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1"- Thr Oatlr S&lt;-nllnel. ~ttddlepon-Pumero} , 0 .Fnda) , Det·. 9, 1977

"

·
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.

Brown's appeal ·!
is turned down

Area Deaths

I

COLUMBUS t UP I I
Tlk'
OQJO Supremt&gt; Court tuda)
dJsrn1ssPd Atturne\ Gt&gt;rwr&lt;.tl
W1Jl1am J . Brown'S appea l of
iJ Ppbhc Utlhtlt&gt;s C'ollUlli S.Sllltl
'of Oluo dectstOnl•st Aprtl n•
qutrm~ the Ohio Power Co. to
refw1d about $9 nulhon lfl
o\·erC'harges to its eustonwrs.
The attor ney general
argued in the suit that the rt'
fund sho uld havt• bet•n
!,'Tea ter.
I n a separate, bUl relatt•d ,
case. the Supreme r uurt
refused to disnws_., Ohm
Power's suit agamst the
PUCO chargi ng that the refund should ha\'e been lower.
The allorney .. gener..al
argued in that case th•t Otuo
Power 's suit against htc
PUCO ruling sho uld be
dismissed.
Last April, the PUCO ru led

TRUSTEES TO MEET
Chester To ~&lt;nsh i p Trustees
will meet Tuesday , Dec. 13 at
7 p.m . at the town hall in
C11ester.
SPEAKER NOTED
The Rev . Clifford B.
Coleman, nat ive of Middleport , will be the guest
speaker Dec. 11 at Hope
Baptist Chapel, Middlepon.

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Deposit
'1.000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term
N inet y da 'y 1nterest pena lly
wit h drawn
b e fore

if

matunty dat e

Mei~

Co. Branch

_(!)
The A then\. 1...0unly

Saving s &amp; Loan Co .
296 SecQnd st.

Pom eroy , Oh 1o

l!:rllj

tl1011 Uh10 Po" t'r should makt&gt;
a S9 nulhon r~fund to tl!i
t· ustonwrs aft e r heo~nn g
t rstunon ~ m ct $45 tmlhon fule
adJu.stnwnt t'~ St' fllt&gt;d b) the
northeast Oluo utthty .
Otuo Power ;trgued. m askUl~ for H rt•ht'anng . hat th~
rdund should ha\'l' be~n s~ .5
nuliun. Tht• attorney !-!Crlt'ral.
IS also asking for ct rehcCjring.
urgu"l that tht• r~fu nd should
hu\' t' bet•n greHter. Both reqm•sts for a reht&gt;unng were
dt'fllL'd - &lt;1 dee1sion wha:h
wa s appea lt&gt;&lt;l to the Supreme
Court.

r--------~·-···-------------------,

N. W. COMPTON. 0.0.

t
I

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L

V IRGINIA CLARk
V lr g1 n1a Cl ..'lrk 51 of &amp;52
Fi ffh A ve , Kan augc'l . a
rt&gt;llrcd employ ee ol Hol zer
Mf'd1t al Cen ter , d ied t hNe al
9 55 a m Thurs.day Sh.e;had
been tn fa ili ng hea lth fdr f1ve
v.ears.
She was born April 19, 1920,
1n Ch esh tre Twp. to I ra and
Neff te Roush Swtsher She
was marr ied O c f. 10, 1954 , in
Lawrence County to Hoyt
Clark , who sun.11ves along
wdh
a son , Bobby ,
Kalamazoo , M 1ch ., and a
granddaugh ter She also is
.survived by a stepdaughter,
Mrs . Karen Corse, Canron .
Mrs Clark ' s surv i vors in
elude a brother and three
sisters · Gerald Swisher , Rt
I, B1dwell ; Mrs . Norman
(Hazel) Nyc, Carey, Ohio ;
Mr~ .

Ohio hit
with Sn.OW
Unlt•d Press International
A second major storm in as
many days moved across
l'lhio Thursda,· and early
l\)day. dw11ping up to eight
inches nf new sno w on mul'h
nf the n0rtheastE'rn se&lt;'t ion.
:\·Inst other areas uf the
state got twn or more lnr hes
nf snow and more of the white
fluff\· st uff was forecast
tnda~· in northea stern Ohio.
snow
created
The
hazardous road conditions
aroWld the State and forced
sCho0l cl0sings in many
.areas. Nearly all schools
were closed ~ o day in
northeastE'rn Ohio, including
every public and parochial
school in Lake Co w1ty .
Travelers' advisories were
in effect for the entire state.
Temperatures were in the
lnw or mid 30s early today but
forecaster s sa id cold alr
p&lt;1unng into the state on the
heels of the storm would
lower the mer cury into the
teens or lower 2\is by this
aftern oon.
Bitter · cold
temperatures were expected
to prevail throughout the
weekend .
Al Cleveland-, whic~ had a
total of 13 inches ·of snow on
the
ground ,
Hopkins
]nternational Airport was
ri ns ed and all downtown
hotels were reported!)' filled.
The airport was forced to
close for the second time in
tw n days, agaln because of
poor visibility and heavy
snn w.
Offic ia ls in Van Wert
County Th'ursday ordered all
snowremoving equipment off
the highways because ' of
blinding and drifting snow.
That action caused massive
traffic jams and stranded
hundreds of motorists.

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICEHOURS:9:30tol2,2to5(CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.
•

:

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Our
open
door
policy.

Our no -red ·tape
Auto Loans are fast.
And our interest
rates are low.
At our bank ... you ·make the difference!
Come on in. See for yourself.

-

Jack (Grace-)

Clark ,

Middleport; Mrs . John W
! Daisy ) Thomas. Chestl ire . A
sister preceded her in death .
I n her ear l ier yeats she at
tended the Popl ar Ridge
Church.
Funeral ser&lt;J it es , will be
held at 1 p.m . Saturday at t he
Waugh ·Hal ley·· Wood ~uneral
Home , tne Rev , John Jeftrey
of h ci at ing , and burial w i ll be
in Mound Hi ll Ce m etery
Fr-i,nds may ca ll 2 ·4 and 7 9
p .m . ·roctay at th e funeral
nome

MINNIE HORNBECK
Call 1ng hour s for 93 -year
old Minnie- Hornbeck . 166Q
North High St ., Col umbus,
will be 2 4 and 7-9 p . m . today
at t he Schoedinger ·Norris
Chapel. 3574 North Broad·
way , Gr ove City, She died a1
5: 30p.m . Wednesoay .
Funeral ser vices will be
he ld at the s-ame pla ce Schoedinger ·Norris Chapel --at 10 :30 a.m. Sa turday , Or .
Carl Wiley officiating . En·
tom bment wil l be .. i n Colum ·
bus ' s
Union
Cemetery
ma usole um .
Survivors of Minni-e Horn·
beck are three nieces and a
fos ter son, Charles W itham .
She was born Ma rc h s, 1884,
to Ephra im and Alice Sigler
Whit e.

CECIL RICHARDSON
COOLV I LLE Ce vil V.
Richardson, Sr .• 79, of Route
2, Coo lville. died early th is
morning
at
his
home
fol low ing an extended illness .
He was born at F.rost in Me igs
County , tbe son of the late
Lewis and Nett·ie Brow ning
RiChardson . His first wife,
Nina . died in 1968 . -Three
brothers . Clyde, Guy · and
Wade, also preceded him in
deatll .
Mr . R ic hardson was a
ret i red dairy- farmer and
school bus dr'*er . A former
d irecto r of the Cit i zens
Telephone Co. in Coolville, he
was a member of Coo lville
Lodge 337 FS.AM, Scoltish
Rite Valley ot Columbus , and
ot the farm bureau .
. He is survived by his wi fe.
Lucy Felton Richardson, two
sons, Cecil V, Jr . and Thomas
L. , both Of COQivilie ; a st,e:pdaughter ,
Mrs .
Vera
NPihauP.r . T ucxQn. Ariz. ; two
grandsons ,
Barry
and
Larrv Richardson and a
great
gr~nddaughter ,
Suzeanne Richardson .
Funeral services will be
Sunday af 2 p.m . at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville
with t he Rev. Wal t er A. Frost
officiating . Bur ial will be in
the Troy Bapt ist Cemetery
where Masonic graves i de
rites will be conducted by
Coolville Masoni c Lodge 337 .
Friends may ca ll at the
funeral home after noon on
Saturday .

..

!

Systems 41 years and sub
st ituted 10 years. He was a

Jr ., of Coventry , Conn ., and
Thomas J . of Un i ontown .
Ohio ; one dauQhfer , Mrs.
Danc1 ( Annabel) Van Meter .

Belpre ; a sister . Mrs . Goorge

(Mary )
Genehime r
of
Chester ; si:x grandc:hildr'en .
Mel in da
Kay
Pellet ie r ,
Wes ley Allen R o!i~· Randa ll
Thomas Rose , Patrici a Lee
Rose. Dav id Nea l Van Meter
and Lor i Elizabeth Va n Meter
and a great -gra nddaughter ,
Am y Tt1eresa Pelletier.
Funeral services will be
Sunday at 11 a.m . at the
White Funeral Home i n
Coolville with t he Re v .
Richard Thomas and the
Re v . Freeland Norr is of ·
ficiating . Buri a l will be in
Reeds vi lle Cemetery .
Frie nds may cal l at the
funeral home on Saturday
from 2 ti ll 4 and 6 till 9 p.m .

... ··.·..

)
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Spcr lnl ' mr • t
of
Evangellnr Chapter 17%
OES wlll bt' held at 1; 30
tonight at the Middleport
Masonie Temple. Olflt•ers
~- Ill be Installed.

I

member of the Reeds ~ ille
Chr ist ian Chur cn and the
Ohio Teachers Assn . ~
Mr ~ ose is surv i ved by his
wiie , Verna· 8t1ckley Rose :
two sons , James L:.awrence

·.·.··

Farmers
warm up
tractors

boat firm
Zinn 's Landing -at

· JAMES L. ROSE
REEDSVILLE - James L.
Rose. 73, of Reedsville died
early Friday morn ing ~t the
h~Jme of his daughter · in
Bet pre.
Born at Racine he was the
son . of the late Lewis and
Abb1e ft/,oo re Rose. He was
also preceded in death by five
brothers.
·
..
Mr . Rose was a retired
school teacher hav ing taught
in t he Meigs County School

An acti.on to garnishee was
filed by Commonwealth Loan·
Co., Parkersburg against
Sandra Humphrey , Coolville,
in Meigs Common Pleas
Court. A sui! for $1 ,434.95 was
filed by Grange Mutual
Casualty Co ., Coiumbus,
James Thomas and Annbelle
Thomas, Rt. 1, Middleport ,
against Jo hn J . Manley ,
Middleport for damages
resulting in an automobile
accident on June 27, 1976 on
SR 124 in ·Rutland Township.

seroice watercraft
SAFETY PATROL ~ Front 0-rl, Scott Gheen, Beth Wolfe, Mary Long; Lynn Epple , P .
J. Harris and Ch ris Bw·delle; back row, Melvtn Van Meter , Jimmy Farley, Bobby SouUl·
ern. Jolem• Moodispaugh, Jen ny Meadows, Tracy Herman anc1 Zandra Vau~hiJn . A 14th
member n0t pi ctured is Fnmces Hoffman .

Fifth, sixth graders are protecting children
The group, after training
The gro up of 14 is divided
by Glaze, is working at five into two teams each of which
iritersections each day after will work for periods of two
sc hool dismisses in Mid- weeks each. School Prin·
dlepol1. The patrol has been cipa Is Robert Morris and Don
provided with belts, hats and Hann ing helped in the
badges free of charge by the selection of the pupils for the
AAA .
honor posts.

A sa let y patrol of fifth and
sixth graders of the Bradbury
Elementary School h•s been
organized under direction of
Georg e Gla ze t o provide
protection for pupils of the
Middlepo r t Elementary
School.

scoring in the reserves game
at Ironton .
The Meigs varsity, now 0-1
in. the league, plays Monday
at 7:15 against Alexander in a
non-league match.
The reserves open the
evening activity against
Alexander reserves at 6 p.m.
•
The scoring ;
Meigs - Drehl 2.(4; ·Riggs
1~2 ; King 7~14; Diddle 2~
4; Woodyard 1~2; Zerklo040. Totals 13~26.
Ironton - Bryant 44-8,
McCreary 1~2 ; Slagel, 2-0-4;
Lattimer 4·1-9. Totals 11-1-23 .

VOL 12

«

area of the Silver Memorial
Bridge and Shopping Pl~za,
Piper Hill at Vinton and on
US 35 on the various bridges
on the by-pass.
Two persons were injured
in an accident at 3:30p.m . on
the US 35 by'pass where
Cynthia L. Smith, 33, Point
Pleasant, lost control of her
ca r on an iced-up bridge. The
vehicle ran off the road
striking a guardrail. She and
a passenger , three-year old
Greg Smith, had minor injuries .
They -were taken to the

OPEN TON

AND EVERY NIGHT TIL

The Norfolk and Western ~
Railway reported that it ~
loaded less lhan one-fourth
the normal number of coal
cars in Virginia , West ~
Virginia, Kentucky and oitio. ~

Holzer Medical Center by the
Gallia County Volunteer
Emergency Squad.
An accident about the same
time created a traffic
problem on the Silver
Memorial Bridge. The patrol
said Barbara L. , Kapp, 21,
Point Pleasant, lost control of
her car which slid around
blocking traffic.
Reports of several accidents were incomplete
since there were so many at
the same time. Drivers were
advised by the patrol to phone
in necessary information.

=

HARRY MOORE

range economic eve1opment and diverslfication cannot
be obtained by energy policies based on zero growth."
At the .same tl~e, ~he commission said, "except in
extranrd1nary s1tuat1ons, environmental standards
and regulations should not be relaxed to meet national
energy needs.''

MIDDLEPORT - Harry Samuel
Moore, retired Middleport businessman,
died Frida¥ afternoon after a lingerin·g
illness at his S. Third Ave. residence in
Middleport.
Mr. Moore was owner and operator of
the -Royal Crown Bottling Co. in Middlepo.r t for a number of years. Prior to
coming here he operated Royal Crown
Bottling Co. plants iii Ashland, Ky ., ahd
Huntington, W. Va . He also had operated a .
feed store in Huntington.
MNr. Moore was a member of Grace
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy and was a 50
year member of the Masonic Lodge and
the York Rite. He was a member of Poage
Lodge 325, F&amp;AM, Ashland; Hasa Temple,
Ashland :. Ashland Commandery 28,
Knights Templar; Apperson Chapter 81,
R.A.M Ashland ; Bosworth Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters, Pomeroy; a life
member ofthe Elks lodge 107 in Gallipolis
having been a member of the lodge !or 37
years ; the Twin City Shrine Club,
Masonic rites will be conducted at 7:30
p.m. Sunday at the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home by Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM.
Mr. Moore was born Sept. 22, 1894. He
was 83 at lhe time of his death. He was a .
son of the late Samuel S. and Ullian Rule
Moore and was also preceded in dealh by
two brothers, Eugene and Franklin; a
sister, Marie, and his first wife, Anna
Noonan Moore, who died in 1959.
Surviving are his wife, Jean Lama

TIL .PM

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Christmas Omaments

w

~
~

Most Halhnark onumtent designs are dat_c d and nonbreakable. And· the"'"' beautiful-

W

sure to bceome

~

treasun~d f;:unil~' · ~eepsakes. Shu1 your ('Ollection non·, ~r give one to .~
lo\'t.'rl one. It s another n ·ay to say you care.

~

Titfan~· Classi&lt;-s

~

Nonhreakctbil~ ornanwnt:-; f(·atwi n.~ 1he

I{

look of stained lt•Hdect glass.

tfl:

~

w
Ill
U

~ ·

I{

a·""'..

II:

(.,

~

cUmcnsion twirl
o:tUout ill a decornt:ive fi':.une.

'

th c'Se lu)51i qualitv. nonhrmk&lt;thle
omamen ts .

"'
l(

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... t~

··

The look ofhand:c&lt;o-ved wood antique&amp;
ornaments featunng hand-painted
ti
desi,,ms
.
·
.
II!
;,
!.(

which will accmn modate many more bClats ancf pnm de a
place for repair of boats.

.

tntintl

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MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1977

PRICE 25 CENTS

•

The statement b}' Lester was made
SatUrdav. company officials said the
only work betng performed at the three following concern 1 shown by UMW
Meigs and Vinton County mines was in members that the company might attempt
maintenance and to prevent deterioration to mine coal during the UMWA strike.
A delegation of union officials, led by
· or either the mines or lhe equipment.
Gene
Oiler, president ~f UMW local 1886,
Harry Lester ,
general
mine
will
meet
with Southern Ohio Coal Cu.
superintendent, said it would be
officials
on
Sunday, said Lester.
''impossible to mine any coal without the
Meigs
County
Common Pleas Court
UMWA labor force and no•effort would be
John
C.
Bacon
and Vinton County
·Judge
made to -mine any."
Common Pleas Court Judge Wade H. Lohr
!ale Friday limited the number of pickets
to three at each entrance to Meigs No. l
and Meigs No. 2 mines and Raccoon No. 3
mine in Vinton County.
The pickets also must be at least 15 feet
from each ·other and must not interfere
with supervisory Personnel entering the
mines.
·
Steve Hiles, a spokesman for the AEP
office in Lancaster, said, ''Striking miners
Moore· two sons, Harry S. Moore, Jr., and
at Racoon No . 3 prevented the mine
Willia.;. N. Moore, both of Ashland; a
brother, Herbert F. Moore of P9meroy; a
sister, Mrs . Florian (Helen ) Lyle, By DEBORAH FRAZIER
Ashland; two granddaughters , Cathryn United Press International
Jayne and Carla Ann, both of Ashlan.d and
Tractors by the thousands surrounded
severat nieces and nephews.
statehouses in major farm states across
Mr. Moore was a veteran of World War the nation Saturday as farmers
l, having served in the U. S. Navy.
demanding better prices for their crops
Funeral services will be held at 11 ptit on an impressive show of strehgth for
a.m . Monday at the Episcopal Church in next week's threatened farm strike.
Pomeroy with t~e Rev . Harold Deeth and
Christmas shoppers on windy ~treets .
GALLIPOLIS- That h.azy twUigbt
the Re"' Dwight Zavitz officiating. The cheered the farmers sittlng atop tractors
zone between dream and reality early
Rev. Father John W. P. Weise will be in belching black diesel smoke while police
Saturday momlng near Vinton brought
charge of committal in the Ashland, Ky., tried to Unsnarl traffic jams.
some bloodletting.
cemetery.
They came from places like Prospect
GaiUa County Sherlft James MontFriends may call at the Rawlings· Vailey, Watonga, Cherokee County,
gomery's deputies said tbat Bob
Coats Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Sterling and Riverton . Earflaps were
CochraP., 30, Vinton, had the dream. It
p.m. today.
down and checkered wool jackets zippered
was 2 a.lD. He was on the back seal of a
car hung up on tbe road close to VInton,
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:=:·::::;:;:;::::::;;:;:;:;:::::;::.:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::. up against chill winds as farmers
demanded · breakcven prk'es for their
when he started wielding a knife, ac·
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
cording to deputies.
crops .
Monday through Wednesday, lair
"It's hard to say how many of us there
Tbe nightmare ended. Chancy
and cold Monday, with highs In the 20s are," said John Stulp, ~spokesman for the
Thacker, Rt. I, Ewlogton, had a lourand lows In the teens. A ~bance of sDO\\' American Agriculture movement,
inch laceration. The Gallla County
Tuesday and Wednesday, possibly Organiz~r of the farm strike. "But it's not
Volunteer Emergency Squad look
mixed with rain south. Highs wlll be In hard to measure moods, and we are all in Thacker to Holzer Medical Ceoler,
the 30s and lows wlll be in the 20s.
the swne mood."
w~ere he was treated and released.
SqueaHng c.ity children in Denver
Another passenger, Involved
:::::::::::;:::;:;;::::::;:;:;:::;;;:::::::::;:;:::;::;;;;;;;:;;:;::;;::::;::::;;;:;:;.:::·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·
climbed on the first tractor to roll up at the neither In the dream oor the actuality,
COFCTOMEET
statehouse early Saturday morning, the was Clayton Snyder. Alltbree claimed
POMEROY- The Pomeroy Chamber first farm implement they had ever seen. to be friends, and no one was "mad" at
of Commerce will meet Tuesday at noon at An estimated 1,500 tractors and other farm
anyone else, unless it was a dreamed·
the Meigs Inn. Speaker will be Bill Hogan vehicles arrived at the Denver Olpitol by up mlsldenllllcallon.
who is with Gallco Work Activities Center
Continued on page u~
:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:':·:·:·:·:·:·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::.:::.:::::::::.;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:·
for the mentally retarded.
•

Tractors
surround
capitals

Laceration after a

mere dream painful

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the family and to assist them
in any way possible.
Any child with problems
relating to the anns, legs,
feet or hands can ,attend the
clinics. The problem that the
child has can be one that he
has had since birth or due to
an
InJury.
Veterans
· Memorial Hospital
is
providing facilities for the
clinic free of charge.
Anyone
wishing
information may contact Opal
M. Grueser, R.N., Meigs
County Health Department,
992-3723.

superlntendent and other superowisory
personnel froin leaving the office at the
mine until nearly midnight Thursday. The
miners have also preven ted supervisory
perSOnnel from...ente:ring the mine."
Hiles said AEP has "a couple of
laboratories in that complex that people
.. are being kept out of. We aren't mining
any coal.' '
'
Vinton County Sheriff Ronald Davis said
no one was hurt in the incident.
"They just wouldn't let anybody get out
of the mine," tle said. "I went in and talked
to the mine supervisor and he told me llley
wouldn't let them out. I went out and
talked to the pickets and they told me they
wouldn't let them (the supervisory
personnel) out.' I waited until I finally got
some help and finally got them out. "
Meanwhile, officials of UMW District 6
and UMW local officials met in Cadiz
Friday to learn details and costs of an

interim hospitalization program arranged
by the district nffice.
Trustees of the UMW Health and
Welfare fund suspended. hospitalization
beneflts at the start nf the nationwide
UMW strike at midnight Monday.
The interim program wHl run for 90 days
and may be extended for a second 90 day
period.
Some loc al officials say the most
important subject in contral't ta lks in
Washington between the UMW and th~ soft
coal industry is getting the depleted Health
and Welfare Fund - which provides medical benefits for miner s and their Eamilies
- back in the black.
"The Health and Welfare Fund is the
Whole thing ,'' sa id Bob Hoffman, president
of Local 5497 at North American No. 1
mine in Powhatan Point. "That's the big
item, the most important item. Once they
get lhat settled this slr i~e could be over."

Swastika and warnings
on stolen, burned auto
GALLIPOLIS. - A swastika - in- upholstery. The fire started.from a short in
famous emblem of Hitlerite t.:ennany the wiring, fircml!n speculated. Owner of
was sketched on a car whlch sheriff's the car is Ronnie Smith, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.
deputies said was "set on fire" on a Nebo
Rd. wooden bridge. The burned car, owned
by Garland E. Parsons II , was found at
3:41 a.m. Saturday.
Sheriff James Montgomery's deputies
said that the car, which had been pulled
GALLIPOLIS - The young man
crossways on the bridge, also had on it:
"He will gel you, Parsons," ~nd "helter wanted to buy some beer at 8:54 p.m.
skelter." Parsons's address is Gallipolis. Friday at the Pony Keg on Eastern Ave.
The car had been stolen from ils but the clerk asked for identification to be
parking place at Rio Grande. No in~ sure that he was not too yOung . He bought
formation was readily available on the cigarettes and pulled out so fast that his
significance, if any, of the swastih and car threw gravel and broke &amp; sliding glass
door. His anger cost the Pony Keg $200 and
warnings.
The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire put police on his trail.
The salesgirl was Cindy Roberts. She
Oepanment was called at 10:33 a.m.
Saturday to Eastern Ave. l(t Madison St., and Greg Roberts called the Gallipolis
where a 1971 small foreign-make car was police to report destruction ol property.
She described the ):Oung man as white, fat,
ablaze.
.
Four firemen extinguished the flames with an afro hairdo. Another young man
which damaged wiring, insulation, and was with him .
'
,.

Would-be buyer of
beer got too angry

. OONALD THALER, M.D., of Gallipolis, exami~s a not-too-happy lwn-yca r-&lt;•Id ,
Brandon Scott Roush, son of Bobby R. and Shirley Roush , Pomeroy, ·at fo;riday 's first
orthopedic clin ic held at· Veterans Memorial Hospital.

_,. ~(.,.i ~ Js:i ~~ l~ l· ~ ~~ 1-I::!. ~ ~ ~ 1-:&gt;:{~l5::{R:S:IQ:$&amp;1:=:iS:J:~IQ~_lCI$::(g:$~~~~:a=s~~B::!s=:lAt!
~

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Boats already are on display at Zion's GuU Oil station, taken over by Ashland Oil
Landing and, according to Fleming, the .several months ago. Fleming, a receql
inventory will include sa le and rep3ir of gradUate of Michig an State University, I
boats of 17 feet to 55 feet in length at prices and his wife and daughter, who will be 2 in t
ranging from $300 to $75,000. The main February, liv'e on J ~ wi s Rd .• which runs
brands will be Fiberfonn and VIP, he southwest off SR 218 itbove Mercerville, -added, with Mercury motors both out- five miles off SR 7.
board and inboard.
Zinn 's Landing is located in the former See drawing on page 2.

LANCASTER, Ohio (UP! ) - Officials of
the Southern Ollio Coal Co. and Uniled
Mine Workers Union loca l 1886 will meet
Sunday to work out an agn'l'ment to abide
by temporary restraining orders issued
lale Friday by judges in Meigs and Vinton
counties.
The TRO's were issued to limit picketing
at the mines which .had · preven ted
Supervisory officia)s from leaving or
entering the mines.

of the clinics will be to screen,
POMEROY - Another ~new
diagnose and follow up
service by the Meigs County
children from birth to 21
Department of Health - an
years of age. The clinics will
orthopedic · clinic - got un·
. be a consultation service.
derway · at
Veterans
If during a visit to the
Memorial Hospital Friday
clinic, the patient Is found to
afternoon.
need x~rays for a diagnosis to
The clinic - to be held four
be made or confinned or to
times a Year - is being
note the progress of a cOnsponsored' by the Bureau of
CripPled Children's Services · dition, the Bureau of Crippled
Children's Services will be
and ts free of charge.
asked to assist with these fees
Dr. Donald Thaler , or·
if the family cannot.
thopedfcal specialist from
Follow-up after a clinic will
Holzer Medical Center, was
be done by a Meigs County
the presiding physician· at
Public Health Nurse to anFriday's first clinic_, Purpose
$Wer a.nY of the questions of

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Mnsi·s . Normati Rockwell. Chl'istmas
quotations. &lt;tnd r\metieau landscape

BRING THE CHILDREN TO S~E SANTA TONIGHT AND SATURDAy
NIGHT 6 to 7 PM-THIRD FLOOR

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Nostalgia Collet'tion

Be sure to see all.'he other Hallmark Christmas Ornaments - Party Goods _
Albu":'s - Plus Chnstmas Cards both boxed and individual. A truly -remarkable
selectton·.

BOATS OF ALl. SIZES are trn sale at Zirm's I.anding in
Kanau~a. but a building program will set up structures

·~

conducted in Meigs Friday

W,

Diversity of clt'Sit,~ts . fi-;tll.lling Grandma

SCl'lll'S.

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First orthopedic clinic

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:?l_~.,...

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g
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G ass omatnents

Vf!!J,(:~~~
-~~.-~:-

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~w

ontamenis.

,!-_,,

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ll

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fi.1ll

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~ Satin Ontaments
IS!
. "Pt.•anuts" Col1e{·tion
r.(
"' '
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Ctmiel.' tO:&gt; lves. Walt Disney characters IS!
'.~~ · ' . l~_opt_llw· Pt'tll1lltS cumk strip charo:t_ct('\1'!
.
·f.(
and commemori\tive designs highlight IS!
·
.are ieatured on both ~lass ~ md shtin
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WW

~ l tl!'ac h:'I'S

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'c1' •iri-Abouts.
in

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·Retired businessman
Harl'y S. Moore dies

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(Continued from page 1)

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GALLIPDLIS POINT PLEASANT

4

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Appalachian

•

me management, unton

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GALLIPOLIS - A hall-million-dollar
enterprise to sell and repair recreation- bays of the Ashland Oil filling station.
type watercraft, and to fuel them with
Completion date for the construction
gasoline, will be launched at Kanauga.
will be in March . The sales room a nd
Roben G. Fleming and his father-in- repair building are a $250,000 project, and
law, Ralph Zinn ar~ the partners in the the 24-houJ&lt;gas dock in the Ohio 1\iver back
enterprise to be known as Zinn's Landing. of the business is another $50,000. Fleming
They have contracted with Caner &amp; Evans said that the total investment if you add
to construct the sales room and repair the inventory of boats and accessories wilJ
building adjacent to the existing service be in the neighborhnorl nf $500,000.

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~e~~~:te~Ee~~n:~~·~n:~ ~

NO. 45

Vehicles like skaters
Qn area highways' ice
At least 15 traffic accidents
were blamed on Thursday
evening 's low temperatures
i~ the Gallia · Meig s ~rea
following light ra in produced
sheets of ice making highways a nd secondary routes
dangerous to vehicles and
pedestrians according to the
.Gallia-Meig s Post State
Highway Patrol.
In addition, untold numbers
of motorists were ;tailed on
hills throughout t he twocounty area.
In Gallia County , the most
accidents occurred in the

~

lUttS

Girls l-1 at Ironton
IRONTON - Ironton High strange baskets, httttng only
School girls defeated Meigs !5 of 60 from the field for 25
girls 42-35 here Thursday in pet. They were 5 for 10 at the
basketball with three girls free line.
The sco ring:
hitting in d ou~le figures on 20
Mei~s Brown 5+14:
of 53 shots from the field for a
fine 38 pet . Meigs reserves Burdette 4-6-l! ; Epple 4-1-9;
Vau ghan~ ; Chapman I~
won 26·23.
Fnr Ironton, Vinson h(ld H 2; S. Ash 1 ~2 . Totals 15~ .
ironton - Vinson 7~14.
to lead her t eam. Glenda
Triplett ~; Jenkins 04&lt;1;
Bro~&lt;n of Meigs led her team,
also with H. Brown also was Rist 5-0-10 ; Rowe 5-0-10;
Meigs' top rebounder with 7. Riggs 3-2-8; c;Iay ~- Totals
While Ironton was sharp 26-2-42.
from the field , the Meigs girls ; April King hil seven tries
had troubl e locating the from the field good for 14
points to lead both teams in

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ROBERT G. FLEMING STANDS amon~ boats he has on display at Zinn '.s
Landing in Kanauga . Come next March, when Carter &amp; Evans will have £inished
con~1ruction of a sales room, repair building, and 24-hour g&lt;.~s dock, Fleming and
his partner, Ralph Zinn , will IUJve $500,000 invested in tx•ats, accessories, and
structures.

~~~~~~~~ r~~~~~E~I""b""'""'e""r""t""e""'""'l d......s"""""""l....ni. «:&lt;P=o~lll.e""""rO,""l&gt;':&lt;""'""!;o'.
mines in southwest Virginia.

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Garnishee action
filed in court

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Kanauga will sell,

Junior
Hager .
Stanley
Kingery ; Clarence Myers .
Charles M i ller and Lou is
Barga .

(Contlnu«j from pase 1)
$500. .
" I'm hanging in there .
Course my wife works and
that makes a big difference ."
Burke said a lengthy strike
could create pressure on
UMW negotiators to give in
on their contract demands.
"After three weeks they 're
going to say ··What the hell?'
if the con tract comes down
and it doesn't have the things
they want. "
Striking Virginia miners
Thursday picketed the

Partners
announce

United Press International
Bitter cold settled across
the midlands of America
today as dissident fanner s,
dema nding break-even prices
for their crops, wanned up
their tractors and headed for
&gt;1ate capitals in support of a
nation wide strike.
•
Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland addressed
a
Nati on al Farmer s
PAUL SHIPLEY
Organizat io n meeting in
Paul R. ShiiJiev. 66 . a
Omaha Thursday night and
res ident of Rt. 2, Galli pol i s.
said
he supported demands
was p ro no u nce d dead at
Holzer Med i cal Center at
for 100 percent parity 10 : 10
a .m .
Thursday
market prices equal to the
following a heart attack.
cost
of production plus a
Mr . Shipley was a refired
ma chinist and was fo rmer . reasonable profit, But the
owner of Shipl ey's Machi ne&amp; · administration's
c hief
Repa ir Shop in Gallipolfs .
agriculture official said he
He was born M:ay 15. 1911.
doubted the goal could be
in Page , W. Va. son of the late
achieved.
. Stephen A . Doug l as and
Bertha
Mae
Hammo c k
"I certainly support the
Shipley .
,
objectives or those who seek
He marr ied Edith L.
full parity income,"' Bergland
Mayberry , on Jan. 18, 1957, at
said. ;,I thmk there's nothing
Wi nters v i l le , Ohio.
She
su r vives , a long with three
wrong with that as a stated
sons : Paul A. Sh)pley, Cin. , principle."
cinnati ; Doug and Greg . both
But Berg'ian d said a
at home . One sister , Mrs .
cost of production
guaranteed
Paul
( Eillene)
Moore .
Deland ,
Fla . sur&gt;Jives . would result in "10 percent
He
was
a
mem . land inflation at least ,"
ber of
Trin i ty
Baptist
forcing production costs and ,
Temple, Rio Grande and was
eventually, food prices, up.
treasurer and trustee ot the
church.
Meanwhile, thousands of
He was a member of
fanners from Washington to
1\-\asonlc Lodge No . 168, South
Louisiana and Delaware to ·
Charleston , W. Va . and a
Texas drove American flagmember of A &amp; A Scottish
Rite of Free Masonry .
bedecked tractors, combines,
Funera l services wil l be
pickup trucks and other !ann
held 2 p.m Sunday at the
implements to their capitals
. Wi ll i s Funeral Home witf"'
solidarity
ralli e~
Rev . 0. C. MQrrison ·of - for
ficiating . Burial will follow in
scheduled for Saturday. The
Ohio. Valley fl.Aemory Gar .
strike,
during
which
dens . Friends may cal l at the
producers
will
sell
no
funeral home between 2·J and
buy
no
equipproducts
and
7-9 p .m . Salurday .
The .fol lowing wil l ser&gt;Je, as
ment or supplies, ls set to
pallbearers ; Robert Craft , begin Wednesday.

Violence

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SCOTT LUCAS, ADMINISTRATOR of Veterans
Memorial Hospital which is providing fre&lt;.' facUities for
the orthopedic cli.nics in Meigs County, and Opal Gruese1,
R.N ., Meigs County Crippled Children's Nurse , confer on
a patient's. records .

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.~·~ - The $unda) Tun~s-&amp;•nlulel,

A-3- The Sunday 1'1mes-&amp;ntinel. Sundav. Dec. 11.1977
D
•
Pllc~r. Agrkulture run.~ .an
c
ident i,cal service .
Some CSA ~ pending is su
vague
that l'&lt;fngrl!sS illna l
Continued !rum A-2
s1uffers admi t con fu sion.
F.('onr11nk rx_.vt.•l&lt;IJmlcnt Ad- This year $30 million, $10
ministratiun, the Offil'e of milliun ·more than last yeHr.
Minority Rusiness Enterprise is fur " p(llicy resean·h ..
and ugcnc1es in the departaim~ d at llevelupi n ~ income
ment ~ nf HQusing and
JnuinteMnce p0licies.Agricul!ure .
"We cuuldn'!lell what they
Dupllcation al.sn ext£•nds to were doing with the money,"
CSA's ((llnrnunity Fnod and SCJid •• Senate aide.
Nutrilim1 prog ram which
seeks to insure Umt the poor
TI1csc and (lth cr criticisms
have a dJ&lt;:tru:c at food stamps have wcakene(i l'OilgressionHI
and sl' hool lwu:hes.
CHnfidence in the anti-poverty
A~ricultur e spend s $50
prugram .
millinn u ycur on similar
Al!hou~h she '1 ill believes
ou 1rea ch ac li vltics. 120 CSA "can w.nrk," Rep.
million more than CSA. The Collin s says the agenc)'
pn1gran1 uses 111urc tha11 6.000 "should no!. be expanded until
Exten s ion S(•rvic:e para- it first t'lcans up its &lt;Jet."
professionals in lwlf uf the
No nne in Congress has
nati on's counties whti go critic.:ized the program mor e
duortn-donr in l'itic!-1 like tl1an Sen. Abraham Ribicoff ,
Detroit and Ncwm·k as well une
of . its
nriginal
as in poor rural areas .
ent11usiast!c suppnrtcrs..
" We're
essenlially
In his 1972 book "America
d~livcri11g the sa me service,''
Can Make It !" the liheral
a USDA official said. "'11wre Cnnncct i cut
Demo'c ra t
is 0bvio us ly c:onsid t•rable dcdared "Our antipoverty
overla]&gt; u1 wlmt we're doirig .'' efforts fai led." He said the
Over·lap also is see n in poor need mon ey, not soda!
CSA's mini-grunts, uveraging services.
$2, 000 eao h, to &lt;'sla blish
H.ibicHff fo und t hat in
L'o mmunity gardens ' l\lr the OEO's fir st six years, some

d
overty m ustry

Sunday. Dec. 11, 1977

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&lt;" hnil't: tu abull~h OEO, ~ays
lhl' program W&lt;JS ust&gt;d its a
polilH·al vehldl' by ll•fl win~-:

$600 rmlliun wus S!K'nl on

privatt&gt; firms fur evaluil tiHn,
tec hnical assisiHnt·e aut.l
cuusultalion. He Siud "'fllerc
is big mhney in poverty - b1g
money fnr e~.·rrybudy, that is,
except the pour. "
" I wouldn't change a single
word I wrnte," he said in C1
recenrtnrervtew--:-- ·'I started
with high hopes. · It 5&lt;1W1ded
good. But when ynu analyzed
what's been ~-tceomplished,
the lmlan('c sheet indi t:a tes
Uwy have gcncntlly bee-n
f;tilw·es.''
Sar Levitan, director· of
Gcurgc

at •ti vists,
" I \'iSitcd llectlth ])I'Clgr&lt;IIIIS
whl'l'l' the main cu1wern was
rcgistcrmg voters,·· Phillips
says. " 'n1c war un poverty
prt~gr&lt;:un had nn impowt nn
llJI•vcrty, except fur the pei1Jll(•
Who were employed by it."
AI ils height. he said, "81
pPr {'Cnt nf OEO's runds went
in unc r0l'ln or anoth er to
overhead."
Thomas Sowell , a black
ecnnomic:-; professor at
UCIJ\, says "Tn be.blunt , !he
pour are a gold mine, By the
time · they are stud1 cd,
c1d vised, experimented with
~md administer ed, the pnnr
h&lt;-t ve helped many a middlet.'la ss liberal ln al:hievc
affluence with gnvernment

Washingt&lt;•n

diSlllUSH•Hlll~llt,

su Jnl'

workers say, St('niS
frum t·u~es uf abuse ~mtl
nlis1uHnagc111ent &lt;,f the sort
Wll'ovel'£'!1 by the Hm.L'ie Govrr n 111 en l 0 pe rat i{• n s
Committee.
This swnmer the panel
dwrgL"£1 that CSA has not
"served the natinq'~ poor
m.lequately ;" that tnu oft en
funds ·•a re not properly ael'ounted for;" and that CSA
progr ums have shown ''an
unacccp!abl y high number of
·fa ilur es
an d
seri ous
problems."
CSA supporters say it is
wrong to judge the agency
now bec(IU.st! it ha s been
through "rough limes" under
th e Nixon and Ford
administrations, with sharp
budget cuts a nd seve n
differ ent directors.
po verty~

University 's CentCr for Socia l
Policy Studies, disagrees. He
says
the
anti.puverty
prngram was a key £actor in
easing poverty. He coneedes,
hc1wever , there is no hard
proof.
" What you want to 11\HnC)' ,"
Grat:e Olivarez, President
In a New York Times
measure is not measurable, "
Ca
rter 's new CSA director ,
Ma~azinc
article,
Sowell
said
he said in an interview.
made some some
has
..
·nw
total
amount
nf
money
Even so, Levilan says the
dum
ges
and is ea rning a
th
e
gnvcrnment
spends
on
its
Vietnam War with its
resulting low unemployme nt many antipoverty efforts is reputation for a gel-tough
"w:Js the most imp:_ntanl three times what would be iJltitucle.
In .one instance, she refused
single thing thai brought rt.&gt;quired to lift every man ,
'
to
deal wilh New York City' s
and
child
in
America
'
woman
people 11ut of pl1ver!y ...
anti-poverty
agency after its
above
Uw
official
poverty
line
On the other side~
directors
hired
a person con~
by
simply
sending
money
to
mnservative political activist
victed
of
misappropriating
the
poor."
Howard Phill ips , Nixon ·~
po•verty funds . The board also
CSA employes 110,000 resisted hold ing a new
penpl e in its 866 lo cal electio n when its term
,..~
cnmmunity action agencies. expired.
Las! month she suspended
half nf whum are said to be
from the poor . Forty-four per f1,1nd s going to nationa l
cent Clf those .working in poverty associations when
metrnp(llitan area agencies
ore mC:Iking between $_10,000
and over $15 ,000 a year. A
sampling of salaries paid tn
rnajor city cnminunity action
directors ranges fr om $22,000
to $48 ,000 a year.
Mr•rc than 1,000 people
work in CS.A 's Washington
headquaners and i! s 10
regional offices. CSA regional
FRESH CUT
directors earn from $36 ,171
UP
up In $47,500 a yea r. The CSA
HOLLY
direcwr gels $57,500.
Criticism is not limited to
VARIEGATED '4.00 lb.
outside ecOnom ists and mem'3.00 lb.
bers of Congress. Some CS.A
GREEN
Fresh live fragrant
for door or mantle.
projet:t and grant managers,
privately voice doubts about
M
FRESH CUT OR LIVE
the anti·pnver ty program's
For The
effectiver:tess,
"So much of what. I see
Hard ToI
Regular '2.50
here," said one, "has lillie
Please
SALE '1
impact on the . day-to-day
li ves of!he poor. A lot of what
we spend is going to an
9 1
1 6
entirely different group of
453 JACKSON PIKE
NA
W penple urganized lo help !he
po(lr . I'm nnt sure how much
WEEKDAYS
. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
.
. SU 0 YS
of !hat gels to !he poor. ''
Mu c h of t he·

tht· ·House
c:urnunttce
diselose d thai tlll'y were
"pending federal funds for
travel ;.md t1ther at'tivities
with no CSA mun itori n ~. In
t:~notla.• r case, she c.:lus'-!d
dnwn
thre e
economic
tlcvelupment projects which
were lnsinM money, saying
'"l11ey jusLdidn'l bavc the
t:apitallst n1entalit y. ''
Still, she defends her progra m and its
actomplishmcnts, cha rging
thai
CSA
has
been
"victimized, brutalized and
demPralized" !Jy the congressional probes.
But s he s ug ges ts the
original goa l of eradieatiilg
rxwerty was "uru·ealistic to
begin with .' ·
" If they lripled our budge!,
we eould not eradica te poverty," she told an interviewer.
·' l don't think we c.:an ever
eradicate pove rt y in its
totality.''
Meanwhile,
Carter's
reurganizatirm pl edg es hang
t~ver 'the poverty agency.
'l11ere is speculation that
CSA, now independent , may
be
ass igned
lo
!he
Department of Health,
Education and Welfare or
merge d with so me oth er
agency.
When !old &lt;of , UP I' s
findings , an official involvetl
in reorganization planning
said , " Our analysis 1s
fnllnwing th e very same
- thinking you are describing.

We must f1g-urc oU"t huw tht:y would be more unpressed if
umti·pj)vrrty progrmns J arc a nyone t1mld point to
relctted to other prugram ~ in somL~' ne Whl• was poor who
the
gover mn cnt.
The ell'VH1ed himself fJ ut of
p1·n lifcration 1s incrt&gt;c:hblc." pc,,·erty because of the
Has the w&lt;Jr Hn poverty pre1gram 's scrv1ces."
pru~ram been successful'?
On ~ l'nnRressional mvesWhen all is sa id and dune, no tigator, who has spent the
past slx years examimng the
one really knr•ws.
Some experts pmuL t.u t~grapt puL u this
s uccess of individuals who \Hty : ··some commumty
once worked f11r the j)(l\'erty adiun agencies do virtually
program as prnnf nr progress. nnthing with their funds.
This makes RJbiCt lff C:lngry . Othl'rS are very effect ive and
"That 's a very 1nsidinus imln\·ative . H&lt;:ts it reduced
use of log ic and a very poor poverty ? Frank ly, it's
justification for 0.1 program,. I iw possiblc to tell."

L.U'EST

A/knckbf'_e
DIAMOND STlJD EARRINGS
AND MATCHING PENDANTS

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POINSEniAS.

An
Sunday Tlmes-&amp;.otioel

Rotary (Jub ·

Pubh:sllt'U cv~·n Sundi&gt;y by Th~
Oho Val/to'~- Pubi Js hJn~ Cu.·

Mu.ltunedJ.a, lnt·.

party is held
Friday evening

GALLfPOLIS
DA ILY TRIBUSE
!f..J!i Th1r'd An~ .. Gal hpohs, Ohio

"""'

Pubhsht'l.i e\ el)

~o~·..ekday

t'\'tnmg
Class
Poslage Pul at GalhpolLS, Oh10

t .t ~:tpl

"""'

Saturda~

Second

THE DAILY SE..'\'TlNEL

lll Cou rt St.. Pomeroy. 0 -lti'i6~
Published ~ ,·e n· Wl'ek da)' eYemnl(
exet&gt;pt ,5a turda:~· ~n tered as st&gt;Cond
Class mathng ma tter 11t Pomel\ly.
Oh10 Post OffiCe
8} camer d&lt;ul} and Sunday iSc
~ r ·~:~ek . Motor rout!:' $3 .25 per

month

MAl L

SUBSCRIPTIOi'&gt;O RATES
The Gal!Lpohs

D &lt;~tl)

Tnbune Ill

Ohm and West Vtrgii1~&lt;~ one ~· e!H
S22 OO ;.:m mooths Il l 50; three mon·
Uls SO00 El.se&gt;A.here $2fi .OO ptor yt&gt;&lt;tr :
six mont~ SIL)O; three months

S7.5(1, molor ruull:' S3.25 munU1ly .

The Dculy Semlllel. one yeetr
$22.00; SIX monthsS il.SO, threem onths 17.00. Else wh ere S21i .OO: s u months I JJ .:iO: three monlhs 17 .:'10.
Thl" United Press l nternlmnal LS

exclus1vely entitled lo the use for
pubhc&lt;HIOrL of aU news dispatches
cre(htt-d to lhe ne wsp;oper &lt;:~nd al.su
lhe loci:l! ne ws pubhsht"d herem .

Police report
4 minor-type
car accidents
GALLIPOLIS Fou r
minor traffic accidents occupied !he Gallipolsi police
Friday.
At 4:45 p.m. on the G &amp; J
pa rkin g lot on Fourth Ave.,
the cars of James B. Scott, 20,
Pomerov, and Kevin L. Sims,
17, Gallipolis, collided. Sims'
ca r hit the Scott car, police
said.
.
At 7:21p .m. a! the entrance
to Bob Evans Drive-In on
Eastern Ave ., police said thai
Frances E. Stanley, 48, South
Side, W.Va., tried lo squeeze
in past Dottie L. Wiley, 17, R!.
1, Bidwell but hit !he Wiley
left rear fender and hub cap
as she went through.
AI 1:38 p.m . Randa l R.
Podoll, 25, Gallipolis, pulled
out of the Libby Hotel lobby
alley to head up Second Ave.
an(l hit upbound Sandra J. ·
Lynch , 38, R! . 2, Gallipolis.
At 8:30 a.m. Winifrede F.
Knight, Gallipolis, reported
w .,-;kJe that sometime since
6 p m Thursday an unknown
drl\'tr ~ruck her ca r, which
wa.s parktd at the curb at her
oome, 126 First Ave.
•

MIDDLEPORT c.... A turkey
dinner and program on the
Christmas theme highlighted
the annual holiday seasOn
party of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club Friday
evening at the elementary
school on Pearl St. with ·an
estimated 75. members of
Rotary families in a ttendance.
Special guests introduced
by master of ceremonies
Vernon Weber were Gaige
Paulsen of Athens, area
representative to the Rotary
District 669 , and Mrs.
Paulsen, and Miss Ca!hy
Bremann of Holland , a
Rotary exchange student
sponsored in the Tri·county
area by !he Big Bend Rotary
Club of }'lew Haven. Miss
Bremann was the guest of
Rotarian and Mrs. Bernard
Fultz and their daughters,
Beth , Barbara and Becky.
For the program the Rev.
Wilbur Hilt of Rutland read
the Biblical Christmas Story
and Mrs. Hilt narrated for
colored slides of the Holy
Land which they visi!ed in
1966.
Santa Claus greeted the
young chi ldren and handed
them gifts from a ·lighted
tree. The arrangements for
the dinner were made by
Rotarian Lee McComas.
There were door prizes for
RotaryAnns.

Applications
being accepted
for home help

DAYS TO
CH~ISTMAS

POMEROY - The Gallia·
Meigs Comm unity Action
Agency is acce pting a p·
plications for the Appalachian Rural Home
Repair Program in Meigs
Co unty.
In order lo be eligible ior_
this program applica nts must
be 60 years of age or above,
oome owners and, be within
mcome guidelines. lnterested

persons may call 992-5605,
992-7000 !Tom Calhoun), or
apply a! !he Co mmunity
Action offi ce a! the Pome roy
CQurthouse .

QUAKE REPORTED
TE HRA N,lran iU PI ) - A
sharp earthquake measuring
about six on the Richter Scale
struck off the Iranian port of
Bandar Abbas today, Radio
Iran reported. The radio sa id
the epicenter of the quake
was in the Persian Gulf
waters so uth of Bandar
Abbas. It gave no other
details.

artist'~

"hidden world " of private
organizations.-....,..,,_-:- - -

- There rema ins costly and pay fuel biUs for !he pw r .
&amp;m1e $370 million of this
WASHINGTON iUPI I
duplication among competing
Since Lyndon J ohn son departments and agencies in year's 1600 milli on CSA
declared "war on poverty " in the field s of housin g. budge! goes lo local agencies
1964, !he Uni!ed Stales has nutri t i on,
energy fnr planning , research,
spenl more than $22 billion in · conser vatinn and econom ic administration, salaries arid
some new pro jects.
the name of the poor .
.dev_elo·pment..
An internal s!udy in 1975
Some say th e govenm1ent
- Overhead cnsts. in some
has spent enough on services cases swallow up 50 per cent found 21 pe r cenl of CSA ·s
to lift every man , woman and or mor e of grrmts an d funds went for
child out of poverty three cnntracts.
-admini st ra t ion, which the
said
was
times over. But today, an
- Neither the exec uti ve report
estimated
26
milli on branch nor Congress has "considerably higher than
·
Americans remain beneath tried to evaluate the effect of expected."
th e $5 ,850 poverty line for a the programs on reducing
CSA has no figures on how
family of four .
poverty .
much of its money act ually
Some programs can be
A look a t the budgets of the reaches ·the poor . A random
shown 10 have helped the Commu n i ty
Ser v ices check of CSA budge! items
poor , parliculariy ch ildren. Admini st ration ,
Le gal shows a lot of it goes to
Some community aclion Services Corpor ation, Job finan ce hundreds of private
projects have earned the Corps. Head Starr a nd non-profit groups kmwn as
tribute of federal and local Swnmer Youth Emplo)menl. ''conduits.-"
Many of these groups lobby
offi cia ls alike . Some have run among oth ers, rcveG~ls most
into heavy criticism.
got increases from Contlress Congress. publish magazines
Uruted Press ln!ernahonal this year a fter " being and newsletters and organize
spent six weeks investigating starved,'' as one poverty politica l ac!ion. Others
!he antiiJoverty effort thai worker put il. under !he con duct research which few
wa s
laun ched
as
a Nixon
and
"ord people ever wil l read .
centerpiece of J ohns on's administrations.
.. An
industry
of
Great Society and· has
Job Corps went from $274.1 associations - particularly
con tinued throug h two million las! year lo $417 here in Washington - has
presidencies - despite any 'million !his year. Head Start sprung up around the {XlVerty
impression that Richard is up !o $625 million, a $150 program, " said a Sena te
Nixon ended it when he million jump. Legal Services staffer who monitors poverty
dismantl ed th e Office of at $225 million is alnoost pr ograms. "All of !hem are
Economic Qppor!W'li!y in his double. Community Serv1ces feeding on it one way or
first term .
has $600 million, up fr.om $511 another."
Nearly all of OEO 's million.
An example is a $1 million
ori gini:J l programs were
grant · to the National
" spun off " to differ ent
The focus' of the fede ral Assoc iation of Farmworke r
departments and agencies, antipoverty effort always has Organiza ti.o ns for energy
and remain alive today with been on community action, trainlngtechn ical assistance.
even bigger budgets under which a netwO.rk or A CSA official sa id nearly
cumulatively spending about local agencies was created to $000,000 would go lo local
$4 billion a year . ( A~(ls peak . help the p&lt;&gt;Jr .
farmworker groups for
in 1969, OED's tota l~dget
Thi s approac h prov ided r esearch and development
was $1.9 billion. I
jobs and experience f{)r projects to develop skills
The UP! inquiry centered poverty workers but, as !he among the poor in !he energy
on the Community Services Hou se
Government fi eld.
Administrati on, !he Operatio ns Cilmmitlee found
Forty per cenl of !he gran!
successor to OEO's key ear lier this year, it also will go for program directors.
Community Action agency. produced ·'inexperienced or research professi onal s,
Th e
in \res t.ig at ion se lf-seekmg loc al boards !rain ing staff and olher
revea led :
which in turn led to instances specia lists, plus literature,
- Millions of dollars in of mismanagement and conferences a nd trave l.
.poverty funds are going to a outright graft."
CSA wilT spend more than
little known while collar "inMore than 12 yea rs after . $9 million t hi s year on
duStry '1 of social advocacy the agencies were established energyrelated research and
organizations, welfare under OEO the commillee development projects, mostly
gr oup s 1 ec o nomi s t s, said it was still uncovering through outside professional
nutriti oni s ts, lobbyi s ts, "major areas of weakness, firms.
academic r ese archer s , i n .e f f i c i t: n c y
and
They include : $366,000 Ill
consul tan ts
and other ineffectiveness .' '
the Urban Institute for an
experts.
Befor e Nixon dismantled analysis of its win ~erization
- Millions more are being OEO, local agencies received program ; $~5,000 .to study
spent on studies, surveys, up Ill 90 percent of their fraud by energy compa nies;
resear ch reports , data money from OEO to run $72,380 to produce a television
retrieval systems and other projects like Head Start and film on energy conservation:
materials, a lot of which ends. Jobs Corps.
·
$700,000 to a Massachusetts
.up on government shelves.
Today, the Co mmunity Ser- leg al resea r ch 'firm to
vi c es Adminis tr ation produce studies promoting
provide s
a dmini strative utility rilte" ~ir ucture refnr ~ ;
fu nds and local agencie s $40,000 for an energy
must get project money from cOnservatio n ulutivation
other federal and state study.
NOW YOU KNOW
sources. The local agencit!s
Grants sometimes are ap·
In the 1870s, a law firm . in nnw arc spending mnre than proved because CSA - like
the Utah Territory was so $1.5 billion a year.
IT!_ any ot her_ _gove rnm ent
deluged with divorce cases - Last fear CSA opC"ratCd agencies - does not wailt to
that it buill a slo! machine wilh a total budge! nf $511.2 be ca ught with any unspent
that sold the necessary million plus an extra $282.5 funds.
·
paPQrs for $2.50 a set.
million ltr weC:Ithcrizc h{lmes
One case inv11lved t wn
BY DONALD L \MBRO

4

right

WREATHS

conception of how the development will lay

Poverty industry in Washington
has cost taxpayers a cool $22 billion

For Thdt liH.:ur,ous tour..l1 our exqws11e
dlamond s1ui.l ••.Hr1ng dntl !1ldiCh1ng penda nt&lt;;
A dtamowl ~uuch tn the ri ght pi ace at 1hto

Gif1s

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

NO anti·p(lVCrty progra m
seems to Uraw more fire than
!he Office of Economic Development. Using $48 million a
year,
this Commun ity
Services Administration
agency provide~ capital for
articles about welfare . local businesses to provide
$73,000 grants lo farmworker
consumers and the poor . jobs for the poor.
~ro ups in Rochester, N.Y.,
Other publicati ons include
"lt was a lousy program
and Boise, Idaho, to increase
Legislative
Update , a then and it still is,'' says Sar
participation by women ln
newsle!ter, plus catalogues Levitan,
a
George
their organizations. More
like
"Where the Money Is," Wa shi n gton Univer si ty
th.an $26,000 of each grant
which lists federal funding economics professor who was
went for admi nis~ra'Uve
programs . Printing cdsts one of !h e anti-poverty
costs. Another S:i9.000 was
exceed $132,000 .
program's architeds. " It has
earmarked for development
One
of
CSA's
nchest
never ·worked out."
of a data collection system .
By OctobCr , 1976. OED was
"Their project was no! full y co nduit s is the Natio nal.
delineated," a CSA officia l League of Cities-Conference operating 36 special impact
said, "but we approved it of Mayors . II developed a econnmic development prosystem of counseling centers. grams that have received
anyway ,"
"We have to have all of our for disadvantaged Vietnam more !11an $300 million in
money out by the end of the veterans, inlo which CSA is federal assistance .
fu nneli ng 12.3 million .
.DED estimates !hat local
fi scal year or else we mLLSt
return the balance to the Overhead runs more than Communi ty Development
Treasury," she explained. "It $617,000. of which $170,513 is Corporat ions employ 776 ·
was gelling down to the spent by CSA- just to handle people, but the businesses
they back provide 5,516 jobs.
deadline. Congress doesn 't paperwork .
CSA records s how the
like i! when ·you ha ve money
A
House
Government
Operations subcom mitt ee
lefl over, ,at the end of !he League spends $229,000 on
staff, $160,000 on consultants
cha ired by Rep. Cardiss
year ."
a nd $58,000 on travel.
Collins, D-Ill.. fi gured out
thai each job is costing
CSA spend' more than $23 Indi vidua l item s in cl ude
mi llion a year in the field of $90,000 for a computer firm in
taxpayers $18,000.
food and nut rition. Much of Detroit and another $70,000 in
"I am absolu!ely shocked,"
!ha l goes 10 groups for consulta nt services.
Ms. Collins !old goverrunent
The League gets anot her
r eports
on
nutr itio n
auditors. "! find this fi gure to
prog rams and ' 1advncacy $660,000 to operate 10 of the 27
be absolutely appalling-"
assistance" - lobb}ing - for ce nters. CSA sends an
One DED venture is a
additi onal $850,000 for
fed era l food programs.
bankrupt pool table company
Dne such group is I~ sala ries and overhead to its
acquired in 1972 after a
Washington-based Food Re- own regional offices, which
priv~te consultant warned
search
Ac ti on
Center channel the money to local
the
firm' s
fina nc ial
(FRAC) which this year got paverty agencies to run !he
projections and management
$550,000 from CSA. Th e remaining 17 centers.
.
were faulty. To date, the
CSA ' also awards r esearch
money went, in part, to help
business has lost · $295,000.
FRAC lobby Congress for grants, some of which
" Many of these areas are
expansion of the food slamp produ ce reports which
so economically depressed
prog ram a nd other food ·appear to gq nowhere after
thai we are just pouring good
programs.
they are completed.
money afler bad and getting
A FRAC lobbyist said "We
Dne grant for $8,155 was
lit!le if any return,'' said a
testi fy at hearings, meet with awarded last September to an
Comm e r ce Department
organization in Washington
member s of Congress and
official involved in economic
their aides to influence for. a study on pwr rural
development programs.
legis la t i o n , draft wome n in Appalachia .
amendments, and help with
According to CSA 's Deborah
In the last nine years, $55
speechwriting for membe rs.
Bloom , researchers ''will go
million has been poured into
"We try to get as many into !he community, find out
New
York's
Bedford ·
benefits as we can, and seek who are the co mmunity
Stuyvesant area to refurbish
to expand th ose benefits ·leaders, how many went to
aband oned housin g, save
throug h app r o priate college, the jobs . they have,
dec linin g businesses and
legislation,l ! ·he said .
and identify those women
boost employment.
who
ate
active · in
·CSA money also helped
Despite
thi s,
finance a successful FRAC organizations.''
UJ)employment is up from 6
She said the report will go
lawsuit against food sta mp
per cent in 1970 to ove r 15 per
. cuts
by
!he . Ford directl y to her and after she
cent in 1976. Vacant housing
has read il, be fed into CSA's
administration.
doublect between 1972 and
The Community Nutrition
computer .
1976 to 2,000 units. An4 more
Inst it ute go! $200,000 to
than 24 per cent of the area's
America has spent more
"develop a national stategy than $22 billion since 1964 to
businesses employing some
for Indian programs." A CSA wage what Lyndon Johnson
6.000 persons pull ed out
officia l said that amounted to called a "war on poverty, 11 a
betwee n 1969 and 1974.
.
" making co ntac~t with Indian battle. that continues to be
Almosl half the mooey .
~ ro ups .around the countryn
we nt into hous ing. But ·
fought at a cost of over $4
'111 orgHnize support for CSA billion a year. Yet more tha n
officials say rehabilitation
programs.
cos ts so muc h ' loca l
26 million Americans rema in
Some who ge~ CSA money- in poverty .
residents cannot afford lo buy
are former DEO officials or
these homes."
This is the .. second part of
grou ps like t he private ~~The Poverty Business," t he
"The more !learn about it,
Natinn a l
Center
for finding$ of a six-week UP!
the more it becomes clear to
Cmnmunity Action, In c., once investigation cen tering on the
me that it is like. tl1rowing ll
a training arm of OED . This Comm'u n it y
tablespoon qf water on a
Servi ces
year it got $750,000 - $360,000 Administration, the
fire ," Rep. John Conyers, 0fnr sa laries and oth e r governme nt 's main antiMich., declared at a hearing
overhead, plus $55,000 for poverty agency. The fir§!
on the program .
· travel.
~ ' --~The program duplicates a
part examined federal funds
The Center publishes a provided to fight poverty,
nurgber of olhers in !he Small
monthly magazine, National fi nding that a big slice went
Business Admi!listration, t~
Center Reporter, conta ini~ g not to the poor , but to a
Continued on A·:\&gt;

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Record shows Hoover controlled probe·
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B) D 1\'!D

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thi:' t"a trgury nf a nut anti tht•
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Agt.•nts pil ed Clfl thl'
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r("(._'(lflstrm•tt&gt;d Oswald's life 111

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But sc&lt;..~snnt?(l bureau hand!'.
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With

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Fr(1 111 then, Huuvl'r bfCJ(Ikt.&gt;()
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Tiw ctav after the Kennett\'

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·althn u~h

· nunor and theory. huwen:-r
nutt):
Cllt ho ugh
the~
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Or, beyond question. what

M 1 1111

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BRADFORD'S GROVE

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300 Second A venue

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s$t y 1e.s. Mohogany. Sizes 8 to 16 at

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0 ne o f th ree h an d some M
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the finest leathers. Softer, more ll
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k d D bl
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sbupp et, d etau I uh Y ' twhorb eld .
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Give her an Aigner coat! Made of .

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ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
Always a Christmas Favorite... creams, nuts,
fruits, caramels, nougats, toffeescotch,
crunches and chewy centers, dipped in the
finest dark and milk chocolate
1 lb. $3.25 2 lb. $6.45 31b. $9.65
51
15 95 8
1
b. $ ·
oz. $ · 65

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Give her Aigner gloves! That final
douch with the Aigner mark of
!excellence . Beautiful lined and un -

~ cofle~fi~~Y~f ~~tn~~egl~~oe~. ~i~:sg!~:2•

mahogany. Zip top hobo shoulder
bag $42. Snap-top tote bag $70.

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the town's largest collection of fine
leather handbags . In Aigner's
e x clusive rich signature color - ·

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GIFT IDEA NO. 3
FROM

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GIFT IDEA NO. 2
FROM

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Shop 9:30 til8 p.m.
Monday thru Saturdav

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--~~==~""""""~~~"""~~~--·

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
·

Charles Riffle, R. Ph .

Ronald Hanning , R. Ph

Mon. thru Sat. 8:~0a . m , to9p.m .
Sundav lO :JOto 1'2 :JOandsto9p.'m .

PRESCRIPTIONS

PH. 992-29SS
Friendly Service

E. Main

Pomeroy , 0 .

Open Nights Iilli

campus activities.

Miss Ely was sponsored by
Phi Sigma and is a me1m~~ r

OPEN UNTIL 9 PM

mal l frum th£' citizenry
Jumsclr , Hoover a \so took
tillll' out to tcll l•ne woman, in
writing, " l feel It necessar y
tu inf ll rlll yn u t hat t he
protcl'li un uf the president
tmd his umncd iate fa niily' ·is
the r cspunsibil it y nf t he
Secret s~rvic~ ... ..
·nw bureau \li(} k on CIA
Direct(lr Jnhn McCone, loo,
Htcusmg him of sp reading
lhe rumor Oswald had been
t~dd $6.500 to kill Kennedy
during his Mexico City 1isit.
FR I lntelligenee chief D.J .
Bren nan Jr . den ounce d
Mt'Cone in a memo to Hoover
and rceornrnendl&gt;d to the !Joss
th nt t he CIA chi ef be
ennfr ont L'd on the issue and
t:m~ht some &lt;~ r espect " £or
FB I ('apabilit ics.
Continued on page D-8

~

sored by Alpha Sigma Phi .
She js a member of Chi
Omega Alpha . She is a
member of the Rio student
senate, and is active in

of Zeta Theta Chi. She is
tr·eas urer of ZOX.
First runnerup was Bev
roster, Jackson, sponsored
by Archon and second runnerup
was
Lynnita
Newberry, Patriot , spon·
so red by Alpha Delta Epsilon.

~WNTOWN MURPHY'S STORE HOURS

mu ch

C~~J~!~~~}~EES

held in Co mmunit; Hall
Saturday night .
Weekend aetivilies will be
eoncluded tonight at9 o'clork
with th'e Edgar Winter's
White Trash roncert in Lyne
Center.
Miss Duncan was spon-

•

nwrgirHu•te scribbled April
24, 1964 .
A WI I)'. publie relations

...

~

DEC. 11-17

ternussion of last night 's Ri u
Grande Colle~e· W ilberforce
University basketball con·
test. Car[ Large, athletic
director at Rock Hill and the
late Cecil ·Jlavis were this
year 's hono~l!'e's .
The all cam pus party was

That agent was Ji.Jmes Hosty
uf the ()HIIas bureau.

'

:•ssu rant•es fr11m Sl'trd
Service Chu.~f James Hnwlf.'y

thei~ries .

Jn

And llunver persona ll y
~IHpj)t'&lt;l dovm at least _one
agt•nt qw •ted as saying it was .

.. 1 understand som f.' 'of
thern
i:lft? a lready saying the
l 'ntll·:-. :.md unp!ar~tble contrue
stuff
IS what was ne\' er killing , Dnllas Po1iee Chief
grandeur
;
a
man
whn
had
when
he
deleded
in
1959.
sptr;,n· ~ tht'll rbt:oi -...: wlw
wrlll('n
dn"•n,''
nne F'BI man J esse Curry dar ed s uggest
alread~
tned
t•
)
shr•1
t
Maj
.
But
th(&gt;y
ft1W1d
rwthm~
rt•pn~st.•nt 11 l!rnwmg nlaJflflty
said,
restgnedly,
the day ' publicly the FBI had been
Gen.
Ed
win
Walker,
a
prumiwntt(&gt;n
down.
or
overheard
nf
adult
Au1~rieun~.
nent rrght-\\ln g flgur(\
from the suspect himse lf , \ (l after the files ca me out. derelict m not warning polite
accnrdmg t11 1l plrlhln p.)I!S They quote .\1arina Oswald show IA't' Oswald hated Jii l'k
There was another reason of Oswald · s prc SL'ncc in
art• sUrt.&gt; tn rlaun. hO\\ t.I \Cl'
as ~a~ mg she cr mged when
Kennedy and meant to kill
the assassination files made Dallas - a ehnrge that
lmfatrl~ . tlwt thest• fllt.""S sho\\
Q
spellbinding reading. They f.'O ri1ged Hnove1·.
t1w F RlrmsSC'd the ft,rest fnr stw · hf'Hrd nf the KC'rmcdy him .
sh,•nung , and asked herself:
And the question of motive 11pened a window on a world
tilt' lrt.'t-'S
Cartha 1 DeLoach, a top
my
crazy
one
do
it?"
"Did
the
press
and
th
e
public
IS only one of the mysteries
Re\'tl'W nf a lithe 25.QOO..•dd
Hml'er deput;•. immediately
The~ shuwHoon)r. too. wa s
that still.linger to troubled seldom sees. They showed , iQ ins tru r ted Dullas a g~J\t
mrmos und raw held rrports
rich ani'Cdotal detail, how the Gordon Shanklin to "set
n•leased \\'t.•dnesday shuws. prechsposed to a&lt;-cept Oswald doubters.
as
u
crazed
l'Xtremist
fnHn
nati o n's mig h tiest t Curry l straight regarding
Than
ks
to
the
Iiles.
for
fnr ex~un ple. that ~1arin a
the
nut
sl'l.
e\'en
though
he
example,
the
publir
now
investigative
Coree handled U1ese allegations" and insist
Oswald had her tee th fixed
tried
sl'rupulnusl)
to
l'i1eck
the
cr
ime
of
the
century.
knows
the
contents
of
the
fpr $11 at Bayl11 r L'ntYerslty
that he issue retr~ctiora s.
possibilities
of
conspiracy
by
ashtray
in
Jack
Ruby's
ra
r
And
,
on
nearly
every
page.
"n Oct. B. 1962.
Fuming ul Cm:ry's "stupid
But, on tht' sUbjet:t nf Lee Castn•s Cuba , the Ku Klux a dozen butts . some smea red the han d of J . Edgar Hoover : st&lt;:.~tement s ." DeLoach wrote,
with lipstick - but may still A brill iant. tireless. thin- " the rBI was · Wlder no
Oswald's murder moti\·e , it Klan and others.
Al5 : 15 p.m. EST, less than Wllnder how Ruby could have skinned t}rant who wou ld responsibility tu rep&lt;-irt tu the
add~ nothtng to the puzzled
rond us1,1n the War r en fnu r hours aft&lt;'r the Da ll as ba rged right up to Oswald, ta ke m&gt; the director of the DHIIas police any indi\·idual s
Cnm rrnss inn issuf&gt;d l3 years shnoting. the FBI di rector w1h indered and un noticed. in CIA or a erilical, lelter- of subrcrsin• backl-!rnunds
was JOttmg one of his first
the bowels of the Dallas wntlllg housewife with equal
ag1 1.
progress r eport memoranda police department and shoot determination .
p ~=~-- - -~------ -""'~~ ~
" ~o nne will en•r kno w. "
on
the
case
and
sa)ing
:
htm
point
blan
k
in
the
Ho,wE'r
scattered
the
fil
es
t/1e commission said, " What
" I thoug ht very probably stomach.
with memos, and scrawhngs
passed throug h Oswald's
we
had
in
custody
the
man
The
reports
on
that
subject
in
the margins of 'Other
mind dunng the We{'k befPrE'
who
krlled
lhe
president
...
conclude.
somewhat
lamely.
peoples
' reports, giving the
~ fl \' . 22. 1963."
Ll'l'
Han·ey
Oswald
spent
that
Ruby's
success
was
just
ultimate
insider s view of
The files show the bureau
some ~' ears in Russia,
one of those things, a sec urity progress in the manh unt.
du~ up plenty to suggest
series
of
They show when J oh n
Oswald surely was the kind of although he was born in bo llix , "a
PRE-CUT TREES AVAILABLE
~
Wlfortunate coincidences." Kennedy was still slwnped in ~
man capable ll f murdering a America ... He would be in
W
Located
on
Ch
erry
Ridg
e,
tu
rn
east
at
Darwin
onto
Rt
.
as one memo put it.
the scat of his hosp ital-bound W 681 , go 4 miles to Milepost Jl , turn s9uth on grav~l road ~U
limousine and ehaos r.eigneQ \II 11 , mi.l es lo grove.
~
---~---~~---~-""!'---We now also know that
agents ·set out to int en~ew in Dallas. there was no U
WATCH FOR SIG~S
ll'!
every passenger on the Red questi on in Hoover's mind W
Hours : 10 Till Oark
~
Arrow bus that loo k Oswald who was go ing to ta ke ch arge ~ ~~ ~ ~~ ~~~~ ~~~~ ~~ ~ ~~~
to Mexico City on the of this case.
mysterious Sept . 26-{)ct. 3,
[n a m t&gt;mo timed off at 1:4:8 l~~ r~i:l':li ~~1&lt;;;:ir&gt;:Si$=!.~~r~ l;.:il&gt;:!rs:=: B:S:~~~ftt
11163 •isil , during which he p.m. EST . 18 minutes after !l
ll
cootacJed the Cuban and the shooting, he wrote the ~
~ \....... L~ ~l il~ "4» • f:U.q,llj,:«&lt;l
Soviet embassies.
very fir st entry in the FBI 11!
But we still do not know file. II said :
n
exactly why Oswald went
" [ called the atto r ney W
~
the re, or much about what he general 1Robert Ken nedy) at ~
~
did .
his home a nd adv ised him of W
~
CIA off tcials have said t he the news flash anno uncing ~
W
.
spy age ncy reco rd ed the that Ihe preside nt and Go\' . f(
Features simple triple option · with ·
phone ca lls Oswald made to John Con nall y of Texas had ~
~
compression release for easy
the So\'(et Embassy from the bee n shot in Dallas, today ..
~
W
Cuba n
Embassy
and that the first' news nash Ill
~
starting . - 16" power tip guide bar to
futilely
to·
reportedly
trying
ind
ic
at
ed
the
shot
was
~
11:
put the power to the wood. - With
f(
f(
get tra\'el visas - and ga ve believed to be fatal .
automatic or manual chain oiling
the transcript.s to the FBI.
"The attorney general ha d ~
W
pump for various cutting conditions.
They were not in the fi les. not pm ·iously been advised ~
~
Most of the other dispu tes of th is."
·
W
cent ra l t o t he vari () US
At that point. Hoover. like · ~
\II
conspiracy theories remain the rest of the nali on, was f(
U
as well - what happened to getting his information from ~
the missing third bullet the news broadCasts and t he U
11
Warren Commission believ ed Dallas police. He reeorded
~
W
Oswald ftred. a t Kennedy, fo r tater the shots may have be en ~
1
(j!
example? The memoranda fired by "a colored pe rson, " u
u
on that are confusing and tha t the weapoQ wa s a ~
·
·
~
inconclusive ,
Winchester rifle (it was a Ill
The bureau 's defenders can Mannli cher-Carca no) and fl
11!
easily argue that, if !;orne that a See ret Service agent ~
I(
que s t io n ~
rem a in had been killed (none was). ~
C A N D IE S
unanswered after this kind of
Noneth eless, although the W
W
Super E-Z ·
exhau sti ve r esear ch, then investigation at th at point 0''
~
those qu esti ons · simply was tee hnically the legal rl
~
SEE ONE TO!;) A Y
cannot be answered .
province of the Dallas poliee
u
I
u
FB I spokesmen cautioned and the Secret Ser vice, a
~--:~' ~':""'
W
th e press and the public well bulletin quickly clatt ered out ll'!
~
in advance thai this ·release to FBI 'bureaus:
U
l
would add nothing significa nt
" Immediat ely es tabli sh ~
to the findings published by whereabouts of bombing sus~
the Warren Commission in peels, all known KlaJj and ~
W
1964. They say the same hate group members, known til
ll'!
._,;;9,;;8;;,S.,;;3;;,30;,;8;;...__...,_____C:;:H:.:;E:;S;.;TE.=.;R:. ,.;,0;..... about the next 40,000 pages, radical extremists 'and an y ;
Ami

" H " - t.·~· t·r~\\ here you Jnnk

nutt's uf t-ht• fatal CUJIShillS.
That he L'llU!d and dtd

dtnnc m

(T IIlllllal Ml!&gt;~'l'l H lth ~itS.C

lU',I.~t.·d

t&gt;IWfi.!IPS , l'11utd and dtd assert
Pl'f~lntil ftlllltnanli nf tlw

Ill\ t'Sl!l!~ttllln mto
1\t'nncd~ 's munlt'r

ranadi.l. Eurppt~

That lw fusSt'\l at t ht.·m.
tht.•m 1111. r('jeett.""d tht'lr
l' \l'll .. l""~. l'PITt'dt""tf lht;,•tr Spt""l•
hng,
ralied
at
the1r
dt'tr:1ctors. and ll'ft h1s
Pt' fSnnal mark - th(' letter

ttw pt&gt;ak 11f hts aWt'.stl ll lt'
pm~ l:'r
and ~_I S t v undtn~

\\a~

ft~v. \\t~t•ks

bt&gt;furt• Lht•
nai l.~-. JllUJ'\It•r Or hl l W .J;u:k
Hub~ t\l&lt;tllal!t.'(l tt l k1ll tht&gt;
" ~· rld ' !-.
tllfl.-.;t
fi:nnuu!&lt;

~mm r~~ r IIIHllth.:i .:~nd month~.

wHit•r

at

a

CJI\

Dalla:; hi

~h' \lt.'n.

cktall Hf tht'

(b\\alil

tL.I~ "· rnu!)(.·hng rl\ als asHk
t'&lt;IS.ll~ . that h~..· l'oUld and dtd
..,t•rul hundrt\b 11f a~t'nt~ far

~AG\'

it\

who nHght be

FOR YOUR
SHOPPING

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
NOVEMBER
Mon .
28
9: 30-9

Sun .
27
1-6

DECEMBER

Tues .
29
9: 30-9

Wed .
30
9: 30-9

Thur s.
1
9 : 30-9

Fri .
2
9: 30-9

Sat.
3
9: 30-9
Sat.
10
9: 30-9

Sun.
4
1-6

Mon .
5
9: 30·9

Tues .
6
9: 30·9

Wed.
7
9: 30-9

Thur s .
9: 30-9

Fri .
9
9: 30-9

Sun.
1-6

Mon.
12
9:30-9

Tues.
13
9: 30-9

Wed.
14
9 : 30-9

Thurs .
15
9: 30-9

Fri .
16
9: 30-9

Sat.
17
9:30-9

Mary Ely

Sun.
18
1-6

Mon .
19
-9 :30-9

Tues.
20
9: 30-9

Wed.
21
9:30-9

Thurs .
22
9: 30-9

Fri .
23
9:30 -9

Sat.
24
9:30-5

Pi Sigrua

Christmas

11

. Sandy Dtincan
Alpha Sigma Phi

CONVENIENCE

8

Rio coeds share honors
RIO GRANDE - For th e
· first time ever in the history
of the event . two Rio Gran de
College coeds today shared
homecomin g queen honors.
Saturday evening, during
the halftime interm ission of
the Rio Grande RedwomenCedarville basketball ga me
in l.y ne Cen ter. Miss Sandy

Dunca n, Jackson, and Miss
Mary Ely , Clev eland , were
crowned 1977 co-homecoming
qu eens by Doug Walters of
Rio's st udent programming
board.
It was part of several
weekend events as Ri o
Grande College-Community
Co l l ege ce lebrated

homecoming with a bon fire
and pep rally Friday night,
dances and parties by various
college fraternity
and
sor ority groups Saturday
night .
Other activities included
the annual Hall·of-Fame
Induct ton ceremony , held
durin g the halftime in -.

County.schools expecting
$600,000 to · start '78 with
By Dale Rothgeb
sources, $17,050 from the
GALLIPOLI S - Gallia sales of lunches, milk and
County 's Local Boa rd of ~rejlkf a&gt;ts. and $13,000 from
Education expe cts to have a the Disadvantaged Depen$600,000 carry-&lt;Jve r Dec .. 31 dent Pupil Program lund.
according to a fin a ncial
Receipts totaled $110,146.83
• report given Saturday during an d expe ndHures . wer e
• the
Decem ber
boa rd $737,892.43.
·meeting.
In this month 's bills was
Mrs. Na omi Beman, board one for $ll,376.25 to Scioto
clerk. reviewing the distr ict' s Mechanical Contractors for
finandal status, estimated plumbing and heating lm:· that more than · $600,000 will provel,Tients at Kyger Creek,
.'.' be availabl e to operate the · Cadmus and Bidwell-Porter
" sch ools th e first three months Schools. Th e payment was
.. in 1978.
approved following inThat fi gure was expected to spection of the work.
be higher because the boa rd
The board, following inmust pay two overdue bills to spection of its reeent contract
the
Ohio
Teach ers' awarded for ·paving work at
Retirement System.
the county 's II b~ildin gs and
During November, the construction of tennis courts
board' ~
General Fund at the lour high schools,
•· received $59,937.46 in per- refused to make full payment
. sonal property taxes, $17,057 to the A&amp;S Construction
in interest on Certificates of Company of Piketon due. to
Deposit, $2,344 .24 from other some alleged flaws in both
)

New scoreboards
will tally votes
By J.R. KIMMINS
which maintains vote tally
COLUMBUS (UP[)
systems in about 30 slates,
• When Ohio_House members told Sommer it needed three
return to ColumbUs Jan. 3, weeks of peace and quiet in
they'll have a new electronic the Ohio House' to put in the
scoreboard.
new system and test it.
Now being insta lled in the
With floor sessions each
99•llember House chamber month since June, the time
are two, new display boards could only be set aside .this
costing $15,000 that record month .
Work
began
" earh members' vote and the 1 i m m e d i a t e I y u p o n
total after each roll call.
adj ournment
of
the
The voting switch on each Legislature last Wednesday.
Th e 33-member Ohio
members' desk is also bein g
replaced with a black box Sena te does not have such a
• containin g a r ed " nea " system. The roll is called by a
button, a gree n "yea" button clerk and the votes are tallied
• and a black button to light a on paper - something that
'· bulb a nd summ on a happened 588 times during
le gisla tive pa ge via a the 136 floor sessions in 1976.
• separate board in the rear of
Because of the size of the
' the chamber.
House, the votes are taken by
All of this is being installed th e electr onic system . A
by International Roll-Call · written record is punched out
'·• Systems, lnr; ., of Richmond , automatically by the clerk for
' Va ., a 40-year old firm which later inclusion in the House
;;; does nothing but build, install Journal.
·, • and mainta in vote-tally
The display boards will be
systems
for
state. the same size, but f~nder
' legislatw;es, city councils and than the ones lawmakers
" the United Nations General used durin g the fir st year of
:, Assembly in New York.
the 112th General Assembly.
Updating the electronics
The red and green lights
' with " solid-stale" modules in showing the " yeas" and
•· Ohio's 24-year old vot~ tally "neas" will . be smaller and
system in the House is being show up to the left of the
, done at no cost to the legislator.s' name. The names
·. Legislature - although the will continue to be' listed in
two new display boards will alphabetical order, but will
, cost $15,000 - and the be illuminated from the rear
·~ Legislatur e's annual nn a black, plastic sheet.
' maintenan ce contract with
The particular action the
:· the Virginia firm will remain la~vmak er s' will be voting on
~. at $7,000.
will still be designated at the
:·: " I think it 's a good deal ," top of the display · board, but
.- said
House
Exe cutive will show up in a much more
; ' Secretary J oe Sommer. readable form, similar to the
., "Because of th e age of the old inlorma tion flashed on
' system, it's better to replaee football
and, baseball
• · it than suffer a breakdown." sc oreboards a t a sports
The Virgini a com pa ny, stadium.
'1

projects.
During a rather routine
session the board, followin g a
brief discussion, agreed to
sell the old Eno Building to
the Morga n Twp. trustees lor
$1 providing a reverter clause
is in the deed. The building is
to be used for citmmunity
purposes.
Principal Walter Stowers of
North Gallia suggested the
two acres ofland be used for
a new bus garage between
North Gallia and Kyger .
Creek
High
Schools.
However, his suggestion was
ignored.
The board also employed
Saundra Koby , Ruth M.
Wood, Stephen D. Saunders
and Rita Fern Taylor as
substitute teachers on a 3-1
vote. Stout voted no . He als.o
opposed the reemployment of
Anna L. Salyers, Rt. 2,
Patriot, as a regular bus
driver.
Shar~ Yates, Rio Grande,
an instructor at. Rio Grande
College, was .hired as a parttime Title I coordinator at a
salary not to exceed $5,000.
In other action, the board
approved a resolution paying
transportation costs of four
students to the Ohio School
for the Blind.
- Hired Robert A. Powell
as a substitute bus driver and
granted supplemental contracts to Eleanor Norris, Pep
Club, Hannan Traee High
School and Cody Boothe,
freshman basketball coach at
Hannan Trace.
- Accepted resignations of
Mrs. Deborah L. Duffy, a
Bidwell-Porter teacher, and
Beulah Mae Boster, a substitute cook.
- Tabled resolutions for
the new board on substitute
pay rates for non-certificated
personnel and employment of
a part time custodian · at
Centerville School.
- Authorized clerk Mrs.
Naomi Beman to advertise
for bids on the sale of 16 used
school buses.
- Agreed to let Su)lerin·
tendent Tom Hairston decide
• a policy for granting of leave
'of absences for two teachers.
- Employed Marvin H.
Spencer as an attendance
officer for the remainder of
the school year at $3,000 per
year plus 14 cents per mlle.
Spencer will enforce the Ohio
eompulsory attendance law,
making court appearances
when necessary, ham·e
visitations and working with
the Gallia County Juvenile
·
Court and case workers.
It was the last regular
meeting for board members
Bruce S. Stout of · Rt. I,
Bidwell, and WilHam Carter,
Patriot, who were defeated in
their bids fo• reelection last
month .

PLAYER

AM/FM STEREO
IADINHOIIO

AR

1-TncllPLAYEI

••

SAVE $13

Full slza BSR turntable
with -45 RPM adapter. 2
speakers. Volume, lone,
balance controls. Dusf
cover. Headphone jack .

MODEL
4012

Lit•

Hasbro Brite

4 POSITION

REGUlAR

ADJUSTABLE
HEIGHT

ttl

\g,94

)!)

777

)r•e•c,;leliiOp•i•ct•u•rtts thot light up!
Console. peg plote, pegs , pictur~s·,
25W bulb (extra). Easy assembly .

.

Santa suggests "Iii sport"

.

lllllftiDfll61\1
PORTABU 8-TRACK

TAPE PLAYER

indoor .basketball game

'999

-ou~R:t

1
. -

;~~E

Take it anywhere with three-way power .

Adjustable pole is over 5' lall and has a
weighted
base.
The s oft
foam
"basketball" is 6'14 ' diamete r ... s afe for
indoor play .
SOLD UNASSEMBLED
~

HARDWOOD I.
PLANT ~
.STAND

MODEl

on

Ba"ery (edro), AC or cor/boot adopters
(both included). Built-in hondle.

�•

• • •

•

Results
of vote ·

Abuse
in Navy
is noted

PLENTY
•,

•

g~ven

OF FREE
PARKING

WASHINGTON iU PI I

t;ALI.IPOIJS
Hesults uf
the ballot count of the Galha
Cnuruy ASCS C o rnmunlt~

Cimtmtttrcrnrn vote on
l)N~ cmbr r i at the ASCS

OPEN DAILY

10 to 9

PRICES IN EFFEO SUN., MON., 11 &amp; 12 WHIU QUANTITIES LAST

SUND,Y

12 to 8

(\lllnt \ Office wcrr an nnuncfd Saturcfa~
The ftr~t man listed ts
rhatrntan. th{' second name ts
\'I Ce chatrma n and the thtrd

OPENS

'

OPEN DAILY

10 to 9
SUNDAY

PRICES IN EFFEO SUN. &amp; MON., DEC. 11, 12, WHIU QUANTITIES LAST

12 to 8

AY 12108

pa tlvrn

}

letter to Navy
W. Graham
Cla\·tor released Friday ,
HcP. Thomas Downey, DN.Y., dct;.ailcd a numb&lt;'r of
in
()&lt;:tuber 1975, in which a

D

scni 11r L"hicf petty j1ffi eer
"based his defen se at a cu urt·
mCJrtial f 111' the mistreatment
nf recruits un his cnntenti.on
that ·what he did w 'a s
!'i tar'ldarcl prth.: tice and , to the
best 11f his knowl crlgc,
l·qndoncd by offi ce r s."
He(.Tuits pften are cmwded
into winciH w\ess classronms
where the temperatur e has
r ea ched 108 degrees. Downey
said, while the N:wy says it
ha ~
no fu nds f nr ai r
Cl llld iti' J!ling.

0 0

GREEN FI ELD - PERRY
Gerald ·· Jefr ' Pope.

Willi am "B tll '' Ca rter and

Ra\' Jeffe rs.
dUY AN - Garret Ca mpbelL Ross Fulks and Stanley
Montgomery .
Htl:-.:TJNGTOJ\- MORGAN
- Jerry Dee!. Roger Dee!
and Clyde Donahue.
OH IO - Frank Mills Ill.
Donald Ours and Randall
" Mac k'' Wallace.
RACCOON
Jam es
Howa rd. Willard Call and
Tom Vanco.
1 SPR INGF IELD - Robert
L. Green, Fred Taylor and
Homer Hill. Jr.
WALNUT - Ellis Thornton. Paul G. Pope and Russell
:'Iotter.

ALL
BOXED
PYREX

BAKE-A-ROUND

EVEREADY "(" OR "D" SIZE

BATTERIES

Police said they went to
F11 rk er ·s Cafe wh en th e
nwner called .early Saturda y
to report his. wife missin g.
Th e · ot her woman wa s
beli eved to be a ca fe
employee.

OFF

out ."

said

su pervis 0r

the

nurs in g

at

Marion

thing and zippered accessory pocket.
Umbrella strop and detochobfe travel
hood.

88

:··•Ung

d~ughter was killed

v.tule he and h1s partner were
reCCJ\·enng ·a st(J\cn pi ckup

truck. The truck had str.pped
ond the driver jumped nu t ,
tr) 1n~ tc• escape. The partner
g(;l \'e chase. at the same time
Summers was

•

hit \ by _.a

passing ,·ehicle.
He die(.! (J f his injuries etJrly
Saturcl~y . His fell nw nff icers
have alread\· , ra'i sed Sl ,500
itnd' h(Jf.H' to );p ahlr to 11 ffPI"'~· ·
$ 5.001~$1 0.000 rowan!.

HECK'S REG.
149.88
HARDWARE DEPT.

SIUI1SIB'T.

DAZEY
HECK'S REG. 3.99 GAL
LIMIT 2

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$39.96

HECK'S
. REG.

JEWELRY DEPT.
JEWELIY
DEPT.

Democr a ti c

WITH CALROD UNIT

COSMETIC DEPT.

•

NAIIIJWAilE IJIIIT.

JEWII.IY DEPT.

P.P.O.
AUT.OMATIC

DEODORANT

$

J

TRANSMSSION

24

HECK'S REG. $1.59

tafAL IIC•t.

RIYAL

ICE CRUSHER
M avnd~ of t lo!f,..rJ" ~
t.,~ 1 ta roo ,"~
~u r ' R,~of"l Ju~lloh 1/o,. lod, flop 11'11! ~"" • !Ctr
unrl &lt;'"'~" n wkole h oy o l &lt;uhe~ ,., 30

'"rronrh

Hadf's Reg . Sl6 .96

HECK'SAIG.
$2.99

HECK'S REG. 58' QT •

Nationa l

Crime experts
..-.
w.ill form up
in think .tank ...

HECK'S REG. $13.96
5032

Seattle three .and Denv er one,
wit h Honolulu eliminated .
Memphi s off ered _th e
Demo cra tic
committe es
about $150 ,000 in mnney ami
serv ices to get the eo n·
vention. The bid inliudt•d
$75 ,00 0 in cash to the
Committee to help defray the
cost of the convention.

on enl ire meal or ju~t worm coffee . Perfec: t· lor d::.~rm ,
coHa9e, trci.ler, rec: roomS, polio~ a nd partie.. . They hove the
JOIT'II! type he-ating elemenh used m fulls in range ~. yet they're
'-0 portable you (on take them anywhere.

HECK'S REG. 99'

WASifl NGTON . I UPI I Memphis, Tenn., Friday was
chosen as the site or the
Democra ts' 1978 midt erm
convention. Memphi s ueal
out Seattle . Denv e r and
Honolulu for the convention
that will be held in December
1978. The Democra ts will
have 1,627 delega tes at their
second m idterm conference.
It took the party's 10me mber sit e select ion
committee two ballots to pick
Memphis. On the first ballot.
Mem phis go t four votes,
Seattle three, Denver two and
Honol ulu one . On the second ,

Memphis got six vOtes,

Co~

RIGHT GUARD

$1.38

$9''

strap .

HOTPLATE

50Z.

$109

J~&gt;.;{ -

SET

~~

REG.

~

WITH BUILT-Ill COIIDEIISER MIKE
• Records with bu ilt· in co ndenser micropho ne e Opercrteo;.
on batteries or A( house (Urrenf witho u t on adopter e Play s
and rec ord s tope ca sse ttes e Deluxe keyboord controls for
Rew ind , Ploy, Fmt .Forwor d, Stop , Ejec t and Recnr d with safety
inte rloc k e Automatic Re&lt;or ding level e Auto Stop e Jac ks
fo r microphone and ea rphone e Includes earphone, hand

SINGLE BURNER

$224

HECK'S REG. 1.88
COSMETIC DEPT.

HECK'S

I,I

CASSETTE RECORDER

MUNSEY

1

BRYLCREEM
.

·. '

HECK'S REG.
1
13.99

BIRD SEED--

BRUT 33 SETS

•I

SEAL-A-MEAL

5POUND

.,o.

- :-:-1

r--::.-;;~2
' •, \..'. ''·· \.TIJ._'_ __

S6 .99

CONDITIONER

SAM-1

"

. '.

1

$5~.~~

6 ONLY
SOUNDESIGN

---

bu t we understand it was due
to a heart attock, " an aide to
Downey ::;a id .
The
Navy
had
no
in11nediate comment .
D(lwney earlier chaq";ed
another recruit at Sa n Die go,
Gr11·don Fi s he r , died i n
Sept embe r 1975 af te r a
tr ~inin g exen;ise ··beca use
medica I personne I at the San
Diego ba se beli eved the
rccr ui.t was fakinH his
illness." He said the Navy is
" re-evaulatin g an ea rli er
investi gati on of the death."

Memphis will
host Democrats

'·

GALLON

HAIR

632

___

ANTI-FREEZE

cream.

$1888
HECK'S RIG. $25.99

...

ROMAN BRIO TRAVEL KIT

ALBERTO
BALSAM

Podded weot~er~o l , bo• ed cor·
Mr con~trvction, reinfot(ed ~treu
poi nt\, eock Ope"' fully f or airing
ond motes with onot ~er bog in1o
dol..!ble bog

88

NAIIDWAIE DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPARTMENT

89&lt;

SLEEPING
BAC:

$24 .96

HECK'S REG. $3.99

DOWGUARD

HECK'S REG. 126.22

TOOTHPASTE

WASHABLE

Hec k' s Reg .

10" ELEC. CHAIN SAW

-

COLGATE

LEMAN
3 -LB.

~ur r ;11q ~rla1 , r Capt. Car l I:.
Sulrl! OI;f~.
TI1e 3 1·\ ~ar .. •ld father 11f a

CORELLE&lt;IDDINNERWARE SET

Colga~e·~

infnr ma tion because of the

seekin g d(matinns towa rd a
reward t11 be uff ered. for
inf nrmatinn nn the fatal hit·

s

'

- . . " "\

-

been named Mark Jeffr ey
and Matth ew J ason Myers,
but would nnt r elease fur the r

IDOl, Ohw I UPI) - The
lndi Police Departmen t is

20PIECE

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

A Ch ildren 's Hos pita l
nfficiHl said the ' l\'l:ins had

Offer reward
for cop killer

$54 .66

Heck 's

COIININGWARE "

HECK'S REG. '6.99

70L
HECK'S REG. $35 •88

" 1 troo l~l]o w••'

HECK 'S
RIG.
$17.11

'3366

Gene r al.

parent 's request .

cord

HEARTH BROOM

4 ONLY

Deluxe suspens1on harness. large double
zippered boll pocket. Full lengt h clO-

"The Navy reported the
death as due to pneumonia

, e~ 1 ~ l o nl hOV~"'1fl , 6" I" c r •J n•lodOJ

VINING

CASTLE

GOLF BAG

learned fr om a ''source."

o,-"o'"'( .,, o~o .. l• 1• '"\) ,1v p~ b• eo~~

NAIIDWARIDIPT.

$ 99

Michael Bruce l:lrandon, 21,
Missouri Valley, lnwa,~d i ed
on Aug. 31, 1972 after a
disc iplinary actir"Jn was take n
against him , Dnwney said he

I"" O • I ·J~"'g lh" wo tlrf; l·r;l &lt;Juuhl.,
..,wlpterl ho.mch g,mie&lt; F . dv~""
lecot ur t!~ om lude cog bllli d11&gt;J:
:iv~e, \1• .., , 11,." lro or&lt; C •!! O~&lt;I du••lb&gt;I• Tt

l.gt. It turn' oui o higl-t.wolum~~ of Circula ted heat with
inttont h.a elemer1h ond fo r( td (irtulotion , fOI" t~le
or.m where tatro heot i1 netdld. The heater leO'urel o
wide rorJOI ca~'omal i( !htiiMIICII lo moinloin the lem~o ·
lure wl«tc-d 1-'i('lgerproof 9r1lle . 8v1lt-on hP'ower ,ofety
IWif(l\ ,

ASSORTED
HOUSE PLANTS

HECK'S REG. 681

Siamese twins
given transfer
COLUMBUS (UPII - Siamese twin boys were trans·
ferred from Marion General
Hos pital to Colwnbus' Children's Hospital late Friday .
' ' T he paren ts ·reqU ested
that no information be let

ELEORIC HEA nR

~ Po rtobk!o ~im l 1ne Heater i1 o reol 'poc:e ~ m·er
-only U l~ " IOflQ, 10'' h1gh ond 8" deep in dud 1ng the

ftve yearS &lt;:~ go .

Thi'

18" TO 24"

39!G.

-supermax2
styler I dryer

1320WAn

HECK'S
REG .
$9.99

The

been shot with a .22-ca liber

Gillette

McGRAW EDISON

Watch the b~od bal.inQ in the round PYREX' brand, heat·
reY'!itc nt gla~1 tube. E-..ry klof brown' evenly every time
Owon-oroof rodt to ~. corry ond store tht tube. E05y
step-b,o ·step instructtQm, dllicio•.n rec ipe-,, e&lt;:ny U\oe ~d
cafe inforiT'Citlon 1n the cc»orful pOster - pretty enovg~ to
ho"Q in
k1khen! Uw your own y1P051 breod rf'CI ~S or
l•or,on d &gt;"9 &gt; from the h o1en toodcounter.

TWIN PACK

But the Navy "could find
funds tn automatically water
the . officer's golf course,"
Downey said.
He said he had information
CJ recruit was "exercised tn
death " at the Navy 's Son
Die ~o, Ca lif., trainin g center ·

CHRISTMAS

BREAD BAKER

These comm unity com-

gun.

us k e d

i nvcstiK&lt;:~ti(l n of an indd &lt;!nt

Niday and :\oel Masste.

!'EWAHK . Ohio IU P1 1 fr nzen bod ies nf t wo
women, both shnt through the
head, were found Saturday
mnrmng on the back por Ch or
a downtown cafe.
P o li ce
would
.nnt
immediate ly identify the
\ictims, but said they had

abu ~cs.

D r' w n c y

Collins.
.GA LLIPOLIS- GREEN Harry Pitchford. Victor J.

Two women 's
bodies foWid

a

a l!cgccl

" Dtck '' Cremeens and Jll C' E .

mitteemen will hold a co unty
convention on Monday , Dec.
19 at 10 a.m. in the Jackson
Pr odu ct ion Credit Assn .
basement. Upper River Rd .,
Gallipol is. to elect one
memb er to t he co unty
con l. mittee, for a thr ee year
term . The conventi on is open
to the pu bli c.

re&lt;:r\nt &lt;-lbust• HlCJY

Scnl'tai·)'~

is R regulAr member of the
committee :

-

11f

c:~nd a scrvin•·voi idr
ul\'C~tig&lt;.ltHIIl ma y be needed.

eX I/'it

In

OPEN SUNDAY 12T08 .

AODISON - CHt.SH!Ht.
Hay Hughes. T. F .
Burleson and Claude Burnett.
CLA Y - HAR RISO:-.:
Harold Saunders. J . F:.

A

('\ting the
lh..'~a th~ nf lW11 ;"-;m;y rec ruits,
has t11ld Navy 11ffidals a
I'IIOJ.ti'CSSIIlt.lll,

PITTSBURGH rUPII - A
panel of crime e•perts has
been form ed to help
Alleg heny Count y _ poli ce
solve more thart two do,en
puzzling killings in the area .
The " think tank," including
biate Bureau or Olrrections
psychologist Alan Pa ss and
three police oificia ls, was
created after county comm iss ioner s threat e n e Q a
shakeup if progress was not
made in the probe.
111e panel started work
F'tiday.
Til e 27 ktllings occt•rred in
th e
adjoi n1ng
llea•: e, ,
Allegheny, Washington a11d
Weetmoreland Co unty areas
within the past 20 months.

Most invo lved young women,
.or t h eir male companions,
and three in volved appa rent.
abductions.

I

TRAPPED RY FIRE
BAY CITY , Mi ch. rUPI IFir e t rapped numerous
resid e nts in a d ownt o wn

apa rtm ent -hotel com plex
ea rly Saturday. At lea st two
persons ·" ·ere injured .

,\ lt: ~r~t· ! r .S o f the Warsaw
pa ct , the Commumst mutualf!!fill'i.~ defen se organization , are the
Soviet Union, East Germany,
~~ Poland .
Czechoslovakia,
Hu ngar y. Romania and
1
Bulgaria .

�•

A-ll- The Sunday Ttmes-&amp;nhnel. Sunday. Dt&gt;c. 11 . 1977

A·9- The Sunday Tunes.SCuttud. Sumlay, Oc•·· 11 . 1977

Dog food stolen
from Meigs pound

POWELL'S

Sha dy Cove , below Mid·
dl eport . The btcyc le was
described as a Huffy, 2ti".
light blue in color.
The Swan famih• now lives
in Gallipoli s, but· still has a
number of items stored in its
house on Shady Cove Road .
Both int·idents are under
investigation .

POMER OY
Ke tt h
Woods , Meigs Cn unty Do ~
Warden reported to the office
of Sheriff J a mes Proffitt
Saturday that the dog pound
had been entered and dog
food st olen .
In ot)ler matters. deputies
are investiga ting the theft of
a liJ.speed bicycle from the
Freda Swan res idrn cc ,m

nine-count convil1ion on Jan.
10.
Standefer. Gulf's head of
tax administra tion, was

••

convicted of approving more
oor se; Sharon Roseberry,. history registrar, and Jan
:Judge, clinic C£10rdinator . Members of the Meigs County
Retired Senior Citizens Volunteer Prograun work at the
monthl' clinics assisting visitors in various capacities.

TI!ESE KEY WORKERS OF TilE MEIGS County
Cervical Cancer Clinic hold a consultation on records at
the fine t977 cl inic held Wednesday at Hea th United
Methodist Church in Middleport. From the left ure Mary
Myers, RN, clinic director; Wanda Theiss, RN . clin ic

a now-retired IRS suoervisor.

women handed do~n the ·
The
j ury
accepted
\•erdict following five hours of prosecutor Craig McKay 's
deliberotions. U. S. District contention that Standefer
J udge
William
Knox approved the gratuities to
scheduled sentencjng on the influence t he IRS audits.

•

USDA CHOICE

1~ rBEAUTIFU~
Centerpiece
~

~v~:R..... ~·;~ 109

,...

~· .

... ·;

it,

~THE CHRISTMAS FLOWER!

WWe have a good selection . Let us design a

t

cL

t:: beautiful setting for your holiday table .
~
GRAVE BLANKETS&amp; WRE,ATHS

~A sincere.thank

~.J,l\

DR . E . S . VILLENEUVA, assisted by
Ferndora Story , RN .• volunteer nurse.
a patient at the final 1977 Meigs Cervical Cancer Clinic held Wednesdav at Heath
United Methodist Church in Middleport.
.
·

e~amine

ORDER NOWI ,

W

you to all the nice people

who _attended our Christmas open
Thanks!

~

hou~e

APPEAL COMING
COVINGTON,Ky.JUPI)An attorney representing
0
relatives of victims of the ...
Beverly Hills Supper Club
fire has aMoUnced he Wi)l
.appeal a lower court ruling
Mrs . Millard Vanmeter
which dismissed the Com·
By JAN Jl!DGE
There
is
a
pelvic
tl!
Phone 992·2039
We accept all major credit cards &amp;
106 ·Butternut Ave .
monwealth of Kentucky as a
Meigs Cancer
examination at the free
u Phone 992. 5721 w~re flowers everywhere.
Pomeroy, Ohio
defendant
in . lawsuits
Cllillc Coordinator
clinic. After the ·instrUment is
stemming from the tragic
~-~~~~~=~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~
POMEROY - The Meigs
removed the do&lt;:tor will do
May 28 fire at the nig~tclub.
County Cervical Canc'e r
the following:
Clinic screened 604 women
the relationship
.-~f""g::l ~~:o:y,o,&lt;""' ,.,...,...,.,. ~""'--~-- ""'""'""' - - - -"'"'""'""'""'""'
~~ ~-""' ""''t fr om July I, 1976 to June 30, of !-theCheck
female organs to each
1977.
other.
All Meigs County and local
2-Check the size and
·tri-state area women from
location
of these organs.
~ ages 16 and older are en·
3-Check for any Iwnps,
couraged to take advantage unusual tenderness, bleeding,
w of this completely free ser· discharge or open sores.
vice . At pr ese nt , income
These checks should not be
status has no bearing on painful or bother you. You
eligibility for this free ser·
may
be
slightly
un·
vice. ·The clinic will be held
comfortable for a few
w once each month through minutes though.
July, 1978. Each month the
Following
your
clinic date and time will be examlnatiop a staff member
published in the newspaper .
will talk to you about your
Your visit to this cancer physical examination. She
clinic will cover routine will answer any questions you
checks of blood pressure,
'11. height and weight and urine may have. In a couple of
weeks, you will be notified of
for sugar and protein. The
the results of the "Pap" test.
'11. doctor will examine your
Remember, whether you
bi-easts for tenderness, lumps have regular periods or no
and discharges. A small
DRAWINGS FOR GIFT
'11. instrwnent will be placed in longer have periods, you
should have a "Pap" test
your birth canal to help t he eyery year.
?1
CERTIFICATES EVERY DAY
doctor see inside. A smooth
POMEROY 1977
We are glad to serve you
stick will be used to get some and to help you stay healthy.
?1
THRU DECEMBER 24TH
fluid and castoff cells from
the womb and birth canal.
'11 This " Pap" test can detect
'11. possible cancer before
symptoms appear when it is
•
more easily cured.
ll1

W-

~~

·poMEROY FLOWER SHOP

rprl•
state
are&gt;O
.J. ' .

w

'

•
seroed by c 1•znzc

--1&lt;:&lt;

~

WHAT'S IN STORE?

i1

w

~

SHOP EARLYI

GOLD STAR
CHRISTMAS
GIVE-AWAY

*
**
**
* **
*

w

PRIZES

'6.

- - --

1 DRAWING

'11
'11.

AT GOLD STAR STORES

tl!

;

*.*.;•*
* ** *

** * **

SPON~RS

!f
I
tl
II:

tl

M

~-

.

'iJ.

ii
ii
tl!
f.l

tl!

M

Sears
Fabric Shop·
Ben Franklt'n Store

No purchase necessary . Tickets are ·Free.
Need not be present to win •.Winners will be .

r

Nelons Drug Store
K &amp; C Jewelers
Crow~ Family Resta ura nt
G &amp; J Auto Parts
Stifflers
C:hapm•n Shoes
.
New York Clothtng
~e~:r~nynFiower Shop

~:~~~e;cy

notified .

&amp; =-

J

,

~ONTRIDUTORS

Lohse

FranciS Florist

.. Simons Pick-A. Palr .
Excelsior Oil Co.
Pomerov National Bank
Hartley SKoes tnc .
The Kiddie Shoppe

.._

It'6.

1.1

~

~

7l

Ewing Funeral Home
Teaford Realty
Reuter-Brogan Insurance
Royal Crown BoHling
Dale Warner Insurance
Cleland Realty
Karr &amp; Van Zandt Motor Sales
farmif\'rs Bank
Athen$ County savings &amp; Loan
Pomeroy Motor C:ompanv
Kingsbury Home Sales &amp; Service Inc.
K 1 All
Y e Mullen
Don
on
Robinson'S Laundry &amp; Dry Cleaning
J&amp; R Sport Shop
Smith Nelson Motors

Moores Store
Krogers
landmark

Marguerites Shoes ·
Goesslers Jewelry
Elberfelds
Powells Super V•lu

~

CASH

•

1

6.l

..

j

"'

oz.

WASHINGTON {UP!)
The battle over whether to
rename Mount McKinley its
lndtan name of Denalt " great one" - at first in·
n volved · only the U. S.
08
Geological Survey's Board of
Geographic 'Names. Now It
has extended to Congress.
MIKE SWIGER
Rep. Ralph Regula, R·
99H155
Ohio, whose district includes
. 149 S. Third St.
the fonner president's home,
Middleport, 0 .
has introduced a resolution to
retain the mountain's present
name in perpetuity 11 3S a
tribute to the service of
William McKinley."
Legend has it a prospector
on his way down from the
mountain in 1896 learned
McKinley had received the
Republican nomination for
president and named the
mountain after him.
.
S ·
ee me lor State Farm
A spokesman for the board
St'ngle pre·mt'um
said it usually puts off a vote
on a name change if
d!Sa
' b'l'
1 Jly income ins~rance.
congressiona l action Is
pending. The resolution has
Like a good
been referred to the House
,,
ne••hbor, .
Interior Committee.
...-•
The 20,320·foot peak Is
Stat£ Fann
is there .
I U• • I'&lt; C '·
located about midway be·
tween
Anchorage
and
!&gt;\&lt;'~' 1 "' ,. , • • .011~ I ~ ''--•' ~ ' •
"·• ··
Fairbanks
in
Mount
McKinley National Park.

"When you're sick
Or hurt and can't
work, your car
,
paymeotSd t StOp.

WINTER KILL

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Ohio Valley Plumbing
Davis Insurance
Walter Grueser

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TREET ·

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~

We have pictured a few
r ecipients of this award (to be
presented soon) the past few
weeks , ·and you will see
others in the future as part of
this column.
Now then, if any of you
know or someone whd should
be told "about" in this col·
wnn please call me.
I know there arc others
who do a lot for animals, but
do it V(ithout notoriety and
people like t his should be
recog nize d. We h ear too
much abo ut those who en·
dorse cru e lty and t hink

~- to a standing pos~tion by the pre{:Jsing of a button and then

79~ .

with that ·•·ht.ld . The ch ild
IJ\(:I tures a more }.lentlc' and
loving pNsnn as a result . So,
parent , you know what kind
yuu a rc , ynu know what kind
your child is; you•make the
dl'&lt;' isim, that will not end up
hurting so me speechless,
lu.&gt; lpless :Jnimal. but instead
provide it ¥-'ith a chance fur: &lt;1
happy life. cxa ttly as you
wi sh for your child.
F'ull o win~
:Jre
the
animals available this week
\;ia the Humane Soc iet y
Ad opt ion and Careline Ser·
vice tv a good home:
Heagle, female, nice dug
992-3260, Beagle, ma le, well
eared for 992·3361 . German
Shepherd , male, 4 mo. uld
9'J2·3367. Mixed breed bla ck
and whit e fema le young, very
pretty . ca ll 742·3090 between
lO a. m and noon. Spitz·Co llie.
young. nice look ing 742-2231,
mixed breed, male, gulden
brown and wh ite with fluffy
ta il. 2 yrs. old. outside, quiet
dog 992·2297 . Coo nhound ,
female . 1 yr . old , nice
disposition 949·2693. Mixed
breed, nice dog but will not go
to a man 992·5717 . Labrador . 1
yr. old female 992·3165 . Mixed
Continued on page D-8

see .

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DECEMBER 23

*•.._
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$399
.

10 LB.,

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A Christmas Gift
the Whole Family Will Love-

available to a good home
within the next fe&gt;V da ys. If
interested , call me at 992·
temporarily unt il we can 7680. We have to line up
loca te a good home, please decent homes with people
call our president. Mrs . who have fenced in pa st ure
Fisher at 992·5 42i , any land and shelte r to include
eveni ng or Sunday. We keep hay and grain for proper diet.
animals at least a fu ll week One or a ll are available as
during which t imc it is ad- they a re presently ruMing at
vertised in this co lumn 1 in the la rge, and as you all know.
Adoption and Car eline Ser· this is not a llowed in Ohio .
Selective Humanitarian :
,-ice . and those Yl'ho have
expressed a desire for a pet What is this? Good question .
This IS th e type person who
are t'onti:lcted .
After all else fails the professes tO love animals, has
animal Is 'ta ken to the vet a nd some of his own , but will not
painless!)' .. returned home ." go out of his way. in fad does
The animals pictured will not hesitate to be cruel, to
make t hat t rip unless a home animals not his own .
This is the miner,
is fo und by t ~e weekend. If
interested in an~; pic1ured storekeeper . commissioner,
teacher , student, housewife,
animal, call 742·3162 .
We may ha ve five l10rses clerk . lawyer, do ctor . nurse.
businessman or child who
profe sses to tare - and does
- for what belongs to them ,
but who could care less for
what belongs to someone
else , or worse yet , who
doesn't belong to anyone .
If you're not a Selective
Humanitarian then you care
for any animal who needs
care. We think folks like this
need to be recognized and for
that reason we are going to be
presenting in the very near
future Humanitarian Awards
that will be beautiful and
something anyone would be
proud to display in their of·
!ice or home for everyone to
winter. If there is any reader
whu can provide such a place
for us to board animals

PROTECT AGAINST

DETERGENT

'6.

'6.

By Marion C. Crawford
· Meigs County
Humaot• Society
POMEROY _:.. Shown in
t he accompanying picture
are a nimals that without
temporary ca re wou ld be
dead .
With the coming of
fr eezing weather , the pound
is not the a nswer. Jt has no
· heating facilities to prevent
animals from freezing tU
death, and Femember. folks.
not aU homeless animals are
"o utdoor " animals . The
pound only prov ides a place
of horrors for dogs - there is
nowhere in the count y for
homeless cats and kittens.
Another horrible fact but
I'm afraid, the truth , is that
the Human e Society has no
where to house animals in the

ARGO
PEAS.•~~~:.

i1
i1
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whi te l'hesl o.md tl •l' ~ and thi,l; litth• girl tt)n is just the s wet.'ll'St dog. We d•.•n 'l kno~\' 1l 11w
anyone who daims !0 be a "human being" can throw nut animals s uc h as thi S, but as l 'n •
said bdurc. there ;;u·t:&gt; ~o mc r!illL•n pe11plt• in Meigs C11t1 nty . Here c1rr thret' " j'! 'i&lt;kn• ·t·s."
Any t.lrlf.' wishing tu gi\'l' tl1l' Sl' auima ls a g1•od loving hnlllt' , ple;.Jse ~·all 74 2-:1162 as s"" ll ;1 s
I)I•S:SIbit'. Wt• havt• 11 1• where w~t rmt 1 1 kPl'P them .

~if'l$'

.

.

'"' ~·

JIM ESillP HOLDS THKEE DOGS who plead for a good home. They don't waul t&gt;' die .

w "'~

L_te

....._.

Du~ nn lcrt i ~ a IJecm tiful Hled ium ::; ized l-ycar~ •ld 1.i.ib-Keeshond with wa \.'Y bLiJtk lwir ; slit:
s.tand~ nn her bark legs a nd SHyS ' ' ple~sc .. W:i you ~lp(.H 'crcu· h her ; a sweet drrg . ThL· gl·ntl l'
hltlc Shepheni ~Daehshund male put ~ Ins t•ars dm.vn a nd smiles ~11 ynu wlwn you talk 111 1Ji11 1.
Hl··s a bout &lt;~ year (lid , if that. l.c1stly ·is a very be(luliful wahogany Setter-Brittirwv witlr

ltlliCHRISTMAS
DON'T FORGET THE

•.~

'•

~ -··

~·~~~~~~~'~l~·~~~~~~·~~~:~::~(~~ :~~~~~~~~~~~~·~'~

~

presents. Plea se folk s, be
very careful and a dvise
friends and family mem~rs
to be careful about this type
of gift. Not all children can
handle such ·a gift . Parents
should know what type child
they have. If it is the type who
is interested in one thing one
day and another thing
anot her day, then an animal
is not the a nswer . An anima l
mu-!,1. be cared for everyday .
A st uffed anima l is the an·
swer in most cases; that way
no one is hurt if t he interesl
docs not last.
A defenseless ani mal is
not cast aside, thrown into the
chute at the pound. dumped
a longside a road, or abused
a nd neglected
because
someone chose the wrong girt
fo r a child .
On the other hand , if yo u
a re a responsible parent and

•

than $3,000 in corporate funds
to pay for five vacations
taken by Cyril Niederberger,

The jury of six men and six

prefer.
Next subject: Aninwls tn
be given for Christmct s

•

Thru
·DECEMBER 17, 1977

Gulf executive guilty, fined

_ Service official.

HOOFS. • .and. • .PAWS

Prices Effective
POMEROY, OHIO

providing five free vacations
for an Internal Revenue

ra~ SP a l'h ild tu
&lt;JJI &lt;Tcu turcs aJH.I
will SUJ)j,'f \' isc yo ur child " ilh
I( S pet, there 't'C:lll be no rine r
ur wi st•r wCty tu teal'h
nuthin~ nf killing animals CAt responsibi lity and kindness to
every whipstitch. Lei 's givt• a l'hild. ThcrC' is nu fin er
'----------~c~red~il~w~h~e~re;.;:c~re~d~it!m;;a~s due cumpa niun and gua rdi:Jn for
'
·-wmr-a child than a puppy to ~ ru w

an · trying to

l.x• kind

value life. He it hutn&lt;tn ur
a nimal. we all ('ornr frnm the
same place .
So write or call me- and
I'll go take pictures and get a
~1 ory from that person ur
from you , whieh ever you

298 SECOND ST.

PITTSBURGH tUPil Gulf Oil Corp . vice president
Fred Standefer was con l'icted by a U. S. District
jury Friday of
Court

.,

'11

TH·33 11 If you love f\ ·track but can't part WII h
vou r fl'Citrd s.. ht'rt:s. t lw ~~ ~1 u I util . &lt;)u r H-·I r:n~ k
with A\1/ FM &lt;lt'rt•tJ IIIJ)Jll'tl off ll'llh BSii :i ll I&lt;&gt;·

M ! t ~ .trtl&lt;"

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Ctnl\1 !ioon!llt·~

matic/ m:mua Jcha ngl'r ;1ncl dust l'tl\'l'r. \ lui t 1pll'X
signal indicat; rr.. Bt1lano ; o Jill n rl. ll t&gt;ad phttilt.'
jack. And two·w:ty &lt;tc(,ustic.suspt.-'t1Sitrn spe:tk l· rs.
FE.T. front end . lit'CIIrdm~ output jac b .

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TOM'.S STEREO CENTER

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VISA'

========2=1==\='';,.1;,:1,;IR;,:l;,l;,:",;V,;E;;,I\;,:'l;,:JI;,·:

~ CAL

Phone: (o l lf l .ji,(,.7HR6

LJ PO LIS, ll Ill 0 4 %31

s1er charge
' " 1111••11• C•IIO

I

�A-ll The Sunday Ti mes-Sentinel, SundH y. Dee. 1i, 1977

.

A·lO- The Sunda v Tm1e•.Sentuwl. Sunda
'
.I" , D~c . l l. l9i;

r-------------------------,I

Road to Kanauga first constructed in
G-~a County; Han~an Tr~ce_ second_
people going to a funeral. or
to req uisit ion animal teams. people going to an election
In the 1830s Gallia County traveled free .
The early Gallia turnpik es
in itiated the first road tax on
were
: Fairhaven, Rutland,
it s ci tizen s, the co unty
recri\'JOg 20 r t&gt;nts per $100 and Athens 1begun in 1837),
Jackson,
and
and the township 15 cents per Gallia ,
$100. The total tax on $100 for ChilliCQthe (1846): Gallipolis
the first 70 years of Gallia's and Chilli cothe t 1828 l :
history amount ed to about Hannan Ferry, Mercerville,
$1.30.
Patriot, and Centerville
Th e oth e r maj or r oa d 118391 and Portsmouth ,
builder in the count.y was the Gallipolis. and Marietta
turnpike compa ny. All turn- t1841l . According lo the
pike companies were char· charter, the state could and
tered by the state. In the did purchase these roads.
lo 1850 the Wilkesville and
charter the companies
Plank
Road
promised a 66 foot right of Pomeroy
wav with 33 cleared of brush Company "'as · formed. This
and logs. The l'harter also road ran through part of
stated :
Gallla,. A plank road . was
"At least 18 feet shall be made of wooden planks
made au artificial road
was also gl\·en the autho rity

GALLIPOlJS - The first
roads in Gallia Co uinty were
nothing more than widened
buffalo paths. This probably
at&lt;:ounts, in part , lor the fact
that some of Gallia 's roads
are quite crooked.
The first road built in the
county we~t from GalliiJ&lt;lhS
to Fairhaven 1 K a n a u ~a I.
This road in a fe w yf:'ars v.;as

extended to Addison and a
little later to Chester. The
!le&lt;'ond road was probably the
Hannan Trace started in 1800
by . Thomas Hannan . It
brought
settlers from
Virginia into southern Ohio.
passing through Mercerville,
Patri ot. and Centerville.
The third road built was the
road

that

co nnected

Gallipolis to Burlington. The
Burlington ruad and the

composed of stone, gravel,
wood, or other rom•eoieot

Chester road "''ere the major

material well eompaet ed
wgether In surh manner as to

mall routes in the early 1800s.
Roads remained very
primitive up to the Civil War.
F.or instance the cOunty spent
$187.75 in 1620 on roads . in
1850 the county spent $164.97

substantial road, rising with
a gradual arch, and to no case

COMPLETE SELECTION OF

CONVALESCENT
EQUIPMENT
RENTAL &amp; SALES
•

•Oxygen Regulators
• Flowm eters
•Bedside Commodes
•Humidifiers
•Respiratory Support
Systems

HOME ·DELIVERY AVAILABLE

TRI-COUNTY HOME
. MEDICAL SUPPLY
56 Stale Sireel
Galljpolis,
Mrs . Ronald L. Saunders
Manager &amp; Sales Representative
614-446-3856

IJy 1/obart Jf'i/sm1 Jr.

POMEROY - Keith M.
Woo ds . Middleport. ~h 9
claimed he bagged a record
39-point deer with a bow and
arrow, was fined $150 and
costs in Meigs Co unty Co urt
Friday by Judge Robert E.
Buck, on charges of taking
deer with gun in dosed
season.

AlS&lt;J fined were Thomas
Woods , Middleport, and Rudy
A. Stewart, Middleport , $100
and costs each, for assisting
Woods in taking illegal deer.
Each had all hunting rights
taken for one year in Ohio and
their rights to hunt deer in the
State of Ohio for t.hree years.
Judge Buck said the deer
was forfeited to the State of
Ohio. The rack of the deer
was a record in that it had 39
points.
Buck indicated that two
and possibly three groups will
have the head mounted and it
will be placed fof exhibit in
the Meigs County Museum . It
was also indicated that, on
request , the head will be
loaned to reputable sports
groups for exhibit.
Others fined Friday were
Billie J. Stoops, Gallipolis,
$13 and costs, speeding ;
Loama Crouse,
Ashland,
Ohfo, $25 and costs, failure to
check deer within time limit :
Gregory Sheets, Hemlock
Grove, $150 and costs, three
days confinement, DWI:
Elwood Diamond, New
CarliSle, $100 and costs,

illegal gun ; Mark Lawson,
Middleport , $150 and CQstS,
illega l deer: Chris A. Maul,
Grove City, $150 and costs,
spotlighting with gun: Carl E.
Park er , Pomeroy, $20 and
costs, speedi ng: Michael
Jones, New Haven , $14 and
costs, speeding: Thomas E.
Weekly, Guysville, $13 and
costs, speeding : Gary · L.
Westmorland, Racine , $25
and costs, untagged deer:
Haras Mounts. Columbus, $2o
and costs. ficticious hunting
license:
Roge r Toler.
Columbus, $100 and costs,
attempt to take over one
deer: Richard T. Arrnor,
Mar ietta , $13 and costs,
speeding: Jerry L. Back.
Rutland and Gene D. Ca in.
Columbus. $50 and costs
each, spotlighting: Leonard
S. Martin, W. Garlishe, Ohio,
$25 and costs, failed to check
deer: Dwight Tudor, -Akron,
$25 and costs. littering :
James Thompson, Dayton.
$50 and costs, untagged deer ;
Gerald M. St ubbs, Jr.,
Miamisburg, Ohio, $100 and
CQsts, attempt to take more
than one deer, $25 and costs,
illegal deer: William Beal,
Jr., Dayton, $100 and costs,
attempt to take more than
one deer, $25 and costs,
ill ega l
?eer:
Robert
Barkhedmer, Canton, $25 and ·
costs, attempt to take seconp
deer with same tag : John R.
Cox, Gallipolis, Earle E.
Showalter, Ht. i , Long
Bottom and J ames C. Smith,
Rt. 1, Portland, $12 and costs
each speeding; James Wyatt,
RD, Pomeroy, $16 and costs,
speeding; Jacob E. Schuler,
Rt. I, Portland, $15 and costs,
speeding; Alan Corson,
Dayton, $25 and costs, illegal
deer tag.
Forfeiting bond s were

Gift Ideas
for Chrisbnas

f'l:ll',

Hnrkc y and Ta mmy Simms. T!1C eighth member, nut
prese nt , ls Lynda Bl;tck, Direl'tion w!ll be by Mrs. Paige

HwH.

:-. ub·fn·~·z 1 ng IL'IIIPl'ratun•s aud s now
l't'lUI' Il\ ng \: tst Wl't•k , llllll'il l"t'Sidt'lll S n •t·allt•d tftt.• ~&gt; W ! ntL'r of n"
l'\;t•n tlluugh it's n lll' W ll n luta~· Sl 'i Json .
·

10 months.

I I I

hotels, taverns. and stage
t'Oach stations. As poor as
these early roads were, they

Rat·coon Island Toll Bridge. bridges.
Along these roads and near
The state also regulated the
these
bridges and ferries
pri ces charged on toll
th ere were hundreds of

had an amazing impact on

the econom1c developm ent of
Ga llia County .
Jame s
Sands, address is Box 3,
Barlow 45712.

·

Randall Boggs, Hitchins, Ky .,
llnda L. Griffin , .Parkers·
burg, and Danita A. Manley,
Middleport, $30.50 each ,
speed ing: Joseph E. Bowers,
Rt . I, Reedsville , $34 .50,
speeding; Fra nk J. Ebers·
bach, Rt. I. Middlep ort,
$360.50, DWI: Henry Hart·
man, Rt. l, Long Bottom,
$35 .55, speeding; Homer C.
Horton, Grayson, Ky., $43.55,
speeding: Marvi n ' L. Smith,
Monroe, La., $28, speeding :
William E. Kau ff , Rt. 2,
P om eroy. $1 27, r eckless

operation: James W. George,
Columbus, $50.55, failure to
attach deer tag: Donald R.
Deskins, Rt. 2, Albany , $103.
reckless oper ation .

Bidwell man
cited by patrol
after mishap

IT will he intert•stmg w St't' statistics un crimt• in Ca \lia
Cvunt) Pill' year from now. ProSt'C'U ting Atty . j ()(' ( 0(11 11 .
·infnnm't! llll'lllbt•rt; of llll' (;uUqlPli s l.it• IIS Club TuesdHy ni gl1t
tlwt f;~t' l :i an d figurt•s :tl'l1 being L'o m pil~ on t 'IHTCnt t•rinw ln
Galli&lt;.~ Count ~ fn l\owing tht• ftll'lllatiim uf" C'rim l' Aler t. a

~--------------------~
MICRO WAVE

. f&amp;{ .
~

~~I:I

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Wool and leather coats will keep
everyone in your family warm and
looking great all winter long.
They'll also enjoy shirts.
skirts. jackets and Jeans
. by Lee. Lots of styles
and sizes.

CHRISTMA~

FOR

o11ma

by
Whirlpool

Christmas

~--.. -----~-

·'it • .

PREPAID
next year?

LAYAWAY •NOW

.. _.

channels, too . . .
WEATHER
T RA FFIC
UTILI TIES
BUS INESS
MARINE
CI VI L
DEFENSE

129.95

1

W/Crvstals

.
'

Hand -crafted .jewelry,
copper and wooden kitchen
ite ms. jellies. cheese. toys,
and great stocki ng stuffin's
for anyone on your
C hristmas list.

.

·'

'

om

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."
'

8v~AM

FARMS II&gt;

SAUSAGE SHOP &amp; GENERAL STORE
Route 35 · Rio Grande . Ohio
•

••

1 I I

ALTHOUGH the city will have brand new father s com e
Jan . 1, the rec enlly~lected fiv e ~rn embcr commission won ' t~
go ing into city ha!l blind. M. Harold Brnwn, whn will step dl tWn
as city manager Dec . 31, has gone over every detail J)41SSiblc
With new commissinncrs in 11rder tn make the transition &lt;..1
sniuoth nne .
+1 I
THE NEW eommissi11n must find ways to obtain
additional funds to (tpel'i.JIC til e Oh.l French City . Son1e pn 1jel'ts
already uff the groUnd to IJe ccJrricll fnrward by tlw new
administration indude th e $4 .5 million water purification ami
sewaJ.:e treatment plant, annexati on, metropolitan hoLLsing ,
truffle light si gn:.11iwtinn, pav i n ~ of streets and l'umplction uf
the new municipal swiJJtn!ing puttl.

.

.

TWENTY YEAHS AGO, fr olll th e files of the Daily
1:1nd weekly Galli(:! Timc!:i ... More than 600 pcrs, 1ns
to ur new Nnrth Ga lli a High Sc h(l~l l on Ht. 160 .. . United i.'und
dl&lt;:Upl)er topiC' here ... G1:1llipoli s Pnstrmtster ~!mer Ca !dwl' ll
predict!:i reC!I!'d mail during ChristmCis hnlid C~ ys ,:. Chri stmas

'l'ribWl e

Sea l sales net $2,375 in Gallia County ... Ken Bos ti c has 1!l
points e~nd Kei th Sheets 18 as Blue Devils stun Logan Ch ief·
tatns·: n..s6 ... A~hlcmd E~gle s ed ge Rin Redmen, 71-Gfi.

Cnn1munity
Otllegc professors have Vltted
U•

be represented by the

Amer ic an Assodati on (If
Univer sity Pntfe.SS(lrS.

SPEECH SET
CIN('[NN ATI 1UP! I - The
direC'tnr of the Braz ilian·
A111eri can Cul tw·a l [nstitute.

.Jo se Ncistein , will speak at
Xavit.:r Univeniity next
'l'lll'Sday on the topic , '' R (l(~.t s
of M1•dcrn Art iii Brazil in
Light 11f its Social Hi stl •l'y. "

· Neiotc in' s address will be
part 11f X8vicr's Third Worl d
F 1trUII l , a lecture seri es
which br ings sneakers fr pm
und erdeveloped n ;~ti on s to
the x~tVier tampus.

Dad

..

Wholesome And Useful Way.

MUSIC PROVIDES THIS

OhioValley Bank
~.

.

1978
CHRISTMAS CLUB

OUR BIG SPECIAL FOR THE MONTH OF
DECEMBER~A BEAUTIFUL
LOWREY ORGAN
A VALUE OF

OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TILL 8:00 P.M.

I t !&gt;

I,

fp(Jibly e ol ~'(

SPECIAL

. • I •'&gt;P•r~&gt; '~'"It ~ oo11"Rtrl 'r"uuency you "Yt selected When
Hlil v. ;m t tr, .-h .. tiQo&gt; ''"'l'lflr"lr• t'S tllSI en ter the n.ew ones
Ai oiOIIlat •L '1\!il lrn l(· i~ ~ 011 sr.ctn an~ (j1ven 1an g e of ! re·n .en • 11•-; ! vo11r ' r•u·Ul w!Tnn• d oanu Pusli bu !ton tock l•ut i\'" &lt;1 111~ you 10 'i'elf!Ciovely &lt;;k•fl !redueru; oao; no t o l
r ""'"' 'l"lf•reo:; t 111P. flf!r11nat (fi&lt;;Oia )' w•ll1i l 5 exclu~'" "
•Oil•".tl ."1,'10 '&gt; I foil~ Yo'" }.n•rn ~ nannets yo ore mor1110rmg

"Everything in Two Way Radios , Antennas
and Accessories"
George's Creek Road
Gallipolis. Ohio 456~1

rv

tSEOE:MS t.
SE:Of.M S

Dispa t cher

BOn nie Z1irne s and Craig

Join NOW • • •

make

your ·last payment FREEl

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,

Galltpolls . Ohio

NOW! FOUR GREAT LOCATIONS TO BEITER SERVE YOU!

Memb •r: 'DPO

I Hope That One DCiy Your Children Will Thank You
.

on more than a score of
em ergency calls between 4

.

p.m. Thursday and 8 a.m.
Friday on roads that even
sa lt trucks and snow plows
found difficult to navigate.
There we re 13 sim ultaneous
calls at one point.
"We had .no significant
problems from the storm."

help of the Paramedics, but
failed minutes · later 112 :25
a.m.!, just outside Wellston

used caution , avoiding any
accidents."

when

The most notable event of
the evening, Zornes reported.
happened just minutes after
midnight.
Alvin and Donna Strong,
J ackso n, were ex pe c tin g

their third child on December
27, but Mrs. Strong went into
labor about 10 :30 Thursday
even ing in the middle of the
icc storm . Forced to travel on
the glazed roads, Mr. and
Mrs. Strong got as far as
Wellston in an attempt to take
E. lamb, M.D.
their ot her children, aged 4
and 2, to stay with Mrs.
Strong's parents in McArthur ·
before
proceeding
to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospita l
in Athens.
When Mrs. Strong's labor
choleste rol. That will help
prevent artery changes in the contract ion s got c lose
together, however, the y
eyes or in the heart or brain.
If you have another glucose detoured quickly to the
tolerance test or a blood Wellston station of the life
sugar test after eating or squad service to get Mrs.
drinking sugar wHter, be Sure Strong more quickly on her
Hnd prepare yourself proper- way to the hospital.
Their strategy worked:
ly for the test. That means
you should conswne quite a Mrs. Strong to to the medical
bit of sweets and starches for
three days before testing .
Then you can come in fa sting
TRIAL TO OPEN
if you need to for your par·
OAK LAND, Calif. (UPIJ ticular'test 1for a fasting Hnd The trial of former Black
after glucose test 1. If you Panther Eldridge Cleaver on
stay on a diet and do hot have charges of attem pted .murder
any' sweets or st.arches before' and assault with a deadly
the test, your body will not weapon will sta rt in Alameda
respond properly to sugar ·County Superior Court Feb.
loHding, and you will have a 24. Cleaver appeared Friday
false positive test that looks before Superior J udge Alan
like diabetes. We call it a A. Lindsey, who set the trial
starvation diabetes response. date. The charges spring·
I am sending you The fr om a 1968 gun batt le with
Health Letter number 3-11, Oakland police, in which
Diabetes : Diagnosis, Preven- Panther Bobby Hutton was
tion , and Management. ~illed and two police officers
Others who want this issue wounded.
can send 50 cents with a long,
sta mped, se lf-a ddressed
envelope for it to me in care
of this newspaper, P 0 . Box
1551 , Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.

Eye problem woes
By Lawrence Lamb,' M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB :- Last
sw1m1er , I noticed that my vi·
sion was getting worse, so I

saw an opthalmologist. On hi s
advice. I had H glucose
tolerance test which showed
no evidence of diabetes,
allhougtl there was a suga r
inerea se !n both the urine and

blood.
The optl\al molog ist ·s
dia gnosis was retinal and
choroidal arteriolorsclerosis.
What is t h is~ Is there aeure
for this or a way to prevent it
from getting worse ' I saw the
dia ~osi s

on tiome in tiunmce

fonTlli the doctor fi ll ed out.
On the advice of my opthalmologist, I saw my inter·
nist again, and he did another
glucose tolerance test which
also showed JlO evidence of
diabetes.
Meanwhile, my cont.act
try to watch my diet so that I
· will nol get heavier, I should
lose about 10 pounds . I am 52.
1 rea lize that diabetes can
cause blindness. My fat her
had diabetes, too, after the
age of 50 I believe. •
DEAH READER - You
should relax smce your tests
sho w you do not have
di'abetes. Diabetes ha s
nothing to do with your present eye problems. With a
family history of di abetes, it
iS wi se to have a check up at
inten'a ls. You can help p,revent diabetes by getting nd of
all your excess pounds of
body fa! , and Uoing your best
to stay on the slim side.
You do have fatty .
cholesterol depostts in the
Hrteries at the back of your
eyes. That i$ whHt the doc·
tor's dia~ nosis means. You
can see the arteries and veins

directly through the pupil of
the eye. It is the one place you
can look directly at the blood
vessels withOut having to
open the body.
·
Doctors are particularly in·
terested in the arteri es at the
ba ck of the eyes because they
may reveal the st.ate of other
arteries in the body, but the
correlation is not an absolute
one. The presence of chHnges
in the arteries at the back of
your eyes made your eye doc·
tor think you needed to be
evaluated for possible
changes elsewhere in your
body. And such changes a re
in

com m on

the

will be to fo llow a diet that
keeps you slender , one thHt is
low in fat, , particularly
saturated fats, and low in

There's
·no telling
·what
she'll get.
A *Ilk ml11t,

•

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COLO~l'-·
•

*

l'lll'nlr,·

Tonighllhru
Tuesday
• YOU HAVE SEEN
GREAT AINENTIIRES.
YOU ARE ABOUT

TO LIVE ONE.

For The Very Important Decision You Are About To
Make.

BRUN-ICARDI MUSIC CO.

1

Zornes said . "The high
num ber of calls kept us very
busy,· but the Paramedics

~HEALTH
~~Lawrence

GUARANTEE TO HAVE YOU PLAYING A TUNE IN 15 MINUTES

•n•l!l',.ll

BOB'S C.B.
RADIO EQUIPMENT

'

EVEN IF YOU'VE NEVER HAD A LESSON IN YOUR LIFE-WE

Wtl{:&gt;•. ~ ~~ ~· ·~.,,. r" ' lo• • &gt; 111 tln .111 ae)•ve trequencv tn e
•IN •r:t'.tlll•'&gt;"ll,l\ ~ l'""lw~ the .h &lt;11111et and tne ' reoue n&lt;;:y
t'l•i&lt;' l l'l

th e lif e squad s of the
South casl Ohi o Em ergency
Mcdi ca I
Se
i ccs

... "

cunctltllem

r hO'! J,uge tlef.:lffi&lt;ll

mghl 's tee stor m paralyzed
lll UC'h of the regi on, but as
ul ways, vital services were
frt rcrd to conti nue, notab ly

pressure .
I think your best approach ·

.

\M-lOLL lHL US

SEOEMS life.squads didn't stop

presence of diabetes, but they
can be Caused by other pr&lt;&gt;blems, includ ing high blood

00

.. AND WE'RE GOI-(j
TO l='t N D US 5Qv1EONE

.

.

more

$269.95
0 1",t"li"),H(J

ANSWERS TO WHAT
IT'S ALL ABaJT!

'--'

++I

The Greatesi Gift We Can Give Our
Children Is The Ability To Get More
E11.joyment Out Of Life I~ A

Regular
$349 ' 95
Now

n,,. ,·a l'"'f1uP'I{ IPS 11111want to ~;ran ... nd

TO 6ET SD'v1E

(

lenses have been corrected. I

.

ALL TI-l E

CHRISfMAS 4::&gt;·
f-0 IS ...

Cfll.l.IPOIJS - Thursday . John son sent the life squ ads

16 channel (no crystals needed}. ·In stock.

p,. t

seven days a week 9:00 'til 9:00.
Gift Certificates available.
Master Charge acc~pted.

+++

lung and rvugh four yea rs fnr current City
Curnmissioner~ John Alli~on , Douglas Wetherfi'olt and Pelt'
Nii..M.:!rl. They've gone throu gh three city man 1:1 gt:-rs am! lhrr e
city solicitors. rt will cume tel r.tn end at midni ght on S:-Jlurclay ,
l)c&lt;·. 31.

217-120 , with th e Americ&lt;&gt;n

Monitors, Crystals In Stock
Layaway For Christmas . ..
ntE "NEW" REGENCY TOUCH

1' 01 lh(.'

-Open

·

H

Fedei·&lt;.tt io n of Tea c her s
eliminated in an earlier vote .
About 78 percent of Tri-C's
faculty vnted lil wednesday 's
r unoff .

~arcat2/0
Country Christmas Gifts

SPEAKING of the PL' fJ ('lub, Hubert Gn,up 1$ serving as
f.a('u.lty advisor (llld not Hay a!:i a nnow1 ced in Th ursday's
paper . CroUil is U1 e Blue Devil s first full time-athlete .traint·r.
According to Gallia 's varsity t•oachcs, he' s di•lng an e x ccll ~n t

The 'AAUP beat nut the

HIGH &amp; LOW

-iC

~1 E RE

+++

Ohin Eduratiun Assodatiofl ,

•

WE'RE C:O NG OUT-

WE wei'L' glad t h Sl'l' tht• CAl-I S PL·p Ch!b n'oi~ H illl.t ' lnsl
week . Jt mea ns H lot lO \u{.'&lt;.il eugcrs when thl'y ha n• ;_t f.!l•!•d
d JCer tng sl•euon in I he st&lt;.Jnds whill' playin g on th (' rHtH I
Al th•)ugh the Blue Devils lost llt l'l l' firsttw fl gam es a nd piLI~T·d
powerful Wt&amp;verly Friday ni ~ht, you ean ht•t Cn.:u.:!1 Ji m
Osb(lrne 's lad s will provirlt&gt; mauy thrill., bef1 trL' the l!l77-7fl
ClHil[ll:Jign eumes tu u dose.

C u yahl1ga

1"-,J ~- Listen on these

j~rU',;

FROM '

by Baur art!! Pa•toret

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

Ah·rt and goal s fnr tJH· f 'llllllng yt·m·
I 1 I

TEACHERS ORGANIZE
CLF.VF.l.ANO I UP I I

citation was issued.

. ·6..=:-.-i - ~~
t'-"'~''
·

•

Winter coats and
western wear

n.

.

GALLIPOLIS - James V.
Dobbins, 18, Bidwell, was
charged with drivin~ left of
J;enter following an acCi dent
at 3: 10 p.m. Friday on the
Vinton-Eno Rd. one and eight
tenths miles north of SR 554.
The Gallia-M eigs Post
State Highwa y Patrol said
Dobbins ' vehicle struck a •
so uthbound car driven by
Leon D. George, 53, Bidwell.
There was moderate damage
to the Dobbins car and slight
damage to George's vehicle.
A second accident occurred
at 6:45 p.m. on TR 308 in
Meigs County , one and four
tenths miles north of SR 7
where Melody M. Stemthem,
23, Pomeroy, lost control of
her ca r Which ran aUthe road
striking a tree. There was
moderate damage . No

~

~\O.Z.}:;

OVENS

,.. ... -.. I t~:,

.v.r~c--

·

Judy, Joe and the Ho-Ho·Ho

tTII IIt'

~ ~ AHS cal.(l' g reet! ;111d
ba~kl't h&lt; t 1I pia~ tT, is H'J"\' Illg &lt;.~s p P•J.-: 1"~111.
l·nonlin(:lln r. Art1Cl duhs tllld IW~itfll_'l.illlo ns wi slung to kn"\\
mun• ai.Juut this J)f'~tgrw tJ shuulil r ura !Atct /\tty . ('Lt JJ I ~t l I n~
nffi('l' , I h: and Mikt• wall bl' gl.mll n da ~nr.;s the JlUI'p ~tSl' uf Cl'l ll!t'

ACTUAl .\, Y, thL• · 'Wultt•r of 7H" W11n 'i brg in until 0l't' . 21.
Wl' 're ull h1 1ping 11 W(•n'tlle as ba~l tlw; year as it was 12 lllt•nths job.
ugo. Tiler!! 111a~ lw t•llt' L'HIIsnlatinn . Hesidents an•, 111• dt~ubt ,
L&gt;ettr rprrpurt•ci fur a long wmter h;tul thi s rt:·&lt;lr tlmn the\ w er e ·
IT'S been
I I· I

tu ht•IJJ prt'\'ellt

()hit' Stat(' University

With

in 1976 .

Gifts from the General Store say Merry Christmas in an
old -fashioned , special kind of way. There are a ll kinds of
original. count ry gifts and a large selection of weste rn -style
clothing for the whole fam ily.
'·

~1idd le port. Frnm the left an· Carla Smith, Cathy Blaell·
J nan Hnberts, .K.altly ·Qut vcy, LindH E~&amp;~ on, Jam~ t

THIS GilliS Ol.l'E'l"i'F: will b&lt;· featunxl with
tr adtti(•nal &lt;·arnls whl'll tht~ Meigs J,n&lt;:&lt;tI Junior and Senior
High Vocal DE.' Ilarlmt• nts prl~e nt " ('l'lrll'crt nf t:hristn,as"
tift '1\tPsd ay, Oet . 20,7:30 p . n l , i n tht.• Mei gs Junillr IJigh a t

~~~~--~~--~----~1
r your po ce and remen .
' • ."' ""£· ...j:;r. in action!
.J[/ i

r,

SEEMS likt• n11h. )'t'l:itl'rri Hv• (lallia ( 'ltUillhtnsI \\'t'f'l'
Shin•rmg l'n tlw ir lic•,,ts as snPw und iee und l.t luw zer n
tt•m peratu l'es paralyn ·d lll ltSt al' tivili L•s in the an•:1. It 's lx·r n

Deer with record 39-point rack _costs hunter $1.50 fine

GENERAL SIORE

"

Gallia

·!

dcMgln~ l

'
I I I
MIKE FENOEHHOSnl. f~r nn t·r

!
!

! Qateline

secure a flrm. e\'en and

shall the ascent io any such
turnpike road be greater than
on roads.
five
degrees."
Road building and im ·
The
rates of toll were also
provement, if any were done,
fixed
by
state law : 25 cents
were done either by township
per
10
miles
for wagonS 1 6 1 4
trustees or by private
companies. In 1809 the state cents per 10 miles for man
made it mandatory fo r every and horse, 2 cents per 10
able-bodied citizen over 21 to miles for cattle and a half·
give two days of work each cent per 10 miles for sheep
year on the r oa ds . The and hogs. People on foot.
supervisor of township roads people going to ch urch.

•Home Oxygen .
•Hospital Beds
•Wheel Chairs
•Canes
•Walkers
•Crutches

nailed onto wooden ralls .
Related to th•• building of
roads was the building of
bridges and the e•tablish·
ment of ferries . There were
ferries across the Ohio as
well as ferries across t~e
major creeks in Gallia
County .
The year 1848 could well be
called the year for bndge
building in Gallia Co unty.
Eight toll bridge companies
began operating that year.
They were : Campaign
Bridge, Claylick Toll Bridge,
Coombs Mills Toll Bridge,
Ewington Toll Bridge,
Gallipolis and Patriot Toll
Brid_ge. Gallipolis and Ports·
mout.h
Toll
Brjdge.
Harrisburg Toll Bridge. and

I

h•denall) -fuudt 'C I prt 1j Ct'l

[PGj

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

~""

,

'

·~· ··~·'

'

Cartoon

'

{ij·

Sandi

...

lfl ......_, " "

.., ••• or

"'""·.

•r .....

' • iolnl 11t i HMnl"l ftM "lllctltfl,
I
.,.. ID 111111. Prty'l nrtll.lf ltrtlllllcb .

Paramedics Susan

Emmert and R. A. Hollings·
head delivered Yvonne Lynn
Strong, a hea lthy 7 pound, 9
ounce baby girl. Mother and
crying

dau~hter were

then

taken safely to O'Bleness
without further inci dent .
SEOEMS finished out the
night, responding to several
aulo accidents, as well a s
c.hc c king for infuiies a t

ne arly one-hundred "fender·
benders."

"I could help
provide you with a
regular monthly
income if you
became disabled~

C. K. Snowden
24 State S1ree t
Phone 446 -42 90

See me about State Farm
disability income insurance.
Like a good
neichbor,
SlauFann
is there.

~· · "

' """'

. .. ' " . .. .. ( l

Si~l r I 1rm "" "'~~ A.. loii"·Ob ol t lr5 u'~"te l ~~ ~~n)
i'Oom~ Q l!,. ~ ~IOGrt•.r-i··~·

'

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Woman 's World

,

. )\' "'
"W' '
••

Catherine Benet

•

•
•
•
•

446-2342

992-2156

Gallipolis-Point Pleasrmt

Pomeroy-Middleport

Mr. mul M ri. -]11ck Carter
TO !'ELEBHATF. -

Mr. &lt;And Mrs. Jar k l"a rll'r ,
Ca lli pol i!~. will bl' n ll•br.ati ng thei r fortiet h wedding
'-Ul lli \'CI'sa r~· (l\1 Sund ay. JJ\.oc('lllbcr 18, from, 2 to 4 p .lll. at
an npt.•n ret'('ptl nn in thei r humc t}ll St . HI . 218 . Hosti ng the
cl'lcbra litlll will bt· tlwir sun. Charl es J r~t', and daug hterin-la w, Jnyn•. T ill' hn11 11fCC'S ha vt• two gra ndsuns, .Jay ami
.Jnel. Mr. C:lrH.•r IS retired fr om thr Buckeve HtU'H l
Elet·trk ('umpnny ami MI·S . Carh•r js ,; retired
l'lt•mt'ntarv l ccwht•r. Friends and r d olll\'l'S ar e &lt;.'H rdially
invi t l •d t11~'n i l tl ur mg ti ll' n.'(•e pt ij 111. Pll•a::il' 11111 it g 1ftti.
POMJ.:Il OY--PJ:111 s ha ve
been t•ompleted for the open
&lt;." hun.:h wedding of Mitis M ~1 r~
Kathryn Hus('heJ, da ughtl' l' of
Mr. a nd Mrs . Alfrl'd Husd lci.
E bt:·n ~zt:• r St.. Pomerov a nd
F n'd Joseph Jones. son·u'r Mr.
ami Mrs . Errll'st J ones. Dex·
ter.
The wedding will bt• an
t'\'t• nt of Friday , Dec 16. at
6:30 p.m. at the Middlcpnrl
Chu rch of the Nazarene. Thl!
He v. Ja mt·~ Broome. will uf~
fi datc . Music preceding the
&lt;·c rem ony wrll be J.Jrcscnted
begi nni ng Cit 6 p.rn . IJ.\' Mis_s
Teresa Elhs, ptemi st.
The bride's ~ ltt t•ndant..., will

lx• her three sisters, Mrs.
Sandra M&lt;.' Daniel, Alnwdcn,
Ca lif .. rna trun of honor .. and
Mr s. S u.s.a n Y e r 1a .n ,
Galvastan, lexas, a nd M1ss
Nita Hu sdtel, Pom eroy ,
bridesmaids.
Rk k Pt cn~c. Sa lem Center
will be best man . and the
us her will .!Jc Eugene
Rusdw l, Mt . Vernon.
Guests will IJe registered by
Miss Anj.!ie Sisson , Pomeroy.
anti Ck! thy T.wyman . Ewingtun. Tht•re will be ~HI open
rN'l'ption at the Midtllt!port
Masvn il' Tt.•mple. cor·ner· ur
North Scl'untl and Walnut
Slr(-'t•ts .

Mrs. King installed as worthy matron
MI DO I. E P O J{')' .. Jl essi e
Ki ng wets instc-~ll e d ;~ s worth y
matron. cmd Hobert King as
worthy patron . of Evangeli nt~
Chapter 172, Order of the
Ee~ stcrn Sta r , In ceremonies
conducted Thursday nig ht at
the MiddlcJ&gt;ort Metsonit: Temple.·
othe r officers installed for
the 1978 yeil r were Ann
Thomas. associate ulatron;
Ho be rt Kuhn , a ss ul'ia le
pa tron ; Maryln Wilc ox,
sec retary ; Kathryn Evans,
treasurer ; Beatrice Kuhn,
condu ct re ss; Bett y Van
Matr c, associa te co nductress ; F'i:trie Kennedy.
chaplain ; Paul Darnell , rnar· sha l, Kath y John so n,
organist ; Lore nn a Aull ,
Adah ; Glenna Crisp, Ruth ;
Merri Aull, Esther ; Euvetl&lt;l
Bechtle , Martha ; Donna
Stewart, Elceta ; Erma Yuhu,
warder , and Glen Evans . sentinel. lnstallc&lt;l iiS trustees

The in::ilalli:t tiun team L·onsisted of Ncwmi King, insta lling orfit:er: Harry Chesher ,
invit ing, marslull; HiiUa
Qu ickel and F.tl&lt;l May Norton, installing marshals :
Ma ry Hug hes, i n slalli n~
c hap lain ;
Ca ther ine
~ h encf 1 eld,
installi ng
organist; .Jennie Chesher, insl&lt;lllm~ ucntluclress;. Allen
Hughes, instal ling wa rder :
Raymond Wilcox, installing
se ntinel ; William Kin g ,
escort and (;len · Evans.
sul oisl.
Mrs. Evans. pro tcm wurthv and Pa ul Darnell. worthv
p ~tr on, we lcom ed th'e
Jncrnllcrs c.~nd guests ;
Mr. and Mrs. King 's theme
fur the year is "Work ,
Fellowship, Fun" ami th eir
motto is pca&lt;.' e. The\ whik
poinsettia is their flower ;:md
their color::; &lt;:tre white and
blue.
Standin !;{ conunittees fur
were Mrs. Kennedy , Sue the year ilrc vouching, Naomi
Floyd , anti Paul Darnel l.
King and William King:
reg Lstri:ttion. M(;lrie Ha wkins

.

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PH ESE NTS CHECK - Brr b Evans Fmm F'110d S made a fin e s h owiu ~ t hi s yt•ar a~ 1h t · ~
to the H!ilzer Mcdit'al Center Pedia tri c T clcvi s i1111 Fund . Tht• r•rga ni :t.ali "ll IIa:-;
alway!) been a ct i\'C in bring in g such servi ces ln the c hildren 11f Hr1lzer Hn ~pil:ll and IIIi~ ~ t•ar
wa.s ;1o differe nt. Pl:t!S,cnt ing the t' heek !1• F.~lrl Neff arc G;1ry F'ife, lllHnag r•r rrf lht• Br 1h
EYans Dri\·c-1n , B1rb St'I Jit . manager of the Steak H liUSl' a mi D 11Ug Fie ld. il:itiist&lt;ll ll ll lill t&lt;t gt'l
uf tile Sausage Sh(lp .

..;•
•

I ' Hn lfibu t~'d

GREAT~

OF ROCKERS
'H PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFT.

ALL SIZES • Check W'rth

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Us For A Good Price!

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AT MASON FURNITURE

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lift for Chrlstnuas now
NOW

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Today At Mason

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$119.95

Charlene Hoeflich

·································~·················

Wedding plans made final

The YEOMAN•J1 21 Sleek sport\ IJL•rl,rr .l t• ·n
colors
o pera·
. 1un1ng
: e.-. pect

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YEAR 'ROUND OFFERINGS
The OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Contact : Gene
Warman . The Ohio Historical Center, 1-77 and 17th Aven.ue ,
Columbus, Ohio 43211. (614 ) 466-4655.
AHMSTRONG AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM, Wapakoneta .
Open daily .
THE NATIONAL ROAD-ZANE GHEY MUSEUM, Zanes,
ville (Exit U.S. 40 ). Open daily.
1
OHIO VILLAGE , Columf1us (1-71 and 17th Avenue). Open
Wednesday through ~unda )(.
I OHIO RIVER MUSEUM , Marietta, Open Daily .
CAMPUS MARTIUS MUSEUM, Marietta. Open daily .
WAHKEENA , South of Lancaster (off U.S. 33) . Open
Monday through Friday.
RUTHERFORD B. HAYES HOME AND MEMORIAL ,
Fre mont. Hayes ' horne open daily ; Museum open daily .
CEDAR BOG, Urbana. Distinguished Ohio Native ~ 15,000
years old! Limited tours available by reservation. (614) 4665963. Free.
. OHIO'S ZOOS
The CINCINNATI ZOO features while Bengal Tigers ,
Hours : Weekdays, 9-5. Weekends, 9-6. Adults, $2.50. Children
and Sr . Citizens , $1. Parking, $1. 3400 Vine Street, Cincinnati ,
Ohio 45220. (513) 281-4700.
The CLEVELAND ZOO complete with talking' Books is
open Monday through Saturday, 10-5. Sunday, 10-7. Adults ,
$1 .25. Children , 50 cents. Free youth admission, Saturday a .m .
Parking, $1. Brookside Park, Cleveland, Ohio 44109 (216 ) 6816500.
'
The COLUMBUS ZOO features the world famous Gorilla
Family . Hours: Daily, 10-6, Adults: $2. Children, 75 cents.
Bargain Day, Thursday. Free parking. 9990 Riverside Drive,
Powell, Ohio (614) 859-9471 .
The TOLEDO ZOO which includes a Natural Science Wing
is open daily 10-4 (winter admission until 4), Adults, $1. Sr.
Citizens, 50 cents. Children, 25 cents. Free admission Saturday
10-12. Anlbony Wayne Trail, Toledo, Ohio 43609. ( 419 ) 385-5721.
. SAMPLING OF OHIO'S MUSEUMS
AKRON ART INSTITUTE, 69 E. Markel Street, Akron,
Ohio 44308. 216) 376-9185. Open Monday through Friday, 12-5.
Wednesday, Thursday , 7-10. Saturday 10-!i .. Sunday, 12-5. No
charge. Closed NationaJ .Holidays . .•
.CANTON ART INSTITUTE, 1001 Market Avenue, North,
Canton , Ohio 44702. (216 ) 453-7666. Open Tuesday through
Thursdays, 9.,\ and 7-9. Friday and Saturday, 9-5. Sunday, 2-5.
Closed Mondays, New Year 's, Thanksgiving and Christmas.
No charge.
CINCINNATI ART MUSEUM, Eden Park, Cincinnati,
Ohio ~202 . (513 ) 721.,\204. Open Mondays lbrmlgh Saturday, HJ·
5. Sunday and Holidays, I.,\ . Closed Mondays, Thanksgiving
and Christmas. No charge .
CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART, lll50 East Boulevard,
Cleveland, Ohio 44106 . (2161 421·7340. Open Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, 10-6. Wednesday , 10-10. Saturday, 9-5,Sunday, 1-6.
Closed Mondays, National Holidays . No charge.
COLUMBUS GALLERY OF FINE ARTS, 480 E . Broad

'

POMEHOY - Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Smith celebrated their
gulden wedding anniversary
on Nov . 20,from 2 to 4 p.m.
with. a t::elei.JrQtit.m in the
Meigs Jnn social room.
The observance was hosted
by their daughter and son-inlaw. Mr. (;llld Mrs. Thomas
McClung, and their son and
da u ~ hter- in- law.
Mr. and
Mrs. Rona ld Smith. Miss
Jayne Smith registered the
guests, Miss Jan Smith
presided at the punch bowl.
Miss Sueannc MrClung served the wedding cake, and Jim
McClung poured the coffee.
AU are grandchildren of the
hon or~d couple. Mrs. Sylvia
Midkiff, Mrs. Georgia Watson, and Mrs. Burton Smith
assisted with the serving .
Mr. and Mrs. Smith were
married on Nov. 19, 1927 by
the Rev. J N. Strickland.
Out-of-town guests allending were Mr. &lt;l!Jrl Mr..: .

,

'

Dc!..' Oratwns and dimng
ruu m ; Je n ~vee Cheshe r .
Mcr ri t\ ult, ll&lt;i Darnell, Donna Stewa rt , Aru1 Thot rras. and
Ka thy Johnson ; wHys ami
means ;;tnt\ rcfr cshmcn~.
Ka thryn Mild11..•ll , I .orenna
Ault, Aliha Wilcox, Lou ise
MeF.lh inney, Euvclla Reehtlc, J·: rma Yoho, Kathryn
Evans, and Ella Vla y Norton ;
pages, F.tta May Norton , and
Na omi Kirlg; and pa raphernalia, 11ubcrl King, Robert
Kuhn , Pa ul Darnell, Glen
Evans. and Harry Ches her .

SUNil AY DEAni.INE
Thl' dt·~dlim· fnr Wl'ddin,g
:met l' ll~ag('m c nt notic't•s
and sodt·tl' m·ws itrrns for
the Sunday Timt•s-St-'ntinel
is 12 nuon on tht:· Thursday
prl'f't•din g puhli&lt;'aliuu .
luformaticrn may ht• tuntt'{l
innr mailt'rl tu tht• uffkt· of
tht•
f:allipolis
Daily
Trihunr or Pomeroy Uaily
St·ntim•l. Enga~t·ment and
\H_·dding
form :-;
an·
on· ail&lt;.~bh· upon n·qut·st.

Smiths observe date

Street , Columbus, Ohio 43215. (614) 221-&lt;i!IOI. Open Tuesday
through Friday, Sunday, 11-5. Saturday, 10-5. Wednesday II8:30. Closed Mondays, National Holidays. Adults , $1. Children
50 cents. Free Tuesays.
·
DAYTON ART INSTITUTE, Forest and Riverview
Avenues, Dayton, Ohio 45401. (5131 223-5277. Open Tuesday
through Friday, Sunday, 12-5. Saturday, 9-5. Clo~ed Mondays,
National Holidays. No charge.
_
MANSFIELD ART CENTER, 700 Marion Avenue, 'Mansfield, Ohio 44903, 1419) 758-1700. Open Tuesday through Sunday ,
12-5. Closed Monday s, National Holidays. No charge.
TOLEDO MUSEUM OF ART, 2445 Monroe Street (Box
i013) , Toledo, Ohio 45687. ( 419 ) 255-8000. Open Monday, Sunday
and Holidays, 1-5. Tuesday ttrrough Saturday, 9-5. Closed
Thanksgiving, New Year's and Ctrristmas. Nn charge.
BUTLER INSTITUTE OF AMERICAN ART, 524 Wick
Avenue, y 01mgslown, Ohio 44502. (216) 743-1711. Open Tuesday
through Saturday, 10-4 :30. Sunday, I.,\. Closed Mondays,
Thanksgiving and Christmas.
·
,
TAFf MUSEUM, 316 Pike Street, Cincinnati. Ohio 45202. ,
(513) 241.{)343 , Open Monday lllrough Saturday, 10-5. Sunday
and Holidays, 2.,\. qosed Thanksgiving and Christmas. No
charge.
CLEVELAND HEALTH MUSEUM, 8911 Euclid Avenue,
Cleveland, Ohio 44106 (216) 231-5010. First in tho nation . Open
Monday through Saturday, 9-5. Sunday, 1-5. Closed Thanks·
giving and Christmas. Admission charge . Tuesday, no charge .
CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, While
Oval, University Circle, Cleveland, Ohio 44106 (216) 231-4600.
Open Monday through Saturday, 10-!i, Sunday, l.,\:30.
Admission charge. Tuesday, no charge. Closed National
Holidays.
FREDERICK C. CRAWFORD AUTO AVIATION
MUSEUM, 10825 E. Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio 44106. (216 )
721.,\722. Open Tuesday through Saturday, 10-5. Sunday, 12-6 .
Closed Mondays, National Holidays, Admission· charge .
CENTER OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY, 280 E . Broad
street, Colwnbus, Ohio 43215. (614) 228-6361. Open Monday
lllrough Saturday, i0-5 . Sunday, 1-5 :30. Closed National
Holidays. Admission charge.
AULLWOOD AUDUBON CENTER, !00\ Aullw&lt;K&gt;d Road,
Dayton, Ohio 45414, (513) 896-7360. Winter hours: Monday
Ill rough Saturday, 9.,\. Closed Sundays, Nationa l Holidays.
Admission charge.
JOHNSON-HUMRICKHOUSE MEMORIAL MUSEUM,
3rd and Sycamore Streets, Coshocton, Ohio 438l 2. 16141 622·
3155. Historic building houses outstanding collections of Early
American, American Indian, and Oriental artifacts . Open
Tuesday lbrough Saturday, 1-4 :30. Sundays and holidays, 2.5.
Closed Mondays, National Holidays.
·
DAYTON MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, 2629 Hidge
Avenue, Dayton, Ohio 45414. (513 ) 275-7431. Open Monday ,
Wednesday, Thursday, and Saturday, 9-6. Tuesday, Friday, 99.Sunday,2-6. CiosedNewYear 's andChrislmas Eves . Cha rge
on' Sunday.
GARST MUSEUM, 205 N. Broadway, Greenville , Ohi o
45331. 1513) 548-5250. Open Tuesday, Fridny , Sunday, 1-5.
Closed New Year's, Good Friday, and Christmas. No charge .
WARREN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY MUSEUM ;
Harmon Hall , 105 South Broadway, Box 223 , Lebannn, Ohi o
45036. (513 ) 932-1817. Open Tuesday through Saturday, 9-1,

FtJrnitur~&gt;

and Kathnn Knight : pmons,
Ca..W l.m·ge a nd C(:lrol Ktng;
exmnming, Glenna Cr1SJl.
Paul Da rnell. c.~ ml M&lt;jnc
Ha wkins; hospitet!ity. Evelyn
l.c wis, ami Fan e Kennedy;
instructi on , Bub King .
Beatrice Kuhl , and Betty Va n
Matre: auditing, Iii! Darnel),
N&lt;:wmi Kin g and (~ra ce
Fren ch; publicity, flowers
and .t:ards , Maryln Wiltox,
Euvetlcl Rcchtlc ; prv ~ rams,
Mcrri Ault ami ~Jennet Cri sp.

Harvey ~ w1lle r. Hampton,
Iowa ; .' Mrs. Yuovne Seott,
Clea r Lake, Iowa ; Mrs.
Kathleen Harn1s, Merscocla ,
Wise .; Mr . imd Mrs. Melvin
Bolin, North Lewisburg; Mr.
and Mrs. John McClain, Lancaster ; Mr . and Mrs. Claude
Bowers. Urbane~ ;
Mr s.
Beulah Nutl, Buchannon, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Kane , Heather and F.nul y,
Marieltd ; Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Smith, Canton; Mrs. Charles
Spencer, Florida; Stanley
Houdashcll , Gallipuhs; Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Mannring,
Zanesville; Mr. and Mrs.
Hebert McClung, Jaekson;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McClung, Worthington ; Miss
R&lt;Jchel Hunter, Ohio Stale
University. Nwnerous Jural
relative:-;. neighbors and
friends of the Smiths called
during the open reception

hours.

-

Deborah 1/ein
ENGAGED ~ Mr. and Mrs. Hichard Hcin ,
Minersv ille . are (;l nnuuncing the eng(;lgement and fort/Jcoming ITI(;I!T ioge of their daug hter , Deborah Kay, tu
Gale Osbo rne, son of Mr . al!d Mrs . Harold Osborne, Long
Bottom . Tl1e bride-cled is (;I seliior CJt Eastern High Srhool
and will be gradua ti ng in .Janua ry . Her fiance is a 197 ~
gr(;ldU(;Ite uf Eastern a11d a 1977 ~ raduate of Hocking
Technica l College with an assm:ie~t~ degree m recreatiOn
and wil dli fe . He also holds di plomas in wx idermy . He IS
presently empluyed al the Bluunl l:!rolh ers Construction
Division of Dupont. The wedding will iJe a n event of Apnl
15. The coupl e will take a wedd in g trip to the Smokey
Mountai ns immedi a tely following the reception. They
plan to reside in Meigs County where Mr. Osborne hopes
to open a practice in taxidenny.

ROBERT KEATON
TURNS ONE ~ Robert
William Lesley Keaton "'as
honored "'ith a party party
at the home of his grandfather, Lloyd Hoffman,
Pomeroy, on his first birthday . A birthday cake
designed as a foutbali field
1A'ith ice cream and soft
drinks was s~rvcd. Attending

wer~

his parents, Mr.

and Mrs . Kenneth Huff.
man, his aunts, ·rcrti
Tobin, Tina Hendricks and
Mary Ann Hoffman, John
Huffman. an uncle, and
Mary Lee,' Ray and Nkhola
Pickens, and Sp. 4 Chris
Miller. Unable to attend
were his 'grandmother,
Bess Hendricks, Art Tobin,
·uncle, his grandfather,
lloyd Hoffman,
and
uncles, Robert and Thomas
Tobin, both currently sen·ing in the U. S. Navy The
Huffman home was also the
scene ·of
('Cicbratio'n

a birthday
reccnUy · fur

Mrs. Barbara Hoffman,
Robert's muther.

Mike Harvey and judy Woodyard
TO WED - Mr . Hmi Mrs. Llioyil S~rg c n l nf 122 Vin e
Street a nn11W1 t'C the pending December marrh1 gc of thei r
daughter , Jud y Ann W11ndyc.ml to Mike Willian1 Har vt-'y.
Mike it1 a 1977 gntdu&lt;J te of Buckeye Hills Career Center
and Ga ll iH Academy High Schm l. He resides with his
porenls at Eur eka Star H(•u te..Jud~· is a st udenl M
, Bu ckeye Hill s Ca re&lt;!r Ce nter.

Sunday, 12-4. Closod Monday, National Holidays. Adm1ss10n
prearranged with the outlet . The Winery .t ba mlusky) presents just a glim)l'ie Wherever , don't overlook this taste of
charge.
ALLEN COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, 620 W. Markel
Ohio!
Street, Lima, Ohio 45801. 1419 ) 222-9426. Open Tuesday ttrrough
ETC . Statewide - We have ca verns , covered bridges,
Sunday, 1:30-5. Closed Mondays, National Holidays. No · monume nts historic, restorations, sceni c hike s AND - ·a
charge. MacDonnell House: Adults, token admiSsion.
feeling quite euphoric ! CONTACI' : The Office o[ Travel and
LOUIS BROMFIELD MALABAR FARM, Route 1, Lucas,
Tourism, S ox tOOl, Columbus, Ohio 43216. (614 ) ~66-&lt;i!IH.
Ohio 44843, ( 419) 892-2784. Where Humphrey Bogart and
Remember, fnr daily ski reports, and additional winter
Lauren Ba call took lbeir vows. Also, experimental farm . Open
recreation informa tion, call toll-free INFOHIO Jc300-282-ll2!;0 '
daily, 9-5. Closed Thanksgiving and Ctrrislmas. Admission
Become a part of whaL' happening' ENJOY'
charge.
DE:CEMBF.H 1-:.10. OI.IJ FASHIONED CHlli ~T M A S . Hath
THOMAS EDISON BIRTHPLACE MUSEUM , 9 Edison
tHale Farm &amp; Village 1 -· Pre-&lt;.'11111tncreial Ch ri ~tn w s 1s
Drive , Milan, Ohio 44846. [ 4191 499-2135. Open Tuesday through
enjnyl&gt;&lt;l Glt the Hale House. Me etinglwlllie ami Cr aft 13arn .
Saturday, 9-5. Sunday, I.,\ . Closed Mondays, Thanksgiving , Ec1ch Sunday, samplin gs of .J ohnnyca ke and turkey are
December. Admission .
nff crc'l. CONTACT : Cnrky, Hale Farm &amp; Village, 1' . 0. B"x
KINGWOOD CENTER, 900 Park Avenue, W. Mansfield,
256, Bath, Ohi o 44 210. 1211;1 666-:17l l.
Ohio 44906. I 419 ) 522-0211. Gardens, greenhouse and nature
DECEMB EH 2-4 , WI NTE R FAIR , Cnhunbuo IO hi , ' S ~&lt; i&lt;'
areas are open daily, 8-sundown, Kingwood Hall is open . Ft:tirgrnund s l - 2.50 profession al &lt;." rafts lllen fr r~ 111 th rnughnu;
Tuesday through Saturday, 8.,\,. Sunday, 1:30-4 :30, beginning
the statl• wi ll be der'w 1nstrating a nd selling ·the ir cc lll lL'I ttpl 11'&lt;1ry
· Easter. Free.
('l'afL"l . [~ ntcrtnimn t'lll , tnn . CONTACT: llcll StrVI''IIS, Olw ·
THE DAWES ABORETUM, Route 5, Box 270, Newark,
Designer Craftsm e11. 7tl 1·:. Cli c:-;tnut , ColumiJUS, Ohio 4:i2 1G ..
Ohio 43085. (614 ) 323-2355. Historic buildings ( 1818) . Open
16141 228-ll6(;,
daily. No charge .
DECEMBER 7-2 :! Wcdnesda v Thrnu gh Su11d;01· ,
GREAT LAKES HISTORICAL SOCIETY MUSEUM, 480 CHHISTMAS AT OHI O VILLA(; E.- Columbus - i.i g ht ~d
Main Street, Vermilion , Ohio44089. (216) 967·3467. Great Lakes tapers, tintypcs. tt·rnpti ng ditiiJes and thl' viii;:Jgl' lt llU' high li ghl
ship models, marine artifacts. Winter hours: Sat.lr~y .
this annual hnlida y l'e lcbration. Dres!i WCin lliJ , bring a
Sunday , 11-5. Closed Ctrristrnas. Admission charge .
naslllif,! ht - and l'Oj11y! CONTA('T : "Ms. Pl:l11 1 Churd1 , OliiH
PIA'IT CASTLES, R.R. 2, West Uberty , Ohio 43357. (513 ) Historical Snd cty, I-i i and 17th Avenue, Crdw nbus, Oh io 4:1211 .
465-2821. Castle Piatt Mac-A.Cheek open March ttrrough
1614) 466-4655.
November . Ca stle Piatt Mac-A-Chee npen April through
DECEMBE:H 11, CI IHIST MAS TOU H OF 110 ~1P: S.
October. Admission charge .
Mari etw
CON'I'AI 71' t'OH DETAil S : Mrs. Hayii &gt;OJII I
AIR FORCE MUSEUM, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio Gut hrie, J:l02 Cisler Dri ve, Ma riclla , Ohi o 45750, 1'6 H ) :m- 11011
45433,(513 ) 255-3284. l..argesttnuseuminlhe worlddedicatedto
DF.CEMBEH t :~ J 6, CHHISTMAS AT STAN II YWET
military aviation . Weekdays, 9-5. Saturda ~ a nd Sunday, 10-6. HALl., Akron. Cnnt:crts foll owed by caroling in th e Musa·
Closed Christmas, No charge.
·
Hown , w els.'i~il in tlte Gn.!~Jl Hi:t ll. Advanee r e.scrv ~1 t ion s
PHO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME, 2121 Harrison
necessa ry . CONTACT : Ms. Louise Goodm e~ n , Stan Hywt~ t Jl;lll
Avenue, Canton, Ohio 44720. (216) 456-8207 . Only shrine of its Fomrdatiun , 714 Nor th P1•rt&lt;1 ge Pt.~th , Akron , Ohio 44:l0:\. ! 2It\ 1
kind in the world . Winter hours : 9-5. Clnsed Chri stmas Day . 836.,\53:1.
Admission ch'arge .
. ! Date s unkn own) C'HII.DHE N'S WON DEHI .ANIJ,
THE NATIONAL HEISEY GLASS MUSEUM , 6th and Maumee 1I .ucCJs Cc ~unty l ~ccrcatinn {'enter 1. For everyr~nc e~ ~t·
West Church Streets, Newark, Ohio 43055 . I614 ) 345-2932. Open two and nver ! ,24,000 squ:.~ re fee t nf jnyfu ! anim ati(ln . Follow
(thrnugh March ) Wednesday , Saturday and Sunday, 1-4 . Open U1e asphalt h,ighway to th is annua l celebration. l'ON'I'Al'T ,
(April through October ) Tuesday through Sunday, 1-4. Closed Lucas Cnunty Hec r eHtiun Center, 'lfJOl Key Slrect, Maunu:t·.
Mondays, Holidays. Adult admission charge.
Ohi&lt;• 43557. 14191 893-9481.
SKI RESORTS ~ Snowbuddies business continues at
IDates unluwwn 1 CH111 STMAS AROUN D THE WO) lLD,
Alpin e Va llcy,Cheste rland ; Boston Mjlls, Peninsula; Brandy-_ Toledo ( Zrt~ r ). Christmas trees decorated tn represent rmmy
wme , Northfield ; Clear Furk , Buller ; Mad River ' Belle- • · natinnalities ~llld internatimw l enterta i nment in t.HJ i nduflf
fonwine (small motel on site ); Snow Trails, Mansfield;
lbcalre, 10-!i p.m . CONTACT : Ms. Cha rm ia n 11i"ega n .
Sugarcreek , Bellbrook, Atw1K1d Lake , Dellroy, offer s a slope , I nte m:o~ tinnal Instit ute , 2040 SuH lw nod Avenue, Tnlcdo, Ohi o
~·· · Do not neglect Ohio 's other wi nter recreations: 43620. 1419 1 24J.91 78,
'
TOBOGGANINC.
( in· Strongsville ,
Akron
... ) ;
(Da tes unkn , wn J OPEN HO,USE AT P EHKI NS
SNOWMOBILING !severa l state and metropolitan parks ); MANSION, Akron . CONTA CT : Perkins Ma ns11on. ooO Cupley
ICE FISHING ("winterized " fish taste better ); and HEARTH Road, Akron, Ohio .
SITIING Ialmost any friendly place).
"
The Office nf Trave l and TPW' ism is nut respnn:-;ible for
WINTER 'S WINERIES - Those open for a taste and a date cht1ngc•s nr ca ncc ll atinns aft er nu1 dead line tlat.e.
tour ar c: Chalet Deh&lt;•nnc , Madisnn ; Hafl e Vineya\·ds,
F11r fu r ther infcrn nrJtion. contact the Offi t:e of Travel and
Spring fie ld; Meier 's, Silv erton ; Shawnee Vin eyard s, Tourism , Bnx 1001.' Columbus, Ohio 4:!216. 1614 1 466-&lt;i844 .
L'1rd cvi lle : Tarula Fanus, Clark svi lle; Valley Vine yard s,
CALL INFOHW - H!00-282-()250 ~ The Offi ce nf Tra,·~J
Morrnw ; and Warren Sublette , Cincinnati. Hememan·s, Put- and Tou rism's tQil-free se rvice - to ri nd out what 's lkiJ&gt; ])l' mn~
in-Bay, is not open in wintertime ; Mon Ami , Ca lawba , offers fc):it iVGI I and eve nts-wi.se th ro ughout the sta t~ !
only eating ; and Engles &amp; Krudwig, Sandusky ~ unless

�.....
' Sw1da\
B-2-The

Tl nlt.'s~en lirwl,

Sunday. l&gt;t•r . Ll, 19-;"7

Gallipolis Christian Women
to have December luncheon

j ~.~.&lt;:t ().. (\()'\"~ ...
1='~aW\:
{~:a~~'' l\ e

... tht.&gt; rnnrnir1g aftt&gt;r tht• Ot&gt; sl~J"trt~ I've t'\'t•r attt•ndt'&lt;l. :\t y
Silrority . Zt'ta Theta fh1 . thr('w 01 simply :;.upt.•r ba sh 111
.J ackson Friday mg ht. Bt•$1 wi ~ hcs g tl l•Ut tn nur ~l S!t•r , !\l ~tr y
F. Iy, who ts slw ring the t It lr- ,1f qut't' n wJt h Sandy DurH'i lll nf ('In
Onlt'~a Alpha . We ar(' rery pr•1ud nf Mary and tt.mlk sht• ;utd
Sandy will make a1l tlf H111 prnud . The party was well attt•udt&gt;d
and E&gt; \·eryt)ne had a grt&gt;at tinw . :\t&lt;~ry Jo(lked rad iant as did a ll
t!f'llur ar lin members. alumm and rushet.•s. Natw- J ll~ I g11t 1n
on·e da nce with Jake Bapst of the Hin Grande Iicllls Club fa 1m• .
Jake is well·kn(lwn for cuttmg a rhic feather. tm tht~ danct&gt;
noor . and last night was no different. I'd like 111 thank our
actin.• member~ fpr (lil t.' nf g matest part irs t•wr thn,wn by the
sor ority . Simply ~ £'at. !adh'" 1
F•lr the Semt•r l'l t!Zt' ns 11f E_~ lt1a C· •unty, it 's n• •l tt)(l la tt' tt 1
~ r1ter art for tJll' Hin•rby t•x iHbit.
'

[ ft&gt;l'l SP n•ry old tht&gt;st.• da: s. H.t•t't.'IH'I.l ;1 ·lt:!tler frPm ni ~
high scho1{ll &lt;.~ bn ut nw· fh-e year· n •w1inn ~ ha s lt lX'l'll thnt
lnn !J. '? 'l\1 makC' th111gS w ~~ r ~e . 1ran intt l lll) l"t llliJlit&gt; fn1m Ctlllt',t..:t'
the othl'r d(l ~ , I couldn't help rememQering all tlw r ra zy things
we USC'd 1•1 dn and the partym~ . It all \"Clfllstwd wht•n she &lt;l skrct
Ill (' l!l a r~oa ny - ~I Tupperw ~m,• party . '11Hngs &lt;ll"l' rl(' \"t' f tht•
same .
Qunte... ~f.t t w .wt•ek : {')eli berate bt'fnrt&gt;hand, but
fnr al.:ll rln dn 11ot lwsltate . ~ Jamt•s Alll'rl.

HI ttll~ I! lilt'

l.rg ht Hnuse Ta be rn a~.: lt? Assembly nf Gnd 1.\""i!l tX"
prrsent i n ~ a wnr ship and praise- ser\'i C
't.' tonight. Agap(' Sounds
w11l bf.' m charge 11f the musil' and my fnen d &amp;1 111 Ca lh•1un ctnct.
thP penplr in charge nf warmth unlimited .

Me1nnnes - Stnughlllr), Clif11 11l amt
Sidey . .This is a· p.ictnrial de,·,, nf. the K ~nnedy White H tlWW .
After read ing and ,·iewing this buuk I realize why· those were
·
years nf hnpe . ·
g, l nk.o~ • f-{ !Je.wee k :

,•,•.·.•,•.•.....~..::;;.~-...~~'(&lt;':'•'

;r··········,X·•.

social · ····

I Calendar
"

SUNDAY
HYMN SING , Sunday, 1:30
p.m. at Raze! Community
Church with music by Da n
Hayman and the Country
Hymn Timers.
CHESTER Fire Depart·
men! Christmas party
.sunday . ~ p.m. at fire house.
MONDAY
TWIN CfTY Shrine Club
Monday 7:30 p.m. at clu b
house . Ovsters will be se rved .
. LE . Lj': CHE
League
meeting at home of Mrs.
Mary Hendricks, 7:30 pm.
Topic, "The Art of Bre~st·
feeding and Overc oming
Difficulties.' ' For more information phone Mrs. Bev
Splete at 446-4010 or Mrs .
Betsy Crank at 67~-2776 .
N·IFTY STITCHERS
Sewing Club Monday home of
Kay Logan 6 p.m. Potluck
refreshments. Usua l gift
exchange.
BEN D 0' The Ri ver
Garden Club, Meigs Inn , 6:30
p.m. Christmas dinner . Gil·
tisfm' .. exchange and program to follow. Mrs. Andrew
Cross is president.
TIJESDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club. 6 p.m. potluck dinner at
the home of Mrs . Dollte
Hayes. There will be gift excha nge.
RA CINE LODGE 461
F&amp;AM Tuesday . All master
masons and their guests are
invited. Officers will be in·
stall ed in an open in·
stallation.

TUESDAY
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Trustees Tuesday 7 p.m. a!
IO"ll hall in Chester.
POMEHOY CHAMBER of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn .
MEI·;:;s COUNTY Pamona
Juni or Grange Tuesday 7
p.m . at Rock Springs Gi~ ng e
Hall. All members who have
not paid dues of $2 should do
so.
•
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
7:30p.m. at school.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80
RAM Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Bosworth Council 4S R&amp;SM
8:15p.m.
RACfNE
GRANGE
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. at the
hall . Work in third and fourth
degrees. Potluck refresh·
ments. Dues of $~ for 1977-78
a"e due.
POMEROY · ·
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
annual · Christmas · party,
Wednesday noon . Meigs Inn .
Uons asked to take small gift
for exchange.

PARTY SET
POMEROY - The Riggs
Royalettes Christmas skating
party will be held today from
2:30 to 5 p.m. at the Chester
Skate-a-Way . There will be a
$2 gift exchange between
members of the corps. All
twirlers , family members
and gu'ests are Y.:elcome.

GAI.l.IPO!.IS
The
Ca lhpohs Chn stl;.~ n Wm nt."n
wtll hold thetr Dt'ecmbcr
lun&lt;'ht'un on Tut'sda) , Drr
13. at the Holida y Inn m
Ga lhpoh s. Cost for the uwa l
ts 13.50 wtt h fret• babysitting
prtl\'ided.
The thernC' w1ll bt' ·· Home
fu r the Holidays." with n
spenal feature of Christllla s
dl"coraoons presf.•nt ed by the
Gall ipolis Gard en Club.
Mustr wtll be presented by
Daryle Shrcts. Res€'rvat1ons
must be madt.• to Connir
Thompson at 367·7676 or f:lsie
Neal at H6-1717 . Special
~urst speaker will be Mrs.
Harold 1Maie I Minnick of
Black Mountain. North
Carolina . Sht) IS lht.• wifE' of Lt.
Coioney Harold E. Minnick
1 USAF retired l and has
first · hand know ledge
of · a
large
part
l&gt;f the world . She was
born and liveu in Korea until
sixteen : had tea while a
teenager with Generalissimo
MAlE MINNICK
and Mrs. Chiang Kai-shek in
Peking ; attended Queens
College 1n Charlotte. N. C..
and with her Air Force
husband has been stationed in
Europe and the United
States . Colonel Minntck
retired from the Air Force in
August 1970 and they now live ·
in Black Mountain, Nort h
Carolina .
1928
Mrs. Minnick was selected
the 1970 Wife of the . Year for
the Military Airlift Com·
mand . She has been an active
volunt eer in militarv and
civilian com mu'niti.es in
America and ove rseas. Girl
Scout Leader. Den mother .
Dt-1.·. 12 - E\"t'lllll!i Bridge 7:30 p .1 11. Call L es h~ ,. 1'n• l,,. .... ,,
workin g with mentally
Dec. H - Get Acquainted Coffee at Cmdy Potter 's at 10
ret a rded child ren : Co·
ordinator of Anglo-American a.m . Ca ll 441H~60 for information.
o,_·L'. lD- F.\·cning Bridge 7:30 p.lll . Call Pam Tcrrizzi at
relat ions at RAF Alconbury
m.-HB.'i
.
.
in England: a corrective
Dec.
17
-C
hristmas
Open
House
at
Pam Terrizzi'S.
therapy volunteer lor four
Dec.
19
General
Meeting
7:30
p.m
. Christmas party .
years at the VA hospital In
Cookie
exchange,
White
Elephant
Swap.
Tacoma, Wash .. a nd with the
Ca t! Joy Atwood at 441H1599 for more in(ormation.
geriatric patients at Oteen
Jan . 4 -'-' Crc·1fts at Jr•y Atw1~•d's twuse .
VA Hospital in ASheville ,
Mate helped organize and
· was the Director 9f Training
in the Ta com a Litera cy
Council using the Laubach
Mrs . Carl Hubbard, Syracuse
"Each One Tea ch One "·
SON BORN DEC. 7
method. This organization is
DEXTER - Mr . and Mrs . and Mrs. Suzie Workman.
dedicated to teaching adult Jerry , Hubbard. former Ravenswood . The couple also
illiterates to read and "-Tite Kathy Conde, Dexter, · an· have a daughter. Cassie Ann .
Engli sh. Many of her nounce the birth of a son.
studentS were foreign·born Jeremy Carl , Wednesda y,
wives learning English as a Dec . 7. The infant wetghed si x
JUST lN TIME FOR
second langua ge.
CHRISTMAS
pounds and three ounces.
On two overseas tours "-'ith Maternal grandparents are
her husband. she was vice- · Mr. and Mr s. James Eugene
president for Ellrppe of the · Cond e, Chester. · ·pat ernal
227 Second Ave.
Women-of-the-chapel (wives grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Gallipolis, 0 .
of American service per· Roger Holter , Racine, and
sonnel l. Under her guidance Larry . Hubbard , Syracuse,
SAVE 10%-15%-20%
were milit a ry wives in maternal great-grandparents
OFF
chapels from Norway t o are Mr . and Mrs . Paul E .
Ethiopia and from Pakistan Casto, Co lumbus, paternal
ON ALL MERCHANDISE
to Africa .
great-grandparents, Mr. and
Open Sun . the llth &amp; 18th
1 P.M. til S P .M.

®

WE'VE GOT

I

t

rr

*

.THE PERFECT

w·

GIFT!

w

w
w

PORTRAIT GIFT CERTIFICATES

~

~~~Va~e~~~?G~~~~sy ~

~.

~

~~=~~~~~~~~~-~~~-~='

GIFTS FOR

GIFTS FOR

MEN

WOMEN

t
..
~

OFF

'

GILLIAN'S
FASHION CENTER~

''

Dead11ne to return:

Return to:

~

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..

....,...

.·~:.~ *
.

~

Midd Jeport,

POMEROY
Mei gs
Senior Citizens Center activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior 1-ligh School
is open 9 a .rn .-4 p.m.. Monday
through Friday.
Monday , December 12 Cards and Games. Souare
Dance, 12 : 4~-3 p.m.
Tuesday, December 13 Chorus, 12 :45-3 p.m. .
Wednesday. December 14
Social
Security
Representative. 9:30 a.rn.12 :30 p.m.: Blood Pressure

pastel

other

If for sele. price : -------Tuesday, December 20, 1977

French Art Col ony

P 0 Bo• 471

"

Gall1po11s, ,Oh1o

45631

Testing,

o.

~

'""

,.
MASS PLANNED
·. POMERO)' -- Monsignor
tdwin Murphy will celebrate
liis golden jubilee with a Mass
'Ill the Sacred Heart Catholic
l(11urch at 7:30p.m. Saturday

night. Now reti red and mak·
ing his home with a brother in
Florida, Monsignor Murphy's
first parish was the Pomeroy
Church .

"

CALENDARS
Star Trek, Star WafS, The J.R.R. Token
Calendar, James Herriol, _Sherlock Holmes,
~

Astrological Calendars. Full Line of HaHmark

The Alcove

· '~~
"' Court St.
••

'

Gallipolis, 0.

Open Friday &amp; Saturday Nightlil8
Starling Tuesday, December 13th open ·
every night till 8 : 00.

a.m.-12

noon;

Grange enjoys
potluck affair

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Kiwanis Club, in
cooperation with the Gallia
County RSVP Program, will
be holding its annual Kiwanis
Pancake Fry at the St.
Peter's Episcopal Church,
54 1 Second Avenue, on
Friday, December 16, from 6

REED NOW AIRMAN
LANGSVILLE - Airman
Clair C. Reed , son ol Mr. and
. Mrs. Harold Cottrill of Hl. 1.
Langsville, has graduated at
Sheppard AFB, Tex., from
the U. S. Air Force 'technica I
training course for aircraft
maintena nce specialists. He
is a 1977 high school
graduate.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED: John Hinkle,
llartlord, IV . Va.
DISCHARGED, None.

a.m . to 8 p.m., and on
Saturday, December 17, from
6 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Fry includes all the
pancak~s

you can eat and a

single serving of sausage.
The Western Pancake House,
on Route · 3~. has made a
donation of mix and syrup for
the Kiwanis project. Other
items available on the menu
will be eggs, ho!Ahocolate,
coffee, and ju't plain good
food .
Tickets are available from
Kiwanis Cl ub members and
RSVP members of Gallia
Co unty. Tickets will also be
available at the door.
The proceeds of this also
will be split between the
RSVP Prog ram and the
Kiwanis
Club .
Both
orga nizati ons arc serviceoriented, and the money will
be utilized towards service
projects of each organization.

~-~~~~~=-~~~=~--~- B ~

~

.

~

·~

~

~

-tfill\\UVJ..,-

~

CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR'S

2

w

CARDS

~

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~

GIVE A BOOK •••

W

BIBLES, DICTIONARIES, INSPIRATIONAL

tr.

«

~

~

GIFT BOOKS, COOKBOOKS

~

W·

ALOW,
The TRIESTE • S2516P
Ma jestically styled Medilerranean

GOLD STAR LUCK
POMEROY - Saturday
wi!ltlers in the Gold Star
Give-Away sponsored by the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Commerce were Avice
Bailey, Rl.l, Box 47, Shade, a
certificate from Elberfelds
and Nora Buchanan, Reedsville,, a certificate !rom
Simon's Pick·A·Pair. The

LOW

fuil

base console fealu1 1ng a beau t1ful
Pecan wood - grain l1n1sh applied to
durable wood products on top and
ends with ·selec t hardw ood sol1ds
framing th e top . Front and base ol
simulated wood 1n ma tch ing finish.
Casters. Automatic" Fine -tu ning
Control.

$69995

CHROMATIC ONE-BUTTON TUNING

certificates may be picked up
at the office of ihe Athens
Messenger in Pomeroy.
Winners on Friday were
Florence Sidders, Rt. I,
Shade, gift certificate from
Goessler Jewelry , and
Debbie Fraley, 513 Magnolia
Drive, Gallipolis, gift certificate from Hartley Shoes.

· • Super Video Ranae

9 A.M. TIL 8 P.M.

~

~~

Mitchell OHice
,S upply

~~

w

~

Second Ave.

.

w

Gallipolis, 0.

• Picture

Control

$7.50 Value · C~ref re e uni- utl thermo~~l

Hair-Styling

s5.95

INGELS FURNITURE

Free

Gift
Wrap

\

514-95

j

·

We are participating in Gallipolis ·
Merchants Shop -A- Ram a

1'1\1 STYLE CENTER

ss.9s

SIS . V.,lue, fteth young and 'nt . ·

Retouch

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
-992·2635
,.

'

I

ou~

Lay Away

$18 . Value , Get tl,e ,romentic feeling . .

Virgin Tint

Open Till
8:00 Monday
Thru Saturday

Use

I

"$25. v,lue . SIJn.lfrea~e~ e11:iteme'lt
1
,..;th a dyn•mic ha i~ p•inti,..g or

·Frosting

106 N. 2ND AVE.

\

S3Q to S18Q

8' CHRISTMAS STOCKING AND 6' SANTA
TO BE GIVEN AWAY DEtEMBER 23.

.95

\

~

~~~-~~~-=~=====~==-~

No shortage of warmth here!
Our contemporary coat
cqllect ion wi II gel h e r
through any winter · c ri sis
comfortably.
A
warm
sur prise for your favorite
girl on Christmas morn . !
Sizes 6 to 20

• Synchromatic 70~Posltion UHF
Ch8nnel Selector

~

~

OUTERWEAR GIFTS

Turring System

W

~

I

\

w
w

Beginning December 12th Open

Party
enjoyed ·

No purchase necessary. Need not be present to win.

VISA '

10

Games , 12:45-2 :t5 p.m.
Thursday. December I~ Co lumbia Gas Speaker, 11
GALI.IPOLIS
The with these activities th e a.m.; Sing-a-Long, 12 :45 p.m.
'- children of the Comm unity ·children have been learn Friday, December 16 - Art
Nursery School located at the ing to put on their ·own Cla ss, 10 a .m.·l2 noon;
First Presbyterian .Church coats and to button, zip and Knittin g and Croc heting
had lor a theme for the month sna p them up. They are also Cla ss, 10 a.m.-12 noon ;
of November "Out on the encouraged each day to take Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Frontier."
of! their outdoor clothing by
Senior Nutrition Program,
A trip back in time, lbund themselves and hang them .in 12 noqn -12 : 4~ p.m., Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Activities the chi ldren playing a game the hall under their name tag. through Friday.
at the Gallia County Senior that brought them across the On the progress chart, each
COAD Se ni or Nutrition
Citizens Center include the ocean on the Mayllower as child in the class now has a
Program Menu for December
Pilgrim~ to America in her star after his or her name for
following for this week :
12 through December 16:
early day~. Pilgrim life was knowing their full name and
Sunday, Dec . II
Monday - Sloppy Joe on
Volunteer Recognition Party seen through pic.1ures as well being able to print their first
bun, potato &amp;ips, co leslaw
as songs, finger plays, and name. '11lese are just a few of with tomato bits, chocolate
1By invitation only), 4 : ~ : 30
stories.
They found their the basic sk ills the children pudding , milk .
p.m.
ol
today
quite different are encouraged to leam .
home
Monday, Dec . 12 - CHorus,
Tuesday - Turkey open
from
the
log
cabin
of pioneer
Co mmunity Nursery face sandwich· - gravy,
1: 1~-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 13 - Hostess time . It was hard for them to wishes to welcome Mr s. mashed potatoes, buttered
Training Session (Amy visualizt: their country David (Cindy) Gra ham to our beets, pears with iced
Wedemeyer, instructor]. 1 without electric light s, cars, staff. Cindy is doing some of graham cracker, milk.
p.m .; Bible Study, 1 : 15-2 : 1~ trains. airplanes, stores ~ and ~er teacher observation. She
Wednesday - Dried brown
all the other things that make i!. a student with Rio Grande · beans, wieners, tossed salad
p.m.
.
Wednesday, Dec. 14 - Card up our society today. The College.
with dressing, canned plums,
children also looked at Indian
For more information on
Games, 1·3 p.m.
cornbread, butter, milk.
life in early America. They our school you,(llay call Mrs . ·
Thursday, Dec . I~ Thursday - Baked cubed
did
teepees, canoes. blankets . John Moore 446·27~5 or Mrs. stea k · gravy, mashed
Quilting, 9 a .m.-3 p.m .;
As they have done for the Jam es Roush 446-4274 or potatoes, buttered green
Co uncil Meeting, I :30 p.m.
Friday. Dec. 16 - Art la&gt;t four years at Thanks- come visit our sc hool. beans, ice cream, roll, butter,
Class, 1·3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7 giving time, the children did Morning classes, Monday milk.
a reenal1ment of the first through Friday, 9·11 :30,
p.m.
Friday - Fried fish,
Feast. Some afternoon classes, Monday, macaroni sa lad, stewed
Thanksgiving
Senior Nutrition Pro~ram
were Pil grim s and some
Wednesd ay and Friday, tomatoes, rolled oat cake,
menu is:
Indian s.
Alan~
12 :45-2:45.
·Monday - Sloppy Joe on were
bread, butter, milk.
bun, potato chips, coleslaw
Coffee, tea, juice and
with tomato bits, butter,
buttermilk served daily .
pears with iced graham
cracker, milk.
SATELLITE MENU
Tuesday - Turkey open·
PORTLAND - The new
face sandwich. gravy, sucSenior Citizens satellite open
cotash, buttered beets,
at the Reorganized Church of
butte., chocolate pudding.
Jesus Christ ol the Latter
milk .
Day Saints (Old Town Flats)
Wednesday - White beans,
on the Racine - Portland
cheese sticks, tossed salad·
Road offers COAD Senior
dre$sing, cornbread, butter,
Nutrition Menu for Dec. 12
POMEROY --The annual Rock Springs Grange for
ca nned plums, milk.
through
Dec. 16:
Thursday - Liver, mashed holiday potluck of the Rock ct&gt;mmunity service work .
Monday
- Sloppy Joe on
Springs Grange was held The grange was recognized
potatoes, butt~red green
bun,
potato
chips, coleslaw,
Thursday night at the hall.
for their work in re!ituring the
beans, hot roll, butter, ice
chocolate
pudding,
milk .
Awards rece ived by springs in the Rock Springs
cr.eam, milk.
Tuesday
Turkey
roll,
members at ' the recent of- community. ALso received
Fridi!Y - Fried fish ,
ma
she
d
potatoes,
.
gravy,
ficers conference were noted was an award and a check
macaroni salad. stewed
buttered beets, pears with
tomatoes, bread, butter, and include blue ribbons, Sue from the Na tional Grange [or iced graham crackers, bread,
Ellen Fry and Ruth Ann Fry an increase in membership.
applesauce-raisin cake, milk.
butter and milk .
lor stuffed toys ; a blue ribbon
Mrs. Lucille Leifheit, youth
Cho!ce or beverage served
Wednesday
Baked
as CWA chairman to Mrs. chainna n, reported on the
with each meal .
beans:
wieners.
tossed
salad
AmoS Leonard, an award for talent contest to be held this
~~serVices rendered on a
with
dressing
,
plums,
corn"
l3 years of serVice as year a nd Mrs. Barbara Fry
non-discriminatory basis. ''
bread,
butter
and
milk
.
secretary to Mrs . F-rances reported on the sewing and
.Thursday . - Beef patty,
Goeglein, and an award to the baking contests to be held.
mashed
potatoes, gravy,
The bowling team will enter a
green beans, apricots, hot.
tournament to be held at
roll, butter and milk.
MEETING CALLED
Newark in January .
Friday - Fried fish,
MASON, W. Va. - There
Thank you notes were read
salad, stewed
macaroni
will be a meeting Monday at 7
from the Rollin Bearhs famitomatoes,
rolled
oat cake,
p.m. in the band room at
ly. Members reported ill were
and
milk.
bread,
butter
Wahama High School on !he
Amos Leonard, Nanry RadCoffee, tea, buttermilk and
school levy that will be voted
ford , and Gladys Morgan.
juice
served daily.
on Dec. IS.
Sympathy was extended to
POME.ROY--The annual James Fry family and Mrs.
Christmas party of tile Mary Shaeffer.
Women 's Auxiliary of
The program by the lecVeterans Metiwrial Hospital turer, Mrs. Ethel Grueser,
was held recently in 'the East- consisted o[ the . Christmas
West Lounge of the hospital. story by Mrs . Shaeffer, piano
A potluck dinner preec-dc&gt;d solos by Ruth Ann· Fry and
the meeting.
Sue Ellen Fry, a reading,
Slides of the Holy Land "Christmas Is"' by Opal
were shown by Mrs. Clara Grueser; and " Christmas of
Burris and Mrs. Mildred Fry. L•mg Ago" by Agnes Dixon.
Members exchanged gifts
Six of the children, Scott
and caroled dunng the even- and Lisa Pullins, Sue Ellen
ing.
and Ruth Ann Fry, and MarGuests were Mr. and Mrs. sha and Michl King sang
Waller Lucas, Dr. and Mrs. "Jingle Bells. " The closing
Lewis Telle, Dr. and Mrs. E. prayer was by Martha King
S. Villanueva , Dr. and Mrs. and there was a white
A. E. Solo, and Dr. Thomas elephant gift exc hange
McGowan.
following the program.

.. THERE IS STILI. TIME - Anyone interested in entering tile Gallia ('r&gt;unty Si•lli"r
Citizen Art Slww can still do so by filling nut the entry blank no later thi:UI Dl'&lt;.'t.' Jllbt.•r 20. Arl
to be exhibited slwuld be delivered to PJ's 1111 Saturday. December :n Ill" [11 Hin.'rh.' · " II
January :J.
,

:~
.

k

STOP IN AND REGISTER TO WIN AN

"Your .Christ'mas Gill Headquarter~"
N. 2nd Ave.

No

•1- .

• Powet Sentry Voltage Regulating
System

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Yes

charcoal

terimit5

t::- Calendars

• 100% Solid-State Chassis

20%

"·~

watercolor

acrylic

oil

5cu l pture

... For sale :

:w

I

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

Nursery school stays busy tr''''''5;:':·:'cWi;;;;~'&gt;.1 Kiwanis !'~ncake Fry
\\~ Calendar
planned for next weekend

Telephone number --------------- ---- Number of pieces - - - - - - --------

Circle type of entries :

;:;
,.
. :~
:..

:1

W

'"

..'"

·

!fi

"·~ .------------------------------------------------------""' Address

~

w

• Brilliant Chroma color Picture Tube

BLOUSES

On The T
In Middleport

~

GALL!A COUNTY SENIOR CITIZENS ART SHOW

ftll

I SUITS
I DR ESSES
ISPORT COATS
'CAR COATS
ILEISURE SUITS 1 DRESS COATS
'HATS
I LEATHER COATS
I
Dress
&amp;
Casual
&amp; JACKETS
1
!
SLACKS
I BLOUSES
~! • Dress &amp; Lesiure
1 PANT SUITS
'J-f'-&gt;!1,7
JACKETS
13 Pc. S'UITS
• SWEATERS
,SLACKS
I SHIRTS
•SWEATERS
•WALLETS
,HANDBAGS
IKEY CASES
I BILLFOLDS
•LUGGAGE
. •BEADS &amp;
UNDERWEAR
EARRINGS
•sox
•HOSIERY
it TIES
I LUGGAGE

1

SHIRTS
OR

SUN DAY
I.AF AVETTE White Shrine i~===============~=~
prat1.kc at 2 p.m. al the
Masonic•'f('mple.
t11urch Se rvice
PA INT Creek C'h&lt;i$[111 HS
w
Program at 7 p .m . ·
w
MONDAY
-~
THE VINTON Volunteer
Firemen . fanlil)' potluck
w
dinner at the Villa~e Hall at w
6:-30p.m. All members of the w
department
a nd
their
familil's invited . Hegular
W e , h ave th e I argest stOCK
'- ....
· ~W
meeting after dinner .
LA LECHE League at 7:30 p.
m. at home of Mrs. Mary W
of frames In the area.
Hendricks. Topic, "The Art of w
" ' t!!
•.
I{
llreast feeding and . Over·
coming Difficulties." Mrs.
Bev Splete, 446-4010 or Mrs.
Betsy Crank. 67~-2776 for
more information.
·.
MERCE RVILLE Grange at
W
446-7494
I
7:30 p.m.
TIJESDAY
,
·
Open Tues. thru Sal. 10-S
VISIII '
GALLIPOI.IS Chri stian
Women's Luncheon. Holida y W
Thurs. Eve. tillS
~
Inn 12 : 15. 367 ·7676 or 446-1 707
PAST Matron Club ol Vinton
•

B-3- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 11. 1977

EVA'S BoUTIQUE

This Week's Special

t

TIJESDA Y
PEMBROKE Club will meet
at the home of Mrs. Thomas
Price at 6:30 p.m.
FRENCH CITY Garden Club
at Holiday Inn 6 p.m . Aller
dinner go to the home ol Mrs.
Bertina Smeltzer for their
meeting, at 7:30, and gilt
exchange.
THURSDAY
THE F,MAt:WN
CLUB
Christmas party and gift
e•change
at
Oscar 's
Riverboat Room, 6:30 p.m.

Welcome Wagon
club activities

Official Tongues
The official la nguage in all
but three Latin-American
republics is Spanish . Brazil
uses Portuguese ; French is
spoken in Haiti : English is
spoked in Guyana .

Daisy Original
Country Casual
First Glance
or H. I.S.

Order 4l f l•:astern Star meet at
Mr . and Mrs. Dewey
I Walker 's 111 6 p m. Potluck
dinner meet 111g. Furnished
..-ill bt• meat and rolls.
Devotions by Arlene Tracy.
l!lVEHSlDE Study Club
meet at I p.m. at the home ol
Mrs . Herbert Cardwell.
White elephant gilt exchange.
AMERICAN Legion
Auxihary spccial·meeting at
the home of Mable Brown, ~43
3rd Ave., at 7:30p.m.

340 SECOND AVENUE, GALliPOLIS, OHIO

�La Leche League

Australia topic for EmanGn Club

., Community
Charlene
to conduct meeting , Corner ByHoeflich
(; ,\ t.UI'lli!S
arc nu rsw~ ~ tlUr b:lb} art'
~ ou \\ tl friC'd

that

\'Ill rh•t

ht'

bt&gt; ~ t'llllll! t'lliHH,:h '' :\rl' )llll
afraid to nurs.t• b&lt;'caust• It" 111
·tie ~ o u dtmll''" WhJt 111 rln
al)!,1ut ··Cohck( ' bab) "' What
t11 d11 abtJ UI tt•t•thm~ p;lln and

tharrht•a ,. ll uw dL) } nu mLT t"ilSC' ynur nulk suppl) and

t•x prrss f•s:t ra mtlk \\ht' n
bn·:~sts ~t·t t.•n1.wrgt•d''

:;;

Tht'St' qu.,•.sthJOS and other
!t•ehmqut·~ hl'ipful to n urs tng
llllltht' r"1.·hlld n•lath1nShtp w1\l
bt~ du:it' u~st•d at the St:'Cond

lhl'tl~"t".l-..hllll!l l'llih·r ,q [ \~~~ ' llh'•llh l1'!H&gt; ••1
' "' ' 'hdll'
!1 l\ l' lih'lll

\\

l'\ l'

h:.ttl11.:r

:._:1 l\ [ ilL' Ill

\

and
Overcom ing
Dif·
fi culties." All interested,
ex:pectant or nursing mothers
·are enco uraged to come.
Bab irs are welcome to ar·
company their mothers.
For more informatiOn call
Mrs. Bev Splet• at 446-4010 or
Mrs . Betsy Crank at 675-2776 .

ur

THR EE BILl~~ SIGN EU
COLUMBUS iUPI I- Gov.
James A. Rhodes Friday
signed bills pro1·iding major
tax abatement fo r industries.
r equir ing
th e
join t
nom in ation of candidates for
govetn qr a nd li eutena nt
governor , and conveying 260
acres in Union County to the
Honda Motor Co.

Program planned
A special

M liSSIIIi.IO

jlf\

llllCf('.Stlllf,! ta lk 1111 J\UStr&lt;.tha
b} Bl'tl} Krttt1.,

\\ :ts ' J!.IH'II

\\hu du.l su me cnnsultlllg
tht•n• fur trn months.
She passed nut Ctiptcs uf the
.song, " WitltZlllf.! Matiltht "

pnd &gt;1artrd out ~) s;oying it
nas awt thr Natinnal Anthem
11f Australi&lt;t. She explained
\\ nrd .s 111 tht' song &lt;lnd thrtr
nH'aninJ.: nncl twcl item s or

p'ictur(''s tu shuw SU('h a~ the
jnlly sw&lt;Jgman, a hobo t~ pl'
man ; ballabung - Cl furnh:r
ri\'l'r bt•d that fills With the
\\&lt;tlt'r during a rainy SNiso n ,
used as a pool by hobnl's :
Ctli!Jbah trrc - u gum tn•t•;
billy -· a t'llll used for bmilng
w&lt;tter and cooking our 11f
LhxJrS: ju111buck - a young
shecp :.tu ck('r ba,kt -- rood bag
carried 011 till' bal'k :md
squatter - the owner of :1
lmg(' farm or ranch .
She had a map of Austr;.alia
which if viewed upside down .
.resem.bles thr map of t hr
United States a nd is about the
same sizr, with only six
states. and has fewer people
than the st ate of Illi nois.
Australia lles just south uf
thr equat or between th e
Ind1a n Onan and thr South
Pa('i fi e Oce::m. It is H \nnd of
~reat open spaces and scenic
beauty, some what like the
west•rn Unilrd Sta les. A
single Aust ralian ea tth.• ranch
may cover hundred s of
sq uare miles.
Most of the Australians live
in la rge cities. They speak
Engli sh. but have many
words of tht&gt;ir own w ~1 i eh may
be hard fur a prrson from the
Unit ed States or Gn'at
Britam to understand .
\Ji nin~

ATHENS -

Ma r)

Thursday, Dt•&lt;· canbl•r 1.
Stutes \\rrl' shown and an

The ··good smn&lt;~ntan awilrd" uf tlw \\l"t.'k gut·~ to l\1r ami
Mrs. C;uroll Pll'fl'C of ttu.• Sult•m Ccntt.•r t'U IIUll \ltll ty Tht•y
befnt.•mlt&gt;d J:t w t'&lt;:tQ tran.•lc!'!, on thl1 ll'tl-(.'U\'cnxl roatls Thurs·
11\t't'tlllg ,1f J.a r. ..·eht&gt; League
day ru~ht afti.•r a pllt..'-UP 1lf cxr~ .
11 f (;alllpllil:- on Monday,
F.1ght of tht! 13 wen• A,·vn la dle~ rt'lurnm~ frurn Weli!&lt;Oton
Dt•ct•mth•r . l::! m; 30 p m at
where thl'Y spent thr aftt·rnoon :ll a Chnstma s !)arty. Must
tht' h1lllH' 11 f Mr&amp;. ;\·l ary
wcr~ mlong gowns ttnd s1lver. shppt•rs, hardly appropriat e fur
lkndncks .
trudgmg along in ttlc snow and ll't' .
.llr&lt; ll&lt;'' Spkte 11111 b&lt;&gt; th•
Mrs. Pten·t' mmlt• eoff(;'e and tea for the group, Hnd then HS
lt•;_nft&gt;r fll f lht' d!Sl' USSI 01l 0 11
the ni~ht wore on tnststcd on preparing a meal. SC\'l'I"HI hours
" 'llw. :\ rt nf Brt•ast · ft'i'dmg
Mer. Glen Cnsp came with a jeep and escorted till' twu
earlo.ads of Avon representatives to Hutland. In tht• group
were Romona Yonker, whose l'Hr tnt•tdl'Jlt.ally wtml off tht•
nxHi i:Hi d was later .struck by an empty school bus, Ann
Thomas, Pauline Wolfe. Barbara Murray , F.vrlyn Gilt11un•.
Esther Bacon. Beatrice Smtih, and Diane Nichols .
In ''aSt' vou'vt:&gt; wondered there w11l bt.&gt; tt Chnstma s humc
del'Oratm ~ contest an Middl~port . Plans wert.• to be eompll'ted
this wt•ekend bv Mrs . 'Malcolm Roller uf the Middleport
G~rden Club, a~d her conunitt ee. For many years ;ltlt' two
Middleport garden dut.; have sponsored the con test wh1ch has
certai nly contributed to the beauty of the village at CltrJstmas
tim to .
AND DID YOU HEAR - Annte and Paul Chapman are !he
parents of twins. a so11 and a daughter. born Thursday mgh t at
Holzer.
Be;my Rtce carne home lor the holidays earlit•r than ht• had
expected. A professor a t ttie Mansfie ld Branch a! Ohio Stale
. Umversity. Benny slipped on the icc and injured his back. HL's
recuperating at the !lome of his mother, Mi ldn.•d J·:.a::J1er. whose
ha\·ing her own nH.•dical problems now.
HAV EANICE WEEK .

i1.
PJ.n h lll' 111.1r ~,.. d (),_·, l h~.· .. .t,tt.d lh' \ ll..'f ' \\tlhllll ,~ll
.. [ \ k· Pl1 h 'I' , •I !h.· \ 1hk. 1.1 . . 111, lll.thk·. I )n hL't' l' R. 1't' t n
't 11ldl

hollH'

·:·
:·:

llt.' "\ for lht.• fun uf

!l.1omts.
Life among the people or
Au;1ralia is much like the life
in the United States. A man
who Jives in Sidney or
Melbourne does about the
same th in~ as !he man who
hv•s in New York or Chicago.
except
the
Au stralia n
probably gets more exercise
and watches more sporting
events.
Beca use of the climate,
Th e n&lt;.~tivf'
anmwls , •
r!uwrrs and people of Au!l.irnlians have remained
Austrulia are diffprcnt from outdoor pe&lt;iple, even though·,
ttwsr fuund anyw here in the mo st of them now live in
wnl'l rt. Au.straliil has many cities. Australians do more
gn.•at for(&gt;sts . Most of the swimming and sun-bathing
than most Ameri~ans . This is
trees are hardwoods of a kind
known as Eut·a lypts, whi ch because all the important
bclflng to the family of trees cities are on or near the
r11 lled Eucalyp tu s, co ast. Australians love
hiking, hill climbing, football .
Au~1ralians call them gum
rowmg, cycling, golf. horse
t n'l'S They :~re trees of great
racing, cricket, a nd an
I.Jc(:lut)'. su mc bl aze with
crims.•n And yellow blooms in outdoor sports. Whether he
season. All ale eVergreens lives in his own house or in an
which shed their bark instead a partmen t the Australian
of their leaves in winter . generally has a ga rden .
Australia has no national
Wattl e blos·so ms are so
popu lar thai they have b&lt;&gt;en anthem other than the British
"God Save the King ror
made part of the country's
' 'Waltzing
official coAt of anns. The best Queen ). "
Matilda" comes ~rea rest to
known of thr many stra nge
and interesting anima ls are .being Australia 's national
the kangaroo, the platypus · folk song .
Australians celebra t e
and th• koala. The nat1ve
ut the same holidays as do
abo
people ore call ed Aborigines.
•peopl
e in ot her Western
Thr ruast line of Australia
1s smooth, with a few bays or nations but there are a few
purely Australian holidays :
c&lt;.~ pes but there a re a number
May 5th, Co ra l Sea Day. the
uf good harbor s. The best
kn own is Sidney Harbor, one day they celebrate giving
of the most beautiful in the thanks to the United States,
world, with more than lBO April 2&gt;l h. Anzac Day ,
milrs of shore. It is spanned com memorates the landing
by a 1,6)0 foo t bridge. one or of the Austra lian and New
the largest steel-arch bridges Zealand Army Co rps troops
on the world . Ocean-going at Gallipoli ln World War I.
vessels ca n pass under the The word Anzac is made up
bridge easily . Many sailors of t he in itial letters of
consider the harbor one or the Australians and New leland
besl in the wo rld because it is Amty Corps , January 26th.
deep and well sheltered from Australia Day, the day when
Australian s celebrate the
founding of their country.
Mrs . Kratz also gave a
short review of "The Heroes "
b~ Ronald McKie. It is among
the most extraordinary and

portant unlust ry tn Australia
s tn N'
gilld
was
first
lh Sl'u\'l'rt'&lt;l 111 1851. Queens·
land h&lt;1s i.l rn·h source nf both
J.!uld Hnd l'i,ppcr ores.
J\ u~iralti.l ~150 produL:es l4irl)e
amounts of ~·uul. Whf'a t and
mt•oH for uthrr ru uutries to
usr Aust ralians en joy Utkin~
part in spu11s. the most
popular SJX'l'taturs spurt IS
hurse racing .

o.,\I.I.II'OLIS
Thl'
l ·:na~ llh l fl t'hib nu•t at lhr

Mil" hr-1• n an im-

" Wi nter in Appala ch.ia·
program will be pr l.lsented
Saturday 1Dec. 171 by the
Appc.ll achian Gree n Pa rk s
Project, a m u s~eal theat• r
gr o up . The performance is
under the joint production of
the Ohio University School of
Theater. arid !he Ohi o Valley

Offer includes living room
.lnd hall onty up 'to JOO sq .
II.

Laving around on dirty
carpets?
Get
them
stea med so they ' ll be in
great shape tor winter.
Furniture' Stan ley Steemed

s cat~t,Jg~rrr

VIS.4 '

PROTECTION
Gift a Gift Certificate for
Christm'as- Call us about
it .

Open · Evenings
•u n co""

•"t"'lll 1 •• ~~·Jooi.A 0&gt;1'110

MEIGS, VINTON
&amp;GALlTA CO.

Til 8 PM

61~46-4208

DECEMBER 11 THRU DECEMBER 17

BYmEFRENCHCITYGARDENCLUB,
A MEMBER OF mE OHIO
ASSOCIATION OF GARDEN CLUBS.

The Wreath . Titere are three basic decorations that most
of us picture when we think of Christmas - a wreath a
garland or swag, altd a Christmas tree. Wreaths symbolize ihe
eternal so we suggest ways of making them .
Although there are lovely mmmercia lly madr wreaths , it
is a great joy and satisfaction to gether material and make
yoW" own. For a bushy green wreath you will need a circular
foundation which can be made by binding pliable wands of
shrubs such as privet or forsythia, formi ng a circle, nr bending
a coal hanger or other wire to a circle. U you do not want to
make yoW" own, wire foundation hoops can be purchased, as
well as styrofoam and straw wreath forms.
SfAUFFER HOLDS PARTY - 11Je Stauffer Chem ica l Co. recently held a Christmas
Gather evergreens and cut into four or five-inch pieces,
party
for the emplnyCI's' children at the Point Pleasant Moose Lodge. At left, Ben Franklin
wire the pieces into little bun ches, using about five pieces loa
th e enh•rtmnmm1t with his magica l show. On the ri~ht, Santa. Claus listens to
provides
bunch.,Wilen a nwnber of these bunches have b&lt;&gt;en prepared ,
wishes
from
tl1c children.
with a spool of wire fasten each bunch to the wire hoop, each in
the same direction, overlapping some, tW"ning the spool of
wire aroWJd and around the wreath until the circle is
and
daughters ,
Mrs.
compl eted. With the styrofoam nr straw foundati on. the
Kathleen
Durst,
Mrs.
Lois
material can be stuck directly into the wreath , making su re lo
cover all sides thickly .
~·
Denney 1 Denise,
Mrs .
Dorothy Morris, Mrs. Garnet
There are many ways to decorate these wreaU1s and one
Meeks and Mrs. Jane Ann
popular way is the Della Robia design created by using
Denney.
bunches of fruit of dil(erent size and color-small bunches of
Refreshments were served
grapes, lemons, walnuts, apples, limes and cnnes. Tie this with
of cupcakes, nuts, mint s,
a large rosette bow with streamers, of red and green lined
Kool-Aid and coffee . ·
ribbon . With the artificial fruit and bow of weatherproof
ribbon , this wreath would look fresh in any wea ther. This
' would be a very bright and gay wreath but they are equally
lovely in more subdued C&lt;Jlors. One of the la test design.s is the
"country loo k" or the natW"allook created by using the natura I
and brown tones with ribbon bows of the same colors.
Fruits that are good to use for Della Robbia wreaths are
lady apples, crab apples. lemons, limes, kwnquals,
cranberries, nuts, tangerines, mandarins and Sec~el pears
and small pine cones. If natural fruits are used they will last
much lo~ger if shellaced.
Another lovely wreath can be made by using a straw
wreath, wrap with ribbon either solidly or at intervals. The
center of interest can be .either at the lop or bottom or to one
side, at both tile lop and the bottom. In the latter case, the
SMALL DOWN PAYMENT
bottom arrangement should be the larger . much the same ·
materials can be used as with other wreaths. A bow of the
HOLDS ANY ITEM!
same ribbon can be used in tile center. Corn Husk nowe rs ami
figurines are love ly used with straw wreaths, tied in wit11 the
DELIVERY BEFORE
bow.
·
If your door is protected from the weather and you us•
CHRISTMAS.
Fresh fruit , use greens that have more grey in !hem than the
bright green of pine. Instead of a wh ole circle of fruit you. could
YOU PICK
use clusters at mlervals, with grey~reen juniper berries, use
yellow lady apples , bronze Seckel pears, yell ow-red love
apples and a moss green ribbon bow.
To make a pine cone Wreath, it is a guod idea to have a
circle of Masonite or wallboard· or similar mat ~ri a l, a can of
linoleum paste and a wide putty knife to spread the paste.
Assemble all materials on a newspaper on a table, arrange the
design at the side. Use tiny cones or large pew is of Cal ifornia
or Southern cones, p•essed into the paste around the edges of
tile foWJdation, with tile roWJded side out 1l will give a
scalloped effect. Almonds with the pointed end out will give
this nice effect Plan a design as with any nt1wer arrangement.
have a point of interest or focal point and balance can be .
accomplished by using a point of interest at the top and bottom
with smaller Focal points at either side. After you have your
points of interest. fill in SQlidly with the balance of material to
lorm'the complete wreath. Use either in its natural coiors or
dust with gold or silver ..A two-tone brown and green bow is
pretty with til is wreath. Dried materials are also very lovely to
use on ~ wreath, especially the straw wreaths .
Sometimes there is a color problem in decorating the
doorway . If you have amber colored glass lanterns on either
side of the doorway , a plain green pine wreath can be hung
from each one. Some pine cones dusted with gold and a gold
velvelte ribbon bow.
_
Vou might want to decorate a green wreath to emphasize
the colors in your living room. Should yoW" walls be yellow or
soft green or even beige, decorate a green wreath with pine
cones, sweet gwn balls and acorns. This could ile hung over the
fireplace.
.
·
If you have a bright colored door such as red, orange, blue,
or other, be careful of the colors you use so that nothing
clashes: Gold is pretty with red, brown·with orange, silver with
blue and green with most colors unless a green door. Just be
careful of the color ribbon used .
Begin early til is year to collect cones, nuts, seed pods and
other materials to dry and use with next year's wreath. It will
Ill' exciting to mllecl these items and arrange them on such a

KOOAK
MOVlEDECK 425
Projector
A prt.::sent tha l 91'o'CS home

v1e wrng to 1nP wh ole

IA mlly ~

Easy to US(' Au to rna1 1c th reacl mg Ins tant 1er un _Plus m ore
co nven 1ence l e &lt;~.tur es Fun to
ge l Easy I O CjiV(~

1 €~ier.
TAWNEY'S
STUDIOS
41-1 Second Ave .
Gallipolis

•
·Send Our FTD

Seasons Greeter-··
Bouquet. ·
( 'hrl-.1111.1'&gt; ~.· . mdkln.:hl. lrl·-.h
fl, ,,, ~· r ... h.:-.11\l' ~ ;l·~n .. in .r
~ 1..'.1111111 ~ J,ra -..., \'11.,., ]'- Pur 1· 11J'

I·
1

.

\~·.t ~ ,n \

c ; t"l'l't l! r' Bllll•l tLl' l .
lllli4Ut: }.! ifl, \1.1:

( hll' tlf Ill. I ll ~

\L'IH \ ; r\n \•'" 1 .: 111~\\h l' l"l' . till'

'

.

l ' ID ";r\ . :'&gt;.l.rk \.' \t' ur ,,· !..:~· lll•n
atr:l kt II'&gt; {j, , tl1l' fL"' t ' ! tl
l ' tl llll' 111 .

$15.00

Car/4 Harbour
WILL WED- Mr. and Mrs. Clyde I. Harbour of Rl. 4
h·oct(lrville, Ohio Gl re annnUilcing the engagement and
forthcoming marriage uf their daughter, Carla Jean, to
William B. Hall , snn of Mr . and Mrs. William M. Hall of
RL 1, Crown City. The wedding will take place 7 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. II. 1978 at the
. ..
~ ...
FirSt Baptist Church of
Proctorville with the Rev.
John Alley officiating . Ms.
Harbour is a graduate of
Fairland High School and
Hun tington . College of
Business. She is employed by
the Hunting ton Internal
Medicine Group. Mr. Hall is a
graduate of Hannan Trace
High School and is employed
by Standard Oil of Gallipolis.

Th e spec ial Christmas
program, which is bei ng
presented in ot her cities
around the stale this month ,.
appeals to people of all ages.
The members of the group
have composed, arranged
and scripted th e show
authentically and have taken

FLOWERS by GEORGE
•

18

G·allipolis

Cedar St.

..,...-

Phone 446-m 1

II

.

BY

•

STRATOLOUNGER

wreath.

'

SPE·CJALS

: Shower held
•

'

Sunday thru Saturday

•
•

•,.

Dec. 11 thru Dec. 17

.

'

BIDWELL - Mrs. Pearl
Denney, Mrs. Dorothy Norris
and Ms. Verna Weddington
hosted a baby shower Nov. 3
in honor of Mrs. Chuck
(Fran) Denney at the John E.
Denney residence in Bidwell.
Games were played with

prizes going to Mrs. Howard
Hatcher and Mrs. Millie
George. Door prize was 1'(!!!.1
by Mrs. Midge Denney.
Guests attending were Mrs.
Charlotte Tussey, Mrs. J. A.
Hammond,
Mrs.
Ann
Nuckles, Mrs. Lucy Montgomery, Mrs. Lottie Young,
Mrs. Judy Hively, Mrs. Millie
George, Robin George and

THE UNIFORM CENTER
-366 Second Ave.~------·-·-·---·----- Gallipolis, Ohio-

PICTURES
AND
PLAQUES
CHOOSE NEW

LAMPS
ALL TYPES
NOW

FROM A

IN
STOCK

WIDE
SELECTION

No

Substitutes
e 2 PIECES CHICKEN
e MASHED POTATOES

tl ROLL

.

.

Go

Give A Gift
Certificate
From The

Sholce Shoppe
Gallipolis Store Only

~qakt ~qnppr
2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

,

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

FOR QUICK PICI\-UP SnRVlCE PHONE

K &amp;K
~
E MOBILE HOMES ;

i

~ 3411 Jackson Ave. ·
~

~

·.

.

Point Pleasant

675-3000

.

l11 ~".R tttm-u 'ii ~'R'Jl'Jl "n'Jl'R'Jl -non

'

·Interior and Exterior

bin

Fixtures
Bulbs, Flurescent Tubes

PHONE 444et-1611

!446-12121
LOOKING, FOR

BAGS
TWO SIZES
TO CHOOSE FROM

0

jalt

35

.

· Mon-Sat.
9 A.M.·6 P.M.

Across from Hospital

-

.,

~·Next

..
••

This Christmas~ why not
give a new light fixture.

1312 Eastern Ave.

...

'

Ph. 446-1212

Door to the Pizza Hut"

0

0

EARI.YI

0
SHOP THE. • • 0

REMEMBER
A SMA.I.L

AGIFT IDEA!

•

I

FOR YOUR
CHRISTMAS GIFTING

SHO~

Gun

All Types of

PfPILll
lUlU

'I

DESKS

THIS
CHRISTMAS

!

---~

We have a nice
selection of

,·

FIXED THE WAY
YOU LIKE 'EM

t . ...---·
. . . . . . ,............
.

~ ------~

MANY STYLES

CEDAR CHEST

THE

ltHRISTMAS. SPECIAL~
t TIDS DECEMBER =
~
AT
=

·-

WOOD
ROCKERS

~~'ll ~'R'lt 'It 'R'll'll 'll'Jl1J'Jl.'R'Jl'll1J'Jl1f4

T({))

'300

BEAN

.

CHICKEN
m
BE SURE AND
~
SNA.CK BOX BROASTED =
t CHECK _OUT THE ~

From

&amp; BASSETT

•

Greece voted to become a
republic on Dec. 8, 1974,
ending
a
142-yea r·old
monarchy .

large (8·9), X·large (9%-101h)
AT

RECLI"ERS

We rea!h- get around ... for you 1

-

Numerous Styles, Fabrics and ColoiS
Small (5-6), Medium (6\lz.Jl/2)

GIFT!

••r\kr, L·.dl 11r

care to preserve the customs,

SV}VDAY thru SATURDAY

County Gudm O.,Joo

Living, loving holiday gifts.

The free prog ram.is open to
tire public and will b• held in
the Athens Middle School
Auditorium at 2 p.m.
" Winter in Appalachia" is
perfo rmed in the familiar
Gre•n pa rk s fo rmat and
consists or songs, music,
dramati c segme nt s and
puppet s. Along with material
from past performances, the
group will present a Christ·
mas seg ment ce ntered
around an Appa la chian
.O lristmas celebration set in
1864 . The scrip! was written
by Connie House, one of the
performers.
·
The new segment shows a
family reunited for the fir st ·
time sine• the beginning of
the Civil War . Throughout the
sce ne, th e audience · is
prese nted with diffe.rin g
views of the mening of Christ·
mas . The Green Pa rk s
puppets present their own
Wlique version.

sounds and sp1ril of Appalachia.
The performance in Athens
' ha s been ma de poss ibl e
through 10cal sponsors in·
eludin g Larry Conrath
Realty, Marting's Depart·
men! Store, Pizza Hut of
Ohio , Inc ., The Ohi o
University Inn , and Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph B. Vanity, J r.
The Appala chian Green
Parks Project is also supported by the Ohio Program
in the Humanities.

• werkly leatuw of Lh.,. Callia

Ci/f
lt!Ptt...
-

L

"A Gift To Make Her Heavenly
On Her Feet"

GARDEN.

~
f~/:

//,

--·-·------------------------------------------~----------~

From OUR

profoundly moving accounts
in the annals of war .. ll tells'tlf
two secret raids from the stia
on Japanese-occupied
Singapore during the darkest
days of the Second World
War.
Launched
from
Au;1ralia the first raid wa•
an im.·omparable suttess the second a total tragic
Iaolure. It is a story of un·
surpassed cou rage and
sacrifi ce that recounts with
clarity and precision th e
exploits of the men who took
part in the raids and the tiny
Krait !hal carried them first
to glory, and then to death .
During her stay .i n
Australia , Betty had the
privilege of going on board
the Krait, this she consider&lt;'!~
a great honor.

•

Thea ter, Im:.

ANY
LIVING ROOM &amp; HALl

M-The Sunday Times-&amp;nlinel, Sunday, De&lt;:. 11, 1977

-DOWN

PAYMENT

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HOOVER SWEEPERS
GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
MICROWAVE OVENS
.DISHWASHERS
TRASH COMPACTORS
0 WASHERS
0 DRYERS
D REFRIGERATORS
0 CARD TABLES

~'-Bol ""'~Y,: l&gt;:&lt; y;,: ~t&lt;::! 1&lt;::' ~~12101 !EjOII""I&lt;OI r&lt;:I'BIIIWI!IilliiiOUii¥11UIICII-IICIII!ill!fliiCII •ll!aro&lt;:&lt;ilURilU!!IOI lt'OIW 11101 lf';:I!Ej01!2101 B;:j l&lt;:¥!2101 ro&lt;:&lt;l"" l&lt;O&lt; 1!01~!2101 20:01&lt;0&lt; - - l&lt;OIBO&lt;Io::a:lfll.

•

�B-{l- The Sunday Tunes-Sentmrl. Sunday . Dt&gt;&lt;: t 1. 19; i .
and ,\ trs . A!nn

Baby born
VINTON -

Mr. and Mrs.

Kevin L Willi ams 1Barbara
liay) af Goldsburu. ~ - C. are
announrmg the birth o{ thetr
ftrst chi ld . a ctauJ!ht&lt;'r.
Olrtstiana

~tari ('

Rar-

Sara 's Christmas

nert. Grrf'n Acr£&gt;s Sub·dtnswn. Mrs . Beatrt C'£'

ShP was

born at St-ymon.' Johnson A1r
Force Hosp1tal D~· - 6 ant1
wet!olhed srren pounds and
ftve oun('t'S. and mr asurrd 20

Manr Ga} and tht' latt'
Dewt') Gay. Pork Trailer
l'tl Urt. 1\tr. and Mrs. Ozzae
,;\ux1er . J al·kson. Kt&gt;vtn

SARA 'S CHRISTMAS
llV l 'ATHEIIINE RE NET
Sara dashl\1 to the wmdu"· to l'&lt;ttth a glimpse uf the f(rst s now f~ll. Her· eyes trred
to follow t•ach srh•t•ry nake as they quietly fell to the ground.
Soon tht• pasture held would be suited for slcigh-rrdin~ "nd the m~ktn~ of s11ow

graduat ed from Sou lh·
~tH•stern SchL
lOI 1n 1975 and
Barb:ua frmn G~llipolis tn

,

1976.

men . PaJ»&gt; hud prmhised that sht- l'ould stay out lcttc this fCLtr and ride her -slt· a ~h
down the rockv hill after dark. What fun evervonc would l~avt• this year. And best of

aiL Urwk Jud would lx.• thl·re tu bwld a ftrl:'for Uw children.
Christmas will soon be tll'rt' thought &amp;trn. Evt~ryorll' was fct•ling the t'Xcilemcnt of
tht&gt; season. Mr. Wilson down at lht' ~t·rwral store had hunf.! fl'd and green paprr across
tht• &lt;'cihng and would gi\'P ctteh ehtld a pteec of roC'k ctmdy when they came in the
store . E \•en Mama had hung a sprig of 1nistletoe o\•er the d oorwa~·~
Yes. Christmas would soon be hen• ... suddenly Sara wished fur some morlt'y. Nut

Lnrhes long . Grandparents
a re Mr . and l\:frs . :\lar k G.

Gay, Kineon Dr . and Mr.
Le onard ar.d F:dt t h Ann
Will ia ms . Vinton . Gre at -

grantparents

are

Mr .

The diameter or Saturn's
ring syst£'m is about liO,(X)()
nu1es but thr nngs are
rstimHted to be no thicker
than 10 m1 Ics.

to buy any thing foolish. but just enough 11\0ney to buy a manger set or candles to fix up

tht.• da rk C{l bm or maybe s.torl' presents .
• Presents. though, wt•rc no problem for little Sara. In Sunday School s he had made
Hi bit.• markers ....... nn ~ fnr ~b ntH and (•Ill' f•~r Pa1&gt;a . lf-nnly she had H p r esent fj•r b~ • l&gt;y
Jt·sus ...
"Sara , homd tm• the pan pf P'- 'Pl''•rn . Pap(:l will bt• ht•re so1•1l wi lll the munt•y frotn

the skins . We want to hav(' the tree decur&lt;Jted before your Papa comes home.
Evervthing must be fuushed so we can leave for chu rch." spoke Sa ra's mother, a g~n­

NOW OPEN
Ad vent taper 5. pink . blue , lavende r ; Ch n st m a5
candl es. se ve r al co lor s ; t a pers &amp; p1llers . cand le r in9 s.
nbbon bows, Fireside ba sk ets , WICker items,
decorativ e gre en wr eath s, t ree ornaments, box wood &amp;
fru it peck s. a.fg hans. asso r tm ent of plant pots, unusual
gift ite ms. ginger ja rs . ( Liqu•d si lv e r ie welrv , dotls &amp;
toa ste r CO\I ers made by Cher okee lnd1an sJ. Hand

too led leathe r billfold s and pu rses - handma de , lam b
skin wa sha b le ba by mocca sin!&gt;. Sha klee Product s. food
supplem e nts . Sr odeg r adabl e hou se h o ld pr oduc ts ,
cosmetics, men 's toiletries, per sona I ca r e for th e whole
famil y. Regis ter for Li qui d Silver necklace &amp; earrings.
No purchase nece ssarv - draw ing Chr istma s E11e ., Not
necessa ry to be pr esent .

•

2 mi . west of Chesh1r e Rt . 554 . White house, r ed barn .
In event of fla sh flood u~ e Roush Lane, 1 m i. N.

Che'&gt;h ire.
O~ n

Thur:- s., Fri. , Sa t ., Sun- 1·8 until Christmas

~~~~~-~~~ R~~~~-~- ~~~

~

~

w

w

w

®

0
~

l'i
l'i

l'i
w
w
w
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The Christmlls Store For
Boys and Girls. . .

~

JUST A FEW OF OUR MANY SUGGESTIONS
~FOLLOW :
.

~
W FOR BOYS

'W
/l - sur.,s

11

~

~

~

il

~

FOR GIRLS

- Slacks
W- Jackets
W - Shirts
~ - Sweaters
l'i - SOcks
l'i -Bells
l'i - Underwear
~ -Pajamas
~
Sizes 0- 16 !loys 0-14

-~

~

~

- Dresses
- Skirts
- Slacks
- Blouses
- Sweaters
- Lingerie
- Sieepwear
- Hosiery
- Coats
Girls

~
t:

u

ii
~

Party held
F.AST I.ETAHT-Tht· annual holida)' dinner party of
the E"st Letart Unt ied
Methodist Women w&lt;ts held
Tuesdet}' mghl at tl' churdt

l.1ve

poinset ti as

ctnd

a

Cljristmas trc-d'dt&gt;coratc'&lt;l the

dturch.
The nit~·t ing opened wi th

group singing vf ··Thcrc'.s

OJ

te r taining apprcdattvc
husba nds and other ~ucsts .
wit h fo rt y-fi ve pr·escnt.
Bo nnie Swindler's l'Otn·
mittee included Viula rarter ,
Irene Sme lt zer, F:lizabelh
Philli ps, Ethel Burdette,
Edit h
Gilkey.
Thelma
Plununer and Libby ll ill .
They sen·ed a deli~ h tful

dumer. fl.at uring baked luun
with raisin snut·c and
delicious hot ve~etablcs ,
tossed salad, and pineapple
upsidt•-duwn ca ke and coffee .
Rita Frazer int roduced the
prog r am: Zelma North&lt;· utt
lea d i n~ o ca pella group mrol

sing: ing, Pastor King reading
Marlenl' Fisht!r ~ t the piano. the Nat i\•ity story from the
Thr ee bi rthduys we r e Bible ro r devot ions, and
c-elebrated. Mrs. Hazel Fox Pastor F'ra zie r gi\•in g a
&gt;had the pro~ram which was mov ing acco unt of hiS perentitled "C hri s tm as Ht S(mal \'iew of the historic
Poston.. and de.a lt with a con- event. Taking "o ut of th eir
cent ration camp ob.servancc. sta ined-g lass wi ndow set·
&amp; ripturt• was ta ken from ti ng" th e persons who
Ma tt 2, I to 14 by Mrs. Doris su rro unde d J esus at His
Ada ms. Headers for Ute pnr birth , the s peaker s peculated
gra tn wer e Mrs . Mabel about the inner f..tings of
Song In the Air " with Mrs.

Shields, Mrs. Ei leen Buck.
Mrs. Luc y Donahue.
Games were played with
prizes going lo Mrs. f isher·,
Molly Fis her . Mrs. Shields.
and Donna Smith. Secret pals
were revealed with 1:t gift exchange . Guests were Donna
Snuth. Dorothy J ohnson.
Ma ry Stover and daughter.
Ar lene Howe and daughter.
and Molly fi sher. Members
attending besides t hose menti oned were Mrs. Marg;1rct
Gloec kn e r . Mrs .
Sa ll y
Gloet:kner, Mrs. Ada Ruwc,
Mrs. Belva Fisher, Mrs.

Focie Ha)'lllC. n.

Mr~.

Joseph, the shepherds, t he

Club to meet

GA LLIPOLIS
The
Christmas Rose will be t he
theme of the progr am , to be
pr esented by Mrs. Elaine
George, when the f rench
City Ga rden Club meets with

Mr s.

Bertina

Smeltze r

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···:;·:-::·:-:-:·:·:-:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:-:·&lt;·:·:·:::-

Meigs High musicians to
present program for PAT
POME ROY - Meigs High
School Music De partment
will present the progr am
Monday, Dec. t2 a t the PAT
( Parent s a nd Tea che rs)
meeting scheduled at 7:30
p.m. a t the hi gh schoo l
cafeteri&lt;l .
Vo cal
se lections
of
Christmas musie und e r
direction of Mrs. Paige Hunt
wi ll be followed by a performance by the jazz band
directed by her husband,
Randy Hunt . Sel ections to be

presented by high sehool so fa r " at other PAT
st udents will incl ude a solo by meet ings and at Open House
Lynett a Whittington; a duet .this year , and he hopes,
by Kathy Quivey a nd Carrie " PAT will continue to be so
Bearh s; a quartet selection successful."
PAT offi cers urge parents
composed of Anna Wiles,
Sandy, Tammy , a nd Leslie to attend • and become
Miller , .and num bers by an acquainted with yet another
octet , ·madrigal , and a girls' aspect of school activities.
PAT's usual m eeting date
ensemble.
Parents, patrons, and the would be Tuesday ; however,
public are invited to attend thi s month's meeting was
t hi s prog ram . Principal rescheduled to avoid conflict
James Diehl said the ad- with a bask etball ga me
ministration has been " very Tuesday night:
well pleased wit h the tumoul

Ladiea

All Christmas Roll Wrap
Now 25% OFF
Gallipolis, 0.
.

• HANDMADE ITEMS

STOP IN AND SIGN UP
FOR OUR FREE CHRISTMAS DRAWING

Pltilson.

........llr'. .- - - - - - 3 3 0

' You Nam e lt. . We've Got It!

..

Second Avenue

CRARY LADIES HANDICRAFTS

Suggests

Revlon
Great Grooming
Fashion Kits

804 W. Ma in St.

Pom eroy . 0 .

Ju st below the Jon es Boy s in Pome roy in
the Nationwide In s. Building .

OPEN

•

By PAUL VARIAN
DETROIT (U Pll

~

Frord

industry uutluuk ISSUed ~··
week t!arlier by Ge neral

Motnr Co. Chairman Hen ry

Mutun;

Ford I! Sa turday beca me the
first autu industry executive
to predict a downturn in 1978
car s al es. blamin g a n
ec onmny
bedev iled
by
uncert.ainty.
In his annua l ye ar-e nd
statement . Ford predicted
that combined 1978 car and
truck
sa les,
includin g
imports, would equal the
anticipated current - year
level of 14.9 m illion. with new
ca r deliver ies slipping by
100,000 to 11.1 million.
Howe ver, he sa id he
expects the domestic car
s hare of the marke t tn
increase as a res ul't of
recently an nounced pr ice
increases for fue l-sti n gy
foreign cars which accounted.
for nearly 20 percent of
over all industry sales during
most of i977.
The for ecast was in sharp
con tr a s t t o the bulli s h

Murpny,

REDDING, Calif. ( U P! )~
A 38-yea r-old mother who
killed her hus band after he
reportedly beat and sexually
a bused her and molested a
daughter has been acquitted
by a judge who said th e
shooting was justified .
Sh asta Co unty Supe rior
Court Judge Richard Abbe
Friday found Wanda Sue
Carr ol Burney inn ocent of a
manslaughter cha rge in the
killing of her husband of 22
years, Vallea m Carr , 43, last
July 7.
" I don 't believe she had a
vi able a lternative," Abbe
sa id.
Deputy District Attorney
William Lun d, who ha d
reduced th e charge from
m urder to m a nsla ughter ,
said after the trial. " It 's the
first time I felt I didn't care
whether I won or lost ."

Cll;.~ in nan

Thumas

who

predic ted
uverall vehide sales would
increase tu a record 15.5
million. Wall Street analysts
expect sa les to ded ine.
Forti
said
several
indica tnrs s uch as reta il
sales, h11using starts and t he
stabiliza tion of food prices

•

·J 1 " , ~
I .L~~~ '-

point to cnntinued growth. VJ

?1

et•nnomy."

t:

~

'-~

v'&lt;'-'.W

EO"tT :t'T J::ro- ~
,

50% POLYESTER, !iO% ~TION

DENIM
SPORTS

JACKET
REG. SJ5.00

88

ea p ita l s pen di ng of $2.5
billion nex t ye ar - a nearly
40 percent increase over the

current year .
He said the money will be
spent to retool ford plants for
the prnductio n of smaller
ca rs tha t will allow t he firm
to meet goverrunent gasoline
mileage sta ndards . A tntal of
10,000 new jobs will be
created in the .U.S., with

SIZES 38 to 44
,'REGULARS &amp; LONGS

ma jor expa ns ion proje cts

COLORS: BLUE &amp; BURGANDY

pla nned for 17 facilities .

SLACKS

'12

· ~ ------

---

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(

99
REG.

,.

CORDUROY

Shoe2World

SPORTS

JACKET
Here's just a sample
of what you'll find ...

REG. 539.00

'

(OFFSUGGESTED RETAILPRICES )

Fuzzy Mop Slippers

We ca ll it our co mfo rt sale becau se all18 H&lt;&gt;ur " Bra s, Girdl es
and Ali -In-On es are made with S pa n ette~ th e exc lu sive st rp tc h
fabri c th at gives you all -ove r comfort anrl control for ho urs.

SIZES 38 TO 44
NAVY, GREEN,
HONEY &amp; BROWN

ht· pl'rfn I

,J., .,t n.HH I' u f

q u.d •t v

•Wome n's O rion Boot1e Socks tn
Asstd . Colors Reg. 69&lt; pr... 44C: ·

Keepsake'

Boys' Flecce- lm ed

Sl ippers S tzes 9-3

•
If you rece ived yo ur Chri stm as Club che ck thi s year,

190

SA\'E$-f

00

on 18 Hour®Bras including
the New18 Hour®TricotBra

VEST

Reg . S2.99

yo u 'r e in grea i sha pe! lfno t ,we im·it cyou to join ou r

_\

Chri stmas C lu b t ocl~)· a n d enjoy jro ur next Chri st m as

Me n's Pu ll -on Boot w1lh
Soli Lea t110r Vamp

with out fin an cia l stra in .

H arness Strop
and Me1 al Trtm

Open

Til Christmas
Lay Away Now For Christmas

Gi rls' Bool IS

'~'1590 977

SA\'E$3°

0

Pr1ccs ·."1ood thru Tuesday • M as t e r Ch ~r ge . Visa or Ask Abo ul Our t..avawtty Plan

;.

•

on 18 Hour®AII-I n-One

f

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I

l,

'

I
\

I

RE.G. s14.00

\

•'

l

00
·~

-

REG. •1 8.00

Nobody· but nobody- saves you more.
303 UltPE~ RIVER ROAD
OPEN 9 AM TIL 9 PM DAILY:
ACROSS FROM THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
SUNDAY 1 TIL 6 .

Plaza-Spdng Valley Plaza

.

$

on Fashion w1 th S1lle
Ltppet and Sl ttChecl
Detailing SIL0S 9-3

Use Your Vi s a or Master Charge

,,.,. . o .. ... , ..

.

28 TO 38

O pe n S unday 1 to 6 p.m.

30%!

I

1

' ' ~ ~--~'NM•,.,...,m&lt;NoM,-,vo;.:,.»«&gt;&lt; "' •""''W.-&gt;&lt;'

,

SIZES

sr o 00

111 l.l K h''ld hw 1th 1lw K1't' l''&gt;• 1l.. 1·

,,

f.t

~

mism ove r the economic
nu llnnk, Ford said the No. 2
automaker plans worldwide

~vmbnl .. "' yt•ur 1.. .,.,. { r.11 1('d

,•

WESTERN WEAn

~

He cited the accelera ticm of V.
inflati nn, uncerta inty nver W
who will chair the F ederal
Reserve Board for the next
four years a nd the fact that
" the stock market seem s to
be wa llnwin g helplessly in the
doldrums."
For d sa id the - nearly 40
percent jnbless rate among
bla ck t eerH:~ge t·s "is a time
bomb ticking away in. the
bosom of the country's ma jor
cities - a danger we can
ignore only a t considera ble
peril .
" It will not be cured by
stim ula ti on
nf
overa ll
demand ; that would only fuel
the rircs ofinflation," he said .
" It mu st be a ddressed by
programs targeted at t he
specific gr oups affected ."
Despite his r elative pessi -

sv M Bo l. s 01- LOVE

nn).i.,

'.- ---------------

fJ.

W

Bu l, he a dd ed , un em plnyment is soa ring a1nnng
blacks and young people of
bo th races wh ile " nth er
uncertainties als(! bedevil the

K !' l ' l "·l~l' m.J I Lh t·,f wt • , l ,l ,n~:

Bri~ge

~

The Book- Lao).; Man•cure

O\ tLW1 (

j:ourt Street-Silver

~

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I

Limit 2 pr. pe r Cus to me r Whil e The y Last!

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18 HOURCOMFORT

~"--:::;;;;;;:uA~i:!l Women's &amp; Children's

COMMERCIAL &amp;
SAVINGS .BANK

~

71

PLAYT~X

•

"""" J&lt;:&lt;B0¥g::(

JOIN TODAY

W
W

SUNDAY
SPECIALS

COORDINATED COLORS

I

Ex.hibii for the month of DeCember ~ J ohn Ruthven, "The
World of John Rutlwen, Wildlife Artist ," 35 prints .
Ga llery hours , Sa turday and Sundays, I p.m. un til 5 p.m. ;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a .m. until 3 p.m.
December 11 , 6 p.m . - 8 p.m . - Anpua l Christmas Party
for members a nd their immediate fam ilies: Marko the
Magicia n, specia l guest. 6 p.m . - Children decora te tree at
Ri verby and Santa Claus arrives for a visi t ; 7 p.m . ~ Marko
.and Ta rbaby entertain , Gaby Sattler , Chairwoma n of the
Christmas pa rty, Riverby.
Dece mber 27, 7: 30 p.m . ~ f .A.C . Interdepartmenta l
Meet ing; 9 p . m .~ F.A.C. Trustees Meeting , Riverby .
Dece mber 11-Ja nuary 2 ~ Gal leries closed at Riverby for
the Holiday s.
:
·
Exhi bit for the month of January, 1978 ~ GaiJja County
Senior Citizen Art .
Ja nuary 3, 1978 ~Galleries r eopen a t Riverb y.

JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS
CLUB TODAY!

~

Ford's view of .: *
::: l'i
'77 is dismal :.': ~

Husband killer
found innocent

All the Popular Brands!

•CRAFT SUPPLIES
• KITS OF All KINDS

The Alcove
41 Court St.

4576~

'PtJIHl W -f, (}lu,

1-t•~tc~

Rous h, Mrs. Eula Wolfe, Mrs.

B-7 - Th e Swrday Ttmes-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Dec. I I, 1977

8"1 WEST MAIN :;TR EET

--·

••

check from the Bank every
hristmas could help you!

MONDAY
OA PSP. meeting at Hannan
Trace I hgh School at 7:30
p.m .
WEONF,SDA Y
GA LI.I A County Extension
Homemakers Club at 10:30 a l
the C'u lu mbus and Snuthcrn
Ohio Electric Bu ildin~ .
PYT H1AN SISTERS Voting
un new u£ficers, 7:30 p. m. OJt
t he K of P Hall. All members
please attend .
fRIUAY
ANNUAl. KIWAN IS Pancake
Fry F r iday and Saturday at
St.
Peter's
E pisco pal
Church: Fnday from 6 a.m.
till 8 p.m.: Saturda y 6 a .m.
t ill 5 p.m .

~.

Mary

Berttm Robinson, Mrs. J ulia
Norris, and Miss Kathryn

Pastor Kill!-: concluded, like
l"~ and me, that God touched
and callc•d to spe&lt;·tal tasks ...
ble"edl), they re.s ponded.

wise men and Ma ry un that

Love Sara''

~ Tuesday evening, Dec. 13. at
W 7 30 p.m.
~
Mrs. Patty Snyder will giv e
~ de votion s by presenting an
!!!
arrangem ent in which ea ch
item has a rel ig ious meaning.
This arra ngement is created
W by the Hixson School of
Design .
The members will first
meet at the Holiday Inn for
dinner at 6 p.m . and go from
FREE GIFT WRAP
· there to the home of Mrs.
Smeltzer. After devotions and
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
the program : Mrs . Smelt zer
:;:.,~t:=:.(~~~~~li::.(~,r ~~~;&gt;:.~~~~~ will exhibit her display of
cact i a nd then t here will tiea
$2 gift exchange.

OPEN EVERY NIGKT TIL 9

GALI.IPOL IS - Graee
Guild of the United Methodist
Ch urch celebrated Chri;tmas
Sunday rvcning. Oet•. 4 with a
l!andlcli)!ht dinner, en·

it,.. Pastor Ca rson said.
Papa reached fo r a charred doll and suddenl y r ea lized it was S.. ra's new bride
doll . The delicate lace was black and the face marred with as hes. A torn slip of paper
which he recognized a s Sara's Chr istmas piece hung from the ~oil ' s arm .
Before Pa pa could a sk, Pastor Carson explained that he had foWJd t he doll Wlder
·
the rrnnger.
With tears fill ing P a pa' s eyes, he read the rrotc :
•· Dear bab y J esus, Ha ppy Birthday

l'i

~
~

Christmas _program held

mnst of the way down . I managed to get th is out . I thought ynu and Jenny shnu ld see

l'i

~

~

~

u

tle woman WhOSl' faee had begun to show lhe Signs ol ma ny years of hard work.
" Mam" . will Papa get tots and lots of money for t he skins ' Maybe enough for rea l
presents ?" asked Sara as she ski pped mer nly across the room.
" Papa sN extra tra ps this year. but da rli ng don 't count on real presents all wra!&gt;'
ped up . You know that bui lding the ca btn and buymg that new work horse put us 111
dt!bt. Wt~'n.• in need of every penny we cHn get. Don't worry about it though. We' re ~o-­
mg to have B blessed holiday. Sa ra, you must remember . we are rich in other ways.
With us being a Christian fa mily, we have things other famili ~s don't rnt ve. Now run
along and pri-!clicc your Cfu·istmas pil"{' l~ .. ,
·
As Sara dnserl her eyes ami rnunnurl'(l the hnly words the front .ct(lor swung npcn
and Papa walked in. He hung up his tO&lt;il and hat in silence and ca refully pla~ed a
damp brown bag that ha d rested under his arm. in the sa fe,a binet. Sara, sweet ge n~
lie Sara, he thought as he buried the bag under some old rags.
It might be a real Christmas fo r once. Tllere was never enough money to ~nake
thi ngs specia l. Working m the mines, setting (raps, g rowing tobaeco a nd fanrun g yet why wasn't there enough mon~ y'?
Somet imes he wished £or just a few more cents to place in the offering. Pra ise
God for Jenny and Sa ra . This year he had saved enoug h money to buy that bride doll
in the cat&lt;! log. Sara had spent hours gazi ng a t it : so white and fancy with la ce and lillie pea rl earrings. Now it was hers and sudde nly Christmas s .. med a lot ha ppi er . A
slight nod to Jenny confirmed her unasked question.
The da ys passed quickly and soon Christmas Eve came to the tiny Drummond
cab in . Sara cried when she opened the package and saw her beautiful new doll . She
named her De~lie after her papa 's siste r who had died of a fever just a year before.
Sara loved Dellie and could hardly stand to be apartfrom her.
,
.
That night Sara took Dellie. to church for the C)rristmas program . With a glowing
pride she s howed her off, careful to let only her bestest fr iends hold her .
Sara spoke her piece with(lut nnce l~1 \U ng 8t the paper . Santa emne nnd J!iH'C
each child candy and a sma ll gift. E veryone had a present but tmy baby Jes us who
slept quietly in the manger near the alta r. Poor baby Jesus thought S..ra. Everyone
got a present but J esus.
Late that night Pastor Ca rson rapped on the d,lOr of the Drumm ond l'abin . Pcq.H1
ra n to the door, pulling up tus tro users. Who would be calling now ?, he wondered.
" Ba&lt;ter, I've got some bad news. The tree caught afi re at the church and it burnt

radta nt &lt;;~ a r-ltl night. All just
u rduwn human bemgs,

..

•

IN THE

Sale end s lanuary 7, 1978

STORE HOURS:
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

SILVER BRIDGE

10:00-9:00

PLAZA

SUNDAYS 1:00-6:00

...

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE

PLAZA

'

�Summer session
fees cut at MU

Akronite held in shooting
TIF HH .\
\ . ~1

, l'PI •

\\1 \ H i l. LI .
\ n Llhlt' ma n

\\ as Struck b\ n t•ar near the

mt-.·rsc(' twn 'n r lntrrstatt:1' 25
and ~("W ~1('XIl'O 22.
Aft er the arrest. he
altt· ~t•ctly t c~ld auth~•ritirs

he

lwd slt•ll and killed '"'"
PtTStinS at \\•lard~ earlier m
th t•
t•venmg .
Offieers
uwestJ~o.1t1ng lhe cl8im found

Ute b«dies &lt;lf Mary Rigsby.
26,

Velarde,

and

Jj'Y

Cam('wn Faurot, 45, San
F'randst"n, near Ms. Rigsby 's
ft'~idt'lll't'

We ll'h was arrai gnt•d
Fnday m Sand&lt;lVal Cc•Wlt)' tlfl
the traffll' d1arges l.lnd tht•
maxunum OOnd of $5.000 was
set. He thrn ~·as transft:&gt;rrt&gt;d
tn Rin Arraba County fnr
arraignment on murder
charges and the bood was
bo&lt;•sted w $100,000.
Moqumn was reported in
seriuus ,

but

st·alP whit:h encourages
lklklllg at least ttu·cc-&lt;~uartcrs
of a full selllt'~tcr load and a
npprn\'NI a nwdt.•st cut in !;0 pt•n-cnt cut in the ~eneral
fee aJH l fad liti~ s charge, on
SlUillllCr Sl'S.Siun fl'CS, Whlrh
undt•r Slilnt• t lrnunst&lt;lll('t'S, the U1cury tha t these fees are
C'ould SH \'(' studl'll lS nwrt• of lrss bendit t11 i:i si.unmer
stude nt tha n in the fall and
tlmn $50.
Till' l'umplex: rcviSilln spr ing .
inel udPd ('flan ges in the perThe u·ustet'S also upproved
credit-ho ur in ~truct ional fee . , a Hk:cnt per hnur im:rease in
student wages tu comply with
Ohiu
's $2.30 per hour
1
OXFOHii. Ohiu 1 UP II
The Mwmi University l1n&lt;.~rd
uf
'l'ru ~ ll'l'~
Satu rd ay

impro\·ing.

condtli&lt;&gt;n Saturday at St.
Vincent Hospita1 in Santa Fe.

and sht !lad li! buy a new
wm·drulx.• bl'l'i:ll.l!it! ~h e wa s

Dog registration
required by Code
POMEROY - Howard E.
Frank.
Meigs
County
Auditor , cited page and verse
from th e Ohio Revised Code
Saturday that requires an·
nual dog registration. The
Code says ·

assess a penalty of two
dollars upon each owner,
keeper, or harborer . and a
five dollar penalty shall be
ilSsessed for each kennel
license issued after January
20 of each year . The regular
registration sha ll be $2 and
the kennel registration shall
be $10.
"The closing date shall be
January 2o, 1976. After this
date a penalt y will be
assessed."

"E xcepi as ot herwi se
provided in sections 955.01 I
and 955.16 of the Revised
Co de, every person who
o ~ns , keeps, or harbors a dog
more than three months of
age. shall, before the twentieth day of January of each
year, file . in the office of the
An emperor is addressed in
co unty auditor of the county
in which such dog is kept or a letter as Sir or Your lm·
harbored, an application for perial Majesty.
registration for the following
year. stating age, sex, color,
character of hair, whether

.short or long breed, if known,
and the name and address of
the owner of such dog . A
registration fee of two dollars
for each dog sha ll accompany
such application, unless a
grea ter fee ha s been
established under section
955.14 of the Revised Code.
"If such application for
registration is not filed and
said fee patd. on or before the
twentieth day of January of
each yea r. the auditor shall

wa~c.

Sume fcc$ fur dff Campus
told "lady t&lt;.Hlllidat e~ CHn't prog ra m we re increased,
\\'t•a r pants ."
huwcvt!l'. Fees for Miami
'11wugh the city hus a l'ity Uni\•rrsi t y's
Eur opean
tJaanagt•r-typc government. Center in I.ux embourgh were
she dti('Sn 't intC'nd tll seck bc.Jsted to $3.980 and the
11111re authority hw her offke . char ge for the s u1~ 1mer
" I'm nut int erested in Geology Fit•!'d Co urse in
power for myself, not in the Wyoming was increased to
least," she said , " cx,:ept as it $485.
is Llseful " for the city .

llr'....,._..._,llO Second Alenue
Way T'o Go
For Christmas '77

MRS. MORRIS, LEFT. MRS. YOST
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Mary Elberfeld Morris , left. presented Allen Keller 's
Chrisunas story "l Remember Mama 1' dealing with the tlncoming h0lida y seCIS\In·s
traditions of the late Mrs. Ja cob Elberfeld of Pomen•y to members ·or Heturn J t, mllh&lt;.~ n
Meigs Chapters, Daughters of thE.' American Revplution, when the grou p met Friday
afternoon in the social room of Heath United Methodist ChwTh in Middleport. Wit h her is
Mrs. Mary Kay Yost, vice regent of the chapter and progra m chnirnmn . Mrs. 1\·t nrris is a
granddaugh ter of the late Mrs . Elberfeld. Keller, a uthor Clf ··1 He member Mama '' is A Still ·
in-law vf the late Mrs. Elberfeld and penned the sto ry aft rr spCnding a 11umbPr j l f yt'Rrs at
the Elberfeld home in Pomeroy during the holiday seasnn. Keller rr$ides 1n D c1rtl'll, t'Ptlll .

Isabella Cannon at 73;
mayor and mamma to all

(lrlt'

Usual and
the Unusual

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI ( UPH - Ken Anderson fired a 43-yard
touchdown pass to Pat Mclnally to rally Cincinnati to a crucial
17-10 victory over PittsbW"gh Saturday and put the Bengals in
the driver's seat abe ad of the Steelers for a playoff berth.
The Bengals, who needed at least a sevcn1Juint victory ove r
the Steelcrs to take command in the AFC Cent ral Division and got just that - need only to beat Houston next weekend to
receive the division playoff ticket.
The Steelers, who earlier in the year beat Cincinna ti by six
points, could ha ve afforded a sixi&gt;'Jint loss Saturday and still
have been in good shape to ma~e the playoffs. But the
difference of Cincinnati's single-point margin in the two
games, gave the edge to the Benga ls in the formula used to
determine the playoff[ team in case of a tie.
Going into the last weekend of the season, both Cincinnati
and Pittsburgh have 8-5 records.
The Bengals, down 10.7late in U1e third quarter, rallied for 10
points in just 18 seconds to takecharge of the.game .
Taking adva ntage of a fumble by Franco Harris, Chris Bahr
booted a 24-yard field goa l to tie the score at 10 with 3:06
remaining in the third period.
On the ensuing kickoff, Jim Smith fwubled and Lenv\1 Elliott
jumped on it for Cincinna ti at the Steelers' 43. On the next play ,
Anderson lofted a 43-yard sco ring pass to Mclnally with 2:48
left in the third quarter to give the Benga ls their 17-10

-----

Concen trated Colog ne Spra y
'7 oz .
$400

---

.Lehigh captures
Division 2 title
WI CHI TA FALLS , Tex .
(U P! ) - Mike Ricker threw

Uamecocks m the second Jacksonville 23 when Green
half.
scrambled for six yards. But·
two touchdown · passes and ·
Rieker scored on a 1-ya rd the quarterback took a hard
ran for another to guide r"!l in. the second period and shot and had to be taken from
Lehigh to an easy 33.0 victor)• fintsned the quarter by hit· the field on a stretcher.
over Jackson State in the ting Steve Krieder with a 10·
Two downs later Green 's
Pion ee r Bowl Sa t uring. yard touchdown pass.
replacement, sophom ore
giving the Engineers their
Dave Aprill scored from Mike Watis, lost 19 yarda .on
first NCAA Division 2 the one for Lehigh midway · third down and fumbled the
Championship.
through the third period, · ball away to Lehigh's Greg
Jacksonville's chances for Mike Ford added a 7-yard Clark at the Engineers 38.
victory were ruined with 22 scoring run late in the third
Lehigh promptly drove 62
5econds left In the first peri od quarter and the duo of Rieker
yards and scored on Rieker 's
when starting quarterback and Kreider teamed on a 7- run.
Bobby Ray Green left the yard touchdown pass in the
Ford, who ga ine~ 93 yards
ga me with a concussion. The final period.
on 13 carries, was voted the
Gamecocks also turned the
The opening quarter was game's most valuable of·
ball over six times.
scoreless, but Jacksonville,
fensive player while Clark
Lehigh, which finished with which ended the year at 11·3,
was selected the lea ding
a 12·2 record, controlled the . was threatening as the period
defensive player of the game.
ball for all but 11 plays of the came to a close.
·
Rieker hit l«klf-20 pases for
second
quart er , and
Th e Engineers had a first
98 yards.
thoroughly dominated the and 10 situation at the

ANN ARBOR , Mich. (UP!)
- Junior Tom Stayton and
freshman Mike McGee fue led
a second-half surge Saturday
tl\at ca rried lith -ranked
Michigan past Dayton 71-lll in

Country Fare
. ._ _ _ in Spring Valley Plaza _ _ _,

noneonreren c~

co ll ege

basketball.
The Flyers, 4-2, slowed
down tlfe Wolverines, 4·1, and
led ~y as many . as eight
points, 2!1-20, en route to a 32-

27 halftim e lead . But
Michigan started running and
in two spurts went ahead to
stay.
Stayton, who scored .10
points in the game, hit a shot
with II :03 left to put
Michigan ahead for the first
iime , 47-46, ond then
compl eted a string of 10
straigh t Michigan points with
a basket which put the Wolve-

~AST LANSING, Mich .
( UPI) - Greg Keiser hit a
season-high 25 points and
14
re bounds
grabbed
Saturday, leading Michigan
State to a 79-57 rout of
Western Mi chiga n in a

nonconference. game.

turnovers.
Dunk s by
Johnson early
hal f helped
Spartans to a

Keiser a nd
in the second
- move the
211Joint lead.

over Blue. In addition to the
two incidents involving the
attempted sale of the former
Cy Young award winner to
the Yankees and the Reds,
Kuho also intervened in a
1972 con trac t squabble
between Finley and Blue and
ordered "the A's owner to sign
the left·hander.
There is little doubt that
Fin ley, or .Reds ' President
Bob Howsain, will take Kuhn
to court if he votes to void the
sale. But Howsam doesn't
think it will come to that.
''We feel there is no reason
why it (ihe sale ) shouldn't be.
approved," said Howsarn.
If it Is approved; the Reds
will be the odds-on favorite to
capture the NL pennant next
year. The addition of Blue
would give the . Reds one of
the more formidable pitching
staffs in the major s.
"Before we were alWays
called the club with all the
hitting," said Reds' Manager
Sparky Anderson . " Now,
we're more 1ike a one~unit
team. Blue is the same .Blue
as he always was. This year
he had one of those years ( 14·
19), but he's still an

outstanding pitcher.
' 'We' ll
compar e our
pitching staff with anyone's
in baseball."
· Since last June the Reds
have beefed up their staff by
obtaining three-time Cy
Young award winner Tom
Seaver and Bill Bonham in
trades. They also have a
promising righthander in
Paul Moskau , a talented
yo ung Ieft-hander in Doug
Capilla and a proven winner
in Ieft-hander Fred Norman .
Needless to say, the deal
for Blue pleased Manager
Tom Lasorda of the NL
champion Los Ange les
Dodgers even less than it did
Kuhrt
"What did I think of the
tra de ?" asked Lasorda.
"What did you think of the
Brinks robbery?"
The Dodgers were one of
only three teams
Minnesota and San Diego
were the others - who did not
participate in the-swapping.
01 the. 23 who did, it appears
Texas, California and the
New York Mets ·benefited
rriost.
Texas was involved in only

one trade, but it was the fourteam, lliJiayer blockbuster
and the Rangers wo~nd up
with outfielder AI Oliver a nd
lefthanded pitcher Jon
Matlack. They lost pitcher
Bert Blyleven in the process,
but Matlack is capa ble of
winning as many games ( 14 )
as Blyleven won last year and
Oiiver is one of baseball 's
finest hitters.
The Rangers should be
st r o ng~ enough now to
seriously challenge for the
American Lea)lue West title.
California, under n ew
general ma ·nage r Buzzie
~vasi, was the most active
participant in the "swap
shop." The Angels came to
the meetings seeking pitching
help and got two fine young
right-h anders in Chris Knapp
and Don Aase .
They also picked up a first·
string catcher in Br ian
Downing and obtained a left.
handed pinch-hitter in Ron
Fairly and signed outfielder
Rick Miller as a kee agent.
California was forced tb part
with slugging outfielder
Bobby Bonds, who went to the
White Sox in the trade for

Knapp and Downing, a1
sc.con d basema n · Jerr .
Rerny, who went to Boston f&lt;
Aase .
With the extra addition "'
Lyman Bostock , the Angels, &lt;
disappointment last season
should improve considerably
this year and may even be
good enough to challenge
Kansas City and Texas for
the division title.
The Mets, a last-place club
in the NL East a year ago ,
have improved considerably
by getting co lorful first
baseman Willi e Montanez
fr om Atlanta, shortstop Tim
Foli froll\ San F ranciseo and
outfielder Tom "Grieve from
Texas.
Without Matlack the
pitching is weaker, but the
. Mets may have made enough
good "deals to escape the
cellar.
As far as major-league
business was concer ned,
there were four nuteworthy
decisions reached:
- Approval by the AL of the
change of ownership of the
Cleveland Indians to a group
headed by Steve O'Neill .

'

rines up 51--16 with 10 :11 to
play.
In between, he blocked a
shot by Erv Giddings and
threw a pa ss which resulted
in a basket by McGee.
McGee and Dave Bllxter
each scored 18 points, while
Joel Thompson added 15 for
Michigan. Day tori got a game
high 23 points from Jim
Paxson and 11 from Giddings.

Johnson finished the game
with 18 points, and freslunan
center Jay Vincent added 17.
Western Michigan , 3-3, was
led by Rod CW'ry's II points.

MidAmerican
openin g
Conference ga me for both
teams.
Newman's two shots lifted
the Chippewas to a 77·74 lead,
a nd Tol edo could · only
manage a Stan Joplin jumper

,.

KENNY Young, (4, on right with ball ) looks for teammate to pass off
to aga inst tough Logan defense during Friday's SEOAL cage battle at
Rock Springs. The Chieftains won, 89-39, to take over undisputed first

~~~:~;t~~~;~:JA:; Snain
r

in J-h.ont
with only one round left
•

The Rockets held a 36·29
halftime lead, but Central
.
.. .
MANILA, The Phthpptnes
chipped away throughout the
second half to close wjthin 74• (UP! )
Severlano
72.
With
1:13
left
Jeff
Tropf
Ballesteros
~nd
Antonio
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) per cent from the field for the
Paul Dawkms and J ohn game, broke a 10.10 lie and hit jump shot and was fouled , Garrtdo ralheu and overtook
Harris combined for 49 points s tayed ahead . until the giving the Chippewas a 7:;..74 Canada Saturday to grab a
lead
for
Saturday afternoon to le• d Bobcats knotted it at sthSO lead. Then came Newman's three-stroke
clinching
free
throws.
defending
champion
Spain
Northern lllinois to an 8()..76 with 13 :50 remaining.
Dave Grauzer had 25 pnints wtth one round to go m the
victory over Ohio University , The Bobca ts, h.owever,
for
Central, and Leon Guydon · 1977 World Cup Golf
in the opening Mid-American were never able w take the
16. Toledo was led by Champtonshtp.,
,
added
Conference game for both lead, although they managed
Joplin
with
21
points
Ballesteros,
Spain
s 20·
teams.
to cut the deficit to 78-76 with ·
Both
teams
are
no;.
J..2
on
year-old
sensation,
played
The win was the first in five · two seconds left on a d•iving
the year.
virtually flawless golf and
· overall sta rts for the Huskies, layup by Jan Smoljan.
·
fired·
a 3-under-par 69 for the
while OU dropped to 4-2 on ·
Smoljan, who was fouled on
the year.
the play, intentionally missed ::::;:;:::::::;'::: :=:;:::} : ::;:::;(:\}}'; ~;'~ b~d~~s ~~':~~rrl~r~~
· Dawkins led the way for his free throw attempt, but .
Because of the severe rest of the holes.
Northern with 29 points, while Harris got the rebound, was
to Ohio, many high
weather
Garrido turned in a
Harris ch ipped in with 21. fouled and converted both for .
.
school
bas.
k
etball
games
73to give Spain a ·.
respectable
Steve Skaggs of Ohio the final margin.
night
scbeduled.for
Friday
54-hole
'total
of 440 - three
University led all · scorers
Tim Joyce added 14 points
were postponed.
shots
better
than Ca nada,
with 33 points .
to the OU ca use and Buckey
which
was
leading
in the first
OU led early in the game, Walden had t3.
.':{{::;::;:;::;::::::
))):;
:
;::::{?::f)}
two
days
.
but Northern, which shot 62.8

2-52 5.00 GiH Certificates to be
given awav December 23 . Free Gift
Wrapping . Gift Certificates isSued
for any aiT\Ount.

tage house
OF SHOES
t"h ru

Th ursda v &amp; Saturday 9 : Jo·
to 5:00. Friday 9: 30 to 8: 00.
Middleport, 0 .

,

•

•

place in the SEOAL standings. Chieftains left to right are Dave (Duke)
Dalton (51) and Marty Hallett ( 43). See details and other pictures nn C-2.

in the few seconds remaining,

Ohio University
drops loop tilt

Stop in and register for 1- SSO.OO ancs

..

By FRED McMANE
UP! SpHrts Writer
HONOLULU !UP!)
Baseball's winter meetings
ended with 51 players
cl1anging uniforms for ne&lt;t
season, but there was one
piece of unfinished business
which could have a direct
bea ring on the National
League pennant race.
Still to be decided is the
status of left-handed pitcher
Vida Blue, who was presumably traded by the Oakland A's
ID the Cincinnati Reds for
first baseman Dave Revering
and $1.5 million.
However, Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn , wh n previously
set aside a $1 .5 million sale of
Blue to the New York
Yan kees in 1976 on the
grounds that it was not in the
best interests of baseball, has
temporarily voided the sale
and called a hearing between
the two sides.
" I believe the deal raises
substantial que~tions as to
whether it should be
approved or not." said Kuhn .
It is the third time that
Kuhn has been at. odds with
A's owner Charlie Finley

Central Michigan gets
••
by Toledo five, 77-76

Michigan used a fuiJ.coW't
zone press at the start of the .
•
game and took an 18-8 lead
after 5:51 on the way to its
fourth win in five games.
. Keiser scored 21 of his
MOUNT PLEASANT,
points in the first half and
Mich
. (UP!) - Two free
fres hman Earvin Johnson
throws
by Sonny Newman
added 11 to stake the
with
34
seconds
left Saturday
Spartans to a 44-26 halftime
edge. MSU also forced gave Central Mi chigan a 77-76
Western iqto II first-half victory over Toledo in the

.~

51 players change teams
as winter meetings end

Spartans humble WM five

Th e sleek, vers a t ile boot
lo oks
yo u
love
(c omplete w ith soft
toppings) at plunder ·f ul
prices. C'mon in and
add t o yo ur cache
Covered heel look in
rust , or black smooth
uppers .

Monday

the field and got his back wet, which later tW'ned mto a case nl
PittsbW"gh finally started rolling late in the first period with
fr«stbite.
·
Bradshaw firing passes of 15 yards to Harris a nd 22 ya rds to
PittsbW"gh Coach Chuck Noll directed his team with a Bennie Cunningham to pace a drive climaxed by Harris' &amp;broken arm . Noll slipped on the ice in downtown Cincinnati on yard TD run early in the second quarter .
his way to dinner Friday night and fractured his left arm near
The Steelers took the lead at 10.7 late in the second period
the elbow . Nnll went t« Christ Hospital where X-rays revealed pn Gerela's 32-yard field goal.
the break and he was quickly fitted with a cast .
Score by quarters:
On Parrish's TO interception, Bradshaw 's pass had been PittsbW"gh·
0 10 0 0 - tO
intended for Jim Smith, but the receiver fell down on the icy Cincinnati
7 0 10 0-- 17
Cin- Parrish 47 pass inter&lt;.'Cpti•in (Bahr kick t
fi eld .
The Bengals could have opened a big lead early but blew
Pit - Harris 5 run ( Gerela kick l
twn scorlng opportunities later in the first quarter .
Pit - FG Gerela 32
Coy Bacon jumped on a Rocky Bleier fu,mble at the PittsCin - FG Bahr 24
burgh 15 and an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty against
Cin - Mclnally 43 pass from Anderson ( Bahr kick)
Pittsburgh tackle Joe Greepe gave Cincinnati a first-and-goal
A - 36,133.
at the eil(ht.
STATISTICS
Anderson who wound up the game with a season high 303 Department
Pitt
Ch
yards passing, rifled a 7-yarder to Mclnally to set up a fourth· First downs
21
I
Rushing
and~oal at the one. But on the ne.t play , the Steelers'
32-123
JO.r
defensive line stopped rookie fullba ck Pete Johnson just short Passing yards
246
3
Return yards
of the goal.
114
20-39-1
A few minutes later, after forcing Pittsburgh to punt , Passes
Cincinnati marched from its 29 tsJ the Steelers' 20, but that Punts
5-33 .4
drive also ended scoreless whefi Bahr was wide on a 37-yard Fumbles lost
4-4
:;.
Penalt.ies, yard
field goal try.
ll -95

Michigan tops ·Dayton _

Holiday Hours
Mon.·Sat . 10-8
Sun . 1-6

Open

advantage.
Pittsburgh stormed back early in U1e fourth quarter, but
Harris fumbled at the Cincinnati 18-yard line a nd Ken Riley
recovered for the Beng:als.
Cincinnati then marched 68'yards and with 4:40 to go tried a
24-yard fi eld goal which would have given the Bengals some
breathing room. But the center snap rolled back to holder
Marvin Cobb and although Bahr got the kick off, the ball hit the
right upright and bounced back.
Pittsburgh kept the pressure on by getting the ball back with
just 1:51 remaining when Glen Edwards pounced on an Archie
Griffin fumble at the Pittsburgh 21.
But Pittsburgh's desperation drive ended when Terry Brad·
shaw threw an incomplete pass nn a fourth down play at the
Cincinnati 42-yard line.
Cincinnati had seized a 7~lead on the third play nff the game
on a ~7-yard pass interception. retW'n by Lemar Parrish.
However, Pittsburgh got a five-yard TD run by Harris and a
32-yard field goal by Roy Gerela in the secQnd period to take a
10.7 halftime lead.
The pivotal game was played on a partially fr ozen field in
bitterly cold weather. The temperature at the start ufthe game
was nnly two degrees and one player - Bengal linebacker Jim
'·
LeClair - suffered frostbite dW"ing the contest.
Bengal's officials said LeClair fell inw a puddle of water on

SPORTS

''

nf '\"OJUntcers, and Sh€'

Christmas Gifts
For The

17-10

'.

in ller fam ily . Her husb;md
senrect a~ mayor C\f Elon
College when ·u1ey lived there
in Ute 1930s.
Her campaign wa. s te~rgely

adopted as her campaign
in sig nia a cann on with
fl ower s pokin g from the
been aC'tive for years in local
barrel. A eo!!ectinn nf ca nnon
ch·ic organizatwns and was a sits on a table in her home ,
precin ct chairma n for the Her volunteer s wnre T-shirts
Democratic Party. She has decnrated with t he fl owering
writte n for ' newspHpers and cannon and the slog&lt;:~ n '· Le t's
used tn act in a theater group . - get Rnleigh mo\'ing again .' '
Mrs. Cannon, who once
·The campaign fll!'('ed so me
worke d for the United clwnges in her lifestyle. All
Nations, is not the first mayor she had was casual cll1thing

By ELIOT BRENNER
RALEIGH , N.C. (UP! )
Isabella Cann on proudly pro·
claims she's •·mamma to all
Raleigh."
At 73. Mrs. Cannon. is
Raleigh's first woman mayor

American Express
Master Charge
Visa
Golden Buckeye

minim um

C-1- TheSun&lt;lay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. 11, 1977

I

Canadians George Knudson
and Dave Barr faltered with
respective cards of 78 and 79
to post a three-day total of
443.
Japan vaulted into con·
tention at · 445, tying South
Africa and even surpassing
the Philippines, which came
in 447.
Italy and Taiwan were ·
locked at449, followed by tll.e
United States and South

~;g~::;:;~:\::1~:\ :::~~~:' : :{~~ ::\/ : ;: : }) : : : : :;: : : : : : : : )} :
, SANTIAGO, Chile (UP!)- Chile won the first round
uf the Suuth American Zone Davis Cup Playoffs Saturday
by capturing the doubles match.for .a 3-(! lead over Bolivia .
On Friday, Chile wun the first two· singles matches.
Veterans Jaime Fillul and Patricio C..rnejo defeated
Ramiru Benavides and Mario Martinez, 3-6, &amp;-2, !HI, 11-6.
r

"
\

Zealand al 452.
Veteran South African pro
Gary Player shot a 1-over·par
73, but it was enough for him
to maintain the lead in the
individual standings a(ter
earlier rounds of 72 und 68.
U. S. Open Champio n
Hubert Green, Who like
teammate Lanny Wadkins
was encountering difficulties
in taming the tricky, slow
greens at the Wack Wack

" The playing condition s
Golf and Co untry Club
were
better today, parcourse, held on to runner-up
on the greens which
ticularly
position so far despite his 77
were
t
rimm ed further ,
with a 54·hole card of 216.
them
not too slow,"
making
Ballesteros, Knudson and
Ballesteros
said. " Over
Filipino Pro Rudy Lavares, a
newcomer to World Cup dinner last night , we decided
com petition, had Identical that if we play good today we
fnvididual totals of 219 , will recover all the shots we
followed by Kuo Chie-Hsiung lost in the first two rounds .
" We'll definitely try harder
of Taiwan with 220.
much more than
tomorrow,
B.ut it was the remarkable
we
did
today
. But I think it's
perfonnance of Ballesteros
still
too
close
to be sure."
and Garrido which astounded
Echoing
the
woes
of most of
an estimated 10,000 fans at ·
Knudson
the
leading
players,
Wack Wack.
said
his
putting
was
bad,
The two Spaniards started
which
acco
unt
ed
for
his
the round 12 shots behind the .
dismal
round
Saturday.
· Canadians ih the team
"It's very trying 1 " he said.
co mpetition •· and
they
"
As
soon as you miss a few
methodically_ chopped down _
putts
you start doubting
the lead until they held it for
yourself."
good after 14 holes Saturday.

�('-:1 l'ht• S unda ~ Tum·s-..ot•n tml'i, Sumla~ . llet•. II. 1977

c-2- 'f h£' 5unda y TI!llt's..St'ntuwl, Sunda} . IX:.e. 11, 1977

Powerful Logan hands Meigs 89-39 setback

1977 deer gun season harvest shows decrease
ATIIEN~

Chiefs in fh:st
all alone after
,. second loop win
· B~ ( ;re~

pt'rt'l'llt lll'tTeast• h1111 la st
Yl'ltr wil h apprll.\llll a te h
1:1.08!1 dt:'er takmtlns sPasori.
compared to 1 5,0 7~! 111 Hl7fi,
the IJJvi SH!II of Wildlif C'

n•pm'tl'd Sa tur·da\·.
Open clay rt•su li s sh,r \\'Cd H
20 pt•n •t•nt .inncoJ:;(' in the
rnunbl'r uf dl'L'r taken wlwn
('lllllJmi'L'd l(• upcning da )
resu lts flu· 19/G. Opt.'mng da~
thi s year shuwcd a ppmxulmtel) li.O:II rlt•t•r killed.
whil e 197fl upening dav
figu res werl,) n ·cnnlccl ~~1
~ . 997 . ldl'i.ll \\'CHthN
t'(lfl·
chtions prC\'tJIIrd on u p(• n iii ~

lla il t&gt;y

Logan was Jed in scoring by
two substit utes. Steve Walton
and Brad Tucker with 15 and
13 points. respectively. Dan
Lehma n wa s the only starter
for either team to hit double
figures as he ca nned , 12.
Loga n sank enough foul shots
to wi n SQme cont ests· as LHS
put through an unbelievable
37 of 52 free throws. Walto n
made 10 of those .
Meigs was led in scoring
by Tim Coats' nine points
while Tom Hawley came
oft the bench to nail eight.
Chuck Follrod and Kenny
Young led the starters with
six points apiece. Follrod
sprained an ankle late 'tn
the first hall. but saw some
limited ac1ion in the second
hall. Meigs ,.·as also cold at
the charity stripe as MHS
hit just seven of 23.
Meigs will pla y t hree
games this week .
Tuesday. MHS travels to
Well;t on to battle the Golden
Rockets in what should be a
goo d ma t ch-up . F r ida y
Jac kson comes to Marauder
territory in another contest
and then on Saturday the
Meigs crew crosses the r iver
to battle the Wahania White
Falcons.

clay this ycHI': howe\'CI' , as
tlw

MEIGS MARAUDERS 1391
FG-A FT-A RB PF TP
3-10
0-J
6
6
3
05
2J
3
3
2
I
0
0·2 0-2
5
29
2-5
I
5
6
1- 8
0-2
3
2
2
9
J-6
1-2
2
5
4
1-1 2-2
0
5
J . JQ
1 8
0-0
5
0·4 0-0
0
2 0
I
1-2 0-i
3
2
0-1 0-1
I
1 0
0-0
0-0
2
0
0
16-58
7-23 25
35 39
LOGAN CHIEFTAINS 189}
FG-A PT-A RB PF TP
I
4
7
2·4 3-5
4-6
0-1 10
2
8
4-4
4-6
3
0 12
1-5
I3
6
3
3
1-4
1· 2
3
1
5
25
4-4 0
1 8
9 12
3-5
6
3 15
1 13
3-6
7-10 5
1-2
1-2 8
3
3
9
3-4
6
3-4
7
1-2
4-5
2 6
26 -49
37-52
51 24 89

Foll r od

'An drews
S1anley
Y ou ng

Becker

Coats

Blake
T. Haw ley .

Hal ley
Elkins
Kennedy
Di az

TOTALS

PLAYER
Gasse r
Brag lin
Lehma n

Albert
Kr ieg
Ka ynes
Wal to n
Tucker
Dalton
Hal lett
K emper

TOTALS

Score by quarters :
Loga n Chief1 ains
M ei g s Marauder s

'

28 15 12 34
a 17 5 9 -

89
39

Papooses pull away
•

in fourth for,.33-24 wzn
Box score :
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Mei gs Re serves are still
MEIGS RESERVES 1241 looking for their first win Chr is Yeauger J -1·7; O'llinger
Faulk 1-0-2; Dan
alter dropping a contest 2-1-5;
Thoma s d-0-8 ; Dodson 1-0-2;
Friday night to the visiting 0' Br ien 0-0-0 ; Kenned y 0-0-0;
Logan Papooses, 33-24 . Logan Bla ettnar 0-0-0; SnoWden o.o.
·
led most of the way, but a o. Totals 11 -2-24 .
LOGAN RESERVES 1331
third-quarter Meigs rall y had - Dillon 1-0-2; Fisk 5-3-13 ; D.
fans on the edge of thei r Be ll 4-0 8; Moore 3-0-6; R.
Be l l l -0-2; Lov esy 1-0-2; Mara
seats.
0-0-0;
Rugg els 0-0-0; Ba chus
After jumping off to a 12-0
0-0-0; Flo wers 0-0-0. Totals 15lead in the first quarter , the 3-JJ.
s¢cond per iod saw the host s

Score by quarters :

1274 10~33
keep right up with t he L&lt;J9a n i BI
Meigs(B)
6-7
9 2- 2&lt;
visitors.
In the third period, Meigs
found the range and tightened
its defense to limit Logan to
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UP! )
just four points to come - George Fost-er, the Cinwithin striking distance 23-22 cinnali Reds' outfielder who
at the third buzzer. In the last hit .320 while smashing a
period, Meigs could manage club-record :&gt;2 home runs, has
only two points as Logan won been named the 1977 National
going awa y..
League Player of the Year by
Dan Thomas led the local Kansas City baseball supboys with eight points on four porters and writers.
field goa ls · whi le Chri s
F oster , the 28-yea r•old
.Yeauger was right be hind ri ght·ha nded slugger who
with seven. The tea m hit on 11 won 'The Sp ortin g News
n'f :~3 shots from the fl oor for Player-o f-!he-Year honor in a
3.1 P•r C(•nt whi le caiuung two la nd slide vote by other ·
.,. .. il four fo ul shots for the National League players, will
e evening.
attend the seventh annual ·
' &lt;Jgan was led by Dave Kansas C1ty Baseball Awards
F isk as he poured in 13 points Dtnner Jan . 28. aLthe Hilton '.l'hile Bell had eight. The hit Plaza Inn. The dinner is
ll per cent from the floor and sponsored by the Royals'
just 3 of 8 from the foul line. Lancers and the Kansas City
l

pt'l't'd huntt•rs.

fur

T ill' l'SIIlll:tl l'(l 11&lt;11'\'L'St

I Ul'l I

l' li i. UM!l ll ~

Dt•nru s Stt•inb;a•k uf
Bl;rck H1n•r s n\'s hi s
SL'I L•rtinn &lt;Is I ill' tlnil;•d Pn•ss
('1r;wh

lrlil'l'llatinnal Cia:-:-: ''

('nach

llr

thL· yt·a r rw rw as a
surpri st· (t • hi 11 1. f h• m JUid Iike
ht t un I tl w t;1b k~ ltfl his 197tl
'1p pt 1llt'll1 s'

· · T h ;r t • :-.
r r a IIr
um•xpt•t·u•d ," said S(l•i nb&lt;li'k .
wh r• kd !ht• Piralt•s In a 10..{)

IW'onlm Ius fi r st y~ar ;t t tl1t'
ht·lnt. " I never di'L'CJIIIl'&lt; l 11f
an~ ti l H I).!

t~1is ...

l1 kl'

N M Sl 69 , La 1 L•C I1 ~ ~

!6 C,o F IO 67

51

STRETCH - Meigs' Tom Hawley 132! siwts ju mper
nver Lngan defender s Da ve Da lton 151 ) and Marty Hallett

143). On right is Ma rauders' Chuck F ollrod 1H 1. Logan
too k over undispu ted first plare with an 89-39 triumph .

Del an d, F Iii

SIPl!iOJI 71

Cage
standings

'UGs

32

· TOO MUCH HEIGHT - Logan 's Dave Dalton (51) hold .. ball high above shorter Meigs
players during Friday 's SEOAL game at Rdck Springs. On left is Meigs' Greg Be cker r 12 1.
On right is Tom Hawley 132).

MEIGS' Greg Becker· (12 1 drives [or layup with
Logan's John Kemper {45 ) in close pursuit.

Bulldogs rally to edge
Golden Rockets, 74-68
WELLSTON - Coach Fred
Gib son 's Athen s Bulldogs
blew an II point halftime lead
Friday night but clawed their
wa y back in the fourth period
for a 74-68 triumph ov er
Wellston.
Down 53-50 going into the
final stanza the Bulldogs
com bined a tight defense and
balanced scoring from the
guards to notch their first
"victory of the young season .
Athens jumped to a 24·12
first period lead and was
coasting with a 38-27 halftime
lead before John Martin led a
third quarter Wellston charge
to outscore the visitors 26-1 2
· and take a 53-50 lead.
Martin tallied 12 of hiS
game high 21 points in that
third period surge. .
·
The Rockets fell behind
•·
chapter of the llas eball
Writers' Associ ation of
America.
Baseball writers across th e
nation also chose Fo;1 er as
their le~gue's most valuable
player , mainly on · the
strength of his consistent
power hitting . That hitting
earned him 149 RBi s and :&gt;2
home runs - the most hit in
the league sin ce Willie Mays
hit the same number in 1965.
Foster also amassed 388 total
bases to lead the league.
Other honorees already
announced include Dennis
LeonaFd as Royals' pitcher ·of
the year and Al Cowens as
Royals' player of the year.

midwa y through the fourth co nvert ed 10 of 25 free
quarter when g uard John throws. The Bulldogs com'
Royster drew hi s fifth per- mitt ed i9 tu r novers and
sonal foul and this changed grabbed 35 rebounds with
the compl exion of the contest . . David Mathews snaring II .
Martin 's 21 p0 inls led · Wellston , now 1-3, con·
Well ston with Robbie Nor- nected on 31 of 60 from the
man getting H . and Mark Ooor and made good on six of
Swon ger 11.
13 at the line . The Rockets
The Bulldogs were pa ced were guilty of 30 turnovers,
by Gary Bentley's 21 poi nts. but pulled down 39 rebounds
David Mathews added 17, led by Ra y Gilliland's II
Mark Walla ce had 16, a nd AI grabs.
Walton chipped in II before
Box score:
fo uling out in the fi na l two
ATHENS 17•1 - Edwards
minutes of play.
0-1·1; Bentl ey 9-3-21; Walt on
4-3- 11 ;
Wall ace
7 - 2 ~ 16 ;
Athens hit 49 pet. fr om the Mathews
S-1-17 ; Chonk o 4-0-8
Ooor on 32 of G6 attempts a nd TOTALS 32 -10-7&lt;.
WELLSTON
168)

Event called off

Royster d-0-8; Swonger 5-111; Gill il and 3-2-8; Mart in 9-3·
21 i Sw ingle 1-0-J ; Norman 7-

0-14; Baker 2·0-4. TOTALS 31 -

by b11d weather

MI LAN, Italy (UPI )- The
Ita lian
Wint er
Sports
Fed erati on
a nn oun ce d
Sat urd ay th e Women's
Downhill and Giant Slalom
World Cup skiing competition
s che~l ed Dec. 15-16 a t
Borm10 1n the Italian Alps
had been cancelled because
of ba d snow condit ion s.
The F ederat ion said warm
winds and rain the past
se veral
days
ma de
prepar-ation of the co urses for
the downhill and gia nt slalom
events impossible.
. Instead, the giant slalom
fo'r women is to be held at
Madonna Di Campiglio Dec.
15 following the men's events
ther e tha t da y: No plans were
made for reschedulin g the
wom en 's do wnhill event.

6-68.
Score by quarters :
Athens
24 l-4 12 24- 74
w el lston
12 15 26 15- 68
Reserve score : Wel lston 59,
A then s 51.

KANSA S CITY , Mo. I UP I )
- The Kansas City Royals
F' rida y assign ed catcher
Buck Ma;tine z to th e
Milw a ukee Bre wers. to
cdmplete the Mark Littell-Al
Hrahosky deal wit h the St.
I11Uis Cardina ls.
Martin ez, 29 , wa s th e
" pla yer to be named_late_r'' in
th e Kansa s City.Sl. Loui s
dea l an no un ced earlie r
Fr iday. St. Louis then traded

Martinez to the Brewers for
minPr l ca~ u e pitcher George
Frazier .

•

0 208 176
0 122 100

Portsmouth

3 I 304 23'2

Logan

3 I 286 216

Ironton

1 2 160 151

Athens

I 3 238 283
1 3 259 278

0 2 106 116

Jackson

0

2 lOB 129

Mei gs

0

J 139 244

Eastern teams
begin. cage play

Pt . Pleasant
o o o o
Ravenswoo d
0 0 0 0
Dec . l results :
Log a n 78 Nels - Yor k 6 1
Ma r ietta 76 Athens 69
Dec . 6 result :
Pike Eastern 74 Wellston 57
Friday 's Non -SEOAL ;
Portsm outh 90 Boyd County

EAST MEIGS Th e
East ern
Junior
High ,
coached . by Arch Rose, has
opened it s new; sea son ,
although they will now be off
because of the school closing.
56
At Waterloo last week, the
WC H- T ea ys Va l ley . pp nd ,
seventh grade le310 dropped
reset Det . n
a 28-22 decision. The first
SEOAL VARSITY
game jitters showed on the
TEAM
W L P OP club although they gave a
L09 an
2 0 148 92 good account of themselves.
Ironton
1 0 79 30
Wa ver·ly
1 0 57 .tO Brian Well did most of his
Athe n s
. 1 t 114 125 team's scoring as he netted 14
Well ston
1
130 131 points.
Gal lipol is
.0
53 S9
The eighth ~tade squad
Jackson
0
57 62
Me ig ~
o 2 69 168 also lost by six points, 27-21.
TOTALS
6 6 101 101 Greg Cole led the local ciub
Friday 's re sults :
with his eight points .
Wa verl y at Ga ll ipo l is, ppnd ,
On Tuesday of this week,
reset Feb . .s
Belpre
came to town and
Iron ton a t Jackson , ppnd.
At hens 7:J Wellston 68
went home with two victories
Logan 89 M ei g s 39
although the Eastern junior
high
seemed much improved .
SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L POP In the seventh grad¢ contest,
Wells!on
2 0 11 7 77 Brian Well again led his te~m
Ga llipoli s
1 o 44 36
with his nine points although
Iron ton
1 0 46 35
they
fell to tlie taller Belpre
Logan
1 1 69 68
At hens
1 1 99 103 squad 5\l-21. Brian CoUins
Jac kson
Meig s

TOTALS

0

1 44

0 I 26 58

0 2 59 79
6 6 504 so•

Dec . 10 game :
Sout h Point af Waver ly
Wav erly at Ironton
Ga lllpoli s at Jack son
M eig s at Wel lston
Logan a t At hens
Greenfi el d at Wa sh ington
Dec . 16 gameS :
Ironton a t Logan

Ja ckson at Meigs
Well ston at Waverly
Ath ens at Ga"llipolis
Wa shingten at W i lm ington

SEOAL FROSH
W L P OP

Jackson

1 0 53

26

1 0 49
1 1 87

44
81

I

1 65

86

0
0

1

TOTALS

32 43
1 JJ ·39

4 4. 319
Thursday' s results :
Gal l ipoli s-Wav erly , open
Ja ck son -Ironton , op en
Logan 43 Meig s 32
Athens 53 Well ston 26

Case No

11·360-EL·FAC 10 rev"w the
tuel procurement practrces
and l)ohcres ol Ohro PoWer
Company, the o ~ra1t ons of
t1S fuel cos t adtus tme nl
clause and related matters
Tht s heartng IS scheduled 10

begm al1 0 00 AM . on Decem ber 12, 1977. at the of·
!ices ot the CommtSSIOn. 1BO
East Broad Street. Columbus.
OhiO All rnterested oersOns
w1U be gwen an opportunity
lo be heard further lnfor·
malton may be obtamed by
conta cl1ng the Commrss10n.

fHt PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSIONOF OHIO
By Randall G Appleg.ate ,
Secretary

81

Vil

W ~lyn

M ISS 76

NC' b wsrvn 111, Tark. io 92
N Oak. 60 S1ou x. FallS 56

thC yea r , and Puul

f
11
J
Krtpko rt Ashta JU CJ St. uhn,
fi ni s hed sccn iH..I in tl1L'
ba llot JJJ )..! fur Ut is yea r 's
hn 111 1J' , followe d !Jy .lnl m Web\
of
SP U11 I
Cha rl est o n
Smnhe.aslern ami Bnb Haurie
o f P(:llrick Henry .

So

67

We ~ t

Ari1o na

Wstrn St
81 Hou ston BO

SO

80 1Se $1 91. Cal S 8 77
Ca l P ly SLO ! J . SF St SB

Cal

UBJQUC WlJ)" b}'

pUr&lt;.'httSing H

wildlife sum1p, as a Christ·

tun·vt•st is down over t.hc 19ifi
fi~-ture uf 20..5!11 .
The 1)ivi siun \Jf Wild\Jfl'
cinticipatrd H dt•c·rcasc 111 the

mas gi ft,·" say s. Dale Hl:lnt'Y,
C11il'f IJf !hi' Ohio Depa1tm cnl
1Jf
Na tur.rtl
n cs(J ur!'es'

un ) of th e" · fi\'t' wildli fe

district offi&lt;'CS .
Addresses of the di stricl
offices i.trC: WikHife Di strict
I', 1500 Dublin
H•iH d.
Columbu s 432 15; Wil dl ife
Dist rict 2. 952 Lim~• Avcn'uc.
FindiH)' 45840 : \V ildli fl'

'
.-. SHOP '(
EARLY

·

Nnt many years CJJ.!t 1• Black
Hi\'er ra n up a n ugly 5-l-game
lnsing st reak. IJut the Pi rt:~tt!S
are :12--5 the last f(•lll' year s
·
k r·
k
and Stc mbal· 1gurcs t1 r eep
them 1111 111p .
West J effers11 n '.s Gene
Ked . last rear 's Class A
·

/\I corn Sl 7-J , Qu1nc v 57
Att1 m Ac t 85 ., 5 Hou s s~
B thny Na/ ,9 . L u b Chr rs 70
H P ayne 106 . Pilul Our nn 69
Mdw!otr n St 6 9 St Mry ' s 670 ~ (hr•s 98 . Wayld Ba p 67
AdCHll !&gt; St 9Q,

tributt' tn the progrmH i11 ;:1

Hl,4!)2 dcl!r dunn~ the J~Ji7
deer ~-tun sca!-iun. The tutal

baekground . Printed in
Ji mat ed numbers 1n 1972, th e
stamp is cons id ered 1;.1
Ctlllcct ur's 1tcrn siru.:c the
plates
wen
ori ginal
de·strqyed ~rft er print ing.
" PunUs f rum the sa le of
this stamp Hrc used by ' the
Div iswn nf Wildlife primaril}•
to co nduct approved non -

SW"priSP .
" \V~ s h11 uld han! &lt;t fai rly
good tl'lll n ," he said, " but
we' 11 rca 11 Y 1HH'l' to 1msl Ie
~ l&gt;el'i:I USe thn·c· l tf t he te;;uns in
tile c11 nfc n.•nt·t.• i J&lt;'i rehmds 1
are fa ir !~· yuung .
" A lnl of t~n m s a rc ~o in g to
·1
ff" 1ll' &lt;I( II( Cd , "b Ut
Wrl C US I• ,
we have a go11d nucleus

('l)acll of

O hla C r!y BJ,

sr

t tJil ·

We'll look
into matter
Elliot says

3t9

bee.- 12 games :
Ironton -Waverly , open
Ja ck son at Ga'llipolis?
Ather:~s at Logan
Well ston a t M eig s

Browns fans
to gel free broth
CLEVELAND (UP! )·
Football fan s brave enough to
de[y snow-swept Cleveland
Stadium in below freezing
temperatures for the BrownsHouston Oilers game today
were promised free cups of
hot broth .
·
., The Browns manage'ment
announced the free broth
Saturday, sayl•g it ·would be
dispensed· at
several
· locations in the upper and
lower stands and the
bleachers of the 80,000-seat
stadium on the Jakefront.
About 45,000 tick~s were
S(&gt;ld lor the game . .

Dis ~ ove r what' s new ir) appliances during our Hotpoint Holiday
of Values. And, beli eve us, Hotpoint has plenty of great new
features that make your life easier and our appliances great
values. Hotpoint has washers with the added Handwash•
System . There are deluxe refrigerators with adjustable glass
shelves. Come see our deluxe Potwash er dishwashers. And
fast -cooking microwave ovens that do it all automatically.
We 've got the features. We've got th e va lues. Come and see
.them all !

Fnd ay ' s

M rnes 100 , W slm nstr 9J

F ! Lewrs 8 1, Mesa Coli 79

FresnO Pa c 56, Pom . Ptzr 50
Or e T ec h 7'1. Ch ic o Si 56
Po i nt Lom a 77 ,· Biola 63
Regts Co li 91. So U1ah SB
Ro Ck I' Mln 95 , Ida . Ca ll 91
ST . Cl ara 76 . Pa c Cal 70
W Mon t 105, N W NitZ 1QJ
W N M n , So Colo 63

Ce ntral Colt eg ta l e
Hocke y A ssn. Resu lts
Unit e-d Press Int ern a tional
Sf Lou is 5 Lake Supe r1 or 2
Western Michigan 7 Oh io
Sta te 1
.
Nor th e,&gt; rn Mi c higa n 7 Fer r iS
Ste1t e 1
Yor k a t Bow ling Green, ppd,

Shop &amp; Compare! We've got the lowest prices anywhere!
largest Selection and stock of appliances

tn

Southeastern Ohio

snow

D Deluxe 20 8 cu. ft . no- lrosl r efn ~­
erator- lree ier 0 /ldjustab le meal
s to rage D 5 Spil l-adjus tab le glass
s helves D 5 ildJUSiable do_or s helve s.
Model CT&lt;21GV

50 DISCOUNT

1

Baylor
0 D el u~e microwave oven with sal ids lote touch controls D Cooks fast by

wants to

MIAMI { UP! )
A
facetious suggestion that the
1979 University of MiamiNotre Dame football game be
moved from Miami's Orange
LONG BEACH, Calif . .
Bowl to · Tokyo to improve
attendance may get serious (UP! ) - Outfielder Don
Baylor ha s asked the
attention .
Miami officials chuckled California Angels to trade
when a South Bend., Ind ., him because he does not want
sports writer suggested two to be used only as a
weeks ago the two teams designated hitier, it was
probably would get a bigger reported Saturday.
" I'd
rather
play
financial return in Japan
than they would if they ' s~ mewhere else than be
played in a hail-filled Orange designated hitter with the
Angels again," Baylor told
Bowl .
Last week's Notre Dame- the Long Beach Independent,
Miami game drew only 35,789 Press-Telegram. " I want to
fans to the Orange Bowl. That be out there in the outfield
may have spurred Miami playing every day."
Baylor. signed as - a free
orficials to take a second look
by the Angels last
agent
at the proposal.
" Hell, yes, I'm serious season for $1 .6 million over
about considering it," said six years, hit .252 with· :i:; .
home runs and 75 runs batted
Miami Coach Lou Saban.
Miami Athletic Director in.
About criticism that his
Pete Elliot said , " We'll
throwing arm is weak, Baylor
certainly look into it."
said, " I've seen guys run on
Bobby Bonds and Joe Rudi.
How many guys do they
throw out to win a game?
Mickey Rivers plays cenFOXBORO, Mass . (UP!) terfield · for the World
The Patriots issued hopeful
Champions and tan he
reports Friday on the healing throw? I feel all that is overprogress of tight end Russ
rated.
Francis and linebacker Pete
"Being a designated hitler
Barnes, two starters trying to
is just like pinch hitting four
get rea dy for Sunday's game times a game . You have to
against the Miami Dolphins.
run your emotions o_n and
Francis, out the past lour turn them off."
weeks with broken ribs, has
Baylor and his agent Jerry
been
upgraded
to Kapstein have asked Angels'
questionable and Barnes . General Manager Buzzie
bothered by a thigh injury
Bavasi to seek a trade,
ha s been upgraded to
preferably to Texas because
probable.
his home is in Austin.

I

Athens 45701 : and
Wildlife District 5, P. 0 . !lox
576, 1076 Olrl Sjlrin~field P1 ke.
Xcn1a 45:!85.
Sportsman·~ Ca lendar Dec. 17 - Wilson's snipe
cl oses: Dec. 17. Hilvcnna "gun
second of li Satunh1ys:
Dee . 24. Squirrel closes,
pu blic lands: Dec. :11 . Quail
dose:r, and Dec. :u. Deer
crossbo w opens.

kn11W if wc could gu 10-0. Wt:
, kn('w if \\'l' ~..·uu l d fi II a c·nupll'
of kt ·~· pusilJoriS, Wl• ' d he
l.Mil-(ht.·•
With the S UU.'l'SS Ill' had th iS
~ear. SleJ nba(' k wi ll p rn ba b l~
gctr ;1 few ph( tile calls about

.

111 , Grn sbro Coli

At:&gt; Ctu IS ~~~ '.f;;.~;:&gt;~

wildlife .('an

~tn•ct,

c4rm mg back ·•

M tdw e!. t
Carle l n 7J. Gr,nncll 66
Centr al sq, Coe 51
Cnc rd 1a 111 71 , Cncrd ia 65
Mrl w Te ch 89 , Waseca 81
Ncb 65 . C r£' •qhlon 58

Oh.io W slyn 96 , Wr lm 90
NC'IJ On1 7!:J
· S11npson 100 . G r ac&lt;'lnd q 9
W11.1 Penn 69 M1dlnd Ncb

non·~tunc

sk y-blue

good ypar ,'' s:.11d tlw J6-)'L'.ill" ·
11hl Stl'inbat:k. " but WL' didr1'1

trme or temperatu re D Cooks slo w
with automatic simm er dish.
MQdel AE944V

be traded

Dec. 13 games :

Ath ens
Gal li pol is
Logan
Well ston
Meig s

----

rhe PubliC ~liltheS CommiSSIOn of Ohto has set tor
he~rrng

SH1 rn

" Oiu u&lt;.~ n S

'111e !-;tamp ma) be purb~ !'.(•ncling a theck l!r
mom·~ ,,rclrr fur $5 tu the
Ot\1ISi(tll 11 f Wlldllfl·. Founuun
Sq utt rC, l'c,lu mbus n~~t or

3. 912 Portage Lakes

Drlw. Akron 44319, Wildlife
lli;trict 4. :lllO East State

&lt;'hHSt'd

48

Friday's res.UitS; :
Wa verl y at Gallipoli s, ppnd .
Iron ton a t Jackson , ppnd.
We ll s ton 59 At hens 5.1
Logan 33 Meig s 24

TEAM

tossed in six points in the
losing cause as the Baby
Eagles shot only 30 percent
from the floor. They eommitted 29 turnovers.· Belpre
was led by Scott Dever 's lB
points .
The eight h grade team of
Belpre had to come from
behind as the tough Eagles
led for most of the game.
Center Tim Dill of the hosts
had 1~ markers as the Eagles
outscored the vi sitors 15·12 in
the second canto to go into the
locker room leading 25-23 at
hall . But the Eagles finally
succumed to the taller Bepre
team to fall 43--37 . Cole had
nine points to go with Dill's
13.
Vaughan led the winners
with 18 markers. Eastern's
good foul shooting kept them
in the game until the closing
minute.
Eastern's next game is
Jan. 3 at Wahama.

-.!

LEGAL NOTICE
'publiC

Gron r Wbb 73 , Pl eitter n
Hamp ton II~ . D C: 99
Md· E S ~1 91. Sf Paul 's BB

U Sou t1 1 95 , Co ven&lt;tnt 90
Vil S t 87 , Rtq r &lt;;, Cmd n 81

Roadrun ner Cl ass•c
Las. Cruces . N M.
P "H1l\"

Grnsbro

Slll rq 116. Bishop Co li 68

0 1&lt; Ia Sl 99 , Mrsnl! 87
71

c

ll' ildlih· Stam ps
mtcrcM(!d 111 the
managemrnt nf the ~1i.ltl' ..'&gt;

588 : C:allia 56 ! : Jat·ksno 5~1:
Hoss 144 ; J.awrenL'(' 9:~: Pikl'
R4 : nnd Scioto 4~ .
State Ohin hunt ers killl'll

CJ

D is1rid

tiJ!Il')

That brings·LL') l 1t the 1978

Mrf'ho u'lr 106.' Ddl&lt;trd 100

1\ul.nn 66 So Ill OS

tr'-" ... r" ' l

So uth
C11r1s Nwp l 8&lt;1 . N

M CN SC' 5 1 96 ,

H u nl rng to n . W.Va

'1

Waverly

77

M·arshati T ourn am ent

Was h ington
Waver ly

Wel lston
Ga l l ipolis

St . Sf

L VO II'I C.11 91. Tex A &amp; I 63
Pf'p rcln(' 1!9 l f'X Arl 88

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
3

1\r~

M .ll lbU ClilSSI C
Mal tb\J , Cill .

thl'

a)..!~llnst

pru ~ ram5.· ·

a nd 1'11 li kt· tu
think l ' 11 1 a J)retty gor 1d
en;_l(;h, t oir."

Oc;.-..•JCQO Sl 90, Mar is ! B7
Pa c(&gt; 105 Lehman B1
Pro v · 7J , WiSCO nSi n 67
S~1ph rd 91 , Mt St Mry 's 76
Stny Brl&lt;. 87 . St J Frsh r r:.
TNnOif' AO . D tc k m~nn 'i"'
w
L•b 7J. w va ~ ~ 60
w s te r o n . sw rt hm r e 65

New O rl n s 93. Cntnar.,. 59

jttllllllg

s1aff \lll tkr
' 1\~rr~· J&lt;'orbt•s in l~J7fi. When
Fo r bc ~ ll'f t c•flt·r ;m 8· 1
camp;lign · · ~ t wkt' e!h1• lll'lld
j11b at Nllnt~~m ~r. StL' Inba ck
g••t th(' H!~u ·k Hivt•r JWSl.
" \V\• lhHUg!it WL' 'd ha\'l' t1

S&lt;IU1 .

F~~rbe s tl':1111.

Milnhlt nv! 117 Mr-r c""y BJ

Hatt er Cla&lt;&gt; src

J.)(:fl•!'t'
HivL'r

J.!H ille

"llll' wtldhfe stamp port ra)S :t parr 11f t·ardmals una
snuw-cuvcrcd pin1• tree

•

Lcb Vol 79, Muh!nbr Q !6

Ch arlolle, N C

LaSI IC 96 E (;,r 95 2 o l
N C Cl1ilr 7q Ss.n Coli 61
Cougar Cl assK
Provo , U tilh
Wm&amp;MJry 07 . 1-ullr tn S l 6/
Monlal)rl 76 BYU 7"1

Bl:tt'k

Vmt un 748 ; Pe lT~ 7\:t: \t 1hlt•
712; Mt•ttrllt' &amp;:H: ( 'ushttdl'll
63:1 : llocklnt4 f)Oi: Bf'lnu.nt

J)J\'I.'&gt;tun nf Walll l1£e.

rn••\·ing n1tW , Tht· irn plil'&lt;lt Htll
is tlit•n· that this w;.rs a

111\aca n , Cortland oo
KtnQs PI 9 1. rou Mad oo

[ F 1n t Umon To urn a m e n t)

St&lt;~1 t on

t 11ta l

" Trut hfully, ,. Ill' said , " J'11 1
not n·aliY iu 1L''I'l'Sled i11

E as t
Cll&lt;'yny 83 . Morgan 75
h arvMd Q, , CC NY 8-1

CharloH e ln\Jta fi &lt;lnal

Sl&lt;'illl.)tH'k hall oru• lll't'VInus
~t·;n·
nf
hL'&lt;td
t 'u aC'h
l':qll'rii·rH 't' nt t' •du rii iJ l&lt;t

harvt•st ~~!'&gt; a r c~ult nf
:J,21)(1ft•\\l'T" &lt;Jntll•ri(•Ss pt·rmltS
IK•ing ISSUl'll than till" lllllllher
ISSUt'd ft,r J~i6 .

Allll'n:, l.221:i : ~ilwrn sL' ~ 1,070 :
Ml'!J4S 1,021; ~1uq~an RHO :

· 1
·
j ll) llpi.' ll lllg !-i

U la h Cla5s tc
Sa lt La ke Ctt y, U t~h
l nq Be h S ! 9.\ . ~nJ osf' R4
Utah so, Kt'r' ' St 47

( Ftrst Roun d I
Brg Su n T our n a m en t
Sl. Pel t&gt; rsb urq , F la .
Sc ion It nil 76 w v 73
~ Ia

cnunLil':-:1 tn Wlidhfl' Ihstnl'l 4
t.'i as follow.s · Muskmgum
1.4:!0: W;n·&gt;hllt.L:IP't t,:t87:

Steinbeck top· mentor

Col tc'gc- Ba ske tb all Res u lt &lt;;
8 y Unt i ed Prt: s&lt;; Jnt crna t io n i'l l
Fn ct.ay 's Tour n,1 m c nt Resu lt s.

Reds' Foster honored again

•

Wl'&lt;'k pru~ resst•d heavy

raimL c.md t111-:h \\ 1nd ~ ha111·

Colle,n:e
results
e

Meigs-Logan box score
PLAYER

d t•c•r

1SuuthcaSll'rll Ohltll. fWit o r
dt&gt;C'I' 7mrr r~~u r , ~huw:o&gt; a t:1

ROCK SPRINGS Tlw weather was freezing
outside. and the shooting of the host ~ l cigs
~ l aratfders was just as cold inside as they fell to
the visiting Logan Chieftains Friday night a t
Morrison Gymnasium . 89-39.
The hos ts shot just 2i percent from the lloor.
ca nnin g 16 of 58 shots while the Chiefs were j ust
the opposite. hit ting a sizzling 53 perce nt as th ey
put throug h 21i field goa ls in ~ 9 attem pt s.
The triu mph left Logan in und is puted first
place in the Southeas tern Ohio League standings
I Iront on a nd Wa verly did not play Friday ) with a ·
2-0 ma rk. On the vear. LHS raised its record to 3-1.
Me igs dropped io 0·2 inside the leag ue a nd 0-3
overa ll .
The Chieftains of Co ach
Scott Fitzgerald jumped off
to an early lead. seemingly in
command at the end of the
fi rst peri od. 28-JI.
The Marauders of Coach
Ron Loga n came alive and
outscored the visitors .li-6 to
na r.ro wthe score to 34-25 with
two minutes to go in the half.
But then Log an aga in fo und
the ra nge and reeled off nine
unanswered point s to nail the
door shut at ha lftime, 43-25.
The Meigs defense
played admirably In the
third period. limiting the
Chiels to just 12 markers.
but the hosts ' offens e
couldn't lind the range as
they hit for only live points.
Besides the cold shooting of
the Marauders. a big facto r
on th e night was t he
r eboundin g. Meigs' board
tenders co llect ed just 25
errant shot s whil e .. th e
Olieftains. led by Ja y Braglin
with 10. garnered a whopping
51 caroms. ·
The foul de partment was a
little uneven as the visitors
were ca lled for 24 per sonals
in the foul-infested contest
while the hosts were whistled
for 35.

The

hHI'\'l'.Sl fur W1JdnfL' Dl :o:.t nt·t -l

OASTINGINA

NEWYEAR

50 DISCOUNT

1

DECEMBER 31, 1977 - 6 PM TIL 2:30 AM

'-

(;

'

J
•

.OPEN,l ROAD

0 Deluxe Potwashe r model u 12
Cycle built-1n dis hv1asher r . .PowerScrub" cycle D Ldi -/1- Level • upper
rack D Sani-cycle L Crys tal Clear"'

f " f1 •·1ux r. I&lt;Jrqc

rinse di spen se r.

tcvt:i C:!n trO I C Aut o rna ttc sOnk cycle
M ·)•!I 'l it \V,1700 T

\'JW,Iitn("] llcxr bdr !y

Model HOA912

50 DISCOUNT

1

.-"

c~p aclt y

washer

r1

:3 W; ,I /S pm ~ rc.r.rJ cnrnhm&lt;l tro ns T
Hanr!.,..,n·;_hfit Sy r,V:m foe cn mp!C1c
r~-

Varra b c wntor

s50 DISCOUNT
ON ' TH E

Make your reservatiOns
now and don't be left out.
Phone 992·3629 for information
Tickets should be picked up by Dec . 20th .·

CARE
.•. EVERYWHERE
Fasl Dependable Service

THIS TIME ... MAKE IT

I I u I 1, ,, i u-.~1
POMEROY LANDMARK
.

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Drive A Little and Save A Lot- Free Delivery Within 7~ Mile s- Ye s ! We Ser vic e
AI Your Local Holpoinl Dealer .
Store ~ours :

a : JO to 5 · 10- Mtll Clo ses ijt5 · oo p

·

·

M

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ervtn g Me•gS. Ga lir a &amp; Ma so n Cou nt 1E!s.

�C-1 The Sunda~

Tllllt.'~..St•ntuwl, Sunda~.

·'

Dt'f..' 11, l9j;

C-5- The Swl(lay Tmtes-Sentinel, Sw1day, Dee. ll, l9TI

Texas ace captures
1977 Outland Award

Kuhn requests hearing over Vida Blue deal
he plan:-; tn d~' 1f Kuhn rrJPet s
tht• d&lt;'al on tlw ~ro unds it IS
ni.ll Ill tht' bi•st mtt•rcsts uf
Kuhn 1s C'al hn~ it h{'ann~ b&lt;&amp; -t'ba\1. but thrn• as a srn1ng
h kehhnud llC and the Heds
ll\'{'r ltw de&lt;t \
" I bdlt.'\'t' tht&gt; deal nuscs \-\Ill take l\').!al at1hm alsu .
Kutu• · ~ last ii ppl'arante m
sub:,1antml questwns as to
court
took. p\a('t' last spring in
whrther 1t should bt• ~tp­
Atlanta
wht•n• Braves' owm•r
pro\'{'d or nut." ht' savs.
Tt•d
Tunu-r
sought to bB\'r his
Sho uld he disapprove the
a~am .
orH'·)
l'
HI'
s uspcnsw n for
Fr um all etppt•arance , dect\ as he did jn thr sale to
tampl'ring
lifted
. Tumer lost
tht•
Yunkt•t•
s.
Fmlrv
wtti
take
t}lat's what h--.· has tn mind.
that
one,
but
beat
Kuhn when
'
Kuhn
to
cou~
agnin
even
Ha\'tn j;L l'iHJceled a pn.'\'luus
the
judge
ruled
he
still was
thllugh
h('
was
beaten
there
sale of Blu~ to the ;'\;rw York
l'nt
1t!ed
tu
his
first
choice
in
tltn{'.
Last
time.
tht'
first
Yankt"'t's in Junt.' of J97ti,
the
SU!lUH£"r
drHft.
Kuhn
wa
s
fi).!htlng
only
KutUI s1g mfied his mtcnt1on nf
W1th the departure of Blur.
Finley. This time hC may~
dom~ the same thtn~ all O\'(' r
again Frida\' shon lv aftN tht: going up against Bub outfielder Bill North and
Howsam.
th('
Red s' Mit chell Page art• the only
l'mc111na t1 Jlt.&gt;cts Ll biamed thE:'
players of any !'l1ature Finley
'------_3....o!~--...J left -handed 28-year·old hard pres1dent. as well.
Howsarn isn't saymg what ha s \('ft . Li ke so many others.
\'lOA RLL'E
throWt'r by tunung &lt;J\ Cr Sl5
Kuhn feels Finl ey is
H) Mll.Til:'o/H IUI M.\N
l 'PI Sports Editor
1101\0I.Ui.L' I liP I 1
H{l Wil' Kutu1 111U!l1 Ill ISS gom~
h l (.'UUrt He hasn 't brf'n 111
ont:' fllr e1ght months lhl \-\ , but
that's t•x.artl! where ht' ~
h~alit&gt;d 1f ht:&gt; trlt'S k n{H: klll~
\' 1da Blue nut nf tht• bt_)x

!lllllhlll

i.Ul(l f1nt b«Sl'Jllitn
Dan• Ht~n• rm~ to nt&lt;trht•
FuHc~ ll f tht• Oakland 1\ 's

•

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Nancy Tawney of
Gallipolis has
•
•
game nnprovmg
... . on Aussie tour

r, ;

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GALLIPOLIS - Down Wlder, where the
season s are re,·ersed Nant.:v Tawnev of
Gallipolis has a good st~rt towa~d winning bi~
this year on ~he I £~dies Professional Golf .
Association tour in Australia .
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max .
Tawney . 154 First Ave ., Mi ss Tawney lms wnn
dose to $2.000 just U1ree mon ths into the
ladies tour .
Big things are expected of her this year .
She came to New South Wales in 1975 after
barely missing a card to tour with the lady
·
pros in the U. S. that vear .
Her notices on the iour show her ga me is
steadily improvlng as she always fin ishes
near the top. She tied for first in the Leeton
Rice Bowl Festival Tolll"nament and was
. denied her .first win in a play-&lt;1ff by Rhn
Wright. .~lread)' she has competed in eig ht
e.vents this seaS&lt;ln, fini shin g second four
t1mes. one a sudden death playoff to Gayle
Flynn at Dubbo.
Two .weeks ago she finiShed third among
the country's professional golfers in tile
Rosebud CoWltry Club tournev .

- ~(ft
·!j :.

. ltlj

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( 'n... .

· ··~'

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,1' -

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NANCY TAWNEY

Friday's high school scores
Friday 's
r
Ohio High School
Ba ske tba II Results
United Press International
Athens 7J. Wellston 68
Beaver Local 66 West Branch
61
Bellaire 62 Bell a ire St Johns
60
Brook 11ille 55 Ca r lisl e 49
Buckeve S 77 Shadvsi de 60 ·
Cambr idge 8.4 Steubenville 77
Canton McKinl ey 65 Alliance '
61
Ci n .Elde r 51 Cin Ba con 49
Cin LaSalle 70 Cin Purce ll 41
Ci n Norwood 63 Cin Ande rson

sa

Ci n Woodward,d9 (in Waln ut
Hills 42
Cin Xavier 65 Cin Moeller 61
Col Acad emy 55 New Albany
52
Col Br igg s 67 Col Central 66
Col Ea~t 77 Wa ln ut Ridge 75
Col Hartley 57 Col Watter son
56
Col Li nden 78 Col -Brook haven
77 (ot .1
Col Mar . Frank 63 Col
Eastmoor 61 (at)
Col Mifflin 79 Col In·
dependence 61
Col North 66 Col South 64
Col Northland 87 Col Whet .
slone 74
Col Ready 7d Col Wehrle 59
Col St. Ch arl es 56 Col DeSales
54
Col West 80 Col Mohawk 65
Col Westland 57 Ch ill icothe 45
Copley 78 Coventry 71
Day Cham Jul 87 Day Ca rr oll
63

Deer Park 60 Mil ford 54
Delaware 63 Weslervil !e N 49
' Do11er 62 New Ph il adel phia 53
Fai rv iew 67 Nort h Olmsted 64
Finneytown 57 St Bernard 55
Gahanna 61 Wort hington 52
Green view 85 Ea st Cl inton 80
Hamilton Taft 67 Fa irfi eld 63
Ha rr ison 61 Greenh il ls 58 •
Howla nd 65 Boardman 53
Hubbard 43 You ng s Ursul ine
42
Indian Hills 44 Sycamore 41
Indian Valley N 74 Cona tion
Valley 62

Eastwick is
pleased with
new contract

Lakota 61 Ha mi lton Badin 59
Landmar k Chr ist J9 Cin
Cou nt ry Day 35
Leavi tts.burg LaBrae 55
Liberty 38
Leetonia 62 Un ited LOcal 58
LoCkland 54' Kings 51
L09an . 89 Me igs 39
LOUISV ille 65 Marl ing ton 61
N\adeira 17 Mariemont 64
Marietta 84 Upper Arling ton
72

Marti ns Ferry 74 Tor on to 55
Mass illon 71 N Canton Hoover
55
Maysv il le 74 New Concord JG
68

.

Miller 71 Trim ble 69
Mingo 77 Cad iz 63
MI . Hea lthy 69 Cin Turp in 65

M1 . Vernon 72 Whirena l·l 67
New Ph iladel-phia cc 71
Hila nd 53 .
New Lex ington 60 Cr ooksvi lle
48
North
College
Hill 7&lt;1 ·
Wy omi ng
10
N9rth ridge 73 Oakwood 62 .
Por lsmou th 90 Boyd Counly
I KY1· 56
·
72 Hamilton
Princeton
Garfield 57
Sher idan 62 Tri Valley 57
V1nton Cou nty Q5 Belpre 79
Westerville S 60 Groveport 56
Y~~~~s F~~~~~Y 79 Austin .
You ngs Ra yen 69 Sharon
I Pa l Kennedy 55
Zanes vi lle 54 Newark so

Rea Rennox claims

.'77 World Cup title
TOLWORTH ,
En gland
rUPil - Canadian Rea
Rennox
ca ptured
t he
Women 's Bowling World Cup
Title Sa t urday when she
outpointed Ameflcan Lauren
Lacost 570-542 in their threegame final at the 13th World
Cup Championships.
T he
33-yea r·old
schoo lteach e r from Scar·
borough , Ontario, fini shed
wit h three straight spares
after opening the fina l game

with a double.
Renno x was always ahead,
taking the three games 192189 , 18H70, 197·183, as
Lacost , a 22-year-old student
at Illinois State Uni versity,
struggled to find the touch
which gave her the doubles
title with J udy Giovinco at
last month' s America n Zone
Olampionships in Panama.
"The pins fell for me today .
I was lucky," said Rennox.

Billie King gains filtals
LONDON tUPI ) - Billie
Jea n Kin g weathered a
strong cha llenge from topseeded Betty Stove Saturday
to ga in the fina ls of the. $.'l5,000
Br.emar Cu'p Women's Tennis
Championships here with a
corrn::from-behind 6-4, 2~. 6·3
vietory.
Stove attacked the six-time
Wimbledon champion. from

NEW YORK IUPI I
International
Newly-signed relief pitcher
Hockey league
Rawly Eastw1ck is "very
Unit ed Press International
pleased" with his New York
North
w I 1 pts. gf ga
Ya nkee contraet according to
Flint
1J 6 2 30 110 102
his agent , J err y Ka pstein .
Port Hurton
Eastw ick, a 27-y ear·old
10 7 6 26 82 10
right-ha nder, had been Sagi naw 10 11 4 24 106 88
negotiating · wi t h several Muskegon 7 15 4 18 83 106
teams throughout the week as t&lt;alam,uoo 4 13 5 13 76 95
South
.a fr ee agent , said Kapstein ,
w I t pts. gf ga
but the former bu llpen ace of FI . Wa ync
11 68 309080
· 10 8 6 26 91 79
the Cincinnati Reds deci ded Toledo
Day Ion
10 tO 3 23 17 87
to sign with the Yankees Milw
.
7 8 7 21 64 74
because of " an excellent
Friday's Resu.lts
contract."
Mu skegon 6 , Fl int 6
Kapstein , calling Yankee Kalam a zoo J, Saginaw .I
J, Tol edo 3 ·
owner George Steinbrenner Port Huron
Sunday's Games
"a very decisive man," said Dayton al Toledo
that East wick decided to play Sagina w at Flint
with a team with a strong Mus kegon af Milwauk e.e
tradition and a bright future. Fort Wayn e at . Kalamaloo

the first rally but threw away
the chance of taking the fir st
set when shEi double-faulted
twice in the lOth game.
Stove then took charge in
the second set, but . King
shook off her apparent
lethary in the final set. King
broke service irf the si.xth
game , he lped by two
volleying erro rs from the
po werfully-built Dutch player
before cr uising through the
next three games for victory.

mitt.le an amwuncement.
th e co mmissi oner
rharacteristica l"•
ordered
hun out by angnly t elling
him, " not in my room, you
don't.''
What makes It so difficuh
for me to understand is how
Kuhn can Hll y stand by and
co untena nc.·e th ese utterly
ridicu lous payment s of
millions to free agents and
then step in and void a deal
for a player . beca use of the
total money involved.
'111e two stances by him are
l'orn plet ely inconsist.ent.
When the Texas Rangers
bought rdirvcr Paul Lind·
blad from the 1\'s for $400,000
th1s past spring, Kulm did
11othing . When he got wlnd
they also were trying to buy
Blue from Finley for $2
million or so . he warned them
he wouldn't hold still for It,
giving them to W1der.stand
that 1400,000 lor a player wa's
what he considered an abplay the Yankees in Fort solute ee11ing.
'!"hat's a laugh right there.
Lau d~ rda l~ · t he follo win g
lt reminds me of that old
night. and co nl'iude the trip in
Pompano Beach wit h a s1ory where H fellow meets a
Sunday game aga in st the g1rl in a bar and they get to
tfl lking. He asks her out for
Texa s Hangers.
the
even m~. but she tells him
The Reds will also pia)' two
will cost him some
that
other night games during the
money.
Hl' te lls her what he's
spring. meeting thr Ne w
wi
lling
to spend and that
York Mets in St. Petersburg
affronts
her .
on Wednesday, March 22, a11d
..
What
kind of a gi rl do you
the . Detro it Tige rs in
Lakeland on Monday, April3 . think I am ? .. she asks, in·
In all . lhc Reds will play 14 di~na ntl y .
" We've already established .
games aga in st Nati ona l
League opponents and II that,'' he says . " 1\11 we're
a ga in ,s t America n Leugue try ing to do now IS settle the
price ...
teams.

s1ars as Vt•rn Stephens, Eilts
Kinder and Jack Krc;unt&gt;r for
blK IHUI,lt'Y
muney th(')'
desperate!! ncrdc·d merely to
~1ay su lvcnt .
1 think Bo\.\ tc Kuhn ts
governed by good intent1uus.
but I also think he leaves
himself upcn {u Charges of
perseelltmg Fmley tf he rules
a~alnst hun i:l~ca in this ume .
Everyb11dy kn ows Kuh n
and Finl ey have no love for
each other , how Finh•y did
evcr)1htnM. he cuu ld to unse.at
Kuhn as t.•nmmissioJll' r
duri n~ th(' summer meetmgs
in Milwaukee two ycH r s ago,
and how a t those same
meetings, Finley trietl t u
brief the press 1n the same
room in which Kuhn hHd just

hqu1dat1ng thr Oa kland sell Cary Matthe ws. as he
rranrht sr and trymg w gt.•t well mi~hr' Will Kuhn call a
out " 1th iiSmuch n wnt·~· as ht' ht• ann~ on that. too'?
Lctst time finlev triffi to
possibly t-'dn before 'sellinJ.!
move Blue it was 1~ a strai~ht
the club.
Huw can Kutm say Fmit') IS sa le to the Yank ees for $1.5
st ripping his cl ub wht'n 1111llion. Kuhn set that one
pla)ers like Catfish Hunt er. uside, as he did Finley's
Sa l Sando. Joe ll udi, llrrt Simultaneous sale uf out ·
Cetmpaneri s and Hullit.• fielder Joe Rudi and Hollie
Fingers stripped it them- Fingers t u Boston for $2
sel\'CS by guing to thi.' highest million and the co urt ' backed
him up on these sales.
bidders'
But the dreuntstam:es an~
Sa)·. fur arg ument's S'lk c.
F' inley is ~trippin g his dub. different this time. Finley has
What makes it anr more received a player fr ont the
wrong for him to den 1 Vida Heds along with t,he rn&lt;&gt;ney .
Blue than for Ted Turner to Pre(:edt'nl is entirclv on his
deal Wj llie Montanez and side beca use back 10. the 'lOs
Andy Messersmit h on sur· the St. Louis Browns always
CCSS I\'e day s ? And SUV got back a player or two
Turn er now decides to deal o~ whenever th ey so ld such

OKLAHOMA ·c iTY (UPl )
- Th.e Foo tba ll Writ ers
Association Saturday named
defensive tackle
Brad
Shearer of Texas wirmer or
Ute Outland Award for the
nation 's top co llegiate
interior lineman.
The Writers' 25" uan 1977
All·Anterica team includes
Heisman Trophy winner Earl
Campbell of Texas and two
other finalists for that award
Oklahoma State running back
Terry Miller and Notre Dante
tight end Ken MacAfee.
I.SU's Charles Alexander
filled the other running back
slot , with Guy Be njamin of
Stanford at quarterback .
The team. 1ft be presented
on a nat iona lly telecast
prog ram Sunday night,
mc ludes seven repea ters:
Miller, MacAfee, offensive
lineman Mark Donahue of
Michigan , linebacker Jerry
Robinson of UCLA, defensive
back Dermis Thurman of
USC,
punter
Russell
ErxlPhen or Texas anr'l riPff'n-

Reds announce spring schedule
CINCINNATI - All four
defending division champions
will visit Tampa next spring
to play the Cincinnati Reds as
part of a 25-game spring
training schedule announced
toda y by Bub Howsam.
President of the Reds .
The Reds ' training camp
opens on F eb. 23 when pit·
chers and catchers report for
th eir first worko ut the
following day. The full squad
report s on Feb. 28 and begins
workouts on March I.
The World Champion New
York Yankees will be at AI

Lopez Field to play th&lt; Reds
on Friday, March 17. Kansas
City. which
won th e
American League West title,
will meet the Reds in Tampa
on the following day.
National League Olampion
I.Als Angeles will visit on
Tuesday, March 28, and
National League East winner
Philadelphia has a date with
the Reds on Thursda y. March
23.
Th e Reds will play 10
games in Tampa next spring,
H road games in Florida and
then wind up their pre·~cm;o n

adivity in Co lumbus, where
they meet Detroit on
Tuesday . April 4.
The Reds will play the
Houston Astros in the
t raditi onal regula r season
National Leag ue Opener at
Riverrron t Stadium on
Thursday , April 6.
Another of the highlights of
the lleds ' spring schedule will
be a thrce.&lt;Jay weekend trip
to Florida 's Go ld Coast on
Easter weekend . The Reds
will meet the Baltimore
Orioles at Miami in the night
game on Fnday, March 24:

OSU gridders to leave for
Bayou country on Dec. 20
COLUMBUS - Ohio State 's
Sugar Bowl bound football
team will depart Dee. 20 for
New Orleans , where on Jan . 2
C&lt;Jach Woody Hayes will send
his 9-2 Buckeyes up against
Coach Bear Bryant's 10-1
Alabama Crimson Tide .
Th e Buckeyes will stay at
the New Orleans Hilton and
will practice at Tulane
Stadium, site of the Sugar
Bowl until recently when the
pos.t ·season classic wa s
moved to the Superdome. A
total of nine practice sessions
ate sc hed uled in Bay Ou
CoWltry, with Dec . 22. 25 and
281isted as free days. Prior to
departing for New Orleans,
Coach Hayes planned to put
the Buckeyes through eight
workouts.
The Buckeyes, who made
Big Ten history this year by
ca pturing a share of their
sixth consecutive conference
ch ampionship, are making
their sixth straight bowl
appearance. Prior to being
chosen for the Sugar Bowl,
Ohio State played in four
1
consecutive Rose Bowls and
on e Orange Bowl. This is the
tenth bowl appearance for
Ha)'OS, who goes into Ohio
St a te's first-ever meet in g
with Alabama with a 5-4
· record in post·seaso.l contests .
·
The 64-year old Hayes
currently ranks as the fourth
winningest coach in college
football history and is second
among a ll active ma jOf
college coaches in terms ol
victories . He has 231 career
triumphs , 198 of which have
come during his 27 year
career at Ohio State, where
he has either won or shared 13
Big Ten title s. Woody' s
overall record is 231~7-9 and
hi s mark at OSU is 198-56-9.
The only active major
college coach with more wins
than Hayes is Bryant, who in
33 years as a head coach has
won 272 games, while losing
76 and tieing 16. Bryant is
third on the all-time victory
list and recently anno unced
he would continue coaching
Wltil he surpasses all-time
leader Amos Alonozo Stagg
who recorded 314 wins during
hi s ca reer.
The game · bet ween the
ninth ranked Buckeyes and
the second rated Tide shapes
up as a classic match up be·
tween t wo of the gal)1e's most
co lorful and successful
coaches . Hayes is eagerly
loo ki ng forward to the
meeting.
" I've always wanted to
play the Bear," says Woody ..·

·· He is a great coach and
Alabama has a great football
t radition. I think this is go in g
to be a great game."
Added Hayes, " I think this
tea m 1Ohio State 1 has one
great game left . We plan to
play it in the Super Bo-'-1."
The ·tw o teams are
amazing!~·
similar
stati•tically , especially of·
fensively. Ohio State gained
4,552 yards this year to 4,584
for Alabama . That averages
out to 413 aod 416 yards per
game , respectively , Th e
Buckeyes scored 337 points in
J.J games, Alabama 345. Ohio
State
ranked
second
nationally in rushing offenSe,
14th in total offense and 16th
iri scoring offense. Barna was
ninth. twelfth and fourteenth
in the same categories.
,Defensively the Buckeyes
appear to have an edge. but it
is a slight one. The Buckeyes
finished second nationally m
scoring
defense ,
were
seventh in Mal defense and
12th in passing defense, while
the Tide failed to fir.ish in the
top twenty in any major
derensive category.
A comparison shows that
OSU surrendered 230 yards
per game to 252 for Bama .
Buckeye opponents rushed
for an average of 130 yards
per game this year and an
average 100 yards in the air
against OSU . The Tide gave
up an average of 138·yards on
the groWld and ll3 in the air.
It 's almost as close in·
dividually . For instance, OSU
quarterback Ron Gerald
amassed 1,358 yards in total
offense this year, while his
Ban\ a counterpart , Jeff
Rutledge, finished with 1,518
yds. Gerald's total came on
4ll rushing yards and 913
passing yards. Rutledge's
figures came about as the
result of 3ll yards on the
ground and 1,207 through the
air. Gerald ran for seven
touchdowns and passed for
three more, hitting 60 of 97
passes . Rutledge rushed for
four scores and tossed eight
TD passes, connecting on 64
of 107 aerials.
It doesn't top there either.
Tailback Ron Springs, the
Big Ten's leading rusher and
the workhorse of OSU 's I·
formatio~. carried the ball
190 times and gained 1,092
yards. The hub of Alabama's
wishbone attack is fullback
Johnny Davis who gained 9JJ
yards this year on 182 carries.
OSU fullback Jeff Logan ,
hurt much of the year, and
Barna halfback Tony Nathan
also compare fa vora bly .

. BAI.TIMORF. r UPI I _
Allen "Skip" Wise , who
became a star basketball
player in his only year a~
. Clemson. has pleaded "g'ui lty
' &amp; POOL SCiiEDULE
to pa.rt " in s~ llin g IZ grains nf
L'I'NE CENTER GYM
. hen~m to un tnformer May 17 .
For Week of ~c . n. 1977
DATE - GYMNASIUM
,POOL
Wi se
wet s
~..:onvieted
Dec
.
12
5.
15
p.m.'
Redwomen
vs
.
Sa
lem
~hursday in U.S. Districl
7 30 p.m .. R ~ dm e n vs . Wals h
Court nf possessing heroin
C lo~ed-.c l ntr a mural s
Closed
Judge . Alexa.nder Ha rv~y
Dec. 13- 8 10 p.m. Coli. Rec
8 JOp .m. Coli. Swim
Dec 14 - Clo!:ed lntramural s
Closed
ordered h1m to jai l under
8·10p.m. OpenSwim
Oec.JS· 8 lOp.m. OpenRec.
$20,000 hnnd and Will sentence
Dec. 16- 7 9 p rn . Family Rec Night 7 9p.m. Fam. Rec . Night
hltll.ln 45 clays. Wise co uld be
Al l L.yne Cen ter fa c il ilies will be c lased from De cem ber 17.
fmed up tu $25,000 and sent to
1977 un til Januar y 3, 1978 for Christmas Vaca tion A new
sc l)edule wil l be publ ished early in Januar y.
prison fnr un In 1~ \'P:• r c:

Dive him

aBuck
pocket knife.
lt11 in the finest
traoltion.

. "'

HOLIDAY HOURS
OPEN SUNDAY
1:00 P.M. TO 6 P.M.

Logan had 549 yards this year
on 94 ca rries , while Nathan
got the tall 104 times and
responded with 642 yards.
The game shapes up as a
classic in everY way.
In cidenta ll y.
Logan,
Springs · and Gerald were
named to the aU-Big Ten
team thi s year . as were tight
end Jimmy Moore and tackle
Olris Ward on offense , and
end Kelton Dansler. middle
gua rd Aaron Bro,.n. halfback
Mike Guess, linebacker Tom
Co usineau and sa fet y Ray
Griffin on defense.
Ward : a 6-5 , 266-po und
senior was a conserisus All American choi ce, Whil¢
Brown. Cousmeau and Griffin
all receiv ed fir st tea m
recognition. Dansler was a
second-team choice a nd
Moore
won
hon orable
mention honors in the All·
Ame~ican votlng .

Wh~n 1t

comes 11me to buy a Knile lor your son. grands.on or
anothe ; youn gster ynu ca re about , give him the very best . II
he takes care of it a Buck pocket knife w111 be around to remtnd
h1m of what f1ne craftsmanship means all his life . And what
you mean lo h1m, too. HIQh·carbon Buc k steel blades have
bu 111 a reputat•on for edge-hoiding quality . And the Iough
.sta1nless steel pivot p1ns will hold uo throuoh vears of hard
use See our complete 11ne at
McKnight &amp; Davies Hardware
Gallipolis
43 Court St.
Ph. 446-1374

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STARTING DECEMBER 12
OPEN WEEKDAYS
9:30 A.M.
P.M.

BUCK

I

•

Today's

KNIVES

TVAC 'Dream Team'

Sport Parade
8y MILTON RICHMAN

and Tom C&lt;Jusinea of Ohio
State were Robinson 's
teammates in the linebacking
corps.
Zac
Henderson
of
Oklahoma and Bob Jury of
Pittsburgh were in the
secondary with Thurman .
Place kicker was Arkansas'
Steve Uttle .
A vote by Football Writers
Association members helped
guide
an
All-America
committee
headed
by
association president Cooper
Rollow of the Chicago
TribWle. The committee was
CDmposed of Edgar Allen of
the Nashville Banner, Smith
Barrier of the Greensboro,
N.C. Daily News, Roy Darner
of tjle Chicago Tribune, Bob
Hartzell of the Tulsa Tribune,
Norman Miller of the New
York News, John Mooney of
the Salt Lake Tribune, Dick
Peebles of the Houston
Chronicle and Loel Schrader
of
the
Long
Beach
Independent
Press Telegram .

sive end Ross Browner of
Notre Dame.
Brnwner was winner of the
Outland Award in 1976, when
the Writers departed from
of
the
usual format
presenting the trophy only to
interior linemen . But It was
decided to make the 32nd
annual award again tn a
t,'llard, tackle or center.
Shearer's s trongest
com petiti on was from
offensive tackfe Chris Ward
of Ohio State.
Othe r offen sive linemen
were Donahue, Joe Bostic of
Clemson and Keith Dorney of
Penn State. Tom !Ydvis of
Nebraska was center.
The Writers chose two wide
receivers, John Jef(eson of
Arizona State and Ozzie
Newsome or Alabama .
Joining Shearer and
Browner in the defensive line
were Dee Hardison of North
Carolina, Randy Holloway of
Pittsburgh and Art Still of
Kentucky.
.John Anderson of Michi~an

Pt. Pleasant dominates

UPI Sport.l Editor
WYNTER PARK, ria . (UP!) _ Ed Jucker says it 's not easy
for a man to be an onlooker after 30 years of coaching.
" I ca~·t be stricUy a fan at this stage," says the man who
made his debut as a major college basketball coach with backto-back NCAA championsl1ips and came within an overtime of
&lt;
winning a third straight title .
" rm sometimes in':"ardly a coac h. There's pulling and
tuggmg 1ns1de me durmg close games. It kind of makes me
nervous. And besides I've got a persona l interest in these kids
- I want them lo do well."
Jucker turned over the coaching reins of the Rollins College
Tars th1s year to Mark Freidinger, the man he recommended
to succeed him . A.t 59, Jucker is now head of the physical
educat10n ·deparbnent at the private liberal arts college. He 's
also hooorary chairman of the Tangerine Bowl basketball ··
classic.
II is a measure of the man that his first game at Rollins, in
1972, was played before only 50 fans - "I was in tears" he
says- but now the Tars often play before sell-out crowds .'
Jucker came lo Rollins after a stin t as a professional coach
a job he went into afte!f his wildly successful years at th~
University of Cincinnati.
He took over the Cincinnati program in 1960. A player named
Oscar Robertson had just graduated and joined Cincinnati's
pro team .
''When he graduated, 8,000· fans graduated with him ,"
Jucker recalls. Under the new coach, Cincinnati lost three of
1ts first five games. And Jucker had the Bearcats playing a
controlled, disc iplined offense, Wllike the run-and-gun style of
the preVIOUS year.
" There were a lot of boos," he says. "The fans were yelling
'Let 'em run, Jucker .
'
" We lost three of our first five games," he said. 11 But we
went on to win 22 in a -row."
Which leads up to the fondest memory of his career :
Cincinnati went up against. No. l·ranked Ohio State the
bitter upstate rival , in the NCAA championship final. '
Cincinnati woo it in overtime . That was championship No. 1.
The Bearcats won it again the next year.
And they came within a hair of winning it the third year ,
losmg m overtime to Loyola in the final.
But there were other highwater marks in his career: the
professional Cincinnati Royals were No . t for a while under
him; Rollins was rated the No. I team in the NCAA's Division
II at one point and the Tars once polished off some Division I
teams lo win the Tangerine Bowl ba sketball title . Jucker
compiied an 82-42 record at Rollins - bringing his collegiate
coachmg career Iota I to 267-109 - but said he knew last year it
was time to stop.
" I think every coach knows when it's time to step aside . It's
a yoWlg man's game. You have to be 100 percent enthusiastic.
. " I lost the spark last year," he said . "I think the biggest
reason was health - I didn't feel up to it from a health
standpoint."
.
As a man who's been to the top, Jucker looks baek over the
years and· smiles.
"The eXperience _I've had has been so rewarding, so
pleasant. It's not · JUSt because of winning the national
championships - I was one of the fortunate coaches _ just
workmg w1th young people ts a reward in itself.
" H you're worried about making money and coaching, you
ought lQ get out. You make about40 eents an hour.
" But there' s a different kind of compensation to see these
people graduate and go out and become doctors and lawyers
and teachers and busmessmen and then bring their families
back 1o you.
"It's worth allthe midnight oil you spend on

Hale paces
Oaks victory
over Fairland

=

-#~

CHICAGO (UP!) - Racing
was canceled at Sportsman 's
Park a'fter the first race
Friday because the track was ..
glazed by ice and packed
snow that caused three
horses to fall during the first
race. There were no injlll"ies. ·
J ockeys met after the opening rat'C and voted almost
unanimously to refuse to ride ,
officials said. Track officials
then called off the rest of the
nine-race card .

..••......
.

:.,.

•
•

Don't run yourseH ragged ·this holiday season • Onistrnas g'lVmg
• · Is
· a
snap ·when you
You'll find everything'
Ia shop downtown Middleport.
·
· you
eed
n
m one p ce - toys and gam~s, sports gifts, fashion gifts, horne gifts and
more: We have _an up-to-date selection for everyone in the farni1 So thi
save tune, save gas, save your saniiyl Shop downtown Middleporty. d ~ year,
an enJOY ..
the holiday season.

••
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••

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•"

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•
•••
••

FREE GIFTS

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••

REGISTER AT PARTICIPATING MERCHANTS•
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. NEED NOT BE PRESENT
TO WIN.

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'L:-:=~':':':P-:A-:-RT-I_CI_P_A_TI_N_G_M_ERC_H_A_N.:..:T..:.S_ _I

••
••
•••
~

'•r

•DUTTON DRUG CO.
•MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
•MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
•HERITAGE HOUSE
•INGELS FURNinJRE
•SHOE BOX

•
•••

I

••

••""
••
•

••

•

On Certicates of Deposit

~

•

$1,000 Minimum For A
I Year Term .

Give your money_ BIG earning power with our winning combination
··: Savmgs ~ertaflcates! When left to maturity , they combine a high
yteld mvestment :·· wtth complete financial security . We have many ·
other ttme -d~pos1t plans available to you too! There's a Bl~ future
lor you 1n Savmgs Cert1f1cates ... let's discussyours today!

•••

••

•

~

•''
~

••

MEIGS BRANCH
ATHENS COUNTY .SAVINGS
&amp;LOAN
1.96

W. 2nd St.
.......,.__.Pom~emy ; 0 ·....-RICHARD E. JONES , Manager

'

.

'

~ ·

FSLIC.
~ -• Sow...,.&amp;
¥a..•

l_. '"' "'-•Coo'

s.:.n9• ln,,.,,d -,o, .. 0OOo

I

•~·

l.

.

J '

"• ••

"'&lt; '
'~ ''
•• .

,_

v

•BAKER FURNITURE
•WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE
•CROSS HARDWARE
•THE SEWING CENTER
•BAHR CLOTHIERS
•GIU.IAN'S FASHION CENTER

SPONSORS

Citizens National Bank
Tonr's Carry.Out ·
Wer'ner's Radio 1
Dan Thompson Fotd. Inc.
Ellis &amp; Sons Sollio
Rawlings-Coat$
Downing -Childs Agency, Inc.
Ralls Ben Franklin
Royal Crown Bottling Company
Martins Furnitute
·
Friend.ly Tavern
Youngs Market
King . Buil~ers Supply Company
Ohio Va_lley Publishing Company

•

Ninety Day Interest Penalty If Withdrawn Before Maturity Date.

CHRISTMA.S ORNAMENTS
• Make Lasting Gifts

The Alcove
41 Court St.

Gallip li · 0

.~r1~~~~~~~~~~:;~~~~~~~~=-~~~~~~~-~:;::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~o~s~,~·~

•

2

CiNCINNATI (UP! I - The
Cincin nati Stingers and
Buffalo Sabres may soon join
the ra.nk~ of World Hockey
Assoc1at10n and National
Hockey League clubs to make
a player deal between the two
leagues.
Rick Dudley, a WHA All·
Star left-winger and captain
of the Stingers, may be sold
or traded to the NHL Sabres
the Cincinnati Post reported
Friday.
"
Bill DeWitt Jr., e&lt;ecutive
vice presdient of the Stingers
admitted he has talked with
Sabre officials about a deal
for Dudley. "Buffalo has
talked with us from time to
time about getting Rick
Dudley, but that's as far as
I'll say. " DeWitt told the
Post .

PT. PLEASANT _: Tri running back Pete Sommer.
Valley Athletic C&lt;Jnference On defense : end Tim Nibert.
(TV AC ) gridiron champion tac,)&lt;le Allen Whitman and
guard Mike Martin .
Point Pleasant dominated the
Coaches from the TV AC
all conference team by vote on the all-conference
placing four players on of· . squad as well as Particular
fense and four on defense, all Honorable Mention and
seniors.
Honorable Mention squads .
Among the eight Big Blacks
Ripley, which had one of its
to make the team for the best seasons in a long \lme,
second time are 210-p&lt;&gt;und placed six on the all·
offensive end Timbo Roberts
and linebacker, Paul Krimm . conference team. Hurricane
and Sissonville · each landed
Other standouts making the five
on the team, while
offensi ve All· TVAC team Dunbar and Nitro had three
were : guard David Lieving , each a'nd Ravenswood one.
tackle Scott Thomas and
The Big Blacks also placed
seven on the Particular
Hon orable Mention ·squad
and three on Honorable
Mention .
Tim Nibert, who made All·
TV ~C as a defensive end, •
ma~e Particular Honorable
Cleveland acquires
Mention as an offensive
lineman. On the offensive
PROCTORVILLE - Doug line , he was joined by first baseman
Hale crammed in 29 points teammates seniors Bob
HONOLULU (UP!) - The
and pulled down 15 rebounds Messick and Frank Cook.
Cleveland
Indians acquired
Point Plea sant's sig nalFriday night to lead Oak Hill
Jack Baker
first
baseman
to a 69~0 Ohio Valley Con· caller senior Jeff Holland was from the Boston Red So&lt; in
ference
victory
over na med to the Particular e&lt;change for minor-league
Honorable Mention squad as
Fairland.
outfielder Carry Hancock .
C&lt;Jach Norm Persin's Oaks, quarterbaek .
Baker, 27, batted .274 with
Three Point Pleasant backs
now 3·1 and 2.{) in the ave .
14
home runs and !5 RBI in 86
led by three points at the half made the defensive Par- games at Pawtucket of the
and the~ opened up an eight· ticular Honorable Mention International League before
point bulge a fter three squad : seniors Scott Howard, his late-season recall to
periods. It was Fairland's John Withers and Frank Boston. He is assigned to the
Cook.
first loss in three games.
Makin g the Hon ora ble Indians ' major-league roster.
Oak Hill, which tied with
Hancock, 23, has eompleted
Chesapeake for the OVC Mention tea m were: of- two seasons in the Indians'
crown last year, shot 51 fensive lineman, senior Allen organization following his
percent from the floor but Whitmen, who made All· career at the University of
was hampered by 21 turn· TV AC on defense; senior South Carolina and Is
defensive ,lineman Berry
overs.
assigned to the Pawtucket
Greg Potter added 15 points Hudson and junior defensive roster .
back
Ron
Newell.
and five rebounds for Oak
Hill while Steve Kaljnoski '
had 14 points.
Tim Nichols led Fairland
-~·
with 22 points. Chris Powell
added 14.

••

1

Player deal
is expected

,,

Spencers Market
Thomas l. Goett-Joe's carry-O.ut
Bailey•s Bargain Store
Blue Tartan
Burketts Barber Shop
Middleport Lunch Room
JJm mies Pastry
•
Dan's Shoe Repair
Deb's Barber Shop
The Quality Print Shop
Rich Valley Dairy
General Tire Sales
City tee &amp; Fuel Company
Kelly MariufactUring

I
Middleport Speed Queen
D~,Jdley's Florist
Jack's Dairy Bar
McClure Dairr Isle
Valley Lumber &amp; Supply
Wilkinsons
Stiffler Stores, Inc.
Brenda's Beautr Shop ..
Jerry's Beauty ShopPe
Pratt's Beauty Shop

�•
('-I)

1Hah· .........;t'lltlf1t•l ~ .•~;old\ Pt.·l

rtwSund&lt;.J\

1: .•

r-·1

•

1 -

Here's list of trades .made during the 1977 winter meetrngs
HU:"\ UI l'l l'· l'l'l
11'1
uf trade) madt• Bt t ht· \\lOll'!
basrball met·tuu.! ."Th,~

C'al! h 1r-rll a

\ ni..! t'h

t•utflelder H tt bb~
Bt• nds. ,lutftf•lde r Thnd
Bt\ S)t'Y and p!t rP·•r Dl l'k
Dutson tn ttil' l'lw. ·;,..:tl Whllt'
~) x ft,r plt r ht•r t 1ms KnJ pp .
ctttchrr Bnan 11 wnm~.; and
pit cher Dand Fn 1 ~t
1l1£' H o u~t tm A::&gt;trPs tradt•d
outftrlder ! .t.'lm H,,lk•rb t\1 tht~
Stlatt le .\1arnwr ~ fllr mflrid(•r
Jmm1 ~ Se-.:ttm
The ll11 ta~ u l ' ub~ tradl•d
outflrldrr [)~n· H 11~rl!( t w thr
Cle\·eiand lndwr'l:-; fur \.1mor
Leag\.le , pll Cht•r
~ or m
Churchall and .\!anl' r l.ra~ur
Pt.lthelder W1llil' t\trnpt nn
The Tort,ntll Blut&gt; Jays
traded
pJtcher
Pl·t~
\ ' uck•1\'1Ch to tht• St L11U1S
l'anlmals fnr pu chrr Tom
l'nden~' Otlt:l
and ptt c ht• r
\'1ct or Cruz.
The San· FranCISC't' Grcmts
traded shortstop Tun Fola to
.t he Xf'w York \1 ets for Citsh
a nd a player to be named
tradt&gt;d

\.l~t ·

\ ll;mr .t HLt\ ~..,

!), n

l'lll l .ib:-. 11 .nk! utftL·Idt·J
JL•rn \l. r~1 lt "' , L~l!• t:rr ~h'\ l
~ \\l~hlT .1n.. l .l pl.\\~·r 1. l&gt;t·

'~Jn,llt• II "'

ll&lt;I!Hl'd

);,l ~r

t• tht

l··r •· UUlt;dn
t'&lt;Hthl r ll;1\ i'

t"tlrdui;~\ ..

f klt\ •·rut &lt;tnd
H.hh·r

llll \ JH::l'l' · r.hkd "'l'l'"l\'1
h.l ... t'rH.Ul .l l·rr;. Ht'lll~ ll•

H. '" 'n lh'd

s \1 \

f(or

t tw

pnc ·ht•r

.uuJ.

l~hh &lt;'

.n-

1\,•\h and ~1111t1 r IA•:wm• f1r ... t
\).it ~,· tnc~ n Hutdt ·\ lbl'rt -"

tn a (, ,w· t1'am dl'al.

TL1 HlUl' .1,1\ .. punh&lt;t .. t•d
ttr ..t b&lt;i" l'll\ :111 !'.. t mn~ Hutt.m
ir. 111 lht'
Phli.uklphlil

\\ tlltt·

J•htllt t'"

.\ tl ant.a ,

llw \ m.:t•! .. ;u-qutrt•d ftr"t
h.. t ... t' l114in

1• U1fll'hkr H•·n

r.r

r·.nrh frnlll thl' HIUt' .lti~'
\1lw 1r Lt•;.tcut• t'i ltl'bt•r !'at

tlu.~

\lt·t~ &lt;H'QUin"tl ftr~"t b.itSt.'lll iHl

\1 tullam•t

t ;rtt' \ t '

nil nwd
\tla ntil
Tom

frulll

t•Utflt.•ldl'r "1\ Hn
&lt;1nd ~~ pia~ t•r tt1 bt'
la t~r (r•Ht l Tl'SD ~
n~n' l\ t•d ptt t.'h\•rs

Boggs

und

t\drw n

Ot'\ un· ilnt1 qutflt'it!{'r Fcilht•
\1t ~h' r fr1 111\ Ti.!Xit!'&gt; . Tl'\m.. ~..;,,,
ptl th ~..· r

J tlll \1at\ad&lt; frnm thr
\kt:-, i.lnd uu tf1dtll'r .-\I Oil\ t'r

amt sht,rbtliP ~l'lson \ tl rllltlll
fmm PtWJIJurgh ami l'lttsbun.:h rt'L't' t\'t'd pnthn l'h'rt
Bl)lt•n·n frmn Texas and
J11hn :\lt im~r fn11n the .\let s.
The ~h·ts tradC'd t ht rd

ba!-&gt;t\ mHn Uo.\ Statgt'r to tht•

short~1 up Tum Vt•ryzf'r l o thl'

Yurk \';:tnkl'l'S fur .\1inur
1 eague tnftrlder Sen~w

lndwn .., fur outfteldl'r lltarht•
Sp1kes
The rardtnals tradt·d

\'t' \\

Ft•rn~r

Thl' Carduw\s tradrd rrhl'f
pitcher AI Hr"busky !u th•
f\ ;mscts Cit~ Hoyals for rehrf
Jlll&lt;·hrr ~lark l.l!!rll and
l'atl'hl'r Burk Maninf'z .
The DetrOit '1'1gers traded

uuthrldt•r 1-kn

frullll hl' Oakland A's for fir~l
ha..,t•an;,wl&gt;&lt;t\'t.' 1\rvNtng und
1 :; uul11u11

Hn•wf'rs for ~ h nur Lett~ul•
plt&lt;"hrr Gt'1..1rgr rrazu·r .
The Brewt•rs traded pH (•hers Jun Slaton and Hwh
F\llkl'rS t o the Tii{crs fol'

Tht•

Shant• Ha\\ Icy .

Fl"ltr·

W
IB

L

Ne ·t~ Yor~

1J n

GB

150
5J2

5

Buffa l o
11 11 500
BO!iiOn
8 16 333
New Jersey
2J 15J
c entral 01\'IS tOn

w

l

ChiC ago
Mdw
lnd tan.a

Detro it
Kansas(,,.,.

Mtli:O:.(JUrt

h&lt;Jd

fJV("

represPnt &lt;~t ivf's :
nffrnsivc
linemen Pete Allard 13.4 in
Education 1 find Mm:k Clark
I :u
in Arts ami SCICI!t'C I,
dcfe nsiv"£' lin&lt;'man Oavid
!.egg 13.2 in Agriculture 1,
lml'backer Chri s Ciirlich 1:t6

toW~J Swa• w;,s nrx r high
wi th four rrpresentaltves :
runni ng b;:H'k C'al Cummins
! :!.0 in Dtst ributi\'C Studies 1,
kicker Smtt Kollman r3.5 in
Industrial Admtni s.l ration 1.
dcrcn!:iivc tackle Tom HandaB 1:U in Imlustrial Ad-

RET AILS EFFECTIVE
• THRU SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1977
We

rn er..-e tile ngtlt It li Mit • - t•l •t l
ftr llJGtraploocel e""' ·

r uto~s i ble

Q~ itll itt"'l 111 tll il M . llillu S&lt;lld Ia dnoltrt .

lolc1

OPEN DAILY
g.g
SUNDAY

SHORTENING

can be

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1977
We ruent th risM to li mit

1S

q~a~t itlu a~

oll item1 in tlr.i1 1d. Nilne 1cld to

'

FRESH GROUND·BEEF formerly

Ground Chue•

FAMILY PAK SHELL

Sirloin Steaks

i

$

2
4
7

71 ~
8

Pel . G B
826

Phoen i ~

13

9

591

lb.

51 }

Golden St
12 12 500 71 }
Los Angeles
9 15 375 10' '
Seattle
10 17 370 11
fr•day · s R esu lt~
Cleve aT Bf lo. ppd , snow
Portland 118 , Boston 87
New Jerse y 122 , Kan ( , ty II J
Ph ll a 120 . San Anton io 116
New Yorl' 103 , A tl anTa 8A
wash 10 1. New Or leans 97
HOUSTOn I 16. LOS Ang 105
Seattle .1] 6., M il wauKee 123
Sunday 's Game s
New Jersey at Was n .all
Houston at Seattle
8 ullalo at LOS Angelc&lt;;

W L T
Ph 1la delph i
NY Islander s
NY Rangers
Atlanta
Smythe 0

vancouve r
Ch Jc ago
Colorado
M innesola
51 Louis·

17
1-1
10

J

J

6 7

13 J
1 10 9
1\0IS IOn
W l
T

9 10 6
7 1I 8
6 11 6
6

16 J

5 18 J

JB
35
2A
73
P IS.

l-Ib.

W l
17

Lo&lt;, Angeles

13

T

Pf s .

4

38

8 5

31

5

P ttsburgh
B 11 6
Detroi'l
9 13 J
W ashington
3 18 S
Adam s Di visio n

G•a p·es
•

Loaves

MJIS. SMITH'S

"'

Pie Shells •• "" ""

Pumpkin Pie .. ·"' ""' "'• qq• MIS. f '1 POUTO CH((SI
Mince Pie •. , " "" "• $1.09 Pierogies •• • • •

7~

71

11

Z •·· 8 qe

HOLIDAY HELPERS

~9

JENO'S

~!!~~. !2~!~.. ~::: ~

c

'.\\l.

te\\o

W L T' Pts .
Boston
16
S
Bu lfal o
17
6
Tor onto
IS 6
Clevel and
8 IS
F riday 's Result
Tor on t o J , Colo . 2

5
3
3

37

37

3

19

Sunday 's Games
Boston a T NY Ranqers
c;Jeve at Pll 1ladelph ia

Sweet Piclries •••••••••••••• ,,.,.. 6qt
6
Sweet Gherkins •••••••••• ~ • ,.,..,..
N.UlKOe MI . SALTT
Pretzels &amp; Pretzel Stielrs ...... ,., . 49c
DfiMASUGl

Liquid Dish Det."'""""',• •• • ··~. ..... ...
Tomatoes . ............ , • . , .,b . c.n 3

,,--

basketb&lt;.~ll

francln!'lcs

1c1

I
I

Apples •••

'

HEINZ

Mustard
MllD IIIOWN

.,, .......$1

I

..

." __

·

I
I

J.rt
Valid thrw.

.n;;r;,:;, 1

'

r.

77c

ARE AVAILABLE
AT PENNYFARE

I
GIVE A PENNYFARE

I
I
I

• •. J.fb.Bog

GIFT FRUIT BASKETS

qc

$

DEl NAVE"

I

unloaded s(lme nf the high·
pn ced members of his
Atlanta Bra\·es at the winter
ba seball meeting In Honolulu.
the general manager nf his
ba s krtba li' Hawk s . Mike
Gearfln, was drd n~ the same
thing at home.

6

zo,. 98t

"Cho1y Brand" MciNTOSH

qc

·

I

ATLANTA 1U PI 1 - Wh1 le
Ted Turne r . fl cuntwy~nt
()\\'ner rof bnth buscb~il t :u)d

Tangelos ••

~ '

fUINZ

HlliU

Czechoslo\l ak i a at Qup

\\0\\

FLORIDA ORLANDO

Atlan ta at P i tTSburgh
Sr lOU IS at Wash
VanCouver at Bu ffalo
Mmnesota at (h,cago

WHA Stan dmg s
8'; Untied Pres s In t ernat io nal
W L T Ph .
Nev~ En gland
1e 6 3 39
Quebec
1A 10 1
29
W 1r&gt; n1pl'q
13 12 I
'}7
· ~dmon!on
17 17 1
'15
Ho uston
10 17 1
11
lnd anapol io:,.
9 13 3
11
C n tc1 hnal i
10 IS 0
20
B1rm,ngham
8 IS '}
18
~rida y's Resul t s
New Enq 2, Br mfiql'lm 1. 01
Houston 5 , Ed mon ton 3
CZCCI"IOSIO\Idlo:; a 5. lndplt, 3
Cinci J, W 1r\n1pcg J. ot
Sunday 's Gam el.
Houo;ton at Edmonton
lndp!s at Winn,peq

lb.

JENO'S "Thick Crust" PIZZA
HIGHliNlt•PuiH &amp; D•n iMd
J.U. . $~ ' ' Cheese • • • ••• "' , •. ,., s 1.39
Shrimp Salad Pieces ~; ~- Combination •• "' , ....... s 1.69

33

out ,"

the

United Press International

CALIFORNIA
RED EMPEROR

c

FIVE

2-&lt;~

12
18
It
13

Wal es Conf erence ·
Norr i s D I~'ISion
Montre a l

Ill.

Bread Dough

Pts .

wrwked

source said.
The so urce S'-'id Gabe Paul.
the new head man fo r the
Indians, wants to reestabli sh
the work ing ag r eeme nt
Cleveland ~ad with the old
P,nrt land Be.a vcrs in the
1960s.
The Beavers, under the
ownersh ip of rjt ll Cutler, left
Por tlanrl and weril tn
Spnkane, Wash., wher e he
sti ll operates the dub in the
P CL. The Beave rs were
tepl;,ced in Portland by the
Class A Mavericks, (tWned by
Bing Russell , who had his
territory drafted awi:iy rr11m
him by the PC!. a! the winter
meeti ngs.

,Utah tops •
Kent State
50 to 47

RICH'S

N H L Stand •ng s
B y U1Hied Pr es~ I nternational
Campbell Conference 1
Paf(ltk D IVISiO n

Not

THOROFARE "~. ·u.S.D.A. Choice

P.lCifiC Di~' ISIO n

l

d e a~u .

re1pontibl e for tnagraphielll lirron .

'

.!

PORTLAND IUP I I - The
Pa ci fic Coast League is
expected to 3nnounce a Los
Angeles investor will lJe the
owner or the 'new Portland
ent ry in t he league and t he
Cleveland Indians will be
parent club, a Portland
newspaper r ep ! 1r t ecl todt~ y.
The Hrtie le in
The
Oreg onian
quoted
an
undisclnscd source at the
winter baseball meetings in
Honol ulu Friday night.
The paper said Ha rr y
Ornes! apparently will gel all
the details wo rked out for the
Vancfluver, B.C.; entry into
the PCL, !urn the operations·
nver to his brother, l.~o. and
th en take ch:::. r gc in Pnrtl and
later this month.
" I talked with Oak land
officials less tha n two hours
ago and came away with the
feeling that the A's will lie up
with Vancouver if everything

CRISCO

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W
19

~'itch, Handa II and Blabolil
all earned fi rst team AII·Big
Eight berths for their performances on the football
field, while Coffman, Milier,
Wa ldemore, Kunz and Pillen
earned second team selections.
Avanzini, Garlich c~nd
Harvey were Academic All·
Americans last year and
joined Miller. Craig. Kollman
and Ran da ll as rep eat
Conference
All-Academics
this season.

AT PlNMlfAI£ WitH TMI~ COUPOfl
t S1.50 PIJI(MASl

lb.

1().6

6
10

Portland

ounistrHttun 1 c.md punter
H1rk fllabulil &lt;2.7 In In·
dustrial Admini3trationl .
Houndin g out the team
wert• ti~hl end Pcml Curfman
12.8 in (;rain Science 1 and
o£fensivr lineman Flo\'d
Dorsey !3.6 in 'Pre.Vet
Medicine) fnnn K ans&lt;.~s St ale
and tacklr Man Miller &lt;2. 9 in
Geology 1 from Colorado.

.,

Pet. G B

17
8 680
lJ r;; 609
lJ 13 .519
9 IJ 391
8 IJ 3M
9 16 360

Finan('t~ 1.

in Busuwss' and dcfcnsJv(•
brJC ·k .Inn J.pm•nt 1:t:1 m
lll'aitll Edul'atwn 1.

or•Stea•

Pet. G B

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WS Mg ' n
IS B 652
San AnTon
IS ll 517
1' '
C:leve nd
1J 10 565 2
At l an ta
11 11 522 · 3
New Or l ns
11 I.! .tJO 5
Ho u ston
10 13 .t 35
5
Wes Tern Conferenc e
Midwes T Dt Ytst on

Denver

th(• lnnc&gt;
H ('li C
trm k I'L' p rr :~en l at 1\ ' t'
frum the Jayhawks. huwt.'\;Cr.
Oklahoma was rrpn'sented
by wide receiver BnbLy
KinJbi.ill 12.7 in Botany 1.
defensive linrman Bru ce
Hntnn t3. 1 in Pn.• -l.mn and
d cft• n st v~ ba r k Sherwood
Ta\'lur t:J.J in Enginccrilli·P ·
Okiahm,n a State a lso had just
Ml'dt l..' inr . 1-l t' \\i:IS

c.on

\\0\\

•

Pc1.
0,

in Busmi'sS 1. !J m·hackt•f' 1.('t'
Kum 1:U in Businl'SS l, and
defrnsivc ~a('ks Ted llarvn
I 3. 8 in Pre·Oplonu•t ry 1 tiJHl
Jam P1ll r n 1 :ui tn PreMt•didnc 1.
The individual hlgh-gr&lt;H.Ie
point• went tn Kan s~J s sar(•t\
Tom Fit&lt;·h, a f1rst tea1n Ali·
Big Eight pcrromwr , who
ea rn ed a 3. 85 in Pre-

, .\\1.
\3·01.·

s-\\l.

,-------------,

Ph rl a

Dave
pttchcr

released Sunda y.
Nebraska was repn•sentl'd
by qua11erback Tum S..r lcy
l :t5 111 tJ l't'l!untln~-!,1. running
~&gt;t•ck Curt 1s l'nlig 13.2 in
crlt nin a l just icc 1, w1de
receiver Tim Smith 13.1 in
business &lt;Jthnlnistrati on 1.
ta(•kle Stan Wald emu rc 13.8
tn mamJgl•mcnl ), llc fcn sive
linrn&gt;!Jn George Andrews ; :1.0

lit•' 1.1•:"

Seattle \1 annl'fs
t ra ded o utf ielde r Ca r los
Lopez and pit cher Tommy
~t oo re to th e Baltim ore
Onoles for pitCher ~l 1ke
Parrot t.
The ~l on treal Expos traded
pitcher s_ Don Stanhouse and
J oe Kemgan plus ou tfielder
Gary Roenicke to the Ortoles
for pitchers Rudv Ma \' and
Ran dy ~1iller ~nd ~li no r
League pit cher Brvn Sm l!h .
The New Yor k. Yan kees
pur cha sed pit cher ,\nd y
.\1esse rsmt th fr om
the

Eastern conterenc e
Allanttc OtYI SI OI'I

Mt~rlllH S

;.lt•attk

tntded
pUtfac\dcr
C'ollms lo tht' HL•ds for

KANSAS CITY , Mo . 1UPI1
N~braska ma y h"""
finished as the runnH-up to
Oklahoma for the Rig Eight
r ...tl)all cha mpionship , butlt
finished second to nu onr in
the classroom this fHII .
'11le Co rnhus kers lOpped all
Big Eight schouls with eight
players namrd to the ronrerence all-academic team

~

T he

NBA Standtng s
B y Un tTE' d Press International

{)~}lvtt:

('lfl('Jnni.lti
Hed~
acquu·rll pttl'ht·r Vtda Blue

Indians to
field team
in Portland

la ter .

:I
Pro
:I
:Standings :

Nebraska tops .B ig 8 schools on All-Academic Team with eighl

Ti t ~'

\1artntez to the Mllw~Likl'('

The Sut1da) 'l'uul'.s-St"ut mel, Sumh.1y, Dl't'. ll, W77

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Utah cr ,ach J err y Pimm
says his 13!h~·anked Utes'
three·point wln over Kent
State was jiL'l what they
needed .
The Utes had been cnasling
along, t~veragi n g 89 poin ts
per game in t hci r twn
openers. But t ~a t was befor e
the first-rnund game Friday
nigh! in the l Oth an nun! Utah
Clas.":lic .
" We let Kent Sta~ : , . t the
offen s ive tem po, ' Pimm
said. "And their deliberate
game plan and fu ll ~o w· l zo ne
press really had us going. But
I think it was gr&gt;Od for us , i!
helped wake the playe rs up a
bit ."
Utah stnrmed out 10 a :10- 18
ha lftime lead. But the Golden
Fla shes, now 0·3, to()k over in
the seeon d half . falling short
of pulling off an upset in the
fi na l two mi n utes when
neither team could score and
the unbeaten Utes esca ped
with a 51J.47 win - their third
straight of the scaS&lt;lll.

Long ReHch State downed
P aci fi c Cnas t At hl e t ic
A'isnt:iation rival Sa n Jose
Stale 94-84 in !he othe r
opening nighl ~amc to ra ce
t he

Ut es

in

t onight' s

ch.nlnpinnsh ip final.
Buster Matheney and Jeff .
J udkins scored 19 of Utah 's
fi rst 20 pnint,ii in the second
h&lt;llf in leading the way ln the
harclrnughl wi n over Kent
Slate. Matheney Sc•~ed 12 of
hi s 16 points In the second
half, while fr eshman forwanl
Danny · Vranr.s finisht!d the
gcnne with 14 . poinL"i, (Jild
Judkins addc'!l !I.
Forward Burrell Ml·Gilee
led a ll

seorer ~

with 18 pnints

for the Golden Flashes. But
Burrell was the only Kron t
~l8tc player in double figure
scorrng .
In other games F r iday
ni ght.
Wo(lster
l 11ppcJ
Swarthmore I Pa ). 72-C&gt;5,
Geneva 1Pa . ) whipped
Malone, 9.3-87; and Case
Western Heserv e blasted
111iel 1Pa.l. 8Hl5, and Ohio
We sl cyan
o u'tl a s led
Wilmin g to n,
96-90
in
overtime , in the fir st r nund nf
the Delaware Kiw a ni s
Trturnamcnl .

�C-9-The Sunday Ttmes~nunet , ~unday,

SHERYl. FL\TlJ \1'
lt•a,.:th' l.'ll~unpt• •n l \ •rt land
l ' PI Sp11[ts Writl'r
• Trml Bl;iH'r:' h•ft lht• tt•mt t
Wn h nnl~ J•1h11 Ha\ lln·k.
'~ tth Hll8-l61't'l'nrd. tilt' wnrst
Oan• 0•\\ ens ,tnd J 1• J11 \\1utt•
st~trl lrl lb lustur~ .
lt•ft tn sern' as rt'11 Hilikrs 11f
·· For ~•ltll' l't'aSt•n ur otht'r ,
what •m&lt;'e wets. t!.... B(lst r•n
~tttllud,• \'t'r) dt.•ftn tkl~ has
Celttt'S no w art&gt; bw1glmg ••n a
snnll't lung '" dn wit h H.'' sa ui
rughtly basi s.

a dtstraught

BPsl\!Jl's lls-.8j hunuhatll'fl

Fridn\

ni~ht

b\' tht.•

l' P&lt;t ch

s,;, tun la~

J&gt;• •slpnllt'&lt;l
Ho H" kt ·l~

Wo~rk

until

Wt'

J,!t•t II riJ,!ht, "

('ah 111

lk'

smll .

Rill

We~ !t11n

St·ton•d 2ll).unts

and MH UI'It't' l.m·as addt_'tl 18
as !&lt;&gt; lX P .. rt la nd p\ay~rs
Sl'nn•d ,in d1 1Ubk ~lJ.! un· ~ t1•
.h:oad thl' Hl:tzt'I'S {!1 thL'll' ntmh
\'l l't PI' ~ lfl 10 ~i.lllll'S . O•Wt'llS

T •HH

th.•msdhn has . plarmt•d

anclt ' lt•n•1aud al Buff;d" \\a!'&gt;

" \\\ •' r t• t,.:nmg L11 v.·urk and

Ht'IIJStllll i.

~· t sttl n g

IPil j..., dco:;t••l,..l· ~ w pradlt't.' f~~r

i.l

• Comfort padded collar an11

toPfll'd

InSOle

~li..lp

u..;

Sl'l'llllt! httlf Ltkt•rs· ft•nw n l
Kt'l'lllll Witshmg tun f!ltl ght
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ll •tU!&lt;&gt;I•lll' ,..;
K t'\'!rl

,l;&lt;Hil l ' \\ 1/Hll llg S.lrt'H k

Hud~

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• Well consbuthon
• Steel shank arch support

• Cush•on crepe sole ami heel

~1/td

'!1

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r\isSa lke to GJII f11r
Washingt111\ ':-; s uspensi1 11l f1w
the rem(i inder pf tlw s('aS,•n .
Washington was e jl'l'lPd nne
nunuH&gt; into the St'l'( •nd half .
Kareem Abdui-Habbar led
Los Angeles with 32 points. 20
in the second half.

deft•att-d. } San

;\l i!w~11 t k• •('

11:-- l:!th \ l{'tur~ m

T"lll

Antonio. t21}. llti. Wnshtn~ l , ,n
beat 1'\ew Orleans, 101-9i.
New York topped Atlanta .
103-8~ . New Jer~y defeated
K;msa s Clly, 122-11~ . Seattle

rearner

~2

T• lll l j~m••\' il..-11. wh•• sufft•n•d n
110~' \llltf \lll'l' l'~t\IHII S ,
pru1n pt i 11 ~ Hol'kt•t.s' Coaeli

ElscwhNt•, Huusl t\fl bt'&lt;J l
Ang t•le s.
I t6-t05 .

• Green. ful l gra tn co wntde

P•llnl:-. t•• lt•;nl

brukL•n

l.n ~

WOLVERINE 9
WILDERNESS - BOOT

~c,·,•rt-t l

,

P• •lllb fo r !IPHSinn lll tht•

Kun rwrt

kd BP~t nn with 2i j.).Hnt s .

Philadclphi;,t

.lulHJ!&lt;&gt; En 111g "'' .. . ,"1

b~ :\11 11 \\

ll6 , L.akl'r!'&gt; 105:
\1 u q•il~

Siur!&lt;. 1:!0, Spurs 116 :

.;&amp;

la:.t

u

tlll'l't'·

for

~Ill

AlltPillH, I .&lt;IIT\ 1\t•llull Sl'PI't'tl

25 1•otnt:-. for ·lht• Spurs ami
( ;t•nrgt• (;l' l'\'111 &lt;H.Jdl'd ~4 .
Uullels 101. Jau 97 :
Tt•Jt l ilt'rHll'rsnn ..;run•d :!2
po int s fn1' W;. is ll illglt'll.
ltl&lt;'l udm g four frrt• thrP\\'~
with lt•:.;s than 30 :it'r"11ds
n·n1aining m the game, til
le ad
WasldnJ,!ton .
Lt•n
"Trul'k " Robinson Sl'Ol't'(l 28
p11i nt s for Nt.•w Or len ns,
wlli&lt;: h lws nnw l ~ t s t SIX
straight gamPs.
Knkks 103, Hawks 114 :
1'\ L' \\' Y1•1'k hrnk(• :1 ~ i'oi -t' ar•u•

HUNTINGT ON, W. Va .
(UP!) - Oklahoma State,
which rallied t o spill host
Marshall 99~7, and Auburn
which· held off a Souther~
Illinois ~meback lor a 66~
victory, clashed Sat urday
night lor the championship of
the lith and final Marshall
Memorial InvitationaL
Marshall, 2-3 and Southern
lllinosi, 1-2, bahled third
place before Oklahoma State,
4-1 and Auburn 2-1, collided in
the finals.
" We needed offensiv e
rebounding to win, " Marshall
Coach Stu Aberdeen said.
" We didn't get it . They
converted five of 10 offensive
rebound situations.
" They're a good shooting
team ."
Marshall's Bunny Gibson
showed the hot hand in the
first hall, sinking 26 points
but he added only six in the
second half while th e
Cowboys kept their branding

mad lusm~ stn~a k . wtth Ju n
l\1l'l\1t lhan st·•w ul g 22 poults .
John Hruwn ll'd 1ht• H:1wks
With 19.
Nt•ts 122. Kings 114 :

Bernard

Km~

S(:oredo a
JO pot nl s and
Ottrrwll Hllluwn addt'(l 23 as
~anu'-h lgh

:'\t·w Jt·rsc} snapp('d a slxJ.!.:tllll' lnging strt'(lk . Seutt

Wl•thnall had 26 a nd J,1h11
Kuesu•r ad dNI 21 tu 11.:.1t.:e
Kansas Citv .
St1l1ks 136,' Rut•ks l23 ~
Gus Williams sc•Xt'&lt;l 19 of
• his gaJm• . high 33 pnints in th~
nrst quctrter as Se~lttl e won
its f ifth strai ght !!alllt' .
Marqut:'S Jnh nson and Da\'('
Meyers l'Cil'h ~corl'&lt;l 20 forth~
Ru eks .

IFlorida, Seton Hall in finals

•I
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game ot the tournament .
potnts and Hobtnson had 16
Florida Slate, which im- for the Mo untain~ers , who
proved its record to 5-0 , dropped to 2-3 .
rallied
behind
th e
Elsewhere ,
it
wa s
playma k ing
of
David Proviflence 73 , Wisconsin 62;
Thom pson and broke the Arizona 81, Houston 80 ; Long
game open with 12 minutes to . Beach Stale 94, San J ose
play .
Sl at e 84; William and Marv
Thompson finished with 13 67, Fulleron State 62; Utah 50,
points and Mike Dillard had Kent State 47; Montana 76,
14 for the Seminoles . Center
Brigham Young 72; Idaho
Steve Staford and gua rd Cal State 77. Pan American 74;
Glover each scored 20 points New Mexico State 69,
for South Florida .
Louisiana Tech 51 and SouthCenter Scott Dewan scored ern Ca l 93, New Mexico 80.
16 points a nd Calis added 15
Providence stretched its
for the Pirates. MnbrP h:H'i ?1

United Press lntern~tlonal
Flonda St ale and . Seton
Hall each scored tight victories to move into last night 's
finals in th e Big Sun
basketball tournament in St .
Petersburg, Fla .
Harry Davis scored 25
points as unbeaten Florida
State battled from behind
Friday night for a 7!Hl7
victory over South Florida,
which led by up to nine points
in the first half.
Se.ton .Hall, 3-2, gained the
finals by outlasting West
Virginia. 76-13. in the o!J&lt;'ning

Rockies gain moral victory
UnltedPressinternatloaal
Maybe It wa~ the _une~·
pected pleasure of play10g tn
front of a large and f~1endly
audien~e . Or maybe lt was
more stmply the play of two
ftne young hockey player s.
Whatever the reason, the
. Colorado Rocktes took . ~n one
of the top teams In the
Nation a l _Hockey League
Frtday mght and almost
emerged Wlth_a pomt .
Darryl Stiller scored on a
breakaway to snap a 2-2 lte
wtth less tha n three m10utes
left to play as the Toronto
Maple Leafs downed th e
RDckJes, 3-2.
It may have also been a ·
mor a l victory for the
IWcktes .
For some strange reason ,
Denver ; a city that enjoys
college hockey and has even
sent some fine players to the
major leagues, is not turned
on by pro hockey . But Friday
night 15,376 . fans . ~ the
largest crowd 10 the htstory of
the Denver franchise - .
turned out to see the game.

They didn 't get their victory , but they did see an
exciting game . Goa ls by Pau l
Gardner, the young scoring
whiz Y.ho now has _ ~ goals,
and Barry Beck; 1 the fine
rookie defenseman , gav e
Colorado a 2-1 lead in t he
second pertod.
But Tiger Willia ms scored
on a rebound early in the
third period to tie the game
and set the stage for Sittler's
game--wtnner. Ron Eilts had
opening scoring for Toronto
late in the first period.
Therewerenoother games
in the National Hockey
League.
In the World Hoc key
Association, New England
edged Binningham, 2-1, in
overtime, Houston defeated
Ed m o nt 0 n ,
5- B ,
Czec hoslovak ia topped Indiana poli s, 5-3 , and GinCinnati nipped Winnipeg, 4·3,
10 overtime .
Peter Marrin gave Birmingham a 1-Q lead, but
Gordie Roberts tied the game
in the third period a nd

Georg e Lyle -sco red an
unassisted goal in overtime
.. . Andre Lacro ix scored once
and set up two other goa ls to
pace the Aeros .. . Pavel
Richter scored a hat trick to
lead
Czec ho s lov aki a's
nationa l hockey team in the
opener of the Czechs ' ninegame series against WHA
teams _during the next two
weeks and the game -counted
in thE league s ta n di ngs,
lea ving the Ra cers with a 913-3 record ... Robbie Ftorek
scored on a scramble in front
of the net with 3:25 ·gone in
sudden-death overtime to lift
Stingers
-

~bea t en

record to 5-0 as
guard Dwig hl William s
scored 25 points .
Two free throws by Kenny
Da vis, with 31 seconds
remaining, clinched a narrow
vict ory for Arizona over
previous)y
undefeated
Houst on. Arizona ran it s
home winning streak to 38.
Long Beach State, behind
Leonard Gray 's 33 point s.
defeated San J ose State in
opening-round action of the
Utah Classic .
Buster Matheney and Jeff
Judkins scored 19 of Utah's
first 20 points in the second
ha If to lead the Utes to victory in the second game of the
tourney. William &amp; Mary hit
74 percent oi the shots in the
second half en route to a
victory over Fullerton State
in the opening game of the
Co ugar Classic.
. In the second game ,
Montana htt f6ur straight free
throws in the closing minute
and Mike Richa rdson scored
1ll points.
Guard La"' rence Butler
had 28 points and forward
Brand Robin.son added 20 to
lead Idaho State in the
op ening round of the
Roadrunner Tournament.

iron hot.
and Earl Banks With 12. Gary foul situation to pull we
Oklahoma State shot 56.3
Wilson of Southern Illinois Salukis within 64-'3 but Myles
Patrick converted both ends
percent for t he game · in· tossed in 25 points.
eluding 57 percent in' the
The War Eagles frittered of a one--and-&lt;&gt;ne foul with 30
second half. Marshall stayed away a 12-point lead in the seconds left to increase
with the taller Cowboys by second half. Southern Illinois Auburn's margin to 66-93.
The Salukis made a final
shooting 53 in lhe first half for caught up a 62-'2 on a field
bid
when Wayne Bracy netted
a 51-51 halftime tie.
goal by Christopher Giles.
Marshall held the upper 1 _ ~iewicz sank a shol a fullow-up shot with five
hand 77-73 with seven 'ffii'm t~ left corner with 55 seconds left, and Wayne
minutes remaining when the seconds remaining to get the Abrams fired a shot from
Cowboys rifled in 18 straight lead back for Auburn. Wilson near midcourt that bounced
potnts to take command at 91- sank the first of a one-and-one o[fthe rim at the final buzzer .
77. A 52-foot field goal from
the backcourt by Marshall 's
Pat Burtis at the final buzzer
climaxed the' pointmaking
parade.
, Oklahoma State's -point
production was led by Eli
Johnson with 23 points, Oluf
Holder 19, Andy J ones 18 and
not let them get the brg plays
Mark Tucker 16.
United Presslolernatlonal
like
thetve been getting."
When
the
1977
football
· Besides Gibson ,' Marshall's
"
I'
ve
always had a lot of
season
began,
the
Miami
only big scorer was Harley
Major with 18.
'
Dolphins didn't give much respect for the Patriots' de thought to post-season play . fense and the way they've
Auburn was sparked by
They see med content to played ," Miami coach Don
Stan Pietkiewlcz with 18
sac rifice
the
season, Shula said. "We've always
points, Mike Mitchell w!thl7
experimenting and had a lot oi trouble With it. "
Three teams have already
rebu,ilding for the futw-e .
cl
inched pla yoff spots But with only two weeks
Denver,
Dallas and Los An· remaining in the regular
geles.
In
addition to Miami,
season, the 9-3 Dolphins find
the futw-e is now. Going into 10 other learns are still in the
fo r
the
fiv e
Sunday 's game at New En- running
gland, they are tied for first remaining playoff spots.
The Super Bowl Champion
:::: place in the , AF&lt;; East with
) the Baltimore Colts, lead the Oakland Raiders, 9-J, ca n
-- Patriots {ll-4 ) by one game qualify as the AFC wild .ca rd
and can capture the Eastern entry by winning its last two
· · tit1e with victories in t heir games or finishing in a 10-4
) final two games. They face tic ·with Baltimore, Miami or
[.!_:,:
the Buffalo Bills at Miami in New England . The Raiders
. their last game of the season . ~ave the best intraconference
:_: :
If the Dolphins and Colts record amoog those teams.
Minnesota , 8-4, has to win
, end the season with identical
11-3 records; Miami will beat one of its last two games to
out Baltimore because it clinch the NFC Ceritral . If
sports a better intradivision they should' end up in a 9-li tie
record {7-1 to Baltimore 's 6-- with Chicago, now 1!-4, the
2) . The Colts would still have Vikings would take t he
becau se · they
a shot at a wild card berth . division
However, if New England defeated the Bears by six
- which looked to be out of points and lost to them by
the playoff picture a few on ly three.
The NFC wild card spot ·
weeks ago - should defeat
the Dolphins and go on to beat most likely will go to either
the Colts at Baltimore in their St. Louis, Washi ngton or
season lina)e, the Patriots Chicago, all with 7-li records,
would take the division . New although Atlanta , 6-', r etains
England also
becomes a slim chance.
conference champion if the
:::: three teams finish in a 10-4 tie
because they have the best
record in head-to-head
competition with Miami and
Baltimore .
'·
New England quarterback
Steve Grogan said he hasn't

Dolphins face
New England

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too

much

~~~i~~.n:'~r0~~g ~u~::~;~

Our Last Shipment At
This Special Price
Has Arrived!

\

FITS ANY 1/ 4 "
ELECTRIC DRILL

SAVE '1000

MASONRY • AUTOS llr BOATS

HUNORBJS OF OTHER JOBS

• CHAIN BRAKE
• AUTOMATIC OILING • ANTI-VIBRAiiON

Never buv expensive paint removers again! Caustic chemical removers
are dangerous ~o skin and eyes and are highly flammable
The THOMPSON ROTO STRIPPER'" works on a patented new principle
to do the JOb cheaper, safer, ready for repainting with little or no preparation necessary. Miracle " fingers" made o1 space-age carbon steel
alloy ·'whip '· 011 paint, rust. scale In seconds!
·
BOATS , HOUSE SIOING , does all big jobs in a tr:ctlon Of the time!
STOPS RUST OEAO , strips rusted spots down to the lllro mtllt! Cleans
masonry and swimming pools effor1tessly!
SAFE TO FINE FURNITURE when used as di re~led . Leaves a , .;,
smooth finish ready for paint or stain . No sanding needed (won't raise

MR. CGFFEE'" II
DRIP
.,COFFEEMAKER

The Rem1ng ton Mighty Mite 400 is the finest
l1 'g htwe 12 hl chain saw built today . It's all new
1n des1gn ·and offers all these features you
want 1n a chai n saw.
,

REG. $29.99

• Cha 1n bra ke stops mov1ng chain in a
sp lit second to reduce hazard from
" kick-ba ck'

TAKE YOUR CHOICE-

Holy Land Tours

• Exclusive anti -vibra tion sy.s tem suspends ent ire en gin e on heavy rubber
mounts

• Qu iet operation fro m new low-to ne
muffler'.
lf •you ' re lh inkmg of buying a cham saw be
:ure you check th e new Remington Mighty
M ite 400 al
We have four Wa rm
stock.

Morning

Stoves in

CARTER &amp; EVANS
BUILDING. SUPPLIES
GALLIPOLIS, 0.

WHILE SUPPLY LASTS,

Come wtth us to His Land! Find Bethlehem ,

where the first Christmas took place. See
Nazareth, the Galilee and the River Jordan!
Stay in Jerusalem , the Holy City to the
World's three great iaifhs. Visit the shrines

• Powerfu l 2.3 cu . in . engine
• B 1g 14" spfocket nose guidebartocut
tree s and firewood up. to 28" thick .

Christmas Ideas For Thut

5

Hard To Please Person.!·

that reca II the greatest events of history the tragedy of the Cross and the triumph of
. ~ -.()
Jesus over death.
p 1 5 It R I'
Rev A n ld M
OUR TOUR FEATURES·
as or co
aw mgs
IT~.:~· r 0
ockstroth
Y
Tour Esc•ort -IPortsmo,uthl
Escort . Wa 11 erl y, 0 · ~ PE!rsonally escorted
•
;,.~::~~ghts via Swiss~ir with meal s
- I nternat io na I Lines

$1199 per person

per person

Double Occupancy
10 Day Journey To Holy Land
'ftl.

1978
;,.
Fcu, 11:24
I

Double Occupancy

- Hotel accommodations
- All state &amp; Local ta xes

- conflnental breakfast dailv

- lunch &amp; dinner daily

-. AII · S-ightseeing adm 'i Ssio-ns

-A n experienced local English speak.ih g tour escort. famil iar wirh
the Stble. to accompany the toor on
all sightseeing "cursions .

~

t

5

fi

~

5

~

5

ft.

ARE

TODA Y'S BEST
BUYS IN HOMES

u
~

purchase necessary.
We honor Master

Buckeye

~

See All Our "Red Rlbborw"

~

Gilt Ideas

9~~~

w

MOBILE HOMES INC.

W

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

Charge-VISA~ulden

~

~

w

llna

••aliaal lll&amp;flll&amp; w
~·

~

It

~

~

Open Munday Nights tll9

~;

thra Christmas

.,...,
,,,

Spring Valley Plaza

Phone 446 -2206 );:

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

TOM'S STEREO CENTER
11

GETS IT ALL TOGETHER"

AND SAYS:

''MERRY
CHRISTMAS!''
WITH MUSIC

DAN THOMPSON
FORD BOWLING
Week of Dec. 6, 1977

Team
Team 2

Won Lost
76
36

Team 3

68

44

Team 1

68

44

Team 8

68

44

67

45

Team 4

64

Team 12

64

48
48

Team 6

Team 5
Team 9

56

56

Team 18
Team 16

56
54
54

56
58
58

Team 15

48

64

Team 7

46

66

Team 10
Team 13
Team 11

41
36
30

71
76
82

only
B.I.C. 920

for 15 with 18t . and Roger
Hines was high ·for 14 and 166.
Team 6 won 6 points from
Team 16, with Steve Richards
high for 6 with 174 and Harold
Skidmore high on 16 wilh 177.
Team 1 won all 8 points

Auto-Return
Stack-Play

from Team 7. High for l was
Jim Clathworthy with 189 and
high for 7 was Richard Smith
wilh 168.
Team 10 won 6 points from
Team 13. High for 10 was Dot
Adams with 197 and high for
· 13 was Walter Allie with a 165.
Team 12 won 6 points from

Separate~

Priced $587.75

Teams·. High for 12 was Jack
Ferguson with 211 and high

for 5 waS: Howard Browning
with 182.
Team 2 won all 8 points
from Team 11.. High for 2 was
Jack Mink with 246 and high
for 11 was Mil&lt;e Walters with
172.

wOOd grain as liqutds do)

• Fully automat1 c 01ling

~

Team 15 won 6 points' from
Team 14. Rick Penn was high

HOUSE SIDING • WROUGHT IRON

with

BLOOMINGTON ,
Ind . about 17 minutes to go in thl'
(UP! )
Guard Mike second half. Coach Bobbl
Woodson scored 21 points Wright played mainly subSaturday to lead Indiana to ;titutes to finish out th t:
an 85-'1 viC\pry over Murray game.
State.
Besides Woodson , Hoosier.,
F orward Mike Muff topped in doubl~ fig ures were Ste\ e
FLYERS WIN AGAIN
· Murray State with '!I points. Risley with 16 points, Tomrm
PHILADELPHIA (U PI ) Indiana moved to a com· Baker with 13 and Glen
Don Saleski's seeond goal of
manding 55-27 lead with Grunwald with 10.
the game midway through
the third period brolte a 2-2 tie ~~~~~~~~~~ =~~~~~~~~~
Saturday and enabled the
Philadelphia Flyers to defeat
the Chicago Black Hawks 4·2,
ij'
extending their upbeaten ~
II
string to eight games.
I!!
Back ·Rest (for reading or watching TV in ~
u bed)
u
.I W Folding Bed Trays
~
BRUINS TRIUMPH
Tennis Elbow &amp; Wrist Supports
BOSTON (UP! ) - Peter
~
Support Panty Hose
McNab scored two goals and
II!
White
Nurse' s Support Pantyhose( white
Brad Park added a goal and 11
pocket
org
.l
~
two assists Saturday to lead
Men's Support Hose
the Boston Bruins to a 6-2
Hand Helper (builds muscle strength)
victory over the Pittsburgh !1.
Hand Exercisers (for bowl ers -golf ers Penguins.
~ tennis players) ·
W
Mlnsoles
~
etal Arch Supports
~
~ S1t1p in and register f11r an Oster lnfar-r1!d heaL ha nd .
~ massager to be given away Dec. 23 at noon . f'lu
nation' s leadin g rider in
races won with 475 victories.

pressure

424 Second Ave. .
Gallipolis (
-:,: ::::;::::;:::::::::-;::::::::::::::::::.:::::::;;:,:::::;::: ::::::;:::,:,:,:;:::0:: ,:, :::::: :::::::::::::::-:::::,:,:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:; poised . We' ve gtit to make
some big plays ourselves and

Indiana thumps Murray State

MODUlAR HOMES

BOWLING -

fe lt

Thompson

FASTER,
CLEANER,
EASIER THAN
ANY OTHER
WAYI

NEW YORK (U I-'1 ) Teena ge Joc key
Steve
Cauthen, who last month
became the first rider to earn
$5 minion in purses in one
year, Saturday broke the $6
million mark, riding two
_winners and placing second
twice at Aqueduct .
The 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld jockey was
$14,750 short of the mark
going into Saturday's card,
·but then rode Mini Styls to
victory in the first race,
placed second with Arthur
Rock in the fourth race and
passed $6 million with a win
in the $25,000 sixth race
a ll owa n ce aboard Little
Happiness.
Another second·place finish
in t he seventh race put his
earnings
for
1977
at
$6 ,007,980 . Ca uthen , who
started riding in New York in
November, 1976,' is also the

~~~

LARGE SB.ECTIO"

:

POWERS OFF
PAINT • VARNISH
RUST • CORROSION

Cauthen breaks $6 million

OSU, Auburn gain finals

Celtics off to worst start ever
B)

De&lt;:. 11, 1977

11

Day Tourney To
Holy Land &amp;
.
Switzerland

feb. 21-March 3, 1978

Write for a fr.e e brochure
or ca II ( 614) 446-0699
33 Court Sf.___- Gallipolis , 0 . --

mas

Team 4 and Team 8 split 4
and 4. High for 4 was Merida
Shaw with 188 and high for 8
was Debbie Russell a 182.
Team 3 and Team 9 split 4
and A. High for 3 was Dave
Somerville with 198 and high
for 9 was Keith Bowles with
154.
High game for the women
for the evening goes to Dot
Adams wilh 197 . •
High series for the women
for the evening goes to
Marilyn Browning · 495 .
· High game for . the men
goes to Jack Mink with a 246,
nice bowllnp Jack .
High senes also goes to
Jack with e 575.
other highs for the night
was Rick Penn s 14, Wally
smith 513, JacK Ferguson 526,
Dave Carman (sob.) 2t2, 527,
and Lee Howell 501 .

'"'

Bose Model
301

J.V.C.
JRS.lOO

Direct-Reflecting

Speaker

AM.fM Stereo .
Receiver

System

eWe Welcome Layaways

'
• Open Week Days Til 8:00

Pomeroy Bqwling Lanes
· Morning Glories
Nov. 29, 1977
Team \
Pts .
No.2
69
G. &amp; J . Auto Parts
58
Newell Sunoco
55
Gibbs Grocery
48
No.5
38
Karr &amp; VanZandt
20
High ind. game - Phyll is
Cline tBO ; Darlene Tillis 178.
High . i.nd . 3-games . Phyllis Cline 459 ; Lenora
McKnight 454~
High team game -

No. 'J

811 High team J.games - No . 2
2271.

e Delivery

Up To Dec. 24th

• Bonus Credit Pia• .
-Pay 10% and Tax As Down Payment
and 1st Payment .Not Due Until
Mar. 1978 ·

TOM'S STEREO CENTER
24} THIRD

AVENUE ~

GALLIPOLIS, OfiiO 4563 1 .

~-master cha
'~I

Phone: (6 14) 446- 7886

""l•t•••

I

�C-1~ Th~ SWlda) Ttmt·~...Sl'ntult~l. Sunda) . l.&gt;t&gt;t· 11. 1911

Rep. Jordan says she will
not run for fourth term
ll) JAMES L. 0\ ERTU'I

HOUSTO:'\ 1UPI1 - lh'p .
Barbara Jorctlll , D-Tt'"&lt; . tht•
first black Cl'n~n· ss m, maJ J
r lected frnm tht:' Dl't:'p South,
a nnf"lun ced Saturday sht'
would not St."'t'k n. f11urth tl•rm
Ln ('()ngrt.'SS in 1978.
Saying stw wm; ;1 cttr~~ .. ft,r
rea54.ms prt'dicatt'CI !Utally nn
my internal rvmpa.s.s. " . :\1 1 ~~
J orda n t' !Hied mo nth s ,,f
... speculat wr1 th~tt s.h t~ Wt)ulrl
" rr tire frnm poil lit•al hfP - fpr
the time be mg . She rl'f ust~d to
: sa)' an~1lu n g abtlUI l ~ r futurt'
plans.
''This dedstunls made 11\l \\
:.. - rather Utan twt\ nr fnur
years henct:' - lx'caust.• I
th ink it W(lU\d beC Ll llll'
im.·reQ singly ctiff1 cult fl1r me
to change c·nurse The rr lS, 1

bt•ll t:'\'t',
an
, 111\"Pn; t •
r l'lat lll ii Shl p b l'twt' t'll
duratiOn or h ' fllll'l' l1l tht•
Cnn ~ n-:;~ and t ht.• &lt;lb!h t)

In

t.'hangt• gt•ars." slw said at a

rw'' s

('l 'llf~· n•nt't' at
~ft'SStl ma l (lffl l't' .

la•r L'nn-

" What t'nllt" St'' I shn ll
purslll' 111 19i 9 wlwn my

cunent t ~nn expln's. 1 dn not
know. \\'hl'tht..•r m thr pub\i(.'
or prl \'tHt• St'Ctnr . I do not
kt ww." ~lw scud.
SIIH't:' ht•r Plt't·tion ll• tht'
H(1use 111 . 1972 ·frt1
,. m' the l8l11
Cnngrt&gt;sSiilJlal Distr ict, Mtss
Jorda n, 41. h:1s had a faSI
lllfi \'Jng l '31"l'el" .

She
was
catapu lt·
ed to na t ional promi·
nence bt' her freshman·
term perfnnnanct&gt; during the
Hnuse Judit·ia ry Cllmmittee 's

·.

-:·:·;·:

SENIOR CITIZENS' SCENES
I'OMr: HOY
r'1ft1 ll'1ll"S
·H!-!o an md t\' tduut ' \~ \' I ll~
-ltl'lf ..,_~~)UIHf 60 ) C4U"~ " ;t g ~'IIJI ·

su!rrt•rl t•' br qu1t r t•l dNI~ .
TudH y. tfaanks t o nwd~rn
mrdkal tt•ehn1JI1lgy . t he .ilf.: t'
uf 60 IS fur C\ number 11f
persons th(' ··print(' uf ll!P."
Uut for nwst ~l f us. thts agt• IS
also thr bPgmnmg uf nur
ret1rcmrnt yt•ars. Wha t an•
aet in• a nd t•ncq.;t•til' people tu
do with tht'St' ext rn hn urs·'
Hrrr in Mrigs Count). Uw
Hrt ired Srni ('l r Vnlu ntHr
Program &lt;;an nffcr tht·sc
individua ls lWt•r the a~-:c \I f 60
an OPPI' rtunit y to nwk e U.Sl ' or
tbeir ta lrnts and knowlcdgr.
}t"'or example. rccC"nt ly two
\'OlUntcers \'iSited the CIHSS·
room uf Mrs. Vi eki Hill at the
Southern Hig h Sc hool to
demonstrat e how to make
Christmas Wreaths from live

I l' , . 1 ~ t• d
:"\ 1 x j • n
unpcadlllh'lll IH"a nnt-i s 111

t ,.

t974 .
,-\ ttn buu ng that n •il' In
bl·mg " at ttw nght p i:H:l' &lt;I t
tlw raght tllllt'," s lw scud 11
w a~ 11~11 ht•r grt•a U'St tllt• nu·ht
m thl' l' n n ~ r l'Ss .

'" "~ si ngll', lllOSl g rt'&lt; ll l•st
al' t'H il lJ..d ! S h lll l' rlt
i !.'O.

n• p rt'~ t'Jlti n g

hun d r l-' ds .

thous and s. 11 f herr t,,fnn•

nameless . face lrss. ·voicck ss
PL'''Plt• i fn,m her mos t \y
blnck F~ 1 ur th Ward in Hnuslt• n )~ " shr said . " l cnn si dt~ r
that the grel.ltl' St. best
&lt;ll'rompl1shment . •·
Sht• sa id · s hf'

ha d

n tl

un mt'&lt;.ti ate pltlllS fnr srtt i u ~

fo lia~:w .

up a law pru(' tire a~1d lltl
plan s tn seek a fed er ctl
judgt&gt;sl1ip ~ whi c h t) bseners
h.;1ve indicated she wants.
;\ strikl ng . burly woman -

Thi s project of mak ing and
Christmas Wreaths
wa s initiated by the students
to provide funds for the
purchase of cra ft suppli es for

sellin~

~h.: c n 1Jlpli s hed
Pratnr
kJW i\1t fnr her distinctivt'ly

au

Katie's Korner

deep. rt&gt;snnant voiee - she
bt~ntnJ t'
in terest r d
in
lX'lll1X' rnt iL' pnhtit·s at an
E'&lt;lrly age .
Her fa tiwr . a warrhDuse
clerk , struggled tn put her
thr ough Texa s Snu thern
Uru \·l'rsity in Hnustnn. where
she
wa s a champi on deba ter
POMEROY - Norman E. Schaefer . Laurel Cliff.
and
m ag na cum laude
celebra ted hi s 8lsl birth da1· Saturdilr. Dec. 10. Mr . Schaefer
gradua
te .
was a lnng time employe ~f the OhiO Power Cn., and still is
She
won election w the
active on his farm . You name it. he dCI€s it.
Texa
s
s tat e Senate aft e r
Mr . Schaefer) wit h hts daughter and her husbqnd, Mildred
several
defeats and became
... and Bill Perry 1whose birthda ys werr also in Dt&gt;cember '·were
the
fir
st
black
state sena tnr in
honored at a dinner in the horne of (ill ll l h~r daughter , Mrs. ·
Texas since 1882. She twice
· Vern Story, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
A· boyhood friend of Mr. Schaefer's. Albert Jack Hoffner. ran un successfully for the
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. will celebrate his 8lsl birthday on Hou se of Repres entat ives
befnre winning .
Dec. 15 .
In Congress. Miss Jordan
CONGRATULATIONS '
has helped write civil rights
MRS . Thomas tJ ody ) Crnw , Pnmeroy, is a medical patient legisiati on, inc l udi n g
expansion of the voting rights
at Holzer Medical Center. Her room number is 43&amp;-B .
act to co,·er Texas. and was
chief Hlluse sponsor of a new
CONGRATUL~TION TO David and Sherrie Busk irk .
law repea ling so&lt;alled fair
Syracuse, nn their six th w.edding a nn..i~· er sary which was
trade statutes which allowed
•. celebrated on [Jj,c. 3.
ma nuf act ur ers
to
fix
·rnE OPEN HOUSE held at the Racine Home Nationa l minimum reli.iil prices.
At
last
summrr ' s
Bank last Monday was really a nice affair .
Democratic
conventio
n in
Tom Wolfe. president. shou ld be commended fo r having
New
York
she
was
one
of
two
handled the event in such an excellent manner. It was indeed
selected
by
keynnle
speaker
s
. an honor fnr Meigs County· to have such celebrities as Da ve
nt
Carte
r
and
Preside
Diles and Archie Griffin .
practi cally stole the show
I
with
her stirring remarks .
THE LIGHTING COMM ITTEE for the Pomeroy Chamber
nf Cflmmerce is erecting Christma s lights on Pomeroy's
Secmd Street.
_ Jim Frecke r , chairman of the Christmas parade and
..__.. , Bar bat a Chapman, Secretary of the chamber, who assisted
.. · i !"reeker. extend their thank5 to those who participated in the
~ parade and to a ll others who helped make it a success.

By Katie Crow

MRS. EULA WOLFE , Letart Falls, would like for all her
friends to know that she recently had a private telephone line
installed. Her new number js 247·36:i8

urbcan ~trea.s such as V o un~s ­
to wn. Munuu ;md M;l!lSflcld.
VtllUntl't'l' hours far surpa ss
t h ust~ ttf li l rJH'f l'U IIl lllUill tiC~

lht•ar t·la ~s n~t• ltl .
l·.oH'h
cla ss

fllt'IIIIH·r
a bast• rorm t u
thl'lr prujt•t•t " 1th lh~·

prr pa rt.~d
br~ a n

u1 Otuu

\' o luntet· r ·~ hd~)

'l'h('

V nl untt •t·r ~ l':lln£• : 1 " H~

from th iS dassrnum kn,•wtn ~
tluH 1hr1r t•rfort s wt·n• apprecJa tt.'&lt;i and the !-.1Udt•nt s
wt•rr lf'ft with tin.' [('t•iln!,! tlw t
tJwst.• pC11plr ran•d
When a p(' rStll\ ftr ~ t
lllQ Uirt•s abo ut tx·&lt;·u mmg a
\'Olunll't.1 r . thr f1rst qut.'Sllnn s
asked by th t• staff urr "\Vha l
an• vnur int erests alld wha t
are 'yo u int erestP(l in domg
for ~ o ur t'OIIliJ IU nit) ·:·· The
\'Ul-untN'r is usually asked t H
serv l' a t a variety of wpr k
statiuns. Transport ation t ': lll
be .Pruvided if needed; and
th P \'olunt eer is t'O \'l'rrd b)
personal inj ury insur a nr ~ to
and from a work stat ion an d
whil e sening at tht"" st ation.
Mr igs County 's Reti re d
Seni or Volunteer Pro~ rm n
li st of 260 ur ti\•e Pnrol\Pes is
comparable to the number of
volunteer s listed in larg£'

Ttll'
Ht•t tr ed
Scntur
Vu luntrt•rs spend many hnurs
l"liiSin g dulla r s h1r c· un ~
unuat 10n uf all Scnwr r u izrn
l'r uj.(rtll n S 111 M e li.!.S t'uunt ) .

SPECIAL MUSIC BY "The Watchmen" from
"Oprralinn Evangelize" and Dave Lucas as evangelist
will be featw·ed at special senoces to be held at 7:30p.m.
friday , Saturday and Sunday at the Bradbury Church of
Chr ist. The J,!roup inc ludes, back. I tor. George Draper,
Riek Ranson, Vi ekir Warren , Sarn ' Batten; (ront, Steve
Ranson. Uavid Lucas and Steve Hoffman .

SUNDAY
SPECIAL

CARRY OUT

SERVICE
and warm In a well Insulated
OPEN SUNDAY

Fom-Cor wrapped house from

4:00 TIL 11 : 00

MEIGS INN

K lngsbury Home Sales.

PIZZA SHACK

We have house type doublewides and al so
FHA. 1/A modular homes.
Siop .inand see our lot display a! 1100 E.
Main St ., Pomeroy , Ohio

PHONE 992-6304

HOME SALES INC.

COBRA CB 2-WAY
JlADIO EQUIPMENT
Punches Thr ou gh
Loud an d Cle ar.
f h lur l! riC h ud qwu yo u all
2;3 c/lolll nell\oucll.lld cl•u l.rl
Clud .. , ()yn*"'lh !if C i.!n Qm
IT OI Celt• Two;, And AdJLlSI Ahl&lt;!
Sque ich :Mu•murn 1~ • 1 po .. er

BUY NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS GlVING

A BIG
SAYINGS

fC C type

a cctpl~

WAS '199.95

COBRA 26. A COPY OF 1l!E

N(M

COBRA 29

BUY

Cobra28

NOW
WHILE

EVERYT~ING

LOOKS

8£MlTIFUL 1

WE HAVE

23- Channel Super -Com pa ct

AM M .o .;e CR 2- Wav Rad1 0

23-Cbannel AM
Mobile CB Radio

23-Channe l Dynarnike

WAS '139.95

not i ng sa ccharin has been

completing·their second year
of a two·year Medical
Laboratory Technology
IMLT ) program in con·
nect ion with Holzer Medical
Center.
After graduation and
registry exams this. ~pring,
the •1 udents will become
Medical Lab Technicians.
MLT's, who frequ ently
work in hospital laboratories,
are trained for res ponsibiliti es like analyzing blood
specimens, cult urin g ba cteria to test [or infectious
disease, and blood typing .
The curricul um includes a
year 11f studs on the Rio

p.m. ana H 1aays 1-3 p.m.
LAUNCH MADE
MOSCOW rUPl ) - The
Soviet Union Sa t urday
launched two men into space
aboard the Soy us 26
spa ceship to link up with the
orbiting Salyut 6 spa ce
station, the Tass news agency
reported . Tass said the crew,
U . Co l \'uri Romanenko and
Georgi Grechko , were
launch ed at 4 • 19 a .m .
Moscow time (10:19 p.m .
Friday EST ).

•

CHRISTMAS GIFTS that nwke
the great outdoors a lot warmer.

Grande campus and a second
yea r in practical clinical
experience in the laboratory
at Holzer Medical Center.
Acco rdin g
to
Steve
Elberfeld , MLT educational
coordinator, more than 50
percent of the graduates will
remain in the Community
College fo ur-county district
for employment. He also
pointed out that Rio Grande
students have scored consistently higher in registry
than
national
exam s
averages . E lberfe ld is
assisted in the program by
instructor Hoseanne Woods.

There·s nothing like giving- or getti ng - a
little warmth for Christmas . At the Ou tfitt ers
Shop. that's our specialty. We sell the latest.
most advanced outdoor clothing and gear
available. Like down vests and jackets by Gerry
and Woolrich . And sleeping bags by Snow Lion .
Our prices are reasonable and we stand behind
everything we sell.
We also handle tents, backpacks. cookware .. .
everything the outdoorsman needs in ahy weather.
Stop by and check us out real soon.

Outfitters Shop

Mayor slaps at director
for closing airport

Open Daily 10-5

'

director Andrew Putka said
he kept up with snow remova l
by telephone Friday because
he was handling other airport
business from his City Ha ll
off ice.
Putka said he ,w ent to the

Located on the banks of Raccoon Creek
at the eastern edge of the

airport
at
p.m .
a nd appointed . ope rations
su perv isor
J ohn
Ge ib
to
superv ise
snow
r e m nvt~ \
in
Katzma,r 1 S
absence. He said he also
called four private contra tors
for help at 3 p.m.

-g,c, e\faas
FARMS®

Phone: 245-5304

.

Cobra21

THE. OWLS
CLU6

'

Adleta , Gerry Hilferty, Liz
Hilferty , Steve Koch and J im
Winebrenner.
The show will open with a
re ception and th e Me igs
County film of the 1930s will
be shown.
The Museum also has a
display of historic Chri ~1mas
gifts in the wind ow a t
Elberfeli:!s. All gifts may be
purchased at the museum
during the open house and
during regular
hours .
Museum hours through
January 6, are as follows:
Sundays and Tuesdays 2-4

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

99~-7034

" For the Finest in Manufactured

BREW "'T

that warnmg poste rs as
shuwn to cause cancer 1n test required by the law should be
animals :__ will have to start placed "near the store en~
trance and in the a isle where
appearing Feb. 21 .
Previously, the agency has the product is sold." A public
moveq to put into effect hea ring on that aspect of the
another section of the law proposal was set for Jan. 12.
requirin g th e
warnin g
statement as written by
Congress to appea r on labels
of saccharin prod ucts. At a
hea rin"g last week so me
ma n·u fa ct urcrs told t he
agency 1ts proposal on that
aspect was written in such a
way that the warning could
m ver the ent ire label of some
CLEVE LA ND ( UP! ) products.
Mayor Dennis Kuci nic h
The FDA is reviewing that - accused his ports director
poi nt .
ami airport commissioner of
Friday 's action pr0poses poor leadership Saturday in
the battle to keep Cleveland
· Hop kins
In ternat iona l
Airport open . •
·The airport was closed by
snow [or almost lB·'·hours ·
Tuesday and Wednesday and
then shut down again at I
'
p.m. Thursda y. It finally
r eopened a t 11 : 35 p.m.
Why a re so many dri vers switching
Friday.
their insura nce to Allsta te?
Hundreds of travelers were
We'll give you Iota of reasons.
durin g
the
slr"n ded
shutdowns . Many slept in the
AllstHte offers lots of special
termina l Frida y on cots
rates and discounts. Good Driver.
pro1&gt;ided by the Red Cross.
Compact Car. Two Ca r. Low
"My inquiry indicates both
Mileage. Young Married. And more.
th
e
commissioner and the
And Allstate offers today's most
dir ector [ailed tq · provide
adva nced claiin handl ing. Coast
adequate leadership during
to coast. Fast . Convenie nt.
th ~ crisis peri od ," sa id
We th ink you'll find a
Kucihi ch, who went to the
difference wit h All state.
airport unallJ1ounced at 5
S&lt;l compare companies. Fi nd out
p.m. Friday and took over
why t he owners of over nine
supervision of snow removal.
" The whol e p lace was
m ill ion cars are now in "good
disorganized, ~~ he saip. " I'm
ha nds." Call or come in.
thor oughl y convinced that
&gt;ll· •......... ,, . • ' ...
wi t hout ·in tervention the
airport still would not be
open.
NOW AVAIL ABLE THROUGH
"Nothing was happening.
THE
Operations were put in a
McGINNESS-STANlEY AGENCY :INC. holding pattern for a full day
NICK JOHNSON
while creWs rearranged snow
on the field ...
AC~OUrH EXEC UTIVE
Airport
commtsstoner
Phone 446 -1761
Katzmar
said he was
Gunther
Gallipolis
452 2nd Avr
not a t work moSI of Friday
because of a fever. Poria

IV ASHINC. TON 1UP II The Food and Drug • 1·
ministra tion Frida y told the
nation's grofen cs and othe-r
retail er s they must place
saccharin waming postt•rl:i
near the entrance to their
stores and in aisles where
sacc ha rin - contain ing:
produ&lt;ts are sold .
111e reg uli.ition, pu blished
in proposed form in the
Federal Register . is a further
im plementation of the law
Prcsidl•nt Cart cr signed last
month dela ying for 18 months
the proposed ban on saccharin an d pro\'i d in g for
l'Onsumer warnings in the
interim .
wa mings

EAT IN OR

this wll'!ter snug

GALLIPOLIS - . Mary
Rockwell, Nancy Molnar and
Kathy Garnes , all of
Gallipolis ,
and
Kathy
of
ChesNewe ll
ter
are
among
nine
Rio Granae College and
Community College students

Saccharin warnings ordered

FREE FOUNTAIN
SOFT DRINKS WITH
EACH PillA
EATEN ON PREMISES
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--.

KINGSBU~Y

POMER OY - The Meigs
Cu wlly Museum is beginning
it s Christma s se a son by
opening the "Art From Our
Cuunty " Exhibit today, 2-1
p.m. This exhibit shows work
of Meigs County artist s a nd is
to continue through .January
6.
The work on free public
display in clud es draw ing,
painting, printmaking, batik,
ceramics , wood s cupture,
and fibers, by Jack Slavin,
Larry Wolfe , Bill Mayer,
Margaret Ella Lewis, Don
Adleta, Tricia Hennessy ·

MEDICAL LAB TECHNOLOGY students, completing their second year of instruction ,
will graduate this spring . Back row,l tor, Mary Rockwell, Nancy Molnar, B1·yan Joseph ,
Kathy Hoover , Kathy Garnes. Front rnw, Beverly McCraw , Hhoda Poland , Ka thy Newell ,
~'~-.
.
-

Winter. Is Just Around
The Corner.

OR CALL

Meigs art work on display

'

23 CHANNEL

~t6HT
~FTER THE
HOMEM~DE

be thr speH kor Thursday
m urn m ~ beginmng at 11 a .m .
on the s ubJect " Futuro
supplies uf gas and pri cing."
Start pt a nnin ~ now to be at
tht• l'C'nte r December 22 for
our a nnua l Ch ristmas pcu1 y;
C&lt;K&gt; kies a nd punrh will be
served and Santa will be
pay ing us a \'tsit.
Havr a ~oo d " el'k .

,l

obra

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().1 - The Sunday 'l)mes.sentme1, Sunday, Dec. 11, 1977

'· .... ::'l!.' I

D~z-..---:__

--

;_

Prisoners tell of brutality in Mexican jails

$.

By RON HUTCHERSON
SAN 'DIEGO ( UP))
Amcrieans trans rerred fr om

•

i

PRE-CHRISTMAS

Me Kican penitentiaries to

!

U.S.. pri sons
in
an
unpn-cedented
pre.Christ-

~

ma s inmate swap wcPc
r eunited Sa turday with
friend s and relatives in a
federal jail, with some telling
da~k tales or brutality in
Mexieo.
They appealed for help for
the hundreds of Americ:ms
left behind .
The $2 million prngram.

I

J

brought nn by charges that
Ame ril' ans ar rested in
Mexi co are mistreated ;
began Friday with the return

of 61 American prisoners and the baby oorn behind
bars to one nf the women -

on a chartered jet £rom
Mexico City, in exchange for
36 Mexicans who had been
serving terms in U.S. prisons.
Another plane load of 66
wa s sc hedul ed to arrive
Saturday afternoon.
From the rnoment they
stepped off U1e plane. soine of

~Haldeman ·type

not for Carter
WASHINGTON (UPI) ]'J·esident Carter says he will
ne ver have
all-powerful
H.H. Haldeman or J ohn
Elu·iictunan type nl aide on
his White House staff.
" I don ' t ha vt! the same
need for a chief of stall or a
s trong power , autocra tic
Wh ite House s taff that
President Nixon fe lt ," Carter

an

SiJid .
Ci ti ng Haldeman and
Ehrliclunan - the convicted
Watergate conspirators who
were Richard Nixon's top

staff aides - as examples of

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III'IQ!I • 3 W;u er tempc r o~ •ur e
sen•nqs • l t"C coaterJ stH•I
c a O•rtnr N llh IO U9 h ac r v t1t
ename t•niSh • f am •ty Sll e
: -.ow 11r Po...,er Ftn Ar,j ltaiOr •

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elutl in&amp;les 1\ut s oots • Llir~t:
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~ namel li ntsh

arms pl u5
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:.t•.;l'l : 'r1~ r,h rn •l"l at e&amp; ore rm~•ny • uru,lue rai. k •OCI ·
BIG IO il d ~ 0 1'iheS and Stlve·~or ay

~o r a y

waHI o n roc - not me r..onom -

ste~ff

are trying to run the major

agencies nf !W~ernment," he

StiiJ.
" It is not my way of
nmning things . As you know,
President Eisenhower a lso
had a chief of stall, Sherma n
Adams, who ran things
a lmos t like a seconda ry
president. "
Sherman

Adams

was

horced to r esig n his White
Hnuse nffice when it became
known he had ;tccepted the
gift of a fur coat from a
private citizen .
Ca rter Said he prefers to
make ·•unprecedented use"
of Vice President Walter
Mondale instead of relying
wholly on While House a ides.
He sa id Mondale has
authority in foreign and
domestic &lt;\flairs "and also in
helping to manage the White
House staff that no Viee
President has ever dreamed
of having.' '

th:::al

Roth attacked
by Califano

'599 95

BEATT.4E CRUNCH on MONE'( ENERG'(
and INVENTORY! SHOPandSAVE NOW!

staffin g questi on in an
interview r e leased
Saturday .
He said some Washingtun
c ommentators
have
" deplored the fact that I don't
have a s imilar set up as was
t he cuse wh en Pre s ident

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY BEDROOM SUITE
.

what he mea nt, Ca r te r
discussed the Wh ite House

gives (1rders and commands
to the Cabinet members who

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Pecan cQior

WASHI NGTON (UP! ) HEW Sec ret ary J oseph
Cali fa no Saturday blasted
Sen: William Roth, R-Del. ;
. for holding the nation 's Sacia l
Se~urity system 11 hostage"
by attaching an unrelated
amendment to a compromise
bill bols tering the Social
·
Security fund.
Roth' s
amen dm e n t,
supp ort ed
by
Se nate
negotiators, would provide
for a $250-a-year income tax
t.:redit for students attending
colleges and voca ti onal
schools . House members of a
confer ence committee oppose
the amendment and the clash
. has blocked passage of the
la rge r
Soc ial Secu rit y
measure. " This bill now is
being held up by Sen. Roth
who is holding the viabili ty of
the Social Security system of
this country hostage for $1.27
billion ransom which, among
other things, would go to
some of the wealth iest people
in Ame rica ," Calif ann told a
news confer ence.
The secretary of Hea lth ,
Education and Welfare called
Roth's action " intolerable"
and th e am endm ent "an
absolutely incoherent way to
make educational policy in
this country."
·The blast was the strongest
the Carter administration has
leveled against an individual
senator. In the past, reprimands
were
delivered
without naming specific
offender s.

House-Senate conferees ail
but com pleted work Friday
on th e Soria ! Securit y
mea sure, a greeing to a plan
tn increase pay roll taxes over
the next 10 year s · by another
$227 billion.
Califano said the proposed
legislation would make the
Soc ial Sec urity syste m
"secure anq sound through
the. next century" and fulfill
President Carte r 's campaign
pled ges. Under current
projections, Soc ial Security's
disability fund will run out of
money by 1979 ·an d its
retireme nt fund by 1983
unless Congress arts.
House negotiators said they
oppose Roth 's amendment
because it has nothing to do
wit h Socia l Security a nd
would cost $1.3 billion
initially a nd billions more
later .
Ca lifano said Senate
leaders
be li eve
the
negotiated bill could be
revived a nd sent back to both
houses of Congress for a vote
if Roth backed off his stand.
President Carter '' very
much would like to have this
le gisla tion e nacted t hi s
year," Califano said.
But Califano, who argued
the Roth amendment would
benefit wea lthier fa milies,
warned that if Congress
approves the amendment
with the bill he would
"consider" recommending a
presidential veto.

finton County
gets CCC camp
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio Department of Naturai
Resources Office of CivUian
Conservation will open six
Civilian Conserva\ion Corps
Ca mps during the first three
months of 1978 in Sejoto,
Vinton, Fulton, CUyahoga,
Seneca a nd Muski ng um
counties.
David D. Franklyn, chief of
the DNR office, sa id that the
state agency has received
advan ~e noti ce that Ohio will
receive $3 .5 million in federal
funds for operation of the
Young Adult CCC progra m .
The Iunds will be used to set
up the s ix nonresidential
caml"'. The Seneca County
facihty will be adjacent to the
state-&lt;Jperaled Green Springs
Tree Nursery a nd the
Muskingum County camp
will be near the Zanesville
Tree Nursery.

"Engineerin~ designs ~nu
plans ar e nearmg compleh on
for two or the four residential
CCC
ca mps
in · the
Appalachian ·area of the
state," saidFranklyn.
" Bids will be accepted for
construction and renovation
of camps at Shawnee and
Zaleski state forests," he
added. Those two camps will
be fully operational later next
year .
Applications for placement
in the camps is underway
through' local Ohio Bureau of
Employment Service offices,
with t he state making final
selection of the enrollees.
The CCC program was
a uth orized by the Ohio
Genera l Assembly earlier
this year along the lines of a
federally-funded program to
employ ·
youths
in
conservation prQgrams.

th~
pri soners e&lt;press ed
·bitte rne ss that the U .S.
Embassy in Mexico City did
little to he lp them and
accused the Me xican legal
s ystem of rorruption and
brutality.
" All the stories about the
torture are real true ," said
Don ll&lt;Jwen of Hawthorne,
Calif. , a spokesman fnr the
group .
"They started with the
electric cattle prod. It 's very
effective, especial ly ,wi th cold
water and the private areas ."
''There are a nwnber still
in Mexico due strictly to the
error and ignorance of the
U.S. Embassy," said ll&lt;Jwen .
Karen Harrison, a 27-yearold Hawa\iaa prisoner, said
when she was arrested four
years ago she was tortured
for eight hours. Her jaw was
broken and her earrings
ripped from her pierced ea rs,
she said .
A U.S. Drug Enforeement
Agency r epresen t a ti ve ,
whom she identified as
Arthur Sedilo, was present
during t he torture , Mi ss
Harri s on said, and did
nothing to halt it. She also
said she was attacked by
lesbian inmates in jail.
The Americans were the
first of a t least 235 cleared for,
the prisoner swap, about 40
per cen t of the 572 America ns
imprisoned in
Mexico .
Almost all were sentenced for
narcotics offenses in an effort
by the Mexican government
to cooperate with the Nixon

admi n is t ~ ~H in n ' s
d ru g
crackdown. The group also
includes seve n com'irted or
murd e r and one plane
hijacker.
F e deral pri so n offi c ial s
said 44 or the 127 first
arrivals, 20 women and 24
men , would be freed on
parnle Tuesday morning ,
after completing phys ical
examinations and other entry
processing. Parole hearings
for others ,,- Were pri&gt;mi sed
within a week, with possible
release before the Christmas

Saturda y, r ela tives and address the rrowd .
holidays.
friends
were a llowed to m ~t
Tht! remainder will be sent
" We're delighted to be
th
e
pri
son e rs in pri vate hmne, but there a rc still
tn federa l prisons nearer
their home to\\-TIS tu uontinue room s wi thout bars or
people in Mexico who need
se rvin g t hrir
M exic~ri
barriers a t the Metropolitan your help, " ~aid the other ,
Corr e&lt;: tifl nal Cen ter, the Robin Worthingtnn .
sentences.
Jubilant friend s
a nd £ederal jail uften c:mnpared to
"Thank you Co n ~rcssman
rela ti ves were held behind a a hotel.
Stark ," she eried , drawing a
The prisoners re&lt;.:eived a cheer from the crowd for
lerwe at the airport Friday ,
waving U.S . fl ags and fish dinner nn arrival and
Rep . Fortney " Pete" StHrk ,
pla cards to greet the lir;t of , wer e allowed to sleep until
D.Calif. , who led the effort in
the returnees, 35 men, 26 brunch , the warden said .
• C11ngress fur the exchange
w t~ m e n and 18·rnonth-uld
· "ll1ere ar e a lot or people program , hnlding hearin ~.:ts at
Jennifer . Lynn, born t o left in Mexiro and I hope we which witnesses described
Bre nda Lee Ric hards . in the will continue to work to free llJrture, for ced ennf~ssions,
I..os Reyes Women's prison . · them ," said Bowen, one of ext ortion
a nd
other
two pri son e r s allowed to mistrea tment nf Americans

arrested in Mexit'o .
s tark was there to greet the
r eturn ees and read a one- ·
se nte nce message from
Pres iden t
Ca rter :
"l
a ppreciate the init iative and
strong support provided by
our Mexican fri ends for thi s
huma nitaria n art ion ."
Thr ~ m ore groups are
scheduled to ar ri ve in the
coming wee k by bus and
plane from northern Mexican
pri sons
a nd a
fourth
planeload is to be fl own !~om
Mexico Coty in Feb ruary .

Big names lined up to take
.
job as nation's No. 1 sleuth

WASHINGTON (UPI) nationall y
prominent
Attorney General Griffin Be ll people ," Havel sai d.
says he plans to give
Bell, seemingly confident
President Carter the names he already has a winner, told
nf five or six brand new a gr oup of reporters last week
candidates for FBI director he will suggest (five or six
befo re Christmas, and it
appears they will include
several nationally prominent
figures .
A Ju st ice Department
spokesman said it was safe to
speculate the acceptance of
the nomination last August by
VOL 12
federal Judge Frank J ohnson
or Al~bama had made the
FBI job appear · m ore
attrac tive
for
othe r
ca ndida tes
pr evio u s ly
unwilling to step into the
controver sies
surrou nding
BAY CITY, Mich. (UP! Ithe agency.
A fl ash fire roared t hro ug a
Johnson was forced to with·
dow ntown landmark hotel
draw his name two weeks ago
Saturday, sen din g flame s
because of health problems.
from every window and
Robert J . Ha vel, the
for cing scores of screami ng
Justiee Department's deputy
residents to leap for their
public information director,
lives in zer o temperatures .
sa id
Bell
now
is
Scores were killed or injured ,
;,accumulat in g names" to
At least 12 persons were
select a new nominee .
killed· and 60 injured as
''He 's getting some real
CANTON, Ohio (UP)) fla mes swept the four-story
more
Hep. Ra lp.h Regula , D - quality peop.le Wenonah Park Building; a
Canton, said SaturdaJO in his
com bination
hotel
and
a partment house. Another 29
weekly newsletter he ·was
" hea r tened" by Presid en t
Qwer e reported ~is~tng .
Carte r 's plan t o prevent
0 Some of the bwldmg's mor e
further damage to the U.S.
than 400 residents and guests
were trapped on upper floors
stee l industry from lo w
by U1e fast moving flames .
priced imports, but said he
Some hung from window
was re servi ng judgement
until he sees how the plan
led ges
screaming
functions .
·
desperately for help before
droppi ng to the snow and ice
"I'm not totally satisfied
with it," said Regula . " For
covered ground.
example, it does not dea l with
Oth er s , barefoo t and
By ELMER W. LAMMI
the problems associated with
wea ring only night clothing ,
WASHINGTON (UP!)
fabricated and specialty steel
rushed to the only two fire
Congress is unlikely to pass
esuapes on the structure or
products. I am reserving
Pre s ident Carte r' s energy
judgement of the efficacy of
jumped off the roof.
package in time to present it
t he Administration's plan
" People were jumping
to him for 'Christmas, Senate
until I see it functioning."
from eve ryw h ere~'~ one
Majority Leader Robert Byrd
Regula
was
among
po lice dispatcher said. " A lot
said Saturday .
congressional members · of
of the injuries were caused by
Byrd, . D-W .Va. ,
told
the "steel ca.ucUS 1 1 who met
the falls ."
reporters he still has hopes
la st week wi t h Und e r
" They 're still digging
House and Senate nagotiators
Secretary of the Treasury
oodies out," said Detective
will settle remaining major
Anthony Solomon , chairman
Peter White hours after the
differences by Christmas but
of Carter's task force on
fire broke out. "We're tr),ng
that, the date was no longer
steel.
to learn how 'ma ny are
important.
"I came away fr om the
missing . When the fir e
" I think it's important that
meeting heartened by what I
s tarted , everybody scatwe
continue to press for a
heard, " said Regula . " I feel
tered. 11
resolution Of the remainin.g
Two or the dead residents
the Administration's plan to
problems" in confer ~ n ee
preven t
the
damage ,
committees, l1e said.
currently being done by steel
" I don't think that it would
imports is a good beginning."
be possible to wrap up the
Carter's place is based on
entire package in both houses
''trigger 1 ' prices which would
before Christmas."
determine the most efficient
II action is not completed
foreign producer's cost of
on energy legislation before
making steel and to add that
Congress adjourns fpr the
cost to the import price of
year, Byrd said, it would still
steel into the United States.
have "No . 1" priority in the
By HELEN THOMAS
" If,the 'triggers' are 'set too
next session beginning Jan. UP! White Hous.e Reporter
high, they will make it easy
WASHINGTON (UP!) 19.
for American steel mills to
Th e Democratic leader President Carter says the
incr.ea&amp;e their prices without
said he was optimistic final United States has shown the
worrying about competit ion
action could be taken on Saviets it "can't be . pushed
from overseas .
Security funding around" · in st rategic a rms
uu they are too low, in all Social
de'spite the refusal of House negotitions and intends to
probability there will be more
conferees to ag r ee to a maintain equality, or even
and more ciosings of U.S.
Senate-proposed tax break s uperiority,
in nuclear
steel mills, " said Regula.
arms.
for college students.
"So, although I am enByrd also ruled out. any
Discussing foreig n a nd
couraged by the Administraretreat by the Senate in its domestic issues in an
tion's plan , I reserve final
"very strong" opposition to a interview 1 Carter
also
judgement on its ability to do
House decision to restore indica ted h e expects the
the job and solve the steel
funds for the controversi a l B- inflation rate to rise again
import
problems.
The
1 bomber.
somewhat from the lowering
program must be e!fecti vely
" I hope the Senate will trend of recent months.
monitored to make certain
stand up for its position, " he
And he said, although he
tiie desired results ate being · said.
has
no plans to du so , he
achieved."
B~rd said he would give
might eventually t ravel
Regula endorsed Carter's
"high priority" in the next personally to the Middle East
establislun.ent of a commit tee
session to Carter's tax cut if. progress toward peace
of industry, labor and
propasals.
required his perS&lt;lnal, ongovernment officials to
He said botil the president Scene efforts.
oversee the steel plan .
and Vice President Walter
The president made hJs
Mondale have ' agreed with · comments in an interview
tum that the tax cut proposal Friday with visiting editors
s hould be dealt
wit h and
broadcast
news
separately
a
nd
be
fore
directors.
The
transcript
was
TREE STOLEN
Saturday.
released
proposed
tmt
reforms.
PULLMAN, Wash . (UPI)
Discussing
the
longByrd indi cate d he has
- cliristmas tree thieves
running
negotiations
toward
to
the
idea
or
:
coo
led
have stolen a 15-foot
televising Senate debate on a second s tage Strategic
lodgepole pine, which had
Deen under study for 13 years, the Panama Canal treaties. Arms Limitation Trea ty,
at
Washington
State He said there were "technical Carter said, ''We have made
University's
Stephenson problems," inducting lighting some good progress in getting
Forestry Center . Cam pu s and the location of cameras, ba ck on the track the
police said the break·in at the and U1at the experience of the negotiatiOns with the Soviet
center's experimental tree Canadian Parliament with Union .
· " We have protected , our
!ann oce urred Friday. A televison was discouragi ng.
own
interest ; we have shown
Byrd
said
he
had
lieard
spokesman said it would be
them thai we are firm and
reports
of
"grandsta
ndi
ng
impossible to place a value on
and. pos.tur.ing ~ · b~ s.n me can'_t be pushed aro Und ."
-the-missing tree.
mem bers.

No. 45

eandidates . to President
Carter before Christmas, so
Carter can think aoo ut them
over the holida ys .
Bell said they would be
persons o£'juhnson 's stature

- "members of t he federal
judiciary, _college presidents
and grea t lawyers 1 national
fi gures with prnsccutoria l experience."
At this stage, Ha vel said ,

,._

SUNDAY, DECEMBER

Be ll does not know whether
any will accept. Bell and
Dtrlcr do not even plan to
interview them befor ehand an
entire ly
different
Continued on page D.a

~tntintl

~1.

1977

'

PAGE 1-D

•

Scores killed m flash fire·

Steel
stand
0. K.'d

·

·
.
D0 ldrum
gripping
energy

were identified as Richard
complained that s ightseers grabbed nne cr ut ch . I was
Engel, 32, and Anthony K.
coughing bla ck and spitting
blocked bridges over the
Bosco, age unknown. Eight
black. I made it t hrough
Saginaw River that linked the
m or e unidentified bo dies
Guadalcana), Hnd I made it
fire scene to the hospitals .
were pulled from the ruins by
through lhis. "
Walt Prybalski , a crippled
midaft ernoon .
An
admini strato r
at
resident or t he hote l the past
Hospitals reported t reating
three yea rs, said he barely Samaritan Hospital, where 18
aqout 60 victims. Almost lialf
victims were treated , said it
ha d tim e to grab some
were admitted .
a ppeared seven inchel;i of
clothing when he smelle9
Firemen and police waited
snow on the ground may have
smoke.
more than fo ur hours before
brl•ken the falls of so me
" I left my door elosed. got
entering the. sha ky wreckage
leapers.
out my o ld clo t hes and
to look for more .victims. By
that time portions of the roof
had collapsed.
Police estimated more than
400 persons were occupying
the 3116 rooms of the 70-yearold red brick structure when
flames er upted aoout 8 a.m.
EDT. The cause was not
innmediately determined.
The city's three major GAMBARDELLO
may have taken the city on a
hospitals instituted disaster
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
ride of his own.
pla n!j as e very available Big Apple too~ t he .roung
Instead of enjoying cileery
ambulance arou nd t his Jenkins couple or Vermont to
hotel room, Jenkins sat in •
central Michigan city was its heart when they said their . court with $2 in h is pocket
called to the scene. Private honeymoon was wrecked by a
fac ing
gra nd . larce ny
citizens picked up· dazed and 0'lmman who stole thei r car
charges . ·
frostbitten tenants a nd took and ran amok in Times
Vermont police said they
them to hospitals.
Square.
wanted Jenkins for a llegedly
"1 saw flames coming out
Normally cyniea l New
passing !1¥lre than $2,500 in
of just about e very window Yorkers rushed to shower
bad cl1ecks in Burlinb'f.On.
soon after the fire started ," them with di nne r s, sho w
And there was some question
said Bob DiCocco, manager tickets and gifts.
as to whether the couple was
of a department store acrOss
Mayor Abraha m Beame
even married .
the street from the hotel.
woman
even had them over to City
Jenk ins'
·~ rt 's
havoc
here. Hall as honorary guests and
companion, who prev iously •
Sightseers are everywhere presented them with a silver · 'identified herself as his 21and the whole downto wn area plate.
year-o ld bride, Darlene, was
is a mess. Wa ter 's all' over the
But Satw·day it appeared
not in court and detectives
place , and lhe whole area is · that 26-year-old
Jerry
said she had appa rently left
like one big icy pond. "
Je.nkins of Burlington, Vt.,
the city for parts unknown .
H os pital
o ffi c ial s
Standing m ute before Manhattan Criminal Court Judge
Mary JohnSOn Lowe, J enk ins
allowed the court to waive
extradition , and the judge
ordered him he ld in lieu of
$1,000 bail pending a hearing
Monday wh en Vermont police
were to present an arrest
warrant.
Apparently sensitive to the
peaec mossoon , he sa id, "I
Dtirin g th e five -min ute
c laims or congress ional don't anticipate any need for hearing!
Manhattan
critics that he ls giving away
me'to gn to Geneva or to go to Assistant Distr ict Attorney
too much , Corter said, "we
the Mideast to bring ebout a Bohn Vergari requested that
have to be very car eful on negotia ted settlement ...
Jenkins be held on $10,000
technicalities and on ma jor
" But if I felt sometime in bail.
strategic elements in the
the future that my personal
Judge Lowe turned him
negotiations to protect our presence was tlie dJfference down .
''For a man who has $2,
ow;n interests.
between s uccess and failure ,
"We have got to be sure obviously I would go because $1,000 is like a million ," she
that we do have an equal or I consider t his to be very said, rema nding Jenkins to
dominant posit ion on all important not onl y for the Men's House of Detention.
Beame
wa s
Mayo r
aspects
or
s trategic the Middle East but for the
deterrents, a nd I believe we world ... I would do a lmost describ~-d by "" aide as
and
ha ve that posture and I want any thing within reason it f .. surprised
to ~ sure we maintai n it.' 1 thought it was necessa ry to disappointed" at U1e latest
Discussion of the economy bring permanent peace to the turn of evc nls.
came up wh en Carter was Middle East."
Pfl.l iee in Burlington sa id
thev
cuuld not even mnfirm
asked to name his " most
On other subjects , Carter
peroonally gratifying accom- said :
th &lt;li Jenkins had t ake n out a
plishments" of · th e past
- He hopes Congress will marriage license.
If the cn ~ple wa s not
year. .
vot~ on hi s long-delayed
. "We were very pleased to energy pa ck•ge before marr ied; fraud charges could
get the economy m oving in Christmas - a prospect be lodged against the womao
th e right direction ," he said. Senate Democratic Leader for opening a joont checking
Ca rter
noted
uneni- Robert Byrd described account with Jenkins at a
ployment has dropped about I Saturday as unlikely .
Burlington
bank,
the
percent this year and added :
- Pr a i se d
C o n g re ss Vermont polit'C said.
it all began Monday, while
"Since June , the inflation effus ive ly for its overall
rate has leveled off at 4 legislative record this term, Jenkins was trying to get a
percent. I wish I could predict saying, "I think Congress has hotel room in Manhattan. As
that it is going to stay that sh own a great deal of hard th~ couple stopped for a
low. I don 't think it will. But work , dedication and courage traffic light in Times Square,
thi s shows a good response." in bringing us as far as they a 19·year-{l ld youth poked a
On the Middle ·East, he have.''
gun in Darlene's fac e, stole
their car pnd drove it at high
praised the "courage" of
- Said he be lieves th e
speed down .a Times Square
Egyptian President Anwar Senate will event ually rat ify
Sadat's solo peace initiatives th e con trove rsial Panama
s i~e w~lk., mowin g down .
pedestrians .
and S3icl he h as sent Canal treaties a nd wa rned
Secretary of State Cyrus ' th a t the
" very
good
One man was killed and 12
others injured before the car
Vance to try to mend t he re lationship" the Uni ted
r upture this has created States has with Latin
smashed into a fir e hydr&lt;lnl.
The suspect, Harvey Collins, - J
between Egypt and Syria.
Annerica could be " wiped uul
is being he ld for psychiatric
Asked whether he mig]JL overnight" jfjt docs not.
embark himse lf on s uch a
observation .

New Yorkers shower

had-luck honeymooners

U. S. position clarified
with Russia .says Carter

,

�I

0.3- The Sunday Tunes.Sen tmel , SWiday, Dec, 11,1977
[~.!- 1 tw s undd\ ltlllt'"'"'t'!ltlfh'i St uul~t' Ike~ l1

.

Fli7

•

Deed to land Is no right to waste it
....

8\ SteH H1bmgrr

D1stnrt ronsrn atutmst
G~IIIP011S
I re&lt;OOH'd
a publtr at wn r('{t.•nth th.tt
had ctmmwnt:-. " vrth llllr
thou j.:!ht and &lt;vn~ldl·ratwn
One \\rts that trf.'t's and
\Hldllfe are nnt looked Lln .1~
ticlturdl resour('('S .tm lntl!!t'r
but mM(' hkl' pr~Hiu rt ~ L)f n
naturdl resnurct.• thP sml
t gues~ thts dt.' pcnds UJXHl
~ach person s def1rut1on 11f a
natural
r l'Sll Un&lt;' ~
but
regardles~. thrst' produd s d11
d~pend upon the SOil for thctr
&lt;'XIStenre Therefore 1t ts
lot:trc~l to assume thBt a ll\
act10rls Cletnmrntal to tht' ' otl
"'tll
ultunatel~
bt.'
detrimental to forests and
Y.i\dhfe Thr co mPrse t.s true
too ''hal 1s good f or the sot!
Y. tll enhance run·~t .tnd
"tldhfe enutJrs
It

" as

mentioned

throughout the artoell' that
sotl and the nutnents tn tt are
n chc Harvestmg trees or
cro ps rem oves nutrtents
llUS IS balanced 50111(''.1. h.tt
b\ rhe \\eathermg or break-

11 f p.trt•nt IIH.IU'TI•I}
1\ trt•nt lt httt'rtdl ts tht&gt; rock
\\hlth ltcs undrr the sotl
pn1fdt• and Y.ht ch. "ht•n
tit'ld\E~d gnrs th£1 so1l abmf

dtl"!l

us pm1u: ulilr rhara(·ten-.tl(S
S.tnd.,tont' 'H'dther~ tnt u

l11.1 rst.' texturt•d Sl.' ll

shal~s

.tnd l mw~tonr "r.tthl'r mt o

fnwr trxturrd SI.Hls One pomt
Ill lflj('{ t ht•re I.S that C'rOSIOil
il!Hl illl~·ll'ldndtW111Cilt of the
Stlll st rH.s no _good to am
ctm&lt; t1 fl1~ ~utru.•nts are l0st
.md no bt.•awftts from a har·
\l'St arr gl\ m i\1urr eroston
further dN rt•ases \ 1clds ~1f
har. est until the so tlls nrt~rh

alo1w ~lll{'r t hl'rf' .tn• su
m.w\ \arwus sutl (\Hl&lt;httons
,md 1\ pt'S IS It ft.',\!'tll\,lblt• (\I
.ts~un1e that ,111 Sl..ltlr.; l'.tn br
tn•,ltt'd .mel llldrtd~l·d thr
S&lt;lllll \\ 3 \ ' Clrt a tnh
nut
PJUpt.&gt;r mana~emcnt 1 ((ll\
sr n.ttt~' " '

1s

nrtuc~ll\

trt.'dllllj.t l'dCh Still l OI1dl1hHl
.trcordmg to as produc1n r
ltmlt s to m,untam ~)r nnpnn t•
the nutnent lr H•ls and
resuurcr b&lt;ts~
Su \\hat dut•s all lh i.'
' hlston It• ad to ' Onh thts
Ont• ~t·nHatwn pusst·lh
a"'a'
and
anothu

gent"ratwn t umeth but the
t•arth abtdt'lh for£'\t'r ·
~1enlt'
Er0stun r an deplete the 1F.cdrsoastrs t 41
·mere ts and has been
nutnent le\ rls to a point that
lf'~tsldtlon rt'"rentl\ at the
no h3r. est of am t' pe can be
S1atr and nath.mal lr' r\s that
made
Fact ors other than parent "ould rnrour,kge - 1f not
pt upt•r tnn
matcnal
affect
so li mandate
sen
at
ton
of
our natural
c h a rat: te rtstt c s
The
to pog ra ph\ or the land, resources 1'hts has been a
dtmate and ttme all affect contro\crslal tssue beca use
.so1l-makmg processes to the ma.n~ landn\\m•rs feel that
extent that oHr 12 000 thr gvH'rnment ts tn 1ng to
diSttnrtJ\e soli l) pes are furn• them to t real thetr land
found on the Un oted States a rertam '&gt;\a\ 1 h1s mm not

County agent's corner
POMEROY - It s that lime of \ear v. hen farmers take a
hx1k at thetr busmess recn1ds 111 preparatwn ffl r analntng
thetr 197i trends and pt ~panng 1&lt;1 f1le 19ii mc0mt&gt; tax returns
W1lham P Stmth Area Extenswn Agent, Farm \l anagement
has the foliPY.tng mfvrmdtwn \\htLh rna) help }OU 0ut
The farmmcome ~~tx ~o u \\Ill ha\e to pa) for 197i mil\ 11 111
be cut and dnect at thos poont B1 makong appropnate sales
nr pa\ ments durmg the \\Ceks that remam In 197i, sizable tux
sen ln!!S ma' be (XISS1ble As the han est seasons dra" s to a
dose Hill ma: ha\l' lime tP fi gure hem \OU ca n sa \ e on taxes
b\ makmg Sfi!TIE" mcome adJUStments The objectl\e should be
to pre\ent Y.lde fiuctuatwns m taxable lflUltiH' frtlm \E'al to
\ear

Ntn\ ts an e xcellent time to s1t dov;n wtth )Our records
and make a rareful estima te of )OUr probable mcnme for the

\ear · ad\ tses Mr Smtth Compare this mcome '~ 1th previous
)ears and a nurtpat ed mcnme tn futur e }ears 1f pnssablr
1f 1977 sesttmatt&gt;d net fa rm mcorne ts lower than average,
thmk about the fn\lo\\1n g tvpe npttons to mcrease tnl' Ome to at
least rn\ er current deprec tatl nn allmo,;able deduct\11ns and
t!xemp uons 1 1 ) Make addittona l ll \ est11ck sale~ bef ut e the end
rf the \ ear Se ll snme 0f those calves now rather than tn
Januan Cull f1 om the herd no\\ rather tha n later Sell that
exira ha' before December 3\ 12j Col\ecl mone) n\\ ed )OU
before the year ends ! 3) Postpone tradi ng machmer) until
after December 31 Ma ke arrangernenLS to lr• n r r Prll--.,:&gt;r "

11111111111 111111111111111'1 '1 1111111111

auri·

facts

~
•• #"

It takes a lo t of soybeans to
build a Datsun
Amencan
so,'bearrs Although Russta
see ms to get all the
publiC ty the number one
cus tomer for the Amen c an
export market 1s bY far
Japan An d not jUSt for
soybeans Last year the
Land of the R1srng Sun was
number one 1n purchases of
feed grams cotton tobacco
and ltvestock product s as
well as soybeans Just how
tmportant IS number one,
For each of the past three
yea rs p u rcha ses
have
ranged from three to thr ee
and a half b II ton dollars
Or n terms of acreage
they bought the product1on
of IJ md l 10n Amencan
acres
thai s about the
same as all the crop land 1n
th e three West Coast
states
And
cons1dermg
cur rent buy ng protections
th e best customer IS gomg
to become even beller
good news for the world s
the
be s t producer
AmPncan farmer

FULIDN-THOMPSON
TRACTOR SALES
Spnng A 'lie
Pomeroy , Oh10

111111111 iii Ill' 1!11111111! Ill! I1lllllll

bt• \\hat tht' \ \\,lilt lo d11 \\lfh
thmr J,md
Thl' argument IS 1111 t ,,st• of
th• [,onm•r 0 I b.ou~:ht the
l.mtl I pa\ t.Jxes on 1t I
lUiltltll the deed I dest•n•e I n
be d\I L
n,rd tu treat nn J.md
arn " "' I \\ant to Thts 1 ~ 1m
rtght (lr 0\\ nrrshtp ·
Our lrgLslatur s t:tJntend
th.tt PXl't'SSI\ (' C rO~tOn IS R
problem to soclet}
a.s a
\\hole Hat her th.m .1 rtt::ht of
O\\twrshtp c1 fc1rme1 h.ts a
n~ht tll ntan.lgt• the l.~nd to
\\hlch he controls the detd
Titt' bas1c concept 1st hc~t land
bet" ren the Atlant ll C~nd
Pac1hc Oceans os prop&lt;&gt;l1) uf
the Umted States, and John
Dol'. John Smoth, ctt , bu1 the
pm liege of dCt mg as
caretakers or the land that
they bu\ llte) h&lt;~\e the n~ht
to deradt' "hat tht•v do "'tth
the land so long as 1t 1s nut
ad\ erse \y affecting the
common
\HII be mg
or
soc oct' nor depletmg the
natural resource base for
future generatrons
lromrally. a man feels that

BJ J"hn C Ron•
Ext Agr nt, Agru·ulturf'

feed and fuel btlls ca rr\' r\\ er until J:.muan t41 St1ck \\ 1th
straight \me deprec1atwfl &lt;in am ne"" t&gt;qmpment purchases
Don t elmm thr extra f1rst )ear depret:ILitwn
On the other h,md, tf 1977 s prnJetted falllltnrome pteture
ts bener than d\ crage ' uu slwuld ~.:om:ilde r so me t)f these
altern~tt t vrs ( 1 ) Purchase pamt shop ton}s, fe nce fertt ltzer
set•d co1n supplement feed etc before Det ember 31 121
Trade [('r new or u.srd E'qmpment nn" tr \ 11u "til need lt
am\\a\ -n1thm the next ~ea1 Consider takmg dddtttonal fn st \CM deprecmt wn And don 1 forget the 10 pctt:ent 111\ estmcnt
Ll t'lht
'
fct x plt~nmng ts unp11rtant e\en 111 a year " hen there ha\e
been ~et backs m pnces or \lelds and }nu stand nn cha nce nf
pa~ mg am ancmne tdx , Sm1th emphastze!!i hl nummtze
taxes over the long run \'hen f1hn g on the cash basts sales and
expenses must be sluftt&gt;d ~o that taxdble mct)me ts al\\ a)s
sufftc1ent tr cn, er all mdt\1dual exempt tnns .md per,snnal
deductions If \ nu can't pldn taxable tnco me to rover all
exemptions and deductwns annuall;, they are lost fore' er
belcJuse the) ca n't ~earned o \ er from Pne vea r t0 the next
Thmk taxes as ) ou make bus mess dec1stons thrnughout
the) eat aml -espectallv the last few months. Smtth advtse s
PractiCclll) all chances to lm\ er tax habtht) are gom: when the
ne\\ \Cat a1n ves And, your tax consu ltant ca n onl) \l. orj( w1th
ctertsH n.s \ ou l1ave made durmg the \ear

buj\ng lund fur $3,000 pl'r
ht&gt; has more right to full
control th~n lund ooug ht for
$200 p&lt;&gt;r arrc .~\so hlghrr
taxation h•nds to be rt'gardt' d
as an im t•nth t.• for mor&lt;'
absolutr control
Altuall) m or~ doll.trs
tmohed tiOl\ means a lar~er
tn\estment made to tht s n~ht
or 111clllagtng the land notlun~
1nore Wouldn't we ft•t•l
Slt!;!htcd tf tht' lndwns "ho
bought entire terntones f{,t
t"o horses and a strmg of
beads had depleted or rumcd
the soll\o !he extent th,lt •e •
• ere al\ at ~he peak or
stan atwn. scra pt ng the
ground for ever) edob\e
parcel " e could £tnd "
HoY. do we JUSt lh fannmg
land \o death, to tr) to make
more ret urns on the m·
'est mt&gt;nt" HoY. \\Ill our
great gran dchildren thmk of
us or the) are all hvmg Joke
the people uf lnd1a or Afma
because we plowed hollsode
land or polluted all our •ater
reserves" Hov. do \\ £! bU\ that
n ght woth a deed to property '
Tius recent pho\osoph) on
legislative control IS co n·
troverstal , pnmanl} because
It sa ne&lt;n way of thmkmg It s
not stmtlar to the old concept
or fencing your prope r!) to
tsolate yourself from the rest
or the neoghbors and doong
as \ OU dam ~el\ please"
As the \egos\auve proposa ls
no\\ s1t. co ntrol or en·
forcement of proper eroston
control w111 only be mandated
where excessl\'1:' depletion of
a resource base IS occurrtng
You wouldn t have to sell
) our hogs and buy daor)
cattle You won't have to stop
ra1smg corn or SO) beans and
ra1se hay or plant trees You
rna} have t o mm1mum till or
contour strtp - crop or move
the feedlot from the stream
but what os wrong With
conservmg our· natural
resource quahty for th o
future well beon g of our
ch oldren'
b)

Df'rt'

Boyd A Ruth
Soli Consenatton Sen tee
POMEROY - Her e are a few helpful
hmts that Chuck Auerbach of the Athens
Sool &amp; Water Conservation Dostroct on·
duded tn his recent conservatiOn news~
letter Thought ) OU moght be onterested '
WHY MANAGE YOUR WOODS ' Higher quahty tunber sooner, Posts and
poles for sale or home use, Utohty IWJtber
at one·thtrd the cost, F1rewood for sale or
home use Increased recreatiOn value,
Excellent ~•ldhfe habotat, Increased nut
and sap productiOn, Better sotl and water
protectoon, Bog tax savongs through Ohoo's
Forest Tax laws, Cost share ass1stanre
through the ASCS Office
WOODLAND EROSIOI' CONTROl. Avotd workin~ durtng wet seaRnn •m ~(1! 1 '"
B)

By John Cooper
Soli Cons Serv1ce
PT PLEASANT - Con·
se rvat1on work mv ol vtn g
ea rthmovmg has ground to a
slow halt becau se or th~

lay of the land
v. eat her There are several

earthmoving practoces partly
completed but landowners
are wa1t1ng for better
weather to complete them
Two of these mclude the pond
to be used for nothern poke
rea rtng by the West Vorgm1a
Departm en t of Natural

Reso urces on R1vcrs1de Golf
Co urse prop erty Several
thtngs '.~.ere mvolved 10 the
constructiOn nf thas pond
onc\udong the mstallatoon or
h\ o wooden bndges across &lt;1
swale and the onsta \lauon or
some large 30 mch pope , part
of which IS on the Frank
Hendrickson property Thos
same stze ptpe was mstalled
under a dam, but the dam has
not been completed because
of the mclement weather
Another project on whoch
work has been halted os on the
Ed1th McDanoel fann Thos
tmolves the constructton of
an ammal waste lagoon tn be
used tn connection with the
McDanoe\ slaughterhouse A
doversoon dnch ommedoately
above the lagoon has been
partl) completed and a
waterway to ca rry water
away from the dotch has

Helping you succml
is our only concern.
MF 235 DIESEL

I

MF245 DIESEL .................... 6 SPEED
MF 265 DIESEL. ................. 8 SPEED
MF 1085 DIESEL
We're over stoc ked and the se must be sold
Come on on and save.

FULIDN-THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
Spnng Ave

Pomeroy, 0.
I

The Land Bank was established 60 years ago w1th
onego at 1n m1nd - to proVIde a spec1al zed type ol
loan Ia tiered to !he needs
or farmers
Over the years genera
I tons ol farmers have come
to depend on the Land
Bank So today as yester·
day we offer long term
agrtcu•tural cred1t wtth
fl ex, bte repayment plans
When bu1ld1ng for the
next generatron as we ll as
the present see your local
Land Bank Assocta!lon

OA~

"1977
"
"
'"

DISCOUNT PR.ICE

'.:!6 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille ........ ........... 7900
1

• Red wtth white v my l roof wh1te leather lntenor, full
power and factory air full ster eo cru •se con trol T&amp; T
wheel

Ltght blue.

blu e vmyl roof de elegance lntenor , full
power and arr AM FM Stereo w1th tape T&amp; T steenng
wheel

Now

"'F ull power factory a1r
stereo 3:2 000 m les

T&amp; T whe~l

"

leather seats

lJ CadillaC Coupe DeVille

'76 CHEVY
TRUCK

SUPER
BEERE
$2195

water

Pomeroy Mason Brrdge
(304) 773 5177

l1me sl one and colc1um
chlo1' 1de and cak1um bnne f or
dust con trol and spec1ol muong
soh for formers b ce ls101 SoH
Work s Mo•n Street

Pome ro y

Oh10 or phone 992 3891

I

CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
tra1ler $450 Phone t61&lt;4} 698
~2_
'10_ _ _

ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th all ol
J
tochments L1k e new oskmg
12250
Phone (604 ) 698 32'10~
1

1I) Good Refrogerator $150
'Jpnght Freezer

S225

Refngerator
$1:15
I, lancaster Cham Saw $75

Pomeroy Landmark

•

I

I

MEIGS EQUIPMENT":
.
COMPANY
o:

l'!

RUGt.
WALL Hongmgs
and
afgans N• ce tor Chnstmos
Rea sonable Coli 992 2214

FITZPATRICK Orchards

Slat e Route 689
Phone
\'\ d~ ' !&gt; v 1II e ,¢;_9
6 _.:.
37_8;._5.:..-,-c----:

I

1976 FORD F 250 Custom 17 50 x
14 00 t1res wtnch Only l-4 000
m1 Headers CO Tope deck

l

Over $3 000 m e)(tros Senous
only after 12 noon
I
696 0072 $6 BOO
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES PI Plea

I

calls

.I

son! W Vo bes1de Heck s
197.3 Braodmo re 14 x 64

I

2

bedroom

~ 1973Donan 14 •602bedloom
t 1972 Vlclor1011 14 x 67 3 bedroom

t
}

2 both

1972 CoYentry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
"""T9e9 Statesman 12 x 60 2

bedroom
Any lengths or any
amount
Del1~o~ered or may
p1ckup Phone949 2so.:_ __ _

~WOOD

•

ov

•

Z:

...FIREWOOD

spill and del1 vered

• $45 o cord All hardwood
: 843 2933
:l:HRISTMAS TREES for sole M&lt;Jtn
•

Street Rutland

-

'"FOR SALE

:
-

1968

P~ekup $350
985 4240

1

h

Chevrolet

V1ctor A Boh r

---Phone

"""HAY
FOR
sole
: 614 667 38~-- - -:t.ove HOUSE flowen? Coli
• 742 2430 All kmds from 50 ~
:
up Ntce for Chnstmos
~ENS INSULATED boo!S $26 9S

-,
~

!""'
'-

~

r:':
Gallipolis, Ohio

New Co -Op · water and
softeners, model VC SV I.
Only 1279 95
Save $50 00 on a new
Hotpolnt Refngerator
1 New 20 cub1c ft Chest
Freeter
S25 00 D1scount
I Good Used Hotpotnt

APPLES

CENTRAL SOYA
ol Ohio, Inc.,

Landmark
&amp; condthon your
and Co-op water

FOR SALE

STOP BY AND SEE MARK OR ','
TRACY FOR A SUPER DEAL
" '
TOMORROW I

CALCIUM CHLORIDE •••••••••• ~~.~... •&amp;.25

V 8 auto trans

softener, Model UC SV I
Only '279.95
Let us test your water Free

COAL

'"

V 8 PS

~~

auto tran s

P S

rad 1o

~

Buster Brown and Strtde R1te
ch1ldren s shoes $5 88 Boy s
rubber msuloted boots $7 95 &amp;
$8 95 Boys Western boots
Foetor( Outlet Sl ore
Save
money here Bodey s M1d

dleport

=19770o0Ge-

,...
...

Auto
9•9 21lll0

,.,.. ___

.
•:

t;--n Club Cab
Prt ced reasonably
3•

- - - --

,..PIGS $30 604378 6300

I'"

-

~

eo

FOR THE BEST IN FURN ITURE
UPHOL STERING F•ee Esl1mOies
P1ck up and delivery se r ~ 1 ce
coli Mowrey s Upholstery Pt
Pleasant W Vo 675 4154
UGHT WEIGHT CHIMNEY BLOCK
Bx l3 8x8 Galltpolls Block
446 2783

~

w

~

NEW FURNITURE SA LE Bemco
Tw 11 Sels moi tr es5 and boll
spnng
S 119 95
Maple or
walnu t hn1 sh bed'&gt; $69 95 AI
Corbm and Snyder Furn1ture
955 Second Avenue Goll!pol '&gt;
0
HAV FOR SALE by the bole or
truc kl oad
Col\
256 b535
or4 46 0307
PENDElTON RE BUilT BAlTERlES
$15
and exchange
Cal l
388 8546
USED FURN !TURE D1net1e .. ~t cod
sprmgs Cor b1tl and Snyder Fur
nilu r e
955 Second Ave
Goll,pol•s 0

HAWKS INS AGENCY
FOR ALL YOUR lNSUHANCE
NEEDS call 446 2300
FRE SH FRU l l BA SKETS BY ORDER
Wdl del1ver Ph 256 1496 alter
3 30p m
FIREWOOD $2 5 o p1 ckup load
del vered Coli 367 063q
USED FURNITURE
7 PC WOOD DINETlE SET BUFFET
&amp; HUTCH 2 LIVING ROOM
CHAIRS
2 liVING ROOM
SUITES CHEST OF DRAWERS
COUCH lARGE METAL CHINA
CABINET 3 PC END 1ABL E SET
SET OF BOX SPRINGS &amp; MAT
lRESS RICES FURN 854 SEC
446 9523
HIGLEY S Gd t Shop
5 000
ca1alogued 1tems upper Sta te
Rt 7 4.46 0002

-

CHR ISTMAS TREES 6 kmd s fres hly
&lt;ut 3 kmds ba lled trees ln
dtv1duolly pme togg ed Sturdy
lree stand s On lot bes 1de
Hec~ s rr e.t Ple asant So 110 s
Forest
(Cooper s Chnstmm Tree Form )

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

1977 SUZUKI
RM 125
B
367 0586
Motocrosser extras excellent
PHONE 44 6 4999
cond1 t1on 99:2 3082
FIREWO 0__o
_ _ _
WILL PAV cosh for guns go kor ts
mm • and motorcycles or what
have you See od under wonted
section F1le s 992 7494

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

GOOD USED cho1n saws or wdl
trade lor what ho..,.e ~ou F,fe s
992 74.c9....4'--cDIXIE FOUR burner gos range
See through, oven door $15
Con be seen ot 121 7th A11e
M1ddleport Ohto

- -------

ROBYN C.B.
sx 007
$79.95
Comptete
accessones
layaway for

--------

REFRIGERATORS WASHERS AND
ORVERS WRINGER WA SHERS
RANGES
All 5010 WITH
GUARANTEE WE ALSO SER
VICE APPliANCES
SKAGGS
APPLIANCES
09 0B EASTERN
AVE Coli 446 7398
DECEMBER
SAlE
10 '% OFF
EV ERYTHING (S TOREWIDE)
RICES FURNITURE
BS4 SE
COND CALL .446 q523

-FRANKLIN

-----FIREPLACE

Call

44b 0014

BEFORE CHRISTMAS SPECIAL SAlE
2 lrod•t•onal so fa w1th match mg
cha trs $275 each su•te Al so 2
noughy de reclmer s 1 red l
block
$100
each
Call
M ow re y s
Furrulure
and
Uphols termg lor more mlarma
tton 675 4154

.

w1th
' all
Yes, we wtll

Chnstmas

FIREWOOD
seasoned hard
woods spht ond delivered
742 2031
•
c0 LlECfoR BOTTLES se al s un
Jack W Carsey , Mgr .
broken Call (304) 773 5651
~
Phone 992 2181
Mason W Vo

Pomeroy Landmark '

'fla-

-~ -

PORTABLE
DISHWASHER and
rocker redtner Call 367 0515
ofler 5pm

--

~

- --

10 HEAD OF Steer welghmg 15 FT CHEST TYPE FRtEzEc Call
4 500 lbs 5 head ol ml:o:ed
r&gt;
446 7267
Hereford Cows 1959 lion GMC
w1th 52 sqo actual
m1les :2 HORSE TRAILER $375 2 saddle
843 2353
horses gentle Pony 53 1nches
1
ElECTRIC_ c_o_ROo7 g_o_n Sa""m~ a-;
~ a~ 3 ~ ~ 9-•_
new a good Chr1stmas pre ROVAC PORT ABLE TYPEWRITER
sent 992 7883 aher 5 pm
conolse stereo (new motor)
eus:..~th;a7thof~ 1 oids
compact stereo used b w par
table TV New 45 lb bow and 3
1nlo bed and wrap around cur
toms AM FM stereo cgssette
&lt;;teet lip arrows slarter set of
goll dubs Call446 4787
p oyer Cor "•o s 04 000 m •Oe•
' under factory warrenty Ex ADMIRAL color TV con5-o le $250
stJII
cellenl condthon Pnce $4 999
Elec::tronphoot e stero $65 Call
Ca1L9925933
367 00 70

vmyl

TRUCK l OAD OF FIREWOOD Coli
245 SBS5
WI LL DELIVER

'2495

~

1975 DODGE

1975 BUICK

W

Ph

FORD 48 I ran t mtd snow scr aper
blade 1Jre cho ns and Polommo
quarter her~ ~11446 2~03
1973 SUSUKl 400 TS good cond1
ho n $330 Collo446 404 2

-

FIREWOOD Call 367 7 187

55 000 BTU GAS HEATER ex tra
good Coi~J6.?_ 7~48

p

Dart Slan t 6 auto
a tr Only

'3495

'2695

1974 BUICK

1974 BUICK

s

Appolo 1 d r
au to
nice small car

1974 BUICK
P S

Lesa bre 'J dr HT at r
mileage n1ce

PB

•2995

1973 INT.

1972 CHEV.

1971 BUICK

p S

'2295

~
a

'3895

'2195

1200 P1ckup au to.
P B low mtleage

!

Lesabr e Cusl, 4 dr HT
vmyl lop a 1r super sharp U

'3995

Monte Carlo a rea l ntce 72
model

Rtv1era a1 r
low m ileage

'2395

~ow '6

i

w
w

~

local owner

W
~

~

'1695

W

~

w

'

500 E. MAIN

992-2174 ·

POMEROY. OHIO

~
~

~ !:=&lt; ';;;:! ~ ~ !:=&lt; !;::&lt; ~ ~~""'" l!&lt;::t~ ~~:£&lt;;:&lt;I&lt;:&lt; li&lt;::t l!&lt;::t !&lt;:&lt;""'~I'&lt;&gt;&lt; I&lt;::&lt;=&gt;&lt;:&lt;~-~ 1'&lt;:0&gt;&lt;::&lt;=!""= ~ ~'&lt;::&lt;"" -~l w

SEE THE

IBEST BUYS I
USED CAR SAVINGS
1977 Chevrolet Impala $5495
4 Dr 11 000 miles by careful owner Beautiful whtte
ove r dark red 1 n1sh 305 V 8 automatic P S P B . atr
condthoned spare ne~ er used Showroom clean Save

1977 Monte Carlo •••••• $6100

'78 DODGES

-~~
Large Selection of '78 Dodge
Cars and Trucks In Stock.
See them today •••

Red w dh whtte vmy l top carefu lly dr1ven &amp; loaded

w t h every opt1on mc atr tilt wheel speed &amp; cru1se
full power Co car never tttl ed

1975 Ford Torino
4 Dr
dark green ftntsh blk v myl tr1m JSl V 8
automaftc P S P B, wheel covers radto local 1
owner

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE
GALLI POLIS, 0.

COURT &amp; THIRD

1975 Malibu Cpe ••• ~:•• ~2995
V 8 engtne au tomatte P S P 8 , radto stlver blk•
vmy l roof less than 29 000 m1tes by on e local owner

TRUCKS

1975 Chevy 60

Series.~4395

2 Ton 102 cab to axle extra good 825)(20 t•res 2 speed
15 00 0 lb R ax le 292 cu 1n 6 cy l

1974 Chev. 8' Fleetside $3495
Fleetstde Cheyenne cab full chrome mlag s R step
bumper 454 engtne aulomat1 c power steenng &amp;
brak es ra lly wheels atr condd ton color wh1te, real
sharp

1974 Scout 11 •••••.••••• $2895
Travel lop, 258 cu rn 6 cy l engme auto tran s
ne w t tr es radto, 2 wheel dr1 ve

l 1ke

1971 Ford Crew Cab •.•s1395
j"

Ton H duty wheels &amp; t1res , d speed tran s

1969 lnternational ••••••s1500
Loads tar 1800 Tandem drtve axle V 8

.

'4995

PB

--~

FIREWOOD
388 8470

i

~

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

""'•::o"srs AiL-s' Es

FARM FE''N"c:-::
E
z
over 6 000 to choose from
NEW \UI:.A one row corn p1cker
$1 99 and up sh ngles $14 95
excellent
$399
Rem1ngton
per sq
Anderson wtndows
11 48 auto 12 go 30 full ex
sluds o ther bu1ldmg rnoten ol
ce llent $135 Anl1que W1n
Open dody 9 7 Franks Bargom
chester brass scope ond
Center R! 160 Porter Oh1o
mounts
~ery
good
$75
GRAIN FED FREEZER BEE F Ph
742 2359
446 0760
NEW HONDA ZSO mmt btke
HORSES FOR SALE R1dmg horses
9922514
work horses pon 1es and lock
TABLE LAMPS bar stools lhrow
of ott ~tnds Call367 7533
rugs
smoker stands
dog
bonks and macrame gloss COAL AND LIMESTONE del1ver ed
swan!!. and f 1gur mes Phone
Co~!__!la~ d Vaugh~n ?t245 5:._09
992 2598
FIREWOOD $25 p1ckup load

4 spee d extra clean

Don't forget you owe ~ to yourself to check with us before you buy any car, ~
w
new or used. We can save you money. We are the Friend~ Dealer. See or call w
one of these friend~ salesmen: J. D. Story, Ray Dougtas or Bill Nelson
~

~

GOOD USED
Upnght Freezer s and sma ll chest
freezer washers 2 bedroom
su1!es des~~ 1 mople posler
bed dryers ranges bedroom
su1tes beds chests dressers
tables lamps cha•rs oiher
1tems book case call 446 0322
Monday lhru fndQy 9 to 8 p m
Soturdoy 9 to 5 p m 3 mt out
Bulovdle Rd

1 cyl
car

FREE TURKEY WITH ANY PURCHASE OF
A NEW OR USED CAR.

~

~

Brougham

Electn c 4 dr H T Th 1s car
has al l the good 1es

'3995

~

Middleport 0

LAYNE S NEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
NEW
Solo cho1r roc~e r otto man 3
tables $500 Bedroom su tle
nople or p1ne ' $150 30 elec
1oc r onges 5200 Baby bed s
$65 Baby bed mallreHes $20
Bedroom su1te $300 wh1te
map le or p1ne 5250 Medilerro
neon sofa and l o~e se al $32 5
Ear Am solo &amp; {hair $300 Lo'J e
seal $150 modern sofa cho•r
lov eseot $275 solo ped w11h
motchmg cho1r $1 50 Rec l•hers
$100 and up Table s Coffee
oak He:o:ogon maple or pm e
$60 ea ch Roc~er $55 maple or
p1ne table 4 cho~rs $225 Hutch
$275 7 pc Dmelte $109 5 pc
Dmette $55 00 Bunk beds com
p/ele $150 chest of drawer $38
Queen stze molfress &amp; bo x spr
mgs set $130 Reg or lw1n $60

Valtan t
top a1 r

•3995

~ Grand Prix Thtsone ex tra
ntce ca r

See Pat Htll Rocky Hupp or Darrell Dodnll
For A Good Deal on a New or U.. "d Vehtcle
Open Evenmgs ftl6 oo except
Thursday and Saturday Closed Sunday

Al l TYPES ol bu1ld mg matenols
block br ck sewer p1pes w n
dow~__.. lmtel s
ej{
Claude
W nters R1o Grande 0 Phone
245 5 121 alter 5

Van V 8 au t o P S
Th ts IS one sharp van

a

radro aux fu el

local owner

992 2t96

1-1 Ton auto
P 5, P B
a1r cru t!ioe hi! wheel

1975 PLYMOUlll

~ 1974 PONTIAC

loca~ owner Sharp

P B

'3295

W BlOO

1971 FORD RACHERO SQUIRE. .......... '1395

HONDA XL 100 e:o:c co 11d low
m1leage
Call 446 101 9 or
446 378:2

Clifton
Auto Sales

Three 9 ft. 990 Mower.COnditioneiS
One 241 Bigroll Baler
Two 315 6 Ton Wagons
One Glencoe "Soil Saver"

80 LB.............................•2.85

155 W B
tank

~

WP B

clean

3 speed tran s one

6 cyl

CHRISTMAS
SPECIAL
SARAH
MOSH IER S ORIGINAL DE SIGN
COOKIE STAMPS AVAILABlE
AT MCKNIGHT DAVIES HARD
WARE 43 COURT ST

One 7 ft 990 Mower.conditioner

•"

auto trans

!

1976 AMC PACER
Auto
P S P B
crUl~e

~ 1975 DODGE

'

P S P B radto exc clean One local

1974 FORD F·100. ......................... '2695

RAV S USED FURN ITURE
ADDISON OHIO
CAL L 367 0637
70 000 BTU gas heater fvel 011
hf!ater bathroom healer
3
burnar gas hoi pla1e Moylog
wnnger wo!&gt;oher eleCIIIC dryer
chest dresser
po!lery and
glassware Open 9om to 6pm

$3495

'
••t,

RID OF THE ICE. ••

radto local owner

IJALOWIN fun mach ne eleclnc
organ Has rythm sec t. on Ho ~e
ms truc. llons 10 learn to ploy
Perfect ca nd1110n S750 Call
446 l30q

TON

1f2

Cub Cadets · All Sizes • Many At1achments '

25 LB.............................•1.35

NOlo"&lt; '2~

FOUR BICYClES 1n good shape
Small ndmg John Deere It actor
and tra der tor small ch ld New
telescope Call 446 1365

Located on W Va Sode

'

V 8 auto trans
owner

local

1976 CHEV. VEGA ~

1976 GMC

'4795

U Lo cal owner

AN THOMPSON FORD

(

&gt;V O

~

1974 CHEV. C-10 .. ....... ......... ........ '2695

"You'll like Our Ouahty Way
"'
Of Dcing Busmess"
'~92 5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Eve"ongs T•l6 :0"- T·IS p m SaL

One Farmall Cub (15 H.P.)

Phone
992-2176

auto tr ans

~

~------~~----~---+--~--~--~----~--w

W D svspens ton local

·::Karr &amp; Van Zandt

•~

Pomeroy,

4

1974 FORD F-100 SUPER CAB ........... '2795

One 284 Tractor, (28 H.P.)

Thord St.

J ~peed tr ans

vt nyl top a1r

~

1974 FORD F·100 ................ ......... '2795

,,~

"

rad o lutone pam! more

_See one of these courteous salesmen . Pelt
" 13urns, Marvm Keebauqh or George Harns

Orie 986 Tractor (105 H.P.)

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE!

P B

1 Or
car

71

1975 FORD F-100..................... ..... '3195

6 cyl

..'74 VOLKSWAGEN

One 464-Diesel Tractor (45 H.P.)

SJBO O

V a PS
owner

V 8 P B

'590C

Full power a1r ster eo

Here are only a few of the many barga•'n
olems

One 464 Gas Tractor (46 H.P .)

Wos

P S, P B

~

A nice car for Christmas.

1977 CHEV. IMPALA

ti

1975 FORD F·25o .......................... '3195

Was SR900 NOW 17900

" 75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille wa s s6aoo

auto tran s

owner

W

No payment until Feb. 1978

~

1975 FORD F·100 .......................... '3395
v8

you can all enjo; -

~

6 cy l auto trans P S • P B radto slld 1ng back glass
cab l 1ght s one owner ex clean

~

Give the Family a present

~

I cy l 5 speed trans, rad10 exc condtl on Le!:&gt;S than
70 000 miles

one

w

w
w
w
w
w

~

1976 FORD f·150 ........ ........ .......... '3695

_ Bronze tan , vmyl roof leather lnfer JOr. tull power and
.. air cru •se control AM F M ster eo taoe

~

~
~
~

1976 FORD COURIER .. ... ................ '3295

·.-:.11 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille, ............... 110,000

,: 76 CadillaC Sed. DeVille

~
~
~
~
~

.....--·-~~~

NOW'S YOUR nME TO BUY
' '

Meigs Equipment Company is having
a farm equipment and Lawn &amp;
" 1977.
Garden Sale through Dec. 31,

One 674-D Row Crop Tractor (62 H.P.)
One 574-D Row Crop Tractor (52 H.P.)

THOM ~SON FORD

USED TRUCK

SELL-DOWN

"'

0&lt;-;

10 LB................................ 75'

A thl•ught for the day
Ge1 man-Arneracan
author
Tllnmas
Mann
sa1d ,
'"'Opmwn s cannot surv1Ve- tf
1 ne has no chante to faght fm
them

r~~~~~~~~~~-~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~-~~~

"

Wheat crop
•
m
'77 adds
to surplus

SAFE-T-SALT

In 1953 Maj Charles
Yeaeer new a Bell X·IA jet
research plane more than 2 12 tunes the speed of SOW!d
In 1975, Sara Jane Moore
saod she wollfully troed 1o
assassmate President Ford
and asked a San Franctsco
cnurt to accept her gUilty
plea

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

"

3

farmers produ l'lwn costs
t rails and dtsturbed areas bctort: munng Tile ne\\ report reaffirmed
out leave protect ive stnps between \4at er ea r her predtct wns that
courses and roads sk1d trails, or dosturbed farmers have produced theor
areas seed grasses on \andmg to contro1 thord strmght "heat crop of
erosion and to mamtam m open cond1t lons 0 , er 2 billiOn bushels the
for future use a'j'i wtldhfe habotat
thord biggest on hiStory to go
For free techmcal asststance on wood \\tth a record ~ 367 btlhnn
lands or handout materoal on woodland bushel em n harvest
management , contact local Sml and Water Tho crop report estomated
ConservatiOn Dostr!ct Ofhces In Meogs 1977 wonter wheat production
County, ca11992-ll641 or wrote to Metgs Sml at 1 527 btlhon bushels
and Water Conservation Dostroct, Box 432, compared woth a prevoous
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769 Our serv1ces are forecast of 1 529 bilhon
avaolab\e \\Othout dtscromonauon for an) bushels and a revtsed 1976
non ment reason such as race, color, estimate of 1 560 blll\Cin
rehgton, sex, marital status, nattonal
ongm, poht1cs, physocal handtcap, age, or
membershtp or non-membershtp tn any
orgamzatiOn
HEARINGS SET
WASHINGTON - Sen
John Glenn, on Tuesday and
constructoon of a well Both of Wednesday !December 14-15)
these were water con· will chaor Intergovernmental
part!) been completed Thos servat1on proJects · to ass tst Relatoons Subcommottee
job has been left m such a woth lt.estock waterong
IIGR! hearongs on the
Mr Crank cleaned out and growmg national problem or
shape that woth a re" days of
dry weather the \\ ork could rebudt a pond that had been arson Earlier tht s year
constructed 2!; or so years
be resumed
Glenn Introduced S 1882, the
RECENTLY WE looked at ago He reshaped the fol\ on Arson Contro l Asststance
addotton to cleanmg out or the
another project that luck oly
Act, that would requtre the
basm area, and \aod ne~
has been fm oshed Thos os on
FBI to categome arson as a
the B&amp;B Fa rm a nd consosts of water hne to a watenng maJor ("Part 1" ) cnme and
a dtverston and waterway trough below the (lQnd He authome LEAA to dovert
above a n ammal waste recently completetl seedmg funds to antt·arson efforts on
lagoon at the daor) farm All and mulchmg of the crotocal the local level
the earthmovong has been ex cava ted a rea
THE DISTRICT trencher
done on thos project It has
onstalled
1,544 L F of 4-mch
been seeded a nd 1s m the
clay
ttle
on
the Stanley Staats
process of bemg mulched
farm
A
random
system woth
Some coarse rock was placed
DEMOCRATS TO MEET
a
n
mterceptor
latera
l was
at the lo" er end of the
ATHENS - Tho lOth
m~t alled Mr Staats a nd hos
water\\ ay to prevent eroston
Co ngressiOnal Dostnct,
TM other project5 thai son, Max , operate a daory Democrat Actton Commottee
have been completed are on farm m the Broad Run os rtreetmg December 14 at
the Jack Crank farm and the Commumty Some of his Umvers1ty Inn , Athens
Robert Thomas farm The neoghbors gathered •n to help Dmner ts 6 to 7 30 p m ,
Albert Thompson, a fellow
Crank project was a pond remeetmg, 8 p m Program,
co nstruc ti on whale th e da~ryman , Charles Zorkle, a round table diSCUSSion
netghborwg farmer, and
Thom as project wa s the
Kevon Roush of Rood &amp; Son
farms , assisted Max and hos
father woth their pruject
GET
WE ,\RE extremely sorry
to hear of an acctdent on
whoch Torres Wo\hamson, a
fanner at Southside, \\a s
mvolved He lost part of hos
hand on a corn pocker and os
now recuperatmg on Holzer
Medocal Center

'"\h lunoted traffocabohty KeeR sjud trao\s
and road grades less than 10 percent If
posstble 1 except for short dast ances Y&lt;hen
~ecess ar} A.vmd -norkmg m or too close to
streams
Also, provtde for good dramage on
sk1d trails and roads by usmg out slope
roads where feasoble, va rytng the grade
estabhshmg "ater d1verstons as needed ,
use \\ ater breaks dramage dtps or
tulvens, divert water mto protected
areas and develop obstrurttons belo-n
\\ater break outlets "hen needed to trap
sedtment
Others gra\ el roads when feastblc use
bndges .9r culverts \\hen crossmg streams
1f necessar} rest net traffic on soft roads
durmg the "et season seed roads sk1d

Conservation work halted

MASSEY FERGUSON TRACTORS

•

Agriculture and
our contmunity

Woodland management helpful hints ~~i;=~~i~pt~~e:~~Y~e;;~~1

YEAR END SALE

'

&gt;&lt;nnneut Brunch In
Count) t southern
Jackson Branch 111
Cullnt) ~southeastern
Under uetual
utlhLalltiO by beef t'OWS,
1rd clover tall fescue
a\fa\la-tall fescue ha
l u•\ded sunllarly lo t
II\ Bo vso n H r Bud ) l ';u !t•o
frS&lt; ue fcrtllozed woth I
(;,,I h.• ( lHUII\ Ext~nsoon .'\1-(cnt
pounds p&lt;&gt;r acre uf ~:~s~~~:~
'- Phosphorus and J)j
(,i\IIIPOLIS - l.cgUilll'S t~ pte a! j.!rass because tt has have been apphed to
(CHI
be used tn \~mter greater \ ll'lds !Nttt•r at:· legume pastu res but no
pastunng bed luws 111 tmr ceptaboht) b) the grazmK dltlonal n1trugen has
an mHi ls, "tder ran gr uf used Forage quahty
c~rt:a t.•hnunatmg or rcduung
been ho~her than from ~.,.,._
lht.&gt; nt•ed fur nttrngen fl•r· adaptatwn and better per
1&gt;asturcs
•
und er
&lt;ntnter
uhzcr and tlllPI0VIng ttre Sll'itE·ncc
In
t
his
system,
wont»
quality of \\ 1nter-g1a zed gtctZ trl K ThiS tvpe of "Ill·
forllgl' Dt
Robert V~ul tt.~r mg p1Ugra111 fur In cstuck p.tst ure os dovoded
Keu1cn lt'St atdl agrununu:st results 1n s1g mflcant savmgs smaller umts for CO!tlnolliontE
at th t' Ohto Agncultur,tl 111 ldbor bv 1 ed uc.:mg fon tgt• the access of cattle Woth
He search ,md Dt \ t'lupul~nt handl1ng and elirn lndttng clover tall rescue, one
t• u crops of hay are har..
l ('n tcr Woostrr rrct•ntlv nct'd fur mauure disposal
•csted as la rge round balei:
VanKeuren
sa1d
that
as
the
descnbed the results of 4
\ ec1rs of tcst mg such ~1 Y.lntcr grciZlng concept stored 111 the held ElectnO::
developed It "as assumed fencong 1s used to control the
.S\ stem
1,1\1 fl'Sl' UC h.Js been the that le!:!UillCS "ouldn t perSISt grazmg and ronsumptlon oC
under wmtcr gr,•zmg cun· bales throughout the wmteo:
tcatt\e usua lly clean up a ...
d1t1ons tn the upper uudwest
:
In \ 1e\\ o r the n sHig cost of area m 3 to ~ -necks )
Woth alfalfa-tall fescue, t "il:
mt rugcn rerttltzer needed to
llldlrllam grass pastures Van or three crops are harveste~t
Kcuren dectcled to test "mtcr as ruund bales and flel'!:
gaaz1ng uf mtxture s of ston&gt;d, In order to reduce los..
or quahty of alfalfa, the rail:
legumes "tth tall fesc ue
He lntttated hls stud1es an rcgro"1h os utohzed forst b:Z:
1973 at the Research Center s the "ontc•rong herd - tJa.le~
arc fenced off and later tit~
WASHI NG f ON 1UPII cattle are allo"ed access toil'
Tht.• Agllt:ulture Oepotrtment
fumted quanuty of bales all:
est unates the 19i7 "heat l 1op
they are needed
. :
.lt oHr 2 billton bushels The
wonter
grazJnC
another s urplu:s t hat IS
program begtns tn late
I AWYER NAMED
cont nbutan g 111 depressed
tober or ea rly November an~
Cl EVEI AND (UPII
prtces fnr farmers
lasts unttl sprmg pastures a rill
Exe~.:utl\t' d1rector-.secretar)
The estunate~ for the 197i
Pl'tcr P Hopt•r nf The Bar read) 1n Aprol Keeponl
wheLtt l l np " e1 e relectsrd
r\ SSfl( l,lt lorl
nf Greatel \0\ estuck orr the pasture:
Frtda' a nea t -1 eco1d 2 026
Cle\ ( lcmd has been n ciiTH~ from the last harvest unt •t
bollwn bushels 5 perc ent
wonter permits the legume:
~ x ec ull\c cltrect() r 11f the
below a re\ tsed rstlll1&lt;Jte of
to
build up roots reserves..
Penns\ 1\(tnt,l State BcJr
ld.st \ears han est. but still
~uth
red clover and alfaif;C
Assoc1.ltln11 effectlvt• Feb
appa1entl\ mor e tha n enough
h,lve persosted sa usfacto~
I
to meet t urrent need s
H"per 53 •ot h lhe loca l on our Ohoo st udoes Van
That shnuld lot• greater than
bm suuc Apn\1968. suc~.:eeds Keuren sa1d the persistence
dt'mand, pushtng US \~ hec~t
l- red Bnltnn "hn died last of red dover os aoded b)
sw plus stocks l&lt;l fl \ er 1 1
t\ugust
nat ural reseedong
b1l hnn bushels next summer
Thdt's ~;:nud ne\\S f or ronswners an mdtcLttann U1.1t
f1w)d mflattc'll - the Ill Crease
m grncen pnces - \\111 be
held tn bet"een 4 dnd 6
percent (om pared \Hth 6 :&gt;
pet cent Uus \€31
Its bad new s fot faimcrs.
\\ hn ha \ e threat ened a
ruJ tmnY. tde stnke Del H
Wl Less Ute government helps
them get higher pnces fnr
their U(lps The b1g crops

HuriJ In For A Good Deal
POMEROY MOTOR CO.

l OOK ING FOR A CHANCE TO AD
VANCE? Your opporlun1ty IS m
consumer !monee Our com
pony •s gro w1 ng we hove on
openmg as a branch manag er
lra mee for on ambllou~ persoq
who IS wdlmg to slo•l at o
modest bu l comfortabl e so lory
and look forward Ia earn ng
well obo~e overage
Prev1ou s e:o:perten .e
not
neces sary We tram you You II
work w tfh au 1 customer s both
ms1de ond ou t of the olhce In a
f r~end ly
manner
you 11 be
help111g peopl e w1th lhetr l1non
Clol problem s You 11 ho ~e on
e:o:cephonol
oppor tuni ty
to
learn the consumer fin ance
busme ss
Empl oyee bene/ Is 1nclude p01d
'JOc atlon s reltrement plar• and
group msuronce Call Mr Me
Cuttheon at 446 :2J65 Cop1tal
F nonc1ol Ser vn:e 415 SEcond
Ave
Goll1pohs
Oh o
An
eqval opportuntty employer
Prolesslonol employm en t op
portumt1es as co unty Ex tension
' agenl s Master degree 1('
qu red Prefer 01 least ono
degree m eilher ogrn.. ullure 01
home econom c~ M1nonty ap
pl1con l s e 1Caur agod
Ca l l
614 422 6181 lor oppli {ohpl"l
and 111formallon
BAB't'SlllER wonted Ia tome to
my home Call otter 1Oom
446 8583
EXPERIENCED RHR IGERATOR and
appli an ce SN'J ccmon
Po•d
hol1days
vo,o li on:.
and
hosp•tol t zatiOn
Col l•o
Refr ,ge•atot Co 611 3rd A ve
Coll,pol1s Oh1o
l EX AS Oil co mpany need s
mature p er~on lor shor l tnps.
SU! t oundtng Pomeroy Con tact
cus tomer s We lrom W111c
K M D1 ck Pr es Southwestern
Petroleum Ft Warth l X

SEVERAL HAND quilted qutlts
l ew comfor ts Lots o~ large
afagans See Mrs Pete Hen
son B1d~e l~ (oll388 8637

JqJ6Vw

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992 2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs Unhl8 p.m .

WOMAN OR coup le to ll~e w1th
m ddle aged lady 1n PI Plea
sant W Vo Salary negol able
Phone I 30 ~ 675 6999
SAWYER FOR au !om otlon sow
moll Good pay Pmd \IOCO ilon
Coli 61 4 b67 313 1

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
anyJh1nq tor
i'l t nur Auct1nn
P ~ rn or H'l vuor hom e For
•nlor"' i'lt 1o n ~nd p1ckup
!.f rV lC!J Ci'llt 256 196 7
S,1 te F'J cry Saturdav
Nlqhlal 7 p m

Wr

&lt;,(' II

11nv~ody

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
K 1 nneth Sw;un Aurt
Corner Th1rd &amp; Oltv c

L-----------....1
r-----------""1

MACHINE
SHOP
SERVICES
PORTABLE
WELDING
SERVICE
Pubhc walk 1n busmess,
tndustnal or construction
busmess welcomed
Large lathes and bC"rmg

mills
Metaltltny,

weldmg

and

babb1hng
Steel fabncat1on. complete
s to ck of steel~ rounds.
plates and structua Is

Free Esflmah~s
Too Larg e
or Too Small

No Job

M&amp;G MACHINE

SHOP
Upper Route 7
Kanauga , Ohto
61 \ , , "'" .. ,

�D-4- The Sunda1 T1n t h"&lt;;ntmtl Sw da 1

[)e('

II 197-

For Best Results Use Sunday. Times-Sentinel Classifieds
•

In Me•uon
N tOV NG
Lynth ....
II q 6 S

no

""

o y col Mo go e

po~~i!'d a .... oy Dfk

Todo p e co lls he me o ~ of o
o e d onego e 1o N
A nd ho~ e wt'1 o h n l. o f he
.A e hoJ&gt;e ...,ho lo ed he b e~ I
Sod .., m ssed b ., dou g h e 8t! y

S ew o o d fom .,.

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

~ J2JJJJ

~ JltJ~~l!l y
Dec 1t 1977
A stea d\ ou t :s o w f na c a
g O "n n pall.:! n s n sto e fo
~ou
h s com ng yea
You
snou d f' l n t o
t y ng to
speed up p og ess lest you
sta t t
SAG TTARIUS (No' 1 Dec 21 )
T 'i o eave well enough a one
today Foo s usn n whp e
ange s fea to t ead ano you
ust rn ght sound o tf enough to
-get you se I n 1 oub e F nd ou t
mo e about you self by send
ng o you copy of Ast o
G aph Leite Ma l 50 cents lor
eac h s gn des ed and a long
.se f aOd essed stamped enve
ope o As! a G aph P 0 Box
489 ABO o C ty S a on N Y
0019 Be su e to spec fy you
b th s gn
CAPRICOR N iDee 22 Jan 191
Sh o u d you be empted o
change a cons deed op non
be cause of a based co m pan
on coun to 10 f st You way
w II p obably be hew sest
AQUARIUS (Jan 21J.Feb 191
you put you foot n you mow h
be T y ng to c a ty
toda y e
th ngs w I make
N O se
PISCES (Feb 2D March 20) II s
not c cke t o c hange pa ne s
n the rn ddte o l he dance
Adhe e o o g na n ent ons t
you want to s destep st cky
s tuat ons today
ARIES (March 21 Aprll19) D sc
pt ne b eak s down rather ea y
fo you today You mus oe
caul ous not to over ndu ge
la t~r should you feel you
e
st a nl s /pp ng
TAURUS (Apnl 21J.May 10) Be
carefu today no t to pu your
se f n an emba ass ng pas
I on whe e you p elend to
ca mp en end someth ng that
you don 1 You may be asked to
exp an
GEMINI(May 21 June 20) Don I
be th e unde w er of hope ess
causes oday You could make
sk
a loan to a very poo c ed
CANCER (June 21 July 22) Bo h
you an d you mate no d some
equa y strong pos 1 ons today
As uck wou d have t yo u e
on o ne s de of he ence and
she s on he oth e
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) YQu do a
tl e and expect a ot oday
You ewa ds are gong to be
commensu ate w th he ser
v ces you ende
VIRGO !Aug 23 Sept 22) Avo d
the crowds today f you can
Somehow you sense yo u co me
off better n a sma gro up and you e pe feel y r gh
LIBRA (Sept 23 Del 23) Be
ve y met c utous about the
guest
s
f enterta n ng at
home od ay You wou dn t want
to nv te one w ho doesn 1 It
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
You e not too well attuned to
your aud en ce today Unless
you e ca efu you cou d of
tend someone by be ng too
self serv ng
NEWSPAPER ENTE APA SE .6-SS"i

GUN SHOOT Ro c: ne Gun Club
eve y Sun of e noon fo e o
Choc k 9uns pn y
Assorred

WANTED
lAND fo
hun ng
200 oc en Eos of P am~ oy r
Peyto
Soil 273 Charles o
W Vo 25325

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

""'"

THE RACINE Vol un ee
F e
Oepo men! w sp o nso a gun
shoo eve y So u dey Q 6 p m
of he bu d ng
8oshon Foe
o y choke guns o 'I
FlEA MARKET Xl and Sun New
He l! n Con n u y Cen e

Anchonng Sktrlmg,
Awn1ngs
Pal•o
Covers
Carports,
Roof Patnl Set up
I and Re leveling Call

SKATE A WAY
ANNOUNCES
0
~;
en Po y F
Dec
23 d 7 30 0 00 ores p H~ s
bel oo s New Yeo s Eve Po
ty So
Dec 3 !l_,f 30
7 30
ho s ho ns
no semoke s
he \' On e We o e
Ope
F So n es 7 30
Wt'd
0 00 Avo able fo p vo e
po eo; Mon
Tues
Thu s
n gh s o So o Sun o e
noons
Phone 985 392&lt;1 o
Q85 Qli)q~ fo ese vo ens

BILL'S
446 2642
PASQUALE
Ele c col
446 '2 7 6 doy o n gh

- Se

TELEVISION
VIEWING
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Remembers 20

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3 30-AIIIn The Fam ly 8 1D Ltllas Yoga &amp; You 20
4 30-My Three Sons J Parlndge Family 4 Brady
Bunch B 1D L tile Rasca s 15
5 DO--Bonanza 3 My Three Sons 3 Gunsmoke 8
M ster Roqers Neighborhood 20 JJ. Emergency
One 13 My Three Sons 15
S 3IJ.-Odd Couple 4 News 6 Elec Co 20 33 Mary
Tyler Moore 10

Hogans Heroes 15

6 DO--News 3 4 B 10 13 1S ABC News 6 Zoom 2D JJ
6 30-NBC News3 415 ABC News 13 Carol Burnett &amp;
Fr ends 6 CBS News 8 1D Over Easy 20 JJ
7 DO--That Nashville Music 3 Cross Wits 4 Liars Club
6 Marly Robbins Spotllhght 8 News 10 To Tell
the Truth 13 Gilllqan s Is 15 Prime T me 20

Movie

Sunshine Chr stmas

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
SUNDAY lkcembf.r 11 1977
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abb I
82Sco snn sde
63 Concoc
8 A my o

64 Ma u e
85 Seve age
81 Re e be a ons
B9Ra nandh!l

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42 G ee~ e e
43 Appa

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AI PLES AND CIDER
WELLS ORCHA RD

H GLEY S BARBER SHOP OPEN 8
o 5 CLOSED SUNOA Y &amp; MON
DAY GIFTS BOOKS &amp; POT ERY

W LKESV LLE OHIO

COME N NOW AND LAY AWAY A
Se ko Bul ovo or 1 mex fo
Ch st nos o Tow ey Jewel v.
smo
depos
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367 0202
CE NTENARY

PET
GROOM NG FACIL T ES P o
less ana Se v ces o lfe ed a
b eeds all s yles Ph 446 02 3 1

LHA SA APSO mo e beau tu
• aus~
dog
pe f ee t
for
Ch s nos 10 wee k s old Call
440 9753

.

NEW HOUR S

FOR SALE

Do ly o d Svndoy

AKC Registered
Cocker Spaniel

Rf DUCE sol e and
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RISING STAR Kennel Boo d ng
lndoo
and au doo
uns
Groom ng all b eeds C eon
san a y foe I t es Chesh e
Phone (614 ) 367 029 ~
J &amp; D Kennel-s o I Q eed dog
g com ng Make oppo n men
now lor Hoi day Season Co
7o42 3162
REGISTERED BEAGLE dog to sole
Moe 4~eo sold 992 5510
TO GIVE away Mole abandoned
dog Would I ke o f nd o good
home B ad~ on~ b own obou1
3 mo old Phone 991 3367

PHONE 992 3165

Chr stmas

7 30-TV Chapel 3 Your Hea th 4 Show M y People 6
Urban League 10 Amazmg Grace

Bible Class 13
8 oo-81g Blue Marble 3 Day of D scovery 4 Grace
Cathedral 6 Church Serv ce 10 Dr E J Daniels
Presents Happ ness s 3 Sesame St 20
8 3o-Qral Roberts 3 J mmy Swaggart 4 Ce ebratlon
of Praise 6 Day of 0 scovery 8 James Robison
Presents 10 Rex Humbard 13 Open Bible 15
9 llO--Gospel S ng ng Jub ee 3 Rober! Schu ller 4
Ora Roberts 10 Rex Humbard 6 Rev Leonar d
Repass 8 Ernest Angley 15 M ster Rogers 20
9 30-What Ooes The B ble Pia nly Say B t Is Written
10 J1 m Franklin 13 Zoom 20
10 oo-Chr st Is the Answer 3 Church Service 4
Aware 6 Chnst nlan Center 8 Sesame St 20
Move Dav d Copperf e d 10 J1mmy Swag9art

13 Gospel S ng ng Jub ee 1S
10 3G--Rev Moon n Amer ca 3 Yo urs for the Ask ng
4 Rex Humbard 8 Hot Fudge 6 Garner Ted Arm
strong 13
11 GO-Doctors on Call .s B g 8 ue Marble 6 Re)
Humbard 15
Rev Henry Mahan 3 lnfln ty

The lam ly of Fern Ell ot w sh to
e;o; p e~s au spec ol thanks to
0 Kemp D Ables ond the
u s ng slcf o1 he P ne C es
Co e Cen e fo the k dness
end co e g ven our Mo1her
Many thonlr..~ to the p aye s
co ds I ends and ne gtlbo s
who co ed fo her A \IS y
spec ol thank s fa Re ho Fos te
who co ed to he mQny yeo s
We w :!i h o exp ess au s nee e
to our many
opp ec at o
ends and e o .... es shown
du ng he deeth of ou Mathe
Many ho l..s fo he flowe s
co ds and food
A spec ol thanks o McCoy
We he holt Mo o e Funaro
Home M n ste Rev Rober l
Co v n Rev Cho es Lushe
po lbeo e s s ngers Rev and
M s Robe 1 L Cclv n and oc
com pon s Mrs luAnn Layne n
e of g ef ond so row
Do e E o
Madge No hup
ond tom ty Ro ph Ell on and
fam

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NEWGMC
T uck Heodquo e s
974
1 GMCP ckup
t974
1 GMC P ckup
1973 Chev P ckup
1974
1 GMC PU
1- 973
T Chev PU
1974
T (he.., PU
1973 E Com now th top
974
T Fo d PU
973 h ee fou th T Ford PU
974 h ee fou th (hev PU
974 h ee lou th T GMC PU
97 GMC 9500 T acto
974
T Fo d P ckup
975
Ton Chevro ei fo GMC
973 lnte not ono
BOO Seres
cob &amp; chaH s ondem d ve
968
T Fo d P t:kup

SOMMER5GMC
TRUCKS NC
133P neS
446 2532

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1974 VEGA CAMBACK wagon or
cond PS $600 b9 Sole I te 56
Chev o e 2 dr f bergoss I
f on end 4 d rt b lo.es 360
1 uck eng ne Sea s on ox
odoze 388 9906

PONTIAC

LEMANS

Co

446 JO 2

Factory 20

'WANTED TO TRADE 1968 l nco n
4d W
ode to good pd..up
truck Coil 4-46 3012

11 3G--At lssue 3 Amma s An mas Ammals6 F ocus
on Columbus 4 Face The Nat1on 8 E ec; Go 20
Med X 13
12 oo-Meet the Press 3 4 15 Issues &amp; Answers 6
Thinking n B ack 8 Rev Calv n Evans 13 Rebop

••

20
2 30-NFL 77 3 15

News Conference 4
1977 All
Amencan Team 6 NFL Today B The Issue 10
W liard W !cox 13 Mus c 20

12 ss--NFL Fo es 10
oo--NFL Football J 4 s D rec11ons 6 NF L Foolbal
8 10 Wasli ngton Week n Review 33
ssues &amp;
Answers 13 Nova 20
3o-Amerlca s Black Forum 6 Wall Street Week 33
1977 All Amer can Team 13
2 oo-Communique6 Public Po cy Forums 13 Age of
Uncertainty 20 M crobes &amp; Men 33
2 3o-Po1nt of V1ew 6 3 00----McNamara s Band 6

W SH to honk oil my f ends l or
he co ds g fts and o I the
p aye ~ tho we e so d fa my
eco .... e y
n g ad to soy I om ge I ng be e
end om so happy to be home
Ago n I soy hank you and God
8 es; -,.ou all S nee el-,. Ann
Coe Roc ne

Cliffwood Avenue K ds 13 Blind Teacher In a
Public School 2D Plccad fly Circus JJ
3 3()-Movle
A QO-Movle

Fa I Safe 13 Great Performances 20
Ange n My Pocket 3 Movie Silent

Night Lonely N ght 4 Movie
Hercu es Un
chained 6 NFL Footbaii8 1D God BlessAmenca
15
4 3()-M me Dream ng of a Wh1te Chr stmas 33
5 ~Francts of Ass s 15 Rebop 20 Nova 33

5 JO-E lee Co 2D 6 QO--News J 4 Lets Deal With t
6 Parent Elfecllveness 33 Night the An i ma s
Talked 13 Wally s Workshop 15 Zoom 2D
6 JO-N BC News J 4 15 News 6 News maker 77 13
French Chef 20

Ftnng Ltne 33
7 DO--World of Disney 3 4 15 Rudo ph s Shtny New
Year 6 1
60 M n utes 8 10 Crocketts V ctory

Garden 20
7 30-Evenlng at Symphony 20 33
8 DO--Six Mill on Dollar Man 6 13 Rhoda 8 10
8 JIJ.-On Our Own 8 10
9 llO--Billboard Music Awards J 4 1S Movie
It
Happened One Chr s1mas 6 13 All In The Family
8 10 I Claudius 2D 33
9 30-AIIce 8 10 10 oo-Carol Burnett 8 10 V slons
20 33
11 DO-News 3 4 810 15 11 s--CBS News 8 10 PMA
Pulse 15
11 30-Movle Rough N ghl n Jericho 3 Mov e A
Man Called Gannon 4 Move Sherlock Holmes in
New York 15 News 6 3 700 Club 8 F ace The
Nat o_p l.O Monty Pythons F l y ng C1rcus 33
11 4So-ABC News 6 12 DO--Second C ty TV 6 Movie
The Vlktng Queen 1D PTL Club 13 Janak 33

t2 30-FBI6 1 DO-ABC News 13 1 30-Peyton Place
4

977
GOOSENECK
STOCK
TRA LER
4 h tandem axle
e ectr c b ekes Co I Oak H II

682 6943
97-4 PONT AC LEMANS 350 V 8
2 d
uns ve ~ good Co I
245 5069
968 CHEVY PICKUP good unn
ng co nd on B 9 bed F sl
$600 gets t Call 388 8409
197 OLDS low m es

The Almanac
By U1ted Press International
Today 1s Monday Dec 12
the 346th day of 19n w1th 19 to
follow
The moon IS betw~n 1ts
new phase and first quarter
The mornmg stars are
Mars Venus Jup1ter and
Saturn
The evenmg star ts
Mercury
Those born on tlus date are
Wlder the Sign of Sagittarius
John Jay
ftrst Chtef
Justtce of the Umted States
was born Dec 12 174ii
On thiS day m h1story
In 1901 a Wireless message
was transmitted across the
Atlantic Ocean for the ftrst

time
In 1937 Japanese planes
bombed and sank the U S
gu nboat
Panay 1n the
Yangtze
River
above
Nankmg Chma Japan later
sm d It was a case of mistaken

Identity

8)((

cond

Coll446 153
968 V W $.550 Coll44b 4999

DRAGONWYND CATTERY

KEN

NEl AKC Chow Chow dogs
CFA S omese ond H mo cyan
cots
(Pers ons) Ch
s ed
H malayan k ttens onl~ two
eft Flame P mo es (wh te
person s) Call446 3844
971 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 dr
sedan 70 Chevy p ckup 6 cy

74 Hondo 360 Col 256 6836
1970 JEEP $2500
ofte Spm

Col 4146 B650

1971 TOYOTA COROLLA 50 000
m les $900 Colt 446 4499 of er

5pm
1970 Z 28 CAMARO 307 PS P8
auto
co gers
good
m l~;~oge Call 446 9260

gas

WHITE 1974 Corvette 350 4
1 It
speed AM FM Ste eo
e escop c wheel powe w n
dow! power stee ng d sc
brakes custom n er o
or
cond on ng $6 300 or bes of
fe 992 2661
1964 TEMPEST 400 4 speed new
pont 949 23541
GET OUT h s won e 1971 Super
Beet e
g een
AM FM
B aupunk rod o wh e nter or
New t es and snows 1 extras
mounled on wheels Best otfe
ove $8.50 992 2897
976 FORD GRANADA 4 door 6
cy
AC
PS
PB
low
mi eage
$3 500
Phone
992 5445 Call even ngs offer 4

1964 BUCK W LOCAT Runs good
Has good t res $150 Phone
1974 P NTO WAGON E)Ccellen
cond I on Phone992 6134

"
0
93 Keeoe
so he
llnds

OLD FU RNI URE
beds
o bed
I ou!&gt;eho d~ W
R
4 Po c oy
QQ'} 7760

CH P
d

o

Co

GOOD

::,n

Naom Beman
Clerk Treasurer
Gall a County
Local Schoo o str ct
220 Jackson P ke
Ga !polls Oh o 45631
Nov 17 Dec 4
18

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CAR I~NI R't'

od C' 9
l6 1677
C'

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0

5

MIS O t.J t: q o t' o d !.and A
e A R cho d a d So Ur
p R v f!d Go o
01o
Co l44b 778S

We Are Now
Tak1ng New
Cuslomers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

PRODUCT~

Ar t ~ur

A N bert
Realtor

SMALL FARM
PR CED L0\'1

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SERV Ci:

Co 992 5965

GOOD BARN 40 ACRES

So
yood eve
l ab e
C
ln T abaca bfl 5l Pil Stur P
wooll o p c nty ot wa te
Low pr ccd so you ca n
d~: v p op 1s you so des r e
$18 000 00

al
wtl
p cl y g r en gn 5s Ver y
h cc
kp fo
w c o
rc crr 1 o
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c ou
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tone S BR
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!-..,9
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oth e
ou t b gs
Ca n !l as t S23 000 00

OWNER ANXIOUS
TO SELL
00 i'l C c~ n a
we
c 30 C!C r cs t ab c
&lt;;o m r n Cf' c vf'
c cis a ong
t. '" k
so nl' up on
s
sou
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oba cco Msc
~orr
50 a c ~ paslu c nd
li e es
s goo
m)c
~u ta b le
for t unt ng or
'VOOd o
S x oon r ame
ho Sf' mo f'rn n
w1y&lt;:.
b sc11 e n l
u n
w tc r
n 1 d o cr
u
Good
Nf'
oo Ca NOW

SMALL ACREAGE
MOBILE HOME
T s one v.
mJkc you
nonc v ov v r you use
hom(' o
nv
7
CI C cs
c can &amp; v. e
kcp
Mol
home n good co cl Good
wiJte r ~ up y sp
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w fh ne v eflcrG punp
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benche s
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he ilc rea JC
bef!U y of
Good oca on to
mo e
h one~o 'I y lype you
y
de"&gt; re 1 s nc nar c tor

fiu,Rent
3 AND 4 RM fu shed o d un
fu n sh~ op s Pho c 992
5oi34
FOUR ROOMS o d bo h Adu
o ly No pe s 997 5908
COUN RY MOB L.E Ho e Po k
Rou e 33
o lh ol Po €' oy
La ge o s Colt997 7479

S13SOO

Phone 992 2181

TWO BEOR OOM op
992 2188 bef o e a 30 0 n

Co

TWO BEDROOM house A
ew
po
c oo~
so e
uded
Ph one 9Gl2 JOQQ
FOUR ROOM l u n shed op
P I 991 3b5B

\

TRA (ER SP ACE to c
4 m es I o n
ow
Phone 6 l 4 24 7 29

lo

Cov
R

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HUFF NlS &amp; SONS FIX 1 SHOP
App o c e ~ t: c
co w
g
o d pun b 9 Co 388 88 7

Bl l 5 MOB t E HOMES o I HQ e
p ovec !&gt; Fcc
ot:s
Co 440 7642

JEFFS GU NS AN D AMMO l o o c I
a JOb l'G o I E' B
G
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Ac P !&gt; Subd Oper'\ 9o
Mo

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OW weekly o d o I y o e o
l bby Hoe 44b 743
LIGHT I ou sek eep ng
Ce of Ho el

oo

SLEEPING oo s l o
Ho el

~

Po lr..
Go a

TWO BEDROOM nob e han e
S 25 3 bed oo mob e hone
SISO Co 446 0 75

mob e

home

Co ll 367 0170

HOUSE 1mlefom c y m 5 C
no
go § fu note
y wo te
o ge o $100 Oep Ref $ 40
mo No pe s n han e Co
446 0822

ATTRACTIVE 3 bed oom home
ave look ng he ve sou h of
11 ng m w
town 1 oc o
f rep
!o m m k chen o d
full ba semen $275 pe mo
Secu ty depos 1 equ ed Col
TheW semen Rea Es o e Agen
_ cy~t4~ 36.:3

OUTV S BU LONG AND REMODEL
lNG
FREE ES f MATES Cc

256 J52
TV SERV CE Elec on c TV C n
756 Second Avenue Hou s 9om
to 5pm Monday h u Sctu day
Closed Thursdo~ Col 4.tb :.1980

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NEW LISTING
6R CK HOME nd J ac es
norr or rss Loca ted one
e f om R oGrande Th s
nod e n
ome
oa turcs
I n.! c bedr ooms
1 ba hs
mod e n k t chen
v ng
room t u I bllscmen
one
s.m etll b nand a 1 ce tarq e
hOr '5c
1 ar n
S t o r age
1 u ld nq La s. of fru t ees
on t hr pr ope ty and a n ce
q '~ ' tc
s.pof
Th s s a
be"u t u ar-ea and a p me
oce~ t on

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

ut

0

cc
NEW HOU SE

Jus wa t ng for you and
your l am ly An aflordable
one story 3 bedroom ranc h
us ca mp etcd Th s I ome
h~ il ures a n ce cat n k t
che n I v ng oom bath
lovely ca Jipet a nd pen y at
cose t spa ce Loca ed n a
good deve opmen t area n
the c ty o M ddleport W e
cons tr uc ted - a t ang ble
nvcs tn en I Pr ced be o v
r ep ace ment cos

CITY PROPERTY
Located on Th rd Ave
Spac ous 2 s ory w h new
a um oum s d ng
sto m
w ndows 'l o 3 bedroom s
T e nas e bed oon and
d n ng
m
both ea tur e
f r eplaces 1 z ba h s bu If
n k c hen g ut ty rm
Th s hom e has been recent
y r emodeled II you are
Jook ng for a good nvest
nen
p ope tv o
n ce
I one s op by or ca
Reasonab y Pr ced
HOM E OF TH E WEEK
T b .veek we fea tur e an ce
6 oo 11 a
br ck home
Loc t ~ d n a much des ed
n e~ on R t 35 Th s hom e
ei'l lur es 3 n ce. bed ooms
1
alh s uge node
k t
chr n co mp lete N ce ut
y r oon I v ng oom Tot a
e cc c
cen a
a
Large I n shed 2 ca r garf!ge
w he ee l c open er Newly
I n shed d r veway an d a
n cc enccd n o Th s s a
n ce hone
see
for
you se f Call for appo nt
n t nr

cu ou n 9n I e est s
Pi'l u e
J8 acr es n e~
Good ves1 en 525 000

REAl ESTATE

LIST WITH US
WE WILL SEL L

Pomeroy landmark

storm
W1ndows
Storm
Doors
Replacement
Wm
dows Pat1o Covers
Alummum S1dmg and
Accessones Call
446 2642
W LL CARE fo he e de y 11 au
home Pho e Q92 73 4
lone Do e s
New pt o e nu nbe 992 2581
no ons we co 991 2082

fJ ANO TUNIN G

W ll DO VP 9 Mo U!&gt; p s
s a sl co
esu nes etc Co
992 3827 even ngs of a 6 o d

GREAT

1asle MU ST SE E TO BEL EVE
PRICED RIGHT
Ranch st ye hom e w th 5

8 ACRES
w
0 n n
vc Ia
rooms &amp; ba th Ld ge k
ov.n town G lt po s G cen
chen w 11 blJ 1 n cab nels
Town ~ t p
C y
-::oc ho o
range &amp; e g S ng e ca r Sys tem
Has hook up
n
garr~ge
N at ga s hea
nob e home Ga r1 Rur
CALL~0\'1
Wa e
e lcc c and scp c
A DESIRED LOCATION
tank n gh
gh f on po e 200
Not mr~ny homes be come I
l an la ge on G aham
ava abe lo se onw ow Dr Sc hoo l Rd T mber Bu d ng
We have a 4 BR IMet e lam v s te5 CALL NOW
oo n 1 z ba h mod k c hen
garage Nat Gas F A fur
V A APPROVED
n ace
S MM NG
POOL
5 ROOM COTTAGE
18 x36 plac ed n a RUST I C
CHILLICOTHE RD
SETT NG Board ence Rea
We k ept 2 lied room home
n ce home a t a ow tow pr ce
v ng roo m
orma
CALL
F OR
MORE ba h
DR N ce s ze k c hen u 1
DE TA L S
baem r nt
t ;~c h cd garage
6 ROOMS 3 BEDROOMS
Two po c hes one sa
ge
LIKE NEW
on pore n cc Ia e n oy
Toa
eec tr c
a
cond
s a so a
ge
I oners ru r al water sys tem The
Modern k t chen w 1h ots o ga cen a ca e1 nd ya rd Th s
property
us be so
I s
cab nets g l!rbage d spo 5a
a ld S S doub e s nk Ga r age pr ced g h you ca n buy
o lay M ove n tomo row
no rna n e nanc e wh te su~e
s d ng w th ba ck shu tters
n ce evel landscaped
o
o 1(10
meta
s t orage

•

STATE HIGHI'IAY 160
REASONABLY PRICED

bu d ng TH S HOME CAN 150 f f ro 1tng(' on R t 160
BE
PURCHAS E D
Larg e I v q oo n and eal n
RE ASONABLY
k tche n Two B R w th c ose
MINI FARM OR

BUILDING LOTS
App ox 2
A Have you
been took ng t o a hom e
w th a country se t ng';)

HER E

1T S A n ce home w th 3
BR ba th shower nodern
k t c hc n
w t
bu I n
v ng
cab net s db s nk
room fu e l oil F A urn ace
new ste e s d ng ecen y
nsrat ed c ty water also
has a small barn o! her ou
bu d ngs a nd ee l a LOOK

LO~ATION

Co zy o der home w fl
wood burn ng
1 re p ace n la m y ro om 3 BR qa ev k
chen wIt o sol Cflb ne s &amp; range d n ng
room u I y oom pa r a basemen ba ll
&amp; very n cc g~ Age fh s be "ut u l y
s t ur~ t c t home s s rt ng on I
A of
unu sun y n ce and n RaG ande P R I C
F OR C HT
V\O N T LAST L ONG

bath
w th s h o~Ac
N ce
s ream runs hroug prope
y some tr ees large c oncrc e
lao ca port Th s prope y
on y
$18 900 00
JUST

I STED CALL

I 2 ACRES

HANDYMAN 5 DREAM
15 a s of good and p us
un n 5.hed lr leve l
om e
.a t vou c
1 sh a
n a t G a s 1re a ready
.wa ab e
Ow e
wt
nego at e pr cc

6 ACRES
MORE OR LESS
On S ate H ghway 55 4 wo
barn s eve to r o jl ng and
w th s nal s ea 11 l h ough
" ' edge of-prope rt y ONLY
S7 dOO 00

BJJSACRES
MORE OR LESS
Jsc an
and Approx 65
acres ot I m bcr D ug we I
C cck nd spr ngs PR I C
'Eo R G HT
C TY PROPERTY

CONVENt ENTLY
LOCATED
N ce
hom e
camp ete y
es o ed you nu s! see the
~de to bet eve th e ex en
t
ha s )E'en emode ed and
edecn r a e
6
oo ns 7
IJa s F A qas f u nace
new w r ng plu n) ng dry
walt papc and camp etely
carpetecl w lh top g ade
ca p e t ng
F rep ace
ouse s cove ed v th new
a um s d ng g rdcn a ea
all o l
s and 110 e Th s
o e s r ea dy o move nto
VA Loan no dow
pay
mont
I ROOMS

4 BEDROOMS

Good so d home Ga po s
v aca nt a
on Air ca Rd n
Schoo
D str c t
basement
Chesh rc Twp
0 d bar
1
baths mode n k chen
r
gl
ts
60 x70
A t m ne a
camp e te w h b ret"! ca b ne s
goes w lh sa e L ne f ences
furna ce
c arpo I
F A
Dug w e t nea barn
woodburn n g
I r ep l aces
l am y room l arge stor ge
TH S OVER
bu td ng W lh n 5 m es of
OVER314
55Q
FT
RANCH STYLE
G
pot 5 N ce home [I t a
BLOCK BLDG
PRICE REDUCED
good p ce
IIVIO,det·n 6 room r anc h hom e Bus ness or stor a ge space
COUNTRY MANOR
sw mn ng poo r ed uced N ce J ar ge rooms on n ppro x
LOCATED ON
1 anlag e on a Sta e
m m nq poo wo r es 150 f
5 ACRES
ghway
by
approx
180
ft
H
over Look A lm ost new
Tw6 s1o y Colon a br cK
J
ee
p
A
ll
evcl
fu
e
l
o
F
A
modern n eve Y way
home bu It n th e 1800 s t
urrla ce R u a wil e sys tem
m ng
poo l
nc uded
v ng
ea tur es lar ge lormrt
a
so
w
e
w
fh
c
tec
r
c
pump
Beaut ul foyer 3 bedrooms
oom w h I ep ace arge
n ce ar_ge 4 daub e c lose t s 1 H gh ave head door s tor
n odern k chen w th cal n
1 x 18
for 11at large 1 ucks Off ce s n ce\y
5 09 e L R
atea il nd bu It n range &amp;
Gl
pc
cd
nnd
p
;~
n
c
l
ed
CALL
o R ut ty R ce s ze and
wa I oven Jot s o b rch
handy a ge 2 car garage a t FOR OT HE R DETA LS
ca b nets
A so
nc udes
I ached The se ar e a few ol h e
par or &amp; fa n a e ntranc e 5
ns de fea tur es Now the r es
BR &amp; upsta r s ba cony
ots of shru bbe v a !ra e
7 ACRES CLEAN
Th s home s s uted on 5 A
ve
gate
~ n r an ee
to
LEVELLAND
w
th o s at argc shade
bea u fu ty t n shed w alkwa y Sl o rt
d s an ce
no r I
at
rees A so a barn 50 x40
ead ng nto a modern new Gd po t s Ga I a Co R ur a
uck &amp; car garage &amp;
o\l a pool s ze 7 x35 w th Wat er I ne n I ont o th s pr o
s moke
house
w th
d v ng b03rd a d n ght g ht per y
B ack op road
A
f r e place Sma I pond &amp;
Pool co mlete y encec
n m nera l
ghts goes
ALL
severa l t u
t rees
n
There s p en y of ya r d or L E VEL S LOT S OF U SES
c
ud
n
g
peach
&amp;
a
pple
Ap
garden space enccd n on 3
p ox. 1 000
oad tron tage
s des
app le
rees
grape
on Rl 7 CALL FOR EVE N
ON
BLACKTOP
ROAD
v nes ce ntr a a r gas forced
MOR E IJ E T A IL S
NO
a furna ce tots of nsula on 8 rooms mode n ho n c
S GHTSEER S PLEASE
Located on up to I A at
ow hea t b li s baske ba
eve ! and approx 6 m
o
court
qu t - p ease c a fo
BACRES
Ga po l s on a b dCk. top
th e res
LEVEL LAND
oad 3 BR
nrge ta m Y
Bea u t lu .::~nd w th ol s of
ONE ACRE PLUS
room 16 :&lt;20
v ng oom
p nes and wo road I on tge
v ac an and n c ty o M d
nod k chen w h ots ~ ~
d z m les on Me gs Covn
dtepo
Rea n ce bu td ng bu t n c.Jb nets Tab c O'p
tot h gh &amp; dry w tl
a ge e cc rang e Ga t a Ru :J
1y M ne No
Good
shade r ee a r ead y ther e Ap
bu d ng s es and
wat er Sys tem
PHONE
pr o)( 300 f 1 frontage
water t ap pad for
N0\'1 FOR INFORMA
NO \'I
T ION

sw

" ' ' • - Jack W Carsey Mg
..al
Phone 992 218

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

SPACIOUS 81 LEVEL
Need some I v ng space? Th s home has t
J BR n ce mode n k c hen ba h fo na
I v ng room fo mnt d n ng r oom w t
s d n g pa r o doo s ea d ng o deck &amp; co n
c etc pat o i'l m ty room ut 1 ty oom &amp;
ga age pen v of storage Th s ho m e t as
re ce nlly been ececo a t ed w th th e best o

STOP LOOK NG

QOOC

f'v r
t c;. bee
,...d
?0 ~&lt;..r e s or mo r r l n b

We ha\le enlarged our
se rv ce departm en t and
w1ll se rv1ce Hotpomt and
other brands

We Need Your Home or Farm To Sell

2d x30
bu
n k chen
h a r d w o od
f oa r s
c pe ng n cc ba h por ch
t&gt;CII o f or ce d a r u nace
a c co un y wa ter Ga r age
hns pane ed wa s e)( ur ed
cc ng very n ce One Kre
o a most level Th s s
n ce and we
w orth
s

VACANT LAND
~

Phyllrs
Wlllrs T
leadmgham
Loveday
Realtor
Ph H 245 9114
Ph H 446 9539
GallUl County's l&lt;asteljt f.irowmg R eal Estate Agency

NEW LISTING
5 R m house new gar age

FOk' SA L E

Co

2 BEDROOM MOB I E HOM E

I

u
Wl
su i

tu So
Owed ad
O pP a ed b y M 0
0 d No o
Jcffc
Co 44b 7012

256 1922
e

b

new
lJ lh
n
lu
r'lc e
sy 5 e n
n
I vo qooc w ood
tr p
Tn s s &lt;1
~
G oo d

F

N CE MOBIL E HOME
n e be ow
TW N R VERS MAR Nt: 307 Uppc
c y a ve ook ng he
e
R c Rood Ch V'&gt; e So es ~
A.du s o y Co I 446 0338
Se
e Co p e e u Repo
FURN SHED EFF C ENCY I 0
Cu om bv
o e s P o e
Ut I I e s Pd Equa Qppo u y
44b 8655
hous ng Co I 44b 44 b of e
Nli:R OR
PANT NG
(o
3pm
44 6 3100
2 BDR mob le horne Adv s o ly
No pe s b
cund S 30 o JR S A E E PHO STERY SHOP
63
SECOND
AVENUE
monlh 1m es f on own Co
GAlt II Ol S 446 7833
eve
446 2300
gs 446 833
3 bedroom house 4 m es I om
SAND Y AND BEA VER I sv o e
Hasp to $140 mo 446 05 7
Co hos otle ed e ce§ to f e
2 BDR FURN SHED APARTMENT
nsu o e co t: ag e
Go t o
ef dep rcq Co I 446 0650
Co
~ to a no~
o en u y
Fa Tl t o e o cl pe sono p o
5 RM HOU SE w h bo h oco ed
pe Y co El ages o e a o lab e
on Kelt on Rd beh nd Med co
ec
d dual e~ Is Con
0
P ozo $ 50 pu s u
es Po
oc Ray Wed emeyer vou
o y furn sl ed Ch d en o low
e ghbo o d age
ad Cal 367 0626 a 367 0628
BDR

oo
be

Ac

SLEEP NG Roo ns weelo.
Po k Cen t ol Hol e

-~

new

1' N

HOU Sl FOR eo e o l con H
5 bed oo l'l!.
n Pome o y
Depos
equ ed
992 3489
ol e 5 pm

2

OWNER SAYS SELL
l h s .Jr n w I se be oN to
days ma r ke t v:~ uc
so
acr es
J good ba ns.
seve r ~ ot c r o tbu d ng5
M e il oa fs D
cd w I
un
wn e
av a abe
L qc two s o v house
bu
n k chen wo wood
bu n ng f ep a ces
40
i\crcs o 11ore t ab le and
Tobacco b sc p en ty ot
p1 s
e good wooo o!
Owner v I he p 1 nancc
q rt
ed buye
I I you
wnn rt gnod c t e and
o 1cc o l a rn
o W sc
c I ow any
o fer
~"'

PASQUALE ~ u o 9 03 Cc o
S Co
o
P 446 17 6 o
3b 7 0398 of c 5

WA f:R Wl:.ll DR ll NG W o
G a
Ph 74'}')&amp;79 o
?45 5 00

c

n.;~

1lBACRES

" ' ' • - Ja ck W Carsey Mgr.

~

So

("i

FAMILY FARM
4 4 1\c
g o od
eve
1 ab c
~nd
tob basr
30 n
n T mbcr
Th e
LS
s p s lu e w 11
p c t y ..,. 1 e
to
c f e
Lo
wo story I ou~c S x
ns
hrec bed ooms
two
po chcs
Sonl&gt;C'
q
h s
bcr
Lo b r n
qood
cp
o he
out b dq s
N C('
c oun ry
sr i
g
B k op oad

A A A CON llACTORS Bo kl oe
do (" du p u ~ Wo k do c
y u hou o by he ob r o
ct: e
oes Co 7Sb I I

2 BDR FURNISHED nob o home
3 m le5 f om ow e.o:t: and
Adu s no pets S 30 Colt
-446 2300

I

SPCCIA Sl

NG

CAU US
Pomeroy landmark

ONE of he ne h gs a l fe
co pe
o d
B ue
us e
uphols e y cleo e Ren e e
$1 Ce rat
r c shompooe
Supp y

Due to sell of property must move by first
of year Everythmg must go by Chnstmas
Btg Savmgs on all Merchandise m stock
Custom built lamps hand pamted and ftred
lamp shades lamp parts old lamps aild
ani que furniture Child s rolltop desk
tables stoves old Coca Cola parlor cooler
late 1930s or early 40s cigarette machme
st1ll works p1clures and picture frames
four
paperwe ghts •ce cream cooler
compartments ideal for deep freeze 1926 T
Model Ford Speedster 1929 A Model Fire
Truck 1966 Dodge Van
1973 4 Dr
Thunderbird -collector s 1tems And many
other 1tems too numerous to ment1on
OpenJ Days A Week

H\' ~

lA

0~

ANT QUI: Q A,... FUR NI URI: fa c y
on beds s o e a
f&gt;
Col
145 5050

SENIOR
APPRAISE~

u &lt;'d
('
!&gt; p(&gt; 0
MP be Nt CA o d OPCA C
M lo W lr..l;! v o Oh o P
06~ 4q 4

OR

HOUSE FOR REN T 1 m e ou h of
Eu eko Com on R 1 4 ms
and bo h $50 dep $ 50 mo
Ref
eq Co 643 29 1b ofte
~m
N CE BEDROOM 14 Wood and
0 Ca l 446 749

THE LAMP SHOPPE

II RM

l SI CON HO

o

R~GR G~RA

TIMBER
Top p ces fo
l op Qual v
POMEROY FORR I::.S1

DEPEN-

T~

DACI\.

e

AND FREE ZI:.R UP~ GH
CHEST Ph 44 t&gt; 0372

ELIG BLE EMPLOYEES;'

CONTRIBUT ONS

US~D

BACKH OI DOL l /! D ICH~R o
du
u "- Co
('
wo k.
Ha
J lla k
5
l!u to d
0
h 14 / 7008 o 44b 2/ Bb

ap nf&gt; a

GOOD USED FU RN I UR[
!Jphols e cd o d opp o
Ph .14 6 0327

All regular teaching and non31'
each ng employees of tM
Gal a county Loca SchOff
D str ct All future employe
w
be e 9 ble on the f r~
day of the r emp oymen..,
after the effect ve dete of t t'
p ans adopt on
""

entre cost of these benet 3
will be pad by the Employ""'
- Gal a County Loca l Scho!Yt
Osrct
Sea ed b ds w
be f lOll:.
with the Cl,rk Treasure ,.,
Naom Beman Gall a Countr_
Local Schoo
D str ct
2m,
Jackson P ke Ga 1 pol.i,..
no ater thM
Oh o 45631
Twe ve
Noon
Tuesda :G:,
Oecem ber 27
977
The Gall a County Loca1..
Board of Ectucat on reserv""
the r ght to re1ect any and lf.Jl
b ds None bu t the lowe~
responsible b d shall be a..
cepted
B ds w II be opened at tt'l'e'
nel(t regutar or speclh.l
meet ng of the Board ol.
Educat on to low ng receipt
of the b ds or f the Board of
resolut an resol\leS to do so
the b ds may be opened and
read by the Clerk Treasurer
mmed ate y after lhe t me
for f ling such b ds has eJ(
p red at the regu rt r n eet ng
p ace of the Board of
Education wh ch s ocated 'at
220 Jackson P ke Gallipol
Ohio 45631 Phone &lt;area 61AJ.
446 7917
Plan and B d Spec f cat on'!
may be ob1a ned by d&gt;bc
tactino the Off ce of lhe
Clerk Treasurer
or
the
Off ce of the Supe lntendent
of Schools
Oft ces are
located at 220 Jackson P ke
Gall po s Oh o 45631 Phone
area 614 446 1917

Po cs
o•
ele 0 0 0 g~s
j sa
on 8(J died slob S6 pe
De e ed q 0 1 u Po ('
R '2 Po n€' o y qn 166Q

Bon me Stutes
E"Vemngs
4£16 2885

446-6610

4

WOOD

JUNK auto o d
388 877b

MAJOR

lit'

OOlU! \'\ ORK &lt;' H o
o g lh4b 00

01

Will PAY o ~ l lo
, n b k es
o o
ko 5
OCIO
oosowl o o
eve
buy b ek e
g
lo
po s e)C a bo e ' e c F l e '&gt;
Rt
7 Sou h
M ddt tJO
99'1 74Gl4

MED CAL
nsured Em
p loy el'!s
and
nsured
Dependents
1250 000 Max mum Benet t
SSO 00 D~duct b ~ O\ler Sl!lse
F'tan Benet ts
90 percent Co Insurance of
nel(t $2 500 00 of c:overeel
expenses
100 perhnt ot reman no
expenses
( Note
Group
Maio
Med ce
shoUld
be
s gn f cant y equ va ent to the
Group
Mator
Med cat
prov ded unde r ex s1 no pten
hrough the Cas s Tntn
underw,r tten by connect cii)
Genl'!ra l
L fe
lnsurana.
Com pany P an GM 1500 .-

ELIG BLE

I

M

f.&gt;

Heal J.:stal&lt;' for Sale

0

Car ter
Even ngs
319 2 84

CASH FOR u k Co !&gt; F yo !&gt; 1 u lo.
ond Au o '1'. e ke S
P one 747 '208
o f'c
o
Ru o d 74( 9575

(Insure d Emp ayees an!)
Insured Oependen st
Mus
be
s~nftanty
equ va ~nt
to
benet I~
prov ded by Blue Sh eld U A;
Plan n Centra Oh o

DENTS
Wher e cO\II'!r&amp;gefor
GrouP:
appJ es
Hosp tal:a on and Group
Mater Medica
Benet I•
Employees
spouse
ancfo!o
dependent ch ldren I v ng
the Employees .ho useho a'.
are to be Insured for the sam•
benet ts as the Employe~
Dependent ct"l ldren must bl~
unmarred and unemployeJI,;
and under the age of 1....,
Dependent chi dren to age 2!"
w t
be covered
und¢T,
Dependent Benet t pro"' detil
such ch ld s enrolled as It"
fu t me student n a scho~­
co lege or vnlvers ty ati'Q..
pr marly supported by tho.employee
""'"

0

pe

SURGICAt

GROUP

c

I

ot

9

Men

NO I EM I 00 lo 9 u oo '&gt; ol
W
buy I p e e o o p c
hou'&gt;eho d Nt!w u~d a o
ques Mo
Fu
u e 10 N
7 d S
M dd c pa
PI 0
997 6370

GROUP

GROUP

r

742 233

HOSP TALIZATION
( n
sured Emp oyees anct
n
sured OeperiCfetils )_ _ _ __
Room and Board 1~0
days sem pr vate
Misce taneous Expenses -usual
and
cu!Uomary
charges
Outpat ent Serv ces ..,...
nc udtng
0 agnost c
Labore ory Services an~
PAP Smear eva uat on
r Note Th s bl'!nefll should
be son 1 can tt-,. equ valen to
thai prov ded b~ the 120 oa.,.
Malor Pa n by BIJ,Je Cross or
Cen t ra Oh oJ

1

Vr

CO NS CU RIH NCY
poc ke wo Chi.! '&gt; o d
s ve o d gold WP
o d oldc
o
od~,~ Co

IP

IV

1976 Che .... y luv au o sl d ng bock
gloss Ph 446 0 09

1968

Th"e Gal a County LOC~
Schoo Olsrrlct s lnv t no
your b d tor emp ovee
we fare benefit plans lhe
plans woulct cover all regular
teaching and non teach n~
employees of the scho'O
d s lr lc
which ta ra s
prowlmate v 32S In number
The Gal a county Loca
Board of Educllf on w I
accept sealed b CIS for the
tol ow ng plans of nsurance
coverage for
h regvla.r
ea ch no and non teach ng
employees
I
GROUP TERM L FE;
NSURANCE
(Emp oyees
Only)
The Board of Edv~at on
shall pay the tv I prem um for
Group Term L te Insurance
nc ud ng Accidental Death
and 0 smemberment tor a 1
regular teaching and non
each nlil em ptoyees n the
to ow ng amounts
13 000
effect ve Januar y
I 1978
15 000 ncreased to th s
amount September I 978
110 000 ncreued to th s
amount September I 1979

Heal !&gt;;stat• tor Sal~

RPal Estnt .. for SaiP

BO IWtH ) CARAGl QOOR S ~H

TIMBER
Po M o-,. Fu
1 0
du ' 1 op p ce lo
o d q
sow nbe
Co
qq7 5Qb5 n
Ke Hanby
44b 8~ / 0

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR INSURANCE 8105

I

~"""" orr. n d

( ASH pod l o olt
ak
odels ol
ob
1
~::
Pho eo o codeb 4 4 ] q~3

5pm

eaCh nese

73Sh eas

?~

AKC REG STEREO pek ngese pup
pe s Phone (304) 8822683 _

new snow r re.s Runs good
$350
97.. G lttn Pan oc
f eb d 48 000 m les $2 ~ 00
Call 742 2211 or 7 42 2103 of e

across from H1ghway Inn Truck Stop-Ferry and P1ke 51, Kanauga

EO 2es

70 E s

0

FOR
STUD
Se ..., ce
AK(
reg ste ed cocke
span el
Blo ck and
on
Clo ksdo e
l nes Showquolty J &amp; D Ken
nels H2 3162

Wanted to Uu,

1972 CHEVROLET VEGA w 1h l

•bb

E9

3 Su yod
4 f)
h ow
5 Mo ays

48.

Go uo

50 Me

1u1g-uage

h5oa e

e9 Mak eamends
0 Conde s end ng
oaks
Soa ks
DOWN
Pack aw a
2 Wooa can

JQ Hay ng wea oo

&lt;~9

9'12 1680 742 3162 992 5427

All Wh1fe

6 3G-ThiS Is The L1fe 3 Jerry Falwell 4 Taikmg
Hands 8 American Problems &amp; Challenge s 0
7 oo-Mormon Cho r 3 Edd e Saunders 6 Viewpoint
8 Treehouse Club 10 Newsmaker 77 13

a

ME CS COUNTV Humo e Soc ety
Co el ne and odop on Se v ce

9'12 2749

59Cooad a a
60 og

5 8odowae

sso.oo

1• • J69B Jm

1973 FORD PINTO 2 dear good
cond t on Coll992 5533

Loheng n

Ja

Female

CandleiiQht Carol ng Ceremony 33
SUNDAY DECEMBER 11 1977
6 DO--Chr stopher C oseup 3 Ag USA 4 Th s Is The
L fe D

Jerry Falwell

WOODS

HOOF HOLLOW Ho ses Buy se
ode o
o n New and used
saddles Ruth Ree...,eti Albany

pm

34 Mooa
3e Heoneo

94 Vas ages
95C es kego;t
96 Pa amou
9 Obse a l'l n

03 Goddess o d s

•

WE WILL BUY you c..ld d amend s
Also god co !&gt;
Tow ey
Jcwele s 424 Seco dAve

8 10 News 20
10 31)- Farm 0 gest 20 Mark Russe 33
11 DO--News 3 4 B JD 1S D ck Cavell 2D

MONDAY DECEMBER 12 1917
5 4So-Farm Report 13 5 5()-PTL Club 3 5 5s-Sunr se Semester 10 PTTL Club 15
6 2So-Med x 1D 6 30-Columbus Today 4 News 6

NFL Foolball 6 13

5 2 A on ne
&lt;:, Au hen co

TREE HAVEN CERAM CS g ee
wo e cus o
f ng I st ~:~d
p odu o de s Co 388 88

you o wn hoi day co dy Full
e o l a dy ok g o d co k e
deto o g supples
0 onno
Bogg!&gt; 446 7903

Eag les 33

8 DO-San Pedro Beach Bums 13 Little House on The
Pra rie4 15 Emergency One 6 Peanuts 8 10 Age
of U ncertamty 20 33
B 30- Twas The N ghl Before Christmas 8 1D 9 ()()-

45 Repu se
41 Teu on c ae

TH URMAN HOUSE on ques Fu
n urc st pp ng
rcpo
o d
el n ,hed Coun y Rd 8 orf 35
Ce e . ., lie
V lloge
C oo:.trd
Mo day &amp; Tuesday Even gs
by oppo n men 2ol5 947Q

o oo-sw tch

New Truth or Cons 4
M uppet Show 6 Match Game PM 8 MacNetl
Lehrere Report 2D 33 W ld K ngdom 1D Candid
Camera 13 Nashville On The Road 15

me asu e
'IJ P ay n ng

DE.-.o Stoclo. emoved No cho gc
Coll24$ 551 o4

4 15 Ma ude 8 10
9 31)- Sunshine Christmas
3 Betty Wh te 8 10
M me Dreaming of a Wh te Ch r stmas 20 Fall of

7 Jo--&lt;:o lege Basketball 3

92

SWEEPER bnd sew ng
o_c h c
epa po 'S ond SUf pi ~' P lr.
up and del very Do . . s Vocuu
CltJOne
n le up Ceo Q£' '&gt;
C eek Rd Ph o4o4b 07qo4

CHR SIMA S SPECIAL We ho...,e o BRIARPA T( H Kennels Boord ng
G com ng AK C Gordon -set
o ge 'S e ec t o o f d a na ds
&amp; s Engl sh Cocke Span e s
pu chased bel a e t e 15
Ph oi46 4 9t
p e n c ~se
ell g wh e
he st ock los so rhe o d p res RIS NG Sl AR KENNEl
Towney Jewele !&gt; 474 Seco d
8oo d ng I door Outdo;&gt; Runs
G oo n ng All B eeds Clean
01 S CANDY Co nc see fo
So to y foe
es Chesh e Ph
you se how easy 1 !&gt; o ok e

I

Know Your Schools 33

~oss

v re

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

l'et&amp;lor Sale

NollCH

,

(),~ II 1977

0-5- lhe!)unday lunt s-&lt;;, tmd Sun Ia)

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
85SSECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS OH 0

Office

446 7900

LET THE GALLERY
SELL YOUR PROPERTY
RENTAL INVESTMENT
5 un
ilpar m en bu d ng
on Uppe Second Avenue n
GQ po s Thee s much
demand n I s are a by
en e s for apa ments I f
you ar e he ype of nvesto
wh o k es res c:tent a en a
p op e t y h s tax she ter
cou d offe r you an exce en !
hedge aga nsl ax a on and
nf a on

GREAT PLACE TO GET AWAY
Hewn log cab n
arge ston e f replace bath loll 14 acres woods good
hun I 19 n hea t ol Nat I for est I na nc ng ava tabl e
STROUT R EA LTY -146 0008

Mobile Homes for ~ale
AU l
Sk
0

MOU 1: HOMES SERV CE
ng a ho g a d po os
d46 3608 0
d

8 AND S MOB lF. HOME S
P Pl EASAN W VA
9 3B oodno e 4&gt;~64 2b
973 Do
4x60 2 b
4xb7 3 b

2

R S A E MOB lE HOMES
GAl POL S 0 ·HO
968 FLEE WOOD 2 X bO 3 bd
965 R CH ARO SON 1 x 60 3 bd
969 OP ER '1 o:: 52 I bd
97 PROWL ER 1 SC
972 NO't'
2 x 60 TV o d o
o d o
g
o p e I? v lu
n shed Co 44 6 9272

t:iunpmg Eqmpm&lt;'nl

wee k~nd s

STARCRAF1 FA Ll SAl!:
M
no o 20 2] O\le
o D s 8
5 53 799 '/5 7 bu k OuSC!
$4 875 o d dow s S 700 8 up
e We !&gt;t:&gt; !&gt;e
&amp;q o
Mobil&lt;!-' Homes l or Sale Tvo Open
Sunday Con p Co
ey Slo c of So u R 62 N of
8 x 52 TRAIL ER FOR so e W e
Po
P eoso
Box 39
Na y C a k R
Roc ne s at ng phone numbe
SIAIKR ArT DECEMBER ~ALE 1'978
25 7 Su k House S4 £N5
od
SPREAD OUT
No
eed
o
down S 8 0 A ~77 a e s
pos tpone
yo u
I opp ess
s o d fo d rlow s df'Cl o 5.
wo ng lo bu de s See h s 24
as
t mon h o y Nc v and
)C 2 A dd o oo n o d splay o
sed u ~
s o k Ope Su
K n g sbu y Homes
$3 800
day Camp Co cy S o of
n oves ond seh I up eody o
So e!&gt; R 62 o
of P P co
be I ve d n Pho e 9C?2 7034 o
949 2654

'0

Al O R

VIRGIL B TEAFO~D SR
REALTOR

b8 Ho ty Pa k T o e
v h
2
oo:po do wo I 1.1 o I d yo
d ~hw o he u de f n ng '1 x
12 ou b dg p 606 638 40b0

MOBILE HOME epa s 992 5858

TEAFORD(B
216 E Second Street
Pomeroy Oh1o 4576f
Phont Q92 3325

1ST AVENUE LOCATION
W e have a 2 s ory 7 room
home ovl'! ook ng the Oh o
R ve r ha
s n need of
ex. ens \le emodetjng bu1
cou ld be n ade
nto a
beau tu
horr e
Ca l
n
oda y tor more deta s
NEW LISTING
L ke you pr vacy N ce 2
bed oom om e w h h a d
wood floor s a nd pane ed
wa s s tua ed on over 1
ac r es of wooded
and
Pr ced at 52 3 900 00

SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms
ba th c ty water natural
gas furnace ga age on
corner lot S16 500
RUTLAND - 4 bedroom s
r ep ace bath c ly wa er
nal u a t
gas
hea t ng
qa r age a nd ex t a l ol
s 4 000

TUPPERS

NEW LISTING
3 y ol c:t CO!Y anch set ng
on
ac e o
Ea n
k c hen equ pped w h
r o ng e and
refr g
3
bedrooms 1
ba1hs
1
base ment Pr ~,;eel a only

PLAINS

Ranch 3 bed oom hom e
Gas F A
f u nace
c ty
wate b eezeway garage
and a ge of near sc hoo
s 11 500

RACINE

La r ge

$35 000 00
CALL AT HOME
VICKIE HAULDREN 446
4042
BOB LANE
446 11)49
WALTLANE
4460458
BECKY LANE
446 0458
DENVER HIGLEY446 OOOJ
KENNY RATCL FF
367

4

bed oom home w lh cen ral
hea t and a
co 1d 1 an ng
Sto m doors an d w ndow s
Ga age and lMge ot

S28 000

1529
TERRYO DELL

POMEROY
Esca pe the
coun try wcathe by v ng
n th s -1 bedroom lam l y
home 2 ba hs
am ly
oom5 Ia ge yard A pace
fo a f (lm y '577 500

NATIONAL AD
VERT SING WITH
THE GALLER'Y OF
HOMES

256 683
94 256 640 2

THIS SPACE RESERVED
FOR YOUR AD WHEN
YOU LIST WITH US
SYRACUSE

0 d 9 oom
br ck han e C t y water
nat u a gas a d ete clr c 2
lots $5 500
Helen L T eaford
Gordon B Tea lord
As soc iltes

\ardliale
~

VOU hove o se v ce o oll c
won o buy o se some h ng
o c look ng fo wo k
o
wha eve
you ge esu
los e w h o Sl'n l ne Wo n Ad
Co I 992 1156

CamJ!lllg'EqUipmenl
STARCRAFT FAll Sole
M
T aVe
mota s 20 o d 22
1 ol e s 18 5 $3 799 25 7
Bunlo.hou!&gt;e $4 875 Fold down
S 700 up We sc ~
ce and
qual 'I Open Sundays Camp
Conte-,. 5 o c of So les R b2
N of P Pleo son
TRUCK CAPS $ 99 up
r u k
LO po !&gt;?
Don
m ss au
spec o s Se e hem odoy o
Codnc s Co npe s on Ro bow
R dg e 0 Rt 7 oke Me 9s 2A
o 32 o Bo shon and fa ow
s g s Owr1e Robe Codne
t ong Bo o 1'1 Dh o
COONER S CAMPER S on Ro nbow
R dge l ong Bot om
Oh o
Need a wo ch a muLa I to o
h ng o mo 1g? Coli Bob b 4)
843 2b21

MINI FARM 14 acre s rot ng and camp etely
remOdeled 1 , story home log barn and pond located
on Hannan Tra ce Rd n H a r 'liOn Twp STROUT
REALTY d46 0008

�l)-6- TheSwlda\ Tlmt·~ ....o.;l' tllll tt'l, Simtla.\ . lkr l l . 1971

•

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifi.e ds
u~al E•tat~

Real E~tate for~~ ..

for !'alP

lkall::•tah• for !'ale

H~al ~:.tatP

ltt•al Eo tale for :ialt•

ltealli•tatf' for l'al"

0-7- Th•Sunday1'1mcs.Sentmcl , Sunday , ~c . 11.1917

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel·Classifieds

for Sale

lteal Eotalr for ~ale

THE WISEMAN R'EAL
ESTATE 4GENCY
QUALITY PLUS
You can buy lh rs 3 ye~"\r ol d hom e
to~uy for se.vNnl thou .. .lnd dollars less them it can be
burl! for Thts bed ut rfu l q uill rty built 2 story si t u~ led rn
. Tara E-states IPatur~~ .J bedrooms rnctudi ng a ml'tSfer
_, ~droom tl1at rs out o l th rs wor ld . form,l l en trcm cf.&gt; a nd
dm rng . superb lut ch('n attra ctive farndy r oom w 1th
w b f tre plac e. full ba sement &lt;:'\ •d finished r•c rm .
I Iarge 2 car g&lt;1 rag e CdH today · S68. 500
Pus

LIKE THE RUSTIC l-OOK? Be &lt;;ure to see fh1S 3 BR
oea ut y W t lll compll' t(' 1-. l t llli'n. QU.'IIIIY C&lt;lrPt•t, ov c r~ rz
('d-.gar &lt;lQC lull basenwnt ~ ' rlh l itmdy rm l&lt;lrQ(' tiM lo t
&amp;tf'SS !Mnly r 01&lt;1 STROUfRE•\ LT Y
.JJ6 0008

: Saturday. 0{'(· . 10

VSREALTY

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Branch

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY

BUD McGHEE

1218 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
:"We SPII 'Better Living "

Manager

• 97~

So South \~·u n th~1t first
.:wd promptly plaecd
tilt• joH"k uf ht·arts on the
tabk
:\ow put) u ursel f 111 West"s
plan· . l-It., could n sc w1th the
.tL' t' of hl•art.s. play hi.s king·
Jaek anct (' tght of sp~ 1des
wlll'rt:'upon F.ast L'Ould o,·cr take and cash tht• last s pade
Would \ ' OU rise w1th that

• Q

aL' t•"' In

\0 1

\oK I H.,

*' T 6

• K 101

• lO 8 ; :l 2
.. .--\9 :l

\\ t- ... 1
• K J 82
• :\ B ti :3
• J
.. Q 8 5 ~

J- \ '1
A~ (.j !l 5 -4 ~

... f\ .I 7 4

spad ~·

aOv

1

N 1C£' k i fC.tH'n , '2 ~ bathS ,
unt'que tam II i room , lar ge
stone t irep 1:1c e Allra cti ve
setting on 7'1 wooded acres .
iust 3 m i n . from town

'
'

\\ t•' l

\ v 1lh

d1dn't and South quickly r:.ui

:1

l'e~ss
Pe~ss

! •

f-

.1~1

'&gt; (IUlh

I •
~

Pass
Pass . Pass
Openmg ll· ad
~ A
H\ 4)~" .tid..\

;-.; T

J,tmt'' J ,it ' Uh \

South thou,eht th~lt 1f he
had h i S ltfr to live O\' Cr ag&lt;:~111
he wou l d han· druppe~l thr
b1ddmg at tw o d1amomb .
Still. tht&gt;r(' was no reasun
t o gn· l• up . HC', was looktng &lt;:Jt

e1ght s ure tncks . He \\ ould
be up to nlnt,' if hl' could ~l't
11 1 on€' heart. '
.
So uth 's first problem wa !')
a t tnck one . Shou l d hl' du c k
tha t queen of s pade:, p r u·
duced b \' East "

played enough to qual ify as
one of the on gina l 10 . Smce

he ne :er Played m tournaments a ft er tllat he neve r
made the list.
He Is one of the s ix mem·
lJcrs of th(' Hall of Fa me and
ha s tlu r \'Otc for. a ~os th u­
mou.s ii w a rd of ll fe m aste r·

C'

·~.:&gt;

•

111'1\ ISt

A.'i.,oo;-...

.,, _ "'~. II "' d . ; ... t~!'t/ll)n

Bn ck &amp; F arne Ranch An
att rac l 1ve 3 S R rancher w 1tn
larqe l._.t chen &amp; tam rm 1' .
oatns &amp; garage Beaut tl •· l
ca.rpet thro u ghout
ntcC
sundeck
and
oar t 1td
basem ent Poss , ble VA or
FHA S31. 900

18&lt;1 Mi ll St. - M ,dd l@port
ice 7. story home wilh large
ving room , w b f ir epla ce .
torm dinmg , 2 BRs , cen lra l
air , and large lot
I
qarage S30 .000

H ou~e

n·

r~SO~

ga raQ~

p
E

land Contract or
this
a ttract i ve
bedroom
home
over looking the r iv er on a 11: a c lot south
of town . Features rtn ilttra ct ive Jiving
room . with l ifE place , fam i ly room . kitchen
&amp; lu ll basement Good stor"age building .
Call and m a !.:e us an offer .
'

E
E
K
L
y

c
AN
Colonial home iust 17
from grade school' and only
a few blocks f r om shopping . This fin e home fea tures· a
large living room and family room . brea~last nook and
kitchen . J large bedroo m s. 2 1 ' baths and fu ll basem ent .
Plenty of storage in wa l k in atti c. and lrtst but not least.
a beautifUl fenced in private swi mming 'pool in
backyard . $.t9 ,500 ..

I
A
L

An

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3796
E. N. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-4500
CALL 446-3643

·Business Services

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's
Carpeting
Route 3 Pomero;y, 0.

992·3978

RACINE , D .

INSUlATION
SERVICE
WOOD AND WOOL FIBER
" SINCE 1947

SWAIN
Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS • lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
Ph. 378-6110
l.zl. TFC

Jteedsrillt. 0.

12 II 1 mo.

-

~ - r------

..". RACINE CARPET

-·~: CLOSED FOR WINTER·
SHOP

~

Special Orders or Showing
of Carpets by Appointment
.. .. Only .
•
r.

••

Phone 911-9 -2814
Dave Parsons,
Owner

..

-....

0:' L ________&lt;1!1~
- 2:;!
. 5,:;
· 1c;m~o!.:_._

Let The Opening
OF
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And

TRIM SHOP IN RACINE
Be the opening of The in door season for· You with
your · old furn i ture re .
upholstered in beautilul
warm colors &amp; patterns
from Bob 's. If you are
looking for savings i t w in
pay you to pay us a \liSi t,
Locue~ in back of the S@w
N ' Sew Ourlet on Ma in St .•
Racin e, 0 .
1110 lmo

Appalachian
Stove Company
A complete selection
of Coal &amp; Circulating
Healers allow prices.
Fully slocke!J.
We're in Carpenter just Oft
· Rt. 143. Phone 698.7191.
11-1· 1 mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding
Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders
General Contractors
Phone 949-2801
or 949., d6(1
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Plea se
II 21· 1 mo.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
Service~
,,_ the ..,,,._., trudi
luilll,ga•'
Of'

htl'-tor to the

'""'·

'
... then ,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
p~

992·2174

PllflltrO)'

Kingsbury

Home Sales
•Mobile
Home'
Underpinning
~ Roof Coating
• Tie -Downs
• Awnings - Carports
• Insurance
Repa irs
See us at 1100 East Main
S1reef. Pomeroy ,· Ohio or
Phon e 992 -7034 . 10-19 tma.··

ALUMINUM SIDING
.SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT
. Easy
step
by
st,p
instructions .

ACE HARDWARE
Loca1ed In

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport , Ohio
li -9·11C

B~wn

Insulation StrYiU:s

Financi•a A•ailable
llow• Into Wills &amp; AHics

STORM
WIIDOIIS &amp; DOORS
RE~LACEMENT

IIINDOIIS

Phone Mike Young

AlUMINUM
SIDING-SOfFIT!

992-2206 or 992-7630

LARRY LAVENDER

"The Ori&amp;inalors
. Not The lmiblors

SJrKUSt. Ohio

AI

GUTTERs-AWNINGS

Ph. 992-3993

CARTER

RACINE CARPET

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

SHOP

300 Main St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Pomeroy 992 -6282
or 992.6263
8 A .M . to 4 , 30 P .M .
SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-ttc

Bissell Siding Co.

"·

"'' r - - -- - - - ,

Carpet &amp;Upholstery

FREE ESTIMATES

We are 1n need of lt s f i ng ~ l or

our auat1 f 1ed buyers It you
are Tll ,nlong of SC'!I tno . Ul11
s and w e will C'lln,,nale
lnose t ed Jous and t , me
c ons um tng problem$ th at
ott en pccur wllcn scll 1nq
your home

CONTINUOUS
GUTTER SERVICE
Third Street
Racine , Ohio

Dave Parsons
Owner

Elec ., · ·p lumbing,
carpenter
work,
painting,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done around your
home.

WETHERALL CONCRETE

PNONE

Hartford
Henderson
882 -217 5
675 -1582
UNION OPERATED
12·2-1 mo.

992~5705

I

l'lmnhing and Heating
CARTER 5 PLUMBING
' AND HEA l iNG
Cor f ourlh H. fJ 1o0
Phonf' 446 3888 or 44 0 44 7/ r
STAN DAHD
l'lu111h' nq HPOtU t(j
215 Th ,rrl Avf' 4-4 6 1!U7

Save 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on heating cost
E~tperience and
fully insured
Free Est .
Call667 -6479
11 -14· 1 mo. pd .

72 MILL CREEK - GoOd 'hOme Wlfh 3 bedrooms , bath ,
dining room , 1 ~ b asern'ent , pay for this like renl Onl'y

12-7-1 mo .

l'h~l:11hing and

Chester, Ohio
10-3o.,

1\iulrile-Homi~:tor ltenl
MOBILE-HOMES LOTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COM ·
MUNITY
located on R"- 141 c1ty wa1er . c1ly
schools , 5 rnm from Calltpolrs
an d Holzer Hospital.
'

;

Giveaway
ANY PER SONwh o has anylhrnglo
9'~'11 owoy w:d does n.ot offer or
oll empl to offer ony other thing
l or sole may place on odin tim
co lumn
lhere will be no
charge to th e ad .,er tr ~er ·

Healing

GlNI· PLA N IS 8 SON~·
PlUMHING
Hl'ot.ng
A11 Cnll
rltti Of tFng 300 l- o ur th A~tf' Ph
446 1637
mWI Tr S PLUMBING
AND HI: ATING
Houte 160 01 her green
Phone 446 273S

HANDYMAN SPECIAl Good older home , 3
bedrooms , baTh, dining room , almost new furnace .
needs a titT le wor~ out is a good buy lor Sl2.800. owner
wants tos.ell today .
CROWN CITY ·- Ellcellent building tor business or of
l ice. bui lding is seT up for a beauty snap and a barber
shop , both with equipment, locatei:l on a nice tot. A real
bargain lor $11 .500.

1.2 acres ol la nd w1 th .
new fuel 011 tur.nace.
Priced to 51'! I I.

\
1Dne
SO
1\,.:

EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPOR T UNITY - GOOd
Route busine~s wHh unlimited poten tial. if you want to
be independenT and have a money ·mak ing bus iness .
stop i n at our of f ice for more oe-ta i Is.

Th rs.l1orne 11 as a

NICE LOT - Suitable for a house or mobile home,
located 1n Cheshire Village , only $2,500.

11 slorage budding .

t8 ACRES Very nice land suitable for investrnenf or
developmE"nt, small farm or home si te. Loca ted close
To A ddav i l le School .

Three BR , 112 bat hs, butlt 1n k itChen except r el r rg .,
ca rpet thr oughout th e house e'l!:cep l ba ths H11S homers
Loca tect close ro !Own , and rt 1S pnc ed to sert Call now
lor an etppo•n tment .

lS ACRES .______, GOOd roll i ng land suitable for hunting br
camping witl1 cabin, S14,500.

Tired of pa vmg large uT i l 1tv bills? ! I t he answer ts yes ,
g1ve- us a ca ll rtghf now We Me olfer 1ng a 4 B R nome
that has th e economy of natur it I gas heat . l 25,900

I
beauti fu l 2 story colonial that will se t your heart
Th is fine home fedt ures formal entrance and dini
attractive l ivi ng room and tamtl y room with
firep la ce. beaut iful built -in kit chen, 3 s~!:. ~~:::
bedrooms with enormous close t spa ce in the
bedroom . f'1 baths and large 2 car gar13ge p lus
of a comm unit swimming pool Located in lo vely

60 ACRES -

New Listi ng , house nas been remodeled ,
new bath , new furnace . pane led and carpeted. 3
bedro~ms , storage build1ng with cella r neuse. county
waT er , n ice roll ing land. house can be purchased with 3
acres if des i red . Located on St. R t. 55 &lt;~ Eas t of Porter .

The ultimate m Cl1n stma s gifts . Make vour fam i ly a
gilt of one of the f 1nest homes tn th e area . Mak.e an ap
po intmenr to see the bed ut if ul home located al 6-29
Deenie Dr . This home has 1t ap . Repla cement cos t of
fh iS. t ine·home w ould be in the high ~90 ' s . The owne r has
agr eed to se ll i t l or muc h ICS!:.

FOR
FRIENDLY
PROFESSIONAL
HELP
WITH
YOUR . REAL
ESTATE
NEEDS .
CALL
OR
STOP , IN
AT
OUR
OFFICE .
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING .

WE NEED USTINGS
~552 ANYTIME ·
428 2nd AVE.
GAU.IPOUS. OHIO

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers loos te r!. , 1rons, oil
~m o l l appliances . Lawn mower.
nex t to Stote H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) qss.
3815.

·'\._

., ••••••••••••• ***************** ~~'. , ~-=-! .
FOR SALE
PONY KEG CARRY OUT
: IRELA ND MORTGAGE

!

*

!

!

!

!
!

BAIRD &amp;FUu.ER REALTY

:

~7013

!
!
*

~

~

&gt;t-

,._

:

t******************************

Au~tion
AUCTION SALE . e11e ry Tue.s . end
Frt . of 7 P.m . New ond u ~ed
t~erchon~ise at Qh,o River Au~:
!ton , Me•gs Pla10 , Middlepor~
Oh1o
Home Phone /304 )
7735471 .
11

OWN
in
!he
wilderness of the Wavne
Nat l&lt;lna l Forest . 5 lO 8 acre
tracls ol woodland now
available
adjo i ning
thousands ot acres o t
government rand . Pub lic
hunling ,
fish i ng
and
cam p ing perm i tted . Prices
sta rt af S2500 with f inan
cing ava i lab le.

l:XCAVA fiN G. don•r... bo~khoe
and di tcher. Chodes R. Hat·
lield . Back Hoe Service.
Rutlond , Oh1o Ph one 742-2008
WILL do roo fing , const ruct 1on,
plumb1ng and heoltng No rob
too Iorge or too sm all. Phone
742 -2348 ,

NEAR LECTt..
101 acr e
farm with dS A t i llable, 5
' r m , hoUse, 3 barns . sever a
other outbuildingS , cellar.
hou se, sp r ing water &amp; a
J.soo IIJ \ tob.. base .S5o .ooo .

r

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Ex cavating, s~:~p fi t::
sy~ t ems .
dozer . backhoe, dump t r ~ .
limestone , grovel , bl acktop
paving . Rt 143 . Phone I (614)
698 l 331 .
.

VACANT
ROONEY

BATHROOM S AND Kit&lt;he ns
remodeled , ceramic tile. plun1·
LIST WITH US
We
bing . carpentry . and general
lis1ings for our qua l
maintenance . 13 years ex . Sec us for ac t ion
per ience. 992 -3685 .
• •; mJr property .

COUTURE QUALITY Dre ss Making
&amp; Alt era tions . It's not too late
to ho'w'e you r Chr istmas &amp;.New
Year · ~ ou tf il cusl om mode .
'991•3263
YAMA HA , HARLEY ·DAVIDSON 8
Can -Am Motorcycles . Complete
sol ""s ond fontos!ic service!
Hours M -T, T 9-6. W -F. 9· 7. Sat .
9-5. " The Motorcycle People of
Sou lheos!ern Ohio" AthenS
Sport Cycles. Inc,. 20:11, Strm·
son Avenue , Alhet'ls~ Ohro
Phone ( 614 ) 591 . 16q2 _

RE AliOit

CO . By owner . Iorge bnck on Mort,n
Dr . Neo r hosp,lo l. all extra~ . Ph
Spet1ol,zing in FH A ond VA
44b· \171 or 446 -4305
.Home loons . Ab o R.ef tnanc ing.
403 2nd A~tELlo c oled 2nd floor .
2 STORY 3 bedroom frame house .
Gotlrpolis . Ph. 446·71 72
-·r-f ,A . furnace , storm wrnd ows
4 'BR . HOUSE on on e Ocre lot m
firep loc "' in Middleport . Phone
B1dwell. Ph _388 -BHb .
992·3457 or 992.SB67 .
~
~
LAND FOR SAL E BY OWNER Coli
·after bpm . 388 -9930 .
~--~-

-

+

.--

-

--

~

---

-

-

••

E
HAVE
0 THE R
TINGS &amp; PICTUR
F A~L OUR LISTI
N THE OFFIC E . rrii.Act
N &amp; LET US HEL
REAL
E EDS .

e&lt;•···•r..,

WE BUY, SELL
OR TROE
Dtugla s Wctherho lt
Brok er , 446·4144
Earl Winter s 446 3'818
John Caudill 675 4161
SALES ASSO CIAT ES.

L.•..,e.,J~O..h,.n..'o•n"l"S~6··6~7;4~0-.I

• ......

LAND NEAR
Approx
SS
leve l &amp; roll i ng

ac r e!. o t
f8rm rand w ith pond . tab
base , barn &amp; co wa_ter
Th is property fronts on '2
rds . in a very de5 Jra ble
loca tion . Lots of poten t i al
tor '1.55.000 . \
NEAR 'TYCOON LAKE 38.5 acre tarm i~ level &amp;;
rol ling rand w ith about IS
acres t illable &amp; the oaJance.
in woods 11~ s!or}l nome
has been nicety remoaeled
&amp; Offers 4 BR '~ - nice k tl
chen with stove &amp; refr 1g •
oil f urnace &amp; w w cat pel
RACCOON CREEK
_JJ
acres of llat tano w •1/1
approx 1500 11 of creek
tron
sandy so d . ba~n
IOC.!I
Norther n Ga 11i a
Co .

M
FARM
IJ acres
ro l i g land . com pletely
remodel€d . 11l story home .
tog barn and pond t oc~led
on Hannan Trace Rd . in
Harr ison Twp .
LOC~TlON

Ke n Morqan

Ru so;.clt 0 Wood
Ev enrng s.

E '&gt;~entn 95
44 ()

~4 6 - 4618

0971

RUSSELL WOOD REALTOR

446-1066

100 YEAR OLD GEM ... If you ha ve always wan ted an
older home you co uld restore you'll love this one. 4 BR ,
fam i ly rm ., massive living rm . iflnd d i ni ng rm . Centra l
foyer with open stairway . O'llg tree studded lot with
space for a garden . Needs some work but could be a
showplace. S22,(l(}Q
MODERN 3 BEDROOM CARPETED HOME : Loca t eo
o ff Rt 55 4, near Parl er JO acr es ro l li ng land. 1.500 sq .
ft of l i ving spac e on f rrsf floor plu&lt;; fl nrshed full base
ment. I I you lr ke pr 1va c t of the country p lus conve
111ence of modern l iv i ny, •tou should l oo ~ at this . Pri ce
S59,000 .00.

---·-

BEFORE YOU BUY! See this new 3 BR 011 electric
home. Lg . country kitchen . lo1s of cabinet space.. range
and d isposal. F ireplace 1n LR . fully carpeted . Garage.
Nice level lol. $35,000 .

we

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING SP'ECIAL?
have
homes S59 ,000 and up . Shown by appointment only
RACCOON CREEK and Bear Run Road frontage , ex ·
cetlen1 bu ild ing ~:te . Id eal lor summer home 30' boat
romp G.:~ Il ia County Rural Wat er , 57.000
NEW HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION . Wood
burn tng f i replace, 2 car garage. 2 FULL B A TH S. &lt;..en ·
tr. al air cond., r~nge , dishwa sher 1 1 d isp . in kit . Ap
pr ox 1 acre lot S45.90 0 a,nd Under .
DOWNTOWN RESTAURANT Well es ta bi&lt;Shed
restaurant seating 48 and r ecreat ion h~ll with up t o
date equi pment, presen t owner has b uilt t his into a
thr·ivi ng business . potential unli m i ted ! Priced
reasonable. Call soon for more details .
WARM AND FRIENDLY Galher . around lhe
fireplace in the famil y rm . and enjoy the wi nter
evenings . This 3 BR brick . all electric ranch has a
Warm morn i nQ wood burner for added comfort and
economy . Work saver kitchen w ith lots of cabinets.
range, d ishwasher and disp . JA acre. S37 .500 .
BRICK AND FRAME RANCH - Nearl y new . 2 BR .
large LR. k itchen has lots of cabinets , built -in oven
counter top range . dining area . Util ity rm . 100'xl50' Jot.
Pr iced to sell at S22 .000 .

44 OLIVE STREET . Within w alk ing distance
downto wn . 3 BR frame . N ice eat -in kitchen . Garage .
Nat ural gas furnace . Good cond. $28.000.
" COUNTRY PLACE ." 5.3 ac r es . barn , chicken house
and granary Good fence , &lt;i BR hom e, fam ily rm .. ,
g_a~a.~e - Fuel oil furnace. Lots of space for family
ltvr~ . SJ2.500.
BUSINESS AND HOME Lower l evel Ideal lor
a lmost any t)tpe bus i ness over 1. 900 sq . ft .
showroom . work area and attractive carpeteQ offic.e .
Upfttairs, a tastefully decorated 3 BR home. Lg .
modern kitchen , carpeting t hroughou t . Sepa r ate gas
heating system for· both floors . Cen , air' cond . Lots of'
park ing space . Super location . CWner relocated in
area. $40,500.
NINETY -SIX ACRE hill farm , some t i llable land , 2050
lb. tobacco base, 1972 Homette 2 BR mobile home.
septic ta nk , good water supply . Hannan Trace Schools .
Just list ed 125,00'1.
190 ACRES , SO a·cres. 10 .3cres of a bldg . lot the choice is
yours, owner will split this fa r m to sui t your needs.
beau ti f ul building sites on l y minutes from city . Call of
stop by the office tor more infor mation and a per sonal
tour of tl1e property .
WE HAVE MORE FARMS, HOMES &amp; BUSINESS
PROPERTY AVAI L ABLE CALL

LOTS FOR SAl E. Blocklop. oil
ufFiil ies . Coli .u6-0lb8.

446-3636

3 BOR . HOUSE , like new. 2 acres
ojocenl to ci ty corp. 52 2.500.
Coli -'14b-1 615or Ub - 11i~ .

ANY HOUR
OR BETTER YET .. . STOP BY AND SEE US AT 2S ' '
LOCUST ST ., GALLIPOLIS, 0 .

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

l:XCAV ATIN G. doze1 . loode1 and
bac Hhoe work : dump truc ks
ard lo - boy~ lor hire ·- will haul
frll dirt. to soil , limestone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jcf
lers . day phone 992 -7089 n1ghl
phone 991 -3525 or 992 - 5132 .

PUl liNS EXCAVATIN G. Complele
Service Phone 992 -2478 .

lH

--

i

~Thi s well known businessisoneofthearea ' s
best . A money -making busines s· that
~ includ.es the property, n ice lot to river .
fixtures and inventory . Business has a very
~good net income per year. Stop in and let us
give you more details .

BRADFORD , Au ctionee r . Com ·
plele Serv tc e Phone 949 -2467
or 949 -2000 . Ra ci ne . Ohio , Crill
Brodlord .

Evenings Call
Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

'!!e

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
So 'I 34

S10,500

SEWING MACHINE Repai rs . ~er ­
..or~e all mak es , 9~'J . 2284 lh e
Fo bri (;_ Sho p . Pome r oy.
Auth onzed Smger Sal es ond
Ser '&gt;~ke .
sharpen,S:c rssors .

R es idential
and
commercial.
Call
for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday , anytime.
Phone 985 -3806

446-3636

·f o\lr- I

HOME WITH RENTAL - Buy th rs 3 bedroom home
with bath , dining room. enclosed back porch and let t he
rent from a 2 bedroom garage apartment _nelp make
your payment. Good locat ion in town .

REMODELING . Plumb ing, heottng
and all types of general repair .
Worlt guaranteed 20 yea rs ex ·
pe!ience . Pho~e 99~:?409 .

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

11 -25· 1 mo.

Home Service

"Get ALoad Of This"

JIM KEESEE .
Cellulosic (wood fiber}
Thermal lnsu lation

[B

NEW LISTING N ice 12x60 mobile nome with
covered patio across frorrr. new carpet in tivng room,
carport , 2 sma II bufldings, coun ty water , woods rn bac k
to ma~e thrs a beauty . Qut &lt;; tanding buy for Sl2.000 .

Look1n9 tor a home wdh acr eage? 11 so g1ve a cal l rtght
now We =tr e off enng a ver'l n rce "'ider home mat hd~
been remod eled from top to bottom Th1s ftne home has ,
a lull bflsement Al so you w rll en 1oy nearly 30 iic r es of
h ill land rust r 1qhl tor,Qronnq a few cd ttl c , itlso for hr k
1ng . Th1S pr'Operry .oller s an amaz rng panor am 1c V1ew
of n1e beauTrlul Oll 10 R •ver Col i no w for an appo1nt
ment .

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation

,.

NICE &amp; ROOMY ' - Attractive frame Mme. J
bedrooms, new bath , new kitchen , tamily room , good
buy tor $22 ,800. owner w ill help finance or sell VA or
FHA .

Ch ecked th e pnce of rand lalelv? If vo u have you know
by now 1t ' s noT g('IIH)Q dny cheaper M y sugges t•on 1S to
buy now , or pay more later GtvP us a cdll , we have a
few lots availilbl&lt;' at th 1s t 1m e

E1 STORY ...;. Unuo;ual but beautiful home with
BOO sq. If. of ru stic liv in g i n Ihe family room . ( Has a
balcony that su pports master bedroom &amp; bathsl. &amp;
w_ b. fireplace . There are 3 other be droom s. ea t in
k1tchen ~nd extra bath . ~ni?Y the fenced in swimmi ng
pool and large 1 a cr e lot m Cr Sch . Dis t . on Rt . 1-11.

BEAUTY IN THE WOODS - Qualily built ranch style
home is ~tuated on 17 acres of pines overlooking U.S.
35 ~pp:-o:~c 4 mi. west of R io Grande . First time on the
marke1 . S50's. STROUT REALTY , 446-0008.

CANADAY REALTY

CLOSE TO TOWN
Lovely new cedar ran ch , 3
bedrooms , 2 baths, r ange, dispoo;al &amp; d •shwa she r ,
oeau tilul carpe t. hea t pump, radio inter com, 1 ca r
qarage . Call tor an appointment .

~nvestment pr oper ty loca te d ,n GaJI,pol rs. Thts. hs1 tng
mcludes thr ee rentals C,lll now for an iippointmenT
All lhree unlt S pr e~ e-ntlJI OC CUPil' d

WE NEED LISTINGS

RACINE
PlANING MIU

' • ., '

hornrs rn the a ref! Tnf' ab ove ctc,_;cr,bed 1S locet ted only
two ll'Hies tr am downtown GC~IIi POirs Ca ll now for an
appomrment

s

·• · :·~·h·
H n re · J. s ~o. t'le
~ : ~ .•11e-l" r'1 1S n~ ~1 spa·
" .. d ._t, ~ ::. .\ /} ,l'l$ ,\1?1 d

'·

. ..t$,. " .

Thmk ah ead to nellt " ~.-:
tM potC'n t ta l ottn r&lt;; wS::rlng adn~ I am sure yOu wdl see
ol an acrr , Wtlh-r •v r 1 CMl' or nome . Srtua ted on .87
dock. plus othrr r ec~"'a ; ontage L o t~ of r oorn tor a boat
appo•ntm en t 1
t:
IQnalllc l rvdt es. Call now tor an
0 s.e(' lh FS hom (', tomorrow could be roo
lute

l rnma cula l e )
BR r anch ,,.,
y
Or 1ve
Fe ttlurt
k 11Chcn
l•vinq
r
and
t _...,. nUl
c aro £1 t
throughout Owner!&gt; nave
b aOiE!d l h1 S ltnc 1\0Fl'iC

Your
Motel
ce rry
Out
Re5 tdence . 11 un 1T cconomv
pr ic ed motel can bC &lt;::- •
pdnded at l i tt le Cll.pt' nsc
Carry oul do ing a SuDer
bu s tne5S
Wonderful
S
bedr oom nome wdh 2
cnens e1c For mor e 1nt o
I ke W 1semnn

fo r

"

"' _. ~j-

'

Live close to town .,nd iii the sa rne trme enroy coun rry
atmosphere. You will love Thts modular home that ' "
eludes all ol 111e extras . 1nclud1ng cen Tral air. l ormat
d1ning, ta m11y room and much more Low S30' s

1

That ·mtght well be th(• S.'.l'"l,:0~\1 't' ' ·&lt;hJ(]If'SSt?tl t'n ~e
clflc-'~· •' ''' r:"-"L·f,lSe,J
.r"lt" most
"·-mn1ng pia.&gt; 1f s p &lt;:~ dt• s W('fL'
nre'P-'1
,.c
Jut&gt;st
1"'.'i \\ tli oe
gmng ro brea k ;. ~ . but that
seem ed &lt;:~ !m o s t 1mpo:os 1 bl~ ... :::.e.J ·" . ,.,,~ ~·~"'11' 'H' dna .\ Ill
't?l't" \ f' •'-'!'tt&gt;S vr
J A.CO BY
with Ea s t and \Vest not b1 d·
'.' OOE qN
dtng
.
' '1__:;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ....,

Doll

L o\lelv 3 Bed r oom Ranch a
t me IJr rc tr. &amp; frame rancllcr
w i th 3 n 1ce BR , lclrQ{' fa m
rm , n rce k tTcncn a ncr ca rpE'I
ihrougn o.u t Exce ll ent nCi Qfl
b.ornood r•qht Acro ss trorn
Addav ille Sq10ol. $31 ,900

sh1p
'.I W... l '·\l 'l· li )-.' 'It

Countr y
Showplace
Beaut i fu l 3 BR brick. wilh
nco SQ tl o t lrv K1tcht::n &amp;
breaktaSI arca , tor m dining,
lnr ge
t am
rm ,
w b
l i r cola ce. 7 ba!I1S 8. J rr cres.
C.all lit Co S.ch 01St S69,90 0
. An eye ca rcner

35 ro 40 acres ol land s.urr oundr nq one of ttle n1cest
Good Starter Home
COlY 2
bf'drm ran che r w rth large
l i'&gt;l . r\-n &amp; family r m . eal in
k i tchen \ wit h ranq c &amp;
refr lg l . Very scen tc 5 acre
wooaed lot on R 1 160. Good
opport un, ry tor S29 .000 CCIII
Dan Evans dt JBB 8111 .

l'Ve rrt. this \V(•s t

A :'\t..•w Ham~siure re&lt;:tdei·wants to know if it is true
tha t Ely Culbertson never
became a life master .
Yes. it is true . When the
Ufe Master categor y was
established Ely had not

Farm Near R:uttand 6e
acres of t,H,n land w i th 15
, t il lable and balan ce 1n
· Sture and woodtana A lso
large 1 story s BR hom e 11•·
both , eat -1 n kit , d1n . rm ,
lor ce d a •r Oil healing , QOOd
fencc &amp; 1ar9 c bar n \JQ ,900

Heal t:!illde for s.k.,.

21 PORTSMOUTH RD .
Nice family ho me w i th 4
bedrooms. large li v ing rm ., new k itchen, forma l din
ing , full finished basement, all fh1 S for onl y ~2 9 , 900 Call
toddY.

NEW LISTING
For S71 500
BR home si tu tE'd on a 9 - ·
you can buy a 2 or three
nome thai has 11ac1 e • ceol ~:n~n acre clo t This is an Older:
PQtntmen l
c ar e au now lor an ap

• :\ .Ill
• .·\t\ !l ti 5--1
... JLl ti
East-West •;u lner: Jblt'

Ehioy

the On,ci V a lley , rl beautiful 3
BR Y sha ped res,denc{'

urt thl· rll lll' tnck, s he needed .

• Q .J

OesFgnf'd

a mo5t cornm and ir1g view ol

tn wa i ~ F nQ
sc hoo l s and
tealures
J
le~rn -il y
r oom
1 nQ l arqe l 1v1n9
1 ,,
k ,rcnen , '2
Qilraae Carpe t
out · See · tOdrlV

'South takes risk early
f-

Archit ect

A v('ry n1ce 2

Heal .Estate for :ialc

LOVELY NEW RANCH - Just coi'Tl-J)Ieted and wa 1ting
for you . Has 3 bedrooms, I' 1 bathS, nice c arp el. ful l
ba sement with br ic k fireplace , large carpor t. Located
on 11• acres of p ice w ooded land very good buy lor on
ly 533,500

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby.

Ueal Estate for Sale

OFFICE 446-7013

CALL 446-3643

REALTOR

Real ~ate tor :iale

Hcol t;otate for ~Je

BE YOUR OWN B05Sw ith
this
well
est ab li shed
grocery bu!i ness . Perfect
for a family oper at iOn .
L ivi ng quarters are at tache d . Call tor deta ils.

VALUE

APPEAL
'24ac.refarm iS
mos lly lill aiJ ie &amp;-fea tu res a
very ntce 7. 'i.IOrv home with
a rms
&amp;
bat~ .
The
downslairs i'i. brand new .
Also i ncluJe d are a 50ll60
barn . s i lo &amp;- J small
build ings Tll is property is
located J ~ m i nP.rth ol
HrMC on Route 160 '

OVERLOOKING
RIVEk
- Nice 1 BR cottage is
located on Route 7, 4 m i.
south of town on .97 acre.
DriVe by th is one &amp; you ' ll
adm it i1's bargain priced at
$15.500 .

BEAUTY \ N THE WOOD ~
- Quality bu ilt r anc h style
hOme is situated on 1;
acres of p ines overlooking
u .s . 35 approx . 4 m i west
Qf Rio Grand@ . Tll iS tow
m " inten8nce
ho'me
is
cove red w i th br i ck &amp;
alum inum &amp; features 3
BR ' s, l arge LR with stool'
t ireplaCP. . nice kitcnen &amp;
d in ing area , '2 garages &amp; a
cella r house . F irst t ime on
the m arket SSO ' s.
iY R . OLD RANCH nas lets
to oft er tor only i32 .900
Fea1tures eire 3 BR ' s , larg~
LR &amp; ta mH y r m ., k,, tc he n
with s1011e. refr i g , d ish
wasner I!. breakfast bar,
laundry rm , cent a ir _&amp;
sw imm i ng
poo l .
Th rs.
Deaulv i s located m B tdwell
&amp; would probabl y go FHA
or VA.

RUSTIC
RANCH
QUALITY BUlL T
3 BR
beau ty i s les5 than 1 yr . old
and features natural wood
si d ing , fu ji basement w i th
poured concre t e wa ll s ,
double garage , k i tchen
w i th Co rn ing cook top , ~elf
cl eao rng oven . a isp and
d i shwasher
Owners
lee~ving area . Pr ic ed to sell
-PASTURE

FARM

Mudsoc Area Appro)( .
1.11 acres c l_ean !" i ll pasture .
woven w ire tertces , appro)( .
1 mi . td . frO(lfo!IQI:' , lOb ..
ba!,e . 2 barns. 5 rm . house ,
all m inera l r ights inc l uded .

s.as ,ooo

1.:1ST1NGS NEilDID WE
ADVEIITISII
NATIONALLY- WI IUY
~ SELl,- TIIIAIU .

4 LOTS ' &amp; HOME 6
rooms , 3 or 4 bedrooms.
bath, some carpeting &amp;
panel ing, porches , all in
good condif ion . 512,000 .00 .
4 ACRES - Rutland House
has 3 bedrooms, bath , 2
livingA oom s, r oofed ~ atio
in the rear . trailer hookup.
515.500.00.
JUST LISTED - 2 story
frame , 3 B DRMS .. l' 2
baths . 2 living rooms .
fi r e p l ace .
p orches .
ca rpet in g &amp; har d wood
floor's , good condition , good
neighborhood. immediate
posses sion .
O N LY
$13 .900.00.
TWO FIREPLAC,ES - Up
to 3 BDRMS ., I floor plan .
kjt .
&amp;
bath ,
nicely
remQde;led , near shopp ing
M iddleport.
ONLY
in
513,000.00
TWO YEARS OLD ~ This
modern ranch can be yours
for only 525 , 900 .00 . 3
Bdrms .. garage, storm
windows &amp; doors. in a good
subdiv ision _ CALL
TODAY .
PRICE REDUCED - No
heat ing b i lls th is winter
wit h your own ga·s . d
Bdrms., util ity , large k it ,
patiO , barn &amp; other sheds ,
garden space
t l1is 7
acres. 532,000.00 .
WE HAVE BU.YERS FOR
YOUR HOME OR FARM .
LET
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING • SERVIC E
WORK POR YOU .
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
- FrANK;'K'A'TFIY &amp; LEONA
ASSOCIATES
992 -22S9- 992-6191

on

CANADAY. REALTOR

PRICE
REDUCED - OWNER
RELOCATING :
Modern J bedroom home ~ituated on 1.82 4cre lot
over looking rn e beauttful Onio River. Oak floors and
trim, full basemen t, cenT r a l air cond ., 2' 2 baths,
neaTed garage, obser va t ,on deck. and many oth~r
amenifie~ . Pr ice r educed l o$58.500 .00 .,
NEW LISTING : In Kanau ga , 2 bedroom , srtua fed on
large 101 . plenTy of room for c ~pans , on . Pr iced to sell.
&gt;18 ,500 .00.

UNIQUE HOME WITH 5 _
A CRES ....... Si tUa ted on Sugar
Creek Rd.. 11 ea r Cr own Ctl y 767 l b_ tab , base, all new
co nstruc t10n Needs som e comt:i letion . Price onl y
19 .000.00 .

NEW LISTINGS : 3 bedroom , carpe ted homes, all eler: ·
!r ic.- SilUaleO on 7S ' x120 ' tots _ .Availab le for one vear
Jeas.e, or b uy for 525,000.00 conven t inal loan, or land
con tr act . Ca l l for more rn formatr on _
NEW 3 BEDROOM homt
located on M i ll Cr eek Rd .
Ju~l comp leted, you can be
th e first occupanl. buill
with Qual it v in mind . Cal l
lor more information .
NEW LIS TING - Thre~::"
bedroom c arpeted norne i n
Plantz Suodfv ., tWO e1. tr a
lots , tO ta l difnensions.
180' X140 ' . F ,A : naL ga&lt;:.
tura11ce. S23 ,0d monthly
budget
FOR SALE OR LEASE :
Modern one story bri ck
buil dt ng , over 14.000 sq. ft .,
pa rt ba ~emen l , na t . ,gas ,
centra l a ir con d i l 10ning .
Large rece ption room , ove r
60 r oom s, v ar iou s Si l es .
l deitl
locaTion, par~ i ng
area accomm odates excess
at .so autos . Located adia
cenl to Gallipolis Golf
Course. Ca ll or stop tn lor
more intor'm at ion .
NEAR TYCOON LAKE : l
acres. plus ne w f i r ep l ace
( f ir ewood al ready cu t ),
16'x l 7'
living r'oom. 3
bedroom s., ca rp e t ~ d . 700
feet of roa d fron tage
Gal li p o l i s Ci ty
?chool
D istr ic t . Pr ice 5.35.000 .00.
NEW LISTING : Small cot
tage, loca ted on Rt 160.
just outside city limits, nit e
garden area . fenced ,n
yard , garage Priced to sel l
$23 .500 .00 .

IF

YCII ' RE

PLANNINL.
WE
H ft ' ' E
A
LIST
OF
PRDSPFCT'IVE BUVERS ,

T'O SE L L , CALL lJS
ANO

WE'RE

ANXIOUS

TO SERVE YOU

NEW 3 b.edroom house. 2 baths
oil elec . 1 acre, Mtddleport .
close to Rutland . Phone 992 7481 .

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS . HobsteHer Jr. ,
Broker
10112 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-6333
OWce Hours : 9 A .M . to ·•
P. M .
Clo se
Thursdays
an rSaturdays at noon.
New 4 bedroom , 2500 sq. ft
living space . 21 ~ baths, I'
room ranch brick . LocafCi:
. 3 miles fr9m Rt. 7, up Wes
Shade River . Call for ar
appointment .
We ha we n~ed of li sti ng s,
all type s, homes, Janel,
commercial , etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Ass.ociate

Home Phone 742 -2003
- - - Hi fton Wolfe, Sr.
A ss.oci ate

Home Phone 949 -2589

~--

NEW LISTING : 40 ac:res,
with thr ee bedr oom riO"u se.
garage
and .two ou t ·
ouila i.ngs . ru ral w ater and
well. Loca ted near Cora on
Tom · Wood Rd . Price
128 ,000 .00 .
FIV E BEDROOMS: " Cen
trally loca ted alonQ 400
blocK of Second Ave . -Home
is divided to m ake rent al
apartmen t If desire$1 :..2 kit
· chens , 2 balh roo~ car·
port , fv ll basement, steam
heat w i rh in' e·asy welk ing
dis tan ce of do wn1own .,
Price S35 .000 .00.
151 ACRE FARM : , Near
V in ton . lnc luc.Jes rUlab le
a·nd t imber land. Also, 4
be'd room home, equi·p m ent
shed , Bottom land bOrd er s
' Rac coon Creek . Call for
more in fo rma tion .
MINl ·FAR M : 4 bedroom
house with 17 acres, near
V i nton . property bord ers
Rt )25 and Raccoon Creek .
I nc ludes one large out
buld1 ng , 20' x l00' and corn
crib . Buy now tor onl y
S39, 50(LOO

WE NeED LISTINGS : IF YOU ARE THINKifiG OF
SElLING GIVE US A CALL .... LET US HELP YOU!

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associate

HOME51TES l or sole I acre and
up M•ddleporl . near Rul lond.
Co11992 -7481 .

NEW LISTING : Located
on Lower River Rd .. a
beautiful vlew with river
fr ontaqe ; 3 bed room, new ·
ty r eno vated. ca rpeted ...
, ou must see to appre.c.iate .
Wood b u rn i ng fireplace ,
new hot water tank: F ,A .
fu el oil f urnace, . 84 ·-~re
loT , all tor $30 ,000 .00. '-

IF YOU DON ' T SE I! THI:
PR QPERT'( YOU WANT
I N TH I S AO . CALL . W E
foi.A Y BF AP.LE TO FINO
JT FOR YOU .

,

SMAll lo rm for sole 10•. down
owner f 1non(ed Monroe CouritV W . Vo Phone [304 ) 77 13101 or {304) 772 -3227
COUNTRY lorm1ond wdh ~edud
ed wood~ wolcr and good O( (e5.5 rn Monr oe Coun ty W Va.
$1 000 . down coi l {304 ) 7713102 o_~_
_!.J04} 772 -3227
Commer&lt;tol p'roperly oppr ox . 17
acres . level lond located ol
Tuppers PIQ'm s on Ohro Route
7 _Phone ( b14 ) 667 · 630~

-

---·-

,....--

VA-FHA . 30 yr hno"nctng. Ireland
Mortgage. 77 E. Slate A then~
phone (6U ) sq2.3051
SIX ROOM house . all electr 1&lt;
(Orpe ted cor port $16 OCIO Ar row Camper $600 992 7885 10
om to 6 pm No Sunday coils

n

ACRES 8 room s 2 bolhs ••nt h
sho we1 Comp le te ly remo~oel ­
ed . fue l 01l furna ce All m1neraf
r,1ghts. 2 boy cor pc..F ~ Eventngs
after 5 pm 742 2819 .

\t¥Iled tu.fio

HOUSE FO~ 'Sole, 3 bedr oom 1
cor goroge
2 yeors old
$27 500 Ru\11( H,lls. SyrocU!&gt;e
qq;t .554 1

HUFF INf S INlERIOR
DECORATING
Coll388 -88 47

Wanted lo Uo
NOOD SURNER ~eG11f'9 !otovc
Co!/ Jb7 7793

U.,l a.Dd

HOUSE HAVE to sell by 15 t ol ABSHIRE A UTO 1274 ~o~tl&gt;rn A Je
month Call 741 2SIO between'
Wtll po1nl your cor or tru ck for
11omondl0pm
. te5-s Also tuneup ond m1nor
molor work Coll 44 6 3664

--

PINt

PULPWOOD dehveted 10
B1dwe ll Woodyard or
GROW E).RlHWORMS l or prol1t
w1ll buy pu\~ ostu'mpoge For
f.ree Ooto
WORM WORI:-D ~&gt;Cf8- mlocmol•on, conlo " l
1810 S Joseph1ne Denver Col
West,oc o C01 porotFon P 0
or odo 80210 01 co l! M r 'James
Bo .o l b fS ,dweotl Oh ~o 45614
co l\et t 303 778 1026
Col! b 14 388831 3
We~hoco

t'o~~

(OS'J large mole colRe. los!HC
{Oiored answer\ to the nom&lt;&gt;
of . Mo ster
Reword
Coli
446 7130 Of 4tlb4!228.
LOST bcJO:el reddtsh br~n. color
w 11h blo&lt;k loce Lost ar ound
Kerf Coll uo 7451 .
FOU flO BEAGLE do9 in M1d
dl ep or! ~-hll or . . : Pho., e
992 370 2

�D-8- The Sm1dav flnw~"\"\entlne l. Sunday, OE"C. 11 . 1977
·
\'t'hi(:les . The sta te patrol

f'sl\mttt~&gt;d ttw

Big

lar~est Gl?&lt;&gt;rgia "trach•mtde'' ondudt'&lt;l
6, 000 \'ehirles. but the tu rn&lt;&gt;ut was fa r

Tractors

short nf. thr 20,00o to 30,000 that nr{!anizers
rt~&gt;~.m

had predil1ed.

Contumed frllm A·l
\\ tth d1~ring s.ho pp~·rs "· tstun~ thrm

Dozens of traetors lx•gnn gathrrtng m c~~ntm u ed from oal!:e D-1
th(' i ..OUIS!ana Capitnl m B&lt;Hnn Rougr. wuh
approach from that of an
G11 \'. ~-:d w in Edwa r ds schPduled tn addri!SS
ea r lier s pc'&lt;'ia l srarrh
U1em from the sta tehuuse steps
t.'tllllllllSSion which brought
MISSllUrl Gov . J oseph Teasda le told
the
attorney
gener&lt;::~ l
about 500 farmers on JefferS&lt;&gt;n Cil)' he felt " hundreds" nf prospects tn

luek.
The tr tH't11 r:::

park~d

111

C:l.• ncl' ntnr

trcl r s. ll'Ud speakers played the nfttwna l
.tn U1rm, and signs s.m d: ·'C'rimr does nnt
par, neitht•r dot's fannin~ ." ·Washingtnn
t

it was lime to tell Prestdent Carter alx•ut mter vu:•w but none wh {lS()
problems laced by MtsMuri agne ultural quahflcatwns satisfi ed h1m.
produce rs.
11tis time, Bell and Ca rter
Hundreds of ! roaring farm machines
togeth
er will narrow Ute hst
from Maryland, Dela ware, Virgi nia , and
of finalists to Utree and th en
nther states rnlled toto a biting wind at the
chO&lt;,se a director. Havel said.
na tmn 's capJtul in Wash ing ton, bla mmg
"Neither he nor Carter will
pohticJa ns a nd nuddlemen for ln w cmp
talk
to
th e fina list
pnces. Only 15 farm er~ \\ ere allowed tn beforehand, " he said
enter the Wh1te House to present d emand~
Bell , stunned by his disaplor htgher prices.

ts l1ke a mult• - t o gel Its attentum you
ha\re to stnke." and " Tius ) ear I fffi 56

people. nt'XI year I will feed two."
(\lhl r ad11
cO\\ b\l\

_,

HH: hard L.unm. 1n
~M.1ts nnd de11illl suit, ~ a lk ed
fr('l\ .

arnwu1 the Capitol ;md d1atted with
farn1ers. ·· [f 1 were a farmer, I'd be
~trik ing,"

hr stlid

An effigy of

Agr~t·ultttrll

Secretary Bob

Bergland danglrd fr11111 a ('ra ne aboard a

flatbt-"ll trU('k

Oklahoma Cit). wht.&gt; re
thousands ~~ ~ f.~rmers gath£-red in a fn gid
mnd " Til lS 1s JUSt a fract ion of the people
wh&lt;) \\111 t'J)me tJUt t1' ralhrs we hare after
1n

In Florida. 800 farmers who brought 185
tractors to the Capitol complex in
· Ta llah assee shouted down Agriculture
Commissioner Doyle Conner when he
refused to endorse a farmers strike.

De&lt;·. • It " satd Iarmer Hugh Peck of
Okla .
frl'lll ~t.·braslw.. Wy&lt;1mi n ~ and
Colt&gt;radn rcaC'ht'd the Wyt11lling statehouse
m Chl•ycru1e bl'f(lrt' noon Sa turday and
pa raded t hrou~h t11e dnwn town before
pt epanng f1 1r ;.m aftt•rnnrm ra ll y Sever~ I
hundred f&lt;mners were reported at Helt&gt;na ,
~h1n t.. Ill meet wtth the governor and the
state abrrtrulture C'O HU11lss1oner .
Wm ,)nga .

The1 r leaders said the tra ctors wouldn't
bP moved until Gov . Reubin Askew, who
was 1n Jacksonville, returned and met
With them . Gap!taJ Security officials said ,
however , they expected the farmers to dis-

Farmer~

ment spoke sman said .

tractor C'a de to show support for a caravan

he ading through S&lt;JUtherm Washington
and into Oregon for a rally at Pendleton.

ENERGY DEMANDS HEAVY
By Unlled Press International
The deep freeze that settled on the
upper Midwest lor the second time thts
week is producing record energy demands
and the snows of yesteryear are reappearing in the Buffalo, N Y environs,
boding ill for the winter officially still II
days away. "It 's bad, really bad," said
Betty Tyas, sheriff's dispatcher al Van

Farmer s in Kans as wa ited to join a
seven- m il e li ne of farm mac hinery
thr o ~h

the streets of

To~ka

tO\\ard Lhe Cap1tol Demonstrators wnr l?

stocki ng ca ps pulled to the tr eyebrows in
the X legr('(' chi ll Hand-letter ed s1gns on
tractors sa1d "Pant y. not Chant~ ." and
"I\"o Barlej. Nt• Beer.' '
In Ge-or gta, thousands of farmers ctrcled
the Atlanta sta tehouse on their farm

DOC

Wert , Ohio. "It's not as bad as last wmter,

but it's getting nice and close."

:SONANZA

---------------------------·
.8~...1..7':..~
••• ~.. UUUI"L:

Floods caused
Dear S1r .

Bell has said all along that
he was "lookmg for a leader,
a strong leader . smnebudy
who kno ws ei t her law or la w

'f1j'J~f.\hl

ffil;l

Andrei Sakharov reported, in
an a ppare nt att empt to
disrupt a planned dem onstra tton on In te rna tional
Huma n
Ri ghts
Da y.
Sakharov ts winner of the
No bel Peace Pnze for his
human rights work .

Hoofs, paws
Continued from page A-9
breed spayed female , 6 mo.·
old, black and white 882-3115.
Weimer.Shepherd, 4-mo.-old
94!1-21i07.St. Bernard puppies,
female 949-2489. Two cats and
three kittens . Tabby, Tiger
and yellow Wtth white. very
pretty 992-3911. Angora cat. 4
kilt~ns , very P.retty 843-2703.
Lost ·

femille

tan collar and license. This
dog has hea rt worm and must

be treated. Call 992-5611.
Humane Society Monthly
Meeltng and Soctal Dec. 15,
7:30p.m. Call992·7680 or 992·
54 27 lor locatton and dtrec·
tion.

Air conditioning
White-wall Radials
Sport m i rrows
Deluxe wheel covers
Radio accom. pkg .

•

,. ~,..,

.....

I

Record
Continued from

rJ

'OIJ,.,_&lt;~?:

rI J

I

X

I

I

r•I

vI I

I

Answer· WhatAladdtngotfromtne specter -

"RES PEer·

wtthin the burea u," he jotted
in the margms ol one subordinate 's memo.
He also chafed at tnvestigative suggesttons of people he
considered bothersome ama-

at which the Kennedy
bee n

REG. 95'

49e

Tht s specia l i s offered to you to acquatnf you with

the goodness and economy of our homemade
Mexican food .
No hmit to quanftty of purchase. Offer good for
Drive-In or Carry-Out Servtce Qnly.

of a woman

ca rrymg

window, shattering the glass wtndow pane, Hen mm sa1d.

DETROIT - HENRY FORD U SAYS his company will
a record $2.5 billion lor capital improvements m 1978,

s~nd

despite expedations of H Sag in car sa les. ln hts year~ n d
statements, U1e chain mm of Furd Motor Co., differed wtlh H
General Motors executiv e by fnrerastmg a slight downturn m
auto sales nex. t year . The ex.ecut1ve had predicted a record
year .
Ford said combined truck and car sales, includmg imports ,

probab ly wtll stay at tills year 's level of around 14 9 nulhon
But he satd car sa les alone proi!ably will drop 100,000 to II I
mtllion .
Nevertheless, the head of the No. 2 car company sa td
facility expansion and s~cia l retoohng throughout the world
will create a capital budget btgger than an) other in Ford 's 7&gt;·
year history . "This money will be s~ nt 'to provide the tools
and factlities we need to butld lighter-weight vehtcles that
• meet government standards and still pro\1de a reasonably
wide range of cars and trucks for our customers, " Ford said .

s~nd

CAIRO, Egypt (UP! ) Prestdent Anwar Sadat ha s
wntten off Syria as an ally m
his drive lor ~ace wtth Israel
and
Ius
parhament
reportedly is ready to give
him a mandate to make a

sepa rate peace wtth the
Jewtsh state.
Foreign Mimster Butros
Ghali said Sunday that when
the Cairo Middle East talks
begm Wednesday , live seats
will be reserved lor Syria, the
S&lt;lVlet Union, the Pa'lestine
I.iberation

CAIRO,EG YPT - DAVIDHOLDEN,ONEOF the world's
mo::-1 distinguished foreagn correspondents, was found robbed

and shot to death on the desert frin ge of a Cairo suburb .
Hol den, 53, ch1ef foreign currespondent for Bntam's Sunday

Times, was found early Wednesday with a bullet m his back
near Nasr aty, between the ca pital and Cairo airport, pohce
sources said H1s body was not tdentified until the weekend
Violent crimes against fore igners are very rare m Egypt

and pollee satd they had no evidence of a polittcalm ottve for
the sla)'lng. But the newspaper AI Ahram reported the pohce
investigalton was focusmg on "whether there is a pohtical
motive ...or whether the kiJllng was done by a taxi driver wtlh
the aim of robbery ."
COLUMBUS - JUDGES WOULD IMPOSE stiller
sentences, similar to those for heroin traffickers, on people
arrested for using animal tranquilizer PCP under a law
proposal by the state Pharmacy Board.
A public hearing will be held here Tuesday on the change ,
which would' raise the prison sentence from the present 1-10
years to 4-15 years and the line from $&gt;,000 now to $10,000.
Franklin Wickham, board executive director, satd board
members decided w reschedule PCP into the class with heroin
as a result of research done since March which increased use
of PCP, es~c.ially among U!enagers.

a'

Kennedy campaign placard
1960 with the name
"Ruby ," on it. They learned
her first name was Ruby.
They heard a New York
City gy psy might kn ow
something about the slaying.
• " N um e r o us
gy p sy
tearooms contacted on 42nd
m

Street," an agent reported,

"and unable to identify gypsy
se t out in referen ced

COLUMBUS - A PUBLIC HEARING WILL be held
Thursday night by the state Division of Parks and Recreatton
to get comment on proposed rule changes/involving the use and
operation of stat;, park facilities, including charging disabled
~ople one./lall price for stat;, park camping.
Other proposed changes include allowing overnight
sleeping in boats in designated areas, allowing non-registered
individuals to use waste s!,ation facilities at campgroWlds,
permitting trained dogs for the deaf at state park facilities,
· banning people in motor vehteles while launching or loading
boats at state ramps, and allowing fishermen to use waist
.floatation devtces on lakes maintamed by Department of
Natural Resources.

telety~. "

1978 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR SEDAN

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2X . 1\u.

u;x

Lows Sunday mght wer e in

·the- low tee ns but those
temperat ure s occurred
during the evening hours.
Temperatures in some

Eichinger one
of 273 workers
to be honored
Governor James A. Rhodes
wtll honor 273 state em·
ployees with 35 years or more
of public service Dec. 13 m
ceremonies at the State
Fairgrounds, includmg a
resident of Syracuse, Meigs
Counly.
Wilham W. Eichinger, has
38 years of public servtce, is
an employee of Tran·
sportation.
''These employees are part
of the backbone of state
government that extends
service to all the people of
Ohio. We could not o~rate
state government without
their expertise and experience,'' the Governor said.

" I am proud of the record
of
service · and
accomplishment these em·
ployees have built over the
years. They havf.hel~d state
government in Ohio keep
pacor with the times in many
varied fields, such as high·
way transportahon, natural
resources,
and
public

health," the Governor said.
These employees will be
honored at a reception
planned for Rhodes Hall at 2
p. m. Tuesday, December 13.

•REMOTE MIRROR

•BODYSIDE MOUlDINGS
•WHITE WAll RADIAL TIRES
•CARPET SAVERS
•AND MANY MORE EXTRAS
BRING THE CHILDREN TO SEE SANTA CLAUS
MONDAY OR TUESDAY EVENING 6 TO 7 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN--POMEROY

Donna K. James, 11,
Eureka Star Rt., Gallipolis,
was treated and released at
the Holzer Medical Center for
injuries suffered in a traffic
accident all :10 p.m. Sunday
on SR 7, four tenths of a mile
south of Eureka.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Htghway Patrol said
the child was leaving a
church bus when she ran into
the path of a vehiCle operated
by Lucy C. Foster, 33,
Gallipolis. There was minor
damage. No charge was filed.
• A deer was blamed for a
single· car mishap at 6:4:i
. p.m. on Victory Rd. south of
the Bladen • MercerYille Rd.
Officers said the animal ran
into the path of a car driven

by Johriny C. Caldwell, 20,
Crown
City.
Caldwell
swerved his vehicle to miss

the deer but lost control. His
car ran off the road ipto an
embankment.
Bad roads caused an accident at 8:30 p.m. Saturday
on the Kerr-Harri~]lurg Rd.
one and two tenths miles west
of SR 160. The auto driven by
James E. Plants, 16, Bidwell,
struck a series of deep chuck
holes which broke th e left
front ball joint suspension of
his car. It caromed into a
ditch.
Thomas P. Avis , 20,
Coolville, was charged with
impro~r backing following
an accident at 5': 15 p.m.
Salt . day on SR 681. The

patrol said the car backed
into a vehicle o~rated by
Ralph E. Parker, 23, of
Pomeroy.

.;,

"'

'

-.

'" '

~.1'

confrontation With the Jewish

Balmier
days are.
•
commg

WILLIAM EICHINGER

\ ~o-·

does not want peace."
Jordan and Lebanon.
Arabs "have no alternative
But htgh mmtstry of!tcials
conceded tt was virtua lly before tbem except wliat we
cer\ain the fi ve would stick did, " Sadat said, adding that
by their pledges to boycott hi s opponents "have lost
the talks in retaliatwn lor everythong. The biegest loser
Sadat's historic but divisive is (Syrian President ) Hafez
Assad, who lost Egypt and
visit to Israel last month .
Sadat seemed to seal his lost me'' as allies
Syna and the PW rejected
break with Syria, an ally in
Sadat's
pe ace initiative ,
the 1973 Arab-Israeli war,
when he told Cairo's Ocwber apparently fearing it will lead
ma gazine, " I can sta te to a sepa rate peace between
categorically that Syria does Israel and Egy pt, the
not wanl peaee. Definitely it mainstay of the Arab

state. Jordan has been mildly
supporttve of Egypt but ruled
out gomg to Catro unless
Syna and the PLO go.
Lebanon followed Jordan's
lead.
Despite Sadat's re~ated
pledges that he will not sea l a
separate peace with Israel, a
top member of Parliament
from his ruling Arab Socialist
party said Sunday Par·
United Press International
li8ment
is ready to go along
Warmer weather is on its
with
such
8 pact.
way · to
Ohio
with
"U
you
do not get Arab
t.em~ ratur es on the rise
support
for
Egypt's efforts
·since midnight

Child struck by automobile
PRICE, INCWDES lHE FOLLOWING
•301 ENGINE
•AIR CONDITIONING
•TINTED WINDSHIELD
•AM.fM RADIO
•DELUXE WHEEL COVERS

..·.·:··.·.:·:·:::..

•

enttne

Organization,

a week in the capital

Korea .
Their olltcial mission is to investiga te "all aspects of the
political, military, intelligence, economic ed ucational and
information relati onsh ips" between the United States and
So uth Korea . But most of the Koreans the investigators want to
meet reportedly are former and present government offici als
and businessmen apparently involved in procurin g supplies for
the U S. military in K~r ea

"OK" Hoover wrote, then .

SPECIAL
PRICE

:;:.;:,:;.,:;.,:;~:-:·. =:···:·· ·:· ··:-··:··::-::······-··.;.·.·.··.;·.··=::··:·.·.; ···:·;: ·-:;;:.;

separate peace

interviewmg some 60 people, appa rentl y in connection wit h an
alleged Seoul plot to inOuence U. S. congressional decisions on

added : "It so unds hke a lot of
poppycock to me."
Hoover's men mvesugated
plenty of poppycock - 1,300
pages of nut-ftle reports were
included in the fir st batch of
documents alone.
Arnenca 's theories on the
Kennedy ktllin g were as
boundless as its grief . One by
one the FBI trudged after the
tips .
They tracked down the
hobo who scrawled in chalk,
in an empty boxcar near
Detr oit, " Lee Harv ey
Oswald, Man of Destiny,"
and found he wrote it after ·
the murder even though he
dated it beforehand .
They investigated a photo

ENCHILADA

and her common-law husba nd , Jerry Campbell, 26, were
sleeping early Sunday when she awoke a11d lnld Campbell she
no longer wanted the baby . Wilen Campbe ll went back to sleep,
she went into Wendy 's room and shoved the in! ant through the

. House subcommtttee, plan to

travelmg.

BEEF &amp; CHEESE

bluck Ohw

•

l (l

at

Korea 's sovereignty. The mvesllgators , asstgned to a U.S.

advisers recommended the
bureau ascertain the exact

Monday , Dec. 12 thru Sunday, Dec . 18

e

SEOUL, SOliTH KOREA - SEVEN U. S. investigators
today bega n questioning businessmen and ollicial~ in Seoul
despite angry government objectwns they could be violating

teurs, but he ordered his men
to follow every tedious lead.
Once, Warren Commission

Special of the Week

Carroll ClJUntl es ir1 eastern Ohto. They attempted

Lt.-.mard Russ Buriug, .r,,hns ltiWH, against FltJf3 May R eC \'t S
Oi"-11111 Millerspnrt , cl 31.

•

Homicide investiga tor J ohn Herman said Mrs. Lawrence

AI the oottom of tha t
NO HOR~E CAN f:70
mem o, Hoover penctled , L--''"-""''-""-._,J-....LA~ FA~T AS "THIS!
" 0 K" and added hts , r::-:--:-:-:-:-:-~
distin ctive " H" with the BLAMME
Now arrange the c1rcled leners lo
looped bar that resembled a
V
'I
form the surpnse answer. as sugfancy cattlebrand.
~ _
,1
gested by the above canoon
Innuendo the FBI was
covering up a right-wing
'V
'1
1
consp iracy infurtated htm, Mw: THEl A
j YOUl
j
and he hounded agents lor the
(Answe"' Monday)
proof that would make fools
Jumbles STOKE DRONE PICNIC EXPEND

had

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monda), Oecembrr 12, 1!177

with murder in the deau, nl her baby, Wendy, who died of
multiple injunes a short til.,. later at St. Bernard Hospital.

CRIMET

A-4)

motorcade

plans to march nn non -union coal operations to clo~e them

wmdow of her lhree-£tory ~1partment onto the freezin g
pavernent f police sa1d Airlana L..awrence, 26, was charged

I GUBEN

s~ed

. :'·····: .;;: -··::·.;.·;:·.;:.;.·;.·.;.:;:.·:=:•=:··:·::·:·.:·.·:·.:·;.::..;:,:;:.;;-:.·:.:·.·:·.=:·..;.;: ;::·:;:;:-:;:·;::':':
9J in Tuscarawas CoWlty but were ordered to move.
"11Jere must be 500 to 600 of them here," said Lawrence
~u preliminary inju11ctiuns and tempo ra ry rest raining
County Sheriff James Howell tn Ironton. " About 50 or GO ca rs
••rders have been filed by the Southern Ohi•• Ct•a l Cu., Athens,
cam e down route 93 and 50 or 60 more came down Ohio 7.
They're shuthng down the docks and alithe non-union mines." and lhc Ohiu Pnwer Cu., Cant• •n, agaim~ t United Mh1e
Wurkers uf Arnt•rica, in care ••f. Arn•IJd Miller , prLos ident ,
Howell said there had been no violence.
Washlngtun , D. C., and U11ited Mine W,urke rs uf America Jn
Tuscarawas County sheriff's deputy Brian Walker said the
uf J••hn Guzek , president, Bellaire, United Mine
roving ptckets came from Muskingum County, through care
W••rkers uf America !ural union 1886 and !ural 1890.
Coshoc ton County and inw Tuscarawas CoWlty .
Alsn filed in Meig s C11unty Common Plt"as Court \\;B S a
"They tned to block route 93 above Sugar Creek in the
partiliun uf real estate by Edna Mae Reeves. Albany, and

Kentucky
The caravan of 30 vehicles traveled through Gallia C(1unty
this mormng w1der the watchful eye nlthe Ohio State Highway boycott businesses in the Metgs and Vinton CoWlty areas , but northwestern part of the county/' said Walker. ''They ~ere
Patrol.
he terwed U1at a ''drastic steo."
,. ordered to move and they did . There's about lOll of them tn 30
Meeting Sunday al the Wilkesville Baseball ~'fe ld ,
Anuth~ r ~rnup uf slnkir1g rniner.s left Musk.in~wn County
cars and are using citizens bcihd radios to communicate."
approKtmately 150 miners, members nf the UMW, discussed · i.lnd went after non-unum uperatwns m '1\Jsl'ara wa s ;md
(Continued on page 8)

CHICAGO - A WOMAN WHO SAID SHE WAS tired of
caring lor her J..monthjlld gtrl threw lite infant out the closed

on this matter but I am not
meeting wtth any success

•
•
•
•
•

soutllern Ohin a long the Ohio River . and then on to eastern

down.
Gene Oiler of Middleport , prestdent of Loca l 1886 of the
Southern Coa l Company's number two mme, sa td th e men in
this area were angered over an ··unfair " tempora ry
restraini ng order granted Friday by Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Judge John C. Bacon.
·
The order limits the number of pockets at Southern Ohio
Coal Company mines to three at each gate and they must stand
15 feet apart.
Becaw;e of the order, Otler said some of the mtners want to

By United Prt&gt;Ss Internatiu11al

_........_

A_..

~ ~
.... ,...

for early but thorough report

301 v.a engine
Automatic trans .
Power steering
Power brakes
Tinted glass

Unitt•d Press ln1ernatJnnal

Roving bands nf United Mine Workers union pickets, vowmg
" no scab coal," spread out thr(lugh southern and eastern Ohio
today tn an attempt to close down n on ~uni on mines and coal
loadin g docks alon g the Ohio Ri ver.
A group of several hundred striking UMW workers met in •
Vinwn County and lell by car caravan lor Lawrence County, in

byHenriArooldandBob l ee

r-"T:-H-:-Q:::-:U,..,..,Y-:--,
VY ~

of h1s cnt1cs.
Yesterdays
" It is just because of such

•
•
•
•
•

Roving pickets promise no scab coal

Unscramble lhese lour Jumbles
one lener 10 each square. lo form
lour ordinary words

enfnn :ement "

attacks that I have pressed

German

Shepherd , 5 yrs. old, wearing

'

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

v

SMITH'S

l'IIIH'ellution

1'\\'ENTY ARF;ESTED
MOSCOW tUPil -Soviet
author it tes ' place d
20
dissidents under house arrest
Saturday, dissident leader

w..- regret any im.wwt.•nil'nl'e cm.c;cd parrnts nnd school
iK'trons by Ule last nunutc cunccllatinn of thl' Walwma P T.O.
STRIKE VOTED
and tax levy mee t m~ Monrlny night, Dee . 5 Tlw l'i.llll'C ilat iun
CANTON
, Ohto (UPII
was due to the flash fll10ds in sonu.· areas wlnt' h wnuld ha ve
Pubhc
school
teachers in the
pr evented many parems and t~ut·ht&lt; rs frnm attt·mhng tha t
Ca
nton
City
School
Dtstrict
Ullp0r tant IIICt' IUI ~
voted
Thursday
night
to
Monday. [)c(.' 12. has bet•n set fu r the new meeting. Olstvn
Wrigh t , at tendanl'c nffil'l'r of lhc M ason County sciHI\I l system, · &gt;t rike at mtdnight Jan. 3 if
contract agreement is not
pmntment wh en J n hn~o n \~ 111 be guest speaker. Ht&gt; will speak on the pruposed tax levy.
reached with the city board of
The Wa hama ('hnrus directed by Kay Hoffman will present a
withdrew, had sa1d he W(JU!d
education.
Omstmas
p ru~ r am . This wlll be the churus ·~ first public
for get about it for t\Y( I weeks.
appearam_·e
lett mg the •· dust settle'"
We hope ail me mbers 11£ tht&gt; community wi ll attend th is
But he also satd "lightning
unporta
nt meetmg Sl.l they ('311 be "inf(1rmed \'O ters" nn Dec.
thigh! strike" dun ng the
15Ul.
Again,
the date IS Monday. Dec. l2, 1977. The place is the
penod , apparen tly mean ing a
W
ah
ama
Band
Room and the time is 7 p. m. Refreshments will
satisfartory candidate might
be
served.
Marilyn
Stodola, President, Wahama P.T.O.
turn up by surprise.
Th e tw(l-week moratorium

ts up Tuesday and lightning
perse late in the day .
has struck again
apparently
"Put him out. " farmers sh outed . "He's
and
again,
a
.Justiee Departnol for us."

Two c ropctus rer planes bu zzed a

snaking

•'

northern Ohio areas are

already 10 degrees higher
than SWlday's high readings.
Toda y's weather map
shows a high pressure area responsible for our cold
weather of recent days moving eastward, away from

Ohm. A low pressure system
1s

developing

over

the

Dakotas and wtll brmg cloudy
wea ther and gusty winds

today.
And, as ihat low pressure
system approaches, there

wtll be a good chance of
showers developmg over the

state Tuesday.
High te m~ratures today
wtll be near 30 in northern
Ohto and to · near 40 in the
southern sect1011 of the state.
Temperature.5 wil1 remain in

that same range tomght with
highs Tuesday in the 40s over
the entire state.

The Ohio extended outlook
for Wednesday throu,g_h
Friday calls for a chance of
showers Wednesday and a
chance of showers or snow
flurri es over northeastern
Ohio on Thursday. Fair
weather is expected Friday.
Highs wtll be in the 40s, with
overnight lows in the 30s,
Wedne s day . Aft ern oo n
temperatures will be in the
low or mid 30s by Friday wtth
a low early Friday ·in the
teens or lower 20s.

f()r a,compreh~nsive (Middle

East 1 settlement, come to us
in Parliament and we are
prepared to give you a
mandate to conclude a
separate se ttlement with
Isra el," the deputy told
Foretgn Mimster GhalC

Lady Churchill

dies in London
LONDON (UPI) - - Lady
Clementine Spencer
Churchill, widow of Sir
Winston Churchill, died
today at her Landon home
after suffering 8 heart
attack, her family said. She
was 93.
,:;.,:;.;:; ,:;.;:;.;:, ,,:, .. :;·::···;.:;·:;;';:;·;:;.;:;.;:·.;:·.;: .;

MISTER BASS 1977 - Jack Sta nley , left, Saturday mght was presente d a piltque a nd
the traveling trophy for having ca ugh t the largest poWldage of hsh during tournmnenL' last
season sponsored by the Big Bend Bass Anglers Club. Mak,i,ng the prese ntatino \\ Cl e .Inn
Crow, center,last year's winner a nd vice president. dunng the club's annu!:ll dinner at 1ts

new, elub bouse located on West Shade River.

--~-----------------------E·XTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, chHnce of showers

Wednesday and chance
of

showers

or

snow

flurries over the north
west Thursday,
but
fair Friday. Hlgbs In the
40s and lows In 30s Wednesday, ·cooling to highs In
\ow tu mid 30s and lows in

Jeens and low 20s by
Friday.
;:;::·.:;:,:;:,:;.,:;:,:;:.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:·:;:;:;:;.;:·.;:;:;

Interviews on
Ch .13 scheduled
Three staff members of the
Gallia · Jackson • Meigs
Mental Health Center will'be
tnlerviewed over WOWK (Ch.
13) Tuesday at noon .
They are Mary Skinner,
co ordinator of Personal
Advocacy; Steve Dawson,
director of the Alternatives,
Program, and Dr. Nan
Mykel, Meigs Clinic Coor·
dinator .who will appear on
"Mid Day" with Rick
Foucheaux in a discussion of
services offered at the Meigs
Clinic.

Four held for
'contributing'
Four men , t~e oldest 27, the
youngest 18, have been taken

Into county court on charges
of contributin g to th e
delinquency of minors. One
already has been sentenced.
The department of coWlty released. St!veral juveniles
sheriff James J . Proffitt said mvolved in the case have
Russell Robinson, 20, of
Darwin,

and

t~~::· !~,)~~,~~i::~,:~~~:,,
Ronni e ·::~·~~:::?':
;:;:;:;:··::·:;:·::·::;·::··:;:··::;:;:·:;:·.;:·:•:·::· :-:-:·::·:·:·:·

Williams, 27, old Chester
R eg l st rnl l on
lor
Road, RD Pomeroy, were
Christmas
baskets
and
toys
taken into custody Friday
for needy lomllles of Meigs
evening and appea red in
County will be held
CoWlty Court Saturday. Both
Tuesdoy and Wednesday
pleaded gulity before Judge
between land 4 p.m. at the
Robert l)uck who sentenced
8alvallnn
Army, 115
Williams to 30 days in jail and
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
pay his co urt costs. However,
Used toys a nd food
the judge suspended 27 days
donations a r c sun needed.
of tbe jail sentence and
placed him on one year
probation.
Robinson was to appear
NOW YOU KNOW
late today lor sentencing.
The United States produces
Arrested Saturday af- more than twice as many
ternoon were Kenny Wilt , 18, cars each year as babies.

Two more ex-Rio athletes
inducted into Hall-of-Fame

Two more 'il[o " Grande
College athletes were in·
dueled into the school's
Athletic Hall of Fame during
Saturday night ceremonies
before approximately 1,500
~rsons at Lyne Center.
Inducted were the late
Cecil Davis and Carl Large,
current athletic director at
Rock Hill High School in
Lawrence County.

Acceptink the award for the
late Mr. Davis was Mrs.
Garland (Jenny) Elliott.
Davis, who was born in
Patriot in 1898, died at the age
of 68 In 1967.
After a successful athletic
career at Rio Grande, he
taught and coached 36 years
In area schools before his
retirement. His high school
teams at Cadmus, Vtnton and
·

Mercerville won eight county
titles and placed second eight
times during his long and
successful coaching career.
Large was a starter of Rto
four years tn the mid-1950s
and wa s Most Valuable
Player in basketball hts
senior year. After graduating
from Rio in 1959, he coached
several years before earn ing
his master ' s degree tn

B uck eye 1.f.armers won 't st rz•k e
United Press International
The
execu'tlve
vice
president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation satd
wday Ohio farmers would not ~
join a nationwide strike by
farmers scheduled for
Wednesday because "if a
strike was the answer we

No cttation wa s iss ued • would ha ve do~ e it a long
following an accident at 10:55 time ago."
a.m. Saturday on US 33 at the
junction to SR 7. Officers said
C. William Swank said he
iin auto operated by Ed· could sympt&gt;atize with the
ward L. Laudermllt, 34, striker's goals-100 per cent
Pomeroy, sideswiped a parity for their crops-but
vehicle owned by Dennis L. feels their protest is futile.
Parker, 73, Racine. There
Leaders of the strike mel
was minor damage.
Sunday night with Vice President Waller Mondale at a
A deer was killed when fundraising dinner in Adams
struck in an accident at 7:25 Counly, Colo., and said
a.m. on SR 141. The al]iiJl.al ~ ~n~"._ "show"i _llenuj ne
ran inlo the path of a vehicle concern and interest" for
operated by Thomas L. their demand for break-even
Collins, 31, Gallipolis.
crop prices.

Minersville, and Monte
Riffle, 21, Pomeroy, also
charged for contributing.
All are m custoy of the
Shenff wtth the exception of
Wtll who posted bond and was

Swank satd the stnke
apparently was triggered by
wheat farmers from the
midwest who don't have any
alternative but to grow
wheat.
"It's a protest that's all it
is/' said Swank. "Pe&lt;"lple
have a right io protest when
they are unhappy, I can't
even call it a strike. There Is
no way farmers can strike
and there won 'I be one this
time.
''It is more of a parade than

a strike but I don't minimize
Ule problem," he said. "We

really have a problem but a
strike is not the soluUon. I
haven't found a single soul
tbat is participating or even
talking about participating.
Swank said the Ohio Farm
Bureau

Federation

is

workmg on several solutions

to the problem of over

produ ction of whea t and
soybeans includmg the
conversion of: gram into a
ty~ of alcohol .that can be
burned to Help the nation
meet part of its energy
demands.
Swank also disclosed the
federati on is sending a trade

mission to the Far East m

February.
"We are also working on

the loretgn trade angle," said
Swank. "We will be sendmg a
mission to Japan, Korea ,
Hong Kong and Taiwan. We
want to see if we can do some
good there with both grain
and livestock. We are laking
every angle we can think of
and see 1£ we can come up
with a sg).utio n to this
problem_.It~ink tiJat is much
more pr oduct ive than a
simple protest where nothing
can happen.

"If a strike was a n answer
we would have done it a long
time ago," said Swank. "This
is not the first time we ha ve
had problems."
Swank said the· federation
is optunistic about the Far
East trade mission.
"They will try and undo
some of the damage done by
the three embar~oes several
years ago," Swank said, in
reference w administration
grain embargoes which
limited exports.
1

gutda nce and coun seling
from th e University of
Dayton tn 1970.
Bill Gray, ma nager of
WYPC-FM Radio, Gallipolis,
se rved as maste r of
ceremonies, held durin~ the
halftune mtennisston of the
Rio Grande-Wil berfo rce
University basketba ll game.
Presenting the awards was
Dr. Paul Hayes, Rio Grande
College-Community College
president.

At~:ticH:~a,?~~n~a,;eol~~: ~~

conceived in 1973 by the Rio
Grande Alumni Association
in order to honor those who
have co ntributed to the
athletic excellence of Rio
Grande Co llege from the
beg innmg of its athletic
programs to the present era
(Continued on page 8) ·

'The Japanese don't kno w

whether we are a reliable
suppher or not and they have
to import grain and that 's ail
there is to tt," satd Swank.

"Our trade mission will at.
convince_ th_e_
Japanese and the others that
we are a reliable source for
tel'l]pt~to

their grain."

DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS

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