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                  <text>12-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Friday, Feb 17, 1978

:--------------------------- l Ohioans hurt
I
I

Area Deaths

NORA GORHAN
Nora Gorhan, 90, a resodent
of Sidney, 0 ., formerly of
l.etart Falls, died Thursday
at Holl Crest Marmor ~he was
born March 12, 1887, the
daughter of the late Calvon
and Rebecca Rochoe Hayman
She was preceded on death
by her husband, Elmer, a
son, Earl, seven brothers and
two sisters.
Survtvors
include
a

: in accident
•

brother , Thomas Hayman of
Syracuse , a sister, Lillie
Morgan of Alberta, Canada,
several nieces and nephews
Funeral services wtll be
held at 2 p.m Saturday at
Ewong t' uneral Chapel on
Pomeroy woth Rev rreeland
Norros offocoatong Burial will
be on Letart Falls Cemetery
Froends may ca ll at the
funeral home any tome . -

PLAINFIELD, lnd (UPI J
- Two Ohoo men were
onjured and part of their
poisonous cargo spilled today
on a truck accodent on nearby
Interstate 70
Police saod three of none
~onlamers aboard the semi
ruptured when the rig overturned m the median on the
onterstate west of Indiana 267.
The phosphorus compound
contamonated part of the
truck and some spoiled onto
the ground. Authorities saod
the only danger would come
from touching the suootance
and that no deadly fumes
(ConUnued from paae ll
were m the au
profots will be turned over to the uruversoty .
T.raffoc in both dorections
was blocked nearly two hours
FOUNTAIN, COLO - MELVIN R. PRIVETI, shopping as work crews cleaned up the
in the men's clothing secloon of hos local store VV~nesday , felt wreckage.
Maynard Ltvesay, 45,
something strike his leg as he wa lked down the aisle . He looked
down and saw a three-fool diamondback rattlesnake, whoch Luca s, Ohoo, and Robe rt
Sdmudt, 32, nil' hometown
had just bitten him
Firemen gave Privett forst aod for the bole, and he was avaolable, were trapped on
the wreckage 90 monutes,
hospitalized broefly .
then ta ken to Methodost
CINCINNATI - CINCINNATI HEALTH Conunissioner Hospota l at l ndoanapolos.
Dr. Arnold Le!f has disclosed !bat laboratory tests this week Schm tdl -was listed m
satosfac tory co ndotoon. No
confirmed an outbreak of Russoan Flu on the Cmcinnato area
was
ava ol able
The illness has afflicted thousands of Ham1lton County report
school children, reducmg attenda nce bf as much as one-third unmedoately on l~vesay
m some districts .

News •• in Briefs

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - POLICE IN CORDOBA
say they bave no clues on the mystery of the mununifoed corpse
found on the post offoce's dead letter deparbnent.
The mummy, a man of about 40 dressed in the lypocal
clothes of the Coya Indians of northern Ar~entina. was
discovered by postal workers among other packages, where ot
apparently had been for more than a year, pollee said Thursday .

James commends
Meigs Countians
COLUMB US
State
Representative Ron James
tuday commended the people
of Meogs Count y for theor
efforts 111 helpong one another
dunng the recent wmter
storms
" I ha ve hea rd several
rematkable s t ones clrcul atmg
around
th e
Statehouse and in Co lumbus
aboul the people of Meogs
County - theor generosoty
a nd theor woUongness to
help, " James said
He coted as an example the
g reat way that National
Guardsmen were treated in

TOKYO, JAPAN - A 29-YEAR-OLD housewofe gave borth
to q\Uidruplets Friday at Osaka Uruversity Hospotal
Doctors saod the babies - two boys and two gorls- were on
good conditoon even though they were born one month
prematurely

Our Interest is
Greater For You

5.75%
On 90-Day
Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit
$1,000 .00
Minimum
Interest
Payabl e
Quarterly.
A sub!tanhal penalty IS
invoked on all certiftcate

accounts withdrawn prio.to 1he date of matunty .

Meigs Co. Branch ·

@
The Athens

County

Savings &amp; Loan Co

Two hurt
(ConUnued from Pllt 1)
assured c}ear distance
No one was lnJUred m a
headon collosoon at 4.10 p m.
Thursday on TR 444 on Meigs
county , three moles west of
SR 7.
The patrol saod vehocles
dnven by Nellie M. Pa1ker,
64 , Pomeroy, and John D.
Swarts, 23 , Cool volle, colloded
headon on a snow cove red
roadway .
There
was
moderat e damage
No
charges were ftled. ·
Icy roads were blamed on
an accid ent at 2·58 p m on
Eagle Rd. east of TR 46 on
Ga lloa Co unty State troopers
saod an auto dnven by Edward C VVcst, 71, Bidwell,
shd on the ocy pavement
strokm g a vehocle operated by
Tim oth y Atkonson,
29,
Jac kson. There was nunor

Pomeroy

James also sa id that he was
sure the Clttzens of other
counties m his dlstrlct have
done t he sa me kinds of
things, but that "the ston es
about Meogs County have
really heen circulating."
" I have always been proud
uf the people of my dostroct
and Meogs Countoans have
JUSt shown olhers around the
state that they are among the
' best' Oh1o has to offer, "
J ames concluded

Laurel (liff

d am~ge

296 Second St
Pomeroy, Ohio

·FSJ,IC

---- -...

News Notes
In 1964, Kenny Hubbs,
Ch ocag o
Cu bs ' seco nd
\Jaseman, was kolled when the
hght plane he was pilotin g
crashed on Utah .

AttendanceSwoday, Feb 12
at the Free Methodost Church
was 68.
Mr . and Mr s Ralph
Dunmtre, Nashville, Tenn. ,
were guest singers at the
local church Sunday mor-

l!lnG
Rev . Cecol VVose and Mr.
and Mrs . Rome Cook ,
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Ph oil
VVose , Beverl y, attended
Sunday services at the local
church.
Mrs . Ted Mathew , Huron,

Oo
(

NEVV YORK ( UPI I Rochard Noxon turned down
sevral overtures by the
Sovoets in 1969 to Join a JOint
atomoc attack agaonst
nuclear facolities in China,
says former top aode H R.
Haldeman
Noxon and Henry Kissinger
then feared Russoa would
launch an attack of ots own
and the nuclear fallout would
be so extensive it could wipe
out Japan and thousands of
Amencan troops m Korea
and on Pacohc Islands.
So
they
mformally
ex tended an American
unbrella to head off a

unilateral Russian stnke on
Chona.
In his forthcoming book
" The Ends of Power, "
Haldeman also wroles thai
Kissonger also doscovered the
Russoans were buolding a

tllebankd
theceniUrJ

. . . . 'lted

11112

•Candles
eRecords
(

•Gift
Wrap

nuclear submarme base in
Cuba ~ and forced the
Sovoels to halt the pr9JecL
He called Uoe two oncidenls
the "greatest triumphs " of
the Noxon-K!ssonger
diplomatic era.
Newsweek Magatme made
30,000 pages of excerpts from
the book available
VVhen asked Thursday
about the invil8tion by Russia
for a JOint attack against
Chona, Kossinger said he
didn't remember It
" I do not recall any such
event and I wouldn't have
forgotten ot," he saod .
Haldeman related · " In
1969, there were se veral
overtures by the Sovoets to
the U.S. for a joint venture in
the surgocal strike " agaonsl
Cho nese atomic targets.
"Noxon turned the Sovoels
down , but wa s then mformed,

•

EUCLID, Ohio (UP! ) - An
woderground, 124nch, crossover natural gas line that
exploded durong rush-hour
traffic ripped up hu ge
sectoons of pavement and
turned a major mtersection
into mayhem as windwhipped flames bellowed as
hi gh as ISO feet
ollumonatong the sky for more
than 90 minutes . ·
There were no m aJor
onjuries reported as a result
of Thursday mght's oncodent
at East 222nd Street and St.
Clair Avenue near the former
VVhite Motor Co. truck plant,
police saod.
East Ohoo Gas Co. officials
have not yet detenmned why
the line ruptured and what
ognlted the pressunzed gas,

own ''
He said the Soviets bad
moved nuclear warheads
sta cked in piles wothin two
miles of the Chinese border,
and intellogence reports
showed !bat fallout from
"dirty" Soviet nuclear bombs
would bave killed "every
man, woman and child in
Japan .''
"The fallout would spread
across ' Korea and Pacofic
Island where more than
250,000 American troops were
stationed," he saod.
Haldeman said Maj. Gen.
George Keegan suggested
using a trick that worked
during the CUban missole
crlsls - send a "secret"
message, but "by accident"
leave it uncoded so the
Russians cou ld easily
ontercept it

Ch:S~~~~;:r-" said

~~entis
CINCINNATI (U PI ) Hustler Magaztne owner
Larry Flynt was to be
arraogned today in Hamilton
County Common Pleas Court
on charges of disseminating
materoal harmful to 1uveniles
and authorozong the sale of
obscene materiaL
The charges stem from the
mass mailing to thousands of
Cincmnall-area resodents of
an illustrated pamphlet
vovully depoctong victims of
chold abuse , and the sale of
Hustler Magazone at a

scheduled
downtown
Cmctnnatl
storefront.
Flynt was ondicled on the
latest charges la st week . It
was the thord time he has
been indicted by a Harnolton
County grand jury.
He is appealing
a
conv tctlOn on charg es of
engagmg in orgaruzed crime
and pandering ooocenity, and
is awaotong troal on charges
stemming from the mass
matbng of a "war crtmes"
pamphlet to Cinconnati
residents last year.

Meigs
spent the wee ~end woth her
parents, Mr. and Mrs Dick
KarT
Mrs
Margaret Karr,
Huron, spent the weekend
woth Mr. and Mrs. Tomm y
Reuter and famoly
The UMS of the local
church met Tuesday evening
wolh Mrs Floyd Shook
Refreshments were served
by Mrs Iva Powell and Mrs.
Bertha Parker.
The Yowog Adult Class of
the local church will meet
Thursday evenin g at the
onfonnary . Mrs. Ida Marton
and' Rachel Will woll serve
refreshments

eBihles
•Glassware
•Candy

-- •Decorations
•Religious
Pictures

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
Middleport, 0-

Property
Transfers
George Eldon Green,
Louose Lola Green to George
Eldon Green, Louose Lila
Green, 51 13 acres, Scopoo
Joseph Hoba ch, dec. to
Sandra Huff, Paul Hoback,
Bruce Hoback, AI!. for trans ,
Racine
Sandra Huff, Vernon Huff
to Charles F Pyles, Shirley
L Pyles, Lot, Ra cone
Betty Brickles, Paul
Hoback, Sue A. Hoback to
Charles F. Pyles, Shorley L
Pyles, Lot, Rac one.
Charlotte M.
Evans,
Charles H Evans to Charles
H. Evans, Charlotte Evans,
Lot, Pomeroy.
VVolllam Fred Smoth Sr.,
Beatrice E. Smoth to Fletcher
R. VVelch, Lot, Middleport.
James J Proffitt , Shff ,
Melvona Davodson, etal. to
Lavada \\'heeler, 1.40 A ,
Salisbury
'

of roadway_ "It's JUS! a
miracle that no one was hurt
bad. "
Schell saod he saw three
huge mushroom clouds
before the wbole area went up
in flames .
A pickup truck and Greater
Cleveland Regional Transit
Authority bus wolh nine
people aboard were waitong
for a traffoc light at the
in tersection
when
the
explosion occurred The bus'
wondshield was blown out and
its parking lights melted
from the lntensoty of the
fl ames.
"The truck driver backed
up hos pickup 1n a hurry and
there were people running off
the bus on all dorecloons,"
Shell saod " Had it been 111,
seconds later, the bus and
truck would bave been roght
over where ot happened; and
you never know ... "
John Svrga, 29, Euclod,
driver of the pockup , said that
when he saw what was
evolvmg he jammed the gear
shift mto reverse and floored
the accelerator
"It just start!"~ coming up
out of the ground," he saod.
~~First there was dirt Then
smoke. Then flames. It's a
miracle nobody was kolled.
Damn, it's a mtrade. "
RTA bus drover Abraham
Smith, 41, East Cleveland,
suffered lacerat10ns, was
treated at Huron Road
Hospotal, East Cleveland, and
later was released He saod he
wasn't fnghtened.
" I didn't have lome lo be
scared," Smoth saod. " I just
thought about gettong out of
there.
" I popped the doors (to the
bu s ) open . The ( eoght)
passengers rushed out the
rea r and I ran out the front. I
thought I was a gonner "
The explosoon Slle was
about 200 feet south of Ohio 2,
where gawkmg motorists
slowed to watch the
spectacular blaze - tying up
traffic throughout the ordeal.
The fire also attracted about
2,000 people, according to fire
chief George Langa , who
credited his 40 firefighters for
not allowmg the flames to
spread to nearby structures.
"There was no way we even
were going to try to put the
flre out," Langa satd. " It
would have been useless to
try.
" All we wanted to do was to
make sure it wouldn't spread.
VVe just kepi pourmg water on
the businesses and lndustrial
plants in the area to keep
them cool so they wouldn't
ignite
VVe were just
protecting the bwldongs."

E. SLack and C•ndlce M .
SIJCk, Dtfendlnh
In pursuance to an OR:OER
OF SALE In the above en
titled action, 1 w•ll otter for
salt at public auction, at tne
front !leps of the Court House
in Pomeroy, Oh io. M'ergs
County on Saturday, the 18th

day of February, 1911, at

10 : 00 o'clock a . m . the
following descrlbeG real

estate, s•tuate In the County

of Meigs and State of Onio. to
wll

Situated in the Village ot

Syracuse, County of Me igs ,
and State of Ohio and
de5crlbed as follows.
Being 35 feet off of the west
s1de of Lot No 77 In said
Vlll&amp;g~ of Sy racuse, 1n the
County of Meigs, and State of
Oh10

Property

appre1sed

NAMED SUPERVISOR - Gene
R. Abercrombie, State Director of
Ohio Farmers Home Admlnistrahon.

at

$3000. and cannot be .sold for
tess than two th1rds of the •

United Stales Dcporlmenl of
Agriculture, announces that Da\•ld P.
Urwin has assumed the duties of
County Supervisor In the Gallipolis
office. Mr. Urwin, as County
Supervisor wJII administer the
supervised eredlt programs for
farrntng , business and industrial
deve lopment, housing and com·
munlty la cllllles. The Gallipolis
office Is located at 529 Jackson Pike
and serves Gallia, Jarkson and
, Lawrenre counties .

appraised value .
Terms of Sate: Cash In
hand, subject to ree l estate
ta xes

Jill met J . Proffitt

Sheriff
Metgs County1 Ohio .
( 1) 20. 27 (2 ) 3. 10, 17, stc

For Saturday, F;'eb. 18, 1978

ASTRO•GRAPH

to be hauled In so that the school could stay

msistence that power usage bt&gt; rC&lt;:lUCl'd
At prt'Sent , redut1H'n IS on a voluntary
Howeve r. mandatory usc
basts
1 equiremeuts appear to be furthcuming
Scho(Jis nnt unly arc not ava1\ablr for
remember ··
Meet10g after meetmg has been called mght meellngs at th1s potnt lfl the shoroff because of power shortages. Sdoool tage, but students - thuse physically able
fac1ht1es, used so often during normal to attend classes - iUe fmdin~ tht..•mselves
times for groups, particularly school· ix'comin~ very fanuliar With cnnscrvati()n
related ones , are just not available at this 11leasures which have been put mto errcct.
Bustncsses also are being aUectt&gt;d by
tuuc due to tht• power shortage and the
the power shurtage. Must of them have t'Ul
down on elcctncal usHge iil rcady .
Break in water main
Pomeroy Police Cluef Jed Webster visited
a number of Pomeroy busmesses on
at Pomerol: repaired
Friday and suggested thai each take •teps
tu 1educe power usage. Meantim~ . VIIIHHCS
POMEROY - Most of Pomeroy are m blackout status at mght With no
Vllia~e was without water at one tunc or street hghts or only un occHsionu l ont•
another Friday when a break developed 1n hghted.
a water mam 'caustng the BreeZ)' Heights
reservoir to go dry.
Some homes and businesses were out
POM~ROY SQUAD CAI.LED
of water for two to three hours whtle others
POMEROY
The Pumcruy
were Without water service all day
Emergency
Squad
was
called
Salurduy at
The break was found near the
Pomeroy Cement Block Co., East Main 11 : 19 a.n1 to the Scott Folmer rcstdencc on
Sl , and repa1rs made so that service cuuld old Route 33 for Frances Folmer whll wus
taken to Holzer Medical Center
be restored.
upen .
The electncnl shortage in 1978 will
a1sn proba bly be a part nr the ·· muments to

+

tmts VOL 13

Feb. 18, 19'78
fnends IS
like ly to mcrease qutte 1mpres~
Your ctrcte of close

stvely thts commg year Als o,
thtn gs look prelly ntfty where
Cup1d ts concern ed
"

What

you

come up wtth

today wtll further enhance 'tha f
quality

out

Fmd

GALLIPOLIS - Effective Tuesday
(Feb. 21), temporary serv1ce hours were
announced by Richard M Bane, postmaster of Galhpohs, due to the energy
shortage.
Window service hours Mond ay
through Froday woll he 8 15 a m to 4 15

to

whom ·
suited b)t,

you re ro manltcally
sendtng for your co py of Astr a·
Graph Letter Matl 50 cents fot

eac h

and

a

long ,

se lf·

stamped envelope.
lo Asoro-Graph P 0 Box 489,
Radoo C1ly Stal1on. N V 10019.
Be sure to spec1fy your birth
addressed,

PISCES

1Feb.%~March

greater chan sma

SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 19, 1978

p.m. at the Gallipolis postoffo ce, and
Sat urday 8:15a.m. to noon
Lob by hours Monday through
Saturday woll be 6 a m to 5 30 p m
The post oH1ce wtll be closed on
Sunday. Ttns Monday , Presidents ' Day,
the post offoce will he closed for a legal

huhday.
Bane's armouncement makes speciftc
for Galhpohs the Joint announcement of K
W Cooley, manager of the Buckeye Postal
D1stn ct, and J. G Schraer, manager of the
Nort heastern Ohio D1str1ct, that some
adjustments will be made m co llect ion and

Tentative agreement
approved by officials

20)

Some days we are endowed
w1th

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

than we

are o n oth er days Tht s IS your
day to exhtbtt a sparkle that
other s lack
'

ARIES I March 21-Aprll 19)
Cann g lnends pulling strmgs
lor you fro m beh ind the scenes
could tngger happy surprises
today All benefits won ' t be
initially ev1dent
TAURUS IAprlt 2~May 20)
Someone who loves you needs
reassurance today Endeanng
·,·,·: :·.·.·:·.·:·:·.·:·:·.·:·:·.·.·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·.·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.· words will make her realize
she's still No 1 1n your book .
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Be
ATTEND MEETING
MASON - Mrs. Leota on your toes today Something
may unexpectedly pop up to
Hubbard, presodent of V.F -VV . spell fmanc 1al gam for you It
Ladles Auxiliary of Stewart- Will come throug h a business
J ohnson Post 9926 and Mrs . contact
Dottie Van Meter , treasurer , CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
attended the VFVV 8th person whom you felt never
tru ly appreciated you may be
Dostrict meeting which was extremely
attentive today The
held at Ceredo, VV. Va., on
reason Your warm overtures
Feb. 5. President Hubbard will help erase a similar doubt
was presented a certoficate LEO (July 23-Aug.22) Where
awarded to Post 9926 Ladies roma nce IS concerned today,
be too aggress1ve Play a
Auxiliary for 100 percent don't
htlle hard to gel, but leave the
commumty servoce by Peggy door a1ar
Butcher,
8th
District VIRGO 1Aug .23-Sept.22)
Presodent. Accompanying the Aath ~r than get tn a rut by
ladies to the meeting were domg the sam e thmgs w1th the
same old crowd , seek fresher
their husbands, Mr . DeVilo pastures
today New faces wHI
Hubbard, Adjutant-Quarter prove more fun
Master of VFVV Stewart- LIBRA ISepU3-0cl. 23) All 11
Johnson Post 9926 of Mason , w11t take today to get you 1nto
and Mr Okey Van Meter Jr., full gear IS to ha~e somethmg
occur where the stakes are
post member.
meanmgful You II react hke a
champ
SCORPIO 10et.24-Nov.Z2) Olflhe ·cu lf 1deas w1 11 be your
WILL BE PREACHING
sharpes t ones today Undue
Triedstone Baptist Church de liberatio n tend s to d1m youf
wtshes to announce that Arius bngh llhoughls
Hurt , son of Mr. and Mrs. SAGITTARIUS 1Nov.23•
Wesley Hurt of Rio Grande, Dec.2l~ Fortuna tely for you ,
who hke you wtll be
will bring the 6:45 p.m. people
eager to share what they have
worshop message this Sun- w1th you today Be equally
day, February 19. Arius and graCIOUS
his wife Martha and theor CAPRICORN 1Dec.2%-Jan.19)
family are members of Nor ma lly yoU 'd prefer to call ·
shots Today, howe\ler,
Troedstone Baptost Church. the
you'll see more ment in being
The host pastor os Rev. John co&lt;apta ln
D. King The public Is invited .
(NEWSPA PE R ENTERPRISE ASSN I

TONY PRESTON

Speaker named
for civic meet
GALLIPOLIS - Focus Inc Saturday
extended an mv1tatwn to commumty
residents to attend its fourth annual C1v1c
: dinner, to be held m the R10 Grande
~ College Cafetena, on Feb 25 at 7 p m
.
Guest speaker tht$ year w1ll be Tonylf
· Preston, mayor of Rendvtlle, Ohto, one of
the first black settlements in Ohm He ts a
graduate of Moller High School and he also
attended Central State Umverstty
Mayor Preston IS trustee of F1rst
Baptist Church, Rendv11le; second VIce, president of the Ohio Baptosl General
Convention - Laymen's Auxt liary,
Democrattc Ce ntra l Comm ttt eeman ;
member of Black Elected Democrats of
Ohto; member of National Conference of
. Black Mayors; member of Oh1o Municipal
League; vtce-pres1dent of the Lancaster Faorfoeld County NAACP, Voce-Presodent,
Rendv\lle Housmg Authority; Presodenl,
(Contonued on page A-2)

GALLIPOLIS - The Galha County
I .(}Cal Boa rd of Education Fnday m~ht in
Superintendent Thomas Hairston's office,
220 Jackson P1ke , approved a tentatlve
wo rk agreement £or the use of Camp
Franc1s Asbury for the displaced st udents
of Centervi lle School.
Ftre damaged the school Feb 11
Th e tent atl\'e agreement was worked
out With Dave Schar, regional director of
the Western Conference of Umted
Methodist Church es, wh1ch owns and
operates Camp F'ranc1s Francis Asbury,
located three or four miles west of R1o
Grande. Also present was the Rev. Damon
Stapleton, Rodney. the camp manager
In. a related action, the county school
board also passed a resolution t ransferrmg the enti re Centerville school
operation to Camp FranCIS Asbury to
begm " Imm ediately " The supermtendent
sa1d that classes would start at the camp
Tuesday, after "movmg m" on Monday,

unless " unforeseen difficulties" mterfere.
The board held a five -hour negotiating
session with OAPSE Another .meeting is
schedu led Feb. 27
Gratitude was expressed to the search
committee and the various churches and
other bui1dmgs which the committee
VISited

Search commtttee mcluded Conm e
Bond, presodenl of the Centervolle PTO,
Barbara Smith, secretary ; Ellen LeftWich, Adelaide Sanders , Jean Gardner ,
Davod Campbell, and Davod Arrowood
Considered were Rodney, Rto
Grande , and Centervolle United Methodost
Churches, Faoth Baptist Church , Rio
Grande College, Centervolle Town Hall
The board also thanked Bob Ruff and
Woodrow Hall for leadership m contammg
the f1re and t o Cameron Sands, who
headed up the securtty force guarding the
school after the fire.

Theft probed Friday
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
PO MEROY - State Audotor Thomas by Gallipolis police
Ferguson reported the annua1 d1str1butaon
from the Ohio Faors Fund woth a total or
GALLIPOLIS - City pollee officers
$1,779,040 goong to 87 county and eoght here Friday investogated the theft of a $735
mdependent agncultural soctet1es and the gu1tar and case taken from Ward's
Ohto Expos1ltons Comm iSSion Of the total Keyboard, 412 Second Ave
the Meigs Agncultural Society which
Offoc&lt;rs also lnvestogated the theft of a
stages the Metgs County Fair recetved billfold owned by Marvin McGuire, Rt. I,
$20,180 Calha County got $2,5110.
Crown City McGmre sa1d the wallet
contammg $129 was taken from h1 s person
at the Coty Garage on Chestnut St,
CAR DESTROYED
Meanwhole, Galha County sheriff's
MIDDLEPORT - The Moddleport
Fore Department was called to the Gard deputies Saturday were investtgatmg a
Drolhng Co., Route I, Bidwell, at 6:01p .m. breakmg and entering at Arthur Isaac's
Friday where a 1956 auto was on Fire The home on the Kerr-Harrosburg Rd Several
tools were missmg.
car was destroyed

•
I

'

'I

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

(

'TIL 8
Final Clearance at Unbelievably tow Prices on
Mens and Boys Shirts -

MensI Jeans -

Woman•

Coats- Boys and Girls Wear- Womens Dreuas
Womans Wlntel'\ Slaepwear -

And Other Items

'
\

of Wearing Apparel

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE
CONTINUES SATURDAY
AND MOr,IDAY 9-.30 TO 5 PM

SNOW SHOVEI.S held their role liS • "nec.. ssoty" of life dur on~ the winter of

1978 Sa~urday as another over two Inches of snow fell ovl!rnight and more

t'Ontlnued to fall Saturday mormng. Tom Wolfe, left , and Charles Wolfe, Syrucuse,
were busy wtlh theLr snow :ihovel in the area of 'l'rlnity C.1mrch in downtown
Pomeroy.
,

tnfintl
PRICE 25 CENTS

MIODLEPORT- POMEROY

Post office to curtail service due to shortage

AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb.19l

When necess tty demands
your apltlude for mnovallon IS
often supenor to that of your

peers

NO 3

stgn

This week's winning Ohio
Lottery numbers :
Gold
number-5.
While
number-73.
Blue
number-106.
Extra Cash-489%81.
Lucky Buck Two
Three-digit nnmber1101.
Slx-dlgll number
838864.

POMEROY - Meogs Counloans will
certamly have ·· moments to remember"'
from the winter of 1978 - that IS. if It and
1ts conscquencts ever end
Schools throughout the county were
closed prart orally all of January due to the
weather. School officials are strugghng at
the moment With how to go about makmg
up the lost time Current problems at
schools, however, deal not only w1th
makmg up t1me, but keepmg enough
bi.udents In schools for classes because or
the wa\•e of innuenza wh1ch has hit particularly heavy_amof'!g the younger set
At une pomt. durmg the past week,
absenteeism ran about 45 percent at Meigs
Hogh School but by Froday ohongs were
better and absent eeism stood at 21 percent The ftrst Part of the week, elemen·
tary schools dodn 'l appear to be lou badly
hot by the flu Thai had changed by Fro day
in some areas hke Rutland where 46
percent absenteeism was recorded
AI Bradbury, It ran 28 perc&lt;nt and 27
per ce nt at Salem Cen ter. Salisbury
Ele111entary had the lowest absenteeism
rate 1n th e Me1gs Local School Dtstrtct
Fnda~· . 1a percent However, that school
was w1thout water Friday and water had

Bernice Bede Osol

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Clara Shuster, aka Clara B
Shuster to Clara B. Shuster,
Gerald E Shuster, Parcels,
Pomeroy.
Reva J . Snowden, Affodavil , RuUand.
Jerry L Tillis, Darlene
Tillis lo Clayton Tackett , C. J.
Tackett , David Tackett, IS
A., Rutland.
Claudoa C. Roush, Wayne
D. Roush to Guy H. Shuler,
Mary Shuler, Parcels, Letart
Clara B. Miller to Daruoy
Sherwood
Zirkle,
Lot ,
Pomeroy.
FLUWING AGAIN
FAIRBANKS, Alaska
(UPI) - Oil was floWing
agaon today along the $9
billoon trans-Alaska pipeline,
which was shut down by a
bomb that blew a 2-lnch hole
in the underside of the pope.
Alaska state troopers said
they were . investigating a
possible suspect in the
sabotage . They gave no
further information except to
·" "" that aerial surveiUance of
the blast area was conducted
and possible additional
evodenqe was found at the
scene.

Loan Co., Pla•ntiff vs. Elden

on

September 1970 Kissin ger
noshed into his offoce with
onlellogence aeri a l
photographs of CUba and
shouted "The CUbans are
buolding soccer fields - those
soccer fields could mean
war."
Before Haldeman had a
to
question
chance
Kissonger's mental stability,
the secretary continued:
" Cubans play basebalL
Russians play soccer."
The discovery led to later
intellig ence ghotos, whoch
showed the Russians were
buolding a nuclear submarine
base.
"So Henry saw Soviet
Ambassador
Anatoly
Dobryuo and quietly informed
him thai the sub base would
not only destroy detente but
would spark an updated
missile cr~1s," Haldeman
said. "If the construction was
halted, nothing more would
be sald."
After a week of "qu1el
pre ssure" the Ru ssi an s
stopped construction.

to his horror . that tht&gt; Soviets

but the utility sa od servoc..
was restored to the area.
Besides leav mg traffic
lights dangling (some even
were melted) and blowing out
windows in area businesses,
the explosoon and for e also
s1zzJed power hnes - thereby
disruptong servoce to about 20
C lev e land Eleclro c
Dluminating Co industria l
customers for more than
three hours Also interrupted
was servoce to about 1,000
Ohio Bell Telephon e Co.
custom ~rs in the 481 , 486, 383
and 531 exchanges.
"At forst, I thought it was
some kind of atomiC exploston," sa1d WilHam Schell,
who was at a nearby business
when the blast - wh1ch
occurred about 5:55 p m. tore up a 50-by-35-foot section

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
CASE NO . lUS1
The Athens countr Savings &amp;

·'The message said the U.S .
bad 1,300 nuclear weapons
airborne -and named Soviet
coties that were targeted for
the bomb;."
The Russoans intercepted
the message and when Nikita
Khrushchev saw it he
" turned pale ," the book
reports
Just to be safe, another
wocoded message was put out
advising tbal Intelligence reports showed tbal many thousands of Russoans Ul Soberoa
would also die from the
nuclear fallout.
"The Soviets realized they
no longer could take the
chance," Haldeman said .
" lntellogence reports showed~
their nuclear armed divisions
were wothdrawlng from the

mtended to go ahead on their

Explosion rips
line
,,

JUST IN - NEW JEWELRY
STICK PINS &amp; EAR RINGS

pot@i5."7

"". .'= C::.'rna
FDIC

By CLAY F. RICHARDS

FOR ANY
OCCASION

•Jewelry
•Stationery

Me•b ••

to attack China rejected

oO

1) Think how we make your savings grow.
With big interest.
2) Think how secure your savings are
Vault-safe _.. and safely insured I
To us ... you 're the bosS:
You really do make the difference

pOII*CIY

~lea

'Moments to remember': flu,
power cuts, cancellations

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE

••

••

-.-""
.-.
-

':"Q

GRANT SCHOOL

PAGE FROM OLD city schools' trleMlal report pictures
Individual school buildings, one of which was Grant Scbool.
The booklet does not say where the school was located, but

J.

Ernest N. Wiseman says that it was on MiU Creek Street beFirst and Second Aves. and was converted into a
mission in laler years.

tw~n

,I

•

diSpatch schedules In order to take £uU
advantage of daylight hours Wonduw
serv1 ce In post off1ces w1U not exceed em
eoght hour span "per day , they added
AdJustments also w1ll be made m lock
box servtce hours at some offices where
presently ava ilable on Sunday, ttnd some

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday, fair
Monday and Wednesday and a chance of
•now Tuesday Highs will be In the 20s
Monday and Tuesday and in the upper
20s or lowu 30t; Wednesday. Lows wtll
runge from fl\'e to 15.

Saturday wmdow scrvwc will be adjusted
'fhe announcement st1 esscd that each
local po~t orf1cc Will displu; notices of uny
spec1ftc chan~es upplltahle In Its cum·
mumty . QuestiOns about mall riervlct•
should be llhected tu Hlchard Bcuw,

telephone 441i-o:~l4
Cooley mnl Schrllct smd t lt ul the
en cq~y const'rvntwn uct1nn 1.s th.l slgncd to
effelt a 25·50 pmccul rcd uetion 111 clcctncu l con.sUIUjlliun HI all [)IISLUI in·
st&lt;tllatwn:t in tlw lillllt•.

Miners ease assaults
on non -union facilities

utility plunts
By United Press Intcrnutlo11BI
All the tro uble Sutu1duy " us in
With attention shtfted to floundering t'Oal
talks on Washongton this weekend, Unot&lt;&lt;i Washmgton wlmre the UMW burgnlnm~
Mine Workers Umon members appeur to t'(JUnCII --rnr thll Hccund time - rejected
have eased th~ir assault against non-uruon a snft coal Industry con tract offer
The nut10n 's hmgcst coal strtkC, nnw intu
racthties across Oh1o
Sheriff's departments in Ga lltl:l , it:-; 75th d&lt;i)' , muy yet be settled wtthout
Hocktng, Belmont, Tuscarawa s, and drastt&lt;' fcderu l mtervenuon, lt(IWcver .
Vmt.on COWltles that had been on near· NcgotUitors for hoth Sides twvc a~rc..'Ct:'l lO
alert status durmg the week, S.turduy ~1i:ll t lalkin lol IJ/.(ain But President Carter
reported all was quiet at non-union mines admitted, '' 1'1 n~ pct:L'i llf"C not pnrtlculnrly
in Ute1r areas and the car ca ravans of c~ r.ouruging'' fur scttlen1cnt
GALLIPOLIS - A scholarship is of- UMW pockets watched closely during the
01110 ullhUes, scl'lmpmg ,Jnd tr ymg to
fer ed by Gallopohs's Ancoent York Lodge week did not appear today .
stn..&gt;f.ch senously dcplctt.'&lt;l coni stocks ,
33, on addotoon to the Most Worshopful
The Army Corps of Engineer!i in Wei c down to between 2&amp; days of fuel rnr
Prince llall Grand Lodge or Ohoo Cincmnati , which Frtday warned its the Monoguhela Power Co und 59 days £or
scholarship award, according to William personnel at darns and locks along the the Dayton Pnwer &amp; I.J ght Go, llf'C!flrdlng tu
L JamiSOn
river of posstble trouble over the ftgw·cs l'Omptled FruhJy by the Pubhc
Apphcallon forms can be obtained movement o[ t.-oal barges, reported no $1grt UUHLlcs Commi:'iSIOn ur OhiO
from him . H1s telephone nwnber Is 446- of disturbance Saturday
Cmcmnati Gu.':i &amp; 8 1ectn c Co. ufflcmls,
4136
Ofhc1als of corps d1strtcts a1ong the Oh1o w1th 43 days of cnul :md rcgulm slnp1ncnts
Students who w1sh to apply must meet River tiave discussed th e J)()SSibhty or of 4,000 tons of coni a duy still cmmng m,
these requirements·
viO len ce ~ st e mm i n g from coa l barge announct-'d Fnday It sho uld be able to geL
1 - They must be members or the movement with lhe U S Attorney offices m through next week w1thout cH illi!~ for
June , 1978, graduating class
mandatory cled ric curlailnlCIIts .
the1r reg1on
2 - Each of them must have an
If, that is, voluntHry cutbncks, lton-wuon
The sheroffs or all 88 Ohou countoes uod
average for the first seven semesters of the Stale Hoghway Palrol have agreed to coal del!verle!:l und purchases of power
hogh school of nollessthan 2 0 (two poont ). cooperate m efforts to contam coal .stnke from outs1dC the region conUnue
3 - Must be recommended by the voolence, to avoid culling up the Ohio
OhiO Edi:i!m Cu down lu a :1:t-dn y supply
school in keeping with the apphcatton form Nahonal Guard
of coaJ , cut back on 1ts reserve gcneruting
otself
lbe patrol may escort coa~rucks on the capaCity Frlduy m order to 11void 11 50
4 - Th e apphcat1on must be ac-, open htghway but may not mterfere tn percent mand nt.ury curtai lment that was
compam ed by a transcnpt of credits
picket line confrontations at mtne8 ur to go U1to effect Tuesday

Scholarship
is offered

Booklets describe city
schools in early years
By J. She110an Porter
GALLIPOLIS - Paul and Allee
Margaret Mossman, who live on the Flood
~scape Rd. (SR 588), have a couple of
booklets concerning the Gallipolis Coty
Schools of another time.
One os the First Triennial Report of the
Superintendent for the years endlog Aug.
31, 1891, 1892, and 1893. The other Is the
Manual of the Public Schools of Gallipolis
1900-1901.
The manual ls seven and a fourth
inches long and fove inches wode woth 72
pa ges. The report is nearly mne mches
long and sox mmches wode with 103 pages.
The Ohio General Assembly has
decreed that every school distroct In the
Buckeye Stale print an aruoual report, and
Gallopohs's os folded to make a quarterpage - One fourth of your 1978 TimesSentinel regular page - but opens up to
tabloid size, whoch Is a half-page, just onehalf the soze of the modern Tomes-Sentonel
pa ge. II has eight pages, well Illustrated
with photographs and charts.
The 1900 manual has photographs, too,
startmg woth the six-man board of
education plus the superintendent. Other
pictures are of schools. The report has
photos of schools in ot.
Presodenl of the board in the three
years of the early 1890s was E. G Alcorn
Vice-president was A. T. Brown in 1891,
James Mulllneux, Jr., m 1892, and M. S.
Hurn m 1893. Clerk was J. c. Vanden all
three years. Treasurer was C. H. McCormick in 1891 - he was Alice
Margaret's grandfather, P. H. Cooley in
1892, and Ira W. Booton in 1893.

'I

Mulheux and H R Bradbury were the
other board members on 1891, D. A Howell
and Hum on 1892, and E E Gatewoud and
Cooley on 1893.
Standmg committees were repairs and
sc hool hous e suppli es, teachers and
dlscophne, textbooks , bills and accou nts.
and fmances,
The 1891-3 pr\ncopalon the high school
was T W Karr Teachers of grammar
were AlUla Morgan and Allee Lupton, and
amon g the primary teachers was Louise
Hutsmptller t.mcoln SchoOl - where
blacks were segregated - had W A Clark
and A. R. G. Guy as pnncopal on dofferent
years. Grammar principal was Martha A.
Cousm s
,
Grant School had H ll. Maxon as
prmcopal all three years woth Lyda
Cherrmgton the f irst year and second yeur
and Allee Bailey the third year as her
assistant
Garfoeld School had Nelloe Merriman
as principal the f1rst year and W. L Niday
the next two years Dougii\S School had
FaMie Scheneberger as princtpal the f1rst
two years and J . S. Porter the third year.
Special teachers were Augusta Waller
in penmanshtp and Mary Aleshire in
muSJc. Truant officers were J F. Martin
and r . E. Munston.
Prestdent E. G. Alcorn's " address"
took up pp 8-11 In the report, from which
came this gem
... A wise, prudent and judicious
mana1ement of tbe finances of the Board
greatly oilftcll, If II doe&amp; not wholly
regulate, every other question. II Ia the
way the flnu c.. are maoaged thai

commend,; the Board to the confidence of
the people, and any deviation from thh1
cour!le speedily awakens diRtruHI on the
part or lhe taxpayers and Involves the
Board In perplex ing dltfleultleH. It Is a
wise provision that the memberH of the
Board are directly reHponslble to their
constituents for the proper expenditure of
the money colled ed for Hchool purpose8 1
and that no dereliction of duty in thl11
purtlrular can go long unpunished ...
... There Is nothing su essential to good
schools as the selection of teachers ... raise
the standard by an lm·reast• nf their
salaries. Good salaries will bring good
tca~hcrs.

The clerk's report showed receipts ~md
disbursements equa l m each year of the
three, but each year mcluded a balance
f:?m the previous yea r In 1891, t he
fogure wa s $21,013 34, lncludong the
balance of $5,444.22; on 1892, receipts were
$19,9Jl.S6, expcndtlures the same, including a balance or $4,986 94 ; In 1893, the
figure was $22,16131, with the balance
mcluded $7,154 20. John C. Vanden signed
the report.
Supt. J B. Mohler's report listed oncreased attendance for th e three yea rs,
"due maonly" to "the closong of Guilla
Academy and the Parochial School, the
effec1s of the Truant L;ow, and Increased
prosperity of our city "
ll'ho knew that Gallla Academy once
had closed, until this triennial report came
to light ? 1\'ho knew that we had a parochial
SChool in Gallia Cowoty, prior to the school
which later was converted to the Guiding
(Continued on page A-2)

'

•

�A.-3-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Feb. 19, 1978

A·2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel , Sunday, Feb. 19, 1978

Booklets •••
(Continued from page I I
lland School at Cheshi re:
Mohler' s report continued that eight
truants had been sent to reform institutions; live moved out of the state to
avoid the Truant Law - whatever it was ;
17 were found not to have sufficient
:clothing to attend school.
·
•
" The teachers ha ve been !ailhlul,
~ne rgetic , and effici ent," the superin"
Jendent wrote, " many of them c oming to
work a t an early ho ur in the morning and
Z.cma ining until late in the even ing ." On
J,op of that they attended 23 general
{eacher·s· meetings a year.
There were one and half pages on
specia l days. The first was this :
:

Oct. J7, 1890 -

the wh11le sc·hnol par-

llcipated in the CentennJal Celebration of

the l.andlng of the First French Settlers of
Gallipolis. The Celebration ronslsted of
appropriate exercises In all the rooms a nd
a general parade Jn thl" afternoon whr n
on :' r a thousa.nd school children and th•~
lf'at' hers passed in review before Govemor
James E. Campbell and his stall.
· There were also Longfellow's Day
Nov . 24, 1890 : Whittier's Day Feb. 27,1891;
Arbor Day, Lowell Day ; in March, 1892, all
the teachers and 57 citizens visited the
Columbus city schools; Tennyson's Day
was Feb. 21 , 1893.
Enumeration was 1,806 in 1891 with
enrollment of 1,278 and the high school
having 124 ; enumeration was 1,884 in 1892
with enrollm ent of 1,354 and high schoo l
!53 ; and en umer ation 2,060 in !893 with
en rollment of 1,400 and high school 165.
Commencement of May 28, 1891, had
John Eaton, U. S. Commissioner of

Warrant
.dismissed
by judge ·

Education, as the speaker.
Alumni were listed on pages 28·36. A
kind or random selection of either familiar
names or French sounding names : 1870 George Gilmore. 1871 - Emma Kerns, nee
Gatewood. 1872- C. Fred Henking. 1874 Kate Small , nee Gatewood. 1875 - Anna \1.
Rust nee Newton of Mukwonago, Wis.
1876 - Ma ry E. Gatewood, nee McClellan.
1877 - Kate M. Dages, nee Newton. 1878 Emma de Mode, nee Kerr. 1879 - Allee
Pit rat. 1880 - Lincoln Neal, druggist ; Ella
Lupton, physician. 1881 - Alice Dufour.
1883 - Charles C. Cadot, pilot. 1885 Edgar Gatewood. 1892 - Claude Parker,
'
physi cian.
1be last three pages of the manual
give the history of the Gallipolis public
schools.' Initials at the end, H. U. M., are
those of Hannah U. Maxon, one of the
" cit y's outstanding teachers or all lime.
" In the early part of the year 1900 the
union of the Academy and the Public High ·
School was consummated, whereby endowment of the Academy was to go to the
repairing and equipment of the building,
and entire equipment was transferred to

GALLIPOLIS - Municipal
Court Judge James A.
Bennett Friday dismissed a
warrant against Eddie Gould,
Rl. 2, Bidweil , cha rgin g
aggravated menacing. The ·
charge had been liled by
Depu t y Alva Su.ilivan . It
allegedly involv ed JiJmes
Koontz of Rt. 2, Bidwell.
According to the court , th e
cas~ was dismissed because
the prosecution and main
prosecutibn witnesses fai)ed
to appea r. The case was
being handled by assistant
city solicitor Hamlin King .

.
In oltier

cases, Bobby
White, 1025 Second- Ave .,
Gallipoli s, entered a not
guilty pica to a physical harm
charge . His trial was set for
March 7.
A Point Pleasant man,
Ba rton E. Pea rso n, was
permitted to enter a guilty
'p lea to ·a misdemeanor
charge .under the bad check
section of the revised code.
Pearson had waived

ELCONA
24X56

9~~,
MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340
· , Gallipolis, Ohio

•

•

ON
..

1ST CHOICE IN

OVER THE PAST TWO
PLYMOUTH

,'•'

By Unltod PresslateruUonal
A glance at develoJmenla In the nationwide United
Mine Workers Union !ltrlke:
·
UMW Negollatlou
Coal union leaders rejeCUd a ''final" management
contract offer late Saturday, but Preaident Carter has
nudged negotiawrs for bolh aides beck w the
bargaining table . The altemaliw l.s drastic federal
intervention in the Th-day-old !ltrlke and even federal
takeover of mines.

I Continued from page I I
Pe rry Co unty Drug Abuse Council ;
E&lt;eculive Dirj!C(or of Perry County
Regional Planning Commisslqn and is
listed in " 1978 Who's Who Among Black
Americans.'' -The dinner will be roast sirloin beef,
baked potato, vegetables, relish plate,
dessert, and rolls. C&lt;&gt;st of the tickets is $5.
Anyone wishing to attend the dinner please
contact any Focus member or call 4463878. Reservations must be .made before
Feb. 22.

19 cases

tenninat~d

..

FORMAL OPENING

JOY'S
SALON
OF BEAUTY
.
.

Cheshire, Ohio (Roush Lane I
PHONE a67-7S26
or ·367-7605
Joy Rife, Owner and Operator

&amp;lploymeot
Layoffs are scheduled wstart in the Marietta area
on Monday because of electrical shortages
experienced by tile Monongahela Power C&lt;&gt;. which
serves 22,000 customers in Ohio. Union Carbide C&lt;&gt;.
said it would layoff 80 tAl 85 workers and Sperry-Univac
said it would go w a 32-flour week.

Now, you ge t Ameri ca. s fi rst choice in w agons over

the pasl two yea rs . And with it yo u ge l $663 worth of
po pular o pt io ns for on ly $41 3!' Yo u save $250 off the
sticker pri ce !
· Val ue Bonus Pa ckage reqUir es opt ronal power stee rrng

4 REASOIIS WHY IT'S AMERIU'S 1ST CHOICE
OVER THE PAST IWO YURS.
I. HIGH RESALE VALUE.

Vo la res shown wit h Value Bon us Package and

UMWrejects
latest offer
By DEAN REYNOLDS
WASIDNGTDN (UP!)
Tired and angry, witll the
~our after midnight , the
United
Mine
Workers
bargaining council voted 37~
early Saturday w reject the
soft coal industry's latest,
best offer.
The vote looked like a step
backwards in the nation's
longest coa l strike. Last
SUnday, when the council
rejected
an
earlier
setlle.ment, tile vote was ~ .
Simply put, tile miners are
insisting on tile basic protections ·built into the old, ·
e&lt;pired 1974 cootract, plus
tile '1/ percent wage hike (w
$64 a day ) tile Bituminous
C&lt;&gt;al Operators Association
bas said it is prepared to pay;
"This is our stand. Period,"
said one councU membe&lt;
The 3!knember ~argaining
council, ·two were "ab5ent
early Saturday, must,pass ori·
any contract the negotiating
team produces. U approved,
tile offer tllen is presented
with or without recommendation tO the rank
and file.
So far the council has been
pretty hard-nosed but tllere
have been exceptions.
The cuuncil is reported
willing to accept companyoperated healtll plans and
deductions for
health
coverage tllat are. now
provided free of charge. This
has been one sticking point.
• Manag e ment has
expressed a willingness w
,drop the controversial
proposal to fin e wildcat

6vtAM6t

opt;ona l custom aKterlo rs.

SAVEUPTO

ON

db
e

Legislative Reactloa
The Ohio General Assembly leadership has
scheduled nearly all sessions and committee meetings
for lhe coming week during daylight hours to reduce
energy usage .

..SAVE UP TO $250 ON
VOURE WAGON VAWE PACKAGES.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A attr act federa l energy
new degree program in research grants.
energy managemen t at Clark
Riffe had said one of his
Te c hni c al C ollege , goals. was to make ''Ohio
Springfield, was unanimoosly number ooe in energy reapproved Friday by the Ohio search."
Board of Regents.
•
The
regents
a lso
A year ago, Ohio House unanimousl y approved
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe , Jr., degree
progra ms
in
D-New· Boston ,
had R, es piral o r y Therapy wh o res igned from the
asked the
board
to Technology at Nortll Central Huntington Ioree in 1962 after
rev iew energy programs Technical College and being indicted lor breaking
a t th e state's colle~ e s Accountancy and Financial and entering, purchased a
and universities and upgrade Information Systems at the $100 First National City Bank
programs to attract federal Ohio ·state University.
of New York travelers check
energy research funds .
In other action, the in Ashland, Ky ., which was
Chance.ilor James · A. regents ~
photographed and used in the
Norton said !he Clark Tech
- Auth or iz ed nursing counterfeiting process , the
program was the first or students at 24 schools of indictment said.
several which will come nursing operated by nonArthur F . Nehrbass ,
before the board within the profit hospitals to be eligible specialagent-in-&lt;:harge of the
next several montlls.
for Ohio Instructional Grants. FBI office in Pittsburgh, said
.The new degree at Dark
- Approved a $4,700 the indictments· culminate a
Tech, one of three approved consultant contract with Dr. 27-month investigation into
by the regents, will include .John C. Bartlett to study the counterfeiting and passage of
study on the development and financial stabilitr and thousands of dollars worth of
maintenance of energy enrollme nt at the Ohio counterfeit travelers checks
systems. Graduates in the College of·Podistric Medicine across the United States.
program will receive ari in Cleveland.
Indicted on conspiracy
associate of applied science
- Hired Dr . Lynn G. cha rges were Robert Brent
degree.
Johnson at $22,318 a year as a
Norton said !he board was " lifelong learning officer."
acting in other areas lo
th e~"-~,
- Approved
comply with Riffe's request, expenditure of $706,400, most . ~npmgn
t
and that within a year the of it in Title I federal
regents wi!i have developed a government subsidies, for 20
" v·ery substantial, summer programs at 17
competitive progra m" to Wliversities.
~~

UMW Membership Activity
Sheriffs departments across southeastern Ohio
reported all was quiet tills weekend. The Army Corps
of Engineers, who have become concerned about
possible action whalt barges transporting coal on tile
Ohio River, also reported no problems SalW'day.

extradition to Gallia C&lt;&gt;unty
to lace a felony bad check
charge. The $599.35 check
was written to the Ohio
\/ailey Livestock Sales last
POMEROY - Thirteen
June.
defendants were fined and six
Judge Ben nett fined others forfeited bonds in
Pearson $100 and costs, Meigs County Court Friday.
sentenced him to six months
Fined by Judge Robert E.
in the county jail.
Buck were: Frank Harold,
However, the jail term was Jr., Middleport , and Richard
suspended and .he was placed C. Wilt, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $10
on six months probation. and costs, each, speeding;
Pearson was also ordered to Douglas E. Smith, Crown
make restitution as soon as City and David M. Huston,
possible.
Syracuse, $15 and costs each ,
Another Point Pleasant speeding; Allred T. Smith,
resident, Lewis M. Oliver, 26, . Pjlrketsburg, $15 and costs,
forfeited bonds totaling $896 assured clear distance ;
for three charges, OWl, Robert L. Williamson, Rutassured Clear distance and land, $10 and costs, assured
fiditious registration .
clear distance ; Paul ReitFined were Donald L. mire , Pomeroy, $11 and
Taylor, 25, Gallipolis, $100 costs, speeding ; Paul R.
and costs, six months in the Manley, Columbus, and
county jail, all of which was Amos B. Cross, Rt. 1, Langssuspended except three days ville, $13 and costs each,
for driving under suspension. speeding; Henry P. Price, Rt.
Eiizabeth Bailey, 58, Rl. I, 1, Long Bottom, $10 and costs,
Ches hi re, $15 and costs, reckless operation; Ted
assured clear distance .
Co ppick, Middleport, $100
Forfeitin g bonds were and costs, $75· suspended,
Joseph G. Swain, 25, Crown illegal deer; Mary Greer, Rl .
City , $25 speed ; Delbert I, Long Bottom, $100 and
Russell, 54, Gallipolis, $24 costs, $50 suspended, illegal
speed; John E. Cunning , 60, deer .
Freedom, Pa., .$24 speed;
Forfeiting bonds were
Oral R. Bevan, 43, Rt. 2, Morris E. Smith, Hurricane,
Crown City, $70 overload and $30.50, speeding; Randall
James A. Bays, 38, Rt. 2, Reeves, Rt.. 4, Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, $28 failure to $25.50 illegal muffler; Ira G.
register . In a case in court Vandyke, Galloway, $30.50,
earlier this week, John A. assured clear distance;
Clonch, 63, Rt. 2, Patriot, Elmer C. Swank, Newark,
entered a not guilty plea to a $28, left of center; EdwardS.
charge of defective brakes Ankrom, Parkersburg, $28,
and not DWI as staled in unsafe vehicle; Richard J.
Friday's court news. His case Stettler, Chester, $360.50,
will be heard March 30.
OWl.

VOI.ARE COUPES AID SEDANS, TOO!

STE.f:..K HO,t JSE

You get up lo $663 worth of op tions like AM radio .
d• gital cloc k. and more . .. at $250 ofl the slic ker

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

price tt A real Vol are Va lue

NEW YORK 1t.;PI I -· The
CIA m ust pay $4,000 in
damages
three persons
whust.' mall It opened .

CHARLESTON, W. \I a.
fU P!i - A former Huntington police sergeant has
been named an unindicted cocons pira tor by a federal
grand jury which Indicted a
printer, photographer and
oHset pri nter lor coun·
ter!eiling about $1 million
worth of travelers checks.
Bernard Tomlinson , 51,

Coal Supplies
The Ohio Edison Co. next week will operate
witllout backup generation capability. It l.s hoped tile
action willllrnlt !he probability of mandatory power
cutbacks. Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric and Colwnbua and
Southern Ohio Elec'trlc C&lt;&gt;. optimistically predict !hey
wll1 be able to avoid curtailments If voluntary
conservation continues.

JUVENILE CITED
GALLIPOLIS - Chris R. Daniels , 16,
Gallipolis, was cited to Juvenile C&lt;&gt;urt lor
no operator's license following an accident
at 3:25p.m. Friday on the Bu!aville-Porter
Rd. north of SR 160.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol said Daniels' car attempted to turn
into a private driveway when it slid on the
icy pavement. The vehicle struck a mail·
box and ditch.

~

Huntington man CIA must pay mail damages
Energy program Fornrer
· d CO•CORS:plrator
•
name
.'o
given approval

Watch'

Speaker. • •

GAHS CLASSR ING FOUND
GALLIPOLIS - A 1978 Gailia
Academv Hi 11h School cliJssrim! was found
in downtown Gallipolis Friday. Initials
on the rin g are " MW" and apparently the
ring was run over by a vehicle . The owner
may claim it at The Tribune office.

CLOSE OUT
'

the Board of Education."
Thus spake Hannah Maxon in !he 190!)..
1901 manual of the Public Schools of
Ga llipolis.

-·

strikers $20 for each day of
missed work, anolh.,.. hurdle .
But the industry apparently
still wants some displlnary
action against wildcat '
instigawrs. The BCOA also
has given ground on the costof·living issue. But not nearly
enough for tile miners.
Eddie Sturgill, a council
member from Harland
C&lt;&gt;unly, Ky., said lhe industry
offered to place a maximum
3tkent
cost~f·living
allowance on the last ~wo
years of tile tllree-year pact.
This means that if tile cost
of living increases by, say, 50
cents in 1980, tile miners
would still get no more Ulan a
3lkent allowance.
11
We don 't want any ceiling
on eost..,f4iving at all," said
sturgill.
The contract rejected last
Sunday contained no cost-a(.
living escalator of any kind .
Anoth er proposal made ·
Friday didn't even draw a
vote from the couneil, and a
tllird . plan, tile details of ·
which were still unclear
Saturday, was unanimously
rejected, even !hough it was .
considered the industry's
11
4lst 1 final, best offer."
Sturgill said tllere were
some "eight or nine" other
issues
which
needed
modification.
The bargaining council was
in an angry mood Friday. Ex·
hausted from too little sleep
and tired of waiting to vote m
ari agreement, members one
by one made known their
views.
"That contract t.hat (UMW
President Arnold) Miller sent
us was a disgrace;'' said one
in reference w last Sunday's
rejected pact. "He .should be
ashamed."
Some see the heel-digging
position of the UMW as a
reflection of a political
!ltruggle within tile union . The
council wants to dispel .that
notion .
"The Arnold
Mill~r
problem has . nothing to do
with the contract," ~J&amp;id one
me.mber. "We want a fair
contract, that's all. · ·

2/1rt Carved .
ArtCarved offers the most appealing and
complete selection of styles handcrafted of
I 4-korat gold.

TAWNEY'S JEWELERS
424 Second Ave.

Gives more passenger room than a ll \he new
down ·s lzed GM interm edia te wagons base d o n

Gallipolis

WASHiNGTON (UP!) To help. pay off the mortgage
debt from Ohio Democratic
Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum's unsu ccessful 1974
Senate race, organized labor
has put up $20,000.
The money is being used to
pay orr a $64,300 loan from the
Cleveland Trust Co. secured
by the campaign committee
with securities owned by the
senator.
When Metzenbaum lost a
primary race to Sen. John H.
Glenn in 1974 he found
himsell nearly $70,000 in debt,
with no political friends to
help pay it off. But his victory
in 1976 changed that and a
Metzenbaum Post - Campaign Committee was set up
to pay off the earlier debt.
· Through politlca l action
committees, the AFL-CIO
ha s given $3,000 ; the
Machinists and Aerospace
Workers,
$6,000.:
and
Aerospace Workers, $6,000;
tlie Reta il Clerk s In·
ternational Union, $5,000; and
the United Auto Workers,
$6,000.

Sears

ONLY '199

99

for our finest
Franklin-style
fireplace ... cut •3o
Ven ts from top for
s tra ight-up venting or
from ha ck for throughw:.tll \'enting

EnUre firepla ce is
of f.ine grain cast iron
with a sa tin y fjni sh

Twist damper is buil t
into r~du ce r for eas\1

Cast-in bracket for us~
with barbecue grid and
he an pot (both sold

contrnl of fire

separate ly, extra )

· ·•

Includes dual -purpose
g ra te for burning logs
up to 23 in. long, or
for burning coal

F ire box is m a de of
haJf.parte ls holted to·
ge t her to reduce likeli ·
hood of cra&lt;· kin~

..
..·'

CHRYSLER
CC.~PO~ Ali O !ol

W,.;+

cou pe w•th tH:yl •nd er . 1-bhl. engine w1th
man ua l tran smrssro n. '!'ou r ac tual
m11eage may diller depen ding on yo ur
drilJr ng habit s: the conartion ol your car

and its opt ional equrpmen t

-

/

Plrjmouffi

PAA

..
IIP ....CIMINT

GUARANTE:E~

GALLIPOLIS CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTH, INC.

•'

·'
.,•

'30 OFF wood·
burning heater
SALE '18999

'20 OFF cast iron
radiant heater
SALE '7999

'30 OFF iron/steel
radiant heater·
SALE 113999

Grnvitv -lype circu lator.
Holds fire up to 12 hours
without re'fueling.

Use as heater or stove .
LQad s thro ugh front ,
top. Pn rtly assembled .

The rmostat OJJe nS and
doses damper. Partly
assembled.

• Shlpping, installation extra • Prices are c&amp;.talog prices
• Sears hae a credit plan to suit most every n eed'
• Now oR aa le in our "V" catalog supplement

,•'

.....
·'
·'

•

1639 EASTERN AVE.

GAU.IPOUS, OHIO

-,---

•

-

-· _ , - . .

./ ·

.,. ·-

..

"Wh•r• only ,,. besr.food is good inough"

O'DEU WMBER CO.
Vlno SlrMI
thlllpofll, Oll,la

,r

SLA CKS·.... ~.E~.JP.......~9rt ••'900

~

indictme nt

~

STORE HOURS
Mon.thru Fri.lOa.m . tiJBp.m .

ALL

Sun . l · S:30

SALES

.FASHIONS

FINAL

•

PLAZA _SHOP CENTER

BELPRE OHIO

printed in his print shop.

PRESIDENTS' DAY SALE
DOWNTOWN ·STORE
SU N.-MON.-TUES.-WED.
CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S COFFEE COAT
50% POLYESTER 50% COTTON
PRIN.TS AND SOLIDS
SIZES 10 to 44
REG. 17.4f""

LATEX FLAT

BAND LEG OR ELASTIC LEG

SEE THRU LID - AUTOMATIC SIGNAL
LIGHT
AUTOMATIC THERMOSTAT

INTERIOR

$299
GAL

REG · ~

CA.NVAULOTH

WOMEN'S BRIEFS
100% COlTON

DEEP FAT FRYER

WALL PAINT
REG. 1J.9(

;(gg

31/2 QT. CROCK . POT

·HANDBAGS

REMOVABLE STONEWARE POT .
STAY COOL HANDLES
SEE THRU COVER

72~

BOYS' FLANNEL SHIRTS
SIZES 12·14-16

REG.~

PLANT
LADDER
REG. !J,9(

REG.~J.f'

POPCORN MAKER

$422

WEST BEND BUTTERMATIC
AUTOMATIC

SUPER

. lAMINATED THERMAt
WATER REPEUENT

S.M·L
REG. -

•

8 22

REG. $}14(

HOT
CYCLE

HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS
REG.

'JM6'

$1 Q22

SHELl • RICK RACK •
BROOMSTICK SCOTTISH PlAID

MISSES

WITH 2 WIDE RANGE SPEAKERS

REG.~ ·

POLYESTER
FABRIC

ADMIRAL TV

Isears I

12" B&amp;W

'522

SHIRTS
REG. !)8'(
. S3 22

SLIGHnY DAMAGED
1 ONLY

FILE CABINET

~

$3()00

1 ONLY

FILE CABINET

BURGER MACHINE

2 DRAWER

'922

•

REG.U

4 DRAWER

UTilE MAC

REG.,v'

REG•

GTR ORGAN
FLOOR MODEL
WITH BENCH
REG.~

&amp;U•faclion Guaranteed Or Your Monell Back

Most merchandise available.
for pick·up within 2 days
For Orders Phone 446·2770
•

SEARS,

SILVER IR!DGE PLAZA
FOR SERVICE ONLY
•
PHONE 446·2902

llOI:BU~

AND 00.

'822

STEREO 8 TRACK
TAPE PLAYER

A ASST. STYLES
~-----------1 V WES TO $....1.1
AFGHAN KITS
!&amp;.iS"

REG.;JA'{

4. LOW PRICE,
Co mpa red to GM competition ... Vol are·s low
pri ce wil l surprise yo u.

A
w

SPECIAL BUY

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
DRESS • SPORT
• Ba sed On EPA est im ates tor ! edan and

SIZES 3-20

Bran ornaments n tra

tra nsve r5:e sUspensi o n .

MtniOfiiUO lllAI.Ift

/2

P•rtly auembled

The only wago n in 'it s class with Iron! iso lated

recenl Automot rve Market Aepolt pu blr ca tro n

OFF. FALL.
WINTER
.FASHIONS

PLASTIC

3. BIG CAR RIDI.

'' % ot ret urn o t or rgr rj al strck er prrce tor one yea r o ld
wagons on a co rn plfirl iva m ode l basrs, Based on

an

1/

REG. ~

eig ht key in lerior dimensiOns .

.•

in

charging Paul " Bud" Waugh,
40, of Huntington , a former
Golden Gloves
boxin g
champion, with transporting
forged and counterf eit
American Express Co.
travelers checks In $50
denominations in 1976.
Franklin was charged in
another indictment with lying
to the grand jury about the
counterfeit checks being

FASHION SALE

SIZES 5 to10

one damn nickel from
anybody for doing this. Not.
one damn nickel."

2. PASSENGER ROOM.

again

government as the result of
disclosures that the CIA
illega lly had opened mall sent
between t he United States
and communist countries be·
tween 1957 ond 1972.
Ea rlier judgement awards
have been as high as $6,000.

uiven $20,000 ·

"You remind everyone.''
he said. " We aren 'l getting

Volar€! Wagon's resale va lue i s hig her t han all its
Fo rd a.nd G M competi tion . ·

Ba D of Huntington , a local
veterans club bartender and
f o rm e r Hunt i n g t on
Publishing Co. photographer ;
Carl Franklin of Huntington,
who has a print shopi J ohn W.
Roa ch of Huntington. a
retired offset print e r ;
Randall Lee Myers, now In a
federa l prison in Minnesota;
and Milia rd H. Carter of
C&lt;&gt;!umbus, Ohio.
Another indictment naming
Tomlinson as an unlndicted
co-conspirator said he, Myers
and others pa ssed the
counterfeit checks in West
Virginia, Kentucky, Georgia,
North Caroiimi, Mississippi ,
Missouri, Nebraska, Utah,
California and Illin ois in
May, June and July of 1976.
Tomlinson was named

U. S. District C&lt;&gt;urt Judge
Jack R. Weinstein, calling the
mail openings "despicable,"
Friday awarded $2,000 to
le ct ur er- writer Corliss

l.amont Ill. 76, and $1 ,000
each to Victoria Wilson, 28,
an editor at Knopf Publishing
C&lt;&gt;., and Rodney Driver. a
matllema tics professor at the
University of Rhode Island.
The three a re the la test to
win judgements aRainst the

'35

G. C. MURPHY CO. • THE FRIENDLY STORE
Due to Clearance Metthandise No Rain Checks on Above Items

�French City
•
VIgllettes. • •
•

Sunday Tlmes.Seolinel

Paul Bauer, Direct&lt;&gt;r of Curriculum &amp; Instruction .
Gallipolis City Sehools, discussed educational ~ rant with
Madalyn Ledoux .
,

BV TOM SAUNDERS
GALLIPOLIS The
Gallipolis Journal of Feb. 14,
1878 had this article: Nash
and Daddell, Ia wyers of this
· city are in receipt of a letter
from certain attorneys in
New Orleans who represent
parties who claim to have an
ownership in the greater part
of the city of Gallipolis. The
lett er states that the property

Racine honor
roll announced

Seven Taken
To Hospitals

RACINE - Fort y-three
stud ents
at
Racine
Elementary. School were
named to the third six weeks
' honor roiL Students must
maintain a "B" or better to
be named to the roll .
Names were:
Grade One - Traci Beegle,
Shawn Diddle, Chris Jewell,
Elizabeth Sm ith and Melanie
VanMeter.
Grade Two Angie
Bostick, Annet t Ca rdone,
Patrece Ci rcle, Marty
Teacher s in Ga lli polis City Schoo ls receive
Cleland,
Tammy Holter, Tina
Educational Grant. L-r, Cleora Egnor, Jerry Davis
Sloter, Joy Stobart, and J on
Madalyn \Aeoux.
'
Tuttle.
Grade Three - Michael
Dee m, Heather Hobbs ,
. Matthew Jewell , Debbi e
Murphy, Lisa Pape, Richard
Parsons, Rachel Reiber,
Dia na Simpso n, Tammy
Theiss, Tammy Wolfe, and
Wendy Wolfe.
Grade Four - Lori Ada ms,
Dixie Dugan, Melissa Ihle,
Lisa Parsons, Kelly Rizer,
Kenda Rizer, Robin Savage
and Becky Va n.Meter.
Grave Five - Lo is lhle,
Allan Crisp, Sandy Deem,
Sandy Harden, Debra Holter,
Ja n)eS Lea mond , David
Powell , and Lori Simpson.
Grade Six - Linda Proffitt ,
Laren Wolfe and Tony Wolfe.

Meigs sheriff issues

belonged to a Frenchman by
the name of Antoine Rouby .
He died in New Orleans about
1805 leaving one child a
daughter, who married one
Pierre Maturine Bisnard.
The latter died in 1808, 9 or
10 and the widow married one
Joseph Eugene. Bailey, he
dying in 1822. The grandchildren of Mrs. Besnard and
Bailey a re prosecuting this
case. The claim comprises all
or the greater portion of the
land on which the town of
Gallipolis nowstands, the site
of the courthouse being about
the center of the tract . Our
lords of t he ma nor can
prePare to pore over abst racts, and see whether they
a re really r ich, or only
supposably so.
Antoine Rouby drew lots
188 and 197 in the original
division of Gallipolis. These
were between Second and
· Third Aven ues on Locust St.
He drew these lot s on Jan. 20,
1191.
I have not been able to lind
any information as to how
this case was handled by our
city fathers.
The Journal ended the news
with the words : " Blessed is
he that hath nothing, for it
shall not be taken from him."
The building of our post

office required the removal of
the following buildings : a
double frame once an ale
.house run by John H. KUhn, a
double frame where Julius
Ba•ter had a bakery and
Charles Ba•ter a paint shop,
a photo ga ll ery run by
-Charles Fellmore which was
later a notions store, a
dwelling of Russ and Cyrus
Cheney that was later used as
a mercantile building. Billy
Sha rtz ·worked as a tobac·
conist in this store. Nick
North ran a restaurant in the
building. Also in this area
was the tin shop of A. R.
Chase.
In 1900 C. B. Blake of Swan
Creek downed an apple
tree 14 feet in diameter . This ' tree was
planted in 1818 bv A. T.
Blake. Sixty-seven bushels of
apples were ,produced by this
tree in th e year mentioned
above. At the time it was
thought that this tree was the
largest apple tree in the state.
In 1843 Reuben Aleshire ran
a flat boat from Gallipolis to
New Orlea ns. The crew was:
Biri c
Smi th,
William
Lambert , George Eashus, AI
Kinder, William LoUks,
Matellus Switzer . Their pay
was 8 or 9 dollars a mont h. A
round trip took nine weeks.
W. H. Langley H. H. Neal,
Will ia m Boltzell, Nicholas
Th ev ineux , Capt. John S.
Myers wer e shippers of flour,
bran and produce . Seven
hundred barrels of flour sold
lor $2,540, 6,000 Ibs. of bran
$1 ,100. One of these trips was
made in eight een days and
sixteen hours non-stop.

t

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,.,".

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'. •·

......

.-.

'

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.. '·
- .•'1

'.

.'

... 330

~d

Awenu

'.

...

is having

.,.

a

IBIIIRIIHIDA\lY
••• j

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.

MON.
SPECIAL

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Marluka
Varian , Hartford ; Marie
Smith, l'renter, W. Va. ; Mrs.
David Dewhurst , · Letar
t;.
.
Minnie Lyons, Leon ;· ,Mrs.
Henry Arnold, Southside ;
Christopher Divers, New
Haven; Robert VanMeter ,
Mason; Mrs. Robert Bl5hop~
Henderson ; Nonnan Henry,
·Henders on; Mrs . James
Kelly , Keith Hill, Mark Smith,
Mrs . Jam es Craddock,
Grandvllle Hill and Mrs.
Ralph Davil!, all of Point
Pleasant.

$5 and $10 RACKS
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS
on
SWEATERS, SLACKS,
JEANS &amp; DRESSES
SAVE $$$'s

50-60% OFF
ON ALL OTHER
WINTER MERCHANDISE
COORDINATES, COATS

A thought for the day :
Ame ri can
philo sophe r
William James said, "Man
lives by ha bit, indeed, but
what he lives for is thrills and
excitement.''

- - - E'CC.

'

GROUP MEN"S

FebruaiJ

SUITS
&amp;
SPORT-COATS

,

17-18

·.

GROUP MEN'S

lhPRICE

&amp;20

'

$4888

TOP
COATS ~:ula~

•

~:!

according to
Timothy Eggl eston,
Executive Director of the
school. Miss Parsons is the
daught er of Mr . and Mrs .
Larry H. Parsons of New
Haven, West Virginia.
The winner is a high school
senior achieving the htghest
scor e on the three-part
Business Aptitude test given
December, 19n. Each of the
six West VIrginia Career
Co lleges, privat e bu sin ess
schools specializing in in·
t ens tve career-o r iented
programs, offers an annual·
scholarship. This year over
50Q high school se niors
around the state participated
in the Schola rship Awards
competition.
According to Don Ca mp:
bell, guidance counselor at
Wahama High Sehool, Miss
Parsons has long been an
outstanding student. " I am

The top ten · winners . included : Sh eila Gibson of
Chesa peake High Schoo l,
Beth Grav~s of Ceredo
Kenova High School, Terry
Hensley and Roberta Smith
from Buffalo of Way ne,
Sandra Va nee of Magnolia
High at Mat ewa n, Gina
Kelley of Da wson-Bryant ,
Criss Riggs of Ironton, Sandy
Hale of Wayne, and Peggy
Wilhelm of Po int Pleasant .

r ---------------- - - - ------- ~

!

MEN'S

JUMP SUITS

'

Farmington, Mich.; two
stepda ughters, Mrs. Augusta
Applin, Sunland, Ca lif. , and
Mrs. Geo rge Wee kley,
Park ersburg; a brother,
Harry Aumill er, Little
Hocking; 70 grandchildren
and five great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Johnson was preceded
in dea th by her husba nd,
Ruben In 1959, a son, Benny
Lewis, In 1954 and eight

'

"The new

,

tax.fonns•.

Group

:·•

Mens Shoes

.•

l\

PRICE .

Sport Shirts

%PRICE

ELMER NIDAY
GALIJPOLIS - Elmer S.
Niday, 94, a resident of 635
Thi rd Ave., died at 2:25a.m.
Saturday at the Je nk ins
Memorial Home, Wellston.
Mr. Niday had been in
failing health several years.
He was an engineer at the
Gallipoli s State Institute ,
being .retired in 1956 after 30
years service.
Mr. Niday was born Nov.
21, 1883 , in Walnut Twp. son ui
the late Stephen E. and
Elizabeth Boggs Niday.
He is survived by his wife,
Maude Uoyd Niday , whom he
married on Aug. 14, 1910, in
Gallipolis. A daughter-in-law,
Mrs. Helen Niday, Gall ipolis,
survives.
One daughter, Mrs. Pa ul
(El iza beth )
Wi lli a m s,
Gallipolis, survives. Two sons
prece ded him in deat h,
Merrill E. Niday , wlro was
killed in action during World
War II in Germ any, on April
12, 1945, a nd Uoyd E. Niday,
who died on Dec. 3, 1968. One
grandson and one grand·
da ught er survive, · J ack
Willia ms, Gallipolis and Mrs.
Aun Straley, Dubuque, Iowa.
Two gr ea t-g randchildren ,
Todd and Amy Straley survi ve.
Three sisters and fiv e
brothers preceded him in
death.
Mr. Niday was a member
of Grace United Methodist
Churc h an d the Mason ic
Lodge at Patriot and the St .
John 's Bible Class.

QONALD V. COLEMAN
COOLVILLE - Donald V.
Coteman, 61 , Pickerington,
formerly of Long Bottom,
died Friday at Mt. Carmel
East Hospital, Columbus, as
a result of injuries received in
a home lire last month .
He was born at Long
Bottom, a son of the late John
R. and Cora Coleman. He
served In the armed forces
.during World War U and was brothers and sisters.
Funeral services will be
a member of the Long Bbttom
Christian Church and the held at I p. m. Tuesday at the
Whi te Funeral Home with the
American Legion.
Rev.
Eve rett Cla gg of·
Surviving · are a daughter,
ficiating.
Burial will be in the
Judith Mary Marga r et
Torch
Baptist
Church .
Brown, of Dover; six sisters,
Friends
may
caU
at the
Funeral services will be
Mrs .
Naomi
Osborn ,
funeral
home
any
time.
held
I :30 p.m. Monday at th e
Pickerington i Mrs. Gamel
Waugh-HaUey-Wood
Funeral
Stewart, Parkersburg; Mrs.
Hom e with Rev. Charles
Opal Osborn, Cincinna ti ;
WILLIAM MUSSER
Mrs. Audrey Bowm an,
ATHENS _ William K.
Sabina; Mrs. Gladys Ritchie, . Musser, 61 , a resident of Rt.
Belpre, and Mrs. Elizabeth
M'llei
St Lo ·· M
I, Athens, died unexpectedly
1
• · u•s,
o.; two Frid ay
afterno"on
at
'
brothers, Harry L., Long
Bottom, and William H.. . O'Bleness Hospital.
Columbus, and six grand·
He was the son of the late
children . Preceding him in . · William H. and Iva Spires
death were his parents, a Musser. He Was born In
brother and a sister.
Rutland on Feb. 4, 1911.
Funeral services will be
Mr. Musser was a graduate
held at I p.m. Monday at the of Rutland High School and
White Fun eral Home in was a World War II veter~n ,
Coolville with the Rev. having served with the U. S.
Ric!Jard Thomas officiating. Army in the Pacific Theatre.
Burial will be in Sand Hill
He was formerly employed
Cemetery at Long Bottom . by the New Vork Central
Friends may call at the Railroad and Pickens Ha ~··"'\
funeral home any time.
ware in Mason lor 20 years .
He was employed by the
Athens Mental Heaith Center
LUTA N. JOHNSON
for th~ past 20 years and was
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Luta maintenance foreman prior
N. Johnson, 84, died Friday at to retirement in 1977.
her home in Torch.
·
He was a member of the
She was born in Wood Athen s Gr ange, Athen s
County, W.Va., a daughter of Pomona Grange, Civil Serthe late Henry C. and Lucy vice Association, vice
Brookhart Aumiller. Mrs. pres ident of the Athen s
Johnson was a member of the Mental Hea lth Center credit
Torch Unit ed Meth odi st uniori.
Chureh, the women 's group of
He is survived by his wife,
the church and the Coolville Ruth Pickens Musser, two
Senior Citizens Club.
daughters : Mr s. J ames
Surviving are three Sons, ( Rub y)
H e nder s on ,
Henry Douglas, Tacoma , Co lumbus ; Mrs. Clift on
Wash.; Luma,n J., Parkers-- (Patricia) Rice, Athens; two
burg, and Seldon, Torchi two sons: William R. Musser , and
daughters,
Mrs.
Cleo John F. Musser, both of
Ferguson, Huntington , W. Pomeroy.
Va ., and Mrs. Freda Fuchs,
One sister survives, Mrs.
Parkersburg ; three stepsons , Fred Brown, Gallipolis and
Clinton Johnson, Portland; two brothers, Arthur Musser,
Raymond Johnson , Parkers- Rutland and Hubert Musser,
burg , and Ralph Johnson ,

I

....
.
.r.

Group Men's

lf2

i

Area Deaths

:.

Young GOP against treaty
ATHENS - The Executive representing 41 elubs Hnd " fnr their s upport of
Cummiltee uf · the Ohiu uvrr
~.000
members Guverrior Rhodes in till s
League or Young Repulican thruughuut Ohio, urged matt e r" and praised 6th
Clubs
last
weekend Senators G lrnn and Mli· Di s tr ic t Congress ma n
unanimously pass ed lwu zcnba um tn vote against Wilh am H. Ha rsh jj ''for his
resulutions addressing the ratificati un (If the treaties. efforts to spearhead the bi·
issues of th e proposed
Hhe second r eso lution pa "isan Ohio Cong ressional
Panama Canal treaties and reHfhrmed lhe
Yuunlo{ delegation into similar ut··
the current coal strike.
Republit' ans' "support of th e lions."
The Youn~ Republi C'a ns. actlun uf Ohio Govern or
During
t he
Sunda y
Ohio
You ng
James A. Rhudcs in urging mt!eting ,
President Jimmv Carter to HePublkun Chairman Pete
intervene in negotiation s in Co uladis of Athens urged ·all
the UMW st rikr. by invoking Young Uepublicans in Ohio to
the TaU-Hartley Act."
se nd letters to thei r
The r eso lution further Co ngress ional represe n·
commended Ohio Ho use tativcs a nd to the White
Speaker Vernal G. Hiffe. Jr. Hou se expressin g their
and Ohi o Senate President ieelings on these two vital
Pro Tempore Oliver Ocusek isstu.•s.

Cb.arles not
ready for
marriage

LONDON (UPI l - Prince
Charles is a " fan tast ic"
person but isn 't ready for
marria ge and probably
hasn't even met the woman·
who will be his queen, uccord ing to one of tl!e prince's
current girlfriends .
Lady Sarah Spencer, . 23,
who recently spent a IO'day
Swiss ski holiday with the 29·
year·t&gt;ld heir to the British
throne, a lso denied t here was
anything roma ntic in her
friendship with the prince.
"As a person he's fantastic; .
He;s fabulous. But ... there's
no question of me being the
future queen of England . I
don't think he's met he r yet,''
Lady Sarah told reporters
Friday.
"He does n't wa nt to
ma rry . anyway . He's not
ready for ma rriage yet,'' sne
sa id.

Lusher and Rev . Christian
King officiating. Burial will
be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funer~ l

home on Sunday from

2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Mason ic services will be
conducted by Patriot Lodge
at 7:30 p.m. Su nday .
Pallbea rers. will be Atty.
Warren Sheets, J im Dai ley,
Tom Eva ns, Bill Shadr ack,
Homer Shadrack, Ted Perry
and Calvin Layne.
Honorary pall bearers will
be members of St. John ' s
Bible Class.

Our experts wi ll "'"kc a ~X7 fi lack ~ Whi te As· l'
copy.o f ~ny pic Lur e m guod L:~mdi t ion , and we wHI
show you how ha nd· f&gt;&amp;li n t~d minwturcs. even full
s ize o il pa intings, ca n IX! made.! from ~ hc r is hed

·'.·

Open Friday &amp; Monday Ti18: oo P. M.

:r
~·
·\
·,'

'

'f
\
'

w

"

·~
•

,.

tP2-3795 '

27 SYCAMORE. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
~ · 0303

Open 9:00ta6 :00 WHicdoys
, , oo tas :oo S.turdoy
No Appolntmetlt Nocosoary

Mon.-Sal.

8 am-10 pm
Sunday

10 am-10 pm
Prices Effective

298 SECOND ST.

Thru
FEB. 25, 1978

~~~-,~-'

SUPERIOR BULK

.

WI EN ERS..L~~-

59¢

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plaza- Gatlipolis
Open Tues. thru Sat. 10-5, till 8 on thurs.

446-7494

$2
99
POTATOES~~-~~·

A.LL PU.RPOSE

&lt;

Dodge Ramcharger Four by Four.

INSTANT COFFEE
10 oz. $449
W/C
Limil1 Per Custome r
Good Only at Powe ll"s
Offer Expires Feb. 25 , 1972 ·

~m

-~

WALDORF

TOILET.TISSUE

59¢
4
ROLL
PACK

W/C

Limill Per Custom er ·
Good Only at Powe ll 's
Feb. 25, 1978 ·

DEL MONTE

CATSUP
38 OZ.

69¢

W/ C

Limit 1 Pe r Custom er
Good Only at Powe ll's
Offer Expires Feb. 25, 1978

THE

FASTEST
GROWING
TRVCK COMPAN Y
&lt; -·~~·INAMERICA.

~ll'"""!aR!!'""!!!!!'BLOC~'!!'~It..

.

Hours:

Umiled Time Onlyl

When it comes to·trucks to buy or lea se, nobody seem s to have
more to choose from than your nearby Dodge Dealer. That's becau se
he has a complete lineup of good- looking, hard -workin g Dodge·
pickups and full - time four -whe elers. Lik e tough ; dependa ble 0100
pickups. Wild and wicked Warlock pickups. Rough and ru gg ed tou rwheel - drive Ramchargers and Power Wagon pickups. Trucks that .
have got it where it counts when it comes to comfort, styl e, performance, and value . So what are you waiting lor? See th e man who
has "the trucks that have got it all.

At H&amp;R Block, we understand these new
fonns, we know the laws. We11 do every·
thing we can to save you money. And that's
Reason No. 1why you should let H&amp;R Block
do your taxes.

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

Store

pic tures . If photot'l arc ti nH: Wor n , uddittono l
c harge s for res to r atio n an.' rL'u:-oo nah ly Jl rtccd
a lso.

See all the '78 Dodges at your nearby Dodge Deal er's today .

THE INCOME
. TAX PEOPLE
-

'S

POWE L

CHERISHED
COPIES

.•,

·,

I

nu:~u:agt o•n,

very proud that · a student
from our school won the
scholarship," Campbell said.
He continued to say that April
has always been an excellent
student.
April is 'il member of the
National Honor Society, the
·Wahama High School Mar·
ching Band, and the Wahama
High School Debale Team,
The schoJarship winner also
works Pa rt-time at Tookie~
Fashions in New Haven and
is an Avon Representative.
She has one brother, Joseph,
a st udent at Marsha ll
University, and one sister,
Anna, a student at Wahama.

.••

KNIT SHIRTS
~PRICE

~:~~~~~~fni:award
by
'~
· Careergiven
College

!

~ ·.

Mens

CORDUROY
SLACKS

MASON - April Parsons,
Wahama High School Senior,
,accepted t he annual

•.••

DRESS
SHIRTS

· Group Men's

Miss Parsons
. . '"'cepts award

t. .

GROUP MEN'S

Group

Zanesville . Sixteen grand -

children and one great ·
grandchild survive.
One brother, Raymond .
preceded hin1 In death .
Funeral services will be
held I p.m. Monday at the
Jagers Funeral Home in
Athens with Rev . John
Palmer officiating . Burial
will be in Athens County
Memory Gardens .
Friends may call at the
funeral home Sunday from 24 and 1·9 p.m.
Contributions may be made
to the At hens County !lear!
Fund.

I

'

1977 activity,report

A-6--TIIoo S•llldl•y TIJnes.Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 19, !978

Carroll Norris Dodge
THIRD &amp; COURT

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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

~

MP:wl

LOOK FOR OUR

MYSTERY
SPECIAL
SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY
ONL Y!

I

�A~- The Sundav Times-sentinel, Sunday,

.

Feb. 19, 1978

B-1 - The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Feb. IS, 1978

Drug workshop announced
health. nursin~ homes •nd
other centers where geriatric
care as provided. The content
of the prog ram includes
medications to contrul·treat
long-term illnesses of older
persons ; effeds of an aging
physiology on the absorption
and elimination of drugs ; and
effects of interaction between
medications treating two or
more chroni c conditions.

Pharmaceutical Services,
University l! ospitals of
Clev eland; al\d Rosanne
Skul)', R.N., geriatric nurse
consultant, Nursing Division
of the Ohio Department of
Health.
The workshop hours are
8:30 a .m. to 4:3() p.m. but
lunch is not included in the
SlO registrat ion lee . The
workshop carries QNA en·
Instru ctors
for
the dorsed .6 CEUs.
For more infonnation or to
workshop are: William D.
Ball. Howard S. Glazier , register , contact Steven
Kenneth J . Sol omon and Cavot e, CHEAO continuing
Ronald I. Cowan, phar. education coordinator at 614·
macist s with the Clinica l 593-:'&gt;526 in Athens.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Corporation for Health
Education in Appala chi a
Ohio [CHEAO ) will sponsor a
workshop on '· Drugs : Action,
Reaction, Interaction,"
through the facilities of the
Ohio
Va-lley
Med ical
Mi crowa ve. The program
will be ai red on March 3 at
two sites, the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis and the
Athens Mental Health Center.
Registration is limited to 35
participants
at
ea ch

microwave site.

•

The program will benefit
nurSes working in public

.

.

WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY

Cooperative approach is established
WAVERLY - A new twist
to the traditional style of
coordinating co uncils ha s
been developed within the
Southern Ohio Regional
Council on Alcoholism, ac·
cording to Joan Hedderson,
Executive Director.
The Regional Council

assisting m publie relations.
Charles VandeCarr IV and
Rev. Euge ne Mendenhall
have been appointed to serve
as Co-Chairpersons for the
Board .
· Charles VandeCarr IV , who
received his Law Degree in
1976 from Ohio University, is
presently the Ross County
Assistant Director of Law .
VandeCarr was recently
elected 1978 Secretary of
Ross
Co unty
Barr
Association, and also serves
on the Advisory Board for the
newly appointed Paint Street
Play House.
Rev. Dr . Eugene Menden-'
hall is employed by the Five·
County Pastoral Counseling
Ce nt er, Inc. to provide .
pastoral counseling in Ross
ani! Pickaway Counties. Rev.
Mendenhall has actively
served on the SORCA Board
since its origin.
Both VandeCarr and
Mendenhall express positive
feelin gs that the co·
chairperson a rrangement
will provide numerous ad·
vantages to the council, and
believe their different
professional backgrounds

primarily ex:ists to assist ih

surveying community needs,
advising services, identifying
for ~.

areas of need

new

programs, and mobilizing the
community to begin dealing
with the problems of
alcoholism within the len

counties. of Adams, Brown,
Gallia, Highland, Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto
and Vinton .
The 10-county community·
wide coordinating council has
established a cooperative
approach to the delegation of
roles and responsibilities. Co·
chairpersons have been
designated to facilitiate
meetings and direct council

members into such activities
as: fund raising, serving as
information clearinghouses 1
working
to
influerice
legislation,
tech~ical

providin~

assista nce, and

should aspire increased trust
from different levels of the
comm unity . According to
VandeCarr, immediate plans
for the council have · been
establi shed . . "The development of different committees
have tieen designed to assist
in steering the Regional and
County staff to areas which
need attention, increase the
publlt's awareness of the
services avallable, and of
primary importance, remove
the stigma attached to
and
the
alcoholism
of
the
misconception
alcoholic .''
For additional information
c'Ontact Ron Meyers, Ad·
rninistrative Assi·stant,
SORCA, 105 East Second
Street, Waverly, Ohio 45690.

DRIVE SAFELY WITH OUR BEST 40.CH._MOBILE CB

Miami ,

jennifer Varian
ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs: Richard

TV
..

' ' '

TRC-424

~--- ~CAL ISI7C.. me .. 2.,.

..

Sonia Beaver

21- 1522

Pll/LED ALL CHANNEl

""

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Reg. 16995

·r.1t ·

SAVE•70

Puts ir all toget he r to help you t hro ugh winter's

last blasts I LED chan nel display, lighted S / RF
meter, RF gatn, ANL , noise blanker.

•

TO WED - Mr. a nd Mrs . Gary Griffith, Route 1, Long
Bottom, are announdng the engagement and approaching
marriage of her daughter, Sonia Lee Beaver, to Myles
Randall Blake, son of Mr . and Mrs. Elden Blake, Jr.,
Route 1, Reedsville. The open church wedding will'be an
event of March 18 at 6:3() p.m. at St. Paul United
Methodist Ch urch, Tuppers Plains. The Rev. Eldon Blake,
Sr. will perform the ceremony .

by Realistic

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cha nne ls!

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any outdoor

PLAZA

batter1es . 23 ·
464 , Re g. 49C ,
. 25C .

Ladies
Fall and Winter

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SPORTSWEAR

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H1gh performan ce base CB· w1'th ANL,
no1 se l 1mlter. hys tereS IS sque lch .
mor e !

AM~FM STEREO SYSTEM.

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by Realistic

TO

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Sizes 38 to 46
Regulars and
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Gauchos-

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mus11n of so.pct.

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c~tton·,SO ~ct . polyester ·Twin Fl•t
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Science Fair "'

Patrolman-5

Values

~

ELECTRONIC PROJECT KIT

Values to $18.00
Oloose !rom long and sMort
styles. In an a!l.sorfment
of colors &amp; fa brics .

One Small Group

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
DV

992-2156

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport

GALLIPOLIS .
The
Second South Central Area
CCancer Conference spon·
sored by the Ohio Division of
the American cancer Society
will ·be held on · Sunday,
February 26, at the Holiday

.

New books
released

Lady'"s

SAVE
50o/o

DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO

446-2342

GALUPOLIS - New books
.released by the Gallia County
District Library on February
16 were:
FICTION - A Short Life,
Thomas B. Allen; Death
in .t he Caribbean, John
R. L, Anderson; The French

meter. Input for record changer.

Play games. shoot movin g target with pistol / rifle!
6 "C" batteries or AC adapler [60-3053, $4 .95) .

Reg . $9 .00 Values. Sizes 14112 to 17.

W!LL WED-Mr . and Mrs . Charles W. Knighting, Rt.
2, Bidwell, ann?unce the ehgagement and. approachihg
marnage oftherr daughter, Connie Faye, to Dennis Glenn
Haner, son of Mr .. and Mrs. James D. Haner, Rt. 3
Gallipolis. Conmc IS a senior at Buckeye Hills Career
Center, Rio Grande, and is employed at Newberry's
$portmg Goods, Gallipolis. Denni~ is a 1976 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School, and ts employed at Robbins
:Wd Myers Plant, Gallipolis. Wedding plans are
mcomplete.
·

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Connie Knighting

6-IN-1 FULl COLOR TV GAME

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Nice Collection of Colors and Fabrics

PLANS TO WED - Mrs . Nuncy Wat.son, fU . 1
Bidwell, announces the engagement and nppro.ochlng
marriage of her daughter, Dottie, to Ro~er Dille
McClelland, son of Mr . and Mrs. Ho~t·r· McClelland., Mlll
Creek Rd .. Gallipolis. Dottle is a senior at lliickcyc Hllls
Career Center and is employed nt The Western Ptmcnkc
House. Roger is a 1975 graduate of KyKer Cruuk High
School nnd is employed by Elllott's insta llution . '!"he open
church wedding will be an event of Sundny, r' eb. Zli, i1t 2
p.m. at the United Pentecostal Chw·chn in MlddlellO&lt;t
with the Hev, Knittles officiating .

Charlene ·Hoeflich

Berkich to moderate
area cancer conference

9V batt.. strap
SPECIAL!
Stock up on 9V

OFF

Dottie Wil(l'

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Higginbotham, Gallipolis, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Paula Gay, to Ronnie E .
McKinney, son of Mr. Owen McKinney, Cheshire. Miss
Higginbotham is a 1977 graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and is employed by Burger Chef in Gallipolis. Her
fi ance is a 1975 graduate of Kyger Creek 'High School and
is employed by Thaler Ford on Jackson Pike. Wedding
plans are incomplete.

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

fun! W1th chan ne l 14 crys1al s.

~

Paula Higginbotham

Woman 's "World

Reg. 199 sEa.

Fla .

Saturday's low was 24
degrees below zero at Gun·
nison , Colo.

Th e 2 · w ay ra·

SUITS

Varian of
Mason, W. Va . are annoWiclng the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter , Jennifer Sue to
Terry Michaels, son of Mr. Herman Michaels of Bradbury
and Mrs. Maxine Michaels of Pomeroy. Susi is a 1977
graduate of Wahama High School. Terry is employed at
the Excelsior Salt Works, Pomeroy. The open church
wedding wiU be an event of Tuesday , Feb. 28 at 6 p.m . "at
the Clifton Holiness Tabernacle, Clifton, W. Va. with the
Reverend George Hoschar officiating. A reeeption will
follow the ceremony at the home of the bride's parents.

. CJI WALKIE-TALKIE

HI· LOW TEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest temperature reported
Friday to the National
Weather Service, .excluding
Alaska and Hawaii , was 71
degrees at

by Realistic ®

as
seen on
national

sao

Hear action of VHF - Hi/ Lo , UHF, FM -AMI
AC / batterv circui11

Exhibit for the month of February, 1978 - Elsie Kay
Harris, Lexington, Kenlllcky, Oiljl on canvas and Graphite
Drawings.
Gallery Hours - Salllrdays and Sundays, I p.m. until 5
p.m.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, IOa.m. until3p.m.
Feb. 23, 6:30 p.m.- F .A. C. Annual D~nner Meeting, Oscar's
Restaurant, $6.50 per person. Telephone reservations to 44e,
1819 or 44e,9705 by Monday, February 20.
February 26 , 2 p.m.-4 p.m. - Parent-Child Workshop.
Lynqa Myers, Instructor; · Penny Moore, Chairwoman.
Children · will make sachets, aU supplies furnished.
Membership in French Art Colony not necessary, open for aU
children who are interested. Riverby,.
February 28, 7:30 p.m. - F.A.C. Interdepartmental
Meeting; 9 p.m. - F .A,C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby .
March 6-17 - Poet In the Schools program featuring d
steven conkle, well-known poet from Millfield , Ohio.
Mafch 16, 8 p.m. - An Evening Of Poetry with d steven
·
conkle. Riverby. A reception will follow.

In the Service
CAMP SPRINGS, Md. Airman First Class Mary A.
Bascue, daughter of Mrs.
Jean Booth of 531 Fifth Ave.,
Huntington, W. Va., has
arrived for duty at Andrews
AFB, Md.
The airman is a 1975
graduate of Hannan High
School, Ashton , W. Va. Her
grandmother, Mrs. Effie
Turner, resides in Apple
Grove, W. va.

GETS PAYMENT
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Fair Board was
a mong the fair boards in Ohio
receiving $2,000 payments
from John M. Stackhouse,
.director of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Agriculture, to help
the boards with .premiums
given to their 1977 junior fair
exhibitors.
· In 1976, President Ford

named George Bush !o be
director of the Central intelligence Agency ,

Lover,

Barbara

Annandale; Death and
Variations, Ivan Baker ; This
Spendid Earth, V. J. Banis;
Excellency, David Beaty;
Stroke of Death, Josephine
Bell; Rider of the High Hills,
Max
Brand ;
Circus
Couronne, R. Wright Campbell; The Passion and the
Flower, Barbara Cartland;
Marriage ·and Mary Ann,
Catherine Cookson; Silver on
the Tree, Susan Cooper; The
Peter
Walking
Dead,
Dickinson; Heart Beat,
Eugene Dong; The Hider,
Loren D. Estleman; Olive
and Mary Anne, James T.
Farrell; Sabine, Nicolas
Freeling; A Family Likeness,
Anna GHbert; Angelique and
teh Ghosts, Sergeanne Colon;
The Invisible Victory,
Richard Gordon ; The Human
Factor, Graham Greene;
Charlie is My Darling, Mollie
Hardwick; Paradise I, Alan
Harrington; Voyage, Sterling
Hayden; Lord of Ravensley,
Constance Heaven; Shadows
On Our Skin, Jennifer
Johnston; One Hell of An
Actor, Garson Kanin; Night
Shift, Stephen King; AVein of
Rich~s. John Knowles;
Bargain Bride, Evelyn

Lampman :

Warrior's

Woman, Phyllis Leonard;
The Silent Salesman, Michael
Lewin; The Shootout, Giles A.
Lutz; Dark Sins, Dark
Dreams, Barry N. Malzberg;
Scared to Death, Anne
Morice; What Kind of Guy Do.
You Think I Am?, Sidney
Offit; Acts of Mercy, Bill
Pronzini; The Great Waltz,

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Inn in Chillicothe, The Cancer pancreas, cancer of the colon Surgery, Cleveland Clinic,
Conference is directed to ·and newer diagnostic and Cleveland.
physicians in the central and therapeutic procedures used
This is ihe Second South
southeastern Ohio area. The in the treatment of cancer. Central Area Cancer Con·
program will consi st of
The program will be ference, . the first one having
presentations concerning moderated by Dr. Edward J . been held in Gallipolis apJJentkl PenninJ!IM7
lung cancer, cancer of the Berkich, American Cancer proXimately one year ago.
Soci.ety
Trust ee
from The meeting one yea r ago
Gallipolis.
ANNOUNCEMENT MADE - Mr. and Mrs. Bennie
was an immedi~te success
Physicians participating in and it ls. hoped that in the
Pennington of Cudrnus announce the engagement of t11Uir
the day lon g conference will coming years the Cancer
daughter, Beniti.t Penn ington, tu Jefr Pctri1•, :;on of Mr .
~d M rs ~ F . C. Petrie, Sr .,of Rio Granc.lc . Miss Pcnni.n glml
Abraham R o lhb~rg; . The include Jacob D. Bitran, Conference will be rotated to
Is a graduate of Buckeye liills omd Southwestern Jli~h
Nightmare Factor, Thomas M.D., Assistant Profess(}r major southeastern "· Ohio
School. Mr . Pe~rie is .attending schoo l in JcffurSHn . N. C.
N. Scortia; Doctor Tuck, University of Chicago, cities such as Chillicothe,
Elizabeth Seifert ; Imprudent Chicago, Il1inois, Carl G. Port s mouth, Ma ri etta,
M.D .• Gallipolis, Ironton , a nd
Lady, Joan Smith ; Until the Schowengerdt,
Chillicothe,
John
.
R.
Man· Athens, etc. The day long
Celebration, Zilpha Keatley
chester,
M.D.
,
Chief,
Dept.
of program is accredited by the
Snyder; Close Encounters,
Radiology,
Medical
Center
Ohio Sta te University College
Steven Spielberg; The
Memory of Eva Ryker, Hospital, Chillicothe, Norbert of Medicine Center for
Me di ca l
Donald Stanwood; A Roaring Reich , M. D., Dept. of Continuing
in the Wind, Robert Taylor; Radiology, Cleveland Clinic, Educatlrm.
All practicing physicians of
Wiseguys, Vincent Teresa; Cleveland , Larry C. Carey,
M.D.,
Professor
of
Surgery,
the southeastern Ohio area
The Fatal Trip, Michael
Underwood;
Hail
the Ohio State University, are invited to attend and
1928
Conquering Hero, Frank Columbus, Sidney F . Miller, participate. Further in·
D.,
Mia
mi
Valley
M.
formation, if it has not
Yerby; The Adventuress ,
Hospita l, Dayton, Frank a lready been received
Daoma Winston.
Meyers, D. 0 ., Dean Ohio through the mail, can be
NON-FICTION
Religiouns in America, University , College of obtained by contacting the
Herbert Marx; Light My Medicine, Athens, a nd American Cancer Society,
Candle, Anita Bryant; Who's Rupert B. Turnbull, Jr., M. Ross County Unit, 311 West
Who in Greek and Roman D., Dept. of Colon and Rectal Water Street. Chillicoth e,
Feb. 20 - General Meeting Jackson Pike Branch Ohio
Ohio 45601.
Mythology , David Kravitz;
Valley
Bank 7:30 p.m. Installation of offi cers . Kingsley
Economics,
Paul
A.
director of recreation at Bob Evans Farms.
Meyers,
Samuelson; The Telephone
21 - Pinochle Lois Phlegar's RSVP 1 p.m. Call 245·
Feb.
Book, H. M. Boettinger; The
564L
Splendor of the Seasons,
Feb. 22 - Crocheting I p.m" Teresa Bihl's. Call 446-1937.
Editors of Outdoor World;
Feb.
25 -Gourmet dinner 7 p.m. RSVP Pam Terrizzi.,Call
How Life Began, Irving
446-4485.
Adler; The Saturday Evening
Feb. 28 - Canasta RSVP 7:30p.m. Joy Atwood's. Call446Post Automobile Book; Motor
8599.
Auto Engines and Electrical
March 1- Bridge 9:30a .m. Lois Phlegar's RSVP. Call245Syste111s 7th ed.; The Whole
5641. .
Horse Catalog; How to
March 2- Crocheting 1 p.m. Joy Atwood's . RSVP.
Raise the Train a Boxer,
March 6- Board meeting 7:3() p.m. Cyndy Potter 446-4460.
Sara M. Barbaresii Woman's
March 15 - Get Acquainted Coffee 10 a.m . at Pam
Day Book of Baking, Diane
:rerrlzzi's. Call 446-4485 or 24~349,
Harris; Being Beautiful: the
March 16- Evehing Bridge at Phyllis Todd's, 7:30 p.m.
story of cosmetics from
Welcome Wagon is opened to any interested party in the
ancient art (lo modern
area.
Call Joy Atwood at 44~99 or Mary Ann Jamison at 446science), Carolyn Meyer ;
2649
for
information.
Parents' Yellow Page s,
Frank Caplan; The Gregg
Reference Manuel, William
A. Sabin; Gardens That Care
for
Themselves,
Tam
Mossman; Country: the
CHILD BORN
APPLY FOR U CENSE
biggest music in America,
Sgt. and Mrs. Ray Belville
GALLIPOLIS - Making
Nick Tosches; The Outlaws:
of Lawton, Oklahoma an- application for a marriage
revolution in Co~ntry MusiC,
nounce tJ~e arrival or .a son li ce nse . in Gallia Co unty
Michael Bane; Dave Cowens:
born Feb. 14 at 10 :20 p.m. Probate Court were Olan
a
biography,
George
Ray Brian weighed nine and Hollis Snyder, 50, Crown City,
Sullivan; Breakout, Ron
one half pounds, and retired, and Gloria Ann
LeFlore; Be A Winner in
measured 23 inches lung . The Swanson, 41 , Crown City, .
Dr. Ed Berklch, stale ACS Medical .Trustee,
Skiing, Charles Coombs;
Belvilles have two sons, machin~ operator.
moderator of conference; Donald Warehime, Gallia
Listen to the Wann, Rod
Martin and Je sse Lee.
County
Cancer Crusade, c&lt;H:bainnan.
McKuen; ,Letters to Friends,
Maternal grandparents are
MEETING CALLED
Famlty and Editors, Frank
Mr. and Mrs. Johann Sch· ' POMEROY
The
Kafka; The Making of Henry
midt, 8933 Klosterlechfeld February meeting of the
the VIII, Marie Louise
MEET MONDAY
Pleasure Riders will meet at Schwabstadl, Nr. 10, Ger· Salisbury PTO has been
Bruce; One Hundred Tons of
POMEROY - Weather 7:30 p.m. Monday at the many . Paternal grandmother cancelled due to the elec·
Gold, David !,.eon Chandler. perml!ting, the Meigs 4-H home of Julie Elberfeld.
is Ruth E. Belville, Northup. triclty cutbacks. .

Wekome Wagon
club activities

�ll-~ - The Sunday

Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb.l9, 1978

Mrs. Reed hosts meeting

Dieters learn .about anxiety
"Anxiety and Overeating"
was the lecture topic at the
Monday night meeting of the
Conway Diet Class held at the
Meigs Inn.
Marda Arnold won the
revolvtng ~rophy for the most

meeting Tuesday night, Carrie Neal was welcomed as a
new member. Barbara
Roush, Virginia Johnson, and
Linda Clarke tied for the
most weekly weight loot and
Virginia

Johnson

received

weekly we~g htl oss and Helen
Diddle and JuamU. J uslis lied
for runner-up.
At the Point Pleasant class

her 20 pound pin and cer·
tificale.
The Athens class met on
Wednesday evening. Margi
Patton had lost the most

CLINIC MARCH I
MIDDLEPORT - The next
free cervica l cancer clinic for
Meigs County women will be
held on March I at Heath
United Methodist Church in
Middlep ort. There arc
openings for the free af·
ternoon clinic. Women
wishing to visit the r:linir arc
asked to call 9\)2-5832 during
the daytime or 9\J2-7531 in the

weight for the week, with

C\' Cnin~s or on Weekends.

Jean Winner as rWlner·up.
SQUAD CALLED
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse ER Squad was
called to Minersville Thurs·
day at 2: 15 p.m. for Pauline
Cunningham and at 9:30a.m.
Friday fo r Vickie Cundiff.
Both were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

NEW HAVEN - The .New
Haven women of The Church
of God held their •'ebruary
meeting'atlhe home of Becky
Reed in Mason. Mrs. Reed,
Delores Taylor and Margaret
Dodson served as hostesses.
The meeting was called to
order by the president, Or ph a
Fields, and she led in prayer.
!Wll call was answered by
naming a favorite hymn .
Stewardship dire ctor,
Patty Maynard, received the
Penny-a-Day calendars. She
reminded members to continue making quUt blocks to
be used for Mission Stations.
Delores Taylor, Spiritual Life
Director, gave an update on
the Christ's Birthday Observance and Prayer Vigil.
Members voted to contin ue
the coin holders for CBO . .
Members reported taking
Christmas gifts to a patient at
Lakin State Hospital. It was
announced that the State
Convention will be held in
Oak Hill on March 31 and
April I . Members were urged
to attend.
An Executive Committee
meeting will be held on
Tuesday, Feb. 21, at the home
Mrs. Lloyd Wood
of Becky Reed. All officers
and directors are to attend.
Blessing cups are to be
brought to the March meeting
and Sue Erwin and Eleanor
POINT PLEASANT - green with dark green velvet Davis will serve as hostesses.
The Nominating Com·
The Church of Christ, Sand lrinunings. They carried a
nosegay
of
chasled
daisies
mlttee
presented the ballot
Hill Road, Point Pleasanl was
the scene of the marriage of with baby's breath and green for the election of Group I
officers for the new year
Kimberly Clark and Uoyd and white ribbons.
Serving as ring bearer and beginning in April. Those
Wood, on November 25, 1977 at
flower girl were the Wood elected were: President,
7:30p.m.
Twins
Craig and Tammy, Orpha Fields; Hi stori an,
The double ring ceremony
nephew
and niece of bride.
Bonnie Fields; Publications,
was solemnized by Evangelist
Craigwasattlredln
a
dark
•.
Graee
Cunningham ;
Lewis Mikell of Gallipolis,
tuxedo
matching
that
of
Parliamentanan,
Sue Erwm;
green
Ohio.

JewaJaa
CM SECOND AYaNUI

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-~MIE..,EO -~ICAH OEM IOCiiTY

THE PAN RACk ·
•

AND

p
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H

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You,v~

WAITED

!Jhe.R£ £lse

FOR'

'

y~JJI£R'S

Tammy wore a floor length
Ocupill'a .music · was
green
and dark green velvet
recorded and sung by the
wn
g
Ocupilla Group of Harding 0 ·
.
.·
.
The ushers were Kevin
College. The selections were:
" Oh Promise Me", "Oh Walker, Te rry Saunders,
Perfect Lcve," "I Love You Mark Smith, David Graham.
Truly," " Through the Years'\
Carlos Wood served as best
" Because," "I'll W.alk Beside man, cousin of groom, all
You" and the traditional were attired In tuxedo's
· processional and recessional matching the groom.
For her daughter's wedmarches.
The chw-ch was decorated ding Mrs. Clark chose a
with light candles in can- brown double knit suit with
dleabras ,
trimmed
in beige accessories.
greenery with two baskelil of
The groom's mother woretB
green and white mums. The dark green double knit suit
pews were marked with Wtth light green accessories.
Hurricane lamps.
Both mothers wore matching
The bride was escorted by corsages of while carnations.
her father and given in
ReglsteriJ\g gueslil was Miss
marriage by her parents, Mr. Ruth Wood, sister of the
and Mrs. Charles L. Clark, groom.
Point Pleasant. The groom is
A reception was held In the
the son of Mr. and Mrs. basement of the church and
Herman Wood, Patriot, Ohio. was decorated with green and
The bride wore a while while. Those assisting were
polyester knit gown lashloned Mrs. Unda Henry, Mrs. Faye
with an empire walst'and high Pancake, Mrs. Pearl Douglas,
neckline of chantilly lace with Mrs. Lottie Roush, Mrs.
long sleeves accented with Bonnie Harrison.
chantilly lace at cuffs.
After a short wedding trip,
She wore a lace edged linger the couple resides at 425 Green
tip veil attached to a camelot Terrace Drive, Gallipolis,
cap of chantilly lace.
Ohio.
The bride also carried a
nosegay of chasted daisie. sand
green·pom poms, the houquet
was accented with baby's
breath.
Mrs, Edn~ Cooper received
The bridesmaids were word from Mrs. Carrie
!Wxanne Monroe and Nancy Norse, . Coiumbus, Monday,
Priddy of Point Pleasant. The stating the weather Is very
attendants wore matching bad.
floor length gowns of light
Miss Bonita Elkins,
Jackson, visited Mr brother, .
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Elkins
over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Howard, Dayton, visited one
weekend with his mother,

Fmance, . Sarah

were

served 'using

tomato, cheese, lettuce,
pickle, .onion, mayonnaise,

was called to see a sick cow

for William Howard.
Mr. Uoyd Howell, Cin·
cinnati, called his brotlier-in·
law, Mr. Robert Cooper,

. nu
UIHOl

2nd &amp; Olive

POUUI

UTUY

Galipolis, 0.

-- --

stating they had a very
severe blizzard in Cincinnati.
They are all well and hopes
everyone here are the same.
Mrs. Jackie Howard and
children, local, visited her
.aunt, Mrs. Josephine Hurt
and her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Flo Hurt Sunday al·
ternoon.
"
Deacon Elmer Cofer and
wife are doing line and wish
to thank all their many
friends who remembered
them at Christmas time.

a&amp;liaal llnaJip»e

.::::One of Meigs oldest County's citizens, Mary Diehl, will

Valentine theme. Those attending, besides Mrs. Reed,
Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. Dod·
son, were Rena Johnson,
Roberta Maynard , Iva

Mon. lhru Frl. - 9 A.M. loS P.M.

celebrate her lOlst birthday on Feb. 25.
Mrs. Diehl, n~w bedfast, is at the home of her daughters,
Mrs. Stella Alk1ns and Miss Ruby Diehl, Route I, Rutland .
Besides the daughters, she has a foster son, Felix Alkire,
RDute 4, Pomeroy, live grandchildren, 'and 13 greatgrandchildren.
While Mrs. Diehl isn 't able to read anymore due to failing
eyesight, the family always reads cards and letters to her. Join
with us In a card shower lor Mrs. Diehl.

Eveningst~nd Slturd~y

By Appointment Only
Physician'$ Rtftrrll Required

Capehart, Norma Greene ,
Sue Erwin, Pansy Fry, Patty
Maynard, Bonnie Fields,

Herman L. Dillon, L P. T..

Addie Brown, Grace Cunningham, Fay Carpenter, and
Orpha Fields.

AND SPEAKING OF BIRTHDAYS .....

Up Minersville way, our valentine girl, Sadie Brown, observed her 9lst birthday. Three of her close friends made their
traditional Valentine's Day visit with a heart-shaped cake.
M~. Brown, who has lived in the same house in Minersville
for 72 years, still does her own work, and remains active in the
United Methodist Church. She received many gifts and over 150
birthday cards. She also got a telephone call from her grand·
son, Robbie Brown, in Texas, She has one son, Russell of
Pomeroy, another grandson, Dr. Harold Brown, and two
great-grandsons.

Sunday thru
Saturday

FOR MANY YEARS the American Lutheran Church Wo111en
of St. Paul's Church in Pomeroy have staged a valentine party
lor resldenlil of the infirmary.
It took place last SWlday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Blaetlnar, Pastor William Middleswarth, Erna Jesse, Jean
Braun, Barbara Fry and Wilma Mees presenting a program
and serving punch and cookies. Each resident received a
valentine and a heart favor.

Feb. 19-25

Hot Roast Beef Sandwich
•
WITH MASHED POTATOES

59

AND SMOTHERED IN

•

GRAVY
COLE SLAW

REG. 11.95

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ffriL&amp;I

fc

~;:;~:':':'8':•:•:&gt;··•-.;·o&lt;·;w.o;;·;
. .....~~~ · · ~

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Citizens
alendar 1
follows ~

Monday, February 20 Closed.

·lUI It

Tuesday, February 21 Physical Fitness, 11 : 15 a.m. i

STOP (Seniors Take Off
Pounds),

.....

Hl :30

a.m.j

President's Party, 1:30-2:30.
Wednesday, February 22 Card Games, 1·3 p.m.;
Movies "NHlK," ' 'Steadfast Tin Soldier," " To

'Thursday, February 23 -

Physical Fitness, 11: I&gt; a.m.;
Blood Pressure Check, I:151;45; Bible Study, I :15-2:15,
•Friday, February 24 - Art

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

y

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GROUP OF

The wedding was an event
of Oct. 16 at 2:30p.m. with the
Rev. Paul White officiating.
The bride is t.pe daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Unley Roush,
Jr. of Rutland, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Hershel McClure of
Route 3, Pomeroy .
Mrs. Twila Childs, Middleport, presented the music
with selections incl uding
Uleme from ''Romeo and
Juliet", theme from 01 Love
Story", ''Colour My World'\
and the traditional wedding
marches.
Tbe ceremony was performed before the altar
decorated with s piral
candelabra between which
was an arch trimmed with
greenery, yellow ribbon and
doves. Pots of yellow mums
were included in the decora-

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Class, 1-3.
The menu served al l2 noon
by the Senior Nutrition
Program is:
Monday - Closed.
Tuesday - Baked . pork

t :·

couple was held in the church
social room. Tables were
covered in white with yellow

. Thursday - Hamburger on
bun, potato salad, ,buttered
peas, butter, mixed fruit cup,
milk.
Friday - Baked turkey
with gravy, mashed potatoes,
coleslaw with green pepper
bits, bread, butter, lemon
pudding, milk.
Choke of beverage served
with each meal.

Mr. and Mrs. jimmy McClure
: c .. :

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar
LADIES SHOES

ONE
GROUP

s7.99

30%0FF

PR.

''

&gt;

NEW

LADIES

PURSES
30%
OFF

ARRIVING DAILY

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Main St.
•

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OFF

•
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...

SWEATERS
BLOUSES

"'

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ALL WINTER .

AND

Pomeroy, Ohio

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OFF

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Shop Our Store For Many
Excellent Bargains
In Fine Wearing· Apparel
For Men
and Wolnenl
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During Our Presidents'
.

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. Day Sale, Now Thru

•

Saturday, February 25th
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OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY - OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM . ••..
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Social
Calendar

Katie's Korner

'

By ·Katie Crow

SUNDA'I'
POMEROY Youth Baseball
League Sunday at Pomeroy
Legion Hall. Plans will be
made for signup day , money

making projeclil, field repair
and maintenance. All (»~rents
of youth involved in the
program are asked to attend.
Managers ar~ needed for T-

Ball and pee wee teams.
Anyone interested in helping
with the teams may tontact
Don Hunnel.
MONDAY
MEIGS County Churches of
Christ Men 's F'ell ows hip
Monday 7: 30 p.m . ·at Dexter
Church.
TUESDA 'I'
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority , will
meet Tuesday a.t the home of
Mrs. Carol McCullough. Mrs.
McCullough and Mrs. Karen
Goins will give the cultural
repor(. Co-hostesses will be
Mrs. Annie Chapman and
Mrs .
Donna
Byer.
WEDN ESEA 'I'
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at !he Meigs
Inn. All Lions urged to attend.
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-B~nnett Post 128, will
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
all he Midd[epurl Legion hall.
AMERICAN LEGION Aux·
iliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
l28, will meet at 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday at the hall.

Richard Coleman tells us that dogs running loose in the
Keno area are really posing a problem.
Last Sunday between 4 and ! p.m. dogs were chasintl a
deer past the driveway of Glen Soul. Stout managed to ch...
tlie dogs away . One yearling doe came up to his holllle as she
was unable to run as the rlghl rear leg of the deer had been
partiaily eaten by tbe dogs .
Mr. stout killed the deer dressed and salvaged the meal.
The game warden was contacted but there really . wasn't
unythln!: he could do as the damage had already been done.
One of the dogs was a come and the other a be"l!le. ·
Mr. Coleman reports that dogs running loose Is common In
tlie Keno area and asks that owners of dogs to please keep
tliem confined to the owner's property .
Colemun said the dogs are nQt wild, but Incidents such as
tliis one could have been avoided If people would keep their
dogs confined to a restricted area .
POMEROY MA'I'OR Clarence Andrews Is requesting, not
demanding,that all resldenl'! and business persons curtail the
use of electric lights as much as possible, especially neon
signs.
The Mayor stated that all help from the citizens would be
greatly apprecia..,d and perhaps a UtUe sacrifice now would
keep us from not having any electricity at all.
So let's tighten that belt a little more.
MAYOR CLARENCE ANDREWS Is very pleased with a
letter he received from State Representative Roo James.
James staled " I have heard several remarkable stories
circulating around the statehouse and in Columbus about the
people of Meigs County - their generOII!ty and their willingness w help." James was referring to the efforts of Meigs
Cowlty residents during the recent winter storms.
"I have always heen proud of the people of my district and
Meigs Countians have just shown olhers around the state that
they are among the "best Ohio has to offer," James concluded.
Very nice - I must say .

Shirley Pierotti. Gallipolis ;
STUDENTS OF SO!ITHERN Local School District were
and Mrs. Amanda Starcher,
to attend classes Satw-day morning but tlils was
scheduled
Gallipolis. Guests were
cancelled
due
to the new snowfall.
registered by Miss Brenda
Rupe, Langsville.
F'or a wedding trip to the
Penn Hills Honeymoon
Resort in Pocono Mountains
of Pennsylva nia, the bride
changed into a ta n corduroy_
vested pantsuit and a leathcl'
ProJ.t.dly Presents
i:oat; ~ill of the groom.

The Fountain of Youth

The ~oupJe rc§ides on
Union Terrace in Pomeroy.
'111e new Mrs. McClure is· a

KAREN CHEVALlER
To The
• · STAFF

Meigs High Sc)jool gniduatc
of 1.976. in busi ness a nd offiee
education arid is employed as

* *

*

Patsy c;•mpbtll,
Man•ger
Pork Control Hoiol Bldg .

'-~=::::::=::::::-...

on the reception and the gift
tables. White and yellow
streamers decora ted the gift
table.
Presiding at the refreshment table were Mrs. Corena
Farmer, Cheshire; Mrs .

GROUp

LADI_ES

All Lealher

.J

pon a rrangements were used

''Services reOdered on a
non-discriminatory basis."

FASHION
BOOTS

.: nu nee

net overlays. The bride's
·table featured a three tiered a cashier at the Twin-City
weddlng cake decorated in Gateway in .Middleport, Mr.
orange and yellow and topped McClure, a 1975 graduate of
with the traditional miniature · Meigs High School, is
bride artd groom and bells. manager of McCiures Dairy
Sheet cakes served .were Isle, Middleport. Both . are
marked with orange and members of the F'irst
yellow bells. Wedding bells Southern Baptist Church in
were suspended over the Pome~oy.
· reception table and at the
table front were bells inscribed " Darlene a nd Jim'' . Pom-

cherr y garnish, cheese
:,ticks, cornbread, butter, ice
cream, mHk.

Betty Ohlinger

COATS

orange sweetheart roses with
baby's breath, from whlch
fell rainbow ribbon lied in
lover's knots. For the tradi·
tiona! something old, sbe
placed a low- leaf clover in was best man,and the ushers
her bouquet, something new, were Gary Grueser, Bob Mcher wedding attire, Clure, and Terry Farrar, all
wmething borrowed, a fami- m Pomeroy. John Joseph
ly necklace, and something Pierotti of Gallipolis was the
ringbearer and he carried a
heart-shaped pillow and wore
a yellow boutonniere. He is a
cousin of the bride. All of the
groom's attendants were in
brown tuxedos and wore
white carnations tinted
yellow . The grqom was in a
while tuxedo and wore a
boutonniere ·of white carna·
tion tinted yellow and a
sweetheart rose.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Roush was in a
floor length gown of blue and
while floral design with sheer

Wednesday ·- Beef stew,
pineapple slice salad with

•

LEATHER COATS
LEATHER JACKETS
PANT COATS
LONG COATS
ALL PURPOSE COATS
(Zip Lining)

quet of yellow carnations,
mums, pompons and burnt

mil~.

•s.oo PR.

2oFF

girl. All of their dresses were
identical in brown with peach
panels down the front. Lace
trimmed the rounded
necklines and yokes as well
as the long sleeves of the
gowns.
The attendants wore head·
bands of yellow flowers and
carried bouquets of yellow
carnations and mums with
yellow streamers tied in
lover's knots. The flower girl
wore a single yellow flower in
her hair and carried a basket
or petals.
Sammy Uttle of Columbus

Both mOtherS had ca rn~tion
corsages.
A reception honoring the

CHILDqEffS SHOES
IJIII PR . 2 pr 1500

"..

were Miss Georgene Grate,
Rutland ; Mrs . Autumn
Walker, Columbus, Miss
Jeannie McClure, Pomeroy.
Ray Lynn &amp;sham, a cousin
.of the groom, was the flower

chop, creamed co rn, kale
with vinegar, bread, butter,
spice cake with cannel icing,

'· IBIIRIIHIDA\lY

••

trinuned with yellow ribbon.
Lighting of Wlity candle
.from single candles candles
was included in the
ceremony. Given In marriage
by her father, the bride wore
a formal gown fashioned with
a high neckline, long sheer
sleeves, and a sheer overlay
accented with lace motifs.
The chapel length train was
attached at the back with a
ribbon which extended from
1 the empire waistline. It, too,
had lace trim.
The bride's headpiece was
a floral design in pearls and
beld the shoulder length veil
of 'illusion. She carried a bou-

blue sleeves. Mrs. McClure

.

MEN'S
SHOES

blue, her garter.
Miss Tammy Michael.
Pomeroy, was the maid of
honor' and the bridesmaids

lions along with pew candles

wore a yellow floor length
~own With · a while shaw,l.

.'., IPIRIESIIDE~IS

·.

Small lot

SKIRT SETS
LONG DRESSES
LINGERIE
JR. DRESSES
MISSES DRESSES
CO-ORDINATES
PANTSUITS

vows.

Ow- belated congratulations to Mrs~ Clara Shuster, Riverview Drive, Pomeroy. She celebrated her 83rd birthday Fri·
day.
HAVE A NICE WEEK.

this week is as

LAFAYETTE MALL

MIDDLEPORT--In
a
double- ring ceremony at tbe
Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, Miss
Darlene RDush and Jimmy'
Mc-clw-e exchanged wedding

Day. And this year that contact with shutins will be made but
the women of the church aren' t sure just w}len.

GALLIPOLIS Daily
activities at the Center for

.·300 SECOND AVI:NUE ·

Roush-McClure VOWS
exchanged in Middleport

Last year their ' 'heartline'' project was· carried out on May

..
PHONE 446-1611

Weather of the past two winters have been against the Valentine's Day project of the Afternoon Circle of Heath United
Methodist Church. The women traditionally prepared trays of
homemade cookies and candies and delivered !hem to shutins
of the community .
·

1 ~ 30-2: 30;; ·Blood Pressure
Gheck at the Vinton Nutrition
Site.

two .weeks because of the
weather.

14 lb., 100% ground beef,

Phone •46-2206

Labrador for Brook Trout,"

family .
School was out for almost

STUFT SHIRTS

e».lli poti s, Ohio

the

Stewardah1p, Patty Maynard.
Members will begin takm~
orders for the annual Easter
Egg project.
\;..
,i ~"' ~ .... · ·
The program was
prese nted by Becky Reed .
She
presented
program on the work in
·Tanzania :- The program
closed with devotions given
by Delores Taylor taken from
Galatians 3:26-28. She gave
each member a small map of
Tanzania to remind each one

Mrs. Mary Howard and

Sunday thru Saturday
.February 19 thru February 25

Community
8
~1 Corner ~~:~e

II·

Itaa

Sprl119 YolltY Pllll

Glbbs ;

New Hope

Mrs. Amy from Frankfort
is doing well these bad days.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Elkins,
local, made a b!J,siness trip tCl
Columbus Monday. They
were accompanied by Glen's
mother, Mrs. Viola Elkins .
and sister, Bonita.
The farmers are sendlng
their tobacco to market as
soon as the weather allows
them to prepare it.
Mrs. Glen Elkins taught
school In Gallipolis two days
last week.
Bonita Elkins visited oV.r a .
weekend recently with her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Elkins.
Dr. Edmiston from Vinton

PHYSICAL THERAPY SERVICE

to pray for the work there.
Bonnie Fields closed with
prayer.
Delicious refreshments

Miss Clark weds

the groom.

JW-'J'he SWlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. l9, 1978
::;?.:::::-;~:::;::;;.-:;::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·::::::::~:::::::::~:::~~::«-:."mi«&lt;$~~-~~

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m. • 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
Monday~ February 20 Black Lung Representative,
12 noon-2 p .m.; Square
Dance, 12:45-3 p.m.
Tuesday, February 21 - ,,,
Beginning Knitting ClaSs, 10

SALE

a.m.-12 noon ; Crewel Em·
broidery Class, II a.m.; Craft
Class, 1 p.Jll.; Chorus, 12:45-2

p.m.
Wednesday, February 22 Social Security Represen·
tative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.;
Games, 12 :4&gt;·2 p.m.; Craft
Class, I p.m.
Thursday, February 23 Blood Pressure Testing; 10
a.m.-12 noon ; Craft Class, I ·
p.m.
Friday, February 24 - Art
Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon; Ad·
vanced Knitting Class, 10
a.m;·l2 noon; Bowling, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program,
12 noon-12 :45 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Menu for F ebruary 20
through February 24, 1978 :
Monday - Chicken salad
sandwich, buttered green
beans, . cranberry sauce,
canned peaches, 'milk.
·
Tuesday - Baked pork
chop, applesauce, spinach ·
with vinegar, spice cake with

FRIDAY, FEB. 17
THRU MONDAY FEB. 20TH

DINGO BOOTS
DRESS AND CASUAL

Polyester &amp;
Cotton Prints
45" wide
Reg.S1.98
Sale

WOMEN'S

VALUES TO

DRESS &amp; CASUAL

'36.99

milk.
Wednesday - Beef stew,
apricots, com.bread, butter,
milk, pineapple slice salad.
Thursday - Hamburger on
bun, potato Chips, buttered
peas, mixed fruit cup, m(lk.
Friday - Baked turkey,
mashed potatoes, coleslaw
with green pepper bi\S, lemon
pudding, bread, butter, milk .
Coffee, tea , buttermilk and
juice served daily. During the
Energy Crisis we have been
adv!Jecl by the Ohio Com·
mission on Acing to llerve a
modified menu. We will serve

.

..•

FAll SHOES

ONE GROUP MEN'S and WOMEN'S

SHOES,

•

THE
SEWING
CENTER

Yz
OFF
REG. PRICE

2

(rJcanveRseJ..COACH

ANGEL TREADSLIPPERS

DISCONTINUED COLORS
REG. '13.99

WINTER STYLES

On tile t

WOMEN'S

Middleport, 0 .

CHILDREN'S

caramel icing, bread, butter,

one hot
•~N~-~2~N~D~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliliiiiiililijlliilii~M~I~~~~~:i;;!J lhouRh
. dish every day
I

'' PRESIDENT'S
~ BIRTHDAY

WINTER BOOTS
lnclude.s Women ' s Dress Boots

4'0 %

Men's Dress Shoes
•

OFF

REGULAR PRICE

heritage
N.

THOM MeAN
VALUES TO
1
26.99

h~use

'1522

of Shoes

Store Hours: 9: 30to5 : 00 Monday
Thru Saturd•Y• Due to Energy Crisis

Middleport, o.

,,

I
I

�CANCER

Answer line
Amerlcln Cancer Society

A
regular
feature ,
prepared by the American
Cancer Socicty,.., to he:lp save

your life from cancer. '
A civil engineer asks: "Can
you summarize some of the
activities of the National

TERESA JAMES
Teresa James, a junior

at Hannan Trace High

P(ogram?n
ANSWERiine : This kind uf
summary was prepared
Car:~cer

recently by Dr. Guy Newell,
Deputy Director of the
National Cancer Institute,
and here are some excerpts :
Five years ago there were
only three Comprehensive
CanCer

Centers

in

the

country, today there are 19,
plus 64 specialized centers.
Eight years ago there was no

organized national effort to worldwide exchange of in· past menopause. Most cases
screen chemicals in the formati on ~· ith data ter- are diagnosed in the ~
environment that may cause minals 10 more than 500 year age group . Recent
c ancer, tnday over 250 locations in the U.S. and studies have suggested that
chemicals are being tested ; abroad ; an Information &lt;~nd the incidence of this disease ·
geographic differences in Alert program for oc· may be increasing in the
cancer occ urrence have been (,' uptition al cancer is un - United States, possibly
mapped throughout the derway . These are only because of the use of
country with the goal of samples of what is happening estrogens. Women who have
finding hazardous industries within ·our . National Cancer taken estrogens or who are
and uncovering new clues as Program .
obese, have hlgh b.lood
to the cause of cancer ; whole·
A cooking instructor asks : pressure, diabetes, or any
new cla~ses of anti~cancer "Is it true that there is a form abnormal bleeding should be
drugs have been developed; a of uterine cancer that strikes under · medical surveillance.
multi-treatment approach to older women ? If so what can· · Like all cancer, endometrial
cancer using the skills of we do? "
cancer can be most easily
many medical experts has
ANSWERiine :
En· and successfully treated
been established : an in · dometrial cancer, cancer of when detected in an early
tcrnational Cancer Research the lining of the womb, is stage. Women can do much to
Data Bank is promoting primarily a disease of women protect themselves by being

alert to any unusual bleeding
or discharge, and .then by
seeing a physician as soon as
possible.
.
A college student explains :

diagnosis and treatment can
cost lives and therefore,

''I am doing a research

yours is a crucfal topic.

project on medical quackery.
What about its relationship to

For
information
on
programs and materials
available call 446-7479.

cancer treatment?"

ANSWER!ine : There is a
long history of unproven
methods of cancer treatment.
The Ari:.erican Cancer
Society
has extensive
reference files that may be
used by physicians, science
writers, editors and ' the

general public. Check with
your local American Cancer
Society Unit for access tQ this

8-5--The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb.l9, 1978

information and other
assistance in your -project.
Unpr~ven

GALLIPOLIS
The
monthly Parent-Child
Workshop sponsored by teh
French Art Colony will be on
Sunday afternoon, Feb. 26,
from 2 o'clock until 4 o'clock
at Riverby.
Instructing the children
who attend will be Lynda
Myers. She will show them
how to make sachets from
material, lace and ribbon,

TO MEET

'!be trustees of Little Kyger
Congregational Christian
G11Urch are aMouncing a
meeting lor all persons in·
terested in the future of the
church on Sunday, Feb. 26 at
10 :30 a.m. The meeting will
follow the Sunday School
service.

Scbool, has been chosen

Future Homemaker of
America January Girl-of·
lhe·Month. She Is th e
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Russell James of Eureka
Star Route. Enrolled In the
commercia l cOurse, Teresa
Is a member of the Pep
Club, Library Club, FHA
officer,
ba nd
and
majorette. She Is also a
candy s triper for the
Hoh er Medical Center.
Teresa '• hobbles are child
care , horseba ck riding,
sewing, reading . Mrs. ·
Sophia Campbell Is her
advisor.

. . -------=.
. '

) r.

lHiliL5EFFiCiMTHRUSATURDAY,

WHOLE .
FRYERS •••••

ob.

49c

IV2"
THICK ·

the

t'OmeLI ~

,,.

Gian-Carlo Menotti.
At the ·arulUal meeting, th :
Annual Membership Drive

will begin, chaired by Betty

chairwoman for the Parent~

Child Workshops sponsored
monthly by the French Art
Colony.

March 23. Members and
prospective members are
urged to attend the annual
meeting and are assured of a
most enjoyable evening of
musical entertainment.

U t•Ui .tHISC.

family, Mr . and ~1r s . llL-rb• ,,
Smith and family. Mr utuJ

', f'a! dl lrh•·

l v, ~ n

ti n I

PLL ··&lt;-' k1•, c't'fiN'

ut! pum;h ~l!!d h.'llluna •il'

were srrved
The aft&lt;' :1von " •s SIJ(·Ill
reminiscing an1.1 p .o~ ; Jug
games and 111usic.
Mrs. Evans received and

acknowledged several lovely

lS

\~

~

E\

~nm .... m~:htt•r
ft~ur 1:• Pfr,J1

IS

••
!I

rl·

••
,.. ··~

1, t

M, '· Wilham lleno;), Sr ., Mr
a nd Mrs. Earl Mavo , Sr., an d

t\ dh uc r of turkC\' wit h
lil ~S ::- ;n ,~.
bc t•r- bak c d
1'11 1.. kt.•n, ru ust /)crf an d
.• ~a .·y. fruit S..1lad ~tn arr:J} of

Mo·,. \Vt lllllm ~l :te ht•l i.
&lt;1r1 rl l\1! " Dt'\bt ·fl l;;

~

r
),

M&lt;Jro.
I'll
~111&lt;1
Hrid•'i't Hrr :·y, l'ly\w Smit h.
,Jorrph ill ••&amp;ll l~1ildrcd J .
l\ ,h·r.
Cl!ln.t
Bnnli.' ll,
Ourut uy Hippcy, f\·1r. uml
Mrs. Willinm Hrnry . Jr ., 1.1 11d

ohildren. Charles Lewis, IlL
· Also
her birl h·

.

• •

.JUST IN 1111.1.
TUIINS ONE - Justin
Cluirt• Hill , sun u( Mr. nnd
Mrs. Mnx llill, ltuult• 2,
Radnc, &lt;·ch•brutt·d his rlrsl
blrthcluy nn Ft•b. 15 with u
gathering ut tilt' hmm• uf
his grnndpnrcuts, Mr. mul
Mrs . Claire Uus4t, Pnrtlnnd .

• Itt.

FAMILY PU

TOP ROUND .,, ,
STEAKS ••• '""' '" ,,, ••

Ill.

lb.

BRACIOLE STEAK

I. 99
$1 .59
5 1,89

IOtUlUS TOP IOU NO

$

BEEF HOT DOGS • • • • • • • • • • • ••• "'·... 1.09
JUMBO BOlOGNA •• , ••••• SLICED ... Ib. '1.19
SliCED BACON ••••••••••.•••••.,.,... 1 1.59
1

HlllSHIRE FARM •

Polska Kielbasa or Smoked Sausage • , •• , ••••• • ·

$149

Hillshire Farm Knockwurst ...,"' W!fh ,,.~....... .. . . • · 11.59
Kahn's Wieners or Beef Franks ••.••••••.•••• •· 11.39

lb.

IONUEU I'APU THIN

Average
While Supply lasts

lb.

,1&amp;.

fRUM U(liiA UAN GROUND

GR.OUND ROUND

REYNOLD'S

DOG FOOD

• • ••

FOIL WRAP

15.5-al.
Con

WHITE

•

0

Roll

0

•

NAPKINS

• • 37c

12" • 25'

MARDI GRAS

RIVER RICE ••••• 1···
Pfcg.

• •1' • • • •

1.89
s I 29
,.
,

69

140-Ct.
Pkg .

~

6JI for

s-.
£

STPKElY

KIDNEY BEANS

15.5-oz • . ,
Can

6tf

PILLSBURY

FLOUR

· 25 -lb.
• • • • • • • • Bag

''""lA
,,
.:./~~ Armour * Star Beef -

Coea
Cola

U.S.D.A. Choice

WHOLE

Top Round~!~:~~~b-~~IH

Star kist
Tuna

SUNSHINE

$.,
S9
.,_

CHUNK LIGHT

HiHo
Craellers
Pkg.

W /OIL and W /WATER
6.5-oz.Can

1-lb.

2 Liter No Return Bot.

Mueller's
Noodles
OLD FASHIONED

FINE, MEDIUM, WIDE

1-lb. Pkg.

"CUT FREI'' l11to lop Round Ro•tt or Steili - London Bnii - Eye Sfylo
lloast or Steft - Cube Steak - l11f for Stew - Grollfld RoultCI.

.

o • 12-o•. Pkg.

am lormttly

"STOCK YOUR FREEZER WITH TENDER BEEF"

~

SUGARDALE
SUCED

LUNCH MEATS o

VETS 6 Yarletioo

EYE STYLE ROAST •••• , , "

Young Turkey
18 to 22-lb.

,,

lb.
TOP lOUND IUmlflY FOI ITUHING or ROlliNG

U.S.D.A. G.RADE "A"

Hot Dogs •••••••• ,.,b. Pk~. qqe

1:79

EYESTYLE
s
ROUND STEAKS • • • • • . "·

BONELESS

ARMOUR -ti STAR

5

IOHEUSS FAMll YPAl

CUBE STEAKS •.• •••••

Top Round
Roast

ments;

1-lb. 8-oz. Ctn.

Ill.

CHICKEN
BREASTS.

99

nJESDAY

GALLIPOLIS Ch urch of
Christ in Christian Union
Revival, Feb. 21 thru 26,7:30.
WEDNESDAY
SHEPHERDING Committee
meeting at
Galli polis
Christian Church at 8 p.m.

c

Allentown,

P euu. ,

" •

Mr . . ,

,.

Islands. Sln&lt;·c 1969, ltcv.

BRAVO MUSHROOM, MEAT, MEATLESS

SPAGHEnl SAUCE

1···

Qt ,

Jar

1-ot. Pkg.

79

WISHBONE - ITALIAN lDILUXEFRINCH

SALAD DRESSINGS. •

o

\i..~:

e

TAMII\LINI Frozen THICK CRUST

PIZZA •

o •

o •

0

0

•

1-lb.
4-oz. Pkg.

0

$-. 29

0

••• •

12·01.

Can

Institute.
Mr. l'hllllps wil l tell of
the work of The Weslcymt

YLASIC POLISH WTROB

. .-.- SPEARS •

Phillips hns serve d In
Jnm a lru us · SUJit'rlntendcnt, gcncrul cva ng1·llst
and Jn s tru C'tor nt the
Jamuku Wcsh•yn n HlhiC'

1-lb.

Church In Jamalt-a. li e Is a
ca pable speaker wHh a
message for persons of nil

'• ~

'

Heads

CLARE SPECIAL • Frozen

Freneh
Fries

Light Brown or
1OX Confectlonary

5• OFF LABEL • GAL. BOT.

'

Rev .

Phillips.

Sugar

's A·J
leaeh

hear

'

' ~­

•·red Shock ley, &lt;'urdlally
Invites all in .the com·
munlty · to

.

p:

ages. Colored slides will he
shown. Curios will be un
dls plu y. The pastor, ltev.

Oranges

Solid
Crisp

CANDYSTRIPER Monday
7 p.m . at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
RACINE PTO Monday, 2
p.m. instead of evening due to
energy crisis ·at ele!pentary
school cafet eria. Fifth grade
mothers will serve refresh·
ments.

United

c 0 I It~ .L: l' •

Wcril Indies in Ft•hru nry,
1947, after rcrclving un
uppointnu~ nl to Herve in St.
l: rob, Amcrit·u n Vir~in

FLORIDA

MONDAY

uf

Phillips flrRt weut tu the

v.s.

Social
Calendar

'l'hc Wcsh·yun Uhurl'h IH
Jamaica, West lndlt•s , will
spt;ak ut 7 p.R1 . F't·h. 20 ·at
the Cruwn City Wt•sh•yan
Cht.lrc-h, Cruwn CUy. A
grarlnute

leeller
Lettuee

PRAYER
and
Praise
meeting, Gallipohs Christian
Church at 7 p.m o
SKATING PARTY Gallipolis
Chti~ll!.n Church. 6: 15.

TO St:•EAK - ltt·v. Ut·ali
P hill ips, . Jl mlss lmlary of

w c s Ic yil II

CAL_IFORNIA

MONDAY

MEt.tlUEU I-:\' AN~

Sealtest
Cottage Cheese

Canapllell'
10.75-oz. Can

IQNELES5 fAMILY PAl

KNIGHTS of Phythias rank
w~rk c K of P Hall , 8 p.m.

corn

Whole Kernel or Cream Style
1-lb. c..

SON BORN
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and · .. ·
Mrs. Joe . Dailey (Cynthia , ;
Mill er) wish to annour1 cc the " ·~~

birth of their second child, . j
Jason Todd, bono Jan . 31 . at •.
' -~
.
~

Plea sant Valley Hospital. 4 :

.;.,:

long. He was welcomed home •. :

4fif

The little Mr. weighed seven·•; !(!
pOunds and was 19% inches,!:,,; ,., .•

ieious Apples ~~!
._,(."
or D'AnJou Pears!l';
FLORIDA
. ... ...... 3 ~ qqe "'ARSH
WHITE

. TUESDAY

POMEROY Cha mber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. David Pratt,
President of the Big Bend CB
Radio Club, guest speaker.

Peking.

is

Telephone " , a dtl• t•dol
short musical

14,

W•.t h 'a family dinner at the
"&lt;~ :"•'r CrN• k Employees

comp.1nied by Anm· t ._ hl.T
at the piano, present i,L • 'llu:

McGinness and continue until

Chieken Noodle Sou

IOtUUS~

GALLIPOLIS LIONESS
Clu b, 6:30 p .m., OVB,
Jackson Pike Branch.
Thomas Moulton will spea k
on "Wills and Estates".
PEMBROOK CLUB, 8 p.m.
with Mrs. Maury Mittleman.
TODDLERS to Ta sse Is
~!!oth e r s Club at Molly
Piylll!'le's 8 p.m .
WELCOME Wa gon ca rd s
L&lt;Jis Phlegars RSVP I p.m.
LAFAYETTE White Shrine
at Masonic Temple at 7:30 p.
m. Program a nd refresh~

In 1972, President Nixon
left on his historic trip to

Moore

Restaurant in Gallipoli5,
must be made by calling 446·
1819 or 446·970~ before
Monday noon, February 20 .
A social hour is scheduled
for 6:30p.m. with the dinner
to follow at 7 o'clock. The cost

unhcr 75thbirthcl:,y. 1- \;,

Rl'·

Thos~ Pl't.:&gt;i;"'llt tu ul'lp
c~ ·!e h .·a1 c t1w huj·J,J.. i)('t'USiun
\\f' l ~ Mr &lt;Jnd ~1r s . Willi:un
J~.•·l;.; n ~- nd ftn nih·. Mr . and

OPEN DAIL'f 8·9 SUNDAY 10-6

INCLUDES:
• 2 Breast Qtrs. W/Back
• 2 Leg Qtrs. W/Back
• 2 Necks, 2 Pkgs. of Giblets

Sharon Morgan's.

IJ8ht.s.

small

Oscar's

\.. i , . LIPOI. IS
Mr&gt; .
Mildred F . a ns w;is hOtH·I d

evening ~~·

Jl-1 •J!:J'dlll wtl!
feature Sandra it' 1lkin anu ,(..

The

SUPER MARKETS

CJaiellen Parts

RIO GRANDE Mothers '
League will meet 7:30p.m. at

In 1811, Balwnore became
the first American city to
have gas -burning street

;my

children who attend, or be
sure that an adult is with
them. It is sure to be a funfilled afternoon for all who
participate.
Penny

is $6.50 per fl&lt;'tSvn

25,1978. :;,-;;:;::,:-:,;;,.,.,,,,_

T\JFSDAY

SUNDAY
GENERAL meeting at Little
Kyger
Congregational
Church at 10 :30 a.m.
BENEVOLENCE Committee
meeting, Gallipolis Christian
Church .at 6 p.ll).

February 23 at

The program is open to all
children who would like to
attend.
Parents are requested to
accompany

Reser·

Colony on Thursday evening, · 1.. " J ohnny " f;k ,·r .

Art Colony is not necessary.

U.S.D.A.INSPECTED ~,a~ - p~

SUNDAY
GALUA COUNTY Historical
Society 2 p.m., St. Peter's
Episcopal Church.
MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS B&amp;PW, a t .
Oscar's, 6:30 p.m. Finance
committee in charge of
program. For reservations,
contact Elise Kimball .
WELCOME Wa gon general
meeting 7:30 p. m. Ja ckson
Pike Branch OVB. In·
stallation of officers.

WELCOME
Wagon
crocheting at Th eresa Bihl's 1
p.m.
PYTHIAN Sisiers meeting, K
of P Hall, 7:30 p.m.

using needle and~•thread .
When they are finished, the
sachets will be ideal for St.
Patrick's Day remem brances or the children may
want to keep them for
themselves.
All supplies will be fur·
nished. No charge is made to
take part in the Parent-Child
Workshops at Riverby, and
membership in the French

GALLIPOLIS -

vations Lo attend the annual
meeting of the French Art

Mrs . .t.A.1ans !:tas ,'.1le11 tne b ·t'lbaay

•

., I .

WlillNESDAY

Reservations due Mom.!ay

Parent-child workshop
planned at Riverby

methods · of

IHEIWOOD IOIIST

WILD BIRD FOOD

SEEDLESS PINK

or

GRAPEFRUIT •

by his sister, J odi. Parental"
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. William Dailey and ·

lb.

Bag

s

lb.
Pol~

great-grandparents arc Mr.

lb.
Pkg.

Bag
AMIIRGLOW

~ ~~~!~LACE LOGS •••

~

ROASTED PEANUTS
'

•••
• • • •

l'lolttorlolt~
12..
1. . . .

68'

POSTSUPEI

e
q
~~bi..9
BEEF STEW ••••

SUGAR CRISP CEREAL 2..

DINTT MOillE

·

and Mrs. Harold Dailey and
Mr . and Mrs. Conn ie Saun·
ders, all of Ga ll ipolis.
Maternal grandmothers are ...
Mrs. Gladys Miller and great·
grandmother is Mrs. Bertha ,
Farney, both of Oak Hill .

,.

'· ~·

Ohfo.

,"I.

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1978
Henry Wilson , 18th vice
president of the United ·
States, w•s born Feb. 16, ·
1812.
'

'•

�~-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 19, 1978

Mem be.r.·r announced
J

Gallipolis Area l'hamber of
Commerce and a member or
the Board of. TrUstees of the
Holzer Hospital Foundation.
During the meeting, Unda
Dayton , R.N., newest
member of of the Holzer
Home Health Staff, was in·
troduced to the Advisory
Committee.
John Neal, R.N ., Director
of Home Health Services at
the hospital, announced that
during the most recent
quarter, October through
December, 19n, an all time

GALLIPOLIS - During the
quart erly meeting or the
Holzer Medical Center Home
Health Advisory Committee
held in the French Five
Hundred Room at the
ho$pital, new members were
· welcomed to the group by
Earl Walters, Chainnim or
the Committee.
They are Karen Berkich,
R.N. , of Gallipofis and
Martha Cochran of Pl.
Pleasant, W. Va. A third new
member, unatile to attend, is
Tom Tope, President of the

high or 246 home health visits
in Gallia and Mason Counties
was reached in the month of
November, 19n.
The addition of Mrs.
Dayton to the staff is a
positive response to the
growing number of home
heallh visits in Gallia and
Mason Countie$.

••
••
••
•

BLOOD DAY SET
The Bloodmobile will be at
Grace United Method ist
Church from noon until 6 p.m.
on Thursday. Take a few
minutes out of your day to
give the gift of life.

.Earl Walters (1), Chairman of the Holzer Medical
Centev Home Health Advisory Committee, welcomes new
members, Karen Berkich, R.N., (t) of Gallipolis and
Martha Cochran (r ) or Pt . Pleasant.

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

Buried treasures?

.\II , ~ •ll 11 n·d 1~ • 1nal..t', l'~ll ' l d , l\ ·_, ll ''' clr' !&lt;oh il lt.' Ia,~ ·
11 K1, 1, \ Lhhion j.., :1 ht·.t 111 il 1!1 ~t l'l"li I t).! ~ i h tT . ~ole! · h lit •cI.

ol

I l l-.. !!,Old s,,t' ldd 11\."ll..t hai u. \\"(Il l\ ~\· it II ,, pt.·wlan!
Sp~· idd llt't k. l hai I I j \ \Ill t" It~~ K 'C"OI IIl' ;I

t il , do t U" . \ fltl 1

~&lt;"&lt;")"·'~(· in II' ,'" n I ig ill .

• School
J"-~ ().. ~~t ··~ meeting
•
~o~·.
: h /d
t~e.''"~ :e e

5p.eut.et

GALUPOUS -

•••
•
••

Betty Martin , R.N., (c ) and Diana Cheng, LPT, (r ),
both of Pt . Pll'l!sant, members of the Holzer Medica l
Center Home Health.Advisory Committee, talk with Unda
Dayton, R.N. ,,newest member of the Holzer Home Health

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

Staff who serves as a visiting nurse.

Christian School was called
Feb. I~ at 7:30p.m. Themairt
items covered during the

:

meeting were:

•
•
•

report to the membership,
future plans, and election for
two positions on the board.
.Nominations for positions·
on the board of trUstees were
Mrs. Connie Skaggs and Mr.
William Davis, Jr. The vote
was taken and Mrs. Skaggs

e

• ••••••••••••••

•

unanimously elected to the
positions of treasurer and
secretary of the hoard of
trUstees of Gallia Christian
School.
Future plans for G.C.S.
include fall registration for

Valentirte's Day was very romantic this year. One of the
special moments of the day came with the help of a charming
grandmother in Loveland, Ohio, who postmarks cards With
cupids and the Loveland seal bearing a very romantic
message. Sent my guy's card to Loveland and the results were
well worth i,t.

portation, and projects to be
carried out through the
Parent Teacher L.cague.
Registration for new
students who wish to attend
Gallia Chirstian School will
be taken the first of March.

Galleries to see the Community Players in "Born Yesterday."
Whlle i.he first act dragged in spots the tempo picked up and
made for a delightful evening of light entertainment. WOWK's
Rick Foucheaux, was well suited for his role. Yet the female
lead of Mary Poindexter stole the show as the slightly dumb
Billie Dawn. The acting was above average, the set was
designed with a professional touch and the evening was simply
wonderful.

MAXIMUM
INTEREST
SAVINGS?

V

and

Mr .

Davis

various means of trans·

Anyone interested in an

application lor the 1978 school
year may call Gallia Chris-·
tian School (9 a.m. to 3:05
p.m.) at 388-3128 or 4'!6-3041.

SIGNS OFF

AKRON, Ohio (UP! ) - The
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.,
in an effort to conserve

Special thanks to Nell Frieder of the Point Pleasant
Register who took the new column photo. He is a mJister with

energy, has turned off its five
large outdoor signs in the
Cleve land, Detroit and

the camera .

Akron, Ohio, areas.

. IlL

""lilllll~
.......: '

NAIU,~AI.

~'·':':':t::'..•

GOLD
BON D

s.-ECIAI GLUT

STARZ
AJIID

'CHAILII

Rev. Grace Bloomfield
WILL BE SPEAKING A revival will be held at the
Gallipolis Church of Christ

FRI., MAR. 10 7:30 P.M.
riOtErs OHSALfNOW

INSURED TO

FfSTIV.I,I SEATING 17.00liMJlfO .I.DVANCf

$40,000

Services will begin at 7:30
p.m. Guest speaker will be
Rev. Grace Bloomfield.
Pastor James Kittle an·
nounces that there wlU be
special singing from area
talent and a nursery will be
provided.

OIDIIIY MAIL NOW

1\,._H

Sf'I'X, HUNTINGTON CIVIC CfNTtll
.
Ot.f' ( lVI( CHlrU PLAZA, Ht)NTINGTON, lroll . VA. 25727

CfiiTif!EO CHICKS 01 MONfY OtOUS
CAUFOII I "*OJIAV.TIONO~UOO

HUNTINGTON ClVIC CENTER

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

SUNDAY
SPECIAL

Yi£L D

• Compo unded D1ily!

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6~l

6 ~1

.

6-YEAR CERTIFICATE

O.nd In ~ d(h\lon to all i h15

()Liartcrly 1nr.ome

7 ~,%

month!~

EAT IN OR.
CARRY OUT
SERVICE

01

pa•d on one. lwo, three, .

Jour o ~ s1 ~ ~ear cer l • li c~tc~ Interest ~ay·
able montll! r 1! you de ~ue on c~rt1 11catts
w1th Iact amoun t of SS 000 DO or n1ore
FeQeral AegLJIJ IIOhS reOLllte a

UT E

PIY&amp;IIIt Qtlatterly • Mrn1mu m S1.0(10 00

----"'---;::s,_-.

• PIVIbl e Qulrl erl v • Min1mYm St .OOO 00

penally ror prernawre Wl!tldrawal ol cerhh·

e

P~y1blt O~a rlerly

•

Mm ~ m· u m

$1 ,000.00

catc lunas

MEIGS INN .

PIZZA SHACK

~ Ohio Valley Bank
Gallipolis , Oh io

PHONE 992-6304

First National B ~nk I G~liipolis. Ohio
, .,&gt;&lt;I.&gt;~
'"'''"'

o•
"·''
'
Wo ., .... I, ~&gt; .. \• &lt;o .... ·~
&lt;'1."• lot . • ll' "'\• • ••1· "l'•f~·o(". o ot•l I

,

'

IH H

Ill II !'1.1 .•• " " II WI

-

.......

•

ww...,.... . .,..,.,_ _,.

The Gold Bond can be
transferred to anyone.

•

Both types of Gold Bond g::an be
purchased in one hundred dollar

Member FDI C

'

11

' ..

They're easy to buy.

The Leading Savings Plans Are At The Leading Savings Bank
,j

Gold Bonds provide a unique savings
opportunity. First of all, the interest
rates paid on the two types of Gold
Bonds are the highest permitted by law
and the interest is compounded daily .
The face value of the certificate
remains unchlanged . You don't have to
listen to the radio or read sma ll print in
a newspaper to find the asset value of
your investm ent. The interest r ate
printed on the Gold Bond is positively
fixed as far as .twelve years into the
future. There's no guess work, no
questions about future earnings, no
changing conditions to consider - the
bank will honor the lGold Bond as
agreed for the face value plus interest.
That's a guaranteed investment. It's
even insured by the FDIC like all other
bank deposits.

7 1/•% AlltJIIUAL INTEREST 7.63% COMPOUNDED DAIL Y

I

Open Sunday 4100 Til 11:00

suostan 1 1 ~ 1

They're as good a,s gold.

..

Since no name appears on the bond
and no cust,O!Tler {dentltication number
is required, the Gold Bon &amp; ou buy is
corriplefl!ly anonymous. For that
reason, no 1099 tax reporting form
can, or will, be issued by the bank. ihe
person holding the bond is honor
bound to report the interest received.
(Because the bank keeps no records,
we 'recommend you keep your Gold
Bondsin a safe deposit box.&gt;

EATEN ON PREMISES

~HE

• P&amp;~lblt Q~a rt erlv • M i ~ i mum SI ,DOO .OO

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

CERTIFICATE

i

:

The Bank will not issue an
IRS 1099 form.

FREE FOUNTAIN
SOFT DRINKS WITH
EM:H PillA

6 /.::~,%

un

• P&amp;ylflll Ouarlerlw • Minimum $1 ,000 .00

l

3- ~EAR

"

Since Gold Bondsare "bearer
bonds", the only record the bank keeps
.is the bond serial number and the
amount. That means the bond can be
transferred from one owner to another
-just like cash- without notifying
the bank. They can be used as gifts or
to pay debts. Upon presentation and
surrender of the bond by the bearer,
the bank will pay the face amount,
·along with accumulated Interest, during
a ten-day redemption period at
maturity (annually on one-year bonds
and each four-years on four-year
bonds). Final maturity occurs at the
end of twelve years and the bond earns
no additional interest from that time
on. Gold Bondsmay M cashed
anytime at any of our banking offices,
subject to federal regulations covering
early redemption.*

IILUSOOHfT SEMel CKAIIGf
CMC CfNTfll&amp; All !t-ITAN. oonttS

Stop in today to learn why our savings
continue to reach record levels.
.

5 /!, 5:.~.~%

-· ,.

NOTE : The anniversary is
determined by the date of original
purchase from the bank, not when the
"bearer" acquires it .

lilllilllllllmt

STYX
f

earn interst for two additional
four -year periods. By law, the four -yea r
bond can earn a higher rate since it
has a longer maturity.

6.27'/o

.

.•••• '

a
Jill

.

t O OJ..I\..".,'

••

In Christian Union from
Feb. 21 through the 26.

GOLDEN .

.,.. ·•• ., '
,.,. ,.w~'L ' ~''"'"
al

"'"' '"·

.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

,. ... , • ••·

,.,. • ~·•

coM' ou"" 0\"'\10
\\. no\\S • . . .
f
Ga
aao\&lt;. , ..~,,ly ·.~·.:::.....,, .•
u ·,.
._. \\01'\
...... ~· ·~ r•''
,... &amp; ·~" ;'0~~·
··~~
f \rs\
........... \~~~··· ··":';;'t..• ~· · ~

"

.

The 'Gold Bond, issued only in
"bearer" form - without a customer
name, has just been introduced by our
'
bank. It is available in two types - a
one-year bond paying 6% annual
interest (6.27% when compounded
daily) and a four- year bond paying
7.25% annual interest (7.63% when
compounded daily). Both will earn
interest for up to
twelve years.
.

;~

.

AND IT'S NOBODY'S BUSINESS
BUT YOURS.

new students; location of a

penn anent school building;

All plans pay th.e highest interest rates
allowed by law and guarantee you this
maxim1,1m yield.
·

8

.

.

were

Each plan is designed for a specific need
for our customers and is insured up to
$40,000 by F.D.I.C. ·
.

I TRODUCI G
E
AY TO EAR
HIGH I TEREST RATE

helps.

financia l

... at the end of a week when you feel like your own mother
doesn 'I love you. Mt.er a week or fighting a cold I'm ready to
give up and quietly croak. My voice sounds like ~ tired obscene
phone caller's; my nose is red, swollen and peeling (and the
tacky comments about "Rudolph " don't help matters) and I'm
sick of people tellirtg me how awful I look. What are friends for
if not to lie under such conditions. The only relief from all of
this comes from chewing aspirina, eating Vicks and chugging
Nyquil. If your stomach isn't that strong, just try chasing it
down with a gallon of orange juice. The Tribune' has turned into
genn city but things are improving; we've cut down our
consumption of Puffs to only two family size boxes a day.

· Quote-&lt;&gt;f-lhe-week : Let them not have domlnio·n over me .
Anne Undbergh from Locked Rooms and Open Doors.

Ddll show you the
route to

The an-

•
•
•

•

\

FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF GALLIPOLIS

e nual meeting of Gallia

l.ast week in Huntirtgwn·we made it to the Huntington Art

· Master Charge-VISA-Golden Buckeye

.

_,

....--GOLD--.
multiples up to $10,000 per bond with
a minimum of $100 for the one-year
certificate and $1,000 for the four-year
certificate. ihe two bonds work under
slightly different ground rules.
As its name suggests, the
one-year bond matures annually.
Unless redeemed, it will automatically .
renew each year and continue to earn
interest for a period of twelve years.
That means, from the first anniversary
.of its purchse on through the twelfth,
you can redeem it on any
. anniversary
date for the face amount and all
interest earned to date. Or you can
leave it in the bank and let the interest
accumulate. After twelve years, the final
maturity date, the bond stops ~arning
interest.
.The four7year bond matures in
four years. It too, if not redeemed, wi II
automatically renew and continue to

Gold Bondsare another great ·
waytosave. ·
Our bank has nearly a dozen ways to
save money, including the regular
passbook savings plan and many
different Certificates of Deposit. The
Gold Bondhas special appeal for
customers who particularly want the
ease of purchase and the total
transferability . It is an ideal investment
certificate for customers who
occasionally receive larger sums of
money. Elderly customers, particularly,
should find the transferability of special
appeal. The highest possible interest
rate and variable maturities should be
helpful to all our customers.

You may wish to purchase multiple
certificates in different denominations
and maturities. There is no limit on
the number of Bonds that can be
issued to an individual.
Federa l law a nd regu lation s prohibit the payment Of a tim e deposit
pr ior to matu r it y unless three months of interest is forfeifed and in·
terest on the amount withdrawn i s r educed to the·.passbook rate.

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!
MAIN BANK-SECOND AVE.
THIRD AVENUE BRANCH
VINTON BRANCH-VINTON

j

'

�•

C-1-TheSWldayTimes-Sentinel, SWJday, Feb. l9.1978

-iunbav 'i!imts· jtntintl

SPORTS

-

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY

JAMES SKEEN
HAS PARTY ·
James Harold Skeen
celebrated his first birthday
on Janua ry 6 at his home on
Rt. 7, Ga llipolis. A rabbit
cake and ice cream were
served. Those present at the
occasion were sist·ers Teresa
and

Susa n · and

tl

D

BAIBASIC

mot hers, Vesta Ca ll · and
Ruby Poling, and parents,
Mr . and Mrs. Ronnie Skee 0 .
Sending a gift was his aunt,
Ruth Mays.
·

NON-AEROSOL ANTIPERSPIRANT
SPRAY

BRACH'S

. . .....

REGULAR OR NEUTRAL

CHOCOU n COVERED

l

$119

CHERRIES

. ~

HECX'SIIG.
$1 .69

HICX'SIEG.
99'

crasunr•r.

tas.t&amp;IK"'T.

REEL

TRUMAIK
FOLDING

Rugged a ll m~al con$1ruction

Smoo th d ie

co ~t

gear 'ystem

~)) $244

with 115 yds. 8# Trile ne .IC.Xl.

$688

TRISHA SPENCER
TURNS SEVEN
Trisha Spencer, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Rooole

SI'MTS-.T.

on·

7941

.

was served with ice cream,

FRABILL

punch and favors. Allending were Trisha's brother,
Donnie, Mrs. Nancy l'&lt;forrlssey, Tommle aud Carrie
Morr is sey,
Laura

HORSESHOE SET
Four regulation size shoes finished in gold and
silver with two 'l's")C24" Steel Stakes painted

Hawthorne,

bright

Robyn

and .

Todd Toban, Brian Bailey,
Christl Hollman, Floyd
Ridenour, Willie Hill, JeH
Mays, Mike Frost, Susan
Wolf, and Amy Mu'l'hy.
Sending a gill was Jay
Reynolds.

$2999
Heck's Reg. $37.96

2GALLON

MOTOR OIL

session set

$244

COMI»ACT CURLER

The fast, eal)' way
.t o cur ( you r hair
olmott onyw~re .
Cordess
f.:nl
and eo~y f!) u5e
- heoh in about '
t wo mi nu te s. ··
Compact, pcnable
design.
Unique
teleKoping rod.

HECK'S REG. '12.96

AITfJMOTIW/191.

JEWELRY DEPT.

Sat urday .

$}099-

e

SUPER JUICER

HECK'S REG.
$2.99

UNIONDALE , N. Y. (UP!)
- Jude Drouin's fourth goal
of the se ason, with I :03
remaining, enabled the New
York Islanders to sa:lv~ge a 33 tie with the Atlanta Flames

MIST SUPER CURL

e

NORELCO

ROCKET

GILLmE

e

JEWELRY DEPT.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis f3 rari ch of The

HECK'S RIG. $14.96

JIWB.•r IJIIIT.

Association of

University Woman will hold a
s p eci a l ses sion Monday ,
fe bruary 2!) at 7:30 p.m. at

· GALLON .
1RADCO ..

St. Louis Catholic Church.
This spec ial session will be
entitled " Assertive Behavior
Pract ice - Pa rt II."
It was decided to hold this
s pecial practice session
beca use of the lack of time
during the la st meeting: Dr.
Betty Yorde will conduct this

WINDSHIELD
WASHER
ANT1-F11EEZE
LIMIT2 GAl..

66(

special session.

120QPK

SOLDERING
GUN KIT
8 · p1K~ kd on &lt;l uct.• Wde! Mod.il 9200
d...:&gt;t hlol wlde.,nQ Q"" lhrH copper
•QIM"nQ ~ p • , bp &lt;~a~gong .. •eto&lt;/1 , II~ •
btvlh ,QI~eo•n !l ootl !ool, rn~ nl ILJ/• O

WEN

6" BElCH GRillER

,•

Introducing the world's first double insulated bench grinder. bc:lusi,..

rO.on &lt;n&lt;e IOIJ:jet , S!.td,, plo1tlc ~OI!Y'fl9

Ufl •

c.,.,pl~lt wi t~

feature!. include cog btllt dri..,.,. Superstructure to inueose durability,
dynami C brake fo r fast stop! , break reli!tont hoUsing, 6' two
condvctor c,ord, YJ hor5epower.
.

'\oldu ing Tip\'

GAL

$12

88

..

HECK'S REG.

HECK'SIEG.
$16.99

$54.66

MAfiMIAII

,_

S]9''

COOKWARE SELL-A-BlATION
A. SEAMLESS BISCUIT PAl
.
I.PIZZAPAI
C. LARGE COOKIE PAl
D. 10" PIE PLAR
HECK'S REG.
$1.99EACH '

E. IOU• CAKE PAl
F. 6 C.. MUFFII PAl
G. SQUAll CAKE PAl
H.LOAFPAI ·
CHOICE

SJ 00 .
,
EACH

...

LOOKING FOR BALL - 'Hannan Trace's David
Swain (32) and David Campbell («) keep their eyes on the
ball to see if it goes in during the Eastern-Hannan Trace
game Friday night at Meigs High School. Hannan Trace
defeated a stubborn Eagle squad, ~3.

American League play
_to start on April 5

MARTHA WASHINGTON'S
BAKER-EZE

BANKERS MEET
,
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - A.A.
Milligan, president of the
Ameri c an
Ban ,krrS
· Association, will "lltak on
banking legislation at the
national level at the 1978 MidWinter Meeting of the Ohio
llltnkers Association , to be
held
Tuesday
and
Wednesday.
More than 500 Ohio bankers
are expected at the meeting
which will explore the topics
of federal legislation, the
secondary mortgage market
and consumer credit.
.l

WELLER

booUet

HICJ('SIIG.
99'GAL.

LUNCHEON PLANNED
The Gallipolis Chri stian
Women's Club invites the
public ' l~ the February
Luncheon on Feb. 21 at the
Holidayinn al12 :15 p.m. Cost
is $3.50. Theme will be "You
Light Up My Life" with a
s pecial
feature
from
Columbus and Southern Ohio
El ectric Co. Music will be by
Noreen Bechtel. Speaker will
Ire Mrs . William Seaton,
.Athens, Ohio. Reservations
will be taken by phone eallers
or call Maythorne Keeler 446·
4629 or Kandy Nuce 44&amp;-7374 .
Babysitting provided free by
calling Ann Saunders 44&amp;0766. Cancellations must be
rnacte before 6 p.m. Monday.
If you cannot honor your
reservation and you do not
call to cancel, your meal still
must be pa id for by you.

.~.

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S999

HECK'S REG.
$14.99

Islanders,
Flames tie

ARGUS

red. Rules and Reg ulations included.

AAUW

Am e ri can

$3.11
~rs•r.

$1.99

a party recenUy
her
seventh birthday. Games
were played and gilts
present~d to the ho~ored
guest. A valentine cake

GRABS REBOUND - Eastern 's Dan Spencer ( 43) out fights two Wildcat defenders .
:Randy Neal ( 20) and David Campbell (44) for a rebound in action during Friday 's Class A
Sectional Tournament at Meigs High School. (Greg Bailey photos) .

HECK'S lEG.

HICK'S lEG.

Spencer, was honored with

HECK'SIIG.
$1.29

WRIST ROCKET

~ lo f d ra g
aluminum
~h ro ud with hordtned ring . Retri eve · 3 lo 1 Co m e~ spooled

By Greg Ba iley
ROCK SPR INGS - The
' basketba ll ~ournament
season has begun, and if the
first game is anything like the
rest is guing to be."'the fans
ar~ in for some exciting
basket ball.
At Meigs High Schoo l
Friday night. in the opening
round of the Class A Sec·
tiona!, the Eastern Eagles
fell to the Hannan Trace
Wildcats for the third lime
this season by three points or
i£'ss. This time the score was
OS-53, and the outcome was In
doubt unt il on ly two seconds
remained in the co ntest \

The first quarter ended 119, the favor of Hannan Trace.
and the Wildcats led must of
the second period. The in·
termissiun ruWld the- boys uf
Wildcat r&lt;1ach Dan Cornell
still on top. 24-23.
The thi rd period was just as
&lt;'lose with Ha nnan Trace just
barely staying abead until
with
2:25
remam 1ng ,
sophomore Brian Bissell put
the Eagles ahead 35-34 on a
three-poi nt play . A ha lf
minute later , Bissell put two
more thrnugh the hoop to put
the Eagles up by three.
Eastern was on top by five,
41-36 at the buzzer.

·

Opening the last period, Campbell found the range
opent.•d its lrad to (rum outside and conneclt."tt
nine. 45·36. on buckets by furtwo with :091eft. Rnmking
Bissell and Jl'ff Goebt:l. But down the Onor, Goeb&lt;'l was
then it happened . Hannan chargt:'d with truvellng us he
Trace nelte&lt;t 12 ununs "·ered drove the lane and the
points in the next three Wildcats got the ball wath twu
minutes to take n 46-45 lead, sectmds lrft.
seemingly in tuntrol.
Dave Swain uf the Wildrats
But Eastern wouldn 't die, tuuk .st•orin~ houurs on tlw
and with 26 seconds le ft in the night with his 2l , points.
t{thne, Goebel hit A but·kct to Cnmpb&lt;'ll eontributed 13 ond
knot the scOre 53-all. thmnan Steve Bea ver netted 12. Till'
Trat"e missed It s shot , and Wildcats made good nn 13 uf
after the Eagles gut the J7 free throw s and wf.lro
re bound , they missed their ca lltod for 15 fouls. They'll
shut.
play Southwestern on Feb. 22
TI1is time when. the Wild- in the semifinals.
t•ats got thr ccu·orn , David
Easte rn wus led by
Got•b{•\ 's 14 nmrkt•rs. Bissell
r~u~tern

netted 13 while Juninr Dan
Spencer added 10. The Ea~les
uf Couch Duane Wolfe hit 22
of 65 shuts for 33 per rent and
sank 6 of 9 foul shols. 1lae foul
whistl e was used on thP
Eagles 16 times. Spencer It'll
tht1 Ea~lt: rebounding with 17 .
Box: SL'orc :
East ern (SlJ
Goebel , 7 0
14: Spenc:er, 4 2-10 ; Bissell , 5
J lJ ; Bcown , 2 1 S; Wlgel . 2 7
6; Hayman, '1 J 5. TOTALS
22-9 -53.
Hannan Trace USl - D .
Campbell. 6 I 13 ; Neal, 0 l -1;

Swa in, S 11 '1 1; Mooney , 3' 0 6 ;
S. Se.wer, 6 0 11 : Pack , 1·0 7.
TOTA LS l 1-13 Sl.
Scare by Quarters :
Easfefn
9 14 18 17
Hfln Tra ce:
11 13 1'1 19

.SJ

55

Tar Heels rip
Virginia five

30L

gra nd-

Wildcats slip past Eagles

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The borne openers the following
American League will open week are Seattle at Oakland;
the 1978 baseball season llltltimore at Kansas City ;
Wednesday night, April 5, Detroit
at
Toronto ;
when the Seattle Mariners Milwaukee a t Baltimore;
bost tbe Minnesota Twins, AL Chicago at New York, and
· President Lee MacPhail Texas at Boston.
announced Saturday.
ci( a total 1,134 schedu.led
It will be the second contests, an all-time high of
straight year the Mariners 718 night games will be
have hosted the early AL played this year in the AL.
opener. The . night game Last season, its first under a
against the Twins, featuring 14-team. format, the league
major
league . batting played 693 night games ,
champion Rod Carew, There will be 12 fewer double•
precedes the National League beaders than a year ago, 51 in
opener the next day in all.
Cincinnati.•
Following the Seattle
Sports Transactions
By United Press lnternationai
.P.,ner, Milwaukee begins its
Friday
season
against
home
Baseball
Hou ston Rea, hed agree Baltimore while Toronto
ment w ith cen ter .fielder Cesar
opens at Detroit Thursday. Ced eno fo r a report ed S3.5
Four m,ore clu~• move mto m illion , lO·vear contract .
Boslon - Signed left -handed
action Friday, with Boston at relief
,pi1cher Tom Buromeier
Chicago and Oakland at · as a free agent.
College
California.
The &lt;;:itadel H ired Art
· The r.est of the league starts Baker of Furman to replac e
play Saturday, AprU 6, when Bobby Ross as head football
· Coach .
the. Wocld Champion New
Basketball
Chicago Placed forward
Yock Yankees visit Texas in a
Scoff May on the disable-d I isl
natlonally televised game and activated Derrick Dickey,
and Cleveland hosts Western signed as a free aQent .
Hockey
Division champion Kansas
Cincinnat i (WHAJ _,_ SMt
City.
goaltender Norm Lapointe to
Binghamton of the Amer ican
Other American League U~ague
.

Drouin took passes from
. Bryan Trottier and Gerry
Hart and flipped a 10-footer
over the shoulder of Flames
goaltender Dan Bouchard.
Mike Bossy, returning to the
lineup for the first time since
injuring a · s houlder in
Chicago Feb. 8, scored ·his
41st goal at 16:16 to bring
New York within one .
Aft er a scoreless first
period , Atlanta 's Dick
Redmond beat · New York
goalie Billy Smith with a 50- .
footer at I :48 of the second
period. A minute and 53
seconds later, ·Willi Plett
scored with ·a 30-footer from
the right. Tom Lysiak
assist ed on both Atlanta
goals.
The Islanders got on the
board at 6:29 when Denis
Potvin scored from the point
on a power play with help
from Bossy and Trottier. Ken
Houston opened the third .
period with a goal for Atlanta
in the second minute, beating
Smith with a 30-footer which
was screened.

CHAP E L HILL, N. C.
t UPI I - Guard Phil Ford
exploded for 22 points in the
second h alf Saturday as
eighth-ranked North Carolina
tightened its grip on the
Atlantic Co ast Conference
lead with a 71-54 victory over
16th-ranked Virginia.
Ford led all scorers with 30
points as the Tar Heels slowly
widened a 20·15 halftime lead
and ran their record to 22-5 on
the season and 8-2 in the ACC.
Virginia, . led by freshman
J eff Lamp 's 22 points,
dropped to 17~ overall and 5-li'
in the ACC.
North Carolina, playing
without three of its top men.
went into its four-corners'
off ense with almost 71&gt;
minutes left in the first half,
clinging to an 18-15 lead. The
Tar Heels held the ball until
the. buzzer, when Ford hit a
jumper to provide the halftime lead.
Lamp hit a pair of buckets
in the first three minutes of

SPENCER SHOOTS - Jwtior center Dan Spencer ( 43 ) lets go with a long jumper
during Friday's Class A Sectional action at Meigs High School. Watching the ba ll are HT's
Dave Swain (32) and Frank Mooney (1 2). Closing in is the Engles' Brion Bissell· ( t5).

Bowling Green . .
·
.. Cedeno agre~s to $3.5
· ·.
romps, 66
. •44
million Astro contract .
BOWLiNG GREEN, Ohio
tOP! )- Ron Hammye, Joe
Faine and Duane Gray led a
balanced Bowling Green
attack Saturday and the
Falcons exploded for 23
stra ight points midway
through the second half for a
66-44 Mid-Americ an Con·
ference win over Western
Michigan.
The Falcons, now 7-4 in the
MAC and 9-13 overall, led 31·
30 at halftime and were still
only up 43-38 with 12 minutes
left in the game.
But, Western Michigan
wel)t nearly 10 minutes
without a point and the
Falcons zoomed out to a 63-38
margin.
.
Hammye led the BG
scoring with 16 points, Faine
added 15 and Gray 14, while
Mark Weishaar was the only
Bronco playing in double
figures with 10.
Western, now 3-9 and 6-16,
shot only 17.9 percent from
the floor in the second half,

hitting 7 of 39.
Hammye's 10 rebounds and
nine by Faine led BG to a 49·
43 rebounding edge.

Friars
triumph
63 to 54

PROVIDEN CE, R. I.
(UPI ) - Sophomore Rudy
Williams' 12 points paced 11
Providence college players
who scored Saturday as the
13th-ranked · Friars sub·
stituted freely in ~lipping
Campbell College, 63-54.
Providence Coach Dave
Gavitt subslituled freely
throughout the game against
the North CaroUna team .
Bruce Campbell had nine and
Dwight Williams and Rich
Hunger each netted eight.
Starling
center.
Bob
Misevicius sat out the game
for Providence due to an
injury.
Campbell College, a small
hours and . 56 minutes to Division I school from Buie's
complete. Two penalties were Creek, N.C., shot 23.9 percent
given seven seconds after from the field against its
taller hosts, connecting on
play began.
only
17 of 71 shots from the
Defeilseman Joe Watson
field.
The Camelis, 9-13 , were
scored his 37th career goal
by John Heckstall who
paced
with a 55-foot slap shot to give
scored
a game high 17 points.
the Flyers a 1.0 lead in the
Darrell
Mauldin added 10
first period. Don Saleski
pointS
for
Cambell.
boosted the Flyers lead to 2.0
The Friars Sunday af·
at 12:28 when he t()()k a pass
back from Bob Kelly and put ternoon tap off against
Boston College at the
in a 10-footer .
Detroit swung back on a Providence Civic Center to
power play at 14 :12 as Andre make up a game originally
St. Laurent tipped in a 50- scheduled for Feb. 8 but
postponed due to the blizzard.
footer by Dale McCourt.

Flyers beat Wings, 4-2
PHILADELPHIA (UP! l ~
Two goals by Blll Barber
wlthin a span of six minutes
in the final period enabled the
Philadelphia Flyers to beat
the Detroit Red Wings 4-2
Saturday.
The victory helped th e
Flyers pull to within four
points of the first place New
York Islanders in the Patrick
Division of the NHL.
Tempers flared throughout
the intense action, with six
fi ghts erupting and 136
penalty minutes being meted
out in the game that look.two

the second half as Virginia
pulled within one, 22-21, with
17: 08 left in the game. But a
pa ir of baskets by Ford and
one each by Tom Zali agiris
and AI Wood during the next
four minutes widened the ga p
to 30-21 and the Tar Heels
were never threatened the
rest of the way .
Zalia giri s was the only
other North Carolina player
in double fi gures, sco ring
nine points in the second half
to wind up with II. Mike
Owens had 12 points, joining
Lamp as the only Cavaliers in
double ligures.
· North Carolina was playing
without center Rich Yonakor,
who is out for the season wllh
a knee injury ; Mike O'Koren,
temporarily sidelined with a
sprained ankle, and backup
ce nter Geff Crompton,
declared ineligible for the
last four r eg ular seaso n
gaines because of his participation in a recreation
league in 1976.

HOUSTON (UP! ) - Center
fielder Cesar Cedeno ha s
a~reed to a contract with the
Houston Astros lhot could
take care of him for hi e.
Astros pre sident a nd
general manager Tal Smith
Friday sa id th e contract
would pay Cedeno a reported
$3.5 million during the next 10

Wittenberg is
winner 71-69
SPRINGFIELD, Ohi o
(UP!) - Robin Gregory hit a
211-foot jump shot with five
seconds left Saturday to lift
Wittenberg to a 71-69 win over
Ohio Wesleyan, clinching the
Ohio Conference Southern
Division championship for
th e Tigers .
Gregory's game-winner
gave him 18 points in the
contest. Wittenberg , which
finished the regular season at
15~ overall and 9·3 in the OC,
was led by Brian Agler with
19 points and Tyron Curtis
contributing 11.
Wittenberg led by as many
as 11 points in the first hall,
which ended with Ti gers
holding a 37-29 advantage.
But , Wesleyan , which
finished at15-JO overall and 6'
6 in the conference, tied the ·
game at 50 and the lead
changed hands six limes and
was ti ed six times b&lt;'fore
Gregory's heroics.
Mike
Kainnaird
led
Wesleyan with 19 points and
Mike McCoy had 16.

,R io to host baseball clinic
.RIO GRANDE - A taste of with world series films and a
the spring . baseball season welcome by Art Lanham, Rio
hits the Rio Grande College Grande athletic director.
and Community College
Howard Bozman, Logan
(RGC-CCJ campus Saturday, High School head baseball
Feb. 25, when four out- coach, wlll lead the first
standing coaches gather for morning session on t)as·e
Rio's second annual baseball running ~ Bozman's teams
clinic.
•
were 1977 SEOAL and 1977
Sessions on base running, American League District
catching, hitting , double Champions.
plays and bunting are
Malone College's head
planned for the 9 a.m. to 4 baseball coach, Bob Starp.m. clinic, which is open to cher, will direct a second
all coaches and players, pony clinic session on catching.
league through college age. Starcher's team was District
According to RGC-CC's 22, National Association of
baseball coach, .lohnny Intercollegiate Athletics
Ecker, the clinic will begin · champion last .year and

runner-up in the Mid-Ohio inducl ed into the 1978
Conference.
American College Baseball
Dick Fishbaugh, head Coaches Hall of Fame, has
baseball coach at Otterbein coached teams which hold 11
College, wlll lead an af- Mid-America Conference
ternoon session on hitting. titles.
Ohio
University
Registration lor the clinic
The
graduate, who also holds the is $5 for adults with advance
NCAA record for 7 RB!'s in registration, $6 at the door,
one game, lias conducted and $2 for studentsat the door
In advance . Prehitting schools for several or
years and his teams have riot registration may be sent to
had a losing season ln the last Rio Grande Baseball Clinic,
ten y.ears.
RGC Box 849, Rio Grande,
Ohio University's former Ohio 45874. Additional Inhead coach, Bob Wren, will fonnation is available by
direct the final two clinic . phoning 245-5353.
periods on double plays and
The .clinic Is being cobunti~g. Wren , who was sponsored by Coca-Cola .

'.

yea rs.
"Th ere is a provision for
extension of this C4Jntract
beyond that tim e,'.' Smllh
said. "What we have, in cf·
feet, is a ca reer contract. "
Cedeno wus present at n
news cohferencc ~nnuunci ng
the agreement ·and he sa id
the· decisi on ma de him
nervous.
'' I much prefer standing at
the plate facing a fa stball
than standing up here and
talkln ~ about this. Make it
short , my leg is shaking," he
said.
.•
Public press ure has been
heavy on Cedeno, an eight·
year veteran, since Smith one
week ago disclosed that 13
weeks of negotiations were
&amp;
tailed and that he would
trade the team's .292 lifetime
hitter. if he Was not signed
before the season opener
April 8.
Cedeno read for newsmen· a
letter he rece ived this week
fr,om an Ell Pa so, Texas boy ,
urgin g him to stay with the
A•tros.

" I will be spcndinMt.h c rest
of my cu rccr in Houston ,"

Cedeno s;"lld.

If he remained UHsig11ed
this season , Cedeno could go
to the hi ghest bidder. Houston
co ul d concei vably ha ve
received no compcns.ulinn.
1
'1 was se rious ;~ bo u t
trading him ," Smith ~w id . " I
had to think of what was best
of the cl ub."
'llle a~ rce m c nt included
signing or a let.ter-uf-intcnt
cov c i· in ~ the points of i s~o~ u c ,
Smith sai d. The ..: cncrul
manii gcr -udmittcd that a no~
trade provision was not it:~ the
contra&lt;.'t .
But " there urc no issues t q
be resolved, " Sm ith said.
The 1urgcs t contra ct
previously paid a baseball
player , .according to· Smith ,
was the $:1.1 million, six-year
pact given Larry Hisle by the
Milwaukee Brewers. Smith
refused to discuss the terms
of Cedeno 's co ntract cx&lt;:cpt
to say, "This Is the lnrgest
Contract in t he history of
bas ch~Jll . ''

Central Michigan
tops Ball State
MOUNT
PL E ASANT ,
Mi ch. (UPI ) - Cent ral
Michigan, bolstered by 19point performances from Jeff
Tropf and Dave Grauzer ,
overcame a late second half
Ball State rally Saturday to
post a 9Hl4 Mid-American
Conference victory.
The Chippewas held a 60-44
lead at halftime and padded it
to as many as 20 points, 74-54,
midway through the second
half when Ball State out·
scored Central Michigan 22~
over a five-minute spa'n to
narrow the gap to 80-76.
Grauzer made a three-point
play with 1:09 remaining to
make it 9tHI2 and Ball SLate
was unable to catch up before
the buzzer sounded.
Central Michigan made 41
of its 64 shots from the floor
for 64 percent while Ball State
made 36 of 88 for 53 percent.
Val Bracey finished with 16
points and Leon Guydon
added 15 for the Chippewas,
who are now 8-3 in the MAC
and 13-3.
Ball State, despite a gamehigh 27 point performance
from Robert Simms, dropped

to 5-IJ in t he league and 13-3
overall.

.Jaycees event
slated Feb. 26
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Jaycees wlll hold a
Tri skill Basketball com petition on Sunday. Feb. 26.
The competition is open to all
boys and girls ages eight
through 12 living in Gallia
County . The youngsters will
. be competing in their own age
group and will be tested In the
skills of dribbling, shooting
and passing.
The youn gsters may
register at · Washingt on
Elementary School at 2 p.m .
the day of the competition,
Sunday, Feb. 26.
The winner and runner-up
In each age group will be a ble
to compete in the· Sta te
Triskill competition in
Danvllle, Ohio on Marcb 18.
Transportation and lunch will
be provided by the Galllpolls
Jaycees.
\

�C-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 19.-1978

C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swtday, Feb. 19. 1978

•

Gallipolis wzns tournament opener, 74-52
IRONTON - Coach Jim
Osbor ne's Gallip oli s Blue
Oev ils drilled in 48 points in
the secund half here f' riday
ni~hl enroute to a 74-52 victory over the Fairland
Dra gons in the opening round
of the Iront on Class AA
.Sectional Basketball Tournament.
Three players hit double
digit scoring to pa ce GAHS as
the Dev lis embark on thl?
defense of the Ironton Sectional crown they won last

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POMEROY, 0. ~

interesting ea rly in the
second peri od when Tim
Nichols. Steve Hamlin, and
Marshall Dani els brought
their team lu within three
points, 14-11, with 5:45 left.
NiChols, who entered the

finish with 16 points.
Led by Wall and junior
Jimmy flarris , some dandy
foul shooting by Bill !Big
Jcohn 1 Armstrong, and excellent support from Brad
Abels, Rick Dailey, Jeff
Lanham. and Nate Thomas
the lead gradually increased
to 17 point s with 5: 20
remaining .Coach Osborne sent in his

('on test sport ing a 30-poinl

per game average, tallied 13
points before fnuling nul with
2 ~ 29 remaining in the contest.
He hit just sl• of 14 shots and
nne rrec thruw .
Senior Jeff Brown sparked
the Blue Devils throughout
year .
the contest and it was his
By virtue of Friday 's leadership that turned the
triumph, GAHS will now face tempo uf the contest around
a stiff test Tuesday night in the s econd period as he
when they oppose a strong ripped off rebounds at both
South Point team which owns ends of the floor and con·
a 12·&gt; record. The Pointers tributcd eight points. He
played Huntington East last fini shed with nine snares to
night in a mak e- up game.
lead GAHS in (hat departI ~ the first contest Friday
ment.
night , Rock Hill defeated
In the third period, the Blue
Coa l Grove, &gt;6-49, and will go . Devil lead mushroomed to 12
against top-se•ded points 137-25 and 39-271 before
Chesapeake Tuesday at 6:4&gt; the Dragons closed it to 46-37
p.m .
at the end of the third canto.
GAHS jumped off to a 4-0
The fourth quarter was a
lead f' riday night and was shoot out as GABS poured in
never headed as the Blue 20 points with senior Terry
Devils led by quarter scores Wall swishing 10 markers. He
of 14-4, 26-21, and 46-37.
had been held in check for the
However , Coach Carl fi rst three quarters with on ly
York'.s Dragons made it six points, but he found the
hole in the final period and
ca nned five field goals to

subs. including sophomores

Greg Atkins and Nick
I :38
Robins on,
with
remaining and the score
showing 'ti9·&gt;0.
AI the 48 .second mark the
spread reached 20 points for
the only time in the contest,
at 72-&gt;2, and Nate Thomas
closed it out, 74-52, with 19
seconds remaining.
Brown led all scorers with
17 points, Wall added 16, Jim
Harris 14 as Gallipolis hit 29
of 63 fielders for 46 percent
and added 16 of 25 free

IO; hit 22 of 51 from the floor
and converted eight of 12
gratis attempts . They snared
26 reb ounds with Love
grabbing nine and Daniels
seven. The Dragons had It
turnovers.
It was also a good night for
two Blue Devil fans as Jim
Simms, center and co-captain
of the 19n football team, won
a chance to shoot from midco urt with the prize being a
TV set.
The senior fired a 45-foot
shot that swished through the

Cage
standings

E 'S SPECIAL
FEB. lBthru 24

FISH SANDWICH &amp; F. FRIES

ggc

House knocked the Wave rl y

Tigers out of competition by a
59-55 score.
Mark Fielder talli ed 23
points for the Tigers, ·who
conclude the season with a
fina l reco rd of 13-6.
. Friday's victory by the
Blue Lions marked the thi rd
cnnsecut ive vea r thf' TiJ,!er s

'::J
+I e ~
A.
tm d· a 1'ry 1s
Locust &amp; 4th St.

Middleport, 0 .

992-5248

Wellston
Jackson
Meiqs

TOTALS

Moodov

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I" . ·1 n:po
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and the: M . , s~at: .
.
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hnllllC' nl avt:r.Lgc
Tt:~h M\ o g). .
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ahlc tu ilflo rtl a h tln':.:.
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elh.c [tn&lt;
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Jackson

TOTALS

I . will the poor be

hJ.ppcd·n~ . ~~~ ~:n:e ow n&lt;:: rship._but so
prH:t.t

II

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a

m,n.t p r &gt;Jspcr~J U S Wl

ll b ab le to a o r
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.

.. tcss
abh:
c ·trc nu..
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,nc0 111 • \0 or even ,-,,..;\'cars a~u .
\lll 111C tlu n f h I \ '11•" );ca r.., i~ pr n·
1 h. \T ·nd l) t t: ~"
.

,.

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'•''
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• fut ure . •• t ypical n.:v.
JC ctctl IIIlO the

for you with payments you can afford.

It's lrue! New h~me prices are tiigher this year
than la~t ... and, tf the experts are right, they 'll be
even h1~her ne~~:t year: However, in spite ot rising
costs, J1m Walter con tinues to custom build homes
that most .families CAN afford.
Do~ ' t wait! Take advantage of this Year's sa vings.

Burld ~ and avoid the rising cost of material and
labor. Build !!!!.!'! A new, permanent home built on

yo~r property, is STILL today 'a besl investment _•..
an mvestment that wrli grow in value year after year.

Build !!.2W! Jim Waiter has a plan to save you hundre,d s and hun~re ds of dollars, Here's how it works:
We II cu:stom build rour new home to almost any
sta~e ._. : !rom the ' shell,'' up to 90% complete.
We I! f•ry•sh the out!lide from the foundation up, includtng lwo coats of quality paint. Then, on the in~ide, you tell us how much to finish. Where we stop
t~ ~re~ty much up to you, but the more of lhe inside
h~1shrng you and your family do, the less your cost
Will be. YES WE CAN build together . . . and you'll
have a home you can afford.
To ma_ke it even easier tor you to buy your new
home, ~lm Walter offers one-slop INSTANT mortgage. fma~cin g to qualified property owners.
There s no red_ tape and .no " third party" delays
because your Jem Walter represenlllive handles all
the detail• for you. He'll also tell you exac: tl"y what
you~ monlhl~ payment will be, before construction
begms,

Jim 'llfl11r HOMES
CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619
'

NITRO, W. VA. 25143

Old Highway 52

606 lsi Ave. South

P. 0. Box 637

P. 0. Box 250

Ph.: 867-3153

..

u. s. lfwy. 25 East

I

More than 20
different models
available.
Choose the one
that's just right ,
priced right lor
your family .

&lt;

A~~:~u~~~s

Col Marfon Franklin 77
Westerville N 39
Grolle City 59 Gahanna 55
Col Whetstone 58 Worth ington

48

:~J-74

Fairmont E 49
Xenia 65 Carroll 48
Oay Belmont 64 Mic,mlsburg

50

Tec~mseh 63 Fa1rborn Park

Holts 57

Class AA
At Canton
Manchester 77 Northwest 70
Orr11 ille 70 Rittman 59
At Stewart
Sheridan 70 Warren Local 62
At Ironton
Ga ll iJ?olis 74 Fairland 52
Rock H ill 56 Coal Grove 49
At Urbana
St. Paris Gra ham 77 Tipp

17 7 19 2~
25 24 16 20--l!S
Marlette

70, Athens 54.

City

South

lrontcn vs, Portsm outh at
lucasville Friday's games :
Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
Sissonville at Ravenswood
Sectional championship ·
game at Ironton

.

N. College Hill60 Bethel Tate
34

Western Brown 77 East
Clinton 61
Loveland 55 Clermont North ~
eastern 32
Cll nton-Mass ie7B St. Bernard

39

Coal Grove

Parkersburg at Ravenswood
Rock Hill vs. Chesapeake at
Ironton
Wednesday's games :
Ripley at Ravenswood
Cgur1 House vs. Well ston at
Unloto
Thursday ' s games :
Pt. Pleasant at Parkersburg

45

Miam j East 69 Indian Lake 61
At Cincinnati

Rock Hill
eliminates

Pt. Pleasant at Ripley

AIT

spr 1ng f 'teld S· 63rNoy.or lh man 1 55

Score by quarters :
score:

At Chillicothe
Wash ing1on CH 59- Waverly 55

Class A

At Athens
Glouster Trimb le 68 Miller 66
Cr ooksvi ll e 58
Fed era l
Hocking 46
At Portsmouth
Portsmouth E 60 New Boston

IRONTON - In the first
game of the Class AA Sectional Tournament played at
Ironton Friday night the
Rock Hill Redmen came from
behind to defeat Coal Grove
56-49.
The victory puts Rock Hill
against top-seeded
Chesapeake at 6 : t~ p.m.
Tuesday followed by the
GallipOlis-south Point contest
at approximately 8i30 p.m.
Friday night Jim Orrick·
scored 21 ppints and Tom
Carter 18 for the winners
while John Fields netted 16
and Scutt Vanderhoof 10 for
the losing Hornets.
The box score:
ROCK HILL (56) - Car\er
9-0-t8; Dalton 0-H; Gilmore
1·0-2; Orrick 9-5-21; Scott 2·0·
4; Simms 1·0-2; Zornes 4·0.8.
TOTALS 25-6·56.
COAL GROVE l«l Butler 1-0-2; Williams 4-1-9;
Willis 3-0-6; F lelds 6-~- 16 ;
Bare 3-0-6; Vanderhoof 5·0·10.
TOTALS 22-5-49.

At Chillicothe

Adena Ross 67 Pain t Va lley 57
At Bellefontaine
Springfi eld Southeastern 59
Ri11e r side 43
Tr iad 66 Si dney Lehman 6S
At Hillsboro
Lynchburg Clay 77 White Oak
67
.
Peebles 71 Manchester 70
At Pomeroy
Ha nna n Trace 55 Eastern
Meigs 53
Regular Season Results

Ada 55 Bluffton 49

8 16 17 15-56
15 10 10 14- 49

Amelia 58 Wil lia msburg 55
Ar cadia 67 Liberty- Benton 65

Arc hbold 54 Delphos St. John
49

'Bedford (M ich .) 66 Fostoria
56
Bel laire 74 Buckeye S 69

NOTICE

LEXINGTON, Ky . (UP!)
- The l)niversity of Kentucky Friday signed defensive end Dave Yecley, of
Euclid, Ohio, and quarterba·ck Todd Shadowen, of

INSULATION
CONSTRACTORS
.

MadisonvHle , to riational

Ohio Power Is preparing a list of . home insulation

c

59 (o!)

Con1inental 71 Columbus
Gro 11 e 54
...
Coshocton
69
New

Ph iladelphia 61
Danv ille 92 Lick ing His 90 12

of )
Dundee

(Mich. ) 66 North -

wood 49
Easl Cle . Shaw 90 Cle. John
Hay 46
East Liverpool 93 Wlnters ville 64
Edgerton 79 Fairview 64
Elyria 73 Avon Lake 24
Emahuel Christ ian 69 Temple

'-.·'.

TODAY! We would /lice lot .11011 to " ' .,, ot til• ~~•
then 20 qu•lifJ-constructtd custom-bullr hom•• ofteted
brdJ/m Walter. We would tllca to '•" you the enct cost
an wh4lt )lOut monthly morlgege pa)lment would ~:». tor
o1 our homes built on your IHO,.rly ro wlleltnr
.stege of Inside comp/e,lon you c"oo1e. When you tt1r1
ALL the feels end figures , we tttlnk you'll choose Jim
Welt11 es your builder.
.

55
51

Ga lion 57 Bucyrus 53
Genoa 50 Eas twood 48
Gibsonburg 68 EJmwood 61

lot l

Guernsey Cath 82 Sk y11ue 62
Hol l and
Springf i eld
60
Rossford 55
·
Hopewell Loudon 87 Betts llille 50
Hudson 64 Shaker Hts . 52
Huron 80 Fremont St. Joseph

74

Independe nce 86 Cl.e Kin~ 59
Jonathan A lder 66 Olentangy
44
Kenton 71 Upper Scioto 56
Lakota 8S Woodmor e 80
Lima Bafh 11 Coldwater 67
Lima
Cent
Cath
72
Wapakoneta 62
Lora in Catholic 90 Columbia

61

PISCATAWAY, N.J . (UP!)
- Walt Frazier leaned on
John Williamson with one
band and swept the ba ll away
from him with the other
Friday night to secure the
Clevela nd Cavaliers' 99-96
victory over the New Jersey
Nets.
Foots Walker picked up the
ball With the Cavs a he~d, 9796, a nd after Williamson
fouled him, Walker caMed
the two fouls to clinch the ·
victory.
Naturally, Willi~mson and
Frazier had differing perspectives on the game's key
play.
"It's tough losing· a game
on a cali like t hat," said
Willia mson . "He made
contact with me before he
knocked the ball loose.''
"It wasn't a foul, he knows
that ,".· count ered Frazier. "I
got the ball fair and square.

r.~---------JIM WAlTER HOMES r~o~oiltonr~arlllallicel
.,
1 I would like to have mor• information ond rhe cost

I
I

I
I
I

of build in~ on. mv pr ope rty. I understand th ere would
b!! no obligCJtlan to buy a nd that you wo uld give me

the5e fe~ch free of charge.

,

NAME ____________________________
ADDilESS

CITY

STATE____

ZIP

T•lephone (or n•ithbon)• --------~'-------

1 II ,.,.1 touiO ploa" glvo di,..liono
own ptopon' in

Counly.

I

I
1

I
I

Rev : Arnold Meckslrot
Tour Escort . Waver!•

: FOR THE BEST DEAL IN :
: QUALITY MOBILE HOMES :
IT'S
:
:
•
•
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:•
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•
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:
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10 Day J ourney

To Holy Land

•

PLEASE RETURN THIS COUPON BY MARCH I.

-Peilon•ify escorted
- Jet flights via SwluAir with meals

- Hotel occommodotlons
-All IIIIo &amp; Loco! toxu
- Continenti! breakfast dally
-Lunch &amp; dinner dolly
- All slghtseetng admlulons
.
- An uptrlenced local Engllshspuklng tour escort, tomlllor with
all slghtsoolng murslons .

,

.''$1

"·

...

..

~

'

·. ·.

/~ r~

==lhl

rdsforEscort-P
Scott ~rt~~~·
Tour

'1199 per

'

peiSGII

Double OccuPIDCJ
11 Day Tourney

To

·'

Holy Land &amp;
Switzerland

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK

0.

Court Street

•

••

brlllher.
Hef e rrln~ to. the !urge
LTowd ol well-wishers, Ali
said " All of you coming out tu
meet. me makes'it pOSSible for
me to undef'tund people still

recugnizc me as champion.
" All people ... still loving nw
will forc1• Spinks to fight me."

• Well conslrucllon

• Sleel shuk lrch 1uppor1
• Cushion crepe 1ole and heel

Jim Chones drove lor

the baskel. Chones missed,

~

the Nets got the rebound and
called time.
Kevin Porter passed to
Williamson who appeared to
drivin g

$47.99

a

towards

potential winning basket
when Frazier stole the ball.
Porter had 23 points and II
assists for the nets, while
Elmore Smith scored 16
points and gra bbed I&gt;

Mon . &amp; Fro. liiBp m
Tues. Wed . Sat. ti1 5'
Thursday 11112 noon

Spring Valley Plaza

I'

1•
I
•

•••••

rebo unds.

REG. 17.98
8-Pc. Paint
Roller Set
Has 9" tray W/grid ; roller
frame &amp; ew. tension ; 2 co11ers ;
trim brush; etc.
906-B

$2199

HIGH-HIDING LA rEX
Custom Colors· Higher

Our Fully Washable,
High Hiding Latex Flat
In Popular Colors!

.,
#

·4-~"

5-FT. STE~

"rif. liP .

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.

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For c lean ing, painti ng, r ~! ,
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~

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$1097
GALLON
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11.4

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TINTERIOR LA TEl

-1-GWSS ENAMJl

An ideal finish for wal ls and
woodwork that get the most
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dries · fast. Water cleanup.

(~)

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GAL.

The "Wash 'n Wear" paint
for e11ery room : walls, ceil , ings and trim . 44 Colors ;
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REG. 113.49

Of course, money doesn't grow on trees, but it'
does grow with a Savings Account! In fact, try
out Savings Account! Your Savings Account is·
guaranteed to grow! See us about starting a
money tree soon!

·

feb. 21-M.-th ·3, 1978

hi• wife ..

lllther
• Comfort p1ddtd co111r and
ln1011
• Leather llned 1nd tn1u11t1d

seemed to have the ga me iced

be

b~

his pllrents und

The Quick, Easy, Inexpensive Way
To Enjoy Colorful New Rooms Today!

o~~s

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Yll~ (]()~'i tiw~ a Mv~~Y l,.;e...

Write for a free brochure
or call (614) 446-0699
33 Court St.
Gallipolis,

•

Cleveland

blazer. He wa s ac- ·

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i
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Telephone Number

YOUR TOUR FEATURES. :

and

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compani ed

FEBRUARY

sg91 .
GALLON

City/ Zip

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WILDERNESS' BOOT

SAT-N-HUE
INTERIOR
LATEX

Address

I

scoring on one of two free

Decorate your rooms even on the smallest paint budget !
Th is select quaUty lat e)C flat produces a rich, 11elvety fi ni sh
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most colors in one coat. Dries in 30 minutes; use your freshly
decorated ro(!ms the same day. Soapy water c:leens your
painting tools .

Name

the Bible, to accomp1nV tht tour on

I

Jlm Brewer broke the tie,

half court press.
"It was dull until we WE-nt

latex Flat WALL FINISH

(Please Print)

l

Speaking to reporters at lin
airport news l'tlnferen&lt;'£', Ali
said he would provide a
better fi ght if a rematch
develops with Spinks, who
upset the former champion
Wednesday .
"We hope to be back in the
ring by March 16 and I shall
fight a better fight because
we will know about him
!Spinks)," All said. "The
nex l time I hope to be

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Yes, I am Interested In how I can be listed
as an Insulation contractor, Please provide
me with more details .
·

per person -eltroute
lnternatlonel Lines

n...•ble Occ UpaftCJ
.
11UU
-

rOw, tiyi ng his now familiar

in

month.

Hawks 111, Jazz JU2 :
The Jazz, playing without
guard
Pete
injured
Marovich ; lost their seventh
straight as New Orleans
native John Drew pumped in
38 points and his teammates
held Leonard Truck Rubinson
to IS.

w~en

arrived

Bangladesh today on a fiveday g,oodwill visit and said he
hoped to fight Leon Spinks for
the title as early as next

Kevi n Loughery. the Nels'

55

Customer Services Department
P .O . Box 400
Canton, Ohio 44701

.4

rhamplon ,

champion. the first man . to
win the title for the third
straight time."
Ali was greeted b y
thousands or 'tans on his
arrival at the airport whi ch Is
usually kept under tl~ht
st'CUrity.
Ali , his face still swollen
from the fight , was dressed in

just upset. "

~-----------------------OHIO POWER COMPANY

Come with us to His Land I Flnd Bethlehem
where the first Christmos took ploce. Se~
Nazareth, the Galli" and the River Jordon I
Stoy In Jerusalem, the Holy City to the
World's three great faiths. VIsit the shrines
that recall the greatest events of history the tragedy of the Cross and the triumph of

DACCA, Bangladesh tUPi l
- Muhammad All, dethroned
world heavyweight buxing

when you' are gua rding close,
and that 's never called. He is

complete and return the coupon below by March 1.

Jesus aver death.

The Knicks snapped a fivegame road losing streak as
Earl Monroe , Spencer
Haywood and Bob McAdoo
combined for 76 points. The
Pistons had closed to within
nine in the final period but
Haywood scored 12 fourthquarter points, eight of them
during a 10.0 New York
streak.
Pacers 1!3, Bullets II!:
Danny Roundfield tallied 23
·points and Mike Bantom
added 22 to lead .Indiana to
only its second victory over
Ute Bullets in two years.
Elvin Hayes pace d the
Bullets with 26 and Kevin
Grevey added 24.

There is alwayS so m~ contact·

contractors to be furnished to our electric heating
customers, as required by Ohio law. II you are
tnterested.ln how·your name can 1&gt;e placed on the list,

Holy Land Tours

FREE FULL-COLOR CATALOG'
Fill out and mail ...
no obligation.

Knirb 128, Pistons 1011 :

coach, was also upset, claim· into the half cu urt press,"
ing, "You bet it was a foul , said Loughery .
there is no way he could
Cleveland had lead 73-67, at
reach the ball with out the end of three periods, when
touching, him ."
the Nets tried their defensive
Williamson outscored pressure. With &gt;:44 left,
Frazier, 32-31, but the former Williamson hit a drive and
Knicks' guard showed he still converted a foul for a game
had the smarts when he tying three-point play . It was
needed them.
. to be tied three times more,
Loughery tried to steal a the latest at 96 with just 44
game for the second night in a seconds· lelt in the game.

fLAT WAU FINISH

TAKE YOUR CHOICE-

'".I'

128-108: Indiana surprised
Washing ton ,
123 -112 :
Philadelphia topped San
Antonio, 12!&gt;-116; Seattle beat
Chicagn, 106-98 ; Atlanta
downed New Orleans, Ill·
102; Milwaukee crushed
Houston, 115-98: Golden State
defeated Phoenix, 111-92, and
Los Angeles beat Boston, 114106.
Kings 1011, Braves 1011:
The Kings picked up their
seventh straight victory as
Richard Washington scored
20 points to lead five Kansas
City players in double
figures . Buffalo's Randy
Smith scored a game-high 25
points.
Cavs 99, Nets 96:
Foots Walker made two
free throws with 13 seconds
left to clinch the victory for
Cleveland. Seconds earlier,
as U1e Nets were in a position
to score the winning basket,
Walt Frazier stole the ball
from John Williamson to
allow Walker to draw the
foul.

Frazier's steal seals victory

Firm Name

West
Boise St. 90, Idaho 61
ldano Sf . 86, Gonz llga ·7a
Pac. Lthrn 79, L &amp; Clark 65
S.F . 99, Loyolo! 71
Wash . 8",., South . Cal. 79
S.F. Sf . .46, Hu m bol d! St . .45
Sn t.! Ctra 62, Pepperdne 53
So. Utah Sr. 78, So . Colo. n
UCLA 60, Wash . St. 59

periods," admitted Portland .
Coach Jack Ram$lly . "They
played
much
more
aggressively than we did . I
think we got a little
overanxious."
David Thompson, held to
only two points In the first
quarter, finished with 30 to
lead the Nuggets and center
Dan Issei added 22.
Maurice
Lucas
led
Portland with 31 poinls, but
center Bill Walton was beld to
only 10 points, ·nine below his
average. Walton ·grabbed a
game-high 15 rebounds.
" I think when . they
(Denver) sit down and realize
what they've accomplished
against the best team in the
league, then they've got to
know that they're capable of
playing with anybody, " said
Nuggets' Coach Larry
Brown.
In other NBA action,
Kansas
City
defeated
Buffalo, 108-100; Cleveland
nipped New Jersey, 99-96 ;
New York defeated Detroit.

Evergreen 56 Anthony Wayn e

Za nes vil le
lucas
75
47
Rosecrans 73
At Minford
Malvern 79 Jewett -Scio 61
Green Twp. 74 Ironton St. Joe• Mansf iel d St . Pet er 59
34
Wynford 47
At Hillsboro
Ma rion Cath 78 Mt. Gilead .48
Peeb les 71 Manchester 70
Ma rion Harding 64 Fremont
At Cln'&lt;:lnnatl
Ross 58
New M i ami 74 Ma con Mays11i ll e68 New Concord J G
East ern 64
45
Batavia 61 Georgetown 44
McCom b 58 M iller City 57
At GrOvepqrt
McM ec hem IW . Va. ) 78
Col Academy 66 M illersport
Bu ckeye W. 75
43
Mendon Union 52 Ayersvi lle
la ncaster Fi sher 59 West
so
Jeffer son 58
Morgan 65 West Musklngum

Score by quarters :

Rock Hut
Coal Grove

Bloomfield 60 Maplewood S4
Brid 9 epod 69 Ridgewood 68
Brookl ield 86 Llberly 43
Buckeye N 73 Tor on to 65
Buckeye Valley 74 Bexley 64 ·
B k
t 1
M h k
u! eye en. ra 67 o aw
Buckey e Tra it 97 Barnesville

72

Day Colonel While 62 Kef

ATHENS "(68) - Edwards
0-1 -1; Bentley 9-6·2~; Topping
3-1-7; Bruning ~- 1 · 9; Hatter Q.
\-1; Mathews 6-6-11; Chenko
4·0-8. TOTALS 26-16-61.
MARIE'rTA (1151 - Ross 5·
0·10; Spindler 1-H ; Weber s2-12; Welh\7·0·14; Wharff 7-317; Stafford 3-3·9; Shuler 1·2·
4; Modle 2·2-6; Ztde 1-0-2;
Miracle 1-0-2; Long 0·3·3;
Dempster 1·0·2. TOTALS 3417-85.
Reserve

Bellevue 87 Shelby 67
Berlin Hiland 53 lakeland 37

At Canton
. , Caldwell ao Fort Frye 68
Canton
M cKinley
73 Campbell 61 Austintown
Mfts~illon Jackson 39
Fitch 52
Loutsvtlle 85 Massillon 75
Card ington 102 Galion NorthAt Copley
mor 72
Akron Cent Hower 81 Re ve re Castalia -Margaretta
107
53
Ed ison 98
Akron East 64 Akron North 60 Celina 72 El ida 61
At Dayton
Cle Benedic.tlne 64 Cle Name

4 17. 16 15-52

Athens
Marietta

Bellaire St. JOhns 87 Cad iz 58

United Preaslaternatl 0118 t
The defending National
Basketball Association
champion Portland Trail
Blazers bave been compared
favorably cto the greatest
teams in NBA history - but
wbere does that leave the
Denver Nuggets?
The Trail Blazers who saw
their H-game h~mecourt
winning streak snapped by
the Nuggets last SUnday,
dropped tllelr third straight ·
game to Denver Friday night ·
by a score of 112-105 at
McNichois Sports Arena.
Portland jumped to an 18point lead to open the game,
but the Nuggets kept ciJipping
away, struggled to a 53-53 tie
at halftime and led most of
the final quarter to improve
their Midwest Divisionleading record to 36-21.
Portland, which has beaten
every other team in tbe
league except Denver this
season, slipped to 44-10.
"They played better than
we did for the last three

GET ALL THE FACTS FROM JIM WALTER

L

Ph.: 727-2296

' I

The LEXINGTON

1A 12 20

United Press lnternaliona I
Tournament Results

Bedlord Chane! 56 Chardon 53

letters of intent with the
school.
Yecley is a 6-1, 207 pounder
from Euclid High · SciJool.
Shadowen, a 6-5, 210 pOund
standout at Madisonville·
North Hopkins High School,
was signed by Wildcat Coach
Fran Curci after Madisonville's basketball game with
Paducah· Tilghman , Friday
night.
So far, 22 high scbool
players have been signed by
Curci, in cl udin g 12 fr om
within the state and 10 out-ofstaters.

4 BEDROOMS- 2 BATHS

Gallipolis
Fairland

Log an at Ir on ton
Wahama at Meigs
Tuesday's games :
Gallipolis vs. South Point at
Ironton

Kentucky inks
h~o Ohioans

''I" .
!._._ ~· - :_~ I

YES WE CAN ... build anew home

0 9 367 448

29 19 2354 1354

Thursday's resu Its:
Gallipolis S1 Athens 46
Logan 46 Meigs 34
Games remaining· ,
Meigs vs. Jack~n . The
Wellston at Logan game has
been forfeited by Wells ton .

uu1
Th ·n o n\ y the
lh~ nH Udlt: class .
~.:
f[ d

'

l!:J t''· ·· ,.
v , ·-

SEOAL FRESHMEN
Team
W L. · P OP
Ga llipolis
8 2 428 385
Athen s
8 2 532 4119
Logan
6 4 424 372
Wellston
6 4 335 374
Meigs
1 8 268 366

Able to Afford a Honte

oA:;~~ge Income Families
Fewer
.
N&gt;lllOn· ~
~h.•r~t::o.
r
1\nH:n~•H'

6 •

7 7 662. 645
1 13 431 691
1 13 477 621
54 54 4499 4499

Score by quarttrl l

Friday•, Boy$

Ohio High School
Basketball

Bulldogs drop
85-68 contest

Waverly ousted
T

school scores

The box score:
GALLIPOLIS (741
Oatley 1·0-2; Brown 6·5-17;
Abels 3-2-8; Harris 6·2-14:
Wall 8·0-16 ; Thomas 1·0.2;
Lanham 1-0-2; Armstrong 1·6·
8; Clarke 2·H . TOTALS :zt.
16-74 .
FAIRLAND (521- Love 3·
2·8; Nichols 6·1·13; Stuart 4·0·
8; Hamlin 5-0-10; Wilson 1-1·
3; Daniels 3·4·10. TOTALS 21·
8-52.

curds and the fans from all
schools in attendance gave
him a rousing applause .
Later jn the game the name
of Dr. Gerald E. Vallee was
aMounced as the holder of a
program with the winning
number for a record player.
Friday night was a good
night with a big tournament
victory , a new TV, and a
record player coming to
Gallipolis.

MARIETTA
The
Marietta Tigers defeated the
Athens Bulldogs for the
second
time in 48 houis
ALL GAMES
Team
W L P OP Friday night as the host
logan
15 2 1090 888 Tigers pOsted an 85-&amp; victory
Waverly-x
13 6 1152 1030 in a make up contest played
throws.
Washington 12 s 115~ 977
The Blue Devils picked off South Point 12 s 1120 1019 at Marietta.
Just Wednesday night in
37 rebound s with Brown Portsmouth 11 7 1195 1089
Pt.
Ple~sant
9
6
917
875
Class
AAA Sectional tourney
getting nine while Brad Abels
Ironton
9
8
1063
967
play
at Ohio University
and Wall each saved eight. Gallipolis
9 9 1063 1026
In addition to the 13 points Ravenswood 7 7 858 828 Marietta defeated Athens 67by Nichols the Dragons ha d Fairland -x
9 10 1035 1021 56.
8 10 1138 1163
Friday night the Tigers,
Marshall Daniels and Steve Athens
Wellston
6 12 1221 129 1 now 11·7, jumped to a 25·17
Hamlin with 10 each.
Jackson·x
3 16 994 1218
Fairland, which closed the Me igs
2 15 970 1212 first period lead, increased it
to 49-24 at intermission, and
season with a final mark of 9Friday's results :
Court House 59 Waverly 55 led 6lH3 after three quarters.
ITny)
Chris Wharff led Marietta
~a11enswood 62 Pt. Pleasant
with 17 points while Gary
Marietta 85 Athens 68 Bentley poured in 24 points
· Gal li pol is 74 Fa irland 52 for the losing Bulldogs, now 8!Tnyl
10, with a makeup SEOAL
cont est slated against
have lost to Washington Court
SEOAL VARSITY
Gallipolis
this week.
House in tournament play. Team
W L
P 0~
The Tigers hit 34 of 73 from
Logan
13 0 836 648
The box score:
Waver ly
10 4 848 740 the floor, made 17 of 22 free
WASH. COURT HOUSE Ironton
9 4 877 727
throws, and pulled down 41
(59) - Bath 4-6-14; Elliot 5-0- Athens
8
5 824 789
10; Pirt cheft 6-0 -12; Denen 5- Gall ipolis
rebounds.
6 7 767 743
3-13 ; Turner 1-0-2; Bursofl0-2· Wellston
Athens connected on 26 of
6 8 959 974
2; Lee ~- 0 · 6. TOTALS 24·11 -59. Jackson
1 13 739 926
6&gt;
fielders, dropped in 16 of 29
WAVERLY (551- Fielder Meigs
1 13 770 1073
at the line , and picked off 37
9-5-23 ; Crace 1-1-3; Thompson TOTALS
54 54 6620 6620
l-5-7; Rick Thomas 4-0-8;
rebounds.
Davena 4-0-9; Arnett 2-2-6.
SEOAl RESERVES
TOTALS 21-13-55.
Team
W L P OP
Score by quarters :
Ironton
11 2 581 501
Wash. C H
13 12 20 14-59 Gallipoli s
9 4 525 480
Waverly
12 II 18 14- 55 Athens
9 4 652 554
Waverly ·
9 5 650 522
Monday's games :
logan ·
7 6 521 485
Hillsboro at Court House

UNIOTO - In Class AA
Sectional To urnament play at
Uniulo high school Friday
night Washin gton Court

Friihiy's high

Rematch could
be in month

Portland beaten by Nuggets

~ ~

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�C--1- TheSunday Ttmes-Senhnei 1Sunday, Feb. 19, !978

,•

Call goes UCLA's way
" It's a ~m and a shame that

United Press lnternatlonal

A disputed la ne-viOlation
ca ll aga mst Washmgton SU.Ie

this game was stolen from
as," satd Washmgton State's
coach, George Raveling
"Thts rouldn't happen anywhere eJge m the Umted
States except here at UCLA
No one m Pauley Pln'lhon
except the rLieree saw the
Ja ne v10latlon," fu med

m the closmK seconds Fnday

rught IS all that ts holding
to g e th e r
UC LA 's
unblemished Pac1flc E•ght

Conference record .
The fourth-rank&lt;!d Brums
upped their Pac~ record I&lt;J
1()..() and raased the1r season
mark to 19-2 w&gt;th a 60..'i9
vu:;tory m

tha t

&lt;.1

Ravehng

Greenwood, who led a 11
scorers wtth a season./tigh 25
pomts, discounted Raveling's
complamt about the l• nr

::;ee-saw llattle

Wa slun glon

Sta le

thought It had won, 6()..58

Forward Stua rt House had
put the Cougars ahead 59..'i8
on a short hook shot With 17
seconds left and after WSU

VIolation .
"They had been stepping m
all rught, " he explained, "and
the offlctal had warned them
all night that he was gmng to
call 1t The OffiCial just had
the gul.&lt;i to ma ke the eall "
ln other key contests, 12Ulranked
Fl onda
State
defea ted No. ll l .oUISville, 81·
70, San FranciSco whipped
Loyola (Cal 1. 99-7 1, and
Washmgton

Ca l1fornm ,

beat

Southern

LYNE CENTER GYMNASIUM &amp; P00l 5CHEDULE
Week of Febr uar '( 20, 1978

POOl

OAT E - GYMNASIUM
Feb 20 81 0 pm , Open Gym

8· 10 p m , Open Sw1 m
Fe b 21 Cl ose d x Basketball
Closed
6 30 p m , Redwomen vs Ma rleUa
Closed K

lntramurals

Feb 22 8 10 p m , College Gym
Feb 23 Clo sed • Baskelball

8 10 ~. m . College Swi m
Closed
7. 30 p m , Redmen .... ~ Tirf ln
Feb 24 7 9 p m , F am i ly Recr eat•on
7 9 p m , fa mi ly
Nigh I
Rec r ee1 t Ion Nig ht
Feb 15 Closed x Basebal l Cl tn lc
Closed
9 am ·5 pm
Closed x

Basketball

M 0 C Tournamen t
F eb 26 1 J p m , Open Gym
7 9p m

1J
79

Open Gym

9 m idntght lntramura ls

GALLIPOLIS - The B1g
Wh ee l Carry -Out
was
knocked from the ranks of the
undefea ted whtle the records
of Tony's PiZZa and the Pony
Keg remam ed unblemished
m third round act ton of the 0
0. Mcintyre Park D1stnct
Men's Basketball Prog ram

mto the lane
The score went ba ck lo 5958 and the ball went back lo
th e 81ums 1

UCLA center Gig S1ms'
massed a basehne JUmpe r,
but Dav id Greenwood soared
htgh above t he crowd
awa1tmg the rebound and
slammed It down through the
hoop w1th both hands lo give
UCLA th e game. 60..'i9

Thursday's act iOn at Hannan

Trace High Schoo l saw the
Pony Keg narrowly escape an
up.!et by a 35 to 34 victory
ove r Jo int Effort Dave
Thomas and Bill Lemley had
12 and ll points respectively
m a losmg cause wh1ie Jack
Matthews had 12 and Gene
Hall had 10 for the wmners It
was

JIGOOD
...-a.EASONS

Matthev. s'

hawkmg

defensive play, however, that
proved to be the difference
In the mghtcap, the Bush-

School. the ea rly game \\ aS
hi ghlighted by the return of
Dea n ·' Brushhog '' Rees to
action fo llowmg an m) u r y
Rees and Larry Stephens had
10 pumts each but 1t wa sn 't
eno ugh as the Sharpshooters,
led by hard-dnvmg La rry
Howell 's 17 pomts , too k
Foster's Grocery 59-40 In a
highly physical game. Roger
Foster 's 14 pomt s pace d
undefeated Tony's P1zza over
the Gray St reaks 45-32 Fred
East well led a well balances

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•r• ua

. '•

NH L Stan d•ngs

Gray Streak attack w1th 9
points
OOM STANDINGS
T&lt;am
W J, P OP
Tony's PIZZa 3 0 160 Il l
Puny Keg
3 0 132 123
B1g Wheel
2 t 114 ll6
Sha rpshooters 2 I 124 100
wackers toppled the Btg G1 ay Streaks 1 2 113 ll7
Wheel 49-37 w1th the Stout Rushwackers l 2 150 146
bmthers, Tun &lt;:~ n d Pat , Foster'sGror:. ery
lea dtng the way Johrune
0 ~ 106 166
Dotson had a fme showmg as Joml Effo rt
0 3 93 113
he netted 12 pomts for the B1g
Wheel
I
At Kyger Cree k H1gh

to see your good
neighbor agent

CAR •HOME
LIFE • IJEALTH

,..

84~79

By Umte d Pr ess lnlerna fl onal
c ampbell Co nfer en ce
Paln ck Ot v ts•on
W l T Pts
N Y Is la nd e r s
35 12 '
79
Phtl ad etptua
37 13 10 74
,_, tlant a
27 22 14 58
N Y Ran gers
19 28 10
48
Sm y1he DtV tSr on

unbeaten in loop

With 10 seconds left, Clark
hit the f1rst shot of a one-and·
one, g1vmg the Cougars a 6058 lead, but an officia l
disallowed the fr e throw,
ruling a Cougar had stepped

p m , Open Sw1m
p m , Open Sw1m

::,:·:;.: :::::::;:;:;

Two teams remain

stole the Brums' mbuund
pass, guard Clarence Clark
wa.s fouled

~

:··

1~54

Ch ~o::: ago

Va ncouve r
CotorMo
M rnr1 eso t a
5 1 LO UIS

NBA Standmgs
By Untied Press l nt ernat ronal
E astern Conference
Atl anttc Otvtsron
W L Pet GB
Ph ila cllph
39 16 709 NewYork
29 27 518 10 1 7
Boston
'20 32 385 H' 1
Buffalo
18 34 3 46 19 1 1
Ne w Jersy
13 44 228 27
Central OIV tStOn

wa s. hrng to n
Cleve land
A t la nt a
New Orl ea ns
Hou s to n

34
2!1
28
26
'16
11

GB

2 1 618
27 509 6
'2 7 509 6
JO 464 8 1 1
31 456 9
1'&gt; 3 15 13 1 1

We stern c onlere nee
Midw est 01\I S IOO
W L Pet

18
15" 29
11 29
13 35

T Pts
15
13

14
6
11 36 7

59
43
38
32
29

Meigs gals whip
Athens, 5() to 28

:I
Pro
:I
:Standings \

W L Pet

n

PLEASANT - Coach percent (2+for-48 ). But the
J ack W1seman's v1stt1ng Red Devils exploded like an
underdog Ravenswood Red atom bomb ln the hnal
Devtls, tra ihng for more than quarter, socking home 72
three quarters, put 11 all percent as they outs&lt;cred the
together m the last four locals 22 points to 16
T1m Newberry, 6-.'i local lad
mtnutes a nd apset the Point
Pleasant Btg Blacks, 63-60 who conhnues to unprove,
had hts best mght of the
Frtday mght
season
wlth 19 talltes and 12
Th e victory squa red
rebounds.
He led all scorers.
Ravenswood's record at 7Mark
Hilton
was high for
and-7 Th e loss left Coach
the
Red
Devtls
with 18, but
Lenme Barn ette's team wtth
Mark
Stanley
blazed
like a
a 9-and-6 sla te
house
afire
for
16,
getting
all
Each team shot well from
the fl oor with the wmners of them in the last half, and 12
htlting 51 percent (27;for·53 ), mlhe fevered fourth quarter
and PPHS nailing on •v• n 50
PT

Wales Conference
Norr rs O l ~· t s ron
W l T Ph
Montreal
l 9 7 9 87
Los Angel es
17 22 11
55
Pttl sburgh
19 23 12 50
Det roil
71 25 8 50
Wo;~s hrngt o n
10 36 11 31
Adam s Dr v rsron
W l T Pts
Boston
35 12 7 77
Bu tt a to
3'2 t 1 13 17
ATHENS - The Meigs
Tor ont o
29 16 10 68
G
~rl
s got back on the wmmng
Cleve land
19 33 7 45
trail Thursday when they
Fnda v's Results
Mont rea 1 8 Wa sh 2
handily downed host Athens
Cl evel a rtd 3 Van e 1
56-28 Glenda Brown and
Sunday ' s Gam es
P1tl at Chr caQo , all
Vicky Epple led the Meigs
Colora d o a t N Y Ranger s
attack as Brown poured m 15
NY I S)nd r s at Ph il a
Mmn at Wa sh mgt on
pomls and cleared the boards
Lo s Ang ls a t Oe t
for
21 rebounds of Metgs
51 Lo u rs at B uff
total 73 Terri Wilson
grand
WHA St an drngs
By Unrted Press lnt ernattonal
gathered 20 caroms a nd
W L T Pts
W1 nn 1peg
36 18 2 74 Epple netted a game htgh 26
New Eng l and
32 19 4 68 pomts
Ed monto n
29 25 2 60
Meigs took command In the
Houston
28 24 3 59
Quebec
25 28 2 52 very ftrst pertod when they
Btrmmgharn
24 30 1 50 built up a 16-4 lead at the
Cm cl nn alt
23 31 3 .4 9
ln dtana pol rs
17 33 4 38 buzzer The Metgs gals hit 34
Fndav 's Results
percent from the f1eld can·
Blrmn gh m 5, l ndnpl s 4
mng
25 of 7l shots and nettmg
E dmntn 6 , Quebc 4
C nn 4 Houstn 3
6 of 20 free throws
Sunday's Games
Athens •vas led by Lavelle's
Blrm nghm at C1nn
10 pomts The team had 41
lndnp ls at Eclmn t n
Qu ebec at Wmn tpeg
rebounds and sank 10 of 19

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

San A n ton to

W l

Ravenswood upsets
Pt. Pleasant 63-60

GB

Denver
36 21
6J :t
Ch tcago
30 28 517 6 1 1
M il w au ke
79 18 509 7
Oetrot t
25 31 446 101 "
23 34 404 1J
Ka nss Ct v
lnd ~ na
71 36 368 15
Pac rfr c Ot ~rs ton
W l
Pet GB
Detro1 1
15 31 446 10 1 1
..Ka nss Ct y
73 14 404 13
lndra na
21 36 368 15
Pac1lc Ovs
29 21
518 16
Go lden Stt
28 29 49 ~ 1:1 1 1
Frrda y ' s Re sults
Kansa s C1l y lOB Bu ff alo 100
Cleveland 99, New J er sey 96
Ph dade lphr a 125 san Anton1o
116
At lanta 1111 N ~ w Or leans 101
Ne w York 128 Oetr o ot 108
lndt ana 123 Wash tn g ton 112
M1l wa uk ee 115, Hous ton 98
Seattl e 106, Ch teago 98
Denver 11 2, Po rll a nd 105
Gol den Slate 111 , Phoen rx 91
Los Ang el es 114 Boston 106
Sunday 's Games
New York at Phil adel phi a,
• 11
New Or lean s at wa shrn gton

College Ba sketball Results
By Untied Press tnternahonal
E asr
Bates Co li 89 Nor w ich 78
Bklyn Co li 87 Pa ce 8 2
Ca th e dral 85 Ca brtn r 56
Co lu m b ia 75 8ro wn 70
Cornell 71 , Y ale OJ
Er snh wr 92. Hough In 68
Frdnt a 64 Po tsdm 61
Geneseo Sf 77 , Br ngh m tn 67
I the a 86 Ciarksn so
Manhttn vl 79 Va ssa r 46
Ma ns fld 76 Le m o yne 71
Prn ctn 79 Harvrd 65
RPI 47, R IT 44
Scran tn 96 , Et zb! wn 71
S c 5.1 82 , Howard 80
St Lwr nc e 96 A l f r ed 73
T uft s 93 , (:olby 75
York 53 J ohn Jay 52
south
Fl r da St 8 1, LOU IS\/ li e 70
Jhns Hp k,-. s 8.4, w ash Coli 73
Radfor d 84 Ci nch Vall 82
V a Un ton 9 1 St Pau l's 75
Mrdwest
Defrot l 132 CC NY 91
Ill CO li 96, Knox 95
M rch T ech 92 Bem td l t Sf 69
N D Sf 71 , UN I 60
Southwest
Gr nd Cnyn n .~.sa nta F e 74
M al one 70 Oh ro Dom n cn 67

al l

Kan sas Ct ty at De tr ott , aft
Seol tl lc at M il wa uk ee, a ll
Boston at Denv er , a ll
Los An gel es at Go lden Sta te
• II
lndt an a at Por t l and

p 78618

free throws and Just 9 of 63
field shots
The Reserves from Metgs
County came from behind
and won a thrtller, 18-17
Aprtl Kmg led the sroring
w1th 10 of the game's 18 pomts
while Debbte Woodyard
pulled down 15 reb&lt;iwtds. The
ReServe Gals htt only 18
percent from the field and
sank 2 of 15 free throws.
The first pertod ended wtth
only a 2-2 score By the half
Athens had pulled In six more
pomts to make the score 8·2
However, Athens went totaUy
cold m the last quarter and
scored no more pomts as
Metgs managed to edge by
with a one-pomt victory.
Athens was Jed by Agnone
wtth nine pomts The team
sank 3 of 16 free throws and
hit 14 percent from the fteld
Gallipolis was to play Metgs
yesterday

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Brown, 7 I

15 , Vaughan, 3 2 8, Burdefte,

0 3 3, Epple, 13 0 26. Wilson ,
I 0 2. S Ash . 1 0,2, Totals 25
6-56.
Atheno (28) - Walker. 1, 1,
3, Brown. 1·3·5, La \letle, 3 4
10 , Channell , 2 0-4, Eldndge,
0.2 2, M 1ller, 2-0 4 Totals 9-

10,28
By Quarters
MeiQS

Athens

\6 15 13 12- 56
.t 5 a 11- 28

Eastern gals
win two tilts
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern Jumor H1gh gtrlsl
coached by Pam Douthitt,
won two games recently.
They beat Symmes Valley 17·
7 and then downed Kyger
Creek 33-13.
In the Symmes contest,
Rhonda Riebel had slx pomts,
Sarah Goebel four, Renee
Riebel four, Kelh Headley
two and Cassie Sheets one
In the Kyger game, Sheets
and R Renee Rtebel each had
ten, Patty Edwards got SIX,
Goebel four, and Rhonda
Riebel had three.
Kun Bickers had etght for
the losers. Eastern's last
game will be Monday at
Galha Academy.
1

Meigs f rosh
lose, 45-38
The Metgs Freshmen
faltered m the second half
and dropped a 45·38 contest to
vtstting Point Pleasant last
night An even first half saw
Me1gs down by one at in·
termtssion, 22-21 Metgs IS
now 3-9 on the season
Dave Kennedy led Metgs
w1th 14 potnts. Other
Marauder scorers were
Kevin Smtth and Mike MUler
WJth e1ght each, John Staats
and Rob Davts with three
each, and Brian Swan with
two Meigs made 8 of 12 free
throws
Krebbs led the w1nners
with 18 while Cremeans hlld
12 The VISitors sank 7 of 17
chanty tosses. Metgs hosts
l.ogan tonight at 3. 45 and
goes to Potnt Pleasant
Saturday to close their

season.

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Jeff Holland tossed in three
buckets for stx, his goal to
open the third period givmg
the Btg Blacks a 10-polnt 32-22
spread, their largest of the
mght Jay Mmton lifted m
two free tosses
But the wmners had two
other double figure scorers in
Seott Mtller w1th 13 and Rtck
Hardy 10. Mtller grabbed
eight rebowtds and Stanley
p1cked off seven
Ravenswood had to give
away height and were beaten
on the boarda, 32 rebounds
overall to 20. But they were
step.dter on the floor , commtttmg only eight turnovers
to 16 for PPHS
The Btg Blacks led 18-12 at
the quarter, 30-22 at halftime,
and were st1ll on top 44-41 at
the lhtrd pole.
Hilton's goal gave tt to the
Red Devtls at 51-50, but
Nibert latd one up and tt was
51·52, Blacks Stanley's shot
took 1t back at 53-52 and
Ravenswood called time w1th
3·18togo
Howard was fouled, converted two and the locals had
1! back at 53-54, But Stanley's
two gtfl shots gave 1t back to
the Devils at 54..'i5 and they
never tratled agam.
Htlton and Stanley followed
wtth buckets and it was 59-54
Pomt called tune wtth 1:23
remaining
Ntbert and Stanley traded
baskets, it was 61-56 And
Pomt called tune again , wtth
0:58 on the lock
In the fur1ous run for the
wtre, Hardy comed two fouls,
and Newberry scored twtce to
peg the !mal count at 63-60,
Ravenswood
The prertm rontest was
another ptstol. Coach Dick
Sturm's Ltttle Dev1ls charged
from behtnd to knot the count
at 47-all with only I 41 on the
clock But the Little Blacks'
Ron Barnette la1d up a goal
then converted a pair of free
throws to g1ve the local kids
thetr 13th wm m 14 starts
Vars1ty box.
RAVENSWOOD (631 Hardy, 4·2 10 · Stanley , 6 4 16 ;
Hli1on, 9 0 18, Miller , 53 13

and Flem&gt;ng, 3 Q,6 Totals 271·63
Pomt Pleasant (60) Vaughan, 5 313 , Newberry ,
83 t9 ,
N1berl.
5111.
Howard, 3 3-9 , J Holland, 3
0 6, Mrnton , 0 2 2 Totals 24-

12 60

By Quarters.
Raven swood 12 10 19 22-63
Pt Pleas
18 12 14 16- 60
Reserve score L•ftle
Blacks 51 Ravenswood 47

Southern 8th
graders win
RACINE - The Southern
Eighth Grade won tts first
game m the tournament at
Alexander last Saturday over
Waterloo,
46-43
Tom
Roseberry led the winners
wtth 18 pomls Other scorers
were Kent Wolfe 10, Richard
Wolfe 6, Jay Rees 4, Robert
Brown 5, Allan Pape 2, and
Seott Fredemk I.
Waterloo was led by Gary
Jolley wtth 15 whtle Tun
Perry had 12. Southern was
knocked out of the tour·
nament when they lost their
ne~t game on Tuesday

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We thmk you' ll 6nd a
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So rom pare compantes Fmd out
why the owners of over nine
m1llion cars are now m &lt;~good
hands " Call or rome m

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•
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orf!IS

Artte Vaughan netted 13 for
PPHS. Ed Nibert pumped In
II and snatched 12 rebowtds
Seott Howard added mne and
was the second Big Black to
score over 200 this year Wtth
3 18 left on the clock, Srott
comed two free throws, the
first one bnngmg hiS total to

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Gallipolis.

C6-'l'beSundayTlmes-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb, 19,1978

Saving energy, soil and water

County Agent's Corner
By Jolm C. Rtce
Ed. Aceal, Acrlealture
POMEROY - Soon lt wdl
be that time of year when we
will be thinklnc abollt grass
tetany. Grass tetany il1 more
lll&lt;ely to occur in a cow that Is
milking and espedally when
llhe lajllll turned onto grass.
Grus tetany b caused by a
low level of magnesium In the
blood aream .
There are several factors
that can contribute to grass
teub;- : (I ) Cows glvmg milk
- be:f or dairy. M1lk contllql qutte a btt of
mi1neslum which takes
magnuium from tbe body ;
(2) Cows cannot store
magnesium in the body so
they need a daily supply ; (3)
Many fields are low tn
magnesium which means
many forages are low m
magnesium; (4) The uptake
of magnesium Is low when

pastures are lush or growing
fast m the spring. Thts is
When magnesi um problems
generally a ppear ; ( 5 )•
Pastures that are fert ilized,
espectally wtth potash, are
lower 111 magnest wn
There are several thmgs we
can do to prevent grass
tetany. One ts to sotl test and
bring th e magneSium level up
to 15 percent. The use of a
dolomli!C limestone, one high
m magnestum, can help,
Some Iunestones run as high
as 12 percent magnesium
F eed
cattle
extra
magnesiUm t hrough the
mmerals, especially the last
of February through May
Be very careful and not
take m1Ikmg cows, beef or
dairy, off from feemg hay too
early m the srpmg and go
completely to grass. The
early grass Just does not
contain enough magnesiUm

Here are two rations ll!r the
feeding of magnestum oxtde
One 1s a routme mll&lt;ture, the
other ts where cows are not
eating enough minerals to get
enough ma gnesi um . Cows
must have two ounces of
magnesmm oxide per day
I Rouhne mtxture - 32
poands trace mineral salt; 40
pounds magnes1wn oxtde; 28
pounds dicalcmm phosphate
Feed free choice dally as the
only source of salt 2
Mtx:ture where C!ons wnpt10n
1s a problem or where cows
are down In condltton. 1,000
pounds of soybean meal; 500
pounds trace mineral salt ;
260 pounds magnesium
ox1de; 200 pounds dicalc1um
phosphate; and 40 powtds
vttamm pre·mtx
Con·
somptwn should be regulated
so that cows conswne one
powtd of thiS miXture dally

.
, _,. ,,--

By Diana Eberlll
County Ext. Agent,
Home Economics
POMEROY - Since space
heating Is one of the highest
uses of home energy, you can
save money as well as energy
by conservmg the wann a1r
that Is produeed You can
lower the temperature and
be more comfortable of you
tighten your home by stopping drafts . II weather·
stripping and caulking have
not been used adequately,
you can temporarily place
towels or throw rugs around
windows and doors to reduce
drafts. If air 1s leakmg
around doors that you do not
use, place tape over cracks.
By locking windows you can
al110 create a better seal.
Duty furnace fllters should
be replaced to Increase the
ellldency of your heating
equipment. If you have a
flreplaee, close the dampers
when the ftreplace ts not m
use . When usmg your
fireplace, close off the room
from the remainder of the
bouse to retain the heat m
that room and to reduce the
amount of air the fireplace
will draw from other parts of
the house, Turn furnace
thenno:Jtat down so ''on"
time will be reduced. ,
Don't place objects such as
drapertes and fum1ture m
frpnt of heat registers, Use
your drapes to conserve
energy by leaving them open
at SUIUIY wmdows and closed
al shaded windows and
during the night. Wearing
several layers of warm
clothes In the house will keep
you comfortable at reduced
room temperature
You can also be comfortable with a lower tern·
perature by creatmg a higher
humidity m the house .
'Humidity may be Increased
by placmg containers of
water on or near heating
outlets. The heat wtll
evaporate additional

moisture Into the atr. A
humtdtty level of around 35
percent ts comfortable for
most people Water vapor
from cookmg and bathmg
adds mmsture, so use exhaust
fans spanngly durmg the
heating season Smce bath·
ro~d kttchep fans also
re ove heated atr from the
om, do not ase th unless
bsolutely nece ry.
en
kmg a bath s ower, close
th
eep the heat from
the hot water In the room and
avoid using an electrtc space
heater
Try to limit your acttvthes
to one or two rooms, such as
the family room or kitchen.
Smce each member of the
latruly generates some heat,
you can be warner by staymg
together m the same area
The kttchen IS generally the
warmest room In the house
because heat is gtven off by
both the range and the
refrigerator
If you have an electric, gas,
or otHired furnace, reduce
thermostat settmg to 65
degrees F. during the day
when someone Is in the house
and to 55 degrees F at all
other times Make sure the
furnace fan selector switch IS
on "automal!c" so that tt Will
tum on only when the ther·
mostat calls lor heat. If you
have a heat pump, yoa should
reduce the temperature to 65
degrees F. Do not set any
lower to avotd equtpment
damage, Frequent resettmg
of heat pump thermostats
wastes wnergy by usmg
reststance heat str1ps
Turn off the heat m rooms
not bemg used. Be sure to
close doors to these rooms
Do not heat garages and keep
doors closed.
For addttional information,
contact the Meigs Cowtty
Cooperative Extension
Servtce in the County Home
Budding on
Mulberry
Avenue. The telephone
number 1s 992-3895

Seminar to be held
Tuesday at Waverly
r

WAVERLY - The OhiO
EPA Ofllce of Land Pollution.
Control and the Ohio Valley
Regional Development
Commission have scheduled
a seminar on Solid Waste
Management Programs for
Tuesday, Feb. 21, at 7 p.m. at
the American Legion Hall in
Waverly.
The semmar ts demgned
especially for all pubbc of·
flcials m the Ohio Valley Solid
Waste Management Regton
(Sciotu, Ross. Vinton, Pike,
Jackson, Brown, Adams,
Lawrence and Gallla).
The seminar will provide a
two-fold purpose. The first

wtll be to provide greater
detail and mstght to the
overall
solid
waste
management process at the
state, regtonal and local
levels . Secondly, 11 w11l
provtde the opportunity for
local elected offtclals to
romment on proposed state
actions, and more im~
portantly, to allow local
elected olltctals to provide
mput mto the planning
agency and implementation
agency destgnatton process
Addttlonal topics for
discussion wtll also define
agency responstbillties, the
development of regional
plans and funding

Plymale animal
GALL!l'OLIS
The
Ayrshire Br~eders
Asaociatlon has selected
Scotch Haven Allee Adalee
Blh, a registered Ayrshtre
heifer owned by Andy
Plymale, Rt. 3, Galllpolls, as
one of six junior yearling
heifers to be nominated for
Junior AII·Amerlcan. The
JantU!ry, 1978 lasue of the
Aynblre Dlgest earrles her
picture and a list of her show

,)

•

IS

records.
In a contest sponsored by
the Dtgest, entries were
recetved
from
jumor
exhibitors all across the
na!lon and a panel of judges
selected the nominees, from
which another group of ex·
perlenced judges will pick the
All-Americans for 1977
Judging was based on an
animal's 1977 show records,

'·

ket· p

h-'ttih 1er~
L~·ss r nf•t ~ '

.-..._.. .•

as m•t•dt•d If \\ t'

ust• mmh n um 1 1\la~t' tlw n 1f
we d ean ttll fu•lds

Most winters last

L&lt;'I\S Cll{'l'j.! \ l:s llt't' tlt•d If Wt'
JH llll C f ll t't ll\!11\d I ll

kN~p

well into March

Joe Collms during a break beh•een classes at Clay
School

•
Know your superorsors

Mr and Mrs Lester
Sievers and son, Scott, of
Grove Cit y were recent
Sunday dmner guests of hts
mother, Mrs . Blanche
Stevers
Mr. and Mrs Darvm Banks
of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs
Robert Halley of Centervtlle
vtstted Emmtt Halley at
Holzer Medtcal Center
recently,
Mr and Mrs Brent
Saunders of Parkersburg, W
Va . and two daughters, Laura
and Greta , were recent
Sunday guests of hiS parents ,
Mr. and Mrs Harold Saun·
ders and famdy.
Mtss Shetla McGwre and
Eddte McGutre and Teresa,
Kathy and Bryan Rose were
recent guests of Mrs ,
Marybelle Mooney.
Mr and Mrs Chne
Thompson and daughter,
Cmdy, of Grove City were
recent guests of Mrs Darlene
Sheets and they all VISited
Brady Sheets a t Holzer
Medtcal Center
Mrs Btll (Sylvia ) Wtlliams
passed away January 6 at Mt
Carmel Hospital at Colum·
bus. Her husband , Bill
Williams, had just passed
away December 27 and they
both were burted at the Union
Grove Cemetery at Canal
Wtnchester Her funeral was
held at the Frank Rd Church
of the Nazarene
Mr
Wtlhams' funeral was held
there also. The callmg hours
were at the Scholdmger
Norris funeral home Mrs
Darlene Sheets and sister,
Mrs . Blanche Stevers,
s1sters-m law, called at the
funeral Home
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Saunders VISited Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs
Melvm Craft and family
Mrs Doris Wisecarver and
two daughters, l.ort Ann and
Debbie, were recent guests of
Mrs Mary Wolford
Mr , and Mrs . Gilbert
Johnson have moved from
their home near VIctory
Church to a home on
Bulavtlle Rd Mr. Johnson
has been among the atlmg for
some tlme. ,
Mrs. Marybelle Mooney
and son, Marlyn Mooney
were recent guests qf her
mother, Mrs. Bertha Cra1g at
Pmecrest Nurmg Center
recently
Mr, and Mrs Andrew
Chapman and three children
Of Beech City were recent
overnight guests of his
brother, Mr and Mrs Davtd
Chapman and family
Haskell Saunders
celebrated hts btrlhday
Wednesday , February I.
Those who helped him
celebrate were his wtfe Ivy,
hts daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
James Vmson and three
children, Brian, Chrtstopher
and Ruth Elizabeth, Mr and
Mrs. Doyle Saunders and two
chtldren, D J . and Bobby J o,
Mr and Mrs. Keith Saunders
and Stephen Saunders.
Mr and Mrs Oakey
Johnson were
recent
Saturday guests of Mrs Mary
Wolford
Brady Sheets, who 1s

cand I•d at e
which mast mclude fm1shing
m the top four in her class at a
state fatr or a national show,
and from photographs supplied by the exhibitor All·
Amertcan select1ons lor each
class wtll be annowtced in the
March issue of the Dtgest
Andy IS the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Plymale and IS a
member of lhe GaJIIa County
4-H Dairy Club

SCS and local ronservatton

Lay ofthe land

'

Conserving energy Blue Lake
in home heating

Less energy Iii; m•t•dcd if we
rcrtthzcr s
lind
distnct leaders need to pass
pg
rt
t•ultu
r
c
cht'llliC
Hls
in
POMEROY - The men and the Wt)rd to ever y corner of
pla&lt;.'f
u11
th('
la
nd
tha
n
tf
"
't'
women who use Amenca 's our nat1on Potential energy
h.1ve
to
rcmo\'t'
them
as
land wisely save energy savmgs mig ht enco urage
more people to say " yes" to pul\utani .S SO!IlC' "IIC rt' l' lSt-.
along with sotl and water
and lh!..'n numufneturc. trans·
Soil tonservatton practtces good land use
po.rt,
a nd sprt"lt d mol e
l..ess
energy
1
s
needed
tf
"
c
and systems co uld save I of
chen!lca
ts tu kr&lt;p the i1111d
every 7 gallons of fuel used In keep SOli in place on the land
pruduttlvc.
t han tf we have to dreLlgc tt
U S agriculture
Less cncrg~' ts nredcd If wr
n wt ts one more reason out downstream, bullcluzt• It
n•t·yl'lr
nnimal wHsH•s f&lt;u
Wh} so il and water con· off streets, or fllter 11 out of
plant
nutrtcnts
r ight thcH' un
water supplies
se rvat mn makes good sense
ttn• furm ur rum h than 1f \ H '
sub!ittlutc mBnufnt t llt L· tl
By Boyd A. Ruth
SoU Coos. S~n IC'e

By Steve Hlbloger
Dlstrlcl Cooservatlonlst
Soli Coos. Service
GALLIPOLIS - Joe Collins
ts the most recent member to
come to the Gallia Sod and
Water ConservatiOn Dtstnct
Board of Supervisors. Joe has
been on the bOa rd smce July,
1977 wh en he f11l ed th e
vacancy created when J1m
The Almanac
United Press International
Today 1s Sunday, Feb. 19,
the 50th day of 1978 with 315 w
follow
The moon Is approaching
tts full phase
The mornmg s tar IS
Mercury.
The evenmg stars ar e
Venus, Jupiter, Mars and
Saturn
Those born on thts date are
Wlder the stgn of Pisces
Polt s h astronom e r
Nic ola us Copermcus, who
formulated the mode rn
model of the solar system ,
was born Feb. 19, 1473
On tins day In htstory
In 1922, vaudeville and
musical comedy s tar Ed
Wynn became the f1rst big
name m show bus mess to sign
for a regular radiO show
In 1945, American Mannes
landed on lwo Juna to start
one of the blood1est battles m
the Pac1flc during World War
ll,
In 1964, Greek Prmee Constantme was named regent of
the mwtlry as the condition
of hiS father, Kmg Paul, worsened Three years later
Constantine was deposed as
king by a trulitary reg1me
In 1977, Brttish Fore1gn
Secretary Anthony Crossland
died at the age of 58

A thought lor the day .
British statesman Wtlham
Gladstone satd, "Selfishness
IS the greatest curse of the
human race "
suffering from heart trouble,
1s a paltent at Holzer Medtcal
Center
Mr. and Mr ~, Haskell
Saunders were Wednesday
guests of thm daughter, Mrs,
Amy Vmson and family
Mrs. Evelyn Smtih was tll
for several days "'th
flu Mrs. Gladys Layne
spent a few days wtth Mrs.
Mary Wolford.
Mrs Geneva Fisher was
recent gaest of her daughter,
Mrs DoriS Eggleton and
family
The foster grandparents at
GSI are back to work after
betng absent because of the
bad weather
Mr. and Mrs Marshall
Boggs, Washmgton C.H. were
recent guests of her mother,
Mrs Grover Smtth.
Mr. and Mrs. Woodford
Greene and daughter, Patti,
of Beverly, 0., spent
Saturday mght wtth his
sister, Mrs Dorothy Beaver
and son, Stephen,
Mrs NeJIIe Pickett ts a
medtcal patient at Pleasant
Valley Hospital a t Point
Pleasant, W Va
Homer Porter was recent
guest of Mr. and Mrs H1llls
Pinkerman
Mr. and Mrs. Kennison
Saunders and three chtldren,
Ntlls, Jam1e and Wesley
spent Saturday mght with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
Moore, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Joe and Joyce Clary were
recent guests of Mrs. Sarah
Halley
Mrs. Odessa Galloway was
recent guest of Mrs Mary
Wolford.
Mrs Thelma Boster and
son, Davtd, and Mrs, Kathy
Boster were recent guests of
Mrs Marybelle Mooney
Mr. and Mrs Lawren~e
(Pat) Patterson and Inez
Halley visited their father,
Emmit Halley at Holzer
Medical Center.

Allbrtght restgned
Joe ' s pnm ary farmt ng
enterprises are cattle and
tobacco He has 53 head of
crossbred cattle and ratses 30
acres of ha) on hts 128 acre
fa m1 on Fnendly R1dge m
Clay Townshtp
But, m order for some
factors lo be pnmary others must be seco nda ry,
and seco nda ry mte1ests Joe
does have . He has an apple
and pea ch orchard, has
raised strawbernes and hogs
previOusly, loves to hunt and
ft sh and ts very acttve m tree
plant ing a nd woodla nd
management activities
Joe does hts fannmg durmg
evenmgs, weekends a nd
summer breaks He teaches
3-5 grade math, health ,
scu~nce and soctal ~iudt es at
Clay Elementary Sehoul He
belongs to most teacher 's
orga mzattml s and had been ill
NEA for over 20 yea rs Joe 's
w1fe of 21 years, Joyce ,
teaches at Hannan Trace
School
Born In Drift, Kentucky,
Joe "as soon aft er brought to
Lawrence County to live He
lived there fo r 30 yea rs Joe
graduated from h1gh school
tn Lawrence Co unty and
came to RIO Grande College
to get h1s bachelor's degt ee m
elementary educatiOn
Upon atta mmg this degree,
he returned to Lawrence
County to t eacher for teJl
years before comtng to Clay
School He has been w1th Clay
for 11 years
Joe has ratsed hts children
to participate m 4-H actlvtttes Jod1e ts a freshman
at Ohto State Umvers!ly, Jan
ts a sophomore at GaJha
Academy H1gh School and
Joel and Jerel are m grade
school now
The Collins farm ha s
undergone extensive brush
clearmg and pasture tm·
provement. The best wood·
land ts fen ced and bemg
managed as recommended
by the Serv1ce Forester
Joe signed hts farm mto
cooperahve agreement wtth
the Gallia S W C D m 1966

By John Cooper
SoUCons. Srrvlcr
l' 'l'
PLEAS ANT
Groundhog Day has come
a nd gone and tt seems that
that craft y rodent Inflicted a
~oud sax " eeks more of
\\o Hitcr weather upon us We
wo uld ha ve t o admtt ,
ho w ever~ that we can nevrr
remember a Groundhog Day
"hen tt dtd not see tt s
s ha dow, so we would con·
el ude tha t most wmters AI e
goang to jast well t up lnlu
Match It ts nut hard to recnll
"mter before last when m
Feb ruary we had three weeks
or exce ptiona ll y wa rm
weather. The temperature
\\ as tn the s1xt1 es a nd
seventi es much of that tunc
We can recall tha t the buds on
trees began to s we ll a nd evml
a few early fl uwermg plants
such as fnrsytlua, burst out
mto bloom only to be frozen
ba ck by some early free10s 1n
Ma!Ch.
Durtng some of our vtstts
w1th cooperators recently we
ha ve found them ea ger to ta lk
about thc1r operatmns even
though they Hre una ble to du
such
Ra} Thompson of Vernon
Churc h commumty wa s
lalhng Waller Salamacha of
SCS that he had pretty welt
eradica ted multiflora rQse on
his fanu by the use of Tordon
and 2,4,5·1' He showed
Waller some h1gh quality ha y
mhiS barn It "as sttll br1ght
colored and the red clover
evcrl retamcd some of Its 1 ed
t.:olor fn the pla nt bhwm He

uses u hdy l Ottdltwm·r .ami
thut a sstsl ~ with tlu• qu tek
dq •tng of hts lmy lie a lSil tuld
Wa llet that he unl)' cuts dtmn
the amuuut uf hc1 ~ that hr
expects tu drv ~mel bale \~t l h l n
a short tune.
Two pr,jetts thnt ""
dtscussed wllh Wall!'!' fm·
futUI'Cwork Ul l' SO ll H' pH St ut C
rcsecdmg th.rl tw 1.s con ~
stdermg domg by thr sud
!Seedmg m etlru&lt;l a nd n lso th ~
develo pn~t·n t of u :sptmg Mr
Thump:&gt;un

has

been

,t

couperat01 of the Wt'stl' rn
Dt strtc t und hn s bee n
operuttng with il t'tlll SC I \•a t m n
phm since the curly f~H ti l' S
The We s t ctn Sml Con ~
\'UtiOn 0 1Sl l HI IS !111W
takmg 0 1 de1s fm d ll l'I1 VI t o n ~
menta l srcdm~ JH:I ckct Tins
plant pucket cunststs of f1vc
C'h tncse chestnut. h\'c bhH k
walnut, hvc ~ruy dugwood,
ftvc N or wc~y spruc.e, f1vc
white ptne and ft v~ Sc·ot eh
ptne The purchaser:-:; uf tlu.'.st•
packets nn.• ex JX•ded to mw
them for bencftt of wtldllfu
and arc not supposed to lw
u~cd fm
01 uarucula l pur·
poses '11w cost ctf tiH s plant
packet JS seven dollfi i'S nnd
urders ca n l&gt; e pldcNI .tt the
d1stnet office, Z:J0 11.! Md lll
Street or by phomng 675·41 70
Payment IS l'cqucstcd at tame
of ordcrmg Severa l 01 del s
have alrct~d y bccu tak en
Delivery of these "1ll be
made c.hrcct1y to thC perso n
ordermg

produc.1 tdn than If \\ t:' t rplun •
It with lantl llw t ll (' l'Ci s
t'lcurmg, ctrnlnmg I PtTIH mg.
tl ll/.! ll tm g , or H H H t: a d lkd
nutnent s
O t lr c I
( 0 11S t'1 Vli! Ju ll
pt tWll CCS lll cl \ ' not fl'lh H l'
c nl' t gy nt•t•rl s clu t•c·tl\· but cio
lllllk£1 it JPIJSSlblr ! 11 J,I I U"
mm t' foud Hnd ftl.wt w&amp;ttw ut
lTI C' l l'H S IJl~ (' 11()1 gy \I Sl '
Not "n il &lt;on li t' I VCi t l un
J)l Hl't\ C'C~ \\I ll SU{'( t•N1 l',' t' l' 'tl·

Ul\dCr

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Smce th e Sllll " h a s bt'cn un
the H,ruund fol sn hm ~, we cH c
Wcmdenng J( J)coplc ~l&lt;I VC
been fecdmg the bards ,md
other wtldhfe We have noted
at our own btrd feeders m our
back lawn that they '" e very
Issue reminder
ha ppy to sec some ru·w
cra cke-d co rn ea clt d .1y
Seveml kmds of hn ds m~
POMEROY - Just a eludmg two 111 three spcc.:1es
remmder that thiS IS the last of spa rrows, c~u d1nals, slate
week to order wildlife
colored JUncus, duvcs. as well
plantmg packets from the as tWO or lhl CC Sp Ct: ICS of
Meigs Soil &amp; Water Con· woodpec kers a nd also
servatton Dtstrtct
sta rlmgs and 11urplc ~-: ra c.: k l es
Large or small assorted ha ve been regula r VISitors ut
packets of 85 or 39 seedlings, our feeders We have noted
ground covers, and quantity that the starlings and purple
orders of 5, 10, 20, or 25 seed· grackles like to feed m l he
hngs of one vanety arc nuddlc of the day, thct cfm e
availabl e
smce we do nut ltke these
For more mformabon call b1rds, we have bt!Cn con ~
992-6647 or stop tn the district centratmg our fecdmg 1n the
off1ce on the second floor of ea rly morntn g a nd la te
the Farmers Bank bu1ldmg m cvemng wh en th e mut e
Pomeroy
desirabl e son g birds feed

plunLt•d h } t.:tJill pUi t•r nt prt•
III Lt •n. u l :-~

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FULTON-THOMPSON
TRACTOR SALES
Spring Av~
Pomeroy , Ohto

1111111111111· ·:'!1111111111111111111111

NEW FOR L.ICE CONTROL.

dust bag kit

'18.95

with 1% Co·Ral or 3% Rabon

FEATURING:
1. FLIP-TOP LOADING-No mess or fuss ,
loads easily through t he t op and closes
securely

•

')'

\

2. STEEL HANGER BAR-Bag wtll not
turn s ideways or roll a way from ammals

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'top.

dust bag

It's easy to mount and won 't sag or droop

3. VINYL IMPREGNATED CANVASWithstands all the eleme nts of weather _ _...;,..-j
while protectmg agamst sha rp horns a nd
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4 . ROPE PROTECTED EDGES-No gromets or straps tha t will te:;~ r out. Rope also
protects edges of bag from wear.

5. POLY LINER-Allows dus t to flow fr••·1v"
but will not easily wear out like burlap
hn ers.

6. FLICKER CHAMBER-Rec harges wit h
dust a fter each usage . . . effec l• vely d us ts
t h e head a n d w1thers of ti m id a m ma ls

CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc.,
Galpelis, Ohio

•

�~-TheSunday Ttm es.Sen tinel

Sunday, Feb 19 1918

th~e elforiS

Let me remind you, Mrs Lyles, these are not my
personal problems - these are the PUBUC S PROBLEMS
1 Beheve me Mrs Lyles Iknowwhata thankl ess job' LS
1
Sincerely,
I
E Joyce Mtller
I
I
\ In response to that lener

~---- - ---- ----- ------ - - - --- - ,

Letters of oplnloo ore welcomed They should be
leas th81L 300words loag (or he subjeet to redudton by
the editor ) oad must be ligaed with the signee's ad·
dress Nomes may he withheld upon publication
However, on request, oomeo wiU be diJclosed Letters
sbould be Ill good taste, oddretslng IAueo, not person.UIIrs

1

Feb 17 1978
Dear
Str
I
I doo t wsnt to waste the space m Hoofs and Paws that
I
I ~ou id be used for more coru.1rucllve endeavors to answer Dr
~'
I Donohue s letter (Feb 12) but you the readers not him, would
I expect me to respond so here I am
I
It sounds as though he was the public relattons man lor the
fur Industry because his distortions are abnoslldentical FirSt
ol all, I did not come from a northern state dtrect to Me1gs
On taxes and other ~ub1ects
County I came bere dlrect from twenty years service through
out
the world to mdude three years m Europe a nd two years m
Feb 17 197B
I would like to express my optnton on the taxes and the V1etnam wtlh the U S Artny
So you see I've seen poverty that makes Metgs County look
other subJects that we have been reading m the paper the past
very rtch And yes I have called people a few names m my
few months
columns It would have been pretty ruliculous to call the guy
TAXES
I read about the taxes that may be put on the restdents of who skmned the dog near Hamson ville cute' or the one who ''
Metgs County for the new garbage equtpment What more threw the cat m the dryer up at Racme compassionate , or
taxes can we stand to be put on us• Not only taxes for the the boys who ktcked the pony 'good guys or the hundreds of
garbage the publtc should vote on the new water rates the people who neglect the1r aOLID8ls and treat them cruely as
counctl wants to put on us residents I have nothmg agamst our bemg good ChrLShsns"
You really don t think that there are nothmg but saanls
counctl I think we may have a very good one, but l don't feel
they have the nghl lo say we wtll raise the waU.r rates My hvmg m Metgs County, Mr Donohue• You re darn nght they
water btU for example , now ts double any person who only aren't That LS why we have polLee lawyers game wardens
uses the nummum and when the water IS over the sewer bill and for the protection of anunals, many organtzations to
goes over slso I feel that there should have been a set amount mclude Humane Societies I don I know whose column you
read where someone was called a hick - I ve never used the
on the sewer for everyone and not what your water blll1s
In four years of JIVlng m Pomeroy we have patd an amounl word I ve also never uSEKI the word backward '
In reference to the firemen - if you really had read my
of over $300 on the sewer "htle a person who only uses
muumum (he ts really fortunate) has only patd $144 for the comment on them on January 31 you d have read where I
same pertod of tune l feel that thts matter should be looked commended them for what they had done for us m the past I
mto for as long as re:s1dents have been pa)'lng for the sewer it did quote a pohcy thts past Sunday of the Pomeroy Ftre Chtel
should be patd for ' lf the water was ftt to use or drtnk I mtght though and tfhe doesn't want hLS policy known then why did he
go along wtth a ratse provtdmg somethtng was done about the make tt? You satd that I mcluded Hunters an my statement
sewer, but I think everyone should dectde on thts and if others that tf people could come back as animals I would hke to see
them come back as fur bearmg arumals I said trappers who
feel the same please let me know
use the leg hold trap • Ntce try s1r
PROPERTY TAXES
As for the cat that was maune&lt;j and then had to he
The deadlme for property taxes ts Jan 20 and as most
people as myself tl comes due when you are recovermg from humanely put to sleep as a result the game warden LS
other btlls or when everythmg else comes due and you rush mvesltgatmg this case, at least this LS an assumption of rrune
down and pay them anyway to keep from paying the penalty As for the dog warden I have done nothing bot pratse the
and you read m the paper that they have extended the tune former Metgs CQunty warden - tl's the pound that I thtnk LS
Why not say we have exwnded the tune mslead of gtvmg a rotten and anyone who has ever seen 1t agrees w1th me
Reporters do not wrtte Jusl things you want to read or that sre
deadlme so everyone can take advantage of the extra time
ruce
- they write facts as they sre, this ts life Most people
ENERGY CRISIS
Also why must the school always suffer when we hit an want to know for sure what'sgomg ontn the world
Lastly I not only like my retirement home m Metgs
energy crisis These children this year wtll have a hard enough
time to get an education with the teachers stnke the act of God Comity- flove tl and the majortty of people too
!'hank you for readmg my column Hoofs and Paws (but
wtth the bad weather and now the power shortages Yet there
please
read slower from now on ) and I hope you w1ll continue
are other thmgs and places stay open full force whtch could
to
fmd
Lt anterestmg, Mr Donohue
curtatl a httle I know that some of these places may be part of
Marton C Crawford,1SG, USA, Ret
thetr occupatton or part of thetr ltvmg but they could cut back a
little also Wtth the school cutlmg hack who will be able to pay
the doctor btU for the children gotng to a school too cold to stl Ln
Ulljustly accused
a class room and coming down stck
We are m a real energy crLSts and may be for sometime but
Feb 12 1978
tf every one wtll pull together like we are asked and wtth God's
I
would
hke
to
say
a
few
words
Ln
defense
of
retired ex
help we wtll come lhrough thts Our famtly have cut back as
Wacs,
Sgt
Marton
Crawford
and
her
friend
MaJor
Joyce
much as we can and we hope everyone will help too
m
Metgs
County
who
are
domg
a
wonderful
JOb
m
Mtller
II LS time for someone to stand up and ftght for Metgs
helpmg
anhnals
County or some day you may wake up and fmd our Metgs
Lawrence A Donohue Rt 4 Pomeroy seemed to overlook
County LS no longer there because people will be movmg out If
that
fact m the letter he wrote to the edt tor that was tn today s
you must be taxed for everythmg you nughtas well be "here
I
Feb
12) Sunday Tunes-Sentinel
you can enJOY tl - Ellen Rought 158 Lmcoin H1ll Pomeroy
He unJustly and unfairly accused and crtllc•zed Marton
Crawford
God gave us anunals to eat and aruma is to protect
Let's get facts stra~ghtl
If a cat LS m the woods ktllmg quat! tt's because tl s hungry
February 15 1978 and because someone has not done thetr duty m protectmg and
I have read Mrs Andy (Ctndy) Lyles vtluperaltve feeding tl
I wtsh Gallta County had a surular humane soctety like
conunents concernmg me pubhshed on February 15 I must
Metgs
County We need one here
say that I am most suprtsed as I have never spoken wtth Mr or
Mrs Mary Rusk James
Mrs Lyles at anytime and netlher has Ms Crawford
539Thtrd
Avenue
Galhpolis OhLO 45631
I have never made public oral or written statements
derogatory or olherwtse pertBLmng to Mr Lyles I have never
made demands of Mr I yles the shertff the dog warden or tbe
ftre department I have NOr the least destre to organtze them
Mr and Mrs Dewey Jones
m a platoon Lets get the facts stratght - the carehne LS a
and
J eanelte were Mrs Molly
By Rita J White
referral servtce The ctllzen havtng the problem ts referred to
Wrtght
Plam C1ly and Mr
M1ss Patty Culpepper was
various agenctes for asststance The cttlzen makes the call to
and
Mrs
BtU Flemmg and
the ¥ency We often receive return calls from these cttlzens a 1 uesday supper guest of chtldren London and the
when they gel negative responses and we hear a lot from the Mr and Mrs W1lmer B former s granddaughter
trate pubhc concermng atlatudes arxl performances of pubhc Haifhtll and sons Joe and Jamte Jones, Gaihpohs
servants Hoofs and Paws merely reports the lack of Tom
Vtstlmg over the weekend
Mr and Mrs Roy Jarv LS
asststance m deahng wtth these problems
wtth
Mr and Mrs Charles
Now I am sure Mrs Lyles ts subject to much frustratton and Debbte Columbus, spent Tate were Mr and Mrs
from the public due to the nature of her husband's work May I the wee~end wtth Mr and Homer Tate and daughters,
suggest she take these frustraitons out on the frustralors' Mrs Wayne Oxyer and Columbus and Mr and Mrs
and not on me I work for no monetary compensataon 7 days a famtly
Spendtng the weekend with Larry Tate Galltpohs
week on call 24 hours a day and I pay all expenses mcurred m
Attendance at Old Kyger
Bapttst Church Sunday
School Feb 12 was 43
Dunng the Sunday evenmg
worship servtce special
mus1c was presented by
J1mm1e Evans and hiS group
from the Wellston area
Mrs James Bradbury and
chtldren J D , Michael and
Beth Ann, vtstled Sunday
w1th her mother, Mrs Nora
Berkley and fam1ly
PURCHASE ANY ONE OF OUR LAWN AND GARDEN
Mary Lou Rupe spent the
weekend
wtth her grandTRACTORS-WITH 15% DOWN-AND YOU CAN DELAY
parents Mr and Mrs Owyer
Short and famtly
YOUR FIRST PAYMENT UNTIL MAY 1ST, 1978. THAfS
Mrs Amy Short Barbara
and
Juntor were Fnday
RIGHT, NO PAYMENTS DUE UNTIL MAY 1, 1978.
overmght guests of her
parents Mr and Mrs
Kenneth Brewer and famtiy
STOP BY SOON FOR COMPLETE DETAILS AND A
Glenwood W Va
Harold Wells Jr was a
GOOD DEALI THIS OFFER LASTS ONLY 'TIL
Saturday overmght guest of
his stster Mr and Mrs
FEBRUARY 28, 1978.

.e~J~fi:.._ ......
~ ~:

... .

HOOFS . • •and. • .PAWS

L

·-=· -·

Kyger

BUY NOW. PAY LATER.
~0 PAYMENTS 'TIL MAY!

1
\ \
BLACKIE SLts wtlh new master, liltle Mtckey Bauer
of Chester (Story below )

By Marlon C Crawford
Meigs Counly HuiD8ne Society
POMEROY - Is tl as obvtous to you as 1t ts to me folks that
I made a mtstake dlsapprovmg of the Leg Hold Traps tl's the
only way you can avotd abuse m th1s area So don t ever
disagree wtth the )lllhcy makers m Metgs County unless you
want to be pubhcly distorteo lwLSted, and nusquoled From
the calls I ve been gettmg most people think this whole
confrontatiOn LS an orgaruzed effort to keep anyone from
rockmg boats I don'tknow how MaJor Miller got mto the act
-she has never talked to or about Lyle, nor has she had
anythtng but good reiattons wtth the Dog Warden (ask Ketth )
or our good sherlff And I wtsh all of you would read last week s
Hoofs and Paws and you ll wonder why Mrs Game Warden
felt her husband was bemg ptcked on I gave his number to a
couple of people wbo had wtld animal problems Aren t we
supposed to pass hiS number out to the people of the county ?
Mrs Lyle you owe Major Miller a public apology And thai IS
all the space I mtend to waste on such trtvta, and smallness
on to more unportanl subJect.&lt; P S I've never called Lyles
Well, last Thursday I delivered Black1e the sweet orphan
dog I had here wtth me for three weeks, to hts new famtly and
home It was a sad day for me because I d really become
attached to that dog He hves m Chester right now but next
week he moves to Long Bottom and will have a ntce btg farm to
roam at wtll on Blackie whtch by the way LS not h1s real name
hves wtlh the Robert Bauer famtly and although they have two
children I have a hunch that hllle Mtckey who ts three years
old ts the real new owner of the new black pel The Bauers
know that if they ever are unhappy wtth thetr new anunal an
they have to do LS call me and he wtU be ptcked up happtly by
me I don I know though - I went up this past Wednesday to
see how he was making out and although lle was a little sore
from a sltghl healmg he took from a netghbor :s dog - be
seemed conwnt enough I was pleased to see that the Bauers
had already been mto Pomeroy and hcensed the dog and tt was
prommently displayed on hts new collar The happy endtng to
what could have been another sactdog one wtthno home No,
I can t say that m thLS case,l'd have kept him myself
Have you all nottced la te!; that there are an awful lot of
dogs and cais hetng hsted as lost tn the paper• One was listed
as havtng been gone for a mon th f would JUSt die tf that

Charles Reynolds and famtly
Mr and Mrs Ray Searl s
and Peggy Rutland were
Saturday guests of Mr and
Mrs Clarence Searls
Becky Pn ce attended the
bu1hday party honormg Sally
Saunders Cheshtre on her
lhtrd btrthday Saturday
afternoon
Sunday VISitors of Mr and
Mrs J oe Stewart wer e thetr
nephew Mr and Mr s
Charles Stewart and famtl y
Guysville
Mr and Mrs Russell Short
and daughters Columbus
were Sunday guests of hts
parents Mr and Mrs Owy er
Short and famtiy
Mr and Mrs Junt or
Lemley were Sunday dmner
guests of thetr daughter Mr
and Mrs Bob Prtce and
children Becky and Frankie
VISIImg Sunday wtth Mr
and Mrs Vtrgti Wamsle;
were Mr and Mrs Vernon
Grmstead Hartford W Va
Mr and Mrs Rtchard
Wamsley and son Racme
Mr and Mrs Dorset Larkms
and famtly Long Bottom
Mr and Mrs J ohn Wamsley
and family and Mr and Mrs
Loute Louden Btdwell Route
Ktm Lucas and Mrs Nancy
Preston, Cheshtre and Mr
Carl Wamsley Georges
Creek Road
Ash Wednesday servtces
were held at the Addtson
Untted Meth odi St Church
under the direction of the
Kyger Untied Methodtst
Church Women Precedmg
the serviCe a potluck dinner
was enJoyed at the Addtson
Town House Attending were

women from the Kanauga
Addison Cheshire and Kyger
Umled Methodtsl Church es
Those attendmg from here
were Mrs Mary Stsson Mrs
Mary Bradbury, Mrs Cora
Rupe Mrs Nma Rupe and
Mrs Am) Short and Bar
bara
Mr and Mrs Bob Hart
P1ckenngton were weekend
guests of Mr and Mrs Wayne
Sasson
Mrs Annabel! Stsson spent
Saturday m Columbus
vtsttmg her daughter Mr
and Mrs Rtchard Stsson and
children Lon and Bnan
Wendell She went espectally
to get acquamted wtlh her
new grandson Bnan
Mr Anderson Spauldmg
has been discharged from
Holzer Medtcal Center HLS
condttion 1s unchanged at thJs
wrttmg V1s1tmg Mr and
Mr s Spauldmg over the
weekend were their son and
wtfe Mr and Mrs Ed
Spauidtng and Connte
Mar10n 0
Mrs Jean Schuler Port
land was VISitmg Thursday
wtlh her mother Mrs Mary
B S1sson
Manon Rupe Wrlmmgton
was a Saturday arternoon
VISLtor of Mr and Mrs Leo
Rupe
Saturday afternoon callers
of Mr and Mrs Dale Sisson
were Mehnda and Ketth
Bradbury, Columbus
Mr and Mrs John Jenkms
Heath and Seth attended a
surpnse btrthday party
hononng Garnet Grey
Huntmgton W Va Fnday
Feb 10 Also attendmg the

LABOR-SAVER!
All around the farm.

Almost any lOb arou nd the f arm s easter when
when you use a Sperry New Ho land sktd steer
loader Spe rry New Hollan d loa de rs ca n p vat m
the r own length so you can turn QUICkl y and
easLiy-even n tt ght places Here are some of
t he JObs they 11 d o

'

-~

• Clean out teedtots • Handle stlage • Move snow
• C.rry bales teed ferbhzer bags • Drtll post holes
• Dtg d!tthes • Provtde hydraulic power tor pruner

·--. J:

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
•

3RD

III.PiJJIFR
L#W#

~

POMEROY, D.
PHONE 992-2176

FOR PROFESSIONAL RESULTS,
TRUST A SEASONED HAND •••

saws and other equipment
W th th e qut ck attach feat ure you can clla nge
from bucket to fork to blade m seco nds-wtt h

out dt smo unt ng Even a backh oe can be
attached QUI Ckly Ca I us so on for a de n onstra
ton Se e for you rself how a Sperry New Hotlan d
loader can rnake almost any JOb eas1er for you

FULTON-THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
Spring Ave

Pomeroy 0

Ohio politics

happened to any of mine so let me go into tile problem lor I
minute First leave a description of the aruma! in the sheriff's
olltce call the radto station, also get in touch with the dog
warden and call us The numbers are Usted daUy In the
sentinel under Humane Society Careline Now then, don't stop
here C.U your netghbors and friends Have them be on the
lookout for your wnmal of course, cbedt the pound There are
so many things that could be the CIIWM! lor anll081s leavrng
famUiar terntory some that come to mind right away are
1 It doesn t get enough to eat at home so Is out beiging
somewhere
2 If male there LS a female m heat somewhere within a
few miles
3 If female and m heat, tt has been chased by a dog pack
4 lflllscuteitmaybebeen dognapped"
5 If ruMing loose and unlicensed the dog warden may
have picked it up
6 Also, if runnmg loose, someone may have called our
Humane Road Agent and had tt ptcked up as a stray needing a
good home
Remember last week we hated an Irish Setter as needing a
good home' Well, I'm teUmg you, we now have a Ust a mUe
long of people desiring this breed of dog I've never seen
anythtng hke tt We got ~ails from an over this part of the
country - the Sentmel LS sure read m far flung places' So if
any of you ever come across an Irish Setter that needs a good
home - giVe us a call
The other day while out m my front ysrd I heard this fuMy
no1se and even the Boston Temers stopped In thetr tracks and
looked up About 15 feet from me, flying low was a Pllealed
Woodpecker Have any of you ever seen one sround these
parts One was seen herem May of73, but none since They are
very large bemg about 15 mcbes long, black and white with a
red head and tufted top TheiJ' flight Is strong with irregular
flaps of thetr wmgs drununlng distinctive, loud slow, softer at
the end The cants a senes, never Single It IS a beautiful bird
and I hope he returns I keep suet hangmg In a tree out front, so
I have a feelmg that LS where he was heading and got
frtghtened by me and my dogs
We have qwtea lislofammalsthat need good homes lolks,
so here they are
Beagle, female 1\'z yrs old (good rabbit dog), also
pupptes, 10 weeks old 992-77116
Doberman type, 1 yr old, female, nice with kids, good
watchdog 992-7706
Collie-Beagle, male, 4months old, good watchdog 992-7706
Dachshund type, red, male, young, sbould go to home
Wtthout children outdoor dog 843-2291
Coonhound type, male , young 446-1!235
Beagle type, female, 8 months old, fnendly 992-7680
Mixed breed, small bousedog, female, good wtth chlldfen,
good watchdog 985-3884
Mixed breed, very large, male 1yr old, mce dog 992-7680
Scotltsh Terrter type, 2 yrs old, housedog, playful 992-.1040
Labrador type, young male, mediunn size 949-2607
Shepherd-Collte pupptes, 6 mo old and 3 mo old 99:!-7680
Shepherd pupptes, male and female 368-9367
Walker Coonhound-Setter puppies, 7 weeks old 949-2621
CoUte-Sparuel puppies, II weeks old 368-9367
Collie type puppy, 4 months old, female, gentle, good
watchdog, good With chUdren, 74:!-2949
Setter-Shepherd-Conte,l yr old, slso her puppies, Bweeks
old 245-5804
Kittens, long hall', 6 weeks old 949-2093
Cats, adult, beautiful 992-7680
Dachshund, female 5 yesrs old, house dog, lovable, AKC
registered, all shots 985-4180

FF A Week being
observed locally

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - LegLSlahve Democrats confmed to
applaudmg Gov James A Rhodes' efforts durmg the bltzzard,
finally were able to take off the shackles la•1 week and ctte
what they thought were some deftctenctes m his handlmg of the
coal shortage
Rep Thomas J Carney, 0-Boardman called on Rhodes to
use the powers granted hun in an energy btll enacted by the
Legtslature and stgned by the Governor last December for just
such a sttuatlon
Carney satd Rhodes eould equaltze coal and elec trical loads
among ulllttles and unpose a han on outdoor lllurrunated
advert1smg The governor s offtce pohtely and qu1ckly rephed
that Rhodes was domg all he thought necessary
Nevertheless the Democrats were only too happy to mclude

VOL 13

NO 3

Rhodes m a resolutton callmg on PreSLdent Carter to use the
fun extent of hLS powers to mamtam electncal servtce m Ohio
That opporluntly presented tlself tn the form of an
amendment from House Mmonty Leader Charles F Kurfess
R Bowling Green , Rhodes' apparent opponent m the Repubh
can gubernatorial sweepstakes this year
Kurfess satd Rhodes has not been exerctstng all his aulhonty
m dealmg wtlh the coal shortage His move dtvtded the
Republican caucus which conlwns some avtd Rhodes Supporters

recently clauned exammers m the auditor s off1ce were
padding thetr mileage reports The Rhodes od!mmstrallon ts
privy lo thost' reports
Stale Sen Sa m Speck R New Concord said he had tnforma
tmn that Nattonal Graphtcs Corp , whtch hsndies state
prmung was usmg stat e-owned paper to fulftli pr ivate coo
tracl8 mstead of repaymg the slate or relurmng the surplus
Vomovich LS an announced candidate for audttor wl)tle
Speck ts thmkmg serLOusly about runmng EIQI both have been
mentioned as potential runmng mates fur Rhodes Perhaps
he .s g1vmg them SQruethmg to do to ratse the1r vtstblhty or te:st

Regarding Rhodes, there IS speculatton that the governo r s
people are spoon-feeding potential Repubhcan candtdate. wtth
rockets to fire at state Auditor Thomas E Ferguson
CUyahoga County ComnussLOner Ge or~e V Votnovtch

lhetr mettle

by lady patient
OAKLAND, Calif (UPI) Beverly Tbompson Is sumg a
fireman who knocked out two
of her teeth while trymg to
stop the bleeding from her
wrists, whtch she had
slashed
Ms Tbompson said In an
Alameda County Superior
Court suit that Berkeley,
Cab! , fireman Jacques
Terhell hit her In the mouth
afl&lt;!r he was c.Ued to her
home last Sept 18
Her lawyer said TerheU
entered the home because her
client had slashed her wrists
while despondent
The City of Berkeley satd
the mjury occurred while
.iremen were trying to stop
the bleeding
Ms Thompson Is seeking
$50,000 from the City of
Berkeley and TerheU
CHAMBER MEETS
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Chamber
of
Commerce
will
meet
Tuesday, Feb 21 at noon at
the Meigs Inn David Pratt,
president of the Big Bend CB
Radio Club will be the guest
speaker Pratt will be accompanied by Charles Hysell
also a member of the club
~

•

PAGE 1D

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1978

Elertrlcal famine spread
In the nation's Industrial
midlands Saturday as coal
supplies dwindled like sand
running
through
an
hourglass
Power was

being cut

back
in
factories ,
businesses homes and
schools and more dlmouls
were threatened as the 75day strike by the United
Mine Workers union
dragged on

Man
recalls
ordeal
RAYMOND WILKINSON
ADDIS ABABA Eth topta
(UP()
The young
Ethtoptan spoke quietly as he
recalled his ordeal Homble
though tt was he constdered
hunself one of the lucky ones
For several days they
beat me wtlh sltcks around
the back and legs until I could
not stand, the young man
satd ' When I had recovered
shghlly I saw other prtsoners
hemg tortured
There was another man
his back had been ripped
open by beatings and I saw
his gusrds applymg flarmng
pteces of paper to his wounds
for several mmutes
Thts young Elhioptan was
one of some 10,000 who have
been arrested by the securtty
forces and local mthtta or
Kebeles as they are called
durmg the government s
open red terror" campatgn
to silence 1ts opposttlon
Some of those arrested
have subsequently been
released Others have been
sent to the countrySide to be
rehabtlttawd • Still others
have sunply disappeared
Diplomats estunate that
more than 1 000 persons have
been killed and many of thetr
bodtes dumped on the
capttal's streets smce the
government campa1gn to
w1pe out 1 counter revolu
ltonanes • began last year
The young Ethtoptan, who
did not wtsh to be named, satd
he was sunply ptcked up at
his work by the Kebeles,
unprtsoned and tortured
I was lucky I suppose
he sond I was released
The goverrunent makes no
apology for tis red terror
campatgn whtch has shaken
the Western world espectally
the Carter admuustratLOn
However
the young
Ethtoptan told me hiS story on
the same day a personal
envoy from PreSident Carter
arrtved m Ethtopta to assure
the Marxtst regune tt was not
g~vmg arms to Somalta Etht
opia s enemy m the Ogaden
Desert war and to try to
patch up relahons wtth Addts
Government offtctals tell
Journaltsts asking about the
mass arrests beatings and
deaths that tt was necessary
to 'ftght fire With ftre'' and m
denoWlce cnbcs of the cam
patgn for thetr lac k of
understanding

By

MAN 0 WAR THE racmg world 'sbeloved Btg Red, • was one of the most famous and
successful race horses ever to come out of Kentucky He won 20 of his 21 races Buried on
Faraway Farm near Lexmgton Ky , where he had spent years of retirement, his body has
now been moved to the Kentucky Horse Park at Lenngton where this larger-than hie
bronze statue will hft the VLStl.or s eyes - Photo by Department of Public lnfonnatton
Frankfort Ky

RIO GRANDE - Members of the FFA and has come to
of the Buckeye Htlls Chapter symbolize the FFA treaJOin w1th over 500,000 other
surer
FF A members m the Untied
Accord mg to President
States m celebratmg Nattonal Keith Cox, of Wellston, the
FF A Week whtch starts Feb Buckeye Htlls Chapter WIU
18 Thts ts also the begmnmg erect a billboard display,
of the 50th Anmve&lt;sary for parttctpale m a televiSLon
FFA
•
program on WSAZ (mommg
Throughout the week the farm program) Bob Evans
sta te s 300 chapters are Restaurant will use FFA
planmng achvttles to support placemats, radio spot anthe theme FF A at :;o A noWlcements on FFA week,
GOLDEN PAST- a bnghter and mstaU greenhand and
future '
chapter farmers at the local
The tradtltons of FFA have FFA meeting
held strong and produced a
Organized 111 1928, the FF A
mighty work force for food promotes leadership,
and ftber to meet the needs of cooperation and c1bzensh1p
our natton and the world
among high school voca
Successful agncultural honal agriculture stuleaders or today are the dents The FFA foun·
tesltmony
The 50 year dalton awards program
success story Is the story of provtdes chapter, state, and
Leammg by Domg
natLonal recogntlion for
NatLonal FFA Week supervtsed programs of
alway s tncludes George agrtcultural productLon,
Washmgton s btrthday '" marketmg processmg and
observance of his leadership serv•ce
m promotmg SCientific fann
1ng practices Washington
Fireman is sued
LS constdered the patron samt
party were Peggy Barker and
Sandra Wilkerson, Hun·
tmgton
Joseph White called on
Mrs Iva Stewart and Mrs
Besste Athey pallents at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Tuesday evemng

emocrats nitpicking at Rhodes energy faults

Liz, Gerald Hilferty design
horse park in Kentucky
MIDDI EPORf - Many
Metgs Co unltans pr obably
fatl to reahze the scope of the
work done by Ehzabeth (Ltz)
and Gerald Hllferty known
ptofesstonally as A Couple
of Dest gners
The
Htlfertys
who
mmntam off1ces m the home
of the late Mr and Mrs C M
Hennessy Garfield St ,
Mtddleport, are the mtertor
destgners of a tourtsl at
tra ctton, The Kentucky
Horse Park • whtch LS bemg
completed near Lexmgton
As mtermr designers the
Hlifertys have prepared the
plans for the exhtbtts to be
vtewed by vtsttors to the
factht; as well as the ftlm s
and arttfacts visttors wtll see
and even down to the path s
they wtll take m travelmg
through the attractwn
The horse park wtll be open
thts spnng but only for
v1s1tors to dnve onto the
grounds wtth the offtctal
opemng after whtch all of the
butldmgs can be vts1tcd for
the complete tour set for the
fall of this year
The fpllowmg story from
the Department of Pubhc
Inlormatton of the state of
Kentucky wtll give restdents
an mstght mto the umqueness
of the project
Kentuc~y LS spendmg $27
mdhon for a park to honor the
horse
The settmg for the Ken·
l ucky Horse Park ts the old
Walnut Hall Stud near
Lexmgton a farm that was
famed as a Standardbred
nursery and has a bam b1g
enough tn hold 1ts own
yearlmg at.ctwns The land
obtamed for the park ts I 032
acres of rolhng bluegrass
meadows wtth clusters of
trees and paddocks set off by
four-plank fences Centered
1n about 40 acres of green
turf m strut1:ures showmg
classic horse farm architecture 1s the vtsttors'
act1v1ty center
Here the Kentucky Horse
Park wtll not try to glorify the
horse or make of htm a
cartoon character, but show
h1m as he at'luall} ex1sts A

'

•

short ftlm deptcts the horse s
surpnsmg d1vers1ty of
talents A museum dtsplays
enh ghtentng exhtbtts and
equtne
artifacts
wtth
evtdence Of how htstory has
affected the horse and ho~
the horse has helped to m
fiuence htslory and a
workmg farm tour shows how
best to care for the horse
Vtstlors wtll be able to ride
horses over spectfled trails or
tour the park to horse-drawn
anuque carrtages and they
wtll have a chance to see the
horse at h1 s most spectacular
endeavor sport To provide a
bea utiful showcase for the
ammals that have held m.an's
1magmat1on for so many
centunes the Kentucky
Horse Park wtll contatn a
steeplechase course polo
fteld show JUmpmg rmg ,
dressage arena
cross
country course and a half
mtle dtrtlrack wtth an mfteld
for rodeo exhibt!Lons and
saddlehorse shows
A restaurant will be In the
vtsilors acttvtty center The
park wtll offer the bel'! Ln
modern campmg facllttlt~s ror
those who want to enJOY the
clean Bluegrass countrystde

Carter gets
big ovation

for a few days
A memortai statue of the
legendary Thoroughbred
race horse stands at the park
entrance to represent all
horses famous or not Thas
bronze status displays Man o
War as tmpenous larger
than hie and hke the plactd
beauty of the land around
him desttned to transcend
the ephemeral demands of
humans
Horses have contributed
largely to Kentucky s fame
and to no small )lllrtton of the
state s wealth smce settlers
began puttmg down roots m
the late 1700s Today wtth the
racmg sellmg and breedtng
of horses setting mcome
records almost annually
Kentucky ts umversally
accepted as the world center
for horses
Kentucky hopes that by
tmparttng apprectatLOn of
these magmf1cent ammals to
as many as 1 5 m1lhon
Kentucky Horse Park v1s1tors
aiUlually, 1t can repay 1ts
long standmg debt to the
horse

Weather
Partly cloudy today wtlh
h1ghs near 30 Low tomght be
tween 10 and 15 Probabthly
of prectpttatton today 20
~rcent

NASHUA N H tUPil
Wtth one heckler shoutmg
MORE SNOW
1
that's a he ' Pres1dent
Carter won a standing
United Press lnterqatlonal
ovatton for his views on the
Snow • shocked easterners
Panama Canal at Nashua bracked themselves Satur
Htgh School Saturday
day for yet another storm
'That made my tnp worth that dumped more than a fool
while Thank you, he told of snow m parts of Texas and
the cheermg crowd w1th a plodded along a northeasterly
grm at the end of a 21 hour ' course v1a Tennessee and
New England vtstt to stump Kentucky
for Democraltc senators
Winter stofm warnings
Saymg the canal really were m eflect for central
should belong to Panama Vtrgmta most of Maryland
Carter remtnded the students and the Washmgton D C ,
and partnts that negottattons area while heavy snow
have gone on £or 14 years and wammgs were tssued for the
been supported by Lyndon mountam areas of western
Johnson and all subsequent Mqryland through northeast
prestdents
Tennessee

Soviets launch
another Cosmos
MOSCOW (UPI ) - The
Sov1et Umon has launched
mto orb1t another Cosmos
sateihte the offtctal Tass
news agency satd Saturday
The satelhte - number 990
m the sertes- was launched
Friday and ctrcles the Earth
every 101 mmutes m an orbit
that takes tl 497 mtles from
the Earth at tis maxunum
distance and 434 mtles at tts
closest

Ano\her theory has Lt that the governor s people are
pumpmg up Speck and Vomovtch to keep former Ll Gov John
W Brown out of the audtlor's race

Rhodes has feuded wLth the Ferguson clan sance 1952 when
he beat the currmt uudttor s rather Joseph I FergtL...on

U Gov Rtchard F Ceiosle ts Romg m for Ute lnstalilnent
plan to r&amp;se monc\ for his J.,'Ul&gt;ernijton al t:amp,ugn
Celeste senl a telier lo suppor lers hop m ~ lluy wt ll come up
1Uih a $25 donuuon ~nml,1taleiJ nnd $10 a month Ihereafter
I'hts as not an CtlS} tusk for me but onf' Hu1t musl lx llu n~
.smd (.;~leste U\ 11u:tlung the tl!stu .s t efulll't!U~st f&lt;H 1 1\ 0 il~Y
Please gave as much us ) ou can now ancl hll out lh{
encJosed card tf ) ou Cdn p1 ovtde a monthh &lt;ontrtbutwn 1 h~
campa1gn wll l sc nd) ou c1 t. VUJlOil lxxlk to sen c ,ts u r(\mmdc1
of your monthly eonmutmcnt
Kind of hke bu) mg 1set of c11() t' lopedl.l-'&gt; 1

Friend murdered
NICOSIA Cyprus (UP! ) rw o ArabJ c-s pe aktn g
gunm en Saturd ay shot
a clos e
and
ktlled
fn cnd of Pres ident An
war Sadat then herded !0
hostages mto a bus to the
atrpurt at l arna c &lt;:~ a nd
threatened to k1llthem nne b}
one Wlless they got a plane to
free dum
The gunmen who satd they
\\. ere Pale~1mtan but "hom
Arab offtctals satd may be
Entrean guernllas stormed

Wttnesses sa1d tne ~:;unn wn
ca rr ymg
prst ol s
ami
grenades SJ)(Jtlcd the g1oup s
secretary Youssef Se bal of
Eg;pt ed1lor tn t htef of the
Catro newspaper AI Ahram
and advtsor to Prestdent
Sadat and ftred ftve or stx
shots mto hun at c.: lose nmge
Seha1 al:;o " prohf1c Egyptian nv ve h~t and one of t he
group of offtcer.s who staged
the Egyptian revolution wtth
lhe late Gatnal Abdel Nasser
fell fatally wounded m the
he,ld a nd chest oul:s1cte a
mto a hutel hostmg the Afro
IIOOkstall
m the hallway He
Astan Peoples Soidtanty
was
dead
on arrtVcll a t
Orgamzataon meetmg as 1t
Ntco s ta Gen et al Ho spi\al
was about to begm
n £ftctc~l s sa1d

l11c !-,'UnmeHthcn fm c~ d up
to 80 pm snn:s It ito the h lt: 1s
cofrec shop but S(~t ln r d&lt; ns&lt; il
all but 10 nr lh ~ m
I It~
ho s ta ~ ~ s
who lll t' ludml
Cvprwt

In te l WI Mtnt s tcl
Ctmstodo ulo~ Vcnt amm unci

V,tssns I } ssandcs lc.ulu or
the Cypnot SlK:ttthst Pm t)
were t.tken to the an port ell
l..arnac.:(1
The ~Wllll t!ll

S(

I

cl

ri c tclllllc

for U1e1r pla m tu take Utclll to
an Wlknown dcslltldttvn 01
warned the) would s tat I
kiihng thctr hn;t ngc, bul 11
pa ssed \\lthout tn c1dcnt
I yssa11dcs
n cg o ttLtl c d
between the gumnc n md
offu1il s 1t UH 111p1rl

~ llll!IH n

Ihl

Ihut 1htu It
h 0 111 lh II ut

tcl t 1

ll so uskl'(l
ht flown In

l m I m1 l H~ l Ull
Au \\ lt\s pl lflt nm:i fhm n to

pH_k hu ll up But I ~ b ~~~ ~~~
ol ll tl t Otll lt S
l lf u sc cl
pet Jfli SSH 11 f m lh ~ pl tru hi
ln11 d lii HI 11 l t lllllll d 1 11 1 pl ~
Off• n lis s,ml tltt ~ !H. Ill Vt'tl
lin ~unnun It ln lliltc ~uJ :s
b ut d t It g tl t to f t m !Nth
S t ll lc t h t
Mil l I tluup t 1
UJ CII I:st lvt ~ 1!1\ ulwd
111
1

t:. u d lt

\\i tl

tu Utt

0'-i HIOI

H11t lttlcll lht
I un fl IIIH l S 111 1 \ht !\1 1hh
till ' umncn st•tlkt wm; 111 I tht
knnl 1f A1 abt( spokt' n 111 lh&lt;'
J il1 n of t\f!lf. d

fk s{t l

who

Boyle convicted again
8\' EDWARD J MCFALL

MEDIA PA (UP!) - W A
Tony
Boyle
form er
prestdent of the Umted Mme
Workers was convicted a
second tlltle for first degree
murder m the 1969 slaymgs of
unton nval Joseph Jock
Yablonskt hts wtfe and
daughter
A JUCY of 11 men and one
woman returned the verdict
against the 76 year old
defendant shortly before 10
am a[ter dehberatmg about
ftve hours almost the same
amount of tune the first JUry
too k to convtcl
Afl&lt;!r the verdict was read
by Jury foreman Davtd Wood
a former policeman and was
recorded mto the record
defense Attorney A Charles

Peruto annoWII..'ed that he
v. ould appeal
Spec aal prosecutor Htchard
A Sprague pra tsed th e
tremendous effort of law
enforcement agen cies m
gathet mg the evtdence that
conv1cted Boyle of ch.u ges
that he orde red the
a.s.sassmallon of Yablonski
59 on June 23 1!l69 after the
vtctun had announ c"ed he
would oppose Boyle for the
umon presidency
Boyle "'ttmg ngtdly at the
defense table
seemed
•tunned by the verdtct and
turned a round wtth a
pieadmg glance ai his
daughter Antotnt!lte who
was sllhng directly hehtnd
hun m the front row of the
courtroom She seemed to be

bhnkmg back tc ,lrs IS " ciS
Boyl es b1 olll ct Hllliir&lt;l
who sat ftlongs tdc he1
lk1yle would mly ~,l) l11t 1

Vel dt&lt;

t

W IS cllli\O UIICt

l\ tlld

hdllrH' t: )llllll Cn l 1ftct wm lis

1 ~ u c Chd ltsh out at
II HWilllx I S o£ \he IU WS
thd~ I Ill dts tppumt ~d
11\ C{h I Witt he c:lllllll Cd
Sp• ague asked th 1t Boyle s dlowt;d lh c 1n stl v~s to b
$2511 Ollll bond be 1c vok c~l I he
Sj)U\ IIl fl d
IJ} the tlcft Wit
request w I S derued by prcsul
tnt! p1 cs l ntclt wha t hi..'
mg Judge 11 mc1s CatHIU/1
cid iJJl Cd \H IS bt lsUI l ~l' nllllt S
IJLit th e Judge sc lledulc\l 1 t f the tttdl
he.trmg for ntxt F1l(l1 y lu
llc 11lso ~1s ht h td done 111
deternnnc whc lhca b 111 Ill s
t los rr11
1 ~ 11 1 11k s
should !J c 1 evoked 01 11 ltl t.; l..:e d Pet uln fm wll~tt ht
IOl'IC.tsed
d IIIIIL'tl WIS h n11 ell llll )
Bec.:a ll:ie he wtll .1ppca l t~nd 1 hut l e~q u c f [ Uw
Perutq h~d httlc to :;.ty ulxltll p1 uccc dm~s
lltc vcrd1 d Cdllt c v.lul c
the verdicl
Boy le s w 1f c I th d 77 w IS m
Yablonskt s sons
C.l11p
and Kenneth who II td s 1t In II 111 11 b y llll Sillt tl S htc
1
pt ss liJi c
the eourtromn fm almu st thf s uff ~e accl
cntn:e hv e weeks of tht pnemnon1a d llut k t 11 Iter Ill
prol'eedmgs d1d not sho w the week

Spa

SCV~I

much e mot1 011 v.h en th e

Nixon's lifestyle revealed
By CLAY F RICHARDS
WASHINGTON (UP!) H R Haldeman s new book
The End s of Power •
reveals much about the
Rtchard Ntxon that only a few
mstders knew but httle sohd
new fact about Watergate
Although the book earned
the heady promtse of a tell
all • expose on the great
scandal It mstead offers
theones and educated
guesses that shed ltttle light
on the unanswered questtons
of Watergate
It LS posstble that what
Haldeman
calls
hts
theories are indeed fact
and that he mUbl wnte them
as conjecture m order to
avotd addiltonal prosecutton
on perjury charges - smce
much of what he says
appears to C"Ontradtcl what he
told Watergate mves!Lgators
years ago
The book makes three
maJor clauns about Ntxon s
Watergate role None is new
- That Ntxon was partly
responstble for the celebrated
lfti,"z mmute erasure m one
Watergate tape but probably
had help from his secretary
Rose Mary Woods Legal and
tape experts concluded m
court that three people could
have done tt Ntxon Woods
and atde Steven Bull who had
no motive
- That Ntxon dtd not
directly order the Watergate
break-&lt;n but caused tt by
demanding his subordinates
dtg
up
pohltcally
embarrassmg matenal on
Democratic leaders That ts
what John Dean told the
Senate Watergate commtttee
almost ftve years ago, and
what most Watergate book
authors have asserted
- Thai Nuron &gt;1as m on the
Watergate cover up from
day one A grand jury
concluded much the same
when It named him an
unlndicted co-consptrator m
the cover up It LS also what
the smoking ptstol tape of
a June 23, 1972 conversation
showed to the sattsfaction of
most members of the House,
who were ready to unpeach

him on that evtdence
So ht stortans w1ll not loo k to
Haldeman s book to answer
the pivotal Waterga te
ques tton comed by Sen
Howard Baker
What dtd
the president know a nd when
did he know tl 1
But they wtll study the book
to learn about Naxon the man
Haldeman was the Whtte
House offlctal closest to
NtxOn , and probably spent
mure tune With hun tha n
anyone outstde his famtly
Although many constdered
the tactturn coldly efftctent
Haldeman Ntxon s alter ego
he
now reveals the
relationship was never close
or warm from a personal

standpomt
To tht s day he docsn I
know how m my children I
have or ilnythmg else ubout
my prt vate hfe Huldcm 1r1
wntes He never asked .md
I wa s h1s clu:-;cst p1 ofcsslmHd
ass: ctate
He says Nixon hdd an
amazmg awkwardness m
dealmg wtlh people faco lo
fa ce on a personul IKtsts u1
a personal cont ext he w.1s
st1ff artificia l somctuncs
even em ban ass mg With
mdtv1duals
Hts desc1tptton of how
N1xon would greet an 0 \ al
Off1ee guest
The president kept a desk
dr.twer filled "ath mementos

Nairobi embassy
closed by Iran
By SAJID RIZVI
TEHRAN Iran IUPI) Iran dosed 1ts Na1robJ
Embassy and recalled Lts
ambassador Saturday m
answer to KenyWl cnllc1sm
of LIS SUp)lllrl of Somaba Ln LIS
Ogaden Desert war agamst
Ethtopta
Foretgn Mlntster Abhas AIL
Khalatban announced the
dec1swns at a hurrtedly
called newl'i conference and
satd Iraman mterests m
Kenya would be represented
by a 'frtendly country to be
named later
Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavt has kept a close eye
on the Ogaden war because tl
may detennme con trot of the
strategic Gulf of Aden and
Red Sea - the mam sea route
of Irantan petroleum sold to
the Umted States and
Europe
Khalatbart satd he was
surpnsed and saddened • by
Na1rob1 s cnticLSms,
espeCially a comment by
Kenyan Foretgn Mtmster
Munyua Watyakt that Iran
IS not an Afrtcan sial&lt;! to take
Sldes 111 an Afncan Issue (the

Og0:1den war)
Surely the rmmster mtL&lt;&gt;t
be mformed about foretgn
mvolvement m Afnca and
who the foretgners are,
Khalatbart relorted
Does
he not know about the Cubnn
troops flghhn g the wa r Arc
they AfriCans I
Sovtet and Cuban lroops
are backmg Ethtopta m the
Ogaden war sparked by
Somalt temtonal ciauns on
the desert Natrobt whtch
has tts own border dtsputes
w1lh Somaha
oppo ses
fore1gn mlh tary aJd for
Somalia fot any reason
Khalatbart satd Iran has
sent Somaha only medtcal
asSistance • But diplomatLc
sources tn Somalia say
Tehran sent m lar llP.
quant1t1es of surface to
a1r mtsstles mortars and
heavy artillery ammumhon
Khalatban satd Nairobt
newspapers had
been
crtttctzing Iran s support of
Somalta for some tune, but
Wa1yaki s recent comment
was the first lime the Kenya
government had made the
dispute offtctal

of the Wlut e House cufnmks ti c pms tilin g~ like
thnt He would Jbr uptl y turn
IIW IY takt l ri C OUt or the
t lro~wLI

utd w1th out
luokuLg h H k - tlu ust 1t
tuwoH d hiS ~UI p1 1scd t-4Ue st

l1ke 1 prn bas ktlbull gumd
off I IJ til behtnd hLS
hack
111cn he \\( uld \4 oul&lt;lturn
to th~ mdn tnd tell hi s
!'&gt;t~1 mhn d N1xon JOke Uwt
never n my n c111ory dr ew d
lau gh G1ve Uus tn vuur w1fe
or your sec retary Y.hi chcver
vo u 11rcfer
h,ut dtn ~

Oranges will
be inspected
PHil ADE I PHI A iUPI I l'he ~ ood mel Drug Ad
rmm.str 1t10n will h 1vc to walt
untll Monda y t 1 In s pect
lUI 000 cases of Isr ael1
urangcs fm po ssible mercury
contamma t1on
fh c mspcct10n wa s ftrst
sc hedul ed l o take pla ce
Stiturday but the owner of
the car go sh1p smd the cost of
kecptn g th e ship docketI over
the weckeud tmt tl unluaders
could be hi red Monday was
too high
fh c concern w1th th e
oranges sterns from recent
!:t1a tcmcnts by an anti Isrucll
tcrronst group
whtch
cl atmed rc spon .S tbtllty for
conturnmatm13 sume lsrach
man ge
s hipment s
t ()
Eurcpean countncs 1n an
effort to dtsrupt lsra elt s
economy
As a safet} prccuutwn tho
li'DA sa td they plan to check
the oranges for the mercut y
the ~a rn e substcmce used In
thermometers
11Le FDA has sa1d tha t the
mercury IS not hannful when
mgested 10 small quantittes
and LS easy to detect
The S S Nordland amved
tn
Phtla dclphta
ea rly
Saturday m01:·mng after a
two day r un from Hahfax,
Nova Scotia
f.he Nordl and unloaded
some of the fsra elt oranges m
Canada a nd none were found
to have been contammated

�..
D-3-The Sundav Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 19,1978

•
[).2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 19, 1978

: For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

SUNDAY CROSSWORD
ACROSS

6 1 Vessel

1 Contests
6 Make l 1dy
1 1 Oepres s10n s
worn bv wa ter
18 Decorate
19 C 1•mb1ng pla nt
20 Ra tse
21 Co me o n the

scene

62 1r1Sh poet

1 21 Cho1te part
123 Depos 11

6 4 Plura l endmg
65 Hebrew letter
66 Refuse from

I 2 4 Portion ot
medic ine

grapes
6 7 Heavy volumes
69 Stnp of leather
71 Vtgor (colloq.}
73 Ta n ned h1de

125 Clue
126 Gall mound
1 27 Shake$pearian
c haracter

I 29 Pertaining to
Denmark

74 Goddess of dis- 131 Speed contbst
23 Undergro und
cord
132 Girl's name
part of plan t
76 Ape ·
133 Abstract being
24 Crim son
79 Place lor com - 134 Parent (colloq.)
2fi Wande r
bat
1 38 Part in glly
27 Senior labbr.l
8 1 Female rul.f
137 Quote
291ta!ian poot
82 Val ,
' 1 38 Res pond
30 Footwear
84 LUerary ~om 139Samt(abbr .)
31 Wear y
pos llion
140 B.ark ctoth
32 Mr . Onass-1s
85 Disc iplines
141 Mounta1non
lcolloq.l
87 Let fall
Crete
33 Ba k er's produc t 90 Highly sens ible 142 Shellered .nlet
34 Class of ver te92 Vi etnamese
143 Rents
brate s cons 1s tholiday
144 Quietude
•ng of th e buds
93 So uth Amer1 can 146 Yellow in hue
35 Wander
ammal
1 48 Vei&lt;Jellike tabnc
36 Par t of camera
95 Pari of play
149 Boats
(pi I
97 Hebrew monlh 150 Go in
38 Longs lor
98 Preposition
151 Twelve dozen
40 Defa ce
99 Symbol lor
41 Fru+t
tellur+um
DOWN
42 Extremely terr i- 1 01 Babylonian hero
ble
10 3 Olne
1 One of FOR 's
43 .Ch art
1 04$ talk
VPs
45 Co nd imen t
I OS More sagac 1ous
2 Mine en lrances.
46 Symbol lor silv er t 0 8Goal
3Stir
47 Rip.
110 8etohg1ng to the
4 Before
48 Athlet ic group
summer
5 Sy mbo l tor tin
49 Bill of fare (pl l
112 At what time?
6 Sa dness
5 1 Foreto~en
113 Arl 1c le o f fur 7
Disturbance
5 2 Corr.pas s pom t
n1ture
8 Grain
53 Paddle
1 1 4 Compass point
9 Preposition
54 Pro phet
I 15 The sweet sop
0 Sea soldier
1
5 5 Conu ndrum s
11 7 Lo ng-legged
11 Boug ht back
57 Sk ill
tmd
12 Ma n's nicknamH
58 Former Russ ian 118 Cou ntry of Asia
13
Girl's na me
rulers
119 Part of race
14 Elephant's tusk 6
120 Spanish (a bbr.)
60 Float m a•r

15 Nahons· vessels

78 Negative

16 French for

80 River In "I rica

" summer"
17 Compass point
21 Unyielding

83 Rav
86 Shaner
59 Toll

23 Bellow
25 Bitter vetch
27 Genuine
28 Feels indignant

90 Hebrew tetter

al
30WIIdhog

3 1 F i :.~ed period ol
Hme
33 Latin for " first "
35 Hind part
3fi Falsifier
37 CoverBd with
sand
39 G.l.'s address
4 t Edible seeds
42 Antlered anirna l
44 Whimpers
47 Rippect
48 Instru ctors
49 Bishop's headdre ss
50 Chairs
54 Classified
55 European
capita l
56 Rigorous
59 Supplicate
60 District in G6rmany
61 River in Italy
63 1dentlca l
66 Pronoun
67 1nitlalsol28t h
President
88 LocaleS
70 Piebald horses
71 Man's nick name
72 Transgress
73 Woolly
75 Abrupt
77 Devo ured

91 Near labbd
94 Poker Stakes
98 Rise and tell ol
ocean
991nstructs
100 Enrollee
102 Ventihated
104 footwear
105 Direction

\06 Allar

.•

1071terates

$400 DONATED.
POMEROY - Christmas •
mailers sent by the Meigs .:
Co unty Chapter of the •
American Cancer Society:;
have brought in $400 to the .~
chapter from Meigs County -!
bu siness
houses.
Mrs. :
Dolores Frank, director, or-:
the local chapter extends :
th8nks to businesses and.,..
individua ls who responded.::

109 Judges
11 1 Devoted
worshiper
112Ciean
113 Pari of skele ton
116 Sodium chloride
1 18 Be defeated
119 Keen
122 Com memoratilie
disks
124 Distend

125 Delesl
126 Plagues
128 Binds
130 Bow
13 1 Body of water
132 Inclines
135 European
137 Con tend with
138 City in Nevada
140 Cravat
142 Sever
143 Malay gibbOn
144 Sub voce (abbr.)
145 Roman number :

-

150
148 Postgraduate

labbr .J

in CPR event at HMC
GALLIPOLIS - Eight Cub
Scouts, members of Den 3,
Pack 203 in Gallipolis, met
recently In the Fifth Floor
Cla ssroom of the Holzer
Medical Center to receive an
intro.duction
to
Cardiopubnonary Resuscitation
(CPR) .
These young men received
instruction in CP R· from
Unda Craft, R.N., a certified
CPR instructor approved by
the· American Red Cross. The
cub scouts were most en-

t husiastic
a bout
thei r
training.'
After Ms. Craft completed
the instruction, the cub scouts
then took turns practicing the
techniques of CPR under her
careful eye and guidance.
Refreshments of cooki es
and chocolat e milk were
served to these young men ,
proud of their newly acquired
Skills in
life
saving
techniques, by Den Mother's
Sara Spurlock and Lynda
Myers.

fwo juveniles
now in custody

McComas prese_n ts
Rotary program

here .
The first occurred at 8:57
.a.m·. on Third Ave. and State
St. wher e a vehi cle dri ven by
J udith
Ann
McCu! ty,
Gallipo lis, struck a parked

motorist .
Another hit-skip accident
occurred at 252 Third Ave. on
the Pennyfare lot where an

WASHINGTON (UPI) Ma ny U.S. military expert~
say both Moshe Daya n and
Cyrus Vance a re wrong in

their dispute over how the
new U.S. warplane sale will
affect the Middle East power
balance.
These analysts be lieve
Israel is now so strong that
the three-way jet fighter deal
will reinforce its superiority
- not merely keep things
even, as the secretary of state
says, or tilt them in favor of
the Arabs, as the Israeli

"Everybody thinks we' re
using it in the sense of some
gigantic set of scales, with
one erid balancing the other,''
one State Department official
says.

MIDDLEPORT - L. W.
McComas presented a n interesting program on the
pyramids of Egypt Friday ·
night when t he. Middleport Pomeroy Rotary C}ub met at
Heath " United . Methodist
Churcl\.
Bob Buck, m embership
chairman , announced an
attendance contest will get
underway on the first Friday
in March . Winners of the
contest after two months will
eat steak dinners while the
losing team will have beans

Women of the church
owned by Wanda L. Neal, 25, · served a steak dinner Fridey
evening.
Rt. 1, Bidwell.
Another accident occurred
on Vine St. on a .private lot
where Vehicles driven by
Brenda K. Wheeler, 20,
Gallipolis; and Patricia J.
Porter, 17, Rt. 2, Crown City,
backed into each other:

~

1978
FAIRMONT FUJURA
Crearh gold vinyl roof, 6 cyl.
engine, aut oma tic trans ·
mission , CR78){1-4 w -s-w tires ,
air conditioned. AM rad io,
tinted g lass, dual bright
mirrors.
Slk. No . 2S4
Sticker Price

•5628

, 1978 FAIR_MONT
2 DR SEDAN

Chili,
Barbequed Ribs,
Country Ham,
Fried Mush,
Hot Biscuits &amp;
Sausage Gravy?-

1978 FAIRMONT
4 DR SEDAN
6 cyl. eng ine, cloth Interior.

mission , power steering and
brakes, BR78xi.C W· S·W tires,
deluxe bumper group. AM
rad io, Interior decor, tinted
glas!, bright dual , mirrors,
pi voting vent windows. deluxe
wheel covers.

automatic transmission, AM
radio, c igar lighter, DR7Bx14
W·S· W tires . power steering
and brakes, air condi t ioner,
AM rad io, Interior accent
group, tinted windshield, vinyl

Stk. No. 2S5

Slk. No. 326

6

Jade with fade vinyl roof, 6
cyl. engine, paint stripes,
automatic trans .. B R78xl4 wS·W tires,
power steering,
deluxe bumper group, interior
decour group·, tinted glass:
pivoting vent windows.

Stk. No. 262

1978 FAIRMONT
2 DR
cyl. engine, automatic trans·

Slicker Price

•5465

poi sonous

Director

1978 FORD
FAIRMONT FUTURA
302 engine. automatic trans.,

'

4314

power steering, power brkes,
OR78 xl-4, W·S·w tires, deluxe
bumper grou p, rear windOw
defroster, air, AM-FM stereo
radio with tape, In terior
decor, dual m irrors, tinted
glass, prot. group, I ight group,

wire wheel covers. ,
No. 209 Was $6488

581 O

2 dr., 6 cyl. engine, auto.matlc
transmission, ·power steering
and brakes, paint stripes, air
conditonlng, AM radiO wllh
Ia ~&gt;&lt;: .

tlnled glass, tight group,

wire wheel covers, v inyl body

side mtdg. Slok. No. 40

LE

Was S5524

Now

1978 FORD
FUTURA
engine, vinyl trim,

302
automat ic trans ., power
steering and brakes , air
' condition lng, front and rear
bumper guard , AM radio,
Interior decor group, tinted
glass, dual bright mirrors,
wire wheel covers.

•5620
ow

Stk. No. 303 N
Was~148

1978 FAIRMONT
FUTURA
302 engine, aUtomatic tran·s.,

1978 FORD
FAIRMONT

'4999

bucket seats, poW~r steering
and brakes, coh.veniente
group, electric clock, sports
steer! ng
wheeL
deluxe
bumper group, AM radio with
stereo tape, tinted glass,
heavy duty battery, 4 cast
aluminum wheels.

Stk. No. 204
Was S5970
Now

•5420

1978 FAIRMONT
2 DR
6 cyl. engine, automatic trans-

1978 FAIRMONT
2DR
Dark blue metallic, vinyl roo1,

mission , power steering and
brakes, front and rear bumper
guards, air conditioner, AM
radio, interior decor group,
tinted glass. delu)(e CQver6,
vinyl bodyslde mldgs .

bench sea t, 4 cyl. englrie,
automatic tran s., powe r
steering, AM radio, exterior
decor, · interior decor group,
tinted glass, vinyl bodyside
moldings.

Stk. No. 257
waumo

Now•4700

w••

1978 'FAIRMONT
FUTURA
Dark blue, white .vinYl roof,
302 engine, autOmatic transmission, Power st~ring and
brakes, deluxe bumper group,
air cond itioner, AM radio,
interior decor group, tinted
glass, dual bright mirrors.

w••

Now

•5480

S4861

•·

Purchase Of

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FORlHElATEST
IN GENERAL ELECTRIC T.V.'S

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COL()R -

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~

F iring Line 33; 7:3D-Antlques 20.

8:oo-Project U.F.O. 3,4,1S; How The West Was Won
6,13; Rhoda 8,10; Evening A Smyphony 2Q,33.

of Praise 6 ; Day of Discovery 8i James Robison
Presents 10; Willard Wllc:ox 13; Open Bible 15.

8: 3()-..()n Our Own 8,10.

'9.:oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Robert Schuller 4;
: . Mister Rogers 20.
· ·
~·9 : 3G-What Does The Bible Plainly Say? 8:
• Written 10; Chur&lt;:h Service 13; Zoom 20.

II Is

~0 : 00-Chrlsl Is The Answer 3: Church Service 4;

·~,

.:,

Aware 6; Christian Center 8; Sesame St. 20; Movie
"Von Ryan's Express" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13;

'I

Gospel Singing Jubilee 1S.

:.

Yours for the Asking 4;
America's Black :- ort~m 6; Way of The Cross 8;
Garner Ted Armstrong 13.

~O : Jo-Rex Humbard 3;
~1
~

,

11 :3D-Movie "Silent Running" 3; Movie ''My

Cousin Rachel" 4; Movie "LeMons" 15; Second
City T.V . 6; 700 Club 81 Face the Nallon 10; PTL
Club 13; Monty Python's Fi~lng Circus 33.
·
12:GO-Soul Train 6; Movie • Donovan' s Reel" 10; .
Janakl33; 12 :30-ABC News 13.Movie Channel4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. - Annie Halt (PGl
7 &amp; 11 P.M..,-The Sting IPGI

,

:oo-Doclors on Call 4: Big Blue Marble 6; Ernesl
Angley 8; Rev. Henry Mahan 13; Rex Hum bard 15;
• lnllnlty Factory 20. ·
~ 1:3G-Outdoors With Julius Boros 3; Animals,

POMEROY
LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Drive A . LiHit and S.vo A Lot-Fr• O.llvory
within 75 Mltu-Yesl We Service At Your Lout
Hotpolnt Outer.
,
Store Hours : 1:301o 5:30-Mitl Closout5 :GG P.MServing Mtlgs, Gor lito &amp; Moson Countln.
·

MONDAY, FEBRUARY20,1978
5:45-Farm Report 13; S:~PTL Club 13; 5:55-'
· Sunrise Semester 10; 6:DO-PTL Club 15; 6:25Medlx 10.
.
6 :3G-Cotumbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
6: 45-'Mornlng Report 3; 6 :50-Good Momlng, ·
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-'Chuck White Reports 10;

Animals, Animals 6; Focus on Columbus 4; Medlx
~; lJ; Elec. Co. 20 .
~;12 : QO-At Issue 3; News Conference 4; F.,ce the Nation
1•
8; Issues &amp; AnsWers 6 ; Energy Dilemma : Social

News 13.

' Significance 13; This Is The Ute 15; Rebop 20.
t12 :3G-Meet The Press 3,4, 15; Directions 6; Christian
; Broadcast 8i The Issue. 10: Evangelist talvln
,."'

Evans 13; Characteristics of Learning Disabilities

•

20.

•

Continuing Creation 15; Eldon Miller : Basketball

:
:

6; Bob Jones 8; Washington Week In Review 33;
Challenge of the Sexes 10; !~sues &amp; Answers 13 ; Pro

·

·

7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News a; Bullwlnkle 10.
·
7:30-Schoolles 10; 7:45-'Sesame St . 33: 8:oo-capt.
Kangaroo 8,10.
9:oo-Merv Grltlln 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Family Affair 8; Match Game .10.
9:30-Emergency One 6; Andy Griffith 8; Family
Affair 10.

~-1 :oo-Tony Brown's Journal 3; Truth or Cons. 4:

.• ~

.

9:0G-Awakenlng Land 3,4,1S; Allin The Famllty 8, 10;
Anna Kaarenlna 20,33; 9 :30-AIIce 8.10.
10 :oo-Carol Burnell 8,10; Nova 20; Hollywood
Television Theatre 33; 11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15.
11 :15-'ABC News 6: CBS News 8,10: PMA Pulse 15:

=
Oral Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard
•
Repass 8; Jlm Franklin 13; Ernest Angley 15;

"'

~'·

Will do

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11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15
Happy Days 6, 13;
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11; 3G-Knockoul 3, 1S; Family Feud 6, 13; Partridge
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6: Jo-N BC News 3. 15; 30 Minutes 8: French Chef 20.33.
7:0G-World of Disney 3,4, lS; Hardy Boys-Nancy Drew
6, 13; 60 Mlnules 8, tO; Crockelt' s VIctory Garden 20;

I :3G-Oraf Roberts 3; Jimmy Swaggart 4; Celebration
-..

20; Kanawha County SChbol board meeting

,Fishing 8; Voyage to the Battom ot the Sea 10;

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Bible Class 1:.t
1(11 :()(}-Day of Discovery 4; Grace Cathedral6; Dr . E.J .
:
Daniels Presents Happiness Is 13; Sesame St. 20.

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American Problems &amp; Challenges 10; Agriculture :

~

.. -

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24 Hr. Wrecker Service
Phone:

4:00-College Basketball 3,4, IS: NBA Basketball 8, 10
4 :3G-Wide World of Sports 6, 13.
5:0G-Rebop20; Nova33; 5:3o-Goll6,13; Elec. Co. 20;
6:0Q-News 3; Newsmagazine 4; Championship

:' Food For Though! t3.
:"7:!10-;-Big Blue Marble 3; Eddie Saunders 6; Thinking
• In Black 8; Treehouse Club 10; Newsmaker '78 13.
:1 :30-TV Chapell; Your Heallh 4; Show My People 6;
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2:3G-Sporlsworld 1S; Fairmont Forum 12; 3:oo-Auto
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,
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19,1978
' :OG-Chrlstopher ·Closeup 3; AG-USA 4; For You
,, Black Woman 8; This Is The Ltle 10; 6:3o-Thls Is
~
The Ltfe 3; Jerry Falwell 4; Talking Hands 8;

With

3/4" screw d rive, pow ·
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automatic rever se, rim e
de lay, cush ion
light
door arm, automati c 1e ·
conn ect tr o lley , posi·
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internal
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33.
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Marry a Millionaire" . 4; D~namic Duos 15; Sound ·

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VIEWING

TABLE MODELS -

Now

flat,.. ltollalorl

n~s95s

J&amp;L

This Is the Sale You've A waited at •••

•

FABULOUS

p~ ~92 -2114

No. 355
Was

SALES AND SERVICE

I 4

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

•4240

,.~-.0.

11 ·9·11&lt;

""'"·

S'llver,
4
cy l.
engine.
automatic t ransmissi on ,
power steering, AM radio,
dual bright m irrors, vinyl
roof. BR78x 1-4 W· S· W tires. Stk.

For a good deal see Tom Sprague, Mtlvin
Litfl~, John Koehn, Morris Sheets, Terry
Hamilton, Gary Rudolph.

RADIO CONTROLLED
GARAGE.OOOR OPEN

hol.. hu to tt..

....

·Or99H263
8A.M. to4 :30P.M.

N~..

Service
,.,.._
a.r,..,

1968 FAIRMONT
FtiruRA

Stk. No. 332

$6100

Now

$4647

I

Carpeting

Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 991-6:182

Wood Stoves

Stk. No. 206

362 JACKSON PIKE-RT. 160 &amp; 35 ACROSS FROM HOllER MEDICAL CENTER

extra ·
transmitter

' Chester , Ohio
10-JI),c:

Young's

C.rpet • UptlOIIIIry
Phono Mib founr
lt
992-220fi or S92·l630

3GG Moln St.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Box 34

Superior'
Stum Eltr•ctlon

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Phone 985-3806

Tt)omas C. Breech,

Second Ave.
,
Gallipolis
Phone 446-2239 or 446-

CARTER

Rr si dent ia l
and
commercial. Call to r
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.

School of Business
414

Upper Routt 7
Ktnougo, Ohio
614-446-46ff

Business Services

Slicker Price

Southern HiiiS
'

gl ue a re ci r-

M&amp;G MACHINE
SHOP

Gallipolis, Ohio

Comer of Third &amp; Court

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

THALER FORD SALES

Americas largest inde·
pendent manufacturer
of garage door openers

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

SPRING QUARTER
STARTS MAR . \5

culating in Ita ly, according to
postal o(ficials.
foreig n minister argues.
Officials said they had so
The wrangling seems to be
fa
r received no reports of
co mplicated by the fact the
persons
becoming ill alter
Unite.d States ·a nd lsr~~ J
licking
the
backs of the
mean different things by the
stamps
to
paste
on letters .
phrase " balance of power."

CONSOLE -

See It Today At .•

bodv side mtd .

Slicker Price

Soccer 20.
' 1 :3D-Bewitched 3; Women Superstars 6. 13; LittlE

Can You

Fr11 Ettlmat••

No Job Too Lorge
or Too Smoll

'5539

unknown vehicle struck a car

Where

Public wolk tn butlnou,
Jn&lt;IUttrlot or conttrucllon
butlnou wolcomod.
L.lrgt toth01 on&lt;l borlnt
mlllt.
Mttolizlng, weldtnt ond
hallblllng.
ll•llabrlcollon, complott
ttack. of atee l: rounds,
pa.t11 •nd structu111.

058!iB

POISON STAMPS
MILAN, Italy (UP!)
Th ousa nds of co unterfe it
postage stamps backed with

POITAILI
WILDING
IIIVICI

DOISIIAlL

For intormation, write,
visit, or call without delay.

POMEROY - The two
juveniles picked , up in
Pomeroy Thursday m.orning
have been turned over to the
Ohio Youth Commission , One
of the youths was wanted as a
parole violator from . Mansfield while the second yo uth
wa s a runaway from a
Franklin County Foster home
having been placed there by
the Youth Commission.
In other matters. Thursday, Jim Diddle, Racine,
reported to the sheriff's office
that he had two batteries
stolen from a piece of his
equipment parked a t a
drilling site in Rutland
Township.
That inc ident is und e r
investigation.

Four mishaps probed by city Po lice a nd cornbread.
car owned by Nancy J ,
Ca stee l, Ga llipoli s. There
was minor damage.
Later on. the Casteel car
was struck by a hit-skip

Experts say leaders wrong

SERVICES

1978 Fairmont Futura ,
sliver, 6 cyl. engine,
automat ic
transm ission .
power steering and brak!!s,
air conditioner, AM rad io,
tinted glass, dual bright
m irrors. Stlc. No. l~C
Slicker Price

Yes, in only 9 or 12
months you are well
prepared for that
good office job.
'
We have more job
ca lis
for
our
graduates than we
have graduates
there must be a .
reas.on!
Courses approved by
Ohio State Board of
School &amp; College
Registration .
RN

14 7 Art ic le

SHOP

FAIRMONT
FUTURA

You Can Do It In
A Year At SHSB.•

Cub Scouts take part

GALLIPO LIS - No one
was injured or cited in four
traffi c accidents investiga ted
Friday by city police offi cer s

·FESTIVAl.
OF VALUES ·

Fabulous

96 Symbol lor niton

MEMBERS of Den 3, Cub Pack 203, Gallipolis, who attended a recent CPR instruction
course at Holzer Medical Center, are, front row, left to right, Bobby Allen, Heath McBride
and Tim Spurlock. Back r ow, left to right. Olris Myers, Mike !Jean, Greg Elliason alld
Bruce O'Rourke. Absen t from the picture, Bill Savage. '

MACHINE

THALER FORD'S

88 BOd ~ ol water

22 Plunders

Tomor.row 8,10; Gong SHow 15; Elec . Co. 33.
1:oo-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children· 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Wom en

Only 15.
1: 3G-Days of Our Lives 3.4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:00-Dne Lite to Ltve 6,13; 2:3G-Doctors
3,4, 15; Guiding Light 8, 10.

TUR LEY ' S WRECKER Servic• .
Racine, Ohio . Oov or night .
949· 2657 ,
ANY SE WING machine cle an ed.
oiled &amp; adjusted , . $5.98 . FREE

pickup and delivery. Belpre,
Ohio. 1-423-5497 .

3:00-Another World 3,4,1 5; General Hosp1tal 6, 13;

Adams Chronic les 33; Ltllas Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-AI I In The Family 8,10: Prime Time 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge of Night 13; My Three
Sons 4; For Richer, For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Gilligan' s Is. 8: Sesame S. 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC tO.
4:3o-Ltttle Rascals~, 15; Gllligan'sls. 4; Brady Bunch
8, 10; Mary Tyler MOOre 13.
5:QO-Here Come The Brides 3; Star Trek .4; Gunsmoke

8; Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood .20,33; Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Em~rgency One 13; To Be Announ ced
15.
5:3G-News 6; Elec. Co. 2D.33: Mary Tyler Moore 10:
Hogan 's Heroes 15.
6 :00--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.

6:3G-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnet t &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Cross-Wtls 3; College Basketball 8,15; Cross·
Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Capitol Beat 33; News 10; To

Tell The Truth 13; Daniel Foster, M.D. 20.
7: 15-'Labor Scene 33; 7:30-That Nashville Music 3: ·

WINTER GET to your hou $e? let us
make

neunary repoln . AI

Tromm . Construction . 7o42 ·232B.
MAGG I ES
UNHOlSTERY .
Refinishi ng, re uphoistery ,
· r ~bui lding . · eeaU tltut aeleetion
of mal eriols ond ... lnyls. Free
es timate . Tel. 1-42 -2852 . l oco·
lion : Sol om Center .

--

--

~------~---

EXC AVATING , dour , loader and
back hoe work ~ dump trucks
and to -boys l or hire; will houl
fill dirt, to soil, lime stone ond
gravel. Call Sob or Roger Jef·
l e~s . day phone 992·7089, night
ptione 992·3525 or 992· 5232.

EXCAVATING, dorar, backhoe
and ditcher. Chorles R. Hot·
field , Sack Hoe Service ,
Ru tland . Ohio . Phone 742-2008.

BRADFORD , Auctioneer, c;om·
plate Service. Phone 9.4'9·'2&lt;187
or 9A9·2000. Roclne, Ohio. Critt
Bradford .

ElWOOD BOWERS REMIR
Sweepers , toasters , Iron&amp; , all
small appliances . lawn mower,
next to Stote Highway GorOV'I
on Rou ie 7. Phone {61A) 985·

3825.
REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
and all types of generdl repair .
Work guaranteed 20 yean aiC •
perlence. Phonit W2 -2A09.
SEWING. MACHINE ReJlolrl , ser·
vic~. all makes , 992•228• . The
ra bri c ShOp , Pom er oy .
AUthoriz"d ,Sin ger Sales and
Ser.,.ice . We sharpen Sc!non.

HOWERY

AND MARTIN h ·
cavotln g , sept ic 1ystems.
dor:er , bockhoe, dump truck ,
limestone, grOvel , blocktop
paving, Rt . 1•3. Phone 1 {61.4)

698-7331.
AND Kitchen• ·
remodeled. ceramic ilie, plumBing , carpvntry , and gen.,al
maintenanc•. 13 yeor1 ••·
perltllnce. '992 ·3685.

BATHROOMS

In Search of 4; Muppet Show 6; MacNeil-Lehrer

Report 20; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13;
Know Your Schools 33.

8:oo-Little House on the Prairie 3,4; Six Mil lion Dollar
Man 6,13; Consumer Surviva l Kit 20,33; Bab~ . I'm
Back 10.
8':30-Turnabout 20,33; Mash 10; 9:0G-Awakenln'
Land 3,4,15; Movie "Wild and Wooly" 6, 13;
People's Choice Awards 8, 10; Hard Times 33;

/\dams Chronicles 20. .
10:DO-NeWs 20: 0rlglnats 33; 10:30-Farm DlgeSI 20;
Anyone For Tennyson? 33.

11 :00-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,1S; Dick Cavett 20; MacNei lLehrer Report 33.

11 : ~().--.JQhnny· C_a rson 3,"4, 15; Pollee Story 6~ 13; Movie
" Attack on Terror" 9; ABC ·News 33; Movie " The
Green Berets" 10.
·

12 :00-Janakl 33; 12:4G-News 13; 1:0Q-TonHlrrow
3,4.

Movie Channel 4 5&amp; 1 P .M. - And TMn There Were None !G)
9 &amp; 11 P.M.-&lt;:arnal Knowledge (RI

,.1

�~The Sunday Times-sentinel, SWlday, Feb 19, 1978

D-4-The Sunday Times.sentmel, Sunday, Feb 19 1!178

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

'

~MPG

( .

~~~hway

I WOULD hke to thank 1!\lflryone
fOf a ll the gths flowers ~ords
and phone calli and aspectally
oil rhe1r prayers for me wh1le 1
wos 1n Hol1er Med•col Center

BILL NELSON
WANTS YOU TO
CHECK WITH US.

Exciting New Little Cars

FIESTA

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

/l:\ N
49 YEARS IN POMEROY

Goldo~e~O~II~~~~:;,;;==
THE RACINE
Volu nte@r F r e
Deportment w 11 sponror a gun
shoot •very Sotur dov at 6 pm ot
tf}etr budchng tn 8o shon Foe
tory choke uns only
THE RACINE Gun Club Gun. Shoot
every Suhday afternoon Foe
tory choke g un s only Assorted
meats

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

34 MPG

Before You Buy Any Car

NEW CHEVROLET CARS - TRUCKS
MODEL CARRY OVER CLEARANCE
LOWEST
MID-SIZE
STICKER PRICE
STARTS AT

2 &amp; 4 DR.

Wh1 te AM rad1 0

&lt;1

cyl

NEW '78
'h &amp; *TON
TRUCKS

s td

trans
Ocaler L1 st 546118

$

SALE PRICE

s3539

NEW LUV TRUCK
a uto tr ans wh t r es
AM r ad lo ext det:or pkg

33 MPG
H1ghway
23 MPG
C1ty

FAIRMONT FUTURA

-

$4099

SALE PRICE

l21!2 fully equipped
Travtl On

4 DOORS
eu

aq ulpmtnl air
t~an

n moat

radtal l•res roll

Let's

$5385

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

PHYLLIS Sntp and Cu rl Former(f
Shtrl&amp;y Koy s Beaut y Solon tn
Pome roy
Now open /p r
bustness tn long Bo11om Ohto
For
oppo ntmenl
phone

500 E. MAIN

Stepslde 350 V 8 au1o P S
P B Scottsdale ligh t blue

radial w w t ires roll bar
Deal1r Pnce 56658

POMEROY, OHIO

SALE PRlCE

PHONE 992-2174

II

_________________________

CHOICE OF 2
CHEVmE 4 DRS.

I
I
I
..II

SAVI .
ITICKIR
PRICID AT '1 10

'1000 OFP DISCOUNT
OF RETAIL STICKER

PEN DEL TON REBUILT BA ITERIES
S 18 w th exchange new ones
$31 guaran teed 388 8596

• 1111 mliiE PIBIIIITS"

O[;EA CAR SAl~

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

FEEDER PIGS

BETTER IDEAS KEEP COMING FROM FORD

Open Evemngs Til 6 00
Except Thurs. and Sal Closed Sunday

6 cy

sld

mile\ Cl!!lln

MANY MORE ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS

Bronze tan vi n y l roof leather mter tor f ul l power anri
a~r crutse control AM F M stereo taoe

76 Cadillac Cpe. DeVIlle ...

. " '7500

Red wtth white vi n yl roof white leather lntenor full
power and factory a r fu ll stereo c ruise control T&amp; T
wheel

76 CadillaC Sed, DeVIlle

7900

Was SR900 NOW 1

Ltght blue blue v1nyl roof de elegance tntenor f ull
power and air AM FM stereo wi th tape T&amp; T st eenng
wheel

75 Cadillac Coupe DeVIllE was S68oo
Full power fa ctory air
stereo 32 000 mIles

leather seat s

76 Cadillac DeVille Cpe.......

5600

NOW ' 1

T&amp; 1 wrtt:t:t

.... '6300

Fu ll power atr leather tnm D br own tan roof

Extended Warranty 12.000 miles or 12
months avaslable 11 desired on 15 76 &amp; 77
Cad1llacs

I ·

73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille ................ '2495
vinyl roof air

See one ot these courteous salesmen Pelt!
Bu.tns. Marv1n Keebauqh or George Harns

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Uke Our Quality Way
Of Do1ng Bussness"
992 5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evensngs T1l6 Oil-TIS p m Sat

PUBLIC NOTICE
Nott ce ts hereby Qtven tha t

on February 20th

19~8

at

10 00 AM a public sale wt ll
be held at The Farmers Ban~
&amp;
Savings
Com p any
Pomeroy Ohto to .sell for
cuh the tollowmg collateral
tow t
1975
Chevro l et
Novo!!
Couple Ser tat No 1 '2705
W l 8~17l M Cdel 1X X27
The Fa rm ers Bank &amp;
Saving! Compa ny ~omeroy
Qhto reser ves the r ght to otd

at

th

s sa le

{2) 12 15 19 Jtc

STARCRAFT FALL So le
Mtn
motors 20 and 22
TraVe-l
Tra tlers 18 5 $3799 25 7
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fold down
S1 700 up We sell serv ce and
quof tv Open Sundays Camp
Conley Storcroft So les Rl 62
N ol PI Pleosont

'

PUBLI C NOTICE
Nol tce t5 hereby gtven that
the Pubttc Uhhltes com
m ss on of OhtO wilt co ndu ct
publtc hcar tngs on pet ttons
tor r~ltef from the ma ndatory
reduc t tons
n e t ectnc t y
usage authorn ed as a result
of the cur rent coa l shor tage
m cases where the Com
mtss on ftnds tha t tlear ngs
ar e necessary Such hear ngs
will be co ndu cted at the of
ftces of the Comm tsston lBO
East Broad St reet Colum
bus Ohto 43215 Because of
the need to act u pon such
pet t1o n s
promptly
tn
dtv f dua l noltce of each
heari ng wtll not be pub shed
Informal on on tndtv tdual
hea ring s m a y be ob tam ed by
contact ng I he Comm ss on at
1 800 282 0198

By

T HE PUBLIC
UTILITIES
COMMISSION
OF OHIO
R tcha rd L Sm th
Sec r etary

M nnt e W Mackenzie
Clerk Tr easu r e r
Ga ll ta County
Dt str ct Ltbrar y
Board of Trustees
Feb

19 26 March 5 12

REAL PROPERTY

SA LE
The fol low ng propert y s
offered for sale by Ste ven T
Sloan as a dm n1strator ot the
estate ot Eff ie Dav s Star
cher
1 App r ox mately 73 acr es
more o r tess
located m
Sect on 29 Lebanon Town
sh •p M e gs Coun ty Oh o
App r atsed
value
$7 945 00
2 App r o)( m atetv 15 acres
more or l ess loc at ed tn
Su tto n
T ow n sh tP
Me gs
County Ohto
Appraised
va l ue
$1 500 00
TERMS OF SALE
I ThtS property cannot b e
SOld for less than the ap
pra se d value
2 Ca sh n hand a t the t me
of the actual deed transfer
All b ds must be de l vered
to the law offJce of Walker
Moll c a &amp; Gall Co L P A 35
North Co llege Street A thens
Ohto on or before 10 00
o c ock a m on Saturda y
February 25 1978 For a n y
a ddtltonal
t n l orma t on
co n ce r ntng l h ts property
tnqulr es. Should be m ade to
Steven T Sloa n at the above
address
All b ds wtlt be opened
publtcly at 10 00 o clock am
on Satur day February 25
1978 at the above taw offtce
(2 ) 15

19 22 Jtc

----

--------~

RECONDITION ED

SALE ENDS FEB. 28TH

RAZORS

Norelco Sunbeam Remmgton
and Schtck $9 50 To $17 50
Tawney Jewe lers .424 Second

SAVE$ SAVE$ SAVE

A'e

~

-

- - ---::-:::--=c

SUITE (NO MATTER WHAT THE

good

COAL I tn eStone ond cole urn
ch o r de and co le un1 br ne l or
du st con tro l ond spec•ol m xtn g
sal l or forne •s ExcelsiOr Salt
Works Motn Street Pome roy
Oh o o r pho H~ 992 389 1
ECONOMY TRACTO R w th all a t
tochmenh l ke new osktng
$2250 Phone (614 ) 698 3290
RUGS
WA LL Hongtngs and
ofgons N ce l or Chrt stmo s
Reoson ob e Coli 992 22 4
B 8. S MO BILE HOMES P Ple a
sant W Yo bes1de Hec k s
1973 Broodmore 14 x 61l 2
bed room
1'173 Dorta \ 14 "'60 2 bed r oom
1972 Vtc lo rto n 14 K 67 3 bed ro om
2 botH
197'1 Co ... en fr ~ 12 X 65 3 bed OOm
1969 Stolesmon 12 ,_. 60 2
bedroom

G··tH·r,!l FIt ( lrtc T V ·.._,

---------FIR EWOOD 949 2358 or 985 3567
~

CO NO TIONED HAV
M xed
$1 SO
Clover
$2 00 Phone
742 2873

-

-------~ ~~

ONE WH ITE G bso n electrt c
refr gero tor Good cond•lt on
$125 One Coppe rto ne Royal
Ch ef electr c stove Good con
dtt10n
$75
Ph o ne (614 )
6673417

PICT URE WINDOW end both tub
AI er 6 coli 992 3401
------~

FIREWOOD $25 a p ckup load
9.49 2129

nd

H··dpt1JIJt i\pplt.IIH

t'

175 BU MANURE spreader Pro c
ltcally new Phone 949 2072

-

fll I( 1",

Phonr· Y97 i 181
1965 CHEVELLE 4 dr A C 283
en g 2 bbl auto tran s Ex
ce llent cond !ton Truck topper
std 8 It bed 28 m htgh
742 2485
985 3849

-

EAR CO RN $2 10 bu G round ea r
corn $75 ton Mtn m um 1 ton
.....co I alter 6 pm 985 358 1

J.1ck W C. t r•,c•y, Mq r

or

REDU CE SAF E &amp; fa st w th GoBese
Tobleh 8. E Vop wa ter pil ls
Nelson Dru g
NICE PIG S lor sol;
949 2857

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

23 INCH MOTOROLA color TV
Good condttton 25 tn ch GE co l
o r TV co nsole e,_.ce ll ent cond
!ton Phonr 99'1 2292

PIG S FO R sole One 75 lb S 42
One 50 lb $32 Two 65 lb $38
eo Three 40 lb S26 eo Tup
pers Plotn s Oht o 667 3368........__

h11 All Ynut

HAY FOR SALE
HAY FOR SALE
985 4248

$&lt;5 (30&lt;1773 5216

HAY FOR Sole 1500 boles of
ftmothy Hoy Ph6 ne 992 7573

LANDMARK

S, !lt•

ZENITH 19 nch Block end wh1te
telev ts on b: cell ent condttton

~:-:-

~rUMt
KUT

,t

SMA LL BLOCK Chevy eng ne 11
m clutch 4 speed transm s
s o n Good cond •t o n $125
949 2860

(~ tl;i~s-

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Storm
Windows,
Storm
Doors ,
Replacement
Wm
dows. Pallo Covers,
Alummum S1dsng and
Accessone~ Ca II

BILL'S

SELLING OUT due to tl healt h
Small grocery sto e O!ld gas
stol on wtth sroc k and cq utp
Hlent l oco ted ot Longsv li e o 1
Route 124 Ver y good buy Colt
992 5868 or 742 904 5
WATER BED w th heater
--- Coli 44b 6668
HAY FO~ sole 992 7306
·-'="--·
HAY CALL 44 6 2724
HA Y FO~ sole 949 2870

446·2642

---

$100

LO"G-- H
c"O
::-M
= ES
: ---

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condltton your
water wtth Co op water

sollener
Model
Now Only

UC SVI

279 .95

PICT URE SOUE MAINTANEN CE
FREE FUEL SAVINGS
Order now for spr ng delt very
See our Jock son County model
Cal l 286 2910 after Spm for n
format on
DEHUM!DtFIER I~~
gal la sso wee-d control for
co rn $35 Mossey Ferguson 2
r ow co rn planter I ke new
$700 10 000 tomato sto kes 101
each Co ll440: 0867

-$sOls

~- ~-

let us test vour water Free

Pomeroy Landmark

'9., _Jack W Carse,.
....

Mgr

Phone 992 2181

_:::::c:__

FIREWOOD CALL 379 2536
FIREWOOD WE: WILL DELIVER
CALL 368 8 194
SPL IT FIREWOOD deltvered $25
Call Coll388 8755

All TYPES of bu ld ng matenals
b oc k br c~ sewe r p pes w n
I ntels
eTC
Claude
dews
W n ter s R o Gran de 0 Phone
245 5121 aherS
~----

LAYNE S NEW 8 USED FURNITURE

IN ALLOWAN CE FOR

OLD SU ITE YOU PAY O NLY
$299 95 RICES FURN ITUR E 854
SECOND 446 9523

eo
GOOD USED
Ta ble 6 cho rs &amp; chtno dryers
range s 3 sets of colfee and end
tab les TV s Freezers bedroom
su tes desk s beds chests
dressef s
tables
lamp s
chotrs o th er tern s book case
call 446 03'22 Monday thru Frt
day 9 to 8 p m Sa turday 9 to 5
p m 3 mt ou t Bulovtll e Rd

---FOR THE

~

BEST IN FURN ITURE
UPHOlSTERING Free Esttmofes
Pt ck up on d deltvery serv ce
coli Mow rey s Upholstery Pt
Pleasant W Vo 675 4154

GRA IN FED FREEZER BEEF
446 0760

Ph

~=-=- del1 ve red
COAL AND LIMESTONE

-

Ca ll Dov d Vaughan at 245 5309
~-~- ---

FIREWOOD
367 0586

$25

ptekup

Located on W Va Stde
Pomeroy Mason Bndge
(304) 17] 5717

12 HP JOHN DEERE and be lly ~~~~~~~----..J
mowe r Coli 367 7878 alter 4 .

pm

NEW
Sw Yel rocker s (gold green or
brow n) SI 25
Sofa
chou
r oc k er
ollomon
3 table s
$500 Bedroom su te maple or
ptne $150 30 electr c ranges
$200 Boby beds $65 Boby bad
mattresses S20 Bedr oo m su i e
wh •t e $250 S300 wh tl e mapl e
or ptne
$300 Sofo &amp; Cho tr
S200 Med terronean sofa and
lov e sea t $325 Ear Am sofa 8
cho $300 modern sofa cha1r
ove seo l S275 sofa bed w th
match ng chatr $150 Recltners
$100 ond up Table s Coffee
oak Hexagon maple or p ne
$60 each Rocker $55 maple or
pme table 4 chotrs $225 Hutch
S275 7 pc Dmelle $109 5 pc
D ne tl e $55 00 Bunk bed s com
plete $150 chest of drawe r $38
Queen sue mattress &amp; bo"' spr
tngs set $1 30 Reg or Tw n $60

YOUR

GOOD HAY Ior ge bal es
per bole Coll675 2377
SPL IT

$1 50

FIREWOOD:cW
~o::.w:..:,:.ll"cd-,::-1,-.-,

JUNK au to an d scrap metal Ph
388 8776

Coli 388 81c:.9.:.:
4 ~-~­
FIREWOOD
388 8470

Will DELIVER

Call

HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy sell
tr ade or trotn New and used
USED FUR NITUR E 5 pc wood dtn
saddles Ruth Ree..,.es Albany
ng room toblv and chatrs 3
(61&lt;) 698 3290
pc maple I vtng room table s
Oc ca sto nol
cha r
sw vel RI SI NG STAR Kennel Boordtng
rocke ~ mattress &amp; cotl sprmgs
Indoor and outdoor
runs
Corb m and Snyder Furmture
Groom ng oil breeds Clean
san tlory facti! es Chesh re
~~9~5~5~S~e~c~o~n::.
d~A~,~·~G~o~l~lo~p::.
o~
l ":c_
Phon e !614) 367 0292
GMC dump truck In o:.:. le good
cond Ph 367 7898
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc tety
ammo care ltn e and adopfton
PEPSI MACHINE A 1 cond U!ied 6
serv ce (free ontmols)
7680
months Best offe r 368 9896
or evenmg s and Sundays
992 5427
Mod
c o
M
Crawford
Rt
4 Box 326
Pom eroy Ohto 45769 Member
TIMBER
Pom eroy Fores t Pro
sh ps and donoltons PO Bo"'
du cts Top pnc:e for stand ng
682 Pom eroy Oh10 45769
saw timber Co li 992 5965 or
Kent Hanby 1 446 8570
FOk SPECIAL people AKC Dober

m

COINS CURRENCY toke ns old
pocket watches and cho ns
s lver' a nd gold We need 1964
and o ld er s lver ca ms Buy sell
or lrod e Call Roger Wamsley
742 2331
-.-~c--c~::-------------~ ­

man Pinscher pups Red and
rus t Good pedlg ees $125 and

up

(614) 797 &lt;500 or (614)

797 41 97.
AKC REG IS'fERED Boxer pups
Hove been wormed 1st shots

992 2726

OLD FU RN ITURE ce bo,..es bra ss
bed s tr on beds etc complete
households Wr te M D Mtl ler
Rt 4 Pomeroy Oh to o r ca ll
992 7760

AKC REGISTERED Do berm an
pups 8 weeks old have health
ce rt ft co t e
$75
Ph one

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small
Wtll buy I pte ce o'r complete
household New used or ant•
ques Mort n s Furmlure 20 N
M tddlepor t Phone
2nd St
992 6370

BRIAR PA TCH Kennels Boord ng
Groom ng AKC Gordon se t
ters Engltsh Cocke r Spomels
Ph 446 4191

load

B43 3053

c.u

ALL

GUARANTEE

VICE

SOLD

APPLIANCES
191 8
AVE Coll446 7398

SKAGGS
EASTERN

-------SPL IT FIREWOOD Co I 367 0612 or
~~......--

367 0511

---~-------

T HU~MAN

HOUSE dnt ques Fur
n ture str lpptng rep01 r and
refm lshed County Rd 8 off 35
CenterY tlle VI loge
Closed
Monday &amp; Tuesdoy Even ngs
by op po tntm enr 245 9479

TREE HAVEN CERAMICS gr een
wore custom I rtng ltnt shed
produc t or ders Co11388 881 1
HIGlEV S BARBER SHOP OPEN B
to 5 CLOSED SUNDAY &amp; MON

DAY GIFTS BOOKS &amp; POTTERY
GRAPEFRUIT Pil l w th D adox
pion more con\len ent than
gropefru t s
Eo t sot sl ytng
meals nod lose we ght REVCO
DRUG

-~~-~-

FREEZER LARGE CAPACITY dou
bl e chest 256 1467
HOUSE COAL 8 8 &amp; M Coo l Co
ESR Gall pelts~~~
W VA CHUNKS F replace cool
Sk dmore Foster Coo l Co Pme
~ ~ ~ allt~lt s 0
____ _

STARCR AFT WINTER SALE
GOOD USE D
not
upholstered and app l1 ances Mm motors trollers fold downs .
Some 77 m odels and u&amp;ed untfs
Ph 446 0322
n stock Where you get serv tce
GOOD
USED REGRIGERA'fOR
and quoltt y at the rtght prtce
AND F~EEZER UPRIGHT OR
Camp Con ley Storcroft Sol es
CHEST Ph 446 0322
Rt 62 N of Pt Pleasant
Top pnces for
Top Quoltty

POMEROY FORREST PRODUCTS
Call 992 5965

J

Phone surveyors needed
far Gallipolis pt Pleasant
•reas Musf have private
hne or .access to an1
Anyone Interested call 446
4373
75-02 -04128

HELP WANTED
FOOD SERVICE
MANAGEMENT
Challenosng
posttton
avatlable as ass1stant food
servtce manager wtth
maeor corporatton Thts is
a career management
posttton requtnng 2 years
expenence 1n food service
An anrad1ve $ftll!rY and
benef1ts provram oHered
Quahhed
cand1date.s
should submit brtef resume
to BX 99S c-o Ga Itt polls
Datly Tnbune , an equal
opportumty employer.

1969 12x50 2 bdr house trailer
Prtc e Myer $2500 1973 Ledger
wood dual whee-l somper 22ft
self contotned I tke new used
appros 2 wee-ks $3000 Call
682 7974 after 4pm or Sotvrdoy

l

1973 DOOC.E WINboW VAN 318

BORDERS GAAAG~ DOOR S£R
VIC £ C01nmencol a ndre~ d~n
hal ~p4K al•1 ng m operator\
l o&lt;a l 25o o.en

Call -446 152b
1973 PLYMOUTH SA TElliTE Runs
good
loo !o. ~ good
A'ilu ng
$1200 Must sell Coll256 1107
1977 RANCHERO emerald green
wtth wl·ute G T su pes AC PS
PB lac lory mags w•th w de
1 re5
SS-400 or w1ll toke 4 )(111
p ckup m trade Al so 1973 3SO
Hondo SCJo"'ble.r $4 50 Call

682 6123

BABY SITTER for ne~ . ·E·
pertence and ref req Call
4~6
~ o!!_~ 5p~ _
BABYSITTER for pre , chool oge
ch.ld Prefer mature adult Coli
446 _3975_after 6pm

1972 CH EVY KINGWOOD sloT• on
wa gon ver y n ce Many e .. tros
S 1000 Call .u 6 7904

MAINTENANCE
MusT
howe mduslr ol planT
mo 1nt enan ce
e)l pertence
Pr m or !y o sold ele&lt;lnco l
background
Plase
send
resume or c.oll lmpe r10 l Electr c
345 Sycamore St M ddtepon
Ohtob t ol 992 5102

1977 CHEVY BEl A IR 4 d1 PS f'B
AC VInyl roof tn good cond
t on Coli 446 3479

?J

1976 A TTEX -btl terra 11 veh de
w th
t r o tl ef 5 2300
Call
367 :n 8s
Will SEl l OR TRADE l or
model piCkup 1974 Toyolo
0110 Slot on Wagon
4
au to
rod of
tire s
.446 2300

------ - LADIES NEEDED FOR GOOD PAY

lNG TEMPORARY OFFICE UKE

WORK

NO

EXPERIEN CE

NECESSARY
ALSO
N EED
LADIE S WITH CAR FOR l iGHf
DEli V ERY WORK
APPlY IN

PERSON ONLY

loteo
Cot

dr
Call

FOiSunday, Feb 19 1978

ASTRO·GRAPH

[ABSOLUTH Y

NO PHONE CAllS ) TO MR S
JERRY CARTER 9 00 to 9 30 AM
TUES FEB 21 WilliAM ANN
MOTEL
918
SECOND
GALLIPOLIS

Bern1ce Bede Osol

sell [304 ) B82 3284
1972 OLOS 4 d r Delta B8 In good
S1 0?5
992 5786
cond han
noon Ia 6 pm only or 992 2579
1975 GRANADA V 8 ou lomoftc
Power steenng powe r brakes
or condtlton ng AM rod o Ex
cell e nt con d 1 on
$2 900
Phone 992 3886
1975 GMC TRI AXLE TRUCK wtlh
16 ft d ump bed 427 motor I 3
spd Irons
good condttton
Coll256 1142 alter 5pm
1951 W ill V S JEEP m go od cond•
!ton Co l1643 2429
1973 C~EVY NO VA 8 cyl good
shape W tll !.ell c ~eop Coli
.446 7057
I ~7 3 M::
O:cN':Tc:
E- C
: -A
-:-:c
RL
-0:::-----;
A,-:1
, --1ow
m•leoge Call 44b 3553

AQUAR IUS I Jan

1971 CH EV ROLET PICKUP
topper Call 446 7828
1976 VW RABBITT 20 000 m1les
auto exc ga s mtleage ex c
cond S3395 Coll 44b 4315 aft er

&lt;pm..::___ _ _
1974 CJ 5 JEEP exc cond
446 4179 on yttme

Cal l

----

1976 Chevy l u11 au to ~I d ng bo ck
J los s Ph 446 0109
Sk dm ore
P ne St

1976 FOR O MAVERICK vtn)l l roof
PS new ltres 10 OCO m1le s
e•c cond $3495 Col l 4.46 4610
1974 TOYOTA CORONA M ARK II
PS PB AC aula $2300 or
best offer Co li 44 b 556-t ask
l o r l ee
1976 CHEVV PICKU P 4 wh dr
PS PB oulo 33 000 m les Cell
446 66960'------~

FREE PUPPIES 6 wks old Po rt
border co llte Coli 4.4 6 869-4
after 3 30pm

FIVE PART BEAGLE PUPPIES

8

wks old Coll 256 6610
CAT FEMALE l onghotred dog
Labrad or type
Both \'erv
fr tendly
l o veable
N ce
looktng pets 949 2607

• A K94
., J 10 9 4
+ A 812

+Q

Gand 0
AUCTlON
oo PM

Mason F 1re Dept
Refreshments
Plenty Parksng

Eo\ST

WEST

• Q 10 1;
., K 7652
+K

... 14 3

• J 2
., Q 8 3

++KJ10 9B652

SOU TH

I Ocl 24 No • 22 1

SCORPIO

E11en tho ugh your vrews con
Ia 11 elements of w tsdom that
your co ntemporarte s tac k be
careful how they repre sented
Vou won I express you rself
well tf yo u re emot tonal about
dummy s I

Vulnerabl e Both
Dealer South

~orth

Ea st

Pass

1•

34

Pass

4 NT

Pass

Pass

5 NT
7t

Pass
Pa ss

Pa~

Pa "s

Openmg

lead

South

1t

we

sell anything for
anybody at our Auchon
Barn or '" vuor hom e For
tnformatton an d ptckup
serv•ce tall 256 1"'
Sale Every Saturday
Ntght at? p m

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swain Auc:t
Corner Th.rd &amp; Dhve

Tom Whtte, Salesman HQme Phone 446 95S7

•

DACK TERMITING SPECIAliST
PEST CON TROL l censed IN
sured
Free
lfl specllon
M ember NPCA and O PCA C
M Hall Wtlke~v Jfle Oh a Ph
b09 4914
LIMESTONE g ovel and sof)d All
s Je~o A R cho ds and So 1 Up
per R ..,er Rd Gall pol s Oh a
Coll 440 7785

1mmed1ate Possess on
Th1 S l ove ly home
t!t loca t ed on Ocoby Or and tt s tess than
one year old Three larg(' BR s one and a
halt barns large L R Out!) 11 lq tche n tn
c lud ng rangC&gt; dtShwaSher dtspo.sal ano
bar Th s t nc- home mctuds all drapes ancl
t1 s c a r pefed th rou ghou f e:.:cep t k t

to

eight , a heart ruff

a d1a

mond to dumrn} ' s seven and
a second heart dropped
East s queen of h ea rts
Now J1m ran all hts
trumps Dummy's last four
cards were t h e ace kmg nme

of spades a nd th e Jack of
h earts
West s w ere the
queen 10-seven of spades

!Nov 23

SAGITTA RIU S

Dec 21) Be reahsttc regardtng
\hmgs whtch you cannot
ch ange toda y AdJusltn g to Stl
uat tons ts better than becom
n9 frustra ted

CAPRICORN iDe&lt; :!2 Jan 191

Bockhoe
dozer dump Huck Wor k done
by the hou r or by !he tOb Fa•
fr ee e~l motes Coll256 1921

JS 1o 40 acr es ot land surroundtng one a t
file mcest homes n th e area Tn e abov e
descr 1beo tS loc ated only 1wo m tes from
down l own Gall polts Cn ll now for ~n ap
pomtment

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

Anchonng Sk1rt1ng ,
A11n1ngs
Pallo
Covers , Carports,
Roof Pa •nl, Set up
and Re leveling Call

Lt 'w'e close to town and at th £' same t m e en
lOY co untr y atmo sph e r e You w II love t h•S
modu lar nom e tha i Jncludcs at 01 tne rx
tr as tncl ud ng cen tr al atr formal d ntng
fa m tl y room anomuc h more L ow SJO s

BILl'S

446-2642

Tt red of pay ng la r ge u ttl tly bIts? If II'€
answer tS yes g1ve us a ca ll rtght now We
are ofler ng a 4 BR horne f hat ha s l fle
t&gt;conomy ot natural gns h~:~11 S25 900
E• cellen t butldtng stte Th r ee mtles tram
HMC I 40 a c r es surround ed by very ntce
homes Call now
Busmes s Locahon - 742 Th r tt Ave Stor e
room w th lot s of st orage Cou rd be u sed
for r et a I out e1 su c h :-~ s grocery stor e or
res tau ra nt I t w as used most recen fl -,. as J
Produce hous e Prt ce ht~s ocen rf'd u red 10
St I 000

A

MISSI SS lppl

wants to know our openwg 1

b~ Wi t h

\
• ~ 7

'A

+ AJ9843

·~

K 95

RIPPE

I I I

We have enlarged our
servtce d epar tment and
wtU serv1ce Hotpomt and
other br.and s

We open JUSt one dtamond

b ut would not really con·
demn a forcmg opemng tf
someone else wanted to

Pomeroy landmark

9. _Jack W C.tr sey

~

Mgr

Phone992 2181

=
co

LOG CABIN - Large stone
firepl ace mode,.n b at h
to ll togs are hand he wn 14
wooded acres greal pla ce
to get awav
IN COME PROPERTY
22 000 SCI It
bu t l d 1ng
located 1n M tddl eport ren t
potent at of over SJO 000 per
year Call tor more n
form a lton

ITHA¥3
r

IGU NJ El
·

I

V 'l
"-

....II

t

ACTVALt.Y ~EEM 10

'J
...A

L.......I.-""""""'--"""""'-..J

C715APP'EAR' ON ~ME
P'EOPLE A&amp; "THEY

clubs or the queen of spades

roo you have a quest.on lor
rhe experts "' Wflte As k tne
A. .A
( J1
Experts cafe of this newsaa L---"~a:,.a...,-J&gt;""""----' gested by the above cartoon
per lndiVIduaf auest1ons WJII
be answered If acco mpar.1ed
Print answer here
by stamped
self addressed
erwelopes The most mteres r
(An.-. Monday)
mg quest1ons w111 be usea m
th1s column ana wtll rece1ve Yesterdays Jumb'es CATCH LOVER HEIFER GLOOMY
cop•es ol JACOBY MODERN J
Answer When were-Adam and Eve asked to leeve

:'Ill= WSP.APF: R E:NTE CPHISE ASSN l

~::..;fV~'I:;. M:.;,.'V;. .:IT'l.:;.S~L" '!&lt;tj-r- 1

oETOJ..DER
Now arrange the drcted leners to
torm the surpnse answer as sug

(I II X:(IXIJ

I

MORGAN TOWNSt41P
36 a cres ne•r Me 1gs Mmes
5 acres level
most of
balance cou ld be pastur e
small stream
townsrHp
road Sll '900

iHE5E LIN.E5

make 11

diamonds and ace of h ea r ts

£ "c ..

Now L sl ng i c,t()ry olt.h t m
on 'J acrl' S o t nrf1r y H1t l!lCI Ju • 1
the 11ahd.,nnn Low S/0 "&gt;

..,

tu 11 ( c1

!h11 or

NEAR TYCOON LA~E
lS 5 ave lar nr !i level &amp;
roll l.ng land w.tn abouJ JS
ac r e!. tlllaole &amp; the balance
n WOOds
1 sto r y home
has been n cetv r cmodr-lcd
&amp; Oi lers 4 BR "' n1(f' lqt
chen w t h sta ve &amp; rc tr q
o I tv r nace &amp; w w caroet

...'

•

LOCATION
VALUE
APPEAL
7Ja crefarm s
mostly 1tl!abl(' &amp; tcatures a
very n ice '} sror y nome w th
8 rms
&amp;
hi\th
lhc
downsla ,r s s braf"ld ne w
Also nc tv :::led are a 50xh0
barn
s Ia &amp; J \nHtll
au tdmgs 1h s property s
loc11 ted 1. mt
north o f
~ MC on R oute 160

a.

That allowed North to count
12 sure tric ks The 13th
would come If J1m held two

ftrst three trac k s went
to the ace of clubs , ace of

ThtMt ah ea d to ncK I s prmg &lt;1nd l tm w t t'
you w tll St&gt;t"' thP po l t&gt;n t a t ol , ... .:. wf&gt; ll c rH fd
l or nomo S oiuaiPc&lt;
n\~U atr t w "'
rver I ran t
,._,
~~\'\1
tor , I)O ~ I
dOCk piU!. ~1'\\..
~Cn~;:H tOilrll d CitVttll ')
Call now l or an appo.nltHln ! to 0:,11 th ...,
nome tom orrow cou ld oc 100 IMf'

27 ACRES Level and EDGE OF TOWN - Lov ely
gently ro ll ng land ra cco on 18R
ran ch s cl ean asap f"1
T wp
Gall po lls
Ctly
School D sl
front s on 1 and o tt e r s a 11:.:.10 farn dy
rm
LR mod ern k l tc nen
r ds waler ltne on 2 Stdcs
s teel SHJtng
l aundry rm
potenttat p lu s
s tor m door s and w in dow s
LOT FOR SALE - 80 1t 180 (en ! a• r and ove r I a cre Of
land
Shown by appo nt
f lal
coun ty
water men!
ava ta ble
mob le home:!:!
welcome
located
n
cen rena r "y on L nco n P ke
OWN
YOUR
OWN
\ 3 500
CAMPSITE
n
the
w lderness Of t he Wa yne
Sl9S PER ACRE 180 Nalton al Fo r est 5 t o8ac r e
a cr es ot w ilde r ness front s trs cts ot woodland now
on townshtp rc:t
good ava ta ble
adto n 1n 9
hun t tng
w th i n
th e t housands a t ac re s o t
boundartes on the Way ne government land
Pub h c
N att ona l For est
An ex
hunt n g
f tSh ng
ana
cellenf hedge aga ns t m
ca m p mg perm ti ed Prtces
fla !tOn
sta r t at \2500 w •th l lnan
c nt;t ava tlabte
GREENFIELD
TOWN
SHIP 18 acres steep
rocky brushland good for
hu nt ng and cam p ing onl y
NEAR LECTA - 101 acr~
$5 500
fa rm w th 115 A t liable s
TWO MILES OUT - Route r m house J b arn s !.ever at
160 approK 5 acres lev el othe r outbu tldmgs cellar
a
land QOOCI tn\leS1ment t or ho us e sp r ng water
3500 l b tob base \50 000
on l y SlO ooo

..
. ;;••
;;-,;\;:_:;_:::;;;_;;;:~......
~~~-

1

JUmp to four With two aces

The

~~

nomt

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

m

r eade r

and no kmgs Therefore the

absent from h1s hand but
that d1d not stop J1m from
takmg all the trick s

t o &gt;~dv

WE NEED LISTINGS

Unscramble these b.lr Jumbles
one lener 1o each square to fonn
lour Ol"dtnary words

about lhe hand IS North s bid ~
of the grand slam after fmd
m g that J1m held no kmgs
H e dec1ded that J1m

~ust one club and the queen
of spades was consp acuously

Ownt r

Vlf ,- 111 • ou.., to
11 ':i &lt;l n a 11•
rdnCh u1c lvct nq rhrt ~
OR !J J IO" 1J
0:.:.11 I Jxlll I 1)1 Tn S (l((j ( )tV ti)QI OQO l
t 1 6x~0 / Wtlt1 l oyd You w II 'l ho • 11j0Y tol
spa c ous c \l 1 K l c llf'n w t h ~el l (It ..'11 1Q
eye levi:' ovt."'n :~n cl 'l t :wtc top etnl;lt p lu~ i'
d1ShWfl~ ll t r AlSO IO I\ Ol WOod ( JD l t 'o {no t
p astel
JnCli.H.J nq
fcurn co t opprd
CO\Jn tN S I hi:&gt; i~ll (' {'C Il l( 1\atnt 1\ I !( ru•u
atr hcJI mut lC111t 1 f'lr concll• o• n J Jtw:.
1 nc home l1~o ll\ o;. an ovr r o:; lo&lt;l tw o ( ctr
wrage- th(1t ha~ fn1 S ll(Cl v.~l ., , , no 1 h x
lured celltnq plu ~ over tit 1W &lt;,lor.Hil Nth a
pull clown I addu tor d U. I ~.. Till rt c}rn
seve r al o t her t nc f f'c"l l ur f.'~ Ctl~ !.clootl
Ca ll now l or l urtllt.&gt;rth; tr.l~

v

Check W1lh Us Before You Buy

three rounds of hearts

Okla, 10 the Nas hv alle
reg10nals
The f1rst tnlerestmg thang

As you can seen Jam held

.........
'i IIIII

We Are Offenng Fmancmg Through VA, FHA and Conventional Loans

made possible by th e pla) of

• 1

kmg -of t rumps would drop

Look ng l or it hOm e wtln acr eage? If ~o
c~ll rtQhl now w~ i\H ottl r tnq .1
very n• re oldN nome !hat t1,t.., t:Ju""n
rt'mooeii'Q 1' om top t p bottom Tn s t nr
hOmt, hilS l I ull tl~SI tnl Jll A SO~ QU Wtl t n
IOV nearly 30 ncn ~ o l h 111 tnll ll~ l r qlll tnr
grt tt'IJ ~ lt&gt;w c llltlt ai!,O 101 hth. nq rt1 "i
prpcfl y olfrrs (Hl 1ll) utng P1lnor 1 tit { v ' ""
ot ttle be'luttfu t Oil 0 R t'w'N C 111 n ov. !0 1 i 1
appotn 1lnf'nt

o vc- a

'&gt;Cit li ltS ... rr

One to one relahonshtps may
requtre all the tact t hat you c an ATT{NTION MARE
Owne"
musler loday to main tam har
AQHA stud se1v ce lntroduc ng
many Ex cuse tn others what
to Southern Oh o Co r to ko sor
you want ellcused tn you
re ll son of Oloe Breed fo r co t
tNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE .ASSN l
o r con formal on a nd dtspost
!Jon Phone 698 8241 ev~n ngs
or ..... n te fo r breed ng contr act
Belle Echo Quarter Horses
110'125 SR b92 Pomero 'J Oh to
Will CARE for the elder ly n our
ol5769
home Ph on e
7314

5• I
6•
Pa !'S

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Today s hand was p layed
by James Chew of Tulsa

F or $21 500 vou un buy a 1 or lnf('t:' OR
h OM eS 1\.tillf'd On 96 Ot AM l Ut' 101 Till~ lS
an oldct hotn&lt;' tl1i11 h~!:ot had i:'XCL!tent c e~n:
(.tlll now tor c"ln nppcuntmenl

A A A CONTRACTORS

4•

needed eight diamonds to

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

dtamond

c huck a s pade on that las t
trump
The Jack of h earts was
dtsca rded and dumm} s
spades took the last three
trtcks A l ucky squeeze but

+ QJ29643
+A
Wesl

A

and kwg of hearts He h a d to

• 863
., A

CUTE LONG hatred ktllen s to a
good home 949 2093
BEAUTIFUL FEMALE collte type
pup Ntce morktngs Gentle
w.ll gtve to good home Call
7~2 2949

2/ 18 A

PH. 446-0552 ANYTIME

-

Jim chalks up lucky 13
NO RTH

BUD McGHEE

428 SECOND AVE

P ISCES I Feb 211-M a rch 20 I TWI N R VER S MARINE 307 Upper
~ ver Roo d Ch y!&gt;ler Soles &amp;
Parttc pate tn active l un pur
Serv ce Comple te Hull Repo r
su tts tod ay bolh mentally and
C u~tom bu It
o e s Ph o e
ptlyS1c ally Sttltng on your du!l
44() $655
sn 1 t he answer
ARI ES I March 21 April 19J TRI STA ll: UPHOLSTERY SHOP
II s best yo u ftnd a constr uc!t"e
1 6J Sec: A ve 446 7833 even
outlet for your energ te s today
ngs 44 6 I 8J3
Keepmg your restlessness bot
REES E TREN CHING
SE RVICE
tied up Wi ll make you rrtl able
wote t ~ewe electr c go~ I ne
TA UR US tA pnl W-Mav 20 1
or d tches 12 nches w de to 5
You r !alen ts 11e more m tile
It deep Wotetl ne hookup~
musc le areas today than the y
Colt olle1 4 p tn 367 75b0
dO n th e menial ones Double
chec k 1f you re ao ng any RUSS 8 MAX El liOTT
Len no,_. Heat ng ond o r cond I on
paperw or k
ng ~op co loom nsulo t on
GEMINI IMa\ 2:1 Jun t&gt; 201
44 6 BSI5 01 44 6 044 5 Coil af ter
Thts ts not a g ood da y to
430
wtndo w s hop stores that carry
merc handt se you netther need SANDY AND BE AVER In surance
nor can alford You r sales
Co ho~ ofteted se 1 ... ces lot f re
res s ta nce ts m l
n$uronce coverage n Gal a
CANCER cJune 21 July 22) II
County l or a lmost o cen ury
the sttua tt o n c a lls lor tt assert
Farm hom e an d pe r so[l'ol pro
pe1 .,. cov e age s o e ova lob e
yo u rself as a leader today
to meet md1'o' dual needs Con
Leav tng that wht c h you shOuld
to e
Cho le~ N eal
your
do up 10 ottuns IS a senous
net ghbor and agent
rT]ts take
I EO Puh 2.1 Aug 22 ) Instead CARPENTRY roo n
odd l •ons
of brtngm g oul tn to the Open
rooJ ng s dtng o nd general
thtn gs wh en d tstu r b you
r epo rs Co11379 2635
vo u re apl 10 keep them pen t
ROACH
WATER DELIVER Y CAL L
up and brood over l he m today
44b 7545 or 446 b5b8
\ IRGO I A ug 23 Sept 22 ) Peo
pte !hat at e self iSh c.r too sel l SANDY AND BEA VER lnsu1 on ce
se ekmg should be avo1ded to
Co hos off ered serv ce!. for f re
day - one tn particular who
nsu onc e coverage n Go I o
COunt.,. lor almos t o centur y
has taken advantag e of you tn
Form home o 1d per~o 101 pro
the past
perty coverages ore ova1loble
LIBRA tSept 23-0ct 23) Ambt
o meet nd v dual needs Con
lion ts an admtr able qual tl y
TacT Don Po mer your nejghbo
p Ovtd ed we don t step upon
and oge 11
olhers n orde r to ach eve our
~----~
alms Do no thmg today to ea rn
thts accus alton

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ANY PERSON who has anyth ng to
gtve away and does not offer or
attempt to offer ony other thtng
for sole moy place on ad n th s
column
The r e w II be no
charge to the od ver l tser

BRANCH

CHA IN LINK FENCING WOODE N
FENCING
AWNING S
Pat o
coyers
A vl1 s Home lm
ptq vemE" 11~ Ph 446 3608 oltM

211-Feb 19 )

Tasks tough l o begtn w tth
co uld be made even more
dt fftc ul l toda y owtng to yo ur
atltlud e espect ally tf you resen t
dotng th em Ftnd out mOte
abo ut yours elf by send ng lor
your copy ot Aslro Graph Let
ter Ma I 50 cent s for eactrand a
long self addressed slamped
en ... elope to A stra-Graph P 0
Box 489 Radt o Ctt ~ Stat on
NY 10019 Be su re to spectfy
your b rt tl stgn

NEWGMC
Truck Headquarters
1974 : T GMCP ckup
19 1'4 1 T GMC P ckup
1973 ~ Chev Pickup
1974 , T GMC PU
t - 1973 : T Chev PU
1974 , J Chev PU
!973 EICom no wtth top
1974 , TFordPU
\ 9 7.&lt;~ three l ourth Chev pu
1971 GMC9SOOTroclor
19'74 ~ T Ford P ckup
1975 • Ton Chevrolet P ckup
1975 • T Chevrolet PU
1973 l ~ r GMCPU
1976 Ford
T Ptcku p
1973 F700 Ford Dump Tr uck
1974 F250 Ford Super Cob PU
197 3 Internal ana l JBOCJ Seres
cob &amp; chossts tandem dr ve
SOMMERS GM C
TRUCKS INC
133PneSt
446 2532

1971 CHEVY PICKUP
Foster Coo. Co
~ a ll po s 0

~1EEME R
CARPET
STANLEY
ClE ANER Any hv r1g room ond
i'loll $29 95 up 10 300 Sq Ft
Southeo!l.let n Oh o
No
I
Cot pel Cleoue-rs A-d• about ou
Cht \lmo~ g.tt cer ttf•c te s Ph
61ol 440 4208

WATER WEll DRILLING W lhom
Feb t9 1918
1
Gro I
Ph 7421879 01
245 5100
Its mportant for you to ao Fill
thai you can 10 Im p r ove yow
managen al s!l.tlls Someth ng
good tS brewtng They II be
needed th1 s cormng year

· 36 Locust St, Gallipolis, Oh , 446 4373
75 02 047 2 B

TWO FORD Mover cks
1973
models 1 std tr an s 1 au to
Owner be ng trans fer red mu st

VS REALTY

DOZER \'YORK c•cova,•ng lond
cleonng_ Ph U6 0051

BillS MOBilE HOME S and Ho 1 e
lmpro ... emenl!. Free es t m ote'!&gt;
Coil J4b 2642

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COu.EGE

1972 Chevrolet Subur ban P S
P B auto trans Coli 949 2220

Ileal l::•lal• for ~ I··

for tial•·

PASQUAlE nsulnt ng 103 Cedar
St Gall pol•\ Ph 441) 2716 01
367 0398 at ter 5

In a good jOb w1th a good luture Gallipolis
Bus1ness College has recently been
awarded Federal funds to tram people lor
of11ce 1obs
School also approved for Vets Quarter
starts soon' 1 To see 1f you qua illy ca-ll. VISit
or wnte

1969 CHE VY 4 dr ExcellenT con d t
!ton $495 M odel 12 W n
che ster sh o t gu n
SJOO
742 2359

n~al.t:state

BACKH OI: DOZER OllCH ER and
dump uuck Com;rete ..... ar t.
Hotf eld Bocll hoe Se1 Rutlo 11d
Oh Ph 742 ~008 o 4~6 2780

INTERESTED? ? ?

2•5 5363

Sunday- 1

~rnct's ()({.,red

1975 FORO EXPLORER f 150
auto loc o•r PS low m leoge
Pr ced to sell Co!l446 -1 428

BRIDGE

=::-,-:-,-- -

245 5348

TIMBER

HELP WANTED

JACKSON WEU.STON
GA lliPOliS AUA S
LEADS MAKE IT EASIER TO HAVE
A SA LES CARE f R t
Mok.e the moil by sell ng the beil
n ght •n ~our o - 11 com numty
wuh our htgh commtSSJon pro
g'am
Otre cf tn home
represen loh v~s
l or
En
cycloped.a Br hon•co ore need
ed tO Southern Oh o Co li Cot
umbus of! ce 864 0331 bet
ween 10om and 2ft"} ~r

FREE Ea ster
candy
moldtng Saturda\ Febru ar' 18 1978
cla sses l ear n how to make
you r own flied Easter egg s
bunn ies and etc At Betty s
Coke Creal ons Rodfley Call

WITH Snow Blade for In! Cub Cadet

WE A LSO SER ,

APPLIANCES

Ser..,.tee

DEAD Stock removed No charge
Co 1245 5514

RISING STAR KENNEL
Boardtng Indoor Outdoor Runs
Groomm9 A ll Breeds Cfeon
Somtory fac ti I es Cheshire Ph
367 0292

CH IP
WOOD
Pol es
max
diame ter 10 on large st end $8
NEW F U~NITURE SA LE Bemco
per ton Bundled slob $6 per
ton Del ve red to O hto Po let
Twm Se ts mattress and bo•
spr ng
$119 95
Mapl e or
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 2689
CE NT E~ARY
WOO DS
PET
waln ut In sh bed!i $69 95
G ROOMING FACILITI~S Pro
GOOD
U SED tr ac t or wtl h
wooden dmette chatrs $11 95
fess tonol Ser v ce~ offered a(I
hydraul iC 3 pi httch 74'2 3074
At Corb n ond Snyder Fur
~s oil styl es Ph 446 0231
n l ure 955 Second A venue
SILVER DOLLARS ond co tns Top
DRAGONWYND CATTERY KEN
Golltpol s 0
dollar potd Ca ll 742 2316
NEL AK C Chow Chow dogs
HAY FOR SALE by the bole or WANTED TO buy Good used
CFA Stome se and Himalayan
truck load Coll 256 6535
bunk beds complete Phone
cots (A lso wh tle Perstans)
7&lt;2 3074
Orde rs ore now baing accepted
-- HAW=K~S~IN~S~A~G~E=N~C~Y:--~
for sprtng kttlen s ond puppies
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE SCASHS for 1unk cars Frye s
446 3844
NEEDS colt 44 6 2300
Truck and Auto Ports Wrecker
Servtc~ Ttre sole and Rutland
r.ERMAN SHORT HAIR POIN TER
REFRIGERATOR::S-::W-:-:A-:S-:-:
H::ER::S-A
~
ND
742 2081 or Pennzo tl 742 9575
PUPS Call 675 1769
DRYERS WR INGER WASHERS

RANGES

SWEEPER and sewmg (T1 0Ch ne
repotr paris and sup plte s Ptck
up ond del very Oo v ts Vacuum
Cleaner 1h mtl e up Georges
Creek Rd Ph 446 0'194
PASQUALE Electncol
446 2716 day o r ntgh t

Clifton
Auto Sales

SUITE $399 95 $100 DO TRADE

NOTICE s hereby gt ven I hot there
w tll be a publt c heortng on
Th ursday
the 23rd day of
February 1978 beg nmng ot
7 00 p m at th e Common Pleas
Court Room m tbe Co urt Hous e
In Pomeroy on the Slate PlofJ
for Soetal Serv1ces m Oh o
under T tie XX of the Soctol
Secunty Act l or the year
beg nmng July 1 197B wh tch
stole pion tncludes the pio n tor
Me gs County Oh a The ob1ect
o f th s hear ng •s to h ghltght
pe-rtmenl mlormotton regor
dtng Soctol Serv ces probl em~
and needs to ehctt publtc com
meni suggest ens and r ecom
mendottons relolt ve to the
county s proposed so c•o l seor
\'tees pio n Interested persons
and orgon tzol ons ore urged to
attend

221 Columbus Rd
Athens -S93 3566 (Collect)

CONDITION) WHEN YOU BU Y

ANY NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE
(SOFA BEDS NOT INCLUDED )
EXAMPLE NEW 2 PC LI V RM

992 7513

see

'2495

$100 TRADE IN ON YOU R OLD

NEED A rtde toGS I 10 6 Phone

SAIL THE SEVEN SEAS

Vtnyl roof AM FM B track
s uper stock whee ls
m tl eage

BABY SITTER wonted 1n my home
fo1 2 chttdren Phone (bl4 )
~9b 1002 o!..!_e!_ S pm__

INCOME TA X ServiCes Federa l
and stole Ta xes
Wol loce
Russell Bradbu ry 992 7228

Vtstt Hong Kmg, Spam the
Carnbean We ff pay you to
do 1t 1n the U 5 Na v, H tgh
~chool grad ~ 17 to 31 call or

1974
NOVA
CUSTOM

SCANDINAVIAN HEAL TH FOOD
l oos mg go n n9 mcrlntenonce
Pat sy Ftt c11 consu ltant Call
446 4204

Sat

black

'3695

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

POMEROY, 0.

992 2126

'NOT I CE TO BtODERS
PROJECT OR SAMUEL L
BOSSARD
MEMORIAL
LIBRARV

Loa ded bla ck on
super stock wheels

MARY KAY COSMETICS
free
lac c Poh)l F tch consultant
Ca ll446 4204

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Open Evenmg s Ttl 8 00 S 00 PM on

REGAL

PENNIE S
D IME S
quarter s
ha lves
For cot
ca lledor s
Dot e from 1860 to 1950 Tawney
Jewe lers 424 Sttcond

Loc.11 owned r;~d a llrei rad o ~ c~ t

o good

Middleport

Sea led pr ppos als w 11 be
r ece tve d unl I 12 00 Noon
L ocal Time Marc h 14 19 78 at
th e Ga l ha County D stncl
Ltbrary Th rd Avenu e and
State Str ee t Gall pol s Oh o
45631 for the turnt Sht ng of
ca rp et ng for th e Dr Samu el
L
Bo ss~ rd
Memo r 1a 1
L br ary Ga ll po l s Oh a n
wdh
t he
a cco rdan ce
dr aw ng s spe cl l ca t ons and
other c ontrac t do cume n ts
pr epa red by Robert L G ant
&amp; Assoct ales Ar c h tec t s
Pr oposals w tll b e opened
tmm ed ate1y th er eafter and
pub! el Y read a t the off tce of
th e r1e rk Trea su rer
T he tn structton 10 B dder s
Drawtng s
Sp ec r ca t1an s
Propo sa l For ms an,d Oth er
Contrac t Do cumen ts may b e
obla ned at the off ce at
Robert
L
G rant
&amp;
Asso c ales Ar ch tects 1515
Bethe l R oad Co lum bus Oh o
43120 (614 ) 457 414 1 Depost t
shall be 525 00 per se t wh ch
w II be re funded pr ay d ing
the docum ents a r e retu rn ed
sht pptng charges pr epatd tn
good co ndttton wlthtn t en ( 10 )
days affer the rec e p t of b d
All b dders must be tn
conformance wit h State
E qual
E mp l oy me nt
Op
por tum tv requtrements
A cert• f ed cl:'leck payable
to
Gall a County D str ct
L brary
or a p r op e r l y
secur ed A l A form of Std
Bond tn an amount equal to 5
per cent of the total b td shal l
be subm tiled w th the btd
The s u ccessf ul btdder w II
be reQu red to f u r ntsh a
satts f actory perform a n ce
bond t o r 100 perc ent of the
co ntra c t amou nt
No b ds may be w thdr awn
fo r at least thtrly (30) days
after the sc heduled cl o!t n g
It me for r t!c e pts of b ds
Th.e Owner reserves th e
ng ht to ac cep t retecl a ny or
a I part s of any b ds

HOUSE COAL
Deh vered $37 o ton l mes tone
del t..,.ered Water I nes thawed
Co li 446 3477

1974 Vega 2 Dr.......... ~~.,~

DodgetransDartr_,d........res.

DAN THOMPSON .FORD

17 Cadillac Cpe. DeVIlle •• .... .... .. .. . 19700

1975
BUICK

256 1352
EASTER BASKETS mode to order
byMorch IS Co ll 256 1496after
3 JOpm

See Pal H1ll , Rocky Hupp
or Darre I Oodn II
For a good deal on a new or used veh1cle

992 2196

40 Ia fJJ lbs Co I

Coli

WAN JED

985 3577

We are the Frsendly Dealer, so call or see
one of the frsendly salesmen, J . D. Story,
Ray Douglas or B1ll Nelson.

II Drive You Happy

PII.IS

CLEARANCE SALE beg ns M an
t Feb 13 01 Sew N Sew Outlet
Matn Str eet
Ro.: trJ e
All
polyester double kmts redu ced
40 •. and so•. Th read b 9 spool
S loi SI

New and Used Cars Now.

SPORT PICKUP

P S rad io

pr iced much

P B

$6450 60

NEW '77 CHEVELLE
MALIBU CPE.

'77 CAPRICE
F~.J II

PS

bar Scottsdale
SALE PRICE
Dealer Pnce

TEC

Mikado custo m trim

m

Stiver 305 V 8 auto tro!lns

NEW '76 CHEVROLET
MINI HOME

4 cy

New or Used. We Can Save
You Money. So Beat the
Spring Rush and Prlce Our

NEW DEWX
61h' SPORT PICKUP

GOOD SELECTION

NEW LUV TRUCK

ANNOUNCING THE opentng of
the pub lic accountmg off tce of
I censed
Roger
l uckeydoo
publtc accountant for occontmg
ond bookkeep ng ser ..,•ces an d
prepo rohon of federal and
stole fox returns ot 291 Walnut
St
Nuddlep or t
Oht o
2b66 Hours by oppotnt
men!

O.AIIii'Y~AN
7~2 3002

ll..aJ !!:stale for 1\ale

Aulo~e5c

the Garden of Eden? -

THE FALL

VACANT LAND NEAR
ROONEY Appro:.: 55
acres of le v el &amp; rottt"l g
far m land wtlh pond lob
ba.se barn &amp; co
water
Th s. proqert y f ront!. on 2
r ds. tn a very de!. rab le
tocat ton Lots of po t ent t~l
tor sss oao
RACCOON CREEK - I J
acres of flat land w th
approx 1500 f t ot tree~
fron t age sandy soil bar n
located tn Nort hern Ga lll a
como~

OVERLOOKING

R l v ~k

- Nt ce 2 B R cottage t5
located on Route 7 4 ml
south of town on 91 acre
Drtve by thiS one &amp; you It
admtf tt s bar ga tn pnced a t

••

$15 500

'

l,

lliSTIHOS NI!I!:DED

WE
ADVERTIS
NATtO NULY- WE SU

-SELL- TRA~!

I

o

:
Ranny Blackburn, Branch Manager
:
I
_...-._.. _. - ._.. _... - ·-·-.-. --- ---. . - '
1 •

Lost ~~~ _::;OST lAST week between
Syr acuse and Mtddleport Ford
hubcap Chrome w tth po nte-cl
green r ng Coli 992 7536 aft er

5

lOST IN l aurel Ct.ff area femo le
lnsh Setter Mtsstng lor 2
week5 Was tn heal when she
left
3163

==:

~-

FOUND Wtute te rr er 1n Swan
Creek o reo Coll 25b 199 1

m

•

�•

•

I)J;-TheSunday Times-Sentinel; Sunday, Feb. l9, 19'18

For Best Results Use Sunday
Times-Sentinel Classifieds
.
.
Real &amp;tate fur Sale

~·-""p;;;Jj;~i"Result~ Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
-

Heal J.:s tate fur SHte

Heal Eslah· fvr Sale

Real Lw:., fur Sale

THE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE AGENCY

CANADAY REAL
BOB LANE, BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLI POLIS, OH 10

OFFICE 446 7900
LET THE GALLERY SELL YOUR PROPERTY

[B

446-3636

II(Atf O it

MAIN

FIRST ADI Very nice 3 BR ranch, 1'h ba th s, family
kitchen with range. central air. etec. heat pump,
attached garage, lg
HURRY! $40,000.

lot, city

sc hools.

BETTER

FIRST AD! Great business location , corner lot, at
traffic light, concrete block bldg ., ideal for re staurant,

POMEROY, 0 .
Arthur A . P•bert
Sen1or M ember
Am er i can society
ot Appra i sers

23 LOCUST STReET

446-6610
•

SHOW OFF I Beautlfvlspaclovs 2 yr . old ranch. 3 BR, 2
full baths. You'll feel like you're leafing through a
decorator magazi ne when you look at this home, fully
carpeted, color coordinator drapes stay . 8' x1J ' Bairh ill
· sandstone fireplace, 2 car garage, extensive land ' scaping, cobblestone sidewalks. outdoor barbecue pit,
over half acre, Unbelievable buy at 552,500.

NEW LISTING - This IO&gt;iely home has 3 1arge BR's, 2
full baths, dOuble work -bar k•tc hen, Inc luding all ~p ­
pllances. There is also a 48'x13' rec rm . in the full s•ze
basement Ca ll for more details . 566,000.

i

Bonnie Stutes
Eventngs
446-1885

'";

TWO BEDROOM wit~ space to expand, brick and
fraMe, has well planned kitchen wi th range . carpeted ,
all electric, lg . 100' )I; ISO' level lot, trees . Great starter
home, S22,000.

" MORE FOR LESS " -

Enjoy
I
I
living in this large modular home, situated, on 8 ~cres
of land . This home has all of the ex tras, ·~c lud1ng a
w .b . fir eplace with heatolator and centra l a1r. A great
buy at only - $29,000

WE HAVE OTHER LISTINGS - WATCH OUR ADS
DURING THIS WEEK OR GIVE US A CALL AND
LET US HELP YOU .
CALL AT HOME
WALT LANE
BECKY LANE
DENVER HIGLEY
KENNY RATLIFF
"viCKIE HAULDREN
BOB LANE

446·0451
446-0451
446-0002 .
367·7529
446·4042
446· 1049

REALTOR

' ' &lt;; ·'*

WE
WILL

HOME - PLUS INCOME
TREMENDOUS
GOODIES!
8 R home - 4 and 5 B R ,
comple te kitch('n, DR , LR ,
flew wood burner . FA oi l
furnace Log cab 1n, work
shop, com me r ci al bldg .
Two mob il e home pads.
Ovt~ r
th i r teen acr es
beaul 1ful land, level to roll
ing Bldg lots M any w a ys
to go VA appro ved
CALL N OW

TAKE A CLOSER LODI( Well constrvcted,
tastefully decorated~,
11' ~ ths, 15'xl7' llv1ng rm .,
family r m . Well plaf' ·
. ..:nen , din ing area Lg le ... el
lot. Near Gavin ar, ... yger Creek plants. Look this
over, you'll be plea santl y surprised! $29,500 .

.
ONE

OF GALLIA

COUNTY' S FINEST

FARMS,

beautiful setting, land lays gently rollmg with a few
acres wooded hillside, excellent development land, or
highly productive farm. Spacious 4 yr . old r anch home
has4 BR , 2 fu ll baths, formal dining, fam ily rm , plush
carpet throughout. 2 ca r garage w1th workshop. Da~ry
barn equipped to sell Grade A milk , other ou tbldg . I ,800
lb. fob. base. also has older home suitable for renting .
Ga.s, oil and coal rights Incl. wtth farm . 117 ACRES.

DAIRY FARM - Nearly new f ully equipped mil
parlor, pipeli ne, tank, appr9x. 95 acres, J ponds,
lays good for dairy farming . 3 BR remode led farm
home, family rm Tnls farm ca n be bough t w1 t h all
farm equipment includ mg a fine herd of cattle. A lso 127
add'l acres available tar lease. SHOWN BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY

PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND near proposed
Interchange new Route 35 . Th is wou ld be an tdeal
location for motel. apartments, restaurant, etc Owner
will f inance, call for m ore details

446-1066

'£,. . •

US

A ENT BEATER! 1•12 story, 3 Br . fr ame in city, 26' x32 '
concrete block garage with ce ment floor Ci ty water
and sewage. Gas heat. Clean, we ll mamtained . $18,900

SEVENTY SEVEN ACRES - Appro x 1,200 '
fron tage, 22 acres t imber, 25 acres tillable, 30 acres
fences pa sture, streams, 5 rm. frame home, oth er
ovlbldg . $32,000.

RUSSELL WOOD

J

,, c.;::..
'1!fl ~'d':i;~:~

WITH

Merntt Carter
Eventngs
379 2184

ponds, toba cco base, some timber, 3 barns. other
outbldg 4 6R brick home, nearly completed . F irep lace
In LR , full basement, garage. Perfect for beef cattl e.
Cali for appointment.

Ken Morgan
Even1"gs
446-0971

LIST

SELL

MODERN HOME

PRODUCTIVE FARM
Rec en tl y remode led hom e.
25 Ac of tilla ble l and , til ed ,
limed, ready for l op pro
ctuc110n 56 ac c lean per
pastur e, 10 ac timber One
19 barn , new too l shed or
loil f mg ba rn 1800 fb tob
base House has new bat h,
ut il 1ty rm, furna ce, wa ter
syste m , i n su la ted , two
good wood bu r n, ng tr
places Far m w ell taKe n
care of A GOO D MON E Y
MAKER .
NEW FARM
Ll S'Ti NG
70 Acres, 16 ac good tert 11e
bollom la nd, 10 ac wood
lot. The res t i n pa stur e.
Plenty water, n 1cc st ream
r uns through fa r m L g .
count r y hom e, 2 stor y , 6
r ooms, 2 por cbes, new
floor s ctowns ta tr s Sha de
tr ees ln n rce co untr y se t ting, atso ch1ck en hou se,
cel lar w 1t h house, nice si ze
farm 1n good condit 10n .
Tob ba se M A K E US A N
OF F ER

BRAND NEW RANCH
AUTIFUL
RANCH
Loca ted in an idea l location, State Route
Owners are anxious to se ll this very n1ce
No. 141 approx. 4 miles from town in city
hOme ma n Ideal location, State Rt. 35. Th1s
sc
hool d•strict, on a nice size lot. Six room
area is real l y booming in growth and
home, nice com fortable conservative
val ue Th e ma1n featur e of th iS home Is a
home. Th1sone is for the economy minded!
huge spacious kitchen and dining ar ea
whi ch t h~ lady of the house would approve
of ; orh er areas of interest, livi ng room, 3
LOOK THIS OVER!
bedrooms, 1112 baths, utility r oom, plenty
Thts farm house has, siK
of cl oset and storage spa ce, 2 car garage
rooms, bath, fu ll basement,
with electric eye opener . Newly paved
carport, storm window s,
dnve area and c ha1n link fence around the
rura l water or dri lled well.
lot.
1500 lbs tobacco ba~e .
MODERN
barn , other outb ldgs. 30
WHI SPE RING PINES
3BEDRODMHOME
Acres t 1llabt e land, some 50
12.88 Acres more or les of
Owner m u$1 sell im ·
ac . pasture, most al l trilc
vacant l and located in a
mediately
Ranch type.
tor land. Good wood lot.
super locat1on - one mile
~ice size rooms. Com ·
some saw timber, 100 acres
from Rio Grande . Has
fortabte ea t-1n kitchen ,
rn all. Th is will sell, we'd
se veral n1ce pme trees on it
builhn ca binets. One ca r
l ik e to se ll it to you .
and good building lots.
garage L g. level lot . Plen ·
SUP E R BUY!
ty open space for c hildren
SMALL ACREAGE '
to play, end of street.
MOBILE HOME
MAKE USAN OFFER
21!2 acres clean and wel l
VACA NT LAND
kept Mob. home in good
FOR SALE
10 ACRE BUILDING SITE
cond. Good water supply,
22 Acres of good tertii~
Good roll1ng la nd on
spring dev. with new elec•
level land, has been t i lled.
black top road. Most all
tri c pump Garage wi t h
20 acres or more timber,
tillable - fences are fair
hand)&lt;
work benches built
cut ou t in Hl22; t he res t is
Spr1ng availble for water
in. Some trees around to
pas ture - 48 acres in all developmen t . Close to
add to the beauty of the
Good Investment, $25.000.
church . GOOD BU Y!
acreage. Good location for
mQre ·homes of any type
~Ou. -may desire. Thi s and
. mOre for $!13,500.
SM ALL FARM
COMFORTABLE
PRICED LOW
AF F ORDABLE RANCH
E ight acres, about al l
SMALL INVESTMENT
JUST LISTED! Only 2·
t ill able Very nice lake for
LOTS OF COMFORT
yea r s old, J bedroom
water or recreation Lg
modern home w ith conve
E.A57ERN AVENUE ,
cou ntry hOme , 5 BR , 4
nient modern kitchen and
Nice 2 B R home for small
rooms with carpet, running
dining ar ea with several
fam i ly . 2 porc hes, new,
water w 1th bath
Lg .
bu ilt in cabinets . NIce Ig.
storm windows and doors,
strawberry path, oth er out
ba th, llvtng room. Total '
utility bldg . v ery good
bldgs Can ' t last . $23,000
el ectric and a wood burner
garden area . Low utifities,
located off Stae Route 7
gas heat
Lot 40'x170' ,
Reasonably priced . Ex·
$3,000 worth of new f urcellent sta rte r home. Call
niture goes with sale. Good
MOBILE HOME
for more detail s.
home for old er couple or
1970 Cham pion m ode l, on
rnuderate income fami ly
corner lot Four rooms With
$14,000.
ba th Good cond1 tion 1500
gal sept1 c tank and drill ed
wa t er furn1shed Rural
wat er c lose by . Hookup all
ready for e;.&lt;. tr a mobile
home This can be a good
investment. Own two, ltve
1n on e, will go a long ways
toward payment . Rent
them both, should n't be anr
• Pflt&gt;blem . Call now. $13,500.

REAl ESTATE

Mose Canterbury
446-3408

NEW LISTING : New home consisting of li ving room ,
kitchen·din i ng area, uti'llty room, 2 bedrooms, bath W·
shower, rural water. wrap around porc h, carpeted,
garbage d1 sposa 1, all the comfort s of home. Call for
More information. Price $35,000
..
KANAUGA : On 5th Ave., 2 bedrooms, large Jot,
natural gas Priced S18t500.

WE HAVE MORE FARMS, H,OMES &amp; BUSINES
PROPERTY AVAILABLE, CALL

446-3636

BAIRD &amp; FULlER
R·EALTY

ANY HOUR
DR BETTER YET ... STOP BY AND SEE US AT 25'12
LOCUST ST. , GALLIPOLIS, 0 .

RODNEY : we have 2 ra nch style, 3 bedroom,
carp\dcdall e lectric homes for sa le now for $25,000
Sit a1 don 75'x120' lots T hese are real ba r gai ns on to·
day 's 1 o~ arkeL Call tor more info.

1218 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
"We Sell Better Living"

MILLCREEK RD .: N ew , 3 bedroom r anch style home,
many: amenities, only 3 m iles from downtown
Gallipolis. Everything new S47,500.

OFFICE 446-7013
IN TOWN - Ni ce attractive home with 3 bedrooms, llh
baths, large living room, formal dining r~om , n1ce k it ·
chen, full basement, price $29,900, owner moved out of
town, f1r st good offer buys it.

PLANTZ SUBDIVISION on Circle Or , 3 bedroom
carpeted home, rural water, 2 ex tra lo1ts. total size
180'X140' FA, nat gas hea t, only 5 minutes from
Ga llipolis or hospital $39.500.
CLIPPER MILL : Newly renovated , 3 bedroom home
w ith w.b. f ~replace , carpeted , river frontge &amp; view, 2
car garage, must see to apprecia te Price $30,000.

3 AND 4 RM . furnis hed ond un ·
furnished opts. Phone 99254J.4 .

GALLIPOLIS CITY : 5 Bedrooms , located In ce nter of
downtown, can be used as 2 apartments, nicely fi nish
ed, some furni ture included. $35,000.

NEW liSTING : 3 bedroom, 24'x60' , 1972 Bo1Xe
Cascade mobile home, sll":' ·o·I"'G'6 acre lot, 2 miles
from Holzer. wo ~t.! C
Jtov"' electrlc I.a .
furnace . rural wt ~~. ...1;! tncludes furni f ure, washer
&amp; dryer, many other an;enltles. Buy for $19,500.00.

fill' "·

NEAR VINTON : 151 acre farm, 4 beqroom home,
100' x20' eq uipment shed, corn crib, barn , ti ltable,
woods and pasture acreage . Price $75,000 .

NEAR GALLIPOLIS CITY LIMITS : Sma ll cottage, cl ·
ty water, city sewer, fenced-in yard, sma ll orchard,
.detached garage, natural gas. Pnce $23,000.
GALLIPOLIS : For sale or lease, 15,000 sq. ft .• Hloor
brick building with room for 40 autos in parking area.
No steps, ideal for professional offices. Ca tl for more
informat1on .

' w·sta t1on bu i lding, plus addi
EWINGTON : Corner lot
t iona I lot across street. Ca ll for more information.
NEAR PORTER : (Wheaton Rd . ). Modern 3 bedroom
home, piUS JO rolling acres, fini shed basement. A nice
ptace to move the family . Pr.ce $59,000
NEW LISTING : 4 rm . home, located on Madison Ave.
1n city . C1 ty water and sewer . Pnce : $7500.
LOT : 110' x230' locateo i n Evergreen area, can be purchased tor $5,300 Also, acreage up to 15 acres for Sl,OOO
per acre. Call for more mfo.

OLDER STO~E BUILDING loc ated on upper 2nd
Aenue, in city . Bu y now for $14,500 00.
WE NEED LISTINGS: IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SELLING GIVE US A CALL ... LET US HELP YOU!
IF YOU ' RE PLANNING
TO SELL, CALL US, WE
HAVE A LIST OF PROSPECTIVE
BUYERS,
6ND WE ' RE ANXIOUS
TO.SERVE YOU.
j

IF YOU DON' T SEE THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD, CALL , WE
MAY BE ABLE TO FIND
IT FOR YOU.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parle
Route 33, north of Pomeroy
Lorge lob . Call 992· 7479,
MASON TWO bedroom opt. Par·
tiolly furn Fully carpeted No
pets. Deposit requ1red. $200
permo After 5 p m co li (304)
882 3356.
TWO BEDROOM Trailer. 1 adult
preferred. S60 per month Mrddleport 992 ·5247
HOUSEKEEPING ROOM,
Utilil1es. pd . Single .
U6·.U16ofter 3 p.m.

$60
Cal l

UNFURNISHED lg . 2 bdr. opt. rn
· Goll1pol tt. R'f req Coli offer
1 .fpm , 675 -1588.
FIRST FLOOR furnished apartment. Downtown. No pets
Su•tobl e for 1 or 2 adults only,
REf. req . 631 Fourth Ave
TWO BDR . FURNISHED HOUSE .
Hendefson , WVo . Double

fronted fireplace, 1form win dows, oil heat. SISS per mo
Coii7Q3.759-2440,
SMALL HOUSE on Mill Creek
Road $135. pvr month , dep ,
req. Coll.t .. 6·4014
NICE FURNISHED APARTMENT. 1
or 2 adults only. Coll .. .f6·0338
TWO BDR . TRAILER . Call446 3273 .
FURNlSHEO TRAILER . $160 5 m1n
from hospital on Kemper
Hollow Rd . Coli 4.C6·A315

SLEEPING rooms l or rent . Goll1a
Hotel
BRADBURY RENTAL S. Furn . Elf
Apts. Adults onl y No pels
Dep. req 7'19 Second A11e Coil
446·0957.
TWO BDR . TRAILER in town
Adult s only No pets Inqu ire at
Sheppard Sole s. . Fr rst and
Olive:'::::-=:::
FURN ISHED EFFI CIENCY $1 20
Utihttes pd
Ad ult s Co li
446 4416ofter3p m
------~

UNFURNISHED APARTMENT , 6
rooms, 11/t bath s. Very nlc:e
$160. 1 ch1ld acc epted Call
~ ~6 4416 after 3 p m

~?7~3"ii~~~~
CARTER'SPLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth 8 P1nc
Phone .f46 3888 or 446·,.4777

-------------STANDARD
Plumbrng · Healing
21 5 Third Ave., 446-3782

--

IF carpels. look dull and drear.
DEWITT S PLUMBING
remove the spots as ther op·
AND HEATING
pear w1th 81v e Lustre Rent
Roule l 60ol Evergreen
electrte shompooer Sl Central Phone 446 2735
--..,...
~upp ly .
--DRAIN &amp; StWER CLEANIN G SER·
FURNISHED 1 bdr, goroge aport
VICE Open 24 Hr . 7 doy s o
ment Upper St. Rl 7 Adults
week Storche,; &amp; Son Ph
only. No pefri:, Coli 4-46 - 4 1~~ _
256-1391
~

-

--

OWNER WILL VA -FHA - Edge of town, th1S hOme has
th ree bedroom s and li v 1ng room f ully carpeted, fu ll
bat h wdh sh ower . beaul 1ful kitchen with tots of
cabi ne ts, lov ely d1n1ng room , three other roo m s. Fore·
ed a1r furn ace, c ity w ater and sewer , c rty schools, and
stat e h rghwa y with ample park1ng make 1t a barga m .
LUXURY HOME - Three miles out, ·thts lovely home
has four bed r oom s, two full baths, two half batns, tots
of storage, cen t r al air, pa tio, covered d.eck, s unk e~ I,IV·
1ng room , wood burning fireplace, f amtly room, Ummg
room , lots of 11v mg area . Beau t ifu l ru ra l settmg.
LARGE RURAL HOME - Three bedroom with fu ll
basemen t loca ted seven m 1les out . Thi~ home h.1s large
beau tif ul k1 tc hen, all room s spa c ious. lots of storage,
tw o f ul l ba th s, double g arage, coun t y wa ter, close to
Spr rng Va lley

WE N EEO LISTINGS - L iS! With us for act ion on your
property . We ha ve buy er s and lenders to hand le your
property , List with us for ac t 1on .
WE HAVE OTHER LISTINGS &amp; PICTURES OF ALL
OUR LISTI.NGS IN THE OFFICE . COME IN &amp; LET
US HELP WITH YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS .
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
Douglas w etherhol t - Broker, 446-4244
SA LES ASSOCIAT E
earl W1nters 446·3828
John Caudill675¥4167
Charles
446·3964

il-lohilc .Hom,,s f~;

ffirit-

MOBtlE HOMES LOTS
GRI:EN T£RRA C!: MOBil £ COM ·
MUNITV
loco 'edon Rt 1111 c:lly wofQr, c1 ty
~chooJ, .'&gt; rn m lrom Gallipolis
on,d H o l ~er H o~p.tol .
TWO BDR TRAILER.' Coll .l-46-3879
or 367 7&lt;1 38.

HOME WITH RENTAL - Bvy this 3 bedroom home
with bath, dinmg room, enclosed back porch and let the
rent from a 2 bedroom garage apartment help make
your payment. Good locat1on 1n town.
HANDYMAN SPECIAL Good older home, 3
bedrooms, bath, din1ng room, almost new furnace,
needs a little work but is a good buy for S12,BOO. Owner
wants to sel l today , nice lot in Bidwell.
72 MILL CREEK - Good home with 3 bedrooms, bath,
d1ning room, 112 ba sement, pa y for this like r ent-. Only
110.500.
CROWN CITY - Excellent building for business or of
fice , build ing is se t up fo r a beauty shop and a barber
shop, both wrth equipm ent, located on a nice lot. A rea l
bargain for $12,500.

REALTOR

IF' YOU hove o sen11ce to oller ,

space.
far
replacement

wont to buy or sell something,
oe look ing for work . , , or
you'll get results
whatever
foster W!lh o Senrmel WonT Ad

125,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT

Co ll 992 · 21:,:56
~.--

Loveday

Realtor Associate

Ph. H. 245-9114
Ph. H. 446·9539
Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real tEstate Agency

CALL 446-3643

STEP UP TO QUALI"'fY="luxurous 5 bedrOOm brick
home on a beautifully landscaped, 1 acre lot, ( 11h m ore
acres available) . This fanta stic home offers an
unusually large family room with W.B.F.P. - 2 com plete kitchens, 3 full baths &amp; lovel y 28' living room .
Large 3 car garage &amp; parking pad for 8 ~r. 9 cars.
Private circle drive plus many other amen1t1es. Call
for api&gt;Oin,tm•ent.

Immediate possession, 3
bedrooms, bath, NG heat,
room, carpeting,
storms, parking, older bvt
In "ery good condition.
$13,900.00.
1 STORY FRAME - 2·3
BR, bath, le-.1 lot, good
neighborhood , some
remodeling.
Going at
I 13,000.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA

cold

We Need Your Home or Farm To Sell

WAL.K IN AND START LIVING - Im m aculate 3
bedroom bnck &amp; frame r anch, 5 m iles from town
Features large famlly room w1th very pretty
w B F p bUilt · in kitchen , di 1ng area, 2 baths &amp; 2 car
ga'ra·ge . A. nat gas &amp; central air S41,500

F'

CLELAND
ASSOCIATES

992-1251-992.. 1109
992.. 1,.

••
BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH - D eannie .Drive Quality .c yr \ old 4 bedroom brick home offenng an at
tractive &amp; spacious living room , formal di~lng , 2 ba ths
&amp; large 2 car garage . Heat pump &amp; centrl atr . $46,900

~~~!~~[B.

- Roomy 4 bedroom
home j ust 1 mtle from down town 24' l iving room, large
k1tchen , d1n1ng area &amp; bath . Deep lot w1th garage
Pnced a t $28,800 .

REAL TO.
216 E. Second Street
COUNTRY - 7 room ranch
home. Real nice kitchen,
large bedrooms, fireplace,
:llf:z baths, 2 car garage,
1948 sq. ft. of floor space.
Almost l'h acres. $70 ,000.
NEW LISTING- 2 family

9 room house, .c bedrooms,
2 baths, ne~tural gas,

central healing, city water
and view of the Ohio River
on 2 lots.
NEAR STORE Lof
50x100 with city water,
sewer and electricity.
Owner will let 2 bedroom
trailer go with sale. All for
fu•t $6.000.
EXTRA NICE- 7 rooms.
1'12
baths.
stove.
refrlgen1tor,
dishwasher
and furniture. Natural gas
furnace
aild
fenced
backyard . Complete for
138.500.
RANCH 3 nice size
bedrooms,
2
walk · ln
closets, modern bath,
equipped large kitchen,
dining , sundeck and 2
acres. $25,000.
LARGE - 7 room older
home In Middleport. Bath,
natural gas heat, city
water and 2 car garage.
Only 11S,OOO.
DON'T HURRY YOUR
REALTOR IN SELLING
YOUR PLACE DR YOU
WILL LIKELY HAVE TO
TAKE LESS.
Bruce TNford
Htltn L. T Hford
Sut P. Murphy
Re1Hor ASioCIIIH

BEST BUY ON TDDAY' S MARKET - Quality bull 2
story colonat in Tara Esta tes. You can buy this dandy
home for several thousand dollars less than It can be
rebu11t for . Features attractive family room With
w .b.f.p., 4 bedrooms with a master bedroom fhat1s out
of rtus world, formal entrance &amp; dinin g, super kitchen.
ful basement with finished rec . room , plus 2 ca r garage
&amp; use of comun ity swimming pool . $68,500 ,
87 SPRUCE - A real bargain for $25,000. Th is 4 vear
old home is just a few blocks from shopping &amp; schools.
Features 3 bedrooms, eat·in kitchen, l iving room &amp;
bath. Nice lot with room for garden &amp; kids.
BARGAIN IN MIDDLEPORT Will sell to first
reasonable offer. Owner has moved, needs to sell im mediate! y Large 2 storv home on 4th Sf,, 3 bedrooms.
large family room, kitchen &amp; dming area, cellar &amp;
garllge w1th 3 room apt . overhead . Good location w1th
rental income.
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY New Listing Small 5 room home including 3 bedrooms &amp;a eat-in k1t·
chen, also 2 mobile homes set up and ready to r ent for
S300 per month. (Could make your mortgage pay ·
ment) . Call today for info. $36.500.

COUNTRY LIVING -

28 acres with fruit trees,
strawberries, free water &amp; gas . 7 miles from Pomeroy
on Rt. 1-43 . This recently remodeled home features 3
bedrooms, eat·ln kttchen &amp; dining, cozv family room
and small basement (e)(cellent storage for your canned
bernes and fruit) , 20x36 barn &amp; excellent garden
space can purchse with or w ithout 12x60 3 BR mobile
home. Call for info.

c.

QUIET COUNTRY BI-LEVEL- Near Centervt lle on
w~ acre lot This f1ne home has 4 bedrooms, large llv·
lng room wlth w .b. trreplace &amp; 11!2 baths. 2.4x36 garage
&amp; super garden spot . $50,000.
J BEDROOM NEAR ADDISON- ApproK. 1200 sq. fl .
brick &amp; frame ranch . Features large family room with
Franklin fireplace, 3 bedrooms, &amp; eat·in kitchen. 1h
acre lot in excellent area for children. $31,900.

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

61 ACRE FARM - Price reduced to 5&lt;6,900. Complete·
ly remodeled 4 bedroom farm home . (New plumbing &amp;
heating, new carpet. new kitc hen). Excellent bottom
land balance in rolling pasture &amp; woodland . The barn,
hou~ &amp; 5 acres are worth the asking price. Owner in a
b ind and needs to sell . Located near Meigs Mine No.1 .

Geo,... S. Hobstetter Jr. ,
lreker

NEAR VI NTDN - Cold be the home yov're looking for .
verv nice frame ranch with 2 bedrooms. K1tchen including refrigerator &amp; range, 10--.30 family room &amp;
garage. 5 acre wooded lot. Call Dan Evans at 388·8111.

10711 Syc.~more St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-'3:13
Offlct Hours: 9 A.M. to ••
P . M.

Close

T .. ursdiiys

VINTON -

Laroe 7 room home on Jackson St.. in·
etudes .c bedrooms, living room , kitchen &amp; bath. At
$18,500 this should be a must for you to see if you're
looking for a good solid home. Call Dan Evans at
388·8111 .

anc,

S.turdays at noon.

Look over our llsllnga
- · y o u buy.

11 ACRES - v ery nice land suitable for investment or
development, .small farm or home site. Loca ted close
to Addaville School

Chary 1 Lemley

fB
f:M

Leadingham
Realtor

below
costs.

NICE LOT - Sui table for a house or mobile home,
located In Cheshire Vi llage, only $2,500.

Evenings·· Call
Oscar Baird, Reallur 4464632
John Fuller, Realtor ~27'

Phylis

paneling,

PONY KEG - This well known Carry Out is one Of the
area's best. A money making business that includes
the property , nice lot to Ohlo R iver , fixtures and inventory . eusiness has a very good net income per year.
Stop In and let us give you all th e details.

EXCELLENT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Route Business w ith unlimited potential, if you
be independent and have a money making business,
stop ln at our office for more detaits.

Willis T.

carport, corner lot . All this
for lust $31,900.00.
2 YEARS OLD - 1 floor
plan, 3 BR. bath, nice
kitchen. utility, carpeflng,
finished garage, lots of

We hove Two Trailers with
lots In Tuppers Plains.
Ohio.
1 home In Tvppers Plains.
Ohio.
1 home on west Shlde,
near Chntar, Olio.
1 home, New, Crow
Subdivision , Rt . 7 nHr
Five Polnto.

WE NEED Ll STf NGS
WE HAVE A WAITING LIST OF QUALIFIED
BUYERS. LIST WITH US FOR 1FAST ACTION OW
YOUR PROPERTY.

-----

GENE PLANT S &amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heating
A1r Con dllloning 300 Fourth Ave. Ph ,
446·1637 .

2 car garage, storage shec:L

NtCE &amp; ROOMY - Attractive home, 3 bedrooms, new
bath, new kitchen, family room , good buy for $22,800,
owner will help finance.

SLEEPING Rooms, weekly rat es
Pork Ce ntral Hotel .
LOW weekly and rn on thly rates at
L1bby Hotel , 4&lt;16- 17~~ ~~
LIGHT hou sekeep1ng room Pork
Central Hotel
'

features. JUST 119,500.00.
5 YEARS OLD - Ranch, 3
BR , bath, lovely kitchen.
formal dining, all carpeted,
electric BB heat, fireplace,

carpetllig,

..

44 OLIVE STREET Within walk1ng distance
downtown . 3 BR frame . Nice eat-In k 1tchen, Garage.
Natural gas furnace . Good cond. SJO,OOO.

190 ACRES, 60 t i llable. 100 acres pasture fenced, 2

Russell D. Wood
Even1ngs
446·4618

~

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

131 ,500.00.
LARGE OLDER HOME 3·4 BR, modern kitchen,
utility, NG hot water heat,

Ill

NEW HOME TOUR ... We have FIVE BRAND NEW
HOMES pri ced from 132,000. All are qvallly bvilt with
energy saving construction, all have firepla ces, extra
lg lots, 1 or 2 car garages. 1 or 2 baths, fu ll y carpeted,
beautifully decorated and landscaped . Call for an
appclntment. TAKE THIS MONEY SAVING T O UR!

VERY NICE - 2 story
fram4, 3 BR, bath, forced
air
heat ,
utility
R.,
carpeting,
paneling,

garage, garden, other

$17 ,250.

llm !!:state for Sale

Real "sla.le lor Sale

Associate
Home Phone742·2003
Hilton WOlle, Sr.
Assod.tt
Hom• - · 949·2519

W'IMESITES for sole . 1 acre and
up. Mid lleport, , near Rutland.
Coll992 · 48 I.
NEW 3 M&lt;!room house, 2 baths,
all elec .• 1 acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland. Phon• 992·
7081.

CASUAL &amp; COMFORTABLE - A ttract1ve 3 bedroom
ranch 5 m1 1es f rom to w n ver y pre tt y living room ,
large f a mily r oom , 11!2 ba ths, nice k rtchpn, 2 car
garage &amp; patio Good area for ct) ildl'en S39,500 .·
121 ACRE FARM - One of the best farms m \he area
Excellent farm home only 4 miles out ef town on a good
black top road . 40·50 acres ot fla t to ro11 1ng land (most
which could be developed into good bu ilding lots) plus
70 acres pasture S. woods. Some exce llent r oad t~o n ·
taQe Also a charming 2 stor y 4 bedroom co ton1 al w1th 2
modern w.b.f.p., l arge f ami l y room and bult·1n. k 1f
chen Large da1 r y barn plus severa l good outbu lldmgs
Good view &amp; excellent 1oca t 1on Ca ll Ike W1sem an
8 ACRES tN MIDDLEPORT -.- Sm a ll house rn good
condit ion . Has 2 mobile home spots with sept1c tank s &amp;.
f rontage on Rt '124 near junction of Rt , 7 $20,000

HANDYMAN SPECIAL - Old er 2 st ory home on 11
acres Owner wants property sold now! The acreage 1s
beautiful (some excel leJ1 t bu rlding lots) with frontage
on SR 325 &amp; town ship r oad The old home 1S 1n need of
repair but is liveable. A rea l barga in al $20,000 .
UNUSUAL FAMILY ROOM - Un1que 2 story home 6
mi . from town on Rt 141. ThiS f rne home off er s 24' l iv
ing room , eat · in klfchen. 2 baths &amp; 4 bedrooms . A lso a
rust1c fam 1ly room w1th overs1zed w b f p &amp; ba lcony
suporting master bed room &amp; bath . EniOY t he I acre lot
&amp; ten ced ·in swimm i ng pool $53,900.

SOLID BRICK ON lND AVE . - Large 2 story 4
bedroom co1on1a l hOm e conve ni ent ly located near
shopping 18' l ivi ng room , family room , eat-in kitchen
&amp; din 1ng, 2 baths &amp; basement. F .A na t. gas heat &amp;
carpet throughout $34,900.
NEARLY NEW COLONIAL Lovely 2 story 3
bedroom colonial with approx. 1954 sq . ft . of li ving The
J yr. old home offers forma t entrance &amp; din1ng, attr ac
tive family room with w .b.f. p., eat ·in k itchen &amp; 2112
baths . Electric heat &amp; central air. L oca ted 6 m i from
town in excell ent neighborhood . S63,900
BEAUTIFUL Y -SHAPED RANCH __. 22 acres of qu1e t
&amp; secluded woods with a breathtaking view of the Ohio
Valley. Thjs 2 yr . old architect des1gned home features
a large l ivi ng room &amp; attractive fa mil y room. 3
bedrooms, extra nice kitchen &amp; 211:~ baths. L arge 2 car
garage beau tiful yard . Ca tl for appom tm ent
85 LOCUST - The grace &amp; charm onl y found 1n an
older home can be found in t hi s large 2 story Colon iat.
Th is spacious home offers large l1ving &amp; t am1 1y or di n·
ing room , 4 bedroom s, 2'h baths, futl basement &amp; large
watk-in attic. ln ·ground swim ming pool in fenced ·in
backyard You must see thts one . S49,SOO
SPECIAL BI¥LEVEL - Ver y n1ce 4 bedroom home on
Jay Drive. Features large fami ly room, l iving room ,
kitchen &amp; dining area, 2 baths &amp; 2 ca r garage . Owner
transferred wil t accept any r easo nab le offer .

WE NEED LISTINGS

JUST WAITING FOR YOU I
L ov el y J BR brtck ho me In a very d cs ~r ed
loc ation - close to Hol zer Hosp1 tal Thi s
home ha s a form al e ntra nce, a lar ge Hvt ng
room . Has a nice larg e k it c hen w1fh form a l
dm mg area . J BR &amp; 2 baths, u ti l ity area &amp;
garage Th is home is si tua ted on a la r ge
w ell land sca ped lot. A l so n atur al gas heil f
&amp; centra l r:u r
8 ROOM HOME
APPROX 4 A .
A ll leve l, al ong Sl. Hw \1
55 4 4 B R modern home
wit h bu ill 1n ki tchen. F A
furnace, parti al basem en! ,
'J porches Separale ga r.1gc
and summer k1 1ct1en , also
work snop &amp; stor age Mea .
Lo ts of bull d1 ng spot s for
new homes on t he Ga ll1 a
Co Rur a l Wdler Sy st Al so
an 1n comc rnveslhl ent pro
per ty CA L L NOW F OR
MOR E DE TA ILS
COMFORTABLE
OLDER HOM E
3 BR , formal 11vtng r oom ,
family room , din1ng r oom ,
1&lt;,1t c hcn w1 th bu ilt 1n
cabinets and s.s. sink ,
mod~rn ba th 1 garage &amp;
ba sement
Locilfed on
large 1 65 A Beautif u ll y
kept L oca ted 1n K yger
Cr eek Sc h Dist N a tur al
ga s heat , E xcell en t loca·
tl on on Sla te H1g hway
0 ACRE S WITH
LARGE PINE TREES
Ideal bui ldi ng spot nestl ed
rn an a r ea of lar ge pi ne
trees 200f t. frontage 2 out
side stor age bu tld1ngs
Garden spot, apple &amp; peac t1
trees. T 1mber , well w 1th
ONLY
e lectnc pum p
18,900 OOTOTAL .

BEAUTIFUL RIVER
FRONT HOME
Beau t1 IU I 7 room home w1 th
a panoramic vrew of the
nver 21h A . Fu ll ba sem ef'lt
w i th
woodbur n ing
f rrep ldce . 23 H,x4 llt . room
with k i t Ch enette, e)( ce ll ent
for entertaining or dane
ing Nrce mode rn k1 tc hen
inc ludmg d 1shasher , rang e
&amp; r e frig erator , formal d•n·
mg room, familY room , tor ·
mall1ving r oomS. J BRa nd
2 f ull bath s &amp; showers Fuel
oil F .A. f urna ce E )(Ce ll enl
tocat1on for f rsh1ng, r rght
out your ba ck door Ci t y
school dtst Must see to ap·
prcc iate its va lue.
11.7 ACRES
WITH LOTS OF
SHADE TREES
2 BR mobile hOme n es t l ~d
rn lots of shade trees L ots
Of road fr on tage . Outside
buildings. All furn1ture
goes, includtng wash er and
dryer . Some t1mber . CA L L
NOW .
8 ACRES
LEVELLAND
Bea ut1 tu l land with lo i s of
pines and two road f rontge ,
4'h m i les from M eigs Coun
ty Mme No. 1, Good
buildmg sites and rura l
wa ter tap paid for . CALL
NOW
MINI FARM OR
BUILDING LOTS
App r ox . 2'h A . Have you
been !poking for a ttome
with a country setting?
STOP LOOK IN G, H ERE
IT IS A nice home with J
BR . ba th, shOwer, modern
k i tchen
with
built · in
cab inet s, dbl. si nk, l iving
room, fuel oil F A . f urnace,
new steel sid ing recen t ly
1nstal l&amp;d, city water, also
has a small barn, ot her out ·
bUildings and cellar . LOOK
Tf-IISOVER .

BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOM E I
Th1s hOme was des1gned wllh a woman in
m 1nd , verv nlw step sa iJor k i tc hen w ith
lots of cab inets, c.Hshwastwr , gi'lr bage
disposal &amp; r ange Lcvge l ivi ng room wtftl
m tr r or ecl w al l. ex tr a nice difiiii Q area. 3
BR . J1. 1 Ua ths, ut 111 1y r oo m . 1 c ar ga ra ge &amp;
cor ner lot. Less tnan 10 minult•s !rom
G alli po lis on blacktop roc1d TH IS O N E t S
PRI CE D TO SE L L

ONE ACRE PLUS
v aca nt lanrt 1n CII Y of M1d
dleport . Rea l ni ce butlt1i ng
lot, hi gh &amp; dr y w j lh l arge
shade l rec a lready there . A p
pro x 300 lj tron iA ge.
8 ACRES
PRICE REDUCED
Wi thin 10 n11n. dr i ve to
downtown Grt llipolis, Green
C1ty
Sclloo l
l own s hlp ,
Sys tem
Hrt s hookup for
m obi le home G,111 t.l Rur.1 1
Wa ter . elcc ln c and ~~ p l i c
tank . n1ght li ght on pole 700
ft
tr on ta ge on Graha m
School Rd Ti m ber . Bundfng
Sites , CA L L N OW

STATE HIGHWA Y 160
REASONABLY PRICED
ISO ft . fron1 agc on Rl 160
Lar ge l iving room an d ea t in
k i tchen Two B R W1th ClOSe !,
ba th w 1th show er
N ice
stream run s t hr ough pr oper
ty , some trees, l arge concrete
f loor c arpor t Th1 s property
on l\1
$18 ,9 00 00
J U ST
LI STED , CA LL.

83 .35 ACRES
MORE OR LESS
Vaca nt l ~tn d . Appro x. 65
acr es of timber Du g we ll
Cn: ek itnd springs. PRIC
E O RIGHT
PR ICE REDUCED
OVER 1145 SQ . FT .

BLOCK BLDG .
Busi ness or storage space .
Nrce 3 IM fJe r oom s on EIP
prox . 150 It f r ontilg o on it
Slil l c Hlg hwi'ty by appro)( .
180 II deep, A ll leve l, lul~l
orl FA turn acl' Rural
W&lt;ller sysHf m . di SO Wt' ll
wll ll elec tr ic pump H lgh
ovcr ht!.1d doors for large
tr uc kS Off ice 15 nice l y
ca r pe ted &lt;l ll d prt ne l ed
CAL L
FOR
OT HE R
DE I AIL S

CITY PROPERTY
CO NVENIENTLY
LOCATED
N1ce flOm e,
com pletel y
res tor ed, \I O U m usl see the
is1 dc to believe the ex tent it
has been r em odeled and
rcdecor illed . 6 room s, 7
111ACR ES
va ca nt 1anc1 on Af r ica Rei 111 bath s, F A ga s lurnacc.
Chesl11 r e Twp . Old barn new wiring , plumbing, dry
60' x70' . All m 1nerrtl right s ' w all. pa per and comp letel y
carpeted wi th top grade
goes with sale. L 1ne fences
F irepla c e ,
c arpe t rng .
Dug well near barn
hOuse rs cover ed w1lh new
alum . siding, garden area,
2 ACRES CLEAN
C~ I J of thi s ilnd more. This
L EVEL LAND
one i s r ea dy to move i nto.
Short di stan ce north of
VA Loan, no down P·1Y ·
Ga ll ipol is. Gallia Co. Rural
men I .
Water 11ne in front of th is pr o·
pertv . B l acktop r oad
All
7ROOMS
m 1nera1 righT s goes AL L
4BEDROOMS
LEVEL S. LO TS OF USE S
Good solid home, Gal lipoli s
School Ol strk l , bC~sement,
w.. bath s, modern kit chen ,
NIC E REMODELED
comp lete with birch c .:;~b l nets,
DUTCH COLONIAL
F .A
fur nace, carport , 2
With 1 4 A . of use ab le la nd .
woodburning
f i r ep la ces ,
a room s, 4 BR No upk e:eP famtly room , large
srorge
vrny l sl 'c:li n g, slorm doors,
building , Within 5 miles of
theropanc windows
1112
Gallipol is. N1 ce hom e at a
bath s, nat gas F .A fur
good pr ice
nac e. N ice bu tlt 10 k1tchen .
Plenty ot good cold spring
COUNTRY MANOR
water. Nice block garage
LOCATED ON
wi t h 15'X 23' storage space
SACRES
&amp; part1a l basemen! und er
Two slory Co loni al brick
storag e area . Loc ated on
hOme built in the 1800's. It
blackfop road If' mi le oft
ea1ures large formal living
S1 Hwy 160 ,ust l is ted .
room w ith f ireplace, large
SEE I f N O W
modern ki tchen with ea t in
ar ea and built·rn r ange &amp;
wa l l ov en, lots of birch
HANDYMAN ' S DREAM
cabine ts. A l so Includes
45 ac rs of good land plu s
parlor &amp; forma l entrance . 5
unf rnis hed tri ·level home
BR &amp; upsta irs balcony .
th at you can ff n1 sh, a l l
This home is s1tu ted on 5 A .
mater i a l s are already
with lots ot large shade
availab le . Own e r will
tr ees. A Iso a barn 50'x40',
negot1ate pnce .
tr uc k &amp; c ar garage &amp;
smoke
h ouse
with
firepla
ce.
s
mall
pond
&amp;
61!, ACRES
se verat fruit tree5, In·
MORE OR LESS
eludi ng peac h &amp; apple . Ap·
On State Highway 554, two
pr o '~{ , 1,000' road frontage
ba rn s, level to roll1 ng land
on Rl. 7. CALL FOR EVE N
w ith sma ll stream t hrough
MOR E
DETAILS!
NO
at edge of pr operty , ONLY
SICif-ITSEERS PL EASE .
p .•oo oo
ON BLACKTOP ROAD
9 room modern home ·
Loca ted on up to 1 A o f
level land approx . 6 mi. to
Gallipol iS on a blacktop
road . 3 BR , l.:fr ge family
room , 16'x20' , living room,
mod . kitchen with lots of
bu i lt·in cabinets Table top
etec. _range Gall i a Rura l
Water System . PHONE
NOW FOR I NFORM A,
TION .

GREAT LOCATION
Cozy older home with
wood burni ng f lreplacl!
fa m ily room , J BR . galley
k 1t c h en
with lots of
cabi nets &amp; range, dining
room, utility room, pa rtial
basem ent, bath &amp; very n1ce
garden . Th is bea utifully
Situated home IS si tti ng on
1112 A. of unusually nice
land 1n Rio Grande. PR I C·
ED R IG HT WON'T
LAST LONG .

E. M. WISEMAN. BROKER 446-3796
LL

THE CHOICEST PRICE IN TOWN
HOuse 1s located by Ook Hill
From Hwy ~3 8. 279 take 279 2
miles to Co . Rd. 4. Turn left on 4
and follow to H1ckory Grove
Church fake drtVawoy about
LOTS FOR SALE . Blacklop, oil
30 feet poiil church to house .
utiht1es. Coll.f46-0168.
This 3 b4tdroom house on o n1ce
lot has all the makings to
LOTS IN CITY OF Gallipolis , ol1o
become o beauttfvl home
Gallipolis Township, Addison
.. w1th some pounding and
Township,
and
Guyon
po1nt. We've got to sell if
Townsh1p Coli Robert Queen,
now!! So the best offer w1 ll get
"6-0168.
il . Materials to f1n ish can be
3 BOR hous• w1th 4 acres of land
mode ovoiloble. Immediate
on Rl . 218. 256·6836.
possession w1tl'l small down
payment and low mo11thly
ooymet'lts. N&lt;? clos1ng c~sts or
TWO STORY 3 bedroom frame
commission to pay. See It and
house. F.A. furnace, 1torm win·
then give us. your offer Contact
dows. fireplace . In M1ddleport.
(612 ) 5889758.
---Phone 992-3.c57 or 992-5867 ,

MORTGAGE
CO .
COUNTRY farmland with seclud- IRELAND
ed woods, water and good OC•
Specializing in FHA and VA
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo
Home loons. Also Refmonc1ng
$1 ,000 down, caN {304) n2.
463 2nd Ave. l ot'ated 2nd tloor
Gollipol11, Ph. A.cb·7 172.
3102"' (30&lt;) n2·3m.
Commercial property approx , 17
acres, level fond , locot~ ot
Tuppers Plaint on Ohio, Route
7. Phone (61AI1167-630A.
VA-FHA, 30 yr, financing. also
refinancing. Ireland Mortgage,
E. Slale. Alheno. phone (61&lt;)
592·3051.

n

NICE THREE beckoom houae with
~orage ,
in Ruttlc Hills ,
Syrocuoe. $27 .000. 992.5541 .
JUST COMPLETED new house in
Middfeport. For mar• informo.
tton co11992·2238or992,fkW .

NEW LOW ENERG Y HOUSE for
sole . Coll 256128 1 or 256·9346
197.. SKYLINE 14 x 56. 3 bedroom
BY OWNER
total electrrc. $7500, 992-2019
Bea utiful
brick
ranch
1n
Gallipolis . On 3 city lots , 3 bdr , 8 JC 52 TR-'\JLER for sole. Would
'l baths , foyer , LR . DR, tam r
moke a good camper. Phone
Ia und ry rm
Ia rge 2 cor ~9::&lt;::9:,:·2:.:3::
"~
·n~y::t~lm~e::o~l::
••::.r:.:S;.:·~
~­
garage K1tchen has ids.posol ,
d1shwasher buih-tn range and
o11en, lots oJ cobi ne li , carpe ted 1972 RICHARDSON 11 x SO mob1le
home , 2 bdr $3995 Coli
throughtout sw.mmrng pool
"6·2030.
1? x 35 oYal, natural .gas heel ,
air cond , chain link fence . Coli 1973 HCONA trailer in good
shape , 14 x ?0 Soy win dwo, 2
.t•6-J96A for oppo1ntment Prrce
bdr. Toke over poymenh . Coli
reduced
U16-2064

i~~ - ~~::::::.::..::~ ·~
SERVICE STATION 10 Goll1pohs
Coil 4.tb... 11 ~ . 446-1 09-4 even
mgs .

--- - ·

-~--...---·

AUL I MOBILE HOM ES SERVICE.
S'ktr ling. anchoring, ond pot•o~o .
coli 446-3608 after 4
JC b8 Holly Pork Tro•ler , w~th
e.:pondo , wosher and dryer.
drshwosher , underpinning , 12 x
12 ou tbldg., Ph, 606·638 ·-4060

12

B&amp;S MOBILE HOM ES
P1 PLEASANT , W VA
1975 1.. K70 PEERLES , 3 bdr. cenfrol
1 air , tipou r
1971 12x60 VINDALE, 2 bdr .. 11/ t
both
1970
12x60 RAMBRANT. 2 bdr .
1969 CHAMPION , 12 x 60 mobile
home eKe.. cond $3600. Ga ll 1970 12Jt60 REAGENT, 3 bdr
1971 12x52 TORNADO , 2 bdr
between 6 and 7pm , H6-2901
or .t4b-0131

·-

---·---

HUFF INE'S IN1 ERIOR
DECORATING
Coli 388·88&lt;7.

-

•,

Will BABYSIT at my home. Call
U6·310S,

POMEROY · Moore'• Store. After.
30 years of successful butineu'
we ore sell!ng this general :
nordwore · automotive store. •
Priced a! ln11entory Contact;
Sommerv,fle Real Estate: phone
l ·JO.t-675 -3030, Pt. Pleasant,

,- - - . -

�~-The Sunday Time!hSenbnel, Sunday.

Feb. 19, 1978

Senior Citizens' Scenes
POMEROY - The square
dance gro up is meeting
regularly on Mondays alter
being unable to hold a square
dance
susion
s1nce
December. Come 1n and join
them on Monday afternoons.
\4. lso,
a
black
lung
representative w1ll be at the
Center Monday (tomorrow)
to answer any questions you
may have on black lung
Jeg•slahon from 12 noon unlll
2 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 21 begmnmg
kmtting class at 10 a.m. and
crewel embroidery class atll
a.m. On Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday at 1 p.m. craft
makrng classes for the Easter
bazaar will be held. Thursday
beginmng at 10 a.m w1ll be
the monthly blood pressure
chmc . Fnda y morning,
beginning at 10 a.m . an advanced knittin g class IS
scheduled.
Lunch is served daily at the
Ce nt er through CO AD
Nutri tion Pro gram at 12
noon.

Please

register

for

lunch at least one day ahead
by calhng 992-7886.
ART SHOW
Remember to get your
entr~es 1n lor the third annual
Semor C1tizen Art Show, Sale
and Auction March 13-19 at
the Statehouse RolLmda m

Columbus. This art show IS

lor Oh io artists, age 60 and

STATE FARM

over, who may enter an
original work executed after
reaching age 60 All entries

lines. Material for work must
be furnished by the Senior
C1tiz.en For fu rther in -

must

formation on this program,

be

fram ed

and

call the Center at 992·7886.
LOW COST LOANS
Recently there have beed
than 5 entries per artist
in .... y;a rious
will be accepted, and no artlcles
painting can be larger than 3 publications about low cost
ft x 4 ft. Each entry must be loans and-or grants from the
Home
Adfor sa le with the price deSired Farmers
ministration for qualifymg
, mdica ted on the pamting.
Entnes for the Art Show families... ·
Since age is not a factor m
must be at the Center by
determming
your elig1bihty
March l so arrangements can
thiS
could
be
a
way for Semor
be made for transporting the
Citizen s on limited income to
paintings to Columbus
get necessary repairs, etc.,
FUEL INFORMATION
rr you filed for the ubhty for their homes at a low cost.
Generally the repair loans
dtscount and recea ve a
regular month ly gas or and-or grants are used to
electric b11l but the disco unt remove health hazards Some
has not been shown, call the of the repaars mclude
Center at 992-7311 so we can repaanng roofs, providmg a
che ck w1th the compan y samtary water and waste
disposal system (example ·
about your discount.
Effective January 1978, digging a well, putting in a
persons who receave food septi c ta nk), installing
stamps and have a n tncrease screens,. windows and m·
of $25 or more on the1r utility sulat10n.
To give you an idea of what
bills may be ellg1ble for an
these
loans would cost; a
adJustment in the cost of food
$t,500
loan
for 10 years at I
stamps. Contact the Welfare
percent
would
cost you $12 a
Department, Middleport ,
month
A
$2,500
loan for 15
Ohio or call 992-2117 for
years at I percent would be
further informa tion
repaid at $15 a month
RSVP LUNCHEON
ThC Farmers Home AdThe"' sec ond stat ewide
RSVP luncheon will be held ministration office for Me1gs
at t he Columbus Sheraton County IS located In the
Hotel, Columbus, Ohio April Farm ers Bank BUJldmg,
17, 1978. F1ve senior volun- Pomeroy, Ohio For more
tee rs have expressed a n information about these low
interest 1n attending so far cost loans, call the FHA office
Tickets for this luncheon at 992~644
have to be prdered by March
1, oo call 992-7684 1! you are
Interested m gomg . Trans·
purtat10n will be furnished
and the cost of the luncheon
w11l be a pproxunately $5
Persons who attended last
ready ·for hanging with

®

FOR INSURANCE CALL

C. K. SNOWDEN
24 State Street

Gallipolis, Oh10
Phone 446-4290

Like a good neighbor,
State Fann is there.
5111~

Hone

t. rm 1111,11 J!l ~~ I Ql\111111••11
O llt~~ ~ i:lloQmm 9 1Q~ l ll"'o'~

book gives
old names

year' s luncheon had an en·

joyable day and we hope to
have a la rger representation
from Me1gs County this year.
HOME MAINTENANCE
With spnng just around the
co rn er, according t o the
By James Sands
calenda r, tt's time to begm
GALIJPOLIS
- Matenals
thinking about those needed
home repairs If you have of histo rica l value a re
minor repairs to your home so m etime ~ to be found m
that need to be taken care of ~'lran gc places. Such a place
such as pamtmg porches, IS an old phone book. We have
steps hxed, roofs patched, before us a copy of a
etc. - the Home Main- Galhpohs phone directory for
tenance Program may be the year 1935. There were
able to be of assistance to some unusual (to us in the
1970's) phone numliers like t
you
Accerding to the Home or 6 or 9. 0 0 Mcintyre's
Mawtenance
Program number was 00. From teh
guidehn es, the labor lor book " e ca n tell pretty well
mtnor repairs to , }'our home what Galhpolls was like m
can be furnished 1f yo u a re 1935.
For mstance, Gallipohs
within the financial guide·
contained no fewer than 22
businesses that made money

:
eal
Sta ,.e:••
To ay •

) I 116fl'&gt;"

I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

(I

d

.

By

Willis T. Leadmgham

•

-

Realtor

•
•
I
I

from the sale, repair, or

upkeep of the automobile.
There were four new car
Dodge
and
dea lers:
Plymouth ( 417 Second ),
FraZier Motor Sales (205
Third), Moore Brothers Ford
(50 State). and Gallipolis
Motor Company (Secon d
Avenue)
There were at least five
garages for repc.ur · E.E.

•
•
•
the date ot closing. Also •

Langdon (Pme and Fourth),
Harnngton 's (Second ),
Walter WISe (654 Second!,
Day and N1ght (444 Second),

: WHICH CI:OSING COSTS DEDUCTIBLE?
•

Expenses connected with

• the sale of real estate over
• an&lt;l above the selling pr ice

dedu cf tble as interest Is the 1
amount charged as points I

• are known as closing costs
• Some
of
these are
• dedu c tible irom you r
e income tax _ others are
• not .
•
Property ta xes are

and

Haskins

Garage

(Second).

h
1
1x
T ere were atu east s gas
stations: Butterfield (Pine),
Wetherholt (Third aod
Court), Sinclair (Second and
Sycamore), Evan Reese
(Chi ckamauga
Road),
Morgan Super Service {Pine
and Fourth) and Haffelt
Brothers (VIne).
•.
Other
auto
re lated

prov ided they are •
charged es a premium for •
the loan of the money - not I
when cha rged for services 1
Non -deductible closing I
ex pen ses , are
fire I
e usually prorated so tha t msurance, FHA mortgage •
e both the buyer and seller .insura nce , and charges for •
e each pay the ta xes for the . rent for occupancy before •
• portion of the year that ~ closmg
•
•
•

each owned the property
Each may deduct thts
e amount - and only this
If there is anything we
• amount - even though one can do to help you in the
or the other pays the entire flekt oi real estate please
• amount.
phone or drop 1n at

e

e Another deductible Item LEADINGHAM REAL
• that appears In closing ESTATE, 512 Second Av:9'
•
•

costs. Is Interest charged to
you on the mortgage up to

•
1
e
1

businesses were: Oscar Wood
Tire and Battery, L.M. Evans

e
e

and Sons Tires {Third and
Grape), G&amp;J Auto Parts
(Court ) plus Sterling Oil and
Standard Oil Bulk stations.

1

Galhpolis, whtch in the
1800s had over 30 grocery

~~~'::O~~re ~~o:lp~46- 76 · e

~·························

1

-

"IT TAKES A HEAP OF LIVING
TO MAKE A HOUSt A HOME!"

STEVE Dawson, left, director of alternatives program, Gallia-Meigs-Jackson
Commumty Mental Hea lth Center, and Maxine Plummer, executive dll'ector of 648 Board .

Wellston Teen Town
•

receives $3,000 grant
WELLSTON
The activities that s urvive over
Commumty Mental Health an extended penod of ttme
Teen Town provides a
646 Board awarded a $3,000
meetmg
place and actiVIty
gra nt to the Comm umt y
Mental Hea lth Center's center for high school youth
Alternatives Prog ram for use durmg after school hours.
in support of the Wellsto n The Alternatives Program
Teen Town Program. Teen staff recognize the Tee n
Town program as one
Town as a unique youth
type
of
alternative
project of t he Wellston to the developing of
Rotary Club Not only is Teen substance abuse Steve DawTown umque In the type
son , Program Darector
program ·it offers to the
the
Alternatives
Wellston area high sehoul for
Program,
states
that 11 is
youth, but also 1n the fact that
thetr
desire
to
work
with Teen
1t ha s bee n s uccessfull y
Town
tn
inc
reasing
the
scrvmg the youth for ()Ver 20
number
uf
actlvttles
that
can
years There are few youth

be provided by Teen Town
Alternatives staff believe
much can be done in the
prevention of drug problems

through

IncreaSin g

lei s ure and
communication skills among

youth.
Alternatives Program staff
are available to work and
mnsult with mdiv1duals and
community groups m the
preventiOn of drug abuse
Alternatives staff can be

contacted through the local
Commumty Mental Health
Center in Meigs, Jackson and
Gallia counties.

RonJames
(D-Proctorville,)

92ndHouseDistrlcl )
In 1ts darkenejl legislative
chamber ht only by sunlight
coming through the wmdows,
Ho\Jse
of
the · Oh io
Representa\lv es passed a

important symbolic effect of
showmg Washmgton offic ials
the cntlcal need for coal in
Ohto a nd the near. universal
ca llmg of Ohio political
leaders to settle the coal
dispute qmckiy and fairly.
Like most offices and
busmesses, the Statehouse is
usmg only mmimal lighting

resolutiOn Thursday urgmg and ts utilizing other conPrestdent Ca rter to per· servation measures ln order

sonally med1ate the co al
stnke negotiations. Th e
resolution which I cosponsored, was approved by
an 87 to 4 vote.
In part, the reso lution asks
the PreSident to "apply the
full power and prest ige of the
off1ce of President 111 order to
ex pedit e agreem ent and
prompt resumption of coal
mming."
The reso lution ha s th~

to consume hall of itsnormal
electrical usage
N1ght
committee hearmgs have
bee n
cancelled
and
rescheduled for da ylight
hours. TelevisiOn came ra

"hot lights" have not been
t urned on Copy machines are
used sparin gly. Anything
electrical that IS not vitally
needed is not used.
ln other legislative action

last week, the House passed
legislation providing for two
addttwnal com mon pleas
court jud ges for Lak e
County and one each for
Ashtabula and Greene
Counlles. All three counties'
populations are growing
rapHlly creating the need for
more jurists. Also passed in
the House was a measure

BUY N!&gt;W&amp; SAVE
DURING OUR
MID-WINTER SALE

KER FURNITURE
IN MIDDLEPORT

'

mto eastern Kentucky.
"The latest report I have is
that 60 carloads of miners,
with about four or live in each
car, had entered Lawrence
County
from
Jackso n
County," said Lawrence
County Sheriff James Howell
at Ironton
Howell said no non·union

coal was running in
Lawrence County today.
" They worked Friday,
Saturday and Sunday and
then shut down today, I guess
when they heard the miners
were commg," sa1d Howell.
Kentucky State Police were
reported out in force at the
Kentucky border to guard
against any violence.

Ohio UMW members and
the ir wives have also
scheduled a march on the
statehouse for Tuesday and
will attempt to meet with
Gov . James A. Rhndes m
order to show the public their
side of the contract dispute.
In a related development,
proposed cutbacks by the
Ohio
Edison
Co.
headql!Brtered in Akron and
the Monongahela Power Co.
m West Virginia , which
serves 22,000 customers m the
Marietta area have been
postponed.
Don Nunley, Glouster,
Ohio, a UMW District 6
official, sa1d members of four
southeastern Ohw locals
dec1ded over the weekend oo

I

say m the adoptiOn of a model
buiidmg code by the OhiO SI.OGWf!U, 7lfE
Board of Buildmg Standards.
~1-Tif Nll t;
Last year the Board adopted JOGS 2 MI/.£S
one code and recommended 11 /3V£R'(MORN
ro;f/3 H!Gif
to ·" communities and then
changed its mind . Now the WA~R 0'&lt;1
WHATEVER ...
legislature wants to better
scrutimze the actwns of the
board
·
Both the judges' bill and the
bulldmg code b1ll now go to
the Senate for consideration

:~~~:J~~~~~1 • A~IN'""• ',i

1
1
""''"
vvJN
I AIN'T WALKIN'
THAT fWi: PUSH IN'
A GROCE~¥ CART!!
WE'LL PARK

stores, had In 1935 over 20 (32 8 Second ), Mossman 's
11
p~ ~11
RIGHT HERE ..
groceries
They
were· Office Outfitters (46 Court ),
Gall ipolis Market (463 Gallipolis Ha rdwa re (338
make recommendations for
TH~E~S SPACE
Second ), G11ls Produce Second), Gathpohs Departfundmg pubhc zoos and assist
OVER THERE. '
(Third and Grape), Henkmg ment (302 Seco nd ), Kerr
in developmg long-ra'nge
Bovie Company (27 Court), Drugs (324 Second), Neal 's
plans of their operatiOn and
Kerr and Gooch (152 Third), Drugs (500 Second ), Neal and
unprovement. The bill is
Layne Products (19 Court), Gillingham Drugs (762
mtended to foster comLevisay (92 Olive) . Modern Second) and Harry Frank 's munication and cooperation
Markets (15 Grape), Myers Sons (322 Second ).
among Ohio's publicly-owned
The phone book listed: zoos
Produce (Second and Court
plus 219 Third ), Niday- Downtain Printing (48 State)',
McKinley Gro ce ry [Third Watters Hatchery (Third ),
and Grape ), J .D. Nurt~ Ohw Valley Laundry (841 •*******••***********************************~
(Vine), North 's Meats [463 Th~rd) , M.T. Epling Sand and
Second),
Central
[601 Gravel (First ), H. W. Dexter
Second), Ohio Produce (145 Plumbing and Heating, Un10n
Third ). Pine Street, Puritan Carbide Sales (719 First) ,
Mkt. (756 Second), Wood's G11imgham's Store (408
(Cedar and Third ), Barnett's Second )., Condee Coal (701
[4!i Court ), Evans (700 First ), First), Maytag Wa shing ~
Galha County Produce (240 Machme Co. (Third), White
Third ) and Galha FrUit Star (854 Second ) and Fontana FrUit (360 Second).
(Sycamore ).
Out In East Gallipolis was
Among the restaurants in
located
the CCC Work Camp.
town In 1935 were , Oscar's
Tbe
C&amp;O
Railroad had a
Place (346 Second ), The Rose
Kitchen (258 Third), Joe passenger depot on Olive and
I
Pierotti (312 Second ), Shartz freight depot on Third. First
Soda Gnll (404 Second) , National Bank was on
Swa1n' s
R es taurant Second, Ohio Valley Bank
(Second), Vmce's (47 Court), was at 366 Second and
and Vanden 's Restaurant Commercial Savings at 300
Second.
(416 Second ).
Then as now there were a &gt;t Long sleeve sport and dress shirts for men - men's sport coats Among the manufacturing
number
or busmesses that ; men's flannel shirts - unbelieveably low prices- many other sale ;
eslabllshments we would
Include: Spring HUI Dairy took advantage of the town's ..- items. too.
...
(Second), R. P. Thompson good name. Here we would
Stove (761 Second), Plymale- include Galhpohs Dye Works
Wagner Lumber (Pine) , (250 Second), Gallipolis Ice ;
Women's winter gowns. robes. and pajamas 112 price - Special
;
O'Dell Planing Mill, Linde (709 F~rst ), Gallipolis Oil and ..- group women's dresses and sportswear- tops and slacks '12 price.,.
Air Prnducts, Rue Marble Gas (Third and Vine) , It low ' prices on many other women's wear.
and Granite and Mootz GaUipolis Fertilizer (Second
~
and Olive ), GaUipolls Taxi
Bakery (71 VIae).
[412
Second)
and
the
Among other busmesses
were . Womeldorff and Gafiipohs Tribune [425 ~ Snow suits - sportswear - dresses - blouses - sweaters - boys slacks
~
Thomas Hardware (Third &amp; Second). Taking advantage
Court). Davis-Shuler Dry of the county's name were : ~ lops.
Goods (406 Second ), Haskins- GaUia Roller Mills (Grape
Davis Clothiers (49 Court), and Fourth), Gallia Iron &amp;
McKnight Dav1es Hardware Wrecking (Vme ), and the
(43 Court), Moch's Clothmg GaU1a Times (439 Second).

•

",..
,..

*

i

irlhdaj,..
:

i

~

!*

t WOMEN'S WEAR

t

*! CHILDREN'S WEAR ·

*
,.
2

i**********************************************'*
ELBERFELDS IN P.OMEROY a
I

I

at

en tine

-,

Fifteen Cents

•

Vol. 2M, No. 2lli

" We're looking for a real

good turnout today," said Bill
Cray, a UMW local official
from Vinton County. "We
expect between 500 and 700
men out there . We are
determined oo cut-off aU nonunion coal conung into Ulis

state the best way we can ."
OhiOans for Utility Reform,
m a statement prepared for a
news conference today, demanded the nation 's coal
operators "begin serious
negotiations with the United
Mine Workers Union to reach
a fair settlement.
"The coal operators-who

I

are in fact some of the
nation's largest oil, steel and
utihty companies-have lleen
taking a hard line designed
not to promote an equitable
contract but to break the
union,11 said OUR.
"In this state we point the
finger of blame at three
highly
profit a bl e
companies," the coalition
said, "Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electr1c Co, Ohio Power
and Standard Oil of Ohio.

Weather
Snow tonight and Tuesday,

contmued cold wtlh lows from
10 to 15 and h1ghs near 30 The
probability of precipitation is
10 percent today and 70
percent tonight and Tuesday

:t;{esideJits
urged to
' Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman
today
urged
residents to attend and
participate in the public
hearing to be held Wednesday, Feb. 22, at 7 p.m. in
the Middleport council
chambers.
The purpose of thiS hearing
is to generally discuss the
contents of the draft of the
Environmental Assessment
and financial information
pertaining to the proposed
improvements to the existing
wastewater
treatment
lagoons and combined
sewerage system In the
Middleport-Meigs County
Planning Area.
Comments aQd suggestions
will he welcomed from all
concerned citizens on the
proposed
improvements
regarding feasibility , cost,
and unpact on the community
and the environment m
general.
Public participation is
encouraged in the planning of
all public facilities.
The meeting w1ll be conducted by the village
engineering firm of Floyd G.
Browne and Assoc. Ltd. and
village officials.
Draft copies of the
Facilities Plan have been

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday thru Friday
Fair Wednesday wttb
sod
snow Thursday
Frtday. Cold Wednesday
wlth highs In the 2Ds and
lows in the lower teens,
warming by Friday to
highs in the 30s and lows lo
tbe 20s.

EMS has four
weekend calls

"We are sick and tired of
the self-serving, full-pa ge
advertisements touting an
energy crrisis which C&amp;SOE
has bought with ratepayers'
money as a scare tactic to
shift blame for bargaining
failures to the
mme
workers," satd OUR. "What
the ads don't tell us is that
C&amp;SOE owns its own coal
mines . The utility has hired
Peabody Coal Co. to manage
the mines. Peabody is the
nation 's
operator.

largest

coal

"Ohio Power is a whollyowned
subSidiary
of
American Electric Power,
the nation's largest private
utility holding company,"
said the coalition. "AEP is
also the 11th largest coal
operator .

" Soh1o keeps it profits on
full not only by selhng
gasoline and oil, but owns Old
Ben Coal Co., the 14h largest

Editor·

will
speak
Editor Bob Wingett of the
Pl. Pleasant Register wlll
spea k to the luncheon
meetmg of the Meigs Human
Resources Council at noon on
Thursda y, Feb. 23, at the

coal operator, " said OUR.
OUR said the "companies
that are blocking the way of a
fair coal settlement IU'e the
same ones which have grown
fat while the rest of us have
tightened our belts as energy
prices rose out of sight."
The coalition sald the average price of coal has shot up
from $8.53 per ton in 1973 oo
$20 per ton in 1976.
" Mmer's wages and benefit
programs in 1969 accounted
for 49 cents per dollar of coal
cost," said the coalition. "By
1977 with high prices, profits
and productivity, the miners'
share had dropped to 36

cents."
Monongahela Power Co.
had pla iUled to Institute a 30
percent cutback beginning
today but moved back to a 10
percent cutback.
Ohio Edison had planned a
50 perce nt mandatory
cutback but postponed that
cutback aft&lt;:r it decided to cut
off all back-up generating
units.

•
CARRIER OF THE
is Steve
16, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Don ~aylor, 11 Fisher Street, Pomeroy . Steve has
been a carrier for The Daily Sentinel for approximately one
year. He IS a student at Me1gs High School and likes to ride
motorcycles.

'Crisis Watch'
By United Press International
A glance at developments in the nationwide Umtcd Mine Workers
Union strike :
UMW Negotiations
President Carter has asked Congress to help end the nationwide
coal strike by reviewing a course of action he has recommended but
kept secret. The recommendations probably mcluded natwna li~ati on
of the coal mines, binding arbitration or invoking the Taft-Hartley law.

The
Middl e port
Emergency Squad answered
four calls over the 1\oeekend.
At 6:31 p.m. Saturday the Meigs Inn, m Pomeroy.
PHILADELPHIA - THE MAN IDENTIFIED as "Deep
UMW Membership Activity
Wingett, whose talk was
squad
went to 991 S. Second
Throat" by H. R. Haldeman says be has proof he was out of the
Hundreds of Ohio UMW workers are to move into Lawrence
Ave., for Martha Hunnell who postponed in January due to
country when lthe secret informant gave key information about
snow,
will
share
some
of
his
had
rece1ved
a
possible
arm
County
, Ohio and eastern Kentucky today in a continuing attempt to
the Watergate scandal. Fred Fielding, who served as assistant
knowledge
and
expenence
fracture
in
a
fall.
She
was
close non-union mines.
to presidential coWISel John Dean, told the Philadelphia
taken to Veterans Memorial involving fund raismg and
Bulletin even though he denied Haldeman's allegations
community planning for the
Hospital.
lnunediately alter they were made three weeks ago, he felt he
Economic Reprecussions
city of Syracuse as well as Pl.
At
7:08p.m
.
the
squad
went
had oo prove that he was not "Deep Throat." In his book,
Pleasant.
The
Ohio
Edison
Co.,
l!eadquartered in Akron a nd Monongahela
to Route I, Cheshire for
"Ends of Power," Haldeman, the former White House chief of
The
Human
Resources
Marilyn Snyder, a medical
Power Co. headquartered in West Virginia, were to have instituted
staff, said he believes Fielding was "Deep Throat" and said
patient, transferred to Council InVItes interested
cutbacks that would have resulted in layoffs but have now postponed
former President Richard Nixon !bought so too.
agencies and individuals to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
them.
its
monthly
luncheon
At
7
·58
a
.m.
Sunday,
!he
NEW YORK - POLICE HAVE CHARGED a lab
f1re department went to 680 S meeting.
technician at a municipal hospital with raping a 73-year-old
Consumer Reaction
Third Ave., the Marshall
woman who Ia dying of cancer. The woman , who weights only
McMillion
restdence,
where
Ohioans
for
Utility
Reform,
a consumer group, claims the coal
60 pounds, told police the technician, Bennett Marcus, took a
SQUAD CALLED
there
was
a
fire
around
the
operators are not negotiating seriously in an attempt to break the
blood Sample from her, then pulled down her sheets and raped
The Pomeroy ER Squad
chimney area.
her In her hospital room at Brooklyn Jewish Hospital.
was called three t1mes
UMW , The group demanded the operators begin serious negotiations
At 8:15
a.m.,
the Saturday night.
with
the UMW to reach a fair settlement.
emergency unit went to 733
COLUMBUS - THE GOVERNOR-LIEUTENANT
At 10:35 p.m. they transBeech St. lor Mildred M. ported Connie Romine to
governor team of Richard Celeste and Michael Dorrian bas
Bates, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
UMW Reaction
been sanctioned by the Ohio Democratic Party. Lt. Gov.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. 11:47 they were called for
UMW President Arnold Miller says if the Taft-Hartley act is
Celeste and Franklin County Commissioner Dorrian won tbe
party's backing Saturday as the team bidding for the party
Doris Haynes and at 11-53
invoked in the strike there may be bloodshed but predicted the UMW
nomination in the June primary. That team could face available at the Mayor's Deputies probe
p.m. for Lawrence Cline.
membership would return to work under a federal ta keover of the
opposition , from Ohio Supreme Court Justice Frank D. office and will be available
Both were taken to Veterans
mines.
Celebrezze of Cleveland who has said he is considering lor inspectiOn at the public two accidents
Memorial Hospital.
entering the race.
hearing .
Saturday afternoon Meigs
ATLANTA_ u. N. AMBASSADOR Andrew Young says
This project is bemg funded
County
Deputies investigated
the United States is selling arms In Egypt oo bolsler the by 75 percent federal funds
from the Environmental a one-car accident on Scipio
security of President Anwar Sadat and thus the security of
Israel. "I think Israel's security is dependent on Anwar Protection Agency and 25 Township Road 14. The acSadat 's staying in power and !think we've got to look at Egypt percent from village funds . cident occurred atl2 :15 p.m. '
Dana H. Bailey, Jr., 26, Rt.
Icy road conditions were ISSUed.
GaU1potis, slid into a vehicle SR 160.
as really a new ally and treat them as such," Young said Total cost of the project is
3, Albany, told deputies he blamed on 10 of the 13 traffic
9
operated
A
single
car
mtshap
oc·
by Gary Fmley, 37,
State troopers said a
Sunday at the dedication of the Martin Luther Klilg Jr. chapel $26,! 1.
at Allilnta's Morehouse College.
One . ~ajor
re~om- was traveling south on the accidents investigated over curred on SR 554 west of GaUipotis.
vehiCle driven by Charles R.
•
mendallon IS the continued snow covered township road, the weekend by the Gallia- Cheshire where an auto
Walter R. Bradshaw, 25, Fuller, 26, VInton, slid on the
BOSTON _ THREE SUSPECTS WERE scheduled for • use of the lagoons as the slid off the roadway and Meigs Post State Highway driven by SaUy B. Oxyer, 26, Gallipolis, was cited to ~ow-covered roadway into
Gallipolis, going west, struck Municipal Court for improper the Durham vehicle . There
arraignment Tuesday in a $!-million-a-year check-cashing treat'!'ent facility with the struck a tree upon meeting Patrol.
The first occurred at 12:20 a bad section of the highway backing following an accident was moderate damage and no
scheme that victimized banks and stores In five New England addlt!on _of aer~tio.n and another vehicle. There was
p.m. on the Bulaville-Porter covered with lee and water. at 11 :17 am . Sunday on SR charges were flied .
slates. Authorities said the ring apparenUy had ties to chlorma!lon faclli!les as slight damage to his car.
Deputies
also
investigated
Rd.
one mile west of SR 160 ' The under carriage of her car 588, five tenths of a mile east
organized crime. Three suspects were arrested in the Boston requll'ed b~ EPA.
.
At 6:30 p.m. on SR 160,
a
hit-&lt;;kip
accident
that
ocwhere
a vehicle driven by was damaged.
of US 35.
area Saturday and Charged with forgery and receiving stolen . This project was. lmtlated
so uth of milepost 10, vehicles
The patrol said the Brad- driven by Wanlna PenningN(J cne was injured or cited
properly, Police and postal lnspeciAirn said they were m 1976 after meetmg~ w1th curred sometime between 9 Mary A. North, 30, GaUipolis,
seardllng lor 10 others but no new arrests had been mad b
the Corps of Engineers p.m. Saturday and 1:30 a.m. shd Into a car operated by in an accident at 1,20 p m. shaw car backed into a ton, 16, Bidwell, and Thomas
late &amp;mday
'
e Y reference to eroSion control Sunday.
Charles D. Lund, 58, Saturday on Georges Creek vehicle driven by Galen J . J Smith, 31, Gallipolis,
·
at the lagoons. Determina)ion
According to the report Gallipolis. There w~s minor Rd. one mile west of SR 7 Belville, 27, Galllpolls.
sideswiped
to be made on the filed by Douglas E. Hauber, damage.
At 10:45 p.m. Sa!urday on
where vehicles driven by
An acctdent ol'c urred on
, BONN, WEST GERMANY- WEST GERMAN TEEN- had
proposed life of the lagoon 20, Rt. I, Long Bottom, he had
A Me1gs County accident John R. Manley, 19, Bidwell, CR 30, a mile north of SR 160, Sugar Creek Rd. one tenth of
AGERS are taking their parents, Jesus and Elvis Presley as
role modela, according to a public opinion poll released treatment facility before any parked ltis auto at the occurred at 12:45 ' ·p.m. and Wanda M. Taylor, 28, Rt. a car driven by Clyde R. . a mile north of SR 7 when a
action could be taken by the parking lot of the TaU Tim- Saturday on CR IS north of 1, Gallipolis, sideswiped at a Hayden, 18, Kerr; slid into a vehicle driven by Patrick
Sunday. Adolf ffitler was the most disliked by boys and girls
Corps
to control erosion at bers Night Club. When he SR 124 where a Vehicle driven hillcrest on the snow covered vehicle operated by Kimberly Bal1ey, 21, Crown City, slid on
qed 12 to 18 in 81 clUes questioned by the Wickert PubUc
loCation.
this
started to leave Hauber by George D. Miller, 18, roadway .
There
wa s Hill, 22, Rt. I, Gallipolis.
the icy roadway striking an
Opinioo Institute for the newspaper Welt am Sonntag.
With the acceptance of this discovered an unknown Middlepo'r t, slid on the Icy moderate damage.
Lena H. Durham, Vinton, a auto operated by Thomas E .
A similar acc id ~nt oc- passenger in a car driven by Banks, 30, Crown City.
BAL HARBOR, FLA.- MAJOR UNION LEADERS from study by the EPA, it is an- vehicle had sideswiped the pavement striking an auto
ticipated
that
asalstance
may
operated
by
Kelly
D.
Stewart,
left
side
of
his
auto.
There
curred
at 6 p.m. on CR 42, one Edsel H. Durham, 35, Vinton,
A similar mishap occurred
the nation uaemble today In thbi sunny resort to the
north of Miami Beach for their annual mid-winter meeting. be obtained from the Corps was slight damage to 17, Pomeroy. There was and one tenth miles north of was injured 10 an acc1dent at a t 3: 45 p.m . Sunday on
for riverbank protection in Hauber's 1974 Mercury moderate damage to the SR 218 where an Auto driven 6:5; p.m. Sunday on the Eno- Hannan Trace Rd one mile
(Continued on Pili~ 8)
this area.
Miller car. No citation was . by Unda L. Johnson, 26, Vinton Rd. two miles east of
Comet.
IContinued on page 8)

OSP investigates 13 wrecks

i

i MENS9:30
to 5 P.M.
and BOYS' WEAR

go across the Ohio River into
Kentucky to halt the flow of
coal from mines to electric
power utilities.

be present
United Preoo InternaUonal
CINCINNATI - TWO MIC!flGAN YOUTHS and a
Cincinnati-area boy died in a suburban Cincinnati park
Saturday, when ice suspended in trees above them collapsed.
Dead were David Kroger, 10, and his brother, Billy, 7, both of
Orion, Mich., and Thomas Dauphin, 9, of Springfield
Township, Ohio.
Robert Mason, chief park ranger of the Hamilton County
Parks, said the boys were playing in an area of Winton Woods,
north of Cincinnati, where large sheets of ice were suspended
in trees - the reSUlt of a lowering of the lake at the woods
earlier this winter.

: MONDAy FEB. 20TH

The Finest Selection
And The Best Values
ANYWHERE'

non·union operations and
were expected to continue on

Meanwhile, a consumers

group today in Columbus
accused coal companies of
attempting to break the UMW
as the coal strike entered its
77th day today .

THE SNOW KEEPS falling, the coal strike seems to be up
in the all' as far as a settlement IS concerned at this point and
the flu is runnmg wild. However, keep smilin'.

! SALE PRICES

IT TAKES SOME FURNITURE TOOl

Uulted Press lnlernallonal
Several hundred strikmg
Umted Mine Workers Union
n\embers moved by car
caravan into Lawrence
County today in search of

YOU MIGHT WANT to send along a card to Brian Knopp,
wbo will be t)"o in April. Brian underwent brain surgery at
Children's Hospital in Columbus and IS confined there. His
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Max Knopp, Racine, and
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs . Otis Knopp, Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. John Sprow, GaUipolls. The room number is 3005.

~ ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

Presidential press secretary Jody Powell told
reporters, "A series of definitive options have
been reviewed and reconfirmed for presentation
to the president. Consultation with congressional
leadership will begin immediately."
He held out httle hope for future collective
bargaining by the UMW and the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association, saying, ''It is clear that we
can waif no longer to initiate the process for
resolving this matter by other means."
Action, in whatever form. can be expected
this week, the admimstration offic1al said.
"The administration," the official said, " ha s
embarkt&gt;d on a process which will culm inate in
one of those three options" - Taft-Hartley ,
federal seizure of the mines, or binding
arbitration.

Coal strike in 77th day

AND THEN THERE'S Barbara Offutt and her jar full of
praymg mantis.
Barbara gathered up an egg sack and the other day things
started to happen. She now has a whole jar fuU of praying
manbs (that's plural - a whole bunch of 'em) . They're living ,
on sausage at the present time since no one seems oo know just
what they like. If any teacher would like the jar and its
contents for class study, do call Barbara at 992-3296. She'D part
with them!

l

Senate labor subcommittee. Chairman Frank
Thompson of the House labor-management
subcommittee was also to be briefed on the
" definitive" course of action.
Pittsburgh and Midway Coal Co., a subsidiary
of Gulf Oil, climaxed weeks of independent
bargaining by reaching a tentative settlement
with a bargaining team made up of UMW national
negotiators and local union leaders. Although
headquartered in Denver, P-and-M has mines in
western Kentucky, Kansas and Missouri.
The agreement was reached with the help of
the Federal Media lion and Conciliation Service,
which also announced that another round of talks
was underway between the Garland Coal Co. of
Arkansas and UMW local leadership.

VICe

:· ·. ·..;: .

:·

giving the legislature fmal

there
Last week the House also
passed and sent to·the Senate,
House Bill 902, legiSlation
creatmg a Zoological Ad•
v1sory Council in the
Department of Natural
Resources The co uncil would

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 20, 1978

HANG RIGHT IN THERE, you genealogists. Another
letter of request from Mrs. Dorothy Enloe, Sorento, Ill., 62086,
who writes :
"I wonder if your reading audience could be of any help to
me . I am trying to fmd who my great-great-grandparents
were. My great-grandfather, Samuel Ingalls (Ingels) was born
in Meigs County about 11121).1823. Could any of your readers tell
me who his parents were?"

recr eation,

View from the statehouse \
Yrom the Office of:
Stale Representative

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter
--, Ordering the miners back to work under the
•setting aside collective bargaining for th~ Taft-Hartley Act - a move which UMW President
moment, sought the advice of key congressmen Arnold Miller warned would provoke bloodshed at
today liow to end the record 77 -day strike by the mines.
160,000 coal miners.
- Submitting the soft coal industry and ·the
At the same time, one independent coal UMW to binding arbitration.
company reached a tentative settlement of its
- A federal takeover of the mines, under
contract with the United Mine Workers " which the government would set "fair" wage and
apparently the first crack in the record-long profit levels while the bargaining continues.
walkout.
.
Congress would have to approve either of the
Carter himself spoke with Senate Democratic last two options.
Administration officials said Marshall was
leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who said he
told the president the best recourse was continued shuttling between the House and Senate today to
negotiations.
present the options.
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall and Carter
Marshall scheduled a midday meeting with
sounded out lawmakers on what administration Chairman Harrison Williams, D-N.J ., of the
officials indicated were three options :

You may or may not have tbought tha• returmng to a more
basic style of living might be your bag. Whether you've
thought about it or not you may not have any choice in the
matter, the way thing~ are going.
James and Helen Heaton have proven it can be done and
they are, after three years, enjoying their change of pace type
living,
Three years ago they built a one room house on Sklnner
Run and moved into it. Later, they built a second one room
house near the location of the first one and they are currently
residing in that ooe.
· The Heatons have no electricity whatsoever and despite
the mcooveruences that you think this brings about, !be
Heatonsare surviving very nicely. They use three oil lamps handed ,down through the family for years and years - to tight
their one room residence . There's no boob tube, refrigerator
and the 101 other electrical conveniences. However, the winter
months proVIde no problem for refrigeration and their
entertainment comes from a citizens band radio·and a regular
radio, both battery powered. There's no gas either but a wood
burning stove keeps them very warm and the Heatons don't
have to worry about a coal, gas or electricity shortage.
Reading has returned for the Heatons and they're enjoying it
unmensely . Who knows ? They 've probably even discovered
that conversation isn't really a lost art.
A couple of other interesting facts. The Heatons tore down
their home in Chester Township for materials with which to
build both of the one-room houses . Their son, David and family
decided that they would like to try the same way of life as h1s
parents and they are living m the first one-room structure.
That's why the second one materialized
The Heatons ra ised a huge garden last swruner and raised
livestock wh1ch was butchered. So for the most part they are
practiCally self-&lt;;ufflclent .
Their borne - built themselves - has a large porch on
which is a wooden swing and Mrs. Heaton says she really
enjoys this part of the living during the summer months.
Yep - it can be done so perhaps, you can get a little
encouragement from that while going through the problems of
1978.

wires attached. No more

Telephone

INSURANCE

Presi eilt ,.,.arter seeks a

•

•

acl'llll

•

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