<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14935" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14935?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T09:49:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47712">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7d483e49e5f10b251f532659a9cfcafa.pdf</src>
      <authentication>152d373bb414e4ab2453d95df131bc23</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48005">
                  <text>...

~.

~~

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

H- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday. May 30, 1980
~....;:.;;.;.;;_:,:-=-.;..;.;.;;:
"'
~ .
.- - - "'- - - ,. ·
\..

Comlnission races highlight Meigs election
POMEROY - Seven Republicans
and twa Democrats are seeking the
nomination of their respective parties to run for Meigs County Cornmissioner, term ending Jl!ll. 2, 1985.
Meigs Countians wW 'cast their
votes on this race and otlll'ra when

,..

. _......

••

they go to the polls Tuesday.
The seven Republican candidates
for the post, now held by Democrat
Cl1ester E. Wells, include J . Otis
Bailey, Racine; Henry E. Cleland,
Jr., Pomeory; David J. Koblentz,
near Pomeroy; Donald L. Moore,

Route 2, Pomeroy; Kenneth Guy
Rose, Route 1,- Long Bottom; Manning K. Roush, Minersville, and
Elden C. Walburn, Middleport. The
two Democrat candidates for the
post are Wells, the incumbent, and
Oscar Weber, Long Bottom.

There are only two candidates for
the second county corrunissioner
pest to be filled this year, term expiring Jan. 3, 1985. They are Richard
E. Jones, Pomeroy, the incumbent,
and Don R. Hill, Racine, both
RepublicallS .

.

Where It Is Inside

It's summertime
.

!

·.. ·.

Meigs County also has two candidates, both Republicans, running
for the nomination of clerk of
courts. They are Larry E. Spencer,
Racine, incumbent, and Robert G.
Pickett, Pomeroy. There are no
&lt;Continued on page A·Jl

•

t

:~,.,

The county has two Republican
candidates for nomination to run for
county sheriff and they are J . J.
CremeallS, Middl~port, and John C.
Welsh; Dexter. Tbe winner will oppose Democrat incumbent, James J.
Proffitt, Pomeroy, in the fall.

\'

again ...

'--"'""'

SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS - Pictured above are the winners of various scholarships present during
Senior Awards Nig_ht at Wahama Wednesday. They are, from the left, Karen Brown, the National Honor Society
scholarship ; Alice Roush, the Mason Mother's Club scholarship; Terry Angel, the Waham~ Alumm Assocwt10n
scholarship; and Stephanie Estes, the New Haven Woman's Club scholarship. The scholarship wumers are among
84 students who will graduate from WHS during commencement exercises Wednesday , June 4, at 7:30 p.m.

Area deaths • •• • • • . . • • . • . . • • . . . . • • • • • • • • • . • • • • A-41
Classified ads • . . • . . . . . . . . • . • . . • . . • • . • . . . . . . . D-2-7
Editorial ....................... .. ........... , • A-2

B-1

Farm oe-ws . o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
E-2-5
Lifestyle .............••.•.••....•.......•.. B-1-8
Local .......• o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A-3-8
State-National ..•............................. J&gt;.l
~rts ............ ....•.
C.l-8
guide . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . Insert
0

AWARD w;NNERS - Paul Maynard, left, past commander of the American Legion Smith·Capehart Post 1&lt;W,
New Haven, presented several awards during Wednesday's Senior Award~ Night at Wahama High SchooL Ptctured
above from the left are Maynard' Terry Angel and Terri Johnson , wmners of the Amencan Legton God and
Count~y Awards: K~ren Brown, wktner of the DAR Good Citizenship Award ;. Jill Taylor and Jeff Bumgardner,
Danforth Award winners: and Annette Campbell, winners of the Chnsttan L1vmg Award.

0 ••••• · •

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

.state tourney . . . C-1

0 ••••••••••••

•

ttntS

House rejects budget
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Mter rejection of the budget, Sen. terence would likely end up cutting
House, sending contradictory Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., Senate defense.
signals on higher military spending, Budget Committee chairman,
However, Rep. Jack Kemp, Rhas rejected a $613.3 billiol), defense- blamed Carter for its defeat and said N.Y., opposed the budget, saying it
oriented 1981 budget while ~ ndorsing a revised compromise could "short- was "going back to Herbert Hoover"
a record peacetime increase for the change our critical defense needs. "
by trying to balance the federal
Pentagon .
The House vote on the budget budget by relying on increased lax
The House action Thursday night sharply divided the Democratic
revenue in the face of an econorruc
downturn. Kemp said lax cuts were
instructs House-Senate negotiators leadership, with O'Neill and Carter
to prepare a second budget com· at odds with nearly every other top
needed.
promise, but tells them to keep the House Democrat, including
The compromise budget was
Majority Leader Jim Wright, [).
controversial defense figure that
reached last week by a HousePresident Carter and House Speaker Texas, and Giaimo.
Senate conference that Jargely acThomas P. O'Neill Jr. opposed.
A total of 146 Democrats and 96
cepted the Senate's demand for
"I've got two mandates and one Republicans joined with O'Neill and
sharply higher military spending
headache," complained Rep. Robert Carter in opposing the budget, while
and cuts in domestic programs.
N. Giaimo, [).Conn. , House Budget 'i17 Democrats and 44 Republicans
" We cut (domestic) programs
favored it.
Committee chairman, as he
without sense " said Rep. Richard
prepared to take the proposed balanThe issue of higher defense spen- ' A. Gephardt.' 0-Mo., one of five
ced budget back to conference with ding also sparked a rare public
liberal-t&lt;&gt;-moderate Democrats who
opposed the compromise in · conthe Senate next week .
disagreement between Carter and
Earlier Thursday, Carter and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who told
ference.
O'Neill
appeared
to
have
prevailed
Congress
they
needed
more
defense
BAlFOUR WINNERS _ Valed'ictorian Lisa Hill and Honor Student Rick Barnitz were named the 1980 B a lfo~r
in their opposition to the budget's
money, not less, than was included
Award winners during Senior Awards Night held Wednesday at Wahama High School. Pictured above, from the le t,
$153.7
billion
defense
figure
as
the
HOSPITAL :\EWS
in the compromise.
are WHS Principal William McWhorter, Miss Htll, Barmtz and Ass1stant Prmctpal Ron Vance.
compromise spending plan was
The Democratic split left the fate
voted down, 242·141.
VETERANS~ORL\L
of the first proposed balanced
But as the night wore on and many
Admitted-William
Reitmire, Jr.,
budget in 12 years largely in the han•
Democrats headed for home,
Pomeroy;
Robert
Fetty,
Langsville;
ds of Republicans. But GOP memRepublicans succeeded in forcing
Dessie
Kuhn,
Cheshire;
Graham ·
bers remained deeply divided over
approval of instructions to the
Goff,
Pomeroy;
Glena
Soulsby,
whether to support the spending
negotiators to stick by the $153.7 plan.
Syracuse; Geneva Spraudlin, MidGideon's Auxiliary presented white
The presentation of the prestigious
am very proud to honor such an
biilion
defense
amount
for
fiscal
dleport.
House Minority Leader John J.
Testaments to nurses aid students
Balfour Award to Lisa Hill and Rick
outstandin g individual who has
1981,
which
starts
Oct.
1.
Discharged--Carolyn Gilmore,
Rhodes,
R-Arlz.,
said
he
was
voting
Forbes.
Leah
Edie
Shephard,
Kim
excelled in academics as well as
Barnitz highlighted the an'nual
The
non-binding
instructions
were
Boyles, Betty Ross, George
Sarah
"reluctantly"
for
the
budget
Hoffman
,
Melinda
J.ieving.
Regina
athletics."
Senior Awards Night at Wahama
on
~oice
vote
after
the
approved
Sr., Gerald McDaniel Ill.
Folmer,
because
a
new
House-Senate
conRe
lma
Gibbs.
Todd
Keebler.
High School Wednesday.
WHS
Other top students recognized
Democratic
leadership
failed
,
16!&gt;Goodnite
and
Judy
Hall.
principal William McWhorter, in
· were Salutatorian Karen Brown and
123, to table - or kill - the GOP
Also receiving recognition were
honorarians Teresa Ayers and Terri
presenting the Balfour keys to Miss
motion
and then lost, 14frl41, on an
band members Karen Brown and
·Hill. the 1980 valedictorian. and
Johns~?
1 effort to adjourn the House before a
Terri Johnson. prior recipients of
Barnitz, a senior honor student, said
Jtll I aylor and Jeff Bumgardner
final vote.
the Ar ia n Award; and sen io r were nam ed Danforth Award
the two were chosen for their
The Republican instructions
members of the National Honor winners and, in recognition of this
scholastic ability, participation in
denied
Carter and O'Neill a clearSociety. Ce rtificates of appreciation awarded promoting leadership,
school activities. citizenship and for
cut
victory
in the defeat of the
from Lakin Hospital and Rhonda
their relationship with the students
were presented with the "I Dare
budget
package
they opposed
Nicewonder. Mason County Special
and fa culty members at Wahama
You'' book. Scholarship winners
of
its
proposed
cuts in
because
Educati on Coo rdinator, we re included Stephanie Estes, the New
throughou t their high sc hool
domestic
spending
to
pay
for
higher
FASHION WEAR
presented to Rick Ba mitz. president Haven Woman's Club scholarship;
careers.
defense.
of the National Honor Society , in Karen Brown, the National Honor
McWhorter also honored the
The instructions, proposed by
recog niti on of th e society' s Society scholarship; Alice Roush,
entire Class of 1980 by saying, "We
Rep
. Delbert Latta, R.Qhio, also
assistance with various programs at Mason Mother's Qub scholarship;
appreciate each and every member
should
strengthen the hand of Senate
!.akin and with the recent Mason and Barbara Gordon and Terry
of this year's graduating class for
negotiators who have vowed to fight
Co unty Spec ial O l~m pics.
what they've given to Wahafj;\a High
Angel, the Wahama Alumni
to
keep the $153.7 billion defense
Eighty-four
seniors
will
receive
Association scholarships.
School while they've been here and
figure, which is $3.2 billion mo're
we wish them the brightest future their diplomas in commencement
than Carter requested.
exercises at Wahama on Wedpossible."
Columbus,
and
Mrs.
Kay
Gilkenson,
Giaimo said rejection of the
nesday. June 4. at 7:30 p.m.
He further commended the seniors
Mrs. Emily Wood and Dreama Kay,
budget raised doubt about the future
by ,;ail when you buy any 2 Comfort Colors ••
by commenting on their sterling
East Uverpool, were Memorial Day
of the t&gt;-year-old congressional
·
. He'll like Hanes new fashion shades.
behavior on the recent senior trip to
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob budget process and its attempt to
and
so
will you
Cincinnati. Interjecting a "com·
Hoeflich and Jayne, Pomeroy.
bring
federal
spending
under
conHurry' Oll er lasts only un tt l Ju ne 14, 1980
mercial" of sorts, McWhorter said,
BEND AREA PERSONALS
Ltm it: One tree garment per household
Mr. and Mrs. David Eskey, Kandi
trol.
"I'd like to sell a product of great
Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Wolfe, Colum·
and Amy, Newark , visited over
" If the liberals are upset with the
quality. If you'd like to buy such a
bus, have spent the past several
Memorial Day weekend with their
budget for one reason and the conproduct, buy the senior class of
days here visiting thei r son-in-law
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey servatives for another, then God
Wahama High School."
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. DonEr·
Erlewine, Rutland, and Mr. and
help the American people," he
Miss Hill also received the Robert
win and fami ly, Middleport, and
Mrs. Charles Eskew, Pomeroy.
declared .
C. Byrd Award , a medal, savings
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Boles, Cinbond and certificate presented
Guests of Mrs. Clarice Erwin,
cinnati, left Thursday after visiting
annually to high school valedic·
Middleport, over the holiday
Mrs. Amanda Murray, Middleport.
torians throughout West Virginia.
weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
They came especially to visit his
and was recognized for her high
Brown, St. Albans, W.Va.
sister, Mrs. Cynthia Gohring, a
school achievements by the
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, Mrs.
pa tient at Veterans Memorial
Daughters of the American · Kimberly Martin and son, Stevie,
i'lpspital.
BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
Revolution and the Am erican r------'----------- - - - - - - -- - - 1
ALL SEATS JUST $1.50
Association of University Women.
Barnitz, in addition to being
531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt .35 NORTH - PI1one 446· 4524
named a Balfour winner, was the
recipient of the Chemistry I Award
and was awarded a certificate in
recognition of being nominated to
the McDonald's All-American
Basketball Team . Gary F en·
derbosch, manager of the Gallipolis
McDonald's, said, " This award is
presented to Rick, not only for his
accomplishments this year but in
recognition of his entire basketball
career at Wahama High School. r
Karen Brown and Brett Grinstead
received · medals and pins as the
OAR Good Citizenship award
winners ; Terri Johnson and Terry
Angel received the American Legion
God and Country medals; Karen
Brown, the American Association of •
ROf SCI-fUR
University Women's award; and
7:00 &amp; 9:30P.M.
Annette Campbell, the Christian
&amp; 3:
Uvlng Award, a $25 prize.
Scholastic award winners were
jeff Bumgardner , .the drafting
award and the chemistry II award ;
J
•RABBITS •SCIRROCCOS •DASHERS
Mellnda Lieving, the home
. •PICKUPS •VANAGONS
economics
award ;
Debbie
McKnight, typing I, and Nellie
ONE DIESEL AVAilABLE NOW!
Esque, typing II; Terri Johnson, the
business award: and Teresa Ayers,
the accounting a ward.
Upper River Road
_
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mrs. Orville Strow, on behalf of
446 9800
the Point Pleasant Camp of the

Barnitz, Hill WHS Balfour

•

.Meigs girls ousted from

VOL 15

NO. 18

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1980

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

35 CENTS

Gallians to vote on
2 ·tax levies Tuesday
GALUPOUS- Gallians will vote ·
on two tax levies and narrow the
current field ri 32 candidates
seeking county offices during
Tuesday's primary election.
Six candidates are seeking the
January 2 term of the Gallia County
Board of Commissioners.
Republicans seeking nomination are
incumbent James C. Saunders,
James w. Saunders, Melvin R.
Halley, and Glenn L. Thompson.
Tonuny Lee Stewart will run unopposed for the Democratic
nomination to that term. Evelyn G.
Morrow seeks election as an independent candidate.
Eight candidates are seeking the
January 3 tenn of the county commission. Republican hopefuls are incumbent Paul D. Niday, Ralph G.

WIDD ers

Brown, John L. Belville, and J .
Robert Evans. Donald R. Wright,
Stuart Hy\len (Coronel), and C.
Robert Shaw are running for the
Democratic nomination to that
term. Warren D. Woodyard seeks
election as an independent.
Incll!llbent Democratic Sheriff
James M. Montgomery will face opposition from within his own party
from Jimmy Lee HaUield and
Wayne Russell. Republicans seeking
nomination to that post are D. Ray
Roberts, Daniel Lee (Tuck) Carter,
John Heiskel, ·and Derry D. Hemphill. James E. Baldwin seeks election as an independent.
Vying to unseat incumbent
Democratic Gallia County
Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain are
Republicans David D. Evans and

Hamlin King, who wlll face-off at
Tuesday's primary election.
Democratic candidate for the ·
judgeship of Common Pleas Court
Richard C. Roderick will face no intra-party opposition on Tuesday.
The Republican Party fielded no
candidate for the post. Incumbent
Judge Ronald R. Calhoun is seeking
his third term to the Gallia County
bench as an independent.
Five incumbent Republican office
holders will face no opposition from
either within their own party or from
the . Democratic Party. Running
unopposed are Clerk of Courts
Louise Burger, Recorder Evalee
Myers, Treasurer Frank H. Mills ·
Jr. , Engineer James P. Baird and
Coroner Dr. Donald R. Warehime.
(Co nti nued on cage A ·J)

ELBERFELD$

I

'

~

I

~
,.

~·

Wi

'- ' TWENTY.ONE members of the Holzer Medical
Center School of Nurstng wW graduate on Friday, JWJe
6. They are, first row, left to right - &amp;icky Sallaz,
Point Pleasant; Becky James, Sciotovllle; Jan Elick,
LancaSter; Krista! Hash, Bidwell; Krista Smith, Point
Pleasant; Beth Taylor, Circleville, and Mary Batt,
Vinton. Second row - Carla Graves, Chillicothe;

COLORS.

\

Kathy Dukas, Belpre; Thomasina Gates, Kyeser; Betty Spray, ScJotoville; Sally Ehret, Richwood; Penny
Daugherty, Belpre, and Cheryl Huber, Mason. Third
row - Grace Bumhelmer, Minford; Paula Hughes,
Ironton; Trlsh Terzy, Jackson; Charissa ParsollS,
Westerville; Cheryl Carey, Ironton; Beth Mooney,
Gallipolis, and Connie Lyon, Portsmouth.

Holze._. School of Nursing
to graduate 21 on June 6
GALLIPOLIS - Twenty-one
young women will graduate from the
Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing on Friday, June 6.
Ceremonies for the 57th
graduating clats will begin 8 p.m. in
Faith Baptist Church, Rodney.
Graduation activities commence
Tuesday, June 3, when 11 members
of the senior class will participate in
the annual spring concert, presented
by the school's glee club, beginning
at 8 p.m. in the Main Lounge of
Davis Hall, 514 First Ave. in downtown Gallipolis.
The concert will feature contemporary music, including a number of popular and show tunes. Jay
Batt and Sally Ehret will present a
duet and Connie Lyon a solo.
Another highlight of the one hour
program will be a sing-along. Anne

orT·SHIRT

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MAY 30.31. JUNE 1.2.3.4.5

VACATION BEGINS - With the dl.smissa1 of
Southern Local Schoola Friday many youngsters

headed for London Pool in Syracuse in Meigs county to
get their vacation time off to a good start.

Social Security gets temporary reprieve
WASHINGTON . (AP) _ While
banks are ready to honor benefit .
checks for 35 million Social Security
recipients,. Presldent earte·r •s .10..
cent gas fee appears headed f or can-

gaUonfeenextWednesday.
That was price paid by lfouse and
Senate leaders to obtain !13ssage of
an emerge·ncy five-day e:ite
. nsion of
the federal debt ceiling. Failure to
pass the extellSion · by midnight
cellation.
popula 1
tont'ght could have hung up Social
Opponenls of the un
r evy
wrung a comm Itmen t from . Security and Othe r government
con-•O!IIIIleaders FridaY f or a benefit Checks.
"' ~
the ~·-~·
Those on both sides of the issue
showdown floor vote on
..... ~-

WE GOT 'EM
FINALLY!

Weather forecast

1980 VOLK'SWAGENS

Partly cl011dy wann and hwnld Sunday with a chance of shOwers or thunderstonns by late afternoon. Highs mid to upper Ms. Warm and hwnid with
IIC8ttered shoWers or thunderwtorms Sunday nig~t ahd Monday. Lows Sun·
day night
70 and highs Monday In the low 90s.
EsteDdecl Oblo Forecait
M-.y tllroql! w•Mity: Scattered altowen and thunderstorms
tiJnlu&amp;bout tile alate MOiiday and mUdyln tile east and louOI Tueoday and
Wednr'ay. ~ ft- tile • Moaday to the mid 70s to mid 80s Tuesday
IIIII Wed-day. !Awl Ina
Manday and Tuer'lly to
SO. to low 80s

near

RIVERSIDE VOLKSWAGEN

I

W,..,nec,y.

' ·,

lile,..

qte

I

"

now agree that once put to a vote,
the gasoline levy - already blocked
by a federal judge - will be permanently shot ham
down by wide
marginsHin bothsc k bers.
Tho .
P·
And ouse pea er
mas .
O'Neill, who supports the fee and
bl k fl
te
·t
had tried to oc tha
a oor vo on ls1 ,
conceded Friday
t opponents
ha
h
te a to
seem to
ve enoug vo s o
override the veto Carter has
threatened.
Treasury Department officials
said. the stopgap legislation was
needed to h• vr enough cash to pay
all of the ,9.5 billion in Social
Security benefits that come due
June3.
Failure of Congress to. raise the
debt ceiling, ·officials said, could
have meant that some of thooe
checks .~ already in the mail would not have bceil honored by
banks. Other federal benefitll and
(Continued on page A 3)

Fischer is the director of the glee
club. Joe Gulley is the accompanist.
Following the concert, a reception
will be held for family members,
friends, and the general public.
Seniors participating in their final
concert wlll be Katherine Dukas,
Sally Jo Ehret, Jan Ellen Elick,
Carla Jane Graves, Krista! Dawn
Hash, Cheryl Annette Huber, Paula
Sue Hughes, Becky Jane James,
Constance Elaine Lyon, Charissa
Lynn Parsons and Patricia Dawn
Terry.
Thursday, at 8:30a.m. will be the
aruiual senior graduation breakfast,
tobebeld in the hospital's cafeteria .
The climax comes on Friday
evening with graduation exercises
at Faith Baptist Church. Mter the
invocation by Rev. Arthur Lund,
Director of Chaplaincy Services at

the hospital, Hugh P. Kirkel,
President of the Holzer Medical Center, will welcome the families and
friends of the graduates. He will also
introduce the featured speaker,
Thomas W. Morgan, M.D., chairman of the department of surgery of
the hospital. His topic will be "A
Changing Profession in Changing
TUnes.''
Dr. Morgan joined the staff of the
Holzer Medical Center as an attending surgeon in 1952, and became
the Chainnan of the Department of
Surgery at the hospital in 1968, the
post he continues to hold. Agraduate
of Washington and Jefferson
College, he holds his medical degree
from Harvard Medical School and
completed his surgery specialty
training at Ohio State University. He
(Continued on page A·JI

James R. Williams
named to bank post
GALLIPOUS - Russell L. Reid,
Chairm8n and President of The Central Trust Company, Marietta, announced Saturday James R.
Williams, Vice President and Comptroller, has accepted the position as
president of The Central Trust Company, Sou\hern Ohio Division, at
Gallipolis and Middleport.
The promotion is with an affiliate
bank of The Central Bancorporation,
Inc. and a move within the holding
company.
Williams joined The Central Trust
Company 26 years ago ~nd started
his employment in the bookkeeping
department. He has worked in
various departments throughout the
bank and held a number of positions.
In January; 1~, he was appointed
manager of Personal Loan ,Department, January, 1966, Manager, Installment Loan Dept., February,
1968, he was elected Caahier,
January, 1973, Vice President and
Cashier, and December, 1978, Vice
President and Comp\foller.
Williams is a graduate 'f

Cleveland West High School,
American IIIStitute of Banking, Ohio
School of Banking, Ohio School of Installment Credit and attended
Marietta College.
He is a member of the Marietta
Noon Uons Club of which he Is a past
president, a director of the Ohio
Valley Chapter of American Institute of Banking, member of
Mariela Riverfront Improvement
Corp., Washington County 648 Board
·- Mental Health Service,
Washington County Chairman,
United States Savings Bond
Program, Marietta Chamber ol
Commerce of which he is a past
director lind treasurer, past director
ri Grea~ Mal&lt;ieUa United Appeal,
put president ol Washington County

ArthriUs FoUndation, \faahlngton
County Heart AMoclatlon and
Marietta Convnunity FOWidati01,.
He and hill wife, the former Jennie
A. Theis, reside at 211 Wooster
Street, Marietta. They have one son,
Michael D. Wiiliama, who' is married
to th~ former M~ry Sl~n.

II

~

..

MEIGIJOB~CWDEU

POMEROY- Walter Smith, ~
the Ohio Department ~ ,..._
portatlQn, Marietta, 8llllOIIIICed
Friday that Iuue 'lbrae, relll'llfnc
highway repair and ~
incltldel repair to SR JJt betwliWI
Racine lllld ~'at I COlt : ~

.-,ooo.

..

�A-3-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980
A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentint!l, Sunday, June 1, 19110

· junb~

~imts· itntintl

Opinions and Comments

.

.

.

..·'
... AIJD Tl-IAT
'WA$1mJGrON
VOLCAOO
1-\At; Tl-tE l=ORCE
01= AW
I-I-BOMB!!

Jun:h~ 'limes- Jtntnw

I' .
I

Publi.shed every Sunday by The Oho ValJey Publishif18 Co.· ML.dtimedla, lnc.
tion ~~ ~O:.,lni
) on,;re weiC(lfJled. They thould ~ I~ than 300 words long (or subj~ to reduc.Y
a mll.!t be Signed With the sagnee s addreaa. Names may be withheld upon
publicaU011. However, on request, names will be disclOSf!d Letters should be in aood t.astt addressinc luues, not pe-.alities.
•
'

.·

GALUPOUS

DAILVTRIBUNE

.

.

t= 1blrd Ave., GalliJJI()lb. Oh.Jo ~1 .
Ohi~ every weekday evening except Saturday. Second Class Postage Paad at GaUi.polls ,
11IE DAR.Y SENTINEL

l~!~ St. ,~. 0 . 45769. PubUJhed every week day evening exctpt Saturday Entered
u K\."UIIII class mailins matter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.
By carrier daUy and Sunday Sl,OO per week. Motor route •4.40 per month.
MAlL

-· .

THE SOVIEIS'LL
I-IEAU A'BOUT
IT-A~D "rnEI,)'LL
WAN\ OOE,
TOOf!

SIJBSCRIPTION RATES
TbeGallipoliaDIIIUy Tribune in Ohio and West Virginia one yearS33.00; six months 117.50: three
Elsewhere PI 00 per year; sis months 120.00; Ulree months SILOO: motor route

:;;,=:.

~~to•\.- ted Prest Ls exclusively entitled to the use for publlcation of aU news di:ipatc~
wlliiCI newspaper and also the local news publi.s.bed herein.

~~·,...,.d·-

""'"'

--. .·

-~

-. Reagan's Ohio media

...,.
*- •~

......•.
~·

-- -·-

..•.....

,"'

:.

·---·
·-,..,. .
Oh •

James Schifrin has quit as the Ohio media coordinator
for Republican presidential candidate Ronald Reagan,
blasting the rest of the campaign organization for "in·
competence."
Schifrin, a free-lance public relations consultant from
I
Cincinnati, said he wanted Reagan to win the November
· ·. presidential election, but feared that the "characters
· . calling the shots in his campaign are going to lose it for
.. . hiin."
Schifrin, on the Ohio Reagan campaign staff since
August, said he resigned in disgust with the way the way
- · press relations were handled on Reagan's trip to Cin;,. • cinnati last Wednesday.
~
Schifr,in said his repeated appeals for a general news
{: conference were turned down, but the former California
~ governor granted interviews to each of three televisions
\: stations. Schifrin said Reagan's press secretary, Ed Gray,
:~ told him there was no time to meet with local newspaper
~ and radio reporters.
~
"Even if he only was scheduled for two hours in Cin·
·• cinnati, he could and should have held a general news con~ ference," Schifrin said. "This was just one of several
~ examples of the stupid mentality that seems to prevail in
; the national Reagan organization."
:
Hamilton County Commissioner .Norman Murdock,
: Reagan's state campaign co-chainnan, said he was "surI . • prised and disappointed" by Schifrin's resignation.
I . ;• "I heard that Jim had some problems with the Reagan
staff, became upset and quit," Murdock said. "I am sorry
• Jim feels the way he doe&amp; and made the decision he did."
:
Murdock said he intended to contact Schifrin over the
: weekend "to find out exactly why he quit."
•
Jeff Coreoran, the Hamilton County campaign co: ordinator' said he had high personal regard for Schifrin,
: ·but described him as "new to politics and sometimes in~ clined to be thin-skinned."
:
Schifrin also complained he was not reimbursed for
: campaign expenses he paid out of his pocket.
• · "It's bad enough that they never put me on the payroll
: after Dave Johnson (Ohio campaign co-ordinator)
: . promised me they would back in January," Schifrin said.
_• "But all this time since last August, I have not been paid
• . one penny toward the expenses I have run up for the cam~. palgn." .
~·
Murdock said Schifrin would get paid for the expenses
:·; "even if I have to do it out of my own pocket."
":•

I

~ Today

.,'·
:•
·i

Onthisdate:
In 1533, Anne Boleyn was crowned
as queen as England.
In 1943, British actoc Leslie
Howard was killed whenta Gennan
warplane shot down hhl civilian
Lisbon-to-London flight. :

i;

•.:
:•

;;
·:
~

:·

•••

~

' ,,,
"'
'.

Today's political roundup

John Anderson: the third man
ByDooGraff
Now that John Anderson has
finally had the courage of a lot of
other people's conviction and
declared his independent presidential candidacy, what else is new?
Lest we forget, independent or
third-party candidates have been a
factor in virtually every presidential
election of modern times.
Looking back just a bit, there were
two of some significance last time
out- Eugene McCarthy and Lester
Maddox. There was a thin year in
1972 with no real standouts, but then
we have 1968 and George Wallace at
what turned out to be his peak. And
moving aU the way back to 1948, we
have a real classic - both Henry
Wall~ce and Strom Thurmond. Here
and lhere in preceding years there
are a few other rememberable and
even some memorable names;
Robert LaFollette and the redoubtable Nonnan Thomas to name two.
Eventually we hit 1912 and the
champion of them all - Theodore
Roosevelt.
· A major concern of the major parties - and on occasion the explicit
hope of a candidate such as George
Wallace - is that the popular
presidential vote will be so !ragmen-

Privat~

ted by the minor entrants that no one
will receive the 270 or more electoral
votes necessary for election. That
would throw the decision into the
House of Representatives.
The House has had that responsibility only once in the nation's
history, however, and then - in the
Hayes - Tilden contest of 1876 - it
was not a consequence of minor candidates skewing the count but of
disputed returns from several
states.
Neither have independent' jnd
third-party candidates made m~ch
of their potential as "spoilers" siphoning off silfficient votes from a
leader to thr!iw the election to the
major candidate who otherwise
woUld have been the also-ran.
True, Democrat Woodrow Wilson
did win in 1912 with a minority of the ·
popular vote. But that was an
anomaly in which the "spoiler" was
a former president - Roosevelt who captured the majority of the
Republican Party from its official
candidate, incumbent William
Howard Taft.
In 1948, Harry Truman won
despite the combined siphoning efforts of Henry Wallace's

Progressives and Strom Thurmond's Dixiecrats . George
Wallace's 14 percent of the vote does
raise a question about the 1968 Nixon
- Humphrey race, but it's a question
without a definitive answer. It may
well have come equally from both
major party candidates, or from
those who would have been nonvoters had Wallace not been in the
running.
It is most often said in favor of the
minor candidates that they serve a
purpose in articulating issues that
the major candidates might otherwise prefer to dodge.
Possibly, but not certainly.
George Wallace may be said to have
had some impact to this effect. And
Socialist Thomas went about the
task with dedication election after
election but with what appeared
scant impact at the time. Many &lt;1
his concepts, however, were to find
subsequent expression in the
legislative programs of both
Democratic and Republican administrations.
Eugene McCarthy, possibly the
most intellectually elevated
presidential aspirant since Wilson,
articulated with a vengeance in 1968
when he was a Democratic

challenger unseating his own party's
incwnbent. But his presence as an
independent in 1972 was virtually unnoticeable.
So it goes, or has gone. Anderson,
who has proved himself the
brightest of dark horses in the
current campaign, is being, taken
very seriously. Polls curren!ly show
hini the preference of better than 20
percent of the electorate. But then,
remember when the same polls indicated the Democratic nomination
was Edward Kennedy's for the announcing?
It is much too early to cOWit John
Anderson in or out. In an election in
which the distaste of much of the
electorate for both major pjlrty
leaders is so pronounced, he just
might make history.
The odds remain ver-Y l01ig,
however, that when history gets
around to looking back on the 1960
election, it Will say John Anderson's
real contribution was to the good
consciences of a large but nondecisive body of voters. His candidacy enabled them to do their duty
as good citizens at the polls.and still
vote for none d the above.

pension plans: a system in jeopardy

NEW YORK (AP) - If you believe
the private pension system is im-

mune to collapse, perhaps because
you have seen the CQUiltry stwnble
its way through so many other big
problems, consider this scenario:
If inflation were to prevail for 10
years
at 12 percent a year - or
In 1968, the American wtiter Helen
lower
than
the rate so far this year
Keller, who was both deaf and blind,
would
erase about tw~thirds
it
died.
the
buying
power
of the fixed-sum
In 1973, Premier George
1
Papadopoulos of Greece declared pensions that support millions.
But, you say, relief would be
the Greek monarchy abolished.
rushed
to the scene. From governTen years ago, Argentine ·
ment?
Can
you really be sure of that
terrorists announce they had tried
when
the
federal government is
and sentenced fonner President
already
deeply
in debt and is
Pedro Eugenio Aramburu.
,
already
blamed
for
being an engine
Five years ago, police in the whiteof
inflation?
ruled African country llf Rhodesia
Two obvious possibilities suggest
killed 11 blacks in a clash with
themselves:
Bigger contributions
rioters in Salisbury.
from sponsors of corporate pensions, and greater returns on pen-

..•'
'.

sion fund investments. But experience ' suggests little help from
either.
First, the matter of bigger contributions. Based on a survey of 501
companies by Hewitt Associates, a

flation rate of 7.4 percent, according
to Becker Securities.
According to Martin D. Sass, himself a pension fund manager, the
biggest equity pension funds simply
cannot battle inflation. "They're too

Business mirror
major actuarial finn, 57.5 percent of
companies have made no postretirement additions to funds since
1973.
Several pension authorities say it
is safe to assume that .what additions
were made feU far short of offsetting
inflation's damage.
· Between 1970 and 1979, pension
equity funds - those invested In
stocks - averaged a paltry 3.6 percent return, less than half the in-

big," he says. "Their elephantine
size curbs their fiexibility."
And yet, most pension money is
managed by big organizations. The
top 25 banks, for example, handle
about '199 billion of retirement funds, or 35 percent of the •
billion
private pension fWid pool. lndividual
banks may manage as much as $20
billion of private pension funds.
Sass, who heads M.D. Sass Investors Services, contends that the

choice of stocks in which to invest
shrinks with the size of the investment. In his view, managers of
the largest dollar amounts have the
fewest choices; their investmenlll
can be absorbed only by huge companies.
He believes the future lies with
"money. management boutiques"
that·limit the amount of money they
manage, the purpose being to
remain sufficiently fiexible to take
advantage of buy-sell opportunities.
There is evidence that the
boutique concept is catching on.
Banks, which with insurers are often
among the "elephantine"
managers, suff~red a net loss of 24
funds last year. The boutiques
gained 87 new cllenlll out of 87
hirings by the 350 largest pension
funds.
J

Presidential debate: three's company?

I

..

I

'·

'

.'

..
.''

''

I

'

~

.-.

'

'"My conscious•tfiS$ lfbout se1wa/ harassment
ha~ finally been ruised - d11rn it!"

L-----~----~~~
. r~------------a-------~~~--~1.

Commission • • •
I Continued from

in history• .•

;. Today is Sunday, June I, the Ui3rd
; ; day of 1980. There are 213 days left in
•: theyear.
i: Today's highlight in histo~ ' In
!. 1944, the siesta WllS tificially
•: abolishedinMexico.

1

-.........·.
e:
.... .

l.l.:ut\CU

coordinator quits

another major ash fall had lessened,
but said fonnation of a dome increased the chance of lateral blasts
and the likelihood of superheated
pwnice cascading down the sides &lt;1
the mountain,
Scientists stuck to earlier predictions that there was little chance of
quick-moving lava flows down the
sides of the mountain.
"It would be like tar fiowing down
the mountain, slow and not very
far," said Hait.
The death toll from the May 18
eruption stood at 22 Friday. The
Cowlitz County coroner announced
plans to issue "presumptive" certificates
of death after ground searScientists had predicted the erupches
for
the 53 remaining victims
tions of gas and ash, which covered
are
completed
Sunday.
six states with a powdery fallout and
Observers
circling
the mountain
filled rivers with mud and debris,
by
plane
Thursday
reported
glowing
would be followed by lava oozing to
the surface to form a dome in the the red spots In the crater. Initially, the
spots were visible only through lightcrater.
"I think we can feel pretty sure intensifying glasses, but by Friday
we're at the beginning of the lava- were visible to the naked eye.
A lava dome is a thick plug of
dome stage," said Tim Hail of the
magma, or molten rock, that cools
U.S. Geological Survey .
Halt and others were unable to as it rises to the surface over a
speak in more than general tenns on periOd of weeks or months. Mount
what dangers the new development St. Helens is dotted with domes from
could pose. They said the chance of previous eruptions.

VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) Lava on the fioor of the haH-mile
deep crater on Mount St. Helens
could be as hot as 950 degrees - and
could raise the chance of explosions
un the volcano's scaiTed flanks
scientists say.
'
Glowing lava appeared on the
mountain Friday for the first time
since the volcano began rwnbling
March 27. The mountain erupted
May 18 in a devastating blast that
caused an estimated n.7 billion
damage to state and private property, according to state Budget Direc;;. · tor Lyle Jacobsen.

.."'. ·

year 13S.OO; Six """'ths $11.50; w.e mooths $20.00 Elsewhere I» oo ·'
Sl&amp;lllGIIum-.w ; threeiiiOO!hs$11 .00.
. The ~~tinel,..,.

•

CounCil debating pr:oposal

Lava may cause
new explosions

WASHINGTON (AP) - Two's
company in presidential campaign
debates, but this season there Is a
three-man crowd in prospect. Like
Richard M. Nixon a dozen years ago,
President Carter has decided he
won't take part in any debate including that third man.
And while Carter has said he is
eager to debate a Republican opponent in the fall campaign, that
doesn't riecessarily mean he'll be
debating. Rev. John B. Anderson
may be the woy out.
Carter has ruled out campaign
debates that Include Anderson, the
independent presidential candidate.
The official explanation from
White House press secretary Jody
. Powell :
" It is not our intention to be involved in a debate wlth.third or fourth or fifth pany candidates.... Once
J

you start opening up the process,
then .it's hard to decide where you
draw the line."
So the line is drawn, and It excludes an independent presidential
candidate likely to draw votes that
otherwise · would go for the

In

Gerald R. Ford in
1976. Ford was the first incumbent
president to debate his opponent; no
elected president ever has done so.
Past Incumbents always have
found ·a way out, usually involving
the problem of equal or comparable

Washingt~n

Democratic ticket in a contest with
Republican Ronald Reagan.
The League of Women ·voters
already Is planning to sponsor a
series of campjlil!ll debates like the
three . that matched Carter anti

broadcast time for minor party candid4tes denied a place in broadcast
debate. The real reasons are tactical; the candirlate who is better
known, or
,., comfortably in the lead,

seldom sees a need for debate.
But to say so would be bad politics..
There has to be a cover story.
So in 1968, well ahead In the public:
opinioo polls, Nbton found one in
third party candidate George C.
Wallace. He said he'd debate Huben
H. Humphrey, the Democratic'
presidential nominee, but not in an)'
forwn that included Wallace.
For Wallace, the American In:.'
'dependent Party candidate, aP:
·pea red more likely to cut into th&amp;
Nixon vote than Into Humphrey's. ,
In 11180, Anderson's independent
candidacy Is a threat to ~
Democrats, so party roles are rever-.
sed. Anderson is a Republican, but a'
liberal one, and the Reagan and~
ter camps are agreed that his share
of the vote Is likely to come largely
from people who otherwise would be
casting Democratic haUD9.

page A· l )
Democratic candidates for the post.
Five Meigs County incumbents,
all Republicans, are unopposed by
both members of their own party or
the Democrats for nomination to run
for reelection. These five include
Eleanor Robson, Minersville, county
recorder; George Collins, Reedsville, treasurer; Hankin Ray
Pickens, Pomeroy, coroner; Wesley
A. Buehl, Pomeroy, engineer, and
Frederick W. Crow III, Syracuse,

Gallians . ..
I Continued from

page A· l)
The fate of Guiding Hand School
will be deternlined on Tuesday as
voters are asked to renew that agency's .3 mill operating levy. Additionally, a .7 mill levy for the purpose of J'IHlstablishing the green-box
program will be decided.
Thirty-five Democrats and ~
Republicans are seeking election to
each party's 36 seat central committees.
Two slots on the Democratic Cen' tral Committee are being contested.
Forrest Borden vie .against Leota
Guinther in Gallipolis City Precinct
4-B; and Margaret F. Chambers wUl
oppose Charles W. Meadow in Green
Precinct No. 2.
One seat on the Republican Central Committee is being contested as
Kala Sue Bush will oppose Robert S.
Warren in Clay Precinct.
Polls will be open Tuesday from
6;30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. at the
following locations:
1-A, Willis Tire Co.; 1-B
Washington School; 2-A City
Building; 2-B, Bob Saunders Quaker
State; a-A, Washington School; a-B,
Lodge Building, Third and Pine; 4A, Evans Building across from
Ulrry'w Wayside Furniture; 4-B,
City Garage; 4-C, Central Soya.
Gallipolis Twp., Courthouse;
Kanauga Pet., Jaycee Building; Addison Twp., Bulaville Townhouse;
Addison Pet., Townhouse; Cheshire
Twp., Community Building;
Cheshire Pet., Bradbury Building;
Guyan Twp., Townhouse; Guyan
Pet., Village; Clay Twp. and Pet.,
Clay Elementary School; Harrison
Twp., Townhou,''e.
Huntington Twp., Grange Hall;
Huntington Pet., Townhouse; Green
Twp., Grange Townhouse; Green ·1,

prosecuting attorney.
There· is only one special local
issue in the June 3 primary election
and this is in Olive Township where
voters will decide on a .5 of a mill
levy for fire protection. Voters in all
of the county's precincts will decide
upon central committeemen.
Meigs Countians will, of course,
also help decide the fate for pie four
state issueS and who will represent
them at the national party conventions.
Rodney Community Building ;
Green 2, Green Elementary; Green
3, Rodney Community Building;
Greenfield, Gallia.
Morgan, Morgan Center; Ohio,
Townhouse; Perry Twp .,
Townhouse ; Raccoon and Rio Grande Precinct, Rio Grande Elementary School; Centerville Pet.,
Villige TownhaU; Springfield Twp.,
Townhouse; Bidwell Pet., Bidwell
Elementary School; and, Walnut
Twp., Townhouse.
During the last - presidentlal
primary In Gallia County on June ·a,
1976, a record 8, 735 people showed up
at the polls. In 1972, Gallia had 7,920
voters in the primary election.
Gallia now has 15,~lus registered
voters.

The Associated Press
The head of the Islamic
Republican Party, Iran's dominant
political faction, said in a Tehran
newspaper interview published
Saturday that he wants the nation's
present transportation minister to
be the nation's new prime minister.
The newspjlper Bamdad quoted
pjlrty leader Mohanunad Beheshti
as saying the Revolutionary Council
was currenUy deljating his proposal
to nominate ROads and Transportation Minister Moussa Kalan-

•
near the Iraqi border.
Last week, a govenunent~wned
newspaper reported the coWicil had
selected Hassan Habibi, Iran's
education minister and council
spokesman, as the new prime

tari, 32, whom he described as "a
revolutionary and believer" in
Iran's Islamic regime.
"We are determining whether to
use him in the premiership if
possible and we s!lall study this in
the council for the time being,"
Beheshti was quoted as saying.
Before taking the govenunent
post, Kalantari served ~s head of the
roads division in the provincial
government of the oil-producing
region of Khuzestan in western Iran

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini has
ordered the assembly to decide the
late of the American hostages, who
end their 30th week in captivity
today.

Meanwhile, iranian officials in
Tehran prepared for Monday's
opening of a four-day "Crimes of
America" conference. Bani-Sadr
proposed such a conference to seek
international condemnation of the
United States for its aborted attempt
last month to rescue the American
hostages.

mimster.

But the report was denied by
Habibi and Iranian President
Abolhassan Bani.SSdr, who IS a
political rival of Beheshti and his
hard-line clerical party, which controls the newly elected Parliament.
Iranian revolutionary leader

Korean generals consolidate power

Holzer . ..
(ConTinued from page A.·1)

was certified by the American
Board of Surgery in 1955.
Active nationally in the American
College of Sjlrgeons, Dr. Morgan has
served as President cl the Ohio
Chapter of the American College of
Surgeons, was a founding member
of the American Trauma Society in
1972, is a fellow of the American
Association for Surgery of Trawna,
and has served in a number d
capacities in the Ohio State Medical
Association. He has just completed
his year as president of the OSMA. 1
Following Dr. Morgan's address,
diplomas will be a warded seniors by
Charles E. Holzer Jr., M.D.,
president of the hospital's medical
staff. The Class of 19110 will be
presented by class advisor, JIU
Harr, R.N. The pins will be presented to the graduates by Anne W.
Bowers, R.N., associate director d
nursing education.
During the evening, the School of
Nursing Glee Club will sing, as will
members of the Class of 1980. Mr.
Gulley wiD be at the organ for the
processional and recessional.
Special awards will he made at the
close of the commencement
program, with the names of the
recipients a secret until the actual
time of the presentation.
Following benediction by . Rev.
Lynn D. Lahaie, Pastor of Faith
Baptist Church, a reception will be
held in the church fellowship hall for
members of the graduating class,
their families and friends.

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South Korea's generals, moving to
cement their ircm-fisted grip over "
the nation, announced the establishment Saturday of a militarydominated, junta-like comnuttee to
run the country Wider an existing
martial law decree.
Official government statements
apparently sought to play down the
role and makeup of the Special Committee for National Security
Measures. The government sa1d the
panel would serve in an "advisory"
capacity and would be chaired by
South Korea's civilian president,
Choi Kyu-hah.
However, its members include 14
active generals and three retired
generals now serving in Choi's
Cabinet.
Despite the president's presence
on ·the committee, its most power
member will be Lt. Gen. ChWI Doohwan, who has emerged as South
Korea 's military strongman
following the·assassination last October of President Park Chung-hee.

Chun, regarded by most sources
as the architect of the committee
plan, will sit on the pjlnel as acting
chief of Korean Central Intelligence
Agency, a powerful secret police
organization established by Park.
Chun also serves as defense security
corrunander.
Led by the 4~year~ld career officer, South Korea's generals began
consolidating their power in the face
of mounting civilian demands for a
shift to democratic rule after 18
years under Park's autocratic
regime.
CiVIlian appeals for democracy
were highlighted by a nine-day
rebellion in the southern city ti
Kwangju that was crushed by the army last Tuesday.
Announcement of the new committee coincided with an appeal
from the Carter administration for
South Korean leaders to adopt a
more liberal policy.
" We believe that the stability of
Korea and the safeguarding of its
security interests and ours requires

that (Korean leaders) 100ve in a
(democratic) direction," an administration official said Friday in
Washington.
The United States and South
Korea are currenUy locked In what
some observers called the worst
diplomatic rift in nearly a decade.
The U.S. Embassy in Seoul issued
a statement Friday accusing the
South Korean leadership of distorting the U.S. view of the generals'
power grab.

·I .

.I

In pjlrticular, sources said, the
United States was irked at'Chun for
falsely declaring that the May 17
martial law crackdown in South
Korea had u.s. approval. According
to sources, American diplomats in
Seoul learned of the military crackdown only 30 minutes before it was
announced. The government action,
including mass arrests of political
and student leaders, came in response to the civilian demands for
democracy.

. ON JUNE 3RD

IT'S THE 11 C" THAT COUNTS
CAST YOUR VOTE FOR

• ACTION

WORK

Twenty killed
in bonier flares

By Tbe Anoclated Press
Iraqi artillerymen pounded
Iranian border posts with shellfire
Friday in a new upsurge of frontier
hostilities between the two Mideast
neighbors, Tehran Radio reported.
It claimed some ,20 Iraqi soldiers had
been killed in earlier fighting.
In Tehran, Iranian President
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Abolhassan Bani.SSdr met with
Ayatollab Ruhollah Khomeini at
IN THE REPUBLICAN PRIMAR\
Khomeini's residence and reported
m "the latest developments in the
ELECT AMAN
country," the official Pars news
••. WHO STANDS UP FOR WHAT HE BELIEVES
agency said.
(Continued from page A· l)
It was not known whether Bani•••WHO TAKES TIME TO LISTEN TO YOU
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
peyments eventually w~ Sadr and the supreme Iranian
caught in the crunch if co ess
leader discussed the status of the 53
IN llfE REPUBLICAN PRIMARY
•..WHO HAS WORKED FOR YOU FOR 4 YEARS
were unable to resolve the dispute.
U.S. hostages who on Saturday end
However, foes of the gasoline fee ~th!!:e!!ir..:!30th~!w~ee~k:.!in~ca~p~ti;:v•~
·ty!:..m~
· :;Ir~a~n::_.__L----------------------------------------------had vowed to block the debt-limit eatension unless an amendment
repealing the gas fee wa:J attached.
" We want to send the oil tax to the
president on a vehicle that he
probably wouldn't want to veto,"
said House Republican Leader John
Rhodes of Arizona.
Under the compromise agreement
reached late Friday, opponents were
promised a clear shot at attaching
the gas-fee repealer to a longer ex•
tension of the debt ceiling when it is ,
considered next Wednesday.
00
June Social Security checks,
payable June 3, will have already
been honored by then and thus would
no longer be potential hostages in
-Modei60J3BDR -ms sq. Ft.
the battle between Carter and
Congress over the energy fee.
3 Bedrooms
1328 sq. ft.

CONCERN

EXPERIENCE

RE-ELECT JAMES "C" SAUNDERS

Social . ..

RE-ELECT JAMES ''C'' SAUNDERS

JUST ARRIVED

Delivered and set up

Country Estate Series

on your foundation for
less than $21 per sq. ft.

Plan A9-293

*
*2 Baths

*

*Total Electric

LOVE A NURSE! I I I
For Graduation - Give A Gift She 'II Use- --

D1ning

M~ter

Brdroom

l1TI

Lister SS Bandage Scissors (5" &amp; 7")
Deluxe Pen lights
Nurse Scopes · assorted colors

w~h

Country Kitchen
Breakfast Boot h

DOuble Head Non-Chill Stethoscopes in assorted colors
Bowles S~ethoscopes
Ford-Bowlesr Stethoscopes (Combination)

~ , livi ng Room
u

"'g

Bedroom

Bedroom

Exactus II B.P. Cuffs
White Support Panty Hose
Knee-Hi White Support Hose

*Carpet throughout except kitchen, utility and baths

*5 yr. Buyer Protection Plan

o.os
""'

0

1--J.O'O•"--J..--10'0"· --+----16'0"---+-4'0"~

Ask about selected mobile homes which qualify for a

uoo "direct from factory" rebilte to the customer.

•HOME OF llfE EXCLUSIVE 5 YR. BUYER PROTECTION PLAN •
iWE HAVE MODULAR$ WHICH QUALIFY .fOR LOW INTEREST W. VA. HOUSING MONEY•

Professional Discount Given To

R.N.'s and L P. N.'s

....

Sprln• Valley Piau
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone &gt;W6-2206

* Side by Side Ref./Freezer
* BuiK in Microwave
·* Front porch steel double
door eniiJ
·*Breakfast Booth

•ln•llll•'
.
• .,.

-1

4

,

. " '' •.

• ·· •

j

•

r

•

•

•

\

.

~'

· ~ · .. ,. ~

••

'

,.

... ~

' &lt;· ~.f

J,J.-· .... ~·~"''.' , ~ .It·"'·· ·

, ... .., .. . ~ .. ton '' ' "

· • ·•· ~ •~ "

"'

~ .... .,

.. ... "' ""' "

· ~.,.. ' " ".,

.,. ,. . ... . ~. ~

,

�A-3-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980
A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentint!l, Sunday, June 1, 19110

· junb~

~imts· itntintl

Opinions and Comments

.

.

.

..·'
... AIJD Tl-IAT
'WA$1mJGrON
VOLCAOO
1-\At; Tl-tE l=ORCE
01= AW
I-I-BOMB!!

Jun:h~ 'limes- Jtntnw

I' .
I

Publi.shed every Sunday by The Oho ValJey Publishif18 Co.· ML.dtimedla, lnc.
tion ~~ ~O:.,lni
) on,;re weiC(lfJled. They thould ~ I~ than 300 words long (or subj~ to reduc.Y
a mll.!t be Signed With the sagnee s addreaa. Names may be withheld upon
publicaU011. However, on request, names will be disclOSf!d Letters should be in aood t.astt addressinc luues, not pe-.alities.
•
'

.·

GALUPOUS

DAILVTRIBUNE

.

.

t= 1blrd Ave., GalliJJI()lb. Oh.Jo ~1 .
Ohi~ every weekday evening except Saturday. Second Class Postage Paad at GaUi.polls ,
11IE DAR.Y SENTINEL

l~!~ St. ,~. 0 . 45769. PubUJhed every week day evening exctpt Saturday Entered
u K\."UIIII class mailins matter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.
By carrier daUy and Sunday Sl,OO per week. Motor route •4.40 per month.
MAlL

-· .

THE SOVIEIS'LL
I-IEAU A'BOUT
IT-A~D "rnEI,)'LL
WAN\ OOE,
TOOf!

SIJBSCRIPTION RATES
TbeGallipoliaDIIIUy Tribune in Ohio and West Virginia one yearS33.00; six months 117.50: three
Elsewhere PI 00 per year; sis months 120.00; Ulree months SILOO: motor route

:;;,=:.

~~to•\.- ted Prest Ls exclusively entitled to the use for publlcation of aU news di:ipatc~
wlliiCI newspaper and also the local news publi.s.bed herein.

~~·,...,.d·-

""'"'

--. .·

-~

-. Reagan's Ohio media

...,.
*- •~

......•.
~·

-- -·-

..•.....

,"'

:.

·---·
·-,..,. .
Oh •

James Schifrin has quit as the Ohio media coordinator
for Republican presidential candidate Ronald Reagan,
blasting the rest of the campaign organization for "in·
competence."
Schifrin, a free-lance public relations consultant from
I
Cincinnati, said he wanted Reagan to win the November
· ·. presidential election, but feared that the "characters
· . calling the shots in his campaign are going to lose it for
.. . hiin."
Schifrin, on the Ohio Reagan campaign staff since
August, said he resigned in disgust with the way the way
- · press relations were handled on Reagan's trip to Cin;,. • cinnati last Wednesday.
~
Schifr,in said his repeated appeals for a general news
{: conference were turned down, but the former California
~ governor granted interviews to each of three televisions
\: stations. Schifrin said Reagan's press secretary, Ed Gray,
:~ told him there was no time to meet with local newspaper
~ and radio reporters.
~
"Even if he only was scheduled for two hours in Cin·
·• cinnati, he could and should have held a general news con~ ference," Schifrin said. "This was just one of several
~ examples of the stupid mentality that seems to prevail in
; the national Reagan organization."
:
Hamilton County Commissioner .Norman Murdock,
: Reagan's state campaign co-chainnan, said he was "surI . • prised and disappointed" by Schifrin's resignation.
I . ;• "I heard that Jim had some problems with the Reagan
staff, became upset and quit," Murdock said. "I am sorry
• Jim feels the way he doe&amp; and made the decision he did."
:
Murdock said he intended to contact Schifrin over the
: weekend "to find out exactly why he quit."
•
Jeff Coreoran, the Hamilton County campaign co: ordinator' said he had high personal regard for Schifrin,
: ·but described him as "new to politics and sometimes in~ clined to be thin-skinned."
:
Schifrin also complained he was not reimbursed for
: campaign expenses he paid out of his pocket.
• · "It's bad enough that they never put me on the payroll
: after Dave Johnson (Ohio campaign co-ordinator)
: . promised me they would back in January," Schifrin said.
_• "But all this time since last August, I have not been paid
• . one penny toward the expenses I have run up for the cam~. palgn." .
~·
Murdock said Schifrin would get paid for the expenses
:·; "even if I have to do it out of my own pocket."
":•

I

~ Today

.,'·
:•
·i

Onthisdate:
In 1533, Anne Boleyn was crowned
as queen as England.
In 1943, British actoc Leslie
Howard was killed whenta Gennan
warplane shot down hhl civilian
Lisbon-to-London flight. :

i;

•.:
:•

;;
·:
~

:·

•••

~

' ,,,
"'
'.

Today's political roundup

John Anderson: the third man
ByDooGraff
Now that John Anderson has
finally had the courage of a lot of
other people's conviction and
declared his independent presidential candidacy, what else is new?
Lest we forget, independent or
third-party candidates have been a
factor in virtually every presidential
election of modern times.
Looking back just a bit, there were
two of some significance last time
out- Eugene McCarthy and Lester
Maddox. There was a thin year in
1972 with no real standouts, but then
we have 1968 and George Wallace at
what turned out to be his peak. And
moving aU the way back to 1948, we
have a real classic - both Henry
Wall~ce and Strom Thurmond. Here
and lhere in preceding years there
are a few other rememberable and
even some memorable names;
Robert LaFollette and the redoubtable Nonnan Thomas to name two.
Eventually we hit 1912 and the
champion of them all - Theodore
Roosevelt.
· A major concern of the major parties - and on occasion the explicit
hope of a candidate such as George
Wallace - is that the popular
presidential vote will be so !ragmen-

Privat~

ted by the minor entrants that no one
will receive the 270 or more electoral
votes necessary for election. That
would throw the decision into the
House of Representatives.
The House has had that responsibility only once in the nation's
history, however, and then - in the
Hayes - Tilden contest of 1876 - it
was not a consequence of minor candidates skewing the count but of
disputed returns from several
states.
Neither have independent' jnd
third-party candidates made m~ch
of their potential as "spoilers" siphoning off silfficient votes from a
leader to thr!iw the election to the
major candidate who otherwise
woUld have been the also-ran.
True, Democrat Woodrow Wilson
did win in 1912 with a minority of the ·
popular vote. But that was an
anomaly in which the "spoiler" was
a former president - Roosevelt who captured the majority of the
Republican Party from its official
candidate, incumbent William
Howard Taft.
In 1948, Harry Truman won
despite the combined siphoning efforts of Henry Wallace's

Progressives and Strom Thurmond's Dixiecrats . George
Wallace's 14 percent of the vote does
raise a question about the 1968 Nixon
- Humphrey race, but it's a question
without a definitive answer. It may
well have come equally from both
major party candidates, or from
those who would have been nonvoters had Wallace not been in the
running.
It is most often said in favor of the
minor candidates that they serve a
purpose in articulating issues that
the major candidates might otherwise prefer to dodge.
Possibly, but not certainly.
George Wallace may be said to have
had some impact to this effect. And
Socialist Thomas went about the
task with dedication election after
election but with what appeared
scant impact at the time. Many &lt;1
his concepts, however, were to find
subsequent expression in the
legislative programs of both
Democratic and Republican administrations.
Eugene McCarthy, possibly the
most intellectually elevated
presidential aspirant since Wilson,
articulated with a vengeance in 1968
when he was a Democratic

challenger unseating his own party's
incwnbent. But his presence as an
independent in 1972 was virtually unnoticeable.
So it goes, or has gone. Anderson,
who has proved himself the
brightest of dark horses in the
current campaign, is being, taken
very seriously. Polls curren!ly show
hini the preference of better than 20
percent of the electorate. But then,
remember when the same polls indicated the Democratic nomination
was Edward Kennedy's for the announcing?
It is much too early to cOWit John
Anderson in or out. In an election in
which the distaste of much of the
electorate for both major pjlrty
leaders is so pronounced, he just
might make history.
The odds remain ver-Y l01ig,
however, that when history gets
around to looking back on the 1960
election, it Will say John Anderson's
real contribution was to the good
consciences of a large but nondecisive body of voters. His candidacy enabled them to do their duty
as good citizens at the polls.and still
vote for none d the above.

pension plans: a system in jeopardy

NEW YORK (AP) - If you believe
the private pension system is im-

mune to collapse, perhaps because
you have seen the CQUiltry stwnble
its way through so many other big
problems, consider this scenario:
If inflation were to prevail for 10
years
at 12 percent a year - or
In 1968, the American wtiter Helen
lower
than
the rate so far this year
Keller, who was both deaf and blind,
would
erase about tw~thirds
it
died.
the
buying
power
of the fixed-sum
In 1973, Premier George
1
Papadopoulos of Greece declared pensions that support millions.
But, you say, relief would be
the Greek monarchy abolished.
rushed
to the scene. From governTen years ago, Argentine ·
ment?
Can
you really be sure of that
terrorists announce they had tried
when
the
federal government is
and sentenced fonner President
already
deeply
in debt and is
Pedro Eugenio Aramburu.
,
already
blamed
for
being an engine
Five years ago, police in the whiteof
inflation?
ruled African country llf Rhodesia
Two obvious possibilities suggest
killed 11 blacks in a clash with
themselves:
Bigger contributions
rioters in Salisbury.
from sponsors of corporate pensions, and greater returns on pen-

..•'
'.

sion fund investments. But experience ' suggests little help from
either.
First, the matter of bigger contributions. Based on a survey of 501
companies by Hewitt Associates, a

flation rate of 7.4 percent, according
to Becker Securities.
According to Martin D. Sass, himself a pension fund manager, the
biggest equity pension funds simply
cannot battle inflation. "They're too

Business mirror
major actuarial finn, 57.5 percent of
companies have made no postretirement additions to funds since
1973.
Several pension authorities say it
is safe to assume that .what additions
were made feU far short of offsetting
inflation's damage.
· Between 1970 and 1979, pension
equity funds - those invested In
stocks - averaged a paltry 3.6 percent return, less than half the in-

big," he says. "Their elephantine
size curbs their fiexibility."
And yet, most pension money is
managed by big organizations. The
top 25 banks, for example, handle
about '199 billion of retirement funds, or 35 percent of the •
billion
private pension fWid pool. lndividual
banks may manage as much as $20
billion of private pension funds.
Sass, who heads M.D. Sass Investors Services, contends that the

choice of stocks in which to invest
shrinks with the size of the investment. In his view, managers of
the largest dollar amounts have the
fewest choices; their investmenlll
can be absorbed only by huge companies.
He believes the future lies with
"money. management boutiques"
that·limit the amount of money they
manage, the purpose being to
remain sufficiently fiexible to take
advantage of buy-sell opportunities.
There is evidence that the
boutique concept is catching on.
Banks, which with insurers are often
among the "elephantine"
managers, suff~red a net loss of 24
funds last year. The boutiques
gained 87 new cllenlll out of 87
hirings by the 350 largest pension
funds.
J

Presidential debate: three's company?

I

..

I

'·

'

.'

..
.''

''

I

'

~

.-.

'

'"My conscious•tfiS$ lfbout se1wa/ harassment
ha~ finally been ruised - d11rn it!"

L-----~----~~~
. r~------------a-------~~~--~1.

Commission • • •
I Continued from

in history• .•

;. Today is Sunday, June I, the Ui3rd
; ; day of 1980. There are 213 days left in
•: theyear.
i: Today's highlight in histo~ ' In
!. 1944, the siesta WllS tificially
•: abolishedinMexico.

1

-.........·.
e:
.... .

l.l.:ut\CU

coordinator quits

another major ash fall had lessened,
but said fonnation of a dome increased the chance of lateral blasts
and the likelihood of superheated
pwnice cascading down the sides &lt;1
the mountain,
Scientists stuck to earlier predictions that there was little chance of
quick-moving lava flows down the
sides of the mountain.
"It would be like tar fiowing down
the mountain, slow and not very
far," said Hait.
The death toll from the May 18
eruption stood at 22 Friday. The
Cowlitz County coroner announced
plans to issue "presumptive" certificates
of death after ground searScientists had predicted the erupches
for
the 53 remaining victims
tions of gas and ash, which covered
are
completed
Sunday.
six states with a powdery fallout and
Observers
circling
the mountain
filled rivers with mud and debris,
by
plane
Thursday
reported
glowing
would be followed by lava oozing to
the surface to form a dome in the the red spots In the crater. Initially, the
spots were visible only through lightcrater.
"I think we can feel pretty sure intensifying glasses, but by Friday
we're at the beginning of the lava- were visible to the naked eye.
A lava dome is a thick plug of
dome stage," said Tim Hail of the
magma, or molten rock, that cools
U.S. Geological Survey .
Halt and others were unable to as it rises to the surface over a
speak in more than general tenns on periOd of weeks or months. Mount
what dangers the new development St. Helens is dotted with domes from
could pose. They said the chance of previous eruptions.

VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) Lava on the fioor of the haH-mile
deep crater on Mount St. Helens
could be as hot as 950 degrees - and
could raise the chance of explosions
un the volcano's scaiTed flanks
scientists say.
'
Glowing lava appeared on the
mountain Friday for the first time
since the volcano began rwnbling
March 27. The mountain erupted
May 18 in a devastating blast that
caused an estimated n.7 billion
damage to state and private property, according to state Budget Direc;;. · tor Lyle Jacobsen.

.."'. ·

year 13S.OO; Six """'ths $11.50; w.e mooths $20.00 Elsewhere I» oo ·'
Sl&amp;lllGIIum-.w ; threeiiiOO!hs$11 .00.
. The ~~tinel,..,.

•

CounCil debating pr:oposal

Lava may cause
new explosions

WASHINGTON (AP) - Two's
company in presidential campaign
debates, but this season there Is a
three-man crowd in prospect. Like
Richard M. Nixon a dozen years ago,
President Carter has decided he
won't take part in any debate including that third man.
And while Carter has said he is
eager to debate a Republican opponent in the fall campaign, that
doesn't riecessarily mean he'll be
debating. Rev. John B. Anderson
may be the woy out.
Carter has ruled out campaign
debates that Include Anderson, the
independent presidential candidate.
The official explanation from
White House press secretary Jody
. Powell :
" It is not our intention to be involved in a debate wlth.third or fourth or fifth pany candidates.... Once
J

you start opening up the process,
then .it's hard to decide where you
draw the line."
So the line is drawn, and It excludes an independent presidential
candidate likely to draw votes that
otherwise · would go for the

In

Gerald R. Ford in
1976. Ford was the first incumbent
president to debate his opponent; no
elected president ever has done so.
Past Incumbents always have
found ·a way out, usually involving
the problem of equal or comparable

Washingt~n

Democratic ticket in a contest with
Republican Ronald Reagan.
The League of Women ·voters
already Is planning to sponsor a
series of campjlil!ll debates like the
three . that matched Carter anti

broadcast time for minor party candid4tes denied a place in broadcast
debate. The real reasons are tactical; the candirlate who is better
known, or
,., comfortably in the lead,

seldom sees a need for debate.
But to say so would be bad politics..
There has to be a cover story.
So in 1968, well ahead In the public:
opinioo polls, Nbton found one in
third party candidate George C.
Wallace. He said he'd debate Huben
H. Humphrey, the Democratic'
presidential nominee, but not in an)'
forwn that included Wallace.
For Wallace, the American In:.'
'dependent Party candidate, aP:
·pea red more likely to cut into th&amp;
Nixon vote than Into Humphrey's. ,
In 11180, Anderson's independent
candidacy Is a threat to ~
Democrats, so party roles are rever-.
sed. Anderson is a Republican, but a'
liberal one, and the Reagan and~
ter camps are agreed that his share
of the vote Is likely to come largely
from people who otherwise would be
casting Democratic haUD9.

page A· l )
Democratic candidates for the post.
Five Meigs County incumbents,
all Republicans, are unopposed by
both members of their own party or
the Democrats for nomination to run
for reelection. These five include
Eleanor Robson, Minersville, county
recorder; George Collins, Reedsville, treasurer; Hankin Ray
Pickens, Pomeroy, coroner; Wesley
A. Buehl, Pomeroy, engineer, and
Frederick W. Crow III, Syracuse,

Gallians . ..
I Continued from

page A· l)
The fate of Guiding Hand School
will be deternlined on Tuesday as
voters are asked to renew that agency's .3 mill operating levy. Additionally, a .7 mill levy for the purpose of J'IHlstablishing the green-box
program will be decided.
Thirty-five Democrats and ~
Republicans are seeking election to
each party's 36 seat central committees.
Two slots on the Democratic Cen' tral Committee are being contested.
Forrest Borden vie .against Leota
Guinther in Gallipolis City Precinct
4-B; and Margaret F. Chambers wUl
oppose Charles W. Meadow in Green
Precinct No. 2.
One seat on the Republican Central Committee is being contested as
Kala Sue Bush will oppose Robert S.
Warren in Clay Precinct.
Polls will be open Tuesday from
6;30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. at the
following locations:
1-A, Willis Tire Co.; 1-B
Washington School; 2-A City
Building; 2-B, Bob Saunders Quaker
State; a-A, Washington School; a-B,
Lodge Building, Third and Pine; 4A, Evans Building across from
Ulrry'w Wayside Furniture; 4-B,
City Garage; 4-C, Central Soya.
Gallipolis Twp., Courthouse;
Kanauga Pet., Jaycee Building; Addison Twp., Bulaville Townhouse;
Addison Pet., Townhouse; Cheshire
Twp., Community Building;
Cheshire Pet., Bradbury Building;
Guyan Twp., Townhouse; Guyan
Pet., Village; Clay Twp. and Pet.,
Clay Elementary School; Harrison
Twp., Townhou,''e.
Huntington Twp., Grange Hall;
Huntington Pet., Townhouse; Green
Twp., Grange Townhouse; Green ·1,

prosecuting attorney.
There· is only one special local
issue in the June 3 primary election
and this is in Olive Township where
voters will decide on a .5 of a mill
levy for fire protection. Voters in all
of the county's precincts will decide
upon central committeemen.
Meigs Countians will, of course,
also help decide the fate for pie four
state issueS and who will represent
them at the national party conventions.
Rodney Community Building ;
Green 2, Green Elementary; Green
3, Rodney Community Building;
Greenfield, Gallia.
Morgan, Morgan Center; Ohio,
Townhouse; Perry Twp .,
Townhouse ; Raccoon and Rio Grande Precinct, Rio Grande Elementary School; Centerville Pet.,
Villige TownhaU; Springfield Twp.,
Townhouse; Bidwell Pet., Bidwell
Elementary School; and, Walnut
Twp., Townhouse.
During the last - presidentlal
primary In Gallia County on June ·a,
1976, a record 8, 735 people showed up
at the polls. In 1972, Gallia had 7,920
voters in the primary election.
Gallia now has 15,~lus registered
voters.

The Associated Press
The head of the Islamic
Republican Party, Iran's dominant
political faction, said in a Tehran
newspaper interview published
Saturday that he wants the nation's
present transportation minister to
be the nation's new prime minister.
The newspjlper Bamdad quoted
pjlrty leader Mohanunad Beheshti
as saying the Revolutionary Council
was currenUy deljating his proposal
to nominate ROads and Transportation Minister Moussa Kalan-

•
near the Iraqi border.
Last week, a govenunent~wned
newspaper reported the coWicil had
selected Hassan Habibi, Iran's
education minister and council
spokesman, as the new prime

tari, 32, whom he described as "a
revolutionary and believer" in
Iran's Islamic regime.
"We are determining whether to
use him in the premiership if
possible and we s!lall study this in
the council for the time being,"
Beheshti was quoted as saying.
Before taking the govenunent
post, Kalantari served ~s head of the
roads division in the provincial
government of the oil-producing
region of Khuzestan in western Iran

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini has
ordered the assembly to decide the
late of the American hostages, who
end their 30th week in captivity
today.

Meanwhile, iranian officials in
Tehran prepared for Monday's
opening of a four-day "Crimes of
America" conference. Bani-Sadr
proposed such a conference to seek
international condemnation of the
United States for its aborted attempt
last month to rescue the American
hostages.

mimster.

But the report was denied by
Habibi and Iranian President
Abolhassan Bani.SSdr, who IS a
political rival of Beheshti and his
hard-line clerical party, which controls the newly elected Parliament.
Iranian revolutionary leader

Korean generals consolidate power

Holzer . ..
(ConTinued from page A.·1)

was certified by the American
Board of Surgery in 1955.
Active nationally in the American
College of Sjlrgeons, Dr. Morgan has
served as President cl the Ohio
Chapter of the American College of
Surgeons, was a founding member
of the American Trauma Society in
1972, is a fellow of the American
Association for Surgery of Trawna,
and has served in a number d
capacities in the Ohio State Medical
Association. He has just completed
his year as president of the OSMA. 1
Following Dr. Morgan's address,
diplomas will be a warded seniors by
Charles E. Holzer Jr., M.D.,
president of the hospital's medical
staff. The Class of 19110 will be
presented by class advisor, JIU
Harr, R.N. The pins will be presented to the graduates by Anne W.
Bowers, R.N., associate director d
nursing education.
During the evening, the School of
Nursing Glee Club will sing, as will
members of the Class of 1980. Mr.
Gulley wiD be at the organ for the
processional and recessional.
Special awards will he made at the
close of the commencement
program, with the names of the
recipients a secret until the actual
time of the presentation.
Following benediction by . Rev.
Lynn D. Lahaie, Pastor of Faith
Baptist Church, a reception will be
held in the church fellowship hall for
members of the graduating class,
their families and friends.

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South Korea's generals, moving to
cement their ircm-fisted grip over "
the nation, announced the establishment Saturday of a militarydominated, junta-like comnuttee to
run the country Wider an existing
martial law decree.
Official government statements
apparently sought to play down the
role and makeup of the Special Committee for National Security
Measures. The government sa1d the
panel would serve in an "advisory"
capacity and would be chaired by
South Korea's civilian president,
Choi Kyu-hah.
However, its members include 14
active generals and three retired
generals now serving in Choi's
Cabinet.
Despite the president's presence
on ·the committee, its most power
member will be Lt. Gen. ChWI Doohwan, who has emerged as South
Korea 's military strongman
following the·assassination last October of President Park Chung-hee.

Chun, regarded by most sources
as the architect of the committee
plan, will sit on the pjlnel as acting
chief of Korean Central Intelligence
Agency, a powerful secret police
organization established by Park.
Chun also serves as defense security
corrunander.
Led by the 4~year~ld career officer, South Korea's generals began
consolidating their power in the face
of mounting civilian demands for a
shift to democratic rule after 18
years under Park's autocratic
regime.
CiVIlian appeals for democracy
were highlighted by a nine-day
rebellion in the southern city ti
Kwangju that was crushed by the army last Tuesday.
Announcement of the new committee coincided with an appeal
from the Carter administration for
South Korean leaders to adopt a
more liberal policy.
" We believe that the stability of
Korea and the safeguarding of its
security interests and ours requires

that (Korean leaders) 100ve in a
(democratic) direction," an administration official said Friday in
Washington.
The United States and South
Korea are currenUy locked In what
some observers called the worst
diplomatic rift in nearly a decade.
The U.S. Embassy in Seoul issued
a statement Friday accusing the
South Korean leadership of distorting the U.S. view of the generals'
power grab.

·I .

.I

In pjlrticular, sources said, the
United States was irked at'Chun for
falsely declaring that the May 17
martial law crackdown in South
Korea had u.s. approval. According
to sources, American diplomats in
Seoul learned of the military crackdown only 30 minutes before it was
announced. The government action,
including mass arrests of political
and student leaders, came in response to the civilian demands for
democracy.

. ON JUNE 3RD

IT'S THE 11 C" THAT COUNTS
CAST YOUR VOTE FOR

• ACTION

WORK

Twenty killed
in bonier flares

By Tbe Anoclated Press
Iraqi artillerymen pounded
Iranian border posts with shellfire
Friday in a new upsurge of frontier
hostilities between the two Mideast
neighbors, Tehran Radio reported.
It claimed some ,20 Iraqi soldiers had
been killed in earlier fighting.
In Tehran, Iranian President
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Abolhassan Bani.SSdr met with
Ayatollab Ruhollah Khomeini at
IN THE REPUBLICAN PRIMAR\
Khomeini's residence and reported
m "the latest developments in the
ELECT AMAN
country," the official Pars news
••. WHO STANDS UP FOR WHAT HE BELIEVES
agency said.
(Continued from page A· l)
It was not known whether Bani•••WHO TAKES TIME TO LISTEN TO YOU
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
peyments eventually w~ Sadr and the supreme Iranian
caught in the crunch if co ess
leader discussed the status of the 53
IN llfE REPUBLICAN PRIMARY
•..WHO HAS WORKED FOR YOU FOR 4 YEARS
were unable to resolve the dispute.
U.S. hostages who on Saturday end
However, foes of the gasoline fee ~th!!:e!!ir..:!30th~!w~ee~k:.!in~ca~p~ti;:v•~
·ty!:..m~
· :;Ir~a~n::_.__L----------------------------------------------had vowed to block the debt-limit eatension unless an amendment
repealing the gas fee wa:J attached.
" We want to send the oil tax to the
president on a vehicle that he
probably wouldn't want to veto,"
said House Republican Leader John
Rhodes of Arizona.
Under the compromise agreement
reached late Friday, opponents were
promised a clear shot at attaching
the gas-fee repealer to a longer ex•
tension of the debt ceiling when it is ,
considered next Wednesday.
00
June Social Security checks,
payable June 3, will have already
been honored by then and thus would
no longer be potential hostages in
-Modei60J3BDR -ms sq. Ft.
the battle between Carter and
Congress over the energy fee.
3 Bedrooms
1328 sq. ft.

CONCERN

EXPERIENCE

RE-ELECT JAMES "C" SAUNDERS

Social . ..

RE-ELECT JAMES ''C'' SAUNDERS

JUST ARRIVED

Delivered and set up

Country Estate Series

on your foundation for
less than $21 per sq. ft.

Plan A9-293

*
*2 Baths

*

*Total Electric

LOVE A NURSE! I I I
For Graduation - Give A Gift She 'II Use- --

D1ning

M~ter

Brdroom

l1TI

Lister SS Bandage Scissors (5" &amp; 7")
Deluxe Pen lights
Nurse Scopes · assorted colors

w~h

Country Kitchen
Breakfast Boot h

DOuble Head Non-Chill Stethoscopes in assorted colors
Bowles S~ethoscopes
Ford-Bowlesr Stethoscopes (Combination)

~ , livi ng Room
u

"'g

Bedroom

Bedroom

Exactus II B.P. Cuffs
White Support Panty Hose
Knee-Hi White Support Hose

*Carpet throughout except kitchen, utility and baths

*5 yr. Buyer Protection Plan

o.os
""'

0

1--J.O'O•"--J..--10'0"· --+----16'0"---+-4'0"~

Ask about selected mobile homes which qualify for a

uoo "direct from factory" rebilte to the customer.

•HOME OF llfE EXCLUSIVE 5 YR. BUYER PROTECTION PLAN •
iWE HAVE MODULAR$ WHICH QUALIFY .fOR LOW INTEREST W. VA. HOUSING MONEY•

Professional Discount Given To

R.N.'s and L P. N.'s

....

Sprln• Valley Piau
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone &gt;W6-2206

* Side by Side Ref./Freezer
* BuiK in Microwave
·* Front porch steel double
door eniiJ
·*Breakfast Booth

•ln•llll•'
.
• .,.

-1

4

,

. " '' •.

• ·· •

j

•

r

•

•

•

\

.

~'

· ~ · .. ,. ~

••

'

,.

... ~

' &lt;· ~.f

J,J.-· .... ~·~"''.' , ~ .It·"'·· ·

, ... .., .. . ~ .. ton '' ' "

· • ·•· ~ •~ "

"'

~ .... .,

.. ... "' ""' "

· ~.,.. ' " ".,

.,. ,. . ... . ~. ~

,

�..

. .. . . .
.'

'

A-4-TheSun\lay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1; 1980

~-5-:TheSunday Tlme.-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980

'Narcotic' flood leads to policy
Herbert B. Thivener

Faye R. Schaffer

GALLJPOUS - Herbert Bronson
Thivener, 70, a resident of 410 Smith
St., Kanauga, died Friday around
8:55a.m . in Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Thivener had been ln failing
health the past three months.
He was born Dec. 7, 1909, in Put- . nam County, W. Va., son of the late
Linnie McDaniel lJ!ivener and
Jasper Thivener, who survives.
Mr. Thivener worked in the maintenance department in Holzer
Hospital 15 years before movlng to
Columbus where he was employed
at the Columbus State Hospital. He
retired in 1974.

COLUMBUS Mrs. Faye
Rawlings Schaffer, 84, Columbus.
died Thursday in Columbus.
Mrs. Schaffer was the daughter of
the late Oliver and Vira Rawlings.
She was also preceded in death by
her first husband, Roscoe Webb, her
second husband, Allen Schaffer, two
sons; Verlin and Malcom, and two
brothers and one sister.
She is survived by two grandchilren, one brother, John Rawlings,
St. Petersburg, Fla.; six local nieces
and nephews, Freda Smith, Denver
Rawlins, Florence Well, and Mary
Paynter, all of Albany; Ardis
Waggoner, Harrisonville and John
Dean, Pomeroy. Several other
nieces and nephews also survive.
Funeral services were held Saturday at 10 a.m. in Columbus.

He married Ethel Clark of Patriot
in 1949: She survives, along with two
children: Robert Ray, Columbus
and Mrs. Russell (Sharon) Johnson,
Cheshire. Two grandchildren survive.

;'{

POMEROY - Craig Wendell
Gilmore, Pomeroy, six-weeks old infant son of Richard and Vickie Hoyd
Gilmore, died Saturday mornlng in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He is also survived by two halfbrothers, Jason and Travis Cain;
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Hoyd of Albany and
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs: Richard Gilmore, Pomeroy.
Also surviving are greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lyons of McArthur and Walter
Gilmore of Racine. There are also
several aunts and uncles.
Graveside services will be held at
10 p.m. Monday at Rock Springs
Cemetery. Visitation will be held at
Ewing Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m.
this evening.

Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Monday at Miller's Home for
Funerals with Rev. Arnold Skaggs
officjating. Burial will be in Pine
Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.

James T. McKnight

F. Lawrence Dickey
GALUPOUS - FWieral services
for F. Lawrence Dickey, 65, will be
held at 10 Monday morning in Tampa's Idlewild Baptist Church. Burial
will be in the Chapel Hill Garden,
Zephyr Hills, Fl., by the Roei-Curry
Funeral Home.
Lawrence Dickey was born March
14, 1915, at Clipper Mills to the late
Harry Clyde -Dickey and Garnet
Harrison Dickey.
MEETS TUEsDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce will meet
Tuesday at noon at the Meigs Inn to
finalize plans for the Big Bend
Regatta.
The chamber urges residents to
cut weeds along the river bank in
front of their property.

.

ATrENDS CONVENTION-

Craig Wendell Gilmore

Five brothers survive : William,
Lorain, Cecil, and Paul Thivener, all
of Columbus and Cleve, Crown City.
~e brother, Shirl, was killed during
world War II.

MASON - James T. McKnigh~
87, Hartford; was dead on arrival at
Pleasant Valley Hospita I Friday.
Born January 8,1893, in Hartford, he
was the son of the late George and
Safronia Wetzell McKnight.
Mr. McKnight's wife. Mide Ginter
McKnight, died April 15, 1980. He
was also preceded in death by a son,
George McKnight.
Survivlng are a son. Charles T.
McKnight. Atwater. Ohio: two
sisters, Miss Esther McKnight and
Mrs. Edna Wayland, both of Hart·
ford ; six grandchildren and
one great grandchild.
Mr. McKnight was a retired coal
miner, a veteran of World War I and
a member of the Hartford United
Methodist Church and the United
Mine Workers.
Funeral services will held Monday
at I :30 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason with the
Rev. William K. Dawson officiating.
Burial will fo llow in Graham
Cemetery.
.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday from 2-4 and 7·9
p.m.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A tough
drug policy has been adopted for
Cincinnati public schools because
police predict a " flood" of illegal
narcotics into the United States,
school and police officials say.
Educators are trying to head off
·the predicted influx with a drug
policy that mandates expulsion for
any student possessing, using or
selling drugs on school property.
The students also would be turned
over to police under the policy,
which was adopted Tuesday.
City school Superintendent James
Jacobs said Friday that he discussed

Fire damage $9,500

Ross Hamrick, President of
Security aod Safety Services
recently returned from Nashville, Tenn. where he participated In ·the lhlrty·lhlrd annual National Bnrglar and Fire
Alarm Association Convention.
Seminars and topics dlsCWised
Included Legal Semluars, False
Alarm Workshop, Labor
Relatloos and Corporate Planning and Fire Alarm In·
stallatloos.

GALUPOUS - Damage to a
Chalham Avenue hom.e hit by fire
late Friday has been estimated at
$9,500, reports the Gallipolis City
Fire Department.
Called to the scene at 2107
Chatham-the home of Mildred M.
Cook-at 10:04 p.m., that department
reports lightning ran in through the
television set causing an electrical
short which ignited that appliance,
carpeting, wall covering and the furnace.

Wiseman

SQUAD RUNS
POMEROY- The Middleport ER
Squad was called Saturday at 4:52
a.m. for James Nelson who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
AT 7:40a.m. the Pomeroy Squad
was called to the home of Vicki and
Richard Gilmore, Mechanic Street,
for their six month old son, Craig W,
GALLIPOLIS
Kenneth
Douglas, DireCtor of E.R.A. Gilmore. The infant was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The in·
Marketing and Research Inc., an·
.
!ant
died and was taken to Ewing
nounced Saturday that E . M. (Ike)
Funeral
Home.
Wiseman has been elected chairman
of the Charleston CoWicil of Electronic Realty Assoc. (ERA).
place in the U.S. in six minutes.
According to Douglas the council
E.R.A.'s Home sellers and Home
is made up of Real Estate brokers in buyers protection which covers nine
the tri-state area associated with major systems and appliances in a
Electronic Realty Associates, the home, should they break down
world's largest sellers of home during the period it takes the home
protection coverage for home · to sell, and one year following the
· buyers and the second largest Real sale.
Estate franchise in America.
The newest and most exciting
Purpose of this coWicil is to program which will revolutionize
provide and maintain the highest the Real Estate industry is the Home
degree of sales training in the real Sellers security plan which guaran·
estate industry.
tees the seller that if E.R.A. can't
sell your home; E.R.A. will buy it
The council provides a highly from you.
skilled trainer who is a specialist in
the technique necessary to provide
the E.R.A. Real Estate Salesmen
with the tools to give home buyers
af\d home sellers the best possible
service.

named ERA
chairman

I '•
I.

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions-Tina Smith, Mid·
dleport; Mary Qualls, Pomeroy;
Marvin Darst, Pomeroy; Daphne
Cremeans, Pomeroy; Joseph Davidson, Rutland; Eileen Smith,
Syracuse; GlennisMusser, Rutland.
Discharges---John Chaney,
Charles Jones, Walter Green, Clara
Adams, Dessie Kuhn, Jesse Swan,
Anna Alley.

pen.''

The tougher drug rules aim to
" prevent young people from
becoming a part of the narcotics
culture at an early age," Leistler ·
said.
Jacobs said the policy is more a
" preventive measure than a
punitive one, but we're not side.•tepping the punitive."
Some teachers have objeck'U to a
provision of the drug policy
requiring teachers to turn 10 students. Teachers union President Tom
Mooney said the union supports
stricter drug rules, but IL&gt;s questions
aboutthem.
.
"Teachers have no problem with
reporting violations they see, but are
we going to get into the role of investigating and collecting evidence?" Mooney said. "I think that's
the role of the police and other agen-

cies."

BJCPACKS

J

You get Upiecesof
£"ISh, 8 hush puppies,
a pint of cole slaw,
and plenty of fries.

II

Of the Bend

I
I

By Bob Hoeflich

Mrs. Evelyn Holter and Mrs.
Janet McKee, Racine, have returned home after winning a fabulous
vacation trip to Las Vegas in conjunction with their work with
Stanley Products.
They flew to Vegas out of Colwn' bus and stayed at the Sahara Hotel
while ln the city. They had a gret
time seeing the sights and the shows
and, of course, attended training
sessions given by the company
during the outing.

~@WJ®L?tlffiil IIDro~

!Tsiives4
L__ ~ormore)

The news ofdry docking the USS
Oklahoma City was met with a touch
of sadness by the Pullins Family.
Dean Pullins of Meigs was on the
ship for two years and the Pullins
family has a most attractive yearbook type books on the ship and its
personnel covering 1974-76.

Thrift

Pack

You get 8 pieces of
fish, 8hushpuppies,
a pint of cole ilaw,
and plenty of fries.

I

Atlulhi;'P f~ muu' dOlt' I&lt;. tho• "'')II ._11,111lfllu'l\k&lt;'f With &lt;'~Ill!
11&lt;""'"''" rum lom dfld har"h"rn.·l~· plu..n dHp rufl••d '111h
I&lt;Jill!lY G .. n•'"''" r''"I"&gt;Thnn• "'~~ •• ~ rh,· 10!. ·~1 1 h~11 to., rlw

Utllo•" m.m

This lu&gt;(Uf11JUJ r.-clinmg ~hflh
nnd re~.!fxlng nx:kktg ~· h ~h II) W\•11'
A11d

:-uri?riW~

r~"

yo•rrrl"
M;r!lui{J.:o'nt S ruot"l"Uillil.'t )(p · Ji'o 1·.•·

f hol ~ h11\r th.u i!' ~"

HJu "' ~IM [Ytlllldli r.•lru,:i'ltll'ln l ~ tm I', h• lull r. ••li•\m!l , om fo rt

"'111n11ln•r 'IP I ~•IU,•t•·l.l

'"!.1

,,.•.,J,..,,.. •fl'" ' "I~ ~ h,Uf

,

'''I" "J ·" hl t·~ aull i"U ~·

GAl - 1US - One person was
injured "•ld one driver cited as the
result of a two-vehicle accident investigated Friday by Gallipolis City
Police.
Called to the scene on Fourth Ave.,
at the junction of Pine St., at 9: 15
p.m., officers report a pickup
operated by George H. Young, 17,
Gallipolis, failed to yield at the in·
, . tersection and struck a vehicle
driven by Teresa Barcus, 19,
Gallipolis.
A passenger in the Barcus auto,
Lynn E. Smith, 19, Northup, claimed
injury but was not immediately
,
treated.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Young was cited on a
charge of failure to yield.
In further action, Michael D. Bar·
cus and Virgil Madden, both of
Gallipolis, were cited early Saturday on charges of disorderly conduct.
Stephen J . Rocchi, 20, Gallipolis,
was cited on a charg, of open container Friday.

series of six science fiction books.
Warner Brothers, distributor for the
film, is a co-defendant.
Eastwood, who played the tough
cop Dirty Harry, is majority
stockholder in Malpaso Co, He in·
sist&lt;f Friday that the idea for using
"Th'e Enforcer" as a title for the
third Dirty Harry movie came from
a 1951 Warner Brothers film starring
Hwnphrey Bogart.

Jimmy says you shouldn't charge
and now Jimmy says you should.
Maybe you played it by ear and handled your personal business without
his advice. You keep smiling now.

Our 4. 97 Queen Size. 2 for $7
Our 5.97 t&lt;ing / Tw in , "l f or $9

$6
2
FOR

Our
Reg .
3.97

"ltis" And "Hers"
Sleeping Pillows
Polyester/cotton ticking , polyester
fi lling. Standard 20 x 26 ~' Save now.

Model
AHA·020·2

2!~4x15"

Durable Plastic
Foam Chest

$154

Our
Reg . $164

Dehumidifier

• Up to 20 pt. moisture removal
for
24
hr .,
automatic
humidistat.

An extra-large 48-qt. chest with lid locks
and sturdy plastic end handles.

Our '184 30

... ;;..·

;

Jimmie L. Hatfield

VOTE JUNE3RD

JIMMIE L HATFIELD
FOR SHERIFF
1 have talked to many Gailia Co .
residents in person, would like to
have talked to everyone, which is
impossible . If electecl sheriff, I
want the people to feel free to
come to my office at any rime . I
want to do my best to clean up
crime and drugs in our county.

lfS UP TO YOU
Pd. Pol. Adv .

77.eour
1.07

Marshmallow Candy
Delicious toasted coconut marshmallow treats. 12-oz• bag just 78'.

Our Reg . 25.97

·'wanted in a
Seafood Platter

Roll - Our 1.36

Color Film Processing

·J 23
2 Days Only!
• Prell® Shampoo Sale

•
•
•
•
•
•

'

.
'

'

'

I_,___...._.___......
_
_
...._...._...,....-!!
..
y

NEW YORK (AP J- In a role apparently new to him, actor-producer
Clint Eastwood has appeared in a
Manhattan federal court to defend
the title of " The Enforcer,'" one ri
his "Dirty Harry" movies.
Writer Andy Sugar has filed suit
for several million dollars claiming
Eastwood and Malpaso Co.,
producer of the Dirty Harry movies,
illegally copied the title from her

Don't forget that Tuesday is the
day you do your duty. The polls will
be open long hours for the convenience of voters and the new counting system will be operating so the
results will be known early. Now you
didn't forget to register, did you•

.Ev~ing
you've~

'

Wayne Russell, Democratic Cand.ldate
For the ShP.riff of Gallia County
PD. POL . ADV. BY CAND .

'"

Acto.r appears in court to defend title

' N.1wt.

.'

'
'
T
HE
PEOPLE'S SHERIFP'
Thank you for your s.upport for a better Gallia County

cl,., ... l, (I

,,,J, ,,r.1.tll ,J..cor•tOr lo&lt;.&gt;l&lt;

Gallipolis.
Davrd R. Carman, 38, Addison,
waived $30 on a charge of failure to
obey a traffic control device.

·Sturdy Automatic
Swing For Babies
Sta nd-mou nted with 2-position
molded seat. Easy-wind mec ha·
nism rocks baby 1().15 minutes.

5-0ts .
Our 7.57

Flat Latex Wall Paint
Applies easily, covers in one coat . Wh ite
and colors. Save on 5-qt . can.

2 Days Only

• Steam And Dry Iron
With 25 steam vents . Changes
from steam to dry instantl y.

F~R

$1

Our Reg . 59c

Jergens Soap
3 bar bundle of bath soap.

s~~~!!'g

WAYNE RUSSELL

Slwk c ,ntit~w r arm$ "I!:Jhhglrr th•• d.:11~ p;:"id,•rt ...... , ~no t
bo~ k

$15 on a charge of no motorcycle en·
dorsement.
Forfeiting $35 on a charge of open
container was Stanley Siders, 25,

-·MO

Prell®concentrate in 5-oz. net wt.
tube or 11 fl. ozs. Prell•' liquid.

IF YOU HAVE BEEN UNHAPPY WITH THE LAW
ENFORCEMENT THE PAST 4 YEARS AND .YOU WANT
.A CHANGE,
ON TUESDAY, JUNE 3, REMEMBER
,,
or th ~o~ moor ucilir~grvtllllm~~h~~tr Nylo! Jrw Wo~Votr ~.,,,,

was rined $100 on a charge of
reckless operation.
Fined $20 on a charge of no
operator's license was Samuel
Meade, 18, Vinton.
Patricia A. Miller, 19, Thurman,
was fined US on a charge of assured
clear distance.
Forfeiting $30 on a charge of
overhigh bumper was Homer McMillin, 21, Bidwell.
John Kerr, 18, Gallipolis, forfeited
$30 on a charge of squealing tires.
Forfeiting $25 on a charge of no
slow·moving-vehicle emblem was
David E. Warren, 21, Gallipolls;
Jeff Roth, 20, Gallipolis, was fined

Paper carriers are hard to come
by these days. Time was when many
families looked upon newspaper
routes as excellent training for their
youngsters. Hopefully, that attitude
will return.
The Sentinel has two routes
currently open. One is on Third and
Fourth Sts. in Middleport and the
ot)ler is in the business section of
Pomeroy. Kids can pick up quite a
few bucks each week on the routes
besides earning points which they
can turn in for prizes.
Anybody interested? We would
like to hear from you tomorrow morning at 992·2156 or 992·2157.

One injured in
minor accident

''FAIRNESS TO EVERYONE"
0f'lfl

Box 57, Revere, Mo., 63645, are
tracing Floyd's family tree and
would like some help from Meigs
Countians. They .want to know about
Isreal Young, Nicholas and Barbara
Young, Mrs. John · (Elizabeth)
Young and others. If you can help,
please contact the Youngs .at the
above address.

GALUPOUS - Thirteen cases
were terQ1inated in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday.
David W. Walters, 20, Vinton ,
pleaded guilty to charges of reckless
operation, no operator's license and
fleeing a police officer. Walters was
fined $150 plus two six month con·
secutive sentences, all but 20 days
suspended.
, Cljarged with leaving the scene of
an accident and driving while under
suspension, Roger E. Lambert, 28,
Gallipolis, was sentenced to two six
month sentences, all but seven days
suspended.
Douglas Thompson, 29, Gallipolis,

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Young, RR I,

[ (serves 3~4) 1

WHEN ELECTED SHERIFF, WAYNE RUSSELL
WILL:
•PROVIDE GOOD USE OF TAXPAYERS
DOLLARS
•REDUCE CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES
•PROTECT THE PRIVATE ·PROPERTY OF ALL
CITIZENS OF GALLIA COUNTY
•REDUCE IMPROPER CRIMINAL
INVESTIGATION
•EMPLOY QUALIFIED PERSONNEL

.

f

With students dismissed in two of
the county's three local school
districts :.... Southern Local wrapped
up Friday- vacation time is well on
the way.
Supt. Bob Ord of the Southern
District issues a summer reminder
that adults are not pennitted to play
on the new girls' softball diamond at
the high school. This is a protection
for property owners near the field.
So- you big hitters will have to find
another location.
And - by the way - Southern
High School Principal James Adams
reports senior cap and gown pictures have been delivered. Seniors
may pick them up from 9 a.m. to 12
noon both on Monday and Tuesday.

Captain D's.

Captain's
Value Pack

Terminate 13 cases in Gallia court

---- .. - - -

Beat•••

prepare for what is going to hap-

ELECT A NEW SHERIFF
WAYNE RUSSELL
''THE SHERIFF
FOR
THE PEOPLE''

According to Douglas, these tools
include the "electronic moving
machine" which can deliver a picture of any home to virtually any

Our Best Selling
Stratolounger® Recliners

'-tr&lt;ttnk'"'"!l"' c f11mou' XP ' Clow Up' d .., .yn "'O!h wit
prll""'- d-..,,m •.-1 bur~ ond !I'" ~ ' "-ldp owr nnm Pu1ttruo 11
''""' h• ~~~ .. .. n.. nd vuu rrtrwr hd~'trtn m o~ .· rr •'v"n "'h""
lull•. rl;'dlt11'fl 1 f ht&gt; f)o?do•n r hnl&lt;t&gt; lor ~m~ll.! r ""-'m•
d"'"'rl
dlld sumrtu""'
,,, ,nmforlai!W Alrtloo~~·

the crackdown on. illegal drugs with
Police Chief Myron Leistler two
months ago.
"I explained we in this coun~ry are
in for a flood rJ. hard narcotics the
likes of which we have never seen,
even in the days of high narcotics addiction " Leistler said. " We have a
bumpe~ crop of heroin-grad7 opiwn
coming out of southeast As1a. It 1s
necessary to step in at this time to

fl

r

Crispy Fish
2 Tasty Shrimp
2 Tender Scallops
Fresh Cole Slaw
Crunchy Hushpuppies
Golden Fryes

~[;g(jb"&amp;;8iiver~

..
•

SEAFOOD SHOrPES
UPPII?~ ROUTE 7
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

,.

®

99~~e

Air Refrigerant

Maintain proper Freon ' levels in
.vour car's air condilioner. 14 ozs. •
F'"l.

cu•.

Our 1.26

Our Enamel Spray Paint
Interior/exterior in white and co lors.
16 ozs. net. wt.• Save now'
' {li•oend•nq on P•}3men l

Our Reg . 8.96

Jr. Oversize Racket
25·inch aluminum frame, leather
grip tennis racket. Nylon throat
and string . Special price ,
·

•

�..

. .. . . .
.'

'

A-4-TheSun\lay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1; 1980

~-5-:TheSunday Tlme.-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980

'Narcotic' flood leads to policy
Herbert B. Thivener

Faye R. Schaffer

GALLJPOUS - Herbert Bronson
Thivener, 70, a resident of 410 Smith
St., Kanauga, died Friday around
8:55a.m . in Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Thivener had been ln failing
health the past three months.
He was born Dec. 7, 1909, in Put- . nam County, W. Va., son of the late
Linnie McDaniel lJ!ivener and
Jasper Thivener, who survives.
Mr. Thivener worked in the maintenance department in Holzer
Hospital 15 years before movlng to
Columbus where he was employed
at the Columbus State Hospital. He
retired in 1974.

COLUMBUS Mrs. Faye
Rawlings Schaffer, 84, Columbus.
died Thursday in Columbus.
Mrs. Schaffer was the daughter of
the late Oliver and Vira Rawlings.
She was also preceded in death by
her first husband, Roscoe Webb, her
second husband, Allen Schaffer, two
sons; Verlin and Malcom, and two
brothers and one sister.
She is survived by two grandchilren, one brother, John Rawlings,
St. Petersburg, Fla.; six local nieces
and nephews, Freda Smith, Denver
Rawlins, Florence Well, and Mary
Paynter, all of Albany; Ardis
Waggoner, Harrisonville and John
Dean, Pomeroy. Several other
nieces and nephews also survive.
Funeral services were held Saturday at 10 a.m. in Columbus.

He married Ethel Clark of Patriot
in 1949: She survives, along with two
children: Robert Ray, Columbus
and Mrs. Russell (Sharon) Johnson,
Cheshire. Two grandchildren survive.

;'{

POMEROY - Craig Wendell
Gilmore, Pomeroy, six-weeks old infant son of Richard and Vickie Hoyd
Gilmore, died Saturday mornlng in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He is also survived by two halfbrothers, Jason and Travis Cain;
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Hoyd of Albany and
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs: Richard Gilmore, Pomeroy.
Also surviving are greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lyons of McArthur and Walter
Gilmore of Racine. There are also
several aunts and uncles.
Graveside services will be held at
10 p.m. Monday at Rock Springs
Cemetery. Visitation will be held at
Ewing Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m.
this evening.

Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Monday at Miller's Home for
Funerals with Rev. Arnold Skaggs
officjating. Burial will be in Pine
Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.

James T. McKnight

F. Lawrence Dickey
GALUPOUS - FWieral services
for F. Lawrence Dickey, 65, will be
held at 10 Monday morning in Tampa's Idlewild Baptist Church. Burial
will be in the Chapel Hill Garden,
Zephyr Hills, Fl., by the Roei-Curry
Funeral Home.
Lawrence Dickey was born March
14, 1915, at Clipper Mills to the late
Harry Clyde -Dickey and Garnet
Harrison Dickey.
MEETS TUEsDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce will meet
Tuesday at noon at the Meigs Inn to
finalize plans for the Big Bend
Regatta.
The chamber urges residents to
cut weeds along the river bank in
front of their property.

.

ATrENDS CONVENTION-

Craig Wendell Gilmore

Five brothers survive : William,
Lorain, Cecil, and Paul Thivener, all
of Columbus and Cleve, Crown City.
~e brother, Shirl, was killed during
world War II.

MASON - James T. McKnigh~
87, Hartford; was dead on arrival at
Pleasant Valley Hospita I Friday.
Born January 8,1893, in Hartford, he
was the son of the late George and
Safronia Wetzell McKnight.
Mr. McKnight's wife. Mide Ginter
McKnight, died April 15, 1980. He
was also preceded in death by a son,
George McKnight.
Survivlng are a son. Charles T.
McKnight. Atwater. Ohio: two
sisters, Miss Esther McKnight and
Mrs. Edna Wayland, both of Hart·
ford ; six grandchildren and
one great grandchild.
Mr. McKnight was a retired coal
miner, a veteran of World War I and
a member of the Hartford United
Methodist Church and the United
Mine Workers.
Funeral services will held Monday
at I :30 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home in Mason with the
Rev. William K. Dawson officiating.
Burial will fo llow in Graham
Cemetery.
.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday from 2-4 and 7·9
p.m.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A tough
drug policy has been adopted for
Cincinnati public schools because
police predict a " flood" of illegal
narcotics into the United States,
school and police officials say.
Educators are trying to head off
·the predicted influx with a drug
policy that mandates expulsion for
any student possessing, using or
selling drugs on school property.
The students also would be turned
over to police under the policy,
which was adopted Tuesday.
City school Superintendent James
Jacobs said Friday that he discussed

Fire damage $9,500

Ross Hamrick, President of
Security aod Safety Services
recently returned from Nashville, Tenn. where he participated In ·the lhlrty·lhlrd annual National Bnrglar and Fire
Alarm Association Convention.
Seminars and topics dlsCWised
Included Legal Semluars, False
Alarm Workshop, Labor
Relatloos and Corporate Planning and Fire Alarm In·
stallatloos.

GALUPOUS - Damage to a
Chalham Avenue hom.e hit by fire
late Friday has been estimated at
$9,500, reports the Gallipolis City
Fire Department.
Called to the scene at 2107
Chatham-the home of Mildred M.
Cook-at 10:04 p.m., that department
reports lightning ran in through the
television set causing an electrical
short which ignited that appliance,
carpeting, wall covering and the furnace.

Wiseman

SQUAD RUNS
POMEROY- The Middleport ER
Squad was called Saturday at 4:52
a.m. for James Nelson who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
AT 7:40a.m. the Pomeroy Squad
was called to the home of Vicki and
Richard Gilmore, Mechanic Street,
for their six month old son, Craig W,
GALLIPOLIS
Kenneth
Douglas, DireCtor of E.R.A. Gilmore. The infant was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The in·
Marketing and Research Inc., an·
.
!ant
died and was taken to Ewing
nounced Saturday that E . M. (Ike)
Funeral
Home.
Wiseman has been elected chairman
of the Charleston CoWicil of Electronic Realty Assoc. (ERA).
place in the U.S. in six minutes.
According to Douglas the council
E.R.A.'s Home sellers and Home
is made up of Real Estate brokers in buyers protection which covers nine
the tri-state area associated with major systems and appliances in a
Electronic Realty Associates, the home, should they break down
world's largest sellers of home during the period it takes the home
protection coverage for home · to sell, and one year following the
· buyers and the second largest Real sale.
Estate franchise in America.
The newest and most exciting
Purpose of this coWicil is to program which will revolutionize
provide and maintain the highest the Real Estate industry is the Home
degree of sales training in the real Sellers security plan which guaran·
estate industry.
tees the seller that if E.R.A. can't
sell your home; E.R.A. will buy it
The council provides a highly from you.
skilled trainer who is a specialist in
the technique necessary to provide
the E.R.A. Real Estate Salesmen
with the tools to give home buyers
af\d home sellers the best possible
service.

named ERA
chairman

I '•
I.

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions-Tina Smith, Mid·
dleport; Mary Qualls, Pomeroy;
Marvin Darst, Pomeroy; Daphne
Cremeans, Pomeroy; Joseph Davidson, Rutland; Eileen Smith,
Syracuse; GlennisMusser, Rutland.
Discharges---John Chaney,
Charles Jones, Walter Green, Clara
Adams, Dessie Kuhn, Jesse Swan,
Anna Alley.

pen.''

The tougher drug rules aim to
" prevent young people from
becoming a part of the narcotics
culture at an early age," Leistler ·
said.
Jacobs said the policy is more a
" preventive measure than a
punitive one, but we're not side.•tepping the punitive."
Some teachers have objeck'U to a
provision of the drug policy
requiring teachers to turn 10 students. Teachers union President Tom
Mooney said the union supports
stricter drug rules, but IL&gt;s questions
aboutthem.
.
"Teachers have no problem with
reporting violations they see, but are
we going to get into the role of investigating and collecting evidence?" Mooney said. "I think that's
the role of the police and other agen-

cies."

BJCPACKS

J

You get Upiecesof
£"ISh, 8 hush puppies,
a pint of cole slaw,
and plenty of fries.

II

Of the Bend

I
I

By Bob Hoeflich

Mrs. Evelyn Holter and Mrs.
Janet McKee, Racine, have returned home after winning a fabulous
vacation trip to Las Vegas in conjunction with their work with
Stanley Products.
They flew to Vegas out of Colwn' bus and stayed at the Sahara Hotel
while ln the city. They had a gret
time seeing the sights and the shows
and, of course, attended training
sessions given by the company
during the outing.

~@WJ®L?tlffiil IIDro~

!Tsiives4
L__ ~ormore)

The news ofdry docking the USS
Oklahoma City was met with a touch
of sadness by the Pullins Family.
Dean Pullins of Meigs was on the
ship for two years and the Pullins
family has a most attractive yearbook type books on the ship and its
personnel covering 1974-76.

Thrift

Pack

You get 8 pieces of
fish, 8hushpuppies,
a pint of cole ilaw,
and plenty of fries.

I

Atlulhi;'P f~ muu' dOlt' I&lt;. tho• "'')II ._11,111lfllu'l\k&lt;'f With &lt;'~Ill!
11&lt;""'"''" rum lom dfld har"h"rn.·l~· plu..n dHp rufl••d '111h
I&lt;Jill!lY G .. n•'"''" r''"I"&gt;Thnn• "'~~ •• ~ rh,· 10!. ·~1 1 h~11 to., rlw

Utllo•" m.m

This lu&gt;(Uf11JUJ r.-clinmg ~hflh
nnd re~.!fxlng nx:kktg ~· h ~h II) W\•11'
A11d

:-uri?riW~

r~"

yo•rrrl"
M;r!lui{J.:o'nt S ruot"l"Uillil.'t )(p · Ji'o 1·.•·

f hol ~ h11\r th.u i!' ~"

HJu "' ~IM [Ytlllldli r.•lru,:i'ltll'ln l ~ tm I', h• lull r. ••li•\m!l , om fo rt

"'111n11ln•r 'IP I ~•IU,•t•·l.l

'"!.1

,,.•.,J,..,,.. •fl'" ' "I~ ~ h,Uf

,

'''I" "J ·" hl t·~ aull i"U ~·

GAl - 1US - One person was
injured "•ld one driver cited as the
result of a two-vehicle accident investigated Friday by Gallipolis City
Police.
Called to the scene on Fourth Ave.,
at the junction of Pine St., at 9: 15
p.m., officers report a pickup
operated by George H. Young, 17,
Gallipolis, failed to yield at the in·
, . tersection and struck a vehicle
driven by Teresa Barcus, 19,
Gallipolis.
A passenger in the Barcus auto,
Lynn E. Smith, 19, Northup, claimed
injury but was not immediately
,
treated.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Young was cited on a
charge of failure to yield.
In further action, Michael D. Bar·
cus and Virgil Madden, both of
Gallipolis, were cited early Saturday on charges of disorderly conduct.
Stephen J . Rocchi, 20, Gallipolis,
was cited on a charg, of open container Friday.

series of six science fiction books.
Warner Brothers, distributor for the
film, is a co-defendant.
Eastwood, who played the tough
cop Dirty Harry, is majority
stockholder in Malpaso Co, He in·
sist&lt;f Friday that the idea for using
"Th'e Enforcer" as a title for the
third Dirty Harry movie came from
a 1951 Warner Brothers film starring
Hwnphrey Bogart.

Jimmy says you shouldn't charge
and now Jimmy says you should.
Maybe you played it by ear and handled your personal business without
his advice. You keep smiling now.

Our 4. 97 Queen Size. 2 for $7
Our 5.97 t&lt;ing / Tw in , "l f or $9

$6
2
FOR

Our
Reg .
3.97

"ltis" And "Hers"
Sleeping Pillows
Polyester/cotton ticking , polyester
fi lling. Standard 20 x 26 ~' Save now.

Model
AHA·020·2

2!~4x15"

Durable Plastic
Foam Chest

$154

Our
Reg . $164

Dehumidifier

• Up to 20 pt. moisture removal
for
24
hr .,
automatic
humidistat.

An extra-large 48-qt. chest with lid locks
and sturdy plastic end handles.

Our '184 30

... ;;..·

;

Jimmie L. Hatfield

VOTE JUNE3RD

JIMMIE L HATFIELD
FOR SHERIFF
1 have talked to many Gailia Co .
residents in person, would like to
have talked to everyone, which is
impossible . If electecl sheriff, I
want the people to feel free to
come to my office at any rime . I
want to do my best to clean up
crime and drugs in our county.

lfS UP TO YOU
Pd. Pol. Adv .

77.eour
1.07

Marshmallow Candy
Delicious toasted coconut marshmallow treats. 12-oz• bag just 78'.

Our Reg . 25.97

·'wanted in a
Seafood Platter

Roll - Our 1.36

Color Film Processing

·J 23
2 Days Only!
• Prell® Shampoo Sale

•
•
•
•
•
•

'

.
'

'

'

I_,___...._.___......
_
_
...._...._...,....-!!
..
y

NEW YORK (AP J- In a role apparently new to him, actor-producer
Clint Eastwood has appeared in a
Manhattan federal court to defend
the title of " The Enforcer,'" one ri
his "Dirty Harry" movies.
Writer Andy Sugar has filed suit
for several million dollars claiming
Eastwood and Malpaso Co.,
producer of the Dirty Harry movies,
illegally copied the title from her

Don't forget that Tuesday is the
day you do your duty. The polls will
be open long hours for the convenience of voters and the new counting system will be operating so the
results will be known early. Now you
didn't forget to register, did you•

.Ev~ing
you've~

'

Wayne Russell, Democratic Cand.ldate
For the ShP.riff of Gallia County
PD. POL . ADV. BY CAND .

'"

Acto.r appears in court to defend title

' N.1wt.

.'

'
'
T
HE
PEOPLE'S SHERIFP'
Thank you for your s.upport for a better Gallia County

cl,., ... l, (I

,,,J, ,,r.1.tll ,J..cor•tOr lo&lt;.&gt;l&lt;

Gallipolis.
Davrd R. Carman, 38, Addison,
waived $30 on a charge of failure to
obey a traffic control device.

·Sturdy Automatic
Swing For Babies
Sta nd-mou nted with 2-position
molded seat. Easy-wind mec ha·
nism rocks baby 1().15 minutes.

5-0ts .
Our 7.57

Flat Latex Wall Paint
Applies easily, covers in one coat . Wh ite
and colors. Save on 5-qt . can.

2 Days Only

• Steam And Dry Iron
With 25 steam vents . Changes
from steam to dry instantl y.

F~R

$1

Our Reg . 59c

Jergens Soap
3 bar bundle of bath soap.

s~~~!!'g

WAYNE RUSSELL

Slwk c ,ntit~w r arm$ "I!:Jhhglrr th•• d.:11~ p;:"id,•rt ...... , ~no t
bo~ k

$15 on a charge of no motorcycle en·
dorsement.
Forfeiting $35 on a charge of open
container was Stanley Siders, 25,

-·MO

Prell®concentrate in 5-oz. net wt.
tube or 11 fl. ozs. Prell•' liquid.

IF YOU HAVE BEEN UNHAPPY WITH THE LAW
ENFORCEMENT THE PAST 4 YEARS AND .YOU WANT
.A CHANGE,
ON TUESDAY, JUNE 3, REMEMBER
,,
or th ~o~ moor ucilir~grvtllllm~~h~~tr Nylo! Jrw Wo~Votr ~.,,,,

was rined $100 on a charge of
reckless operation.
Fined $20 on a charge of no
operator's license was Samuel
Meade, 18, Vinton.
Patricia A. Miller, 19, Thurman,
was fined US on a charge of assured
clear distance.
Forfeiting $30 on a charge of
overhigh bumper was Homer McMillin, 21, Bidwell.
John Kerr, 18, Gallipolis, forfeited
$30 on a charge of squealing tires.
Forfeiting $25 on a charge of no
slow·moving-vehicle emblem was
David E. Warren, 21, Gallipolls;
Jeff Roth, 20, Gallipolis, was fined

Paper carriers are hard to come
by these days. Time was when many
families looked upon newspaper
routes as excellent training for their
youngsters. Hopefully, that attitude
will return.
The Sentinel has two routes
currently open. One is on Third and
Fourth Sts. in Middleport and the
ot)ler is in the business section of
Pomeroy. Kids can pick up quite a
few bucks each week on the routes
besides earning points which they
can turn in for prizes.
Anybody interested? We would
like to hear from you tomorrow morning at 992·2156 or 992·2157.

One injured in
minor accident

''FAIRNESS TO EVERYONE"
0f'lfl

Box 57, Revere, Mo., 63645, are
tracing Floyd's family tree and
would like some help from Meigs
Countians. They .want to know about
Isreal Young, Nicholas and Barbara
Young, Mrs. John · (Elizabeth)
Young and others. If you can help,
please contact the Youngs .at the
above address.

GALUPOUS - Thirteen cases
were terQ1inated in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday.
David W. Walters, 20, Vinton ,
pleaded guilty to charges of reckless
operation, no operator's license and
fleeing a police officer. Walters was
fined $150 plus two six month con·
secutive sentences, all but 20 days
suspended.
, Cljarged with leaving the scene of
an accident and driving while under
suspension, Roger E. Lambert, 28,
Gallipolis, was sentenced to two six
month sentences, all but seven days
suspended.
Douglas Thompson, 29, Gallipolis,

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Young, RR I,

[ (serves 3~4) 1

WHEN ELECTED SHERIFF, WAYNE RUSSELL
WILL:
•PROVIDE GOOD USE OF TAXPAYERS
DOLLARS
•REDUCE CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES
•PROTECT THE PRIVATE ·PROPERTY OF ALL
CITIZENS OF GALLIA COUNTY
•REDUCE IMPROPER CRIMINAL
INVESTIGATION
•EMPLOY QUALIFIED PERSONNEL

.

f

With students dismissed in two of
the county's three local school
districts :.... Southern Local wrapped
up Friday- vacation time is well on
the way.
Supt. Bob Ord of the Southern
District issues a summer reminder
that adults are not pennitted to play
on the new girls' softball diamond at
the high school. This is a protection
for property owners near the field.
So- you big hitters will have to find
another location.
And - by the way - Southern
High School Principal James Adams
reports senior cap and gown pictures have been delivered. Seniors
may pick them up from 9 a.m. to 12
noon both on Monday and Tuesday.

Captain D's.

Captain's
Value Pack

Terminate 13 cases in Gallia court

---- .. - - -

Beat•••

prepare for what is going to hap-

ELECT A NEW SHERIFF
WAYNE RUSSELL
''THE SHERIFF
FOR
THE PEOPLE''

According to Douglas, these tools
include the "electronic moving
machine" which can deliver a picture of any home to virtually any

Our Best Selling
Stratolounger® Recliners

'-tr&lt;ttnk'"'"!l"' c f11mou' XP ' Clow Up' d .., .yn "'O!h wit
prll""'- d-..,,m •.-1 bur~ ond !I'" ~ ' "-ldp owr nnm Pu1ttruo 11
''""' h• ~~~ .. .. n.. nd vuu rrtrwr hd~'trtn m o~ .· rr •'v"n "'h""
lull•. rl;'dlt11'fl 1 f ht&gt; f)o?do•n r hnl&lt;t&gt; lor ~m~ll.! r ""-'m•
d"'"'rl
dlld sumrtu""'
,,, ,nmforlai!W Alrtloo~~·

the crackdown on. illegal drugs with
Police Chief Myron Leistler two
months ago.
"I explained we in this coun~ry are
in for a flood rJ. hard narcotics the
likes of which we have never seen,
even in the days of high narcotics addiction " Leistler said. " We have a
bumpe~ crop of heroin-grad7 opiwn
coming out of southeast As1a. It 1s
necessary to step in at this time to

fl

r

Crispy Fish
2 Tasty Shrimp
2 Tender Scallops
Fresh Cole Slaw
Crunchy Hushpuppies
Golden Fryes

~[;g(jb"&amp;;8iiver~

..
•

SEAFOOD SHOrPES
UPPII?~ ROUTE 7
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

,.

®

99~~e

Air Refrigerant

Maintain proper Freon ' levels in
.vour car's air condilioner. 14 ozs. •
F'"l.

cu•.

Our 1.26

Our Enamel Spray Paint
Interior/exterior in white and co lors.
16 ozs. net. wt.• Save now'
' {li•oend•nq on P•}3men l

Our Reg . 8.96

Jr. Oversize Racket
25·inch aluminum frame, leather
grip tennis racket. Nylon throat
and string . Special price ,
·

•

�,

.

._

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

A-7- The Sunday Times.&amp;ntincl, Sunday, June I, 1980

Stolen truck found burned
POMEROY - A 1976 Chevrolet
pickup truck stolen from Gary
Phillips, Athens, around 2:20 a.m.
Friday was found burning on Cherry
Ridge near the Jim Robinson home
Friday. The tnlck was destroyed.
Pomeroy's Fire Dpeartment was
called after Tim Krauter dis(!overed
the fire as he was passing by. Athens
County Sheriff's ·Department is investigating the theft.
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies
are investigating breaking and entering at Duncan Grocery on SR 681,
Darwin. The· store was entered

Thursday night or early friday morning.
'
Money, cigarettes, and sunglaasea
were taken.
In other activity, Clarence Baker
Bashan, reported Thursday that
someone had entered hiS garage late
Wednesday night or early Thursday
and took gasoline from his car.
During the heavy rain storm
Friday evening, Harold D. Clark,
Cheshire, was traveling north on SR
7 and lost control of his 1976 Ford
van. It ran off right side of the roadway and overturned.

A passenger, Peggy ~. 28,
Cheshire, was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by
private vehicle for eumination.
There was severe damage to the
van.
Deputies are lnvestlgatin~ · the
theft of a Kawasaki motorcycle
owned by WUIIam Wickline of Letart
Falls. The theft was reported at midnight Friday night,
The cycle was loca~ later behind
the Letart Falls Elementary School.
Investigation Is continuing.

OSP facing discrimination charge

HOSPITAL PROCEDURE- John W. Blaettnar,
left, and his son, Rick, right, are pictured learning
procedures at Veterans Memorial Hospital's emergency room as a part of their training as certified

.

emergency medical technicians. With them are
hospital staff members, Kathy Lehew and Sharon
Dailey, R.N.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Highway Patrol has been
charged with discriminating against
women in its hiring policies, but the
matter may be resolved without a
triaL
The suit filed in U.S. District Court
Wednesday by the U.S. Attorney
General's office also names the Ohio
Department of Highway Safety and
the State of Ohio as defendants. It
alleges that as of Sept. 21, 1977, the
patrol had 1,176 officers, all male.
A patrol spokesman, however,
sa id there are currently seven
female officers and that six of them
are working in the field,
Richard Letts of the U.S. attorney's office said a proposed set·
tlement has been drafted subject to
review by both parties and approval
of the court.

He said under tenns of the
proposal the patrol denies it
discriminated against women, but
agrees to make extra efforts to fill
~25 percent of its annual vacancies .
with women. "subject to the
availability of qualified ap·
plicants... "
The suit contends the patrol
violated the U.S. Civil Rights Act of
1964 by failing or refusing to recruit
women on an equal basis and by
failing or refusiilg to correct
discriminatory policies. The suit
also contends tests which favored
males were used despite having
nothing to do with job performance.
Letts said the investigation was
begun last year by the Clvil Rights
Division of the JUStice Deparbnent.
A patrol spokesman sald its
minimum height requirement of $.

feet, 8-inches for patrol applicants
was dropped last month and the
patrol no longer has a minimum
height.
INCUMBENT BEATEN
DETROIT (AP) -A truck driver
backed by a reform group in the
Teamsters union beat the incumbent
president of Teamsters Local 299
here in a government-l!upervised
election of officers for the violenceplagued local.
Peter Karagozian, 55, who headed
a reform slate of candidates, upset
lncwnbent President Robert Lins by
394 votes Friday.
Karagozian had the support of the
Teamsters for a Democratic Union,
a reform group within the Teamsters that has about 10,000 members
nationwide.

Four hurt in
minor mishap

NEW YORK (APJ - Treasury
Secretary G. William Miller
"
declared this past week that "the
worSt may be behind us" in the
. current economic slump.
President Carter suggested that
"America is turning the tide" and
t•
will see Inflation slowing by late
summer.
But the bad news keeps rolling in.
And It will be some time before we ·
know whether this is the darkness
before the dawn.
The sharp decline in interest
rates, slowing of consumer buying
and decline in indwitrial output do
appear to sign~~! a reduction in
major forces that pushed consumer
prices up at an 18 percent annual
rate in the first three months of the
LIONS CLUB DONATION-Don Murphy, treasurer of the New Haven · year.
· Liilns Club, right is shown presenting a check for $100 to .the New Haven
The latest report showed inflation
Volunteer Fire Department. The money will be used toward the purIn April running at an 11.5 percent
clw;e of electronic s1gnalin~ devices for the fire deparbnent. Receiving
annuol rate. And most economists
the check ts BtU Jam es, Ftre Chief.
expect that easing to continue as
slackening demand for goods and
declines In interest rates are reflected in the inflation index.
Mortgage rates, a part of the in·
dex, have fallen by 2 to 3 percentage
points since mid-April, and that will
show up as one source of reduce&lt;l inflation pressure in the May coo·
swner price index when it comes out
NEW HAVEN - A Point Pleasant around 10 a.m., according to the in late June.
man was critically injured Friday Mason County Sheriff's Depart..
But the oqtlook on the depth and
morning when a bulldozer ran over ment, which investigated.
length of the recession is cloudy.
him at an excavating site near New·
Secretary Miller, in comments to
Pickens' brother-In-law, Gree·
. Haven.
the
congresaiooal Joint Economic
Weaver, was credited with movint
Conunittee,
conceded · that the
The victim, JeffreyS. Pickens, 21, the dozer off the injured man.
naUvn's
slide
into a recession has
reportedly was working on the
The victim was transported by the
Darony Sayre property and had been New Haven Rescue Squad 14 be8n "quite steep" but he said the
using the dozer to pull a welder Pleasant Valley Hospital. He Ia natioll should follow a steady
mounted on a truck. He stopped the listed in critical condition witlt ecGilomic policy.
· doter on top of a grade and had gone multiple injuries includin~ a frac: back to unhook a chain attached to tured pelvis.
the truck when the dozer apparently
Pickens is an employee (II the
• sUpped out of gear and rolled back
Eldon Roush's E and R Excavating
;, onto him. The mishap occurred
Co.

Man crushed in
bulldozer mishap

Nev. Jan!
:unemployment rate going up Adams,VEGAS,
free of an indictment that
N~

LAS

spent 10 hours in the emergency
room of Veterans Memorial Hospital
observing and learning procedures.

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Unem. ployment, which advanced to a
• three-year high in Ohio in April, is
continuing to climb in the state.
. The Ohio Bureau off Employment
Services estimates that 334,813 per·
sons made claims for unem. ployment in the week ending May24.
· This is up 5.7 percent from the
• 316,883 claimants the previous week.
. The U.S. Labor Department
.estimated Ohios April unem"pioyment at 7.4 percent on a
'seasonally adjusted basis and 7.3
•percent on an unadjusted scale. That
·compares with national unem. ploymentfor April of 7.0 and 6.6.
· Adjusted statistics are weighted
.by such factors as temporary dej'iar·
tment store employees workin~

Over ~ ..

They both are now required to
spend two and one-half hours each
on runs with the Pomeroy Emergency Squad, learning procedures of
that group.
Both have passed written
examinations following their studies
under Struble. Rick has completed
his observation work with the squad.
Both Blaettnars soon will be certified emergency medical
technicians.
Rick has been a member of the
Pomeroy Junior Fire Department
for two years ~nd became a member
of the regular deparbnent when he
reached his 18th bir;thday.

GALLIPOLIS- Four people were
litjured and one driver cited as the
result of a three-vehicle accident investigated Friday by the Galli8·
NEVER RAN IN PRIMARY
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Thomas Jefferson never ran in a
Called to the scene on SR 7, just
south of milepost 12, at 6:211p.m., the primary. Unlike Ieday's field of
patrol reports an auto operated by presidential candidates, Jefferson
Leslie Ray, 66, Proctorville, pulled had to convince only a congressional
from a commercial drive onto 7 and caucus, or group of party leaders.
struck a north bound vehicle driven Caucuses nominated Jefferson in
by Chester Whisman, 38, Kenova, 1800 and later Presidents James
Madison, James Monroe, and John
W.Va., head-on.
Quincy
Adams.
Following impact, the Ray vehicle
spun around and struck a parked .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~
auto owned by Jackie Harrison, Rte. I'
VOTE
2, Crown City.
Ray, who was cited on a charge of
REPUBLICAN
DWI, displayed visible signs of in·
jury, but was not immediately
DERRY D.
treated.
Whisman claimed injury and was
transported to Holier Medical Center for treatment.
Two passengers in the Whisman
vehicle, Wihna Williamson, 53, HunHONESTY· EFFICIENT
tington, and Ethel Lucas, 58,
LET'S FIGHT C~IME
·Kenova, claimed injury but were not
Pd. Pol . Ad\/.
immediately treated.

Corner of Second
and Pine
Gallipolis, .
Ohio

HEMPHILL
FOR

charJ!ed she killed a tennlnaUy ill
patient In her care, is going back to
work In the intensive care unit of the
state's largest hospital.
"I'm so happy," Ms. Adams said
Friday after a murder charge against her was dismissed for lack of
evidence.
Hours later, Sunrise Hospital
executive director David Brandsness said Ms. Adams would be
"immediately reinstated" to her
joh "We all look forward to
welcoming her home," he said.
He said Ms. Adams and the
hospital's 2,000 other employees had
been made to suffer by the
"scurrilous, unfowtded, unverified
and WICOilfirmed allegations (that)
were made against her in an atmosphere of sensationalism and
hysteria."
District Judge Micltael Wendell, in
a brief session in a packed cour-

or

during holiday periods, increases
decreases in farm and constructioo
labor and high school graduates entering the labor market for the first
time.
Administrator Albert G. Giles of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services said "S/,644 persons filed fir·
st-time claims for unemployment in
tl\e week ending May 24. This is
down 5.4 percent from the 39,800 per·
sons who filed initial claims a week
earlier.
Giles said continued claims of persons unemployed one or more weeks
were estimated"at 290,698last week.
He said that includes 221,000 under
the Ohio law and is 7.9 percent above
the 269,296 total for the week ending
May 17.

'.

~AA

youth program applicants sought

. CHEsH!Rl1; -

The Gallia-Meigs

"CAA will be accepting applications
for the swruner youth emplyment
•prOflram at the Job Service Office,
, C5 Olive St., Gallipolis, from 8:30 to
.11 :30 a:m. and from I p.m. to 3:30
.p.m. Tuesday, JuneJ.
· Wednesday, applications will be
~ceepted at the Job Service Office,
"j:lnion Ave., Pomeroy, the same
&gt;times. Applications are available to
•anyone .Interested in employment
.lvho is age 14 or older and a resident
,6fGallia or Meigs County.
' A pre-application may be picked
jJp between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mon'day thru Friday at the Job Service
OOice, this should be completed and

..'

SHERIFF

returned on June 3 (Gallia) or t
(Meigs ).
Individuals unable to apply on
these days may register at the
Gallia-Meigs CAA Office in Cheshire
at any time between 8 a.m. and t: 30
p.m. Monday thrugh Friday (except

SUPREME 21" push

As the Song says - ''March went out like a Lion... and May was full
of promises, But she couldn't keep 'em quick enough for some. And·a crowd
It's Come By Gum!" ... and Gilly's is celebratin' by holding their 2nd
Annual Sidewalk Sale on Wednesday, June 4th from 9: 00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m.

985·3308·

TAVERN
HAM
L£AN NO
WASTE
FULLY

$
lh OR
WHOLE

COO~ED

!room, ruled ihere was not enough
evidence to show a patient under Ms.
Adams' care died from other than
natural causes.
The patient, Vincent Fraser, 51,
died March 4 of septicemia massive infection - caused by
problems with internal organs. The
indictment issued one month later
accused the nurse of turning down
the oxygen supply on the respirator
of the tenninally ill man, causing~
death.
Nevada law allows the prosecution
tO appeal Wendell's ruling. District
AUomey Bob Miller, who would
make the decision to appeal, was not
available for comment.
Wendell said twG doctors testified
before the grand jury. He said
testimooy by one of them that turning off the oxygen "might have"
caused Fraser's death was "conjecture." The other doctor said such
an act probably would not have any
"significant" short-term effect on
the patient.

holi~ys).

Students who have already applied at area schools need not reapply, students attending Meigs High
School may obtain an applicatim at
the school guidance office and
should not register at the Job Service Office on June t. Persons
having questions should contact the
CAA Intake Office at 367-7342
(Gallia) or99'U629 (Meigs).

'•
,.

COME, BROWSE, and SAVE on the wide selection of merchandise being
.
0ffered at our Sidewalk Sale. Rain will postpone the we to later date.

~~~
· ~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
.

HAM SLICES
$189
LB.

'1

CHICKEN BREASTS
LB.

WIENERS

99e ·

12 oz.
PKG.

PAR KAY
MARGARINE

ICE CREAM

!SST.$1 ~~

FLAVORS .

HB.
PKG.

Gallon

4

~.

GALLIA COUNTY SHERIFF
D. DEPENDABLE STAFF
D. DEDICATED SERVICE

t: THOROUGH INVESTIGATION

or

$ 29

:..Has A Good RecoFd in Education, Labor, Fanning Business. ·
'
•

1

I

CAN

I

Good Only at Barr' s Expires 6·4·80

POTATOES...........................~~~ .... . 2

' We reserve the riqht to limit quantities.

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

..

~

.. .... .

~

. . ... . .
-.~

~

~~

I
I

!
I

I

L----------------------------1
U. S. No. 1
20 lb. $
39

COMMISSIONER

' 92ld District- Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs, 4 Townships
Athens
·
R'
Representing Lawrence county in Area 7 on Agmg, to
crandl;! Office.
Pd . Pol. Adv.

SAVE $1.86

MAXWEU. HOUSE COFFEE
3-LB.
um a $849

GALLIA COUNTY

•

\1)~· $}19

VALUABLE COUPON

92nd DISTRICT

:, ~ROLD SCHRmER.farm Owner, Construction Business,

EGGS

Plus Deposit

JANUARY (2nd) TERM

STATE REPRESENTAnVE

3

8-16 oz. Btls.

STEWART

FOR

ALLISON
GRADE A SMALL

Diet Rite

TOMMY JOE

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

..-

79e
KRAFT

CANDIDATE FOR

... . .

'

.SAVE 20c PKG .
SUPERIOR ALL MEAT

SAVE JOe LB.

DEMOCRAT

..

SAVE
TAVERN

GROUND BEEF
39
LB.

FOR

twelfth grades may attend the camp
which will be held between August 3
and a at Camp Asbury near Rio
Grande.
For more Information, contact
Tony Landis at the Commtinlty Mental Health Center at t46 S553.

..

SLAB

round resh Several
Times Daily

,,

'

%OR
WHOLE

LB.

ELECT
RAY ROBERTS

HAROLD SCHRIITER

of doubtin' Thomases was predictin' that the suminer'd never come... But

CHESTtR 0.

forecasting company.
He expects the nation 's Gross
National Product, or real output of
goods and servtces, to drop at an annual rate of at least 8 percent and
perhaps as much as a record 10 percent in the current quarter.
By comparison, the economy grew
at a weak 0.6 percent, at an annual
rate, in the first three months this
year. The biggest quarterly drop on
record was 9. I percent in the first
quarter of 1975 when the nation was
in its last recession.
Generally, a recession is defined
as at least two consecutive quarters
of declining GNP.

BONELESS

TO CITIZENS OF GALLIA COUNTY:
GETTHE BUGSOUTOFYOUR LAW
ENFORCEMENT

VOTE FOR

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Mi ller's view that the current AprilJune qua rter will be the worst for
the economy.
Those forecasts are based not only
on the economic indicator data 'but
on recent reports showing housi~g
starts off in April for the seventh
consecutive month, industrial
production down a big 1.9 percent
last mooth and retail sales weak for
three consecutive months.
"It's going to be a V-sha ped
recession , a sharp drop and a quick
turnaround. We think that by fall the
economy will stabilize," predicts otto Eckstein, president of Data
Resources Inc, a Lexington, Mass.,

.Fourth camp will be held Aug. 3-8
GALLIPOLIS- Alternatives, the
•drug abuse prevention program nf
; the Gallia-Jackson·Meigs Com.munlty Mental Health Center, is
;sponsoring its fourth annual sum. !1Jer camp for the youth of Gallia,
. Jackson and Meigs Counties.
Children ·from seventh through

• Up to 30% more usab1e power
• Solid-state ignition
• Quiet under-the-deck muffler
• Lightweight
• Fingertip s~arting
• Patented Lawn-Boy safety

" It seems qwte probable ... that
the economy is already experiencing
ita sharpest fall during the current
quarter," he said, " The worst may
be behind us."
Only two days after he made those
comments, the government's index
of leading economic indicators - its
chief economic forecasting tool showed the biggest monthly drop in
its history.
The drop of 4.8 percent in April
showed 10 components of ·the index
falling , only the second time in two
,decades that a decline has been so
broad . The index measures
economic activity, rangin~; from the
layoff rate in industry to stock prices
and building permits, to assess the
economy's outlook.
Economists In and out of government cited that drop as eviDence
that the economy's output i\1 the
current quarter will fall sharply.
But Courtenay Slater, chief
economist at the Commerce Department, said the drop "tells us little
about the more distant future" for
the nation 'seconomic output.
Charles L. Schultze, the chairman
of President Carter's Council of
Economic Advisers, refused to say
whether he agreed with Secretary
Miller's assessment that the worst
may be over when he was asked for
comment this past week. But he
joined other economists, private and
public, in predicting the recession
will be more severe than the
relatively mild and short one the administration predicted in March.
Still, some private. economists
tend to see a relatively short but
steep decline consistent with

Jury fails to
indict nurse

Father-son team
becoming EMT's ·
POMEROY - A Pomeroy father
and son are completing their work to
become certified emergency
medical technicians.
They are John W. Blaettnar, a
teacher at the Meigs High School in
distributive education, and his son,
Rick, a senior at Meigs High.
The two men first completed a ~
hour emergency medical technician
course under the instructorship of
Joe Struble, Pomeroy, and then

President feels econom.ic tide turning

.·

....... .

. . -. ... •· . .
'

~

�,

.

._

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

A-7- The Sunday Times.&amp;ntincl, Sunday, June I, 1980

Stolen truck found burned
POMEROY - A 1976 Chevrolet
pickup truck stolen from Gary
Phillips, Athens, around 2:20 a.m.
Friday was found burning on Cherry
Ridge near the Jim Robinson home
Friday. The tnlck was destroyed.
Pomeroy's Fire Dpeartment was
called after Tim Krauter dis(!overed
the fire as he was passing by. Athens
County Sheriff's ·Department is investigating the theft.
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies
are investigating breaking and entering at Duncan Grocery on SR 681,
Darwin. The· store was entered

Thursday night or early friday morning.
'
Money, cigarettes, and sunglaasea
were taken.
In other activity, Clarence Baker
Bashan, reported Thursday that
someone had entered hiS garage late
Wednesday night or early Thursday
and took gasoline from his car.
During the heavy rain storm
Friday evening, Harold D. Clark,
Cheshire, was traveling north on SR
7 and lost control of his 1976 Ford
van. It ran off right side of the roadway and overturned.

A passenger, Peggy ~. 28,
Cheshire, was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by
private vehicle for eumination.
There was severe damage to the
van.
Deputies are lnvestlgatin~ · the
theft of a Kawasaki motorcycle
owned by WUIIam Wickline of Letart
Falls. The theft was reported at midnight Friday night,
The cycle was loca~ later behind
the Letart Falls Elementary School.
Investigation Is continuing.

OSP facing discrimination charge

HOSPITAL PROCEDURE- John W. Blaettnar,
left, and his son, Rick, right, are pictured learning
procedures at Veterans Memorial Hospital's emergency room as a part of their training as certified

.

emergency medical technicians. With them are
hospital staff members, Kathy Lehew and Sharon
Dailey, R.N.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Highway Patrol has been
charged with discriminating against
women in its hiring policies, but the
matter may be resolved without a
triaL
The suit filed in U.S. District Court
Wednesday by the U.S. Attorney
General's office also names the Ohio
Department of Highway Safety and
the State of Ohio as defendants. It
alleges that as of Sept. 21, 1977, the
patrol had 1,176 officers, all male.
A patrol spokesman, however,
sa id there are currently seven
female officers and that six of them
are working in the field,
Richard Letts of the U.S. attorney's office said a proposed set·
tlement has been drafted subject to
review by both parties and approval
of the court.

He said under tenns of the
proposal the patrol denies it
discriminated against women, but
agrees to make extra efforts to fill
~25 percent of its annual vacancies .
with women. "subject to the
availability of qualified ap·
plicants... "
The suit contends the patrol
violated the U.S. Civil Rights Act of
1964 by failing or refusing to recruit
women on an equal basis and by
failing or refusiilg to correct
discriminatory policies. The suit
also contends tests which favored
males were used despite having
nothing to do with job performance.
Letts said the investigation was
begun last year by the Clvil Rights
Division of the JUStice Deparbnent.
A patrol spokesman sald its
minimum height requirement of $.

feet, 8-inches for patrol applicants
was dropped last month and the
patrol no longer has a minimum
height.
INCUMBENT BEATEN
DETROIT (AP) -A truck driver
backed by a reform group in the
Teamsters union beat the incumbent
president of Teamsters Local 299
here in a government-l!upervised
election of officers for the violenceplagued local.
Peter Karagozian, 55, who headed
a reform slate of candidates, upset
lncwnbent President Robert Lins by
394 votes Friday.
Karagozian had the support of the
Teamsters for a Democratic Union,
a reform group within the Teamsters that has about 10,000 members
nationwide.

Four hurt in
minor mishap

NEW YORK (APJ - Treasury
Secretary G. William Miller
"
declared this past week that "the
worSt may be behind us" in the
. current economic slump.
President Carter suggested that
"America is turning the tide" and
t•
will see Inflation slowing by late
summer.
But the bad news keeps rolling in.
And It will be some time before we ·
know whether this is the darkness
before the dawn.
The sharp decline in interest
rates, slowing of consumer buying
and decline in indwitrial output do
appear to sign~~! a reduction in
major forces that pushed consumer
prices up at an 18 percent annual
rate in the first three months of the
LIONS CLUB DONATION-Don Murphy, treasurer of the New Haven · year.
· Liilns Club, right is shown presenting a check for $100 to .the New Haven
The latest report showed inflation
Volunteer Fire Department. The money will be used toward the purIn April running at an 11.5 percent
clw;e of electronic s1gnalin~ devices for the fire deparbnent. Receiving
annuol rate. And most economists
the check ts BtU Jam es, Ftre Chief.
expect that easing to continue as
slackening demand for goods and
declines In interest rates are reflected in the inflation index.
Mortgage rates, a part of the in·
dex, have fallen by 2 to 3 percentage
points since mid-April, and that will
show up as one source of reduce&lt;l inflation pressure in the May coo·
swner price index when it comes out
NEW HAVEN - A Point Pleasant around 10 a.m., according to the in late June.
man was critically injured Friday Mason County Sheriff's Depart..
But the oqtlook on the depth and
morning when a bulldozer ran over ment, which investigated.
length of the recession is cloudy.
him at an excavating site near New·
Secretary Miller, in comments to
Pickens' brother-In-law, Gree·
. Haven.
the
congresaiooal Joint Economic
Weaver, was credited with movint
Conunittee,
conceded · that the
The victim, JeffreyS. Pickens, 21, the dozer off the injured man.
naUvn's
slide
into a recession has
reportedly was working on the
The victim was transported by the
Darony Sayre property and had been New Haven Rescue Squad 14 be8n "quite steep" but he said the
using the dozer to pull a welder Pleasant Valley Hospital. He Ia natioll should follow a steady
mounted on a truck. He stopped the listed in critical condition witlt ecGilomic policy.
· doter on top of a grade and had gone multiple injuries includin~ a frac: back to unhook a chain attached to tured pelvis.
the truck when the dozer apparently
Pickens is an employee (II the
• sUpped out of gear and rolled back
Eldon Roush's E and R Excavating
;, onto him. The mishap occurred
Co.

Man crushed in
bulldozer mishap

Nev. Jan!
:unemployment rate going up Adams,VEGAS,
free of an indictment that
N~

LAS

spent 10 hours in the emergency
room of Veterans Memorial Hospital
observing and learning procedures.

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - Unem. ployment, which advanced to a
• three-year high in Ohio in April, is
continuing to climb in the state.
. The Ohio Bureau off Employment
Services estimates that 334,813 per·
sons made claims for unem. ployment in the week ending May24.
· This is up 5.7 percent from the
• 316,883 claimants the previous week.
. The U.S. Labor Department
.estimated Ohios April unem"pioyment at 7.4 percent on a
'seasonally adjusted basis and 7.3
•percent on an unadjusted scale. That
·compares with national unem. ploymentfor April of 7.0 and 6.6.
· Adjusted statistics are weighted
.by such factors as temporary dej'iar·
tment store employees workin~

Over ~ ..

They both are now required to
spend two and one-half hours each
on runs with the Pomeroy Emergency Squad, learning procedures of
that group.
Both have passed written
examinations following their studies
under Struble. Rick has completed
his observation work with the squad.
Both Blaettnars soon will be certified emergency medical
technicians.
Rick has been a member of the
Pomeroy Junior Fire Department
for two years ~nd became a member
of the regular deparbnent when he
reached his 18th bir;thday.

GALLIPOLIS- Four people were
litjured and one driver cited as the
result of a three-vehicle accident investigated Friday by the Galli8·
NEVER RAN IN PRIMARY
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Thomas Jefferson never ran in a
Called to the scene on SR 7, just
south of milepost 12, at 6:211p.m., the primary. Unlike Ieday's field of
patrol reports an auto operated by presidential candidates, Jefferson
Leslie Ray, 66, Proctorville, pulled had to convince only a congressional
from a commercial drive onto 7 and caucus, or group of party leaders.
struck a north bound vehicle driven Caucuses nominated Jefferson in
by Chester Whisman, 38, Kenova, 1800 and later Presidents James
Madison, James Monroe, and John
W.Va., head-on.
Quincy
Adams.
Following impact, the Ray vehicle
spun around and struck a parked .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~
auto owned by Jackie Harrison, Rte. I'
VOTE
2, Crown City.
Ray, who was cited on a charge of
REPUBLICAN
DWI, displayed visible signs of in·
jury, but was not immediately
DERRY D.
treated.
Whisman claimed injury and was
transported to Holier Medical Center for treatment.
Two passengers in the Whisman
vehicle, Wihna Williamson, 53, HunHONESTY· EFFICIENT
tington, and Ethel Lucas, 58,
LET'S FIGHT C~IME
·Kenova, claimed injury but were not
Pd. Pol . Ad\/.
immediately treated.

Corner of Second
and Pine
Gallipolis, .
Ohio

HEMPHILL
FOR

charJ!ed she killed a tennlnaUy ill
patient In her care, is going back to
work In the intensive care unit of the
state's largest hospital.
"I'm so happy," Ms. Adams said
Friday after a murder charge against her was dismissed for lack of
evidence.
Hours later, Sunrise Hospital
executive director David Brandsness said Ms. Adams would be
"immediately reinstated" to her
joh "We all look forward to
welcoming her home," he said.
He said Ms. Adams and the
hospital's 2,000 other employees had
been made to suffer by the
"scurrilous, unfowtded, unverified
and WICOilfirmed allegations (that)
were made against her in an atmosphere of sensationalism and
hysteria."
District Judge Micltael Wendell, in
a brief session in a packed cour-

or

during holiday periods, increases
decreases in farm and constructioo
labor and high school graduates entering the labor market for the first
time.
Administrator Albert G. Giles of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services said "S/,644 persons filed fir·
st-time claims for unemployment in
tl\e week ending May 24. This is
down 5.4 percent from the 39,800 per·
sons who filed initial claims a week
earlier.
Giles said continued claims of persons unemployed one or more weeks
were estimated"at 290,698last week.
He said that includes 221,000 under
the Ohio law and is 7.9 percent above
the 269,296 total for the week ending
May 17.

'.

~AA

youth program applicants sought

. CHEsH!Rl1; -

The Gallia-Meigs

"CAA will be accepting applications
for the swruner youth emplyment
•prOflram at the Job Service Office,
, C5 Olive St., Gallipolis, from 8:30 to
.11 :30 a:m. and from I p.m. to 3:30
.p.m. Tuesday, JuneJ.
· Wednesday, applications will be
~ceepted at the Job Service Office,
"j:lnion Ave., Pomeroy, the same
&gt;times. Applications are available to
•anyone .Interested in employment
.lvho is age 14 or older and a resident
,6fGallia or Meigs County.
' A pre-application may be picked
jJp between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mon'day thru Friday at the Job Service
OOice, this should be completed and

..'

SHERIFF

returned on June 3 (Gallia) or t
(Meigs ).
Individuals unable to apply on
these days may register at the
Gallia-Meigs CAA Office in Cheshire
at any time between 8 a.m. and t: 30
p.m. Monday thrugh Friday (except

SUPREME 21" push

As the Song says - ''March went out like a Lion... and May was full
of promises, But she couldn't keep 'em quick enough for some. And·a crowd
It's Come By Gum!" ... and Gilly's is celebratin' by holding their 2nd
Annual Sidewalk Sale on Wednesday, June 4th from 9: 00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m.

985·3308·

TAVERN
HAM
L£AN NO
WASTE
FULLY

$
lh OR
WHOLE

COO~ED

!room, ruled ihere was not enough
evidence to show a patient under Ms.
Adams' care died from other than
natural causes.
The patient, Vincent Fraser, 51,
died March 4 of septicemia massive infection - caused by
problems with internal organs. The
indictment issued one month later
accused the nurse of turning down
the oxygen supply on the respirator
of the tenninally ill man, causing~
death.
Nevada law allows the prosecution
tO appeal Wendell's ruling. District
AUomey Bob Miller, who would
make the decision to appeal, was not
available for comment.
Wendell said twG doctors testified
before the grand jury. He said
testimooy by one of them that turning off the oxygen "might have"
caused Fraser's death was "conjecture." The other doctor said such
an act probably would not have any
"significant" short-term effect on
the patient.

holi~ys).

Students who have already applied at area schools need not reapply, students attending Meigs High
School may obtain an applicatim at
the school guidance office and
should not register at the Job Service Office on June t. Persons
having questions should contact the
CAA Intake Office at 367-7342
(Gallia) or99'U629 (Meigs).

'•
,.

COME, BROWSE, and SAVE on the wide selection of merchandise being
.
0ffered at our Sidewalk Sale. Rain will postpone the we to later date.

~~~
· ~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
.

HAM SLICES
$189
LB.

'1

CHICKEN BREASTS
LB.

WIENERS

99e ·

12 oz.
PKG.

PAR KAY
MARGARINE

ICE CREAM

!SST.$1 ~~

FLAVORS .

HB.
PKG.

Gallon

4

~.

GALLIA COUNTY SHERIFF
D. DEPENDABLE STAFF
D. DEDICATED SERVICE

t: THOROUGH INVESTIGATION

or

$ 29

:..Has A Good RecoFd in Education, Labor, Fanning Business. ·
'
•

1

I

CAN

I

Good Only at Barr' s Expires 6·4·80

POTATOES...........................~~~ .... . 2

' We reserve the riqht to limit quantities.

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

..

~

.. .... .

~

. . ... . .
-.~

~

~~

I
I

!
I

I

L----------------------------1
U. S. No. 1
20 lb. $
39

COMMISSIONER

' 92ld District- Lawrence, Gallia, Meigs, 4 Townships
Athens
·
R'
Representing Lawrence county in Area 7 on Agmg, to
crandl;! Office.
Pd . Pol. Adv.

SAVE $1.86

MAXWEU. HOUSE COFFEE
3-LB.
um a $849

GALLIA COUNTY

•

\1)~· $}19

VALUABLE COUPON

92nd DISTRICT

:, ~ROLD SCHRmER.farm Owner, Construction Business,

EGGS

Plus Deposit

JANUARY (2nd) TERM

STATE REPRESENTAnVE

3

8-16 oz. Btls.

STEWART

FOR

ALLISON
GRADE A SMALL

Diet Rite

TOMMY JOE

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

..-

79e
KRAFT

CANDIDATE FOR

... . .

'

.SAVE 20c PKG .
SUPERIOR ALL MEAT

SAVE JOe LB.

DEMOCRAT

..

SAVE
TAVERN

GROUND BEEF
39
LB.

FOR

twelfth grades may attend the camp
which will be held between August 3
and a at Camp Asbury near Rio
Grande.
For more Information, contact
Tony Landis at the Commtinlty Mental Health Center at t46 S553.

..

SLAB

round resh Several
Times Daily

,,

'

%OR
WHOLE

LB.

ELECT
RAY ROBERTS

HAROLD SCHRIITER

of doubtin' Thomases was predictin' that the suminer'd never come... But

CHESTtR 0.

forecasting company.
He expects the nation 's Gross
National Product, or real output of
goods and servtces, to drop at an annual rate of at least 8 percent and
perhaps as much as a record 10 percent in the current quarter.
By comparison, the economy grew
at a weak 0.6 percent, at an annual
rate, in the first three months this
year. The biggest quarterly drop on
record was 9. I percent in the first
quarter of 1975 when the nation was
in its last recession.
Generally, a recession is defined
as at least two consecutive quarters
of declining GNP.

BONELESS

TO CITIZENS OF GALLIA COUNTY:
GETTHE BUGSOUTOFYOUR LAW
ENFORCEMENT

VOTE FOR

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Mi ller's view that the current AprilJune qua rter will be the worst for
the economy.
Those forecasts are based not only
on the economic indicator data 'but
on recent reports showing housi~g
starts off in April for the seventh
consecutive month, industrial
production down a big 1.9 percent
last mooth and retail sales weak for
three consecutive months.
"It's going to be a V-sha ped
recession , a sharp drop and a quick
turnaround. We think that by fall the
economy will stabilize," predicts otto Eckstein, president of Data
Resources Inc, a Lexington, Mass.,

.Fourth camp will be held Aug. 3-8
GALLIPOLIS- Alternatives, the
•drug abuse prevention program nf
; the Gallia-Jackson·Meigs Com.munlty Mental Health Center, is
;sponsoring its fourth annual sum. !1Jer camp for the youth of Gallia,
. Jackson and Meigs Counties.
Children ·from seventh through

• Up to 30% more usab1e power
• Solid-state ignition
• Quiet under-the-deck muffler
• Lightweight
• Fingertip s~arting
• Patented Lawn-Boy safety

" It seems qwte probable ... that
the economy is already experiencing
ita sharpest fall during the current
quarter," he said, " The worst may
be behind us."
Only two days after he made those
comments, the government's index
of leading economic indicators - its
chief economic forecasting tool showed the biggest monthly drop in
its history.
The drop of 4.8 percent in April
showed 10 components of ·the index
falling , only the second time in two
,decades that a decline has been so
broad . The index measures
economic activity, rangin~; from the
layoff rate in industry to stock prices
and building permits, to assess the
economy's outlook.
Economists In and out of government cited that drop as eviDence
that the economy's output i\1 the
current quarter will fall sharply.
But Courtenay Slater, chief
economist at the Commerce Department, said the drop "tells us little
about the more distant future" for
the nation 'seconomic output.
Charles L. Schultze, the chairman
of President Carter's Council of
Economic Advisers, refused to say
whether he agreed with Secretary
Miller's assessment that the worst
may be over when he was asked for
comment this past week. But he
joined other economists, private and
public, in predicting the recession
will be more severe than the
relatively mild and short one the administration predicted in March.
Still, some private. economists
tend to see a relatively short but
steep decline consistent with

Jury fails to
indict nurse

Father-son team
becoming EMT's ·
POMEROY - A Pomeroy father
and son are completing their work to
become certified emergency
medical technicians.
They are John W. Blaettnar, a
teacher at the Meigs High School in
distributive education, and his son,
Rick, a senior at Meigs High.
The two men first completed a ~
hour emergency medical technician
course under the instructorship of
Joe Struble, Pomeroy, and then

President feels econom.ic tide turning

.·

....... .

. . -. ... •· . .
'

~

�.'
'

A-8-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Jun•' I, 1980

OU receives $90,000~ grant
A'l'I-IENS ~ Ohio University's
College of Osteopathic Medicine was
awarded over $90,000 for two projet~
proposals at a reeent meeting of the
Ohio Board of Regents .
The major awar·d was $81,600 for a
Rural Pediatric Residency Development program. This project will increase the opportunities fourth year
Ohio University medical students
have to participate - under faculty
supervision - in the health t are of
rural children.
Students will be involved in
routine patient care, home visits to

determine .health and safety factors,
and the assessment of patient
nutritional needs. They will also
keep records on all habies born in
Athens county during the next two
years in order to determine the effect of the program on the county's
high infant mortality rate.
The experience gained on this
project will be used to determine the
feasibility of establishing a rural
pediatric residency program in
Southeastern Ohio in the future.
The regents also approved $9,262

. 1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1. 19811

for a swruner tr~ining program for
OU medical students in the area of
gerontology. Six students will be
selected to participate in each of the
next two swruners.
Students will be taught clinical
research procedures and how useful
research information ca n be
gathered whi!e caring for elderly
patients. Once in family practice,
the young physician should then
have the skills necessary to add to
medical knowledge in the field of
gerontology.

OPEN DAILY 10,9

B

· SUNDAY 1-7
PRICES IN EFFECT SUNDAY, JUNE 1
THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 7
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.

I

It .'s Suntmertime

FOR

the farm bureau voted recently to officially stay neu.tral on the issue.
That decision came after fanner
member·s agreed roads need repair
but questioned the method of finaneing.
l " We discussed financing in our
guide that goes to some 20,Q00-25,000
members," Swank said.
Swa n~ said the continuing effects
of inflation indicate the bond financing method "might turn out to be a
good thing."
"If you build it now instead of later
it doesn't work out that badly, " he
adde~. "We watched our railroads

and,.the living is fun!

GALLIPOLIS - " In the Good Old Swrunertime.. ."
seems to be the theme of local Gallipolitans as both the
weather and human spirits warm .
.Local folk are indulging in such "su1nmery" activities
as bicycling, playing (ennis, swimming ( out-of-town, of
course, unfess you're lucky. en&lt;mgh to ~ave your own
pool ), skatmg, gardemng, ptcmck:mg, frtsbee throwing
and just sitting in the sun.
Wtth last saturday's opening of the 0. 0 . Mcintyre
Park DistrictJ with its facilities - basketball court
baseball fiela, shelter house, among others - oP:
l'Ortunities for summer fun are really at an optimum
this ye~r.

Officials say bridges need repair
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Four
days before a statewide referendum
on a highway bond issue, highway
and farm officials gave statistics
Friday on roads and bridges they
say need repair.
State Tra nsportation Director
David L. Weir says he can replace or
upgrade 97 of the sta te's worst
bridges in 1981~2 if the bond issue
passes next Tuesday.
But C. William Swank, executive
vice president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau, says a private study shows
over 20,000 miles of paved ma in
roads are dangerous and 16,000
bridges are too weak or too narrow
to handle the traffic authorized on
roads they connect.
Legislators say the bond proposal
- Issue 3 on the ba llot - would
allow sale of about $500 mill ion wm·th of bonds durin!( the next live
years to be used for road and bridge
repair.
Swank estimated it would take
$151 million per year for ten years to
correct the most serious bridge and
road problems.
"The experts say we could bring
them up to snuff for that," Swa nk
added. " They say it wou ld get our
highway system in good shape."
Weir said passage of the issue wi ll
make potlsible up to $1.3 bill ion for
highway repair, incl uding federal
aid the bond money would captu re.
He said the 97 bridges are only
those most in need of att ention and
decli ned to speculate un other
projects in the more distant fugurc.
If passed, Weir said the funds
would go for statewide resurfacing,
bridges, installing flush toilel• in
roadside rest stops and safety work.
Swank stopped short of endorsing
the bond L'&lt;Sue because directors of

' ' '

go into disrepair and now we don't
ha ve them. Now we've watched our
highways go into disrepair ."
He said city residents mostly ·use
streets and interstate highways but
fanners and service people use
other main and · secondary highways.
" If you can't cross a bridge with a
combine or a truck load of grain
you're in trouble," Swank added.
Swank's staiistics came from a
report compiled by The Road Information Program, a non-profit
research agency headquartered in
Washington.

r----- - -- - -- -- - - - - - - - - - -- --1

Here in Gallia County

Allstate can save you 10%
on "Good Hands" insurance
for your new home.

W

Just reading under a Ire\! can be a ·
relaxing way to
spend a lazy sum·
mer day.

For yea rs, yo u've
sten a nd hea rd
fl:l advertisi ng abo ut
Allstate Homeowners insura nce.
And now, it's a vai lable he,-e. at ou r

agency. Bu t, did you know that if

Or summer can
be the lime for
taldng a stroll(er)
In lbe sunshlne.

RoUer skating bas

(Angela Barcus Is
pushing
while
Johnny Spaulding
is enjoying the
ride.)

become a popular

sport for lbe
younger set, as
especially appropriate passtJ.
me for warm,
summer days.

your house is 5 years old or less, yo u

may qualify for Allstate's "New

)

House 10 Pe rcent Discou nt" on you r
bas ic premium'!
Allstate has found it costs less
to msure newer homes, a nd they're
passing th is savings on to you.
Give us a call and get in on the
savings!
A. l l&gt;l•"" l"'U'"'" •' ! '"'"I'"~'
..:,... h!..... ~ ll

Now Available Throuqh The --- -

McGINNESS.STANLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nick Johnson , Accountant Executive
452 2nd Ave.
Phone 446 -1761
Gallipolis

ART FOR
IlLUSTRATIVE
PURPOSES ONLY

HAMLIN KING
REPUBLICAN F()R PROSECUTOR .

MK. -

· flta I US

-

·-

· _ . Jl.tl

-

·-

· PliO IUS

-

·-

· 1'11(1 ,.. _. ,

IIOW$2479

NOW$13

69

MOW $2649

IlK. Sillla. NtO 11 . n

Bicycling can be

an entertaining plus an exercising
-passtime.

- ·*'· PliO IJ.t l

-

·-

· flta ll.tl

- ·- .IIIIa lr.tl

-

--

. I'IICIH.tl

-· - .I'IQ ,...,

IIOW$1659 IIOW$2859
.I

MOw$29 99
-

- .- .NtCJ•I.tJ

· , _ , I'IICJ tl .ts

IIOW$1799
IlK. Sltll&amp;4i . N:ICI U .ts

M .

- .I'IICI U .tl

NOW$1899
11

IlK. , _, I'IICJIJ.tl

THE KINGS"

NOW

1

M .-

· PIICI U .tl

IlK. -

· PIICI•t .tl

$1959

IlK. ,_, PIICIIUI

•MASTERS DEGREE
) IN PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION

•VETERAN

. PIICit4 .tl

i

l-R: BRENDA, HAMLIN, MARY LOU, JIM &amp; TY.

•HARD WORKER

IlK . -

IIOW$3999
NOW$2269

commoa
hay bales -tied
. together Ia a field
caa be a work or
art when the sun
softly spUis· its
' o•llow paint over
their beadll.

•
,.

...... .

.

._ .~ ...

&lt;1,• • • •• ~ ... , ...... .

#

"'

··· ~~ . . . . . . . .

&amp;

•

• •

•

.,

•

•

.•.

Photographs, copy

qy Sa/iyanne Holtz Times~Sentinel writer

Summer Is Ume
for laying out so
you can gel a tan
on your bidr!

I

)

�.'
'

A-8-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Jun•' I, 1980

OU receives $90,000~ grant
A'l'I-IENS ~ Ohio University's
College of Osteopathic Medicine was
awarded over $90,000 for two projet~
proposals at a reeent meeting of the
Ohio Board of Regents .
The major awar·d was $81,600 for a
Rural Pediatric Residency Development program. This project will increase the opportunities fourth year
Ohio University medical students
have to participate - under faculty
supervision - in the health t are of
rural children.
Students will be involved in
routine patient care, home visits to

determine .health and safety factors,
and the assessment of patient
nutritional needs. They will also
keep records on all habies born in
Athens county during the next two
years in order to determine the effect of the program on the county's
high infant mortality rate.
The experience gained on this
project will be used to determine the
feasibility of establishing a rural
pediatric residency program in
Southeastern Ohio in the future.
The regents also approved $9,262

. 1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1. 19811

for a swruner tr~ining program for
OU medical students in the area of
gerontology. Six students will be
selected to participate in each of the
next two swruners.
Students will be taught clinical
research procedures and how useful
research information ca n be
gathered whi!e caring for elderly
patients. Once in family practice,
the young physician should then
have the skills necessary to add to
medical knowledge in the field of
gerontology.

OPEN DAILY 10,9

B

· SUNDAY 1-7
PRICES IN EFFECT SUNDAY, JUNE 1
THROUGH SATURDAY, JUNE 7
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.

I

It .'s Suntmertime

FOR

the farm bureau voted recently to officially stay neu.tral on the issue.
That decision came after fanner
member·s agreed roads need repair
but questioned the method of finaneing.
l " We discussed financing in our
guide that goes to some 20,Q00-25,000
members," Swank said.
Swa n~ said the continuing effects
of inflation indicate the bond financing method "might turn out to be a
good thing."
"If you build it now instead of later
it doesn't work out that badly, " he
adde~. "We watched our railroads

and,.the living is fun!

GALLIPOLIS - " In the Good Old Swrunertime.. ."
seems to be the theme of local Gallipolitans as both the
weather and human spirits warm .
.Local folk are indulging in such "su1nmery" activities
as bicycling, playing (ennis, swimming ( out-of-town, of
course, unfess you're lucky. en&lt;mgh to ~ave your own
pool ), skatmg, gardemng, ptcmck:mg, frtsbee throwing
and just sitting in the sun.
Wtth last saturday's opening of the 0. 0 . Mcintyre
Park DistrictJ with its facilities - basketball court
baseball fiela, shelter house, among others - oP:
l'Ortunities for summer fun are really at an optimum
this ye~r.

Officials say bridges need repair
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Four
days before a statewide referendum
on a highway bond issue, highway
and farm officials gave statistics
Friday on roads and bridges they
say need repair.
State Tra nsportation Director
David L. Weir says he can replace or
upgrade 97 of the sta te's worst
bridges in 1981~2 if the bond issue
passes next Tuesday.
But C. William Swank, executive
vice president of the Ohio Farm
Bureau, says a private study shows
over 20,000 miles of paved ma in
roads are dangerous and 16,000
bridges are too weak or too narrow
to handle the traffic authorized on
roads they connect.
Legislators say the bond proposal
- Issue 3 on the ba llot - would
allow sale of about $500 mill ion wm·th of bonds durin!( the next live
years to be used for road and bridge
repair.
Swank estimated it would take
$151 million per year for ten years to
correct the most serious bridge and
road problems.
"The experts say we could bring
them up to snuff for that," Swa nk
added. " They say it wou ld get our
highway system in good shape."
Weir said passage of the issue wi ll
make potlsible up to $1.3 bill ion for
highway repair, incl uding federal
aid the bond money would captu re.
He said the 97 bridges are only
those most in need of att ention and
decli ned to speculate un other
projects in the more distant fugurc.
If passed, Weir said the funds
would go for statewide resurfacing,
bridges, installing flush toilel• in
roadside rest stops and safety work.
Swank stopped short of endorsing
the bond L'&lt;Sue because directors of

' ' '

go into disrepair and now we don't
ha ve them. Now we've watched our
highways go into disrepair ."
He said city residents mostly ·use
streets and interstate highways but
fanners and service people use
other main and · secondary highways.
" If you can't cross a bridge with a
combine or a truck load of grain
you're in trouble," Swank added.
Swank's staiistics came from a
report compiled by The Road Information Program, a non-profit
research agency headquartered in
Washington.

r----- - -- - -- -- - - - - - - - - - -- --1

Here in Gallia County

Allstate can save you 10%
on "Good Hands" insurance
for your new home.

W

Just reading under a Ire\! can be a ·
relaxing way to
spend a lazy sum·
mer day.

For yea rs, yo u've
sten a nd hea rd
fl:l advertisi ng abo ut
Allstate Homeowners insura nce.
And now, it's a vai lable he,-e. at ou r

agency. Bu t, did you know that if

Or summer can
be the lime for
taldng a stroll(er)
In lbe sunshlne.

RoUer skating bas

(Angela Barcus Is
pushing
while
Johnny Spaulding
is enjoying the
ride.)

become a popular

sport for lbe
younger set, as
especially appropriate passtJ.
me for warm,
summer days.

your house is 5 years old or less, yo u

may qualify for Allstate's "New

)

House 10 Pe rcent Discou nt" on you r
bas ic premium'!
Allstate has found it costs less
to msure newer homes, a nd they're
passing th is savings on to you.
Give us a call and get in on the
savings!
A. l l&gt;l•"" l"'U'"'" •' ! '"'"I'"~'
..:,... h!..... ~ ll

Now Available Throuqh The --- -

McGINNESS.STANLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nick Johnson , Accountant Executive
452 2nd Ave.
Phone 446 -1761
Gallipolis

ART FOR
IlLUSTRATIVE
PURPOSES ONLY

HAMLIN KING
REPUBLICAN F()R PROSECUTOR .

MK. -

· flta I US

-

·-

· _ . Jl.tl

-

·-

· PliO IUS

-

·-

· 1'11(1 ,.. _. ,

IIOW$2479

NOW$13

69

MOW $2649

IlK. Sillla. NtO 11 . n

Bicycling can be

an entertaining plus an exercising
-passtime.

- ·*'· PliO IJ.t l

-

·-

· flta ll.tl

- ·- .IIIIa lr.tl

-

--

. I'IICIH.tl

-· - .I'IQ ,...,

IIOW$1659 IIOW$2859
.I

MOw$29 99
-

- .- .NtCJ•I.tJ

· , _ , I'IICJ tl .ts

IIOW$1799
IlK. Sltll&amp;4i . N:ICI U .ts

M .

- .I'IICI U .tl

NOW$1899
11

IlK. , _, I'IICJIJ.tl

THE KINGS"

NOW

1

M .-

· PIICI U .tl

IlK. -

· PIICI•t .tl

$1959

IlK. ,_, PIICIIUI

•MASTERS DEGREE
) IN PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION

•VETERAN

. PIICit4 .tl

i

l-R: BRENDA, HAMLIN, MARY LOU, JIM &amp; TY.

•HARD WORKER

IlK . -

IIOW$3999
NOW$2269

commoa
hay bales -tied
. together Ia a field
caa be a work or
art when the sun
softly spUis· its
' o•llow paint over
their beadll.

•
,.

...... .

.

._ .~ ...

&lt;1,• • • •• ~ ... , ...... .

#

"'

··· ~~ . . . . . . . .

&amp;

•

• •

•

.,

•

•

.•.

Photographs, copy

qy Sa/iyanne Holtz Times~Sentinel writer

Summer Is Ume
for laying out so
you can gel a tan
on your bidr!

I

)

�-

~

-

~

~

. . .. . . . ~

~

. . .. ·- ...
'

B-2- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June I , 1980

B-3-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980

Judging announced for Meigs County Fair

Senior Citizens' Scores
New health service program established in Meigs Count"y

'

POME ROY - J udging of projects
for the Meigs County Fair was a nnounced for June 14 when the Meigs
County Girl Scout Service Unit met
recently at the Meigs Inn .
The judging will take place a t the
Meigs County fa irgrounds in the 4-H
building according to the foil owing
schedule:
9 a. m., Browni e registra tion of
projects for judging with the judging
to take place a t 9:30a.m.
10 a.m., Junior scout regis tration
of projects with JUdgmg at 10:30

entries, as well as the entry tags will
be given to each scout so that .the
parents will know and be able to
assist the scouts with procedures
prior to judging day.
During the meeting leaders were
advised about troop finance reports
and troop program reports. Plans
were made for the scouts to participate in the Regatta parade.
Day camp was announced for July
14-18 at Camp Kiashuta, Chester.
Becky Mankin will be the director
and volunteer leaders are needed to
assist.
A new badge program for juniors
will begin in ,september and Mrs.
Dee Lawrence, field director, met
with the leaders to explain the

a.m.
11 a. m., Cadette and senior scout
registration with judging to be held
atl1 :30a.m.
A letter concerning the entry
rules, the individual categories for

program.
.
Recognition was given to the
leaders in Meigs County including
Judy Eblin, Chris Bower, and
Sharon Darst, Rutland Brownies;
Pat Hysell, Kay Frederick, Rutland
juniors; Janet Simpson, Jennifer
Warth, Salisbury
Brownies ;
Margaret Parker, Barbara Fry,
Susie Pullins, Carolyn Sinclair, and
Ida Clark, Salisbury juniors; Janice
Haggy, f{aren Triplett, Pomeroy
Brownies; Peggy Crane, Nellie
Wright, Pomeroy juniors; Rhea
Jean Norris, Patricia Arnold, and
Gloria Riggs, Harrisonville juniors;
Harold Norris, Juanita Reeves,
Harrisonville cadettes; Marilyn
Meier, Luckeydoo, Evelyn Bauer,
and Marilyn Poulin, Middleport

brownies; Joy Clark, Susie Stewart
and Cherry Cadle, Middleport
juniors ; Pat Philson, Judy Pape,
Syracuse Brownies; Shirley Cogar,
Carol Adams, Joyce Sisson ,
Syracuse juniors.
Pat Schaekel, Janet Koblentz 1,.
Chester brownies; Shirley Gibbs, ..
Betty Barker, Chester juniors; Pat-:;
ty Capehart, Gertrude Casto, ...
Chester · Cadettes; Pat Thoma, ·
public relations director; and Becky
Mankin and Martha Graves, service
unit leaders.
Blue ribbon troop awar~ were "
presented to the Syracuse Junior
Troop, the Salisbury Brownie Troop,
the Salisbury Junior Troop, and the
Pomeroy Junior Troop.

HEALmSERVICE
PROGRAM

be st;lrted late in June. Isometric
exercises, low calorie snacks,nutritious menus, confidential
weekly weigh-ins, speakers, films,
fitness walks and group support will
be offered. If you are interested in
joinlrig-the group, tell one of the staff
the next time you ;~re in the Center
or call 992--2161. lf'you have been advised by your doctor to lose a few
pounds (oq more J, for health
reasons, this just might be the an,swer for you.
The health staff will keep you informed via the Center newsletter
and the Dally Sentinel as to special
health programs planned. Ferndora
Story, R.N., who has donated many

POMEROY- The,Meigs County
Council on Aging has established a
health service program. This ·new
health program will deal with many
problems facing senior citizens.
Health staff personnel will present
simple easy to understand classes in
life saving techniques such as the
Heimlich Maneuver (a rescue for
choking victims) and car diopuhnonary resuscitation (CPR).
Films and discussions concerning
first aid, nutrition, physical fitoess,
poisoning, and safety in the home
are planned.
A weight control group class will

hours to the Center in the past few
years, will be working part-time as
will Bernie Anderson. Feel free to
ask Ferndora or Bernie about your
special needs or concerns.
RETIRE;D SENIOR

On the Light Side

If you are interested in working at

,the nursing home for a two to three
hour period weekly, every other
week, monthly, etc. , contact the
RSVP office. Mrs. Helen Zidian ,
Social Services Director at the nursing home, will be happy to talk
about assignments and the different
ways volunteers may assist at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
A training session for RSVP volunteers who will serve as receptionists
at the Multipurpose Senior Center
was held recently. The volunteers
will work in teams of two with
assiStance from staff members .

VOWNTEERPROGRAMfRSVPJ
With the move to the new
Multipurpose Center and additional
transportation available, morning
visits to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center are scheduled for Tuesday
and Friday during June. The bus
will leave the Center at 10:30 and
return to the Center at ll: 30.
There are now more than 60
residents at the Health Care Center,
so more volunteers can be assigned.

'

URPHYS

NOW thru SAT.
JUNE7

NOW IHRU SAT.,
JUIE7

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

,,
2-PIECE POPULAR
TERRY SHORT SET
LOW
LOW

PRICE

The Dancing Crew

Love Boat cru,ise in
dance slated ]u~e 7
I

GALUPOUS - The students of
the Gallia-Mason Perfonning Arts
will present a mock cruise of the Sun
~rincess, better known as the Love
Roat, Saturday, June 7, at
Washington Auditorium, Gallipolis.
Pictured are Kelly Jo Chapman,
Lori McGuire, Debbie Turley, Shannon McNabb, Sharon Clifton, Angie
Holley, Tracy Waugh, Kristi
Thomas, and Sarah Simpson who
are the crew of the ship. Not pictUred are Jodi McMillin and Christi
Davis. Dancing passengers are AnClark, Tracie Hill, Lettie
stewart, Missy McDade, Connie
Zeoli, and Todd Haner .
Several countries will be represented in dance . Portraying South
Americans and also Russian peasants are Susan Skeen, Joni Dotson,
Becky Thomas, Tara Easton, Stacy
~rnes, and Cindy Marcil.
The different dance styles of the
islands will be exhibited by Trenda
Miller, Bree Langona, Cassandra
'11tompson, Annie Valentine, Kathy
Beebe, Amber Thabet, Sarah Riffle,
Jamie Huffman, Michele Vickers,
Carey Stanley, Leslie Gault, Hollie
Davis, Melinda Gooldin, Lyn Ryan,
Becky Jones, Amy Baisden,
I&gt;anielle Jenkins, Kathy Hager,
Shayna Chapman, Danielle Cummons, Wendy Long, Laura Wolfe,
afid Kim Hutchins.
Chinese Coolies are Starr North,
Wendy Thompson, Shelli Proctor,
Garita Smith, Wendy . Brown,
Crystelle Howard, Misty Grant,
ftlllie Ritter, and WendiSaunders.
·A Viennese waltz will be danced
by Jenni Beymer, Edina VanMatre,
Slierri Swisher, Sandy Forrest, Andtya Beattie, Heather Thabet, April
Powel, and Jodeann Ball. Todd
Haner will prsent an African war
dlince.

na

•
•
"

~

WEEKEND GUESTS

POMEROY , Mr. and Mrs.·
Leonard Russ, Cleveland, were the
Memorial Day weekeQd guests of
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart and Miss
EtmaSmith.

The sailors' sweethearts are Erika
Pullin, Michele Reymond, Cheryl
Rollins, and Hollie Watson .
European folk dancers are Shayna
Chapman, Joetta Pizzino, Danielle
Jenkins, Lori Sexton, Arny Baisden,
Wendy Thompson, Holly Ritter.
Cindy Mason and Heather Hastwell will dance the Scottish Fhng.
The second half of the show will
present scenes in America . The
Dallas cowboy cheerleaders Andry a
Beattie, Allison Woods, Tracy Nott,
Tracy McNabb, Jenny Musgrave,
Tracie Hill, and Sandy Forrest.
The Main Event at Madison
Square Garden with Heather Hastwell, Carolyn Vansickle, Anna
Clark, Missy Oliver, Todd Haner,
Connie Zeoli, Missy McDade, Lori
Hammond, Angie Lear, and Nina
Bush.
The Superman theme with Becky
Bush, Marsa Oliver, Amy Bush,
Samantha Rumley, Trenda Miller,
Annie Valentine, and Cassandra
Thompson .
Majorettes are Andrea Hensley,
Michele Vickers, Colleen Wilt, Julia
Edwards, Stephanie Reynolds, Lisa
Slinde, Debra Watson, Becky Beattie, Charla Beattie, Susan Reynolds,
Jessica Hamm, and Jenni Beymer,
and also Kelly Roush, Sherry
Swisher, Lisa Cline, and Kelly Safford.
Bringirg Disco to the stage are
Melissa 'Davis, Tara Easton, Carru
Williams, ·Becky Thomas, Terri
Tawney, Tammy Ba~s, Kelly
Arrowood, Lisa Hauldren, Jodi
Halley, Susan Skeen, and Kristy
Holmes.
Doing the California Strut! are
Lias Ehman, Debbie Rumley, Joni
Dotn, Seleesa Stover, Jori Bailey,
Christa Bailey, Jenifer Ehman, and
Jeanette Gilbert.
Other music used is the St. Louis
Blues, Chattanooga Choo Choo, Miss
America Theme, Dixie, Goldfinger,
Star Wars theme, a hillbilly number
and disco music.

BAKESALETHURSDAY

:'!:JARIUSONVILLE
The
W.rrisonville Senior Citizens will
hold a yard and bake sale Thursday
and Friday at the 1 !;larrisonville ·
tewnhouse, 9 a.m . to 4 p.m., tain or
sliine. ·

BOYS' KNIT TANK TOPS

444

Ide a l fo r ac tive spo rt s, ca sual
wear. Care fr ee te rry in summer
co l ors w ith con tra sti n g trim

Cla ss ic tan k t op a nd ela sti c-

wai st shorts. Sizes S, M and l

127

mals.

VINYL LATEX
HOUSE AND
TRIM PAIIIT

---------0
REGULAR

'1

64C

PAIR

I

SHORT LINGTH
NYLON LOUNGERS

MISSES' COOL
FASHIONS FOR
SUNNYDAYSI

MODEL
T A-950

houiehold chores.

PRICi

..

197
GALUPOLIS - The birthdays of
Cherri Wright and John Wright were
celebrated recently. Cherri was 16
on May 30 and John was II on June J.

'REG. '3.19
Nylon-bristle
brush for use
w / oll pa ints.

STRIKE CAlLED

MULTI·POSITION CHAISE

Ch o ic e o f po p u la r colors . One siz e .

Soft Knit Tank Top•
li ghtwe1ght p o lyester for
good look s, ea sy ca re . Many
fd shi o n co l o rs .· S1zes S,M ,L.

$888--

liiEG- '.13.96\

lightweight, foldable and
easy to tote . Steel frame
• adjusts to mony different
; positions . Carefree vinyl
, tubing ' " popular colors .
Soft foom-padded headrest.
Size : IO " H x 72 " l x 22 " W .

Knit .lamalca lhorb
Pull -o n s ty le with st i tc hed
front c re as e . Po lyester kn i t.

Fa shion co l o r s. Si ze s 10-18

molded soles. Teens',
women's si zes 5- 10 .

247
IIJI li"i~

Trim-All® TaptoTrim®
Electric Trl•mer/Edger

~

1477

;f,

EXCITING STYLES!
SUMMER HANDBAGS

1~!0

94

Men's or women's
Style s. Plasti c
or metal frame s
and s moke,colo r
polarized lenses.

I
I

YILURA

377

21-Pc. %"and 3/s"

.......... 247

•

Reg .•• 97

of cotton / po ly in

deco rat or col ors. HIIIWII fl•w•l
Jacquard borde~ . • ••. '2.47
Buy now and save! Wolltcloth

.- ' ·
t

784 _

.

-

.

ltAPIR
PLATI
HOLDIRS

2-0UAIT COlD Dll
HOT HI- DISPEIISEI

.

Keeps kid s cool a nd happy .
Simply attach to your gar den hose for splashing fun .
(Adult supervisi on recommended )

;.-1(/-----'

CARPET THE
WHOLE HOUSE
FROM
GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING
&amp;BUILDING SUPPLY
PHONE 446-1995

749 THIRD

GAUl POLIS

[11Cj Mo-y•la•l•g

Photo •ro1111os

REGULAR •12.97
PKG.OF4
REG. '1.68

Ideal for picniC$ or work .
Insulated metal body with
dripleu, fast-flow spout.

PRESS TOP
TO DISPENSE

7''

'9.H
REG.

1.J1

••••oo

HAIDY AIR-PUMP JUG

and,/ , " driv e soc ket s, ratc he t,
ado pt e r , e ll te ns •o ns and m o re!

. . .... WILLY "'
THI WATIR aUG
PUN WATIR TOY

let . '3AJ'

. . .. 1

Fire Fighters Local 1336. The two
were suspended for 12 hours on -~
Friday because city Qfficials said :
they refused to be called in to work :.:
earlier in the week during their off- ·
duty hours.

POLARIZED SUN5LASSiS

137 I

OURLOW
PRICE

[~c;;;J
"IANTA

HEAD AND FOOT
SECTIONS ADJUST
FO~ COMFORT

~

SOLID COLOR
POLYESTER KNITS

.
I~
I .
.

I

VelVet -soft blend

~ f~\ \::~~~. 1~~~
m

I

I

Just top o n groun d to o ufom ot ico lly relea se mo nof ilam en ! li ne . Cuts 8" swath .

1'1111'1

ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) -Ashland
firefighters went on strike Friday
night for the first time in the city's
history.
The strike was called to protest
the suspension of two members of

TOWEL ENSEMBLE

l!e1QJUIJmwu .DRIVE SOCKET SET

WE CARRY SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

II
I
I

OUR
LOW

SAVE '3

n e ck. s;ze • 5,M.L.X L._

BOYS' SPORTS-THEME
2-PIECE SHORT SETS

·Softl y fl o wi ng, eosy·core 100"1.. nylon _
Elolt ici zed ne c kli n e , sh o rt slee ve s.

Slip- o n st y l e wi !h

Many fosh.cn Sll,l ches , includ •ng
popu lar c repe~. tocq uord s . large
selectio n of co lors. 60" wi de .

Comfor1 and good looks
for Dod's leis ure hours.
Soft pol y- cotton terry
w i th short s le e~ e s , v.

I JUMBO 4-IN.
I PAINTBRUSH

Eosy-cleon plast ic
w ith metal handle.
Handy for pointing,

.97
AIYDADI

MEN'S TERRY PULLOVERS

Gallon

-------------.------·53 c:211 · ·

: 5-GUART UTILITY PAIL

444

-

SUPER
.IUNI
IPICIALI

'

A

4''

Ideal f o r use on wood , concrete ,
mo$Onr y or cinder block . Dries
fost to a durable , fl at finish .
Cleans up w ith soap and water .

W hi le, black or
fo sh•on colors .
St retch nylon .
f 1t SIZes I 0- 13.

Cool And Flattering!

.~~~.

WIWTE
OIILYI

Men's Dress Socks

SUPER SUMMER BUY!
COOL FABRIC CASUALS

lG-INCH SIZ:E

'----~ Swivel bo..,, corry hondle .

@99~a..
Perfect for graduation , w ed ding photos. Gold-tone metal.

IUILT-I N
FLASH!
To do y 's new es t natu ral co lor s in
canv a s w it h me sh o r straw . Top
handle, cl u! ch o r organi zer bog s.

USII-OORS
OROUTDOORI

ROOM·SIZE
OLIFINRUG

2497

Mocklwtelse
H•lr Accenerle1

2

SAVE •12
l o ng- wear in g . sto in -re ·
s istont. Gross green or
m u lt i -co lor stripe . N on·
skid back i ng . Appro Ki ·
motely 8'h' .oo; 1 1Yt ' size.

Earth-Tone Designs

"VICTORIA"
BIEEIY OPEN WEAVE
5-PIECE CURTAIN SET
No -f un polyester
i n wh i t e, mint,

gold, copper . In dudes 2 panel$,
2 tle- bo cks , va l-

Normal
To Dry

on ce . 58 " wide .

or Oily

3'7

Reg. 01.17 -63" length
R•l· '1.17 ... 1" L•ngth

PnHy Eyelet RuHle
2-Pc. Curtain En•••••
TIER
AND

.VALANCE

FOR·I

ASTROTURF

YOUR CHOICE

347

Af-LIWPIJCI

12CILII
EDOSIIIS
Film , 110..12&amp;-177-610

D£Vll0f'ED /ttHJ PliiiNitD

Charming ~e! in easy - care polyester . ...
White, be ige or gold. Tiers : 36 " long, •
58" wide. Valance : 10" long, 52" wide .
flll'l'l ! 11~176-127·
621).:1Srnm PYtnts

Formulas

00/tlOPt:D AND

44

SAVE•2

"" '"""

l'tUN110

•IOXOFII
FREEZER lARS
• 6 DIFFERENT
TASTY FLAVORS
0 EACH IARIS
1.250UNCES
• TOTAL 22.5
=::;:::~!) FLUID OUNCES

4·PIECI CANISTIR SIT

OBSERVED
MIDDLEPORT Obligation
night will be observed at the Thursday night meeting of Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 P,,m. Officers and star
points are requested to fl'ear for-

QUALITY·TanD

Big sele C! io n of sol id co lo rs o r stripe s
in carefree blend o f
polyester/colton kni!.
Stock up f or summer
0
oi our low, low price . REGULAR 1.97

OBLIGATION NIGHT

•

:

Tops

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

MUSICAL HAm WVER?
NEW YORK (AP) - How much do you love music? A West Coast
music lover is so enamored of Franz Schubert that he paid $650 for a
lock of brown hair cut from the head of the Austrian composer at his
death in 1828.Charles Hamilton, of the Charles Hamilton gallery, said the lock
consisted of about 50 strands preserved in plastic.
Before the bidding Thursday night at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, the
lock was described as a " somewhat macal)re relic of the great
classical composer, quite probably the only lock of his hair surviving
today. "
1
Hamilton said the item was sold by West German collector who apparently came upon it through Schubert's biographer, Otto Erich
Deutsch who authenticated the origin of the lock.
.
Schu~rt died at age 31 and the lock was cut by a close friend,
Hamilton said.

Favorlt•
Warm
Wttath•r

Super
Buy]

I
I
I
I

OSCAR'S LAST WAGER
OCEANPORT, N.J . (AP)- For more than 50 years, Oscar Roy Post ,
played the horses at Morunouth P~rk racetrack, most of the time with
uneventful results - if measured in dollars won.
But the New Yorker, who died Feb. 9, viewed it differently. Monmouth was kind of a second home . And so Thursday , Oscar Roy Post,
71, came home for good as he wished.
One of his last two requests was that his ashes be scattered across
the track, which his son Leroy did Thursday before post time.
The other showed·Oscar was a horse player to the end - and beyond.
Still following instructions, Leroy placed a pair of $20 bets on his
father's favorite daily double numbers.
But Dame Fortune apparently wasn't amused or sympathetic.
The horses finished third and last.

2_,.ECE LIFOAJI® PKIIC SR
foam p lo$t lc. 30 - q\.Jort
chest and 1- gollon jug.

399

...........t

. .IIZIR
'STICKS

VISAOI

OUR BRAND

PACIAL
'1'8HU

'

57.!

AVAILABLE AT MURPHY'S DOWNTQWN
. STORE, 341 2ND AVE.

BOX

REGULAR 16' ·
200 COUNT
UMITIIIOXIS

I 6 3
1 oz. ,01
I
I

•I'I 36c

C
REG. 44' EA H

powder, berry,
1 Baby
herbal frogroncos.

LIMIT 6

REG.U•

...'!--'L

r

11\.UTU CHAIGI

38

c

I OUR BlAND I SCIIIttTO® I
l'llANSPUBI
aUTAIII
HAIITZ®
, . . . . . . . . . I TAPII.L I L••..,... I 21•1 ....."'
OUR BRAND

I SOLID Ala

I S'"'AVE ...
aao.L
,.
I Jumbo-1500 d\"
1 dispenser roll ot
I 0 '"per-low pdce.

I Pack
I ~

S7c II Dow 199

I REG. 'I.IJ
now, """'over
1I Buy
one-holf on those
I · handy d;"' &gt;OOLIMI

J

I

G..s.n

PEII
lOll

3:r1

lOLL

110 • " " ' -

IIUC.NIIor139
arAC.MI
Super 8 or Regulor I ,

olte 3.S,..m SlidM-

"I

20Eapgw,..

ROLL

Mea•

f!_'~!ln

IUIUIICII.AT_ .... _

SomeFcrelg~Fil;:s~I::';Z!I~I;pec;aiProceulng

.

Goofed on
pictures? Don'twony. Unle&gt;syo~ore
complololy sollsfled wllh your color prmts yoo don 1 poy.
Keep only 1he ones thol pleote yov.
,_._, _ _.,
....
1_

Kills f leos, t icks
for up lo 5 months.

G.C. MURPHY CO. • TH.

I'ICIIII,..nnNUCT

Y''"'

•NDLY

.

AVAILAIU AT MURPf1Y'S DOWNTOWN STORE, 348 2ND AVE. 1
!

•

-

~

PerII
R
0

Cellar

RtG.

I '3...
1

~

2''

'1"

25 sq. yd.

TYPE

•·s

RUBBER BACK CARPET
95 sq. yd . •

Available

Knchen Print
carpet

•750

SAXONY

'875 sq.inst.yd.

sq. yd.

inst.

CUT LOOP

20·Rolls of
noleum in

...

"The Liule Store With The Big Selection
·A, The Small Price. 'j

•

�-

~

-

~

~

. . .. . . . ~

~

. . .. ·- ...
'

B-2- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June I , 1980

B-3-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980

Judging announced for Meigs County Fair

Senior Citizens' Scores
New health service program established in Meigs Count"y

'

POME ROY - J udging of projects
for the Meigs County Fair was a nnounced for June 14 when the Meigs
County Girl Scout Service Unit met
recently at the Meigs Inn .
The judging will take place a t the
Meigs County fa irgrounds in the 4-H
building according to the foil owing
schedule:
9 a. m., Browni e registra tion of
projects for judging with the judging
to take place a t 9:30a.m.
10 a.m., Junior scout regis tration
of projects with JUdgmg at 10:30

entries, as well as the entry tags will
be given to each scout so that .the
parents will know and be able to
assist the scouts with procedures
prior to judging day.
During the meeting leaders were
advised about troop finance reports
and troop program reports. Plans
were made for the scouts to participate in the Regatta parade.
Day camp was announced for July
14-18 at Camp Kiashuta, Chester.
Becky Mankin will be the director
and volunteer leaders are needed to
assist.
A new badge program for juniors
will begin in ,september and Mrs.
Dee Lawrence, field director, met
with the leaders to explain the

a.m.
11 a. m., Cadette and senior scout
registration with judging to be held
atl1 :30a.m.
A letter concerning the entry
rules, the individual categories for

program.
.
Recognition was given to the
leaders in Meigs County including
Judy Eblin, Chris Bower, and
Sharon Darst, Rutland Brownies;
Pat Hysell, Kay Frederick, Rutland
juniors; Janet Simpson, Jennifer
Warth, Salisbury
Brownies ;
Margaret Parker, Barbara Fry,
Susie Pullins, Carolyn Sinclair, and
Ida Clark, Salisbury juniors; Janice
Haggy, f{aren Triplett, Pomeroy
Brownies; Peggy Crane, Nellie
Wright, Pomeroy juniors; Rhea
Jean Norris, Patricia Arnold, and
Gloria Riggs, Harrisonville juniors;
Harold Norris, Juanita Reeves,
Harrisonville cadettes; Marilyn
Meier, Luckeydoo, Evelyn Bauer,
and Marilyn Poulin, Middleport

brownies; Joy Clark, Susie Stewart
and Cherry Cadle, Middleport
juniors ; Pat Philson, Judy Pape,
Syracuse Brownies; Shirley Cogar,
Carol Adams, Joyce Sisson ,
Syracuse juniors.
Pat Schaekel, Janet Koblentz 1,.
Chester brownies; Shirley Gibbs, ..
Betty Barker, Chester juniors; Pat-:;
ty Capehart, Gertrude Casto, ...
Chester · Cadettes; Pat Thoma, ·
public relations director; and Becky
Mankin and Martha Graves, service
unit leaders.
Blue ribbon troop awar~ were "
presented to the Syracuse Junior
Troop, the Salisbury Brownie Troop,
the Salisbury Junior Troop, and the
Pomeroy Junior Troop.

HEALmSERVICE
PROGRAM

be st;lrted late in June. Isometric
exercises, low calorie snacks,nutritious menus, confidential
weekly weigh-ins, speakers, films,
fitness walks and group support will
be offered. If you are interested in
joinlrig-the group, tell one of the staff
the next time you ;~re in the Center
or call 992--2161. lf'you have been advised by your doctor to lose a few
pounds (oq more J, for health
reasons, this just might be the an,swer for you.
The health staff will keep you informed via the Center newsletter
and the Dally Sentinel as to special
health programs planned. Ferndora
Story, R.N., who has donated many

POMEROY- The,Meigs County
Council on Aging has established a
health service program. This ·new
health program will deal with many
problems facing senior citizens.
Health staff personnel will present
simple easy to understand classes in
life saving techniques such as the
Heimlich Maneuver (a rescue for
choking victims) and car diopuhnonary resuscitation (CPR).
Films and discussions concerning
first aid, nutrition, physical fitoess,
poisoning, and safety in the home
are planned.
A weight control group class will

hours to the Center in the past few
years, will be working part-time as
will Bernie Anderson. Feel free to
ask Ferndora or Bernie about your
special needs or concerns.
RETIRE;D SENIOR

On the Light Side

If you are interested in working at

,the nursing home for a two to three
hour period weekly, every other
week, monthly, etc. , contact the
RSVP office. Mrs. Helen Zidian ,
Social Services Director at the nursing home, will be happy to talk
about assignments and the different
ways volunteers may assist at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
A training session for RSVP volunteers who will serve as receptionists
at the Multipurpose Senior Center
was held recently. The volunteers
will work in teams of two with
assiStance from staff members .

VOWNTEERPROGRAMfRSVPJ
With the move to the new
Multipurpose Center and additional
transportation available, morning
visits to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center are scheduled for Tuesday
and Friday during June. The bus
will leave the Center at 10:30 and
return to the Center at ll: 30.
There are now more than 60
residents at the Health Care Center,
so more volunteers can be assigned.

'

URPHYS

NOW thru SAT.
JUNE7

NOW IHRU SAT.,
JUIE7

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

,,
2-PIECE POPULAR
TERRY SHORT SET
LOW
LOW

PRICE

The Dancing Crew

Love Boat cru,ise in
dance slated ]u~e 7
I

GALUPOUS - The students of
the Gallia-Mason Perfonning Arts
will present a mock cruise of the Sun
~rincess, better known as the Love
Roat, Saturday, June 7, at
Washington Auditorium, Gallipolis.
Pictured are Kelly Jo Chapman,
Lori McGuire, Debbie Turley, Shannon McNabb, Sharon Clifton, Angie
Holley, Tracy Waugh, Kristi
Thomas, and Sarah Simpson who
are the crew of the ship. Not pictUred are Jodi McMillin and Christi
Davis. Dancing passengers are AnClark, Tracie Hill, Lettie
stewart, Missy McDade, Connie
Zeoli, and Todd Haner .
Several countries will be represented in dance . Portraying South
Americans and also Russian peasants are Susan Skeen, Joni Dotson,
Becky Thomas, Tara Easton, Stacy
~rnes, and Cindy Marcil.
The different dance styles of the
islands will be exhibited by Trenda
Miller, Bree Langona, Cassandra
'11tompson, Annie Valentine, Kathy
Beebe, Amber Thabet, Sarah Riffle,
Jamie Huffman, Michele Vickers,
Carey Stanley, Leslie Gault, Hollie
Davis, Melinda Gooldin, Lyn Ryan,
Becky Jones, Amy Baisden,
I&gt;anielle Jenkins, Kathy Hager,
Shayna Chapman, Danielle Cummons, Wendy Long, Laura Wolfe,
afid Kim Hutchins.
Chinese Coolies are Starr North,
Wendy Thompson, Shelli Proctor,
Garita Smith, Wendy . Brown,
Crystelle Howard, Misty Grant,
ftlllie Ritter, and WendiSaunders.
·A Viennese waltz will be danced
by Jenni Beymer, Edina VanMatre,
Slierri Swisher, Sandy Forrest, Andtya Beattie, Heather Thabet, April
Powel, and Jodeann Ball. Todd
Haner will prsent an African war
dlince.

na

•
•
"

~

WEEKEND GUESTS

POMEROY , Mr. and Mrs.·
Leonard Russ, Cleveland, were the
Memorial Day weekeQd guests of
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart and Miss
EtmaSmith.

The sailors' sweethearts are Erika
Pullin, Michele Reymond, Cheryl
Rollins, and Hollie Watson .
European folk dancers are Shayna
Chapman, Joetta Pizzino, Danielle
Jenkins, Lori Sexton, Arny Baisden,
Wendy Thompson, Holly Ritter.
Cindy Mason and Heather Hastwell will dance the Scottish Fhng.
The second half of the show will
present scenes in America . The
Dallas cowboy cheerleaders Andry a
Beattie, Allison Woods, Tracy Nott,
Tracy McNabb, Jenny Musgrave,
Tracie Hill, and Sandy Forrest.
The Main Event at Madison
Square Garden with Heather Hastwell, Carolyn Vansickle, Anna
Clark, Missy Oliver, Todd Haner,
Connie Zeoli, Missy McDade, Lori
Hammond, Angie Lear, and Nina
Bush.
The Superman theme with Becky
Bush, Marsa Oliver, Amy Bush,
Samantha Rumley, Trenda Miller,
Annie Valentine, and Cassandra
Thompson .
Majorettes are Andrea Hensley,
Michele Vickers, Colleen Wilt, Julia
Edwards, Stephanie Reynolds, Lisa
Slinde, Debra Watson, Becky Beattie, Charla Beattie, Susan Reynolds,
Jessica Hamm, and Jenni Beymer,
and also Kelly Roush, Sherry
Swisher, Lisa Cline, and Kelly Safford.
Bringirg Disco to the stage are
Melissa 'Davis, Tara Easton, Carru
Williams, ·Becky Thomas, Terri
Tawney, Tammy Ba~s, Kelly
Arrowood, Lisa Hauldren, Jodi
Halley, Susan Skeen, and Kristy
Holmes.
Doing the California Strut! are
Lias Ehman, Debbie Rumley, Joni
Dotn, Seleesa Stover, Jori Bailey,
Christa Bailey, Jenifer Ehman, and
Jeanette Gilbert.
Other music used is the St. Louis
Blues, Chattanooga Choo Choo, Miss
America Theme, Dixie, Goldfinger,
Star Wars theme, a hillbilly number
and disco music.

BAKESALETHURSDAY

:'!:JARIUSONVILLE
The
W.rrisonville Senior Citizens will
hold a yard and bake sale Thursday
and Friday at the 1 !;larrisonville ·
tewnhouse, 9 a.m . to 4 p.m., tain or
sliine. ·

BOYS' KNIT TANK TOPS

444

Ide a l fo r ac tive spo rt s, ca sual
wear. Care fr ee te rry in summer
co l ors w ith con tra sti n g trim

Cla ss ic tan k t op a nd ela sti c-

wai st shorts. Sizes S, M and l

127

mals.

VINYL LATEX
HOUSE AND
TRIM PAIIIT

---------0
REGULAR

'1

64C

PAIR

I

SHORT LINGTH
NYLON LOUNGERS

MISSES' COOL
FASHIONS FOR
SUNNYDAYSI

MODEL
T A-950

houiehold chores.

PRICi

..

197
GALUPOLIS - The birthdays of
Cherri Wright and John Wright were
celebrated recently. Cherri was 16
on May 30 and John was II on June J.

'REG. '3.19
Nylon-bristle
brush for use
w / oll pa ints.

STRIKE CAlLED

MULTI·POSITION CHAISE

Ch o ic e o f po p u la r colors . One siz e .

Soft Knit Tank Top•
li ghtwe1ght p o lyester for
good look s, ea sy ca re . Many
fd shi o n co l o rs .· S1zes S,M ,L.

$888--

liiEG- '.13.96\

lightweight, foldable and
easy to tote . Steel frame
• adjusts to mony different
; positions . Carefree vinyl
, tubing ' " popular colors .
Soft foom-padded headrest.
Size : IO " H x 72 " l x 22 " W .

Knit .lamalca lhorb
Pull -o n s ty le with st i tc hed
front c re as e . Po lyester kn i t.

Fa shion co l o r s. Si ze s 10-18

molded soles. Teens',
women's si zes 5- 10 .

247
IIJI li"i~

Trim-All® TaptoTrim®
Electric Trl•mer/Edger

~

1477

;f,

EXCITING STYLES!
SUMMER HANDBAGS

1~!0

94

Men's or women's
Style s. Plasti c
or metal frame s
and s moke,colo r
polarized lenses.

I
I

YILURA

377

21-Pc. %"and 3/s"

.......... 247

•

Reg .•• 97

of cotton / po ly in

deco rat or col ors. HIIIWII fl•w•l
Jacquard borde~ . • ••. '2.47
Buy now and save! Wolltcloth

.- ' ·
t

784 _

.

-

.

ltAPIR
PLATI
HOLDIRS

2-0UAIT COlD Dll
HOT HI- DISPEIISEI

.

Keeps kid s cool a nd happy .
Simply attach to your gar den hose for splashing fun .
(Adult supervisi on recommended )

;.-1(/-----'

CARPET THE
WHOLE HOUSE
FROM
GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING
&amp;BUILDING SUPPLY
PHONE 446-1995

749 THIRD

GAUl POLIS

[11Cj Mo-y•la•l•g

Photo •ro1111os

REGULAR •12.97
PKG.OF4
REG. '1.68

Ideal for picniC$ or work .
Insulated metal body with
dripleu, fast-flow spout.

PRESS TOP
TO DISPENSE

7''

'9.H
REG.

1.J1

••••oo

HAIDY AIR-PUMP JUG

and,/ , " driv e soc ket s, ratc he t,
ado pt e r , e ll te ns •o ns and m o re!

. . .... WILLY "'
THI WATIR aUG
PUN WATIR TOY

let . '3AJ'

. . .. 1

Fire Fighters Local 1336. The two
were suspended for 12 hours on -~
Friday because city Qfficials said :
they refused to be called in to work :.:
earlier in the week during their off- ·
duty hours.

POLARIZED SUN5LASSiS

137 I

OURLOW
PRICE

[~c;;;J
"IANTA

HEAD AND FOOT
SECTIONS ADJUST
FO~ COMFORT

~

SOLID COLOR
POLYESTER KNITS

.
I~
I .
.

I

VelVet -soft blend

~ f~\ \::~~~. 1~~~
m

I

I

Just top o n groun d to o ufom ot ico lly relea se mo nof ilam en ! li ne . Cuts 8" swath .

1'1111'1

ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) -Ashland
firefighters went on strike Friday
night for the first time in the city's
history.
The strike was called to protest
the suspension of two members of

TOWEL ENSEMBLE

l!e1QJUIJmwu .DRIVE SOCKET SET

WE CARRY SIMPLICITY PATTERNS

II
I
I

OUR
LOW

SAVE '3

n e ck. s;ze • 5,M.L.X L._

BOYS' SPORTS-THEME
2-PIECE SHORT SETS

·Softl y fl o wi ng, eosy·core 100"1.. nylon _
Elolt ici zed ne c kli n e , sh o rt slee ve s.

Slip- o n st y l e wi !h

Many fosh.cn Sll,l ches , includ •ng
popu lar c repe~. tocq uord s . large
selectio n of co lors. 60" wi de .

Comfor1 and good looks
for Dod's leis ure hours.
Soft pol y- cotton terry
w i th short s le e~ e s , v.

I JUMBO 4-IN.
I PAINTBRUSH

Eosy-cleon plast ic
w ith metal handle.
Handy for pointing,

.97
AIYDADI

MEN'S TERRY PULLOVERS

Gallon

-------------.------·53 c:211 · ·

: 5-GUART UTILITY PAIL

444

-

SUPER
.IUNI
IPICIALI

'

A

4''

Ideal f o r use on wood , concrete ,
mo$Onr y or cinder block . Dries
fost to a durable , fl at finish .
Cleans up w ith soap and water .

W hi le, black or
fo sh•on colors .
St retch nylon .
f 1t SIZes I 0- 13.

Cool And Flattering!

.~~~.

WIWTE
OIILYI

Men's Dress Socks

SUPER SUMMER BUY!
COOL FABRIC CASUALS

lG-INCH SIZ:E

'----~ Swivel bo..,, corry hondle .

@99~a..
Perfect for graduation , w ed ding photos. Gold-tone metal.

IUILT-I N
FLASH!
To do y 's new es t natu ral co lor s in
canv a s w it h me sh o r straw . Top
handle, cl u! ch o r organi zer bog s.

USII-OORS
OROUTDOORI

ROOM·SIZE
OLIFINRUG

2497

Mocklwtelse
H•lr Accenerle1

2

SAVE •12
l o ng- wear in g . sto in -re ·
s istont. Gross green or
m u lt i -co lor stripe . N on·
skid back i ng . Appro Ki ·
motely 8'h' .oo; 1 1Yt ' size.

Earth-Tone Designs

"VICTORIA"
BIEEIY OPEN WEAVE
5-PIECE CURTAIN SET
No -f un polyester
i n wh i t e, mint,

gold, copper . In dudes 2 panel$,
2 tle- bo cks , va l-

Normal
To Dry

on ce . 58 " wide .

or Oily

3'7

Reg. 01.17 -63" length
R•l· '1.17 ... 1" L•ngth

PnHy Eyelet RuHle
2-Pc. Curtain En•••••
TIER
AND

.VALANCE

FOR·I

ASTROTURF

YOUR CHOICE

347

Af-LIWPIJCI

12CILII
EDOSIIIS
Film , 110..12&amp;-177-610

D£Vll0f'ED /ttHJ PliiiNitD

Charming ~e! in easy - care polyester . ...
White, be ige or gold. Tiers : 36 " long, •
58" wide. Valance : 10" long, 52" wide .
flll'l'l ! 11~176-127·
621).:1Srnm PYtnts

Formulas

00/tlOPt:D AND

44

SAVE•2

"" '"""

l'tUN110

•IOXOFII
FREEZER lARS
• 6 DIFFERENT
TASTY FLAVORS
0 EACH IARIS
1.250UNCES
• TOTAL 22.5
=::;:::~!) FLUID OUNCES

4·PIECI CANISTIR SIT

OBSERVED
MIDDLEPORT Obligation
night will be observed at the Thursday night meeting of Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 P,,m. Officers and star
points are requested to fl'ear for-

QUALITY·TanD

Big sele C! io n of sol id co lo rs o r stripe s
in carefree blend o f
polyester/colton kni!.
Stock up f or summer
0
oi our low, low price . REGULAR 1.97

OBLIGATION NIGHT

•

:

Tops

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

MUSICAL HAm WVER?
NEW YORK (AP) - How much do you love music? A West Coast
music lover is so enamored of Franz Schubert that he paid $650 for a
lock of brown hair cut from the head of the Austrian composer at his
death in 1828.Charles Hamilton, of the Charles Hamilton gallery, said the lock
consisted of about 50 strands preserved in plastic.
Before the bidding Thursday night at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, the
lock was described as a " somewhat macal)re relic of the great
classical composer, quite probably the only lock of his hair surviving
today. "
1
Hamilton said the item was sold by West German collector who apparently came upon it through Schubert's biographer, Otto Erich
Deutsch who authenticated the origin of the lock.
.
Schu~rt died at age 31 and the lock was cut by a close friend,
Hamilton said.

Favorlt•
Warm
Wttath•r

Super
Buy]

I
I
I
I

OSCAR'S LAST WAGER
OCEANPORT, N.J . (AP)- For more than 50 years, Oscar Roy Post ,
played the horses at Morunouth P~rk racetrack, most of the time with
uneventful results - if measured in dollars won.
But the New Yorker, who died Feb. 9, viewed it differently. Monmouth was kind of a second home . And so Thursday , Oscar Roy Post,
71, came home for good as he wished.
One of his last two requests was that his ashes be scattered across
the track, which his son Leroy did Thursday before post time.
The other showed·Oscar was a horse player to the end - and beyond.
Still following instructions, Leroy placed a pair of $20 bets on his
father's favorite daily double numbers.
But Dame Fortune apparently wasn't amused or sympathetic.
The horses finished third and last.

2_,.ECE LIFOAJI® PKIIC SR
foam p lo$t lc. 30 - q\.Jort
chest and 1- gollon jug.

399

...........t

. .IIZIR
'STICKS

VISAOI

OUR BRAND

PACIAL
'1'8HU

'

57.!

AVAILABLE AT MURPHY'S DOWNTQWN
. STORE, 341 2ND AVE.

BOX

REGULAR 16' ·
200 COUNT
UMITIIIOXIS

I 6 3
1 oz. ,01
I
I

•I'I 36c

C
REG. 44' EA H

powder, berry,
1 Baby
herbal frogroncos.

LIMIT 6

REG.U•

...'!--'L

r

11\.UTU CHAIGI

38

c

I OUR BlAND I SCIIIttTO® I
l'llANSPUBI
aUTAIII
HAIITZ®
, . . . . . . . . . I TAPII.L I L••..,... I 21•1 ....."'
OUR BRAND

I SOLID Ala

I S'"'AVE ...
aao.L
,.
I Jumbo-1500 d\"
1 dispenser roll ot
I 0 '"per-low pdce.

I Pack
I ~

S7c II Dow 199

I REG. 'I.IJ
now, """'over
1I Buy
one-holf on those
I · handy d;"' &gt;OOLIMI

J

I

G..s.n

PEII
lOll

3:r1

lOLL

110 • " " ' -

IIUC.NIIor139
arAC.MI
Super 8 or Regulor I ,

olte 3.S,..m SlidM-

"I

20Eapgw,..

ROLL

Mea•

f!_'~!ln

IUIUIICII.AT_ .... _

SomeFcrelg~Fil;:s~I::';Z!I~I;pec;aiProceulng

.

Goofed on
pictures? Don'twony. Unle&gt;syo~ore
complololy sollsfled wllh your color prmts yoo don 1 poy.
Keep only 1he ones thol pleote yov.
,_._, _ _.,
....
1_

Kills f leos, t icks
for up lo 5 months.

G.C. MURPHY CO. • TH.

I'ICIIII,..nnNUCT

Y''"'

•NDLY

.

AVAILAIU AT MURPf1Y'S DOWNTOWN STORE, 348 2ND AVE. 1
!

•

-

~

PerII
R
0

Cellar

RtG.

I '3...
1

~

2''

'1"

25 sq. yd.

TYPE

•·s

RUBBER BACK CARPET
95 sq. yd . •

Available

Knchen Print
carpet

•750

SAXONY

'875 sq.inst.yd.

sq. yd.

inst.

CUT LOOP

20·Rolls of
noleum in

...

"The Liule Store With The Big Selection
·A, The Small Price. 'j

•

�(
84-TbeSunday Times-Sentinel, S_unday, June 1, 1960

B+-The S~day Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980

Slinderella
classes begin ...

Community Corner

··...
...
..,.... Mitchells return from England ·
•
:.:.

Delbert and Kathryn Mitchell
have returned after' three weeks in
; :: England with their son, Sgt. Edward Mitchell and his wife Kim a
native of Frome, England, wh~m
' · they had never met.
The two were met at the Garwick
Airport by Eddie and Kim and spent
much of their time there touring
about. They visited cathedrals
casUes and museums and were mosi
impressed with the War Musewn of
England at Duxford and the
.•
American Cemetery at Cambridge
where thousands are buried and
statues represent each branch of the
service.
.. . It was a delightful trip for the
couple whose son is in electronics at
Midenhall Base and will be there for
'
about three years.

'

'

s.

...

...
··-

....

.

~

,.

..
r•

••
,..
~­

_,.

Dorothy Douglas of Lincoln
Heights recently underwent eye
surgery at University Hospital in
Colwnbus and news is good. Her
doctor expects that she will be able
to see as well as ever once the
healing is completed. Now, that's
·
goodnews!
From rummage sales to yard
sales, garage sales, next to new

..

It's the latter that the
land
Methodist Women of the r
.
Church are planning for ue
The "odds and ends" will be
displayed on the porch of Mrs. Edith
Williamson (Salem St., just across
the street from banll) and the hours
arefronn9a .m. to5p.m.
Meigs County will again be served'
by the Appalachian Ohio Regional
Transit Association (AORTA) bus
line probably a week from now.
A schedule is being completed at
this time by the Meigs County Commissioners and the AORTA Board of
Trustees, and it will be publicized
through this newspaper in the hope
of improving ridership so that the
bus line can be continued on an indefinite basis.
While rising the bus will take
longer to get from Pomeroy to
Athens and back than driving your
own car, certainly the cost of
gasoline should encourage residents
tpgiveitatry.
Remember to get out and vote
Tuesday!

Cheshire-Kyger Elementary
has 6th grade recognition

.·•'

'.

,.
-.
~

CHESIDRE - Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary School held its sixth
grade Recognition and Promotion
~i-ght at 7:30p.m. on Thursday, May

Spires and Shellie Ward. SpellingBlondena Gilbert, Lori Thomas
Julie Spires, and Sbellie Ward. Pen:
manship - Carl Ward, Richie
Gilmore, and Lori Thomas .
Invocation was given by Teresa Academic Success - Shellie Ward.
Dray. Songs presented during the Enthusiasm Brian Peck.
program were under the direction of Homework - Roger Leach. CitizenMiss Suzy Reiser. Songs included ship (chosen by fourth, fifth, and six.
were "Changing, " by the sixth th grade teachers) - Julie Spires
grade students of Mrs. Shitley Doss and Richie Gilmore. &amp;ience- Julie
and Ms. Doris Fuller. " We're On Spires and Shellie Ward. Social
Our Way," and "Rainbow Con- Studies- Shellie Ward.
nection," were sung by the sixth
Class Will was read by Carl Ward,
grade classes, Ms. Roberta Zdep- Class Prophecy by Julie Spires, and
ski's fourth grade students Mis Future Plans by Shellie Ward.
Marilyn Reese's fifth grade 'class
Presentation of Class and Cerand Ms. Doris Fuller's fourth and
tifica!es was by Uoyd L. Myers,
th grade students. Fourth and fifth pnnc1pal at Cheshire-Kyger. Mr.
grade students who participated Myers also presented each student
were: Shelly Aeiker, Amy Brown, with a carnation. Sixth grade
Tommy Buttrick, Mike Ferrell
students of Mrs. Shirley Doss are
Mickey Gilbert, Cheryl Little, Vicki Michael Todd Aeiker, Margaret
Little, Kelly Roush, Missy Snyder Brister, Robert Collins, Teresa
and Janet Stiltner.
Dray, Blondena Gilbert, Richard
Ms. Jyl Zerkle presented Reading Gilmore, Roger Leach, Mary Beth
Awards to Richie Gilmore, Roger Nelson, Brian Peck, Charles School·
Leach, and Becky White.
craft, Julie Spires, Lori Thomas,
..
Mrs. Doss presented Lori Thomas
Carl Ward, Michelle Ward, Rebecca
: : Julie Spires, and Carl Ward with White, Dawn Wright, and Larry
• Perfect Attendance Awards.
Young. Ms. Doris Fuller's sixth
· • Those receiving special awards
grade students are Sherry Buttrick,
• for being on the Honor Roll (all
Mickey Schartiger, and Jeff Sheets.
year) were Shellie Ward, student of
Julie Spires presented a ptaque to
' Mrs. Doss; and Sherry Buttrick,
Mrs. Doss from all her students. A
student of Ms. Fuller.
certilicate was presented to Ellie
· · Other special awards presented
Wright, room mother, from the sixth
during the program were: Honor grade students of Mrs. Doss.
Roll - (last six weekss), Shellie
Following the presentation,
Ward and Julie Spires. . Most Imrefreshments were served in the
: proved Student (past six weeks),
cafeteria by Mary Bradbury, Betty
Buddy Nelson. Awards presented for
Edwards, Brenda Johnson, and
• " A" in any subject for entire school
Janet Thomas. Cake was baked and
·: year were as follows : Math - Lori
decorated by Ellie Wright. The
: Thomas and Julie Spires. Reading Cheshire-Kyger PTA furnished all
• Shellie Ward. Language - Julie
refreshments.

fif:

.

ORTA to meet

..

GAlLIPOLIS - The Gallia CountiM: Ohio Retired
• Teachers' AssociatiOn will meet at
~· the Rio Grande cafeteria on Thursday, June 5, at 12 noon.
Music will be furnished by the Rio
~- ty Chapter of

Grande Music Department.
State Senator Oakley Collins will
speak on legislation of interest to
retired teachers. For niore details,
consult the annual bulletin. Guests
are welcome.

Area couples announce engagements

POMEROY - Slenderella c~
will begin at Chester next week with
sessions scheduled for 7:30 p.m , at
the fire house, Mrs. Jo Ani)
Newsome, lecturer, announced. '..
At the Mason class Monday nJiht,
Barb Varian and Sarah Johnsonjied
for losing the most weight with Deb&lt;
bie Murphy as runner-up. Darlene
Cunningham lost the most weight in
the Tuesday morning class, and
there was a t1e for numer-up Qetween Candy Van Meter and Nita
Conde. At the Middleport class
Peggy Lewis lost the most weig!lt:
and Isabelle Lewis and Juantta
Sayre tied for runner-up. The Middleport class will be held on Wednesday instead of Tuesday next
week due to the election.

sales, and now odds and en

AN ENSEMBLE from Pensacola Christian Colle~e
will present a progriun of sacred music on June 3 at
7:30p.m. at Calvary Bible Church . The Ensemble consists of five young people and one faculty represen·
tative. The program will feature sacred music, speech
and a multi-media presentation about the Florida ·
college. Th~ members of the Ensemble are Chris

Bowman, Ohio; Bob Magee, Indiana; David Potter
Michigan; Gary Walls, Florida; and Scott Gentry:
Flonda. The facijlty representative will provide information about the ~ollege . There is no admission charge
for this program. The church is located midway between Chester and Flatwoods Road on County Road 25
near Five Points.

fun~

24 absolute
deadline for FA C
july 4th exhibit
Although the Annual River
Recreation Festival Exhibit, spon·
sored by the French Art Colony a nd
held on the Fourth of July each year
in the City Park is a full month
away , the time passes very quickly,
and the deadline to have entries to
the French Art Colony is just three
weeks away . At 3 o'clock on Tuesday
afternoon, June 24, is the absolute
deadline to deliver any works of art
to Riverby to be catalogued and
judged for the July show.
Artists are urged from not only
throughout the inunediate tri-state
area, but from any location who
have an interest, to enter their work
in this multi-media exhibit. All entries must have been produced since
July, 1978, and not previously
exhibited in this particular July 4th
River R~reation Festival Exhibit.
Artists may register as professiona1

or as amateur. The professional
category includes those who have
earned their living through their art
and those actively selling their work ·
and receiving commissions
regularly. Amateur is divided into
age categories: adult, high school
and elementary. Artists will determine their own status.
A registration fee of ~ for adults
and $3 for children through age 16
will be assessed to all entrants who
are not members of the French Art
Colony. A 15 percent service fee is
retained for the sale of all work
resulting from this exhibit to help
defray expenses.
The deadline for delivery of works
of art has been set for 3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 24. Entry blanks are
available at PJ's or at Riverby, or
by phoning 446-1819.

Adult Bible Class meets
POMEROY - A lesson from
Proverbs 8 and 9 was conducted by
the Rev. Richard Thomas at the
recent meeting of the Adult Bible
Class of the St. Paul's United
~ethodist Church held Monday
rught at the church in Tuppers
Plains.
. The 20 attending had group
smgmg and a prayer to open the
meeting. Betty Chevalier was the
song director, and the Rev. Mr.
Thomas was a t the piano. Mrs .
Chevalier presided at the business
meeting, assisted by Mrs. Lorean
·
Gorrell, vice president.
Inspkational poems and readings
were giVen by Doris Koenig, Mrs.
Gorrell, Edith Harper, Thelma Henderson, Nina Robinson and the
minister. Mrs. Mildred B~ooks gave
the treasurer's report and the offering was received.
The meeting closed with the Friendship Circle. group singing r1
" Amazing Grace," and the benediction by the pastor. Refreshments

were served by Mrs. Chevalier and
Mrs. GorrelL Next meeting will be a
church-wide picnic on June 24 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stout
'
S.R. 248nearKeno,
Attending wer.e Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Gorrell, Linda Gorrell Mrs
Linda Damewood, Mrs. Edith Har:
per, Mrs. Edna Hannon, Mrs.
Mildred Brooks, Mrs. Betty
Chevalier, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Stout, Mrs. Shirley Harris, Mr . and
Mrs. Carl Barnhill, Mrs. Thelma
Henderson, and the Rev. Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas.

In 1639, Jeremiah Harrocks first
observed the transit of·Venus across
the sun.

VOTE
REPUBLICAN JUNE 3

Shari Colmer

Rebecca Brown

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Colmer, Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Shari
Lynn, to Michael David Hindy, son
of Patricia Hindy, Middleport, and
DavidHindy, Middleport.
The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate
of ~eigs High School. Her fiance 1s
emplayed at the Royal Crown Bot·
Uing, Middleport. A June wedding is
being planned.

ELECT

Fry-Ball

MELVIN R. HALLEY
FOR
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
HONEST, FAIR &amp; RELIABLE
Pd. Pol. Ad \I.

VOTE EXPERIENCE AND TRAINING

[!] JOHN HEISKELL
REPUBLICAN
FOR
SHERIFF
EXPERIENCE .- PATROLMAN WITH GAUIPOLIS
POLICE DEPT.
INSPECTOR/TRAINER WITH OHIO ALCOHOL
TRAINING UNIT
GOVERNOR'S REPRESENTATIVE TO ALCOHOL SAFffi
ACTION PROJECT WITH THE CINCINNATI POUCE
DEPT.
TRAINING -. OHIO STATE HIGHWAY PATROL
POLICE SCHOOL

PROLIFIC WRITERS
According to Gernumy 's Muni ch

Inst&lt;tute for Social Statistics, the
Frr n&lt;·h arr the most prolific writers

Tame/a Snider

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
C. Brown of Bidwell and Mr. and
Mrs . Harley R. Wells, Sr. of Crown
City are proud to announce the
engagement and approaching
mamaee of their children. Rebecca
Ann Brown and Harley Reed Wells
!Jr.
'

POMEROY - Mrs. Allah A.
Snider, Route 1, Hebron, Is announcing the engagement and ap·
proachin g marriag e of her
daughter, Tamela Sue, to John J.
Blake, son of Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Blake, Route 2, Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a 1977 graduate
of Lakewood High School, Hebron,
and is presently attending the Central Ohio Technical College's School
of Nursing, Newark .
Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of
Meigs High School and a 1978
graduate of the Ohio Institute of
·Technology, Colwnbus. He is em·
ployed at the Mountaineer Power
Plant as a control technician. A June
28 wedding is being planned.

Miss Brown is a 1979 graduate of
North Gallia High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center. She is
employed with the 0. 0. Mcintyre
Park District.
Wells is a 1972 graduate of Hannan
Trace High SchooL He is employed
at Federal MoguL
The wedding will be an event of
July 19 at 6 p.m. at the Gallipolis
Christian Church, State Route 588 .
Gallipolis. The custom of open chur:
ch will .be observed.
.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel Fry of 8 Cole St., Pomeroy,
are announcmg the engagement and
approaching marriage r1 their
daughter, Becki, to David Ball, son
r1 Mr. and Mrs. Garol Ball, Racine.
The open-church wedding will
take place at 1:30 p.m. on June H at
the Racine Baptist Church. The Rev. ·
Don Walker will perform the
ceremony.
Miss Rita Bailey will be the maid
r1 honor, and Larry Ball will be best
mali. Organist will be Mrs. Marilyn
Wilcox, and hostesses for a reception to follow the wedding will be
Cindy Roush, Pam Diddle, and
Pauline WoUe.
The bride-elect is a 1978 graduate
o1. Meiga High School and is cashier
\
at Jones Boys in Pomeroy. Her fiance is a· 1978 graduate of Southern
THE ANGELAIRES will be singing at the Homecoming at
High School and is employed at
Fellowship Chapel, Vinton, at 9:30a.m. and I p.m. Sunday, June L The
Dravo.
public is invited. The Angelaires Gospel Team, Lancaster, have been
Following their wedding the
singing for 15 years. They started as a trio singing in their own church.
couple will reside in Middleport.
The present group consists of Naomi Cununans, Marilyn Thacker, Da ve
Hugh~s. Dave Jackson, and Rosemary and Tom Dupler.

tJ,,,,..
WINDOW

AIR-CONDITIONERS
6,000 . 24,000 BTU.

10 %
ABOVE
OUR
COST

On Models
In Stock

,4m,.,,..,

FREEZERS

CHEST AND UPRIGHT
0 I .OFF
/0 LIST PRICE

15

On Models
In Stock

REFRIGERATORS RANGES·
COOK TOPS
RADARANGES . ALL REDUCED!

THE
WILL BE DEMONSTRATEO FROM 4:00 · 9:00

Sen. Oakley Collins,

Sentinel Social Calendar
SUNDAY
REV!V AL at Trinity Christian
Assembly Church, Coolville, now
through June 8 with evangelist
Harry Wingler. Pastor Gilbert Spencer invites the ' public to attend.
There will be special singing.
MONDAY
BIBLE SCHOOL at Letart Falls
Elementary Monday through Friday
9 to 11 daily. Children age three to
elementary grades welcome .
Refreshments each day. Mrs. Eileen
Buck, director. Sponsored by East
Letart, Apple Grove and Letart
Falls United Methodist Churches .
MEIGS FAIR Board meeting, 8
p.m. Monday at secretary's office on
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
EJGIIT and 40, Monday evening,
7:30 p.m. at hqrne of Veda Davis,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE WILL BE RED
TAGGED AND REDUCED FO.R BIG SAVINGS.
THURSDAY • JUNE 5th • 9:00 A.M. • 9:00 P.M.

Rio musicians coming

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club, 7:30
p.m. home of Mrs. Carl Horky .
Walking tour of Strauss 's rose garden . Members Middleport Amateur
Gardeners to he guests.

TUESDAY
SUTI'ON TOWNSffiP Trustees, 8
p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse Muni cipal
Building.
SOUP DINNER and supper, 11 :30
a .m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday at Racine
Wesleyan Church, for carry out orders, take containers.
ELECTION DAY lunches at
Forest Run United Methodist Church Tuesday by church women begin ning at 9 a.m. Tuesday.

GALUPOUS - Sen. Oakley
Coll ins and Merlyn Ross's Rio Grande College-Community College
musicians will share the platform at
noon next Thursday m the college
dini n~ hall when the Gallia County
Retired Teachers Association holds
its regular luncheon meeting .
The announcement was made by
D. Lester Davis, the association
president, who said that Marguerite
Hineman , program cha irman,
would introduce hoth the veteran
state legislator and the students.
Senator Collins will discuss the
status of legislation which relates to
retired teachers.

CABINET SALE
1 DAY ONLY • THURSDAY JUNE 5th.

40

0/0
/C

OFF LIST
PRICE

Riviera Cabinet

PLATINUM
Platinum is added to lower-grade
fuel to produce high-octane gasoline.

15 STYLES
9 STAINS

~:.=--=--=--=--=--=--_--:_-- -_-:_-iiiii-- -----......- _-_-_-.,_-.::-.::--::--::--::--::;-1
.
..
•' GET YOUR MONEY IN THE GOING RATE

of love letters iii the world. The
English are second.

sro
and Mike Hindy

FIRST OBSERVER

,J:j

0/

35 /0

OFF LIST
PRICE

Kemper Cabinets

9 STYLES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM

.,

.' ,
''
&lt;,

•~
..,'
~

.
••
••
..
~.1

'.
'

~

•"
•'

\

.'

''

•

·There are big things going on ;; the money market. Now,
we can help you be part of them.
Every week, the U.S. Treasury announces the .!liverage
auction discount rate being paid on 6·month Treasury
Bll.ls. The figure is arrived at through the weekly money

Regular
$119.95

Earning this ki,nd of interest used to mean tying your
money up from one to even eight years .
No longer. Our 6-month certificate of deposit gets yoo in
and out, in only she months.
'

The now 6·inonth CD will really get your money going.
And your rnterest rate is guaranteed.
Whatever the 6-month Treasury Bill auction rate -is the
week you purchase your certificate of depasit, that's the
Interest rate you are ou.aranteed for Its maturity .

----

KITCHENAID
KDS-19 SUPERBA
DISHWASHERS
Regular 1625 .95

S spacious storage areas
• sturdy construction •
White baked enamel
finish.

The actual return to Investors on Treasury Bills' is higher
th~n the discount rate offered.

..· BETrER BANKING. SERVICE, lHAfS THE CENTRAL IDEA

C£ ~E CEN_
TRAL .TRUST COMPANY, "•~
4 CONVENIENT UlCATIONS

Concerned about
heat 1ng costs? Black
Bart could be your
solution,

WOOD
BURNING
. .
STOVES!

Not an ordinary wood
heat1ng stove A remarkabl e breakthiough tn
engineering of a wood
heattng system.
Un1Queveots. walls
and controls mean Black
Bart gets an the heat

'

vt~lue oiWOOd

Arldgets
1tall out to you FQ( hours
and hours on a handful
of WOOd. Bart costs less

(ll "a15"..t " t

DELUXE UTILITY
PANTRY

Federal regulations require a substantial interest penillty

SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION

~~

Regular 1 489.~· 5

'

--

for premature withdrawal of certificate funds.

Mt:MII~H:t ot~

KITCHENAID .
TRASH COMPACTORS

~

INTRODUCING
OUR NEW LIN
BLACK BART

Only· Thursday June Sth

1

Full width top shell • clothes
hanging bar • Salin brown
enamel finish.

marKet auction .

t.:c-.Iu:.

RED TAG SALE

.
WARDROBE CLOSET
W/ EASY GLIDE DOORS

DELUXE WARDROBE
CLOSET

l .DAYONLY

Large storage capacity
2 top shelves • 2 locks •
clothes hanging bar •
satin brown baked
enamel finish .

1 DAY ONLY

KltchenAid
Because It's ...n•r+h

SINGLE DOOR
PANTRY
Sp~ce saver utility In whtto.

· KltchenAid.

Appliances

RED TAGGED AND REDUCED!
ERS • COMPACTORS • HOl WATER DISPENSERS

B
'

.
;I

0~

AI

fl~

SLIK:i lt( Al

. Big Savings .
On Heating Costs!

,$62995
Black

HEATING' .,ISYiftll

�(
84-TbeSunday Times-Sentinel, S_unday, June 1, 1960

B+-The S~day Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1980

Slinderella
classes begin ...

Community Corner

··...
...
..,.... Mitchells return from England ·
•
:.:.

Delbert and Kathryn Mitchell
have returned after' three weeks in
; :: England with their son, Sgt. Edward Mitchell and his wife Kim a
native of Frome, England, wh~m
' · they had never met.
The two were met at the Garwick
Airport by Eddie and Kim and spent
much of their time there touring
about. They visited cathedrals
casUes and museums and were mosi
impressed with the War Musewn of
England at Duxford and the
.•
American Cemetery at Cambridge
where thousands are buried and
statues represent each branch of the
service.
.. . It was a delightful trip for the
couple whose son is in electronics at
Midenhall Base and will be there for
'
about three years.

'

'

s.

...

...
··-

....

.

~

,.

..
r•

••
,..
~­

_,.

Dorothy Douglas of Lincoln
Heights recently underwent eye
surgery at University Hospital in
Colwnbus and news is good. Her
doctor expects that she will be able
to see as well as ever once the
healing is completed. Now, that's
·
goodnews!
From rummage sales to yard
sales, garage sales, next to new

..

It's the latter that the
land
Methodist Women of the r
.
Church are planning for ue
The "odds and ends" will be
displayed on the porch of Mrs. Edith
Williamson (Salem St., just across
the street from banll) and the hours
arefronn9a .m. to5p.m.
Meigs County will again be served'
by the Appalachian Ohio Regional
Transit Association (AORTA) bus
line probably a week from now.
A schedule is being completed at
this time by the Meigs County Commissioners and the AORTA Board of
Trustees, and it will be publicized
through this newspaper in the hope
of improving ridership so that the
bus line can be continued on an indefinite basis.
While rising the bus will take
longer to get from Pomeroy to
Athens and back than driving your
own car, certainly the cost of
gasoline should encourage residents
tpgiveitatry.
Remember to get out and vote
Tuesday!

Cheshire-Kyger Elementary
has 6th grade recognition

.·•'

'.

,.
-.
~

CHESIDRE - Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary School held its sixth
grade Recognition and Promotion
~i-ght at 7:30p.m. on Thursday, May

Spires and Shellie Ward. SpellingBlondena Gilbert, Lori Thomas
Julie Spires, and Sbellie Ward. Pen:
manship - Carl Ward, Richie
Gilmore, and Lori Thomas .
Invocation was given by Teresa Academic Success - Shellie Ward.
Dray. Songs presented during the Enthusiasm Brian Peck.
program were under the direction of Homework - Roger Leach. CitizenMiss Suzy Reiser. Songs included ship (chosen by fourth, fifth, and six.
were "Changing, " by the sixth th grade teachers) - Julie Spires
grade students of Mrs. Shitley Doss and Richie Gilmore. &amp;ience- Julie
and Ms. Doris Fuller. " We're On Spires and Shellie Ward. Social
Our Way," and "Rainbow Con- Studies- Shellie Ward.
nection," were sung by the sixth
Class Will was read by Carl Ward,
grade classes, Ms. Roberta Zdep- Class Prophecy by Julie Spires, and
ski's fourth grade students Mis Future Plans by Shellie Ward.
Marilyn Reese's fifth grade 'class
Presentation of Class and Cerand Ms. Doris Fuller's fourth and
tifica!es was by Uoyd L. Myers,
th grade students. Fourth and fifth pnnc1pal at Cheshire-Kyger. Mr.
grade students who participated Myers also presented each student
were: Shelly Aeiker, Amy Brown, with a carnation. Sixth grade
Tommy Buttrick, Mike Ferrell
students of Mrs. Shirley Doss are
Mickey Gilbert, Cheryl Little, Vicki Michael Todd Aeiker, Margaret
Little, Kelly Roush, Missy Snyder Brister, Robert Collins, Teresa
and Janet Stiltner.
Dray, Blondena Gilbert, Richard
Ms. Jyl Zerkle presented Reading Gilmore, Roger Leach, Mary Beth
Awards to Richie Gilmore, Roger Nelson, Brian Peck, Charles School·
Leach, and Becky White.
craft, Julie Spires, Lori Thomas,
..
Mrs. Doss presented Lori Thomas
Carl Ward, Michelle Ward, Rebecca
: : Julie Spires, and Carl Ward with White, Dawn Wright, and Larry
• Perfect Attendance Awards.
Young. Ms. Doris Fuller's sixth
· • Those receiving special awards
grade students are Sherry Buttrick,
• for being on the Honor Roll (all
Mickey Schartiger, and Jeff Sheets.
year) were Shellie Ward, student of
Julie Spires presented a ptaque to
' Mrs. Doss; and Sherry Buttrick,
Mrs. Doss from all her students. A
student of Ms. Fuller.
certilicate was presented to Ellie
· · Other special awards presented
Wright, room mother, from the sixth
during the program were: Honor grade students of Mrs. Doss.
Roll - (last six weekss), Shellie
Following the presentation,
Ward and Julie Spires. . Most Imrefreshments were served in the
: proved Student (past six weeks),
cafeteria by Mary Bradbury, Betty
Buddy Nelson. Awards presented for
Edwards, Brenda Johnson, and
• " A" in any subject for entire school
Janet Thomas. Cake was baked and
·: year were as follows : Math - Lori
decorated by Ellie Wright. The
: Thomas and Julie Spires. Reading Cheshire-Kyger PTA furnished all
• Shellie Ward. Language - Julie
refreshments.

fif:

.

ORTA to meet

..

GAlLIPOLIS - The Gallia CountiM: Ohio Retired
• Teachers' AssociatiOn will meet at
~· the Rio Grande cafeteria on Thursday, June 5, at 12 noon.
Music will be furnished by the Rio
~- ty Chapter of

Grande Music Department.
State Senator Oakley Collins will
speak on legislation of interest to
retired teachers. For niore details,
consult the annual bulletin. Guests
are welcome.

Area couples announce engagements

POMEROY - Slenderella c~
will begin at Chester next week with
sessions scheduled for 7:30 p.m , at
the fire house, Mrs. Jo Ani)
Newsome, lecturer, announced. '..
At the Mason class Monday nJiht,
Barb Varian and Sarah Johnsonjied
for losing the most weight with Deb&lt;
bie Murphy as runner-up. Darlene
Cunningham lost the most weight in
the Tuesday morning class, and
there was a t1e for numer-up Qetween Candy Van Meter and Nita
Conde. At the Middleport class
Peggy Lewis lost the most weig!lt:
and Isabelle Lewis and Juantta
Sayre tied for runner-up. The Middleport class will be held on Wednesday instead of Tuesday next
week due to the election.

sales, and now odds and en

AN ENSEMBLE from Pensacola Christian Colle~e
will present a progriun of sacred music on June 3 at
7:30p.m. at Calvary Bible Church . The Ensemble consists of five young people and one faculty represen·
tative. The program will feature sacred music, speech
and a multi-media presentation about the Florida ·
college. Th~ members of the Ensemble are Chris

Bowman, Ohio; Bob Magee, Indiana; David Potter
Michigan; Gary Walls, Florida; and Scott Gentry:
Flonda. The facijlty representative will provide information about the ~ollege . There is no admission charge
for this program. The church is located midway between Chester and Flatwoods Road on County Road 25
near Five Points.

fun~

24 absolute
deadline for FA C
july 4th exhibit
Although the Annual River
Recreation Festival Exhibit, spon·
sored by the French Art Colony a nd
held on the Fourth of July each year
in the City Park is a full month
away , the time passes very quickly,
and the deadline to have entries to
the French Art Colony is just three
weeks away . At 3 o'clock on Tuesday
afternoon, June 24, is the absolute
deadline to deliver any works of art
to Riverby to be catalogued and
judged for the July show.
Artists are urged from not only
throughout the inunediate tri-state
area, but from any location who
have an interest, to enter their work
in this multi-media exhibit. All entries must have been produced since
July, 1978, and not previously
exhibited in this particular July 4th
River R~reation Festival Exhibit.
Artists may register as professiona1

or as amateur. The professional
category includes those who have
earned their living through their art
and those actively selling their work ·
and receiving commissions
regularly. Amateur is divided into
age categories: adult, high school
and elementary. Artists will determine their own status.
A registration fee of ~ for adults
and $3 for children through age 16
will be assessed to all entrants who
are not members of the French Art
Colony. A 15 percent service fee is
retained for the sale of all work
resulting from this exhibit to help
defray expenses.
The deadline for delivery of works
of art has been set for 3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 24. Entry blanks are
available at PJ's or at Riverby, or
by phoning 446-1819.

Adult Bible Class meets
POMEROY - A lesson from
Proverbs 8 and 9 was conducted by
the Rev. Richard Thomas at the
recent meeting of the Adult Bible
Class of the St. Paul's United
~ethodist Church held Monday
rught at the church in Tuppers
Plains.
. The 20 attending had group
smgmg and a prayer to open the
meeting. Betty Chevalier was the
song director, and the Rev. Mr.
Thomas was a t the piano. Mrs .
Chevalier presided at the business
meeting, assisted by Mrs. Lorean
·
Gorrell, vice president.
Inspkational poems and readings
were giVen by Doris Koenig, Mrs.
Gorrell, Edith Harper, Thelma Henderson, Nina Robinson and the
minister. Mrs. Mildred B~ooks gave
the treasurer's report and the offering was received.
The meeting closed with the Friendship Circle. group singing r1
" Amazing Grace," and the benediction by the pastor. Refreshments

were served by Mrs. Chevalier and
Mrs. GorrelL Next meeting will be a
church-wide picnic on June 24 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stout
'
S.R. 248nearKeno,
Attending wer.e Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Gorrell, Linda Gorrell Mrs
Linda Damewood, Mrs. Edith Har:
per, Mrs. Edna Hannon, Mrs.
Mildred Brooks, Mrs. Betty
Chevalier, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Stout, Mrs. Shirley Harris, Mr . and
Mrs. Carl Barnhill, Mrs. Thelma
Henderson, and the Rev. Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas.

In 1639, Jeremiah Harrocks first
observed the transit of·Venus across
the sun.

VOTE
REPUBLICAN JUNE 3

Shari Colmer

Rebecca Brown

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs . Jerry
Colmer, Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Shari
Lynn, to Michael David Hindy, son
of Patricia Hindy, Middleport, and
DavidHindy, Middleport.
The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate
of ~eigs High School. Her fiance 1s
emplayed at the Royal Crown Bot·
Uing, Middleport. A June wedding is
being planned.

ELECT

Fry-Ball

MELVIN R. HALLEY
FOR
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
HONEST, FAIR &amp; RELIABLE
Pd. Pol. Ad \I.

VOTE EXPERIENCE AND TRAINING

[!] JOHN HEISKELL
REPUBLICAN
FOR
SHERIFF
EXPERIENCE .- PATROLMAN WITH GAUIPOLIS
POLICE DEPT.
INSPECTOR/TRAINER WITH OHIO ALCOHOL
TRAINING UNIT
GOVERNOR'S REPRESENTATIVE TO ALCOHOL SAFffi
ACTION PROJECT WITH THE CINCINNATI POUCE
DEPT.
TRAINING -. OHIO STATE HIGHWAY PATROL
POLICE SCHOOL

PROLIFIC WRITERS
According to Gernumy 's Muni ch

Inst&lt;tute for Social Statistics, the
Frr n&lt;·h arr the most prolific writers

Tame/a Snider

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
C. Brown of Bidwell and Mr. and
Mrs . Harley R. Wells, Sr. of Crown
City are proud to announce the
engagement and approaching
mamaee of their children. Rebecca
Ann Brown and Harley Reed Wells
!Jr.
'

POMEROY - Mrs. Allah A.
Snider, Route 1, Hebron, Is announcing the engagement and ap·
proachin g marriag e of her
daughter, Tamela Sue, to John J.
Blake, son of Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Blake, Route 2, Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a 1977 graduate
of Lakewood High School, Hebron,
and is presently attending the Central Ohio Technical College's School
of Nursing, Newark .
Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of
Meigs High School and a 1978
graduate of the Ohio Institute of
·Technology, Colwnbus. He is em·
ployed at the Mountaineer Power
Plant as a control technician. A June
28 wedding is being planned.

Miss Brown is a 1979 graduate of
North Gallia High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center. She is
employed with the 0. 0. Mcintyre
Park District.
Wells is a 1972 graduate of Hannan
Trace High SchooL He is employed
at Federal MoguL
The wedding will be an event of
July 19 at 6 p.m. at the Gallipolis
Christian Church, State Route 588 .
Gallipolis. The custom of open chur:
ch will .be observed.
.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel Fry of 8 Cole St., Pomeroy,
are announcmg the engagement and
approaching marriage r1 their
daughter, Becki, to David Ball, son
r1 Mr. and Mrs. Garol Ball, Racine.
The open-church wedding will
take place at 1:30 p.m. on June H at
the Racine Baptist Church. The Rev. ·
Don Walker will perform the
ceremony.
Miss Rita Bailey will be the maid
r1 honor, and Larry Ball will be best
mali. Organist will be Mrs. Marilyn
Wilcox, and hostesses for a reception to follow the wedding will be
Cindy Roush, Pam Diddle, and
Pauline WoUe.
The bride-elect is a 1978 graduate
o1. Meiga High School and is cashier
\
at Jones Boys in Pomeroy. Her fiance is a· 1978 graduate of Southern
THE ANGELAIRES will be singing at the Homecoming at
High School and is employed at
Fellowship Chapel, Vinton, at 9:30a.m. and I p.m. Sunday, June L The
Dravo.
public is invited. The Angelaires Gospel Team, Lancaster, have been
Following their wedding the
singing for 15 years. They started as a trio singing in their own church.
couple will reside in Middleport.
The present group consists of Naomi Cununans, Marilyn Thacker, Da ve
Hugh~s. Dave Jackson, and Rosemary and Tom Dupler.

tJ,,,,..
WINDOW

AIR-CONDITIONERS
6,000 . 24,000 BTU.

10 %
ABOVE
OUR
COST

On Models
In Stock

,4m,.,,..,

FREEZERS

CHEST AND UPRIGHT
0 I .OFF
/0 LIST PRICE

15

On Models
In Stock

REFRIGERATORS RANGES·
COOK TOPS
RADARANGES . ALL REDUCED!

THE
WILL BE DEMONSTRATEO FROM 4:00 · 9:00

Sen. Oakley Collins,

Sentinel Social Calendar
SUNDAY
REV!V AL at Trinity Christian
Assembly Church, Coolville, now
through June 8 with evangelist
Harry Wingler. Pastor Gilbert Spencer invites the ' public to attend.
There will be special singing.
MONDAY
BIBLE SCHOOL at Letart Falls
Elementary Monday through Friday
9 to 11 daily. Children age three to
elementary grades welcome .
Refreshments each day. Mrs. Eileen
Buck, director. Sponsored by East
Letart, Apple Grove and Letart
Falls United Methodist Churches .
MEIGS FAIR Board meeting, 8
p.m. Monday at secretary's office on
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
EJGIIT and 40, Monday evening,
7:30 p.m. at hqrne of Veda Davis,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE WILL BE RED
TAGGED AND REDUCED FO.R BIG SAVINGS.
THURSDAY • JUNE 5th • 9:00 A.M. • 9:00 P.M.

Rio musicians coming

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club, 7:30
p.m. home of Mrs. Carl Horky .
Walking tour of Strauss 's rose garden . Members Middleport Amateur
Gardeners to he guests.

TUESDAY
SUTI'ON TOWNSffiP Trustees, 8
p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse Muni cipal
Building.
SOUP DINNER and supper, 11 :30
a .m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday at Racine
Wesleyan Church, for carry out orders, take containers.
ELECTION DAY lunches at
Forest Run United Methodist Church Tuesday by church women begin ning at 9 a.m. Tuesday.

GALUPOUS - Sen. Oakley
Coll ins and Merlyn Ross's Rio Grande College-Community College
musicians will share the platform at
noon next Thursday m the college
dini n~ hall when the Gallia County
Retired Teachers Association holds
its regular luncheon meeting .
The announcement was made by
D. Lester Davis, the association
president, who said that Marguerite
Hineman , program cha irman,
would introduce hoth the veteran
state legislator and the students.
Senator Collins will discuss the
status of legislation which relates to
retired teachers.

CABINET SALE
1 DAY ONLY • THURSDAY JUNE 5th.

40

0/0
/C

OFF LIST
PRICE

Riviera Cabinet

PLATINUM
Platinum is added to lower-grade
fuel to produce high-octane gasoline.

15 STYLES
9 STAINS

~:.=--=--=--=--=--=--_--:_-- -_-:_-iiiii-- -----......- _-_-_-.,_-.::-.::--::--::--::--::;-1
.
..
•' GET YOUR MONEY IN THE GOING RATE

of love letters iii the world. The
English are second.

sro
and Mike Hindy

FIRST OBSERVER

,J:j

0/

35 /0

OFF LIST
PRICE

Kemper Cabinets

9 STYLES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM

.,

.' ,
''
&lt;,

•~
..,'
~

.
••
••
..
~.1

'.
'

~

•"
•'

\

.'

''

•

·There are big things going on ;; the money market. Now,
we can help you be part of them.
Every week, the U.S. Treasury announces the .!liverage
auction discount rate being paid on 6·month Treasury
Bll.ls. The figure is arrived at through the weekly money

Regular
$119.95

Earning this ki,nd of interest used to mean tying your
money up from one to even eight years .
No longer. Our 6-month certificate of deposit gets yoo in
and out, in only she months.
'

The now 6·inonth CD will really get your money going.
And your rnterest rate is guaranteed.
Whatever the 6-month Treasury Bill auction rate -is the
week you purchase your certificate of depasit, that's the
Interest rate you are ou.aranteed for Its maturity .

----

KITCHENAID
KDS-19 SUPERBA
DISHWASHERS
Regular 1625 .95

S spacious storage areas
• sturdy construction •
White baked enamel
finish.

The actual return to Investors on Treasury Bills' is higher
th~n the discount rate offered.

..· BETrER BANKING. SERVICE, lHAfS THE CENTRAL IDEA

C£ ~E CEN_
TRAL .TRUST COMPANY, "•~
4 CONVENIENT UlCATIONS

Concerned about
heat 1ng costs? Black
Bart could be your
solution,

WOOD
BURNING
. .
STOVES!

Not an ordinary wood
heat1ng stove A remarkabl e breakthiough tn
engineering of a wood
heattng system.
Un1Queveots. walls
and controls mean Black
Bart gets an the heat

'

vt~lue oiWOOd

Arldgets
1tall out to you FQ( hours
and hours on a handful
of WOOd. Bart costs less

(ll "a15"..t " t

DELUXE UTILITY
PANTRY

Federal regulations require a substantial interest penillty

SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION

~~

Regular 1 489.~· 5

'

--

for premature withdrawal of certificate funds.

Mt:MII~H:t ot~

KITCHENAID .
TRASH COMPACTORS

~

INTRODUCING
OUR NEW LIN
BLACK BART

Only· Thursday June Sth

1

Full width top shell • clothes
hanging bar • Salin brown
enamel finish.

marKet auction .

t.:c-.Iu:.

RED TAG SALE

.
WARDROBE CLOSET
W/ EASY GLIDE DOORS

DELUXE WARDROBE
CLOSET

l .DAYONLY

Large storage capacity
2 top shelves • 2 locks •
clothes hanging bar •
satin brown baked
enamel finish .

1 DAY ONLY

KltchenAid
Because It's ...n•r+h

SINGLE DOOR
PANTRY
Sp~ce saver utility In whtto.

· KltchenAid.

Appliances

RED TAGGED AND REDUCED!
ERS • COMPACTORS • HOl WATER DISPENSERS

B
'

.
;I

0~

AI

fl~

SLIK:i lt( Al

. Big Savings .
On Heating Costs!

,$62995
Black

HEATING' .,ISYiftll

�B-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, J une I, 1980

'Womensart '79' FAG
june cultural fare june

Katie 's Korner
That old gang of mine. . .
KATIE CROW

Tlmea-SenUoelstaff writer
Gee, but it was good to see that old
gang of mine.
On SatUrday evening, May 24, the
class of 1940 had a get-together that
will be long remembered.
Walter Grue$er conunented that
he hoped the next 40 years are as
good as the past 40.
To start the evening off we met at
the lovely home of Mary and Torn
8owen. What gracious hosts those
two are.
From there we went to the dinner
at the Meigs High School cafeteria
and I must say had a delicious dinner. It was great to see so many old
friends.
Following the dinner we were in·
vite(J to the attractive borne of Mary
and Walter Grueser.
As always Mary and Walter
spread out the red carpet. There was
an abundance of delicious food and a
cake, compliments of Joan Mescher,
purple and white, our old alma
mater colors, decorated with a boy
and girl in cap and gown. Not only
was it attractively decorated but it
was very, very good.
Those attending the Pomeroy
Alumni dinner from the class of 1940
were Marie Carr Williams, Walter
Grueser, Mary Karr Bowen, Floyd
Mescher, Mary Goodwin Bartels,
Harold Heilman, Virgil King, An·
nabel Lewis Houdashelt, Ada Warner Nease, Delmar Hanun, Mary
Yost Hanun, John Mitch, Mae, Burton Reinhart, and me.
It was a great evening - it's a
shame that people wait 40 years to
enjoy the company of old friends.
Marjorie Manuel, Syracuse, ls
retiring as technician of vision and
hearing in the Meigs County Schools
after eight years of service.
The Meigs County Health Depart·
ment honored her with a dinner and
presented her several gifts.
Attending were Frank Petrie,
Mary Cleek, Opal Greuser, Carl
Tannehill, Debby Levalley, Pearl

Glad to hear that new bulbs have
been placed on the cross located on
the Shuster property on Lincoln Hill.
Mary Chancey celebrated her birthday Friday. She was presented a
cake and gift by close friends.
Mary is 25 and holding ... Fred
Crow, Pomeroy attorney, celebrated
his birthday Saturday. He is not
telling his age. Best wishes to you
both.
I wiU have the recipe for the
Mississippi Mud cake for the lady
who called next week and I am
trying to locate the recipe for a
sauer-kraut cake.
Anyone having a recipe for a
sauer-kraut cake please let me
know. Thanks.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Robinson

Tammy Scott weds in
Waimae Falls, Hawaii
WAIMAE FALlS, Hawaii - RM3
Tanuny Elizabeth Scott became the
bride of RichardT. Robinson, Jr. on
Feb. 24 at 2:30 p.m. in Waimae Falls
Park, Hawaii, the Bishop W. H.
.Reed officiating.
The couple's parents are Mr. and

wish to breastfeed their babies wiU
find encouragement and in·
fonnation at the second meeting of
the La Leche League of Point

Monday, June 2 - Carpenter,
Laura 's Store, 2-2:30 p.m.; Dexter,
Church, 3-3 :30; Langsville, Small's
Grocery, 3:4&gt;4 :10; Danville, Church, 4:41h5:05; Rutland, Pomeroy
National Bank, 5:~:30 (short fihn
at 6); Rutland, Depot Street, 6:357:20 (short fiiln at 7) ; Bradbury,
Red Bam, 7:36-3.
Tuesday, June 3 - Baum Ad·
dition, 3:W.3:50; Reedsville, Reed's
Store, ,4:30-5:45 (short fUm at 6:30) ;
Rock Springs, 'Church, 7:35-8.
Thursday, June 5- Coolville, Post
Office, 9:45-10:15 a.m.; Arcadia
Nursing Home, 10:36-11; Tuppers
Plains, Lodwick's Market, 11 :30
a.m.-12 noon; ~nior Citizens Center, 12:50-1 :20 p.m.; Mulberry
Heights lnfinnary, 1:25-2:10; Antiquity, 2:50-3:15; Letart Falls, Ef·
fie's Restaurant, 3:30-4; Racine,
Home National Bank, 4:30-5 :15
(short film at 5); Racine, Wagner's
Hardware, 5:1!HI (short film at
5:45); Syracuse, Pool, 6:15-7:30
(shortfllmat7) .
~
Drop by your nearut bookmobile
stop this sununer. For the kids therels Sununer Reading Club fun,
games, puzzles and prizes.
For everybody - free en·
tertairunent and information, in·
~ludlng paperbacks, 45 and LP
records, magazines, large-print
• books, and hQw·to-do-it help for summer projects.

COMPLETES COURSE
Navy Boiler Technician Fireman
Apprentice Michael K. Musser, son
of Judy Musser of Route 4, Pomeroy,
has completed the Basic Boiler
Technician Course.
During the course at the Naval
Training Center, Great Lakes,
students received instruction in the
use of hand tools, the operation and
maintenance of shipboard pumps,
and the operation of boilers and
other engineering machinery. In addition, they were introduced to the
types of engineering duty watches
that Boiler Technicians stand
aboard ships.
A 19'/9 graduate of Meigs High
School, Roc;k Springs, Ohio, he
joi~ed the Navy in September 1979.

Lt. Shaefer &amp; wife

WE CLEAN UPHOLSTERY
1
'

Regardless of claims, only Steamway is endorsed by all carpet
manufacturers . Only Steam way guarantees results or no charge.
Because of high gas prices we must charge $.50 a mile for anything
over 3 miles.

SMELTZER'S STEAMWAY
614-446-2096 '

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
GALUPOUS - Activities for
the Senior Citizens Center for this
week are :
Monday, June 2- Chorus, 1·3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 3- S.T.O.P. Class,
10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:15
a.m.; Macrame Class, 1-3 p.m. ;
Bible Study, 1-3.
Wednesday, June 4- Vinton l;iible

0 "'' JIOOCI '"""'G" Jvly 1

'""'" s....u., L•••

Species" was published in~859.

Crown City, I p.m.; Card Games, 13; World Religion Class, I p.m.
Thursday, June 5 - Ceramic
Class, 12 :30 p.m.; Blood Pressure

BORN fN 1864
Artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
ws born in 186._

J'

J

. A.NOY.I:t.IR UN IQUI AAA MIMBIRStUP BINI_,IT
MORE THAN 900 AAA OFFICES THROUGHOUT THE U.S. I CANADA:
With AAA you h..e friends you can call on wherever you got Your AAA
membership entitles you to all club service• anywharo In the country·
no other motoring organization can give personal 1arvlce almost

~nywhertl

lnclud•lf'tll •d lor PREE All••· FI•MW•I Dun.,. onlyl11.10 .,., yur.

I100l\ Your Personal Automobile Cl.u b
'(~:~;)'

J

~,
·
·

·j

GalliPOlis, Ohio
For membership information call or visit:
P~. 446·0699
VA"--'&lt;!....IA'b..J «t.•A-.,'!.iAta.,!t,t..JtA'-'o.d"•'-'UA'-1'

Check,l
Friday,:l5-1:45.
June 6- Art Class, 12:36-3 11-----:;;;;::;::;:;:;;:;:;;:;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;::;:;::::;;,:::::;;;:;::;;:;::;;;;;;;;;,:---p.m.; Advisory Council, I p.m.;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Progrm will
serve the following menus:
Monday - Sloppy Joe, bun, buttered beets, tossed salad/dressing,
butter, pear/peanut butter, mill&lt;.
Tuesday - Pork chop, sweet
potatoes, broccoli, bread, butter,
butterscotch pudding, milk.
Wednesday - Salisbury steak,
noodles, peas, bread, butter, fruit,
mill&lt;.
Thursday - Baked chicken,
mashed potatoes, lettuce and
dressing, bread, butter, ice cream,
milk.
Friday - Liver/onions, carrots,
green beans, bread, butter, apple
cobbler, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal. "Services rendered on a
I '
' /"
non~iscriminatory basis."
I
,
. ..
I
t, ,~ /

/ ...-;

z~

&lt;''

Shape Up!
2 FOR J
SPECI A~
ONE MONTH MEMBERSHIP

•2 5

Offer Ends June 7th

THE FITNESS CENTER

/

I

I
'
_:

#'.:&lt;/ '.

it's a'"'sundress spectacular!

· this May, offered prizes that were
donated by ~rea businesses.
Tom Grube, Gallipolis, won the
·first prize of $15 for his photo of a
. child playing with two goats. A. first
prize of $15 was also won by Hazel
Camden, Gallipolis, for her picture
of children.
A second prize of a case of Coca
Cola was won by Larry Kent of
Gallipolis. Third prize, a handbag,
was won by Teresa Reynolds of
Gallipolis.
In the children's division, a first
prize of $10 was won by Debbie Boyle
of Bidwell for her picture of two
'Children playing chess. Second prize
was a beanbag chair. It went to
Ellen Eggleton of Bidwell. Janice
McMillen of Bidwell won a third
prize of $2 gift certificate.
In the adult division, prizes of a
)&gt;ook and a $2 gift certificate went to
Bonnie Hunt of Rio Grande, Albert
Holt of Gallipolis and Cathy Chapman of Rio Grande. Earl Mayo, Sr.,
of Bidwell won a roll of film and a
gift certificate. Mels Pickens also
won a gift certificate.
The Community Mental Health
Center's Director, Bernard Niehm,

MASS RAID

A mass raid by U. S. Army Air
F orcc bombers wreaked severe
damage on Tokyo Nov. 24, 1944. The
first land-based attack on the
Japanese capital, the raid was launched from Saipan in the Marianas.
Despite the great distance to be
covered, each plane carried six tons
of bombs.

.v·

~UPER
Vli;E

,I
I I

I

1\

._,

I

I

••
I I

a

II
I I

•• ;

•

t

I
I

QUARTER SLICED

We Will Hire Gallla County
Personnel

PORK LOIN

PD . POL. ADV.

I

~-•:

I

a. •• ,

••••

#

\_

~

. . . .:

'

·-•

e

•o I
-...., Ji
1

_.

•••

&amp;:

~

I

'

lA_
I\

.

\

·-·

\

•

I
I
I

•••

~-

I

I
I

1

L....
II

••• .:
:. •••
• • .1

JUNE
SALE

VALUES TO 795
1

RECLINERS
PRICED
FROM

'99 '399
TO

O~n

Stock

FRENCH PROVINCIAL WHITE &amp; GOLD
BEDROOM PIECES
CHESTS, DRESSERS,
NIGHTSTANDS, &amp; BEDS.
Buy Any 3 Pieces and Receive 10% Off
already Discounted Price.

BRASS PLATED

HEAD BOARDS
ANY STYLE- TWIN, FULL, QUEEN
OR KING

ONLY

'3900

CHOPPED SIRLOIN

FRESH LEAN
GROUND BEEF

$13~-

SUPERIOR
FRANKIES

EXTRA LEAN
GROUND CHUCK

12 oz.
PKG.

$1~90

SILVER BRIDGE

PlAZA

$16~.

ICEBERG

FRESH

HEAD LETTUCE

TOMATOES

59e

49e

.LB.

ROME BEAUTY

POTATOES
10 LB.
BAG

25% OFF

Reg. low Price

$129

2% MILK

SPECIAL JUNE SALE

GALLON PlASTIC

PRICES ON ALL

MATTRESS SETS

APPLES
3LB. $
09
BAG
HlllANOALE
GRADE A
EXTRA LARGE

EGGS
~~-65e

21 CUBIC FEET

REFRIGERATOR • FREEZE
Ot,!LY

8-16 OZ. BTLS.

'598

$ 1 29

-AIR CONDITIONERS - WASHERS - DRYERS - RANGES

MELODY MAID

VALLEY BELL

DEHUMIDIFIERS - FREEZERS - STEREO SETS -

CHOC. DRINK

ICE CREAM
HALF
$ 49

GALLON
PlASTIC

CA1SUP
24

13" COLOR

TELEVISION

JUNE SALE

'269

'109
'598

DELUXE

MICROWAVE OVEN
REG. 1649

'549

BEAUTIFUL

TABLE LAMPS

2

FOR

'79

oz.

BOTTLE

SALE
COM I IN AND SA VEf

7

GALLON
M
AUGRATIN OR SCALLOPED

POTATOES

5.5

9e

oz.

BOX

VlASIC KOSHER
DILl PICKLES

OPEN PIT
BAR-~ SAUCE
REG. or HOT-N-SPICY

32 oz.
JAR

e

18 oz.
BTl-

PLOCHMAN .SQUEEZE
BARREL

MUSTARD

IQl/2

EVERYTHING ON

$ 1 29

HEINZ

9e

oz.

BTL

PRINGLES
POTAl'O CHIPS
TWIN
PAK
r-· --

OXYDOL

SANK A

·DETERGENT

INSTANT COFFEE

L 49 oz.

co Ut!ctt a r' E-s: rl\1 ' 19 cotc.ots tn carefree l abncs

79e

FRESHEST PROi'JUC~ !1'1 TOWN

UNFINISHED FURNITURE - .END TABLES - AND MANY MORE ITEMS.

'

$19~B.

MAPLE BEDROOM
~· GROUPS

FLOOR COVERING - DINETTES - CHINA CABINETS -

.

USDA CHOICE
TOP SIRLOIN

$25~.

'498
OPEN STOCK

Quantity"

$} 1!.

HEAD

16 DIFFERENT STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

li m ~

STEAK

.

2 &amp;3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITES

446-9593,.

9-11 chops

- · ••I

e

0

PHONE

Prices Effective through Saturday, June 7, 1980

"I Will Be Firm and Fair"

~

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'We Resel'le tile Right to

······- ... ·- :-----,
•... ,..... r·- ··-I ..••..
···-:···~=··
....... ····' .... -----· .......-.... :.t.____...____ _
1

MARKET - OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.

ST~lt ;,

1

FROM

sev eral tr orn ob( lt11ge

JOHn

REPUBLICAN FOR
GALLIA COUNTY SHERIFF

BEDROOM SUITES

selec tio n so big 1n fash•on-rig htness. so l ttt le in

information.

DANIEL "TUCK" CARTER

A ANE SELECTION Of WOOD

The cool est notw ea th er buys you 'll see for

Anyone wantmg tu make the trip

r;:;;,::;;,::;;,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;::;;,::;;,::;;,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

FROM

·

with the semor citize ns may call
Mrs. Minnie McGrath at 742-3186 for

1

OLIVER CbOMWELL
English statesman Oliver Cromwell died in 1658.
LABOR DAY
Labor Day was first celebrated in
the United States Sept. 3, 1894.

will leave the Center at 6:30 a .m.
and seating IS $till availab le.

CHANGE
FOR GALLIA COUNTY

thanked the businesses that made
donations for their support and interest. Judges for the contest were
Ceal Thompson and Steve Keller,
who both work at the Mental Health
Center.. . The first prize winning
photos will be displayed at the Ohio
State Fair in August.

CEDAR CHESTS

'
sum mer in JUntor stzes. A s un-sa ti o nal Vidy
Vaughn

s""' o· 13

GALUPOUS ..:. The winners of
the "Pictures of Mental Health"
Photo Contest sp.onsored by the
Gallia Community Mental Health
Center have been chosen. Winning
photos are being displayed at the
Bossard Library in Gallipolis. The
. contest, which was one of the Cen: ter's Mental Health Month activities

LANE

~

Yo~· u chouse

Photo contest winners named

,

nrfo·.raiigluJ spec;ally'priced •.'.
price•

WINNING Photos of the Pictures of Mental Health contest are on
display at the Gallipolis Bossard Library.

~

You can't beat AAA lor personal Auto Club ser- .
vices and d'ozens of beneflta . you can
use-Emergency 'Road Service, Personal Acct.. I
dent Insurance, world famous Trip Planning and ;
more! And through ,July 1, new master members
will receive AAA 's colorful Road Atlas. FREE, juat
by bringing or mailing In this ad. low cost AAA
membership Is LESS THAN $2.50 a MONTH PER '
COUPLE. plus entrance lee (see details below), 10
call or visit to JOIN THE CLUB!

townhouse.
Purchase of a cupboard and a new
couch were discussed along with
new trips, one on June 24 to the Cin·
cinnati Zoo and Gardens. The bus

NOTICE!
WE NEED A

Free AAA Road Atlas

Tolol nb~mell••ndl25ptusiiO ..ch lortpOYMun4chMdrlftllvlna•thotMto..sdrH•betow.

~

POMEROY - Susan Rodgers
spoke on the life style of 'the Indonesian people at the recent
meeting of the Harrisonville Senior
Citizens Ce nter held at the

you join to receive I

.. ·

~
·,·

1

1

p,..aent this ld whlri

ROADATLAS

, : ...- ,
,
,
' .. .
..., •• _..._;.;..

of

Study, 12 :30 p.m.; Mobile Unit to

SPEc'•' ~ Ecmo,.
••

,

~

CHARLES DARWIN
Charles .Darwin's "Origin

0

l , ··1,

Staff, and Assistant Chief of Staff
Operations for SHAPE. The General
has received many decorations and
awards of high order.
The public is invited to come
Saturday night, June 7, at 7 p.. in the
Rio Grande College cafeteria. Dinne r reservations should be called in
by Wednesday evening, June 4, to
either 446-2984, Gallipolis, 245-5242,
Rio Grande, or 992-3864, Middleport.
r;ost is $5.

/'

417~cond Ave.

Any Other Room
When Cleaned with Living or Dining Room •••••• $15.00

chairman, NATO military committee. He has served in numerous
capacities including Chief of Staff,
USAF Europe, Deputy Director for ~·
Plans and Policy, us Joint Chiefs of

/(

Reg. $25 Per
, Person NOW

Any Living &amp; Dining Room with Hall .......... . .... $37.95
(Limit350sq. ft . )

~~~ua:;~:;~~s:~s!:o:t ~e~~:Y ·~· ...-.wnG""Wonnw,_n Jr_. ,.,n rT•H•.nE-·rC
,••unbS"1f•• ,...~

Reunion Plarmed
GAWPOLIS - A reunion Is
being planned (or all members,
families and friends of the former
Waterloo Church r/. the Nazarene
,Saturday, June 7, at the Waterloo
Grange, Waterloo.
Contacb to SOIIIe0!1e we may have
forgotten will be appreciated. We do
not want to leave anyooe out of this
reunion, and we sincerely hope you ·
wiU make plans to joui us as there
are so llli!DY whom we have not seen
in along lime.
.
Bring a cpvered dish and join us
· any time before noon. We who have
,been worlting on this are thrilled
about It and are looking forward to
seeinll you and your family there.
For any informaUoo please call
· Mrs. Jewele Parker, 379-2241 or Mrs.
~tb,y lj.arcua, 882-791.

SMELTZER'S
CARPET CLEANING SPECIALS

Any Living Room &amp; Hall . ............................. $19.95
(Limit 250 sq. ft . )

GALLIPOUS - Lt. ' General
Richard F. Shaefer, USAF (Ret.)
and his wife, Caroline, are the guest
speakers for the June 7 meeting of
the Gallipolis Chapter of Full Gospel
Businessmen's Fellowship International.
Gen. Shaefer, before retirement,
was a combat pilot during World
War II in Europe following his

Do have a good week.

Pleasant. The topic will be "The Art
of Breastfeed.ing and Overcoming
Difficulties." The meeting will be
held in the home of Mrs. Joy Russell,
908 Fifth St., New Haven, on June 2
at 7:30p.m.
La Leche League believes breast·
feeding gives the best possible.start
in good mothering and helps to
develop and deepen the close
relationship between a mother and
her child. The League offers motherto-mother help based on the manual,
"The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding." The meeting discussions
include the latest medical research,
as well as personal experience.
Other services include a lending
library of books on childbirth, child
care, and breastfeeding.
The continuing series of informal
meetings is open to all women interested in breastfeeding. Babies
are always welcome. Anyone
desiring further information may
call Betsy Crank 675-2776 or Gloria
Palkovic 675-£1l04,

through to the end of the fiscal year
Sept. 3() has passed the House, 236106, but the Senate failed to vote on it
Friday.
The FTC first ran out of money
May 1, and employees were told they
could do nothing other than prepare
for the closing of tlie agency.

•

Mrs. Chester Scott, Gallipolis, and
Mr. and Mrs, RichardT. Robinson,
Sr, of Ha waii. A reception was held
at the park following the ceremony.
The bride is a member of the U.S.
Navy. Her husband is a Law student
at the University of Hawaii.

Full Gospel Businessmen's
Fellowship to hear Shaefers

La Leche League to meet
PT. PLEASANT -Mothern who

TEMPORARY LAYOFF
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Federal Trade Commission shuts
down at midnight tonight, temporarily out of money for the second
lime in a month.
A $49.7 million bill to carry the
consumer protection agency,

'79 ."

CONGRATULATIONS to Frankie
Mumaw, Syracuse, who will
celebrate her 9lst birthday on June
5.
Frankie certainly deserves
recognition. She attends church
regularly and does aU her own
housework and is very good in
remembering others with cards on
birthdays and anniversaries.
May your day be grand and
glorious.
Recently Syracuse Village Officials had portable restroom
facilities placed at the Syracuse
Park.
Four year old Tucker Williams,
son of Jack and Judy, Syracuse, was
at the park with his mother.
He looked up at his mother and
said, "Mommy, we don 't have to
worry about restroorns any more ;
they have those big refrigerators."
Adults, try to match that one.

Selections for this collection were
made by six highly l'I)Spected
professioiil!l artists, representing
diverse media and various
geographic areas of the state. They
did an excellent job of selecting 48
outsb)nding works of arts from a
field of 320 entries. In addition one
selecton by each of the jurors~ added to the 48, to make the exhibit of
54 pieces.
Wornensart '79 serves as a show·
case and an affirmation of the vast

talents of women artists within the
State of Ohio and It also serves to
further the climate of change with
regards to the rol~of women in the
arts, according to Bonnie Keirn,
guest curator at Artreac~ Gallery in
Columbus, form where the traveling
exhibit comes.
Included in this exhibit are pastels
on paper, sculpture, collage, sepia
prints, acrylics, watercolors, batik,
pencil on pebbleboard, mixed media
on paper, cloisonne enamel, ~roo­
lain, oils, graphite drawings, wood·
cuts, lighographs; ink sketches,
stoneware, earthenware, clay and
sand.
Area residents are urged to see
this exciting exhibit on Tuesdays
and Thurndays from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.,
and Saturdays and Sundays from 1
p.m.-5 p.m. at Riverby.

GALUPOUS - A collection of 54
works of art in aU media · by
professional women artists from
throughout the State of Ohio, will be
featured throughout the rnonth of
June at Riverby, the home of the
French Art Colon y, in both
Galleries. it is called , "Womensart

Scot, Norma Torres, Kim Winebrenner, Nancy Ackerman, Nita
Wlsniskl and Betty Christopherson.
Sorry to hear you are leaving but
most of all we sincerely hope you enjoy your retirement.

Sus(Jn Rodgers speaks on Indonesian lifestyle recently

1I .box

1 Johnson's

Mkt.

$

59

$

79

Exp. 6-7-80

---

�B-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, J une I, 1980

'Womensart '79' FAG
june cultural fare june

Katie 's Korner
That old gang of mine. . .
KATIE CROW

Tlmea-SenUoelstaff writer
Gee, but it was good to see that old
gang of mine.
On SatUrday evening, May 24, the
class of 1940 had a get-together that
will be long remembered.
Walter Grue$er conunented that
he hoped the next 40 years are as
good as the past 40.
To start the evening off we met at
the lovely home of Mary and Torn
8owen. What gracious hosts those
two are.
From there we went to the dinner
at the Meigs High School cafeteria
and I must say had a delicious dinner. It was great to see so many old
friends.
Following the dinner we were in·
vite(J to the attractive borne of Mary
and Walter Grueser.
As always Mary and Walter
spread out the red carpet. There was
an abundance of delicious food and a
cake, compliments of Joan Mescher,
purple and white, our old alma
mater colors, decorated with a boy
and girl in cap and gown. Not only
was it attractively decorated but it
was very, very good.
Those attending the Pomeroy
Alumni dinner from the class of 1940
were Marie Carr Williams, Walter
Grueser, Mary Karr Bowen, Floyd
Mescher, Mary Goodwin Bartels,
Harold Heilman, Virgil King, An·
nabel Lewis Houdashelt, Ada Warner Nease, Delmar Hanun, Mary
Yost Hanun, John Mitch, Mae, Burton Reinhart, and me.
It was a great evening - it's a
shame that people wait 40 years to
enjoy the company of old friends.
Marjorie Manuel, Syracuse, ls
retiring as technician of vision and
hearing in the Meigs County Schools
after eight years of service.
The Meigs County Health Depart·
ment honored her with a dinner and
presented her several gifts.
Attending were Frank Petrie,
Mary Cleek, Opal Greuser, Carl
Tannehill, Debby Levalley, Pearl

Glad to hear that new bulbs have
been placed on the cross located on
the Shuster property on Lincoln Hill.
Mary Chancey celebrated her birthday Friday. She was presented a
cake and gift by close friends.
Mary is 25 and holding ... Fred
Crow, Pomeroy attorney, celebrated
his birthday Saturday. He is not
telling his age. Best wishes to you
both.
I wiU have the recipe for the
Mississippi Mud cake for the lady
who called next week and I am
trying to locate the recipe for a
sauer-kraut cake.
Anyone having a recipe for a
sauer-kraut cake please let me
know. Thanks.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Robinson

Tammy Scott weds in
Waimae Falls, Hawaii
WAIMAE FALlS, Hawaii - RM3
Tanuny Elizabeth Scott became the
bride of RichardT. Robinson, Jr. on
Feb. 24 at 2:30 p.m. in Waimae Falls
Park, Hawaii, the Bishop W. H.
.Reed officiating.
The couple's parents are Mr. and

wish to breastfeed their babies wiU
find encouragement and in·
fonnation at the second meeting of
the La Leche League of Point

Monday, June 2 - Carpenter,
Laura 's Store, 2-2:30 p.m.; Dexter,
Church, 3-3 :30; Langsville, Small's
Grocery, 3:4&gt;4 :10; Danville, Church, 4:41h5:05; Rutland, Pomeroy
National Bank, 5:~:30 (short fihn
at 6); Rutland, Depot Street, 6:357:20 (short fiiln at 7) ; Bradbury,
Red Bam, 7:36-3.
Tuesday, June 3 - Baum Ad·
dition, 3:W.3:50; Reedsville, Reed's
Store, ,4:30-5:45 (short fUm at 6:30) ;
Rock Springs, 'Church, 7:35-8.
Thursday, June 5- Coolville, Post
Office, 9:45-10:15 a.m.; Arcadia
Nursing Home, 10:36-11; Tuppers
Plains, Lodwick's Market, 11 :30
a.m.-12 noon; ~nior Citizens Center, 12:50-1 :20 p.m.; Mulberry
Heights lnfinnary, 1:25-2:10; Antiquity, 2:50-3:15; Letart Falls, Ef·
fie's Restaurant, 3:30-4; Racine,
Home National Bank, 4:30-5 :15
(short film at 5); Racine, Wagner's
Hardware, 5:1!HI (short film at
5:45); Syracuse, Pool, 6:15-7:30
(shortfllmat7) .
~
Drop by your nearut bookmobile
stop this sununer. For the kids therels Sununer Reading Club fun,
games, puzzles and prizes.
For everybody - free en·
tertairunent and information, in·
~ludlng paperbacks, 45 and LP
records, magazines, large-print
• books, and hQw·to-do-it help for summer projects.

COMPLETES COURSE
Navy Boiler Technician Fireman
Apprentice Michael K. Musser, son
of Judy Musser of Route 4, Pomeroy,
has completed the Basic Boiler
Technician Course.
During the course at the Naval
Training Center, Great Lakes,
students received instruction in the
use of hand tools, the operation and
maintenance of shipboard pumps,
and the operation of boilers and
other engineering machinery. In addition, they were introduced to the
types of engineering duty watches
that Boiler Technicians stand
aboard ships.
A 19'/9 graduate of Meigs High
School, Roc;k Springs, Ohio, he
joi~ed the Navy in September 1979.

Lt. Shaefer &amp; wife

WE CLEAN UPHOLSTERY
1
'

Regardless of claims, only Steamway is endorsed by all carpet
manufacturers . Only Steam way guarantees results or no charge.
Because of high gas prices we must charge $.50 a mile for anything
over 3 miles.

SMELTZER'S STEAMWAY
614-446-2096 '

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
GALUPOUS - Activities for
the Senior Citizens Center for this
week are :
Monday, June 2- Chorus, 1·3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 3- S.T.O.P. Class,
10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:15
a.m.; Macrame Class, 1-3 p.m. ;
Bible Study, 1-3.
Wednesday, June 4- Vinton l;iible

0 "'' JIOOCI '"""'G" Jvly 1

'""'" s....u., L•••

Species" was published in~859.

Crown City, I p.m.; Card Games, 13; World Religion Class, I p.m.
Thursday, June 5 - Ceramic
Class, 12 :30 p.m.; Blood Pressure

BORN fN 1864
Artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
ws born in 186._

J'

J

. A.NOY.I:t.IR UN IQUI AAA MIMBIRStUP BINI_,IT
MORE THAN 900 AAA OFFICES THROUGHOUT THE U.S. I CANADA:
With AAA you h..e friends you can call on wherever you got Your AAA
membership entitles you to all club service• anywharo In the country·
no other motoring organization can give personal 1arvlce almost

~nywhertl

lnclud•lf'tll •d lor PREE All••· FI•MW•I Dun.,. onlyl11.10 .,., yur.

I100l\ Your Personal Automobile Cl.u b
'(~:~;)'

J

~,
·
·

·j

GalliPOlis, Ohio
For membership information call or visit:
P~. 446·0699
VA"--'&lt;!....IA'b..J «t.•A-.,'!.iAta.,!t,t..JtA'-'o.d"•'-'UA'-1'

Check,l
Friday,:l5-1:45.
June 6- Art Class, 12:36-3 11-----:;;;;::;::;:;:;;:;:;;:;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;::;:;::::;;,:::::;;;:;::;;:;::;;;;;;;;;,:---p.m.; Advisory Council, I p.m.;
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Progrm will
serve the following menus:
Monday - Sloppy Joe, bun, buttered beets, tossed salad/dressing,
butter, pear/peanut butter, mill&lt;.
Tuesday - Pork chop, sweet
potatoes, broccoli, bread, butter,
butterscotch pudding, milk.
Wednesday - Salisbury steak,
noodles, peas, bread, butter, fruit,
mill&lt;.
Thursday - Baked chicken,
mashed potatoes, lettuce and
dressing, bread, butter, ice cream,
milk.
Friday - Liver/onions, carrots,
green beans, bread, butter, apple
cobbler, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal. "Services rendered on a
I '
' /"
non~iscriminatory basis."
I
,
. ..
I
t, ,~ /

/ ...-;

z~

&lt;''

Shape Up!
2 FOR J
SPECI A~
ONE MONTH MEMBERSHIP

•2 5

Offer Ends June 7th

THE FITNESS CENTER

/

I

I
'
_:

#'.:&lt;/ '.

it's a'"'sundress spectacular!

· this May, offered prizes that were
donated by ~rea businesses.
Tom Grube, Gallipolis, won the
·first prize of $15 for his photo of a
. child playing with two goats. A. first
prize of $15 was also won by Hazel
Camden, Gallipolis, for her picture
of children.
A second prize of a case of Coca
Cola was won by Larry Kent of
Gallipolis. Third prize, a handbag,
was won by Teresa Reynolds of
Gallipolis.
In the children's division, a first
prize of $10 was won by Debbie Boyle
of Bidwell for her picture of two
'Children playing chess. Second prize
was a beanbag chair. It went to
Ellen Eggleton of Bidwell. Janice
McMillen of Bidwell won a third
prize of $2 gift certificate.
In the adult division, prizes of a
)&gt;ook and a $2 gift certificate went to
Bonnie Hunt of Rio Grande, Albert
Holt of Gallipolis and Cathy Chapman of Rio Grande. Earl Mayo, Sr.,
of Bidwell won a roll of film and a
gift certificate. Mels Pickens also
won a gift certificate.
The Community Mental Health
Center's Director, Bernard Niehm,

MASS RAID

A mass raid by U. S. Army Air
F orcc bombers wreaked severe
damage on Tokyo Nov. 24, 1944. The
first land-based attack on the
Japanese capital, the raid was launched from Saipan in the Marianas.
Despite the great distance to be
covered, each plane carried six tons
of bombs.

.v·

~UPER
Vli;E

,I
I I

I

1\

._,

I

I

••
I I

a

II
I I

•• ;

•

t

I
I

QUARTER SLICED

We Will Hire Gallla County
Personnel

PORK LOIN

PD . POL. ADV.

I

~-•:

I

a. •• ,

••••

#

\_

~

. . . .:

'

·-•

e

•o I
-...., Ji
1

_.

•••

&amp;:

~

I

'

lA_
I\

.

\

·-·

\

•

I
I
I

•••

~-

I

I
I

1

L....
II

••• .:
:. •••
• • .1

JUNE
SALE

VALUES TO 795
1

RECLINERS
PRICED
FROM

'99 '399
TO

O~n

Stock

FRENCH PROVINCIAL WHITE &amp; GOLD
BEDROOM PIECES
CHESTS, DRESSERS,
NIGHTSTANDS, &amp; BEDS.
Buy Any 3 Pieces and Receive 10% Off
already Discounted Price.

BRASS PLATED

HEAD BOARDS
ANY STYLE- TWIN, FULL, QUEEN
OR KING

ONLY

'3900

CHOPPED SIRLOIN

FRESH LEAN
GROUND BEEF

$13~-

SUPERIOR
FRANKIES

EXTRA LEAN
GROUND CHUCK

12 oz.
PKG.

$1~90

SILVER BRIDGE

PlAZA

$16~.

ICEBERG

FRESH

HEAD LETTUCE

TOMATOES

59e

49e

.LB.

ROME BEAUTY

POTATOES
10 LB.
BAG

25% OFF

Reg. low Price

$129

2% MILK

SPECIAL JUNE SALE

GALLON PlASTIC

PRICES ON ALL

MATTRESS SETS

APPLES
3LB. $
09
BAG
HlllANOALE
GRADE A
EXTRA LARGE

EGGS
~~-65e

21 CUBIC FEET

REFRIGERATOR • FREEZE
Ot,!LY

8-16 OZ. BTLS.

'598

$ 1 29

-AIR CONDITIONERS - WASHERS - DRYERS - RANGES

MELODY MAID

VALLEY BELL

DEHUMIDIFIERS - FREEZERS - STEREO SETS -

CHOC. DRINK

ICE CREAM
HALF
$ 49

GALLON
PlASTIC

CA1SUP
24

13" COLOR

TELEVISION

JUNE SALE

'269

'109
'598

DELUXE

MICROWAVE OVEN
REG. 1649

'549

BEAUTIFUL

TABLE LAMPS

2

FOR

'79

oz.

BOTTLE

SALE
COM I IN AND SA VEf

7

GALLON
M
AUGRATIN OR SCALLOPED

POTATOES

5.5

9e

oz.

BOX

VlASIC KOSHER
DILl PICKLES

OPEN PIT
BAR-~ SAUCE
REG. or HOT-N-SPICY

32 oz.
JAR

e

18 oz.
BTl-

PLOCHMAN .SQUEEZE
BARREL

MUSTARD

IQl/2

EVERYTHING ON

$ 1 29

HEINZ

9e

oz.

BTL

PRINGLES
POTAl'O CHIPS
TWIN
PAK
r-· --

OXYDOL

SANK A

·DETERGENT

INSTANT COFFEE

L 49 oz.

co Ut!ctt a r' E-s: rl\1 ' 19 cotc.ots tn carefree l abncs

79e

FRESHEST PROi'JUC~ !1'1 TOWN

UNFINISHED FURNITURE - .END TABLES - AND MANY MORE ITEMS.

'

$19~B.

MAPLE BEDROOM
~· GROUPS

FLOOR COVERING - DINETTES - CHINA CABINETS -

.

USDA CHOICE
TOP SIRLOIN

$25~.

'498
OPEN STOCK

Quantity"

$} 1!.

HEAD

16 DIFFERENT STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

li m ~

STEAK

.

2 &amp;3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITES

446-9593,.

9-11 chops

- · ••I

e

0

PHONE

Prices Effective through Saturday, June 7, 1980

"I Will Be Firm and Fair"

~

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'We Resel'le tile Right to

······- ... ·- :-----,
•... ,..... r·- ··-I ..••..
···-:···~=··
....... ····' .... -----· .......-.... :.t.____...____ _
1

MARKET - OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.

ST~lt ;,

1

FROM

sev eral tr orn ob( lt11ge

JOHn

REPUBLICAN FOR
GALLIA COUNTY SHERIFF

BEDROOM SUITES

selec tio n so big 1n fash•on-rig htness. so l ttt le in

information.

DANIEL "TUCK" CARTER

A ANE SELECTION Of WOOD

The cool est notw ea th er buys you 'll see for

Anyone wantmg tu make the trip

r;:;;,::;;,::;;,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:;::;;,::;;,::;;,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

FROM

·

with the semor citize ns may call
Mrs. Minnie McGrath at 742-3186 for

1

OLIVER CbOMWELL
English statesman Oliver Cromwell died in 1658.
LABOR DAY
Labor Day was first celebrated in
the United States Sept. 3, 1894.

will leave the Center at 6:30 a .m.
and seating IS $till availab le.

CHANGE
FOR GALLIA COUNTY

thanked the businesses that made
donations for their support and interest. Judges for the contest were
Ceal Thompson and Steve Keller,
who both work at the Mental Health
Center.. . The first prize winning
photos will be displayed at the Ohio
State Fair in August.

CEDAR CHESTS

'
sum mer in JUntor stzes. A s un-sa ti o nal Vidy
Vaughn

s""' o· 13

GALUPOUS ..:. The winners of
the "Pictures of Mental Health"
Photo Contest sp.onsored by the
Gallia Community Mental Health
Center have been chosen. Winning
photos are being displayed at the
Bossard Library in Gallipolis. The
. contest, which was one of the Cen: ter's Mental Health Month activities

LANE

~

Yo~· u chouse

Photo contest winners named

,

nrfo·.raiigluJ spec;ally'priced •.'.
price•

WINNING Photos of the Pictures of Mental Health contest are on
display at the Gallipolis Bossard Library.

~

You can't beat AAA lor personal Auto Club ser- .
vices and d'ozens of beneflta . you can
use-Emergency 'Road Service, Personal Acct.. I
dent Insurance, world famous Trip Planning and ;
more! And through ,July 1, new master members
will receive AAA 's colorful Road Atlas. FREE, juat
by bringing or mailing In this ad. low cost AAA
membership Is LESS THAN $2.50 a MONTH PER '
COUPLE. plus entrance lee (see details below), 10
call or visit to JOIN THE CLUB!

townhouse.
Purchase of a cupboard and a new
couch were discussed along with
new trips, one on June 24 to the Cin·
cinnati Zoo and Gardens. The bus

NOTICE!
WE NEED A

Free AAA Road Atlas

Tolol nb~mell••ndl25ptusiiO ..ch lortpOYMun4chMdrlftllvlna•thotMto..sdrH•betow.

~

POMEROY - Susan Rodgers
spoke on the life style of 'the Indonesian people at the recent
meeting of the Harrisonville Senior
Citizens Ce nter held at the

you join to receive I

.. ·

~
·,·

1

1

p,..aent this ld whlri

ROADATLAS

, : ...- ,
,
,
' .. .
..., •• _..._;.;..

of

Study, 12 :30 p.m.; Mobile Unit to

SPEc'•' ~ Ecmo,.
••

,

~

CHARLES DARWIN
Charles .Darwin's "Origin

0

l , ··1,

Staff, and Assistant Chief of Staff
Operations for SHAPE. The General
has received many decorations and
awards of high order.
The public is invited to come
Saturday night, June 7, at 7 p.. in the
Rio Grande College cafeteria. Dinne r reservations should be called in
by Wednesday evening, June 4, to
either 446-2984, Gallipolis, 245-5242,
Rio Grande, or 992-3864, Middleport.
r;ost is $5.

/'

417~cond Ave.

Any Other Room
When Cleaned with Living or Dining Room •••••• $15.00

chairman, NATO military committee. He has served in numerous
capacities including Chief of Staff,
USAF Europe, Deputy Director for ~·
Plans and Policy, us Joint Chiefs of

/(

Reg. $25 Per
, Person NOW

Any Living &amp; Dining Room with Hall .......... . .... $37.95
(Limit350sq. ft . )

~~~ua:;~:;~~s:~s!:o:t ~e~~:Y ·~· ...-.wnG""Wonnw,_n Jr_. ,.,n rT•H•.nE-·rC
,••unbS"1f•• ,...~

Reunion Plarmed
GAWPOLIS - A reunion Is
being planned (or all members,
families and friends of the former
Waterloo Church r/. the Nazarene
,Saturday, June 7, at the Waterloo
Grange, Waterloo.
Contacb to SOIIIe0!1e we may have
forgotten will be appreciated. We do
not want to leave anyooe out of this
reunion, and we sincerely hope you ·
wiU make plans to joui us as there
are so llli!DY whom we have not seen
in along lime.
.
Bring a cpvered dish and join us
· any time before noon. We who have
,been worlting on this are thrilled
about It and are looking forward to
seeinll you and your family there.
For any informaUoo please call
· Mrs. Jewele Parker, 379-2241 or Mrs.
~tb,y lj.arcua, 882-791.

SMELTZER'S
CARPET CLEANING SPECIALS

Any Living Room &amp; Hall . ............................. $19.95
(Limit 250 sq. ft . )

GALLIPOUS - Lt. ' General
Richard F. Shaefer, USAF (Ret.)
and his wife, Caroline, are the guest
speakers for the June 7 meeting of
the Gallipolis Chapter of Full Gospel
Businessmen's Fellowship International.
Gen. Shaefer, before retirement,
was a combat pilot during World
War II in Europe following his

Do have a good week.

Pleasant. The topic will be "The Art
of Breastfeed.ing and Overcoming
Difficulties." The meeting will be
held in the home of Mrs. Joy Russell,
908 Fifth St., New Haven, on June 2
at 7:30p.m.
La Leche League believes breast·
feeding gives the best possible.start
in good mothering and helps to
develop and deepen the close
relationship between a mother and
her child. The League offers motherto-mother help based on the manual,
"The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding." The meeting discussions
include the latest medical research,
as well as personal experience.
Other services include a lending
library of books on childbirth, child
care, and breastfeeding.
The continuing series of informal
meetings is open to all women interested in breastfeeding. Babies
are always welcome. Anyone
desiring further information may
call Betsy Crank 675-2776 or Gloria
Palkovic 675-£1l04,

through to the end of the fiscal year
Sept. 3() has passed the House, 236106, but the Senate failed to vote on it
Friday.
The FTC first ran out of money
May 1, and employees were told they
could do nothing other than prepare
for the closing of tlie agency.

•

Mrs. Chester Scott, Gallipolis, and
Mr. and Mrs, RichardT. Robinson,
Sr, of Ha waii. A reception was held
at the park following the ceremony.
The bride is a member of the U.S.
Navy. Her husband is a Law student
at the University of Hawaii.

Full Gospel Businessmen's
Fellowship to hear Shaefers

La Leche League to meet
PT. PLEASANT -Mothern who

TEMPORARY LAYOFF
WASHINGTON (AP) The
Federal Trade Commission shuts
down at midnight tonight, temporarily out of money for the second
lime in a month.
A $49.7 million bill to carry the
consumer protection agency,

'79 ."

CONGRATULATIONS to Frankie
Mumaw, Syracuse, who will
celebrate her 9lst birthday on June
5.
Frankie certainly deserves
recognition. She attends church
regularly and does aU her own
housework and is very good in
remembering others with cards on
birthdays and anniversaries.
May your day be grand and
glorious.
Recently Syracuse Village Officials had portable restroom
facilities placed at the Syracuse
Park.
Four year old Tucker Williams,
son of Jack and Judy, Syracuse, was
at the park with his mother.
He looked up at his mother and
said, "Mommy, we don 't have to
worry about restroorns any more ;
they have those big refrigerators."
Adults, try to match that one.

Selections for this collection were
made by six highly l'I)Spected
professioiil!l artists, representing
diverse media and various
geographic areas of the state. They
did an excellent job of selecting 48
outsb)nding works of arts from a
field of 320 entries. In addition one
selecton by each of the jurors~ added to the 48, to make the exhibit of
54 pieces.
Wornensart '79 serves as a show·
case and an affirmation of the vast

talents of women artists within the
State of Ohio and It also serves to
further the climate of change with
regards to the rol~of women in the
arts, according to Bonnie Keirn,
guest curator at Artreac~ Gallery in
Columbus, form where the traveling
exhibit comes.
Included in this exhibit are pastels
on paper, sculpture, collage, sepia
prints, acrylics, watercolors, batik,
pencil on pebbleboard, mixed media
on paper, cloisonne enamel, ~roo­
lain, oils, graphite drawings, wood·
cuts, lighographs; ink sketches,
stoneware, earthenware, clay and
sand.
Area residents are urged to see
this exciting exhibit on Tuesdays
and Thurndays from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.,
and Saturdays and Sundays from 1
p.m.-5 p.m. at Riverby.

GALUPOUS - A collection of 54
works of art in aU media · by
professional women artists from
throughout the State of Ohio, will be
featured throughout the rnonth of
June at Riverby, the home of the
French Art Colon y, in both
Galleries. it is called , "Womensart

Scot, Norma Torres, Kim Winebrenner, Nancy Ackerman, Nita
Wlsniskl and Betty Christopherson.
Sorry to hear you are leaving but
most of all we sincerely hope you enjoy your retirement.

Sus(Jn Rodgers speaks on Indonesian lifestyle recently

1I .box

1 Johnson's

Mkt.

$

59

$

79

Exp. 6-7-80

---

�C-1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel; SWlday, June 1, 1980
8-3--:TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June I , 1980

.

.

Auxiliary a.nnounces

Marriage announced

summer conference .
POMEROY - The Eighth District
summer conference to be held Thursday at Jackson was announced and
delega tes and alternates named
when the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, met at the hall.
The delegates were Mrs. Mary
Martin, Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs.
Veda Davis, and Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer. Alternates are Mrs. Iva
Powell, Miss Erma Smith, and Mrs.
Gemma Casci,
Miss Smith reported on the poppy
sales noting that Ed Van Inwagen, a
legionnaire, sold the most. A
donation to the fund from Grace
Eich was acknowledged.
Mrs. Marjorie Fetty presided at
the meeting which wa~ preceded
with refreshments served by Winola
Schnucker, Mrs. Thelma Hayes, and
Mrs. Dorothy Wells. The pledge to
the flag, prayer, and the National

TOPS queen honored .
Mr. and Mrs, Michael M itchell

Silver Run Church is
setting for wedding
POMEROY - The Silver Run
Baptist Church was the setting for
the wedding of Terry S. Roush and
Michael A. Mitchell on April 6 at 2
p.m.
The bride is the daughter of Carole
V. Roush, New ·Haven, W.Va. and
Richard Roush, Route I, Letart, and
Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Mitchell, Route
I, Rutland are the parents of the
groom . .
The Rev. Marvin Markim perfanned the double ring ceremony
following a program of ·pre-nuptial
music by Todd Thomas, pianist. His
selections included "We've Only
Just Begun" and "You Needed Me."
Baskets ol white carnations with
blue tips, baby's breath and
greenery and candelabra decorated
the altar.
Escorted to the altar by the father
of the bridegroom, Merlin Mitchell,
the bride was attired in a white gown
of organza featuring a tiered and

Exhibit for the month of June,
starting June 3, 1930 - · Womensart
79 from Artreach Gallery; Columbus, Ohio. 54 pieces of art in all
media by professional women artists of Ohio. Exhibit during Ohio
during 1980.
Gallery Hours - Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.;
Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. until
5p.m.
June 11, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - CPR
class for members of the French Art
Colony. Instructors : Eleanor
Strang, R.N., and Jan Thaler, R.N.
Contact Peggy Evans at 44&amp;-1819 to
register. No charge to take the course for FAC members.
June 24, 3 p.m. - Deadline for entries to be submitted for the July 4th
River Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Chaired by Jan Thaler. Entry blanks
available at Riverby and at PJ's in
downtown Gallipolis, or call 446-1819
to request an entry blank, or write to
the F AC, Box 472, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631. Entries may be delivered to
Riverby on June 19 from 10 a.m. utnil 3 p.m., on June 21 and 22 from 1
p.m. until5 p.m. and on June 24 from
10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Show to be
jurored the week of June 30.
July 4, 10 a.m.-:i p.m. - River
Recreation Festival Art Exhibit in
the City Park in downtown
Gallipolis; in case of rain, exhibit
willbeatRiverby.

draped skirt which extended mto a
cathedral train. Chantilly lace accented the skirt as well as the sweetheart neckline and the cuffs of the
long sheer sleeves. The bride wore a
picture hat of orga nza with an attached floor length veil and carried
a bouquet of blue tipped white carnation s, baby 's breath and
greenery. She wore a diamond cross
necklace and carried a white satin
Bible.
Mrs. Stephen David Cannichael,
sister of the bride, was matron of
honor and she wore a blue fl oral
gown and a blue carnation in her
hair. She carried a bouquet of white
carnations tipped in blue accented
with baby's breath and greenery .
Gene Halley, uncle of the groom,
Cheshire, was best man.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Roush wore a street length dress of
navy blue and ye llow and had a corsage of yellow carnations. Mrs. Mitchell was in an off-white dress and
had a blue-tipped carnation corsage.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at the church. The refreshment table featured a three tiered
cake decorated in blue and white
and topped with the traditional
miniature bride and groom. Mrs.
Jack Roach, Mrs. Vernon Smith and
Mrs. John Hawley presided at the

Belva Schuler was honored as
queen of the week at the Tuesday
evening meeting of TOPS OH 1456,
Rutland. Freda Davis was the runner-up. Marcia Barrett, leader,
presided at the meeting and explained that each member losing
weight would receive 25 cents for
each pound lost. The weight recorder reported a loss of 16 pounds.
Jackie Justice became the chapter's second KIW for May. A new
contest was discussed and will begin
at a later date. Any person interested in visiting or becoming a
member · may call 742-2126 or 7423078. There will be no meeting on
Election Day.

table. Mrs. Richard E. Roush
registered the guests.
The new Mrs. Mitchell is a student
at Wahama High School. Mr. Mitchell graduated from Meigs High
School in 1979 and is employed with
Boilermakers Local105.
Out-{)f-town guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Wardlow, daughters,
Tammy and Leisa, and Brian Templeton, Leesburg.

• •

Anthem opened the meeting and
reports of the office rs were given.
It was noted that Jayne Hoeflich,
freshman at Ohio University, and
Anna Wiles, who will graduate this
month from Meigs High School ,
were recipients of the unit's scholarships.
Mrs. Davis, junior activities chairman, reported on the Department of
Ohio awards received at the recent
junior conference in Columbus.
They included a first in history to
Linda Eason, a second to the unit in
veterans affairs and rehabilitation
narrative, a second on conference
cover, a first in the junior activities
narrative, ''Juniors in Action,'' a first by Robin Campbell on the foreign
relations essay, and a second place
to the unit on the foreign relations
scrapbook. The unit also took first
place in the junior activities scrapbook.
Correspondence was r ead from
Frances
Roberts,
Mrs .
acknowledging receipt of the community service report, Lori
Ehresman, for the foreign relations
report, and Marge DeVault for the
president's report.
,
Refreshments at the June meeting
will be served by the juniors.

Pearisburg, Va . on April21. The new
Mrs. Diddle is a 1976 graduate of
Meigs High School. Mr. Diddle
graduated from Meigs in 1975, served with the U. S. Anny at Key
West, Fla., and is currently working
at the Meigs Tire Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Diddle reside at
Happy Hollow Road near Rutland.

MONDAY
INSTALLATION of officers
American Legion Lafayette Post 'l:l
and American Legion Auxiliary.
Open House. Potluck dinner, 7 p.m.

This W e~k · s Special

RC
OR

DIET
RITE
16 oz.

8 btls.

'lp~!x

Don't miss these spectacular values.
Toni Todd's spec ial group of cuol
'n classy car~r dresses. At such
little prices you'll want to c hoose
several in th e season's great colors and
carefree fabrics . Sizes 8-18. '24.00

&amp; De!)0Sil1t

OPEN SUNDAYS
9 AM - 4,PM
No Beer sa Ies on Sunday
6% Cold Beer &amp; Wine

.

GALLIPOUS ICE CO.
DRIVE THRU
CARRY OUT

I()

l)

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

SAVE

eUNEN e TERRY
e GARBARDINE
e5WIMWEAR
•POLYESTER KNITS
eT-SHIRT KNITS
•PERMANENT PRESS
. • SILKS •EYELETS

til

G. B. D.
pipes,
accessories and. pipe
re airs.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
l&gt;e&lt;ond Ave.
42 ~

Golllpolis; Ohio

LARRY E. SPENCER
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
MEIGS COUNTY

FOR MEIGS COUNTY CLERK OF COURTS
"Your Vote
and Support Appreciated"
.
PD. POL. ADV.

,,

'

BY SCOTI'WOLFE
Meigs Sports Bureau
ASHLAND - The overpowering Warren
Champion Flashes downed the Meigs
Marauders 13-1 in the state softball semifinal
here Friday evening.
The Flashes advanced to the state finals
Saturday with a 20-1 record.
Meigs; SEOAL runnersup, ended its season
with a fine 19-4 record.
Hard-hitting Champion erupted for four
runs in the first after two outs.
'
Pitcher Peg Davis drilled a double down the
third base line to start things off. Karen
Novotny followed with a towering triple, Lori
Emerson walked, Becky Pierson doubled and
Sharon McFarland singled to account for the

runs.
Before the start of the game, Meigs suifered a psychological setback with the loss of.
ace firstbaseman - pitcher Terri Wilson, who
was injured in an accidend last Monday.
'

However, freshman Natalie Lambert got the
starting nod and turned in a fine effort at first
base.
Coach ~ita Slavin's Marauders were
retired in order by overpowering and accurate Peg Davis. The windmill-type hurler
collected four strikeouts and quieted the
usually potent Meigs hitters with three hits.
Davis walked six after tiring in the late inning.
After a shaky first inning, Marauder pitch~r ·Beth Bartrum settled down, but the
Flashes scored twice in the second, third,
fourth and sixth innings. Champion's second
inning rui!s came on only one single, a
fielder's choice and a sacrifice fly·. In the
third, Warren repeated with one hit, but
scored twice on two errors and a walk. Meanwhile, Meigs loosened up from "State tournament tightness" in the third by pulling runners in scoring position, but Warren escaped
the third-inning rally.-

In the top of the seventh Champion put
together a single and a double for Its final run .
With one gone in the bottom of the seventh
Kris Snowden was hit with a pitch befor~
Terri Wilson came off the bench. Wilson drew
a walk and Pam Crooks followed with another
free pass to load the bases. Tonia Ash grounded out to produce the lone Meigs tally. The
Flashes retired Sonia Ash on a long fiy ball to
end the game. The victory was one of a long
Une of routs Champion has rolled up during
the tourney. The Flashes smashed opponents
21-1 and 17-2 in the sectionals and 'l:/·2 in the
regional.
Bartrum walked five and fanned one for the
Marauders.
Pam Crooks, Bartrum, and Susan Zirkle
collected the Meigs hits as .every Marauder
got to see action.
McFarland led Champion with three singles
while Pierson rapped two doubles, Novotny a
triple and single and Dorreen Rowland two

singles.
"They were devastating; a superior
ballclub," Slavin said of Warren afterwards.
"They were so overpowering, their defense
was flawless and Davis' was intimidating.
"I have nothing but praise for our team,"
Slavin added. They continually hustled and
showed their desire all season long ."
The very large contingent of Meigs sup-,
porters who made the trip to Ashlsnd felt
proud of their team, especially after the
Marauders regrouped to go out like champions in spoiling the Flashes' shutout bid in
the seventh.
Meigs planned a late Saturday return after
watching the Class AA finals at 4p.m.
Warren Champion "
422 202 1-13 11 0
Meigs
000 000 1- 1 3 6
Peg Davis and Karen Novotny; Beth Bartruro and Susan Zirkle.

MASON, W.Va.- The 144-man
field for the second annual Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament
has been completed with the addition of heavyweight boxing contender Duane Bobick.
The former Olympic
heavyweight i8 planning . to
resume his quest for the world's
championship after recovering
from treatments -for shoulder ar-

thritiS.

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va The Mason County Cancer
Society will sponsor a second annual singles and doubles Tennis
Tournament for nien and women
June 12-16.
There will also be a second
division for women's doubles, 35over. Entry fees are $6 singles
and $8 doubles. Contestants must
furnish a can of balls for their first match.
The tournament Is open to
!'llllidents of Maaon, Jackson,
Meigs and Gallia Counties.
For further information, contact 67fi.8278.

Reds tryouts
CINCINNATI- A tryout camp
will be conducted by the Cincinnati Reds June 7 at Lancaster
High School. The camp Is open to
all boys 1&amp;-22 years of age.
All participants must provide
their own uniform, glove, shoes,
travel and living expenses, If any,
unless signed to a contract by the
Reds ·organization. All other
equipment will be furnished.
All American Legion players
must bring written pennission
from their post conunanders in
order to try out.

GRD tennis

SUPER SAVINGS ON THE RED TAG WALL

-SERVING 2 TERMS CLERK OF COURTS
I
-RESIDENT OF MEIGS CO. ALL MY LIFE
-ABLE, WILLING AND QUALIFIED

LARRY E. SPENCER

Marauders all victim to
heavy Champion hitting

Mason net tourney

20% OFF.

·cLERK OF COURTS

0. 0. Park lineup

-

· "But it doesn't interfere with
my golf · swing," Bobick, who
lives in Longport, New Jersey,
assures.
·Bobick will also be on hand for
the M-G-M dinner and pretournament activities.
Spectator tickets are still
available for the June 19
exhibition.

FoR YOUR MAN

Large selection

Locally •••

c

Bobick joins field

1/iS/;~ Gtfc~-

-

GALLIPOIJS . - The 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District's Raccoon Creek Day Camp will offer
three two-week sessions this summer for Gallia County youths
ages 5-12. Session l, for ages :Hi
will be held June 9-20; Session n
(7-9 years), June ~uly 3; and
Session m ( 1~12), July 7-18.
The $45 fee (Session m $50)
also includes art supplies, sports
equipment, field trips and sports
equipment.
Novice, lntennediate and advanced tennis instruction will be
offered in two week sessions ($10
instructional fee). Classes are
scheduled for ~ and 6-7 p.m.
(novice ooly) and 7~ p.m.
(novice and intennediate). Advanced claB8es will be scheduled
pendll!g interest. Course
locations are Kyger Creek High
School (June9-20), Hannan Trace
(JWle 23-July 4), North Gallia
(July 7.July 18) and Southwestern (July21·Aug.1).
Swinunlng lessona will also be
offered at Kyger Creek June 9July 18 In four clas.!es:
JW!e 9-18: 9-9:45 a.m., beginners age fi.ll; 9:45-10:30 a.m.,
beginners 9-14; 10:»11:15. a.m.,
water babies, 2-4; and 11 :15 a.m.noon, adult beginnel'll, 1~ver.
June 23.July 4: 9-9:45 a.m, advanced beginners fi.ll; 9:45-10:30
a.m., advanced beginners 9-14;
10:36-ll: 15 a.m., water babies;
and 11: 15 a.m.-noon, adult advanced beginners.
July . 7-18: 9-9:45 a.m., intermediate fi.ll; 9:45-10:30 a.m.,
intermediate 9-14; 10: 36-11: 15
a.m., water babies; and 11 :15noon, tntennediate adult.
For registration infonnatlon,
contact the park district office,
446-4612, ext. 76.

Remember

PYTHIAN SISTERS

HAVE ANNIVERSARY
WILKESVILLE - Wilkesville
Temple 591, Pythian sisters will observe an open house in celebration of
its 50th year on Sunday, June 8. At
that time the mortgage on the new
temple will be burned. The activities
will begin at2 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Announcement
is being made of the marriage of
Shirley Jean Hysell, daughter of
Mrs. Nellie Hysell, Route 1, Middleport, and the late Lawrence
Hysell and Edward Diddle, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pooler, Middleport, and Waid Diddle, Van Lear,
Ky.
The wedding took place at

OPEN MON. AND FRI. TIL 8 P.M.
CLOSED lHURSDAYS IN JUNE, JULY AND AUGUST
I

RENcll

CiTy FAbRic Sleopp

GALIJPOUS - Registration
for Gallipolis Recreation Depart.
ment summer tennis lessons will
·be held from 8-10 p.m. Monday at
the Memorial Field tennis courts.
Registration will be on a firstcome basis. All participants inu.st '
furni8h their own racquets and

baU..
Lessons will be conducted on an

hourly bMls from 8-11 a.m. aod r..
7 p.m. Head Instructor Is Jackie
Knight.

'

(Continued on Page C-2)

Meigs pitcher Beth Bartrum goes into the windup while freshman first baseman Natalie Lambert waits for a putout.

La.,.,dreau.x' streak stopped at 31

Schmidt blasts two homers; CarltQn wins ninth
CIDCAGO (AP) - Mike Schmidt
blasted two home runs to raise his
major league-leading total to 16
Saturday and Steve Carlton became
the first nine-ganie winner in the
majors as the Philadelphiah Phillies
rolled to a 7-&lt;J victory over the
Chicago Cubs.
Sclunidt, who now has 24 career
homers in Wrigley Field and 34
against the Cubs overall, slugged a
two-run homer to feature a three-run
third, walked in a three-run fourth

and homered again to lead off the
seventh.
It was the fifth time Schmidt has
hit two home -runs in a game in
Wrigley Field, where he slanuned
four in a row on April17, 1976.
Carlton, 9-2, allowed only singles
in the seven innings he worked.
Dickie Noles finished up.
Willie Hernandez, 14, was the
loser.

two singles and a sacrifice fly and
Baltimore took advantage of five
Twins errors as the Orioles bombed
Minnesota 11-1 Saturday.
Minnesota outfielder Ken Landreaux went 0-for-4 and had his
major league-leading hitting streak
stopped at 31 games. Landreaux's
streak was the longest in the
American League in 31 years.

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP ) Rich Dauer drove in four runs with

Minnesota conunitted three errors
in the first two innings as Baltimore

provided Scott McGregor with a 5-0
lead.
McGregor, 4-2, scattered eight hits
aod struck out three batters.
DETROIT (AP) - California's
Tom Donohue and Bert Campaneris
each cracked two-run homers to
back the combined four·hit pitching
of Bruce Klson and Dave LaRoche
as the Angels defeated the Detroit
Tigers &amp;-1 Saturday.
Kison, 3-4, was masterful in the
early innings, giving up a two-out
single to Steve Kemp in the first in-

Clay 'A' softball cha·m p
Wildcat pitcher Bess McCulloch
limited the Patriots to seven hits and
allowed no walks.
After scoring one run in the first
inning, Portsmouth rolled up nine
runs in the fifth inning and two more
in the seventh.
Portsmouth . shortstop Teresa
Portsmouth collected 18· hits and
committed only one error enroute to ' Ruby smacked a home run in the ·
the state crown.
seventh inni11g for the only roundASHLAND, Ohio (AP) - The Portsmoulh Clay Panthers defeated the
New Madison Tri·Village Patriots
13-3 Saturday for the Class A Ohio
High School Girls Softball championship.

Abele wins AAA tennis
COLUMBUS (AP) - Adam Abele
gave Marietta its first state high
school tennis champion Saturday
when he defeated Eric Heigh of
Toledo St. John 's 64, &amp;-2\11 the Class
AAA singles finals at Ohio State.

Mark Redding and Jeff Kohls of
Kettering Alter defeated Semi ·and
Merln Mutlu of Springfield North &amp;4, &amp;-1, for the ClaSs AAA doubles
championship.

tripper of the game.
Tri-Village committed six errors
in losing.
Kim Cassidy and Kelly Feeman
had three RBI's each to help · Cuyahoga Fall defeat Amella 14-0 ·
and win the state girls Class AAA
fast-pitch softball championship
Saturday.
Cuyahoga Falls had three runs In
first inning. Amelia's starting pit. cher, Tiffaney Beach, walk~ the fir•
st four.
Mary Frazier then went In lor
Amelia.
·
The. winning pitcher was Tarla
Leittly, who went the seven innings
and allowed three hits.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO - - - - - 1

Early Winners
•. ,. Page C-5 ·

ning and then retiring the next 13
batters in order before walking Kirk
Gibson to start the Detroit sixth.
The Angels got one run in the first
when Rick Miller worked Tiger starter and loser Pat Underwood, 0-3, for
a walk, went to third on Dickie
Than 's double and scored on Carney
Lansford's grounder.
In the California second, Larry
flarlow hit a · two-out single and
scored ahead of Donohue's second .
homer of the season - a line shot
that just cleared the screen in lower
left field.

Late Losers
• •• Page C-5.

Scoreboard •.. Page C-3
Ohio Sportligh't ...-Page C-6
,,

~'
l

�C-1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel; SWlday, June 1, 1980
8-3--:TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June I , 1980

.

.

Auxiliary a.nnounces

Marriage announced

summer conference .
POMEROY - The Eighth District
summer conference to be held Thursday at Jackson was announced and
delega tes and alternates named
when the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, met at the hall.
The delegates were Mrs. Mary
Martin, Mrs. Catherine Welsh, Mrs.
Veda Davis, and Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer. Alternates are Mrs. Iva
Powell, Miss Erma Smith, and Mrs.
Gemma Casci,
Miss Smith reported on the poppy
sales noting that Ed Van Inwagen, a
legionnaire, sold the most. A
donation to the fund from Grace
Eich was acknowledged.
Mrs. Marjorie Fetty presided at
the meeting which wa~ preceded
with refreshments served by Winola
Schnucker, Mrs. Thelma Hayes, and
Mrs. Dorothy Wells. The pledge to
the flag, prayer, and the National

TOPS queen honored .
Mr. and Mrs, Michael M itchell

Silver Run Church is
setting for wedding
POMEROY - The Silver Run
Baptist Church was the setting for
the wedding of Terry S. Roush and
Michael A. Mitchell on April 6 at 2
p.m.
The bride is the daughter of Carole
V. Roush, New ·Haven, W.Va. and
Richard Roush, Route I, Letart, and
Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Mitchell, Route
I, Rutland are the parents of the
groom . .
The Rev. Marvin Markim perfanned the double ring ceremony
following a program of ·pre-nuptial
music by Todd Thomas, pianist. His
selections included "We've Only
Just Begun" and "You Needed Me."
Baskets ol white carnations with
blue tips, baby's breath and
greenery and candelabra decorated
the altar.
Escorted to the altar by the father
of the bridegroom, Merlin Mitchell,
the bride was attired in a white gown
of organza featuring a tiered and

Exhibit for the month of June,
starting June 3, 1930 - · Womensart
79 from Artreach Gallery; Columbus, Ohio. 54 pieces of art in all
media by professional women artists of Ohio. Exhibit during Ohio
during 1980.
Gallery Hours - Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.;
Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. until
5p.m.
June 11, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - CPR
class for members of the French Art
Colony. Instructors : Eleanor
Strang, R.N., and Jan Thaler, R.N.
Contact Peggy Evans at 44&amp;-1819 to
register. No charge to take the course for FAC members.
June 24, 3 p.m. - Deadline for entries to be submitted for the July 4th
River Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Chaired by Jan Thaler. Entry blanks
available at Riverby and at PJ's in
downtown Gallipolis, or call 446-1819
to request an entry blank, or write to
the F AC, Box 472, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631. Entries may be delivered to
Riverby on June 19 from 10 a.m. utnil 3 p.m., on June 21 and 22 from 1
p.m. until5 p.m. and on June 24 from
10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Show to be
jurored the week of June 30.
July 4, 10 a.m.-:i p.m. - River
Recreation Festival Art Exhibit in
the City Park in downtown
Gallipolis; in case of rain, exhibit
willbeatRiverby.

draped skirt which extended mto a
cathedral train. Chantilly lace accented the skirt as well as the sweetheart neckline and the cuffs of the
long sheer sleeves. The bride wore a
picture hat of orga nza with an attached floor length veil and carried
a bouquet of blue tipped white carnation s, baby 's breath and
greenery. She wore a diamond cross
necklace and carried a white satin
Bible.
Mrs. Stephen David Cannichael,
sister of the bride, was matron of
honor and she wore a blue fl oral
gown and a blue carnation in her
hair. She carried a bouquet of white
carnations tipped in blue accented
with baby's breath and greenery .
Gene Halley, uncle of the groom,
Cheshire, was best man.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Roush wore a street length dress of
navy blue and ye llow and had a corsage of yellow carnations. Mrs. Mitchell was in an off-white dress and
had a blue-tipped carnation corsage.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at the church. The refreshment table featured a three tiered
cake decorated in blue and white
and topped with the traditional
miniature bride and groom. Mrs.
Jack Roach, Mrs. Vernon Smith and
Mrs. John Hawley presided at the

Belva Schuler was honored as
queen of the week at the Tuesday
evening meeting of TOPS OH 1456,
Rutland. Freda Davis was the runner-up. Marcia Barrett, leader,
presided at the meeting and explained that each member losing
weight would receive 25 cents for
each pound lost. The weight recorder reported a loss of 16 pounds.
Jackie Justice became the chapter's second KIW for May. A new
contest was discussed and will begin
at a later date. Any person interested in visiting or becoming a
member · may call 742-2126 or 7423078. There will be no meeting on
Election Day.

table. Mrs. Richard E. Roush
registered the guests.
The new Mrs. Mitchell is a student
at Wahama High School. Mr. Mitchell graduated from Meigs High
School in 1979 and is employed with
Boilermakers Local105.
Out-{)f-town guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Wardlow, daughters,
Tammy and Leisa, and Brian Templeton, Leesburg.

• •

Anthem opened the meeting and
reports of the office rs were given.
It was noted that Jayne Hoeflich,
freshman at Ohio University, and
Anna Wiles, who will graduate this
month from Meigs High School ,
were recipients of the unit's scholarships.
Mrs. Davis, junior activities chairman, reported on the Department of
Ohio awards received at the recent
junior conference in Columbus.
They included a first in history to
Linda Eason, a second to the unit in
veterans affairs and rehabilitation
narrative, a second on conference
cover, a first in the junior activities
narrative, ''Juniors in Action,'' a first by Robin Campbell on the foreign
relations essay, and a second place
to the unit on the foreign relations
scrapbook. The unit also took first
place in the junior activities scrapbook.
Correspondence was r ead from
Frances
Roberts,
Mrs .
acknowledging receipt of the community service report, Lori
Ehresman, for the foreign relations
report, and Marge DeVault for the
president's report.
,
Refreshments at the June meeting
will be served by the juniors.

Pearisburg, Va . on April21. The new
Mrs. Diddle is a 1976 graduate of
Meigs High School. Mr. Diddle
graduated from Meigs in 1975, served with the U. S. Anny at Key
West, Fla., and is currently working
at the Meigs Tire Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Diddle reside at
Happy Hollow Road near Rutland.

MONDAY
INSTALLATION of officers
American Legion Lafayette Post 'l:l
and American Legion Auxiliary.
Open House. Potluck dinner, 7 p.m.

This W e~k · s Special

RC
OR

DIET
RITE
16 oz.

8 btls.

'lp~!x

Don't miss these spectacular values.
Toni Todd's spec ial group of cuol
'n classy car~r dresses. At such
little prices you'll want to c hoose
several in th e season's great colors and
carefree fabrics . Sizes 8-18. '24.00

&amp; De!)0Sil1t

OPEN SUNDAYS
9 AM - 4,PM
No Beer sa Ies on Sunday
6% Cold Beer &amp; Wine

.

GALLIPOUS ICE CO.
DRIVE THRU
CARRY OUT

I()

l)

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

SAVE

eUNEN e TERRY
e GARBARDINE
e5WIMWEAR
•POLYESTER KNITS
eT-SHIRT KNITS
•PERMANENT PRESS
. • SILKS •EYELETS

til

G. B. D.
pipes,
accessories and. pipe
re airs.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
l&gt;e&lt;ond Ave.
42 ~

Golllpolis; Ohio

LARRY E. SPENCER
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
MEIGS COUNTY

FOR MEIGS COUNTY CLERK OF COURTS
"Your Vote
and Support Appreciated"
.
PD. POL. ADV.

,,

'

BY SCOTI'WOLFE
Meigs Sports Bureau
ASHLAND - The overpowering Warren
Champion Flashes downed the Meigs
Marauders 13-1 in the state softball semifinal
here Friday evening.
The Flashes advanced to the state finals
Saturday with a 20-1 record.
Meigs; SEOAL runnersup, ended its season
with a fine 19-4 record.
Hard-hitting Champion erupted for four
runs in the first after two outs.
'
Pitcher Peg Davis drilled a double down the
third base line to start things off. Karen
Novotny followed with a towering triple, Lori
Emerson walked, Becky Pierson doubled and
Sharon McFarland singled to account for the

runs.
Before the start of the game, Meigs suifered a psychological setback with the loss of.
ace firstbaseman - pitcher Terri Wilson, who
was injured in an accidend last Monday.
'

However, freshman Natalie Lambert got the
starting nod and turned in a fine effort at first
base.
Coach ~ita Slavin's Marauders were
retired in order by overpowering and accurate Peg Davis. The windmill-type hurler
collected four strikeouts and quieted the
usually potent Meigs hitters with three hits.
Davis walked six after tiring in the late inning.
After a shaky first inning, Marauder pitch~r ·Beth Bartrum settled down, but the
Flashes scored twice in the second, third,
fourth and sixth innings. Champion's second
inning rui!s came on only one single, a
fielder's choice and a sacrifice fly·. In the
third, Warren repeated with one hit, but
scored twice on two errors and a walk. Meanwhile, Meigs loosened up from "State tournament tightness" in the third by pulling runners in scoring position, but Warren escaped
the third-inning rally.-

In the top of the seventh Champion put
together a single and a double for Its final run .
With one gone in the bottom of the seventh
Kris Snowden was hit with a pitch befor~
Terri Wilson came off the bench. Wilson drew
a walk and Pam Crooks followed with another
free pass to load the bases. Tonia Ash grounded out to produce the lone Meigs tally. The
Flashes retired Sonia Ash on a long fiy ball to
end the game. The victory was one of a long
Une of routs Champion has rolled up during
the tourney. The Flashes smashed opponents
21-1 and 17-2 in the sectionals and 'l:/·2 in the
regional.
Bartrum walked five and fanned one for the
Marauders.
Pam Crooks, Bartrum, and Susan Zirkle
collected the Meigs hits as .every Marauder
got to see action.
McFarland led Champion with three singles
while Pierson rapped two doubles, Novotny a
triple and single and Dorreen Rowland two

singles.
"They were devastating; a superior
ballclub," Slavin said of Warren afterwards.
"They were so overpowering, their defense
was flawless and Davis' was intimidating.
"I have nothing but praise for our team,"
Slavin added. They continually hustled and
showed their desire all season long ."
The very large contingent of Meigs sup-,
porters who made the trip to Ashlsnd felt
proud of their team, especially after the
Marauders regrouped to go out like champions in spoiling the Flashes' shutout bid in
the seventh.
Meigs planned a late Saturday return after
watching the Class AA finals at 4p.m.
Warren Champion "
422 202 1-13 11 0
Meigs
000 000 1- 1 3 6
Peg Davis and Karen Novotny; Beth Bartruro and Susan Zirkle.

MASON, W.Va.- The 144-man
field for the second annual Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament
has been completed with the addition of heavyweight boxing contender Duane Bobick.
The former Olympic
heavyweight i8 planning . to
resume his quest for the world's
championship after recovering
from treatments -for shoulder ar-

thritiS.

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va The Mason County Cancer
Society will sponsor a second annual singles and doubles Tennis
Tournament for nien and women
June 12-16.
There will also be a second
division for women's doubles, 35over. Entry fees are $6 singles
and $8 doubles. Contestants must
furnish a can of balls for their first match.
The tournament Is open to
!'llllidents of Maaon, Jackson,
Meigs and Gallia Counties.
For further information, contact 67fi.8278.

Reds tryouts
CINCINNATI- A tryout camp
will be conducted by the Cincinnati Reds June 7 at Lancaster
High School. The camp Is open to
all boys 1&amp;-22 years of age.
All participants must provide
their own uniform, glove, shoes,
travel and living expenses, If any,
unless signed to a contract by the
Reds ·organization. All other
equipment will be furnished.
All American Legion players
must bring written pennission
from their post conunanders in
order to try out.

GRD tennis

SUPER SAVINGS ON THE RED TAG WALL

-SERVING 2 TERMS CLERK OF COURTS
I
-RESIDENT OF MEIGS CO. ALL MY LIFE
-ABLE, WILLING AND QUALIFIED

LARRY E. SPENCER

Marauders all victim to
heavy Champion hitting

Mason net tourney

20% OFF.

·cLERK OF COURTS

0. 0. Park lineup

-

· "But it doesn't interfere with
my golf · swing," Bobick, who
lives in Longport, New Jersey,
assures.
·Bobick will also be on hand for
the M-G-M dinner and pretournament activities.
Spectator tickets are still
available for the June 19
exhibition.

FoR YOUR MAN

Large selection

Locally •••

c

Bobick joins field

1/iS/;~ Gtfc~-

-

GALLIPOIJS . - The 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District's Raccoon Creek Day Camp will offer
three two-week sessions this summer for Gallia County youths
ages 5-12. Session l, for ages :Hi
will be held June 9-20; Session n
(7-9 years), June ~uly 3; and
Session m ( 1~12), July 7-18.
The $45 fee (Session m $50)
also includes art supplies, sports
equipment, field trips and sports
equipment.
Novice, lntennediate and advanced tennis instruction will be
offered in two week sessions ($10
instructional fee). Classes are
scheduled for ~ and 6-7 p.m.
(novice ooly) and 7~ p.m.
(novice and intennediate). Advanced claB8es will be scheduled
pendll!g interest. Course
locations are Kyger Creek High
School (June9-20), Hannan Trace
(JWle 23-July 4), North Gallia
(July 7.July 18) and Southwestern (July21·Aug.1).
Swinunlng lessona will also be
offered at Kyger Creek June 9July 18 In four clas.!es:
JW!e 9-18: 9-9:45 a.m., beginners age fi.ll; 9:45-10:30 a.m.,
beginners 9-14; 10:»11:15. a.m.,
water babies, 2-4; and 11 :15 a.m.noon, adult beginnel'll, 1~ver.
June 23.July 4: 9-9:45 a.m, advanced beginners fi.ll; 9:45-10:30
a.m., advanced beginners 9-14;
10:36-ll: 15 a.m., water babies;
and 11: 15 a.m.-noon, adult advanced beginners.
July . 7-18: 9-9:45 a.m., intermediate fi.ll; 9:45-10:30 a.m.,
intermediate 9-14; 10: 36-11: 15
a.m., water babies; and 11 :15noon, tntennediate adult.
For registration infonnatlon,
contact the park district office,
446-4612, ext. 76.

Remember

PYTHIAN SISTERS

HAVE ANNIVERSARY
WILKESVILLE - Wilkesville
Temple 591, Pythian sisters will observe an open house in celebration of
its 50th year on Sunday, June 8. At
that time the mortgage on the new
temple will be burned. The activities
will begin at2 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Announcement
is being made of the marriage of
Shirley Jean Hysell, daughter of
Mrs. Nellie Hysell, Route 1, Middleport, and the late Lawrence
Hysell and Edward Diddle, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pooler, Middleport, and Waid Diddle, Van Lear,
Ky.
The wedding took place at

OPEN MON. AND FRI. TIL 8 P.M.
CLOSED lHURSDAYS IN JUNE, JULY AND AUGUST
I

RENcll

CiTy FAbRic Sleopp

GALIJPOUS - Registration
for Gallipolis Recreation Depart.
ment summer tennis lessons will
·be held from 8-10 p.m. Monday at
the Memorial Field tennis courts.
Registration will be on a firstcome basis. All participants inu.st '
furni8h their own racquets and

baU..
Lessons will be conducted on an

hourly bMls from 8-11 a.m. aod r..
7 p.m. Head Instructor Is Jackie
Knight.

'

(Continued on Page C-2)

Meigs pitcher Beth Bartrum goes into the windup while freshman first baseman Natalie Lambert waits for a putout.

La.,.,dreau.x' streak stopped at 31

Schmidt blasts two homers; CarltQn wins ninth
CIDCAGO (AP) - Mike Schmidt
blasted two home runs to raise his
major league-leading total to 16
Saturday and Steve Carlton became
the first nine-ganie winner in the
majors as the Philadelphiah Phillies
rolled to a 7-&lt;J victory over the
Chicago Cubs.
Sclunidt, who now has 24 career
homers in Wrigley Field and 34
against the Cubs overall, slugged a
two-run homer to feature a three-run
third, walked in a three-run fourth

and homered again to lead off the
seventh.
It was the fifth time Schmidt has
hit two home -runs in a game in
Wrigley Field, where he slanuned
four in a row on April17, 1976.
Carlton, 9-2, allowed only singles
in the seven innings he worked.
Dickie Noles finished up.
Willie Hernandez, 14, was the
loser.

two singles and a sacrifice fly and
Baltimore took advantage of five
Twins errors as the Orioles bombed
Minnesota 11-1 Saturday.
Minnesota outfielder Ken Landreaux went 0-for-4 and had his
major league-leading hitting streak
stopped at 31 games. Landreaux's
streak was the longest in the
American League in 31 years.

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP ) Rich Dauer drove in four runs with

Minnesota conunitted three errors
in the first two innings as Baltimore

provided Scott McGregor with a 5-0
lead.
McGregor, 4-2, scattered eight hits
aod struck out three batters.
DETROIT (AP) - California's
Tom Donohue and Bert Campaneris
each cracked two-run homers to
back the combined four·hit pitching
of Bruce Klson and Dave LaRoche
as the Angels defeated the Detroit
Tigers &amp;-1 Saturday.
Kison, 3-4, was masterful in the
early innings, giving up a two-out
single to Steve Kemp in the first in-

Clay 'A' softball cha·m p
Wildcat pitcher Bess McCulloch
limited the Patriots to seven hits and
allowed no walks.
After scoring one run in the first
inning, Portsmouth rolled up nine
runs in the fifth inning and two more
in the seventh.
Portsmouth . shortstop Teresa
Portsmouth collected 18· hits and
committed only one error enroute to ' Ruby smacked a home run in the ·
the state crown.
seventh inni11g for the only roundASHLAND, Ohio (AP) - The Portsmoulh Clay Panthers defeated the
New Madison Tri·Village Patriots
13-3 Saturday for the Class A Ohio
High School Girls Softball championship.

Abele wins AAA tennis
COLUMBUS (AP) - Adam Abele
gave Marietta its first state high
school tennis champion Saturday
when he defeated Eric Heigh of
Toledo St. John 's 64, &amp;-2\11 the Class
AAA singles finals at Ohio State.

Mark Redding and Jeff Kohls of
Kettering Alter defeated Semi ·and
Merln Mutlu of Springfield North &amp;4, &amp;-1, for the ClaSs AAA doubles
championship.

tripper of the game.
Tri-Village committed six errors
in losing.
Kim Cassidy and Kelly Feeman
had three RBI's each to help · Cuyahoga Fall defeat Amella 14-0 ·
and win the state girls Class AAA
fast-pitch softball championship
Saturday.
Cuyahoga Falls had three runs In
first inning. Amelia's starting pit. cher, Tiffaney Beach, walk~ the fir•
st four.
Mary Frazier then went In lor
Amelia.
·
The. winning pitcher was Tarla
Leittly, who went the seven innings
and allowed three hits.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO - - - - - 1

Early Winners
•. ,. Page C-5 ·

ning and then retiring the next 13
batters in order before walking Kirk
Gibson to start the Detroit sixth.
The Angels got one run in the first
when Rick Miller worked Tiger starter and loser Pat Underwood, 0-3, for
a walk, went to third on Dickie
Than 's double and scored on Carney
Lansford's grounder.
In the California second, Larry
flarlow hit a · two-out single and
scored ahead of Donohue's second .
homer of the season - a line shot
that just cleared the screen in lower
left field.

Late Losers
• •• Page C-5.

Scoreboard •.. Page C-3
Ohio Sportligh't ...-Page C-6
,,

~'
l

�v2-'nleSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June I, 1980

/
'

Scoreboard

Rain didn't stop no-hitter, track record
l"nnmAuoclaledl'ral reporta
companied by heavy rain, postponed
ThWiderstonns played havoc with five field finals until today. She also
Ohio high school spring sports cham- finished third in the long jump and
. . pionshillS Friday, but they did not fifth in the shot put, accounting lot
wash out a n~hitter by Cincinnati 17 of Geneva's 18points.
-: Jleading's Steve Engel and an allIn the Class AAA track team
; : time state girls track record by
races, Chillicothe and Alliance
:· Geneva's Nadine Cox.
shared the boys lead with 10 points
~: Reading moved within one victory each Bnd .West Chester Lakota had
" Qf its sixth state baseball title behind 19 points to lead Geneva by one point
:: Engel's rain-shortened gem. The among the girls.
!· senior left-hander threw only six in- · Hillsboro's boys and GranviUe's
; : nings before rain knoclled out the girls led Class M with 10 points
•: fmal inning Qf Reading's 1.0 Class apiece. Stryker and Portsmouth
;. Msemifinal decision over Norwalk. Notre Dame shared the Class A boys
•· The Cincinnati school will face lead with 10 points each and 1975
; Portsmouth or Petersburg champion Frankfort Adena, Canal
• Springfield, whose game was in- Winchester and Rockford Parkway
; teiTI!pted with no score in the third were deadlocked at 10 for the girls
•· inning, in the Class AA finals at Ohio lead.
State University. ·
In the boys baseball semifinals at
Cox, a senior, brcke her own all- Ohio State, Bay Village eliminated
time Ohio record with a 1~2 effort New Philadelphia 3-1 and Cincinnati
.. in winning the Class AAA discus for Oak Hills thwnped Toledo Whitmer
•. the second straight season. She set 12-3 in Class AAA and New
;. the old mark of lSI·I two weeks ago.
Matamoras Frontier defeated
' Cox established one of 24 stale Newark Catholic 7-3 and Anna
; •meet records before lightning, ac- ousted Mount Blanchard Riverdale
,

seven runs on only six hits.
Glazer of Beachwood. The Sopkos
In the fourth inning, Ryan NeweU defeated Kurt and Paul Nahra of
tripled home three runs after Borgia Gates Mills Hawken oW, 6-3, 6-3,
bad walked the · bases full. The while Sonkln and Glazer were
5-0.
an inning-ending double play.
Cougars tal)ied three more runs on defeating David DeCola and Steve
Engel issued two walks in the first
Bill Wegman bad a double, triple
an infield single, three walks and a Hodley of Urbana 6-3, oW, &amp;-2.
inning, but worked out of the jam and home run and five runs batted in
tw~run single by Tom Barker.
In the Class AAA singles, Adam
and put down the rest of the batters
to lead Oak Hills, 24-7, past Whit·
Warren Champion, the 1978 Class Abele of Marietta took on Tom
he f.aced in order. ·
mer, · ~3 . Dan Selhorst added a
AA girls smtball titleholder, bas Colton of Bay Village and John
The Blue Devils scored the game's
three-run horne run.
reached the finals for the second Treml of Akron FireStone will face
only run in the third inning when
Steve Oliverio, a.o, went the
time in three seasons. Champion
Eric Heigh of Toledo St. John's in
Dale Feldhaus walked, advanced to 'distance for Oak Hills, striking out
walloped Pomeroy Meigs 13-1 and Saturday's semifinals.
second on a Dean Estes sacrifice
nine and walking three.
faced Jamestown Greeneview, a III-I
In Class MA doubles Saturday, it
bunt and came home on an error.
Pitcher Tony Barker of Anna (20semifinal victor over Bellville Clear was Semi and Merin Mutlu of
Bay Village, 26-4', was paced by
4) checked Riverdale (17.,';) on six
Fork in the semifinals Friday at Springfield North against Andy Vansenior pitcher Mark Kaiser who held
hits, striking out five and walking
Ashland.
ce and Doug Detwiler of Lancaster
New Philadelphia, 1!1-1, to just three
two.
In the Class MA girls softball and Upper Arlington's Rick
hits as he struck out nine and walked
fmals Saturday, Amelia took oo Berggrem and John Sokol against
just two.
The Rockets jumped out to a 4.o
Cuyahoga Falls and the Class A mat- Mar.k Redding and Jeff Kohls of KetThe Rockets gave Kaiser all the
lead in the first inning as they bunchup sent Portsmouth Clay against tering Alder.
ched four singles and two walks, · New Madison Tri-Village.
support he needed in the first inning
In Friday's quarterfinals, forced
chaslrig starter Khris Thacker.
when Chris Fedor stroked an RBI
Amelia edged Brunswick 6-S, indoors by thunderslorll)s, Abele,
single and catcher Jim Liberatore
Jay Billing added an RBI single in
Cuyahoga Falls stopped Newark 5-4, defeated Kep Smith of Centerville 4coMected for a tw~run homer.
the sixth inning to close out the Anna
Clay ran over Archbold 1111 and Tri- 6, 7-6, 6-4, Colton beat Gerry Lowe of
(20-4) scoring.
New Philadelphia scored its only
Village blanked Beverly Fort Frye Cincinnati SyCamore, &amp;.o, 6-4, Treml
run in the second inning with the
Frontier (18-4) took advantage of
9.() in the semifinals.
ousted Streve Brown of Cincinnati
benefit of two infield errors. Kaiser,
nine walks by Newark Catholic (1!1·
Tinn Bruin of Lima Central Walnut Hills 6-4, &amp;-2, and Heigh
IH, helped kill the rally by starting
12) pitcher Clark Borgia to score
Catholic and Adam BOttortf of Ot· defeated Jim Demos of .Centerville
tawa Hills reached the finals of the 7.,';, 6-4.
combined Class A-M singles in the , In the Class MA doubles quarGist annl181 Ohio High School Boys terfinals, the Mutius beat Avon
Tennis Tournament.
Smith and Scott Harlow of Maumee
Bruin whipped Dick Miller of &amp;-1, 7.,';, Vance and Detwiler whipped
Springfield Central Catholic &amp;-1, &amp;.o,
David Strause and Steve Sbary of
first two roWlds.
PARIS (AP) - Bjorn Borg and while in the other semifinal Bottorff Upper Arlington 7-5, 3-6, 7-5,
With Watson and Irwin at even par Billie Jean King tamed a 81rirling eliminated Dan Kim of Canton Cen- Berggren and Sokol eliminated John
were Mahaffey, 68-72, Marti, 711-70, wind Saturday and moved forward tral Catholic 6.2, &amp;-I.
Mattimol and Matt Kelly of Toledo
and Newton, 72-68.
in the French Open Tennia ChamIn the Class A-AA doubles finals
St. John's 6-3, 6-3, and Redding and
There were 82 players out of a field pionships on a day cut short by rain.
Saturday at Ohio State, Jeff and Kohls polished off Rick Sholl and
of 156 who made the cut at 148, which
Borg, 1defending champion and David Sopko of Columbus Cen- Matt Romonoff of Sylvania Nortied with Houston for the second favored to win the men's title, tennial faced Rick Sonkin and Ron
thview 6-4, &amp;-I.
biggest field for the final two days demolished Pascal Portes of France
after Phoenix which had 83.
&amp;-3, ~. &amp;-1 and reached the 1aat 16.
Jay Haas, one of the first day
King, who got the worst Qf the conleaders at 68, joined Bob Gilder and
ditions earlier, overcame freaklah
Jeff Mitchell at one over par 141
gusts and clouds of red dust to
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
while Dave Hill, another of the first
eliminate fellow American Leslie
day c~leaders, Dave Stockton, winAllen 6-4, 3-6, &amp;-2.
ner of the 1976 PGA Championship,
Corrado Barazzutl of Italy,
Craig Stadler and Bill Kratzert were
Manuel Orantes of Spain and Peter
ina group of eight at 142.
McNamara Qf Australia were the ·
Term Beginning Jan . 2, 1981
other third-round winners. Guillermo Vilas of Argentina was well on
YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE AP
the way to victory when the rain
PREClATED
returned and ended play .
Pd. Pol. Adv.

State prep roundup

BETIIESDI\, Md. (AP) - Tom
: Watson and Lee Trevino have
;. worked themselves into position to
•. ~ce on the championship of. the
:·$ioo,OOO.Kemper0pen.
:: However, before either of the tour·
· •nament favorites starts counting the
::$72,000 first prize at the
:· Congressional Country Club in
:: suburban Washington, he'U bave to
·; hold off J .C. Snead, Dr. Gil Morgan
:·and little-known Mike Morley as
::well as Hale Irvin, John Mahaffey,
· ·: veteran Fred Marti and Australian
:; Jack Newton.
:• Snead, who played what he called
;: "kind Qf a boring round," shot a 69
&lt;Friday to go with his li8 for a tw~
:. round total of 137 over the 7,054:: Ylll'd. par-70 course to lead the field
:: by one stroke going into today's
:: third rOWld. The final round will be
.· played Sunday.
·~ "I didn't drive as well as I did
-: Thursday," said Snead, whose 270.7.: yard average leads the tour
· statistics this week, "but I didn't get
into as much trouble."
In second place is Morley, an 11·
year pro whose only tour victory
came in the 1977 Quad City Open. He
al8o said he shot two similar rounds,
7~138, except that he started off
Thursday with two bogeys.
Trevirio, with 6~70, and Morgan,
11-ta, tied for third place lit 139, and
Trevirio appears to be working up to
the U.S. Open at Baltusrol in two
weeks.
"This course is very similar to
•Baltusrol," he said, "except they
don't have the rough here that we
: will bave in \he !)pen. This 18 good
·for me because 'rm going to skip

Locally...
(Continued from Page C-1)

Nee camp
ATHENS - A Danny Nee
. basketball day camp for boys and
. girls will be conducted by the
Athens City Recreation Park
June23-27.
Nee, a former Notre Dame
assistant, was recently named as
Oti head coach.
Interested campers may
register at the park from 8:311-9
a.m. June 23. Each session will
run from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
For further information, con- ,
tact camp coordinator Larry Ep- .
perly, 59UOOI.

Women's tourney
GAIJlPOUS - A sanctioned
women's slow pitch softball tournament will be held In Gallipolis
June 7-'. For further information
call446-7577.

~SCamp
GAIJlPOUS - Registration
will begin at 8:30 a.m. for the
thre!Miay Gallia Academy
Baseball Camp. There are still
some openings available at the
gate (f'J)).

ones."
Watson, currently the game's
most outstanding player and leading
money-winner thl:i year with
$346,12:i,led a group of five including
IrWin, who bad the tournament's low
I"Oijlld of 66, at even par 140 after the

KENNETH GUY ROSE
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

Tony Barker took over and fanned
the first inan he faced, but Frontier
right-fielder Tom Barker hit a tw~
run single to left.
A walk loaded the bases again, but
Barker recorded his second strik~
out to get the save and give Ana the
cbampionslUp.
Frontier ended the season 18-6.
Cincinnati Oak Hills won the Ohio
Class AAA high school baseball title
Saturday with an 8-6 victory over
Bay Viliage - in the championship
game,

--:- .-

15 21 .349 91to!t

211 17 .•'22
lill II .!711 2
:w 19 .!711 2

22 24 .t78 8~
li 28 .422 V
lfl 26 .381 10~

Atlanta

f"tidd_y'•G•mp
Cbl&lt;a10 10, l'!lilodelphia 7
New YoBS, Pittaburgb 1, s~ innings, raln
MoolreaiiO, St. Loula4
Clndmatl5, san Di"l!o 3
Loll Angeles I, AUantl4
San Frucil«! 3, HOW!ton 2
Saadoy'oGameo
N~w York at Pittsburgh
Montreal at st. Louis
PNJ.delphia at Chicago
Atlanta at lAJ Angelet
Cinci.Mti at San Dieso
Houst.onatSanFranclaco
,
Mt.day'aGames
Chie~go atMoot.re.l, n
P1llladelphia at Pittsbuf!!h, n
CtncinniU at Loe Anceles, n
Houaton at San Dleco, n
Atlanta at San Francisco, n

-

W. LPe&amp;. GB
'ZI 16 .6211

22
22
21
20
19

20 .5:W ~~~
22 .500 5\1
Zfo .467 7
23 .465 7
:W .442 I

Kanau City
Ookland

26
:W
24
23

11
Zl
22
23

New York

22 Ill .5:W

Baltimore

Cleveland

Detroit

~ ~~

.591
.533 21&lt;o
~22 3
.500 4
22 22 .500 4
II Iii .419 711
II !a .391 9

Chicago
Seatlle
Teua
Calllornla

Minn...ta

Frldliy'• Games

•

Ba!l9fl $, Milwauk~ 3
Seattle 4, Cleveland 3, 111 innings
Nn-Yorkl, Torontoo
lldroit 12, Calllornia 1
Ka"" City 9, ChicaiO 2
Battlmoro 3, Mlnneaola 2,10 lnnlnp
Oekland I, Texas 3
Suda)''• Gamel
Califmnia at Detroit
Milwaukee at Bolton
Toronto at New York
Seattle at Cleveland
Chicago at Kansas City
Baltimore a t Oakland at Tezu, n
M-.y'aGIIIDIS
Mll•auk.ee at Baltimore, n
cautQmta at Toronto, n
Oakland at C1eveland, n
Sealtle at lldroit, n
New York o~tKansu City,n
Boston 11 Mlmesota, n

P'rldoy'•:t;~
AmerkaaLeope

DETROIT TIGERS -

Announ&lt;ed th&lt;
retirerDI!!llt rA John Hiller, pltcher. Recalled
~. RobbiN, pii.Cher, tram Evansville of the

PITISBIJRGH PIRATES - Plo&lt;ed Tim Foli,

· lnfitk:ler on Ur diNbled list. Recalled Vance
Law, Wielder, from Portland of the Pacific
Colli w,...
JI'OO'I'IIAIL
No-F-Loqae
BlJFFALO BIW - ' Reltued!Uuty Jacltaon,
• punter. Acql&amp;irtd Roosevelt lab, runnina
back, on waiverafrun the Baltinn Colts.
,. CINCINNATI BENGAI.'I - Slonod Ron Sin&gt;
~er, and Ltny Poole, n&amp;IUlJni

! C:,·

~o't9~!""u.

prices to dealers on these selected
models until Aug. 17, 1980 so you may get big savings!

'100
DISCOUNT

HOTPOINT DELUXE 23.5 CU. FT.
REFRESHMENT CENTER WITH
ICE &amp; WATER THRU THE DOORI

QUALITY 2·SPEED WASHER
&amp; MATCHING CAVER WIH-1
PERMA NENT PRESS C'I'CLES !

IJGHTING UP SCOREBOARD
The avef!ige scoring for both
teams in major games in the 1979-80
college basketball season was 144

wa.,... ,..

M :c~ ,•,t.; ,'~(l,.1'

C·~·-·

'.'

-~·

:JL8155(;A

'50 DISCOUNT

ON THE PAIR

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - SW1ed Larry
Heater, nlllllin&amp; bact, to a aeries~ t!aree one-

)'e.ar contracta.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS - stcne&lt;t Moot
Buben, defensive end, and Paul Rici:er. Ught
' end. '
ODU.EGE
• .cENTIIAL MISSOUIII STATE - Named LYM
• nan« head buketbaU cooch.
· WYOMING - Nomod Robert Hll&lt;h athletic
' director .

t-

Majer lane .........
Frlolo}"o Gomeo
NATIONAL LEAGUE_,

Baltimore, .~2 ; Cooper, Mllwa~, .HS; S~
men, Detroit, .345.
RUNS: YOWlt, MilwauiH, 39; WillS Texas
31; Molitor, Milwaukee, 36 ; Wilson, Kania! City:
36; Tranunell, Detroit, l3.
RBI: Oli ver, Texas, 35; Ogiivie, Milwaukee,
32; Hebner, Detroit, 31 : Cooper, Milwauk~. 31;
Perez, Booton, 30 ; Parrish, Detroit 30 · Annas
Oakland, 30; B. Bell, Texas', 30.
' '
'
HITS: Limdreaux, MlnneS&lt;lta, 63· Molitor
Milw~ukee, 5t ; Rivers, Te~UU, $9 ; Wi'lson, K.u,.:
sas City, ~ ; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 57 .
DOUBLES: Morrison, Chicago, JS; Yount
Milwaukl!t!, U; Oliver, Texas, It ; D. Ga rcia:
Toronto, 13; Lemon, Chica~o, 12.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 6; Brett Kansas
City, 5; Castlno, Mirmesota, t; 13 Tied W'IU13,
HOME RUNS: Oglivle, Milwaakee, 12; Rudl,
Califomla, 11: Velez, Toronto, 9; Zisk Teus 9·
5 Tied Wittl8.
SJ'OLEN BASES : Hendt'noo , Oakland 22:
Wilaon, Ka~U:~ City, 19; Bwnbry, Baltimor~ 13·
'" Carew, Ca1Uornia,12; J. Cruz , seattle, 12; Wu~s'.
I

•

•

Texu, 12.

PITCHING (S Deciaiona) : Honeycutt Seattle
H • .87$, 2.S9; Rainey, Boston, S-1 , .W, 4.00;
Guidry, N~w York, ~1, .833, 3.12; John, New
York, 7·2, .nl, 3.01; Gura, Kansas City, 7·2, .m,
1.89 ; Redfern, Minnesota, 6-2, .750, 3Jt9 ; Stieb,
Toronto.~2 •.714, 2.44; Dobon, Chicago, 5-2 .714
4.31.
t
'
. ~TRIKEOUTS : Guidry, N.ew York,Gl; F. BanIUI\er, Seattle,~; M. Nol'll5, oakland, M; fted.
fern, MiMesota, 49; Matlack, Te188, ta.

CANTON !API - Lee Erickson,

Julie Brendenbeck; MaCedonil N'urdonla, 132-8.
I. Su• Fil%jjentld, Mecedonla Nordorlla, 12H ! .
Debbie Undenachmidt Cent.ervJIK, 1~7 . 8.
Jane Rader, Cr~:~fton, Midview, llt4.
Girls A Shol P\Jt - 1. &amp;v Schumm, Rockford
ParkWMy, 41-l .., , l . Barb.l l"i~W.ins, Fayette
Gorham Fayette, 411-1'-'•· 3. SUiie Howman, New
l.cfl:don_, 40-4'1:. 5. Tyra Hom, Sdo Jewett-&amp;io
37-3~. a. Qathy T1ylor, ~ertoo,37-3'•·
'
Girls AAA Hhr:h Jwnp - l. chris Hunt, Dftlytoo
W11yne, ~. 2. M4chelle Stoyka, Cleveland Mar·
Wll, s-t. 3. J11ckie Buctm~n, New1rk, $-(i. 4.
Ulur'te Areaenau.lt, Wort.hlngton, 5-$. 5. (tiel
· Heidi Hovrefe, Medina, and Sue Beredt, Raven:

...

~.

~

Girls A Long Jump .:... I. ~~ti HMnia , Frank·
fort Adena 18-7¥., mttt r
; old record, 11·

I 'll, Tr!Jh Elting, Minater, 19'11. 2, Terri Koenig
Mineral RJdge, 1?.1. 3. Joyce Grube, Bahlmort
U~rty Unlon, 11·1. 4. PatU Bednarek, Richmond He.lghts, 17-0. 5. Jani.ne Sctvnelur LlnC&amp;;Ster filher, J~ . 6. Jackie KiM-, Millnrd
Center Fairbanks, 1&amp;-fl ~.
Boys A Hl~ttl J~ - I. Toin Bowman, Port,s.
mouth Notre DarneL&amp;-1. Z. (tie ), Ken Mackulin,
Independence, and uave Jones, JI!'Welte-&amp;io 67. 4. Pete Ya.skowitz, Old Fort, U . 5. Rick
Newsock, West A!~xandria Twin VaUey Soulh, 56. 8. Jay Hom, Waynesfi eld-Goshen ,~Boys AAA Shot Put - l. Garin Verb,
ChiUieotbe, 6-t'r.. 2. Ron Yarab, Youngstown
Boerdman, 63 ~. !1. Barry Walker, Lancaster, 62·
4lt.. 4. Mark Hocevar, Warren Howland, 62-4\la . 5.
James Ka.ser, Toledo St. Francis, 59-Sir•. 6. Tom
HasseJ, Cincinnati PureeD, $9-3~ .
Boy, AAA Long Jump - 1. Kevin louu
Alliance, 23-31f.. 2. Allon:o Lyons, Painesville
Riverside , 23-J . 3. Tel'l')' Holt, Colwnbu..l!l Brook·
haven, Z3-1. 4. Jeff Ross, Welt Chester Lakota
22-9\t. 5. Dan-en Morgan, Warren Hardin@; zi
7\la. 6. J;..ory Kermedy, Dayton Roth, 22--2\t. '
Boys AA Dill'UI - I. Jon Colt, l:lillatdo,18U,
meet record ; M:t record, 17t-7, Steve James
Cortland La-.., lim. 2. Rick Tooker:
Chagrin Falls KenBton, 186-6. 3. Melvin Terrell
Cleveland ChatoUc, 183-9. 4.. BU,l Szabo, Oberlin
Firelanda.r. 163-t. Dean hall, Swanton, 162-5. 6.
Jeff Fry, 1Mhod0fl, l!().7,
Team laden
1

BoysAAA - I . (tie),Ch.iUicotheandAIJiance
10. 3. (tie), Younptown Boardman and
PainesviUe Ri Y.erside I . 6. (Ue), Lancaster and
Colwnbua Brookhaven 6. 7. (tie}, West Che.11ter
Lakota and Warren Howland4. 9. (Ue) Toledo St.
Francllland Warren Harding 2.
Boys AA - 1. HU.laboro 10. 2. Chagrin FaUs
Kenston 8. 3. Cleveland Catholic S. 4. Oberlin
F irelands 4. S. Sw6ncon 2. 6. Goshocton L
Boy• A - 1. (tie), Stryker and PortsmouUI
Notre Dame 10. 3. Lewiaburg Twin VaHey North
CWo . . . Semlltaoll
8. 4. (tie), Scto Jewett and Independence 7. 8.
NewPhiladelphiaO 1 0 0 0 0 0 - 1 3 0
Richwood North UnionS. 7. (tie), Old Fort and
BlyVillage
300 000 x - 3 53
Liberty Center4.
·
Mike Sidley and Andy Mallemee· Mark
GIRLS AAA - 1. West Cbester Lakota 19. 2.
Kalaer and JUn Libero~tore. W·Kaiser. Lstokey. .· Geneva 11. 3. ( Ue )J.~tervlll e, Macedonia NorHR~ Bay Vlllage, Ubertore.
dotUa and Dayton wayne 10. 6. (tit), North Can·
OakHIIIs
40 3 032 0 - 12 9 3
ton Hoover, Clev~land MarshaU and Sylvanla
Toledo Whitmer 0 0 0 0 II I - 3 8 I
Northv lew8.
Steve Oliverio and Dan Sehlhorst Craig
Girla AA - l. GranvtUe 10. 2. Twinsburg
Perkins (7); Brian Ueberman, Jeff Koiat 13),
Chamber tin 8. 3. Orrville 6. 4. Delaware Buckeye
Pat Dennls (7 ) and Tom Slefert. W-Oliverto, a.o.
Valley 4. S. Waverly 2. 8. Hamden Preble
L-Uebennan, 8-3. HR-()ak Hills, Dan Sehlhorst
Shawnee l .
Bill Weeman; Whibner, Scott Ziems.
'
Girls A - 1. (tie) , Frankford Adena, Canal
Winchester and Rockford Parkway 10. 4. (tle) 1
Clau AA Seaaill.u.la
Fayette Gorham Fayette, Mineral Ri~e ana.
Minst.er8.
Norwalk
000000 - 001
Reading
001 000 - I 4 0
Rick Leibold and Bob Duncan,; Steve Engel
COLUMBUS (AP) - Cham- .
and Mart Swanner. W-Engel. L-Leibold.

Prep baseball tourney

Na_..._

Oak Hills (25-7) ~ored three runs
in the first inning on a fielding error
by Bay Village pitcher Cbris Fedoc
who picked up a squeeze bunt and
threw it into foul territory in right
field.
The Highlanders followed with two .
more runs in the fifth inning when ·
Bay Village committed an~
error. A tri~le by Dave Oliverio Qf
Oak Hills in the same inning pushed
the sCore to 7~.
The Highlanders scored their final
run in the sixth inning on a saCricie
fiy by Mike GurclseO which followed
a triple by Chuck Laumann,
Jeff Hellman, 7-1, who allowed
only three hits, was credited with the
victory.
Bay Village scored all five of their
runs in the ninght inning on a threerun homer by losing ·pitcher Fedor
and a tw~run double by Mike Cseh.

Richard, Houston, 71; Ryan, Houston' ~ .'
Blylt!ven , PittsbutKh , 53; ROtfers, MontreaL 52. '
AMERICAN LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

Milwaukee
Toronto

l3i

ColliM, Clnclnnatt, 13; Cedeno, Houston'
'
PITCHING (5 Dedshw ): Rew, U.Angeles
6&lt;1, 1.1100, 2.13; Blblly, Pittaburgh, H ..131, 3.11:
Wekh, Lol Angeles, S.l, .833, 2.16; Carlton
Philadelphia, 1-2, .100, 1.99: Blu~, San FranchiCO'
. 1-2, .lOCI, 2.79; Jackaao, Pilbburgh, 4-1, .100,1.69 ;
S~rley, San Di~go, 4-1 , .100, I.S2; Po~stcre, Clnemnatt, 6-2, .750J. 2 . ~ .
··
S'I'RIKEOlJT_, Carlton, Phit.&lt;lelphla ao

·North. San Fnmcbco, 13.

BAmNG (15 at btita) : l..andruux Mlnne. soW, .356; Molitor, Milwal,lke(!t · ~ i BUmbry

MILWAtJIIEE BREWEIIS - Recalled Paul
' Mitchell, pitcher, from VaTICOO\Ier of the Paciflc
Couti.eque.

points.

i

BATIING 115 at ball)' Reitz, St. Loula, .3114;
K. llemancle2, St. Loula, .363; R. Smith, Los
AnJele.!, .SM; Trillo, Philadelphia, .333; J . Cnu:,
1
, H.........331.
·
RIJNS: Schmidt, l'!liloclelphia, 35; K . Her·
: nandez, Sl. Loula, 32; Roo&lt;, l'!lilodelphia , 30;
Loazlnlkl, l'!lilotlelphia, 21: Templeton, St. l.oo~,
21: . _ , Lai Anoeteo, II.
RBI : S&lt;hmldt, Pt111aclelphia 31; Garvey, Los
· An&amp;eles, :rl; McBridel.~ddphia, 33; H.,.
drick, Sl. Loula, 33; R. liMitll.Lai An(elea, 33.
fDTS : K. Hernandez, St. Louia, 59; l'~mpleton,
St. Loula, 511 ; Reitz, Sl. Loula,l4; R. Smltll. Loo
All&amp;elel, 53 ; Taveras, New Vork, 52; Hendridl,
Sl t.ula u. '
OOtJBf.ii, Steama, New Yoot, 17: RCIH,
: Plllla&lt;telohla, 14; Klllgllt, Cln&lt;II1Nitl, 3; K. Her·
nanda1. St. Louia, IZ; Valentine, Montreal, II;
Sdlnlon, l'!lilodelpbla, 11.
TRIPLES: Moreno, Pttubursh, $; McBride,
• l'lllladelphla, 4; KnJ&amp;ht, ClnclnnaU, 4; 14 Tied
Wittl3.

- - - 082
Riverdale CluiA
0000000
Anna
400001x - S 71
Kris Thacker, J im Weber ( l) amd Randy
Worrell; Tony Barker and Steve Baker. w.
Barker . l.r Thacker.
Frontier
0100303 - 763
NewarkCathoUc 003 000 0 - 3 3 ()
Robert McP~ak and Chad Bleakley; Clark
Borgia and Jay Cooperrider.

State track meet
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ Cham­
pionship results Friday in the combined Ohio high school boys and girls
track meet in Ohio Stadium (aU
distances in meters unless otherwise
indicated):

· pionship results Saturday in the
combined Ohio high school boys and
girls track meet in Ohio Stadium (aU
distances in meters unless otherwise
indicated):
A.U
Girb'3,200-I.C.nl&lt;ovllt..1 UsaHaw•,Janet·

,tesurton,CarotWalcott,KeuyGreentee. 9:28.4,
beat record, new event. 2. Wacbwortll, 9:33.7. 3.
West Chester Lakota, 9:SS.1. 4. Upper Arlington,
Fainnont
West,Village
9:40.3. Ba)', 9:M.O. 6. Ketterinl!l
9:37.1
. S. Bay
Boys' Hl&amp;h Jump - 1. Jeff Lunt, Lakewood St.
Edward, W . 2. Robbie Marsh, ~ter,&amp;-7 . 3.
Doug Patch, G~. 6-7. 4. Dan Huff, Akron
Springfield, 11-1. $. Pitt Sm!lh 1 Reynolcbbufl!,l!-1 .
6. Jeff Rots, WestCbeacer I..UOtl, u .
Boys' Pole Vault - 1. Charles McConnel, West
Chester Lakota, 1M. 2. Bryan Jones, Kettering
Falnnoot Ell~ Ilot. 3. Mor8111 Ebln, Roynolcllburs, 14-0. 4. 8rad Hotehklu, Medina, 1'-&lt;1. $,
JtmSmlth, TUf.., Columbian, IH. 8. Moot fllrbodte&lt;l&lt;, J.exinlton,IU.
Girls' 100 low hurdles - 1. Prouda Adams,
Trotwood-M.dlooo, 14.3. 2. 2. llqlnna Kl"ff,
Akron Bu.chte~ 14.4. 3. Kim JIUl'liaon, Toledo
Start, lUI. 4. Sheila Gibeon. Toledo Rocers, IU.
5. Sherry Pastor, Parma ValLey Forge, 14.7. 6.
S~ron Watta,OaytonSUven.Patterson, IU.

coach at Malune College.
Erickson was assistant basketball
coach for two seasons at Wichita

M-G-M
Softball

pointment Friday.
The new coach succeeds Phil
Hoskins who guided the Pioneers the
past three seasons. Hoskins resign~
last month.

GAS
PAINS?

MONDAY
AI Kyger
Kyger Creek vs Mead, 6:15
p.m.
Eagles vs Kyger Creek, 7:30
p.m.
Mead vs Eagles, 8:45p.m.

TUFSDAV
At Kyger
Mason vsPearl Beer, 6:15p.m.
Hockenberry's vs Mason, 7:30
p.m.
Pearl Beer vs Hockenberry's,
8:45 p.m.
At GalllpoUs
Holzer vsRollins (1), 6:15p.m.
Racine vs Pizza Hut (2), 6:15
p.m.
Pizza Hut vs Holzer (2), 7:30
p.m.
.
RollinsvsRacine (1), 7:30p.m.

WEDNESDAY
AI Kyger
Carr's vs Mead, 6:15p.m.
RC vs Carr's, 7:30p.m.
Mead vs RC, 8:45p.m.
AtGaWpoUs
Mt. State vs Rookies (UMP·
7:30p.m.) (!),6:15p.m.
Wamsley vs Hockenberry's
(2), 6:15p.m.
Mason ( UMP~: 15 p.m. ) vs MI.
State (1), 7:30p.m.

Get relief -

Drive a

MOTRON MOPED®
To work • To school • To play

Upto100+ MPG*

THURSDAY
At Kyger
Kyger Creek vs Canady, 6:15
p.m.
Pearl Beer vs Kyger Creek,
7:30p.m.
Canady vs Pearl Beer, 8:45
p.m.
AtGaillpolls
Wamsley vs Eagles (1), 6: 15
p.m.
Pizza Hut vs Blue Tartan (2),
6:15p.m.
Blue Tartan vs Wamsley (2),
7:30p.m.
Eag1es VS Pizza Hut ( 1), 7 :30

Low cost to buy Low cost to operate

•

The Smart Ride in Alternative Transportation

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

606 E, MAIN
992-2094
BRAKE SERVICE &amp; ALIGNMENTS
.

p.m.

'will vary wilh rider 's weight and driving conditions.

r============~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
OPEN DAILY 10.9; SUNDAY 1-'

Boys Clau A pole vo~ult - 1. Tom Coulon,
Stryker, 14-4. 2. Mitt Vermillion Lewilburil
. Twin Valley Nortll, IH. 3. Dove o..:;n, Riel&gt;
wood North Union, 13-4. 4. Kevin Carpenter,
· Liberty Center. ts.G. 5. (Ue) , Tony Mtller, Old
Fort,andLeeR12«,MountGUead 1:14.
Gkll A Hllh Jwnp - I. Jenny
Canal
Winchester, W. Z, Julie llo«enkamp, Mlnoler, 1Boys' 110 ~gh hurdleS - 1. Sam Thomas
4, 3. Kim Daubenmire, MUfersport, 5-4. 4. Cathy
Uma, 14.1 . 2. Darren Morgan, Warren Ha.rd1ni
Taylor, Edeerton, s-4. 5. Klm Tackett. Piketon,
Eut IU. 3. Ed Poole, Akron Garfield, IU. I.
!-,! , 6. Julie lllce, W..t Salem North..-m, :1-2.
Daryl Calhoun, Middletown, IU 5. Jolltl
Girb AM Shot Put - I. Theresa Hawltlnl,
Tbomaa, Zaneaville, lU. s. Tim Ryan,
West Chester Laklb, 44-4~. 2. JUlie Hoehb1J, · Clevelard
St. IsnaUus, U.4
S)'lvanil Northview, -GO. 3. Debbie Moort,
Cleveland llelgllla u.s%. 4. Krla McKenzie,
Chesterland W..t Geauga, ~1·14. 5. Nadine c..,
Girls' 16110 - I. Kathy Bryant, Colwnbus Wat·
Geneva, 40'-'. S. Kim Williams, Tole&lt;loDeVUblsa,
terson, 5:1JU. 2. Mluren Coopn, Ketter~nt: FairlN.
mont East, 5:112.1. 3. Becky Domll, Athens,
5,116.89. I. LoiJ TrWer, Sidney, 5,06,&amp;. i . Slit
Girls M ~-1. Carrie Brown, Granville,
Schroeder, Napoleon, 1:01.1. I. Gina Moore
I:IJ.6, meet t«&lt;rd: old re«&gt;nn, 1~. Terri L)'lll1
MiamiabllrR,i,IU.
'
Byland Mantua Crestwood, 1m. 2. Car.,1
Boys' 1800 - 1. Mlk~ Kallabrin, Mansfield
Blalk....t&lt;l, Twlnsbufl! Cltamberlin 12f.7. 3.
Malabar, 4:111.07, be.at record ; old record, 4:1».5,
Valerie Pack, Orrville, 1~. ~. KeUy RoiiSCh,
Reule McAfee, Cincinnati Courter Tech,l989. 2.
Delaware Buckeye Valley, llt-10. 5. BmMta
Jolin Zlll*a1 Ll!n&lt;uter, l :O'I .I. 3. Rickey Pitt.
Reed , Waverly,ll&amp;-3. 8. Carolyn later, Camden
PtebleSha'lfhee, 1164.
man, ClevelatlG East Tech, 4:13.4. 4. Brian
Carlt~t PainePille Riverside , 4: Jt.O. :.. Jay100
Girb AM Long Jwnp - 1. Carla Battaalia,
Foi,J....UIWood St EdW'af'd. 4:15.8. 6. Chri.s Ross,
Centerville, 111-2. 2. Janet Baughman, North CanWeotCarTollton,~ : IU.
ton Hoover, ll'r'.. 3. Nadirie Cox, Geneva, 17~. t .
Boys' 400 relay - 1. Middletown Darwin Hill,
Pamela Dillon, Mwlllon Ja~ 1 17-41%. 5.
Larry Jonea, BarT)' James, Keith Grace, 42.0,
Mellsaa Pipe, Cincinnati Indian rtiu, 17-4'11. 5.
beat record old record, 42.9, Cleveland Adams
Tracey Lotti. Weal Cheater Lak,..,l7-4.
19'111. 2. Cleveland Adamo, lU 3. CantoO
Girls AAA Diacus - l . Nadine Col:, Geneva,
McKinley, U.S.~. Cleveland Collinwood, 12.5. 5.
1!6-2, meet I'1!Cilnl: old re&lt;ord, 113-2, Cox,l9'79. z.
Thereoa bawtlrls, Wut Chester Lalt..... I:IN. 3. •Cleveland East, 4U. 8. Cleveland KeMedy, 42.8

Barl«l,

State, and head coach at Tabor
College and California Baptist
College.
Malone Athletic Director Jack
Hazen aMounced Erickson's ap-

38, has been named .head basketball

SUN.

MON ~

KM RADIAL 225

1

TUES. WED. ONLY

'3

Our Reg . •. 96

STEEL BELTED! fOILamps
RADIALS

·

1 Rectangular

:lamps.

GR78X15 HR78X15 LR78X15

51

•

1978 CHEVEnE 4 DOOR
STANDARD SHifT
'3995

EICI~ Plu1 F.E.T.

2. 70 To 3.24
Our 10.88 •
811.88

:
I

97~
AlrOIOI

Flit Fix
Slle Price
lnllatee up to
25lbt. Seale
tor short dto·
lar&lt;:eo.

b

1977 CHEVROLET IMPALA .....................•:.u~.,a•
Door, 305 V·8, auto. trans., air cond., AM rad io.
1977
MONTE CARLO. ............................
\/·8 enQ., auto. trans., air, ~adlo, w . t ires.

COVf- [llll.liRY
CO M'I~ I Iol [ li! S

&lt;4

'100
DISCOUNT

1976 NOVA CONCOURS.........................'3295

'50 '
DISCOUNT

4 Door, 305 V·B, auto. Irons., air, lilt wheel, 22,000 miles.

1976 MALIBU ClASSIC ........................ '1995
4 Door, V-8, auto .•.AM: FM.

1975 CAPRICE 4 DR ............................ •1995
V·B, auto. trans., air, window locks, AM·8 track.
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR...................... '2495

PAY
WAT ER

WE HAVE IN
NEW 1979 CHEVROLET PICKUPS
SEVERAL NEW 1979 CHEVROl£T

•100
DISCOUNT
MVdCl
l
HOA7EO

Mooel

~.t c.:::l!

csr;mJA

;&lt;;' 9:'1''1

•so

DISCOUNT

POMEROY LAN.D MARK

~·

"Your Cltevy Dealer"
Pomer~v

Auto Spllsh Guards
No drilling. All rubber guarde tor
front or rear ot car. Saw. .

4Cholet97of
Eacll

48~,~.

Steel Lug

Save low On Front

Wranclles

Disc Brake Special

Additional parr s and services.
wl'lteh may be f"teeded are at ex tra
cost For most Amer1can ca rs .

"Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Courlties"
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Pomeroy
Main Street

INGELS FURNITuRE

Store Hours: 8:30to 5:30
Mill Closed ats:oo P.M.
Phone 992-2181

'• -

our Reg . 3.27

Why take 8% on the Money
Market when you can get 12% at
Ingels Investment. - No
Mtoimom.1 - No Penalty for
Withdrawals. Start belfeving
that money does grow on trees.
Everyone gets a green thumb
when they lilake a cfeposlt. Come
In and discuss all the iletalls.

.

POMEROY M

ON
SAVINGS

I

8 ICE
SERV ICE!

PASSENGER CARS

992·2126

12%

WE

101 N. Znd Ave.

992-2&amp;35

I.

Middleport, 0.
I

.

,

Open Evenings Til8:00 p.m.
'•

i

.'
'

,(

'i

.-..-

:

12-V auto fog 1
:

YOUR CHOICE OF:
t7J

"I back
the
•
family Insurance
I sell with
·good neighbor
service."

lioto'""--

.~1

Amencan Auoc11Uon.

Special Edition. Slant 6cyl. eng ..

CALL ME. .

W&gt;liT

Los Angeles
Cindnrioti
HOUlton
·-_.,Diego
San Fr.nciseo

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;

Anna, Oak Hills
diamond champs
COLUMBUS (AP) - Anna's pit.
ching combined for 12 strikeouts and
stranded 13 runners as the Rockets
beat New Matamoras Frontier
Saturday 8-4 to win the Ohio Class A
!figh School baseball championship
it Ohio State University's Trautman
Field.
Anna, 20-4, went into lbe top of the
seventh leading 8-2, but starter Pat
Frilling, who bad worked out of
trouble all morning, appeared to
tire, yielding a single and two walks, .
whileretiringonly~.
'

2211

21 II .131 II&gt;
19 20 .i87 31&lt;o
II 22 .4&amp;3 ~l&lt;o

Borg, King lead
French Open

[Watson, Trevino closing in
Atlanta and go to Hartford to
prepare lor the Open."
Morgan, who bad two good initial
rounds here in the 1976 PGA Championship before (altering, said he
found it more difficult Friday than
he did the day previously.
"The greens were more difficult to
read and putt," he said. "I felt the
round was up and down. I bad some
good holes and then I had some bad

W. L Prt. GB
24 II .571

HOME RUNS : S&lt;:r•nldt, Phlladelpbla, ll:
Luzinikl, Phi~delphla1 12; Ga.rvey, Lot Anltlt!le.'l,
t; R. Smith, l..w ,\rijceae.. t; Kingnlln, Chicago,
I ; Hendrick, St. LooTs, I; S.k~r.l..tll An"e1t1, I ·
Clark, s.n Fnmcl.sco, l .
'
!!.TOLEN BES : LeFlore, Montreal, Z2;
Monmo, PittlburM;h, 22; (..aw, Los An~te~ lS ·

Erickson named Malone mentor

-~-·----· -----'·r.____________;,~~;:___ _ _

�v2-'nleSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June I, 1980

/
'

Scoreboard

Rain didn't stop no-hitter, track record
l"nnmAuoclaledl'ral reporta
companied by heavy rain, postponed
ThWiderstonns played havoc with five field finals until today. She also
Ohio high school spring sports cham- finished third in the long jump and
. . pionshillS Friday, but they did not fifth in the shot put, accounting lot
wash out a n~hitter by Cincinnati 17 of Geneva's 18points.
-: Jleading's Steve Engel and an allIn the Class AAA track team
; : time state girls track record by
races, Chillicothe and Alliance
:· Geneva's Nadine Cox.
shared the boys lead with 10 points
~: Reading moved within one victory each Bnd .West Chester Lakota had
" Qf its sixth state baseball title behind 19 points to lead Geneva by one point
:: Engel's rain-shortened gem. The among the girls.
!· senior left-hander threw only six in- · Hillsboro's boys and GranviUe's
; : nings before rain knoclled out the girls led Class M with 10 points
•: fmal inning Qf Reading's 1.0 Class apiece. Stryker and Portsmouth
;. Msemifinal decision over Norwalk. Notre Dame shared the Class A boys
•· The Cincinnati school will face lead with 10 points each and 1975
; Portsmouth or Petersburg champion Frankfort Adena, Canal
• Springfield, whose game was in- Winchester and Rockford Parkway
; teiTI!pted with no score in the third were deadlocked at 10 for the girls
•· inning, in the Class AA finals at Ohio lead.
State University. ·
In the boys baseball semifinals at
Cox, a senior, brcke her own all- Ohio State, Bay Village eliminated
time Ohio record with a 1~2 effort New Philadelphia 3-1 and Cincinnati
.. in winning the Class AAA discus for Oak Hills thwnped Toledo Whitmer
•. the second straight season. She set 12-3 in Class AAA and New
;. the old mark of lSI·I two weeks ago.
Matamoras Frontier defeated
' Cox established one of 24 stale Newark Catholic 7-3 and Anna
; •meet records before lightning, ac- ousted Mount Blanchard Riverdale
,

seven runs on only six hits.
Glazer of Beachwood. The Sopkos
In the fourth inning, Ryan NeweU defeated Kurt and Paul Nahra of
tripled home three runs after Borgia Gates Mills Hawken oW, 6-3, 6-3,
bad walked the · bases full. The while Sonkln and Glazer were
5-0.
an inning-ending double play.
Cougars tal)ied three more runs on defeating David DeCola and Steve
Engel issued two walks in the first
Bill Wegman bad a double, triple
an infield single, three walks and a Hodley of Urbana 6-3, oW, &amp;-2.
inning, but worked out of the jam and home run and five runs batted in
tw~run single by Tom Barker.
In the Class AAA singles, Adam
and put down the rest of the batters
to lead Oak Hills, 24-7, past Whit·
Warren Champion, the 1978 Class Abele of Marietta took on Tom
he f.aced in order. ·
mer, · ~3 . Dan Selhorst added a
AA girls smtball titleholder, bas Colton of Bay Village and John
The Blue Devils scored the game's
three-run horne run.
reached the finals for the second Treml of Akron FireStone will face
only run in the third inning when
Steve Oliverio, a.o, went the
time in three seasons. Champion
Eric Heigh of Toledo St. John's in
Dale Feldhaus walked, advanced to 'distance for Oak Hills, striking out
walloped Pomeroy Meigs 13-1 and Saturday's semifinals.
second on a Dean Estes sacrifice
nine and walking three.
faced Jamestown Greeneview, a III-I
In Class MA doubles Saturday, it
bunt and came home on an error.
Pitcher Tony Barker of Anna (20semifinal victor over Bellville Clear was Semi and Merin Mutlu of
Bay Village, 26-4', was paced by
4) checked Riverdale (17.,';) on six
Fork in the semifinals Friday at Springfield North against Andy Vansenior pitcher Mark Kaiser who held
hits, striking out five and walking
Ashland.
ce and Doug Detwiler of Lancaster
New Philadelphia, 1!1-1, to just three
two.
In the Class MA girls softball and Upper Arlington's Rick
hits as he struck out nine and walked
fmals Saturday, Amelia took oo Berggrem and John Sokol against
just two.
The Rockets jumped out to a 4.o
Cuyahoga Falls and the Class A mat- Mar.k Redding and Jeff Kohls of KetThe Rockets gave Kaiser all the
lead in the first inning as they bunchup sent Portsmouth Clay against tering Alder.
ched four singles and two walks, · New Madison Tri-Village.
support he needed in the first inning
In Friday's quarterfinals, forced
chaslrig starter Khris Thacker.
when Chris Fedor stroked an RBI
Amelia edged Brunswick 6-S, indoors by thunderslorll)s, Abele,
single and catcher Jim Liberatore
Jay Billing added an RBI single in
Cuyahoga Falls stopped Newark 5-4, defeated Kep Smith of Centerville 4coMected for a tw~run homer.
the sixth inning to close out the Anna
Clay ran over Archbold 1111 and Tri- 6, 7-6, 6-4, Colton beat Gerry Lowe of
(20-4) scoring.
New Philadelphia scored its only
Village blanked Beverly Fort Frye Cincinnati SyCamore, &amp;.o, 6-4, Treml
run in the second inning with the
Frontier (18-4) took advantage of
9.() in the semifinals.
ousted Streve Brown of Cincinnati
benefit of two infield errors. Kaiser,
nine walks by Newark Catholic (1!1·
Tinn Bruin of Lima Central Walnut Hills 6-4, &amp;-2, and Heigh
IH, helped kill the rally by starting
12) pitcher Clark Borgia to score
Catholic and Adam BOttortf of Ot· defeated Jim Demos of .Centerville
tawa Hills reached the finals of the 7.,';, 6-4.
combined Class A-M singles in the , In the Class MA doubles quarGist annl181 Ohio High School Boys terfinals, the Mutius beat Avon
Tennis Tournament.
Smith and Scott Harlow of Maumee
Bruin whipped Dick Miller of &amp;-1, 7.,';, Vance and Detwiler whipped
Springfield Central Catholic &amp;-1, &amp;.o,
David Strause and Steve Sbary of
first two roWlds.
PARIS (AP) - Bjorn Borg and while in the other semifinal Bottorff Upper Arlington 7-5, 3-6, 7-5,
With Watson and Irwin at even par Billie Jean King tamed a 81rirling eliminated Dan Kim of Canton Cen- Berggren and Sokol eliminated John
were Mahaffey, 68-72, Marti, 711-70, wind Saturday and moved forward tral Catholic 6.2, &amp;-I.
Mattimol and Matt Kelly of Toledo
and Newton, 72-68.
in the French Open Tennia ChamIn the Class A-AA doubles finals
St. John's 6-3, 6-3, and Redding and
There were 82 players out of a field pionships on a day cut short by rain.
Saturday at Ohio State, Jeff and Kohls polished off Rick Sholl and
of 156 who made the cut at 148, which
Borg, 1defending champion and David Sopko of Columbus Cen- Matt Romonoff of Sylvania Nortied with Houston for the second favored to win the men's title, tennial faced Rick Sonkin and Ron
thview 6-4, &amp;-I.
biggest field for the final two days demolished Pascal Portes of France
after Phoenix which had 83.
&amp;-3, ~. &amp;-1 and reached the 1aat 16.
Jay Haas, one of the first day
King, who got the worst Qf the conleaders at 68, joined Bob Gilder and
ditions earlier, overcame freaklah
Jeff Mitchell at one over par 141
gusts and clouds of red dust to
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
while Dave Hill, another of the first
eliminate fellow American Leslie
day c~leaders, Dave Stockton, winAllen 6-4, 3-6, &amp;-2.
ner of the 1976 PGA Championship,
Corrado Barazzutl of Italy,
Craig Stadler and Bill Kratzert were
Manuel Orantes of Spain and Peter
ina group of eight at 142.
McNamara Qf Australia were the ·
Term Beginning Jan . 2, 1981
other third-round winners. Guillermo Vilas of Argentina was well on
YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE AP
the way to victory when the rain
PREClATED
returned and ended play .
Pd. Pol. Adv.

State prep roundup

BETIIESDI\, Md. (AP) - Tom
: Watson and Lee Trevino have
;. worked themselves into position to
•. ~ce on the championship of. the
:·$ioo,OOO.Kemper0pen.
:: However, before either of the tour·
· •nament favorites starts counting the
::$72,000 first prize at the
:· Congressional Country Club in
:: suburban Washington, he'U bave to
·; hold off J .C. Snead, Dr. Gil Morgan
:·and little-known Mike Morley as
::well as Hale Irvin, John Mahaffey,
· ·: veteran Fred Marti and Australian
:; Jack Newton.
:• Snead, who played what he called
;: "kind Qf a boring round," shot a 69
&lt;Friday to go with his li8 for a tw~
:. round total of 137 over the 7,054:: Ylll'd. par-70 course to lead the field
:: by one stroke going into today's
:: third rOWld. The final round will be
.· played Sunday.
·~ "I didn't drive as well as I did
-: Thursday," said Snead, whose 270.7.: yard average leads the tour
· statistics this week, "but I didn't get
into as much trouble."
In second place is Morley, an 11·
year pro whose only tour victory
came in the 1977 Quad City Open. He
al8o said he shot two similar rounds,
7~138, except that he started off
Thursday with two bogeys.
Trevirio, with 6~70, and Morgan,
11-ta, tied for third place lit 139, and
Trevirio appears to be working up to
the U.S. Open at Baltusrol in two
weeks.
"This course is very similar to
•Baltusrol," he said, "except they
don't have the rough here that we
: will bave in \he !)pen. This 18 good
·for me because 'rm going to skip

Locally...
(Continued from Page C-1)

Nee camp
ATHENS - A Danny Nee
. basketball day camp for boys and
. girls will be conducted by the
Athens City Recreation Park
June23-27.
Nee, a former Notre Dame
assistant, was recently named as
Oti head coach.
Interested campers may
register at the park from 8:311-9
a.m. June 23. Each session will
run from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
For further information, con- ,
tact camp coordinator Larry Ep- .
perly, 59UOOI.

Women's tourney
GAIJlPOUS - A sanctioned
women's slow pitch softball tournament will be held In Gallipolis
June 7-'. For further information
call446-7577.

~SCamp
GAIJlPOUS - Registration
will begin at 8:30 a.m. for the
thre!Miay Gallia Academy
Baseball Camp. There are still
some openings available at the
gate (f'J)).

ones."
Watson, currently the game's
most outstanding player and leading
money-winner thl:i year with
$346,12:i,led a group of five including
IrWin, who bad the tournament's low
I"Oijlld of 66, at even par 140 after the

KENNETH GUY ROSE
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

Tony Barker took over and fanned
the first inan he faced, but Frontier
right-fielder Tom Barker hit a tw~
run single to left.
A walk loaded the bases again, but
Barker recorded his second strik~
out to get the save and give Ana the
cbampionslUp.
Frontier ended the season 18-6.
Cincinnati Oak Hills won the Ohio
Class AAA high school baseball title
Saturday with an 8-6 victory over
Bay Viliage - in the championship
game,

--:- .-

15 21 .349 91to!t

211 17 .•'22
lill II .!711 2
:w 19 .!711 2

22 24 .t78 8~
li 28 .422 V
lfl 26 .381 10~

Atlanta

f"tidd_y'•G•mp
Cbl&lt;a10 10, l'!lilodelphia 7
New YoBS, Pittaburgb 1, s~ innings, raln
MoolreaiiO, St. Loula4
Clndmatl5, san Di"l!o 3
Loll Angeles I, AUantl4
San Frucil«! 3, HOW!ton 2
Saadoy'oGameo
N~w York at Pittsburgh
Montreal at st. Louis
PNJ.delphia at Chicago
Atlanta at lAJ Angelet
Cinci.Mti at San Dieso
Houst.onatSanFranclaco
,
Mt.day'aGames
Chie~go atMoot.re.l, n
P1llladelphia at Pittsbuf!!h, n
CtncinniU at Loe Anceles, n
Houaton at San Dleco, n
Atlanta at San Francisco, n

-

W. LPe&amp;. GB
'ZI 16 .6211

22
22
21
20
19

20 .5:W ~~~
22 .500 5\1
Zfo .467 7
23 .465 7
:W .442 I

Kanau City
Ookland

26
:W
24
23

11
Zl
22
23

New York

22 Ill .5:W

Baltimore

Cleveland

Detroit

~ ~~

.591
.533 21&lt;o
~22 3
.500 4
22 22 .500 4
II Iii .419 711
II !a .391 9

Chicago
Seatlle
Teua
Calllornla

Minn...ta

Frldliy'• Games

•

Ba!l9fl $, Milwauk~ 3
Seattle 4, Cleveland 3, 111 innings
Nn-Yorkl, Torontoo
lldroit 12, Calllornia 1
Ka"" City 9, ChicaiO 2
Battlmoro 3, Mlnneaola 2,10 lnnlnp
Oekland I, Texas 3
Suda)''• Gamel
Califmnia at Detroit
Milwaukee at Bolton
Toronto at New York
Seattle at Cleveland
Chicago at Kansas City
Baltimore a t Oakland at Tezu, n
M-.y'aGIIIDIS
Mll•auk.ee at Baltimore, n
cautQmta at Toronto, n
Oakland at C1eveland, n
Sealtle at lldroit, n
New York o~tKansu City,n
Boston 11 Mlmesota, n

P'rldoy'•:t;~
AmerkaaLeope

DETROIT TIGERS -

Announ&lt;ed th&lt;
retirerDI!!llt rA John Hiller, pltcher. Recalled
~. RobbiN, pii.Cher, tram Evansville of the

PITISBIJRGH PIRATES - Plo&lt;ed Tim Foli,

· lnfitk:ler on Ur diNbled list. Recalled Vance
Law, Wielder, from Portland of the Pacific
Colli w,...
JI'OO'I'IIAIL
No-F-Loqae
BlJFFALO BIW - ' Reltued!Uuty Jacltaon,
• punter. Acql&amp;irtd Roosevelt lab, runnina
back, on waiverafrun the Baltinn Colts.
,. CINCINNATI BENGAI.'I - Slonod Ron Sin&gt;
~er, and Ltny Poole, n&amp;IUlJni

! C:,·

~o't9~!""u.

prices to dealers on these selected
models until Aug. 17, 1980 so you may get big savings!

'100
DISCOUNT

HOTPOINT DELUXE 23.5 CU. FT.
REFRESHMENT CENTER WITH
ICE &amp; WATER THRU THE DOORI

QUALITY 2·SPEED WASHER
&amp; MATCHING CAVER WIH-1
PERMA NENT PRESS C'I'CLES !

IJGHTING UP SCOREBOARD
The avef!ige scoring for both
teams in major games in the 1979-80
college basketball season was 144

wa.,... ,..

M :c~ ,•,t.; ,'~(l,.1'

C·~·-·

'.'

-~·

:JL8155(;A

'50 DISCOUNT

ON THE PAIR

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - SW1ed Larry
Heater, nlllllin&amp; bact, to a aeries~ t!aree one-

)'e.ar contracta.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS - stcne&lt;t Moot
Buben, defensive end, and Paul Rici:er. Ught
' end. '
ODU.EGE
• .cENTIIAL MISSOUIII STATE - Named LYM
• nan« head buketbaU cooch.
· WYOMING - Nomod Robert Hll&lt;h athletic
' director .

t-

Majer lane .........
Frlolo}"o Gomeo
NATIONAL LEAGUE_,

Baltimore, .~2 ; Cooper, Mllwa~, .HS; S~
men, Detroit, .345.
RUNS: YOWlt, MilwauiH, 39; WillS Texas
31; Molitor, Milwaukee, 36 ; Wilson, Kania! City:
36; Tranunell, Detroit, l3.
RBI: Oli ver, Texas, 35; Ogiivie, Milwaukee,
32; Hebner, Detroit, 31 : Cooper, Milwauk~. 31;
Perez, Booton, 30 ; Parrish, Detroit 30 · Annas
Oakland, 30; B. Bell, Texas', 30.
' '
'
HITS: Limdreaux, MlnneS&lt;lta, 63· Molitor
Milw~ukee, 5t ; Rivers, Te~UU, $9 ; Wi'lson, K.u,.:
sas City, ~ ; Bwnbry, Baltimore, 57 .
DOUBLES: Morrison, Chicago, JS; Yount
Milwaukl!t!, U; Oliver, Texas, It ; D. Ga rcia:
Toronto, 13; Lemon, Chica~o, 12.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 6; Brett Kansas
City, 5; Castlno, Mirmesota, t; 13 Tied W'IU13,
HOME RUNS: Oglivle, Milwaakee, 12; Rudl,
Califomla, 11: Velez, Toronto, 9; Zisk Teus 9·
5 Tied Wittl8.
SJ'OLEN BASES : Hendt'noo , Oakland 22:
Wilaon, Ka~U:~ City, 19; Bwnbry, Baltimor~ 13·
'" Carew, Ca1Uornia,12; J. Cruz , seattle, 12; Wu~s'.
I

•

•

Texu, 12.

PITCHING (S Deciaiona) : Honeycutt Seattle
H • .87$, 2.S9; Rainey, Boston, S-1 , .W, 4.00;
Guidry, N~w York, ~1, .833, 3.12; John, New
York, 7·2, .nl, 3.01; Gura, Kansas City, 7·2, .m,
1.89 ; Redfern, Minnesota, 6-2, .750, 3Jt9 ; Stieb,
Toronto.~2 •.714, 2.44; Dobon, Chicago, 5-2 .714
4.31.
t
'
. ~TRIKEOUTS : Guidry, N.ew York,Gl; F. BanIUI\er, Seattle,~; M. Nol'll5, oakland, M; fted.
fern, MiMesota, 49; Matlack, Te188, ta.

CANTON !API - Lee Erickson,

Julie Brendenbeck; MaCedonil N'urdonla, 132-8.
I. Su• Fil%jjentld, Mecedonla Nordorlla, 12H ! .
Debbie Undenachmidt Cent.ervJIK, 1~7 . 8.
Jane Rader, Cr~:~fton, Midview, llt4.
Girls A Shol P\Jt - 1. &amp;v Schumm, Rockford
ParkWMy, 41-l .., , l . Barb.l l"i~W.ins, Fayette
Gorham Fayette, 411-1'-'•· 3. SUiie Howman, New
l.cfl:don_, 40-4'1:. 5. Tyra Hom, Sdo Jewett-&amp;io
37-3~. a. Qathy T1ylor, ~ertoo,37-3'•·
'
Girls AAA Hhr:h Jwnp - l. chris Hunt, Dftlytoo
W11yne, ~. 2. M4chelle Stoyka, Cleveland Mar·
Wll, s-t. 3. J11ckie Buctm~n, New1rk, $-(i. 4.
Ulur'te Areaenau.lt, Wort.hlngton, 5-$. 5. (tiel
· Heidi Hovrefe, Medina, and Sue Beredt, Raven:

...

~.

~

Girls A Long Jump .:... I. ~~ti HMnia , Frank·
fort Adena 18-7¥., mttt r
; old record, 11·

I 'll, Tr!Jh Elting, Minater, 19'11. 2, Terri Koenig
Mineral RJdge, 1?.1. 3. Joyce Grube, Bahlmort
U~rty Unlon, 11·1. 4. PatU Bednarek, Richmond He.lghts, 17-0. 5. Jani.ne Sctvnelur LlnC&amp;;Ster filher, J~ . 6. Jackie KiM-, Millnrd
Center Fairbanks, 1&amp;-fl ~.
Boys A Hl~ttl J~ - I. Toin Bowman, Port,s.
mouth Notre DarneL&amp;-1. Z. (tie ), Ken Mackulin,
Independence, and uave Jones, JI!'Welte-&amp;io 67. 4. Pete Ya.skowitz, Old Fort, U . 5. Rick
Newsock, West A!~xandria Twin VaUey Soulh, 56. 8. Jay Hom, Waynesfi eld-Goshen ,~Boys AAA Shot Put - l. Garin Verb,
ChiUieotbe, 6-t'r.. 2. Ron Yarab, Youngstown
Boerdman, 63 ~. !1. Barry Walker, Lancaster, 62·
4lt.. 4. Mark Hocevar, Warren Howland, 62-4\la . 5.
James Ka.ser, Toledo St. Francis, 59-Sir•. 6. Tom
HasseJ, Cincinnati PureeD, $9-3~ .
Boy, AAA Long Jump - 1. Kevin louu
Alliance, 23-31f.. 2. Allon:o Lyons, Painesville
Riverside , 23-J . 3. Tel'l')' Holt, Colwnbu..l!l Brook·
haven, Z3-1. 4. Jeff Ross, Welt Chester Lakota
22-9\t. 5. Dan-en Morgan, Warren Hardin@; zi
7\la. 6. J;..ory Kermedy, Dayton Roth, 22--2\t. '
Boys AA Dill'UI - I. Jon Colt, l:lillatdo,18U,
meet record ; M:t record, 17t-7, Steve James
Cortland La-.., lim. 2. Rick Tooker:
Chagrin Falls KenBton, 186-6. 3. Melvin Terrell
Cleveland ChatoUc, 183-9. 4.. BU,l Szabo, Oberlin
Firelanda.r. 163-t. Dean hall, Swanton, 162-5. 6.
Jeff Fry, 1Mhod0fl, l!().7,
Team laden
1

BoysAAA - I . (tie),Ch.iUicotheandAIJiance
10. 3. (tie), Younptown Boardman and
PainesviUe Ri Y.erside I . 6. (Ue), Lancaster and
Colwnbua Brookhaven 6. 7. (tie}, West Che.11ter
Lakota and Warren Howland4. 9. (Ue) Toledo St.
Francllland Warren Harding 2.
Boys AA - 1. HU.laboro 10. 2. Chagrin FaUs
Kenston 8. 3. Cleveland Catholic S. 4. Oberlin
F irelands 4. S. Sw6ncon 2. 6. Goshocton L
Boy• A - 1. (tie), Stryker and PortsmouUI
Notre Dame 10. 3. Lewiaburg Twin VaHey North
CWo . . . Semlltaoll
8. 4. (tie), Scto Jewett and Independence 7. 8.
NewPhiladelphiaO 1 0 0 0 0 0 - 1 3 0
Richwood North UnionS. 7. (tie), Old Fort and
BlyVillage
300 000 x - 3 53
Liberty Center4.
·
Mike Sidley and Andy Mallemee· Mark
GIRLS AAA - 1. West Cbester Lakota 19. 2.
Kalaer and JUn Libero~tore. W·Kaiser. Lstokey. .· Geneva 11. 3. ( Ue )J.~tervlll e, Macedonia NorHR~ Bay Vlllage, Ubertore.
dotUa and Dayton wayne 10. 6. (tit), North Can·
OakHIIIs
40 3 032 0 - 12 9 3
ton Hoover, Clev~land MarshaU and Sylvanla
Toledo Whitmer 0 0 0 0 II I - 3 8 I
Northv lew8.
Steve Oliverio and Dan Sehlhorst Craig
Girla AA - l. GranvtUe 10. 2. Twinsburg
Perkins (7); Brian Ueberman, Jeff Koiat 13),
Chamber tin 8. 3. Orrville 6. 4. Delaware Buckeye
Pat Dennls (7 ) and Tom Slefert. W-Oliverto, a.o.
Valley 4. S. Waverly 2. 8. Hamden Preble
L-Uebennan, 8-3. HR-()ak Hills, Dan Sehlhorst
Shawnee l .
Bill Weeman; Whibner, Scott Ziems.
'
Girls A - 1. (tie) , Frankford Adena, Canal
Winchester and Rockford Parkway 10. 4. (tle) 1
Clau AA Seaaill.u.la
Fayette Gorham Fayette, Mineral Ri~e ana.
Minst.er8.
Norwalk
000000 - 001
Reading
001 000 - I 4 0
Rick Leibold and Bob Duncan,; Steve Engel
COLUMBUS (AP) - Cham- .
and Mart Swanner. W-Engel. L-Leibold.

Prep baseball tourney

Na_..._

Oak Hills (25-7) ~ored three runs
in the first inning on a fielding error
by Bay Village pitcher Cbris Fedoc
who picked up a squeeze bunt and
threw it into foul territory in right
field.
The Highlanders followed with two .
more runs in the fifth inning when ·
Bay Village committed an~
error. A tri~le by Dave Oliverio Qf
Oak Hills in the same inning pushed
the sCore to 7~.
The Highlanders scored their final
run in the sixth inning on a saCricie
fiy by Mike GurclseO which followed
a triple by Chuck Laumann,
Jeff Hellman, 7-1, who allowed
only three hits, was credited with the
victory.
Bay Village scored all five of their
runs in the ninght inning on a threerun homer by losing ·pitcher Fedor
and a tw~run double by Mike Cseh.

Richard, Houston, 71; Ryan, Houston' ~ .'
Blylt!ven , PittsbutKh , 53; ROtfers, MontreaL 52. '
AMERICAN LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

Milwaukee
Toronto

l3i

ColliM, Clnclnnatt, 13; Cedeno, Houston'
'
PITCHING (5 Dedshw ): Rew, U.Angeles
6&lt;1, 1.1100, 2.13; Blblly, Pittaburgh, H ..131, 3.11:
Wekh, Lol Angeles, S.l, .833, 2.16; Carlton
Philadelphia, 1-2, .100, 1.99: Blu~, San FranchiCO'
. 1-2, .lOCI, 2.79; Jackaao, Pilbburgh, 4-1, .100,1.69 ;
S~rley, San Di~go, 4-1 , .100, I.S2; Po~stcre, Clnemnatt, 6-2, .750J. 2 . ~ .
··
S'I'RIKEOlJT_, Carlton, Phit.&lt;lelphla ao

·North. San Fnmcbco, 13.

BAmNG (15 at btita) : l..andruux Mlnne. soW, .356; Molitor, Milwal,lke(!t · ~ i BUmbry

MILWAtJIIEE BREWEIIS - Recalled Paul
' Mitchell, pitcher, from VaTICOO\Ier of the Paciflc
Couti.eque.

points.

i

BATIING 115 at ball)' Reitz, St. Loula, .3114;
K. llemancle2, St. Loula, .363; R. Smith, Los
AnJele.!, .SM; Trillo, Philadelphia, .333; J . Cnu:,
1
, H.........331.
·
RIJNS: Schmidt, l'!liloclelphia, 35; K . Her·
: nandez, Sl. Loula, 32; Roo&lt;, l'!lilodelphia , 30;
Loazlnlkl, l'!lilotlelphia, 21: Templeton, St. l.oo~,
21: . _ , Lai Anoeteo, II.
RBI : S&lt;hmldt, Pt111aclelphia 31; Garvey, Los
· An&amp;eles, :rl; McBridel.~ddphia, 33; H.,.
drick, Sl. Loula, 33; R. liMitll.Lai An(elea, 33.
fDTS : K. Hernandez, St. Louia, 59; l'~mpleton,
St. Loula, 511 ; Reitz, Sl. Loula,l4; R. Smltll. Loo
All&amp;elel, 53 ; Taveras, New Vork, 52; Hendridl,
Sl t.ula u. '
OOtJBf.ii, Steama, New Yoot, 17: RCIH,
: Plllla&lt;telohla, 14; Klllgllt, Cln&lt;II1Nitl, 3; K. Her·
nanda1. St. Louia, IZ; Valentine, Montreal, II;
Sdlnlon, l'!lilodelpbla, 11.
TRIPLES: Moreno, Pttubursh, $; McBride,
• l'lllladelphla, 4; KnJ&amp;ht, ClnclnnaU, 4; 14 Tied
Wittl3.

- - - 082
Riverdale CluiA
0000000
Anna
400001x - S 71
Kris Thacker, J im Weber ( l) amd Randy
Worrell; Tony Barker and Steve Baker. w.
Barker . l.r Thacker.
Frontier
0100303 - 763
NewarkCathoUc 003 000 0 - 3 3 ()
Robert McP~ak and Chad Bleakley; Clark
Borgia and Jay Cooperrider.

State track meet
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ Cham­
pionship results Friday in the combined Ohio high school boys and girls
track meet in Ohio Stadium (aU
distances in meters unless otherwise
indicated):

· pionship results Saturday in the
combined Ohio high school boys and
girls track meet in Ohio Stadium (aU
distances in meters unless otherwise
indicated):
A.U
Girb'3,200-I.C.nl&lt;ovllt..1 UsaHaw•,Janet·

,tesurton,CarotWalcott,KeuyGreentee. 9:28.4,
beat record, new event. 2. Wacbwortll, 9:33.7. 3.
West Chester Lakota, 9:SS.1. 4. Upper Arlington,
Fainnont
West,Village
9:40.3. Ba)', 9:M.O. 6. Ketterinl!l
9:37.1
. S. Bay
Boys' Hl&amp;h Jump - 1. Jeff Lunt, Lakewood St.
Edward, W . 2. Robbie Marsh, ~ter,&amp;-7 . 3.
Doug Patch, G~. 6-7. 4. Dan Huff, Akron
Springfield, 11-1. $. Pitt Sm!lh 1 Reynolcbbufl!,l!-1 .
6. Jeff Rots, WestCbeacer I..UOtl, u .
Boys' Pole Vault - 1. Charles McConnel, West
Chester Lakota, 1M. 2. Bryan Jones, Kettering
Falnnoot Ell~ Ilot. 3. Mor8111 Ebln, Roynolcllburs, 14-0. 4. 8rad Hotehklu, Medina, 1'-&lt;1. $,
JtmSmlth, TUf.., Columbian, IH. 8. Moot fllrbodte&lt;l&lt;, J.exinlton,IU.
Girls' 100 low hurdles - 1. Prouda Adams,
Trotwood-M.dlooo, 14.3. 2. 2. llqlnna Kl"ff,
Akron Bu.chte~ 14.4. 3. Kim JIUl'liaon, Toledo
Start, lUI. 4. Sheila Gibeon. Toledo Rocers, IU.
5. Sherry Pastor, Parma ValLey Forge, 14.7. 6.
S~ron Watta,OaytonSUven.Patterson, IU.

coach at Malune College.
Erickson was assistant basketball
coach for two seasons at Wichita

M-G-M
Softball

pointment Friday.
The new coach succeeds Phil
Hoskins who guided the Pioneers the
past three seasons. Hoskins resign~
last month.

GAS
PAINS?

MONDAY
AI Kyger
Kyger Creek vs Mead, 6:15
p.m.
Eagles vs Kyger Creek, 7:30
p.m.
Mead vs Eagles, 8:45p.m.

TUFSDAV
At Kyger
Mason vsPearl Beer, 6:15p.m.
Hockenberry's vs Mason, 7:30
p.m.
Pearl Beer vs Hockenberry's,
8:45 p.m.
At GalllpoUs
Holzer vsRollins (1), 6:15p.m.
Racine vs Pizza Hut (2), 6:15
p.m.
Pizza Hut vs Holzer (2), 7:30
p.m.
.
RollinsvsRacine (1), 7:30p.m.

WEDNESDAY
AI Kyger
Carr's vs Mead, 6:15p.m.
RC vs Carr's, 7:30p.m.
Mead vs RC, 8:45p.m.
AtGaWpoUs
Mt. State vs Rookies (UMP·
7:30p.m.) (!),6:15p.m.
Wamsley vs Hockenberry's
(2), 6:15p.m.
Mason ( UMP~: 15 p.m. ) vs MI.
State (1), 7:30p.m.

Get relief -

Drive a

MOTRON MOPED®
To work • To school • To play

Upto100+ MPG*

THURSDAY
At Kyger
Kyger Creek vs Canady, 6:15
p.m.
Pearl Beer vs Kyger Creek,
7:30p.m.
Canady vs Pearl Beer, 8:45
p.m.
AtGaillpolls
Wamsley vs Eagles (1), 6: 15
p.m.
Pizza Hut vs Blue Tartan (2),
6:15p.m.
Blue Tartan vs Wamsley (2),
7:30p.m.
Eag1es VS Pizza Hut ( 1), 7 :30

Low cost to buy Low cost to operate

•

The Smart Ride in Alternative Transportation

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

606 E, MAIN
992-2094
BRAKE SERVICE &amp; ALIGNMENTS
.

p.m.

'will vary wilh rider 's weight and driving conditions.

r============~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
OPEN DAILY 10.9; SUNDAY 1-'

Boys Clau A pole vo~ult - 1. Tom Coulon,
Stryker, 14-4. 2. Mitt Vermillion Lewilburil
. Twin Valley Nortll, IH. 3. Dove o..:;n, Riel&gt;
wood North Union, 13-4. 4. Kevin Carpenter,
· Liberty Center. ts.G. 5. (Ue) , Tony Mtller, Old
Fort,andLeeR12«,MountGUead 1:14.
Gkll A Hllh Jwnp - I. Jenny
Canal
Winchester, W. Z, Julie llo«enkamp, Mlnoler, 1Boys' 110 ~gh hurdleS - 1. Sam Thomas
4, 3. Kim Daubenmire, MUfersport, 5-4. 4. Cathy
Uma, 14.1 . 2. Darren Morgan, Warren Ha.rd1ni
Taylor, Edeerton, s-4. 5. Klm Tackett. Piketon,
Eut IU. 3. Ed Poole, Akron Garfield, IU. I.
!-,! , 6. Julie lllce, W..t Salem North..-m, :1-2.
Daryl Calhoun, Middletown, IU 5. Jolltl
Girb AM Shot Put - I. Theresa Hawltlnl,
Tbomaa, Zaneaville, lU. s. Tim Ryan,
West Chester Laklb, 44-4~. 2. JUlie Hoehb1J, · Clevelard
St. IsnaUus, U.4
S)'lvanil Northview, -GO. 3. Debbie Moort,
Cleveland llelgllla u.s%. 4. Krla McKenzie,
Chesterland W..t Geauga, ~1·14. 5. Nadine c..,
Girls' 16110 - I. Kathy Bryant, Colwnbus Wat·
Geneva, 40'-'. S. Kim Williams, Tole&lt;loDeVUblsa,
terson, 5:1JU. 2. Mluren Coopn, Ketter~nt: FairlN.
mont East, 5:112.1. 3. Becky Domll, Athens,
5,116.89. I. LoiJ TrWer, Sidney, 5,06,&amp;. i . Slit
Girls M ~-1. Carrie Brown, Granville,
Schroeder, Napoleon, 1:01.1. I. Gina Moore
I:IJ.6, meet t«&lt;rd: old re«&gt;nn, 1~. Terri L)'lll1
MiamiabllrR,i,IU.
'
Byland Mantua Crestwood, 1m. 2. Car.,1
Boys' 1800 - 1. Mlk~ Kallabrin, Mansfield
Blalk....t&lt;l, Twlnsbufl! Cltamberlin 12f.7. 3.
Malabar, 4:111.07, be.at record ; old record, 4:1».5,
Valerie Pack, Orrville, 1~. ~. KeUy RoiiSCh,
Reule McAfee, Cincinnati Courter Tech,l989. 2.
Delaware Buckeye Valley, llt-10. 5. BmMta
Jolin Zlll*a1 Ll!n&lt;uter, l :O'I .I. 3. Rickey Pitt.
Reed , Waverly,ll&amp;-3. 8. Carolyn later, Camden
PtebleSha'lfhee, 1164.
man, ClevelatlG East Tech, 4:13.4. 4. Brian
Carlt~t PainePille Riverside , 4: Jt.O. :.. Jay100
Girb AM Long Jwnp - 1. Carla Battaalia,
Foi,J....UIWood St EdW'af'd. 4:15.8. 6. Chri.s Ross,
Centerville, 111-2. 2. Janet Baughman, North CanWeotCarTollton,~ : IU.
ton Hoover, ll'r'.. 3. Nadirie Cox, Geneva, 17~. t .
Boys' 400 relay - 1. Middletown Darwin Hill,
Pamela Dillon, Mwlllon Ja~ 1 17-41%. 5.
Larry Jonea, BarT)' James, Keith Grace, 42.0,
Mellsaa Pipe, Cincinnati Indian rtiu, 17-4'11. 5.
beat record old record, 42.9, Cleveland Adams
Tracey Lotti. Weal Cheater Lak,..,l7-4.
19'111. 2. Cleveland Adamo, lU 3. CantoO
Girls AAA Diacus - l . Nadine Col:, Geneva,
McKinley, U.S.~. Cleveland Collinwood, 12.5. 5.
1!6-2, meet I'1!Cilnl: old re&lt;ord, 113-2, Cox,l9'79. z.
Thereoa bawtlrls, Wut Chester Lalt..... I:IN. 3. •Cleveland East, 4U. 8. Cleveland KeMedy, 42.8

Barl«l,

State, and head coach at Tabor
College and California Baptist
College.
Malone Athletic Director Jack
Hazen aMounced Erickson's ap-

38, has been named .head basketball

SUN.

MON ~

KM RADIAL 225

1

TUES. WED. ONLY

'3

Our Reg . •. 96

STEEL BELTED! fOILamps
RADIALS

·

1 Rectangular

:lamps.

GR78X15 HR78X15 LR78X15

51

•

1978 CHEVEnE 4 DOOR
STANDARD SHifT
'3995

EICI~ Plu1 F.E.T.

2. 70 To 3.24
Our 10.88 •
811.88

:
I

97~
AlrOIOI

Flit Fix
Slle Price
lnllatee up to
25lbt. Seale
tor short dto·
lar&lt;:eo.

b

1977 CHEVROLET IMPALA .....................•:.u~.,a•
Door, 305 V·8, auto. trans., air cond., AM rad io.
1977
MONTE CARLO. ............................
\/·8 enQ., auto. trans., air, ~adlo, w . t ires.

COVf- [llll.liRY
CO M'I~ I Iol [ li! S

&lt;4

'100
DISCOUNT

1976 NOVA CONCOURS.........................'3295

'50 '
DISCOUNT

4 Door, 305 V·B, auto. Irons., air, lilt wheel, 22,000 miles.

1976 MALIBU ClASSIC ........................ '1995
4 Door, V-8, auto .•.AM: FM.

1975 CAPRICE 4 DR ............................ •1995
V·B, auto. trans., air, window locks, AM·8 track.
1975 DODGE DART 4 DR...................... '2495

PAY
WAT ER

WE HAVE IN
NEW 1979 CHEVROLET PICKUPS
SEVERAL NEW 1979 CHEVROl£T

•100
DISCOUNT
MVdCl
l
HOA7EO

Mooel

~.t c.:::l!

csr;mJA

;&lt;;' 9:'1''1

•so

DISCOUNT

POMEROY LAN.D MARK

~·

"Your Cltevy Dealer"
Pomer~v

Auto Spllsh Guards
No drilling. All rubber guarde tor
front or rear ot car. Saw. .

4Cholet97of
Eacll

48~,~.

Steel Lug

Save low On Front

Wranclles

Disc Brake Special

Additional parr s and services.
wl'lteh may be f"teeded are at ex tra
cost For most Amer1can ca rs .

"Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Courlties"
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Pomeroy
Main Street

INGELS FURNITuRE

Store Hours: 8:30to 5:30
Mill Closed ats:oo P.M.
Phone 992-2181

'• -

our Reg . 3.27

Why take 8% on the Money
Market when you can get 12% at
Ingels Investment. - No
Mtoimom.1 - No Penalty for
Withdrawals. Start belfeving
that money does grow on trees.
Everyone gets a green thumb
when they lilake a cfeposlt. Come
In and discuss all the iletalls.

.

POMEROY M

ON
SAVINGS

I

8 ICE
SERV ICE!

PASSENGER CARS

992·2126

12%

WE

101 N. Znd Ave.

992-2&amp;35

I.

Middleport, 0.
I

.

,

Open Evenings Til8:00 p.m.
'•

i

.'
'

,(

'i

.-..-

:

12-V auto fog 1
:

YOUR CHOICE OF:
t7J

"I back
the
•
family Insurance
I sell with
·good neighbor
service."

lioto'""--

.~1

Amencan Auoc11Uon.

Special Edition. Slant 6cyl. eng ..

CALL ME. .

W&gt;liT

Los Angeles
Cindnrioti
HOUlton
·-_.,Diego
San Fr.nciseo

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;

Anna, Oak Hills
diamond champs
COLUMBUS (AP) - Anna's pit.
ching combined for 12 strikeouts and
stranded 13 runners as the Rockets
beat New Matamoras Frontier
Saturday 8-4 to win the Ohio Class A
!figh School baseball championship
it Ohio State University's Trautman
Field.
Anna, 20-4, went into lbe top of the
seventh leading 8-2, but starter Pat
Frilling, who bad worked out of
trouble all morning, appeared to
tire, yielding a single and two walks, .
whileretiringonly~.
'

2211

21 II .131 II&gt;
19 20 .i87 31&lt;o
II 22 .4&amp;3 ~l&lt;o

Borg, King lead
French Open

[Watson, Trevino closing in
Atlanta and go to Hartford to
prepare lor the Open."
Morgan, who bad two good initial
rounds here in the 1976 PGA Championship before (altering, said he
found it more difficult Friday than
he did the day previously.
"The greens were more difficult to
read and putt," he said. "I felt the
round was up and down. I bad some
good holes and then I had some bad

W. L Prt. GB
24 II .571

HOME RUNS : S&lt;:r•nldt, Phlladelpbla, ll:
Luzinikl, Phi~delphla1 12; Ga.rvey, Lot Anltlt!le.'l,
t; R. Smith, l..w ,\rijceae.. t; Kingnlln, Chicago,
I ; Hendrick, St. LooTs, I; S.k~r.l..tll An"e1t1, I ·
Clark, s.n Fnmcl.sco, l .
'
!!.TOLEN BES : LeFlore, Montreal, Z2;
Monmo, PittlburM;h, 22; (..aw, Los An~te~ lS ·

Erickson named Malone mentor

-~-·----· -----'·r.____________;,~~;:___ _ _

�•
•
~TheJ1unday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 19!11l

,_

C-4-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June I, 1980

Visit to movies makes Leihrandt winne~

Blue .rules SF mound By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vida Blue is king of the hill in his
town.
On a team that has been having as
many ups-and-dowris as the streets
of San Francisco, Blue is providing
the Giants with classic consistency.
The " stopper" of the San Francisco staff halted another losing
streak Friday night, hurling a fivehitter as the Giants defeated the
Houston Astros 3-2.
"The team plays well when I'm
out there," said Blue, who stopped a
three-game San Francisco slide this
time. "I wish we could put it
together and be as responsive when
the other starters are pitching.''
Blue's victory improved his
record to a sparkling 11-2. The other
San Francisco pitchers have a
cumulative mark of 11-24.
A bWlt by Johnnie LeMaster
scored Terry Whitfield in the sixth

'

inning on a suicide squeeze play to
break a 2-2 tie and give the Giants
their winning run.
Elsewhere in the National League,
the Los Angeles Dodgers whipped
the Atlanta Braves 11-4; the Montreal
Expos routed the St. Louis Cardinals
JG-4; the New York Mets turned
back the Pittsburgh Pirates~~; the
Chicago ·Cubs outscored the
,Philadelphia Phillies lll-7 and the
Cincinnati Reds trinuned the San
Diego Padres~Blue won his sixth straight game,
giving up both the Astros' runs on
homers in the fourth inning by Jose
Cruz and Art Howe, which tied the
score at 2-2. Before the fourth, he
had not allowed a homer in 64 innings.
The Giants had four hits and two
runs in the first inning off Ken Forsch, ~- WiUie McCovey drove in a
run with a double and scored on a

'

.- .'

Vida Blue
Frisco stopper

Dusty Baker
Three-run crash

single by Darrell Evans.
Dodgers 8, Braves 4
Dusty Baker slugged a three-run
horner and Bill Russell drove in two
runs with a bases-loaded double to
lead Los Angeles over Atlanta.
Burt Hooton, 5-3, earned the victor}', but gave up three homers, in.
eluding two by Gary Matthews, his
third and fourth. Chris Chambliss hit
his fifth homer for the Braves. The
Dodger starter needed late-inning
relief help from Rick Sutcliffe.
Expos 10, Cardinals 4
EUis Valentine and Chris Speier
each drove in three runs, Andre
Dawson added a horner and
sacrifice fly and Gary Carter also
homered as Montreal whipped St.
Louis.
Scott Sanderson, ~3. scattered
nine hits as the Expos won for the
lith time in 14 games. Jim Kaat, 1).3,
a 41-year-old southpaw making his
first start of the season, surrendered
the first six runs and took the loss for
the sliding Cardinals, who have
dropped 16 of 18 games.
Mets 5, Pirates 1
Steve Henderson smashed two
doubles, driving in three runs behind
the three-hit pitching of Pat Zachry,
as New York beat Pittsburgh in a
game called after 5\0 innings
because of rain.
Zachry, 1·2, held the World Series
champions to two singles and a solo
home run by Mike Easler.
New York pounded Pirate starter
John Candelaria, 2-4, for four
doubles among seven hits in the
early going, taking a ~ lead after
two innings.
Cubs 10, Phillles 7
Mike Vail socked four hits and
Tim Blackwell's first major league .
horne run capped a six-run first in.
ning as Chi cago ouscored
Philadelphia.
Rick Reuschel, 4-4, was the winner, turning in a complete game
despite yielding 13 hits. Dan Larson,
Il-l, victim of four unearned runs in
the first inning, suffered the loss.

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Charlie
Lei brandt, the rookie left-bander for
the Cinciflnati Reds, was beginning
to wonder_whether he even belonged
m the maJor leagues. until he went to
the movies with pitChing coach Bill
Fischer.
~ibrilndt had not won a game since May 9 Wllil he defeated the San
Diego Padres ~ Friday night to
stretch their losing string to five
games.

Rick Cerone
Heavy hitter

Luis Tiant
Heavy fine

Gaylord Perry
Heavily hit

Rewrite book on Rick Cerone
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
The book on Rick Cerone apparently needs rewriting.
Opposing .learns keep giving out
intentional walks to pitch to the New
York Yankee catcher and Cerone
keeps coming through with hits.
It bsppened again Friday night
when the Toronto Blue Jays walked
Bobby Brown to load the bases in the
eighth inning of a scoreless game
and bring up Cerone.
" I saw it developing," said
Cerone. " ! figured they'd play the
percentages and load the bases,
looking for the double play. But I hit
into only four DP's all last year, the
lowest number in the majors. "
Cerone's bases-loaded double started the Yankees toward their~ victory over the Blue Jays and gave
Luis Tiant his fourth victory in six
decisions.
It was the fourth time in a week

' COLO''
·
,
•
I J,,.,Jir ,

The

ttKramer
SUN·THUit JUN 1-S.

that opposing teams have walked a
batter to get to Cerone. And it was
the fourth time that Cerone carne
through with a !tit - including a
grand slam horne run against the
Detroit Tigers.
In other AL games Friday, Boston
stopped Milwaukee ~3, Seattle nipped Cleveland 4-3 in 10 innings,
Detroit bombed California 12-1, Kansas City downed the Chicago White
Sox 9-2, Baltimore needed 10 innings
to edge Minnesota 3-2 and Oakland
defeatedTexasS-3.
Tiant got something besides the
victory. Yankee Manager Dick
Howser fined the right-hander $500
when the veteran, showed his

displeasure at being taken out of the
game by dropping the ball at the
rnOWld. He also flung his glove into
the seats 11ehind the Yankee dugout
on his way to the showers.
Rich Gossage relieved Tiant and
retired the last four hitters, completing the victory.
Red SollS, Brewen 3
Butch Hobson drove in three runs
with a horner and a sacrifice fly to
pace Boston over Milwaukee. Hol&gt;son's sacrifice fly carne in a tw&lt;Hllll
second inning and his tw&lt;&gt;-run horner
was in the fourth.
Chuck Rainey, 1&gt;-1, scattered
(Continued on Page ~)

..-==-'-'--'--'---'----'--'---------------URGENTLY NEEDED
OIL AND GAS LEASES
GALLIA COUNTY

To fulfill future drilling programs. please write or call and be sure to
include proertv location and acreage that' s available for lease.
UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
P.O. BOX 142

Ironton, Ohio 45638

'

•

Over hill, d
1
over ae
HONDA Fl250
ODYSSEY'"

• Three , large, flotalion -type
t ires
• Oual ·range tour·speed
tran smission
• 105 .1 cc OHC
to ur-stroke
engine

• Fo ur tal , llolation 1ype ti res
• Full roll bar and shoulder

harness
• Aircrall· type steering con tro l
• Automatic clutch

sgso

1550

5
JUN87

ATC®70

PARTS LIST

youngsters
• 3-speed transmissio n
automatic clutch
• Three tat, flotation
type tires

AND DIRECTIONS
FOR ASSEMBLING
AND OPERATING

DUSTIN

DELIVERY

~50

HOFFMAN

Floyd Bannister

IN

~..

446-0475

"

Ph. 4%·2240

Gallipolis

lawn and garden attachments to help make your JOb easter
And every Bolens Tractor is renowned for 1ts reltabtllly and

Rio Grande College and Community College,
services Gallia, Jac kson, Meigs and Vinton
Counties with LOW COST education within easy
commuting distance .

quahty const ruCtiOn No matter what your needs are. Bolens

has a tractor thars righl for you at a pnce ~ou 11 f•nd affordable

'

GI2&gt;CL
11hp Genr

Why travel many miles from home when QUAL!·
TY education is available at Rio Grande with
courses and degrees offered to fi t YOUR
schedule.

~

•

PITTSBURG
260 Miles

•COLUMBUS
92 Miles

- Morning, Alternoon and Evening Classes.

•••
•
'

Available tJut 11llt

VINTON

Hl t;IXL
16 hjl

1ll11 ~ 1! .o ll•d

Hy ll t OIIatiC

CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE STORE

'r
'

..

'CINCINNATI
162 Miles

JACKSON

MEIOS

co.

co.

-tf RIO ORANDII COLLIIOII
AND COMMUNITY COLUQI

•LEXINGTON
181 M1les

~

'·
•''
'•

co.

Registration Dates
JUNE 9 (First Summer Termr
JULY 14 (Second Summer Term)
SEPT. 8 (Fall Quarter)

"

"

•

Ruth's home run revisited
and the Cubs were on him. The ftrst
pitch from Charley Root was a
strike. The crowd roared in approval. Ruth turned toward the stands and held up one finger.
"Root put over another strike and
the Babe held up two fingers. Then,
before digging in, he swept his amn
full length toward the center field
fence. Th~ext pitch landed over
that fenctl'tor a horne run."

se."

.

As part of this effort, the recommendation was made for increasing
the NBA's recruitinent and development of officials. This would be in
conjunction with "renewing and expanding the NBA's contract with the
Continental
Basketball
Association," said Colangelo, with
that minor league being used as a
developmental place for officials as
well as players and a testing goWld
for rules changes and new equipment
"We want to be able to look people
in the eye and say, 'We're ready for
three officials. We've got the people
who can get the job done, "' said Joe
Axelson, the NBA's director of
operations.

"WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND"
'

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER

*Native of Meigs County
•world War II Veteran
•Member and past commander, Feeney-Bennett Post

.

*43 years as bricklayer and cement masorl.
•Financial sec'y. and business manager of Bricklayers
and Cement Finishers, Local 32, Pomeroy.
-~
•Member of senior citizens and Pomeroy Eagles Club
'•Brother of former commissioner, Charles Walburn,
deceased
·
*Married to former Gladys Lambert
*Will devote full time to people of Meigs County if
elected
Check these qualifications and vote for the man that will
do the best job for Meigs Co. Your vote and Influence appreciated.

•CHARLESTON
84 Mltea

;

The move came Friday at the final
session of the annual sununer
meetings of NBA coaches and
general managers. The final
decision will be up to the Board of
Governors, one representative
(usually an owner ) of each of the 23
NBA franchises , which begins its
summer meetings Tuesd~y in
Coronado, Calif.
In another major action, the Competition and Rules Committee chose
to table a motion to return to the use
of three referees per game, which
had been tried during the 1978-79
season but dropped last summer.

128

- Approved for Veterans Benefits
Mod•t OlD&lt;L &amp; H18)(!

LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) - The
three-point goal, a popular success
in its trial run during the 1979-&lt;10
National Basketball Association
season, is on the verge of becoming a
permanent feature of the pro game.
The league's Competition and
Rules Conunittee, acting on the
urging of NBA coaches and general
managers, voted to recommend to
the Board of Governors that the
three-point goal rule - awarding
three points for shots made from
beyond an arc that ranges from 22
feet to 23 feet, 6 inches from the
basket - be kept on a permanent
basis.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

(llltd an 110 per cr.ctlt t\our lor r11idlnt1 of 011tl1, J1ck1on. Meigs or
VInton Counllu with Ius thu CoU~~g~~junlor clan standing.)
.

•

help when San Diego scored a pair of
runs to wke a 2-0 lead.·
But Mura' couldn't hold the advantage and Cincinnati erupted for
I our runs in the second to bring on
reliever John D'Acquisto.

" It was the best John's pitched in
two years," said San Diego Manager
Jerry Cole1lllln. "I think he . can
move into a stopper role in the
bullpen for us."
Coleman also said Mura would he
·given another shot in the starting
rowtion despite his unimpressive
outing .
"That's probably as poor as
Steve's pitched all year, " Coleman
said. " He'll get another chance,
probably in the upcoming series
with Houston."
Willie Montanez staked Mura to
the first-inning lead with a tw&lt;&gt;-run
single, which gave him 10 runs batted in his last 11 games.
But the Reds' bounced hack in t)le
second when Ron Oester hit a bases-

The fire-balling right-hander held
the Reds scoreless for five innings
with Cincinnati getting its final run
in the ninth off Rollie Fingers, the
third Padres· reliever.

PD. POL. ADV.

lHANK YOU

lOQded single to drive in the first run
and Leibrandt tied the game on a
sacrifice fly .
Mura walked Dave Collins to load
the bases and bring on D'Acquisto,
who threw a wild pitch to bririg in the
third Cincinnati run. Dave ConcepciOn drove in what proved to be
the game-winning run when he
grounded out.
Cincinnati got an insurance run in
the ninth inning when Collins
singled, stole second and scored on
Harry Stilman's RBI single.
The teams meet in the third of
their four-game series tonight with
San Diego sending left-hander John
Curtis, :1-4, to the mound to face Tom
Seaver, 2-3, who holds a 25-7 career
record against the Padres.

Delivers game-winner

Three-pointer permanent

ELDEN •'Whitey" WALBURN

·- $150 per quarter tuition

•

•

!

Check out the Rio Grande Story.

...

Hook up in duel

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) Here's the latest on the long-ago
episode in the 1932 World Series involving Babe Ruth of the Yankees
and the horne fWl he allegedly called
against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley
Field:
Eric Painter, then the trainer of
the Yankees, detailed this accoWJt
for the Baseball Hall of Fame:
"When Ruth carne up in the fifth inning of the third game, the crowd

There's .No Plaee Like Home
For The·summer ••••• A.nd Tile J!all

Bolens 61 ye(lr tractor htslory' Each powers a wide range ol

Len Barker

HONDA SALES

&lt; IM COt..lolllll "'t YUIIII IOil&lt;IIUIII 1fot. \:1c-1..,..

!-\ere's the ftnest ltne·up ot 11 hp through 18 hp tractors •n

'

BETZ

"KRAMER VS.
KRAMER''

SWISHER IMPLEMENT CO.

Bolens·xL Tractors.
Our entire line is
·engineered for excellence.

.••.

READY FOR

• Fun tor

Charlie Leibrandt
Back in form

"The coaches, general managers
and the Competition and Rules Committee all believe in the concept of
three officials, but the problem is
we're not quite ready," said committee chairman Jerry Colangelo,
general manager of the Phoenix
Suns.
"We need to develop an overall
program for the recruitment and
development of officials. We don't
want to put the cart before the hor-

IN STOCK

HONDA

'"ffper River Road

" Bannister's been pitching
tremendous baseball for us," agreed
Darrell Johnson. "He got beat once
Hl and once 2·1, and he pitched a
game just like this in Minnesota that
we ended up winning but where he
didn't get the win." Heaverlo, 2-0,
picked up the vi&lt;;lory on Friday.

6ACADEMY
PICTURE

-

him.''

Kramer"
tNL LlJIJINio

•

was going to pitch a shutout. "
Once Bannister was gon~. the In·
dians battled back to lie the game in
the ninth off reliever Dave Heaverlo.
Heaverlo had come on in relief of
Shane Rawley with the bases full an
inning earlier, and worked out of
that jam on a strikeout and a line
drive to second.
In the ninth, however, Heaverlo
permitted consecutive singles by
Toby Harrah and Gary Alexander.
Speedy Miguel Dilone ran for
Alexander and promptly stole
second, and he carne home to tie the
game on a sacrifice fly after Harrah
had scored on a ground out.
Cruz's horner, his first of the
season and only the fourth of his
career, carne after he narrowly
missed being struck out by Monge.
· ''He threw a pretty good pitch just
before the home run, " Cruz said. "It
could have gone either way.
Everybody was booing (because
they thought) it was strike three."
Instead, Cruz took it for a hall and
Wlloaded on the next pitch, a fastball
"right down the middle," to settle
the issue.
"I'm real glad because it was Bannister pitching," Cruz said. "He's
been pitching some good games and
we haven't been scoring runs for

VS.

AWARDS
BEST

...

Phone 1· 532-0101

CLEVELAND'(AP) - Julio Cruz
knows he can't generally hit a
baseball 390 feet all by himself,
despite .evidence to the contrary for it was a 3~fOQt solo blast by
Cruz that lifted the Seattle Mariners
to a 4-3, !~inning victory over the
Cleveland Indians Friday night.
" It might have been, say, 330
f~t," Cruz said, "and then the wind ·
took it an extra 60 feet.''
The elements had played a part in
the contest earlier, as rain delayed
the start of the game by nearly two
hours. But Cleveland's Len Barker
and Seattle's Floyd Bannister then
quickly settled into a pitching duel
that seemed inevitably headed
toward a one-run decision.
Bannister lasted through seven innings, when Manager Darrell Johnson lifted him because of a stiff
s)10ulder. The left-bander gave up
just three Indian hits and one run on
a fourth-inning Cliff Johnson double
that scored Mike Hargrove from first base.
Barker, meanwhile, shut the
Mariners off through seven innings,
but gave up a run in the eighth
before leaving the game with two
men on. Reliever Sid Monge, ~2.
allowed both runners to score on
Dan Meyer's loop single as Seattle
grabbed a 3-1 edge.
"He (Barker) walked a guy hitting
.095," said Cleveland Manager Dave
Garcia, referring to Seattle's Larry
Milbourne. uvou can't do that."
Milbourne later scored along with
Cruz on Meyer's base hit.
"Still, Len pitched good enough to
win,"Garcia said. "It looked like he

WINN F.K lll·

FRISAT

something which turned me
around, " said l.eibrandt, 4-3, who
would not elaborate further.
"I had my rhythm tonight. I was
sailing along," he continued, "I was
having my doubts about whether I
belonged in this league, but now I
think I can win a few games."
Steve Mura, Il-l, the Padres' young
right-hander who was making his
first start in more than a year, got
some Wlaccusto~ed first·inning

Wind-blown homer
spoils Indian rally

TWO WEEKS
Friday, May 30th
thru Thursday, June 12

ME-CHANICAL
TRANSPLANTER

" J had been struggling a bit recently. I was trying to find the answer ''
said Leibramlt, who surrender~
two runs in the first inning, then
blanked the Padres until Dave Winfield hit a solo homer in the eighth.
· Doug Bair took over at that point
and we ithb rest of the way to earn
his fifth save.
"I went over some ga me films of
my recent performances with
Fischer and I carne up with

FORD'S INCREDIBLE

That might not be enough to
satisfy the referees' union. If the
board, which voted out the third official last summer, also decides to
table the question of restoring the
third official, it could lead to a major
confrontation.
The NBA officials' contract with
the league expired at the end of the
playoffs earlier this month, and
Wlion leader Richie Phillips had said
earlier that a return to three-man
refereeing crews would be one of his
key demands in negotiations for a
new contract.

CASH REBATE
On Trucks and CaiS Is For AUmited lime On~.

Combined with the Discount Pat Hill Ford Is
Offering, You Can Save Up To:

other recommendations included
going to 12-rnan rosters next season
from the present limit of 11, making
the first round of the playoffs best of
fiv e games instead of best of three
and experimenting with collapsible
rims during training camps and the
exhibition season.
" We also recommended that a
conunittee be formed to look into the
drug problem, if there is one," added Colangelo. "We don't want this
to be taken ip an alarmist way. But
we are aware that drugs are a
problem in our society, we can't be
oblivious to that fact and we want
the NBA to take the initiative in this
area."
Most of the 10 recommended rules
changes were minor. The most
significant of those dealt with the
placement of red lights above the
backboards that would he coordinated with the game clock (as
hockey's goal lights are) to provide
a visual aid as to when playing lime
expires, and elimination of the word
" injury" from the 20-second
lirneouts to avoid their abuse. Each
team would now get one 21l-second
timeout per half to use whenever it
wants, which should eliminate the
phant&lt;Vll injuries tbat crept into
NBA games in recent seasons.

S2,4QO.OO to $3,000.00
$2,300.00
52,000.00
$1,800.00
51,800.00
$1,400.00 to $1,600.00
Sl. OOO.OO to $1.600.00

1979 &amp; 1080 4x4 PICKUPS
1980 BRONCO 8 Cyl.
1980 BRONCO 6 Cyl.
1980 CLUB WAGON
1980 SUPER CAB
190 PICKUPS V-8
1980 PICKUPS 6 Cyl.

CHECK OUT THIS INCREDIBLE DEAL!

I• •I

198Ct-f-150 4x4
FOR ALOW PRICE OF

'6765 00

6 cyl., gauges, sliding rear window, Li mited Sl ip rear
axle, 1100x15 all Terr ia n tires, white spoke wheels,
rear step bumpe r, plus more.

RETAIL AND FLEET ORDER CONSUMATED
BY JUNE lOth ARE ELIGIBLE FOR REBATE,

MONEY
AVAILABLE
FOR
REAL ESTATE·
LOANS
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN

AV~ILABLE

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVI~GS &amp; LOAN CO.

Elden

••wh~ey"

Walburn

'

POMEROY OFFICE
216 W. MAIN ST.
{614) 992-6655
Contact Your Realtor or Our Office
For FurthPr Information

�•
•
~TheJ1unday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 19!11l

,_

C-4-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June I, 1980

Visit to movies makes Leihrandt winne~

Blue .rules SF mound By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vida Blue is king of the hill in his
town.
On a team that has been having as
many ups-and-dowris as the streets
of San Francisco, Blue is providing
the Giants with classic consistency.
The " stopper" of the San Francisco staff halted another losing
streak Friday night, hurling a fivehitter as the Giants defeated the
Houston Astros 3-2.
"The team plays well when I'm
out there," said Blue, who stopped a
three-game San Francisco slide this
time. "I wish we could put it
together and be as responsive when
the other starters are pitching.''
Blue's victory improved his
record to a sparkling 11-2. The other
San Francisco pitchers have a
cumulative mark of 11-24.
A bWlt by Johnnie LeMaster
scored Terry Whitfield in the sixth

'

inning on a suicide squeeze play to
break a 2-2 tie and give the Giants
their winning run.
Elsewhere in the National League,
the Los Angeles Dodgers whipped
the Atlanta Braves 11-4; the Montreal
Expos routed the St. Louis Cardinals
JG-4; the New York Mets turned
back the Pittsburgh Pirates~~; the
Chicago ·Cubs outscored the
,Philadelphia Phillies lll-7 and the
Cincinnati Reds trinuned the San
Diego Padres~Blue won his sixth straight game,
giving up both the Astros' runs on
homers in the fourth inning by Jose
Cruz and Art Howe, which tied the
score at 2-2. Before the fourth, he
had not allowed a homer in 64 innings.
The Giants had four hits and two
runs in the first inning off Ken Forsch, ~- WiUie McCovey drove in a
run with a double and scored on a

'

.- .'

Vida Blue
Frisco stopper

Dusty Baker
Three-run crash

single by Darrell Evans.
Dodgers 8, Braves 4
Dusty Baker slugged a three-run
horner and Bill Russell drove in two
runs with a bases-loaded double to
lead Los Angeles over Atlanta.
Burt Hooton, 5-3, earned the victor}', but gave up three homers, in.
eluding two by Gary Matthews, his
third and fourth. Chris Chambliss hit
his fifth homer for the Braves. The
Dodger starter needed late-inning
relief help from Rick Sutcliffe.
Expos 10, Cardinals 4
EUis Valentine and Chris Speier
each drove in three runs, Andre
Dawson added a horner and
sacrifice fly and Gary Carter also
homered as Montreal whipped St.
Louis.
Scott Sanderson, ~3. scattered
nine hits as the Expos won for the
lith time in 14 games. Jim Kaat, 1).3,
a 41-year-old southpaw making his
first start of the season, surrendered
the first six runs and took the loss for
the sliding Cardinals, who have
dropped 16 of 18 games.
Mets 5, Pirates 1
Steve Henderson smashed two
doubles, driving in three runs behind
the three-hit pitching of Pat Zachry,
as New York beat Pittsburgh in a
game called after 5\0 innings
because of rain.
Zachry, 1·2, held the World Series
champions to two singles and a solo
home run by Mike Easler.
New York pounded Pirate starter
John Candelaria, 2-4, for four
doubles among seven hits in the
early going, taking a ~ lead after
two innings.
Cubs 10, Phillles 7
Mike Vail socked four hits and
Tim Blackwell's first major league .
horne run capped a six-run first in.
ning as Chi cago ouscored
Philadelphia.
Rick Reuschel, 4-4, was the winner, turning in a complete game
despite yielding 13 hits. Dan Larson,
Il-l, victim of four unearned runs in
the first inning, suffered the loss.

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Charlie
Lei brandt, the rookie left-bander for
the Cinciflnati Reds, was beginning
to wonder_whether he even belonged
m the maJor leagues. until he went to
the movies with pitChing coach Bill
Fischer.
~ibrilndt had not won a game since May 9 Wllil he defeated the San
Diego Padres ~ Friday night to
stretch their losing string to five
games.

Rick Cerone
Heavy hitter

Luis Tiant
Heavy fine

Gaylord Perry
Heavily hit

Rewrite book on Rick Cerone
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
The book on Rick Cerone apparently needs rewriting.
Opposing .learns keep giving out
intentional walks to pitch to the New
York Yankee catcher and Cerone
keeps coming through with hits.
It bsppened again Friday night
when the Toronto Blue Jays walked
Bobby Brown to load the bases in the
eighth inning of a scoreless game
and bring up Cerone.
" I saw it developing," said
Cerone. " ! figured they'd play the
percentages and load the bases,
looking for the double play. But I hit
into only four DP's all last year, the
lowest number in the majors. "
Cerone's bases-loaded double started the Yankees toward their~ victory over the Blue Jays and gave
Luis Tiant his fourth victory in six
decisions.
It was the fourth time in a week

' COLO''
·
,
•
I J,,.,Jir ,

The

ttKramer
SUN·THUit JUN 1-S.

that opposing teams have walked a
batter to get to Cerone. And it was
the fourth time that Cerone carne
through with a !tit - including a
grand slam horne run against the
Detroit Tigers.
In other AL games Friday, Boston
stopped Milwaukee ~3, Seattle nipped Cleveland 4-3 in 10 innings,
Detroit bombed California 12-1, Kansas City downed the Chicago White
Sox 9-2, Baltimore needed 10 innings
to edge Minnesota 3-2 and Oakland
defeatedTexasS-3.
Tiant got something besides the
victory. Yankee Manager Dick
Howser fined the right-hander $500
when the veteran, showed his

displeasure at being taken out of the
game by dropping the ball at the
rnOWld. He also flung his glove into
the seats 11ehind the Yankee dugout
on his way to the showers.
Rich Gossage relieved Tiant and
retired the last four hitters, completing the victory.
Red SollS, Brewen 3
Butch Hobson drove in three runs
with a horner and a sacrifice fly to
pace Boston over Milwaukee. Hol&gt;son's sacrifice fly carne in a tw&lt;Hllll
second inning and his tw&lt;&gt;-run horner
was in the fourth.
Chuck Rainey, 1&gt;-1, scattered
(Continued on Page ~)

..-==-'-'--'--'---'----'--'---------------URGENTLY NEEDED
OIL AND GAS LEASES
GALLIA COUNTY

To fulfill future drilling programs. please write or call and be sure to
include proertv location and acreage that' s available for lease.
UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
P.O. BOX 142

Ironton, Ohio 45638

'

•

Over hill, d
1
over ae
HONDA Fl250
ODYSSEY'"

• Three , large, flotalion -type
t ires
• Oual ·range tour·speed
tran smission
• 105 .1 cc OHC
to ur-stroke
engine

• Fo ur tal , llolation 1ype ti res
• Full roll bar and shoulder

harness
• Aircrall· type steering con tro l
• Automatic clutch

sgso

1550

5
JUN87

ATC®70

PARTS LIST

youngsters
• 3-speed transmissio n
automatic clutch
• Three tat, flotation
type tires

AND DIRECTIONS
FOR ASSEMBLING
AND OPERATING

DUSTIN

DELIVERY

~50

HOFFMAN

Floyd Bannister

IN

~..

446-0475

"

Ph. 4%·2240

Gallipolis

lawn and garden attachments to help make your JOb easter
And every Bolens Tractor is renowned for 1ts reltabtllly and

Rio Grande College and Community College,
services Gallia, Jac kson, Meigs and Vinton
Counties with LOW COST education within easy
commuting distance .

quahty const ruCtiOn No matter what your needs are. Bolens

has a tractor thars righl for you at a pnce ~ou 11 f•nd affordable

'

GI2&gt;CL
11hp Genr

Why travel many miles from home when QUAL!·
TY education is available at Rio Grande with
courses and degrees offered to fi t YOUR
schedule.

~

•

PITTSBURG
260 Miles

•COLUMBUS
92 Miles

- Morning, Alternoon and Evening Classes.

•••
•
'

Available tJut 11llt

VINTON

Hl t;IXL
16 hjl

1ll11 ~ 1! .o ll•d

Hy ll t OIIatiC

CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE STORE

'r
'

..

'CINCINNATI
162 Miles

JACKSON

MEIOS

co.

co.

-tf RIO ORANDII COLLIIOII
AND COMMUNITY COLUQI

•LEXINGTON
181 M1les

~

'·
•''
'•

co.

Registration Dates
JUNE 9 (First Summer Termr
JULY 14 (Second Summer Term)
SEPT. 8 (Fall Quarter)

"

"

•

Ruth's home run revisited
and the Cubs were on him. The ftrst
pitch from Charley Root was a
strike. The crowd roared in approval. Ruth turned toward the stands and held up one finger.
"Root put over another strike and
the Babe held up two fingers. Then,
before digging in, he swept his amn
full length toward the center field
fence. Th~ext pitch landed over
that fenctl'tor a horne run."

se."

.

As part of this effort, the recommendation was made for increasing
the NBA's recruitinent and development of officials. This would be in
conjunction with "renewing and expanding the NBA's contract with the
Continental
Basketball
Association," said Colangelo, with
that minor league being used as a
developmental place for officials as
well as players and a testing goWld
for rules changes and new equipment
"We want to be able to look people
in the eye and say, 'We're ready for
three officials. We've got the people
who can get the job done, "' said Joe
Axelson, the NBA's director of
operations.

"WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND"
'

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER

*Native of Meigs County
•world War II Veteran
•Member and past commander, Feeney-Bennett Post

.

*43 years as bricklayer and cement masorl.
•Financial sec'y. and business manager of Bricklayers
and Cement Finishers, Local 32, Pomeroy.
-~
•Member of senior citizens and Pomeroy Eagles Club
'•Brother of former commissioner, Charles Walburn,
deceased
·
*Married to former Gladys Lambert
*Will devote full time to people of Meigs County if
elected
Check these qualifications and vote for the man that will
do the best job for Meigs Co. Your vote and Influence appreciated.

•CHARLESTON
84 Mltea

;

The move came Friday at the final
session of the annual sununer
meetings of NBA coaches and
general managers. The final
decision will be up to the Board of
Governors, one representative
(usually an owner ) of each of the 23
NBA franchises , which begins its
summer meetings Tuesd~y in
Coronado, Calif.
In another major action, the Competition and Rules Committee chose
to table a motion to return to the use
of three referees per game, which
had been tried during the 1978-79
season but dropped last summer.

128

- Approved for Veterans Benefits
Mod•t OlD&lt;L &amp; H18)(!

LOS ANGEL.ES (AP) - The
three-point goal, a popular success
in its trial run during the 1979-&lt;10
National Basketball Association
season, is on the verge of becoming a
permanent feature of the pro game.
The league's Competition and
Rules Conunittee, acting on the
urging of NBA coaches and general
managers, voted to recommend to
the Board of Governors that the
three-point goal rule - awarding
three points for shots made from
beyond an arc that ranges from 22
feet to 23 feet, 6 inches from the
basket - be kept on a permanent
basis.

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

(llltd an 110 per cr.ctlt t\our lor r11idlnt1 of 011tl1, J1ck1on. Meigs or
VInton Counllu with Ius thu CoU~~g~~junlor clan standing.)
.

•

help when San Diego scored a pair of
runs to wke a 2-0 lead.·
But Mura' couldn't hold the advantage and Cincinnati erupted for
I our runs in the second to bring on
reliever John D'Acquisto.

" It was the best John's pitched in
two years," said San Diego Manager
Jerry Cole1lllln. "I think he . can
move into a stopper role in the
bullpen for us."
Coleman also said Mura would he
·given another shot in the starting
rowtion despite his unimpressive
outing .
"That's probably as poor as
Steve's pitched all year, " Coleman
said. " He'll get another chance,
probably in the upcoming series
with Houston."
Willie Montanez staked Mura to
the first-inning lead with a tw&lt;&gt;-run
single, which gave him 10 runs batted in his last 11 games.
But the Reds' bounced hack in t)le
second when Ron Oester hit a bases-

The fire-balling right-hander held
the Reds scoreless for five innings
with Cincinnati getting its final run
in the ninth off Rollie Fingers, the
third Padres· reliever.

PD. POL. ADV.

lHANK YOU

lOQded single to drive in the first run
and Leibrandt tied the game on a
sacrifice fly .
Mura walked Dave Collins to load
the bases and bring on D'Acquisto,
who threw a wild pitch to bririg in the
third Cincinnati run. Dave ConcepciOn drove in what proved to be
the game-winning run when he
grounded out.
Cincinnati got an insurance run in
the ninth inning when Collins
singled, stole second and scored on
Harry Stilman's RBI single.
The teams meet in the third of
their four-game series tonight with
San Diego sending left-hander John
Curtis, :1-4, to the mound to face Tom
Seaver, 2-3, who holds a 25-7 career
record against the Padres.

Delivers game-winner

Three-pointer permanent

ELDEN •'Whitey" WALBURN

·- $150 per quarter tuition

•

•

!

Check out the Rio Grande Story.

...

Hook up in duel

COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) Here's the latest on the long-ago
episode in the 1932 World Series involving Babe Ruth of the Yankees
and the horne fWl he allegedly called
against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley
Field:
Eric Painter, then the trainer of
the Yankees, detailed this accoWJt
for the Baseball Hall of Fame:
"When Ruth carne up in the fifth inning of the third game, the crowd

There's .No Plaee Like Home
For The·summer ••••• A.nd Tile J!all

Bolens 61 ye(lr tractor htslory' Each powers a wide range ol

Len Barker

HONDA SALES

&lt; IM COt..lolllll "'t YUIIII IOil&lt;IIUIII 1fot. \:1c-1..,..

!-\ere's the ftnest ltne·up ot 11 hp through 18 hp tractors •n

'

BETZ

"KRAMER VS.
KRAMER''

SWISHER IMPLEMENT CO.

Bolens·xL Tractors.
Our entire line is
·engineered for excellence.

.••.

READY FOR

• Fun tor

Charlie Leibrandt
Back in form

"The coaches, general managers
and the Competition and Rules Committee all believe in the concept of
three officials, but the problem is
we're not quite ready," said committee chairman Jerry Colangelo,
general manager of the Phoenix
Suns.
"We need to develop an overall
program for the recruitment and
development of officials. We don't
want to put the cart before the hor-

IN STOCK

HONDA

'"ffper River Road

" Bannister's been pitching
tremendous baseball for us," agreed
Darrell Johnson. "He got beat once
Hl and once 2·1, and he pitched a
game just like this in Minnesota that
we ended up winning but where he
didn't get the win." Heaverlo, 2-0,
picked up the vi&lt;;lory on Friday.

6ACADEMY
PICTURE

-

him.''

Kramer"
tNL LlJIJINio

•

was going to pitch a shutout. "
Once Bannister was gon~. the In·
dians battled back to lie the game in
the ninth off reliever Dave Heaverlo.
Heaverlo had come on in relief of
Shane Rawley with the bases full an
inning earlier, and worked out of
that jam on a strikeout and a line
drive to second.
In the ninth, however, Heaverlo
permitted consecutive singles by
Toby Harrah and Gary Alexander.
Speedy Miguel Dilone ran for
Alexander and promptly stole
second, and he carne home to tie the
game on a sacrifice fly after Harrah
had scored on a ground out.
Cruz's horner, his first of the
season and only the fourth of his
career, carne after he narrowly
missed being struck out by Monge.
· ''He threw a pretty good pitch just
before the home run, " Cruz said. "It
could have gone either way.
Everybody was booing (because
they thought) it was strike three."
Instead, Cruz took it for a hall and
Wlloaded on the next pitch, a fastball
"right down the middle," to settle
the issue.
"I'm real glad because it was Bannister pitching," Cruz said. "He's
been pitching some good games and
we haven't been scoring runs for

VS.

AWARDS
BEST

...

Phone 1· 532-0101

CLEVELAND'(AP) - Julio Cruz
knows he can't generally hit a
baseball 390 feet all by himself,
despite .evidence to the contrary for it was a 3~fOQt solo blast by
Cruz that lifted the Seattle Mariners
to a 4-3, !~inning victory over the
Cleveland Indians Friday night.
" It might have been, say, 330
f~t," Cruz said, "and then the wind ·
took it an extra 60 feet.''
The elements had played a part in
the contest earlier, as rain delayed
the start of the game by nearly two
hours. But Cleveland's Len Barker
and Seattle's Floyd Bannister then
quickly settled into a pitching duel
that seemed inevitably headed
toward a one-run decision.
Bannister lasted through seven innings, when Manager Darrell Johnson lifted him because of a stiff
s)10ulder. The left-bander gave up
just three Indian hits and one run on
a fourth-inning Cliff Johnson double
that scored Mike Hargrove from first base.
Barker, meanwhile, shut the
Mariners off through seven innings,
but gave up a run in the eighth
before leaving the game with two
men on. Reliever Sid Monge, ~2.
allowed both runners to score on
Dan Meyer's loop single as Seattle
grabbed a 3-1 edge.
"He (Barker) walked a guy hitting
.095," said Cleveland Manager Dave
Garcia, referring to Seattle's Larry
Milbourne. uvou can't do that."
Milbourne later scored along with
Cruz on Meyer's base hit.
"Still, Len pitched good enough to
win,"Garcia said. "It looked like he

WINN F.K lll·

FRISAT

something which turned me
around, " said l.eibrandt, 4-3, who
would not elaborate further.
"I had my rhythm tonight. I was
sailing along," he continued, "I was
having my doubts about whether I
belonged in this league, but now I
think I can win a few games."
Steve Mura, Il-l, the Padres' young
right-hander who was making his
first start in more than a year, got
some Wlaccusto~ed first·inning

Wind-blown homer
spoils Indian rally

TWO WEEKS
Friday, May 30th
thru Thursday, June 12

ME-CHANICAL
TRANSPLANTER

" J had been struggling a bit recently. I was trying to find the answer ''
said Leibramlt, who surrender~
two runs in the first inning, then
blanked the Padres until Dave Winfield hit a solo homer in the eighth.
· Doug Bair took over at that point
and we ithb rest of the way to earn
his fifth save.
"I went over some ga me films of
my recent performances with
Fischer and I carne up with

FORD'S INCREDIBLE

That might not be enough to
satisfy the referees' union. If the
board, which voted out the third official last summer, also decides to
table the question of restoring the
third official, it could lead to a major
confrontation.
The NBA officials' contract with
the league expired at the end of the
playoffs earlier this month, and
Wlion leader Richie Phillips had said
earlier that a return to three-man
refereeing crews would be one of his
key demands in negotiations for a
new contract.

CASH REBATE
On Trucks and CaiS Is For AUmited lime On~.

Combined with the Discount Pat Hill Ford Is
Offering, You Can Save Up To:

other recommendations included
going to 12-rnan rosters next season
from the present limit of 11, making
the first round of the playoffs best of
fiv e games instead of best of three
and experimenting with collapsible
rims during training camps and the
exhibition season.
" We also recommended that a
conunittee be formed to look into the
drug problem, if there is one," added Colangelo. "We don't want this
to be taken ip an alarmist way. But
we are aware that drugs are a
problem in our society, we can't be
oblivious to that fact and we want
the NBA to take the initiative in this
area."
Most of the 10 recommended rules
changes were minor. The most
significant of those dealt with the
placement of red lights above the
backboards that would he coordinated with the game clock (as
hockey's goal lights are) to provide
a visual aid as to when playing lime
expires, and elimination of the word
" injury" from the 20-second
lirneouts to avoid their abuse. Each
team would now get one 21l-second
timeout per half to use whenever it
wants, which should eliminate the
phant&lt;Vll injuries tbat crept into
NBA games in recent seasons.

S2,4QO.OO to $3,000.00
$2,300.00
52,000.00
$1,800.00
51,800.00
$1,400.00 to $1,600.00
Sl. OOO.OO to $1.600.00

1979 &amp; 1080 4x4 PICKUPS
1980 BRONCO 8 Cyl.
1980 BRONCO 6 Cyl.
1980 CLUB WAGON
1980 SUPER CAB
190 PICKUPS V-8
1980 PICKUPS 6 Cyl.

CHECK OUT THIS INCREDIBLE DEAL!

I• •I

198Ct-f-150 4x4
FOR ALOW PRICE OF

'6765 00

6 cyl., gauges, sliding rear window, Li mited Sl ip rear
axle, 1100x15 all Terr ia n tires, white spoke wheels,
rear step bumpe r, plus more.

RETAIL AND FLEET ORDER CONSUMATED
BY JUNE lOth ARE ELIGIBLE FOR REBATE,

MONEY
AVAILABLE
FOR
REAL ESTATE·
LOANS
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN

AV~ILABLE

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVI~GS &amp; LOAN CO.

Elden

••wh~ey"

Walburn

'

POMEROY OFFICE
216 W. MAIN ST.
{614) 992-6655
Contact Your Realtor or Our Office
For FurthPr Information

�...

An AP Sports Analysts

TV Sports

By FRED ROTIIENBERG

By
I

George Strode

/

Murray relishing overwork
Calvin Murray relishes the
prospect of becoming a workhorse
for Ohio State's football team.
Earle Bruce apparenUy has big
plans for his senior tailback in his
second coaching season at the Big
Ten Conference school.
"Coach Bruce took me aside
before spring practice and said,
'Hey, I want you to get ready.' And
he bas been working me," Murray
said after his 28 carries for 95 yards
in the Buckeyes' spring game.
Murray, from Woodbine, N.J ., had
never carried the ball 20 times in O!Ie
game in hls previous seasons. His
busiest day was 19 bips in an
opening 1979 biumph over Syracuse.
But Bruce, eager to win a second
league tiUe, makes no secret of the
fact that Murray may carry 20 to 30
times a game next fall. It doesn't
bother the speedster from New Jersey.
"Thirty to 40 if he wants," Murray

said of Bruce's plans. "I'm ready to
carry the ball a lot."
Murray's big problem may be his
own frailness.
He suffered hip injuries twice last
fall. The first injury came in the fifth
game against Northwestern. It
limited him to seven carries. And
Murray, slowed by an aggravation
of a hip pointer, managed 14 carries
against Wisconsin two weeks later.
He believes he's learned from the
experiences. He cannot be a 171)pound tailback in the Big Ten. He
played at 185 this spring and envisions 195, even 200 pounds for fall
practice.
"I've hit the weights a lot (since
last season)," he said: "My whole
body needs it. I've just got to build it
up. I'm getting my body physically
ready to start.'' •
Murray added, "I have to play
with more pain, too. I played with a
hyperextended left knee (in the
spring game)."

Quails working overtime
URBANA- Ohio wildlife officials
have brood quail believing they're
ana 17-hourday.
The move may restore the state's
small game bird population within .
five years.
The Division of Wildlife, by using
controlled lighting, has shortened
days by seven hours at the state's
game farm at Urbana. The result is
up to 100 eggs from each brood quail
instead of the customary dozen per
year.
.
Ohio's quail population was
almost wiped out by the severe winters rl. 1977-78 and 1978-79, leading
the state to close quail hunting two
years ago.
Dave Urban, a state wildlife
biologist, said it would take from
eight to 15 years to restore the quail
population in northern Ohio without
any assistance. He estimates it
would take three to five years for
qual! to come hack on their own in
the southern part of the state.
"With assistance," said Urban,
"-we can possibly restore the
population through the state in three
to five years."
To start the operation, each of
Ohio's 88 county game protectors
were asked to trap quail. The trapping netted 379 wild birds that were

taken to Urbana 18 months ago.
At first/' Urban said, ' We had a
lot of problems. The (controlled)
lights were one problem. Plus, wild
birds are touchy. Just having a different person feed them could upset
them for days."
Urban estimates the Urbana
facility now has 4,000 birds. "We're
getting 750 to 1,000 eggs a week.
We've got about 3,000 eggs in the incubator and probably another 1,000
eggs ready to go in.
"When we get to 10,000, we'll start
releasing them. That could be this
fall, but more likely our big release
will be next spring."
1

11

C-7- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1~

New diamond pact may seal NAS fate

· Ohio·Sportlig,.t

Already the state has made a test
release of about 400 birds in central
Ohio, a project that will provide
guidelines for the wholesale
stocking.
The wildlife officials surveyed the
quail population in every county.
"The study showed 32 counties with
no quail at all and extremely poor
populations in 40 other counties.
Where we can find good habitat in
these cOunties, that's where we'll
Pul the birds," Urban said.
Wildlife personnel will give no
estimate on when quail hunting
might resume in Ohio.

AP Sports Writer
Now that the threa t of a baseball
strike has been postponed for one
year, ABC's prime tirne baseball
can begin this Monday night without
interruption and its Sunday soccer
matches can continue in obscurity.
It's true that all sides - the
players, owners and television would have been hurt by a baseball
strike. The players wouldn't have
drawn their salaries, the owners
wouldn't have drawn their gate, concession and TV revenues and
television itself wouldn't have drawn
flies with its substitute baseball
progranuning.
But as far as we ran figure out, the
only possible beneficiary from a

baseball strike would have been the
North American SoCcer League's
national telecasts. The ABC soccer
shows are well-produced and wellpromoted, and they have one of
ABC's top broadcasters, Jim
McKay, doing the play-by-play. It's
just that hardly anybody's watching.
Soc&lt;;er mighty never be a hot TV
ticket in the United States, but its
chances of getting a toehold are near
nil when it must compete each Sund~y with local baseball. Who's going
to watch Vancouver-Tampa Bay even if they are last year's Soccer
Bowl finalists - in Chicago when the
~

Jenner: 'It's no
Oscar performance'
ByBOB'niOMAS
Associated Press Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - "It's no
Oscar-winning performance," ad·
mits Bruce Jenner of his movie
debut in "Can't Stop The Music,"
"but for a first try, I think it was
pretty good."
Critics may differ, but you get the
impression that negative reviews
won't matter to Bruce Jenner. The
self-assessment is what counts. That
was true during his grueling fouryear training for the 1976 Olympic
Games. The same kind of control
has gone into his post-Olympics
career. He has maintained the
media exposure and the monetary
rewards that eluded another gold
medalist, Mark Spitz.
"Can't Stop The Music" is no mere
walk-on for JeMer. He plays the role
of a tax lawyer who becomes enmeshed with Valerie Perrine,
romantically as well as financially,
in her scheme to promote a new
singing group, the Village People.
The film was produced for E.M.I.
Films by Allan Carr and directed by
Nancy Walker.
It has been almost four years since
Jenner won the decathalon at the
Montreal games. Since then he has
been visible as sports commentator,
first for ABC and now NBC; as TV
pitclunan for a breakfast cereal,
camera and sports clothes; as
highly paid speaker at conventions;
as author of ·an autobiography
"Decathalon Challenge: Bruce Jenner's Story"; as a sponsor of the
Special Olympics and other causes.
Acling also has been one of his
goals. Why did it take so long?
"Because l wanted to find the

right role," said Jenner, who recenUy turned 30. " I had a few offers for
cameo spots as an athlete, but I
didn't warit that.
"Although I wasn't offered the
role, I did test for 'Superman.' The
producers were pleased with my test
but decided I was too young for the
role. I was just as glad."
Two years ago he met Allen Carr
at a party. Later they had a conference and the producer said, "I'd
like to do something with you." Mon·
ths went by, and Jenner concluded it
was so much Hollywood talk. Then
one day, Carr invited him to a .
meeting with Jacques Morali.
Morali is the fellow who dreamed
up the notion of taking six young
men from New York's Greenwich
Village scene and transforming
them into a singing group. The
result: millions of copies sold with
such titles as "Macho
"

Cubs are on or in New York when the
Yankees are playing?
According to the ratings, only the
die-hard soccer fan.
·
ABC's premier 1980 soccer
tel~t May 18 drew a national
rating of 2.1, which means a UtUe
more than 2 percent of America's
TV homes were watching, and a 7
percent share of the sets that were
on.
.
In New York, soccer had 4 percent
of the viewing audience, while the
Yankees and Mets totaled 40 percent. In Chicago, soccer had 6 percent to the 50 percent watching the
Cubs or the White Sox.
A baseball strike would seem to be
the only way to get viewers to give
televised soccer a chance.
"We love it whenever ABC does
soccer," says an executive at NBC
Sports. "We just wish the soccer
season went all year.''
ABC's NASL contract requires
that at least two games involve the
Cosmos. The league, which makes
• the schedule, inade a big mistake in
llot starting with its best foot for-

Nobody wondering who Bair is now:

ward and opening with the Cosmos.
CBS learned that lesson ·with pro
basketball this season, when the
ratings Improved because !If the
near-weekly appearances by the
Celtlcs and Larry Bird or the Lakers
and Magic Johnson.
When you've got it, flaWlt it, and
from a national standpoint, all the
NASL has right now is the Cosm.os.
After a winter of not thinking soccer.
the viewing public has to be reminded there sWI is an NASL, and that
it's back on television. The first
telecast is extremely important for
creating interest and building
momentum.
A Super Bowl rematch betw~n
Pittsburgh and Los Angeles is one
thing, but a Soccer Bowl rematch is
another matter altogether. And if
you doubt this, see how many people
knowwhotbeNASLcbampionis.
This Sunday; it's the Cosmos vs.
Washington and Johan Cruyff- the
ideal matchup of super-team against
super-player - and if the ratings
don't improve, the NASL-ABC
marriage might be on the rocks.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Doug Bair
spent six years in the minor leagues,
and the Paulding, Ohio native's
fame didn'texactly precede him.
He knew he was in trouble when he
reported to one training camp and
the clubhouse man asked, "Who are

you? "
It wasn't until Bair landed with the
Cincirmati Reds two years ago that
his career really started to look up.
Bair spent his first two years in
professional baseball in the Pittsburgh Pirate organization at
Salem, Va., and Waterbury, Conn.
He got promoted to the Pirates'
Triple-A club in Charleston, W.Va.,
but languished there for five years.
Once, after the 1974 season, the
Pirates released him conditionally
to the Detroit Tigers.
"I reported to Lakeland, Fla.,
(Tiger training camp) in the spring
d. 197~ and walked into the
clubhouse," Bair said.
"Who are you? the clubhouse
man asked.
. "Doug Balr."
11

(Continued from Page C-4)
-seven hits, including a home run by
Dick Davis in the eighth, before
giving way to Tom Burgmeier, who
was touched for a twD-run homer by
SalBando.
Tigers 12, Angela 1
• Two home runs by Riehle Hebner
and single four-baggers by Lance
Parrish, Kirk Gibson and Stan Papi
powered Detroit over California.
The Tigers led 2-1 going into the
foUrth inning when Hebner hit a solo
shot. Mter Gibson legged out an infield hit, Papi slamm.ed his homer.

•'

VOTE
FOR
J. OTIS BAILEY

OMAHA, Neb. ( AP)
Professional baseball clubs finally
have the green light from Comrniisioner Bowie Kuhn to sign
players from among the tho~
of refugees recenUy arrived from
Cuba.
But it's not known yet how many
Cubans will be sought by the big
leagues, Kuhn said Friday night as

.'.
•
ft

•
'

..

i

.

••

Qualified, capable and willing

to work for a be1ter Meigs Coun·
fy.

A Vote tor Bailey is a vote for
upgrading our highway system

and other programs beneficial to

'

Meigs County.

REPUBUCAN, FOR COMMISSIONER

(Continued from Page C~)
Orioles 3, Twins 2
• Terry Crowley's pinch-hit home
. run leading off the loth inning lifted
Baltimore over Minnesota. Crowley
drilled the first pitch by loser Doug
' Corbett, 3-2, over the center field
fence.
Twins outfielder Ken Landreaux
·doubled in the seventh inning to extend hls major league-leading hit. ting streak to 31 games.

TERM BEGIIItNI NG JAN. 2, 1981

DON. R. ·HILL
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
TERM BEGINNING JANUARY 3, 1981
*Lifelong resident of Meigs County
*Farmer in Letart Falls
*Serving 11th year as Letart Township Trustee
*Married and has 3 children
*Member of Racine Masonic Lodge
*Member of American Legion

j .--------"'!!!~~~""!~~!""1--------i

.I

~:~~?.meinandsaid,'Wecan'tuse

RE-ELECT
JAMES M. MONTGOMERY

Bair's contract was returned to
Pittsburgh, and he spent two more
years at Charleston before going to
Oakland for a season and then to
Cincirmati in 1978.
While Bair got his first major
league chance With the Oakland A's,
he wasn't there ·long enough to
regret moving to the Reds.
"Things got completely out of

· ,.

(""

~

-:'

.

_

'

.
•

he watched the opening round of the
College World Series.
"I really have no idea how many
quality players there might be
among (the refugees)," Kuhn said.
His action ends a controversy
which eruptecl earlier this mouth
when Kuhn dfrected major league
clubs to leave the Cuban refugees
alone.

OF GALLIA COUNTY
1. The Sheriff who has helped decrease crime in your
county by 30%
2. James M. Montgomery deserves a second term .
3. Support and re-elect James M. Montgomery, Sh er iff.
Paid tor by the committee t o Re·elect James M . M ontgomery, Jamie

Fisher. Treasurer .

PD . PDL

•ov .

A's 6, Rangers 3
Consecutive home runs by
Dwayne Murphy and Mitchell Page
off Gaylord Perry in the fourth inning carried Oakland to its victory
over Texas.
Winner Steve McCatty, 5-4, didn't
yield a hit until the fifth inning ll!1d
finished with a six-hitter.
Rjchie Zisk hit a solo home run, hls
ninth of the season, for Texas In the
ninth.

J. ROBERT EVANS
REPUBLICAN

Don R. HiD

YOUR VOTE AND INR.UENCE APPRECIATED

Radio Shack's Lowest Price Ever for the World's
Best-Selling Personal Microcomputer System

CANDIDATE
· FOR

PD. POL . ADV.

Level II 16K TRS-80
System as Shown

COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

$

Retired teacher, administrator with experience, determination, loyalty,leadership and dedication.
Pd . for by the candidate

OPEN
MONDAY

DON'T FORGO

B•g 12
V•deo
Mon11or

Reg. 849.00

FATHER'S DAY

TIL 8 PM

IS
JUNE 15TH

The hottest
fashion
Is a
cool suit.
By

..
Acrylic Latex Flat
House Paint

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
James 0. Bush, Mgr.
Ph. 388·8603

SAVE '2°

~INYL ACRYLI

· EX HOUSE PA

'

NOW. $987
ONLY Suggested Retail Price

1 G ALL Or.

THE FORMER OFFICE OF

that, plus cool I
comfort with this
amazingly lightweight imported
blend of polyester
and wool. Available in a wide
variety. of stripes
and panerns.-to
give you a look ·ot
quiet cleganet
that's "Tlllt
Cricketeer
DiffcrcncC".

0

White

OnlyI

CRICKEfEER®

'11.87

,

675-1160

Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to !&gt; p m.,

S:~turday

cassette

Data
Recorder

• World's most popular personal
computer
• No prior knowledge of computing
is required
• Used In offices~ tchools, labs, ·

.,...

.: even at home · .

.

• Oft·the shelf delivery in moit
.

Start summer off wtth something tmportant for your bus tness ,
school or vacationing student - a TRS-80 Computer sys tem that' s
not only designed and built by Radio Shack but already has over
200,000 users worldwide.
The TRS-80 Microcomputer has practically everything you cou ld
want in a computer plus the expandabilily to meet your fu tu re
needs! Versatile- use it for everything from personal finance
planning to video-graphic games. Programs in Level II BASIC the language that is easy to master but powerfu l enough for many
advanced applications . Comes complete with a "plain Engl ish"
manual, cassette data recorder, and two samp le program s. 26· 1056

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

Sale ends 6/7/80

FROM

t175

CAROLINA LUMBER. &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 Sixth Street

10-Key
Numeric
Keypad

meticulous 1ailor~
in g. You 'II get all

• Wood or masonry
• One coat
• Mildew resistant

VINTON 0.

53-Key
Profe ss 1onat
Keyboard

Today's fashion
calls for a casual,
comfortable look,
with subtle
shaping, natural
shoulders and

'825

Will be open for business starting June 9, 1980, wi_th Optometrists R.-Keith King, O.D., and Richard H. Btllman
II, 0.0.

3"" innings in their first spring
exhibitiongame,thennotagainuntil
the last game, two-thirds of an inning. General Manager Ralph Houk

VOTE FOR

BUY NOW FOR
SPRING DELIVERY
AND SAVE $300
Reg. Sl12S SPECIAL

DR. N. W. COMPTON

"Oh,' ' the man said. ''Well, let 's

get you a uniform."
Bair was issued a mljSty No. 72
uniform from an old trunk . There
was no name on it, although every
other player in camp had a personalized jersey.
"Obviously, they were&lt;~ ' t expecting me," Bair said. " I pitched

That winter, the Reds tried to puichase pitcher Vida Blue's contract
from Oakland, but the deal was
quashed by baseba ll Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
The deal was finally complete&lt;(,
with Bair coming to the Reds instead
of Blue, and Bair fi nally found a
niche ; in two seasons with the Reds,
he made 139 appearances, saving 44
games and wirming 18.
·

Rewrite . . ·--------------~

(Continued on Page C-7)

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC CENTER

hand there (in Oakland)," 13air said.
"Some veterans were showing up 10
or 15 minutes before game time, pule
ling on their uniform~ and going out
to play," he said. "Believe it or not,
though, I had fun ... really had fun.
"I was single. I worked on my '57
Chevy all day and went to the park
at night. There was no offense and
no defense, so it was me against the
other team ....

Doug Bair
No identity crisis

.

Royala 9, White Sox Z
John Wathan drove in three runs
and Darrel Porter added a two-run
homer to back Larry Gura 's sixhitter and propel Kansas City over
Chicago. Gura, 7-2, retired 17 batters
in a row in one stretch as the Royals
increased their lead in the American
League West to 2% games.
Willie Wilson walked to lead off
the first, then stole second and third
to spur a three-run burst which Porter capped with his homer.

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

" Who?"

"Doug Bair. You obtained my contract over the winter," Bair said.

Kuhn approves Cuban recruitment

· Rewrite . ..
"

.

YOU CAN COUNT ON RADIO
. SHACK: WE SERVICE
. WHAT WE SELL

Most rtems

also available at
Aaoro Shack
Oea ters.
Look for thrs

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Point Ple11ant
8 a.m. Jo 12 noon

J•

.'

l, I

srgn m ~ o ur
1 DEALE:R
nerght)orhood . . __ _ _ __

'

�...

An AP Sports Analysts

TV Sports

By FRED ROTIIENBERG

By
I

George Strode

/

Murray relishing overwork
Calvin Murray relishes the
prospect of becoming a workhorse
for Ohio State's football team.
Earle Bruce apparenUy has big
plans for his senior tailback in his
second coaching season at the Big
Ten Conference school.
"Coach Bruce took me aside
before spring practice and said,
'Hey, I want you to get ready.' And
he bas been working me," Murray
said after his 28 carries for 95 yards
in the Buckeyes' spring game.
Murray, from Woodbine, N.J ., had
never carried the ball 20 times in O!Ie
game in hls previous seasons. His
busiest day was 19 bips in an
opening 1979 biumph over Syracuse.
But Bruce, eager to win a second
league tiUe, makes no secret of the
fact that Murray may carry 20 to 30
times a game next fall. It doesn't
bother the speedster from New Jersey.
"Thirty to 40 if he wants," Murray

said of Bruce's plans. "I'm ready to
carry the ball a lot."
Murray's big problem may be his
own frailness.
He suffered hip injuries twice last
fall. The first injury came in the fifth
game against Northwestern. It
limited him to seven carries. And
Murray, slowed by an aggravation
of a hip pointer, managed 14 carries
against Wisconsin two weeks later.
He believes he's learned from the
experiences. He cannot be a 171)pound tailback in the Big Ten. He
played at 185 this spring and envisions 195, even 200 pounds for fall
practice.
"I've hit the weights a lot (since
last season)," he said: "My whole
body needs it. I've just got to build it
up. I'm getting my body physically
ready to start.'' •
Murray added, "I have to play
with more pain, too. I played with a
hyperextended left knee (in the
spring game)."

Quails working overtime
URBANA- Ohio wildlife officials
have brood quail believing they're
ana 17-hourday.
The move may restore the state's
small game bird population within .
five years.
The Division of Wildlife, by using
controlled lighting, has shortened
days by seven hours at the state's
game farm at Urbana. The result is
up to 100 eggs from each brood quail
instead of the customary dozen per
year.
.
Ohio's quail population was
almost wiped out by the severe winters rl. 1977-78 and 1978-79, leading
the state to close quail hunting two
years ago.
Dave Urban, a state wildlife
biologist, said it would take from
eight to 15 years to restore the quail
population in northern Ohio without
any assistance. He estimates it
would take three to five years for
qual! to come hack on their own in
the southern part of the state.
"With assistance," said Urban,
"-we can possibly restore the
population through the state in three
to five years."
To start the operation, each of
Ohio's 88 county game protectors
were asked to trap quail. The trapping netted 379 wild birds that were

taken to Urbana 18 months ago.
At first/' Urban said, ' We had a
lot of problems. The (controlled)
lights were one problem. Plus, wild
birds are touchy. Just having a different person feed them could upset
them for days."
Urban estimates the Urbana
facility now has 4,000 birds. "We're
getting 750 to 1,000 eggs a week.
We've got about 3,000 eggs in the incubator and probably another 1,000
eggs ready to go in.
"When we get to 10,000, we'll start
releasing them. That could be this
fall, but more likely our big release
will be next spring."
1

11

C-7- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 1, 1~

New diamond pact may seal NAS fate

· Ohio·Sportlig,.t

Already the state has made a test
release of about 400 birds in central
Ohio, a project that will provide
guidelines for the wholesale
stocking.
The wildlife officials surveyed the
quail population in every county.
"The study showed 32 counties with
no quail at all and extremely poor
populations in 40 other counties.
Where we can find good habitat in
these cOunties, that's where we'll
Pul the birds," Urban said.
Wildlife personnel will give no
estimate on when quail hunting
might resume in Ohio.

AP Sports Writer
Now that the threa t of a baseball
strike has been postponed for one
year, ABC's prime tirne baseball
can begin this Monday night without
interruption and its Sunday soccer
matches can continue in obscurity.
It's true that all sides - the
players, owners and television would have been hurt by a baseball
strike. The players wouldn't have
drawn their salaries, the owners
wouldn't have drawn their gate, concession and TV revenues and
television itself wouldn't have drawn
flies with its substitute baseball
progranuning.
But as far as we ran figure out, the
only possible beneficiary from a

baseball strike would have been the
North American SoCcer League's
national telecasts. The ABC soccer
shows are well-produced and wellpromoted, and they have one of
ABC's top broadcasters, Jim
McKay, doing the play-by-play. It's
just that hardly anybody's watching.
Soc&lt;;er mighty never be a hot TV
ticket in the United States, but its
chances of getting a toehold are near
nil when it must compete each Sund~y with local baseball. Who's going
to watch Vancouver-Tampa Bay even if they are last year's Soccer
Bowl finalists - in Chicago when the
~

Jenner: 'It's no
Oscar performance'
ByBOB'niOMAS
Associated Press Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - "It's no
Oscar-winning performance," ad·
mits Bruce Jenner of his movie
debut in "Can't Stop The Music,"
"but for a first try, I think it was
pretty good."
Critics may differ, but you get the
impression that negative reviews
won't matter to Bruce Jenner. The
self-assessment is what counts. That
was true during his grueling fouryear training for the 1976 Olympic
Games. The same kind of control
has gone into his post-Olympics
career. He has maintained the
media exposure and the monetary
rewards that eluded another gold
medalist, Mark Spitz.
"Can't Stop The Music" is no mere
walk-on for JeMer. He plays the role
of a tax lawyer who becomes enmeshed with Valerie Perrine,
romantically as well as financially,
in her scheme to promote a new
singing group, the Village People.
The film was produced for E.M.I.
Films by Allan Carr and directed by
Nancy Walker.
It has been almost four years since
Jenner won the decathalon at the
Montreal games. Since then he has
been visible as sports commentator,
first for ABC and now NBC; as TV
pitclunan for a breakfast cereal,
camera and sports clothes; as
highly paid speaker at conventions;
as author of ·an autobiography
"Decathalon Challenge: Bruce Jenner's Story"; as a sponsor of the
Special Olympics and other causes.
Acling also has been one of his
goals. Why did it take so long?
"Because l wanted to find the

right role," said Jenner, who recenUy turned 30. " I had a few offers for
cameo spots as an athlete, but I
didn't warit that.
"Although I wasn't offered the
role, I did test for 'Superman.' The
producers were pleased with my test
but decided I was too young for the
role. I was just as glad."
Two years ago he met Allen Carr
at a party. Later they had a conference and the producer said, "I'd
like to do something with you." Mon·
ths went by, and Jenner concluded it
was so much Hollywood talk. Then
one day, Carr invited him to a .
meeting with Jacques Morali.
Morali is the fellow who dreamed
up the notion of taking six young
men from New York's Greenwich
Village scene and transforming
them into a singing group. The
result: millions of copies sold with
such titles as "Macho
"

Cubs are on or in New York when the
Yankees are playing?
According to the ratings, only the
die-hard soccer fan.
·
ABC's premier 1980 soccer
tel~t May 18 drew a national
rating of 2.1, which means a UtUe
more than 2 percent of America's
TV homes were watching, and a 7
percent share of the sets that were
on.
.
In New York, soccer had 4 percent
of the viewing audience, while the
Yankees and Mets totaled 40 percent. In Chicago, soccer had 6 percent to the 50 percent watching the
Cubs or the White Sox.
A baseball strike would seem to be
the only way to get viewers to give
televised soccer a chance.
"We love it whenever ABC does
soccer," says an executive at NBC
Sports. "We just wish the soccer
season went all year.''
ABC's NASL contract requires
that at least two games involve the
Cosmos. The league, which makes
• the schedule, inade a big mistake in
llot starting with its best foot for-

Nobody wondering who Bair is now:

ward and opening with the Cosmos.
CBS learned that lesson ·with pro
basketball this season, when the
ratings Improved because !If the
near-weekly appearances by the
Celtlcs and Larry Bird or the Lakers
and Magic Johnson.
When you've got it, flaWlt it, and
from a national standpoint, all the
NASL has right now is the Cosm.os.
After a winter of not thinking soccer.
the viewing public has to be reminded there sWI is an NASL, and that
it's back on television. The first
telecast is extremely important for
creating interest and building
momentum.
A Super Bowl rematch betw~n
Pittsburgh and Los Angeles is one
thing, but a Soccer Bowl rematch is
another matter altogether. And if
you doubt this, see how many people
knowwhotbeNASLcbampionis.
This Sunday; it's the Cosmos vs.
Washington and Johan Cruyff- the
ideal matchup of super-team against
super-player - and if the ratings
don't improve, the NASL-ABC
marriage might be on the rocks.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Doug Bair
spent six years in the minor leagues,
and the Paulding, Ohio native's
fame didn'texactly precede him.
He knew he was in trouble when he
reported to one training camp and
the clubhouse man asked, "Who are

you? "
It wasn't until Bair landed with the
Cincirmati Reds two years ago that
his career really started to look up.
Bair spent his first two years in
professional baseball in the Pittsburgh Pirate organization at
Salem, Va., and Waterbury, Conn.
He got promoted to the Pirates'
Triple-A club in Charleston, W.Va.,
but languished there for five years.
Once, after the 1974 season, the
Pirates released him conditionally
to the Detroit Tigers.
"I reported to Lakeland, Fla.,
(Tiger training camp) in the spring
d. 197~ and walked into the
clubhouse," Bair said.
"Who are you? the clubhouse
man asked.
. "Doug Balr."
11

(Continued from Page C-4)
-seven hits, including a home run by
Dick Davis in the eighth, before
giving way to Tom Burgmeier, who
was touched for a twD-run homer by
SalBando.
Tigers 12, Angela 1
• Two home runs by Riehle Hebner
and single four-baggers by Lance
Parrish, Kirk Gibson and Stan Papi
powered Detroit over California.
The Tigers led 2-1 going into the
foUrth inning when Hebner hit a solo
shot. Mter Gibson legged out an infield hit, Papi slamm.ed his homer.

•'

VOTE
FOR
J. OTIS BAILEY

OMAHA, Neb. ( AP)
Professional baseball clubs finally
have the green light from Comrniisioner Bowie Kuhn to sign
players from among the tho~
of refugees recenUy arrived from
Cuba.
But it's not known yet how many
Cubans will be sought by the big
leagues, Kuhn said Friday night as

.'.
•
ft

•
'

..

i

.

••

Qualified, capable and willing

to work for a be1ter Meigs Coun·
fy.

A Vote tor Bailey is a vote for
upgrading our highway system

and other programs beneficial to

'

Meigs County.

REPUBUCAN, FOR COMMISSIONER

(Continued from Page C~)
Orioles 3, Twins 2
• Terry Crowley's pinch-hit home
. run leading off the loth inning lifted
Baltimore over Minnesota. Crowley
drilled the first pitch by loser Doug
' Corbett, 3-2, over the center field
fence.
Twins outfielder Ken Landreaux
·doubled in the seventh inning to extend hls major league-leading hit. ting streak to 31 games.

TERM BEGIIItNI NG JAN. 2, 1981

DON. R. ·HILL
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
TERM BEGINNING JANUARY 3, 1981
*Lifelong resident of Meigs County
*Farmer in Letart Falls
*Serving 11th year as Letart Township Trustee
*Married and has 3 children
*Member of Racine Masonic Lodge
*Member of American Legion

j .--------"'!!!~~~""!~~!""1--------i

.I

~:~~?.meinandsaid,'Wecan'tuse

RE-ELECT
JAMES M. MONTGOMERY

Bair's contract was returned to
Pittsburgh, and he spent two more
years at Charleston before going to
Oakland for a season and then to
Cincirmati in 1978.
While Bair got his first major
league chance With the Oakland A's,
he wasn't there ·long enough to
regret moving to the Reds.
"Things got completely out of

· ,.

(""

~

-:'

.

_

'

.
•

he watched the opening round of the
College World Series.
"I really have no idea how many
quality players there might be
among (the refugees)," Kuhn said.
His action ends a controversy
which eruptecl earlier this mouth
when Kuhn dfrected major league
clubs to leave the Cuban refugees
alone.

OF GALLIA COUNTY
1. The Sheriff who has helped decrease crime in your
county by 30%
2. James M. Montgomery deserves a second term .
3. Support and re-elect James M. Montgomery, Sh er iff.
Paid tor by the committee t o Re·elect James M . M ontgomery, Jamie

Fisher. Treasurer .

PD . PDL

•ov .

A's 6, Rangers 3
Consecutive home runs by
Dwayne Murphy and Mitchell Page
off Gaylord Perry in the fourth inning carried Oakland to its victory
over Texas.
Winner Steve McCatty, 5-4, didn't
yield a hit until the fifth inning ll!1d
finished with a six-hitter.
Rjchie Zisk hit a solo home run, hls
ninth of the season, for Texas In the
ninth.

J. ROBERT EVANS
REPUBLICAN

Don R. HiD

YOUR VOTE AND INR.UENCE APPRECIATED

Radio Shack's Lowest Price Ever for the World's
Best-Selling Personal Microcomputer System

CANDIDATE
· FOR

PD. POL . ADV.

Level II 16K TRS-80
System as Shown

COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

$

Retired teacher, administrator with experience, determination, loyalty,leadership and dedication.
Pd . for by the candidate

OPEN
MONDAY

DON'T FORGO

B•g 12
V•deo
Mon11or

Reg. 849.00

FATHER'S DAY

TIL 8 PM

IS
JUNE 15TH

The hottest
fashion
Is a
cool suit.
By

..
Acrylic Latex Flat
House Paint

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.
James 0. Bush, Mgr.
Ph. 388·8603

SAVE '2°

~INYL ACRYLI

· EX HOUSE PA

'

NOW. $987
ONLY Suggested Retail Price

1 G ALL Or.

THE FORMER OFFICE OF

that, plus cool I
comfort with this
amazingly lightweight imported
blend of polyester
and wool. Available in a wide
variety. of stripes
and panerns.-to
give you a look ·ot
quiet cleganet
that's "Tlllt
Cricketeer
DiffcrcncC".

0

White

OnlyI

CRICKEfEER®

'11.87

,

675-1160

Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to !&gt; p m.,

S:~turday

cassette

Data
Recorder

• World's most popular personal
computer
• No prior knowledge of computing
is required
• Used In offices~ tchools, labs, ·

.,...

.: even at home · .

.

• Oft·the shelf delivery in moit
.

Start summer off wtth something tmportant for your bus tness ,
school or vacationing student - a TRS-80 Computer sys tem that' s
not only designed and built by Radio Shack but already has over
200,000 users worldwide.
The TRS-80 Microcomputer has practically everything you cou ld
want in a computer plus the expandabilily to meet your fu tu re
needs! Versatile- use it for everything from personal finance
planning to video-graphic games. Programs in Level II BASIC the language that is easy to master but powerfu l enough for many
advanced applications . Comes complete with a "plain Engl ish"
manual, cassette data recorder, and two samp le program s. 26· 1056

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

Sale ends 6/7/80

FROM

t175

CAROLINA LUMBER. &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 Sixth Street

10-Key
Numeric
Keypad

meticulous 1ailor~
in g. You 'II get all

• Wood or masonry
• One coat
• Mildew resistant

VINTON 0.

53-Key
Profe ss 1onat
Keyboard

Today's fashion
calls for a casual,
comfortable look,
with subtle
shaping, natural
shoulders and

'825

Will be open for business starting June 9, 1980, wi_th Optometrists R.-Keith King, O.D., and Richard H. Btllman
II, 0.0.

3"" innings in their first spring
exhibitiongame,thennotagainuntil
the last game, two-thirds of an inning. General Manager Ralph Houk

VOTE FOR

BUY NOW FOR
SPRING DELIVERY
AND SAVE $300
Reg. Sl12S SPECIAL

DR. N. W. COMPTON

"Oh,' ' the man said. ''Well, let 's

get you a uniform."
Bair was issued a mljSty No. 72
uniform from an old trunk . There
was no name on it, although every
other player in camp had a personalized jersey.
"Obviously, they were&lt;~ ' t expecting me," Bair said. " I pitched

That winter, the Reds tried to puichase pitcher Vida Blue's contract
from Oakland, but the deal was
quashed by baseba ll Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn.
The deal was finally complete&lt;(,
with Bair coming to the Reds instead
of Blue, and Bair fi nally found a
niche ; in two seasons with the Reds,
he made 139 appearances, saving 44
games and wirming 18.
·

Rewrite . . ·--------------~

(Continued on Page C-7)

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC CENTER

hand there (in Oakland)," 13air said.
"Some veterans were showing up 10
or 15 minutes before game time, pule
ling on their uniform~ and going out
to play," he said. "Believe it or not,
though, I had fun ... really had fun.
"I was single. I worked on my '57
Chevy all day and went to the park
at night. There was no offense and
no defense, so it was me against the
other team ....

Doug Bair
No identity crisis

.

Royala 9, White Sox Z
John Wathan drove in three runs
and Darrel Porter added a two-run
homer to back Larry Gura 's sixhitter and propel Kansas City over
Chicago. Gura, 7-2, retired 17 batters
in a row in one stretch as the Royals
increased their lead in the American
League West to 2% games.
Willie Wilson walked to lead off
the first, then stole second and third
to spur a three-run burst which Porter capped with his homer.

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

" Who?"

"Doug Bair. You obtained my contract over the winter," Bair said.

Kuhn approves Cuban recruitment

· Rewrite . ..
"

.

YOU CAN COUNT ON RADIO
. SHACK: WE SERVICE
. WHAT WE SELL

Most rtems

also available at
Aaoro Shack
Oea ters.
Look for thrs

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Point Ple11ant
8 a.m. Jo 12 noon

J•

.'

l, I

srgn m ~ o ur
1 DEALE:R
nerght)orhood . . __ _ _ __

'

�..
C-3-- The Sunday Tinies.Sentinel, Sunday. June I, 1980

..-

...

~

......

~

. ...

\,.

Lasorda:'He made it look easy, didn't he?'
By JOHN NADEL .
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "He was
just that far from perfection,'' said
Los Angeles Dodgers Manager Tom
Lasorda , holding his thwnb and
forefi nger a millimeter apart.
Lasorda was talking about the performa nce of Bob Welch against the
Atlanta Braves on Thursday night.
Welch, who seems on the verge of
being one of baseball's top pitchers,
was, indeed, all but perfect.
Welch allowed only one hit - Larvell Blanks' clean single in the fourth inning - and faced the minimwn
'l:l batters as the Dodgers blanked
the Braves 3-0.
Weich now is 5-1 with victories in
his last five decisions . The 23-yearold right-hander walked none and
struck out seven in lowering his earned run average to 2.16.

•

-

An AP Sports Analysts
By GORDON BEARD
AP Sports Writer
BALTIMORE (AP)
The
Baltimore Orioles started the
baseball season with a new owner,
their best ever advance sale and a
new learn song, "Orioles Magic,
FeelltHappen."
Edward Bennett Williams continues to make the long trek from his
home near Washington, D.C., to
cheer his team and the attendance is
holding its own so far. But the magic
of 1979 is missing.
" There's nothing wrong with the
Orioles, just the record,'' insists
Manager Earl Weaver. However,
eve n that incurable optimist
wavers: "The talent is there, but I
am wary about the turn of events."
It clearly was expecting too much

Bob Welch
In ('Ontrnlall night

•
~
•

~etch set down the lirst10 Braves
with no problems. Then, with one out
in the fourth, Blanicll' lined what
Welch called a " high hook" over
shortstop BlU Russell's head into
left-center field.

Chambliss W8SI)'t quite so high on
Welch's perfonnance. "I've seen as
good or better,'; said the Atlanta fir·
st baseman. "He threw about thesame as I've seen him throw before.
We're a better hitting club then that;
but he was good. We just didn't hit
him.''

Chris Chambliss came up next and
came up with one of the fe\v hard-hit
balls off Welch, a crisp grounder to
Reggie Smith and Joe Ferguson
the right side. Second baseman blAsted solo home runs to account
Davey Lopes handled it easily, for two of the Dodge~· runs. The
however, and started a double play.
other scored as Steve Garvey was
That was it for the Braves, as groun&lt;Ung into a double play.
Welch set them down routinely the
"That's the best _display of
rest of the way.
throwing fastb!llls I've ever
" That was a n()-hit game," said caught," said Ferguson, adding
losing pitcher Phil Niekro, a 41-year- · quickly with a smile that he wasn't·
old veteran who has seen, and tur- around before Sandy Koufax retired.
ned in, some excellent performances "He's done very well all year long.
over the years. " I've seen no-hitters He's come to the point now where he:
that weren't hall as good as that. He can throw the ball where he wants
was in control all night.''
to. He's out there thinking."

Oriole magic of '79 missing

.. . I •

••

"He made it look easy, didn't he,
Penguin?" Lasorda said to third
baseman Ron Cey just moments after Welch had completed his gem.
.. Boring,., said Cey, " real
boring."
The Dodger ' Stadium crowd of
24,630 didn't think so- giving Welch
a standing ovation after pinch hitter
Mike Lum struck out to end the
game.
"I got a few chills when it was
over, when that happened,'' said
Welch, who just a few short months
ago admitted he was an alcoholic
and spent a good part of the winter
• at a clinic in Arizona. "That's the
best control I've ever had."
Welch estimated he threw 80 percent fastballs to the Braves. It was
one of the other :Ill percent that
perhaps cost him a shot at per·
fection .

to think the defending American
League champions would repeat
their miracle performances of last
season when they came from behind
to win 47 games, including 36 in the
seventh inning or later.
Through their first 44 games this
· year, the Orioles showed a &amp;-10 mark
in the late-decision games. They
were 2-9 in one-run games after
leading the league with a 32-20 per·
centage a year ago.
But the way they're losing is more
disturbing than the current ID-24
record. Mental mistakes seem to in-

dicate the players are thinking of
something other than baseball.
Perhaps things came too easy last

season.
Wbatever the reason, the fans who
in 19'19 broke Baltimore's attendance record by abnost 500,000
admissions are getting restless. The
darlings of 1979 have become the
bunglers of 1980, and bOos have
begun to waft out of the Memorial
Stadium seats.
The Orioles, first or second in
fielding in 11 of the past 12 years,
have been charged with 33 errors

and rank elghUJ in the l"'gue.
Baltimore has 311 homers, a shade
below last year's pace when a club
record 181 was set, but that's onlf
part of the story. The CJIIPOiition
already has 46, compared With 133
for all of last seuon.
.
The starting pitchers have a winning record bUt the bullpen, 7.4 at
this point a year ago, has a diamat L10 mark through 44 games.
The team _batting average, never a
strong point for Baltimore, is even
worse this season with a .253 mark
that ranks next-to-last in the league.

•

were trying to catch the Red Sox. I
was awed then. My whole body was
trembling."
pitching there. I've still got a weird
delivery because nobody e\Cer laugh!
me the right way. A good description
of me is that I'm all arms and legs."
Burnside didn't play high school
ball because his school didn't have a
team. Bul the Detroit Tigers were
impressed with his semi-pro perfo!'lnance and signed him as a free
agent in 1975.
" I busted my backside," Burnside
said of his early career. "I was
willing to learn. I wanted to prove
something. 1 wanted to do well,
make a name for myself."
His 14--5 record at Evansville two
summers ago earned him a trip to
the big leagues in September .
" I pitched in Yankee Stadium my
first game," Burnside said. " They

SPECIAL

The Tigers traded him to Cincinnati last November. During
spring training, he was sent to Indianapolis, where he stayed until
Bonham's injury.

REGENCY ACT E·L
8 CHANNEL POLICE MONITOR

He made a forgettable Cincinnati
debut on Sunday against Montreal,
giving up a home run and a single to
the. two batters he faced .
The Reds expect to use Burnside
in short relief, mostly against lefthanded hitters. Like reliever Dave
Tomlin, he is a breaking-ball pitcher
with an 88-mph fastball.
'' A second left-handed reliever is a
luxury ,'' Tomlin said. " It lets the
manager play the percentages
more.''
Burnside said, " I love performing
and performing well. My big goal is
to hear the cheers now and know
they're for me ."

BOB'S. ELECTRONICS
I

ACROSS FROM 1H£ SILVER BRIDGE PWA

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

, SPECIAL NEW CAR SALE
- - - O N E WEEK ONI..Y--SPECIAL INCENTIVES FROM PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION
ON THIS LIST OF AUTOS MAKE THIS SPECIAL SALE POSSIBLE.
ALSO, THESE CARS WERE RECEIVED BEFORE THE LAST GM
PRICE INCREASE, WHICH MEANS AN EXTRA SAVINGS
TO YOU.

1980 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 DR

The C&amp;S Bank.
Providing professional
.
banking service to
Gallipolis and Gallia Co.

LOADED WITH EQUIPMENT

FACTORY RETAIL PRICE
DISCOUNT

Special .Sale Price

.

C&amp;S Bank
The

~commercial
25 Cou n Street
"

I ·L~. ..

s•.~ n111 v.,l!. ,,

!I l l' I

1980

CATALINA 4 DR SEDAN
No. $9 FULLY EQUIPPED
RETAIL STICKER PRICE 8392.84
DISCOUNT-1765.92

SPECIAL SALE PRICE

&amp; Savings Bank
t Of C

By The Associated Press
· Ronald Reagan lambasted the
· Carter Administration 's economic
. policies in a string of northern Ohio
·campagin appearances Friday,
charging the president with
betraying the workers of America
by accepting layoffs as the pcice ol
an end to inflation and recession.
Reagan, who appears to have the
Republican nomination ·locked up,
made the charges in Cleveland as he
neared the end of a three-day ca mpaign blitz through Cincinnati,
Dayton, Columbus, Toledo,
Cleveland and Canton.
At Canton's Memorial Civic Center,
llefore about
4,000 persons
.
.
. Reagan said unemployment is not •
, the way to attack inflation. He also
· said if he's elected president, every

" ... When he took office, the inflation rate in America was 4.8 percent and the president said he was
going to do something about that and he did. It is now averaging about
16.4 percent. ... "
Later at a Cleveland news conference, Reagan was asked what he
ha s to offer the Youngstown
steelworkers who lost their jobs not
because of lay offs, but because of
plant closings. Reagan responded
that there are going to be changes in
industrial output or technology .
" I believe that the answer there is
retraining . And I think that through
the cooperation and a little incenti ve
from the govenm1ent, private industry could carry that effort."
When asked how he would revive
the steel industry, Reagan said,
" Relief froin onerous government

regulations and punitive taxes that
make us unable to compete in a
world market."
Asked when or how he would use
military force to avoid what he had
earlier characterized as betrayals of
our allies, Rea gan said, " It would be
a little bit like a governor with the
national guard , you use whatever
force is necessary to achieve the
purpose ... I'm not trigger happy .
I'm not one wl!o is going to rush out
to wave a blood-soaked sword .. . I
don't think it's necessary. lf we show
the wili and determination. If we anticipa te, if we have a grand strategy,
a pian ... "
Reagan began his final day in Ohio
at a fund-raising brea kfast in Toledo
where about 240 supporters paid $150
each to hear the candidate.
Thousands more lined the streets

iunbmr ~imts - itnfintl
~

.

VOL 15

NO. 18

$9141.56
~1916.51

$7225.05

1980 PONnAC TRANS AM
No. 813 THE HOT ONE
RETAIL $nCKER PRIC_~ 8911.52
DISCOUNT -1360.43 .

SPECIAL sALE PRICE s7551.09

By JOE McKNIGHT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Ohioans looking for a political
lighthouse might find a beacon in
Ashtabu_la's Ward I - it's voted for
. presidential winners in nine of the
past 10 general elections.
Election records show that voters
in the 14 precincts of Ward 1 are
about as close as Ohio has to a
political bellwether. Political
:. veterans in a nwnber of other coun. ties nominated candidates for· the
: title but none checked out as well as
· the ward in Ashtabula that runs
from the old dock area south to 19th
Street.
Except in 1968, when Ward I sup. ported Democrat Hubert Humphrey
. in one of the closest national elec• lion's ever, its voters have ser-Ved as
presidential pendulums back to at
least 1940. Republican Richard
. Nixon won in 1968, but the 3,209
. · voters in the ward of mostly middle. class homeowners gave Humphrey a
307-vote plurality, which was about
average among recordS searcnea.
· Nixon carried Ohio that year by

.

SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1980

80,4211 votes of 3,959,698 cast, and the
nation by 510,314 votes of 63,060,6-W
cast. In 1972, the ward gave Nixon a
323-vote plurality.
" Historically this was the white
collar Republican office workers
years ago but it has changed recen- ·
Uy so that now there are more
Democrats,'' said Joseph Timoneia,
an insurance executive who is
Democttatic committeeman of
Precinct J. He said perhaps onethird of the residents are of Italian
descent who moved into the betterclass neighborhood a generation
ago.
Democrat Lyndon Johnson in 1964
was the most favored presidential
candidate among Ward 1 voters,
winning by 1,433 votes among the
3,569 cast. Democrat Jolm F. Kennedy had the smallest margin in the
ward, 97 votes among the 3,649 cast
in 1960. In the two previous elections,
the ward backed Republican Dwight
D. Eisenhower and in the 'three prior
elections, it supported Democrats
Harry Truman and Franklin
Roosevelt.
Looking back further, the ward

•Searchers rescue man, dogs
VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) ' Searchers have rescued a 75-year. old man and his four dogs who were
· trapped in an as!Kovered cabin 10
· miles from Mount St. Helens when
· the volcano erupted on May 18, 'or. ficialssaidSaturday.
Ray Jennings and the dogs were
plucked from the cabin near Swift
: Reservoir, south of the mountain, by
: a _ Washington National Guard
· helicopter on Friday, said Rhonda
Brooks of the state Department of
· Emergency Services.
: '' He and his dogs both appeared to
: be-in good health," she said.
' Jennings, who was rescued by a
: c~U~pper from the 116th Armored
; C4.Valry from Fort Lewis, was taken

PAGE 1-0

to a fire station in Yacolt, about 10
miles north of Vancouver, lor
reunion with his relatives, Ms.
Brooks said.
J ennings name had not appeared
on the list of missing, Ms. Brooks
said.
His rescue came one day after air
searches were suspended and
authorities had termed chances ri
finding further survivors " nil." ·
The helicopter that rescued Jennings was called in by the Skamania
County Sheriff's Office, which is par·
ticlpating in ground searches.
I~ was not immediately known how
sh~iff's deputies foUnd out about
Jennings, Ms. Brooks sa1d.

commissione r .

Meanwhile, in Colwnbus, a nonpartisan citizens' troup urged
voters to become aware of the
presidential candidates' positions on
nuclear power.
Steven Molk , representing the
Central Ohio Safe Energy Committee, said his grouo's parent - the

Campaign for Safe Energy from
Boston, Mass. - is involved in a
state-by-state effort to get both the
Republican and Democratic parties
to adopt a safe energy platform at
their national conventions this swnmer.
Although the group insisted it was
not endorsing candidates, it noted
that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass, endorsed the Safe Energy
Platform Feb. 15, 1980.
Molk said Ronald Reagan "is the
most unequivocal · supporter ol
nuclear energy out of the remaining
candidates.''
President Carter, he said, "also
supports nuclear power," while Rep.
John B. Anderson, R-Ill., who ill running as an independent, "has shown
his support for alternate sources of
energy."

Coal conversion problems
.
seen at some power plants
CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP) As many as a third of the oil-fired
power plants that the Carter administration wants to switch to
coal can 't be converted, acco~:,ding to a congressional survey .
A bill proposed and supported
by the administration would give
$10 billion to selected utilities to
convert plants targeted by tpe
federal Energy Department, according to congressional staffer
Andy Athy.
But Athy said a study by a subcommittee oi the House Energy
and Corrunerce Committee shows
that conversion of many of the
plants would be "clearly

voted 1,133-370 for repeal of
prohibition in 1933, the year the effort to making drinking legal again
was successfuL
Attorney John Mahoney, who has
lived all of his 63 years in Ward 1and
serves as Precinct C Democratic
committeeman, calls it a churchgoing area of bluecollar workers
with incomes ranging from upper
middle class to welfare levels.
"It's third-generation home
owners,'' Mahoney said, '~ with a mix
of Finnish, Swedish and Irish neighborhoods. It crosses many economic
lines with mostly blue collar
workers but some professionals
also."
Timoneia said the ward has
changed economically during three
generations from a white collar
district with a country club air to an
upper middle class district of many
ethics, with houses priced from
$30,000 to $150,000.
Other voting districts checked in
the search for an Ohio bellwether
voting unit included South Precinct,
Perry Township, Putnam County,
which backed presidential winners
in six of the past eight general elections. Voters there backed Nixon
over Kennedy in 1960 and in 1976 SUJ&gt;ported Gerald Ford by one vote, 104103. But in 1940 and 1944 they backed
Republicans Thomas E. Dewey and
Wendell Willkie. The precinct voted
against repeal of prohibition.
In Adams County, Locust Grove
and Manchester Village, Ward A has
voted fo_r winning presidential contenders in general elections back to
1964. Both gave their support to
Nixon in 1960.
And in Highland County seven
precincts have winning records since meeting their Waterloo in the
Nixon-Kennedy contest of 1960. They
are Greenfield Northeast, Green-.
field South A and B, Hillsborough
Northwest Band southeast A, Brush
Creek South, and Madison South.

in a one-mile stretch of downtown
Toledo to watch a parade featuring
the Republican_ front-runner and
local candidates on the Ohio
primary ballot June 3.
Joan Kennedy, wife of Sen. Edwa rd M. Kennedy, appeared in
Cleveland Friday evening to attend
a fund-raising event for Timothy
Hagan, a Kennedy backer and
Cuyahoga County Democratic chairman. Ha gan is running for the
Democratic nomination for county

uneconomical. ''
The administration put the list
together "without the kind of
hard analysis that would be
desirable," he said. "The determination that they're coalcapable was just not correct."
The plants are owned by 31
utilities and most are in the Northeast. Consolidated Edison and
Long .Island Light and Power
have the most plants targeted for
conversion, he said.
Athy said he and other mem- '
hers of the Energy and Power
Subcommittee staff conducted a
detailed survey and concluded
that as many as one-third of the
107 plants may have to be deleted

from the bill.
""Many of them dQn'l have the
necessary facilities,'' he said.
"Their boilers may have coal
capability, but they may not have
the storage or transportation
facilities they need. "
Stili other utilities have said if
they'r e forced to convert their oilfired power stations " they'll just
retire the plants,'' said Mike Serpe, an aide to Rep. Nick Joe
Rahall, D-W.Va., ooe of the
congressmen who introduced the
bill.
Serpe said other problems with
the legislation have bee n
discussed during House debate.
"Questions have been raised
about why should we supplement
those that will make the change
on their own," Serpe said.
uThe major concern is the
money," he said. " A lot of members are afraid to spend $10
billion for conversion. Others
want more environmental constraints on the bill, but still others
say that's just that much more
money that would have to be added. ' '
However, Serpe said, the hili's
supporters are not ready .to give
up on it yet.
"It's just the price of the
over.1U bill that people are
questioning ," he said.
Another RahaU aide, Bruce

Wentzman, said the bill is divided
into two sections. The first , he
said, " is a very workable
program" to provide financial
aid to power plants that can converi with only minimal changes.
Many burned coal in the past but
switched to oil to reduce
pollution, Wentzman said.
The first section represents
a bout 40 percent of the total
estimated cost of the program, he
said.
Wentzman said the second part
calls for a "much more lolfgrange program~~ to provi ·e incentives for early retirement of
plants that can't be converted to
coa l, speeding up their
replacement with coal-fired
units.
The present budget-cutting
mood in Congress makes it likely
that the bill's two sections will be
split, and the second phase
delayed uritillater, Serpe said.
"I think as each day passes,
that becomes more and more of a
reality,'' he said.
Athy said weeding out tJJn.e
plants that cannot be easily converted would reduce the blU's ef·
fectiveness in cutting oil consumption, but that it would help
the blU's chances of passage.
" II would reduc~ the ar&gt;-'
propriation, and that's bound to
please some members ," he said.

Begin may stall withdrawal plans
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP )- Prime
Minister Menachem Begin has
threatened to stall Israel's withdrawl from the Sinai Peninsula if
Egypt fails to sign an agreement
establishing an international peace
force for the one-time desert battleground, Israel Radio reported.
The prime minister's spokesman
refused to confirm the report. The
state radio said Begin made the
remarks to the parliamentary
Foreign Affairs and Security Committee, whose deliberations are
secret.
In Cairo, the authoritative
newspaper AI Abram today attacked
Begin's renewed call for a Sinai
police force.
"Obviously Begin is bringing up
the subject now to di vert attention

The force was to have been
from his internal problems at
Egypt 's expense, " the paper said in deployed when Israel pulled its
troops back to the El-Arish Ras
a front page editorial.
Under terms of the Israel-Egypt Muhanuned line down the middle of
peace treaty, signed in March 1979, a the Sinai last January. However, the
U.N. peace force was to be created U.N. Security Council refused to set
to patrol a buffer zone along the new · up a new force and Israel and Egypt
Sinai frontier between the two started joint patrols of the area,
aided by American and U.N. obnations.
servers .

Iran closer to USSR after ill-fated act
BOONVILLE, Mo. (AP) - The
failure of the Iranian hostage rescue
mission has moved Iran " closer to
the arms oi the Soviets," says
retired Gen. William C. Westmoreland.
He made the corrunent to repor·

ters after addressmg graduates · at
Kemper Military School and College
Friday.
" Military force is not wha~ should
be used," he said of American efforts to free the hostages.

:Ohioans may decide Democratic presidential nomination
COLUMBUS,. Ohio (AP)
delegates, althoujlh he already is
: Ohioans vote Tuesday in a primary
beyond the 998 needed for the GOP
. election which is attracting national
nomination.
attention and could settle the long
Aside from the presidential pic. bitter fight " for the Democratic
ture, many other candidates and
:presidential nomination.
issues will be judged by an
· ·President Carter and his only
estimated 2.4i million voters, based
; challenger, Sen. Edward M. Kenon projections by Secretary of State
:riedy, D-Mass., stumped hard in the
Antliony J. CelebrezzeJr.
'state last week in competition for its
That turnout would compare to a
i 161 Democratic National Convention
total of 2.367 million in 1976, but
'delegates.
would represent only 44 percent of
· CaJ;Ier needs less than 100
Ohio's 5,484,448 registered voters, he
· d~legiltes, and there will be 696 pick- Said. Four years ago, when there
ed during the June 3 " Super Bowl
was opposition in both presidential
'Tuesday"_as balloting here and in · primaries, the /igure was 51 percent.
seven other states winds up the
Celebrezze said some interest in
•primary election season.
the election likely was lost with the
: Ronald Reagan, who· also camwithdrawal of Bush froin the GOP
:paigned around Ohio last week - In
race.
'six cities - emergen unopposed for
Most recent polls show Carter stlll
'the GOP nomii)BtiOn with . the leading Kennedy in Ohio, as be has
;withdrawal May 26 of George Bush,
aU along, by as much as 2-1 in some.
·although the latter's name remains
But Kennedy worked feverish!~
on the ballot.
last week in northeastern Ohio,
which has been htt by unemReagan figures to receive all cl
ployment
in the '-steel, au(9, and
;the yrtate's 77 GOP convention

•

•

able-bodied person collec ting
welfare would be required to work
for the public good.
In Cleveland, Reagan told 4,000
people attending a downtown rally
that the president has a policy of increasing unemployment to fi ght inflation. But, he said that for each 1
percen~ hike in unemployment, $27
billion is added to the government's
deficit.
Reagan said Ca rter , " has
betrayed the automobile workers
and he ' has betray ed the
steelworkers in this country and the
others." Ohio has been hard hit by
thousands of layoffs in the steel, auto
and rubber industries. Residents in
Toledo and the Cleveland area have
been among the hardest hit by auto
industry-related layoffs."

Ashtabula could
provide answers

~

D

Reagan ·lamblasts Carter's. economic policy

.

!Burnside self-made hurler
, SAN DIEGO (API - Nobody eve r
' taught Cincinnati Reds left-hamler
: Sheldon Burnside how to pi tch. So
· filr , thRt hasn't mattered much.
~ Burnside. who was acquired by
·' the Red~ from the Detroit Tigers of
I the American League in return for
l Champ Summe rs, brought a
; sparkling 3-0 record and 0.50 earned
: run average from Cincinna ti's Class
· AAA Ameri can Associati on farm
: dub in Indianapolis to the Reds last
' week after right-handed starter Bill
Bon ham was disabled by a sore
shoulder.
·• Burnside, 25, grew up in suburban
:Toronto, where he found Uttle com:petition and little coaching. '
~ '' )twas so easy ," he recalled. " It
,wa s just, 'Gi ve me the bali ,' and I'd
always win. There wasn't much
coa ching, exeept 1 lea rned a good
pickoff move .
" But l gol into a few bad habits

classified

other industri~s. blaming the
problems on Carter. Aides insisted
. he made strong gains on the
president in the heavily Democratic
area.
,Otherwise, Ohioans on Tuesday
will be nominating one candidate
from each party for the U.S. Senate,
along with those seeking the state's
23seatsin the U.S. House.
U.S. Sen. John H. Glenn, D-Ohio,
has token opposition, but State Rep .
James E. Betts, Rocky River., is
unopposed for the Republican
senatorial nomination.
in two of the 23 congressional
districts - the 6th and 22nd - voters
will be picki ng new candidates, for
seats now he:• i by Rep. WlUiam H.
Harsha, D-Po:·tsmouth, and Charles
A. Vanlk, D-Clcveland. Botti are
retiring.
Nine of the other 21 incwnbent
members of congress have 0]&gt;position, but are not believed in
trouble.
Three seats are up for grabs
. on the

....

seven-member Ohio Supreme Court
but there is only one in which there is
an intraparty contest. That's for the
seat of Justice Thomas M. Herbert,
a Republican who is retiring .
David D. Dowd Jr., judge of the
5th District State Court of Appeals,
endorsed by the state GOP
organization, has two opponents in
William J . McCrone of North Olmstead and George C. Rogers of
Whitehall.
'
Chief Justice Frank D. Celebrez·
ze, a Democrat, and Associate
Justice Robert E. Holmes, a
Republican, are "without opposition
in their resptlCtive primaries.
Democrats currently control the
court4-3.
Otherwise, 16 of 33 state senators
nin e Democrats and 7
Republicans- are up for re-election
this year. Among four who have
primary oppositign, only veteran
Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese, ().
Cleveland, appears to have a strong
challenge. He faces three opponents.

All of the 99 seats in the Ohio
House are at stake, with all but a
handful of present members unor&gt;posed within their parties for
renomination. Democrats curr!'ntly
control the Senate 111-15 and the
House 62-37.
Tuesday 's voting won't affect
those numbers, but they could
change in the November general
election when candidates of each
party face each other.
There are four statewide issues on
the ballot.
Placed there by the General
Assembly, they are Issue I, which
allows
municipal electric
cooperatives to join in the construction and operation of
generating facilities, and Issue 2,
permitting the state to issue bonds to
help provide housing for low and
moderate income families. Issue 3
would permit the state to issue bon·
ds, tied to the availability of existing
revem1es to retire them, for needed
highway ant~ br~dge imp_rovments

around the state. Issue 4 allows local
governments to notify households,
rather than aU individual voters, of
proposed changes in government
charters.
Myriads of local issues will . be
decided in the slate's more than
13,000 polling places. And more than
1,100 candidates for local government office wlU be nominated. These
. include, in all the 88 counties, candidates for sheriff, recorder,
treasurer, and prosecuting attorney,
along with common pleas court
judges and county judges.
Celebrezze said that all told, the
cost of Tuesday's election, to be
shared by the stale and the county
boards of election, will be -roughly
$5.1 million.
The total" compares to costs cl
about S4.8 million for the 1876
primary. Celebrezze's office at·
tributed the increase to a recently
enacted bill raising the pay cl
polling place workers, and .to inflation gen.ally. .

'

�..
C-3-- The Sunday Tinies.Sentinel, Sunday. June I, 1980

..-

...

~

......

~

. ...

\,.

Lasorda:'He made it look easy, didn't he?'
By JOHN NADEL .
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "He was
just that far from perfection,'' said
Los Angeles Dodgers Manager Tom
Lasorda , holding his thwnb and
forefi nger a millimeter apart.
Lasorda was talking about the performa nce of Bob Welch against the
Atlanta Braves on Thursday night.
Welch, who seems on the verge of
being one of baseball's top pitchers,
was, indeed, all but perfect.
Welch allowed only one hit - Larvell Blanks' clean single in the fourth inning - and faced the minimwn
'l:l batters as the Dodgers blanked
the Braves 3-0.
Weich now is 5-1 with victories in
his last five decisions . The 23-yearold right-hander walked none and
struck out seven in lowering his earned run average to 2.16.

•

-

An AP Sports Analysts
By GORDON BEARD
AP Sports Writer
BALTIMORE (AP)
The
Baltimore Orioles started the
baseball season with a new owner,
their best ever advance sale and a
new learn song, "Orioles Magic,
FeelltHappen."
Edward Bennett Williams continues to make the long trek from his
home near Washington, D.C., to
cheer his team and the attendance is
holding its own so far. But the magic
of 1979 is missing.
" There's nothing wrong with the
Orioles, just the record,'' insists
Manager Earl Weaver. However,
eve n that incurable optimist
wavers: "The talent is there, but I
am wary about the turn of events."
It clearly was expecting too much

Bob Welch
In ('Ontrnlall night

•
~
•

~etch set down the lirst10 Braves
with no problems. Then, with one out
in the fourth, Blanicll' lined what
Welch called a " high hook" over
shortstop BlU Russell's head into
left-center field.

Chambliss W8SI)'t quite so high on
Welch's perfonnance. "I've seen as
good or better,'; said the Atlanta fir·
st baseman. "He threw about thesame as I've seen him throw before.
We're a better hitting club then that;
but he was good. We just didn't hit
him.''

Chris Chambliss came up next and
came up with one of the fe\v hard-hit
balls off Welch, a crisp grounder to
Reggie Smith and Joe Ferguson
the right side. Second baseman blAsted solo home runs to account
Davey Lopes handled it easily, for two of the Dodge~· runs. The
however, and started a double play.
other scored as Steve Garvey was
That was it for the Braves, as groun&lt;Ung into a double play.
Welch set them down routinely the
"That's the best _display of
rest of the way.
throwing fastb!llls I've ever
" That was a n()-hit game," said caught," said Ferguson, adding
losing pitcher Phil Niekro, a 41-year- · quickly with a smile that he wasn't·
old veteran who has seen, and tur- around before Sandy Koufax retired.
ned in, some excellent performances "He's done very well all year long.
over the years. " I've seen no-hitters He's come to the point now where he:
that weren't hall as good as that. He can throw the ball where he wants
was in control all night.''
to. He's out there thinking."

Oriole magic of '79 missing

.. . I •

••

"He made it look easy, didn't he,
Penguin?" Lasorda said to third
baseman Ron Cey just moments after Welch had completed his gem.
.. Boring,., said Cey, " real
boring."
The Dodger ' Stadium crowd of
24,630 didn't think so- giving Welch
a standing ovation after pinch hitter
Mike Lum struck out to end the
game.
"I got a few chills when it was
over, when that happened,'' said
Welch, who just a few short months
ago admitted he was an alcoholic
and spent a good part of the winter
• at a clinic in Arizona. "That's the
best control I've ever had."
Welch estimated he threw 80 percent fastballs to the Braves. It was
one of the other :Ill percent that
perhaps cost him a shot at per·
fection .

to think the defending American
League champions would repeat
their miracle performances of last
season when they came from behind
to win 47 games, including 36 in the
seventh inning or later.
Through their first 44 games this
· year, the Orioles showed a &amp;-10 mark
in the late-decision games. They
were 2-9 in one-run games after
leading the league with a 32-20 per·
centage a year ago.
But the way they're losing is more
disturbing than the current ID-24
record. Mental mistakes seem to in-

dicate the players are thinking of
something other than baseball.
Perhaps things came too easy last

season.
Wbatever the reason, the fans who
in 19'19 broke Baltimore's attendance record by abnost 500,000
admissions are getting restless. The
darlings of 1979 have become the
bunglers of 1980, and bOos have
begun to waft out of the Memorial
Stadium seats.
The Orioles, first or second in
fielding in 11 of the past 12 years,
have been charged with 33 errors

and rank elghUJ in the l"'gue.
Baltimore has 311 homers, a shade
below last year's pace when a club
record 181 was set, but that's onlf
part of the story. The CJIIPOiition
already has 46, compared With 133
for all of last seuon.
.
The starting pitchers have a winning record bUt the bullpen, 7.4 at
this point a year ago, has a diamat L10 mark through 44 games.
The team _batting average, never a
strong point for Baltimore, is even
worse this season with a .253 mark
that ranks next-to-last in the league.

•

were trying to catch the Red Sox. I
was awed then. My whole body was
trembling."
pitching there. I've still got a weird
delivery because nobody e\Cer laugh!
me the right way. A good description
of me is that I'm all arms and legs."
Burnside didn't play high school
ball because his school didn't have a
team. Bul the Detroit Tigers were
impressed with his semi-pro perfo!'lnance and signed him as a free
agent in 1975.
" I busted my backside," Burnside
said of his early career. "I was
willing to learn. I wanted to prove
something. 1 wanted to do well,
make a name for myself."
His 14--5 record at Evansville two
summers ago earned him a trip to
the big leagues in September .
" I pitched in Yankee Stadium my
first game," Burnside said. " They

SPECIAL

The Tigers traded him to Cincinnati last November. During
spring training, he was sent to Indianapolis, where he stayed until
Bonham's injury.

REGENCY ACT E·L
8 CHANNEL POLICE MONITOR

He made a forgettable Cincinnati
debut on Sunday against Montreal,
giving up a home run and a single to
the. two batters he faced .
The Reds expect to use Burnside
in short relief, mostly against lefthanded hitters. Like reliever Dave
Tomlin, he is a breaking-ball pitcher
with an 88-mph fastball.
'' A second left-handed reliever is a
luxury ,'' Tomlin said. " It lets the
manager play the percentages
more.''
Burnside said, " I love performing
and performing well. My big goal is
to hear the cheers now and know
they're for me ."

BOB'S. ELECTRONICS
I

ACROSS FROM 1H£ SILVER BRIDGE PWA

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

, SPECIAL NEW CAR SALE
- - - O N E WEEK ONI..Y--SPECIAL INCENTIVES FROM PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION
ON THIS LIST OF AUTOS MAKE THIS SPECIAL SALE POSSIBLE.
ALSO, THESE CARS WERE RECEIVED BEFORE THE LAST GM
PRICE INCREASE, WHICH MEANS AN EXTRA SAVINGS
TO YOU.

1980 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 DR

The C&amp;S Bank.
Providing professional
.
banking service to
Gallipolis and Gallia Co.

LOADED WITH EQUIPMENT

FACTORY RETAIL PRICE
DISCOUNT

Special .Sale Price

.

C&amp;S Bank
The

~commercial
25 Cou n Street
"

I ·L~. ..

s•.~ n111 v.,l!. ,,

!I l l' I

1980

CATALINA 4 DR SEDAN
No. $9 FULLY EQUIPPED
RETAIL STICKER PRICE 8392.84
DISCOUNT-1765.92

SPECIAL SALE PRICE

&amp; Savings Bank
t Of C

By The Associated Press
· Ronald Reagan lambasted the
· Carter Administration 's economic
. policies in a string of northern Ohio
·campagin appearances Friday,
charging the president with
betraying the workers of America
by accepting layoffs as the pcice ol
an end to inflation and recession.
Reagan, who appears to have the
Republican nomination ·locked up,
made the charges in Cleveland as he
neared the end of a three-day ca mpaign blitz through Cincinnati,
Dayton, Columbus, Toledo,
Cleveland and Canton.
At Canton's Memorial Civic Center,
llefore about
4,000 persons
.
.
. Reagan said unemployment is not •
, the way to attack inflation. He also
· said if he's elected president, every

" ... When he took office, the inflation rate in America was 4.8 percent and the president said he was
going to do something about that and he did. It is now averaging about
16.4 percent. ... "
Later at a Cleveland news conference, Reagan was asked what he
ha s to offer the Youngstown
steelworkers who lost their jobs not
because of lay offs, but because of
plant closings. Reagan responded
that there are going to be changes in
industrial output or technology .
" I believe that the answer there is
retraining . And I think that through
the cooperation and a little incenti ve
from the govenm1ent, private industry could carry that effort."
When asked how he would revive
the steel industry, Reagan said,
" Relief froin onerous government

regulations and punitive taxes that
make us unable to compete in a
world market."
Asked when or how he would use
military force to avoid what he had
earlier characterized as betrayals of
our allies, Rea gan said, " It would be
a little bit like a governor with the
national guard , you use whatever
force is necessary to achieve the
purpose ... I'm not trigger happy .
I'm not one wl!o is going to rush out
to wave a blood-soaked sword .. . I
don't think it's necessary. lf we show
the wili and determination. If we anticipa te, if we have a grand strategy,
a pian ... "
Reagan began his final day in Ohio
at a fund-raising brea kfast in Toledo
where about 240 supporters paid $150
each to hear the candidate.
Thousands more lined the streets

iunbmr ~imts - itnfintl
~

.

VOL 15

NO. 18

$9141.56
~1916.51

$7225.05

1980 PONnAC TRANS AM
No. 813 THE HOT ONE
RETAIL $nCKER PRIC_~ 8911.52
DISCOUNT -1360.43 .

SPECIAL sALE PRICE s7551.09

By JOE McKNIGHT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Ohioans looking for a political
lighthouse might find a beacon in
Ashtabu_la's Ward I - it's voted for
. presidential winners in nine of the
past 10 general elections.
Election records show that voters
in the 14 precincts of Ward 1 are
about as close as Ohio has to a
political bellwether. Political
:. veterans in a nwnber of other coun. ties nominated candidates for· the
: title but none checked out as well as
· the ward in Ashtabula that runs
from the old dock area south to 19th
Street.
Except in 1968, when Ward I sup. ported Democrat Hubert Humphrey
. in one of the closest national elec• lion's ever, its voters have ser-Ved as
presidential pendulums back to at
least 1940. Republican Richard
. Nixon won in 1968, but the 3,209
. · voters in the ward of mostly middle. class homeowners gave Humphrey a
307-vote plurality, which was about
average among recordS searcnea.
· Nixon carried Ohio that year by

.

SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1980

80,4211 votes of 3,959,698 cast, and the
nation by 510,314 votes of 63,060,6-W
cast. In 1972, the ward gave Nixon a
323-vote plurality.
" Historically this was the white
collar Republican office workers
years ago but it has changed recen- ·
Uy so that now there are more
Democrats,'' said Joseph Timoneia,
an insurance executive who is
Democttatic committeeman of
Precinct J. He said perhaps onethird of the residents are of Italian
descent who moved into the betterclass neighborhood a generation
ago.
Democrat Lyndon Johnson in 1964
was the most favored presidential
candidate among Ward 1 voters,
winning by 1,433 votes among the
3,569 cast. Democrat Jolm F. Kennedy had the smallest margin in the
ward, 97 votes among the 3,649 cast
in 1960. In the two previous elections,
the ward backed Republican Dwight
D. Eisenhower and in the 'three prior
elections, it supported Democrats
Harry Truman and Franklin
Roosevelt.
Looking back further, the ward

•Searchers rescue man, dogs
VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) ' Searchers have rescued a 75-year. old man and his four dogs who were
· trapped in an as!Kovered cabin 10
· miles from Mount St. Helens when
· the volcano erupted on May 18, 'or. ficialssaidSaturday.
Ray Jennings and the dogs were
plucked from the cabin near Swift
: Reservoir, south of the mountain, by
: a _ Washington National Guard
· helicopter on Friday, said Rhonda
Brooks of the state Department of
· Emergency Services.
: '' He and his dogs both appeared to
: be-in good health," she said.
' Jennings, who was rescued by a
: c~U~pper from the 116th Armored
; C4.Valry from Fort Lewis, was taken

PAGE 1-0

to a fire station in Yacolt, about 10
miles north of Vancouver, lor
reunion with his relatives, Ms.
Brooks said.
J ennings name had not appeared
on the list of missing, Ms. Brooks
said.
His rescue came one day after air
searches were suspended and
authorities had termed chances ri
finding further survivors " nil." ·
The helicopter that rescued Jennings was called in by the Skamania
County Sheriff's Office, which is par·
ticlpating in ground searches.
I~ was not immediately known how
sh~iff's deputies foUnd out about
Jennings, Ms. Brooks sa1d.

commissione r .

Meanwhile, in Colwnbus, a nonpartisan citizens' troup urged
voters to become aware of the
presidential candidates' positions on
nuclear power.
Steven Molk , representing the
Central Ohio Safe Energy Committee, said his grouo's parent - the

Campaign for Safe Energy from
Boston, Mass. - is involved in a
state-by-state effort to get both the
Republican and Democratic parties
to adopt a safe energy platform at
their national conventions this swnmer.
Although the group insisted it was
not endorsing candidates, it noted
that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass, endorsed the Safe Energy
Platform Feb. 15, 1980.
Molk said Ronald Reagan "is the
most unequivocal · supporter ol
nuclear energy out of the remaining
candidates.''
President Carter, he said, "also
supports nuclear power," while Rep.
John B. Anderson, R-Ill., who ill running as an independent, "has shown
his support for alternate sources of
energy."

Coal conversion problems
.
seen at some power plants
CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP) As many as a third of the oil-fired
power plants that the Carter administration wants to switch to
coal can 't be converted, acco~:,ding to a congressional survey .
A bill proposed and supported
by the administration would give
$10 billion to selected utilities to
convert plants targeted by tpe
federal Energy Department, according to congressional staffer
Andy Athy.
But Athy said a study by a subcommittee oi the House Energy
and Corrunerce Committee shows
that conversion of many of the
plants would be "clearly

voted 1,133-370 for repeal of
prohibition in 1933, the year the effort to making drinking legal again
was successfuL
Attorney John Mahoney, who has
lived all of his 63 years in Ward 1and
serves as Precinct C Democratic
committeeman, calls it a churchgoing area of bluecollar workers
with incomes ranging from upper
middle class to welfare levels.
"It's third-generation home
owners,'' Mahoney said, '~ with a mix
of Finnish, Swedish and Irish neighborhoods. It crosses many economic
lines with mostly blue collar
workers but some professionals
also."
Timoneia said the ward has
changed economically during three
generations from a white collar
district with a country club air to an
upper middle class district of many
ethics, with houses priced from
$30,000 to $150,000.
Other voting districts checked in
the search for an Ohio bellwether
voting unit included South Precinct,
Perry Township, Putnam County,
which backed presidential winners
in six of the past eight general elections. Voters there backed Nixon
over Kennedy in 1960 and in 1976 SUJ&gt;ported Gerald Ford by one vote, 104103. But in 1940 and 1944 they backed
Republicans Thomas E. Dewey and
Wendell Willkie. The precinct voted
against repeal of prohibition.
In Adams County, Locust Grove
and Manchester Village, Ward A has
voted fo_r winning presidential contenders in general elections back to
1964. Both gave their support to
Nixon in 1960.
And in Highland County seven
precincts have winning records since meeting their Waterloo in the
Nixon-Kennedy contest of 1960. They
are Greenfield Northeast, Green-.
field South A and B, Hillsborough
Northwest Band southeast A, Brush
Creek South, and Madison South.

in a one-mile stretch of downtown
Toledo to watch a parade featuring
the Republican_ front-runner and
local candidates on the Ohio
primary ballot June 3.
Joan Kennedy, wife of Sen. Edwa rd M. Kennedy, appeared in
Cleveland Friday evening to attend
a fund-raising event for Timothy
Hagan, a Kennedy backer and
Cuyahoga County Democratic chairman. Ha gan is running for the
Democratic nomination for county

uneconomical. ''
The administration put the list
together "without the kind of
hard analysis that would be
desirable," he said. "The determination that they're coalcapable was just not correct."
The plants are owned by 31
utilities and most are in the Northeast. Consolidated Edison and
Long .Island Light and Power
have the most plants targeted for
conversion, he said.
Athy said he and other mem- '
hers of the Energy and Power
Subcommittee staff conducted a
detailed survey and concluded
that as many as one-third of the
107 plants may have to be deleted

from the bill.
""Many of them dQn'l have the
necessary facilities,'' he said.
"Their boilers may have coal
capability, but they may not have
the storage or transportation
facilities they need. "
Stili other utilities have said if
they'r e forced to convert their oilfired power stations " they'll just
retire the plants,'' said Mike Serpe, an aide to Rep. Nick Joe
Rahall, D-W.Va., ooe of the
congressmen who introduced the
bill.
Serpe said other problems with
the legislation have bee n
discussed during House debate.
"Questions have been raised
about why should we supplement
those that will make the change
on their own," Serpe said.
uThe major concern is the
money," he said. " A lot of members are afraid to spend $10
billion for conversion. Others
want more environmental constraints on the bill, but still others
say that's just that much more
money that would have to be added. ' '
However, Serpe said, the hili's
supporters are not ready .to give
up on it yet.
"It's just the price of the
over.1U bill that people are
questioning ," he said.
Another RahaU aide, Bruce

Wentzman, said the bill is divided
into two sections. The first , he
said, " is a very workable
program" to provide financial
aid to power plants that can converi with only minimal changes.
Many burned coal in the past but
switched to oil to reduce
pollution, Wentzman said.
The first section represents
a bout 40 percent of the total
estimated cost of the program, he
said.
Wentzman said the second part
calls for a "much more lolfgrange program~~ to provi ·e incentives for early retirement of
plants that can't be converted to
coa l, speeding up their
replacement with coal-fired
units.
The present budget-cutting
mood in Congress makes it likely
that the bill's two sections will be
split, and the second phase
delayed uritillater, Serpe said.
"I think as each day passes,
that becomes more and more of a
reality,'' he said.
Athy said weeding out tJJn.e
plants that cannot be easily converted would reduce the blU's ef·
fectiveness in cutting oil consumption, but that it would help
the blU's chances of passage.
" II would reduc~ the ar&gt;-'
propriation, and that's bound to
please some members ," he said.

Begin may stall withdrawal plans
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP )- Prime
Minister Menachem Begin has
threatened to stall Israel's withdrawl from the Sinai Peninsula if
Egypt fails to sign an agreement
establishing an international peace
force for the one-time desert battleground, Israel Radio reported.
The prime minister's spokesman
refused to confirm the report. The
state radio said Begin made the
remarks to the parliamentary
Foreign Affairs and Security Committee, whose deliberations are
secret.
In Cairo, the authoritative
newspaper AI Abram today attacked
Begin's renewed call for a Sinai
police force.
"Obviously Begin is bringing up
the subject now to di vert attention

The force was to have been
from his internal problems at
Egypt 's expense, " the paper said in deployed when Israel pulled its
troops back to the El-Arish Ras
a front page editorial.
Under terms of the Israel-Egypt Muhanuned line down the middle of
peace treaty, signed in March 1979, a the Sinai last January. However, the
U.N. peace force was to be created U.N. Security Council refused to set
to patrol a buffer zone along the new · up a new force and Israel and Egypt
Sinai frontier between the two started joint patrols of the area,
aided by American and U.N. obnations.
servers .

Iran closer to USSR after ill-fated act
BOONVILLE, Mo. (AP) - The
failure of the Iranian hostage rescue
mission has moved Iran " closer to
the arms oi the Soviets," says
retired Gen. William C. Westmoreland.
He made the corrunent to repor·

ters after addressmg graduates · at
Kemper Military School and College
Friday.
" Military force is not wha~ should
be used," he said of American efforts to free the hostages.

:Ohioans may decide Democratic presidential nomination
COLUMBUS,. Ohio (AP)
delegates, althoujlh he already is
: Ohioans vote Tuesday in a primary
beyond the 998 needed for the GOP
. election which is attracting national
nomination.
attention and could settle the long
Aside from the presidential pic. bitter fight " for the Democratic
ture, many other candidates and
:presidential nomination.
issues will be judged by an
· ·President Carter and his only
estimated 2.4i million voters, based
; challenger, Sen. Edward M. Kenon projections by Secretary of State
:riedy, D-Mass., stumped hard in the
Antliony J. CelebrezzeJr.
'state last week in competition for its
That turnout would compare to a
i 161 Democratic National Convention
total of 2.367 million in 1976, but
'delegates.
would represent only 44 percent of
· CaJ;Ier needs less than 100
Ohio's 5,484,448 registered voters, he
· d~legiltes, and there will be 696 pick- Said. Four years ago, when there
ed during the June 3 " Super Bowl
was opposition in both presidential
'Tuesday"_as balloting here and in · primaries, the /igure was 51 percent.
seven other states winds up the
Celebrezze said some interest in
•primary election season.
the election likely was lost with the
: Ronald Reagan, who· also camwithdrawal of Bush froin the GOP
:paigned around Ohio last week - In
race.
'six cities - emergen unopposed for
Most recent polls show Carter stlll
'the GOP nomii)BtiOn with . the leading Kennedy in Ohio, as be has
;withdrawal May 26 of George Bush,
aU along, by as much as 2-1 in some.
·although the latter's name remains
But Kennedy worked feverish!~
on the ballot.
last week in northeastern Ohio,
which has been htt by unemReagan figures to receive all cl
ployment
in the '-steel, au(9, and
;the yrtate's 77 GOP convention

•

•

able-bodied person collec ting
welfare would be required to work
for the public good.
In Cleveland, Reagan told 4,000
people attending a downtown rally
that the president has a policy of increasing unemployment to fi ght inflation. But, he said that for each 1
percen~ hike in unemployment, $27
billion is added to the government's
deficit.
Reagan said Ca rter , " has
betrayed the automobile workers
and he ' has betray ed the
steelworkers in this country and the
others." Ohio has been hard hit by
thousands of layoffs in the steel, auto
and rubber industries. Residents in
Toledo and the Cleveland area have
been among the hardest hit by auto
industry-related layoffs."

Ashtabula could
provide answers

~

D

Reagan ·lamblasts Carter's. economic policy

.

!Burnside self-made hurler
, SAN DIEGO (API - Nobody eve r
' taught Cincinnati Reds left-hamler
: Sheldon Burnside how to pi tch. So
· filr , thRt hasn't mattered much.
~ Burnside. who was acquired by
·' the Red~ from the Detroit Tigers of
I the American League in return for
l Champ Summe rs, brought a
; sparkling 3-0 record and 0.50 earned
: run average from Cincinna ti's Class
· AAA Ameri can Associati on farm
: dub in Indianapolis to the Reds last
' week after right-handed starter Bill
Bon ham was disabled by a sore
shoulder.
·• Burnside, 25, grew up in suburban
:Toronto, where he found Uttle com:petition and little coaching. '
~ '' )twas so easy ," he recalled. " It
,wa s just, 'Gi ve me the bali ,' and I'd
always win. There wasn't much
coa ching, exeept 1 lea rned a good
pickoff move .
" But l gol into a few bad habits

classified

other industri~s. blaming the
problems on Carter. Aides insisted
. he made strong gains on the
president in the heavily Democratic
area.
,Otherwise, Ohioans on Tuesday
will be nominating one candidate
from each party for the U.S. Senate,
along with those seeking the state's
23seatsin the U.S. House.
U.S. Sen. John H. Glenn, D-Ohio,
has token opposition, but State Rep .
James E. Betts, Rocky River., is
unopposed for the Republican
senatorial nomination.
in two of the 23 congressional
districts - the 6th and 22nd - voters
will be picki ng new candidates, for
seats now he:• i by Rep. WlUiam H.
Harsha, D-Po:·tsmouth, and Charles
A. Vanlk, D-Clcveland. Botti are
retiring.
Nine of the other 21 incwnbent
members of congress have 0]&gt;position, but are not believed in
trouble.
Three seats are up for grabs
. on the

....

seven-member Ohio Supreme Court
but there is only one in which there is
an intraparty contest. That's for the
seat of Justice Thomas M. Herbert,
a Republican who is retiring .
David D. Dowd Jr., judge of the
5th District State Court of Appeals,
endorsed by the state GOP
organization, has two opponents in
William J . McCrone of North Olmstead and George C. Rogers of
Whitehall.
'
Chief Justice Frank D. Celebrez·
ze, a Democrat, and Associate
Justice Robert E. Holmes, a
Republican, are "without opposition
in their resptlCtive primaries.
Democrats currently control the
court4-3.
Otherwise, 16 of 33 state senators
nin e Democrats and 7
Republicans- are up for re-election
this year. Among four who have
primary oppositign, only veteran
Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese, ().
Cleveland, appears to have a strong
challenge. He faces three opponents.

All of the 99 seats in the Ohio
House are at stake, with all but a
handful of present members unor&gt;posed within their parties for
renomination. Democrats curr!'ntly
control the Senate 111-15 and the
House 62-37.
Tuesday 's voting won't affect
those numbers, but they could
change in the November general
election when candidates of each
party face each other.
There are four statewide issues on
the ballot.
Placed there by the General
Assembly, they are Issue I, which
allows
municipal electric
cooperatives to join in the construction and operation of
generating facilities, and Issue 2,
permitting the state to issue bonds to
help provide housing for low and
moderate income families. Issue 3
would permit the state to issue bon·
ds, tied to the availability of existing
revem1es to retire them, for needed
highway ant~ br~dge imp_rovments

around the state. Issue 4 allows local
governments to notify households,
rather than aU individual voters, of
proposed changes in government
charters.
Myriads of local issues will . be
decided in the slate's more than
13,000 polling places. And more than
1,100 candidates for local government office wlU be nominated. These
. include, in all the 88 counties, candidates for sheriff, recorder,
treasurer, and prosecuting attorney,
along with common pleas court
judges and county judges.
Celebrezze said that all told, the
cost of Tuesday's election, to be
shared by the stale and the county
boards of election, will be -roughly
$5.1 million.
The total" compares to costs cl
about S4.8 million for the 1876
primary. Celebrezze's office at·
tributed the increase to a recently
enacted bill raising the pay cl
polling place workers, and .to inflation gen.ally. .

'

�D-3-The Sunday Trmes.Sentmel, Sun!lay, June 1, 1980

Clas

s
l

1~·~--::c=-a-r-d=-o-of Thanks
I'D like to thank Rev
Charles Lusher
Sarah
Wmters Chns McCoy and
Fred and Joa nn Wood f or
the beaut 1ful serv•ce for
m '{ husband, V1rg•t Hobbs
And many thanks to the
frtends and acqua•ntances
of the family of Vrrgd Hob

tiS for the g1 ft s of food and
ttl:&gt;wers and tor the concern
lmd k indn ess that you ve
s~own to me and my family
111 our f1m e of need

••

)

MAl NTENANCE
MAN WANTED
Full ftme pOSI IIOO

pe nence

Ex

rn electncal

plumb•ng,
and
refngeratton would be

helptul

Salary com
mensurate w•th ex

penence

Resume can

be mailed to
Veterans Me.monat
Hosp•tal
Box 749 Mulberry Hts
Ph 614 992 2104
Equal Op por tun 1ty

wre

extended to a 11 lA ho
~lped '" any way dur.ng
tDe Illness and death of our
lcw1ng mother and grand
f13other
Edna
Sum
raerf1eld
Espec1ally to
Holzer Hosp1tal Wh 1te s
Pune ral
H ome
Rev
T.nomas Rev and Mrs
H1cks, p1an•st , S1ngers and
to our relat1ves fr ends
aiid ne1ghbors who brought
teod May God bless each

one
T)le Edna
F&gt;a m 11y

Summerfield

--

~--

In Memonam

IN MEMORY of Lura N
Crooks who left us 1 year
aOo today June 1 Sadly
tnfSSed by son, John ,
daughter 1n law
Mtldred
aOd granddaugnters
UN SPOKEN THOUGHTS
I WISh I had told her-

How the blue of her eyes
WJJS so soft and so clear
Like the b lue of the sk1es
I WISh I had Said
Wh en she brushed back her
h
il
1
r
Th;:tt I thought she was

protty
So ~ lim end so fatr
And
m1ght
have
wtuspered ,
A fon d word of pratse
When she tolled for my
comfort ,
On long bus y days
I WJSh I had Sa td
Many 11mes through the
ye4rs
How pat tent you are w1th
My tOYS and my tears

I wh 1sh I had told her
When st eps grew more
slow
A nd I knew that they had
noh
MU'Ch fa rth er t o go
1wish I had sa 1d
"You are prec1ous to me
Dear mother of m1ne
And you always will be
I thought these thtngs over

Aga m and agcm
But I d 1d not express them
W ith VOICe or Wtth pen
So long I was stt ent
And now we reapar t,
I WISh I had told her
The thoughts tn my heart
,
Amy Per-rm
In 1ov1 ng memory of
Har-net S Ne1gler who
passed away SIX year-s ago
on May 30, 1974 Daughter
Mary

IN , MEMORY of my
mother , Mr-s Llll 1an C
Sealey , who passed away
May 31! 1967
Gone from our l1ves one so
dear,
But tn our hearts tor-ever
neaT,
There ts a 11nk dea th ca nnot
sever
Love and rem embrance
last for-ever
Daughter, N tna S Burks

Announcements

1
PAY h•ghest pr. ces
poss1ble for gold and silver
coms r-mgs 1ewelr y etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Mtddleport

P1ck1ng up an Easy play
organ
tn
your
area
Look1ng lor- a r espons bl e
pa r ty ro take over pay men
t s. Call c red1t manager
collect 614 5'n 5122
P1ano Tun1ng
Lane
Dan 1els 7J.2 2951
Tun•ng
and Rep rt~r Serv1ce stnce
1965 It no answe r phOne
997 7082

Employer

THE BUTCHERS SHOP
PE
formerly owned by
Vernon Luc as under new
management. freezer beef
Swif t S1des , custom work
done
Cal l
446 285 1,
Bu lavllle Porter Rd
SEE THE Columb1a com
muter Mopeds at 1066 F rst
Ave Up to 150 miles per
gallon Call .4.46 4626
BIDS want ed f or resur
tac1ng and re pam ng a
pnvate r-oad Approx 1200
It Cal l for detailS, 446 2970
ANYONE trespaSSing on
the property of Bertha E
Hatfield, on A ll ee Rd
Ew1ngton
OH
will be
pr-osecuted

Bags
Have golf 1tems
ballS cl ubs ca rt s head
covers W il l trad e John
Tea for d 61A qa5 3961

The La w Otftce of Doug las
W Ltttle Pomeroy Oh ,
will be closed dunng th e
week of June 1
1980
through June 8
1980
Regular office hour-s w 11
commence on Monday
June9 1980
SWEEPER and sewmg
machme re pa1r- parts and
su ppl1 es
P1ck up and
delivery
Dav•s Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m11e up
Georges Cr-eek R d
Call
446 0294

BIBLE l.ANOTOUR
Dept Oct
HI 1980 !rom
G.tll POli S 01110 Va I IH.lltiOIInd

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp; TREES
20% OFF

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Maon St.
Pomeroy
992·2181

ATTENTION
LEARN
PROFESSIONAL
SALES

J ordan Only '9U ()() !rom New
York Egypt ophonal add1l1on
Milke r t'~erva tton ~ now For 1n
tor mahon wnle Bibl e Lana
lours 413 41h Ave
K M w
G.t ll lpOI•s
O h tO
4S6l1
Ph
44&amp; 4]1l

._____Giveaway_

ANY PERSON who has
anyth mg to 91ve away and
does not offer- or attempt to
off er any other thmg for
sale may place an ad 1n lh1 s
column There will be no
char-ge to the advert1ser2 FULL blood S•amese
ca ts 1 ma le
f emale,
housebroken Have been
de clawed Call 367 7705 or
367 9361
4__ --- ~~ way

Sell
large locket
1tem
and
make
money
1
to
1, 500 dollars com mossoon
from
1
sale Mulloply thos
by 2 or 3 sales a
week .
Recent corporate
change put us on a
mass
expansoon
program . Must be
ava1lable now Extensove travel by
plane
and
car .
Must be able to
travel. Must have
late model car and
des1re
extremely
h1gh oncome . Op
portunrty 1s now
Call Mr. Steon Col lect
Monday
through Fnday, 9
a . m to 5 p m . at
1 800-325· 9593 Central
Standard
Tome

,ooo

OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5
413 FOURTH ST., KANAUGA

Immaculate ranch style

home, sttuated on J lots,
W1th fac1httes for tra1ler- hookup Th1s home
features 3 !RR , famtly room Wtth woodburn1ng fp,
country kitchen w1th bu11t 1ns, plus llvmg quar-ters
for 1n laws on lower level One of a kind property
Don ' t m1ss see1ng 1t, or call DONNA SWISHER
446 431 3
'
CENTURY 21
Larry E Alban Realty 1 276 S311

MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
OPENINGS IN SCIENTIFIC/
TE Ct1 NI CAL/ MEOICAl. anlf
GENERAl. MANAGEMENT

Unttorm elf Mll1lilrv Ot\IIS IO fl ! of lhe Department ol the
Na11v h.llve some open•ngs ava lable Tnev •nc tul:l e
SCI ENTIFICt TECt1NICAl.
A vialton ( P1lottra.n•n9 a nd Systems Ma1n tenancel
Computer Programmmq/ Technology
Eng•neerm11 ICtvti/ Marme/ Mechan• cal l E tee lr •cal/
E tectron1c l
Nuclear Power Operatoont lns tructoon
Ocea n
a nct Salv011ge
I

__ _

Assorted number of cats
and k1tt ens Long ha•red
and short ha~r ed of all
shapes and s1zes Cal l 985
4163
6

Lost and Found

5400 REWARD FOR LOST
Sma II brown terner
black and w h1te mar-k. mtd
d ie of fad Needed badly for
SICk per-son
Genero us
reward
Please qu 1ckly
please 1&gt;14 742 30'13 or 1&gt;14
4468674 or 6149S54325 or
local shenff
7

Yard Sale

YARD SALE
At Jaycee
bldg on Rt 35 For Gal l1 a
Jun1or M 1ss Sc hol arship
fmal May 31st
LARGE
BARNYARD
SALE Adults clothes, 111
ti e boys and g1rls clo thes of
all kmds Ant1que clocks
All k1nds of m•sc 2 miles
from Vmton ott 325 on Roy
Holcomb Rd
look for
s1gns Monday and Tues
fr om9 to 6

Yard Sale

7

Y ar d Sa te June 2, 3, from 9
' Follow stgns at F1ve
POtnts
YARD SALE Monday
June 2, 6 p m
ttl 71 ,
Tuesday June 3 9 30 am
111 ? oavts r-es1 dence Rose
Hill

YARD SALE Monday 6
? and Tuesday 9 JO
a rn to?, top of Rose Hill,
girls clothes all S12es from
tnt ant on up toys baby ca r
seat

p m t il

CARPORT sale June 3 2
p m
7 p m June 4 10 4
918 S ThiCd M ddleport
5 FAMILY yard sa le, June
2 J 9 to 5 R •ggscrest
Manor above Eas tern Htgh
School
M1n 1 btke
snowmobile su1t square
dance
ou tftt
btke
chtldren s clo thes 1ntant s
and up baby stenhzers
and other baby 1tems
matern•ty c lothes

3 FAMILY yard sale June
2 and 3 ar Ina Masserr est de nce
1n Tuppers
Plams 3 houses above
Ashland All stz e clothes
dtshes turn1rure fl ower
vases etc A lot of good
buys Ra 1n or shtne Fr-om 9
1111 dark
FIVE Family yar-d sa le
Monday June 2 th rough
Thur-sday June 5 or unt11
th1ngs last
From 9 5
Clothes whatnots, tewe lr y
housewilre and a l 1t1e btt of
eve r {thtng On the Laurel
Cld f Road at t he home of
Mrs Cl1fford Jacobs Ram
cance ls

LARGE garage sale Man
and Tues June 2 and 3 340
Page St Middleport
THREE
Family
flea
market 1nc ludt ng anttque
dtshes
clot h1 ng, books
records flower pots and
pl ants
household 1tems
and lamps also TV games
Sa turday May J J and Man
day June 2 from 10 to' a t
fhe Kelly res1dence 10
Syracuse Wa tch for the
s1gns
F I VE Fam l y yard sa le
Monday June 2 from 9 to 4
held InS ide at RICh Valley
comer of Park and Page
Streets tn Mtddleport Lots
of 1tems Cal l 949 2479
YARD Sa le Ju ne 2 through
7 B to 5 p m at the Gene
R tggs restdence, located
Route 7 at the top of the hill
tram Eastern H1gh Sc hool
Lo ts of cloth 1ng new and
used fr-om mtant to adults
Fumlfure and household
ttems
Toys
k1ng and
queen motorcycle sea t

YARDSALE June2and3
M1sc 1tems 930 Logan St,
Middleport OH
2 FAMILY YAR D SA LE
June 5 and 6 9 to 5 only
Slide pro1 ec t or, cloth es,
Avon bottles and m1sc
Ram or shme Rt 124,
Langsville 1st r-ed house
after pass 1ng bndge on
n g ht
BIG YARD SA LE Tues 9
IO 5 Wed 9 to 2 R 31&gt;5 S
6th Ave Middleport Oh
BACKYARD SALE

June

R UMA.\AGE SALE
Mon
day June 2, 9 t111 dark
Texas Rd near Landmark
Packtng House

4 Pat Ingels Many m1sc
1tems woven x bra1ded
rugs plank bottom c h a ~r ,
bowling ba Ms, lamps, quilt,
french fryer trombone x

GARAGE SA LE
June 2
and 3 9 to ? F ~rst r-oad left
pasf Kerr s1gn
Fol low
s1gns

bugle 725
Mtddleport

YARD SALE
Monda y
June 2 1928 Chestnut St
Cance lled If ram
YARD SALE 2 Cole St
Pomer oy
Mary Mart1n
and Pearl Knapp Man
Cloth tng A m sc 1tcms
some smcll l Stzes
YARD
SALE
153
Mulberr-y June J and 4 9 to
A Child ren s clothes fur
n1ture
baby buggy,
bassmet , tand em b1ke
radiOS, cor elle
YARD SALE
Ju ne 2
through 7 810 S Second St .
Mtddleport New c loth1ng
bedd1ng
linens
d1shes
1ewelry, sllverstone, toy s
small appliances, l ot s of
m1sc Come see

a

Chestnut

BRADFORD AuctiOneer
Complete Serv•ce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 rac1ne
Oh10 Cr1tt Bradtord

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
sell anvth1ng foranybody at our Auct 1on
Bar-n or 1n your home Fortnformatlon and ptckup
servtce call 256 1967
We

Sale Every Saturdav

Ntghtat7pm

PROCEDURE Send a le tter or resume s tahng quallllca
tiOtll and Interests to
NAVY OPPORTUNITY' INFORMATION
CENTER
OEVISION OPO 200 N Htgh Sf , RM 60'
COLUMBUS OH U21S

lEqoo, l

Oil CAl.L 1 800181 1788
Emplover, U i Cthre ns t'l lp requ1rfd

O,PP'"""''''

_

11

!Je lp Wanted

CATALYTIC
CON
VERTERS
! used)
alummum
(cans etc )
au tomat1 c
transm,ss1ons
( tunk) copper, brass lead
batter1es rad1ators, Call
Robert L Har-per 675 3616
or 675 5202

GET VALUABLE traon'"g
as a young bus1ness person
and earn good money plus
some great !;;ufts as a Sen
t1nel route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on
me ellglb1 11ty ltst at 992
2156 or 992 2157

DIAMONDS
Old cams,
wedd 1ng bands. estate
1ewelry cl ass rmgs, etc
TAWNEY JEWELERS,
422 Second Ave

Babysitter
wanted
Cheshire area for- 3 small
cht ldren 2 schoo l age
Needed some afternoons
367 0525

GOLD l Ok 14k, lSk dental
gold and gold year pms
Call675 3010

OLAN MILLS IS now
rec1ev1ng app i1Cat1ons for
te lephone oper-ator- and
ltght del1very person
Man , J une 2 and Tues
June 3, 10 a m to 4 p m
Brown s Trader Court
Trailer No 18 Minersvil le
Oh Must apply 1n person
No phone cal ls please

WILL BUY old Iran
SmiSSIOnS
batterieS ,
engmes or scrap meta ls,
etc Call245 9188
WANT TO BUY tobacco
pla nts Call256 1466 after 6
I ron and brass beds old
furnt t ure
d esks
gold
r1ngs
1ewelry, sliver
dollars sterl ng, etc wood
1ce boxes ant1ques etc
Comp lete
households
Wn te M 0 Mtller Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
7760
10 kara t 14 karat, 18 W.:araf
gold Dental gold and gold
ear p1ns 675 30 10
Gol d sliver or foretgn
cotns or any gold or Sliver
1tems An t1 que furnttur e,
glass or Ch1 na , Wi ll pay top
dollar , or complete estates
No tt em too lar ge or too
sma ll Chec k pnces before
se lltng Also do appra1 S1{1g
Osby (Dss ,e) Mart1n 992
1&gt;370
WILL BUY o l d fran
Sm ISSIOnS ,
batter-teS,
eng.nes or scrap metals
etc Ca ll 245 9188

Help Wanted

11

HELP WANTED
Part
ttme
fu ll ttme
World
Book Child Craft sales
representat.ves Call 675
3775
FINANCIAL INTERN
A large nat1onw1de fman
c1al corporat 1on, operat1ng
1n 25 states, seeks m
diVtduals to 1111 pos1t1on m
career
progresston
tra1n1ng program Career
tra cks fo r successful ap
pl 1cants lead to local
reg1ona I
and nat1ona I
fmanetal
management
pos1tlons
Career and
salary growth assurred
w1th ample opportunitY for
advancement due to recent
and antlctpated corporate
growth College wor-k g1yen
preference
If you are
willmg to accept r-espon
Sl bl lltY and are mterested
10 people and fmance, con
tact Cred1l Th ntt 446 4113
Or contact Mr Headlee for
an appomtment
PARTT IME two or 3 days
a week helpmg w1fe care
for semi mvalld husband,
nurse a1d trammg helpful
as some l1ftmg IS required
Hours are flexoble, pays $20
per day call 446 7026 befor-e
8 p m for appotntment

SOME ONE to diSC garden
1n East GallipoliS Cal l 446
4579
BABYSITTER
for
3
ch ildr-en 3 and 4 days
weekly No weekends Call
367 0525
PARTTIME help weeken
ds only , apply 1n person at
Lorob1 s Stiv er Bndge
Plaza

JUNE 6, 1980 - 8 P.M.
For your con~en1ence thts merchandiSe has been
moved to the Rutland F1rehOu.1e on Ma.n Street,
Rutland, Oh10
Stationary Tools
Tool chests, fl oor and table model mach1n 1st dnH
presses, lf2 to S h p Campbell Hausf1eld atr com
p(essors Bambndge metal cutoff saws , double
wh~el bench and floor model gnnders up to 2 h p
f loor model ba lter-y chargers, portable floor vacs
Hand Tools and Mtscellaneous
All s1ze socket sets gr mders tot que wrenches
vtses, hydraulic 1acks, electru.. drills, screw
dnvers, bolt cutters ex:tens10n C&lt;.lrds, p1pe wren
ches, hammers, el ectnc and a" •mnact tools, steel
measuring t ape t ow chatns slec qes elec tn cal tape
and much more
Name Brand Item s Black &amp; Decker-, Stanl ey,
Rockwell , Cumm1ns , Channe l Lock, Tnumph,
K(aeuter and mor-e
•
Erms Cash
Postt1ove t D
Lunch
V1ew1ng one hour pnor to sa le
Not responstbl e for acc1dents
Sa le sponsbr-ed by Rutland F1re Dept
Dan SmJth
J1m Carnahan
949 103:1'
949 1708

IN SURA NC E
CLAIM
REPAIRS call446 3407
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can
ce ll ed'
Lo s t
your
operators license' Phone
9'12 2143
16

RadooTV
&amp; CB Repair

RON'S TV SE'RVICE
SpectaiiZing 1n Zen1th
House Calls Call 1 304 576
2398 or 446 2454
Wanted lo Do

LAWN MOWER repair,
eng1nes, frames, shar
penong, call 446 0355 or 446
4233 after 5 30
CARPENTRY
WORK,
roof1ng ,
concrete,
re1asonable rates, 245 9520,
or 446 2787

22

:::
::::
:::
..-

lt
Jt

lt
Jt

lfJt

*Jt
lt

Wdl do babys,tling Call
Tract Tucker at 992 5451

*

NEED Babys,tler for
swmg sh 1ft 1n my home
Call 446 9530 before 1, after
3 call256 noe
WOU L D YOU l ike to be pa1d
for gomg to college? You
ca n get this and extras like
$1500 bonus, free tran
sportat1on to exot1c
paradtses l1ke Hawau and
Puer-to R1co, life msurance
and more 1ust for one
weekend a month and 15
days a year 1n the OhiO A1r
Nat1onal Guard To f1nd out
how thts dream can come
tr-ue f or you, c all MSgt
M1ke G11more at (6141 474
(614) (collect)
497 0670noghls
(COl lec
t)
7048
and
days

NUCLEAR
POWER
TRAINEES
Rewardmg
program offers good
salary,
earn
30
days vac;~tion with
pay, total medical
care
and
$2000
bonus upon com ·
plet1on of tra1n1ng
program .
Age
17·25. Some math
and
physics
reqUired . Call: Toll
Free

1-300.282·1384
MON.-WED.
9 AM TO 2 PM
12

Sttuahons Wanted

Will do odds and ends
Paneling, floor t11e, and
ce1 11ng til e
Call Fred
M il ler 992 6338
Wtll Q1Ve p1ano lessons to
beg tnners and • ad-vanced
students m my home Also
teach chordmg and tran
spos1ng 1f mterested call
992 5403

INTERIOR x extenor
patntmg done Barn roofs
also No 10b too sm all Call
949 2379

PUBLIC AUCTION
LOCATION From Gallopohs follow Route 160 one
m1le and turn right onto the Bulav111e Porter Road
and go one mtle, the followtng wilt be offered .
a~r compressor. 300 gallon
fuel ta nk D1x 1e wood and coal cookstove, manure
spreader (rough con dltton} , , 2 water troughs,
several m ilk cans, many stant1ons, 2 refn gerators
tarpaulins, gnndstone, 1ron kettl e, metal drums, old
Sideboards harness, G E d1shwasher ( brown), 2
saddl es sooo tobacco st1cks, double door wardrobe,
n1ce LR su1te {one year old l. wooden dm1ng room
table w 1th 4 chatrs half bed, 2 c:hests of draWers, 2
dressers, LR cha1r- and couch, good wntmg desk,
cann tng tar-s , dehum1d1fler, several games,
fireplace screen, stone tars, and many other
mtscellaneous house and farm items
Terms Cash
Wayne Russell, OwnP.r

3 pt scraper blade, small

Lee Johnson - AUCTIONEER
Crown C1ty , Oh10
Phone 256 6740

~
Not Responstble for Acctdents or Loss nf Property

We Repair All
Small Gasolme
Engtnes
Up to 25 H P
Lawn mowers, ttllers,
cham saws, motor btkes
&amp;
etc
All
work
guar-anteed P•ckup &amp;
Delivery
PRECISION SMALL
ENGINE SERVICE
544 Upper R1ver Rd
446 2096

Jt

lt
lt
lt

*
*

23

CASH Loan never repay,
free detailS, A L Lullon,
P 0 Box 7~. GallipoliS
Oh

*
*
Jt
Jt
Jt

,._
Jt
Jt
Jt
Jt
Jt

*'

Jt F1rst
*second
11- d
,.an
Jtcases.
!plete.

mortgages, Jt
mortgages
f
' 1fo
re mance,.
Ca II Com - II'
Mortgage:
e r v 1c e s
in*ltGallipohs, Ohio '..at~
:446-1517 for more:
Jtinformation
and*
~your appointment • .

*lt
!
Jt

,.s

,..

!

*

ONE 2 bdr house at 64
Chillicothe Rd , $7500 call
446 4038 or 446 1243
ROOM house w oth
garage, 64 Chtll1cothe Rd
S190 per month mcome

5

~r~of~n;2~ ,4038 or 446

ALMOST new b1 level near
Clay Elem , 3 lg bdrs , 2
car garage, rural water,
-r************--· VA approved Call 256 6267

!

!Jt
*

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

-

1971 Fleetwood 14x65 3
bdr , l'h bath
1971 Liberty , 14x65, 2 bdr ,
1968 New Moon , 12x60, ex
pando, 2 bdr
1970 New Moon, 12x60, 3
bdr
1961 V1ndale, 10x55 2 bdr
1969 Broadmore 12x60, 2
bdr
B&amp;S
M ob ole Home Sales
PI Pl easa nt W VA
675 «24

: MONEY - MONEY :

: lli lli $ $ $
:vour
! MONEY • MONEY ,., t • • • • • • * * * * * "

:

32

PRICES REDUCED used
mob1le homes and travel
!railers
TRISTATE
Jt First • mortgages,: MOB ILE HOME S CALL
446 7572
! second mortgages,!
,.and
ref1nance,.
KANAUGA
MOBILE HOMES
Jtcases. Call Com-11'
selecloon of used
:plete
Mortgage: Large
lO's, 12 s, &amp; 14 Wide MObile
,.services
in* Homes Kanauga Mobile
ltGallipolls, Ohio at* Home Sale, Kanauga, Oh1o
:446-1517 for more: 446 9662

**'!.*'!.********* ~tinformation
andll
lif
appointment_ :

lt

BY OWNER 3 bdr house,
kitchen , F R wood- bUr
nmg f1replace, lg lewAst.
Call446 3100
·~

:$$$$$ ..

Professoonal
Serv•ces

1972 FAIRMONT Mobole
home, 12x60, 2 bdr un
furnished,
range
and
refngerator 1s furnished
Window atr condtt1oner,
space for washer and
dryer, new breaker box,
new carpet, very good con
d1t1on, pnce, S6,S9S Catt
446 7340 after 4 30
1974 12X65 HOLLY PARK
trailer 3 BedrOoms wtth
expando on living room,
central a.r and wood burner, on a lot With chatn ltnk
fence. phone 446 2007
1980 BAYVIEW by Fair
mont, 2 bdr- , bay wmdow,
wooden bar, total electrte
Excellent
condition
$12,300 Call446 1006
MOBILE HOME
45x8
W1ll sell for S2,000 or trade
for boat, motor and tra 11er
Call J B at 1 246 6047

CALL US for your
pttotograph,c needs Por
tra1t , passpor-ts
co m
merc1al and
wedd 1ng
photography
Tawney
StUdiOS, 424 Second Ave

31

Mobtle Homes
for-Sale

1973 Fa1rpo1nt
14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron
14x65 2
bedr
1971 Fleetwood , 14x65 3
bdr- bath 'h
1971 Shakespear 14 x65 2
bedroom
1965Yanor 12)(52 2bedr
196e Fleetwood 12x63 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOM E
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv 304 675 4424

1969 2 BR 12X60 Hollypar k
Trader Furn1shed a c,
washer Have to see to ap
prec1a te $9,000 Cal l 992
2881 or 992 7633
1970 Card 1nal 12x60 mobile
home Wtth lots of extras,
under-pmn1ng porch Ex
cel lent shape a II for $5,000
Cal l992 5632
1973 62x12 two bedroom
mob ile home tn good con
acre lot 1n Harnsonv tl le
Ca ll992 3640

)-Csc--;Lo:
OI: S
:-:&amp;o-:AC r ea ge

35

Lots &amp; Acr-eag_e

42

Mobile Hom es
tur til ent

LEVEL Land at Por tl and
On on Sr R t 124 Ca ll 99'2

7330

Houses for Rent

--

2 BDR and J bdr mob1le
homes ca ll446 0175

, -

Rintals
41

--

Two bedroom house for
rent Unfurntshed , depO!S it
requ1red No pets Call 992
3090

FOR RENT two bedroom
w,th garage Salem Str-eet
Rutland $175 month plus
ut1 l1ftes 742 2378
4 ROOM COTTAGE w th
screened in porch, adults
only, no pets r ent and dep
Ava1 1abte w 1thm 2 days
Call446 0957 No mmors
HOUSE
3 bdr, 2 bath,
L R , fam1ly room
a~r
cond , downtown Cal l 446
1409 between 5 and 6 p m

14x70 FURNISHED 3 bdr
house trailer on pnvate lot
has washer and dryer and
T v , suItable tor J or more
adults Call 4.46 1822 after 5
pm
2 BDR and 3 bdr mob1le
homes
Furntshed ,
mar-r~ed cou ple No pets no
children Secur-1ty depos1t
requ1red On Ra coon Rd

NICE MOBILE HOME 1
m11e below c1 t y overlooking
nver- Centra l a1r-, adults
on ly, ca ll446 0338
Two Bedr-oom Mob1 l e
Home Adults only 992
3324

Apartment
for Rent

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

UNF APA RT 4 r-ms and
One bedroom mobt le home [ bath, adults onl y, no pets
Furn1shed , all ut il 1t1eS Call446 3748 or 256 1903
pa1d Ca ll992 7479

Former E u B
Church
property 50'x 100' lot on
College 51, Sy racuse, Oh
If 1nter ested wnte BoJ&lt; 45
Syracuse, Oh

Real Estate- General

NOTICE
serv1ng your Real
Estate needs m Rto
Grande, Centerv111e,
Oak Holl , Jackson

A PPRO X A acres near
A lbany, C1s tern, sept1c
elec trt c, telephone , ready
for hookup 698 6306 alter 6

_CONTACT
STAN EVANS
Century 21 - W10n1e
Bla~r Agency
Offoce 286 4498
Home 682 72S2

RESTRICTED
BUILDING LOTS
Debby Drove all
utlhhes available
STROUT
REALTY,
446 0008

Real Estate - General

Real Estate

45631

1980 OAKBROOK

Homes for Sale

3 BDRS ,
basement,
assumable
per ce nt
R1ggscrest
4329

~GRAVELY.
.. i"",.., '"''~.&lt;~... "'"

50" mower when you
buy a ridtng tractor

r•;!l~~~~~~;;;~~;;;;~;-·;;;ij

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

.

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

30" mower when
you buy a
walking mower.

CalllmmedJalely

"Mannong Roush-Owner"

D&amp;W ESTATES

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Rl. 93 North
Jackson, OH.

•

LOT MODEL CLEARANCE
OF NEW 1979 HOMES

992·2342
IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

BEDROOM

~h. 1 614-423·9642
Not Re•ponsobiP for Aetodents

General

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY
OFFICE 446-7013
GOOD FAMILY LIVING - Th1s lovely ranch has 3
bedrooms, fam tly room w1th woodbur-ner, l arge 2
car gar-age beauttful 18X36 pool w1th large patto
c lose to town Reduced to$52,000
11 1995
LAND CONTRACT - Buy thtS attract1ve 3 bedr-oom
house for S2.000down at 12% tnterest Located tn the
V1llage of Bidwel l, owner want s to sell now
N 1572
LAND CONTRACT - A 10% Interest rate and down
payment Will buy you a lovely br 1ck frame b1 tevel
w1th 3 bedr-ooms 2 baths centra l a 1r and p ;,.. acre~
Close to hospttal Ca ll tor appo mtment today 11 1465

CONVENTIONAL - VA - FHA FtNANCI NG
AVAILABLE INTEREST RATES HAVE BEEN
REDUCED, CALL FOR RATES
10% DOWN PAYMENT &amp; INTEREST RATE That s all 1f takes for you to move 1nto th1s lovely
br~ ck
home, 234 baths, formal d1nmg, fully
carpeted, fa m1ly room w1th f1 replace N•ce 1 acr-e
lot, call for appomtment
f/1847

BEST BUY IN THE AREA - Lovely ranch With 3
bedrooms, bath w1th shower, range, ll\lmg r-oom
su 1te &amp; dm1ng set all stay also older home on pro
per ty Located on 8 ac r es of n1ce land Only $38 000
Owner Will sell w1th 10% Down Payment &amp; ln t~rest
Rate
PRtCE REDUCED - On th•s n1ce double w1de,
pr1ce 1ncludes t urn1ture and 6 acres of land owner
leavmg state
11 1532
93 ACRES - Vacant land, good 1nvestment proper
t y, some t1mber, all m1neral nghts located 1n Ad
doson Twp $23,000
N 1032

91f• % F1nanc1ng Ava•lable•

3 bedroom ran ch

11/:2 baths, fam1ly
room
large k1tchen area
Fully
carpeted 1Sx20 out of the ground pool
S1tuated on a large lot

Evenmgs Call
Darvm Bloomer, Assoc_ 446-2599
Oscar Ba1rd/ Realtor '446-4632
John Fulleli Realtor 4464327
Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

BEAT THlS - SJOO PER MONTH
lncludmg prmc1pal mterest, taxes and
1nsurance Only 9% mt Owner transfer
red and ver-y an x1ous to sell C1ty
sc hools, acre of ground more or less,
I1V1 ng room 2 W B ftrep laces kitchen
and dmtng area Full basement Prtced
1n S40s

Ruttor-Auct1onHr
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Servtng 6,000
Commun1ties
428 Second Ave.
Coii446-G552 Anylome

'

BMR 349- New llsttng All electnc home 3 B R
ra nch sttuated on large f lat l ot Call tor deta11s1
BMR 350M - Kirkwood mobtle home on r ented lot
LEss than SS 0001

BMR 351 - New LIS!mg ~ 3 B Rhome located 10 CIIY
school d 1stnct on nearly an acre of land Only 2
miles from Galltpohs

12 ·0 ..

BMR 346 - In Thurman 2 BR fram e home on good
condltton Assumable l oa n

SATURDAY, JUNE 7
TIME: 11 A.M.
LOCATION: NO. 3 FLORAL CIRCLE,
MARiffiA, OHIO
DIRECTIONS Turn Off Washington Sl (RI 50 &amp; 7)
onto 3rd 51 - 1 Block from Campus Mart1us
Museum follow 3rd Sl (or Rl 60 to Muskmgum
Onve Turn onto Juhan St by the Sun Ma1d Gr-ocery
or 1 Block below Best Western Motel Watch for
S1ons As we are mooveno to Cal1forn1a we w111 sell at
Publ iC Auct1on the complet~ contents of lh1S large
beaullful home overlooking !he Muskmgum R1ver
Household Dishes and Glassware of all konds Several pteces of heavy stainless steel cookware
Corn1ng Ware Elect Appliances of all k1nds &lt;some
still new 1n boxes) 17 cu ft Ref Freezer (app 1 yr
ooo Avocado). Wards 10 cu ft Chest Freezer, Wards
Matched patr Aut Washer and Elec Orlyer (all 3
same as new), Large oval d1ntng room table - 6
overstuffed swivel dining room chairS, large 2 oc
solid 2 mch s1deb'Oard, dropleaf parlor table, drop
leaf serv1ng table, large~ poece overstutted 11vlng
room su1t.e, several beautiful p1eces of overstuffed
11vong room cha~rs, hinged lid and pop top coffee
table, ver-y unusual stand table , large lamp, solid
magaz1ne rack with storage, swivel base J c Pen
'ny console color TV (remote control aprx 1 yr old),
Gone Wolh the Wmd Lamp, 8 day wall ctock (New
England Clock CoL Round ol!lk hall tree m~rrow, 6
ong1nal oil pa 1nt1ngs several clown pictures MGM
Poclures Annoversory !Limited Ed ilion w1!h Senal
No) , large hide a bed couch makes onto queen size
bed, old rockers, beautiful 4 poster bedroom su1!e
complete with chest, nlghtstand (new box springs
and mallress. Sealy), table model color TV, 8 track
stereo combination, shadow box chess set, complete
!wall mounll music center organizer, plus In the
parlor we have a very large Peacock WICker chair
(Phlllopines), wicker tables, Drunken Lord's chair
!Bamboo) , wicker chest, British officers bar made
to told up and mount on horseback !bamboo), pair
bamboo chairs with table, handmade cushions,
bamboo screen, wood bar cabinet, pair hand carved
cups, Alabaster bookends, poly vi nyl curtatns,
brass pieces, complete set of Harvard Classics (50
books in all and In excellent cond1t1onl. several
other very old and expens1ve books, 2 leather bound
Whiskey decanters, Japanese tea server with
basket, hand carved pieces, round California sMe
coffee table, Lane cedar chest, kidney shaped table
completely refinished, plu5 round banquet tableseals 10, 3 4 II banquet and 2 6 II banquet labl..-all
are fold up plus 16 stack type banquet chatrs, com
plete banquet dishes and silverware for 24 people, 6
II chocken barbecue outfit complete, 14 It
aluminum bOal, plus many, many beautiful Items
from !his large beautiful home lo be sold. All the
lurnoture IS made bY the Rowe Manufacturing Com
pany and Is on same as new condition The public ls
onv1ted to Inspect the contents from 12 noon to 8 p
m on Friday, June 6 Everyone welcome,. Positive
1 o required tor bid numbers This will be an ex
cepl1onafly good AUCTION with absolutely NO
J u N I( I Refreshm~nts served
E. L "Red" Miller
Auctioneer

A GAS SAVl
HOME •
Only 2 Mtles From C1ty•
Modern ranch , spac1ous llvmg room
w1th wood burn1ng f1replace Modern
built m k 1tchen and d1nmg area Cen
tral a1rgarage f1n1shed
Cha1n
back yard Well
Low utl llttes attic
Strtral&gt;e DUII,~ing
Schools'

GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE'
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORD IT•
The owner-s have loved thiS home but
they are moovtng J bedroom ranchlllv
1ng room , kt tchen w 1th butlt ms, dm1ng
araa , mOdern bath, 1 car f1n1shed
garage, all th ts on a nt ce s•ze lotloc:ated
only one and a half m11es trom the c1ty
Pr1 ced m the m1d 40 s

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PUBLIC AUCTION

Real Estate

UNFURN 1 bdr apart
ment, upsta~rs, second
Ave $200 per mo 1n
cludmg uttl1t1es, one month
depos1t requ.red No pets,
ca ll 446 2129 or 446 2800

286-3752

210 Condor St. Ph. 992-2975 Pomeroy, (.on.

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE,

'

FREEl II

FREEl II

2 Bdrm., furn1shed,
59.450. Down payment
$984- Only
5159.48 per mo.
(A.PR 1B%l

FURN
EFFICIENCY
apartment m R10 Grande
Call 446 0157

SLEEPING rooms, onQ
ltght housekeepmg apart
ment Park Centrat Hotel ~

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Serv1ce statoon do
mg good bustness excellent butldmg, large shop If
you re 1nter ested 1n ownmg your- own busmess and
mak 1ng money stop 1n and see us for deta1ls 111100

MOBILE HOME

~ baths, ful l
2 car garage
mor-tgage, 9'h
$48 000
Manor- 614 985

FURNISHED Apt 1 BR
Near HMC Adults $220
uttllttes pd 446 4416 after 7
pm

Apartment
for Rent

44

General

REALTV WORLD., - Stutes Real Estate
21 Locust Slreel Gall opolis Ohoo
Telephone (6141 446 4206

Real Estate

Apartment
tor Rent

Call446 1728

44
42

44

14' WIDE
31

Bus1ness
Opportunity

**************

**************

FIHIREial
21

Located 1n exc res1dent1al
comm1.1n1ty, spac1ous. at
trachve,matntenance free
home located Df1 lovely
ac:re 101 Modern k1tchen,
family
room, sever-al
bedrooms, two bath s,
basement, Qarage
Low
UtilitieS 992 7727

BY OWNER
Down Sf
R1. 7; 5
menutes from City Park
2 story frame, 4 B R's,
hveng room w1th w B
fireplace, eat·1n kit
chen. Basement and
garage.
Praced
a1
$39,500
Call· Daylome, 446·161 5
After 5 446 1244

...::: Money · Money · lt,.. '
Money
Second Mortgages,
Forst Mortgages &amp;
Refonance Cases Ex·
ample of 2nd mort·
gage loan Appraos·
ed value of property
$40,000 - (total of
both mortgages cannot exceed 75% of appraosed
value)
$40,000 X 75% =
$30,000 - lsi mort·
gage balance $15,000
- amount avatlable
tor 2nd mortgage,
$15,000 Relonance &amp;
1st mortgages can
lolallOO% of appraos
eel value• Where can
th1s be done? At
Compete Mortgage
Ser-v1ces
1n
Galhpohs, Ohoo Phone 614·446 1517
Please call forst for
mtormahon and an
appo1ntment

NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home
21h
baths
rec room
fireplace,
basement,
garage At Morn 1ng Star
Hts Lee Construction 992
3454 or 9'12 5455

RIVER VIEW HOME
FOR SALE

l

** ************
:
$$$$$$
,..

!.......
!
!~

11 -- liomes tor sale - -

Beautiful large home Low
uttl 1t1es, bnck ranch sty le,
3 bedroom~ 21h baths,
ftreplace, fUll basement,
fam1ly room , atr c on
ditioner, J car garage
Baum Add1t100 Me1gs Co
985 4169

Money to Loon

FHA VA Convent1al Home
Loans, Columbus Ftrst
Mortgage
Co , loan
represe nta t1ve
V1olet
(COOkie) V1ers, 463 Second
Ave , Ga I hpolls, Oh , «6
7172

SAWYER WANTED tor
auto saw mdl Jet of 217
and 218, Scottown, DH Call
256 6363
RELIABLE
SITTER
needed for older Child
Monday thru Froday, Ref
req , ca ll 446 2978 after 5

Bu smess
Opportunity

CASH Loan never repay,
fr-ee deta1ls, A L Lutton,
P o Box 766, Gallipolis,
Oh

*lt

SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1980 - 10:00 A.M.

TOOL AUCTION

SANOY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offer-ed
serv1 ces for f1r-e msurance
coverage 10 Gall•a County
for almost a century
Farm home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in
diVIdUal needs Contact,
Charles Neal, your netgh
bor and agent

21

WE DO EAR p1erc'"g, buy
the earnngs and get the
ears
p1erced
FREE
Tawney Jewelers

AUCTION SERVICE

Kl'nneth Swatn, Auct
Corner Th1rd &amp; Ohve

lnsurt~nce

HELP WANTED Fork loft
operator must know the1r
logs Apply at ,unct•on of
217 and 218 scottown, OH

2 to 5 YEARS EX
PERIENCE
preferred
ca 111ng on mdustnal plants,
power- plants, stnp m1nes,
construct1on pro1ects m Trt
State Area Send resume to
BO&gt;&lt; No, 183 m care of
Dally Tnbune
CAREER MINDED
SALES PERSONS
Take advantage of your
own selling sk1lls We
are look109 for 3 well
groomed personable
persons w1th etther a
r ea l estate sales or real
estate brokers license
MLtsf be wtll1ng to ac
cept our trammg and
sales methods Send full
resume w1th curr-ent
photo to Bo&gt;c 182, c o
Oa1ly Tnbune Equat
opportumty employer
All r eplay s held 10 stnct
confidence

13

18

SWAIN

RN/ MD/ 00/ 00 5
AII IIHI F• elds

BENEFITS Personnel un upect an e11.cttlent benefit s
package which Includes lD da ys annua l vacatton generous
mettlc al/ de ntalt hle •nsunnce cover•ge and other In tree
Incent ives Oependenls beneftls are 1lso avllable E .. te n
si~t~a tralntng pr ogram Is provided A planned promotion
pro,ram 11 tncludtd wtth a commttslon in the Naval
Reserve

St,

Pubhc Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

MEDI CAL

Accountlnt/ Fin.Jnce
Adm.nlslr.llftont Personnel
Transport011110n
Operal lons
QUALIFICATIONS M ntmum RS / &amp;A degr ee (colltte
junlon and umlon may 1nqulrel Federal reiulatlon\ re
qu ire that Applianh be no mon than 21 vean old lad
jus table up to J vears lor veterans Ud •te r~ulrem&amp;nts
vary lor Mechcal Prognm) taensurt lull opportuntly tor
ureer adYanument Relocation overseas or lfomestlcallv
reau1 red Apphcanl$ mu st pa u d r1 gorous mental •nd
physica l examma t•ons and q ualtlr for secu n ty c lea rance

_Want~ t~Buy

9

liomes for Sale

ON COLLEGE R D 1n
syracuse 3 bdr 2 bath
wall to wall carpetmg cen'
tral a1r and heat, 2 por-ches
double car garage $45 ooo'
Call M Weaver, 992 3s02

D-2- Sunday, June I, 1980

Announcemenrs

OUR HE ARTFELT thanks

2

junb&amp;Jl ~imes • ientin.el

31

------

.

-

3_1__ _!tomes for Sa!!__

LIVING

LANDtONTRACT9%1NT
Th1s 1s a famty room all brtck wtth A
bedrooms and a sparkling full ba t h up
Large kttchen lmed wtth pretty
cabmets Large foyer and formai i1V1ng
room and d m1ng
Ful l basement,
fireplace '" fam11y room , 2 car garage
attached, a lso a workshop and a bam
S1tuated on approx SO acres Th1s home
r-eflects tender, lov1ng care and true
val

ROOM

17 .....

•

BEDROOM

BEDROOM

•

10 ·I

1HI'

SKYLINE 24'x44"

WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY
To fil all 5 bedrooms 1n th1 s except1onal
ly outstand1ng briCk home Formal llv
1ng r oom, large spac10US family room
w1th w b ftreplace, beaut1fUI kitchen
wtth all built 1ns and d1 nmg area Color
fu l ce ram tc tile baths Full fm1shed
base ment loads of cl oset space Large
2 car fm1shed garage Th1s home tS ver y
well constructed PrQfess,on all y land
scaped
Porterbrooke Subd
C1ty
Schools Shown by Appoontm eot Onl y '

full 3-12 root p1tch, total wr;tp Fom-Cor. The very best
furn1ture and carpeted throughout.

nr

1-- 12¥

BARON 14'x70'
BR Total Electric, tot;~l wrap Fom-Cor, woodburning
fireplace w1th br1ck front and mantle. Garden tub and
separate shower, stereo. The best of furn1ture and
carpeted throughout.

2

PRICED AT $14,500.
•

•

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR LOT
SAVE $3,500 ON THIS ONE

•
•
•

.
•

*NO TRADE-IN AT THESE LOW PRICES

KINGSBURY HOME
SALES, INC.
In

"For The Finest
1100 E. Main St.

Manufacture&lt;! Housing
" Pomeroy,

992-7034

0.

BMR 342 All electnc home
throughout Situated on 120x200 lofl

New

carpet

BMR 361C M iddleport grocery store w1th C 2
beer and w1ne license Includes all stock and equ 1p
ment needed for operatton
BMR 361 - Two stor y home tn Rto Grande w1th 4
large BR s Includes 3 e&gt;C tra lots

BMR 334 details

PRICED AT $21,500.

SAVE $2,500 ON THIS ONE

BMR 344- Bnck ranch mcludeS 3 8 Rs, F R, Jlh B's
Central a 1r 1n excell en t cond1t1Dn Located 1n county
school d1strtct

BMR 333 Modula r home, 3 BR s, 2 baths, LR,
OR , FR wtth WB kitchen 1ncludes r~ nge and
refngerator S1 tuated on 1 23 acres

3 BR total electriC sectional home, vertical rusloc siding,

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR FOUNDATION

BMR 345 - Older 2 story home 1n Rac1ne 10 rooms
90% remodeled Two stamed glass wmdows tunc
t1onal f1replace Call now for co mplete detatl s 1

Owner Wtll help flnanc:e with a down
payment and carry the balance on a
LAND CONTRACT Stately 2 story
p1llary posts, 3 bedroom, formal entry
and large open wmding staircase
Fam 1ly room w1th plank floonng and
w b fireplace F ormal l1v1ng room ,
spac1ous ea t m ki t chen With loads of
knotty ptne cab1nets Thts a nd much
more settmg on 3 acres Can buy onl y
one acre C1ty Schools G1ve us a cal l formor-e detailS
DAIRY FARM
135 acres more or less 1 3 m 11es Rae
coon Creek bottom , 40 acres creek bot
tom , 60 acres total tillable Used as a
Grade A da~r y operation 4 milkers w1th
automatiC washers, 800 gal bulk tanks,
2 s1los !800 Ions total ) W1th Silo
un1oad1ng auger STr-uctureseAOxBO
molal, 172x40 m1lk house With feed
room , 40x170 concrete stab teed lot All
structures have concrete floors 1,000
walnut a nd poplar trees on fa tm Clay
Twp , C1IY Schools
$14,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE•
On th1S 2 story 4 bedroom home Llvmg
room , kitchen and dtnlng area Fully
carpeted 1 cr garage •S1tuated on a
~ee p lot w 1th a garden space
RODNEY CORA RD
sa Acre, mob1le home runner for a
12xou tra11er, septic tank. rural water
ava1lable V er-y reasonable

BRICK HOME
Your family
!he beauty of the
two fireplaces and the energ't' savmgs
...pi the woodburner 3 bedrooms, lull
o asement and much more Th1s home
shows excellent quality and workman
Sht p Call US today I
LOVE A GRACIOUS SETTING•
HOME OF RARE VALUE &amp; CHARM
ThtS stat ely 2 story home has all the
featur-es 1n a home you would ever
wa nt• Four bedrooms 4 full baths
Complete butl,..l n k1tchen off from the
fam ilY room w1th w b f1replace For
malllvtng and dtning room Full f1msh
ed basement featuring a large family
room w1th w b firepla ce, game room
and ut1l1ty room Large 2 ca r- garage
w1th opener
Covered pat10 and
sundeck
Free
sw1mmlng
and
clubhouse area available
RIO GRANDE AREA
Mob1le home and half ac:re tot for only
$14,500 ()()
ACREAGE
6 Acr-es more or- less w1th a pond
Chooce buoldong site on Blacktop Road
ACREAGE
Excellent bu1ld1ng s1te 8 4 acres more
or tess Totally fenced Located 5 to 6
miles from the cttY C1ty schools Pnc
ed 514,500
LOW INTEREST RATES AVAILABLE
CONVENTIONAL FINANCING AS
LITTLE AS 5% DOWN. V .AJ • NO
DOWN PAYMENT. F.H A. LOW
DOWN PAYMENT. MORTGAGE
MONEY IS AVAILABLE!

Bonnie L Stutes, Realtor, 446-4200
Jamt!S R. Stutes, Assoc. 4' o-21185
f
•
.
L llc!c!l, Assoc. 245-9484
-l-----'0.

1 3 at res of land 8% fman cmg Call for

BMR 335 - Located 10 downtown GalliPOlis ThiS
bnck has 10 spacmus rooms Must be see n I
BMR 336- Execut1ve type home on nearly 6 acres
of land Owner Is anx1ous to sell and has reduced the
pnce CAll today tor deta11st
BMR 94 - Stately older home 1n Chesh1re Natural
gas heat Must see to apprec1a te'
BMR 348 Bnck ranch mcludes 3 BRs, kttchen
w1th dmmg area FR w1th f1rep 1ace. full basement
S1tuated on large flat landscaped lot'
BMR 139- Two story home on Second Ave Home
has alum1num siding, tncludes 3 BRs, LR, OR , FR
Call for details
BMR 149 - 30 acres w1th SOO ft frontage on Clark
Chapel Road Mineral roghts are oncludedl

BMR 157 - 3 BR frame house with full basement
and 32 a&lt;res of land Located on Eureka near the
dam
BMR n4F - 30 acres In R' 10 Grande with 2 story
house m need of repair Call tor detailS!
I

BMR 340 - 2 story home In Patriot situated on 'h
aue lot Kitchen mcludes range and d1sposal
BMR 341- L shaped brick ranch close to hospital
Includes natura~gas hea!w1th central alr
BMR 331 - 12 Un it apartments In Middleport In
ventory avaolable (3 buoldihOS4 units each )
BMR 347M - Champ,on mob1le home on rented lot.
Will sell fur-ntshedor unfurn1shed Call for detailS'
EVENINGS
TOM WHITE, ASSOC.
STEVE McGHEE, ASSOC
DONA McGHI!£, ASSOC
BE'I"H
ASSOC
BUDMcGH

UHSS1
446·0552
446-oSI2

MH501
446-0SSt\

•
•

.

'·

�D-3-The Sunday Trmes.Sentmel, Sun!lay, June 1, 1980

Clas

s
l

1~·~--::c=-a-r-d=-o-of Thanks
I'D like to thank Rev
Charles Lusher
Sarah
Wmters Chns McCoy and
Fred and Joa nn Wood f or
the beaut 1ful serv•ce for
m '{ husband, V1rg•t Hobbs
And many thanks to the
frtends and acqua•ntances
of the family of Vrrgd Hob

tiS for the g1 ft s of food and
ttl:&gt;wers and tor the concern
lmd k indn ess that you ve
s~own to me and my family
111 our f1m e of need

••

)

MAl NTENANCE
MAN WANTED
Full ftme pOSI IIOO

pe nence

Ex

rn electncal

plumb•ng,
and
refngeratton would be

helptul

Salary com
mensurate w•th ex

penence

Resume can

be mailed to
Veterans Me.monat
Hosp•tal
Box 749 Mulberry Hts
Ph 614 992 2104
Equal Op por tun 1ty

wre

extended to a 11 lA ho
~lped '" any way dur.ng
tDe Illness and death of our
lcw1ng mother and grand
f13other
Edna
Sum
raerf1eld
Espec1ally to
Holzer Hosp1tal Wh 1te s
Pune ral
H ome
Rev
T.nomas Rev and Mrs
H1cks, p1an•st , S1ngers and
to our relat1ves fr ends
aiid ne1ghbors who brought
teod May God bless each

one
T)le Edna
F&gt;a m 11y

Summerfield

--

~--

In Memonam

IN MEMORY of Lura N
Crooks who left us 1 year
aOo today June 1 Sadly
tnfSSed by son, John ,
daughter 1n law
Mtldred
aOd granddaugnters
UN SPOKEN THOUGHTS
I WISh I had told her-

How the blue of her eyes
WJJS so soft and so clear
Like the b lue of the sk1es
I WISh I had Said
Wh en she brushed back her
h
il
1
r
Th;:tt I thought she was

protty
So ~ lim end so fatr
And
m1ght
have
wtuspered ,
A fon d word of pratse
When she tolled for my
comfort ,
On long bus y days
I WJSh I had Sa td
Many 11mes through the
ye4rs
How pat tent you are w1th
My tOYS and my tears

I wh 1sh I had told her
When st eps grew more
slow
A nd I knew that they had
noh
MU'Ch fa rth er t o go
1wish I had sa 1d
"You are prec1ous to me
Dear mother of m1ne
And you always will be
I thought these thtngs over

Aga m and agcm
But I d 1d not express them
W ith VOICe or Wtth pen
So long I was stt ent
And now we reapar t,
I WISh I had told her
The thoughts tn my heart
,
Amy Per-rm
In 1ov1 ng memory of
Har-net S Ne1gler who
passed away SIX year-s ago
on May 30, 1974 Daughter
Mary

IN , MEMORY of my
mother , Mr-s Llll 1an C
Sealey , who passed away
May 31! 1967
Gone from our l1ves one so
dear,
But tn our hearts tor-ever
neaT,
There ts a 11nk dea th ca nnot
sever
Love and rem embrance
last for-ever
Daughter, N tna S Burks

Announcements

1
PAY h•ghest pr. ces
poss1ble for gold and silver
coms r-mgs 1ewelr y etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop Mtddleport

P1ck1ng up an Easy play
organ
tn
your
area
Look1ng lor- a r espons bl e
pa r ty ro take over pay men
t s. Call c red1t manager
collect 614 5'n 5122
P1ano Tun1ng
Lane
Dan 1els 7J.2 2951
Tun•ng
and Rep rt~r Serv1ce stnce
1965 It no answe r phOne
997 7082

Employer

THE BUTCHERS SHOP
PE
formerly owned by
Vernon Luc as under new
management. freezer beef
Swif t S1des , custom work
done
Cal l
446 285 1,
Bu lavllle Porter Rd
SEE THE Columb1a com
muter Mopeds at 1066 F rst
Ave Up to 150 miles per
gallon Call .4.46 4626
BIDS want ed f or resur
tac1ng and re pam ng a
pnvate r-oad Approx 1200
It Cal l for detailS, 446 2970
ANYONE trespaSSing on
the property of Bertha E
Hatfield, on A ll ee Rd
Ew1ngton
OH
will be
pr-osecuted

Bags
Have golf 1tems
ballS cl ubs ca rt s head
covers W il l trad e John
Tea for d 61A qa5 3961

The La w Otftce of Doug las
W Ltttle Pomeroy Oh ,
will be closed dunng th e
week of June 1
1980
through June 8
1980
Regular office hour-s w 11
commence on Monday
June9 1980
SWEEPER and sewmg
machme re pa1r- parts and
su ppl1 es
P1ck up and
delivery
Dav•s Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m11e up
Georges Cr-eek R d
Call
446 0294

BIBLE l.ANOTOUR
Dept Oct
HI 1980 !rom
G.tll POli S 01110 Va I IH.lltiOIInd

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS
&amp; TREES
20% OFF

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Maon St.
Pomeroy
992·2181

ATTENTION
LEARN
PROFESSIONAL
SALES

J ordan Only '9U ()() !rom New
York Egypt ophonal add1l1on
Milke r t'~erva tton ~ now For 1n
tor mahon wnle Bibl e Lana
lours 413 41h Ave
K M w
G.t ll lpOI•s
O h tO
4S6l1
Ph
44&amp; 4]1l

._____Giveaway_

ANY PERSON who has
anyth mg to 91ve away and
does not offer- or attempt to
off er any other thmg for
sale may place an ad 1n lh1 s
column There will be no
char-ge to the advert1ser2 FULL blood S•amese
ca ts 1 ma le
f emale,
housebroken Have been
de clawed Call 367 7705 or
367 9361
4__ --- ~~ way

Sell
large locket
1tem
and
make
money
1
to
1, 500 dollars com mossoon
from
1
sale Mulloply thos
by 2 or 3 sales a
week .
Recent corporate
change put us on a
mass
expansoon
program . Must be
ava1lable now Extensove travel by
plane
and
car .
Must be able to
travel. Must have
late model car and
des1re
extremely
h1gh oncome . Op
portunrty 1s now
Call Mr. Steon Col lect
Monday
through Fnday, 9
a . m to 5 p m . at
1 800-325· 9593 Central
Standard
Tome

,ooo

OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5
413 FOURTH ST., KANAUGA

Immaculate ranch style

home, sttuated on J lots,
W1th fac1httes for tra1ler- hookup Th1s home
features 3 !RR , famtly room Wtth woodburn1ng fp,
country kitchen w1th bu11t 1ns, plus llvmg quar-ters
for 1n laws on lower level One of a kind property
Don ' t m1ss see1ng 1t, or call DONNA SWISHER
446 431 3
'
CENTURY 21
Larry E Alban Realty 1 276 S311

MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
OPENINGS IN SCIENTIFIC/
TE Ct1 NI CAL/ MEOICAl. anlf
GENERAl. MANAGEMENT

Unttorm elf Mll1lilrv Ot\IIS IO fl ! of lhe Department ol the
Na11v h.llve some open•ngs ava lable Tnev •nc tul:l e
SCI ENTIFICt TECt1NICAl.
A vialton ( P1lottra.n•n9 a nd Systems Ma1n tenancel
Computer Programmmq/ Technology
Eng•neerm11 ICtvti/ Marme/ Mechan• cal l E tee lr •cal/
E tectron1c l
Nuclear Power Operatoont lns tructoon
Ocea n
a nct Salv011ge
I

__ _

Assorted number of cats
and k1tt ens Long ha•red
and short ha~r ed of all
shapes and s1zes Cal l 985
4163
6

Lost and Found

5400 REWARD FOR LOST
Sma II brown terner
black and w h1te mar-k. mtd
d ie of fad Needed badly for
SICk per-son
Genero us
reward
Please qu 1ckly
please 1&gt;14 742 30'13 or 1&gt;14
4468674 or 6149S54325 or
local shenff
7

Yard Sale

YARD SALE
At Jaycee
bldg on Rt 35 For Gal l1 a
Jun1or M 1ss Sc hol arship
fmal May 31st
LARGE
BARNYARD
SALE Adults clothes, 111
ti e boys and g1rls clo thes of
all kmds Ant1que clocks
All k1nds of m•sc 2 miles
from Vmton ott 325 on Roy
Holcomb Rd
look for
s1gns Monday and Tues
fr om9 to 6

Yard Sale

7

Y ar d Sa te June 2, 3, from 9
' Follow stgns at F1ve
POtnts
YARD SALE Monday
June 2, 6 p m
ttl 71 ,
Tuesday June 3 9 30 am
111 ? oavts r-es1 dence Rose
Hill

YARD SALE Monday 6
? and Tuesday 9 JO
a rn to?, top of Rose Hill,
girls clothes all S12es from
tnt ant on up toys baby ca r
seat

p m t il

CARPORT sale June 3 2
p m
7 p m June 4 10 4
918 S ThiCd M ddleport
5 FAMILY yard sa le, June
2 J 9 to 5 R •ggscrest
Manor above Eas tern Htgh
School
M1n 1 btke
snowmobile su1t square
dance
ou tftt
btke
chtldren s clo thes 1ntant s
and up baby stenhzers
and other baby 1tems
matern•ty c lothes

3 FAMILY yard sale June
2 and 3 ar Ina Masserr est de nce
1n Tuppers
Plams 3 houses above
Ashland All stz e clothes
dtshes turn1rure fl ower
vases etc A lot of good
buys Ra 1n or shtne Fr-om 9
1111 dark
FIVE Family yar-d sa le
Monday June 2 th rough
Thur-sday June 5 or unt11
th1ngs last
From 9 5
Clothes whatnots, tewe lr y
housewilre and a l 1t1e btt of
eve r {thtng On the Laurel
Cld f Road at t he home of
Mrs Cl1fford Jacobs Ram
cance ls

LARGE garage sale Man
and Tues June 2 and 3 340
Page St Middleport
THREE
Family
flea
market 1nc ludt ng anttque
dtshes
clot h1 ng, books
records flower pots and
pl ants
household 1tems
and lamps also TV games
Sa turday May J J and Man
day June 2 from 10 to' a t
fhe Kelly res1dence 10
Syracuse Wa tch for the
s1gns
F I VE Fam l y yard sa le
Monday June 2 from 9 to 4
held InS ide at RICh Valley
comer of Park and Page
Streets tn Mtddleport Lots
of 1tems Cal l 949 2479
YARD Sa le Ju ne 2 through
7 B to 5 p m at the Gene
R tggs restdence, located
Route 7 at the top of the hill
tram Eastern H1gh Sc hool
Lo ts of cloth 1ng new and
used fr-om mtant to adults
Fumlfure and household
ttems
Toys
k1ng and
queen motorcycle sea t

YARDSALE June2and3
M1sc 1tems 930 Logan St,
Middleport OH
2 FAMILY YAR D SA LE
June 5 and 6 9 to 5 only
Slide pro1 ec t or, cloth es,
Avon bottles and m1sc
Ram or shme Rt 124,
Langsville 1st r-ed house
after pass 1ng bndge on
n g ht
BIG YARD SA LE Tues 9
IO 5 Wed 9 to 2 R 31&gt;5 S
6th Ave Middleport Oh
BACKYARD SALE

June

R UMA.\AGE SALE
Mon
day June 2, 9 t111 dark
Texas Rd near Landmark
Packtng House

4 Pat Ingels Many m1sc
1tems woven x bra1ded
rugs plank bottom c h a ~r ,
bowling ba Ms, lamps, quilt,
french fryer trombone x

GARAGE SA LE
June 2
and 3 9 to ? F ~rst r-oad left
pasf Kerr s1gn
Fol low
s1gns

bugle 725
Mtddleport

YARD SALE
Monda y
June 2 1928 Chestnut St
Cance lled If ram
YARD SALE 2 Cole St
Pomer oy
Mary Mart1n
and Pearl Knapp Man
Cloth tng A m sc 1tcms
some smcll l Stzes
YARD
SALE
153
Mulberr-y June J and 4 9 to
A Child ren s clothes fur
n1ture
baby buggy,
bassmet , tand em b1ke
radiOS, cor elle
YARD SALE
Ju ne 2
through 7 810 S Second St .
Mtddleport New c loth1ng
bedd1ng
linens
d1shes
1ewelry, sllverstone, toy s
small appliances, l ot s of
m1sc Come see

a

Chestnut

BRADFORD AuctiOneer
Complete Serv•ce Phone
949 2487 or 949 2000 rac1ne
Oh10 Cr1tt Bradtord

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
sell anvth1ng foranybody at our Auct 1on
Bar-n or 1n your home Fortnformatlon and ptckup
servtce call 256 1967
We

Sale Every Saturdav

Ntghtat7pm

PROCEDURE Send a le tter or resume s tahng quallllca
tiOtll and Interests to
NAVY OPPORTUNITY' INFORMATION
CENTER
OEVISION OPO 200 N Htgh Sf , RM 60'
COLUMBUS OH U21S

lEqoo, l

Oil CAl.L 1 800181 1788
Emplover, U i Cthre ns t'l lp requ1rfd

O,PP'"""''''

_

11

!Je lp Wanted

CATALYTIC
CON
VERTERS
! used)
alummum
(cans etc )
au tomat1 c
transm,ss1ons
( tunk) copper, brass lead
batter1es rad1ators, Call
Robert L Har-per 675 3616
or 675 5202

GET VALUABLE traon'"g
as a young bus1ness person
and earn good money plus
some great !;;ufts as a Sen
t1nel route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on
me ellglb1 11ty ltst at 992
2156 or 992 2157

DIAMONDS
Old cams,
wedd 1ng bands. estate
1ewelry cl ass rmgs, etc
TAWNEY JEWELERS,
422 Second Ave

Babysitter
wanted
Cheshire area for- 3 small
cht ldren 2 schoo l age
Needed some afternoons
367 0525

GOLD l Ok 14k, lSk dental
gold and gold year pms
Call675 3010

OLAN MILLS IS now
rec1ev1ng app i1Cat1ons for
te lephone oper-ator- and
ltght del1very person
Man , J une 2 and Tues
June 3, 10 a m to 4 p m
Brown s Trader Court
Trailer No 18 Minersvil le
Oh Must apply 1n person
No phone cal ls please

WILL BUY old Iran
SmiSSIOnS
batterieS ,
engmes or scrap meta ls,
etc Call245 9188
WANT TO BUY tobacco
pla nts Call256 1466 after 6
I ron and brass beds old
furnt t ure
d esks
gold
r1ngs
1ewelry, sliver
dollars sterl ng, etc wood
1ce boxes ant1ques etc
Comp lete
households
Wn te M 0 Mtller Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
7760
10 kara t 14 karat, 18 W.:araf
gold Dental gold and gold
ear p1ns 675 30 10
Gol d sliver or foretgn
cotns or any gold or Sliver
1tems An t1 que furnttur e,
glass or Ch1 na , Wi ll pay top
dollar , or complete estates
No tt em too lar ge or too
sma ll Chec k pnces before
se lltng Also do appra1 S1{1g
Osby (Dss ,e) Mart1n 992
1&gt;370
WILL BUY o l d fran
Sm ISSIOnS ,
batter-teS,
eng.nes or scrap metals
etc Ca ll 245 9188

Help Wanted

11

HELP WANTED
Part
ttme
fu ll ttme
World
Book Child Craft sales
representat.ves Call 675
3775
FINANCIAL INTERN
A large nat1onw1de fman
c1al corporat 1on, operat1ng
1n 25 states, seeks m
diVtduals to 1111 pos1t1on m
career
progresston
tra1n1ng program Career
tra cks fo r successful ap
pl 1cants lead to local
reg1ona I
and nat1ona I
fmanetal
management
pos1tlons
Career and
salary growth assurred
w1th ample opportunitY for
advancement due to recent
and antlctpated corporate
growth College wor-k g1yen
preference
If you are
willmg to accept r-espon
Sl bl lltY and are mterested
10 people and fmance, con
tact Cred1l Th ntt 446 4113
Or contact Mr Headlee for
an appomtment
PARTT IME two or 3 days
a week helpmg w1fe care
for semi mvalld husband,
nurse a1d trammg helpful
as some l1ftmg IS required
Hours are flexoble, pays $20
per day call 446 7026 befor-e
8 p m for appotntment

SOME ONE to diSC garden
1n East GallipoliS Cal l 446
4579
BABYSITTER
for
3
ch ildr-en 3 and 4 days
weekly No weekends Call
367 0525
PARTTIME help weeken
ds only , apply 1n person at
Lorob1 s Stiv er Bndge
Plaza

JUNE 6, 1980 - 8 P.M.
For your con~en1ence thts merchandiSe has been
moved to the Rutland F1rehOu.1e on Ma.n Street,
Rutland, Oh10
Stationary Tools
Tool chests, fl oor and table model mach1n 1st dnH
presses, lf2 to S h p Campbell Hausf1eld atr com
p(essors Bambndge metal cutoff saws , double
wh~el bench and floor model gnnders up to 2 h p
f loor model ba lter-y chargers, portable floor vacs
Hand Tools and Mtscellaneous
All s1ze socket sets gr mders tot que wrenches
vtses, hydraulic 1acks, electru.. drills, screw
dnvers, bolt cutters ex:tens10n C&lt;.lrds, p1pe wren
ches, hammers, el ectnc and a" •mnact tools, steel
measuring t ape t ow chatns slec qes elec tn cal tape
and much more
Name Brand Item s Black &amp; Decker-, Stanl ey,
Rockwell , Cumm1ns , Channe l Lock, Tnumph,
K(aeuter and mor-e
•
Erms Cash
Postt1ove t D
Lunch
V1ew1ng one hour pnor to sa le
Not responstbl e for acc1dents
Sa le sponsbr-ed by Rutland F1re Dept
Dan SmJth
J1m Carnahan
949 103:1'
949 1708

IN SURA NC E
CLAIM
REPAIRS call446 3407
AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been can
ce ll ed'
Lo s t
your
operators license' Phone
9'12 2143
16

RadooTV
&amp; CB Repair

RON'S TV SE'RVICE
SpectaiiZing 1n Zen1th
House Calls Call 1 304 576
2398 or 446 2454
Wanted lo Do

LAWN MOWER repair,
eng1nes, frames, shar
penong, call 446 0355 or 446
4233 after 5 30
CARPENTRY
WORK,
roof1ng ,
concrete,
re1asonable rates, 245 9520,
or 446 2787

22

:::
::::
:::
..-

lt
Jt

lt
Jt

lfJt

*Jt
lt

Wdl do babys,tling Call
Tract Tucker at 992 5451

*

NEED Babys,tler for
swmg sh 1ft 1n my home
Call 446 9530 before 1, after
3 call256 noe
WOU L D YOU l ike to be pa1d
for gomg to college? You
ca n get this and extras like
$1500 bonus, free tran
sportat1on to exot1c
paradtses l1ke Hawau and
Puer-to R1co, life msurance
and more 1ust for one
weekend a month and 15
days a year 1n the OhiO A1r
Nat1onal Guard To f1nd out
how thts dream can come
tr-ue f or you, c all MSgt
M1ke G11more at (6141 474
(614) (collect)
497 0670noghls
(COl lec
t)
7048
and
days

NUCLEAR
POWER
TRAINEES
Rewardmg
program offers good
salary,
earn
30
days vac;~tion with
pay, total medical
care
and
$2000
bonus upon com ·
plet1on of tra1n1ng
program .
Age
17·25. Some math
and
physics
reqUired . Call: Toll
Free

1-300.282·1384
MON.-WED.
9 AM TO 2 PM
12

Sttuahons Wanted

Will do odds and ends
Paneling, floor t11e, and
ce1 11ng til e
Call Fred
M il ler 992 6338
Wtll Q1Ve p1ano lessons to
beg tnners and • ad-vanced
students m my home Also
teach chordmg and tran
spos1ng 1f mterested call
992 5403

INTERIOR x extenor
patntmg done Barn roofs
also No 10b too sm all Call
949 2379

PUBLIC AUCTION
LOCATION From Gallopohs follow Route 160 one
m1le and turn right onto the Bulav111e Porter Road
and go one mtle, the followtng wilt be offered .
a~r compressor. 300 gallon
fuel ta nk D1x 1e wood and coal cookstove, manure
spreader (rough con dltton} , , 2 water troughs,
several m ilk cans, many stant1ons, 2 refn gerators
tarpaulins, gnndstone, 1ron kettl e, metal drums, old
Sideboards harness, G E d1shwasher ( brown), 2
saddl es sooo tobacco st1cks, double door wardrobe,
n1ce LR su1te {one year old l. wooden dm1ng room
table w 1th 4 chatrs half bed, 2 c:hests of draWers, 2
dressers, LR cha1r- and couch, good wntmg desk,
cann tng tar-s , dehum1d1fler, several games,
fireplace screen, stone tars, and many other
mtscellaneous house and farm items
Terms Cash
Wayne Russell, OwnP.r

3 pt scraper blade, small

Lee Johnson - AUCTIONEER
Crown C1ty , Oh10
Phone 256 6740

~
Not Responstble for Acctdents or Loss nf Property

We Repair All
Small Gasolme
Engtnes
Up to 25 H P
Lawn mowers, ttllers,
cham saws, motor btkes
&amp;
etc
All
work
guar-anteed P•ckup &amp;
Delivery
PRECISION SMALL
ENGINE SERVICE
544 Upper R1ver Rd
446 2096

Jt

lt
lt
lt

*
*

23

CASH Loan never repay,
free detailS, A L Lullon,
P 0 Box 7~. GallipoliS
Oh

*
*
Jt
Jt
Jt

,._
Jt
Jt
Jt
Jt
Jt

*'

Jt F1rst
*second
11- d
,.an
Jtcases.
!plete.

mortgages, Jt
mortgages
f
' 1fo
re mance,.
Ca II Com - II'
Mortgage:
e r v 1c e s
in*ltGallipohs, Ohio '..at~
:446-1517 for more:
Jtinformation
and*
~your appointment • .

*lt
!
Jt

,.s

,..

!

*

ONE 2 bdr house at 64
Chillicothe Rd , $7500 call
446 4038 or 446 1243
ROOM house w oth
garage, 64 Chtll1cothe Rd
S190 per month mcome

5

~r~of~n;2~ ,4038 or 446

ALMOST new b1 level near
Clay Elem , 3 lg bdrs , 2
car garage, rural water,
-r************--· VA approved Call 256 6267

!

!Jt
*

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

-

1971 Fleetwood 14x65 3
bdr , l'h bath
1971 Liberty , 14x65, 2 bdr ,
1968 New Moon , 12x60, ex
pando, 2 bdr
1970 New Moon, 12x60, 3
bdr
1961 V1ndale, 10x55 2 bdr
1969 Broadmore 12x60, 2
bdr
B&amp;S
M ob ole Home Sales
PI Pl easa nt W VA
675 «24

: MONEY - MONEY :

: lli lli $ $ $
:vour
! MONEY • MONEY ,., t • • • • • • * * * * * "

:

32

PRICES REDUCED used
mob1le homes and travel
!railers
TRISTATE
Jt First • mortgages,: MOB ILE HOME S CALL
446 7572
! second mortgages,!
,.and
ref1nance,.
KANAUGA
MOBILE HOMES
Jtcases. Call Com-11'
selecloon of used
:plete
Mortgage: Large
lO's, 12 s, &amp; 14 Wide MObile
,.services
in* Homes Kanauga Mobile
ltGallipolls, Ohio at* Home Sale, Kanauga, Oh1o
:446-1517 for more: 446 9662

**'!.*'!.********* ~tinformation
andll
lif
appointment_ :

lt

BY OWNER 3 bdr house,
kitchen , F R wood- bUr
nmg f1replace, lg lewAst.
Call446 3100
·~

:$$$$$ ..

Professoonal
Serv•ces

1972 FAIRMONT Mobole
home, 12x60, 2 bdr un
furnished,
range
and
refngerator 1s furnished
Window atr condtt1oner,
space for washer and
dryer, new breaker box,
new carpet, very good con
d1t1on, pnce, S6,S9S Catt
446 7340 after 4 30
1974 12X65 HOLLY PARK
trailer 3 BedrOoms wtth
expando on living room,
central a.r and wood burner, on a lot With chatn ltnk
fence. phone 446 2007
1980 BAYVIEW by Fair
mont, 2 bdr- , bay wmdow,
wooden bar, total electrte
Excellent
condition
$12,300 Call446 1006
MOBILE HOME
45x8
W1ll sell for S2,000 or trade
for boat, motor and tra 11er
Call J B at 1 246 6047

CALL US for your
pttotograph,c needs Por
tra1t , passpor-ts
co m
merc1al and
wedd 1ng
photography
Tawney
StUdiOS, 424 Second Ave

31

Mobtle Homes
for-Sale

1973 Fa1rpo1nt
14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron
14x65 2
bedr
1971 Fleetwood , 14x65 3
bdr- bath 'h
1971 Shakespear 14 x65 2
bedroom
1965Yanor 12)(52 2bedr
196e Fleetwood 12x63 2
Bdr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOM E
SALES PT PLEASANT
wv 304 675 4424

1969 2 BR 12X60 Hollypar k
Trader Furn1shed a c,
washer Have to see to ap
prec1a te $9,000 Cal l 992
2881 or 992 7633
1970 Card 1nal 12x60 mobile
home Wtth lots of extras,
under-pmn1ng porch Ex
cel lent shape a II for $5,000
Cal l992 5632
1973 62x12 two bedroom
mob ile home tn good con
acre lot 1n Harnsonv tl le
Ca ll992 3640

)-Csc--;Lo:
OI: S
:-:&amp;o-:AC r ea ge

35

Lots &amp; Acr-eag_e

42

Mobile Hom es
tur til ent

LEVEL Land at Por tl and
On on Sr R t 124 Ca ll 99'2

7330

Houses for Rent

--

2 BDR and J bdr mob1le
homes ca ll446 0175

, -

Rintals
41

--

Two bedroom house for
rent Unfurntshed , depO!S it
requ1red No pets Call 992
3090

FOR RENT two bedroom
w,th garage Salem Str-eet
Rutland $175 month plus
ut1 l1ftes 742 2378
4 ROOM COTTAGE w th
screened in porch, adults
only, no pets r ent and dep
Ava1 1abte w 1thm 2 days
Call446 0957 No mmors
HOUSE
3 bdr, 2 bath,
L R , fam1ly room
a~r
cond , downtown Cal l 446
1409 between 5 and 6 p m

14x70 FURNISHED 3 bdr
house trailer on pnvate lot
has washer and dryer and
T v , suItable tor J or more
adults Call 4.46 1822 after 5
pm
2 BDR and 3 bdr mob1le
homes
Furntshed ,
mar-r~ed cou ple No pets no
children Secur-1ty depos1t
requ1red On Ra coon Rd

NICE MOBILE HOME 1
m11e below c1 t y overlooking
nver- Centra l a1r-, adults
on ly, ca ll446 0338
Two Bedr-oom Mob1 l e
Home Adults only 992
3324

Apartment
for Rent

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

UNF APA RT 4 r-ms and
One bedroom mobt le home [ bath, adults onl y, no pets
Furn1shed , all ut il 1t1eS Call446 3748 or 256 1903
pa1d Ca ll992 7479

Former E u B
Church
property 50'x 100' lot on
College 51, Sy racuse, Oh
If 1nter ested wnte BoJ&lt; 45
Syracuse, Oh

Real Estate- General

NOTICE
serv1ng your Real
Estate needs m Rto
Grande, Centerv111e,
Oak Holl , Jackson

A PPRO X A acres near
A lbany, C1s tern, sept1c
elec trt c, telephone , ready
for hookup 698 6306 alter 6

_CONTACT
STAN EVANS
Century 21 - W10n1e
Bla~r Agency
Offoce 286 4498
Home 682 72S2

RESTRICTED
BUILDING LOTS
Debby Drove all
utlhhes available
STROUT
REALTY,
446 0008

Real Estate - General

Real Estate

45631

1980 OAKBROOK

Homes for Sale

3 BDRS ,
basement,
assumable
per ce nt
R1ggscrest
4329

~GRAVELY.
.. i"",.., '"''~.&lt;~... "'"

50" mower when you
buy a ridtng tractor

r•;!l~~~~~~;;;~~;;;;~;-·;;;ij

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

.

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

30" mower when
you buy a
walking mower.

CalllmmedJalely

"Mannong Roush-Owner"

D&amp;W ESTATES

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Rl. 93 North
Jackson, OH.

•

LOT MODEL CLEARANCE
OF NEW 1979 HOMES

992·2342
IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

BEDROOM

~h. 1 614-423·9642
Not Re•ponsobiP for Aetodents

General

BAIRD &amp;FULLER
REALTY
OFFICE 446-7013
GOOD FAMILY LIVING - Th1s lovely ranch has 3
bedrooms, fam tly room w1th woodbur-ner, l arge 2
car gar-age beauttful 18X36 pool w1th large patto
c lose to town Reduced to$52,000
11 1995
LAND CONTRACT - Buy thtS attract1ve 3 bedr-oom
house for S2.000down at 12% tnterest Located tn the
V1llage of Bidwel l, owner want s to sell now
N 1572
LAND CONTRACT - A 10% Interest rate and down
payment Will buy you a lovely br 1ck frame b1 tevel
w1th 3 bedr-ooms 2 baths centra l a 1r and p ;,.. acre~
Close to hospttal Ca ll tor appo mtment today 11 1465

CONVENTIONAL - VA - FHA FtNANCI NG
AVAILABLE INTEREST RATES HAVE BEEN
REDUCED, CALL FOR RATES
10% DOWN PAYMENT &amp; INTEREST RATE That s all 1f takes for you to move 1nto th1s lovely
br~ ck
home, 234 baths, formal d1nmg, fully
carpeted, fa m1ly room w1th f1 replace N•ce 1 acr-e
lot, call for appomtment
f/1847

BEST BUY IN THE AREA - Lovely ranch With 3
bedrooms, bath w1th shower, range, ll\lmg r-oom
su 1te &amp; dm1ng set all stay also older home on pro
per ty Located on 8 ac r es of n1ce land Only $38 000
Owner Will sell w1th 10% Down Payment &amp; ln t~rest
Rate
PRtCE REDUCED - On th•s n1ce double w1de,
pr1ce 1ncludes t urn1ture and 6 acres of land owner
leavmg state
11 1532
93 ACRES - Vacant land, good 1nvestment proper
t y, some t1mber, all m1neral nghts located 1n Ad
doson Twp $23,000
N 1032

91f• % F1nanc1ng Ava•lable•

3 bedroom ran ch

11/:2 baths, fam1ly
room
large k1tchen area
Fully
carpeted 1Sx20 out of the ground pool
S1tuated on a large lot

Evenmgs Call
Darvm Bloomer, Assoc_ 446-2599
Oscar Ba1rd/ Realtor '446-4632
John Fulleli Realtor 4464327
Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

BEAT THlS - SJOO PER MONTH
lncludmg prmc1pal mterest, taxes and
1nsurance Only 9% mt Owner transfer
red and ver-y an x1ous to sell C1ty
sc hools, acre of ground more or less,
I1V1 ng room 2 W B ftrep laces kitchen
and dmtng area Full basement Prtced
1n S40s

Ruttor-Auct1onHr
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Servtng 6,000
Commun1ties
428 Second Ave.
Coii446-G552 Anylome

'

BMR 349- New llsttng All electnc home 3 B R
ra nch sttuated on large f lat l ot Call tor deta11s1
BMR 350M - Kirkwood mobtle home on r ented lot
LEss than SS 0001

BMR 351 - New LIS!mg ~ 3 B Rhome located 10 CIIY
school d 1stnct on nearly an acre of land Only 2
miles from Galltpohs

12 ·0 ..

BMR 346 - In Thurman 2 BR fram e home on good
condltton Assumable l oa n

SATURDAY, JUNE 7
TIME: 11 A.M.
LOCATION: NO. 3 FLORAL CIRCLE,
MARiffiA, OHIO
DIRECTIONS Turn Off Washington Sl (RI 50 &amp; 7)
onto 3rd 51 - 1 Block from Campus Mart1us
Museum follow 3rd Sl (or Rl 60 to Muskmgum
Onve Turn onto Juhan St by the Sun Ma1d Gr-ocery
or 1 Block below Best Western Motel Watch for
S1ons As we are mooveno to Cal1forn1a we w111 sell at
Publ iC Auct1on the complet~ contents of lh1S large
beaullful home overlooking !he Muskmgum R1ver
Household Dishes and Glassware of all konds Several pteces of heavy stainless steel cookware
Corn1ng Ware Elect Appliances of all k1nds &lt;some
still new 1n boxes) 17 cu ft Ref Freezer (app 1 yr
ooo Avocado). Wards 10 cu ft Chest Freezer, Wards
Matched patr Aut Washer and Elec Orlyer (all 3
same as new), Large oval d1ntng room table - 6
overstuffed swivel dining room chairS, large 2 oc
solid 2 mch s1deb'Oard, dropleaf parlor table, drop
leaf serv1ng table, large~ poece overstutted 11vlng
room su1t.e, several beautiful p1eces of overstuffed
11vong room cha~rs, hinged lid and pop top coffee
table, ver-y unusual stand table , large lamp, solid
magaz1ne rack with storage, swivel base J c Pen
'ny console color TV (remote control aprx 1 yr old),
Gone Wolh the Wmd Lamp, 8 day wall ctock (New
England Clock CoL Round ol!lk hall tree m~rrow, 6
ong1nal oil pa 1nt1ngs several clown pictures MGM
Poclures Annoversory !Limited Ed ilion w1!h Senal
No) , large hide a bed couch makes onto queen size
bed, old rockers, beautiful 4 poster bedroom su1!e
complete with chest, nlghtstand (new box springs
and mallress. Sealy), table model color TV, 8 track
stereo combination, shadow box chess set, complete
!wall mounll music center organizer, plus In the
parlor we have a very large Peacock WICker chair
(Phlllopines), wicker tables, Drunken Lord's chair
!Bamboo) , wicker chest, British officers bar made
to told up and mount on horseback !bamboo), pair
bamboo chairs with table, handmade cushions,
bamboo screen, wood bar cabinet, pair hand carved
cups, Alabaster bookends, poly vi nyl curtatns,
brass pieces, complete set of Harvard Classics (50
books in all and In excellent cond1t1onl. several
other very old and expens1ve books, 2 leather bound
Whiskey decanters, Japanese tea server with
basket, hand carved pieces, round California sMe
coffee table, Lane cedar chest, kidney shaped table
completely refinished, plu5 round banquet tableseals 10, 3 4 II banquet and 2 6 II banquet labl..-all
are fold up plus 16 stack type banquet chatrs, com
plete banquet dishes and silverware for 24 people, 6
II chocken barbecue outfit complete, 14 It
aluminum bOal, plus many, many beautiful Items
from !his large beautiful home lo be sold. All the
lurnoture IS made bY the Rowe Manufacturing Com
pany and Is on same as new condition The public ls
onv1ted to Inspect the contents from 12 noon to 8 p
m on Friday, June 6 Everyone welcome,. Positive
1 o required tor bid numbers This will be an ex
cepl1onafly good AUCTION with absolutely NO
J u N I( I Refreshm~nts served
E. L "Red" Miller
Auctioneer

A GAS SAVl
HOME •
Only 2 Mtles From C1ty•
Modern ranch , spac1ous llvmg room
w1th wood burn1ng f1replace Modern
built m k 1tchen and d1nmg area Cen
tral a1rgarage f1n1shed
Cha1n
back yard Well
Low utl llttes attic
Strtral&gt;e DUII,~ing
Schools'

GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE'
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORD IT•
The owner-s have loved thiS home but
they are moovtng J bedroom ranchlllv
1ng room , kt tchen w 1th butlt ms, dm1ng
araa , mOdern bath, 1 car f1n1shed
garage, all th ts on a nt ce s•ze lotloc:ated
only one and a half m11es trom the c1ty
Pr1 ced m the m1d 40 s

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PUBLIC AUCTION

Real Estate

UNFURN 1 bdr apart
ment, upsta~rs, second
Ave $200 per mo 1n
cludmg uttl1t1es, one month
depos1t requ.red No pets,
ca ll 446 2129 or 446 2800

286-3752

210 Condor St. Ph. 992-2975 Pomeroy, (.on.

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE,

'

FREEl II

FREEl II

2 Bdrm., furn1shed,
59.450. Down payment
$984- Only
5159.48 per mo.
(A.PR 1B%l

FURN
EFFICIENCY
apartment m R10 Grande
Call 446 0157

SLEEPING rooms, onQ
ltght housekeepmg apart
ment Park Centrat Hotel ~

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY - Serv1ce statoon do
mg good bustness excellent butldmg, large shop If
you re 1nter ested 1n ownmg your- own busmess and
mak 1ng money stop 1n and see us for deta1ls 111100

MOBILE HOME

~ baths, ful l
2 car garage
mor-tgage, 9'h
$48 000
Manor- 614 985

FURNISHED Apt 1 BR
Near HMC Adults $220
uttllttes pd 446 4416 after 7
pm

Apartment
for Rent

44

General

REALTV WORLD., - Stutes Real Estate
21 Locust Slreel Gall opolis Ohoo
Telephone (6141 446 4206

Real Estate

Apartment
tor Rent

Call446 1728

44
42

44

14' WIDE
31

Bus1ness
Opportunity

**************

**************

FIHIREial
21

Located 1n exc res1dent1al
comm1.1n1ty, spac1ous. at
trachve,matntenance free
home located Df1 lovely
ac:re 101 Modern k1tchen,
family
room, sever-al
bedrooms, two bath s,
basement, Qarage
Low
UtilitieS 992 7727

BY OWNER
Down Sf
R1. 7; 5
menutes from City Park
2 story frame, 4 B R's,
hveng room w1th w B
fireplace, eat·1n kit
chen. Basement and
garage.
Praced
a1
$39,500
Call· Daylome, 446·161 5
After 5 446 1244

...::: Money · Money · lt,.. '
Money
Second Mortgages,
Forst Mortgages &amp;
Refonance Cases Ex·
ample of 2nd mort·
gage loan Appraos·
ed value of property
$40,000 - (total of
both mortgages cannot exceed 75% of appraosed
value)
$40,000 X 75% =
$30,000 - lsi mort·
gage balance $15,000
- amount avatlable
tor 2nd mortgage,
$15,000 Relonance &amp;
1st mortgages can
lolallOO% of appraos
eel value• Where can
th1s be done? At
Compete Mortgage
Ser-v1ces
1n
Galhpohs, Ohoo Phone 614·446 1517
Please call forst for
mtormahon and an
appo1ntment

NEW 3 or 4 Bedroom home
21h
baths
rec room
fireplace,
basement,
garage At Morn 1ng Star
Hts Lee Construction 992
3454 or 9'12 5455

RIVER VIEW HOME
FOR SALE

l

** ************
:
$$$$$$
,..

!.......
!
!~

11 -- liomes tor sale - -

Beautiful large home Low
uttl 1t1es, bnck ranch sty le,
3 bedroom~ 21h baths,
ftreplace, fUll basement,
fam1ly room , atr c on
ditioner, J car garage
Baum Add1t100 Me1gs Co
985 4169

Money to Loon

FHA VA Convent1al Home
Loans, Columbus Ftrst
Mortgage
Co , loan
represe nta t1ve
V1olet
(COOkie) V1ers, 463 Second
Ave , Ga I hpolls, Oh , «6
7172

SAWYER WANTED tor
auto saw mdl Jet of 217
and 218, Scottown, DH Call
256 6363
RELIABLE
SITTER
needed for older Child
Monday thru Froday, Ref
req , ca ll 446 2978 after 5

Bu smess
Opportunity

CASH Loan never repay,
fr-ee deta1ls, A L Lutton,
P o Box 766, Gallipolis,
Oh

*lt

SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1980 - 10:00 A.M.

TOOL AUCTION

SANOY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offer-ed
serv1 ces for f1r-e msurance
coverage 10 Gall•a County
for almost a century
Farm home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in
diVIdUal needs Contact,
Charles Neal, your netgh
bor and agent

21

WE DO EAR p1erc'"g, buy
the earnngs and get the
ears
p1erced
FREE
Tawney Jewelers

AUCTION SERVICE

Kl'nneth Swatn, Auct
Corner Th1rd &amp; Ohve

lnsurt~nce

HELP WANTED Fork loft
operator must know the1r
logs Apply at ,unct•on of
217 and 218 scottown, OH

2 to 5 YEARS EX
PERIENCE
preferred
ca 111ng on mdustnal plants,
power- plants, stnp m1nes,
construct1on pro1ects m Trt
State Area Send resume to
BO&gt;&lt; No, 183 m care of
Dally Tnbune
CAREER MINDED
SALES PERSONS
Take advantage of your
own selling sk1lls We
are look109 for 3 well
groomed personable
persons w1th etther a
r ea l estate sales or real
estate brokers license
MLtsf be wtll1ng to ac
cept our trammg and
sales methods Send full
resume w1th curr-ent
photo to Bo&gt;c 182, c o
Oa1ly Tnbune Equat
opportumty employer
All r eplay s held 10 stnct
confidence

13

18

SWAIN

RN/ MD/ 00/ 00 5
AII IIHI F• elds

BENEFITS Personnel un upect an e11.cttlent benefit s
package which Includes lD da ys annua l vacatton generous
mettlc al/ de ntalt hle •nsunnce cover•ge and other In tree
Incent ives Oependenls beneftls are 1lso avllable E .. te n
si~t~a tralntng pr ogram Is provided A planned promotion
pro,ram 11 tncludtd wtth a commttslon in the Naval
Reserve

St,

Pubhc Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

MEDI CAL

Accountlnt/ Fin.Jnce
Adm.nlslr.llftont Personnel
Transport011110n
Operal lons
QUALIFICATIONS M ntmum RS / &amp;A degr ee (colltte
junlon and umlon may 1nqulrel Federal reiulatlon\ re
qu ire that Applianh be no mon than 21 vean old lad
jus table up to J vears lor veterans Ud •te r~ulrem&amp;nts
vary lor Mechcal Prognm) taensurt lull opportuntly tor
ureer adYanument Relocation overseas or lfomestlcallv
reau1 red Apphcanl$ mu st pa u d r1 gorous mental •nd
physica l examma t•ons and q ualtlr for secu n ty c lea rance

_Want~ t~Buy

9

liomes for Sale

ON COLLEGE R D 1n
syracuse 3 bdr 2 bath
wall to wall carpetmg cen'
tral a1r and heat, 2 por-ches
double car garage $45 ooo'
Call M Weaver, 992 3s02

D-2- Sunday, June I, 1980

Announcemenrs

OUR HE ARTFELT thanks

2

junb&amp;Jl ~imes • ientin.el

31

------

.

-

3_1__ _!tomes for Sa!!__

LIVING

LANDtONTRACT9%1NT
Th1s 1s a famty room all brtck wtth A
bedrooms and a sparkling full ba t h up
Large kttchen lmed wtth pretty
cabmets Large foyer and formai i1V1ng
room and d m1ng
Ful l basement,
fireplace '" fam11y room , 2 car garage
attached, a lso a workshop and a bam
S1tuated on approx SO acres Th1s home
r-eflects tender, lov1ng care and true
val

ROOM

17 .....

•

BEDROOM

BEDROOM

•

10 ·I

1HI'

SKYLINE 24'x44"

WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY
To fil all 5 bedrooms 1n th1 s except1onal
ly outstand1ng briCk home Formal llv
1ng r oom, large spac10US family room
w1th w b ftreplace, beaut1fUI kitchen
wtth all built 1ns and d1 nmg area Color
fu l ce ram tc tile baths Full fm1shed
base ment loads of cl oset space Large
2 car fm1shed garage Th1s home tS ver y
well constructed PrQfess,on all y land
scaped
Porterbrooke Subd
C1ty
Schools Shown by Appoontm eot Onl y '

full 3-12 root p1tch, total wr;tp Fom-Cor. The very best
furn1ture and carpeted throughout.

nr

1-- 12¥

BARON 14'x70'
BR Total Electric, tot;~l wrap Fom-Cor, woodburning
fireplace w1th br1ck front and mantle. Garden tub and
separate shower, stereo. The best of furn1ture and
carpeted throughout.

2

PRICED AT $14,500.
•

•

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR LOT
SAVE $3,500 ON THIS ONE

•
•
•

.
•

*NO TRADE-IN AT THESE LOW PRICES

KINGSBURY HOME
SALES, INC.
In

"For The Finest
1100 E. Main St.

Manufacture&lt;! Housing
" Pomeroy,

992-7034

0.

BMR 342 All electnc home
throughout Situated on 120x200 lofl

New

carpet

BMR 361C M iddleport grocery store w1th C 2
beer and w1ne license Includes all stock and equ 1p
ment needed for operatton
BMR 361 - Two stor y home tn Rto Grande w1th 4
large BR s Includes 3 e&gt;C tra lots

BMR 334 details

PRICED AT $21,500.

SAVE $2,500 ON THIS ONE

BMR 344- Bnck ranch mcludeS 3 8 Rs, F R, Jlh B's
Central a 1r 1n excell en t cond1t1Dn Located 1n county
school d1strtct

BMR 333 Modula r home, 3 BR s, 2 baths, LR,
OR , FR wtth WB kitchen 1ncludes r~ nge and
refngerator S1 tuated on 1 23 acres

3 BR total electriC sectional home, vertical rusloc siding,

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR FOUNDATION

BMR 345 - Older 2 story home 1n Rac1ne 10 rooms
90% remodeled Two stamed glass wmdows tunc
t1onal f1replace Call now for co mplete detatl s 1

Owner Wtll help flnanc:e with a down
payment and carry the balance on a
LAND CONTRACT Stately 2 story
p1llary posts, 3 bedroom, formal entry
and large open wmding staircase
Fam 1ly room w1th plank floonng and
w b fireplace F ormal l1v1ng room ,
spac1ous ea t m ki t chen With loads of
knotty ptne cab1nets Thts a nd much
more settmg on 3 acres Can buy onl y
one acre C1ty Schools G1ve us a cal l formor-e detailS
DAIRY FARM
135 acres more or less 1 3 m 11es Rae
coon Creek bottom , 40 acres creek bot
tom , 60 acres total tillable Used as a
Grade A da~r y operation 4 milkers w1th
automatiC washers, 800 gal bulk tanks,
2 s1los !800 Ions total ) W1th Silo
un1oad1ng auger STr-uctureseAOxBO
molal, 172x40 m1lk house With feed
room , 40x170 concrete stab teed lot All
structures have concrete floors 1,000
walnut a nd poplar trees on fa tm Clay
Twp , C1IY Schools
$14,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE•
On th1S 2 story 4 bedroom home Llvmg
room , kitchen and dtnlng area Fully
carpeted 1 cr garage •S1tuated on a
~ee p lot w 1th a garden space
RODNEY CORA RD
sa Acre, mob1le home runner for a
12xou tra11er, septic tank. rural water
ava1lable V er-y reasonable

BRICK HOME
Your family
!he beauty of the
two fireplaces and the energ't' savmgs
...pi the woodburner 3 bedrooms, lull
o asement and much more Th1s home
shows excellent quality and workman
Sht p Call US today I
LOVE A GRACIOUS SETTING•
HOME OF RARE VALUE &amp; CHARM
ThtS stat ely 2 story home has all the
featur-es 1n a home you would ever
wa nt• Four bedrooms 4 full baths
Complete butl,..l n k1tchen off from the
fam ilY room w1th w b f1replace For
malllvtng and dtning room Full f1msh
ed basement featuring a large family
room w1th w b firepla ce, game room
and ut1l1ty room Large 2 ca r- garage
w1th opener
Covered pat10 and
sundeck
Free
sw1mmlng
and
clubhouse area available
RIO GRANDE AREA
Mob1le home and half ac:re tot for only
$14,500 ()()
ACREAGE
6 Acr-es more or- less w1th a pond
Chooce buoldong site on Blacktop Road
ACREAGE
Excellent bu1ld1ng s1te 8 4 acres more
or tess Totally fenced Located 5 to 6
miles from the cttY C1ty schools Pnc
ed 514,500
LOW INTEREST RATES AVAILABLE
CONVENTIONAL FINANCING AS
LITTLE AS 5% DOWN. V .AJ • NO
DOWN PAYMENT. F.H A. LOW
DOWN PAYMENT. MORTGAGE
MONEY IS AVAILABLE!

Bonnie L Stutes, Realtor, 446-4200
Jamt!S R. Stutes, Assoc. 4' o-21185
f
•
.
L llc!c!l, Assoc. 245-9484
-l-----'0.

1 3 at res of land 8% fman cmg Call for

BMR 335 - Located 10 downtown GalliPOlis ThiS
bnck has 10 spacmus rooms Must be see n I
BMR 336- Execut1ve type home on nearly 6 acres
of land Owner Is anx1ous to sell and has reduced the
pnce CAll today tor deta11st
BMR 94 - Stately older home 1n Chesh1re Natural
gas heat Must see to apprec1a te'
BMR 348 Bnck ranch mcludes 3 BRs, kttchen
w1th dmmg area FR w1th f1rep 1ace. full basement
S1tuated on large flat landscaped lot'
BMR 139- Two story home on Second Ave Home
has alum1num siding, tncludes 3 BRs, LR, OR , FR
Call for details
BMR 149 - 30 acres w1th SOO ft frontage on Clark
Chapel Road Mineral roghts are oncludedl

BMR 157 - 3 BR frame house with full basement
and 32 a&lt;res of land Located on Eureka near the
dam
BMR n4F - 30 acres In R' 10 Grande with 2 story
house m need of repair Call tor detailS!
I

BMR 340 - 2 story home In Patriot situated on 'h
aue lot Kitchen mcludes range and d1sposal
BMR 341- L shaped brick ranch close to hospital
Includes natura~gas hea!w1th central alr
BMR 331 - 12 Un it apartments In Middleport In
ventory avaolable (3 buoldihOS4 units each )
BMR 347M - Champ,on mob1le home on rented lot.
Will sell fur-ntshedor unfurn1shed Call for detailS'
EVENINGS
TOM WHITE, ASSOC.
STEVE McGHEE, ASSOC
DONA McGHI!£, ASSOC
BE'I"H
ASSOC
BUDMcGH

UHSS1
446·0552
446-oSI2

MH501
446-0SSt\

•
•

.

'·

�.
D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1,-1980
44

I

Apartmen1

---~
fo~r~R~e~n~
t-

RENTER ' S assistance tor
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Caii'I'J2·7787 .

44 - - -

··-----Household Good$

51

AP8i-tn1ent

SLEEPI NG ROOM S
rent, Ga II ia Hotel.

for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone 992 5434 .

2 bedroom turnished apt . in

Two bedroom
newl y
remodeled house for rent .
Fully carpeted with stove,
refrigerator and \'y'asher
and dryer provided . Also
has garage. Part ially fur ·
nished . $225 .00 per month
deposi t re.q uired . Calt 992·
2362 alter 4 and befor e 7.

Real Estate

General

4~ - ~ce for Rent

1 TRAILER SPACE
Adults onlY . Concrete patio
and w alk , 900 block in town.
Furnished apartfl'\ent for Large lawn area , ·water
re nt, three rooms and batn . paid, $60. mo. Ca l l 446 4416
Newly remodeled with after 1 p .m .
garage .
Stove
arid
refr i gerator . $160.00 monCOUNTRY MOBILE Home
th . Deposit required . Call
W2·2J62 alter 4 and before Park, Route J3 , North ot
Pomer oy . Large lots . Call
7.
992· 7479 .
General
47

Wanted to Rent

WAN T TO RENT - 1 or 2
bdr . apar t ., private, furn .,
wit hin 5 mile radius of
Ga ll ipol is. Call446-2342 and
Ask for Ma r k.
WIDOW and .4 children
needs to re nt home right
away . Call379'·27 16.
49

For Lease

!'OR L-EJ'QE4800 SQL!are Feet, next
door f'ob Evans Steak
Ho•se. 800 sq. fl . office,
14, 000
wa rehoLt se
~ storage, garage or any
other commercial lise.
Call Ike Wiseman
446-3 643
The Wi ~e man ~Agency

Bob Lane, Sales Manager
Home : 446-1049

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
-REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Real Estate

General

d r yers,

refr igerators,

ranges .
pliances,

Skaggs
Ap ·
1918 Easte r n

-

LAY NE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, cha ir , rocker , ot· Ave ., 446·7398.
taman, J tabl es, S500 Sofa ,
chair and loveseat, $275 . USED FURNITURE : 36 in
Sofas and chairs priced gas stove, queen size mat·
from $275. t o $550. Tables, tress, box springs, twin size
SJJ . $60 ·$7 "
and
S85 . mattress and bo&gt;.: springs,
Sofabed and chair, $150. Corb in &amp; Snyder Furn , 955
Hide-a-beds,SJOO ., queen SE cond Ave, 446· 11 71 .
size ,
S325 . ,
&amp;
UP .
Recliners , $125 ., S150.,
$160., $175 , and S225 . Lam- PORTABLE KE NMOR E
ps from S18 . to S50 . 5 pc . sewi ng machine with c ase.
di nettes from $69 . to S325. Ca ii .W.· 7540 after 6 p .m .
Wood tabl e and 4 chairs,
$235 . Tap le, two le"'es, 6
chairs, ( high bacKed), $400. 2 ME TA L twin beds, com ·
Hutches, SJOO , and $350., ptete w i th mattress and
map le or pine fin ish. sp rin 9s $175, 2 matt ress
Bedroom suites, $195 . $350. covers, 2 bedspreads and
(oak), Bassell Oak, $550., shee ts free wit h bed s. 992·
Bassett Cherry , 5675. Bunk 5551.
bed complete with mat·
tresses, $175 ., S250 ., $275.
Capta in' s beds. $275. com ·
pi ete. Baby beds, $75 . M at t resses or box spr ings, f u ll
or twin, $55., firm , $65 . and
$75. Queen set s, $185. 5 dr .
chests, $49 . Bed fra mes,
Supports Your
$20.a nd
un der
n5.
Po stu re Zon e
USED
Rang e s,
Try the Posture 11
refrigerator s•• TV 's, head·
boards and beds. bar ~R:BIN
c:Nvlr\I:DI
stools, 1 counter top
refridgerators,
J mil es out Bu lavi lle Rd .
Open 9am to 8pm, Mon .
9SS Second Avenue
thru Fri., 9am to 5pm , Sat.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-0322
45631
PH . 61H46·1171

Sl

General

Real Estate

Antiques

s4 -~- Mis!:- ~e~c~~nise
22 PREHUNG doors, 125
shee ts of vertica l cedar
siding, windows, beds, and
some carpet. See Frank
Beach , St. Rt . 160 Porter,
OH orca II 388-9866 after 5.

s4~-

04- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, J uue 1, 1980

MiSc-. Merchanllt

STRAWBERRIES · Pick
your own beginning Wedt 9
to dark . Sorry no checks.
Closed Sunday . Happy
Hollow
Fruit
Farm .,
Gall ipol iS Ferry, W.VA.
304·576·2026 .

40 L B Bo x of Wes t Virginia
Chunks, low ash, low suI fur
Foster Coal co., 446-2783 .
BURROUGH S Bookkeeping machine, S50. Call 446·
2342 .
D
BUMGARDNE R
SALES-, · THE
POOL
_PEOPLE l1711 Noble Summit Rd. Middleport, Oh io
992-5724 Soles, service and
supplies.
In ground and
above ground pool s.

ATTENTION :
I IM PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or cer ti fied check
for anHques and ~ ollec ·
tibl es or entire est~;~tes .
Noth ing too large . A lso,
guns, pocl&lt;et watches and
coin collections . Call 614·
767-3167 or 557-3411 .
S4

BE A T
THE
BAD
WEAT HER
Gel your
firewood
now .
Oak ,
Hickory , Mapl e, Ash or
Mired . Cal l now, 367·7180 .

General

_I'

Real Estate - General

MAY 23 TO JUNE 10, 30
"'rcent off greenware sa le.
Bring conta iner. open 9
a.m . to 9 p.m . Orehel 's
Ceramics, 59 North Sec.
Ave., Middleport. Call 992·
27Sl.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING!
Good investment . Recen tly remodel ed. Approx ·
imatel y 1800 sq . 11. on main floor. Ideal for a
grocery . 2- 2 bed room apartments completely
re m odeled on second floor . An older bl,l llding In tip·
top shape . Let us take you to this one now.
1473

,..,..

,..,..
,..,.. LOAN ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE - 11 % - IN
,..,.. TOWN
Comp letely remode led home close to
Washin g ton grade school and Ga llia Academy .
,.. cleani
refr igerator and self·
Very nice
ng range with overhead micro-wave oven.
,.. Pr iced in SJO' s to sell f ast !

.

kitchen~ inc ludes

~

1976 14' x70 ' KIRKWOOD WILL CONSIDER
LAND CONTRACT - Extra nice mobile home
: . situated on lf2 acre tot. This beautiful home is com plete with underpinning, ca rpeting, security light,
~ util ity build ing, built· in appliances, and partial fur nishings. Gallipolis schools. Fantastic buy with 11
~ percent interest. $21 ,500.00 .

**
*lt~

lt ON OUTSKIRTS OF TOWN - Newly decorated J Jt.
lt - bedroom with full basement . New main1enance free ,._
: Sidi ng , new carpet and fresh paint on in1erior walls.
,.. Apx . 3 miles from town in a quiet subd i vi son. In the
lt $30'S.
~

1

.
.
**Jt.
*
**Jt-

REDuceo•- Owner is living in Florida and has ,..
:: reduced 1he price on thi s beautiful new ranch. THis
=:: gem has all the luxuries! Family room, with ,..
:_ firep lace. drea m kitchen, central air, 2 car attached
garage and much more . Ap&gt;.: . one acre level corner
lot. $49.500.00.

**
~

l
l
!

NEW LISTING - 544 THIRD AVE.- TWO STORY Jt.
WITH FULL BASEMENT - Old fashioned charm Jt
can be found in every room of this older 2 story Jt
..- home . Located w ithin 3 blocks of downtown •
Gallipolis and 2 blocks of Wash ington Grade School.
With a little loving care, this would be a beautiful Jt..
home. L isted at $35,000.00.

*
*
~
*Jt

!':*
ji:

lt MOBILE HOME LOT -

LAND CONTRACT 11% INTEREST - Thisonea cre ..
l leve l_ lot has hook ups lor two mobile homes. J'/ 2
;:: miles from town . County water . Storage bui lding on
~ Sl,OOO.OODOWN -

Jt

..

EVENINGS

n,.nn,::.rfv .

:

,..

,.. BOB LANE
.. SUE ROUSH
Jt CHERYL CUNNINGHAM

446· 1049
446-9753
367-0433

&gt;t

lt
&gt;I

****************************'
Real Estate

Real Estate- General

General

101 ACRE FARM
Idea l hog farm . Fatten ing house. new
furrowing house . New 6,000 bushel
grain dryer. Approximately 70 acres
tillable. Hook up for tWo mobile homes .
Owner will sell complete with equip ·
ment. For. more information call today .
'
N438

Century~~

Rear Esl ate corpora rion . Printed In U.S.A .

AIR CONDITIONER
18,000 BTU , G.E . Call 24591-43 or 245-5329.

Et~ch ofli ce Is indapendentlyowned•nd ~""" ·

Equ• t Mou s ing

Real Estate

VACANT LAND- LAND CONTRACT
tO% INTER EST
100 acres more or less of vacant land.
Several acres of clear productive land .
Some marketable t imber . Over If~ mile
of road frontage . County water runs
across fron t. F inancing no problem .
N469
LIKE THE COUNTRY?
P!e"nty of r oom for vegetab le or forma l
garden . 3 bedrooms, living room, ki t
chen and dining com bi nat io n, ap·
pliances included . Bath, hardwood
f loo rs. 24x33 unffnisheOwner wil l con·
Sider land contract . Pri ced in the S40's.
NJ91

FINANCI-NG POSSIBILITIES '
Has this immaculate 3 bedroom home
Li-ving room , kitchen, d in ing ar ea haS
p~ti o doors. Bath , single car garage.
N1ce ca rpet. Large level lot . Ci t y school
d istrict .. ~ooking for a neat Well kept
home g1ve us a ca ll . Owner willing to
help wi t h f inanc ing.
N4SO

PRICE REDUCED'!!
On thi s su per 2 bedroom ra nch . Large
· living room, kitchen and dining com·
bination , bath, utility rOO(Tl . New
dishwasher, plus ki tchen range and
refrigerator . Nice size lot. 41f2 m iles
from Holze r Medical Center . Reduced
to $35,500. Home is A· l condition . Make
ideal starter or retirment home .
#411
FARM- CL05E IN '
Three miles down river from city
lim its. 3 bedroom home . The kitchen
and liv ing rooms are the show places of
the house. You wil l be impressed at the
remodeling and how mother has kept it
so clean and char m ing . 54 acr es. some
t imber, pasture and tillable land . Good
barn. tobac co base. This is what we are
asked for . Please cal l. We wi ll exp lain .
A good buy . Don' I wa it .
N446

88 ACRE FARM
If you' r e looking for a hom e for yourself
A ND y our animals ... then look no fur·
ther ! 33 good, level, ti ll abl e acres.
Som e woods, som e pasture, nice size
barn . Located 15 m in. fro m Ga lli polis
on a blacktop roa d . this gentleman's
far m has t hat " down home feelin g".
Home consists of J BR , living rm .• din ·
ing rm ., kitchen , bath and good size
ut il ity r oom . Call for more specifics .
N419

GREATSTARTERHOME
Ideal for a young couple st ar t ing out is
thi s two bedroom mobile home . 2111 acre
Jot . 10'x 12' stora ge building . Good toea ·
t lon . Sl7 ,000.
N427
THREE WISHES
If peace. comfort and loc ation are important, th is older 3 bedroom home wi ll
fill your needs . Li'ling room, dining and
kitch en combination, bath , enclosed
porch, util ity room . Natura l gas heat .
Fireplace . Situated on one acre.
Loca t ed at th e edge of town . $33,000 .
~474

MINI FARM - 13.90 ACRES
home . 3 .
bedrooms , large kitchen, liv ing room ,
bath, fam ily room added at present
tim e. Tobacco base, 20x60 tobacco
barn . Looking for small acreage, give
us a ca 11 . Priced in t he $40s.
#457

3 year old frame ranch

PRICE REDUCTION
Located in the Ever green area . 1968
F leetwood 12'x60' , features large living
room, 12' x2 0' modern throughout, fue l
oil heal. cen tr a l a ir, low taxes. 4 miles
of hospital, 7 mi les from Gallipolis, nice
size lot . Pr iced t o move.
#467

General

Real Estate

General

SO GOOD LOOKING
Inside and out . 3 bed room s, l lf'1 bath
bri ck ranch with famiy room and 2 car
atta ched garage . 2 fireplaces, fi ni shed
basement, hardwood floors, nat ura l gas
heat wi th low heati ng bil s. LArge lot ,
12x16 bldg . Nice, quiet neighborhood .
Gr eat loca ti on. Owner w ill sel l on land
contract. F ina ncing no problem .
#392
SOUTHERN HILLS SPECIAL
Drive out Li ncoln Pike and view th is
wondertul se tting . Two bedroom
modern 197 1 Fl ee two od 12' x65 '.
Everything is impressive, dri l led we ll ,
w ell kept lawn, flowers, w hi te poll!
f ences. red barn wired tor electricity ,
with loft, driveway . we ll li m ed leads
back to orig ina l barn and garden . This
setti ng is in the valley between th ose
green Southern Hill s. 41 ac r es tor cam ·
'p ing, nature trails , wood grouse, squir·
refs, deer and r abbits would be some of
the wild game available fo r spor t .
Located only a short distance from
STa te Route 790, a blacktop road . Let us
se ll this to you .
N471

HEY t.OOK ME OVER
I' m a charming tastefully decoratecl
stu cco and frame home. Entry hall, 11\Zl
ing room , formal dining room , fami!r
room. 3 bedrooms, PI" baths, large wilt
approved built-in k i tchen. 2 fireplace.,
full basement . All this plus 2 a c r ~.•
Priced in the upper $50's . Call today tor .
an appointment to take a better look ....

STEAM JENNY, less than
one year old, $695 . Call 446·
2240.

Real. Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate -

General

Reat I! state

Large wooden office desk
and swivel office cha ir .
Real good cond . 992·5348 .

Real Estate

General

13~

2.2SACRES·
,
Go with this 3 bedroom home. Formal
din ing room , livi ng room , kitchen , battf.
Basement . Nice g~rage wi t h furnace
and air c ondit ioning . Also J phase el ~
tri c avai lable_Countv water . $29,900 . .....
#406
,.
CLOSE BY
Is this 3 bedroom, 1971 mobile hollit
with ex tra addition added on . Kitchen It
complete with dishwasher, range a~
refr igerator . Jl/"' baths. Air conditione
ing . 8x10 metal bulding . 1 acre lot. Thil
one you must see inside to appreciati.
With in shor t d istance of town. $15,500.
1405
PICK MEt PICK MEl
You can assume m y loan . My price ll
r ight . SSO' s. I have 3 or 4 bedroom:s,
15x26 l iving room , entry ha ll, built-in
kitchen , utility room, bath, fuel oil hea!l,
fireplace. central air' conditioning. ~
acr es of la nd with pond . I am well buitt
and wel l insulated. You must see me fo
appreciate me . Ask to see me todav .

WJ

ON 4'1&gt; ACRES
A fi ne ranch in thec()Untryl seven miles
from Ga llipolis. Six room moder-b
house, J BR, bath, full basement, fuel
oi l forced air furnace . Blown in insuli~ ·
tion. Cou nty water plus large cistern for
ex tra uses. Spr ing w i ll soon be her ~.
Whal a place tor your fam il y and
friends . Well stocked pond, good fences .
Beautiful acres. Call today . This shQIII#449
ing w ill be conv incing.

General

Real Estate

-·l.[!
m_
REALTOR®
1 .

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Aiiilfey "Canaday, Realtor 446-363G
25 Locust Sl, Gallipolis, Ohio
•

•.

ON THE WATER- Deck suitable for
dining overlooking Ohio River , perfect
spot for boat doc k, J BR , family room ,
eff icient kitchen. basement, near ly an
acre, just outside city . $38,000.

HUM A N E
50CIETY
Adopt r~ h om e ~ess pe l
Heal Th y , shots, wormed.
Donations requ~r ed
992
6760, noon 7 p. m , except
Tu esday , emergency ca lls
only .

We cover over
7 million miles
to find you a home,

'Gallia County's Fastest Growing

eal Estate Agency

Pets for

Sal~

HI LLC REST
KENNEL&gt; .
Board ing , all breeds . Clean
indoor outdoor fa c iti ti es
A l so
AKC
regi s tered
Dober mans. 6 14 446 7795 .

S'

S6

Pets for Sale

RISI NG STAR Ken nel.
Boarding . Ca ll367 0292 .

Real Estate
General
---------

POO DL E GROOMING .
Judy Taylor . 614-367 7220.

Real Estate - General

.1.

·1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
lit e W l ~ c mt~fl , Broker. 446o· l7116, E\lt! .
E . N. Wo ie man, Broke r . H 6·4500 Evt! .
Jim Co&lt; h r&lt;~n, Auoctate, 444 7881 , Eve .

Oiil'l Evt~ns, Assoc ., 381·1111 Eve
8 J . Hairuan, Auoc ., 446·42U. Eto~ e .
Nanc'f Sm illlt, Anot . ~ ••· 4 ' 10 • EYe .

PHONE 446·3643

I

rn

RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE
Vacation sett ing few m iles from ci ty . 3
BR , rear sundeck over looks Ra ccoon
Creek . Al l modern conveniences.
$37,500.

TRULY FAIR - Custom built, one
owner brick, 3 BR , l 'l• baths, fully equipped kitchen . Recreation rm . with
f ireplace, super sized patio, attached
gara ge. Cen , air . You ' ll love the decor
Assume 9% ll)Ortgage. $79,000.

NINE ACRES - N ice 4 BR home, faml ·
ly room, country kitchen, 2 porches.
Garage . Several outbtdgs. Nea r Rio
Grande. $44,900.

90 ACRES - Nearly 2,00011. rood Iron·
tage, 55 acres pasture, 20 acres timber
rest tillable . $74,500.
Rt\IER VIEW --" Very nice 2 BR , new
c arpet, recently redecorated, 2 car
garage with garage apt. In city. $65,(100.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs . CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats . Call 446·384A
after 7 p.m.
H ILLCREST KEN NE L - .
Boarding all bteeds. cle8n
indoor·outdoor facili ties .
Also AKC Reg . Dobermans. Call446-7795.
BR IAR PATCH
KEN NELS . Board ing
and
groom ing . AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniel s. Call446-4191 .
1 YEAR old Walker, 1
black and tan, 1 5 yr . old
Blue T ick crossed with a
Walker. Call256-1614.

• I : • "''

HOOF HOLLOW : Hor ses
and ponies and riding
lesson s.
Everything
imaginable in horse equip ment . ' Blanke ts, belts,
boots, etc. English and
Western . Rut h Reeves
(61 4) 698 -- 3290.

Musical
Instruments
P icking up a piano in your
area . Looking for a responsible party to take over
pa yments . Ca l l credit
manager collect. 614 .. 592 ·
5122.

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

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

-'I.

oo• • 0 ' 0

• t

• ooo-

Farm Equipment
ECHO CHAIN
SAWS,
hydraulic wood splitters,
saw chain, bars, and all
wood cutting supplies .
Charles Mc1(ean, Fairfield
Centenary Road, 446-9442 .
FANTASTIC BUY! REDUCED FROM
$]5,900 TO Sl8.900
OWNER SAYS, " SELL NOW."
Modern 8 room ranch in the country .
Large liv. room 16'x 18', fa
17' x 12' wit t) wood burningA~~·~g~,~c;~;
Rural water ~ centra l air .
acre of clean land·. Large
patio. Carport . See this home now !

REDUCED!! I FOR QUICK SALE
RIVER FRONTAGE
' Beautiful 7 rooms uniquely designed 2
story home w ith 4 BR, 2 baths, 20x191iv·
ing room with fireplace . Full basement
garage, storm doors and w indows.
Patio doors open up to the back pa tio
and a beauti fu l view of the Ohio River. 2
acres M . or L. You ' ll love the home and
view . CALL NOW FOR $59,900.
1374
ISO FT . RIVER
FRONTAGE
6 rooms,
2 or
3
bedrooms, living room ,
approx . 20')( 16', mobil e
home with partial basement , 2-car garage, 2
other storage buildings.
Beautiful v iew of the
Ohio River. I acre M. or
L. on State Highway .
Just buy and move in,
it' s fu lly equ ipped . #417

l A
BROOM HOU S E
-1

,,,,

I

j •d ' •'
[)

"

':'

It,•

'"

,,·n,

1.

"•I

~,j 'I

.

'

I I, I I

•I', I I I 'l l

111•1 1
"

,,.

'·

"'

• ] I,

'

il '

. 1)
,:
'

'"

C'

'

$7500.00
9 acres, vacant land .
Morgan Twp . off White
Oak Rd. Level to slightly roll ing . At one time
nad· a trailer hookup . 2
w ells . Som e fe nces .
Some outbu i ld ings. Nl70

co.

NEro 10

14 A . Farm -

East
Meigs Co. Rd. 31 just
minutes from
new
Portland bridge. Has
newer home, lg. barn.
garage, two ponds .
Acreage can be tilled on
tray field , also fenced.
U1,500 - 2 BR house
sits on 1.50 acre near
Forked Run Park .
Building
Lots
Located on Rl . 7 near
Eastern High School .
$24,900 - House has 6
r.ms, sits on 2 acres. 1112
car garage . Near Tuppers Plains.
Athens -Co, - 12 acres
all fenced . Small house
needs repair. Just a few
minutes
from
The
Plains. $14,000,
SAL-ES ASSOCIATE
Virginia Hayman
Ph. 985· 4197

8 N FORD tractor wi t h
equipment 446-4635 . ,
6l

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
di ameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton . Bund led
stab . $10 per ton . Del ivered
to Ohio Pallet Co.• Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

NICE HOME
PRICED RIGfH
J bed room s. 2 baths wi th
showers, fam il y room,
dining a r ea . Total 8
rooms, modern kitchen
with electric range,
refr ig.,
d is hw as her,
garbage disposal and lot
of cabinets . F .A .F .• also
woodburner ,
Ga l l ia
rura l wa ter serv ice.
s tor age
bu i lding ,
ca re free alum . sid ing ,
nice landsca ped lot . Approx . 1 acre . House ap·
prox . 4 year s old . See
thi s.one now.
#384

ANTIQUE S,
FUR N IT URE, glass , ch ina,
anything . See or call Ru th
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992 ·
3161 .

I

f&lt;_,IINIMI NG POOL i
off 35 . 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, fam . &amp; rec.
room . Gas hea t . Ba seme nt. S70's.

in Centenary . Fam .
fi r ep l ac~, priva tevard w / pool.

MOV~?

I

OLD COl NS , pocket wal
ches, class r ings, wedd ing
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver . Call J . A . Wams ley,
742 -2331. Treasure Ches r
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592
6462 .
GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
R I NG S,
JEWELR Y ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . I TEMS. PAYIN G
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP-T O-DATE
PRICES. CO NTA CT ED
BU RKETT
BARBE R
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL 9'12-3476.
63

livestock

MILK GOATS .
8572.

Cal l 388·

RABBITS for sa le. A ll
sizes, from fryer size to pet
size. Call/42-2455.

.

BARGAIN PRICED - 5 spac ious 5
bedroom, 2 baths, fam . rm ., cent . air, 2
car gar age. lmmadualte. Nea r Rodney .
LowS60' s.

01/oiNE'R MAY
ng
kept, riverfront home . 4 bedrooms,
2 ba ths , f ir eplace, basement. 1f2 ac .
$48,000 in Cheshire.

H x N Da y old or started
leghorn pullets, both fl oor
or cage grown avai lab le.
PoUltry
Housing and
Automati o n .
M o dern
Poul t ry, 399 W. Ma in,
Pomeroy . Call992·2164.

......
.... ..... .............
. ....... . .....
~

71
OWNER
FINANCING
LISTED Modern 5 bedroom ,
bath, firep lace. full basement, gas,
cent . ai r . Corner lot in Rio Grande.
$56 ,000.

Autos for Sale

1979 MUSTANG - p.b., p.s.,
auto. trans ., sun roof, exc.
cond ., $5,750. Ca ll 446·1104 .
1970 FORD TORINO - $250.
Call 388 ·8238.

72

PLYMOU TH wagon,
small engine, low milage,
388-8230.

General

HILLTOP FARM- Only 5 miles from
city. Nice 4 BR home, family rm
equ ipped kitchen, 48 acres. GOOd prO:
duc ing gas well furnishes free gas tor
r esidenCe plus income. $85,000.

---

. -· PefsToi-Sate'-

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220 .

.------ ------·
------·
WISEMAN
__B:ea l Estate- General

I

ealtor Assoc
Ph, Home: 446-3294

BELPRE, OHIO

~cond

Street

NEW LISTING - 6 yr .
old 3 bedroom carpeted
home. 2 f ull baths,
equipped
kitchen,
dishwa sher, disposal.
dining, family room,
utility shop, carport,
porch and 2 level lots
with fruit trees. 535,000.
NEW LISTING - Large
5 bedroom family home
with bath, furnace, 2
rentals, 3 ca r garage,
4,0d large corner lot at
Letart. Drilled well and
garden space. Low 60's .
FAMILY HOME - N ice
large ~ bedroom home
next to playground , 1'12
baths, modern kitchen ,
carpeting, full basement and porches. Low

ollls.

ROLLING LAND
Woods beyond ,
qui et countr y ro ad, wonderful place for
chi ldren and horses, J BR colon ia l of f ~rs all t he space you ' l l need . 14 acres
onl y S1h miles from city . $40,000.

ALL TYPES of building
materials, block , brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin
tel s, etc. Claude WinTers,
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245
5121 after Spm .

Spread
your
wings

PUG PEPPER
&amp;

PO R TABLE
BLDG All sizes, 6xl0 10
12x40 . See at 123112 Ptne Sl..
446 2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling A ll ey on Rt . 7, 446
1279.

Real Estate - General

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325

SITTIN ' PRETTY - Drive UP Fourth
Ave., near th e golf course, watch for
our sign on the f r ont lawn ot thi s beau ty , 3 BR . 2 baths, country style kitchen
with cozy dinette, large corner lot,
bea utiful trees and sh rubs, $42,900.

I cu tting outfit . Call 992·

6229 .

.9!1.a.

11• t: .

ENTERTAIN HERE ! From the slate
floor entry to. the second f loor balcony
you II love thrs home. 4 BR , 21f2 ·baths
mast er suite h!is its own bath and sit :
ti.ng ~r~a . Folding doors let you com·
brne lrvmg rm . and fami ly r 111.. for large
parties. Formal dining rm ., 2 car
garage, 2 rm . basement. Colonial styled
exterior . Circular drive, approx . 3
acres, pond, lots of trees. Rio Grande
area . $94,000.

I CEDAR gun cabi net, one
40 channel base station ca.

KACH ALL

56

-

WHEN YOU HAVE THAT SPECIAL HOME IN MIND, WE CAN HELP YOU FIND IT.
Real Estate- General

MODEL 102 Cuo Cadet 10
H . P . Iawn tract or . Cal1992
5992 .

cen rury 1 1 Rea l Estl'lte co rporo~~Uon • Reglster!Kt Trademark

Decorated cakes tor all oc ·
casions. Character cakes
and sheet cakes. Call W2·
6342 or 992· 2583 .
PRICE REDUCTION
Owner says th is home must be sold . 4
bedrooms, li ving room, family room ,
kitchen, bath, utility room , full ba se·
m en t . Natural gas heat. 3 acres.
Loca ted at the edge of town. Owner will
consider l and contra ct with small down
.¥366
payment .

992 - ~751.

Pets t or Sale

S6

COAL ,
LIME STO N E,
sand , gravel. calcium
chloride, fertiU :!.er , dog
tood , and at I types ut saiL
Excelsior Sa lt Works. Inc .,
E . Ma in St ., Pomeroy , 992
3891 .

BALED hay for sale, In the
field, 69 Chevy tor sale, 3888836 any time .

New styles of Resistol
Straw and Felt hats and
Tony Lama and Acme
boots. Mountain Lea the r
and General Store . 104· 105
West Union, Athens, Oh .
592·5478, 10-5:30 Mon .-Sal.

APLACEINTHECOUNTRY
Can be yours. We .have 115 acre farm
with 2 story, 3 bedroom home just
waiting for you . Approx. 10 acres of bot·
tom land, tobacc o base, barn and other
outbuildings. Pri ced in t he $40's. Hurr y
on th i s one!
N443

MAY 23 to June 10, 30% off
greenware sa le. Br ing a
container . 9 a . m . to9 p . rn
Drehel's Ceramics. 59 N .
Second Ave ., Middl eport,

Misc . Merchanise

250 CASE KNIVES, some
limited edition, Tawney
Jewelers.

VEGETABLE PLANTS
Cabbage ,
broccoli ,
cauliflower,
le ttu ce ,
celery, beets, green pep ·
pers, chili pepper&gt;, pimen·
Hungarian wax ,
toes,
sweet banana , egg plant.
Large selection of bedd ing
annuals, hanging baskets,
pots Of flowers and vfnes.
Cleland
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine Cleland, Ra c ine,
Oh .

NEW LISTING - BEACH COTTAGE ON LAKE
JACKSON - Furn ished cottage with ap&gt; . 900ft. of
living space . Plenty of beautiful frontage on Lake
Jackson w ith 2 docks. Nice sunbathing area . Finest
fishing . $20,000.

IN STOCK t or immediate
del ivery : var 1ous sizes ot
poo l· kits. Do· it yourself or
let us install t or you . D.
Bumgardner Sa les, I nc.
992 5724.

54

Two S and w 357 Magnum
pistols. Two Rem . 1·30-06,
1-l-43 Rille with scopes, 1·
TB870 Rem . trap, 1·Ant.
dooble barrel, 12 ga . 1-45
cal . Hand R muzzle. Day s,
446-2240, evenings, 367-0482 .

Misc. Merchandise

1973 CHEVY 60 series
truck, new tires, new
motor. new paint job, exc.
cond .• 14ft. runabout boat,
with 5 H.P . gas engine. 10
speed trolling motor . Ten·
nessee Walk er Mare, due to
ha've colt in July . Call 367·
7533.

Misc. MerChlndise

S4

ATTE NTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay ca sh or certif ied check
for antiques and collec·
tibl es or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collec t ions . Call 614·
767·3167 or 557-3411 .

and
FURNITURE

Real Estate

Household GoodS"~

Gas Ta~p~n- rarlge-G~
cond . $20. 9'J2-5118 .

GO OD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
wash e r s ,
5l- -H
- 0Uieti01d Goods

Mi dd lepor t. 1·304-882-2566

Real Estate

Sl

for

.

'

BRICK VENEER - 3
bedroom ranch w i th
equipped
kitchen ,
carpeting,
ca rp or t ,
family room , full basement, and large lot .
s-17,500.
50LjD IRICK - A nice
remodeled nome · wun
new bath, 4 bedrooms,
new -kitchen, 2 porches,
on a tmlll upkeep lot.
Want 131.500,
ARI! YOU MI.SINO
THI! lOA T? SOMI!
PROPERTY IS IN ·
CREASING I I; VALU E
EACH DAV , CALL
Jill or ttl-Jt,.,

3or4 ROOMS
Fishing, vacation, 1 or 2
bedroom cabin . Located
fac ing Raccoon Creek
and ' Blue Lake. Nice
large wooded lot. Make
your life a year round
vacation . CALL US
NOW.
1366

LIFE IS TOO
SHORT
Stop dreaming about
own i ng
your
own
business . Brick building
in Vinton equipped for
carry -out . Perfect f or
Plua Parlor, Be&amp;uty
Parlor or Barber Salon .
Calllordeta il s.
ll43

OWNER
TRANSFERRED
4
bedroom , 2'h bath, fam . rm ., gas, cent .
air , 2 car garage, Good neighborhood
off u .S. 36. $60's.
7ROOMS
l ACRES
Only $19,900! J nice
rooms built on to a
mobile home. Large ea t·
in kitchen 12' x3J ', lots of
buill-in ca binets, 12'x20'
living
r oo m ,
front
porch . Nic e rolling land·
scaped 2 acr es. Lots of
room .
#41 2

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

OHIO RIVER Lovel y 4 bedroom, 5 f ireplaces, 2112
baths, lovely floor s &amp; woodwork, gas
heat . 2 ca r garaoe. S70's.

1975 MONTE CARLO , ps,
pb , am -fm 8 tra c~ stereo
with new speakers, new
wire basket wheels, new
Daytona radial tires, com plete new exterior paint,
light blue w i th medium
blue interior, excellent condi tion $2,995. Pn 446-3062 or
446· 1422 alter 4 p. m .
1979 FORD FIESTA - 19,000
17111es. Exc. gas mileage,
$3;950. Call 446-2300 .

S16,500 - Remodeled ma int. free

OWNER TO HELP
Near·
ly new 3 bedroom, 2 acres,
ba5e·
ment, woodburner , large kitcnen . Near
Rio Grande . $45,000 .

2 bed room , gas heat . Garage. in town.
Owner may help finance!

1937 FORD - good condition, $1500. Call 742·2844 .
1971 MERCURY MON ·
TEREY - 4 dr., 1 owner, all
power, air, very good old
car. Body, motor, tires in
A·1 cond. 5450. Caii.W.-16-41
or 446-7076.
1979 FORD FAIRMONT
FUTURA - solid black with
sun roof. p.s., p,,b ., air. AM FM, tinted windows, 4-c yl .,
25 mPO, exc. cond., call 446·
IIJ07 between 7 a.m . to 2:30
p,m .

TGAGE
Payment of S189 .60 mo.
1 acre and 5 room home
just .out of city li m its on
Rt . 141. N ice com fortable easy to heal
home w ith woodburnlng
f i replace , basem ent,
modern k i tchen, nat .
g as fu rnace, city water,
large carport, 16'x18'
bloc ~
storage bldg. ,
oarpen space. Call now .
I
4
1
I

GREAT GAS MILEAGE ·
1974 Mustang II Ghlo. 6
cyL, loaded with extras.
$1850. Caii446-05U.
1957 BEETLE · garaged, A ·
1 cond ., 36 mpg, $1 ,300 . Cal l
379-2469,
9' '&gt;% LOAN ASSUMPTION 4·5
bedrot!"S, 3 baths, t,lm, rm ,, fireplace,
g~s. ,.eat,
bastment, garag@ &amp;
workshOP. In Rio Grandi. $50'1,

1967 tNTERNATION~L
SCOUT • 1971 Elecfra
Buick. Call 4-46· 75«1 alter 6
p.m.

�.
D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 1,-1980
44

I

Apartmen1

---~
fo~r~R~e~n~
t-

RENTER ' S assistance tor
Senior Citizens in Village
Manor apts. Caii'I'J2·7787 .

44 - - -

··-----Household Good$

51

AP8i-tn1ent

SLEEPI NG ROOM S
rent, Ga II ia Hotel.

for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Is. Phone 992 5434 .

2 bedroom turnished apt . in

Two bedroom
newl y
remodeled house for rent .
Fully carpeted with stove,
refrigerator and \'y'asher
and dryer provided . Also
has garage. Part ially fur ·
nished . $225 .00 per month
deposi t re.q uired . Calt 992·
2362 alter 4 and befor e 7.

Real Estate

General

4~ - ~ce for Rent

1 TRAILER SPACE
Adults onlY . Concrete patio
and w alk , 900 block in town.
Furnished apartfl'\ent for Large lawn area , ·water
re nt, three rooms and batn . paid, $60. mo. Ca l l 446 4416
Newly remodeled with after 1 p .m .
garage .
Stove
arid
refr i gerator . $160.00 monCOUNTRY MOBILE Home
th . Deposit required . Call
W2·2J62 alter 4 and before Park, Route J3 , North ot
Pomer oy . Large lots . Call
7.
992· 7479 .
General
47

Wanted to Rent

WAN T TO RENT - 1 or 2
bdr . apar t ., private, furn .,
wit hin 5 mile radius of
Ga ll ipol is. Call446-2342 and
Ask for Ma r k.
WIDOW and .4 children
needs to re nt home right
away . Call379'·27 16.
49

For Lease

!'OR L-EJ'QE4800 SQL!are Feet, next
door f'ob Evans Steak
Ho•se. 800 sq. fl . office,
14, 000
wa rehoLt se
~ storage, garage or any
other commercial lise.
Call Ike Wiseman
446-3 643
The Wi ~e man ~Agency

Bob Lane, Sales Manager
Home : 446-1049

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
-REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Real Estate

General

d r yers,

refr igerators,

ranges .
pliances,

Skaggs
Ap ·
1918 Easte r n

-

LAY NE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, cha ir , rocker , ot· Ave ., 446·7398.
taman, J tabl es, S500 Sofa ,
chair and loveseat, $275 . USED FURNITURE : 36 in
Sofas and chairs priced gas stove, queen size mat·
from $275. t o $550. Tables, tress, box springs, twin size
SJJ . $60 ·$7 "
and
S85 . mattress and bo&gt;.: springs,
Sofabed and chair, $150. Corb in &amp; Snyder Furn , 955
Hide-a-beds,SJOO ., queen SE cond Ave, 446· 11 71 .
size ,
S325 . ,
&amp;
UP .
Recliners , $125 ., S150.,
$160., $175 , and S225 . Lam- PORTABLE KE NMOR E
ps from S18 . to S50 . 5 pc . sewi ng machine with c ase.
di nettes from $69 . to S325. Ca ii .W.· 7540 after 6 p .m .
Wood tabl e and 4 chairs,
$235 . Tap le, two le"'es, 6
chairs, ( high bacKed), $400. 2 ME TA L twin beds, com ·
Hutches, SJOO , and $350., ptete w i th mattress and
map le or pine fin ish. sp rin 9s $175, 2 matt ress
Bedroom suites, $195 . $350. covers, 2 bedspreads and
(oak), Bassell Oak, $550., shee ts free wit h bed s. 992·
Bassett Cherry , 5675. Bunk 5551.
bed complete with mat·
tresses, $175 ., S250 ., $275.
Capta in' s beds. $275. com ·
pi ete. Baby beds, $75 . M at t resses or box spr ings, f u ll
or twin, $55., firm , $65 . and
$75. Queen set s, $185. 5 dr .
chests, $49 . Bed fra mes,
Supports Your
$20.a nd
un der
n5.
Po stu re Zon e
USED
Rang e s,
Try the Posture 11
refrigerator s•• TV 's, head·
boards and beds. bar ~R:BIN
c:Nvlr\I:DI
stools, 1 counter top
refridgerators,
J mil es out Bu lavi lle Rd .
Open 9am to 8pm, Mon .
9SS Second Avenue
thru Fri., 9am to 5pm , Sat.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-0322
45631
PH . 61H46·1171

Sl

General

Real Estate

Antiques

s4 -~- Mis!:- ~e~c~~nise
22 PREHUNG doors, 125
shee ts of vertica l cedar
siding, windows, beds, and
some carpet. See Frank
Beach , St. Rt . 160 Porter,
OH orca II 388-9866 after 5.

s4~-

04- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, J uue 1, 1980

MiSc-. Merchanllt

STRAWBERRIES · Pick
your own beginning Wedt 9
to dark . Sorry no checks.
Closed Sunday . Happy
Hollow
Fruit
Farm .,
Gall ipol iS Ferry, W.VA.
304·576·2026 .

40 L B Bo x of Wes t Virginia
Chunks, low ash, low suI fur
Foster Coal co., 446-2783 .
BURROUGH S Bookkeeping machine, S50. Call 446·
2342 .
D
BUMGARDNE R
SALES-, · THE
POOL
_PEOPLE l1711 Noble Summit Rd. Middleport, Oh io
992-5724 Soles, service and
supplies.
In ground and
above ground pool s.

ATTENTION :
I IM PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or cer ti fied check
for anHques and ~ ollec ·
tibl es or entire est~;~tes .
Noth ing too large . A lso,
guns, pocl&lt;et watches and
coin collections . Call 614·
767-3167 or 557-3411 .
S4

BE A T
THE
BAD
WEAT HER
Gel your
firewood
now .
Oak ,
Hickory , Mapl e, Ash or
Mired . Cal l now, 367·7180 .

General

_I'

Real Estate - General

MAY 23 TO JUNE 10, 30
"'rcent off greenware sa le.
Bring conta iner. open 9
a.m . to 9 p.m . Orehel 's
Ceramics, 59 North Sec.
Ave., Middleport. Call 992·
27Sl.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING!
Good investment . Recen tly remodel ed. Approx ·
imatel y 1800 sq . 11. on main floor. Ideal for a
grocery . 2- 2 bed room apartments completely
re m odeled on second floor . An older bl,l llding In tip·
top shape . Let us take you to this one now.
1473

,..,..

,..,..
,..,.. LOAN ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE - 11 % - IN
,..,.. TOWN
Comp letely remode led home close to
Washin g ton grade school and Ga llia Academy .
,.. cleani
refr igerator and self·
Very nice
ng range with overhead micro-wave oven.
,.. Pr iced in SJO' s to sell f ast !

.

kitchen~ inc ludes

~

1976 14' x70 ' KIRKWOOD WILL CONSIDER
LAND CONTRACT - Extra nice mobile home
: . situated on lf2 acre tot. This beautiful home is com plete with underpinning, ca rpeting, security light,
~ util ity build ing, built· in appliances, and partial fur nishings. Gallipolis schools. Fantastic buy with 11
~ percent interest. $21 ,500.00 .

**
*lt~

lt ON OUTSKIRTS OF TOWN - Newly decorated J Jt.
lt - bedroom with full basement . New main1enance free ,._
: Sidi ng , new carpet and fresh paint on in1erior walls.
,.. Apx . 3 miles from town in a quiet subd i vi son. In the
lt $30'S.
~

1

.
.
**Jt.
*
**Jt-

REDuceo•- Owner is living in Florida and has ,..
:: reduced 1he price on thi s beautiful new ranch. THis
=:: gem has all the luxuries! Family room, with ,..
:_ firep lace. drea m kitchen, central air, 2 car attached
garage and much more . Ap&gt;.: . one acre level corner
lot. $49.500.00.

**
~

l
l
!

NEW LISTING - 544 THIRD AVE.- TWO STORY Jt.
WITH FULL BASEMENT - Old fashioned charm Jt
can be found in every room of this older 2 story Jt
..- home . Located w ithin 3 blocks of downtown •
Gallipolis and 2 blocks of Wash ington Grade School.
With a little loving care, this would be a beautiful Jt..
home. L isted at $35,000.00.

*
*
~
*Jt

!':*
ji:

lt MOBILE HOME LOT -

LAND CONTRACT 11% INTEREST - Thisonea cre ..
l leve l_ lot has hook ups lor two mobile homes. J'/ 2
;:: miles from town . County water . Storage bui lding on
~ Sl,OOO.OODOWN -

Jt

..

EVENINGS

n,.nn,::.rfv .

:

,..

,.. BOB LANE
.. SUE ROUSH
Jt CHERYL CUNNINGHAM

446· 1049
446-9753
367-0433

&gt;t

lt
&gt;I

****************************'
Real Estate

Real Estate- General

General

101 ACRE FARM
Idea l hog farm . Fatten ing house. new
furrowing house . New 6,000 bushel
grain dryer. Approximately 70 acres
tillable. Hook up for tWo mobile homes .
Owner will sell complete with equip ·
ment. For. more information call today .
'
N438

Century~~

Rear Esl ate corpora rion . Printed In U.S.A .

AIR CONDITIONER
18,000 BTU , G.E . Call 24591-43 or 245-5329.

Et~ch ofli ce Is indapendentlyowned•nd ~""" ·

Equ• t Mou s ing

Real Estate

VACANT LAND- LAND CONTRACT
tO% INTER EST
100 acres more or less of vacant land.
Several acres of clear productive land .
Some marketable t imber . Over If~ mile
of road frontage . County water runs
across fron t. F inancing no problem .
N469
LIKE THE COUNTRY?
P!e"nty of r oom for vegetab le or forma l
garden . 3 bedrooms, living room, ki t
chen and dining com bi nat io n, ap·
pliances included . Bath, hardwood
f loo rs. 24x33 unffnisheOwner wil l con·
Sider land contract . Pri ced in the S40's.
NJ91

FINANCI-NG POSSIBILITIES '
Has this immaculate 3 bedroom home
Li-ving room , kitchen, d in ing ar ea haS
p~ti o doors. Bath , single car garage.
N1ce ca rpet. Large level lot . Ci t y school
d istrict .. ~ooking for a neat Well kept
home g1ve us a ca ll . Owner willing to
help wi t h f inanc ing.
N4SO

PRICE REDUCED'!!
On thi s su per 2 bedroom ra nch . Large
· living room, kitchen and dining com·
bination , bath, utility rOO(Tl . New
dishwasher, plus ki tchen range and
refrigerator . Nice size lot. 41f2 m iles
from Holze r Medical Center . Reduced
to $35,500. Home is A· l condition . Make
ideal starter or retirment home .
#411
FARM- CL05E IN '
Three miles down river from city
lim its. 3 bedroom home . The kitchen
and liv ing rooms are the show places of
the house. You wil l be impressed at the
remodeling and how mother has kept it
so clean and char m ing . 54 acr es. some
t imber, pasture and tillable land . Good
barn. tobac co base. This is what we are
asked for . Please cal l. We wi ll exp lain .
A good buy . Don' I wa it .
N446

88 ACRE FARM
If you' r e looking for a hom e for yourself
A ND y our animals ... then look no fur·
ther ! 33 good, level, ti ll abl e acres.
Som e woods, som e pasture, nice size
barn . Located 15 m in. fro m Ga lli polis
on a blacktop roa d . this gentleman's
far m has t hat " down home feelin g".
Home consists of J BR , living rm .• din ·
ing rm ., kitchen , bath and good size
ut il ity r oom . Call for more specifics .
N419

GREATSTARTERHOME
Ideal for a young couple st ar t ing out is
thi s two bedroom mobile home . 2111 acre
Jot . 10'x 12' stora ge building . Good toea ·
t lon . Sl7 ,000.
N427
THREE WISHES
If peace. comfort and loc ation are important, th is older 3 bedroom home wi ll
fill your needs . Li'ling room, dining and
kitch en combination, bath , enclosed
porch, util ity room . Natura l gas heat .
Fireplace . Situated on one acre.
Loca t ed at th e edge of town . $33,000 .
~474

MINI FARM - 13.90 ACRES
home . 3 .
bedrooms , large kitchen, liv ing room ,
bath, fam ily room added at present
tim e. Tobacco base, 20x60 tobacco
barn . Looking for small acreage, give
us a ca 11 . Priced in t he $40s.
#457

3 year old frame ranch

PRICE REDUCTION
Located in the Ever green area . 1968
F leetwood 12'x60' , features large living
room, 12' x2 0' modern throughout, fue l
oil heal. cen tr a l a ir, low taxes. 4 miles
of hospital, 7 mi les from Gallipolis, nice
size lot . Pr iced t o move.
#467

General

Real Estate

General

SO GOOD LOOKING
Inside and out . 3 bed room s, l lf'1 bath
bri ck ranch with famiy room and 2 car
atta ched garage . 2 fireplaces, fi ni shed
basement, hardwood floors, nat ura l gas
heat wi th low heati ng bil s. LArge lot ,
12x16 bldg . Nice, quiet neighborhood .
Gr eat loca ti on. Owner w ill sel l on land
contract. F ina ncing no problem .
#392
SOUTHERN HILLS SPECIAL
Drive out Li ncoln Pike and view th is
wondertul se tting . Two bedroom
modern 197 1 Fl ee two od 12' x65 '.
Everything is impressive, dri l led we ll ,
w ell kept lawn, flowers, w hi te poll!
f ences. red barn wired tor electricity ,
with loft, driveway . we ll li m ed leads
back to orig ina l barn and garden . This
setti ng is in the valley between th ose
green Southern Hill s. 41 ac r es tor cam ·
'p ing, nature trails , wood grouse, squir·
refs, deer and r abbits would be some of
the wild game available fo r spor t .
Located only a short distance from
STa te Route 790, a blacktop road . Let us
se ll this to you .
N471

HEY t.OOK ME OVER
I' m a charming tastefully decoratecl
stu cco and frame home. Entry hall, 11\Zl
ing room , formal dining room , fami!r
room. 3 bedrooms, PI" baths, large wilt
approved built-in k i tchen. 2 fireplace.,
full basement . All this plus 2 a c r ~.•
Priced in the upper $50's . Call today tor .
an appointment to take a better look ....

STEAM JENNY, less than
one year old, $695 . Call 446·
2240.

Real. Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate -

General

Reat I! state

Large wooden office desk
and swivel office cha ir .
Real good cond . 992·5348 .

Real Estate

General

13~

2.2SACRES·
,
Go with this 3 bedroom home. Formal
din ing room , livi ng room , kitchen , battf.
Basement . Nice g~rage wi t h furnace
and air c ondit ioning . Also J phase el ~
tri c avai lable_Countv water . $29,900 . .....
#406
,.
CLOSE BY
Is this 3 bedroom, 1971 mobile hollit
with ex tra addition added on . Kitchen It
complete with dishwasher, range a~
refr igerator . Jl/"' baths. Air conditione
ing . 8x10 metal bulding . 1 acre lot. Thil
one you must see inside to appreciati.
With in shor t d istance of town. $15,500.
1405
PICK MEt PICK MEl
You can assume m y loan . My price ll
r ight . SSO' s. I have 3 or 4 bedroom:s,
15x26 l iving room , entry ha ll, built-in
kitchen , utility room, bath, fuel oil hea!l,
fireplace. central air' conditioning. ~
acr es of la nd with pond . I am well buitt
and wel l insulated. You must see me fo
appreciate me . Ask to see me todav .

WJ

ON 4'1&gt; ACRES
A fi ne ranch in thec()Untryl seven miles
from Ga llipolis. Six room moder-b
house, J BR, bath, full basement, fuel
oi l forced air furnace . Blown in insuli~ ·
tion. Cou nty water plus large cistern for
ex tra uses. Spr ing w i ll soon be her ~.
Whal a place tor your fam il y and
friends . Well stocked pond, good fences .
Beautiful acres. Call today . This shQIII#449
ing w ill be conv incing.

General

Real Estate

-·l.[!
m_
REALTOR®
1 .

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Aiiilfey "Canaday, Realtor 446-363G
25 Locust Sl, Gallipolis, Ohio
•

•.

ON THE WATER- Deck suitable for
dining overlooking Ohio River , perfect
spot for boat doc k, J BR , family room ,
eff icient kitchen. basement, near ly an
acre, just outside city . $38,000.

HUM A N E
50CIETY
Adopt r~ h om e ~ess pe l
Heal Th y , shots, wormed.
Donations requ~r ed
992
6760, noon 7 p. m , except
Tu esday , emergency ca lls
only .

We cover over
7 million miles
to find you a home,

'Gallia County's Fastest Growing

eal Estate Agency

Pets for

Sal~

HI LLC REST
KENNEL&gt; .
Board ing , all breeds . Clean
indoor outdoor fa c iti ti es
A l so
AKC
regi s tered
Dober mans. 6 14 446 7795 .

S'

S6

Pets for Sale

RISI NG STAR Ken nel.
Boarding . Ca ll367 0292 .

Real Estate
General
---------

POO DL E GROOMING .
Judy Taylor . 614-367 7220.

Real Estate - General

.1.

·1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
lit e W l ~ c mt~fl , Broker. 446o· l7116, E\lt! .
E . N. Wo ie man, Broke r . H 6·4500 Evt! .
Jim Co&lt; h r&lt;~n, Auoctate, 444 7881 , Eve .

Oiil'l Evt~ns, Assoc ., 381·1111 Eve
8 J . Hairuan, Auoc ., 446·42U. Eto~ e .
Nanc'f Sm illlt, Anot . ~ ••· 4 ' 10 • EYe .

PHONE 446·3643

I

rn

RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE
Vacation sett ing few m iles from ci ty . 3
BR , rear sundeck over looks Ra ccoon
Creek . Al l modern conveniences.
$37,500.

TRULY FAIR - Custom built, one
owner brick, 3 BR , l 'l• baths, fully equipped kitchen . Recreation rm . with
f ireplace, super sized patio, attached
gara ge. Cen , air . You ' ll love the decor
Assume 9% ll)Ortgage. $79,000.

NINE ACRES - N ice 4 BR home, faml ·
ly room, country kitchen, 2 porches.
Garage . Several outbtdgs. Nea r Rio
Grande. $44,900.

90 ACRES - Nearly 2,00011. rood Iron·
tage, 55 acres pasture, 20 acres timber
rest tillable . $74,500.
Rt\IER VIEW --" Very nice 2 BR , new
c arpet, recently redecorated, 2 car
garage with garage apt. In city. $65,(100.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs . CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats . Call 446·384A
after 7 p.m.
H ILLCREST KEN NE L - .
Boarding all bteeds. cle8n
indoor·outdoor facili ties .
Also AKC Reg . Dobermans. Call446-7795.
BR IAR PATCH
KEN NELS . Board ing
and
groom ing . AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniel s. Call446-4191 .
1 YEAR old Walker, 1
black and tan, 1 5 yr . old
Blue T ick crossed with a
Walker. Call256-1614.

• I : • "''

HOOF HOLLOW : Hor ses
and ponies and riding
lesson s.
Everything
imaginable in horse equip ment . ' Blanke ts, belts,
boots, etc. English and
Western . Rut h Reeves
(61 4) 698 -- 3290.

Musical
Instruments
P icking up a piano in your
area . Looking for a responsible party to take over
pa yments . Ca l l credit
manager collect. 614 .. 592 ·
5122.

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

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

-'I.

oo• • 0 ' 0

• t

• ooo-

Farm Equipment
ECHO CHAIN
SAWS,
hydraulic wood splitters,
saw chain, bars, and all
wood cutting supplies .
Charles Mc1(ean, Fairfield
Centenary Road, 446-9442 .
FANTASTIC BUY! REDUCED FROM
$]5,900 TO Sl8.900
OWNER SAYS, " SELL NOW."
Modern 8 room ranch in the country .
Large liv. room 16'x 18', fa
17' x 12' wit t) wood burningA~~·~g~,~c;~;
Rural water ~ centra l air .
acre of clean land·. Large
patio. Carport . See this home now !

REDUCED!! I FOR QUICK SALE
RIVER FRONTAGE
' Beautiful 7 rooms uniquely designed 2
story home w ith 4 BR, 2 baths, 20x191iv·
ing room with fireplace . Full basement
garage, storm doors and w indows.
Patio doors open up to the back pa tio
and a beauti fu l view of the Ohio River. 2
acres M . or L. You ' ll love the home and
view . CALL NOW FOR $59,900.
1374
ISO FT . RIVER
FRONTAGE
6 rooms,
2 or
3
bedrooms, living room ,
approx . 20')( 16', mobil e
home with partial basement , 2-car garage, 2
other storage buildings.
Beautiful v iew of the
Ohio River. I acre M. or
L. on State Highway .
Just buy and move in,
it' s fu lly equ ipped . #417

l A
BROOM HOU S E
-1

,,,,

I

j •d ' •'
[)

"

':'

It,•

'"

,,·n,

1.

"•I

~,j 'I

.

'

I I, I I

•I', I I I 'l l

111•1 1
"

,,.

'·

"'

• ] I,

'

il '

. 1)
,:
'

'"

C'

'

$7500.00
9 acres, vacant land .
Morgan Twp . off White
Oak Rd. Level to slightly roll ing . At one time
nad· a trailer hookup . 2
w ells . Som e fe nces .
Some outbu i ld ings. Nl70

co.

NEro 10

14 A . Farm -

East
Meigs Co. Rd. 31 just
minutes from
new
Portland bridge. Has
newer home, lg. barn.
garage, two ponds .
Acreage can be tilled on
tray field , also fenced.
U1,500 - 2 BR house
sits on 1.50 acre near
Forked Run Park .
Building
Lots
Located on Rl . 7 near
Eastern High School .
$24,900 - House has 6
r.ms, sits on 2 acres. 1112
car garage . Near Tuppers Plains.
Athens -Co, - 12 acres
all fenced . Small house
needs repair. Just a few
minutes
from
The
Plains. $14,000,
SAL-ES ASSOCIATE
Virginia Hayman
Ph. 985· 4197

8 N FORD tractor wi t h
equipment 446-4635 . ,
6l

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
di ameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton . Bund led
stab . $10 per ton . Del ivered
to Ohio Pallet Co.• Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992-2689.

NICE HOME
PRICED RIGfH
J bed room s. 2 baths wi th
showers, fam il y room,
dining a r ea . Total 8
rooms, modern kitchen
with electric range,
refr ig.,
d is hw as her,
garbage disposal and lot
of cabinets . F .A .F .• also
woodburner ,
Ga l l ia
rura l wa ter serv ice.
s tor age
bu i lding ,
ca re free alum . sid ing ,
nice landsca ped lot . Approx . 1 acre . House ap·
prox . 4 year s old . See
thi s.one now.
#384

ANTIQUE S,
FUR N IT URE, glass , ch ina,
anything . See or call Ru th
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992 ·
3161 .

I

f&lt;_,IINIMI NG POOL i
off 35 . 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, fam . &amp; rec.
room . Gas hea t . Ba seme nt. S70's.

in Centenary . Fam .
fi r ep l ac~, priva tevard w / pool.

MOV~?

I

OLD COl NS , pocket wal
ches, class r ings, wedd ing
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver . Call J . A . Wams ley,
742 -2331. Treasure Ches r
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592
6462 .
GOLD AND
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD .
R I NG S,
JEWELR Y ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC . I TEMS. PAYIN G
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP-T O-DATE
PRICES. CO NTA CT ED
BU RKETT
BARBE R
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH 10, OR CALL 9'12-3476.
63

livestock

MILK GOATS .
8572.

Cal l 388·

RABBITS for sa le. A ll
sizes, from fryer size to pet
size. Call/42-2455.

.

BARGAIN PRICED - 5 spac ious 5
bedroom, 2 baths, fam . rm ., cent . air, 2
car gar age. lmmadualte. Nea r Rodney .
LowS60' s.

01/oiNE'R MAY
ng
kept, riverfront home . 4 bedrooms,
2 ba ths , f ir eplace, basement. 1f2 ac .
$48,000 in Cheshire.

H x N Da y old or started
leghorn pullets, both fl oor
or cage grown avai lab le.
PoUltry
Housing and
Automati o n .
M o dern
Poul t ry, 399 W. Ma in,
Pomeroy . Call992·2164.

......
.... ..... .............
. ....... . .....
~

71
OWNER
FINANCING
LISTED Modern 5 bedroom ,
bath, firep lace. full basement, gas,
cent . ai r . Corner lot in Rio Grande.
$56 ,000.

Autos for Sale

1979 MUSTANG - p.b., p.s.,
auto. trans ., sun roof, exc.
cond ., $5,750. Ca ll 446·1104 .
1970 FORD TORINO - $250.
Call 388 ·8238.

72

PLYMOU TH wagon,
small engine, low milage,
388-8230.

General

HILLTOP FARM- Only 5 miles from
city. Nice 4 BR home, family rm
equ ipped kitchen, 48 acres. GOOd prO:
duc ing gas well furnishes free gas tor
r esidenCe plus income. $85,000.

---

. -· PefsToi-Sate'-

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220 .

.------ ------·
------·
WISEMAN
__B:ea l Estate- General

I

ealtor Assoc
Ph, Home: 446-3294

BELPRE, OHIO

~cond

Street

NEW LISTING - 6 yr .
old 3 bedroom carpeted
home. 2 f ull baths,
equipped
kitchen,
dishwa sher, disposal.
dining, family room,
utility shop, carport,
porch and 2 level lots
with fruit trees. 535,000.
NEW LISTING - Large
5 bedroom family home
with bath, furnace, 2
rentals, 3 ca r garage,
4,0d large corner lot at
Letart. Drilled well and
garden space. Low 60's .
FAMILY HOME - N ice
large ~ bedroom home
next to playground , 1'12
baths, modern kitchen ,
carpeting, full basement and porches. Low

ollls.

ROLLING LAND
Woods beyond ,
qui et countr y ro ad, wonderful place for
chi ldren and horses, J BR colon ia l of f ~rs all t he space you ' l l need . 14 acres
onl y S1h miles from city . $40,000.

ALL TYPES of building
materials, block , brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin
tel s, etc. Claude WinTers,
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245
5121 after Spm .

Spread
your
wings

PUG PEPPER
&amp;

PO R TABLE
BLDG All sizes, 6xl0 10
12x40 . See at 123112 Ptne Sl..
446 2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling A ll ey on Rt . 7, 446
1279.

Real Estate - General

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325

SITTIN ' PRETTY - Drive UP Fourth
Ave., near th e golf course, watch for
our sign on the f r ont lawn ot thi s beau ty , 3 BR . 2 baths, country style kitchen
with cozy dinette, large corner lot,
bea utiful trees and sh rubs, $42,900.

I cu tting outfit . Call 992·

6229 .

.9!1.a.

11• t: .

ENTERTAIN HERE ! From the slate
floor entry to. the second f loor balcony
you II love thrs home. 4 BR , 21f2 ·baths
mast er suite h!is its own bath and sit :
ti.ng ~r~a . Folding doors let you com·
brne lrvmg rm . and fami ly r 111.. for large
parties. Formal dining rm ., 2 car
garage, 2 rm . basement. Colonial styled
exterior . Circular drive, approx . 3
acres, pond, lots of trees. Rio Grande
area . $94,000.

I CEDAR gun cabi net, one
40 channel base station ca.

KACH ALL

56

-

WHEN YOU HAVE THAT SPECIAL HOME IN MIND, WE CAN HELP YOU FIND IT.
Real Estate- General

MODEL 102 Cuo Cadet 10
H . P . Iawn tract or . Cal1992
5992 .

cen rury 1 1 Rea l Estl'lte co rporo~~Uon • Reglster!Kt Trademark

Decorated cakes tor all oc ·
casions. Character cakes
and sheet cakes. Call W2·
6342 or 992· 2583 .
PRICE REDUCTION
Owner says th is home must be sold . 4
bedrooms, li ving room, family room ,
kitchen, bath, utility room , full ba se·
m en t . Natural gas heat. 3 acres.
Loca ted at the edge of town. Owner will
consider l and contra ct with small down
.¥366
payment .

992 - ~751.

Pets t or Sale

S6

COAL ,
LIME STO N E,
sand , gravel. calcium
chloride, fertiU :!.er , dog
tood , and at I types ut saiL
Excelsior Sa lt Works. Inc .,
E . Ma in St ., Pomeroy , 992
3891 .

BALED hay for sale, In the
field, 69 Chevy tor sale, 3888836 any time .

New styles of Resistol
Straw and Felt hats and
Tony Lama and Acme
boots. Mountain Lea the r
and General Store . 104· 105
West Union, Athens, Oh .
592·5478, 10-5:30 Mon .-Sal.

APLACEINTHECOUNTRY
Can be yours. We .have 115 acre farm
with 2 story, 3 bedroom home just
waiting for you . Approx. 10 acres of bot·
tom land, tobacc o base, barn and other
outbuildings. Pri ced in t he $40's. Hurr y
on th i s one!
N443

MAY 23 to June 10, 30% off
greenware sa le. Br ing a
container . 9 a . m . to9 p . rn
Drehel's Ceramics. 59 N .
Second Ave ., Middl eport,

Misc . Merchanise

250 CASE KNIVES, some
limited edition, Tawney
Jewelers.

VEGETABLE PLANTS
Cabbage ,
broccoli ,
cauliflower,
le ttu ce ,
celery, beets, green pep ·
pers, chili pepper&gt;, pimen·
Hungarian wax ,
toes,
sweet banana , egg plant.
Large selection of bedd ing
annuals, hanging baskets,
pots Of flowers and vfnes.
Cleland
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine Cleland, Ra c ine,
Oh .

NEW LISTING - BEACH COTTAGE ON LAKE
JACKSON - Furn ished cottage with ap&gt; . 900ft. of
living space . Plenty of beautiful frontage on Lake
Jackson w ith 2 docks. Nice sunbathing area . Finest
fishing . $20,000.

IN STOCK t or immediate
del ivery : var 1ous sizes ot
poo l· kits. Do· it yourself or
let us install t or you . D.
Bumgardner Sa les, I nc.
992 5724.

54

Two S and w 357 Magnum
pistols. Two Rem . 1·30-06,
1-l-43 Rille with scopes, 1·
TB870 Rem . trap, 1·Ant.
dooble barrel, 12 ga . 1-45
cal . Hand R muzzle. Day s,
446-2240, evenings, 367-0482 .

Misc. Merchandise

1973 CHEVY 60 series
truck, new tires, new
motor. new paint job, exc.
cond .• 14ft. runabout boat,
with 5 H.P . gas engine. 10
speed trolling motor . Ten·
nessee Walk er Mare, due to
ha've colt in July . Call 367·
7533.

Misc. MerChlndise

S4

ATTE NTION :
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay ca sh or certif ied check
for antiques and collec·
tibl es or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collec t ions . Call 614·
767·3167 or 557-3411 .

and
FURNITURE

Real Estate

Household GoodS"~

Gas Ta~p~n- rarlge-G~
cond . $20. 9'J2-5118 .

GO OD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
wash e r s ,
5l- -H
- 0Uieti01d Goods

Mi dd lepor t. 1·304-882-2566

Real Estate

Sl

for

.

'

BRICK VENEER - 3
bedroom ranch w i th
equipped
kitchen ,
carpeting,
ca rp or t ,
family room , full basement, and large lot .
s-17,500.
50LjD IRICK - A nice
remodeled nome · wun
new bath, 4 bedrooms,
new -kitchen, 2 porches,
on a tmlll upkeep lot.
Want 131.500,
ARI! YOU MI.SINO
THI! lOA T? SOMI!
PROPERTY IS IN ·
CREASING I I; VALU E
EACH DAV , CALL
Jill or ttl-Jt,.,

3or4 ROOMS
Fishing, vacation, 1 or 2
bedroom cabin . Located
fac ing Raccoon Creek
and ' Blue Lake. Nice
large wooded lot. Make
your life a year round
vacation . CALL US
NOW.
1366

LIFE IS TOO
SHORT
Stop dreaming about
own i ng
your
own
business . Brick building
in Vinton equipped for
carry -out . Perfect f or
Plua Parlor, Be&amp;uty
Parlor or Barber Salon .
Calllordeta il s.
ll43

OWNER
TRANSFERRED
4
bedroom , 2'h bath, fam . rm ., gas, cent .
air , 2 car garage, Good neighborhood
off u .S. 36. $60's.
7ROOMS
l ACRES
Only $19,900! J nice
rooms built on to a
mobile home. Large ea t·
in kitchen 12' x3J ', lots of
buill-in ca binets, 12'x20'
living
r oo m ,
front
porch . Nic e rolling land·
scaped 2 acr es. Lots of
room .
#41 2

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

OHIO RIVER Lovel y 4 bedroom, 5 f ireplaces, 2112
baths, lovely floor s &amp; woodwork, gas
heat . 2 ca r garaoe. S70's.

1975 MONTE CARLO , ps,
pb , am -fm 8 tra c~ stereo
with new speakers, new
wire basket wheels, new
Daytona radial tires, com plete new exterior paint,
light blue w i th medium
blue interior, excellent condi tion $2,995. Pn 446-3062 or
446· 1422 alter 4 p. m .
1979 FORD FIESTA - 19,000
17111es. Exc. gas mileage,
$3;950. Call 446-2300 .

S16,500 - Remodeled ma int. free

OWNER TO HELP
Near·
ly new 3 bedroom, 2 acres,
ba5e·
ment, woodburner , large kitcnen . Near
Rio Grande . $45,000 .

2 bed room , gas heat . Garage. in town.
Owner may help finance!

1937 FORD - good condition, $1500. Call 742·2844 .
1971 MERCURY MON ·
TEREY - 4 dr., 1 owner, all
power, air, very good old
car. Body, motor, tires in
A·1 cond. 5450. Caii.W.-16-41
or 446-7076.
1979 FORD FAIRMONT
FUTURA - solid black with
sun roof. p.s., p,,b ., air. AM FM, tinted windows, 4-c yl .,
25 mPO, exc. cond., call 446·
IIJ07 between 7 a.m . to 2:30
p,m .

TGAGE
Payment of S189 .60 mo.
1 acre and 5 room home
just .out of city li m its on
Rt . 141. N ice com fortable easy to heal
home w ith woodburnlng
f i replace , basem ent,
modern k i tchen, nat .
g as fu rnace, city water,
large carport, 16'x18'
bloc ~
storage bldg. ,
oarpen space. Call now .
I
4
1
I

GREAT GAS MILEAGE ·
1974 Mustang II Ghlo. 6
cyL, loaded with extras.
$1850. Caii446-05U.
1957 BEETLE · garaged, A ·
1 cond ., 36 mpg, $1 ,300 . Cal l
379-2469,
9' '&gt;% LOAN ASSUMPTION 4·5
bedrot!"S, 3 baths, t,lm, rm ,, fireplace,
g~s. ,.eat,
bastment, garag@ &amp;
workshOP. In Rio Grandi. $50'1,

1967 tNTERNATION~L
SCOUT • 1971 Elecfra
Buick. Call 4-46· 75«1 alter 6
p.m.

�J

..

..

•

,

1&gt;11-The Sundav Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June I , 1980
Real Estale - General

Real Estate - General

-=-Gefteral
-Real
- Estate
---

----- - ·--

71

7._1,_ _~
A,
~_,_,
tos for Sal!_ _

Autos for Sale

197 1 VEGA station wagon ,
$150 . Call446·8674 .

REAL ESTATE

' MA~~MERO 'f,'Q~
- ........
992·2259
YOU PROVIDE THE
FAMILY - We' ll pro·
vide everyth ing else in
this 4 bedroom home.
One of the bedrooms i$
26 by 17 1h and is
gorgeous . Only 528,500.
TENANT WILL BUY IT
FOR YOU - T his 5
room and bath would
made a goOd rental.
·Situated on 2 acres. Just
$6,500.
GRAB THIS FAST, IT
WON ' T LAST LONGIf you' ve been looking

for a place with approx.
1 acre, on a good road,
w ith 2 bedrooms, utility

room, and a separate
garage,

this

is

it!

$17,200.
DON ' T FENCE ME INI
- Want a home with 25
acres, and a one story
frame, with 2 bedrooms

and

was

recently

remodeled with a bu iltin
kitchen? $38,950.
WILLING TO DO SOME
HOME WORK?- It's a

good 5 room house in a
qu iet
small
town .
Situated on over 2 big

lots. Does nee.d some
repair . $16,500.

LOOKS
LIKE
A
BUTLER
WOULD
ANSWER- Central air
in this 9 room showplace
of a home. Located in a
nice neighborhood in 1
M iddleport and .must be
seen to believe . $59,500.
6 ACRES FOR YOUR
COW OR HORSE - or
whatever - Plus a story
and a half house with a
possible •4 bedrooms,
dining room, and a large 1
utility room . Yours for
$29,500.
INTEREST
RATES
ARE LOWER - YOU 1
CAN NOW AFFORD A
HOME!
I
REALTOR
Henrv E . Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Associates
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell, 949-2660
Real Estate- General

ALBANY, OHIO
INCOME LESS THAN
51S,OOO / YEAR?
We
~ave two nice homes
located in Meigs County
with financing approved
thru FMHA , Both are
three bedrooms and
priced in ttte low nos.

Real Estate

General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
GeorgeS . Hobsteller Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING- Nice 7
room home, 2 baths,
carport and workshop,
situated on 20 acres with
a good barn. On Co. Rd .
13, Asking $49,500.00 .
ACREAGE - 185 acre s,
on Vanzandt Rd ., some
minerals. Call for info.
EXTRA NICE 3
bedroom, totel electric
home. Off New Lima
Rd .• calltod~y .
MEIGS HI - Lovely 3
bedroom home on neartv an acre. Selling pri ce
$39.900 .00.
BRICk - Beautiful bi ·
level, 3 bedrooms, 21!2
baths, living room, din·
ing room , very nice kitchen
with
built -in
microwave,
··tamily
room with fireplace, 2'h
car garage, situated on
corner with approx. A
acres. Only $69,000.
SYRACUSE
Ni ce
remodeled
home , 3
bedroom , l iv ing room,
dining room, large kit·
chen, utility and garage.
Situated on nice lot. Sell ·
ing price S28,000 .
GIVE US A CALL
DAY OR EVENING.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Ph. 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Ph. 742-2003
Real Estate- General

~~~~

'f'I.

. WOOD

j

REALTY, INC•.
446•1066
.

NEW LISTING - 3 BR
home on 21'? acres of
l and. 3 miles be low Mid
dleport off Rt . 7. Also
traiLer hookup for addi·
t iona! income .
NEW LISTING - 1 floor
plan, J or 4 bedroom
home, nice built-in ki t
chen with range and
oven on R t . 7 in
Pomeroy , Oh.
BUSINESS BUILDING
In
downt o wn
Rutland, 0 ., approx . .10
years ol d . Use as
business or conver t to
living quarters. See to
apprec iate .
NEW LISTING - 3 BR
cottage with 2 acres of
qui et countryside . 5
minutes fro m
M id ·
dleport, 0 .
3 BEDROOM HOME Carpete~ and paneled ,
on Vine Street
in
Racine , very clern ,
ready to move into . Nice
level lot. Will also con ·
sider renting .
1 ACRE IN MIODLEPOR T - 4 room co t·
tage, trailer hookup,
reduced to $8,000 .
2 BR HOME - 4 acres,
walking distance to M id·
dteport .
TAKING LISTINGS!
Hobart Dillon. Broker
Fay Manley
Branch Mgr .
Phone 992-2598

Real Estate- General

~I

1YIH MUS rANG II · 4 cy l .
4•spd ., flip top, stee l belted
radials, .a m lm , wire ~poke
wheels, will trade tor older
model . S3.795 . Call~ 9480.

1979 CAMARO 305 engine
v 8, p .s., p .b., air, am fm
cassette stereo . E'l(cel lent
condition . S5,700 . Call 446
1006.

1979 FORD PINTO · Pony .
Good condi t ion, 4·spd ., am ·
f m , cassette, grea r gas
mil eage . Call 367 7774 .

1957 CHEVROLET
exc .
condition . Al so 72 Chevelle
Malibu . Good condi tion.
Call after 5 p.m . 367 ·0397 .

1978
sedan . Like new. auto:
transmission, low mileage.
985 4394.
197-4
Gremlin,
power
steering, air cor1d itloning ,
good gas mileage, $1100.00.
See Glenn Bissell at 949·
2801 '

--------'----::l!--1-'

Pomeroy, 0 .
E11ecutrve li sting - N R Sl , J
bedroom home , complef elv
remoQelcd . new c arpet ,
basement. W"'"
ated.
rea s.on111

0

c.Q\..

Auto s for Sale
-........ -- ..... Datsun B210, 4 dr

1978 CUTLASS SUPREME
• p.s., p.b ., am radio,
wheels, sport mlrro~rs.
bench seal, V·8 260 en•lin&lt;e,
gOOd gas mileage, ex··
cellent condition. 17,000
m i les . $4,850. Call 446·3062
or 446· 1422 after 4 p.m .

.lrlls .

lo c ated ~
rwo
lots .
¥ulberry fl.ve, Poml!rov,
On Owner will help t, nance
to res.pons.ib le j:larty

Busineu Oppor tun i ty -

NR · S1,
Burl ingham S tor~ 11 mrle~ I rom
Pomer oy on Rt JJ. complete
garage . s!ore room. garc:sen
c: e , and tree par k ing .
Bargarn prr c: eO in the low $20's.

var d and garage. This won ' t
last long .

RESTAURANT 7% Fl NANCING
Doing great business. 30&gt;&lt;10. 5 year old building .
Seating for 50 people. E lectri c heaL air condition·
ing . Good location. Looking for an excellent invest·
#434
ment. ca ll today . Shown by appointment .

Chilrles M . Hayes, Realtor

Neacil E . C•ney , Br .· Mgr .
Pn. 992·140lor n1-2110

1978 FORD 4x4, $4200. Call
446·2007 .

Century 11 Rea l ESiille C:orporalion · RegiShHed Trlldemark
Centu r y 21 Real Es tate Cor po ration P r inted in U .S A .
Each offrce h i ndependently own~

We have potential
buyers- need your
listings.

1976 GMC Sierra Grande .
Will consider trade . Exc .
cond., call ~ - 3175 .

Equal

'Real Estate - General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

1975 CHEVY 'I' ton pickup.
Six cylinder, 3 speed_,
RadiO, 54,000 mile•, $2,000.
Call Mrs. Bryan Harris at
667·3652 .
1974 ONE TON Chevy
crew -cab, dual wheels,
dual fuel tanks, power
steering, poWer brakes,
and ~lr conditioning . Call
on weekends 247·2302.

25 ft. 1 in, long, 7 fl. 1 in .
wide flat bed dual ll)(le.
Two 4,000 gall . gasoline
tank• (good). One 3,000 gall
gas tank, suitable for
cu lvert. Call1·263 -3306 .

73

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive
traction front and rear. 985·
4339.
74

Motorcycles

1973-HONDA 350, very good
cond. $350. Call245·9264.

Real Est•te- Gener•l

24 ft . Pon toon Harris float
bOat, w _
l th many extra's,
for sale or t ra de for cam·
per of equal value. Call446·
1648 or 446·9743 between 9
and 5.
76

__. ,_-

~-

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

--

14" and 15" hubcaps. $1 .50
up . 992 ·51 18.

2 G78 15" tires. Less than
1.000 miles . S6S. 949· 2065 .
UTILITY t raile r with
r acks. S100. Call 614·985·
4329 .

FOUR T IRES
like new.
6.00)( 14·6 ply nul on $25.
each. Call985·4329.
PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY . S20. pius ta x
and old battery . We buy old
batteries. Repair batteries.
Ca ll388·8596.
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair ,
wrecker service,
sel l
radiators ."
buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. Call after 5, 446 ·
7717 .
77

(0

R(IAIYI - on almost 4 acres ot land
a pond and small barn. Plus! A new 3 bedroom
home, with 1112 baths, a svnburst orange IU,tc:hen,
central a ir , electrlc heat pump , extra in511tation .
Pass. loan assump.
PLATTED AND READY TO BUILD ON- Building
lots 120' x100', located in subdivision in ·Kc school
district . Buy on land contract

446-3087

GOOD FAMILY LIVING- Neelj a few acres and
not too far out. 6.5 acres with a 2 BR home, garage
and 3 outbuildings . Located on Rl. 160, Approx . 2.5
miles past hospitaL

24 STATE STREET
GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO
WE 00 OUR HOMEWORIC 1

WE . HAVE OTHER
PROPERTY
AVAILABLE. PLEASE CALL FOR INFORMATION.

MIDDLEPORT - Grac ious Older 2 story home . 3
BR , bath, kit., din . rm ., full basement and situated
on a choice corner lot. Easy access to shopping .

SUPERB CEDAR RANCH - First rate craftsman··
sh ip throughout . A bedrooms, double closets, 2 full
baths, complete built·in kitchen with Corning top
range, formal dining , l arge family room with wood·
burner. Wood deck and 2 car garage . Jf.a acre lot .
Call for appointment.

AFTER,HOURS PHONE
BECKY LANE . , .. , ....... . ...... 446-0458
WALT LANE .. .......... .. ...... 446-0458

PRETTY RANCH - With a new 2 car garage at
!ac hed . 3 bedrms., bath, utility, kit., li v. rm. , large
lam . rm ., with Franklin F . P , and new carpet plus 112
acre lawn. Located in K .C. Dist .

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Re•l Est•te- Gen&amp;ral

FRONT END
AUGNMENlS
by
Randy
Carpenter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
spe·
cia list.

lANDMARK
SERVICE STATION
Camping
Equipment

F IB ER GLASS truck top·
per with Sliding window for
6 1/ 2 ft . Fleetside truck $400 .
Call
after 5 p.m .
1978 21'h Fl. Prowler, fully
se lf co ntained , a·ll equip·
me nt i ncluded, $4000 . Call
446 ·2240.

t

1978
STARCRAFT
GALAXY 6 fo ld down tent
Sleeps
6.
c amp er.
Economical to tow. Clean
and in excell ent shape. Call
156·6626 or 256·657 4 .

446~0008

1978 PROWLER , 32 fl. filth
wheeL tu l ly equipped .
$7,000 . St . Rt. 7, 5 miles
North of Ga ll ipolis. Glenn
Smith .

t

5 ACRE FARM - 4 bedroom home, living rm., din.
rm ., kit. &amp; 1 bedroom downstairs, baement , f .a. fur ·
nace, rural water, barn &amp; outbuilding, nice garden
spot, located on Rt . 554, near Eno. Buy now for
$43,000.00.

t
t
t
t

t
t

BEAUTIFUL, MODERN BRICK HOME Overlooking Rt. 1A1 , only'" 1 "'"1ile from Gall ipolis
corp. limits. 2 w/ b fir ·col.Oamily room in base·
ment, l'h baths, ma ~ ... uti t-ins, house and 2112
acres, buy now in the $60' s. Poss ibility of mortgage
as91fmption!
"NEW LISTING IN VINTON_: 3 Bedroom home
situated across fr:om the elementary school on
Jackson Pike. VIllage water, F.A. oil furnace,large
garden area, downstairs bedroom and bath.
beautiful shade tree. A home you would certainly
enjoy. $37,500.00.

t

t
t
t

MINI FARM - 6'-1 ACRES - No house but has
small barn. Located lust off Rt. 141 , at Centenary.
Buy now for $20,000.00.

~

.BUY THIS l BEDROOM home in Ewington,
situated • on St. Rt. 160' and ready for you . 2
flr~places. well water. Buy now tor only $8,500.00.

t
f
f

.

t
f

JUST IN TIME FOR SPRING : 3 bedroom honi&amp;; f
living rm., dining rm. , kll., 1 nath, with 6 acres;
mor&amp; or less, nice gardrs· Q\..0 rlvacy of th&amp; coun·
try but close enough tot ... uuy now for $:!9,900.00.
Previ·o usly advertised for S34,\l00.00. You must see
the lnsld&amp; to appreciate L' _

IN THE LAP OF LUXURY - That'swher&amp; you will
be the day vou move Into this brand new 3 BR, 2'h
bath trl · level . ThiS home will fulfill ·your every
dr&amp;am with the large L·shaped family rm ., equip·
ped kitchen &amp; 2 car garge. Located in Clearvl&amp;w
Estates &amp; shown by·appointment.

RACCOON CREEK FARM - 50 acres, 38 A. bol·
tom , 11 A . pasture,lovely modern brick home with 3
Brs ., 2 baths, cathedral · ceilings, fireplace, large
sun deck and lots of other extras. new metal pole
barn~ crib, loading chute, approx. 1700 ft . creek
frontage , located 4 mi. trom Meigs Mine No. 3.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - $6,500 down
- 9%- Asking $33,000 - Remodeled 2 story home,
3 BR 's, LR, den, family rm ., dining, kitchen, 2 we
f irepla ces, 31/:z acres. Located on State Route 233
betweenGallipolisand Oak Hill.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 20% DOWN
- Older 2 story home With 6 rms. &amp; bath, cellar
t"1ouse, sheds, large shade frees on approx. 4 acres.
Located 4 mi. south of Rio Grand&amp; on the Tom
Woods Rd . $19,900.

Ranny Blackburn,

GREEN TOWNSHIP - PASTURE FARM ~ 155 A.
M · L located on SR 1-41 approx . 6 mi. west of town .
Land is approx . 60% cleared &amp; 40% woods &amp; in·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn . Priced at $500 per
acre.

~No - 4.25 acres lev&amp;l land . Over 400 fl . frontage
on state Route 554. County water available, ex·
cell en! bu i ldlng .or mobile home site . 56,500.

Branch Manager

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 518- Remodel ·
ed hom&amp; includes 6 rms. and bath, carport, stov&amp;,
refrig., dishwasher, almost 2 acres of land priced
for quick sale .

GREEN ACRES ~ Three BR re~ch, nice balh,
large L R, modern kitch•·uce.O ·, all carpeted.
garage &amp; flat loL REP _,, , tor most types of
financing . lmmedtare possession. $39,500. .·

'RODNEY BIDWELL RD. - Sectional home, 24x60,
4 BR, 2 baths, large LR, equipped kitchen, cent. a~r ,
concrete block garage. 1acre. $22,500.
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Approx . 6 acres
level and gently rolling land , county water, nice
1uilding sites, located on the Floyd Clark Rd .

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Vnfinlshed one story home with 3.4 acr&amp;son RAC·
COON CREEK . Located on the Gr&amp;en Saunders Rd.
near Northup. $18,500.

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted building 101.
1.22 acre, nice wooded setting, city ~chools . S5,900 .

PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres. 15 A. Simms Creek
bottom, balanc&amp; rolling pasture &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large barn, several other buildings,
lob. base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon Woods Rd .

MINI FARM - OWners moved to Florida and are
selling ttris lovely J EIR brick home . This 6 yr. old
beauty offers lots of good living for some lucky
family with a large kitchen &amp; dining rm ., LR , fam1 ·
ly rm . with fireplace. garage &amp; barn. Located on
State Rout'e160 approx . 6 mi . from HMC .

CAMPGROUND (FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEl:
ACRES) Make something of this property again. 11
A., 2 acre lake, severa buildings in ne&amp;d of repair.
dumping station, 2 water systems, lots of pine trees.
Fix this dandy place up &amp; start making money. ·opportunity knocks.
.:.

thl! city; nat. gas F .A. f~rnace, full basement. ap· '
prox. 'h acre lot. Buy now for 543,000.00.

. ·-.

.

'

WDODRIALTY,INC.
32LOCCIST ""GALLIPOLIS

1
;.

411.....- - - - ..- -. . .-~

Set/lEeS
.,-------

81
Home
_ _l_m_provements
MEA DES ro oling and
spouting, home remodeling
and sid ing, free estimates,
10 years local experience .
Ca ll 388·8205
PAINTI!lG · Residential
and commercial. Interi or
and exterior, mobile home
roots. Free estima te s. 17
yrs. exp. with references
call 367 ·7784 or 367 · 7160.
ALL TYPE S of Carpentrv
work, new home bldg. or
remodeling, call 446·2910 .
PAINTING interior ~nd e)(·
terior , tree estimates, cttr ll
446--3344.
Most wood produ c ts. Wood
Shop,
101 court St ..
Ga ll ipoliS , OhiO 45631. Call
446·2572.

NEW LISTING -'- 3 bedroorl home situated wlthlrl
.

1973 STARCRAFT !railer,
loaded, a.c ., 2-30 lb. gas
bottl es, sleeps 6, twin
axles, new tir es and
brakes, bath , shower, oven,
re frlgera·tor , tu\1 side
awn ing, TV antenna , 110
vo lt or 12 volt or gas . Call
992·5A34 or 992 ·3129 for in·
lormation
and
a-p ·
po intment . $3,600 firm .

_C_A_B
_I_N_E_T
_S
_&amp;
_ V ;:N
- I'TI ~S

f

j.
'

A TRULY GRACIOUS HOME - Beller Homes and
Gardens would be taken by the beauty of this
spacious home set on a beautiful landscaped lot
abundant with shrubbery &amp; frontage on the OHIO
RIVER . Words cannot describe the quality of this
brick &amp; frame 2 story home . 3 B R ' s, 2'12 baths, extra
large LR &amp; familv rm ., fireplace , cent. air, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH MORE . Shown
by appointment.

3 OR 4 BEDROOM cottage located on Clark's ;
Chapel Rd., near Porter. Approx . 9 miles from
hasp., hous.e, garden and 21/:t acres, nice garden
area. Buy now for $30,000.00.

'

3406 .

ROOFING , Guttering and
remodel ing . W illiam Mit·
chell, 388 ·8507 .

~ - 4208

FLOORING ,
ceiling,
paneling, doors and w in·
dows, a lso pa inting·. Call
992 ·2759.

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

F·rank Rose Const. Co.
Remodeling repair, new
construction, all types
Free estimates, all work
full_y
g.uaranteed.
Resedential, commercial, industrial..&amp; .mm. g, . fiedricaT work.
SHA Cert.
446·%27

JS Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Call 446·3896
or 446-3080

PA IN TING · Commercial
Airless spray pa i nting:
L .M . Johnson , 675· 1128.

PROFESS IONAL pa inting
· ~xf :, •nt. , roof and sign
pa•ntmg. 30 yrs. exp., free
est . Call Arthur Hill , Jr.
446·3890.

KUHN &amp; SAUNDERS
ROOFING
Commercial or
Residential
Hot or Cold Process
446·2450-379·2458

O&amp;F CONTRACTORS.
Home improvements,
room additions, siding,
electrica I &amp; air conditioning, and insurance
claim repairs . Guaranteed work.
Free
Estimates . 446-3407.

t~==~======j

DENNY
CHAIN LINK FENCE

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home i m ·
provements - Rooting
gutters -spouts -con·
crete work . Ph . 367·0427,
367-0194, 367-0141. Free
estimates.

Reese Trenching .
&amp;Backhoe Service

82

Bill's

DOZER WORK
ex
cav a ting . Land c lea ring,
ca ll446·0051

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration
D·DAY
REFRIDGERATION

c~

&amp;

-,
'

Sandblasting co ,

L~\

Roller , Brush and Spr.,y
Work .
- Fully In su r ed
- Free Estimates
- Interior &amp; Exterior

p

85

DEWITT' S PLUMB I NG
AND HEATING
Route 160-af Evergreen
Phone ~ - 2735 .

V
Del
.Eivery
. FILLINGER
Service. CaWater
ll 379 ·
2124 .

M . H. Repair

Blf.L 'S MOBILE HOM ES
and Home Improvements .
Free estimates. Call 446 2642.

· 'ROOM TO ROAM - I think you would sav that this
sprawling brick tri· levells one of the nicest country
homes you've ever seen. This beauty is situated on
4'h acres of land about 3'1• miles trom Rodney . Why
not 1e1 your family enjoy 5· BR's , 3 baths. large living and dining ·r oom, comlete kitchen, family room
-!lith stone fireplace nd 2 car garage . Be the first to
see th,ls O;lie.
·

STUCCO
plasterin g,
plaster repair, 1e• tur e
ceilings, free cstltru•tes,
call256·1182 .

j

THE ENTIRE FAMILY WILL LOVE THI5 ONE -J"Or .I e~ · s., t·a baths, l.R with WB fireplace, famllr'
rm , lovely carpet throughout , 2 car gar.JQC., near
CI' Y School, $$3,900 . .

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

J

ALL THIS FOR SJ9,500-3 BR's, 1'h baths, LR with
stone fireplace, natural gas heat, air cond., range,
dishwash&amp;r, garage, large patio &amp; fenc~ In frqrtitl
lawn . Green Acres Subdivision.
'
.• .

'

JIM MARCUM Roollng
spautlng and sldlnQ, · o
years txpur lonen
~" 4 '.,
estjmal s . Rolnu!l 11110
Ca,l l 388 857

---

l

pos.
121 Wens
t23 Nahoor
sheep
124 ToUt:&lt;!
125 Ois1ance
UMit

1,

,.,cvoured

127
129
13t
132
133
134
t36

Easter, e.g.
Ashes
Learning
Asian river
Pigpen
Exist
Football
kick
t37 Abide
t38 Habituale
139 Wanl ad
abbr.
t 40 Pieces out
t41Goal
'
t42 Loose garment
t43 Lifted
t44 Tidier
146 Wear away
t48 Steed
149 Climbing
devices
1Ji0 Insurgent
1'51 Paths

DOWN
1 Like ears
2 Poetic muse
3 Portal
4 Beverage
5 French article
6 Broil
7 American
ostrich
8 Goel&lt;jess ot
healing
9 Printer 's
measure
10 Exile
11 Sowing
12 Diphthong
13 Incarnation
of Vishnu
t4 Barter
15 Make angrv
16 Snme
17 FOI'Ii'a'l

Business- Farm s- Partn erships
an d Corpora lions

ut1'I'ity

T· shirls and novelty
shirts for politician s,
b 1
b .
a I teams , usmesses
or individuals.
Shirts 54 .00 Each
"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything! "
Ph . 614-949· 2358
Evenings &amp; Weekend s
5·8· 1 mo

Pnmeroy, Oh .

BUI.Idl'ngs

Sizes from 4x6 to l2x40

P&amp;S BUILDIN GS
Rl 3 B 54
· · ox
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·843 ·2591
5 14 1 m o.

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULA'FION

ROOFING
REMODELING
HOME
MAINTENANCE

Vi n yl&amp;
Alu minum Siding
elnsulat ion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacem ent
Windows

AI Tromm
Construction

Free Estimate

James Keesee
Ph, 992 -2772

742·2328

992·3795
4-2-tfc

CONSRTROUU,SHCTI
- ON
*New homes • ex·
lensive remodell·ng
·
* E lectr 1
·cal works

* Maso,nry work
12 Years
Experience

Greg R ous h
Ph 992 758
•

·

3
5· 15·1 mo.

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
THE POOL PEOPLE
31 711 Noble Summit Rd.
Midd~port, Ohio
992 .5724
Sales, service and sup·
pltes. In ground and
abo•e ground pools .
S·l ·tfc

~-==========1~=~-~-~-~~~~~8~!~m;o~-~±~~~=~~~==~
87

5 1

Upholstery

VINYL SIDING

MASTERCR AF T UP HO L
STERY . SHOP
Com
mer cia! and r esi dent 1al 32
years experi ence . Call 4116
2301 or 446 4971.

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
Serving your area for 25 years.
Cal l Now tor Large Savings
Fo r Free Estimate Call

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322
5·29· 1 mo.
87

65 Paid nolice
66 Tense
67 Morning
prayer
69 Shouts
7 t Needlefish
73 Kind of perIodical
7 4 Goddess of
discord
76 Unlock
again
79 Fruit
8 t Scottish ri•·
er
82 Nod
84 Heavy string
85 Ermines
87 Let fall
90 Noble
92 Female ruff
93 Memoranda
95 Metal las·
1ener
97 Uriaspirated
98 Exist
99 Pair (abbr.)
101 Laths
103 Piper's son
104 Citrus fruit
105 Experience
t08 Free ot
t 10 Built
112 European
113 Possesses
114 Preposition
115 Hyalite
1 t7 Paslime
118 Suspend
119 Covers
120 Foolball

.. ._

" From 30:.::10"
SMALL

5·25 ff c

GENE PLANTS
ANO SONS
Plumbing
Heating
Air
conditioning. 300 Fourth
Ave. Ph . 446· 1637.

,

F:r~L ~~~~~gs

op

/"'

7785.

--------=~1 86

I

~-

618 E. Main

General Hauling

JIM 'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery . Cal l 256 ·
9366 or 256 ·1394 anylim e.

· . . . ..

•

1·28·1 mo.

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping
Service

... __

' -;;,;;

.;

992 · 7314

r~=~~=~~~~~~;==~~~~===;=r~===::::;::;~~~~

WILL HAUL limes tone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. L eo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742-2455.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or

H&amp;R BLOC K OFFICE LOCATION

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
I Lawlul
6 Avarice
II Forewarning
t8 Pope's scart
t9 German river
20 Discovered
2 t Relund
23 Row
24 Edible seed
26 Emporium
27 College deg.
29 Gladden
30 Feslive
3t Ripped
32 Girl's name
33 Small bird
34 Reject
35 Rolllighlly
36 Chastise
3B Self·cenlered one
40 Girl's name
41 Tessera
42 Strap
43 Man 's name
45 Golf score
46 Sun gOd
47 Clayey earth
48 wa1er
source
49 Old· womanish
5 1 Gol1
mounds
52 Lalln conjunclion
53 Mineral
54 Actual
55 Feasted
57 Rodent
58 Surgical
thread
60 Loess
6 1 Dance step
62 1/endlllons
64 Dyspr slum
&lt;y1MIJUI

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ayrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

Work .
949 2686
'

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Swe epers ,
toa5ters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to St ate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825 .

CARTER'S F'LUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone~ 3888 or 446·4477

Nu-Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp;
vinyl
siding
How met Patio covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum
utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive
446·2642
Free Estimates

. n . ....
. -~'~ ....-r

Gheen's
Painting

: all

LIMESTONE , graJel and
sand. A ll sizes. At Richards
and Son. Upper R iver Rd.,
Gall ipolis, Ohio . Call 4-46·

s

Gutter work , down
spouts , som e concrete
work .
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)

LEO
MORRIS

Repairs . servi_ce,
al l
makes. 992 ·2284 .
The
Fabric Shop, Pome roy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sha rpen
Scissors.

QUALITY
MAIN ·
TENANCE · Electrical,
plumbing, heating, and air
conditioning. Call388·9698 .

~

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

e V·CHISEL
PLOW

:::9~:: ::8::~·N ~ ~2~~\C:.m
Sh

·-

~=========~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SWIM LAND
150 Third Ave.
IS NOW OPEN
10 am til 5 pm
Monday thru
Saturday
'1ABEX CHEMICALS"
PHONE 446-7887

Salem "fwp. Rd. 180
De•ter , Ohio 45726
Bil l E ske-w, Ph . 742· 2456
Your Pl ace or Mm e
5 9 1 mo pd .

Call 446·

heating,
cooling
, electrical
Resi dential,
commercial.

KOTALIC
LANDSCAPING
Residential &amp; C:ommer· ·
cial. Tree &amp; shrubs in·
stat led, designing &amp; lan·
ting , shrubbery trimm ing, lawn need control
programs .
446·3100
861 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

(Gallia Co•nty
Certified)
ILeac:h Beds," Water and
Lines, .Electric
Lines, Pofe B~.tildings .

DOZER WORK
1058 or 446 4955.

Dozer , backhoe and tren
cher . Septic systems, com
plete services. Hourl y or
con lra c t . Engineering,
layout and construction.
Bill Pull ins. 9912476.

Bl LL'S
Home Improvements
Nu -Prime Replacement
Windows . Stor-m Win ·
dows &amp; Doors. Patio
Covers ,
Carports .
Mobile
Home Ac ·
cessories.
Free
estimates.
691 Miller Drive 446·2642

RinGrande ·

DAVISON
DEVELOPMENT
Excavation Services .
Dump truck, dozer,
backhoe.
Call 446·4537

Tri.COunty
General Welding

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR

Limestone for dr iveways .
Pomerov··Maso n area . 367
7101.

I1-~=========-:j

Ken Soles
245·9113

Free E stim.;~ tes
Reas onable Pnces
Ca ll H award
949 · 2862
9-19 ·2160
1·22 ·1fc

STA ND ARD
Plu mb in g Healing
215 Third Ave ., 446 3782

PAR K FINANCIAL
&amp; V A Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay ·
ment. Federa l Housing
Loans, l% down on
\15,000; S% down on
b_
a la nce. FHA 20s Substdy Program . FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M -W-F 'i : 00 to 1:00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office99l ·7S44
Home 992 -6191
107 Sycamore Sl.
Po mero , OH.
VA

Ru11and , 0.
Ph . 742· 2455
5 2 1 I mo

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, guMer,
build -up roof, home
repair .
Free Estimates
J88-97S9

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC.
Box 89, Bidwell, Oh .,
388-9877. Sidewalks,
driveways,
basements, steps, etc. 1nsulation, residential"
or
commercial.
Some remodeling. ·

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1 I 11% ln terest-30 Yrs.

ENGINE
STeAM
CLEANED
'12.00

PAINTING done ; inter ior
and ex terior. Call992 ·3827 .

GAI.LIA RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT
Insulated vinyl siding,
aluminum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
windows. Free estimates.
C.a l! 367 ·0209 day or night,

BUDGET
CONSTRUCT ION CO.
A ll
type
home
im ·
provements · exterior and
interior. Free estimates
Mike Marcum. 388·8636. ·

82

All types of roof work ,
new or repai r gutters
and downspout s, gutter
cl eaning and painfing
All work guaranteed .

Real !:State Looms

H '1\.'F YOUR

H. L WR11£SEL
ROQCING

KINGS CONTRACTING .
Rooting and chimneys,
house painting and tree
service . Ca ll992 ·3737.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning

R .M .
ROOFING
&amp;
SPOUT I NG .
Home
remode l ing, siding. Free
es timates. phone 388 -9039
or 388 ·9642.

Business Services

Call for Free Siding
Estimate , 949·2801 or
949·2860. No Sunday
ca lis.
5· 1· 1 mo.

Roofing, siding, room ad
ditions, a ll types of general
repairs. 25 year!!. Pxp . 992

Will paint houses , barn s
and roofs . No job is too big
or small. Free estimates.
First quality · work . Call
992·3941 or 992 ·5126 .

1•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Wi ll pour concrete, lay
block and brick . Call 992
3406 .

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER &amp; DOOR, INC .
Overhead Garage Doors,
Electric Door Operators,
Continuous no· leak gut·
tering
Day · 698·8205 · Night

PAINTING · interior and
ex terior , free estimates in
Ga llipolis area, reasonable
rates. Call Mark White
245 ·5050.
'

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

CAMPER · 25 fl . self
assemb led . S1600. Call 446·
2126 .

t

BEEN LOOKING for a piece ol Investment proer·,
ty? well, we hav&amp; iustlisteo property located on thef
100 block on Fourth Ave. Consists illwo rentals. Call
us for more Information, you' II be glad you did!
,

---------

LAIR CON ST . · Block
brick,
firep la ces, ne~
homes, remodeling , c al l
379·2123.

-

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning
St ea m
clea ned .
Free
es t ima te .
Reasonab l e
rates. Scot chguard . 992
6309 or 742 ·2211.

THEISS INSULATION, In ·
sulmaster foam Insu lat ion .
New homes, old homes,
comme r cial structures .
For free estimates ca ll 446·
1971.

R. McKEE &amp; COMPANY .
B la c_
k to p,
dr iveway s,
parkt ng lots, patch in g
s~a lcoating,
concret~
Si dewalk s. Free estimates,
25 years e)(perience . Call
797·2648. 21 Converse St
.,
Chauncey, OH .

1975 STARCRAFT pop up
camper · sleeps 6, stove,
heater, ice box . complete l y
se lf-contained . Used only 1
summer . Like new, $1500.
Call 446·1641 or 446 ·7076 .

IDEAL FOR TWO OR THREE: Slluated across
from Penny Far~ Mkt. If you're looking for conve·
nience, this is tne hOme lor you. One floor. cily ser·
vices, low maintenance ... Buy now for $24.500.00.

FOR
BEST In Carpet
Clec:Jning Call Smeltzer 's
Steamway . Ca l l 614· 446 ·
2096.

BILL ' S CONCRETE
SE RVIC E
Driveways, walks, pat ios,
porches, basements and
garages. Free es t ima tes,
ca ll 388·91168 · Vinlon, OH

Auto Repair

~-3139

f

81

FREE ESTIMATES

78

Ken Morgan
Evenings 446·0971
Real1or

t
t

I mpro_ve.!'!_~t!ts

Call (6 14) 992-9932
Pomeroy, 0 .

1S ACRES PLUS- 12x65 Kirkwood mobile home .
Barn, corn crib, pond, land fenced and lots at shade
tr'ees . Land can be sold without mobile home .

Home
I mprove_me~ts~.

Home

81

14" and 15" used tires. plus

trucks, repa
two ir
tones
change
of
body
, $159.
van
color extra but reasonable .
Hammonds Body Shop. 221
Mill Sl., Thurman, OH . Call
245 ·9371 or 379·2306.

f

f

Boats and
Motors for Sale

SAND AND PAl NT · minor

Building lOt with water and sewage on
Bulaville Road .

Russell D. WOod
Evenings 4"'·4618
Rea nor

75

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr . wrecker
service . All types of repair .
Upper Rt. 7 Ca ll 446·2445
days and 446·4792 nights.

WM. D. TONEY - BROKF'f

Real Estate- General

_

1972 k750 Zuzuki, water
cooled in good condition'.
$750.00. Call992 3640.

7H~7.

TONEY REALTY

81

---

_M~t~r~y~l_es

1974 Ford F100 Pickup . 360
eng. $1,200 firm . 949·2328.

1/u (;(. fll~JJ .
Of

~ -- _

1973 Kawasaki 350 dirt
bike . Good co nd . Must sell.
1250. 992 61 15.

Trucks tor Sale

1975 CHEIIY '4o ton truck.
A· l shape, 35,000 miles,
S2500. or best offer . Call
446·9334 aft&amp;r 5.

D-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel , Sumlay, June 1, 1980

GMC 1974 pickup .one·half
ton 51,495. 69 Old• Cutlass
U95 or will fake guns on
trade. See T. 0 . Stewart~
7&lt;2·2421.

1976 DATSUN pick UP truck
with topper. In good cond .,
caii24S ·9212.

1969 CHEVROLET Pickup
truck, $500. Ol iver 70 trac ·
tor, 5800. 8x50 mobile
home, $2,000. Call388·9792 .

Comtortabte
Hom~
NR- 51, close in, 6 rms ., fi.II IV f urn ished, nice POrch,

- T rucks lor Sale

1938 «;:HEVROLET pickup.
It runs, restorable. ssoo.
Call ~ - 4294.

1976 FORD v, ton pick up .
Short bed, low mileage, ex·
cellent condition. S2,895 .
Call ~- 0515 .

NR ·• l. New l i lting - Nice
r:aun tr,- nome , wi1t1 )1 ac res
near Ru tl and , 5 rooms with
bath, gOOd ou tbuild ings,
hunting ,
w it h
m ineral
right s. s~ to appreciale .

72

1972 BUICK SKYLARK · V·
8, new J .C. Penny battery ,
Gd. mileage, $600. Call 992 ·
2288.
72

. 94 ACRE -

t
f.

71

Auto s lor Sale
;

DILLON
60B E • ••

71

abbr.
21 Worships
22 Raise
23 Biblical
weed
25 Eon
27 Direct
wrongly
28 Bears wit '
ness 1o
30 Sea bird
31 Narrate
33 Striped ani·
mal
35 Ardor
36 Gong
37 Silkworms
39 Grain
4t Mountain
lake
42 Ray
44 Pacify
47 Temper
48 Survives
49 Norse gods
50 Moray seeker
54 Defeated
ullerly
55 Evaluate
56 Slrike out
59 Game fish
60 Allghl
61 State: Abbr.
63 Sluggish
66 Preposition
67 Pronoun
68 Biting gently
70 Steeples
71 Fuel
72 Likely
73 Courage
75 Grave
77 .Compass

pt.
78 Borr.
~0 1.Jian land
83 Port, ...g.

86 Scnrrtms

A&amp; H . UphOlSINJrt g
' Now
Re Uph al:; t crin g
Car
Sea rs Ph ll9 2 3752 or 992
37 43

88 Group ot
eight
89 Urge on
90 Compass

pl.
91 Pronoun
94 Walks
96 Printer's
measure
98 Singing

voice
99 Pledge
tOO Quick retor.J,
102 Teacake
104 Burbol
105 Bind
106 Torment
t07 Went In
109. Waste time
t 1 t Fool tra velers
112 Rooters
tt:i Pit
116 Meadow
118 Male deer
119 Weary
122 Moved sinu·
ously
124 Deliver
t25 Slir
t26 Entertains
128 Fear
t30 Roll
131 Defame
t32 Aromalic
plant
13~ Slave
137 Mine vein
t38 Merit
t40 Guido' s high

note
t42 Steal ·
143 Brown kiWI·
144 Chlorine
symbol
145 Interjection
14 7 Scale note
t48 Hectoliter
\abb,,)

UphOlstery

NOI1010S

TRISTATE
LI PHQ_ STE RY SHOP
11 63 Sec ,".J..v&lt;&gt;. G~l! i polis .
4J6 7933 or 4.46 1833

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Fines t qualitY a1 lowest
possi bl e prices. Call
now tor free estimate.
Co mme rcial or r esidentia I.
2S6·1S67

�J

..

..

•

,

1&gt;11-The Sundav Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June I , 1980
Real Estale - General

Real Estate - General

-=-Gefteral
-Real
- Estate
---

----- - ·--

71

7._1,_ _~
A,
~_,_,
tos for Sal!_ _

Autos for Sale

197 1 VEGA station wagon ,
$150 . Call446·8674 .

REAL ESTATE

' MA~~MERO 'f,'Q~
- ........
992·2259
YOU PROVIDE THE
FAMILY - We' ll pro·
vide everyth ing else in
this 4 bedroom home.
One of the bedrooms i$
26 by 17 1h and is
gorgeous . Only 528,500.
TENANT WILL BUY IT
FOR YOU - T his 5
room and bath would
made a goOd rental.
·Situated on 2 acres. Just
$6,500.
GRAB THIS FAST, IT
WON ' T LAST LONGIf you' ve been looking

for a place with approx.
1 acre, on a good road,
w ith 2 bedrooms, utility

room, and a separate
garage,

this

is

it!

$17,200.
DON ' T FENCE ME INI
- Want a home with 25
acres, and a one story
frame, with 2 bedrooms

and

was

recently

remodeled with a bu iltin
kitchen? $38,950.
WILLING TO DO SOME
HOME WORK?- It's a

good 5 room house in a
qu iet
small
town .
Situated on over 2 big

lots. Does nee.d some
repair . $16,500.

LOOKS
LIKE
A
BUTLER
WOULD
ANSWER- Central air
in this 9 room showplace
of a home. Located in a
nice neighborhood in 1
M iddleport and .must be
seen to believe . $59,500.
6 ACRES FOR YOUR
COW OR HORSE - or
whatever - Plus a story
and a half house with a
possible •4 bedrooms,
dining room, and a large 1
utility room . Yours for
$29,500.
INTEREST
RATES
ARE LOWER - YOU 1
CAN NOW AFFORD A
HOME!
I
REALTOR
Henrv E . Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Associates
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742·2474
Jean Trussell, 949-2660
Real Estate- General

ALBANY, OHIO
INCOME LESS THAN
51S,OOO / YEAR?
We
~ave two nice homes
located in Meigs County
with financing approved
thru FMHA , Both are
three bedrooms and
priced in ttte low nos.

Real Estate

General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
GeorgeS . Hobsteller Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING- Nice 7
room home, 2 baths,
carport and workshop,
situated on 20 acres with
a good barn. On Co. Rd .
13, Asking $49,500.00 .
ACREAGE - 185 acre s,
on Vanzandt Rd ., some
minerals. Call for info.
EXTRA NICE 3
bedroom, totel electric
home. Off New Lima
Rd .• calltod~y .
MEIGS HI - Lovely 3
bedroom home on neartv an acre. Selling pri ce
$39.900 .00.
BRICk - Beautiful bi ·
level, 3 bedrooms, 21!2
baths, living room, din·
ing room , very nice kitchen
with
built -in
microwave,
··tamily
room with fireplace, 2'h
car garage, situated on
corner with approx. A
acres. Only $69,000.
SYRACUSE
Ni ce
remodeled
home , 3
bedroom , l iv ing room,
dining room, large kit·
chen, utility and garage.
Situated on nice lot. Sell ·
ing price S28,000 .
GIVE US A CALL
DAY OR EVENING.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Ph. 742·3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Ph. 742-2003
Real Estate- General

~~~~

'f'I.

. WOOD

j

REALTY, INC•.
446•1066
.

NEW LISTING - 3 BR
home on 21'? acres of
l and. 3 miles be low Mid
dleport off Rt . 7. Also
traiLer hookup for addi·
t iona! income .
NEW LISTING - 1 floor
plan, J or 4 bedroom
home, nice built-in ki t
chen with range and
oven on R t . 7 in
Pomeroy , Oh.
BUSINESS BUILDING
In
downt o wn
Rutland, 0 ., approx . .10
years ol d . Use as
business or conver t to
living quarters. See to
apprec iate .
NEW LISTING - 3 BR
cottage with 2 acres of
qui et countryside . 5
minutes fro m
M id ·
dleport, 0 .
3 BEDROOM HOME Carpete~ and paneled ,
on Vine Street
in
Racine , very clern ,
ready to move into . Nice
level lot. Will also con ·
sider renting .
1 ACRE IN MIODLEPOR T - 4 room co t·
tage, trailer hookup,
reduced to $8,000 .
2 BR HOME - 4 acres,
walking distance to M id·
dteport .
TAKING LISTINGS!
Hobart Dillon. Broker
Fay Manley
Branch Mgr .
Phone 992-2598

Real Estate- General

~I

1YIH MUS rANG II · 4 cy l .
4•spd ., flip top, stee l belted
radials, .a m lm , wire ~poke
wheels, will trade tor older
model . S3.795 . Call~ 9480.

1979 CAMARO 305 engine
v 8, p .s., p .b., air, am fm
cassette stereo . E'l(cel lent
condition . S5,700 . Call 446
1006.

1979 FORD PINTO · Pony .
Good condi t ion, 4·spd ., am ·
f m , cassette, grea r gas
mil eage . Call 367 7774 .

1957 CHEVROLET
exc .
condition . Al so 72 Chevelle
Malibu . Good condi tion.
Call after 5 p.m . 367 ·0397 .

1978
sedan . Like new. auto:
transmission, low mileage.
985 4394.
197-4
Gremlin,
power
steering, air cor1d itloning ,
good gas mileage, $1100.00.
See Glenn Bissell at 949·
2801 '

--------'----::l!--1-'

Pomeroy, 0 .
E11ecutrve li sting - N R Sl , J
bedroom home , complef elv
remoQelcd . new c arpet ,
basement. W"'"
ated.
rea s.on111

0

c.Q\..

Auto s for Sale
-........ -- ..... Datsun B210, 4 dr

1978 CUTLASS SUPREME
• p.s., p.b ., am radio,
wheels, sport mlrro~rs.
bench seal, V·8 260 en•lin&lt;e,
gOOd gas mileage, ex··
cellent condition. 17,000
m i les . $4,850. Call 446·3062
or 446· 1422 after 4 p.m .

.lrlls .

lo c ated ~
rwo
lots .
¥ulberry fl.ve, Poml!rov,
On Owner will help t, nance
to res.pons.ib le j:larty

Busineu Oppor tun i ty -

NR · S1,
Burl ingham S tor~ 11 mrle~ I rom
Pomer oy on Rt JJ. complete
garage . s!ore room. garc:sen
c: e , and tree par k ing .
Bargarn prr c: eO in the low $20's.

var d and garage. This won ' t
last long .

RESTAURANT 7% Fl NANCING
Doing great business. 30&gt;&lt;10. 5 year old building .
Seating for 50 people. E lectri c heaL air condition·
ing . Good location. Looking for an excellent invest·
#434
ment. ca ll today . Shown by appointment .

Chilrles M . Hayes, Realtor

Neacil E . C•ney , Br .· Mgr .
Pn. 992·140lor n1-2110

1978 FORD 4x4, $4200. Call
446·2007 .

Century 11 Rea l ESiille C:orporalion · RegiShHed Trlldemark
Centu r y 21 Real Es tate Cor po ration P r inted in U .S A .
Each offrce h i ndependently own~

We have potential
buyers- need your
listings.

1976 GMC Sierra Grande .
Will consider trade . Exc .
cond., call ~ - 3175 .

Equal

'Real Estate - General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

1975 CHEVY 'I' ton pickup.
Six cylinder, 3 speed_,
RadiO, 54,000 mile•, $2,000.
Call Mrs. Bryan Harris at
667·3652 .
1974 ONE TON Chevy
crew -cab, dual wheels,
dual fuel tanks, power
steering, poWer brakes,
and ~lr conditioning . Call
on weekends 247·2302.

25 ft. 1 in, long, 7 fl. 1 in .
wide flat bed dual ll)(le.
Two 4,000 gall . gasoline
tank• (good). One 3,000 gall
gas tank, suitable for
cu lvert. Call1·263 -3306 .

73

vans &amp; 4 w.o.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto.,
p.s., p.b., topper. Positive
traction front and rear. 985·
4339.
74

Motorcycles

1973-HONDA 350, very good
cond. $350. Call245·9264.

Real Est•te- Gener•l

24 ft . Pon toon Harris float
bOat, w _
l th many extra's,
for sale or t ra de for cam·
per of equal value. Call446·
1648 or 446·9743 between 9
and 5.
76

__. ,_-

~-

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

--

14" and 15" hubcaps. $1 .50
up . 992 ·51 18.

2 G78 15" tires. Less than
1.000 miles . S6S. 949· 2065 .
UTILITY t raile r with
r acks. S100. Call 614·985·
4329 .

FOUR T IRES
like new.
6.00)( 14·6 ply nul on $25.
each. Call985·4329.
PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY . S20. pius ta x
and old battery . We buy old
batteries. Repair batteries.
Ca ll388·8596.
CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair ,
wrecker service,
sel l
radiators ."
buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. Call after 5, 446 ·
7717 .
77

(0

R(IAIYI - on almost 4 acres ot land
a pond and small barn. Plus! A new 3 bedroom
home, with 1112 baths, a svnburst orange IU,tc:hen,
central a ir , electrlc heat pump , extra in511tation .
Pass. loan assump.
PLATTED AND READY TO BUILD ON- Building
lots 120' x100', located in subdivision in ·Kc school
district . Buy on land contract

446-3087

GOOD FAMILY LIVING- Neelj a few acres and
not too far out. 6.5 acres with a 2 BR home, garage
and 3 outbuildings . Located on Rl. 160, Approx . 2.5
miles past hospitaL

24 STATE STREET
GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO
WE 00 OUR HOMEWORIC 1

WE . HAVE OTHER
PROPERTY
AVAILABLE. PLEASE CALL FOR INFORMATION.

MIDDLEPORT - Grac ious Older 2 story home . 3
BR , bath, kit., din . rm ., full basement and situated
on a choice corner lot. Easy access to shopping .

SUPERB CEDAR RANCH - First rate craftsman··
sh ip throughout . A bedrooms, double closets, 2 full
baths, complete built·in kitchen with Corning top
range, formal dining , l arge family room with wood·
burner. Wood deck and 2 car garage . Jf.a acre lot .
Call for appointment.

AFTER,HOURS PHONE
BECKY LANE . , .. , ....... . ...... 446-0458
WALT LANE .. .......... .. ...... 446-0458

PRETTY RANCH - With a new 2 car garage at
!ac hed . 3 bedrms., bath, utility, kit., li v. rm. , large
lam . rm ., with Franklin F . P , and new carpet plus 112
acre lawn. Located in K .C. Dist .

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate- General

Re•l Est•te- Gen&amp;ral

FRONT END
AUGNMENlS
by
Randy
Carpenter,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
spe·
cia list.

lANDMARK
SERVICE STATION
Camping
Equipment

F IB ER GLASS truck top·
per with Sliding window for
6 1/ 2 ft . Fleetside truck $400 .
Call
after 5 p.m .
1978 21'h Fl. Prowler, fully
se lf co ntained , a·ll equip·
me nt i ncluded, $4000 . Call
446 ·2240.

t

1978
STARCRAFT
GALAXY 6 fo ld down tent
Sleeps
6.
c amp er.
Economical to tow. Clean
and in excell ent shape. Call
156·6626 or 256·657 4 .

446~0008

1978 PROWLER , 32 fl. filth
wheeL tu l ly equipped .
$7,000 . St . Rt. 7, 5 miles
North of Ga ll ipolis. Glenn
Smith .

t

5 ACRE FARM - 4 bedroom home, living rm., din.
rm ., kit. &amp; 1 bedroom downstairs, baement , f .a. fur ·
nace, rural water, barn &amp; outbuilding, nice garden
spot, located on Rt . 554, near Eno. Buy now for
$43,000.00.

t
t
t
t

t
t

BEAUTIFUL, MODERN BRICK HOME Overlooking Rt. 1A1 , only'" 1 "'"1ile from Gall ipolis
corp. limits. 2 w/ b fir ·col.Oamily room in base·
ment, l'h baths, ma ~ ... uti t-ins, house and 2112
acres, buy now in the $60' s. Poss ibility of mortgage
as91fmption!
"NEW LISTING IN VINTON_: 3 Bedroom home
situated across fr:om the elementary school on
Jackson Pike. VIllage water, F.A. oil furnace,large
garden area, downstairs bedroom and bath.
beautiful shade tree. A home you would certainly
enjoy. $37,500.00.

t

t
t
t

MINI FARM - 6'-1 ACRES - No house but has
small barn. Located lust off Rt. 141 , at Centenary.
Buy now for $20,000.00.

~

.BUY THIS l BEDROOM home in Ewington,
situated • on St. Rt. 160' and ready for you . 2
flr~places. well water. Buy now tor only $8,500.00.

t
f
f

.

t
f

JUST IN TIME FOR SPRING : 3 bedroom honi&amp;; f
living rm., dining rm. , kll., 1 nath, with 6 acres;
mor&amp; or less, nice gardrs· Q\..0 rlvacy of th&amp; coun·
try but close enough tot ... uuy now for $:!9,900.00.
Previ·o usly advertised for S34,\l00.00. You must see
the lnsld&amp; to appreciate L' _

IN THE LAP OF LUXURY - That'swher&amp; you will
be the day vou move Into this brand new 3 BR, 2'h
bath trl · level . ThiS home will fulfill ·your every
dr&amp;am with the large L·shaped family rm ., equip·
ped kitchen &amp; 2 car garge. Located in Clearvl&amp;w
Estates &amp; shown by·appointment.

RACCOON CREEK FARM - 50 acres, 38 A. bol·
tom , 11 A . pasture,lovely modern brick home with 3
Brs ., 2 baths, cathedral · ceilings, fireplace, large
sun deck and lots of other extras. new metal pole
barn~ crib, loading chute, approx. 1700 ft . creek
frontage , located 4 mi. trom Meigs Mine No. 3.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - $6,500 down
- 9%- Asking $33,000 - Remodeled 2 story home,
3 BR 's, LR, den, family rm ., dining, kitchen, 2 we
f irepla ces, 31/:z acres. Located on State Route 233
betweenGallipolisand Oak Hill.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 20% DOWN
- Older 2 story home With 6 rms. &amp; bath, cellar
t"1ouse, sheds, large shade frees on approx. 4 acres.
Located 4 mi. south of Rio Grand&amp; on the Tom
Woods Rd . $19,900.

Ranny Blackburn,

GREEN TOWNSHIP - PASTURE FARM ~ 155 A.
M · L located on SR 1-41 approx . 6 mi. west of town .
Land is approx . 60% cleared &amp; 40% woods &amp; in·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn . Priced at $500 per
acre.

~No - 4.25 acres lev&amp;l land . Over 400 fl . frontage
on state Route 554. County water available, ex·
cell en! bu i ldlng .or mobile home site . 56,500.

Branch Manager

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 518- Remodel ·
ed hom&amp; includes 6 rms. and bath, carport, stov&amp;,
refrig., dishwasher, almost 2 acres of land priced
for quick sale .

GREEN ACRES ~ Three BR re~ch, nice balh,
large L R, modern kitch•·uce.O ·, all carpeted.
garage &amp; flat loL REP _,, , tor most types of
financing . lmmedtare possession. $39,500. .·

'RODNEY BIDWELL RD. - Sectional home, 24x60,
4 BR, 2 baths, large LR, equipped kitchen, cent. a~r ,
concrete block garage. 1acre. $22,500.
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Approx . 6 acres
level and gently rolling land , county water, nice
1uilding sites, located on the Floyd Clark Rd .

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Vnfinlshed one story home with 3.4 acr&amp;son RAC·
COON CREEK . Located on the Gr&amp;en Saunders Rd.
near Northup. $18,500.

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted building 101.
1.22 acre, nice wooded setting, city ~chools . S5,900 .

PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres. 15 A. Simms Creek
bottom, balanc&amp; rolling pasture &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large barn, several other buildings,
lob. base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon Woods Rd .

MINI FARM - OWners moved to Florida and are
selling ttris lovely J EIR brick home . This 6 yr. old
beauty offers lots of good living for some lucky
family with a large kitchen &amp; dining rm ., LR , fam1 ·
ly rm . with fireplace. garage &amp; barn. Located on
State Rout'e160 approx . 6 mi . from HMC .

CAMPGROUND (FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEl:
ACRES) Make something of this property again. 11
A., 2 acre lake, severa buildings in ne&amp;d of repair.
dumping station, 2 water systems, lots of pine trees.
Fix this dandy place up &amp; start making money. ·opportunity knocks.
.:.

thl! city; nat. gas F .A. f~rnace, full basement. ap· '
prox. 'h acre lot. Buy now for 543,000.00.

. ·-.

.

'

WDODRIALTY,INC.
32LOCCIST ""GALLIPOLIS

1
;.

411.....- - - - ..- -. . .-~

Set/lEeS
.,-------

81
Home
_ _l_m_provements
MEA DES ro oling and
spouting, home remodeling
and sid ing, free estimates,
10 years local experience .
Ca ll 388·8205
PAINTI!lG · Residential
and commercial. Interi or
and exterior, mobile home
roots. Free estima te s. 17
yrs. exp. with references
call 367 ·7784 or 367 · 7160.
ALL TYPE S of Carpentrv
work, new home bldg. or
remodeling, call 446·2910 .
PAINTING interior ~nd e)(·
terior , tree estimates, cttr ll
446--3344.
Most wood produ c ts. Wood
Shop,
101 court St ..
Ga ll ipoliS , OhiO 45631. Call
446·2572.

NEW LISTING -'- 3 bedroorl home situated wlthlrl
.

1973 STARCRAFT !railer,
loaded, a.c ., 2-30 lb. gas
bottl es, sleeps 6, twin
axles, new tir es and
brakes, bath , shower, oven,
re frlgera·tor , tu\1 side
awn ing, TV antenna , 110
vo lt or 12 volt or gas . Call
992·5A34 or 992 ·3129 for in·
lormation
and
a-p ·
po intment . $3,600 firm .

_C_A_B
_I_N_E_T
_S
_&amp;
_ V ;:N
- I'TI ~S

f

j.
'

A TRULY GRACIOUS HOME - Beller Homes and
Gardens would be taken by the beauty of this
spacious home set on a beautiful landscaped lot
abundant with shrubbery &amp; frontage on the OHIO
RIVER . Words cannot describe the quality of this
brick &amp; frame 2 story home . 3 B R ' s, 2'12 baths, extra
large LR &amp; familv rm ., fireplace , cent. air, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH MORE . Shown
by appointment.

3 OR 4 BEDROOM cottage located on Clark's ;
Chapel Rd., near Porter. Approx . 9 miles from
hasp., hous.e, garden and 21/:t acres, nice garden
area. Buy now for $30,000.00.

'

3406 .

ROOFING , Guttering and
remodel ing . W illiam Mit·
chell, 388 ·8507 .

~ - 4208

FLOORING ,
ceiling,
paneling, doors and w in·
dows, a lso pa inting·. Call
992 ·2759.

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

F·rank Rose Const. Co.
Remodeling repair, new
construction, all types
Free estimates, all work
full_y
g.uaranteed.
Resedential, commercial, industrial..&amp; .mm. g, . fiedricaT work.
SHA Cert.
446·%27

JS Court St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Call 446·3896
or 446-3080

PA IN TING · Commercial
Airless spray pa i nting:
L .M . Johnson , 675· 1128.

PROFESS IONAL pa inting
· ~xf :, •nt. , roof and sign
pa•ntmg. 30 yrs. exp., free
est . Call Arthur Hill , Jr.
446·3890.

KUHN &amp; SAUNDERS
ROOFING
Commercial or
Residential
Hot or Cold Process
446·2450-379·2458

O&amp;F CONTRACTORS.
Home improvements,
room additions, siding,
electrica I &amp; air conditioning, and insurance
claim repairs . Guaranteed work.
Free
Estimates . 446-3407.

t~==~======j

DENNY
CHAIN LINK FENCE

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home i m ·
provements - Rooting
gutters -spouts -con·
crete work . Ph . 367·0427,
367-0194, 367-0141. Free
estimates.

Reese Trenching .
&amp;Backhoe Service

82

Bill's

DOZER WORK
ex
cav a ting . Land c lea ring,
ca ll446·0051

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration
D·DAY
REFRIDGERATION

c~

&amp;

-,
'

Sandblasting co ,

L~\

Roller , Brush and Spr.,y
Work .
- Fully In su r ed
- Free Estimates
- Interior &amp; Exterior

p

85

DEWITT' S PLUMB I NG
AND HEATING
Route 160-af Evergreen
Phone ~ - 2735 .

V
Del
.Eivery
. FILLINGER
Service. CaWater
ll 379 ·
2124 .

M . H. Repair

Blf.L 'S MOBILE HOM ES
and Home Improvements .
Free estimates. Call 446 2642.

· 'ROOM TO ROAM - I think you would sav that this
sprawling brick tri· levells one of the nicest country
homes you've ever seen. This beauty is situated on
4'h acres of land about 3'1• miles trom Rodney . Why
not 1e1 your family enjoy 5· BR's , 3 baths. large living and dining ·r oom, comlete kitchen, family room
-!lith stone fireplace nd 2 car garage . Be the first to
see th,ls O;lie.
·

STUCCO
plasterin g,
plaster repair, 1e• tur e
ceilings, free cstltru•tes,
call256·1182 .

j

THE ENTIRE FAMILY WILL LOVE THI5 ONE -J"Or .I e~ · s., t·a baths, l.R with WB fireplace, famllr'
rm , lovely carpet throughout , 2 car gar.JQC., near
CI' Y School, $$3,900 . .

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

J

ALL THIS FOR SJ9,500-3 BR's, 1'h baths, LR with
stone fireplace, natural gas heat, air cond., range,
dishwash&amp;r, garage, large patio &amp; fenc~ In frqrtitl
lawn . Green Acres Subdivision.
'
.• .

'

JIM MARCUM Roollng
spautlng and sldlnQ, · o
years txpur lonen
~" 4 '.,
estjmal s . Rolnu!l 11110
Ca,l l 388 857

---

l

pos.
121 Wens
t23 Nahoor
sheep
124 ToUt:&lt;!
125 Ois1ance
UMit

1,

,.,cvoured

127
129
13t
132
133
134
t36

Easter, e.g.
Ashes
Learning
Asian river
Pigpen
Exist
Football
kick
t37 Abide
t38 Habituale
139 Wanl ad
abbr.
t 40 Pieces out
t41Goal
'
t42 Loose garment
t43 Lifted
t44 Tidier
146 Wear away
t48 Steed
149 Climbing
devices
1Ji0 Insurgent
1'51 Paths

DOWN
1 Like ears
2 Poetic muse
3 Portal
4 Beverage
5 French article
6 Broil
7 American
ostrich
8 Goel&lt;jess ot
healing
9 Printer 's
measure
10 Exile
11 Sowing
12 Diphthong
13 Incarnation
of Vishnu
t4 Barter
15 Make angrv
16 Snme
17 FOI'Ii'a'l

Business- Farm s- Partn erships
an d Corpora lions

ut1'I'ity

T· shirls and novelty
shirts for politician s,
b 1
b .
a I teams , usmesses
or individuals.
Shirts 54 .00 Each
"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything! "
Ph . 614-949· 2358
Evenings &amp; Weekend s
5·8· 1 mo

Pnmeroy, Oh .

BUI.Idl'ngs

Sizes from 4x6 to l2x40

P&amp;S BUILDIN GS
Rl 3 B 54
· · ox
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·843 ·2591
5 14 1 m o.

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULA'FION

ROOFING
REMODELING
HOME
MAINTENANCE

Vi n yl&amp;
Alu minum Siding
elnsulat ion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacem ent
Windows

AI Tromm
Construction

Free Estimate

James Keesee
Ph, 992 -2772

742·2328

992·3795
4-2-tfc

CONSRTROUU,SHCTI
- ON
*New homes • ex·
lensive remodell·ng
·
* E lectr 1
·cal works

* Maso,nry work
12 Years
Experience

Greg R ous h
Ph 992 758
•

·

3
5· 15·1 mo.

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
THE POOL PEOPLE
31 711 Noble Summit Rd.
Midd~port, Ohio
992 .5724
Sales, service and sup·
pltes. In ground and
abo•e ground pools .
S·l ·tfc

~-==========1~=~-~-~-~~~~~8~!~m;o~-~±~~~=~~~==~
87

5 1

Upholstery

VINYL SIDING

MASTERCR AF T UP HO L
STERY . SHOP
Com
mer cia! and r esi dent 1al 32
years experi ence . Call 4116
2301 or 446 4971.

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
Serving your area for 25 years.
Cal l Now tor Large Savings
Fo r Free Estimate Call

Eugene Long (614) 843-3322
5·29· 1 mo.
87

65 Paid nolice
66 Tense
67 Morning
prayer
69 Shouts
7 t Needlefish
73 Kind of perIodical
7 4 Goddess of
discord
76 Unlock
again
79 Fruit
8 t Scottish ri•·
er
82 Nod
84 Heavy string
85 Ermines
87 Let fall
90 Noble
92 Female ruff
93 Memoranda
95 Metal las·
1ener
97 Uriaspirated
98 Exist
99 Pair (abbr.)
101 Laths
103 Piper's son
104 Citrus fruit
105 Experience
t08 Free ot
t 10 Built
112 European
113 Possesses
114 Preposition
115 Hyalite
1 t7 Paslime
118 Suspend
119 Covers
120 Foolball

.. ._

" From 30:.::10"
SMALL

5·25 ff c

GENE PLANTS
ANO SONS
Plumbing
Heating
Air
conditioning. 300 Fourth
Ave. Ph . 446· 1637.

,

F:r~L ~~~~~gs

op

/"'

7785.

--------=~1 86

I

~-

618 E. Main

General Hauling

JIM 'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery . Cal l 256 ·
9366 or 256 ·1394 anylim e.

· . . . ..

•

1·28·1 mo.

Tri-Counfy
Bookkeeping
Service

... __

' -;;,;;

.;

992 · 7314

r~=~~=~~~~~~;==~~~~===;=r~===::::;::;~~~~

WILL HAUL limes tone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. L eo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742-2455.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.

POMEROY,O.
992·6215 or

H&amp;R BLOC K OFFICE LOCATION

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
I Lawlul
6 Avarice
II Forewarning
t8 Pope's scart
t9 German river
20 Discovered
2 t Relund
23 Row
24 Edible seed
26 Emporium
27 College deg.
29 Gladden
30 Feslive
3t Ripped
32 Girl's name
33 Small bird
34 Reject
35 Rolllighlly
36 Chastise
3B Self·cenlered one
40 Girl's name
41 Tessera
42 Strap
43 Man 's name
45 Golf score
46 Sun gOd
47 Clayey earth
48 wa1er
source
49 Old· womanish
5 1 Gol1
mounds
52 Lalln conjunclion
53 Mineral
54 Actual
55 Feasted
57 Rodent
58 Surgical
thread
60 Loess
6 1 Dance step
62 1/endlllons
64 Dyspr slum
&lt;y1MIJUI

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ayrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

Work .
949 2686
'

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Swe epers ,
toa5ters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to St ate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825 .

CARTER'S F'LUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone~ 3888 or 446·4477

Nu-Prime replacement
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp;
vinyl
siding
How met Patio covers
Howmet screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum
utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive
446·2642
Free Estimates

. n . ....
. -~'~ ....-r

Gheen's
Painting

: all

LIMESTONE , graJel and
sand. A ll sizes. At Richards
and Son. Upper R iver Rd.,
Gall ipolis, Ohio . Call 4-46·

s

Gutter work , down
spouts , som e concrete
work .
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)

LEO
MORRIS

Repairs . servi_ce,
al l
makes. 992 ·2284 .
The
Fabric Shop, Pome roy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sha rpen
Scissors.

QUALITY
MAIN ·
TENANCE · Electrical,
plumbing, heating, and air
conditioning. Call388·9698 .

~

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

e V·CHISEL
PLOW

:::9~:: ::8::~·N ~ ~2~~\C:.m
Sh

·-

~=========~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SWIM LAND
150 Third Ave.
IS NOW OPEN
10 am til 5 pm
Monday thru
Saturday
'1ABEX CHEMICALS"
PHONE 446-7887

Salem "fwp. Rd. 180
De•ter , Ohio 45726
Bil l E ske-w, Ph . 742· 2456
Your Pl ace or Mm e
5 9 1 mo pd .

Call 446·

heating,
cooling
, electrical
Resi dential,
commercial.

KOTALIC
LANDSCAPING
Residential &amp; C:ommer· ·
cial. Tree &amp; shrubs in·
stat led, designing &amp; lan·
ting , shrubbery trimm ing, lawn need control
programs .
446·3100
861 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

(Gallia Co•nty
Certified)
ILeac:h Beds," Water and
Lines, .Electric
Lines, Pofe B~.tildings .

DOZER WORK
1058 or 446 4955.

Dozer , backhoe and tren
cher . Septic systems, com
plete services. Hourl y or
con lra c t . Engineering,
layout and construction.
Bill Pull ins. 9912476.

Bl LL'S
Home Improvements
Nu -Prime Replacement
Windows . Stor-m Win ·
dows &amp; Doors. Patio
Covers ,
Carports .
Mobile
Home Ac ·
cessories.
Free
estimates.
691 Miller Drive 446·2642

RinGrande ·

DAVISON
DEVELOPMENT
Excavation Services .
Dump truck, dozer,
backhoe.
Call 446·4537

Tri.COunty
General Welding

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR

Limestone for dr iveways .
Pomerov··Maso n area . 367
7101.

I1-~=========-:j

Ken Soles
245·9113

Free E stim.;~ tes
Reas onable Pnces
Ca ll H award
949 · 2862
9-19 ·2160
1·22 ·1fc

STA ND ARD
Plu mb in g Healing
215 Third Ave ., 446 3782

PAR K FINANCIAL
&amp; V A Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay ·
ment. Federa l Housing
Loans, l% down on
\15,000; S% down on
b_
a la nce. FHA 20s Substdy Program . FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort
Open M -W-F 'i : 00 to 1:00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office99l ·7S44
Home 992 -6191
107 Sycamore Sl.
Po mero , OH.
VA

Ru11and , 0.
Ph . 742· 2455
5 2 1 I mo

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, guMer,
build -up roof, home
repair .
Free Estimates
J88-97S9

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC.
Box 89, Bidwell, Oh .,
388-9877. Sidewalks,
driveways,
basements, steps, etc. 1nsulation, residential"
or
commercial.
Some remodeling. ·

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1 I 11% ln terest-30 Yrs.

ENGINE
STeAM
CLEANED
'12.00

PAINTING done ; inter ior
and ex terior. Call992 ·3827 .

GAI.LIA RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT
Insulated vinyl siding,
aluminum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
windows. Free estimates.
C.a l! 367 ·0209 day or night,

BUDGET
CONSTRUCT ION CO.
A ll
type
home
im ·
provements · exterior and
interior. Free estimates
Mike Marcum. 388·8636. ·

82

All types of roof work ,
new or repai r gutters
and downspout s, gutter
cl eaning and painfing
All work guaranteed .

Real !:State Looms

H '1\.'F YOUR

H. L WR11£SEL
ROQCING

KINGS CONTRACTING .
Rooting and chimneys,
house painting and tree
service . Ca ll992 ·3737.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning

R .M .
ROOFING
&amp;
SPOUT I NG .
Home
remode l ing, siding. Free
es timates. phone 388 -9039
or 388 ·9642.

Business Services

Call for Free Siding
Estimate , 949·2801 or
949·2860. No Sunday
ca lis.
5· 1· 1 mo.

Roofing, siding, room ad
ditions, a ll types of general
repairs. 25 year!!. Pxp . 992

Will paint houses , barn s
and roofs . No job is too big
or small. Free estimates.
First quality · work . Call
992·3941 or 992 ·5126 .

1•

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Wi ll pour concrete, lay
block and brick . Call 992
3406 .

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER &amp; DOOR, INC .
Overhead Garage Doors,
Electric Door Operators,
Continuous no· leak gut·
tering
Day · 698·8205 · Night

PAINTING · interior and
ex terior , free estimates in
Ga llipolis area, reasonable
rates. Call Mark White
245 ·5050.
'

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

CAMPER · 25 fl . self
assemb led . S1600. Call 446·
2126 .

t

BEEN LOOKING for a piece ol Investment proer·,
ty? well, we hav&amp; iustlisteo property located on thef
100 block on Fourth Ave. Consists illwo rentals. Call
us for more Information, you' II be glad you did!
,

---------

LAIR CON ST . · Block
brick,
firep la ces, ne~
homes, remodeling , c al l
379·2123.

-

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning
St ea m
clea ned .
Free
es t ima te .
Reasonab l e
rates. Scot chguard . 992
6309 or 742 ·2211.

THEISS INSULATION, In ·
sulmaster foam Insu lat ion .
New homes, old homes,
comme r cial structures .
For free estimates ca ll 446·
1971.

R. McKEE &amp; COMPANY .
B la c_
k to p,
dr iveway s,
parkt ng lots, patch in g
s~a lcoating,
concret~
Si dewalk s. Free estimates,
25 years e)(perience . Call
797·2648. 21 Converse St
.,
Chauncey, OH .

1975 STARCRAFT pop up
camper · sleeps 6, stove,
heater, ice box . complete l y
se lf-contained . Used only 1
summer . Like new, $1500.
Call 446·1641 or 446 ·7076 .

IDEAL FOR TWO OR THREE: Slluated across
from Penny Far~ Mkt. If you're looking for conve·
nience, this is tne hOme lor you. One floor. cily ser·
vices, low maintenance ... Buy now for $24.500.00.

FOR
BEST In Carpet
Clec:Jning Call Smeltzer 's
Steamway . Ca l l 614· 446 ·
2096.

BILL ' S CONCRETE
SE RVIC E
Driveways, walks, pat ios,
porches, basements and
garages. Free es t ima tes,
ca ll 388·91168 · Vinlon, OH

Auto Repair

~-3139

f

81

FREE ESTIMATES

78

Ken Morgan
Evenings 446·0971
Real1or

t
t

I mpro_ve.!'!_~t!ts

Call (6 14) 992-9932
Pomeroy, 0 .

1S ACRES PLUS- 12x65 Kirkwood mobile home .
Barn, corn crib, pond, land fenced and lots at shade
tr'ees . Land can be sold without mobile home .

Home
I mprove_me~ts~.

Home

81

14" and 15" used tires. plus

trucks, repa
two ir
tones
change
of
body
, $159.
van
color extra but reasonable .
Hammonds Body Shop. 221
Mill Sl., Thurman, OH . Call
245 ·9371 or 379·2306.

f

f

Boats and
Motors for Sale

SAND AND PAl NT · minor

Building lOt with water and sewage on
Bulaville Road .

Russell D. WOod
Evenings 4"'·4618
Rea nor

75

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr . wrecker
service . All types of repair .
Upper Rt. 7 Ca ll 446·2445
days and 446·4792 nights.

WM. D. TONEY - BROKF'f

Real Estate- General

_

1972 k750 Zuzuki, water
cooled in good condition'.
$750.00. Call992 3640.

7H~7.

TONEY REALTY

81

---

_M~t~r~y~l_es

1974 Ford F100 Pickup . 360
eng. $1,200 firm . 949·2328.

1/u (;(. fll~JJ .
Of

~ -- _

1973 Kawasaki 350 dirt
bike . Good co nd . Must sell.
1250. 992 61 15.

Trucks tor Sale

1975 CHEIIY '4o ton truck.
A· l shape, 35,000 miles,
S2500. or best offer . Call
446·9334 aft&amp;r 5.

D-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel , Sumlay, June 1, 1980

GMC 1974 pickup .one·half
ton 51,495. 69 Old• Cutlass
U95 or will fake guns on
trade. See T. 0 . Stewart~
7&lt;2·2421.

1976 DATSUN pick UP truck
with topper. In good cond .,
caii24S ·9212.

1969 CHEVROLET Pickup
truck, $500. Ol iver 70 trac ·
tor, 5800. 8x50 mobile
home, $2,000. Call388·9792 .

Comtortabte
Hom~
NR- 51, close in, 6 rms ., fi.II IV f urn ished, nice POrch,

- T rucks lor Sale

1938 «;:HEVROLET pickup.
It runs, restorable. ssoo.
Call ~ - 4294.

1976 FORD v, ton pick up .
Short bed, low mileage, ex·
cellent condition. S2,895 .
Call ~- 0515 .

NR ·• l. New l i lting - Nice
r:aun tr,- nome , wi1t1 )1 ac res
near Ru tl and , 5 rooms with
bath, gOOd ou tbuild ings,
hunting ,
w it h
m ineral
right s. s~ to appreciale .

72

1972 BUICK SKYLARK · V·
8, new J .C. Penny battery ,
Gd. mileage, $600. Call 992 ·
2288.
72

. 94 ACRE -

t
f.

71

Auto s lor Sale
;

DILLON
60B E • ••

71

abbr.
21 Worships
22 Raise
23 Biblical
weed
25 Eon
27 Direct
wrongly
28 Bears wit '
ness 1o
30 Sea bird
31 Narrate
33 Striped ani·
mal
35 Ardor
36 Gong
37 Silkworms
39 Grain
4t Mountain
lake
42 Ray
44 Pacify
47 Temper
48 Survives
49 Norse gods
50 Moray seeker
54 Defeated
ullerly
55 Evaluate
56 Slrike out
59 Game fish
60 Allghl
61 State: Abbr.
63 Sluggish
66 Preposition
67 Pronoun
68 Biting gently
70 Steeples
71 Fuel
72 Likely
73 Courage
75 Grave
77 .Compass

pt.
78 Borr.
~0 1.Jian land
83 Port, ...g.

86 Scnrrtms

A&amp; H . UphOlSINJrt g
' Now
Re Uph al:; t crin g
Car
Sea rs Ph ll9 2 3752 or 992
37 43

88 Group ot
eight
89 Urge on
90 Compass

pl.
91 Pronoun
94 Walks
96 Printer's
measure
98 Singing

voice
99 Pledge
tOO Quick retor.J,
102 Teacake
104 Burbol
105 Bind
106 Torment
t07 Went In
109. Waste time
t 1 t Fool tra velers
112 Rooters
tt:i Pit
116 Meadow
118 Male deer
119 Weary
122 Moved sinu·
ously
124 Deliver
t25 Slir
t26 Entertains
128 Fear
t30 Roll
131 Defame
t32 Aromalic
plant
13~ Slave
137 Mine vein
t38 Merit
t40 Guido' s high

note
t42 Steal ·
143 Brown kiWI·
144 Chlorine
symbol
145 Interjection
14 7 Scale note
t48 Hectoliter
\abb,,)

UphOlstery

NOI1010S

TRISTATE
LI PHQ_ STE RY SHOP
11 63 Sec ,".J..v&lt;&gt;. G~l! i polis .
4J6 7933 or 4.46 1833

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Fines t qualitY a1 lowest
possi bl e prices. Call
now tor free estimate.
Co mme rcial or r esidentia I.
2S6·1S67

�•

•
E-1-The Sunday Tunes-Sentmel, Sunday, June 1, 1980
D-3-The Sunday Tunes.Sentmel, Sunday, June 1, 1930

Veteran makes last. stand
for additional benefits

Sunday Television
Log
.
~

JUNE 1,1aao

I

MORNING
8:10 Cil WORLD AT LARGE
5:30
AGRICULTURE u.s A
t:OO
CHRISTPPHER CLOSE-UP
BETWEEN THE LINES
~ AMERICAN PROBLEMS AND
CHALLENGES
8.30 (l). CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
(l) KOINONIA
.[J) ABETTER WAY
ilDl TREEHOUSE CLUB
7:00 (l). THISISTHELIFE
(l) FORD PHILPOT
[J) BANANA SPLITS
•CD OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
~ URBAN LEAGUE
IDi ID ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:30 III. T,V CHAPEL
III DAWSON MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH SERVICE
[J) IT IS WRITTEN
(I) EDDIE SAUNDERS
(!) JIMMY SWAGGART
ilDl OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
IDi. BIBLE ANSWERS
8.00 (l). MORMON CHOIR
CIJ THE LESSON
ill THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
(I) GRACE CATHEDRAL
• [J) DAY OF DISCOVERY
CD(jj) SESAME STREET
IDi Ill
EVANGELISTIC
OUTREACH
8.30 III. ORAL ROBERTS
CIJ CHAPEL HOUR
(I) CONTACT
(!)OPEN BIBLE
.CD REV. LEONARD REPASS
IJDl JAMES ROBISON
IDi LOWER LIGHTHOUSE
8·oo III SINGING JUBLtEE
(I) ROBERT SCHULLER
CD PARTRIDGE FAMILY
CD REX HUMBARD
ffiABETTERWAY
.CD CHRISTIAN CENTER
ill STUDIO SEE
ilDl ORAL ROBERTS
(jj) MISTER ROGERS
ID!a REV. RA WEST
8:30 [J) GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
(!)FAITH FOR TODAY
.[J) ROBERT SCHULLER
CD BIG BLUE MARBLE
ilDltT IS WRITTEN
(jj) SESAME STREET
10:00 (l). REX HUMBARD
CIJ CHANGED LIVES
[J) LEAVE ITTOBEAVER
CD KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
(!) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
CD SESAME STREET
ilDlMOVIE-(WESTERN)"' ''Sono
01 Kotll Eldlf" 1965
ID!a JIMMY SWAGGART
10:30 (I) SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
ffiMOVIE -(DRAMA)"" "Separ·
ole Tobloo" 1958
.CD ERNESTANGLEY
(jj) ZOOM
11:00 III. HUMAN DIMENSIONS
(I) IN TOUCH
(!) REX HUMBARD
CD ONCE UPON ACLASSIC The

I

I

legtate Tra ck and Fteld Champton
1t'11ps (90mms)

(jj) ELECTRIC COMPANY
HENRY MAHAN
11:30 (l) •
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
CD &lt;!Z IB ANIMALS, ANIMALS.
ANIMALS
.CD FACE THE NATION
CD WORLD OF THE SEA
(jj) BIG BLUE MARBLE

EVENING

WORLD The Voung Runaway s A
ktdnap lhubrother an d stsler !rom
a foster home end up tn sttHlgle

with bank robbers (PI I of a two
60 mms )
lJ) JIMMYSWAGGART

R!rt eptsode

fight forthetr ftves after thetr plane

crashes 1M desolate mountamsaMd
they ere threatened by avalanches
of mud Stars Andy Gnftlth Oav1d
Ackroyd (60 mms )

lll lll®i60 IIINUTES
WAR AND PEACE
FRENCH CHEF
7:30 [J) RAT PATROL
(!j) WALL STREET WEE I&lt; Lone
I])
(!j)

Star Strategy

B:OO (l) IJ (I) CHIPo Tho•oh hospo
tahzed Panch helps Jon and h iS
temporary replacement to solve a
rash ol robbenes co mm1tted by
thieves who use st olen cars
(Repeat 60 mms )

REX HUIIBARD
ill MOVIE ·(COMEDY)"' The
(I)

1i53

CIJ W CD HAL LINDEN 'S BIG
APPLE Hal Lmden steps out of the

aqu ad room and 1n to the streets and
skyscrapers of New York lor a ne
tlveaoM a voyage home1na specra l
hour of musrc and comedy w1th
gueats Shecky Greene Robert
Guillaume and the Aadro Crty Mu81c
Halla Rockettes (60 mms )
Ill CD (!I) ARCHIE BUNKER'S
PLACE Edith slrant1c acurryrng
does liltle to sat1sfy a howling Ar
ch1e , who IS SICk overt he energy
COSIS {Repeat)

[J)

mhab1tants of Chaco Canyon New
Mexico, undertook one of !he most

co mprehens1ve bulldtng protects
aver Attar 50 years of ar
ch eolog1cal study how and why
these people developed such a so
ph1sllcated technology 1s only now
becommg clear {60 m1ns )

8.30 IJI[J)(ll) ONE DAY AT ATIME Max
and Julie are left homeless dur ng
sn a1rhne slnke and the1r so lutiOn
tor a place to stay leaves Ann and
Barbara Cl1mbrng the wa lls
(R&amp;J1!&amp;1)

0:00 C2J U THE DREAM MERCHANTS
Stars MorganFalfchtld MarkHar
moM Bnenne Leary An amb1!1ous

young dnfter named Johnny Edge
beg1ns a mov1e studto dynasty m
Hollywood a golden era {PI II 2

hrs )
700CLUB
CD@Ql SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

nilE OF DELIVERANCE
CD IDi Ill
ISSUES AND
ANSWERS
(!)THIS IS THE LIFE
• CD VIEWPOINT

(I)

The Destructors 1974 Stars M1
chael Caine, Anthony Oumn

Smoka'i_Roadblock 197 8
ALICE Allee leads the
g1rl adown lh a road of rebellton after
Mel1us 11111 s attme clock a!the diner
(ReJ1!at}

8 (]) (lQl

Sundown'
(jj) OHIO JOURNAL

12:30 (l).(!) MEET THE PRESS
,
C1J ORAL ROBERTS
CIJMOVIE-(IIYSTERY)" "Whoot
oiF-"1842
CD DIRECTIONS
• CD WILD KINGDOM
IJDl THE ISSUE

[J)IliJ

examlnll aome of •Ia present uses

MOVIE

8.30

~ADVENTURE)

"Charge of the Light

1838
D. JAMES KENNEDY
CD AMERICA'S ATHLETES 1980
B~godo"

(I)

Serlet devoted to exammmg and

(!) PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
•
CD
MOVIE
-(SUSPENS&amp;-DRAIIA)" Ya "Bol

ffiENERGYEXPOTheOe&gt;elopong

CD WEST VIRGINIA STATE HIGH
SCHOOL TRACK MEET
®I FACE THE NAnON
1:30 iiOJ HOGAN'S HEROES
(jj)
HOCKING VALLEY
BI.UEORASS

examinee the htstory of Amence 's
1!,!..8Ssnt energy 11tuatton

• CD ilDl TRAPPER JOHN 11.0

WORLD OF PENTECOST
CD (!Z a NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sports woll

(I)

[J)

bltweentheNewYorkCosmosand

theWaatilngton Otplomata (2 hrs ,
30mlno)

(JJ)

Loo~teoOodlloro

.CD (Ill) II!IIPI!ROPEN
CD UCI!LLENCE FOREVER Thto
program explore• the work of Inter
n1tlonelly known wood ·CifYtr
~uvuot Crob-

UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'YourOI*IIon1 Sorvont' Hudson'o

(jj)

n

aecretlve behavior eroueee au

(80mlno)
1l!IN!I.A80UT TOMORROW
(JI) •
WIPE WORLD OF
SPOIITS 1) US ~uta Club Dirt
• RocolromiiiiAOio 2)Aopeclolf&gt;O'·

' 4:30

folmlnce by the Chtnell Acrobats
ol Totwon (90 mtno I

'

I

AJAW Nattonal Women a Cot

Public Nohce
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
OE PARTMENT OF
TRANSPOIHATION
Columbus, Ohoo
May 23, 1980
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 80·341
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS·OOOSC17ll

and Washmgton
Oh1o, on various
locaf10ns
by applymg
retroflectonzed polyester
compound for cen terltnes,
lane l i nes and c hannellztng
t1nes

FIRING LINE The Cabonet

(jj)

11·oo

rn •ill mm CD GID w CD

11

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Son1ag

NEWS
CIJ NEWSIGHT
[J) RUFF HOUSE
CD NON-FICnON TELEVISION

I South opens wtth one club

'PieaBargalning AnAmertcanWay
of Juatlce'Thlaprogram focuses on

aeveralcourtcaaas In an attempt to
examine the plea bargatn iMg
!l_ltem In Flortda {60 mrns l

11•30 (l).MOVIE~COIIEDY)'"

nme For Comedy" 1940

"No

CIJ THE KINO IS COMING
ill SNEAK PREVIEW. JUNE
ill OPEN UP
ABC NEWS
NBC LATE NIGHT MOVIE
CD MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) "

W
11

cas h1 er ·s cnecK tor an
amount equa I to five per
cent of h1s b1d, but tn no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of his b1d,
payable to the D1rector

co lor, or nattonal ongm 1n
cons 1de rat1on
tor
an

award
Mtn1mum wage rates
for th1 S pro tec t have been
prede term1ned as requ1red
by law and are set forth tn
the b1d proposa 1 '
'T he date set for com
pt etton of th1 s work shall be
as set forth m the b1dd1ng
proposal "

Each bu~fder shall be
requ1red to file W1fh h1s b1d
a cert 1f1ed check or

~

KIHtr In Every Corner" 1875

ilDlMOVIE -(DRAMA) "Ya "Chat·
Iongo" 1870
11:45 Cllt.ENNY HILL SHOW
' (Jl) a ABC NEWS
12:00 ill GUILTY DR NOT GUILTY The

and West doubles wtth S - A J
94 H - K Q 6 D K 10 75 3 C
6 North passes East holds s .
K 10 3 2 H - A 52 D- J 6 C- 9
7 5 3 He btds one spade and
after South passes 1t "' up to
West to act He btds two
spades A JUmp to three would
show a hand that would probably produce game oppostle a
really bad Easl :oand
East shou'•1 b:d either three
or four sparl"
preferably
four If he JU&gt; , btds three West
should go on to game
The play lor game is reasonably good The best
defense ts to lead and contmue
clubs J;;ast ruffs m dummy.
comes to hts hand with th~ ace
of h~arts leads. ht• low dta
1ntl hops :Jp With
dumruv s klllg It Will fll ~ ha
f'lt(lrd

bly hold whereu pon he leads

proper

forms,

tor

qualtf1catian at least ten

days pnor to the date set

for open1n9 b1ds

In

Plans lind specif !cat1ons
are on ftle 10 the Depart
ment of Transportat1on and
tt'te off1ce of the Dlstnct
D eputy Dtrector
The 01rector reserves
the right to reject any and
all btds

DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev a 17 73
June 1, 8

II

JACQU&amp;'l CARTIER
Explorer Jacques Cartier died m
1557
INVADED POLAND
Gennany Invaded Poland Sept. I,

1939.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ t!l

HennArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

another dtamond, etc
2 Agam South opens wtth
one club Thts ltme West
holds S-A102H-KQ1050

' ~e~l~ J ~ -d~~b~:'1., h~:g~

cards, tut poortsh dtstrtbullon East holds: S- K 9 3 2 IfA J 7 4 D - K 9 3 C · 8 7 He

should show h1s strength by a
two-club cue-btd
West Will Simply respond
two hearts and East wtll take
him nght to game Netther
partner moves toward a slam

because ~ach one ts lookmg at
two qu1ck club losers
3 This really tough hand
wtll be dtscussed next Tu~s­
day The openmg bid 1ds one
heart North doubles With S
A K 10 4 H - Q D - A Q J 3 CAQ 6 5 South holds S - Q J 9 8
6H - 854D

one let1er to each square to form
four ordrnary words

INVEX

85C · 842

I I I
·-·Tit,••,c...

...,,-~,~

b

••,.,,. ..,

I MUGMY
I [J
SPOMIE

K]

I

t
J I l J

tHILERS

Print

Yeste rdays

I

!l ow woulrl vuu

r~ n y 0 11 from

,'

, Nto..-. !:)1' "- •'rltt'\il l P.\' lll:i!o \ S..\;."1:

WHAT
~AID
iHAI HOl-l-YWOOD
"EXT~A" WA?.
Nono arrange lhe circled letters to

form the surpnse answer. as suggested by the atxJve cartoon

ans~er here.

"[

XXI I Jt"

(Anowero Monday)
Jumbles GROOM FAINT HOPPER SCENIC
Answer How flea marke ts start - FROM ' SCRATCH '

·.

\ Jumble Book No u conltlning 110puulea l••••ll•ble forl1 75postpald
fror'l Jutnblll eJo th la r.ew suaper so .. ~i, Nprwood N J 071S411ncludeyour
r

!''lt

L....

,n iJ "'~ ri p c('lie a rod make cl\er:lt;; payable to Newtf)lptlrboc*;l

-

- -

Public Notice
Counties, Ohto, on various
routes and sections, by

preparing the surface and
painting
F1eld Paonting of
Exls11ng Steel
Structure Type
See
Plans
" The date set lor com
pte11on of this work shall be
as se1 forth on the bidding
prgposal ''
•Each bodder shall be
required to file with his bid
a certtfted check or
cashier' s check tor an
amount equal 1o five per
cen1 of his bid, but In no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
lor ten per cen1 of hts bid,
payable to the Director.
Bidders must apply, on
the proper farms, for
qualifcatlon at least ten

days prior to 1he dale set
lor opening bids tn ac
cordance wfth Chopler 5525
Ohio Rev1sed Code
Plans and speclflcallcns
are on file In lhe Depart·
men I of Transporlatlon and
1he office of the Dls1rlc1
DeilUIV Director.
The Director reserves
1he right to reject any ond
all bods
DAVIDL.WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev a 17 73
May 25, June 1
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Fer sale 1he residence of
the late BenJamin Neu1·
zllng at 105 Maple Place,
Pomeroy ,' Ohio, fully carpeted, COOSISftng of two
bedrooms, living room,

South responds me spade
t!H J e l

ac

ccrdance woth Chapter 5525
Ohoo Revosed Code

'it 11\JNt ID1l

Lindley and his wife, now 30, "were
divorced m December !97S. She has
since remarned another Vietnam
veteran She was graduated from
the Umverstty of Maryland w~th a
degree m busmess management and
works for the Securities and Exchange Comrruss1on m Washington.
Dananna lives w1th her.
Being the wife of an officer who
volunteered for Vtetnam put her m
an uncomfortable position, she
recalls, because no one understood
why he wanted to be )llere After a
whtle , she had trouble un·
derstanding herself or explauung to
her fnends. She was 19 and trymg to
learn to live m what she descnbed as
a "some;vhat hostile, fnghtemng
and very lonely environment "
" It's very complicated. But I think
one thiqg Rusty and l have kmd of
ftgured out more or less has to do
wtth anttctpatory gnef My
girlfriend's husband was ktlled over
there At the time that he died IS the
lime when I f1rst started expenencmg sort of stgns of grief.'' ,
In prepanng herself for Lindley's
death, she suffered loss of appetite,
nauseousness and shortness of
breath. She lost all of her feelings
and emotion Nothing could make
her cry.
" And at that pomt, I ftgured the
best thing to do was m essence ktll
Rusty off, so that I could adjust
when he died. And then when he
didn't die, which I mean IS just wonderful, but I mean I had already m a
sense ktlled him. I know it sounds
very cruel.
" Then 11 was real hard to get any
true feelings back for him. It wasn't
so much that he had changed, but
my feelmgs for him had changed
and I wasn't able to get them back
Rusty and I are still very good fnends, which IS just great. I really like
him. I can't say that I love him and I
haven't been able to say that for
some time"
She says she "had neither counseling nor anyone to adviSe me while
he was tn Vtetnam or after his
return Our marriage and the reconstructl{lg of our lives never had a
fa1r chance "
Iromcally, as a result of what happened to her, Lindley lobbied for
legtslation for a psychological readJustment program. It was sponsored
by Wolff and passed mto Ia w by
Congress last year.
Now, Lindley says, he would like
to se~ Wolff's newest bill enacted
and "then get a Job unplementing
it.
He says he is getting tired of
ftghting the battle over and over
"It gels old. It doesn't need to be
It shouldn't have to be done 10 years
after the majonty of veterans g~
back from VIetnam."

Publtc Notoce
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oh1o
May 14, 1980
Conlrac! Sales Legal
Copy No. eo-278
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposols w1ll be
received at 1he office of 1he
Direclor of the Ohio De par
lmen1 Dl Transportalion
Columbus, Ohio, un111 10.00
A M , Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, June 10, 1980, for
1mprovements in
Parts 1 to 221nclusove are
offered as one contract and
will be considered on the
baSIS of the total amount
bid
Parts 1 thru 22
Athens, GatUa, Monroe,
Noble and Washington

Sodders must apply, on

the

Take-out double examples

Jemt+calnn'' 1939

11:15 liJ PMAPULSE
tlDI CBS NEWS

The Oh10 Department of
Transportat1on
hereby
not1f1es all b1dders that 1t
will afftrmat1vety msure
that 10 any contract en
tered tnto l)ursuant to th1s
advert iSement, m1nonty
bust ness enterpnses wtll be
afforded full opportunity to
subm1t b1ds 1n response to
thiS IOVIfdfiOn and Will not
be d1SCr1m1nated aga1nst
on the grounds of race,

-

Whot happened?
MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) "

10•30

Lindley says he grew up believmg
he had an obhgation to serve his
country lie volunteered for the Army, bypassmg college, went to Offtcers' Candtdate School and
marned Marcta Stlbaugh stx months before he went to V1etnam m
August1968
" It's not advtsable to spend 18
months - the f1rst &lt;wo years of your
mamage - m Vtetnam. But, you
know, I thought things were gomg
great over there I was making
about $1,000 a month, which was
pretty good pay 10 years ago, spending about $10
"My wife was working, gomg to
school at the time. It looked like I
was comptling a pretty tmpress1ve
resume, or at least that was what I
was led to beheve "
When he returned to the Umted
States m 1970, he was dis1lluswned
wtth the way servtcemen were bemg
treated
He went to look for a job in
Colorado Sprmgs, Colo., where he
was gmng to college and where he
and Marcta planned to live on f1ve
acres of land they had purchased for
$15,000.
"I walked mto the local em·
ployment offtce and spoke to the
veteran's representative and gave
him a copy of my resume and explamed I would want something
reasonably commensurate wtth
what I was domg m the serv1ce.
"The guy flips through his Illes
and says, 'Well, we have an opemng
for a counter man at the Colorado
Sprmgs Zoo.' I sa1d, 'What's a counter man? ' Hesatd, 'Well, you do a little short order cookmg, clean the
counter and wash the dishes.'
" I sa1d, 'Walt a second Is this the
kmd of JOb you're offenng veterans?
It's not exactly what they promtSed
I don't want to have anything to do
with this agency anymore ' I wot'ked
for them later on, but that's JUSt sort
of the way the system works "
Lindley left Colorado CoUege after
a year and moved wtth his wife and
then• newly born daughter, Dananna, now 9, to Washington 111 the summmer of 1971.
He worked for a year as a lobbyist
for vanous veterans' groups. In 1972
he JOmed the unsuccessful presidential campatgn of Democratic Sen
George McGovern For the next four \
years he was director of the Vtetnam
Veterans' Center. He worked for the
Department of Labor as a consultant
for veterans' employment dunng
1978 and then held a senes of consulting JObs with Vtetnam veterans'
orgamzat10ns.

Public Nohce

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Indian Ocean growmg more enl1
Westesn and pro-s oc1ahst but
whentherevolufloncomel!l tl1spro
democracy, pro economiChber1y

meet,'' he says

PubliC Not1ce

BRIDGE

BEN WATTENBERG'S t980

rlv .1t1ng m~o~rdt.rl rt a lo! O r Clr! Cop
polmo a tnal whu;:h 912:ud A.mer

komMiomt 21U S Men's ()ymnoo

CINCINNATI (AP) - In these
ttmes when the dtvorce rate ts domg
1ts best to stay ahead of mflation ,
Chester and Atmee Blackwood
prove that life-long marnage ISn'(
an extmct Ideal
The Blackwoods celebrated thetr
70th wedding anruversary Saturday.
Blackwood says he recetved good
advice from his father the day after
the couple, who were aged 19 and 17
at the hme, eloped m 1910
'Son, you're 19 gomg on 20, and
you've chosen to marry awfully
young That's done. That was your
dectswn But, hsten, you've made a
deal and you'd better stick tott."
The deal st1ll bmds the Blackwoods, who are now aged 89 and 87

Count1e~ ,

uca Cttemp!onehlpe from~h.o 3)

World

Life-long marriage
isn't extinct ideal

Meigs

Champion.tul) oJ A"'eteur Bowling

1)

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
pohce Department mvest1gated a
two-car acctdent Fr1day at 2 2ll p m
at the entrance of the Kroger Store
Erma Hollon, Chester, pulled
from the Kroger parkmg lot mto the
path of an auto drtven by Howard
Ebers bach, Portland There were no
mJunes and no cttations were
tssued There was moderate damage
to both vehicles

Improve ments 1n
Athens, Gall1a, Hockmg,

SiatevaOr Coppolmo W1ththea1d
of stock footage andst rlla ,ttl 1stast
pa c ed e,~~:clus1ve recreates the

(!) SPOIITSWORLD

Check Minor Accident

'Srl Lanka Second Thoughts1n the
Third World A sleepy Island 10 the

I

(J) IASIBALL Atlanta 8(avea vs

ASHLAND, OH - Leshe W Menshouse and Freddte B Westfall of
Galhpohs were members of the 1980
graduatmg class at Ashland College
Menshouse recetved the bachelor
of sctence m busmess ad·
llllmstrattOn degree, ma]onng m
business management and
marketmg
Westfall was graduated swruna
cwn laude with honors in Gamma
Alpha Kappa for mamtammg a 3.6
grade pomt average or above durmg
his college career He recetved the
bachelor of sctence m busmess adllllmstrat!On degree, maJormg m
busmess management and poh!tcal
sctence He ts the son of Hurl Westfall of Rt I, Box 282

Tuesday , June 24, 1980, fot

What Are Its Responllblltttes ?
Gueat Jack H Watson Jr Au ra
tant to the Pree1dent for Inter
GovernmentaiAffe1ra Secreteryto
the Cabtnet Host Wtll lam F Buck
l_!t,Jr (60mlns)

provide coverage of the game

I

of '80 Ashland class

AM, Ohoo Standard Tome,

Fast, bniKant emergency act ron by
Trapper and Dr Rl'o'&amp;rstde saves
the l1te of a g~rlly lng cnt1c a1\y mJured
In the street but threatens later to
make 11thng ducks of Rrver s1de and
Gonzo (Repeat, 60 mtns )

ID!a Ht-O

TRIALS

Two Gallians members

Sealed proposals w111 be
rece 1ved at the off 1ce of the
D1rector of the Oh1o Depar
tment of Transportation ,
Columbus, Oh oo, un1ol iO 00

Energ~Cr11 1 S ALongTrad1t1on and

flld"1112

SPORTS
•
CD tlDI
SPECTACULAR
.OUT0'80
, 3:30
....ONARIES IN ACTION
•
IIOVIE-(COIIEDY)'" "Brood
AlldCIIoCOUte" 1877
4:00 (l).IASEBALL Clnconnall Reds
•
vt Son D'- Padreo
C1J HI!UYES

scores ot fa shtonable London par
Ilea where he enga ges some ot
England s most promment polt
ttctans tn verbal combat (60
m1ntJ
Ill C1J (!I) THE JEFFERSON$
When fnanda fr om HeleM s high
school days make Tom feel out ot
ptace 1nhta ownhome hemakesthe
mtatake of turnmg to George l or

Bedecked and bedazzling wtth an
"exuberance that never d1ee down,
Bette TheRese Mtdlerstarsrn thts
dynam1c concert performance It a
a h1gh energy award wmnmg
exclusive

Moacow

(!) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
liD SIX MIWON DOLLAR MAN
(jj) ANnGUES
2:11 [J)MOVIE~DRAMA) "l'a "Hold
lock 111e Nl8hl" 1856
2:30
THE DEAF HEAR
HI!RE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
3:00 evOYAGETOTHEBOTTOM
DFTHESEA
CD ATHOMEWITHTHE BIBLE
[D UNITED STATES OLYMPIC

he ts mvtted to

help (Repeat)
10:00 CIJ KENNETH COPELAND
ill BETTE MIDLER SHOW

revealing the best athletes who
weretorepresent the United States
at the OlympiCS to be held 1n

2:00

00 ill MAVERICK
5.00 [J) UNTOUCHABLES
4

18ROTAR~SPRESENT

MASTERPIECE THEATRE

J&amp;mm D~rtraet1

Thelaeer playa a s•on•hcant role 1n
a variety of J1elda Thts program

... y.

'Ghosto1 the China Sea" 1958

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary met Fr1day
evemng at the Heath Umted
Methodist Church wtth Jack Walker,
prestdent, presiding
There were 18 members present
and one guest, Btll Boyd of Huntington Dmner was served by the
i
ladles of the church

'Otaraeh Eptsode I Dtzzy In thus
f1rat epi!!IOde of a four pan senes
basad oM the hie and t1mes ol Ben

®NOVA 'Ltohtofthe21 etCentury'

ID!a KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO

'Comanc:heStatlon" 1e60

(!) NEWS
US (!Z Ill NEWS
2:30 [J)
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) "
1

(!) THE BIG EVENT The Great

THE OLD WEST 'Doomed At

1:00 (l) •

(jj) ODYSSEY The Chaco

Legacy Over 900 Years ago the

(I)

wraatlle tool (60 mms )

•••1ft

"The 5 000 Fingers Of Or T "

AFTERNOON

and proJects the future uses of true

THE YEAGERS Carroll

Yeager and members of hts tamtly

with fighting m Vtetnam "
Lindly ts 32 now but looks much
younger He lives m a $200-a-month
apartment over an lndtan
restaurant Just four blocks from the
White House.
He was hired as a wnter for The
Stars and strtpes, the national
veterans' newspaper, two months
ago after workmg there part-ttme.
He makes $liOO a month.
"I can JUSt about make ends

By GEORGE ESPER
Associated Press Writer
WAS!UNGTON (AP) - Ftve
years after the end of the VIetnam
War, a Columbus, Ohio, native who
fought there IS trymg to go up a down
escalator.
After a decade of fighting an unpopular war, Rusty · Lmdley IS
makmg what ltkel) ts his last stand
for addttional benefits for 2 8 lllllhon
VIetnam veterans as an unofflctal
adytser on congresswnalleg1slatwn.
Wtth no official status, 'no college
degree, the road has been rocky smce he returned home from the war 10
years ago, a captam at age 21.
One casualty has been his
marnage to the girl -he met m his
history class and courted at Upper
Arlington H1gh School m their
hometown of Colwnbus
"The best analogy I can gtve for
the Vtetnam veteran," says Lindley,
"IS like he's on an escalator. He's
trymg togo up a down escalator.
"He's got a lot of things workmg
agalllSI him He's got attitudes He's
got lack of benefits. He's got t1me
gomg agamst h1m He 's got
psychologtcal problems "
Rep Lester Wolff, D-N Y , a member of the House Veterans Affatrs
Conumttee, says Lmdley contrtbuted the baste tdeas for a comprehenstve $1 5 btlhon ftve-year
package of beneftts for Vtetnam
veterans that he mtroduced m
Congress March 20
" He's had mput m this for anumber of years, " says Wolff. "He ts an
unpatd volunteer to help us He's one
of the people that's keepmg the Vtetnam veterans' 1ssuealive"
Wolff's bill would set up a
pres1denttal corrumss1on on VIetnam
veterans' affatrs and an asststant
secretary of labor for employment;
estabhsh a program of career
development trammg through sut;.
stdies to employers, provtde compensatton and tr"eatment for
d1sab1ht1es caused by Agent
Orange; tmprove counselmg servtces, and mcrease by 15 percent the
cost of hvmg allowance to veterans
m school under the GI Bill who can
prove a need for the addtttonal funds
Wolff agrees with Lindley that
VIetnam veterans have been shunned because tt was an unpopular war
and people JUSt want to forget 1t
Some of the blame he lays on
Congress and some on the Veterans
Admimstratton.
The plight of the Vtetnam veteran,
even today, says Wolff, IS still very
ser1ous
Wolff says that what he has trted
to do, wtth help from Lindley, "15
bnng together all of the problems as
we see them today.It's a maJor push
m order to try to redress these
problems m solllll fashion We've
been domg tt m a ptecemeal fashion
and we've brought tt all together m
one piece of legJslatwn."
Lindley, who worked as an adviSer
to Vtetnamese soldiers durmg the
war, says that "everything I've done
ts directly related and mtertwmed

wtlenlhtrtvolutloncomea tttspro

democracy, pro econom1c liberty
wnat happened?

1

couple of runaways on a mtss tonto

CIJe ATISSUE

CIJ

Thtrd World A aiHpy lalarwj In the
Indian Ocean gr.owmg more ant1
Weatern and pro aoc1ahal but ,

1.30

(!) POP GOES THE COUNTRY
lli CDilDl NEWS
(I) BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
(jj) SESAME STREET
8 30 (l) 8 (I) NBC NEWS
(I) FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
[J)
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
(I) NEWS
0 [J)(ll) CBS NEWS
7 00 (l)8 (!) DtSNEY"SWONDERFUL

ln·Laws' 1979
(l) MOVIE · (FANTASY)

BEN WATTENBERG'S 1980

12:45 [J) THREE'SACROWD
1:00 [J) MOVIE ·(WESTERN) "Ya

e 00 ()) ABC NEWS

[J) W CD

a attention during the 601

Snlanka Secood Thoughts In the

••• "Moonraker' 1979

(jj) GROUCHO

@. REV

12:00

[J)

LAWMAKERS
5.00 CIJ WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
CD AFRICANS .
(jj) ElECTRIC COMPANY
5 30 (I) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
ill MOVIE (SCIENCE·FICTION)
(I)

Old Cunoatty Shop' Outlp 'iiSits
Grandfather berates him for gam
bling and demands to b8 repatd
Immediately

~e;:a

-

-

-

dining room, 1&lt;1tc~en, balh,
lull basemenlond 1hree car
garage. Seen by appointmen! Call 992 3101 aller
500PM
LOIS Burt
Executrix Ol
1he Es1a1e of
Ben1amln Neutzllng,
- Deceased
15125, (6) 1, 2tc

......LAFF.__ . __A·
_ DAY

\

Leaders worry about ·future ·racial tension
By Associated Press
Each week, the liSt seems to grow ·
Rtots m MIBllll Shootmgs m rural
Georgta. Firebombings m Michigan
Marches 10 MissiSSippi.
W1th tempers 10 the nation's ghettos nsmg, now from gnnding inflation and unemployment and later
from the swnmer heal, CIVIl r1ghts
leaders across the country say they
are worned about the months ahead
"I think this ts a 11eneral outcry by

blacks and I belteve unless other
cittes hasten to address themselves
to the cructal needs, we 're gmng to
f10d that some of the flames from
M1anu and WnghlsvtUe (Ga. ) are
going to Ely into the yards of these
other cities and set them on fire
too," the Rev. Abraham Woods'
head of the Blrnungham, Ala , cha~
ter of the Southern Chrtshan Leadership Conference, satd Frtday
Some black leaders see a con-

nectton between the shootmg of
National Urban League President
Vernon E Jordan Jr 10Fort Wayne,
Ind , on Thursday and Fnday's ftre
tn the off1ces of the Urban League of
Greater Mtallll
"My unital reaction was that 1t
(the ftre) had something to do w1th
rac1al trouble, g1ven what has happened to Vernon and gtven what has
happened here two weeks ago
(notmg)," s•ud T Willard Fatr,

director ot the UWM
M1arru pohce, however, discount
any conneclton between the shooting
and the ftre, which caused about
$50,000 damage. The Mtallll Herald
reported today that mvestigators
ruled the fire was deltberately set
Jordan was shot twtce by a smper
as he returned to his motel and was
liSted m "guardedly good" conditton
Fnday The FBI satd tl was lookmg

they beneftt from ANS"entltiements
for nearly all their crude oil " Car'
'
son said in an mtervtew
Sohio spokesman Tom Libertt
would not confim etther estunate.
He said the company has not deternuned what tmpact the proposed
new regulations would have
Carson satd •t was evtdent from
"the 18-to-20 cent pnce advantage
Sohio has on the street" how much
benefit the Ohio company recetved
from the entitlements program
"You had a sttuation where the
guy wtth the lowest pnce gas (Sohio)
had the highest profit margm," Carson said.
The department's chief hearmgs
offtcer stapped Sohio with an
emergency order mtended to force a
to-cent hike m Standard's gasohne
pnces. His order later was rescmded by DOE, which then set m
motion a rule-changmg procedure to
elmunate the benefit Sohio recetves

under the entitlements program.
Sohio, \\hose pnces are among the
lowest m the natton, donunates the
Ohio !llllrket wtth about Z1 percent of
total gasoline sales in the state
DOE acted to change the rules m
response to pleas from some Ohio Independent oil dealers that they faced
bankruptcy because of compelltton
fromSohio
The entitlements program was
destgned to equahze the cost of
crude 01! between compames dependent on expenstve, foretgn crude Imports and those wtth cheaper
domesttc otl sources. Sohio was compensated because of the cost of
brmgmg otl down from Alaska
But the the DOE said the program
was thrown badly out of kilter by a
· sharp riSe m costa of tmported crude
last year
Heanngs on the proposed rule
changes are scheduled next week m
Washington and Los Angeles.

STUDENTS INDICTED
CINCINNATI (AP) - A grand
Jury has mdicted f1ve 18-year-old
Forest Park High School students
who were among 26 persons arrested
a month ago on charges of
man1uana trafficking.
A Hamilton County grand jury
charged four of the five persons w1th
more than one count of selling
msn)uana. All five are from subur·
ban Forest Park.
The arrests were made on April
30, mostly on school grounds, and
stemmed from an Investigation by
police and the school district. The
probe mvolved an undercover
policewoman who posed as a student
and made purchases from students

LOTI'ERY EARNINGS
CLEVELAND (AP) - The winning number drawn Friday mght m
the Ohio Lottery's datly game "The
Nwnber" was 750.
The lottery reported earnings of
$316,853.50 from the wagenng on
Fnday mght's dally number
drawtng The lottery's computer '
tabulations show sales prior to the
drawing ~arne to $660,814.SO.
Holders of wlnmng tickets are entitled to S3-13,961.
I

rial from experiences: or
tbiDgs tbat I see or here,"

says soft-spokeD Jimmy
Bullett. He Dotes all 1bose
tbiDgs down tn a little beok
for use when wntiug future
soDgs.

By ANDY LANG
AP Newslealures
If you do not belong on a high
ladder I and you know whether
you are m that category) , then
this ltttle treatise on the proper
way to handle such a ladder
tsn't exactly for you.
What IS really bemg discussed here ts an extension ladder, which IS really two ladders, fttted together so that one
secllon can be moved separately to reach the destred hetght
The top section moves upward
when the rope attached to it ts
pulled down, alter whtch the
two parts are locked together
by a spectal gadget that ts
clearly vts1ble and easy to operate
To get the knack of ralSlng
the top sectton, the ladder
should be m a vertical postlton,
but leamng shghtly toward the
house at the top Many persons
vtolate all the rules of safety m
gettmg an extenston ladder to
rest agamst the house There ts
only one proper way to do thts
wtthout nskmg lllJUry.
Place the bottom of the ladder agamst the foundatiOn at

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Bob
Evans Fartns Inc reported Frtday
1ts annual sales were up 19 percent
for the fiSCal year ending Apnl25
The Ohio based sausage and
restaurant fmn reported con·
solidated sales of $125,210,000 for the
fiSCal year compared to $10S,64S,OOO
m1979.
Board Chatnnan Dame! E Evans
satd net income for the year, based
on the wetghted average number rJ
shares outstanding, was $11,398,000,
or $2.03 per share, compared to
$7,024,000, or $1 29 per share, a year
ago.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - John
P Williamson, chail1118n and chief
executive offtcer of the Toledo
Edison Co , was elected Frtday as
prestdent of the Ohio Electnc U!thty
Institute.
He succeeds Charles A. Heller,
president of • Ohio Power Co ,
prestdent of the mstitute the past
two years.
Institute directors chose Robert
Frazer, pres1dellt of Dayton Power
and Light Co , as vtce prestdent

"I TAKE MOST of my male-

In Phoemx, Ariz. , the head of the
natton' s largest Htspantc
organization /concurred. The
shooting IS "further evidence of the
revoltmg VIolence which 1s
beconung almost mgramed mto the
Amencan soctalfabnc," satd Ruben
Bonilla, prestdent of the League of
United Latin American CitiZens.
In his speech, Lowery did not
specifically mention the noting m
Miami, which claimed 16 lives
earlier this month, or other ractal
protests. But he did warn of the
dangers of VIolence.
"We must put an end to vtolence or
1t wtll put an end to us "
Other scenes d. ractal con·
frontation this spring have been in:
- Wnghtsvtlle, Ga,, where two
months of ractal conflict over black
demands for econorruc equality
resulted in 16 persons bemg indicted
Thursday, including two white men
for the wounding of a !~-year-old
black g1rl Offtc181s there agreed to
open a voter registration offtce
today, when tt usually is closed, thus
averting a prayer VIgil by black
leaders

-Natchez, MillS., wbere delflOJl-•
strations aod 5ealtered vandalism·
have OCCilfTed over the police han-'
dling of the shootln!! of a black man'
allegedly robbing a store. After'
meeting wtth black leaders, Mayor
Tony Byrne decided not to impose a
curfew Friday night.
-Muskegon, Mich., where black
have warned of a "volattle
situation" because mvestigators
allegedly conducted a "casual" mvestigation of an arson fire that
critically burned a civil rights
leader on May 9. After meeting
Fnday wtth black residents, Mayor
Marguente Holcomb sa1d a reward
would be set up for information m
the fire that burned 54-year-old
Owen Pearson.
Several national figures have
called for cooler heads to prevail
followmg the Jordan shooting,
among them President Carter, Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and
NAACP executive director BenJammHooks
"The tragtc violence of recent
weeks poses a severe threat to the
publtc safety of all Amencans and It
IS my sertous hope that this latest m-,
ctdent wtll not lead to a further
escalation of vtolent reaction," satd
Caretta King, wife of the late Dr."
Martin Luther King Jr., who was'
assassmated m Memphis a dozen'
years ago
Tom Fullove, president of the
ColombUll, Ohio NAACP smd, "I'm
not as much concerned about racial
VIolence as I am about c1vil disor·
der

HOMES FOR AMERICANS

Business briefs . ..

NILES, Mich. (AP) - ShellerGlobe Corp ts suspending production of automotive padded products
at Its Niles diVISIOn, tndeftmtely
laymg off 140 hourly and 71 salanes
employees
John R. Eastman, president of
Toled&lt;»-based Sheller-Globe, satd the
facility wtU close temporarily but
wtll be kept m standby condition for
production reqwrements when auto
production increases.

The attack on Jordan was "a senseless act of violence," the Rev .
Joseph Lowery, president ol the
Southern Ouistian Leadership Conference, said Fnday in Petersburg,
Va.
He told the V1rgtnia chapter of the
SCLC that racwn in America Is "expenencmg an unfortunate, tragtc

resurgence.''

Opinions different on hike
WASHINGTON (AP) - Two
Department of Energy offtclals have
ISSUed wtdely varymg estimates on
the tmpact that new pncmg
regulations will have on the cost of
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) gasollne
Wllliatn Carson, chief of the
department's crude oil pncing branch, satd Fnday Sohio's prices could
Jump 18-20 cents a gallon when the
proposed new rules go mto effect
However, Douglas Robinson,
deputy admimstrator of DOE's
economic regulatory admtmstralton, disputed that
estimate. Robinson satd the latest
f1gures available mdicated that the
mcrease m prices at Sohio pumps
would be about 10-cents s gallon
RobUISon's estimate, which was
more m line With what department
offtctals have satd prevtously, was
based on Sohio's March report that
about 75 percent of the crude ml tl
refmes comes from the Alaska North Slope Carson, whose estimate
was published in the Federal
Register, sa1d his estimate would be
for a refmery usmg 100 percent
A1skan North Slope 01!. "They
(Sohio) are pretty close to that,"
Carson sa1d.
Only 5 percent of the ANS crude
actually goes to Sohio's refinenes,
but Crason satd that "tradeoffs"
which Sohio makes with other
refmers gtves them the same pncmg
advantage. "Dtrectly or mdirectly ,

"mto the possibility of a con-

spsracy."

LO WER l EVEL

'IlHIS CONTEMPORARY, sp ht·entry house ts
basically a one-story ra nch home wtth basement pullecl
up out of the ground Its 3,388 square feet lias a fivebedroom sleepmg capabthty, wtth four baths F'or more
to forma tiO n on Plan HA 11 5 1 M, wnte - enclosmg a
s tamped , self-addressed envel ope - to Mas ter Plan
Servtce, 89 East Jertcho Turnptk e Mtncola N Y
11 50 I

By ANDY LANG
AP Newsfealures
Q. - I read some weeks ago
that the government had told
savmgs and loan assoc1at10ns to
begm offermg renegotiable rate
mortgages. I understand that
the mterest rates on such mortgages go up or down depending
on some kind of tndex The first
thmg I want to know ts wh1ch
index ts used? The second 1s
why the savtngs and loan assoetalton m my area told me they
do not yet handle this kind of
mortgage and are not sure
whether they ever will Why
not?
A - The mdex used as the
basts for rate adjustments IS
the natiOnal average mortgage
rate for all maJOr lenders and
IS compiled by the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board InCidentally, no matter what the
Index shows, mterest rates cannot change more than 5 percent
over the life of the loan. As to
the matter of your savings and
loan associalton 's attitude, the
Federal Home Loan Bank
Board only gave tis authorIZation to the Issuance of such
mortgage loans; tl did not say
an assoctalton HAD to make
them. Also, the authorlzatton
applied only to federally chartered savings and loan associations . As a matter of reality,
many state-chartered associations bave had such authonty

from thetr state legislatures for
some time The renegotiable
mortgages m such cases may
be stmtlar to those of the federally chartered assoctabons but
not necessartly the same.
Q - Is tl better to use caulkmg compound from a can or
from a cartridge ?
A - You seldom have need
for the use of caulking compound from a ca n unless you
are domg a large amount of
caulkmg For orclinary purposes, 1t IS much eas1er to use
the type of cartrtdges that ftt
mte the so-called caulking
guns
Q - How do you get the
washer out of the stem of a
faucet when the screw that
holds It In place is broken?
A. - Try picking tt out, btt
by btl, wtth the end of an awl
or stmilar tool. But If you hold
the · stem m your hand when
domg thiS, you must be very,
very careful Better to place
the stem m a vtse ancl then do
the picking, but be careful not
to ltghlen the vise on any part
of the stem that may damage
1t The screw then can usually
be turned wtth pliers. In some
cases, 11 Is necessary to dr1ll
down into the screw and, when
you have a friendly hardware
dealer, he mtghl get it loose for

When usmg the rope that
ratses the top secllon of the
ladder, always allow an overlap
of both secttons The overlap
should be at least three feet, a
precaution that wtll prevent the
ladder from bemg unsteady.
Once you are working on the
ladder, the most tmportant
safety measure IS not to reach
out too far Extend your arm so
that you can pamt or otherwtse
perform m comfort Once you
feel yourself stretching, you are
getting near the pomt of danger Consider the poss1b1ltty of
buymg a stabilizer, a curved
ptece of metal that attaches to
the upper part o( the ladder
and rests agamst the house to
keep the ladder in place.
If the day you have selected
for your ladder proJect 15 very
wmdy, ftnd somethmg else to
do

(For Andy Lang 's booklet,
"Pamt Your House Instde and
Out, " send SO cents PLUS a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Know-How, P.O
Box 477, Huntmgton, NY
11743 )

.,.~~!.~~;' ~~~~~,~..F~n~~~!:: .J

AP Newsleatures
so often that
the des1gn of furmture is mfluenced by the apparel mdustry that there must be at
least some truth m the statement.
Certamly tt IS a fact that at
the recent nallonal furmture
market tn North Caroltna , upholstered sofas and chairs
sported many of the same
dressmaker delatls found in
women's clothmg
Flounces, pleats, shtrrmg and
ruffles were seen on many a
seating piece mtroduced by
manufacturers to retailers at
the semtannual market And
the lusctous fabrtcs m soft pastel colors such as dusty rose,
pale green and while would be
It has been satd

Here's the Answer EEl

r1ght angles to the house Go
back to the top of the ladder ,
grab the top rung and ratse tt
to shoulder hetght. Now, rruse
the ladder slowly, keepmg a
ftrm grtp on the ladder and releasmg one hand at a time. Be
certam, as you do th1s, that you
are holdmg one rung tightly as
you move the other hand to the
next rung
Fmally, as the ladder becomes vertical, rest the top
aga1nst the house. Now, slowly
and carefully, move the foot of
the ladder away from the
house, little by lillie. When the
ladder is about one-fourth of tis
hetght away from the house, it
IS m the correct postlton Thus,
wtth a 20-foot ladder, the bottom should be about ftve feet
from the house In this posttion,
tt w11I remam stable as you
cltmb 1t and whtle you work on
tl, always assummg that the
feet of the ladder are solidly
restmg on the ground. Some
ladders come With deVIces to
keep a ladder from slippmg If
your ladder doesn't have them,
you can buy attactunents for
the purpose

HOMES

you.
(Leaky faucets, plumbing
noises, etc., are discussed m
Andy Lang's booklet, "Make
Simple Plwnbmg Repairs,"
available by sending SO cents
and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Know-How,
P 0 Box 477, HtmllnP.n, N Y
11743. Questions of geheral In·
terest will he answered in the
column, but lndividuol corre·
spondence cannot he undertaken.)

woman's body
These dresssmaker detatls
helped to create some of the
prettiest and most graceful upholstered furmture seen tn
years.
Consumers wtll have a
chance to judge for themselves
this fall when most of the new
offermgs will appear on retail
sales floors
As usual m a large market
servmg the entire spectrum of
the furmture mdustry, anythmg
anyone could unagme m the
way of seating was on VIew at
one or another of the more than
I,OOOshowrooms However, contlnwng a trend at pr10r markels, modular seating and dualpurpose sofas seemed to be on
the tnCrease
.
"The No I demand of custamers IS Oextbtltty," explamed
Ed Bohling, marketing director
for Sherwood Corp , a maker of
nip-out foam sofas and modular
seating that converts mto beds
by nipping or otherwise rearranging the foam components.
" Flip-out furniture, a product
that is only four years old at
Sherwood. now accounts for 75
percent of our busmess," sa1d
Bohling.
"The consumer continues to
lead us where we ought to be
going," he added, describing
the success of an unusual group
of modular components covered
in bright red, green blue, orange, yellow or black nylon
packcloth that had Be411lled a
bit too daring before Its introductlon and lnltial accept..
ance by Cllltome111.
Bruce Shelton, presldeqt of
SpberlcalCDI"p., wbo8e unusual,
rounded foam 10fu and chain
that !Up out Into beda have

y&lt;;ar, noted that over the seven
years he has shown the formlure m North Carolina, acceplance has grown steadily
Bestdes Oextbtltty, the other
ma)Or theme struck by new upholstered lurmture is comfort
There was a strong emphasts
on recltners and other comfortpromotmg easy chstrs
At Thayer Coggin, for example, a new, nextble acryltc
and ftberglass matertal that allows a chatr to sway and rock
a btl to provtde an added sense
of comfort was a feature on a
chaise and several easy chatrs
Fully upholstered dining
chair!! were seen m several
showrooms Such chatrs, wtth
enough uprtght support for dm.
ing plus the comfort to make
loungmg m them after dinner
pleasant, were offered by a
number of manufacturers in·
eluding Swaun, Dtrectional,
Thayer Coggm and Charlton.
Among fabrics that appeared
to cut across style and destgn
ltnes were textured, jacquard
fabrics combining white and
betge, chintz and canvti.Hiuck.
Altbough a color known vari·
ously as dusty rose, raspberry
sherbet and mauve appeared to
be the most widely distributed
new color, white was also 011
display in many different types
of upholstered furniture show·
rooma. Deep tones - emerald
IIJ'een, garnet red, navy blue were allo seen widely.
But, as one color consultant
noted, virtually aU colors are to
be seen tn the marketplace,
"With fabric, you am lind
!he futur~d the 0881 In the
present," said Yale Forman,
color copsultant to Hercules,

Inc,

�•

•
E-1-The Sunday Tunes-Sentmel, Sunday, June 1, 1980
D-3-The Sunday Tunes.Sentmel, Sunday, June 1, 1930

Veteran makes last. stand
for additional benefits

Sunday Television
Log
.
~

JUNE 1,1aao

I

MORNING
8:10 Cil WORLD AT LARGE
5:30
AGRICULTURE u.s A
t:OO
CHRISTPPHER CLOSE-UP
BETWEEN THE LINES
~ AMERICAN PROBLEMS AND
CHALLENGES
8.30 (l). CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
(l) KOINONIA
.[J) ABETTER WAY
ilDl TREEHOUSE CLUB
7:00 (l). THISISTHELIFE
(l) FORD PHILPOT
[J) BANANA SPLITS
•CD OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
~ URBAN LEAGUE
IDi ID ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:30 III. T,V CHAPEL
III DAWSON MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH SERVICE
[J) IT IS WRITTEN
(I) EDDIE SAUNDERS
(!) JIMMY SWAGGART
ilDl OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
IDi. BIBLE ANSWERS
8.00 (l). MORMON CHOIR
CIJ THE LESSON
ill THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
(I) GRACE CATHEDRAL
• [J) DAY OF DISCOVERY
CD(jj) SESAME STREET
IDi Ill
EVANGELISTIC
OUTREACH
8.30 III. ORAL ROBERTS
CIJ CHAPEL HOUR
(I) CONTACT
(!)OPEN BIBLE
.CD REV. LEONARD REPASS
IJDl JAMES ROBISON
IDi LOWER LIGHTHOUSE
8·oo III SINGING JUBLtEE
(I) ROBERT SCHULLER
CD PARTRIDGE FAMILY
CD REX HUMBARD
ffiABETTERWAY
.CD CHRISTIAN CENTER
ill STUDIO SEE
ilDl ORAL ROBERTS
(jj) MISTER ROGERS
ID!a REV. RA WEST
8:30 [J) GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
(!)FAITH FOR TODAY
.[J) ROBERT SCHULLER
CD BIG BLUE MARBLE
ilDltT IS WRITTEN
(jj) SESAME STREET
10:00 (l). REX HUMBARD
CIJ CHANGED LIVES
[J) LEAVE ITTOBEAVER
CD KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
(!) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
CD SESAME STREET
ilDlMOVIE-(WESTERN)"' ''Sono
01 Kotll Eldlf" 1965
ID!a JIMMY SWAGGART
10:30 (I) SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
ffiMOVIE -(DRAMA)"" "Separ·
ole Tobloo" 1958
.CD ERNESTANGLEY
(jj) ZOOM
11:00 III. HUMAN DIMENSIONS
(I) IN TOUCH
(!) REX HUMBARD
CD ONCE UPON ACLASSIC The

I

I

legtate Tra ck and Fteld Champton
1t'11ps (90mms)

(jj) ELECTRIC COMPANY
HENRY MAHAN
11:30 (l) •
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
CD &lt;!Z IB ANIMALS, ANIMALS.
ANIMALS
.CD FACE THE NATION
CD WORLD OF THE SEA
(jj) BIG BLUE MARBLE

EVENING

WORLD The Voung Runaway s A
ktdnap lhubrother an d stsler !rom
a foster home end up tn sttHlgle

with bank robbers (PI I of a two
60 mms )
lJ) JIMMYSWAGGART

R!rt eptsode

fight forthetr ftves after thetr plane

crashes 1M desolate mountamsaMd
they ere threatened by avalanches
of mud Stars Andy Gnftlth Oav1d
Ackroyd (60 mms )

lll lll®i60 IIINUTES
WAR AND PEACE
FRENCH CHEF
7:30 [J) RAT PATROL
(!j) WALL STREET WEE I&lt; Lone
I])
(!j)

Star Strategy

B:OO (l) IJ (I) CHIPo Tho•oh hospo
tahzed Panch helps Jon and h iS
temporary replacement to solve a
rash ol robbenes co mm1tted by
thieves who use st olen cars
(Repeat 60 mms )

REX HUIIBARD
ill MOVIE ·(COMEDY)"' The
(I)

1i53

CIJ W CD HAL LINDEN 'S BIG
APPLE Hal Lmden steps out of the

aqu ad room and 1n to the streets and
skyscrapers of New York lor a ne
tlveaoM a voyage home1na specra l
hour of musrc and comedy w1th
gueats Shecky Greene Robert
Guillaume and the Aadro Crty Mu81c
Halla Rockettes (60 mms )
Ill CD (!I) ARCHIE BUNKER'S
PLACE Edith slrant1c acurryrng
does liltle to sat1sfy a howling Ar
ch1e , who IS SICk overt he energy
COSIS {Repeat)

[J)

mhab1tants of Chaco Canyon New
Mexico, undertook one of !he most

co mprehens1ve bulldtng protects
aver Attar 50 years of ar
ch eolog1cal study how and why
these people developed such a so
ph1sllcated technology 1s only now
becommg clear {60 m1ns )

8.30 IJI[J)(ll) ONE DAY AT ATIME Max
and Julie are left homeless dur ng
sn a1rhne slnke and the1r so lutiOn
tor a place to stay leaves Ann and
Barbara Cl1mbrng the wa lls
(R&amp;J1!&amp;1)

0:00 C2J U THE DREAM MERCHANTS
Stars MorganFalfchtld MarkHar
moM Bnenne Leary An amb1!1ous

young dnfter named Johnny Edge
beg1ns a mov1e studto dynasty m
Hollywood a golden era {PI II 2

hrs )
700CLUB
CD@Ql SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

nilE OF DELIVERANCE
CD IDi Ill
ISSUES AND
ANSWERS
(!)THIS IS THE LIFE
• CD VIEWPOINT

(I)

The Destructors 1974 Stars M1
chael Caine, Anthony Oumn

Smoka'i_Roadblock 197 8
ALICE Allee leads the
g1rl adown lh a road of rebellton after
Mel1us 11111 s attme clock a!the diner
(ReJ1!at}

8 (]) (lQl

Sundown'
(jj) OHIO JOURNAL

12:30 (l).(!) MEET THE PRESS
,
C1J ORAL ROBERTS
CIJMOVIE-(IIYSTERY)" "Whoot
oiF-"1842
CD DIRECTIONS
• CD WILD KINGDOM
IJDl THE ISSUE

[J)IliJ

examlnll aome of •Ia present uses

MOVIE

8.30

~ADVENTURE)

"Charge of the Light

1838
D. JAMES KENNEDY
CD AMERICA'S ATHLETES 1980
B~godo"

(I)

Serlet devoted to exammmg and

(!) PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
•
CD
MOVIE
-(SUSPENS&amp;-DRAIIA)" Ya "Bol

ffiENERGYEXPOTheOe&gt;elopong

CD WEST VIRGINIA STATE HIGH
SCHOOL TRACK MEET
®I FACE THE NAnON
1:30 iiOJ HOGAN'S HEROES
(jj)
HOCKING VALLEY
BI.UEORASS

examinee the htstory of Amence 's
1!,!..8Ssnt energy 11tuatton

• CD ilDl TRAPPER JOHN 11.0

WORLD OF PENTECOST
CD (!Z a NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sports woll

(I)

[J)

bltweentheNewYorkCosmosand

theWaatilngton Otplomata (2 hrs ,
30mlno)

(JJ)

Loo~teoOodlloro

.CD (Ill) II!IIPI!ROPEN
CD UCI!LLENCE FOREVER Thto
program explore• the work of Inter
n1tlonelly known wood ·CifYtr
~uvuot Crob-

UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'YourOI*IIon1 Sorvont' Hudson'o

(jj)

n

aecretlve behavior eroueee au

(80mlno)
1l!IN!I.A80UT TOMORROW
(JI) •
WIPE WORLD OF
SPOIITS 1) US ~uta Club Dirt
• RocolromiiiiAOio 2)Aopeclolf&gt;O'·

' 4:30

folmlnce by the Chtnell Acrobats
ol Totwon (90 mtno I

'

I

AJAW Nattonal Women a Cot

Public Nohce
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
OE PARTMENT OF
TRANSPOIHATION
Columbus, Ohoo
May 23, 1980
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 80·341
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
PMS·OOOSC17ll

and Washmgton
Oh1o, on various
locaf10ns
by applymg
retroflectonzed polyester
compound for cen terltnes,
lane l i nes and c hannellztng
t1nes

FIRING LINE The Cabonet

(jj)

11·oo

rn •ill mm CD GID w CD

11

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Son1ag

NEWS
CIJ NEWSIGHT
[J) RUFF HOUSE
CD NON-FICnON TELEVISION

I South opens wtth one club

'PieaBargalning AnAmertcanWay
of Juatlce'Thlaprogram focuses on

aeveralcourtcaaas In an attempt to
examine the plea bargatn iMg
!l_ltem In Flortda {60 mrns l

11•30 (l).MOVIE~COIIEDY)'"

nme For Comedy" 1940

"No

CIJ THE KINO IS COMING
ill SNEAK PREVIEW. JUNE
ill OPEN UP
ABC NEWS
NBC LATE NIGHT MOVIE
CD MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) "

W
11

cas h1 er ·s cnecK tor an
amount equa I to five per
cent of h1s b1d, but tn no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of his b1d,
payable to the D1rector

co lor, or nattonal ongm 1n
cons 1de rat1on
tor
an

award
Mtn1mum wage rates
for th1 S pro tec t have been
prede term1ned as requ1red
by law and are set forth tn
the b1d proposa 1 '
'T he date set for com
pt etton of th1 s work shall be
as set forth m the b1dd1ng
proposal "

Each bu~fder shall be
requ1red to file W1fh h1s b1d
a cert 1f1ed check or

~

KIHtr In Every Corner" 1875

ilDlMOVIE -(DRAMA) "Ya "Chat·
Iongo" 1870
11:45 Cllt.ENNY HILL SHOW
' (Jl) a ABC NEWS
12:00 ill GUILTY DR NOT GUILTY The

and West doubles wtth S - A J
94 H - K Q 6 D K 10 75 3 C
6 North passes East holds s .
K 10 3 2 H - A 52 D- J 6 C- 9
7 5 3 He btds one spade and
after South passes 1t "' up to
West to act He btds two
spades A JUmp to three would
show a hand that would probably produce game oppostle a
really bad Easl :oand
East shou'•1 b:d either three
or four sparl"
preferably
four If he JU&gt; , btds three West
should go on to game
The play lor game is reasonably good The best
defense ts to lead and contmue
clubs J;;ast ruffs m dummy.
comes to hts hand with th~ ace
of h~arts leads. ht• low dta
1ntl hops :Jp With
dumruv s klllg It Will fll ~ ha
f'lt(lrd

bly hold whereu pon he leads

proper

forms,

tor

qualtf1catian at least ten

days pnor to the date set

for open1n9 b1ds

In

Plans lind specif !cat1ons
are on ftle 10 the Depart
ment of Transportat1on and
tt'te off1ce of the Dlstnct
D eputy Dtrector
The 01rector reserves
the right to reject any and
all btds

DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev a 17 73
June 1, 8

II

JACQU&amp;'l CARTIER
Explorer Jacques Cartier died m
1557
INVADED POLAND
Gennany Invaded Poland Sept. I,

1939.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ t!l

HennArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

another dtamond, etc
2 Agam South opens wtth
one club Thts ltme West
holds S-A102H-KQ1050

' ~e~l~ J ~ -d~~b~:'1., h~:g~

cards, tut poortsh dtstrtbullon East holds: S- K 9 3 2 IfA J 7 4 D - K 9 3 C · 8 7 He

should show h1s strength by a
two-club cue-btd
West Will Simply respond
two hearts and East wtll take
him nght to game Netther
partner moves toward a slam

because ~ach one ts lookmg at
two qu1ck club losers
3 This really tough hand
wtll be dtscussed next Tu~s­
day The openmg bid 1ds one
heart North doubles With S
A K 10 4 H - Q D - A Q J 3 CAQ 6 5 South holds S - Q J 9 8
6H - 854D

one let1er to each square to form
four ordrnary words

INVEX

85C · 842

I I I
·-·Tit,••,c...

...,,-~,~

b

••,.,,. ..,

I MUGMY
I [J
SPOMIE

K]

I

t
J I l J

tHILERS

Print

Yeste rdays

I

!l ow woulrl vuu

r~ n y 0 11 from

,'

, Nto..-. !:)1' "- •'rltt'\il l P.\' lll:i!o \ S..\;."1:

WHAT
~AID
iHAI HOl-l-YWOOD
"EXT~A" WA?.
Nono arrange lhe circled letters to

form the surpnse answer. as suggested by the atxJve cartoon

ans~er here.

"[

XXI I Jt"

(Anowero Monday)
Jumbles GROOM FAINT HOPPER SCENIC
Answer How flea marke ts start - FROM ' SCRATCH '

·.

\ Jumble Book No u conltlning 110puulea l••••ll•ble forl1 75postpald
fror'l Jutnblll eJo th la r.ew suaper so .. ~i, Nprwood N J 071S411ncludeyour
r

!''lt

L....

,n iJ "'~ ri p c('lie a rod make cl\er:lt;; payable to Newtf)lptlrboc*;l

-

- -

Public Notice
Counties, Ohto, on various
routes and sections, by

preparing the surface and
painting
F1eld Paonting of
Exls11ng Steel
Structure Type
See
Plans
" The date set lor com
pte11on of this work shall be
as se1 forth on the bidding
prgposal ''
•Each bodder shall be
required to file with his bid
a certtfted check or
cashier' s check tor an
amount equal 1o five per
cen1 of his bid, but In no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
lor ten per cen1 of hts bid,
payable to the Director.
Bidders must apply, on
the proper farms, for
qualifcatlon at least ten

days prior to 1he dale set
lor opening bids tn ac
cordance wfth Chopler 5525
Ohio Rev1sed Code
Plans and speclflcallcns
are on file In lhe Depart·
men I of Transporlatlon and
1he office of the Dls1rlc1
DeilUIV Director.
The Director reserves
1he right to reject any ond
all bods
DAVIDL.WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev a 17 73
May 25, June 1
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Fer sale 1he residence of
the late BenJamin Neu1·
zllng at 105 Maple Place,
Pomeroy ,' Ohio, fully carpeted, COOSISftng of two
bedrooms, living room,

South responds me spade
t!H J e l

ac

ccrdance woth Chapter 5525
Ohoo Revosed Code

'it 11\JNt ID1l

Lindley and his wife, now 30, "were
divorced m December !97S. She has
since remarned another Vietnam
veteran She was graduated from
the Umverstty of Maryland w~th a
degree m busmess management and
works for the Securities and Exchange Comrruss1on m Washington.
Dananna lives w1th her.
Being the wife of an officer who
volunteered for Vtetnam put her m
an uncomfortable position, she
recalls, because no one understood
why he wanted to be )llere After a
whtle , she had trouble un·
derstanding herself or explauung to
her fnends. She was 19 and trymg to
learn to live m what she descnbed as
a "some;vhat hostile, fnghtemng
and very lonely environment "
" It's very complicated. But I think
one thiqg Rusty and l have kmd of
ftgured out more or less has to do
wtth anttctpatory gnef My
girlfriend's husband was ktlled over
there At the time that he died IS the
lime when I f1rst started expenencmg sort of stgns of grief.'' ,
In prepanng herself for Lindley's
death, she suffered loss of appetite,
nauseousness and shortness of
breath. She lost all of her feelings
and emotion Nothing could make
her cry.
" And at that pomt, I ftgured the
best thing to do was m essence ktll
Rusty off, so that I could adjust
when he died. And then when he
didn't die, which I mean IS just wonderful, but I mean I had already m a
sense ktlled him. I know it sounds
very cruel.
" Then 11 was real hard to get any
true feelings back for him. It wasn't
so much that he had changed, but
my feelmgs for him had changed
and I wasn't able to get them back
Rusty and I are still very good fnends, which IS just great. I really like
him. I can't say that I love him and I
haven't been able to say that for
some time"
She says she "had neither counseling nor anyone to adviSe me while
he was tn Vtetnam or after his
return Our marriage and the reconstructl{lg of our lives never had a
fa1r chance "
Iromcally, as a result of what happened to her, Lindley lobbied for
legtslation for a psychological readJustment program. It was sponsored
by Wolff and passed mto Ia w by
Congress last year.
Now, Lindley says, he would like
to se~ Wolff's newest bill enacted
and "then get a Job unplementing
it.
He says he is getting tired of
ftghting the battle over and over
"It gels old. It doesn't need to be
It shouldn't have to be done 10 years
after the majonty of veterans g~
back from VIetnam."

Publtc Notoce
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Oh1o
May 14, 1980
Conlrac! Sales Legal
Copy No. eo-278
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposols w1ll be
received at 1he office of 1he
Direclor of the Ohio De par
lmen1 Dl Transportalion
Columbus, Ohio, un111 10.00
A M , Ohio Standard Time,
Tuesday, June 10, 1980, for
1mprovements in
Parts 1 to 221nclusove are
offered as one contract and
will be considered on the
baSIS of the total amount
bid
Parts 1 thru 22
Athens, GatUa, Monroe,
Noble and Washington

Sodders must apply, on

the

Take-out double examples

Jemt+calnn'' 1939

11:15 liJ PMAPULSE
tlDI CBS NEWS

The Oh10 Department of
Transportat1on
hereby
not1f1es all b1dders that 1t
will afftrmat1vety msure
that 10 any contract en
tered tnto l)ursuant to th1s
advert iSement, m1nonty
bust ness enterpnses wtll be
afforded full opportunity to
subm1t b1ds 1n response to
thiS IOVIfdfiOn and Will not
be d1SCr1m1nated aga1nst
on the grounds of race,

-

Whot happened?
MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) "

10•30

Lindley says he grew up believmg
he had an obhgation to serve his
country lie volunteered for the Army, bypassmg college, went to Offtcers' Candtdate School and
marned Marcta Stlbaugh stx months before he went to V1etnam m
August1968
" It's not advtsable to spend 18
months - the f1rst &lt;wo years of your
mamage - m Vtetnam. But, you
know, I thought things were gomg
great over there I was making
about $1,000 a month, which was
pretty good pay 10 years ago, spending about $10
"My wife was working, gomg to
school at the time. It looked like I
was comptling a pretty tmpress1ve
resume, or at least that was what I
was led to beheve "
When he returned to the Umted
States m 1970, he was dis1lluswned
wtth the way servtcemen were bemg
treated
He went to look for a job in
Colorado Sprmgs, Colo., where he
was gmng to college and where he
and Marcta planned to live on f1ve
acres of land they had purchased for
$15,000.
"I walked mto the local em·
ployment offtce and spoke to the
veteran's representative and gave
him a copy of my resume and explamed I would want something
reasonably commensurate wtth
what I was domg m the serv1ce.
"The guy flips through his Illes
and says, 'Well, we have an opemng
for a counter man at the Colorado
Sprmgs Zoo.' I sa1d, 'What's a counter man? ' Hesatd, 'Well, you do a little short order cookmg, clean the
counter and wash the dishes.'
" I sa1d, 'Walt a second Is this the
kmd of JOb you're offenng veterans?
It's not exactly what they promtSed
I don't want to have anything to do
with this agency anymore ' I wot'ked
for them later on, but that's JUSt sort
of the way the system works "
Lindley left Colorado CoUege after
a year and moved wtth his wife and
then• newly born daughter, Dananna, now 9, to Washington 111 the summmer of 1971.
He worked for a year as a lobbyist
for vanous veterans' groups. In 1972
he JOmed the unsuccessful presidential campatgn of Democratic Sen
George McGovern For the next four \
years he was director of the Vtetnam
Veterans' Center. He worked for the
Department of Labor as a consultant
for veterans' employment dunng
1978 and then held a senes of consulting JObs with Vtetnam veterans'
orgamzat10ns.

Public Nohce

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Indian Ocean growmg more enl1
Westesn and pro-s oc1ahst but
whentherevolufloncomel!l tl1spro
democracy, pro economiChber1y

meet,'' he says

PubliC Not1ce

BRIDGE

BEN WATTENBERG'S t980

rlv .1t1ng m~o~rdt.rl rt a lo! O r Clr! Cop
polmo a tnal whu;:h 912:ud A.mer

komMiomt 21U S Men's ()ymnoo

CINCINNATI (AP) - In these
ttmes when the dtvorce rate ts domg
1ts best to stay ahead of mflation ,
Chester and Atmee Blackwood
prove that life-long marnage ISn'(
an extmct Ideal
The Blackwoods celebrated thetr
70th wedding anruversary Saturday.
Blackwood says he recetved good
advice from his father the day after
the couple, who were aged 19 and 17
at the hme, eloped m 1910
'Son, you're 19 gomg on 20, and
you've chosen to marry awfully
young That's done. That was your
dectswn But, hsten, you've made a
deal and you'd better stick tott."
The deal st1ll bmds the Blackwoods, who are now aged 89 and 87

Count1e~ ,

uca Cttemp!onehlpe from~h.o 3)

World

Life-long marriage
isn't extinct ideal

Meigs

Champion.tul) oJ A"'eteur Bowling

1)

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
pohce Department mvest1gated a
two-car acctdent Fr1day at 2 2ll p m
at the entrance of the Kroger Store
Erma Hollon, Chester, pulled
from the Kroger parkmg lot mto the
path of an auto drtven by Howard
Ebers bach, Portland There were no
mJunes and no cttations were
tssued There was moderate damage
to both vehicles

Improve ments 1n
Athens, Gall1a, Hockmg,

SiatevaOr Coppolmo W1ththea1d
of stock footage andst rlla ,ttl 1stast
pa c ed e,~~:clus1ve recreates the

(!) SPOIITSWORLD

Check Minor Accident

'Srl Lanka Second Thoughts1n the
Third World A sleepy Island 10 the

I

(J) IASIBALL Atlanta 8(avea vs

ASHLAND, OH - Leshe W Menshouse and Freddte B Westfall of
Galhpohs were members of the 1980
graduatmg class at Ashland College
Menshouse recetved the bachelor
of sctence m busmess ad·
llllmstrattOn degree, ma]onng m
business management and
marketmg
Westfall was graduated swruna
cwn laude with honors in Gamma
Alpha Kappa for mamtammg a 3.6
grade pomt average or above durmg
his college career He recetved the
bachelor of sctence m busmess adllllmstrat!On degree, maJormg m
busmess management and poh!tcal
sctence He ts the son of Hurl Westfall of Rt I, Box 282

Tuesday , June 24, 1980, fot

What Are Its Responllblltttes ?
Gueat Jack H Watson Jr Au ra
tant to the Pree1dent for Inter
GovernmentaiAffe1ra Secreteryto
the Cabtnet Host Wtll lam F Buck
l_!t,Jr (60mlns)

provide coverage of the game

I

of '80 Ashland class

AM, Ohoo Standard Tome,

Fast, bniKant emergency act ron by
Trapper and Dr Rl'o'&amp;rstde saves
the l1te of a g~rlly lng cnt1c a1\y mJured
In the street but threatens later to
make 11thng ducks of Rrver s1de and
Gonzo (Repeat, 60 mtns )

ID!a Ht-O

TRIALS

Two Gallians members

Sealed proposals w111 be
rece 1ved at the off 1ce of the
D1rector of the Oh1o Depar
tment of Transportation ,
Columbus, Oh oo, un1ol iO 00

Energ~Cr11 1 S ALongTrad1t1on and

flld"1112

SPORTS
•
CD tlDI
SPECTACULAR
.OUT0'80
, 3:30
....ONARIES IN ACTION
•
IIOVIE-(COIIEDY)'" "Brood
AlldCIIoCOUte" 1877
4:00 (l).IASEBALL Clnconnall Reds
•
vt Son D'- Padreo
C1J HI!UYES

scores ot fa shtonable London par
Ilea where he enga ges some ot
England s most promment polt
ttctans tn verbal combat (60
m1ntJ
Ill C1J (!I) THE JEFFERSON$
When fnanda fr om HeleM s high
school days make Tom feel out ot
ptace 1nhta ownhome hemakesthe
mtatake of turnmg to George l or

Bedecked and bedazzling wtth an
"exuberance that never d1ee down,
Bette TheRese Mtdlerstarsrn thts
dynam1c concert performance It a
a h1gh energy award wmnmg
exclusive

Moacow

(!) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
liD SIX MIWON DOLLAR MAN
(jj) ANnGUES
2:11 [J)MOVIE~DRAMA) "l'a "Hold
lock 111e Nl8hl" 1856
2:30
THE DEAF HEAR
HI!RE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
3:00 evOYAGETOTHEBOTTOM
DFTHESEA
CD ATHOMEWITHTHE BIBLE
[D UNITED STATES OLYMPIC

he ts mvtted to

help (Repeat)
10:00 CIJ KENNETH COPELAND
ill BETTE MIDLER SHOW

revealing the best athletes who
weretorepresent the United States
at the OlympiCS to be held 1n

2:00

00 ill MAVERICK
5.00 [J) UNTOUCHABLES
4

18ROTAR~SPRESENT

MASTERPIECE THEATRE

J&amp;mm D~rtraet1

Thelaeer playa a s•on•hcant role 1n
a variety of J1elda Thts program

... y.

'Ghosto1 the China Sea" 1958

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary met Fr1day
evemng at the Heath Umted
Methodist Church wtth Jack Walker,
prestdent, presiding
There were 18 members present
and one guest, Btll Boyd of Huntington Dmner was served by the
i
ladles of the church

'Otaraeh Eptsode I Dtzzy In thus
f1rat epi!!IOde of a four pan senes
basad oM the hie and t1mes ol Ben

®NOVA 'Ltohtofthe21 etCentury'

ID!a KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO

'Comanc:heStatlon" 1e60

(!) NEWS
US (!Z Ill NEWS
2:30 [J)
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) "
1

(!) THE BIG EVENT The Great

THE OLD WEST 'Doomed At

1:00 (l) •

(jj) ODYSSEY The Chaco

Legacy Over 900 Years ago the

(I)

wraatlle tool (60 mms )

•••1ft

"The 5 000 Fingers Of Or T "

AFTERNOON

and proJects the future uses of true

THE YEAGERS Carroll

Yeager and members of hts tamtly

with fighting m Vtetnam "
Lindly ts 32 now but looks much
younger He lives m a $200-a-month
apartment over an lndtan
restaurant Just four blocks from the
White House.
He was hired as a wnter for The
Stars and strtpes, the national
veterans' newspaper, two months
ago after workmg there part-ttme.
He makes $liOO a month.
"I can JUSt about make ends

By GEORGE ESPER
Associated Press Writer
WAS!UNGTON (AP) - Ftve
years after the end of the VIetnam
War, a Columbus, Ohio, native who
fought there IS trymg to go up a down
escalator.
After a decade of fighting an unpopular war, Rusty · Lmdley IS
makmg what ltkel) ts his last stand
for addttional benefits for 2 8 lllllhon
VIetnam veterans as an unofflctal
adytser on congresswnalleg1slatwn.
Wtth no official status, 'no college
degree, the road has been rocky smce he returned home from the war 10
years ago, a captam at age 21.
One casualty has been his
marnage to the girl -he met m his
history class and courted at Upper
Arlington H1gh School m their
hometown of Colwnbus
"The best analogy I can gtve for
the Vtetnam veteran," says Lindley,
"IS like he's on an escalator. He's
trymg togo up a down escalator.
"He's got a lot of things workmg
agalllSI him He's got attitudes He's
got lack of benefits. He's got t1me
gomg agamst h1m He 's got
psychologtcal problems "
Rep Lester Wolff, D-N Y , a member of the House Veterans Affatrs
Conumttee, says Lmdley contrtbuted the baste tdeas for a comprehenstve $1 5 btlhon ftve-year
package of beneftts for Vtetnam
veterans that he mtroduced m
Congress March 20
" He's had mput m this for anumber of years, " says Wolff. "He ts an
unpatd volunteer to help us He's one
of the people that's keepmg the Vtetnam veterans' 1ssuealive"
Wolff's bill would set up a
pres1denttal corrumss1on on VIetnam
veterans' affatrs and an asststant
secretary of labor for employment;
estabhsh a program of career
development trammg through sut;.
stdies to employers, provtde compensatton and tr"eatment for
d1sab1ht1es caused by Agent
Orange; tmprove counselmg servtces, and mcrease by 15 percent the
cost of hvmg allowance to veterans
m school under the GI Bill who can
prove a need for the addtttonal funds
Wolff agrees with Lindley that
VIetnam veterans have been shunned because tt was an unpopular war
and people JUSt want to forget 1t
Some of the blame he lays on
Congress and some on the Veterans
Admimstratton.
The plight of the Vtetnam veteran,
even today, says Wolff, IS still very
ser1ous
Wolff says that what he has trted
to do, wtth help from Lindley, "15
bnng together all of the problems as
we see them today.It's a maJor push
m order to try to redress these
problems m solllll fashion We've
been domg tt m a ptecemeal fashion
and we've brought tt all together m
one piece of legJslatwn."
Lindley, who worked as an adviSer
to Vtetnamese soldiers durmg the
war, says that "everything I've done
ts directly related and mtertwmed

wtlenlhtrtvolutloncomea tttspro

democracy, pro econom1c liberty
wnat happened?

1

couple of runaways on a mtss tonto

CIJe ATISSUE

CIJ

Thtrd World A aiHpy lalarwj In the
Indian Ocean gr.owmg more ant1
Weatern and pro aoc1ahal but ,

1.30

(!) POP GOES THE COUNTRY
lli CDilDl NEWS
(I) BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
(jj) SESAME STREET
8 30 (l) 8 (I) NBC NEWS
(I) FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
[J)
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
(I) NEWS
0 [J)(ll) CBS NEWS
7 00 (l)8 (!) DtSNEY"SWONDERFUL

ln·Laws' 1979
(l) MOVIE · (FANTASY)

BEN WATTENBERG'S 1980

12:45 [J) THREE'SACROWD
1:00 [J) MOVIE ·(WESTERN) "Ya

e 00 ()) ABC NEWS

[J) W CD

a attention during the 601

Snlanka Secood Thoughts In the

••• "Moonraker' 1979

(jj) GROUCHO

@. REV

12:00

[J)

LAWMAKERS
5.00 CIJ WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
CD AFRICANS .
(jj) ElECTRIC COMPANY
5 30 (I) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
ill MOVIE (SCIENCE·FICTION)
(I)

Old Cunoatty Shop' Outlp 'iiSits
Grandfather berates him for gam
bling and demands to b8 repatd
Immediately

~e;:a

-

-

-

dining room, 1&lt;1tc~en, balh,
lull basemenlond 1hree car
garage. Seen by appointmen! Call 992 3101 aller
500PM
LOIS Burt
Executrix Ol
1he Es1a1e of
Ben1amln Neutzllng,
- Deceased
15125, (6) 1, 2tc

......LAFF.__ . __A·
_ DAY

\

Leaders worry about ·future ·racial tension
By Associated Press
Each week, the liSt seems to grow ·
Rtots m MIBllll Shootmgs m rural
Georgta. Firebombings m Michigan
Marches 10 MissiSSippi.
W1th tempers 10 the nation's ghettos nsmg, now from gnnding inflation and unemployment and later
from the swnmer heal, CIVIl r1ghts
leaders across the country say they
are worned about the months ahead
"I think this ts a 11eneral outcry by

blacks and I belteve unless other
cittes hasten to address themselves
to the cructal needs, we 're gmng to
f10d that some of the flames from
M1anu and WnghlsvtUe (Ga. ) are
going to Ely into the yards of these
other cities and set them on fire
too," the Rev. Abraham Woods'
head of the Blrnungham, Ala , cha~
ter of the Southern Chrtshan Leadership Conference, satd Frtday
Some black leaders see a con-

nectton between the shootmg of
National Urban League President
Vernon E Jordan Jr 10Fort Wayne,
Ind , on Thursday and Fnday's ftre
tn the off1ces of the Urban League of
Greater Mtallll
"My unital reaction was that 1t
(the ftre) had something to do w1th
rac1al trouble, g1ven what has happened to Vernon and gtven what has
happened here two weeks ago
(notmg)," s•ud T Willard Fatr,

director ot the UWM
M1arru pohce, however, discount
any conneclton between the shooting
and the ftre, which caused about
$50,000 damage. The Mtallll Herald
reported today that mvestigators
ruled the fire was deltberately set
Jordan was shot twtce by a smper
as he returned to his motel and was
liSted m "guardedly good" conditton
Fnday The FBI satd tl was lookmg

they beneftt from ANS"entltiements
for nearly all their crude oil " Car'
'
son said in an mtervtew
Sohio spokesman Tom Libertt
would not confim etther estunate.
He said the company has not deternuned what tmpact the proposed
new regulations would have
Carson satd •t was evtdent from
"the 18-to-20 cent pnce advantage
Sohio has on the street" how much
benefit the Ohio company recetved
from the entitlements program
"You had a sttuation where the
guy wtth the lowest pnce gas (Sohio)
had the highest profit margm," Carson said.
The department's chief hearmgs
offtcer stapped Sohio with an
emergency order mtended to force a
to-cent hike m Standard's gasohne
pnces. His order later was rescmded by DOE, which then set m
motion a rule-changmg procedure to
elmunate the benefit Sohio recetves

under the entitlements program.
Sohio, \\hose pnces are among the
lowest m the natton, donunates the
Ohio !llllrket wtth about Z1 percent of
total gasoline sales in the state
DOE acted to change the rules m
response to pleas from some Ohio Independent oil dealers that they faced
bankruptcy because of compelltton
fromSohio
The entitlements program was
destgned to equahze the cost of
crude 01! between compames dependent on expenstve, foretgn crude Imports and those wtth cheaper
domesttc otl sources. Sohio was compensated because of the cost of
brmgmg otl down from Alaska
But the the DOE said the program
was thrown badly out of kilter by a
· sharp riSe m costa of tmported crude
last year
Heanngs on the proposed rule
changes are scheduled next week m
Washington and Los Angeles.

STUDENTS INDICTED
CINCINNATI (AP) - A grand
Jury has mdicted f1ve 18-year-old
Forest Park High School students
who were among 26 persons arrested
a month ago on charges of
man1uana trafficking.
A Hamilton County grand jury
charged four of the five persons w1th
more than one count of selling
msn)uana. All five are from subur·
ban Forest Park.
The arrests were made on April
30, mostly on school grounds, and
stemmed from an Investigation by
police and the school district. The
probe mvolved an undercover
policewoman who posed as a student
and made purchases from students

LOTI'ERY EARNINGS
CLEVELAND (AP) - The winning number drawn Friday mght m
the Ohio Lottery's datly game "The
Nwnber" was 750.
The lottery reported earnings of
$316,853.50 from the wagenng on
Fnday mght's dally number
drawtng The lottery's computer '
tabulations show sales prior to the
drawing ~arne to $660,814.SO.
Holders of wlnmng tickets are entitled to S3-13,961.
I

rial from experiences: or
tbiDgs tbat I see or here,"

says soft-spokeD Jimmy
Bullett. He Dotes all 1bose
tbiDgs down tn a little beok
for use when wntiug future
soDgs.

By ANDY LANG
AP Newslealures
If you do not belong on a high
ladder I and you know whether
you are m that category) , then
this ltttle treatise on the proper
way to handle such a ladder
tsn't exactly for you.
What IS really bemg discussed here ts an extension ladder, which IS really two ladders, fttted together so that one
secllon can be moved separately to reach the destred hetght
The top section moves upward
when the rope attached to it ts
pulled down, alter whtch the
two parts are locked together
by a spectal gadget that ts
clearly vts1ble and easy to operate
To get the knack of ralSlng
the top sectton, the ladder
should be m a vertical postlton,
but leamng shghtly toward the
house at the top Many persons
vtolate all the rules of safety m
gettmg an extenston ladder to
rest agamst the house There ts
only one proper way to do thts
wtthout nskmg lllJUry.
Place the bottom of the ladder agamst the foundatiOn at

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Bob
Evans Fartns Inc reported Frtday
1ts annual sales were up 19 percent
for the fiSCal year ending Apnl25
The Ohio based sausage and
restaurant fmn reported con·
solidated sales of $125,210,000 for the
fiSCal year compared to $10S,64S,OOO
m1979.
Board Chatnnan Dame! E Evans
satd net income for the year, based
on the wetghted average number rJ
shares outstanding, was $11,398,000,
or $2.03 per share, compared to
$7,024,000, or $1 29 per share, a year
ago.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - John
P Williamson, chail1118n and chief
executive offtcer of the Toledo
Edison Co , was elected Frtday as
prestdent of the Ohio Electnc U!thty
Institute.
He succeeds Charles A. Heller,
president of • Ohio Power Co ,
prestdent of the mstitute the past
two years.
Institute directors chose Robert
Frazer, pres1dellt of Dayton Power
and Light Co , as vtce prestdent

"I TAKE MOST of my male-

In Phoemx, Ariz. , the head of the
natton' s largest Htspantc
organization /concurred. The
shooting IS "further evidence of the
revoltmg VIolence which 1s
beconung almost mgramed mto the
Amencan soctalfabnc," satd Ruben
Bonilla, prestdent of the League of
United Latin American CitiZens.
In his speech, Lowery did not
specifically mention the noting m
Miami, which claimed 16 lives
earlier this month, or other ractal
protests. But he did warn of the
dangers of VIolence.
"We must put an end to vtolence or
1t wtll put an end to us "
Other scenes d. ractal con·
frontation this spring have been in:
- Wnghtsvtlle, Ga,, where two
months of ractal conflict over black
demands for econorruc equality
resulted in 16 persons bemg indicted
Thursday, including two white men
for the wounding of a !~-year-old
black g1rl Offtc181s there agreed to
open a voter registration offtce
today, when tt usually is closed, thus
averting a prayer VIgil by black
leaders

-Natchez, MillS., wbere delflOJl-•
strations aod 5ealtered vandalism·
have OCCilfTed over the police han-'
dling of the shootln!! of a black man'
allegedly robbing a store. After'
meeting wtth black leaders, Mayor
Tony Byrne decided not to impose a
curfew Friday night.
-Muskegon, Mich., where black
have warned of a "volattle
situation" because mvestigators
allegedly conducted a "casual" mvestigation of an arson fire that
critically burned a civil rights
leader on May 9. After meeting
Fnday wtth black residents, Mayor
Marguente Holcomb sa1d a reward
would be set up for information m
the fire that burned 54-year-old
Owen Pearson.
Several national figures have
called for cooler heads to prevail
followmg the Jordan shooting,
among them President Carter, Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley and
NAACP executive director BenJammHooks
"The tragtc violence of recent
weeks poses a severe threat to the
publtc safety of all Amencans and It
IS my sertous hope that this latest m-,
ctdent wtll not lead to a further
escalation of vtolent reaction," satd
Caretta King, wife of the late Dr."
Martin Luther King Jr., who was'
assassmated m Memphis a dozen'
years ago
Tom Fullove, president of the
ColombUll, Ohio NAACP smd, "I'm
not as much concerned about racial
VIolence as I am about c1vil disor·
der

HOMES FOR AMERICANS

Business briefs . ..

NILES, Mich. (AP) - ShellerGlobe Corp ts suspending production of automotive padded products
at Its Niles diVISIOn, tndeftmtely
laymg off 140 hourly and 71 salanes
employees
John R. Eastman, president of
Toled&lt;»-based Sheller-Globe, satd the
facility wtU close temporarily but
wtll be kept m standby condition for
production reqwrements when auto
production increases.

The attack on Jordan was "a senseless act of violence," the Rev .
Joseph Lowery, president ol the
Southern Ouistian Leadership Conference, said Fnday in Petersburg,
Va.
He told the V1rgtnia chapter of the
SCLC that racwn in America Is "expenencmg an unfortunate, tragtc

resurgence.''

Opinions different on hike
WASHINGTON (AP) - Two
Department of Energy offtclals have
ISSUed wtdely varymg estimates on
the tmpact that new pncmg
regulations will have on the cost of
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) gasollne
Wllliatn Carson, chief of the
department's crude oil pncing branch, satd Fnday Sohio's prices could
Jump 18-20 cents a gallon when the
proposed new rules go mto effect
However, Douglas Robinson,
deputy admimstrator of DOE's
economic regulatory admtmstralton, disputed that
estimate. Robinson satd the latest
f1gures available mdicated that the
mcrease m prices at Sohio pumps
would be about 10-cents s gallon
RobUISon's estimate, which was
more m line With what department
offtctals have satd prevtously, was
based on Sohio's March report that
about 75 percent of the crude ml tl
refmes comes from the Alaska North Slope Carson, whose estimate
was published in the Federal
Register, sa1d his estimate would be
for a refmery usmg 100 percent
A1skan North Slope 01!. "They
(Sohio) are pretty close to that,"
Carson sa1d.
Only 5 percent of the ANS crude
actually goes to Sohio's refinenes,
but Crason satd that "tradeoffs"
which Sohio makes with other
refmers gtves them the same pncmg
advantage. "Dtrectly or mdirectly ,

"mto the possibility of a con-

spsracy."

LO WER l EVEL

'IlHIS CONTEMPORARY, sp ht·entry house ts
basically a one-story ra nch home wtth basement pullecl
up out of the ground Its 3,388 square feet lias a fivebedroom sleepmg capabthty, wtth four baths F'or more
to forma tiO n on Plan HA 11 5 1 M, wnte - enclosmg a
s tamped , self-addressed envel ope - to Mas ter Plan
Servtce, 89 East Jertcho Turnptk e Mtncola N Y
11 50 I

By ANDY LANG
AP Newsfealures
Q. - I read some weeks ago
that the government had told
savmgs and loan assoc1at10ns to
begm offermg renegotiable rate
mortgages. I understand that
the mterest rates on such mortgages go up or down depending
on some kind of tndex The first
thmg I want to know ts wh1ch
index ts used? The second 1s
why the savtngs and loan assoetalton m my area told me they
do not yet handle this kind of
mortgage and are not sure
whether they ever will Why
not?
A - The mdex used as the
basts for rate adjustments IS
the natiOnal average mortgage
rate for all maJOr lenders and
IS compiled by the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board InCidentally, no matter what the
Index shows, mterest rates cannot change more than 5 percent
over the life of the loan. As to
the matter of your savings and
loan associalton 's attitude, the
Federal Home Loan Bank
Board only gave tis authorIZation to the Issuance of such
mortgage loans; tl did not say
an assoctalton HAD to make
them. Also, the authorlzatton
applied only to federally chartered savings and loan associations . As a matter of reality,
many state-chartered associations bave had such authonty

from thetr state legislatures for
some time The renegotiable
mortgages m such cases may
be stmtlar to those of the federally chartered assoctabons but
not necessartly the same.
Q - Is tl better to use caulkmg compound from a can or
from a cartridge ?
A - You seldom have need
for the use of caulking compound from a ca n unless you
are domg a large amount of
caulkmg For orclinary purposes, 1t IS much eas1er to use
the type of cartrtdges that ftt
mte the so-called caulking
guns
Q - How do you get the
washer out of the stem of a
faucet when the screw that
holds It In place is broken?
A. - Try picking tt out, btt
by btl, wtth the end of an awl
or stmilar tool. But If you hold
the · stem m your hand when
domg thiS, you must be very,
very careful Better to place
the stem m a vtse ancl then do
the picking, but be careful not
to ltghlen the vise on any part
of the stem that may damage
1t The screw then can usually
be turned wtth pliers. In some
cases, 11 Is necessary to dr1ll
down into the screw and, when
you have a friendly hardware
dealer, he mtghl get it loose for

When usmg the rope that
ratses the top secllon of the
ladder, always allow an overlap
of both secttons The overlap
should be at least three feet, a
precaution that wtll prevent the
ladder from bemg unsteady.
Once you are working on the
ladder, the most tmportant
safety measure IS not to reach
out too far Extend your arm so
that you can pamt or otherwtse
perform m comfort Once you
feel yourself stretching, you are
getting near the pomt of danger Consider the poss1b1ltty of
buymg a stabilizer, a curved
ptece of metal that attaches to
the upper part o( the ladder
and rests agamst the house to
keep the ladder in place.
If the day you have selected
for your ladder proJect 15 very
wmdy, ftnd somethmg else to
do

(For Andy Lang 's booklet,
"Pamt Your House Instde and
Out, " send SO cents PLUS a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Know-How, P.O
Box 477, Huntmgton, NY
11743 )

.,.~~!.~~;' ~~~~~,~..F~n~~~!:: .J

AP Newsleatures
so often that
the des1gn of furmture is mfluenced by the apparel mdustry that there must be at
least some truth m the statement.
Certamly tt IS a fact that at
the recent nallonal furmture
market tn North Caroltna , upholstered sofas and chairs
sported many of the same
dressmaker delatls found in
women's clothmg
Flounces, pleats, shtrrmg and
ruffles were seen on many a
seating piece mtroduced by
manufacturers to retailers at
the semtannual market And
the lusctous fabrtcs m soft pastel colors such as dusty rose,
pale green and while would be
It has been satd

Here's the Answer EEl

r1ght angles to the house Go
back to the top of the ladder ,
grab the top rung and ratse tt
to shoulder hetght. Now, rruse
the ladder slowly, keepmg a
ftrm grtp on the ladder and releasmg one hand at a time. Be
certam, as you do th1s, that you
are holdmg one rung tightly as
you move the other hand to the
next rung
Fmally, as the ladder becomes vertical, rest the top
aga1nst the house. Now, slowly
and carefully, move the foot of
the ladder away from the
house, little by lillie. When the
ladder is about one-fourth of tis
hetght away from the house, it
IS m the correct postlton Thus,
wtth a 20-foot ladder, the bottom should be about ftve feet
from the house In this posttion,
tt w11I remam stable as you
cltmb 1t and whtle you work on
tl, always assummg that the
feet of the ladder are solidly
restmg on the ground. Some
ladders come With deVIces to
keep a ladder from slippmg If
your ladder doesn't have them,
you can buy attactunents for
the purpose

HOMES

you.
(Leaky faucets, plumbing
noises, etc., are discussed m
Andy Lang's booklet, "Make
Simple Plwnbmg Repairs,"
available by sending SO cents
and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Know-How,
P 0 Box 477, HtmllnP.n, N Y
11743. Questions of geheral In·
terest will he answered in the
column, but lndividuol corre·
spondence cannot he undertaken.)

woman's body
These dresssmaker detatls
helped to create some of the
prettiest and most graceful upholstered furmture seen tn
years.
Consumers wtll have a
chance to judge for themselves
this fall when most of the new
offermgs will appear on retail
sales floors
As usual m a large market
servmg the entire spectrum of
the furmture mdustry, anythmg
anyone could unagme m the
way of seating was on VIew at
one or another of the more than
I,OOOshowrooms However, contlnwng a trend at pr10r markels, modular seating and dualpurpose sofas seemed to be on
the tnCrease
.
"The No I demand of custamers IS Oextbtltty," explamed
Ed Bohling, marketing director
for Sherwood Corp , a maker of
nip-out foam sofas and modular
seating that converts mto beds
by nipping or otherwise rearranging the foam components.
" Flip-out furniture, a product
that is only four years old at
Sherwood. now accounts for 75
percent of our busmess," sa1d
Bohling.
"The consumer continues to
lead us where we ought to be
going," he added, describing
the success of an unusual group
of modular components covered
in bright red, green blue, orange, yellow or black nylon
packcloth that had Be411lled a
bit too daring before Its introductlon and lnltial accept..
ance by Cllltome111.
Bruce Shelton, presldeqt of
SpberlcalCDI"p., wbo8e unusual,
rounded foam 10fu and chain
that !Up out Into beda have

y&lt;;ar, noted that over the seven
years he has shown the formlure m North Carolina, acceplance has grown steadily
Bestdes Oextbtltty, the other
ma)Or theme struck by new upholstered lurmture is comfort
There was a strong emphasts
on recltners and other comfortpromotmg easy chstrs
At Thayer Coggin, for example, a new, nextble acryltc
and ftberglass matertal that allows a chatr to sway and rock
a btl to provtde an added sense
of comfort was a feature on a
chaise and several easy chatrs
Fully upholstered dining
chair!! were seen m several
showrooms Such chatrs, wtth
enough uprtght support for dm.
ing plus the comfort to make
loungmg m them after dinner
pleasant, were offered by a
number of manufacturers in·
eluding Swaun, Dtrectional,
Thayer Coggm and Charlton.
Among fabrics that appeared
to cut across style and destgn
ltnes were textured, jacquard
fabrics combining white and
betge, chintz and canvti.Hiuck.
Altbough a color known vari·
ously as dusty rose, raspberry
sherbet and mauve appeared to
be the most widely distributed
new color, white was also 011
display in many different types
of upholstered furniture show·
rooma. Deep tones - emerald
IIJ'een, garnet red, navy blue were allo seen widely.
But, as one color consultant
noted, virtually aU colors are to
be seen tn the marketplace,
"With fabric, you am lind
!he futur~d the 0881 In the
present," said Yale Forman,
color copsultant to Hercules,

Inc,

�E-3- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday June

...·

. t-2- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June I, 1980

County agent's corner

.••
·'

BY JOHN C. RICE
Exteuloo Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY- If you find that termites have infested your house, the
best advice is to u8e common sense
and not be rushed, says Jim Sargent,
Extenson insect specialist at The
Ohio State University.
In most instances, once a termite
infestation has occurred, control
measures are best done' by a

valuable m weeo control m the garden. To control weeds with
cultivation, space rowlf far enough
apart to allow mechanical
cultivation with garden tractor or
tiller. Power equipment greatly er·
duces the drudgery of weedo
removal. Weeds are easftr to
remove and control when they are
small.
FLOWERING SHRUBS
Now you can prune them , at least

the ones that have bloomed and
blooms have faded away. Hold off on
those yet to bloom.
Basically, these shrubs are pruned
by thinning out rather tban heading
back. Thinning is done by cutting off
undesired branches where they attach to the main stem or to another
branch. Heading back forces the
next bud below the cut to begin
growth into a new branch.

pfofessional
pest to
control
There is no need
panicoperator.
because rr;;:,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
these insects work very slowly, and
your house won't fall down overnight.
Many people find termites at work
during the spring and summer months. But, control measures can be
started in a few weeks or a few mon·
ths. The situation will not suddenly
get out of hand.
If you decide to secure the services of a pest control company,
take your time. Do not penni!
anyone to rush you into purchasing
termite control services. A delay of .
'"'
a few weeks will not make any dif.
ference. There's always time to.pur0% DISCOUNT
chase this service wisely and at your
convenience.
ON AU
Obtain detailed estimates from
BRUSHES, SPONGES, SCOUR PADS, &amp;MILK FILTERS
several companies. The more
details on the contract, the easier it
is to compare services. And It is best
FtRSTCHOICE
ALBACILLIN
not to automatically take the
cheapest but find out what the firm
will do for the priee quoted, where it
will treat, what it will treat, what
$7JJ Doz.
Doz.
kind of guarantee goes with the con·
tract and who will do tpe job.
BEEF &amp; DAIRY
BIODRY
Sometimes a small company,
where the boss actually does some of
the treatment work, is better than a
large company that may bave less
experienced people doing the treat00ooz.
Gal.
ment. Most companies are ex·
cellent, but it sometimes matters
CONCENTRATED
BEEF &amp;- DAIRY
who does the actual work.
GARDENING
Tomatoes and other summer
vegetables grow fast, once the soU
95 20oz .
temperature is right and enough
Gal.
moisture, but not too much, is
present.
It appears, from all weather
reports, that gardening can begin in
earnest now, so get the Ionia to and
pepper plants out, plant your beans
4 lbs.
and okra and make use of the upcoming hot summer days.
WEED CONTROL lN GARDEN
Mulches such as black plastic
film, clean straw, sawdust or peat
·lrd&amp;
moss, .properly .applied, are most
Sycamore,
446-2463
Gallipolis

DAIRY
MONTH

WORK ON PROJECf - Badger patrol members
of Boy Scout Troop 200, Gallipolis, pictured by new
Raccoon Creek County Park sign, assisted Marc
Cameron on his Eagle project by cleaning up around

the park area last week. Left to right are Randy Simpson, Philip Savage, Kerry Theiss, Gene O'Rourke,
Marc Cameron, Mark Dillon, Joe and Brian
Schemenauer.

_:More than 1,500 individuals take part in
:j park activities over Memorial Day weekend
: GALUPOUS - Memorial Day
' weekend drew more than 1,500 park
visitors to Gallia County's Raccoon
. Creek County Park according to Bill
. Davis, park manager.
; Weekend activities at the park in·
; eluded family picnics, sandlot ball-

;-

1980

games, badminton, fishing, hiking,
basketball, and frisbee games.
There was lots of activity observed
at the youth playground facility and
a family reunion at the shelter house .
Highlights of the weekend included one young fisherman who

made a catch of a 12" caUlsh from
the banks of Raccoon.
The park is open Monday through
Saturday from 9 a.m. to dark and
Sundays from 12 noon to dark.
The Raccoon Creek County park is
located off State Rt. 775 on Dan
Jones Rd.

Agriculture and
•
our community

disea·ses. However, the main reason
why people give up on them or
refuse to grow them in the first place
is because of disease problems!
There are two dis"!!ses of roses tbat
are quite infectious and damaging.
These are black spot and powdery
By Bryson R. fBud) Carter
mildew.
Gallia County Ext.;nsion Agent
Black spot, as the name implies, is
a fungus caused disease that shows
up as black spots on the leaves and
win be charged for one person from
GALUPOUS - Local famiers
spreads
upward as the plant grows.
one farm. $50 is charged for the
: are invited to participate in the 1980
Rain
or
splashing water carries
second person from the same £ann.
: Crop Management Workshop spon·
fungus
spores
from leaf to leaf. You
Registration ded\:lline is July I.
· sored by your Cooperative Excannot
ignore
black spot and have
tension Service. The workshop is
nice
roses.
They
need to be sprayed
The Ohio Valley Dairy Goat
designed for grain producers who
on
a
preventive
health
management
Association and the Lawrence Coun·
· are interested in new technology, in·
ty Cooperative Extension Service program before the disease appears.
· formation, and "management
Use Benomyl, Pbaltan, Funginex, or
sponsoring a Dairy Goat
are
· tools." It will be held July 21-24 at
Captan.
Follow labeled instructions,
Training
Meeting
on
June
7
from
10
: Marion, Ohio. The program includes
being
sure
to spray both suriaces d
a.m.
to
3
or
4
p.m.
at
the
Lawrence
: some outstanding resource people
the
leaves.
County
Fairgrounds
(rain
or
shine)
.
/ from Ohio State, ali well as illinois
This will be an outstanding , Powdery mildew is caused by a
- and Missouri. You will also use a
program featuring specialists in fungus as well. White powdery ares
:·grain farm management computer
several areas. The program will in· or lesions show up ·on youngest
; progtam designed to help you
elude Herd Health, Fitting and foliage. As the disease worsens,
• evaluate nwnerous cropping alter·
Showing Goats, Dairy Goat l]oisting and rolling of shoots and
: natives as well as find the "best"
Nutrition, and Goat Judging leaves occurs. Mildew will be worse
: ·plan for your farm. The program
Training and Judging Contest. In ado on roses in shaded (especially mor: will consider your acreage, input
dition, there will be other demon- ning shaded) locations. It also tends
costs, sto1'age and drying facilities,
strations and exhibits on the care to develop in the autumn when warm
machinery ,labor, and other limiting
and management of dairy goats. days alternate with cool nights. You
: factors.
Refreshments win be available at a may not need to spray all summer
: Enrollment in the workshop will
for mildew protection. However,
concession on the Fairgrounds.
• be limited to 50 farms on a "firstwhen fall approaches, get busy! You
: come-first-11erve basis." Enrollees
can
use Benomyl, Funginex, Mildex
Keeping
Roses
Healthy
Roses
: are encouraged to bring their
or Actidione-PM.
aren't
particularly
prone
to
a
lot
of
.spouse, child, key employee or
business pariner who is involved in
• the farming operation. Only full: time enrollment will be accepted.
·~ A meeting will be held before the
' workshop to assist you in completing
: _the computer input form. Con; \Sultants will he available during the
:works)Jop to assist in adjusting and
• 'evaluating your results.
; With the cost-price squeeze af~ feeling all farms, this is your op; portunity to evaluate ' yqur
•.management and consider alter·
~ f18tlves. A registration fee of $150

·-

Interest Free Financing!
TRACTORS (36 HP &amp; Larger) UNTIL 3-1-81
HAY EQUIPMENT UNTIL 4-1-81
SAVEl

:~ : Women

charge
::Carter with
..~ .discrimination
;; CLEVELAND (APJ - Women's
: · organizations which had been
: : crusading for appointment of a
•: woman federal judge in Cleveland
: ·are charging P1'esident Carter with
: discrimination.
~
AriD Aldrich and George W. White
-: are the two new federal judges
.: : recently appointed in Ohio's' nQr·&gt; then) judicial district. Technically,
-:: Aldrich, 52, should have seniority by
:• virtue of age over White, 48, since
_; their
appointments
are
; simultaneous.
~
But because White's commission
:· . was signed by Carter on May 23, and
' : Aldrich's was not signed until the
:· next day, White has seniority. .
c: Lana Moresky, president of the
~: National Organization for Women's
: :Cleveland East chapter, said Alrich
: was the only one of five Ohioans ap: proved by the Senate for the federal
· . bench whose commission was not
. signed on May 23. The othel- ap: . pointees are men.
· · The NOW group and the Cuyahoga
' County Women's Political Caucus
. have sent telegi'8JD8 to Carter
; ·inquiring about the delay in' the
·· ~ signing of Aldrich's commisalon.
: . Arulette Samuels of the president's
: ·staff said Carter Signed a number of ·
· :appointments on May 23 and did not
::get to the stack containing the
: · Alrlrich confinnation untj!later. She
: :uid she did not know if the presidcn1t
would backdate the commissiun.

HUNDREDS AND
EVEN THOUSANDS
OF DOLLARS
INTEREST.

Cpadal&amp;

MASTITIS SYRINGES

MASTITIS SYRINGES

$1250

MASTITIS SYRINGES

$11

AEROSOL SPRAY

$4

MARLATE SOW
$875

FLY SPRAY

$fi00

FlY SPRAY
CONCENTRATE

$2300

WINVANE FEmER

sgsoo

C NTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO, INC:

Have you kept your
old John Deere
Lawn and Garden Tractor safe?
john Deere durability does result in satisfied customers. But long life also caDs for
attention to maintenance. And maintaining the safety equipment on your tractor can be
especially important.
For example, the original boot (or cover) for the battery's positive post on Model
60, 70, 100, 110, 112, 120 or 140 Tractors manufactured from 1963 through 1974 may have
suffered from age or may have been lost or dama~ed . And if that positive batte.ypost is not
properly covered, there is danger of a spark causmg a fire and bodily injwy if you accidentally touch a metal gas can to the positive batte.y post when refueling the tractor. A more
serious fire can result if you are not using a safety-approved gas can.
· If you own one of the above models 1 john Deere wants you to make absolutely
certain that your ~ractor has the battery's positive post properly isolated. To make it easyand safer-for you, we wiU send you a new cover, free. just fill out the coupon provided
below· and mail it to the address shown. It comes complete with installation instruc·
tions and is not difficult to install. But if you prefer, after you ha ve received your kit, make
a date with your john Deere Lawn and Garden Tractor dealer and he'll instaU it for a small
service charge.
.
Remember, safety and maintenance go hand in hand. The operator's manual can
help you. Read it again. Keep your tractor as safe as it was meant to be .
It could be the most iffiportant thing you do today.

By Diane S. Eberts
Extension Agent
Home Economics
Meigs County
PROTECT CHILDREN FROM
TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
POMEROY - The four-year-{)ld
girl lived but had to have brain
surgery. All the effects from the accident won't be known lor years. She
had zoomed out into the street on a
"big wheel" just as a car was
coming. The driver failed to see her
before it was too late.
This is a real incident that happened in another part of the state.
But children are hit by cars daily all
over.the country. In fact, over 50 000
rece1ve disabling injuries from
pedestrian accidents every year; six
children die each day.
Parents can play a big role in
helping prevent such accidents
through the way they teach their
children traffic safety habits.
One rule that needs to be
repeatedly stressed is to stop before
entering a street. And this needs to
be done through some actual planned experiences rather than just the
constant command "stay out of the
street.''
Very young children need to un·
derstand which are the safe places
to play in their neighborhoods and
which are the places for care. Go for
a walk and ask them to tell you
where these places are. Have them
examine the ·surfaces of streets and
sidewalks, telling how they are dif·
ferent and how they are alike.
Changes in surfaces often indicate
boundaries for walkers and drivers:
Point out curbs and less well-{!efined
street edges that make it clear to
children where the walker's •
territory ends and car's begins.
During this walk practice stopping
before entering a car's territory.
Back home, children might sort
out pictures of roadways, highways,
driveways, streets, sidewalks,
paths, yards, and parks into places
for walkers and pfaces for cars.
Before they can go on to learn any
other rules, they have to understand
how important it is to stop before
going on to a street.
All educational programs and activities conducted by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service are
. available to aU potential clientele on
a nondiscriminatory basis without
regard to race, color, national
rights, sex, or religious affiliation.

Store Hours:

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, .JUNE 7, 1980

.

HEW ON CHARGES
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - Two
Hazard, Ky., women were arrested
on Friday for allegedly passing
counterfeit $20 bills at three
Hamilton businesses.
Charged with three counts each of
theft by deception - were Brenda
Johnson, 28, and Donna Chapman,
33. They were held in the Butler
County Jail on $30,000 bond each
pending hearings Monday.

· USDA CHOICE

ARM

$

.

129
ROASI .......L!·•• ,
$

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK ....

8~ ~ •• 129

$}l9

USDA CHOICE

GROUND BEEF. ...~•..
PORK CHOPS ......L~·

••

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS............~!~..
PORK STEAKS..... ~•.

BANANAS ........... H·
FLAVORITE

2% MILK .........;,;;:.~l

1950 SILVER EAGLE,
SPECIAL EDITION
• Perform.ance oriented, st~llsh, Quality ,

69

roomy runabout•
• New high efficiency hull design gives In·
cr edibly smooth ride at high cruslng si)Hds ,
• Super day cruiser/ ski boat w ith large sun
1ounoe aft and ~K Ira wide seat across stern
• conceat~d floor sto rage for water sk is, sld
\'est, lll'le, and e)( Ira supplies
• Large double w ide helm bucket wt swive t
bU(:ket to port.
•260 ~rc , sk i tow bra cket, swim step walk
tnru windsh ield. speedo , horn, a ll metal
flake 8nd mooring co\'er.
SPECIFICATIONS
Gunwale length 19' 2" centerline 1eng1n IB' I "
beam 96" weignt . 2316 I ; fuel c apacnv 40
gallons .
STANDARD EQU IPMENT ;
Aft 1ounoe ~at aft sun lounge; beverage
holder5 {41; bilge pump ; blower, fOf"ce&lt;l ven·
t ilatlon ; boW&amp;. ski eyes , s.S.; carpet ing/ hull
side coverl ng - defu)(e poly. cut pile ; clears ·
. almeo (4} ; controls {slcllt mount ) ; neavv
tnarlfle vinyl ; custom seats 01 s ingle &amp; (1)
csoubte bucket ; drain plug; engine cover In·
sutated InSide; engt11e conr upholster ed
cushion tp .· foot rest; gunwale t ri m, htvy
aluminum w/VInyl guards; instrument•·
t lon ; tadl, oil, speedo. temp, volt &amp; tuel'
gauvn ; Insulated ice chest; lighting
(Inland! ; marine grade vinyl / deeP foam;
polyurethane foam flotefil)(l, ski storage;
steering ; n ck &amp; pin ion. me , han iu l, S.J S.
wheel ; stor.tge : bOW. under !&gt;Nil!.. rear
loun~ese .,ts, floor : windsn 11~1 u . ~A f el 'p' QIIIS5o
opening center sect ion .
CO LOR : Dark ch ;~r c oal w l lh Sll\'er J;!r ipM
trimmed In red.

.MAKE YOUR BEST DEAL
WITH US AND lliEN GET
FREE FINANCING THROUGH
IHCC TO THE ABOVE DATES.

t,
&lt;I
··--·-------------

STOP

BY

SOON

PAR KAY

e MARGARINE.....L~~

wELcH

GRAPE JELLY. •••4!.0:.
FLAVORITE
DEL MONTE
_ /$1
·
·
$}
09
CATSUP............~4.~l..
ICE CREAM.......~~~~ ..
.

~~;;' . I ~j•f;;
. ~~l,J~:.=;

KOOL-AID
No. 020x510/79~
1737-1

PORK &amp; BEANS
400i

2/$119

I•

KRAFT

TEA ·BAGS

MIRACLE WHIP

100 COUNT

$}69

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
•otter E
June 7, 1980

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer J:xpires June 7~ 1980

v

TENDERLEAF .

•

320l

99~

�E-3- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday June

...·

. t-2- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June I, 1980

County agent's corner

.••
·'

BY JOHN C. RICE
Exteuloo Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY- If you find that termites have infested your house, the
best advice is to u8e common sense
and not be rushed, says Jim Sargent,
Extenson insect specialist at The
Ohio State University.
In most instances, once a termite
infestation has occurred, control
measures are best done' by a

valuable m weeo control m the garden. To control weeds with
cultivation, space rowlf far enough
apart to allow mechanical
cultivation with garden tractor or
tiller. Power equipment greatly er·
duces the drudgery of weedo
removal. Weeds are easftr to
remove and control when they are
small.
FLOWERING SHRUBS
Now you can prune them , at least

the ones that have bloomed and
blooms have faded away. Hold off on
those yet to bloom.
Basically, these shrubs are pruned
by thinning out rather tban heading
back. Thinning is done by cutting off
undesired branches where they attach to the main stem or to another
branch. Heading back forces the
next bud below the cut to begin
growth into a new branch.

pfofessional
pest to
control
There is no need
panicoperator.
because rr;;:,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
these insects work very slowly, and
your house won't fall down overnight.
Many people find termites at work
during the spring and summer months. But, control measures can be
started in a few weeks or a few mon·
ths. The situation will not suddenly
get out of hand.
If you decide to secure the services of a pest control company,
take your time. Do not penni!
anyone to rush you into purchasing
termite control services. A delay of .
'"'
a few weeks will not make any dif.
ference. There's always time to.pur0% DISCOUNT
chase this service wisely and at your
convenience.
ON AU
Obtain detailed estimates from
BRUSHES, SPONGES, SCOUR PADS, &amp;MILK FILTERS
several companies. The more
details on the contract, the easier it
is to compare services. And It is best
FtRSTCHOICE
ALBACILLIN
not to automatically take the
cheapest but find out what the firm
will do for the priee quoted, where it
will treat, what it will treat, what
$7JJ Doz.
Doz.
kind of guarantee goes with the con·
tract and who will do tpe job.
BEEF &amp; DAIRY
BIODRY
Sometimes a small company,
where the boss actually does some of
the treatment work, is better than a
large company that may bave less
experienced people doing the treat00ooz.
Gal.
ment. Most companies are ex·
cellent, but it sometimes matters
CONCENTRATED
BEEF &amp;- DAIRY
who does the actual work.
GARDENING
Tomatoes and other summer
vegetables grow fast, once the soU
95 20oz .
temperature is right and enough
Gal.
moisture, but not too much, is
present.
It appears, from all weather
reports, that gardening can begin in
earnest now, so get the Ionia to and
pepper plants out, plant your beans
4 lbs.
and okra and make use of the upcoming hot summer days.
WEED CONTROL lN GARDEN
Mulches such as black plastic
film, clean straw, sawdust or peat
·lrd&amp;
moss, .properly .applied, are most
Sycamore,
446-2463
Gallipolis

DAIRY
MONTH

WORK ON PROJECf - Badger patrol members
of Boy Scout Troop 200, Gallipolis, pictured by new
Raccoon Creek County Park sign, assisted Marc
Cameron on his Eagle project by cleaning up around

the park area last week. Left to right are Randy Simpson, Philip Savage, Kerry Theiss, Gene O'Rourke,
Marc Cameron, Mark Dillon, Joe and Brian
Schemenauer.

_:More than 1,500 individuals take part in
:j park activities over Memorial Day weekend
: GALUPOUS - Memorial Day
' weekend drew more than 1,500 park
visitors to Gallia County's Raccoon
. Creek County Park according to Bill
. Davis, park manager.
; Weekend activities at the park in·
; eluded family picnics, sandlot ball-

;-

1980

games, badminton, fishing, hiking,
basketball, and frisbee games.
There was lots of activity observed
at the youth playground facility and
a family reunion at the shelter house .
Highlights of the weekend included one young fisherman who

made a catch of a 12" caUlsh from
the banks of Raccoon.
The park is open Monday through
Saturday from 9 a.m. to dark and
Sundays from 12 noon to dark.
The Raccoon Creek County park is
located off State Rt. 775 on Dan
Jones Rd.

Agriculture and
•
our community

disea·ses. However, the main reason
why people give up on them or
refuse to grow them in the first place
is because of disease problems!
There are two dis"!!ses of roses tbat
are quite infectious and damaging.
These are black spot and powdery
By Bryson R. fBud) Carter
mildew.
Gallia County Ext.;nsion Agent
Black spot, as the name implies, is
a fungus caused disease that shows
up as black spots on the leaves and
win be charged for one person from
GALUPOUS - Local famiers
spreads
upward as the plant grows.
one farm. $50 is charged for the
: are invited to participate in the 1980
Rain
or
splashing water carries
second person from the same £ann.
: Crop Management Workshop spon·
fungus
spores
from leaf to leaf. You
Registration ded\:lline is July I.
· sored by your Cooperative Excannot
ignore
black spot and have
tension Service. The workshop is
nice
roses.
They
need to be sprayed
The Ohio Valley Dairy Goat
designed for grain producers who
on
a
preventive
health
management
Association and the Lawrence Coun·
· are interested in new technology, in·
ty Cooperative Extension Service program before the disease appears.
· formation, and "management
Use Benomyl, Pbaltan, Funginex, or
sponsoring a Dairy Goat
are
· tools." It will be held July 21-24 at
Captan.
Follow labeled instructions,
Training
Meeting
on
June
7
from
10
: Marion, Ohio. The program includes
being
sure
to spray both suriaces d
a.m.
to
3
or
4
p.m.
at
the
Lawrence
: some outstanding resource people
the
leaves.
County
Fairgrounds
(rain
or
shine)
.
/ from Ohio State, ali well as illinois
This will be an outstanding , Powdery mildew is caused by a
- and Missouri. You will also use a
program featuring specialists in fungus as well. White powdery ares
:·grain farm management computer
several areas. The program will in· or lesions show up ·on youngest
; progtam designed to help you
elude Herd Health, Fitting and foliage. As the disease worsens,
• evaluate nwnerous cropping alter·
Showing Goats, Dairy Goat l]oisting and rolling of shoots and
: natives as well as find the "best"
Nutrition, and Goat Judging leaves occurs. Mildew will be worse
: ·plan for your farm. The program
Training and Judging Contest. In ado on roses in shaded (especially mor: will consider your acreage, input
dition, there will be other demon- ning shaded) locations. It also tends
costs, sto1'age and drying facilities,
strations and exhibits on the care to develop in the autumn when warm
machinery ,labor, and other limiting
and management of dairy goats. days alternate with cool nights. You
: factors.
Refreshments win be available at a may not need to spray all summer
: Enrollment in the workshop will
for mildew protection. However,
concession on the Fairgrounds.
• be limited to 50 farms on a "firstwhen fall approaches, get busy! You
: come-first-11erve basis." Enrollees
can
use Benomyl, Funginex, Mildex
Keeping
Roses
Healthy
Roses
: are encouraged to bring their
or Actidione-PM.
aren't
particularly
prone
to
a
lot
of
.spouse, child, key employee or
business pariner who is involved in
• the farming operation. Only full: time enrollment will be accepted.
·~ A meeting will be held before the
' workshop to assist you in completing
: _the computer input form. Con; \Sultants will he available during the
:works)Jop to assist in adjusting and
• 'evaluating your results.
; With the cost-price squeeze af~ feeling all farms, this is your op; portunity to evaluate ' yqur
•.management and consider alter·
~ f18tlves. A registration fee of $150

·-

Interest Free Financing!
TRACTORS (36 HP &amp; Larger) UNTIL 3-1-81
HAY EQUIPMENT UNTIL 4-1-81
SAVEl

:~ : Women

charge
::Carter with
..~ .discrimination
;; CLEVELAND (APJ - Women's
: · organizations which had been
: : crusading for appointment of a
•: woman federal judge in Cleveland
: ·are charging P1'esident Carter with
: discrimination.
~
AriD Aldrich and George W. White
-: are the two new federal judges
.: : recently appointed in Ohio's' nQr·&gt; then) judicial district. Technically,
-:: Aldrich, 52, should have seniority by
:• virtue of age over White, 48, since
_; their
appointments
are
; simultaneous.
~
But because White's commission
:· . was signed by Carter on May 23, and
' : Aldrich's was not signed until the
:· next day, White has seniority. .
c: Lana Moresky, president of the
~: National Organization for Women's
: :Cleveland East chapter, said Alrich
: was the only one of five Ohioans ap: proved by the Senate for the federal
· . bench whose commission was not
. signed on May 23. The othel- ap: . pointees are men.
· · The NOW group and the Cuyahoga
' County Women's Political Caucus
. have sent telegi'8JD8 to Carter
; ·inquiring about the delay in' the
·· ~ signing of Aldrich's commisalon.
: . Arulette Samuels of the president's
: ·staff said Carter Signed a number of ·
· :appointments on May 23 and did not
::get to the stack containing the
: · Alrlrich confinnation untj!later. She
: :uid she did not know if the presidcn1t
would backdate the commissiun.

HUNDREDS AND
EVEN THOUSANDS
OF DOLLARS
INTEREST.

Cpadal&amp;

MASTITIS SYRINGES

MASTITIS SYRINGES

$1250

MASTITIS SYRINGES

$11

AEROSOL SPRAY

$4

MARLATE SOW
$875

FLY SPRAY

$fi00

FlY SPRAY
CONCENTRATE

$2300

WINVANE FEmER

sgsoo

C NTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO, INC:

Have you kept your
old John Deere
Lawn and Garden Tractor safe?
john Deere durability does result in satisfied customers. But long life also caDs for
attention to maintenance. And maintaining the safety equipment on your tractor can be
especially important.
For example, the original boot (or cover) for the battery's positive post on Model
60, 70, 100, 110, 112, 120 or 140 Tractors manufactured from 1963 through 1974 may have
suffered from age or may have been lost or dama~ed . And if that positive batte.ypost is not
properly covered, there is danger of a spark causmg a fire and bodily injwy if you accidentally touch a metal gas can to the positive batte.y post when refueling the tractor. A more
serious fire can result if you are not using a safety-approved gas can.
· If you own one of the above models 1 john Deere wants you to make absolutely
certain that your ~ractor has the battery's positive post properly isolated. To make it easyand safer-for you, we wiU send you a new cover, free. just fill out the coupon provided
below· and mail it to the address shown. It comes complete with installation instruc·
tions and is not difficult to install. But if you prefer, after you ha ve received your kit, make
a date with your john Deere Lawn and Garden Tractor dealer and he'll instaU it for a small
service charge.
.
Remember, safety and maintenance go hand in hand. The operator's manual can
help you. Read it again. Keep your tractor as safe as it was meant to be .
It could be the most iffiportant thing you do today.

By Diane S. Eberts
Extension Agent
Home Economics
Meigs County
PROTECT CHILDREN FROM
TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
POMEROY - The four-year-{)ld
girl lived but had to have brain
surgery. All the effects from the accident won't be known lor years. She
had zoomed out into the street on a
"big wheel" just as a car was
coming. The driver failed to see her
before it was too late.
This is a real incident that happened in another part of the state.
But children are hit by cars daily all
over.the country. In fact, over 50 000
rece1ve disabling injuries from
pedestrian accidents every year; six
children die each day.
Parents can play a big role in
helping prevent such accidents
through the way they teach their
children traffic safety habits.
One rule that needs to be
repeatedly stressed is to stop before
entering a street. And this needs to
be done through some actual planned experiences rather than just the
constant command "stay out of the
street.''
Very young children need to un·
derstand which are the safe places
to play in their neighborhoods and
which are the places for care. Go for
a walk and ask them to tell you
where these places are. Have them
examine the ·surfaces of streets and
sidewalks, telling how they are dif·
ferent and how they are alike.
Changes in surfaces often indicate
boundaries for walkers and drivers:
Point out curbs and less well-{!efined
street edges that make it clear to
children where the walker's •
territory ends and car's begins.
During this walk practice stopping
before entering a car's territory.
Back home, children might sort
out pictures of roadways, highways,
driveways, streets, sidewalks,
paths, yards, and parks into places
for walkers and pfaces for cars.
Before they can go on to learn any
other rules, they have to understand
how important it is to stop before
going on to a street.
All educational programs and activities conducted by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service are
. available to aU potential clientele on
a nondiscriminatory basis without
regard to race, color, national
rights, sex, or religious affiliation.

Store Hours:

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, .JUNE 7, 1980

.

HEW ON CHARGES
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - Two
Hazard, Ky., women were arrested
on Friday for allegedly passing
counterfeit $20 bills at three
Hamilton businesses.
Charged with three counts each of
theft by deception - were Brenda
Johnson, 28, and Donna Chapman,
33. They were held in the Butler
County Jail on $30,000 bond each
pending hearings Monday.

· USDA CHOICE

ARM

$

.

129
ROASI .......L!·•• ,
$

USDA CHOICE

CHUCK STEAK ....

8~ ~ •• 129

$}l9

USDA CHOICE

GROUND BEEF. ...~•..
PORK CHOPS ......L~·

••

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS............~!~..
PORK STEAKS..... ~•.

BANANAS ........... H·
FLAVORITE

2% MILK .........;,;;:.~l

1950 SILVER EAGLE,
SPECIAL EDITION
• Perform.ance oriented, st~llsh, Quality ,

69

roomy runabout•
• New high efficiency hull design gives In·
cr edibly smooth ride at high cruslng si)Hds ,
• Super day cruiser/ ski boat w ith large sun
1ounoe aft and ~K Ira wide seat across stern
• conceat~d floor sto rage for water sk is, sld
\'est, lll'le, and e)( Ira supplies
• Large double w ide helm bucket wt swive t
bU(:ket to port.
•260 ~rc , sk i tow bra cket, swim step walk
tnru windsh ield. speedo , horn, a ll metal
flake 8nd mooring co\'er.
SPECIFICATIONS
Gunwale length 19' 2" centerline 1eng1n IB' I "
beam 96" weignt . 2316 I ; fuel c apacnv 40
gallons .
STANDARD EQU IPMENT ;
Aft 1ounoe ~at aft sun lounge; beverage
holder5 {41; bilge pump ; blower, fOf"ce&lt;l ven·
t ilatlon ; boW&amp;. ski eyes , s.S.; carpet ing/ hull
side coverl ng - defu)(e poly. cut pile ; clears ·
. almeo (4} ; controls {slcllt mount ) ; neavv
tnarlfle vinyl ; custom seats 01 s ingle &amp; (1)
csoubte bucket ; drain plug; engine cover In·
sutated InSide; engt11e conr upholster ed
cushion tp .· foot rest; gunwale t ri m, htvy
aluminum w/VInyl guards; instrument•·
t lon ; tadl, oil, speedo. temp, volt &amp; tuel'
gauvn ; Insulated ice chest; lighting
(Inland! ; marine grade vinyl / deeP foam;
polyurethane foam flotefil)(l, ski storage;
steering ; n ck &amp; pin ion. me , han iu l, S.J S.
wheel ; stor.tge : bOW. under !&gt;Nil!.. rear
loun~ese .,ts, floor : windsn 11~1 u . ~A f el 'p' QIIIS5o
opening center sect ion .
CO LOR : Dark ch ;~r c oal w l lh Sll\'er J;!r ipM
trimmed In red.

.MAKE YOUR BEST DEAL
WITH US AND lliEN GET
FREE FINANCING THROUGH
IHCC TO THE ABOVE DATES.

t,
&lt;I
··--·-------------

STOP

BY

SOON

PAR KAY

e MARGARINE.....L~~

wELcH

GRAPE JELLY. •••4!.0:.
FLAVORITE
DEL MONTE
_ /$1
·
·
$}
09
CATSUP............~4.~l..
ICE CREAM.......~~~~ ..
.

~~;;' . I ~j•f;;
. ~~l,J~:.=;

KOOL-AID
No. 020x510/79~
1737-1

PORK &amp; BEANS
400i

2/$119

I•

KRAFT

TEA ·BAGS

MIRACLE WHIP

100 COUNT

$}69

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
•otter E
June 7, 1980

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer J:xpires June 7~ 1980

v

TENDERLEAF .

•

320l

99~

�E-5-The Sunday Times.Sentinel, ~unday, June 1, 19110

E-4-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jllll€ I, 19110

Homemakers ~

Cj.rde
BY 11:1111: CU.U
,

f).~,UNI,

. . . ....,--'el

SNEAKY CALORIES
GALlJPOlJS Our recent

: colWlUl on HCalorie Trinuners"

I

I'

'I
' i'

: made us aware of how often calories
· can "sneak" into our diets. Take a
look at the following well·balanced
meal . It is not too high in calories
either. But notice what those wr
: planned bites and extras can do to
· the total number of calories in a
. menu.
(Menu, approximate calories in
planned menu, and approximate
calories in the unplanned extras
listed in that order) :
Pot roast (3 ounces) , 200; Gravy
. (about 3 tablespoons), 55; Mashed
potato ( 'h cup made with milk and
butter, 90; Just a little more potato
and gravy (2 tablespoons ), 50;
Green beans ('h cup), 20; Butter (1
tablespoon for beans), 35; Rolls (1
medium), 60; An extra half left by
your husband, 30; Butter (! pat for
the roll) , 50: A little more for the extra roll, 31J; French dressing (I
tablespoon ), 60 ; Canned peaches ( 'h
cup serving), 80; Another serving
(fruit's good for me), 110; Cookies
(added to the menu the last minute),
110; 1 - 3" dry type (they don't look
rich ), r cookie left on the serving
plate, 110; Coffee with 1 teaspoon
sugar, 15 ; Second cup with sugar, 15 .
Total, 675, 425.
Does this seem famlllar"!
If extra pounds are creeping up on
you, be aware of the "sneaky
calorie" ... it just might be the
culprit.

Agricultural weather
Here is the agricultural advisory
for Ohio as prepared Saturday by
tJYgricultural Weather Center in
west Lafayette, Ind.:
A combination of warmth and ad·
ded moisture from scattered thunderstorms is boosting growth of Ohio
spring crops. A cool front is exwcted to stall in southern Ohio by
early Sunday. Conditions will favor
scattered showers and thunderstorm formation tonight and Sunday across much of the state. It will
continue to be warm and humid with
minimal cooling to the north of the
fro nt. The extended weather
forecast for the first half of next
week calis for continued scattered
showers
and
thunderstorms
throughout the state Monday, then
mainly in eastern and southern Ohio
Tuesday and Wednesday. A little
cooling back into the 1Qs but still
above seasonal norms is posSible
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Field conditions will he quite
varied across Ohio for the weekend

HUDSON, . Ohio (AP) - Mid·
Continent ' Telephone Corp. said
Friday it has completed a merger of
the Cylmer Telephone Co. of southwestern New York into MidContinent in a stock exchange.
. CJ}rmer serves approximately
1,300 telephones in an area contiguous to the Jamestown district of
Midstate Telephone Corp., a MidContinent subsidiary .
Clymer shareholders received
15,632 shares of Mid-Continent common and preferred stock.
The Hudson-based Mfd-Continent
. has operating subsidiaries in 13
states serving more than one million
· telephones.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Amtrak
reports that ridership is up on its two
·passenger routes through Cin·
· cinnati.
The number of depertures from
:and arrivals in Cincinnati on the
Shenandoah and Cardinal trains
totaled 9,478 in the first three months
of 1979. Amtrak said that figure increased to 10,469 this year.
· The Cardinal has daily service
·between Chicago and Washington,
·D.C., through Cincinnati and
Charleston, W.Va. The Shenandoah
goes from Washington to Cincinnati
through Harpers Ferry, W.Va .

UPSET WITII SIGNS
FRANKIJN, Ohio (AP) - City
.Manager Robert Homan is upset by
illecqlly posted political signs in !lis

City.
••
In an attempt to discourage such
signs, Homan personally tore down
.34 of them on Friday. City ol"
.dinances prohibit signs on utility
poles or in public areas.
"I think it's remarkable that can·
didates for shentf, prosecutor and
Congress have campaign managers
who don't seem to regard city ordinances," Homan said.

HOCHIMINH
Ho Chi Minl1, president of North
Vietnam. died in 1969.
·
I

because of the sacttered wetting pal·
tern of thunderstorms. Some quite
beneficial amounts of rain were
noted through Friday evening from
the two belts of showers that crossed
the state. Rainfall totaling one-half
inch to an inch in some places was
reported in northwest Ohio. Drying
rates will be moderate at times Sunday, but wetting risks of up to 40 per·
cent will keep any extended field ac·
tivity curbed . Daily evaporation
should reach two-tenths of an inch
through the weekend.
The surge of warmth and renewed
surface moisture will be accelerating weed development. The
next week wi ll be most important in
weed control by cultivation. Any opportunity to cultivate will be on an
individual field situa tion through the
weekend. Possibly better cultivating
weather should develop from
western Ohio by Tuesday or Wed·
nesday.
The weather co ntinues to
stimulate some problems in tobacco

WASHJNGTON lAP)- There are
new government figures out that put
a patch of blue in the otherwise stormy economic sky over agriculture.
But the preliminary figures by no
means change the forecast for
significantly reduced farm incomes
this year.
The Agriculture Department
reported Friday that the prices far·
mers got for their raw goods rose
during May after posting monthly
declines in March and April.
The increase of 0.9 percent was
also more than twice the rise in the
prices they paid to meet expenses.
That index rose 0.4 percent during
the month after remaining un·
changed from March to April.
The improvement, however, wc;~ s
not enough to offset previous mon·
thly declines in prices received so
that income continued running
below 1979 levels for the fourth
straight month. Prices paid by farmers have been running ahead of
year-.,arlier levels for more than 17
months.

M WAI11NG ON"THt LAR R::ol-

10 1f-lt: 4--H Mee-t~.~_j

Farmers get
higher prices
.f.
ds
J Or raw goo
•
.
111
d unng l'~ay
"

By sharing rides and planning activities in their local communities many

4 - 11 ' ers I1e l P conserve gasoline. Through demons tra tiona a nd "Energy Awareness
Teams" many 4 - H' ers are helping
•··
teach adul ts and yout h "Energy Conservation"
practices .

production. University of Kentucky
extension tobacco specialists report
no active blue mold has been detec·
ted in Kentucky. But active blue
mold is present in Tennessee and aU
tobacco regions of the east and
south. This necessitates continued
preventive sprays as long as tran·
splan_ts are nee(led. This is also true

for angular leaf spot, bacte rial soft
rot and root rot.
.Hay curing weather will be
marginal through the weekend and
the first day or two of next week.
Curing rates will be slow and there is
added risk of wetting, with up to a 40
percent chance on a dally basis
through this period.

Tree fruit Will be rapidly moving
into the thinning stage in central and
northern Ohio in the next few days .
The warmth will keep_the optimum
thinning period short. Spray application chances will he minimal
except in the morning hours for the
next three days because of wind and
wetting risks.

The May parity level for farm
conunodities remained at the April
level of 60 percent, the lowest since
May 1933 during the depth of the
nation's worst economic depression.
At 100 percent, farmers wquld
theoretically have the same spen·
ding power they did in 191~1914.
The department's Crop Reporting
Board said much of May 's increase
!n prices received by farmers was
due to higher prices for oranges,
hay, corn, broilers and potatoes,
although prices for cotton, soybeans
and hogs were also ahead of the
April averages. Lower prices for
eggs, milk a nd ca tUe tempered
those inc reases.
Increased costs for fertilizer, fee d,
family living and fa rm chemicals of·
fset the lower costs during the month
for feeder livestock, the board said.
• Compared to 1979, the May farm
price index was down 8.1 percent.
The price slide began in February,
marking the fi rst time in more than
two years that prices were running
below the year-.,arlier leve ls.

On the other hand. the farm expense index was running 10 percent
ahead of 1979.
Department economists are
predicting retail food pnces will rise
in the range of 7 to II percent this
year, probably about 9 percent;
depending on general inflation,
weather and food supply conditions
in foreign countries. In 1919 they
rose 10.9 percent, the largest annual
increase in five years.
Economists, however, do not consider monthly changes in the farm
pric~ index reli able indicators of
future retail trends. Two-thirds of
every food dollar pays middleman
expenses.
So far in 1980, the farm price index
declined slightly in January, edged
up in February , dropped in March
and April and bounced back slightly
in May .
Farm prices in May averaged 226
percent of a 1967 base price average
used for comparison. The revised in·
dex for April was 224 percent.
Compa ring May parity values

.-

with the preliminary average prices
received by farmers in May and the
final figures for April, in dollars, the
report included :
May- April- Parity
Wheat, bu ., 3.62-3.58-6.46
Rice, 100 lbs., 11.50-11.60-18.40
Com, bu:, 2.40 - 2.36 - 4.47
Oats, bu., 1.42 - 1.38 - 2.32
Sorghum grain, 100 lbs., 4.11 3.96 - 7.53
Hay, haled, ton, 70.60-63.4 0 Cotton, upland, lb., 0.801 - 0.585 1.07
Soybeans, bu., 5.71-5 .63 - 11.20
Dry beims , 100 lbs., 23.10 - 22.6036.50
Apples , lb., 0.169 - 0.169 - 0.226
Grapefruit, box, 3.26 - 2.95 - 4.05
Oranges, box, 3.66 -3.09-5.23
Beef cattle, 100 lbs., 60.00 - 60.20
- 81.60
Hogs, 100 lbs., 28.50 - 28.00 -76.60
Lambs, 100 lbs., 60.60 - 59.30 90.60
Milk, wholesale, lb., 0.128 - 0.128
- 0.179
Broilers, live, lb., 0.236-0.225-

Turkeys , live, lb., 0.312- 0.341 0.674
Wool, lb., 0.882 - 0.929 -1.83
WASHINGTON (APJ U.S.
cheese production hit a record 3.72
billion pounds in 1979, up 6 percent
from the · record 1978 output, the
Agriculture Department says.
And the department's dairy
product figures for this April show
cheese production running ahead of
last year 's levels. April production·
of all cheese excluding cottage
cheese was 333 million pounds, up 4
percentfrom April1979.
Production . of creamed cottage
cheese, which dropped 4 percent
from 1978 to 1979, was up 2 percent in
April from a year earlier while
lowfat cottage cheese, which rose
slightly in 1979, jumped 13 percent in
April compared to the same month a
year ago.
Butter production for 1979 dropped
to 985 million pounds, down 1 percent
from the year before. But in April,
some Ill million pounds was
produced, 20 percent higher than the
1979level.

Worst may
be behind
us-- Miller

.Penngfare
;;~~~~~~;~==~~~R~E~T~A~I~LS~EF~f~ECTIVE THRU SAT., JUNE 7, 1980. "'''-"'"''lllutciiMI TqutnUtlttMitll ltHHinii\IIW.N-~~;~IIIItolll••'-''·"'otr••po~~•l~t,t~~.,,,..,,,hk•'ef•or

lm~~) Sealtes

Laundry
Detergent

Doz.
Ctn.

1"THICK

1!!
88
SUNSHINE CHIP·A·ROOS •••••

20·ct. Box

LIQUID SWEETNER, .• ,,,.,., .1-ot.Bot.

THOROFARE TRASH BAGS ••••

l·oz . Bottle

12-oz. Box

·K

FT DRESSINGS ••••••• ••"''·;"':;'-33:;:::=::::::::::::,...

HERRUD- TOP QUALITY

Bound Stea"

SWISS
STYLE

C

.

.

lonel-lottom Round Roast .. , • , , .. "·

...

But the bad news keeps rolling in.
And it will be some time before we
know whether this is the darkness
before the dawn.
The sharp decline in interest
rates, slowing of consumer buying
and decline in industrial output do
appear to signal a reduction in
major forces that pushed consumer
pnces up at an 18 percent annual
rate in the first three months of the
year.
The latest report showed inflation
in April running at an 11.5 percent
annual rate. Most economists expect
that easing to continue.
Mortgage rates, a part of the in·
dex, have fallen by 2 to 3 percentage
points since mid-April, and that will
show up as one source of reduced in·
flation pressure in the May con·
surner price index .
But the outlook on the depth and
length of the recession is cloudy.
Miller, in comments to the
congressional Joint Economic Com·
mittee, said the nation's slide has
been " quite steep" but he said the
country should follow a steady
economic policy .
"It seems quite probable ... that
the economy is already experiencing
its sharpest fall during the current

"Great lor
the Grill''

eJess Bottom

SMALL CURD

Ctn.

swruner.

THOROFARE "Deluxe" BEEF U.S.D.A.

Eggs

24·01.

NEW YORK (AP) - Treasury
Secretary G. William Miller said
this past week "the worst may be
behind us" in the current economic
slump.
President Carter suggested that
"America is turning the tide" and
will see inflation slowing by late

~~R;E~T~A~I;L;S~E;FF~E~C~T~IV;;E~T~H;R;U~S~A;T~U~R;D~A;;Y~,J~U;N;E~7~,1~9~1;0~·;·;~~;~~·;'"~'''~'"~·';'·'~'";M~·";'"~'";•";";~;~•..t•"·"~'"'po"'~~•••o,,.,,a,,.,hll•'•"orl.

..

..
HILLANDALE
GRADE A SMALL

Tide

Cottage
Cheese

Business briefs . ..
CLEVELAND (AP) - AcmeCleveland Corp. said Friday it has
completed the acquisition of the
Hillyer Corp. of Mountainside, N.J.,
in a stock transaction.
Hillyer
makes computer
numerically controlled bridge-type
vertical machining centers, with a
work force of 75 persons and annual
sales of approximately $6 million.
Acme-Cleveland President W.
Paul Cooper said the Clevelandbased company issued 162,874
shares of Series B Convertible
Preferred Shares in exchange for all
of the outstanding capital stock in
Hillyer.
· The new preferred shares will pay
an annual divided ci $1.110 and are
convertible share-(or·share into
conunon stock in Acme-Cleveland.
They are non-&lt;:allable for five years,
alter which they are redeemable at
a price of $26 a share.
Acme-Cleveland produces a broad
line of cutting and threading tools,
machine tools, foundry equipment
and tooling, electrical and elec·
troniccontrols, automatic transfer
lines and complete production
systems.!

Cooperative E!&lt;lension Serv1ce
The Ohio Stale University

Franlf.s

$

Jb.

$2"
-

, , , ••• , , •·

$22'
-

Boneless lye of Round loasl., ... ,.,,,"
G
•• "
o.o~u.... rouna oun .."''u"'· ... , , . •·

'2"
$1!!

Boneless Rump Roast

$241

lonel..s Culle Steak •.•••••...••.••• ·'"· loMI• StewiMf .................. li. $21!

ILOC:l rnu

U.fUlU.Iol

HONEYSUCKLE

BURGERMAKER

BASTED YOUNG

Quarter Pound

Turlleys
32-oz. Jar ,

Beef Patties

lito 14-lb. Avg.

$z1s
.g;JJ!~

quarter," he said, "The worst may

ABS , •.• .•.. , •••

HEINZ • STRAINED

170- ct. P~g. 79 C

BABY JUICES·· Var. ..........

5 $1

SHORTENING ••••

25

C

TENDER CHUNKS DINNER • 1..,,,,.,

$168

THOROFARE-PURE VEGETABLE

c.l ·ot.
Jon

KEN·L·RATION DOG FOOD·5 Var.

U -oz.Jar

l·lb.c..

PILLSBURY DELUXE FUDGE

BROWNIE MIX ••• n.~ .••.,.9.

-

$118
-

·

HUNT'S KETCHUP.....

$118
-

WETONES TOWELETTES $1!!
FILBERT'S SPREAD 25

SOFT MARGARINE l·lb.aowl

$118
-

WIENERS l"f. Orhoh

DINNER BELL

o o o o •• o o o o o o o o

,
1 - 1~, ,. • . 1 J,J9

RI.NG LIVER •••

0.

0

0

•••••••• 0

I

0

•••• •

~• •

$J79

FRESH BOSTON

BL 11 E"'SH

BEEF WIENERS '"·"'"" ••••••• • • • ·'·" ·"•'I .69
RING BOLOGNA ,llllloro.rtk ••• • •••• , •• ·~· '1.19

FILLETS ••

lb.

-

,,,,

SLICED lUNCH MEATS ,:,. ,,, ..... , ,_,._,.,1 1,6t
SLICED BACON •••·•""· •• • • • • • • • • •·"-"•·'I,U
KIELBASA or SMOKED SAUSAGE., •• , , ,,., 11,71

$2$9

FRESH

PERCH FILLETS •••••

lb.

-

HOT DOG 5•• 0 • 0 • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • • 11 · CI . ,~ • •• • • • ,
HOTDOGS ••• , ... .. ................. ,1 1.U
JUMBOBIEFFRANKS.,,,.,.,,., ,,.,._.,,1 1.59
SMOKED HAM SLICES
•••••••• u .... .. , 1 1.t9
SLICED LUNCH MEATS ''"'· •••••.••• ,,_,,_,., 1 1,49
SLICED BACON •• ••••••• , .,,, •• ·'·"·"•·'l,St

GENUINE::,:;~~=::::::::~;.,;

$2Cf

lib 1

WEAVER•Froren

FRIED CHICKEN . Pi.~~··
FREEZER QUEEN Froren

ENTREES .··~·~· •••••

.&amp;.:

$J.!!

2-lb.

Pkg.

ARMOUR ff SUR

INS"~: ANT

Iced Tea

VERI BEST PORK

Beef
Patty Mix

16·oz.lat ·

'

VARIETY

Porll Chops

l·lbs.

69~
KEEBLER

VonilloorAsst. Colors

ICE CREAM CUPS .•..•..•.• , .•. 12-cl. P~g .

g~~R~~~REAL •.. •. •. •. 12-o

1 ,8ot

5ac
78

C

98C
NON-DAIRY CREAMER ••• ·"·"·'"

THOROFARE

PIZZA~~~~-~.?.
~~K~~~~A'?.?..~ ~

.•••. , .10.25·oz.con4
• , •. 1-71-ot. Can

DREAM WHIP

8

.

C

6$J18
8C

TOPPING MIX....................

-

rHANitvoou'·puooiNGs .. 49c
8C
4
CHOCOLATE SYRUP,
48C
ELBOW MACARONI,

FARM FRES

TASTIOFNATURE

,,.,bean

THOROFARE

ol -UOI

FRESH TENDER

.

6 ,.

Peaches

Sauee
11-ozlot.

LARGE 2" &amp; UP

Country Tim~
LEMONADE or LEMON-LIME
MAIIIIII
OUAITSI

•

' '

"

.
1

'
f

$ ~ zq
CauliflowerHead.&amp;

TENDER SNOWY WHITE

JUICY SOUTH

Steak .

Jl-oz. C•n

-

Leal Lettuce1b.

A·~

'

~

RODUCE

$2 •8

.s,=:

6 8'
6 8'
BARBECUE SAUCE .................."i'
6 8'
INSTANT SHAVE CREAM •••••• n....c..
38'
SWEET RELISH .....................

MUSSELMAN'S

.

APPLE BUTTER ••••••••••••••• •i·••·"'

OPIN Pll ·R~GUU.R

COLO AU• REG., MINTHOL or LIME
THOROFARE

·
J..

HI·DRITOWELS •••••• .! ....... oJ•mto '•" 53 c
GOURMAYCOFFEEFILTERS • • • •••• ,;......,29'
ORTEGA TACO KIT ••••••••••••• ,,.,.,,. 88'
LUX BAR SOAP ................. •·••·'"' 32'
READ'S SALADSI·Yor.•••••••• ••• , u.•• c.. 59'

We Cordia11y -~edef!IJI . U.S. G_ov.t. Food Stamps
'

·'

~
POTTING
PliNN LOAM S-Ib.

SOIL••••••. aa·s

lb.

RED RIPE
LAJIGE
SLICING
.

To111atoes1 . ._

~iiiiii

SUNKIST
CALIFORNIA
WHITEORPINK

6 9 C.

GRAPEFRUIT

I,

S·lb$ ~
Bag ..&amp;

49

CRISP
GREEN

~,~

PEPPERS ••• lb. :JI,

be behind us."
Two days later, the government's
index of leading economic indicators
showed the biggest monthly drop in
its history.
The drop of 4.8 percent in April
showed 10 components of the index
falling . The index measures
economic activity, ranging from the
layoff rate in industry to stock prices
and building permits , to assess the
economy's outlook.
Economists in and out of govern·
ment cited that drop as evidence
that the economy's output in the
current quarter will fall sharply.
Still, some private economists
tend to see a relatively short but
steep decline consistent with
Miller's view that the current April·
June quarter will be the worst for
the economy.
Those forecasts are based not only
on the economic indicator data but
on recent reports showing housing
starts off in April for the seventh
straight month, industrial production down 1.9 percent last month and
retail sales weak for three consecutive months .
In other business developments
this past week :
-Average earnings of American
families rose 8 percent in the past
year to $395 a week, but the gain
failed to keep up with inflation,
which reduced real spending power,
according to the Labor Department.
- Key lending rates dropped
again, continuing a b:end begun in
April. The priJ!le rate, which applies
to business loans, was reduced to 14
percent by the nation 's major banks.
It peaked at 20 percent in early
April. The Federal Reserve also
reduced its rate for loans to banks,
called the discount rate, to 12 per·
cent from 13 percent.
-The federal budget resolution
for fiscal 1981 ran into tough opposition in Congress and failed an
initial vote in the House of Repres~n­
tatives .
USED IN ENGINES
Platinum Is used to line jet engines
because it can take high temperatures. It also withstands friction
well, and is made into scree~
through which synthetic fibers are
drawn.

�E-5-The Sunday Times.Sentinel, ~unday, June 1, 19110

E-4-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jllll€ I, 19110

Homemakers ~

Cj.rde
BY 11:1111: CU.U
,

f).~,UNI,

. . . ....,--'el

SNEAKY CALORIES
GALlJPOlJS Our recent

: colWlUl on HCalorie Trinuners"

I

I'

'I
' i'

: made us aware of how often calories
· can "sneak" into our diets. Take a
look at the following well·balanced
meal . It is not too high in calories
either. But notice what those wr
: planned bites and extras can do to
· the total number of calories in a
. menu.
(Menu, approximate calories in
planned menu, and approximate
calories in the unplanned extras
listed in that order) :
Pot roast (3 ounces) , 200; Gravy
. (about 3 tablespoons), 55; Mashed
potato ( 'h cup made with milk and
butter, 90; Just a little more potato
and gravy (2 tablespoons ), 50;
Green beans ('h cup), 20; Butter (1
tablespoon for beans), 35; Rolls (1
medium), 60; An extra half left by
your husband, 30; Butter (! pat for
the roll) , 50: A little more for the extra roll, 31J; French dressing (I
tablespoon ), 60 ; Canned peaches ( 'h
cup serving), 80; Another serving
(fruit's good for me), 110; Cookies
(added to the menu the last minute),
110; 1 - 3" dry type (they don't look
rich ), r cookie left on the serving
plate, 110; Coffee with 1 teaspoon
sugar, 15 ; Second cup with sugar, 15 .
Total, 675, 425.
Does this seem famlllar"!
If extra pounds are creeping up on
you, be aware of the "sneaky
calorie" ... it just might be the
culprit.

Agricultural weather
Here is the agricultural advisory
for Ohio as prepared Saturday by
tJYgricultural Weather Center in
west Lafayette, Ind.:
A combination of warmth and ad·
ded moisture from scattered thunderstorms is boosting growth of Ohio
spring crops. A cool front is exwcted to stall in southern Ohio by
early Sunday. Conditions will favor
scattered showers and thunderstorm formation tonight and Sunday across much of the state. It will
continue to be warm and humid with
minimal cooling to the north of the
fro nt. The extended weather
forecast for the first half of next
week calis for continued scattered
showers
and
thunderstorms
throughout the state Monday, then
mainly in eastern and southern Ohio
Tuesday and Wednesday. A little
cooling back into the 1Qs but still
above seasonal norms is posSible
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Field conditions will he quite
varied across Ohio for the weekend

HUDSON, . Ohio (AP) - Mid·
Continent ' Telephone Corp. said
Friday it has completed a merger of
the Cylmer Telephone Co. of southwestern New York into MidContinent in a stock exchange.
. CJ}rmer serves approximately
1,300 telephones in an area contiguous to the Jamestown district of
Midstate Telephone Corp., a MidContinent subsidiary .
Clymer shareholders received
15,632 shares of Mid-Continent common and preferred stock.
The Hudson-based Mfd-Continent
. has operating subsidiaries in 13
states serving more than one million
· telephones.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Amtrak
reports that ridership is up on its two
·passenger routes through Cin·
· cinnati.
The number of depertures from
:and arrivals in Cincinnati on the
Shenandoah and Cardinal trains
totaled 9,478 in the first three months
of 1979. Amtrak said that figure increased to 10,469 this year.
· The Cardinal has daily service
·between Chicago and Washington,
·D.C., through Cincinnati and
Charleston, W.Va. The Shenandoah
goes from Washington to Cincinnati
through Harpers Ferry, W.Va .

UPSET WITII SIGNS
FRANKIJN, Ohio (AP) - City
.Manager Robert Homan is upset by
illecqlly posted political signs in !lis

City.
••
In an attempt to discourage such
signs, Homan personally tore down
.34 of them on Friday. City ol"
.dinances prohibit signs on utility
poles or in public areas.
"I think it's remarkable that can·
didates for shentf, prosecutor and
Congress have campaign managers
who don't seem to regard city ordinances," Homan said.

HOCHIMINH
Ho Chi Minl1, president of North
Vietnam. died in 1969.
·
I

because of the sacttered wetting pal·
tern of thunderstorms. Some quite
beneficial amounts of rain were
noted through Friday evening from
the two belts of showers that crossed
the state. Rainfall totaling one-half
inch to an inch in some places was
reported in northwest Ohio. Drying
rates will be moderate at times Sunday, but wetting risks of up to 40 per·
cent will keep any extended field ac·
tivity curbed . Daily evaporation
should reach two-tenths of an inch
through the weekend.
The surge of warmth and renewed
surface moisture will be accelerating weed development. The
next week wi ll be most important in
weed control by cultivation. Any opportunity to cultivate will be on an
individual field situa tion through the
weekend. Possibly better cultivating
weather should develop from
western Ohio by Tuesday or Wed·
nesday.
The weather co ntinues to
stimulate some problems in tobacco

WASHJNGTON lAP)- There are
new government figures out that put
a patch of blue in the otherwise stormy economic sky over agriculture.
But the preliminary figures by no
means change the forecast for
significantly reduced farm incomes
this year.
The Agriculture Department
reported Friday that the prices far·
mers got for their raw goods rose
during May after posting monthly
declines in March and April.
The increase of 0.9 percent was
also more than twice the rise in the
prices they paid to meet expenses.
That index rose 0.4 percent during
the month after remaining un·
changed from March to April.
The improvement, however, wc;~ s
not enough to offset previous mon·
thly declines in prices received so
that income continued running
below 1979 levels for the fourth
straight month. Prices paid by farmers have been running ahead of
year-.,arlier levels for more than 17
months.

M WAI11NG ON"THt LAR R::ol-

10 1f-lt: 4--H Mee-t~.~_j

Farmers get
higher prices
.f.
ds
J Or raw goo
•
.
111
d unng l'~ay
"

By sharing rides and planning activities in their local communities many

4 - 11 ' ers I1e l P conserve gasoline. Through demons tra tiona a nd "Energy Awareness
Teams" many 4 - H' ers are helping
•··
teach adul ts and yout h "Energy Conservation"
practices .

production. University of Kentucky
extension tobacco specialists report
no active blue mold has been detec·
ted in Kentucky. But active blue
mold is present in Tennessee and aU
tobacco regions of the east and
south. This necessitates continued
preventive sprays as long as tran·
splan_ts are nee(led. This is also true

for angular leaf spot, bacte rial soft
rot and root rot.
.Hay curing weather will be
marginal through the weekend and
the first day or two of next week.
Curing rates will be slow and there is
added risk of wetting, with up to a 40
percent chance on a dally basis
through this period.

Tree fruit Will be rapidly moving
into the thinning stage in central and
northern Ohio in the next few days .
The warmth will keep_the optimum
thinning period short. Spray application chances will he minimal
except in the morning hours for the
next three days because of wind and
wetting risks.

The May parity level for farm
conunodities remained at the April
level of 60 percent, the lowest since
May 1933 during the depth of the
nation's worst economic depression.
At 100 percent, farmers wquld
theoretically have the same spen·
ding power they did in 191~1914.
The department's Crop Reporting
Board said much of May 's increase
!n prices received by farmers was
due to higher prices for oranges,
hay, corn, broilers and potatoes,
although prices for cotton, soybeans
and hogs were also ahead of the
April averages. Lower prices for
eggs, milk a nd ca tUe tempered
those inc reases.
Increased costs for fertilizer, fee d,
family living and fa rm chemicals of·
fset the lower costs during the month
for feeder livestock, the board said.
• Compared to 1979, the May farm
price index was down 8.1 percent.
The price slide began in February,
marking the fi rst time in more than
two years that prices were running
below the year-.,arlier leve ls.

On the other hand. the farm expense index was running 10 percent
ahead of 1979.
Department economists are
predicting retail food pnces will rise
in the range of 7 to II percent this
year, probably about 9 percent;
depending on general inflation,
weather and food supply conditions
in foreign countries. In 1919 they
rose 10.9 percent, the largest annual
increase in five years.
Economists, however, do not consider monthly changes in the farm
pric~ index reli able indicators of
future retail trends. Two-thirds of
every food dollar pays middleman
expenses.
So far in 1980, the farm price index
declined slightly in January, edged
up in February , dropped in March
and April and bounced back slightly
in May .
Farm prices in May averaged 226
percent of a 1967 base price average
used for comparison. The revised in·
dex for April was 224 percent.
Compa ring May parity values

.-

with the preliminary average prices
received by farmers in May and the
final figures for April, in dollars, the
report included :
May- April- Parity
Wheat, bu ., 3.62-3.58-6.46
Rice, 100 lbs., 11.50-11.60-18.40
Com, bu:, 2.40 - 2.36 - 4.47
Oats, bu., 1.42 - 1.38 - 2.32
Sorghum grain, 100 lbs., 4.11 3.96 - 7.53
Hay, haled, ton, 70.60-63.4 0 Cotton, upland, lb., 0.801 - 0.585 1.07
Soybeans, bu., 5.71-5 .63 - 11.20
Dry beims , 100 lbs., 23.10 - 22.6036.50
Apples , lb., 0.169 - 0.169 - 0.226
Grapefruit, box, 3.26 - 2.95 - 4.05
Oranges, box, 3.66 -3.09-5.23
Beef cattle, 100 lbs., 60.00 - 60.20
- 81.60
Hogs, 100 lbs., 28.50 - 28.00 -76.60
Lambs, 100 lbs., 60.60 - 59.30 90.60
Milk, wholesale, lb., 0.128 - 0.128
- 0.179
Broilers, live, lb., 0.236-0.225-

Turkeys , live, lb., 0.312- 0.341 0.674
Wool, lb., 0.882 - 0.929 -1.83
WASHINGTON (APJ U.S.
cheese production hit a record 3.72
billion pounds in 1979, up 6 percent
from the · record 1978 output, the
Agriculture Department says.
And the department's dairy
product figures for this April show
cheese production running ahead of
last year 's levels. April production·
of all cheese excluding cottage
cheese was 333 million pounds, up 4
percentfrom April1979.
Production . of creamed cottage
cheese, which dropped 4 percent
from 1978 to 1979, was up 2 percent in
April from a year earlier while
lowfat cottage cheese, which rose
slightly in 1979, jumped 13 percent in
April compared to the same month a
year ago.
Butter production for 1979 dropped
to 985 million pounds, down 1 percent
from the year before. But in April,
some Ill million pounds was
produced, 20 percent higher than the
1979level.

Worst may
be behind
us-- Miller

.Penngfare
;;~~~~~~;~==~~~R~E~T~A~I~LS~EF~f~ECTIVE THRU SAT., JUNE 7, 1980. "'''-"'"''lllutciiMI TqutnUtlttMitll ltHHinii\IIW.N-~~;~IIIItolll••'-''·"'otr••po~~•l~t,t~~.,,,..,,,hk•'ef•or

lm~~) Sealtes

Laundry
Detergent

Doz.
Ctn.

1"THICK

1!!
88
SUNSHINE CHIP·A·ROOS •••••

20·ct. Box

LIQUID SWEETNER, .• ,,,.,., .1-ot.Bot.

THOROFARE TRASH BAGS ••••

l·oz . Bottle

12-oz. Box

·K

FT DRESSINGS ••••••• ••"''·;"':;'-33:;:::=::::::::::::,...

HERRUD- TOP QUALITY

Bound Stea"

SWISS
STYLE

C

.

.

lonel-lottom Round Roast .. , • , , .. "·

...

But the bad news keeps rolling in.
And it will be some time before we
know whether this is the darkness
before the dawn.
The sharp decline in interest
rates, slowing of consumer buying
and decline in industrial output do
appear to signal a reduction in
major forces that pushed consumer
pnces up at an 18 percent annual
rate in the first three months of the
year.
The latest report showed inflation
in April running at an 11.5 percent
annual rate. Most economists expect
that easing to continue.
Mortgage rates, a part of the in·
dex, have fallen by 2 to 3 percentage
points since mid-April, and that will
show up as one source of reduced in·
flation pressure in the May con·
surner price index .
But the outlook on the depth and
length of the recession is cloudy.
Miller, in comments to the
congressional Joint Economic Com·
mittee, said the nation's slide has
been " quite steep" but he said the
country should follow a steady
economic policy .
"It seems quite probable ... that
the economy is already experiencing
its sharpest fall during the current

"Great lor
the Grill''

eJess Bottom

SMALL CURD

Ctn.

swruner.

THOROFARE "Deluxe" BEEF U.S.D.A.

Eggs

24·01.

NEW YORK (AP) - Treasury
Secretary G. William Miller said
this past week "the worst may be
behind us" in the current economic
slump.
President Carter suggested that
"America is turning the tide" and
will see inflation slowing by late

~~R;E~T~A~I;L;S~E;FF~E~C~T~IV;;E~T~H;R;U~S~A;T~U~R;D~A;;Y~,J~U;N;E~7~,1~9~1;0~·;·;~~;~~·;'"~'''~'"~·';'·'~'";M~·";'"~'";•";";~;~•..t•"·"~'"'po"'~~•••o,,.,,a,,.,hll•'•"orl.

..

..
HILLANDALE
GRADE A SMALL

Tide

Cottage
Cheese

Business briefs . ..
CLEVELAND (AP) - AcmeCleveland Corp. said Friday it has
completed the acquisition of the
Hillyer Corp. of Mountainside, N.J.,
in a stock transaction.
Hillyer
makes computer
numerically controlled bridge-type
vertical machining centers, with a
work force of 75 persons and annual
sales of approximately $6 million.
Acme-Cleveland President W.
Paul Cooper said the Clevelandbased company issued 162,874
shares of Series B Convertible
Preferred Shares in exchange for all
of the outstanding capital stock in
Hillyer.
· The new preferred shares will pay
an annual divided ci $1.110 and are
convertible share-(or·share into
conunon stock in Acme-Cleveland.
They are non-&lt;:allable for five years,
alter which they are redeemable at
a price of $26 a share.
Acme-Cleveland produces a broad
line of cutting and threading tools,
machine tools, foundry equipment
and tooling, electrical and elec·
troniccontrols, automatic transfer
lines and complete production
systems.!

Cooperative E!&lt;lension Serv1ce
The Ohio Stale University

Franlf.s

$

Jb.

$2"
-

, , , ••• , , •·

$22'
-

Boneless lye of Round loasl., ... ,.,,,"
G
•• "
o.o~u.... rouna oun .."''u"'· ... , , . •·

'2"
$1!!

Boneless Rump Roast

$241

lonel..s Culle Steak •.•••••...••.••• ·'"· loMI• StewiMf .................. li. $21!

ILOC:l rnu

U.fUlU.Iol

HONEYSUCKLE

BURGERMAKER

BASTED YOUNG

Quarter Pound

Turlleys
32-oz. Jar ,

Beef Patties

lito 14-lb. Avg.

$z1s
.g;JJ!~

quarter," he said, "The worst may

ABS , •.• .•.. , •••

HEINZ • STRAINED

170- ct. P~g. 79 C

BABY JUICES·· Var. ..........

5 $1

SHORTENING ••••

25

C

TENDER CHUNKS DINNER • 1..,,,,.,

$168

THOROFARE-PURE VEGETABLE

c.l ·ot.
Jon

KEN·L·RATION DOG FOOD·5 Var.

U -oz.Jar

l·lb.c..

PILLSBURY DELUXE FUDGE

BROWNIE MIX ••• n.~ .••.,.9.

-

$118
-

·

HUNT'S KETCHUP.....

$118
-

WETONES TOWELETTES $1!!
FILBERT'S SPREAD 25

SOFT MARGARINE l·lb.aowl

$118
-

WIENERS l"f. Orhoh

DINNER BELL

o o o o •• o o o o o o o o

,
1 - 1~, ,. • . 1 J,J9

RI.NG LIVER •••

0.

0

0

•••••••• 0

I

0

•••• •

~• •

$J79

FRESH BOSTON

BL 11 E"'SH

BEEF WIENERS '"·"'"" ••••••• • • • ·'·" ·"•'I .69
RING BOLOGNA ,llllloro.rtk ••• • •••• , •• ·~· '1.19

FILLETS ••

lb.

-

,,,,

SLICED lUNCH MEATS ,:,. ,,, ..... , ,_,._,.,1 1,6t
SLICED BACON •••·•""· •• • • • • • • • • •·"-"•·'I,U
KIELBASA or SMOKED SAUSAGE., •• , , ,,., 11,71

$2$9

FRESH

PERCH FILLETS •••••

lb.

-

HOT DOG 5•• 0 • 0 • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • • 11 · CI . ,~ • •• • • • ,
HOTDOGS ••• , ... .. ................. ,1 1.U
JUMBOBIEFFRANKS.,,,.,.,,., ,,.,._.,,1 1.59
SMOKED HAM SLICES
•••••••• u .... .. , 1 1.t9
SLICED LUNCH MEATS ''"'· •••••.••• ,,_,,_,., 1 1,49
SLICED BACON •• ••••••• , .,,, •• ·'·"·"•·'l,St

GENUINE::,:;~~=::::::::~;.,;

$2Cf

lib 1

WEAVER•Froren

FRIED CHICKEN . Pi.~~··
FREEZER QUEEN Froren

ENTREES .··~·~· •••••

.&amp;.:

$J.!!

2-lb.

Pkg.

ARMOUR ff SUR

INS"~: ANT

Iced Tea

VERI BEST PORK

Beef
Patty Mix

16·oz.lat ·

'

VARIETY

Porll Chops

l·lbs.

69~
KEEBLER

VonilloorAsst. Colors

ICE CREAM CUPS .•..•..•.• , .•. 12-cl. P~g .

g~~R~~~REAL •.. •. •. •. 12-o

1 ,8ot

5ac
78

C

98C
NON-DAIRY CREAMER ••• ·"·"·'"

THOROFARE

PIZZA~~~~-~.?.
~~K~~~~A'?.?..~ ~

.•••. , .10.25·oz.con4
• , •. 1-71-ot. Can

DREAM WHIP

8

.

C

6$J18
8C

TOPPING MIX....................

-

rHANitvoou'·puooiNGs .. 49c
8C
4
CHOCOLATE SYRUP,
48C
ELBOW MACARONI,

FARM FRES

TASTIOFNATURE

,,.,bean

THOROFARE

ol -UOI

FRESH TENDER

.

6 ,.

Peaches

Sauee
11-ozlot.

LARGE 2" &amp; UP

Country Tim~
LEMONADE or LEMON-LIME
MAIIIIII
OUAITSI

•

' '

"

.
1

'
f

$ ~ zq
CauliflowerHead.&amp;

TENDER SNOWY WHITE

JUICY SOUTH

Steak .

Jl-oz. C•n

-

Leal Lettuce1b.

A·~

'

~

RODUCE

$2 •8

.s,=:

6 8'
6 8'
BARBECUE SAUCE .................."i'
6 8'
INSTANT SHAVE CREAM •••••• n....c..
38'
SWEET RELISH .....................

MUSSELMAN'S

.

APPLE BUTTER ••••••••••••••• •i·••·"'

OPIN Pll ·R~GUU.R

COLO AU• REG., MINTHOL or LIME
THOROFARE

·
J..

HI·DRITOWELS •••••• .! ....... oJ•mto '•" 53 c
GOURMAYCOFFEEFILTERS • • • •••• ,;......,29'
ORTEGA TACO KIT ••••••••••••• ,,.,.,,. 88'
LUX BAR SOAP ................. •·••·'"' 32'
READ'S SALADSI·Yor.•••••••• ••• , u.•• c.. 59'

We Cordia11y -~edef!IJI . U.S. G_ov.t. Food Stamps
'

·'

~
POTTING
PliNN LOAM S-Ib.

SOIL••••••. aa·s

lb.

RED RIPE
LAJIGE
SLICING
.

To111atoes1 . ._

~iiiiii

SUNKIST
CALIFORNIA
WHITEORPINK

6 9 C.

GRAPEFRUIT

I,

S·lb$ ~
Bag ..&amp;

49

CRISP
GREEN

~,~

PEPPERS ••• lb. :JI,

be behind us."
Two days later, the government's
index of leading economic indicators
showed the biggest monthly drop in
its history.
The drop of 4.8 percent in April
showed 10 components of the index
falling . The index measures
economic activity, ranging from the
layoff rate in industry to stock prices
and building permits , to assess the
economy's outlook.
Economists in and out of govern·
ment cited that drop as evidence
that the economy's output in the
current quarter will fall sharply.
Still, some private economists
tend to see a relatively short but
steep decline consistent with
Miller's view that the current April·
June quarter will be the worst for
the economy.
Those forecasts are based not only
on the economic indicator data but
on recent reports showing housing
starts off in April for the seventh
straight month, industrial production down 1.9 percent last month and
retail sales weak for three consecutive months .
In other business developments
this past week :
-Average earnings of American
families rose 8 percent in the past
year to $395 a week, but the gain
failed to keep up with inflation,
which reduced real spending power,
according to the Labor Department.
- Key lending rates dropped
again, continuing a b:end begun in
April. The priJ!le rate, which applies
to business loans, was reduced to 14
percent by the nation 's major banks.
It peaked at 20 percent in early
April. The Federal Reserve also
reduced its rate for loans to banks,
called the discount rate, to 12 per·
cent from 13 percent.
-The federal budget resolution
for fiscal 1981 ran into tough opposition in Congress and failed an
initial vote in the House of Repres~n­
tatives .
USED IN ENGINES
Platinum Is used to line jet engines
because it can take high temperatures. It also withstands friction
well, and is made into scree~
through which synthetic fibers are
drawn.

�E-6- The Sunday Times-lien tine!, Sunday, June 1, 1980

Tholl:.s ands line street~ to greet Pope
~allipolig

lliarp
By J . Samuel Peeps
f - 192~

arus.t : Er~st H Shepard)

GALUPOUS - There's a 282· cared enough Just to ask. To me she
page book in the Dr. Samuel L.
has been an ever flowing spring with
Bossard Memorial Ubrary of Gallia
each letter bnnging a new bit of
County entitled "The Cherrington
data, another photograph or the
Family History &amp; Genealogy." On
name of someone else who might be
of help."
the front cover are three maps, the
barest outlines of the principal
Turning to Henny Evans, the
British Isle, Pennsylvania, and
author then acknowledged that "on·
Ohio.
ce the fire was lit there was no
Up near the head of the Bristol
keeping up with Cousin Henny . Each
Channel and the River Severn in
time I felt we had exhausted every
western England, near South Wales,
possible source of information she
the map shows Cheltenham. In eastwould come up with three new leads.
central Pennsylvania the map shows
Whe n I was content to take a
Roaring Creek Valley. A dot
passive attitude and let information
represents Gallia County in the Ohio come to me, she went out and beat
map. There are only these places
the brush with letters, telephone
shown on the cover maps, places
calls and personal contacts. When I
touched by the Cherringtons as they
had plans to run off a few Xerox
grew through history.
copies of the information for our own
At the bottom of the cover it reads,
private enrichment, she insisted it
"By Dean C. Cherrington" a nd in·
would be a certain bestseller to rival
dented under the byline : " With a lot
Mr. Haley's 'Roots' and deserved of help from many family friends
no, required - a formal printing of
but especially from ·Miss Susan
'at least several hundred copies. •
Cherrington and Mrs. Henrietta C.
Her arguments were persuasive a nd
Evans" This is repeated on the first
her help was unending. My thanks
sheet inside.
are unbounded '."
In the preface, the author
reminisces about his boyhood on a
HENNY EVANS was going
Pennsylvania farm, his eight years'
through the Feb. 16, 1887, Galli!iolis
schooling in a one-room structure
Journal and found some items that
and visits to a nearby Quake;
revealed even then postal service
Meetinghouse. Next page, Dea n
and city streets were in the news.
Cherrington points out the im- .Johnny Carson and other video stars
practicality of naming all the people
joke about the slow delivery of the
who helped him. " However, there
1980 mails. But Gallipolis s treets are
are two who require my special
the greatest since the recent paving
thanks," he writes .
of them with money from the city income tax . Episcopal women still
MISS SUSAN CHERRINGTON of
contribute their needlework to their
Thurman, Ohio, is the first. " A December bazaar.
second measure of thanks must go to
Item One from 1887 : The street
Henrietta Cherington Evans of
committee found enough mud on the
Gallipolis, Ohio," both of whom had
streets last week· to use a scraper.
responded to a 1973 form letter Dean
Other towns, not so fortunate, have
Cherrington had sent out. But there
lost their streets, Pomeroy reporting
was more:
her crossings out of sight.
"Since that fi rst reply" Miss
Item Two: The ladies of the
E piscopal Church have a
Susan "has been a constant source
of information and inspiration to me
magnificent piece quilt on exhibition
in this work. She has spent most of
at Roadell 's drug store. The s ilk and
her four score plus years in
satin pieces composing the face of
gathering and sharing information
the spread are contributions from
such distinct ladies as the wives of
on our family history with all who

PARIS (AP) - The faithful, the
fatthless and the just plain curious
lined the streets of Paris leading to
Notre Dame Cathedral to greet Pope
John Paul II in this city's largest
cheering, flag-wavin~ spectacle in
recent memory . .
From the broad Champs-Eiysees,
to the banks of the Seine, the streets
and boulevards throbbed with
people Friday at the start of the
pope 's four-day visit, the first papal
trip to France in 176 years.
The pontiff, who speaks fluent
French, delivered . a message of
" peace, trust, love and faith" to
President Valery Giscard d'Estaing,
government officials and the people
of France.
From a tapestry-covered altar in
the 816-year-old Notre Dame
Cathedral, he celebrated a Mass and
Generals Grant and Sherman. The
quilt is up for lottery, tickets to be
sold at 50 cepts each. The quilt was
recently onfexhibition in New York
City. It is a handsome piece of
needlework and embroidery.
Item Three: Charleston, W. Va ., is
to have free postal delivery, under
the law which gives that privilege to
cities having gross pbs tal receipts of
$10,1100 or over.
Item Four: Sam Cherrington has
the smartest boy in town. Several
fond parents dispute this. We will
wait till he gets old enough to play
with George House. (This boy of
Sam's was Henny's grandfather,
Henry, who was born in March of
1886 and not even a year old at the
time) .

led the Te Deum - a hynm of thanks
to God .
The last pontiff to visit France was
Pope Pius VII who came to Notre
Dame in 1804 to attend the
coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte.
The pontiff, feuding with Napoleon
over Roman Catholic powers in post·
revolutionary France, was ordered
by the emperor to attend the
ceremony. A .lady-in-waiting wrote
in her diary that Napoleon kept the
pope waiting in the chilly cathecjral
for several hours.
Pope John Paul, on this sixth
roreign trip since his election in October 1978, went to France to give a
spiritual boost to a sagging church in
this predominantly Roman Catholic
coun try. The church is faced with a
sharp decline in the number of practicing Catholics and a drop in
recruits for the priesthood .
The pontiff will meet today with
representatives of non-Catholic
groups as well as with Giscard
d'Estaing and his family . In the af·
ternoon, the 6{}-year-old Polish pope
will meet with some 15,1100 Poles who
are gathering to honor " their" Jan
Pawel II, the former Cardinal Karol
Wojtyla of Krakow in communist
Poland.
The major event of the day will be

DO YOU ·KNOW, or do you know
how to find out, where the second
battalion, second r egiment, first
brigade of the Ohio militia saw action and what skirmishes they took
part in during the War of 1812' It's a
question asked by Sibyl M. Toops,
85110 SR 323 SE , Mt. Sterling, Ohio
43143, asked in a letter to Peeps . Her
great-great-grandfather, Martin
Miller, volunteered in June, 1812, for
six months service with that outfit.
It's our intention to run her entire
letter in the Peeps column next Sunday with about four genealogical
questions.

..
'

VOTE I

~

''
'

FOR HENRY "Hank" CLELAND, JR.
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

•'
•
•

I

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

.
.••
•
,;.
,;

YOUR vote and Influence
Appreciated. Term Beginn·
ing January 2, 1981.
PD. POL. ADV.

•

•

"Hank"
CLELAND, JR.

••

....•

...
~

6TH

LAFF-A-DAY

r~J

.,._\ _r -

~

JIOINT PUIAIANI

·socKs

':.J~
· . ·' .)
-.l.

'---.c---··-

GOODS INC.

2U

ic

{};-;, .--,

·,

TOM FOSTER, 3751 Harrison St.,
Oakland, Calif., was the only member of the Skidmore family to miss
the alumni bash May 24 for Vinton,
Bidwell-Porter, and ·North Gallia
High Schools, 350 a ttending. He's the
marketing and car utilization expert
for Southern Pacific Railroad. He's
the son of Phil and Marie Foster.

a Mass at the 13th century basilica in priests to have faith in their calling
St. Denis, a working class Paris
and not to be discouraged by present
suburb where history contra&amp;ts with · difficulties. His words appeared
politics.
·
aimed at the split between conSt. Denis is known as " the red
servative and progressive priests in
suburb" because of its communist
France.
leanings. The mayor, the com"I am not without knowledge of all
munity's nine deputies to the
that can discourage and perhaps unNational Assembly and its four
settle priests today," he said. He
senators in the county government also stressed the need for ceUbacy,
belong to the Conununist Party.
saying it · was necessary to show
In a message to the French clergy
" that we are totally consecrated to
delivered in the ornate Notre Dam~
the worjt to which the Lord luis
Cathedral Friday, the pope urged
called us."

-

85!~

~

:WILSON

WARM-UPS

TENNIS BAllS

'239

•·

(MIJf

HolliS

'

....
•
•

..

'

---J---rJ .· '"

, .... .... __ ..,.__~ ---·- - -

•

•

TIIPLf KNIT

~~ 'l995

...

'·

11?1/i~/JIJJ&lt; k

T·SHIRTS

All.

" I got him to stop swearin g,
drink ing and smok ing . Now he 's

2g$5 :llll

FISHING SUPPLIES
· IN STOCK

a big bore:·

THREE YEARS
Capt. Johi1 Claus Voss arrived in
England Sept. 2, 1904, after cir·
cumnavigating the globe in an Indian dugout canoe. Voss took three
years, three months and 12 days to
make the trip. The vessel, for which
Voss paid $75, had been carved 50
years earlier by a Nootka Indian on
the west coast of Vancouver Island.
The canoe carried no auxiliary
motor but sailed under three masts.
Voss died in California in 1922.

10 l£TIUlD T-IlliS
1111111[ GMII ~MY

1st Mt - '50 Gift Zn&lt; '"" - '21 &amp;m Coo1ificall
ltd Prill - '10 Gift c:.tificate

Ill~

IIW Dill!

lfllrM .nd Prk:ea effective thru Sat., June 7, 1980.
Quantity Rights R-rved.

'
'
'
'

~ . r------------------------------.

634·43 2ND AVENUE

oflt 110 11.1111111 -~IIC.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

. .. lEITII SHill\ JICim

lEG.
'11.11

•No P.mt. lltclslry. You IMid

'

•
•

11111 ws.

• WI HA. VI AU SCHOOl. ~OitS IN THI A111.4

Bill's Sporting Goods Inc.
. 213 SIXTH STiiEEr

...' . STORE HOURS: MON.,SAT. 9 A.M.·9 P.M.
. SUNDAY ·10 A.M.·&amp; P.M.
Action Prices are special savings all over the store in ...
Groceries, Frozen, Dairy, Health and Beauty Aids and
·General Merchandise. You'll get extra savings
wherever you see this Action Price sign.
Every week at A&amp;P.

I'OUIT I'UASMIT:

675-319!1

$189 LMnPorkButt-or
Pork Steaks .... lb. 99~ F,..h
Fryer Legs ...... ~~~. 89~
Chuck Roasts . ~~~.
"'"'ao..
$169 Mllld
$129 AlP Rlgulw, Thick or Girlie
~
Pork Chops ...• . lb.
Sliced Bologna .. ~~~.
·Chuck Steaks . ~~~.
29
PorkAoRoasts. . . ~ ~. 51 89
Ribs ..... ~ ~. S1 19 Wi:.iers or Franks ~1
39
Fritters,~ 89~ SaU~~ge Patti~S1:;Bacon ..... ~1
Bo--

99

spa:;'

Be;r;"

99° sn;ed

~EFA
""

.§

VOTE FOR

J. ROBERT
EVANS
FOR
COMMISSIONER
AS YOUR VOICE
IN COUNTY GOVERNMENT.

What's Your Choice?
ONE DAY

Annual Rate

DEWS ••••••.•••••• • • ,. •• •OL$149

5.46%

This Money Market Certificate
rate is effective every Thursday.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding
of
Interest.
Automatically renewable at
maturity at the prevailing rate.
The actual return to investors on
Treasury's.Bills Is higher.

7.753%

Annual Yield

BACKGROUND
Ohio State University
Graduate of Agriculture
Retired Teacher &amp;
Administrator
Farm Boy
Veteran World War II
Professional Man

HONEY

Minimum Deposit $10,000
Earnie' s checking-savings plan
earns you 5'1•% interest every
day on your total savings account
balance. Write checks as you
need to. Savings account interest
- checking account convenience.
Ask for" Earnie!"

5.25%
EXPERIENCE
Former Mayor of Rio Grande
Former President Rio Grande
Village Council
Former Chairman of Street
Commission of Rio Grande
Past President Galli a county
Teachers Association
Past President Southwestern
Local Teachers Association
Past President Vo·Ag District 14
including Gallia, Meigs, Vinton,
. Lawrence, Athens, Washington ,
Jackson &amp; Hocking Counties.

-To-

SIX MONlHS

GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS ••••••••••••••
SoUTHERN
PEA.CHES ••••••••••
••••
•
SWEET
'"Tho
CORN •••••••• ~.

UNTIL
WED., JUNE 4

. 39e
~. 79c
F«49e

-------·· -~--

21h YEARS

31h YEARS

Minimum Deposit $500
The rate shown below for this
Certificate ·is applicable this
month and · is related to the
average 21/2 year y ield of
treasury securities. Interest is
compounded daily and Is paid
monthly,
quarterly,
semi ·
annually, or annuallY.

MAY RATE

For those Investors who prefer a ·
longer term this certificate earns
the same rate and is Issued under
the same regulations as the 2'12
year certificate. Interest is com ' pounde~ dally and paid monthly,
quarterly, semi-annually, or an·
MAY RATE
nually.

If elected as your Gallia county Commissioner 1 promise to be honest and
fair to all the people as a full time commissioner.
I WILL
1. work with the county engineer for better roads
2. do my best to curb eHtravagant spending
3. support the Gallia County Jurtior Fair Board
4. work for a better understanding with the township trustees
s. be a full time cor:nmissioner
.
.
The confidence of Your Vote and Support Will Be Appreciated
Pd. for by the ca ndidate

Annual Yield

Annual Rate

EACH DEPOSITOR INSURED UP TO $100,000 BY THE FDIC, AN AGENCY OF
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

,..~mbe r:

.J

'

FDIC

~tetter.

.

Corn Meal . . .
PoR
, ....... $139
Sugar Crisp . . . • ""'I!IFI O'Ciad&lt;
Bean Coffee - . ~.
. . . .l:!i $24 9

75c Tomato
Sauce .. . .
39~
Peanut C.:my
$149 Green
Cut Beans
31 c
er. ... .
44k&gt;L$129
Macaroni ~· 21 C Powder
Detergent
Cheese Dinner .
,....... 45c ·Dish
Dried
sgc
Detergent
Pinto Beans

rm:rr~"n~~e~se$ 499

mrorcn..:,_$149
French Fries 8111

Bun

Oolwrlc

.

Krunch

15or.

c.n

Oolwrlc

:~&amp;oz.

.

15YH&amp;

,.

&amp;

Clt&lt;wiC Liquid

Golwlc

"N Jg

Box

fr.dlum ·-$209
Cheddar . . ......
~.

1111.

Plcg.

'

=:

Slices .....
liatu:',.. $2 09
Cheddar • •,:-..

c.n

·Gtntotc

OoNrtc

I

or Oblonp-Am

*
ini(·r.por ..
PaouolDM,

ago

- ':." 39q
.

EGGS

.

DUNCAN HINES

=18l0-oz.59q
1104

.

CMEMIX

Box

~
1105

. CRISCO

Chuse SIICIIf'IIU.

NORTHERN
BATH nssUE

SHORTENING
3-1&gt;.
con
,

ElghiO'~

BEAN COFFEE

$249

~89'

$189
Wlln Tn.s coupon,

~ Ltmil (l~p CPUporl P« t.IStOfl1et
~

'v~;lld

fll!'\1 Sat,,

Junt~7 .

1980

•

••

~

T.._,, Solllluy or

IM~ge
,,_
Dinners ... . ...,..

590

trn'lon - __ $139
Rings .. . . PlfU.

~Shlrp,

111111!113 cou~o'N 11111111

MEDIUM

~~s109
. · ~~og

rozen FOOds

Valley
Four IO(elloneto •erwe Jou

=torw-~-~

Dairy PrOducts

Annual Yield

Interest must remain on deposit a full year to earn annual yield. There Is a
substantial penalty for premature withdrawal of Certificate funds. Minimum
Deposit $5,000 for Monthly Interest.

VeUe~bl;sv~ 3~~ ~- $1

economy Corne.
Oolwrlc

,.
•

79o

.2'= 79°

Tomato
Ketchup . . . . -1111•

i

Annual Rate

=ago

Golwlc

Minimum Deposit $500

10.50% 11.23%· 10.50% 11.23%

NOtllllln
•
• -::-.=, ..__ 89 $
.....
'fir'
$129
Bath
T1ssue
.~. Pllg.
Joy Liquid .
15' 011 1.11111
PlolnorSeii-RIIIng
..
~$199
White Lily Flour
Bounce ...•
~$299 ~
Grape Jelly ..... ~ $139
Era Detergent
1CI' 011 1.11111
VIIIIC tlwMIIIIIIIh or
Hamburger Dills '~ .
Camay Soap .

20' 011 1.11111

t'o"rn on

Ole Cob.

4-$1
09
,.,..

�E-6- The Sunday Times-lien tine!, Sunday, June 1, 1980

Tholl:.s ands line street~ to greet Pope
~allipolig

lliarp
By J . Samuel Peeps
f - 192~

arus.t : Er~st H Shepard)

GALUPOUS - There's a 282· cared enough Just to ask. To me she
page book in the Dr. Samuel L.
has been an ever flowing spring with
Bossard Memorial Ubrary of Gallia
each letter bnnging a new bit of
County entitled "The Cherrington
data, another photograph or the
Family History &amp; Genealogy." On
name of someone else who might be
of help."
the front cover are three maps, the
barest outlines of the principal
Turning to Henny Evans, the
British Isle, Pennsylvania, and
author then acknowledged that "on·
Ohio.
ce the fire was lit there was no
Up near the head of the Bristol
keeping up with Cousin Henny . Each
Channel and the River Severn in
time I felt we had exhausted every
western England, near South Wales,
possible source of information she
the map shows Cheltenham. In eastwould come up with three new leads.
central Pennsylvania the map shows
Whe n I was content to take a
Roaring Creek Valley. A dot
passive attitude and let information
represents Gallia County in the Ohio come to me, she went out and beat
map. There are only these places
the brush with letters, telephone
shown on the cover maps, places
calls and personal contacts. When I
touched by the Cherringtons as they
had plans to run off a few Xerox
grew through history.
copies of the information for our own
At the bottom of the cover it reads,
private enrichment, she insisted it
"By Dean C. Cherrington" a nd in·
would be a certain bestseller to rival
dented under the byline : " With a lot
Mr. Haley's 'Roots' and deserved of help from many family friends
no, required - a formal printing of
but especially from ·Miss Susan
'at least several hundred copies. •
Cherrington and Mrs. Henrietta C.
Her arguments were persuasive a nd
Evans" This is repeated on the first
her help was unending. My thanks
sheet inside.
are unbounded '."
In the preface, the author
reminisces about his boyhood on a
HENNY EVANS was going
Pennsylvania farm, his eight years'
through the Feb. 16, 1887, Galli!iolis
schooling in a one-room structure
Journal and found some items that
and visits to a nearby Quake;
revealed even then postal service
Meetinghouse. Next page, Dea n
and city streets were in the news.
Cherrington points out the im- .Johnny Carson and other video stars
practicality of naming all the people
joke about the slow delivery of the
who helped him. " However, there
1980 mails. But Gallipolis s treets are
are two who require my special
the greatest since the recent paving
thanks," he writes .
of them with money from the city income tax . Episcopal women still
MISS SUSAN CHERRINGTON of
contribute their needlework to their
Thurman, Ohio, is the first. " A December bazaar.
second measure of thanks must go to
Item One from 1887 : The street
Henrietta Cherington Evans of
committee found enough mud on the
Gallipolis, Ohio," both of whom had
streets last week· to use a scraper.
responded to a 1973 form letter Dean
Other towns, not so fortunate, have
Cherrington had sent out. But there
lost their streets, Pomeroy reporting
was more:
her crossings out of sight.
"Since that fi rst reply" Miss
Item Two: The ladies of the
E piscopal Church have a
Susan "has been a constant source
of information and inspiration to me
magnificent piece quilt on exhibition
in this work. She has spent most of
at Roadell 's drug store. The s ilk and
her four score plus years in
satin pieces composing the face of
gathering and sharing information
the spread are contributions from
such distinct ladies as the wives of
on our family history with all who

PARIS (AP) - The faithful, the
fatthless and the just plain curious
lined the streets of Paris leading to
Notre Dame Cathedral to greet Pope
John Paul II in this city's largest
cheering, flag-wavin~ spectacle in
recent memory . .
From the broad Champs-Eiysees,
to the banks of the Seine, the streets
and boulevards throbbed with
people Friday at the start of the
pope 's four-day visit, the first papal
trip to France in 176 years.
The pontiff, who speaks fluent
French, delivered . a message of
" peace, trust, love and faith" to
President Valery Giscard d'Estaing,
government officials and the people
of France.
From a tapestry-covered altar in
the 816-year-old Notre Dame
Cathedral, he celebrated a Mass and
Generals Grant and Sherman. The
quilt is up for lottery, tickets to be
sold at 50 cepts each. The quilt was
recently onfexhibition in New York
City. It is a handsome piece of
needlework and embroidery.
Item Three: Charleston, W. Va ., is
to have free postal delivery, under
the law which gives that privilege to
cities having gross pbs tal receipts of
$10,1100 or over.
Item Four: Sam Cherrington has
the smartest boy in town. Several
fond parents dispute this. We will
wait till he gets old enough to play
with George House. (This boy of
Sam's was Henny's grandfather,
Henry, who was born in March of
1886 and not even a year old at the
time) .

led the Te Deum - a hynm of thanks
to God .
The last pontiff to visit France was
Pope Pius VII who came to Notre
Dame in 1804 to attend the
coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte.
The pontiff, feuding with Napoleon
over Roman Catholic powers in post·
revolutionary France, was ordered
by the emperor to attend the
ceremony. A .lady-in-waiting wrote
in her diary that Napoleon kept the
pope waiting in the chilly cathecjral
for several hours.
Pope John Paul, on this sixth
roreign trip since his election in October 1978, went to France to give a
spiritual boost to a sagging church in
this predominantly Roman Catholic
coun try. The church is faced with a
sharp decline in the number of practicing Catholics and a drop in
recruits for the priesthood .
The pontiff will meet today with
representatives of non-Catholic
groups as well as with Giscard
d'Estaing and his family . In the af·
ternoon, the 6{}-year-old Polish pope
will meet with some 15,1100 Poles who
are gathering to honor " their" Jan
Pawel II, the former Cardinal Karol
Wojtyla of Krakow in communist
Poland.
The major event of the day will be

DO YOU ·KNOW, or do you know
how to find out, where the second
battalion, second r egiment, first
brigade of the Ohio militia saw action and what skirmishes they took
part in during the War of 1812' It's a
question asked by Sibyl M. Toops,
85110 SR 323 SE , Mt. Sterling, Ohio
43143, asked in a letter to Peeps . Her
great-great-grandfather, Martin
Miller, volunteered in June, 1812, for
six months service with that outfit.
It's our intention to run her entire
letter in the Peeps column next Sunday with about four genealogical
questions.

..
'

VOTE I

~

''
'

FOR HENRY "Hank" CLELAND, JR.
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR

•'
•
•

I

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONER

.
.••
•
,;.
,;

YOUR vote and Influence
Appreciated. Term Beginn·
ing January 2, 1981.
PD. POL. ADV.

•

•

"Hank"
CLELAND, JR.

••

....•

...
~

6TH

LAFF-A-DAY

r~J

.,._\ _r -

~

JIOINT PUIAIANI

·socKs

':.J~
· . ·' .)
-.l.

'---.c---··-

GOODS INC.

2U

ic

{};-;, .--,

·,

TOM FOSTER, 3751 Harrison St.,
Oakland, Calif., was the only member of the Skidmore family to miss
the alumni bash May 24 for Vinton,
Bidwell-Porter, and ·North Gallia
High Schools, 350 a ttending. He's the
marketing and car utilization expert
for Southern Pacific Railroad. He's
the son of Phil and Marie Foster.

a Mass at the 13th century basilica in priests to have faith in their calling
St. Denis, a working class Paris
and not to be discouraged by present
suburb where history contra&amp;ts with · difficulties. His words appeared
politics.
·
aimed at the split between conSt. Denis is known as " the red
servative and progressive priests in
suburb" because of its communist
France.
leanings. The mayor, the com"I am not without knowledge of all
munity's nine deputies to the
that can discourage and perhaps unNational Assembly and its four
settle priests today," he said. He
senators in the county government also stressed the need for ceUbacy,
belong to the Conununist Party.
saying it · was necessary to show
In a message to the French clergy
" that we are totally consecrated to
delivered in the ornate Notre Dam~
the worjt to which the Lord luis
Cathedral Friday, the pope urged
called us."

-

85!~

~

:WILSON

WARM-UPS

TENNIS BAllS

'239

•·

(MIJf

HolliS

'

....
•
•

..

'

---J---rJ .· '"

, .... .... __ ..,.__~ ---·- - -

•

•

TIIPLf KNIT

~~ 'l995

...

'·

11?1/i~/JIJJ&lt; k

T·SHIRTS

All.

" I got him to stop swearin g,
drink ing and smok ing . Now he 's

2g$5 :llll

FISHING SUPPLIES
· IN STOCK

a big bore:·

THREE YEARS
Capt. Johi1 Claus Voss arrived in
England Sept. 2, 1904, after cir·
cumnavigating the globe in an Indian dugout canoe. Voss took three
years, three months and 12 days to
make the trip. The vessel, for which
Voss paid $75, had been carved 50
years earlier by a Nootka Indian on
the west coast of Vancouver Island.
The canoe carried no auxiliary
motor but sailed under three masts.
Voss died in California in 1922.

10 l£TIUlD T-IlliS
1111111[ GMII ~MY

1st Mt - '50 Gift Zn&lt; '"" - '21 &amp;m Coo1ificall
ltd Prill - '10 Gift c:.tificate

Ill~

IIW Dill!

lfllrM .nd Prk:ea effective thru Sat., June 7, 1980.
Quantity Rights R-rved.

'
'
'
'

~ . r------------------------------.

634·43 2ND AVENUE

oflt 110 11.1111111 -~IIC.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

. .. lEITII SHill\ JICim

lEG.
'11.11

•No P.mt. lltclslry. You IMid

'

•
•

11111 ws.

• WI HA. VI AU SCHOOl. ~OitS IN THI A111.4

Bill's Sporting Goods Inc.
. 213 SIXTH STiiEEr

...' . STORE HOURS: MON.,SAT. 9 A.M.·9 P.M.
. SUNDAY ·10 A.M.·&amp; P.M.
Action Prices are special savings all over the store in ...
Groceries, Frozen, Dairy, Health and Beauty Aids and
·General Merchandise. You'll get extra savings
wherever you see this Action Price sign.
Every week at A&amp;P.

I'OUIT I'UASMIT:

675-319!1

$189 LMnPorkButt-or
Pork Steaks .... lb. 99~ F,..h
Fryer Legs ...... ~~~. 89~
Chuck Roasts . ~~~.
"'"'ao..
$169 Mllld
$129 AlP Rlgulw, Thick or Girlie
~
Pork Chops ...• . lb.
Sliced Bologna .. ~~~.
·Chuck Steaks . ~~~.
29
PorkAoRoasts. . . ~ ~. 51 89
Ribs ..... ~ ~. S1 19 Wi:.iers or Franks ~1
39
Fritters,~ 89~ SaU~~ge Patti~S1:;Bacon ..... ~1
Bo--

99

spa:;'

Be;r;"

99° sn;ed

~EFA
""

.§

VOTE FOR

J. ROBERT
EVANS
FOR
COMMISSIONER
AS YOUR VOICE
IN COUNTY GOVERNMENT.

What's Your Choice?
ONE DAY

Annual Rate

DEWS ••••••.•••••• • • ,. •• •OL$149

5.46%

This Money Market Certificate
rate is effective every Thursday.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding
of
Interest.
Automatically renewable at
maturity at the prevailing rate.
The actual return to investors on
Treasury's.Bills Is higher.

7.753%

Annual Yield

BACKGROUND
Ohio State University
Graduate of Agriculture
Retired Teacher &amp;
Administrator
Farm Boy
Veteran World War II
Professional Man

HONEY

Minimum Deposit $10,000
Earnie' s checking-savings plan
earns you 5'1•% interest every
day on your total savings account
balance. Write checks as you
need to. Savings account interest
- checking account convenience.
Ask for" Earnie!"

5.25%
EXPERIENCE
Former Mayor of Rio Grande
Former President Rio Grande
Village Council
Former Chairman of Street
Commission of Rio Grande
Past President Galli a county
Teachers Association
Past President Southwestern
Local Teachers Association
Past President Vo·Ag District 14
including Gallia, Meigs, Vinton,
. Lawrence, Athens, Washington ,
Jackson &amp; Hocking Counties.

-To-

SIX MONlHS

GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS ••••••••••••••
SoUTHERN
PEA.CHES ••••••••••
••••
•
SWEET
'"Tho
CORN •••••••• ~.

UNTIL
WED., JUNE 4

. 39e
~. 79c
F«49e

-------·· -~--

21h YEARS

31h YEARS

Minimum Deposit $500
The rate shown below for this
Certificate ·is applicable this
month and · is related to the
average 21/2 year y ield of
treasury securities. Interest is
compounded daily and Is paid
monthly,
quarterly,
semi ·
annually, or annuallY.

MAY RATE

For those Investors who prefer a ·
longer term this certificate earns
the same rate and is Issued under
the same regulations as the 2'12
year certificate. Interest is com ' pounde~ dally and paid monthly,
quarterly, semi-annually, or an·
MAY RATE
nually.

If elected as your Gallia county Commissioner 1 promise to be honest and
fair to all the people as a full time commissioner.
I WILL
1. work with the county engineer for better roads
2. do my best to curb eHtravagant spending
3. support the Gallia County Jurtior Fair Board
4. work for a better understanding with the township trustees
s. be a full time cor:nmissioner
.
.
The confidence of Your Vote and Support Will Be Appreciated
Pd. for by the ca ndidate

Annual Yield

Annual Rate

EACH DEPOSITOR INSURED UP TO $100,000 BY THE FDIC, AN AGENCY OF
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

,..~mbe r:

.J

'

FDIC

~tetter.

.

Corn Meal . . .
PoR
, ....... $139
Sugar Crisp . . . • ""'I!IFI O'Ciad&lt;
Bean Coffee - . ~.
. . . .l:!i $24 9

75c Tomato
Sauce .. . .
39~
Peanut C.:my
$149 Green
Cut Beans
31 c
er. ... .
44k&gt;L$129
Macaroni ~· 21 C Powder
Detergent
Cheese Dinner .
,....... 45c ·Dish
Dried
sgc
Detergent
Pinto Beans

rm:rr~"n~~e~se$ 499

mrorcn..:,_$149
French Fries 8111

Bun

Oolwrlc

.

Krunch

15or.

c.n

Oolwrlc

:~&amp;oz.

.

15YH&amp;

,.

&amp;

Clt&lt;wiC Liquid

Golwlc

"N Jg

Box

fr.dlum ·-$209
Cheddar . . ......
~.

1111.

Plcg.

'

=:

Slices .....
liatu:',.. $2 09
Cheddar • •,:-..

c.n

·Gtntotc

OoNrtc

I

or Oblonp-Am

*
ini(·r.por ..
PaouolDM,

ago

- ':." 39q
.

EGGS

.

DUNCAN HINES

=18l0-oz.59q
1104

.

CMEMIX

Box

~
1105

. CRISCO

Chuse SIICIIf'IIU.

NORTHERN
BATH nssUE

SHORTENING
3-1&gt;.
con
,

ElghiO'~

BEAN COFFEE

$249

~89'

$189
Wlln Tn.s coupon,

~ Ltmil (l~p CPUporl P« t.IStOfl1et
~

'v~;lld

fll!'\1 Sat,,

Junt~7 .

1980

•

••

~

T.._,, Solllluy or

IM~ge
,,_
Dinners ... . ...,..

590

trn'lon - __ $139
Rings .. . . PlfU.

~Shlrp,

111111!113 cou~o'N 11111111

MEDIUM

~~s109
. · ~~og

rozen FOOds

Valley
Four IO(elloneto •erwe Jou

=torw-~-~

Dairy PrOducts

Annual Yield

Interest must remain on deposit a full year to earn annual yield. There Is a
substantial penalty for premature withdrawal of Certificate funds. Minimum
Deposit $5,000 for Monthly Interest.

VeUe~bl;sv~ 3~~ ~- $1

economy Corne.
Oolwrlc

,.
•

79o

.2'= 79°

Tomato
Ketchup . . . . -1111•

i

Annual Rate

=ago

Golwlc

Minimum Deposit $500

10.50% 11.23%· 10.50% 11.23%

NOtllllln
•
• -::-.=, ..__ 89 $
.....
'fir'
$129
Bath
T1ssue
.~. Pllg.
Joy Liquid .
15' 011 1.11111
PlolnorSeii-RIIIng
..
~$199
White Lily Flour
Bounce ...•
~$299 ~
Grape Jelly ..... ~ $139
Era Detergent
1CI' 011 1.11111
VIIIIC tlwMIIIIIIIh or
Hamburger Dills '~ .
Camay Soap .

20' 011 1.11111

t'o"rn on

Ole Cob.

4-$1
09
,.,..

�E~Thl: Sunday Times--')entinel, Sunday, June 1, 19!10

Lincoln School had reputation for excellence; 41 graduates

LOOKJNG FOR HOME - These are just a few of the many beautiful
kittens available for adoption through the Humane Society.

l Hoofs and Paws
By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - The woman who
handles our answering service calls
occasionally asks me to reinind
readers about something or to
please cover one subject or another.
This week she asked that I say
something a bout this business of
calls coming in to her asking the
Humane Society to euthanize their
personal animals.
No, we do not do this. If an animal
is privately owned, it must be the
responsibility of its owner - be it the
feeding of it, medical ca re of it, or
hilmane exit because of old age,
sickness or what have you. You can
imagine what our vet bills would be .
Thev · are alreadv anvwhere from
$200 to $500 a month.
· '! wish we had unlimited funds so
thllt we could do it"all - for the
animals - but there are so many
homeless animals that need us, that
we must encour~ge pet owners to do
what's right by their own pets.
And you know; most people 'take
such good care of their animals that
it makes you wonder where the
remainder came from, what sort of
mold they came out of, doesn't it?
I guess it's like aU other characteristics that we develop down
through the years. It comes in so
many cases from those who raised
us ... from unusually effective
teachers in school, and from
unusually effective reli gious
leaders, and do you suppose some
folks just have plain, good hearts,
and would never dream of hurting
any living creature?
I had a friend in service like that
years ago - she could not stand to
see anyone or anythmg unhappy and even if she didn 't
know the. person well, or at all,
she would step in and offer
to console them or go to an animal that looked as thou~h it were
lost or unhappy and take 1t up in her
arms, many time soiling a uniform
and afterwards just go back to the
barracks and change without a gripe
ora word.
I know people like this in Meigs
County - l see so many of them at
every Humane Society meeting. I
talk to them in the stores around
town and on the street. Whenever
anyone finds out that I write HIP
th-ey tell me about family pets, about
animal related incidents that sure
make me happy that I put forth .this
effort each week.'
Joyce Miller and I had the
pleasant experience of speaking to
the Middleport Rotary Club this past
week and they were such a great
group of gentlemen. The
comaraderie of the obviously " good
friends" as well as fellow
businessmen was fun to see and I'm
sure we all learned things we didn't
know before · about the other
organization. There is so much that
supposedly learned people don't
know about the community they live
in that these interchanges are really
enlightening, and do help make a
community a better one.

1 was proud, on my last trip to the
former home of the Women's Army
Corps, Fort McClellan, Alabama-in
the city of Anniston, that the WAC
Vets have chosen the Calhoun County Humane Society as one of their
projects and needless to say the
folks who operate the kennels there
think Army women are guardian
angels. If I were still in uniform that
would have made me pop my buttons off.
One bad note this \veek. I got a call
from the Chester area Village of
Alfred, that those of you who
love kittens and cats had best
keep an eye on them. There
are some reports of people
taking great delight in getting into cars and drtvmg around until they see one of those lovable little
creatures and fire at them with
rifles.
A little three-year old girl is grief
stricken this week because this is
how she lost her cat as the took it for
a walklastSunday.
Anyone witnessing similar incidents please try to get a license
number and description of the carcall the Sheriff's office and call your
Meigs County Humane Society right
away.
Time for our monthly report on
animaf related activities: Calls
requesting information, 350; ~all
out, 201 ; Emergency runs, 21!; Dogs
placed, 12; Cats placed, 15; Investigation cruelty-neglect, 2;
Animals euthanized, 5; Animals
available at the time, 20 dogs, 24 kittens .
Anyone · interested in any of the
following animals ~hat are available
for adoption to a good home, call9926260 any day noon until 7 p.m.
Donations are required. We have a
large Great White dog, male with
brown eyes about a year old' a really
nice red Irish Setter, female, about
eight months old; a female
Foxhound type, a year old; a
Miniature Collie type, female, about
six months old ; a Brindle Plott,
male, six months old; a Border
Collie-Terrier, female, six months
old; two Coon Hounds, both male
about a year old ; a cute little red
female retriever about six months
, old ; a really nice CockerSpaniel,IOO
percent, male, black about a year
old; five Dachshund types both male
and female and that's it on dogs.
Now, then, if you like cats you must
see what we have to believe it. We
have 24 of the most beautiful kittens
in the world - whites, grays, blacks,
tigers, beige, fawn and white, fawn
tigers. We also have two really pretty white adults. Do call and make an
appointment to see all these
animals, I guarantee you won't go
home empty handed ... if you convince our manager that you will
make a good pet owner.

BY JAMES SANDS
GALLI POLIS
F orty -o ne
graduates would be considered a
small class of seniors by today's
standards. At Lincoln S&lt;:h()(,l ;., .
Gallipolis it took 18 years 11882- 191•0
to ~et 41 persons With diplomas. In
fact there were some years when
there were no graduates.
But big is not always good. Lincoln
School had a reputation for
educational excellence as did a number of s mall white schools.
Four other academies '
Though Gallia Academy is the
only academy to survive (and that in
name only) Gallia County once had
at least four other academies that
attracted students from all over
Ohio
(Centerville ,
southern
Cheshire, Vinton, and Ewington).
The EwingtoQ Academy has
received some attention lately
because of efforts to restore it. The
school dates back to 1857 when it was
established by Hiram Howe.
Cheshire Academy (the largest of
the last (our) was started in 1860 on
land given by C. L. Guthrie. The
school was a large two-story brick
on the corner of West and Main
Streets. After the Civil War a large

dortnitory was built on Main Street
to house out-of-town students.
~uck money helps
It was only by the financial support or the Mauck family that the
school stayed open as long as it did.
The academy went broke, selling the
classrooms to the public schools and
the dornlitory to the Masons.
The first graduating class at
Cheshire Public High School was in
1898. In contrast to the academy,
which had instruction 13 weeks a
year, the public schools offered nine
months. Also in . contrast to the
acade!,IIY was the make-up of the
student body. Almost all the
graduates of the academy were
men . But in the first 25 years of !he
Cheshire Public School 75 percent of .
the graduates were women.
Curriculum good
The curriculum at Cheshire and
Lincoln was a good one despite the
small size. For instance students at
Lincoln in the year 1900 who were
freslm1en were required to take
algebra, Latin, English, history,
rhetoric, and physiology. The next
two years added German, pnysics,
botany, geometry, Greek, and

Roman history. Seniors took besides
some of the above : trigonometry,
geology, and chemistry.
It is, also interesting to look over
the ieacher's guide for elementary education at Linco ln School in 1900 . He re
is how the student spent his
2712 hours in class per week:
Opening exercise, 75 minutes;
re&lt;'ess, 90 minutes; physical culture,
30; music, 30; drawing, 30; formal
language, 30; conversation, 30;
reading, 300; spelling, 100; writing,
100 and math, 240. For sixth, seventh
and eighth graders there was no
such thing as recess.
Last classl916
The last graduatin!fat Lincoln was
1916. The grade school, of course,
operated for some years after this .
But as small as Lincoln School was,
it was gigantic compared to another
black school in Galli a County.
In 1946 Gallia County had the
smallest school in the state of Ohio
- Buckridge School in Springfield
Twp. The one room school had been
in operation by 1946 for at least 100
years; and in 1946 the school had an
enrollment of nine students in
grades one through eight.

There was a big iron stove in the
middle of the building and the desks
were arranged along the walls.
Despite the work of the community,
the building had a greyish old look to
it.
~
•
Mrs. Lewis taught
The teacher of the school that yea
was Mrs. DOrothy Lewis,
was
the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. C. M;.
Payne. Two of Mrs. Lewis's sistel'!l
were also teachers, Mrs. Earl Diggs
and Mrs. Bernice Borden. Mrs.
Lewis was a graduate of Rio Grande
College and had taught in Perry
County for five years before coming
to Buckridge.
,
The student body listed two in the ·
eighth grade; two in ~e seventh ;;.: ,
one in the fourth; one m the third ;
and ' three in the first grade. The
children all came from !ive families
three of whom were naml!d Cordell.
The other two were named Smith '
and Mayo. There were many other .
fine small schools in Gallia history
and if other folk have any information on them, they might send
that to us, and we will have another
article on old Gallia schools.
James Sands' address: Box 92,
Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.

who

Marietta- The Ohio Department of
Transportation will open bids in
Columbus, June 24 , for repairing two
Vinton County sections of US 50
pavement.
Programmed estimate for construction engineering and construction costs is $354,000. Improvements will be financed with
federal-aid primary roads program
and ODOT funds ,
Sections to be improved extend
from:

- The Ross County line to Ohio 671
in Harrison Twp.
- 0.31 mile west of Ohio 677 to 0.2
mile east of Ohio 278 in Elk and
Madison twps.
Plans call ror concrete pavement
joint repair by full depth rigid
pavement removal and flexible
replacement.
Traffic will be maintained during
construction. Estimated completion
date is Oct. 31.

i~hij· ·'IUitts -.j.,"""""'"""

Joint Jtrli~nt tttui~ttt

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

DAVIDJ. KOBLENTZ
FOR

COMMISSIONER

"Serving Over 20,000 Homes"

MEIGS COUNTY - JAN. 2nd TERM
YOUR SUPPORT IS APPRECIATED
PO . POL. AOV .

ELBERFELD$

~
... ~.~SA\
!

Listings for
June 1- 7

~~

*Local films
Page 2

~~) RECLINERS
~

'='

,
Page 9

EUlKlJI\E .,

*TV I.Q.

The Original Close
To The Wall Recliner

*Film clips
Page 8

*TV Puzzle
Page 4

SAVE '40 to '100

SUNDAY, JUNE 15th

RETIRED
The United States transferred 50
retired destroyers to Britain in 1940
in exchange for a lease of air and sea
bases in Newfoundland and the
Caribbean.

_____............_____________,
ANDY GRIFFITII comforts his two

.,.. .

~al

C£state
To~ay

Willi• T. Leadingham
Realtor

HINDSIGHT HURTS

.

.'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

·Suplilement to

·&lt;

NOMINATE AND SUPPORT

Enjoy big savings on famous Berkline Wallaway ® recliners, the original close-to-the-wall
recliner , during our special Father's Day Sale. Choose from many styles and fabrics that
will blend with your living room, den or family room decor. Give Dad the gift of comfort and
relaxation at super saving sale prices . Give Dad the luxury of a space savino Berkline
use ouR LAYAWAY
Wallaway Ce1 recliner - the best gift of all.

,

This week on

ODOT will bid US 50 project

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

••
••
•••
•••
•••
•

. \

Hold the chair of your

!~~~~s ~~:~~J~~~ei~o~~~

,__

sons, Rob Olivi and Jimmy Malr, after
their plane has crashed in a desolate
mountain region In 'IHE YEAGERS, the

first ot two hour-long adventure dramas on
ABC-TV Sunday, June 1 and Sunday, June

8.

�E~Thl: Sunday Times--')entinel, Sunday, June 1, 19!10

Lincoln School had reputation for excellence; 41 graduates

LOOKJNG FOR HOME - These are just a few of the many beautiful
kittens available for adoption through the Humane Society.

l Hoofs and Paws
By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - The woman who
handles our answering service calls
occasionally asks me to reinind
readers about something or to
please cover one subject or another.
This week she asked that I say
something a bout this business of
calls coming in to her asking the
Humane Society to euthanize their
personal animals.
No, we do not do this. If an animal
is privately owned, it must be the
responsibility of its owner - be it the
feeding of it, medical ca re of it, or
hilmane exit because of old age,
sickness or what have you. You can
imagine what our vet bills would be .
Thev · are alreadv anvwhere from
$200 to $500 a month.
· '! wish we had unlimited funds so
thllt we could do it"all - for the
animals - but there are so many
homeless animals that need us, that
we must encour~ge pet owners to do
what's right by their own pets.
And you know; most people 'take
such good care of their animals that
it makes you wonder where the
remainder came from, what sort of
mold they came out of, doesn't it?
I guess it's like aU other characteristics that we develop down
through the years. It comes in so
many cases from those who raised
us ... from unusually effective
teachers in school, and from
unusually effective reli gious
leaders, and do you suppose some
folks just have plain, good hearts,
and would never dream of hurting
any living creature?
I had a friend in service like that
years ago - she could not stand to
see anyone or anythmg unhappy and even if she didn 't
know the. person well, or at all,
she would step in and offer
to console them or go to an animal that looked as thou~h it were
lost or unhappy and take 1t up in her
arms, many time soiling a uniform
and afterwards just go back to the
barracks and change without a gripe
ora word.
I know people like this in Meigs
County - l see so many of them at
every Humane Society meeting. I
talk to them in the stores around
town and on the street. Whenever
anyone finds out that I write HIP
th-ey tell me about family pets, about
animal related incidents that sure
make me happy that I put forth .this
effort each week.'
Joyce Miller and I had the
pleasant experience of speaking to
the Middleport Rotary Club this past
week and they were such a great
group of gentlemen. The
comaraderie of the obviously " good
friends" as well as fellow
businessmen was fun to see and I'm
sure we all learned things we didn't
know before · about the other
organization. There is so much that
supposedly learned people don't
know about the community they live
in that these interchanges are really
enlightening, and do help make a
community a better one.

1 was proud, on my last trip to the
former home of the Women's Army
Corps, Fort McClellan, Alabama-in
the city of Anniston, that the WAC
Vets have chosen the Calhoun County Humane Society as one of their
projects and needless to say the
folks who operate the kennels there
think Army women are guardian
angels. If I were still in uniform that
would have made me pop my buttons off.
One bad note this \veek. I got a call
from the Chester area Village of
Alfred, that those of you who
love kittens and cats had best
keep an eye on them. There
are some reports of people
taking great delight in getting into cars and drtvmg around until they see one of those lovable little
creatures and fire at them with
rifles.
A little three-year old girl is grief
stricken this week because this is
how she lost her cat as the took it for
a walklastSunday.
Anyone witnessing similar incidents please try to get a license
number and description of the carcall the Sheriff's office and call your
Meigs County Humane Society right
away.
Time for our monthly report on
animaf related activities: Calls
requesting information, 350; ~all
out, 201 ; Emergency runs, 21!; Dogs
placed, 12; Cats placed, 15; Investigation cruelty-neglect, 2;
Animals euthanized, 5; Animals
available at the time, 20 dogs, 24 kittens .
Anyone · interested in any of the
following animals ~hat are available
for adoption to a good home, call9926260 any day noon until 7 p.m.
Donations are required. We have a
large Great White dog, male with
brown eyes about a year old' a really
nice red Irish Setter, female, about
eight months old; a female
Foxhound type, a year old; a
Miniature Collie type, female, about
six months old ; a Brindle Plott,
male, six months old; a Border
Collie-Terrier, female, six months
old; two Coon Hounds, both male
about a year old ; a cute little red
female retriever about six months
, old ; a really nice CockerSpaniel,IOO
percent, male, black about a year
old; five Dachshund types both male
and female and that's it on dogs.
Now, then, if you like cats you must
see what we have to believe it. We
have 24 of the most beautiful kittens
in the world - whites, grays, blacks,
tigers, beige, fawn and white, fawn
tigers. We also have two really pretty white adults. Do call and make an
appointment to see all these
animals, I guarantee you won't go
home empty handed ... if you convince our manager that you will
make a good pet owner.

BY JAMES SANDS
GALLI POLIS
F orty -o ne
graduates would be considered a
small class of seniors by today's
standards. At Lincoln S&lt;:h()(,l ;., .
Gallipolis it took 18 years 11882- 191•0
to ~et 41 persons With diplomas. In
fact there were some years when
there were no graduates.
But big is not always good. Lincoln
School had a reputation for
educational excellence as did a number of s mall white schools.
Four other academies '
Though Gallia Academy is the
only academy to survive (and that in
name only) Gallia County once had
at least four other academies that
attracted students from all over
Ohio
(Centerville ,
southern
Cheshire, Vinton, and Ewington).
The EwingtoQ Academy has
received some attention lately
because of efforts to restore it. The
school dates back to 1857 when it was
established by Hiram Howe.
Cheshire Academy (the largest of
the last (our) was started in 1860 on
land given by C. L. Guthrie. The
school was a large two-story brick
on the corner of West and Main
Streets. After the Civil War a large

dortnitory was built on Main Street
to house out-of-town students.
~uck money helps
It was only by the financial support or the Mauck family that the
school stayed open as long as it did.
The academy went broke, selling the
classrooms to the public schools and
the dornlitory to the Masons.
The first graduating class at
Cheshire Public High School was in
1898. In contrast to the academy,
which had instruction 13 weeks a
year, the public schools offered nine
months. Also in . contrast to the
acade!,IIY was the make-up of the
student body. Almost all the
graduates of the academy were
men . But in the first 25 years of !he
Cheshire Public School 75 percent of .
the graduates were women.
Curriculum good
The curriculum at Cheshire and
Lincoln was a good one despite the
small size. For instance students at
Lincoln in the year 1900 who were
freslm1en were required to take
algebra, Latin, English, history,
rhetoric, and physiology. The next
two years added German, pnysics,
botany, geometry, Greek, and

Roman history. Seniors took besides
some of the above : trigonometry,
geology, and chemistry.
It is, also interesting to look over
the ieacher's guide for elementary education at Linco ln School in 1900 . He re
is how the student spent his
2712 hours in class per week:
Opening exercise, 75 minutes;
re&lt;'ess, 90 minutes; physical culture,
30; music, 30; drawing, 30; formal
language, 30; conversation, 30;
reading, 300; spelling, 100; writing,
100 and math, 240. For sixth, seventh
and eighth graders there was no
such thing as recess.
Last classl916
The last graduatin!fat Lincoln was
1916. The grade school, of course,
operated for some years after this .
But as small as Lincoln School was,
it was gigantic compared to another
black school in Galli a County.
In 1946 Gallia County had the
smallest school in the state of Ohio
- Buckridge School in Springfield
Twp. The one room school had been
in operation by 1946 for at least 100
years; and in 1946 the school had an
enrollment of nine students in
grades one through eight.

There was a big iron stove in the
middle of the building and the desks
were arranged along the walls.
Despite the work of the community,
the building had a greyish old look to
it.
~
•
Mrs. Lewis taught
The teacher of the school that yea
was Mrs. DOrothy Lewis,
was
the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. C. M;.
Payne. Two of Mrs. Lewis's sistel'!l
were also teachers, Mrs. Earl Diggs
and Mrs. Bernice Borden. Mrs.
Lewis was a graduate of Rio Grande
College and had taught in Perry
County for five years before coming
to Buckridge.
,
The student body listed two in the ·
eighth grade; two in ~e seventh ;;.: ,
one in the fourth; one m the third ;
and ' three in the first grade. The
children all came from !ive families
three of whom were naml!d Cordell.
The other two were named Smith '
and Mayo. There were many other .
fine small schools in Gallia history
and if other folk have any information on them, they might send
that to us, and we will have another
article on old Gallia schools.
James Sands' address: Box 92,
Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.

who

Marietta- The Ohio Department of
Transportation will open bids in
Columbus, June 24 , for repairing two
Vinton County sections of US 50
pavement.
Programmed estimate for construction engineering and construction costs is $354,000. Improvements will be financed with
federal-aid primary roads program
and ODOT funds ,
Sections to be improved extend
from:

- The Ross County line to Ohio 671
in Harrison Twp.
- 0.31 mile west of Ohio 677 to 0.2
mile east of Ohio 278 in Elk and
Madison twps.
Plans call ror concrete pavement
joint repair by full depth rigid
pavement removal and flexible
replacement.
Traffic will be maintained during
construction. Estimated completion
date is Oct. 31.

i~hij· ·'IUitts -.j.,"""""'"""

Joint Jtrli~nt tttui~ttt

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE

DAVIDJ. KOBLENTZ
FOR

COMMISSIONER

"Serving Over 20,000 Homes"

MEIGS COUNTY - JAN. 2nd TERM
YOUR SUPPORT IS APPRECIATED
PO . POL. AOV .

ELBERFELD$

~
... ~.~SA\
!

Listings for
June 1- 7

~~

*Local films
Page 2

~~) RECLINERS
~

'='

,
Page 9

EUlKlJI\E .,

*TV I.Q.

The Original Close
To The Wall Recliner

*Film clips
Page 8

*TV Puzzle
Page 4

SAVE '40 to '100

SUNDAY, JUNE 15th

RETIRED
The United States transferred 50
retired destroyers to Britain in 1940
in exchange for a lease of air and sea
bases in Newfoundland and the
Caribbean.

_____............_____________,
ANDY GRIFFITII comforts his two

.,.. .

~al

C£state
To~ay

Willi• T. Leadingham
Realtor

HINDSIGHT HURTS

.

.'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

·Suplilement to

·&lt;

NOMINATE AND SUPPORT

Enjoy big savings on famous Berkline Wallaway ® recliners, the original close-to-the-wall
recliner , during our special Father's Day Sale. Choose from many styles and fabrics that
will blend with your living room, den or family room decor. Give Dad the gift of comfort and
relaxation at super saving sale prices . Give Dad the luxury of a space savino Berkline
use ouR LAYAWAY
Wallaway Ce1 recliner - the best gift of all.

,

This week on

ODOT will bid US 50 project

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

••
••
•••
•••
•••
•

. \

Hold the chair of your

!~~~~s ~~:~~J~~~ei~o~~~

,__

sons, Rob Olivi and Jimmy Malr, after
their plane has crashed in a desolate
mountain region In 'IHE YEAGERS, the

first ot two hour-long adventure dramas on
ABC-TV Sunday, June 1 and Sunday, June

8.

�Page Two-TV Supplement:

)

Page 1'bree-TV Supplement

'Jazz', 'Kramer' offered this .week
By LARRY EWING
Area theatres are offering moviegoers two outstanding-and conceptually diverse-films this week.
KRAMER VS. KRAMER (PG), a
faithful adaptation of Avery Corman's novel, is basically the story of
a court battle over custody of a
young boy, and what went before
and came after that battle. There
are no villains here, merely human
beings with flaws. The perfonnances are magnificent, Including one by a marvelous new
child actor, Justin Henry.
As a multiple Academy Award
winner, the freshness of "Kramer"
may be attributed, to a great extent,
to the fact that this is one of those
movies that they don't make
anymore.
"Kramer" is not a 'director's film'
or a 'cinemaphotograber'sfllm'; it is
an actor's film. The technical aspects are secondary to the human
drama portrayed. You will not be
overwhelmed with special effects,
oblique camera angles or mindbending light shows.
You will be taken, however, by the
immaculate polish and great depth
of feeling Cl'eated by the principal
characters. In a very real sense,
'Kramer' is a throw-back to an age
when movie direction was used sen-

sitively rather than overwhelmingly.
'Life and love, and ALL THAT
JAZZ, is bull-" says Roy Shelder,
as Joey Gideon. That self·
proclamation perhaps best
describes director Bob Fosse's approach to existence In his
remarkable, autobiographical film.
'All That Jazz' (R) is w'director's
film.' It is pure and not~ly,
'Fosse'-the multiple Tony and
Academy award winning
choreographer, author and director.
Roy Sheider, In the role of his
career, is superb as he plays a great
Broadway
director
and
choreographer. With the exeptioo of
nwnerous trips into a realm of fantasy, the story never leaves the
world of his rehearsal room, theatre,
and bedroom.
The film's portrayal of the
backstage life of theatnH!own to
the sweat-is unflinchingly authentic. One extraordinary sequence
shows the audience what a really gifted director can accomplish with absolutely lousy material and
mediocre performers.
Even at its most serious, 'All That
Jazz' is one of the most joyftil and
magnificent "what is life all about"
films ever made.

Cable
(2) WSAZ-TV (NBC)

ChaMel

(3) CBN

(4) liB().TV (ABC)
(5)

(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)

wrns

WTVN-TV (ABC)
Wl'AP-TV (NBC)
WCHS-TV (CBS)
WMUI.rTV (PBS)
\\!BNS-TV (CBS)
WOUB-TV (PBS)
WOWK-TV (ABC)

3
3
6

17
6
15
8

33
10
20
13

The above listing provides chaMel nwnbers for cable subscribers.
Schedules of programs are provided by the television stations
which reserve the right to make last-minute changes. Tbe SUDday
Tlmes-Sentlllel is not responsible for schedule changes.
Schedules copyright 1980 T.V. Data Inc.

•"141

IIORNING
1:10
1:30
8:00

WQIILDATLARGE
AGRICULTURE U.S.A. •
CHRISTOPHER CLOSE-liP
BETWI!!N THE UNES
(ill AIII!RtCAN PROBLEMS AND

I.

.CHAWNGES
8:30

BEHIND THE
BADGE
Elizabe'th Montgomery and
O.J. Simpson (pictured) star as
detectives whose close professional relationship leads to a
strong personal attachment, in
'Behind the Badge,' a madefor-television film to be presented on 'The CBS Wednesday
Night Movies ,' WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 4 on CBS-TV.
This tele·flick aired on the
network last year with surprisingly strong ratings. despite the
controversial undertones.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME

CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP

KOINONIA

(I) ABETTER WAY
TIIEEHOUSE CWB
• THIS IS THE UFE

7:00

I

FORD PHILPOT

BANANA SPUTS
(I) OLD nilE GOSPEL HOUR
!lABAN LEAGUE
IDle ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:30 CIJe T.Y. CHAPEL
()) DAWSON IIEIIORIAL BAP.
nST CHURCH SERVICE
(I) IT IS WRITTEN
(I) EDDIE SAUNDERS
(I) JIIIIIY SWAGGART
nilE GOSPEL HOUR
BIBLE ANSWERS
8:00 (I)
IIORIION CHOIR
()) THE LESSON
(I)
THREE STOOGES AND
FRI!NDS
(I) GRACE CATHEDRAL
• (I) DAY OF DISCOVERY
(I)())) SESAME STREET
i!2l •
EVANGELISTIC
OUTREACH
8:30 CIJe ORAL ROBERTS
()) CHAPEL HOUR
(I) CONTACT
QPENBIBLE
(I) REY. LEONARD REPASS
JAIIES ROBISON
LOWER UGHTHOUSE
11:00 (I)
SINGING JUBLIEE
()) ROBERT SCHULLER
PARTRIDGE FAMILY
·
REX HUIIBARD
ABETTER WAY
(I) CHRISTIAN CENTER
STUDIO SEt;
(ill ORAL ROBERTS
())) IIISTf:R ROGf:RS
IJ2). Rf:Y. R.A. Wf:ST
11:30 (I) GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
(I) FAITH FOR TODAY
• (I) ROBERT SCHULLER
(I) BIG BLUE MARBLE
(ill IT IS WRITTEN
())) BESAIIESTREET
10:00 CIJe REXHUIIBARD
()).CHANGED UYES
(I) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(I) KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
(I) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
(I) BESAIIE STREET
®liiOYIE -(WESTERN)''' "Sono
Of Katie Elcltr" 11165
IJ2). JIIIIIY SWAGGART
10:30 ())SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
CIJIIOYIE-(DRAIIA)"" "S.par·
ale Tableo" 11158
• ()) ERNESTANGLEY

If:

i!Dll

Patrick Macnee (right) is
an avenger no more ; he' s
an international villain .
trading in his bowler hat
for a brace of beautiestwins Beth and Karen
Specht (or Karen and Beth
Specht; only their mother
knows for sure)-in 'The
Billion Dollar Threat,· an
encore presentation airing
on ABC-TV's 'The ABC.
Friday
Night
Movie,'

FRIDAY, JUNE 6.
CHECK liSTINGS fO R WCT TIME "''

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.

11:00 (1). HUMAN DIMENSIONS
())IN TOUCH
(I) REX HUIIBARD
()) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'The
Old Curiosity .Shop' Oullp visits
Clrandlalher, beralea him lor gam·
bllng and demands 'to be repaid
Immediately.
liD ELECTRIC COMPANY
IDJID REY.HENRYMAHAN
11:30 (I) •
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
CIJIJ2)
ANIMALS, ANIMALS,
ANIMALS
• (I) FACE THE NATION
()) WORLD OF THE SEA
())) BIG BLUE MARBLE
AFTERNOON
12:00

FREE ESTIMATES PROMPT SERVICE
224 First Street
675·2460
Point Pleasant

()) D. JAMES KENNEDY
(I) AMERICA'S ATHLETES 11180
S.rlea devoted to examining and
revealing the beat athletea who
-•torepreaent!heUnHedStataa
et lhe Olymplca to be held In
lloacow.
(I) PUIUCPOUCYFORUII
•
(I)
MOYIE
-(SUSPENSE-DRAMA) "141 "Baf·
lied" 11172
(J) WESTVIRGIHIASTATEHIGH
8CHOOL TRACK MEET
FACE THE MAnON
1:30
HOGAII'S HEROES
HOCKING
VALLEY
IWEGRASS

I

!Dl·~

2:00 ()) WORLD OF PENTf:COST
(I) IJ2) • NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sport awill
provide coveroge of lhe game
be.W..ntheNewYorkCoamoaand
the Waahlngton Diplomats. (2 hrs .•
30mlna.)
(I) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
(ill SIX IIUION DOLLAR MAN
(JI) ANTIQUES
2:11 ClliiOYlE-(DRAMA)"I'I "Hold
Back .... Nlllh1" 11151
2:30 (I) THE DEAF HEAR
(JI) HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
3:00 (1). YOYAGETO THE BOTIOII

OF THE SEA
()) AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(I) UNITED STATES OLYMPIC

~

3:30
4:00

I

(j]Y ZOOII

BARGAIN loiATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 1.50

.IIOVIE -(ADVENTURE)
"Char11• of the Llllht

~"111341

m

Trust Your Home Heat To

till. KIOI ARE PEOPLE TOO
1:00 (I) •

.lUilE 1, 11110

BILLION DOLLAR
THREAT

Station Listings

((sunday»

end projecta the Mute uaea of thla
vnattle 1ool. (10 min a.)
·

CIJ• ATISSUE
Cil TIME OF DELIVERANCE
()) IJ2) a
ISSUES AND

ANSWERS
(I) THIS IS THE LIFE
• (I) YlEWPOINT
()) THE OLD WEST 'Doomed At
Sundown'
liD OHIO JOURNAL
12:30 CIJe(I) MEETTHE PRESS
()) ORAL ROBERTS
CIJMOVIE-(MYSTERY)" "Wheel
o!Fortuntl" 11142
(I) DIRECTIONS
.())WILD KINGDOM
I!Dl THE ISSUE
liD NOVA 'Lightoftho 21a1Century'
Tho laser playa a algnllicant role in
a variety olllelda . Thla program
examinee soma of ita present uses.

4:30

5:00
5:30

I!Dl
SPORTS
SPECTACULAR
liD SPOLETO 'SO
()) IIISSIONARIES IN ACTION
OOIIOYlE-(COIIEDY)"' "Bread .
And Cllocolate" 11177
(1). BASEBALL Cincinnati Red a
va Sen Dleeo Padroa
()) HEUYE8
Cll BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va
Loa ~lea Dodgers
• (I) (ill KEMPER OPEN
(J) EXCELLENCE FOREVER Thla
programaxplofeatheworkofinter·
nationally known wood-carver
Auguat Crabtree.
liD UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'Your Obedient Servant' Hudson's
aecrettve behavk)r arouses sulon. (60 mlna.)
·
TIINK ABOUT TOMORROW
i!2l • WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS 1) U.S. Auto Ctub Dirt
Race from Illinois. 2) A special per·
forma nee by the Chinese Acrobala
ot Taiwan. (IKl mlna.) .
(I) SPORTS WORLD 1) World
Championship of Amateur Bowling
from Miami. 2) U.S. Men'aClymnaa·
tics Championships from Ohio. 3)
AIAW National Women's Col· .
loglale Track and Field Champion·
ahlpa. (IKl mlna.)
()) LAWMAKERS
()) WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
(I) AFRICANS
liD ELECTRIC COMPANY
()) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(!)MOYIE -(SCIENCE·FICTION)

f:

...

11

Moonreker" 1i79

liD ClROUCHO

EVENING
11:00 (I) ABC NEWS
(I) POP GOES THE COUNTRY
.(J)Clal NEWS
(J) BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
liD SESAME STREET
11:30 (I).(I) NBC NEWS
())FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
(I)
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTUNG
(I) NEWS
.(I) (Ill CBS NEWS
7:00 CIJe(I)DISNEY'SWONDERFUL
WORLD 'The Young Runaways' A
coupJt of runawaya, on a mission to
kidnap lhelrbrother and slater from
a foaler home. -.nd up In a tangle
wHh bank robbers. (Pt. I. of a two·
(!!rt eplaode; 60 mlna.)
l1J JIIIMY SWAGGART
(I) IJ2). THE YEAGERS Carroll
Yeager and members of hialemily
light lor their livea alter their plane
&lt;:raahealndeaolatemou~la lnaand

-

lheyarothrealanedbyavalanchea
of mud. Stars: Andy Griffith, David
Acl&lt;royd. (60 min a.)
.(J)I!DliOIIINUTES
()) WAR AND PEACE
liD FRENCH CHEF
7:30 (I) RAT PATROL
.
liD WALL STREET WEEK 'Lone

Star Strateev'
8:00 (I) • (I) aw&gt;a Thoullh hoepl·
tallzed, Ponch halpo Jon and hla
temporary repla.-t to oolve 1
raah of robberlu committed by
thlavea who uao atolen cera.
apu1; 10 min a.) ·

l

REX HUIIBARO

IIOY1E -(COMEDY) " ' "The
IIH.awt" 11171
(I) IIOYIE -(FANTASY) •••141
"The 5,000 Ftnee" Of Dr. T."

11163
(I) i!2l • HAL LINDEN'S BIG
APPL! Hat Linden atepa out ot the
aquadi'OOIIIandlntotheatreetaand
akyacrapera of New York for a na·
tlvaaon'avoyagehomolnaapeclal
hour of mualc and comedy with
gulata Shacky Clreane, Robert
ClulltaumoendlheRadloCityMualc
Hell' a Rockattea. (10 mlna.)
• (I) (ill ARCHIE BUNKER' S
PLACE Edith's frantic scurrying
doea tittle to aatlaly a howling Ar·
chle, who Ia alck over the energy
crlala. (Repeat)
(J) ())) ODYSSEY 'The Chaco
Leeacy' O~ar 900 Years ago. the
lnhabHanta of Chaco Canyon, New
Mexico, undertook one olthe moat
comprehensive building prOjects
avir. After 50 yeara of ar·
cheologlcalatudy, how and why
!heaepeopla developed such a ao·
phlatlcated technology Ia only now
becoming clear. (10 min a.)
8:30 .(J)(iiiONEDAYATAniiEMax
and Julie are left homeleaa during
an airline strike, and their aolulion
for a place to stay teavea Ann and
Barbara climbing lhe walla.
{BIIJ!!II)

11:00 (1). THEDREAIIMERCHANTS
Slara: Morgan Fairchild. Mark Her·
mon, Brlanne Leary. An ambitious
young drifter named Johnny Edge
begins a movie studio dynaaty in
Hollywood'• golden era. (Pt II; 2
hra.)
(I) 700CLUB
(J)IJ2). SUNDAY NIGHT MOYIE
'Tha Deatructora' t974 Stars: Ml·
chaal Caine, Anthony Quinn.
(I) THE BIG EVENT 'Tha Great
Smokalfloadblock' 1978
.Cil!l!ll ALICE Alice leads the
glrladowntharoadofrebelllonaher
Mellnatella atimoclockat the diner.
{BeJ!!II)
(IJ lUl MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Diaraoll' Episode t. 'Dizzy' In this
llrat eplaode of a lour part aeries
baaed on thallle and llmea of Ben·
jamln Dlaraell, he Ia Invited to
acoroa otfaahlonable London par·
tlea, where he engages some of
Englond~ a moal prominent poll·
ticlana In verbal combat. (60
min a.}
11:30 • (I) ®) THE JEFFERSON$
When friends from Helen's high
school days make Tom feel out of
placalnhlaownhome,hemakeathe
mistake of turning to George tor
help. (Repeat)
10:00 (I) KENNETH COPELAND
(!)
BETIE MIDLER SHOW
Bedecked and bedazzling with an
exuberance that never dies down,
BeNe 'The Rose ' Midler stars in th is
dynamic concert performance. It 's
a high energy, award"'Winning
exclusive.
&lt;IlENERGYJ;XPOTheDeveloping
Energy Cri ala; ALong Trad it ion,and
examines the history of America's
f!!...eaent energy situation.
•Cilllll TRAPPER JOHN M.D.
Faal, brilliant emergency action by
1rapper and Or. Riverside saves
thollleOf aglrllying critically injured
In the street but threatens later to
maktti«ingduckaotRiversideand
Gonzo. (Repeal; flo mina.)
(J) FIRING LINE 'The Cabinet:
What Are Ita Re sponsibilities?'
Cluaat: Jack H. Watson, Jr., Ass is·
tanl to the President lor Inter·
Governmental Aft airs ,Secretary t a
lheCablnel. Host: William F. Buck·
'!l· Jr. (60 mlna.)
lUl BEN WATTENBERG'S 1080
'Sri lanka: Second Thought a In tho
Third World' A sleepy island In the
Indian Ocean irowing more anti·
Waalern and pro·aoclallat , bu t,
when the revolution comes, It ia pro·
democracy, pro-economic liberty.
Whal happened?
·
10:30 liD MOYIE -(MYSTERY) "
11

Jamalcalnn" 1839

•
o!Juetlce'Thlaprogramtocuuaon
-•tcourtceuolnanattemptto
examine tbe plea borgalnlng
atem
. In Florida. (10 mlna.)

11:11

i

PIIA PULSE
CBS NEWS

11:30 CIJ.IIOVIE-(COIIEDY)'" "No
Time For c-dr" liMO
()) THE KING IS COlliNG
(]) SNEAK PREVIEW: JUNE
(I) OPEN UP

(I) ABC NEWS
(I) NBC LATE NtGHT IIOYJE
• ClliiOYIE -(SUSPENSE)"
''K...,.In Everr Cort~t~r" 11175
(ill MOYlE -(DRAMA) ••141 "Cha~
lenste" 1070
11:41 (I) BENNY HILL SHOW
ABC NEWS
12:00 (!) GUlLTY OR NOT GUlLTY The
Statava Or.Coppollno. With the aid
of stock footoge andatilla,thiafaat·
paced excluaive recreates the
rivetlngmurdertrialotor. Carl Cop·
polino, a trial which aelzed Amer·
lea's attention during lhe 'BOa.
()) BEN WATTENBERG'S 1980
'Sri lanka: Second Thoughts in the
Third World' A sleepy island in the
tndlan O&lt;:ean growing more anti·
Wealern and pro·aoclaliat , but ,
whontherevolutloncomea,ltlapro·
democracy, pro-economic liberty.
Whal hoppened?
12:45 (I) THREE'S A CROWD
1:00 C1J MOYIE -(WESTERN) "\Ia
11
Comlnche StatJon'' 1960
1:30 (I) NEWS
1:45
NEWS
2:30 (I) MOYIE -(ADVENTURE) "
"Ghoat otlhe China Sea" 1958
4:00 C1J MAVERICK
5:00 (I) UNTOUCHABLES

!Dl.

112l.

HAL LINDEN
SPECIAL
There 's a song 1n the atr.
taps on the t oes and a laugh
in the hea rt wh en Hal Ltnden
(pict ured). st ar of AB C's
'Barn ey Miller .' steps out of
the squad room and into the
st reets and sky scra per s ol
New York for a nat1v e son 's
musical voyage hom e 1n ·Hal
linden 's Big Apple .' a spe c1al
hour of musi c and comedy
with gue sts Shecky 'Greene .
Robert Guillaume ('Benson' )
and the Radi o C1ty Mus1c
Hall's Roc kettes .
'Hal Linden 's Big Apple ' w1ll
air on ABC -TV SUNDAY,
JUNE 1.
CH[C I'. liSTI NGS 1"0 ~ l .V.Cl TI M£

Honda

for
1980

11:00 (I) • ()) (I) CJ ()) lllliDl Gl
NEWS
I
()) NEWSIGHT
(I) RUFF HOUSE
(J) NON-FICTION TELEVISION
--c:::;......!S.W.- - ---·.:.I;.;;;.;.;.ot
. ,, . .
'Pief!jll(ll,li(' ipq : A n,tlmerica~l'(ay , , , •"'
. , , , , , • .

�Page Two-TV Supplement:

)

Page 1'bree-TV Supplement

'Jazz', 'Kramer' offered this .week
By LARRY EWING
Area theatres are offering moviegoers two outstanding-and conceptually diverse-films this week.
KRAMER VS. KRAMER (PG), a
faithful adaptation of Avery Corman's novel, is basically the story of
a court battle over custody of a
young boy, and what went before
and came after that battle. There
are no villains here, merely human
beings with flaws. The perfonnances are magnificent, Including one by a marvelous new
child actor, Justin Henry.
As a multiple Academy Award
winner, the freshness of "Kramer"
may be attributed, to a great extent,
to the fact that this is one of those
movies that they don't make
anymore.
"Kramer" is not a 'director's film'
or a 'cinemaphotograber'sfllm'; it is
an actor's film. The technical aspects are secondary to the human
drama portrayed. You will not be
overwhelmed with special effects,
oblique camera angles or mindbending light shows.
You will be taken, however, by the
immaculate polish and great depth
of feeling Cl'eated by the principal
characters. In a very real sense,
'Kramer' is a throw-back to an age
when movie direction was used sen-

sitively rather than overwhelmingly.
'Life and love, and ALL THAT
JAZZ, is bull-" says Roy Shelder,
as Joey Gideon. That self·
proclamation perhaps best
describes director Bob Fosse's approach to existence In his
remarkable, autobiographical film.
'All That Jazz' (R) is w'director's
film.' It is pure and not~ly,
'Fosse'-the multiple Tony and
Academy award winning
choreographer, author and director.
Roy Sheider, In the role of his
career, is superb as he plays a great
Broadway
director
and
choreographer. With the exeptioo of
nwnerous trips into a realm of fantasy, the story never leaves the
world of his rehearsal room, theatre,
and bedroom.
The film's portrayal of the
backstage life of theatnH!own to
the sweat-is unflinchingly authentic. One extraordinary sequence
shows the audience what a really gifted director can accomplish with absolutely lousy material and
mediocre performers.
Even at its most serious, 'All That
Jazz' is one of the most joyftil and
magnificent "what is life all about"
films ever made.

Cable
(2) WSAZ-TV (NBC)

ChaMel

(3) CBN

(4) liB().TV (ABC)
(5)

(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)

wrns

WTVN-TV (ABC)
Wl'AP-TV (NBC)
WCHS-TV (CBS)
WMUI.rTV (PBS)
\\!BNS-TV (CBS)
WOUB-TV (PBS)
WOWK-TV (ABC)

3
3
6

17
6
15
8

33
10
20
13

The above listing provides chaMel nwnbers for cable subscribers.
Schedules of programs are provided by the television stations
which reserve the right to make last-minute changes. Tbe SUDday
Tlmes-Sentlllel is not responsible for schedule changes.
Schedules copyright 1980 T.V. Data Inc.

•"141

IIORNING
1:10
1:30
8:00

WQIILDATLARGE
AGRICULTURE U.S.A. •
CHRISTOPHER CLOSE-liP
BETWI!!N THE UNES
(ill AIII!RtCAN PROBLEMS AND

I.

.CHAWNGES
8:30

BEHIND THE
BADGE
Elizabe'th Montgomery and
O.J. Simpson (pictured) star as
detectives whose close professional relationship leads to a
strong personal attachment, in
'Behind the Badge,' a madefor-television film to be presented on 'The CBS Wednesday
Night Movies ,' WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 4 on CBS-TV.
This tele·flick aired on the
network last year with surprisingly strong ratings. despite the
controversial undertones.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME

CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP

KOINONIA

(I) ABETTER WAY
TIIEEHOUSE CWB
• THIS IS THE UFE

7:00

I

FORD PHILPOT

BANANA SPUTS
(I) OLD nilE GOSPEL HOUR
!lABAN LEAGUE
IDle ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:30 CIJe T.Y. CHAPEL
()) DAWSON IIEIIORIAL BAP.
nST CHURCH SERVICE
(I) IT IS WRITTEN
(I) EDDIE SAUNDERS
(I) JIIIIIY SWAGGART
nilE GOSPEL HOUR
BIBLE ANSWERS
8:00 (I)
IIORIION CHOIR
()) THE LESSON
(I)
THREE STOOGES AND
FRI!NDS
(I) GRACE CATHEDRAL
• (I) DAY OF DISCOVERY
(I)())) SESAME STREET
i!2l •
EVANGELISTIC
OUTREACH
8:30 CIJe ORAL ROBERTS
()) CHAPEL HOUR
(I) CONTACT
QPENBIBLE
(I) REY. LEONARD REPASS
JAIIES ROBISON
LOWER UGHTHOUSE
11:00 (I)
SINGING JUBLIEE
()) ROBERT SCHULLER
PARTRIDGE FAMILY
·
REX HUIIBARD
ABETTER WAY
(I) CHRISTIAN CENTER
STUDIO SEt;
(ill ORAL ROBERTS
())) IIISTf:R ROGf:RS
IJ2). Rf:Y. R.A. Wf:ST
11:30 (I) GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
(I) FAITH FOR TODAY
• (I) ROBERT SCHULLER
(I) BIG BLUE MARBLE
(ill IT IS WRITTEN
())) BESAIIESTREET
10:00 CIJe REXHUIIBARD
()).CHANGED UYES
(I) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(I) KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
(I) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
(I) BESAIIE STREET
®liiOYIE -(WESTERN)''' "Sono
Of Katie Elcltr" 11165
IJ2). JIIIIIY SWAGGART
10:30 ())SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
CIJIIOYIE-(DRAIIA)"" "S.par·
ale Tableo" 11158
• ()) ERNESTANGLEY

If:

i!Dll

Patrick Macnee (right) is
an avenger no more ; he' s
an international villain .
trading in his bowler hat
for a brace of beautiestwins Beth and Karen
Specht (or Karen and Beth
Specht; only their mother
knows for sure)-in 'The
Billion Dollar Threat,· an
encore presentation airing
on ABC-TV's 'The ABC.
Friday
Night
Movie,'

FRIDAY, JUNE 6.
CHECK liSTINGS fO R WCT TIME "''

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.

11:00 (1). HUMAN DIMENSIONS
())IN TOUCH
(I) REX HUIIBARD
()) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'The
Old Curiosity .Shop' Oullp visits
Clrandlalher, beralea him lor gam·
bllng and demands 'to be repaid
Immediately.
liD ELECTRIC COMPANY
IDJID REY.HENRYMAHAN
11:30 (I) •
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
CIJIJ2)
ANIMALS, ANIMALS,
ANIMALS
• (I) FACE THE NATION
()) WORLD OF THE SEA
())) BIG BLUE MARBLE
AFTERNOON
12:00

FREE ESTIMATES PROMPT SERVICE
224 First Street
675·2460
Point Pleasant

()) D. JAMES KENNEDY
(I) AMERICA'S ATHLETES 11180
S.rlea devoted to examining and
revealing the beat athletea who
-•torepreaent!heUnHedStataa
et lhe Olymplca to be held In
lloacow.
(I) PUIUCPOUCYFORUII
•
(I)
MOYIE
-(SUSPENSE-DRAMA) "141 "Baf·
lied" 11172
(J) WESTVIRGIHIASTATEHIGH
8CHOOL TRACK MEET
FACE THE MAnON
1:30
HOGAII'S HEROES
HOCKING
VALLEY
IWEGRASS

I

!Dl·~

2:00 ()) WORLD OF PENTf:COST
(I) IJ2) • NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sport awill
provide coveroge of lhe game
be.W..ntheNewYorkCoamoaand
the Waahlngton Diplomats. (2 hrs .•
30mlna.)
(I) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
(ill SIX IIUION DOLLAR MAN
(JI) ANTIQUES
2:11 ClliiOYlE-(DRAMA)"I'I "Hold
Back .... Nlllh1" 11151
2:30 (I) THE DEAF HEAR
(JI) HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
3:00 (1). YOYAGETO THE BOTIOII

OF THE SEA
()) AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(I) UNITED STATES OLYMPIC

~

3:30
4:00

I

(j]Y ZOOII

BARGAIN loiATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS JUST S 1.50

.IIOVIE -(ADVENTURE)
"Char11• of the Llllht

~"111341

m

Trust Your Home Heat To

till. KIOI ARE PEOPLE TOO
1:00 (I) •

.lUilE 1, 11110

BILLION DOLLAR
THREAT

Station Listings

((sunday»

end projecta the Mute uaea of thla
vnattle 1ool. (10 min a.)
·

CIJ• ATISSUE
Cil TIME OF DELIVERANCE
()) IJ2) a
ISSUES AND

ANSWERS
(I) THIS IS THE LIFE
• (I) YlEWPOINT
()) THE OLD WEST 'Doomed At
Sundown'
liD OHIO JOURNAL
12:30 CIJe(I) MEETTHE PRESS
()) ORAL ROBERTS
CIJMOVIE-(MYSTERY)" "Wheel
o!Fortuntl" 11142
(I) DIRECTIONS
.())WILD KINGDOM
I!Dl THE ISSUE
liD NOVA 'Lightoftho 21a1Century'
Tho laser playa a algnllicant role in
a variety olllelda . Thla program
examinee soma of ita present uses.

4:30

5:00
5:30

I!Dl
SPORTS
SPECTACULAR
liD SPOLETO 'SO
()) IIISSIONARIES IN ACTION
OOIIOYlE-(COIIEDY)"' "Bread .
And Cllocolate" 11177
(1). BASEBALL Cincinnati Red a
va Sen Dleeo Padroa
()) HEUYE8
Cll BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va
Loa ~lea Dodgers
• (I) (ill KEMPER OPEN
(J) EXCELLENCE FOREVER Thla
programaxplofeatheworkofinter·
nationally known wood-carver
Auguat Crabtree.
liD UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'Your Obedient Servant' Hudson's
aecrettve behavk)r arouses sulon. (60 mlna.)
·
TIINK ABOUT TOMORROW
i!2l • WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS 1) U.S. Auto Ctub Dirt
Race from Illinois. 2) A special per·
forma nee by the Chinese Acrobala
ot Taiwan. (IKl mlna.) .
(I) SPORTS WORLD 1) World
Championship of Amateur Bowling
from Miami. 2) U.S. Men'aClymnaa·
tics Championships from Ohio. 3)
AIAW National Women's Col· .
loglale Track and Field Champion·
ahlpa. (IKl mlna.)
()) LAWMAKERS
()) WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
(I) AFRICANS
liD ELECTRIC COMPANY
()) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(!)MOYIE -(SCIENCE·FICTION)

f:

...

11

Moonreker" 1i79

liD ClROUCHO

EVENING
11:00 (I) ABC NEWS
(I) POP GOES THE COUNTRY
.(J)Clal NEWS
(J) BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
liD SESAME STREET
11:30 (I).(I) NBC NEWS
())FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
(I)
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTUNG
(I) NEWS
.(I) (Ill CBS NEWS
7:00 CIJe(I)DISNEY'SWONDERFUL
WORLD 'The Young Runaways' A
coupJt of runawaya, on a mission to
kidnap lhelrbrother and slater from
a foaler home. -.nd up In a tangle
wHh bank robbers. (Pt. I. of a two·
(!!rt eplaode; 60 mlna.)
l1J JIIIMY SWAGGART
(I) IJ2). THE YEAGERS Carroll
Yeager and members of hialemily
light lor their livea alter their plane
&lt;:raahealndeaolatemou~la lnaand

-

lheyarothrealanedbyavalanchea
of mud. Stars: Andy Griffith, David
Acl&lt;royd. (60 min a.)
.(J)I!DliOIIINUTES
()) WAR AND PEACE
liD FRENCH CHEF
7:30 (I) RAT PATROL
.
liD WALL STREET WEEK 'Lone

Star Strateev'
8:00 (I) • (I) aw&gt;a Thoullh hoepl·
tallzed, Ponch halpo Jon and hla
temporary repla.-t to oolve 1
raah of robberlu committed by
thlavea who uao atolen cera.
apu1; 10 min a.) ·

l

REX HUIIBARO

IIOY1E -(COMEDY) " ' "The
IIH.awt" 11171
(I) IIOYIE -(FANTASY) •••141
"The 5,000 Ftnee" Of Dr. T."

11163
(I) i!2l • HAL LINDEN'S BIG
APPL! Hat Linden atepa out ot the
aquadi'OOIIIandlntotheatreetaand
akyacrapera of New York for a na·
tlvaaon'avoyagehomolnaapeclal
hour of mualc and comedy with
gulata Shacky Clreane, Robert
ClulltaumoendlheRadloCityMualc
Hell' a Rockattea. (10 mlna.)
• (I) (ill ARCHIE BUNKER' S
PLACE Edith's frantic scurrying
doea tittle to aatlaly a howling Ar·
chle, who Ia alck over the energy
crlala. (Repeat)
(J) ())) ODYSSEY 'The Chaco
Leeacy' O~ar 900 Years ago. the
lnhabHanta of Chaco Canyon, New
Mexico, undertook one olthe moat
comprehensive building prOjects
avir. After 50 yeara of ar·
cheologlcalatudy, how and why
!heaepeopla developed such a ao·
phlatlcated technology Ia only now
becoming clear. (10 min a.)
8:30 .(J)(iiiONEDAYATAniiEMax
and Julie are left homeleaa during
an airline strike, and their aolulion
for a place to stay teavea Ann and
Barbara climbing lhe walla.
{BIIJ!!II)

11:00 (1). THEDREAIIMERCHANTS
Slara: Morgan Fairchild. Mark Her·
mon, Brlanne Leary. An ambitious
young drifter named Johnny Edge
begins a movie studio dynaaty in
Hollywood'• golden era. (Pt II; 2
hra.)
(I) 700CLUB
(J)IJ2). SUNDAY NIGHT MOYIE
'Tha Deatructora' t974 Stars: Ml·
chaal Caine, Anthony Quinn.
(I) THE BIG EVENT 'Tha Great
Smokalfloadblock' 1978
.Cil!l!ll ALICE Alice leads the
glrladowntharoadofrebelllonaher
Mellnatella atimoclockat the diner.
{BeJ!!II)
(IJ lUl MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Diaraoll' Episode t. 'Dizzy' In this
llrat eplaode of a lour part aeries
baaed on thallle and llmea of Ben·
jamln Dlaraell, he Ia Invited to
acoroa otfaahlonable London par·
tlea, where he engages some of
Englond~ a moal prominent poll·
ticlana In verbal combat. (60
min a.}
11:30 • (I) ®) THE JEFFERSON$
When friends from Helen's high
school days make Tom feel out of
placalnhlaownhome,hemakeathe
mistake of turning to George tor
help. (Repeat)
10:00 (I) KENNETH COPELAND
(!)
BETIE MIDLER SHOW
Bedecked and bedazzling with an
exuberance that never dies down,
BeNe 'The Rose ' Midler stars in th is
dynamic concert performance. It 's
a high energy, award"'Winning
exclusive.
&lt;IlENERGYJ;XPOTheDeveloping
Energy Cri ala; ALong Trad it ion,and
examines the history of America's
f!!...eaent energy situation.
•Cilllll TRAPPER JOHN M.D.
Faal, brilliant emergency action by
1rapper and Or. Riverside saves
thollleOf aglrllying critically injured
In the street but threatens later to
maktti«ingduckaotRiversideand
Gonzo. (Repeal; flo mina.)
(J) FIRING LINE 'The Cabinet:
What Are Ita Re sponsibilities?'
Cluaat: Jack H. Watson, Jr., Ass is·
tanl to the President lor Inter·
Governmental Aft airs ,Secretary t a
lheCablnel. Host: William F. Buck·
'!l· Jr. (60 mlna.)
lUl BEN WATTENBERG'S 1080
'Sri lanka: Second Thought a In tho
Third World' A sleepy island In the
Indian Ocean irowing more anti·
Waalern and pro·aoclallat , bu t,
when the revolution comes, It ia pro·
democracy, pro-economic liberty.
Whal happened?
·
10:30 liD MOYIE -(MYSTERY) "
11

Jamalcalnn" 1839

•
o!Juetlce'Thlaprogramtocuuaon
-•tcourtceuolnanattemptto
examine tbe plea borgalnlng
atem
. In Florida. (10 mlna.)

11:11

i

PIIA PULSE
CBS NEWS

11:30 CIJ.IIOVIE-(COIIEDY)'" "No
Time For c-dr" liMO
()) THE KING IS COlliNG
(]) SNEAK PREVIEW: JUNE
(I) OPEN UP

(I) ABC NEWS
(I) NBC LATE NtGHT IIOYJE
• ClliiOYIE -(SUSPENSE)"
''K...,.In Everr Cort~t~r" 11175
(ill MOYlE -(DRAMA) ••141 "Cha~
lenste" 1070
11:41 (I) BENNY HILL SHOW
ABC NEWS
12:00 (!) GUlLTY OR NOT GUlLTY The
Statava Or.Coppollno. With the aid
of stock footoge andatilla,thiafaat·
paced excluaive recreates the
rivetlngmurdertrialotor. Carl Cop·
polino, a trial which aelzed Amer·
lea's attention during lhe 'BOa.
()) BEN WATTENBERG'S 1980
'Sri lanka: Second Thoughts in the
Third World' A sleepy island in the
tndlan O&lt;:ean growing more anti·
Wealern and pro·aoclaliat , but ,
whontherevolutloncomea,ltlapro·
democracy, pro-economic liberty.
Whal hoppened?
12:45 (I) THREE'S A CROWD
1:00 C1J MOYIE -(WESTERN) "\Ia
11
Comlnche StatJon'' 1960
1:30 (I) NEWS
1:45
NEWS
2:30 (I) MOYIE -(ADVENTURE) "
"Ghoat otlhe China Sea" 1958
4:00 C1J MAVERICK
5:00 (I) UNTOUCHABLES

!Dl.

112l.

HAL LINDEN
SPECIAL
There 's a song 1n the atr.
taps on the t oes and a laugh
in the hea rt wh en Hal Ltnden
(pict ured). st ar of AB C's
'Barn ey Miller .' steps out of
the squad room and into the
st reets and sky scra per s ol
New York for a nat1v e son 's
musical voyage hom e 1n ·Hal
linden 's Big Apple .' a spe c1al
hour of musi c and comedy
with gue sts Shecky 'Greene .
Robert Guillaume ('Benson' )
and the Radi o C1ty Mus1c
Hall's Roc kettes .
'Hal Linden 's Big Apple ' w1ll
air on ABC -TV SUNDAY,
JUNE 1.
CH[C I'. liSTI NGS 1"0 ~ l .V.Cl TI M£

Honda

for
1980

11:00 (I) • ()) (I) CJ ()) lllliDl Gl
NEWS
I
()) NEWSIGHT
(I) RUFF HOUSE
(J) NON-FICTION TELEVISION
--c:::;......!S.W.- - ---·.:.I;.;;;.;.;.ot
. ,, . .
'Pief!jll(ll,li(' ipq : A n,tlmerica~l'(ay , , , •"'
. , , , , , • .

�Page Four-TV Supplement

• • r '

•

«daytime))
liON THIIII Fill

IIORNIHG

1:41
1:10

~·
FAIIII REPOIIT
WOIILDATLAROI!(W!D.)
•
Pn. cw•TALK AND
VARIETY

a:aa Cll oooo WORD

8:00 (() VARIOUS PROGRAMMING

{PC. liON.)
(I) UITEN(IION.) World AI Large

~Cil700CWB

I

~HEALTH FIELD

8:0&amp;
8:1&amp;
8:20
8:30

1:45
8:10

WORLD AT LAROE (TitUR.)
ATHLETES(IION.)
OUTEN TAG
~ WORLDATLARQE(TUE.)
ROSSBAGLEYSHOW
NEWS
ClJ HEALTH FIELD
~ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
Cil. MORNING REPORT
(J) A. II. WEA THEA
~•
GOOD MORNING WEST
VIRGINIA

8:55 ~-NEWS
7:00 Cil.ClJ TODAY
ill FUN TillE
Cll ~ • GOOD MORNING

TELE

7:55
8:00

8:30
t:OO

Pulse

by Steve K. Walz
Last week this column offered its readers Part
I of a two part survey, which will give us an
opportunity to register their tele-pulse on television
programming. The results of both surveys will be
published prior to the beginning of the new fall TV
season. Part II of the survey, which zeroes in on
specific TV choices, appears below. Please feel free
to fill out the questionnaire and mail to : Tele-Pulse.
P.O. Box 123, Lyndhurst , N.J. 07071.

Which of these magazine shows
do you enjoy the most: '60
Minutes.' '20/20,' or 'Prime
Time Saturday'?

10:00

~DIN PROGRESS)
C!JIIOVIE -(SUSPENSE)
"lllreet Kllllt" 1178
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC NEWS

8:30

Which dramatic program do
you watch the most?

VILLAALEQRE

When i t comes to network news
coverage,. which news program
do you watch?

...

• • FACETHEIIUSIC
1.!)VI AIIEIIICAIISTYLE

()) 11C TAC DOUCIH
IIIAC!eL-LitNR REPORT
TV COMPU&amp;.OO IIIMCU, WIC,

DICK CAV!TT IHOW
• THAT GOOD OLE IWII+-

7:30

VILLE IIUIICGMalt: Larry~llln.
JallleFrtcka.
(() WOitDS OF 1101'!
(I) WOIEI'I GYWIAITICI

ACROSS
1 Accep table (clue to puzzle answer )
5 Orange peel
9 Auto
10 Type of poem

'CaeMraPalacalnvhalioaal' Part
I. H'a 1 daullng cllaplay ofagHity
and er-ca when the counlty'a top
---acceplthechal·
langa to : ' • In thla alha

12 Postage

E

15 Pu b game
18 Constella tion
20 Food stap le
21 Each

25 Baluchtstan tribesman
28 ,Chemtcal sutftx

31 Prayer ending
32 Nat K1ng ....

34 ·....• on her ftngers'
36 Martin and Tyler Moore
37 Gym pad
39 h clamatton of surprise
41 Screen
42 Relate

1:00

I

" '

3 Digraph

1111

(I) •

13 Rap lightly
puzzle

answer)

SCIIWI!S

·
Answer on
Page 9

THUll.,

~C. TUE., THUR.)

wiM'.t::=:

16 USA (clue to puzzle
answer)
l7 Japanese fis h
19 Spelunker's delight
23 Hurts
26 Fren ch for 'fnend '
27 Title again
29 Standard ·

mine.)
1:30 (I) CONSUIIIER REPORTI PRE·
ANTS 'Tile Medicine Show' For
-•conluaad about which
ovartM-counlardnlgaarathebait
buya, thla axcluaiYa Ollara a cure.
Thll aacond eegmant of ttlO'a an·
tortalnlng and Informative aerie•

30 English cathedral ci ty
33
35
36
38
40

ONE • A -.uON

Max Iaiii In love wtth Nancy, who
1oo1oa dMparltaly lor 1 way to tall
111111 the feeling IM't exactly
IIIIIIUII.
• (J) (il) RLY GIIAIWI
~DE
.
()) ® PICASSO: A PAINTER'S
DWIYPicaaeoapaakalorhimaall,
by0Merllof8ftactor'avolca-ovar,
1n lhla Intimate look at the artlet, hll
family, lrlaftda and - " •· (80

7 Closer

to

•

Bhlrtay plclco up tha piacal when

8 Struggle for breath
11 Joker

(I) AHOY GIIIFFITH SHOW
.(I) ()I AUCE(EXC.
(J) . VARIOUS PROGRAMMING

!IIIAMAN~oyec~byhlawjle'anag­

llllna.)

4 Fall
5 Street
6 Part ol the mind

June Magazine (THUll.)
(Ill. IIORNIIIG MAGAZINE
10:30 Cil •
ClJ
HOU.YWOOD

.

(J) !lOCK CHUIICH
(J) 1i110Y11! -(DitAIIA..flOIIANCE)
- •....,, Tile 111111 llllult Fll"

2 Church feast

(clue

~-t.IMREII REPORT

~an1uHOUSEONTHI

tloii.NaleO!Mwltakaahla'1ravellt.g etON' Otllto the countryalda
.._...._.andlalainlo¥awllh
a clallghtful woman. (Rapaat; eo

DOWN

14 AM

.THIPAIILY
ETSIHOW Guaet: Lola

F=~ROAD

22 Canal or lake
24 At no ttme

Cll 1ooa.ua

l•aac's son

lnd•an merchant
Trench
Like

Pronoun

LAVERNE AND

SHIRLEY

halpaahopparllftlkawlaacholcaa

• (I) (!I) PRICE ISRIGHT
C1J VARIOUS PROGRAMMING

(I)(JZ. ALLIIYCIILDREN
• (I) (JI YOUNG AND THE

., THUR.)

• FAMILY FEUD
11:&amp;&amp; (I) NEWS
11:57 .Cil®l NEWSIREAK
AFTERIIOOII

(Ij • (I) Cll • (I) ilDl (ft) •

NEWS
()) VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(I) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
~XC. liON., TUE.)
CIJIIISTER ROGERS
·
12:15 (I) MOVIE (liON.) 'Foreign In·
trlgua,' Love American Style
(IUE.)

2:00

C1J ELECtRic COMPANY
12:58 (I)~· FYI
1:00 CIJ.(!) DAYSOFOURLIVES

I

2:30

VARIOUS PROGIWIIIIHG
(Ill. ONE LIFE TO UYE
Cll Clll AS THE WORLD

2:51
3:00

~

• ClJ ANOTHER WORLD
(!XC. WID.) Daytime Emmy
Awarda (WED.)
FATHIRKNOWSIEST
@.FYI
700CWI
FUN nilE (EXC. WED.)
Baaaball (WED.) Atlanta Braveo va
San Franciaco Glints
GENERAL HOSPITAL
Cll GUIDING LIGHT
PAINT ALONG WITH NANCY
KOIIIIISKY
VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
OVER EASY
CIJCIII HEWS8REAK
(I) (Ill. FYI
()). IIR. CARTOON

I

(11)1

3:30
3:17

S:N
4:00

1
i

FI.INTSTOIIII (EXC. WED.)
II!IIVGRIFF.

~~OAT

JUNCTION
(I!XC. TUI!.) Tho CBS Library
(TUE,) 'Tha Incredible Book

.Cll DOCTORS

TURNS
UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
2:21
NEWS

12:30 (I) MOVIE (EXC. IION,) 'Gunfight
AtDodgaCity'(TUE.), 'Clouds Over
Europa' (WED.), 'Hu"icane Smith'
R.l, 'Battle Stationo' (FRI.)
~-RYAN'S HOPE
PASSWORD PLUS
SEARCH FOR

I

RE~':.. ·

ICll WHEEL OF FORTUNE

TOII~RO~

ABCIIEWS

CR088WITS
THE TllltD STORY

!!OQAN'S HEROES

ilDl JOKER'S WILD (EXC. THUR.)

12:00

I

7:00

Which of your favorite TV stars
do you think could make the
jump into major motion
pictures?

(JHIJR.)

11;30

I

I~O:CHEws

AJIIIW.S -

Which famous movie star(s)
would you like to see in a TV
series, mini-series or teteflick?

TV

••l'o

ILOVEWCY
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Guaot:
Joanne
Woodward.
• (J) (il) CIS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF

Name two syndicated TV shows
that you enjoy.
(They can be old network
re-runs.)

.i])oiiORNINQ
(J) BODYWORKS (EXC. FRI.)
OdyaMy(FRI.)
ilDJ SIX IIIWON DOLLAR MAN
(J) VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
~XC. FRI.)
ilDl HOGAN'S HEROES
ilDJ CHUCK WHITE REPORTS
(() VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(I) HAZEL
eCIJ~Ql CAPTAIN KANGAROO
(I) SESAME STREET
(I) LUCY SHOW
Cil. BOIIIRAUNSHOW
llJ FAMILY AFFAIR
(I) BIG VALLEY
Cll (Ill. PilL DONAHUE SHOW
• (I) BI!VERLYIILLIIWES
(J) MOVIE 'Two·Way Stretch'
(MON., FRI.), 'Baby and tho Battle·
ship' (TUE.). 'Come and Got It'
~.), 'Lawle11 Range' (11-tUR.)
ilDl VARIOUS PROGRAIIIIING
(I) GREEN ACRES
808 NEWHART SHOW
ilDJ ONE DAY AT A TillE (EXC.
WED.)
Cil.ClJ CARD SHARKS

(I) (Ill •

~·Wc,fa(l).fo~, :~::

FILL IN
What is your favorite
situation-comedy?

by
K. Walz
New York- During Hollywood's
'Golden Era' of the 30's and 40's,
the major movie studios actively
recruited young actors and actresses who they felt could be
molded into big screen super·
stars. Known as the star system,
each studio boasted a star·
studded roster of name contract
players with whom the producers,
distributors and the movie-going
public could identify.
. With the advent of TV in the
50's, the studios began to lose
money and implemented austerity measures which curtailed the
signing of new talent.
Today, almost all the movie and
TV casting is done by independent
firms which work in tandem with
the various production companies. Universal Studios might be
the only remaining production
house that actively signs aspiring
thesps to contract player
agreements (Erin Gray of 'Buck
Rogers'
being
a
prime
example) .
1 Over
at ABC, where the
network narrowly lost out to CBS
for the '79·'80 prime-time season
after four consecutive years of
leadership, network execs have
decided to pick up where the
movie studios of the 'Golden Era'
left off. They have hired gutsy,
maverick Hollywood agent Joyce
Selznick (cousin of movie mogul
David 0 . Selznick) to scout tor
and sign talent exclusively for the
network .
"In me these people (actors/actresses] know they've got
a friend," boasted Selznick from
her office in Century City- ABC's
plush western corporate nerve
center.
Indeed Joyce has been more
than a friend to the likes of Darren
McGa~in, Tony Curtis, AI Pacino
and Candice Bergen, all of whom
were. discovered and launched by
the aggressive talent agent. Joyce
also takes credit for enhancing
the burgeoning careers of Robert
Redford and Barbra Streisand
while she was a talent coordinator
at Columbia Pictures. Her most
recent and glowing success was
the casting of little known Kurt
Russell and Season Hubley in the
ABC bio-pic 'Elvis' which went
through the Nielsen roof .

EVENING
8
:00

Who
is
your
favorite
comedian/comedienne!

(I) MOVIE 'The Battling Bellhop'
(MON.), 'Ali Through tho Night'
(TUE.), 'Istanbul Exproaa' (WED.),
'Let's Dance' (THUR .), 'Tho Man
From the Diner' I Club' (FRI.)
(I) EDGE OF NIGHT
• (J) JEFFERSONS (EXC.
THUR.) June Magazine (THUR.)
Cll MOVIE 'Sin Antone Ainbuah'

11:00

JUNI! 2, 1110

Name your favorite dramatic
TV actor;actress.

.(I)

t:30

., ,.

~!!!!!ij!!!!!ij!!!!!ij!!!!!iji!iii
((monday» - MEDIA MONITOR
•
A Selznick rev1ves
Steve

Do you consider 'Real People'
and 'That's Incredible' news or
entertainment!

AMERICA

7:30

.. .

Page Five-TV Supplement

E!C!PO~SAIIE sTREET

I

ll

~

(I)
PI!RCI!NTAGES

(J) DR.WNO

PLAY

THE

·

® ELECT.-c COWANY

:loy lUNCH

@. HAPPYDAYSAGAII

I

RI!ALIICCOYS
STARTII£K ·
VARIOUS PIIOGIWI-a
GILLIGAII'S ISlAND (EXC.
WED.)
Clliii!RV GIIIFFIN
• CIJ GOllER PYLE (EXC.
TUI.)
GOllER PYLE
• TOllAND JERRY
1:00
MOVIE (WED.) 'C.H.O.M.P.S.'
IIY THREE SONS (EXC.
4:30

John-' (FRI.)

~ :::"OF .IEAIINIE

In the mt!llclne nwltatpleca.
(J) • • IIONDAY NIGHT IIARIALL New York Yankaoa vo
Kanaaa City Roylla or Cincinnati
Rada va Loa Angalao Dodgaro.
(Region wll dal811111na game to be
,....,..... in yOVIaraa.)
1:00 (J)II(I)IIONDAYIIIGHT 4TTHI
'MOVIES 'Sactela OIThraa Hungty
Wlvoa' 1t788tare: Jam~aFrancio·

I

WEI!.J

'

(1) SANFORD AND SON
® MISTER ROGERS
MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW
1:30 CIJ. tit II.A.I.H.
(() ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) MOVIE (THUR., FRI.) 'Bread
andChocolata'(THUR.),'Jeremiah

1

- · Jaaalcl WaHar.

(() 700CWI

(I)IIIOVI!o(DIIAIIA)••I'o "!IoiiarIIIII" 1071
.(J)CIIJ II.A.I.H.Ababy,l)omto
a K....,. woman and an Amartcan
Gl, II abandoned at lhe 4077111.

ATHLETIE:
.

SHOES

Boys, Men •nd,Won•..,
Open All D•y Thursdlty·

DAN.
&amp;

1:30

a-m-£ HouSE CALLS

Mi~

Oro.
chaala and Solomon looa Ieith I~
thamealvao when Charley hal a
day when ha can ....,lngly do no
right, and Norman haa a patient ha
!MY loaa unlaaa ha can gat a court
order lor an operation. (Rapaat)
(J)IILAII, THIVELANDTHIFU.
TUM Nancy Olckaraon praaldao
oww a eaaa1on of Amartcan and Ia·
lam!R woman exploring the vut
. . . . .108 In lholr llloal)iaa.

.lOyce Solznlck'a New Yorll d~Koverlaa, Ia ahown
here with co-star Peter Scolari In 'llolom BuddiH,' a pro)ectad new ABC fall
aarlas.
Tom Hlnkl (left), one of

"I am responsible for supplYing be in ·Bosom Budd1es · along with
the network with new stars. There fellow recruit Tom Hanks, and Ann
is a tremendous demand for new ' Jillian who starred on Broadway in
faces and personalities in Holly- ' 'Sugar Babies' and will co-star in
wood today. And as far as I know. 'It's A Living.'
Said Selznick, "Everybody
what I am doing for ABC has
never been done before. It's sort thought I was crazy when I
of a streamlined version of the old claimed Kurt Russell would be
talent scout hunt." Joyce re· right for the ·Elvis· part. I know
what I'm doing! ABC will be able
marked.
How has she scouted for her to use that talent over a long
talent? On a swing through New period of time . Talent just doesn 't
York City several months ago, drop in from the sky. It takes
which she claimed was bristling talent to know talent!"
To say that Ms. Selznick is
with untapped talent, Joyce test·
ed close to 150 people a day. overly confident would be the
After she discovered some here- understatement of the year, but
tofore unknown talent, Joyce let's face it, her accomplishments
took them back to the West Coast speak for themselves and that' s
where they were tested again and what ABC is banking on. It also
then summarily placed in series gives Joyce a sense of satisfaction
to see these kids finally getting a
and pilots.
Some of the names you'll be fair shake .
" My major concern is that
hearing from in 1980 include AI
Corley, who was thrust into the those kids out of New York got a
Spelling-Goldberg 'Oil' replace· break . If the effort works . this will
ment series. and John Jones. who afford us the opportunity to find
Selznick claims has 'everything to people all over the country . We
be a superstar .' Three of Joyce 's have barely scratched the
dis'coveries have already been surface-and believe me, the star
cast in scheduled ABC fall series . system still exists and makes the
They are : Dtnna Dixon , who will difference.''
Fknnca Handereon. (80 mino.)
()) RQPBAGLEYSHOW
(I) (Ill •
ABC NEWS

® IIILAII, Till VEL AND THE
FUTURE
10:00 (I) J.AIT OF Till WLD
.()) LOUGRANTCoualnAnoraw
gooa on trial lor murder and the
Tribuna 11111 Ieaia tho atrain ol
covartngthaetorybacauMOIOon·
ovan'a cloaa ralatlonahlp to tho
clafondant. (Conclullon; eo m1na.1
(J) JAZZ AT THE IIIAIIITI!NAIICE
1H0P 'Phil Wooda Quartet' Thla Ia
the 11r1t progrom In a aerie a ol par~bythe 'tlanta ol jau',
taped In
Intimate aallingo.
PhiiWooclawaavotad 'OownBaat'

-H.

IICllfTUIII

.()) CIS LATE MOVIE 'HARRY
0: Account• Balanced' A woman
hlreo Harry to find out wilY har hut·
band Ia m~king lraquant tripo out ol
town. (Repeat) 'HEC RAMSEY:
Dead Heat' Staro: Richard Boone,
~Morgan. (Repeal)

-daeldabatwaananoperatlon
or a lifetime ol ahting on a rubber

m~gazine'o18781Hoaaxplayerol

IITIVEANO EYDIE
•
HEWS
10:30
IIIII! AND IE HEALED
IAII!IIALL Atlanta Brav11 VI
San Franclao Glanla
® OVER I!ASY Gueat: Walter
Mack. Holt; !!ua!! Oowna.
11:00 (I) • (I) Cll • Cll Clll ~ •

.

HEWS

()) I'I!STIVAL OF PRAISE
(I) MOVII! -(HORROR) ••• "Tha
Brood" 1878
(J) DAVEALU!NATLARGE
mJ DICK CAVETT IHOW Guut: .
·Richard Gilman, author and drama

critic.

t1:30 (I).ClJ THE TONIGHT SHOW

v-.

Gvael hoat: David Letterman.
Guotle: Ben
Joaa Molina,

I

(J) ABC CAPTIOIIED NEWS
I!IMOVII-(IIY8TI!RYI00 1'1 "Man
T!af" 1181
11:10 (I) (Ill. BARNEY MILLER Filh

the year, and hla 'Song For SIIY·

· ~~.:jnornlnltadloraGrammy.

I•

NEWS
2:00
IIELEYE
2:30
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
S:20
MAVERICK
4:00
700CWI
4:20
OPENUP
1:30 (JJ WORDS OF HOPE

~. (!!apaat) .

12:20

Cllllll. POLICE WOIWI'Tho

Buttercup KHiar' Pollee receive no
help !rom a proud, aecrotivolamlly
ol Greek immlgranta whooo
marnbarlara baing ayatematlcally
murdered in a blza"e laahion.
(!!apaatl
12:30 C!JMOVtE-(DRAIIA)•u "City On
1:00

Fire" 111711

'

(I). TOMORROW Hoot: Tom
Snyder. Guest: Quenton Criop,
authoroi'ThaNakadCiviiServant.'
apaat; eo mine.)
TRANSFORMED
PROGIWI UNANNOUNCED

l

HEWS

1:30 ~~&amp;KENNEDY
1:31 (I) MOVIE o(ORAIIA) 0 1'1 "Night
Tide" 1113

HJADQOARTERS

OPEN

MONDAY
and FRIDAY

TIL 8:00 P.M.

~ .

�Page Four-TV Supplement

• • r '

•

«daytime))
liON THIIII Fill

IIORNIHG

1:41
1:10

~·
FAIIII REPOIIT
WOIILDATLAROI!(W!D.)
•
Pn. cw•TALK AND
VARIETY

a:aa Cll oooo WORD

8:00 (() VARIOUS PROGRAMMING

{PC. liON.)
(I) UITEN(IION.) World AI Large

~Cil700CWB

I

~HEALTH FIELD

8:0&amp;
8:1&amp;
8:20
8:30

1:45
8:10

WORLD AT LAROE (TitUR.)
ATHLETES(IION.)
OUTEN TAG
~ WORLDATLARQE(TUE.)
ROSSBAGLEYSHOW
NEWS
ClJ HEALTH FIELD
~ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
Cil. MORNING REPORT
(J) A. II. WEA THEA
~•
GOOD MORNING WEST
VIRGINIA

8:55 ~-NEWS
7:00 Cil.ClJ TODAY
ill FUN TillE
Cll ~ • GOOD MORNING

TELE

7:55
8:00

8:30
t:OO

Pulse

by Steve K. Walz
Last week this column offered its readers Part
I of a two part survey, which will give us an
opportunity to register their tele-pulse on television
programming. The results of both surveys will be
published prior to the beginning of the new fall TV
season. Part II of the survey, which zeroes in on
specific TV choices, appears below. Please feel free
to fill out the questionnaire and mail to : Tele-Pulse.
P.O. Box 123, Lyndhurst , N.J. 07071.

Which of these magazine shows
do you enjoy the most: '60
Minutes.' '20/20,' or 'Prime
Time Saturday'?

10:00

~DIN PROGRESS)
C!JIIOVIE -(SUSPENSE)
"lllreet Kllllt" 1178
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC NEWS

8:30

Which dramatic program do
you watch the most?

VILLAALEQRE

When i t comes to network news
coverage,. which news program
do you watch?

...

• • FACETHEIIUSIC
1.!)VI AIIEIIICAIISTYLE

()) 11C TAC DOUCIH
IIIAC!eL-LitNR REPORT
TV COMPU&amp;.OO IIIMCU, WIC,

DICK CAV!TT IHOW
• THAT GOOD OLE IWII+-

7:30

VILLE IIUIICGMalt: Larry~llln.
JallleFrtcka.
(() WOitDS OF 1101'!
(I) WOIEI'I GYWIAITICI

ACROSS
1 Accep table (clue to puzzle answer )
5 Orange peel
9 Auto
10 Type of poem

'CaeMraPalacalnvhalioaal' Part
I. H'a 1 daullng cllaplay ofagHity
and er-ca when the counlty'a top
---acceplthechal·
langa to : ' • In thla alha

12 Postage

E

15 Pu b game
18 Constella tion
20 Food stap le
21 Each

25 Baluchtstan tribesman
28 ,Chemtcal sutftx

31 Prayer ending
32 Nat K1ng ....

34 ·....• on her ftngers'
36 Martin and Tyler Moore
37 Gym pad
39 h clamatton of surprise
41 Screen
42 Relate

1:00

I

" '

3 Digraph

1111

(I) •

13 Rap lightly
puzzle

answer)

SCIIWI!S

·
Answer on
Page 9

THUll.,

~C. TUE., THUR.)

wiM'.t::=:

16 USA (clue to puzzle
answer)
l7 Japanese fis h
19 Spelunker's delight
23 Hurts
26 Fren ch for 'fnend '
27 Title again
29 Standard ·

mine.)
1:30 (I) CONSUIIIER REPORTI PRE·
ANTS 'Tile Medicine Show' For
-•conluaad about which
ovartM-counlardnlgaarathebait
buya, thla axcluaiYa Ollara a cure.
Thll aacond eegmant of ttlO'a an·
tortalnlng and Informative aerie•

30 English cathedral ci ty
33
35
36
38
40

ONE • A -.uON

Max Iaiii In love wtth Nancy, who
1oo1oa dMparltaly lor 1 way to tall
111111 the feeling IM't exactly
IIIIIIUII.
• (J) (il) RLY GIIAIWI
~DE
.
()) ® PICASSO: A PAINTER'S
DWIYPicaaeoapaakalorhimaall,
by0Merllof8ftactor'avolca-ovar,
1n lhla Intimate look at the artlet, hll
family, lrlaftda and - " •· (80

7 Closer

to

•

Bhlrtay plclco up tha piacal when

8 Struggle for breath
11 Joker

(I) AHOY GIIIFFITH SHOW
.(I) ()I AUCE(EXC.
(J) . VARIOUS PROGRAMMING

!IIIAMAN~oyec~byhlawjle'anag­

llllna.)

4 Fall
5 Street
6 Part ol the mind

June Magazine (THUll.)
(Ill. IIORNIIIG MAGAZINE
10:30 Cil •
ClJ
HOU.YWOOD

.

(J) !lOCK CHUIICH
(J) 1i110Y11! -(DitAIIA..flOIIANCE)
- •....,, Tile 111111 llllult Fll"

2 Church feast

(clue

~-t.IMREII REPORT

~an1uHOUSEONTHI

tloii.NaleO!Mwltakaahla'1ravellt.g etON' Otllto the countryalda
.._...._.andlalainlo¥awllh
a clallghtful woman. (Rapaat; eo

DOWN

14 AM

.THIPAIILY
ETSIHOW Guaet: Lola

F=~ROAD

22 Canal or lake
24 At no ttme

Cll 1ooa.ua

l•aac's son

lnd•an merchant
Trench
Like

Pronoun

LAVERNE AND

SHIRLEY

halpaahopparllftlkawlaacholcaa

• (I) (!I) PRICE ISRIGHT
C1J VARIOUS PROGRAMMING

(I)(JZ. ALLIIYCIILDREN
• (I) (JI YOUNG AND THE

., THUR.)

• FAMILY FEUD
11:&amp;&amp; (I) NEWS
11:57 .Cil®l NEWSIREAK
AFTERIIOOII

(Ij • (I) Cll • (I) ilDl (ft) •

NEWS
()) VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(I) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
~XC. liON., TUE.)
CIJIIISTER ROGERS
·
12:15 (I) MOVIE (liON.) 'Foreign In·
trlgua,' Love American Style
(IUE.)

2:00

C1J ELECtRic COMPANY
12:58 (I)~· FYI
1:00 CIJ.(!) DAYSOFOURLIVES

I

2:30

VARIOUS PROGIWIIIIHG
(Ill. ONE LIFE TO UYE
Cll Clll AS THE WORLD

2:51
3:00

~

• ClJ ANOTHER WORLD
(!XC. WID.) Daytime Emmy
Awarda (WED.)
FATHIRKNOWSIEST
@.FYI
700CWI
FUN nilE (EXC. WED.)
Baaaball (WED.) Atlanta Braveo va
San Franciaco Glints
GENERAL HOSPITAL
Cll GUIDING LIGHT
PAINT ALONG WITH NANCY
KOIIIIISKY
VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
OVER EASY
CIJCIII HEWS8REAK
(I) (Ill. FYI
()). IIR. CARTOON

I

(11)1

3:30
3:17

S:N
4:00

1
i

FI.INTSTOIIII (EXC. WED.)
II!IIVGRIFF.

~~OAT

JUNCTION
(I!XC. TUI!.) Tho CBS Library
(TUE,) 'Tha Incredible Book

.Cll DOCTORS

TURNS
UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
2:21
NEWS

12:30 (I) MOVIE (EXC. IION,) 'Gunfight
AtDodgaCity'(TUE.), 'Clouds Over
Europa' (WED.), 'Hu"icane Smith'
R.l, 'Battle Stationo' (FRI.)
~-RYAN'S HOPE
PASSWORD PLUS
SEARCH FOR

I

RE~':.. ·

ICll WHEEL OF FORTUNE

TOII~RO~

ABCIIEWS

CR088WITS
THE TllltD STORY

!!OQAN'S HEROES

ilDl JOKER'S WILD (EXC. THUR.)

12:00

I

7:00

Which of your favorite TV stars
do you think could make the
jump into major motion
pictures?

(JHIJR.)

11;30

I

I~O:CHEws

AJIIIW.S -

Which famous movie star(s)
would you like to see in a TV
series, mini-series or teteflick?

TV

••l'o

ILOVEWCY
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Guaot:
Joanne
Woodward.
• (J) (il) CIS NEWS
(J) WILD WILD WORLD OF

Name two syndicated TV shows
that you enjoy.
(They can be old network
re-runs.)

.i])oiiORNINQ
(J) BODYWORKS (EXC. FRI.)
OdyaMy(FRI.)
ilDJ SIX IIIWON DOLLAR MAN
(J) VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
~XC. FRI.)
ilDl HOGAN'S HEROES
ilDJ CHUCK WHITE REPORTS
(() VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(I) HAZEL
eCIJ~Ql CAPTAIN KANGAROO
(I) SESAME STREET
(I) LUCY SHOW
Cil. BOIIIRAUNSHOW
llJ FAMILY AFFAIR
(I) BIG VALLEY
Cll (Ill. PilL DONAHUE SHOW
• (I) BI!VERLYIILLIIWES
(J) MOVIE 'Two·Way Stretch'
(MON., FRI.), 'Baby and tho Battle·
ship' (TUE.). 'Come and Got It'
~.), 'Lawle11 Range' (11-tUR.)
ilDl VARIOUS PROGRAIIIIING
(I) GREEN ACRES
808 NEWHART SHOW
ilDJ ONE DAY AT A TillE (EXC.
WED.)
Cil.ClJ CARD SHARKS

(I) (Ill •

~·Wc,fa(l).fo~, :~::

FILL IN
What is your favorite
situation-comedy?

by
K. Walz
New York- During Hollywood's
'Golden Era' of the 30's and 40's,
the major movie studios actively
recruited young actors and actresses who they felt could be
molded into big screen super·
stars. Known as the star system,
each studio boasted a star·
studded roster of name contract
players with whom the producers,
distributors and the movie-going
public could identify.
. With the advent of TV in the
50's, the studios began to lose
money and implemented austerity measures which curtailed the
signing of new talent.
Today, almost all the movie and
TV casting is done by independent
firms which work in tandem with
the various production companies. Universal Studios might be
the only remaining production
house that actively signs aspiring
thesps to contract player
agreements (Erin Gray of 'Buck
Rogers'
being
a
prime
example) .
1 Over
at ABC, where the
network narrowly lost out to CBS
for the '79·'80 prime-time season
after four consecutive years of
leadership, network execs have
decided to pick up where the
movie studios of the 'Golden Era'
left off. They have hired gutsy,
maverick Hollywood agent Joyce
Selznick (cousin of movie mogul
David 0 . Selznick) to scout tor
and sign talent exclusively for the
network .
"In me these people (actors/actresses] know they've got
a friend," boasted Selznick from
her office in Century City- ABC's
plush western corporate nerve
center.
Indeed Joyce has been more
than a friend to the likes of Darren
McGa~in, Tony Curtis, AI Pacino
and Candice Bergen, all of whom
were. discovered and launched by
the aggressive talent agent. Joyce
also takes credit for enhancing
the burgeoning careers of Robert
Redford and Barbra Streisand
while she was a talent coordinator
at Columbia Pictures. Her most
recent and glowing success was
the casting of little known Kurt
Russell and Season Hubley in the
ABC bio-pic 'Elvis' which went
through the Nielsen roof .

EVENING
8
:00

Who
is
your
favorite
comedian/comedienne!

(I) MOVIE 'The Battling Bellhop'
(MON.), 'Ali Through tho Night'
(TUE.), 'Istanbul Exproaa' (WED.),
'Let's Dance' (THUR .), 'Tho Man
From the Diner' I Club' (FRI.)
(I) EDGE OF NIGHT
• (J) JEFFERSONS (EXC.
THUR.) June Magazine (THUR.)
Cll MOVIE 'Sin Antone Ainbuah'

11:00

JUNI! 2, 1110

Name your favorite dramatic
TV actor;actress.

.(I)

t:30

., ,.

~!!!!!ij!!!!!ij!!!!!ij!!!!!iji!iii
((monday» - MEDIA MONITOR
•
A Selznick rev1ves
Steve

Do you consider 'Real People'
and 'That's Incredible' news or
entertainment!

AMERICA

7:30

.. .

Page Five-TV Supplement

E!C!PO~SAIIE sTREET

I

ll

~

(I)
PI!RCI!NTAGES

(J) DR.WNO

PLAY

THE

·

® ELECT.-c COWANY

:loy lUNCH

@. HAPPYDAYSAGAII

I

RI!ALIICCOYS
STARTII£K ·
VARIOUS PIIOGIWI-a
GILLIGAII'S ISlAND (EXC.
WED.)
Clliii!RV GIIIFFIN
• CIJ GOllER PYLE (EXC.
TUI.)
GOllER PYLE
• TOllAND JERRY
1:00
MOVIE (WED.) 'C.H.O.M.P.S.'
IIY THREE SONS (EXC.
4:30

John-' (FRI.)

~ :::"OF .IEAIINIE

In the mt!llclne nwltatpleca.
(J) • • IIONDAY NIGHT IIARIALL New York Yankaoa vo
Kanaaa City Roylla or Cincinnati
Rada va Loa Angalao Dodgaro.
(Region wll dal811111na game to be
,....,..... in yOVIaraa.)
1:00 (J)II(I)IIONDAYIIIGHT 4TTHI
'MOVIES 'Sactela OIThraa Hungty
Wlvoa' 1t788tare: Jam~aFrancio·

I

WEI!.J

'

(1) SANFORD AND SON
® MISTER ROGERS
MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW
1:30 CIJ. tit II.A.I.H.
(() ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) MOVIE (THUR., FRI.) 'Bread
andChocolata'(THUR.),'Jeremiah

1

- · Jaaalcl WaHar.

(() 700CWI

(I)IIIOVI!o(DIIAIIA)••I'o "!IoiiarIIIII" 1071
.(J)CIIJ II.A.I.H.Ababy,l)omto
a K....,. woman and an Amartcan
Gl, II abandoned at lhe 4077111.

ATHLETIE:
.

SHOES

Boys, Men •nd,Won•..,
Open All D•y Thursdlty·

DAN.
&amp;

1:30

a-m-£ HouSE CALLS

Mi~

Oro.
chaala and Solomon looa Ieith I~
thamealvao when Charley hal a
day when ha can ....,lngly do no
right, and Norman haa a patient ha
!MY loaa unlaaa ha can gat a court
order lor an operation. (Rapaat)
(J)IILAII, THIVELANDTHIFU.
TUM Nancy Olckaraon praaldao
oww a eaaa1on of Amartcan and Ia·
lam!R woman exploring the vut
. . . . .108 In lholr llloal)iaa.

.lOyce Solznlck'a New Yorll d~Koverlaa, Ia ahown
here with co-star Peter Scolari In 'llolom BuddiH,' a pro)ectad new ABC fall
aarlas.
Tom Hlnkl (left), one of

"I am responsible for supplYing be in ·Bosom Budd1es · along with
the network with new stars. There fellow recruit Tom Hanks, and Ann
is a tremendous demand for new ' Jillian who starred on Broadway in
faces and personalities in Holly- ' 'Sugar Babies' and will co-star in
wood today. And as far as I know. 'It's A Living.'
Said Selznick, "Everybody
what I am doing for ABC has
never been done before. It's sort thought I was crazy when I
of a streamlined version of the old claimed Kurt Russell would be
talent scout hunt." Joyce re· right for the ·Elvis· part. I know
what I'm doing! ABC will be able
marked.
How has she scouted for her to use that talent over a long
talent? On a swing through New period of time . Talent just doesn 't
York City several months ago, drop in from the sky. It takes
which she claimed was bristling talent to know talent!"
To say that Ms. Selznick is
with untapped talent, Joyce test·
ed close to 150 people a day. overly confident would be the
After she discovered some here- understatement of the year, but
tofore unknown talent, Joyce let's face it, her accomplishments
took them back to the West Coast speak for themselves and that' s
where they were tested again and what ABC is banking on. It also
then summarily placed in series gives Joyce a sense of satisfaction
to see these kids finally getting a
and pilots.
Some of the names you'll be fair shake .
" My major concern is that
hearing from in 1980 include AI
Corley, who was thrust into the those kids out of New York got a
Spelling-Goldberg 'Oil' replace· break . If the effort works . this will
ment series. and John Jones. who afford us the opportunity to find
Selznick claims has 'everything to people all over the country . We
be a superstar .' Three of Joyce 's have barely scratched the
dis'coveries have already been surface-and believe me, the star
cast in scheduled ABC fall series . system still exists and makes the
They are : Dtnna Dixon , who will difference.''
Fknnca Handereon. (80 mino.)
()) RQPBAGLEYSHOW
(I) (Ill •
ABC NEWS

® IIILAII, Till VEL AND THE
FUTURE
10:00 (I) J.AIT OF Till WLD
.()) LOUGRANTCoualnAnoraw
gooa on trial lor murder and the
Tribuna 11111 Ieaia tho atrain ol
covartngthaetorybacauMOIOon·
ovan'a cloaa ralatlonahlp to tho
clafondant. (Conclullon; eo m1na.1
(J) JAZZ AT THE IIIAIIITI!NAIICE
1H0P 'Phil Wooda Quartet' Thla Ia
the 11r1t progrom In a aerie a ol par~bythe 'tlanta ol jau',
taped In
Intimate aallingo.
PhiiWooclawaavotad 'OownBaat'

-H.

IICllfTUIII

.()) CIS LATE MOVIE 'HARRY
0: Account• Balanced' A woman
hlreo Harry to find out wilY har hut·
band Ia m~king lraquant tripo out ol
town. (Repeat) 'HEC RAMSEY:
Dead Heat' Staro: Richard Boone,
~Morgan. (Repeal)

-daeldabatwaananoperatlon
or a lifetime ol ahting on a rubber

m~gazine'o18781Hoaaxplayerol

IITIVEANO EYDIE
•
HEWS
10:30
IIIII! AND IE HEALED
IAII!IIALL Atlanta Brav11 VI
San Franclao Glanla
® OVER I!ASY Gueat: Walter
Mack. Holt; !!ua!! Oowna.
11:00 (I) • (I) Cll • Cll Clll ~ •

.

HEWS

()) I'I!STIVAL OF PRAISE
(I) MOVII! -(HORROR) ••• "Tha
Brood" 1878
(J) DAVEALU!NATLARGE
mJ DICK CAVETT IHOW Guut: .
·Richard Gilman, author and drama

critic.

t1:30 (I).ClJ THE TONIGHT SHOW

v-.

Gvael hoat: David Letterman.
Guotle: Ben
Joaa Molina,

I

(J) ABC CAPTIOIIED NEWS
I!IMOVII-(IIY8TI!RYI00 1'1 "Man
T!af" 1181
11:10 (I) (Ill. BARNEY MILLER Filh

the year, and hla 'Song For SIIY·

· ~~.:jnornlnltadloraGrammy.

I•

NEWS
2:00
IIELEYE
2:30
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
S:20
MAVERICK
4:00
700CWI
4:20
OPENUP
1:30 (JJ WORDS OF HOPE

~. (!!apaat) .

12:20

Cllllll. POLICE WOIWI'Tho

Buttercup KHiar' Pollee receive no
help !rom a proud, aecrotivolamlly
ol Greek immlgranta whooo
marnbarlara baing ayatematlcally
murdered in a blza"e laahion.
(!!apaatl
12:30 C!JMOVtE-(DRAIIA)•u "City On
1:00

Fire" 111711

'

(I). TOMORROW Hoot: Tom
Snyder. Guest: Quenton Criop,
authoroi'ThaNakadCiviiServant.'
apaat; eo mine.)
TRANSFORMED
PROGIWI UNANNOUNCED

l

HEWS

1:30 ~~&amp;KENNEDY
1:31 (I) MOVIE o(ORAIIA) 0 1'1 "Night
Tide" 1113

HJADQOARTERS

OPEN

MONDAY
and FRIDAY

TIL 8:00 P.M.

~ .

�Page Six-TV Supplement

' Page Seven-TV Supplement

«tuesclaY))

«wednesday»

Riddles

JUNU, 1880

.IUNI! 4,' 1110

1. What 11 the ea1lnt way to

EVENING
8:00

I

fll•(!)e(f)(la)(DJe NEWS

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,!(liNED IN PROGRESS)
C!J SNEAK PREVIEW: JUNE
(I) ANDY GRIFFITH SIIOW
Cll.&amp;BCNEWS
(f)@ ZOOII
8:30 ille (!) NBC NEWS
Clll LOVE LUCY
Cll C.&amp;ROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Guests: Dick Van Dyke,
!2"1!landall.
•lJJ®J CBS NEWS
(f) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
®OYEREASY'PavarottionOpera• Hoot: Hugh Downs.
1!2le ABC NEWS
7:00 illO CROSS WITS
(I) PUPPET TREE GANG
CIJ STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Red
Skellon'aFunnyFacea'Oidfrlenda
Freddie Freeloader end Clem Kad·
diddlehopper aro Juata few of your
favorites on hand when Red Skel·
ton hoalalhla exclusive ahowcuing Shield aandY arnell, Yacov Noy
and several other great masters of
mime.
Cll HOGAN'S HEROES
(f)(!}le FACE THE MUSIC
(!) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
• Cll TlC TAC D.OUGH
(f) MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
· ® DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest:
Peter Hall, director of Great Brl·
lain's National Theatre.
7:30 ill 8
®l
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
(I) F.&amp;ITH THATLIYES
C1J ALL IN THE FAMILY
C1J SHA NA NA Guest: Kingston
Trio.
(!) ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
eCil·JOKER'S WILD
(f) DICK CAVETT SHOW
® MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
1!2le SHA NA NA
8:00 ille THE MISADVENTURES OF
SHERIFF LOBO Lobo trieato sell
worthleaaawamplandtoaomemen
he aaaumea to be visiting real es-

make

3. Ia It better to write on
full or on
atomachf

e:OO

~·(!)·tiJ(Blil2ie NEWS

8:30

I

!5. What mualcal lnatrument

8. Satellite

doe•. 1 akeleton play?
6. When Ia lonahand quicker
than lhorthand7
'II
"IUGqWOAI IIIJ. 'li
·,&lt;ad we
·~:101:1 I

UO

I,UII llq 1111 IIIII AIIIY 'IUO '"

1. Television

9. Super Station

2. VIdeo

10. Home

3. Cassette

11. Computer

4.
!1.
6.
7.

Recorder

12. Llnk·UP

Tape

13. Shopping

Dl,c

14. Library

Cable

15. Information

"JIIIICI

11:1nw

II

Jedld

•AIIIIIIN '£

'1111

·t

R E D R 0

SH3MSNV

Find the word that best connects the
two on each line. For exarople:
Igloo

1.

eskimo

blind

2. pop

I

3.

Marco

pie

bluff
the weasel
shirt

CIJ

ffi 0

10:00

10:30

11:00

ENERGY EXPO A look at op·
tiona in the near future , and how
Americana must adjust to meet
energy needa in the transitional
j!!riod before ua.
llJI!2l. TAXI The sudden reap·
pearance of Alex's father 1 who
gave up hla family dulles 30 yeara
betore, .... the stage for an
emotion·packed confrontation
lhallaavaa Alex with the ourpriae of
hla Ule,{Rapeat)
CIJi!2ltiHARTTOHARTTheHarta
enter the dangerous world of International espionage when Jonath·
an, Jennifer and their new antique
carbecomethemyateriouatargeta
of another jel·aelling couple who
will atop at nothing to •9qulrethe
claaalc auto. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
Cll CITY NOTEBOOK
®NEWS
ilJO(!)THECHEAPDETECTIYE
Flip Wlfaon ataro ea alow-prlcad
gumahoe, who ii forced to masquerade aa a cleaning woman
named Geraldine in order to learn
the detaila of a real estate
awlndla.
(I) FAITH20
Cll BASEBALL Atlanta Bravea va
San Franclaco Glanto
Cll CAMERA THREE 'Canadian
Braoo'
®OVEREASY'PavarottlonOpera' Hoot: Hull!!_Down a.
ill • Cll (!) • Cll ®&gt;1!2l •
NEWS
TODAY IN BilLE PROPHECY
DAVE ALLI!N AT LARGE
DICK CAVEn IHOW Guoot:
Pater HaM, director of Groot Btl·
taln'o National Theatre.
&lt;1lMOVII!-(DIWM)•••• "0..
Hulltor''1178

I
11:11

z

K E E L

v

X N H D B

u

X

v

v 0 z u
z c I N X
c A N D z
v s u p E
z s I z c
E

p

E K

N E I

c

p

11oft AtlanU." 11185

1:1o &lt;IZINEws
1:30 (J)
TOMORROW Hoot: Tom
S!lydor.Guat:CorolaShaw,edllor
oi 'Big Beautiful Woman.' (R~eat·
80mlna.)
•• '

~ OLDT111EG08PELHOUR

{t) =BAGL!YSHOW

A R B
N A p

R E T u
p T E 0
A A H 0
R s T A
0 G D 0
D y N y 0 L
N 0 I s I v
s R u wy F
Q T v z E N

11:30 ilJO(!)DECISION '80Areporton
lha roauHa of the California, Ohio,
New Joraey, Montana, and South
Dokota Prealdenlial primarioa.
(J) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) i!2J •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
.(I)(J§) CAMPAIGN '60A report
on tho roaulla of the Calltornla,
Ohlo,Montona,SouthDakota,New
Jeraay, and Weal Virginia Pre·
aldonllal prlmarl01.
(f) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
12:00 ille(!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest host: David Letterman.
Gueota: Dick Shawn, Robert Mandan~rich Segal. (90 mine.)
Cll&lt;Bie SOAP Burt geta aome
good newa and bad newalrom hi a
doctor--Mary Ia pregnant ind Burt
Ia not long lor this world. (Repeat;
70mina.)
• . (f)
CBS LATE MOYIE
'BARNABY JONES: FlnaiRanaom'
A recently releaaed prisoner at·
tamptalo reactivate • kidnapping
plot when ho wu unable to colla&lt;:!
tho ranaom 10 yeara earlier.
(Repeat) 'MARY HARTMAN
MARY HARTMAN' Stars: Louie~
Laollf ..Greg Mullavey.
&lt;II MOYIE -(MUSICAL.COMEDY)
• !'ThatTanna- Boot" 11168
1:00 (J) CHARISMA
Cll NEWS
1:011 Cll MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• "Opor•

2:10

'

E R A

L

s

G T I
0 T L
OIOd '£ seoll ·z:
s,uew ' t :uaMtuy

c

A

s

I

L p u A v M T u A L L I L G
0 I p z 0 L I B R A R y N A

Wordslink

®ZOOM

.(!)NBC NEWS

'

Traveling is another problem . Whenever he's about to
board · a plane, the scanner buzzer invariably goes
off-'the suitcase looks like a bomb.' Normally, a simple
explanation that he's a ventriloquist will suffice. But if
the attendant recognizes 'Chuck and Bob,' Jay gets
stuck doing his bit.

•

I N I
A 0 N

p M 0 c F
M C p N' O
I D y D R

T

I

0 N M

A R J
p H 0

E L

D A

L T

E T I

G z K M 0
0 I J p N

®ltBEUEVE
3:011 (I)
MOVIE
-(ADVENTURE-DRAMA) •
"lavage Gringo" 11M15
4:00 (I) 700 CLUB
4:50 CIJ MAVERICK
1:30 (J) JESUS IS THE ANSWER

Designed lor ,{
Basketball
Competition 'J.?~

IJ!!\
i_\,

COIIVI!Il• !J.liTAR
'1,'
LEATMER IAilETUU IMOU
~
'¢..
• Single unit out sole lor top traction
and wear

• Soli. strong leatMr upper wrth
Pldded toogue and ankle collar

lor comlort and support

, CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Gueat: Jack Klugman.
eCil&lt;J~ CBS NEWS
(I) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
&lt;HI VILLA ALEGRE
&lt;JZe AICNEWS
7:00 ille CROSS WITS
(J) BUlLE BOWL
Clli!OGAN'S HEROES
Cll &lt;JZ. FACE THE MUSIC
(!) LOVE AMERIC~ STYLE
Cil TlCTACDOUGH
MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
NEWS
® DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueot:
Wombaugh, author. Part I
7:30 Clle COUNTRY ROADS
(J) AT HOME WITH THEBIBLE
CIJ DOOBIE BROTHERS IN CO,._
CERTOver26mllllonracordahave
bMn oold by these durable rock 'n
rolloro, and yo~·n hear why when
YOII 'Liotan To the Mualc' olallthelr
blggeol hill at lhia recent in·
concerl pertormanca.
ALLIN THE FAMILY
MATCH GAME
WILD KINGDOM 'Snake River
Birdo of Prey' Part II
Cll JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
THE JUDGE
®MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
&lt;JZI FAMILY FEUD
8:00 ill REALPEOPLECamelracea

Banana spilt
Although Jay acknowledges that a ventriloquist's
relat1onsh1p With h1s l1gure is essentially a struggle
between good (the ventriloquist) and evil (the figure),
he rejects the not1on th at ventriloquism is sublimated
schizophrenia . Whil e Bob does have a distinct
personality , he can be more precisely described as
Jay 's alter ego .
" II I'm doing a show, and I don't like this guy with
the pl~ld SUit and checked tie, I myself probably
wouldn t say anythmg. But Bob would jump right in
there and start zinging him .

IJo•

Word Search

·z

tJeq Jno.&lt; u1 punoJI ~liM
'IIIII u1 11 1no

ROSIBAGLEYHOUR(JOINED
lfPROGIII!SS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
AICNI!WS
t~OVELUCY

put In 11n empty baa?

Fonz through his paces and causes

.............. 111711

1

empty

·4. How many bean a can you

are really mobsters. (Repeat; 60
min a.)
(I) ORAL ROBERTS
·
CIJ MOYIE -(COMEDY) ••1&gt; "Up
From Tho Doplho" 1079
C1J
MOYIE
-(ADVENTURE-DRAMA) •••
"A(!Inot All Flogo" 19!12
(1){12). HAPPY DAYS The Fonz
lacu one of the biggest chal·
lengea of his life when he hires a
disabled mechanic who puts the

-TUEIDAYNIGHTMOVIE
'Siaga'11177Stara:MartlnBaloam,
t}tWIIIklnay.
1:10 CIJ 110¥11 -(IUII'ENII!) •••

an

Uninterrupted Jay Johnson

EVENING

banana "'""

2. What Ia the blat way to
find I pin In I rua7

tate executives, unaware that they

him to lose hia cool. (Repeat)
Cll ®l . BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
(I)@ NOVA 'APlague on Our Children' Toxic herbicides, pesticides,
and other chemicals may cause
cancer, miscarriages and birth
defect a, and the evidence ia just
beginning to come out. Thia program examines the harmful effects
deadly chemlcala may hove on this
and following genera tiona. (2 hra.)
8:30 (I) GOOO NEWS
CIJ1!2J. LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
When Laverne and Shirley end their
gang at the brewery learn that they
muat undergo psychological
examinations, they worry about ex·
• poling their innermost secreta.
(Be~ at)
11:00 (2).(!) THE BIG SHOW Flip Wllaon and Sarah Purcellarelheh6ata
and their gueata are Oiahann Car·
roll, Barbi Benton, Peaches and
Herb,Gallagher,lceakateraPeggy
Fleming and Robin Couaina, The
Dance Theatre of Harlem, and
Flamenco dancer Jose Molina. (90
mlns.)·
(I) 700~UB
,
Cll ,()JI •
THREE'S COMPANY
When tho lrlo'a outrageous eacopadao reoun In an eviction noIlea, thoy got ready for the good
tlmao awaiting them In a rant-free
panthouaathotloaglltfromthomon
whoM liN wao oaved by Jack.

r

..If it comes from inside you,
you can believe that a grapefruit
can come alive. A ventriloquist
can make anything talk."

~

I

In Nevada.~ human drum and a
popular nightclub where female im·
paloonalort entertain will be lea·
lured. (Repeat; 60 mina.)
(J) FOCUSOHTHEFAMILY
C1J MOVIE -(MYSTERY) ••• "Uot
Of Adl1aft llaaaangar" 11M13
Cll
FAMILY Kale rebuffs
repeated ouggeationo from long·
lima friend Eloine Hogan that they
get IOQOihaf, bulattomptalo realore tho raletlonehip all or the irou·
bledwomaniaarreatedlorahoplilt·
Jng. (QO mine.}
lD • (f) &lt;Ill BILLY GRAHAM

$.

CRUSADE
(f)@ GREAT PERFORMANCES
'Tannhauaer lrom Bayreuth' The
llr.tllma thla part leu lor Wagnerian
opera will be aeon nationally on
American televiaion, ilia the story
oltha mlnolrel knight Tannhauaer
andthoconflictbetweenhialovefor
the young and innocent Ellaabeth
andhlopaaolonlor.Yenua,goddeaa
· ollovo. (3 hra., 30 mine.)
8:30 (I) THE PRESENCE OF GOO
CIJ MOYIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Klier E..." 1175
11:00 ille (!) DIFF'RENT STROKES
Amold and Willi a are found with a
atolan Ham In their poaaeaalon fol ·
lowing aburglary In their apartment
b~lldlng. (Repeat)
(J) 700CLUB
(J)i!2JtiCHARUE'SANGELSThe
angelo are l~red to a remote
tropical loland where they lind
thamoelvea helpless and altha
mercyolamadmanwhohaaahock·
lngplanotoreachofthem.(Repeet;
60mlnoJ
• Cll (II) WEDNESDAY NIGHT
MOYIE 'Behind The Badge' 1977
Slaro: Elizabeth Montgomery, O.J.
Slmlon.
1:30 ~ (!)THE FACTS OF LIFE
10:00
NEWS
ENERGY EXPO Exploring
!!O!RY~iona.
·
Cll!DI• VEGAS Dan Tannallnda
hlmoallat oddowHh aboaulilul nor·
cot leo agent, whotella him that one
of hlo clooolrlendalatheleader of
amurderOIIoorganlzolionthatuaea
claoolc coralr&gt; Ha dope-amuggling
I!I!O'Oiiona. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)
CD QUINCY Quincy lnveoligatea a
Jockey'o death, which aoon begin a
to look llka homlclda. (Repeat; 60
mint)
10:10 (J). BAIEBAU Cincinnati Redo
VI Loo Angalaa Doclgllro

(J) MAX IIOitRIS
' {))IIOVIf!-(DIWM) ••• "City On
Ph" 1171

by Chuck ·Bins
When master ventriloquist Jay Johnson appears on
ABC -TV's '$20.000 Pyramid ' this week (June 2-6). Bob
won 't be with him . " I couldn 't bring him when so much
money is riding on the line for somebody ," Jay said .
" I'd be trying to come up with an answer and Bob would
be trying to zing the gags in there .''
Without his insulting and interruptive p&lt;1rtner by his
side. Jay is an excellent player.
Between tapings. Jay slopped to chat about his life
as a ventriloquist . Bob meanwhile was sleeping soundly
in his suitcase back at the hotel . whi ch is how we
avoided the following talk show pitfall .
The talk show syndrome
As Jay explained it, " Whenever we go on a talk show
together . they (the hosts) usually" star t out asking' me
a few questions. and tnen they ask Bob a few questions.
and then they ask Bob something else. and it gels to
be a one-on-one with Bob ." At that point . Bob has to
remind the host who the real 'dummy' is .
That kind of lopsided attention seems to haunt Jay
wherever he goes. " People often ask me to bring him
to a party ," Jay continued. " But even if I'm asked , very
rarely do I bring him , because whenever I take Bob out
of the suitcase, I'm working. And people surprisingly
don't have much respect for that . I mean, that's what
I do lor a living. It seems very strange to me . Nobody
asks a ballet dancer to bring her tutu to a party or to
kick up her leg in a store .''

11 :oo

(]) •

wm •

CIJ ®JI!2l m

NEWS
(J) JEWISH VOICE
(I) LAST OF THE WILD 'Arctic
Reecue'
11:30 (I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) MOVIE ·(WESTERN) ••
11
Apac;he 11 1154
(I) 1!2J •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
(!) THE TONIGHT SHOW Guo at
hoot: David Steinberg. Guest: Ri·
chard Reevaa. (90 mine.)
eCil CBS LATE MOYIE 'BLACK
SHEEP SQUADRON: Fighting An·
gelo' Everyone at the Black Sheep
Marino compound muot man the
gunowhananemycommandoaland
during a fierce battle. (Repeal)
'THE TENDER TRAP' 1955 Stare:
Frank Slnalro, Lola Albright.
(I) ABC CAPT10NED NEWS
(II MOVIE -(REUGIOUII-ORAMA)
•"~

11:50

11

Love Boat'·'Muolcol Cablno' }.
young bachelor muol marry within
tho weak In order to claim a $3 mil· .
lion inharttanco. Baratta--'CoUftl
Tho Dayo I'm ·Gone' Barotta
-chao for tho 8-yaar-old IIIIer

Ancient

art form

Jay is quick to point out that ventriloquism , in it's
purest form . is the perfect link between mental and
P.,hysical abilities ; an art form· passed down from ancient
times. High priests and priestesses in ancient Greece
often attracted a wide following by projecting the11
voices through idols. The oracle Delphi , for example , is
believed to have used ventriloquism 'to bring messages
back from the dead .' There was a strong motivation for
the oracle to be flawless in his delivery , lor if ever he
was caught in his chicanery, his lips would be forever
sealed .
Twentieth Ce ntury audiences are no less ruthle ss.
even though they know th e 'trick .' Jay says people
sometimes accuse him of dubbing Bob 's voi ce in on
'Soap .' Of course , Jay could never again look Bob
straight in the eye if he did .
During live performances, hecklers are a constant
problem- everyone wants to get in on the act.
Fortunately, lor Jay . Bob usually has the perfect riposte
right on the tip of his little tongue .

of an alcoholic nurse who disap·
pea red itter witnessing a murder.
(!!apeat; 2 hra., 15 mina.)
12:11 CIJMOYIE-(DRAMA)••!!o "Roller·
ball" 1175
1:00 (]). TOMORROW Hoot: Tom
Snyder. Guest a: Mickey Rooney
and Ann Miller. (Repeat; 60 min a.)
(I) GOOD NEWS
(!)NEWS
1:30 &lt;1J REXHUMBARD

TV COM,ULOQ St:"VICU, INC

CIJ NEWS
1:35
2:00
2:011
2:30
4:00
4:05
5:30
1:35

CIJ

ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY
&lt;JDII BELIEVE
1!2J. NEWS
(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) 700 CLUB
liJ MOYIE -(DRAMA) •1&gt; " Para·
troop Command" 1958
(I) BOB GASS
CIJ LOVE AMERICAN STYLE

PAY YOUR
•
PHONE BILL
OR CABLE
TV HERE

Th1Robe"1853

~:LOVEBOAT-BARETTA

" Most people supress alot of their true feelings . And
any therapist would tell you, I think, that a ventriloquist.
as an individual, should be more healthy because these
things get said."
Chuck on 'Soap ' however is a different story . "C huck
is basically schizophrenic ... If Bob says, 'Bert is
insane.· Ch uck is going to say , 'No, I think Bert is really
a nice guy.'" Like Chuck, Jay does have a warm spot
for Bob . " But to the point where Chuck brings Bob to
the breakfast table , and won 't accept him as anyone
but a little boy , that's . where we differ ."

"-~-

• Fast Accurant Prescription Service
• Russell Stover Candies
• e Free Delivery in the Ga'llipolis Area
PHone 446-1883

�Page Six-TV Supplement

' Page Seven-TV Supplement

«tuesclaY))

«wednesday»

Riddles

JUNU, 1880

.IUNI! 4,' 1110

1. What 11 the ea1lnt way to

EVENING
8:00

I

fll•(!)e(f)(la)(DJe NEWS

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,!(liNED IN PROGRESS)
C!J SNEAK PREVIEW: JUNE
(I) ANDY GRIFFITH SIIOW
Cll.&amp;BCNEWS
(f)@ ZOOII
8:30 ille (!) NBC NEWS
Clll LOVE LUCY
Cll C.&amp;ROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Guests: Dick Van Dyke,
!2"1!landall.
•lJJ®J CBS NEWS
(f) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
®OYEREASY'PavarottionOpera• Hoot: Hugh Downs.
1!2le ABC NEWS
7:00 illO CROSS WITS
(I) PUPPET TREE GANG
CIJ STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Red
Skellon'aFunnyFacea'Oidfrlenda
Freddie Freeloader end Clem Kad·
diddlehopper aro Juata few of your
favorites on hand when Red Skel·
ton hoalalhla exclusive ahowcuing Shield aandY arnell, Yacov Noy
and several other great masters of
mime.
Cll HOGAN'S HEROES
(f)(!}le FACE THE MUSIC
(!) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
• Cll TlC TAC D.OUGH
(f) MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
®J NEWS
· ® DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest:
Peter Hall, director of Great Brl·
lain's National Theatre.
7:30 ill 8
®l
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
(I) F.&amp;ITH THATLIYES
C1J ALL IN THE FAMILY
C1J SHA NA NA Guest: Kingston
Trio.
(!) ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
eCil·JOKER'S WILD
(f) DICK CAVETT SHOW
® MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
1!2le SHA NA NA
8:00 ille THE MISADVENTURES OF
SHERIFF LOBO Lobo trieato sell
worthleaaawamplandtoaomemen
he aaaumea to be visiting real es-

make

3. Ia It better to write on
full or on
atomachf

e:OO

~·(!)·tiJ(Blil2ie NEWS

8:30

I

!5. What mualcal lnatrument

8. Satellite

doe•. 1 akeleton play?
6. When Ia lonahand quicker
than lhorthand7
'II
"IUGqWOAI IIIJ. 'li
·,&lt;ad we
·~:101:1 I

UO

I,UII llq 1111 IIIII AIIIY 'IUO '"

1. Television

9. Super Station

2. VIdeo

10. Home

3. Cassette

11. Computer

4.
!1.
6.
7.

Recorder

12. Llnk·UP

Tape

13. Shopping

Dl,c

14. Library

Cable

15. Information

"JIIIICI

11:1nw

II

Jedld

•AIIIIIIN '£

'1111

·t

R E D R 0

SH3MSNV

Find the word that best connects the
two on each line. For exarople:
Igloo

1.

eskimo

blind

2. pop

I

3.

Marco

pie

bluff
the weasel
shirt

CIJ

ffi 0

10:00

10:30

11:00

ENERGY EXPO A look at op·
tiona in the near future , and how
Americana must adjust to meet
energy needa in the transitional
j!!riod before ua.
llJI!2l. TAXI The sudden reap·
pearance of Alex's father 1 who
gave up hla family dulles 30 yeara
betore, .... the stage for an
emotion·packed confrontation
lhallaavaa Alex with the ourpriae of
hla Ule,{Rapeat)
CIJi!2ltiHARTTOHARTTheHarta
enter the dangerous world of International espionage when Jonath·
an, Jennifer and their new antique
carbecomethemyateriouatargeta
of another jel·aelling couple who
will atop at nothing to •9qulrethe
claaalc auto. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
Cll CITY NOTEBOOK
®NEWS
ilJO(!)THECHEAPDETECTIYE
Flip Wlfaon ataro ea alow-prlcad
gumahoe, who ii forced to masquerade aa a cleaning woman
named Geraldine in order to learn
the detaila of a real estate
awlndla.
(I) FAITH20
Cll BASEBALL Atlanta Bravea va
San Franclaco Glanto
Cll CAMERA THREE 'Canadian
Braoo'
®OVEREASY'PavarottlonOpera' Hoot: Hull!!_Down a.
ill • Cll (!) • Cll ®&gt;1!2l •
NEWS
TODAY IN BilLE PROPHECY
DAVE ALLI!N AT LARGE
DICK CAVEn IHOW Guoot:
Pater HaM, director of Groot Btl·
taln'o National Theatre.
&lt;1lMOVII!-(DIWM)•••• "0..
Hulltor''1178

I
11:11

z

K E E L

v

X N H D B

u

X

v

v 0 z u
z c I N X
c A N D z
v s u p E
z s I z c
E

p

E K

N E I

c

p

11oft AtlanU." 11185

1:1o &lt;IZINEws
1:30 (J)
TOMORROW Hoot: Tom
S!lydor.Guat:CorolaShaw,edllor
oi 'Big Beautiful Woman.' (R~eat·
80mlna.)
•• '

~ OLDT111EG08PELHOUR

{t) =BAGL!YSHOW

A R B
N A p

R E T u
p T E 0
A A H 0
R s T A
0 G D 0
D y N y 0 L
N 0 I s I v
s R u wy F
Q T v z E N

11:30 ilJO(!)DECISION '80Areporton
lha roauHa of the California, Ohio,
New Joraey, Montana, and South
Dokota Prealdenlial primarioa.
(J) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) i!2J •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
.(I)(J§) CAMPAIGN '60A report
on tho roaulla of the Calltornla,
Ohlo,Montona,SouthDakota,New
Jeraay, and Weal Virginia Pre·
aldonllal prlmarl01.
(f) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
12:00 ille(!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest host: David Letterman.
Gueota: Dick Shawn, Robert Mandan~rich Segal. (90 mine.)
Cll&lt;Bie SOAP Burt geta aome
good newa and bad newalrom hi a
doctor--Mary Ia pregnant ind Burt
Ia not long lor this world. (Repeat;
70mina.)
• . (f)
CBS LATE MOYIE
'BARNABY JONES: FlnaiRanaom'
A recently releaaed prisoner at·
tamptalo reactivate • kidnapping
plot when ho wu unable to colla&lt;:!
tho ranaom 10 yeara earlier.
(Repeat) 'MARY HARTMAN
MARY HARTMAN' Stars: Louie~
Laollf ..Greg Mullavey.
&lt;II MOYIE -(MUSICAL.COMEDY)
• !'ThatTanna- Boot" 11168
1:00 (J) CHARISMA
Cll NEWS
1:011 Cll MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• "Opor•

2:10

'

E R A

L

s

G T I
0 T L
OIOd '£ seoll ·z:
s,uew ' t :uaMtuy

c

A

s

I

L p u A v M T u A L L I L G
0 I p z 0 L I B R A R y N A

Wordslink

®ZOOM

.(!)NBC NEWS

'

Traveling is another problem . Whenever he's about to
board · a plane, the scanner buzzer invariably goes
off-'the suitcase looks like a bomb.' Normally, a simple
explanation that he's a ventriloquist will suffice. But if
the attendant recognizes 'Chuck and Bob,' Jay gets
stuck doing his bit.

•

I N I
A 0 N

p M 0 c F
M C p N' O
I D y D R

T

I

0 N M

A R J
p H 0

E L

D A

L T

E T I

G z K M 0
0 I J p N

®ltBEUEVE
3:011 (I)
MOVIE
-(ADVENTURE-DRAMA) •
"lavage Gringo" 11M15
4:00 (I) 700 CLUB
4:50 CIJ MAVERICK
1:30 (J) JESUS IS THE ANSWER

Designed lor ,{
Basketball
Competition 'J.?~

IJ!!\
i_\,

COIIVI!Il• !J.liTAR
'1,'
LEATMER IAilETUU IMOU
~
'¢..
• Single unit out sole lor top traction
and wear

• Soli. strong leatMr upper wrth
Pldded toogue and ankle collar

lor comlort and support

, CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Gueat: Jack Klugman.
eCil&lt;J~ CBS NEWS
(I) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
&lt;HI VILLA ALEGRE
&lt;JZe AICNEWS
7:00 ille CROSS WITS
(J) BUlLE BOWL
Clli!OGAN'S HEROES
Cll &lt;JZ. FACE THE MUSIC
(!) LOVE AMERIC~ STYLE
Cil TlCTACDOUGH
MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
NEWS
® DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueot:
Wombaugh, author. Part I
7:30 Clle COUNTRY ROADS
(J) AT HOME WITH THEBIBLE
CIJ DOOBIE BROTHERS IN CO,._
CERTOver26mllllonracordahave
bMn oold by these durable rock 'n
rolloro, and yo~·n hear why when
YOII 'Liotan To the Mualc' olallthelr
blggeol hill at lhia recent in·
concerl pertormanca.
ALLIN THE FAMILY
MATCH GAME
WILD KINGDOM 'Snake River
Birdo of Prey' Part II
Cll JOKER'S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
THE JUDGE
®MACNEIL-lEHRER REPORT
&lt;JZI FAMILY FEUD
8:00 ill REALPEOPLECamelracea

Banana spilt
Although Jay acknowledges that a ventriloquist's
relat1onsh1p With h1s l1gure is essentially a struggle
between good (the ventriloquist) and evil (the figure),
he rejects the not1on th at ventriloquism is sublimated
schizophrenia . Whil e Bob does have a distinct
personality , he can be more precisely described as
Jay 's alter ego .
" II I'm doing a show, and I don't like this guy with
the pl~ld SUit and checked tie, I myself probably
wouldn t say anythmg. But Bob would jump right in
there and start zinging him .

IJo•

Word Search

·z

tJeq Jno.&lt; u1 punoJI ~liM
'IIIII u1 11 1no

ROSIBAGLEYHOUR(JOINED
lfPROGIII!SS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
AICNI!WS
t~OVELUCY

put In 11n empty baa?

Fonz through his paces and causes

.............. 111711

1

empty

·4. How many bean a can you

are really mobsters. (Repeat; 60
min a.)
(I) ORAL ROBERTS
·
CIJ MOYIE -(COMEDY) ••1&gt; "Up
From Tho Doplho" 1079
C1J
MOYIE
-(ADVENTURE-DRAMA) •••
"A(!Inot All Flogo" 19!12
(1){12). HAPPY DAYS The Fonz
lacu one of the biggest chal·
lengea of his life when he hires a
disabled mechanic who puts the

-TUEIDAYNIGHTMOVIE
'Siaga'11177Stara:MartlnBaloam,
t}tWIIIklnay.
1:10 CIJ 110¥11 -(IUII'ENII!) •••

an

Uninterrupted Jay Johnson

EVENING

banana "'""

2. What Ia the blat way to
find I pin In I rua7

tate executives, unaware that they

him to lose hia cool. (Repeat)
Cll ®l . BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
(I)@ NOVA 'APlague on Our Children' Toxic herbicides, pesticides,
and other chemicals may cause
cancer, miscarriages and birth
defect a, and the evidence ia just
beginning to come out. Thia program examines the harmful effects
deadly chemlcala may hove on this
and following genera tiona. (2 hra.)
8:30 (I) GOOO NEWS
CIJ1!2J. LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
When Laverne and Shirley end their
gang at the brewery learn that they
muat undergo psychological
examinations, they worry about ex·
• poling their innermost secreta.
(Be~ at)
11:00 (2).(!) THE BIG SHOW Flip Wllaon and Sarah Purcellarelheh6ata
and their gueata are Oiahann Car·
roll, Barbi Benton, Peaches and
Herb,Gallagher,lceakateraPeggy
Fleming and Robin Couaina, The
Dance Theatre of Harlem, and
Flamenco dancer Jose Molina. (90
mlns.)·
(I) 700~UB
,
Cll ,()JI •
THREE'S COMPANY
When tho lrlo'a outrageous eacopadao reoun In an eviction noIlea, thoy got ready for the good
tlmao awaiting them In a rant-free
panthouaathotloaglltfromthomon
whoM liN wao oaved by Jack.

r

..If it comes from inside you,
you can believe that a grapefruit
can come alive. A ventriloquist
can make anything talk."

~

I

In Nevada.~ human drum and a
popular nightclub where female im·
paloonalort entertain will be lea·
lured. (Repeat; 60 mina.)
(J) FOCUSOHTHEFAMILY
C1J MOVIE -(MYSTERY) ••• "Uot
Of Adl1aft llaaaangar" 11M13
Cll
FAMILY Kale rebuffs
repeated ouggeationo from long·
lima friend Eloine Hogan that they
get IOQOihaf, bulattomptalo realore tho raletlonehip all or the irou·
bledwomaniaarreatedlorahoplilt·
Jng. (QO mine.}
lD • (f) &lt;Ill BILLY GRAHAM

$.

CRUSADE
(f)@ GREAT PERFORMANCES
'Tannhauaer lrom Bayreuth' The
llr.tllma thla part leu lor Wagnerian
opera will be aeon nationally on
American televiaion, ilia the story
oltha mlnolrel knight Tannhauaer
andthoconflictbetweenhialovefor
the young and innocent Ellaabeth
andhlopaaolonlor.Yenua,goddeaa
· ollovo. (3 hra., 30 mine.)
8:30 (I) THE PRESENCE OF GOO
CIJ MOYIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Klier E..." 1175
11:00 ille (!) DIFF'RENT STROKES
Amold and Willi a are found with a
atolan Ham In their poaaeaalon fol ·
lowing aburglary In their apartment
b~lldlng. (Repeat)
(J) 700CLUB
(J)i!2JtiCHARUE'SANGELSThe
angelo are l~red to a remote
tropical loland where they lind
thamoelvea helpless and altha
mercyolamadmanwhohaaahock·
lngplanotoreachofthem.(Repeet;
60mlnoJ
• Cll (II) WEDNESDAY NIGHT
MOYIE 'Behind The Badge' 1977
Slaro: Elizabeth Montgomery, O.J.
Slmlon.
1:30 ~ (!)THE FACTS OF LIFE
10:00
NEWS
ENERGY EXPO Exploring
!!O!RY~iona.
·
Cll!DI• VEGAS Dan Tannallnda
hlmoallat oddowHh aboaulilul nor·
cot leo agent, whotella him that one
of hlo clooolrlendalatheleader of
amurderOIIoorganlzolionthatuaea
claoolc coralr&gt; Ha dope-amuggling
I!I!O'Oiiona. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)
CD QUINCY Quincy lnveoligatea a
Jockey'o death, which aoon begin a
to look llka homlclda. (Repeat; 60
mint)
10:10 (J). BAIEBAU Cincinnati Redo
VI Loo Angalaa Doclgllro

(J) MAX IIOitRIS
' {))IIOVIf!-(DIWM) ••• "City On
Ph" 1171

by Chuck ·Bins
When master ventriloquist Jay Johnson appears on
ABC -TV's '$20.000 Pyramid ' this week (June 2-6). Bob
won 't be with him . " I couldn 't bring him when so much
money is riding on the line for somebody ," Jay said .
" I'd be trying to come up with an answer and Bob would
be trying to zing the gags in there .''
Without his insulting and interruptive p&lt;1rtner by his
side. Jay is an excellent player.
Between tapings. Jay slopped to chat about his life
as a ventriloquist . Bob meanwhile was sleeping soundly
in his suitcase back at the hotel . whi ch is how we
avoided the following talk show pitfall .
The talk show syndrome
As Jay explained it, " Whenever we go on a talk show
together . they (the hosts) usually" star t out asking' me
a few questions. and tnen they ask Bob a few questions.
and then they ask Bob something else. and it gels to
be a one-on-one with Bob ." At that point . Bob has to
remind the host who the real 'dummy' is .
That kind of lopsided attention seems to haunt Jay
wherever he goes. " People often ask me to bring him
to a party ," Jay continued. " But even if I'm asked , very
rarely do I bring him , because whenever I take Bob out
of the suitcase, I'm working. And people surprisingly
don't have much respect for that . I mean, that's what
I do lor a living. It seems very strange to me . Nobody
asks a ballet dancer to bring her tutu to a party or to
kick up her leg in a store .''

11 :oo

(]) •

wm •

CIJ ®JI!2l m

NEWS
(J) JEWISH VOICE
(I) LAST OF THE WILD 'Arctic
Reecue'
11:30 (I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) MOVIE ·(WESTERN) ••
11
Apac;he 11 1154
(I) 1!2J •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNE
(!) THE TONIGHT SHOW Guo at
hoot: David Steinberg. Guest: Ri·
chard Reevaa. (90 mine.)
eCil CBS LATE MOYIE 'BLACK
SHEEP SQUADRON: Fighting An·
gelo' Everyone at the Black Sheep
Marino compound muot man the
gunowhananemycommandoaland
during a fierce battle. (Repeal)
'THE TENDER TRAP' 1955 Stare:
Frank Slnalro, Lola Albright.
(I) ABC CAPT10NED NEWS
(II MOVIE -(REUGIOUII-ORAMA)
•"~

11:50

11

Love Boat'·'Muolcol Cablno' }.
young bachelor muol marry within
tho weak In order to claim a $3 mil· .
lion inharttanco. Baratta--'CoUftl
Tho Dayo I'm ·Gone' Barotta
-chao for tho 8-yaar-old IIIIer

Ancient

art form

Jay is quick to point out that ventriloquism , in it's
purest form . is the perfect link between mental and
P.,hysical abilities ; an art form· passed down from ancient
times. High priests and priestesses in ancient Greece
often attracted a wide following by projecting the11
voices through idols. The oracle Delphi , for example , is
believed to have used ventriloquism 'to bring messages
back from the dead .' There was a strong motivation for
the oracle to be flawless in his delivery , lor if ever he
was caught in his chicanery, his lips would be forever
sealed .
Twentieth Ce ntury audiences are no less ruthle ss.
even though they know th e 'trick .' Jay says people
sometimes accuse him of dubbing Bob 's voi ce in on
'Soap .' Of course , Jay could never again look Bob
straight in the eye if he did .
During live performances, hecklers are a constant
problem- everyone wants to get in on the act.
Fortunately, lor Jay . Bob usually has the perfect riposte
right on the tip of his little tongue .

of an alcoholic nurse who disap·
pea red itter witnessing a murder.
(!!apeat; 2 hra., 15 mina.)
12:11 CIJMOYIE-(DRAMA)••!!o "Roller·
ball" 1175
1:00 (]). TOMORROW Hoot: Tom
Snyder. Guest a: Mickey Rooney
and Ann Miller. (Repeat; 60 min a.)
(I) GOOD NEWS
(!)NEWS
1:30 &lt;1J REXHUMBARD

TV COM,ULOQ St:"VICU, INC

CIJ NEWS
1:35
2:00
2:011
2:30
4:00
4:05
5:30
1:35

CIJ

ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY
&lt;JDII BELIEVE
1!2J. NEWS
(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) 700 CLUB
liJ MOYIE -(DRAMA) •1&gt; " Para·
troop Command" 1958
(I) BOB GASS
CIJ LOVE AMERICAN STYLE

PAY YOUR
•
PHONE BILL
OR CABLE
TV HERE

Th1Robe"1853

~:LOVEBOAT-BARETTA

" Most people supress alot of their true feelings . And
any therapist would tell you, I think, that a ventriloquist.
as an individual, should be more healthy because these
things get said."
Chuck on 'Soap ' however is a different story . "C huck
is basically schizophrenic ... If Bob says, 'Bert is
insane.· Ch uck is going to say , 'No, I think Bert is really
a nice guy.'" Like Chuck, Jay does have a warm spot
for Bob . " But to the point where Chuck brings Bob to
the breakfast table , and won 't accept him as anyone
but a little boy , that's . where we differ ."

"-~-

• Fast Accurant Prescription Service
• Russell Stover Candies
• e Free Delivery in the Ga'llipolis Area
PHone 446-1883

�~ ., ~ , .: •.,.. • • r: ' ' ,

•

Page Eight-TV Supplement

((thursday»-- F i I m Clips-JUNU, 1180
EVENING

~~ !ll•Wc,!tii.!~,.,=~~:

~

JOINED IN PROGRESS)

ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC HEWS
®ZOOM
1:30 (J). (!) NBC HEWS
&lt;Ill LOVE LUCY
(I)
CAROL BUAHETT AND
FRIENDS
• (J) (I) CIS NEWS
(I) WILD WILD WOIILD OF
AJIIIIALS

®

OYER EASY Guest: Dick
Smothera. Hoet: Hugh Downs.
ABC NEWS
7~
. CAOSSWITS
BACKYARD
I!OQAH'S HI!ROES
~~~-FACE THE IIUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
IIACHEiloLI!HIIER REPORT
HI!WS
DICIC CAVEn IHOW Gueot:
~ Wambaugh, author. Part A
7:111 (J). HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(J) ZOLA LI!Y1TT
C1J GUllTY 011 NOT GUllTY The
StatavaDr.Coppolino. With the aid
olatocklootageandetlh,thlalaatpacad uclualve recreataa the
rtvellng mwdertrtal of Dr. Carl Coppolino,. trial which ltized loa'a anentlon during the ·eo..
(J) ALL• THI! FAaY
(J) TIIIONI!'I FOil DAD Ayoung
boyltamatocopewlththedeathot
hie tether. Stare: Johrlny Whitaker,

I

Dickti~TnM

I

character that created the subtle jokes and throw-away
· genre he is the only one to gags to be fourid If one can
survive its demise . So the catch .the allusions. For inrevival of Ma~well Smart in a stance. the chief villain con feature length movie ·is more stantly wears gold thimbles
an e~er cise in nostalgia than as a spoof of 'Goldfinger.· and
in topical satire. Ma~ is the Ma~ no longer · works for
same here as he was in the Control but for an agency
TV show, walking brashly in.to known as the ' Provisional
danger. facing death with a · Intelligence and Tactical
timid false bravado, and as Service' - or the ' P.I.T.S.' for
short.
always. 'loving it! '
One of the chief appeals of
The threat to the world
the newest Bond films is their
Ma~ is called upon to van quish . comes in the form of elaborate special effects, and
KAOS (of course) which has 'The Nude Bomb' also has its
developed a bomb that des- share of special effects, but
troys all known fabrics, thus they are of such poor quality
renderi~g the world comple- that if they were any worse
, tely nude. Although as a plot they would almost be funny
line it's serviceably silly, it's in and of themselves. These
also indicative of the entire shots are the kind the 'small
film whicl-! is little more than screen' and small budget and
a lavish TV episode. The story casual viewer can easily
is a bit more convoluted . the accept, but on the big
tors the phenomenally suc- electronio·gadgets a bit more screen-are all too fake .
cessful Bond films spawned, elaborate, and the scenery a There is even a chase that
such as 'Matt He'lm' and 'Our touch more e~otic, but it's takes place on Universal
Man Flint.' With Don Adams much the same stuff. Instead Studios' backlot. which ceras the fumbling, bumbling of getting one '·cone of tainly saves some bucks
Maxwell Smart. Agent 86, the silence' there are enough of scouting locations and serves
show quickly became a rat- them to drive several of as a self-indulgent commer cial for the Universal Studios
ings winner and still com- M~'s superiors crazy.
mands quite a following in
Much of the humor in the tour.
Those staunch followers of
re-runs. Having been the film (and there are some very
brainchild of two such fertile funny moments) stems from Agent 86 will no doubt enjoy
yet off-beat imaginations as either Ma~·s slapstick inepti- ' the continued antics as the
those of Mel Brooks and Buck tude or his wrestling with viii&lt;Wos of the world try to
Henry, it's easy to see why 'spy-fi' gadgetry such ;~s his 'Gef Smart,' but in taking a
premise
and
the show was such a shoe-phone or a desk which half-hour
converts into a car traveling stretehing it to a feature
· success.
Certainly James Bond is in e~cess of 40 miles per hour length film we are presented
still around, but as the but less in the living room. with more, longer, but evenThere are also a number of tually only noisier gags.

The •Nude Bomb' fizzles
by J. T. Yurko
'The
Nude Bomb'-A
Universal Picture. Directed
by Clive Donner, written by
Arne Sultan, Bill Dana, and
Leonard B. Stern. Starring
Don Adams, Sylvia Kristel,
Rhonda Fleming, and Andrea
Howard. Rated PG.

Review
As a TV show, 'Get Smart'
was one of the best. Here
was a superb spool of the
James Bond superspy character and the slew of imita-

IIMCIII!LoUI:SW: 111!1'0111'

•
ROAD

•••••••••••••••

IIAIHYLLI! ON THE

1:00 CWIUCKIIOGI!IIIUITHE25111

• •

THE WALTONS John
agonlzaa over atudylng lOt' hi along
delayed high achool diploma while
Mary Ellen getaalaaaon In !He from
he&lt; beckwooda patlenta. (Repeat;
eomtna.)
.
(I) THE STATE WE'll!! 1H
® lllL IIOYEIIS' JOURNAL (eo
min a.)
8:30 (J) WAKE UP AMERICA
CIJ(jJ)• BENSON Banaonand hla
beleag-ed ataff lace 1 problem
when an overly ambhiOIIa lieutenant governor takea over lOt' a dizzy
GovemorGatllng,wholaglddylrom
medication. (Repeat)
C1J IHEAK PREVIEWS Hoata
RogerEbtrlandGentSiakololngle
out aome great lllma of the .70'a,
including 'The Late Show'.
'Straight Time', 'Maon Streett' ond
'Jo!igllt Movoa'.

8:00 (f).(!) IIOYIE OF THE WEEK
'Amat-NightAtTheDixleBirAnd ,
Grill' 1878 Stare: Tonyo Tucker,
Henry Glbaon. A droma about tho ;
peraonalllvea olthe partlclpantaln '
an 1mateur to lent contest being
ataged at a country and weatern '
roadhou11. (2 hre.)
&lt;Il700CLU8
CIJ (jJ). BARNEY lltLLER Tho ·
dedlcatedcrlmellghteraollhe 121h .
precinct warmly recall their colleague when they pay tribute to the
lett Jack Soo, who played Detective Yemana. (Repeat)
•&lt;IliAIIIWIY JONES Bam aby '
and 8at1y Jonta anend an Olympic
prellminarytryouttoaupporta pret- 1
ty, teenage gymnaat and tumble ·
lleadlonglntoa-rchtora'ghoet.'

PqeNiae-TVIhc4""oent

«friday»
.IUII!I,1110
I!V!NING

•~ ;·~~~1lo~,. :~!
(,19111tEDII PIIOGIII!II)
ANDY CMWFI IH IHOW

AICIII!WI

~~HI!WS
ILOVI!WCY

1:30

(!!.epeat: eo mini.I
(I) IIIOHTEOUS APPLES 'By
Hook'lnadaaptrateanompttoflnd
ntOnty, Sandy Burne bteonlea Involved with a clever pimp who
ctalma to hold the key to a bright

futuro.

® 1N1!AK PIII!YII!WS Gene Sil'""

ktl and Roger Ebert ravlew the la~movill.
.
&lt;IJI!MIII!*'TOUGH Afumbling
lilly Clyde dropa the ball when
Barbara Jane and Shake arroilge a
dele lor him while he Ia pining over
the woman he loved.
(J) GOOD HI!IGHIOIII

® fiiiOGIW! UIWIIIOUHCED

10:00 (]) IIOYII! o(COIIEDY) ••• "Tltt
lltoUnn" 1171
(J) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
energy optlonalor the long term
future, lncklding outer apace"•• 1
viable
of renew1ble

-ce

Hi=SEIIIe'aaadneaa
onlhtoccalionotGa,Y'ablrthday,
hermillingaon,qulcklychangaato
)llbllatlon when lheleama he and
Valent are both beck In Danae and
plan to be remarried. (Repeat; eo
mini.)

(J) IOUIID8TAQI! 'lith Annlver~--·teomlna.)

I
11~ ~W'e,'r€1Ze

10:30

HI!WI
110111W1 YUICEHT PEAL!!
OYEII EAIY Guaat: Dick

HI!WS
JOHN Alllti!RII!IIG IHOW
LAIT OF Till WILD 'WoH'
DAY! ALLI!NAT lAIIGI!
DICK CAVITT IHOW Gueat:
~ Walllbaugh, 1uthor. Part I
11:30 (f).(!) THI! TONIGifT IHOW
Gu11t holt: Joan Rlv1ra. Guilt:
~~Van llllren. (110 mlna.)
&lt;IliiOIIIAOLI!Y.IHOW
CIJIIOYII! o(ADV!IITURE) •• 1!1
''Tt11Telllln"18111
C1J 0 •
ABC HEWS

I

HIGHTIJIII!

~CULATI!IIOYII!'THEJEF­

FEA80NS: George' a Skeleton' A
friend 0411 ol Gtortt'a paet thraatena to rattle the akeleton In
Gtorge'a cloaet unleaa he comea
up with aome cuh. (Repllt)
'MOGAMBO' 1853 Stare: Clark
Gable, Ava Gwdntr.
Cll AIC CAI"TTIOII!D HEWS0
\It 'IIOYII! o(DRAIIA) "
"!!!IUrPIIY'aW•" 1171
11:45 C1J 11H1!AK PIII!YIEW: JUNE
11:10 CIJ . (jJ) •
CHARUE'S
ANGI!LI-IARETTA Charlle'a
Angela .. 'Winnlng Ia For Looera'
Thl angela enter the world of
Womtn'a prolealional goH to eave
thl life of a lovely young pro.
a.-..•Big, BadCharlie' Bartlta
playecuplcl while Marching lor the
Chlneae gang which plana to kill
Tony'alrltncl, Charlie. (Repeat; 2
hrl., 15 mini.)
12:15 CIJIIOYII!o(COIIEDY)••• "lrted
Mc1CIIocolatt"1177

1:0D (J). TOMORROW Hoat: Tom
llftydtr. Gueeta: Wamer WoH and
Steve =~-laportlcutera .

ObiOIIIA

1:30

HI!WI
.
IIOII!IIT ICHULUR

1:as

=o(IIYmiiY)•I!I

2:0D
2:01
2:30
1~11

"Tha
y-., tlltE..,andtlltlaY..."

P

!.JEUI!YE

• HI!WS
IIOIIBAGLI!Y SttOW
.
MOYIE
o(NIITOAICAL.fiOIIANCE) ••
"YOWII.._." 1170

4~
~700CLUI
5:30
10U11D OF THI! 1P111T

LOY! AIII!AICAN ITYlE

1.
2.

3._

.(J)8 CUHI!WS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
AHIIIALI
® OV!RI!AIY Gueat: Martin Bal·
11111. Hoet: Hugh Downa.

8.

CAIIOL IIUIINETT AND

7~~·:g..~
(I}ITUf'F

l
®

w,::=~SIC
LOY! AIII!IIICAII STYLE
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
:::ell-l!ltiii!R REPORT

7:30 (f). PRICE II RIGHT
(J) THI! LI!IION
C1J COHIUIIER REPORTS PRE·
SI!NTI 'The Medicine Show' For
con•-• conluaed about which
overthe-counterdrugaarethebest
buya, thla exclualve offera a cure.
Thla HCond eagrnent of HBO'a entertaining and lnlormotive aeries
helpaehopperamakewiaecholces
In the medicine marketplace.
&lt;Il IAII!IALL Afulnta Braves va
Loa Angelea Dodgers
Cll 8HA HA HA Gueat: Lola
Falana.
(!) (jJ) •
POP GOES THE

~ER'SWILD

(J) DICK CAVETT SHOW
()I FAaYFEUD
® IIACNEil-lEIIAER REPORT

~~

{I)IIOY11!-(COIIEDY) 00 \!o "FM-

co Kilt' ~.,.. ,J

i' t-.

(I) (II. I'IIIDAY HIGHT IIOYIE
'The Billion Dollar Threat' 1979
Stare: Date Robinette, Patrick

..__

(!) ILLY GIWWI CRUSADE
.(1)8 THI! IICREDIBLE HULK
While -"'II with a rodeo, David
Ba11ner dlacovera that one of the
. cowboy~ II petlonnlng with an 111neaa which could coat him hie lifo
lllld hla 11ro111tr Ia at the IIHII'cy ota
grooopolcettlethilvti.(Repeat;80

....

~

(J) (II) WAIIIIIGTON WEEK IN

III!YII!W

8:111 (J). -AND IWIX Wh111 Norman leama of the death of hla
lather, whom he hadn't aeen lor
yeare, helorgota a baatbaH game
to anend Dad'a Day at Maxx'a
achool.
(I) ® WALL ITIIUT WEEK
'Requiem tor Auto Stocke' Host:
Loula~.

I:OD (f).(!) THI!IIOCKFOIIDFILES
WhenJinuWictantlyagrMatobea
proxy lOt' a friend at a amall town
council II!Mtlng, ha geta caught
bthoeantwolinlllerlactlonavylng
tor control of the vltlage to promote
gambling and land development.
epeat: eo mlna.l
7DDCUII
(J) Ill THE DUKES OF HAZ·

i

4.

5.
7.

8.
I.
10.

11.
12.

DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueat:

Sa.-.h Celclwelt, opera dlrectllt'.

13.
14.

15.
11.
17.

18.
19.
20.

What Hrln feetured Lance Kerwin other then
'J1m11 At 15'f
·
Whet ector atlrred n the held of the f11111lly In
thet Hrlnf·
Who aterrell n hla wife 7
Who hed the title role In the movie 'The World
of Suzie Wont' 7
Whote reel neme 11 Herrlat Lake7
Who pleyed Jolhue Bolton on 'Here Comn tl)e
Brldll'7
Who pleyed hl1 brother Jeremy7
Whet w11 hla effllctlon7
Who pleyed the title role In 'The Men From
Atlentl1'7
Whet 11 the reel neme of the beer known 11 'Gentle
Btn'7
Whet Wll the Lone Renaer'a rtll neme 7
.
Who w11 the neme of Ben Certwrlaht'a ho1'18 on
'Bonenze'7
Who pleyed Jeff on '77 SunHt Strlp'7
Whet Hrltl feetured the cherecter Lt.
Muldoon7
Who pleyed hlm7
Who took hl1 place the followlna yeer7
Whet w11 hit name on the Hrltl7
Who hid the title role In the 111• of 'Andy
Burnett'?
Whet Hrles feetured thla alx·pet1 mln1Hrlt17
Wh9 aterred 11 the orlalnel Zorro In 'The Merll
of Zorro'7
T¥

ZAAD A stolon truckload o1 Bon
llogg'atelevision sots gels Bo and
Lulie accused of hijacking, so lhoy
havolo lind the real croolta to vindicate thernaalvea. (Repeat; eo
min a.)
CIJIIOYIE o(DRAIIA) •••• "The
~of lht Long D'-tance
Rumer" 1M2
())) HOIH'ICT10N TELEVISION
'Service Entrance' and 'Man ol
Wheat' Thlo progr1m teaturoa two
haH hour lllma about lndlvlduali in'
ouraoclety.Thetlratlollowsanalmlua teenager who enllata in the
Army Reaerveinan enempt to odd
direction tohlallle.Tho second pOt'traya the aaga of a wheat Iarmer
who goealrom raga to riches in his
lifetime. (8Qmlna.)
·
10:00 (f).(!) fiiiCIII!I'OIITS
CIJ IIOYII! o(COIIEDY) •• 1!1 "Up
FI'OIII Tha Dtplht" 117g
·&lt;ll ENERGY EXPO Exploring
Amarfca'l energy optionl.

CIJ (jJ) •
TENSPEED AND
IAOWH IHOE Lionel' a probe of a
40-~-oidunaotvedmwderleada

thti111Prob1ble privati detective
and hla partner E.L.Into a atorm of
machine gun ltre and a myaterioua
meeting 11 the old murder acene.
(OOminl.)
• C1J (I) DALLAS Lucy decide a

that Alan Baam Ia the man lor her
atterlhewftneaaaahlmstlndingup
toJ.R. withoutknowlnghwuollght
ataged by the two of them to convlncl CIIIIBarnea of Blam'aloyal(Repeat; eo mins.)
HI!WI
10:30
IIICIIAIID HOGUE
OYERI!ASY Gueat: Martin Balaant Hoat: Hugh Downs.
11:00 (f) • Cll (!) • &lt;ll &lt;Ia) (jJ) • .
HI!WS
(J) DAN GIIIFFUI

i

Allergy and Dermatology
FAMILY CLINIC
9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m . Monday · Friday

SILVER
BRIDGE

PlAiA -

·oz

SIIUICijiWJ "1tnoa
,pufiA:IUIIQ, 'It
pufiiA~ IWOAif 'It
AIJIAid ~II IN 'I. t
UOijllfC~W e~AOH 'It

crv I.Q.

,...,.

reacuea a hearing-Impaired girl,
who became aaparated from her
cta._tea during an ol!llng.

liLLY GIWWI CRUSADE

C1J fill

r

~~ (f). HI!III!'SIOOIIER Boomer

CI!IITIIIIY BliCk Rogera, maaquer-

adiftg aa a Mhleaa convict, and a
beaulllul but cunning !Mail prtaoner are handcuffed together ••
they break 0411 of )aN and are relentltaalypurautd by an lndtltructlble
android. (Repeat; eo mlna.)
(J) .IIIKIIWIII!I 5I ACTION
CIJ IIOYII! o(IIYITI!RY) •• 1!1
"l!yea 01~ ...... 1171
&lt;IliiOYII!o(COIIEDY·WI!STEAH)
11
••
FII'tCJ ,.,.., 1110
Cll61l.IIOIIK AND IIIHDY MOt'k ·
and Mindy lind themaelvealn the
middle of Exldor'a hllarlouelove
affair with a lovely meter maid In
which MOt'k muat coach the zany
Exldor Into a proper marrlego
·iopoaai:(Repeat)

1 ;'

DAVID CARR, D. O.
2924 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
FOR APPOINTMEfH CALL 675-6971

~LOG

IAilUIOW UIIOr 'lit
,A:al3 PlliiN, 'tt
IIIIIUI Aeloll '£ t
J10ft8 'Zt
Plell UIIOr 'tt
0 ..

ourua 'Ot

11~14'4 .•
IUIAe»ftiS '8
UIWAfiiS A:qq0f1 'I.
IIIOS PIAICI '8

we1110S uuy 'li

UIIIIJI

A:~UIN

't

IIJAIH ennr '£
JUOJ uue10

·z

,JIIAIOH A:IIWIJ, 't

S.J3MSU~

answer

HltYtCII, INC

DAVID
HARTMAN

&lt;I&gt; LAST OF THE WILD 'The Last

Refuge'
CIJ DAYEALLENATLARGE
® DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest:
Sarah Caldwell, opera directllt'.
11:30 (f).(!) THETONIGHT SHOW
Guaat hoat: Joan Rivera. Guests:
Barbara Waltara, MartyLaahner.
mina.)
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
IIOYIE o(DAAIIA) ••• 1!1 "Walk
Proud"
.
CIJIIOYIE o(IIOIIIIOR) •• "Pyro"
11113
CIJ(jJ). FRIDAYS
• CIJ CBS LATE IIOYIE 'THE
AVENGERS: The Bird Who Knew
Too Much' Agentatake photo aof a
top aecret military base by using
carrier plgeona with little camerae
atrapped to their lege. 'THE RETURNOF THE SAINT: Dregonsead'
Stare:
ian
Ogilvy,
Sam
Wanamaker.
C1J AIC CAPTIDHED HEWS
8 IIOYII! 'Frank111ateln Must Be
Deatroyed' 1GI8f'lterCushing,
Simon Ward. 2) 'TIITorintheHauntedllouM'1M8GaraidMonr.Cathy
O'DonMtl. (2 hrl. 30 mlna.)
12:00 IDAYIDIUSIKIHDSHOW
12:40
e.RGEHCY
12:41
• HI!WS
1:00
• (!) THE IIIDHIGHT
SPI!CIAL
&lt;IllliiiGKT
1:15 (])
BASI!IALL: GREATES
IPOIIn IIVAUIII!S 'The YankMIVI TheDodge(s' Relive one of
bellbaM'a greateat oporta rtvalrlta,thiYankeaavatheDodgera,in
film cllpa of tha teama claaalc conlrontatlonain10Wortd Series.
1:30 &lt;Il JIIIIIY SWAGGAIIT

I

&lt;llHI!WI

'Hila

1:45 (]) GOLDEN AGE OF BUSTER
KEATON The buffoonery of silent

ecreen atar Buster Keaton will

dellglltyoungandold.He'llworl&lt;his
way Into your heart as hewprl&lt;s his
w1y In and oul of trouble in lhooe
ctualc moments from his greatest '
film a.
1:50 &lt;I&gt; MOYIE o(DRAIIA) ' " "Doep
Yalllr'' 1~7
·

2~
2:30
.
3:55

~tBEUEYE
.f!EWS

IIDSS BAGLEY SHOW
IIOYIE o(IIYSTERY) "1!1
"HouiiOfF..r" 1141 ·
4~ ~ 700Cllll •
5:15
LOYEAIIEIIICANSTYLE
5:30
JUST PASSING THIIU

SUPER
PHARMACY
• The Low Cost
Prescription Specialists
• Low Cost Photo
Finishing
• ~lways Specials .
'Throughout The Store
• Tiniex Watches At
Discount Prices.
r.l\I:J Health •
~

J)q I• ~ )1~11 1

IIIW

~Hi ll

A1d Pharmacy
lit

U

ho u UllOC l

Appalachian Tire Products, Inc.
426 Viand Street

675-3930

Point Pleasant

"Your Good Year Tire ·Headquarters"

GOOD/YEAR
• TIRE CENTER

• ROAD SERVICE

(

�~ ., ~ , .: •.,.. • • r: ' ' ,

•

Page Eight-TV Supplement

((thursday»-- F i I m Clips-JUNU, 1180
EVENING

~~ !ll•Wc,!tii.!~,.,=~~:

~

JOINED IN PROGRESS)

ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC HEWS
®ZOOM
1:30 (J). (!) NBC HEWS
&lt;Ill LOVE LUCY
(I)
CAROL BUAHETT AND
FRIENDS
• (J) (I) CIS NEWS
(I) WILD WILD WOIILD OF
AJIIIIALS

®

OYER EASY Guest: Dick
Smothera. Hoet: Hugh Downs.
ABC NEWS
7~
. CAOSSWITS
BACKYARD
I!OQAH'S HI!ROES
~~~-FACE THE IIUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
IIACHEiloLI!HIIER REPORT
HI!WS
DICIC CAVEn IHOW Gueot:
~ Wambaugh, author. Part A
7:111 (J). HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(J) ZOLA LI!Y1TT
C1J GUllTY 011 NOT GUllTY The
StatavaDr.Coppolino. With the aid
olatocklootageandetlh,thlalaatpacad uclualve recreataa the
rtvellng mwdertrtal of Dr. Carl Coppolino,. trial which ltized loa'a anentlon during the ·eo..
(J) ALL• THI! FAaY
(J) TIIIONI!'I FOil DAD Ayoung
boyltamatocopewlththedeathot
hie tether. Stare: Johrlny Whitaker,

I

Dickti~TnM

I

character that created the subtle jokes and throw-away
· genre he is the only one to gags to be fourid If one can
survive its demise . So the catch .the allusions. For inrevival of Ma~well Smart in a stance. the chief villain con feature length movie ·is more stantly wears gold thimbles
an e~er cise in nostalgia than as a spoof of 'Goldfinger.· and
in topical satire. Ma~ is the Ma~ no longer · works for
same here as he was in the Control but for an agency
TV show, walking brashly in.to known as the ' Provisional
danger. facing death with a · Intelligence and Tactical
timid false bravado, and as Service' - or the ' P.I.T.S.' for
short.
always. 'loving it! '
One of the chief appeals of
The threat to the world
the newest Bond films is their
Ma~ is called upon to van quish . comes in the form of elaborate special effects, and
KAOS (of course) which has 'The Nude Bomb' also has its
developed a bomb that des- share of special effects, but
troys all known fabrics, thus they are of such poor quality
renderi~g the world comple- that if they were any worse
, tely nude. Although as a plot they would almost be funny
line it's serviceably silly, it's in and of themselves. These
also indicative of the entire shots are the kind the 'small
film whicl-! is little more than screen' and small budget and
a lavish TV episode. The story casual viewer can easily
is a bit more convoluted . the accept, but on the big
tors the phenomenally suc- electronio·gadgets a bit more screen-are all too fake .
cessful Bond films spawned, elaborate, and the scenery a There is even a chase that
such as 'Matt He'lm' and 'Our touch more e~otic, but it's takes place on Universal
Man Flint.' With Don Adams much the same stuff. Instead Studios' backlot. which ceras the fumbling, bumbling of getting one '·cone of tainly saves some bucks
Maxwell Smart. Agent 86, the silence' there are enough of scouting locations and serves
show quickly became a rat- them to drive several of as a self-indulgent commer cial for the Universal Studios
ings winner and still com- M~'s superiors crazy.
mands quite a following in
Much of the humor in the tour.
Those staunch followers of
re-runs. Having been the film (and there are some very
brainchild of two such fertile funny moments) stems from Agent 86 will no doubt enjoy
yet off-beat imaginations as either Ma~·s slapstick inepti- ' the continued antics as the
those of Mel Brooks and Buck tude or his wrestling with viii&lt;Wos of the world try to
Henry, it's easy to see why 'spy-fi' gadgetry such ;~s his 'Gef Smart,' but in taking a
premise
and
the show was such a shoe-phone or a desk which half-hour
converts into a car traveling stretehing it to a feature
· success.
Certainly James Bond is in e~cess of 40 miles per hour length film we are presented
still around, but as the but less in the living room. with more, longer, but evenThere are also a number of tually only noisier gags.

The •Nude Bomb' fizzles
by J. T. Yurko
'The
Nude Bomb'-A
Universal Picture. Directed
by Clive Donner, written by
Arne Sultan, Bill Dana, and
Leonard B. Stern. Starring
Don Adams, Sylvia Kristel,
Rhonda Fleming, and Andrea
Howard. Rated PG.

Review
As a TV show, 'Get Smart'
was one of the best. Here
was a superb spool of the
James Bond superspy character and the slew of imita-

IIMCIII!LoUI:SW: 111!1'0111'

•
ROAD

•••••••••••••••

IIAIHYLLI! ON THE

1:00 CWIUCKIIOGI!IIIUITHE25111

• •

THE WALTONS John
agonlzaa over atudylng lOt' hi along
delayed high achool diploma while
Mary Ellen getaalaaaon In !He from
he&lt; beckwooda patlenta. (Repeat;
eomtna.)
.
(I) THE STATE WE'll!! 1H
® lllL IIOYEIIS' JOURNAL (eo
min a.)
8:30 (J) WAKE UP AMERICA
CIJ(jJ)• BENSON Banaonand hla
beleag-ed ataff lace 1 problem
when an overly ambhiOIIa lieutenant governor takea over lOt' a dizzy
GovemorGatllng,wholaglddylrom
medication. (Repeat)
C1J IHEAK PREVIEWS Hoata
RogerEbtrlandGentSiakololngle
out aome great lllma of the .70'a,
including 'The Late Show'.
'Straight Time', 'Maon Streett' ond
'Jo!igllt Movoa'.

8:00 (f).(!) IIOYIE OF THE WEEK
'Amat-NightAtTheDixleBirAnd ,
Grill' 1878 Stare: Tonyo Tucker,
Henry Glbaon. A droma about tho ;
peraonalllvea olthe partlclpantaln '
an 1mateur to lent contest being
ataged at a country and weatern '
roadhou11. (2 hre.)
&lt;Il700CLU8
CIJ (jJ). BARNEY lltLLER Tho ·
dedlcatedcrlmellghteraollhe 121h .
precinct warmly recall their colleague when they pay tribute to the
lett Jack Soo, who played Detective Yemana. (Repeat)
•&lt;IliAIIIWIY JONES Bam aby '
and 8at1y Jonta anend an Olympic
prellminarytryouttoaupporta pret- 1
ty, teenage gymnaat and tumble ·
lleadlonglntoa-rchtora'ghoet.'

PqeNiae-TVIhc4""oent

«friday»
.IUII!I,1110
I!V!NING

•~ ;·~~~1lo~,. :~!
(,19111tEDII PIIOGIII!II)
ANDY CMWFI IH IHOW

AICIII!WI

~~HI!WS
ILOVI!WCY

1:30

(!!.epeat: eo mini.I
(I) IIIOHTEOUS APPLES 'By
Hook'lnadaaptrateanompttoflnd
ntOnty, Sandy Burne bteonlea Involved with a clever pimp who
ctalma to hold the key to a bright

futuro.

® 1N1!AK PIII!YII!WS Gene Sil'""

ktl and Roger Ebert ravlew the la~movill.
.
&lt;IJI!MIII!*'TOUGH Afumbling
lilly Clyde dropa the ball when
Barbara Jane and Shake arroilge a
dele lor him while he Ia pining over
the woman he loved.
(J) GOOD HI!IGHIOIII

® fiiiOGIW! UIWIIIOUHCED

10:00 (]) IIOYII! o(COIIEDY) ••• "Tltt
lltoUnn" 1171
(J) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
energy optlonalor the long term
future, lncklding outer apace"•• 1
viable
of renew1ble

-ce

Hi=SEIIIe'aaadneaa
onlhtoccalionotGa,Y'ablrthday,
hermillingaon,qulcklychangaato
)llbllatlon when lheleama he and
Valent are both beck In Danae and
plan to be remarried. (Repeat; eo
mini.)

(J) IOUIID8TAQI! 'lith Annlver~--·teomlna.)

I
11~ ~W'e,'r€1Ze

10:30

HI!WI
110111W1 YUICEHT PEAL!!
OYEII EAIY Guaat: Dick

HI!WS
JOHN Alllti!RII!IIG IHOW
LAIT OF Till WILD 'WoH'
DAY! ALLI!NAT lAIIGI!
DICK CAVITT IHOW Gueat:
~ Walllbaugh, 1uthor. Part I
11:30 (f).(!) THI! TONIGifT IHOW
Gu11t holt: Joan Rlv1ra. Guilt:
~~Van llllren. (110 mlna.)
&lt;IliiOIIIAOLI!Y.IHOW
CIJIIOYII! o(ADV!IITURE) •• 1!1
''Tt11Telllln"18111
C1J 0 •
ABC HEWS

I

HIGHTIJIII!

~CULATI!IIOYII!'THEJEF­

FEA80NS: George' a Skeleton' A
friend 0411 ol Gtortt'a paet thraatena to rattle the akeleton In
Gtorge'a cloaet unleaa he comea
up with aome cuh. (Repllt)
'MOGAMBO' 1853 Stare: Clark
Gable, Ava Gwdntr.
Cll AIC CAI"TTIOII!D HEWS0
\It 'IIOYII! o(DRAIIA) "
"!!!IUrPIIY'aW•" 1171
11:45 C1J 11H1!AK PIII!YIEW: JUNE
11:10 CIJ . (jJ) •
CHARUE'S
ANGI!LI-IARETTA Charlle'a
Angela .. 'Winnlng Ia For Looera'
Thl angela enter the world of
Womtn'a prolealional goH to eave
thl life of a lovely young pro.
a.-..•Big, BadCharlie' Bartlta
playecuplcl while Marching lor the
Chlneae gang which plana to kill
Tony'alrltncl, Charlie. (Repeat; 2
hrl., 15 mini.)
12:15 CIJIIOYII!o(COIIEDY)••• "lrted
Mc1CIIocolatt"1177

1:0D (J). TOMORROW Hoat: Tom
llftydtr. Gueeta: Wamer WoH and
Steve =~-laportlcutera .

ObiOIIIA

1:30

HI!WI
.
IIOII!IIT ICHULUR

1:as

=o(IIYmiiY)•I!I

2:0D
2:01
2:30
1~11

"Tha
y-., tlltE..,andtlltlaY..."

P

!.JEUI!YE

• HI!WS
IIOIIBAGLI!Y SttOW
.
MOYIE
o(NIITOAICAL.fiOIIANCE) ••
"YOWII.._." 1170

4~
~700CLUI
5:30
10U11D OF THI! 1P111T

LOY! AIII!AICAN ITYlE

1.
2.

3._

.(J)8 CUHI!WS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
AHIIIALI
® OV!RI!AIY Gueat: Martin Bal·
11111. Hoet: Hugh Downa.

8.

CAIIOL IIUIINETT AND

7~~·:g..~
(I}ITUf'F

l
®

w,::=~SIC
LOY! AIII!IIICAII STYLE
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
:::ell-l!ltiii!R REPORT

7:30 (f). PRICE II RIGHT
(J) THI! LI!IION
C1J COHIUIIER REPORTS PRE·
SI!NTI 'The Medicine Show' For
con•-• conluaed about which
overthe-counterdrugaarethebest
buya, thla exclualve offera a cure.
Thla HCond eagrnent of HBO'a entertaining and lnlormotive aeries
helpaehopperamakewiaecholces
In the medicine marketplace.
&lt;Il IAII!IALL Afulnta Braves va
Loa Angelea Dodgers
Cll 8HA HA HA Gueat: Lola
Falana.
(!) (jJ) •
POP GOES THE

~ER'SWILD

(J) DICK CAVETT SHOW
()I FAaYFEUD
® IIACNEil-lEIIAER REPORT

~~

{I)IIOY11!-(COIIEDY) 00 \!o "FM-

co Kilt' ~.,.. ,J

i' t-.

(I) (II. I'IIIDAY HIGHT IIOYIE
'The Billion Dollar Threat' 1979
Stare: Date Robinette, Patrick

..__

(!) ILLY GIWWI CRUSADE
.(1)8 THI! IICREDIBLE HULK
While -"'II with a rodeo, David
Ba11ner dlacovera that one of the
. cowboy~ II petlonnlng with an 111neaa which could coat him hie lifo
lllld hla 11ro111tr Ia at the IIHII'cy ota
grooopolcettlethilvti.(Repeat;80

....

~

(J) (II) WAIIIIIGTON WEEK IN

III!YII!W

8:111 (J). -AND IWIX Wh111 Norman leama of the death of hla
lather, whom he hadn't aeen lor
yeare, helorgota a baatbaH game
to anend Dad'a Day at Maxx'a
achool.
(I) ® WALL ITIIUT WEEK
'Requiem tor Auto Stocke' Host:
Loula~.

I:OD (f).(!) THI!IIOCKFOIIDFILES
WhenJinuWictantlyagrMatobea
proxy lOt' a friend at a amall town
council II!Mtlng, ha geta caught
bthoeantwolinlllerlactlonavylng
tor control of the vltlage to promote
gambling and land development.
epeat: eo mlna.l
7DDCUII
(J) Ill THE DUKES OF HAZ·

i

4.

5.
7.

8.
I.
10.

11.
12.

DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueat:

Sa.-.h Celclwelt, opera dlrectllt'.

13.
14.

15.
11.
17.

18.
19.
20.

What Hrln feetured Lance Kerwin other then
'J1m11 At 15'f
·
Whet ector atlrred n the held of the f11111lly In
thet Hrlnf·
Who aterrell n hla wife 7
Who hed the title role In the movie 'The World
of Suzie Wont' 7
Whote reel neme 11 Herrlat Lake7
Who pleyed Jolhue Bolton on 'Here Comn tl)e
Brldll'7
Who pleyed hl1 brother Jeremy7
Whet w11 hla effllctlon7
Who pleyed the title role In 'The Men From
Atlentl1'7
Whet 11 the reel neme of the beer known 11 'Gentle
Btn'7
Whet Wll the Lone Renaer'a rtll neme 7
.
Who w11 the neme of Ben Certwrlaht'a ho1'18 on
'Bonenze'7
Who pleyed Jeff on '77 SunHt Strlp'7
Whet Hrltl feetured the cherecter Lt.
Muldoon7
Who pleyed hlm7
Who took hl1 place the followlna yeer7
Whet w11 hit name on the Hrltl7
Who hid the title role In the 111• of 'Andy
Burnett'?
Whet Hrles feetured thla alx·pet1 mln1Hrlt17
Wh9 aterred 11 the orlalnel Zorro In 'The Merll
of Zorro'7
T¥

ZAAD A stolon truckload o1 Bon
llogg'atelevision sots gels Bo and
Lulie accused of hijacking, so lhoy
havolo lind the real croolta to vindicate thernaalvea. (Repeat; eo
min a.)
CIJIIOYIE o(DRAIIA) •••• "The
~of lht Long D'-tance
Rumer" 1M2
())) HOIH'ICT10N TELEVISION
'Service Entrance' and 'Man ol
Wheat' Thlo progr1m teaturoa two
haH hour lllma about lndlvlduali in'
ouraoclety.Thetlratlollowsanalmlua teenager who enllata in the
Army Reaerveinan enempt to odd
direction tohlallle.Tho second pOt'traya the aaga of a wheat Iarmer
who goealrom raga to riches in his
lifetime. (8Qmlna.)
·
10:00 (f).(!) fiiiCIII!I'OIITS
CIJ IIOYII! o(COIIEDY) •• 1!1 "Up
FI'OIII Tha Dtplht" 117g
·&lt;ll ENERGY EXPO Exploring
Amarfca'l energy optionl.

CIJ (jJ) •
TENSPEED AND
IAOWH IHOE Lionel' a probe of a
40-~-oidunaotvedmwderleada

thti111Prob1ble privati detective
and hla partner E.L.Into a atorm of
machine gun ltre and a myaterioua
meeting 11 the old murder acene.
(OOminl.)
• C1J (I) DALLAS Lucy decide a

that Alan Baam Ia the man lor her
atterlhewftneaaaahlmstlndingup
toJ.R. withoutknowlnghwuollght
ataged by the two of them to convlncl CIIIIBarnea of Blam'aloyal(Repeat; eo mins.)
HI!WI
10:30
IIICIIAIID HOGUE
OYERI!ASY Gueat: Martin Balaant Hoat: Hugh Downs.
11:00 (f) • Cll (!) • &lt;ll &lt;Ia) (jJ) • .
HI!WS
(J) DAN GIIIFFUI

i

Allergy and Dermatology
FAMILY CLINIC
9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m . Monday · Friday

SILVER
BRIDGE

PlAiA -

·oz

SIIUICijiWJ "1tnoa
,pufiA:IUIIQ, 'It
pufiiA~ IWOAif 'It
AIJIAid ~II IN 'I. t
UOijllfC~W e~AOH 'It

crv I.Q.

,...,.

reacuea a hearing-Impaired girl,
who became aaparated from her
cta._tea during an ol!llng.

liLLY GIWWI CRUSADE

C1J fill

r

~~ (f). HI!III!'SIOOIIER Boomer

CI!IITIIIIY BliCk Rogera, maaquer-

adiftg aa a Mhleaa convict, and a
beaulllul but cunning !Mail prtaoner are handcuffed together ••
they break 0411 of )aN and are relentltaalypurautd by an lndtltructlble
android. (Repeat; eo mlna.)
(J) .IIIKIIWIII!I 5I ACTION
CIJ IIOYII! o(IIYITI!RY) •• 1!1
"l!yea 01~ ...... 1171
&lt;IliiOYII!o(COIIEDY·WI!STEAH)
11
••
FII'tCJ ,.,.., 1110
Cll61l.IIOIIK AND IIIHDY MOt'k ·
and Mindy lind themaelvealn the
middle of Exldor'a hllarlouelove
affair with a lovely meter maid In
which MOt'k muat coach the zany
Exldor Into a proper marrlego
·iopoaai:(Repeat)

1 ;'

DAVID CARR, D. O.
2924 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
FOR APPOINTMEfH CALL 675-6971

~LOG

IAilUIOW UIIOr 'lit
,A:al3 PlliiN, 'tt
IIIIIUI Aeloll '£ t
J10ft8 'Zt
Plell UIIOr 'tt
0 ..

ourua 'Ot

11~14'4 .•
IUIAe»ftiS '8
UIWAfiiS A:qq0f1 'I.
IIIOS PIAICI '8

we1110S uuy 'li

UIIIIJI

A:~UIN

't

IIJAIH ennr '£
JUOJ uue10

·z

,JIIAIOH A:IIWIJ, 't

S.J3MSU~

answer

HltYtCII, INC

DAVID
HARTMAN

&lt;I&gt; LAST OF THE WILD 'The Last

Refuge'
CIJ DAYEALLENATLARGE
® DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest:
Sarah Caldwell, opera directllt'.
11:30 (f).(!) THETONIGHT SHOW
Guaat hoat: Joan Rivera. Guests:
Barbara Waltara, MartyLaahner.
mina.)
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
IIOYIE o(DAAIIA) ••• 1!1 "Walk
Proud"
.
CIJIIOYIE o(IIOIIIIOR) •• "Pyro"
11113
CIJ(jJ). FRIDAYS
• CIJ CBS LATE IIOYIE 'THE
AVENGERS: The Bird Who Knew
Too Much' Agentatake photo aof a
top aecret military base by using
carrier plgeona with little camerae
atrapped to their lege. 'THE RETURNOF THE SAINT: Dregonsead'
Stare:
ian
Ogilvy,
Sam
Wanamaker.
C1J AIC CAPTIDHED HEWS
8 IIOYII! 'Frank111ateln Must Be
Deatroyed' 1GI8f'lterCushing,
Simon Ward. 2) 'TIITorintheHauntedllouM'1M8GaraidMonr.Cathy
O'DonMtl. (2 hrl. 30 mlna.)
12:00 IDAYIDIUSIKIHDSHOW
12:40
e.RGEHCY
12:41
• HI!WS
1:00
• (!) THE IIIDHIGHT
SPI!CIAL
&lt;IllliiiGKT
1:15 (])
BASI!IALL: GREATES
IPOIIn IIVAUIII!S 'The YankMIVI TheDodge(s' Relive one of
bellbaM'a greateat oporta rtvalrlta,thiYankeaavatheDodgera,in
film cllpa of tha teama claaalc conlrontatlonain10Wortd Series.
1:30 &lt;Il JIIIIIY SWAGGAIIT

I

&lt;llHI!WI

'Hila

1:45 (]) GOLDEN AGE OF BUSTER
KEATON The buffoonery of silent

ecreen atar Buster Keaton will

dellglltyoungandold.He'llworl&lt;his
way Into your heart as hewprl&lt;s his
w1y In and oul of trouble in lhooe
ctualc moments from his greatest '
film a.
1:50 &lt;I&gt; MOYIE o(DRAIIA) ' " "Doep
Yalllr'' 1~7
·

2~
2:30
.
3:55

~tBEUEYE
.f!EWS

IIDSS BAGLEY SHOW
IIOYIE o(IIYSTERY) "1!1
"HouiiOfF..r" 1141 ·
4~ ~ 700Cllll •
5:15
LOYEAIIEIIICANSTYLE
5:30
JUST PASSING THIIU

SUPER
PHARMACY
• The Low Cost
Prescription Specialists
• Low Cost Photo
Finishing
• ~lways Specials .
'Throughout The Store
• Tiniex Watches At
Discount Prices.
r.l\I:J Health •
~

J)q I• ~ )1~11 1

IIIW

~Hi ll

A1d Pharmacy
lit

U

ho u UllOC l

Appalachian Tire Products, Inc.
426 Viand Street

675-3930

Point Pleasant

"Your Good Year Tire ·Headquarters"

GOOD/YEAR
• TIRE CENTER

• ROAD SERVICE

(

�Page Ten-TV Supplement
present continuous news and possess an un·
precedented capability to 'go live' anywhere in the
world where major news is breaking at any hour of
·
the day or night.
CNN is the brainchild of R.E . 'Ted' Turner,
president of Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.
Turner's television station, 'WTBS, Atlanta, came to
national prominence as the Superstation seen on
cable systems throughout America with a 5chedule
of sports and entertainment programming.
Both CNN's and WTBS' operations will be
headquartered at the new $23 million Turner
Broadcasting System center in Atlanta. There will be
seven CNN news bureaus in the United States-in
Ne.w York, Washington, Los Angeles, Dallas, Chicago,
San Francisco, and Miami.
There also will be several foreign news bureaus.
In association with the Canadian Television Network,
Ltd. (CTV), CNN will operate joint bureaus in Peking,
London, and the Middle East, sharing production
facilities, resources, and satellite feeds. With its
Peking bureau, CNN will be the first American
television network to have a permanent news
'presence in the People's Republic of China. CNN also
has formed an association with UPITN, which has
agreed to supplement the reports CNN receives from
its own bureaus.
Among those who will report and interpret the
news to the American public are former CBS News
corre$pondent Daniel Schorr, former Secretary of
the Treasury William Simon, former ABC News
Vice-President and Washington Bureau Chief George
Watson, U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater, and former
,.. COIIPUI.oo ,........ ooc.
Congresswoman Bella Abzug.

SPECIALS
GIDDE •.
SUNDAY
JUNE 1, 11180
AFTERNOON
4:00 CIJ EXCELLENCE FOREVER This
prog&lt;om oxpiO&lt;eo the wort&lt; of Inter·
nationally known wood-carver
Auguat Crabtree.

(ill.

7:00

'

8:00

.

EVENING
(I)
ntE YEAGER$ Carroll
Yeager and member• of his family ...,
light IOf their lives altar their plane
craoheoln daaolate mountaina and
they are threatened by avalanches
of mud. Stars: Andy Griffith, David
Ack1J1Ydj80 mlns.)
(I) [JZI •
HAL LINDEN'S BIG
APPLE Hal Linden steps out of the
squad roO&lt;n and Into the etroets and
skyscrapers of Naw York lor ana·
live aon's voyage home in a special
hour of music and comedy with
guests Shecky Greene, Robert
GulllaumeondtheRadioCityMuaic
Hall' a Rockettea. (80 mlna.)
m . THE DREAM MERCHANTS
Storo: Morgan Fairchild, Mart&lt;Har·
mon, Brlanneleary. An ambitious
young drifter named Johnny Edge
begins a movie studio dynasty in
Hollywood'o golden era. (Pt II; 2
hra.)
(J)ENERGYEXPOTheDaveloping
EnergyCrlala:ALongTradition,and
examinee the history of America' a
present energy situation.

8:00

10:00

MONDAY
JUNE 2, 11180
EVENING
8:00 •
(I) iB) BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
C1J (jj) PICASSO: A PAINTER'S
DIARYPicuaoapeakalorhimsell,
by means ot an actor' avoice-over,
in thlalntlmatalook at the artist, hi a
family, friends and wort&lt;a. (90
mins.)
8:30 CIJISLAII, THEYEILANDTHEFuTURE Nancy Dickerson presides
over a session of American and Ia-

)

Iamie women eltploring the vast

difference in their lifestyles.
(jj) ISLAM, THE VEIL AND THE
FUTURE
10:00 &lt;1DJ STEVE AND EYDIE

CABLE IIEWS NETWORK
Turner Broadcasting System : lnc .

Growing cable audience
more than three million
The Cable News Network (CNN) on Sunday,
June ' 1 will begin live, twenty-four-hour-a-day news
coverage on cable television systems throughout the
United States which promises to revolut1omze the
way in which Americans will be informed about
domestic and global events and 1ssues. At tis
inception, the CNN staff will include more than three
hundred electronic journalists, executtves, and
technical persons.
Cable television systems with a total of more
than three million . subscribing households are
committed as of this date to carry CNN . Other cable
systems continue to sign on in anticipation of the
CNN premiere on Sunday, June 1.
.
From the moment it is launched, CNN will
TUESDAY
JUNE3, 1880

WEDNESDAY
JUNE4, 1880

FRIDAY
JUNU, 1880

EVENING
Bill.Y GRAHAM
8:00 (!) • CIJ
CRUSADE
Cl)(jj) NOVA 'APiagueonOurChil·
dren'Toxlcherbicldee,peetlcldes,
and other chemlcala may cause
cancer, mlacarrlagea and birth
dolecta, and the evidence Ia just
beginning to cO&lt;na oul. This pro·
.gram examines the harmful effects
deadly chemica Ia may have on this
and following genera tiona. (2 hra.)
8:30 (]) ENERGY EXPO A look at op·
tiona In the near future, and how
Americana must ad)uat to meet
energy needs in the transitional
!!!~J!!tlore ua.
11:30 ~DECISION'80Areporton
the reouha of the Colllomil, Ohio,
New Jeraey, Montana, and South
Dokolo Prealdanliol primaries.
eCIJ®&gt; CAMPAIGN'80Araport
on the reaulta of the California,
Ohio, Montana, South Dakota, New ·
Jeraey, and Wast Virginia Pre·
oldentlal primaries.

EVENING
8:00 (!) • (I) &lt;1DJ BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
10:00 (]) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
anergy options.

EVENING·
8:00 (!) BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE
10:00 m•CIJ NBC REPORtS
(I) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
America's anergy options.

®J

Page Eleven- TV Supplement

«saturday))
JUNE 7, _11180
MORNING
WORLDATLARGE

5:48
8:00

THURSDAY
JUNE5, 1880

AFTERNOON
12:00 CIJ(D). WEEKENDSPECtAL

EVENING
7:30 CIJTHISONE'SFORDADAyoung
boylaomatocopewiththedeathol
hlalathor. Stare: Johnny Whitaker,
Dick Von PoHen.
8:00 CIJ BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE
10:00 (I) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
anergy optlonalor the long term
future, Including outer space as a
viable aourca of renewable
energy,

EVENING
8:00 CIJ(JD IRAN: INSIDE THE ISLAMIC
REPUBUCFIImadbyanlranianand
American crew · during the five
month period between December
1978 to June 1979, this documen·
tary examines the motivation of the
Iranian people and their leaders
during the revolution that ousted
the Shah. (2 hra.)
10:00 (JD OVER EASY

SOCIETIES IN TRANSISTION
8:30 me SATURDAY REPORT
()) ROll BAGLEY SHOW

I.

(]) REBOP

!HI FARM REPORT

BIG BLUE MARBLE
VEGETABLE SOUP
.
{)) PORKY AND FRIENDS
IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
KENTUCKY AFIELD
7:30
LITTLE
.
RASCALS
·
MATTERS OF UFE
BAY CITY ROLLERS
~RSOCIETY FILM
&lt;JZ• CAPTAIM CAVEMAN-TEEN
7:00

wI

ANGI!LS

&lt;fZ.

7:55
DEAR ALEX AND ANNIE
8:00 ()) •
(I)
GODZILLA·
GLOBETROTTERS HOUR
()) EVER INCREASING FAITH
(I) IIOIIPER ROOII
(I)
WORLD'S GREATEST
SUPERFRIENDS
• (I) !B) MIGHTY MOUSE·
HECKLE AND JECKLE
C1J THE GOOOIES
8:28 • (I) !HI IN THE NEWS
8:30 (]) MOVIE ·(WESTERN) ''I&gt;
"llorlzono Weal" 11152
CIJ FAWLTYTOWERS
8:55 @. SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
8:58 • (I) ill IN ntE NEWS
ti:OO m . (I) FRED AND BARNEY
III!ET THE SHIIOO
()) UFE IN THE SPIRIT
CiJ&lt;IIltiPLASTICIIANCOMEDYADVENTURE SHOW
eCil BUGS BUNNY-IIOAD RUN-

&lt;fZ.

CIJ RISE AND FALL OF REGINALD
PERRIN
ill BUGS BUNNY AND ROAD
RUNNER
8:25~· SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
8:28
(I) ill IN THE NEWS

8:30
t:M
10:00

10:25
10:30

THE ROCK
TWORONNIES
• (I) ®liN THE NEWS
()) MANNA
CIJ MOYIE ·(MYSTERY) "I&gt;
"Phantom of tho Opera" 11161
CIJ HAROLD LLOYD 'Safety Last
and Hot Water'
SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
m
CIJ DAFFY DUCK SHOW
Cll THE LESSON
CiJ&lt;IIltiSCOOBYANDSCRAPPY

(12)1

DOo

eCil POPEYE HOUR
ii) ·MOVIE -(COMEDY) ••~~o
"Enter Lauthln8" 11167

THE HElL HEAT PUMP

WAIM UP TO TIESE PIICES
IEFOII TIE PIICE IICIEASEI
Tile ALL IIW ALIMIIIM IIYIIIII

24' FLORIDIAN ·I

•IIAVY DITY El'-IIDED AL. . COIST.
EXTRUDED ALUMINUM FENCING,
20 Gouge Virgin Vinyl Liner, Outolde
Dlmenalon 31'x27', 24' Swim Area,
Carpeted Patio, 1\1' Wllk-Around,
Full H.P. S1nd Fillratlon Syatem,
Advanced Thru Wall Skimmer. 10
Year Pro-Rated Warranty on Entire
Pool.

-·

•• ~
"C.Hfomll PIIHQI"
1850
(I) SUPER MEMORIES OF THE

WAKEUPAIIER~A

IT'S YOUR BUSINESS

NEII.IHOW
SATURDAY
JUNE7, 1880

REVIEW
(JIIe HOTFUDGE
2:00 m • CIJ MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK St.
Louis Cardinals va Montreal Expos
Of PIHaburgh Pirates va New Vorl&lt;
Meta (Region will determine game
lo be talavl"d In your area)
(I) MOVIE -(DRAMA-WESTERN)

10:55~~ (!)
SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
JETSONS

11:00

STUFF
(I) IN THE NEWS
• JOHNNY OUEST
BACKYARD
(I) GIGGLESNORT HOTEL
(I) JONNY OUEST
FATALBEATSHOW
(I) Gooo NEIGHBORS
ACTtoNNEWSFORKIDS
(I) IN THE NEWS
11:58

11:28
.11:30
.

.(1)

I•

AFTERNOON
12:00

~~~~~~NG
Cll110V1E -(CRIME-DRAMA) "I&gt;
"Gw:,orZangaro" 11161
~·(ij~END SPECIAL

SUPER BOWL
• (I) VIEWPOINT
C1J PAUL DUKE: A VIEW OF
WASHINGTON
'1m-STATE TOOAY AND
TOMORROW
2:30 ()) NEW HOPE WITH DALE
GALLOWAY
(]) DOOBIE BROTHERS IN CON. CEAT0var28milllonrecordshava
been sold by these durable rock 'n
rolleraandyou'llhearwhywhanyou
'Liaten TotheMuaic' olallthalrblg·
geat hits at this recant in-concert

(12).

l!!r1ormanca.

(12) •

MOVIE -(TITLE
UNANNOUNCED)
• (I) FRENCH OPEN
CIJ OLD HOUSEWORKS
&lt;IDJIN THE KNOW
3:00 ()) JUST PASSING THRU
(I) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Diaraeli' Episode I. 'Dizzy' In this
first episode of a tour part aerie a
boaod on the life and times of Ben·
jamln Disraali , he Is invited to
acorea of faahionable London partlea, where he engages some of
Englan4's moat prominent poll·
ticiana in verbal combat. (60
mlna.)
&lt;1DJ VOYAGE TO THE BOnOM OF
THE SEA
3:30 ()) FORD PHILPOT
(]) STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Red
Skelton's Funny Faces' Old friends
Freddie the Freeloader and Clem
Kaddiddlahopper are just a law of
your favorites on hand when Red
Skelton hoatsthia exclusive show·
cuing Shields and Yarnell, Yacov
Nay and several other great mastara of mime.
4:00 ()) KENNETH COPELAND
(]) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
I I 0D &lt;1DJ ATLANTA GOLF
[JJ

CLASSIC

C1J

MYSTERY! 'She Fell Alnong
Thieves'
4:30 (]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "
"C.H.O.M.P.S." 111711
(I) CAN All RACES
5:00 meCIJ LPGACHAIIPIONSHIP
·NBC Sports will provide coverage
of the semi-final round of this tour·
nament, featuring some of the top
namea in women's golf. (60 mina.)
()) BOBGASS
(]) PUn PUn GOLF
(I) (Ill •
WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS
IIGD&lt;IDJTHEBELIIONTSTAKES
The t 12th running oft he third leg of
the Triple Crown tor 3-year-olds on
a mile and one hail race . (80
mlna.)
(I) WINDOW ON THE WORLD
'Saudi Arabia'
(jj) LAP QUILTING
5:30 ()) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
(jj) OLD HOUSEWORK$

8:00

(I).

EVENING
&lt;1DJ NEWS
C!lMOYIE-(COIIEDY)"' " Broad
And Chocolate" 11177
(]) GEORGIA CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
(!) C!,OD HAS THEANSWER

.ODCONCERN
CIJ(JD LOOK AT liE 'Wrap-Up'
8:30 m . CIJ NBC NEWS
C1J NEWS
• CIJMUPPETS SHOW
CIJ CATCH33
&lt;Ill CBS NEWS
(JD VICTORY GARDEN
()II II ACTION NEWSIIAKER
'80
7:00 m . DANCE FEVER
()) BLACKWOOO BROTHERS
(I) CHILDREN'S VILLAGE
(I) LAWRENCEWELKSHOW
.(I) NEE HAW Guaata: Tannea·
oee Ernie Ford, Tammy Wynette ,
Karel GoH, Jonae Family. (Repeat;
SOmina.)
{)) (JD ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'The Clld Curloaily Shop' LIHia Neil
and Grandfather encounter two
graedyownaraola Punch and Judy
et show.
BUGS BUNNY
SUIIBEAUTY SHOW
7:30 m
THIS IS THE ONE
· C1J ntE LUNDSTAOMS
Cll BASEBAll Atlanta Braves vs
. Loa Angeles Dodgers
CIJ WORLD OF THE SEA
(JD GROUCHO
()II •
StOO,OOO NAME THAT
TUNE
8:00 .m•CIJ BJ AND THE BEAR Pogo
Lll aaka BJ lor help when she is
threatened by people who are alter
her previously worthleaa gold mine
now that the metal is soaring in
value. (Repeat; 80 mins.)
()) 700 CLUB
,
(!) NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIVALHaed•outhtotheGrand
OleOpryHousalorthiahigh·energy
country-pop festival featuring
ataralika Barbara Mandrell, Lynn
Anderson, singer-comedla·n Jim
Stafford and Johnny Cash's
country·rocklng daughter Ro·
seannaCaah.
• (I) &lt;IDJ THE BAD NEWS
BEARS
CIJ AUCREATURESGREATAND •
SMALL 'Fair Means and Fowl'
(jj) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Diaraeii' Episode I. 'Dizzy' In this
flrat episode of a tour part aeries
baaed on t~alile and times of Ben·
jamin Oiaraeli , he ia invited to
scores of fashionable london parties, where he engages some of
England's moat prominent poli·
tlclana in verbal combat. (80
min a.)
!Bill 240ROBERT An earthquake
rocka the county, spelling diaaater
and almost certain death lor Trap
andThibwhentheybacomeaealed
In an underwater cava. (Repeat; SO
mlnaJ
8:30 .(JJ&lt;IDJ THE STOCKARD CHAN·
NING SHOW Love, in the guiaeola
lelr damsel, smites Bred Gabriel
and It takes all of Susan's ingenuity
to convince him that she is a
dengerouadragonouttoimpalehim
and th~rogram .
8:00 m•w SANFORD Fred Sanford
tries to get rich making whiskey.
(I) BARNEY MILLER The dadicat·
ed crlmelighters of the 12th
precinct warmly recall their col·
league when they pay tribute to the
late Jack Soo ~l"ho played Detec·
live Yamane. (Repeat)
• CIJ &lt;1DJ SATURDAY NIGHT
MOYIE 'WonTon Ton,The Dog Who
Saved Hollywood' 1976 Stars :
Bruce Darn, Madeline Kahn. A
talented German shepherd
provides the route to Hollywood
aucceaa for an aspiring actreaa, a
would-be producer and a bankrupt

I

JUUA CtttLD AND MORE
COMPANY

CIJ
THIS EXCITING All NEW POOL
MIIIUrll ADOro.:imltiiY 38'x18'
Outalde Dimetllion t8'd0' Swim
Arso, 4 Ft. Deep. The Floridiln IN
Oflora Compteto Carpetod Polio.
All Extrvdod Aluminum. lxtrudod
'•nclna Around Deck and Pool.
Alae inciudeo Hydro Skim In WoU
Skimmer. Keepa Wotor ,reo ol In·
aecta and Dabrio AuiO&lt;naticolly.

All S.eason Heating &amp; Cooling Designed For Total
Comjort. Call The Dealer located Nearest You.
Distributed by City Ice &amp; Fuel &amp;·available at
•

SMITH'S PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

675-2710

511 Burdette

Point Pleasant

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

992·5321
2nd Ave.
o • t

f

I

o

#

•

'' .

Middleport
0'

JONES APPLIANCE

WIIAVI POOLS STAIIIIC AI '939" IIIYAUII
CALL IIOWI FOI FlU - AT -IUYICE

937-2501
Buffalo, W. Va.

. DeWITT'S
PLUMBIN.G &amp; HEATING

446-2735

St. Rt. 160

Gallipolis, 0.

•

I

ALL POOLI Allll COMPLITILY INITALLID
rt

1

Complete line of lnground poole

:::fu'"' ~es CALL COLUCT 77..1333 w722·4321
"''·

12:30 me FLASH GORDON
()) BilLE BOWL
POINT OF VIEW
ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
(I) TARZAN AND THE SUPER
SEVEN
CIJ VICTORY GARDEN
(JZ. AMERICAN BANDSTAND
1:00 m •
GREATEST SPORTS
LIGEN08
()) 700CLUB
(I) AWARE
CIJ WRESTUNG
(I)
WALL STREET WEEK
'Requiem lor Auto Stocks' Host :
Loula Rukeyoer.
®&gt;MOYIE -(SCIENCE FICTION)
•11o "Attack of the Fifty-Foot
W-"1NI
1:30 ~- THISWEEKINIASEBALL

i

PUTT PUTT GOLF

5473. mEl B. CIAS., W.VA.

,

Cll30.-uTES
. WASHINGTON ~I( IN

THE PERFECT GIFT FOR DAD'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE 15th

R._ayal Imperwl
by FLORSHEIM"

studio head in the days of silent
fllma. (2 hrs.)
())(jj) IRAN: INSIDE THE ISLAMIC
REPUBUCFilmedbyanlranianand
American crew during the five
month period between December
1978 to ~uno 1979, this documen·
taryexamlnea the motivation of the
Iranian people and their leaders
during the revolution that ousted
the Shah. (2 hra.)
(Ill. THE LOVE BOAT 'Gopher's
Greatest Hits' Gopher thinks he's
headod IOf stardom altar he Iiiia in
IOf e singer in the lounge. (Repeat;
· 80mina.l_
8:30 m . CIJ JOE' S WORLD The
Woboahkldsthlnk that a divorce is
Imminent when they woke up to lind
thairdadaleepingontheliVingroom
couch.
()) THE LESSON
(])
BETTE IIIDLER SHOW
Bedecked and bedazzling with an
exuberance that never dies down,
Batte 'The Rosa' lAidier stars in this
dynamic concert performance. It's
1 high energy, award -winning
excluaive.
10:00 m •
(I)
PRIME TIME
SATURDAY
()) ROCK CHURCH
(I) THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE
MUSIC
(jj) OVER EASY
(JIIII240ROBERT An earthquake
rocka th&amp;county, spelling disaster
and almost certain death for Trap
andlhib when they become sealed
In an underwater cave. (Repeat; 60
mlna.)
!Continued on page 12)

ROCKET
SALE

.

The Ariens 7 hp Rocket
Tiller. The quality
performance choice ol
serious gardeners lor years
can be yours. with electric
start , at a big savings of
$100! For a limited time
only, your participating
Ariens dealer is offering
$100 off on the Ariens
RT7020 Rocket Tiller with
electric starter kit!
Offer good only white
supply lasts. so get to the
Anens Rockel Sale today
and save!

SHINN'S
SALES
240 Upper
leon, W. Va. River Road
458·1630 Gallipolis, 0
446-1044

"We Have The Areas Finest Selection Of Florsheim"

BEN FRANKLIN CO.
"The Home Of Good Shoes Si nce 1903"

�Page Ten-TV Supplement
present continuous news and possess an un·
precedented capability to 'go live' anywhere in the
world where major news is breaking at any hour of
·
the day or night.
CNN is the brainchild of R.E . 'Ted' Turner,
president of Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.
Turner's television station, 'WTBS, Atlanta, came to
national prominence as the Superstation seen on
cable systems throughout America with a 5chedule
of sports and entertainment programming.
Both CNN's and WTBS' operations will be
headquartered at the new $23 million Turner
Broadcasting System center in Atlanta. There will be
seven CNN news bureaus in the United States-in
Ne.w York, Washington, Los Angeles, Dallas, Chicago,
San Francisco, and Miami.
There also will be several foreign news bureaus.
In association with the Canadian Television Network,
Ltd. (CTV), CNN will operate joint bureaus in Peking,
London, and the Middle East, sharing production
facilities, resources, and satellite feeds. With its
Peking bureau, CNN will be the first American
television network to have a permanent news
'presence in the People's Republic of China. CNN also
has formed an association with UPITN, which has
agreed to supplement the reports CNN receives from
its own bureaus.
Among those who will report and interpret the
news to the American public are former CBS News
corre$pondent Daniel Schorr, former Secretary of
the Treasury William Simon, former ABC News
Vice-President and Washington Bureau Chief George
Watson, U.S. Senator Barry Goldwater, and former
,.. COIIPUI.oo ,........ ooc.
Congresswoman Bella Abzug.

SPECIALS
GIDDE •.
SUNDAY
JUNE 1, 11180
AFTERNOON
4:00 CIJ EXCELLENCE FOREVER This
prog&lt;om oxpiO&lt;eo the wort&lt; of Inter·
nationally known wood-carver
Auguat Crabtree.

(ill.

7:00

'

8:00

.

EVENING
(I)
ntE YEAGER$ Carroll
Yeager and member• of his family ...,
light IOf their lives altar their plane
craoheoln daaolate mountaina and
they are threatened by avalanches
of mud. Stars: Andy Griffith, David
Ack1J1Ydj80 mlns.)
(I) [JZI •
HAL LINDEN'S BIG
APPLE Hal Linden steps out of the
squad roO&lt;n and Into the etroets and
skyscrapers of Naw York lor ana·
live aon's voyage home in a special
hour of music and comedy with
guests Shecky Greene, Robert
GulllaumeondtheRadioCityMuaic
Hall' a Rockettea. (80 mlna.)
m . THE DREAM MERCHANTS
Storo: Morgan Fairchild, Mart&lt;Har·
mon, Brlanneleary. An ambitious
young drifter named Johnny Edge
begins a movie studio dynasty in
Hollywood'o golden era. (Pt II; 2
hra.)
(J)ENERGYEXPOTheDaveloping
EnergyCrlala:ALongTradition,and
examinee the history of America' a
present energy situation.

8:00

10:00

MONDAY
JUNE 2, 11180
EVENING
8:00 •
(I) iB) BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
C1J (jj) PICASSO: A PAINTER'S
DIARYPicuaoapeakalorhimsell,
by means ot an actor' avoice-over,
in thlalntlmatalook at the artist, hi a
family, friends and wort&lt;a. (90
mins.)
8:30 CIJISLAII, THEYEILANDTHEFuTURE Nancy Dickerson presides
over a session of American and Ia-

)

Iamie women eltploring the vast

difference in their lifestyles.
(jj) ISLAM, THE VEIL AND THE
FUTURE
10:00 &lt;1DJ STEVE AND EYDIE

CABLE IIEWS NETWORK
Turner Broadcasting System : lnc .

Growing cable audience
more than three million
The Cable News Network (CNN) on Sunday,
June ' 1 will begin live, twenty-four-hour-a-day news
coverage on cable television systems throughout the
United States which promises to revolut1omze the
way in which Americans will be informed about
domestic and global events and 1ssues. At tis
inception, the CNN staff will include more than three
hundred electronic journalists, executtves, and
technical persons.
Cable television systems with a total of more
than three million . subscribing households are
committed as of this date to carry CNN . Other cable
systems continue to sign on in anticipation of the
CNN premiere on Sunday, June 1.
.
From the moment it is launched, CNN will
TUESDAY
JUNE3, 1880

WEDNESDAY
JUNE4, 1880

FRIDAY
JUNU, 1880

EVENING
Bill.Y GRAHAM
8:00 (!) • CIJ
CRUSADE
Cl)(jj) NOVA 'APiagueonOurChil·
dren'Toxlcherbicldee,peetlcldes,
and other chemlcala may cause
cancer, mlacarrlagea and birth
dolecta, and the evidence Ia just
beginning to cO&lt;na oul. This pro·
.gram examines the harmful effects
deadly chemica Ia may have on this
and following genera tiona. (2 hra.)
8:30 (]) ENERGY EXPO A look at op·
tiona In the near future, and how
Americana must ad)uat to meet
energy needs in the transitional
!!!~J!!tlore ua.
11:30 ~DECISION'80Areporton
the reouha of the Colllomil, Ohio,
New Jeraey, Montana, and South
Dokolo Prealdanliol primaries.
eCIJ®&gt; CAMPAIGN'80Araport
on the reaulta of the California,
Ohio, Montana, South Dakota, New ·
Jeraey, and Wast Virginia Pre·
oldentlal primaries.

EVENING
8:00 (!) • (I) &lt;1DJ BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
10:00 (]) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
anergy options.

EVENING·
8:00 (!) BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE
10:00 m•CIJ NBC REPORtS
(I) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
America's anergy options.

®J

Page Eleven- TV Supplement

«saturday))
JUNE 7, _11180
MORNING
WORLDATLARGE

5:48
8:00

THURSDAY
JUNE5, 1880

AFTERNOON
12:00 CIJ(D). WEEKENDSPECtAL

EVENING
7:30 CIJTHISONE'SFORDADAyoung
boylaomatocopewiththedeathol
hlalathor. Stare: Johnny Whitaker,
Dick Von PoHen.
8:00 CIJ BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE
10:00 (I) ENERGY EXPO Exploring
anergy optlonalor the long term
future, Including outer space as a
viable aourca of renewable
energy,

EVENING
8:00 CIJ(JD IRAN: INSIDE THE ISLAMIC
REPUBUCFIImadbyanlranianand
American crew · during the five
month period between December
1978 to June 1979, this documen·
tary examines the motivation of the
Iranian people and their leaders
during the revolution that ousted
the Shah. (2 hra.)
10:00 (JD OVER EASY

SOCIETIES IN TRANSISTION
8:30 me SATURDAY REPORT
()) ROll BAGLEY SHOW

I.

(]) REBOP

!HI FARM REPORT

BIG BLUE MARBLE
VEGETABLE SOUP
.
{)) PORKY AND FRIENDS
IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
KENTUCKY AFIELD
7:30
LITTLE
.
RASCALS
·
MATTERS OF UFE
BAY CITY ROLLERS
~RSOCIETY FILM
&lt;JZ• CAPTAIM CAVEMAN-TEEN
7:00

wI

ANGI!LS

&lt;fZ.

7:55
DEAR ALEX AND ANNIE
8:00 ()) •
(I)
GODZILLA·
GLOBETROTTERS HOUR
()) EVER INCREASING FAITH
(I) IIOIIPER ROOII
(I)
WORLD'S GREATEST
SUPERFRIENDS
• (I) !B) MIGHTY MOUSE·
HECKLE AND JECKLE
C1J THE GOOOIES
8:28 • (I) !HI IN THE NEWS
8:30 (]) MOVIE ·(WESTERN) ''I&gt;
"llorlzono Weal" 11152
CIJ FAWLTYTOWERS
8:55 @. SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
8:58 • (I) ill IN ntE NEWS
ti:OO m . (I) FRED AND BARNEY
III!ET THE SHIIOO
()) UFE IN THE SPIRIT
CiJ&lt;IIltiPLASTICIIANCOMEDYADVENTURE SHOW
eCil BUGS BUNNY-IIOAD RUN-

&lt;fZ.

CIJ RISE AND FALL OF REGINALD
PERRIN
ill BUGS BUNNY AND ROAD
RUNNER
8:25~· SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
8:28
(I) ill IN THE NEWS

8:30
t:M
10:00

10:25
10:30

THE ROCK
TWORONNIES
• (I) ®liN THE NEWS
()) MANNA
CIJ MOYIE ·(MYSTERY) "I&gt;
"Phantom of tho Opera" 11161
CIJ HAROLD LLOYD 'Safety Last
and Hot Water'
SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
m
CIJ DAFFY DUCK SHOW
Cll THE LESSON
CiJ&lt;IIltiSCOOBYANDSCRAPPY

(12)1

DOo

eCil POPEYE HOUR
ii) ·MOVIE -(COMEDY) ••~~o
"Enter Lauthln8" 11167

THE HElL HEAT PUMP

WAIM UP TO TIESE PIICES
IEFOII TIE PIICE IICIEASEI
Tile ALL IIW ALIMIIIM IIYIIIII

24' FLORIDIAN ·I

•IIAVY DITY El'-IIDED AL. . COIST.
EXTRUDED ALUMINUM FENCING,
20 Gouge Virgin Vinyl Liner, Outolde
Dlmenalon 31'x27', 24' Swim Area,
Carpeted Patio, 1\1' Wllk-Around,
Full H.P. S1nd Fillratlon Syatem,
Advanced Thru Wall Skimmer. 10
Year Pro-Rated Warranty on Entire
Pool.

-·

•• ~
"C.Hfomll PIIHQI"
1850
(I) SUPER MEMORIES OF THE

WAKEUPAIIER~A

IT'S YOUR BUSINESS

NEII.IHOW
SATURDAY
JUNE7, 1880

REVIEW
(JIIe HOTFUDGE
2:00 m • CIJ MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK St.
Louis Cardinals va Montreal Expos
Of PIHaburgh Pirates va New Vorl&lt;
Meta (Region will determine game
lo be talavl"d In your area)
(I) MOVIE -(DRAMA-WESTERN)

10:55~~ (!)
SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
JETSONS

11:00

STUFF
(I) IN THE NEWS
• JOHNNY OUEST
BACKYARD
(I) GIGGLESNORT HOTEL
(I) JONNY OUEST
FATALBEATSHOW
(I) Gooo NEIGHBORS
ACTtoNNEWSFORKIDS
(I) IN THE NEWS
11:58

11:28
.11:30
.

.(1)

I•

AFTERNOON
12:00

~~~~~~NG
Cll110V1E -(CRIME-DRAMA) "I&gt;
"Gw:,orZangaro" 11161
~·(ij~END SPECIAL

SUPER BOWL
• (I) VIEWPOINT
C1J PAUL DUKE: A VIEW OF
WASHINGTON
'1m-STATE TOOAY AND
TOMORROW
2:30 ()) NEW HOPE WITH DALE
GALLOWAY
(]) DOOBIE BROTHERS IN CON. CEAT0var28milllonrecordshava
been sold by these durable rock 'n
rolleraandyou'llhearwhywhanyou
'Liaten TotheMuaic' olallthalrblg·
geat hits at this recant in-concert

(12).

l!!r1ormanca.

(12) •

MOVIE -(TITLE
UNANNOUNCED)
• (I) FRENCH OPEN
CIJ OLD HOUSEWORKS
&lt;IDJIN THE KNOW
3:00 ()) JUST PASSING THRU
(I) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Diaraeli' Episode I. 'Dizzy' In this
first episode of a tour part aerie a
boaod on the life and times of Ben·
jamln Disraali , he Is invited to
acorea of faahionable London partlea, where he engages some of
Englan4's moat prominent poll·
ticiana in verbal combat. (60
mlna.)
&lt;1DJ VOYAGE TO THE BOnOM OF
THE SEA
3:30 ()) FORD PHILPOT
(]) STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Red
Skelton's Funny Faces' Old friends
Freddie the Freeloader and Clem
Kaddiddlahopper are just a law of
your favorites on hand when Red
Skelton hoatsthia exclusive show·
cuing Shields and Yarnell, Yacov
Nay and several other great mastara of mime.
4:00 ()) KENNETH COPELAND
(]) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
I I 0D &lt;1DJ ATLANTA GOLF
[JJ

CLASSIC

C1J

MYSTERY! 'She Fell Alnong
Thieves'
4:30 (]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "
"C.H.O.M.P.S." 111711
(I) CAN All RACES
5:00 meCIJ LPGACHAIIPIONSHIP
·NBC Sports will provide coverage
of the semi-final round of this tour·
nament, featuring some of the top
namea in women's golf. (60 mina.)
()) BOBGASS
(]) PUn PUn GOLF
(I) (Ill •
WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS
IIGD&lt;IDJTHEBELIIONTSTAKES
The t 12th running oft he third leg of
the Triple Crown tor 3-year-olds on
a mile and one hail race . (80
mlna.)
(I) WINDOW ON THE WORLD
'Saudi Arabia'
(jj) LAP QUILTING
5:30 ()) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(I) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
(jj) OLD HOUSEWORK$

8:00

(I).

EVENING
&lt;1DJ NEWS
C!lMOYIE-(COIIEDY)"' " Broad
And Chocolate" 11177
(]) GEORGIA CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
(!) C!,OD HAS THEANSWER

.ODCONCERN
CIJ(JD LOOK AT liE 'Wrap-Up'
8:30 m . CIJ NBC NEWS
C1J NEWS
• CIJMUPPETS SHOW
CIJ CATCH33
&lt;Ill CBS NEWS
(JD VICTORY GARDEN
()II II ACTION NEWSIIAKER
'80
7:00 m . DANCE FEVER
()) BLACKWOOO BROTHERS
(I) CHILDREN'S VILLAGE
(I) LAWRENCEWELKSHOW
.(I) NEE HAW Guaata: Tannea·
oee Ernie Ford, Tammy Wynette ,
Karel GoH, Jonae Family. (Repeat;
SOmina.)
{)) (JD ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
'The Clld Curloaily Shop' LIHia Neil
and Grandfather encounter two
graedyownaraola Punch and Judy
et show.
BUGS BUNNY
SUIIBEAUTY SHOW
7:30 m
THIS IS THE ONE
· C1J ntE LUNDSTAOMS
Cll BASEBAll Atlanta Braves vs
. Loa Angeles Dodgers
CIJ WORLD OF THE SEA
(JD GROUCHO
()II •
StOO,OOO NAME THAT
TUNE
8:00 .m•CIJ BJ AND THE BEAR Pogo
Lll aaka BJ lor help when she is
threatened by people who are alter
her previously worthleaa gold mine
now that the metal is soaring in
value. (Repeat; 80 mins.)
()) 700 CLUB
,
(!) NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIVALHaed•outhtotheGrand
OleOpryHousalorthiahigh·energy
country-pop festival featuring
ataralika Barbara Mandrell, Lynn
Anderson, singer-comedla·n Jim
Stafford and Johnny Cash's
country·rocklng daughter Ro·
seannaCaah.
• (I) &lt;IDJ THE BAD NEWS
BEARS
CIJ AUCREATURESGREATAND •
SMALL 'Fair Means and Fowl'
(jj) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Diaraeii' Episode I. 'Dizzy' In this
flrat episode of a tour part aeries
baaed on t~alile and times of Ben·
jamin Oiaraeli , he ia invited to
scores of fashionable london parties, where he engages some of
England's moat prominent poli·
tlclana in verbal combat. (80
min a.)
!Bill 240ROBERT An earthquake
rocka the county, spelling diaaater
and almost certain death lor Trap
andThibwhentheybacomeaealed
In an underwater cava. (Repeat; SO
mlnaJ
8:30 .(JJ&lt;IDJ THE STOCKARD CHAN·
NING SHOW Love, in the guiaeola
lelr damsel, smites Bred Gabriel
and It takes all of Susan's ingenuity
to convince him that she is a
dengerouadragonouttoimpalehim
and th~rogram .
8:00 m•w SANFORD Fred Sanford
tries to get rich making whiskey.
(I) BARNEY MILLER The dadicat·
ed crlmelighters of the 12th
precinct warmly recall their col·
league when they pay tribute to the
late Jack Soo ~l"ho played Detec·
live Yamane. (Repeat)
• CIJ &lt;1DJ SATURDAY NIGHT
MOYIE 'WonTon Ton,The Dog Who
Saved Hollywood' 1976 Stars :
Bruce Darn, Madeline Kahn. A
talented German shepherd
provides the route to Hollywood
aucceaa for an aspiring actreaa, a
would-be producer and a bankrupt

I

JUUA CtttLD AND MORE
COMPANY

CIJ
THIS EXCITING All NEW POOL
MIIIUrll ADOro.:imltiiY 38'x18'
Outalde Dimetllion t8'd0' Swim
Arso, 4 Ft. Deep. The Floridiln IN
Oflora Compteto Carpetod Polio.
All Extrvdod Aluminum. lxtrudod
'•nclna Around Deck and Pool.
Alae inciudeo Hydro Skim In WoU
Skimmer. Keepa Wotor ,reo ol In·
aecta and Dabrio AuiO&lt;naticolly.

All S.eason Heating &amp; Cooling Designed For Total
Comjort. Call The Dealer located Nearest You.
Distributed by City Ice &amp; Fuel &amp;·available at
•

SMITH'S PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

675-2710

511 Burdette

Point Pleasant

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

992·5321
2nd Ave.
o • t

f

I

o

#

•

'' .

Middleport
0'

JONES APPLIANCE

WIIAVI POOLS STAIIIIC AI '939" IIIYAUII
CALL IIOWI FOI FlU - AT -IUYICE

937-2501
Buffalo, W. Va.

. DeWITT'S
PLUMBIN.G &amp; HEATING

446-2735

St. Rt. 160

Gallipolis, 0.

•

I

ALL POOLI Allll COMPLITILY INITALLID
rt

1

Complete line of lnground poole

:::fu'"' ~es CALL COLUCT 77..1333 w722·4321
"''·

12:30 me FLASH GORDON
()) BilLE BOWL
POINT OF VIEW
ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
(I) TARZAN AND THE SUPER
SEVEN
CIJ VICTORY GARDEN
(JZ. AMERICAN BANDSTAND
1:00 m •
GREATEST SPORTS
LIGEN08
()) 700CLUB
(I) AWARE
CIJ WRESTUNG
(I)
WALL STREET WEEK
'Requiem lor Auto Stocks' Host :
Loula Rukeyoer.
®&gt;MOYIE -(SCIENCE FICTION)
•11o "Attack of the Fifty-Foot
W-"1NI
1:30 ~- THISWEEKINIASEBALL

i

PUTT PUTT GOLF

5473. mEl B. CIAS., W.VA.

,

Cll30.-uTES
. WASHINGTON ~I( IN

THE PERFECT GIFT FOR DAD'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE 15th

R._ayal Imperwl
by FLORSHEIM"

studio head in the days of silent
fllma. (2 hrs.)
())(jj) IRAN: INSIDE THE ISLAMIC
REPUBUCFilmedbyanlranianand
American crew during the five
month period between December
1978 to ~uno 1979, this documen·
taryexamlnea the motivation of the
Iranian people and their leaders
during the revolution that ousted
the Shah. (2 hra.)
(Ill. THE LOVE BOAT 'Gopher's
Greatest Hits' Gopher thinks he's
headod IOf stardom altar he Iiiia in
IOf e singer in the lounge. (Repeat;
· 80mina.l_
8:30 m . CIJ JOE' S WORLD The
Woboahkldsthlnk that a divorce is
Imminent when they woke up to lind
thairdadaleepingontheliVingroom
couch.
()) THE LESSON
(])
BETTE IIIDLER SHOW
Bedecked and bedazzling with an
exuberance that never dies down,
Batte 'The Rosa' lAidier stars in this
dynamic concert performance. It's
1 high energy, award -winning
excluaive.
10:00 m •
(I)
PRIME TIME
SATURDAY
()) ROCK CHURCH
(I) THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE
MUSIC
(jj) OVER EASY
(JIIII240ROBERT An earthquake
rocka th&amp;county, spelling disaster
and almost certain death for Trap
andlhib when they become sealed
In an underwater cave. (Repeat; 60
mlna.)
!Continued on page 12)

ROCKET
SALE

.

The Ariens 7 hp Rocket
Tiller. The quality
performance choice ol
serious gardeners lor years
can be yours. with electric
start , at a big savings of
$100! For a limited time
only, your participating
Ariens dealer is offering
$100 off on the Ariens
RT7020 Rocket Tiller with
electric starter kit!
Offer good only white
supply lasts. so get to the
Anens Rockel Sale today
and save!

SHINN'S
SALES
240 Upper
leon, W. Va. River Road
458·1630 Gallipolis, 0
446-1044

"We Have The Areas Finest Selection Of Florsheim"

BEN FRANKLIN CO.
"The Home Of Good Shoes Si nce 1903"

�Page Twelve-TV Supplement

saturday

Sports

1

(Continued from page 11)
11:00

m
• w rn • w Clll·w
NI!WS

•

SUNDAY
JUNI! 1, 11180

(J) ZOLALEVITT
(]) IIOVIE -iDRAMA) •••• "DHr
llullw"1t78
(J)
DICK MAURICE AND

.

AFTI!RHOOII

=~ -iDRAMA·MYSTERY)
··~

1:00

tiJ AIIERICA'UTMLI!TES 18110
Sorloo devoted to oxomlnlng end
rovoollng tho bootothlotoo who
werotoreproHnttheUnltodStatoa
ot the Olymplco to be hold in

"!dee ot Doom" 1850

(JI)
HOCKING
VAUEY
II.UI!GRAS8
11:30 ()) • (!) SATURDAY NIGHT
UYE
(J) RICtiARD HOGUE
(J) AICNEWS

10:30

8:30

core'' 1878

2:30 (I) 8$QJ NEWS
(}) THE LESSON
3:00 (}) REX HUMBARD
3:20 (I) MOVIE -iHORROR) ' "Deathdroom" 1872
4:00 (})
COURAGE FOR CRISIS
LIVING
., 4:30 (}) ORAL ROBERTS

Clle

e,

,

• I

Head .
The hair place

EVI!NING
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING

EVENING
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS
'Caoaara Palacalnvitational' Part
II. It' a a dazzling dlaplay of agility

~~~· KENTUCKY AFIELD

Cll •

AFTERNOON
GIII!ATEST SPORTS

LI!GI!IIDI
(!) WRI!STUIIG
1:30 ()). THIS WI!I!K IN IASEBAU
CIJ PUTT PUTT GOLF
2:00 ()) • (!) IIAJOII LEAGUE lA·
II!IALL~ OF TIE WEEK St.
LouloCordlnalovalolontrooiExpoo
or Plttoburth Plroteo vo New York
Mete (Region will determine gome
to be totovllld In your aroo)
CIJ SUPER MEMORIES OF THE

1(1)C1J

IUPI!RIOWL

2:30
4:00

FR(NCHOPEN
(II)
ATLANTA GOLIF

CLAS8IC

4:30 C1J !:,AN All RACES
1:00 (I).(!) LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP

'

RICHMOND

Quarters
.
by Juanita

HAND
OPERATED
ICE CREAM
FREEZER

for everyone

Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 til 9, Saturday ·9 to 5
Phone 446·2673

(I)

(!)

7:00

"Merle Norman Cosmetics"
43 $tate Street
Gallipolis, Ohio

MONDAY
JUNE2, 1880
7:30

tiJ IAII!IALL Atlonto Brovoo vo

Son Froncioco Glonta
WI!DN!IDAY
JUNI! 4, 18110
EVENING
10:30
BAII!BAUCinclnnaiiReda
vo Loo Angoloa Oodgoro
1:35 C1J
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SI!IAU REPLAY
FRIDAY ...
JUNE 18110
EVENING
7:30 (I) IABI!IIAU: Alllnto Brovea vo •
Loo AnQoloo Oodgero
1:11 (])
BABI!IALL: GREATES

IOCCERLEAGUEABCSportawiil
provldo covorogo ot tt\e game
botwoonthoNowYorkCoomooand
tho Woohington Dlplomato. (2 hro ..
30mlno.)
3:00 (!) UNITED STATES OLYMPIC
TRIALS
•
CIJ
Clll
SPORTS
SPECTACULAR
4:00 ()). BASEBALL Cincinnotl Redo
•• Son Diogo Podrao
, C1J BASEBALL Atlenta Bravos va
Loo Anll!loo Dodgoro
• CIJ (!g) KEMPER OPEN
4:30 C1J $ •
WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS 1) U.S. Auto Club Dirt
Rocolrorn llllnola. 2) Aspacial per·
formonco by the Chinese Acrobat a
ol Taiwan. (90 min a.)
(!) SPORTSWORLD I) World
Chompionohip of Amateur Bowling
from Miomi. 2) U.S. Mon'oGymnaa·
tlco Cnampionohipatrom Ohio. 3)
AIAW National Women 's Coiiogiata Track and Field Championships. (90 mine.)

" Winter Meeting" 1948

8ATUIIDAY

JUNII! 7. 11180

1:00

EVENING

Moocow.

(I) 700CLUB
1:30 (I) MOVIE ·(WESTERN·DRAMA)
11
••
DikOll Lll" 1950
2:00 (]) MOVIE -(DRAMA)'' I&gt; "Hard·

IPORTI RIYALMS 'Tho Yon·
k - vo lhoOodgero' Rollvoone of
beHboU'o grootell oporto rlvolrloo,thiYonkHovetheOodgero,ln
.111m cllpo of the toomo cta00ic con·
lrontotionoln 10WOfkl Sotiea.

TUI!IDAY
JUNE 3, 18110

(J) WI!8TVIIIOINIA STATE HIGH
ICHOOL TRACKIII!ET
2:00 C1J (ll) •
NORTH AMERICAN

e(J)IIOVIE-iDRAMA)''I&gt; "Tho
lleclllallert''
ClllMDVIE -iADVENTURE) ••• I&gt;
"FIIflltl ollhe Phoenix" 11168
$ . MOVIE 'Dracula's Caalla'
11169 John Corradine. Doctor and
hlo wile kidnap young girls lor the
purpoao ot drinking there blood. 2)
'Creeping Terror' 1964 Vic
Sovage, Shannon O'Neil. A Mon·
otertrom another planotterorlzoa
the population, and oHortato des·
troy It are almootlmpoaalblo.
11:46 (J) HEE HAW Gueota: Tennoaaee
Emla Ford, Tammy Wynette, Karel
Gott, Jones Family. (Repeat; 60
mlna.)
12:00 (J) HI DOUG
(I) ROCK CONCERT Guests:
Linda Ronatadt, Steve Martin,Nitty
Gritty Dirt Band, John Hartford.
12:30 (J) HOLIDAY AT MELODYLAND
12:45 CIJ MOVIE -(MYSTERY)" "Van·
doltofor tho Saint" 1968
1:00 ·ffi . MOVIE ·(DRAMA) " I&gt;

end groco wh111tho country' otop
women gymnollo oocoptlhe chol·
Iongo to compote In thla elite
lll"'!!!ltlc ..... '
1:30 liJ Clll. MONDAY NIGHT IIA· .
SI!IALL Now Vorl&lt; Yonkooo vo
Konooo City Royolo or Clnclnnotl
Redo vo Loo Angoloo Dodgora.
&lt;ReGion will determine gemo to be
tllovlood In yow otoo.)
10:30 Cll IAII!IAU Allonto Brovea vo
Son Froncloo Gianto

$10~~Sale

Hair Stylists : Chuck McGuire, Marty Reynolds, Karen
Johnson, Christi Reynolds, Merri Ault, Mary Edwards,
Karen Clark, Juanita Saunders (cosmetic consultant).

.;

\...

Price $13.45

This model has a high density polyethylene tub in bold gold
color. 5 quart.
003-962JFKP5

HOSE NOZZLES
YOUR CHOICE

Your choice of pistol grip or
adjustable type nozzle.
678-938/N29C

706- 45712210

BIG 10-DAY SALE STARTS TODAY!

,.

Famous Stratolounger®
Close-Up®recliners

CARTER &amp;fvANS~iNC:nMES

YOUR CHOICE

87011ve St.
Phone

•

Building Supply &amp; Hardware
•

Grea1 man-SIZe comlort n a 51rk.r.g stan restSiant easy-care 1-ie!CLAon tattc
~·s

LAYAWAY
N(M
FOR BEST

SELECTION
•

a surni)L.KJUS,ty oe1a~ Stra!Qbungel Cbs~HJp Tre famous reclner

mechaniSm tt'lal Slayscbse 10 1~ w~-even wren Sltelcl"ed way out n tul
rechnflQ comtor1 The pertecr chaw lot' rooay's smaler rooms And ar w spe·
. Cl81 value pce-yau woo up w~h tne rroSI combrable reclner ever at

tremendOus saVlr"'QS

1

Har&lt;Json-ely Sl\llped aro '"""" SlfaiOOulge&lt; Cose·Up TM perlecl
ct'OCe lor )'{lur comtorr ana pceo ro make ~ the perfect ctoce tor you
b..dget tool n·s the space-savnc 1eclner !hat always ~ps ts back ro rt"e
wal - even when 'yi)U lean baCk tl the t~ reclf'ed p:&gt;s«on Ard ot cwse.
you enroy SrratOk:&gt;tJ'lger 's SUJJ2f0f constrLCI011, me\(;ulous u~ery detatl
ard deep-deep custn"llng- hre tun~ure q~ ., a so-son vnyr tha1 rr.oats
tre l(;hest ot leatnet"s

UWPOUS, OH 45631

0

�Page Twelve-TV Supplement

saturday

Sports

1

(Continued from page 11)
11:00

m
• w rn • w Clll·w
NI!WS

•

SUNDAY
JUNI! 1, 11180

(J) ZOLALEVITT
(]) IIOVIE -iDRAMA) •••• "DHr
llullw"1t78
(J)
DICK MAURICE AND

.

AFTI!RHOOII

=~ -iDRAMA·MYSTERY)
··~

1:00

tiJ AIIERICA'UTMLI!TES 18110
Sorloo devoted to oxomlnlng end
rovoollng tho bootothlotoo who
werotoreproHnttheUnltodStatoa
ot the Olymplco to be hold in

"!dee ot Doom" 1850

(JI)
HOCKING
VAUEY
II.UI!GRAS8
11:30 ()) • (!) SATURDAY NIGHT
UYE
(J) RICtiARD HOGUE
(J) AICNEWS

10:30

8:30

core'' 1878

2:30 (I) 8$QJ NEWS
(}) THE LESSON
3:00 (}) REX HUMBARD
3:20 (I) MOVIE -iHORROR) ' "Deathdroom" 1872
4:00 (})
COURAGE FOR CRISIS
LIVING
., 4:30 (}) ORAL ROBERTS

Clle

e,

,

• I

Head .
The hair place

EVI!NING
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING

EVENING
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS
'Caoaara Palacalnvitational' Part
II. It' a a dazzling dlaplay of agility

~~~· KENTUCKY AFIELD

Cll •

AFTERNOON
GIII!ATEST SPORTS

LI!GI!IIDI
(!) WRI!STUIIG
1:30 ()). THIS WI!I!K IN IASEBAU
CIJ PUTT PUTT GOLF
2:00 ()) • (!) IIAJOII LEAGUE lA·
II!IALL~ OF TIE WEEK St.
LouloCordlnalovalolontrooiExpoo
or Plttoburth Plroteo vo New York
Mete (Region will determine gome
to be totovllld In your aroo)
CIJ SUPER MEMORIES OF THE

1(1)C1J

IUPI!RIOWL

2:30
4:00

FR(NCHOPEN
(II)
ATLANTA GOLIF

CLAS8IC

4:30 C1J !:,AN All RACES
1:00 (I).(!) LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP

'

RICHMOND

Quarters
.
by Juanita

HAND
OPERATED
ICE CREAM
FREEZER

for everyone

Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 til 9, Saturday ·9 to 5
Phone 446·2673

(I)

(!)

7:00

"Merle Norman Cosmetics"
43 $tate Street
Gallipolis, Ohio

MONDAY
JUNE2, 1880
7:30

tiJ IAII!IALL Atlonto Brovoo vo

Son Froncioco Glonta
WI!DN!IDAY
JUNI! 4, 18110
EVENING
10:30
BAII!BAUCinclnnaiiReda
vo Loo Angoloa Oodgoro
1:35 C1J
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SI!IAU REPLAY
FRIDAY ...
JUNE 18110
EVENING
7:30 (I) IABI!IIAU: Alllnto Brovea vo •
Loo AnQoloo Oodgero
1:11 (])
BABI!IALL: GREATES

IOCCERLEAGUEABCSportawiil
provldo covorogo ot tt\e game
botwoonthoNowYorkCoomooand
tho Woohington Dlplomato. (2 hro ..
30mlno.)
3:00 (!) UNITED STATES OLYMPIC
TRIALS
•
CIJ
Clll
SPORTS
SPECTACULAR
4:00 ()). BASEBALL Cincinnotl Redo
•• Son Diogo Podrao
, C1J BASEBALL Atlenta Bravos va
Loo Anll!loo Dodgoro
• CIJ (!g) KEMPER OPEN
4:30 C1J $ •
WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS 1) U.S. Auto Club Dirt
Rocolrorn llllnola. 2) Aspacial per·
formonco by the Chinese Acrobat a
ol Taiwan. (90 min a.)
(!) SPORTSWORLD I) World
Chompionohip of Amateur Bowling
from Miomi. 2) U.S. Mon'oGymnaa·
tlco Cnampionohipatrom Ohio. 3)
AIAW National Women 's Coiiogiata Track and Field Championships. (90 mine.)

" Winter Meeting" 1948

8ATUIIDAY

JUNII! 7. 11180

1:00

EVENING

Moocow.

(I) 700CLUB
1:30 (I) MOVIE ·(WESTERN·DRAMA)
11
••
DikOll Lll" 1950
2:00 (]) MOVIE -(DRAMA)'' I&gt; "Hard·

IPORTI RIYALMS 'Tho Yon·
k - vo lhoOodgero' Rollvoone of
beHboU'o grootell oporto rlvolrloo,thiYonkHovetheOodgero,ln
.111m cllpo of the toomo cta00ic con·
lrontotionoln 10WOfkl Sotiea.

TUI!IDAY
JUNE 3, 18110

(J) WI!8TVIIIOINIA STATE HIGH
ICHOOL TRACKIII!ET
2:00 C1J (ll) •
NORTH AMERICAN

e(J)IIOVIE-iDRAMA)''I&gt; "Tho
lleclllallert''
ClllMDVIE -iADVENTURE) ••• I&gt;
"FIIflltl ollhe Phoenix" 11168
$ . MOVIE 'Dracula's Caalla'
11169 John Corradine. Doctor and
hlo wile kidnap young girls lor the
purpoao ot drinking there blood. 2)
'Creeping Terror' 1964 Vic
Sovage, Shannon O'Neil. A Mon·
otertrom another planotterorlzoa
the population, and oHortato des·
troy It are almootlmpoaalblo.
11:46 (J) HEE HAW Gueota: Tennoaaee
Emla Ford, Tammy Wynette, Karel
Gott, Jones Family. (Repeat; 60
mlna.)
12:00 (J) HI DOUG
(I) ROCK CONCERT Guests:
Linda Ronatadt, Steve Martin,Nitty
Gritty Dirt Band, John Hartford.
12:30 (J) HOLIDAY AT MELODYLAND
12:45 CIJ MOVIE -(MYSTERY)" "Van·
doltofor tho Saint" 1968
1:00 ·ffi . MOVIE ·(DRAMA) " I&gt;

end groco wh111tho country' otop
women gymnollo oocoptlhe chol·
Iongo to compote In thla elite
lll"'!!!ltlc ..... '
1:30 liJ Clll. MONDAY NIGHT IIA· .
SI!IALL Now Vorl&lt; Yonkooo vo
Konooo City Royolo or Clnclnnotl
Redo vo Loo Angoloo Dodgora.
&lt;ReGion will determine gemo to be
tllovlood In yow otoo.)
10:30 Cll IAII!IAU Allonto Brovea vo
Son Froncloo Gianto

$10~~Sale

Hair Stylists : Chuck McGuire, Marty Reynolds, Karen
Johnson, Christi Reynolds, Merri Ault, Mary Edwards,
Karen Clark, Juanita Saunders (cosmetic consultant).

.;

\...

Price $13.45

This model has a high density polyethylene tub in bold gold
color. 5 quart.
003-962JFKP5

HOSE NOZZLES
YOUR CHOICE

Your choice of pistol grip or
adjustable type nozzle.
678-938/N29C

706- 45712210

BIG 10-DAY SALE STARTS TODAY!

,.

Famous Stratolounger®
Close-Up®recliners

CARTER &amp;fvANS~iNC:nMES

YOUR CHOICE

87011ve St.
Phone

•

Building Supply &amp; Hardware
•

Grea1 man-SIZe comlort n a 51rk.r.g stan restSiant easy-care 1-ie!CLAon tattc
~·s

LAYAWAY
N(M
FOR BEST

SELECTION
•

a surni)L.KJUS,ty oe1a~ Stra!Qbungel Cbs~HJp Tre famous reclner

mechaniSm tt'lal Slayscbse 10 1~ w~-even wren Sltelcl"ed way out n tul
rechnflQ comtor1 The pertecr chaw lot' rooay's smaler rooms And ar w spe·
. Cl81 value pce-yau woo up w~h tne rroSI combrable reclner ever at

tremendOus saVlr"'QS

1

Har&lt;Json-ely Sl\llped aro '"""" SlfaiOOulge&lt; Cose·Up TM perlecl
ct'OCe lor )'{lur comtorr ana pceo ro make ~ the perfect ctoce tor you
b..dget tool n·s the space-savnc 1eclner !hat always ~ps ts back ro rt"e
wal - even when 'yi)U lean baCk tl the t~ reclf'ed p:&gt;s«on Ard ot cwse.
you enroy SrratOk:&gt;tJ'lger 's SUJJ2f0f constrLCI011, me\(;ulous u~ery detatl
ard deep-deep custn"llng- hre tun~ure q~ ., a so-son vnyr tha1 rr.oats
tre l(;hest ot leatnet"s

UWPOUS, OH 45631

0

�IUm

WELLER

SOLDERING
IRON
sg2A~rS.Ie

FULLER

VERMONT AMERICAN

26" HAND SAW

VAUGHAN-BUSHNELL

16 OZ. HAMMER

ASSORTED PLIERS

.
89

$3

Price $11.90

6 piece kit consists of one soldering iron, one roll rosin core
solder, 3 tips and soldering air
tool.

027·979/190-6 Dla. Cut
027-995.1192·6 Long nose aide cut
028-001/194·7 Unemana side cut

$529

Valuea to $5.99

After Sale Price $6.60

Your choice. Choose from 6"
diagonal cutters, 6" long nose
side cutters, 7" linesman's side
cutters. All with vinyl grip.

After Sale
Price $6.25

020-016/SP23K

Bevel filed ,
accurately set teethhigh impact plastic
handle is hand fitted
for comfortable
sawing. 8 point
general purpose.

MINI LIMB·N· TRIM~

Drop forged 16 oz . head.
Rust resistant enamel
finish . Polished face .
Lacquered hickory
handle.

735·985 962

752·9 15 0 0 16

8" ELECTRIC SAW
Lightweight, easy to use. 1114 H.P. m?tor.
Manual oiler. Double insulated . .370 mch
pitch chain. U.L. approved. 6 amps. 11 5
volts AC.

VERMONT AMERICAN

6 PC. ROUTER
BIT SET

686·014 75481

After Sale
Price $15.97

Professional
quality
blades for
wide range of cut·
ting in woods, plastics,
and metals. Does straight cut, medium
and ttght scroll sawi ng.

For general
. stock removal,
slotting, grooving , rabbeting
and freehand routing- 1fa, % , 3/a, 112
straight ; 3!ts veining , 112 V-groove .
663-781 491

798· 777 39

VERMONT AMERICAN

VERMONT AMERICAN

CARBIDE TIPPED
SAW BLADES

MULTI-BIT
SCREWDRIVER

YOUR CHOICE
After Sale
Price $6.77

After Sale
Price $10.95

Carbide
tipped blades ·
for carpen·
ters and build·
ing contractors have 24·28 tungs~en car·
bide tips .

6 1f2 inches in diameter
663·021 M4461 2

7V4 inches in diameter
663-047 M44714

Multi-bit
screwdriver
with 4 insert
bits. Handy
storage compartment in rear of
driver.
568·451 3195

�IUm

WELLER

SOLDERING
IRON
sg2A~rS.Ie

FULLER

VERMONT AMERICAN

26" HAND SAW

VAUGHAN-BUSHNELL

16 OZ. HAMMER

ASSORTED PLIERS

.
89

$3

Price $11.90

6 piece kit consists of one soldering iron, one roll rosin core
solder, 3 tips and soldering air
tool.

027·979/190-6 Dla. Cut
027-995.1192·6 Long nose aide cut
028-001/194·7 Unemana side cut

$529

Valuea to $5.99

After Sale Price $6.60

Your choice. Choose from 6"
diagonal cutters, 6" long nose
side cutters, 7" linesman's side
cutters. All with vinyl grip.

After Sale
Price $6.25

020-016/SP23K

Bevel filed ,
accurately set teethhigh impact plastic
handle is hand fitted
for comfortable
sawing. 8 point
general purpose.

MINI LIMB·N· TRIM~

Drop forged 16 oz . head.
Rust resistant enamel
finish . Polished face .
Lacquered hickory
handle.

735·985 962

752·9 15 0 0 16

8" ELECTRIC SAW
Lightweight, easy to use. 1114 H.P. m?tor.
Manual oiler. Double insulated . .370 mch
pitch chain. U.L. approved. 6 amps. 11 5
volts AC.

VERMONT AMERICAN

6 PC. ROUTER
BIT SET

686·014 75481

After Sale
Price $15.97

Professional
quality
blades for
wide range of cut·
ting in woods, plastics,
and metals. Does straight cut, medium
and ttght scroll sawi ng.

For general
. stock removal,
slotting, grooving , rabbeting
and freehand routing- 1fa, % , 3/a, 112
straight ; 3!ts veining , 112 V-groove .
663-781 491

798· 777 39

VERMONT AMERICAN

VERMONT AMERICAN

CARBIDE TIPPED
SAW BLADES

MULTI-BIT
SCREWDRIVER

YOUR CHOICE
After Sale
Price $6.77

After Sale
Price $10.95

Carbide
tipped blades ·
for carpen·
ters and build·
ing contractors have 24·28 tungs~en car·
bide tips .

6 1f2 inches in diameter
663·021 M4461 2

7V4 inches in diameter
663-047 M44714

Multi-bit
screwdriver
with 4 insert
bits. Handy
storage compartment in rear of
driver.
568·451 3195

�BLACK &amp; DECKER
%" VARIABLE

BLACK &amp; DECKER
71f41NCH

ELECTRIC DRILL

CIRCULAR SAW

$4819

YALE

$

YALE

PADLOCK

NIGHT LATCH

Look Strong, Are Strong!

179After Sale

Prlc~ $2.79

v.1w

The new Yale 7100
Series Padlocks offer
the latest in modern
styling and improved
padlock secunty. Rust
resistant case,
hardened steel shackle,
multi-tumbler
mechanism ... ideal
security for office, home
and school.

J.1:V

1

$609
After
Sale Price
$8.45

~~.

-c:- - -

l

i

~~

Low cost security for your
homes. Operates with key
outside, knob inside. Fits doors
1Va" to 2V4'' thick.

754·887/V7112

219-394/VOO

Double insulated; beveled and
depth adjustment. Two randles
for steady control. Power lock off
button. 1.5 H.P. maximum.

Double insulated precision
ball thrust bearing system
locking button and 6 ft . cord. '
693·45717190

693-48 1/7390

DENNII

WIIOW-EIEE
~29

..

DRILL GUIDE

$-JO~?.,

3 IN 1 CIRCULAR SAW
BLADE PACK

Sola Price

$67A~S.Ie

$13.75

FOR ACCURACY IN DRILLING
• True goo holes
• Edge drilling
• Drills 45° CORNER ANGLES
• Controls drilling in pipe and
round stock
• Catches debris when drilling overhead
• Can be used (without frame) as 10" drill
extension- fits Black &amp; Decker and most
other 114 " and Va drills.

Price $9.55

Three of the most popular Black
&amp; Decker manufactured SUPER
SHARP circular saw blades
packaged to bring you a
savings. Includes 73-007 7%''
combination blade, 73-027 7%''
crescent blade and 73-047
plywood blade.

091-496171·055

5 77-494/73-700

After Sale
Price $9.98

Sturdy aluminum
with curved ends.
Durable extruded
channel. Does not
include handles.

Prloel1.

BLACK &amp; DECKER

FLOOR SQUEEGEE
$729

After

BLACK &amp; DECKER

DENNIS

Squee~ window
• ciHnerln quality

plated, double
IMdldand
long-luling. linch.

161·851/24·24

.DENNIS

SPOI&amp;EJSQIEEIEE
H44 .,.., ....
-.- I

Prlceti.M

Poly sponge washes, quality
squeegee blade dries
fut without
streaking.
121nches.
575-51118101

010-...C:

EMPIRE 18"
FARM &amp; HOME

GARAGE BROOM
$479

ROOF CEMENT

After Sale
Price $6.05

$309 Price
After Sale
$4.35

Long wearing broom designed
for sweeping patios, garage
floors, walks,
etc . 54" wood
handle.

High quality roof
cement will not dry
out or harden in the
package.

796·581125-1673

101-717/FH22~6-10

FARM &amp; HOME
5 Gallon

STANLEY

POWER LOCK
RULE
12FT.

$7~9
.

After Sale
Price $9.55

12' x 3!4" wide blade protected
for long wear. Power return. 16'
and 20' lengths available.

DRIVEWAY SEALER
.$970
Make your driveway look like new
with this fast drying tar pitch
emulsion sealer.
Seals against sun
damage and water
penetration . Resists gas, oil and
other solvents. Full
5 gallon fill.
796-102/FH746

HEAVY DUTY SEALER

439-570/PL312

$12

20
796-110/FH760

�BLACK &amp; DECKER
%" VARIABLE

BLACK &amp; DECKER
71f41NCH

ELECTRIC DRILL

CIRCULAR SAW

$4819

YALE

$

YALE

PADLOCK

NIGHT LATCH

Look Strong, Are Strong!

179After Sale

Prlc~ $2.79

v.1w

The new Yale 7100
Series Padlocks offer
the latest in modern
styling and improved
padlock secunty. Rust
resistant case,
hardened steel shackle,
multi-tumbler
mechanism ... ideal
security for office, home
and school.

J.1:V

1

$609
After
Sale Price
$8.45

~~.

-c:- - -

l

i

~~

Low cost security for your
homes. Operates with key
outside, knob inside. Fits doors
1Va" to 2V4'' thick.

754·887/V7112

219-394/VOO

Double insulated; beveled and
depth adjustment. Two randles
for steady control. Power lock off
button. 1.5 H.P. maximum.

Double insulated precision
ball thrust bearing system
locking button and 6 ft . cord. '
693·45717190

693-48 1/7390

DENNII

WIIOW-EIEE
~29

..

DRILL GUIDE

$-JO~?.,

3 IN 1 CIRCULAR SAW
BLADE PACK

Sola Price

$67A~S.Ie

$13.75

FOR ACCURACY IN DRILLING
• True goo holes
• Edge drilling
• Drills 45° CORNER ANGLES
• Controls drilling in pipe and
round stock
• Catches debris when drilling overhead
• Can be used (without frame) as 10" drill
extension- fits Black &amp; Decker and most
other 114 " and Va drills.

Price $9.55

Three of the most popular Black
&amp; Decker manufactured SUPER
SHARP circular saw blades
packaged to bring you a
savings. Includes 73-007 7%''
combination blade, 73-027 7%''
crescent blade and 73-047
plywood blade.

091-496171·055

5 77-494/73-700

After Sale
Price $9.98

Sturdy aluminum
with curved ends.
Durable extruded
channel. Does not
include handles.

Prloel1.

BLACK &amp; DECKER

FLOOR SQUEEGEE
$729

After

BLACK &amp; DECKER

DENNIS

Squee~ window
• ciHnerln quality

plated, double
IMdldand
long-luling. linch.

161·851/24·24

.DENNIS

SPOI&amp;EJSQIEEIEE
H44 .,.., ....
-.- I

Prlceti.M

Poly sponge washes, quality
squeegee blade dries
fut without
streaking.
121nches.
575-51118101

010-...C:

EMPIRE 18"
FARM &amp; HOME

GARAGE BROOM
$479

ROOF CEMENT

After Sale
Price $6.05

$309 Price
After Sale
$4.35

Long wearing broom designed
for sweeping patios, garage
floors, walks,
etc . 54" wood
handle.

High quality roof
cement will not dry
out or harden in the
package.

796·581125-1673

101-717/FH22~6-10

FARM &amp; HOME
5 Gallon

STANLEY

POWER LOCK
RULE
12FT.

$7~9
.

After Sale
Price $9.55

12' x 3!4" wide blade protected
for long wear. Power return. 16'
and 20' lengths available.

DRIVEWAY SEALER
.$970
Make your driveway look like new
with this fast drying tar pitch
emulsion sealer.
Seals against sun
damage and water
penetration . Resists gas, oil and
other solvents. Full
5 gallon fill.
796-102/FH746

HEAVY DUTY SEALER

439-570/PL312

$12

20
796-110/FH760

�THOMAS

OUTDOOR
LIGHT

ALLENTOWN 88"

CLOTHESLINE
PROP
After Sale
Price $1 .75

G.alva~ized steel tubing
w1th wtre top and plastic
foot.

$~

Frosted glass ch imney
and clear acrylic panels. 10" sq. Ht.
14112'' . 1-100W. Ord~r post separately.

Read.y to install. Just hang with c hains
supplied and plug in. Gro unded cord and
plug set. Chain and hook suspensio n
·
Bulbs included.

061·457 SL775·7

n6·167 240SPL

PACIFIC ELECTRICORD

PACIFIC ELECTRICORD

703·009 65

CLAMP ON
FLOOD LIGHT

TROUBLE
LIGHT

ARROW-CONTI CO

WEATHERED BARN
MAILBOX

AJAX

MAILBOX

Weathered barn
mailbox made of
unbreakable
polyethylene with
recessed door to keep
weather o ut.

POST
49 :~:;sate

$8

619·334 M8101

WHEELING GALVANIZED

10 QT. WATER PAIL

$579

Seamed body
with strong ears
and heavy w ire
~oail.

$41 ~rSate

After Sale
Price $10.49
Puts light where you need it.
On/Off switch with snap
open plastic cage for easy
bu lb replacement. Comes
with 25 ' cord . Bulb not included.

Price $5.95

Heavy aluminum reflector
shade. Perfect for patio, garage,
photograph , etc. New swivel feature adJ~sts and holds the lamp firmly in any positton. Clamps on anywhere.
799-270 A2302-006

THOMAS

$11 .99

Just tw1st the earth anchor
1nto the ground in minutes.
Holds firm and solid . s 1ngle
post design . sturdy steel
construction. rust res1stant
black sa!ln fln1sh. Overall ·
length 56"

$319

OumJOri

UiHT

096 556 MB202A

~7?2-

S-189!_
I

036·606 1102

GARBAGE CAN CART
WHEELING

20 GAL. GARBAGE CAN

Prloe

$25.11
Black finish wall bracket lantern in die-cast aluminum.
Clear acrylic panes. 6" sq. Ht.

Price •••.11

'T

$1399

48" WORKSHOP LIGHT

$25~~~;~65

$124

AfterSale
Price $16.95

AMERICAN FLUORESCENT

Black outdoor bracket with
clear panels. 8¥1" sq. Ht.
18¥1". Ext. 10Y•"· 1·75W

16". Ext. 7112''

111-'4et'81.8231-7

HIOW
543-92e/SL.i250-7

LEVITON

CORD
CONNECTOR

Multi-purpose lawn . rubbish and
garden cart holds two 20 gallon
cans. Constructed of 1" heavy
gauge alummum tubing .
622· 175 122

GEM .

FUSE
PLUGS
YOUR
CHOICE

After Sale
Price $9.19

21c

Galvantzed
throughout .
Complete wtth
snug fitting l1 d.
036·622 920

$198

After Sale
Price $2.95

Heavy duty grounded rubber connector with cord clamp.
577-15515365

545·463 690·20
545-5091690·30

ELECTR.IC
TAPE

ELECTRICAL
BOXES
YOUR CHOICE
Switch Box
109·066 471

Ceiling Box
109·330 146

After Sale
Price 95e

See thru glass lets
you see when fuse
ts blown Avatlable
tn 15. 20. 25 and 30 amps
545-4751690·15
545-491 690·25

MANCO

RACO

inch x 66 ft . roll of vinyl
electric tape . All weather
-flame retardant .
314

After Sale
Price $1 .25

790-659 667

�THOMAS

OUTDOOR
LIGHT

ALLENTOWN 88"

CLOTHESLINE
PROP
After Sale
Price $1 .75

G.alva~ized steel tubing
w1th wtre top and plastic
foot.

$~

Frosted glass ch imney
and clear acrylic panels. 10" sq. Ht.
14112'' . 1-100W. Ord~r post separately.

Read.y to install. Just hang with c hains
supplied and plug in. Gro unded cord and
plug set. Chain and hook suspensio n
·
Bulbs included.

061·457 SL775·7

n6·167 240SPL

PACIFIC ELECTRICORD

PACIFIC ELECTRICORD

703·009 65

CLAMP ON
FLOOD LIGHT

TROUBLE
LIGHT

ARROW-CONTI CO

WEATHERED BARN
MAILBOX

AJAX

MAILBOX

Weathered barn
mailbox made of
unbreakable
polyethylene with
recessed door to keep
weather o ut.

POST
49 :~:;sate

$8

619·334 M8101

WHEELING GALVANIZED

10 QT. WATER PAIL

$579

Seamed body
with strong ears
and heavy w ire
~oail.

$41 ~rSate

After Sale
Price $10.49
Puts light where you need it.
On/Off switch with snap
open plastic cage for easy
bu lb replacement. Comes
with 25 ' cord . Bulb not included.

Price $5.95

Heavy aluminum reflector
shade. Perfect for patio, garage,
photograph , etc. New swivel feature adJ~sts and holds the lamp firmly in any positton. Clamps on anywhere.
799-270 A2302-006

THOMAS

$11 .99

Just tw1st the earth anchor
1nto the ground in minutes.
Holds firm and solid . s 1ngle
post design . sturdy steel
construction. rust res1stant
black sa!ln fln1sh. Overall ·
length 56"

$319

OumJOri

UiHT

096 556 MB202A

~7?2-

S-189!_
I

036·606 1102

GARBAGE CAN CART
WHEELING

20 GAL. GARBAGE CAN

Prloe

$25.11
Black finish wall bracket lantern in die-cast aluminum.
Clear acrylic panes. 6" sq. Ht.

Price •••.11

'T

$1399

48" WORKSHOP LIGHT

$25~~~;~65

$124

AfterSale
Price $16.95

AMERICAN FLUORESCENT

Black outdoor bracket with
clear panels. 8¥1" sq. Ht.
18¥1". Ext. 10Y•"· 1·75W

16". Ext. 7112''

111-'4et'81.8231-7

HIOW
543-92e/SL.i250-7

LEVITON

CORD
CONNECTOR

Multi-purpose lawn . rubbish and
garden cart holds two 20 gallon
cans. Constructed of 1" heavy
gauge alummum tubing .
622· 175 122

GEM .

FUSE
PLUGS
YOUR
CHOICE

After Sale
Price $9.19

21c

Galvantzed
throughout .
Complete wtth
snug fitting l1 d.
036·622 920

$198

After Sale
Price $2.95

Heavy duty grounded rubber connector with cord clamp.
577-15515365

545·463 690·20
545-5091690·30

ELECTR.IC
TAPE

ELECTRICAL
BOXES
YOUR CHOICE
Switch Box
109·066 471

Ceiling Box
109·330 146

After Sale
Price 95e

See thru glass lets
you see when fuse
ts blown Avatlable
tn 15. 20. 25 and 30 amps
545-4751690·15
545-491 690·25

MANCO

RACO

inch x 66 ft . roll of vinyl
electric tape . All weather
-flame retardant .
314

After Sale
Price $1 .25

790-659 667

�NUPAC

AMPCO

CABINETS
x

VANITIES

DOUBLE DOOR 18"

$3844

$4099

36"

An attractive addilion to

~r:!r~~:;,· i~a.;~~~~; to

install, lightweight cabinet
with a custom built look.
Available in white or brown .
one cir two door models
with solid or louvered front.

After Sale
Price $56.35

After Sale
Price $44.89

Inexpensive yet beautifully styled, complete
w1th marble top. Integral bowl and back splash .
19 x 30 x 17. White (less faucet)
808·402/1900

MASTER 30 GALLON GAS

WATER HEATER

DRYER VENT

KIT

$-J29

i~i:.g

• AGA approved
ventM gas

$459
.After Sale
Price $6.75

4 Everylhing you need to

4" vent your dryer Hood.

flange plate, 5 feet or
flexible dueling and two
clamps For 5 inch
vent.

• Glass lined

Louvered
Doors

• 100% safety
controls

818·633/303WHi
818·64113048RN

Solid
Doors

LAVATORY
FAUCET

LINT TRAP KIT
ii;;iiiiiiii:~

19

CENTRAL

LAMBRO

$579

$1299

After Sale
Price $8.29

Complete kit for do-ityourself installation.
Adapts to any dryer.
Ideal for apartments, condominiums,
mobile homes
or wherever
outside venting
~~::-'! is impractical.

Contrast w ith chrome plated shell
housing rough chrome tee.
Renewable seals. 4 inch centers.
072·892'714 7

CENTRAL

SINK FAUCET
Top mount ledge sink fitting ,
renewable seats. Replaceable
without removing faucets from
sink. 8 inch centers , 2 inch
shanks.

• Fast heat
recovery.

818·617/301WHI
818·625/3028RN

After Sale
Price $18.85

740·001 MRGJOTSLN

SINGLE

40 GALLON
ELECTRIC

DOOR
12"

X

36"

$2995

After Sale
Price $42.89

291 ·229 MRE40SEO

Louvered Door

Solid door

818·674 313WHI
818·68213148RN

818·65&amp;311WHI
818·666/3128RN

I ·

II
I
I

~.: ~ . ~:&gt; 111

.

..
• ...

I

-:...

.· . ~

Sparking stainless steel stnk, self
rimming for eaay lnataJiatlon. Overall
size 33 X 22 Inches.
111 4IIIPU322

LAWSON BATH ACCESSORIES
Triple plated chrome, complete
with mounting screws.

TOWEL BAR
095·39815124

ROYAL REPLACEMENT

KITCHEN-AlAE 30" DUCTLESS

TOILET SEAT

RANGE HOOD

$3288

ME LARD

8FT. DRAIN
AUGER

After Sale Price $5.25

$181·

SOAP DISH
095·49715105

After Sale Price $2.59

TISSUE HOLDER

095·463 5109

After Sale Price $3.75 ••.

249

Removes heat and odor from your kitchen.
Features 2 speed fan , activated charcoal filter
and convenient range light. Easy to install.
Choice of colors.

$629

$2.05

156·17411708E

Also available in 10 and 15 ft. lengths.

TUB&amp;
TILE
CAULK
$1 4~erSale
Price

After Sale
Price $3.05

For cleaning all types of drains.
780-00712230WHI
780·04912230COP
780·081 2230ALM
780·015112230HG
780-02312230AVO

DAP

One piece plastic hinge . white
only.
464·032, 88TM

Seals around tubs.
showers, sinks or tile.
125·823 KWIK

�NUPAC

AMPCO

CABINETS
x

VANITIES

DOUBLE DOOR 18"

$3844

$4099

36"

An attractive addilion to

~r:!r~~:;,· i~a.;~~~~; to

install, lightweight cabinet
with a custom built look.
Available in white or brown .
one cir two door models
with solid or louvered front.

After Sale
Price $56.35

After Sale
Price $44.89

Inexpensive yet beautifully styled, complete
w1th marble top. Integral bowl and back splash .
19 x 30 x 17. White (less faucet)
808·402/1900

MASTER 30 GALLON GAS

WATER HEATER

DRYER VENT

KIT

$-J29

i~i:.g

• AGA approved
ventM gas

$459
.After Sale
Price $6.75

4 Everylhing you need to

4" vent your dryer Hood.

flange plate, 5 feet or
flexible dueling and two
clamps For 5 inch
vent.

• Glass lined

Louvered
Doors

• 100% safety
controls

818·633/303WHi
818·64113048RN

Solid
Doors

LAVATORY
FAUCET

LINT TRAP KIT
ii;;iiiiiiii:~

19

CENTRAL

LAMBRO

$579

$1299

After Sale
Price $8.29

Complete kit for do-ityourself installation.
Adapts to any dryer.
Ideal for apartments, condominiums,
mobile homes
or wherever
outside venting
~~::-'! is impractical.

Contrast w ith chrome plated shell
housing rough chrome tee.
Renewable seals. 4 inch centers.
072·892'714 7

CENTRAL

SINK FAUCET
Top mount ledge sink fitting ,
renewable seats. Replaceable
without removing faucets from
sink. 8 inch centers , 2 inch
shanks.

• Fast heat
recovery.

818·617/301WHI
818·625/3028RN

After Sale
Price $18.85

740·001 MRGJOTSLN

SINGLE

40 GALLON
ELECTRIC

DOOR
12"

X

36"

$2995

After Sale
Price $42.89

291 ·229 MRE40SEO

Louvered Door

Solid door

818·674 313WHI
818·68213148RN

818·65&amp;311WHI
818·666/3128RN

I ·

II
I
I

~.: ~ . ~:&gt; 111

.

..
• ...

I

-:...

.· . ~

Sparking stainless steel stnk, self
rimming for eaay lnataJiatlon. Overall
size 33 X 22 Inches.
111 4IIIPU322

LAWSON BATH ACCESSORIES
Triple plated chrome, complete
with mounting screws.

TOWEL BAR
095·39815124

ROYAL REPLACEMENT

KITCHEN-AlAE 30" DUCTLESS

TOILET SEAT

RANGE HOOD

$3288

ME LARD

8FT. DRAIN
AUGER

After Sale Price $5.25

$181·

SOAP DISH
095·49715105

After Sale Price $2.59

TISSUE HOLDER

095·463 5109

After Sale Price $3.75 ••.

249

Removes heat and odor from your kitchen.
Features 2 speed fan , activated charcoal filter
and convenient range light. Easy to install.
Choice of colors.

$629

$2.05

156·17411708E

Also available in 10 and 15 ft. lengths.

TUB&amp;
TILE
CAULK
$1 4~erSale
Price

After Sale
Price $3.05

For cleaning all types of drains.
780-00712230WHI
780·04912230COP
780·081 2230ALM
780·015112230HG
780-02312230AVO

DAP

One piece plastic hinge . white
only.
464·032, 88TM

Seals around tubs.
showers, sinks or tile.
125·823 KWIK

���BIG BOY

•n
»47!.,_

IUTIER/
CI.EAJIER

THE PUMP

- :-,.1

Designed for small
pressure needs and
limited air volume.
Overall height is 18".
657· 783 5325

LAWN $444
MOWER
BLADES

DELUXE.

Price S2.H

After sale
price $6.19

LAWN

OS ROW

Cleans and conditions
all fine leathers and
vinyls. Use on C$r
Interiors, furniture,
sports equipment and
clothing. Keeps things
soft and supple. 10 oz.
aerosol can.

After Sale
Price $3.95

MICHIGAN PRODUCTION
REPLACEMENT

®

MISSOURI HICKORY

High carbon steel blades available in
all popular sizes . Complete with
inserts to fit most mowers.
184-549/DU0-18
126-920/DU0-22
011-866/DU0-24
184-655/DU0-19
184-762/DU0-20
139-444/DU0-25
126·912/DU0-21
590-695/DU0-26

RAKE

CAR WASH
BRUSH

s7~~Sale

price $9.35

107-516'11110

22 Spring steel tines
cover a full 22:Y4 sweep.
A quality rake made
to last. 48"
long
wooden
handle .

AMERICAN SPONGE

TI.R RAG

After Sale Price $3.69

$329

26" aluminum handle
with shut-off valve.
Wash cars, boats,
windows and gutters .

After S.le
PrlceM.48

517·433119·359

New synthetic that

026·658 BA1 0

cleana and driea
Instantly without

RITE-LINE LAWN MOWER

atreaklng. Strong, long
luting and lintleaa.
Machine wuhable.
Perfect for car, home,
boat. ACTUALLY

I~#

l'UNE·UP KIT

~ $2~~. ~prlcol3.35

IMPROVES WITH
USEIIn reusable bag.
824-14&amp;'TR378W

Fits Briggs &amp; Stratton and
Clinton engines. Tune up
mowers, garden tractors,
ohaln saws. 782·57!51RL·128t

EAGLE 21h GALLON

GAS CAN

~~··

After
Nle
price
$1.15

ARMOR-ALL

RAY·O.YAC

TRAIISISTDR
BAIIERY

LANTERN
BATTERY
After Sale
Price $2.49

6 volt
battery
especially de·
signed for lantern service.
Spring terminals.

242·338/M2 1/2

t~-587/~7N8

PROTECTAll

$197
9Volt
battery
for electronic
applications.

Fits 90% all lawn mower
and small engine
applications.

Made of 26-gauge galvanized steel.
No top or side seams. Equipped with.
flexible spout and vent cap.

LAWNWARE "CLASSIC"

LAWN FENCE

Protects and
beautifies leather,
wood, acrylics,
plastic, rubber and
vinyl. Makes
surfaces anti-static
to repel dust and
dirt.
114-e38/1080

After
Sale
Price
$6.79
A rugged
dependable all
purpose lantern
w11h compact. light·
we1gh1 construc11on. that
enables 11 10 float Has a
sturdy metal sw11ch w&gt;th a
weatherprool rubber gasket Pertec1 lor
land and water use
109·033!LM10S

~~:~·~

15" high x 36" long. Decorative styling with
wrought iron fini sh. Durable high impact
polystyrene construction. Exclusive " snaplock"
connection . 641· 340 422

�BIG BOY

•n
»47!.,_

IUTIER/
CI.EAJIER

THE PUMP

- :-,.1

Designed for small
pressure needs and
limited air volume.
Overall height is 18".
657· 783 5325

LAWN $444
MOWER
BLADES

DELUXE.

Price S2.H

After sale
price $6.19

LAWN

OS ROW

Cleans and conditions
all fine leathers and
vinyls. Use on C$r
Interiors, furniture,
sports equipment and
clothing. Keeps things
soft and supple. 10 oz.
aerosol can.

After Sale
Price $3.95

MICHIGAN PRODUCTION
REPLACEMENT

®

MISSOURI HICKORY

High carbon steel blades available in
all popular sizes . Complete with
inserts to fit most mowers.
184-549/DU0-18
126-920/DU0-22
011-866/DU0-24
184-655/DU0-19
184-762/DU0-20
139-444/DU0-25
126·912/DU0-21
590-695/DU0-26

RAKE

CAR WASH
BRUSH

s7~~Sale

price $9.35

107-516'11110

22 Spring steel tines
cover a full 22:Y4 sweep.
A quality rake made
to last. 48"
long
wooden
handle .

AMERICAN SPONGE

TI.R RAG

After Sale Price $3.69

$329

26" aluminum handle
with shut-off valve.
Wash cars, boats,
windows and gutters .

After S.le
PrlceM.48

517·433119·359

New synthetic that

026·658 BA1 0

cleana and driea
Instantly without

RITE-LINE LAWN MOWER

atreaklng. Strong, long
luting and lintleaa.
Machine wuhable.
Perfect for car, home,
boat. ACTUALLY

I~#

l'UNE·UP KIT

~ $2~~. ~prlcol3.35

IMPROVES WITH
USEIIn reusable bag.
824-14&amp;'TR378W

Fits Briggs &amp; Stratton and
Clinton engines. Tune up
mowers, garden tractors,
ohaln saws. 782·57!51RL·128t

EAGLE 21h GALLON

GAS CAN

~~··

After
Nle
price
$1.15

ARMOR-ALL

RAY·O.YAC

TRAIISISTDR
BAIIERY

LANTERN
BATTERY
After Sale
Price $2.49

6 volt
battery
especially de·
signed for lantern service.
Spring terminals.

242·338/M2 1/2

t~-587/~7N8

PROTECTAll

$197
9Volt
battery
for electronic
applications.

Fits 90% all lawn mower
and small engine
applications.

Made of 26-gauge galvanized steel.
No top or side seams. Equipped with.
flexible spout and vent cap.

LAWNWARE "CLASSIC"

LAWN FENCE

Protects and
beautifies leather,
wood, acrylics,
plastic, rubber and
vinyl. Makes
surfaces anti-static
to repel dust and
dirt.
114-e38/1080

After
Sale
Price
$6.79
A rugged
dependable all
purpose lantern
w11h compact. light·
we1gh1 construc11on. that
enables 11 10 float Has a
sturdy metal sw11ch w&gt;th a
weatherprool rubber gasket Pertec1 lor
land and water use
109·033!LM10S

~~:~·~

15" high x 36" long. Decorative styling with
wrought iron fini sh. Durable high impact
polystyrene construction. Exclusive " snaplock"
connection . 641· 340 422

�STOPES

~5 T 0 P E~

,

._ .

i

..Ji

SOFT WHITE

AND SAVE!

BULBS

4/$167

IT'S MURPHY'S MART POLICY
NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD
ON ANY ITEM WE ADVERTISE

59¢

Soft White Bulbs soften shadows
and diminish glare, in sizes of 60 ,
75 and 100 watt.

~~It ~c_curs, We'ff Honor The Lower

781-021'L3456

$739

Many household repairs call for a pair of
snips. Wi ss makes the best. Now
available at a special low price .

After Sale
Price $11 .05

A ~ nee On The Some Item With
opy Of Any Current Local Ad

KIDDE FIREAWAY 10

FIRE
EXTINGUISHER
4

$7 ~erSale

028·464 M·3P

Price $12.99

H1g~ performance
protection for kitchen ,
workshop . garage , ut1hty,
furnace room, autos,
trucks , and farm
equipment. Extinguishing
ability equals two S- B: C
units . Contents: sodium
bicarbonate base dry
chemical. Use on burning
liquids ; gasoline, cooking
or lubncating oils ,
greases , pa1nts and
solvents . Also safe on l1ne
elect11Cal equipment.
704

~02

Incredibly Low Priced!

•

ELECTRIC, IYLOI LIIE

GRASS TRIMMER

MISSES' COOL
COMFORTABLE
FASHIOIIS FOR
SUIIIIY DAYS!
SUPII
JUII
SPECIAL

Regular

$19.97

LUNCH MATE

87
EACH

SOn lilT TAll TOPS
Cool summer favorite in a Iorge
selection of beautiful colors. Polyester
knit. You'll wont several at this low
price. Sizes S,M,l.

MEl'S TERRY SHIRT

SAVE

'3

lilT JAJIAICA SHORTS
Carefree polyester knits with on
elastic waist and stitched crease.
Many solid colors. Sizes 10-18.

4''

Comfort and good looks ot a
low price! Poly/cotton terry in
fashion colors. Sizes S,M,l,Xl.

10

SORRY, NO RAINCHECKS
AT L£AST 194 PER STORE

sggg
JR. SLEEPIIG JIAG

After Sale Price $15.79

IAYI

Keeps meats fresh for
hours. vegetables and
frUit cool and crisp.
lnstde there ts a plastic
food tray to separate
food from ice and
beverages. 11/z gallon
capacity.

•s

9'7

Durable polyester cover
a waterproof vinyl
bottom. Plump, 2-pound
filling for warmth! 90"
zipper. 33" ~ 64" size.

016· 733 2321

,·;-.
Litho In U.S.A. , Midwest Utho Co., Klnneapolll, Minn. t9 157

~~'.

13''

High-speed line cuts quickly and
cleanly (50-ft. of line included).
Automatic line trimmer. Double insulated . .. no grounding needed.

IGLOO

COOLER

Sale Ends Saturday, June 7

FLICK.. A BIC

GE

WISS SNIPS

,

~

0

Spool De1igned
For Fo1t, Eo1y
Advancing Of
Cutting Une!

�STOPES

~5 T 0 P E~

,

._ .

i

..Ji

SOFT WHITE

AND SAVE!

BULBS

4/$167

IT'S MURPHY'S MART POLICY
NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD
ON ANY ITEM WE ADVERTISE

59¢

Soft White Bulbs soften shadows
and diminish glare, in sizes of 60 ,
75 and 100 watt.

~~It ~c_curs, We'ff Honor The Lower

781-021'L3456

$739

Many household repairs call for a pair of
snips. Wi ss makes the best. Now
available at a special low price .

After Sale
Price $11 .05

A ~ nee On The Some Item With
opy Of Any Current Local Ad

KIDDE FIREAWAY 10

FIRE
EXTINGUISHER
4

$7 ~erSale

028·464 M·3P

Price $12.99

H1g~ performance
protection for kitchen ,
workshop . garage , ut1hty,
furnace room, autos,
trucks , and farm
equipment. Extinguishing
ability equals two S- B: C
units . Contents: sodium
bicarbonate base dry
chemical. Use on burning
liquids ; gasoline, cooking
or lubncating oils ,
greases , pa1nts and
solvents . Also safe on l1ne
elect11Cal equipment.
704

~02

Incredibly Low Priced!

•

ELECTRIC, IYLOI LIIE

GRASS TRIMMER

MISSES' COOL
COMFORTABLE
FASHIOIIS FOR
SUIIIIY DAYS!
SUPII
JUII
SPECIAL

Regular

$19.97

LUNCH MATE

87
EACH

SOn lilT TAll TOPS
Cool summer favorite in a Iorge
selection of beautiful colors. Polyester
knit. You'll wont several at this low
price. Sizes S,M,l.

MEl'S TERRY SHIRT

SAVE

'3

lilT JAJIAICA SHORTS
Carefree polyester knits with on
elastic waist and stitched crease.
Many solid colors. Sizes 10-18.

4''

Comfort and good looks ot a
low price! Poly/cotton terry in
fashion colors. Sizes S,M,l,Xl.

10

SORRY, NO RAINCHECKS
AT L£AST 194 PER STORE

sggg
JR. SLEEPIIG JIAG

After Sale Price $15.79

IAYI

Keeps meats fresh for
hours. vegetables and
frUit cool and crisp.
lnstde there ts a plastic
food tray to separate
food from ice and
beverages. 11/z gallon
capacity.

•s

9'7

Durable polyester cover
a waterproof vinyl
bottom. Plump, 2-pound
filling for warmth! 90"
zipper. 33" ~ 64" size.

016· 733 2321

,·;-.
Litho In U.S.A. , Midwest Utho Co., Klnneapolll, Minn. t9 157

~~'.

13''

High-speed line cuts quickly and
cleanly (50-ft. of line included).
Automatic line trimmer. Double insulated . .. no grounding needed.

IGLOO

COOLER

Sale Ends Saturday, June 7

FLICK.. A BIC

GE

WISS SNIPS

,

~

0

Spool De1igned
For Fo1t, Eo1y
Advancing Of
Cutting Une!

�SAVE BIG ON A GREAT WARDROBE AT MURPHY'S MART

BIG DISCOUNTS ON MEN'S FASHIONS AT MURPHY'S MART

CUlL_..

11111511111

96

·

18

.

. CHENILLE
TUBE TOPS

lfte'3

Electric. Mitt o; dry. 20 curten
(AI Jizes), dips. Compcxt. 6' GOI'd.

SAVE
OVER
25%

•
MISSIS'
STIRCH TillY

SPORT SOCKS

,

••

Acetate / polyester/span·
dex . Bandeau or basic
tube styles. One size.

SHORT NYLOII LOUNGERS

· TERRY SUNDRESSES
Many styles, most with
wide or self-tie strops
and shirred or gathered tops.
Solid colors and stripes with
contrast trim . Sizes S,M, L.
(Styles may vary from store
to store.)

4

Regular

77

ss.94

MEl'S KilT SPORT SHIRTS

444

•

REG. 15.96

Comfortable, softly flowing 100% nylon .
Elasticized, gathered neckline and short sleeves.
Flattering colors. One size.

MEl'S WOVEI • .,.1•••

897

YOUIG MEl'S JUIS

TERRY
SHORTS

Cotton/ nylon/ acrylic
cushionized terry.
Fit sizes 9· 11 .

AND lOP
·FABRIC
CASUALS

4~~

247

Colorful, carefree terry
in bright colors with wh ite
piping. Tonk top. Matching
elastic waist shorts.
Save on sizes S, M, l.

Braid trimmed con·
vas with molded
soles. Sizes 5· 10
in popular colors.

5!!

Easy-care 100% polyester
pullover. Collar style with
two-button placket. Stripes
with "solid color accents.

IAVI

•3

Tough 13·3/AI 01. cotton/ polyester denim. Trim
cut, flare leg styling. Waist si1es 29·40.

IAVI

'3

•

IA¥1'2

Sizes S,M,l, XL

MEl'S LCD WATCH

·~r

14

Shows day, date, hours, minutes, second s,
AM or PM. lithium battery l'asts approx. 3
years. Block plastic case a nd band.

99~

100% polyester gabardine. S,M,llengths,
waist sizes 30-42. Popular solid colors.

NLAIIZII
S.CWSIS

•

Mil'S CUSIIOia

STRETCH TUBE SOCKS

3?~'4.97

REGULAR

94C

#Mft's ...t wotWf(s atytes.
PlCIItk or lllllof fraMe~.

'1.47

~

80% cotton, 20% nylon. Stretch fit si1es

color polarized lens.

9·15. White with striped top.

OUR BIG SAVINGS ON SUMMER SHOES KEEP YOU IN STEP WITH YOUR BUDGET

. FLATTERING
SUMMER FOOTWEAR DISCOUNTS FOR WOMEN AND TEENS
..

MEl'S AID IOYS' IYLOI
ATIUTK OXFORDS
I

WOMEI'S COMFOITAIU SDP-IIS
Soft ~nyl uppers in CJMOrted fashion
colors. Rope-wrapped bottoms on
crepe soles.

24 7

Reg. '3.97

97

wo•rs Wlln v•YL. THOIGS

COOL COli WEDGE SAIIALS

leather-look with cork wedge.
Wo.men's and teens' sizes.

Burgundy urethane uppertwith "basket weave" vamp.
Women's and t•ns' sizes.

2

93 ·
Reg. *4.97

6~~

a.g. •a.97

3

91

MD'S UAIIII-LOOI SiiiDALS

REGULAR s4.97

MEl'S IYLOI

SRP-IIS

Nylon mesh uppers with elastic Qor.. Thick cuWon Insoles. Choice of
popular colon and si1es.

Cool, comfortable slin_g·back style
with brown woven urethane uppers.
Comfort-contoured insoles. Thick tire·
tread soles. M.n's sizes.

6'1
REG. sa.97

6~G~8.97
Nylon uppers with
padded collar.
Cushioned in·
soles. Suregrip soles.
Blue or beige.

�SAVE BIG ON A GREAT WARDROBE AT MURPHY'S MART

BIG DISCOUNTS ON MEN'S FASHIONS AT MURPHY'S MART

CUlL_..

11111511111

96

·

18

.

. CHENILLE
TUBE TOPS

lfte'3

Electric. Mitt o; dry. 20 curten
(AI Jizes), dips. Compcxt. 6' GOI'd.

SAVE
OVER
25%

•
MISSIS'
STIRCH TillY

SPORT SOCKS

,

••

Acetate / polyester/span·
dex . Bandeau or basic
tube styles. One size.

SHORT NYLOII LOUNGERS

· TERRY SUNDRESSES
Many styles, most with
wide or self-tie strops
and shirred or gathered tops.
Solid colors and stripes with
contrast trim . Sizes S,M, L.
(Styles may vary from store
to store.)

4

Regular

77

ss.94

MEl'S KilT SPORT SHIRTS

444

•

REG. 15.96

Comfortable, softly flowing 100% nylon .
Elasticized, gathered neckline and short sleeves.
Flattering colors. One size.

MEl'S WOVEI • .,.1•••

897

YOUIG MEl'S JUIS

TERRY
SHORTS

Cotton/ nylon/ acrylic
cushionized terry.
Fit sizes 9· 11 .

AND lOP
·FABRIC
CASUALS

4~~

247

Colorful, carefree terry
in bright colors with wh ite
piping. Tonk top. Matching
elastic waist shorts.
Save on sizes S, M, l.

Braid trimmed con·
vas with molded
soles. Sizes 5· 10
in popular colors.

5!!

Easy-care 100% polyester
pullover. Collar style with
two-button placket. Stripes
with "solid color accents.

IAVI

•3

Tough 13·3/AI 01. cotton/ polyester denim. Trim
cut, flare leg styling. Waist si1es 29·40.

IAVI

'3

•

IA¥1'2

Sizes S,M,l, XL

MEl'S LCD WATCH

·~r

14

Shows day, date, hours, minutes, second s,
AM or PM. lithium battery l'asts approx. 3
years. Block plastic case a nd band.

99~

100% polyester gabardine. S,M,llengths,
waist sizes 30-42. Popular solid colors.

NLAIIZII
S.CWSIS

•

Mil'S CUSIIOia

STRETCH TUBE SOCKS

3?~'4.97

REGULAR

94C

#Mft's ...t wotWf(s atytes.
PlCIItk or lllllof fraMe~.

'1.47

~

80% cotton, 20% nylon. Stretch fit si1es

color polarized lens.

9·15. White with striped top.

OUR BIG SAVINGS ON SUMMER SHOES KEEP YOU IN STEP WITH YOUR BUDGET

. FLATTERING
SUMMER FOOTWEAR DISCOUNTS FOR WOMEN AND TEENS
..

MEl'S AID IOYS' IYLOI
ATIUTK OXFORDS
I

WOMEI'S COMFOITAIU SDP-IIS
Soft ~nyl uppers in CJMOrted fashion
colors. Rope-wrapped bottoms on
crepe soles.

24 7

Reg. '3.97

97

wo•rs Wlln v•YL. THOIGS

COOL COli WEDGE SAIIALS

leather-look with cork wedge.
Wo.men's and teens' sizes.

Burgundy urethane uppertwith "basket weave" vamp.
Women's and t•ns' sizes.

2

93 ·
Reg. *4.97

6~~

a.g. •a.97

3

91

MD'S UAIIII-LOOI SiiiDALS

REGULAR s4.97

MEl'S IYLOI

SRP-IIS

Nylon mesh uppers with elastic Qor.. Thick cuWon Insoles. Choice of
popular colon and si1es.

Cool, comfortable slin_g·back style
with brown woven urethane uppers.
Comfort-contoured insoles. Thick tire·
tread soles. M.n's sizes.

6'1
REG. sa.97

6~G~8.97
Nylon uppers with
padded collar.
Cushioned in·
soles. Suregrip soles.
Blue or beige.

�II'

BIG INFLATION-FIGHTING DISCOUNTS .A T MURPHY'S MART
SIMULATED WOODGRAIN
CABINET

OUI OUALITY IIAID

MEl'S DURABLE, 10.1101
MATCHED WORIWEAR

SHIRT

'•

IA¥1'2

797

:!-::.2 .........897
long-sleeved shirt has 2 pockets. Sizes S,M.L,XL.
Pants in waist sizes 30-.U and lengths 29·32.
Poly/ cotton. Popular colors.

IIIIINDfllliN 3-PC.

STEREO PHOIIOGRAPH
8SR 3-speed automatic record changer features dia·
mond stylus, stop/start/auto control and convenient
cueing/pouM control. Record size and speed selector
controls. Separate controls for volume, treble, boss,
balance. Headphone jock. Two wide-range speakers in
15" high enclosures. Simulated woodgrain cabinetry.

'63

REG
$99.94

HICKORY-FIIIISH
STEREO CART

3494

• MEl'S CUSHIOIED
WOII/SPOITS SOCKS
Reg. '2.67
3 PAIR
PACKAGE

Tele-Permalltee 11 0
POCID CAMEU

SAYI'IO

197

IAYI

Deluxe cart hos plenty of room for
components, albums and tapes. Rich
hickory-grain vinyl laminate finish.
Bronze-tone casters. Easy assembly.
Items On Shefves Not Included

95% heavyweight cotton and 5%
nylon. White, grey. Sizes 10-13.

'10

Regular and telephoto lens.
Built-in electronic flash .

...
3!7...
IOU

2-QT. All PiliP
VACUUMIOnu

.

7!~12.97

Dispenses hot or cold
drinks.. Handle, metal
body, swivel bose.

1994

24~1

"........
~

4

••

• •

......

I•ACIII••1J9

s.,.a • ....,a,
•:as-SIWet-

...

20..,.._

.--

IOU

4!!...

... . . . . . .,~LIW..al
s- '-"" ..... ,... ....... Special ,._... ~ ,_TWa Sole
MCI u• JIIIKI NUCY
YOM 11Mt love 'f04I'

('O!or

prints, or J"DDI cloft't poy. We ........ COIIIpiete

toti.fodioll .. ,.. ~ Of 'f04I' MOMy wil be ,.._.._

..

. WICAIIYI.II . . , . . _ . . .

�II'

BIG INFLATION-FIGHTING DISCOUNTS .A T MURPHY'S MART
SIMULATED WOODGRAIN
CABINET

OUI OUALITY IIAID

MEl'S DURABLE, 10.1101
MATCHED WORIWEAR

SHIRT

'•

IA¥1'2

797

:!-::.2 .........897
long-sleeved shirt has 2 pockets. Sizes S,M.L,XL.
Pants in waist sizes 30-.U and lengths 29·32.
Poly/ cotton. Popular colors.

IIIIINDfllliN 3-PC.

STEREO PHOIIOGRAPH
8SR 3-speed automatic record changer features dia·
mond stylus, stop/start/auto control and convenient
cueing/pouM control. Record size and speed selector
controls. Separate controls for volume, treble, boss,
balance. Headphone jock. Two wide-range speakers in
15" high enclosures. Simulated woodgrain cabinetry.

'63

REG
$99.94

HICKORY-FIIIISH
STEREO CART

3494

• MEl'S CUSHIOIED
WOII/SPOITS SOCKS
Reg. '2.67
3 PAIR
PACKAGE

Tele-Permalltee 11 0
POCID CAMEU

SAYI'IO

197

IAYI

Deluxe cart hos plenty of room for
components, albums and tapes. Rich
hickory-grain vinyl laminate finish.
Bronze-tone casters. Easy assembly.
Items On Shefves Not Included

95% heavyweight cotton and 5%
nylon. White, grey. Sizes 10-13.

'10

Regular and telephoto lens.
Built-in electronic flash .

...
3!7...
IOU

2-QT. All PiliP
VACUUMIOnu

.

7!~12.97

Dispenses hot or cold
drinks.. Handle, metal
body, swivel bose.

1994

24~1

"........
~

4

••

• •

......

I•ACIII••1J9

s.,.a • ....,a,
•:as-SIWet-

...

20..,.._

.--

IOU

4!!...

... . . . . . .,~LIW..al
s- '-"" ..... ,... ....... Special ,._... ~ ,_TWa Sole
MCI u• JIIIKI NUCY
YOM 11Mt love 'f04I'

('O!or

prints, or J"DDI cloft't poy. We ........ COIIIpiete

toti.fodioll .. ,.. ~ Of 'f04I' MOMy wil be ,.._.._

..

. WICAIIYI.II . . , . . _ . . .

�MART
FOLDING
ALUMINUM
LAWII/PAIIO
FURNITURE

TERRIFIC SUMMER BUYS FOR OUTDOOR LEISURE, IND·O OR COMFORT AND EASY
LAWN
CARE
.
"'

DYNAMARK®
I 0-HPI 32-IN.
RIDING MOWER

647

COOL, UGHTWEIGHT,
TAICE-ALONG SEATING

97

lAVE '152

CHAIR

• Key ignition $tart • Heovy-duf¥ gear
drive with differential a nd disc bra ke • 3
forwa rd speeds, 1 reverse • Shock-mounted
engine • Twin blades for .full 32" cut
• Rea r-discha rge cutting deck

13~~¥1'4

CHAISE

23~~¥1'6
Colorful Tuffweave• Textilene11 covering
is tough, comfortable, sunproof. Stands
up to years of weather, for years of en·
joyment. Plastic arms. Aluminum frame.

MODEL MUI-20
\ or G0-200 -

SAVE s10 NOW
On Each Of These
Quality Mowers!

ECOIOMY MODEL! 3-HP,
. 20-11. ROTARY MOWER

REDWOOD-51AlliED
PICNIC I ABLE AND
MAICHING BENCHES

IAVI

2'988

'IS

8497

• Recoil-start Briggs and Stra tton engine
• Handle-mounted throttle co ntrol e Ha ndle
fold$ for eo$y storage • Fully au embled

~~~ ~~'!!
Super sumMer dilclou!Rt! ._..... 3-piecle picnic 1et is
con$tructed of duNble 8/4 fir ltodt with rusti( redwood
stain. Table: 30'' hi9h, 25W' .W., rr lang. Benches: 17''
high, 11 ~ , _.., 72'' loftg. Eoly a 1 111,.

models shown.

''ROLLIITI''
AD.IUITABU
FAN ITAIID

DISCOUIT BUY!

3'/2-HP, 22-11.

ROTARY MOWER

97

7 IAYI'2

IOS~VI'IO
• Recoil-start Briggs
and Stratton engine
• Throttle control is
mounted on handle
• Folding handle for
easy storage • Wheel
height adjusters

IIIDOOR/OUIDOOR
GRAII-ftXIURID
OUFIII PIU
ROOM-1111 RUG

24

1596

REG. '17.98

97

31/2-HPI 22-11.
SELF-PROPELLED
ROTARY MOWER

147!1.-:.

'10

Front-wheel drive. Briggs
and Stratton engine. Folding
handle for convenient storage. Fully assembled.

-

IA¥1'12

long·weoring, stain-resistant. Perfect
for patio, game room or poolside area.
Grau green or multicolored stripe with
non-skid backing. Approx. 8 ~'x1 1 W size.

MODEl

MUSP-22
or Ml-220

•
•

�MART
FOLDING
ALUMINUM
LAWII/PAIIO
FURNITURE

TERRIFIC SUMMER BUYS FOR OUTDOOR LEISURE, IND·O OR COMFORT AND EASY
LAWN
CARE
.
"'

DYNAMARK®
I 0-HPI 32-IN.
RIDING MOWER

647

COOL, UGHTWEIGHT,
TAICE-ALONG SEATING

97

lAVE '152

CHAIR

• Key ignition $tart • Heovy-duf¥ gear
drive with differential a nd disc bra ke • 3
forwa rd speeds, 1 reverse • Shock-mounted
engine • Twin blades for .full 32" cut
• Rea r-discha rge cutting deck

13~~¥1'4

CHAISE

23~~¥1'6
Colorful Tuffweave• Textilene11 covering
is tough, comfortable, sunproof. Stands
up to years of weather, for years of en·
joyment. Plastic arms. Aluminum frame.

MODEL MUI-20
\ or G0-200 -

SAVE s10 NOW
On Each Of These
Quality Mowers!

ECOIOMY MODEL! 3-HP,
. 20-11. ROTARY MOWER

REDWOOD-51AlliED
PICNIC I ABLE AND
MAICHING BENCHES

IAVI

2'988

'IS

8497

• Recoil-start Briggs and Stra tton engine
• Handle-mounted throttle co ntrol e Ha ndle
fold$ for eo$y storage • Fully au embled

~~~ ~~'!!
Super sumMer dilclou!Rt! ._..... 3-piecle picnic 1et is
con$tructed of duNble 8/4 fir ltodt with rusti( redwood
stain. Table: 30'' hi9h, 25W' .W., rr lang. Benches: 17''
high, 11 ~ , _.., 72'' loftg. Eoly a 1 111,.

models shown.

''ROLLIITI''
AD.IUITABU
FAN ITAIID

DISCOUIT BUY!

3'/2-HP, 22-11.

ROTARY MOWER

97

7 IAYI'2

IOS~VI'IO
• Recoil-start Briggs
and Stratton engine
• Throttle control is
mounted on handle
• Folding handle for
easy storage • Wheel
height adjusters

IIIDOOR/OUIDOOR
GRAII-ftXIURID
OUFIII PIU
ROOM-1111 RUG

24

1596

REG. '17.98

97

31/2-HPI 22-11.
SELF-PROPELLED
ROTARY MOWER

147!1.-:.

'10

Front-wheel drive. Briggs
and Stratton engine. Folding
handle for convenient storage. Fully assembled.

-

IA¥1'12

long·weoring, stain-resistant. Perfect
for patio, game room or poolside area.
Grau green or multicolored stripe with
non-skid backing. Approx. 8 ~'x1 1 W size.

MODEl

MUSP-22
or Ml-220

•
•

�DISCOUNTS AT MURPHY'S MART ARE STYLED FOR ·SUMMER!
@~Ue.

S-PliCE
PLACE HlftNG

•Ycom•••

696
REGULAR '9.20
Add to your set or start o new
one! Includes 1 medium and large
plate, bowl, cup, IOUCtr. Choice of
3 toble..nhoncing patterns.

"VIdorla" S.Pc.
OPIII WIAVI
CURTAIN In
Reg. $5.97
63" Length

397
.

Reg. $6.47
81" Length
Soft, breezy look for svmmerl
Includes 2 panels, 2 ti•bocks, YOI·
once. No-iron polyester in white,
gold, mint or copper. 58" wid~ .

-PC. ALUMINUM
COOKWARE with
Silverstone* lnt•lor

•:v•
7 2197
..,
Htavy·gouge aluminum with Sil'lentone• nonstick cooking surface. 1 and 2·quort covered
saucepans, plus 5-quott Dutch oven with
cover that also fits 10" fry pan.
•Dvi'MI't .... TM'-Itt

,...,._ ......Slick Mt.c.

lit

FANTASTIC .MURPHY'S MART BUYS FOR OUTDOOR FUN!
FAMILY-SIZE
CANVAS lENlS

VOLLEYBALL
&amp; IADMIIITOI
2-11-1 SET

.8497

8'x1 0'

lAVI

'35

996

9997

9'x12'
SA
VI

••o

Includes on official size and
weight volleyball, 4 steel·
shaft rockets, 2 shuttlecocks,
cotton net, steel poles, rope,
ground stokes, instructions.

Flame-retardant tents. Walls and roof are of very
du rable camdrill canvas. Polyethylene floor.
Screened side windows and zippered door. All
with storm flops. Sturdy, easy-to-erect frames ..
B'xlO' tent sleeps 5. 9'x12' tent sleeps 7.

DINING CANOPY
12'x12'

SAVI

'13

2697

Reinforced polyethylene canopy with
adjustable center pole. Flame retardant.
Includes ropes, poles and stakes.

lEBCD
MODel 1245

· 2-PIECE
RAil SUIT

, ..

IA¥1'2
Yellow PVC
vinyl. Hooded,
zippered-front
parka. Pull-on
pants. Sizes:
S,M,l,Xl.

Metal Tennis Racket
97
IA¥1'2

3

Nylon string, leather grip.

W1U0P .UYIIC1'te

OfflclallaskeiHI
Official weight &amp; 5ize.
Nylon wound.

5 92
.

,

Reg •8•99

EASY TO lSSIMill

SPII-CAST REEL &amp; IOD SET

••

IAVI

7''

Reel includes monofilament_line. 5-ft. long,
light-action fiberglass rod.

·••m

MAID• LIIIOIIADE
CIYSTALS

~t

MAKH
I QTS.

t••

REG. '2.33
Made from lemon juiQt...no
ortificiol ffavon or colors.
~~~,.,-. lndudes convenient scoop.

REG.

*1.39

88C

Pound

Mints, tofffts, caramels, root beer
barrels, sour bolls, jelly nougats,
plus many more favorites!

PIILAIBPIIA

DIBIICEI
GUIIIT

2788

�DISCOUNTS AT MURPHY'S MART ARE STYLED FOR ·SUMMER!
@~Ue.

S-PliCE
PLACE HlftNG

•Ycom•••

696
REGULAR '9.20
Add to your set or start o new
one! Includes 1 medium and large
plate, bowl, cup, IOUCtr. Choice of
3 toble..nhoncing patterns.

"VIdorla" S.Pc.
OPIII WIAVI
CURTAIN In
Reg. $5.97
63" Length

397
.

Reg. $6.47
81" Length
Soft, breezy look for svmmerl
Includes 2 panels, 2 ti•bocks, YOI·
once. No-iron polyester in white,
gold, mint or copper. 58" wid~ .

-PC. ALUMINUM
COOKWARE with
Silverstone* lnt•lor

•:v•
7 2197
..,
Htavy·gouge aluminum with Sil'lentone• nonstick cooking surface. 1 and 2·quort covered
saucepans, plus 5-quott Dutch oven with
cover that also fits 10" fry pan.
•Dvi'MI't .... TM'-Itt

,...,._ ......Slick Mt.c.

lit

FANTASTIC .MURPHY'S MART BUYS FOR OUTDOOR FUN!
FAMILY-SIZE
CANVAS lENlS

VOLLEYBALL
&amp; IADMIIITOI
2-11-1 SET

.8497

8'x1 0'

lAVI

'35

996

9997

9'x12'
SA
VI

••o

Includes on official size and
weight volleyball, 4 steel·
shaft rockets, 2 shuttlecocks,
cotton net, steel poles, rope,
ground stokes, instructions.

Flame-retardant tents. Walls and roof are of very
du rable camdrill canvas. Polyethylene floor.
Screened side windows and zippered door. All
with storm flops. Sturdy, easy-to-erect frames ..
B'xlO' tent sleeps 5. 9'x12' tent sleeps 7.

DINING CANOPY
12'x12'

SAVI

'13

2697

Reinforced polyethylene canopy with
adjustable center pole. Flame retardant.
Includes ropes, poles and stakes.

lEBCD
MODel 1245

· 2-PIECE
RAil SUIT

, ..

IA¥1'2
Yellow PVC
vinyl. Hooded,
zippered-front
parka. Pull-on
pants. Sizes:
S,M,l,Xl.

Metal Tennis Racket
97
IA¥1'2

3

Nylon string, leather grip.

W1U0P .UYIIC1'te

OfflclallaskeiHI
Official weight &amp; 5ize.
Nylon wound.

5 92
.

,

Reg •8•99

EASY TO lSSIMill

SPII-CAST REEL &amp; IOD SET

••

IAVI

7''

Reel includes monofilament_line. 5-ft. long,
light-action fiberglass rod.

·••m

MAID• LIIIOIIADE
CIYSTALS

~t

MAKH
I QTS.

t••

REG. '2.33
Made from lemon juiQt...no
ortificiol ffavon or colors.
~~~,.,-. lndudes convenient scoop.

REG.

*1.39

88C

Pound

Mints, tofffts, caramels, root beer
barrels, sour bolls, jelly nougats,
plus many more favorites!

PIILAIBPIIA

DIBIICEI
GUIIIT

2788

�KIDS WILL ENJOY THESE GREAT MURPHY'S MART BUYS!

(~)
Easy ouembly willl

AJ\11 F Roadmaster·
BOYS' 20" TRUE IMIIIIE
Competition-strength, welded, gusseted frame. Single·speed
coaster broke hub, Rear caliper broke for better control in
competition. Tubular MX fork. Choinguard. Rtflectorized
rot trap pedals.

(~) ~
~ layers of colorful

Jopbclr support

pre·-.lded topbor.

"*"" no sinking.

lodred·in color is

impact, .aotch and

protection dart with

1 bolt I * leg.

shifting, twnling.

weother resisJont.

goiYOnizlng.

fxtn&gt;-Wide lloy·
cool steps for
odclod tofety.

. .. . . .

e

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

7&amp;••
Regular '97.96

DELUXE 6-LEG GYM 511
W11H MAIIIC "OLD IIIII" lin IWING

Also has trapeze bar, slide, 2 swings with Dura·Koot• seats, lawn
glider, Sky·Skooter4. Sturdy tubular steel frame.

9997
REGULAR s127.88

I 0-GALLOI AOUAIIUM

WIIIIAITZ• CAll m

IAVI••
Easy to assemble. Plastic walls with no sharp edges.
Vinyf liner, hardware and coping. Approximately
6' diameter x 15" deep. Rolls up for storage.

1294

I

• gloss aqt.~arium • 4
ouncfl of Anticlllor
• pump •

bottom fi~

• thermometer • air
tubil\9 • charcoal •

Hou • core boolt

�KIDS WILL ENJOY THESE GREAT MURPHY'S MART BUYS!

(~)
Easy ouembly willl

AJ\11 F Roadmaster·
BOYS' 20" TRUE IMIIIIE
Competition-strength, welded, gusseted frame. Single·speed
coaster broke hub, Rear caliper broke for better control in
competition. Tubular MX fork. Choinguard. Rtflectorized
rot trap pedals.

(~) ~
~ layers of colorful

Jopbclr support

pre·-.lded topbor.

"*"" no sinking.

lodred·in color is

impact, .aotch and

protection dart with

1 bolt I * leg.

shifting, twnling.

weother resisJont.

goiYOnizlng.

fxtn&gt;-Wide lloy·
cool steps for
odclod tofety.

. .. . . .

e

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

7&amp;••
Regular '97.96

DELUXE 6-LEG GYM 511
W11H MAIIIC "OLD IIIII" lin IWING

Also has trapeze bar, slide, 2 swings with Dura·Koot• seats, lawn
glider, Sky·Skooter4. Sturdy tubular steel frame.

9997
REGULAR s127.88

I 0-GALLOI AOUAIIUM

WIIIIAITZ• CAll m

IAVI••
Easy to assemble. Plastic walls with no sharp edges.
Vinyf liner, hardware and coping. Approximately
6' diameter x 15" deep. Rolls up for storage.

1294

I

• gloss aqt.~arium • 4
ouncfl of Anticlllor
• pump •

bottom fi~

• thermometer • air
tubil\9 • charcoal •

Hou • core boolt

�KROGER

SUPP•.IM1t41 TO :
Pol.nt Pl•osant Reg lst•r
Point Pl•a•ont . W. v A.
Sundo~ Tlm•s Sent ln•l

Items And Prices Good In
Silver Bridge &amp;Pomeroy

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Each

ot

these

adyeniSe&lt;f

l1ems

ts

reQutred

to

be

read~ly avai lable for sele m each Kroger Store , e~cept as
~ roted Ill this ad. H we do run 0\Jt of an advertised
ttem , we ~~~ offer you your choice of a comparable rtem ,
wtlen avat~ . retlectmg the same savmgs or a ra 1nchec:k

'Nflict1 will entitle you to purchase the adverttsed ttem at the

advertised price withm .lJ da~ .

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Everythtng you buv at Kroger tS guaranteed lor your total
satisfactton rega rdless of manufacturer If ,.au are not satts fied , Kroger will r!tplacc your ttem with the same brand or a

SAVE

sc

com parable brand Of refund vou r purchase price .

.· COPYRIGHT

1980 ~ THE

KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
: GOOD $UNDAY JUNE I THRU SATURDAY JUNE 7, 1980. WE
· RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.
.,.

m~

VS
'
LAST YEAR 'S

,---------~--------~~
YOUR FRI
LYKROGER

PRICE

OPEN
24 HRS.

MART

ADAY

Except Closed Saturday Midnight Til 9am Sunday
bcept Hinton, White Sulphur, 7th . Ave.

Charleston &amp; Williamson

HOLLY FARMS . U.5.D .A.
INSPECTED
.

Mixed
·
Fryer Parts ... . lb.

47c

sse

HOLL V FARMS . U.S. D.A. INSPECTED

SAVE

(;;EUp ·.

PER LB.

Frying Chicken. lb.

JOe
YS.

IN THE PIECE

KrogerMeat
Bologna ....... . lb .
COUNTRY CLUB

....... 7'3
RIG. 11.14

UMII2JAIS

LiiNII&amp; SAnl IS
C

3 .,
=···7·lilch .,.
c-:-......,
,_, 10- _ ,
J'WI.'III

-.....
•
71•ca68c -.1.-M

CLIIP . . R'I

.Country Style
Cut Up Fryers

lb .

U.S.D.A . INSPECTED KROGER .
B· IHB . AVG .

GradeA
Fresh Turkeys lb .

.

89·C

·

SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED
All VARIETIES

Luncheon l·lb.$ 119
Meats ........ Pkg .

•••

SLICED INTO CHOPS (NO CENTERS REMOVED )

~~: ~~:~~r. . . . . .
$4!,! Smoked
ggc
Ham Portions. lb .
SEMI -BONELESS

3

-lb.

Can
FREE
CANNED HAMS 5-LB. CAN ••. $7.99

19
lb. $1

FROZEN JIFFY CHUCKWAGON . BREADED

VEAL OR

~:~~SB.~~~

liS

........, - ===
..............
I

Canned
Hams ....

59
79c

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
GRADE A

. . . .. . . ~k~~~$_J49

OSCAR MAYER JUMBO .

2
9
~he~~s~~:ners ......... ~~~: $1

·•

,__......_,.

OSCAR MAYER BEEF F!IANKS I·LB. PKG . .. $1..9

FRESH

Bone In

SAVE

Pork Steaks

PER LB.

lb.ggc

20e
vs.

USDA

CHOICE
DELUXE SLICED

Su pplemer~t to: Point Pleasant Register/Sunday TlmH senti'*, Youl'lgSiownVlndloatof, The Tribune Chronicle, Sunday,
June I , Athens Messertger &amp; Messengar Ad'19~1ser, Sunday/ Monday, June 1&amp;2, Sturgis Dally Joomai/Jooma1 WMkly

Orummtr News, Centn!ll Shopptf, Bucyrue T&amp;l&amp;gl'lph Forum, AdwtrttHI"-Trlbune/Senece Santtnel, Tuesd ay, June 3, Dally
Senllnei-Tr1bune, Record Cour1er, Wednesday, June -4, Mt. Vernon Newt/KnoX Wtekly N8W1o.
·

Re view. 81yan iime$. l ogan Dally News, The Ad~er11ser/Bellefontelne Eum!ner, Alliance RI!IV'-w, The News Messenger,
Crescan1 New s/Northwes t Signal. Monday, June 2, Tlpp City Hera!diW"t Millon Record/TO City Advocale/Vandalls

Sporti ng

Goods on pages

1 and 9 not

at

Greenvi lle

or

a•89 C
•·a•99 C W

A BLEND Of BEEF I

Kahn's Club 8
Bologna ........ Pi. 9.

CLUI BOLOGNA 12·01 . PKG . •. $1.19 OR
$LICED
HI. PKG •. ·. $1.~ 9

Clrclevlllet Stores.

I(;;;;~,;TP;o

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
1

Kahn's Beef
Bologna
........ Pkg.
BEEF BOLOGNA IZ· OZ. PKG ... $1.39 OR '

h;i;vBoneless $289
Top s.·rlo•·n .. .. lb •

'"""fiEEZER BEEF

r?E"~D

FOR SIDE OR QUARTER BEEF
ORDERS PLEASE ALLOW 5 DAYS PREPARATION TIME
IJ .S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , .U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
ISS-175-LB . AVG.

Forequarter
of Beef
lb .

$1 19

H==~;-i.=;--.,.

US-165 -LB. AVG .

Hindquarter
of Beef

$ 59

U.S . GOV'T GRADEDC
300·3,j0 ·L8. AVG.

, 'Side
Of Beef

•.$139

$ 19

1

Beef Patty Mix ... .. .... lb .
REGULAR OR CHUB PAM

:~!u~deB:~:·.... ........

49
$1
$
89
·

lb.

I
·o•. 89 C

REGULAR . POLSKA OR ITA LIAN

Hillshire Farms
Smoked Sausage ....... lb .
Olde Smithfield
12
Ham Sausage ........ Pkg .
KROGER (All VARIETIES EXCEPT
CHOPPED HAM ) SLICED

Luncheon
Meats ............. ..

12 ·0&amp; .

Pkg.

$119

FRESH.LAMB
PRE ·CUT &amp; PACKAGED •

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GENUINE $PIING LAMB

•

Forequarter of Lamb .. .. .. ..... lb.
U.S.D.A . CHOICE GENUINE SPRING LAMB

Hindquarter of Lamb ...... .. .. . lb.
U.S.O.A. CHOICE GENUINE SPRING LAMB

Whole Side Of Lamb .. ......

Shankles• Leg '0' Lamb .. ... . lb.
U.S.D.A,. CHOICE GENUINE SPIING LAMI

Pre -Carved Shoulder Roast lb.
U.S.O.A. CHOICE GINUINI SPRI~G LAMI

Whole Boneless · ,
$149
Smoked Hams ............ lb.

r·

USDA

CHOICE

$2 29
$199

lb.

U.S.O.A. CHOICE GENUINE SPRING LAMI

THORN A,U VALLn,
1·10 AVG.

$179

.

Shoulder Blade Chops .... ,.... lb.
U.I.O.A. CHOICI GINUINI SPRING LAMI

Lamb Rib Chops .. ,................ lb.
U.S. D.A, CHOICI GINUINI' SPRING LAMI

Lamb Loin Cl;lopa .... ... :..... :... cb.

$269
$169
•·

$189
.

$359 .
$399'

�KROGER

SUPP•.IM1t41 TO :
Pol.nt Pl•osant Reg lst•r
Point Pl•a•ont . W. v A.
Sundo~ Tlm•s Sent ln•l

Items And Prices Good In
Silver Bridge &amp;Pomeroy

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Each

ot

these

adyeniSe&lt;f

l1ems

ts

reQutred

to

be

read~ly avai lable for sele m each Kroger Store , e~cept as
~ roted Ill this ad. H we do run 0\Jt of an advertised
ttem , we ~~~ offer you your choice of a comparable rtem ,
wtlen avat~ . retlectmg the same savmgs or a ra 1nchec:k

'Nflict1 will entitle you to purchase the adverttsed ttem at the

advertised price withm .lJ da~ .

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Everythtng you buv at Kroger tS guaranteed lor your total
satisfactton rega rdless of manufacturer If ,.au are not satts fied , Kroger will r!tplacc your ttem with the same brand or a

SAVE

sc

com parable brand Of refund vou r purchase price .

.· COPYRIGHT

1980 ~ THE

KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
: GOOD $UNDAY JUNE I THRU SATURDAY JUNE 7, 1980. WE
· RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.
.,.

m~

VS
'
LAST YEAR 'S

,---------~--------~~
YOUR FRI
LYKROGER

PRICE

OPEN
24 HRS.

MART

ADAY

Except Closed Saturday Midnight Til 9am Sunday
bcept Hinton, White Sulphur, 7th . Ave.

Charleston &amp; Williamson

HOLLY FARMS . U.5.D .A.
INSPECTED
.

Mixed
·
Fryer Parts ... . lb.

47c

sse

HOLL V FARMS . U.S. D.A. INSPECTED

SAVE

(;;EUp ·.

PER LB.

Frying Chicken. lb.

JOe
YS.

IN THE PIECE

KrogerMeat
Bologna ....... . lb .
COUNTRY CLUB

....... 7'3
RIG. 11.14

UMII2JAIS

LiiNII&amp; SAnl IS
C

3 .,
=···7·lilch .,.
c-:-......,
,_, 10- _ ,
J'WI.'III

-.....
•
71•ca68c -.1.-M

CLIIP . . R'I

.Country Style
Cut Up Fryers

lb .

U.S.D.A . INSPECTED KROGER .
B· IHB . AVG .

GradeA
Fresh Turkeys lb .

.

89·C

·

SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED
All VARIETIES

Luncheon l·lb.$ 119
Meats ........ Pkg .

•••

SLICED INTO CHOPS (NO CENTERS REMOVED )

~~: ~~:~~r. . . . . .
$4!,! Smoked
ggc
Ham Portions. lb .
SEMI -BONELESS

3

-lb.

Can
FREE
CANNED HAMS 5-LB. CAN ••. $7.99

19
lb. $1

FROZEN JIFFY CHUCKWAGON . BREADED

VEAL OR

~:~~SB.~~~

liS

........, - ===
..............
I

Canned
Hams ....

59
79c

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
GRADE A

. . . .. . . ~k~~~$_J49

OSCAR MAYER JUMBO .

2
9
~he~~s~~:ners ......... ~~~: $1

·•

,__......_,.

OSCAR MAYER BEEF F!IANKS I·LB. PKG . .. $1..9

FRESH

Bone In

SAVE

Pork Steaks

PER LB.

lb.ggc

20e
vs.

USDA

CHOICE
DELUXE SLICED

Su pplemer~t to: Point Pleasant Register/Sunday TlmH senti'*, Youl'lgSiownVlndloatof, The Tribune Chronicle, Sunday,
June I , Athens Messertger &amp; Messengar Ad'19~1ser, Sunday/ Monday, June 1&amp;2, Sturgis Dally Joomai/Jooma1 WMkly

Orummtr News, Centn!ll Shopptf, Bucyrue T&amp;l&amp;gl'lph Forum, AdwtrttHI"-Trlbune/Senece Santtnel, Tuesd ay, June 3, Dally
Senllnei-Tr1bune, Record Cour1er, Wednesday, June -4, Mt. Vernon Newt/KnoX Wtekly N8W1o.
·

Re view. 81yan iime$. l ogan Dally News, The Ad~er11ser/Bellefontelne Eum!ner, Alliance RI!IV'-w, The News Messenger,
Crescan1 New s/Northwes t Signal. Monday, June 2, Tlpp City Hera!diW"t Millon Record/TO City Advocale/Vandalls

Sporti ng

Goods on pages

1 and 9 not

at

Greenvi lle

or

a•89 C
•·a•99 C W

A BLEND Of BEEF I

Kahn's Club 8
Bologna ........ Pi. 9.

CLUI BOLOGNA 12·01 . PKG . •. $1.19 OR
$LICED
HI. PKG •. ·. $1.~ 9

Clrclevlllet Stores.

I(;;;;~,;TP;o

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
1

Kahn's Beef
Bologna
........ Pkg.
BEEF BOLOGNA IZ· OZ. PKG ... $1.39 OR '

h;i;vBoneless $289
Top s.·rlo•·n .. .. lb •

'"""fiEEZER BEEF

r?E"~D

FOR SIDE OR QUARTER BEEF
ORDERS PLEASE ALLOW 5 DAYS PREPARATION TIME
IJ .S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , .U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
ISS-175-LB . AVG.

Forequarter
of Beef
lb .

$1 19

H==~;-i.=;--.,.

US-165 -LB. AVG .

Hindquarter
of Beef

$ 59

U.S . GOV'T GRADEDC
300·3,j0 ·L8. AVG.

, 'Side
Of Beef

•.$139

$ 19

1

Beef Patty Mix ... .. .... lb .
REGULAR OR CHUB PAM

:~!u~deB:~:·.... ........

49
$1
$
89
·

lb.

I
·o•. 89 C

REGULAR . POLSKA OR ITA LIAN

Hillshire Farms
Smoked Sausage ....... lb .
Olde Smithfield
12
Ham Sausage ........ Pkg .
KROGER (All VARIETIES EXCEPT
CHOPPED HAM ) SLICED

Luncheon
Meats ............. ..

12 ·0&amp; .

Pkg.

$119

FRESH.LAMB
PRE ·CUT &amp; PACKAGED •

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GENUINE $PIING LAMB

•

Forequarter of Lamb .. .. .. ..... lb.
U.S.D.A . CHOICE GENUINE SPRING LAMB

Hindquarter of Lamb ...... .. .. . lb.
U.S.O.A. CHOICE GENUINE SPRING LAMB

Whole Side Of Lamb .. ......

Shankles• Leg '0' Lamb .. ... . lb.
U.S.D.A,. CHOICE GENUINE SPIING LAMI

Pre -Carved Shoulder Roast lb.
U.S.O.A. CHOICE GINUINI SPRI~G LAMI

Whole Boneless · ,
$149
Smoked Hams ............ lb.

r·

USDA

CHOICE

$2 29
$199

lb.

U.S.O.A. CHOICE GENUINE SPRING LAMI

THORN A,U VALLn,
1·10 AVG.

$179

.

Shoulder Blade Chops .... ,.... lb.
U.I.O.A. CHOICI GINUINI SPRING LAMI

Lamb Rib Chops .. ,................ lb.
U.S. D.A, CHOICI GINUINI' SPRING LAMI

Lamb Loin Cl;lopa .... ... :..... :... cb.

$269
$169
•·

$189
.

$359 .
$399'

�I:

Vac Pak

Old·Fashion
Lemonade -Mix .•..

Kroger Coffee

'

Swansoft
Bath Tissue 4;.~o~~
NESTLE

Chocolate
• k_.... .... ....
QUIC

LIMIT I
l2

I
I

Canister

;:

.

1
I

_ ,:

1 ..

.

···················---~

.

.

NESTLE

Strawberry
• k ............
.
QUIC

1-lb.
Ctnr .

$ 29

VACPAK

·lb.
Can

Krepr 1.5%
LIWfllllllk

'

63 ... .

Maxwell House $
C0 ff ee '........3

_

'

·I ·
1:

31·01 •.

ceurt•smEcrro
GGOt ~~~~~ ""E, ••••umm 11111. 1110
AmJmu srm 1LOCAL mu

I ar

ScotTowels

I '

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

1

$ - 59

1-lb.
Ctnr.

~

119 SHEETS PER ROLL

.
•
CA~s:::A;~r~f!L~~:~~:~~~TSE~~DDITIO.NAL -..

SAVE
&amp;oc

-lb.
Can

380-SHEETS PER ROH

~~: 5149

. 79

49

:t$

Spam Luncheon
Meat

I
I; : ·-,
I .1· ;'

.

..

KROGER POTATO AU GRATI.N SNACKS.
BACON SNACKS OR

17-a~

Green Giant
Sweet Peas ....

c

Kroger ·
Wheat Squares~-:;:

Cans

Hi Nu ,2%
Lowfat

..

$

$ 58

Green Giant
Niblets Corn

'
.•.
'

..

::

Niblets

30-Ct.
Box

Sour Cream Dips
GET ONE
Sour Cream Dips

KOTEX '.IGHTDAYS 48-CT . BOX ... $2.39

Bufferin Ta bl et s.........

60·Ct.
Btl.

c .:

Summers Eve
Douche ...... 2~~~0~~-

. CTN . KROGER

AT THE REGU'.AR PRICE

$ 49

SUMMERS EVE DOUCHE 9-0Z . .• 79'

VACPAK

&lt;•n

-

30-oz.
Pkg .

&amp;3

19

C Kroger 20-oz. 3$
I e Bread ..
Wh•t

20-oz.
Lvt.

----untry Club
Ice Cream

$ 99

12-ot.
Cans

•

•

13-o• .

10·••-

100-CO

s139

sgc
age
$119
Strawberry Preserves
.. . . Q••••
,•.
Sun Gold Saltines ... . ... ... .. .... ..-;,~- 4gc
3gc
Oleo Margartne Quarters . . . . •••
Avondale Frozen Orange Juice ........ ~;~: 33c
CLOVERVALLEY

CLOVU VAUIY

!!"

a$

Pak

25-)b.
8a9

4gc
2gc
26c
2gC

2gc
•
Hillcrest
Tomatoes .. .. . .. . . .. . " ·o•. 33c
Kroger Tomato Paste ... .. ........... ~:~ 22c
Kroger· Tomato Sauce .... .... . . . . . . . •·o•- 18c
age
Kroger Cnspy R1ce . ............. ..............
5399
Kroger Instant Coff ee ... . .. . -.
,.,
•

Sprite, Tab _
or Coca Cola

Chatham
Dog food

Gallon
Ctn.

16·01 con

Embassy Tea Bags .. ..... .. . .. . . ...
•
. b
Sa
1i •• .
Hillcrest Bar ecue uce ..... .. .. . . . "''
Clover Valley Grape Jelly .. -.. .. - a~::•

RETURNABLE

&amp;$ 49

.

C

con

ROUND TOP

.

A&amp;W
Root Bee_r.

CRIEAM STYLI 01 WHOLE KEINIL

15-01 .

63

con

'

c

DoL

- F•1g Bars .........

$ 1

... , .

GradeAA ·
large Eggs'

Grade A
Large

CBig Value

4.6·01 .
Tube

SIUCT

KROGER

Green Giant
Mushrooms .. . ~~;z
Aqua-fresh
T00th paste.. ...

·lb

Avondale Pea~hes .. ... ......... . ... . ·~::·
Avondale Fruit Cocktail .... ..... .. ....... .1 ~::AvondaIe P•Into Beans .......................... &lt;•n
Avondale Dark Red Kidney Beans .... 1 ~::·
Avondale Corn .... ... .. .... ... ..... ....
Avondale Cut Green Beans ....... .... ....... "···c••

15' OFF LABEL

Folger's
$
Coffee ....... 3ca~

I·OZ. CTN . KROGER

$129 ·

VlLLOW CLING SLICED 01 HALVES

MA3P

$ 49

can

1•••

'------.... GOLDEN COif••

Kotex
L•1g h.td ays ....

n -o•.

Con

WHOLE Kffii'IEl oJ

DISPOSABLE

33 e

&amp;ge
• ................ ...... . .··-··· sgc
Kroger Tomato JUICe
Kroger Apple Juice . . .. . .
·~:: age
2gc
Kroger Applesauce . .
. . • ....

$

: ~
..

·~::

Avondale Vegetable 0· 1'1 .... .. .. .. .. . . .. . . .... ....,,o• . $149
Market Basket Black Pepper ............ ~;~:

GREEN GIANT 17-0Z. CREAM
STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL CORN OR

Blue L_ake
Green Beans

Compare the Quqlity!
Compare the Pr1ces!
Avondale Sweet Peas ...
.. . .. . . .
. .,e Shorten1ng
• . .. .. . . . . ... .
Avonda

MA2M
GREEN GIANT

Why buy a can with no brand, uncertain quality
no guarantee of
conslstency ... when you can buy brands you know and trust that
are all competitive ly priced and unconditionally guaranteed lor
quality ... or your money back .

•

....

l -Ib .

Avondale Hot Dog Sauce . .. ... . .. . .
,

Fleece Fac1al .nssue .. ... . . . .

. .

·

Avondale SpagheH1 .. ...
Avondale Coffee Creamer. ....

Fiut 06 -Tke-·KG.clk

200-Ct .

...

33~

43

C

Single

Fleece Paper Towels . . .

•

con

4
4
C
.. ... •o"
.---- ':;··• 32c

IIA SHilTS "U ROU . WHITE OR ASSOIII:TED

.

10 '/o o•

... . ·~:.· $119

SUGAR BOWL W /COVER

Budget Bcwtru
.
.

-.

.
.. . ..

Kroger
Pinto Beans

Aim
Toothpaste
"·

1
Kodacolor C-126 FilmEo,h o~,cz....

20·EXPOSURE

Ag~~
· . · .
.
Shampoo .... ,... ... .. .. .. .. .. ..
Agree Cream Rinse .
Ia Conditi..,.er .... -....... ..
tr

12·o•.
111.

C

$139
,

~;r· $129

Banquet
Cookin' Bags _

~

!' :

.

24-EXPOSURE

$

$199 .

Kodacolor C-11 0 Film Ea•h

Sl
Car Polish .............. ~~-ITAR•en .

lt·CT.PU.NRIIIPIIIZU

TwlnCreMtaor

.,

loOt ..., Float•

;

. Martha White Flour 25 i'!&amp;

S499

4
s
1
' Potted •• :tat.. .............
-

~::;

3 S1
Yle1nna 5auaage.. .... .. .. ~::;
CHICKEN

. ·30 4 OFF

WITH COUPON

. Allll Till PUICIAII Of Gill
···01 . 101

·Snowy Bl•ach
Detergent : ·
CIINIICIM-IJIII.IJ. IIU

IIIJIC111 UPUCIIU
11111 I IICM'IUU

I

VALUABLE COUPON WORTH 12.110

15 OFF
4

WITH COUPOf\1

3
,
$109
Kroger BISCUitS .. .. Tub•• ·
2 ggc
English Muffins ..... ~k';::
79c
Real Cream Topping . ~;&lt;.:!:
BUnUMENOT

•

•

KIOGU

· KIOGU

2 $119 ,
· ·, Shredded Cheese . :•.-o,~-.
:. kiOGEI

30 OFF
4

WITH COUPON

AIII111E I'UICIIAII Of 0111
17-01. CAll

Utt 1111111CIIAI' Of Gill

Lysol Bathroom
CIHner

Kroter
_Peanut Butter

CIIINII- •11111•1 1. 1111

.. . . . . . . 1111 ..11,1 .
IIIIICI 11 llftiCIU
11111 aiiCiltiiD

IIIIIC1 11 IPNCIIU

11AIU IICIIIIIU

9 /,·ot.

SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER

...oz.JU

65C
7
9
Regular French Fries 2~;~
77
Glazed Donuts ...... .... :k;~-

w1ener BunI ..... ...... .2•ks•- s1

KioGEIFioUN

KIOGEIIlACKfOIEST

FROZEN

11
Ianquet D•1nners.. .. _Pkg·o•-.
FiouN olE IDA criNKLE cuT or

KIOGER FROZEN

•

.

C
C

1

Macaroni &amp; Cheese .2;:.~-

I

TOW.UO THl PU«CHASE Of THIS WEEK'S fUTUfllO ITEM

Our ll•gulaf Discount Price Sf. H
Coupon Sovln tt
_12.00

SELF IISING

. AIMOUR

------------...
$2:

8$ 09

-lb.
Bag

.. o..o .... , ••

'77
~!c~!:~~~~- ... ---.. ..... . . ·-~~- $2

' f

4 $ 69

'

Ban Roll-On
1••• :
Deodorant ... .. ............... .... ctnr.

...

$129

KRO.GER

1-Ct .

.

lOYAL VIKING DANtsH

$109

Filled Coffee Cake ... ~;··
COUNTRY OVEN
$119
Angel Food Cake ...... ·~k;~-

4
20
OFF
WITH COUPON ·

MD1111fll lAM Of Gill
11.1-01 . ~

Hawaiian Puncll
Red Drink Mix
-- - 111Pf\81L
I !W.I!ItJF l.ltlf ·
SUCT

1

2
Bread............ .

lll~~~:t~

11111 ILICILIUD

Yow' Price (With Coupon ) $7.99
In the p1ttern or your choice

16-oa.

I ·
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

$119

i

Lvo .

I
I
I

20 4 OFF

•I

WITH COUPON

Utt ._ PUiaMIIIIf ,_

tt-II.IIAG

12-

Idaho Baking

Df
I

I$

_ . . - •u IIIII JIII!Utll .
SUCf1UiftiCIIUITI1ULICAl1UU

: .
I
I
.:

...
1------------------·

�I:

Vac Pak

Old·Fashion
Lemonade -Mix .•..

Kroger Coffee

'

Swansoft
Bath Tissue 4;.~o~~
NESTLE

Chocolate
• k_.... .... ....
QUIC

LIMIT I
l2

I
I

Canister

;:

.

1
I

_ ,:

1 ..

.

···················---~

.

.

NESTLE

Strawberry
• k ............
.
QUIC

1-lb.
Ctnr .

$ 29

VACPAK

·lb.
Can

Krepr 1.5%
LIWfllllllk

'

63 ... .

Maxwell House $
C0 ff ee '........3

_

'

·I ·
1:

31·01 •.

ceurt•smEcrro
GGOt ~~~~~ ""E, ••••umm 11111. 1110
AmJmu srm 1LOCAL mu

I ar

ScotTowels

I '

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

1

$ - 59

1-lb.
Ctnr.

~

119 SHEETS PER ROLL

.
•
CA~s:::A;~r~f!L~~:~~:~~~TSE~~DDITIO.NAL -..

SAVE
&amp;oc

-lb.
Can

380-SHEETS PER ROH

~~: 5149

. 79

49

:t$

Spam Luncheon
Meat

I
I; : ·-,
I .1· ;'

.

..

KROGER POTATO AU GRATI.N SNACKS.
BACON SNACKS OR

17-a~

Green Giant
Sweet Peas ....

c

Kroger ·
Wheat Squares~-:;:

Cans

Hi Nu ,2%
Lowfat

..

$

$ 58

Green Giant
Niblets Corn

'
.•.
'

..

::

Niblets

30-Ct.
Box

Sour Cream Dips
GET ONE
Sour Cream Dips

KOTEX '.IGHTDAYS 48-CT . BOX ... $2.39

Bufferin Ta bl et s.........

60·Ct.
Btl.

c .:

Summers Eve
Douche ...... 2~~~0~~-

. CTN . KROGER

AT THE REGU'.AR PRICE

$ 49

SUMMERS EVE DOUCHE 9-0Z . .• 79'

VACPAK

&lt;•n

-

30-oz.
Pkg .

&amp;3

19

C Kroger 20-oz. 3$
I e Bread ..
Wh•t

20-oz.
Lvt.

----untry Club
Ice Cream

$ 99

12-ot.
Cans

•

•

13-o• .

10·••-

100-CO

s139

sgc
age
$119
Strawberry Preserves
.. . . Q••••
,•.
Sun Gold Saltines ... . ... ... .. .... ..-;,~- 4gc
3gc
Oleo Margartne Quarters . . . . •••
Avondale Frozen Orange Juice ........ ~;~: 33c
CLOVERVALLEY

CLOVU VAUIY

!!"

a$

Pak

25-)b.
8a9

4gc
2gc
26c
2gC

2gc
•
Hillcrest
Tomatoes .. .. . .. . . .. . " ·o•. 33c
Kroger Tomato Paste ... .. ........... ~:~ 22c
Kroger· Tomato Sauce .... .... . . . . . . . •·o•- 18c
age
Kroger Cnspy R1ce . ............. ..............
5399
Kroger Instant Coff ee ... . .. . -.
,.,
•

Sprite, Tab _
or Coca Cola

Chatham
Dog food

Gallon
Ctn.

16·01 con

Embassy Tea Bags .. ..... .. . .. . . ...
•
. b
Sa
1i •• .
Hillcrest Bar ecue uce ..... .. .. . . . "''
Clover Valley Grape Jelly .. -.. .. - a~::•

RETURNABLE

&amp;$ 49

.

C

con

ROUND TOP

.

A&amp;W
Root Bee_r.

CRIEAM STYLI 01 WHOLE KEINIL

15-01 .

63

con

'

c

DoL

- F•1g Bars .........

$ 1

... , .

GradeAA ·
large Eggs'

Grade A
Large

CBig Value

4.6·01 .
Tube

SIUCT

KROGER

Green Giant
Mushrooms .. . ~~;z
Aqua-fresh
T00th paste.. ...

·lb

Avondale Pea~hes .. ... ......... . ... . ·~::·
Avondale Fruit Cocktail .... ..... .. ....... .1 ~::AvondaIe P•Into Beans .......................... &lt;•n
Avondale Dark Red Kidney Beans .... 1 ~::·
Avondale Corn .... ... .. .... ... ..... ....
Avondale Cut Green Beans ....... .... ....... "···c••

15' OFF LABEL

Folger's
$
Coffee ....... 3ca~

I·OZ. CTN . KROGER

$129 ·

VlLLOW CLING SLICED 01 HALVES

MA3P

$ 49

can

1•••

'------.... GOLDEN COif••

Kotex
L•1g h.td ays ....

n -o•.

Con

WHOLE Kffii'IEl oJ

DISPOSABLE

33 e

&amp;ge
• ................ ...... . .··-··· sgc
Kroger Tomato JUICe
Kroger Apple Juice . . .. . .
·~:: age
2gc
Kroger Applesauce . .
. . • ....

$

: ~
..

·~::

Avondale Vegetable 0· 1'1 .... .. .. .. .. . . .. . . .... ....,,o• . $149
Market Basket Black Pepper ............ ~;~:

GREEN GIANT 17-0Z. CREAM
STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL CORN OR

Blue L_ake
Green Beans

Compare the Quqlity!
Compare the Pr1ces!
Avondale Sweet Peas ...
.. . .. . . .
. .,e Shorten1ng
• . .. .. . . . . ... .
Avonda

MA2M
GREEN GIANT

Why buy a can with no brand, uncertain quality
no guarantee of
conslstency ... when you can buy brands you know and trust that
are all competitive ly priced and unconditionally guaranteed lor
quality ... or your money back .

•

....

l -Ib .

Avondale Hot Dog Sauce . .. ... . .. . .
,

Fleece Fac1al .nssue .. ... . . . .

. .

·

Avondale SpagheH1 .. ...
Avondale Coffee Creamer. ....

Fiut 06 -Tke-·KG.clk

200-Ct .

...

33~

43

C

Single

Fleece Paper Towels . . .

•

con

4
4
C
.. ... •o"
.---- ':;··• 32c

IIA SHilTS "U ROU . WHITE OR ASSOIII:TED

.

10 '/o o•

... . ·~:.· $119

SUGAR BOWL W /COVER

Budget Bcwtru
.
.

-.

.
.. . ..

Kroger
Pinto Beans

Aim
Toothpaste
"·

1
Kodacolor C-126 FilmEo,h o~,cz....

20·EXPOSURE

Ag~~
· . · .
.
Shampoo .... ,... ... .. .. .. .. .. ..
Agree Cream Rinse .
Ia Conditi..,.er .... -....... ..
tr

12·o•.
111.

C

$139
,

~;r· $129

Banquet
Cookin' Bags _

~

!' :

.

24-EXPOSURE

$

$199 .

Kodacolor C-11 0 Film Ea•h

Sl
Car Polish .............. ~~-ITAR•en .

lt·CT.PU.NRIIIPIIIZU

TwlnCreMtaor

.,

loOt ..., Float•

;

. Martha White Flour 25 i'!&amp;

S499

4
s
1
' Potted •• :tat.. .............
-

~::;

3 S1
Yle1nna 5auaage.. .... .. .. ~::;
CHICKEN

. ·30 4 OFF

WITH COUPON

. Allll Till PUICIAII Of Gill
···01 . 101

·Snowy Bl•ach
Detergent : ·
CIINIICIM-IJIII.IJ. IIU

IIIJIC111 UPUCIIU
11111 I IICM'IUU

I

VALUABLE COUPON WORTH 12.110

15 OFF
4

WITH COUPOf\1

3
,
$109
Kroger BISCUitS .. .. Tub•• ·
2 ggc
English Muffins ..... ~k';::
79c
Real Cream Topping . ~;&lt;.:!:
BUnUMENOT

•

•

KIOGU

· KIOGU

2 $119 ,
· ·, Shredded Cheese . :•.-o,~-.
:. kiOGEI

30 OFF
4

WITH COUPON

AIII111E I'UICIIAII Of 0111
17-01. CAll

Utt 1111111CIIAI' Of Gill

Lysol Bathroom
CIHner

Kroter
_Peanut Butter

CIIINII- •11111•1 1. 1111

.. . . . . . . 1111 ..11,1 .
IIIIICI 11 llftiCIU
11111 aiiCiltiiD

IIIIIC1 11 IPNCIIU

11AIU IICIIIIIU

9 /,·ot.

SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER

...oz.JU

65C
7
9
Regular French Fries 2~;~
77
Glazed Donuts ...... .... :k;~-

w1ener BunI ..... ...... .2•ks•- s1

KioGEIFioUN

KIOGEIIlACKfOIEST

FROZEN

11
Ianquet D•1nners.. .. _Pkg·o•-.
FiouN olE IDA criNKLE cuT or

KIOGER FROZEN

•

.

C
C

1

Macaroni &amp; Cheese .2;:.~-

I

TOW.UO THl PU«CHASE Of THIS WEEK'S fUTUfllO ITEM

Our ll•gulaf Discount Price Sf. H
Coupon Sovln tt
_12.00

SELF IISING

. AIMOUR

------------...
$2:

8$ 09

-lb.
Bag

.. o..o .... , ••

'77
~!c~!:~~~~- ... ---.. ..... . . ·-~~- $2

' f

4 $ 69

'

Ban Roll-On
1••• :
Deodorant ... .. ............... .... ctnr.

...

$129

KRO.GER

1-Ct .

.

lOYAL VIKING DANtsH

$109

Filled Coffee Cake ... ~;··
COUNTRY OVEN
$119
Angel Food Cake ...... ·~k;~-

4
20
OFF
WITH COUPON ·

MD1111fll lAM Of Gill
11.1-01 . ~

Hawaiian Puncll
Red Drink Mix
-- - 111Pf\81L
I !W.I!ItJF l.ltlf ·
SUCT

1

2
Bread............ .

lll~~~:t~

11111 ILICILIUD

Yow' Price (With Coupon ) $7.99
In the p1ttern or your choice

16-oa.

I ·
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

$119

i

Lvo .

I
I
I

20 4 OFF

•I

WITH COUPON

Utt ._ PUiaMIIIIf ,_

tt-II.IIAG

12-

Idaho Baking

Df
I

I$

_ . . - •u IIIII JIII!Utll .
SUCf1UiftiCIIUITI1ULICAl1UU

: .
I
I
.:

...
1------------------·

�.
..
--.....
_!'
f
ilM_
......
.... '
,. ,

'lEW CROP

Honeydew Melons . each

$169
.. ·

CA4P

Red Plums ..................... lb. 89 c

2 1
10

Fresh Mangoes ... ........ For 5
Limes ...... ............... ...... Each c
.Lemons ........ .......... ... .8For 99 c

WHITE
.CORN

5 gge
Ears

PRISH

Asparagus :..... ............ lb.

ggc
.

Salad Size To'matoes.1b. 69c :

SaW Fixbt'3
4

$1

Green Onions ....... ... .. Bunches
Salad Spinach ............ Bunch 49c
Bunch Red Radishes. Bunches 5
Red Leaf LeHuce ...... Bunches 5

~· ~c/(1/tL · ;, . · ·

.

. 3 1
. . 2 1
Fresh Cucumbers ............3For 51·

j_

•

Ml( REPORT? ·

'f'ES, MA'AM,
Mil. REPORT

M'{ REPORT

"

15 ON ..

15 READY. .•

EDEll DO IT

. AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl DEPT$.
HOT FOODS AVAILABLE I lam TIL 7pm

New Deli Style
Bar-B-Q

·~···~ ~ $.

vJ"f

99

lb

Russer
·
$159
Cooked Salami .... lb.

:.=~

,.$129

SLICED
TO ORDER

lb.

Swiss Cheese ...... ........ lb.
DELl :TYLE

Boiled Ham ............. .... lb .
12·PIECES OF CHICMEN WISHBONE
READY TO EAT

Barn·O·Chicken ........ e.c~

.

'.

$2 49
$5 99

Air

freshener .

II·Cf. HEFrY SUPU

89

79

$ 99

·

SPREAD

Pimento Cheese ....... .. lb .

DlSSERT

Tahitian Salad ............. lb.
e

7
9
c
$J69
·

$J49

Pina Colada Cake . ~~1:: .
FRESHMADE
$349
·
p•
Straw berry 1e ..... •;·
Chocolate Brownies ~~·;: ggc .
9 · 1nc~

•
.Di XII

-TI
Chicken .......... .81c,

rowu

,

Ones ....... .
2J83'c 2f70C
Dog Food ......
·"
Wet

514

5119

IC-OZ .

1_.·0Z . AlPO ASSORTED

Success Rice ....

flAVORS

Bread

1

1·01, ARMOUR

sse

.

. I

1·0!. UMOUI

Potted Mtot ..... 30

IC'Io.Ol .

.

....

..

flour ..... .SJZB

S•\ , . P~AIN.. SHF ·IISING OR
UN I.E I'I. CH-.:0 PIH SIURY

$ lt

Dot Food ... ..... . 7

U ·OZ . GlArE 01 ORANGE

s1z•
Drlnlc
......
.
co:oz.
S'Mt
HI·C·

CANNIIfER

Tang .... . .......

., ..

...oz.ociANSPIAY SJ4t

I Gn1111ifruit

,

Juice

...oz. OCIAN IPRA Y

c:::t...·. . . st..
••

f/tQM

T'HAT' s:rAR
" · .OvEtt-

A HUNDfl!O
iii~SAHO

~ .A~

Alto .,. otas..y
SlD9

VIenna Savaage

ltefStew .. ..... 23
S!IOWIOAT. 39f IJ8t'
Porte &amp; IHIII ....

$125

5.1.B. PI' t.Siurtv_

IHI. GRAVY fiAIN

oiG·OZ . DINfY MOORE ,

"IMA.fNI ~
}:ANII·• • •

.... sps sp9

IO·OZ. Ml~kY WAV . SNICMltS
OU MUSIIITE,E,!S
$ 48

75e

&amp;.o16HT

Dixie Cups ...... .. 9S c

J·OZ. HORMEt DEVIlED

I ·OZ. SWANSON CHUNk

flEALt'J,I, THI

CO-CT. f.oz. SIZE REFILL

70·Cf. MOin

Snaclc Ber ........

WHlf TEACHERS
51611-50
MUCH ...

DO You

cups ....... $109

' ........
· .. .. SJDI
I cIa1rs

HonMl Ham ..... SID&amp;

I WONDER

'

100-CT . 3 ·0Z . SIZE REFILL

I ·OZ . ~ICH'S CHDCO• ATE

I''· ·OZ. TINDU CHUN)&lt;

BEEN
SORT 0~ TANGLED
lJP IN IT ~OR A60UT
THREE DA'f5 NOW, AAD
! CAN'T SEEM TO 6ET
IT LOOSE 50 I'VE
JUST BEEN KINO OF
LEARNIN6 TO LIVe
WITH IT, ANO.. .

49e ..,,.,...

IO·l iC·OZ . SARALEE

Spam ...... . ... 4Se

·$349

fRESH ICED

Lux Soap ........ .

6·01. FROZIN MINUU MAIO

U ·OZ. FIOZIN MINUTE-MAID

~ES, MA'AM ..

BUNS AVAII.ABlE ONL V AT YOUR SllVERIRIDGE
AND POMEROY MROGER STORES

I ·OZ . IAR

·

12·0 Z. FIIOZlN MINUTE MAIO

nus KITE ...

WELL

Caress Soap:.... •57c

• .75·01 . IAIS a,-TH SllE

Orange Juice . SSe
lemonade ....... 75e 69e
Limeade ......... 67e sge
Pound Cake ..... SJ73 ' SJ41

Pkg.

KITE?WI-IAT
KITE 7 01-f,

7• OFF LAIEL , 4.75·0 1 . BAR

$ gg

15' OFF LA.IIl . I J.Qz. BTL.

c

I·Ct.

MIX
.OR MATCH

2
Jergen 's Soap .2/SS e
SoftScrub ........ sse 69c
Trash Bags .....

White shelf to.gs will be. used for ragl.llar
prlclnt , while bright ~allow "C ost
CwHer· -lonus ·l uy" Tags will signal
cuttQmen that a spedallower price Is In
.tfect lor oll"'ited time . This might be o
a.,.·w•.&amp;! tpecie~l or o rad~c:tlon for 01
mwch 01 seVeral weeln . Yelle~w tag• will
mar" the items below.

Hamburger or Hot Dog
Sandwich Buns

Macaroni Salad ....... :.... lb.

·

7·0Z. GlADE RAIN IHOWU
POWDER FRESH
C

FRESH BAKED

Corned Beef,
Peppered Beef
Or Roast Beef
lb.

LORRAINE

LOOK FOR THE
WHitE &amp; YELLOW
UNIT ~RICE SHElF TAGS

YOUR CHOICE

~~

·

~IIJ''S '

NoTHING •••

�.
..
--.....
_!'
f
ilM_
......
.... '
,. ,

'lEW CROP

Honeydew Melons . each

$169
.. ·

CA4P

Red Plums ..................... lb. 89 c

2 1
10

Fresh Mangoes ... ........ For 5
Limes ...... ............... ...... Each c
.Lemons ........ .......... ... .8For 99 c

WHITE
.CORN

5 gge
Ears

PRISH

Asparagus :..... ............ lb.

ggc
.

Salad Size To'matoes.1b. 69c :

SaW Fixbt'3
4

$1

Green Onions ....... ... .. Bunches
Salad Spinach ............ Bunch 49c
Bunch Red Radishes. Bunches 5
Red Leaf LeHuce ...... Bunches 5

~· ~c/(1/tL · ;, . · ·

.

. 3 1
. . 2 1
Fresh Cucumbers ............3For 51·

j_

•

Ml( REPORT? ·

'f'ES, MA'AM,
Mil. REPORT

M'{ REPORT

"

15 ON ..

15 READY. .•

EDEll DO IT

. AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl DEPT$.
HOT FOODS AVAILABLE I lam TIL 7pm

New Deli Style
Bar-B-Q

·~···~ ~ $.

vJ"f

99

lb

Russer
·
$159
Cooked Salami .... lb.

:.=~

,.$129

SLICED
TO ORDER

lb.

Swiss Cheese ...... ........ lb.
DELl :TYLE

Boiled Ham ............. .... lb .
12·PIECES OF CHICMEN WISHBONE
READY TO EAT

Barn·O·Chicken ........ e.c~

.

'.

$2 49
$5 99

Air

freshener .

II·Cf. HEFrY SUPU

89

79

$ 99

·

SPREAD

Pimento Cheese ....... .. lb .

DlSSERT

Tahitian Salad ............. lb.
e

7
9
c
$J69
·

$J49

Pina Colada Cake . ~~1:: .
FRESHMADE
$349
·
p•
Straw berry 1e ..... •;·
Chocolate Brownies ~~·;: ggc .
9 · 1nc~

•
.Di XII

-TI
Chicken .......... .81c,

rowu

,

Ones ....... .
2J83'c 2f70C
Dog Food ......
·"
Wet

514

5119

IC-OZ .

1_.·0Z . AlPO ASSORTED

Success Rice ....

flAVORS

Bread

1

1·01, ARMOUR

sse

.

. I

1·0!. UMOUI

Potted Mtot ..... 30

IC'Io.Ol .

.

....

..

flour ..... .SJZB

S•\ , . P~AIN.. SHF ·IISING OR
UN I.E I'I. CH-.:0 PIH SIURY

$ lt

Dot Food ... ..... . 7

U ·OZ . GlArE 01 ORANGE

s1z•
Drlnlc
......
.
co:oz.
S'Mt
HI·C·

CANNIIfER

Tang .... . .......

., ..

...oz.ociANSPIAY SJ4t

I Gn1111ifruit

,

Juice

...oz. OCIAN IPRA Y

c:::t...·. . . st..
••

f/tQM

T'HAT' s:rAR
" · .OvEtt-

A HUNDfl!O
iii~SAHO

~ .A~

Alto .,. otas..y
SlD9

VIenna Savaage

ltefStew .. ..... 23
S!IOWIOAT. 39f IJ8t'
Porte &amp; IHIII ....

$125

5.1.B. PI' t.Siurtv_

IHI. GRAVY fiAIN

oiG·OZ . DINfY MOORE ,

"IMA.fNI ~
}:ANII·• • •

.... sps sp9

IO·OZ. Ml~kY WAV . SNICMltS
OU MUSIIITE,E,!S
$ 48

75e

&amp;.o16HT

Dixie Cups ...... .. 9S c

J·OZ. HORMEt DEVIlED

I ·OZ. SWANSON CHUNk

flEALt'J,I, THI

CO-CT. f.oz. SIZE REFILL

70·Cf. MOin

Snaclc Ber ........

WHlf TEACHERS
51611-50
MUCH ...

DO You

cups ....... $109

' ........
· .. .. SJDI
I cIa1rs

HonMl Ham ..... SID&amp;

I WONDER

'

100-CT . 3 ·0Z . SIZE REFILL

I ·OZ . ~ICH'S CHDCO• ATE

I''· ·OZ. TINDU CHUN)&lt;

BEEN
SORT 0~ TANGLED
lJP IN IT ~OR A60UT
THREE DA'f5 NOW, AAD
! CAN'T SEEM TO 6ET
IT LOOSE 50 I'VE
JUST BEEN KINO OF
LEARNIN6 TO LIVe
WITH IT, ANO.. .

49e ..,,.,...

IO·l iC·OZ . SARALEE

Spam ...... . ... 4Se

·$349

fRESH ICED

Lux Soap ........ .

6·01. FROZIN MINUU MAIO

U ·OZ. FIOZIN MINUTE-MAID

~ES, MA'AM ..

BUNS AVAII.ABlE ONL V AT YOUR SllVERIRIDGE
AND POMEROY MROGER STORES

I ·OZ . IAR

·

12·0 Z. FIIOZlN MINUTE MAIO

nus KITE ...

WELL

Caress Soap:.... •57c

• .75·01 . IAIS a,-TH SllE

Orange Juice . SSe
lemonade ....... 75e 69e
Limeade ......... 67e sge
Pound Cake ..... SJ73 ' SJ41

Pkg.

KITE?WI-IAT
KITE 7 01-f,

7• OFF LAIEL , 4.75·0 1 . BAR

$ gg

15' OFF LA.IIl . I J.Qz. BTL.

c

I·Ct.

MIX
.OR MATCH

2
Jergen 's Soap .2/SS e
SoftScrub ........ sse 69c
Trash Bags .....

White shelf to.gs will be. used for ragl.llar
prlclnt , while bright ~allow "C ost
CwHer· -lonus ·l uy" Tags will signal
cuttQmen that a spedallower price Is In
.tfect lor oll"'ited time . This might be o
a.,.·w•.&amp;! tpecie~l or o rad~c:tlon for 01
mwch 01 seVeral weeln . Yelle~w tag• will
mar" the items below.

Hamburger or Hot Dog
Sandwich Buns

Macaroni Salad ....... :.... lb.

·

7·0Z. GlADE RAIN IHOWU
POWDER FRESH
C

FRESH BAKED

Corned Beef,
Peppered Beef
Or Roast Beef
lb.

LORRAINE

LOOK FOR THE
WHitE &amp; YELLOW
UNIT ~RICE SHElF TAGS

YOUR CHOICE

~~

·

~IIJ''S '

NoTHING •••

�AB~GS BUNNY®

ALLEY ·OOP
LOO\o:: , MAG! II'S

[1H16 M~CHAN ICAL.WAS6tT·WILL RJi AN

WE 1'1-10UGHT

Al.LEY! HE'S Al.L
~~GO~! .

Dlt-IOSAUR' HAD
EAT~N

WHEN HE10UCHES HE'~,
HELL GEi iHE SHOCK 0~
HIS LIF~.

:END iO iHAi BUGS
BUNNY•. ~·~~
'

"T'HAI A¥JFUL

YOU

LIP!

1..

AND I 'LL. ~OUND UP

~ME COOKING IHINGS!

WI-4ATCHA WANT
MS IQ DO ,MAG? .

YOU 101..0 ALLeY

DON'T
wo~~~I'I..t..

IHE: 11 'THING''

ABOUT
IN "'T'HE SA~OEN I
DIDN'T YOU ?' .

F!Nt::&gt; $1'v1!
.'

-,

OH,MY

1

GOODNESS.

IFo~

TO!

Warner Bros.

. '·

I WIL..I.. 1'AKEil-ltS u:&gt;Ne·cAr&lt;~D EArziJ..I
I CI&lt;EAiUr&lt;E SACK iO MY PLA.NEi ~
A SPECIMEN. .
. -

w~~s

I

uP,:·:. .

.. Doc·~

,t

' '

by·Crooks &amp; Lawrence

CA.PT. EASY
BUT +-lOW TO

~-----,

GI:T AT IT~ ...
THAT'S THE RUB,

HOW TO
MIND OF

PE~STRATE TH&amp;
"U5TS~ I&lt;Al.LII&lt;AK
P~E6SNT5 A FORM IDA~!..&amp;

~OH

.N Y WONDER®

DlckBo

I'ERHAP~

THE A~5WE!R
LIES I~ 50ME
OF, OI.IR MO~e

EH, CHieF;

R.EFIAIEO
.TORTUREtJ!

PI&lt;OS\..EM TO AMEii:ICA'So

I&lt;EE"'EST COU~Te~~PIES

WHAT'S M:~eDeD MAY Be SOMe

NO. TO DRINK AN

5UCI&lt;~ lJP A =fRiJNKFUI. OF .

FORM OF POSITIVE MOTIVATION·•
TO LURE HIM IIJTO COOPERATII\JIS . . , t - - WITH U.5l
... AL.THOLJeH I
MU5T C0'-'FE5?
THAT OOEg RAI5&amp;
THE QUESTIO'-'

WA,..R · 'Tloi&amp;NcpuTS IT$ TRUNK.
IN'TO If&amp; HO.JT~ ANO 5~UIRTS

THE WA1ER COWN IT!IiHROAT. .

I

W~AT OOE5AN
ELeCTRIC EEL
USE ITS ELEC-

i~ICITY 1=0~?

OF ...

,~i ~

.
'
~y~··
........ti....:

r=::::::jJ
Johnny wanler
(c/o this news;.per)

.

P.O. Box1335

Santa Cruz. Ca. 95011

Carroll &amp; McCormick

HOOPLE

IPON'T

KNOW W'rt( I .
SHOCJL.P WANT
·10MARRV

VOU! .

.'

1-\EY, . MI.,TER. I~ TH\~ TGWN

GA.R DEN 6~0 YE ~ ;·

DOD6E C:rTY1
CONFOUND 1'\!
NO! l i

,.

''

'

'

.

·-THAT.,.· .. ·
MUST ·~E ;
I ;,.
.

,-. ~ .

~ .

"-....
~.~

I

IA/E ' :
lc_',..··, .;;.,_
~ JYJ' -·.%

AG-RE:E QN ;
.:. 'THI"~'·.
,
.'"'¥~·-

1

�AB~GS BUNNY®

ALLEY ·OOP
LOO\o:: , MAG! II'S

[1H16 M~CHAN ICAL.WAS6tT·WILL RJi AN

WE 1'1-10UGHT

Al.LEY! HE'S Al.L
~~GO~! .

Dlt-IOSAUR' HAD
EAT~N

WHEN HE10UCHES HE'~,
HELL GEi iHE SHOCK 0~
HIS LIF~.

:END iO iHAi BUGS
BUNNY•. ~·~~
'

"T'HAI A¥JFUL

YOU

LIP!

1..

AND I 'LL. ~OUND UP

~ME COOKING IHINGS!

WI-4ATCHA WANT
MS IQ DO ,MAG? .

YOU 101..0 ALLeY

DON'T
wo~~~I'I..t..

IHE: 11 'THING''

ABOUT
IN "'T'HE SA~OEN I
DIDN'T YOU ?' .

F!Nt::&gt; $1'v1!
.'

-,

OH,MY

1

GOODNESS.

IFo~

TO!

Warner Bros.

. '·

I WIL..I.. 1'AKEil-ltS u:&gt;Ne·cAr&lt;~D EArziJ..I
I CI&lt;EAiUr&lt;E SACK iO MY PLA.NEi ~
A SPECIMEN. .
. -

w~~s

I

uP,:·:. .

.. Doc·~

,t

' '

by·Crooks &amp; Lawrence

CA.PT. EASY
BUT +-lOW TO

~-----,

GI:T AT IT~ ...
THAT'S THE RUB,

HOW TO
MIND OF

PE~STRATE TH&amp;
"U5TS~ I&lt;Al.LII&lt;AK
P~E6SNT5 A FORM IDA~!..&amp;

~OH

.N Y WONDER®

DlckBo

I'ERHAP~

THE A~5WE!R
LIES I~ 50ME
OF, OI.IR MO~e

EH, CHieF;

R.EFIAIEO
.TORTUREtJ!

PI&lt;OS\..EM TO AMEii:ICA'So

I&lt;EE"'EST COU~Te~~PIES

WHAT'S M:~eDeD MAY Be SOMe

NO. TO DRINK AN

5UCI&lt;~ lJP A =fRiJNKFUI. OF .

FORM OF POSITIVE MOTIVATION·•
TO LURE HIM IIJTO COOPERATII\JIS . . , t - - WITH U.5l
... AL.THOLJeH I
MU5T C0'-'FE5?
THAT OOEg RAI5&amp;
THE QUESTIO'-'

WA,..R · 'Tloi&amp;NcpuTS IT$ TRUNK.
IN'TO If&amp; HO.JT~ ANO 5~UIRTS

THE WA1ER COWN IT!IiHROAT. .

I

W~AT OOE5AN
ELeCTRIC EEL
USE ITS ELEC-

i~ICITY 1=0~?

OF ...

,~i ~

.
'
~y~··
........ti....:

r=::::::jJ
Johnny wanler
(c/o this news;.per)

.

P.O. Box1335

Santa Cruz. Ca. 95011

Carroll &amp; McCormick

HOOPLE

IPON'T

KNOW W'rt( I .
SHOCJL.P WANT
·10MARRV

VOU! .

.'

1-\EY, . MI.,TER. I~ TH\~ TGWN

GA.R DEN 6~0 YE ~ ;·

DOD6E C:rTY1
CONFOUND 1'\!
NO! l i

,.

''

'

'

.

·-THAT.,.· .. ·
MUST ·~E ;
I ;,.
.

,-. ~ .

~ .

"-....
~.~

I

IA/E ' :
lc_',..··, .;;.,_
~ JYJ' -·.%

AG-RE:E QN ;
.:. 'THI"~'·.
,
.'"'¥~·-

1

�'

'

.

.

~

••
•

.

'

'I

~ ~

'

~

..
-

..'

·:

.

K~~l'. IT OFF,

I

' ;

' '

' WI~~~, ·

1

••

t:

.:t l4lOW YOU'~

(

U~~g TH~~~

\T IMJIZ.I'W, H~IOO~ .•.'(ou

WJ.\ATS

· 1"HIS

COM~ o~oor ~

ALL.

'

...

·.AeouT
'

~

•

.~

.•
I

... "~p WE,

CLASS OF
1960, ARE GOING- TO FACE.
MAKY CHA-LLENGeS IN Tt-\E
FUTURE. ·

~Of'EFULLY,

CAN

~E

'

ALL-OU\ WAR

i ANDY

AVOIDE.'P ... - -

·•I

••

'

CAPP

I

'

J

••
Jl

•••
•
'

'

'

-~.·

I · I&lt;'~SHECAN

·&amp; .....

~EA[) ME 1.1 KE

'
~ AL~ 1¢1&gt;.01~
.'f!J(lE. P31{f-OI.C6Y E'C()I::$ .. .
·MA~ I,QJ CAtJ HaP M~
&amp;

..

WI~~

~

''

b!j

i~

e

:

c~·tQ,,

'

•

SMf.IJ. f'R:t(fM

.

·

GIVE REVIEWS

ru:ITAftJLYI 1'D .
.

A

eoot( ... 8Ui'SHS
bOeSN'T 'AVE 1t)

f£ GU&gt;.D lO

.
~·
=!

,_
·Ernie Bushmlllet
I'LL SURPRISE
NANCY WITH MY
DISCO DANCE '• ·

•

'

.
i

.

.~

~.

.,.(} ._. ..

YOU CLUMSY OX - - YOU
B~OKE OUR LAMP---

6ET OUT

BOY, DO I FEEL BAD--

NANCY WON'T. SEE ME --SO
1 CAN'T TELL HER
- I'M SORRY .

··-··

.

.

'

·; '

/

·,·..,

.

··
i

�'

'

.

.

~

••
•

.

'

'I

~ ~

'

~

..
-

..'

·:

.

K~~l'. IT OFF,

I

' ;

' '

' WI~~~, ·

1

••

t:

.:t l4lOW YOU'~

(

U~~g TH~~~

\T IMJIZ.I'W, H~IOO~ .•.'(ou

WJ.\ATS

· 1"HIS

COM~ o~oor ~

ALL.

'

...

·.AeouT
'

~

•

.~

.•
I

... "~p WE,

CLASS OF
1960, ARE GOING- TO FACE.
MAKY CHA-LLENGeS IN Tt-\E
FUTURE. ·

~Of'EFULLY,

CAN

~E

'

ALL-OU\ WAR

i ANDY

AVOIDE.'P ... - -

·•I

••

'

CAPP

I

'

J

••
Jl

•••
•
'

'

'

-~.·

I · I&lt;'~SHECAN

·&amp; .....

~EA[) ME 1.1 KE

'
~ AL~ 1¢1&gt;.01~
.'f!J(lE. P31{f-OI.C6Y E'C()I::$ .. .
·MA~ I,QJ CAtJ HaP M~
&amp;

..

WI~~

~

''

b!j

i~

e

:

c~·tQ,,

'

•

SMf.IJ. f'R:t(fM

.

·

GIVE REVIEWS

ru:ITAftJLYI 1'D .
.

A

eoot( ... 8Ui'SHS
bOeSN'T 'AVE 1t)

f£ GU&gt;.D lO

.
~·
=!

,_
·Ernie Bushmlllet
I'LL SURPRISE
NANCY WITH MY
DISCO DANCE '• ·

•

'

.
i

.

.~

~.

.,.(} ._. ..

YOU CLUMSY OX - - YOU
B~OKE OUR LAMP---

6ET OUT

BOY, DO I FEEL BAD--

NANCY WON'T. SEE ME --SO
1 CAN'T TELL HER
- I'M SORRY .

··-··

.

.

'

·; '

/

·,·..,

.

··
i

�e
VOL. 31 NO. 34

•

at y
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

•

enttne

MONDAY, JUNE 2. 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

b
•
. ;;

.OH, 5URE; ~'5TY, .. ~,_. "iCU
RI%M eMBER~ · . . .
IT. W.AIO t,..Aer~e&lt;.
~ ..
.

'IOU ~AVE ME A BL.Kl&lt;:
. E:.~ ANDA
Sl&lt;=t' i&lt;'NO-r (l;N MY H-~D••.

I

i3~~

~...

''
From tbe Associated Press

State troopers quell uprising

..

FUNNY .•. !

~

OC&gt;N'r.

11-1·15 NEI~BCRHCCO IF .
'iOLJ CAN 'T1'HINK F;ter.

RE?M~BE!R II. ·

'

Det-J'r I...AeT ~ lN

.~

FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. - State troopers with shotguns and pistols
opened fire on hundreds of angry Cuban refugees after the Cubans
pelted police with rocks and stormed the front g!lte of the Fort Chaffee
temporary relocation center.
Three Cubans were shot.as the troopers drove them back onto the
base. More than a dozen people were injured, hundreds of civilians
were evacuated and several buildings were set afire before police and
soldiers quelled the rioters with tear gas and clubs, authoties said.

Pontiff unleases sharp attack
PARIS- Pope John Paul II unleashed a sharp attack on Catholic
dissidents, then prepared to end his four~y visit to France today by
traveling to the Normandy town of Lisieux to say Mass and visit the
famed Carmelite nunnery there.
The first highlight of the pope's day Sunday was an open-air Mass
for half a million people at Le Bourget Airport just north of Paris. Intermittent bursts of rain failed to mar the spirits of the faithful as they
listened to the pope denounce "totalitarianism and imperialism," and
gently cbastise the French for drifting away from the Church.

FBI interoiews shooting eyewitness

Priscilla's Po
GOSH.' WHO'S THAT
IMKJRIANT- LOOKING
MAN TALKING- TO 'tOUR ' ;..
~I$CILLA~

Ed Sullivan
NO
KIDDING.'

I DON'T
'KNOW.'

FORT WAYNE, Ind. - Police investigators trying to find out who
ambushed Urban League President Vemon Jordan- and why- say
they will interview again the woman who was the only eyewitness to
the sniper attack.
The woman, Martha C. Coleman, a 3&amp;-year-old divorcee, "wants to
cooperate completely with us," Kenneth Van Ryan, city police chief of
detectives, said Sunday.
·She and her lawyer will meet with local authorities on Tuesday,
police said. It was not clear if the FBI would also interview the
woman, who talked briefly to authorities after the Thursday morning
shooting and then went into hiding.

Marine battalion leaves ocean
WASHINGTON - The first U.S. Marine battalion ever deployed to
the Indian Ocean has le(t the area after a 2lf..month cruise.
The Pentagon said Sunday the 1,800 Marines and a task force of four
amphibious ships, a cruiser and a frigate left through the Lombok
Strait. The unit was sent to the area in March in response to the
Iranian hostage crisis and the Soviet military i!Jtervention in
Mghanistan. The Pentagon did not indicate whether the United States
will send in another Marine unit to the Persian Gulf region. There was
no word on the task force's destination.

Proposed pay hike not enough
WASHINGTON- President Carter's proposed pay increases for the
military still would not be enough to put members of the anned ser·
vices on an equal footing with industry workers and solve recruiting
problems, a congressional report says.

HE .........-.

I THINK
HE'S A

.D.ISTINGUISJ-IEI?LOOKING.' WHAT

~

POLITICIAN .'

"rrU 5U'PPosE

HE c:oES?

Weather forecast
Showers and thunderstorms likely tonight and Tuesday with small
stream and urban flooding possible. High Tuesday in the low to mid
80s. Low tonight 65 to 70. Chance of rain 70 percent tonight and
Tuesday.
Ohio Extended Oudook
By The Associated Press
Wednesday tbrougb Friday - Thunderstorms possible Wednesday
and Thursday, maiDiy in the afternoon and evening. A cbance rl
showers or thundentorms Friday. Highs In the upper 70s and 80s.
Lows from the upper 50s to mid 60s.

Pomeroy bank gains
new name, resources

..
'

·{
•'
. ·,
'

\

"NOW l'HAT WE'VE GOT GAS UP TO
DOLLAR A GALLON, WHAT SAY
9/10 OF ACENT

''AND LSELIEVE AWoMAN'S PLACE IS IN THE HOME,
DARREN, SO YOlfLL HAVE GET TWO JOBS!"

"MOW THE LAWN.
P.EOPLE CAN'T DECIDE IF
' YOU'RE ADEDICATED QONSERV,ATIONIST
OR ANEJGHBOAHOOD DISQRACEI"

1

Pomeroy National Bank today
gained a new name and new resour·
ce providing new banking tools to its
management and personnel. The
new name is BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, NA, brought about
because the $31.7 million dollar
Meigs County bank is now an af.
filiate of BANC ONE COR·
PORATION, a multi·bank holding
company headquartered in Columbus, Ohio.
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA
serves Meigs County with offices in
Pomeroy, Rutland, and Tupper
Plains.
Edison Hobstetter, BANK ONE
OF POMEROY's President, said,
"We asked for the affiliation with
BANC ONE CORPORATION
because of its national leadership in
several technical fields but more importantly because of its policy of
locally controlled banks.
We will continue as an individually
operated local bank maintaining
local management, staff and board
of directors.
•.
We will remain locally responsible
for meeting the unlque banking
needs of 0111' community," he added.
As an affiliate of BANC ONE COR· '
PORATION, the bank will also be
provided with BliSistanee from
banking' specialists and wiUt the support of additional financial resources from the l!olding company affiliates.
Bank President' Hobstetter noted
that an important factor in the bank

board's decision to affiliate with

BANC ONE CORPORATION was
the corporation's nationally
recognized expertise in 24 hour
banking, trust and investment ser·
vices, personal property leasing and
international banking.

MOBILE HOME DAMAGED - A mobile home owned by Mrs.
Elizabeth Fisher, North Second Ave., Middleport, was heavily damaged
Sunday when a tree fell across it during high winds. Mrs. Fisher was in

the home at the time the tree fell but escaped injury. Workers were
removing the tree Sunday evening.

Twister leaves rubble behind.
By Associated Press
The severe weather, which
brought tornado warnings and watches to Ohio and some damage
where at least one twister struck
down, has moved off to the eastern
seaboard, however, the National
Weather Service is forcasting the
likelihood of more thundershowers
today.
Rubble was all that remained
where 'a twister toqched down in

12 die in
weekend
accidents
By 1be Associated Press
Twelve persons bad died on Ohio's
highways this weekend, the Ohio
Highway Patrol said Saturday.
The patrol records traffic
fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday to mid·
night Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
NEW PlllLADELPHIA - William
K. Longacher, 25, of New
Philadelphia, in a one car accident
on Ohio39 in Tuscarawas County.
.BOWLING GREEN - Thomas S.
Oldcorn, 'EI, of Findlay, in a motor·
cycle-ear accident on a city street in
Wood County.
HAMDEN - Anna M. Black, 51, of
Wellston, in a one car accident on
Ohio 160 in Vinton County.
ASHTABULA - Yvonne K.
Hughes, 42, of Columbus, in a twocar accident on Ohio 3ff/ in
Ashtabula County.
SATURDAY
BATAVIA - Donald Glass, 54, of
Cincinnati, in a two-ear accident on
Ohio 132 near Batavia.
WILMINGTON - David J. Set·
&lt;Continued on pag~ 12)

CAR FIRE
The Middleport Fire Department

was called to upper Rutland St. at
11:48 a.m. Saturday where a car
owned by Candy Carpenter, Colum·
bus was on fire. There was damage
to the seats of the vehicle.

Licki11g County, but Darby Gilmore
salvaged what he could from his
home near Croton, demolished
minutes earlier by a tornado that injured five persons, two seriously.
The twister ripped a swath, about
~ yarda wide, through a section of
homes outside the community of 400,
destroying several homes and barns
and causing widespread damage
Sunday · afternoon, according to
Licking County sheriffs deputies.
Stanley and Mary Warner of
Loveless, who were visiting their
daughter's home in Ute area, were
among those injured. The Warners,
in their 70s, suffered broken bones
and were reported in guarded con·
dition Sunday night at Licking County Memorial Hospital.
Their daughter's home was one of
six leveled by the midaftemoon

storm.
Another woman, 54-yearo()ld Mary
Arter, was treated for head injuries
at Riversjde Hospital in Columbus,
where she was listed in satisfactory
condition.
Two others were injured, but were

treated at the scene.
Licking County appeared to a!&gt;sorb the worst of severe storms that
swept across the state Sunday, according to the National Weather Service. It said the tornado, which also
killed several animals, struck at the
edge of Croton about 3 p.m. The
Weather Service also reported a tornado touched down about 2 p.m
around the Licking County community of Utica causing widespread
damage, but no injUries.
The Gilmore home looked like
"nothing more than a pile of kin·

dling, "according to one observer of
the aftermath.
Gilmore, who was home with his
wife and daughter when the funnel
cloud hit, got caught beneath a par·
titian in the home and sustained only
a few "aches and pains."
The other two members of his
family fled to safety in the basement
and managed to huddle against the
only corner of the structure sparedfrom the vicious stonn. Gilmore's
other daughter was attehding
graduation ceremonies for students
at Northridge High School.
An area resident, viewing the
uprooted trees, dead animals and
the deqris left behind by the storm,
said more people might have been
injured - or killed - had they not
been attending the graduation exercises.

County engineer Buehl dies
Wesley A. Buehl, 69, Meigs County
Engineer, died unexpectedly Sunday
at his home on E. Main St.,
Pomeroy.
Mr. Buehl was appointed Meigs
County Engineer some 10 years ago
and since then had been elected to
the post.
He was unopposed as Republican
candidate for his county post in
tomorrow's primary ~lection.
A 32nd degree Mason, Mr. Buehl
was a member of the Knight York,
Cross of Honor, and the United
Methodist Church. .
Preceded in death by his parents,
his wife and two sisters, Mr. Buehl is
survived by two sons, Paul Wesley of
Berea, and Ted Cleary, Berea; a
daughter and son- in-law, Louise and
John Barlowe, Toledo; a granddaughter, Johnna Louise Barlowe;
two sisters, Eleanore Buehl,
Baltimore, Md., and Mary Addler,
Chicago, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. Robert
McGee officiating. Following ser·
vices here the body will be taken to
the Baker Funeral Home in Berea
for services at 1 p.m. Friday. Burial

will be in Woodvale Cemetery at
Berea.
Masonic rites will be held at 7:30

p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friends may call from 2
to 4 and 7 to9 p.m. Tuesday.

County Engineer Buehl

Loan, grant approved Suspect taken into custody
BANK CHANGES - Edllon
Hoboletter, long•tlmt employe
and presldeat of the Pomeroy
Nalloaal Balik today llllllOIIIlCtd
the bank hils gaiDed a new 118111t
and aew resource~. Tile new
aame Is Balik ODe of Pomeroy,
NA.

WASHINGTON, D. C. -Representative Clarence
Miller along with the Farmers' Home Administration
today announced the approval of a $54,000 loan and a
$153,000 grant to · the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District.
FHA funding . will be used to extend water
di~tribution lines on the present system to serve additional families. The loan will be repaid over a 40 year ·
period at five percent interest.
Previous loans and grants to the water district from
FHA have totaled more than $2.7 million.

Twenty-year old Herbert L. King,
Akron, sought in Swrunit County for
violation of probation Saturday al·
ternoon was taken into custody at
the residence of a relative at Rt. I,
Racine by .Meigs County sheriff's
deputies.
The department investigated a
two-ear accident Sunday at 2:18
a.m. on the parking lot at Tall Tim·
bers Night Club.
Vehicles driven by David H.
Spurlock, 27, Tuppers Plains, and

•

Kathryn M.' Johnson, 25, Mine!'
sville, collided as they attempted to
leave the parking area. There was
slight property damage. There were
no injuries and no citations issued.
Sunday at 9:15 a.m on county
road 21, Laurel Cliff Road, Shirley
Ann Meadows, Mason was traveling
east on her way to church when her
car caught fire. The Pomeroy Fire
Department was called. The vehicle
was destroyed.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="154">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2744">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48007">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48006">
              <text>June 1, 1980</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4287">
      <name>dickey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="371">
      <name>gilmore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="624">
      <name>mcknight</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7062">
      <name>schaffer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1641">
      <name>thivener</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
