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                  <text>10- The Daily Senltnel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday, Jan. '1:1. 1978

Point's bad·soil ~-----A~~~-il-~~~h~----~
headed for Texas
-

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va .
(UPI ) - Six truckloads of
soil , contaminated by a
chemical spill from a train
derailment in Point Pleasant
last week, has been loaded on
a train bound for a Texas
landfill.
The poisoned soil was re·
turned to Point Pleasant
Thursday wben residents of
Williamsburg , Ohio,
protested the proposed burial
of the soil in a federal
dumping grmmd .nearby .
The chemcial, epicholorhydrin , leaked from a derailed
Chessle System train in Point
Pleasant on Monday. The

chemi(:al is highly toxic and
flammable, but officials who
ordered the excavation of lbe
soil at the spill site said they
had "neutralized" the soil
with other chemicals.
The chemical shipment belonged to Dow Chemical Co.,
which had agreed to take tbe
contaminated soil to an
undisclosed dumping area in

Texas.
Residents in Point Pleasant
have been without normal
water flow since the spUl
Monday and city officials and
National Guardsmen are distributing drinking water at
several sites in the city.
A

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

new

water · line,

connecting an old well with
the city's water works, is
expected to restore the 'water
supply by early Sunday,
officials said.

ARTHUR C. GIBSON
Arthur C. Gibson Sr .• 77,
Rl. 2, Albany, died Wednesday at CY Bleness Hospital

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

SEVERAL FLOOR SAMPLES

SOFAS &amp; SUITES

1f2 PRICE
SHOP EARLY FOR YOUR CHOICE

Jamt1 Herberl Nlda 58. a
resident of Rt. l . Vlnlo.\. died

Thursday In Holler Medical
Center following a short

illness . Mr. Nida WI$ a retired

Zelda Wood Gibson .

insulator for the
Carbide Co . in

He was also preceded in
death by two brothers ,
Everett and Frank , and a
sister, Gladv Jordan. He
ret ired In 1965 from Federal

South
W. Va .
IYu . Nida was a World War
II veteran and a member of
lhe Springfield Bapllst
Church In Bidwell ,
He is survived by his wife ,
Mary. and lhe lollow lng
children : · Mrs .
Coonle
Woodyard, Hur.rlcane ; Mr s .

He taught school 12 vears

and was a farmer .

He was a member of the
Pearl Chapel Methodist

Beulah Barker, Elk View ;
Mrs . Virginia Slate, Nitro ;

Church and Albany Grange
1611. He wa5 a veteran of
World War I.

Mrs . Bonnie Harper, Clen .
denin ; Mrs. Rebecca Stover ,
Bidwell ;
David
Nida ,

He is survived by his wife,
Maye Elliott Gibson ; one son,
Arthur C. (Son ny) Gibson Jr .,
Albany ; one grandson , A. C.
Gibson 111 , Alban{ ; one
sister, Ruth Kingan o Butler,
Pa .• and numerous other

THurman and James Nida ,

relat l\'es.

Funeral services will be
Saturday at 2 p.m . at the

Blgony -Jordan Funeral
Home ln Albany with the Rev.
Paul Yeun officiating._ Burial
In

r

Alexander'

Friends may call a1 the
funeral home after 2 p.m.
today .

Jr ., at home.
The
following sisters
survive : Mrs . Arbutls Niner ,
Wheelersburg ; Mrs. Freda
Starkey, Huntington ; one
brother , Oenzlf
Niday ,
Atlanta , Ga .
Fourteen
grandchildren survive.
Funeral services will be
held 1 p.m. Saturday· at the
Casdorph arid Currr Funeral
Home Chapel in S . Albans .
Rev . Alfred Holley and Rev .
Bob Hughes will offlc!ate.
Burial will be rn Smith
Cemetery, in Scott Depot, W.
Va .

Laetrile will

beWASHINGTON
checked
out
(U P! ) -

Friends may call at the
funera l home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m . today at the funeral
home .

The government's leading
cancer-fighting agency wants President will
the medical records of 200 to
300 cancer p~lients who speak to nat'o
believe they have benefited
I n
from Laetrile.
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The National Cancer In· President Carter will deliver
stitute wUt have cancer a "fireside chat" Wednesday
speciall;ts evaluate the cases evening to encourage support ,.
to see i.f there is any · for the Panama Canal
suggestion that the con- treaties, the White House said
lroversial substance made today.
The broadcast was exfrom apricot pits is effective
against malignant tumors as peeled to be in evening prime
claimed
by
Laetrile time 1 but the hour hArl nnt vet

..-.------1
proponents.

been set.

Senate Democratic Leader
Robert Byrd said Thursday
Carter would speak in support of the treaties, The
timing coincides with fastmoving developments on
Capliol Hill to win Senate
ratification of the accords.

I . Fl SH FRY I
1 SATURDAY 1
I JANUARY 28th I
1
I STARTING AT
. 11:00 A.M. I .Now you Know
I
At The
William Ballentine became
I MIDDLEPORT I the
first trans-Atlantic aerial
stowaway and the first one to
I FIRE DEPARTMENT I get airsick, on a flight that

I

.• • • • • • •. . took off July 2,1919.

REPORT OF CONDITION
POMEROY I'll A TIONAL BANK
in the stale of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 1977 published in response to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, Wlder title 12, United Staies Code, Section 161.
Charter nwnber 1980

National Bank Region Number •

Statement of Resources anti Liabilities

Cash and due from banks . . . . . .. .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . ...... ·... . .... .- ._. ._._.
U.S. Treasury securities ............ . . . ....... . .. .

-.~.·o·d·s·· o·f·

00
·. T.h.. ·.

a

Obligations of States and political subdivisions ........ , ... _.... ... , ....... , ,·,_.. ...

......

I

Ill
Ill

c

;

Other bonds, notes. and debentures ..... .. .. .. ... .... , .... , ...... ... . , . , .. ... .
Federal Reserve st&lt;"!k and corporate stock ..... . ............ ...... - ... : .. - . -... L":.:.:."-'
Federal funds so' : ·. nd securities purchased
.
under agreements to resell .. .,. _.............. .... , . .. , ... ......... :. : .... . . -~
Loans, Total tcxcluding unearned income) - .. · .. · · · .. : · ·· ....
~::I

···I

~ss:

Reserve forpm&gt;slble loan losses . . . ...... . , ..... ........... ·
Lo;ms, Net. ... .. . , ....... . ............. , ... . : .. ... ...................... . ,!10,5421

Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and

.

-

.

01~t::~:."~~ts ~prese.~ting-~nk ~remises :.:::::::.: : :::: : ::: :; ; :::::::::::::: 1~ ~I
TOTAL ASSETS ...... ................ , ............... .. ... ....... . .... .... $26,328
·l· .

...

Ill

;:::

.-..
ID
.-c..

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps .. and corps .... .. .. , .. , . . .......... ..
6,0561
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
prtnships, and corps ...... ....•............. . ................ ... . ... .... c ... 15 443
Deposits ofUnited States Government ...................................... . . . .. 175
Deposits of States and political subdivisions . . .. . .. . .. .. .. .. . . . .. . . .. . .. .. . . . .. .. 2 332
Certifiedandofficers'checks ..................... . ............... ,.. . .. .. . ..
74
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS ........................ , ......... . ........... 24,08()
Total demand deposits .. ... : ............. ... ................ . ~
Total lime and savmgs deposits ... .. , .......... ' .............. ~
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN OFFICES ... ... ... ....................·.......... : .......... 24 080
Other liabilities .... .................. . ...................... . ... .. ......... ..... 71
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding suhordinaled notes and debentures) ....... .. .. , . $24,151
Conunon stock:
a. No. shares authorized

8,000

'

. ~~~·u~hareso~ls~nding . a.~ .. (par.~~~-~e ) - -.
. .-...... ·. .-.. .. . ... ......... ·.·:. ~
UndiVIded profits ..... ·......... ...... ....... , .............. .... ..... . .......... 534
Reserve for contingen~ies and other capital reserves ... . .• , •........... ~ • . . . . . . .
. 43_
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ........................... , .............. :.. .. . . , 12 177
TOTAL LIABILITIES A•:D EQUITY CAPITAL ...... .. . ..... . .... .... ... .... . . ~

c

Q

'

As most residents con·
tinued to battle snow and ice
in the area , another problem,
high water, has slipped into
the overall weather picture.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED- Paul Marr,
Racine ; Joseph Wilson ,
Middleport; Alpha Cotterill,
Syracuse; Raymond Russell ,
Middleport; Wllliam Woods ,
Marietta; Harold Dewhurst,
Rutland; Carolyn Gilmore,
Pomeroy.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Roxann
Wallis, Henderson; Joseph
Higginbotham,
Buffalo;
Letha
Wamsley,
Point
Pleasant; Juanita TB.ylor,

Point Pleasant; Nancy
Bowen, Ashton ; Frank
McDermitt, Letart;
Catherine . Darst, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Ricky Casto,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Michael
.Sellards, Point. Pleasant .

cXiLuMBUS (UPI)- After
Gov. James A. Rhodes, his
aides and executive cabinet
left th~ Capitol Thur!!day
night after doing 'Ill they
could to meet what Rhodes
called a "killer blizzard," Ed
Como was left in charge.
Como , 23, a student at
Franklin UniVersity and a
food stamp recipient, left his
wife and son at their ' north
Columbll8 home because be
said he wanled to help .
Como walked 3'o&gt; mlles in
the snow lind wind to
Volwtteer. "I was raised in
upstate New York. I'm used
to this.'' .

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges Jan. 26)
Penny Allen. Orville
Barnhouse, Dorothy
Bluebaum, Dellie Caudill,
Adrian
Daley,
Ajesta
Deitrick; Rufus Dorsey,
Arthur Essman, · Jarrtes
Hedrick, Sandra Kisor, Isaac
McCormick , Earl Naylor,
Homer Nobel, Unda Preston,
Mansell Robinson, Emma
Rogers, Enuna Ryan, Ruth
Shobe, Mrs. Paul Wright and
daughter.
(Births Jan. 26)
Mr. ar~d Mrs. James
Grimm, a son, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Pauley, a
son, Proctorville.
HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
highest temperature reported
Thursday io the · National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, waS 71
degrees at Miami Beach, Fla.
Today's low was 25 degrees
below zero at Devil Lake. N.

~mber

:
:

&amp;

mover at a Columbus
warehouse. !I.e said he
decided to go back to school
on the GI bill to' study
computer technology.
Como answered
the
telephone all night while most
of Columbus slept.
.

.

While the overnight snow in no way eoo~pared to tile 8 to 10
inches which fell overnight ~ week, what did faD created
new kinds of problems in that high winds call.Bed deep drifts.
Also the snow which feU Thur!!day night and Friday
morning covered streets and highways already icy, creating
dangeroll8 driving conditions. The snow was continuing to faD
at mid-morning Friday.
,
There was no mail coming into the county through the
Columbll8 District'and as a result tllere was no mail to deliver
Friday even If postal employes had been able to get to patrons.
• Banks which closed last Friday were open today and there
were a few businesses open, although the business day was
expected to be slow.
Grocery stores, drug stores and other "necessity"
businesses were open.
Owners of others, even though they Op!llled this morning,
indicated they probably would close early.
·
The coWJty courthouse was closed as it was last Friday.
&amp;hools, of course, remained closed today.
Adding to the woes of residents was the fast rising Ohio
River. Tbe river had moved into the swale between tile upper
and lower parking lots in Pomeroy and onto the upper lot this
morning. Neither lot was being 118ed for parking cars today
because the rate of'the rise of the water was irregular and
officials could not predict a crest. The flow of the river, with
beavy ice visible, appeared to be fast this morning.
Some businesses using baseinent areas as storage were
moving out of them this morn~ .
Meanwhile, residents along the Ohio River "should be
alert to changing conditions" on the' waterway from. potential
ice jams, the ArmY Corp! of Engineers warned late Thur!!day.
"There is a possibUlty of ice jamming in the river," said
·Jerry &amp;hmWik, a spokesman for the corps. "However, at this
time, we have no concrete evidence of an ice jam causing

•
•

:
:

nomirultion for governor Thursday.

State Agricullure

Director John

Stackhouse urged consumers not to hoard

food.
Wallace Hirschfeld, a grain and hog
farmer from New Bremen in Auglaize
County and president of the Ohio Fann
Bureau, commended state officials and the
Guard for their help.
The fe deral assistance coupled with the
efforts of 3,000 Ohio Nalional Guard
members have opened up roads in 15

prayer for the nine known dead. An
unofficial casualty counl showed 14 dead
by Saturday.
'
Rhodes said he has appealed lo U.S.
Agriculture Secretary Robert Bergland to
declare an agrlculture disaSter in Ohio. an
action thai will make farmers eligible for
low-i.nterest loans to recover from building
damage, livestock dealhs and the dumping
of $1 million worlh of milk. ·
With 24 Co~nties still shut down in the
state, most of them in tile a£ricultural

counties since Friday.
Utility repair crew~ working aroi,Uld the

clock aod flying to trouble spots in
helicopters have returned power to 150,000
Ohioans aod lhe last 25,000 should he
turned on by !ale Saturday.
Forty Army reserve helicopters were in
the air Saturday, deJivering pa(.-emakerS

VOL 12 NO. 52 .

Today's January
meeting of the Gallla Countv Historical
Sociely has been cancelled . The nexl
1 neetlng will be held Sunday, Feb. 19,

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

.Elberfelds In· Pomeroy
SAVE DURING OUR

·Eiberfelds In Pomerov~JJ:..........
JANUARY
thru Feb. 3

•

:.
:
•
•

( ', d • ..· + . ~
:~;· airy Isle t!l

•

:

1

0. ·

:

-

'

, #

...

THE UGLY OHiO RIVER threatened Pomeroy' s
business section Friday. The water moved onto the upper '
parklng lot and was frozen by the cold weather . Whi1e the

luttS

· water was expected to ercst just below nood stuge , it was u
watchful sltmHion for Pomcruy me rchant.'j , muny of whom
remember the 1937 nood whirh occu1·rt.'&lt;i in Jununr y.

tntintl

. SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 1978

· UJLUMBUS - Columbus &amp; Southern
cut back 25 percent in their consumption of
electricity, and come Monday, C&amp;SOE will
reduce its voltage five percent.
This was announced late Saturday
afternoon by a company spokesman.

Other electric utilities in and around
Ohio afe experiencing similar problems,
and at this point, it seems certain that
Columbus &amp; Suulhern will not be able to
purchase power to meet normal customer
requirements on Monday .
Consequently , as uf Monday morning,

According lo the company, lack of the company will be asking for strong
fresh coal supplies continues to present conservation efforts from all of its

problems for the f.irm . .
·customers.
· Because o£ the current coal strike, new
Customers wm be asked · to cut back
suppUes of coal are not . comlng into their use' of electricity by 25 percent, and

generating plants. ·
Fresh coal is needed to get adequate
~apacity from the generating units.
The company's stockpiles supply of
coal are wet 1 and wet coal does not burn
efficiently_
This reduces the amoWlt of electricity
Ute company can produce.

Ohio river
'slush' hits

' '\
.!"-"'

,..,

\

FIREWOOD ANYONE? Mother Nature has taken care of felling three large
trees in a wooded area at the rear of the home of Mr·. and Mrs. Leland Sisson, 378 E.
Second St., Pomeroy . The trees came down in the high winds the latter part of the
week .
·

Arrests predicted
GALLIPOLIS - Arrests were
expected momentarily Saturday in a..
armed robbery of Zinn's Ashland Service
Station in ·Kanauga.
..Gallia County sheriff's deputies said
lwo black men entered the stational 6:30
a.m. with a handgun and. ordered the
station attendant, William McAble, of
Point Pleasant to "hand over the cash ."
Between $75 and $125 was taken . After
forcing McAble inlo a hack room by
threatenlng him, the men left on foot. One
man was said to be tall, the other short.
In a blizzard-related action, Gallia
County sheriff's deputies, with lhe
assistance 'Of a avil Defense amphibious

craft, were foiled in efforts to rescue a
herd of cattle owned by Charles Richards
from high waters off Sandfork Creek near
Cadmus.
Sgl. Danny White said between 12-15
calves were puiled from ·lh·e icY waters ·
along With eight cows, however, several
other cows and calves had already frozen
to 'death. White said a boot 5!1 other cows
were in the water ·and could not be
rescued.
Meanwhile, Gallipolis city police
Friday night investigated the theft of two .
speakers and three tapes from a car owned'
by Danny Sickles of Rt. 2, Crown Gly,
parked at the Gallipolis Post Office.
-

GALUPOLIS - Eight state highways and slippery.
Two
traffic acciderlts were
in the Gallia-Meigs County area remained
closed saturday due to high water and investigated Friday by the state _highway
patrol.
.snow drifts.
The fu:st occurred at 7:15a.m. on SR 7
, The GaUia-Meigs Post State Highway
Palrtll said Rt. 233 at Gallia was closed in Meigs County where.an auto driven by
becall8e of high snow drifts. Highways 'Vaughn W. Johnson, 33, Gallipolis, turning
closed by water included SR 554 west of right slid on lhe icy pavement striking a
Oleshire; SR 141 at Cadmus; SR 325 north vehicle operated by Stephen Houchins, 41,
of Vinton; SR 124 at Langsville; SR 124 at Middleport. There was moderate damage.
Minersville; SR 7 norlh of Pomeroy and The accidenl is stiU under investigation.
A Galli a County accident occurred on
SR 338 at Antiquity.
Several secondary roads in both SR 325, south of CR 2at 12:40 p.m. Friday.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
counties were also under water forcing
Larry D. Burnette, 32, ,Gallipolis, going
motorists to seek alternate routes.
Major highways opened in. the area south on SR 325 struck a heavy sheet of ice.
were Slippery in spots while county and His car left the highway hitting a fence
. township roads rertlained snow covered . owned by Arnold Pitchford . .

Losses set at $30,000

:
•

:

We have delicious Hot Chocolate
and Hot Cider. Drink!!!
Try Both. This Week
1

Middleport,

28

..

•

•

Ohio Electric Co. is asking its customers to

Eight highways cl()sed

FRIDAY, JANUARY 27th THRU TUESDAY, JANUARY 31st

'

•

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

Cutback in power asked

.

End Of The Month Sa.le

· ~- 1...

•'

.

mm.

&amp;

MEETING CANCELLED

GALUPOUS -

unba

"After almost a year of active campaigning, in which I
have been offered a great deal of significant personal
assistance, .t have come to the concl118ion that I am unable to
place my campaign on a SOWid financial footing," said Ocasel&lt;.
The six-term stale senator, who will now be a candidate for a
seventh term this June, had to be rescued by the Ohio Highway
Patrol just north of Columbll8 early Thur!!day morning as he
drove·from Akron to the Capitol for a news conference. ·

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
----------------------------------------·
l

as a real possibilty .

had ." He asked foc a minute of silent

.

992-5248

relail shortag"'' ill the norlhwest by early
neKt week and spreading to lhe soulhwesl

I

to Zanesville-, shuttlmg kidney dialysis
paUenls to hospitals and ruMing other
rescUe missions .
Victims of the storm include several
elderly persons caught outside by the
stotm : a county highway worker whose
snowplow trapped him in a drift ; an
autoworker who coulcln'l make ·11 home
and died of carbon moooiide (X)isoning in
his car parked in the company lot.
AI,.,, a tiny haby horn with a respiratory
problem in a Bellefontaine hospital. A
train rigged 1o take lhe child to a
Springfield hospital was slopped by
blowing snow.
, ..
A former elderly patient in .Dalton,
Wayne County, was caught by the stonn as
he was. walking to a doctor's appointment.

(Continued from page 1)

MEDIA, PA.- AFrER ALMOST TWO WEEKS of Jury
'''''''tii#~~t'\i\i';r:;;Ji~::;::::::::
selection, testimony was scbeduled to begin today in tbe retrial
This week:s winning Ohio
of former United Mine Workers President w. A. ''Tony" Boyle,
lottery nwnbers:
who the prosecution says arranged the "cold-blooded"
Gold number 1.
assassination of union rival Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski.
·white number - 82.
Special Prosecutor Richard A. Sprague, who has directed
Blue number - 741.
all the cases against the nine persons charged in the 1969
Extra Cash
slayings of Yablonski, his wife and daughter, and defense
748282.
attorney A. Charles Peruto, were scbeduled to make tbeir
Lucky Buck Two
opening addresses to the Jury. Selection of the 11-man one·
Three-digit number
woman jury was completed ThUrsday wben the last jurot was
131.
picked in the morning session and the two alternates in the
Slz·diglt · number
afternoon session.

Loc .;;t &amp; 4th St. .

danger, the governor said. He described

News •• in Briefs

SLOPPY JOE SANDWICH
&amp; FRENCH FRIES ................. 84~
.,

norlhwest, deliveries of produce and up to
12 million .pounds of mllk a ·day are in

Corps engineers have concluded that the substantial rise in
river stages along the Ohio late Wednesday and Thursday "is
not at aU Wlusual for the rain the area has had TUesday and
Wedne!!day." The river stage at Cincinnati was 43.3 feet
Thursday night and rising slowly. "That's 13 feet above what it
was Wedne!!day morning," &amp;hmunk noted. At Greenup, Ky .,
one of two eoal barges which broke loose from tbeir Dhlo River
moorings near Russell went over the concrete weir of the
Greenup Dam early today and a seeond barge was left.hanging
on the weir.
Spokesmen at the dam said an empty coal barge owned by
. the River Rail Coal eo. went over the dam and has been
corralled by the tow "Peggy Mays" below the dam.
Kathy Manshine, a clerk at !be dam, said, ''The other
partly-loaded harge is hanging on the weir but I tllink they'll
try to float it off." ~e said all the dam's gates are up and the
riVer is "wide open."

·rHIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

:

yROSEMARY ARMAO
United Preas internallunal
With federal troops and snow removal
machinery already on loan to snow.
battered Ohio, Gov. James A. Rhodes appealed to Washington Salurday for
compensatioo for more than $48 million in
bliztatd-relaled agricullurallosses .
Rhodes also released the state's first
official storm loll calling ll "a report thai
we have all dreaded. These are victims of
a killer bllztard, the worst we 've ever

increased river stages on the Ohio."

as a runuture ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

•:
•

We, the undersigned directors attest tile correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of·our knowledge ahd
belief is true and correct. ,

(Continued from peae l)
Below, at the Gallipolis dam, the river stood at45.7 at 10:;!0
a.m ., rising at .2of afoot per hour. Flood stage at the dam is 50

:································~······~

TOTAL ASSETS . .. . .. .. . .. . . . .. . .. . . .. . .. . . . . .. .. .. .. . .. . . . . .. . .. .. .. .. . . . $26,699

.

County hit again

D.

:~~::·:::at;~~

f:~ ~:~~:~of_$!~,~ or_morein do~e~tic ~ffices_::::::: : :::: : :::: : :: ::::: ~

.Edisop Hobstetter
Roger Morgan - Directors
Ori.on W. Roush

The dam spokesman said
the Gallipolis 'Locks are still
open, but ''no one wants to
lock through right now ." He
added lo~k approaches are
jammed with ice.
Thursday 's cold spell
slowed up the river's rap~d
rise, preventing , at least for
the time being, the sea30n's
first major Oood.
Before the thaw ended
Wednesday or early Thurs·
day, the Ohio was rising be·
tween .5 and .6 of a fool per

"I went to a church that the
radio said needed volunteers;
Nobody was there. I went to
the police station and City
Hall and got lbe run-&lt;l!'ound .
So I walked down to see the
governor/' said Como.
Como was put to work at
. Rhodes' receptionist's desk
answering the telephone. He
had a list of emergency
numbers in front of him, and
referred callers to the
appropriate state -or local
agency.
"My family is fine at home.
We have heat and a radio.
Last Yl!llr. when it was so cold
I kept a grocery_store open all
night just so people would
have a place to get some food .

...~

1, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the aboye-named bank do hereby declare that this
·Report of Condition is true and correct to the best' of my knowledge and belief.
Joan Wolfe
January 23, 1978

1-' .

·

DISCHARGED - Sonya
Collins, Bessie Stitt, Chad
Granen, Denise Riffle. Earl
Riggs, Addie Reitmire,
Richard DeMoss, Curtis
Cawthorn, Oretha Durst,
Sharon Leffle.

•

~ -

weeks.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Average for 30 calendar days ending with report dale :
Cash and due from banks ....................................... : ......... $1,624j
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ......................... , , . ........ , . , ......... . . ., 1 593
Total loans ... .. .... . ...... . ..... ... , ... . ....... , . ............. . . ....... , .. 11127

0

which fell throughout the
region during the past three

According to a spokesman
at the Gallipolis Locks and
Dani-in Eureka this morning,
the Ohio River has climbed to
45.7 feet on the lower gauge.
This is about four•or five feel
below Oood stage in Gallia
CoWlty.
. The Ohio was still rising .2
of a foot per hour at the
Gallipolis Dam at 10:30 a.m.
today although the river
reportedly crested in the
Pittsburgh area around 2 hour .
The spokesman said most
a .m. Friday.
Normal pool stage on the of the water was coming off
lower gauge at tbe Gallipolis the Kanawha River. He
Dam is 12 feet. Ws also 12 feet· added the river was falling
on the upper gauge , The one-tenth of a foot per hour at
upper gauge reading at10 :30· Winfield. It was still rising
one-tenth or a ·root per hour at
a.m. was 24.1 feet.
The h'igh water is a result of Belville Locks and Dam.
melting snow and hflavv r;lin

z
c
III:

!.

Gov. Rhodes says Ohio
$48 ntillion stornt loser

.

Volunteer helped
Rho.d es

Consolidating dOJTiestic subsidiaries of the

Ill

Union

C~arleslon,

Laild Bank of Kentucky ,
Gallipolis offlce.

be
Cemetery .

GAME RESET
The Hannan Trace at
Southern basketball game
has been rescheduled at
Racine for 2:30 p.m. Saturday according to Paul Dillon,'
Hannan Trace Principal.

JAMES NIDA

in Athens. He was bOrn in
Meigs County, a son of the
late William Bradbury and

will

I

River climbs to· 45.7
feet at Eureka Dam

John Rice, extension agent,
.agriculture, reported to Gov. Rhodes
Friday damage to farm facilities and
property in Meigs County was estimated at
$30,000.
One building used to produce turkeys
was blown in upon itself, Rice said, and a
number of minor sheds and buildings were
damaged on other fartru1. The turk~y
building was on the !ann of the Facemeir
Brothers in lhe Albany area.
Meigs waa hickier than Gallia County
whose extension agent, Bryson (Bud)
Carter, Friday estimated d.llmage at
f251),000. Among the losses were 42 head of
cattle that died directly frOIJ!. causes

traced to the slorm. Eighl were killed
outright when the roof on the hay barn on
the T. F. Burleson farm near RobbinsMyers collapsed on them .
COMMISSION TO MEET
GALLJPOUS ~ The Gallipolis City
Commission will meet in special session at
Bp.m. Monday allhe GtyBuildlng. Items
for discuSsion and 'action include l!ll
ordinance for reopening of Firsi Ave .• a
waler rate study; report on the GalliaMeigs Regional Airport, appointments to
the planning commission ahd recreation
buard and insurance bills.

~­

I

'

the C&lt;&gt;mpany will redUce voltage by five
percent.
·
Conservation suggestions will appear

in the Columbus papers on Sunday and
Monday .

Rupert Trout
dies Saturday
GA!.UPOLIS - Rupert A. Trout, 69, a
residenl of 427 Third Ave., -Gallipolis, died
unexpectedly in Holzer Medical Center at
9:35a.m. Saturday.
Mr. Trout was a retired businessman,

River crests early SaturdJJy
GALUPOLIS - Officials a t U1e Gallipolis Locks and Dmn in r:urek.lt
said the Ohio River crested then• at :1 a.m. &amp;ltm·day at 47.8 feet , just below

flo()d stage in Gallia CoWlly.
At 11 a .m. Saturday the river had dropped til 47 .5 feet . A dan1 SJ)('Ikcsnttm
said the river was falling &lt;:~bout UJH!-Imlf tm tlh of a foot per hour,
POMEROY ~ The Ohio River clogged wittl ch unk$ of ictl ct·estr cl in
Pomeroy about 4 a.m . Saturday at 45.6 just a little under the. 46.:J riuod -sU1ge.
Whi.le the river did not get over the stnoets of P(•meroy 's bm;incss
section, it did cover main highways into town including Huute 7, Houtc 124
Into Reedsville, Route 124 was blocked off at Minersville. Water across the
roads kept nwnerous workers from getting to their places uf employment
Saturday morning . The Pomeroy National Bank and the Farmers Botnk and

Savings Co. were closed Saturday.
The Melgs Courthouse reopened Saturday and moil was delivered lute
Friday afternoon into Meigs CoWlty post offices )"ith po~ Lnl people re~umln~
mail delivery to homes Saturday.
·

""

No easy trip to HMC -

having operated Troul Dodge in downtown
RUT!.AND - It took some doing Re; Shenefield, was rul!cd ulkl HSkCd to
Gallipolis for several years. He was Friday morning but Marvin Morris, CR 1, pick up rn1 emergency mt..'dical technici~n
chairman of the Gallia Counly Board of in the Salem Center area finally got to from lh e Gallipolis un it and take him ln the
Elections at the time of his death .
Holzer Medical Center.
Morris residence.
Mr. Trout was born in Roane Cowlly,
About 4:30a .m., lhe Rutland unit of the
Shenefield, using a three qWJrter ton
W.Va. on Dec. l7,1908, son of the late John Southeastern Ohio Emer~::ency Medica I pickup, did so and the Gallipolis unit wits
Samuel and Edilh Harnack Trout.
By ROBERT SANGEORGE
Service was ca lled for Morris who was frt'Cd ~md succeeded in taking Morris to
He married Leona Moore on Nov. 6, 1937, having chest pains. The_ truck became Uu~ mec..li~a l Center about 8 a .m .
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Ohio River,
described by a forecaster as "flowing lit Gallipolis. She survives.
hung up in ice and water at L:Jngsvllle.
One daughter, Teddie Ann, died Jan .
slush," reached flood stage in several •
A second truck was dispatched from
areas Saturday with minor flooding 15, 1960. Two brolhers and one sister also Rutland via Harrisonville, It too got hung
COMMISSION TO MEET
preceded him in death .
FCPQrted.
.
up in ice and water and by a ca r which had
POMEROY - The Meigs CoWliY
Two sisters survive , Flossie Mae a road blocked. A lhird unit was
The river crested SatW'day afternoon at ·
Comm issioners will mee t in sp(!c ial
Porlsmouth, Ohio, and the National Trout, Gallipolis and Mrs. Madge Neal, dispatched from Gallipolis. It gollo CR l $€Ssicm ut 7 p.m. M(mtlay in their ofrit.-e tl;)
Weather Service's Ohio River ForeCast also of Gallipolis.
but .was delilyed there before reaching the discUss the dog warden situation and the
(Continued on page A·2 l
Center in Cincinnati predicled the wave of
Morris residence. A nehthbor or Morris,
~mnitnry landfill .
the crest would move slowly down the
waterway Saturday and Sunday, causing
no major damage.
•in shouldn't get more than a. foot or so
above flood stage anywhere," said BiU
Ray, a hydrologist wilh lhe river center.
''We've gotUm no reports of any significant
damage from the high water and we don 'I
expect any as the crest moves downriver.''
of Galiia-Meigs Chapler of
GALUPOLIS- Last rites
The forecaster said gages which
the Fraternal Order of
measure water levels along the Ohio had for 83-year-old Chester A .
Police , and a lifetime
Leaper,
Wllu
died
·
Frid_
a
y
frozen or been damaged · by ice in some
member. He al.c;o was · a
places, making it difficult for hydrologists night, will be held at 2 p.m.
lifetime member of the Ohio
to gather detailed information. "In Monda·y at Miller's Home -for
Associalion of Chiefs of
Funerals wltb six unifonned
~.ddition , our computations also have been
Police. He was a member Of
complicated by the tremendous amount of law-enforcement officers
Naomi I..(Jdge 55, Knights of
slush and ice in lhe river: It's adding a few serving as pallbearerS for
f'ythias, and al"' of Wood·
feet to what the water level nonnally this n'lan who served longest
m'en of.lhe World. On May 11,
would be."
·
(24 years) as Gallipolis chief
1977, ' AI Durose , now
Ray said the river stage predictions at of police.
lieutenant · governor of the
Cincinnati were typical of mo8t areas
There will be two state
njnth Kiwanis divi s ion ,
along the waterway, with a crest between highway patrolmen, two from
organized a "This is Your
53 and 54 feel expecled by Sunday the sheriff's department , and
Life" program at Kiwanis,
morning . Flood stage at Cincinnati is 52 two from the police depart·
during which L . Claude
feel, and minor flooding was expected in a ment In which he served for
· Miller served I:IS narrator and
few low-lying areas.
• 33 years. "Shug" Leaper
The high water levels, ice jams, melting retired in 1966.
prepared an illustrated book
for presentation to him along
mow and slush combined to make an
President Millard
wtusual, even 'twlique" situation on the ·. Cassidy of the Gallipolis
with a cake.
Ohio, Ray said. "You could almost say lhe Kiw-~nis Club said that
Chief Leaper was active In
Ohio is flowlrig more slush than waler. All Kiwanlans would meet at 1:45
the Gallia County Senior
that !tuff causing complications at bends p.m. Monday ~t Miller's and
Citizens Center, .especially
in the river, slowing down the normal . attend the funeral in a group.
for trips out" of to~ on
flow."
·
chartered ~uses.
Chester Leaper was a charter
.Sunshine and '!'arming temperatures in \ member of Kiwanis.
He was born April 2, 1894,
the Ohio Valley during lhe weekend
at Yellowtown, Gallia
The Rev . JamesV. Frazier,
probably will not aggravate minor pastor of Grace United
County, one of five children of
flooding problems, the hydrologist Methodist Church, will of·
J . Frank and Josephine
explained. "The temperature is stiU way ficiate. Burial will be in Pine
Berridge Leaper. He is
below freezing and the only snow entering Slreet Cemetery heside his
survived by his sister, Mrs.
the river is from very low~ying areas ." wife, the former Norina
Mary Wetherholt, Colwnbus.
Although the forecast center received no Homer. During her mort~!
Chester Leaper attended
reports of major ice jams, an ice gorge Ulness, Chief Leaper took
grade school at Yellowtown,
which broke up 40 miles downstream lrom care of her througtw'onths of
but came to Gailla Academy
FORMER GALLIPOLIS Police Chief Chester A.
Cincinnati caused nearly 1110 barg"'' 1o suffering, even, to the
High School in 1912, and was
leaper once said that athletics and the Gallia Counly
break away from moorings along the river detriment of his own health .
gradualed in 1916 after
Junior Fair were the greatest things available for the
bank or from towboats.
·
playing basketball and foot·
Cheste.r Leaper succumbed
youih
of this community. Chief leaper died Friday in
Most of the runaway barges had been at 7:20 p.m. Friday in the
ball for the Blue Devils. He
Holter Medical Cel!ler. He was 83. He is pictured above
caught by Saturday; but 13 were stuck Plned·est Care. Center. His
was center on the basketball
with Larry Snowden serving Bs honorary captain or the
against tbe face .of the huge Markland home was ac·russ Second Ave.
team, and right tackle and
1974
Thanksgiving bay GAHS alumni tilt oil" Memorial
Dam, near Warsaw, Ky. U.S. Coast Guard from the Gallipolis City
right halfback for the football
Field.
Leaper was a member of the GAHS football team in
headquarters in Cincinnati said salvage Building, in ~hich th~ police
team. He taught in the county
1914
and
1915, and was stili atlending all Blue Devil
crews would be occupied through Sunday station is locited.
schOO'ls, after workin2 on the
football
games
at ~orne or away as late as 1972.
corraling the remaining barges.
irjmtinucd
on
pc~ge
A·2
J
He was a charter member

flood level

Otester Leaper
funeral Monday

r

I'
)

�Leglslators' study due
on school money
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP I) - Tbe
Ohio General Assembly will
uttempt to continue its st udy
of lhe state's school financing
problems lhis week, with
porti ons of Ohio slill
reco ve ring fro m a major
blizzard .
The ex act legislative

Education As'iOciation that a

or state support was
Ule answer, but members did

low level

agenda is st ill uncertain , with

leaders dependent for the
lhird straight week on how
many m ember s are able to

make it from lheir hom!"' to
the capital.
Some
nor thern
Ohio
lnwmakers were unable to

get home late last week
. because of heavy snows.
But the inquiry into the
school problems is expected
to proceed, perhaps w1th
from

t estimony

superintendenl'l of the school
d!stricl'l foreed lo close last
y ear

be cause

or

cash

shortage s.
The superintendents have
been invited to testify before

the

House

Finance

Committee, which is delving
into the reaso ns for the

closings .

Hearings

are

scheduled for · Tuesday
'aftern oon and Wednesda y
-rnorning.
: · The committee heard
tCstimony last week from the
;I:)Jate
Departme nt
of

Educati on and the Ohio
.,

.

not appear lo be satisfied .
They want to know what the
districts purchased with
s upplem'entai
money
provided lhe schools by the
Legislature.
The House Educatiory Committee is to continue hearings

Tuesday and Wednesday
evening on what ronstitules a
''thorough and efficient" '
system of education.
That criterion is set forth in
lhe Ohio Constitution, and a
visiting judge in Hamilton
County Common Pleas Court
has declared lha t lhe current
system does not meel lhat
requirement.
The House Ways and.
Mea ns Committee is to vote
Wednesday morning on a
proposed school distri ct

income lax bill, which has
been kicked around for more
than a year.
The same rommittee also
will continue to look at the soca lled "Johnson plan" - a
propOsal to shift the burden of
sc hool

financing

from

Johnson , ().{)rrville.
The House Highways and
Highway Safety Cornmitle&lt;&gt;
will continue hearings
Wednesday morning into
legislation delaying for one
year the implementation or
registration .

The Senate Finance
Commitlee is to kick off the
week Monday night wilh a
hearing into nursing home
financing.
The Senate has a
"skeleton" session scheduled
for Monday evening, bul no ·
rollcall votes until Tuesday.
. The House is to reconvene at
II a .m. Tuesday .

to be $4,000
GALUPOLIS - Loss was
estimated at $4,000 to a 1977
Ford Fiesta owned by Thaler

Ford and parked at the
Thaler residence al 298
Debby Dr . at 6:55 p.m.
Friday. '
A short in electrical wiring
was blamed for the fire ac·
cording to GallipOlis fire chief

portation front-end loaders
were used to place a large
barricade of·snow across the

highway. When the trucks
reached it, they •we'!' greeted
by Van Wert Co unty Sheriff
Don Thomas, deputies and
Ohio Highway Patrol of-

Funeral services wiU be held Monday
at 2 p.m. al the Presbyterian Church in
Gallipolis with Rev. Frank and Rev. Tura
Hayes officiating. Burial will be in Mound
Hill Cemetery:

Mr. Trout was a member of the First
United Presbyterian Church wbere he
.served as a deacon and trustee. ile was ' a
:past E~alted Ruler of Gallipolis Elks
Uxlge No. 107. He was a member of alllhe

Friends may call at Warehime

Funeral Home today from 2-4 and 1·9 p.m.
M~nic services will be held 1:30 p.m.
Sunday,

Gallipolis Masonic bodies, and was a past

ficers.
The truckers were told they
could not continue because of

SOLAR POWER from moonbeams is one way of
describing the nighttime tests of a sun-tracking mirror at
the Department of Energy's Solar Thermal Test Facility
at Sandia Laboratories in New Me&lt;ico. The lower
intensity of the moon beam (100 watls as compared wilh
the sun's 200,000 watts) facilitates focusing tests.

First tattoo
was to save
her marriage

.·Rupert Trout

automobile dealers association .

MRS 0 H STEWART
'
MIDO·u;' PdRT _ M
rs. 0 ·
H .. Stewar t, ~6, tormerly · ~'

needled from her shoulders to
her knees, was in Min-

neapOlis to altend lhe North
American Tattoo Club's third
annual convention that opens

today .
Mrs. Weinzirl said her late

hu sband, Adolph, former
chainnan of the Department
of Public Health at the

huge snow drifts.
Thomas said some of the
drivers came out of their

trucks anned with pipes bul
there was no violence . The
truckers were transported to

University of Oregon Medical
School, had a thing abeut

shelters in Van Wert .
MOst of the truckers were

tattoos. When they were first
married, he asked her to get
one .
"I wasn 't about to move
out," she said, so she got a

disgusted with !he situation,
saying I hey had been working
together shoveling sno.w
drifts by hand along lhe way.
They said that if anything,

red-and-green
butterfly.
"Once the bug bites, you're

they were providing a service

by opening a lane of traffic.
They called it a waste of
taxpayers' money to use state
equipment to p1le snow back
on the highway while many
people In the area were still

sunk,'' she said.

VOrNOVICH TO RUN
CLE VELAND (UPI) Cuyahoga Co unty Com·

without power and most
roads remained closed.

missioner George Voinovich

announced Saturday he will
run for . the Republ ican

Weather

nomination for state auditor
in the primary election.
Voinovich said his record and
experience are what the GOP
·needs to unseat Democratic

in c umbent
Ferguson.

Contin ued cold today, high
in. the h1gh teens. Blowing,
som~ snow, but diminishing.

Turning clea r Monday,
continued cold. Lows tonight
lo 5 above. Snow pOssible
{VIonday night.

Thomas

M I?&lt;Jieport, d 1~ Thu~sday an
~h lcago followmg a ltngedng
Illness.
Mrs. Stewart was born Dec.
14, l881 in Pomeroy , a
daughter of the late Thomas
and Margaret Wl llia!T' S
· Sh
1
· d d
,0 a v•s .. e was a so pr~ce e ·
In dea1h by ner husband, 0 .
t4· Stewart .
Surv i ving
are
two
daughters . M rs. William K.

!Margaret) Blaker. Salt Lake
Ci t y, Utah , and Mrs. Jack
(l:?orothyl White, ~ochester ,
M•nn .. two . cousms, ~rs .
Elizabeth F1sher, Flor~da .
and Mrs. Geraldl~e Young,
Pomeroy, and s•x grand.
children
Funerl.l arrangements will
be
announced
by
t he
Rawl ings -Coats
Funeral
Home.
· JAMES C. POOL
RACINE - James Carroll
PooL 78, Route 1, Racine, was
dead upon
arrival at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Friday nlght where he was,
taken
by
the
Racine
Emergency Squad .
.
Mr . Pool was born July 18.
1899 in Huntington , W. Va ., a
son of the late James and
Bertha Sloter Pool. He was a
veteran of World War I•
having served in the U. S.
Army . He was retired as a
company aud1tor for th ~
Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co . for 17 years and for
several years opera ted a
dea lershlp for the company in
Circlev i lle.
Surv i ving is his wife, Sylvia
Jewett Pool.
Funeral serv ices will be
held at 2 p.m. Monday at the
Rawlmgs . Coats · Funeral
Home. Burial wi ll be in Meigs
Memory Garden . Friends ·
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 5 p.m . Sunday .

MEIGS J . BENE DUM

REEDSVILLE Meigs
Jasper Benedu m, 92, Reeds.
ville, died Frida y evening at
~a mden - Ciark
Memorial
Hospital in ParkersDurg
following a lengthy illness.
He was born in Dodridge
County, W. Va ., a son of the
late J . D. and Charlotte
Wilson Benedum. He was a
r~s l dent and a farm~r in the
Re~dsv i lle area 57 years. He
belonged to the Joppa .United
'Methodist Church .
Surviving are his wife,
Metta Ford Benedum ; four

I

sons, Chari .. of London ;
Wilson. Columbus: Francis,
Tuppers Pla ins . and Loren,

Reedsvill e; three daughters.
Mrs Violet Mlllhone, Tuppers. Pla ins; Mrs. Charles
(Mary) Valentine, Parker~b
. Mrs 0on {Peggy)
urg ,
t
n
111
Pull ins.
1 ams ow •
·
Va ., 20 grandchildren, 31
great .grandcnlldren. and one
rea 1 _ great - granc:ldeugnt~r .
gH
d- ... In death by
e was prece C\,1
three
two sisters and
br~~h~;:~l services will be
h ld 1 3 p m· Monday at the
F~neral Home In
Coolville with the Rev .
Freel and Norris and the Rev .
Richard Thomas officiating .
. Burial will be In Sahd Hil1
c•,.me1err, . Friends may call
qt the uneral home after
noon Sunday .

w:

Whit:

GAL Ll POLIS Stanley
Swain, a well -known Crown
City farmer, died at hi s home
Saturday afternoon .
_
Funeral arran9ements and
additiona l details. will be
announced Monday by Willi s
Funeral Home.

Leaper
(Continued from page A·1)
!ann as a boy.
He was a World War I Navy

-

are James Leaper, San

Francisco; Mrs. Betty Ryal,
Columbus;
Mrs.
John
(Nancy) Houck, Gallipotis;
and Mrs. Peggy Wills,
Marietta .

He worked for the E. N.
Deardorff department store
for 13 years prior to 1932,
when he joined the police
department. In 1942 he was
made chief of police, a
position he held for nearly a
quarter of a century. It was
about that time that he
married the fonner Norma
Horner.

Friends may call 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. today at Miller's.

'

28

Amateur Radio Code
Auto Mechanics for
Senior Citizens
Carpentry
Dog Obedience
Dog Obedience (Advanced)
Emergency Care (Advanced)
First Aid
Income Tax Preparation
Karate (Beginning)
Karate (Intermediate)
Macrame Weaving
Medical Secretary
Personal Auto Mechanics
Preparation tor Parenthood
Residential Wiring
Shorthand I
Slimnastics
·Typing
Welding !Mon. &amp; Wed.)
Welding (Tues. &amp; Thurs.)

10
40
18
18
40
21
24
20
·30
16
60
8
14
60
48
10
30
60
.60

Please. call Adult Education

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
3 Locations To Ser~e You

Main Bank-Second ,Avenue
Third ·Avenue Branch
Vinton Branch - Vinton

sor Scon

BUCKEYE HILLS C.AREER CENTER

ADULJ EDUCATION

ACQUIRE NEW FRIENDS!

Silver Bridge Plaza
Downtown Gallipolis
Spring Valley Plaza

vires , Inc . in acco rdance with
thr t•ont rat1. signed last April.

ambulance ser vice for co unt y
residents.

burrowed.
In other mutters Friday .

mu;i pay eight
pet. interest un the money
S~~OEMS

Bank. Friday's action CJ Jiows
the emergency service t u
borrow on future antic!patcd
r evenue.

trart no additional funds will

discussion with Shcnff James

Under the agreeme nl
signed last April 14, the

be spent , Belville said.
Jn the cunsent tu assign·

Montgomery &lt;'onccrning th e
weHthcr rchlted problems in

commission's contract with
paid from Federal Reve nue

ment, the Boa rd of Com·
mi ss ioners composed of
Belvill r . .J:mv'"' ~w1 nrl(' .. ~ Anrl

Funds is due Aprill4 ,

Paul D. Nida)', consents to

Under the modified con-

CQmmiss i onc.rs

freighter were spottt.-d
tile Gulf of Mexico.

Fleming, . Syracuse,
reported lhat her trailer at Bald Knobs had

a few minutes ago a nd
Uley 're in good shnpe," said a

Coast Guard spokesman.
"We're tickled to dea lh ."
Seven Coast Guard and Air
Force search planes reswned
their criss-cross pattern in
lhe Gulf of Mexico loday after
spOilers Friday discovered

John

.I

been entered, but nothing taken. 'llle I ·' .
storm door had been torn off and was lying
on the ground.
The lhieves got into lhe church
lhrough a basement door, sometime between 6 p.m. Sunday and 5 p.m.
Wedne sday. There are fingerprints.

(Webster's dictionary does not say

Not only fuzz busters, but also CB
from each truck-were
stolen. The thieves got into the trucks by
breaking lhe vent glass on each.

GALUAGOESOVER
GALLIPOLJS - December i977 sales
of Series E &amp; United States Savings Bonds
in Ohio were $:)5 million. Al the end of
December, the state attained 91.9 percent
of il'l 1~77 Sales Goal. C. Leon Saunders,
Gallia CoWlty Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, reported December sales of
Savings Bonds in the county were $17,193.
The county achieved 119.8 percent of it.s
annual sales goa l December 31.

Criminals were busy elsewhere the

pasl week.
There were not only lhese two trucks,
but also a church, an automobile, a mobile
home were broken into.
·
Acouple of items were taken from lhe
church; the Eden United Breihren Church,
Rt. I, Reedsville, but they were not

- The enlargement o[ the
European Community to

We'st

include Greece, Portugal and
Spain.
- The case for a bigger role .
in NATO for West Germany.
'
·

reductions of anned forces
and arms iil Central Europe.
- The possible evolution of
"a more cohesive" Europenn
arms production· effort.

- The potential for an East·
agreement on mutual

Starting
'Date
2-6-78
2-6-78

an

European

affairs

specialist for lhe Library of
Congress, the study said the
rationale for establishing the
. allia)lce in 1949 still appears
"remarkably intact" and

REGISTRATION
JANUARY 30 &amp;31
.
.
6:30 TO 8:30 P.M.
Registration may also be made at the Adult
Education Office during the week ot January .
30, 1978 from 8:00a.m. to 4:00 p.m .

Ending
Date
3-20-78

Instructor
Saunders
Delong

Fee
$35
Free

Room
268
227

available

alternative

to

NATO that would serve the
interests of the United States
as welL "

In releasing the report,
Biden, a member of the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, said it demon· •
strates thai "despite the
many changes now affecting
·u.s. relations with westerri

Full Time Adult Programs
Farm Business Planning &amp; Analysis
I Call245-5336 ext. 252 for information)
Practical Nurse Program
( Call245·5336 ext. 204 for information)
.

3-1-78

2-8-78
2·7-78
2-6-78
2-6-78
2-6-78
2-8-78
2-9-78
2-6-78
2-6-78
2-7-78
2-8-78
2-7-78
2-9-78
2-7-78
2-7-78
2-6-78
2-7-78
2·6-78
2-7-78

3-8-78
3·9-78
5-8-78
5-8-78
4-24-78
3-22-78
. 3-30-78
4-24-78
5-29-78
3-28-78
3-29-78
2-28-78
3-23-78
3-28-78
3-30-78
3-13-78
4-11·78
4-3-78
3-28-78

Cole

$25

Crabtree
Curtis
Abrams
Abrams
Nibert
Fisher
Brown
Massie
Massie
Steele
Wisniski
Bailey
Wilson
Kendall
Musser
Brown
Heath
· Coli

Free
$35
$25
$25
$35

Free
s'17
$20.

s3o
$15
$50
Frt:e
Free
$55
$45
$12
$30
$74 .
$74

266
349
311
317
317
224
224
280
Cafe.
Cafe.
224
208
Thaler Ford
224
320
268
208
263
312
312

' .J

Ext. 252 for

lnstitut~ons
BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN .
500 Third Avenue

OHIO VAU.EY BANK CO.
4 Great locations to Serve You BeHer
370 Jackson Pike
420 Third Avenue
41? Fourth Avenue "Mini Bank"
Rio Grande Branch

Gas is common
pruhlem

and am 5 feet 8 inches lall.
jug four or rtve miles a day.

Each morning I have a bowl
of bran cereal and th·en work
out for 45 minutes, which includes
the jogging and
calisthenics. Then I have two

By Lawrence U.mb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
problem is lol'l of gas. When I
am out exercismg or just being active I feel gr,e at, but

THE BIG EVENT , of the Chinese New Year
ceieb1·ation in SJ n Francisco is the naming.of Miss Chinatown, se lected from

con testan ts from

Ch inese

communities throughout the United States . . By the
Chinese reckon·mg, the Year of the Horse begms Feb. 6.

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
There's this g~ri' I like &lt;~ n&lt;l I thi nk she likes me ; w1til her
girlfriends show up. Then she ignores me to laik w1th them.
They're always ruining it for me. They seem to follow her
wl1erever she goes. How can I get her alone? -FRUSTRATED
DEARFRUS:
Why don't you ask her on a real date · where the g~rlfnends
can 'tfollow' ·SUE

allies."
The report says NATO is
"healthier" today lhan it has
been for more than a decade
but faces soffie Hdifficult

problems," including' the
time NATO forces would
have in the event of a Soviet
attack.
ll said NATO forces may be
badly deployed and ill
prepared to meet a sudden
offen sive. ·
·
Uke a recent report by the
General Accounting Office,

the Library of Congress study
sa id lack of standardization

of

NATO weapons is "a

serious defect" that limits the
effectiveness of military_
spe.nding by the NATO
countries .

Economically, however,
the repOrt sa id lhe West still
holds "a considerable edge"
over the Soviet bloc.
The stu dy also · cites
pOtential changes that will
affect the alliance in the
years ahead. They mclude:
- The potential mem·
bership of Spain in NATO.
~ Th e possible " drifting
away" of Turke)' from its ties
to the United States and
NATO.
- Tile possibility vi t.:vm-

munist participation in the
governments of France and

Italy .

•

Sunday by TIM:

Co- ·

DAJl,V TRIBUNE
H25 Thlrd Ave ., Gltllipoh.s, Ohio
45631 .
Published every we~kdMy t!Vtrl!ng
t!XL't!Jll Salurdwy . s~cond Class
Pool.agc P11id ut Gul!lpolls, Ohio

..,..

niEDAILYSENTlNEL

Ill Court St , Pomeroy , 0 . 4:i769.
Publish~d l!Vt!ry week day evening
ext't!pl SalurtiHy. Entt'red as second .
cl&lt;i!!S mailinM rnatter at Pomeroy,
Ohio Posl Orfrce.
Hy carrier daily and Sunilily 75c
per week. Motor route $3.25 per
MAil ,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Tile Gallipolis l)luly TriiJwre in
Ohio antl Wesl Virglnil:l une ye11r
$2200; sixmonths $11.50; Utr~muu ·
tlrs$7.00. Elsewhere $26.00 per year;
ili monlhs $13 :i&lt;l; three months
$'1 .50; mol.or route $3.25 monthly.
The Daily
Unel, Me year
S2200;Sixmou Sli .OO; lhreemunlhll$7.00. EIJ:Iewh
~.00; SIX moolhs$13.00 ; thrt.&gt;emo
17.50.
The UnilL&gt;d Pn.oss lnterntional Is
I'Xdusively entitled to the use fur
publiculion of all news ·dispatches
tTedited' to the newspc~~ r Mnd abo
the loca l news pu1Jii11hed ht!rein.

balanced meal. I don 't smoke
or drink alcoholic beverages.
The X ray of' my stomach

Cherokee Indian. My eyes may be blue and my s kin fair , but
my spirit is with my Red ancestors , the ones who were forced
down the trail of tears to Oklahoma i the ones who wer·e c rowd~

and a gastroscopic test were

ed on reservations and forgotten.

There are two facets, the

Sunday Times.Sentfnel

monlh .

usually a four-course, well·

keep on the move all the time
my problem would be solved.
DEAR READER - Yo.ur
description of your problem
sounds worse than most, but
gas is a common problem.

Regardless of what food I
eat, it takes little food to
make me feel full and the
pressure is greater right
after I eat.
I am 31, weigh 155 pounds
l'V~Cry

... Because you 're trying too hard.
Relax and think of your g.f.'s parents as ordinary people who
may be a little ill at ease with you too. Then trv to make them
comfortable. -~LEN AND SUE
•
I'm 15. All my life I've had to sing patriotic songs, pledge
allegiance; clc. I'm tired or all this sham. You see, I'm a

can do without eating and

uie dinner table or drive a
car.

Published

LF'W:

RAP :

Please tell me whal lo do.
What could it lle and wno can
I see about my problem' If I

ward. I stuck with it and after
a few years can do sil-ups
without pain. My worst problem is when I sit at a desk , at

Ohu Vall~y Publn;hing
Multlml!rh11 , Inc.
GALLIPOL1S

DEARRAP :
,
I've been going with my girlfriend abnost two yea rs .
Everything's fine, except I can 't talk to her parenl'l. I'm not
shy. How come I clam up around them, especially when
they're pretty nice to om!?· LOST FOR WORDS

ing the day I hayc·an unmge,

normal.

·

g~:~s

itselt and the inability to pass
it readily.
The gas is mostly from two
sources - that tesulting from
fermentation of undigested
food and that caused · by
swallowing air- which we all
must do when we swallow li·
quids and eat. In many ins tanCes the air swaliowed is
the main factor. How can you
s top it? First, you have to be

long ,

stamped ,

se lf-

where il is impOssible to get
coa l or ruet delivl"rcd. He suid
some famili es huvt• 1wo or
three dn~'s ' supply of fuel but
1f t he weather dol'~u·t lJreak
sewn, they may ha ve tu bl'
C\' ~cuated .

ll was reported thut
citizens requesting deput ies

to bring rood or 11\edicinc still
must pay for it: Appurcntly
so me residents were under
the impression thut f(JUd -and
medicine was being dcHvercd
fr ee or charge.
In ord e1· to a ll cv iatt.•
heati ng pro bl e m s. ('O m ·

distributed In bugs fur per·
so ns n ~edin~ it , upon thr

authorization of the sheriff's
department.
'llle sheriff's departmenl
emphu sizcd tha t persons wil h
emergencies onl y shnuhl usk
for as..,.istunce . 'l11e dl•pat1·
ment has been flooded wit h
numerous CH lls, st'vcral nf
which canru11 be dass lfi~d n ~

t!mcrgency.
The comm issio ners ulsu
dt~r i fic d an

Earlier 1 thC !)earch planes
returnt:d to Merida, Mexico
for refueHng . Bohner said

chances or finding the· men
alive were goo d.

BLUE

DEAR RED :.
Things are changing, though not fast enough. But refusing to
sing won't help. Why not instead train for leadership of y(lllr
people' Your generation can right many injustices by working
with all colors· and within the system· to improve Indian life: HELENANDSUE
RAP :

Mom is always trying to push daughters of her friends on
me, and they're not exactly my type. She downgrades the gi rls
I hit on. Whatdo ldo? -ED
DEARED:
.
Make your own choices, but be polite to your mother's. Who
knows: Someday she might come up with a winner,. HELEN
AND SUE

and get over ~ur

cUlon '

spasms . you will probably
stop havmg symptoms.

nJ.)p r·o priut io n

mudc to Sheriff

M on t~mncf)

la::1-. Tuesday . A 112,000 ap-

prupriatlun was mude within
his bllllgct. It is not u sup·
plc'n lcntul API&gt;ropriutlon.
Cmmnissioncrs ulso wen t
·on r·e(·ord tlutnking tht'
various township trush•cs for
their hard wurk in gettin~
roads clearerl of snow mul
kc.

WOLVERINE · 9"
WILDERNESS • BOOT
• Grl!en . full grain cowhide
leather

• Comfort padded collar and
insole
• Leather tined and lnsulaled
• Wel1 con•trucllon
• Steel snank arch support
• Cushion crepe sole and heel

Ill.:
0101 2

••

$47.99 •
Mon . &amp;
....,..,.,..., • . . , . . . .
•

Fro . til S p .m .

Tues . Wed. Sat. tll$

I
•

Thursday tll12 noon

II••••••••~••••
Bank Nn. I:tO

REI'OIIT OF CON IJI'I'IONOF

The Ohio Valley Bank
Company
of Gallipolis in the Stat1• nf Ohin nnd DunU'stic~ Subsidiuries at the dnsc u(
business on December 31, 1977

ASSETS

1.·

Cash and due from banks .... . ............... .... . . , . .......... 5,668,000 .00

U.S. Treasury sec urities . . . . .. ... ................ , ............ 8,085,000.00
Obliga tions o( other U.S. Government
agencies an&lt;l corporations ...... .. ... . . ...... . ..... . . . ....... 1,201 ,000.00
Obliga ti ons of States and political subdivisions.. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 5,403,0011.00
Other bonds. notes, and debentures .
. .....••........•.. 202,000.00
F'ederul funds sold und sec urities purchuscd

undcragrccmcnb to resell ........ ....... . ................. 2,100,000.00
a. LOi!ns, ToWI (exCluding uneet rned income ) .......... :14,044,000.00

b. Less Reserve for possibleioan losses . .... . . . ....... .. . 171,000.00
c. Loans, Net ... ... . . ....... ... ... ..· ..... . ................... 3:!,87:!,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures,

·

and other assets representing bank premises .. ...... .. .. .... . .. 1,080,000.00
Otl1eo· assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. 416,001) .00
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . .
. . .. . . . .. ...... .. ... ...... ...... 58,028,0011.011
I.IABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals,

pt:~rtncrshlps,.andcorpurations............. .. ..........
. .. ll,!J7:~. unn.tMl
Tunc and savmgs deposits of md1viduals,
parttlerships,andcurporations ... . ... . , .. , .. . . , ... , , ........ :J7,125,000.00

Dcposil'l of United States Government . .. .... . .. , ............... . . 2GI ,000.00
Deposit.s of Sla tes and political subdivisions ..................... :!,288,000.00
Deposits of cummerdal banks .. . ......... . ............ . . ......... 1,000.00
Certified and officers' checks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .......... 220,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS .. .. , . .
. . : . . . . . . . . ... 52,868,000.00
a. Total demand deposil'l . .
. ............ , : .. 1:!,592,000.00
b. Total time and savings rlcpos1L'"&gt;. . . ... , .•.... ... , .. 39,276 ,000.00

White Americans call it their land. History l)ooks distort. I
get sick of hearing veterans tell about their victori es when Indians were labeled savage animals for doing the same thing :
protecting their rights.
Outside of a few who take our side, we're still the forgotten
people. Unto! thmgs change, I won't be singing along wilh these
patrootic "Americans" any more.· RED, WHITE AND VERY

aware that you are swallowing air. Try holding a rubber
eraser between your teeth,
and )'OU will then become
aware of swallowing. This 1551, Radio C1ty Station, New
helps many people break the York, NY 10019 . .
habit.
The gas most of us have
Your address was not on passes normally, and we
your letter itself, but if you don't even know it. ff you
Will write to me again I'll have a spasm in your colon it
send you a copy of The Heallh will cause the gas to 1&gt;1' trapLetter nwnber 6-§, Controll· . ped. The !rapped gas creates
ing Gaseousness and also pressure against the wall of
number 2·1, Spastic or lr· the colon - like.blowing up a
ritable Colon and Constipa- balloon !.. and that is what
tion. O!hers who want either causes the swelling you
or these issues can send 50 notice and !he pain. If you
cents for either to me with a establish good bowel habil'l
addressed envelope in care of
this newspaper, P.O. Box
1'

fuel , medicine , etc .
Sheriff Mont gmm~ry nutcd
lh Ht the r e are se ver al
famili es residing in areas

missioners Friday agreed to
have a load of roal dumped at
the Gallia County G11ra~c on
Jackson Pike. Coal will be

Slab~

apple and pear. Supper

IS

Montgomery said his
department was receiving
more than 150 phone calls per
day from people requesting
assistance in gettin t4 food,

CONSOUDATt~O

bran muffins and coffee. Dur-

when I sit down the pressure
starts. It feels like my
stomach is swelling and I
have to lossen my belt in
order to relieve the pressure.
I cannot wear anything tight

Hround my waist at any time.
Europe , the
American There was a time when I
national interest continues to couldn't do any sit-ups at all
require the maintenance of a
because of the pain imstrong U. S. comm.itment to . mediately aflerwards and
the security of our European even for several days after·

shortening of the warning

2-6-78

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

recent snow, rains and it.:y
t'O nditions.

SpOkesman Chri s Bohner
Friday said lhe debris, found
drifting in the waier, included
part or lhe nameboard from
of the ship.

DEAR FRUSTRATED:
Could be this p rl prefers not to be alone with you. If she really wanted it one-to-one, she'd let the gi rlfnen&lt;ls know il.
~illN
.

Saturday by Sen. Joe Biden,
IJ..Del.
Prepared by Stanley Sloan, .

Gatlia Co unt y as " result of

wrec kage (ro m the Eva
Maria in the Gulf.

semi-tractor-trailers.
radios-one

in

The men were diseovered

described.
A 12-volt battery was stolen from the
automobile, owned by Marvin Taylor,
Chester.

lhat a fuzz buster is a device which detecl'l
radar in pOlice cars, but it is.)
U!wrence Yeauger is the owner of lhe
two trucks, according to records in Sheriff
James J. Proffitt 's office. The trucks are

~mf e

by a search plane just as lhe)'
reached an oil drilling rig off ·
the Me!dcan coast. They were
in two lifeboats from the Eva
Maria, a 492-foot Uberian
freighter .
"We found all 26 people jus!

Fuzz busters stolen
Mrs.

a

NEW ORLEANS tU PI) The Coast Guard today
reported all 26 men missing
and feared dead in lhe
explosion and sinking or a

$300.

POMEROY - Sheriff's deputies must
have lifted their. eyebrows , snorted ,
coughed, groaned, and spat exclamations
in four directions when lhey learned that
someone pinched a fuzz buster from each
of two trucks last weekend on Rt. 2,
Cheshire.

he ld

26 found
after wreck

flue caused a fir e that firemen got out using extinguishers. Dcimage there was est1ma ted at

"there appears to be no

I

This Space Paid For By These Fine
COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS .BANK

short . The money is
needed because runs in the
Ga lli a Co unty areu have

in lhe U. S. national interest ,

6: 00·9 : 00
6:00-10:00
7:00·9:00
·6:00· 10:00
7:00·8:30
8:30-10:00
6:00-10:00
6:30-9:30
6:30.9:30
5:30-7:30
7:30-9:30
7:00-9:00
6:00-10 :00
7: 00-9:00
7:00-9:'00
6:00-10:00
6:30-9:30
7:00-9 : 00
6:30·9 : 30
6:00-10 : 00
6:00-10:00

.

according to a study r el eased

Time- P.M.
6:30-9: 30

Wednesday
Tues. &amp; Thurs .
Monday
Monday
Monday
Wednesday
Thursday
Monday
Monday
Tuesday
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Tuesday
Thursday
' Tues. &amp; Thurs.
Tues. &amp; Thurs.
Monday .
Tuesday
Mon.&amp; Wed.
Tues . &amp; Thurs.

.--~

runnin~

HOME DESTROYED - The Tom Lewis residence on lhe bank of the Ohio River at
l.etart, W.Va. was destroyed by fire Thursday about 10 :30 a.m. whim New Haven volunteer
firemen were hampered by frozen hoses and high winds. The house and contents were a
total loss. It was in names when lhe firemen arrived. Half the firemen at the tiine of the
Lewis fire were diverted to the home of Don Shields, also or Letart, where an overhea ted

By t;LMt;K W. LAMMI
WASHINGTON (UPI) The nearly 30-year-old Nooth
Atlantic Treaty Alliance is
still the best means of
guarding the sec urity of
west ern E urope, and its

WINTER SESSION SCHEDULE. 1978
Accounting· Bookkeeping I
Adult Basic Education

. .""'.

President John Belville .
SEOEMS' reserve fund was

Valley Bank of GallipOlis, of a
purtiun or the monies du e
from l he Suulhcast Ohiu
Emer~cncy Medi ca l Ser·

So uth east Ohio Emergency
Medical Services. Inc. permilling SEOEMS to borro w dou ~lcd si nce the contract
$65,000 from the Ohio Valley was signed making a free

Shan~g

continued existence remains

TYPING---..

Evenings
Mon. &amp; Wed.
Mon., Wed.
and Thurs.
Mon.&amp; Wed.

'

the assignment of the Ohio

According to Commission

NATO still best guard

GALLIA·JACKSON-VINTON JVSD

.Total
Hours
36

,~
~·. ·
.

veteran, and when he carne
from military service

; adult education?
Aault education is a program of courses for in dividuals to
upgrade themselves , prepare for new jobs, or just fun.

Course

.--.,,,

home

he marri·ed the former
Qarlene Morgan. Surviving
children from lhat marriage
- the first of two marriages

Gallla · 1978.

SEOEMS for $91,179 to be

STANLEY SWAIN

LEARNING IS LIFELONG

OBTAIN SELF-SATISFACliONI

GALLIPOLIS -

Co unty Com m issioners
Friday during a s p ecial
meeting ,
modified
th e
cu r'rent cunt ract with the

w

NIGHT LIFE AT
BUCKEYE HILLS .CAREER CE TER
When are classes held?
Courses in adult education may be offered anytime sufficient
community interest Is evident . Standard courses will be offered
periodically throughot~-the year as per class schedules . Class wi II be
cancelled and rescheduled during incelement weather.

Gallia SEOEMS may borrow $65,000
from bank against future revenues

"'

l

Area Deaths

I

VAN WERT, Ohio (UP!) A pOrtion of westbound U. S.
30 at the edge of Van Wert
was transformed into a giant
parkmg lot ·Saturday . when
authorities stopped a large
convoy of trucks lhat had
spent ail morning inching its
way across Van Wert rounly
on the closed highway.
Ohio Department of Trans·

computerized motor \'ehicle

Loss estimated

l

one big
park IQt

properly to income taxes and
provide a guaranteed
miriimum level of funding for
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) primary and secondary
·Elizabeth
Weinzirl, 75, got
James A. Northup. ·Fourteen
schools.
her
first
tattoo
to save her
That propOsal has been volunteer fir emen responded
advanced by Rep. John E. to the 15th alarm of lhe year. marriage. But one tattoo led
to another and now she may
well be the most decorated
great-grandmother in the
nation .
president of ~e Gallipolis Shrine Club.
The prim Portland, Ore.,
Mr. Trout was also a member of lhe
resident,
who ha s been
Modern Woodmen Lodge and lhe local

1Conllnued frum page A·l )

---------------------------1

u.s. 30

A•2- The Sunday Timcs·Sentuwl . Sunday. Jun. Zl. m;H

A-3- The Sunday Thnes'"\~nt tnel. Sumla) . Jan . l~. Hl'i8

I would suggest eliminating
coffee entirely, including
caffeine-free brands and tea
or any such beverages. Also,
elirpinate the . gas-forming
foc;Jds. Apples are gas funners
for some people.

If you don't improve with
these changes you might
want to see a specia list in

gastroenterology. About half
of lhe patients who consult _
these specialists go there
because of gas complaints, to
give you an idea of how common it really is .

Other liabilities . . . . . . . . . .
. .. .. .. ... ............ .. ...... 5S:l,()(Kl.OO
TOTAL I.IAB!LIT!ES .. . ..... . .... . ... ... ....... . .......... 5:!,451,000.tl0
EQUITY CAPITAL
·common stock
a . No. shares authorized 125,000
b. No. shares outstanding 125,000. . . .
. . (Par Value )
1,250,000.00
Surplus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 2,250.000.00
Undivided profol'l . . . . . . . . . . .
. ......................... . 1,011,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAP ITAl. ....... , .. .... : .................... 4,571,000,00
TOTAL I.! ABILITIES AOO
EQUITY CAPITAL ... ........ . ......................... . .. 58,028,000.00
MEMORANDA
Average for 15 or30 calendar days ending with ca ll &lt;late :
a. Cas h and due from banks................... . .... : ..... ... ... . 3,507,000.00
b. Federal funds sold and securities purchased
·
under agreemenl'l to resell ............................... ... 1,370,000.00
c. Total loans " .. . , .. ... ........ . ...... ........... , ..... ..... 34,019,000.00
d. '!'nne dcposils of $100,000 or more. . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. .. . . .. . . .... 2,816,000.00
e. Total deposits .. ... . .. .... .............. ..... ..... , . ....... 51,494,000.00
Time of deposil'l of $100,000 or more:
a. Time certificates of depOsit in
denominations of $100,000 or more ........ . ............... .. 2,803,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value) : ~
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged lo secure deposits and other liabilities ................. 3,555,000.00
Oll1er assel'l pledged to secure.deposil'l and other
liabilities (including notes and bills rediscounted and
securities sold under re purchase agreement) .... ... ............. . 306,000.00
TOT~L

. ...... ....... . . . .. . : : . ............. . ... . .. ...... . . .. 3,861 ,000.00

l, C. Leon Si'Wlders, Vice President and Cashier, of the above-named bank,
do solemnly affinn that this report of condition true and correct, to lhe best of
my knowledge and belief.
·
Correct-Attest : C. LeonSa~nders
.. . .
.... .,..,. "~··· ......."·
-~·~
Emerson E . Evu.........
- ·~ '
Murris E. Ha skins - Direct ·
• ,
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Frank H. Mills, Jr.
Slate of Ohio, County of Gama. ss:
Sworn lo and subscribed before me this 25th day of January, 1917, and I
hereby certify that I am not an ofhc"er or director of this bank.
My commission e&lt;pires April 8, 1980. Phyllis P. Wilcoxon, Notary Public.
.

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A4-Thi;Sunday Tim-sentinel, S)lnday, Jan. 29,197&amp;

Couple wed last summer \-j;;.,_~- )

::;/l.f/Ql/J~

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Paula Hale

POMEROY .. The United yellow tea roses, gardenia,
Methodist Church in and Ulies of tbe valley was
Pomeroy was the setting for camed on a w~te Bible. She
the Aug . 14 wedding of Miss wore pearl earnngs.
Thurma V. Vaughan of Pitts·
The maid of honor, a
ford, N. Y. and Bruce r. college
friend, was Nancy
.
McDaniel of Rochester, N. Y. Small, Columbus. She wore a
The bride is the daughter of misty mint empire.waist long
Mr. and Mrs . Leo 1.. dress and earned . three
Vaughan, Marlin St., yellow silk roses. She wore a
Pomeroy,
and
the yellow rose in her hair. Amity
bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Tara Layne, twin nieces
and Mrs. Lloyd E. McDaniel, of the bride, were the flower
Plainfi~ld, N. J . Officiating at girls and they wore apricot
the 2:30p.m. ceremony were chiffon dresses.
the Rev. Aida Spencer and
Keith McDaniel of Boston,
the Rev . William Spencer. Mass. served as his brother's
Host minister was the Rev. best man, a~d the ushers
Robert Hayden. Mrs . were Scott McDaniel of
Catherine Shenefield was Salem, Mass. , also a brother,
organistfor the wedding.
and 1... Loring Vaughan ,
The altar was decorated Pomeroy, brother of the
with two urns of while bride.
gladioli flanked by circular
For her daughter's wedwinding candelabra with 13 ding. Mrs. Vaughan wore a
candles. Candles also marked beige colored three piece lace
the parenis' pews.
and double knit suit accented
Given in ma rriage by her with a . corsage of three
father, the bride was attired apricot sllk roses. Mrs. Lloyd
in a gown of while brocade E. McDa niel wore a dark rose
with a pattern of sprays of lily c"Qiored jersey A-line dress
of the valley throughout. It accented with a corsage of
was fashioned with a square three pmk SJ!k roses.
neckline, long sleeves, and a
A reception was held in the
high fitted bodice decorated social room of the church imwith front and back pin tucks mediately fol)owing the
which released into a flared ceremony. The table was arskirt with a chapel length ranged by the women ·of the
train. Her finger tip veil was church. Mints were made by
attached to a headpiece Mrs._Marie Watson, aunt of
covered with pleated satin the--bride. 'The three tiered
and accented-on one side with wedding cake was decorated
a yellow tea rose and baby's with garlands of yellow roses
brea th . The bridal bouquet of portraying the Holy Bible on
·
the first tier, and the cross
and doves on the top.
Presid ing at the table were
Mrs. Sandra Korn, friend of
the bride, and Mrs. Bessie
Sylvester, cousin of the bride.
Mrs. Hilah Layne registered
STIJDY COMPLETED
the guests at her sister's wedCHINO, Calif. (UP!) ding.
• ·
Film
director
Roman
The couple took a wedding
Polanski has completed a trip to Southwest, Pa. They
co urt ~ordered psychiatric
now reside at 1709 Blossom
study in less "than half the · Road, Rochester, N.Y.
scheduled 90 days time and
The new Mrs. McDaniel
will report to a judge this has a bachelor of sicence
week for ~ent en cing. on a degree from Ca pital Univercharge he had sexual In- sity' class of 1969, und is
tercOurse with a 13-yea r--old employed at the University of
girl. The 44-year-old director Roch es ter, Schoo l of
was pi cked up by two Medicine. Mr. McDaniel
unidentified men ·ea rly received his B. A. degree
Friday following only 42 days from Rutgers University in
of the scheduled three-month 1967 and his J . D. degree from
psychiatric stutly . .
the University of Connecticut

Mr. and Mrs. Bruce McDaniel

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hale, Oak Hill, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Paula, to Timothy Alan Jones, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Jones, Thurman. The bride-elect is a 1973
graduateof Southwestern High School and is employed at
Robbins-Myers, Gallipolis. Her fiance is a 1976 graduate
of Oak Hill High SchOOl. He is presently attending Rio
Grande College, and is associated with his father in the
fam ily farming operatiorl. Wedding plans are incomplete.

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Art work held over
GALLipOLIS- Due to the
extreme weather conditions
that have plagued the area
throughout the month. of
January, the Galleries at
Riverby hHve not been open

for thei r usua l hours on
Tuesdays,
Thursdays,
Sat urdays and Sunda ys.

visitors will be welcome from
IO"a.m. until I p.m.
At that lime the Senior
Citizen Art Exhibit will be
taken down so that the
February exhibit of Els ie
Kay Harris may be hung.
However, a partial exhibit of

Ga Uia County Senior Citizen
The . Ja nuary exh ibit, · Art will be hung in \he first
fe;nuring the art of Gallia floor classroom · at River by,
County Senior Citizens, has and remain there throughoUt
been missed by many who th~ month of Februur~ . This
wo uld have enjoyed viewing will giv~ area reside nt !:~ the
it. The Gallery will be open if .opportunity to both enjoy the
at all possi ble this weekend. local exhibit as well as the oil
so that visitors may come by. and gra phite work of Mrs.
Also on Tuesday, January 31, Harris th~t will appear i11
both Galleries.

•••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••

: FOR THE BEST DEAL JN :
! QUALITY MOBILE HOMES :
••
. . IT'S
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K&amp;K

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MOBILE HOMES

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:•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. 675-3000
:

$7 2

REG. suo

REG. s135

MEN'S SPORT COATS

GALLIPoLis - Activities
for this Week at t he Senior
Citi~e n s Genter, 220 Jackson
Pi kei ·· are· as follow s:
I weathet- permitting I
Monday , Jan. 30, Quilting

REG.

170

NOW

1

Fitness, 11 : 15 a.m.; Bible

NOW

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7''

MEN'S

WOOL TOP COATS
MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS
MEN'S WOOL &amp; CORD

SHIRTS
.GROUP YOUNG MEN'S

CORD SLACKS

Sewing'

Study, 1:15-2:15.
Friday, Feb. 3, Advisory
Council, 1 p.T11. ; Art Class, 13; Social Hour, 7 p.m.

$56

CHOICE

9~3 ;

Tuesday, Jan . 31, Physical
Fitness, 11 :15 a.m.; Birthday
Party, ):30 p.m.
Wednesday·, Feb. I, Card
Games 1-3; Quilling, 9·3.
Thursday, Feb. 2, Physical

$1 08

MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS . $48

DRESS VALUES
. TO 18
SHIRTS

and Visiting,
Qasses,;) p.m .

•87·

REG. '60

GROUP MEN'S

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Fresh. romantic rl uwns arranged
with aspr;1y l,f spark ling h t.:a~ t s.
We l'illl send it almnsl anywhere by ll"irc. the FTb
\\'av. But hurrv ...
Val~ntin.;·s Dilv is
aim''"'' here .' Cal l
(If visit
u~ llHJ:tv.

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'15.00

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FLOWERS by GEORGE
•

28 Cedar St.

Phone 446-9721

. GROUP BOYS

CLOTHING &amp; COORDINATES
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Of Gallipolis

Charter nwnber 136
National Bank Region Number 4
of Gallipolis in the stale of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, 1977 published in
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12; United Slates Code,
Section 161.

Senior Nutrition Program
Menu for each day which is
served at noon is:

Monday - Baked ham
sli ce,
buttered
sweet
potatoes, buttered peas,
bread, butter, apricot upsjde
down cake, milk.
&lt;JI"
Tuesday - .Turkey in
mushroom sauce on rice,
jellied vegeta bl e sa lad ,
buttered lim a beans, Qread,
butter, canned peaches, milk.
Wednesday - Meatloaf,
mashed potatoes, buttered
spinac h, bread , butter ,
butterscotch , milk.
Thursday
·. Chicken
croquette with cheese sauce,
can!}ed niixed vegeta bles,
jellied cr a nbe·r ry salad,
bread, butter, choColate chip;
cooki·es, milk .
Friday - Dry beans, celery
sticks with peanut butter,
cheese sticks, co rn brea d,
butter, bread pudding witp
nutmeg sauce, mil~ .
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
Service rendered on a nondiscriminatory basis.

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ASSETS
Cash andduefrombanks ... , .......................... .. ...... .. ..... . .. $2,406,000.00 - - - - U.S. Treasury sec~nties ...... .. ..... .' ............ .. ..................... 1,299,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Govt.
agencies and corps ............................ . ... .. .. ................. 1,300,000.00
Obligations of States and political suWivisions. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . ...... 2,960,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures . . .. . . .... : . . .. .. .. . . .. .. .. . . .. .. . . . . . IOOif.OOO.OO
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ........ . , .... . ............... ..... 6 ,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities pl.1rchased
.
under agreements to resell . .. .................................. .. .... .. 1,700,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ............ , ........ 13,252,000.00
Less: Reserve for possible loan losses .......... . . , . ............. 108,000.00
.
Loa ns, Net ..................... , .................................... 13.144,000.00
Directleaselinaneing ....... .,.., ....................... . .... .... .............. 45,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures1 (find ·
other assets representing bank premises ..... . ... . ..... , . . . ..... . . , .. . .... .. 267 ,OOO.do
Real estate owned other than bank premises .......... , ........ ... ........ .", ... 8,000.00
'1'0TAI,.t\$$ETS ......... . ...... .. ... . ..... ... ...... .....•.... , . ...... $23,28D,OOO.OO

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OFF
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PRESIDENT NAMED
, OVERLAND PARK, Kan.
(UP!) - Faye Wattleton
Dayton , Ohio, . a health
professional, wa.s appointed
president of the . Planned
Parenthood Federation of

'·

New books released
by Gn:llia Library

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Demand deposits otindividuals, prtnshps., and corps ........... ' . . ..... •. . , :$5,550,000.00
Time and saving's deposits of individuals,
,
.
prtns hps. , a~d corps ..... ... ...................... .. ........ ..... ..... 14,303,000.00
Ill
Deposits of Umted States Government . ...... .. ....... . ............. , ....... 12D,OOO.OO
Deposits of States and political suWivisions .................................. 657,000.00
j::
DepoSits of commercial banks .... .......... : .. ..... .... .. ...... ...... .... ... 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ........... .. ............... . . .......... . ... . . 183,000.00
1111
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS .... . ............... . .................... 20,827,000.00
o(
Total demand deposits ..... , ......... , ........ .. .............. 6 524 000.00
Totall"une and savmgs
. depoSJts
. ...... , .... . , .. .. ..... .. . ...... 14 '304' 000.00
TOTALDEPOSITSINDOMESTJC
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ANDFOREIGN OFFICES .......... .. ....... ..... ·..... ...... , ......... 20,827,000.00
Other llabilihes ............................................ ..... , ......... 62 ooo oo
TOTAL LIABILITIES
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(excluding subordinated notes and debentures; ..... . ... . .. ... .... , ..... $20,889,000.00
Corrunpn stock
----a. No. shares authorized 1,000
o(
b. No. shares outstanding 1,000
(par value ) ............. -............... 100,000.00
Surplus ............................................... ... ........ ...... 2,250,000.00
: ;) A.
Undivided profits ........................................ ...... ........ , ... 21,000 oo
0
Reserve for-contingencies and other capital reserves ... ........ , , ... , •...... .. . 29 OO(ioo
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. ........ .. .................. .. .... , ........ . 2 400 '000 ' 00
u
__:_--:-+--TOTAL
LIABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL.. . . . .. .. . . . . .. . .. . ....... $23:289:ooo:oo
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Average for 15 or 30 calendar days ending with call date:
.
c:a
Cash and due from banks .. .. ........... : . . . . ........ .' .. ........ ," . .. ... $2,474 000.00
Fed. funds sold and securities
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~urc~ased under agreements to resell .................... .. ............. 1,352,000.00
Ill:
Tota/oans: · · .. · .. · • .. · · .. · · ..... · ........... • ........... ........... 14,348,000.00
TO ota deposits ... ................. ..... ........ • ......... " .. :.... .. 20,489,000.00
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TAL ASSETS ......................... . ........ . ............... ..... 23,065,000.00

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Y/e. th~ undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
llabllih~s. We delare that It has been exammed by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief IS true and correct.
John E. Halliday
Russell D. Wood - Directors
E. E. Null

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"also.

you

charges for restoration arc reasonably priced

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Li!llited Time Only!

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY

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Sale

·$495

Our ,experts will make a ~X7 Block 10 Whitc' As·ls
· copy.of any picture in guod wndition, . ond 1 we will
show
how hand· painted' ininiaturcs, even full
size oil paintings, can he made fnJtn cheriHhed
pictures • 1f ph()to s are timeWorn , additional

•'•

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I, Marlin G. kerns, Executive Vice President of the above-named bank do he1·eby
dedare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my kndwiedge and

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America Friday.

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PROCTORVILLE
carried one red role. They
Rebecca Lynn Nichols, wore baby's breath In their
daughter of Rev. and Mrs. hair.
Earl Nicho!s of Route 3
Flower girl wu Karen
Proctorville, became th~ Doss, cousin of tbe bride, u
bride of Timothy Robert was the rlngbearer Leigh Ann
Webb, son of Mr. Robert Nichols. They wore burgundy
Webb of 416 6th Ave., Hun- dresses with puffy short
tingtoo, in a ceremony at the sleeves
and
rounded
Federal Creek United necklines. Pink velvet riJ&gt;.
Metbod!st Church at Miller, bon.-.ccented the high waistoo January 28. Rev. Nicholas line and sleeves. They wore
and Rev. Jerry Galloway, pink ribbons and baby's
coll8ln of the bride, · per· breath in their hair.
Robert Webb served as best
formed the ceremony with
music provided by Miss Janet man for his son. Ushers wore
Bragg.
T~rry Webb, brother of the
For her wedding day the groom, Greg Crigger,
bride selected a ·bouffant Charles Patrick, coll8ln of the ..
gown of sheer organza and . groom, Bruce Hensely. Taper
chantiUy lace enhanced with lighters were Tim Nicbols,
a sabrina neckline and long br'other ofthe bride, and Brad
fitted sleeves. It was "ac- Crigger. The ushers wore
tuxedoes
with
cented with aeed pearls and black
lrridescent sequins on the burgundy shirts.
A reception was held at the
bodice. Three tiers of lace on
bride 's home in Proctorville.
the back of the gown flowed
into a chapel train . She wore Mrs. Deloris Williams was in
a chapel length ·veil of charge of the reception with
chantilly lace and seed pearls Mrs. Linda Nicbols, sister-In·
law of the bride, Mrs. Beulah
. attached to a cam~lot cap.
Mrs . Robin Nichols, Doss, aunt of the bride, Mrs.
Carolyn Harrison and Miss
cousin of the bride, was
Barbara Jack, cousin of the
matron of honor and
bride, assisting.
Miss Terri Stuart, was
maid of honor. Brides- .. ' Whe new Mrs. Webb is
maids were Miss Cheryl Doss graduate of Fairland
and Shelly Dillon, cousins of ·-School and St. Mary's •·•·-·'"
the bride, and Mrs. Denise of X-Ray technology. She ·
Spears .a nd Miss Dawn employed at Cabell Hun·
Johnson.
tington Hospital as a
The matron and maid of registered radiologic
honor . wore
burgandy technologist.
The bridegroom Is a
polyester quiana gowns with
a graceful A·line design. The graduate of Kermit High
gowns · featured V-necklines School. He attepded Marshall
and capped sleeves. They University and is employed in
carried one pink rose. The the pharmacy at Cabell
bridesmaids wore pink Huntington Hospital.
,,
polyester quiana gown!! ~~::!

New books released by the Relations, Ellis Dillon; The
GaiUa County .District Women's Room, Marilyn
Library on January 26 were: French; The Committee,
Fietloo
Donald Seaman ; Trans·
Just Like Humphrey atlantic Blues, Wilfrid Sheed;
Bogart, Adam KeMedy; The · McGarr and the Sienese
Toff in Town, Jolm Creasey; Conspiracy, Bartbolonew
The Great Drake, Mario Gill; The Vi~Ma Elephant,
Cappelli; A Child Is Missing, Edwin Leather; · Homeward
Charlotte Paul; The Hess to lthaka, L~onard Wlb·
Cross, James Thayer; berley ; False Evidence,
Strangers, Gardner Dozois; Harry Carmichael; In
Aria, Brown Meggs; The Eye Gallant Company, Alexander
of the Gods, Richard Owen; Kent; The Haunted Sisters,
Goldilocks, Ed McBain; Jean Plaldy ; All Over the
Shadow Box, George Pllmp- · Town, R. F. Delderlield;
ton; Make A Wish, Don Gallows Child, Pauline Wins-.
Robertson; Stage of Uive, low; The Romanov Ransom,
Ceclly Shelbourne; Separate Anne Thompson; Hostage to
Ways, Hester Mundis; The Death, Jeffrey Ashford ; The
Haunting of Sara Lessing· !.ion at Se8, Max Hennessy;
ham, Margaret James; The . Petrella at Q, Michael
Judas Pair, Jonathan Gash ; Gilbert;
The
Scofield
The Peace Keeper, Ray Diagnosis, Henry Denker;
Hogan; A Pay-Off in Swit· Natural Shocks, Richard
zerland, Noah. Webster ; · Stern; The Second Ring of
Carlot a, Scott O'Dell; Hay Power, Carlos Castaneda;
Lenny, Hey Jack, Alan The Glory Trap, Shennan
Brody; Walk Gently This Williamson; Dead Ringer,
Good Earth , Margaret Arthur Lyons; The Nirvana
Crav.erti Devil's Gamble, Contracts, James Wohl ;
Frank G. Slaughter; KG 200, Lov•r• Are Not People,
J. D. Gilman; The Vision, Timeri Murari; Bel Rla,
Dean Koontz; Eclipse, Dirk Sheila Burnford.
Wittenborn ; Daughter of
Non·Ffelloo
.
Shadows, Miranda Seymour;
Civil War Railroads and
Bloodline, Sidney Sheldon; Models, Edwin Alexander;
The Singing Wind, by Jen· Perfect Needlepoint Projects
nifer Wade; The Churchill from Start to Finish, Kathy
Commando, Ted Wlllia; Archer;
The
Older
Crown Court, James Follett; American's Handbook, Craig
Forbidden City, Anthony Norback; Reflections on !.ife
Ester ; .Amusement Park, After Life, Raymond A.
Robert Nathan; Blood Moody; The Yeshiva, Chaim

We reall y ~d arnund ... for vnu~

.

Marlin G. Kerns
January 23, 1978 ·.

JUMP SUITS
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THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

DENIM

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Lo¥e8un"die®
Bouque{

:;::::::::::::::::::::::::;~:::::*::;*:«;8*-~~~:::

MEN'S SUITS

REG. '90

Send Our FTD

Con~olidaling domestic subsidiaries of the Consolida_ti.ng domestic and foreign subsidiaries
of the

TO WED- Ms. Alice Clary of Rt. 2, Crown City, and
Homer Clary of Kerr a nnounce the engagement and forth·
coming marriage of their daughter, Rhonda , to James
Merrick , son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Merrick of
Gallipolis. An open church wedding ceremony is planned
for Feb. 25, 7:30p.m. at the Apostolic Gospel Church at
1812 Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis. A reception will follow
immediately after the ceremony.

WINTER SALE CONTINUES

sgs '68

•
in 1974. He is a member of the
~
Connecticut Bar Association ',\ , .-, • &lt;
_ .fJ 1,\~
and the American Bar
~ J?::';: &lt;= l'i_ ~,
A.s.sociation. He is associated
·with Lawyers Cooperative SUNDAY
Pub! . co., Roc hes ter, N. y.
THE
H t973Tgraduating
H' class of
Coming from out of town
annan race . Jgh School
for the wedding besides the meetto plan reuruon 2 p.m. at
groom's parents and brothers the high school.
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles GAL.UA- County Historical
Iglehart, Saverna Park, Md.; Society 2 p.m. St. Peter's
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis M. lg· Episcopal Church.
Jehart, Yorktown Heights, N. TUESDAY
Y., Miss Susan Satterthwaite. WELCOME WAGON general
Lebanpn, Ms. Maryanne meeting at 7:30 at Jackson
Roades, Lebanon, Dr. and Pike 'Branch of Ohio Valley
Mrs. Hilmar Grimm, Colum- Bank. Installation of officers.
bus; Mr . and Mrs. Dewitt
•
- - Clinton Small, Dayton; Dr.
.suPPLIES ADEQ~ATE
and Mrs. Edward Fowler and
!'he adviCe was don I go out
family, Rochester, N. Y., Mr . unless Yohu havfelltoh, hbudt
and Mrs. Robert Sylvester enough 0 toans e l ey a
and family, Delray Beach, lo ;' riday that, despite high
Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Timothy winds and ice-coated roads,
Dunne
and
family, long lines formed. ~l grocery
Louisville; Mrs. Mary Sue stores, gas statiOns and
_Michael, Minerva ; Mr. and . phannaries. The UP! said
Mrs. Robert Layne and !ami- . some shortages developed,
ly, Cedar Bluff, Va., and Vic- . but retaders satd they extor A. Vaughan, Grafton, pee ted no . re~l problems
Wise.
unless de!Jvenes Monday
should be held up.
• •
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Hun'\'.' Vui£'11/ille :1 Du\' ;_, 7iwlllrn·. Fchrua/'1' !.f.'
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REPORT OF CONDITION

\ s'ca~:J;;s ~ REG.

Miss Nichols •weds

!'

Spring Valley Plaza-Gallipolis

'

, Open Tues. thru Sat. 10-5, tillS on Thurs."

446-7494

...
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SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY JANUARY 29 &amp; 30

BLUE TAG CLOTHING

CLEARANCE
Mrs. Timothy Webb

A fi'bver· de Ia
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ALL FALL
AND .WINTER
CLOTHING

pet t•te matson
•

by: Catherine Benet
While Rimbaud might have
dreamed ' the green night of
dazzling snow, I am having
bona fide nightmares of the
white substance.
Words Uke wind chill factor , blizzard and snow drifts
send me into mass hysterics.
I am relieved to know that

tbere"' • worn which literally
translates, "fear of snow".

People who suffer from this
have usually lived through
two bad winters and fear any
oonlaet with snow.
Not believing that such a
word really told the entire
story I decided to coin a
phrase of my own for
something . much worse than
the fear of snow. With the
Grade; Collected Poems 1919· help of Rio Grande College's
1976, Allen Tate; Bednarik, Joanne Ewill8. Ia belle san
Jack McCallum; How to Find sois, the proper phrase has
Your Family Roots, Timothy been created for cabin fever.
Beard; The Complete Pork The new term is uA .fever de
Cookbook, Uiuise Schoon; Ia petite maison."
The symptoD)S 0( a fever de
The Arms Bazaar from
·Lebanon to wckheed, All· Ia petite maison Includes
thony Sampson ; Check· making phone calls, local or
mate !, George Koltanowski; long distance, t.o any person
Tomabout; Help for a New you ever mel f()I;" more than
Ute, Jean Kirkpatrick; Rock two minutes. It's reading
Almanac, Stephen Nugent ; your four year supply of PeoThe Life and Loves of Cary ple magazine and enjoying it.
Grant; It Takes a Uing Time It's coming home at 4:40,takto Become Young, Garson lng a hot bath at 7 and a
Kanin;
The American shower at 10. Cabin ... excuse
Proposition,
Francis me .. . a fever de lu petite
Bradley; The Dispossessed malson, also leads to such
MaJority, Wilmot Robertson; unexpialnable acts as wat·
All Autobiography, Agatha . ehinp, Donny and Marie and
Christie; Cosmetic Surgery: enjoying it. It often involves
timing the test pattern on the
A Consumer's Guide, Sylvia
Rosenthal; Halt! I'm a tube from TomSnyder's sign
Federal Game Warden, off until the !ann report.
Other symptoms include
Willie ~ -- Parker; The
Animals· Come First, Mary eyeing a four month old
Bowring; The Complete Book orange and wondering if you
of Running, James Flxx; A should eat it. It's eating that ·
Great &amp; · Glorious Romance, four month old. orange with
Helga Sandburg; Breathing the logic that botulism would
get you to a hOSpital, hence
Tokens, Carl Sandburg;
Every Child's Birthright: In humanity . .
The fever cun drive people
Defense of Mothering, Selma
F.raiberg; The Comic Book · to · strange and unusual
Price Guide, Robert Over· behavior. SUch as the woman
in Peoria who wakes _up from
street.
her naps to go to bed. Or the
state road employee from
West Virginia who was found
running through the department crying, "!'lease take
me to Vulcun. I need excitement."
There are tales of the people who are driven to count
·the number lwnps in a jar of
crunchy peanut butter while
standing on their heads hum·
POMEROY -- Gisela mlng a stliring rendition of
Stevens, a native of Ger· "Short People."
many, will be speaker at the
The fever makes people exFeb. 9 meeting of the plore the deep meanings of
Women's Aglow Fellowship
the Wliverse, such as where
to be held at the Meigs Inn.
does Mrs. Olsen go at nigqt
The dinner will be served at with Mr. Whipple.
7 p.m. with tbe doors to open
Its wondering whut r:eully
at 6:30 P·lll· The dinner cost happened to the class of 65. ·
will be $3.50 per person with You suspect they have grand·
reservations to be made on or ·children and beer - tununies
before Monday, Feb. 6 at while wasting ~way In tbe
992-5845, 949-2325, 949-2'123 In suburbs.
the Pomeroy-Middleport
With time on your hands
area, or Gallipolis,~ or you think about what might
Mason, W. Va 7'13-5768.
have been or what did so and
M'"' Stevens ill tbe wife of so reaDy mean when they
Sleven \ B. Slev~ns and the said such and such. This can
'!l_~ther Of two children, and
involve such thoaght provok·
liiiil helped her husband in ing questions as what did Unwork for Christ for tbe Na· cle Stanley mean when he
tiona! and . World Witness, said you had an interesting
Her testimony at tbe meeting face. Or would that blond
will concern God's heaUng of cheerleader really have gorie
a back problem of which doc- out with you if oilly you hadn't
. tors had given up hope. She · grabbed her pompons?
will also talk about her strong
While these are just a few
faith which afflnns who you of tbe symptoms of a fever de
are In Christ, tbe health and Ia petite malaon there are
wealtl) which was purchased side effects of tbe disease.
In Him as well as salvation, One Is the remarkable apand the baptism of tbe Holy preciation of the virtues of
Spirit.
swruner. Summer with 98
degree temP,eratures, cars
over heating, sweating aU
over yourself, SWlburns, ... ah
for lhe good life.
MEETING SET
CROWN CITY - The
Crown City Village Council
HELP RENDERED
meetings will be held on tbe
POMEROY
. The
first Thprsday of each month Pomeroy Emergency· Squad
in the city hall at 7 p.m. wu caUed ID Third St., at
November I through March 1:45 p.m. Friday for Mary
31, and at 7:30 p.m. from lleVietro who wu taken to
April 1 through ~ober 31. Pleasant VaUey Hospital .

... . . . . . . 0 •• 0 ••• 0
.. 0 .. 0 •• 0 • • 0 0 0 •••
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• • • 1000 • • • 0 · 1 . 00 0 • •
• • • 010 Ol • 0 • • • .• • 0 • •

0 00 oo ooO 0 I 0 0 00 0 0 0

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•••••••••••••••••

OFF
HECK'S REG. PRICE

PRINTED

KITCHEN
TOWELS
Moke your

~l.ction

KITCHEN
TOWEL

from

popc:orn kitchen towel ond

_printed terry ~ i tc h en tOw·
elli .

66(

66e

HECK'S RI!G.

$1.19

HECK'S REG. '1.19

tUJTIIIIIUEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

120Z.

11 oz.

AGREE

TRACII

CREME RINSE
e

SHAVE
CREAM
RECUI.AR OIILIIE

BAlSAM. REG .

OILY

99(

II~.

-

HECK'S REG.

$1.48

COSMETitiiB'r.

$1.29

COM71CDER..

ONEADAY
VITAMIIIS
REG. 100'5

$224

AMFVOIT
PROFESSIONAl.

BASKETBALL

I OO's WRI 11011

Witness to
healing will
speak at Inn

~\lvp Cl""h~ bo.~ .. ~all huoluplo npl.,.. &lt;Oni ii U&lt;Iion, 'Oil*d ,.0.., '
""' " U!lo n-1011 Wlnd!IIQ !O• ll&lt;lf'IVI~ and d..•nbility OfJ,.,ol l&lt;rO

$216

Ofld-.M.

HICK'.SIIO.
T0$3. 19

$11.88

.C OWIN/JilT.

McMILLAN
10W30

34.~

Hardware Dept.

60-75-100

LIGHT BULBS

SJIORTS,.T.

BATH
SETS

· tlmlt 6 Quarts

59• Qt.

••
8

COORDINATED

MOTOR OIL
Heck's
Reg.

$

HECK'S REG.

'

$229
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3.99

1

Houseware Dept

SNAP
GASOLINE
ANn-FREEZE
•

Heck's Reg. 7r Pkg.

HECK'S REG. 39•

.Hardware Dept.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

�•

A-7- The Sunday Times.S.ntinel, Sunday, Jan. 29, 197&amp;
.....·~·.-«"".::::::SO ·u· ::: ::: : ' ll

.rc~~~~~·-;,ity._,_- ·
w.:.:-······=::·:·····:·~·:·:·:·;·.·-:-········x···:-······».·

Two rivals o.f Celeste
withdraw as candidates
.

I

. .

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Sllteb'"""' Reporler
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Lt.
Gov. Richard F, Celeste, an
announced' candidate for .the
Democratic nomination for
governor, may be breatlllng a
little easier this week.
Two potential rival.o$, House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
0-New Boston, and Senate
President Pro Tempore
Oliver Ocasek, D·Akron,
have decided to forego tbe

~---

-

Ohio politics

..
I

LAST WEEK, tons cf sncw were hauled tc Gallipolis' Upstream Public
Use Area below the park !root. Tcday, that area is inundated by the swollen

Ohio River. Picture was taken Friday afternoon on tbe
lookillg toward Pt. Pleasant .

~ntrance

ramp,

No taxes
paid by
17 firms
WASHINGTON(UPI) - At
least 17 Amer,ican companies
effectively paid no U. S. in·
come taxes in 1976, according
to a survey cf 168 companies
by Rep. Charles Vanik, DOhio, a member of the House
Ways and Means Ccmmittee.
The companies comblned
worldwide income of 12.5
billion, the survey showed.
Eleven companies were
tax-free in Vanik's 1975 study.
Vanik's annual study of
corporate taxes showed the
· overall effective tax rate for
the· companies in his ·survey
was 13.04 percent.
Fe\leral law sets the cor·
porate income tax rate at 48
percent on profits above
--~ $50,000. But companies
legally can cut tax liabilities
with a variety of methods,
including investment tax
. creditS and ~arrying forward
last year's losses to offset
present income.
Vanik said Friday an ad·
APPROXIMATELY II families across Chickamauga
ditional 41 companies paid
Creek
off Spruce Street Extension are cut off from .
effective tax rates of less .
than 10 percent despite
combined· worldwide income
of $29.6 billion.
Vanik noted that President
had suggested
Carter
lowering the.corporate rate to
44 percent by 1980, which
entertainment, have little
By FltANK W. SLUSSER
"co uld possibly ' result in
chalice of passage. Thus the
UPI Business Writer
exempting almost one-third
NEW YORK (UP!) - Tbe tax cuts, according to
of America's maJor cor· stock market, after a brief BusinessWeek,couldswellto
poratlons from federal in· pause to examine President $32 billion.
come taxation ." .
Monte
Gordon , vice
Carter's eCtlnomic, tax and
Vanik listed these com· budget · proposals, resumed president of Dreyfus Corp.,
panies a~ paying no effective . its 1978 slide this week, said ','the way Carter has
U. S. tax on their income plungin~ to a 33-month low. fashioned these measures
through use of various tax Tra~lng was mqderate.
will require political savVy to
devices.
The Dow J.ones industrial gain passage. And he flat
Income is· noted in average, which managed to hasn't shown much savvy in
parenthesis:
gain 1.21 points last week, fell dealing with Ccngress."
United States Steel ($518 12.82 points to 764.12. Its · lri a related matter, Energy
million ), Bethlehem Steel 763.34 close Thursday was the Secretary James Schlesinger
($182 million, LTV (120.4 lowest since it finished at said he was "cautiously op·
million), Ann co Steel ($100.5 749.22 on April 8, 1975. Tbe tlmistic" Congress soon will
million ), National Steel (103.1 Dow is off 67.01i points in 1978. pass a compromise natural
million), General Dynamics
The New York Stock Ex- gas pricing bill that is
($161.6 million). Republic change commoo stock index considered a key to Carter's
Steel ($30.4 million), Singer fell 0.67 to 49.06, the lowest overall energy program.
($107.3 million ), Phelps level since it hit 48.94 on Jan .
Carter has said his energy
Dodge ($40.1 million), (Texas 5, 1976. Standard &amp; Poor's program, whicli critics have
Gulf ($9.7 .2 million, Pan soo.stock index, containing labeled as the largest tax
American World Airlines some overthe-coun.t er lssues, increase in American history,
($100.3
million),
The dropped 1,.31 to 86.58, the is the key to reducing the
Southern Company ($385.1 lowest level since it closed at nation's trade deficit alld to
million), Pacific Gas &amp; 88.14 on ~. 22, 1975. · ·
strengthening the dollar
Electric ($291.8 million),
Declines topped advances, abroad.
Philadelphia Electric 1,165 to 644, among the 2,080
Meanwhile, the economy
!;ompany ($222.7 million) , · issues crossing the composite continued to show signs of
and The Olase Manhattan tape.
strength, but investors are
.
Ccrp. ($144 .million ).
Big Board volume totaled uneasy about Detroit's report
93,951,370 shares, compared of a 15 percent mid-January
with 88,95&lt;1,190 laS\ week and car sales decline, the seventh
124,121,002 traded during the consecutive dip. Also, fourth·
quarter productivity rose
same week a year ago.
Composite volume of NYSE only 1.4 percent, down
issues listed on aU U.S. sharply from 5.4 percent in
·
exchanges and over the the third period.
On the brighter s ide,
counter totaled 108,218,990
shares, rompared with' December durable goods
· orders climbed 5.5 percent
102,630,660 last week.
·Investors sold this week compared with a 0.8 percent
because Wall Street believes November decline.
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)- the Carter administration Is Nondefense durable gooda
An honest woman who found risking high inflation by orders climbed a strong 9.8
and returned more than a pushing for expansion and a percent. The natjon's money
million dollars worth of i'eductioo of unemployment. sunply rose only $800 million
Analysts and business aft.•· plunging $3.4 billion tbe
checks on the streets of the
city's financial district wlll publications such as the Wall week before.
Eastman Kndak was tbe
get a free meal for her good Street Jcurnal and Business
Week magazine criticized tbe most active NYSE-tisted
deed.
.
The two checks were made president for proposing a issue, off 3'/s to 45'4 oo
out by Pacific Gas &amp; Electric $60.2billioo deficit in 1979 and 1,078,600 shares. A federal
. to Standard Oil, as payment proposing a i "voluntary" jury in a suit filed by Berkey
ruled
Kodak
f!&gt;r fuel bills. They were lost wage-price program that Photo
by a messenger on Market skeptics believe will become monopolized the amateur
Street and carried several mandatory co ntrols photography industry. Kcdak
regardless of carter 's public said it would · appeal the
blocks by the wind.
decision .
Ms. Johnnie Taylor found pronouncements.
Sony Corp. was tbe secood
Further, critics are betting
them 011 a streetcomer and
returned them. PGirE said Congress will drastically· most active Issue; off v, to ?¥.
· oobody else could have alter Carter's tax program oo 1,006,900 shares. Some
cashed them in any case. ·
that calls for $3.1.9 billion in analysts have dcwngraded
The big utility told Ms. cuts and $9.4 ~illion in this issue.
Becton, Dickinson was the
Taylor to pick a &lt;laY nelrt revenue..raising ' refonns."
third
most active issue, up 6
The
reforms,
which
would
week, and PG&amp;E would take
to
38~
on 891,400 shares. Sun
ber to lunch.
limit ~usiness expenses and
•

.

race.
That leaves Attorney
General William J. Brown as
Celeste's only prospecUve fQe
with statewide strength.
Brown is expected to make
his decision·soon and odds are
that he wlll seek re-electimi.
if that happens, Celeste's
backers will be greatly heart·
ened. For one thing, they can
spare some of their energies
and funds from a primary
fight .
It also may unify the
Democratic party behind Ce·
leste for an anticipated
general election campaign
struggle against Republican
Gov. James A. Rhndes.
An offshoot of the RilleOcasek declinations: the two
leaders can concentrate Qn
legislative work, head off
splits in their caucuses and
nlake certain they retain
majorities in the General
Assembly elections this fall.

·-.
'

Gallipolis because of high water. Photo was tak~n Friday
·
afternoon on Fifth Ave.

Co. has bought 34 percent of subject of merger• in recent
the firm and may consider a · talks. Nothing was decided,
merger. Sun faces two suits • however. Revlon lost~ to 41.
in the matter , htlwever. Sun
On the American Stock
stock added % to 39%.
Exchange, the market value
Atlas Corp. fell 3'4 to 10'1'4. index fell 0.99 to 120.84 and
The compa ny , which is the price of a share dipped 10
having serious production cents. Declines topped
problernii, announced it "may advallces, 450 to 407, among
not be profitable" In the fiscal the 1,073 issues traded.
year ending June 30.
Volume totaled 12,057,165
WestFn Publishing shares, · compared with
climbed 41', to 24 in active 9,947,145 last week and
trading . The company said it 1&amp;,275,995 during tbe same
is continuing to hold takeover week a year ago.
discussions wlth other
Allied Artists was the mnst
companies.
active Arriex issue, off ,. to
Newhall Land &amp; Farming 2%on825,700shares.Houston
climbed 5 to 22\'o . The Oil &amp; Minerais was second,
company authorized the off 2¥• to 27% on 737,000
purchase of up to a million of shares. Kaiser lndustri~s was
its own shares at $23 a share. third, up 'h to \'o.
Verex Corp., formerly
Data Terminal Systeins
known as CMI Investment, plunged 13¥• to 56¥• following
rose 4\la to 27'1a . The ·an article in Barron's, tbe '
company' already the object financial weekly magazine,
of a $25-a-share tender offer that said ' the firm faces
from Greyhound Corp., said increased competition in the
it would consider other offers electronic cash register field.
· also. ·
Commercial 'Alliance
Bausch &amp; Lomb jumped 5\1, climbed 4% to 20 in active
to 53. The company reported trading. Beneficial Corp. has
higher earnings and revealed agreed to acquire the firm in r
it and Revlon broached the an exchange of stock.
SIDE GLAMCES
by Gill fo•
,...::.::....:~--------------=----,

paid off with

work on it at on.ce.
"I am setting a goal of fi nal
action by the Senate and
. House three years from now,
before Congress adjourns for
the 1980 elections," he said.
He said some cr.itics
contend " runaway health
care costs" rule out early
enactment of a health
in;;urance program .
"But the opposite is true,"
he said . "The only way to
control costs, to rationalize
the health delivery syStem,
and to provide effective
planning for the future is as
part of a national )lealth
inSurance program."
Kennedy· said such a
program would not be a
' ''massive new govenunent
invasion''
of
private
practices and would be ' 'no.
more
intrusive
than
Medicare."

GEORGE CAN SHOW YOU HOW
WITH BULK CHAIN.
BRING YOUR TIRE MEASUREMENTS
TO SIZE.
~~~j};:::::::;:::;:;f~:;::: ,;,,,,:: :,"::,••,\ ..

S~pri ng {Valley
PIKE

'}(

4':;"""•'/~
~
W~

HOURS MON.. SAT. 9 AM TO 8 PM
SUNDAY 1-i PM
"According to my cafculatlons, In another 5000
computatlona. I'll need new batteries!"

()

PHONE 446-4554

club activities

.

•

POMEROY -A Christmas Cnris Alderman, son of Mr.
theme was carried out in the and Mrs. Rodney Alderman,
decorations of the Chester and nepl)ew o.f the groom, .
· United Methodist Church for was the ring bearer.
For her daughter's wed·
the wedding of ·Denise Ann
ding, Mrs. Dean wore a long
Dean and John Lee Payne.
The bride is the daughter of · polyester, beige dress trimm·
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dean, ed in gold braid and pearls,.
Route 3, Pomeroy, and the with a matching jacket, and a
bridegroom is the son of Mr. corsage of gold velvet roses.
and Mrs. John A. Payne, The groom•s mother was in a
long polyester flowered dress
Route 2, Vinton.
The wedding was an event of brown, gray and blue with
of2:3D p.m. on Dec. lt with ihe a corsage of gold velvet roses
Rev. Robert Hayden per· also.
Following the ceremony, a
fonillng the double ring
reception was heh! in the
ceremony.
The·church was decorated church social room. A red
in the seasonal red and green and. green color scheme was
with a lighted tree &amp;nd red carried out with the bride's
velvet roses ·made by the table featuring a three tiered
, bride's mother. ·Rt:d velvet cake with white satin bells on
ribbon bows decorated the top, and decorated with red
family pews and red roses, roses and green leaves. The
bows and evergreen were us· table was covered with green
ed in the windows, the altar ·lace and the appointments
vases, piano and org~n ar· were in silver with red and
rangements. The altar rail green candles, red velvet
was adorned with evergreen, roses, and red velvet rope.
twinkling lights, roses and ' Miss Jayne Smith
bows. Two spiral candelabra registered the guests and
joined an arch candelabra presiding at the table were
and was decorated with red Lynnita Newberry, Miss
roses and long bows in a swag Terri Jividen, and Miss Gin·
ny !lowell. They all wore
design.
green
f.l-:-esses in keeping with
Music was provided by
the
u
o
uding co!~rs. . .
Mrs. Horace Karr, organist,
For
their honeymoon, the
and Miss Lynn Thompson,
guitarist and Vocalist, couple traveled to Florida,
presented "My Sweet Lady" visiting Silver Springs,
Cypress
and "Follow Me" during the Disneyworld,
Gardens, Sea World, and
ceremony.
Given in marriage by her Daytona Beach.
parents, the bride was attired · They now reside at MI.
in a traditional while gown of Tabor Road near Vinton.
The bride is a sophomore at
p&lt;ilyester organza decorated
Rio
Grande College. She is a
with alencon lace and seed
of the Chester
member
pearls. It was fashioned with
a V neckline, long lull organ· Methodist Church and was
za sleeves with lace cuffs and active in 4-H programs for 10
seed pearl trim, and flowed years. Her husband is in partinto a cathedral length train nership 'with his father in
featuring a lace trinuned dairy farming on the family
flounce. She carried a bou· farm on Coal Valley Road at
quet of minuet roses, red Vinton. He is a former 4-H
statice, holly and green rib- member and presently an ad·
bon and wore a diamond visor.
Pre-nuptial showers were
necklace belonging to her
sister. The bride's veil of given at Vinton by Mrs. Fred
Dee! and Mrs. Hayes Deel,
organza was elbow length.
Mrs. Jeff Ridgway of Rio and at Chester &amp;y Mrs. Fred
Mrs . Jeff
Grande was the matr011 of Rayburn,
honor, and the bridesmaids Ridgway, Mrs. Don
were Mrs. Don Eictunger, Eichinger, and Miss Pam
Rio Grande, Mrs. Fred Kllutz.
The rehearsal dinner
Rayburn, Pomeroy, Route 3,
and Miss Pam Kautz, hosted by Mr. and Mrs. John
Pomeroy, Route 3. They wore A. Payne and daughters,
gowns of forest green quiaria Mrs. Rod'Aldennan and Mrs.
featuring V necklines, long David Samples, was held at .
full sleeves, . and drawstring the Chester United Metllndist
empire waistlines. They car· Church following the wed·
ried bouquets of red yelvel ding rehearsal Friday even·
roses, variegated holly,' ing, Dec. 9. Members of the
evergreen and red velvet families and the wedding pal'•
ty attended.
rope.
Flower girl was Carrie
Morrissey, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Patrick Morrissey,
Long Bottom. She were a
NURSE KU.LED .
gown identical to the other at·
NEW •YORK (UPJ) - A
tendants and carried a red . woman 'patient ~t a
· basket with holly leaves and Manhattan hospital "went
red ribbon pieces.
·berserk" and killed a nurse ·
.The groom, wearing a by hitting her On the head
white Seville tuxedo and·a red with a chair early today,
rose boutonniere, was attend· . police said. The 46-year-old
ed by Greg George, Bidwell, pa.tient, Daisy Stewart,
best man, and Tim Massie, struck the nursing supervlscr
Gallipolis, T. J. Robinson, at Trafalgar Hospital,
Sidwell, and Bill Bure1Bon, located on ·the city's Upper
Bidwell, all wearing pale East Side, around !a.m. "She
· green tuxedcs trimmed in just went berserk and hit the
forest green velvet with red sup~rvisor," said
ad·
velvet rose boutonnieres. ministrator Leo Lazarus.

•

I

Exhibit for tbe m011th of February, 1978 - Elsie Kay
Harris, Lexington , Kentucky, Oils on canvas and Grapllite
Drawings.
·
Gallery Hours - Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. until 5
p.m.: Tuesdays and Thursday, !Oa.m. until3 p.m.
February 3 - 8 p.m. - Reception for Elsie Kay Harris,
artist exhibiting in February. Bad weather alternate date,
February 10, 1978, Riverby.
February 23, 6:30p .m. - F.A.C. Annual Dinner Meeting
'
Oscar's Restaurant , $6.50 per person.
February 26, 2 p.m.-4 p.m. - Parent • Child Workshop,
PeMy Moore, Chairman ; details later, Riverby .
February 28, 7:30 p.m. - F .A.C. Interdepartmental
Meeting ; 9 p.m,, F.A.C. Trustees Meeting , Riverby .

Wekome Wagon

RogerandRickandwife.Mr.
and
Mrs. Donald Phitlips Jr .
and boys, Dnmon, David and
Delton of Columbus and Mrs.
Phillips' mother, Mrs. West .

•

••

1928

Dent.Se Dean, }o·hn··Raryne
are ·married in.J:2ecember

- - - - --·
I
••
I

•

Argwnents to open Saturday
MEDIA , Pa . (UPI ) ~
Opening arguments In the
murder retrial of W. A.
"Tony" Boyle were pushed
back until Sat.urday because
the elderly former union boss
was routed from his motel
room by a minor but smoky
fire and then rushed to a
hospital.
Boyle , 76 . tlw fnrmer

KeiT News

THEN MAKE YOUR OWN!

519·-

60 H0t0 N(JCH DO ')(;;()

Feb. !-Bridge at9 :30 a.m. at Nora Troike's. Call 446-2153
for
information.
·
·
BunnY, and Charles Kuhl, struggling recently to clear their
Feb.
2-Craftsat
lp.m.
Call44&amp;-1937.
driveway of snow, came up with a way to keep the snow shovel
Welcome Wagon is open to any newcomer who has lived in
and tbe blade on their tractor free of packed snow.
the
area
for three years or less. Call Joy Atwood at - 9 9 or
They sprayed tllem with a de-icer, such as is used on wind·
Mary
Ann
Jamison at 446-:/.649 for information.
shields, and foWJd that the snow slid right off.
Feb. 6-Bcardmeeting at 7:30p.m. Contact Fran Shaw at
Nancy Pope of Middleport who recently underwent surgery 446-7593.
Feb. 15- Get acquainted coffee at Fran Shaw's at 10 a.m.
at University Hospital is now recuperating at home.
Call 2§.5359 or 446-7593.
Feb. 16 - Evening bridge at 7:30p.m. at Fran Shaw's. Call
With more things to do than time to do them when the
·
weather moderates, Geneva Nolan is. occupying herself with 446-2153 or 446-7593.
Feb. 20 -General meeting at 7:30p.m . at the Jackson
sm;!II household tasks, such as reorganizing her recipes.
In going through her many, many recipes, this former Meigs Pike Branch of Ohio Valley Bank .
County extension agent, hoffie economics, came across the for
applesauce gingerbread which Mrs. Velsia Roush had asked
for . Incidentally, Mrs. Nolan says that sbe has a number of
recipes which call for home canned sauces and butters not only
Danny Justice and friend with a stroke.
adding variety to baked gonds but also milking them more were down from 'Oak Hill, W.
During the vacation at
nutritious. She's mailing them to us.
Va. last week for a load of Christmas time the family
And for the applesauce gingerbread -6 tablespoons shorten- hay , and visited his parents had a get-together at Bidwell:
ing, 14 cup suger, l egg, lh cup molasses, lo/4 cups flour, I tsp. ar Ewington and Mr. and Those attending were Mr.
baking soda, I tsp. cinnamon, \2 tsp. ginger, \2 tsp. salt, and Mrs . J . D. Stout and and Mrs. J. C. Stout and
tw-thirds cup thick applesauce.
Mellayne.
Mellayne, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.
Cream shortening and sugar. beat in the egg, add niolasses,
Opal Phillips and son Phillips and sons, Chuckle
and mix well. Sift together three times the flour , soda, and Donnie and Efoste~e Phillips and Billy, and friend , Mona
other dry ingredients, and add to the creamed mixture alter- Jr. were in . Mt.. City, Tenn . Houck, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
nately wiih the apple sauce.
and Boone, N. C. last Stout and children, Mike and
Bake in a greased pan 350 degrees for 45 minutes.
Saturday and Sunday to see Timmy, and Mr. and Mrs.
!heir aunt, Flossie Brown, Pat.Stout an~ children, Brian
HAVEANICEWEEK.
who is in the Boone Hospital and Jason; Mr. and Mrs.
Blakely Stout and sons,

CAN'T FI.ND
TIRE CHAINS?'

VISA'

lollu

ESTIMA15 THIS IS
601~1'0
?

By Charlene
Hoeflich

Sherri Marshall, confined to Children's Hospital for the past
two weeks , is expected to get home som~time this weekend ,
roads permitting.
A Meigs Junior High student, Sherri has cystic fibrosis and
periodically must be hospitalized for treatment. Her father,
Charles Marshall, reports she's coming along fine and the
family, of course, is anxious to get her back home.

1

mas

;ll

"'

A repealer may be
J?ebate in )ast . week 's somewhat distant. The House
Senate override of Rhodes' still must override , and
are
the
veto of a public employee indications
collective bargaining bill Democrats don 't have the
contained lots of theatrics votes there. •
and litUe substance.
The Ohio Education
The lawmakers have
debated the cootroversial bill Association reopened an old
so many times. they are woond last week, criticizing
growing weary of reciting the Rhodes for his stance on
conventional arguments for. school financing .
John H. Hall, the tea~her
and against it.
Sen . Harry Meshel, D· organization's chief lobbyist,
Ycungstown, the chief said Rhodes forced the
sponsor, unleashed a bitter Legislature into adding $109
attack on right-to-work million to the schools' 1978-79
groups and editorial writers appropriation by deliberately
for spreading "confusion" undercutting basic education
over
the
measure's In
his
budget
rec·
provisions.
Qmmendations.
He said two right-to-work
Til en , said Hall, the .
groups located outside of . governor slashed up to a
Wl\ShlngtQ!l have mailed out percent of the appropriation
'~restroom rhetoric" about
unnecessarUy.
the biU.
· Hall also ridiculed the idea .
Ocasek said the Legislature that ·''state mannates" are
should send a message to responsible for the schools'
Washington that " 500,000 fiscal plight. He said those
public employees in Ohio are mandated programs don't
no looger going to keep their even
approach
basic
mouths shut and do what requirements set by the state
they're told."
'
Board of Education .
Sen. ThomasA. Van Meter,
Rhodes has said that
R-Ashland, an ardent legislative mandates are one
opponent of the legislation, of the chief reasons for
fought back.
schools going bankrupt.
"You (Democrats) have an
The OEA and Rhodes have
overwhelming majority in sparred since the 1974 guber·
this Legislature," he said, natoria I contest, . when
'yet you represent only about Rhodes · campaigned hard
40 percent of public opinion. I against school closings and
hope you are ready to defend the association endorsed his
this bill when it comes on the opponent, Democrat John J .
ballot."
Gilligan .

AND HE WILL CUT THE LENGTHS

a free lunch

®

.•.·

National health insurance
closer Kennedy tells MDs

Market plunges to new, 33-month.low

Honest woman

~« Con1er

,.,

BUSINESS

:·

...

i

CHICAGO (UPI) - Sen.
Kennedy ~d in a prepared
Edward Kennedy, 0-Mass., text it has become "fashiona·
tol~ the n~tion's doctors
ble" to say the tide had
Saturday a national health turned against national
insurlince plan is clo"!'r to health insurance and that it
approval by Ccngress than it was no longer under serlous
has been since 196:i.
consideration.
Speaking to the American
"That simply is not true ,"
Medical Association, he said. "In my view, we are
Kennedy aSked the doctors to closer
to
serious
join him and President congressional c011slderation
Cart~r in an effort to enact
of national healtll insurance
the program within three today than we have been at
years to help reduce health' any time since Medicare was
care costs.
enacted in 1965."
Kennedy, who chairs the
· He said the President is
Senate Health Subcommittee, giving the . proposal high
also asked tqe AMA . to priority because of "his
support legislation to give the strong commitment .. . and
Food and Drug Adminis- . his deep personal belief in it."
tration authority to regulate
Carter plans to send his
the use of new drugs ·after hational health insurance
they are marketed.
proposals to Congress this
Both proposals have been summer, Kennedy Sa id,
oppos¢ by the AMA .
adding the Senate Healtll
Subcommittee would begin

y

•

j ;,.~ ().. \\~(! ••.
1='~aW\:
~~e.\11\t

in the middle of snow and snow banks and
snow drifts and snow piles and snow men . .. ah ...
snow people. With all the white stuff around I'm tempted
to launch a campaign to ship all the snow to Albuquerque for
aU the socially deprived souls to enjoy. Will II ever end?

They had a. gift exchange:

With the weather many people have developed that crazy
age olddiseaseofcabin fever or a fever de Ia petite rnai5on . ln
all seriousness there does happen to be a phobia of being
snowed in. All I know is that it's sc very depressing but if
winter is here tllen spring must be close by.
.

Quote-of-the week: Ncbody ever had a rainbow until they
had bad the rain. Jim Croce.
One very good thing about this weather is the fact that I'?•
had a chance to meet so many people in my apariment urut.
You'll never believe how well you can get to know someone
while pushing a car out of a snow hank or running out with a
bottle of boiling water to unfreeze a car door . Such a pity that
we all had to meet under_such trying conditions .
.
Book-of-the-week: TV-Guide : it's been my favorite
reading material of late.

Insurance out for strikers
.

l'nit ed
Mine
Workers
president accused of master~·
minding the 1969 Joseph A.
"Jock" Yablonski murder.
was taken to a hospital
F'riday morning following the
boiler room fire at the Mediu
Inn . He wns released late
Friday night and retumed tu
hi s hotel room .

Due to the
Inclement Weather
We Have Further
Reduced A II Our
Sale Shoes.
ONE PRICE

s 97
PAIR·
SAVE ON lOG'S OF PAIRS
WOMEN'S • GIRLS' • BOYS'
SHOES

.

CANTON, Ohio (UP!) The Canton City Board of
Education has notified of·
fleers of the Professional
Educators Asscclation and
the Ohio Association of Public
Employees that it.will not pay'
insurance benefits for their
striking members as Qf Jan.
31. .
.
The board said the action
was taken "beca use the
employees have failed to

'

Mr. and Mrs. john Lee Payne

render their services under
contract, and because thisrepresents a substantial
breach in the agreement
which existed between the
board and the association ."

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO 5

SHOP

POMEROY LANDMARI&lt;

DUE TO THE
.· I·NCLE.MENT
WEATHER

/

enn are
SUP~R MARKETS

AD DID NOT
ARRIVE. WATCH
FOR IT IN
MONDAY'S
GALLIPOLIS
.
.'

'

DAILY TRIBUNE

'

IN GENERAL ELECTRIC T.V.'S

CONSOLE- TABLE MODELS- BLACK &amp;
WHITE-COLOR-ALL MODELS IN STOCK

DISCOUNT PRICES
POMEROY
LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, M.GR.
OrtYO A Linlt ond Seve A Lot-FrH Dellvory
within 7S Mlltt-Ytsl Wt Strvlct At Your Local
Hot pOint DH lor.
·
Store Hours : 1:30toS:30-Mltl Clostsal 5:00P.M.Serving Meigs, Gtllit &amp; Mason Counties.

�· ·~-

•

A-.1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. Jan. 29. 197&amp;

Parenting workshop slated

Lavelle 's chamber group will
be next local music attraction
GALLIPOLIS Paul
Lavalle · and the Chamber
Music SQciety of Lower Basin
street will be •the next attraction to appear in
Gallipolis unde_r auspices o l
the Tri-County C&lt;lmmun1ty

each state and two from the
District of C&lt;llumbtal are
association's current concert selected to participate with
series will begin at 8 p.m, the band, which not only
Tuesday in the Gallla marches in Macy's ThanksAcademy High School giving Day parade and the
auditorium.
Tournament of Roses parade,
The Chamber Music but also performs in concert
&amp;lciel)' originated in the 1940s in such places as C~t megie
on NBC radio . Lavalle was a Hall, Kennedy Center, etc.
performer (clarinet and Lavalle
directs
the
saxophone I and stall con- organizing of the blind and
ductor with the NBC Sym- conducts all perfonnances.
phony Orchestra under the
The present~ay version of
directorship of Arturo the Chamber Mu..ic &amp;lciety of
Toscanini. One innovation of Lower Basin Street Is a
the society was the idea of a reinc;amation of the original
" Dr . of Musicology," a group that packed NBC radio
professor·type , narrator who studios and attracted mlllions
·helps to em phasize the ol llstene·rs. This group of
·chamber music "spoof" idea. over ten musicians was
Paul Lavelle studied at revived specifically for the
Chosen to
Julliard Conservatory. His Colu.mbla Artists Festival
be cherished
programs with NBC launched C&lt;l rporation .
such
stars as Dinah Share,
'-,~
The ensemble Is still
Mario
Lanza, Earl Wright· composed of the classical
'
~
son, Robert Merrill, Lena instrumentation of flute ,
_ It \
Home and Victor Borge. In bassoon, oboe, piccolo, horn
1948 Lavalle formed the and clarinet - plus the
world-famous Band of standard Dixieland inAmeri~a for the Citie~ Serstruments such as the
vice
program,
which trumpet, piano, string bass
provided 20 years of weekly and drums. Costumes and
radio prese nt ations, sold staged action have been
eight million record albums added to the Society's
and . was featured on traditional " radio sou.Dd,"
telev islon for three years.
and the part of the
Mr. Lavalle also . formed Musicologist has become an
the World's Fair Symphony actor's monologue gem.
Orchestra for the 1964~
Thfs group ol ta lented
' The perfe c t symboi of '(ou_r
World's Fair. In 1968 he musicians continue to bring a
love , .. a perlect Keep sa ke
became Director of Music classical tradition to the
diamond, gu ar anteed and
and
Principal C&lt;lnductor of modern "3 B's" - Barrelpermaneht!y regrstered
the Radio City Music Hall house, Boogie-Woogie and the
Symphony Orchestra, a Blues.
position he held lor the next
Admission to Tuesday .
IU:,ci~IC'nc'tl llian1tmd Ri n~~;\
seven years.
night' s concert will be by
This musician's most membership card only. No
notable creation recently is single admissions will be sold
the
McDonald's
All- at the door.
American High School Band,
originated in 1967 for the
JOINS SORORITY
McDonald's C&lt;lrp.
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
GALLIPOLIS Amy
Each year 102 honor high
school musicians (two from Knicely, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Knicely of. Maple
Drive, has pledged the
Hanover chapter of Alpha
Delta Pi sorority. Afreshman
atthe college, Miss Knicely is
START THE N'EW YEAR
a gra duate of Gallia
Academy High School and
·was a member of National
Honor Society. Hanover
C&lt;lllege is a lour-year ltberal
arts college affiliated with ,
the Unit.e d Presbyterian
Church, U.S.A., and located
olong the Ohio River in
southeastern Indiana.
Estee Lauder, Reg ional Sales Manager
and . her . assistant will . be doing
E-RCALLEDOUT
consu ltation s on make-up . .For a free
• MIDDLEPORT - Th e
makeup and consultation call lor an
Middleport Emergency
appointment
Squad was called to 86 S.
446-2477
Fourth St., at 1:52 p.m.
Friday lor Evelyn Grueser
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. AI 8:44 a.m .
Saturday, the fire department went to North Second
Ave., where a car driven by
· 300 Second Ave .
Lafayette
Winifred Dent, Pomeroy, had
. Mall
ca ught fire. There were
. eXtensive damages ' to the
'-,:!J..~--....,..-. J::, wiring of the vehic~e.

I

Social

! Calendar

TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., Pomeroy
Chapter 80 RAM. Work in
mark master and past
master degree . All com·
panions welcome.

PAUL LAVALLE

Admitted
Robert
Sigman,' Bidwell; Pauline
Markins, Rutland.
Dischprged - Jell Reuter,
Brenda Cunningham, Charles
Withee~ Linda Freeman.

'

Carol Weak/and
ENGAGED - Mrs. Marian Jones of Gallipolis
announces the engagement ol her sister, Carol Lee
Weakland to Joel Wayne Adkins, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Adkins, Branchland, W.Va. Miss Weakland is
the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Weakland
ol Hastings, Pa. Miss Weakland is employed at the
Gallipolis Parts Warehouse. Mr. Adkins works at the
Huntington Alloys Corp. A summer wedding is planned.

GALLIPOUS - The . annual christmas dinner of the
former employees of Duke
Cleaners was held January 24
due to the bad weather. · The
ladies ate at Bob Evans
Sausage Shop.
All formerly worked for
Forrest Clark at what is now
called Scotch Clean Center.
This event was started nine

366 .Second Ave.__
· - - -_- - - - Gallipol~ Ohio

years ago .. A gift exchange
was enjoyed.
Attending were: Aljean
Thivener, Mary Hatfield ,
Anna bell Stanley, Zelma lee
Vallance, Pearl Ramey and
LindaU Jarvis. Afterwards
the group stopped in at
UndaU's house around a.
roaring fire to talk over old
times.

Large Group Women's

SPORT SHOES .......~.1 0
DRESS HEELS .......~ 12
SAVE lf~

TO OUR CUSTOMERS

l

Due to e~tremely severe weather conditions in near
Mid-West food producing areas. such as Ohio, Kentucky
&amp; Indiana and almost total disruption of both rail and
truck transportation, we are experiencing many delays
in delivery to our stores;
Because ' of this we are delaying our normal
advertising untii Tuesday, Jan. 31, 1978.
Please look for our regular ad with many first of the
month specials on the 31st.
We will continue to be open normal hours on Jan. 29
and 30 barring further weather problems. We have most
products in stock in our stores.
.
We will restock on the missing items just as quickly ·
as possible.
· We apologize for this inconvenience.

The Kroger Company

~------GALLIPOLIS, 0

SLACKS, ·JACKETS &amp;SWEATERS
GOWNS AND ROBES
MATERNITY DRESSES
MATERNITY ·sEPARATES .TURTLE NECK SWEATERS - % OFF
1A to 1h OFF
UNIFORMS

AND MORE
, ON

,,

SL.I P-ONS ANQ
OXFORDS

...._...

::t slj..l' ( rtdfrj!'
"
'""
I

.

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

..

·' ,

·~

CLEARANCE
SALE

"

t

•

•

1'111'11

Sli&gt;.'fU

POIllER
Dll.l.
COSB'I
JAMU I!ARI.
JO.'IES

APIECE Of
ntE ACTIOI't
' ......

1,,, . ....

Diane Shoup, pictured with a Pinecrest resident.
administers medication.

..., ...

""' " " . .....

'"'""·'· ·"~"'' ..,, ' .,

. w•th al l the diamonds you no long er wear.

... Recreation director Yolande Howard and therapist Pete Crane are pictured with Jennie
Des In the therapr progra m.

Jf~

~ -

~

~
~"
.·

- ~

A thought for the day:
Early .A merican freedom

fighter Thomas Paine said,
" A ood cause will ever be
supported by blld means and

0

Cartoon

se lect one o f o ur bea utiful moun ling s ·

new diamo nds whenever you li ke .

(~
·· ~""

bad men.".

Meals are prepared in a well equipped kitchen under
the guidance of a staff dietitian ..Pictured are Gail Stunbo,
Doona Stewart, Steve Thacker and Carol Ullle.

Hi9h quality h•ir ~onditioner tr•afment, to
restore or protect your hlir. 2.6 pH.

Cortoplex

IN FULL SWING

.~

SAVE UP TO

SlOO

HIGHER GROUND

has-

FURTHER
, REDUCTIONS
SAVE
30%-50%

OFF

Second &amp; Grape

Jewtltta

S18·95

UniPerm

''

ON, ALL
FALL &amp; WINTER
MERCHANDISE

••

...---

,

I,.,·

Tonight lhru
. Tuesday

Haifdresser Darlene Swain fixed Lellah Davis' hair in
the Pinecrest Beauty Shop.

$25.
, Heie r:. Curti• perm. M.~ .......,
with • ,e.-, · for a l•tting ilnprenion.

' .

c' h

),

COLO'\\ ·

Millie Folden, Olive Watson and Aldan Miller share
an aftei'noon visit. Inneraction between residents is a vita l
part in the recovery program.

I .

T~•rsday

~u1inti11~!' ,

oil on canvas. ulung with nine
grHphit e dt·nwings and ~~x.­
tcen life drnwln gs in
graph it o, All of her wu•·k will
be av~ilable for purchase.

I

$15

Mon . &amp; Fri.
till p.m.
Tues., Wed.
Soi. lil5

BABY BORN
GALUPO!.IS - Mr. and
Mrs. C. Robert Haner, LOwer
River Road, cirmoWlce the
birth of their first child, a
daughter, on January _7, 1978
at Holzer Medical Center.
The baby was born at 5:27
a.m. and weighed 5 pounds
· a nd 4 ounces. She was 19
inches long and has been
named Jen.cie Elizabeth.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Butler,
Sr., Route 2, Crown City.
Maternal great-grandparents
are Mrs. Mildred Bush and K.
a Butler. Paternal. grandparent is Mrs. F. Francis
Han er, Lower River Rd.
J encie was born on Grandma
Haner's. birthday.

seven hindscapc

t•:tS tt-: llAitltiS

WINTER

Not All Sizes But All Good Buy
Sony, No Layaways.

11112 noon

All private and government
insurance and health care
programs are recongnized
such as Medicare and
Medicaid, Pinecrest W\lfks
closely with both services to
provide complete health care ·
service.
. The center offers 116 beds,
95 of which are occupied. Ad·
ministrator Gary McGuire
points out that this is highly
Wlusual for any center. He
explains that most centers
will U.ke up to a year to reach
the mark of 100 residents. He
is pleased with the progress
Pinecrest has made in such a
brief period of lime. The
number of residents changes
often as the av~rage resident
stays only a few days or
weeks depending upOn the
type of operation or illness
which brought them there.
One area of confusion conct: rns the t.voe of service Ph1c
cerns the type of service
Pinecrest offers. It is not a
hospital although medication
administered and it is not a
nursing home in the' accepted
sense of the meaning. While
most t esidents are recovering from an illpess or operatipn, the a ttention and
medical care are superior.
Yet the staff. works with the
reSidents to 'bring them to a
level of self sufficiency.
R~siden~ are encoura~ed to
care for themselves yet tbe
staff ma kes careful observation on their progress to ensqre no problems evolve.
'l'he structure features two
floors wh ich house the
rt!sidents. Each floor features
a ~- nurse's station, mini kitcl)en, TV room, and dining
which converts into an activity; center. The rooms are
·,•

Competitive PiJinting
Exhibit .
Her husband. ~'rank ll .
Burris, is the Associate l)can
of Students al the University
of Kentucky in Lexington .
They have two d:tUKhters,
Virginia Leigh. age 12. and
Melinda Kay , age 10.
The French Art Colony Is
delighted that Mrs. llarr!s'
work will be featured in hot)!
Galleries as the February
exhibit. A rec~ptlon hunorin~
her will be held on ~' rid"y
even in~. l'' ebruary 3, weathrr
pcr1nittin~ . so that members
may meet her &lt;md view ht'l'
work. Should the we11thcr
be extremely bnct. the
alternate dutt' of February lO
has been selected. Members
will be rctl'iving invitnt1ons
early in .thr week .
Mrs. Ha rris will exhibit

wow ! A truly magn •fice nt r1n g ,

Cormies, Johansens, Naturalizers,
AudHions, Miss Wonderful
LARGE GROUP MEN'S

The avera~e resident of
Pinecrest is one recovering
from an operation or illnesS
that demands more care than
family members could pmvide. Admission is wsed
upon a doctor's recommendatlon.

decor4ted in bright t'Olors SIUilS moJed to meet the needs
.
and offer enough space lqr uf U1e residents.
Pinecrest. not yet one year
personal dec'OI'ations. Rootns
offer either two or lour beds. old. has made an impact on
Single rooms are also the community. People saw
the need for such an organizaavaia ble.
Meats are supervised by a tion and did ~omething a buut
staff dietition in accordance it. The result has been a
with the special diet needs of modern fadlity which offers
each patient. They are the !Jest care to residents
prepared in a modern kitchen while working to bring them
and transported via special back to the eonununity. Yclit
carts to en$Ure proper ha~ gone beyond that in the
temperature.
senee that the human side has
Residents are encouragOO. been added. The staff prides
to enga~ in many of the plan- itself in knowing not only the
ned C:Jctivities such as crafts, medical history of each resisewing or games. Interaction dent but their personal live~
between residents is also en- as well. It is an organization
eouraged. Yolande Howard, in whieh each stall member
recreation director, stresses gives freely of themselves in
the need for planned .ac- helping the residents adjust .
tivities and the importance of to a better lifestyle. From the
it in the recovery porgram. staff members, to the
volunteers, to the residents,
program.
One feature of Pinecrest is the center, as one member
the visiting minister pro- states, ",..is filled with love."
gram . Area ministers Pinecrest is proud of the
volunteer their services for a many volunteers who come to
month on a rotating bases. visit, helping with reading or
They cond uct weekly letter writing. The public is
religious services and spend invited to Qecome involved
many hours during the week with the volunteer program.
&amp;! Pinecrest, alter eight .
visiting. Several chUrchs also
bring services to Pinecrest months, continues to make
progress in the field of health
for the benifit of residents.
The lirst floor of the care. . Pinecrest: another
building leal~res the ad- asset in the quality of life for
ministration offi ces, kitchen, Galli a County.
waiting room and physical
therapy room . Physical
therapist Pete Cra ne works
with the residents wbo need
to improve motor usage and
muscle strength. Included in
his program are whirlpool
tre(;ltments, exercise pr~r
grams and individual ses-

GALLIPOLIS - Elsie Kay
Harri s, accomplished and
well-know n artist from
Lexington. K~ntucky, will
• •hibit her work throughout
the month of February In
bath Galleries at Riverby ,
home ol t~e French Art
C&lt;llony.
,
A native of Charleston, W.
Va., Mrs. Harris is a talented
artist. doing outstanding
work in oil on canvas as well
as ~raphite drawings and tile
drawings . ·
She received her AA
degrees in Art fr.&lt;!m Sullins
C&lt;lllege and her BA degree in
Art from the University of
Kentucky .
Most recently she did the
bllckdrop and set design for
the
l.c x~ng lo n
Ballet
product ion of Sw~tn l.ake. Her
· work was included in the
COntemporary
Dancers
Group Art Exhibit, the
Kentucky Woman' s Com·.
petilivc Exhibition. and she
will be exhibiting this year in
the Lexington Counci l of A1ts

,.

;

NOTICE

STATE &amp; THIRD

·1f2 OF.F

SALE CONTINUES

-

Peddler's P(lntry

HAS REDUCED .PRICES

WITHA~~

COfl'tRIGHT lt71- fHI ICIOGII (0.

SALE

THE UNIFORM CENTER

'

care.

nurse's aides.

r-----~-------------------------·--~

CLARK'S
JEWELRY

by: Catherine Benet
GALLIPOLIS - ~ When
Pinecrest Care Center opent!d their doors on May 23.•
1977, they did so with
the
dedication
of
returning post acutely ill persons to the conununity to lead
active, productive lives.
Since that day Pinecrest has
become much more aware of
the needs of the conununity
for such a service organization and have branched out
into other areas of health
Established to offer post
critical care and servil:es not
found in a more medically
oriented environment. Pinecrest has a staff of seven
ltNs, seven LPNs and 33

Veterans Memorial Hospi&amp;al

Keepsake·

TUESDAY, JANUARY 31ST
1 PM TIL 3:30 PM

children, and looking at the
responsibilitles of the J&gt;'lrent
and child.
The workshop will be
directed toward helping .
parents coRe with the
challenging
and
ever
changing demands of childrearing. Parents with
children from birth to 18
years ol age will find the
workshop helpful. Participants will learn thro!J8h
instruction, practicing and
discussion of typical everyday
problems.
No
requirement will be made for
discussing particular in- '
dividual or family problems.

GALL I POLIS
28. Tuition will be according
" Parenting Can Be Fun" is to Income ( '15 maiimum l.
the title of the paren!lng All parents are invited .
workshop being offered at the Enrpllment Is limited to 30
C&lt;lmmunity Mental ·Health individual.9 with January 30
Center in Gallipolis (located being the registration dead·
at the junction of state routes line. For inlormatioo call
~ and 160) , The workshop Mrs. Margie Casto at 446·will meet on Tuesday nights 5542.
between 6:30 and 9:30 p.m.
The workshop leaders will
· lor live weeks starting be John Brammer and Bill
January 31 through February Breckenridg e,
both
specializing in parent-child
relationships . Among the
various topics to be covered
in this education erperlence
will be exploring alternatives
to discipline, limit setting,
understanding behaviors of

C&lt;&gt;ncert A'sn .
This second program in the

Lexington artist to exhibit at Riverby

Ground' '
tO appear in concert_

~ ~Higher

11

RIO GRAN DE - "Higher
Ground", a combination of
triple success in testimony,
music, and performance, will
· be at the Rio Grnde College
Cafeteria on Saturday evening, February 4 at 7 p.m. The
trio is being sponsored by the
Gallipolis Chapter of
FGBMFI.
.
The story of Higher Ground
is exciting. Wayne Hilliard
had a dream to found the
group and with a wealth of ex-'
perience and m"'ical ability
he built the group upon high
ideals and hope.· From the
first Higher Ground was
singing for the right resons
and their work today takes
them into many revivals and
crusades where they bave an ..
opportunity to share the
things they believe.
Michael McKenney is a
dynamic proof of the dedication and talent of Higher
•'

Goldie Quimby, ·one of the many volunteers, is
Ground. A rock mus1c1an,
picturetl
reading to Mrs. Nellie Eblin.
drug user, playing with a
rock group in New Mexico,
Mike ·.was persuaded by his
mother to listen to Higher training enables him to guide spend an evening ln a special
Ground. Indirectly through Higlt1'r Ground wit.h a way, plan to attend the
their winless be became a ,!,-piritual awareness.
meeting on February 4 at Rio
Christian and nuw adds a
For those who want to Grande College Cafeteria.
dimension of ea rthl y
gratitude and praise to \he
services and concerts where
High er Ground si ng s.
Michael, plays the blisS and
Lee Hilliard, Wayne's ·
brother, and Wayne alternate
oo the piano.
All three are professionals
.
Who.have mastered the realm
of gospel m.Sic. They served
their apprenticeship in
church "choirs and youth
groups helore joining professional gospel music.
·Wayne Hillard has been a
student in the ministry of the
Lord's work and sang with
the Downings. His ministerial

SILVER
BRIDGE

·PLAZA

'

'

'

OPEN TODAY

1 PM TIL 6 PM

•

.

404 SECOND AVIMJ I: • 44tt4J
'""'91EA -~~~CAN OEM IOCiiTY

�• A·lO-The SWldayTirnes-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Jan . 29,1976

hlm•ell"

Wallace said no to Nixon
MONTGOMERY, Ala .
t UP!) - Gov. G&amp;Orge C.
Wallace said Friday he had

Pleasant and manned by Fred Rlcharoson, pulling out an
IS-ton crane owned by Ragnor·Benson and operat&amp;d by
Roy Taylor of Gallipolis Ferry. Directing the operation Is
James Chapman of GalUpolls.

STUCK IN MUD - One of the problems plaguing the
hookup of a well on the Old Town Farm , which will be used

as .an emergency water source for Point Pleasant, has
been the mud aryd snow which Is trapping heavy equl!&gt;"
ment. Shown here Is a dozer. owned by the City or Point

for help . The governor told
rep&lt;Jrters, "my best recollection" of Nixon's approach

no idea hls reluctant rejection

was that " people or a 6beral

of Richard Nixon 's plea lor
help in 1974 would convince
the besieg&amp;d president to
resign.
Nixon, according to David
· Frost's new book, "I Gave
Them a Sword," put down the
telephone after talking to
Wallace on July 23, 1974,
turned to Alexander Haig and
said "Well, Al, there goes the
presidency. ''
Wallace ·confirm&amp;d Nixoll
call&amp;d him that day and ask&amp;d

stance were going after him ,

4

I

and he thought those of a
more conservative stance

should convince those people
who had something ID do with
it the position they should
take ."
More specifically, Wallace
Said, Nixon want&amp;d him ID
prevail upon Rep. Walter
Flowers, a member of the
HoUSE Judicary Committee,
to vote against lmpeachinent.

BERKELEY, calif. (UPII .
- Cali fornia 's new head
football coach, Roger Theder,
has landed a couple of highly
touwd junior college recruits.
Briant Vincent, a 220iJound
defensive end from Mt. Hood
in Oregon, and Don Sprague,
a 220-pound tight end from
West Hills in Coalinga, Calif.,
have signed letters of intent
to come 1D california.

lluring

conversation.

Wallace said he told Nixon,
" I felt it would be Improper,
and 1· felt it could be
misinterpreted, and I could
not comply with his request .·'
" It was a difficult decision
for me," Wallace said . ." It
was a matter of agony to me
- not to do what was the right
thing - but who it was and
Wlder the circumstances."
Wallace said he had no idea

'~

The governor said h&amp;regrett&amp;d he could 11' ' help :
Nixon who was 11 ex.tra nice
to me 'after I was shot" while
campaigning for· president in
1972. "I was sorry he call&amp;d. l
did not think I could in proper
conscience comply with the

request."

·

Frost quoted Nixon as
saying Wa !lace seemed '
puzzl&amp;d by the ,request and
"seemed not to understand '
why I was calling."

Nixon would resign .

"He was very kind, how· .:

Nixon did not try to ever "Nixon said in the book. ,
pressure him ID change ·his "He' said, 'I'm praying for .,
mind, Wallace said, and was you .,. I wish this didn't have •
in "complew l'Ommand of to be visit1..'fi upon you.' "

Bring your
family to the
fann for Great
Country Eatitt
tonight!

Engaging Rings
Your AltarE

the .

CHESHIRE - Ohio Valley
Electric Corp., at a dinner
meeting at the Holiday Inn in
Kanauga recently honored ·
Kyger Creek personnel who
ha d submitted work im·
provemem articles published
during 1977 in the American
Electric Power Corporation's
ojOperating
Idea s"

reduce costs for OVEOC and
industry in general. I. 0.
Hawk, Vi ce President -

l

.,) \.

'

~·~~~~'

}
'~,

.

,\ , .&lt;J"'""'J

"~~....,

•

.1 ~

HIGH wate r came within a whisker of going over on .

taken from the Frosty Freeze parking lot, looking north
toward Chillicothe Rd. ·
'

leaves the Wh ite House, he
plans to beCome a for eign
missionary for the Southern
Baptbis in hopes he might
tum a country " bac:k to God
a nd on our side," his Sunday
Bible school teacher says.
Fred Gregg, who teaches

the adult Bible class attended

pr esiden t

prayed

Cartt!r has sa id Suuthcm

together in the private family
quarters of the White House,
presented a personal plea for
_back to our side and I hope missionaries from Carter last
5omeday that !hot's what I'll year during a gathering of the
get to dt',' " Gregg recalled . South,ern Baptist Convention

Baptists should put heavier
emphasis on missionaries
who work for a limit&amp;d period
of time, rather than limiting
their major thrust to those
who make it a lifetim e
calling .

the job he could of done.
~· H e said, 'I would lik,e to be
a part of Qeing able to turn
that co untry back to God and

Grr~ g.

who said he a nd t he

have

in KansaS City.

Washington, said Carter told 29 ba nks from Louisiam1 to
him of his planS during a ·. California becaus.e he 'said It
discussion of mi ssionary

efforts.
Gregg,
an
insurance
executive, quoted Carter as

Jimmy Carter
.promises to
play politics

telling him recently that,
"When I get out of the White
House. I plan to go for a year
or.two" as a missionary.
WASmNGTON (UP! i
"I want you to go for a year · The Democrats now have a
or two when . yo U retire ...

presJdent who . . promises .to

we're trained, we've taught
Sunday school " Carter told Gregg.
'
" He said, 'My mother did
that when she went over to

pay more attentlop to politics
a nd a new cha1rman who
prom~ses to . pay off the
party~ $1.9 m1lbon debt.
Pres1dent :Carter told the

India, and she was in her

Demo_ cra tu~.

sixties!' " Gregg said in an

Committee Fnday he d1dn t

Nat1~na.l

interview . The president's
mother, Miss Lillian, worked
in India as a Peace Corps
volunteer.

do . mu c ~ to hel~ th_e
J?emocrahc _Party _durmg h1s
flr_st year m off1ce. Commtttee members cheered

Gregg quoted Carter as

when he told them he would

saying , "I don 't want to wake

up 10 or 15 years from today
and find a co untr y that is
friendly to us, that haS turned

try harder

m 1978.

Carter had summoned the

359· n~e mber . committee to
Washmgto~ to elect Texan

to the other side, just because

John White,. th~ deputy

some m issionary did not do

agn culture secretary, as the
new national chairman.

MODUlAR HOMES

ARE
TODA Y'S BEST
BUYS IN HOMES

I

CT~~~

.

MOBILE HOMES INC.
See. Jim Staats or Joe Giles

Phone 446-9340

,,

Gallipolis, Ohio

seemed like the easiest way
to make' mortey has been
sentenced to 30 years in

prison by a U. S. District '
Court judge.
Gary Mellen, 33, of Boston,
plead&amp;d guilty Friday to two
federal bank-robbery
charges after admitting he
was the so-called "newspaper

SAUSAGE SHOP
Route 35 • Rio Grande. Ohio

bandit. "

J udge Marshall Neill
handed down the -sentence
after an assistant U. S. Attorney read the ·list of hanks
robbed by Mellen of an
estima ted $45, 000 over a

individual. "

Find out why people all
over are switching to Allstate
auto insurance.
Why are so many drivers switching
their insurance to Allstate?
We'll .give you lots of reaso ns.

~·

ERNEST TUBB
CHARLIE LOUVIN
RAY PILLOW
MELBA MONTGOMERY
BARBARA MANDRELL
MICKEY GillEY
JIM ED BROWN
HELEN CORNELIUS
TOM T. HALL
MEL STREET-

assist . . . observe r s
recogn izing truth.

second, distinguishing them
from the normal blinking
process, .which occurs at a
relatively slower one~fifth of

also

CARL LIPPS
M.C.

•

Roger E. Bennett, a former

-

I

a second.
Although Mr. !lenn ett 's

time; but, disliking restraint

and study, made but little

psychiatrists, he wanted to
know if they would show up in
a news sett ing, his preferred
application . for the new
t echnique.
He put his theories to the
test whil e teach ing and
working on his master's

progress in learning . Thus by
parenta l neglect on the one
ha nd, a nd ha d example on the
other, were sown those seeds
of vice which , as will be seen
in my narrativet produced
such a dreadful · harVest o(
crimes.

degree at the University of
Texas in Austin. In 1973, he
set up a bogqs 11 Speakers

When about ten years of
age, I was bound to Mr. Smith

bureau" consisting of some of
the students in his magazine
journalism class. He told the
speakers in add~essing the

of Washington, Connecticut
whose severe and passionate
conduct toWards me tended to
render my temper worse,
rather than to reform it.

class to use the details of

I lived with Mr . Smith

t hei r own backgrounds but to

abO ut five years, when I ran

fabricate some aspect. .

away, and lived with Col.

For example, one student,
a former legislative aide to a

Porter, where I was well
trea t ed; but my unruly

member of the Texas House

temper

o f Representatives, announced that he was ru rming.

tro ublespme to othet:s, and
unhappy . myself, wherever I

aga inst the very man he had
worked for, a man whom he
mireJ, Mr. Bennett says.
'The fabrication was that he

was placed.
One day, being angry with
a man of color, I threw. a
pit chfor k at him, which
might have ·killed him had it

was runni ng because he

struck as I int ended . I then

hated this man. had a drastic
split with this man he had
says.
Mr . Be nn ett says that
when the speaker told his lie,

ran home to escape the
·punishment I deserved.
My father being abseht, my
ste~Tmother (for my own
mother died when I was
young) put me to live with

the

Mr. Ferguson .

worked · for," Mr. Bennett

micromomentaries

made

me

start lingly showed up.
In about fo~r weeks, I ran
Ever since he ' was in- away, t ak ing with me · his
terviewed by national public daughter's hat. This was my
radio, Mr . Bennett says, he first act of the kind, except
ha s been beseiged with · such sma ll ones as boys
requests from such diverse bEtter educated than I was,
entities as th!I'Sears Roebuck too oft en commit.
Corporation'" and the United
From .M r. Ferguson's I
States Treasury Department

went to New Haven, havi ng

to teach his techniques, but
he has no plans to do so as
yet.

committed one act of theft,
and stifled the voice of
conscience , whi ch cri ed
aga inst it, I soon beCame deaf

to its wllrnings, and took
without scruple whatever
came in my way .

firms teach their clients how
to dea( .with hostile in·

Let this be a lesson to·
others not to slight the ad·

terviewers, meani ng us, the

monitions of conscience, lest,

press.

like me, they be left to follow
training people how to lie to · their own way to their ruin. In

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
JANUARY 29 THRU FEBRUARY 4

Well , · if they're

us, I wa nt to train reporters

and a bout New Ha ven, I

how to see right through
them."

supported myself partly by
doing little jo~. but prin·

LUNCH TIME GOODIE. • •
TRY OUR
,•HOT DOG
HOMEMADE
CHill

'

I

(Regular Size)
'

•FRENCH FRIES
Small Drink

~
·-·---·

TO GO OR EAT HERE

No. Subt.
No Coopons · No Limit

Your Order Will Be Waiting

THE OAK RIDGE BOYS
, SPECIAL. GUEST

DOTTIE WEST

MEMORIAL FIELD HOUSE

Thursday· Feb. 2 ·8:00P.M.

POPULU

TICKETS • S650 • s7so • ON SALE NOW

IUUY

0.

PHONE .(614) 989-2310
.

at

WITHIN seven day&amp; (Jan. 211-27 ) Qid Man Winter, trying to
SW'pass last year's antics , unleashed huge amounts of snow,
ice, water, sub. .zero temperatures, strong winds and fog
throughout tile region, making lire miserable for area

others

sleeping on the bare ground
an example of the wretc hedness that attends a
vil'ious course of life.
I soon after went to Utchfield, where I stole a hat, a
gannent , and sume books
. £rom a schoolho11se; for
-

residents.

which I was apprehended,
a nd received ten lashes at the

A QmCK survey by Gallia County Extension Agent
Bryson (Bud) carter Friday morning at the request of the
governor revealed Gallia's storm damage could total $250,000.
may he 1nore by the time a com pi~ check is made throughout
the city and county.

~1ole

more books which I sold, and
got clear forthis time.
I did not escape so well in
my next plundering ex·
pedition: having taken some
clothing in the neighborhood
of Litchfield, I was taken,
tried, and received 15 stripes;
after which I was sent to
Litchfield jail. where I lay

+++

THE National Weather Service said Friday the 1977-78
winter f.scason has resulted in a rCl'Qrd nmnhcr of wcnthc"f. .
related reeord$ in Ohio.

+++

- Marvin Miller, chief meteorolo~ist In charge or l1w NWS
Cleveland forecast office, said this winter , sn far, has result oct
in the following records, either for ti•e state nr vnrinus dties :

two or three weeks.

- The greatest snow ctepth.
- The highest wind speeds.

From this conrinement I
was released by a man
removlng

into

New

FIEJ.O
HOUSE ,
MACK
AND
DAVE'S,
HUMPHREYS', SOUTHSIDE PHARMACY , .SEARS
RECORD SHOP.
I tN ASHLAND)
BAUER'S SOUND SHOP IN POINT PLEASANT
A COUNTRY SHINDIG PRODU('T!

•

+++

public whipping-post . I af·
terwards entered a school·
house in Watertown, and

'

+++ .

DESPITE all that by Mother Nature, It could have been
wotse. Last year. the gliB shortage multiplied our problem&amp;.
Although the energy crisis is still with us, U1is ar"" escap&amp;d
most of the severe storm damage ;vhi h occurred in cen tral.
northern and southwestern Ohio last week. Gov. James A.
Rhodes label&amp;d it. "Ohio's greatest disaster in history ."

- The lowest barometric pressure .

York

- The h'l'eatest snowfall during a 2Hiour period (the 1950
blizzard in Ohio snowfall during a 48-hour poriod ).
- The greatest hardship .
- The grea test number of heavy snow storms .
- The state's most severe storm lor any season .
- The most snowfall during the month of January .
-- The snowiest winter season .

state. who paid $15 or $20 for
me on condition of my going

+++

IN an effort to bring Gallia's wenther records up to dnte,
we sent a letter to the Cllmatography Brunch, National
Climatic Center, F&amp;deral Building, Asheville, N. C. last week
requesting a new Climatological Sturunary Means nnd
Extremes data sheet for the Ga llipolis Station. '!11~ smnmury
which we have now was given to us back in October, 1969, by
Marvin E. Miller, who was state climatologist in Columbus ut
that time . We've just.slmply run out of spac'C on that sheet , due
to the many changes in all seasons durlng the pust nine years .

and other articles: some of
wh.ich not knowing what to do

with, I left in the woods . My
theft s were now so numerous,

that I can recollect but a
small part of them. I was

+++

once .c aught, but set free
agai n on con fession, and
giving up the things 1 had
taken.

ACCORDING to a newspaper clipping rc'Ccived last week
by Mr. and Mrs. Max Tawney, Gallipolis, ,their daughter,
Nancy , will represent Australia in the Australia,Jupan
I next visited Salisbury, Foundation Trophy golf tournament at Victoria Club in
where l stole more books Melbourne next month .
+++
from a schoolhouse; and took
TilE clipping reads :
some clothes from a porch. I
A Yank steps out to represent Australia in the muchwas discovered , pursued into
vaunt&amp;d
Australia-Japan Foundation Trophy at Victoria Club,
Canaan, taken, brought hack
Melbourne,
next month .
to Salisbury, and carried
She
is
Naricy
Tawney one or the four --strong AWitraliun
before a justice.
women
'
·
s
professional
team which forms part of the Hi. He pitied me, little as I
deserved pity, a nd let me go, member Australian side.
I

Nancy these days is a permanent resident in the cnuntry

on my returni ng the booty.
About this time, I went into a
house, to get something to
eat. No one being at home, I

she has adopted.
She came from Ohio in 1974, had a look at Australia and
liked it so much that she returned the next year and hHS set up
her h.ome 'here.
In 1977 she was third in the overall winnings in the

helped myself, and took a
watch which was left hanging
up. I then hired myself to a

Australian proettes' circu it and twice she was bcuten in

sudden-death playoffs.
· Nancy and Betty Dalgleish are business partners and
together run clinics , exhibitions and teaching enterprises.
Nancy enthuses: "It will be just great playing out there for
Australia."

man who lived not far off. He
suspected me of the

~o n

theft, havin g es pied th e
chain. I acknowledged the
fact, but plead&amp;d that it was
the first time I had been
guilty of such a thing. An old
, neighbor also was present,
Who pleaded for me, and I
was suffered to go un·
punished.
It was no w t he com ·
· mencement of the late war. I
therefore went to Hartford,
enlisted as a soldier, and
received half my bounty.
From Hartford we went to
Greenbush, where I received
the rest. Shortly after, our
troops were ord ered to
Sackett's Harbour. On the
march, I was stabbed in the
hack by a drunken man, and
disabled from duty for some
time. From Sackett's Har·
bour we marched to Buffalo•
and thence io Black Rock.
Here I dese rted, and
travell&amp;d towards home ; but
was taken near Greenbush,
tried by court·martilil; and
sentenced to be cobbed two
mornings, 15 strokes each
time. This mode of punish·
ment is very severe. It is
performed by laying t he
offender across a barrel, and
whipping him with rods. Five
or six others suffered the
same punishment with me,
som•· of them much worse
than I.
put upon duty, I
\deserted
and went to
in Con~
1nectit:ut,, where I enlisted
1 a!:~~ .'and received another
It
It was soon ~us peeled
known by some of the
soldiers that I was a deser·
ter; and the hints they threw
out made me fearful of

TWENTY

•.tt On

than the former.
I therefore seized the fir st
opportunity to desert, and
escaped to Brooklyn on a
horse whi ch I stole:"where I
lay concealed in a haystack
till night, when r stole a boat,
and a blanket for a sail, and
put off lor Plum Island, a few
miles from the main land . It
being foggy, I missed the
Continued on page A·l2

most of ou~ items • ::

... right

now

at

Fun • ·

• Fashions .

•

• Spring Valley Plata
• ;·:
• (Near Holler Hospital •
• on Rt. 35 , wesl of • ,::

• Gollipollsl .
• ·:
It Jean,, .dress slacks, • :..:; ':
· • tops, etc., in Jr. Si1es by 11 (,_.j: ,
• nationally
advertised « :;:
... trade n1mes . . New «
Jt

merchandise coming in .. ;

• reoutarly .

.. .

•

• :

Hours:

*Tuesday thru Friday • :!
• 11:00-6 : lO . Saturday • :;·
• 11 : 00-8 : 00 .
Closed •
• Sunday &amp; Monday.
• '

•...... .... ..........•
~

•••••••••••••
: · Trim-Une :
•• Custom Striping ••
•
•
: and. Decals :
•1 Permanent protective •
bodye
1side moulding s guaranteede

1not to come off . Vinyl topse

freplaced.

•

e
•

985-3818
••••••••••••••
•

STILL IN PROGRESS
MANY ITEMS

•

•

+++

YEARS AGO, from the files of t11e Daily
Tribune and weekly Gallia Times ... James W. Saunders
appoinwd new Gallia County deputy by sheriff Osc11r Baird ...
Shade Hill, 58, a resident of Green · Twp . Gallia 's second
highway traffic victim ... Burglars take cash in B &amp; E at
Tawney's Store ... Dan Taber to seel! fourth term in Ohio House
of Representatives ... City commission approves $695,000 for
appropriations ... Howard I. .Neal appointed to city
commission, replacing John E. Morgttn . The latter rcsiMncd tc,
run for county commissioner ... GAHS wa llops Jackson five,
611-39, r~mains alive in SEOAL cage race.

SALE AND
.DISCOUNT PRICES

.

'

ilnd

another punishment, worse

.,o.

For Easy. Pickup' Call 446-2682

lodging,

and working with him.
I kept him company some
done in a passion.
I chose for my companions , days, and then gave him the
the most vicious boys, and· slip, and took to my former
spent most of my time iil practice ol st""ling. I had
quarr~lling, fighting , sa~·
now grown so bold in the
bath-breaking, and other habit, that I went into por·
ctles, a nd even into houses,
vices.
and
robbed them of clothing
J was sent to school a short

mental patients and their

greatly respected and a d-

c ipally
by · steaHng ;
sometimes be gging my

harm rather than good, being

of Your Choice

RUSS WALTON

{'

these
take

" I want this more tha n
a nything to be a reporter's
tool," he insists. " I've read
where a lot of pu blic relations

DOOR PRICE - A 1978 MONTE CARLO
ORDER. YOUR TICKETS NOW
AT THE ABOVE ADDRESS

'

in

ne wspaper reporter a.nd
editor who is now .teaclling at

Across from HosPital

ALL THREE DAYS WITH FREE CAMPING $20.00
CHILDREN UNDER 12 $5.00 .

McGINNESS-STANlEY AGENCY:INC.

"

doctoral thesis that co uld

place at one-sixtieth of a

A 43-year·old journalism

lA IIIt

ADVANCE TICKETS ONLY

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
THE

..

professor is at work on a

is true he would sometimes
reprove and chastise me
when at home; but it did

lfptL&amp;a ·

JEANNE C. RILEY
FREDDIE HART
ROY DRUSKY
TOMMY OVERSTREET
ARCHIE CAMPBEll
,.
RAY PRICE
MEL TilliS
MARTY ROBBINS
KITIY WELLS
TAMMY WYNIDE

GRANT TURNER
M.C.

.

Ga IIi polis

follow my own inclinations. It

29

rates a nd discounts. Good D river.

NICK JOHNSON
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE
Phone446-1761
. '
4522nd Avr.

found that they have to be lies
of significance."
He says that
micromomentaries

edition of the New York
Times:

.

Grand Ole Opry

human s \J bconscience· near what is now Rodney. the
produces bizarre expressions
home of t he victim. Following
arotlnd the face , cha rac- is his life story in his own
terized by
rapid
eye
words:
movements,
when
a ~· I was born near Goshen in

neglected, and suffered to

newspaper

clipping on Prof. Bennett. It
appeared in the Sept. 25, 1977,

Open 7 Days a Week 11 A.M. til 9 P.M.

Direct from The

GAL!,IPOLIS - When
James Lane ascended the
scaffold in Gallia County in
1817, he made history
inasmuch as his was the first
and on ly public hanging to
occur in Gallia County and
the first in the state of Ohio.
He was hang&amp;d for the
murder of William Dowell.
which crime he committed

"I

the following

Phone 446-1611

THE BIGGEST SHOW EVER TO HIT THE EAST

lie.
· .
"We know that
a
psychopath, a psychopathic
liar, can beat a polygraph
test," Mr . Bennett says.
" But to the best of my
knowledge, he can't heal
this. "
What Mr. Bennett has
discovered and photographed
on videotape is that the

m ovements," he says.

furnished the Tribune with

REG. s1.59

A COUNTRY MUSIC
SPECTACULAR
JUNE 30, JULY I &amp;·2, 1978

I

known as " micromomentaries" occur at the precise
moment a person is telling a

BY TOM SAUNDERS
Ed. Note : Due to the length
ol this material the author
will divide this story into two
parts.

th e state or" Connecticut.
about the year 179!&gt;. My
father was a show-man, and
his business leading him
much from home, I was

ROUND UP OF STARS
.

Ohio University, has ten·
tatively proved that splitsecond fa ci al expressions

falsehood is uttered .
"The operative idea here is
that the deeper the emotional
attachment to t he lie, the
more exaggerated the eye

Rotarian Harold Wiseman

Hot Roll and Butter.

presents:

Allstate offers lotsof special
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Mileage. Young Marri&amp;d. And more.
And Allstate offers today's most
advanc&amp;d claim handling. Coast
to coast. Fast. Omvenient.
We think you'll find a
difference with Allstate.
So compare compa nies. Fi nd out
,why the owners of over nine
million cars a r e now in °gOI:Xi
hands." Call or CQme in.

This will be Prof. Bennett's
topic here Tuesday.

Includes Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy,

LITTLE HOCKING, OHIO 45742
'.

always used the same method
of operation - walking into

the bandit was armed, but the
victims were told he held a
gun under the paper during
each robbery. Mellen told the
co urt that robbing hanks
"seemed like the' ea~iest way r ..
to make money, the least
violent way. I-'m not a violent

seco nd f~cial expressio ns
known as ' ' micromomentaries'' occur at the precise
moment a person is teJiing a
lie .

BOX 85A

three-year period.
The ·" newspaper .ba ndit "
was so called because he
the bank carrying a news·
pai)er draped over one arm.
It was not known whether

tentatively provejl that split·

GOOD SUN., ·JAN. 29 THRU SAT., FEB. 4

-----------------------------DOUBLER RANCH

ThirtY years giVen
'
newspaper bandit by judge
SPOKANE, Wash . (UP!}A man who admitted robbing

assist
observers
in
recognizi ng the tr uth . He has

'

,.,\'f'lf'J//(1( 1(/

by the president and first

lady Rosalynn Carter at the
First Baptist Church of

a doctoral thesis that cou ld

SAUERKRAUT AND
WIENERS
PLATE LUNCH

FARMS®

Missionary work beckoning Carter
By Laurence McQuillan
WASHINGTON (UP!) When Pre si den t Carter

Prof. Bennett is working on

'SPEC/A

·-

'

••'
the Vine Street Bridge In Gallipolis Satlll'day. Photo was

~IAMB

422 SecQnd Ave .
Gallipolis , Ohio

i

ployees during 1977, including
those from the sister plant,

teaching at Ohio University,
will be guest speaker at the
Gallipolis Rotary Club
Tuesday night .
t
Tuesday's meeting will
begin at 6:30 p. m. at the
Holiday Inn. It will be Ladies
Night.

•

•

\

article being judged Ihe most
outstanding of all articles
submitted by OVEC em·

MEETING CANCELLED '
RUTLAND - A Monday
night meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club has been can·
celled.

who is now

and editor

arulUal award of $1,200, in
recognition of Elmer Boggs'

I1

1

early r esearch proved that
micromomentaries appeared
in clinical settings between

•

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

Prof. Roger E. Bennet. 43,
a former newspaper reporter

.1

•

Operations, .was at the pl&amp;nt

earlier in the day to present
to E. Marie Boggs a special

11

improve plant operation and

French City !·Dat~line
•
I
Gallia
vignettes. • •• By Hobart
.Wilson Jr.

to speak here

magazine. L. R. Ford, Jr ., Clift y Creek Station, at
Plant Manager, presided at Madison, Ind . , and the
the meeting.
System headquarters at ·
The honorees were R. L. Piketon . Mr. Boggs' article
Grose a nd N. R. Swain for was also reprinted in Electheir articles "Better Seal· trical World magazine.
fpl!ling for Sloping Boiler
~reas_ and E. Marie Boggs,
who represented her late
husband Elmer, for his ar·
FASTER. THAN GOSSIP
ticle "Shield Extends Life of
OKLAHOMA CITY (UP!)
J;&gt;ulverizer Springs."
Water travels even laster
• Also honored were T. H.
than
gossip on the city hall
Longstaff and L. C. Grimm
grapevine, employees on ·
whose
article " Wat er
Treating Timers" was judged lower floors learned Friday.
worthy of an internal award A 4o-year-old toilet in the city
by the OVEC reviewing board manager 's office began
although not published in the overflowing and before the
American Electric Power word co uld spread to offices
below, water began pouring
Magazine.
in on unsuspecting emEach individual had
ployees.
received a monetary award
at the t ime of publication fQr
their work to develop ways to

,-------------------------1

Prof. Bennett

KC personnel
.
are recognized·

•

(Slurnbia

/

A·ll- TheSunday Tlmes-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Jan . 29, 1978

30% T.O
50o/o

OFF
Stop In Soon

GILLIAN 'S

FASHION CENTER
Onlf'heT
In
""") ]}/ ''-. Middleport

;

,I

�'
IH - TheSunday Times-sentinel. Sunda;. Jan."29. 1978
· A· 12- The Sunday Timcs-&amp;ntmel , Sund•y, Jan . :!ll. 1978

dictate. Slow learners are not
mixed with fast learners,"
she said.
Miss · Breemao likes
American foods generaUy but
prefers her native coffee over
the American brewed drink.
. The guest was introduced
by Rotarian Bob Bumgarner.
Ladies of the church served a
steak diuner. Vice president
John Rice presided. Two
guests were Rudolfu Diaz and .
Federico Saenz, exchange
students from Mexico.

Carter ·passes tough physical
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Carter passe&lt;! a
rigorous physical exam
Saturday, said he 's feelin g

Hgreat" and then rehearsed
the handling of a military
crisis in the Pentagon " War

Room ."
Alter Carter 's 210 hour
physical
at
suburban
Bethesda Naval Hospital,
Rear Adm. William Luka sh,
his personal physician, issued
a staternenl saying the
results were " entirely
normal" and the president is

able!Al " responrllully " to the

phy sica l demands of his
off ice.
It was Carter 's first major
physical checkup since he

change bis day IAl day health
habits.
" Although the jresident is
an early riser, I feel that the
became president .
amount of sleep he gets is
The resulting public state- sufficient. He appears weU
ment, however, was very rested and maintaios a
general and lacked the natural state of enthusiasm
specific details previous and energy ."
presidents have released on . Some longtime Carter
such ftems as blood pressure friends have said he appears
and weight .
to have aged under the
The Lukash statement said strains of the pr,esidericy in
Carter " has felt extremely [it recent months, but Carter
throughout his first year 1n himself· shrugs off such
office and I have made no comments.
reco mmenrla t inn .,.

th ~ t

~-.,.

" Heel great," he said as he

emerged,

waving

and

smiling, from the hospital.

Asked whether he felt
better than he did a year ago,
he replied , " Yes , much
better'.
Better
than
campaigning."
The president then went to
the Pentagon, where Defense
Secretary Harold Brown
escorted him through the
honeycomb of cream-colored
corridors to the National
Military Command Center hubo[the nation's worldwide
military operations.

Conference will talk of growth
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A

White House conference on
economic growth and the
directions it should lake
· . opens Sunday with President
Carter and several members
of his cabinet scheduled IAl
address the 500 conferees
during the four-day meeting .
The
White · House
Conference on Balanced
National
Growth
and
Economic Development will
develop proposa Is to be
presented to the president in
a r·eport within six months.
The conference, authorized
by Coogress in 1976 to identify
and seek solut ion s to
economic development
problems, will feature
wor~ops and discussions of

•

•

:
•
•
•
•
•
•

0
•
•
•
•

e
e
e
0

o
e
e
o
e
e

e
0

right.&lt; leaders, congressmen,

governors and urban experts.
The Monday and Tuesday
sessions will focus ·on four
basic issues - energy and

env ironment ,

uncrnploy·

ment, fiscal problems of local
government and regional
policy 1n a changing
economy.

s e s s ion .
Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland,
Housing
and
Ur~an
Development Secretary J;'atricia Roberts Harris and
Labor Secretary F. Ray
Marshall a lso will speak
during the four days of
meetings.
President Carter will

attend Thursday to hear
conference policy proposals
and address th e closing
session.
Legislation ' setting up the
confere nce specifies the
White House is IAl prepare
administrative
and
legislative proposals within
three months of receiving the
confe rence report .

economy.
Wednesday's

"Public

Forum sessions will include
five·minute presentations on
11

growth iss ues by 200
unofficial con f erence ·
participants.
Commerce Secre tary
Juanita Kreps will address
Sunday evening's opening

INTERNATIONAL TRIO - Friday evening was like " International night" when the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club was host to three foreign exchange students, two !~om
Mexico and one from The Netherlands.
Federico Saenz, the nephew of Rudolfo Diaz,
both from Torreon Coah, Mexico rtneir families live five city blocks apart), and
center is Cathy Breeman, of Hondink-Ido-Anbacht a city of 17,000 near Rotterdam. cathy is
the guest of the New Haven Rotary Club, residing with t he Rotary family of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald F. Roush. Diaz·came here to attend classes at Meigs High but has transferred to the
En~llsh program at Ohio University where Saenz also attends English classes. In Meigs
County they are the houseJiuests of Mr . and Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Middleport.

MIDDLEPORT - Miss
Cathy Breeman of The
Netherlands has graduated
from high school in her Dutch
city of Hondink·ldo·Anbacht
ncar Rotterdam , where
schools are for learning with

French

~al ~
CEstat&amp;.

no competitiVe athletics but
she likes the sports programs
in Americ~ .
Cat hy, the foreign ex·
change student of New
Haven, W. Va. Rotary Club,
was the guest of the Mid·
dieport-Pomeroy Rotary
Cl ub Friday evening at Heath
United Methodist Chur ch
where she showed slides of
her native land and answered
a va riety of questions about
her count ry posed by the

Rotarians.
The daughter of a "confidential" clerk (insurance
business) and lhe·youngest of
a family of six (two sisters
and a brother), Cathy expects
to continue her education at a
college to prepare for
teaching at the elementary
level.
'' After elementary schOol,''
she said students are djrected
into one of six categories of
high schools as aptitudes may

"Whenyou·,t saca
or hurt and can't
work, your car
payments don't stop~
MIKE SWIGER
9f2.7t55
149 S. Third st.
Mlddlopotl. 0 .

See me for State Farm
single premium
disabilitv income insurance.
Likeacood
nelchbor,

\!.til ••••

State Farm

is there.

.

EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO SEll

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business December 31, 1977, a state banking instilljtlon organized and
operating under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal
Reserve System. Published in' accordance with a caU made by the State Bank·
ing Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank ol this District.

Storm victims listed

ASSETS
Cash and due from banks .. . .. .... .. . ........ ... .. . ............ 2,579,0110.011
U.S. Treasury securities . .. . .. ........ , ... . . .. , ...... , .. .. ... . . 4,581,000.00
Obllgatwns of U.S. Government
agencies and corporations ... ... . ........ ... .... . .... ... .. . . . . 1!4,0110.011
Obligations o[ Slates and political subdivisions·.......... , . . • . ... . 2,520,0110.011
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock . . . .. . . . .. .· . . . ... ....... 24,000.011
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreements to resell in domestic offices ..... .. . ... . ... . ......... 3011,000.011
a. Loans, Total (excludi ng unearned income) .......... 10,147 ,i100.011
. b. Less: Reserve for possible Joan losses . .. .. ......... . . . . 91,000.00
c. Lo&lt;:~.ns , net. . _. ... . .. ... . .. . .. . . . ..... ... ... . .... , ..... . ... 10,056,()()).00
B&lt;:~.nk premises, furniture and fixtures , and
other assets representing bank premises .. ... .. : ., . . . . .. . .. . ... . 399,000.011
Other assets ..... . . ..... ......... . ......... . .... .. .. .. ......... 24,0110 .011 .
TOTAL ASSETS . . ........ ... ..... .. ....... . .... .. .... . . ... . 20,597,0110.011
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals,
partnerships and corporations .. . ... . ...... . .. .. .. . .......... 5,260,000.00
Time a nd savings deposits of individua ls,
pa11nerships, and corporations ... .. . . . ..... .......... ... . , , , !3 ,4~,0110. 011Deposlts of United States Government ..... . ........ . . ... .. ........ 66,0110.011
Depcsits of States and political subdivisions .. .. ..... . .. • . •........ 395,0110.011
Deposits of commercial banks . . . .. . .. .. .... .. ... . ....... .. .... ... 4,0110.011
Certified and officers' checks . .. . ........ .. . . . ... . ...... . .... .. . liiii,0110.011
Total Deposits In Domestic Offices .. ... . .. . .. . ....... 19 3,15 !lOO 011
a. Total demand deposits . .. ..... . .... ... . . ........... 5.815,0110.00
b. Total time and savings deposits ... . ................ 131520,0110.00
. Total Deposits in Domestic a nd Foreign Offices .......... . .. . ... 19,335,000.011
Other liabilities ............ , . ............................... , , 24,!l00,011
TOTAL LIABILITIES .... .... . .............................. 19,359,!l!IO,OO
EQUITY \'APITAL

~·························'

Common stock:
b. No. shares outstanding !2,000 ............ . . . . (par value)
3011,000.00
Surplus .. ..... . : . . . .. . .. .. .. ..... .. .'.... , ......... .. ........... 5011,0110.00
Undivided profits . ................ . .............. .. ... ......... 438,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . .... . . . .... . .. ..... .. .... , . , . .... . . 1,238,000.0
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL .. . . .... : . . . ..· ............. . . .. . : ....... 20,597,0110.00
MEMORANDA
Average !qr 30 calendar days ending repcrtdate:
a. Cash and due from bsnks . ......... . . ....... ...... .. .... ..... 2,096,000.00
b. Federal funds sold and securi(!es purchased under
agreement to resell .. . . .. .. . . . ........... . ..... , ..... , ....... 320,0110.00
c. Total loans ... . ......... . .. ,.., ................ ; . ... ...... . 10,823,0110.011
e. Total deposits in domestic and foreign offices ...... . ..... . , , .. 19,025,000.011
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged ~ssets and securities loaned (hook value) :
U.S. Government obligations, direct and.guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities ........... ......... 763,405.97
TOTAL . ...... ... .. . . .. . ... .......................... ......... 763,405.97

, FEBRUARY26 8:00P.M.

TON CIVIC CENTER

crimes . .

This Is the end of part one. I
shall continue the story in my
article next week. - T1 S.

.

.

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank uo hereby decllire
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell

Penn is
•
wmner,
SPORTS
======================================= 49 to
Mic~igan rips
ANN ARBOR , Mich . (UP!)
- Senibr Tom Bergen a nd
Sophomore Mark !.AJzier, two
seldom-used substitutes,
helped Michigan score 22
points in the last 4:45 of the
firSt half Saturday and the
WolverineS went on to post a
92·73 weather-delayed Big
Ten victory over Indiana.
The game was originally
scheduled for Thursday night
and although the game was a
sellout of 13,609, on ly about
8,0110 people made it to Crisler
Arena because of snow-

(

choked roads .
Indiana led J0.22 wilh 4:58
left in t he first half but
Michigan ripped off 12
straight points and went on to
score 22 the rest of the half to
take a 44-36 lead at halftime.
l.AJzier scored eight points,
two better than his previous
career high, and Bergen had
six of the eight he got in th e
game during that streich.
Wzier ended with 12 points.
Sophomore Mike Woodson
led the Hoosiers with 31
points bul Wayne Radford,

with 14, was the only omer
teammate to get above eight.
Indiana slipped to 2·5 in the
Big Ten and 10-6 overa ll while
Michigan held on to secohd
place and improved Its
conference record to 5-2 in a
10.5 season.
Freshman Mike McGee
scored 19 of his team-leading
20 points in the second half to
help Michigan pull steadily
away from Indiana. Joel
Thompso n scored 15 ol the
Wolverines' first 20 points in
the game but foul trouble
limited him to 17 overall.

Harold Nicholas is hack in town
By Murray Olderman
SAN FRANCISCO·(NEAJ'
If you go back a generation,
the scene on the stage at the
On Broadway Theater, an in·
timate little revue house set
among the skin parlors of San
Francisco, was out of synch.
The little man renter stage,
mounted above a pulpit, was
marvelous as he led the con·
gregation in an evocation of
the blues . .
But I was looking for his lit·
tle feet to go rat-a·tat on hard·
wood, and his tiny hody to
gyrate like a top. Because it
said there in the theater bill :
"Harold Nicholas."
And if you remembered
Dick ·Powell singing "The
Lullaby of Broadway" ·and
Eleanor Powell hoofing a
Busby Berkeley routine,
surely you remembered
Harold Nicholas ·of the
Nicholas Brothers.
The Apcllo Theater, the
Palladium, the Trianon

State of Ohio County of Meigs, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 18th day of October,1978.
J o Arm Crisp, Notary Public
My Commission Expires July !7,1978.

Ballroom - and then the
movi es -- " The Gre:it
American
Broadcast of
1936," for eKample. Those
were the days of the hoofersBuck and Bubbles, Bojangles
Bill Robinson and a young,
limber Ray Bulger.
You'd go to see a movie at
the Strand on Broadway, just
north or 42nd Street, and live
before the matinee would be a
, young comic named Red
Skelton showing how rubbery
a face can be. Benny Good·
man was just starting to swing at the Paramount.
That's the kind of company
Ha rold Nicholas used to be in.
So what was he doing here,
just up tbe block from the
barkers hustling from the
doorways or the joints on
Broadway, San Francisco
version!
He was showing that at 53
none of t~e old verve has
gone. bu t that there was more
to H ·)!d Nicholas as a show

Pro.standings
16 17 12 4J 142 1S5

NBA Standings

By United Press International

Eastern Conference
Atlant ic Division
W. L Pet.
Phila
31 14 .689
New York
25 22 .532
Buffalo
16 27 .372
Boston
14 29 .326

•7

14
16

New Jers,ey
9 38 .19 1 23
Central Division
W. l

Pet . GB
28 18 .609
25 20 ..556 2'h
22 21 .512 "lV2

San Antoni
Wshngtn

Clevelnc!
New Orlns
Atlanta

23 24 .489

5'12

22 26 .458

7

Hou ston
16 30 .348 12
Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L Pet. GB

Denver

30 16 .652

Detr oit
Indiana

5112
20 25 .444 9'h
19 26 .422 l01J2
16 32 .333 15

Chicago
Mil w

26 21 .553
26 23 .531

4lf2

Kanss Ctv
Pacific Division
W. L Pet. GB
Portland
37 8 .822

Phoenix
3 1 15 .674 '61f::.o
Seattle
26 22 .542 12V:o
" LOS Angels
22 24 ,.478 151!2
Golden St .
22 25 .468 16
Friday 's Results
Detroi t at Jhd ., ppd. snow
Wash . at Ch icago, ppd snow
Golden St . 101, Buffalo 94
Atlanta 105 . New York 96
New Orlns 13.1, Kan City 111
Denver 105, Houston 100
Phoenix 110 . Philadelph ia 101
Las.Ang 131 . Milwaukee ll-4
Seattle 95, New Jer sey 90
Sunday's Gatnes

Golden State at BaS~on
Buffalo at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Washington
Philede lphia at Denver
Cleveland et Detroil
New Orleans at Indiana
San Antonio at Kan City
New Jersey at Phoenix
Housto n at

Portlend

Milwaukee a t Sea

Hockey League
United Press lnterrN~tiona I

Nortn
wltpts.gfga
Saginaw 26 14 6 58 213 152
Flint
21 18 5 47 198 206
Port Huron

19 14 9 47 ISS 1S1

Muskegon

IS 23 8 38 160 178

Kalamazoo

13 20 10 37 159 166
So uti!

wltpts.gfga
Ft. Wavne

19 t3 12

~llwaukee

so

Tolede&gt;

15 17 10 40 158 155

Grand Rapids
GB

tntern•tlonal

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report ol,condition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the . best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
TheoooreT. Reed Jr.
Theron Johnson- Directors
Ferman E. Moore

one of the few times in the match, was guilty of a double.fault.
TaMer, who reached lhe' semifinals with a 6-4, 7-6 victory
over second-6eeded Bjorn Borg, regained the momentum after
breaking Dibbs in the third game of the third set with a
smashing cross-court forehand .
While Tanner , who ooce had a serve clocked at 140 mph, had
trouble gettin~ his first serve in, he still bscked up Dibbs with
his forehand and backhand volleys from the baseline and
frequent rushes IAl tbe net. Leading the.set ;..4 , Tanner won the

161 15S

.;et with his 20th ace.
Dibbs apparently weakened in lhe fourth set. being broken in
the first ga me after hitting a forehand into the net. On th• other
hand, Ta nner appeared to ~e t stronger , winning U1e second
game with an ace, ncing twice in the fourth game and three
times in tile sixUl with a ser"e to take a ~llead .
Tauner forced a match point with a forehand up U1e Une and
Dlbbs then doubled-faulted lo lose the 1wo hour, 21 minute
match.

1rimts· jtntintl

Blues lures him hack from Paris;
Stale No. 223X

:

ended lhe set.
Sixth-eeeded Dibbs, 26, of Miami Beach, Fla., haa trouble
returning Tanner's left-handed serve again in the second set,
allowing seven aces to get by him. But the 5-foot-7 Dibbs then
began hitting his forehand and two.fisled backhand from the
baseline for winners, squaring the set at 5.4.
In lhe' llth game, Dibbs fought off two break points and won
the game with an ace and a forehand winner ,then took the set
'"1 the fifth-set point when Tanner. his serve deserlin~ him fur

Indiana, 92-73

Today :

•

PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) - Tenth-seeded Rocoe Tanner
boomed his awesome serve past Eddie Dibbs for 26 aces
Saturday on his way to a 7-&lt;i, 5-7, 64, 6-l victory to reach the
finals of the $225,0110 U.S. Pro Indoor Tennis Championships.
TaMer wUI play the winner of Saturday night's match be·
tween lop-seeded Jimmy Connors and third-seeded Brian
Gottfried in Sunday's final for (he first prize of $35,1100.
The pcwerlul six.foot TaMer, of Lookout Mountain, Tenn .,
had w win a tiebreaker by 7-2 to win the first set but set the
wne of the duel with 20 of his service aces inrludin~ ""' lhM

~unhav

Exchange student speaks
to Rotary Ouh members

Continued from page A·ll
Island , and rowed [for it wa s
calm,. and I co uld not ma~e
use of my sa1i l till, as .J af·
terwards found, I was 15 0r 20
~ ··
miles from land . The fug
Willis T . Leadingham •
cleared a litHe in the morning
Real1or
•
, a nd I found myself near one
of the British ships of war
cruising there. I had now
When listing your home heavily advert ising your •
been a long time without food
with a Realtor to sell, there house and showing it to •
or drink ; and for the night
are
a
variety
of prospects. He wilt not be •
past l had been working a
arrangements you can afraid of bring ing it to the •
miserable hoat, so leaky that
make . But if you are attention of other Rea ltors •
· '
it took a great part of my time
seriously Intent on selling who may have qualified 0
to
keep her from sinking ; and
your home withi n a pro spects. As a rule , •
having
nothing else, l was
TWO GENERATiONS of actfug
reasonable time and at the Realtors are wi lling to •
obliged
to
ladle out the water
film, "Caravans." Anthony,lefl, and
son Duncan, 30,
price you are asking, it cooperate and share the •
with my hat.
would p.a y to consider single commission. That •
played nomad father and son in the movie version of
Worn down as I was with
making an " exclusive right gives you the advantage pf •
James Michener's novel fiimeil in Iran .
to sell" agreement.
.. . having several Realt ors e
fatigue, the fea r of bemg
This gives the Realtor '~' make a determined effort •
discovered made me exet1
the right to his comm.lssion to sell your home.
e
.myself to the utmost , and I
if he actually sells your
e
2. Morbert C. Rineair, 56, worked my way, still rowing
COLU MBUS (UP[) home dur ing the listing
If there is anything we •
Middletown
truck dnver , and lading by turns. till I
period , or it another can do to help you In the e Following is an unofficial list
died
of
a
heart
attack near reached Plum Island, quite
Realtor sells It , or if you field of real estate please e of those Ohioans who died
exhausted .
Vienna.
South
sell it yoursel f .
phone or drop en at e
because of the recent bliz·
While I was in the open sea,
Under tnese cond itions. LEADINGHAM
REAL e
3. Leslie Cooley, 60, Dalton,
zard.
ood died of overexposure.
the Realtor will have the ESTATE, S12 Second Ave: .. •
in
the dangerous condition I
1.. Charles Haskins.- W
added
in ce ntive
and Ga~llpolis . Phone ~46- 7699 . •
have
mentioned, I hoisted a
4.
Earl
Roberts,
79,
Green
County sno w plow driver,
protection to go al l-out In Were here to tielp
'
handkerchief
as a signal of
Springs,
died
while
walking
died while stuck in snow.
distress, in hopes of being
- in Seneca County.
5. Kim Kelly, 21, Elyria, seen and relieved by some
died of carbon monoxide vessel passing, but none
poisoning while stranded in discovered. me.
As soon as I had recovered
· car after leaving GM plant.
6. Florence Battenhouse, sufficient Strength, I walked
Amherst, found frozen in to a house. They wanted to
help, and l hired myself f6r
snow outside her home.
7. Anna Epper, 71, several weeks. I liked my
Morefield Township in Clark situation ; but I was often in
County, died of exposure in fear ·of bemg taken again lor
a deserter; for , though the
front of her home.
8. An unidentified newborn British ships commanded the
baby died while enroute to a Island, yet, when they were
at a distance, parties of
hospital.
9. An unidentified Morrow American troops would often
County woman killed when visil it. The people of the
corn crib fell on her.
Island were suffered to
10. Marsha Pitman, Sun· remain undisturbed on
bury, died of heart attack condition of their not acting
while taking medical supplies against the British.
AI the end of ro~r or five
to Delaware County.
II. Robert Bruce, 51, weeks, I · exchanged my
Fremont, died of heart at· uniform 'for other clothes, and
went to Long Island, where l
tack.
12. Edgar Heyman, 80, felt secure. This was about
Mon roev ille, died of ex· the m1ddle of June. I engaged
myself to work with two
posure.
13. Paul Blankenship, 60, brothers, and -Was to board
Sandusky, froze to death in with them by turn s, a week at
Perkins Township near Erie a tUne. They often had violent
TICI(m ON SALE NOW
quarrels ; aQd I was always
City.
AU. SIAn ti.IVIO-fiO.OO . ..CX)
14. Veronica Wright, 47, sure to take the part of the
PlUS OUTlET SERVICE CHARGE
CIVIC CENTE~ AND All EN TAM TICKET OUTLETS
Huron, died of exposure.
one I was with , right or
ORDER BY MAIL NOW
15. Melvin Seabart Jr .. 31, wrong.
ENGElBEJH, C/0 EN TAM, REYNOLDSST , CHARLESTON, w. VA 2~ 1
CERTIFIED ( H£CKS.OR MONEY ORDER ONlY
CALL 348-8070 FOR INF~MATION
Kenton, found dead In his car
I remained here till the end
near Kenton after leaving of summer, when I went to ·
New York, enlisted again as a
Rockwell plant.
soldier, and received another
bounty . My
comrades
disliking ine, I was put into
•another company. Being
angry at the disgrace, I
deserted the first opportunity, and hired myself to.
a Mr. Sanford lor about six
months. I had always been
fond of intoxicating lfquors
~nd here I had an opportunity
of indulging this taste to a
great degree . This often
raised my passions which
were naturaUy violent, to a
pitch of ungovernable fury .
Many of my errors and
crimes have been committed
in consequem;e of intemperance . This is a sin that ·
lays reason, conscience and
reflection asleep and opens
the door to every species of

.:
•

growth
by
business, labo r and civil

•••••••••••••••••

•

~
:

economic

'

I

Tanner defeats Dibbs, gains indoor finals

14 22 8 36 149 179
Friday's Results
Grand
Rap i ds
at
Muskegon, ppd, snow
Saginaw at Fl int, ppd, snow

Port Huron .a t Kalamazoo.

ppd. snow
Fort Wayne at Toledo, ppd,
snow
Sunday's Games
Port Huron at Flint
Fort Wayn e at Grand

Rapids

Kalamazoo at Saginaw
Milwaukee ,at ToledO
N H L Standings
By United Press International
Campbell Conlerence
Patrh:k Division
W.
28
28
18
16

L T. Pts.
10 8 64
10 8 64
18 11
47
22 9 41

w.

Pts .

NY Islanders
Philadelphia
Atlan ta
NY Rangers
Smythe Div ision

I.,. T.
18' l7 12

Chicago
Va ncouver

Colorado
St. Lou is

Minnesota

12 22 12
10 24 11
11 30 6
10 30 5

Wales Conterence

48
36
31
28
25

Norr ;s Di\lision

Montreal
Los

Angeles

Detroit
Pittsburgh

W.
33
20
17
. 15

L,. T Pts.

7 6

72

17 9

49
t\0
40

20 6
21 10

Washington
9 28 11
·Adams Division
Boston

Buffalo
· Toron to

Cleveland

29

W. L T. Pts.
30 11 6 66
25 10 11 61
25 15 1 57
., 16 29 4 36

Friday's Result
5, washington 2
· sunday 's Games
Los Ang at NY Rangers
Philadelphia at Oetroil
Atlanta at Cleveland
.Minnesota at Wash ington
Pittsburgh at Boston

Boston

WHA Standings

By United Pres s International
W. L. T. Pts.
New England
28 15 4 60
Winni peg
26 11 2 54

Houston

Edmonton
Quebec

22 19 3
23 21 1

22 19 2
20 23 2
18 26 2
u 27 A'

47
.i7
.16

Birm ingham
.12
Cincinnati
38
Ind ianapol is
32
Friday's Results
New Eng 6; Birmingham 2
Edmonton 9, Quebec 6
Sunday's Games
Winnipeg at Cincinnati
New England at Houstns,
Quebec at Edmonton 1

· PHILADE!,PHIA (UP! ) Tony Price sank two fo uls
with t1 seconds remaining
Saturday to give Penn a 49-44
Ivy League victory over
Princeton in the first game of
a Big Five doubleheader at
the Palestra.
LaSalle and Temple met in
the nightcap.
The Quakers raised their
Ivy League leading record to
4.0 while Princeton evened its
at 2·2. Overall ihe Quake~s
are 14-4 and the Tigers are 88.
Kevin McDonald who led
all scorers wilh 14 points,
netted mne in the second half
as the Quakers shot 10 of 12
from the field . Penn led at the
half 24·21 but fell behind 38·34
with 9: II to play.
Penn, behind the shooting
of McDonald and Tim Smith,
took a 41-40 lead with 7:13 to
play. With three minutes to
pl ay,
Fra nk
Sowinski
connected on two free throws
to give the Tigers a 44-431ea d.
But Penn's defense held them
sco reless the rest of the way.
Rich Rizzuto led Princeton
scoring with II points and
Sowinski had 10.

I •

"\

-

..,.

.

.

•

GALLIPOIJS' MEMORIA[; Field is more suited for ·
ice hockey than football , tennis or baseball as a result of
high water from nearby C hl c k amau~a Creek .

buSiness personality than a
pair of limber feet.
Brother Fayard, a couple of
years older. was down in
Hollywood showing kids how
to ·dance at the Inner City.
Every night, up here, Harold
was before the hoards doing a
tour de &gt;force as Ute stand-in
star of · "Evolution of the
Blues" - a . long-playing
ALL GAMES
W L P OP
musical by Jon Hendric~s Team.
Logan
10
I 743 592
which in a few months will Waverly
~ I 640 527
make it to the other Broad· Port:..mouth 9 2 759 633
way, ·in New York, as a Washington 6 3 609 S26
pt . Pleasant -1 J 453 · 449
legitimate stage musicaL
s 5 625 586
When Hendricks, the lead Gallipolis
Raven swood 2 2 253 219
in his own show, was looking Athen s
4 7 689 733
for a replacement several Well ston
4 8 797 862
3 8 631 639
months ago, he didn't even Ironton
Meigs
2 9 623 806
think of Harold Nicholas.
Jackson
2 9 575 724
"He Wanted Bill Render·
Non ·SEOAL result :
son, who wasn't available," Portsmouth 65 Greenup 44
recalled Harold over a pestVARSITY
show mousse au chocolal. TeamSEOAL
·
.w L P OP
"Jon didn 'teven know I could Logan
8 o 531 397
6 1 437 349
sing. Bill told him about me." Waverly
Harold has had a!m""1 half Gallipolis
4 3 457 405
Athens
'4 4 499 499
a centuny on stage to hone his Wellston
4 4 535 545
versatility. He came out of a Irenton
3 4 445 399
stage trunk in Philadelphia, Meigs
1 7 423 607
0 7 362 488
at the old Standard Theater, Jackson
30 30 3574 3574
where " Dad was on the TOTALS
Friday's results :
drums, Mom was at the Gallipolis at Athen~, ppnd
piano, and nobody . taught Logan at Ironton . ppnd
Fayard and me how to dance Waverly at Wel~ston, ppnd
Meigs at Jackson, ppnd
-nobody needed to."
They went on the road and
SEOAL RESERVES
landed in Hollywood in the old Team
W L P OP
5 2 319 236
glory days of the lavish Waver ly
lront ort .
5 2 297 278
musicals. He did "St. Louis Gallipolis
5 2 275 239
Woman" and "Babes in Athens
5 3 384 344
Arms" and sang with the Wellsion
s 3 386 355
4 4 307 311
Goldwyn Girls when Lucille Logan
1 6 t97 329
Ball was one of them. He Jackson
Meigs
0 . B 276 349
went to school on the studio TOTALS
30 30 2376 2376
lot. He was in "Kid Millions"
Tuesday's games:
with Eddie Cantor. Then the Gallipoli s at Ironton
Jackson at Waverly
musica ls started to dry up.
Wellston at Logan
In the early days of Las Wash i ngton at Greenfield
Vegas he was on the biD with 'Meigs at 1\l~ens
Sinatra at the Flamingo and Portsmouth cat Barboursville
at Ripley
the Sands, then travelled -a· Pt. Pleasant
SEOAL FROSH
couple of years with Sammy Team 1
W L P OP
Davis Jr. Inevitably, it faded Atnens
5 1 316 247
4 1 216 182
- hoofing was out - and like Gallipolis
Logan
3 2 242 221
so many black entertainers, Wellston
3 2 178 200
he wound up in Europe and Meigs
1 • 1&lt;9 214
remained · in Paris for 10 Jackson
0 6 2~3 280
. 16 16 1344 1344
years,
appearing with TOTALS
Monday's games :
Josephme Baker at the Olym· Logan
at Wellston
pia Theatre in "Paris, Mes Athens at Meigs
·Amours." He married a
French girl and thought he .
was settled on the Champs
CLAIMS VICTORY
d'Eiysees for life as an ex·
CERRETO LAGHI, Italy •
patriate.·
(UP!) - America's Unda
He fit the Sl'Cne as a little Cochram shot to victory
man, barely over five feet, Saturday in a European Cup
never more than 112 pounds, women's
slalom
race.
and people didn't stare at him dominated by the U.S. team .
because he was black.
Cochram, 24, of Richmond,
"Y~u were 'Monsieur ' in Vt ., sped down the 1,1155-foot
Paris," he said. 11 10 the course with 58 gates in the
States those days, even if you first lap and 55 in the second
had money, you'd still be call· in I minute, 45.43 seconds.
ed 'boy "'
But he was called back to
TO ACCEPT AWARD
appear with Fayard m the
.
CHICAGO
(UPI)
Hollywood Palace show on
Chicago
Bears
ruming
back
television.
will
accept
his
Walter
Payton
"I noticed a big change in
award
as
the
National
the American mentality, '~ he
said. " My wife was blonde. Football League's most
There were no faces turning valuable player Monday
as we walked down night at the Red Cloud
HollyWood Boulevard. It was Athletic Fund's 13th Annual
Sports Banquet.
time to come home.''

Cage
standings

..

Approximately six feet of water had bscked up onto the
baseball diamond, tennis courts and gridiron Fri &lt;luy
shortly before this photo was tu ken .

Virginia tops NC State, 81-73
CHARLOTTESVILLE , Va .
(UP!) - Mike Owens scored
18 points, including 8 in
overt ime, Saturday to. pace
Virginia to an 81-73 Atlantic
Coast Confer ence victory
·over North Carolina Stale.
The Cava liers, 4·2 in the
ACC and 14-2 overall, tied the
score at 64 on a corner jump
shot by Freshman Jeff Lamp
with 10 seconds remaining in
regulation time. Lamp also
finished with 18 points,
Th e
Cavaliers
then
dominated the overtime ,
scoring the first nine points
before the Wolfpack clawed

•

back, cutting the margin to
74-71 on a basket by Kendall
Pinder with 38 second s
remaining.
But Owens hit the front end

Pro gridders honored
by ·Washington Club
WASHINGTON iUPI) Chicago Bears running back
Walter Payton , Denver
quarterback Craig Morton
and Denver Coach Red Miller
were honored Saturday by
the Tou chd own Club of
Washington.
Payton was presented with
a trophy as the NFL's Player
of the Year in the National
Conference by Jack Pardee,
who coached the 1977 Bears
before resigning earlier this
co ach
the
month to
Washington Rcdskins.
Morton was honored as the
outstanding player in the
Ameri c~ n Conference and
· Miller was mtmed NFL
C!&gt;ach of the Year.
Payton, ealier voted the
League's Most Valuable

Race driver
fm• ed $2 500
'

JACAREPAGUA, Brazil
(UP!) - Brazil's Emerson
Fittipaldi shoved and pun·
rhed a racetrack official
Saturday during the final
time trials for Sunday's
Brazilian Grand Prix . Race
authorities fined him $2,5011.
Fittipaldi's yellow
Copersucar Racer broke a
right rear wheel counection
during his first lap and when
the driver attempted to push
the car across the track on a
90-degree curve he a pparently got into an
argument with a race safety
marshal standing nearby.
Witnesses said Fittipaldi
shouted at the official, shoved
him and finally chased him
down the track punching him
in the head while some seven
racetrack attendants tried to
get the car off the asphalt.
Race officials yellowfla gged the trials until the
Copersucar was removed
from the nearly blind curve.
Officials later fined Fittipaldi
$2,5011 for violating safety
regulations.

Sports Tranuction5
By United Press lnternation~t

Friday
Hockey
Wash ington - Called up left
wing Nelson Burton from the
Hershev Be!!lr! and senf Craig
Pa tr ick back to the American
Hockey League tea m
Baseball

BaltimOre - Signed catcher
D&lt;we Skaggs fo a three -year
contract, and also receiiJed
conlracts from pifchers John
Flinn, Ed Farmer and Andy
Replogle .
Cal ifornia - Signed r igh t
hamfer Tam
Griff i n, ~ whO
play~ d out hiS option with the
San Diego Padr es. last vear: to
a thret .yeer contr11ct and cut

of a one-and-one to make it 75- Virginio:~ 's sccnud " team
71, and when the seC&lt;&gt;nd shot Uuskct" uf the giJine, the first
bounded off the rim, u North co nHn g at &lt;1 cr ucial tim e in
Carolnw State plHycr t;Jppt~ d regulution play . ·
it 111 tu make it 77-71. It waH
Tony W;.rren led the
Wolfpa ck, 3·3 in the ACC and
13-4 overH II . with 18 puints.
The entire Wolfp,ack stUit ing
lineup · - Warren, Clyde
Austin, 1\,rt .Jones, Hu wkcye
Whitney a nd Glenn Sudhopfo.uled uut ur the gnmc .
Whitney , the WolfpH ck's
leading
scorer with u 16-p&lt;J int
Player, roshed for 1,852 yanls
av cra~e , wtts held tu ju!-.1 five
last season, includin g a
record 275 yards in one game . points by Virgiuiu 's swunnMorton. long u journeyman ing man -to-mun dc£ensc .
qu arterba ck , reached his He was the fl•·,t NC State
peak in 1977 in pl'opelling lh e player to foul out, with 7::m
BronL'OS to the Super Bowl, rcm&lt;:tining in re~u latio n .
where they lost tu Dallas.
Other foot ball honors went
to Navy running back Joe Mill docked ul
Gattuso, Redskins kickers
Mark Moseley and Mik e 2:02.06 in run
Bragg, ti ght end Ken
GiiRMI SC H
PAH·
Macafee of Notre Dame and
TENKIRCHEN,
West
Ger·
. his coach, Da n Devine, and
running bac k Eurl C&lt;:~.mpbcll ma ny (UP I) - Andy Mill
raised hopes of a medal fur
of Texas.
the United States in the
race of l he World
Penguins, Sahrcs opening
Alpine Ski Cham pionships
Saturday whe n he clocked
in 3-:J deadlock
with in seve n-ten th s of u
second of Olympic champion
PITTSBURGH (U PI) F'ra nz Klammer of Austriu in
Wayne Bianchln's wrist shot the fm al praL1.ice session for
along the ice at 17:18 of the Sunday 's Blue Hibbun
third period Saturday gave Downhill !lace.
the Pittsburgh Penguins a 3-3
Mill, 24, from Aspen, Culu .,
tie with t he Bu ffalo Sabres in who . missed a n Olympic
a nationally tel evised game. Bronze two years ago at InnsBianchin, scoring his 13t h bruck by the same margin,
goal of the season, beat sped down the 3,300 meter
Buffalo goalte nd er Don co urse in 2:02.116 In the final
Edwards from deep In the prU cti ce ru n. Klammer
slot.
posted a ta r get ti me or
Gilbert Perreault had put 2:01.35.
the Sabres ahead 3·2 at 8:50 of
th e third period with his 33rd
goal of the campaign.
BALT IMORE ( UPI) Buffalo jumped off to ~ 2.0
first-period lead as Andre Dave Skaggs, the Baltimore
Sa'vard scored both goals. Orioles catcher who as a
Rick . Kehoe and Jean rookie received the minimum
Pronovost scored early in the . $19,0110 major league salary
third peri~d for Pittsburgh's last year, has been given a
three-year contract with a
other goals.
The Penguins fired 41 shots subslan iia lly higher salary, it
at Edwards.
was announced l'"riday.
General Manager Hank
Peters said he also· has
received contracts from
three ot her players
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay pitchers John Flinn, Ed
(UP!) - Jockey Walter Baez Farmer and Andy Replogle
said Friday on returning - making 28 Orioles who
home from the United States have agreed IAl terms.
that he was convinced the
, horse called Lebon center of
a New York ~acetrack
sca ndal , was in· fact
NEW YORK ( UPI) - The
Uruguayan c hampio n New Jersey Nets, struggling
Cinzano.
·
with the NBA's worst record,
" Ao; soon as l. saw him , I Friday
sen t
re serve
recognized him," Baez said. swingman Bob Carrington IAl
Baez went to the United the Indiana Pacers in
States at the request of exchange for guard John
· vestlgawrs to look at the Williamson.
disputed horse · because he
The Nets also have thrown
had ridden Clnzano several in · an agreement for "future
times and had known the considerations" along with
rse since its colt days.
Carrington.

Monte Pearson
claimed at 69
years Friday
FOWLER, Cali£. (UPJ ) :_
Former Major League
Baseball pitcher Marcellus
." Monte" Pearson died
Friday after a lengthy bo ut
with cancer . He was 69 .
Pearson spent l 4 years in
the Majors, in the 1930s and
1940s, with the Cleveland
Indians, New York Yankees
and Cincinnati Reds . He
compiled a 10\)-62 won·iost
record in 225 appearances.
His most
successful
seasons were 1934, when he
was 18-13 witH the Indians,
and 1936, when he posted a 19·
7 record with the Yankees.
He pitched in four World
Series ga mes for the
Yankees, appearing in one
game in each series from 1936
through 1939, and won all four
games.
Pearson also pitched a no·
hit game against the Indians
In 1938.

MEET MONDAy

GALLIPOLIS _ Gene
New Jersev - Traded Bob • Moore, president of the BJue
Carr ington and " futur e con. D 'I B
·
sidera tio,ns" to· lndiaha for
evt
oosters Club, anguard Jolin Williamson .
nounced Saturday the club
MinnesotaF~t~~~~ed running will meet in the GAHS
back Semmy Johnson to a one. Library Ann~x , starting at 7
p.m. on Monday.
year contract .
righthander Garv Ross.
Basketball
,

,/

,

�OU cage team
stranded in
'78 blizz;Jrd
UPPER SANDUSKY , Ohio
I UP! ) - The Ohio University
basketba ll team spent Friday
and Friday night in the
comparative luxury of a
Knights of Columbus Hall
after spend ing half a day
holding shut the door of their
."itra nded bus.

The tearri left Mount Pleasant, Mich. , after a game
Wednesday night, but by 4:30
".m. Thursday co uld not
rna ke

another

mHe 's

headway against the cold
winds and blowing snow or a
blizzard .
Coach Dale Bandy and hi s
a~s istant coach Bill Brown,
following the bus in a car,

; topped too and decided
to gel
on the
bus
t o awai t help too. But
when the driver rele'ased
the door to let them in, it
Jammed open.
To keep out the hurricaneforce winds , the players took
1urns holding the door shut.
"Lucky Lady," an Upper
&amp;lndusky CBer who picked
up the team's calls lor help,
1 ehtyed messages from the

bus to police and informed
the university where it's
team was .
ll took police until
Thursday afternoon to find
the bus. The silver and white
vehicle blended into the snow
and might have been missed'
except for the green gym
bags that the players had
thrown out in the snow for
more room .
The players were expected
to travel to Athens Saturday
or Sunday .

HANOVER, N.H. (UP!) Joe Yukica has selected one
of his former Boston College
aides and a University of
Missouri assistant to help
rebuil~ Dartmouth into an
Ivy
League
football
champion.
,
Yuklca
announced
Thursday he has appointed
Boston College aide Norm
Gerber, and CUrtis Jones, 34,
a University of Missouri
assistant.

Colorado State upset, 75 to 63
United Press International
The Colorado State Rams
suffered their first Western
Athletic Conference defeat of
the season Friday nighi when
they were upset by Arizona ,
7~ .

Joe Nehls ignited Arizona
midway through the second
half with long ... ange bombs
and Kenny Davis dominated
the iRBide as t1le Wildcats
dropped Colorado State to an
overall mark of 124.

'14

95

Cars Only
Trucks Slightly Higher

THALER .FORD SALES
Rt. 35 &amp; 160

Gallipolis, Ohio

Ooops! How could yJu know . you
~ere one misplaced rollerskate away
from this? Insurance will take care
of the hospital and the doctor. But,
whose paycheck will feed your family?
That's where we come in. With a per. sonal loan from The Willing Bank,
you won't have to fight off the wolf at
the door with a rented crutch. Who'll
help you while- y o u get back
onyourfeet?. We Will!

Davis stored 23 points,
most of them underneath the
basket, and Nehls fired in 22
to offse t a game-high · 1:1
points by the Rams' Alan
CUMingham .
CSU, 3-1 in the WAC, led
throughout most of the first
half before Arizona came on
in the final stages to grab a
33-31 halftime advanl&lt;lge.
With Nehls gunning from
· outside, Arizona widened the
margin and shifted into a

tough

zone

defense

to

solid victory over Boston
College in the Colonial
Classic Basketball
Tournament. Ernie Cobb, the
game's high scorer with 26
points, scored eight straight
to help the Eagles pull within
two points in the second hall,
but Massachusetts ran off
seven of the next nine points
to take command.
Ron Perry scored a gamehigh 24 points and ChriB
Potter added 18 to boost Holy

preserve Ule victory.
Arizona is now 2-.1 in WAC
play and II~ on the year.
In other major games,
Massachusetts whipped
Boston College, ~. Holy
Cross topped Connecticut, 7863, Arizona State beat
Wyoming, ~2 and Oregon
Slate defeated Portland
State, 72-01.
Mike Pyatt scored 24 points
to guide M3Ssachusetts to ::.

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Spcrts Writer
'Even with a severely
sprained right index finger,
the 1Trurk'' threw his game
into high gear Thursday
night, leaving a wake of
Kings in his dust.
The "Truck/' of co~se, is
Leonard Robinson of !he New
Orleans Jazz, and his 27
points and 15 rebounds helped
New Orleans roll to a 134117
victory over the Kansas City
Kings.
4
' 1t was one of OlY best first
j

quarters of the year,' ' s3id
Robinson, who piled up 17
pJints in Ule opening frame .
the groove."
New Orleans, which now
has won seven straight

games, raced to a 37-24 firstquarter
lead
behind
Robinson 's hot shooting. The

Jazz then stretched the
margin to 74-53 at halftime as
reserve guard
Jimmy
McElroy scored 16 secondquarter points.
Pete Maravich led all
scorers ·With 31 points .
McElroy finished with a
season-high 26.
In other games, Atlanta
downed New York, 105-96,
Golden Sl&lt;lte topped Buffalo,
101-94, De.nver tripped
Houston, 105-100, Phoenix
stopped Philadelphia, lliHOI,
Los
Angeles
drubbed
Milwaukee, 131-114, and
Seattle clubbed New Jersey,
91&gt;-90. Detroit a! Indiana and
Washington at Chicago were
postponed due to snow.
Hawks 105, Knicks 96:
John Drew scored 13 of his
21 points in the fourth quarter
to lead Atlanta over New
York . For !he Knicks, Earl

Blue decision
due Wednesday
NEW YORK (UP!) Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn says he will have
no decision on the Vida Blue
hearing untii Feb. I at the ·
earlieSt.
The commissioner said
Friday he was still in the
process of rev,lewing the

more than 12 hours of
testimony
which
was
presented at the two-day
hearing.
Blue, one of baseball's best
left-handed pitchers, was
dealt by the Oakland A's to
the Cinciimati Reds last
month for $1.75 million and
minor league first baseman
Dave· Revering, but the deal
was temporarily set aside by
Kuhn as not being in the "best
interests Of baseball."
Kuhn scheduled a hearing
to look into the matter and the
Reds and A's both , pleaded
their case as Ill why they felt
!he deal should be allowed.
The

commissioner

also

lisiened to testimony from
bot)) league presidents.
.Nineteen moritns ago Kuhn
' disallowed a similar attempt
by the A's to sell Blue to the
Yankees for $1.5 and
outfielder Joe Rudl and Rollie
Fingers to the Boston Red
Sox for $2 million. A judge
supported Kuhn in his

College Baskell:lall Results
By United Press International

East
Assmptn 77, Hartwick 66
C.W . Post 105 , N .H . (O il 81
Clark 11 2, Dr ew 95
Columbia 55, Yale 51
Cornell 86, Brown 79
Conn . Col i. 88, Cncrdia 73
Del 51. 69, N .C. A&amp;T 58
D.C. 91. Gal laude! 64
Fai,.fld 96, 51 Fran 87

Fredonia 60, Nazar et h 56
Ham ilton 86 , Oswego 63
Holy Cross 78, Conn . 63
Kings Pt. 79, TF'Inity 59 ..._
Marst 69 , Brckprt St . 56
Nichols 9-2. Gordon 89
Pace u . 64, Pralt 62
Potomac St . 77 , AIIQ hn y 55
RP I 79, Sf _ L awr ence 68 ·
Scred Hrl 67, St. Mich's 60
w eslfield 85, Mnhttnvl 65
Wheling 90, Dav is &amp; Elkins 81
York Pa . 103, La Roche 76
South ·
F let . Tech 79, Fla . Mem 73
F . Marion 78, Lander 73
Hmpln Ins! 73, Cppn St. 64
Howard 88, S.C. St . 81
Md .,E .Sh . -89, N.C. Cenl81
Roanoke 98, L ib Bapt 80
M idwest
Cent Meth 79 , Trk io 54
Empria St. 62, Pttsbg 59
Gracelnd 79, Mo. Val 69
Lke For est 81, Trin ity 67
Marymt 89, Mt . Marty 79
~cKndree 117, SW Bapt87
Mo . Sth rn 76, Wshbun 70
Ottawa 73, Wm . Jewll 69
St. Xavier 81 , U ICC 78
Southwest

E N.Mex . 100, Snta Fe 88

Mdwstrn 97 , Lub Ch r is 82

decision, but the case has
been appealed by A's owner
Charles 0. Finley and is still
pending.
The Reds and A's have
argued that the case is
different than the previous
one since a player is involved
in the transaction while the
other was strictly a cash
transaction .
Genrge M. Steinbrenner,

principal owner of the
Yanke~s. has argued that the
two cases are very similar
since Revering is not an
accomplished major league
player and money is still the
prime consideration in the
deal. Steinbrenner believes if
the· commiSsioner ruled
against the previous deal·, he
must also disapprove this
one.
·

West
Adetms St. 84. Wstrn St . 79

Ariz _st. 66, Wyoming 62

Azusa Pac 94, Cal Bapt 83
Ca l Poly Pam 73. L .A . St . 71
Ca l Ply 9b$ PO 76, UC -Rv rsd 61
Cen t Wash. 82, Ore . T ecl1 64

G. Fox n , Alaska .Fbks 66
Lwis&amp;C irk 87 , Wiltmette 71
Li nfld 88, Pac· Ore. 82
Montana 67, ldal10 60
No. COlO: . 77, Cent St. 6!!
NW Naz 73. E . Nazarene 53
Ore . Col i 68, E . Ore . 66
Ore .St. 72, Prtlnd St. 61
Ppprdne 60, Lyla Mrymt 58
So. Utah St . 92, Regis 7d
Warner Pac 79, Nrthwst 72
w wash . 80, So . Ore . 78

half, Arizona State struggled
through a 9-for-22cold spell in
the second hall.
Freshman center Bill
McShane scored 17 of hiB 19
points in the final half to help
Oregon State come from
behind. Portland State
scoring star Freeman
Williams, who averaged over
50 points in each of his last
four games, was held Ill ,jllllt
25 points . .

l

added 18. Charlie Criss had 17
for the Hawks.
Warriors 101, Braves 94:
Rick Barry scored 25 points
and Phil Smith added 23 as
!he Warriors continued their
three-year mastery over
Buffalo. The win ended a
three-game losing streak for
the Warriors.
·
Nuggets 105, Rockets 100:
Dan Issei, hampered by a
heavily taped knee, scored 15
of his game-high 26 points in
the first quarter and David
Thompson added 22 to pace
Denver. Calvin Murphy ,
ejected from the game late in
!he fourth quarter for arguing
on foul calls, had 22 points to
lead Houston.
Suns 110, 16er.; 101:
Walter Davis scored 29
points for the Suns, four more
than the combined total of
Philadelphia's Julius Erving
and George McGinnis, who
had 12 and 13 points
respectively.
!.akers 131, Bucks 114:
Lou Hudson, filling in for
Charlie Scott, scored 29
points to pace the !.akers to
!heir fifth straight victory.
Kareem AbduJ·jabbar tallied
26 points and added a seasonhigh 21 rebounds. Dave
Meyers led the Bucks with 21
points and Brian Winters
added 20.
SuperSonics 95, Nets 90:
Fred Brown .Cored 11 of his
25 points in the final period to
lead the Sonics til a comeback
victory over New Jersey.
Marvin Webster helped with
20 points and 19 rebounds and
Jack Sikma added 19 points.
Roo)de Bernard King led the
Nets with 28.

Monroe had a game-high 26
points, while Bob McAdoo

Cross to victory over
Connecticut and into the
finals of the Colonial. Classic
against Massachusetts. Joey
Whelton had 17 points to lead
Connecticut.
Led by Blake Taylor's 19
points,
Arizona
State
survived cold shooting in the
second half to hand Wyoming
a close Western Athletic
Conference defeat. After.
Wyoming made only !k&gt;l-25
field goal attempts in the first

.-

••

Records fall in
Millrose Games

New Orleans makes it seven
straight triumphs, 134-117

" I was feeling good, really in

ALIGNMENT
SPECIAL

:r.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,.,,,.,.,,,,,,,.,,..,.,,,..,,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,.,,,,,.,.,,,,:;.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,t

B;l- Th• Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel. Sunday. Jan . 2V. 1978

B-2- The Sunday Timc s.&amp;~tinel: S•nday, Jan . 29, 197&amp;

NEW YORK (UP!) - In
the 71st Millrose Games,
which featured one recordshattering crescendo after
another, nobody did it better
than Franklin Jacobs.
Even before much of the
capacity Madison Square
Garden crowd of 18,118 track
and field fans had reached
their seats Friday night,
Houston McTear had zipped
to a world indoor best of 6.11
seconds in the 60-yard dash.
But stiU to come was tbe
ballyhooed Wanamaker Mile
in which Dick Buerkle

back a half hour later to
overhaul her longtime rival
Francie Larrieu in the final
steps of a 4:19.71,500meters.
And all the while, Fr~nklln
Jacobs, the 5-foot-8 •mighty
mite" from FairleighDickinson University was
gradually inching toward
what he knew would have to
be a world indoor best leap to
win the men's high jump.
"It was predicted to be a
wonderful night and it was, "
said Jacobs.

reaffirmed his slatus as
America's newest and best

miler with a 3:58.4 triumph
over Tanzania's Filbert Bayi. l
And, there was
the
specl&lt;lcular women's double
performed by Jan Merrill,
who easily captured the half
mile in 2: 10.1 and then came

MACHINE
SHOP
SERVICES
Public wllk In blisln111,
lndutfrlol or conalrucflon
business welcomed.

Largo lathe• and boring
mills.
Mttallling, welding ond
hlbbltlng.
Steel fabrication, cOmpleft

VIne St.

::=
·.·

:;:;

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A coal liquefaction demon-

=:=

State Department of Health
certtlleB tbat It Is Blfe to drink.
He Bald tblo could take
several dayo, and thai the
water Is to be , used lor
oaoltatlon purposes only.
Water was expected to be
turned on lor a short duration
at noon today lor sanitation
purposes only. This had not
been previously announced
because city officials did not
knowiftheycouldhaulenough
water from Gallia County to
.
the clear we IIs 10 Point
Pleasant in order to build up

strike. nearing thr end

Elderly die in
pre-dawn fire

to be the last time water IB to
beturnedoninsucha manner.
Safe drinking water can still
be obtained at locations
scattered throughout the
community. This water is
being provided by the w. va.
National Guard and Valley
Bell Dairy.
Polnt Pleasant and several
surrounding communities ·
have be en wt'th out wa t er since
Iast Monday when a mass Ive

KANSAS CITY, Mo. IUP! )
- 1\ pr('-dawn fire ra ced
through the Coates House,
one of the city's oldest hot els.
killin g more than a dozen
people Saturday and leavi ng
scores of elderly residents
without a place to stay in the
midst of billerly co ld
weather.
.
At le~st . l3 bodies w~re ·
found
by firemen. and poh.l'C
. . there
.
sa1d
could be others.
So , f 11 · t. 1
d
mco Ievic nus cape to
th ·· d,. th f ·
· e1r ca s . rom upper
floors of the sJX-floor onet'
h 1 ' h'
1
I me uxury
ote , w 1ch
more recently has served as a
residential place for elderly
and transients.

Upper Route 7
Kanauga, Ohio
614-446-4696

&amp;.--~;,;:,;,;,- ~

'

guiuoanteed 6 year'·
keepe your
interior .

Outdoors man . . ; work shoes
for worKmen. Qual ity built

J)aaetJ11'Jl' drf

eJ[te~or

12102 wblte

'lr~RNINGI IRRIT~TING TO £Y£S ~

to stay " on dUty " when

' '

,you ' r£1 "on du ty ."

...

"'"

&amp;M~..-. --p&amp;"'l ~

MUP 0111' aF

~ ~ Ctl

rt~

t28 FL. OZ. (t GALLON)

Hydro-Gard

Beautify your bath i n min·
utes .. .Installed quic kly and
eas'ily without drilling on

choice, Anodized aluminum
frame, 'a djustable rollers for
out ·of·plumb Walls

any standard 4% to 5 foot
tub. Sculptured safe plastic

... Effortless
operation. ONLY

Interior. Exterior... Above or Below Grade
Excellent lor All Porous Mason•y'Surtaces
Completely Mixed .. Ready to Use
Can Be Tinted to Hundreds ol Colors •

GALLON
WAS$10.99

CARTER ·&amp; EVANS INC.
Olive-Street
.

day. at 446-9840.
In an open letter to Gallia
·county, station Chief John
Hager said :
"The Gallia Paramedi c
Life Squad wishes to thank
the many GaUia Countians
for making four-wheel-drive
vehicles available. and lor
contributing many other
kinds of help to the
Paramedics during the
recent snow emergency. This

Gallipolis, Ohio

tio n

Servlct:.

Wes t

Virginia Gov. Jay Hock~ ­
feller sol d he feare d
this mny become the t•o untr y's longest coni strike in

history .

Ht~ckcfcller said

!he United

Mine Wor kers 1uul the
Bituminous Coul Opcnltors

Associution o111'C again wr rt'
far Hpttrt, not coming close to
Thf'

strike,

which ut unc lime uHect.cd
186 .000 UMW members.
PLEASANT VALLEY
'tmtcd
Dec. 6. About 160,0il()
DISCHARGED - George
UMW
1
'niners
ti l'~ ttow off tht'
Wamsley , Southside ; Mrs.
jo~ .
Norman Schoonover,
Cheshir e; Mrs. Charles
McCallister and son, Apple
Grove; Mrs. Robert Oonnet,
Gallipolis; Betty Walters,
Gallipolis; Cora Bonecutter.
Gallipolis ; Alberta Kelly,
IJJo:'J'HUIT iUPI )
F ord
Arbuckle; Henry Chapman, Mutor ('o. is rcculling ti6,utKI
Lesage; Charles Powell, 1974· m odel Mustang II mHI
Gallipolis Ferry ; Donald Pinto passenge r cars to cht'{'k
Cottrlll, Gallipolis; Mrs. fo•· ~1 defect in the stccrin~
Aaron Reynolds, Ga111polls; shaft that. could n•sult in
Mrs. Gerald Johns. Buffalo; steering failure.
Nixon Nelson, Gallipolis
A F'ord SJ&gt;4.ikesmun su ld
Ferry; Mrs. William Van- ~' riduy th e Cl~mpu ny IHHi
meter, Clifton ; Armltil received 150 r eports nf . Carnes, · Mrs. Johnnie Krebs, mishaps involving the ddcct,
Eimer L. Ooan, Ethel Wan- resulting in at least four
dling, Walter Donahue, and property dnmugc uccldcntH
Gertrude Bateson, all of Point und one minor injury - :1
spi'Hincd thumb .
Pleasant.

Ford recalling
.i n 66,00 cars

and Savings Bank
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks. .. ... . . .... : . .... , . .... , . , .. .. .. ... . 2,318,000.00
U.S. Treasury sec uritie~ . ·.... ......... . .. ... ........ , ......... 4.0'~2,000 . 00
Obligations of other U.S . Government
agencies and corporations ...... .. ............................... 1,083.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ........ . . . . . .... . . 5,881,000.00
Federal funds sold and sec urities purchased
under agreements to resell '....... ......... . ...... .. ......... 1,41JO,OOO.IXI
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) .
. .... 19,331.000.110
Less: Reserve for possible loon losses . . . . . . . . .
. 2:10,000.110
Loans, Net.: . . . . . .. . . . . . .. .. .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. .
. . 19,101,000.00
fum~· premises, furniture .and fixtures, and

$37 95

other asseL'i representing bauk premises .......... .. . . . . , ....... 7:13,000.00

Other assets ... .................. . ................... . ........ :!53,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS . ....... ....... ... ..... ..... ... ...... . ...... 34,961,00fi.OO
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations ...... . .................................... 7,:l67,00fi.OO
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations ..... .... .... ... .... .......... 22,0S:I,OOO.OO
Deposits of United States Government. ....................... .. .. 346,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ......... . ...... ..... 1,754,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ......... ...... .. .. ....... .. .... ... 193,000.00
TOTAL DEPOSITS ........ . ........ . ............. . ... . ..... 31,713,000.00
a . Total demand deposits .............. . ......... ... .. 8,744,000.00
b. Total time and savings deposJts ............. , .....,. 22,969,000.110
other liabilities fQr borrowed money ..... , , . ·, •. , ... , ... , .
. .. 42,000.00
Other liabilities ...................................... , ...... . . 163,000.00
TOTAL LIABILITIES
(excluding subordinated notes and debentures ) ....... .. ..... . 31,918,000.00
F.QUJTV CAPITAL
Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 90,0110
b. No . shares outstanding 90,000 ... . . .. , , ....... . . (Pa,· Value ) !HJO,OOO.OO
Surplus ......... .. .... . ....... , .. .. . ................ ... ...... 1300000.tMl
Undivided profits. , ............... .... ............... .. ....... .'843:000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ...... ... . . ........ . , .............. 3,043,000.00
TOTAL LIABI!JT!ES
.
AND EQUITY CAPITAL ......... .. ............... ....... . . 34,96!,000.00

•

help was instrumental in our

continuing ability to bring the
necessa ry emergency care to
our neighbors .
"Again, people found the
real value of their neighbors
as we saw Gallia residents
helping other Gallia residents
dig out, get in food supplies.

etc.
"In

some

cases,

tbat

willingness to get invOlved
made the difference between
suffering and well-being even life and death - when
neighbors checked on elderly
residents, helped us .over

snow-clogged streets and
aided in other ways too
numerous to list.
"We again thank those who
helped. Gallia County has
much to be proud ol its
proven ability to help itself
through times o.~ crisis."

MEMORANDA
Average for 15 or 30 ca lendar days ending with call date:
Cash and due frum banks. , ...... , ... , ........ ................. 1.851,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased

Hereford hides

maybe not bad

under agreements to resell ...... . ........... . ....... . ....... 1,484,000.00

To!&lt;illoans ..... ·.... , .. .. ..... ................... . . . .. . ... . 19,361 ,000.00

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Embarrassed Agriculture
Department officials Friday
announced their VVednesday
press release about defects in
hides from Hereford cattle
was almost entirely wrong.
The initial release, publicly
retracted alter protests from
Hereford breeders, said a jsltowem1ate
genetic trait known to cause
hide defect in some Hereford •;:~:;:~:
cattle "may" also be linked 11

.

a

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING PAINT
•
•
•
•

GALLIPOLIS
The
Paramedic staff of the Gallia
County station of the regional
Life Squad service above
made dozens of emergency
runs during the recent severe
snow conditions with · aid of
many other Galli a Countians.
SEOEMS personnel', statecertified Paramedics siilc.e.
last Novemb~r, provide free
emergency ·medical Life
Sqlfad ambulance service to
all Gallia County r~sidents.
Whenever an emergency
haPpens, the Paramedics are
available 24 hours per day by
calling 446-7777, and there is
no charge for the service.
Anyone who has questions
about the service may call
the business office any weekOUR BOARDING HOUSE

3.785 Ll

sent F'riday to Wayne Horvitz. diredor uf the fcdcrHl
Mediation and Cou n&lt;'ilia·

of Gallipolis in the State of Ohio und Domestic Subsidiaries al tht• close of
. business on December 31, 1977.

Life squad received lots of help

Go to work
in quality

possible," Viq~inia Gov . J ohn
N. Dalton said in a telegram

The Commercial

panels in clear or color

LEFT TO RIGHT, front row, Peo5gy Call, Craig Johnson, Dot Neutzling; back row,
Steve Fisher, Rick BoUn, Jack Bas••· John Sager, station chief, Paramedics. N9t pictured
are Ed Kennedy , Bonnie Zornes. Mike Zornes, Darrell. Wasmer, Nina Wasmer, Marv(n
Corbin and Susie Emmert.

Now, solve wet basement
problems easily. Paint on
Hydro-Gard ... warranted to
keep basements dry 5 years.

brought about us suon as

Stale Rank Nu. 16
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONniTtON OF

Tu-oor Bathtub Enclosure

waterproofinl
Paint

that an early settlement to
this se ri ous situation Uc

Fallout report

.M&amp;G MACHINE
SHOP

-.....;;;;;...~

::::

or its

ciKhth week.
· ·
" 1 believe it impcruUv~ '

u scttlemcnl.

h . I
ill f ed
toxic c em1ca sp
ore
.
. .
c1ty off1c1als to shut down the
water system out of fear of
. ·
posstble contamination .
sufficient pressure In the An estimated 400 people
lines. The mayor said thiB was were forced from their homes
for two days as fumes emltteS&lt;I from the spill made the
OTTAWA (UP! )- Canada air unsafe in the immediate
says a report of heavy vicinity.
The soil in the area where
nuclear fallout in the desolate
.the
spill occurred was ex~
northwest where a Soviet spy
cavated
and transportee\ to a
satellite burned up probably
chemical
dumping ground
was a false alann set off by
.
near
.Cincinnati,
0. However,
faulty reading by tracking
the
.soil
was
sent
back here
devices.
alter
officials
prevented
It
president Carter said the
Russians "could have given from being dumped .
Dow
Chemical
Co. ,
us more inforrriation" about
the runaway spacecraft, but which owned the chemical
conceded the United States decided to have it taken to its
would not have ·acted much dumping
facilities
in
differently had an American Freeport, Texas.
satellite been involved.

•

Government and business

andcould
Gull'shelp
board
of directors.
:::
.•:..· ':..'.·': government
"Such a plant
reduce
the growing imported =;:;:
oil and balance of payments problems which the nation :::;
.... faces today and will be of increasing·lrnportance in the ?
=;: future," Byrd said.
{
:;:: The Senate ITU!jorlty leader said West Virginia would ::::
:.'•'.•:. be "an ideal site" for the $450 million to $500 million plant ;::;
. bec~use of its abundant coal resources and proximity to ::i
major electric utility users of imported boiler fuel .
;= :;
=::
The proposed plant would utiUze the solvent refined :':'
=:: SRC-2 process, a publicly owned technology UJ'Ider active )
.;.: development since 1962, Byrd said. The process was ;':'
::: described as the most advonced fonn of coal liquefaction .:::
::: which can produce a liquid boiler fuel from high sulfur :::
:: coThal cadpable of mtleetin g CleanuldAlber Adct staedndardsrod
,
:
e emonstra on p1ant wo
es1gn to p uce ...
;:;,
·:i the energy equivalent of a 20,000 barrel per day refinery . )
and could be expanded to commercial production of ::.=.. :.
:;" liquid and gaseous fuels equivalent to a 100,000 barrel per ...

Water To Be On By Sunday
chance water maybe turned
on tonight," he added.
WbUe water Will oooo be
flowing lbrough faucets here,
tbe mayor Is warning people
not to drlnlt tbe water until tbe

United Presslnt..rnallonal
loo dcr s in Appalachio ,
rea ring electric power cur·
taitments, plant closings and
worker layo ffs. hav e appeoled to Wa sh i n~t on help
St."ttle the nationwide- con i

SHOWERMATE-·- -

0

?

field strife

:. .': '.,· stratlon plant could possibly be conotructed In Weot {
Virginia, according to Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va. =:::
:
Byrd said Friday the plant, which would use 6,000 tons \
:;: of coal daily, depends upon funding by the Energy ::::
.::: Department, negotiation of a contract between the ;:;;
:::' government and Gulf Oil Corp., and final approval by the ;:::

View Of The Confluence Of Mighty Ohi?, Kanawha River~

Work will be finished to
restore water to Point
Pleasant by Sunday, according to Mayor John
Musgsrave.
"However, there is a good

settling coal

:~;

:::
,.
·=·
:~::;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ::;:;:;:::·:; :; :;:;:;:;::::: ·:::. ;.:.; .;.;. :-:. ;. ··:·:·:;:·: .;.; .; ::: :;: .~:::: :;:; :;:;::: ::~::

Free Eaflmofn

Gallipolis, 0.

~~~

:;:. day oil refinery, Byrd said .

No Job Too LIJ111
or Too Sm•ll

O'dell Lumber Co.

State Could Get Huge !li
Demonstration Plant t

:!:

a

stock of steel: rounds,
plates and structuals.

)#~D~

shoe dollars.

The Ohio River flooded in
Point Pleasant early this
morning, according to Lock·
master Kerr Jackson of the
Gallipolis Locks and Dams.
He said the river crested at
1:30 a.m. when It rose to 43.29
feet, where the Ohio and
Kanawha Rivers join. Flood
stage in this area is 40 feet.
According to Jackson, the
river is slowly going down.
The worst Ooodlng to be
reported occurred in the
Kingtown and Hannon Park
areas where approximately a
foot and half of water forced
several families to evacuate.
The Kanawha River crested
Friday and is raPidly
receding,
according to
Jackson.
The river crested at the
Racine and Gallipolis Locks
and Dams at 3 a.m. this
morning when it rose to 41.6
feet at Racine and 47.8 feet at
Gallipolis.
Three-tenths of the river is
covered with ice, according to
Jackson. He said that the lee
and high water has forced the
closure of the locks to any
river traffic. However, he
expected his faclllty to begin
locking in boats sometime
later today.

PORT AILE
WELDING
SIR VICE

CAPTAINS NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Members of lhe Ohio State
football team Friday elected
center Tim Vogler, tailback
Ron Springs, defensive tackle
Byron Cato and linebacker
Tom Cousineau to captain the
1978 Buckeye squad.
" l think they made excellent selections,' ' . sa id
Coach Woody Hayes. "These
men will be great leaders for
us in 1978."

Designed to keep you
comfortable all day .
and deliver tha
kind of long Wear

River stood at 43.29 feet
Saturday at Point Pleasant

Help asked in

to reproductive failureS.
The statment said the
defect, which causes affected

leather to, crack or break in
use, occurs "in nearly 10
percent of the 30 million
Hereford · cattle
hides
produced
each year in the
United
States."
T. w. Edminster, a

~~~~:;:~.fo~:;~n;i,~ntl&gt;
with

in-

structi011S and all materials, Three
marble patterns available, A Shcwer·
T~b
remodeling easy
end economi cal!
•

mala

Kit makO$ $

69

9S

CAROLINA LUMBER
And
.
s·upp'LY co·MPANY

Time deposits of$100,000 or more ............ , , . , ........ , , .... 1,500,000.00

Total deposits .. .. .. ... .. .. ...... . . , .. .... ...... ... .. .. ..... 31 091 000.00
Othe r I'1a bT
. f or borrowed
·
'
t lites
money ... . ........ ..... .. . . : .. ......' 42,000.00
Time deposits of $1110,000 or more:
Time certificates ol deposit in denominations of
$11)0,000 or more .... .. ' · . ....... ...... . ..................... 1,500~000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANI)A
Pledged assets and sec)ll'ities loaned (book value) :
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other·liabilities ......... ... ..... 1,055,000.00
Other assets pledged to secure deposits and otHer
· ·
liabilities (including notes and bills rediscounted and
'
securities sold underrepurchased agreement) ..... . . ......... . 1,001,000.00
TOTAL .. ..... . ................................. ... ..... ... . 2,056,000.00

\

I, Wayne L. Niday, Cashier, of the above-name-d bank, do solemnly affinn
that this report of condition is true and correct, to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Alva
RichardW. Turner

312 6th Street
675·1160
State of Ohio, County of Gallia, ss:
.department research officer
said Friday that "much of the
· f
·
· th
p
·
t
Pleasant
W
Va
Sworn ~o and subscribed before me this 23rd day of January, 1!178, ·and 1
10 ormatton In
e press
Otn
• •
'·
hereby certtfy that! am not an officer or director of this bank.
release is not defensible on
,the basis of properly designed .L_...;:S;;.to;;r,;.e..;H..;r;;.s..;• .;.M..;o;:.:n.;.·.;.
·F,;,r;,.i._8;,.·,;.5_S_a_t..,.,.8..;-)~2_n_o_o_n....,....., ~ .......,M.,y-co•mm~is•s•io•n•ex•p•ir.•s•J•a•nu•a•ry•3•1•,1'11 8• An-ita-T.• O.'D•o•nn•e•l•l, Nota ry P ubl ic • --...1,
111111111111
111111111111111111111111111
..&amp;..LA.JL--.:iiF=--' studies and adequate data. ~·

1

..

�~The SWiday Times.S.nlinel, Sunday, Jan. 29, 197&amp;

u

No one hurt
Losses set
in two accidents at $10,000
C.AI.LIPOI.IS -

No one

was injured in two minor

traffic accidents investigated

•

from
fire
POMEROY - Losses were

rninor damage.
A second mishap occurred

POMEROY - I know you've bad it wtth the weather and 1
don 'l blame you.
Confession is good for the soul, they say. So, let me sock it
to you. Actually ,this whole' mess is my fault ,
,
Here's how I brought it all about. You see we were given a
spring door wreath as a gift and so just after the first of the
year, what else could we do but to put it on the door to welcome
in spring? As you can see, it didn't work. Now before anyone
burn s a cross in our front yard, be assured by the time you
read this the wreath wlll be hidden away until the )Oeather
looks a little better.
The mails- which have sagged a bit now and again in the
past week due to the weather conditions - have brought the ·
annual flood of seed catalogs. I believe in looking to the future,
but frankly, I can't get too enthused abaut browsing thrqugh a
seed catalog when I'm struggling to get through "one day at a

sa id the frame structure

oc cupied by the Jimmy
Graham family was. owned

by Harold Reeves, Pomeroy.
The home was insured for
18,000 and contents. on which
there was no insurance, were

at 9:22 p.m. Friday on
Eastern Ave. where an auto
driven by Terry L. Ham1on,

25, Rl. I, Gallipolis, slid on
the 1cy pavement going into a
private driveway striking an

auto operated by John E.
Nibert, 24, Rt. 1. Gallipolis.

valued at $2,000. There was
no firm cause known as to
what caused the blaze. There
was no one at home at the
time and the home was
engulfed in flames when the

four of

the best
•
Insurance
agents at

once

Y"UI ~1.11l' 1-.tllll •'91!111! 1-1 1!'!&gt;
lu •uwd 111 lw ~·•1m n u . honw , !ill'
AND hJM ij h 111\ur;tncc &lt;~gcn l . ~we

or r.1 l1

C. K. SNOWDEN
24 Stale StrHI
Gallipoli$, Ohio
Phone 446-4290
H&amp;tl

Uke a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

furniture. The sizes are
men's tro users, 34~32; ~hirts
15 1.!l -16; shoes, 10; jackets,
c;oHts, 42. Women's slacks
and blouses, 44; dress, 24 1".!;
shoes, 11; coats, ~4 . Boys
sizes, shirts and pants, 6;
shoes, ll'•2~12 lf.!. Girl sizes

pants, tops and dresses, 5;
shoes, 10·10'"&lt;. Anyone having
anything to give can call 992·
3789.

Countians have always been knqwn to pitc h in to help when tl'ie

chips are down.
If you've been lucky enough to stay by the home fires
during all of this, you have it made, according io the viewpoint
I get from my side of the snowdrift.
However, it does ~m to be a perfect example of human
nature and its workings. I mei:ln, .the ones who have to be out

State's checks
may be on time

fighting the elements are complaining while the ones who can
stay home vo.ice their cabin fever affliction. Perhaps, the two

COLUMBUS '(UP!) - Stale
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
is hoping to exped ite
paychecks to state employees
by Monday despite the two·
day closing of state offices

groups could JUSt cha nge places for a few days.
Needless to say, I hope, is that all in all Meigs County has
fared well during the past couple of weeks. Cities and towns
around us have been hit much barder with all sorts of incidents
resu lting. At least we've had utilities except for a rare break in
a water main or two. And some haven't been that fortunate .
Let'sface it you never miss the water - the power - the gas -

or whatever until the·well runs dry.

cou ld pick up checks for
distribution.
Ferguson said the Saturday
pickup would allow agencies
to have paychecks on hand
when emp)oyees report to
work Monday, and to mail

Don't look for Marion Crawford's "Hooves and Paws"
column in today's paper. Marion is icebound but did climb over
a fence to give the eolumn to the mail man Thursday
afternoon. It hasn't appeared yet but when it does we'll pass it
along to you. I'm sure Marion has many readers.
It's amazing, too, that Lawrence Manley continues his
trash pickup service in Pomeroy and Syracuse. Lawrence was
still going strong Friday when tnany other people were just
about folded up. In some areas of Pomeroy, pickup hasn't
. taken place for some Ulree weeks, so we're not only drowning
in snow and lee but in garbage too: Not really a pleasant
combination, huh ?

COMPLETE SELECTION OF

You have my word thai the wreath is down and the
weather is going to get better. Meantime, think warm.

CONVALESCENT
EQUIPMENT .
RENTAL &amp; SALES
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds
•Wheel Chairs
•Canes
•Walkers
•Crutches

n

."

"
'·

.....

·'

the reflected memories of sunshine of two .previous trips . I

don 't get farther away from home tban Bashan most of the
.time, so it would do me no-good to spend any time with .the
travel booklets.
The weather has brought put countless good samarita ns .
Perhaps, the weather is a good omen, after all , in that we learn
to think a little of others and their problems. It is uplifting to
see "people helping people" but then, come to think of it, Meigs

thern to employees working
outside Columbus.

I iHh Hi

'

catalogs hke Millie and Gerald Shuster are doing, then I might
muster up a little enthusiasm. The Shu.sters are browsing
through the brochures on a trip to Hawaii while still basking in

An appeal has been made
for clothing, bedding and

Dividend of 30 cents is paid

•Oxygen Regulators
•Aowmeters
•Bedside Commodes
•Humidifiers
•RespiratOJy Support
Systems

HOME DELIVERY AVAILABLE

TRI-COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY

DAYTON - ~'he Board of
Directors of Robbins &amp; Myers
(ROBN·OTC) have declared
the regular quarterly cash
dividend of . 30 cents per
common share paya ble

March
15,
1978,
to material. handling systems.
shareholders of record
February 24, 1978.
This is Robbins &amp; Myers'
lloth consecutive quarterly
dividend and the 27th consecutive year in which it has
been paid .

56 State Street
Gallipolis, 0.
Mrs . Ronald L. Saunders
Manager &amp; Sales Representative
614-446 -3856

Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc.,

THESE TWO COUNTY emp loyes assigned to work in
Pomeroy Village, Ryan Dill, left, and Tim Davidson must

Califano owns
•
stock In 'fags
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
gave up smoking HEW
Secretary Joseph Califano
owned, and still may own,
stock in Philip Morris, Inc., a
major Cigarette producer.
Califano on Jan . 11
declared a war on cigarette

"But the point is, he didn't

A"'!iood reason to
let us help with
your taxes."

At H&amp;R Block, we understand these new
forms, we know the laws. We'll do every·
thing we can fo save you money. And thafs
Reason No. 1why you should let H&amp;R Block
do your taxes.

~H&amp;'""!!!R~B~L'""!!!!!O~C'!!"!!'It
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

nounced Califano's anti·
smoking campaign.
Califano said the program
is aimed at research on wby
people smoke and puglic
education to get them to quit.
He a18o suggested inoreased
taxes m\ cigarettes and oil the
tar and nicotine content.

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

in

male

description ol President
Carter on the record uf
his first year In ofllee.
Sbe Is critical ol his
wellare proposals ODd ol
the number of w·omen he

PiiiSENT lease
for

another three years, but
RosalynD Carter Is
already thinking ol a
renewal at the White
House. The President,
she says, Is looking
· loward a sec1md terin.

NOW ON DISPLAY
GSBURY
SALES, INC.

· PHONE 992-6304

"For !he Fines! in Man ulaclure Housing"
I. 1100 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Call992-7058

"

"

n

.,
I

"

Open 9:00to6:00 Weekdays
9:00 to s: 00 Saturday
No Appointm~nt Necessary

,,

,,

ALL SHEETS ARE 4'X8'
Red Oak ..........................·.................. REG.4.95
Cherry- Tone ..... ~ ..•............................. REG.5.95
Mountain Hickory............................... REG: 1.49
Mountam
. Butter.................................
. REG. 7.49
Brady Birch ....................................... REG. 8.48
Acrytuff Walnut ....... ,................ -... ·•· .... REG. 8.59
Gatehouse Antique .............................. REG. 7.95

"

SALE 4.25
SALE 5.25
SALE 6.49

,-

"

'.

SALE 6.49
SALE'6.95
SALE 6.95
SALE 6.95
SALE 7.59

SALE7.59
Eastland Pecan ... .. .. .. ... ... .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .. . REG 8 99 SALE 7.59
Natu~l Birch 14:~. ;; ............................. REG.· 9:95 · SALE8.95
Crestlme Pecan V.. ............................. REG.l0.50 SALE8.95
Sp.lte Birch 1ll•
14 ................................... REG.l0.75 SALE9.25
Watchtower Elm 14'!........................... REG.ll.95 SALE 9.85 ·
Bounty Pine 14'!............. :................... REG.l2.80 SALE 9.89
Silhouette Birch 14'!............................ REG.ll.95 SALE1.0.19 .
Bridgeport Harbour %'~........................ REG.l4.95 SALE12.65
Ga~l"ght
Red 8nc
. k 111
t
I
14 ............
~ ............ REG.l7.95 SALE14.95
1SUga
· lerra 1I 16".....,.............. ,. .......... REG.l5.95 SALE 12.45

s·

BATHROOM
PANELS

-•

.
,,"
"

"

·;

"

.,

.

,

"

923 S. 3RD AVE.

---

"

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
992·2709 OR

992~611

OPEN: 7 to 5 Mon. thru Fri. - 7 to 3 ~turday

fanners when these levels

•

•

available now

are reached," Smith saicr.-"
To keep their grain in good
condition during- storage,
fanners are allowed to rotate
stock. "lithe farmer wants to
take.out the old grain and put
in new grain, he's free to do
that; as long as he puts in the
same quantity and quality."
The ASCS olficial said this is
primarily a · farmer-held
reserve.

About 17 million metric
Ions of leed grains and 8 or 9
million metric tons of wheat
will be held in the grain
reserve program. Fanners

are eligible to enter the
program when their loan
matures.

For additional information
on the program, farmers
should contact the local ASCS
office.

By James Sands
GALUPOUS - In the
early 1900s, under the
presidency
of ·Teddy
Roosevelt, the United States
started treaty negotiations to
build a canal either in
Panama or Nicaragua. Most
knowledgeable · people
preferred the Panama route.
Panama at that time was in
the control of Colombia.
Secretary of State Hay was
sent· to Colombia to negotiate
a treaty for the canal. The
treaty was known as the Hay·
Herron treaty, but the
Colombian Congress rejected
it unanimously .
' As Roosevelt's next step he
told us in his autobiography:
"I was prepared to recom·
mend to Congress that we
should at once occupy the

other side.
On Nov . 16, 1903, the
Bulletin editor wrote: "What
right does the President have
to talk about Colombia or
Nicaragua being ln ternporary posSession of the land
of the canal?"
On Nov. 23 we read this in
the bulletin: "How can the
South American countries
believe In the sincerity ol our
carrying
out
treaty
obligations on the Isthmus
when the President declares
thai this treaty gives us the
right to build the canal
without Colombia's con·
sent?"
The
article
further
criticized Roosevelt lor
saying such things as. " If
Colombia will not come to
agreement, let us build the

Isthmus

canal in spite Of her."

anyhow.

and

proceed to dig.the canal; and
I had drawn out a draft of my
message to this effect."
· " But from the information
received 1 "

RooseveJt

continued, "I deemed it likely
that there would be a
revolqtion in Panama as soon
BB the Colombian congress
adjourned without ratifying
the treaty, lor the entire
population ol Panama felt
that the Immediate building
ol the· canal was of vital
concern to their well-being:"
Roosevelt, upon reeelving ~
word of this revolution, sent
part of the fleet to the
C a r i b b e a n . ( S om e
congressmen would later
accuse Roosevelt of starting
this revolution). During tlie
war, the American gunboat
Nashville intercepted one
Colombian vessel and con·
vinced it to r.eturn to
Colombia.
,
Later, of course, Panama
declared independence and
signed a treaty with the U.S.
for the canal.
But throughout the latter
part ol 1903 and 1904
American public opinion was
' divided on Roosevelt's
handling of this matter. For
Galllans, this issue was
brought into locus by the fact
that the Republican newspaper, the Gallipolis Tribune,
took Roosevelt's side, and the
Democratic newspaper, the
GaUipolis Bulletin, took the

In December the Bulletin
carried excerpts from a
speech by Senator Hoar in
which he called the
President, lla Napoleon. ·"

Later in the month Senator
Gorman's speech was
published.
lp that speech · Gorman
claimed that ~ur dealings
wllb regards to the wbole
sltua!lon were n~l--boliotable.
·Gorman
claimed
tbe
president usurped power
from Cougress to make war
upon Colombia.
At othe~ limes the Bulletin
claimed that it was the
people's money being used
for the canal, and the people
will never get it back.
As the proceedings con·
tinued, the idea of a P~nama
Canal become very popular
with the average person·and
the Bulletin's opposition
mello•·,d quite a bit as 1904
rollctl on. The Bulletin said in
late January 1904 that it was
-in favor of the treaty wlth '
Panama, but it was against
the
"skullduggery
of
Roosevelt."
The position of the Tribune
can best be summed up by his
excerpt from an editorial of
December 25, 1903:
"Undoubtedly, President
Roosevelt acted ~romplly
when he took the new
Republic of Panama in 'out of
the wet' so to speak, and
thereby secured ils consent to

Wildlife packets
available now
BySteveHibluger
Dtstrkl eonservatlonlst
GALLIPOLIS - · Birdwatchers, wildlife en·
thuslasts, homeowners, and
others interested ill planting
trees, shruba and groundcover for home beautification
or wildlife habitat developmenl should lake advantage
of the Gallla SWCD's Wildlife
Packet sal~s now m pro~ress.
The .deadlme for ordermg is '
Several different packets
are _available. The large
packet has Australian Pine,
Scotch Pine, White Pine,
Norway . Spruce, While
Spruce, Colorado Blue
Spruce, White Birch, Tulip
Poplar and Sweet Gwn. The
coli ls $17. A slmllar packet,
the small packet, has the
same apecies avall?ble, but
In smaller quantittes. Thts
packet costs $9.
. .
The Songbird Packet has
White Spruce, European
Larch, Eastern Red · Bud,
Bittersweet, White Dogwood,
Mountain Ash, and Per·
llimmon. This packet costs fl.
Groundcovers avallablz

are Myrtle , English Ivy ,
Pachysandra, and Crown·
vetch. Ten dollars will buy 50
crowns of any of these.
In ·addition, tree seedlings
are available in minimwn
lots ol five . Species available
are White Pine, White
_Spruce,
Scotch
Pine,
Colorado Blue Spruce,
Norway Spruce; Australian
Pine, Douglas Fir; Mountain ·
Ash, Tulip Poplar, White
Dogwood, Eastern Red Bud,
Persimmon, White Birch,
Sweetgum and Bittersweet.
Prices vary, depending upon
the-species.
· Orders should be In during
March or early April. You
will be notified as to what
date and time orders can be
picked up at our office.
For luf1her detalla ol
prices, quantities, species or
speci.es description, stop at
the Agriculture Service
Center 529 Jackson Pike, between and 5 Monday thru
Friday, or call 44&amp;ll688.
.Remember, February 24 Is
an absolute deadline to order
these packets.

a

CINCINNATI - A free
publication that answers
farmers' tax questions ls
available from its local of·
!ices, the Internal Revenue
Service said.
Publication 225, "Fanner's
Tax Guide," contains 64

pages and covers a wide
range ol subjects includlng
soil sales,' crop destruction.
chicken purchases, drought
sales and share !arming,
aceordin~ to the IRS.
Also included in this guide
are examples of how to
prepare Form I040 and
related schedules, and

the construction of the great
Isthmian Canal. Democratic

prepare an accurate tax:

him for this, and the belated
Senator Mor~an talk against
it by the day ... History will
write it down as a fine stroke

of statesmanship wllh
respect to affairs of Interest
So near home, that the U. S.
can well take the Initiative,
even if this requires action

may

seem

a

bit

strenuous!"

needed soon
GALUPOUS - "Time is
getting short. ·Producers of
major crops should report
right away their 1977 acreage
In order that a nonnal crop
acreage can be established
for their farms," Foster

Lewis, chairperson of the
Gallia County AgricultUral
Stabilization and Con·
servation (ASC) committee
said Saturday.
Producers must furnish
this acreage data soon to be
able to qualify lor 1978
program benefits. About 300
farmers art; expected to

Tuesday

Mornlrio

Standings for
1978.

January 24,
w~

Larry's Wayside

14 2

City Ice &amp; Fuel
Peoples Bank
Chartle'sAngels
Holiday Inn
Citizen National llank
Moose No. 1

2

t~

Jaymars

t2
to
8
8
8

6
8
8
8

6

10

4

6· 10 ·

Gillingham Drug
Reese Truck lng

6 10
NvJose Hearts
2 14
Mason County Ins.
2 14
Individual standings:

Larrv's: Marv Ward t91, Min
Ward 494; City Ice &amp; Fuel: D.
Rayburn, 201 -474; Peoples: J .
Greathouse 183- ~57; Chorile's
Angels: B. Allen 152, V.

certify their crop acreages to
the local ASCS office. When
the data ~ reported by these
producers the county ASC
committee will determine the
Normal · Crop Acreages
(NCA).
Lcw.ls said: "The NCA is
essential to participation in
the 11178 set-aside program.
Farmers who do not participate will not be eligible for
price support loans, disaster
payments or deficiency

194-.511; Gllllnghams: S.
Beverly 169·440; Reeses : P.
Reese 150, J. Mahry 374;

Moose Hearts : W. Jarvis 135·

Rawson (2), H. Spradling 5·

Pomeroy Bowling Laries ·

Early Sunday Mixed

League

Jan. 15, 1978
R. C. Bottling Co.

Gibbs' Grocery
Jack's Dairy Bar
Town' Kiln

Cline's Construction
High men's game -

20.
20
18
16
10
10
Ed

Voss 214; Ed Voss 202.
Women's high g_
a me Marlene Wilson 221; Helen

Ameri('ttn

F~""'

the meeting calling for
members to . support the
strike. " Here In Ohio we have
mel wllh · leaders of tile

situation of depressed farm

prices through Increasing
!ann prices and incomes.
· During the annual meeting
in Houston a few Fann
Bureau members picketed

Riggs attending workshop in

of the proposition that the
American public needs to be Today's market cond itions
aware

of

the

farmer 's are

The Amt:rican Furn1
Bureau adopted the following

policy to help remedy the
problem :

ins~ance

agents

TUPPERS PLAINS Kenneth
E.
(Gene
Riggs of SR 7 near Tuppers
Plains is among 27 leading
general
agency . field
representatives of the John
Hancock Mutual Life In·
surance Co. attending an

.

- To intensify . efforts
aimed at improving famt
prices and net incomes. Thls
will include, but will not be
limited to, the expansion of
agriculture e&lt;ports and

much different trom

those of the 1973 embargo.
P'rice contro ls a ren't in effect.
USDA monitors our supply
situa tion daily and weekly.
The world has e•panded its
grain and soybean product·
ion, with Brazil expected to
export 7.6 million metric

ton.• and Argentina. 450.00J

tons. World fish meal ex~
domestic program to expand ports should be about l . 7
million tons this year. US
market demand ;
To
develop
a nd soybea n supply for 1976/77
strengt'hen marketin g al 41 · million tons is 12%
organizations, st~ ut1ures and above the 1972173 volume . •

intermediate estate and
business plaMing workshop

programs that will improve However. the world is facing
a 1 million ton decline in
- To institute and support soybean oil and 5. million
emergency agriculture credit t'on decline in $Oy bean meal
programs which will assist production . a lthou gh .- net ihcomes for fanners;

at John Hancock Institute,
the education facility of the
company's home office in

Boston.
Riggs represents the Clegg
general agency located at 250
E . Broad St., Columbus.
Representatives afe selected
to attend the six-day session
on the basis of outstanding

deserving fam1crs in meeting
the current financiul crisis; ports. of oil.:,eeds and meals
are expected to approach
and
- To urge the Cnngress and last year's record volume
the Administration to control
inflation and to exa'in in c

_sales achievements. Riggs'

.

IBCIS

Agriculture
and l:fre ln Despite penistent nJmon,
agreement with the ob- USDA is not contemplating
jectives of the dem o n~ an embargo on soybeans
st.rations and are in support
now or in the months ahead.

problem," said Swank.

Q,lr,Pau to

Boston for

aarl·

GENE RIGGS

carefully and remove or
appropriat e ly modify
programs which place added

FUllON-lHOMPSON
TRACTOR SALES

Riggs is a member ol the
Middleport· Pomeroy Rotary
Club and ·the Meigs - Galli a Mason Life Underwriters
AsSociation .

Wolfpen News Notes
·6 FOOT SCRAPER BLADES
3 ONLY

0
EACH

'195°
TON THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
Pomeroy, Ohio

Stephanie Rought 205 ; Helen

Pis.

Phelps 190.

1\i\en 's high series - Ed
Voss 632; Darrell Dugan 585 .
Women's high series -

Marlene
Wilson
528 ;
Stephanie Rought 501.
Team high game - Tom's
Carry Out 756.
Team high series - Tom's

Carry Out 2164.

Ti~gley

Boots
REDUCED!

IH OIL AND LUBRICANTS
FOR YOUR EVERY TRUCKING AND FARMING NEED

SAVE lHROUGH lHE MONlH Of JANUARY ON HY·TRAN ENGINE OIL AND ALL OlHER INTERNATIONAl.
WBRICANTS AT MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO. Ai..L WBRICANTS WIL1 CARRY A 10% DISCOUNT
DURING JANUARY.
SALE EXTENDED THROUGH FEBRUARY

Now Just When You Really
Need Them, We Have
Reduced Our Prices
4 Styles To Choose From

No. 1400
Reg. SS.95 Now

No. 1500
Reg.

, 775
,

sn.45

Now

... .....

960

CEJITRAI. SOYA
ol DhiD, Inc.,
G1;»11, Ohio

in

Bureau will do everything · Amerlcan
possible to improve the Movement

policy which calls for in·
creased farm prices and
income. The delegation
learned there tliat according
to legal counsel it would be
illegal and in direct violation
of anti·trust laws for the

:6

B. Bean 2-tO; B. Copley, D.
Hern. J. Mabry 3-10; 0. Mack
5-7; J.Mabry6·7·t0; R. ~ewis
8-9; 0 . Casto 7·4·10.

Tom's carry Out

said ' the American Fann

Mr. Lincoln Russell, local, also have two other
was Sunday visitor of Mr. and daughters . Mrs. Robert
Mrs. James F . Russell of Rus8ell has been helping care
M'ddl
for the baby and rest of
I eport.
family.
Robert and Don
Tom 's Carry Out
Tarruny, Cheryl Johnson,
Gibbs Grocery
26 Peggy Murphy were Sunday . Russell are· visiting a few
R. C. Bottling Co.
22 dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. days this week . Mrs. Russell
Town Kiln
18
will return with them Sunday.
Jack's Dairy Bar
l6 Harley T. Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. John Downs,
Cline's Construction
tO • Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sum·
Hlg~ men's game - A. ~.
merfield ol Illinois are Adam of Racine were recent
~elps, Jr. 234; Jeff Wilson
parents ol a daqghler bam visitors Of Mrs. J. R. Murphy,
Women's high game _ first part of January. They Peggy and Barbara.

10: B. Bean, J. Moonev 8-5·10;

Standings

support • ·strike by farmers.
OFIIF Executive Vice
President C. William Swank

COLUMBUS
Ohio
delegates to the American

Early Sunday MiKed
League
Jan . 22,1978
Standings
Teom
PI

0.

squcc~c

•

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

355; Mason County Ins.: M.
Capehart 1~9-390.

Team

ro~1 · pl'icc income
agriculture.

Phelps 474.
Kiln 2023.

a

pond. Ca ll our oflice at 99H6~7 for free
lechnit'ul help In Meigs County.

Ohio delegation supports .
•
m
higher farin prices, come :::·~m ·111111111111111111111111111111 1

emphasis on business iO·
surance .and estate plarming .

Team high games - Tom's
Carry out 765.
Team high series - Town

desi~ning

Servil-e can ussist you ln

costs
on
agriculture
produeers and intensify the

Phelps 217.
Men's high series - Ed
Voss 545; Jeff Wilson 53'1.

Wome'n 's high series Marlene Wilson 546 ; Helen

Roush 181, B. Copley 477;

Citizens: ·0. Casto 167·485;
Moos.: No. 1: C. Miller 124·
342; Jaymar;s: P. Thomas

Converted :

'

Ponds with severe aquatic weed
infestation Qnd die off last summer or
fall .
Previous sununer or winter fish die
offs. Sluggish fish that stay near an ice
fishing hole and are not easily spooked
may indicate oxy~en stressed fish and a

office Is in Pomeroy.
The workshop is designed
to sharpen the skills of John
Hancock representatives in
advanced phases of multi-line
financial planning with

payments."

Grover 412,· Holiday lnri: C.

Splits

spring ,

provide plants w1th sutllctenl light to
carry on photosynthesis. Water can be
rceirculaled and areas kepi ice free by
pump111g or aeration. This method is
expensive but effective.
, Before. deciding on any winter fish
kill control procedures, it is besllo have
some knowledge oft he funn pond w1der
consideration. If winter kills have been
severe in the past, then control may be
mcrltcd. If fish nw'nbers have not been
notice:tble nver past wintersr then
minimal control procedures or no
cunlml may be adequate to safeguard
the fish population.
However, thc best way to ml]llmlze
a winter kill situation is to build a deep,
properly designed pond Jrom the
beginning. The Soli Conservation

potential for winter fish kill.
When the surface does not have
contact with the air. oxygen can be
replenished in the water by
photosynthesis carried ~ut by aquatic
vegetation. When snow covers the ice,
light penetration to the aquatic plants Is
greatly redut'Cd or eliminated, with the
result that photosynthesis decreases or
stops entirely. The end result is an
oxygen deficiency in the water, which,
if severe enough, will kill fish .
Some preventive measures can be
taken .that may prove effective in
&lt;wnbating winter kill in smaller ponds
of generally two acres or less. If the ice
prevails, keeping a large hole open, or
several small ones, and exposed to air
will be helpful, where wind will help to
keep the water moving.
Removal of some of the snow cover,
especially over known weedbeds maY

By Boyd A. Ruth
S.U Conservation S..rvl&lt;e
POMEROY - Severe winter
conditions have hit our area . Most fam1
ponds are covered with thick ice and
heavy snow. If these conditions con·
tinue, winter fish kills are expected to
result; especially ln small, shallow
ponds.
. Such ponds include :
Ponds less than 8 feet deep over ai
least 25 percent of the pond area, or
without perennial now, such as a

Farm Bureau Federation
annual meeting in Houston,
TexaJ~;, strongly supported

Normal crop
acreage data

politicians may denounce

that

Fish may suffocate in ponds

listings • of important tax:

dates which affect farmers
.during the course of the year.
"Farmer's Tax Guide" is
written in easy-to-understand
language and also provides
useful hints on how good
records can help a farmer
return and pay only the
correct amount of tax. ·

Panama once part of Colombia,
Roosevelt would .have used force

Feb. -~

"·v..

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CORP.

·

I

446-0303

Several double wide homes now on display.
Also 14'x70' homes. For a wide selection of
new or used homes call or see:

PillA SHACK

"

27 SYCAMORE, GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

Seafoam White ..... •...................... ·....... REG. 8.99
Blue Mist ............. :........................ . ..... REG. 8.99

may not be up

.."

his

portfolio.
.
Asked if he had ever
specifically requested that it
be sold, she said his

has appoluted tu top
posts, although she sees ·
those he has named as
generally good choices strong • minded dis·
seoters ,nd afraid to
voice disagreement with
policies,

-'

992-3795

blind -tru.st,"

remained

I~

JANUARY

than a year after he quit he
had the stock."
A spokeswoman
for
Califano said he would have
no way of koowing, under the
11

'
"

tax fonns.

Tobacco Institute, have de·

about cigarettes; and .more

stock

CLOSET

MEIGS INN

any purchase, sale or
exchange transaction involv~
ing my security account."

not believe Califano has gone
far enough to discourage
smoking. ·
"He's been mouthing off

chau\'inist is editor
Gloria Sleinem's

Open Sunday 4:00 Til 1·1:00

while I am Secretary. of the
Department of Health,
Education and Welfare the
identity of any of the holdings
in mY security account nor

individually and through the

manage the trust.
Califano, in a Jan.
letter to Lehman Brc&gt;the!ts,

SERVICE

term of this agreement and

range of $15,001450,000.
Because he was entering
government service Califano
put this and other stock he

no instructions on how to

CARRY OUT

to me at any time during the

· Cigarette·"' manufacturers,

the position that he will take

. EAT IN OR

managing his investments :
"You agree not to disclose

Morris, Inc ., valued in the

investment manager takes

FREE FOUNTAIN
SOFT DRINKS WITH
EAai PIZZA
EATEN ON .PREMISES

"The new

A Lehman Brothers officer
declined to discuss Califano's
arrangements on grounds of
privacy between banker and
client.

sell it," said a critic who does

•••

N

smoking, whic~ be called
"Public Health Enemy No.
1."
Califano said be quit smoking, at the insistence of his
son Joe on Oct. 21, 1975.
In a personal statement of
·net worth dated Dec . 31, 1976,
he listed stock in Philip

knowledge
of
sales,
pm:chases
and
other
investment decisions.

feel like shovels are paris of their bodies, Dill and .
Davidson were still hard at it Friday clearing sidewalks
and other areas of a new snowfall.

Whether the Philip Morris

Dayton, is a multi-ma rket
com pany serving growth
inqustries · with Moy no

SUNDAY
SPECIAL

.. ., c•

"

~~~---., _

Inc., in New York City, set
forth this instruction on

For more Ulan a year after he

terms of the

with corpor ate offices in

'

'

be managed without his

ventilating equipq~ent 1 and
instc:lled heatin g units ;
electric motors al)d · gear~
motors ; and overhead

.. ,,

'

owned into a "blind trust" to

progressing cavity pumps;
Hunter portable electric fans,

'·

"

Of co.urse, if I could look optiJpislically through some

this week . Ferguson's office
WH S to be open Saturday so
state agency payroll officers

I UM

..

GALLIPOLIS - "The farm or In commercial
grain reserve program gives warehouses for the three
farmers a chance to get their years or until the rel•ase
grain off the market and wall level is reached. The release
lor better prices," according mechanism insulates the
to Stewa~ Smith, associate reserve grain from the
administrator of USDA's market, Smith said.
Agricultural Stabilization
For wheal, the release level
and Conservation Service is attained when the national
(ASCS). It's a good method average market price
for farmers to help them· reaches 140 percent of the
selves get the price,of grain loan level. "At this time, the
up, and It also gives us fU farmer is lree to sell his grain
reserve in times ol scarcity," without penalty." When the
national market price is 175
he added.
.Farmers can extend their percent of the loan level, the
matured grain loans for three government will call in the
years and receive storage grains, the release levells 125
payments of 20 cents per percent of the loan, and will
bushel for wheat, corn, be ca lled in when the
sorghum and barley, and 15--national average market
cents per bushel for oats. price reaches 140 percent of
Grain may be stored on the Ihe loan level. "We will notify

••

time."

Pomeroy Fire Department
i:lrrived.

Talk to

increases farm prices

.

-

to tax answers
•

•
-•

•

Friday by city police offi cers set at $10 ,000 as the result ola
fire which destroyed a Union
here.
A hit·skip occ urred on Ave . home late Thursday
Grape St. near Tope's F'ur· nlght .
Fire Chief Charles Lcgar
nlturc Store where an
unknown vehicle struck the
left rear fender on 01 c:.-~r
owned by Nolan D. 'Jlwrnton ,
Ht. 1. Patriot. There was

Fanner's guide

Grain reserve system

l~i8

B-4- The Sw1day Times-St:nt IIICI. Sunday. Jan .'29,

~
Hl"w•&lt;__..
,,
~

......,.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
3rd St.

0.

· Phone

t

�~7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan . 29,

1}6:_TheSunday Times-Sentinel. S• nday. Jan. 29. 1978·

For ~est Resu-lts Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
STOP IN TODAY FOR
YOUR BEST BUYS

CARS
1977 Chev. lmpala •••••s549.5
4 dr ., 11.000 miles by careful owner . Beautiful wh11e
over dark red fin ish. 305 V-8, autQmat lc, P.S., P.B .• a ir
conditioned , spare never used . showroom clean . Save .

1975 Dodge· Dart ••••• }2395
Swi nger, 6 cyl. , std . trans .• radio, good 1ires. rea l
economy .

1974 Camaro Cpe •••••• ~3295
Dark red w ith matc hing vinyl roof, V-8, automat ic,
P.S., P. B., air , spoilers, radio . Sharp .

1974 Scout ll........•..s2895
'T ra .... el top, 258 cu . ln . 6 cyl. engine, auto. trans. , like
new tires, rad io, 2 wheel drive.

1974 Chev. 8'........... $3495
Fleetslde Cheyenne cab, full chrome trim, step
bumper, 454 engine, automatic power s teering &amp;
brakes, rally wheels , air condi tioning , color white, real
sharp.
·

TRUCKS
1975 Ford F15o.::~~~~L.~2500
8' St yleslde, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., power
steering &amp;. brakes , radi o, good tires, 40,000 miles &amp;
local owner , needs tailgate &amp; some pa int work .

·

1971 .Ford F250•••••••••s1395
Crew cab, 6 cyl., 4 speed trans., H. duty ti res , 61!2'
pickup box .

4-WHEEL DRIVES
CHEVY BLAZER &amp;
3/• TON ·PICKUP

Hu;...;rry::...;l_n.;.;.For;...;.A;,..,;Good~·.; : Oea; :;.l~f

'In card'
helps to
have fun
cheaply

1975 DATSON
B-210 HATCHBACK
4 cy L engine, 4 speed transmission
AM radio, l ike new condition 38
mllH.
"
'

77 Cadillac

Cpe~

DeVille •• ..•.•••• •..... '9700

Bronze . tan , vlnyl roof. leather Interior, full power anti
air, cruise contr ol, AM-FM stereo taoe .

76 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille ................... '7500
Red with wh i te "vinyl roof, white leather Tnterior , full
power· and facto ry a ir , full stereo, cru ise controL T&amp; T
wheel.

76 CadillaC Sed. DeVille

79()0

Was moo NOW 1
Light blue, blue vinyl r,oof, de-elegance Interior, full
power and air , AM-FM stereo with tape, T&amp; T steer lr19
wtieel.
&lt;

75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille wa s s•soo

5600

Now ' 5

Ful l power, fa ctor y air, leather seats, T&amp;T wheel,
stereo. 32,000 m i lpo;. _

76 Cadillac DeVille Cpe................... '6300
Full power, air ,.leather trim . D. brown , tan r oof .

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

was

moo ,;ov. . 12495

.t
I'

Another ice age \
not too far off

I

I

'.!
I

1976 MAVERICK 4 OR .. .. .................. SAVE

nr ;, 1/ Ut" ho""'· For

S.111• F 11rrv Sa t u•

d~v

NoQtlti't 1 pn • .

FUll power, air, stereo.

73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille .. ........ :.. ,, .• '2495
Vinyl roof, air.

See one oi these courteous salesmen: Pe_te
Burris, Marvin Keebauqh or George Harns.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Eve11ings Til6 : 0"- T'l 5 p.m. Sat .
•••••••••••••••••••-

Golden Glow meatll ic paint, V-8, white full vinyl roof,
auto . trans ., w -s-w rad ial t ires , P.S, consol~ . P.B., AM
radio w-tape stereo, exterio r accent grp., prot . grp .,
tlr ted glass ,. New Car W.;.rranty.

1977 GRANADA 4 DR ...................... $AVE
V-B, P. B.. auto . trans .• vinyl roof, elect . R.; r . w indow

The Almanac
United Presslnlertljlllooal
Today is Sunday, Jan . 29,
the 29th day of 1978 with 337 to
follow.
The moon is approaching
its last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening stars are
Venus; Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
American
English
freedom crusader Thomas
Paine was born Jan. 29, 1737.
· On this dsy in history :
In 186!, Kansas.became the
34th state in the Union.
In 1900, eight baseball
teams were organized as the
American League_ They were
Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland,
Detroit, Indianapolis, Kansas
City, Milwaukee and Min·
· ·
neapolis.
In 1936, Ty -Cobb, Walter
Johnson, Christy Mathewson,
Babe Ruth and Honus
Wagner became the first five
men elected to the Baseball
Hall of Fame.
In 1977, heavy job layoffs
threatened New York and
New Jersey and other areas
bg~ause of an unprecedented
cold wave.

*

1974 MAVERICK 4 OR ... .............. :~ .. $AVE

1973 MAVERICK 2 OR..... .... ............. $AVE
6 cyl .. P .S.. auto. trans .. radio, viny l top .

1973 PINTO STA. WGN .................. :.. SAVE
Acyl. , auto. trans., A. C., lug . rack, radio, Squ ir e opti on .

1975 COMET 4 DR ................ .......... $AVE
6 cyl., std . trans.

.

TRUCKS

1976 F-100 .............. ................. ....$AVE
v.a, 302, auto . trans., P.S., rad io, tutone blue.

1975 F-100 ................................... $AVE
302 V-8, P.S.1 auto. tran s.

2 Dr., P.S., P .B., a ir
cond.

Bilt Nelson
SOle Price

'219

DUSTER 2 DR.
V-8 engine , power stee ring and
brakes, automat ic trans ., fl oor shift ,
AM radio, good ti res, vii'!Y i roof.
SPECIAL

1965 D-100 CARGO VAN ................... SAVE
1966 PONTIAC LEMANS.2 OR .............SAVE
1974 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR .................$AVE ·

DAN THOMPSON .FORD
See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Darrtll Oodrilt
For A Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle
Open Evenings til6 :00 except
Thursday and Saturday . Closed Sunday
992-2196
Middleport, 0 .

and he said he admired said he a lso listened to
Jimmy Page of Led Zepplin,
Johnny Cash.
The Beatles are 11 Very Ritchie Blackmore and
interesting in thelr arran· · Roger Waters of Pink Floyd,
gements;
vocal
and " But not Jinuny Hendrix - I
11
instrumental, he said. He don 't like LSD."

BILL NELSON
SAYS:
In an old fashion winter
let's have an

FIREBIRD

'77 PONTIAC
GRAtl PRIX

2 dr. Esprit, just 9,821
miles &amp; like new .

With just 7.000 miles.

See your friendly dealer,
we will save you money,
and that, friends, is the
,Name of the Game.

Bill Nelson
Sale Price

'75 DODG£ DART
4 DR.
6 cvl., P.s .. P. B., ·air
con d.

Bill Nelson
SOle Price

'269

Bill Nelson, J.D. Story, and Ray Douglas

S·MITH .NELSON MOTORS
Ph.: 992-2174
I,

'1045

Was
$2495

Now

•1995

POMEROY 0.

Was
$3995

NOW

•3495

1975' MERCURY BOBCAT
STATION WAGON

1972 FIAT 124
4 DR.

V-6 eng ine, power steering and
brakes. automatic transm ission. AM
radio, air condit i oning , in t erior
decor group, radial tires .

4 cy l. engine, automatic tran smission, AM radio, one owner, iocal
car .

SPEClAL

'2995

$20000 OVER COST

Was
11495

NOW

'995

AUCTION SERVICE

1974 CHEVROLET C-20
%TON PICKUP

1974 DODGE COLT

2 DR.

•2095

'2195

1977 FORD F·100
8 FOOT BED

1977 PLYMOUTH
VOlARE WAGON

1975 JEEP
WAGONEER

'4395

1969 GMC ¥2 TON
PICKUP

'799

•4095

NEW '78 VEHICLES IN STOCK

THALER FORD SALES

New Superintendent
Of Schools Named

Educator From
Moundsville To
Start Job Soon

r

.· _,_,_._

,I

~~~:~~f~~~~~~~~~

2

VOU'LL ,

OVER 35 NEW CARS TO CHOOSE FROM!
OVER 50 PRE-OWNED CARS TO SELECT FROM!

Kl•nnf' TPI Sw,.in , Auct

Cor n n Thu·d &amp; OliY I'

TV star
is back
at work
By VERNON SCOTr
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )
"Thank God she's out of the
house ."
The words were Grant
Tinker's, humorously applied
to the fact that his wife, Mary
Tyler Moore, was back at
work after several months
away from the television
cameras.
Mary, a workaholic, foWJd
berself unemployed a year
ago after folding her sevenyear hit ·:The Mary Tyler

Moore Show. "

She suffered a ·bad case of
cabin fever around the
Tinker's elegant Bel Air
mansion . Mary tried to fill
her days with vocal le~ns,
dance classes and a great
deal of tennis.
6 cy l. eng ine, power steering and
350 engine, power stee ring and
Acyl. engine , 4 speed transm ission.
"But how much tennis can
brakes,
automatic
tran
s.,
air
con
brakes, automatic transmission.
air condit ion ing , AM radio, W·S -W
dit ioning, AM radio, luggage rack,
you play ?" she asked ihe
rear step bumper 1 AM radio, good
tires .
w -s-w ti r es . like new cond ition .
other day . "!was really itchy
' condition.
to get back to work . And I
was
Was
guess
Grant was delighted to
SPECIAL
NOW
NOW
12695
SSI95
see me get out of the house
and back into show business.
"It might have been
different if I'd been prepared
NOT to go back to work for a
long period of time . Then I'd
have been all right. But I
expected to do this musical
6 cyi. eng ine , 3 speed trains .,. AM
Cab and ch assi s, V-8 engine, 3 speed
special last April, which was
4 wheel drive , V-8, auto ., W·s -w mud
radio, rear step bumper, swingback
tr ansmiss i on. go·od tires , good
&amp; snow tires. good cond .
only a couple of months after
mirrors, 6,600 miles.
condition .
our show went off the air .
"But there was a series of
Was
SPECIAL
delays
and postponements
Was
S4295
NOW
that kept me from doing the
14595
NOW
show until Thanksgiving.
" I couldn't make any longrange plans about working
because this special . was
hanging. over my bead. I
didn't want to conunil myself
to anythjng serious and th~n
have to interrupt it."
Mary's special, beaming
Feb. 22, is a musical comedy
titied "How To Survive The
70s and Maybe Even Bump
362 JACKSON PIKE-Rl 160 &amp; 35 ACROSS FROM HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Into Happiness." It's a takeoff on all the self-belp books
For a good deal see Tom Sprague, Melvin
Little, John Koehn, Morris Sheets, Terry
and theories of the current
G~LLIPOLIS, OHIO
Hamilton, Gary Rudolph.
PH. 446-3575
decade with guest s tars
Harvey Korman and Dick
Van Dyke.
" I loved the six weeks of
dance
rehearsals
and
working with Harvey and
Dick," ·Mary said . ."I really
missed the family work
structure I had on . tlle
series."
Easter week Mary will cohost, with newsinan Walter
Cronkite, CBS's 50th anniversary nine-bour celebration
show.
And if that's not sufficient
activity for Mary Tyler
the present, he has been the Elks Lodge; a charter Moore fans, the comedienne
Principal · at Union JWJlor member of the Ran.dolph turns dramatic actress ih
High.
County Uons Club and a "First You Cry," a television
Barberio served in the U.S. member of the Board of movie lebration show.
Coast Guard. He Is a .past· Directors of Child Sheller of
And if that's not sufficient
president and executive MoWJdsvWe.
activity for Mary Tyler
director
of
Junior
Pre.sent were
board Moore fans, the comedienne
Achievement in Marshall members HatTy Siders, BUI iurns dramatic actress
County; past-president of the Brady, Paul Walkins, Donna special, will be produced by
d R b t MTM Productions, the
Moundsvllle .Kiwanis Club; Tl&gt;ompson, an
o er company of which Tinker is
The Mason County Board of Education' ended tts tw&lt;&gt;- past officer in the Moundsvllle Adkins.
president.
month search for a new school superintendent Friday evening
'·
"! haven't done any really
with the hlrlng of a Moundsville educator.
strong dramatic acting since
Samuel A. Barberio, 46, wbo is currently principal of
my guest star days before I
Union Junior High In Benwood, was hired on a unanimous
They'll Do It Every Time
did 'The Dick :Van Dyke
vote to fulflll the une:rplted tenn of 'Lowell Cook, who is --=~~--~;;;:;;;::~;:~~'"-:;~~;;;;~~~~ Show,"' Mary said.
resigning due to health reasons.
YER.WN
TELL 't'O~ WHAT-· n."
"The story will serve a
The board Interviewed U candidates for the pooltlon SNI{AKER'S
SWAP M't' SUPER HfrERO· wonderful purpooe for women
.
/iliWTERJNG
D't'Nf' C . Iii. RADIO FOR
wbo live with the fear of
before deciding on Barberio.
!:¥AI""t.i:Ll.\ VOU PONG MV WA•KS
someday
having
a
"! think after many hours bus!Dess and social studies, SOIINPEP
r
AIID DRIVEWA'f ··
mastectomy. There's a lot of
lnlervtewtftg the candidates secondary school principal 'GOOl&gt; 7D
humor in the story, \00. It's a
superintendent's 71fe KIP
weil-rounded screenplay."
and then for the board to give and
N~x:r
The big news in Mary's life
unanimous support In this pooltion.
decision, It is a plus for him
He began his educational
~- · ·. · 1.\-.,.....,-TI
is a new television series
scheduled to go on the air
and the school system," said career at St. Francia IUgh
School Board President School in Morgantown where
next fall . But lt won~ be her
•Harry Siders.
.
he was a teacber and
third situation comedy.
He added: "He will need the coach of all sports from 111117·
Mary has chosen to host a
comedy-variety hour and is
same type -.of. support from 82. From 198U5, he was
searching for some ·strong
Mason County to be an ef. teacher and head football and
wrestling Coach at Roots
HERE 'I ARE .1
'fectlve a.ww ..... ator".
second bananas as regulars.
The new ·superintendent Town, High Sc:.hool In Roots
fioo\Vf
And she will have a lot to say
F
~;i~ii
A LOTTA FUN
about that because it, too, is
expected to begin work here Town, 0. He held a slmllar
PUTTING IT
an MTM Production.
within the nezt few days.
pooltlon at Randolph lltgh
"TOGETHER···
"!.want to take a shot at
Barberio received hla B.S. School in Randolph, 0., from
doing variety," she said.
.begree
in
Business 1~. where he '!as also the.
"And I'd like to have a cast as
AdmlnlBtrotl011 from Salem auiatant principal.
strong as Ted Knight, Ed
CoUege In 1957, and received · From 1~. be waa a
Asner, Betty White ard all
an M.A. Degree from Well business Instructor It Jolul
the rest.
Virlllnla University In 1980. Marshall High School ln
" ! didn't want to try
According to Siders, Bar- Marshall County and between
another situation comedy
certified In the 1989·70, was the assistant
because it would suffer by
berio ill
.teaching
of
secondary principal there. From 19'}0, to
comparison t~ the old one, nc

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nld traditional, " Novitsky
said. "The basis is always
Ukrainian. Only the method
changes ."
.
Their number have titles
like 11 Russian Dawn," " To
the Mother," and "So ~at the
Sky will be Blue" - a war
song.
Tatarchenko-Milnikov, who
plays an American Gibson
~passive.
guitar "bought in the Sovlet
On stage the Kobza showed Union, 11 said the group wcis
signs of knowing what to do if influenced by American
the powers that be didn't music as well as by other
object. But tbe powers that be currents like Slovenian soul
. do object to uninhibited west- in Poland and
ern-style rock so they showed Czechoslovakia.
about· as much abandon as
"By character, country
Queen Elizabeth addressing music is closest to our
the House of Lords .
mu sic,"
Tatarchenk o·
Backstage
Konstantin Melnikov said. He boasted
Novitsky, 29, the bandura that he knew Roy Clark's
player, said that even after music ; even before Clark's .
seeing the way pop music was 1975 tour of the Soviet Union
performed and received in
the West, the group didn't find
the atmosphere chilly in
Kiev. "It's just the custom
here," he said.
The group was formed in
1970 at the Kiev Conservatory
of Music where aU seven
studied. After some changes.
in members, tbey now range
in age from lead guitarist
Gennadi TatarchenkoMelnikov, 25, to Valery
Vsiter, :W, the soloist.
1
' We
perform mostly
national songs, despite the
present arrarlgernents, which
we ·do ourselves, the music is

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.after one number. A few
minutes later it was the
Lovin ' Spoonful.
The a udience was as much
middle-aged as teen-aged and
one man with a long, white
beard appeared to be in his
80s. Until the final number,
when they loosened up
enough to 'clap in rhytlun, the
audience sat virtually

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1974
OLDSMOBILE
REGENCY

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
f' ,H·n

1975
CAMARO

The In Card was hi&amp;, 3nd with
the key to my liquor
patterned alter Dining Club cablnel. ··
and coupon books. But he said
he wanted one more Convenient to the consumer.
11
The In Card encourages
the . consumer to do repeat
business at the participating
merchants ,"
he
said .
" Neither Dining CJub not
coupon books do that.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
"While trying to build
992-2126
Pomeroy
traffic for the merchant, it · By PEGGY POLK
KIEV, U.S.S.R. (UP!)
Open Evenings Until8 P.M.
also gives the consumer more
They wear embroidered Uk·
purchasing power." he adrainian folk costumes and
ded .
'
they
play
traditional
" If you have The In Card, Ukrainian
music
on
you can $op at In Places I the
cen t•~ries-oid instruments
participating merchants) and
like the bandura, the zozabas,
know you a r e going to receive
the boohi and the sopilka.
a pre-determined savings or
But the sound is something
offer /' he said.
else.
The In -Card looks like a ·
Plug the bandura into ao
credit card. It is black with
electric amplifier and out
silver printing. The consumer
cautioned that this could be a pays $20 for the card and it is comes rock and country.
By ROBERT C. MILLER
The seven.man group
MCMURDO,
Antarctica result of the ~ore sensitive good £or one year.
called
Kolna - after an
( UPI) - If you think it was instruments now being used
"T~ere are nearly 190
··anCient
foi-m of the bandura
in
antarctic
meteorology.
cold last winter , stick armmd
merchants in the program, - is one of two in the Soviet
American
temperatures
a few hundred years: Antarc·
and we're adding more all the Union making 13th and 14th
havedroppedanaverageof .7 time, " he said.
tica ~~ -scientists say it's could
century folk songs into 1970s
degree over the past 20 years,
get even colder.
Merchants offer 10 per cent music.
Fauqu•t
said,
whiie
the
averDr. George Denton of the
discounts on merchandise,
The other is Pesnyary of
University of Maine said age i· · 'ne Antarctic has been and sometimes as much as 50
Byelorussia
, which has
glacial studies in the down more than a full degree . percent, Wagenheim said.
loured
the
United States.
Denton explained that such
Antarctic show tllings were
"Besides the card and the Kobza, not yet as well known,
lots warmer down there a temperature change in such discounts, 'the card hqlder
performed
in
120,000 years ago, got a relatively short period of also gets the In Places guide has •
Czechoslovakia
and
Italy
and
time
could
indicate
that
the
progressively colde( and then
which lists all the parworld had reacbed anothet ticipating merchants, what cut one albwn for the Soviet
warmed up for a spell.
11
of the mountains and their particular service or Melodia label.
The New England geologist
A · recent
Kobza
said that warm period is just valleys in its climatology product is, and what their
in
the
about oyer, and tile entire where changes are taking offer is," he said , "The guide performance
Ukrainian
Palace
of
Culture
world co uld be entering place. This one would seem to is updated lour times a
opened with a giant
be another cooling off year.'!
another cold cycle .
phoWgraph of the group
period
."
Dutch-born Dr . Minze
Wagenhain) admits there
Dashed
on the curiain. This
The
meteorologists
are
Stuiver of the University of
aren't many compa nies of •
parted
to
s how
the
convinced
that
any
change
in
Washington explained that
this type and "the only photograph again on a pale
the
temperature
of
the
new techniques of measuring
compa ny able to identify as
the moisture content of the Antarctic air mass will affect this kind, especially in the blue scrim as the members
themselves appeared on the
Antarctic snow and ,Ice pack clbnatic conditions · in the Midwest."
stage
to the pulsating beat of
So
uthern
He
mi
&amp;p
here,
,.. now gives man a more
Since September, he has their recorded music.
particularly.
Australia,
New
accurate pic ture of the
issued I ,500 cards.
Their costumes are a vest
1
weather cycles on the con· Zealand and Africa .
'Publi c advertisin g ha s over shirt and flared
"
We
have
traced
storms
.
tinent.
only been in effeet since the
all
heav ily
The
Navy's
chief and cold fronts from the end of November," he said. tro users,
meteorologist at ·McMurdo, Antarctic all the way through "It takes some time for the embroidered . .Their hair is
but
formidably
Lt. Ronald Fauquet , of AustraHa, " Fauquet sa id , public to become aware of long
groomed.
"and
whenever
New
Zealand
Granada HiUs, Calif., is ev~n
this.
·
Their basic instruments
more specific. " It would gets snow it comes from here,
' 'But what business we are electric drurrts, violin,
not
the
Equator.
"
seem from our records that
have
had
has
been piano, organ, lead and bass
The most useful tool used in
during tbe last 10 to 15 years
gratifying ," tie said. " Card guitar, and the zither·like
Antarctica has been getting Antarctic weather research sales have been growing
bandura. From time to time
has been the American
colder."
every day . We're really they produce a marimba, a
The New Zealanders at satellite system· which now, ple(Jsed. "
mouth harp, a triangle, a bird
Scott base, just two miles for the first lime, gives
The emphasis on The In call and ~astanets to beef up
meteorologists
continuous
from McMurdo, claim last
Card currently is in
year Was the coldest ever · pi ctur e coverage of the Columbus, but Wagenheim the rhythm section .
The kozabas, OOohi and
by
their continent's weather patterns. s!:lys once th~ foundation ls
e)Cperienced
sopilka appeared for the most
But on the debit ;ide, there
wintering~ver party since
boil! here, it co uld be ex- uproarious number of .what,
records were started 20 years are only 20 grdWJd statioos panded to other cities.
reporting in Antarctica,
in contrast to the SOund, was
ago.
Some of the types of
The cold of which they which is the size of Americll businesses honoring The In a . remarkably · sedate
spoke was a daily average of and Europe com bined, Card are an appliance store, perfcrmance.
The kozabas is a kind of
about-00 degrees Fahrenheit. compared to the 600 reporting bowling a lleys, health spas.
in
the
United
States.
banjo
with a much-elongated
Several times tile mercury
some clothing stores, a cake neck and the sopilka
"We
have
areas
down
here
dropped to aroWJd 100 during
deco ratin g store, several
the long Antarctic winter, the size of the United States restaurant s, some bicycle resembles a Oute. But the
without
a
single
reporting
boohl defies comparison. It
and those figures did not
station." Fauquet said with a sales, auto services, plant consists of a cylinder, carried
include the chill factor .
stores, garden centers, craft by two kobzas, with a cord at
The
lowest
official sad shake of his bald head.
shops,
gift shops, hair the back end which is pulled
"
Is
it
any
wonder
we
get
temperature ever reported in
stylists,
record
shops.
by another kobza - what
the Antarctic - or anywhere called 'Weather guessers? '"
Ukrainians
call "dragging
else in the world -was at the
the buffalo by its tail." .
Russian base of Vostok near
The music came out as
the south geomagnetic pole
much a rrunixup of styles as
where it dropped. to 126.9 on
,. · the instruments - rock,
Aug. 24, 1960,
country, ragtime, blues.
Not only has it been getting
"That started out Rod Stecolder in the Antarctic, but
wart
and ended up like the
scientists here said more
Ink
Spots,''
an Arnerlcan in
moisture seems to be falling
the
audience
commented
over the continent, but they
Ll_ _

10 . 4 WHEEL DRIVE VEHICLES NOW IN

AUTO
SAVINGS

By Saodra L. Latimer
COLUMBUS (UP!). - Of
all those little plastic cards in
your wallet that help you buy
merchandise , there '~ one
available in Columbus to help
you save money, find new
places to shop and have fun.
It's called The In Card, in
Loaded .
circulation since September
and available in Columbus
only. The In Card plan is
unique in that you can save
money while shopping.
"It's fun to have, you can
explore ne w places to shop
~nd save money at the same
time, " sald Joel Wagenheim,
located on W. Va . Side
34, founder and president of
Pomeroy -Mason Bridge
The In Crowd, Inc.
!304l m-5m
Wagenheim said this past
Christmas season he had fun
shopping at the stores which _ __::.c
LA
:_:.:_F_:_F~-_:_
A:....,· _,D:.:.A
_,_Y
-'-~,
honor The In Card, knowing ~
he would be saving 10 percent
on purchases, sometime~ as·
much as 50 percent, while at
the same time, finding new
and exciting places to shop.
Wagenheim founded The
In Crowd, Inc. late last
August and started signing up
participating merchants in
September. Its main func·
· lions are selling the card and
getting merchants to par· l~~=='--'-'==~~~
ticipate in the program to
offer discounts to customers. " Oh . I don ' t wan t her back- 1
Wagenheim said the idea of just want to know what s he dh.:

1978

SEE THE
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-II

Laree Selection of '78 Dodee

Vinton
By Mrs. Eleanor White
The Ladies of Fellowship
Chapel met at the home of
Li.llian Rece Thursday with
several ladies present.
Mr . and Mrs . James
Snyder recei ved word of the
death of Mr. Snyder's cousin,
Harold Gillespie of Californa.
He was the son of Rachel
Pickens Gillespie .
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Justus
called on h~r parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow Browning,
Mr. and Mrs. ·Jerry Barnes
and Chris of Gallipolis spent
Sunday with their parents,
Mr. a nd Mrs. Max Barnes
and Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Browning.
James Snyder called on his
aun.t and uncle, Mr. a nd Mrs.
William
Thompson ,
Ewington, Sunday. While
there he shoveled snow for
'them so they can get around .
Mrs. Beatrice Bush called
on Mrs. Virgie Houck Sunday
afternoon .
Friends and neighbors
were sorry to hear of John
Stevens being n the Scioto
Memorial Hospital at Portsmouth . At this writing he is
somewhat better.
·

NOW YOU KNOW
William Huskisson was the
first British member of
Parliament to be run over by
a railroad train.

matter how good it was . .
Anyway, I can't do the stuff
that is making the top 10 new.
"The popular shows now all
seem to be based on sex,
which is fine I suppose, but
I'd llke to have more options.
It 's not my kind of emnedy.
HWhatever the concept of
my variety show. it will have
something new and different
about it."
Mary , whose strength has
always bee n role-playing,
had an opportunity to get her
feet wet aS a host on the CBS
anniversary show. She said
she was surprised at how
relaxed and comfortable she
felt without a character to
play.
Essentially a shy woman,
· Mary
usually
is
. uncomfortable making public
appearances. She has been ill
at ease when participating in
award shows.
Apparently Ma ry has
discovered a means of
coming out of her shell .
"! found myself talking to
the camera as I would a
friend on. the anniversary
show," she said. ~~u was me,
the public me, acting a part.
"She isn't the same person
as Laura Pettie of the 'Van
Dyke Show' or Mary
Richards In my own series.
And I guess it isn 't the very
private me either .
11
Right now I seem to be
busier than I was when we
were making the . series
because I am working on
unfamiliar territory. It's
more challenging and
exciting thlll) the situation
comedy.
•
11
Doing a dramatic movie
and playing host of a variety
show is more worrisome than
tjle safety of a situation
comedy. But worrying ·is a
necessary part of life.
"The important thing is
getting back to work. I thrtve
on coming home at night
physil;ally tfred . And I guess
I'm easler to live with,

too ."

Cars and Trucks In Stock.
See them today • • •

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE
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GAUIPOLIS, 0.

JUST A BLOOPER
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Central Intelligence
Agency said today the in·
telligente estimate that
concluded Israel had nuclear
Weapons as lnng ago as 1974
was relea sed thi s week
through a mi~take. On Thurs·
day, National Public Radio
gave UP! a copy of the CIA
report, released b'y the
Energy .Department under a
Freedom of lnfonnation Aet.
s uit filed by the National
Rest:iurces Defense Council.

Military service
triggers crackup
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Many veterans who "crack
up " were on the verge o£
mental breakdowns before
they were inducted , con tends
Oliver Meadows, na tional
commander of the Dis&amp;bled
American Veterans.
Meadows
However ,
concedes military service
may have finally triggered
some of the breakdown.s and
recommends
better
screening of potential
inductees.
HJn W~rld War rr , I was an
infantry capUlin in Europe
and I had a good opportunity
to see soldiers from the day
we got them till the day they
died," sa id Meadowns.
1
' Frankly,
we had more
people go overboard (break
down mentally) in the early
stages
from
rhllltary
discipline, somebody telling
them to make their bed or
comb their hair .
"We had more .crack up at
the thought of getting Into a
boat and going into combat
than In actual combat. Some
were just crushed by it. Most
.ot the ones I saw were
obviously pretty unstable in
the first place and the minute
·pressure got on them, they
started blowing.
"Left at home to amble
aroWJd, some of these Jieople
might never have cracked
up,'' Meadows figured. "So,
the military probably did
hurt some of them - those
who were on the borderline.
Put that fellow in a strange
environment
and
put
pressw-e on him and he can
'
break up;
"Some of the breakdowns
probably could have been
predicted and could have
been prevented by not
'inducting some of these
people. But in wartime, you
have to scrape the bottom of.
tbe barrel and there ts
pressw-e to treat everybody
alike - 'You took my boy, 8(1
you better take hls tQo .'
'lBut,"
he
~dded,
"realistically, we will never
bave a milllary in which only
Olympic stars or Rhodes
scholars serve."
Despite hls personal
observations, Meadows said
that factually, the "DAV has
no data on which to base the

co nclusion that combut
training or participation in
combat leads to anti-social or
criminal behavior. "
"Cases _can be cited where
veterans were involved in
&lt;.'Ombat and Inter commlttecJ
bizarre crlminal acts. On the
other hand , comparable
examples of non·veterans can
be found .
" ll must he remembered
that while millions of
American men have served
during a · period. of war, .
relatively 'fe w eve r V:t•re
involv ed in hand -t r -hr nd
cOmbat and even few :r are
sure that they personally
killed someooe.
" Many who were in combat
zones served as sup port
troops ... and there is very
little killer implication in
these kinds of jot.!."

Fraud charges
aimed at Bates
stockholders
WASHINGTON (UPI )
The Securities a nd Exchange ·
Commission said Friday
fraud charges have been
made against princ ipal
stockhold ers of
Bates
Manufacturing Co. Inc. in
co nnection with alleged
understatement of coal
holdings in order to ease the
way for more concentrated
ownership. ·
...)
The SEC said Bates is a
holding company that owns at
leas\ $41 million in coalfields
in Virginia, Kentucky and
Pennsylvania that are leased
lndopendent
mine
to
operators . The SEC said
Bates had valued the coal
holdings at $8 million since
1973.
The SEC named Bates,
Bates directors Philip
Sassower, Lawrence
Schneider and Adolf Marcus
and several large stockholders who reside in Liberia,
Israel, Italy and Liechien·
stein.
The SEC said the defen·
dants understated the value
of Bates coal and understated
the number of sh.a res they held In filing papers with the
SEC . .

�U-TheSundayT1mes-Senllllel Sunday Jan 29 1971
B-9-The Sunday Tunes-Sentmel :Iunday J an 29 1978

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
,. _;;;;:_ ==- =-

'"""""'
In

lov ng

y o l lowell
Kempe
who paned owoy 3
r s ago Jonua y 30 Iq75
mt~mo

Now th s eo hly st le s o ... e
No more Sulfe ng no mo e
cores
Ye our l-teo ts o e sod and lonely
For we m ss h m everywhe e

Sod y m ssed by

w le

and

ch ldren
In m~rmoy o f my boher M t
lerd E K nge r wha pos~;ed
away Jonvo y 30 1973
In o g a ve liD swee ly sleep g
Whe e flowe s ge y wo.,.e
~ es one we loved so deo y
Bu t w h om we cou d not save
God knows how much I m ss h m
He coun ts the eo s! shed

And wh s pers he s only s eep ng
Your loved one s no dead
So of en I remem ber

The h ngs you used o soy and do
I m~ heo
H a lways I eosu e
My p ec:: o u s me n o es of you
II hu I S so much

o

hove you

gone
Myg ei s ha d obeo
Bu t som e god day

SWEEPER and tew ng mach 1111:
epo
part$ and suppl es P ck
mnn
up ond del very Dov s Vocuum
(leone
~ m e up Geo ges
fl-jl:.
RACINE Volui\IM
F w
Creel. Rd Ph 44b 0294
Oepor ment w II sponso p gv
shoo t eve y Sotu doy o 4 pm of PA SQUAlE Electr co
Se " ce
.U617 6 day or n gh t
the bu ld ng
Bashon fa&lt;
to y ! hok&amp; guns cm ly
OfAD Stock remo ... ed No &lt;horge
Coii24S 55U
THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Skoal
every Sunday ohernoon Fa!
THURMA N HOUSE ant q ues Fur
to y choke guns only Assor ed
n tu e str pp ng repo r ond
mea~

NCOME TAX. Serv ces Fede ol
ond Sto e To11es
Wallace
Rune I 8 odbu y 992 7228
ANNOUNC ING the open ni of the
pub c o«:count ng olf ce of
Rage
Luckeydoo
l censed
pub c oc&lt;oun ant fa a&lt;coun
ng and bQokkeep ng serv ces
and p epa Q on of federo and
sto e to JO: e urM o 29 Walnut
S M ddlepor Oh (lq2 2666
Hou s by oppo ntmenl
SAIL THE SEVEN SEAS

mE!'e l

ago n
A nd Gods swee t heaven we II

sho e
S s te Lena e

N(OME 1AX ServKe5 Federal
and Stole TaMe~ Wanda Ebl n

v s t Hong Kmg Spa n the
we

~

--~
=

~

et m5hed Coun y Rd 8 ofl 35
CEm El v lie
V lloge
Closed
MQndoy &amp; Tuesday Eve ngs
by oppo ntmenl 245 94 79
TREE HAVE N CERAMI CS g een
wore «:usiQm f r ng f n shed
pr od~ o ders Coli 388 8811
H G EY S BARBER SHOP OPEN 8
to S CLO SED SUNOAV &amp; MON
DAV G FTS BOOKS &amp; POTTER Y

Carr bean We II pay you to
do 11 tn t he U S Na", Htgh
school grads 11 to 31 call or
771 Columbus Rd
Athens- 59 3 3S66 (Collect)

NEWGMC
T uc k Heodquo e !&gt;
1 97 ~
T GMCP cku p
19H
T GMC P ckvp
Chev P cl. up
973
974 T GMC PU
- 1973
T ( hev PU
974 T C h e~ PU
1973EC om no w h op
1974 T Fo dPU
1974 hree fou th Che"' PU
1971 GMC 9500 Troc or
1974
T Fo d P ckup
1975 Ton Chev ole P ckup
1975 T Chev ole PU
1973
T GMC PU
1976Fo d , T Pclc up
1973 F700 Fo d Dump Truck
1974 F250 Fo d Supe Cob PU
1973 nternot onol 800 Ser es
cob &amp; cho5s 5 ondem d ve
SOMMERS GMC
TRU(II; S INC
33 P ne S
446 25 3:2

SPECIAL CAR b&lt;J go 5 1969 0 ds
Dello 88 w th o N ce $360
JACKSON WELLSTON
1967 Chevrole Co p ce 307
GALliPOLI S AREAS
lu.rbo
onsm H on
mog l EADS MAKE T EAS ER TO HAVE
A SAlES CAREER
whee s CB od o n ce S37S
Colt 742 30 10
Make he most by se ll ng thebes
r gh n your own commun ,.,.
1977 CAMARO P S P B AM
w th ou h gh comm ss on p o
FM ou o V 8 Co 992 3565
g am
0 ecI n home
__3~ P~,m
=~-for
En
e pre sen at lves
1972 CHEVY IMPALA good n
cyd oped a Br ton co o e need
9d n Soulhe n Oh a Coli Col
o o
es ond body Mo o
needs wa k easonob e p ce
umbu5 off ce 8b4 0331 bet
John Vorl Me e 992 7288
ween I Oo~o nd 2pm Mo F
1970 Ch&amp;\l y l vv aul as d ng bock WANTED co mpon on to elde y
ody
Cook ng ohd I ght
housew o k Sto e wages ex
1974 VEGA .,PT HATCHBACK
pe e ed Wr te o Bo JO: 990 C 0
35 000 m Ills good !ond on
Ga l pol s Do ly T bune 825
Con ta ct
Rhond o Lee
a
Th rd Ave Galt pol s
367 0478

2 05~ ~60 09

I
I

LEGAL NOTICE
HOUSE TRAILER
OWNERS
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE
Re'tlued Code Sections
HOl 06
and 4503 061 as
amended by Sub H 8 No J:JO
and Elfectrve Augu5t 16 1969
Computed and as sessed by
County
Aud t or
by
mulf p y ng tt'l e ass es sa b e
va lue of t he hou se I ra ler b y
th e ta x rate of th e taJC ng
d st r ct n w h ch the house
s 5 tu5 The
I r a ler has
m m rnum ta x 5 $36 00 per
year
H o wev er
f
the
m n mum ta l( Of th rty s x
do Iar-s s appllcab e to a
house tra er not located n
h s state on the f rst day of
January the tax s deter
m ned by mu t ply ng three
dol ars by the number of f u ll
m onths rem11 n ng to the
l ot ow ng
th rt y f r st o f
December co m m en c ng w th
t he date of acq u s I on or
en ranee nto lh s state
Payab e at Coun t y
Treasurer s Oft c e Co u rt
House
Tax Oue and Payab e When a house tr a ler ha s a
s us n lh s stat e as pr ov ded
n th s se ct on on th e st da y
of January the fu ll a m oun of
the pr o rat e ta x s du e and
payable on o bef ore th e 31st
day of J anuary
When a house tra e r
acqu res a s tu s n th is sta e
as pro" ded n th s sec t on
af er the f r sl day of Janua y
and on or pr or a the J st day
of Oecc -n ber the fu amoun t
at a tax s du e and
of th r o
payab
mmed a ely upon
the exp a t on of a JO day
per od c omm enc ng w th th e
date the s Ius s a cq u red
Pena ty - If th e paym ent
ot the Ia,.; s no t made as
prov ded above a penally of
1 ve dol ars or en perc en o f
he taxes due wh ct'l ev er s
gre&amp;ter st'l&amp; t be m posed and
co ected n add I on to he
tax t:t ue and ow ng
Del nq uent Ta x es - The
County Tr easurer n add on
to any other reme d y pro v ded
by law tor the cot ec t on of
axes and pen a l! es
sha ll
enforce col ee l on of such
axes and pena 1 es by c v I
ac t on n the na m e of suc h
reasurer atJ a n sf t he owner
for the rec over y of the unpa d
taxes
Respons b 1 ty of Ho use
Tra er Owner - A ll owner s
of house tra ers t} av ng a
s tus n the State of Oh o and
sub1ect to th e ta x as pro v d ed
above MUST reg 5ter such
ra te r w th th .e Count y
Aud tor on or pr or to the date
he tax s due and paya b e
No person who s the own er
of a house Ira er and wh o s
r equ re to r eg ster a house
fra er sha I fa I to d 5P a y on
the front of such tra er th e
ssued
cer t f cale or Decal
by th e County Treasurer
01Jerator of a House Tr aer
Court - Every operator of
e housetra er co urt or park
or every owner of propertv
used for such p u rpose when
there s no o pera tor sha
keep a regis ter of a l ho use
tra' lers wh ch make use of
ltie co urt park or pr operty
Howard E Frank
County Aud1tor
Me1gs county Oh o
(1) 2f ltc

WANTED AUTO merhon c to GM
deo eMh p Wr te Box 743
Pome Qy OH •5769

C NEM A TOGRAPHER RECORDER
to I ee loncv lo Hunt ng on
te l e~ slon stolon P efe pe
son w h bmm «:amero Send
e~ume
o
News D recto
P 0 Bol( 13 Hun ngton W Vo
15706
Sl:hool
BA8VS TTEA n V nlo
OsctPele ob y n v age
Co l44b 7857

WANTED:

FULl-TIME R.N.,
MEIGS COUNTY
HEALTH DEPT.
RESUME REQUESTED

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

STAR CRA FT FAl l Sal e M n
n o o s 20 ond 72 T a Ve l
To e s 18 s $3 799 75 7
Bunk ho use $4 875 Fold down
$ 700 up We sel ser" ce ond
quo y Open Sundor- s Camp
Con e ~ S ore oft So les R 02
N of PI Pleosont
NEED A spec a bu I n t o pork
or a tra ve l n? See Codner s
Compe s on Ro nbow R dge
Long Bo tom
Oh o
Co I
614 84 3 262 1

Club finesse proves right
'"

• 6 "3
'
\ Q8.
+A Q l2

.+. .

'

+

83

4

10 6
K 10 9 6 5
Q6 S 3

SOUTH

K 53

4

A KJ lOB2

finesse

North South_:
D~ a l ~ r So u9: h Opentn g
le ad E1gh1 of d1amond s
W est
North East
South

I+

p,.,

2 NT

Pass

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby

c lubs

and played from

South had taken lhe besl
play for has dangerous con

South dtdn L have much of
a problem at trtck one If he
tned lhe dtamond finesse
and 1t lost Easl would lead
back ~ spade and West
woul ca s h a lot of spade
tncks So South rose wath
dummy s ace of daamonds
and w ent after clubs
He did it • bolh lhe nght
way and what was also the
wtnntng way He led
dummy s mne of clubs and
let It rtde
If any or you readers potnt
oul that 1f West held lhe
Singleton QUeen of clubs

South s

firs t round club
fme sse would have led to a
four tnck set
we .oren t
gom g to a rgue wtth you

HOOF HOLL OW Ho ses Bu.,. sell
ode or o n New and used
saddl es Ru h Reeves A bonr(6 &lt;1698 3190
ME GS COUNTY Humane Soc e y
Co e/ ne and adopt on St! v ce
99 :2 7680 742 3162 992 5~2 7
R SING STAR Ken nel Boord ng
ndoor and outdoor
uns
G oom ng o b eeds C eo
son Ia y l ac I as Ches h e
Phone (6 14 367 0292
AK C DOBERMAN P nsche 2 no e
pupp es 7 week s old Bloc!. 8
us 992 2572
AK C RE GISTERED Dobe mon
pups Hove heel h ce I I C&lt;l e 7
wk s old $ 00 each 843 3053

tra~t

~ li):;,) ~:f;,U};j

HAWKS IN S AGENCY
FOR A l l
YOUR
NSURANCE
NEE DS ca ll 446 2300

- - - ----- REFRI GER ATORS WA SHERS AND
DRY ERS WR NGER WASHERS
RANGES
A l
SOLD W ITH
GUA RA NTEE WE ALSO SER
VICE A PP l ANCES SK AGGS
9 B EASTERN
APPL AN CES
AVE Coll 446 7398
~----

SPL T FIREWOOD Col 367 06 2 o
36705 11
FREEZER LARGE CAPACI TY dou
be ches 256 1467

-

-

b1d Wllh

+A Q

+A Q tO S 3

'KJ8 ... AQ2
We don t II would be bet

R

USED FURNITURE 2 PC EARLY
AMER UV ROOM SU TE l KE
NEW OCC ASSIONAL CHAIR
HUTC H &amp; BUFFET 3 PC END
TABLE SE T AND LARGE WOOD
ROCK ER L KE NEW R CE S NEW
&amp; USED FURN 854 Sec
FEEDER PIGS 40 o ·1-:-:
&gt;0 lb-,----:C:-o~ll
156 13S1
EASTER BA SK ETS mode o ordc
b.,. Mo ch 5 Call 256 1496 of e
J 30p n
SPL T F REWOOO
WE
DEL VER CALl 388 B 94

W LL

NEW SE A LY MATTRESSES OOU
BLE SIZ E $59 95 WAS Sb4 95
R CE S NEW AND USED FUR
NITURE 854 SECOND CAl l
446 95:2:2
HOUSE COA
De ve ed $37 a ton L mes ton e
de e ed Wo er nes hawed
Co 14 46 34 77
n

Ia

Al l S ZES
o~ er 6 000
o choosE! f om
Sl 99 and up sh nglt!s $ 4 95
per sq
Ande son w ndows
stud s o ther bu d ng ma &amp; o
Open do y 9 7 F onk s Ba go n
Cen e R 1bO Po ter Oh a

n

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

open two notrump
N~

HORSES FOR SALE R d ng ho ses
wo I. ho 5es pon es ond ock
of all k nds Co 367 7533

WSPAPF R ENn HPRISE: A.'i.'iN

es of JACOBY MODERN!

o r~46

0307

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTIERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Ea sy
stop
by
slop
tnstructlons

ACE HARIMARE
Located In

MEIGS PlAZA

Sk~rhng
Pat1o

BILl'S
446-2642
HENS an d boby cal ves 843 2353

~~7 pm -:-~~--~-c:::C
24

INCH
949 209 1

TV

EXPERIENCED
RadiatorService
, _ the ...... Trvcfl •

Young's

Carpeting

......... t• the

'""'

111113 '"""''
,o
Carpel~
UpnomiiJ

Pllclnt ll1kt YCMinl

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

AI

992 2206 I)( 992 7530
~lloOr•tl-

M•ddleporl Oh•o
II 9!1c

NOTICE

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON
Change of

IPlllor1e Number
992 7608
Closed Jan 10
T•l18th 1978

Blown Insulation
Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics
- Save Fuel &amp; Money-

lAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION

Syracuse Ohto
Free Esttmates
Phone 992 3"3
1-18 1 mo

~
CO AL I mes one and &lt;ole um
c h o de ond cole urn br ne fo
dust «:on ol and spec al m )( ng
so fo o mers Ex«:el s o So t
Wor ks Mo n Street Pome oy
O h o a phone 99'2 3891
ECONOMY TRACTOR w h ott a
ochments L kt! new ask ng
$2250 Phone (b 4) b9B 3290
RUGS WALL Hong ngs and
ofg&lt;Jns N te fa Cl1 5 mas
Reosonob e Call 992 2214
1976 FORD F 250 Custom 17 50 11
14 00 es w nch Only 4 000
m Heade s CB Tape dec:lo.
o~e $3 000 n ex (JS Se OU!&gt;
co Is only of er I~ noon
696 I 072 $6 800

SUNDAY JANUARY29 1978
6 IJO-Chrl slopher Closeup 3 AG U SA •
F or You
Black Woman 8 Tills Is The Life 10
6 30-Th ls I s The Life 3 Jerry Falwell 4 Talk ing
Hands 8 American Problems &amp; Challenges 10
7 !!&gt;-Big Blue Marble 3 Edd ie Saunders 6 Th i nking
9 Blac k 8 Treehouse Club 10 Town Topics 13
7 30-TV Chapel 3 Your Health 4 Show My People 6
Jerr y Falwell&amp; Urban League 10 Amaz ing Grace
Bible Class 13
8 DO-Mormon Choir 3 Day of Discovery 4 Grace
Cathedral 6 Church Service 10 Or E J Daniels
Presents Happiness Is 13 Sesame St 20
8 3G--Oral Roberts 3 Jimmy Swaggart 4 Celebration
of Pra i se 6 Day of Discovery 8 James Robison
Presents 10 Willard Wil cox 13 Open Bible 15
9 00--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3 Roberl Schuller 4
Oral Roberts 10 Rex Humbard 6 Rev Leonard
Repass 8 Jim Franklin 13 Ernest Angley 15
Mlsler Rogers 20
9 30-WIIat Does the Bible Plai nly Say&gt; B It Is Written
10 Church Service 13 Zoom 20
10 00-Chrlst ls the Answer 3 Church Service 4
Aware 6 Christian Center 8 Sesame St 20 Movie
From the Earth to the Moon
10 J i mmy
Swaggart 13 Gospel Singing Jubilee 15
10 J~Rex Hum bard 3 Yours for the Asking 4
Amer ica s Black Forum 6 Way of the Cross
Garner Ted Armstrong 13
11 DO-Doctors on Call 4 Communique 6 Ernest
Angley 8 Rex Hum bard 15 Rev Henry Mahan 13
lnfinlly Factory 20
11 3Q-Outdoors With Julius -Boros 3 Focus on
Columbus 4 Eldon Miller Basketball6 Medlx 13
Elec Co 20
12 oo-At Issue 3 News Conference 4 Issues &amp;
Answers 6 Face The Nation 8 The Issue 10 Blue
R ldgeQuar~ell3 This Is The Llle15 Rebop20
12 3ll-Meel The Press 3 4 15 Golf 6 13 Christian
Broa~ast 8 Face The Nation 10 Characteristics
of Learf'ing Oljabllltles 20
DO-Tony Browns Journal 3 loyal Opposition 4
Bob Jones• 8 Washington Week In Review 33
Challenge of the Sexes 10 My Father My Brolher
and Me 15 Pro Soccer 20
1 30-'B~witched 3 To Be Announced 8 Wall Street
Week 33 Lillie Rascals 1S
1 45--NBA Basketball B 2 !!&gt;-Movie Don I Raise lhe
Bridge Lower the River 3 Superstars 6 13 Movie
Change of Habit 4 Dynamic Duos 15 Sound
slage 10 Microbes &amp; 111\en 33
1 311-Sportsworld 15 3 00--0amlen
20 In Per
tormance at Wolf Trap 33 3 ls-Boxing 6 13
4 IJO-College Baskelball 3 4 IS Golf B 10 Oanceln
America 33
4 15--Sporls Magazine 6 13
4 30-Wide World of
Sports 6 13 Acllon The October 1970 Crisis 20
5 !!&gt;-Nova 33
6 !!&gt;-Lets Deal W th If 6 News 3 4 Championship
Foshlng8 Voyage to the Boltom olfhe Sea 10 Gods
Smuggler 13 Music Cily 15 Zoom 10 Arvilla 33
6 30---NBC News 3 4 15 News 6 30 Minutes B French
Chef 20,33
7 00--World of O&lt;Sney 3 4 IS Hardy Boys 6 13 60
Mtnutes 8 10 Crocketts V I ctory Garden 20 Firing
Line 33
7 30-Antlques 20 8 oo-Six Million Dollar Man 6 13
Rhoda B 10 Evening at Symphony 20 33
8 30---0n Our Own 8 10
9 oo-Golden Globe Awards 3 4 15 Movie
Nlghl
Cnes 613 All In the Family B 10
Claudius
20 33
9 30---Aitce 8 10 10 OG--Carol Brurnett 8 10 Nova 20
V1slons 33
11 oo-News3 4 6 News 8101315 II 15--ABC News
6 CBS News 8 10 PMA Pulse 15
11 30--Movte
Suddenly last Summer
3 Movie
Divorce Hers 4 Movie Oogpound Shuffle 15
Second City TV 6 700 Club
Movie Brother
Orchid 10 PTL Club 13 Monty Pythons Flying
Circus 33
12 !!&gt;-Soul Train 6 Janakl 33 12 30-ABC News 13
Movie Channel 4 5&amp; 7 PM -Jack &amp; lhe Beanslalk !GI
9 &amp; 11 P M - Cassandra Crossing ( R)

Supe,..
SlumubiCIIOI

llol Tilt lmllllllrl

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Restdenttal
aud
commercial
C~ll
for
eshmate 24 hour serv1ce
Anyday anyftme
Phonf985 3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Box 34

Chester Ohto
10 30 c

-UpholsteryProfessional Service 39
yrs
experience
Free
estimates
pickup
&amp;
deltvery
servtce
Resldenttal &amp; Com merdal

Tn-State Upholstery
Shop
1163 2nd Ave Gallipolis
446 7833-446 1833

CARTER
PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.
300 Moln 51
Pomeroy Ohio
Pomeroy 992. 62.82
or 9926263
SAMio430PM
SALES AND SERVICE
11 9 lfc

TURlEY S WRECKER Se v ce
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES Pt P eo
Roc ne Oh a Day o n ght
sont W Vo bes de Heck s
949 2657
1973 Broodmo t! 14 I( b4 2
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR bedroom
Sweepers ooste s
ons oil
1973Do onl 4)( 602bedroom
small oppl ances Lawn mower
1972 V co on 14 )( 67 3 bedroom
next to State H ghwoy Go age
2 b&lt;Jth
on Rou e 7 Phone (614 ) 985
1972 Coven y12 x 653bedoom
3825
1969 S o esmqn 12 x 60 2
b edroom
REMODELING Plumb ng heat ng
and all types of general repo r
BURROUGHS SENS MAT C ac
Work guo onteed 20 years 81(
coun t ng mach ne Ha5 been
pe ence Phone CW2 2409
u nder se v ce controc ond n
good «:a nd I 011 Con be seen ot SEWING MACHINE Repo s ser
The Ooly Sen ne
11 Court
v ce all makes 99:2 2284 Tl1e
S PomE;troy OH
Fobr1 c Shop
Pome oy
Au homed S nger Soles and
Se v1ce We sharpen Sc ssars

1965 CHEVEllE 4 dr A C 283
e ng 2 bb
auto Irons Ex
c:ell enl cond ton Tuck Iappe
s d 8 I
bed 28 n h gh
742 2485

EXCAVATING do01e loode and
boc:khoe wo k dump rucks
and Ia boys lo h re w II haul
I II d rt to so I I me stone and
g ovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers day phone 992 7089 n ght
phone 992 3525 or 992 5232

789 PORD ENG NE and rons 327
c block boed 060wthl21o
p ston s Che"'y 3 speed I ans
992 7759

EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d tcher Charles R Hot
f eld
Back Hoe Ser ... ce
Rutland Ohio Phone 742 2008

SELLING OUT due o II heo th
Sm all g ocery store and gcs
s at on w th sto«:k and equ p
m t! n Located at Langs\1 I e on GROW EARTHWORMS for prof t
Route 12.4 Very got;tlbuy Call
Free Oa o
WORM WORLD
992 S86B 0 742 904!'
81 0 S Josepl1 ne Denver Col
orodo 80210 o c:atl Mr James
collect {303 } 778 10:26

CHEMICALS

we Strtp Patnt Vamlshts
etc
Wood Metol Plashes
Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering Servtce
custom
Prohueonal
RefJnt5htng
Repairmg
Anhques Bought&amp; Sold
DICk Seyler
Phone 992 2718
100 Kerr St
Pomeroy Ohio

Storm
Wmdows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Wmdows
Alum mum
S1dmg Soffit!
Gutters Awmngs

lARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Oh10
Ph 992 3993
1-IB·1mo

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal lnsulat1on
Save 30 pet to 50 pet
on heating c:ost
EJCpenence and
fully 1nsured
Free Esl
Call 667 6479 or 992 381S
1 16 lmo

BRADFORD AuctJonee
Com
plete Ser ... ce Phone 949 2487
or 949 2000 Roc ne Oh o C II
Brodfa d

s

MARTIN Ex
«:ovahng
sept c systems
dozer bockhoe dump truck
I mestone g avel black op
pov ng Rt 143 Phone I (614)
698 7331
BATHROOMS AND K tchens
emodeled cerom c t le plum
b ng co pen try and gene al
rna n enonce
13 years ex
pe ence 992 3685

MONDAY JANUARY 30 1978
5 50-PTL Club 13 5 55-Sunnse Semester 10 6 25--Medlx 10
6 3~olumbus Today 4 News, ... unrise Semester 8
6 45--Mornlng Report 3 o 50-Good Morning
West Virginia 13 6 55--Chuck While Reports 10
News 13
7 oo-Today 3 4 15 Good Morning America 6 13 CBS
News 8 Bullwlnkle 10
7 30---Schoolles 10 7 45--Sesame St 33

NEIGLER S FOR bu ld ng houses
bathrooms all k nds of repa r
wo k and what ha\le you Guy
Ne gle
Roc ne Oh1o Call
949 2508 even ngs
MAGGIES UPHOLSTERY Ref n sh
reupho(stery
rebu ld ng
Beaut ful select on of mater ol
and vmyls Free est mate Tal
742 2852
Locat on
Salam
Center

8 00----Capt Kangaroo 8 10
9 1!&gt;-Merv Griffin 3 Phil Donahue 413 15 Edge of
Night 6 Family Affair 8 Match Game 10
9 30-Emergency One 6 Andy Grlllllh 8 Family

NICINSKY S ELECTRIC SERVICE All
ype of w ng and electr cal
epa rs 742 3092

Sr:JM:M Y. .Gnuary 29 1978

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
~CROSS

1 Shade trH
6 Quarrel
10 Unruly child
1 4 Apartments
19 Bonollla
21 Rani
2 2 Spood eon lost
23 Terrible
24 Frulllul
26 Strong current
28 Rlcn silk
29 Anger
30Sia.o
32 Mlll\18
33Appoar
34 Period of lime
(abbr I
35 A1'T'erlcAn
Soclelyol
Newspaper Ed
tors (abbr )
37 Exp res
39 Shade tree
40 Mme vern
41 Bard
42 Ste I an ~Jotcano
44 Goesrn

(abbr I
69Hiko
70 Drunkard
71 Cleaning
de'JICH

'

73 Clly tn Flonda
75 Continued atory
77 Portico

78 Vapor
80Skondloeoae
81 Silkworm
821ntent
84 Foolballleam
86 Burrowing mam
mal
B7 Parlor
Czechostovakla
89 Paddle
921tem or property
95 Eoglo a neal
98 War god
99 Horses nome
101 Enthusiasm
103 Soaks
10&lt;4 Wander abOut
Idly
105 Pierce
106 E&lt;lola
107 Hebrew tetter
108 Former Ru111an
46 Transgreaaes
leader
47 Distasteful
110Franch otthe
48 Deposll of line
111 Mans ntcknal"('e
earth
112 Shop bollom
50 Spleong
113 Unlock
52 Chapooua
115 Printer a
53 Conluncllon
measure
55 Challenge
57 Mounlo n labbr I 117Jog
119 Note ot scale
58 Parlor lace
120 lnlolloel
59 Lairs
60 College degree 121 Shammed
(obbr I
124 Instrument
62 Span sh plural
126 Swedish
article
~
soprano
64 Edible fish
127 Escaped
66 Malden loved by 1 28 Sari again
Zeus
130 Dace ve
66 Foolba poa lion 132 Tw sl

133 Kind ollabrle
1340cton
135 Afternoon par
I tea
137 Podol d ig Is
139 Scolllah lor
one
1 -'0 Lump on trwt
skin
141 Filaments
143 Baked clay
I 45 Poaed tor
portratt
146 City In France
148 Twlallng
t SO Institution of
learning
152 Wiped OUI
153 Pasteboard
15-4 Lowt de
156 Transparent s1lk
157 Erased (pr nt
mg)
158Reman
159 OIJtarns
160 Showy flower
DOWN

1 Secret Ita I an
society
2 Reluctant
3 Father and
mother
4tllummated
5 Anctent Greek
clly
6 Senior labbr I
7 Stroke
B Keyed up w th
mterest
9 Frlghls
10 Fracture
11 Rage
t 2 Perform
13 Symbol lor
teHur um
1 4 Prepos t on

1 5 100 000 rupees
18 Crypto..,amous

90 W ng looled
91 Put n place
17 Neater
egan
18 Aroma
92 Snake
20 Wmter veh cte
93 Hastens
23 Woody plant
94 Spantsh for
25 Great Lake
yes
27 Argue
96 Roman road
28 Articles of fur
97 Actual betrfg
100 Hebrew month
mture
31 MarShes
102 Fru1t cake
33 Melody
105 D spalch
leofGera nt 109 Top of house
38 Slalk
1 12Sorl
40 Boundary
113Cty n Russ a
41 Vessels
1 1 4 Sea nympth
43 Word of sorro w 1 16 Flesh
45 0 nmg
1 18 Sound a horn
46 Fema le rela t ve 1 20 Inorganic
47 Setlled
121 Conspiracy
49 Waked on
1 22 Approach ng
51 Perta n ng to
123 Food program
Norway
1 25 Most rnsecure
52 Provrded w th
126 G r t s name
money (col OQ ) 1 27 Fortlf ed pla c•
5 3 Char IY
129 Secular
5 4 Chtmney carbOn 131 All ance
56 Fundamental
132 Bundled
59 Ptavwr ght
I 33 Sloll
60 Benefact on
1 34 Covered wrth
61 Antlered an me
sand
63 Hurried
136
Narrow
open ng
65 Ver\le
I 38 Beef anima
67 Poem
1 40 Unwanted p ani
69 Note of sc ale
141 Wtle of Zeus
70 M &lt;ed
14 4 Sn ck and
72 Transect ons
144lamb s pen
74 Art c le
name
76 A slale (obbr I
147 SufiJC make
77 Scoll
nlo
79 Encountered
148 F ~ ng mammal
83 Mohammedan
1 49 Sh p channel
commander
15 1 l te Sav ng Sta
85 Clollled
I on (abbr. .)
86 Mans n c:kname
153 Chr s tran
87 Eptc narrat1ve
Sc ence labbr)
88 Mountains of
Europe
1 55 Pos tsc r lll
labl!r I
69 R ver n S bena

Jew

'

Affair 10
10 oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3 4 15 Jokers Wild 10 Not for
Women Only 13
10 30-Hollywood Squares 3 4 IS Andy Grlffllh 6
Price Is Rigllt 8 10 Rick Foucheux 13
11 00---Wheel of Forlune 34 IS Happy Cays 6 13 Elec
Co 20
11 311-Knockout 3 IS Family Feud 613 Partridge
F am lly 4 Love of Life 8 I D Sesame St 20 33
11 55--CBS News 8 Loving Free 10
12 OD--Newscenter 3 S20 000 Pyramid 133 News
4 6 10 To Say The Least IS Gambll 8
12 30-Ryan s Hope 613 Bob Braun 4 Gong Show 15
Search for Tomorrow 8 10 Elec Co 33
1 !!&gt;-For Richer For Poorer 3 All My Children 6 13
News 8 Young &amp; the Restless 10 Not for Women
Only 15
Jo-Days of Our lives 3 .ot IS As The World Turns
B 10 2 oo-One Life to Live 6 13
,
2 30-0oclors 3 4 15
Guiding Light 8 10
3 1!&gt;Anofher World 3 4 15 General Hospital 6 13 Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20 Adams Chronicles 33
3 30-AII In The Family 8 10 Prime Time 20
4 !!&gt;-Mister Cartoon 3 Edge of Nlghl 13 My Three
Sons .4 For Richer For Poorer 15 '\\erv Griffin 6
Gilligan s Is B Sesame Sf 20 33 Gomer Pyle
USMC 10
4 30-LIItle Rascals3 15 Gilligan sIs 4 Brady Bunch
8 10 Mary Tyler Moore 13
5 !!&gt;-Here Come The Brides 3 Star Trek 4 Gunsmoke
Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20 33 Hogan s
Heroes 10 Emergency One 13 My Three Sons 1S
5 30-News 6 E lee Co 20 33 Mary Tyler Moore 10
Hogan s Heroes 15
6 !!&gt;-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
6 30-NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8 10
7 IJO-Cross Wits 3 Three Tower North 4 Liars Club
6 Marly Robbins Spotlighl 8 Capitol Beat 33
News 10 To Tell The Truth 13 Gilligan s Is 15
Daniel Fosler M D 20
7 15--Labor News 33 7 3~ Thai Nashville Music 3 In
Search of 4 Nashville onthe Rod 15 Muppel Show
6 Match Game PM 8 MacNeil Lehrer Report 20
Wild Kingdom 10 Candid Camera 13 Know Your
Schools 33
!!&gt;-Lillie House on The Prairie 3 4 15 Six Million
Dollar Man 6 13 Good Times B 10 Cbnsumer
Survival 20 33
8 30-Baby I m Back B 10 Turnabout 20 33
9 !!&gt;-Mash 8 10 Adams Chronicles 20 Hollywood
Televlslor&gt; Theatre 33
9 30-Columbo 3 4 15 One Day At A Time 8 10
10 !!&gt;-ABC News Closeup~ 13 Lou Gran! 8 10 News

s

s

20

Hrlll !;•l ai r for

"a l e

rn
w ...

GAWPOLISr OHIO
"We Sell Better Laving"

(II!

A r thur A 1 .oert
Sen or Mem ber

OFFICE 446-7013

Amenca n Soc c t v
of Appra sers

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE LL GIVE YOUR PROPERTY THE PROP E R
AMOUNT OF ADVERTISEMENT AND A SINCER E
EFFORT TO GET IT SOLD AS SOON A S POSSIBLE
LOVELY NEW RANCH - Just
for you H as 3 bedroo l'"n' n
basem ent w tt br ck f
~LV
on 1 • ac r es of n ce wovued land
ly $33500

21 PORTSMOUTH RD - N ce fa m IY hofue w th 4
bed room s l a rge t 11 ng r m new K tche n fo rm al dm
ng fu ll f n shed baseme nt a th s for onl y 529 900 Ca I
today
r---..

WITH

US

Mernll Carter
Evenmgs
379 2184

WILL
SELL

OWN E R SAYS SELL
No reaso nab le offer refu sed Th s ho n ~
se tt ng s sere 1e Md peace l u e 'tov those
w nfer evE&gt;n ngs n a co'ly co unTry il l
nospherc bu t ye t locted only o lC n e ~ ct
a hn I of Sate Rou te 3S Th s hOme hi1 'i '1
bedr ooms modrr 1 bu t n k cl C"n &lt;.i n q
room w til t ardwood fl oors
v ng roo 1
a l d n ce ba t h New g r age 24 IJy 30 i 1s
pane eel wa l s i!nci t ~x t ured c I cts A
REAL BARGA N

OUTSTANDING BUY - Bu v th s 3 bed room home
w th bath d n ng r oor rnL\) 1back por c h and tet t he
re nt f r om a 2 bedr oo ~ , apa rt ment hel p make
vou r pa y m en Good loc al on n town
Bonn1e Stutes
E'/enings
446 2885

HOME WITH RENTAL - BOy th s 3 bed r oom home
w th ba th d n ng room enc losed bac k porch a nd et t he
r ent from a 2 bedroom g arag e apartment he p m ake
you r payment Good toc at1on n town

- "'OlD
;&gt;

&gt;od nome nee ds a h an
t help f1na nce

12 Mill CREEK - Good hom e Wi t h 3 bed roo m s b a t h
d n ng room • baseme nt pay for lh s like r ent Onl y
SIO 500
HANDYMAN SPE&lt;;IAL Good ot de r home 3
bedr oom s bath d n n g room a m os t new t urn ace
needs a ttl e wor k but sa good bu y for $12 800 o wner
1v.•an11 to se ll toda y
CROWN CITY
E x ce lent bu ld ng for b us nes s or of
f ce bu d ng sse up for a beauty sl1 o p a nd a ba rber
shop both w th equ pment oca te d on an ce lot A r eal
ba rga n for $12 500
EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Good
Route busmess w th unl m ted pot ent a l f you w a nt to
be ndependent and have a money rn a k ng bu s ness
nat our off ce for more de fa Is
NICE LOT - Su tabl e for a house or mob e ho m e
located n Chesh rev ag e on v $2 500

•

3 ACRES -

N ce r&lt;.• r- r-nl 1".
furnace new bath co
~'""

me 3 b edrooms new
onl y $2 500

V er y n ce la nd su t a bl e for nvestm ent or
smali fa rm or hOm es te Loc ated c ose
hoo

I?~~~~~~.~~:~:: Is

)1

35 ACRES - Good ro ll ng land su tab e f or hunt ng or
camp ng

w h cabm $14 soo

ACRES - N ce ro
beaut fut home s tes to

SOLD

sever a l p ne trees
t 554 Es t of Port er

PONY KEG - Th s w e ll known Carr y Ou t s on e of th e
area s best A money mak ng bu s ness that nc udes
the propert~ n ce lot to Oh o R ver f xtur es and nven
torv Bu s ne ss has a very good net ncom e p er y ea r
Stop nand let us g ve ou more deti:l s
FRIENDLY
PROfESSIONAL
HELP
YOUR
REAL
ESTATE
NEEDS
CALL
OR
STOP
IN
AT OUR
OFFICE
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING

Evemngs Call
Oscar Ba1rd, Realtor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

IB
REA L Orl

PRODUCTIVE FARM
Recentl y remode led I o n e
:25 ac of 1 liab le and t led
I med ready for to p p r od u
c on 56 ac clea n pe
pas tur e 10 ac t mb er One
lg ba r n new tool shed or
loaf ng ba rn 1800 lbs lob
base Hou se has new ba th
ut 1 y r m fu rn ace water
sy ste m
nsu a ted
two
good wood bur n ng fr pi
Th s sa good I sl ng Good
Fam ly F arm we i ta ken
care of
H a rr son Twp
LOOK THIS OVER
I nd very man y
good fa rm s tor sa le and
th ey ar e se l ng fas t Th s
fa rm has s x r oom s batt
full basem ent
ca rl] et
storm w nc:tows
rur a
wa er or dr led we 1 1500
lbs tob acc o base b arn
oth er out bldgs 30 ac res
t !able land som e SO ac res
pasture m as a l t r ac tor
land Good wood lot so me
saw m ber 100 ac r es n
al Th s w II se we d Ke
to sell t to you

we cann ot

SMALL FARM
PRICED LOW
E ght acres
about all
t abl e Ver y n ce a ke for
water or r ecrea t on Lg
co unt y hotne 5 B R 4
room s w t h carpe t unn ng
wat er w th ba th
Lg
stra w ber~y path ot her out
bld gs Can t as t $23 000
MOBILE HOME
1970 Champ on model on
corn er of Four oom s w th
bath Good c ond t on 1500
gal se pt c ta nk anc:t dr li ed
water turn shed Rur a
water c l ose by Hookup a
r ead y t or ex t ra m ob e
home T h s ca n be a good
tnvest m e nt own two I ve
n on e w 1 go a ong w ay s
towa rd p a y me nt
Re nt
th em bo h shoul d n t be any
prob em Ca I now
VACANT LAND
FOR SALE
Ac r es of good fer t h:
level land has been t I ed
20 ac r es or more t mber
cut ou t n 922 the rest s
pa sture - 48 acr es n al Good 1nves tm ent $25 000

n

CASH p&lt;l d fo all makes and
node l ~
of mob e homes
Phone a eo t ode 614 423 953)
T MBER Pome oy
ducts Top p «:e
saw mber Cc I
Ken Hanby 1 446

Fo es P o
fo s ond ng
992 5965 or
8570

COINS CURRENCY okens old
pocket watches ond cho ns
s lve and gold We need 19b4
and older s lvt!r cons Buy sell
a trade Coli Roge Wam sley
742 2331
OLD FURNITURE te boxes bras s
beds on beds e c: complete
hou seholds W te M D M tier
A 4 Pome oy Oho a coli
~27760

NO ITEM TOO La ge or oo smo I
W II buy I p ec:e or camp ete
household New used o on
ques Mort n s Furn u e 20 N
2nd St
M ddlepor
Phone
CW2 6370
CHIP WOOD
Po es ma x
d ometer 10 on large'i end SB
per ton Bundled slob $6 pe
ton Delvered to Oh o Po let
Co R :2 Pomeroy 992 2689
GOOD USED trocto
w h
hyd &lt;lUI c: 3 pt h ch 742 307~
WANT TO BUY House o mo b le
home n count y w th so me
acreage on lond cant ocl Can
pay down
po ym e nl
I
reasonable On y nteres ed
people need o mo nformo
I on to P..O Bo x 9 Long&amp;v e

~5~7~·~--~----~--T MBER
Top pr ces for
Top Ouol ty
POMEROY FORREST PRODUCTS
Co119915965
Snow Blade for In
245 5348

Cub C&lt;Jdet

P ANO good used cOn so e Call
245 9314
REGULATION S ZE POOL TABLE
Coll388 9832

10 3D--Farm Digest 20

JUNK au o and scrap me ol Pl1
:J{IB 8776
GOOD USED FURNITURE no
upho ste ed and opp onces
Ph 446 0322
GOOD USED REGR GERATOR
AND FREEZER UPRIGHT OR
CHEST Ph 446 0372

BRIARPATCH Kennels Boo d ng
G oom ng AKC Go don 5e t
te s Engl sh Cocker Span e s
Ph 446 41 91
RISING STAR KENNEL
Boord ng ndoor Outdco Runs
G OOI'Tl ng All B eed s Clean
Son lory fo e I t es Ch esh e Ph
367 0292
CENTENARY
WOODS
PET
GROOM NG FAC LiliE S P o
tess anal Ser"' ces ofte ed all
b eeds all styles Ptl 4.46 023 1
DRAGONWYND CATTERY KEN
NEL AKC Chow ChQw do g ~
CFA S omese and H mo oy&lt;Jn
co s (Also wh te Pe s ons )
0 de ~ Q e now be ng accepted
lo sp ng k liens and pupp e5
Coli 446 3844

LAND FOR
DEVELOPMENT
over :27 acr es w th n tour
m es of Ga lpo s
dea
bu ld ng s tes e t her !eve
la nd or woode d area
Ga lt pc s schoo sy stem
blackt op roa d an d ru ra
.... ater

ANY PERSON who hos any h ng o
g oJe awa y and does no offe o
o emp o off e any o he h ng
to ~ ol e moy pace en ad n h s
colu mn
The e w II hfl no
cho ge o tht! odve '.c'.c•-'~,_TWO mo t! Gt! mon Pol «:e dogs
fox e e m notu e co l t!s
ond o to b rado Coll388 9367
TWO GERMAN SHEOHERD 8 n o
o ld One m ~~:ed Col e pup pa t
Ge man Shepherd :2 mo old
A 5o wh l e a d ed b rd dog
Coli 379 2252::.:...---~-~
v er ~

AKC R~G DOBERMAN PINCHER
10 week s males females red
ond ru st champion ped g ee
health cer f cote S I :25 Co
1 797 .4500

AULT MOBIL E HOMES SER V CE
Sk ng onchor ng and po
colt 446 3608 ott,0e"--'
' - - -B AND S MOB l E HOMES
PT PlEA SANT W VA
IF YOU hove o se v ce o off e
1973 8 oodmo e 141(64 :2 b
won to buy o sell 50m&amp;lh ng
1973Do on 14x602b
oe look ng for work
or 1972 V co an 4xb7 3 b
:2
who e'w' er
you get esu s
bo hs
foster w th a Sent net Won Ad J 972 Coven trv 12xb5 3 b
Coll 992 2156
19b9 S a esmon 12..:602 b

Lehrer Reporl 33
11 30-College B.Skelball 3 Pollee Slory 6 13 Johnny
Carson -4 15 Movie The WlckeJ;I Dreams of Paula
Schultz 8 ABC News 33 Movie Key Largo 10
12 1!&gt;-Janakl 33 12 40-News IJ
1 ()()-Tomorrow A 1 30-Tomorrow 3
Movie Chonnel 4 5&amp;9PM -MarsAHockslheWorld(y)
1 &amp; 11 PM - Man Who Skied Dowo Everesf IGI

BRAND NEW RANCH
L oca ted n a n dea l oca t o n Sla te Rou o
No 141 a pp ox d m tes from town
city
Schoo c:t str c f on " n ce s ze io S ~o: roo
hOme
n ce co nfor tnb e co se va t v~
hOme Th s one s fo r he economy
11Jed
NEW MODULAR HOME
1400 SQUARE FEET LIVING SPAC E
Loca ted at the edge of R Q G n le V lagc
Sta te Rt N o 375 on a n cc s zc ot a1 d
ad d t ana l lo t can be pu r chased Very
seen c v ew overl ook tn g Bob Evan~
Fa rm s F eatures l or m al en! y I v g
oom and d n ng r oo m M ode r n sla 1d k t
che n all b utt n 2 ba ths w th a sunken lu v
tub Tot a etec l c - Sm o ke r~ ar n Co 1
use ma n v f acu t cs w 1 c t1 a e av1 lab e
th roug h R o Gra nde Col cge

WINTER SPECIAL
15 Acres Good fences sm a pond a nd a
str ong spr ng for w ate r A pp ox 970 l b
tobacco - two yea r s base Some good
b d g ofs an d som e t m be r Pr ced to sc I
NEW FARM LISTING
lO Ac r es 6 ac good fer le
.)Ottom land 10 ac wood
ot Th e res t n past u n~
a nd P ent y wa ter n ce
t rea m runs h roug h f arm
g countr y home 2 story
IX room s 2 porc hes new
toor s downsta r s Shnde
ees n n ce count y se t
ng a lso ch c ke n hou se
ell ar an d house n ce s ze
arn n good co 1d Tab
ase New on hemark~&gt;taf
35 000

TWO BEDROOM HOME
Pr ced low for mmed a te
ce s i ze
sa e Has k chen
d1n m break f ast rm cm d
ba th 2 outs de porc hes
ba sem ent and furn ace A l l
roo m s pan e l e d
A lum
storm doors w red fo r
e ec tr c stove wa sl1 er a n d
dry er N ce garden space
ava abl e good l oca t on c
ty wat er se w ~ r Owner w I
he lp I na n&lt;,:e q ua f ed
bu yer
VACANT LAND
If 'you w an t vacantI a net to r
nves t ment or a sma I
t ar m
h ow
can yo u
over ook th s - t wen ty t wo
acres
o t 1 ab l e 12
p as t u r e
o de r
ba rn
repa r able for tobacc o b ase
ol 1300 lb s Good fences
p e11ty wa e r 700 ft ro a d
frontage- $11 500

MOBIL E HOM E:
PRI CED TO SELL
17 ~o:65
197J 0
co ne! 3 l)tl
~ Mt I
I
HC''l e I w I tu '" l o W
100( wCt cr sy sJ
"
N enr R lPP"&gt;bu r
w l beh
o l)

BEAUTIFUL BRICK
RANCH
Owners arc anx ou s to s" t
th s ve r y n cc home
o1
dea l oc a t on Th e ma n
fea tu re of II s 1 orne s a
huge spac ou s k tchc n &lt;lnd
d n ng are 1 wh c
he ady
of t he ho use wou ld app rove
of Othe ~ r e1 s ot nter cs 1
v ng roo 3 BR I b CI II s
ul l y room
plent y of
c osc t and sl ur age sp ace 2
ca r gar age w t h e cc fr c
eye ope 1er Newl y paved
d ve Mea and ella n t nk
enccd arou nd the
ot
MAKE
US
A
REASO N A BL E OFFER
SMALLINVESTMEN r
LOTS OF COMFORT
N ce 2 BR home tor sma l
lam y
2 porches new
stor m w ndows a nd dOo s
ut f ~ b dg
Very good
ga rden r~rea Low ut t r es
gas h e r~ I
Lot AO x 170
$3 000 wo rth of new fu r
n tu c goes w fh sa le Goo
hom e fo older coup le
mode a te ncom c f a n l y

REAl ESTATE
!:WrHCe6

N &lt;e

Portrait of a Nurse 33

COMF O RTABLE OR I CK
ANO FRAME

CEDAR - A FRAM E
Loc fed on a o 11: acre woac1ed o t II s
beau ry s tt ng n the wood lands eM ur..-s
three bedrooms 1 1 bat h s.
v ng roo
modern k chen opon I rep lace ~ ct ope 1
sra rway eac:t ng to rt c 1 ups ! r
bed r ooms E ec t r c hea t Tl s YRC at
hone s n very much dem OJ 1(! Ca Now

~HEIWRV

dog

11 !!&gt;-News 3 4 6 B 10 13 15 Dick Cavett 20 MacNeil

I

WE

NICE &amp; ROOMY
A1tract ive fr a m e hom e 3
bed room s new bath new k tc he'n f amr !v r oom good
bu y for $22 800 own er w t I I he lp I na nce

GEORGES CREEK
dyman v e ry n ce lot

10...

LIST

ompleted a nd WiHT ng
1ths n ce car pet fu
Jrge carport Loca ted
very good b uy for on

5 45--Farm Report 13

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Se " ce Phone 992 2478

Heal E•tale for &amp; le

1218 EASTERN AVE.

a

FREE ESTIMATES

Heal !::•tate for Sal~

f or "'alr

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

'

BLACK PADDED BAR w h
wo odgra n top and storage
s hel~ e s
E~~:ce llent cond 1 on
550 9917311

Covers
Carports
Roof Pa•nt
Set up
and Re leveling Call

(Do you have a quest an for
the experts? WrifEJ Ask the NEW FURNITURE SAL E Be nco
Tw n Se s not ess and box
Experts care of lh s newspa
sp ng
$1 9 95
Mope o
per Individual quest ons w II
walnut f n sh beds Sb9 95 A
be answered If accompan ed
Co b n and Snyde Fu n u e
by stamped self..addressed
95 5 Seco nd A ve nue Go po 5
envelopes Tne most mterest
0
ng quest ons w II be used n
HAY FOR SAl "E by he bo e o r
th s column and w II rece1ve
Co
25 b 6535
t uck lo ad
c o~

Anchormg
Awn1ngs

Heal E•tate

TELEVISION
VIEWING

•'
A

---

W VA CHUNI&lt;; S F t! plo«:c &lt;ool
Sk dmore Fos er Coot Co P ne
S Got po t s 0
PEN DE_L_To- N EeU' -L-::T-oB-o
A-::,:,E
:::R
:-E
::::s
$18 w h exchonge new ones
S3 guo an tee d 38 8 8596

ter than a mere one-c:ha GRAIN FED FREEZER ---BEEF P
mond opemng but you have
446 0760
a balanced 22 pomls w1th all
su1ts slopped and should

Business Services

HOUSE COAL 8 8 &amp; M Cool Co
ESR_Gall pol s C o ~2 5~1 5~

A Ph1ladelph1a reader
wants to know 1f we approve
of an openmg two·&lt;hamond FARM FENCE POSTS

and Alan Sontag

.t\1 ft 1.1 fl "I 0 S

of

there He would have made
at least seven trtcks but

Vu lnera ble

Pilss
Pass

ace

returned to dummy for a

+H

2+
I Nr

lhe

queen but wm agamst any
other singleton Of course
South would not have gone
down four tracks tf he had
cashed lhe

'

produc ed

Thus South s play would
lose agamst the smgleton

+KJ

10

had

three

EAST

+o

J 97 2

might also have held the
Easl

+ A Q I0987
'

but he

smgleton five or SIX once

.... 7

WEST

four of that su1t

---

FOR THE BEST IN FURNITURE
UPHOLSTER NG Free Es t ma es
P ck up and de "'e
se v ce
co Mow ey s Upho slery Pt
Plvoson W Vo 675 4 54

----

West d1d hold the smgleton

NOR 'Ttl

lAYNE S NEW 8 USED FURNilURE
NEW
~Ia cho
o.;.ke ot omon 3
ob es SSOJ Bedroom su 1e
mope or p e S150 30 elec
c r;pnges $200 Boby bed!!&gt;
$65 Baby bed mo ll emts $70
Bed oom su te wh e $250
$300 wh te moplv a p nt~
$300
Solo &amp; Cho
S00
ME&gt;d te oneo 5o fa and love
5ua $325 Eo An sofa &amp; cho r
5300 Love 5eot S150 mode n
iola cho loveseot $275 sofa
bed w h motd'l ng cho S 50
Red .ners S 00 o d up Tables
Coff ee oolc Hexagon map t! or
p ne $60 each Rocker SSS
naple or p e tab e 4 cha s
$225 Hu ch $:275 7 pc D nc e
S 109 S pc 0 ne tte $55 00 Bunk
beds co mplete S 50 cl t!'S o f
d owe $38 Ouev 5 H! mol
I es5 &amp; bo~e sp
g~ !&gt;C S 30
Reg o lw n $60ea
GOOD USED
TV s Freeze 5 bed oom su tes
deslo. s beds ches s d esse s
tab es lamps cho s o he
terns book case col 446 0322
Monday thru F day 9 o 8 p m
Solu day 9 o 5 p m 3 m aut
Bulav ti t! Rd

r.

STARCR AFT W N f ER SALE
Mn moo s tol ers fo ddowns
Some 77 mode s and 1.1 sed un h
n stock Whe ~ you g e se v ce
ond qua t ty at the r gh p ce
Co mp Conley S a c of Sal es
R 62 N of P Pl eoson

BRIDGE

s

977 MUSTANG
GHIA v ny
op V 6 luggage ock spo
package 2 000 m les $3800
Call 446 9476 ohe Spm

All lVPES of bu ld ng note o i
blo(;k b, ck sewe p p•s w n
"dow!&gt;
I ntelto
t' l&lt;
C oude
W n e s R Q G onde 0 Phone
2•5 5 2 olt e 5

992-3723

oe

976 ~O RO MAVERICK v nyl oaf
PS new I es
0 000 m es
eH cond $34 95 Coll.ii46 4610

RESPONSIBLE OLOEii lady to l vc
in and core fa og.vd lady n
Rut ond L ght housewo k and
cook ng nQ lound y Mo v to
hom e than wogeio
Coli
742 2078

PHONE

Sa u day Jan 28
972 CHEVY PICKUP
Fos e
Coo Co
Gall pols 0

tor ~e

-- -- ---

GRAPEFRUI T PILL w th 0 oda,
plan more conven en
han
g opel u te
Ea t sot 51 ~ ng
mea ~ and loloe we ght Revco

see

•

&amp; @ A'antrd

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

12 X b8 Holl y Po k Tro e w l h
expondo washer and d ye
d snwosher un d~ p nn ng 12 x
1oo bldg Ph 606 63B ·~
1975
ndale
4x7o 3 bd
unfurn
to a ele«:
cen tro
anchors 5k n ng mony
a
ext as Ike new set up on
loco mob lo home pa k neo
scl1ool $ 12 300 Ph ~I:::
56:_:9.:____

v

1974 SKYLINE 14 x 56 3 bedroom
ta o Iii ec c S7SOO 992 ~0 19

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
We have enlarged our
service department and
I Will service Holpotnt and
other brands

Pomeroy landmark

9a .Jack W
11i1

Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 -2181

A TT EN TION M'\RE Owne s
AQHA stud se v ce n oduc ng
to Sout11e n Oh o Co aka so
e son of 0 oe B eed lo col
or confo rna on and d spos
t on Phone 698 8241 even ngs
or w te fo b eed ng c:on rac t
Belle Echo Ouor e Ho ses
40225 SR 692. Pome o y O h o
45769

TW N RI VERS MARINE 307 Up '"
R vfj Rood Ch vsle ~o os &amp;
Ser ... ce Co Tlp etc l~v Repo
Cuslom bu It
o le 5 PI o e

44 b 9655

TR STATE UPHOL STERY SHOP
b3 Soc Ave 44b 7833 e~e
ngs 44 6 833
REE SE TRENC HIN G SER\1 CE
wa e sew~ ele«: c gos I fl
o d tches 12 nches wde o 5
I deep Wo crl no hookup~
Co ofte " p m 367 7560

Star m

WIndows,

St o r m

Do o r s
Replacement
Wm
dows
Pallo Covers
Alum mum S1dmg and

AccessOrieS Call

BIU:'S

..___ 446-2642

DOif R WORK eJt: o
g o I
( co 9 r"' 4&lt;~ l! OO:l
5 AN LEY
5 I LM R
C EANER A y I
q o
I o $29 95 up
300 Sq
So1.1 hen~ e
Ol o NtJ
Ca po Cleo11n
A k abou au
Ch st nm g I rP I f'
II
b 4 446 4709

RUSS 8 M AX ELLIOTT
Lennox Heo ng o do cond o
ng Ro p«:o loa n
~u l o o
44 6 85 15 o 446 044S Co li of o
4 30

CHAIN L NK FI: N( NG WOOOH.I
Fl::NCING
AW \1 NG~
Io n
co ve ~
Aut .,
to (&gt; In
povcnc s PI 4 6llOEI
c

SANOY AN D BEAVER I suo u
Co hos off ered se v ces fo I c
nsu once cove age n Gall a
Coun y fo a lmos o «:en u y
Fo n home ond pe sonol p o
pe y c:ave ages o e ova abl e
to netl nd v dual needs Con
toe
Cha lcs Neo
you
ne! ghbo ond ogcn

BACKHOE DOZER 0 I CH R a d
du p
u1;k Co c u o w o k
H o I ~ d Ba clo. ~ oo So
~ Ia d
Oh Ph 74'l 200H o 4"6 'l786

CARPEN TRY com ad d ons
oof ng s d ng ond gene ol
epa s Col 37 9 2635

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

0fft rt d

SAND Y AND BE AVER nsu once
Co has offe ed ~e v ces to f e
Go p
nsu 011 Ce CO\Ie oge
Cou .,. for o mo5 o cen u y
Fa m ho ne ond pe sonal p o
pe y cover ages o e o ~o ob e
o met!t rid v duo needs Con
act Don Pal m~;~ yo 1.1 ne glibo
~nd agen

NILL CAR E fo the elde ly n ou
horne Phone 992 73 4
MOBIL E HOME epo

~

m

5858

PI ANO TUN NG Lone Don els 3
ye a s of serv ce New phone
numbe 992 2581

4

DACK I ERM I NG 5 f:C ALIST
PEST CONTROL l con.sod N
su ed
F eo
~ pcct on
Membe NPCA o d ()PC A C
M He W lko v n 0 1 o Ph
609 4914
LIMESTONE g o"et &lt;Jnd so d At
5 zc s A R chQ ds o d So
Up
pe R v~ Rd Got! po s 0 1 o
Co ~ 4 6 7785
A A A CONTRACTORS Backhoe
dou~ dump uck -"wo k done
by the hou a by lhll JOb Fo
t ee es t mo es Call 256 92 1

-

PA SQUALE nsu o l ng 03 Cedo
S C oli po s Ph 4-16 27 6 a
367 0398 ofl e 5
BILL S MOB lE HOMES and Home
mp o11emen ts Free (151 mo es
Coll446 26od1
WATER WELL DR LUN G W II an
T G on
Ph 7422 879 o
2.4 5 5 00

�•

··~~;n;;t""Jiesults Use SunchJy Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Heal l:ota:le fur :;ale

Heal E.tate for Sale
'

lteal &amp;ta:le far Sale

+

&amp;11 - TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 29, t9'ie

For Best Results Use· Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Heal Mta:telor :;ale

Real &amp;tate fur :;.de

Real ~.- tor :;ale

a•••r~ ri.r Sale

'

Kt!n Morgan
Even1ng s

~usse ll

D. Wood
Evening s

THE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE AGENCY
GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
.
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

446 -0971

440-4618

RUSSEll WOOD

REALTOR

REA LTOR_

446-1066

446-3636

CALL 446-3643

'

446-3408
N EW LISTING : New home consiSTi ng at living r oom,
k i tche n d1n1ng area, u td ii Y room , 2 bed r ooms, both w·

"JUST LISTED" Beautifu l spac ious 2 yr , old ranch , 3
BR , 2 fu l l baths You 'll feel l ike you're lea f .ng through
a decorator m aga z1ne when you look a t this home, fu l ly
carpe ted . co lor coo rdma ted dra pes stay. 8'x 13' F a1rh11f
Sandstone fir eptace ;- 2 ca r garage, eJC.tenslve landscap·
ing, cobbles ton e si dewalks, outdoor barbecue Pl,1, over
half a c: r c Unbel ievable but at S52, 500 .

shower , rur a l wa ter, wr ap around porch, ca rpeted,
garbage ch sposal. all tile com fort s ot home Cal l for

more 1nform a lion . Pr1ce $35,000
t&lt;;ANAUGA :

On Stn Ave ., 2

bedroom ~.

large lo t,

CROWN CITY : 5 ac res w1th unique 1B'x20' new ly con
structed, 1 bedroom home, needs some tin1 shing , pn ce

$9,p00
RODNEY :

We

hnve 2 rnnch st y le,

3 BEDROOM RANCH - 1500 sq L A
and fr ame hom e res lin g on a nice 12 ac:re lo t. Fea tu res
a l arge l 1ving &amp; /Jmi l y r-oom &amp; spa ciOUSkll c: hen . Kyg er
Cr eek Sc h Dist On l y $31,900 .

DES I RASLE LOCATION - Beaut1fUI 4 bedroom br 1c k
ranc h 1n sunk ist Villi'lge. Th 1s 4 yr . old hOme offers a •
very a ttrac t ive and spa c 1ous l1vtng room , d 1n1nQ room ,
2 oa th S and 2 c ar garage. A good qual1 t y hOm e for
$46,900

PLANTZ SUBOIV I SION on C1 r cte Dr , J bed room
carpeted hom e, rur al wa1er, 2 extra Jots, total s1ze
180'x140' . FA , nat . gas heat , on ly 5 mtnu tes from
Ga lliPO liS or hOSPi tal . $39,500
CLIPPER MILL New ly renovnted , 3 bedroom hOme
wtth w b f 1r ep1ace. carpeted, nver fron tge &amp; v1 ew . 2
c ar garage, mus t see to apprec 1Cife Pn ce $30,000

LOVELY FAMilY ROOM - Very
I
level 1n J ay Dr 1vc This fm e home fea tur es built 1n kt t
che"n, lnrge &amp; attr ac t1v c fa m1 ly r oom , 2 ba th s and a
la r ge 2 cM garuge. Exce l len! ar ea l or chi ldren Owner
l r.Jn sfcrr ed so make us a n offer

GA LLIPOLI S CITY · 5 Bedrooms. loc ated m center of
downtown , ca n be used as 2 apartment s, n1ce ty f i ntsh
cd , some fur:n1 l ure 1ncluded $35 ,000

;.

T hin k ahead to next sprtng and 1 am sure you w 111 see
the pot en tial of th 1S welt cared for hOme. Situated on 81
of an acre, W!fh r 1ve r f ron tage . Lots of room tor a boa!
dock plu s o lh ~ r rec r eaTional act 1vi l 1eS Call now for an
appointment to see this hOm E.', tomorrow cou ld be too
late

$21 , 000 ~

Nice 3 Bedroom bungalow
with basement &amp; garage.
$32,000. 2 acre of ground .
Tuppers Plains.
New 3 bedroom home wi th
garage
In
Craw ' s
Subdivision . $41.000.
Nice small home located In
Darwl" , Ohio on 51 Rl. 33,
$19,900.
Have
Bus1ness,
and
Investment property In
Pomeroy .

SO' 'D

GALLIPOLIS CITY LIMITS · Sm all co tt.1 ge, Cl
ty water , c lly sewer, fenced 1n ya rd , small orchard .
de tached garage, na turAl gas Pr1 ce S23,000

GALLIPOLIS: For sa le or lease, 15, 000 sq fl , 1 floor
brick bui lding wi th room for 40 autos m p a r~m g area
No steps, 1dcal for prof essiO nal olf ices Cal l fo'\more
Informa tion .
EWINGTON : Corner lot w - sta t•on bu ll d1ng , plus addi ·
t1onall ol across str ee t Cali tor more .ntormation .
NEAR PORTER : (Wheilton Rd) Modern 3 bedroom
h ome, plu s 30 ro ll mg ac res. fin 1sncd basemen t . A n1 ce
p l ace to move the famd v Pn c(" S59.oon

WE ·Ne- ED LISTINGS , IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SELLING GillE US A C"LL .... LET US HELP YOU!
PLANNING, IF YO U DON ' T SEI:: TH E
U5 . WE PROPERTY YOU WA~T
HAVE
A
LIST
OF IN THI S AD . CO.LL. WE
P~OS PECTI VE BUYERS
MAY BE AALE TO FINO
AND WE ' RE A N XI OU' JT FOR YOU
TO SERVE YO U
'v'OU ' RE

p::&gt; SELL , CALL

EXTRA NICE RANCH ....._ Ideal for smal l f am ily . 2
bedroo m ranch on Rou sh L.'lne in Cheshire The owner
has spent som e t1me redecor atmg lhts line hom e ( new
ca rpet , new pat io with conc ret e tabl e and be nches, new
hot wat er tank , new Formi ca etc ) and now Wa nts the
property sold Incl udes ca rpor t &amp; n1ce lo t, r ura l wa ter
and a good well $35,900 .
85 LOCU ST
Th e c harm &amp; grate on l y fo und m an
older home ca n be fou nd 1n th1 s larg e old 2 storv Col
on1 al Th1 s spacious hom e fea tur es a· lar ge llv 1ng room
and fam il y room , 21 ~ ba thS, fu ll ba se m ent &amp; large
wal~ 1n a f11 c EnJOY t he sw1m m1ng pool 1n t he pnvate
fenced in backyard $49,500
QUIET &amp; SEC LUDED ........ 17. ac: res Wtth a br eath tak tng
v tew ol th e Qt)IO Vall ey . 2 m ile from town . Beaut1 ful ar ·
ch1t ec t deS igne d Y shaped br1 ck hOm e Oi l ers la r ge 11 v·
tng &amp; fam ily room , extra n1 ce k 1tchen, 3 bedrooms &amp;
11 1 ba thS Call tor an appo1n1 ment
UNIQUE 2 STORY - U nusual bu t be au tiful hOme Wit h
800 sq ft of ru stl e li ving 1n th e fam1 ty room atone t H as
a bal cony th at suppor ts master Qedroom &amp; ba th ) &amp;
ov ers1zed w b fi r epl ace There are 3 otl'ler b edroom s,
large liv ing room and ba lh En 1oy the fen ced in sw1m
m1nQ pool on I ucre lot C1 ly Sc hools Make us an off er
SOLID QUALIT Y - E;~~;celle nl conslru c: t io n desc nbes
th 1s 2 stor y 4 bed room home 1n love ly Tara Esta tes Of
l ers form al entr ance &amp; d 1n1ng, superb k1l chen. a ttr aC·
l 1ve tamtiY room wtth w b f 1replace, 31 1~ bt hs and
l 1n1 shed ba semen t w1th rec room Large 2 ca r garage
&amp; use ot commun 1ty sw 1mm mg pool $68,500.

BOB LANE, BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

OFFICE 446·7900
LET THE GALLERY SELL YOUR PROPERTY
1ST AVENUE LOCATION - 8 roo m house, Wit h a
large attached storeroom . Th 1s .property also has a
ni c:e 7'1' car garage ren tal apar tm ent , A l lth1S sets on a
65' corner lot 1n Ga lli pol i!:., r~qht on the nv er Th 1s
wou ld be a beautdvl s1te for a boa t dock and o ther sum
mer activ itieS.
FHA APPROVED &amp; APPRAISED -~ 3 yr. o ld cozy
ran ch se tfln g on a l'h ac re lot in B id well Eat in ki t
chen equ1pped W1th rang e and refrig . 3 bed room s, llh
baths. v~ basem,ent.
ROOM TO ROAM - Li ke new 3 bedroom, l'h bath ,
'l4'x72' V 1nd.ile Modular home with 8 acres of land 1n
Kyger Creek School District. Kitchen appli ances go
w ith sale'. This Is a larg e c;om fortable home offermg
cen tral air and the best of construct ion . Priced at only
$2'/,000 .DD.
.
GET AWAY FROM IT ALL! - Enloy the peace and
relax ation o f the quiet surr ou nd1ngs of th1s 5 year old
bnck loca t ed on 3 ac:res of la nd half way between R 10
Grande and Oak H1l l Your new home se ts in a v ery
scen1 c: 1oc at10n w'i th a pond and surrounded by pine
tr ees. T hiS hom e has a 2 car carport , a .Ja rge com
fortab le I1V1ng room with a f1 replace, Ia ra e- kit and din
1ng area , family room and 3 BR
BARGAIN PRICED - Th e perfec t home for c h ~l dren
Th1s hom e is onl y 4 yr s. old w1th 3 BR. kit. equ 1pped
with oR ., ref. and di shwa sher. separ ate d1n 1ng , tam .
room and a swimming pool s1 tuated on a ntce size lot m
Bidwe l l. Pr iced atonly$33,500.
,
VACANT LAND
1 5 acr e tra c16 m ile out ~oute 2 1 8 on r1g h1 , $9,500 00.
2. 3 acre t rac t at corner of Route 325 and Cora Mil ls
Road with an ex 1sting concrete block buil dmg ,
$8,500 .DD .
,
3. Approx . 15 acre tra ct near Eur eka ; $8,500 00
4. Approx 10 acre tra ct near Eureka ; $8,500 00.
5. 3 orae.ac r e trac ts on Cadmus Crossroad at $4 ,000 eac h
- all•n one tract

NATIONAL ADVERTISING

WITH THE
GALLERY OF HOMES
CALL AT HOME:
446· 0458
446·0458
446-0002
361· 1529
256·6831 or 256-6402
446-4042
446 -1049

ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM BRICK ...... Near Thur ·
ma n, 2200 sq It of luxunous 11vmg 1n the "Countr y'
Fea tur es for ma t dr n1ng, ktt c: hen &amp;
S,howpl ace"
brca k fe~ s t ar ea &amp; f am il y room w1 th w .b ttr eRi ace.
Good 4 ac r e lot S69 ,900
TARA ESTATES - 1954 sq H Nearly new 2 story Col
on1a l hom e featur 1ng 3 la rg e bedroom s w1th a la rge
w.1 lk in close t m master bedroom Formal entrance &amp;
dini ng, a ttr ac t ive fo mll y room wit h w b firepla ce, 2112
ball1s &amp; l ar ge 1 cc1r garage $.63 ,900 .
123 ACRE FARM - 4 mi le fr om town with lots of road
frontage on black top road 40 to 50 acr es of fl at to ro il ·
1ng land (c ou ld mak e nice building lot s) plu s 70 Acres
pas ture &amp; some woods A c:l1a rm1n g old 2 story 4
bedroom Co lona! home with 2 moder n wood ·burn1ng
l1replaces, larqe f t~mi l y r oom &amp; bu llt ·1n k 1t chen Large
dai r y barn &amp; seve ral good outbuildings. Call Ike
W1 seman .
OWN ~OUR OWN BUSINESS - Mote l Car r y Ou t ·
Res1den ce. A Cha nce to be your own bos~ With t h1S 12
un1 ts economy pr1 c:ed mot et tha t can be expa nded at
very l1tlle expense. The carr yout IS dotng a super
bUSi ness Th e old house 1s 1n very good cond11 H&gt;n, contai ns 5 bedroom s, 2 kt t c hens, etc Call Ike W1se man tor
further l nl or marton

JAYORIVE 5ml fromtownoffRt 35 Soli d3bedroom
ranc h featuring an a ttra ct i ve l iving room , lar ge famil y
r oom . 1V2 ba ths and n1 ce kilc:hen . 2 car ga rage, patio &amp;
centra l a1r $39,500

BI ·LEVEL - Near Centerv il le - Very n1ce 4 bedroom
b1 leve l on l 11 acre lot'. Ve r y aft r acl1ve 1nterlor Carpet
throughout 24x36 ga ra ge and a super garden spo t
$50, 0DD
RT. 160 - s ACRES - Near V1n ton. An excell ent
start er home with 2 l arge bedroom s Th1s n•ce trdme
ran c: h f ee~ lures a JOx30 f am ily r oom . l arge ftv1ng r oom ,
kitchen w1lh refngertor &amp; ra nge &amp; 1 ca r garage , 5 acre
wooded lot $29.000 . Ca l l Da n Evans at 388·8111

3 BEDROOM NEAR CE"''~ NARY ~ Po ssi ble VA or
J=; HA A ttra ct1 e br1 c'
\e ran c h with large l ivmg
and fami ly room , 7JIU &lt;.~a ths, garage and carpe l
thr oughout Sundec k and n1ce lot $3 1,900

l""\l)

68 ACRE FARM ~ Price reduced to$46,900 Comple te·
ly remode led, 4 bedr oom home (new plumb.ng and
hea tmg, new carpe t , new k i tch en ). Some excellen t bot
tom l and, ba l ance in roll1ng pa sture &amp; wood land. T he
house, ba rn a. 5 acr es are worth th e askmg pnce
Owner must sell. L oca ted near Jun ct 1on of Rt . 124 &amp;
325
8 ACRES NEAR MIDDLEPORT - Has 2 traller spots
w1 th seph c: tank s and small house 1n good cond1t1on .
F rontage on Rt 124 nea r Junc t iOn Rt 7
OLDER HOME ON II ACRES - Owner needs to sel l A
good cnance for the handyman to get a barga1n Older
home in need of repa~rs but 11veab te The II acr es are
bea utifu l &amp; flat w 1t h frontage of Rt 325
7 ROOMS, 3 BEDROOMS - In tow n 2 stor y fr am e
home 1n very good cond1 t 1on L arge fa mil y r oom &amp;
buil t 1n kitC hen 2 bat hs&amp; gar age $35,000
MIDDLEPORT ~

Good 2 story frame home 1n the
heart of town 3 bed r oom s, large l1ving roo m, dtnmg
roo m , kit chen &amp; cel lar Ni ce yard &amp; ga r age with 3 rm
apt $29, 500
SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM - Mile from down town .
You ' !! be am aZed al l h ~ space in this n1 ce fr ame home
Featur es a la rg e liv ing room , k1tchen &amp; d1ning area .
Also ntc:e lol w1 th ga r age $28,800.
NEAR SHOPPING ~ 4 bedrooms on 2nd Avenue Solid 2
story br 1c k hom e 1n good cond1t•on Fea tu res 4 large
bedroom s, f am ily room , 2 ba th s &amp; d1v1ded basement.
Pr iced al$34,900 .
LOTS &amp; ACREAGE - See us for you r bu lld1 ng lots
Ca ll today, we may have what yo u wan t

WE NEED LISTINGS
500 2ND AVE.

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3.7 96
CALL 446-3643

GALLIPOLIS

NEW HOME TOUR . We have F I VE BRAND NEW
HOM E S pri ced f rom $32,000 All are quality bu i lt wi th
energy sa vil"]g c ons tr uc t ion, all hav e f1rreplaces, ex tra
tg lots, 1 or 2 car, gi'lrages, 1 or 2 baths , ful l y c arpeted,
beaut if ull y dec orated &lt;'!nd landscaped Ca ll for an ap·
po1n tm ent TAKE TH IS MONEY SAVI NG TOUR 1
TWO BEDROOM w1th space to expand . br1c k and
frame, has we ll planned k1tchen with range, ca rpeted,
all elec tr ic, lg . lOO' x l 50' le vel lot, t r ees . Great sta rter
home, $22,000.

sss ... Don't let th 1s be one of t he oppor tun1t 1es tha t
pa sses you by , restaura nt do1ng gre at bus1ne ss 1n
DOWN TOWN GAL LI POLlS presently seats 48 ,
Modern effi c1en t eq uipm ent , bil l1ards and r;c r eat1on
rm Ca ll or stop by th e o f fice and let us show you th1
ca n make money fo r you
TURN OF THE CENTURY, COLONIAL. Ba s•cal l
sou nd hOme needs a handyman's tou ch but what a
!
4 BR , Lg l iving rm . fam ily rm , formal dm1ng , c h arrn ~ l
mg foyer wi th open sta1 rway , plu s ex tr a lg lot w1
plenty of r oom for a garden Yours for 522, 000
IN CITY 3 BR . f rame home m good c ond , gas
la r ge level lot , fu lly fenced, several ou tbldgs $22,000
CROWN CITY AREA, 112 story home, fr am e
a tum1num S1d 1ng, 3 BR . garage, s torm doors and
dows, 2 c:tc r es , $17,500.

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING SPECIAL ? W e
homes $59,000 and up , Shown by appoin tm ent only
COUNTRY PLACE . P• :~ m il es from c: ily , 3 BR ranch ,
car oort. U S steel S1d1ng , 31'• acres fe nced $28, 500

,5

· ImmEdiate Po 5se ss.t0n - T his love ly home
TOc a1ed
on Qebby Dr . and 1t ' s less than one year old . Three
targe BR 's, one and a half baths, large LR. bu 1lt ·1n k1f
c_hen •nclud1ng range, d1Sh washer, disposa l and bar .
ThiS f 1ne home tncludes all drapes , and i t 1S carpeted
kIf.

35 to 40 acres of land surroundmg one of th e ntcest
homes 1n th e area The above desc r ibed 1S loca ted only
two miles f rom down town Gall1po11s . Call now for an
appo1ntmen f .

Lookmg
a home
acreage? If so give a ca ll right
now. We ar e offering a ver y n1ce older home t hat has
been r ~model ed If' om top to bo ttom . Thi s fi ne home has
a fu l l ba sement Also you will enjoy nearly 30 acres of
hill land iu st nght for graz1 ng a few cat tl e. also for
h1kmg . ThJ s property offers an ama zing panoram tc
view of t he bea utifu l Ohio River . Ca ll now lor an
appomtment
town and at the same t im e en joy co unl_ry
Yo u will love thiS\ modular home t hat 1n·
the extras. mc ludmg centra l air , form al
r oom and
$30's

Nea.r ty new fully equipped mi lk ing parlor, ptpeflne,
tank, approx 95 acres, 3 ponds, la nd lays good for
dairy farming 3 BR r emodeled f arm home, family rm ,
Th1 s farm ca n be bought Wi th all fa r m equipment m ·
elud ing a fine herd of cat tle A l so 127 add' ! acres
available for lease JUST LI STED SHOWN BY AR..
POINTMENT ONLY ,

T~~!~~~[H

ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY 's FINEST FARMS
bea utif ul se tting, land lays genfly ro ll ing with a few'
acres wood ed hills1 de, exce llent development land or
highly productive farm . SpaC IOUS 4 yr , ol d ran ch hdme
has 4 BR , 2 fu ll baths, formal d1n 1ng, fam i ly rm ., plush
carpe t througt'lout 2 ca r ga rage With workshop. Da ir y
barn eQuipped to sell Gr ade A milk, other ou t bldg 1800
lb . 1ob. b ase, a l so hc,s~older home suitab le for ren t 1ng,
Gas, 01 1and coa l rig hts Inc I with farm . 117 ACRES .

RIVER FRONT - 3 lots
and 7 room house. Bath,
nat. gas furnace , city
· water,
and
excellent
garden .
Wan t
only
$16,500.DD.
CORNER LOT - On Stale
road. 3 bedrooms, bath,
nat . gas furnace . city
water, and ga rage. Need
SlS,SOO.
IN THE COUNTRY - 5
room frame home. Cistern,
bath, fireplace , and almost
an acre of la nd. Asking
$7,500.
GOOD OLD HOME - Has
3 bedrooms with large
closets and storages. 11!1
baths. nat. gas furnac e,
city water and garage
$27,500.
40 ACRES - Small barn,
spring and dug we lL Good
hoUse site and nice hunting
land .
45 ACRES - L.t . water.
electric, and septic tank .
Will fake a qui ck offer of
$10,000.
BUY REAL ESTATE, IT'S
A
KEY
TO
YOUR
SECURITY
AND
WEALTH.
Helen L. Teaford
Gorden B. Tea lord
Sue P . Murphy
Rea It or Associates

190 ACRES, 60 tillable, 100 acres pas ture fenced, 2
ponds, tobacco ba se, some t imber , 3 barns, oth er
ou t bldg. 4 BR br ic:k hom e, nearly com fe ted. F 1rep ta ce
1n LR, fu ll basement. ga r age Perfect for beef cttle
Call for appoinlment
PROSPECTIN'? This f arm has good po ten t ial for gas,
oil or coal 77 Acres, Approx 1200' Rd f rontage, 22
acres 11mber , 25 acres tillbl e, 30 acres fe nced pas ture,
str eams, 5 rm frame home, other outbldg . $32 ,000 .
PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND near proposed i nter
change new Route 35 Th 1S would be an idea l loca tion
for motel, apar t ments. r estaur ant, etc, owner will
fi nance, ca ll for morP dP I.::.i t-.

-

-----

CommerCi al properly app ro ~t . 17 FURNISHED 2 bdr mobile home
Util1t1cs pd Adu lts No pe ts
acres level land , loca ted at
Oep . req . Call 446 -4170 or
TupptHS P/(lm s on Oh10 Reul e
4&lt;1 6 529 1 bel ween 4 and 6p
7 Phonf! (614 ) b67 6304
~
----·-----·
--~-VA-FHA . 30 yr l 1nonc1ng Ireland HOUSEKEEPIN G ROOM, range ,
refngerot or
s1ngle , S75
Morlgoge, 77 E Slole, Athen s,
uttll ti &amp;s pd . .446-44 16 alter 3
phone (61 4) 592 -3051
--~
'~.E·cm"--~------~
TWO STORY 3 bedroom home
house FA ' fur nace, storm w 1n· FURNISHED GARAGE opt . 514 S
dows. f1replace In M1ddlepor t'
M iddlepor t
No
4th Ave
Phone 992·3457 or 991-5867
ch1ldren or pels . 992 -7140. __

3 AND 4 RM furn1 shed and un·
furnished opts Phone 992
5434

446-3636

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
large lots. Ccll992 7479 .

ANY HOUR
OR BETTER YET ,, , STOP BY AND SEE US AT 25'1•
LOCUST ST ~, GALLIPOLIS, 0.

TWO BEDROOM Tra iler . reel
nJce
Adu ls only . Brown 's
Trailer Pork , 992-3324 .
TWO
BDR
H OUSE
o'n
Ne1ghborhood Rd I mtle fr om
c1ty l1m 1ts Not gas heat, c1ty
wa ter . No pels Oep req . SI '40.
per month Calf 446 -0822 .
12 K 60, 2 bdr mob1 le home. Toto!
electr iC, on Bob McCorm ick Rd .
5 mtn dn111!' from town No
pe l s • Adu l ts on ly , Ca ll
446-2543
The amazing Blue LuStre wd l
leave
yo ur upholstery
beautifully !oh and clean Rent
electric $hompooer , $1 Cen tro/
Supply
_ ,_,___

__

HOUSE FOR ren t. Coli 992-3489
__? Iter 5£~

Cor Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446-&lt;14 777

RON CANADAY, REALTOR

REALTOR
216 E . Second Street

STANDARD
Plumbtng · Healing
215 Th1rd Ave , 446-3782

'I

GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
Heat1ng - A1r Co'n.
dl llonmg , 300 Fourth Ave Ph
446-1637

PlUMBING ~

NEW LOW
ENERGY HOME

DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446 -2735
3 or -1 bedroom atfrochve home
DRAIN &amp; SEWER CLEANING SERwithin c1ty school d1stnct.
VICE , Open 24 Hr , 7 day! o
Please ca ll Joe Schemenouer al
week , Starcher &amp; Son, Ph
446 -4930
256·1391

Near Clay School
HUFFINE 'S INTERIOR
DECORATING
c on 368 ·8847 .

Ttred of paying large util i ty bi l ls ? ! f t he answer 1s yes,
give us a ca ll n ght now We ar e offermg a 4 BR home
that ha s th e economy of natural gas hea t $25,900

-·

Dillon Agency
Hobtrl Dillon, Broker;
Olive Burdette, Sales-

person.
1

Ph. 2U-9346 or 256~ 1281

,New L1St1ng - Owner 1S very anx iou s 10 se ll t his vert
lovel y hor"ne It IS a f ram e ra nch 1ncludmg th ree BR's
( 10&gt;&lt; 13- 10x l1 - 13x l1) , Jlh baths, lar ge l1ving roo m
( 16x20) w 1th toyer . Y ou Will also en ,oy a spa emus ea t m
ktt chen w 1fh self c:lea n1ng eye level oven and a tab le
top range plu s a d1shasher . Also lo ts of wood cabmets
(not plas11cl 1nc lud 1ng form •ca tOp ped co unters Tt11 s
all elec t nc hO me has forced ai r tl ea t and central a 1r
cond111onmg . Th1 S ftn e hom e also ha s an over sized two
ca r ga rag e tt1at has f1n1shed wa lls and a l ex lu r ed ce ll
1ng plus ov erh ead storage with a pull down ladder for
access Th er e are sev era l ot her lme features. C1ty
sc: hool s Ca ll now for f ur th er detail s

EJ~Cc e ll en t

bu1ld1ng site. Three m iles f rom HM C. 1.40
acres surrou nded by very n1ce homes. Call now .
Bus•ness Locat1on ~ 742 Thi1d Ave Store r oo m w1tt1
lots of storag e Could be u sed for r etai l outlet . suc h as
gr ocery stor e or r esta urant II wa s used most r ecently
as a prod uce hou se Price has been redu ced to $11 .000

· Check this one out. Mor e for th e money . This lov el y
home 1ncludes 2 firepla ces And a completely fin1shed
basement

Lookmg for
day

a

two acre bu lling site? Give us a cal l to·

WE ARE OFFERING FINANCING THROUGH VA, FHA AND
CONVENTIONAL LOANS. CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY.

WE NEED LISTINGS 446-4552 ANYTIME

GALliPOUS, OHIO

428 2nd AVE.
your m1nd today M a~e an
effort to get 1n touc h
VIRGO (Aug . 23~Sept.22) Your
hnanc1al prospec ts are Qu tte
brig~1t today Be on your toe s.
as you co uld put somethmg
logether Ihal co ul d la ler we ighl
yo ur wallet down
\11.,
LIBRA (Sepl. 23~0ct . 23) The
role cu t out for you today IS that
[lj~
of a leader Delegate assignAIJO
1 ljl\fJ me nts. bul don ' t relm quiSh
UUU
l!JU . command to the less adept
~ SCORPIO (Oct. 24·No• . 221 The
bottom l1ne •s the only on e th at
Jan . 29, t978
should be o f Importance to you
Others Will be pu1t1ng thetr toes
today In lhe !mal tally you .
m doors tha t you cou ldn ' t open
s hould come ou t as well as . or
on yo ur own th 1s coming year
be tt er th an you hoped
Wi shes and des.res co uld be
SAGITTARIUS (No• 23-Dec.
rea 11ze d through l he good will
21) You m1x well toda y. 11
you .,.e estab lis hed w1lh ~ey
be hooves you to go to large
people.
gathenngs where you can rub a
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2D~ Feb ~ 19) lot of elbows
Beca use you treat fn ends in a
CAPRICORN (Dec . Z2-Jan ~ t9)
sympathetiC and unders tand In competitive Sil uat•on s today,
Ing man ner today . you not on ly you 'ha\le a dec1ded edge Th 1s
chalk up po1nts now . but il also 1s espec 1alfy tr ue 11 th e ra ce •s
gives you something to draw for career stake s
upon m th e future Find out 1NE:WSPAPEit ENTf:R PHI St-~ ASSN)
more abou t yourself by send·
mg for your copy o f AstraGraph l eller Mail 50 cents for
For Monday, Jan . 30, 1978
eac h a nd a lo ng , selfaddre ssed . stamped envelope
to Astra-Graph, P 0 . Bo x 489 ,
RadiO C1ty Stal1on , NY .. 10019
Be sure to sp~c t ly your btrlh
s1gn
PISCES (Feb. 20~March 201
YoU r harvest toda y cou ld come
from se eds th at o th ers have
sown yet 1n each In stance
yo u' ll be as welcome to the
crops as those who planted
them
Jao. 30, 1978
AR.ES (M.a rch 21 ·Aprll ' 19)
Allh ough , by p r eference , The key to your success this
you 're an tndepe ndent pe rson, com•ng year Is laying the nght
foundat ions. If you do . the
today yo u may find it more
pleasant and advantageou s to outlook Is rosy If no t. the
result IS a toss-up , at best
do th1ng s with partners
TAURUS (Aprii20~May 20) Cu rl ~ AQUARIUS (Jan. 30-Feb. 191
People ln smaller roles eou ld
ing up w1th a book by a warm
me ss up your plans today Gp
l tr e or Just watching the lube
nght to the top with your ideas .
1sn t where 11 s at today. You
Solicit th e s upport of those
need actlvlt tes callm g for physwhose words carry more
ICal exertion
GEMINI (May 2t ~ June 20) Ot h ~ weight Like to find out more of
what lies ahead for you ? Send
ers may say or do th ings today
for your copy of A stro·Graph
to make yo u feel1mportanl and
admi red . Take thetr remarks a, Lefler by mailing 50 ce nls for
face va lue II won 't be shallow. each and a )ong, se lfaddressed , stamped envelope
pra1 se
CANCER' (June 2t~July 221 Un ~ · to Astra-Graph, P.O Bo x 489,
dertakmgs or c llanges m ac~ RadiO C1 ty Statton, N. Y 10019
cord w1th th e wishes ol yo ur Be sure to specify your birth
sign
la mil y as a u,ni l today will
result , where eac h wrll ga•n 1n PISCES IFeb.ZO.March 201 In
bu smess matters you're lucky
so me favorable measure
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) So m e~ today , bu• do be conservative
one absent from your thoughts Don't touch anything that looks
lor some time may fla sh, into hke a gamble even if you feel
For Sunday, Jan. 29, 1978

- -RO•GRAPH
AST
· Bede Osol
Bermce

Qlllt.. EXCELLENT DAIRY FARM

WE HAVE MORE FARMS, HOMES &amp; BUSINES
PROPERTY AVAILABLE, CALL
HOMESITE$ for sole 1 ocre ond St t EPING Rooms, weekly ra tes
up. Middleporl , near Rutland .
Po_ck_C_e_n~r~ H o te"l~"c""-:---:
Coll992 -748l
LOW weekly and monlhly roles at
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 both!. . ~ : ~~~H o le! ~olb- 17 4 3
all elec., 1 acre, M1dd/epor1
cl9se Ia Ru tland, Phone 992 - ti GHT housekeepmg room . Pork
7481
~~~H5:.t_e 1, ·--;-~~-::--;;:­
SM ALL form for sole 10° ~ down SLEEPINC room s for rent. Gallic
Hole I
owner fmonced . Monroe County, W Vo Phone (304) 772- TWO bedroom fo rm hous-e in
3102 or (304 } 772 -3227
Henderson , W.Vo . Double
--fron ted fi replace, -;; term win
COUNTRY farmland w1th secluddows and Qll heot $155. a
ed woods, wo ler ond good 0(·
month Respons1b le peop le on
cess tn Monroe County, W. Vo
ly Su brrut resume to. 438 River
$1, 000 down, ca ll (304) 772 bend Rd Great Falls, Vo ,
~~30:'1_772- 3127

NEW LISTING - A house
to be cherished and large
too . Approx. 1,600 sq ft o f
living space, 4 bedrooms, 2
tar garage. I acre. 4 yrs
old , modern and 1n the
county . 536,1 00 .
A STEAL - 6 acres 1n th e
country. la rge garden ,
garage, 2 yr. old double
wide. $15,000 ~ 0D .
OllER 3 ACRES - Home
been modernized , barn ,
and bu s ines s building .
JUST LOOK $11.500.00.
OLDER HOME Nice
location . 3 bedrooms, bath,
N.G. heat, kitchen with
range &amp; ref. Porches .
$1\ ,000.DD.
JUST LOOK '- 2 acres,
small barn, 6 yr. old home.
3 or 4 bedrooms , FREE
GAS, brick &amp; frame , perma
pane windows , carport .
JUST S32,DOO.OO
THIS OFFICE STANDS
READY TO SERVE YOU
WHENEVER
YOU ' RE
BUYING OR SELLING A
PROPERTY.
!CALL
TODAY)
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK.KATHY&amp;LEDNA
CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992-1259' 992 -6191

Phyllis
Willis l
Leadingham Liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiip~p.---~~ Loveday
•
Realtor Associate
Realtor
Ph. H. 245·9114
Ph. H. 446-9539
'
Gallia County's Fastest Gro1oing Real 'Estate Al(tmcy

\Ye Need Your Home or Farm To Sell

Live close to
almosptlere
el udes all of
di n ing,lamll

BEAT YOUR WIFE to t he phone to make an appoint ment to see th 1S 3 8 R 50 'x80' tr ee shaded 101
F1n 1~ hed 1 car garage
\.
1c w ell insualted (Last
w1nter 's hea t bil l wa~ lOW) Kyger Creek Sc hool s
$24,DDO

'NEAR

KENNY RATLIFF
TERRY O ' DELL
IIICKIE HAULDREN
BOB LANE

.. .

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

NEAR V INTON · 151 acre tarm , 4 bedroom home,
I OO' x20 ' equ i pment shed , corn cr ib, barn , ti llabl e,
woods and pa s tur e i'ICreage Pr ice $75,000

g~.~~~~~~~LEY

.I

446~ 9557

located 3 miles from Rt . 7.
We51 Shade.
Nice Double Wide 2•x56 on
corner lot In Arbaugh
Addition .
Includ i ng
furniture and appl iances .

87 SPRUCE 4 yr o ld f rame ranch JUS! a few blocks
fr om downtown . Easy access to shOpp.ng &amp; schOols
Features 3 ntce bedroom s and ea t 1n k1tchen Ca ll to
day $25,000 .

NEW LI STI NG ; 3 bedroom , 24' x60 ', 1972 Bolxe
Cascade mobile home, sit uated on 76 acre lot , 2 m i les
from Holzer , wood or coal burn1ng sto ve , electric f.a .
furnace, ru r al water Price inc l udes f urniture , washer
&amp; dryer, man y other amenities Buy fo r $19,500 00

WALT LANE

Tom White, Salesman, Home Phone

Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 74:1· 2003
H1lton Wolfe, Sr.
A ssociate
. Home Phone '149 - :1~89

M IL L CREEK RD : New. 3 bedroom ranch styl e home,
many amen i t ws. only 3 miles f rom down town
Ga l lipol is. Ever y thin g new. $47,500

IF

Manager

Check with us before vou
buy.

Situa ted on 75'x l 20' lo ts These a re rea l ba r ga1ns on to
day 's m ark et C~1 11 for more m fo

•

BUD McGHEE

3 bedroom ,

c arpe tedall e lectn c homes for sale now lor $25,000

l'

GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.,
Broker
107 h Sycamore St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992~ 6333
Office Hours: 9 A.M. to ·•
P.M. '
Close
Thursday s anc
Saturdays at noon."

VSREALTY
Branch

Have 4 Bedroom, ranch ,

Mose Canterbury

na tural ga s Pricf'd $18,500

HOBSTETIER
REALTY

V12.J!!Jl1

QJ

'

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~[!)[]

W

Gltlwlli~mv

1t' s a calculated nsk
ARIES !March 21-Aprll 191
There 's good and bad in part
nersh1p arrangem ents today l
You will probably accompli s h
what you se t out to do , but
there could be tense moments
along the way
TAURUS CApri! 20-May 20)
You may be the targel o f
another's generosity today
When the lime comes to help
someone else , yo u probably
won'J be eq ually lib eral
GEMINI CMay 2l~Jun e 211)
UnlesS some lhmg matenalts at
sta~e. you should be very
am1a ble and easy-going today
If thai happe ns, yo u co uld be a
trifle diffiCUlt
CANCER CJune 21-July 221
The sp ~r~t IS wdl1 n g bu t !he
llesh IS weak today As long as
th1ngs go smoothly , you 'll be
f1ne, reversals co ul d QUICkly
cha nge your demeanor
LEO CJuly 23~ Aug.221 Don I le t
you r fee lings dommate your
10g1c today That co urse of
acllon would lead you astray .
Stay leve l-headed ants you ·n b e
able to cope
VIRGO CAug. 23~Sept.221
Keep you r cool and you can
gam personally today . If you
fee! a sense o f urgenc y and act
1n haste , it could hind er 1nstead
of helping you
LIBRA CSept.23-oct.231 If ,
you 've formulated a plan to
ach1eve an obJective today ,
st1 ck to 1!
Last m inu te changes, Will dis rupt thmgs to
the pomt Where you co uld fall.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24~Nov.Z21 In
Situations that you 're a part of
but lack control today, don ' t try
to force your Jdeas on others
li sten and say li llie
SAGITTARIUS CNov.23Dec.21) While you're very
good at advisin g oth ers today,
restrt ct your words to matters
you are expert 1n. Good intenM
ttons, but bad co unsel, could
cause chaos
CAPRICORN CDee-2%-Jaa II)
Today, go 11 alone 11 you have
som~thmg1 big you want to do .
. Associates may lac k your Perception and ca use the whole
project to become s talled .
jNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

MOBILE HOMES l OTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COMMUN ITY
Loca tgd on Rl 141 , C1ty water, c1ty
schools, S m1n , from Gallipolis
and 1-l olzer Ho sp11al.

CAN
DREAMING
Ranc: h styl e home w 1th all the room .:md
be;~u!y you cou ld drea m of Form ol 1 1~ .
room &amp; din . room, Jg , k1 tchen with ea t 1n
bar, lots of ca b1net s, dt s hw~sher and ~ nd
range. Family room haS a rustl e set fln~ ,
stone w .b . !lreplace and sli ding p~ t1 0
doors. 3 lg BR , 2 t ull ~athS .up s ta1 r~
Downstairs 1ncludes a ru stle look •ng tam1
ty room w 1th wood burner. lg r ec. roo m .
'''2 bath , u tll 1fY room and sew r oo m -or
poss. 4th BR . THI S H OM E WA S DES I G N
E D WITH LIVING IN M I NI)

8 ROOM HOUSE
IN CITY
This is a v e r y modern a t
tract 1ve
bric:k
nom e
loca ted on l y a sh or t
distance fr om c1 ty school s,
3 BR , bath. shOwer . v ery
n •ce ~itchen , lot s of
cabmets &amp; almost all ap
plian c:es poss1b le 1ncluded .
Basement , n a t. ga s FA
turn , cen tr al ai r , very nice
carpet . Many more inv1 t 1ng
fea tures 1ncludmg new c ar·
port &amp; c h ai n link fence.
This hom e 1S 1n top condi ·
t 1o n
SEL LIN G
REA SO NABLE

7ROOMHOME&amp;
PROFITABLE
RESTAURANT
With 37•1.. A . of leve l land .
Home h as 3 B R ., base·
ment, forma l d1ning room .
livi ng room with woodburn
1ng f ireplace, modern k it
che n. All roo m s have wall
to wall carpetin g Storm
doors and wmdows Milk
1ng hou se &amp; parlor, c:orn
cnb . RE STAURANT - 40
ft x521t , w 1th all equipm en t
needed , Appro)( 50 ft . from
home. C1ty wa ter sy stem
All m1neral ngh ts goes
w 1th proper ty A n ic e home
with an excel lent Invest·
ment budd1n~ . CA L L NQW.
J9ACRES- NEWHOME
On Sc ott School Rd ., 4 BR ,
eaHn kttc hen, large 11v 1ng
room · 12 ft . x 28 ft . 2nd
house has 6 room s, 3 BR ,
barn (b loc k) ( &amp; lots of
omer
build.ngs. 2 car
ga rag e separat e from
hom e. A ppro&gt;&lt; . 27 . A of
t 1mber- some p1ne s 12 A .
t1llable. Good line f ences .
All mineral n gh ts goes
with land

NICE COLONIAL HOME
IN GALLIPOLIS
One of the attrac ti ve older
two s t o r y homes
In
Galli poli s, 7 room s. 4 BR .
2112 baths, built· in kit .. F .A.
nat . gas furnace, ni ce larg e
front porch, screened 1n
back porch, nic:e lot w ith 4
car garage in back, close to
churct1 and bus 1ness sect.
downtown. T h1s property 1S
in good ~ ond1t 1on and pn c·
ed to Sell

OTHER
PICTURES
ALL OUR LISTINGS
IN THE OFFICE . COME
IN &amp; LET US HELP WITH
YOUR REAL ESTATE
NEEDS.
WE BUY, SELL
ORTRDE
Douglas Wetherholl
Broker, 446·4244
SALES ASSOCIATE
Earl Winter s 446-3828
John Caudill 67S -4167
Charles Kiesling

14 ACRES
i ROOM HOUSE
5 miles from Ga l lipolis .
N1ce 3 BR home, 2 baths.
Nic:e modern kitchen with
electric range and ref ri g ,,
garbage dl sposa t
Rural
wat er syst em Ni c:e se tting
- house nest led in c leared
area '" woods Mu st see
this home on the Inside .

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO .
SpeCIOIIZII"lg m FHA ond VA
Home loons. Also Refinonc1ng .
463 2nd A ve . loco ted 2nd floor ,
Gall ipolis , Ph . -446 -7172 .
l OTS FOR SALE . Blacktop, oil
ulilit1es . Col1446-0166
CARRYOUT. Coli anyt ime 10 AM
to 10 PM do1ly . Ph 367 -7672
lAND AND BUILDINC
30 ;~~; AD newly constructed
aluminum butldmg. s1 1uated on
~ loh . loco ted O('l Rt. 7 Crown
C•ty . Good busmeu locot1on .
Coll25b-1 440.
BY OWN ER
Beaut1ful
bric k
ra nch
In
Gall ipolis On .3 city lot s, 3 bdr
2 bolhs , foyer , LR, OR FAm
rm ., l oundr~ rm., Iorge 2 cor
goroge K1 tchen has 1dsposol ,
d1shwosher . bu 1ll -m rohge and
oven , lots of .;ob1nets , corpe1ed
th roug htout Sw1m m1"9 pool ,
17 K 35 oval natural gos ht,lo t
alr cond , chain link fen ce Coli
446 3964 for oppomlmen t
Price · $58,900.

123 A. CLEAR EO
ROLLI NG LAND
Approx . 40 A lillrtble , 60 A.
pas tur e Ntce t ile b loc k
barn , appr ox
4 0 ' ;~~;60' .
equ tp shed and lot s ot
other bu ilcl , 5 c herry tree s.
3 ap pl e, grpc IHl r bor
Str eam f low s t11 rough pro
per ty A ll minera l r !ghts
goes (. room home, 3 B R.
ba sement Storm doors and
w1 ndows . Bu111· 1n k i tchen
c btnets, cook. stow &amp; clec.
re fri g . ~ Fuel oil forced air
turn ~ l en t y ol w a ter . 2
garages A r ea l good tarm ,
only 1111 mil es to bank and
groce ry store CALL NOW

ATENTION BUILDERS
Choice building sightS ad
jo1 ning Porterbrook Sub
div iston . F •ve acr es leve l
l a nd
a ll
per f ec t
tor
build tng. V E RY MU CH
DE S I RED LOCAT IO N.
8 ACRES- LOTS
OF PINE TREES
Deep well Elec1r 1c: pu mp
Well tlouse, epllc tank , 4117
miles to M1ne No. 1 Ap
pr ox. 5 acres of t i mber . All
8 acres level land .

RIVERFRONT HOM E
3BEDROOMS
Bea u t iful view on the Oh io
River right fr om your li v
ing r oom . L1ke to bOa t, f 1sh
and r elax each eve nmg on
your own riverfro nt? 6
room s remod eled hOm o,
nice modern ki tchen, F
and B porches. na t gas
tor ced a1r fyrna ce, all
room s ar e m cel y carpe ted
Your own wa ter system
Whtf e al um . ou tstde cover·
ing, 2 large n tcel'r' shaded
lots w 1th ch erry tree s and
one pea c h .
A
very
econom •ca l place to live
19112 ACRES
ROLLING LAND
Well with elec tric pump.
Septic tan k . Con cr ete pad
tor mobil e hom e hookup.
Ce lla r house . Lots of apple
trees Som e timber Good
lme fen ces. A ll m 1nera1
right s goes . Won' t la st
lo ng .
CA LL
NOW
$15,DOO.DD.

12ACRES - BARN MOBILEHOME
1987 tb s toba'c:co base, ap
prox 7 acres t illable, 5
acr es tirhber , Ctay Twp ,
Ga ll ipol is City Sc hoo! Dist.
Kirkwood, 2 bedroom home
has Its own water system
1.000 ga l sept1c tank . Al l
miner al r1ghts goes, l'h
miles off State H 1ghway 7
Call for more details.

ONL Y!.:12,000 ,
N ic e 3 be drooms, lJi-1 111, liv
lng room . mmll! t'n ert t m
kit cncn
with
bu il t "'
ca bltlCtS
Fv ll bilSCillC nt ,
almost nPw gn !i for ced a ~r
tl,lrnn cc &amp; hot wrllrr 1m rtter
Loc ated Witt11n I M c 1t y
1im1ts Looking lor a 111 c
c tc cm 11ome. cl ose to snopp
1ng area A B uy, Cilll Now
KYGER CREEK
SCHOOL DJST
M odern 6 room ran ch
110me Thi s n ice hom£' t'id!i
;;~ n ex tra la r go ca t i n kll
ch en with lo ts al built in
ca b1 nels &amp; applla tKe s . J
sp ac1ous B R. &amp; n1cc ba lll .
Has lots o f c iO!iL' I sp;1 cc
Con c re te
drivl'WriY
&amp;
ga r rtge N e~ t urnl Cli'IS F A .
fu rnocc E x t t" IM9C n •CL·I v
la ntJSCo'lpCd lol I l11 ~ h On lC
1S pr tcc d r1g ht
CAL L
NOW
4ACR ES MOR E
OR LESS
wooded lot So rm ~ p me
trees Appr ox I rni lc trorn
centent.HY on Her man
Nor thup Rd Pi ck your ow n
b ldg . s1 te.

30 ACRES

WOOD E DAR ~ A

Vil cant la nd , (111 rrlln er al
r igtl l s goe s A uood p lac e to
rclr eo l H unt or tu st he by
you r self O N LY $1·1 ,900 00

SPRING VALLEY
SUBD IVI SION
Vacan t
to ts. nl c:c
bulld 1ng
lot s with
u t ilit ieS tti cr l'. LOt
101 8' by J7t.:r . Bel ter
•um now .

srze
&lt;'II
SIZC
get

NO DOWN PAYMENT
WITH VA lOAN
6 Rooms , 3 BR nppro x 1112
mi f rom Ga ll ipoli s E lr.-c
trl c FA furn.1 ce w 1lh ce n
tr.11 a1r , modern kit c h en,
G illllpol is C 1ty Sc hool D 1s t.
Ful ly c.lrpc l c&lt;l. Gallipolis
C it y wa ter, ".ewagP sys tem
M ctJ I ou tsi de door s &amp; t her
mopo1nc Wi ndows
Smrt l l.
c hi l dr en
go to G reen
School. N Icc level I.J nd
s.c.1pcd tot .
LAND CO NT~A C T
6 roo m ~. 2 stor y, wood
tlrcpl acc,
c ity
b urni ng
wa ter on a l arge lot in V ln
ton $2, 0()0 down paymen t
a nd $133 34 per month Ju st
like rent. Call for more i n·
format ion

ID'ft j'jl THAT SCR.MBLED WORD G"ME
\!:1 ~~ ® byHenriArnoldandBob lee

~ftllNl

~

446 · 3~64

256 ~ 6740

6ROOM
REMODELED HOM E
2 or more bcdroorn s. plum S1d1ng, l o t ~ o f
buli ll l n cabi nets, c i i V wu t cr, nnP c nr
gMagc , nice stH:JdY tr ont por c ll 11.1111 w1th
Sll ower P.Jr tia! ba seme nt with &lt;.c ll n r ,
Sh ingle r oof Large lot . A r ec&gt; l lJU Y tor t11 c
money

FOR SALE
New home, 3 BR, fully
carpeted. all etec. , in
Middleport .
Priced $23,900
C. II 446~3045

~~~~Y~A~,so~=~c~~l

Unacramble the!$8 lour Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to fOfTTl
four ordinary words.

I DORBO

I

~~At

tJ

Ook Holl.l
From Hwy 93 &amp; 279, tok e 2111
L.-"
' .J._ _t_;,...,_:c.,__
,a._.J
lwo m1les fo Co. Rd 4 Turen . . - - - - - - - - ,
l um lett on • ond lollow to
H~ekory Grove, Church Toke 1 .C~~..._;:;~~-\-7"'"""-,
Dnvewoy abou t 30 f&amp;et po st t"
church to house , Do o tittl e and
~ .A_ .A
_.A
sove o lot. l ow down paymen t L~_ __r,_~-~~-&lt;1---"&gt;..L.-L-1

INVIPPQL· t"t
'L7 """)

on d

ref'lt

size

monthly

I

r-----------~

~~n:~~~ss,teod~~e~ re~~:r. EaK~ BYSMO~L

eel lent oppor tun•ty N•ce lhree
bedrootn houu . We can fu rnished motenol s to complete'lmmediole poSS85SIQn No clos·

V 'I
"-- _.A

.

1 5
~ne~
cl~~t~o%:c~
~ e~~~~=~~r~: . . . THE
ment 4500 Lyndale AvenUe

North , M 1nneopolt s, Min·
ne•ola , 55412 . (612 ) 588 · ~758
Moridoy ·Fndoy 8.30-5 .00 cen - Yasttrday'a
trollime ,

'J

I

..A

•~ &gt;S

'YOU'D BE A F00!10 AGGEPT
'THIS AW-4~1:'.
Now.arra nge the circled letters to
torm the surprise answer, as suggested 0y the above cartoon

rI I I I) r I XI X·J
,.,.....,,.,.....,,..--..,r"&lt;[r"'O cro;;r;rw-..v-.&lt;17""""

(Mawera Monday)
Jumbles: ~UTE SANDY BODICE ENTICE
M8Wflf Thauohav•''aquere"t.c.. - DICE
,,...,

�B-12- The Sunday Times..Scnlinel . Sunday. J &lt;&lt;n. &lt;IY. !976

Coal strike cuts short electricity

Rescue teams dig thru
drifts for motorists.
United Pr'"s International
Rescue teams braved bitter
cold to dig through towering
snowdrifts Saturday in a
search for stranded motorists
and other victims of the
Great Bliztard of 1978.
The death tnll !rom the
storm climbed tn at least 79
by SatW'day and officials
feared more victims might be
buried under mass ive

Social
Security
notes . ..

snowdrifts that covered much Amtrak train was halted by
of the Midwest.
an 18-foot snow drift in
Among tlle storm deaths, Indiana . The train's 64
llllnois reported 20 storm passengers
and
crew
deaths. Ohio 14, Indiana II, members waited l'k days
Wlscoosin 10 and Michigan before a railroad snowplow
and Kentucky 4 each.
carried them to shelter
A baby born with a Friday. They were holed up
res piratory problem was at a church sheller Saturday,
among the victims. The child, wailing for the dntl to be
born in Bellefonta me, Ohio, cleared so they could conwas placed on a special train tinue their tr ip to the sunnier
for transport tn a Springfield, climes.
Ohio, hospital. But flle train
I nd iana
National
was stopped by.blowing snow . guardsmen used tanks tn
and the infant died.
knock down snowdrifts oo
Temperatures pllllllf!leled some Interstate highways.
tn zeril and below across the
''They are ramming wave
· Midwest in the wake of the upon wave of 12-foot snow
storm - assuring long life for drifts, and it is pretty tedious
mountains of snow spawned

work," a spokesman said.

by the storm.

"The tanks will punch their
way through, then the
wreckers will pull out
stP!Inded vehicles and the
heavy equipment wtll go at

Police and rescue crews ln

BY TRISCHE DANES I
S. S. Branr h Manager
Six mi1hon employers will
have· much less paperwork
when reporting wages for
social secunty and federal
mcome tax: purposes for over
100 million workers as a
result of a change in the law
effective thi s · year . The

portions of Indiana and Ohio
sea rched roadways for
motorists sta lied by mighty
Oh10
officia ls
drifts .
estunated 200 moturists may
still be stranded in their cars
T~ousands

of travelers

were stranded in emer gency
as
wor kers
s helters

attempted tn plow clogged

change is expected to result
arteries .
ln millions of dollars m /~ Chicago-to-Miami

savings for both employers
and the Federal Government.
For the past 40 years, most
em ployer! have had to report
employees' wages to Internal
Revenue Servwe

ever y 3

months . Most used IRS Form
941 (Employer's Quarterly
Federal Tax Return), along
with detailed wage data on
each employee. Many larger
employers reported on
computer produced magnetic
tape . All employers completed a Form W-2 (Wage a nd
Tax Statement) at the end of
flle year for each employee
which showed total wages for
income tax purposes.
Effective with 1976, employers no longer have to
s ubmit detail ed quart erly
wage data . Instead, !hey will
report wages on an annual
basls, using the famtliar W·2.
This means employers must

complete only one wage
report a year, rather than
fi ve. However, they still must
send summary wage and tax
liability information to IRS
once a quarter .

The first report under the
new system is due in early

1979, covering wages for 1978.
Employers will send the W2's to the Social Security
Adrnlnlstraiton , instead of to
IRS. Employers who have not
been notified of the address of
where to send the report by
the time it is due can get it
from any socia l se~ u ri t y
offtce.
The W-2 is very important
because it is the basis for
determining qua rt ers of
coverage,

needed

lor

en-

titlement to monthly socta l
security

ben e fit s

and

Medicare hospital Insurance.
Monthly
retir e me nt ,
disability, and surviv or s
benefits, which are figured
from reported earnings, are
based on wages reported on

the W-2.
In 1978 , workers will
receive one quarter of
coverage for each $250 of
annual earnings up to a total
of 4 quarters if covered an,
nual 'earnings are $1,000 or
more. The $250 measure will
increase in future years to
keep pace with mcreases in
average wages.

Annual reporting has been
in effect for some 9 miiUon

it. "

Oh io Adjutant General
James C. Clem said he saw
drifts 15 feet high and 100
yards long in one area .
" You don't clear out one of
the those very quick with a

front .. nd loader and a dump
truck," he said.

The homes of 50,000
Ohioans still were cold and
dark . But utility crews
working in convoys and by
helicopter c'lr"pleted repairs
restoring power lor 150,000 ·
Ohio utility customers. The
homes of 25 ,000 other

0

0

•

•
'

•

estimated $48 million in
agricultW"alloses.
Rhodes asked for a moment
of silence for Ohio 's storm
dead , who he termed
"victims of a killer blizzard,
the worst we've ever had ."
Natwnal Guardsmen ,
gove rnment workers and
civilian volunteers were out

SALES DELAYED
BOSTON (UP!) - A
federal judge Saturda y
granted a motion by the
slate of MaS8acbusetts and
environmentalists to delay
the scheduled Tuesday sale
of oil and gas exploration
leases off the New England
coast.

.

Both federal officials and
the oil Industry were ex-

peeled to appeal the rull11~.
in force across flle Midwest to ,
aid in recovery efforts.
::·::::::::::·:::::: ::·:::: .. ::··::·:::·:··::·:::·:::·::::::·::·:::·::&gt;::

for the OEA, warned Wednesday that if flle Legislature

Education Assocmbon says

furntshtng enough state
money it will run afoul of the
Ohio c6nstitulion
Hall, whose ~rganization
.
represents 85' 000 pu bl IC
schoo l teac hers tes ttfted

·
He said man(\ates from the
sta te present "relatively
minor fiscal problems if flley
extst at all "
. ·
He satd tha t although the

spending fraud graft or
. •
•
, H
thro~ngdmon~~-away,t tha 11
1
con li nu\, P °~;.nf t"u ma~e
1oca1 sc oo
tc a s
conscious decisions to spend
"th

John H. Hall, ctuef lobbyist

~::! it\~e Ho~~ichtnan~

standards were set by the

prohalbi.Y ct·ohuld

agricultural employees and
self-employed people for a
quarter century. Now the
system applies to t en times

conducting a study of why 15
Ohio sc hools had tn close last
year and at least 37 others
were in financial difficulty.
The study is part of an
· 1 · ·
overall legis allve mqmry
into how to improve the

ar oh I ud(! trnts till d '
0
many sc 00 15 tc s
th
1
not mee •.m.
In fa ct, satd Hall, some of
fll e mandates !all short of the
board 's minimum standards
.
·
For example, he sa td , the

tha t ' numbe r . Wa ges for . school fina ncing system
.
employees of State a nd local
Hall said the General
·
governments as ~ell as for
Assembly must meet tis

Department of Education re·

public school pupils tn the
state have Ute right tn a
minimum level of education

just as poor families have the
right to a basic subsistence
level of livi ng.

'

F

'

dome sttc employment.
however, will continue to be
reported quarterly .
Annual wage reporting has
the potential of substantially

constitutional duty to provide
a "thorough and efficient"
system of public educalidit,
even if it means sacrificing

red.ucing the pap e rwork
burden on employers, par·
ticulariy smaller ones who
report on paper fo rms. The

programs.
Individual school districts
can add what they wish above
.
flle basic level, Hall potnled

new system al so should
reduce Federal Government
a dmini strat ive cost s and
im prove co mpliance with
Federal income · tax laws.
Legisle~tion eliminating the

need •,, keep quarterly data
should save both the employer and the Government a
considerable amount of time
and money.
Employers can realize a
more immediate savin gs,
ho wever, by jo ining the
growing number who report

wages electronically, SSA
estimates about W,OOO employers with small computers
are capable of reporting on
so·ca lled " fl oppy discs':':
which are relatively ineK·
pensive. SSA sends tape and
disc reporters a verified
summa ry of reported wages

by tape, microfiche, or paper
-

whichever

way an em·

ployer prefers.
SSA has different reporting
plans to meet the needs of

lo ca l contr ol over basic

out

A

visi ting judge in
Hamilton County Commoo
Pleas Court held last monUt

conte ntwn of Gov. James A.
Rhodes

fir st

Bo

minimum .

d f Ed

atio

state

in 1957

·
11 educa- rtona 1serv ice
qmres
personnel for every 1 000
.
. •.
students, while the legtslaltve
· on1Y four .
man daIe ts
" II would lake a lot of
money to meet the state
minimum s tandards, and
'that doesn't
. . , meet 'thorough
h t ..

and efftctenl by a 1ong s o '
Hall io!d the committee.
"If you are going to enforce
. .
da ds
state

mtmmum stan r ,

you aren't going tn have local
control of the educational
program up to that point. And

that
Ohio's
c u r rent
tf you don't e nforce . the
educational system dld not . minimum standar~s, . you

me et

the

constitutional
requirement in that regard.
The ruling is under appeal by
th e Ohto Department of
Education.
The OEA spokesman tidiculed the idea fllat programs

employers who wish to report
by tape or disc. For more
information ask for booklet
TIB-3 , " Magnetic Tape
Reporting" at any social
security office.

The Gallipolis Social
Security Office, 49 Olive
Street, is open to the public
Monday through Friday from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. The phone
number is 446-7660.

don't meet flle consttlultonal
requirement. "

,

Hall said the state s school
funding problems are not the
result of ftscal lrresponsibiUty by local school
boards or
unnecessary
programs mandated by the
General Assembly.
He said the problems result
from Ute faiiW'e of Ute state to
assist fllose districts which
cannot underwrite a ...basic
minimum level of education ,

and from organizations which
have fought the growth of
real estate taxes over the
past six years.
" You can take care of all

the budgeting a nd fiscal

SAL£•599
FOR THE PAIR

1

money

on prog ra ms

peop e m

djusttifyt~' the

To remove that decisionk'
ld be t
rna mg power wou
o
take awa loca l con trol of
h I J;.ll 'd
scHoo s, ·u· . edsat ,: h
h
1 ose w o
e crt ctz
have fought tax lncreases and
bo f ht
I'd
those w
oug 1~ pul 1. a . 1
on
taxes,
. hproperty
I
eded
I c atmtng
I th .
sc oo s ne
o mee etr
inflationary costs with
din f
th
revenues
g rom e
. nexpan
t'
s~;o:!:,s
c~e in for
he
T . f
Rhode

a:;:·

Emergency

Medi c ine

physician from Ashland, Ky.,
has julned the Holzer Clinic

staff fulll1me according to an
announcement by RutJert E.
Daniel, Clinic Admmistrator.
Dr. Webb's full time duties
wi ll principally involve
coverage in the Holzer
Medical Center's Emergency
Rnom. On a limited basis, he
will also · be seeing private
patien ts In the Clm1c' s

Physictans.
Dr. Webb was a clinical
instructor in Emergenc'y

Born in Ashland, Dr. Webb

Medicine at the University of
College
of
Kentucky

rece1ved his BS degree from
the Uruve rsity of Kentucky at

Medicine; Director of a one
year training program for

Lexington in 1956, and hts
M.D. degree from the
Universi ty

of

Eme r ge n cy

FRANKFORT, Ky. (UPI)
- Senate Page Mike Flet-

Rogers' heart

has a distinction of which he

Lou 1sv ill e

ASK TO WED
GALLIPOLIS - Making
application for marriage
ltcense Friday in Ga llia
Co unty Probate Court were
Mark Allen Lynch, 20, Point
Pleasant, auto mechanic. and

Cheryl Lynn Ja mes , 19,
Gal!ipolts, food services GSI.
ASKS DIVORCE
GALLI POLIS - Charging
gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty, Glenna Cox,

Medi c al

TORRANCE, Calif. (UP!)
- Cowboy singing star Roy
Rogers Friday left Little
Compa ny of Mary Hospital
where he underwent open

heart surgery two weeks ago.
The 66-year-old Rogers
walked to a car driVen by his
wife Dale Evans and the
couple drove 100 miles to

their desert home in Apple
Valley. A hospital spokesman
petitton in Gallia Cou n ty
said
Rogers was in "good.
Common Pleas Court for
rits"
when he left and had
spi
di vo rce from Curtis Cox 1 Rt.
·been "walking comfortably"
2, Gallipolis. They we re
mamed Dec. 2.19G7 and have for se vera l days ir1 the .

Galhpohs, Friday fil ed a

facility's coronary

two children .

car~

l
I I f
d'
f
ow evte s 0 sdpen tngA .. or
e1emen ary an seconuary
education" in the budget a
year ago .
He said if the LegislatW'e
hadn't added $109 million in
appropriations " more than 15

unit.

•standing ovation Friday by
the members of the Kentucky
Senate.
Fletcher, a poised, · redhaired freshman at Madison
High School, Middletown,
was the only page who
showed up for . Senate
Chamber duty on Thursday
when a near·blizzard'
swirled around the stale.
Capttol Building.
His uncle, Sen. Gene Huff,
R-London, presented him
with his page's certificate for
his week's duty as the
se nators

stood

and

NOW IN PROGRESS

ON

e Boys Wintef Jackets

~
'

0 -

a

• Men's Dress Shirts

• Selected Cosmetics

• Women's Winter ·Gloves

• Men's Winter Jackets

e

• Girls' 0fess Slacks
• M~n's. Corduroys

• Men's Hats
e Girls' Knit Tops

• Children's Snowsuits

• Girls' Sportswear

.

• Junior Sweaters

• Children's Winter Coats

' Hat Sets
• Women's Scarf &amp;

e large Group of Jewelry

e Pre-Teen Sportswear

• Women's Sweaters
• Women's Winter Coats

e

Junior Sportswear

!News. . . in ·Brief~

cers' . decision to fre eze
prices.
"Oil imports will continue
at high levels over the next
several years, and fl1e economies of OW' major trading
partners are expected to
show
only
moderate
improvement," the report
said.
It also warned fllat state
and local governments will
continue as economic drags
· because of tbe high taxes
(Continued on page 8)

• Children's Sleepwear

• Little Boys' Sweatshirts

• Women's Sportswear

e Boys' Sport Shirts
e Boys' Knit Shirts

• little Boys' Jeans

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

'

en tine

Fifh•cn Ct•nts
Vo . 28,
No . 201

'.
.

~

. . .. '

~

tf·;,'
~ '.f

I

:

r.:: ..
BEND AREA RESIDENTS ARE HOPING fllat the old maxim , "high

water always returns to get th~ ice it leaves" isn't true th1s year. Huge

EDMONTON ALBERTA - WILDUFE SCIENTISTS
found a radioactlve crater and a piece of blackened metal
believed to be part.of a nuclear-p&lt;&gt;wered Soviet spy satellite, a
military spokesman said tnday. From Ute short time these
people were around the pieces it is not expected that flley
received hannful radioactive exposW"e," Mills said . The black
metal object of undetermined size was discover_ed in a 6-by-9
foot crater in the ice near Warden's Grove, 240 mtles southwest
of Baker Lake, flle spokesman said.
.
.
The Warden's Grove hotspot was flle fourfll radtoacltve
area discovered in a search, now in its seventh day , for
remains of fl1e Soviet spy satellite fllat entered Ute Earfll's
atmosphere last TUesday. The metal object was yisible
through the Ice but its exa.ct size was not known. He satd four
Canadian ForC.:.s paratroopers were being nir~opped to a
landing strip at Warden's Grove, eight miles from the Impact
site, and would cordon off the area.
·

NORTH Ol.MDSTED, OHIO - !'.ORTH OJ .MSTED public

\1

(Continued on page 8)

chunks of ice from the Ohw River were left a s the rtvet rccedecf over the
weekend, including these large pieces lodged tn trees and bn1sh ulung tho
riverba nk in Pomeroy .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedne sdn y through
Friday, chance of snow

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Company today
pulled switches on '1111 street
lights in that firm's system,
including
Vinton ,
Rio
Grande, Thurman, Cheshire

and Gallipolis tn Gallia
County and Pomeroy, Middleport and Tuppers PlatnS in
Meigs County.
John Weeks, River DiVision

Manager of C&amp;SOE, said the
" blackout" will continue until
emergency conditions end .
Saturday, C&amp;SOE asked Its

tls ninth week.
Bee a use of the strike, new
suppli es of coal are not
Coming into generating

customers effective today· to
cut back 25 percent in their
consumption of electricity.

Earher today, C&amp;$DE cutba ck its voltage ltve percent.
Most of the problem of
power shortage is blamed on

plants. Fresh coal is needed
to get adequate capacity
from the generaltng units.
The company's dwindling
stockpile supply of coal is
wet , a nd officials pointed out
wet coal does not bum ef-

the current coal strike,·now in

ri ciently.

Roy Snowden of
R utIand IS
• d ead

ByUnitedPresslnternatlonal
.,
SEN. JOHN GLENN, D.OHIO, . SAID SUNDAY HE
•
WOULD ask President Carter to become "more Involved" in
' efforts to end the nationwide coal strike while Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, O.Ohio, offere&lt;j hts servtces based on hts
experience as an attorney to help end the work stoppage.
RUTLAND - Roy F .
Glenn also said he wants flle U. S. Department of Energy to
study whether coal can he "~uffled" from areas where fllere Snowden, 70, Salem St.,
Is plenty of coal to areas where the coal is becoming scarce. Rutland, died early Sunday at
Medical
Center
Bolli Glenn and Metzenbawn shied away from calling on Holzer
President Carter to invoke flle 80-day coo!ing-()ff period under following a four year illness.
Ute Taft-Hartley law. Carter could order the miners back to ' Mr. Snowden was born Jan .
30; 1907 in Rutland, a son of
work for 80days under the provisions of flle action .
However, whetller they would retW'n even if ordered to do the late Ellsworth J . and
so by flle President is doubtful . Several United Mine Workers Frances V. Hull Snowden. He
district presidents said last week they doubted miners would married the former Reva
Snider, who survives, in
return until Utey had a new contract.
•Pomeroy, on July I, 1924.
CITY, MO. - - AUTHORITIES n;AR the fire Surviving besides his wife are
that raged through a once-fashionable bote! may have been the two sons, Leland, Zanesville,.
deadliest disaster in flle city's history. Fourteen bodies had and Caroll, of Gallipolis; two
been recovered by late SWlday and 26 persons still were daughters, Mrs . Bruce
missing. Aufllorilies said some of tlle missing might not have (Joan) May, Rutland, and
been in tlle Coates House hotel at the time of flle fire early Mrs. Charles (Phyllis )
SatW'day, but tlley said' the number of victims might ~each 30. Simpkins, Columbus ; two
Recovery of bodies woold be slow, authonlies satd, sisters, Mrs. Ethel McDole,
because of cold weafller and because Usting and identification Bradner, and Mrs. Mildred
of tlle mangled and burned bodies was very difficult . By Sheeler ,'Flagler Beach, Fla.,
Sunday authorities had released flle identities of only three 15 grandchildren and eight
victimS: Herbert I. Richmond, 45, his wife Penny, age great-grandchildren . Also
surviving are a number of
unknown, and James Swickard, 61.
' ·

WASHINGTON - ENERGY SECRETARY James
SChlesinger said SUnday industries in the Midwest will be hit
wifll power shortages unless the coal strike ends or flle severe
winter weather lets up. But Sdtlesinger shied away from
asking President Cart~r to invoke back-tD-work orders under
the Ta!t-lfa111ey Act for striking soft coal miners.
· Appearing on ABC's 11Issues and Answers'' .program,
SChlesinger forecast presidential intervention if Congress does
not settle fl1e natW'al gas deregulation Impasse by mldFellruary. The secretary said flle severe weather; coupled
wifll the coal strike, ·was causing major energy problems in a
belt that runs from western Pennsylvania, thrOUI!h Indiana,
and north into Michigan.

e 'Junior Tops

other supplies tn Ohio Valley conununities lor at least a week .
While crews worked to clear flle dams, flle &lt;:rest ol tlle Ohio
River, two to fllree feet above flood stage, moved slowly
downriver Sunday. Minor flooding was reported from CinclnnaiiJ!nd fa rUtet· upriver .
Light sno~· flurries &lt;oQntinued to fall over Ohio during the
night but much of fllat snow activity resulted in only small
additional accumulations. Snow depths tllroughout the state
today ranged frmn 20 mches a t Cleveland to four Inches in the
Ironton area .
A low pressure area over the Misstssip,pi Vallt•y will move ,
rapidly eastwa rd, brin~in~ so me light snow to Ute entire state
tonight and Tuesda y.
The Ohio extendL'&lt;I for ecast for Wednesday tlu:ough Friday
calls for a d1ance of snow Wednesday, wlfll mostly fair
weafller on Thursday and Friday, Hl~hs will be in the upper
tee ns or Ule 201&lt;. Overnight tows will range from zero to 10
above zero on WL•Inesda)' dhnbin~ to tJetwccn 10 und 15 by
early Friday.
The Ohio extendl-d outlook for Feb. 4 tlll'ough ~'eb. 8
indicates temperatures in Ohi o will be much below normal ,
wifll below normal pre&lt;•ipiwtion.

.

nephews, nieces and cousins .

Little Boys' Kn~ Shirts

e Women's Handbags

• Men's Sweaters
"Senator, I think it Is imperative that we tour
Panama immediately, if nL&lt; sooner! "

at

~SAS

educational standards."
-Enrolliments in Ohio first
grades have increased for
three
straight
ye ars,
indicating schools will
become more populated in

o __

l:::::::::::::::~:=:~::~:;:::::::::::::;:;:::;.;::.:·:·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:~·:::·::::::~:::::·:::::::::~:::::::::::::~:::::::::..;::::~

'

END OF THE MONTH SALE ;.

•

d~E~~!i~~;~:EBlackout ordered

ap-

plautled. Later, he had his
picture taken with U . Gov.
Mrs. Thelma Stovall, the
Senate's presiding officer.

situation was even worse
than it is now, at no time did
the
Legts lature
enact
legislation waiving minlmwn

the future .

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The economy will expand
President Carter, warning of a moderate 4.5 to 5 percent,
high oil imports and balance as measured by the gross
of payments deficits for national product adjusted for
several more years, said inflation. This is more slowly
!Dday flle continued strengfll 'than fl1e 5.75 percent gain of
of the nation' s economy 1977.
hinges on enactment of a $25
-Consumer prices will rise
billion income tax cut.
5.75 to 6.25 percent, a slower
In an annual economic pace fllan flle 6.5 percent of
report to Congress, flle White last year.
House said the recovery that
~Unemployment will drop
began fllree years ·ago will from tlle cW"rent estimate of
weaken by smruner wifllout · 6.6 percent to nearly 6
tax cuts tn provide stimulus percent.
Utat will prevent job layoffs
and
softer
consumer
spending.
The report was written by higher state and local taxes
the Council of Economic and flle balance of payments
Advisers and its chairman deficit, which has the same
Charles Schultze.
economic impact as a tax
Carter signed a foreword increase on Americans .
reiterating his positions on a
The report said oil Imports,
$25 billion income tax cut and which will be reflected by
a proposed $500 billion budget another large deficit in the
for flle next fiscal year.
balance of payments for 1978,
In an 1&gt;verview, the report will torment the economy for
said the following conditions several more years despite
1\'0uld probably prevail if the increased U.S. production in
tax cut is •enacted:
Alaska and the foreign produ-

cher, 14, Middletown, Ohio,

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

school districts would have
closed."
Conversely, he said , if
Rhodes had not cut Ute state
budget by 2 percent m fiscal
1976 and 3 percent in 1977,
some of Ute 15 school districts
could have remained open .
Hall also said:
- In 1969-70, when "the

.

can boast . He was given a

in good-shape

Flour was airlifted to several bakeries in Van Wert county
and 60,000 pounds of powdered milk, canned goods and pea nut
butter began arnving in Cincinnati Sunday !rom Ute U s
Department of Agriculture.
State AgrlcultW'e Director John Stackhouse said half the
normal milk pickups in Columbus and 70 percent in Cleveland
were made Sunday but farm areas In Knox, Wood, Marion and
Van Wert counties remain cut off.
Ice jams tltreatened to back up flle Mu.skingum River in two
spots Sunday. Troops evacauted about 200 families and fllen
dynamited a 12-foot Uttck icewall from flle rive r near
Ztmesvtlle.
Near Philo, in neighboring Morgan County , where riverside
residents were evacuated earlier Illis week , another jam built
up.
But fll e worst ice jam-a Coast Guard official called it ·•a
moaning and groaning mess" - was at the fa ce of the
Markland Dam South of Cincinnati on Ute Ohio River. Tons of
ice, about20 !eel thick and backed up 2 1-2 miles, jammed 17
barges and towboats agamst the dam .
The Army Corps of Engineers feared the ice and crushed
barges may delay badly needed fuel oil, eoal, rock salt and

Economy needs
tax cut--Carter

Ohio teen-ager
given ovation
by lawmakers

Technician II - Paramedic,
one of t wo pilot programs in

disaster," Rhodes said,
.
Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co., down to a 50 day
supply of coal, imposed a live percent voltag~ cutback today
and W"ged coosumers to cut flle use of electrtcty by about 25
percent.
C&amp;SOE said its generating problems were also comJXIunded
by wet and frozen coal which is difficult to born.
.
National Guardsmen and federal troops today. battled teestrangled rivers and snow covered roads lJl helpmg Ohio get
back on its feet .
About 300 regular ~y troops :rom Fort Bragg, N.C. were
airlifted to northwest Ohto to help m recovery efforts.
. .
National Guard and Army helicopters were used to atrlift
supplies and to drop food tn livestock in the hardest hit areas.
The National Guard said it flew 225 nussions smce early
Sunday, including 23 involving medical assistance.
Guardsmen Sunday night began clearing Interstate 75 from
Toledo to B_owllngGreen and Findlay. A guard spokesman satd
several hundred Bowling Green residents were wtfllout heat or
electricity for the fiffll consecutive day.
Alack of food posed a problem in some areas.
.
Several central Ohio supennarket chams ran out of rrulk,
eggs and bread over the weekend .

e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, January 30, 1978

f a~r crltt' tctsmth rLom . l t s
e egts a ~re .. , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
inor a pu
box mg
by recommending

0

)

ey

etr ts n c s.

Berrys World

Frigidaire Heavy
Duty Washer
and matching
big-capacitY Dryer. To help deli ver dependable perform a nce, th is Frigidaire Heavy
Duty Was her has. a heavy duty
motor a nd other co mponen ts used
in Fri g ida ire Commercial Was hers. It keeps t he shape and stre tch
in kn1ts longer with the gentle
wash action of the Frigidaire
Knits c yc le, helps keep wrm kles
ou t of permanent pres s items with
3 P ermanent Press Was h c ycles.
Team it up with the big-load d rying capacity of the Frigidaire
Dryer. It le ts you dry a.s much as
an 18-lb. load all at once·, and provides tender care for everything
from deli cates to denims.

"The problem is not one
f
.
.
o m1smanagemen1, m 1 s-

~

School of ·Medicine in 1960. the Commonwealth
of
He interned at St. Elizabeth Kentucky; and Program
Hospital in Dayton, Ohio 1960- Director for a Symposiwn of
61 , and was i n private Emergency Medicine for five
practice in Ashland, Ken· years at Kings Daughters
lucky from 1961-66. From 1967 · Hospital.
Dr. Webb and his wile,
to Just prior to coming to
Joyce,
and children, Brenda
Holzer Clinic, Dr. Webb was
Sue,
Leigh
Ann, and Charles
Director of Emergency
David
are
residin g in
Services at Kings Daughters
Hospital In Ashland. He is a Ashland.
diplomate at the American
Co ll ege of Emergency

GALLIPOL IS
Dr.
Charles A. Webb, a n

ment .

problems and
still have schools close next
., H 11 .d
year,
a sa 1 .

.

Kentuckian on HMC staff

Fami ly Practice Depart-

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
representative of the Ohio

mandated by the LegtslaiW'e
are responSible for the ftscal
r h f h
.
p tg t ? sc oo 1s, a maJor

...
•

"

·: : ·:; : ;:; :, :: ·::::::,:~;: ; ::: ; :;::::: ·:: ·:: : ·: :·:;: ::;:;:;:; : •:; :;:;:;:::;:

•

'

. •. .

arteries .

where the stonn caused an

...•
'

Minimum level of schooling
seen as pupils' basic r~~!nt
tries to sk irt thi s basic
requirement
by
not
· ·
·

'·

. ..

•

darkened .
President Carter declared
a state of emergency for Michigan, where heavy snows
choked
off · vital
transportation

"
,,

Ohioans, however, remamed

Similar declarations were in
effect lor OhiO and Indiana.
Ohio Gov. James Rhodes
said he also has appealed tn
Agriculture Secretary Robert
Berg land to declare an
agricultural disaster in Ohio,

By JOHNT. KADY
UDited Pl'f!lo International
Ohioans bottled back today from last week's killer bliztaM
but now face curtailments of electricity because of frozen coal
and Ute nationwide United Mine Workers union strike wtUt
more snow on the way .
The stonn that blew across Ohio last ThW'sday and Friday
claimed at least 29lives, cost Ohio farmers $48 million in lost
production,livestock and damages to properly, stranded 7,000
motoristsandlefl!SO,OOOhomeswiflloutheatorelectricity.
Meteorologists at flle National Weather Service's Ohio
forecast o!fice in Cleveland today say more snow Is headed for
the Buckeye State.
Marvin Miller, chief weatllennan in Ohio, says flle snow will
be generated by a low pressure center now. in the Gut! of
Mexico. MUter says the snow, beginning in western Ohio early
Tuesday, will probably be in tlle one-to-four-inch range .
Gov. James A. Rhodes says Ohioans may be facing another
disaster because of fl1e coal shortage and Sunday asked
President Carter tn personally intervene in the strike. ·
"Unless fllere Is a quick settlement of the national coal
strike, Ohio and ofller stales which use large amounts of coal
for the generation of electricity could be facing another

ATHENS Brock w11l

Mr. Snowden was a
member of the Rutland
Church of Christ. He was a
deacon for several years ; a
member of the official board
and a treasurer of the church

mission. He taught school in
the Rutland area for six years
and was a school bus driver
16 years.
He was career clerk at the
Rutland Post Office for 26
messenger, later becoming a
substitute mail carrier and

then a part time clerk.
He was a charter member
of the Rutland Fire Department

ar1d

an

honorary

member of that group. He
was on the first Rutland High
School football team and was
an a ctive member and officer

Precedtng him in death of the Rutland Red Dtvils
besldes his parents were a Boosters Club which supdaughter, Betty Jean Parker ported Rutland High School
athletics.
Recruitment
He helped organize the
Leading Creek Conservancy

ROY F. SNOWDEN District. He was a graduate
of Rutland High School and
attended Ohio University and
Rio Grande College.
Funeral services will be at
2 p.m. Tuesday at the Walker
Funeral Home with Dennis
Smith and ttie Rev. Lloyd
Grimm officiating. Burial
will be in the Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home at a ny time.
The family will rece ive
friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. today.

period ends
Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth,
commander of the GalliaMeigs .Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol, today announced

the

division's

recruitment period ended
Friday, Jan. 'EI. Applications
for the position of Trooper are
no Ienger being accepted.
Recent efforts by the Hig~­
way Patrol to recruit' those
interested in a career as an

Ohio State Trooper were
successful.

Weather.
Cloudy tonight, light snow
beginning early Tuesday
morning, continuing into

evening. Lows tonight will be
from 5 to 10, highs Tuesday in
tlle low 20s. Probability of
precipitation 30 percent
today, 20 percent toitight, 60
percent Tuesday.

Republican

Chairm an

be the

Bill

guest

speaker at the Annual Lin·

sister.

years, having begun his

Tickets for
Lincoln Day
event offered
Nat10nal

in 1974, four brothers and a

duties in 1944,... as a mail

Wednesday and mostl y fair
Thursday and Friday.
Highs will be In the upper
teens and 20s. Lows will be
from zero to 10 above
Wednesday, climbing lo 10
to IS by Friday morning.

coin Day Dinner plamted by
th e
Athens
County
Re publi can
Ex ec utive
Committee on Feb. I.
The dinner will be held at
the Hocking Valley Motor
Lodge which is located so uth
of Nelsonville on Rl. 33.
Tickets are $8 fur a single, $13
a couple and $10 at the door.
Ttckets may be ordered
from Peter Cou ladi s in
Athens, Ohio. Orders for
tickets should be addressed to
Couladis at the Co urthouse in
Athens.

· Middleport E-R
busy on w~ekend
The Middleport ER Squad
was busy over the weekend
answering SIX calls for help :
Saturday at I :28 p.m. to
Storys Run for Bill Fife who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center ; at 7:07p.m. Saturday
to 224 Walnut Street for Betty
Pooler, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Sunday
at I :52 a.m . Robert Van
Meter, Mason, vislting in

Snow hiding theft and ice
Dolphus Burke, Rt. 3,
Albany, didn 't know it at the
time, but someone stole between 100 and 125 bales of hay
from him sometime before
the snow. Meigs County
sheriff's deputies are Investigating.
While the winter hid this
theft, it also makes driving
dangerous and hides the
danger under impacted snow.

!VIefgs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt has urged
residents not to do any unnecessary driving. He said
the roadways have numerous

places where ground water
has frozen into deep patches
of ice. Proffitt . urged
motorists who have to get out
tn drive cautiou.sly.

Middleport, was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospitlil; at
9:25 a.m . F lorence Horton,
285 S. Third , was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
-at 10 :31 a.m . Charles Knapp
and at II :09 Esta David were
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
PRE'ITY SURE
CLEVELAND (UP! )
State
Sen.
Anthony
Celebrezze, D-Cieveland ,
said Sunday night he was 60
percent sur.e he would seek
the Democratic nomination
for Secretary of State.

CALLED TWICE
The Pomeroy ER Squad
NEAR DONE
made two runs over the
weekend : AI I :33 p.m. · WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sunday to 324 E. Main Street The Senate Foreign Relations
NEED HELP'/
for Velma Siders who was Committee today was near
Guy. Russell, Salisbury
treated at the scene and at completion of its work on the Township trustee, Is on three
10:18 p.m. to Minersville for Panama Canal treaties with ',veek vacation to Florida.
Esther Joseph who was taken some modifications - and Anyone needing help on roads
to Veterans Memorial expected to report them soon is asked to call on one of the
Hospital where she was to the $enate for debate next other two trustees, . Denver
month.
admitted.
Hysell or Don Moore.
J.
•l

Markland dam
holds, so far
CINCINNAT I (UPI) - Salvage trews are breaking up a
marrunoth Ohio River Ice jam around tlle Markland Dam
whe re rommercinl tntffic on the wute1way iB halted . Tons of
ice, stretching 21&gt; miles upriverfrcm the dam and 20 fee t tlllck
in places, have jammed 17 barges ~nrl a towboat a~ainst the
face of the dam.
Army Corps of Engineers Inspectors said there hnd been
no structural weakening of the dam, 40 miles dowru~lr'curn

from Cincinnati. But fll c Ice gorge and crushed barges could
delay delivery of critica lly needed supplies of fuel oil , coal,
rock salt and other commodittes to Ohio Valley communities
for a week.
Coast Guard and corps· nearly 100 uncontrolled
salvage crews began trying barges toward the dam .
to break up the mummoth iee
'Dte barges were ripped
pack late Sunday.
from moorings a long the
•
"II tould be a week before rivrr bank and were broken
traffic can travel through away from towboats . Salvage
fllat area and two-to-three c rews worked fra ntiea lly to
weeks before the situation is. catch most of Ute barges
restored to normal,', said a before they reached the dam ,
spokesman for Coast Guard but 17 became stuck again•t
headqua rters in Cincinnati . its face and several others
Lt. Gen. John W. Morri s, sank . In addition, a tnwboat
chief of engineers for the involved in the operation
corps, said a special towbont became stuck between the
would begin kn_ocking a t the darn and the ice gorge. Its
lee below the dam, m an pilot escaped safely.
effort to break up the gorge
A Coast Guard official on
and get at flle crushed barges flle scene descr ibed flle ice
and towboat. Crews using a gOrge around the dam as "u
barge equipped with a giant moaning and groaning
derrick will try lD lift parts of mess." as the tons of ice
the crushed barges away pushed against t he s teel
. from flle dam.
barges .
" The ice ts terr ifi ca lly
A similar, but less-massive
gorged around the dam," a problem with ice and a few
Coast Guard spokesman sa id. stu ck barges was reported at
"There's no telling what will fll e McAlpine Dam, near
happen when the Ice breaks Louisville, Ky " on the Ohio
up fllere. So we have a . River.
helicopter flying over the
While crews wprked tn
area and are prepared to clear the dams, the crest of
assist in evaeuation of Ute Ohio River, two-to-three
cOmmunities nearby should feel above fl ood stage,
flooding occur."
eontinued to move downriver
The problem began Friday today. Minor flooding was
evening, when an ice jam reported around Cincinnati
several miles upriver from and further upriver Sunday,
flle Markland Dam began tn but the htgh water only
break up, causing a rapid rise aggravated winter weatherin the river and sending
(Conlinued on page 8)

Beckley, Mills chair
college trustee hoard
'

RIO GRANDE - McArthur
attorney John Beckley was
elected chairperson and Mrs.
Pat Mills, Middleport, vicechairperson of the Rio
Grande Community College
Board of Trustees last week.
Beckley, who has served on
the board since the Community College was first

College in a special resolution
passed .by the board.
In other action, the boord
selected a site on the Rio
Grande cai:npus for a new
fine arts center. Construction
of the building Is slated lo
begin In the spring on a
location In the southweat
corner of the campus.

eoneeived 'in 1972, succeeds

Einon Plummer who had
been chairperson for the past
two years. Mrs. MU!s was
appointed in 1975 .
Plummer was commended
for his contribution to th e
growth of the Community
~

Beginning with its meeting on · Feb. 6 the
board will meet the
second Wednesday of "each
month in
the Board
Room above the Student
Center.
II

.

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>January 29, 1978</text>
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      <name>leaper</name>
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      <name>pool</name>
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      <name>stewart</name>
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    <tag tagId="1858">
      <name>swain</name>
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