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                  <text>12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, June 6, 1980

•

•

Where It Is Inside

Layoffs Increase In
U. S. auto industry

Area deaths ......................... .. .. . . . ... A·S
Classified ads .... ......... .... .. •....... ... . . D-4-9
Editorial . ...... ..... . ... ... . ••. . •....•... ... . A-2
Farm news ...•. .. . ..... . .. ... . ............... D·2
Lifestyle . ... . .......... .. ..... . . . .. . . ..... . B-1· 10
Local news .......••..•...•.................. A-3-8
State- National .. . . . . ........ . .......... . ...... D-1
Sports ...................................... C-1·8
TV guide ......... . .. . .•.... ·.... . .. . . . ..... . Insert

June is prom

time. .. B-1

·Council receives
checks for
bleJJchers. .. A-7

,J

By The Associated Press
Layoffs in the sagging U.S. auto
industry will continue to climb next
week with another 10,000 in Ohio and
towards the more than 300,000
workers idled at the peak of the 1975
recession, the five U.S. a uto companiessay.
In Ohio, the new layoffs will affect
almost 6,000 Ford employees at
Lorain and more than 2,500 at Ford
Cleveland and Avon Lake plants.
Another 1,250 are scheduled for
layoff at the General Motors plant at
LQrdstown.
Also, The Dura Corp., a 67-yearold auto parts manufacturer with
plants at Toledo, Ohio and in Adrian,
Mich., said Thursday it will close
this fall,- eliminating more than 400
jobs in the two cities.
General manager William Ross
said the target date for closing is
Sept. 15. He, blamed continued
declines in · the sale of new
automobiles.
Dura Corp. opened in 1913 as the
Milburn Wagon Works and at one
time was Toledo's fourth largest employer. It currently makes such
automotive hardware as window lift
mechanisms, door hinges, suspen·
sion and hood components for all the
major automobile manufacturers.
Of the 283,215 assembly workers
slated for layoffs , nationwide next
week, 45,365 will be temporarily
Idled and 237,850 will be on indefinite
furlough. Most o( the 12,000 new
layoffs are-.temporary, company of·
ficials said.

Auto production was down 37.5
percent and truck production fell
69.2 percent this week from the same
period in 1979, a trade publication
reported Thursday.
General Motors Corp. said indefinite layoffs will continue at
135,000, while 12,550 workers will be
idled temporarily next week, up
from 6,400 on temporary layoff last
week.
Indefinite layoffs at Ford Motor
Co. rose to 59,500, up from 57,000 last
week. Workers laid off temporarily
totaled 22,415, while an additional
6,700 workers at component plants
are idled on a short-term basis. Ford
component plant layoffs are not included in the U.S, industry total.
Chrysler Corp. reported no cha nge
in the 40,600 hourly workers on in·
defimte and 10,400 on temporary
layoff.
American Motors Corp. has 2,750
workers on indefinite layoff, up 400
from last ·week because of production changes at its Jeep plant in
Toledo, Ohio. AMC has no temporary layoffs .

448, down from the more than 1,000
people who worked there in
January .
The totals for all five U.S. car·
makers a re distorted· because GM
reported layoffs for next week while
Ford, Chrysler and AMC figures are
for this week. Ford updates its
figures on Friday.

Volkswagen of America reported
no layoffs.
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co. announced Thursday it would
lay off another 133 employees at its
i.JJgan plant, which manufactures
dashboards and instrument panels.
. Company spokesmen said the layof·
fs are the direct result of the
automobile buymg slump. The layof·
Is bring the plant's employment to

Temporary layoffs in Ohio include :
General Motors - 1,250, van
assembly, Lordstown, Ohio.
Ford assembly plants - 1,450,
Ohio Truck Plant, Avon Lake, Ohio;
5,790, car, truck and van assembly,
Lorain, Ohio .
Ford component plants - 1,800,
Cleveland Engine Plants I and 2,
Cleveland.

The figures do not include . the
thousands of workers idled at supplier plants.
The 126,013 cars built this week is
0.7 percent less than the 126,899
made last week and well below the
201,735 built during the same week
in l979 , according to Ward 's
Automotive Reports.
So far this year, car assemblies
total 3,032,074, down 30.5 percent
from the 4,360,855 built through the
same period last year, Ward's said.
U.S. truck production this week is
pegged at 21 ,437, down 14.4 percent
from 25,045last week and 69,617 one
year ago. In 1980,759,644 trucks have
been assembled, 55.4 percent fewer
than the i;701,466 built in 1979.

Central committee members
election results revealed
Meigs County Democrats and
Republicans elected Central Committee members in the 34 precincts
at Tuesday's election.
Democrat Central Committee
members elected include : Russell! .
Wilson, East Bedford; David M.
Brickles, West Bedford; Henry L.
Hunter, North Chester; Clarence H.
Schmucker, South Chester; Thomas
E. Mankin II, West Chester; Arthur
Crabtree, Columbia ; Virginia
Pickens, Lebanon ; Lola J. Proffitt,
East Letart; Lois Allen, Letart;
Francis H. Andrew, Long Bottom;
Betty Osborne and Donald L. Ben·
nett, tied in Olivedale; John H.
Smith, Reedsville ; Norman 0 .
Weber, Orange; Samuel B. May ,
Rutland Village; Marie L. Birchfield, East Rutland; Norman C. Will,
West Rutland ; Barbara E. Roush,
Salem; John Metzger, Middleport
1st; Kenneth E . Imboden, Mid·
dleport 2nd; Lewis Long, Middleport
3rd; Ruben A. Collins, Middleport

SALE STILL ON
In case of rain, a yard sale planned for Saturday beginning at 9 a .m.
on the lawn of Eastern High School
will be held inside the building. The
sale is being staged by the Eastern
High School Band Boosters to help
raise funds for band camp. All sale
contrtbutors are to have their items
at the location before 9 a.m.
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
Rodney Gordon Chevalier, 31, Tuppers Plains, and Debra Lynn Windon, 22, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

SUIT FILED
A suit in the amount of $56().70 was
filed by General Telephone Com·
pany of Ohio, Marion, against Tom
J. Eakins, Rt. 2, Racine, in Meigs
County Common Plea's Court.
The suit is for defult in installment
payments.
Janet Sue Swift, Portland, filed for
divorce against Larry Joe Swift,
Frederick, Md.
UEREJUNEU
On June 11, a representative from
Congressman Clarence E. Miller's
office will conduct an Open Door
session from 10 a.m.-12 noon in the
CourtHouse in Pomeroy.
U anyone has any questions concerning the Federal ·Government,
please stop by to discuss them with
the representative.
MEET TUESDAY

The Cbester Township Trustees
will meet'at 7;30 p.m. Tuesday for a

regi1lar meeting at the Chester Town

HaD.
ISsUES WARNING
Pomeroy Police Chief Charles R.
McKinney said todaY warrants will
be iM1ied in two weeks for arrests of
· persona failing to pay delinquent
· parking tickets.

'

4th; Audrey Young, Middleport 1st ;
Villa ge; Emmogene Holstein ,
Olin D. Boothe, Pomeroy 2nd; Ber- Syracuse Village; Phyllis Harris,
nadine Mei er , Pomeroy 3rd;
Minersville; James Carnahan,
Catherine L. Welsh, Pomeroy 4th ;
RacinePct.
Evelyn B. Thomas, Bradbury ; lola
I. Howell, Laurel Cliff ; No candidate, Rock Springs ; Frances
Alkire, Harrisonville; No candidate,
I
I
Pageville; Ernest A. Wingett,
Wayne Trout
Ra cine Village; Woodrow T.
Hobart Wayne Trout, 63, a
Zwilling, Syracuse Village; No canresident of 116 River St., Kanauga,
didate, Minersville; Edwin S.
died around 9:30 p.m. Thursday
Cozart, Racine Precinct.
shortly after his arrival at Pleasant
Republicans elected include :
Valley Hospital in Pi. Pleasant. .
Hele n M. Quivey, East Bedford ;
Mr. Trout had been in ill health the
Brenda S. Roush, West Bedford;
pa st year, but had continued to
Robert Wood, North Chester; David
work.
Koblentz, South Chester; Fred B.
Smith, West Chester ; Granville
He was born Aug. 13, 1917, in
Gallipolis, son of the late James W.
Lyons, Columbia; Clarence Lawren·
ce, Lebanon; No candidate, East
and Nellie Board Trout.
Letart; Harry Hill, Letart; Paul F .
After graduating from Gallia
Andrews, Long Bottom; William A.
Academy High School in 1937, he
Connolly, Olivedale ; Alvin S. Reed ,
was employed by the Epling Sand
Reedsville ; Roland Torrence ,
and Gravel Co., and later he was a
construction worker.
Orange ; Elizabeth Hobstetter,
He was currently employed as an
Rutland Village; Pearl Little, East
Rutland; James R. Sheets, West
engineer at the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Rutland; No candidate, Salem;
Frank Powers, Middleport 1st; Carl
Mr. Trout was a World War II
Horky , Middleport 2nd; Curtis
veteran, having served with the U.
S. Army in the African campaign.
Jenkinson, Middleport 3rd; Dorothy
He is survived by his wife , Marjorie
L. McGuffin, Middleport 4th ;
Evelyn Clark, Pomeroy 1st ; Robert
Vance Trout, whom he married in
1954.
Hysell, Pomeroy 2nd; Charles W.
One daughter survives, Mrs. John
Legar, St., Pomeroy 3rd; Leslie P .
(Marvena) Jeffreys, Orient, Ohio ;
Fultz, Pomeroy 4th; Edward Templeton·, Bradbury; Nathan Biggs,
two grandchildren; seven brothers:
Rex and Forrest, both of
Laurel Cliff ; George Nesselroad,
Charleston; French, Seminole, Fla.;
Jr., Rock Springs; No candidate,
Harrisonville; Earold Dean, PageMiles, Cheshire; Brooks, St. Albans,
' ville; Cora B. Beegle, Racine
W. Va. ; Dennis, Kentucky and
Harry, Chesapeake.
Mr. Trout attended the Methodist
Church in Kanauga and was a member of VFW Post No. 4464 .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Funeral services will be held 2
Admitted-Mary Still, Middleport ;
p.m. Sunday at Miller's Home for
Gary Pullins, Pomeroy.
Funerals with Rev. Jeffrey Downin
Discharged-Patrick Jacks, Ger·
officiating. Burial will be in Pine
trude Pelegrino, James Nelson,
Street Cemetery.
Margaret Barrett, Constance Craig,
Friends may call at the funeral
Cassie Hudson, William Smith,
home from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. on Satur·
James Hanlon, Charles Cockcroft.
day.

i------------------------i

: Area Deaths :

HOSPITAL NEWS

24 traffic cases terminated
Nineteen defendants were fined
and five others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Russell Browning, Walker, W.
Va., $20 and costs, speed; Linda
West, Racine, $25 and costs, parked
in undesignated area ; Henry J .
Cade, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
speed; Kevin Betzing, Pomeroy, $28
and costa, speed; Chiistopher Schaf·
fer, Parkersburg, $25 and costs,
fishing without non-resident fishing
license; Joel Wisecup , Pomeroy, $5
and costs, defective exhaust; Marie
Walding, Racine, $10 and costs,
assured clear distance; Monte Rif·
fie, · Pomeroy, and D011ald Hood,
Middleport, $25 and costs each, no
1980 fishing license ; Robert McGee,
Jacksonville, Ohio, $26 and costs,
speed; William R. Litteral, Athens,
$25 and costs, fishing with more than
two units; Cecil Giles, .Aibany, and
Ellis Stiers, Athens, 1$25 and costs

each, fishing without valid license;
Eric Bentz, Racine, $25 and costs,
building or using an open fire within
Portland access wildlife area ; Edward Parker, Beverly, $30 and costs,
speeding ; Mark Venoy, Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, illegal bumper;
Richard Enevoldsen, Reedsville, $75
and costs, possession of marijuana ;
Leroy RiChards, Reedsville, costs
only, 10 days confinement, four months probation, jail sentence suspended, avoid contact with wife,
domestic violence ; Wayne Cleland,
Langsville, costs only, domestic
violence.
Forfeiting bonds ere Henry W.
Doerfer, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and
William R. McConaha, Parker·
sburg, $40.50 each, SPI'fdlng; Gary
Lockhart, Mineral Wells, $60.35,
fishing without license ; Chris Smith,
Pomeroy, $36.35, littering water·
shed ; Douglas Bush, Gallipolis,
$37.55, illegal passing .
l

•

ttntS
.:,''&lt;oc

ANTICIPA TJNG GRADUATION - This group of seniors at Wahama High School are shown as they a~xlously
await the presentation of diplomas at commencement exercises Wednesday evening. Shown above, left to rl~~t •. ar~
class officers Harold Douglas Russell, vice-president ; Teresa Annette Campbell, president ; and Er1c Dean RlCk
Barnitz, secretary-treasurer.

Graduation ceremonies held
•
for 84 Wahama High seniors
•

By Mindy Kearns
"Graduation is like being dropped
into the middle of the ocean and not
knowing how to swim. When you
graduate, you enter the sea of life
and the current picks you up and
carries you along. If you don't make
an effort to learn to swim, you will
go where the current (or someone
else) wants you to go; but if you
strike out on your own, you make
your own decisions about where you
want to go and what you want to do."
These were· the words spoken by
Valedictorian Lisa Rene Hill at the
Wahama High School graduation
ceremony Wednesday evening.
A total of 84 seniors received
diplomas at the commencement
exercises for the Class of 1980.
Miss Hill told her peers in her
valedictory address, "Graduation
time is here and the future lies
ahead. I have two questions for the
members of the Class of 1980 : Are
you ready for the future • Do you
know what you want to do?"
"Graduation is one of the saddest
and most exciting times of your life.
It 's sad to think of losing touch with
all of your friends. Everyone goes
his separate way , All of the good
times together are over. Twelve
years, and that's about twcrthirds of
your life to this point, are gone. Most
of those years and maybe more were
spent with the same people - people
you might not ever see again. It's
sad, isn't it, to look at the people
beside you, in front of you, and
behind you, and think, 'I might not
ever see him or her anymore! This
time next year, who knows where we
will all be."
The Rev. John Campbell of the
New Haven United Methodist
Church gave the invocation, Rev.
William Dawson, Hartford United
Methodist Church , the bac·
calaureate address , and Rev.
Marvin Lester, Mason Assembly of
God Church, the benediction.
Musical selections were given by
the Wahama Band, under the
direction of Elizabeth Mattox, and
the Wahama Chorus.
The betterment of the country was
the theme of the address given by
Salutatorian Karen Virginia Brown.
" Thus far, we have had the
privilege of living in a free country",
she said. " But with all the changes
and tension spots in the world today,
the America that we have known in
the past is now jeopardized and the
existance of our
freedom,
threatened. We must accept the
challenge and use tbe· knowledge
and the positive qualities that we ·
have acquired like self-discipline,
endurance, perseverance, respect
for ourselves and others combined
with love for our fellow man, faith in
what we believe, and hope for a
brighter future for the betterment of

our country.''

·

Miss Brown stated, " It is said that
'Life is a book in which every year
begins a new chapter'. Tonight we
have come to the end of a happy
chapter but a new one Is just
beginning" .
She told of how teachers, participation in school activities,
families and peers have equipped
the graduates for the future .
Preceding the recessional of the
Class of 1980, the audience and
graduates joined in singing the
school's alma mater.

" But . it 's exciting to finally
become an adult- making your own
decisions and· planning your own
life. These decisions and plans are
very important. What are you going
to do? Are you going to get married?
Get a job? Go to college? Go into the
military• These are just a few of the
things that you must decide for
yourself once you graduate. After
you decide, then it's time ·to make
plans. These will include how much
it will cost (if anything ), where you
will have to go or where you will live,
what you will need, what you might
have to give up, and what it can give
you in return.''
Miss Hill went on to tell of the
changes decisions and plans may
make in the lives of the graduates,
and concluded by saying, " Do . you
know what you want out of life ?
Maybe not. but you might be
thinking about the future. And if
you're · not, you ought to be. But
remember-Don't let someone else
decide for you; do what you want to
do and what is right for you. The
youth of· today are the· leaders of
tomorrow . What you do could
change the future of many people".
William M. McWhorter, principal,
and Ronald E. Vance, vice·
principal, presented the graduating
class to Harry Siders, president of
the Mason County Board of
Education, and Robert J . Brewster,
Superintendent of Mason County
Schools, who passed out diplomas.
Following the presentation of
diplomas, class advisors Richard
Cline, Lewis Hall, Broderick Painter
and Elaine Preece, gave each

STRAWBERRIES
HAPPY HOLlOW

FRUIT F,ARM

Gallipolis Ferry, w. Va.
1·304· 576·2026
IP Miles South of
Point Pleasant on Rt. 2

member of the class a white silk
rose, the class flower.
Those receiving diplomas included ; William

Wayne Allensworth, Terry Wayne Angel, Jeffrey
Keilh Arnold, Teresa Lynn Akers , Eric Dean

Barnitz Connie Ann Bird, John Vayden Blake,
Jttmes Paul Board, Karen Virginia Brown ant{
Jeffrey Joel Bwn~ardner.
Ma ureen MorriSon Cttmp, Teresa Annette
Campbell, Scott Anthony Chapnum, R eKina

Lynn Clarke,' Yvonne Dee Collier, Da~lene Hazel
CoQk, Elir.abeth Stewart Crump, DavLd LB,wren-:
ec Cwmingham, Wil!iarn James Dav is and
James Ot!itrl Diehl."
.
·
Brian Joe Dingey, Cecil Ray Dw1can, Jr.,
Ne llie Mae Esque, Stephanie.Ann Estes, Jeffre)l
Scott Fields, Kimberly Vickers Forbe$, Melody
J ean Gibbs, Regina Marie Gibbs, William Ed&amp;

ward Gibbs and Mark TLmothy Gilkey.
Relrrut Rae Goodnite,' Barbara Ann Gordon,
Brenda J ea n GraY , Michael Cwtis Grlnun, Brett
Lee Grinstead, Judy Kay Hall, Ina Kay H11yes,
Troy Lane Hesson, Usa Rene Hill and Leah
Marie Hoffman.

Mary Lynn Ho.ffman, Jill Elaine Johnson, Lenna Kay Johnson, Terri Lynn Johnson, Kev""

P11.ul Jones, Tarruny Carli\ou Jooes , Coo ni~
Arlene Kearns , Gregory Scott Kearns and Todd
Alan Kebler.
Jeffrey Shawn L..uthey, Malinda Lee Ueving:
Timothy Dallas Long, William Mark Lowman;
Debr1:1 Kay MacKnight, Terry Wa{.ne McCarthy,
Fre&lt;ld.ie Day McClure, Rick Alen McKirglln,
Jerry Ma rk Oldaker and Steven l..ee Oldaker.
Steven Dale Peters, Angela Rae Proffitt, Gal)
Alom Richard!!, Crystal Renee Richardson,
JHcquelin Marie Rid~way, Alice Marie Roush,
Belinda Lowe Roush, Gary Tyrooe Roush1
Gregory Scott Roush, lbomas Henry Roush, ana
Timothy Allen Roush.
.
Timolhy

Roush, Harold Douglu
Russell , Eddie Kay Shepard, Fred Lee Smith,
Joyce Maria Ste\'ens, Jil1 Renee Taylor, Britta

SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1980

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

35 CENTS

Ghotbzadeh feels he
could win showdown
By The Associated Press
Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh
Ghotbzadeh suggests he could win a
showdown with the Iranian militants
holding 53 American hostages if they
press for spy trials of their captives.
The hostages ended their 31st week
in captivity Saturday.
Ghotbzadeh's statement Friday
signaled one of two clashes among
Iran's revolutionary factions that
emerged in the aftennath of the
Tehran 11 Crimes of America" con·
ference that ended Thursday by con·
demning the United States.
Tehran Radio, which has often
angered some Iranian officials with
its editorial sniping, asked why
Ghotbzadeh's Foreign Ministry
allowed former U.S . Attorney
General Ramsey Clark to attend the
conference. It called Clark " the
vilest American agent," and accused the Foreign Ministry ·of being
conciliatory toward the United
States.
Clark, who led a delegation of 10
Americans to the anti-U.S. conference in defiance of a Carter administration bail on travel to Iran,

was to return to the United States
this weekend. Clark was condemned
Frida y in Washington by U.S. Sen.
Robert Dole, R-Kan., who introduced a Senate resolution ca lling
for prosecution of the Clark mission .
Five members of the group went
to the occupied U.S. Embassy today
taking letters for the hostages a nd
asking for a meeting with the captives, witnesses at the embassy said.
An Iranian photographer iden·
tified the American visitors as Kay
Camp, president of the Women's In·
ternational League for Peace and
Freedom; May Anderson of Cam·
bridge, Mass. , representing the
American Friends Service Com·
mittee; Rev. Charles Kimball, a
Harvard theologian; Prof. George
Wald, Harvard professor a nd a win·
ner of the Nobel Prize in biology ;
and Rev. John Walsh, chaplain of
Princeton University.
Walsh and Kimball visited the embassy three days ago, handed lette rs
for 20 hostages to the militants and
talked with the captors inside the
embassy compound.

Three m embers or the priva te
mission returned Friday night to
New York, where they said customs
officials confiscated papers relating
to the conference. The three were:
Lennox S. Hinds, a Los Angeles attorney ; the Rev. Paul M.
a Philadelphia
Washin gton,
Episcopal minister; and Leonard
Weinglass, a New Jersey college
professor.
Ghotbzadeh, meanwhile, called
the anti-American resolution adopted by the conference a "big victory
for Iran ," and said that what " we
Iranians needed we got." The
resolution attacked American
economic and military interference
in Iran and American treatment of
Ira nian students in the U.S .
The Iranian militants, a nd many
newly-elected members of the
Iranian Parliame nt, s ay the
hostages, held since Nov. 4, should
be tried if deposed Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi isn't returned to Iran
from his exile home in Egypt.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
Iran's religious and revolutionary

JENNELL KELLY

JAYNE SIMPKINS

(Conti n ued on page A -3)

Arnold

Kaye VanMeter, F'rank Edward Varian, Beth
Ann Weaver, Vlnel:!nl Morris Weaver, Randy
Matthew Wright, Rhonda Kay YOI.Ul~ and
Tlmothy Jay Young.

SQUADCALLED
uad
. ddleport Emergency Sq
1
M
The
t 3·28 p.m .
lied to Hysell St. a ·
was ca
Ca to who was taken to
for George
s cal Center.
the Holzer M~e Meigs Emergency
Meantune,
s re orted t.hat
Servic~ Hedeadquca2:' for ~mergency
it rece1v
no
squad units on ThursdaY ·
··

Will resume AORTA bus
service in area Monday
POMEROY - Effective Monday,
tl)e Appalachian Ohio Regional
Transit Association (AORTA) will
again provide service to residents of
Meigs County.
Bus service will be provided Monday through Friday, four round-trips
daily, beginning at 5:30 a.m, from

Pomeroy, then going to Middleport,
back to Pomeroy and on to Athens.
Passengers will be accepted along
the route. The bus route has been·
slated for old Route 33 (County Road
20).
Regular stops will be made in
Pomeroy on Court St. (the old Blue

AIR CONDITIONERS
IN STOCK

•

4,000 TBU
5,000 BTU
7,800 BTU
9,700 BTU
17,900 BTU
22,500 BTU

Backed by Dependable Factory Authorized Service-.
Credit Terms Available.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC ST., POMEROY

S10\\~\D~LOTHING SALE

PREPARE FOR WORKSHOP - Bernard Connolly, left, and Kenny
Sidle prepare for workshop to be held during the country music convention at Bob Evans Farms, Rio Grande, on June 21·22.

20% ON EVERY ITEM OF

'

Weather forecast

WEARING APPAREL FOR MEN,
SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JUNE 7

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

(Continued on page A ·3)

June 21, 22 at Bob Evans Farms

READY FOR DELIVERY

. WOMEM AND CHILDREN.

and Grey Restaurant corner ), in
Middleport at the corner of Mill and
Second Sts .. at Rock Springs, Dar·
win , Burlingham, Pratts Fork ,
Shade, and the bus stop on Court St.
in Athens .
The regular adult fare will be

Country music convention set

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

SAVE
- Pick ·your own from 9
AM til dark
-Closed Sunday
-Sorry no checks

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

VOL. 15 NO. 19

f,Y

.,

Variable cloudiness with a chance of showers. Highs from the upper 70s
to the lower 80s. The chance of rain is 40 percent.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wedne54!ay : Fair Monday and Tuesday. A chance of
thunderstorms Wednesday. Highs through the period from the 70s to the low
80s. Lows from.the mid 40s to the mid 50s Monday, warming to the upper 50s
to mid 60s by Wednesday.

RIO GRANDE - They're swit·
ching the country music convention
to Rio Grande this year, in just a
couple of weeks from now, to be
exact, and they're going to put on the
Bob Evans Farms Country Music
Convention June 21-22 for bands,
banjo soloists, and fiddle soloists .
Advance literature says that it's a
weekend of country and bluegrass
music on U. S. Rt. 35 at Rio Grande.
Musicians who sign up at the
registration tent between 9 a.m . and
2 p.m. Saturday, June 21, will pay $2
per event, and all registrations must
be completed then. Preregistration
cost is $1 per event per group.
There'll be $925 in total prize money
guaranteed by the Bob Evans Farm
Co., Bernard Connolly, program
coordinator, says.
· There's a slew of rules and
reg ulations, nine cash awards with
trophies, and a coupl e of plaques. If
you want to know what they are, you
can · contact Connolly at Box 64 ,
Mason, w: Va. 25260, or telephone
him at (304 ) 67f&gt;-2914.
You do have to play three selec·
lions on Saturday dur ing
preliminary eliminations for each
event with bands playing in·
struments or singing, banjo to have
three standard banjo tunes, and fid·
dle requiring two hoedowns a nd one
waltz- No trick fiddling.
Sunday's finalists will have the
five top bands, five top banjos, and
ten top fiddles . Hog-calling competition will be held between the
band and banjo finalists; clogging
between the banjo a nd fiddle fina ls.
(Continued on page A &lt;J)

MEUSSAJHLE

TERESA NEAL

Seven Gallia, Meigs pupils
earn Rio CC scholarships
RIO GRANDE- Seven Gallia and
Meigs County students are among
the recipients of Rio Grande College
and Community College District
Scholarships.
Woody Burnett II, Connie Louise
Holley, Teresa Neal and Jayne Sim·
pkins from Gallia County and Jenell
Kelly, Rebecca Edwards and
Melissa !tile from Meigs County will
rece ive full tuition, four-year
scholarships to Rio Grande.
Each high school in Gallia, Meigs,
Vinton a nd Jackson Counties is of·
fered one district scholarship every

year.
Burnett, son of Woodrow Burnett,
Addison, is the winner from Kyger
Creek High Schol. He graduated
third in his 53 member graduatmg
class.
Burnett served as president of the
senior class and secretary of the Key
Club. A member of the National
Honor Society, Burnett combined his
academic pursuits with athletic
competition as a member of the varsity football, baseball and track
teams. He plans to pursue a ca reer
(Continued on pag e A 3)

Gallipolis' Col. ]. D. Caldwell
presented Legion of Merit award
WRIGHT·PATIERSON AFB Air Force Colonel Jimmie D. Caldwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Cald·
well, I~ First Ave., Gallipolis, has
been presented with the Legion of
Merit.
The colonel, who is chief of the
Electronic Defensive Division,
Foreign Technology Division here,
received the decoration for exceptionally meritorious conduct in
-the performance of outstanding ser·
vice at Richards-Gebaur Air Force
Base, Mirrousi, and Scott Air Force
Base, Illinois, from September 15,
1975 to June 30,1 979.
During this period, the 1950
graduate of Gallipolis' Gallia
Academy High School served as
assistant deputy chief of staff for
Personnel for Headquarters, Air
Force Communica tions Command.
11
In this important assignment,"
the citation accomJl!lnying his
award reads, "the leadership, exemplary foresight, and ceaseless ef·
forts consistently demonstrated by
Col. Caldwell resulted in significant
contributions to the effectiveness
and success of Air Force personnel
programs. His ability to manage
human resources not only ef·

fectively matched person to job, but
also resulted in significant dollar
savings to the government."
The veteran Air Force officer and
master navigator earned his com·
mission as a second lieutenant
through the Air Force Reserve Of.
ficer Training Corps program at
Ohio University, at Athens .in 1954,
concurrent with his Bachelor of
Science Degree in Education. He
also holds a master of Arts Degree in
International Relations which he
received through the University of
Arkansas' West Germany Ex·
tension, at Wiesbaden Air Base, in
1974.
He is married to the former Miss
Jane Peterson, daughter of retired

Will enforce 'No loitering' law
POMEROY . Effective immediately the " no loitering" law will
be enforced Pomeroy Police Chief
Charles Mckinney warned Saturday.
There is to be 110 loitering on the ·

REBECCA EDWARDS

.

parking lot at any' tune. Anyone
caught sitting in vehicles or standing
around will be picked up .
The police department will patrol
ti1e area particularly the lower lot.

COL. J . D. CAWWELL
,'~

Air F orce Lt. Col. a nd Mrs . Robert
B. Bean, of San Antonio , Texas .

Soviet troops
'digging in'
NEW DELHI, India (AP)- Soviet
troops are reported digging in on the
northern a nd western flanks of
Kabul, the Afghan capital , to face an
ex pected new offensive from
Moslem rebels seeking to oust the
Kremlin 's occupation army.
·
Afghan sources and a traveler
arriving here from Afghanistan said
Friday tbe Soviet troops were
readying themselves for possible at·
tacks on key Soviet military bases
outside the capital, or on Kabul it·
self.
The Afghan traveler, who asked
not to be identified, said about 20,000
insurgents from the provincial
guerrilla strongholds of Bamian and
Wardhak, in central Afghanistan,
had massed in the Paghman moun·
tains about 13 miles west of Kabul.
. He said skirmishes with Russian
troops had begun and that Kabul
residents could hear exchanges of
fire.
Another traveler, who identified
himself only as an Indian student,
said that while in Kabul he had
heard distant artillery fire for two or
three hours during each of the past
three days.
The travelers said l{abul's state ·
television had explained that the
" loud reports" · heard outside the
city were from "ilonnal ·target
shooting practice" by military units.

�.
.......................,/ ............... , .. . _ . .... , ... _ _ _.,, ..

A·2-ThP Sundav Times-5entinel,l'nnnav, June 8, 1980

~unbaJl

junbau 1!'imes- jenthtcl

·

Published every ~Wlday b)' The Oho Valfey PubUshing C&lt;l.- Mllitimedla, lnc.
, ~ttera of !'Puuoo are welcomed. They sOOu ld be less than 300 words 10011 (or subject to reduclioo ~y the editor) and must be signed with Lhe signee'.s address . Names ma y be withheld upon
publi~atJ~. However, on request, name! wiU br disclosed. Letters should be in good Lute, ad-

dressmg lSSUes, not personalities.

GAlLIPOLIS
DAILV mmUNE

,

~Third

C\..IA'RLE~,

Ave., GallipoW, Ohio 45631.
.
Published every weekda y eventns excrpt Saturday. Second Class Postage Paid at Gallipolis
Ohio45631.
'
11iE DAILY SENriNEL
ll l Court St.. P~eruy. 0 . -45789 . Published every week day J!W~ning except Saturday. Entered
as secoru:l ciHSS lJUiding matter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.
By earner daily and Sunday
per week. Motor route 14.40 per month.
MAIL
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The Gallipolis Daily Tribune in Ohio and Wellt VIrginia ooeyear $33.00; ~o~b: months $17.50; three
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creditetl to the newspaper and alJo the local news published herein.

"'t'ELL. ME
ABOUi THE

WELl., MIJ BOI,l,
TilE~

GOOOOL.D

n.oo

OAIJS •••

WERE 10

\JEI\'K£3 AGO. WE
\-tAO BIG CARS AN '
OlEA? GAS.

~, ~~~·--m·-

:O hio Congressmen:
how they voted
Here is how OhiG Congressmen voted on key issues this
week: On extending the national debt limit (passed 208- 198): Republicans for: None.
Republicans against: Ashbrook, Brown, Devine,
Gradison, Guyer, Harsha, Kindness, Latta, Miller,
Regula , Stanton, Williams, Wylie.
Democrats for : Ashley, Hall, Luken, Pease, Oakar,
Seiberling, Stokes, Vanik. ·
Democrats against : Applegate, MottL
On disapproving President Carter's oil import fee
(passed 376-30) : Republicans for : Ashbrook, Brown,
Devine, Gradison, Guyer, Harsha, Kindness, Latta,
Miller, Regula, Stanton, Williams, Wylie.
Republicans against: None.
Democrats for: Applegate, Hall, Luken, Mottl, Pease,
Oakar, Seiberling, Stokes.
Democrats against : Ashley, Vanik.

....
-.
..

To override presidential veto (passed 335-34)
Republicans for: Ashbrook, Brown, Devine, Gradison,
Guyer, Harsha, Kindness, Latta, Miller, Regula, Stanton,
Wylie.
...·.· · Williams,
against: None .
.. Republicans
Democrats for: Applegate, Hall, Luken, Mottl, Pease,
.. Oakar, Seiberling, Stokes.
Democrats against: Ashley, Vanik.
• Foreign aid authorization (passed 221-147):
·· _· Republicans for: Gradison, Stanton.
Republicans against : Ashbrook, Brown, Devine, Guyer,
Kindness, Latta, Miller, Regula, Williams, Wylie.
Democrats for: Ashley, Hall, Luken, Pease, Seiberling,
Vanik.
Democrats against: Applegate, Mottl, Oakar.
';:: Not voting: Harsha, Stokes.
::: Broomfield amendment to foreign aid authorizatin:
:::·Republicans for: Ashbrook, Brown, Devine, Gradison,
:: ::GuS'er, Kindness, Latta, Miller, Regula, Stanton,
• Williams, Wylie.
Republicans against: None.
Democrats for : Applegate, Luken, Mottl.
Democrats against: Ashley, Hall, Oakar, Pease,
Seiberling, Vanik.
Not voting: Harsha, Stokes.

~Today

in history.

Today is Sunday, June 8, the !60th
;day of 1980. There are 200 days left in
·the year.
: Today's highlight in history:
: On June 8, 1965, U.S. troops were
;authorized to engage in offensive
·operations in Vietnam.
: . On this date:
: In 632, the founder of the Moslem
;religion, Mohammed, died.
• In !861, Tennessee seceded from
~eunion.

: : In 1953, the U.S. Supreme Court
)'uled that restaurants in the District
'Ill Columbia could not refuse to ser:V.e blacks.
• In 1963, James Earl Ray, who was

• •

London.
Ten years ago: Troops loyal to
Jordan 's King Hussein were fighting
Palestinian guerrillas who wanted
unrestricted freedom to use Jordan
as a base for action against Israel.
Five years ago: The North Viet·
namese national assembly urged
that Hanoi be made the capital of a
reunited Vietnam.
Last year: Thailand's army repor·
tedly forced back across the border
as many as 7,000 Cambodians who
had fled warfare in their country.
under indictment in the
assassinati on of civil rights leader
Martin Luther King, was arrested in

•••.

..
•

.·.·::
•

::
.'
'.·
' :.

.
..

Economic encouragement for Americans
NEW YORK (AP ) - Rarely does
the ordinary American get much
economic encouragement any more
because, it seems, when the news
turns bad it tends to be very, very
bad, smothering the good news with
it.
But there is good news, if you look
lor it.
- Horticulturists tell .us, for example, that backyard fanners can cut
$25 to $100, and in some instances
much more, if they don't put a price
on ther own labor.
Says Ricardo Gomez, an
Agriculture Department hor·
ticulturist, " If you don't count your
labor, you'll probably get back $5 to
$10 for every dollar spent on a garden."
- A system that helps you to build
savings is beginning to make head-

way. Under the system, various
shops give cash discounts that are
applied to a customer's savings account at the local savings and loan
association.
The idea seems to have developed
simultaneously in several parts of

are available because of refinemen·
Is in the heat pump.

During winter the pwnps, which
draw warmth from the ai r for home
heating (and heat from house hold
air for sununcr cooling), have been
of little use in northern tier states.

Business mirror
the country as a way to serve three
needs: the need of shops for sales,
the need of Sx Ls for funds , and the
need of customers for savings.
- Homeowners, especially those
with access to a water well, are get·
ling good news about heating and air
conditioning. Big savings, it is said,

Now, however, the pumps are
making their way north, drawing
their energy from well water, which
seldom dips below 40 degrees even
during the coldest winter days m the
nation 's coldest cities.
Some pump manufa cturers contend the pumps can cut heating costs

..

by well over 50 percent, and that in
some instances a fuel oil bill that
was $1,500 before conversion could
be reduced to less than $500.
Insta llation costs range from
$2,000 to $4,000, but the cost of
drilling a well, if none exists, might
add another $2,000 or more.
- Spea king of homes, the National
Association of Home lluilders points
to something that some potential
homebuyers might have overlooked.
" Now," it says, His a good time to
buy a home."
Michael Su michrast, NAHB
economist, says lj prices are starting
to leve l off and will continue to uo so
during the next six or seven months
before they head up again. " And interest rates, the NAHB seems to
suggest, might not get much lower
before they too tend to rise.

Will. ..
(Continued from pageA· O

based on five cents a mile with a
rninirnwn charge ol25 centS. Senior
citizens and handicapped persons
will receive a 50 percent discount on
the regular adult fare.
· Bus schedules wil be ,posted in

Non-commercial trailers may get reprieve

"Well, 1•m ell sei for our hike In the country to
get back to nature/'
f·

several locations including the
Senior Citizens Center and the ,Community Mental Health Center. The
service has been reinstated through
the cooperative efforts of the Meigs
Countyh Commissioners and AOR·
TA Board of Trustees, Charlene
Hoeflich, Meigs member.

TllefoUowtq ICbedale will be followed:
Pemeroy to AUteu

I Mooday·Frtdoy I

COLUMMBUS, Ohio (AP) Owners of non-&lt;:ommercial trailers
may get a reprieve, in full or in part,
from a $Ia license fee hike the
Legislature approved accidentally
late last year.
Sen . Kenneth R. Cox, D·
Barberton, says he is introducing
this week a bill " lowering the fee to a
reasonable leveL"
Cox filed his measure in the
clerk's office last week, and it was
up for introduction today as the
Senate and House reconvened after
a siT.-week primary election campaign recess.

Last December, the Ia wmakers
approved a measure that hiked auto,
truck, and motorcycle fees - from
$10 to $20 in the case of autos - but
they accidentally included privately
owned trailers in a nat, $Ia hike they
imposed on trucks.
When the error was discovered,
Rep. Dale Locker, D-Anna, in·
troduced and won approval of a bill
repealing the boost for trailers.
However, Gov. James A. Rhodes,
citing technical Haws in the way
refunds would be given to persons
who already had registered their

vehicles, vetoed it.
Rhodes said he supports canceling
the trailer increase and will sign a
bill that corrects the technical flaws
in Locker's measure.
Cox said he wasn't sure the veto
was needed, but decided to offer his
proposal in an effort to help some
trailer owners this summer.
He said the higher license fee,
al ong with rising gasoline and other
prices, may mean some Ohioans are
not getting to use their recreational
and other trailers this summer.
The senator said "thi s bill is to
benefit only those who use their

trailers not for profit, and those
wishing to take advantage of the
lower fees must swear that the
trailer is for their own private use ."
His measure, as introduced, would
repeal all of the $Ia hike. Owners
who already registered their
vehicles would get refunds when the
registered them the following.year. ·
However, the Bureau of MotoF
Vehicles reportedly is pushing an
amendment that would repeal only
$10 of the boost, leaving $5 of the increase intact.

said that his age makes no dJf.
ference in how he would perform as
the nation's chief executive.
Five percent said Reagan's age
would make him a better president
and 2 percent were not sure in the
poll conducted May 28-30.
Reagan campaigned hard during
the primaries to help push aside any
concerns about his age and his
ability to work hard in the Oval Office. Obviously, that effort succeeded to some degree.
Of course, in a presidential cam-

paign that has already seen major
swings in public opinion, these at·
titudes can change. The five months
remaining until the general election
might be marked by an incident that
raises the "age issue" once again
and makes it important in the
voters' minds.

As of now, Reagan can take some
comfort - and Carter face some
more concern - from a deeper
analysis of the poll results as welL
The concern about his age is higher
among Democrats than among
either independents or Republicans.
Twenty-seven percent of Carter's
party rank and file say Reagan is too
old, while 67 percent say it makes·no
difference.
That compares to only 21 percent
of the independents and 17 percent of
the GOP who are worried about his
age. Seventy-two percent of the in·
dependents and 7a percent of the
Republicans said it makes no difference .
Therefore, the two groups Reagan
hopes to do best among in November
- his own party and the in- .
dependents - are the least negative
about "the age issue."

short and brief, now concedes after a
vincely demonstrated again that the
plunge in economic indicators that it
administrative powers that seek to
"has come quicker and steeper than
we thought."
control the economy are better at
jacking it up than they are at gently
. What the administration thought
racheting it down.
was not what some government and
Spurring activity, it seems, can be
many private sector forecasters had
pretty simply achieved by any
been saying. For months they had
been warning that excesses
president willing to speed up speninevitably would lead to a severe
ding, but no administration has yet
learned how to reverse the process . correction.
Earlier this month the National
without distressing consequences.
Association of Purchasing
President Carter, who had been
Management, made up of. the
forecasting or hoping for a recession
v ·

economically wise men who control
industrial inventories, said "the
economy dropped like a rock In
May."

Its grim report revealed that "the
number of members reporting lower
production was at the highest level
since before World War II," a period
that inc ludes several severe
recessions, including that of 1974 and
!975, the worst since the Great
Depression of the 1930s.
With industrial activity slipping,
and with consumer activity slowing,

· and2ndSI.)

Arrives : Pomeroy(OidBlueand

Gray Restaurant)
Arrives : RockSprin£a ( Via Old Rt.ll: Co. Rd.:ID)

A.M.

,\.M. P.M .

P. M.

~ , 30

6:30 12:00

4:00

~ , .u

8:42 12:12

4: 12

U&lt; s,r,;

!2,2&lt;

4:24

g,O'l
9:17
9:20
9: 2'7

12:37
12':47
lV&gt;Il
12:57

4:37
4: 47

9:32

1:02

6:07

6:17

,.vrtves: Darwin
Arrives: BurUngton

6:20

6:27
6:32.

Arrives: Prattl Forit

ZANESVIlLE, Ohio (AP) - Ending the so-called " marriage tax"
would be an effective step in im·
proving the sorry state of the
economy, said an Ohio man who is
urging Congress to revise the
nation's tax structure.
Lawrence R. Gale, 61, testified in
April before the House Ways and
Means Committee in favor of a bill
that would eliminate the marriage
penalty - created in 1969 when
Congress reduced the tax rates for
single taxpayers.
Married couples, as a result, pay
more federal taxes on their com·
bined income than if their earnings
were taxed separately.
"Congress fooled the public when
that bill was passed," said Gale in
an interview late last week.
Gale, who retired last year after 38
years at Brockway Glass Co. in
Zanesville, said he isn 't sure what
Congress will ultimately do about
what he describes as a "gross
inequity."
"Well, I don 't know whether they
will do anything or not," he said. " I
think somebody introduced the bill
and then they started working on it.
But you know how those things go.
They start debating, r ev ising
changing, amending, then they set
hearings on it. Then they find out
theres' a loophole and it's not going
to do what it really is going to do."
According to Gale, a couple
making an annual income of $12,000
apiece pays a marriage penalty of

uo uo

to Pomeroy
!Moodoy·Frtdoyl

,,m

P.M.
7:00 10 :00
7: 18 ·10 :18

Leaves1Athena (GourtSt. Bus Stop )
Shade
Arrives: Pratts Fork
Arrives: Burlingham
Arrives: Darwin
Arrives: Rock Springs (Vi.a Old RL 33Co. Rd. :ID)
Arrives: PomerGy (Old Blue and
Gray Restaurant)
.

Arriveo~ :

A:~. . l~: ~

Arrl\les: Pomeroy(OldBlueand

GrayRestourant)

$576. He explained that current tax
laws require their joint income of
$24,000 to be taxed a total of $3,770. If
the incomes were taxed separately,
the total tax bill would amount to
$3,194. .
Gale explained that under the
proposed bill, married couples
would have the opti on of being taxed
as if they were single.
The feature could reduce thP
federal government's tax income by
at least $5 billion and possibly by as
much as $8 billion a year.
Gale, however, thinks that such a
provision would do wonders for the
economy which he describes as
being in a " sorry and disorganized
state."
Inflation is taking a heavy toll on
senior citizens, said Gale.
HFor example, if you're over 65,
you can get a reduction on real
estate tax. I retired last year, but I
won't be eligible for a reduction four
four more years. But I have no income, except for my pension," he
said.
Gale doesn't blame President Carter for the dark economic times
being experience across the United
States.
"This particular thing has been
corrung for a long time," Gale said.
" When he Carter ) took over, the
situation wasn't too good."
Foreign autombile imports and
rising energy costs are doing the
most damage to American workers
today, said Gale.

WASI:flNGTON (AP) The
Treasury Department has begun in·
vestigating whether Ramsey Clark
and nine othe~ Americans should be
prosecuted for violating President
Caner's travel ban to Iran, Attorney
General Benjamin R. Civiletti said
Saturday.
Civiletti said the results of the
Treasury investigation, launched at
his request, would be reviewed by
both the civil and criminal divisions
of the Justice Department for
possible prosecution under the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act.

Ghotbzadeh.

• •

leader, has said the Parliament will
decide the fate of the hostages, but
debate on the issue may not begin
before mid-swnmer.
Ghotbzadeh implied that he is
ready to fight the militant students
on the hostage issue and suggested
he would win . He claimed he is more
" in the line of the imam
(Khomeini)" Ulan the students or
anyone else.
The foreign minister's opposition
to spy trials for the hostages puts
him on an apparent crash course
with Ayatollah Mohammad
Beheshti, leader of the hard-line
Islamic Republic Party that controls
Parliament and fayors trials of the
hostages.

.

Carter cannot count on getting the-":
ballots of all those voters. John An-:
derson 's independent candidacy;
might draw well among that group •
particularly among the 17 percent
the GOP rank and file who are ·
worried about Reagan's age.
~

ct.:

0

-

I
a.

Ill
11:111:

c

i: "
Cll:

call

Beer Mugs · Wines
Fahions, Double Old
Fashions · Beer Pilsners· Bloody Marys.
Asst. decanters-ice buckets· wine racks-bar pitchers .

Where else-

Peddler's Pantry
State &amp; Third---------Gallipolis, Ohio

Asks-

Convictions under the law are
punishable by imprisonment of up to
10 years and lines of up to $50,000.
Clark, himself a former U.S. at·
torney general, and the other
Americans, including a Nobel Prizewinning biologist, attended the
"Crimes of America " conference
during the past week in Tehran.
Some of them visited the U.S. Embassy there Saturday and delivered
a box to the Iranian militants. The
Americans would not say what the
package contained.ApparenUy, no
visits were made with the American
hostages.
Three members of Clark's group
returned Friday to the United States
and the others, including Clark,
were expected to return this
weekend.
"I don't know when he's comin g
back," said Geergia Clark in New
York when asked about her
husband's tr~vel plans.
Civiletti said any actions taken
against the group would fall under
the emergency economic powers
act, which technically is ad·
ministered by the Treasury Department. Carter invoked the law on
April 17 to bar certain transfers of
money to Iran, thereby effectively
banning travel to the country.
The State Department said that
Clark's group was denied an exemption to the ban because the ad·
ministration feared the Tehran conference, which was attended by
representatives from 60 countries,
would be a "propaganda circus."

Going on Vacation?

See ourSwim Suits
Terry Rompers
Shorts Tops
&amp; Sunglasses

---etc. o

H'lilltllont l Frlgtdlllre WMI&lt;. And,....,. 0\11 to
M-1 111'10 .. Fri91dl lrt Appl laneea ll'llni... I IMI~,.
""'' lo1 ro~o~ l 5ul yow

- 1110 thlt mNnl

•

it may be many months before the;
downturn can be turned around. And:
when the turnaround comes, the:
problem might still remain.
:
That problem is now recognized as:
poor productivity, and the"
awareness of it transcends poUtlcal•
parties. Economic mtnds of every:
persuasion accept the necessity d •
Americans producing more t1. •
liciently.
•
Economic thinking of that sort,:
however, can be trampled . by
political necessity.

tm

t&gt;t&gt;ner n~r,..,- tq uon-' Frlglclal,. W"k corn..
OlliyOI'ct ayur Sit ut! od ty lor bttt Yt l.,.•
Clll 1 wiCit rtn;t of Frlg1dal,. ,t,~l ~neu l

4:S7
5:02

&amp;':ID

BOB EVANS STEAK HOUSE
DOES IT RIGHT FOR
.•
CHILDREN TOO .....
WITH THEIR OWN LITTLE
FARMER MENU .....

P.M. I P.M.

2,00
2: 18
2:2!

&amp;:30
S:.S
5:58

i·l&gt;
. : .,..

"tU ':IS
: JI

2:35

6 :00

2:311

6:M

U8

10:&lt;1

2,;1

6' 18

8:02 ll :O'.t

3 :02

6:32

3:14 11 : 14
.

3:1-4

6:44

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Refrigerator-Freezer

• Forget the mess anc lime
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Available at el&lt;tra charge.
• Keep most tq:J·Quality
mear cuts lresn anti ready
ro cook lor up to 7 days m

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thawing llecause they ne'er
Quite lreele.

There's No Place ·Like Home
For The Summer ••••• And The Fall

FRIGIDAIRE
WEEK
PRICE

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30 " Electric Range
• Clock and Minute Timer
• Full-width Storage Drawer

• Lilt·oH OVen Door

• Spiii·Saver Top
• Removable Su~ace Units

Rio Grande College and Community College,
services Gallla, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
Counties with LOW COST education within easy
commuting distance.

-

FRIGIDAIRE
WEEK
PRICE

'329

Why travel many miles from home when QUALI·
TY education is availa~le at Rio Grande with
courses and degrees offered to fit YOUR
schedule.

Heavy Duty Washer
• Big 1e lb. capacity

•

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• Exclusl~e 2·way Extra
Surging Wash Action
• Choice ol Regular. ?erma·
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• Four temperature
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PITTSBURG

- $150 per quarter tuition

260 Mi les

(Baud on 110 per credit hour tor re1iden11 of Gtllla, Jackton, M•ISJ• or
VIAton Count..l with le.. than College junior cllu atendlng.)

- Morning, Afternoon

"They're going to have to do
something right now," said Gale.
" We're ina badstateofaffairs."

Z JUST FOR I)AD

m

As George Bush found out the han!
way, that group isn't quite the faun-:
dation for success one might have:;
thought.
And Carter may face a general~
election problem much like Bush did .
in the GOP primaries - the people:
who are worried about Reagan's age:
can split their votes between:
Reagan's opponents.
:

.

uo

U5 11 '211 3,211 .6':&gt;6
Fares - ReHular Adult Fare - Based on S -~ per mile with minimum charge of $.25. Senior Citazens
and Handicap! - 50 percent ol Regular Adull Fare.

Carter might take some comfort
that a quarter of the .public . is:
worried about Reagan's age. He
probably shouldn't.

~

He is confident, however, that
Congress will be forced into taking
some kind of action.

Probe begins on Clark's trip

A~DI

A~;_~)Middl~port (ComerofMilland

Reagan's 69 years and the presidency
WASI:flNGTON (AP) - President
Carter said the other day the voters
will decide whether Ronald Reagan
is too old to be president.
Perhaps ominously for Carter's
re-election hopes, many Americans
seem to have made the decision
already. Their verdict - as of now
- is that Reagan's 69 years do not
make him too old to be president.
Thus, the " age issue" many
thought would be the biggest slum·
bling block to the former California
governor's campaign for the White
House just isn't important to the
electorate.
Only about one out of four
Americans - 23 percent - said they
thought Reagan's age makes him
less able to handle the duties of the
presidency, a recent Associated
Press-NBC News poll found .
But an overwhelming 70 percent

Leave!!: PomerGy (Old Blue and
• Gray Restaurant)
Arrives: Middleport (Comer of Mill

,vrtves: Shade
Mrives: 'Athens {Court St. Bus Stop)

..

Congress fooled public wiUt 1969 hill

(Continued from page A ·l l

Ohio perspective

NEW YORK (AP) - It's been con-

.......
..
.' .
'..•
.,•
•:

Country •• •

Economic control: how to reverse the process?.

·:
:·

representative to the Southern High
School Student Council. Miss Ihle is
the daughter of Edward and Doris
(Contmued from page A·l)
!hie of Racine. She plans to pursue a
in manufacturing and will be career in accounting.
Rebecca Edwards, daughter of
enro.lled in the manufacturing
Pearl
Edwards, Long Bottom, is
technology program.
Eastern
High School's recipient.
Connie Louise Holley graduated
Miss
Edwards
was a three year
second in her class at North Gallia
member
of
the
National Honor
High School. Daughter of V. Eugene
Society
and
graduated
second in her
and Patricia Holley of Vinton, she
61
member
class.
She
also was the
plans to major in business
editor-in-ehief
of
the
school
annual
management at Rio Grande. At Norand
a
member
of
the
Eastern
High
th Gallia High School, Miss Holley
School
Band.
Her
civic
activities
in·
served as president of the National
eluded
4-H,
the
Meigs
County
Junior
Honor Society and vice pesident of
the leadership council and Library Fair Board and volunteer servil'Cs
Club. She competed on the North for the Chester Volunteer Fire
Gallia women's volleyball and soft· Department. She plans a career in
ball teams and was the school 's education after graduation from Rio
Grande .
.- basketball statistician lor two years.
Jennell Kelly, daughter of Thomas
Miss Holley was reco~nized bv the
Kelly, Sr., 683 Chestnut Street,
L.
Gallipolis Business and Professional
Middleport,
is the Meigs High
Women's Club as December Girl of
school's
honoree.
Miss Kelly , who
the Month.
plans
to
major
in elementary
Southwestern Hi gh :School 'S
education,
graduated
fourth in her
recipient is Teresa Neal, who was
!90
member
class.
She
was a memsecond in her class with a 3.9 out of
ber
of
the
National
Honor
Society
4.0 grade point average. Daughter of
and
the
Yearbook
staff
during
her
. Richard and Joyce Neal, Patriot,
high
school
tenure.
Involved
in
com·
s he plans to pursu e a
munity activities, Miss Kelly
degree in accounting at Rio Grande.
teaches Sunday School at the United
In high school, Miss Neal served as
Pentecostal Church.
president of the student council,
Other Rio Grande College and
trea s urer of the Future
Community College District
Homemakers of America and was a
Scholarship winners included Karen
member of the scholarship team.
A. Baker, Wellston; Robert C.
She also took part in many civic acMoses, Oak Hill, and Marla Britt,
tivities and has participated in can·
Jackson.
cer and heart society lund drives.
There were no qualified applicants
Jayne Simpkins, daughter of Carl
for the scholarship this year from
and Barbara Simpkins, is Gallia
Vinton County or from Hannan
Academy's recipient. Miss Simpkins
Trace.
graduated eighth in her 210 member
~·· - class with a grade point average of
;· ~ 3.93 on a 4.0 scale. Her school activities included the National Honor
'
: Society, Tri·Hi·Y, Volunteens, band,
":....... choir, Future Teachers of America ,
the junior classical league, and var·
(Continued from page A·l &gt;
sity cheerleader. Miss Simpkins was
also a !979 delegates to Buckeye
There' ll be workshops.
Girls State. The current Gallia Coun·
Kenny Sidle, Newark, Ohio, fiv e.. ty Junior Miss, Simpkins was the time Ohio champion, two-time West
. second runner-up in the Ohio Junior Virginia champion, t~ee-time Pen·
: Miss pageant.
nsylvania champion wrll be a spec1al
In her spare time, Miss Simpkins guest for the kickoff and will have a
works for the Gallia County
workshop. He's been in the top ten
· Emergency Squad. She plans to pur·
grand masters at Nashville twice
sue a degree in Elementary
and is trying for his third time; he 's
Education at Rio Grande.
a recording artist with the Country
, Melissa Ihle is Southern Local
Cavalcade Staff band from Colum·
• High School's recipient. !hie
bus , and is a Wheeling Jamboree
: graduated second in her 72 member
star.
class. She was involved in the
Troy Herdman and his Rhytlun
. • National Honor Society, French
Guitar will be another guest at
Club, scholarship team and yearkickoff and will have a workshop.
. book staff. She also served as a

••

eqrimts- jttditttl

...

• t• · ·-

Seven .. .

Opinions and Comments

.

- · ~

..

'

eCOLUMBUS
92 Milee

and Evening Classes.

- Approved for Veterans Benefits

FRIGIDAIRE
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PRICE

VINTON

co.

Registration Date•
JUNE 9 (First Summer Term}
JULY 14 (Second Summer Term)
SEPT. 8 (Fall Quarter}

JACKSON

• CINCINNATI

co.

BAKER FURNITURE

162 Miles

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•LEXINGTON
181 Mi les

OPEN 9 til 5
• CHARLESTON

a. Miles

•

CALl. 992-3307 FOI

APPT.

�-

--

---

.- . .

Beat•••

I
I
I

By Bob Hoeflich

..

a part of the cultural heritage of
West Virignia.

pleaded not guilty to charges of DWJ
and leaving the scene of an accidl'l't.
Bond was set at $2,000-case continued.
Eleven other cases were ter·
minated in Judge James A. Ben·
nett's Court Friday.

Tomado hits eastern Ohio
By Tbe Associated Press
A tornado blew down a number of
trees, power lines and rural
buildings in eastern Ohio Friday
ni~ht. But authorities say it caused
no serious injuries before breaking
up into rain showers over south·
western Pennsylvania.
Two children suffered minor cuts
and bruises when their Carroll County mobile home was demolished by
the winds. Several unoccupied
buildings near the residence were
also damaged.
The tornado then spun through
Jefferson CoWll)' at around 8 p.m. A

" An evening with Bob and Hazel
Ginther" will be held Friday
evening at the Ohio State Student
Union ballroom, 1739 N. High St.,
Columbus.
The affair honors the former Middleport couple with Ginther retiring
from his position as band director at
Upper Arlin gton High. ·Local
residents are invited and if you need
any details, give us a ring. We'll help
if we can.
Who turned on the rain machine?
You keep smiling.

farmer told the county sheriff's of·
fice he saw the tornado pass along a
ridge, uprooting trees amid a cloud
of flying debris.

The Pomeroy National Bank took
on its new name a few days ago,
Bank One of Pomeroy, NA. Several
people have asked what the NA
means. Well, that means " National
Associaiton.''

. ..

Mildred Gaul, Chester area
business woman, is hopping a bout on
crutches these days waiting for
broken bones in the top of one of her
feet to knit. Mildred feU down some
steps at home splintering the bones.
She cheerfully ad libs that she's glad
it didn't happen on alumni reunion
night. Now what does that mean?

native
spending
.
summer at Gallipolis church.

"
Harry F. Follett, 52, Gallipolis,
Forfeiting $35 on a charge of di)lor·
and Michael Barcus, 31, Gallipolis, . derly conduct was Virgil Mad!'en,
were each fined $300 plus six month
Gallipolis.
Alice S. Agers, 25, Bidwell, was
sentences, all but 10 days suspended,
fined$15 on a charge of no opera!Qr's
. on charges of DWI.
Fined $25 plus a six month suspenlicense.
ded sentence on a charge of no
James Shaver, 31, Gallipolis, was
operator's license was Steven D.
t'l.ned $15 on a charge of no motorMullins, 21, Gallipolis.
cycle endorsement.
Charles C. Caldwell, 22, Northup,
Forfeiting bond on charges of=ft..
forfeited $193.60 on charges of
cessive speed were •Sara "'E:
operating an overweight vehicle and
Spurlock, 42, Gallipolis, $32; Clw:1ii.
failure to carry emergency equipL. Howard, 32, Gallipolis, $15; i&amp;l;
menton a conunercial tractor.
James E. Perry, 23, Gallipolis,$1.11;:::

--

east bound auto operated by John
Jones, 35, Gallipolis, passed off the
right side of the roadway and struck
a pole.
Jones and a passenger, Joseph
Jones, age 9, Gallipolis, displayed

visible signs of injury and were transported to Holzer Medical Center tor
treatment.
The vehicle was demolished. No
citation was issued.

GALUPOLIS - Last rites for
Phillip Call , 38, have been announced by Waugb-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home. The fW1era1 services
will be 1 p.m. Monday at King's
Chapel Church, with burial in old
Minersville Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 3-5 and
7-9 p.m . today.

u
·
n•

m
·

-

I

Penngfare

I

Everett W. Nibert
PT. PLEASANT Everett
William Nibert , 54, Qelaware, Ohio,
,w dead on arrival tJus morning at
Pleasant. Valley Hospital where he
.was taken after being stricken ill at
the home of relatives in Mason County.
He was born Feb. 14, 1926, at
Gallipolli Ferry. His mother, Mary
Persinger Nibert, preceded hlm in
death.
Surviving are his wife, Dora; five
daughters , Pameia Stover and
Christine Nibert, Apple Grove ,
Sharon Martin , Columbus, Ohio,
Janet Holley, Ashton, and Emellen
Nibert, Delaware; two sons, Ricky
and Steve Nibert, both of Apple
Grove ; two sisters, Mrs. Cora Price
and Mrs. Norma Belle Nibert,
Gallipolis Ferry; two brothers,
Marshall of Columbus and Edward
of Delaware; and seven grandchUdren.
The body will be taken from the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home to the
Bennett-Brown Funeral Home at
Delaware,
Ohio.
Funeral
arrangements will be annoWJced .

RETAILS EffECTIVE THRU SAT., JUNE 14, 1910. Wtr~tt..rl...tltll•lll9-"'tt1MOIIII111-I~thif.,, "-NIII11 ...1ttl. .... r..,...aw.lwt~.,hiotll'fefl,

WE AT PENNYFARE WISH TO EXTEND OUR WARMEST WISHES TO ALL FATHERS EVERYWHERE FOR A

HAPPY FA THEB 'S DAY- June zs, Z911tl:

Louise Hall of S. Third Ave., Mid·
dleport, is more than pleased that
her quilt block - a replica of the now
non-existent train depot at Hartford,
W. Va . - made it at the Belmont
Quilt Show, near St. Marys.
On display at the show was the
train quilt which was put together
for inclusion in the train festival
planned for next year. The blocks
were submitted from all over West
Virginia and Ohio - a total of 24
being used in the quilt which was
assembled by the Pleasant County
Quilt Club.
It was required that a block had to
carry out the railroad theme and
Mrs. Hall chose the Hartford depot
for her entry which was accepted for
the quilt. The quilt will be placed in a
museum in Charleston for display as

-·.. ..·..

.·.
.· .

Minnie Wheatcraft
PT. PLEASANT - Minnie Wheat·
craft, 99, 312 Second St., Point!
Pleasant, died Friday at6 :30 p.m. int
Pleasant Valley Hospital following a,
short illness.
She was born Feb. 18, 1881, a
daughter of the late Charles Elliott ,
and Alvlra Hinzman Thomas, and
attended the Church of Christ in
Christian
Union
at
South
Bloomingville, Ohio.
Her husband, Rupert Wheatcr4ft,
died in 1988.
Survlvers
include
three
daughters, Mrs. Mary Ellen Defflnbaugh , Belle, Mrs. Barbara
Howard, Ronceverte , and Mrs .
. • .Flora Edna Dowell, Leon ; six sons,
Ernest and J .D., both of Leon,
Dorman of VIne Grove, Ky., Hansel
of Cottageville, Leo of McArthur,
Ohio and Cleo of Washington
Courthouse, Ohio; three sisters,
Mrs. Lorna Jones, Sissonville, Mrs.
Freda Coleman, Kenne, and Mrs.
Frances Adkins, Poca ; one brother,
Walter Thomas, Paradise, WV ; 35
grandchildren ,
38
greatgrandchildren and four great-greatgrandchildren.
Services will be held Monday at
1:30 p.m . at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with the Rev. Okey Cart officiating . Burial will be in the Leon
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 4 p.m . today .

· · Scout canip
will open
this summer
HUNTINGTON - The Tri.State
• . · Area Council of the Boy Scouts of
America reports that Camp
Arrowhead, located on Blue Sulphur
Road, Ona, W. V•., will be open
again this summer for the Scouts
and Scouters of the Tri.State Area.
The programs will include a threeweek camping season for Boy
Scouts, ages 11-18, and a three-week
camping season for Cub Scouts, ages

aiG''oN'E CUP.... 68c jH0io"FAR'fcoR'N ~!~· 29c
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ZIPLOC FREEZER BAGS • "·"·"'•· $1,08 THOROFARESWEET RELISH "·••.Jo• 38'
WET ONES ••••••• ,.,,.,,.»..,•• 68' THOROFARESALAD MUSTARD"·'·••·'"' 5'

18

TOPPING MIX •••••• , •• , l·or. lor

SURE
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$112!.g SWITZER

Quart lot.

LICORICE OR CHEIU liTIS 20-or. Pkg.

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0:: HOTDOGS ltt.oriHf ••••••• •••• • 1-lt~.Pk•· ' ' · ' '
JUMIO IUF FlANKS • • , • , • , • , •• 1-UI&lt;g. 'I.St
.·' SMOKED HAM SLICES ... , .......n-oo.JIIog. 11,tt
SliCED LUNCH MEATS 1v... ... , ••• n .......,. 11,U
.SLICED lACON,, •• •• , •• ,,. ,., .1-II.JIIo 1. 1Ut
GE~IUI.IEKULIASST .............. , 11. 1 1,19

...
2 :Ac
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DINNERIELL
WIENERSt..... luoo11••,.,,,., ••• 1-I~· "'•· 'I,U
BEEF WIENERS ...... To••lho , , • , , , • 1-1~. Pig 'I.U
RING IOLOGNA,.olnorGorlk .,., •• ,.,. 10. 11,U
liNG LIVER •••••• ••••••••••••••• 1r.. 'I.Jt
SLICED LUNCH MEATS v!•., ... , • , • ,1-1~. "'•· 11,U
suao lACON ...... n.1,1 • • •••••• • 1-11. "'•'.l.n

DINNIRIILL

Kielbasa or
Smoked Sausage

$

69

-

IHO.
During camp, boys and their
leaders will participate in such
Scouting activities as hiking,
canoeing, riflery, archery, nature,
etc. Special evening activities include campfires, chapel services,
movies, etc.
For the Cub Scouts the activities
will happen from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
.·· . a dally basis.
.. . For more information on any fi
the. programs contact your unit
1 1' I '
leader, or call the Boy Scout office,
, l • I 523-3408.
,, • 1 ..
As based upon the Scouting creed,
the Tri.Stilte Area Councl camps are
• . . open to all YC\1/th and their leaders
.. ·• · regardless of race, religion, creed,
or national origin.

.
SALAD OIL .. u.... ao•.98

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THOIOIAII

fLORIDA TINDER

U.S, No. 1 SIZE

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SWEET CORN
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I '

;..!•

!

..:. .

TRAINS COlLIDE

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) : - A
freight train and an. express
· !~,.,~.,' passenger 'train collided near
, • Kayseri in central Turkey on Satur~; •1 day, killing at least 16 persons, of·
: '
ficlals said.
~ r1 The accident occurred in the
• ~
Tuzhlsar area of the Kayseri.Sivas
~
.~.
, railroad route.
~ ,::' Eight of the victims were
, .' rallwaymen and .the others were
1
passengers, officials said.
, , , Authorities rushed rescue officials
·
' · to the site of acciderJt.
~

.

FARM FRESH PRODUCE

· -;..

.. -....
..i•,•..'

Pearl V. Cheesebrew

. ...

ORTEGA TACO KIT •• •• •• ,.......,. 88'
SMUCKER'S GRAPE JELLY •• 11-oLJoi 59'

..

'i'

Edward C. Jeffers

PT . PLEASANT Edward
Clayton Jeffers, 54, Southside, was
dead on arrival at 2 a.m. Saturday
GALUPoLIS - Seminarian John
Master's, is ordained into the
During his stay at St. Peter's
after suffering an apparent heartatAllen Donnelly, Cincinnati, will be Deaconate.
lack .
•
spending 10 weeks, ending August
• After a training time of from six
Episcopal in Gallipolis, Donnelly
Mr. Jeffers was born June 'n, 1925,
10, with St. Peter's Episcopal months to a year, be can be ordained
will be involved with Christian
at Southside and is the son of James
Parish, Gallipolis. He is currently a
priest. The overall process may take
Education within the parish. He will
(Ped) and Sarah Chapman Jeffers
student at the Virginia Theological five or six years. Donnelly has three
help with the June 16 through June
of Southside. He worked for Quality
Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia, and one-half years effort toward his
20 joint Presbyterian, Episcopalian
Builders of Point Pleasant as a
and Is there with the Parish Intern goal.
Vacation Bible School; the senior
carpenter and was a member of
Program, also called the Deacon InHe was born and raised in Cinhigh youth group of the church, do
CITATIONS ISSUED
Harmony Baptist Church at
training Program.
cinnati, attended the University of
pastoral calling, and will be
GALUPOUS _ Seven citations
Southside.
To be an Episcolpallan
Cincinnati, where he graduated with
assisting with Sunday morning worwere issued Friday by Gallipolis
Surviving, in addition to . his
Seminarian requires an un- a B.A. in History and a B. s . in
shipservices.
JOHNALLENDONNEU.Y
CityPolice.Citedwere:
pafrfenls.arehiswjle. MamieHudson
dergraduate degree, and the person Secondary Education in 1976. From
Donnelly is particularly interested
l
Je ers ; four daughters,
Ricky Waters
, 20, Ga 11ipolis
·,
· Mrs.
must go through a selection process 1976 to 1978 he worked as regional
in community service, as related to
criminal damaging and disorderly
Norma A. Newell and Mary, Shirley
within the Episcopalian Church to youth coordinator for the Episcopal
small church concerns, or problems,
conduct; Henry Howell, Gallipolis,
and Brenda L. Jeffers, aU of
detennine the personal capabilities Diocese of Southern Ohio and was a
and considers his work to be
He· will meet with St. Peter 's
Southside;
two sons, Clifford E. and
menacing; William Saxon, 22, Bidp 1
for ministry.
staff person for the Appalachian
portanlin bw'ldingrelationshj'psbetVestry at their JW1e 10 meeting,
au
David
Jeffers, both of
wei1, open container; Roger MeSo hs d
After approval by a local parish, People's Service Organization, Inc .
ween Christ and the par15
• h. He 1·s a
where there will be exploration and
lli
lis
ut
I
e;
two
sisters, Mrs . Helen
Clelland, 23, Ga ·po · , open con·
Sh II
and the Diocese, the Seminarian He is currently servin_g· as Student
self-confessed " workaholic" , a
discussion rt ideas where the
Cl
de
H
N
rth
u
•
Southside
and Mrs. Betty
o up,
tainer;
y
ens1y,
0 unn, 0 enver, Colo. ; three
does graduate studies in theology Body President at the Virginia
quality which will benefit him hlS
'
Seminarian
may
be
of
benefit
to
St.
·
OWl; and, Gerald Fellure, 38,
and after graduation for his Theological Seminary.
effforts to attain his goal.
Peter's, and to ~elf.
brothers, Perry C., Richard W. and
---------;--------....:..---------------------------------G:.a::l:lipo:.::::li:s,~D:_:W~I::_._· - - - - - - - , Robert Jeffers, all of Southside; and
five grandchildren.
Services will be held Tuesday at
1:30 p.m . at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
by the Rev. Fred McCallister. Burial
will follow in the Harmony
Cemetery at Southside.
Friends may call at the fWleral
home after 6 p.m. Monday.

.

GALUPOUS - Two persons
were injured during a one-vehicle
accident investigated Friday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on Raccoon
Rd,, at 5:35p.m ., officers report an

Phillip Call

.

Two person~ injured in accidents

The annual Gaul Family Reunion
will be held at the conununity park
in Tipton, Ia., on June 15.
It is for the family of the late
George and Lucy Pfarr Gaul who
left Meigs County and moved to
Iowa in the early 1900s. Locally,
those who are family members are
the descendants of Jacob and Clara
Castie Gaul and there are quite a
few of them here, some of which will
be attending the reunion according
to present plans.

..

Cin~innati

~

Preliminary hearing set for forgery suspect
GALUPOLIS - Charged with
forgery, a preliminary hearing for
Ruth Ann Bosley, Gallipolis, was. set
for June 10 in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday. Bond was set at $5,500.
Debra L. Isaac, 21, Gallipolis,

Of the Bend

The annual Big Bend Regatta
Weekend is moving in faster than
you might realize.
This year's ·program will pay
tribute to the late Bill Mayer, the
late N. W. Compton and the late
Wesley Buehl.
The frog ball, a feature a few
years back, will be revived this year
and there will be the usual round of
activities including the annual
parade.
And - as lime marches right
along, the annual Meigs County Fair
is also on top of us. Premium books
for the fair are at the printers and
the fair board members are bearing
down in getting plans wrapped up
for that event in August.

..

1

A~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, J Wle 8, 1980 .

-

.A+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, J Wle 8, 1980

19
63C·
McCORMICK MEA TTENDERIIER..
38
GARLIC BREAD •••• , ••• , •, .......,.
$2 -Jt
DA TTIME DIAPERS ••••••• , ,..,,'"

CIIUNII, OUSNID, SLICID

-.

EMPRESS PINEAPPLE.,,,,,,,. eo•

HAIOliiD l .11..1. 8oo.
UNIIAIOliiD - U7.... 1ot.
1

TAMIILLIN PliOIIN

.

~

JOHNIOll &amp; .IOHNIOli · IXTIIA AI-IlNT

. ~.: I

.

.

.

C FIANK'SIEDHOfSAUQ, ,,,, ,, •• , •• n .... lot.

77'

THOIOf AIISfUFfiD OLIVES. " ' " ,..,.... "" 6

I.

APPIAN WAY CHEESE PI~A,, ,, ••11-oo.loo 1

1.39

C l(tAnGIARDPAIME$ANCHEESE .....eo. lf.6f

THOIOfAII Non·O.Iry CIEAMII .... 11-oa.Jof 9

I'

HIAD&amp;SHOUlDusiHAMI100Lottoo1-lot,lt.69

PIT IIG.

ll-oL6 ,....

IAIIKUUAUQ ........ lot.

!.m~!~~~ .... '. ~~:··'lt•
. I-I~: a· ··

I'IIMIUM IALnNU • , •••• , lea

·.

~

.
·'

NAB.ISCO

I

-

~

.. r

'

. CALifORNIA
LA I "72" SIZE

v~,ncla Oranges •••••• tor

1c
•

8 $139

r.- . :·

-·

!'&gt;:.,.

~

~

3
9
C
Red RadIshes ••••• i.i

GAIDIN FlESH

.

I

~~

ASSOIRO FLAVORS
MI. JUICY

8 .....

Fruit Drinks • • • • • • .
Total Down Prices Save You Mone~v Everyday!!!

'

lot..

PT. PLEASANT - Services for
Pearl V. Cheesebrew, 70, 'JJTl First
Street, Point Pleasant, who died
Thursday at Pleasant Valley
Hoepital, will be conducted at 2 p.m .
Monday at Crow·HU.'Isell Funeral
Home by the Rev . Kenneth
Coleman. Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
Mrs . Cheesebrew was the
daughter of the late Orville and
Garnet Nowlin Martin.
She Is survived by her husband,
John ; step-mother, Mrs. Lllly
Martin, Eleanor: three daughters,
Mrs. Claudette Wllllams. Mrs. l.J.nda
Fulton and Mrs. Virginia DoMally,
.all of Columbus, Ohio; seven sons,
Gerald of Battle Creek, Mich., Tony
of California, Md., Tlnall of Decatur,
Ala., Sammy of C!ilumbus, John,
James and Richard, all of Point
Pleasant; ·a slater, Mrs. Hazel
Chattin, Wilt Columbia: a brother,
Wllaon Martin, Galllpolli FelT)';
three. ~tep-slaters, Mrs . Nina
. Caudill, .GalllpoUa Ferry, and Mrs.
Doris Warner and Mrs. Juanita
FeBID'e, ~!9th of Pliny; 28 grandehlldren and
seven great-

grandcblldnll.

·Friends, may call ·at

horne today.~ .

-

~ ~funeral

. ., .

�-

--

---

.- . .

Beat•••

I
I
I

By Bob Hoeflich

..

a part of the cultural heritage of
West Virignia.

pleaded not guilty to charges of DWJ
and leaving the scene of an accidl'l't.
Bond was set at $2,000-case continued.
Eleven other cases were ter·
minated in Judge James A. Ben·
nett's Court Friday.

Tomado hits eastern Ohio
By Tbe Associated Press
A tornado blew down a number of
trees, power lines and rural
buildings in eastern Ohio Friday
ni~ht. But authorities say it caused
no serious injuries before breaking
up into rain showers over south·
western Pennsylvania.
Two children suffered minor cuts
and bruises when their Carroll County mobile home was demolished by
the winds. Several unoccupied
buildings near the residence were
also damaged.
The tornado then spun through
Jefferson CoWll)' at around 8 p.m. A

" An evening with Bob and Hazel
Ginther" will be held Friday
evening at the Ohio State Student
Union ballroom, 1739 N. High St.,
Columbus.
The affair honors the former Middleport couple with Ginther retiring
from his position as band director at
Upper Arlin gton High. ·Local
residents are invited and if you need
any details, give us a ring. We'll help
if we can.
Who turned on the rain machine?
You keep smiling.

farmer told the county sheriff's of·
fice he saw the tornado pass along a
ridge, uprooting trees amid a cloud
of flying debris.

The Pomeroy National Bank took
on its new name a few days ago,
Bank One of Pomeroy, NA. Several
people have asked what the NA
means. Well, that means " National
Associaiton.''

. ..

Mildred Gaul, Chester area
business woman, is hopping a bout on
crutches these days waiting for
broken bones in the top of one of her
feet to knit. Mildred feU down some
steps at home splintering the bones.
She cheerfully ad libs that she's glad
it didn't happen on alumni reunion
night. Now what does that mean?

native
spending
.
summer at Gallipolis church.

"
Harry F. Follett, 52, Gallipolis,
Forfeiting $35 on a charge of di)lor·
and Michael Barcus, 31, Gallipolis, . derly conduct was Virgil Mad!'en,
were each fined $300 plus six month
Gallipolis.
Alice S. Agers, 25, Bidwell, was
sentences, all but 10 days suspended,
fined$15 on a charge of no opera!Qr's
. on charges of DWI.
Fined $25 plus a six month suspenlicense.
ded sentence on a charge of no
James Shaver, 31, Gallipolis, was
operator's license was Steven D.
t'l.ned $15 on a charge of no motorMullins, 21, Gallipolis.
cycle endorsement.
Charles C. Caldwell, 22, Northup,
Forfeiting bond on charges of=ft..
forfeited $193.60 on charges of
cessive speed were •Sara "'E:
operating an overweight vehicle and
Spurlock, 42, Gallipolis, $32; Clw:1ii.
failure to carry emergency equipL. Howard, 32, Gallipolis, $15; i&amp;l;
menton a conunercial tractor.
James E. Perry, 23, Gallipolis,$1.11;:::

--

east bound auto operated by John
Jones, 35, Gallipolis, passed off the
right side of the roadway and struck
a pole.
Jones and a passenger, Joseph
Jones, age 9, Gallipolis, displayed

visible signs of injury and were transported to Holzer Medical Center tor
treatment.
The vehicle was demolished. No
citation was issued.

GALUPOLIS - Last rites for
Phillip Call , 38, have been announced by Waugb-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home. The fW1era1 services
will be 1 p.m. Monday at King's
Chapel Church, with burial in old
Minersville Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 3-5 and
7-9 p.m . today.

u
·
n•

m
·

-

I

Penngfare

I

Everett W. Nibert
PT. PLEASANT Everett
William Nibert , 54, Qelaware, Ohio,
,w dead on arrival tJus morning at
Pleasant. Valley Hospital where he
.was taken after being stricken ill at
the home of relatives in Mason County.
He was born Feb. 14, 1926, at
Gallipolli Ferry. His mother, Mary
Persinger Nibert, preceded hlm in
death.
Surviving are his wife, Dora; five
daughters , Pameia Stover and
Christine Nibert, Apple Grove ,
Sharon Martin , Columbus, Ohio,
Janet Holley, Ashton, and Emellen
Nibert, Delaware; two sons, Ricky
and Steve Nibert, both of Apple
Grove ; two sisters, Mrs. Cora Price
and Mrs. Norma Belle Nibert,
Gallipolis Ferry; two brothers,
Marshall of Columbus and Edward
of Delaware; and seven grandchUdren.
The body will be taken from the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home to the
Bennett-Brown Funeral Home at
Delaware,
Ohio.
Funeral
arrangements will be annoWJced .

RETAILS EffECTIVE THRU SAT., JUNE 14, 1910. Wtr~tt..rl...tltll•lll9-"'tt1MOIIII111-I~thif.,, "-NIII11 ...1ttl. .... r..,...aw.lwt~.,hiotll'fefl,

WE AT PENNYFARE WISH TO EXTEND OUR WARMEST WISHES TO ALL FATHERS EVERYWHERE FOR A

HAPPY FA THEB 'S DAY- June zs, Z911tl:

Louise Hall of S. Third Ave., Mid·
dleport, is more than pleased that
her quilt block - a replica of the now
non-existent train depot at Hartford,
W. Va . - made it at the Belmont
Quilt Show, near St. Marys.
On display at the show was the
train quilt which was put together
for inclusion in the train festival
planned for next year. The blocks
were submitted from all over West
Virginia and Ohio - a total of 24
being used in the quilt which was
assembled by the Pleasant County
Quilt Club.
It was required that a block had to
carry out the railroad theme and
Mrs. Hall chose the Hartford depot
for her entry which was accepted for
the quilt. The quilt will be placed in a
museum in Charleston for display as

-·.. ..·..

.·.
.· .

Minnie Wheatcraft
PT. PLEASANT - Minnie Wheat·
craft, 99, 312 Second St., Point!
Pleasant, died Friday at6 :30 p.m. int
Pleasant Valley Hospital following a,
short illness.
She was born Feb. 18, 1881, a
daughter of the late Charles Elliott ,
and Alvlra Hinzman Thomas, and
attended the Church of Christ in
Christian
Union
at
South
Bloomingville, Ohio.
Her husband, Rupert Wheatcr4ft,
died in 1988.
Survlvers
include
three
daughters, Mrs. Mary Ellen Defflnbaugh , Belle, Mrs. Barbara
Howard, Ronceverte , and Mrs .
. • .Flora Edna Dowell, Leon ; six sons,
Ernest and J .D., both of Leon,
Dorman of VIne Grove, Ky., Hansel
of Cottageville, Leo of McArthur,
Ohio and Cleo of Washington
Courthouse, Ohio; three sisters,
Mrs. Lorna Jones, Sissonville, Mrs.
Freda Coleman, Kenne, and Mrs.
Frances Adkins, Poca ; one brother,
Walter Thomas, Paradise, WV ; 35
grandchildren ,
38
greatgrandchildren and four great-greatgrandchildren.
Services will be held Monday at
1:30 p.m . at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with the Rev. Okey Cart officiating . Burial will be in the Leon
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 4 p.m . today .

· · Scout canip
will open
this summer
HUNTINGTON - The Tri.State
• . · Area Council of the Boy Scouts of
America reports that Camp
Arrowhead, located on Blue Sulphur
Road, Ona, W. V•., will be open
again this summer for the Scouts
and Scouters of the Tri.State Area.
The programs will include a threeweek camping season for Boy
Scouts, ages 11-18, and a three-week
camping season for Cub Scouts, ages

aiG''oN'E CUP.... 68c jH0io"FAR'fcoR'N ~!~· 29c
0

0.

ZIPLOC FREEZER BAGS • "·"·"'•· $1,08 THOROFARESWEET RELISH "·••.Jo• 38'
WET ONES ••••••• ,.,,.,,.»..,•• 68' THOROFARESALAD MUSTARD"·'·••·'"' 5'

18

TOPPING MIX •••••• , •• , l·or. lor

SURE
·SCINTEDor UNSCfNTEO
SOLID ANTI-PERSPIRANT • , 2·or. Ctn.
LYSOL

SPlAY DISINFECTANT ..

· ·

1

t!~~!:!!.. ,......

$112!.g SWITZER

Quart lot.

LICORICE OR CHEIU liTIS 20-or. Pkg.

PURR CAT FOOD

'"•Con

TUNA PLAYOIID.,.....

~

5

*

aac -..·.-

.. ... I.I.. LCoo

'

·: HOT.OOOS ltt.MIHf ••••••• • ••••n .o•. PIII· 1,11
0:: HOTDOGS ltt.oriHf ••••••• •••• • 1-lt~.Pk•· ' ' · ' '
JUMIO IUF FlANKS • • , • , • , • , •• 1-UI&lt;g. 'I.St
.·' SMOKED HAM SLICES ... , .......n-oo.JIIog. 11,tt
SliCED LUNCH MEATS 1v... ... , ••• n .......,. 11,U
.SLICED lACON,, •• •• , •• ,,. ,., .1-II.JIIo 1. 1Ut
GE~IUI.IEKULIASST .............. , 11. 1 1,19

...
2 :Ac
.V

DINNERIELL
WIENERSt..... luoo11••,.,,,., ••• 1-I~· "'•· 'I,U
BEEF WIENERS ...... To••lho , , • , , , • 1-1~. Pig 'I.U
RING IOLOGNA,.olnorGorlk .,., •• ,.,. 10. 11,U
liNG LIVER •••••• ••••••••••••••• 1r.. 'I.Jt
SLICED LUNCH MEATS v!•., ... , • , • ,1-1~. "'•· 11,U
suao lACON ...... n.1,1 • • •••••• • 1-11. "'•'.l.n

DINNIRIILL

Kielbasa or
Smoked Sausage

$

69

-

IHO.
During camp, boys and their
leaders will participate in such
Scouting activities as hiking,
canoeing, riflery, archery, nature,
etc. Special evening activities include campfires, chapel services,
movies, etc.
For the Cub Scouts the activities
will happen from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
.·· . a dally basis.
.. . For more information on any fi
the. programs contact your unit
1 1' I '
leader, or call the Boy Scout office,
, l • I 523-3408.
,, • 1 ..
As based upon the Scouting creed,
the Tri.Stilte Area Councl camps are
• . . open to all YC\1/th and their leaders
.. ·• · regardless of race, religion, creed,
or national origin.

.
SALAD OIL .. u.... ao•.98

C

THOIOIAII

fLORIDA TINDER

U.S, No. 1 SIZE

.,:~ New Red Potatoes

SWEET CORN
~5ears89~

5·1b. Bag .

$1

'-

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. ..

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..·-...
..

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TRAINS COlLIDE

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) : - A
freight train and an. express
· !~,.,~.,' passenger 'train collided near
, • Kayseri in central Turkey on Satur~; •1 day, killing at least 16 persons, of·
: '
ficlals said.
~ r1 The accident occurred in the
• ~
Tuzhlsar area of the Kayseri.Sivas
~
.~.
, railroad route.
~ ,::' Eight of the victims were
, .' rallwaymen and .the others were
1
passengers, officials said.
, , , Authorities rushed rescue officials
·
' · to the site of acciderJt.
~

.

FARM FRESH PRODUCE

· -;..

.. -....
..i•,•..'

Pearl V. Cheesebrew

. ...

ORTEGA TACO KIT •• •• •• ,.......,. 88'
SMUCKER'S GRAPE JELLY •• 11-oLJoi 59'

..

'i'

Edward C. Jeffers

PT . PLEASANT Edward
Clayton Jeffers, 54, Southside, was
dead on arrival at 2 a.m. Saturday
GALUPoLIS - Seminarian John
Master's, is ordained into the
During his stay at St. Peter's
after suffering an apparent heartatAllen Donnelly, Cincinnati, will be Deaconate.
lack .
•
spending 10 weeks, ending August
• After a training time of from six
Episcopal in Gallipolis, Donnelly
Mr. Jeffers was born June 'n, 1925,
10, with St. Peter's Episcopal months to a year, be can be ordained
will be involved with Christian
at Southside and is the son of James
Parish, Gallipolis. He is currently a
priest. The overall process may take
Education within the parish. He will
(Ped) and Sarah Chapman Jeffers
student at the Virginia Theological five or six years. Donnelly has three
help with the June 16 through June
of Southside. He worked for Quality
Seminary in Alexandria, Virginia, and one-half years effort toward his
20 joint Presbyterian, Episcopalian
Builders of Point Pleasant as a
and Is there with the Parish Intern goal.
Vacation Bible School; the senior
carpenter and was a member of
Program, also called the Deacon InHe was born and raised in Cinhigh youth group of the church, do
CITATIONS ISSUED
Harmony Baptist Church at
training Program.
cinnati, attended the University of
pastoral calling, and will be
GALUPOUS _ Seven citations
Southside.
To be an Episcolpallan
Cincinnati, where he graduated with
assisting with Sunday morning worwere issued Friday by Gallipolis
Surviving, in addition to . his
Seminarian requires an un- a B.A. in History and a B. s . in
shipservices.
JOHNALLENDONNEU.Y
CityPolice.Citedwere:
pafrfenls.arehiswjle. MamieHudson
dergraduate degree, and the person Secondary Education in 1976. From
Donnelly is particularly interested
l
Je ers ; four daughters,
Ricky Waters
, 20, Ga 11ipolis
·,
· Mrs.
must go through a selection process 1976 to 1978 he worked as regional
in community service, as related to
criminal damaging and disorderly
Norma A. Newell and Mary, Shirley
within the Episcopalian Church to youth coordinator for the Episcopal
small church concerns, or problems,
conduct; Henry Howell, Gallipolis,
and Brenda L. Jeffers, aU of
detennine the personal capabilities Diocese of Southern Ohio and was a
and considers his work to be
He· will meet with St. Peter 's
Southside;
two sons, Clifford E. and
menacing; William Saxon, 22, Bidp 1
for ministry.
staff person for the Appalachian
portanlin bw'ldingrelationshj'psbetVestry at their JW1e 10 meeting,
au
David
Jeffers, both of
wei1, open container; Roger MeSo hs d
After approval by a local parish, People's Service Organization, Inc .
ween Christ and the par15
• h. He 1·s a
where there will be exploration and
lli
lis
ut
I
e;
two
sisters, Mrs . Helen
Clelland, 23, Ga ·po · , open con·
Sh II
and the Diocese, the Seminarian He is currently servin_g· as Student
self-confessed " workaholic" , a
discussion rt ideas where the
Cl
de
H
N
rth
u
•
Southside
and Mrs. Betty
o up,
tainer;
y
ens1y,
0 unn, 0 enver, Colo. ; three
does graduate studies in theology Body President at the Virginia
quality which will benefit him hlS
'
Seminarian
may
be
of
benefit
to
St.
·
OWl; and, Gerald Fellure, 38,
and after graduation for his Theological Seminary.
effforts to attain his goal.
Peter's, and to ~elf.
brothers, Perry C., Richard W. and
---------;--------....:..---------------------------------G:.a::l:lipo:.::::li:s,~D:_:W~I::_._· - - - - - - - , Robert Jeffers, all of Southside; and
five grandchildren.
Services will be held Tuesday at
1:30 p.m . at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
by the Rev. Fred McCallister. Burial
will follow in the Harmony
Cemetery at Southside.
Friends may call at the fWleral
home after 6 p.m. Monday.

.

GALUPOUS - Two persons
were injured during a one-vehicle
accident investigated Friday by the
Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on Raccoon
Rd,, at 5:35p.m ., officers report an

Phillip Call

.

Two person~ injured in accidents

The annual Gaul Family Reunion
will be held at the conununity park
in Tipton, Ia., on June 15.
It is for the family of the late
George and Lucy Pfarr Gaul who
left Meigs County and moved to
Iowa in the early 1900s. Locally,
those who are family members are
the descendants of Jacob and Clara
Castie Gaul and there are quite a
few of them here, some of which will
be attending the reunion according
to present plans.

..

Cin~innati

~

Preliminary hearing set for forgery suspect
GALUPOLIS - Charged with
forgery, a preliminary hearing for
Ruth Ann Bosley, Gallipolis, was. set
for June 10 in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday. Bond was set at $5,500.
Debra L. Isaac, 21, Gallipolis,

Of the Bend

The annual Big Bend Regatta
Weekend is moving in faster than
you might realize.
This year's ·program will pay
tribute to the late Bill Mayer, the
late N. W. Compton and the late
Wesley Buehl.
The frog ball, a feature a few
years back, will be revived this year
and there will be the usual round of
activities including the annual
parade.
And - as lime marches right
along, the annual Meigs County Fair
is also on top of us. Premium books
for the fair are at the printers and
the fair board members are bearing
down in getting plans wrapped up
for that event in August.

..

1

A~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, J Wle 8, 1980 .

-

.A+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, J Wle 8, 1980

19
63C·
McCORMICK MEA TTENDERIIER..
38
GARLIC BREAD •••• , ••• , •, .......,.
$2 -Jt
DA TTIME DIAPERS ••••••• , ,..,,'"

CIIUNII, OUSNID, SLICID

-.

EMPRESS PINEAPPLE.,,,,,,,. eo•

HAIOliiD l .11..1. 8oo.
UNIIAIOliiD - U7.... 1ot.
1

TAMIILLIN PliOIIN

.

~

JOHNIOll &amp; .IOHNIOli · IXTIIA AI-IlNT

. ~.: I

.

.

.

C FIANK'SIEDHOfSAUQ, ,,,, ,, •• , •• n .... lot.

77'

THOIOf AIISfUFfiD OLIVES. " ' " ,..,.... "" 6

I.

APPIAN WAY CHEESE PI~A,, ,, ••11-oo.loo 1

1.39

C l(tAnGIARDPAIME$ANCHEESE .....eo. lf.6f

THOIOfAII Non·O.Iry CIEAMII .... 11-oa.Jof 9

I'

HIAD&amp;SHOUlDusiHAMI100Lottoo1-lot,lt.69

PIT IIG.

ll-oL6 ,....

IAIIKUUAUQ ........ lot.

!.m~!~~~ .... '. ~~:··'lt•
. I-I~: a· ··

I'IIMIUM IALnNU • , •••• , lea

·.

~

.
·'

NAB.ISCO

I

-

~

.. r

'

. CALifORNIA
LA I "72" SIZE

v~,ncla Oranges •••••• tor

1c
•

8 $139

r.- . :·

-·

!'&gt;:.,.

~

~

3
9
C
Red RadIshes ••••• i.i

GAIDIN FlESH

.

I

~~

ASSOIRO FLAVORS
MI. JUICY

8 .....

Fruit Drinks • • • • • • .
Total Down Prices Save You Mone~v Everyday!!!

'

lot..

PT. PLEASANT - Services for
Pearl V. Cheesebrew, 70, 'JJTl First
Street, Point Pleasant, who died
Thursday at Pleasant Valley
Hoepital, will be conducted at 2 p.m .
Monday at Crow·HU.'Isell Funeral
Home by the Rev . Kenneth
Coleman. Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
Mrs . Cheesebrew was the
daughter of the late Orville and
Garnet Nowlin Martin.
She Is survived by her husband,
John ; step-mother, Mrs. Lllly
Martin, Eleanor: three daughters,
Mrs. Claudette Wllllams. Mrs. l.J.nda
Fulton and Mrs. Virginia DoMally,
.all of Columbus, Ohio; seven sons,
Gerald of Battle Creek, Mich., Tony
of California, Md., Tlnall of Decatur,
Ala., Sammy of C!ilumbus, John,
James and Richard, all of Point
Pleasant; ·a slater, Mrs. Hazel
Chattin, Wilt Columbia: a brother,
Wllaon Martin, Galllpolli FelT)';
three. ~tep-slaters, Mrs . Nina
. Caudill, .GalllpoUa Ferry, and Mrs.
Doris Warner and Mrs. Juanita
FeBID'e, ~!9th of Pliny; 28 grandehlldren and
seven great-

grandcblldnll.

·Friends, may call ·at

horne today.~ .

-

~ ~funeral

. ., .

�0

1\~lUC I.lWII.tO/ .&amp;U II~U ..U I \..l 1 UUJ.U.WllJ

1 u~.U.,;, '-'t

.i.oiVU

'Advisory council
~eels \\'ednesday
at Meigs High
POMEROY- On Wednesday, the
, Meigs Local Schools' Talented and
Gifted Advisory Council will meet in
the Meigs HighSchool library at 7:30
p.m.
All persons having attended
previous meetings and all others are
especially invited to attend this
meeting.
The final draft of the council.'s purposes, objectives, and structure and
· the final draft of the proposed selec. tion procedure will be shared with
the members.
The major purpose will be to
promote building level programs.
Therefore, it is vital that all
buildings in Meigs Local have
representation at this meeting.
· If you have any interest or concern
.about talented and gifted children,
:please plan to attend this meeting.
If there are questions regarding
this meeting or the TAG Program,
please contact Dan Moris, Director
of Curriculum for Meigs Local at
992-2153.

UMW leader cuts spending
Store Hours:

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SARJRDAY, JUNE 14, 1980

CHECKS PRESENTED - Bill Hubbard, right,
presented checks totaling U,200 to Janice Lawson,
clerk, at the Thursday night's Syracuse Village Council

Young man killed
ANAHEIM , Calif. (AP) - A young
· man was killed early Saturday at
Disneyland amusement park when
; he climbed from a moving car of an
: elevated train and was struck by
: another car from the opposite direc' tion, authorities said.
: Disneyland spokesman Bob Roth
: said the accident occurred at 1:30
; a .m ., during a graduation
• celebration. attended by students
; from several area schools. He said
: the accident occurred on the
~ " People Mover" ride, a slow..
: moving elevated train that provides
; a scenic tour of Tomorrow land in the
; Anaheim attraction, about 35 miles
:.south of Los Angeles.
The youth's name was withheld
. pending notification of relatives.

.: ABC-TV attorney
: to appeal decision
'

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) An attorney for ABC-TV says the
:network will appeal a federal
: judge's denial of an injuction aimed
:at gaining access to New Mexico
:State Penitentiary, site of rioting
·last February that left 33 inmates
dead.
" At no time have state authorities
ever denied access to ABC that was
.afforded other media," U.S. District
:Judge Juan Burciaga said Friday in
denying the m'otion for a
·preliminary injunction.
: The network, which wants to film
a documentary at the prison, argued
that it had been denied access afforded to other news organizations.
Network attorney Eugene Gallegos
of Santa Fe said he would appeaL

.

$ 59

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

at Disneyland Park

.l

FRANKIE
12

oz.

••

A Gallipolis Diary

WIENERS ••••••••••••••• ~~~.

GALLIPOLIS - While Peeps was
in Columbus last weekend, someone
jotted a note which read that Tiny
Cremeans called from Parkersburg.
She found the name of Solomon
Waugh In the May 18 colwnn, listing
vol1111teers to the Ohio militia in the
War of 1~12 from Gallia County. He
was her great-great-grandfather.

SAVORY

BACON•••••••••••••••••••
lB. PKG.

GRADE A WHOLE

JJ

·

FRYERS••••••••••••••••••• ~s~ .!t
Chicken Thighs ..•...••• ;~-.

$ 29

USDA CHOICE BOTTOM

ROUND ROAST.~".E~:~ ••••lf••

\

'psychiatric tests
DETROIT (AP) - Police say
psychiatric tests will be administered to a 22-yearo()ld woman
who holed up in her apartment for
three days, keeping officers at bay
with a shotgun.
A special police squad stormed the
apartment Friday and captured the
woman, identified as Rita Johnson.
Two shots rang out from the apartment during the standofC that began
Wednesday night. Neighbors said
Ms. Johnson was distraught because
her federally f,,mded job had expired.

·BANANAS ...............~~. $
GRADE A MEDIUM
$
f(i(iS ..•••••.•....•... ~~.

Gaskill guest speaker

2

~

MIDDLEPORT - Charles Gaskill
was a guest of the Middleport.Pomeroy Rotary which met Friday
night at the Heath United Methodist
Church.
, Group singing was led by Cash
l!ahr and John Werner, secretary,
presided in the absence of the
president, Jack Walker. Dinner was
•served by the ladies ofthe church.

PEANUT

NO FmE DAMAGE
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Fire
Department was called tq,. 217
Mechanic Street Friday at 7:47p.m.
· According to Charles Le!JBr, chief,
electrical entrance .cable had shorted out. There was no damage.

$}19
IVORY LIQUID ••••••••••••••
ICE CREAM,••••••••••• ~.G!;... .

JIF

FLAVORITE

BUTT~.••~.~••• ~

CHEER DETERGENT
84

oz.

•

49 COTTAGE ·CHEESE •••••2!~~.

$Jig

BORDEN'S ELSIE

DETERGENT

JACK FROST

CRISCO

SUGAR
5lB.
-

BAG

RECENT VISITORS
SYRACUSE - Recent vls,itors of
George and Alice Freeland,
Syracu.ae, were the Rev. and Mrs.
cArl Hiclta.

•

FOOD SOUGHT
ARUSHA, Tanzania (AP) - The
U.N. World Food Council issued an
appeal for emergency food aid , warning hundreds of thousands of people
in East Africa and the Sahara face
starvation.
"I have a feeling we are entering a
period of permanent food crisis in
Africa," Maurice Williams, director
general of the group, told a news
conference.
A four-day meeting of the 3&amp;country organization ended here
Friday. Tanzania is one of the countries facing a serious food shortage.

CHUCK ROAST•••••••••• ;s. •

Woman will undergo

VETERANS MEMORIAL
; Admissions--Darla Combs,
Racine; Herbert Fanns, Nelson'Ville; Nellie Price, Middleport;
Lawton Templeton, Pomeroy; Cora
tlllton, Portland.
· Discharges-Lena Maynard, Gary
Pullins, Pau~ Huston, Ida Young,
Herbert Seth, Glens Soulsby.

Peeps.

meeting. The money will be used to pay for the new
aluminum bleachers that have been placed at the hall
park.

. $}79

L.imit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
June 14, 1980

25 LB.
JAG
L.imlt 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer El(pires June 14, 1980

3 LB• .

CAN
L.i mit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
June 14, 1980

SIBYL M. TOOPS, 8580 SR 323 SE,
Mt. Sterling, Ohio 43143, was the sutr
ject of last Sunday's last paragraph
asking if anyone knew where to find
out where the Gallipolis volunteers
engaged in combat in the War of
1812, but the outfit her great-greatgrandfather joined had different
numbers. Take note of . the differences at the parenthetical insert.
Here's Sibyl's entire letter :
I am a faithful reader of your
colwnn and was pleased to see your__
Usting of men who fought in the War
of 1812 from Gallia County. My grandfather, Martin Miller, mentioned in
this list, volunteered in June, 1812,
for six months service as a private in
the 2nd battalion, 2nd regiment, 1st
brigade of the Ohio militia.
(BoDDie Sayre's llst bad tbe outfit
IIUIIlbend thUB - third division,
third regtmeut, and flnt brigade of
tbe Oblo mllltla)
He did not get into actual service
until' the 9th of August and was
discharged at the "rapids of the
Miami (or Maumee)" on the ninth ot'
February 1813. The pay for this service was six dollars and sixty-six
cents per month. When the Bounty
Land Act was passed in 1850 he
received a grant of eighty acres of
land. After his death in 1856 his
widow applied for an additional
Bounty Land grant under the Act of
11155.
I am interested in learning where
this unit saw action and what skir·
mishes they took part in. I wonder if
any of your readers have any details
of their service?
Martin Miller was born in Virginia
(?) in 1780 and was married 8 March
111M! to Margaret Smith In Kanawah
County, Virginia. (Ed. oote Kana wah is the way she spelled it).
They were parents of four
daughters : Matilda,_b.1811, married
Harrison Johnson; Mahala, b. 1812,
married Abraham Stover; Methursa, b. 1814, married Uttleton
Wooten; Melinda, b. 1817, married
John Holcomb. He is buried in
Providence Cemetery, Clay Twp. I
am interested in learning more
about him or his family and would
like to hear from any of his descendants or anyone who has any infonnation concemlng them.
I enjoy your writings very much,
especially the early history and
stories of the settlers ot: Gallia County. Sincerely,SffiYLM. TOOPS.

.~

r
'

KRA1G HANKINS, former
Gallipolis police force officer, is now
a cop in Nelsonville. About a month
ago, Kevin Kelly, who spent the
summer of 1979 toiling in the newsroom of the Sunday Times-Sentinel,

WESTMINSTER, Colo. (AP) Nine nursing home patients were
treated and one was hospitalized after being fed oven cleaner with their
breakfasts, officials said.
Emma Coykendale, 86, was reported In fair condition Friday with
severe bums of the mouth and
throat, officials said.
·
A dietary assistant who was not
Identified thoug)Jt the oven cleaner
was pancake syrup and fed it to 10
elderly patients Friday morni'l!l at
the Aspen c.re West nunlng home,
Fire Chief AI fteffel said.
The emplo)'ee was fired for !allinK
t

.

17 DIE IN CRASH
ORKNEY, South Africa (AP) At least 17 men were killed Saturday
in a predawn collision between a
trailer and a 26-ton truck carrying
gold dust, the South African Press
Association reported.
Thirteen others were reported
being treated at the West Vaal Mine
Hospital In the gthold-rich afrea about
100 miles sou west 0 Johannesburg .

'

"management
spent more
money
than
it had coming
in," Woofter
said. "So they had to sell assets."
Officials say much of the five-year
dropoff was due to the union writing
off several loans to districts and the
Anthracite Health and Welfare
Fund. In addition, the union has suffered heavy legal losses in recent

yeHrs.
·Tbe union paid over $6.1 million in
The 1979 financial statement in- salaries to its employees.
dicated that the union sought a
The union did sell fewer assets in
major loan last year, for the first
1979 than it did the previous year. In
time in recent years. The union took
1978, sales totaled $4.7 million; in
out a $1.25 million loan from the
1979, the sales totaled $2.9'million.
National Bank of Washington , of
which the union is the major
stockholder. The loan went to help
pay for the convention, said Eldon
Ca llen, the UMW's'presssecretary.
The union reportedly has paid
back about half of the loan.
Among the expenses for the con-·
vention was $57,875 for entertainment. However, union offi cials said that after Church took oflice, he cut back on entertainment.
One of the acts he cut was countrywestern singer Johnny Cash. Other
major expenditures in 1979 included
$1.3 million for international officers ' salaries and expenses.
The expenses claimed by union officials also increased greatly in 1979.
Church, who was the vice president
in 1978, claimed $22,909 in expenses
last year, compared to $14,667
claimed in 1978, in addition to his
$38,610 salary . Former UMW
President Arnold Miller claimed
....... l.o..m~ .. ib~ . . · ~
~ .... ~ ...... .,..== "-·""'-~­
$22,577 in expenses, compared to
"'
ood - ··
dvMirOII!, .. """'-,....
lnltrn..........,.
$14,339 claimed in 1978. SecretarytreasurerWillardEsselstynclaimed
TAWNEY JEWEURS
$25,270 in 1979, as compared to

"""tv

fl$;1;3,;748~th~e~y;ea~r~be~fo~re~.;;;;;;;;!~42~4~·~-~~~~~-~;;~~~~~

DINNER JUNE 18
PORTSMOUTH - The annual appredation dinner for the full membership of Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission (OVRDC) is to be held Wednesday, June
18) at s p.m. at Elks Country Club
just off Route 73 west of Portsmouth.
Commission members are to
gather at 6 p.m. for a social hour,
with the dinner scheduled to begin at
7 p.m., OVRDC officials said.

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

749 THIRD

GAlliPOLIS

Guillaume Dudur"t' one of ............,
frontiersman, excellent shot

wrote a story for the Logan Daily
News. This ttem told the story of
Hankins, 24, who took the oath from ·
Mayor Wilbur . (Dike) Mender of
Nelsonville over an early-May
weekend and started to work that
Monday. Hankins, a full-time
BY JAMES SANDS
student at Ohio University, resides
GALUPOLIS - During the first
in Athens. Kevin wrote that Haukins
two years of the settlement of
"recently resigned from the
Gallipolis, the people depended
Gallipolis Police Department, where
heavily upon wild game. Much of the
he was a full-tinie officer ... holds an
game was sold to the French by
associate degree In basic police
American traders and trappers. But
science from Hocking Technical
orie of the "500" was an excellent
College and is working on his
shot. He was Guillaume Duduit.
bachelor's degree at OU. In addition
In fact, Duduit was later conHankins is a member of the U. S. Arsidered one of the best frontiersmen
my National Guard."
and is looked on as one of the first
successful frontier farmers in
FRANCES EADS, Rt. I Box 149,
southern Ohio. ·
Lebanon, Va. 24266, asks for inBorn 1770
formation:
Duduit came from a wealthy farm
1 - Is there a charge for wedding
family that lived about 10 miles outannouncements in the daily newsside of Paris, France, and at an
paper? The answer is no.
early age, Duduit (born in 1770) was
2 - If a picture is included, will it
given many responsibilities; his
be returned? The answer is that
father died when Guillaume was a
Sallyanne Holtz keeps an
young man.
alphabetical file of brides'
Duduit received a limited
photographs, and authorized people
education, having been sent to
may come to the newsroom and pick
private schools, where, as Duduit
up the pictures.
putit: "The teachers were wholly in3 - Have there ever been pictures
compent to teach."
or newspaper copies made available
Later, Duduit learned the silverfor sale of the fall of the Silver
smith trade, taking up residence in
Bridge? Frances Eads lived in
Paris. He joined the revolutionary
Gallipolis untill970 and lost friends
party under \ Lafayette and was
on the bridge. J:he answer is no;
present at the storming of the
however, for 25 cents a sheet
Bastille in 1789:
·
photostatic copies of part of a page
JolD French 500
.
can be made on the Ohio Valley
In that same year Guillaume took
Publishing Co. microfilm viewer.
a bride and shortly after that the
JOYCE HAIRE, feature editor of
newlyweds decided to cast their lot
the Barnesville Herald-News Gazetwith the French 500 and come to
te, Barnesville, Ga. 30204, says that
America.
Mrs. Jestie Bowen, 94, will be at McWhen Duduit arrived at Gallipolis
- he was one of at least eight silverDaniel's Crossroads today (Sunday)
for the celebration honoring the Mcthe town
had.much
He soon
smitha
thatthere
Daniel clan. Mrs. Bowen was born
found that
was not
call
for this trade in frontier Ohio and it
May 4, 18811, according to Joyce
was then that he showed his skill as a
Haire, and if that date is right Jestie
is 92 years of age. Jestie donated a
hunter. Duduit was even a respected
plaque in memory of her ancestor
marksman among the American
frontiersmen.
who founded McDaniel's Cras&amp;
So impressive were his skills that,
roads, and it was put up and
dedicated in her presence in 1978.
in 19'12 under the Indian wars, he
Dan Stewart, Jestle's first cousin,
was called upon by the U.S. Anny to
says that loday's event will be a
serve as one of the spies that scouted
along the Ohio River from Gallipolis
basket dinner. Get there at 10 a.m.
and stay till late afternoon.
to Marietta. Other spies were Robert
Safford and Waldemard Mentelle
(another of the "500" ).
Surpr1Be elemeui Joel
After the war Duduit was hunting
game near Gallipolis when his dogs
chased something up a tree. He
waited for the moon to shine so that
he could see his tar~et. Guillaume
to follow "proper procedures," said
caught
sight of the animal just as it
nursing home administrator Don
appeared to be springing on top of
Bergen.
him. He fired and the animal fell
The patients, ranging in age from
dead right at his feet. It was a huge
69 to 98, were being fed their breakpanther which he had shot right
fasts when several refused to conthrough the heart.
·
tinue eating, nursing home workers
On one occasion Duduit had
said. One of the workers discovered
strayed from several other
the oven cleaner on the pancakes
Gallipolis hunters when he spied a
and called the fire department
deer and bagged it with one shot.
The patients were taken by amThe other hunters did not . notice
buh.nce to a hospital for treatment
Duduit missing and thought that the
of internal burns.
The Colorado Health Department
shot was fited on by an Indian. So
will send inveatigators to look int'l
thay ran in all the direc\1008 for
the incident, a bealth official said. .
Gallipolis. When they arrived there,

Oven cleaner hospitalizes
nine nursing home patients

'

,I

(ED. NOTE - Sibyl, 6'i , is the
sister of Russell Wooten, 81. She was
the only girl and the " baby" of the
family, while Russell was the first
born; they had two brothers, now
dead.)

&lt;liARLESTON, W.Va. (AP ) - A
financial belt-tightening program instituted by United Mine Workers
President Sam Church is coming
none too soon, union officials say.
The UMW's assets declined by
more than 7 percent last year, according to financial statements
released by the U.S. Department of
Labor .
Just five years ago, the union
reported net assets of $80 million,
the Labor Department said. But at
the end of last year, the uni on's net
assets ~ its total assets minus its
liabilities - totaled about $39.2
million, or down from $42 million at
the start of 1979.
The union 's financial state was a
chief issue during its $2 million 1979
convention, at which delegates approved a dues hike from $12 to $28.50
a month. "Hopefully , we're in the
process of turning a corner, " said
Ron Woofter, the union's new director of finance and administration.
At the December convention in
Denver, Ch.urch pl edged to
strengthen theunion's coffers. He
alreayy has taid off 25 employees at
the union 's international headquarters in Washington, D.C., officials
sat'd.
Part of the union's money
problems were caused when

they found that Duduit was missing
and concluded that Guilaume had
been the one shot by the Indian.
Hunter turm haunter?
The town was in mourning for this
great hunter, when he came
strolling into town a few hours afterwards. The town was thrown into
a panic to see a ghost. To convince
the Frenchman that he was no ghost
he took them to his deer and explained to them what had hapened.
During the War of 1812 Duduit also
served with distinction as a scout.
He then learned from one of the lndians on the American side that
Duduit was recognized by the Indian
as a man whom the Indian had come
upon hear Gallipolis about 1795.
Dilemma for savage
The Indian went on to explain how
he had the opportunity to kill Duduit
from behind a tree. But the Indian
was afraid to shoot because of the
fierce dog that Duduit always had
with him on his hunting forays. The
Indian reasoned that if he had shot
Duduit, before he could reload, the
dog would have attacked him. And if
he had shot the dog first, he knew
that Duduit would have killed the Indian . So the Indian slipped quietly
away.
Duduit was one of the last men in
Ohio to kill a buffalo, shooting one of
the beasts in 1798, the same year
that Andre LaCroix made a kill.
Duduit died in 1836 and had fathered
al children. He bad also become
every bit as good as farmer as he
had been a frontiersman.

ASTROTURF
$

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inst.

20 Rolls of
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CUT LOOP

"The Little Store With The Big Selection
At The Small Price."

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

~ '~
G~tl'- Carryout
1114 Viand Street

&amp; Deli Inc.

675-5843

Point Pleasant

Open 8 a.m. To 12 Midnight Monday • Thursday
Friday &amp; Saturday 8 a.m. To 2 a.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. To 8 p.m.
FEATURING AMISH CHEESE &amp; MEATS,
PARTY SUPPLIES &amp; YOUR FAVORITE COLD BEVERAGES!!

We Have It In 6°/o!!

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1 u~.U.,;, '-'t

.i.oiVU

'Advisory council
~eels \\'ednesday
at Meigs High
POMEROY- On Wednesday, the
, Meigs Local Schools' Talented and
Gifted Advisory Council will meet in
the Meigs HighSchool library at 7:30
p.m.
All persons having attended
previous meetings and all others are
especially invited to attend this
meeting.
The final draft of the council.'s purposes, objectives, and structure and
· the final draft of the proposed selec. tion procedure will be shared with
the members.
The major purpose will be to
promote building level programs.
Therefore, it is vital that all
buildings in Meigs Local have
representation at this meeting.
· If you have any interest or concern
.about talented and gifted children,
:please plan to attend this meeting.
If there are questions regarding
this meeting or the TAG Program,
please contact Dan Moris, Director
of Curriculum for Meigs Local at
992-2153.

UMW leader cuts spending
Store Hours:

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SARJRDAY, JUNE 14, 1980

CHECKS PRESENTED - Bill Hubbard, right,
presented checks totaling U,200 to Janice Lawson,
clerk, at the Thursday night's Syracuse Village Council

Young man killed
ANAHEIM , Calif. (AP) - A young
· man was killed early Saturday at
Disneyland amusement park when
; he climbed from a moving car of an
: elevated train and was struck by
: another car from the opposite direc' tion, authorities said.
: Disneyland spokesman Bob Roth
: said the accident occurred at 1:30
; a .m ., during a graduation
• celebration. attended by students
; from several area schools. He said
: the accident occurred on the
~ " People Mover" ride, a slow..
: moving elevated train that provides
; a scenic tour of Tomorrow land in the
; Anaheim attraction, about 35 miles
:.south of Los Angeles.
The youth's name was withheld
. pending notification of relatives.

.: ABC-TV attorney
: to appeal decision
'

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) An attorney for ABC-TV says the
:network will appeal a federal
: judge's denial of an injuction aimed
:at gaining access to New Mexico
:State Penitentiary, site of rioting
·last February that left 33 inmates
dead.
" At no time have state authorities
ever denied access to ABC that was
.afforded other media," U.S. District
:Judge Juan Burciaga said Friday in
denying the m'otion for a
·preliminary injunction.
: The network, which wants to film
a documentary at the prison, argued
that it had been denied access afforded to other news organizations.
Network attorney Eugene Gallegos
of Santa Fe said he would appeaL

.

$ 59

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

at Disneyland Park

.l

FRANKIE
12

oz.

••

A Gallipolis Diary

WIENERS ••••••••••••••• ~~~.

GALLIPOLIS - While Peeps was
in Columbus last weekend, someone
jotted a note which read that Tiny
Cremeans called from Parkersburg.
She found the name of Solomon
Waugh In the May 18 colwnn, listing
vol1111teers to the Ohio militia in the
War of 1~12 from Gallia County. He
was her great-great-grandfather.

SAVORY

BACON•••••••••••••••••••
lB. PKG.

GRADE A WHOLE

JJ

·

FRYERS••••••••••••••••••• ~s~ .!t
Chicken Thighs ..•...••• ;~-.

$ 29

USDA CHOICE BOTTOM

ROUND ROAST.~".E~:~ ••••lf••

\

'psychiatric tests
DETROIT (AP) - Police say
psychiatric tests will be administered to a 22-yearo()ld woman
who holed up in her apartment for
three days, keeping officers at bay
with a shotgun.
A special police squad stormed the
apartment Friday and captured the
woman, identified as Rita Johnson.
Two shots rang out from the apartment during the standofC that began
Wednesday night. Neighbors said
Ms. Johnson was distraught because
her federally f,,mded job had expired.

·BANANAS ...............~~. $
GRADE A MEDIUM
$
f(i(iS ..•••••.•....•... ~~.

Gaskill guest speaker

2

~

MIDDLEPORT - Charles Gaskill
was a guest of the Middleport.Pomeroy Rotary which met Friday
night at the Heath United Methodist
Church.
, Group singing was led by Cash
l!ahr and John Werner, secretary,
presided in the absence of the
president, Jack Walker. Dinner was
•served by the ladies ofthe church.

PEANUT

NO FmE DAMAGE
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Fire
Department was called tq,. 217
Mechanic Street Friday at 7:47p.m.
· According to Charles Le!JBr, chief,
electrical entrance .cable had shorted out. There was no damage.

$}19
IVORY LIQUID ••••••••••••••
ICE CREAM,••••••••••• ~.G!;... .

JIF

FLAVORITE

BUTT~.••~.~••• ~

CHEER DETERGENT
84

oz.

•

49 COTTAGE ·CHEESE •••••2!~~.

$Jig

BORDEN'S ELSIE

DETERGENT

JACK FROST

CRISCO

SUGAR
5lB.
-

BAG

RECENT VISITORS
SYRACUSE - Recent vls,itors of
George and Alice Freeland,
Syracu.ae, were the Rev. and Mrs.
cArl Hiclta.

•

FOOD SOUGHT
ARUSHA, Tanzania (AP) - The
U.N. World Food Council issued an
appeal for emergency food aid , warning hundreds of thousands of people
in East Africa and the Sahara face
starvation.
"I have a feeling we are entering a
period of permanent food crisis in
Africa," Maurice Williams, director
general of the group, told a news
conference.
A four-day meeting of the 3&amp;country organization ended here
Friday. Tanzania is one of the countries facing a serious food shortage.

CHUCK ROAST•••••••••• ;s. •

Woman will undergo

VETERANS MEMORIAL
; Admissions--Darla Combs,
Racine; Herbert Fanns, Nelson'Ville; Nellie Price, Middleport;
Lawton Templeton, Pomeroy; Cora
tlllton, Portland.
· Discharges-Lena Maynard, Gary
Pullins, Pau~ Huston, Ida Young,
Herbert Seth, Glens Soulsby.

Peeps.

meeting. The money will be used to pay for the new
aluminum bleachers that have been placed at the hall
park.

. $}79

L.imit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
June 14, 1980

25 LB.
JAG
L.imlt 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer El(pires June 14, 1980

3 LB• .

CAN
L.i mit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
June 14, 1980

SIBYL M. TOOPS, 8580 SR 323 SE,
Mt. Sterling, Ohio 43143, was the sutr
ject of last Sunday's last paragraph
asking if anyone knew where to find
out where the Gallipolis volunteers
engaged in combat in the War of
1812, but the outfit her great-greatgrandfather joined had different
numbers. Take note of . the differences at the parenthetical insert.
Here's Sibyl's entire letter :
I am a faithful reader of your
colwnn and was pleased to see your__
Usting of men who fought in the War
of 1812 from Gallia County. My grandfather, Martin Miller, mentioned in
this list, volunteered in June, 1812,
for six months service as a private in
the 2nd battalion, 2nd regiment, 1st
brigade of the Ohio militia.
(BoDDie Sayre's llst bad tbe outfit
IIUIIlbend thUB - third division,
third regtmeut, and flnt brigade of
tbe Oblo mllltla)
He did not get into actual service
until' the 9th of August and was
discharged at the "rapids of the
Miami (or Maumee)" on the ninth ot'
February 1813. The pay for this service was six dollars and sixty-six
cents per month. When the Bounty
Land Act was passed in 1850 he
received a grant of eighty acres of
land. After his death in 1856 his
widow applied for an additional
Bounty Land grant under the Act of
11155.
I am interested in learning where
this unit saw action and what skir·
mishes they took part in. I wonder if
any of your readers have any details
of their service?
Martin Miller was born in Virginia
(?) in 1780 and was married 8 March
111M! to Margaret Smith In Kanawah
County, Virginia. (Ed. oote Kana wah is the way she spelled it).
They were parents of four
daughters : Matilda,_b.1811, married
Harrison Johnson; Mahala, b. 1812,
married Abraham Stover; Methursa, b. 1814, married Uttleton
Wooten; Melinda, b. 1817, married
John Holcomb. He is buried in
Providence Cemetery, Clay Twp. I
am interested in learning more
about him or his family and would
like to hear from any of his descendants or anyone who has any infonnation concemlng them.
I enjoy your writings very much,
especially the early history and
stories of the settlers ot: Gallia County. Sincerely,SffiYLM. TOOPS.

.~

r
'

KRA1G HANKINS, former
Gallipolis police force officer, is now
a cop in Nelsonville. About a month
ago, Kevin Kelly, who spent the
summer of 1979 toiling in the newsroom of the Sunday Times-Sentinel,

WESTMINSTER, Colo. (AP) Nine nursing home patients were
treated and one was hospitalized after being fed oven cleaner with their
breakfasts, officials said.
Emma Coykendale, 86, was reported In fair condition Friday with
severe bums of the mouth and
throat, officials said.
·
A dietary assistant who was not
Identified thoug)Jt the oven cleaner
was pancake syrup and fed it to 10
elderly patients Friday morni'l!l at
the Aspen c.re West nunlng home,
Fire Chief AI fteffel said.
The emplo)'ee was fired for !allinK
t

.

17 DIE IN CRASH
ORKNEY, South Africa (AP) At least 17 men were killed Saturday
in a predawn collision between a
trailer and a 26-ton truck carrying
gold dust, the South African Press
Association reported.
Thirteen others were reported
being treated at the West Vaal Mine
Hospital In the gthold-rich afrea about
100 miles sou west 0 Johannesburg .

'

"management
spent more
money
than
it had coming
in," Woofter
said. "So they had to sell assets."
Officials say much of the five-year
dropoff was due to the union writing
off several loans to districts and the
Anthracite Health and Welfare
Fund. In addition, the union has suffered heavy legal losses in recent

yeHrs.
·Tbe union paid over $6.1 million in
The 1979 financial statement in- salaries to its employees.
dicated that the union sought a
The union did sell fewer assets in
major loan last year, for the first
1979 than it did the previous year. In
time in recent years. The union took
1978, sales totaled $4.7 million; in
out a $1.25 million loan from the
1979, the sales totaled $2.9'million.
National Bank of Washington , of
which the union is the major
stockholder. The loan went to help
pay for the convention, said Eldon
Ca llen, the UMW's'presssecretary.
The union reportedly has paid
back about half of the loan.
Among the expenses for the con-·
vention was $57,875 for entertainment. However, union offi cials said that after Church took oflice, he cut back on entertainment.
One of the acts he cut was countrywestern singer Johnny Cash. Other
major expenditures in 1979 included
$1.3 million for international officers ' salaries and expenses.
The expenses claimed by union officials also increased greatly in 1979.
Church, who was the vice president
in 1978, claimed $22,909 in expenses
last year, compared to $14,667
claimed in 1978, in addition to his
$38,610 salary . Former UMW
President Arnold Miller claimed
....... l.o..m~ .. ib~ . . · ~
~ .... ~ ...... .,..== "-·""'-~­
$22,577 in expenses, compared to
"'
ood - ··
dvMirOII!, .. """'-,....
lnltrn..........,.
$14,339 claimed in 1978. SecretarytreasurerWillardEsselstynclaimed
TAWNEY JEWEURS
$25,270 in 1979, as compared to

"""tv

fl$;1;3,;748~th~e~y;ea~r~be~fo~re~.;;;;;;;;!~42~4~·~-~~~~~-~;;~~~~~

DINNER JUNE 18
PORTSMOUTH - The annual appredation dinner for the full membership of Ohio Valley Regional
Development Commission (OVRDC) is to be held Wednesday, June
18) at s p.m. at Elks Country Club
just off Route 73 west of Portsmouth.
Commission members are to
gather at 6 p.m. for a social hour,
with the dinner scheduled to begin at
7 p.m., OVRDC officials said.

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

749 THIRD

GAlliPOLIS

Guillaume Dudur"t' one of ............,
frontiersman, excellent shot

wrote a story for the Logan Daily
News. This ttem told the story of
Hankins, 24, who took the oath from ·
Mayor Wilbur . (Dike) Mender of
Nelsonville over an early-May
weekend and started to work that
Monday. Hankins, a full-time
BY JAMES SANDS
student at Ohio University, resides
GALUPOLIS - During the first
in Athens. Kevin wrote that Haukins
two years of the settlement of
"recently resigned from the
Gallipolis, the people depended
Gallipolis Police Department, where
heavily upon wild game. Much of the
he was a full-tinie officer ... holds an
game was sold to the French by
associate degree In basic police
American traders and trappers. But
science from Hocking Technical
orie of the "500" was an excellent
College and is working on his
shot. He was Guillaume Duduit.
bachelor's degree at OU. In addition
In fact, Duduit was later conHankins is a member of the U. S. Arsidered one of the best frontiersmen
my National Guard."
and is looked on as one of the first
successful frontier farmers in
FRANCES EADS, Rt. I Box 149,
southern Ohio. ·
Lebanon, Va. 24266, asks for inBorn 1770
formation:
Duduit came from a wealthy farm
1 - Is there a charge for wedding
family that lived about 10 miles outannouncements in the daily newsside of Paris, France, and at an
paper? The answer is no.
early age, Duduit (born in 1770) was
2 - If a picture is included, will it
given many responsibilities; his
be returned? The answer is that
father died when Guillaume was a
Sallyanne Holtz keeps an
young man.
alphabetical file of brides'
Duduit received a limited
photographs, and authorized people
education, having been sent to
may come to the newsroom and pick
private schools, where, as Duduit
up the pictures.
putit: "The teachers were wholly in3 - Have there ever been pictures
compent to teach."
or newspaper copies made available
Later, Duduit learned the silverfor sale of the fall of the Silver
smith trade, taking up residence in
Bridge? Frances Eads lived in
Paris. He joined the revolutionary
Gallipolis untill970 and lost friends
party under \ Lafayette and was
on the bridge. J:he answer is no;
present at the storming of the
however, for 25 cents a sheet
Bastille in 1789:
·
photostatic copies of part of a page
JolD French 500
.
can be made on the Ohio Valley
In that same year Guillaume took
Publishing Co. microfilm viewer.
a bride and shortly after that the
JOYCE HAIRE, feature editor of
newlyweds decided to cast their lot
the Barnesville Herald-News Gazetwith the French 500 and come to
te, Barnesville, Ga. 30204, says that
America.
Mrs. Jestie Bowen, 94, will be at McWhen Duduit arrived at Gallipolis
- he was one of at least eight silverDaniel's Crossroads today (Sunday)
for the celebration honoring the Mcthe town
had.much
He soon
smitha
thatthere
Daniel clan. Mrs. Bowen was born
found that
was not
call
for this trade in frontier Ohio and it
May 4, 18811, according to Joyce
was then that he showed his skill as a
Haire, and if that date is right Jestie
is 92 years of age. Jestie donated a
hunter. Duduit was even a respected
plaque in memory of her ancestor
marksman among the American
frontiersmen.
who founded McDaniel's Cras&amp;
So impressive were his skills that,
roads, and it was put up and
dedicated in her presence in 1978.
in 19'12 under the Indian wars, he
Dan Stewart, Jestle's first cousin,
was called upon by the U.S. Anny to
says that loday's event will be a
serve as one of the spies that scouted
along the Ohio River from Gallipolis
basket dinner. Get there at 10 a.m.
and stay till late afternoon.
to Marietta. Other spies were Robert
Safford and Waldemard Mentelle
(another of the "500" ).
Surpr1Be elemeui Joel
After the war Duduit was hunting
game near Gallipolis when his dogs
chased something up a tree. He
waited for the moon to shine so that
he could see his tar~et. Guillaume
to follow "proper procedures," said
caught
sight of the animal just as it
nursing home administrator Don
appeared to be springing on top of
Bergen.
him. He fired and the animal fell
The patients, ranging in age from
dead right at his feet. It was a huge
69 to 98, were being fed their breakpanther which he had shot right
fasts when several refused to conthrough the heart.
·
tinue eating, nursing home workers
On one occasion Duduit had
said. One of the workers discovered
strayed from several other
the oven cleaner on the pancakes
Gallipolis hunters when he spied a
and called the fire department
deer and bagged it with one shot.
The patients were taken by amThe other hunters did not . notice
buh.nce to a hospital for treatment
Duduit missing and thought that the
of internal burns.
The Colorado Health Department
shot was fited on by an Indian. So
will send inveatigators to look int'l
thay ran in all the direc\1008 for
the incident, a bealth official said. .
Gallipolis. When they arrived there,

Oven cleaner hospitalizes
nine nursing home patients

'

,I

(ED. NOTE - Sibyl, 6'i , is the
sister of Russell Wooten, 81. She was
the only girl and the " baby" of the
family, while Russell was the first
born; they had two brothers, now
dead.)

&lt;liARLESTON, W.Va. (AP ) - A
financial belt-tightening program instituted by United Mine Workers
President Sam Church is coming
none too soon, union officials say.
The UMW's assets declined by
more than 7 percent last year, according to financial statements
released by the U.S. Department of
Labor .
Just five years ago, the union
reported net assets of $80 million,
the Labor Department said. But at
the end of last year, the uni on's net
assets ~ its total assets minus its
liabilities - totaled about $39.2
million, or down from $42 million at
the start of 1979.
The union 's financial state was a
chief issue during its $2 million 1979
convention, at which delegates approved a dues hike from $12 to $28.50
a month. "Hopefully , we're in the
process of turning a corner, " said
Ron Woofter, the union's new director of finance and administration.
At the December convention in
Denver, Ch.urch pl edged to
strengthen theunion's coffers. He
alreayy has taid off 25 employees at
the union 's international headquarters in Washington, D.C., officials
sat'd.
Part of the union's money
problems were caused when

they found that Duduit was missing
and concluded that Guilaume had
been the one shot by the Indian.
Hunter turm haunter?
The town was in mourning for this
great hunter, when he came
strolling into town a few hours afterwards. The town was thrown into
a panic to see a ghost. To convince
the Frenchman that he was no ghost
he took them to his deer and explained to them what had hapened.
During the War of 1812 Duduit also
served with distinction as a scout.
He then learned from one of the lndians on the American side that
Duduit was recognized by the Indian
as a man whom the Indian had come
upon hear Gallipolis about 1795.
Dilemma for savage
The Indian went on to explain how
he had the opportunity to kill Duduit
from behind a tree. But the Indian
was afraid to shoot because of the
fierce dog that Duduit always had
with him on his hunting forays. The
Indian reasoned that if he had shot
Duduit, before he could reload, the
dog would have attacked him. And if
he had shot the dog first, he knew
that Duduit would have killed the Indian . So the Indian slipped quietly
away.
Duduit was one of the last men in
Ohio to kill a buffalo, shooting one of
the beasts in 1798, the same year
that Andre LaCroix made a kill.
Duduit died in 1836 and had fathered
al children. He bad also become
every bit as good as farmer as he
had been a frontiersman.

ASTROTURF
$

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CUT LOOP

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At The Small Price."

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1114 Viand Street

&amp; Deli Inc.

675-5843

Point Pleasant

Open 8 a.m. To 12 Midnight Monday • Thursday
Friday &amp; Saturday 8 a.m. To 2 a.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. To 8 p.m.
FEATURING AMISH CHEESE &amp; MEATS,
PARTY SUPPLIES &amp; YOUR FAVORITE COLD BEVERAGES!!

We Have It In 6°/o!!

�, - • A~TheSundayTimes-&amp;ntinel,SWlday,June8, 1980

IH-TheSundayTimes-&amp;nlinel,Sunday,Jun;S, 1980 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -

B&amp;E suspect pleads guilty

PRESENTED FLAG - Janice Lawson, left, on
behalf of the DA V Lodge presented a flag to Syracuse

M'dyor Eber Pickens to be placed on a pole in front of
the Municipa l Building. The flag was given to Sadie
Thuener by Richard Jones.

Meigs hosts health program
POMEROY - Meigs County will
soon be the site of an innovative continuing education program in public
health.
Specifically designed as an introduction to the issues surrounding
health care, " Access to the Health
Care System : A Public Health
Challenge of the 80s" will be presented on June 18.
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
be the location and a delicious luncheon will be provided. All Meigs
County residents - providers, consunJers, and elected officia ls - are
cordially invited.
The content of this oniMJay
program will center on the im-

portance of the community in determining the future of its Citizens'
health and health care services.
Often times, rural communities
such as Meigs are bewildered by the
almost endless array of guidelines,
procedures,
and
paperwork
associated with federal, stale and
regional health bureaucracies. This
workshop will address ways and
means for Meigs County to actually
begin reversing t hese trends
through
improved
planning,
organization; and involvement of
local citizens.
Further information can be obtained by contacting Mr. Frank
Petrie of the Meigs County Health

Department at 992-6626. Special
registration fees are available for
conswne rs, students and human service agencies that wish to send
representatives.

POMEROY - William D. Lewis,
20, Racine, arrested Friday morning
lor breaking and entering at Spencer's Market formerly Racine Food
market, was taken before the Common Pleas Court on a Bill of Information.
Alter waiving his rights to a grand
jury, Lewis entered a guilty plea. He
was sentenced to a term of six months to five years in a proper state
penal institution. He was remanded
to the custody of Sheriff James J.
Proffitt until papers for transportation to the reception center are
processed.
A 12-year old juvenile involved has
been released to his parents. A
hearing in the Meigs County
Juvenile Court will be hel&lt;Lla.ter,
The store B&amp;E was discovered by
Deputy Keith Wood who was doing a
routine security check on the
business establishment.
Deputies are also investigating a

complaint filed by Lee Smith, Portland. Smith said someone shot his
lwo-year-&lt;Jld registered Bassett
Hound. One hundred pellets were
removed from the face and neck of
the dog.
Friday morning the sherifrs
department investigated a one car
accident on CR 211 approximately
one mile south of Basl)an.
Ralph J . Harden, 16, Rt.1, Racine,
told deputies he was traveling south
when his vehicle swayed. He attempted to pull it back onto the roadway, but lost control, ran across the

road and struck an embankment
causing the vehicle to roll over.
There was severe damage .
· Ned Swindell, Rt. 1, Shade, (Bearwallow Ridge) reported Friday
evening a cow that had been missing
for four days had been found shot
and partially covered with brush in a
ravine.
A rope had been tied to one leg.
The cow had been dragged down the
bank into the ravine after being shot.
The cow was a four year old
Hereford.
Investigation is continuing.

B

It 's june and there 's 'prom ' in the air
It Happens Every Spring ...
The birds begin to sing; your Dad
rolls up his sleeves to clean the attic;
your thirteen year . old sister goes
dramatic . . .and the junior-senior
prom moves Into the social highlight
of the season.
And - that's just what the Meigs
HighSchool Junior-senior Prom was
Saturday night - a social highlight
for students who laid aside their
daily standby jeans and wild shirts
to don beautiful formal attire for the
evening.
As the saying goes, however ... the

BUY ONE
PAIR OF
MUSHROOMS
AND GET THE 2ND PAIR
(of lesser value)

prom was not an "overnight"

FOR
'-h
PRICE

WILL MEET TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans, will
meet a t 7 p.m. Tuesday at the chapter home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Refreslunents will be served and all members are asked to be
present.

The
Shoe Cafe

No, Sir '
Juniors of the high school have
worked on uncountable moneymaking projects through t he school .

:1!111 Second ,\ ve ·
Lafayette Ma ll
Ga llipo lis. 0.

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.'S

f,ATHER'S DAY
giiieoo was a
blgbllgbt of the
prom det!oratioJJS

Telephone rates may go up

and
MARION - General Telephone
Co. customers may notice a slight increase in the cost of out-of-state
long-distance calls due to an mterstate rate hike by the American
Telephone and Telegraph Cu .
(AT&amp;T).
P ut into effect June 6, the new rate
schedule increases long-distance
charges for calls made to points outside of Ohio by 5.12 percent. Interstate private line, interstate
foreign exchange and interstate
WATS (wide area telephone service)
rates also are affected .
The tariff calls for a 3-cent increase for the initial minute of a
direct-dialed station-to-station call
from Ohi o to California during the
daytime. The ra te for the .first three
minutes of an operator-handled call
during the same time period has

Four new l•R d U Ct ees
RUTLAND - Four new members,
Roger Klein, William Wilford,
Alfred Young and James Cunningham , were accepted when Eh
Denison Post 467, American Legion,
Rutland, met in regular session .
It was reported that contact
representatives for Soldiers and
Sailors Rehef, Archie McKinney,
Kenny Davis and William Hobstetter , has assisted in relief for two
veterans.
The post meets at 8 p.m. on the first and third Wednesdays of each
m onth and round and square dancing is held every Saturday evening
at the post home for the public.

gone up 10 to 20 cents. The cost of
each additional minute for most
direct-dialed and operator-assisted
toll ca lls has increased two cents.
The rate hike, su bmitted to the
Fedeml Communications Commission, is the first general interstate increase since 1976, ac·
cord1n g to AT&amp;T. Genera l
Telephone customers are affected
by such long-distance ra te changes
because the company concurs with
AT&amp;T owns nea~ly all interstate toll
facilities.

GIVE OUR
BEST TO
BERKLINE

RECLINERS
THE RECLINER WITH THE
LIFETIME WARRANTY ON
THE RECLINING MECHANISM.

SQUAD RUNS
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
Emergency Squad was called to Ash
St., at 1:37 a.m . Saturday for James
Buchanan who was having chest
pains . He was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.
At 6:12 p.m. Friday the Middleport unit went to S. Second for
Nellie Price who had fa llen. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

I·: i•l•Jf~ t~ ~ fi IIIJ:)~I
SUNDAY, JUNE 15

.SAVE $50 to $100
PRICED FROM

RIVERSIDE
ROLLTOP
DESK

GUN
CABINETS
6, 8, 10

IN
TRADITIONAL STYLING
This handsome desR Is made of solid oak and
oak veneers. It has M'tel1 dt'•-rs, 1 &lt;oil top
and partlloned shelving or ease In organi zing

&amp; 12 GUN

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IN PINE, OAK
AND MAPLE.
THIS WEEK
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COLOR TV SALE

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13" - 19"- 23" - 25"
STARTING AT 536995

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II

By Charlene Hoeflich

TO

to

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Linda

Kovalcbl , le ft ,
BDd Doooa Neece,
we r e rlgbt ln
tbere stuffing uo-

MEETS WEDNESDAY
POMEROY ._ The PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club will hold its
regular meeting at noon Wednesday
at the Meigs Inn.

BOARD TO MEET
GALUPOUS The regular
meeting of the Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees
will be held Tuesday, June 10 at 5
p.m., in the Rare Book Room of the
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial 1l
Library, 641 Second Ave.

sue~

cess.

year to raise necessary funds with
which to purchase decorations used
to transform the auditoriwn into the
attractive setting necessary to
create the prom mood.
And if raising the funds weren't
enough, juniors under the direction
of their advisors, Dorothy Oliver and
Celia McCoy, had to really apply the
pressure to get those decorations
assembled and placed in just the
right spots - no easy job, to say the
least. Hours and hours of time were
given for the one big evening.
Of course, there were the band,
the punch, a parent-sponsored buffet, a king and queen, and " all that
good stuff" which makes the" it happens every spring" junior-senior
prom one of those lifetime "moments to remember.' •

"

SALE

Times-Sentinel staff writer

�, - • A~TheSundayTimes-&amp;ntinel,SWlday,June8, 1980

IH-TheSundayTimes-&amp;nlinel,Sunday,Jun;S, 1980 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -

B&amp;E suspect pleads guilty

PRESENTED FLAG - Janice Lawson, left, on
behalf of the DA V Lodge presented a flag to Syracuse

M'dyor Eber Pickens to be placed on a pole in front of
the Municipa l Building. The flag was given to Sadie
Thuener by Richard Jones.

Meigs hosts health program
POMEROY - Meigs County will
soon be the site of an innovative continuing education program in public
health.
Specifically designed as an introduction to the issues surrounding
health care, " Access to the Health
Care System : A Public Health
Challenge of the 80s" will be presented on June 18.
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
be the location and a delicious luncheon will be provided. All Meigs
County residents - providers, consunJers, and elected officia ls - are
cordially invited.
The content of this oniMJay
program will center on the im-

portance of the community in determining the future of its Citizens'
health and health care services.
Often times, rural communities
such as Meigs are bewildered by the
almost endless array of guidelines,
procedures,
and
paperwork
associated with federal, stale and
regional health bureaucracies. This
workshop will address ways and
means for Meigs County to actually
begin reversing t hese trends
through
improved
planning,
organization; and involvement of
local citizens.
Further information can be obtained by contacting Mr. Frank
Petrie of the Meigs County Health

Department at 992-6626. Special
registration fees are available for
conswne rs, students and human service agencies that wish to send
representatives.

POMEROY - William D. Lewis,
20, Racine, arrested Friday morning
lor breaking and entering at Spencer's Market formerly Racine Food
market, was taken before the Common Pleas Court on a Bill of Information.
Alter waiving his rights to a grand
jury, Lewis entered a guilty plea. He
was sentenced to a term of six months to five years in a proper state
penal institution. He was remanded
to the custody of Sheriff James J.
Proffitt until papers for transportation to the reception center are
processed.
A 12-year old juvenile involved has
been released to his parents. A
hearing in the Meigs County
Juvenile Court will be hel&lt;Lla.ter,
The store B&amp;E was discovered by
Deputy Keith Wood who was doing a
routine security check on the
business establishment.
Deputies are also investigating a

complaint filed by Lee Smith, Portland. Smith said someone shot his
lwo-year-&lt;Jld registered Bassett
Hound. One hundred pellets were
removed from the face and neck of
the dog.
Friday morning the sherifrs
department investigated a one car
accident on CR 211 approximately
one mile south of Basl)an.
Ralph J . Harden, 16, Rt.1, Racine,
told deputies he was traveling south
when his vehicle swayed. He attempted to pull it back onto the roadway, but lost control, ran across the

road and struck an embankment
causing the vehicle to roll over.
There was severe damage .
· Ned Swindell, Rt. 1, Shade, (Bearwallow Ridge) reported Friday
evening a cow that had been missing
for four days had been found shot
and partially covered with brush in a
ravine.
A rope had been tied to one leg.
The cow had been dragged down the
bank into the ravine after being shot.
The cow was a four year old
Hereford.
Investigation is continuing.

B

It 's june and there 's 'prom ' in the air
It Happens Every Spring ...
The birds begin to sing; your Dad
rolls up his sleeves to clean the attic;
your thirteen year . old sister goes
dramatic . . .and the junior-senior
prom moves Into the social highlight
of the season.
And - that's just what the Meigs
HighSchool Junior-senior Prom was
Saturday night - a social highlight
for students who laid aside their
daily standby jeans and wild shirts
to don beautiful formal attire for the
evening.
As the saying goes, however ... the

BUY ONE
PAIR OF
MUSHROOMS
AND GET THE 2ND PAIR
(of lesser value)

prom was not an "overnight"

FOR
'-h
PRICE

WILL MEET TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans, will
meet a t 7 p.m. Tuesday at the chapter home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Refreslunents will be served and all members are asked to be
present.

The
Shoe Cafe

No, Sir '
Juniors of the high school have
worked on uncountable moneymaking projects through t he school .

:1!111 Second ,\ ve ·
Lafayette Ma ll
Ga llipo lis. 0.

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.'S

f,ATHER'S DAY
giiieoo was a
blgbllgbt of the
prom det!oratioJJS

Telephone rates may go up

and
MARION - General Telephone
Co. customers may notice a slight increase in the cost of out-of-state
long-distance calls due to an mterstate rate hike by the American
Telephone and Telegraph Cu .
(AT&amp;T).
P ut into effect June 6, the new rate
schedule increases long-distance
charges for calls made to points outside of Ohio by 5.12 percent. Interstate private line, interstate
foreign exchange and interstate
WATS (wide area telephone service)
rates also are affected .
The tariff calls for a 3-cent increase for the initial minute of a
direct-dialed station-to-station call
from Ohi o to California during the
daytime. The ra te for the .first three
minutes of an operator-handled call
during the same time period has

Four new l•R d U Ct ees
RUTLAND - Four new members,
Roger Klein, William Wilford,
Alfred Young and James Cunningham , were accepted when Eh
Denison Post 467, American Legion,
Rutland, met in regular session .
It was reported that contact
representatives for Soldiers and
Sailors Rehef, Archie McKinney,
Kenny Davis and William Hobstetter , has assisted in relief for two
veterans.
The post meets at 8 p.m. on the first and third Wednesdays of each
m onth and round and square dancing is held every Saturday evening
at the post home for the public.

gone up 10 to 20 cents. The cost of
each additional minute for most
direct-dialed and operator-assisted
toll ca lls has increased two cents.
The rate hike, su bmitted to the
Fedeml Communications Commission, is the first general interstate increase since 1976, ac·
cord1n g to AT&amp;T. Genera l
Telephone customers are affected
by such long-distance ra te changes
because the company concurs with
AT&amp;T owns nea~ly all interstate toll
facilities.

GIVE OUR
BEST TO
BERKLINE

RECLINERS
THE RECLINER WITH THE
LIFETIME WARRANTY ON
THE RECLINING MECHANISM.

SQUAD RUNS
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
Emergency Squad was called to Ash
St., at 1:37 a.m . Saturday for James
Buchanan who was having chest
pains . He was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.
At 6:12 p.m. Friday the Middleport unit went to S. Second for
Nellie Price who had fa llen. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

I·: i•l•Jf~ t~ ~ fi IIIJ:)~I
SUNDAY, JUNE 15

.SAVE $50 to $100
PRICED FROM

RIVERSIDE
ROLLTOP
DESK

GUN
CABINETS
6, 8, 10

IN
TRADITIONAL STYLING
This handsome desR Is made of solid oak and
oak veneers. It has M'tel1 dt'•-rs, 1 &lt;oil top
and partlloned shelving or ease In organi zing

&amp; 12 GUN

GUN CABINETS
IN PINE, OAK
AND MAPLE.
THIS WEEK
ONLY
PRICED

our materl at.

REG..'599.95

20%

COLOR TV SALE

30%

13" - 19"- 23" - 25"
STARTING AT 536995

OFF

23" COLOR SPECIAL ~991i

r

SWIVEL
ROCKER
100% NYLON COVERS

SAVE s4o to s75

'

I.
I

PRICES START AT

'9995

TAWNEY JEWELERS
, GAlliPOLIS

424 SECOND ·AVE.

I

,.

II

By Charlene Hoeflich

TO

to

20%2~PLYWTS

Linda

Kovalcbl , le ft ,
BDd Doooa Neece,
we r e rlgbt ln
tbere stuffing uo-

MEETS WEDNESDAY
POMEROY ._ The PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club will hold its
regular meeting at noon Wednesday
at the Meigs Inn.

BOARD TO MEET
GALUPOUS The regular
meeting of the Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees
will be held Tuesday, June 10 at 5
p.m., in the Rare Book Room of the
Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial 1l
Library, 641 Second Ave.

sue~

cess.

year to raise necessary funds with
which to purchase decorations used
to transform the auditoriwn into the
attractive setting necessary to
create the prom mood.
And if raising the funds weren't
enough, juniors under the direction
of their advisors, Dorothy Oliver and
Celia McCoy, had to really apply the
pressure to get those decorations
assembled and placed in just the
right spots - no easy job, to say the
least. Hours and hours of time were
given for the one big evening.
Of course, there were the band,
the punch, a parent-sponsored buffet, a king and queen, and " all that
good stuff" which makes the" it happens every spring" junior-senior
prom one of those lifetime "moments to remember.' •

"

SALE

Times-Sentinel staff writer

�The

Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June8, 1980

B-3- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Son.. of migrant laborers now Chief of Protocol

Three area couples announce marriages hBre

WASHINGTON lAP) - In the
bulging scrapbook kept by Abelardo
Valdez, U.S. chief of protocol, the
best, documented event is not his
greeting of Pope John Paul 11 or
British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher or Egyptian President An·
wa r Sadat.
What takes the most space~ n the
scrapbook are pictures are of a
homeco m ing

..

families ,

r'•. "

':I •

~=

:r •

!-:

Mr. and Mrs. James Plants

r

~.

RIO GRANDE - Simpson Chapel
~ United Methodist Church, Rio Gran~ ~e, was the setting for the May 3
"' wedding of Paula Covert, Rio Gran~ de, and James Plants of Kerr.
~ : The double-ring ceremony was
":: (lerformed by Rev. Michael Berne,
/ pastor of Simpson Chapel. A three
~ branched candelabra and a white
7i rose, tied w1th burgundy ribbon
;:. placed upon the Bible, decorated the
"' altar. The rose was placed there in
~ loving memory of the deceased
~ grandparents of the couple. On each
•; side of the altar were baskets of
white chrysanthemwns, roses, and
;. gladioli on tall antiqued white metal
::.stands.
;:. Seven branched candelabra and
;: paims completed the decorations of
..the front of the church. A half-hour
.: of music preceded the ceremony .
•; with Mrs. Ann Thompson, organist.
1!Her
mother, Mrs. Adelaide Sanders
~
r'was vocalist.
As the parents were seated, each
;;,mother carried a lighted candle and
.- placed it in the three branched can:~delabra on the altar. The bride and
t:!iroom lighted the center candle,
,::using their mother's candles, at the
~conclusion of the ceremony.
• ' Given in marriage by her father,
;..t11e bride wore a Ooor-length gown of
:;:white chiffon over taffeta. The gown
,..!lad a high split neckline, Bishop's
;;sleeves with lace cuff, and Empire
;~waistline. The fitted bodice was im~·)lorted re-embroidered Alencon lace
;~over English sheer net. Tiny seed
;$pearls were attached to the bodice
~nd neckline. The soft flowing skirt
~ontinued into a cathedral length
~a in.
:; The headpiece was a small cloche
t cap of matching Alencon lace and
~ seed pearls, holding a fingertip veil.
~The bride carried a colonia l bouquet
if~ red American Beauty roses and
~by's breath.
~ The bride's maid of honor, Miss

t'

.

S

Barbara Bishop, Mentor, 0 ., and
Miss LaDonna Plants, bridesmaid ,
wore identical Ooor-length gowns of
dusty rose quiana and carried a red
American Beauty rose tied witfi
burgundy ribbon.
For her daughter's wedding, the
bride's mother wore a Ooor-length
gown of ivory quiana, with a chiffon
coat patterned with tiny roses in
dusty rose. The groom's mother
wore a pink floor-length chiffon
gown with a pink lace jacket.
The groom was attended by
Charles Dalton, Jr: of Charleston,
W. Va. The ushers were Ronald
Plants, brother of the groom, and
Daniel Dobbins, Gallipolis.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held in U1e soc1al rooms of
the church.
·
Mrs. Vera Stimson, sister of the
bride, registered the guests. Two
sisters of the bride, Mrs. Robert
Rhea, Xenia, ;~nd Mrs. Howard
Burks, Reynoldsburg, served the
cake, and Mrs . David Covert, Granville, sister-in-law of the bride,
presided at the punch bowl.
Following the reception the couple
left for a wedding trip to S9uth
Carolina.
The bride is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, attended Rio
Grande College, and graduated from
Columbus Technical Institute. She is
employed as Animal Health
Technician at Allen Boster
Veterinary Clinic, Kanauga.
.
The groom is a graduate of North
Gallia High School and is associated
with his father in Gene Plants and
Sons Plumbing, Heating and Air
Conditioning, Gallipolis.
The couple are residing at their
home on the Bulaville-Addison Rd.
The groom's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gilbert Plantz, were
among those who attended the wed·
ding .

. .K atze. 's K orner

?.

·~

ByKATIECROW
;~· Times-Sentinel staff writer
Mike Kloes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
;;raul Kloes, Minersville, loves

B,

~seball.

1·; Recently, Mike attended Diamond
~nterprise

Baseball
Clinic,
f'!'allipolis, and was presented the top
t~rd out of 50 other youths attend,. The top award Mike received was
i:ihe mental attitude, hlJ.'ltle and
~termination award. Also, in his
~e g_roup, he took first· place in

~OWl!lg.

.., LOOk out for this youngster - he
~ll be, in all probability, setting
4lber records as the years progress.

:r:. Today marks

the 83rd birthday of

!era Beegle, Racine. Give her a
j,)ll, she certainly would appreciate
being remembered.
1: The response to obtaining a recipe
r sauerkraut cake was tremenIJ.'l. I appreciate all the calls and
tters I received.
(~The first to contact me was Helen
Diddle, Syraucse. Here is the recipe.
10 One-baH cup of butter; one and
;te-half cup of sugar; three eggs;
one teaspoon of vanilla; one teas~ of baking powder; one teasJ)OOn soda; two cups of flour; two
&amp;Ips sauerkraut; one-fourth to onelialf teaspoon salt; one-half cup of
&lt;2&gt;roa; one cup of water; one cup of
J!i!s it you so desire; rinse kraut
thoroughly and cut in small pieces;
cS-eam butter and sugar and add one
~ at a time beating well; add
wnilla; sift the flour, soda, baking
~wder, salt and cocoa; add to
¢earn millture alternately with
lfater and beat as you add. Stir in
lraut and nuts. Grease and flour pan

i

•

~~

•r.

la st

I

•

and pour in mixture and bake at 350
degrees for 40 to 45 minutes.
The following is frosting for the
cake submitted by Sue Lightfoot.
Melt one-six ounce package of
semi-sweet chocolate bits, four
table~poons of oleo over low heat.
Remove from heat and blend in onehalf cup sour cream, one teaspoon
vanilla and one-half teaspoon of salt.
Gradually add powdered sugar to
make consistency desired.
Now here is the recipe for the
" Mississippi Mud" cake submitted
by Jane Wise .
Mix well two cups sugar, two
sticks of butter and three eggs. Add
one and one-hall cups flour (plain) ;
one-hall cup cocoa, dash of salt, one
and one-half cups pecans (can use
walnuts or whatever you prefer),
one teaspoon vanilla, mix well.
Place in 11 and one-&lt;~uarter by
seven and one-half inch pan and
bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes.
Remove from oven and place about
three-fourths of a bag of marstunallows or use marshmallow
cream orr top. Place back in oven
and Jet melt. Remove and spread
across top and let cool.
Marshmallow cream is better
than marshmallows to use on top.
Mter cake bas cooled apply the
following icing on ti/P of the mar·
stunallow topping. Leave the cake in
the pan.
Icing: One box confectionary
sugar, one-half cup cocoa, I&gt; stick of
butter; one-half cup evaporated
milk. Mix well and pour over the top.
If you wish thicker cake use a .
smaller pan, a 9xl3. Be sure to
grease and Oour your cake [Jan
before pouring in mixture.

a

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Oblinger

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Scott

Grinstead assisted pastor Strang
with the presentation of Holy Communion. Miss LtSa Thomas, cousin

Worthington Methodist Church
was the setting for the wedding May
17 of Victoria Louise Foster,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Wayne B.
Foster of Worthington, formerly of
Gallipolis and Nicholas C. Scott, son
of the late Mr. and Mrs . L. C. Scott of
Portsmouth. Dr. W. Edge Dixon
read the ceremony.
The bride's sister, Barbara
Foster-Wiley, was matron of honor
and J ames Rudolph, brother-in-law
of the groom, served as best man.
John and Jason, twin nephews of the
groom, were ringbea rers.
The ivory satin gown was flared
from an empire waistline into a full
train. Wide bell sleeves, bodice and
front panels of the skirt were trimmed with wide lace . Her veil of embroidered illusion was gathered into
two tiers to the waist: The bride 's
flowers were coral roses and lily of
the valley edged in the same lace.
The matron of honor wore lilac chiffon with a cape collar to waist and
full double skirt. She carried a

crescent arrangement of cora)

the
National Blank
Co.
ministration
and is Book
now employed
by
The young couple are at their new
home at 635 Kienle Ave., Wester·
ville.

white pompom chrysanthemwns
were used at the altar of the church.
Two seven-branched candelabras
of the bride, New Haven, was in
holding tall white tapers were used
charge of the guest book.
on each side of the altar. A Paschal
The bride's mother chose a pastel
candle was also used in the
violet
sheer dress with white hat for
decorating.
her
attire
and wore a corsage of orMrs. Danny Rizer was organist
chids. Mrs. Ohlinger, mother of the
and •he organ prelude before the sergroom, was dressed in a blue print
vice consisted of " Trumpet Tune in
dress,
also wearing a corsage of orD Major" (Purcell), Postlude in G
chids.
Major (Handel), Piece For Organ
Following the wedding, a recep(Mills) . Mrs. Rizer and her sister,
tion
was held in the social room of
Mrs. Michael Lieving, pianist,
the
church.
The bride's table was
presented several organ and piano
covered
with
a white tablecloth. The
duets : " 0 Perfect Love," "Sweetest
wedding
ca~e
decorated in pink and
Story Ever Told," "0 Promise Me, "
white
was
topped
with a nosegay of
and " Largo. " During the service,
fresh
spring
flowers.
Crystal cantwo hymns were sung by the
delabras
holding
white
tapers were
congregation, " Joyful, Joyful," and
on
each
side
of
the
cake.
Beside the
&lt;~ Praise to the Lord. "
crystal punch bowl was a miniature
Holy Conununion was celebrated
bride and groom decoratmg me
by the bride and groom, followed by
.
table,
a gift of Miss Lelah Jane
the wedding party and finally the enPowell.
tire congregation.
The bride chose a cream-colored
Miss Roush, given in marriage by
her father, wore a Victorian style
gown of Wedgewood and P-&lt;iespirit . lliiiiiiiijjjiiiijjjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
lace with a jewel neckline, fitted
sleeves, flounced bodice, full fivetiered bouffant skirt, and cathedral
length train . The veil was waltzlength edged in satin ribbon with
FOR HIS DESK:
venice lace flowe r appliques.
Her bouquet consisted of red
Terrariums
Folial!e Gardens
sweetheart roses and baby's breath
foliage.
Cut Flower
Cactus Gardens
Miss Myra Roush. sister of the
bride, served as maid of honor, Mrs.
Arrangements
Jane Bird, sister of the bride, served
Scenearariums
as matron of honor, and Miss Kay
.
Roush, sister of the bride and Miss
Kathy Jeffries, friend of the bride,
were bridesmaids. They were at·
tired in identical gowns of chiffon
THIS WEEK ONLY
Silesta rose print, ivory background,
with tiered skirt and off-shoulder
neckline.
All the attendants carried longFOR HIS DEN OR OFFICE
stenuned pink roses with white
streamers.
WIRE SERVICE
Barry Farley of Huntington served as best man. Groomsmen were
DELIVERY SERVICE
William Bird, brother-in-law of the
OPEN
WEEKDAYS
~~:~ee, Rboobethrt ~ho;as, cHousin of thde
SUNDAY TO
•
ew aven, an
Homer Smith, Jr., friend of the
groom, Pomeroy. Master Ronnie
.
Ohlinger and Master William
Ohlinger, nephews of the groom, served as Acolytes and ass1·stants
453 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
·
·
bout • m1' les west of Gallipolis.
durl. ng Holy Commun•·on Thomas

FA THE~'$ DAY

roses, ivory carnations and pale and
dark lilacs.
A luncheon reception was planned
for Hickory Grove, Blendon Woods,
but due to inclement weather, it was
held in the church parlor. Mrs. W.
Edge Dixon, Mrs. c. G. Grace, Mrs.
Richard Medhurst and Mrs. Mark
Phillips served the cake, punch and
coffee.
Special guests were the bride's
aunt and uncle, Dr. and Mrs.
Michael Ribet from Lille, France .
Other guests arrived from Phoenix,
New Jersey , Indianapolis, 'Toledo,
Portsmouth,
Ci ncinnati
and
Chillicothe.
Tt.e bride grew up in Gallipolis
and moved to Worthington while in
fifth grade. She attended Bowling
Green university for two years and
graduated (fom Hocking Tech
College in wildlife management. She
spent last summer as one of the first
women mounted rangers in Blue
Ridge National Park. She is now
finishing a degree in Natural
Resources at Ohio State University.
The groom graduated from Ohio
University, Athens, in business ad-

dress with accenting jacket for her,
traveling attire. After returning
from their honeymoon in Atlanta,
Gal., the new Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Ohlinger are now at home to their
friends in Columbus.
Mrs. Ohlinger is a 1975 graduate of
Wahama High School, and also
Capital University in 1979. Ohlinger
is a 1973 graduate of Wahama High
School and served three years in the
First U. S. Army Band, Ft. Mead,
Maryland. Both Mr. and Mrs.
Ohlinger are Managers of Burger
King in Columbus.
Out of town guests were : Mrs.
Eileen Anderson, Parkersburg, WV;
Mrs. Bernice Hawk , Parkersbarg,
WV; Mrs. Evelyn Cox, Ravenswood,
WV; Mrs. Katherine Huss, Huntington, WV; Mrs. Eleanor Strang,
Gallipolis, OH; Mr. Jeffery Kramer,
Columbus, OH; Ms. Leslie Stevenson, Columbus, OH; Mrs. Virginia
Jefferies, Washington, PA, and Ms.
Rita Vining, Pomeroy, OH.

JUNE 15

10 o/o Off ON LARGE

RHODODENDRONS

LARGE PLANTS

9 to 7

1

6

SMELTZER'S

GARDEN CENTER &amp; flOWER SHOP

ri~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--

GET YOUR MONEY IN THE GOING RATE
NEW HAVEN St. Paul
Lutheran Church, New Haven, was
the setting on April 12 for the wedding of Miss LouEllen Roush and
Mr. Michael H. Ohlin~er. Pastor
David Strang of Ypsilanti, Mich. of·
ficiated at the 1::W p.m. double-ring
ceremony .
The bride is the daughter of Mrs.
Velma Roush of New Haven, and
Mr. Lew Roush of Gallipolis, and the
bridegroom 's parents are Mrs.
Gladys Ohlinger and the late
William H. Ohlinger of West Columbia.
Large vases of white gladioli and

Earning this kind of interest used to mean tying your
money up from one to even eight years .
No longer . Our 6·month certificate of deposit gets you in
and out, in only six months .
'

The new 6-month CD will really get your money going.
And your interest rate is guaranteed.
Whatever the 6-month Treasury Bill auction rate is the
week. you purchase your certificate of deposit, that 's the
interest rate you· are guaranteed for its maturity .

Federal regulations require a substantial interest penalty
_for premature withdrawal of certificate funds.
The actual return to in¥estors on Treasury Bills is higher·
than the discount rate offered.

Offers

..

~ .. "

nhi,.

~-- ·------~-····
·'

recent

an impact. '

BETTER BANKING. SERVICE, THAfS THE CENTRAL IDEA

TRUST COMPANY, N. A.
C:.::. THE CENTRAL
4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION
M

tlloo;;

"''~:!·Ui i. OIIICI

MtMti £ H : f'DIC

tile pope .
The protocol ch id also 1s re spon·

'

985-1275.
•
sible for arrangcrnenl'i durin g
President Cart~r·s lrips al&gt;road, but 1 - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

the president's restricted travel
schedule since Valdez took offi ce has
kept those duties slim.

JOH

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. Marie Roy was hostess at her
home for the May meeting of the
Esther Circle. Devotions by Mrs.
Helen Simpson opened the meeting .
" 0 Beautiful fr· Spacious Skies"
was sung by the group. Readings
were given, " The Quality of· I,.ife"
and "Prayer for Peace." A program
on Missions was presented by Mrs.
Mildred Hart. Readings by members included, "G reetings" from
President Helen Baird of Ohio Baptist Women's Conference," "Parson
Peppers ' Paragraphs, of the
organization of Ohio Baptist Convention in 1826," poem, "Move the

Valdez, assistant administrator
for Latin America within the Agency
for International Development
before he was named protocol chief,
was and is the highest · ranking
Hispamc-American at the State
Department.
He sees the growing Hispanic~
Alllerican corrununity as playing the
role of interpreter, explaining the
United States to Latm An1erica and
the other way around.
" I'm asked tu speak on that theme
constantly," Valdez said. " It 's
something that is bcgmning to make

Mountain,'' 1 ' A Mission of His Own,''

poem, "What kind of Faith Do You
Have?," " A Parable of Program."
"My Faith Looks Up to Thee" was
sung and prayer by Mrs. Wanda

Powell closed the meeting. Eleven
members enjoyed refreshments served by the hostess, Mrs. Roy.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart of St.
Cloud, Fla., visited Mr. and Mrs .
Dale Hart and Legina a couple of
days enroute to visit their osn, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hart and family at
Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Hayman and
Jennifer and Dwaine McDaniels of
Pomeroy Route were dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. James Autherson,
Mother's Day.
Mr. and Mrs . max Wolfe of Sandusky spent several days with his
sister, Mrs. Helen Simpson.
Mrs. Mildred Swift of Columbus
spent Mother's Day with her
mother, Mrs. Francis Morris.
Mr. and Mrs .. Bill McKenzie of
Galipolis spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Riffle.

~PER

-

He said that many mem bers of the
diplomatic corps in Washington , ex·
ccpt for those from the larger countries , have surprisingly little access
to U.S. institutions. As one way to inc rease contacts, he wants to start
taking groups of ambassadors on
tours of the United States.
Valdez supervises 142 embassies
in Washington and about I ,000 consulates arounsJ the country. He says
that takes up about half his time.

3rd Ave. atath St.

SYRACUSE- COntributions to
bulidmg fund and the piano fund
made when the Willing Workers
Missionary Society met recently at
the Syracuse First Church of God.
The group agreed to purchase $l00
worth of blocks for the new buildin g
and then to pay $10 on the project
ea ch month and also decided to set
as ide $100 for the new piano to be
purchased when the building is completed and add $10 a month to that
fund.
Bible school was discussed and
will be held July 28-Aug . 1 with the

closmgprogramtobeheldonAug. 3
at 7.30 P:m. The benevolence comm1ttee will assist Mrs . Arnett when
she returns home from the hospital.
Al1ce Loomis was named new
president of the group with Virginia
Oiler being named the new treasurer
for the remainder of the year. Each
member was asked to take
something baked to the next meeting
to sell. The meeting adjourned with
everyone repeating the 23rd Psalm.
The men prepared hotdogs and
joined the Society for refreshments.
The Rev . George Oiler closed the
fellowship with prayer.

lS your grcutest as.~ct tOOay. Yollr actions &gt;\ ill
wm t'ou respect. a!l ·,.,·ell as allies. Find oul more

e~re:

of what lies ahead for you m the )ear [ollowtn~
ynu r bwihday b)' Sf'ndm j\ fnr your copy of Astro-

Gra ph Mail Sl for each to Astro-Gra ph , Box 489 ,
R.ad1o Ctty StatiOn, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to spectfy
birth date.

CANCER lJunc ti·July 2Z' The example )"OU
Will be an admirabl~: Ullt! . It wlil encourage others to uniU!te your beha\'lOr. Oddly
enough, you won't be really trymjS to lJTipre.ss
anyone.
LEO IJuly 23-Au,g. t%1 Toda}·j you are apt to be
both a student and a teacher. In :&gt;&lt;~me irus t.ance.s
you'll gwde fnends. In others, you ' lll~arn from
them
VIRGO \Aug. Zl-Sept. !"!" ) Suc c~ss ~· ill not
elude you today 1f what you do IS for the good of
others, ms well as for your ~dl. Unselfish
motivation will make you a wmner .
UBRA !Sept. t3-0et. !"3) Re~Sardlcss of whose
company )"OU may be in today, you will be
cherished as an amicable compamon. Everyone
LB equal tn your eyes.
SCORPIO !Ocl. %4-Nov. !2! You ha ve the
golden touch today where mone) or matertal
tlungs are uwolved. Where others see no proftt ,
you l'.il.ll fmd a suun:t' for gHin .
SAGrrTARfUS INO\' . 2J.De.:. 21) The
~a thermg usually comes to hfe when you en ter
the scene. Toda y your presence will haYc even
more impact than usual, es pecu~lly to members
of the opposite sex:.
CAPRICORN (Dec. !"2-Jau . 19 ) TI11ngs tlmt are
hard for others t o conclude a,Jd tie down should
be a snap for you today.
AQUARnJS iJan. 26-Feb. 19) Behaving
thoughtfully toward friends lod8)' l'l"il make
f&lt;tvorable Impressions not qw rkly forgott en .
CUillp&lt;:I SSionalc gestures enhant.:t' your im.age.
~et toffity

PISCES (feb. !O.Marcb !"01 Don 't frl!t O\ICt

financml matters tod~ y. Th.ings should work out
ex:actly as you hoped in the long run . Luck IS
likely to intervene on your behalf.
ARIES !March 21-t\prU

m

Thmgs that

requirr creativit)" or irna ~o: ination will lJe the
areas in wh.lrh you will shlne toclliy . Involve
your self m projects where you can ulllue these
t.alents.
~~

Your Instincts for

making or savmg money ure extremely a&lt;."Ute·
today. There 's a so lid chance you 'll do good for
yourself in either or both areHs

Monday, June 9 - Chorus, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 10 · E lderwalk No.
2• 9:30a.m.; Macrame Class, 1-3.
Wednesday, June II- Boat Trip, 8
a.m. to 9:30 p.m.; Vinton Bible
Study , 12:30 p.m.; Card Games,
12 :30 p.m.; World Religion Class, 1
p.m.
Thursday, June 12 - Boat Trip, 8
a.m. to 6 p.m.; Ceramics Class,
!2 :30p.m.; Bible Study, 1-2.
Friday, June 13 - Art l;lass, I&lt; :J""
3p.m.; Soc1alHour, 7p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following menus:
Monday - Beans and ham,
pickled beets, coleslaw, cornbread,
butter, peach crisp, mill&lt;.
Tuesday - Baked spaghetti, broccoli, tossed salad-dressing, bread,
butter, peanut butter cookies, milk.
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
mashed potatoes, green beans,
bread, butter, fruit, milk.
Thursday - Pork casserole, corn,
vegetable slaw, bread, butter,
chocolate pudding, milk.
Friday - Chicken rice casserole,
lima beans, stewed tomatoes, bread,
butter, fruited ?elatin, milk .
Choice of t
cage served with
each meal.

'21• S/R

•1•

..,..~ -

~~~~;~~~~:;:;:;:;:;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-

SMELTZER'S STEAMWAY
614-446· 2096

U. S. NO. 1 MIX ED

Chuck Steak

FRYER PARTS

7C

FRESH LEAN

SUPERIOR'S

Ground Beef

FRANKIES
12 oz.
PKG.

9.c

U.S. No. 1 RUSSET

GOLDEN RIPE

Baking Potatoes

BANANAS

'159

10 LB.
BAG

JOIN AN

25C

LB.

ICE BURG

ESCORTED

Head lettuce

MOTORCOACH TOUR
All Tours Open To The Public

49 e

HD.

:A~B.

~-......-~llllll!!!

COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICES FOR MEMBERS
AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC
MC

130273-SUB·l

OTA 0134

Ph. 446·0699

33 Court St.

2% MILK

DOG FOOD

.,79

25 LB. BAG

GALLON PLASTIC

CALL FOR FREE BROCHURES
Sept. 13·14-HAWAIIAN LAU /Cl N.-Leon Ramey,
escort
Sept. 25·28-N I AGAR A FALLS-leon Ramey, escort
Oct, 3-5-GRAN DOLE OPRY-Leon Ramey, escort
Oct. 3l·Nov.2-FRA.NKE NMUTH-Leon Ramey, escort
CINN. REDS GAME -GREAT SEATS!·GREAT PRICE!

COKE,
AB or SPR

I~~~J~u~Iy~l~2-~1~3~v~s~S~a~n~F~r~a~n~c~is~c~o~.~J~g~a~m~e~s~~~~~~~~~
~

Ev~ing
you've~s

wanted ina
Seafood Platter

•,29

PAPER PLATES

VIM CO

JERI TOWELS

49C

DEL MONTE

BUTTERMILK

CATSUP.
DEL MONTE

Cottage Cheese

SWEET PEAS

9C

$119

BROUGHTON

ICE CREAM
$ 49

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

r-1

cr;;;;g&lt;j~J;;;siiver~
UPPEII' ROUTE 7
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

~69C

C

BROUGHTON

24 oz.
CTN.

s~~!~'g Sl99

JUMBO
ROLL

ROYAL CREST

HALF
GALLON

SEAFOOD SHOPPES

100 CT, PKG.

ELBO MACARONI
POUND
BOX

•
•
•
•
•
•

ST. REGIS .
ECONOMY

8-16 OZ. BTLS.

SMELTZER'S
CARPET CLEANING SPECIALS

Regardless of claims, only Steamway is endorsed by all carpet
manufacturers. Only Steamway guarantees results or no charge .
Because of high gas prices we must charge s.so a mile for anything
overl miles .

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

FRESHEST PRODUCE If/ TOWN

discriminatory basis.

All while and pastel carpets are 25c Sq. Ft.
WE CLEAN UPHOLSTERY AND WALLS

$}1!

'139

HServices render1 . 1 on a non-

Any Living &amp; Dining Room with Hall ............... $42.95
(LimitJSOsq. ft.)

$}5~
'1 ~B.

I

SUNDAV,JUNE8, 1980
Ab.ndou projects that Rave not burnt frult
•ltbln a reaaonablr time . Tlilil coming ;ye.ar you

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for this
week at the Senior Citizens Center

PORK LOIN

Sale Price

ODDS &amp; ENDS
. . . .~ ~-- -

Thats;ngotsavings!

Sr.
Citizen
ASTROGRAPH
Calendar
"boold seck urw aud mon- prumilill(! objectives.
GEMINI !May 21-Jtwe !8 ~ Puttln ~ others a t
ease and makmg them feel llk ed &lt;md importa11t

CHUCK ROAST

Pr.. Pasted. Fabric Backed VInyl, Murals a..f1jtllng Paper

'l/;\~SCHUMACHER

QUARTER SUCED

6

Willing Workersmake donations ~~-,,::::~~~oRTAHLs :!:: stR :~::
.

r!!P."P.!JI'!'I'. .-'!1

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

(Across from Civic center)
Also No. I Ploza Eut Shopping Center, Charleston, W.Va .

Reg .

~-95ft_

"We ReselVt tie Right to timil~'
~-

Huntington, .

525-7090

PHONE

Prices Effective Sunday, June 8 thru Saturday, June 14

.

.

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

Vlt;f STI!Etl, GALLIPOliS, OHIO

-WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET

1

Any Other Room
When Cleaned with Living or Dining Room ...... 515.00

COUIGE
'COMMUNITY COLlEG£

..

more

Anuthcr c hunk of hi s tn11c gllt'.s to
preparing for state visils rrum
[orei gn dignitcHic.s i:Jild i:IC~
companying them during their stay
here. In his first week on duty,
Valdez looked after visitmg Mexican
President Jose Lopez Portillo, then

institutions.

Any Living Room &amp; Hall .............................. $24.95
(Limit 250 sq . ft . )

RIO tiRi\1'!~~

)ti·~

a

TAURUS !April %0-May

Ttlere are big things going. on in tl1e money market. Now,
we can help you be part of them .
Every week, the U.S. Treasury announces the average
auction discount rate bei ng paid on 6·month Treasury
Bills. The f igure is arrived ar through the weekly money
market auction .

,_--------------1

Manufacturing
Technology

on

homecoming trip to Texas and sa id
he found th e e xp e ro e n ce
remarkable.
" It was really quite touching
because I could see myself in them ,"
he sa id. " It makes me feel proud.
but It also makes me feel humble."
The protocol ch ief remembers
that as a youth he dreamed a bout
doing something important.
Now a dapper 37-yea r-old with the
rank of ambassador, Va ldez said he
takes being considered a role model
for migrant youth seriously .
" I feel I can 't let these people

~­

"' ..
......

cele bration

December in Floresville Texas a
little town 40 miles south 'or San Antonio, where Valdez worked as a
migrant laborer between !he ages of
6 and 14.
When Valdez sprinkles his conversation with references to the
"concept that we call America" or
"the American way ," he indudes
examples from his own past as a
farm worker a mong them.
Valdez did not spea k English
fluently until he was 9, but
graduated with honors from high
school in F loresvill e, worked his
way tbough Texas Ax M University ,
graduated from Baylor Law School
and received his Ia w degree from
Harvard.
Valdez spoke to about 300 children ,
many of U1em from migrant

down," he said in an interview in hts
spacious State Department office.
If Valdez gets h1 s way as protocol
ch ief, friends won 't be askmg him
much Iun ger why he took a job
where his main worry would be
knowing how to hold a teacup.
" It 's a lot more Important than
that," he sa 1d about the post he has
held since last fall . "I found that
even in Wa shington people still have
the impression that it's purely
ceremomal but it's not. "
Valdez said that as an extra part
of his job he is working to promote
international trade, particularly
with Latin America, and to broaden
the contact small countries have
with U.S. government and business

YARD,BAKESALESET
LONG BOTTOM - The Long Bot·
REGISTRATION UNDERWAY ;
tom Community Association will -~ Registration for the 1980-81 sch.a&gt;I
sponsor a yard and bake sale Wedyear is now being held a Gingl!l'·
ncsday, Ju.ne 11, from 8 a.m. to S bread House for pre-school childrei.
p.m. Those who WISh to make a
For additional information call
donation are asked to ca ll 985-3910 or
Sandy Luckeydooat 992-7177

.

®

N~STEA

LUX

INSTANT TEA

DISHWASHING LIQUID

3JAR
oz.

'2''

Johnson's .Mkt.
Coupon Exp. 6-14-80

------

320Z.
BTL •

'129

.IO!Inson's Mkt.

�The

Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June8, 1980

B-3- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Son.. of migrant laborers now Chief of Protocol

Three area couples announce marriages hBre

WASHINGTON lAP) - In the
bulging scrapbook kept by Abelardo
Valdez, U.S. chief of protocol, the
best, documented event is not his
greeting of Pope John Paul 11 or
British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher or Egyptian President An·
wa r Sadat.
What takes the most space~ n the
scrapbook are pictures are of a
homeco m ing

..

families ,

r'•. "

':I •

~=

:r •

!-:

Mr. and Mrs. James Plants

r

~.

RIO GRANDE - Simpson Chapel
~ United Methodist Church, Rio Gran~ ~e, was the setting for the May 3
"' wedding of Paula Covert, Rio Gran~ de, and James Plants of Kerr.
~ : The double-ring ceremony was
":: (lerformed by Rev. Michael Berne,
/ pastor of Simpson Chapel. A three
~ branched candelabra and a white
7i rose, tied w1th burgundy ribbon
;:. placed upon the Bible, decorated the
"' altar. The rose was placed there in
~ loving memory of the deceased
~ grandparents of the couple. On each
•; side of the altar were baskets of
white chrysanthemwns, roses, and
;. gladioli on tall antiqued white metal
::.stands.
;:. Seven branched candelabra and
;: paims completed the decorations of
..the front of the church. A half-hour
.: of music preceded the ceremony .
•; with Mrs. Ann Thompson, organist.
1!Her
mother, Mrs. Adelaide Sanders
~
r'was vocalist.
As the parents were seated, each
;;,mother carried a lighted candle and
.- placed it in the three branched can:~delabra on the altar. The bride and
t:!iroom lighted the center candle,
,::using their mother's candles, at the
~conclusion of the ceremony.
• ' Given in marriage by her father,
;..t11e bride wore a Ooor-length gown of
:;:white chiffon over taffeta. The gown
,..!lad a high split neckline, Bishop's
;;sleeves with lace cuff, and Empire
;~waistline. The fitted bodice was im~·)lorted re-embroidered Alencon lace
;~over English sheer net. Tiny seed
;$pearls were attached to the bodice
~nd neckline. The soft flowing skirt
~ontinued into a cathedral length
~a in.
:; The headpiece was a small cloche
t cap of matching Alencon lace and
~ seed pearls, holding a fingertip veil.
~The bride carried a colonia l bouquet
if~ red American Beauty roses and
~by's breath.
~ The bride's maid of honor, Miss

t'

.

S

Barbara Bishop, Mentor, 0 ., and
Miss LaDonna Plants, bridesmaid ,
wore identical Ooor-length gowns of
dusty rose quiana and carried a red
American Beauty rose tied witfi
burgundy ribbon.
For her daughter's wedding, the
bride's mother wore a Ooor-length
gown of ivory quiana, with a chiffon
coat patterned with tiny roses in
dusty rose. The groom's mother
wore a pink floor-length chiffon
gown with a pink lace jacket.
The groom was attended by
Charles Dalton, Jr: of Charleston,
W. Va. The ushers were Ronald
Plants, brother of the groom, and
Daniel Dobbins, Gallipolis.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held in U1e soc1al rooms of
the church.
·
Mrs. Vera Stimson, sister of the
bride, registered the guests. Two
sisters of the bride, Mrs. Robert
Rhea, Xenia, ;~nd Mrs. Howard
Burks, Reynoldsburg, served the
cake, and Mrs . David Covert, Granville, sister-in-law of the bride,
presided at the punch bowl.
Following the reception the couple
left for a wedding trip to S9uth
Carolina.
The bride is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, attended Rio
Grande College, and graduated from
Columbus Technical Institute. She is
employed as Animal Health
Technician at Allen Boster
Veterinary Clinic, Kanauga.
.
The groom is a graduate of North
Gallia High School and is associated
with his father in Gene Plants and
Sons Plumbing, Heating and Air
Conditioning, Gallipolis.
The couple are residing at their
home on the Bulaville-Addison Rd.
The groom's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gilbert Plantz, were
among those who attended the wed·
ding .

. .K atze. 's K orner

?.

·~

ByKATIECROW
;~· Times-Sentinel staff writer
Mike Kloes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
;;raul Kloes, Minersville, loves

B,

~seball.

1·; Recently, Mike attended Diamond
~nterprise

Baseball
Clinic,
f'!'allipolis, and was presented the top
t~rd out of 50 other youths attend,. The top award Mike received was
i:ihe mental attitude, hlJ.'ltle and
~termination award. Also, in his
~e g_roup, he took first· place in

~OWl!lg.

.., LOOk out for this youngster - he
~ll be, in all probability, setting
4lber records as the years progress.

:r:. Today marks

the 83rd birthday of

!era Beegle, Racine. Give her a
j,)ll, she certainly would appreciate
being remembered.
1: The response to obtaining a recipe
r sauerkraut cake was tremenIJ.'l. I appreciate all the calls and
tters I received.
(~The first to contact me was Helen
Diddle, Syraucse. Here is the recipe.
10 One-baH cup of butter; one and
;te-half cup of sugar; three eggs;
one teaspoon of vanilla; one teas~ of baking powder; one teasJ)OOn soda; two cups of flour; two
&amp;Ips sauerkraut; one-fourth to onelialf teaspoon salt; one-half cup of
&lt;2&gt;roa; one cup of water; one cup of
J!i!s it you so desire; rinse kraut
thoroughly and cut in small pieces;
cS-eam butter and sugar and add one
~ at a time beating well; add
wnilla; sift the flour, soda, baking
~wder, salt and cocoa; add to
¢earn millture alternately with
lfater and beat as you add. Stir in
lraut and nuts. Grease and flour pan

i

•

~~

•r.

la st

I

•

and pour in mixture and bake at 350
degrees for 40 to 45 minutes.
The following is frosting for the
cake submitted by Sue Lightfoot.
Melt one-six ounce package of
semi-sweet chocolate bits, four
table~poons of oleo over low heat.
Remove from heat and blend in onehalf cup sour cream, one teaspoon
vanilla and one-half teaspoon of salt.
Gradually add powdered sugar to
make consistency desired.
Now here is the recipe for the
" Mississippi Mud" cake submitted
by Jane Wise .
Mix well two cups sugar, two
sticks of butter and three eggs. Add
one and one-hall cups flour (plain) ;
one-hall cup cocoa, dash of salt, one
and one-half cups pecans (can use
walnuts or whatever you prefer),
one teaspoon vanilla, mix well.
Place in 11 and one-&lt;~uarter by
seven and one-half inch pan and
bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes.
Remove from oven and place about
three-fourths of a bag of marstunallows or use marshmallow
cream orr top. Place back in oven
and Jet melt. Remove and spread
across top and let cool.
Marshmallow cream is better
than marshmallows to use on top.
Mter cake bas cooled apply the
following icing on ti/P of the mar·
stunallow topping. Leave the cake in
the pan.
Icing: One box confectionary
sugar, one-half cup cocoa, I&gt; stick of
butter; one-half cup evaporated
milk. Mix well and pour over the top.
If you wish thicker cake use a .
smaller pan, a 9xl3. Be sure to
grease and Oour your cake [Jan
before pouring in mixture.

a

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Oblinger

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Scott

Grinstead assisted pastor Strang
with the presentation of Holy Communion. Miss LtSa Thomas, cousin

Worthington Methodist Church
was the setting for the wedding May
17 of Victoria Louise Foster,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Wayne B.
Foster of Worthington, formerly of
Gallipolis and Nicholas C. Scott, son
of the late Mr. and Mrs . L. C. Scott of
Portsmouth. Dr. W. Edge Dixon
read the ceremony.
The bride's sister, Barbara
Foster-Wiley, was matron of honor
and J ames Rudolph, brother-in-law
of the groom, served as best man.
John and Jason, twin nephews of the
groom, were ringbea rers.
The ivory satin gown was flared
from an empire waistline into a full
train. Wide bell sleeves, bodice and
front panels of the skirt were trimmed with wide lace . Her veil of embroidered illusion was gathered into
two tiers to the waist: The bride 's
flowers were coral roses and lily of
the valley edged in the same lace.
The matron of honor wore lilac chiffon with a cape collar to waist and
full double skirt. She carried a

crescent arrangement of cora)

the
National Blank
Co.
ministration
and is Book
now employed
by
The young couple are at their new
home at 635 Kienle Ave., Wester·
ville.

white pompom chrysanthemwns
were used at the altar of the church.
Two seven-branched candelabras
of the bride, New Haven, was in
holding tall white tapers were used
charge of the guest book.
on each side of the altar. A Paschal
The bride's mother chose a pastel
candle was also used in the
violet
sheer dress with white hat for
decorating.
her
attire
and wore a corsage of orMrs. Danny Rizer was organist
chids. Mrs. Ohlinger, mother of the
and •he organ prelude before the sergroom, was dressed in a blue print
vice consisted of " Trumpet Tune in
dress,
also wearing a corsage of orD Major" (Purcell), Postlude in G
chids.
Major (Handel), Piece For Organ
Following the wedding, a recep(Mills) . Mrs. Rizer and her sister,
tion
was held in the social room of
Mrs. Michael Lieving, pianist,
the
church.
The bride's table was
presented several organ and piano
covered
with
a white tablecloth. The
duets : " 0 Perfect Love," "Sweetest
wedding
ca~e
decorated in pink and
Story Ever Told," "0 Promise Me, "
white
was
topped
with a nosegay of
and " Largo. " During the service,
fresh
spring
flowers.
Crystal cantwo hymns were sung by the
delabras
holding
white
tapers were
congregation, " Joyful, Joyful," and
on
each
side
of
the
cake.
Beside the
&lt;~ Praise to the Lord. "
crystal punch bowl was a miniature
Holy Conununion was celebrated
bride and groom decoratmg me
by the bride and groom, followed by
.
table,
a gift of Miss Lelah Jane
the wedding party and finally the enPowell.
tire congregation.
The bride chose a cream-colored
Miss Roush, given in marriage by
her father, wore a Victorian style
gown of Wedgewood and P-&lt;iespirit . lliiiiiiiijjjiiiijjjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjijjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
lace with a jewel neckline, fitted
sleeves, flounced bodice, full fivetiered bouffant skirt, and cathedral
length train . The veil was waltzlength edged in satin ribbon with
FOR HIS DESK:
venice lace flowe r appliques.
Her bouquet consisted of red
Terrariums
Folial!e Gardens
sweetheart roses and baby's breath
foliage.
Cut Flower
Cactus Gardens
Miss Myra Roush. sister of the
bride, served as maid of honor, Mrs.
Arrangements
Jane Bird, sister of the bride, served
Scenearariums
as matron of honor, and Miss Kay
.
Roush, sister of the bride and Miss
Kathy Jeffries, friend of the bride,
were bridesmaids. They were at·
tired in identical gowns of chiffon
THIS WEEK ONLY
Silesta rose print, ivory background,
with tiered skirt and off-shoulder
neckline.
All the attendants carried longFOR HIS DEN OR OFFICE
stenuned pink roses with white
streamers.
WIRE SERVICE
Barry Farley of Huntington served as best man. Groomsmen were
DELIVERY SERVICE
William Bird, brother-in-law of the
OPEN
WEEKDAYS
~~:~ee, Rboobethrt ~ho;as, cHousin of thde
SUNDAY TO
•
ew aven, an
Homer Smith, Jr., friend of the
groom, Pomeroy. Master Ronnie
.
Ohlinger and Master William
Ohlinger, nephews of the groom, served as Acolytes and ass1·stants
453 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
·
·
bout • m1' les west of Gallipolis.
durl. ng Holy Commun•·on Thomas

FA THE~'$ DAY

roses, ivory carnations and pale and
dark lilacs.
A luncheon reception was planned
for Hickory Grove, Blendon Woods,
but due to inclement weather, it was
held in the church parlor. Mrs. W.
Edge Dixon, Mrs. c. G. Grace, Mrs.
Richard Medhurst and Mrs. Mark
Phillips served the cake, punch and
coffee.
Special guests were the bride's
aunt and uncle, Dr. and Mrs.
Michael Ribet from Lille, France .
Other guests arrived from Phoenix,
New Jersey , Indianapolis, 'Toledo,
Portsmouth,
Ci ncinnati
and
Chillicothe.
Tt.e bride grew up in Gallipolis
and moved to Worthington while in
fifth grade. She attended Bowling
Green university for two years and
graduated (fom Hocking Tech
College in wildlife management. She
spent last summer as one of the first
women mounted rangers in Blue
Ridge National Park. She is now
finishing a degree in Natural
Resources at Ohio State University.
The groom graduated from Ohio
University, Athens, in business ad-

dress with accenting jacket for her,
traveling attire. After returning
from their honeymoon in Atlanta,
Gal., the new Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Ohlinger are now at home to their
friends in Columbus.
Mrs. Ohlinger is a 1975 graduate of
Wahama High School, and also
Capital University in 1979. Ohlinger
is a 1973 graduate of Wahama High
School and served three years in the
First U. S. Army Band, Ft. Mead,
Maryland. Both Mr. and Mrs.
Ohlinger are Managers of Burger
King in Columbus.
Out of town guests were : Mrs.
Eileen Anderson, Parkersburg, WV;
Mrs. Bernice Hawk , Parkersbarg,
WV; Mrs. Evelyn Cox, Ravenswood,
WV; Mrs. Katherine Huss, Huntington, WV; Mrs. Eleanor Strang,
Gallipolis, OH; Mr. Jeffery Kramer,
Columbus, OH; Ms. Leslie Stevenson, Columbus, OH; Mrs. Virginia
Jefferies, Washington, PA, and Ms.
Rita Vining, Pomeroy, OH.

JUNE 15

10 o/o Off ON LARGE

RHODODENDRONS

LARGE PLANTS

9 to 7

1

6

SMELTZER'S

GARDEN CENTER &amp; flOWER SHOP

ri~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--

GET YOUR MONEY IN THE GOING RATE
NEW HAVEN St. Paul
Lutheran Church, New Haven, was
the setting on April 12 for the wedding of Miss LouEllen Roush and
Mr. Michael H. Ohlin~er. Pastor
David Strang of Ypsilanti, Mich. of·
ficiated at the 1::W p.m. double-ring
ceremony .
The bride is the daughter of Mrs.
Velma Roush of New Haven, and
Mr. Lew Roush of Gallipolis, and the
bridegroom 's parents are Mrs.
Gladys Ohlinger and the late
William H. Ohlinger of West Columbia.
Large vases of white gladioli and

Earning this kind of interest used to mean tying your
money up from one to even eight years .
No longer . Our 6·month certificate of deposit gets you in
and out, in only six months .
'

The new 6-month CD will really get your money going.
And your interest rate is guaranteed.
Whatever the 6-month Treasury Bill auction rate is the
week. you purchase your certificate of deposit, that 's the
interest rate you· are guaranteed for its maturity .

Federal regulations require a substantial interest penalty
_for premature withdrawal of certificate funds.
The actual return to in¥estors on Treasury Bills is higher·
than the discount rate offered.

Offers

..

~ .. "

nhi,.

~-- ·------~-····
·'

recent

an impact. '

BETTER BANKING. SERVICE, THAfS THE CENTRAL IDEA

TRUST COMPANY, N. A.
C:.::. THE CENTRAL
4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION
M

tlloo;;

"''~:!·Ui i. OIIICI

MtMti £ H : f'DIC

tile pope .
The protocol ch id also 1s re spon·

'

985-1275.
•
sible for arrangcrnenl'i durin g
President Cart~r·s lrips al&gt;road, but 1 - - - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

the president's restricted travel
schedule since Valdez took offi ce has
kept those duties slim.

JOH

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. Marie Roy was hostess at her
home for the May meeting of the
Esther Circle. Devotions by Mrs.
Helen Simpson opened the meeting .
" 0 Beautiful fr· Spacious Skies"
was sung by the group. Readings
were given, " The Quality of· I,.ife"
and "Prayer for Peace." A program
on Missions was presented by Mrs.
Mildred Hart. Readings by members included, "G reetings" from
President Helen Baird of Ohio Baptist Women's Conference," "Parson
Peppers ' Paragraphs, of the
organization of Ohio Baptist Convention in 1826," poem, "Move the

Valdez, assistant administrator
for Latin America within the Agency
for International Development
before he was named protocol chief,
was and is the highest · ranking
Hispamc-American at the State
Department.
He sees the growing Hispanic~
Alllerican corrununity as playing the
role of interpreter, explaining the
United States to Latm An1erica and
the other way around.
" I'm asked tu speak on that theme
constantly," Valdez said. " It 's
something that is bcgmning to make

Mountain,'' 1 ' A Mission of His Own,''

poem, "What kind of Faith Do You
Have?," " A Parable of Program."
"My Faith Looks Up to Thee" was
sung and prayer by Mrs. Wanda

Powell closed the meeting. Eleven
members enjoyed refreshments served by the hostess, Mrs. Roy.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart of St.
Cloud, Fla., visited Mr. and Mrs .
Dale Hart and Legina a couple of
days enroute to visit their osn, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hart and family at
Newark.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Hayman and
Jennifer and Dwaine McDaniels of
Pomeroy Route were dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. James Autherson,
Mother's Day.
Mr. and Mrs . max Wolfe of Sandusky spent several days with his
sister, Mrs. Helen Simpson.
Mrs. Mildred Swift of Columbus
spent Mother's Day with her
mother, Mrs. Francis Morris.
Mr. and Mrs .. Bill McKenzie of
Galipolis spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Riffle.

~PER

-

He said that many mem bers of the
diplomatic corps in Washington , ex·
ccpt for those from the larger countries , have surprisingly little access
to U.S. institutions. As one way to inc rease contacts, he wants to start
taking groups of ambassadors on
tours of the United States.
Valdez supervises 142 embassies
in Washington and about I ,000 consulates arounsJ the country. He says
that takes up about half his time.

3rd Ave. atath St.

SYRACUSE- COntributions to
bulidmg fund and the piano fund
made when the Willing Workers
Missionary Society met recently at
the Syracuse First Church of God.
The group agreed to purchase $l00
worth of blocks for the new buildin g
and then to pay $10 on the project
ea ch month and also decided to set
as ide $100 for the new piano to be
purchased when the building is completed and add $10 a month to that
fund.
Bible school was discussed and
will be held July 28-Aug . 1 with the

closmgprogramtobeheldonAug. 3
at 7.30 P:m. The benevolence comm1ttee will assist Mrs . Arnett when
she returns home from the hospital.
Al1ce Loomis was named new
president of the group with Virginia
Oiler being named the new treasurer
for the remainder of the year. Each
member was asked to take
something baked to the next meeting
to sell. The meeting adjourned with
everyone repeating the 23rd Psalm.
The men prepared hotdogs and
joined the Society for refreshments.
The Rev . George Oiler closed the
fellowship with prayer.

lS your grcutest as.~ct tOOay. Yollr actions &gt;\ ill
wm t'ou respect. a!l ·,.,·ell as allies. Find oul more

e~re:

of what lies ahead for you m the )ear [ollowtn~
ynu r bwihday b)' Sf'ndm j\ fnr your copy of Astro-

Gra ph Mail Sl for each to Astro-Gra ph , Box 489 ,
R.ad1o Ctty StatiOn, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to spectfy
birth date.

CANCER lJunc ti·July 2Z' The example )"OU
Will be an admirabl~: Ullt! . It wlil encourage others to uniU!te your beha\'lOr. Oddly
enough, you won't be really trymjS to lJTipre.ss
anyone.
LEO IJuly 23-Au,g. t%1 Toda}·j you are apt to be
both a student and a teacher. In :&gt;&lt;~me irus t.ance.s
you'll gwde fnends. In others, you ' lll~arn from
them
VIRGO \Aug. Zl-Sept. !"!" ) Suc c~ss ~· ill not
elude you today 1f what you do IS for the good of
others, ms well as for your ~dl. Unselfish
motivation will make you a wmner .
UBRA !Sept. t3-0et. !"3) Re~Sardlcss of whose
company )"OU may be in today, you will be
cherished as an amicable compamon. Everyone
LB equal tn your eyes.
SCORPIO !Ocl. %4-Nov. !2! You ha ve the
golden touch today where mone) or matertal
tlungs are uwolved. Where others see no proftt ,
you l'.il.ll fmd a suun:t' for gHin .
SAGrrTARfUS INO\' . 2J.De.:. 21) The
~a thermg usually comes to hfe when you en ter
the scene. Toda y your presence will haYc even
more impact than usual, es pecu~lly to members
of the opposite sex:.
CAPRICORN (Dec. !"2-Jau . 19 ) TI11ngs tlmt are
hard for others t o conclude a,Jd tie down should
be a snap for you today.
AQUARnJS iJan. 26-Feb. 19) Behaving
thoughtfully toward friends lod8)' l'l"il make
f&lt;tvorable Impressions not qw rkly forgott en .
CUillp&lt;:I SSionalc gestures enhant.:t' your im.age.
~et toffity

PISCES (feb. !O.Marcb !"01 Don 't frl!t O\ICt

financml matters tod~ y. Th.ings should work out
ex:actly as you hoped in the long run . Luck IS
likely to intervene on your behalf.
ARIES !March 21-t\prU

m

Thmgs that

requirr creativit)" or irna ~o: ination will lJe the
areas in wh.lrh you will shlne toclliy . Involve
your self m projects where you can ulllue these
t.alents.
~~

Your Instincts for

making or savmg money ure extremely a&lt;."Ute·
today. There 's a so lid chance you 'll do good for
yourself in either or both areHs

Monday, June 9 - Chorus, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 10 · E lderwalk No.
2• 9:30a.m.; Macrame Class, 1-3.
Wednesday, June II- Boat Trip, 8
a.m. to 9:30 p.m.; Vinton Bible
Study , 12:30 p.m.; Card Games,
12 :30 p.m.; World Religion Class, 1
p.m.
Thursday, June 12 - Boat Trip, 8
a.m. to 6 p.m.; Ceramics Class,
!2 :30p.m.; Bible Study, 1-2.
Friday, June 13 - Art l;lass, I&lt; :J""
3p.m.; Soc1alHour, 7p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following menus:
Monday - Beans and ham,
pickled beets, coleslaw, cornbread,
butter, peach crisp, mill&lt;.
Tuesday - Baked spaghetti, broccoli, tossed salad-dressing, bread,
butter, peanut butter cookies, milk.
Wednesday - Baked chicken,
mashed potatoes, green beans,
bread, butter, fruit, milk.
Thursday - Pork casserole, corn,
vegetable slaw, bread, butter,
chocolate pudding, milk.
Friday - Chicken rice casserole,
lima beans, stewed tomatoes, bread,
butter, fruited ?elatin, milk .
Choice of t
cage served with
each meal.

'21• S/R

•1•

..,..~ -

~~~~;~~~~:;:;:;:;:;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-

SMELTZER'S STEAMWAY
614-446· 2096

U. S. NO. 1 MIX ED

Chuck Steak

FRYER PARTS

7C

FRESH LEAN

SUPERIOR'S

Ground Beef

FRANKIES
12 oz.
PKG.

9.c

U.S. No. 1 RUSSET

GOLDEN RIPE

Baking Potatoes

BANANAS

'159

10 LB.
BAG

JOIN AN

25C

LB.

ICE BURG

ESCORTED

Head lettuce

MOTORCOACH TOUR
All Tours Open To The Public

49 e

HD.

:A~B.

~-......-~llllll!!!

COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVICES FOR MEMBERS
AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC
MC

130273-SUB·l

OTA 0134

Ph. 446·0699

33 Court St.

2% MILK

DOG FOOD

.,79

25 LB. BAG

GALLON PLASTIC

CALL FOR FREE BROCHURES
Sept. 13·14-HAWAIIAN LAU /Cl N.-Leon Ramey,
escort
Sept. 25·28-N I AGAR A FALLS-leon Ramey, escort
Oct, 3-5-GRAN DOLE OPRY-Leon Ramey, escort
Oct. 3l·Nov.2-FRA.NKE NMUTH-Leon Ramey, escort
CINN. REDS GAME -GREAT SEATS!·GREAT PRICE!

COKE,
AB or SPR

I~~~J~u~Iy~l~2-~1~3~v~s~S~a~n~F~r~a~n~c~is~c~o~.~J~g~a~m~e~s~~~~~~~~~
~

Ev~ing
you've~s

wanted ina
Seafood Platter

•,29

PAPER PLATES

VIM CO

JERI TOWELS

49C

DEL MONTE

BUTTERMILK

CATSUP.
DEL MONTE

Cottage Cheese

SWEET PEAS

9C

$119

BROUGHTON

ICE CREAM
$ 49

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

r-1

cr;;;;g&lt;j~J;;;siiver~
UPPEII' ROUTE 7
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

~69C

C

BROUGHTON

24 oz.
CTN.

s~~!~'g Sl99

JUMBO
ROLL

ROYAL CREST

HALF
GALLON

SEAFOOD SHOPPES

100 CT, PKG.

ELBO MACARONI
POUND
BOX

•
•
•
•
•
•

ST. REGIS .
ECONOMY

8-16 OZ. BTLS.

SMELTZER'S
CARPET CLEANING SPECIALS

Regardless of claims, only Steamway is endorsed by all carpet
manufacturers. Only Steamway guarantees results or no charge .
Because of high gas prices we must charge s.so a mile for anything
overl miles .

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

FRESHEST PRODUCE If/ TOWN

discriminatory basis.

All while and pastel carpets are 25c Sq. Ft.
WE CLEAN UPHOLSTERY AND WALLS

$}1!

'139

HServices render1 . 1 on a non-

Any Living &amp; Dining Room with Hall ............... $42.95
(LimitJSOsq. ft.)

$}5~
'1 ~B.

I

SUNDAV,JUNE8, 1980
Ab.ndou projects that Rave not burnt frult
•ltbln a reaaonablr time . Tlilil coming ;ye.ar you

GALLIPOLIS - Activities for this
week at the Senior Citizens Center

PORK LOIN

Sale Price

ODDS &amp; ENDS
. . . .~ ~-- -

Thats;ngotsavings!

Sr.
Citizen
ASTROGRAPH
Calendar
"boold seck urw aud mon- prumilill(! objectives.
GEMINI !May 21-Jtwe !8 ~ Puttln ~ others a t
ease and makmg them feel llk ed &lt;md importa11t

CHUCK ROAST

Pr.. Pasted. Fabric Backed VInyl, Murals a..f1jtllng Paper

'l/;\~SCHUMACHER

QUARTER SUCED

6

Willing Workersmake donations ~~-,,::::~~~oRTAHLs :!:: stR :~::
.

r!!P."P.!JI'!'I'. .-'!1

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

(Across from Civic center)
Also No. I Ploza Eut Shopping Center, Charleston, W.Va .

Reg .

~-95ft_

"We ReselVt tie Right to timil~'
~-

Huntington, .

525-7090

PHONE

Prices Effective Sunday, June 8 thru Saturday, June 14

.

.

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

Vlt;f STI!Etl, GALLIPOliS, OHIO

-WALLPAPER SUPERMARKET

1

Any Other Room
When Cleaned with Living or Dining Room ...... 515.00

COUIGE
'COMMUNITY COLlEG£

..

more

Anuthcr c hunk of hi s tn11c gllt'.s to
preparing for state visils rrum
[orei gn dignitcHic.s i:Jild i:IC~
companying them during their stay
here. In his first week on duty,
Valdez looked after visitmg Mexican
President Jose Lopez Portillo, then

institutions.

Any Living Room &amp; Hall .............................. $24.95
(Limit 250 sq . ft . )

RIO tiRi\1'!~~

)ti·~

a

TAURUS !April %0-May

Ttlere are big things going. on in tl1e money market. Now,
we can help you be part of them .
Every week, the U.S. Treasury announces the average
auction discount rate bei ng paid on 6·month Treasury
Bills. The f igure is arrived ar through the weekly money
market auction .

,_--------------1

Manufacturing
Technology

on

homecoming trip to Texas and sa id
he found th e e xp e ro e n ce
remarkable.
" It was really quite touching
because I could see myself in them ,"
he sa id. " It makes me feel proud.
but It also makes me feel humble."
The protocol ch ief remembers
that as a youth he dreamed a bout
doing something important.
Now a dapper 37-yea r-old with the
rank of ambassador, Va ldez said he
takes being considered a role model
for migrant youth seriously .
" I feel I can 't let these people

~­

"' ..
......

cele bration

December in Floresville Texas a
little town 40 miles south 'or San Antonio, where Valdez worked as a
migrant laborer between !he ages of
6 and 14.
When Valdez sprinkles his conversation with references to the
"concept that we call America" or
"the American way ," he indudes
examples from his own past as a
farm worker a mong them.
Valdez did not spea k English
fluently until he was 9, but
graduated with honors from high
school in F loresvill e, worked his
way tbough Texas Ax M University ,
graduated from Baylor Law School
and received his Ia w degree from
Harvard.
Valdez spoke to about 300 children ,
many of U1em from migrant

down," he said in an interview in hts
spacious State Department office.
If Valdez gets h1 s way as protocol
ch ief, friends won 't be askmg him
much Iun ger why he took a job
where his main worry would be
knowing how to hold a teacup.
" It 's a lot more Important than
that," he sa 1d about the post he has
held since last fall . "I found that
even in Wa shington people still have
the impression that it's purely
ceremomal but it's not. "
Valdez said that as an extra part
of his job he is working to promote
international trade, particularly
with Latin America, and to broaden
the contact small countries have
with U.S. government and business

YARD,BAKESALESET
LONG BOTTOM - The Long Bot·
REGISTRATION UNDERWAY ;
tom Community Association will -~ Registration for the 1980-81 sch.a&gt;I
sponsor a yard and bake sale Wedyear is now being held a Gingl!l'·
ncsday, Ju.ne 11, from 8 a.m. to S bread House for pre-school childrei.
p.m. Those who WISh to make a
For additional information call
donation are asked to ca ll 985-3910 or
Sandy Luckeydooat 992-7177

.

®

N~STEA

LUX

INSTANT TEA

DISHWASHING LIQUID

3JAR
oz.

'2''

Johnson's .Mkt.
Coupon Exp. 6-14-80

------

320Z.
BTL •

'129

.IO!Inson's Mkt.

�••
B-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

M-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8,1980

Class of '70 graduates 10 years late
ATHENS, Ohio (AP I - When
Cra1g Lindberg· learned that Ohio
University planned to hold commencement exercises for its 1970
: class today - 10 years late - he
jwnped at the opportunity.
Graduations are nearly a lways unfortunate events for Lindberg. His
lugh school conunencement was
1 arly rained out and his college
exercises were canceled because of
campus rioting.

" I;m looking forward for a chance
to put on my robe and gown," sa1d
the 32-year-old Lmdberg, now a
managing agent for a Colun1bus real
estate firm . " l want the opportunity
to graduate."
Lindberg is among 68 persons expected to join more than 2,500 members of Ohio University's 1980 class
during graduation exercises today.
OfficiaLs decided to cancel the last

month

uf

classes

and

com-

mencement exercises at Ohio
University 10 years ago because of
campus disruptions which occurred
after four students were killed by
National Guardsman May 4, 1970, at
Kent State University, situated at
the opposite end of the sta te.
Following the sh!J!)tings, many of
Kent State's protesters traveled to
the Athens campus, accordmg t o
Cynthia Weir , another 1970 graduate
who planned to return to the Athens
campus to graduate today. Tile
result was a barrage of fire bombings and tear gas raids, she said.
" It was a very sad time of my life
+ the closest I hope I ever come to
war, " sa1d Ms. Weir , 32, manager of
a Columbia Gas Co. offi ce in Logan.
" It also was sad for me to go on for
four years a nd just walk away with
no chance to graduate."
Other 1970 graduates also felt bad
about receiving their diploma s in the

mail rather than on a plaUorm. So a
few yce~rs ago, some asked the
sc hool to reschedule their com-

mencement.
The university agreed, setting the
ceremon ies and a HI-year reunion
for today. Invitations were sent to
2,700 of the class' 4,160 members those whose names and ad,dresses
had not been lost. And 68 persons,
canting from as far as Louisiana,
Massachusetts and even Japan,
ag reed to parti cipate in the
graduation exercises, with an.o ther
40 to attend the reunion.
Like Ms. Weir, many are returning to see one another - even if
they may not know who any of the
others are.
" I know you can't go home again
and I'm not going back for that
reason," she said. " It's more of a
reunion than the act of going through
graduation exercises. And I want to
be a pa1t ofthat."

MR. GRABER MOVES
POMEROY ~ Since the death of
his wife, Grace, Anthony Graber,
former Meigs County resident, has
left the Valerie Nursing Home in
Dayton, and is now living with his
youngest daughter, Mr . and Mrs.
Robert "Funke, the former Teresa
MIDDLEPORT - The fifth bir- Marie Graber.
thday of Matthew Craddock was
For friends or relatives who would
celebrated recently at the home of like to correspond with Mr. Graber,
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E . his new address is Anthony Graber ,
E. Stiles, Middleport.
516 Vincent Rd ., S.E., Huntsville,
Cake and ice crea were served. At- Ala. 35802.
tending were Barbara, Jimmy, Ruth
Ann and Sue Ellen Fry, Kyle Sim-

Birthday
celebrated

pson, Marjorie Wigal, Matthew 's
mother, Nma Craddock, and his
grandparents. Calling earlier in the
day were Erlene and Joanna Scarand Mrs . Nancy Reed.

'liiiiiiii!iiiii
I

Sears

COMMENCEMENT TONIGHT
LETART FALL.S - The Apple
Grove, Letart FaUs and East Letart
Bible School commencement will
be held this evening at 8 p.m. at the
Letart Falls United Methodist Church. All parents and friends are invited to attend.

By Beth Stone
Special Corrt!llpondent
Copyright Belli Stone, 1980
Dear Beth,
I like to feel that my school age
children are spending their swnmer
in some worthwhile ways. The first
week school is out, I spend a little
time with each child alone, helping
him or her decide on a summer
project. Mter discussing various
possibilities the child selects one or
two long-term projects which he
promises (in writing) to complete
during his sununer vacation. We
post these "goals" on our family
buUetin board so aU family members can be tnserested in each
other's projects,
Some of the projects I suggest that
type, making a special Chrl.sUnas
gift for each family member, learning photography or caligraphy,
making decorated gift wrap paper
and-or Ch(istmas cards, working
with .c lay and ceramics, sewing ii
garment for fall, learning to play
tennis or chess, sorting and
organizing family photographs or
making personal scrapbook of
previous year's activities, reading
ten books on the child's favorite hob-

formally at the La Leche League of
Gallipolis meeting. This fourth
meeting of the series covers
"Nutrition and Weaning, " wiU be
held Monday, June 9 beginning at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Beverly
Splete.
Nursin g babies are always
welcome to accompany their
mothers.
For further information caU Bev
Splete, 446-4010 or Debbie Grueser,
992-3844.

Here come summer's berries'
By CECIL Y BROWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor
Deep down in our hearts, some of
us believe the best and purest way to
serve swnmer's lovely berries 1.s
with heavy cream, " pour" or whi!&gt;'
ped. Nevertheless, there are other
delectable but less calorific accompaniments.
Strawberries, blueberries, rasl&gt;'
berries and qthers of their clan are
delicious accompanied by a simple
custard sauce. Another caloriecoulter i.s cream-style cottage
cheese whirled smooth in an electric
blender with a little milk - ersatz
sour cream. And of course there's
always yogurt .
The c u stard sa uce accompaniment is one we grew up on.
The ersatz sour cream is an idea we
hit on many years ago and that since
has captivated cooks. Yogurt has
begun to be extremely popular
around our house since we 've been
making it at home.
Just recently we tried a new combination we 're in love with . If you try
it, you may become equally
enamored. We baked a " Very, Very
Easy Crustless Cheese Cake" and

Children spend summer well

are "surruner-sized" are learning to

LaLeche League to meet
GALUPOLIS - " It's hot and
hwnid. With school out of session the
children are in and out of the house
all day lon g wanting drinks and
snacks. Need a few ideas on how to
make these nutritious as well as
quenching ? Does that nursing baby II
need supplemental liquids? How do
you calm an irritable pre-schooler?
How long should a baby nurse ?,"
asks Bev Splete, La Leche League
president.
These are an example of some of
the topics that will be discussed in-

Formulas for Fun
by, making a collection and reading
books about it, training a new pet.
Whatever the project is, it should
be a significant learning experience
which is of great interest to the particular child. The project should be
long lasting so that it can continue
throughout the sununer. But it
should be one which can be started
and stopped, depending on available
time and interest. It should be a
project which needs a little adult
guidance intermittently. You and
your child sometimes can enjoy it
together, which tells him that HlS
special interests are worthwhile to
you. But most of the project should
be something the chi ld can do alone.
Whenever he says, "I'm bored. I
don'l"have anything to do," you can
respond with, " That's great! You
have time to spend on one of your
special projects I"
Dear Reader,
Thank you for this excellent letter! Write to Beth Stone, FORMULAS FOR FUN, P. 0. Box 1061,
Paris, Texas 75460. For personal an·
swers send sell-addre'lSed, stamped
envelope. We reserve the right to
edit letters and they become the
property of Beth Stone. None can be
returned.

UMME:R'S &lt;'J;I&lt;'&lt;'" BERRIES - As rendered in the 1900s.
From the culinary picture collection of Cecily Brownstone,
Associated Press Food Editor.

I

URPHYS

Library~
6

Tbe

. '(~

Cricketeer.

APPLE GROVE
Mrs. Eula Wolfe vl.sited Monday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. John Ord
at Letart, W. Va . and vi.sited graves
of loved ones at Board, Fry and
Graham Station cetnetertes. She
also visited her sister, Mrs. Fannie
Roush . On Tuesday evening Mrs.
Wolle and Mrs. Addie Norris visited
Mrs. Nora Lewl.s at Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDale
visited Mrs. Edna Roush and Mrs.
Gladys Shields Memortal weekend
and attended the dinner at the Letart
Fa Us Community Hall Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs, Eddie Hupp, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter McDade of Troy visited
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert Roush Saturday evening.

Fatb

NOW THROUGH SATURDAY,JUNII4

R

Letters

Wimbledon
Blazer by

served small squares of It with fresh
berries.
We found the recipe for the cheese
cake lltta delightful "charity" cookbook, "Specialties of the House "
(Our Lady of Grace Montessori
School, Manhasset, N. Y.) - well
worth looking into.

Your fashion
set point. .

NAME BAND- " Music in the Morgan Manner" will be featured at
the Royal Oak Recreation Building Thursday when the Royal Oak Ballroom Dance Club wiU host the Russ Morgan Band. Pictured is Jack
Morgan, son of the late Russ Morgan, who took over as leader and conductor of the orchestra upon the death of his father in 1969. Morgan sings
111 several different languages in addition to fronting the band. The local
dance will be from 8 p.m . until midnight.

••'

:
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;

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•

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II\

,l gy,

:

Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and Mr.
~ and Mrs. Bruce Hart of Columbus
~ en joyed a trip to Indianapolis, In~ diana Memorial weekend and en{ joyed the Indie 500 Races Sunday.
•
Mrs. J ohn (Erma) Hill is a
~ surgical patient at Holzer Medical
• -Center. Mr. and Mrs . Don Bell
: visited her Thursday. Visiting her
~ .. Tuesday we re Rev. David Harris,
~ Don and Lois Bell and J ohn fiill .
~
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons were
' Monday dinner guests of Mr. and
~ Mrs . Donald Barnette at Albany .
~
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ables, Vicki
~ Ables of Columbus were Memorial
: weekend guests of Mr. a nd Mrs.
::1 Jack Ables.' Vicki remamed for an

•

•

indefinite visit.

~

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knighting of

~ : Gallipolis visited Mr. and Mrs. Ar-

• · nolu Anderson Saturday evemng .
•
Mr. a nd Mrs. Arnold Anderson
j and daughters, Brenda and Lori,
~ were Mother's Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Willord, Lisa and Kim,
" at Portland
~
Isadore Rhode s of Hooper,
•; Nebm.,ka s pent a week with his
' ~ i stcr, Mr. and Mrs . Owen An: derson.
~
Mr and Mrs . Charles Winebren: ner and da ughter, Jody , of Newbury,
; Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Burton and
daughter, Sherry, of Colwnbus were
• Memorial weekend guests of Mr .
• and Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
~ - Mrs. Bca Donohue accompanied

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her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Gilbert to Jacksonville, Fla. for a
two weeks vacation .
Mrs. Gertie Hall and relatives
visited at her mobile home in Letart
over Memorial weekend.
Kimberly Kay Wilford of Portland
spent Sunday night through Monday
with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Anderson, Brenda and Lori.
Memorial weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs Tom Norris were Rev. Tan
Norris and son, Lawrence, of Rome
City , Indiana ; Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Norris, Mrs. Opal Zerkle of
Syracuse; Rev . Freeland Norris,
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Hayffian of
Westerville ; Mrs. Nondus Hendrick,
friend, Mrs. Anderson of Racine ;
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Gathers,
daughter Sandra of Colwnbus ; Mr.
a nd Mrs . Larry Gathers and
daughter, Kelly, of Chillicothe .
Cortney Roush was an overnight
patient at Holzer Medical Center
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spencer
Tuesdayduetoavirus.
spent a week in St. Louis, Misouri.
Tracy Mearns was a guest of Mrs.
Lynn Crow at Syracuse while they
were gone.
Kellie Rought of Pomeroy was a
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Michael, Becky and Chuck.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Proffitt and
children of Canton were Memorial
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Craig and family .
Mrs. Martha Meadows and
daughters, Tammy and Tino, of Portland, were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Anderson and
daughter. James Meadows and son,
Jim, are visiting his brother, Mr.
and Mrs . Clyde Meadows In
Georgia.
Mrs. Mary Russell of Colwnbus
visited Memorial weekend with her
aunts, Mrs. Helen Slack and Mrs.
Pearl Willis.

•=

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For years, you've
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Here in Gallia County

•

DearJinna,
We're getting ready for the Annual Meigs County Art Show. This
yea1 ·e will have three categories:
,, , "~Art- any art work which has a fro2 in it.
Non-Ft:_og Art- any art work which does not have a frng in it.
3-D - three-dimensional art, such as sculpture, macrame, wallhangings, etc.
Non-Frog Art will be subdivided the same way. 3-D will not be subdivided because we had very few entries in that category.
The prizes, which are furnished by the Chamber of Commerce, as
you know, are $5 and a blue ribbon for first place, $2.50 and a red ribbon for second place, and $1 and a white ribbon for third place.
Entries should be delivered to Pomeroy Public Library on Mondays between 10:30 a .m . and 8 p.m., Tuesdays through Fridays between 10:30 a.m. and 5:30p.m. and Saturdays between 10:30 a.m. and
5 p.m. Whenever possible, the entries should be made to stand by
themselves because we c;~nnot use tape on our waUs.
AU entries should be delivered by Friday, June 'a, at 5;30 p.m.
They should not include anything which was entered in previous years.
Judging wiU be completed by noon on Saturday, June 28 . Winners
can pick up their prizes any time after noon on the 28th, but the art wiU
remain on display until5 p.m. July 12th. All entries can be reclaimed
beginning Monday, July 14th at !0 :30a.m.
I hope that answers all the questions you had about the Annual
Meigs County Art Show for 1980.
Sincerely your.
EUen BeU, Librarian
Serving aU of Meigs County

styled with a co mfortable casual
elegance. De signed 10 team up
perfectly with

Kitchen

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Chamber of Conunerce
Courthouse
Pomeroy, OH 45769

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of Dacron® polyester and wool.
Available in a
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Apple Grove News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Pea rl Noms and Mrs.
Margaret visited Mr. and Mrs. Tom
~ Norris a recent Sunday.
Mrs . Phyllis Young of Middleport
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman Sunday.
Mr. ·and Mrs . Dana Lewis of Clifton v1sited Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Russell, Mandy and Michael Sun-

June4, 1980

At courtside or
wherever you go,
you 'II score
fas hion points
with this beautiful

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* Side by Side Ref./Freezer
* Bui~ in Microwave
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TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
!UOI.,c•~no

ILTIA-THI• LCD CALCILAIOI
M oth, squa re root,

POMEROY- Mr . and Mrs. Roger
' Grindley, Minersville, honored their
daughter, Lorna, Sunday aft~moon,
May 18 with a graduation dinner at
·the home of her great-aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Miller,
Syracuse.
Attending from out-of-town were
Lorna's sister, Lisa, Colwnbus; Ms.
Wanda Roush and daughters,
Angelia and Patricia, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Grindley and Carla, Richard
Grindley and sons, Mark and Mitch,

Bedroom

ON PRESIDENT'S LIST
ASHLAND, Ky. Christina
Marie Brumfield, daughter of Mrs.
Marilyn J. Brumfield, Ashland, Ky.,
formerly of Gallipolis, has been
placed on the President's List ~~
Freed-Hardeman College for the
spring semester, 1980.

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all of Colwnbur· M· ~nd Mrs. Dave
Watson and Dena, GaUipolis; Lorna's brother, Chris, and her grandmother, Mrs . Cora . Grindley,
Minersville ; Ms. Ress1e Shaffer,
Donna Case, Colwnbus; Jim Warner
and daughters, Nicole and Tara
Ann, Mr. and Mrs . Harold Davis and
children, Richard and Rachel,
Minersville .
This was a first reunion of the
children of Mrs. Cora Grindley and
the late Ronald Grindley, Minersville.

SQUARE DANCE JUNE 14
There will be a square dance at
Tuppers Plains Elementary School
June 14 from B p.m . until midnight.
Music by Frances Andrew and
group. Caller will be Bob Pickett.
Admission is $2 a person. Sponsored
by Orange Township Fire Department.

88
13
SAVE'4

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Graduation dinner honors Miss Grindley

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�••
B-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

M-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8,1980

Class of '70 graduates 10 years late
ATHENS, Ohio (AP I - When
Cra1g Lindberg· learned that Ohio
University planned to hold commencement exercises for its 1970
: class today - 10 years late - he
jwnped at the opportunity.
Graduations are nearly a lways unfortunate events for Lindberg. His
lugh school conunencement was
1 arly rained out and his college
exercises were canceled because of
campus rioting.

" I;m looking forward for a chance
to put on my robe and gown," sa1d
the 32-year-old Lmdberg, now a
managing agent for a Colun1bus real
estate firm . " l want the opportunity
to graduate."
Lindberg is among 68 persons expected to join more than 2,500 members of Ohio University's 1980 class
during graduation exercises today.
OfficiaLs decided to cancel the last

month

uf

classes

and

com-

mencement exercises at Ohio
University 10 years ago because of
campus disruptions which occurred
after four students were killed by
National Guardsman May 4, 1970, at
Kent State University, situated at
the opposite end of the sta te.
Following the sh!J!)tings, many of
Kent State's protesters traveled to
the Athens campus, accordmg t o
Cynthia Weir , another 1970 graduate
who planned to return to the Athens
campus to graduate today. Tile
result was a barrage of fire bombings and tear gas raids, she said.
" It was a very sad time of my life
+ the closest I hope I ever come to
war, " sa1d Ms. Weir , 32, manager of
a Columbia Gas Co. offi ce in Logan.
" It also was sad for me to go on for
four years a nd just walk away with
no chance to graduate."
Other 1970 graduates also felt bad
about receiving their diploma s in the

mail rather than on a plaUorm. So a
few yce~rs ago, some asked the
sc hool to reschedule their com-

mencement.
The university agreed, setting the
ceremon ies and a HI-year reunion
for today. Invitations were sent to
2,700 of the class' 4,160 members those whose names and ad,dresses
had not been lost. And 68 persons,
canting from as far as Louisiana,
Massachusetts and even Japan,
ag reed to parti cipate in the
graduation exercises, with an.o ther
40 to attend the reunion.
Like Ms. Weir, many are returning to see one another - even if
they may not know who any of the
others are.
" I know you can't go home again
and I'm not going back for that
reason," she said. " It's more of a
reunion than the act of going through
graduation exercises. And I want to
be a pa1t ofthat."

MR. GRABER MOVES
POMEROY ~ Since the death of
his wife, Grace, Anthony Graber,
former Meigs County resident, has
left the Valerie Nursing Home in
Dayton, and is now living with his
youngest daughter, Mr . and Mrs.
Robert "Funke, the former Teresa
MIDDLEPORT - The fifth bir- Marie Graber.
thday of Matthew Craddock was
For friends or relatives who would
celebrated recently at the home of like to correspond with Mr. Graber,
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E . his new address is Anthony Graber ,
E. Stiles, Middleport.
516 Vincent Rd ., S.E., Huntsville,
Cake and ice crea were served. At- Ala. 35802.
tending were Barbara, Jimmy, Ruth
Ann and Sue Ellen Fry, Kyle Sim-

Birthday
celebrated

pson, Marjorie Wigal, Matthew 's
mother, Nma Craddock, and his
grandparents. Calling earlier in the
day were Erlene and Joanna Scarand Mrs . Nancy Reed.

'liiiiiiii!iiiii
I

Sears

COMMENCEMENT TONIGHT
LETART FALL.S - The Apple
Grove, Letart FaUs and East Letart
Bible School commencement will
be held this evening at 8 p.m. at the
Letart Falls United Methodist Church. All parents and friends are invited to attend.

By Beth Stone
Special Corrt!llpondent
Copyright Belli Stone, 1980
Dear Beth,
I like to feel that my school age
children are spending their swnmer
in some worthwhile ways. The first
week school is out, I spend a little
time with each child alone, helping
him or her decide on a summer
project. Mter discussing various
possibilities the child selects one or
two long-term projects which he
promises (in writing) to complete
during his sununer vacation. We
post these "goals" on our family
buUetin board so aU family members can be tnserested in each
other's projects,
Some of the projects I suggest that
type, making a special Chrl.sUnas
gift for each family member, learning photography or caligraphy,
making decorated gift wrap paper
and-or Ch(istmas cards, working
with .c lay and ceramics, sewing ii
garment for fall, learning to play
tennis or chess, sorting and
organizing family photographs or
making personal scrapbook of
previous year's activities, reading
ten books on the child's favorite hob-

formally at the La Leche League of
Gallipolis meeting. This fourth
meeting of the series covers
"Nutrition and Weaning, " wiU be
held Monday, June 9 beginning at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Beverly
Splete.
Nursin g babies are always
welcome to accompany their
mothers.
For further information caU Bev
Splete, 446-4010 or Debbie Grueser,
992-3844.

Here come summer's berries'
By CECIL Y BROWNSTONE
Associated Press Food Editor
Deep down in our hearts, some of
us believe the best and purest way to
serve swnmer's lovely berries 1.s
with heavy cream, " pour" or whi!&gt;'
ped. Nevertheless, there are other
delectable but less calorific accompaniments.
Strawberries, blueberries, rasl&gt;'
berries and qthers of their clan are
delicious accompanied by a simple
custard sauce. Another caloriecoulter i.s cream-style cottage
cheese whirled smooth in an electric
blender with a little milk - ersatz
sour cream. And of course there's
always yogurt .
The c u stard sa uce accompaniment is one we grew up on.
The ersatz sour cream is an idea we
hit on many years ago and that since
has captivated cooks. Yogurt has
begun to be extremely popular
around our house since we 've been
making it at home.
Just recently we tried a new combination we 're in love with . If you try
it, you may become equally
enamored. We baked a " Very, Very
Easy Crustless Cheese Cake" and

Children spend summer well

are "surruner-sized" are learning to

LaLeche League to meet
GALUPOLIS - " It's hot and
hwnid. With school out of session the
children are in and out of the house
all day lon g wanting drinks and
snacks. Need a few ideas on how to
make these nutritious as well as
quenching ? Does that nursing baby II
need supplemental liquids? How do
you calm an irritable pre-schooler?
How long should a baby nurse ?,"
asks Bev Splete, La Leche League
president.
These are an example of some of
the topics that will be discussed in-

Formulas for Fun
by, making a collection and reading
books about it, training a new pet.
Whatever the project is, it should
be a significant learning experience
which is of great interest to the particular child. The project should be
long lasting so that it can continue
throughout the sununer. But it
should be one which can be started
and stopped, depending on available
time and interest. It should be a
project which needs a little adult
guidance intermittently. You and
your child sometimes can enjoy it
together, which tells him that HlS
special interests are worthwhile to
you. But most of the project should
be something the chi ld can do alone.
Whenever he says, "I'm bored. I
don'l"have anything to do," you can
respond with, " That's great! You
have time to spend on one of your
special projects I"
Dear Reader,
Thank you for this excellent letter! Write to Beth Stone, FORMULAS FOR FUN, P. 0. Box 1061,
Paris, Texas 75460. For personal an·
swers send sell-addre'lSed, stamped
envelope. We reserve the right to
edit letters and they become the
property of Beth Stone. None can be
returned.

UMME:R'S &lt;'J;I&lt;'&lt;'" BERRIES - As rendered in the 1900s.
From the culinary picture collection of Cecily Brownstone,
Associated Press Food Editor.

I

URPHYS

Library~
6

Tbe

. '(~

Cricketeer.

APPLE GROVE
Mrs. Eula Wolfe vl.sited Monday
evening with Mr. and Mrs. John Ord
at Letart, W. Va . and vi.sited graves
of loved ones at Board, Fry and
Graham Station cetnetertes. She
also visited her sister, Mrs. Fannie
Roush . On Tuesday evening Mrs.
Wolle and Mrs. Addie Norris visited
Mrs. Nora Lewl.s at Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDale
visited Mrs. Edna Roush and Mrs.
Gladys Shields Memortal weekend
and attended the dinner at the Letart
Fa Us Community Hall Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs, Eddie Hupp, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter McDade of Troy visited
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert Roush Saturday evening.

Fatb

NOW THROUGH SATURDAY,JUNII4

R

Letters

Wimbledon
Blazer by

served small squares of It with fresh
berries.
We found the recipe for the cheese
cake lltta delightful "charity" cookbook, "Specialties of the House "
(Our Lady of Grace Montessori
School, Manhasset, N. Y.) - well
worth looking into.

Your fashion
set point. .

NAME BAND- " Music in the Morgan Manner" will be featured at
the Royal Oak Recreation Building Thursday when the Royal Oak Ballroom Dance Club wiU host the Russ Morgan Band. Pictured is Jack
Morgan, son of the late Russ Morgan, who took over as leader and conductor of the orchestra upon the death of his father in 1969. Morgan sings
111 several different languages in addition to fronting the band. The local
dance will be from 8 p.m . until midnight.

••'

:
;
;

~

'

••'

•

•

•
II\

,l gy,

:

Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and Mr.
~ and Mrs. Bruce Hart of Columbus
~ en joyed a trip to Indianapolis, In~ diana Memorial weekend and en{ joyed the Indie 500 Races Sunday.
•
Mrs. J ohn (Erma) Hill is a
~ surgical patient at Holzer Medical
• -Center. Mr. and Mrs . Don Bell
: visited her Thursday. Visiting her
~ .. Tuesday we re Rev. David Harris,
~ Don and Lois Bell and J ohn fiill .
~
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons were
' Monday dinner guests of Mr. and
~ Mrs . Donald Barnette at Albany .
~
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ables, Vicki
~ Ables of Columbus were Memorial
: weekend guests of Mr. a nd Mrs.
::1 Jack Ables.' Vicki remamed for an

•

•

indefinite visit.

~

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knighting of

~ : Gallipolis visited Mr. and Mrs. Ar-

• · nolu Anderson Saturday evemng .
•
Mr. a nd Mrs. Arnold Anderson
j and daughters, Brenda and Lori,
~ were Mother's Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Willord, Lisa and Kim,
" at Portland
~
Isadore Rhode s of Hooper,
•; Nebm.,ka s pent a week with his
' ~ i stcr, Mr. and Mrs . Owen An: derson.
~
Mr and Mrs . Charles Winebren: ner and da ughter, Jody , of Newbury,
; Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Burton and
daughter, Sherry, of Colwnbus were
• Memorial weekend guests of Mr .
• and Mrs. Vernon Donohue.
~ - Mrs. Bca Donohue accompanied

•·

i
'

'

•

5

her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Gilbert to Jacksonville, Fla. for a
two weeks vacation .
Mrs. Gertie Hall and relatives
visited at her mobile home in Letart
over Memorial weekend.
Kimberly Kay Wilford of Portland
spent Sunday night through Monday
with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Anderson, Brenda and Lori.
Memorial weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs Tom Norris were Rev. Tan
Norris and son, Lawrence, of Rome
City , Indiana ; Mr. and Mrs. Ross
Norris, Mrs. Opal Zerkle of
Syracuse; Rev . Freeland Norris,
Mr. and Mrs . Harold Hayffian of
Westerville ; Mrs. Nondus Hendrick,
friend, Mrs. Anderson of Racine ;
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Gathers,
daughter Sandra of Colwnbus ; Mr.
a nd Mrs . Larry Gathers and
daughter, Kelly, of Chillicothe .
Cortney Roush was an overnight
patient at Holzer Medical Center
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spencer
Tuesdayduetoavirus.
spent a week in St. Louis, Misouri.
Tracy Mearns was a guest of Mrs.
Lynn Crow at Syracuse while they
were gone.
Kellie Rought of Pomeroy was a
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Michael, Becky and Chuck.
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Proffitt and
children of Canton were Memorial
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Craig and family .
Mrs. Martha Meadows and
daughters, Tammy and Tino, of Portland, were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Anderson and
daughter. James Meadows and son,
Jim, are visiting his brother, Mr.
and Mrs . Clyde Meadows In
Georgia.
Mrs. Mary Russell of Colwnbus
visited Memorial weekend with her
aunts, Mrs. Helen Slack and Mrs.
Pearl Willis.

•=

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For years, you've
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e advertising about
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And now, it's available here, at ou r
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Here in Gallia County

•

DearJinna,
We're getting ready for the Annual Meigs County Art Show. This
yea1 ·e will have three categories:
,, , "~Art- any art work which has a fro2 in it.
Non-Ft:_og Art- any art work which does not have a frng in it.
3-D - three-dimensional art, such as sculpture, macrame, wallhangings, etc.
Non-Frog Art will be subdivided the same way. 3-D will not be subdivided because we had very few entries in that category.
The prizes, which are furnished by the Chamber of Commerce, as
you know, are $5 and a blue ribbon for first place, $2.50 and a red ribbon for second place, and $1 and a white ribbon for third place.
Entries should be delivered to Pomeroy Public Library on Mondays between 10:30 a .m . and 8 p.m., Tuesdays through Fridays between 10:30 a.m. and 5:30p.m. and Saturdays between 10:30 a.m. and
5 p.m. Whenever possible, the entries should be made to stand by
themselves because we c;~nnot use tape on our waUs.
AU entries should be delivered by Friday, June 'a, at 5;30 p.m.
They should not include anything which was entered in previous years.
Judging wiU be completed by noon on Saturday, June 28 . Winners
can pick up their prizes any time after noon on the 28th, but the art wiU
remain on display until5 p.m. July 12th. All entries can be reclaimed
beginning Monday, July 14th at !0 :30a.m.
I hope that answers all the questions you had about the Annual
Meigs County Art Show for 1980.
Sincerely your.
EUen BeU, Librarian
Serving aU of Meigs County

styled with a co mfortable casual
elegance. De signed 10 team up
perfectly with

Kitchen

~!

blazer made of a

colo rs, shaped and

CJ

=

Jinna Arnott
Chamber of Conunerce
Courthouse
Pomeroy, OH 45769

lightweighl blend
of Dacron® polyester and wool.
Available in a
variety of smart

Apple Grove News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Pea rl Noms and Mrs.
Margaret visited Mr. and Mrs. Tom
~ Norris a recent Sunday.
Mrs . Phyllis Young of Middleport
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman Sunday.
Mr. ·and Mrs . Dana Lewis of Clifton v1sited Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Russell, Mandy and Michael Sun-

June4, 1980

At courtside or
wherever you go,
you 'II score
fas hion points
with this beautiful

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0

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*Total Electric

* 3 Bedrooms

* 2 Baths

* Side by Side Ref./Freezer
* Bui~ in Microwave
* Front porch with steel double
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* Breakfast Booth

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
!UOI.,c•~no

ILTIA-THI• LCD CALCILAIOI
M oth, squa re root,

POMEROY- Mr . and Mrs. Roger
' Grindley, Minersville, honored their
daughter, Lorna, Sunday aft~moon,
May 18 with a graduation dinner at
·the home of her great-aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Miller,
Syracuse.
Attending from out-of-town were
Lorna's sister, Lisa, Colwnbus; Ms.
Wanda Roush and daughters,
Angelia and Patricia, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Grindley and Carla, Richard
Grindley and sons, Mark and Mitch,

Bedroom

ON PRESIDENT'S LIST
ASHLAND, Ky. Christina
Marie Brumfield, daughter of Mrs.
Marilyn J. Brumfield, Ashland, Ky.,
formerly of Gallipolis, has been
placed on the President's List ~~
Freed-Hardeman College for the
spring semester, 1980.

Vauid 'J C,am
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OF

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W. VA. HOUSirtG MONEY•
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BY VOTIN G POR ME I S SlMCERELV APPlEClATED AND MY ENDEAVORS WILL

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TOP CHOICE ,011 SUMMflll

SHiRT· Reg._$9.97

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Ask about selected mobile homes which qualify for a
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all of Colwnbur· M· ~nd Mrs. Dave
Watson and Dena, GaUipolis; Lorna's brother, Chris, and her grandmother, Mrs . Cora . Grindley,
Minersville ; Ms. Ress1e Shaffer,
Donna Case, Colwnbus; Jim Warner
and daughters, Nicole and Tara
Ann, Mr. and Mrs . Harold Davis and
children, Richard and Rachel,
Minersville .
This was a first reunion of the
children of Mrs. Cora Grindley and
the late Ronald Grindley, Minersville.

SQUARE DANCE JUNE 14
There will be a square dance at
Tuppers Plains Elementary School
June 14 from B p.m . until midnight.
Music by Frances Andrew and
group. Caller will be Bob Pickett.
Admission is $2 a person. Sponsored
by Orange Township Fire Department.

88
13
SAVE'4

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

Graduation dinner honors Miss Grindley

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�~- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Four couples announce engagements

The Poet's
Corner
NEBO
By David Elwy JenkiJ1s
Ont: hundred and twenty-stx. years ago
sh1 p brave ly un furled lu.' t sa1ls

11

h!Uc

r\nd to AmerJ ttl btOU~&lt;:h t .S:Oint' ~up Je frum rar
11ff dtstant W;tle.s.
Tht.-y seetrched f&lt;~r a nd w1dt&gt; for hdls tha t rcmtn·
Jed them of home
Anll when Uwy foun d them here, resul\·1!(] no
mure to roam.

. . ..
't , . ' ' ..

nwy cunqu ercd many hardships, they rle&lt;~rcd
and tilled the :sOO
They shared their n~ i.: h bu r ll' l ruulllc~&gt; a nd kf' pt
l ~ i r fm th m God.
They built a little lug d iurch wt~ r e to worship
Hie)· could go
On yond ~r l·u ll they bulided and g1ve 11 the name,
NL'1:10.

I

'~

~

·~

Regina Priddy &amp;

Ginger Duhsnn

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
George Grate of Rutla nd arc announcing the engagement and approachin g marri age of th e1r
daughter, Beverly Kay, to Kenneth
Allen Baylor, son of Mrs. Virginia
Tyler of Gallipolis, and Rob€rt
Baylor, Zanesville.
The bride-elect IS a 1979 g radu~te
of Meigs High School and is employed at Federa l Land Bank in
Gallipolis. Her fiance is a 1973
graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and is employed at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
The open churc h wedding will b€
held on June 29 at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 2: 30p.m.

Open

GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. Arden Dobson, 408 Hcdg ewood Dn ve,
G a l l ip ol i s, announ c e th e
enga gement and £orth comin g
marriage of their daughter, Ginger
Lee, to Richard Mark Pitts, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Loranza Pitts, Grantsvill e, West Virginia.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Ohio University and is a speech
therapist with the Calhoun County
Schools. Her fiance is employed with
the B. H. Whipkey Oil and Gas Company , Parkersburg, WV.
The wedding will b€ an event of
August 9, at 6:30p.m. at the Grace
Umted Methodist Church , Gallipolis.

Bethel Aid meets

wedding

GALUPOUS - Bethel Ladies Aid
met June 4 with Lena Belle Williams
as hostess. Opening songs, "Victory
· In Jesus" and 'Near The Cross,"
were sung. Scripture reading was by
Virginia Fisher, 11th chapter of
Hebrews. Next month, Ruby Saunders will read scripture. .
Roll call was answered by reciting
scripture. Eleven memb€rs and one
guest attended. Ruby Saunders offered prayer. There were 30 sick
calls made last month.
Program consisted of readings,
" He Was One Of Us," Ruby Saunders; " Whom The Lord Loveth ,"
Virginia F isher; "A Ribbon For
Ruff," Lena Belle Williams; "The
Touch of God," Gladys Church;
" Thank You, God, For Little
Things," Melissa Caldwell; "God's
Kind Care," Florence Ragan.
Next Ladies Aid will be with
Esther Davis.
Closing song was liAmerica ." The
Lord's Prayer was recited by all in
closing. Refreshments were served
following the meeting.

Randall Lusk
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
William B. Priddy , Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, ftegina Diane to Rauda ll
Lamar Lusk, son of Mr. and M1·s .
Jiuuuy C. Lusk of Wilmington, N.C.
Miss Priddy is a 1980 graduate of
North Gallia High School. Specialist4 Lusk 1s a 1978 graduate of New
Hanover High School and is currently stationed at Ft. Bragg Army
Base with the Seventh Group Special
Forces.
The double-ring ceremony will
take place on June 14, 1:30 p.m. at
the Church of Chnst, Henderson, W.
Va ., with Eugene Zopp officiating.

planned
MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
been completed for the open church
wedding of Jennifer Lynn Wise and
John Stephen Harrison.
The wedding will take place on
Saturday, June 14 at the Heath
United Methodil.t Church, Middleport, at 2:30 p.m. A program of
music preceding the ceremony will
begin at 2 p.m.
The maid of honor will b€ Susanna
Wise, sister of the bride, and the
bridesmaids will be Sh erry
Harrison, sister of the groom; Tammy Pitzer and Sharon Hawley.
Flower girl will b€ Stephannie
Thomas.
Best man will b€ Larry Harrison,
brother of the groom, and the ushers
will be Terry Lucas, Dallas Sayre,
and George Hawley . The organist
will be Edie Ross and the soloist, her
daughter, Steffanie Purcell.
A reception will be held immediately following the ceremony in
the church dining room.

TO MEET TIIURSDA Y
RACINE - Racin e Lodge 401,
F&amp;AM, will meet in regular session
at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday with work in
the third degree.

DIVORCEE JAILED
MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. (AP)
- A 36-year-old divorcee has b€en
sentenced to 90 days in jail for nons upport after her ex-husband
testified that if he had fai led to make
the payments, he'd be jailed.
When Rob€rt and Susan Barr
divorced in October, Barr was awarded custody of their two children.
Mrs. Barr, a machinist at a
Roseville plastics factory, was ordered to pay $29 a week in support,
according to Macomb County Judge
Raymond Cashen.

Rena Thacker

~ hu,11n g f&lt;~ ce.

1t.s turn

h~ht

at Ncbu ;md I!L'Iril' 11

Tltough sometimes our fa 1th doth w&lt;tver and the

wurhrs are- might y few
Ycl tom ght the doors are ope n t o welcome each
of you.
God, grant that us tonight our hearts art.' flilildcd

by the memories o( the past

Thvt our doubts and ft!;ars will wasll &lt;IW ij)' bLlt uur
fa1th i11 God w11llast

16 oz.
btl s .

M r rmd M 1-s. Donald Geary II

Oh, teac h us how, v.· e humbl y pra y, to gl \'f t he
f.:l!nerutlon yet to be
1'111 ~ ~ re a l Uentag e, that now !Jt:long!l lo y011 &lt;tnd

Marriages announced

Jilt'.

May the lll VISible host of the century wulk d&amp;t lf·

lly our sale
And thus enable us to keep the doors of Ncbo

Opl'II Widl!.

MIDDLEPORT - Tina Marie
Sheley, daughter of ML and Mrs.
Rob€rt M. Sllcle)·, and Donald M. R.
Ge;,ry Ill, sou of tht• l:itt• Mr. and
Mrs. Dona ld M. Geary II. wc1r
marri ed on May 4 at tht• Midd leport
United Pentecosta l Chu1 rh.
The 4 p.m. wedlling was per- formed by the Hev. William Knittle.
' Tauuuy Richards was the maid of
: honor .and wore a yellow !-iilk dress .

Ma y we transcn bc our recm d on thL• hearts of
)'UUlJ\d&lt;ly by da y

Su Jt "'Lil rem&lt;tm m thf&gt;ir memon l!s &lt;llld a ~ato
and 41ga.1n replay. ·
A rel'Ord not ma rred w1th scratches, one thBt wtll
pl ay w1th soun&lt;l so dear t:lnd s weet
That I! will be worth remembenng unlll ag:Hn
(hancc to meet

w'·

Plans
completed

Infant Dickens

Baby arrives
PT. PLEASANT- Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Dickens, Pt. Pleasant, are
announci"g the birth of a daughter,
Jessica , who weighed eight pounds
and was 20 inches long.
She is welcomed by a brother,
Jason .
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence E . Huffman , Mitchell Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Alonzo Dickens, Point Pleasant.
Maternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norris, Racine,
and Mrs. Virginia Huffman ,
Gallipolis.
REUNION SLATED
GALUPOUS The annual
Lemley-Ralph reunion will be Sunday, June 15, at the Poplar Ridge
Church. Basket lw1ch will be at
noon. All relatives and friends are
welcome.

RODNEY - Final plans have
b€en completed for the marriage of
Lisa Maynard and Michael DeLille.
The wedding will be held Saturday, June 14, 7: 30p.m. at the Rodney United Methodist Church, Rt.
588, Rodney.
The custom of open ch urch will be
observed.
SMAUEL MORSE
Samuel Morse gave the first
public demonstration of his
magnetic telegraph in 1837.

READ THE SALE ADVERTISEMENT BELOW
IF YOU WANT HONEST SAVINGS ON
QUALilY NAME BRAND FABRICS INCWDED
IN OUR REGULAR STOCK. EXCEUENT
SELECTION OF COLORS IN All SALE
CATEGORIES.
. 58 COURT ST.

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Hot Line

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For in formation on savings and current mcnev
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(ieary .

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LINENS • SILKS • VOILES
CALICO AND PASTEL PRINTS
DOTTED SWISS AND GINGHAM
EYELET • SEERSUCKER • PLISSE
POPLIN • KETllE CLOTH • DUCK
SATINS • LACES • CREPE

HJO GHANDE - G. Charles
Pulley, Norfolk, Va. , a nd Wandu J .
Hay, Rio Grande, wish to announce
their ma rriage of May t~ a t llertea
Baptist C:hUJ d i. El i7.iil&gt;·t h City, N.

c.

Pulley is presently an engineer
with Norfolk and Wcstt'rn H: li lwav
· Company and ulso farn L&lt;; ;nld w(uJ(i

works in North Carolina.
Mrs. Pulley IS now completing IJCI'
tea ching duti es at Ordnan ce
Elementa ry in Point Pleasant. She
will be jui ni ng her husband at
. Meadowland , S ure, Nmth Carolinu

(27935), where they wi ll be
cs tnbhshing an alternative school
for t•arly childhood education.
At home with them will be their
f1ve chi ldren, Jessie, Janet and
Jason Pulley and Leslie and To bi
Ray
The bride's famtly, Mab€1 M.
Mohler, her mother, Dave Moh ler,
Kay 11nd Mary Kay Mohler, her
brother and his fam ily are of the Rio
Grande area .

A wedding feast for fam ily and
friends will be held at Meadowland
this fa ll.

: Gallia 4-H News reported

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

60" STRETCH GABARDINE
SOLIDS

POLY / COTTON
PASTELS, BRIGHTS
NAUTICALS, NEUTRALS
REG . TO $5.99 YD .

60"

She carried a bouquet of yellow and
white pompons and baby's breath.
The bride was in a mint green silk
dress and she carried a bouquet of
green and white pompons wi th
baby 's breath. The bride was given
in marriage by her father .
Danny Richards served as best
man, and the ushers were the
groom's brothers, Charlie and Max

Ray-Pulley united

NON-STOP FLIGHT
In 1930, the first non-stop Paris-tcr
·New York flight began.

PRINTED RIBBONS • STRETCH TRIMS
CORDINGS • FLORAL TRIMS • BELTINGS

The Outdoors man 4-H Club mt'l Ma y 21 ot PCA
Building. Jnnice F~van s presi1lfd and had c h il l ~t=
r:l the pr o~ r a m . Ofri• t•rs are , J&lt;Jnice F: v11ns.
preside nt; Amy Huush, st-. T~ t.a ry· nt' \\ &lt;; n •por·
ter ; K}· le S.mnder~. vice pr~~i d e llt ; Tr rr}'
Murray, treasuJP r. At.lvtsors an~ Uan Mmk u11d

' Nick J ohnsu11s . M elll lJHS pr eH'flt " Nt' Ma 1 ~
Bcrkich, J fl nicc Enws, Sk ucy John.~u n , 1&gt;uv:1l
MurraJ , 'fl'rri Mur r&lt;J y, G1e~ Het·5t&gt;, Mny Housh,
k elly H o lL~h, Kr!t" Sa unde rs, Brmn Shupt•, .f11 11
my Taylor. J &lt;uni Che v :~li f' r , R1 ll}' UnrPt! :111d A.tt
· drew S:~tt ler . A gu&lt;'st pre."'t'llt ~~ ~· "~ M1 ~ t ';tt••l•·
JWusn . H&lt;&gt;pcll't.l", Ann Huusll

The H oa cl runncr~ ·~H CILJ b nwl M&lt;J} IS 111
Trainer hnmc. 1 an) a Sk&lt;1~t:( s I'' •·:mkd. ''hsct
Smith IMl devot ll!ll..'i, ami l:lml}!i 1 r!l lli r•r h:ttl
ehjlrgP of lht• pnJI,lram r ·llfL&lt;.ta lr:Hne r Hlld
Ta ny r~ Slo:-.ggs demunst ra iNI fl uwer gardr&gt;n ln~
Ofricers ;Jte, TarJ}a St.:.g~-, .; , trrE'~ i dl'llt; OO\'c
Tminrr. \'il-t' p rl'si,lrnt; ('! ,Jr.sta Tr;,mci,
trea :~u rer: Ali::;;.1 Scr 1th. ~:Yne lmy. DUI'S \\t'f!· ~C"t
al 25

l 't't l l'-1 pt' l'

!lwdir,g

Ad\' i \ l lr~ llrt' Hu li; ~r d

nnc!GI:Jd}'S Trumcr - Hepnrtl'r lla\ P Ti a1rwr
Culllu County Fr u11tiersmt&gt;n ~ H Club HICI
,\ ,. ,rch 25 i\t OhitJ Valley Bank C' ommumkly
I'IMilll. l.q~ til G lll~bun1 presided .'i&lt;md) 1.&lt;1) nc
~ dHot.i o n~ w1tl .l &lt;1eque GlussUurn hmJ d mn:r
fl the prolo(T&lt;J tn . Offit't'TS e lf'r·lt'cl w1•re, p r e ~l d t·n l.
TIU\111)' Me Gurre, VH'e peSilknt, Susa11
Look11df); .st'l'r t.'Ut ry, Sa ndy 1 -&lt;l ~' tll : n e".~ re J,.• r
' ltr. Ltgea Glll.ssbum; n·en•al mn lt'ml·•rh U. I
'G bt.&lt;~i'd JUfll ; treasurer , Kd l)· VanSicklt•: I':Jith .
IC.ermy Junl W&lt;! )llt' Siders: S&lt;J fety, Ginil and A.rl dtf':J RuU+n ; t'lttmnm1ity projt'1·t rlmrman . Dt b
ble Wtlllelt'}. M P m~rs ta lk&lt;'d .tbflut "' l1at
pt't)jects they 14' en• k1k111g thiS }l' ~t r . 1'1&gt;~' d ullro;
· &amp;M mg out duor ('f_&gt;t:lkmrt We u,lso to l~ eJ :lltunt a
' com mU!lll.y pr ojcd . Ad\'I:Wr IS J.at'qur
· cms.~burn
Mt&gt;mbcrs presenl ~ f're l ll mtny
: Mc&lt;iuire, Gina a t~~. ! Andn:il Rutan , Kt·lly Vo nSickle, Sa ndy l..'i)'ru&gt;. .l ~&gt;ff S1dl' l s. D. L
Gllwburn. Susi e J.ock ado, LoE'ge :~ Gl:1sshurn . A
auest present was Oalt! Va11S •d d P. - RPpm1rr.

You've picked
the day, now pick
the ring.

RAM TO MEET
POMEROY
Officers will be
elected at a regular mee ting of
Pomeroy Chapter BO, RAM, to b€
held at 7.30 p.m. Wednesday. At 8:30
p.m. there will b€ a regu lar meeting
of Boswo rth Council46, R&amp;SM, with
electum of office1·s to be he ld.

&lt;:tl Wright-Patterson Atr Forte
Base, Dayton, while Mrs. Poole and
Will CJ I'C rematning here for C:l vt stt
111th the Parkers.
Otilcr recent gut&gt;sL" of Mr . aml
fttent

Mrs . P&lt;irker have Ueen Mr . cmd Mrs.

Ed"in Botetticher, Smithfi eld, wh&lt;o

Genu ine Diamo nds and

_/1tV! lf!!l)f

fj_'IJ!Jitl/lfY-i
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1n 14K gold

Genu 1ne Sapphires Set

~~
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DERIFIELD JEWELRY
417 Sec ond Ave.

Gallipo lis, Oh .

" A cro ss from th e Th eater"

SUPERIOR

Fred Blaettnar, Archie Swartz, a nd
Zelda Davis.
The chapter will prepare dinners
for the Middleport inspectiOn on
June 25 , and for the Shrine visitati on
on June 14. Mrs. Polly Hysell
thanked her officers and prtr tem officers. Refreshments were se rved in
the dining room. A bridal s hower
was held for Debbie Windon
follow ing the meeting .

BOILED
HAM

FULLY COOKED
READY TO EAT

99

$

Sliced The
Way You
Like II.

WIENERS

THIS FATHER'S'DAY GIVE THE GIFT
THAT SHOWS YOU CARE -

12 oz.
PKG.

GIVE A GIFT OF HEALTH AND SAFETY
Exercise bikes
Jobstdresssupporthose
Jobst Enduro athletic stockings
NTRON Heart Alert (Pre set to
monitor heart beat)
Himd &amp; foot whirlpool
Bathtub whirlpool
Shower/tub grab bars
Bathtub safety rails
Bathtub/ shower benches
Back rests
Bean bag lap desks &amp; trays
Butterfly &amp; cervica I pillows
Moist heating pads
Nasal sauna
Hot &amp; cold packs
Paraffin baths
Commode safety rails
Portable commodes
Portable oxygen with shoulder
bag
Elevated toilet seats

MON.-FRI.

.,39

GROUND BEEF

79t;

LB.

~ifts ~

2% MILK

·-·

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I~

FATHER'S DAY
JUNE 'I5

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Phone 446-2206
Gallipolis , Ohio

9-1

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PEPSI

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SILVII

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:,~',o' $129

PLAV.

OUR '500 GOWN
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Colorful

Solids and

Fashion Prints of
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TAWNEY JEWELERS

Legea Gl;t,sltum

the Pa rker~.

Sgt. Poole IS nov. on

PICNIC FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
program on the flag and each memMeigs Chapter of the Da ughters of ber is to contribute something for
the American Revolution, will have the program. Hostesses are Mrs.
a picnic at the home of Mrs. James O'Brien, Mrs . Arthur Skinner, Mrs.
O'Brien Friday at6 p.m.
Larry Wiley, Mrs. George Morris,
Those attending are to take a and Mrs. na ncy Reed.
covered dish. There will be a

Columbia

$5° OFF

S Bank

POMEROY - The charter was
draped for Ethel Williamson at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, held at the Masonic
Temple.
The altar was draped for past
grand matron, Irene Thornburg.
Elizabeth Well took the sunshine
collection and officers' report were
given . Get-well ca rds were sen t to

Col umbia wedding band s from
S IOO.

0

OPEN Tll8 PM
MON. and FRI.
NITES

·The Commercial 8r Savings Bank
25 Court Street
Silver Bridge Plaza
Spring Valley
Member FD1C
,
.
•

3. Pomeroy.

Mrs. Williamson remembered

HOURS

Summer Fabric
•

tile lwme of Mr!:i . Poole's l&gt;arenl",
Mr. :..~nd Mrs. Wilber Parkl·r, Houtc

'

8

were here for the funeral serv ices
for Wesley Buehl, Meigs County
eng mecr. Mrs. Boetticher ., th e
Sister of Mr. Bueh l's la te wile. The
lloettichers were overnight guests of

lulllo, Tcxe:ts, i:lr rlved last week at

HOME BUYER FINDS
UNEXPECTED REWARD
MERRILL, Wis . (AP) - Sue Detert·got a surpnse after buymg an
aged, twcrstory home and 1ts furm shmgs by submittmg a bid 111 an
estate sale.
As she was rolling up old carpeting in the li ving room th1s week, she
discovered $290 in cash underneath.
She kept rolling and found a bout $8,000 in tightly stacked bills between the carpet and its backing.
Mrs. Detert said she checked with her attorney and was ad1· 1sed she
could keep the money, which appeared to be quite old but still1n good
condition. There is one catch, though: she has to pay ta xes on it.

If " e c lose our eyes. perhaps " 't' ca n see t ~m m
thc1r accu.stomt.'tl plan•
And mayllt! hear tlte1 r \'OJces, even see thc1r

They' ..·c tended the
lm ~ htl y burn.

POMEROY - T. Sgt. and Mrs.
Joseph Poole and son, Will, San An-

On The LightS1de

As C!! ch succeedmg generatwn has followed m

EWJNGTON - Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thacker of Rt. I Ewi ngton are
proud to announce the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Rena Diane, to L.aJTy
Dwayne Gilb€rt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Gi lbert of Rt. 2, Vinton.
Mi"' Thacker is a 1979 graduate of
North Ga llia High School and of
Buckeye Hills Career Center. She is
employed at Burger Chef in
Gallipoli s.
Gilbert attended the Southwestern
High School and is employed at Merco Mining Co.
I he wedding will b€ an event of
June 25 at 7 p.m. at the Fairview
Christia n Union Church, Alice Rd.,
Ewington, Ohw.

Pooles visit here

On the Light Side

Drama Student 'Stars'
in Bank Holdup
SALT LAKE CITY ( A Pi - A drama student al the Umversity of
Utah turned in two first-rate performances the other day- one fo r Ius
professor, the other for a jumpy bank teller.
The student, fresh from a triun1pil at his fi nal exams, entered the
13th East branch of Commemal Sec urit'y Ba nk wea ring his costwue
and makeup of an elderly woman.
A teller, startled by the heavy coat of makeup on the young man's
face, immediately pushed the alarm button.

··- ·

1

R-7- The Sunday Times-Se ntil1el, Sunday, June S, 1980

Maily of thu:;e who butlt thcrt , nuw bt! sult&gt; n lit•
ilslccp
As 1f 111 ~:: u&lt;Jnhn ~ It, their silent v1g1I kee p.
TUI.ht }' over il l'entury has entlt.'&lt;l but thc1 t
mt&gt;mon es lmger on
We still can hear the ct•ho of the it praycrs and of
lhc1r song.

',..,

Bever(;' Grate

PWP CALENDAR
POMEROY - Calendar of activities for the Meigs-Ga Uia Unit of
Parents Without Partners: June 9.
7:30 p.m., coffee and conversatiOn
for adu lts a t Dodie Winebrenner's
home, Bra dbury Road, Middleport;
June 12, 7 p.m ., orienta tjon for new
memb€rs at Mental Hea lth Center.
Gall ipoli s; 7:30 p.m. general
busi ness meeting at the center
following orientation with Gene
Gle nd e nn ing s pea k ing on
"Teenagers and Parenting." All
teens, including 12-yea r-olds invited
to attend this meeting, June 3, 8:30
p.m., adult dance at Coon Hunters
Lodge at Rock Springs Fa irground.-,
near Pomeroy.

OVI TOWN'S PINIU SOPEI MAIKIT

�~- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Four couples announce engagements

The Poet's
Corner
NEBO
By David Elwy JenkiJ1s
Ont: hundred and twenty-stx. years ago
sh1 p brave ly un furled lu.' t sa1ls

11

h!Uc

r\nd to AmerJ ttl btOU~&lt;:h t .S:Oint' ~up Je frum rar
11ff dtstant W;tle.s.
Tht.-y seetrched f&lt;~r a nd w1dt&gt; for hdls tha t rcmtn·
Jed them of home
Anll when Uwy foun d them here, resul\·1!(] no
mure to roam.

. . ..
't , . ' ' ..

nwy cunqu ercd many hardships, they rle&lt;~rcd
and tilled the :sOO
They shared their n~ i.: h bu r ll' l ruulllc~&gt; a nd kf' pt
l ~ i r fm th m God.
They built a little lug d iurch wt~ r e to worship
Hie)· could go
On yond ~r l·u ll they bulided and g1ve 11 the name,
NL'1:10.

I

'~

~

·~

Regina Priddy &amp;

Ginger Duhsnn

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
George Grate of Rutla nd arc announcing the engagement and approachin g marri age of th e1r
daughter, Beverly Kay, to Kenneth
Allen Baylor, son of Mrs. Virginia
Tyler of Gallipolis, and Rob€rt
Baylor, Zanesville.
The bride-elect IS a 1979 g radu~te
of Meigs High School and is employed at Federa l Land Bank in
Gallipolis. Her fiance is a 1973
graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and is employed at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
The open churc h wedding will b€
held on June 29 at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 2: 30p.m.

Open

GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs. Arden Dobson, 408 Hcdg ewood Dn ve,
G a l l ip ol i s, announ c e th e
enga gement and £orth comin g
marriage of their daughter, Ginger
Lee, to Richard Mark Pitts, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Loranza Pitts, Grantsvill e, West Virginia.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Ohio University and is a speech
therapist with the Calhoun County
Schools. Her fiance is employed with
the B. H. Whipkey Oil and Gas Company , Parkersburg, WV.
The wedding will b€ an event of
August 9, at 6:30p.m. at the Grace
Umted Methodist Church , Gallipolis.

Bethel Aid meets

wedding

GALUPOUS - Bethel Ladies Aid
met June 4 with Lena Belle Williams
as hostess. Opening songs, "Victory
· In Jesus" and 'Near The Cross,"
were sung. Scripture reading was by
Virginia Fisher, 11th chapter of
Hebrews. Next month, Ruby Saunders will read scripture. .
Roll call was answered by reciting
scripture. Eleven memb€rs and one
guest attended. Ruby Saunders offered prayer. There were 30 sick
calls made last month.
Program consisted of readings,
" He Was One Of Us," Ruby Saunders; " Whom The Lord Loveth ,"
Virginia F isher; "A Ribbon For
Ruff," Lena Belle Williams; "The
Touch of God," Gladys Church;
" Thank You, God, For Little
Things," Melissa Caldwell; "God's
Kind Care," Florence Ragan.
Next Ladies Aid will be with
Esther Davis.
Closing song was liAmerica ." The
Lord's Prayer was recited by all in
closing. Refreshments were served
following the meeting.

Randall Lusk
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
William B. Priddy , Rt. 4, Gallipolis,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, ftegina Diane to Rauda ll
Lamar Lusk, son of Mr. and M1·s .
Jiuuuy C. Lusk of Wilmington, N.C.
Miss Priddy is a 1980 graduate of
North Gallia High School. Specialist4 Lusk 1s a 1978 graduate of New
Hanover High School and is currently stationed at Ft. Bragg Army
Base with the Seventh Group Special
Forces.
The double-ring ceremony will
take place on June 14, 1:30 p.m. at
the Church of Chnst, Henderson, W.
Va ., with Eugene Zopp officiating.

planned
MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
been completed for the open church
wedding of Jennifer Lynn Wise and
John Stephen Harrison.
The wedding will take place on
Saturday, June 14 at the Heath
United Methodil.t Church, Middleport, at 2:30 p.m. A program of
music preceding the ceremony will
begin at 2 p.m.
The maid of honor will b€ Susanna
Wise, sister of the bride, and the
bridesmaids will be Sh erry
Harrison, sister of the groom; Tammy Pitzer and Sharon Hawley.
Flower girl will b€ Stephannie
Thomas.
Best man will b€ Larry Harrison,
brother of the groom, and the ushers
will be Terry Lucas, Dallas Sayre,
and George Hawley . The organist
will be Edie Ross and the soloist, her
daughter, Steffanie Purcell.
A reception will be held immediately following the ceremony in
the church dining room.

TO MEET TIIURSDA Y
RACINE - Racin e Lodge 401,
F&amp;AM, will meet in regular session
at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday with work in
the third degree.

DIVORCEE JAILED
MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. (AP)
- A 36-year-old divorcee has b€en
sentenced to 90 days in jail for nons upport after her ex-husband
testified that if he had fai led to make
the payments, he'd be jailed.
When Rob€rt and Susan Barr
divorced in October, Barr was awarded custody of their two children.
Mrs. Barr, a machinist at a
Roseville plastics factory, was ordered to pay $29 a week in support,
according to Macomb County Judge
Raymond Cashen.

Rena Thacker

~ hu,11n g f&lt;~ ce.

1t.s turn

h~ht

at Ncbu ;md I!L'Iril' 11

Tltough sometimes our fa 1th doth w&lt;tver and the

wurhrs are- might y few
Ycl tom ght the doors are ope n t o welcome each
of you.
God, grant that us tonight our hearts art.' flilildcd

by the memories o( the past

Thvt our doubts and ft!;ars will wasll &lt;IW ij)' bLlt uur
fa1th i11 God w11llast

16 oz.
btl s .

M r rmd M 1-s. Donald Geary II

Oh, teac h us how, v.· e humbl y pra y, to gl \'f t he
f.:l!nerutlon yet to be
1'111 ~ ~ re a l Uentag e, that now !Jt:long!l lo y011 &lt;tnd

Marriages announced

Jilt'.

May the lll VISible host of the century wulk d&amp;t lf·

lly our sale
And thus enable us to keep the doors of Ncbo

Opl'II Widl!.

MIDDLEPORT - Tina Marie
Sheley, daughter of ML and Mrs.
Rob€rt M. Sllcle)·, and Donald M. R.
Ge;,ry Ill, sou of tht• l:itt• Mr. and
Mrs. Dona ld M. Geary II. wc1r
marri ed on May 4 at tht• Midd leport
United Pentecosta l Chu1 rh.
The 4 p.m. wedlling was per- formed by the Hev. William Knittle.
' Tauuuy Richards was the maid of
: honor .and wore a yellow !-iilk dress .

Ma y we transcn bc our recm d on thL• hearts of
)'UUlJ\d&lt;ly by da y

Su Jt "'Lil rem&lt;tm m thf&gt;ir memon l!s &lt;llld a ~ato
and 41ga.1n replay. ·
A rel'Ord not ma rred w1th scratches, one thBt wtll
pl ay w1th soun&lt;l so dear t:lnd s weet
That I! will be worth remembenng unlll ag:Hn
(hancc to meet

w'·

Plans
completed

Infant Dickens

Baby arrives
PT. PLEASANT- Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Dickens, Pt. Pleasant, are
announci"g the birth of a daughter,
Jessica , who weighed eight pounds
and was 20 inches long.
She is welcomed by a brother,
Jason .
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence E . Huffman , Mitchell Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Alonzo Dickens, Point Pleasant.
Maternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Norris, Racine,
and Mrs. Virginia Huffman ,
Gallipolis.
REUNION SLATED
GALUPOUS The annual
Lemley-Ralph reunion will be Sunday, June 15, at the Poplar Ridge
Church. Basket lw1ch will be at
noon. All relatives and friends are
welcome.

RODNEY - Final plans have
b€en completed for the marriage of
Lisa Maynard and Michael DeLille.
The wedding will be held Saturday, June 14, 7: 30p.m. at the Rodney United Methodist Church, Rt.
588, Rodney.
The custom of open ch urch will be
observed.
SMAUEL MORSE
Samuel Morse gave the first
public demonstration of his
magnetic telegraph in 1837.

READ THE SALE ADVERTISEMENT BELOW
IF YOU WANT HONEST SAVINGS ON
QUALilY NAME BRAND FABRICS INCWDED
IN OUR REGULAR STOCK. EXCEUENT
SELECTION OF COLORS IN All SALE
CATEGORIES.
. 58 COURT ST.

60" STRETCH TERRY
SOLIDS

100% POL VESTER
ALL COLORS
REG . TO $4 . 49 YD .

TE~~YE~~~~~~ ;g~~~-~ - -------~7~ 0 -

60" T-SH~R!G~T~::3\s YD .........$2~o.
45" SWIMSUIT SOLIDS

s599

REG. TO $7 .49 YD........ ..

Hot Line

for savings
Information.

446-0662
For in formation on savings and current mcnev
market certificate rates, give us a call on our
Hot Li ne for savi ngs mformation

(ieary .

YD.

25% OFF

60" WHITE/ NEUTRAL SOLID

$

so

loFF
$ 98

PANT KNIT , REG . TO $S.99... ..

60" BRIGHT/ PASTEL SOLID

.1 YO .
60'~~N~~~~0~2~9;e~~--~~~-~--------~~ ~D.
PANT KNIT REG . TO $4. 49 ...

25% OFF

LINENS • SILKS • VOILES
CALICO AND PASTEL PRINTS
DOTTED SWISS AND GINGHAM
EYELET • SEERSUCKER • PLISSE
POPLIN • KETllE CLOTH • DUCK
SATINS • LACES • CREPE

HJO GHANDE - G. Charles
Pulley, Norfolk, Va. , a nd Wandu J .
Hay, Rio Grande, wish to announce
their ma rriage of May t~ a t llertea
Baptist C:hUJ d i. El i7.iil&gt;·t h City, N.

c.

Pulley is presently an engineer
with Norfolk and Wcstt'rn H: li lwav
· Company and ulso farn L&lt;; ;nld w(uJ(i

works in North Carolina.
Mrs. Pulley IS now completing IJCI'
tea ching duti es at Ordnan ce
Elementa ry in Point Pleasant. She
will be jui ni ng her husband at
. Meadowland , S ure, Nmth Carolinu

(27935), where they wi ll be
cs tnbhshing an alternative school
for t•arly childhood education.
At home with them will be their
f1ve chi ldren, Jessie, Janet and
Jason Pulley and Leslie and To bi
Ray
The bride's famtly, Mab€1 M.
Mohler, her mother, Dave Moh ler,
Kay 11nd Mary Kay Mohler, her
brother and his fam ily are of the Rio
Grande area .

A wedding feast for fam ily and
friends will be held at Meadowland
this fa ll.

: Gallia 4-H News reported

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

60" STRETCH GABARDINE
SOLIDS

POLY / COTTON
PASTELS, BRIGHTS
NAUTICALS, NEUTRALS
REG . TO $5.99 YD .

60"

She carried a bouquet of yellow and
white pompons and baby's breath.
The bride was in a mint green silk
dress and she carried a bouquet of
green and white pompons wi th
baby 's breath. The bride was given
in marriage by her father .
Danny Richards served as best
man, and the ushers were the
groom's brothers, Charlie and Max

Ray-Pulley united

NON-STOP FLIGHT
In 1930, the first non-stop Paris-tcr
·New York flight began.

PRINTED RIBBONS • STRETCH TRIMS
CORDINGS • FLORAL TRIMS • BELTINGS

The Outdoors man 4-H Club mt'l Ma y 21 ot PCA
Building. Jnnice F~van s presi1lfd and had c h il l ~t=
r:l the pr o~ r a m . Ofri• t•rs are , J&lt;Jnice F: v11ns.
preside nt; Amy Huush, st-. T~ t.a ry· nt' \\ &lt;; n •por·
ter ; K}· le S.mnder~. vice pr~~i d e llt ; Tr rr}'
Murray, treasuJP r. At.lvtsors an~ Uan Mmk u11d

' Nick J ohnsu11s . M elll lJHS pr eH'flt " Nt' Ma 1 ~
Bcrkich, J fl nicc Enws, Sk ucy John.~u n , 1&gt;uv:1l
MurraJ , 'fl'rri Mur r&lt;J y, G1e~ Het·5t&gt;, Mny Housh,
k elly H o lL~h, Kr!t" Sa unde rs, Brmn Shupt•, .f11 11
my Taylor. J &lt;uni Che v :~li f' r , R1 ll}' UnrPt! :111d A.tt
· drew S:~tt ler . A gu&lt;'st pre."'t'llt ~~ ~· "~ M1 ~ t ';tt••l•·
JWusn . H&lt;&gt;pcll't.l", Ann Huusll

The H oa cl runncr~ ·~H CILJ b nwl M&lt;J} IS 111
Trainer hnmc. 1 an) a Sk&lt;1~t:( s I'' •·:mkd. ''hsct
Smith IMl devot ll!ll..'i, ami l:lml}!i 1 r!l lli r•r h:ttl
ehjlrgP of lht• pnJI,lram r ·llfL&lt;.ta lr:Hne r Hlld
Ta ny r~ Slo:-.ggs demunst ra iNI fl uwer gardr&gt;n ln~
Ofricers ;Jte, TarJ}a St.:.g~-, .; , trrE'~ i dl'llt; OO\'c
Tminrr. \'il-t' p rl'si,lrnt; ('! ,Jr.sta Tr;,mci,
trea :~u rer: Ali::;;.1 Scr 1th. ~:Yne lmy. DUI'S \\t'f!· ~C"t
al 25

l 't't l l'-1 pt' l'

!lwdir,g

Ad\' i \ l lr~ llrt' Hu li; ~r d

nnc!GI:Jd}'S Trumcr - Hepnrtl'r lla\ P Ti a1rwr
Culllu County Fr u11tiersmt&gt;n ~ H Club HICI
,\ ,. ,rch 25 i\t OhitJ Valley Bank C' ommumkly
I'IMilll. l.q~ til G lll~bun1 presided .'i&lt;md) 1.&lt;1) nc
~ dHot.i o n~ w1tl .l &lt;1eque GlussUurn hmJ d mn:r
fl the prolo(T&lt;J tn . Offit't'TS e lf'r·lt'cl w1•re, p r e ~l d t·n l.
TIU\111)' Me Gurre, VH'e peSilknt, Susa11
Look11df); .st'l'r t.'Ut ry, Sa ndy 1 -&lt;l ~' tll : n e".~ re J,.• r
' ltr. Ltgea Glll.ssbum; n·en•al mn lt'ml·•rh U. I
'G bt.&lt;~i'd JUfll ; treasurer , Kd l)· VanSicklt•: I':Jith .
IC.ermy Junl W&lt;! )llt' Siders: S&lt;J fety, Ginil and A.rl dtf':J RuU+n ; t'lttmnm1ity projt'1·t rlmrman . Dt b
ble Wtlllelt'}. M P m~rs ta lk&lt;'d .tbflut "' l1at
pt't)jects they 14' en• k1k111g thiS }l' ~t r . 1'1&gt;~' d ullro;
· &amp;M mg out duor ('f_&gt;t:lkmrt We u,lso to l~ eJ :lltunt a
' com mU!lll.y pr ojcd . Ad\'I:Wr IS J.at'qur
· cms.~burn
Mt&gt;mbcrs presenl ~ f're l ll mtny
: Mc&lt;iuire, Gina a t~~. ! Andn:il Rutan , Kt·lly Vo nSickle, Sa ndy l..'i)'ru&gt;. .l ~&gt;ff S1dl' l s. D. L
Gllwburn. Susi e J.ock ado, LoE'ge :~ Gl:1sshurn . A
auest present was Oalt! Va11S •d d P. - RPpm1rr.

You've picked
the day, now pick
the ring.

RAM TO MEET
POMEROY
Officers will be
elected at a regular mee ting of
Pomeroy Chapter BO, RAM, to b€
held at 7.30 p.m. Wednesday. At 8:30
p.m. there will b€ a regu lar meeting
of Boswo rth Council46, R&amp;SM, with
electum of office1·s to be he ld.

&lt;:tl Wright-Patterson Atr Forte
Base, Dayton, while Mrs. Poole and
Will CJ I'C rematning here for C:l vt stt
111th the Parkers.
Otilcr recent gut&gt;sL" of Mr . aml
fttent

Mrs . P&lt;irker have Ueen Mr . cmd Mrs.

Ed"in Botetticher, Smithfi eld, wh&lt;o

Genu ine Diamo nds and

_/1tV! lf!!l)f

fj_'IJ!Jitl/lfY-i
!:VERY ONE A VALUE

8~

Your c h01cc Genu me Rub1cs 01
1n 14K gold

Genu 1ne Sapphires Set

~~
. _;. :, ·-,t''

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DERIFIELD JEWELRY
417 Sec ond Ave.

Gallipo lis, Oh .

" A cro ss from th e Th eater"

SUPERIOR

Fred Blaettnar, Archie Swartz, a nd
Zelda Davis.
The chapter will prepare dinners
for the Middleport inspectiOn on
June 25 , and for the Shrine visitati on
on June 14. Mrs. Polly Hysell
thanked her officers and prtr tem officers. Refreshments were se rved in
the dining room. A bridal s hower
was held for Debbie Windon
follow ing the meeting .

BOILED
HAM

FULLY COOKED
READY TO EAT

99

$

Sliced The
Way You
Like II.

WIENERS

THIS FATHER'S'DAY GIVE THE GIFT
THAT SHOWS YOU CARE -

12 oz.
PKG.

GIVE A GIFT OF HEALTH AND SAFETY
Exercise bikes
Jobstdresssupporthose
Jobst Enduro athletic stockings
NTRON Heart Alert (Pre set to
monitor heart beat)
Himd &amp; foot whirlpool
Bathtub whirlpool
Shower/tub grab bars
Bathtub safety rails
Bathtub/ shower benches
Back rests
Bean bag lap desks &amp; trays
Butterfly &amp; cervica I pillows
Moist heating pads
Nasal sauna
Hot &amp; cold packs
Paraffin baths
Commode safety rails
Portable commodes
Portable oxygen with shoulder
bag
Elevated toilet seats

MON.-FRI.

.,39

GROUND BEEF

79t;

LB.

~ifts ~

2% MILK

·-·

79

I~

FATHER'S DAY
JUNE 'I5

0 1. ~ \ 0 ;
n '\~:~

. ····~ A

•

o_'

,itt...;;,

v~·~

•

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·'"""''"

CHARMIN

1j4

4 Roll Pkg .

TOILET
TISSUE

ster Charge
Visa
Golden Buckeye

lit.o.e
eaJieal §t.o.er:»IJB

9-5

Ground Fres h
Several T imes Daily

Spring vall ey Plaza
Phone 446-2206
Gallipolis , Ohio

9-1

SAT.

or
DIET
PEPSI

OR HOTDOG

BUNS
SILVII

•••oo•

424 Second Av e.
G a ll ipolis , Oh.

:,~',o' $129

PLAV.

OUR '500 GOWN
IS A HITIII

PLUS
DEPOSIT
ARMOUR STAR

Colorful

Solids and

Fashion Prints of
[idef1on Knits, Enkahne
N)1on Satin and
Triat Blends.

S34, 834, 538, 543, S33

_____F"rench City Fabric Shoppe's

VIENNA SAUSAGE

Scoop Necltline
and Puff Sleeve
with Stretch
Nylon Lace.
SIZES
S.M-l

s oz . Can

49

oz.

$} ~~h

I
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coupon

Good only at Barr's Expires 6-11 -80

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

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CRISP

HEAD LElTUCE.................~~-~ . 49

OUR MOST
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RE-ORDER STYLE

39~

TIDE
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

Full 62 and 64 inch
Bottom Sweep.

SHOP AT THE
LARGEST
.
FURNITURE
STORE IN OUR
AREA.

446-9255

asstgn-

446-1923

PORTABLE CASE FOR SlflGER
SEWING MACHINES, MODELS

S8 COURT ST .
GALLIPOLIS , OHIO

e:t n~w

Superior All Meat

TAWNEY JEWELERS

Legea Gl;t,sltum

the Pa rker~.

Sgt. Poole IS nov. on

PICNIC FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
program on the flag and each memMeigs Chapter of the Da ughters of ber is to contribute something for
the American Revolution, will have the program. Hostesses are Mrs.
a picnic at the home of Mrs. James O'Brien, Mrs . Arthur Skinner, Mrs.
O'Brien Friday at6 p.m.
Larry Wiley, Mrs. George Morris,
Those attending are to take a and Mrs. na ncy Reed.
covered dish. There will be a

Columbia

$5° OFF

S Bank

POMEROY - The charter was
draped for Ethel Williamson at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, held at the Masonic
Temple.
The altar was draped for past
grand matron, Irene Thornburg.
Elizabeth Well took the sunshine
collection and officers' report were
given . Get-well ca rds were sen t to

Col umbia wedding band s from
S IOO.

0

OPEN Tll8 PM
MON. and FRI.
NITES

·The Commercial 8r Savings Bank
25 Court Street
Silver Bridge Plaza
Spring Valley
Member FD1C
,
.
•

3. Pomeroy.

Mrs. Williamson remembered

HOURS

Summer Fabric
•

tile lwme of Mr!:i . Poole's l&gt;arenl",
Mr. :..~nd Mrs. Wilber Parkl·r, Houtc

'

8

were here for the funeral serv ices
for Wesley Buehl, Meigs County
eng mecr. Mrs. Boetticher ., th e
Sister of Mr. Bueh l's la te wile. The
lloettichers were overnight guests of

lulllo, Tcxe:ts, i:lr rlved last week at

HOME BUYER FINDS
UNEXPECTED REWARD
MERRILL, Wis . (AP) - Sue Detert·got a surpnse after buymg an
aged, twcrstory home and 1ts furm shmgs by submittmg a bid 111 an
estate sale.
As she was rolling up old carpeting in the li ving room th1s week, she
discovered $290 in cash underneath.
She kept rolling and found a bout $8,000 in tightly stacked bills between the carpet and its backing.
Mrs. Detert said she checked with her attorney and was ad1· 1sed she
could keep the money, which appeared to be quite old but still1n good
condition. There is one catch, though: she has to pay ta xes on it.

If " e c lose our eyes. perhaps " 't' ca n see t ~m m
thc1r accu.stomt.'tl plan•
And mayllt! hear tlte1 r \'OJces, even see thc1r

They' ..·c tended the
lm ~ htl y burn.

POMEROY - T. Sgt. and Mrs.
Joseph Poole and son, Will, San An-

On The LightS1de

As C!! ch succeedmg generatwn has followed m

EWJNGTON - Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thacker of Rt. I Ewi ngton are
proud to announce the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Rena Diane, to L.aJTy
Dwayne Gilb€rt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Gi lbert of Rt. 2, Vinton.
Mi"' Thacker is a 1979 graduate of
North Ga llia High School and of
Buckeye Hills Career Center. She is
employed at Burger Chef in
Gallipoli s.
Gilbert attended the Southwestern
High School and is employed at Merco Mining Co.
I he wedding will b€ an event of
June 25 at 7 p.m. at the Fairview
Christia n Union Church, Alice Rd.,
Ewington, Ohw.

Pooles visit here

On the Light Side

Drama Student 'Stars'
in Bank Holdup
SALT LAKE CITY ( A Pi - A drama student al the Umversity of
Utah turned in two first-rate performances the other day- one fo r Ius
professor, the other for a jumpy bank teller.
The student, fresh from a triun1pil at his fi nal exams, entered the
13th East branch of Commemal Sec urit'y Ba nk wea ring his costwue
and makeup of an elderly woman.
A teller, startled by the heavy coat of makeup on the young man's
face, immediately pushed the alarm button.

··- ·

1

R-7- The Sunday Times-Se ntil1el, Sunday, June S, 1980

Maily of thu:;e who butlt thcrt , nuw bt! sult&gt; n lit•
ilslccp
As 1f 111 ~:: u&lt;Jnhn ~ It, their silent v1g1I kee p.
TUI.ht }' over il l'entury has entlt.'&lt;l but thc1 t
mt&gt;mon es lmger on
We still can hear the ct•ho of the it praycrs and of
lhc1r song.

',..,

Bever(;' Grate

PWP CALENDAR
POMEROY - Calendar of activities for the Meigs-Ga Uia Unit of
Parents Without Partners: June 9.
7:30 p.m., coffee and conversatiOn
for adu lts a t Dodie Winebrenner's
home, Bra dbury Road, Middleport;
June 12, 7 p.m ., orienta tjon for new
memb€rs at Mental Hea lth Center.
Gall ipoli s; 7:30 p.m. general
busi ness meeting at the center
following orientation with Gene
Gle nd e nn ing s pea k ing on
"Teenagers and Parenting." All
teens, including 12-yea r-olds invited
to attend this meeting, June 3, 8:30
p.m., adult dance at Coon Hunters
Lodge at Rock Springs Fa irground.-,
near Pomeroy.

OVI TOWN'S PINIU SOPEI MAIKIT

�•
~The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
POMEROY Meigs Senior
Citizens Ceriter activities located at
the Multipurpose Senior Center on
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy is
open9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Monday, June 9 - Square Dance,
1-3p.m.
Tuesday, June 10 - Crafts, 10
a.m.; Nursing Home Visit, 10 :30
a .m .; Chorus, I p.m.
Wednesday, JUlle 11 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30a.m.12 :30 p.m.; Movie, "American
PhoeniX," 11 a .m .; Games, 1 p.m .
Friday, June 13 - A1i Class, 9
a .m.; Beginning Art Instruction
10 :30 a.m.; Nursing Home Visit,
10 :30 a .m.; Games, 1 p .m.;
Bowling,l-3 p.m .
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m ., Monday through
Friday.
Monday - Beans and ham, cold
pickled beet, coleslaw, peach crisp,
cornbread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Baked spaghetti with
cheese toppmg, buttered broccoli,
tossed salad - dressing, pineapple,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday Fried chicken,
mashed potatoes, buttered green
beans, pears, bread, butter, milk .
Thursday - Pork casserole, buttered co n\, vegetable s law ,
chocolate pudding. bread, butter,
milk.
Friday-Fried fish, butte red lima
beans, stewed tomatoes, banana
gelatin, bread, butter, milk .
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please register for your lunch the
day before you plan to eat. Pomeroy,
992·2161.

r--Social Calendar
SUNDAY
TWENTY .SIXTH ann ual RussellArcher-Higley reunion Sunday at
Forest Acres park, Rutland, beginning at noon.
REVIVAL at Midway Conununity
Church beginning Sunday . Services
7:30 p.m. nightly. Tony Little and
Art Hughes speakers.
MONDAY
REGISTERED APPALOOSA
SHOW Sunday at Bar 30 Showgrounds, Tuppers P lains. Sponsored
by Southern Ohi o Appaloosa
Association.
TWIN CITY SHRINE Monday 7
p .m . for members a nd wives.
Visitation by the illustriou• potentate of Aladdin Shrine. Me......ers to
bring covered dish .
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
p.m . Monday night at the grange
. hall, practice for inspection. · Inspection will be held on Thursday, 8
(J.m. and all officers are urged to attend.

Mclntoshes return
home after visit
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh, Floral City, Fla.,
have returned home after a 17 day
visit here with Mrs. Ralph Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs . Mcintosh and Mrs.
Spencer sll"nt a day in Canton
visiting with a cousin, Mrs . Harry
Davis, and were joined there by
Mrs. Davis' children, Mr. and Mrs .
Don Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Hamilton and children, Sandy and
Chrissie.
Donald Davis of Youngstown
came to Pomeroy to visit Mrs. Spencer and Mr. and Mrs. Mcintosh. A
former neighbor and close frie nd of
Mcintosh, it was the first tinne they
had seen each other in 40 yea rs. The
two then visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Moore, since Mrs. Moore was a lso a
childhood friend.
Brian and Melinda Spencer and
Amity Dixon also spent a day with
their grandmother and Mr. and Mrs.
.Mcintosh.
RACINE
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of Lorain
spent the weekend with his prents;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Curtis and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill spent
Mother's Day in Marietta with their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr . and
Mrs. WaidFosterandfamily.
Mrs. Mabel Brace and Mrs. Pearl
Adams visited Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Joe Adams, Jr. and daughters at
Five Points.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch spent
Mother's Day weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Birch a nd daughters at
Belleview.

STRAWBERRIES
-Pick your own from 9
AM til dark
-Closed sunday
-sorry no c:hec:ks

HAPPY HOLLOW

. FRUIT FARM

Gallipolis Ferry, w. Va.
1·304·576-2026
1o Miles South of
Point Pleasant on Rt. l

MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
been completed for t11e Saturday,
June 14 weddin~ of Pam Powers,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Powers, Middleport, and Charlie
Marshall, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marshall, Hemlock Grove.
The open church wedding will be
performed by the Rev . Bub Mellon
following a half-hour of mus1c
provided by Mrs. Clarice Erwin,
organist, and Cathy and Don Erwin,
soloists.
Debbie Jones, Racine, will be
matron of honor and the bridesmaids will be Paula McCloud.
Ga llipoli s;
Denise Marshall.

FACCALENDAR
Exhi bit for the month of June,
starting June 3, 1980 - Wom.ensart
'79 from Artreach Gallery, Columbus, Ohio. 54 pieces of art in all
media by professional women artists of Ohio. Exhibit during Ohio
dur'ing 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. Instructor s: Eleanor
Strang, R.N., and J an Thaler, R.N.
Contact Peggy Evans at 446-1819 to
register. No charge to take the course for F AC members.
June 24, 3 p.m. - Deadline for entries to he submitted for the July 4th
River Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Chaired by Jan Thaler . Entry blanks
available at Riverby a nd at PJ 's in
downtown Gallipolis, or call 446-1819
to request an entry blank, or write to
the FAC, 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 . a nd on June 24 from
10 a. m . until 3 p.m . Show to be
jurored the week of June30.
July 4, 10 a .m .-5 p.m. - River
Recreation Festival Art Exhibit in
the City Park in downtown
Gallipolis; in case of rain , exhibit
will beatRiverby.

I

Senior Citizens Scenes

Wedding plans told
Hemlock Grove, and Judy Radford,
Pomeroy, Junior bridesmaids will
be Mica Jones and Tressie Proffit.
Best man will be Mike Magnotta,
Colu mbus, and the ushers will be
Barry Marshall and Randy Marshall, Hemlock Grove, George Carper, Pomeroy, and Bobby Powers,
Middleport.
.
.
Guests will be registered by June
Powers Middleport, and Tammy
Cooper.' Shade. A reception will be
held irrunediately followmg the
ceremony in the church fellows hip
hall. Hostesses will be Sharon
Stewart, Debbie Melton, and Cathy
Erwin.

New bo 0 kS
released
GALUPOUS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library announces the following new books
have been released:
FICTION - The Cradle Will Fall,
Mary Clark ; Conqueror of the
Clo uds, William F . Hallstead ; The
Haunted Dolls; The Hargra ve
Deception, E. Howard Hunt ; Hot
Type, Marj orie Lipsyte; Ride a Tall
HorS€, Lewis B. Patten; Virgin,
James Patterson;
Aman ·
da/Miranda, Richard Peck; Appaloosa Rising, Gmo Sky ; Sharkey,
James Wyckoff.
NON-FICTION - . Becoming a
Couple Leonard Schwartz; Men in
the Sh~dows, John Sawatsky ; Life
For Death, Michael Mewshaw ; Getting Ready to Read, Susan •Glazer;
Look Now, Pay Later, Laurence
Bergreen ; Yesterday, Today, and
Tomorrow, Marquis W. Childs;
Engine Service, W. Gary Lewis; In
Grandmother's Day, J ea n Cross;
Microwave Cooking in Multiple
Speeds; Writing a Job-Winning
Resume ,
John
McLaug hlm;
Photography Year: 1980, Tinne-Life
Books; This Life , Sidney Poi tier;
The Pirates, Lou Sahadi ; The Archer's Bible, Fred Bear; Gateway to
Oblivion, Hugh F . Cochra ne; The
Women Who Made the West,
Western Writers of America; The
Orphan Brigad£, W.flliam C, Davis.

Third week in new Center begins
POMEROY - THis is the beginning of the third week in the new
Multipurpose Center . ! think some of
you are hesitant about coming to the
Center because of the parking . It
does taKe a little longer to find a
parking space in the parking lot but,
you don't-have to wade in the mud
any more . You may use the second
floor entrance adjacent to the
parking lot and use the elevator or
stairway to reach the first floor. If
you are handicapped in any way or
have a passenger that i.s ha ndicapped, three parking spaces are
reserved directly in front of the first
floor entry-way for your con-

vemence.
One of the features of the new
Senior Center lhal should be of interest to the public is the craft store.
You don't have to dr ive on the Blue
Ridge Pa rkway or along the East
Coast to find items and a 1ticles
made by hand and in the AI&gt;"
palachian tradition .
Many of the items offeteil for sale
in the craft stores are made at the
Center. We have wood items, quilts,
quilted pillows, rugs and small crafts tha t are unusual and eye catching.
Gift items will be featured with
Christmas, Easter and other holiday
motifs in mind. In the near future

the craft store will also have leathercraft items and ceramic gifts
displayed. Our prices are extremely
reasonable and all profits will be
used for the continuation of Senior
Citizen programs in Meigs County.
The first social and potluck dinner
will be held on Thursday, June 19
from 5:30p.m. until 7:30p.m. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
Everyone who attends the potluck
will be asked to donate 25 cents
towards the cost of the m eat and
beverage. Those who attend and do
not bring a covered dish will be
asked to donate $1.
The Center staff will prepar e the
meat and beverage, but please bring
your own table service a nd a
covered dish of a vegetable , salad,
rolls or bread or a dessert.
If enough interest is s hown,
potlucks will he held once a month.

We want to see our facilities being
used as much as possible. The
building is beautiful but it is 0~1 ly
empty space without people makms
use of it.
The large, main Center room ill
available for public use at a nominal
fee (to cover utilities, janitorial ser·
vice etc.) There are some problerTII
with' the building; the air conditioner
doesn't work, no hot water and a
drinking fountain that sprays water
to the ceiling!
These problems are being corrected and we will begin schedulmg the
Center room for public evening
events July 1. If yo u are in need of a
meeting place, call us at 992-2161.
The Multipurpose Center is a community facility, so keep us in mind
for yo ur meetings, classes or other
public events.
Have a nice week.

Grade-A

rrr\1i'l
l .

Extra Large
, ,

r, f I
\

I f ' ( \

I

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...,,.,...

Doz.

EGGS

49~

r--------------------- - - - - -

HOMELITE~S

360
fhe Ideal high production saw.
"Fiil Safr'" Ylbrall.., lsolallori
:ushlons the handles lrom the pow..- hNd, reduces operator fllllllue.
• Low noise
thanks to Hom
Softone dual chamber .(lluffler .
tNew 3.5 cubic Inch r.emt ·haad engln;e. •CapaCitor dttcharGe. lgnl~ .
lion. • Adfustable automatic oiler . eUnlque chaln.f~,Of1 1119;, •R~ .
ber coated handle bar and grip. • Bar lengtt1S from l6 to 2t . • ,•A~ ·
·
vanced design fQrNgh production with low operatbr11811gue.

l.,v.,l

Remember
MONDAY
ROSE Brunch, French City Garden
Club, 10 a.m . at home of Mrs.
F lorence Trainer.

elite's

ATIENDS REUNION
MIDDLEPORT - Carter French
attended the recent reunion of the
Middleport High School Class of 1960
held at the Middleport Fire Department. His name was unintentiona lly
omitted from an earlier listing of
those a !tending.

Items and Prices effective thru Sat., June 14, 1980.

Quantity Rights Reserved .

3.4 BILLION POUNDS SEED
The world a nnua lly produces
about 3.4 billion pounds of sesame
seed, most of which is turned mto o1l.

SEE ONE AT

634·43 2ND AVENUE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

OALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Buy Now and
SAVE $180
Reg. $1,075

$169

Boo oluo-

STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9 A.M.·9 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 A.M.·6 P.M.

Chuck Roasts .. lb.

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.
E,very week at A&amp;P.

_.Portion

Skinless

Franks ~ 89~

Smoked Ham
Cenlor

1

.i&amp;
oun

lb.

Sf'-

Smoked Ham ... lb.

Ml-

Pork Chops .... lb.

Sf;;;" libs ...... lb.$1 19

79~ Oocw~

$169

$1 09

Piggie Links ... lb.
r2-iba]

Am " -

Sliced Bacon ~lb.

$179

99~

_,_
Baking Hens

lb.

-~

Fryer Legs .....

Ooaor

lb.

Mol*

Wieners. . . • 1149
Ooaor , . _ . - . , . . -

lb.

Lean &amp; Tasty.....

1~ $119

Special '895
Smaii-!Nymlftt.

wa t&gt;ave many mort memorials.
Upto311% Discount

.

pri ces to dealers on these se l ecte~
m odels unti l Aug . 17, 1980 so yo u may ge t b1g sav1 ngs

Wri.te or call for booklets showing m emorials in full -color with sizes

and prices stated.

•100

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

DISCOUNT

VINTON C .

HOTPOINT DELUXE 23.5 CU. FT.
REFRESHMENT CENTER WITH
ICE &amp; WATER THRU THE DOOR!
Aul omalic

James 0 . Bush, Mgr.
Ph . 388· 8603

Saver

Syslem

I~

-

.... .

QU ALI TY 2-SP[(O If/ASHER
&amp; MA TCHI,_,G O!lYER '/l l lH
PERMANENT pqESS cYCLES'

:.

&lt;Jhe
~-.;;;;::
~-

VACATION BARGAIN

.,,

0.

Energy

'

*50 DISCOUNT
New Crop

ON THE PAIR

•\ AI f~ !; 1~ 1 ~

Ob the yea~

'~ild ~ ,J _,II I.~.

f

r! IPI R

,.

c:::--..

-:c ~ q;r ~-.I

v rtr

CO J'I L•'tO ~ I~

COVl~ ! O L A I~Y
CO W' l~IM [ ~ IS

1 . g la ss shel ves and 3 adJU 5table doo r s h_~ lves
1
m cabmet seCtiOn 0 14 9 Cu It lrest1 load c apaCity L _· 8 6
cu I! lr eezer sec t• on ::J 4 FrePl!!!r s h ~ l•·e~ 1n door and ca b•net
0 Removable treeze r ba sket 0 Ju•ce c an O•spenser ~ Rulbout -on-wheet s

JO" QVEr&gt;..-qANGF: &lt;1111 H
BL ACK GLASS V·,I'JIYX' UU' 1·
'.'o,~c

0 4

'100
DISCOUNT

rl87FGA

Eight O'Clock

TEXAS
CANTALOUPES • • • • • • • • • •
SUGAR SWEET
HONEY DEWS • • • • • • • • • •
SOUTHERN
PEACHES •••• • • • • • • • • • •
SWEET
In The
CORN ...... . • Hutlt
•••••••••

•so

Bean ~·"coupon
Coffee ~-!~·
12"011..--

Zesl Soap ...... . .

1!1" 011..-

Sail Detergent. . . . . . . .

NAVONA

2t5CU FT
I

Gonoric

f "'(»'/P.d

FOO D

WITH
1H RU THE

r.•0.1•

©u!

DISNEY WORLD TOURS

c&lt;::r~;w.

12'!.0Z.
WATER

r,·cr:!

•

50

r····-··---·------,

FOR INFORMATION CALL 1. PLEASE SEND FREE BROCHURE TO : :
: NAME
I
: ADDRESS

:
I

PARK TOURS : CITY
:
521 ~ S1 ., -..,...g, w. Va.: (ZIP)
DG I
1----~---··__,. _________________ ••

POMEROY LAN-DMARK

2C9'l

LAJIDMUK .

"Serving Meigs, Gallla and Mason Counties"
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Main Street

Pomeroy
Store Hours : 8:30to5:30
Mill Closed at 5: 00 P.M,
· Phone 992· 21 1

y

eeeh

No

•U...• P•"e"- ·•~~&gt;l• ed

This Week's Feature
'.

g 'Daytona Clleoch
Cost - Sf69.00 pe1 pe~son. wllh jou~ people pe~ ~ oo m . 'Jw1n
Mle . Sf&amp;7 .00 pe~ pei~on .9ndude.sollcost wept meals.

OR WRITE US AT

,

..

jea lu~'" 9 ' 'Walt 'Dtsney 'Wo~ld. Cypim Qo1dens

99fla

ll~uiJ&lt; •CI Atl Oil•~· ...., •. , I If

DISCOUNT

July 22-26 and Aug . 18-22

428-7618

GOBLET

MI CROWII VE OVEN V.'II H
LARGE 1 3 CU f· 1 CAPA C!I Y1
C[ .,,,,

......
110x

Plol" - - . . , . _ . ,

89" -Elbow Macaroni
$139

Kraft Dressings . . . . . .· &amp;oz.
...

...' .
•..
....

.....

$14 9
~--:z· 21 ~

Goneric

a.-k:

Cut
,5',.,..,._
Green Beans can
Powder
Detergent

Gonerk:

Generk:Uquld

Dried
Pinto Beans

16-0z.
Pkg.

Dish
Detergent

~

sgc

"'-'"•

AIPFnnc:hOOOr&gt;

Sour Cream
Dip . . . . . .
t. . . . ,

7g
3 c..--. $1
89 ~
~~·,'"'
gg

if

Butter

Milk . . . . .

;o,.Gol.

an.

.S} 69
~

:Jil'!lil!l~COU~ON

SAVE 50¢Of
On

..

The Purch ..e
t~b.

can

SANKA COFFEE

Eight

INSTANT COFFEE

l~L

$2!J9
W~ h

Cononelle

BATH TISSUE

=· ~~I

99¢

Thll C0111Xm

UfJ!k Olle Cau~n Plr Cl.lilOfl"lt
Vt~ld Tl"~ S.l , J~ne 14 l §&amp;l

..' ..
..
.·'
'
•

u"

u.-

'• .

' .

"

'

DIQ.

Tissues .............. ""'"

sgc

Products-.... --Frozen FoOds:--.
A&amp;P
mrarcnn~:_$149
Sour
1&amp;oz.
~
French Fries 11et1
Cream . . . . eup

Corn Oil
,-lb.
·Margarine . Pl&lt;g.
Milk ..........
,
''WQOkj
32-&lt;&gt;z.
1111.

Faygo DrInics . . . . . . .6

--Dairy

n ·

Geowic

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese Dinner .

31

--

1o-.

- -

Genork:

. ~ut cn;,~my 211-oz.
BuHer . ~~"~". ""'

=ggc

'="'139
~ O'Qock- eo._,
'299
. . . . . ""'"$159
Instant CoHee . . . . ':"':":'
. . ...

Pillsbury Flour ..... .

Tomato
= 75~ Tomato ,...,._Gen
Ketchup. . . . 1111
Sauce .. . .

(.,nnr, ft~?&amp;;/

CEN TER

•100
DISCOUNT"

'~ 119

- - - - - - - - - - - - - " " ' ,...---Economy corne~r----..

DISCOUNT

.::::··;c·:.. l SIDE -BY

!~CC CI
rl0A76('

2

3

!3" 011..Palmolive
Liquid ... ... . - •

Stemware

DOOR
WATER
&amp; ICE
SERVICE 1

$699· Towels
Viva J~~~o69e Kraft ~:rz. $149
Mayonnaise

Plus •s Addhlonat Purchase

Chlclren. Turkey, Sollobury or

lii~~ge
~~- 590
Dinners . . .
Pllg.

I
I
I

�•
~The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
POMEROY Meigs Senior
Citizens Ceriter activities located at
the Multipurpose Senior Center on
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy is
open9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Monday, June 9 - Square Dance,
1-3p.m.
Tuesday, June 10 - Crafts, 10
a.m.; Nursing Home Visit, 10 :30
a .m .; Chorus, I p.m.
Wednesday, JUlle 11 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30a.m.12 :30 p.m.; Movie, "American
PhoeniX," 11 a .m .; Games, 1 p.m .
Friday, June 13 - A1i Class, 9
a .m.; Beginning Art Instruction
10 :30 a.m.; Nursing Home Visit,
10 :30 a .m.; Games, 1 p .m.;
Bowling,l-3 p.m .
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m ., Monday through
Friday.
Monday - Beans and ham, cold
pickled beet, coleslaw, peach crisp,
cornbread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Baked spaghetti with
cheese toppmg, buttered broccoli,
tossed salad - dressing, pineapple,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday Fried chicken,
mashed potatoes, buttered green
beans, pears, bread, butter, milk .
Thursday - Pork casserole, buttered co n\, vegetable s law ,
chocolate pudding. bread, butter,
milk.
Friday-Fried fish, butte red lima
beans, stewed tomatoes, banana
gelatin, bread, butter, milk .
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please register for your lunch the
day before you plan to eat. Pomeroy,
992·2161.

r--Social Calendar
SUNDAY
TWENTY .SIXTH ann ual RussellArcher-Higley reunion Sunday at
Forest Acres park, Rutland, beginning at noon.
REVIVAL at Midway Conununity
Church beginning Sunday . Services
7:30 p.m. nightly. Tony Little and
Art Hughes speakers.
MONDAY
REGISTERED APPALOOSA
SHOW Sunday at Bar 30 Showgrounds, Tuppers P lains. Sponsored
by Southern Ohi o Appaloosa
Association.
TWIN CITY SHRINE Monday 7
p .m . for members a nd wives.
Visitation by the illustriou• potentate of Aladdin Shrine. Me......ers to
bring covered dish .
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
p.m . Monday night at the grange
. hall, practice for inspection. · Inspection will be held on Thursday, 8
(J.m. and all officers are urged to attend.

Mclntoshes return
home after visit
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh, Floral City, Fla.,
have returned home after a 17 day
visit here with Mrs. Ralph Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs . Mcintosh and Mrs.
Spencer sll"nt a day in Canton
visiting with a cousin, Mrs . Harry
Davis, and were joined there by
Mrs. Davis' children, Mr. and Mrs .
Don Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Hamilton and children, Sandy and
Chrissie.
Donald Davis of Youngstown
came to Pomeroy to visit Mrs. Spencer and Mr. and Mrs. Mcintosh. A
former neighbor and close frie nd of
Mcintosh, it was the first tinne they
had seen each other in 40 yea rs. The
two then visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Moore, since Mrs. Moore was a lso a
childhood friend.
Brian and Melinda Spencer and
Amity Dixon also spent a day with
their grandmother and Mr. and Mrs.
.Mcintosh.
RACINE
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of Lorain
spent the weekend with his prents;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Curtis and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill spent
Mother's Day in Marietta with their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr . and
Mrs. WaidFosterandfamily.
Mrs. Mabel Brace and Mrs. Pearl
Adams visited Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Joe Adams, Jr. and daughters at
Five Points.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch spent
Mother's Day weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Bob Birch a nd daughters at
Belleview.

STRAWBERRIES
-Pick your own from 9
AM til dark
-Closed sunday
-sorry no c:hec:ks

HAPPY HOLLOW

. FRUIT FARM

Gallipolis Ferry, w. Va.
1·304·576-2026
1o Miles South of
Point Pleasant on Rt. l

MIDDLEPORT - Plans have
been completed for t11e Saturday,
June 14 weddin~ of Pam Powers,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Powers, Middleport, and Charlie
Marshall, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marshall, Hemlock Grove.
The open church wedding will be
performed by the Rev . Bub Mellon
following a half-hour of mus1c
provided by Mrs. Clarice Erwin,
organist, and Cathy and Don Erwin,
soloists.
Debbie Jones, Racine, will be
matron of honor and the bridesmaids will be Paula McCloud.
Ga llipoli s;
Denise Marshall.

FACCALENDAR
Exhi bit for the month of June,
starting June 3, 1980 - Wom.ensart
'79 from Artreach Gallery, Columbus, Ohio. 54 pieces of art in all
media by professional women artists of Ohio. Exhibit during Ohio
dur'ing 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. Instructor s: Eleanor
Strang, R.N., and J an Thaler, R.N.
Contact Peggy Evans at 446-1819 to
register. No charge to take the course for F AC members.
June 24, 3 p.m. - Deadline for entries to he submitted for the July 4th
River Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Chaired by Jan Thaler . Entry blanks
available at Riverby a nd at PJ 's in
downtown Gallipolis, or call 446-1819
to request an entry blank, or write to
the FAC, 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 . a nd on June 24 from
10 a. m . until 3 p.m . Show to be
jurored the week of June30.
July 4, 10 a .m .-5 p.m. - River
Recreation Festival Art Exhibit in
the City Park in downtown
Gallipolis; in case of rain , exhibit
will beatRiverby.

I

Senior Citizens Scenes

Wedding plans told
Hemlock Grove, and Judy Radford,
Pomeroy, Junior bridesmaids will
be Mica Jones and Tressie Proffit.
Best man will be Mike Magnotta,
Colu mbus, and the ushers will be
Barry Marshall and Randy Marshall, Hemlock Grove, George Carper, Pomeroy, and Bobby Powers,
Middleport.
.
.
Guests will be registered by June
Powers Middleport, and Tammy
Cooper.' Shade. A reception will be
held irrunediately followmg the
ceremony in the church fellows hip
hall. Hostesses will be Sharon
Stewart, Debbie Melton, and Cathy
Erwin.

New bo 0 kS
released
GALUPOUS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library announces the following new books
have been released:
FICTION - The Cradle Will Fall,
Mary Clark ; Conqueror of the
Clo uds, William F . Hallstead ; The
Haunted Dolls; The Hargra ve
Deception, E. Howard Hunt ; Hot
Type, Marj orie Lipsyte; Ride a Tall
HorS€, Lewis B. Patten; Virgin,
James Patterson;
Aman ·
da/Miranda, Richard Peck; Appaloosa Rising, Gmo Sky ; Sharkey,
James Wyckoff.
NON-FICTION - . Becoming a
Couple Leonard Schwartz; Men in
the Sh~dows, John Sawatsky ; Life
For Death, Michael Mewshaw ; Getting Ready to Read, Susan •Glazer;
Look Now, Pay Later, Laurence
Bergreen ; Yesterday, Today, and
Tomorrow, Marquis W. Childs;
Engine Service, W. Gary Lewis; In
Grandmother's Day, J ea n Cross;
Microwave Cooking in Multiple
Speeds; Writing a Job-Winning
Resume ,
John
McLaug hlm;
Photography Year: 1980, Tinne-Life
Books; This Life , Sidney Poi tier;
The Pirates, Lou Sahadi ; The Archer's Bible, Fred Bear; Gateway to
Oblivion, Hugh F . Cochra ne; The
Women Who Made the West,
Western Writers of America; The
Orphan Brigad£, W.flliam C, Davis.

Third week in new Center begins
POMEROY - THis is the beginning of the third week in the new
Multipurpose Center . ! think some of
you are hesitant about coming to the
Center because of the parking . It
does taKe a little longer to find a
parking space in the parking lot but,
you don't-have to wade in the mud
any more . You may use the second
floor entrance adjacent to the
parking lot and use the elevator or
stairway to reach the first floor. If
you are handicapped in any way or
have a passenger that i.s ha ndicapped, three parking spaces are
reserved directly in front of the first
floor entry-way for your con-

vemence.
One of the features of the new
Senior Center lhal should be of interest to the public is the craft store.
You don't have to dr ive on the Blue
Ridge Pa rkway or along the East
Coast to find items and a 1ticles
made by hand and in the AI&gt;"
palachian tradition .
Many of the items offeteil for sale
in the craft stores are made at the
Center. We have wood items, quilts,
quilted pillows, rugs and small crafts tha t are unusual and eye catching.
Gift items will be featured with
Christmas, Easter and other holiday
motifs in mind. In the near future

the craft store will also have leathercraft items and ceramic gifts
displayed. Our prices are extremely
reasonable and all profits will be
used for the continuation of Senior
Citizen programs in Meigs County.
The first social and potluck dinner
will be held on Thursday, June 19
from 5:30p.m. until 7:30p.m. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
Everyone who attends the potluck
will be asked to donate 25 cents
towards the cost of the m eat and
beverage. Those who attend and do
not bring a covered dish will be
asked to donate $1.
The Center staff will prepar e the
meat and beverage, but please bring
your own table service a nd a
covered dish of a vegetable , salad,
rolls or bread or a dessert.
If enough interest is s hown,
potlucks will he held once a month.

We want to see our facilities being
used as much as possible. The
building is beautiful but it is 0~1 ly
empty space without people makms
use of it.
The large, main Center room ill
available for public use at a nominal
fee (to cover utilities, janitorial ser·
vice etc.) There are some problerTII
with' the building; the air conditioner
doesn't work, no hot water and a
drinking fountain that sprays water
to the ceiling!
These problems are being corrected and we will begin schedulmg the
Center room for public evening
events July 1. If yo u are in need of a
meeting place, call us at 992-2161.
The Multipurpose Center is a community facility, so keep us in mind
for yo ur meetings, classes or other
public events.
Have a nice week.

Grade-A

rrr\1i'l
l .

Extra Large
, ,

r, f I
\

I f ' ( \

I

\

'

I

'

-

w.....
...,,.,...

Doz.

EGGS

49~

r--------------------- - - - - -

HOMELITE~S

360
fhe Ideal high production saw.
"Fiil Safr'" Ylbrall.., lsolallori
:ushlons the handles lrom the pow..- hNd, reduces operator fllllllue.
• Low noise
thanks to Hom
Softone dual chamber .(lluffler .
tNew 3.5 cubic Inch r.emt ·haad engln;e. •CapaCitor dttcharGe. lgnl~ .
lion. • Adfustable automatic oiler . eUnlque chaln.f~,Of1 1119;, •R~ .
ber coated handle bar and grip. • Bar lengtt1S from l6 to 2t . • ,•A~ ·
·
vanced design fQrNgh production with low operatbr11811gue.

l.,v.,l

Remember
MONDAY
ROSE Brunch, French City Garden
Club, 10 a.m . at home of Mrs.
F lorence Trainer.

elite's

ATIENDS REUNION
MIDDLEPORT - Carter French
attended the recent reunion of the
Middleport High School Class of 1960
held at the Middleport Fire Department. His name was unintentiona lly
omitted from an earlier listing of
those a !tending.

Items and Prices effective thru Sat., June 14, 1980.

Quantity Rights Reserved .

3.4 BILLION POUNDS SEED
The world a nnua lly produces
about 3.4 billion pounds of sesame
seed, most of which is turned mto o1l.

SEE ONE AT

634·43 2ND AVENUE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

OALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Buy Now and
SAVE $180
Reg. $1,075

$169

Boo oluo-

STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9 A.M.·9 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 A.M.·6 P.M.

Chuck Roasts .. lb.

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.
E,very week at A&amp;P.

_.Portion

Skinless

Franks ~ 89~

Smoked Ham
Cenlor

1

.i&amp;
oun

lb.

Sf'-

Smoked Ham ... lb.

Ml-

Pork Chops .... lb.

Sf;;;" libs ...... lb.$1 19

79~ Oocw~

$169

$1 09

Piggie Links ... lb.
r2-iba]

Am " -

Sliced Bacon ~lb.

$179

99~

_,_
Baking Hens

lb.

-~

Fryer Legs .....

Ooaor

lb.

Mol*

Wieners. . . • 1149
Ooaor , . _ . - . , . . -

lb.

Lean &amp; Tasty.....

1~ $119

Special '895
Smaii-!Nymlftt.

wa t&gt;ave many mort memorials.
Upto311% Discount

.

pri ces to dealers on these se l ecte~
m odels unti l Aug . 17, 1980 so yo u may ge t b1g sav1 ngs

Wri.te or call for booklets showing m emorials in full -color with sizes

and prices stated.

•100

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

DISCOUNT

VINTON C .

HOTPOINT DELUXE 23.5 CU. FT.
REFRESHMENT CENTER WITH
ICE &amp; WATER THRU THE DOOR!
Aul omalic

James 0 . Bush, Mgr.
Ph . 388· 8603

Saver

Syslem

I~

-

.... .

QU ALI TY 2-SP[(O If/ASHER
&amp; MA TCHI,_,G O!lYER '/l l lH
PERMANENT pqESS cYCLES'

:.

&lt;Jhe
~-.;;;;::
~-

VACATION BARGAIN

.,,

0.

Energy

'

*50 DISCOUNT
New Crop

ON THE PAIR

•\ AI f~ !; 1~ 1 ~

Ob the yea~

'~ild ~ ,J _,II I.~.

f

r! IPI R

,.

c:::--..

-:c ~ q;r ~-.I

v rtr

CO J'I L•'tO ~ I~

COVl~ ! O L A I~Y
CO W' l~IM [ ~ IS

1 . g la ss shel ves and 3 adJU 5table doo r s h_~ lves
1
m cabmet seCtiOn 0 14 9 Cu It lrest1 load c apaCity L _· 8 6
cu I! lr eezer sec t• on ::J 4 FrePl!!!r s h ~ l•·e~ 1n door and ca b•net
0 Removable treeze r ba sket 0 Ju•ce c an O•spenser ~ Rulbout -on-wheet s

JO" QVEr&gt;..-qANGF: &lt;1111 H
BL ACK GLASS V·,I'JIYX' UU' 1·
'.'o,~c

0 4

'100
DISCOUNT

rl87FGA

Eight O'Clock

TEXAS
CANTALOUPES • • • • • • • • • •
SUGAR SWEET
HONEY DEWS • • • • • • • • • •
SOUTHERN
PEACHES •••• • • • • • • • • • •
SWEET
In The
CORN ...... . • Hutlt
•••••••••

•so

Bean ~·"coupon
Coffee ~-!~·
12"011..--

Zesl Soap ...... . .

1!1" 011..-

Sail Detergent. . . . . . . .

NAVONA

2t5CU FT
I

Gonoric

f "'(»'/P.d

FOO D

WITH
1H RU THE

r.•0.1•

©u!

DISNEY WORLD TOURS

c&lt;::r~;w.

12'!.0Z.
WATER

r,·cr:!

•

50

r····-··---·------,

FOR INFORMATION CALL 1. PLEASE SEND FREE BROCHURE TO : :
: NAME
I
: ADDRESS

:
I

PARK TOURS : CITY
:
521 ~ S1 ., -..,...g, w. Va.: (ZIP)
DG I
1----~---··__,. _________________ ••

POMEROY LAN-DMARK

2C9'l

LAJIDMUK .

"Serving Meigs, Gallla and Mason Counties"
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Main Street

Pomeroy
Store Hours : 8:30to5:30
Mill Closed at 5: 00 P.M,
· Phone 992· 21 1

y

eeeh

No

•U...• P•"e"- ·•~~&gt;l• ed

This Week's Feature
'.

g 'Daytona Clleoch
Cost - Sf69.00 pe1 pe~son. wllh jou~ people pe~ ~ oo m . 'Jw1n
Mle . Sf&amp;7 .00 pe~ pei~on .9ndude.sollcost wept meals.

OR WRITE US AT

,

..

jea lu~'" 9 ' 'Walt 'Dtsney 'Wo~ld. Cypim Qo1dens

99fla

ll~uiJ&lt; •CI Atl Oil•~· ...., •. , I If

DISCOUNT

July 22-26 and Aug . 18-22

428-7618

GOBLET

MI CROWII VE OVEN V.'II H
LARGE 1 3 CU f· 1 CAPA C!I Y1
C[ .,,,,

......
110x

Plol" - - . . , . _ . ,

89" -Elbow Macaroni
$139

Kraft Dressings . . . . . .· &amp;oz.
...

...' .
•..
....

.....

$14 9
~--:z· 21 ~

Goneric

a.-k:

Cut
,5',.,..,._
Green Beans can
Powder
Detergent

Gonerk:

Generk:Uquld

Dried
Pinto Beans

16-0z.
Pkg.

Dish
Detergent

~

sgc

"'-'"•

AIPFnnc:hOOOr&gt;

Sour Cream
Dip . . . . . .
t. . . . ,

7g
3 c..--. $1
89 ~
~~·,'"'
gg

if

Butter

Milk . . . . .

;o,.Gol.

an.

.S} 69
~

:Jil'!lil!l~COU~ON

SAVE 50¢Of
On

..

The Purch ..e
t~b.

can

SANKA COFFEE

Eight

INSTANT COFFEE

l~L

$2!J9
W~ h

Cononelle

BATH TISSUE

=· ~~I

99¢

Thll C0111Xm

UfJ!k Olle Cau~n Plr Cl.lilOfl"lt
Vt~ld Tl"~ S.l , J~ne 14 l §&amp;l

..' ..
..
.·'
'
•

u"

u.-

'• .

' .

"

'

DIQ.

Tissues .............. ""'"

sgc

Products-.... --Frozen FoOds:--.
A&amp;P
mrarcnn~:_$149
Sour
1&amp;oz.
~
French Fries 11et1
Cream . . . . eup

Corn Oil
,-lb.
·Margarine . Pl&lt;g.
Milk ..........
,
''WQOkj
32-&lt;&gt;z.
1111.

Faygo DrInics . . . . . . .6

--Dairy

n ·

Geowic

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese Dinner .

31

--

1o-.

- -

Genork:

. ~ut cn;,~my 211-oz.
BuHer . ~~"~". ""'

=ggc

'="'139
~ O'Qock- eo._,
'299
. . . . . ""'"$159
Instant CoHee . . . . ':"':":'
. . ...

Pillsbury Flour ..... .

Tomato
= 75~ Tomato ,...,._Gen
Ketchup. . . . 1111
Sauce .. . .

(.,nnr, ft~?&amp;;/

CEN TER

•100
DISCOUNT"

'~ 119

- - - - - - - - - - - - - " " ' ,...---Economy corne~r----..

DISCOUNT

.::::··;c·:.. l SIDE -BY

!~CC CI
rl0A76('

2

3

!3" 011..Palmolive
Liquid ... ... . - •

Stemware

DOOR
WATER
&amp; ICE
SERVICE 1

$699· Towels
Viva J~~~o69e Kraft ~:rz. $149
Mayonnaise

Plus •s Addhlonat Purchase

Chlclren. Turkey, Sollobury or

lii~~ge
~~- 590
Dinners . . .
Pllg.

I
I
I

�c

The Sunday Ttme~-Scntincl , Sunday , June 8, 19110

PRICES
IN EFFECT THROUGH
SAT., JUliE 14

POMEROY - Additions to the
selection of record albums on your
bookmobile this week are: The
Beach Boys, L.A. (Light Album);
Bee Gees, Spirit.&lt;; Having Flown;
Blondie, ParaUel Lines ; David
Bowie, Low; The Cars, The Cars;
Cheap Trick, Cheap Tnck at
Budokan; Johnny Cash, Greatest
Hit.&lt;;, Vol. 3; Charlie Daniels, Midnight Wind; Earth, Wind and Fire,
The Best of Earth, Wind and Fire;
Foreigner, Double Vision; Peter
Frampton, I'm in You; Andy Gibbs,
Shados Dancing; Waylon Jennings ,
Greatest Hit.&lt;;; Elton John, Greatest
Hits, Vol. II; Rickie Lee Jones,
Rickie Lee Jones ; Kiss. Love Gun;
The Knack, Get the Knack; Kool and
the Gang, Ladies' Night; ljttJe
River Band, Beginnings ; Nazareth,
Expect No Mercy; Maxine
Nightingale, Lead Me On; Peaches
and Herb, Greatest Hits; Bonnie
Pointer, Bonnie Pointer; Queen,
Live Killers ; Kenny Rogers, The
Gambler; Rolling Stones, Some
Girls; Linda Ronstadl, Living in the
U.S.A.; Diana Ross, The Boss; Rod
Stewart, Greatest Hits; Dire Strait.&lt;;,
Dire Strait.&lt;;; Styx, The Grand
Jllusion, and Pieces of Eight; Steely
Dan, Greatest Hits ; Donna Sununer,
Bad Girls ; Supertramp, Breakfast
in America ; Wings, W111gs'
Greatest; The Who, Who Are You.
Bookmobile Schedule for Munday,
June 9 - Darwin, Duncan's Store,
2:1~2:45 p.m. ; Pagevillc, Church,
3:15-3:45 ; Harmonville, Sohio
Station, 3:55-4:25; New Lima Road,
1 mile S. of Ft. Meigs, 4:45-5:30
(short film at !i:l!i); Rutland,
Pomeroy National Bank, 5:4!Hl:30
(short fUm at 6) ; Rutland, Depot
Street, 6:3!;-7: 30 (short film at 7).
Tuesday, June 10 - Long Bottom,
Post Office, 3: 15-4; Reedsville,
Reed's Store, 4: 3{}-5 : 45 (short film at
S); Tuppers Plams, Arbaugh
Housing, 6:1~7 (short film at 6:30);
Riggscrest Addition, 7: l!Hl.
Wednesday, June 11 - Portland,
Post Office, I : 2()-1 ::;o p.m. ; Success
Road, near 39060, 2:3()-3; Torth, Po;1
Office, 3:35-4: iS 1short film at 5: 15 );
CoolviUe, school lot, 6-ii:45 (short
film at 6:30); Skata-A-Way Rink, Rt.
7, 7:1~7:45 .
Thursday, June 12 ~ Pomeroy
Health Care Center, I :3()-2::l0 p.m.;
Hemlock Grove, Post Office, 2:453: 10; Keno, N. side of Keno bridge,
3:35-4; Racine, Home National
Bank, 4:30-5 :15 (short film a t SJ;
Racine, Wagner's Hardware, 5: l!Hl
(short film at 5:45); Syracuse; Pool,
6: 1~7:30 (short film al7).
Drop by your nearest bookmobile,
stop this surruner. For the kids there's surruner reading club fun,
games, puzzles and prizes. For
everybody - free entertainment
and infQnnation, including paperba cks, 45 and LP records ,
magazines, large-print books, and
how-to-do-it help for swruner projec-

Darkhorse noses Risk,
Native or Belmont

WHILE QUAITITIES LAST!
OPEN DAllY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 TO 7

GINIRAL IL'-CTRIC
DILUXIOCUP

'11.96

JIWS.If IJIIIT.

••ipe

"'"'·

IIWitlf DEPT.

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KODAK INSTAMATIC •

X·35F Camera Outfit

HECK'SAIG.
$17.1111

By ASSOCIATED PRESS

-.

CAR RAMPS
HI!CK'S RIG.
$5.1111

$}499

HECK'S REG •. '44.96

Quality engineered for maximum aafety.
Tesled to twice rated. Set of 2. All welded
construction.

HA.DWUI

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HICK'S RIG. $211.115

"'"'·

JEWELRY DEPT.

Genuine Risk is the only competitor to run in all three Triple
Crown event.&lt;;. The daughter of Exclustve Native, winner of three or
five races this year, attempted to
become only the third filly to win the
Belmont. Ruthless in 1867 and Tanya
in 1905 were the only filhes to win the
Belmont, and prior to Genuine Risk,
no filly has gone in the eve nt since
Ri verina finished seven th in 1954.
Codex, meanwhile, bid to emulate
his sire, Arts and Letters, the 1969
Belmont winner.

lADIES

120Z.

ROMPER

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TOPS

LIQUID
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Reg . to $7.99

5 FT. ROUND
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$599

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TOYS DE,PT.

AUTOMDTirl

' ' [f we don't win, 1 won't be
altogether unhappy if one of the
other California horse, say Rwnbo,
wins," sa1d Wayne Lukas, trainer of
Codex.
" I wouldn't be surprised tf the
California horse finished 1-2-3," sa id
Ron McAnally, who trains Super
Moment.
The prese nce of Pizotako recals
the 1971 race when another Latin
Anlerican shipper, Canonero Il,
came to Belmont Park.
Originally purchased for $1,200,
Canonero was a Kentuc)(y bred but
raced in Venezuela before coming to

SALT &amp; CONDIMENT

7 oz.

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COSMITIC JEI'T.
UNION CARBIDI

FLUORESCENT
LANTERN
Fluorescent lantern illuminates a
wide area indoors 1nd outdoore.
Click on I ott switch use readily avail·
able 6 \lolt batteries .

Htll. He returned $108.80, $32.80 ami
· $15.20. The highest winmng return in
the 112-year history of the Belmont
is $132.10 on Sherluck Ill 1961.
Temperence Hill, ridden by Eddie
Maple, completed the l' , miles 111
2:29.8 as he beat Genuine Risk by
two lengths. Rockhill Native , the
beaten favorite in the Derby and the
pace-setter Saturday, was another
1' ' lengths back and two lengths 111
front of the lightly raced Comptroller.
Genuine Risk, owned by Mrs. Bert
Firestone and ridden by Jacinto
Vasquez, paid $7.80 and $5.20. Harry
A. Oak's Kockhilll\altve, ridden by
John Oldham, was $10.4D to show .
Many in the crowd turned out in
anltcipation of a duel between

him )."

Temperence Hill ran like the wind
in the Belmont mud Saturday,
making Cantey and owner John Ed
Anthony look good in their decision
to run him . Anthony had put up
$20,000 to sta11 the Kentucky-bred
colt because he had not been
nominated for the race . The tovestment paid off with a winner's

share of $176,220.
It also paid off handsomely for

the Umted States for the Tnplc
Crown races . He s urpnsingly won
the Kentu cky Derby, then U1e
Preakness.
But the demanding ! 12-mile
Belmont ruined the Cinderella colt's
bid for the Triple Crown. Sent off as
the odds-on favo rite and backed up
by thousands of Puerto Ricans and
Venezuelans who made up the
largest crowd ever at a New York
track, 82,694, Canonero took the lead
at the sta rt but faded in the st retdl.
He would up fourth as Pass Ca tche r,
a 34-1 shot, won.
In the previous 111. runnin gs of the
Be~nont, only 20 colts have had a
chance to make thoroughbred
racing history by winning the Trip le
Crown but only 11 have made it. Affirmed in 1978 was the last to accomphsh the fea t.
No Triple Crown was at stake
Saturday for the 10 challenge rs since
Genuine Risk won the Kentucky
Derby a nd Codex ca ptured the
Preakness.
Spectacular Bid was the las t of the
nine "nea r misses" after being
made the 1-5 favorite for the 1979
Be~nont. He had won 12 straight

stakes but finished third as lightraced Coastal scored an upset.
Coastal had only three prevwus starts and won them all.
Tile day after the race, Bid's
trainer, Buddy Delp, satd the colt
had stepped on an open safety pm in
his sta ll the morlllng of the race,
ca using the poor performance.

Other "nea r misses" - horses
who won the Derby and Preakness
but lost the Belmont ~ were Pensive
in 1944 , Tim Tam in 1958, Carry Back
in 1961 , :-lorthern Dancer in 1964,
Kauai King m 1966, and Forward
Pass m 1968 and Majesltc l'nnce in
1969 ..
Ca lumet Fa1·m, which had won
Triple Crowns with Whidaway and

Citalion, had· the sho rtes t priced
favorite ever for the Belmont, Tim
Tam, at 3-20. Commg off eig ht consecutive stake triumphs, Tim Tan1
dosed on Cavan in the sln.:t&lt;.:h, but

suffered a hair!Jne fracture a nd
staggered home courageous ly on
three good legs to windup second to
Cavan.

Ca lun1et also owned Pensive
which suffered a half-length lo" to
Boundmg Home.

Three burners make it a big favorite with big families . Burn·
ers-3 spaced on Q 5116" centere. Fuel Capacity-3\o\
pints. Approx . BTU lnput-25,800. Main Burner Approx. BTU
imput - 10,800. Each auxiliary burner Input-BTU lnput -7 ,·
500. Appro:&lt;.. Burning Time . All Bumera on Hlgh-2 Houra.

Y

VACATION BIBLE school at Clark
Chapel Church June !1-13, starting at
10 a.m.-12 noon. Classes for all ages.
Ail welcome.
GALIJPOLIS CHAPTER O.E.S. No.
283 Regular Meeting Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m, Presentation of 25
year pins and refreshments
following.

HICK'S
RIQ.
$42.88

S34"

HICK'S RIC.
$20.1111

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
MASON lAP) ~ Vetera n Sandra
Palmer, a non-winner in her last 69
tournaments over the last three
years, beat brisk, swirling winds
Saturday for a four-under-par 68 and
the third-round lead in the Ladies
Professional Golf Association Championship .
The 39-year-old Texan, accustomed to playing under such difficult positions in her home state,
forged a one-shot lead with her 54hole total of 211, five-under par at
the Nicklaus Golf Center's Grizzly

course.

RelRted story, Page C-6
South Alrican Sally Little, the 3&amp;hole leader with Jane Blalock and
Nancy Lopez-Mellon, posted a oneover 73 and was a single shot back at
212.
Blalock took a 75 in the wind that
gusted to 30 mph and dropped to
third at 214. Bet~ Daniel, the tour 's
wirmer last week, shot a 73 and was
tied for fourth place with Barara
Moxness. Moxness shot 74. They
were tied at 215.
Lopez-Meltun, seeking her second
LPGA Championship in the last
three years, ran into seven bogeys

and slumped to a 78. That left her at
217, s ix shots off the pace going into
Sunday's final round .
Donna Capom Young, thts year's
leading

money~winner

and

the

defending champi on here, shot her
second par round of 72 in three days
and was lied at 217 with LopezMellon and three othe r golfers.
She ~irdied five, six, eight and 14 ,
coming with a few inches of a holein-one on the 165-yard fifth hole .
Little, 28, three-putted the openin g
hole and co ll ected two bogeys in her
first four holes. She pa rred the rc;1

IGLOO

PLAYMATE
COOLER

foul claun and an appeal to the
Maryland Racing Conunisston.
Another lure was the human battle
betw een Vasquez and Angel Cordero
Jr., the rider of Codex . The stewards
had called the twu jockeys before
them Thursday and warned them
agamst doing anything but paymg
attention to the business at hand.

Neither duel ever materialized as

th1s day belonged to Tcmperence
Hill, who was not nominated for the
Kentucky Derby because when the
nonunations

closed

back

in

February, he still had nut won a
race . Nuw he has won one of the
most important races of the
An1crit:an turf.

Majesti c !'rince, un&lt;jefeated in
njne career outings, los t by S1 2

lengths to Arts and Letters, who
become the si re to this year's
probable Belmont favonte , Codex.
The popular Carry Back had no
closing ktck in tile 1976 Be~nont and
wound up seventh as S!Jerluck paid
$132.10, the highest wtn price tn
Belmont Slakes history.
Quadrangle ruined Nm1ilern Dancer's btd. Awberoid stopped Kauai
King 's t:hances.

F'on ..·ard Pass , who placed first in

the Kentucky De1·by after Dancer's
Image was disqualified and an easy
w11mer of the Preakness, wilted in a
stretch duel with Stage Door Johnny, wiJO had only five career starts
entenng the Belmont.
Luc ien
B~lJuout

Laurin , who trained
winners Amberoid, Riva

Ridge 119661 and Secretariat 11973)
once satd : ''I'd rather win the
Belmont Stakes than any of the other
dassics bt!cause it proves a horse's
qua!Jty. You need a big strong horse
to wtn the Be~no nt because it's the
toughest of the three since you never
kn uw if a hor s e can go that far."

of the way, except for a birdie three
on the 38()-yard, 15th hole.
lllalock, who had a 69 in similar
wind Friday, also started poorly in
the tlurd round. She took a doubll•
bogey stx on the thlrd hole and
bogeyed the fourth hole. She maintained par the rest of the way to
fm ish at 75.
The first of three maJor women's
tournaments carncs a total purse of
$150,000, with $22,500 of that gomg to
the champion .

Split decision
THJS WAS THE view fans got of umpire Doug Rotolo after he ttpped
his trousers wltile squatting behind the plate during a recent high school
baseball game in Carson City , Nev .

North Gallia selects
Pettit new cage mentor
GALLiPOL IS - Paul Pettit, 28,
has been selected as head basketball
coach at North Gallia High School ,
Principal George Hertzkc annuwlcet.l Friday.
The appointment of Pettit, who
stgned a one-year contract to lead
the Pirates, was approved by the
Gallia County Board of Education
during a special session Thursday.

Pettit, a graduate of Martins
Ferry High Sehoul and Milltgan
!Tenn. ) College, compiled a 57-31
varsity record at Leesburg Fairfield
High m Highland County the past
four se1.:1sons, leading the Lions to a
berth in the 1978 Class A regional
ftnals at Marietta . Fairfield , 2.1-3

mn g to s curt! pim:h·rwmt!r Tony Ber·

na zard from third base, giving the
Montrea I Expo~ a 2-1 victory over
St. l.ouis Saturday .
Elias Sosa, 3-2, "ho replaced
reliever Woodie Fryman in the 12th
llli Jing after the Expos' left-hander
had worked two mnmgs to ex tend Ius

SJO"

the victory .
Rcli e\'er Jtm Otten, ()-1, took the
loss.

St5.H

h i~h- sc h ool

hi s

and football coach at Ea,. Cltnton
High School, complling a 26-10
overall record at the junicr \·arsity
level.
Ea st Cltnton Head Coach Jeff Hodso n wa.s selected to succeed Al

Burger as head coach of tht Jackson
lronmen last week . Hodso11. 25, compiled a 36-22 record and a lso stg ned a
one· year ~ct at Ja ckson.

Tennis offerings added
GALLlPOLIS -

Beginning thls
nc~·

nesday.
Adult class openwgs

tcnms of·

fenng s will be available for youth
and adults at Memorial Field.
Openings fur youth sess totJS at 11-9
a.m., 9-10 a.m. Monday aod Wednesday and 10 a.m. Tuesday and
Thrusdays are still available . while
a new intermediate wonmen 's class
from lHl p.m. Monday and Wed-

nesday is be ing formed. ,, smgles ·
ladder challenge and tally play
1bridge-style I are also bemg planned for this class.
A junior high cla ss is now belllg offered at 10 a .m. Monday a nd Wed-

SUMMER ACI'IVITY BEGINS picking up this
coming week with youth league activity in Gallipolis,
Pomeroy and Racine, while 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District Raccoon Creek Day Camp begins for ages ~
and tennis activitiy in both Gallipolis City Recreation

and 0.0. Mcintyre districts begin. Open gyms will also
be running at both Gallia Academy and Kyger Creek
Highs . Tickets for the second annual Dave Diles
Celebrity Tournament in Mason June 19 arc stt ll
ava ilable, while the aunua l Big Bend Regatta bcgms
June 211-29 in Pomeroy.

GALLJPOLIS - Open basketball
gym hours at Gallia Academy High
Sehoul will begin Monday . The gym
will be opened from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Monday through Friday and 6-11 p.m.
Monday through Thllf'sday the next
seven we'eks.
Fow· individual

championship
competi tions - H-0-R-S-E, 21, foul
shooting and one-on-one will be contested in July .

i:lfl:

a lso

available from5.{) p.m. Tta: sdaJ and
Thursday and 8-9 a.m . Mt olday and
Wed nesday.
Kc~ is trati on ts a\' at a l~ ll' al the
M ~;moria l

Field co urts a\

th~:

f1 rst

session at thr bf'L(tnni nl( tnn(' of
progrn m des in• d !· h '"·
d'
$~
cllJi tl re n and $1 0 wiL rt.". pa~·a!Jlt: a t

time nf registrat1on
The ~l' l'lJJiti

St:SS!U rJ

uf l~::.nr ·" \~ !II

'"II

rw1 June 3()-Jul; 24 . Fn da) _,
remmn as makeup dat es. Glepcn dt ng

upon d emand , hu sbrmdewife a nd
may cl.l.su bt of·

f&lt;.tt h e r·~on leag u e~

fe red dunng the swnmer.

Pastore wins

No.7
• •

.Page C-.2

Hassey success
family affair
.. .Page C-5

Ted Turner and his gang

GAHS open gym

'

beg an

Pettit

career a s an a sstslant bbsketball

scoreles s string to 23 innings, earned

HICK'. RIG.

YARD SALE SET
MINERSVILLE - Women of the
MlnersviUe United Methodist Church will stage·a yard sale from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Monday and Tuesday at the
Ted Russell home in Minersville.

tha t season, defeated H.i chmond
Dale Southeastern 54-42 111 lhe
sqmifinal s before fall ing tu
Gnadenhutten Ind ian Valle y South
S6-49tn the !male .

Expos
•
wzn
marathon
MOI\TREAL lAP) - Bill Almon
smglcd "ith one out m the 13th m-

The Plarmate ice ctle1t k'"llt ttl caM of ~'" tcy cotd 111
dey long. A pwlhbvtton ,...... 111owt tMI lid to awklg to eHher
1~, yet lockl tllvl 101' Hay Clrrylrtg. NIH olt~ , h~Vf'~·lmpt.~
plllliC that wjg 11~1 IOUDtl lnd I~ j)UIIllh!Mflt, The lntMof II
1111n trw:! odof·tt l l~tnlt"d e11y to t ill".

11'0111 ""'·

•

n H.'Jng'!::i glamuur g irlllJ the W i re 111
tile Preakne.'i.'l and then withstood a

week, a variety of

COUlMAN

DELUXE 3-BURIIER STOVE

GenUine Hisk and Codex, who beat

Sandra Palmer grabs LPGA lead

BAR•B•Q

SHAKER

those who wagered on Temperence

Risk hid for women's lib,
Codex for family name

.

WEED WHIP

HAND MIXER

The race was run on a track made

muddy by several hours of hard rain
durin~ the morning, and Joe Cantey.
trainer of Temperence Hill , satd
before the race: "This sure doesn't
help his chances. He really doesn't
run well un an off track. I'll talk with
the owners later and make a
dectsion (as whether to scratch

-

The stakes at Belmont:

HDUSIWA.I

HECK'S RIC. $27.811

GINIRAL ILICTRIC
5-SPIID

REVIVAL beginning June 8, 7:30
p.m. Good Hope United Baptist
Church, Evangelist Raymond
Bragg. Special singing nightly,
nursery will be provided. Everyone
welcome.
A

$2}99

HOT DOG COOKER

fi'I.IO'f rt.t IJOOd li1!'1111 arid goad tatNo al (oD~Wy ltlt1fld o1 hot!-. olfoc:t or 1ct.oolt
"''"i' out •nl ho:lt o:bg ~CI\'0 1 P+le Wf7f it W01 fiiiCinllo ba Sttnmt on.'" two hot
dOQ• pi~, o 10h -on., bu... 5t.om witt&gt; ...~ •. beet or Gtet!l fa hoi &lt;fo9t
l&gt;t~oh. ''""~· d• Ovick, t01y plvg·in con-.nie«e Corory It lund 5ot.oct
plv\
otfl.e., o,. ondudtd. S..tl&lt;!rv, •-....ble&lt;tl~t.ldeGiaift.

Fla.

D

$199

CHOICE
EACH
HECK'S RIG TO $3.28 lA • .

Z'r~J-®

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING , basket dinner at
12, Rev. 0 . G. McKinney, Morga n ·
Center Gospel Mission ; all welcome.
McDANIELS
Reunion
at
McDaniel's Crossroads, begming at
!Oa.m.
FOX FAIR VIEW Church rev tva!
Mt. Zion Rd., near Gallia-Lawrenc~
Co. Une, Junell- 1 ; 7 p.m. each night;
pastor Freddy Cline. Special singing)
each evening. All welcome.
SPECIAL SERVICES Mt. Zion Baptist Church June 8-15; 7 p.m. each
night. Speakers include Jim
Johnson, Kenneth Sanders, Robbie
Jones, Don Eaton, Alfred Holley,
Terry Noble, James Lusher, Kenny
Saunders, on order of dates. Special
singing each nigh! ; nursery
available.
GALUA TWIRLERS will have a
workshop at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center. The caller
will be John Waugh , from 3-5:30
p.m.
SONG FESTIVAL 7 p.m. at Silver
Memorial Church, special sining,
'The Duncan Family from Tampa ,

N

FOLDING GRILL

e

trolling brew strength.

SUNBEAM

HECK'S REG.

Remember

0

OR

C ompletely i mmeraible for eaay
cleaning.
Peek·A·Brewe dofteemeker·
gauge lalla how much coffee is left. e g
cup capacity e Brew selector for con·

ts.

M

STOVE TOP OVEII

PERCOLATOR

e

NEW YORK (AP) - Temperence
Hill, whose trainer had considered
not running him beCause of an off
track, scored a stunning upset Saturday in the $293,700 Belmont Stakes,
beating the filly Genuine Risk, who
made thoroughbred racing history
by becoming the first of her sex to
run in all three Triple Crown races.
At the top of the stretch, it looked
as though Genuine Risk, first in the
Kentucky Derby and a controversial
second in the Preakness, might add
the Belmont to her laurels. The
crowd of 58,090 cheered her on, but
Temperence Hill charged up on the
out.&lt;;ide to win .
Codex, the Preakness winner and
the favortte on thls overcast day,
was never in the hunt through the
stretch.

,.

.. .Page C-7
John garners 200th
.. .Page C4
Scoreboard
.. .Page C4

�c

The Sunday Ttme~-Scntincl , Sunday , June 8, 19110

PRICES
IN EFFECT THROUGH
SAT., JUliE 14

POMEROY - Additions to the
selection of record albums on your
bookmobile this week are: The
Beach Boys, L.A. (Light Album);
Bee Gees, Spirit.&lt;; Having Flown;
Blondie, ParaUel Lines ; David
Bowie, Low; The Cars, The Cars;
Cheap Trick, Cheap Tnck at
Budokan; Johnny Cash, Greatest
Hit.&lt;;, Vol. 3; Charlie Daniels, Midnight Wind; Earth, Wind and Fire,
The Best of Earth, Wind and Fire;
Foreigner, Double Vision; Peter
Frampton, I'm in You; Andy Gibbs,
Shados Dancing; Waylon Jennings ,
Greatest Hit.&lt;;; Elton John, Greatest
Hits, Vol. II; Rickie Lee Jones,
Rickie Lee Jones ; Kiss. Love Gun;
The Knack, Get the Knack; Kool and
the Gang, Ladies' Night; ljttJe
River Band, Beginnings ; Nazareth,
Expect No Mercy; Maxine
Nightingale, Lead Me On; Peaches
and Herb, Greatest Hits; Bonnie
Pointer, Bonnie Pointer; Queen,
Live Killers ; Kenny Rogers, The
Gambler; Rolling Stones, Some
Girls; Linda Ronstadl, Living in the
U.S.A.; Diana Ross, The Boss; Rod
Stewart, Greatest Hits; Dire Strait.&lt;;,
Dire Strait.&lt;;; Styx, The Grand
Jllusion, and Pieces of Eight; Steely
Dan, Greatest Hits ; Donna Sununer,
Bad Girls ; Supertramp, Breakfast
in America ; Wings, W111gs'
Greatest; The Who, Who Are You.
Bookmobile Schedule for Munday,
June 9 - Darwin, Duncan's Store,
2:1~2:45 p.m. ; Pagevillc, Church,
3:15-3:45 ; Harmonville, Sohio
Station, 3:55-4:25; New Lima Road,
1 mile S. of Ft. Meigs, 4:45-5:30
(short film at !i:l!i); Rutland,
Pomeroy National Bank, 5:4!Hl:30
(short fUm at 6) ; Rutland, Depot
Street, 6:3!;-7: 30 (short film at 7).
Tuesday, June 10 - Long Bottom,
Post Office, 3: 15-4; Reedsville,
Reed's Store, 4: 3{}-5 : 45 (short film at
S); Tuppers Plams, Arbaugh
Housing, 6:1~7 (short film at 6:30);
Riggscrest Addition, 7: l!Hl.
Wednesday, June 11 - Portland,
Post Office, I : 2()-1 ::;o p.m. ; Success
Road, near 39060, 2:3()-3; Torth, Po;1
Office, 3:35-4: iS 1short film at 5: 15 );
CoolviUe, school lot, 6-ii:45 (short
film at 6:30); Skata-A-Way Rink, Rt.
7, 7:1~7:45 .
Thursday, June 12 ~ Pomeroy
Health Care Center, I :3()-2::l0 p.m.;
Hemlock Grove, Post Office, 2:453: 10; Keno, N. side of Keno bridge,
3:35-4; Racine, Home National
Bank, 4:30-5 :15 (short film a t SJ;
Racine, Wagner's Hardware, 5: l!Hl
(short film at 5:45); Syracuse; Pool,
6: 1~7:30 (short film al7).
Drop by your nearest bookmobile,
stop this surruner. For the kids there's surruner reading club fun,
games, puzzles and prizes. For
everybody - free entertainment
and infQnnation, including paperba cks, 45 and LP records ,
magazines, large-print books, and
how-to-do-it help for swruner projec-

Darkhorse noses Risk,
Native or Belmont

WHILE QUAITITIES LAST!
OPEN DAllY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 TO 7

GINIRAL IL'-CTRIC
DILUXIOCUP

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Tesled to twice rated. Set of 2. All welded
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HA.DWUI

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"'"'·

JEWELRY DEPT.

Genuine Risk is the only competitor to run in all three Triple
Crown event.&lt;;. The daughter of Exclustve Native, winner of three or
five races this year, attempted to
become only the third filly to win the
Belmont. Ruthless in 1867 and Tanya
in 1905 were the only filhes to win the
Belmont, and prior to Genuine Risk,
no filly has gone in the eve nt since
Ri verina finished seven th in 1954.
Codex, meanwhile, bid to emulate
his sire, Arts and Letters, the 1969
Belmont winner.

lADIES

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TOYS DE,PT.

AUTOMDTirl

' ' [f we don't win, 1 won't be
altogether unhappy if one of the
other California horse, say Rwnbo,
wins," sa1d Wayne Lukas, trainer of
Codex.
" I wouldn't be surprised tf the
California horse finished 1-2-3," sa id
Ron McAnally, who trains Super
Moment.
The prese nce of Pizotako recals
the 1971 race when another Latin
Anlerican shipper, Canonero Il,
came to Belmont Park.
Originally purchased for $1,200,
Canonero was a Kentuc)(y bred but
raced in Venezuela before coming to

SALT &amp; CONDIMENT

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COSMITIC JEI'T.
UNION CARBIDI

FLUORESCENT
LANTERN
Fluorescent lantern illuminates a
wide area indoors 1nd outdoore.
Click on I ott switch use readily avail·
able 6 \lolt batteries .

Htll. He returned $108.80, $32.80 ami
· $15.20. The highest winmng return in
the 112-year history of the Belmont
is $132.10 on Sherluck Ill 1961.
Temperence Hill, ridden by Eddie
Maple, completed the l' , miles 111
2:29.8 as he beat Genuine Risk by
two lengths. Rockhill Native , the
beaten favorite in the Derby and the
pace-setter Saturday, was another
1' ' lengths back and two lengths 111
front of the lightly raced Comptroller.
Genuine Risk, owned by Mrs. Bert
Firestone and ridden by Jacinto
Vasquez, paid $7.80 and $5.20. Harry
A. Oak's Kockhilll\altve, ridden by
John Oldham, was $10.4D to show .
Many in the crowd turned out in
anltcipation of a duel between

him )."

Temperence Hill ran like the wind
in the Belmont mud Saturday,
making Cantey and owner John Ed
Anthony look good in their decision
to run him . Anthony had put up
$20,000 to sta11 the Kentucky-bred
colt because he had not been
nominated for the race . The tovestment paid off with a winner's

share of $176,220.
It also paid off handsomely for

the Umted States for the Tnplc
Crown races . He s urpnsingly won
the Kentu cky Derby, then U1e
Preakness.
But the demanding ! 12-mile
Belmont ruined the Cinderella colt's
bid for the Triple Crown. Sent off as
the odds-on favo rite and backed up
by thousands of Puerto Ricans and
Venezuelans who made up the
largest crowd ever at a New York
track, 82,694, Canonero took the lead
at the sta rt but faded in the st retdl.
He would up fourth as Pass Ca tche r,
a 34-1 shot, won.
In the previous 111. runnin gs of the
Be~nont, only 20 colts have had a
chance to make thoroughbred
racing history by winning the Trip le
Crown but only 11 have made it. Affirmed in 1978 was the last to accomphsh the fea t.
No Triple Crown was at stake
Saturday for the 10 challenge rs since
Genuine Risk won the Kentucky
Derby a nd Codex ca ptured the
Preakness.
Spectacular Bid was the las t of the
nine "nea r misses" after being
made the 1-5 favorite for the 1979
Be~nont. He had won 12 straight

stakes but finished third as lightraced Coastal scored an upset.
Coastal had only three prevwus starts and won them all.
Tile day after the race, Bid's
trainer, Buddy Delp, satd the colt
had stepped on an open safety pm in
his sta ll the morlllng of the race,
ca using the poor performance.

Other "nea r misses" - horses
who won the Derby and Preakness
but lost the Belmont ~ were Pensive
in 1944 , Tim Tam in 1958, Carry Back
in 1961 , :-lorthern Dancer in 1964,
Kauai King m 1966, and Forward
Pass m 1968 and Majesltc l'nnce in
1969 ..
Ca lumet Fa1·m, which had won
Triple Crowns with Whidaway and

Citalion, had· the sho rtes t priced
favorite ever for the Belmont, Tim
Tam, at 3-20. Commg off eig ht consecutive stake triumphs, Tim Tan1
dosed on Cavan in the sln.:t&lt;.:h, but

suffered a hair!Jne fracture a nd
staggered home courageous ly on
three good legs to windup second to
Cavan.

Ca lun1et also owned Pensive
which suffered a half-length lo" to
Boundmg Home.

Three burners make it a big favorite with big families . Burn·
ers-3 spaced on Q 5116" centere. Fuel Capacity-3\o\
pints. Approx . BTU lnput-25,800. Main Burner Approx. BTU
imput - 10,800. Each auxiliary burner Input-BTU lnput -7 ,·
500. Appro:&lt;.. Burning Time . All Bumera on Hlgh-2 Houra.

Y

VACATION BIBLE school at Clark
Chapel Church June !1-13, starting at
10 a.m.-12 noon. Classes for all ages.
Ail welcome.
GALIJPOLIS CHAPTER O.E.S. No.
283 Regular Meeting Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m, Presentation of 25
year pins and refreshments
following.

HICK'S
RIQ.
$42.88

S34"

HICK'S RIC.
$20.1111

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
MASON lAP) ~ Vetera n Sandra
Palmer, a non-winner in her last 69
tournaments over the last three
years, beat brisk, swirling winds
Saturday for a four-under-par 68 and
the third-round lead in the Ladies
Professional Golf Association Championship .
The 39-year-old Texan, accustomed to playing under such difficult positions in her home state,
forged a one-shot lead with her 54hole total of 211, five-under par at
the Nicklaus Golf Center's Grizzly

course.

RelRted story, Page C-6
South Alrican Sally Little, the 3&amp;hole leader with Jane Blalock and
Nancy Lopez-Mellon, posted a oneover 73 and was a single shot back at
212.
Blalock took a 75 in the wind that
gusted to 30 mph and dropped to
third at 214. Bet~ Daniel, the tour 's
wirmer last week, shot a 73 and was
tied for fourth place with Barara
Moxness. Moxness shot 74. They
were tied at 215.
Lopez-Meltun, seeking her second
LPGA Championship in the last
three years, ran into seven bogeys

and slumped to a 78. That left her at
217, s ix shots off the pace going into
Sunday's final round .
Donna Capom Young, thts year's
leading

money~winner

and

the

defending champi on here, shot her
second par round of 72 in three days
and was lied at 217 with LopezMellon and three othe r golfers.
She ~irdied five, six, eight and 14 ,
coming with a few inches of a holein-one on the 165-yard fifth hole .
Little, 28, three-putted the openin g
hole and co ll ected two bogeys in her
first four holes. She pa rred the rc;1

IGLOO

PLAYMATE
COOLER

foul claun and an appeal to the
Maryland Racing Conunisston.
Another lure was the human battle
betw een Vasquez and Angel Cordero
Jr., the rider of Codex . The stewards
had called the twu jockeys before
them Thursday and warned them
agamst doing anything but paymg
attention to the business at hand.

Neither duel ever materialized as

th1s day belonged to Tcmperence
Hill, who was not nominated for the
Kentucky Derby because when the
nonunations

closed

back

in

February, he still had nut won a
race . Nuw he has won one of the
most important races of the
An1crit:an turf.

Majesti c !'rince, un&lt;jefeated in
njne career outings, los t by S1 2

lengths to Arts and Letters, who
become the si re to this year's
probable Belmont favonte , Codex.
The popular Carry Back had no
closing ktck in tile 1976 Be~nont and
wound up seventh as S!Jerluck paid
$132.10, the highest wtn price tn
Belmont Slakes history.
Quadrangle ruined Nm1ilern Dancer's btd. Awberoid stopped Kauai
King 's t:hances.

F'on ..·ard Pass , who placed first in

the Kentucky De1·by after Dancer's
Image was disqualified and an easy
w11mer of the Preakness, wilted in a
stretch duel with Stage Door Johnny, wiJO had only five career starts
entenng the Belmont.
Luc ien
B~lJuout

Laurin , who trained
winners Amberoid, Riva

Ridge 119661 and Secretariat 11973)
once satd : ''I'd rather win the
Belmont Stakes than any of the other
dassics bt!cause it proves a horse's
qua!Jty. You need a big strong horse
to wtn the Be~no nt because it's the
toughest of the three since you never
kn uw if a hor s e can go that far."

of the way, except for a birdie three
on the 38()-yard, 15th hole.
lllalock, who had a 69 in similar
wind Friday, also started poorly in
the tlurd round. She took a doubll•
bogey stx on the thlrd hole and
bogeyed the fourth hole. She maintained par the rest of the way to
fm ish at 75.
The first of three maJor women's
tournaments carncs a total purse of
$150,000, with $22,500 of that gomg to
the champion .

Split decision
THJS WAS THE view fans got of umpire Doug Rotolo after he ttpped
his trousers wltile squatting behind the plate during a recent high school
baseball game in Carson City , Nev .

North Gallia selects
Pettit new cage mentor
GALLiPOL IS - Paul Pettit, 28,
has been selected as head basketball
coach at North Gallia High School ,
Principal George Hertzkc annuwlcet.l Friday.
The appointment of Pettit, who
stgned a one-year contract to lead
the Pirates, was approved by the
Gallia County Board of Education
during a special session Thursday.

Pettit, a graduate of Martins
Ferry High Sehoul and Milltgan
!Tenn. ) College, compiled a 57-31
varsity record at Leesburg Fairfield
High m Highland County the past
four se1.:1sons, leading the Lions to a
berth in the 1978 Class A regional
ftnals at Marietta . Fairfield , 2.1-3

mn g to s curt! pim:h·rwmt!r Tony Ber·

na zard from third base, giving the
Montrea I Expo~ a 2-1 victory over
St. l.ouis Saturday .
Elias Sosa, 3-2, "ho replaced
reliever Woodie Fryman in the 12th
llli Jing after the Expos' left-hander
had worked two mnmgs to ex tend Ius

SJO"

the victory .
Rcli e\'er Jtm Otten, ()-1, took the
loss.

St5.H

h i~h- sc h ool

hi s

and football coach at Ea,. Cltnton
High School, complling a 26-10
overall record at the junicr \·arsity
level.
Ea st Cltnton Head Coach Jeff Hodso n wa.s selected to succeed Al

Burger as head coach of tht Jackson
lronmen last week . Hodso11. 25, compiled a 36-22 record and a lso stg ned a
one· year ~ct at Ja ckson.

Tennis offerings added
GALLlPOLIS -

Beginning thls
nc~·

nesday.
Adult class openwgs

tcnms of·

fenng s will be available for youth
and adults at Memorial Field.
Openings fur youth sess totJS at 11-9
a.m., 9-10 a.m. Monday aod Wednesday and 10 a.m. Tuesday and
Thrusdays are still available . while
a new intermediate wonmen 's class
from lHl p.m. Monday and Wed-

nesday is be ing formed. ,, smgles ·
ladder challenge and tally play
1bridge-style I are also bemg planned for this class.
A junior high cla ss is now belllg offered at 10 a .m. Monday a nd Wed-

SUMMER ACI'IVITY BEGINS picking up this
coming week with youth league activity in Gallipolis,
Pomeroy and Racine, while 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District Raccoon Creek Day Camp begins for ages ~
and tennis activitiy in both Gallipolis City Recreation

and 0.0. Mcintyre districts begin. Open gyms will also
be running at both Gallia Academy and Kyger Creek
Highs . Tickets for the second annual Dave Diles
Celebrity Tournament in Mason June 19 arc stt ll
ava ilable, while the aunua l Big Bend Regatta bcgms
June 211-29 in Pomeroy.

GALLJPOLIS - Open basketball
gym hours at Gallia Academy High
Sehoul will begin Monday . The gym
will be opened from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Monday through Friday and 6-11 p.m.
Monday through Thllf'sday the next
seven we'eks.
Fow· individual

championship
competi tions - H-0-R-S-E, 21, foul
shooting and one-on-one will be contested in July .

i:lfl:

a lso

available from5.{) p.m. Tta: sdaJ and
Thursday and 8-9 a.m . Mt olday and
Wed nesday.
Kc~ is trati on ts a\' at a l~ ll' al the
M ~;moria l

Field co urts a\

th~:

f1 rst

session at thr bf'L(tnni nl( tnn(' of
progrn m des in• d !· h '"·
d'
$~
cllJi tl re n and $1 0 wiL rt.". pa~·a!Jlt: a t

time nf registrat1on
The ~l' l'lJJiti

St:SS!U rJ

uf l~::.nr ·" \~ !II

'"II

rw1 June 3()-Jul; 24 . Fn da) _,
remmn as makeup dat es. Glepcn dt ng

upon d emand , hu sbrmdewife a nd
may cl.l.su bt of·

f&lt;.tt h e r·~on leag u e~

fe red dunng the swnmer.

Pastore wins

No.7
• •

.Page C-.2

Hassey success
family affair
.. .Page C-5

Ted Turner and his gang

GAHS open gym

'

beg an

Pettit

career a s an a sstslant bbsketball

scoreles s string to 23 innings, earned

HICK'. RIG.

YARD SALE SET
MINERSVILLE - Women of the
MlnersviUe United Methodist Church will stage·a yard sale from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Monday and Tuesday at the
Ted Russell home in Minersville.

tha t season, defeated H.i chmond
Dale Southeastern 54-42 111 lhe
sqmifinal s before fall ing tu
Gnadenhutten Ind ian Valle y South
S6-49tn the !male .

Expos
•
wzn
marathon
MOI\TREAL lAP) - Bill Almon
smglcd "ith one out m the 13th m-

The Plarmate ice ctle1t k'"llt ttl caM of ~'" tcy cotd 111
dey long. A pwlhbvtton ,...... 111owt tMI lid to awklg to eHher
1~, yet lockl tllvl 101' Hay Clrrylrtg. NIH olt~ , h~Vf'~·lmpt.~
plllliC that wjg 11~1 IOUDtl lnd I~ j)UIIllh!Mflt, The lntMof II
1111n trw:! odof·tt l l~tnlt"d e11y to t ill".

11'0111 ""'·

•

n H.'Jng'!::i glamuur g irlllJ the W i re 111
tile Preakne.'i.'l and then withstood a

week, a variety of

COUlMAN

DELUXE 3-BURIIER STOVE

GenUine Hisk and Codex, who beat

Sandra Palmer grabs LPGA lead

BAR•B•Q

SHAKER

those who wagered on Temperence

Risk hid for women's lib,
Codex for family name

.

WEED WHIP

HAND MIXER

The race was run on a track made

muddy by several hours of hard rain
durin~ the morning, and Joe Cantey.
trainer of Temperence Hill , satd
before the race: "This sure doesn't
help his chances. He really doesn't
run well un an off track. I'll talk with
the owners later and make a
dectsion (as whether to scratch

-

The stakes at Belmont:

HDUSIWA.I

HECK'S RIC. $27.811

GINIRAL ILICTRIC
5-SPIID

REVIVAL beginning June 8, 7:30
p.m. Good Hope United Baptist
Church, Evangelist Raymond
Bragg. Special singing nightly,
nursery will be provided. Everyone
welcome.
A

$2}99

HOT DOG COOKER

fi'I.IO'f rt.t IJOOd li1!'1111 arid goad tatNo al (oD~Wy ltlt1fld o1 hot!-. olfoc:t or 1ct.oolt
"''"i' out •nl ho:lt o:bg ~CI\'0 1 P+le Wf7f it W01 fiiiCinllo ba Sttnmt on.'" two hot
dOQ• pi~, o 10h -on., bu... 5t.om witt&gt; ...~ •. beet or Gtet!l fa hoi &lt;fo9t
l&gt;t~oh. ''""~· d• Ovick, t01y plvg·in con-.nie«e Corory It lund 5ot.oct
plv\
otfl.e., o,. ondudtd. S..tl&lt;!rv, •-....ble&lt;tl~t.ldeGiaift.

Fla.

D

$199

CHOICE
EACH
HECK'S RIG TO $3.28 lA • .

Z'r~J-®

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING , basket dinner at
12, Rev. 0 . G. McKinney, Morga n ·
Center Gospel Mission ; all welcome.
McDANIELS
Reunion
at
McDaniel's Crossroads, begming at
!Oa.m.
FOX FAIR VIEW Church rev tva!
Mt. Zion Rd., near Gallia-Lawrenc~
Co. Une, Junell- 1 ; 7 p.m. each night;
pastor Freddy Cline. Special singing)
each evening. All welcome.
SPECIAL SERVICES Mt. Zion Baptist Church June 8-15; 7 p.m. each
night. Speakers include Jim
Johnson, Kenneth Sanders, Robbie
Jones, Don Eaton, Alfred Holley,
Terry Noble, James Lusher, Kenny
Saunders, on order of dates. Special
singing each nigh! ; nursery
available.
GALUA TWIRLERS will have a
workshop at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center. The caller
will be John Waugh , from 3-5:30
p.m.
SONG FESTIVAL 7 p.m. at Silver
Memorial Church, special sining,
'The Duncan Family from Tampa ,

N

FOLDING GRILL

e

trolling brew strength.

SUNBEAM

HECK'S REG.

Remember

0

OR

C ompletely i mmeraible for eaay
cleaning.
Peek·A·Brewe dofteemeker·
gauge lalla how much coffee is left. e g
cup capacity e Brew selector for con·

ts.

M

STOVE TOP OVEII

PERCOLATOR

e

NEW YORK (AP) - Temperence
Hill, whose trainer had considered
not running him beCause of an off
track, scored a stunning upset Saturday in the $293,700 Belmont Stakes,
beating the filly Genuine Risk, who
made thoroughbred racing history
by becoming the first of her sex to
run in all three Triple Crown races.
At the top of the stretch, it looked
as though Genuine Risk, first in the
Kentucky Derby and a controversial
second in the Preakness, might add
the Belmont to her laurels. The
crowd of 58,090 cheered her on, but
Temperence Hill charged up on the
out.&lt;;ide to win .
Codex, the Preakness winner and
the favortte on thls overcast day,
was never in the hunt through the
stretch.

,.

.. .Page C-7
John garners 200th
.. .Page C4
Scoreboard
.. .Page C4

�C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

r .,'!-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, :une 8,1980

._ .Stripped before by Reds

World Series title game a surprise

Today's

OMAHA, Neb. (AP ). - For Coach
Jerry Kindall, watching his Arizona
Wildcats win tbe NCAA baseball
cha.mpionship by struggling through
the losers' bracket was a big thrill in

•

'Deja vu' strikes Curtis at Riverfront again
CJNCINNATI (AP) - Strange
things seem to happen when San
Diego's John Curtis pitches at River·
front Stadium.
"In 1974 with St. Louis, I pitched a
shutout against (Cincinnati pitcher
Don) Gullett. After that, I've been
just trying to get out of here with my
uniform on," said the bearded
Padres left-bander, who was again a
victim of unusual circumstances in a
4-2 Reds victory Friday night.
"I've had problems with this club
over my career. It's strange."
Strange things started happening
even before the Padres left their
hotel on Friday afternoon. San
Diego's Gene Tenace bent d own to
tie his shoe and doubled over with a
sharp pain in his back. He was taken
on a stretcher to a local hospital for
X·rays.
When the game starlold, Curtis
used a new grip on his slider to retire
11 of the first 12 batters.. But the

.,

•,.
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Frank Pastore

John Curtis

Notches _No. 7

Snakebit

weak-hitting Padres managed just
two ru.,s off Reds starter Frank
Pastore, 7-2, and RBI singles by Ray
Knight. and Dan Driessen in the sixth
tied the game and chased Curtis.
" We've been putting a lot of
pressure on our pitchers all year
long by ndt-trttting," said a con·
cerned Padres Manager Gerry
Coleman.
Padre third baseman Aurelio
Rodriguez, who made his first error
of the season in the fourth inning,
threw wildly to first base for a nother
error in the seventh that allowed
Dave Collins to score the winning
nm from first base.
Rodriguez, who made just four
errors in 134 games with Detroit in
1978, barehanded a weak bouncer by
Dave Concepcion and threw the ball
down the right field line. The speedy
Collins, who was on first following a
fielder's choice, scored easily to tag
reliever John D' Acquisto, 0-1, with

. Lesser lights knock
~ Tribe's lights out

the loss.
"He is the best-fielding third
baseman in the National League,"
Coleman said. "But everybody
makes a mechanical error from
time to time. It was just Aurelio's
turn.' '
Pastore, the top winner on the Clncinna ti staff, wasn't bothered by
aninflamed tendon in the middle
finger of his pitching hand. But he
was upset by his poor bunt that turned into a rally-killing double play
with two on and none out in the fifth
inning.
" I would have lost sleep if we had
lost the game because of me
screwing up, " Pastore said. " It was
a terrible mental error.! wasn 't SUfr
posed to bunt toward third base, but
I wasn't thinking and it almost cost
us the game."
The first two Padre batters of the
game reached base on Pastore, who
then bore down and struck out the
side in what Coleman considered an
ill ustration of the Padres' problems.
"We're very obviously not getting
things done at the right time," said
Coleman, whose club has l'ost nine of
its last II games. " We had a couple
of scoring opportunities tonight.
Tha t first inning set the tone for us."

Hockey won't forget Howe

Jerry Coleman
Smiles fewer

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Harry Chappas

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The reason is the White Sox' continuing failure to save a victory for
starter Steve Trout. " Trout is pit·
ching a lot better than his 2~ record
shows, but we can't gel him a win,"
said LaRussa.
Wayne Nordhagen gave the Sox a
~lead in the first inning with his fif.
th homer off Rick Waits following a
pair of walks, and doubles by Alan
Bannister and Pryor made it 4-&lt;l in
the second when Waits left with a .
stiff shoulder.
TrQut gave up two runs in the third
on a hit batsman, a double by Ron
Pruitt and a single by Mike

Hargrove and an unearned run in
the fifth on an error and two-out
singles by Joe Charboneau and Bo
Diaz.
Trout was long gone when
Cleveland struck f or four runs in the
eighth, the key blow being a two-run
pinch double by Gary Alexander,
who scored the go-ahead run on a
single by Rick Manning.
Ed Farmer came in and gave up
two walks but prevented any further
scoring as he boosted his reeord to :;.
0 to go along with 13 saves.
"That's good/' said Farmer. " As
long as I don't lose, we don 't lose.

·Nicklaus fails to make Atlanta cut
:
:
·
:
:

. ATLANTA (AP )- Australian Bob
Shearer was looking for a two-putt
birdie, but got a lead-protecting
eagle-3 instead.
"I don't know what brought it on,
but I liked it," Shearer said Friday
after completing a one-under-par 71
that enabled him to retain a one-shot
advantage with a 134 total midway
through the $300,000 Atlanta Golf
Classic.
It put him just ahead of local

Bostock slayer
. fre e.?
:. gomg
A man found innocent by reason of
insanity in the shotgun slaying of
California Angels outfielder Lyman
Bostock is scheduled to be set free on
June 20, Indiana court officials said
Friday. Psychiatrists at an Indiana
hospital said Leonard Smith of
' Gary, Ind. " is not mentally ill and
not in need of a cure or treatment. ••
Bostock was shot to death in Gary,
Ind. on Sept. 23, 1978. Last November, jury of 10 women and two men
found Smith innocent by reason of
insanity a lthough there was no doubt
that Smith had killed Bostock.

a

,•

'

favorite Larry Nelson of nearby Acworth, who had a 6!1-135 total a nd
only three shots better than defen·
ding champion Andy Bean, who
said, " I figure I'm in pretty good
position," following a 69-137 on the
hilly Atlanta Country Club course.
Jack Nicklaus, who started with a
miserable 76 on Thursday, regained
his touch Friday, firing a five-under
67. It wasn't good enough, however,
and Nicklaus missed a cut for the fir·
st time since the Atlanta Classic two
years ago.
" Yesterday I ha d nothing and
today I was reasonably good,"
Nicklaus said. " I never like to miss a
cut. I'm going home. Although it's
unplanned, it will be welcomed."
Shearer, still seeking his first vic·
tory in five seasons on the U.S. tour,
offset birdies at Nos. 5 and 10 with
bogeys on the eighth, where he
missed a Jl).foot par putt and No. 10
where his grip slipped because of the
humid conditions.
He lost another shot when he
carried over the green at the 17th,
but then saved the day with the eagle
on the final hole.
Nelson had a steady round that
could have been even better. He had
four birdie putts along the way curl

The hockey odyssey of Gordie
Howe, an incredible journey through
five decades of greatness, has come
to an end. At age 52, the quintessential iceman has announced his
·retirement.
Hockey will never forget him.
Howe was the greatest scorer in
the history of the sport, with more
goals, more assists and more points
than any man who bas ever played
this game. But that simple sentence
doesn't begin to scratch the surface
of the man. He played for an un·
believable :j2 years, so longevity
alone would give him the Ofr
portunity to score more goals than
anyone else. The goals are only part
of the Howe saga, though.
Perhaps the best way to describe
his impact on his sport would be to
compare him with his con·
temporaries. If Maurice Richard
was hockey's Babe Ruth, the ex·
_ plosive home nm hitter, then Gordie
Howe was the game's Joe DiMaggio,
a man of consummate skills ·on

=
- skates.
=
-

around the cup.
He said he enjoyed playing at
home.
" It's great to see your mother on
one side of the fairway and your daddy on the other," he said. " At least
you know if you hook it or slice it,
they are going to kick it back out."
Bean , who won last y,e ar with a 23under-par total, shared third
position with Mike Nicolette, who
had a 70 to make the cut for his third

straight tournament.
"I haven't made three cuts in a
row in my career, and this is my
third," said Nicolette, who has been
on tour one year. " It's a small goal.
Sammy Rachals was all a lone at
67-137 and fiv e others were
deadlocked at 138 + veteran Gene
Little after a 68, Calvin Peete and
J .C. Snead with 70s and Lanny
Wadkins and Bob Eastwood with
7ls.

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:
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:
•

~

:
:
:

.
~ Olympic

ideal troubled

:

It is clear from an examination of
: the list of nations set to attend the
• Moscow Olympics that the division
: of sports and politics is little more
~ than a. pipe dream in today 's world.

.•

: At last count by the International
: Olympic Committee, 85 nations had
: formally accepted the invitation to
: participate in the Summer Games at
: I'!loscow and 29 had followed the lead
• of the United States and rejected.
: There were 27 other nations that the
: IOC hadn't heard from and most - if
: not all - of them probably won't be
_ there.

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. C. K. SNOWDEN ~
' 417 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446--4290

Arizona, finishing 4:&gt;-21·1, was
ranked second in the nation coming
into the series a week ago. But St.
John's stunned the Wildcats, 6-1, in
the opening game and the Wildcats
had to come back the hard way.
"We keep pushing. We go after
them," said Dwight Taylor, whose
two-out double in the ninth inning
Thursday night beat California 11-10
and sent the Wildcats to the title
game.
Arizona starter c raig Lefferts, pit·
ching on only three days rest after
shutting out Michigan, 8-0, sa id he
only had six good innings in him. He
wasright.
In the seventh, Haw •ii came
within :.-3 on four singles off him.
But the Wildcats brought in Greg
Bargar and he slamn~ed the door,
sending down the remaining seven

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Tour
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Muldowney ,
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mph, but just slightly better than
Beck's 5.986. Tharp, of Dallas, Tex.,
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Hawaii catcher Collin Tanabe, an
a U-tournament selection, agreed.
"It's no matter that we lost,"
. Tanabe said, " We're still No. 1.
Second place is just as good for the
first time to the College World

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OHIO VALLEY BANK

Ask former Olympians who were
medal winners what they remember
best about the experience and
almost all of them· will mention the
surge of national pride when the flag
went up and the anthem was played.
That's hwnan nature. •
The U. S. Olympic Committee is
not immune from financial
pressure, either. Its enthusiasm for
boycotting Moscow picked up
momentum when the Carter ad·
ministration suggested that if USOC
a greed to stay home, Congress

~
.&amp;Marx.

.this year."

: Understand that the decision on
~ whether to attend rests, in all cases,
: not with govenunents, but with in·
: dividual Olympic committees or
• sports federations.
: And, of course, in many countries
• amateur athletes are, in effect,
: govenunent employees . Or, at least,
: their training and expenses are paid
· for by the goverrunent .

Looking at the list, you get the pic: ture. Olympic committees made
. their own minds up, but very rarely
' did their decision stray from the will
' of their goverrunents, especially in
the cases where the country's teams
were goverrunentally subsidized.

• One Coat Hiding
• Fade Resistant

Howe came to the National
Hockey League with Detroit in 1946
when Harry Truman was president
of the United States. That's seven
presidents ago, if you've lost count.
With the Red Wings for 25
magnificent years, he carved a
legend for himself as the ultimate
hockey player.
Howe could skate. Oh, how he
could skate. He accelerated instanUy, zooming after the puck
sometimes, it seemed, from a standing start.
And Howe coul&lt;l shoot. He frowned

. on those booming, banana blade slap
shots that fly off in all directions.
Rather, Howe used a deadly wrist
shot. He would snap his powerful
wrists and the puck would zip
toward the net. Give him a open cor·
ner, even for an instant, a nd he'd
fire away.
Howe did everything on ice that a
hockey player must do and he did
most of those things with a special
flare that set him apart from other
players.
In 1971, Detroit thought a quarter
century of hockey was enough to ask
from this legend and retired him
gracefully. But the sedentary life
didn't satisfy him and two years
later he was back on the ice with the
Houston Aeros of the World Hockey
Association. The lure was the chance to play the game with his sons,
Mark and Marty, a rather unique accomplishment in any sport.
Later, he moved on to New
England and was with the Whalers
when they moved into the NHL last
winter as the Hartford franchise. It
was a special treat for NHL fans,
one more chance to see a Hall of
Farner play the game the way it was
meant to be played.
Howe is a grandfather now and it's
time to write finis to his legend as an
active player. The final figures, including both NHL and WHA regular
season and playoff production read
1,071 goals, 1,516 assists and 2,589
points. They are nwnbers that will
never be matched.
There's just one more thing.
Has anybody ever played hockey
with his grandsons?

Having four players named to the
College World Series all-tournament
team was icing on the cake,
especially since the two pitchers
chosen t&lt;&gt; the select squad were from
Arizona.
And outfielder Terry Francona
was named outstanding player.
"These kids have battled time and
time again and have never once
given up ," Kindall said.
His Wildcats defeated Hawaii :&gt;-3
Friday night with superb pitching
from a staff that had the worst ear·
ned run average of any team in the
Series.
The Rainbows, one of the t'ournament's youngest teams with only
two seniors in their starting lineup,
s urprised everybody by making it to
Omaha in the first place.
" We weren't supposed to be here,"
said Coach Les Murakami. "But
baseball is a funny game, almost
magical. One of these years we'll be
back and be so powerful we'll win it.
We just didn't have the experience

So an 'Olympic committee that is
underwritten, subSidized and for all
practical reasons nm by its government is rather likely to follow the advice of that government, wouldn't
you think?

DUTCH BOY PAINT
• 30 Minute Dry

itself~

By Will Grimsley

,.

,
CHICAGO (AP) Cleveland
Chappas flied out, but Foley, batting for Greg Pryor, tied the game
;: Manager Dave Garcia couldn 't hide
•: his amazement over the key role
with a two-run homer off Victor
Cruz.
;; played by two of Chicago's lesser
With two out in the ninth and Bob·' lights, Harry Chappas and Marv
;: Foley, in an 8-7 White Sox victor y
by Molinaro on first as a result of
being hit with a pitch, Chappas, who
·: over the Indians Friday night.
went
into the game with a .163
;. "God almighty " said Garcia " I
average,
laced a 1·2 pitch down the
:: can't believe it~ I'm not taking
;: anything away from Foley or Chafr
left-field line off loser Sid Monge, ~
4, to score Molinaro with the winning
·: pas, but you expect that sort of thing
;. from Lamar Johnson or Wayne Norrun .
Chappas, noting it was his first
;: dhagen. That's baseball, a crazy
·: game. How do you fig ure it out?"
major league game-winning run bat·: Meanwhile, White Sox mentor
ted in, said, " That's baseball. If you
: • Tony LaRussa was beaming over
play long enough, those things will
: ihe performance of the two latehappen." He appeared calm and
sa id, ~~ By nature, I'm not an exinning replat-ements. " Yes, I knew
·everything was going to ha ppen
citable person. But I am a little
exactly that way, " la ug hed · numb about the whole thing."
LaRussa .
LaRussa wasn't numb and said, " I
wasn't thinking that he'd hit a gameAiming for their fourth straight
winning double but I know one thing,
victory, the Indians had rallied for
four rWJS in the top of the eighth to
he takes his whacks. He's not in·
timidated in situations like that.
go ahead 7~.
Harold Baines led off the bottom of
"I've seen him play in the. minor
leagues a nd I 've seen him play in the
the eighth with a single and LaRussa
major leagues, but I've never seen
sent Chappas to bat for Bruce
him
intimidated,"
sai d
Kimm. " I thought he might get a
LaRussa,who labeled the victory
'lfingle or something to keep the rally
'' bittersweet. ''
going," LaRussa said.

Sports
World

Six singles in the fourth inning
hurlers combined to beat the RainOutfielders named to the r 1uad
bows in the title game.
scored three Arizona runs, gtving
were FJimcona, Lyle Brackenridge
the Wildcats a H lead. They made it
of California and Jim Paciorek of
Colin Tanabe, a catcher, third
:&gt;-1 in the sixth by taking advantage
Michigan. Paul Maruffi, who played
baseman Kimo Perkins and shorof a Rainbow error after two con·
right field for St. John's, was named
tstop Eric Tokunaga joined Clemensecutive Arizona batters we.re hit by
the all-tournament team as
to
ts and Paul Hundhammer of Miami
pitches from Hawaii reliever Mark
de~ignated
hitter.
to complete the infield.
Olmos.
Arizona, after the loss to st. Jr;;;;;;;;;~~;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i
John 's, beat Florida State,
•
Michigan, Hawaii and California to
gain a berth in the title game.
Francona hit .456 in the series,
driving in six runs, and stole three
bases. His 16 total bases led the
eight-team series field .
•
Three of Francona's Wildcat
teammates joined him on the all·
tournament team, which was selected by sportswriters and spor·
tscasters Friday night following
Arizona •s 5-3 victory over Hawaii.
The other Wildcats were first
baseman Russ Clements and pitchers Craig Lefferts and Greg
Bargar. Lefferts went the distance
/
earlier in the 'week to shut out
Michigan and the two Arizona

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�C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

r .,'!-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, :une 8,1980

._ .Stripped before by Reds

World Series title game a surprise

Today's

OMAHA, Neb. (AP ). - For Coach
Jerry Kindall, watching his Arizona
Wildcats win tbe NCAA baseball
cha.mpionship by struggling through
the losers' bracket was a big thrill in

•

'Deja vu' strikes Curtis at Riverfront again
CJNCINNATI (AP) - Strange
things seem to happen when San
Diego's John Curtis pitches at River·
front Stadium.
"In 1974 with St. Louis, I pitched a
shutout against (Cincinnati pitcher
Don) Gullett. After that, I've been
just trying to get out of here with my
uniform on," said the bearded
Padres left-bander, who was again a
victim of unusual circumstances in a
4-2 Reds victory Friday night.
"I've had problems with this club
over my career. It's strange."
Strange things started happening
even before the Padres left their
hotel on Friday afternoon. San
Diego's Gene Tenace bent d own to
tie his shoe and doubled over with a
sharp pain in his back. He was taken
on a stretcher to a local hospital for
X·rays.
When the game starlold, Curtis
used a new grip on his slider to retire
11 of the first 12 batters.. But the

.,

•,.
,,,.

Frank Pastore

John Curtis

Notches _No. 7

Snakebit

weak-hitting Padres managed just
two ru.,s off Reds starter Frank
Pastore, 7-2, and RBI singles by Ray
Knight. and Dan Driessen in the sixth
tied the game and chased Curtis.
" We've been putting a lot of
pressure on our pitchers all year
long by ndt-trttting," said a con·
cerned Padres Manager Gerry
Coleman.
Padre third baseman Aurelio
Rodriguez, who made his first error
of the season in the fourth inning,
threw wildly to first base for a nother
error in the seventh that allowed
Dave Collins to score the winning
nm from first base.
Rodriguez, who made just four
errors in 134 games with Detroit in
1978, barehanded a weak bouncer by
Dave Concepcion and threw the ball
down the right field line. The speedy
Collins, who was on first following a
fielder's choice, scored easily to tag
reliever John D' Acquisto, 0-1, with

. Lesser lights knock
~ Tribe's lights out

the loss.
"He is the best-fielding third
baseman in the National League,"
Coleman said. "But everybody
makes a mechanical error from
time to time. It was just Aurelio's
turn.' '
Pastore, the top winner on the Clncinna ti staff, wasn't bothered by
aninflamed tendon in the middle
finger of his pitching hand. But he
was upset by his poor bunt that turned into a rally-killing double play
with two on and none out in the fifth
inning.
" I would have lost sleep if we had
lost the game because of me
screwing up, " Pastore said. " It was
a terrible mental error.! wasn 't SUfr
posed to bunt toward third base, but
I wasn't thinking and it almost cost
us the game."
The first two Padre batters of the
game reached base on Pastore, who
then bore down and struck out the
side in what Coleman considered an
ill ustration of the Padres' problems.
"We're very obviously not getting
things done at the right time," said
Coleman, whose club has l'ost nine of
its last II games. " We had a couple
of scoring opportunities tonight.
Tha t first inning set the tone for us."

Hockey won't forget Howe

Jerry Coleman
Smiles fewer

,.

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Harry Chappas

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The reason is the White Sox' continuing failure to save a victory for
starter Steve Trout. " Trout is pit·
ching a lot better than his 2~ record
shows, but we can't gel him a win,"
said LaRussa.
Wayne Nordhagen gave the Sox a
~lead in the first inning with his fif.
th homer off Rick Waits following a
pair of walks, and doubles by Alan
Bannister and Pryor made it 4-&lt;l in
the second when Waits left with a .
stiff shoulder.
TrQut gave up two runs in the third
on a hit batsman, a double by Ron
Pruitt and a single by Mike

Hargrove and an unearned run in
the fifth on an error and two-out
singles by Joe Charboneau and Bo
Diaz.
Trout was long gone when
Cleveland struck f or four runs in the
eighth, the key blow being a two-run
pinch double by Gary Alexander,
who scored the go-ahead run on a
single by Rick Manning.
Ed Farmer came in and gave up
two walks but prevented any further
scoring as he boosted his reeord to :;.
0 to go along with 13 saves.
"That's good/' said Farmer. " As
long as I don't lose, we don 't lose.

·Nicklaus fails to make Atlanta cut
:
:
·
:
:

. ATLANTA (AP )- Australian Bob
Shearer was looking for a two-putt
birdie, but got a lead-protecting
eagle-3 instead.
"I don't know what brought it on,
but I liked it," Shearer said Friday
after completing a one-under-par 71
that enabled him to retain a one-shot
advantage with a 134 total midway
through the $300,000 Atlanta Golf
Classic.
It put him just ahead of local

Bostock slayer
. fre e.?
:. gomg
A man found innocent by reason of
insanity in the shotgun slaying of
California Angels outfielder Lyman
Bostock is scheduled to be set free on
June 20, Indiana court officials said
Friday. Psychiatrists at an Indiana
hospital said Leonard Smith of
' Gary, Ind. " is not mentally ill and
not in need of a cure or treatment. ••
Bostock was shot to death in Gary,
Ind. on Sept. 23, 1978. Last November, jury of 10 women and two men
found Smith innocent by reason of
insanity a lthough there was no doubt
that Smith had killed Bostock.

a

,•

'

favorite Larry Nelson of nearby Acworth, who had a 6!1-135 total a nd
only three shots better than defen·
ding champion Andy Bean, who
said, " I figure I'm in pretty good
position," following a 69-137 on the
hilly Atlanta Country Club course.
Jack Nicklaus, who started with a
miserable 76 on Thursday, regained
his touch Friday, firing a five-under
67. It wasn't good enough, however,
and Nicklaus missed a cut for the fir·
st time since the Atlanta Classic two
years ago.
" Yesterday I ha d nothing and
today I was reasonably good,"
Nicklaus said. " I never like to miss a
cut. I'm going home. Although it's
unplanned, it will be welcomed."
Shearer, still seeking his first vic·
tory in five seasons on the U.S. tour,
offset birdies at Nos. 5 and 10 with
bogeys on the eighth, where he
missed a Jl).foot par putt and No. 10
where his grip slipped because of the
humid conditions.
He lost another shot when he
carried over the green at the 17th,
but then saved the day with the eagle
on the final hole.
Nelson had a steady round that
could have been even better. He had
four birdie putts along the way curl

The hockey odyssey of Gordie
Howe, an incredible journey through
five decades of greatness, has come
to an end. At age 52, the quintessential iceman has announced his
·retirement.
Hockey will never forget him.
Howe was the greatest scorer in
the history of the sport, with more
goals, more assists and more points
than any man who bas ever played
this game. But that simple sentence
doesn't begin to scratch the surface
of the man. He played for an un·
believable :j2 years, so longevity
alone would give him the Ofr
portunity to score more goals than
anyone else. The goals are only part
of the Howe saga, though.
Perhaps the best way to describe
his impact on his sport would be to
compare him with his con·
temporaries. If Maurice Richard
was hockey's Babe Ruth, the ex·
_ plosive home nm hitter, then Gordie
Howe was the game's Joe DiMaggio,
a man of consummate skills ·on

=
- skates.
=
-

around the cup.
He said he enjoyed playing at
home.
" It's great to see your mother on
one side of the fairway and your daddy on the other," he said. " At least
you know if you hook it or slice it,
they are going to kick it back out."
Bean , who won last y,e ar with a 23under-par total, shared third
position with Mike Nicolette, who
had a 70 to make the cut for his third

straight tournament.
"I haven't made three cuts in a
row in my career, and this is my
third," said Nicolette, who has been
on tour one year. " It's a small goal.
Sammy Rachals was all a lone at
67-137 and fiv e others were
deadlocked at 138 + veteran Gene
Little after a 68, Calvin Peete and
J .C. Snead with 70s and Lanny
Wadkins and Bob Eastwood with
7ls.

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..

:
:
:
:
:
:
•

~

:
:
:

.
~ Olympic

ideal troubled

:

It is clear from an examination of
: the list of nations set to attend the
• Moscow Olympics that the division
: of sports and politics is little more
~ than a. pipe dream in today 's world.

.•

: At last count by the International
: Olympic Committee, 85 nations had
: formally accepted the invitation to
: participate in the Summer Games at
: I'!loscow and 29 had followed the lead
• of the United States and rejected.
: There were 27 other nations that the
: IOC hadn't heard from and most - if
: not all - of them probably won't be
_ there.

SALE I
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Outperforma Competition

(Continued on Page C-6)

. C. K. SNOWDEN ~
' 417 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446--4290

Arizona, finishing 4:&gt;-21·1, was
ranked second in the nation coming
into the series a week ago. But St.
John's stunned the Wildcats, 6-1, in
the opening game and the Wildcats
had to come back the hard way.
"We keep pushing. We go after
them," said Dwight Taylor, whose
two-out double in the ninth inning
Thursday night beat California 11-10
and sent the Wildcats to the title
game.
Arizona starter c raig Lefferts, pit·
ching on only three days rest after
shutting out Michigan, 8-0, sa id he
only had six good innings in him. He
wasright.
In the seventh, Haw •ii came
within :.-3 on four singles off him.
But the Wildcats brought in Greg
Bargar and he slamn~ed the door,
sending down the remaining seven

Ra~;;:;:~n;::£l

THE 11SKIN-GAME" CON ARTISTS
ARE AROUND AGAIN.
IF YOU GET ACAll FROM ANYONE CLAIMING TO BE
AN AUDITOR, BOOKKEEPER, OFFICER OR
REPRESENTATIVE OF THE OHIO VAllEY BANK, DO NOT
GIVE THEM ANY INFORMATION. GET THEIR NAME AND
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By Schmidt, Scheirich, Homeerest

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Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 to 5 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m. to 12 noon

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~~========~======~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~

COLUMBUS (AP )
Tour
veterans Shirley Muldowney, Gary
. Beck and Richard Tharp all joined
the five-second club Friday as the
qualifying pace intensified in the
National Hot Rod Association's
Springnationals drag races.
Muldowney ,
two-time
Springnationals champion from Mt.
Clemens, Mich., had the best time of
the day at 5.983 seconds a nd 242.59
mph, but just slightly better than
Beck's 5.986. Tharp, of Dallas, Tex.,
was timed in 5.99.

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\

Hawaii catcher Collin Tanabe, an
a U-tournament selection, agreed.
"It's no matter that we lost,"
. Tanabe said, " We're still No. 1.
Second place is just as good for the
first time to the College World

L78·15

ATTENTIONI

OHIO VALLEY BANK

Ask former Olympians who were
medal winners what they remember
best about the experience and
almost all of them· will mention the
surge of national pride when the flag
went up and the anthem was played.
That's hwnan nature. •
The U. S. Olympic Committee is
not immune from financial
pressure, either. Its enthusiasm for
boycotting Moscow picked up
momentum when the Carter ad·
ministration suggested that if USOC
a greed to stay home, Congress

~
.&amp;Marx.

.this year."

: Understand that the decision on
~ whether to attend rests, in all cases,
: not with govenunents, but with in·
: dividual Olympic committees or
• sports federations.
: And, of course, in many countries
• amateur athletes are, in effect,
: govenunent employees . Or, at least,
: their training and expenses are paid
· for by the goverrunent .

Looking at the list, you get the pic: ture. Olympic committees made
. their own minds up, but very rarely
' did their decision stray from the will
' of their goverrunents, especially in
the cases where the country's teams
were goverrunentally subsidized.

• One Coat Hiding
• Fade Resistant

Howe came to the National
Hockey League with Detroit in 1946
when Harry Truman was president
of the United States. That's seven
presidents ago, if you've lost count.
With the Red Wings for 25
magnificent years, he carved a
legend for himself as the ultimate
hockey player.
Howe could skate. Oh, how he
could skate. He accelerated instanUy, zooming after the puck
sometimes, it seemed, from a standing start.
And Howe coul&lt;l shoot. He frowned

. on those booming, banana blade slap
shots that fly off in all directions.
Rather, Howe used a deadly wrist
shot. He would snap his powerful
wrists and the puck would zip
toward the net. Give him a open cor·
ner, even for an instant, a nd he'd
fire away.
Howe did everything on ice that a
hockey player must do and he did
most of those things with a special
flare that set him apart from other
players.
In 1971, Detroit thought a quarter
century of hockey was enough to ask
from this legend and retired him
gracefully. But the sedentary life
didn't satisfy him and two years
later he was back on the ice with the
Houston Aeros of the World Hockey
Association. The lure was the chance to play the game with his sons,
Mark and Marty, a rather unique accomplishment in any sport.
Later, he moved on to New
England and was with the Whalers
when they moved into the NHL last
winter as the Hartford franchise. It
was a special treat for NHL fans,
one more chance to see a Hall of
Farner play the game the way it was
meant to be played.
Howe is a grandfather now and it's
time to write finis to his legend as an
active player. The final figures, including both NHL and WHA regular
season and playoff production read
1,071 goals, 1,516 assists and 2,589
points. They are nwnbers that will
never be matched.
There's just one more thing.
Has anybody ever played hockey
with his grandsons?

Having four players named to the
College World Series all-tournament
team was icing on the cake,
especially since the two pitchers
chosen t&lt;&gt; the select squad were from
Arizona.
And outfielder Terry Francona
was named outstanding player.
"These kids have battled time and
time again and have never once
given up ," Kindall said.
His Wildcats defeated Hawaii :&gt;-3
Friday night with superb pitching
from a staff that had the worst ear·
ned run average of any team in the
Series.
The Rainbows, one of the t'ournament's youngest teams with only
two seniors in their starting lineup,
s urprised everybody by making it to
Omaha in the first place.
" We weren't supposed to be here,"
said Coach Les Murakami. "But
baseball is a funny game, almost
magical. One of these years we'll be
back and be so powerful we'll win it.
We just didn't have the experience

So an 'Olympic committee that is
underwritten, subSidized and for all
practical reasons nm by its government is rather likely to follow the advice of that government, wouldn't
you think?

DUTCH BOY PAINT
• 30 Minute Dry

itself~

By Will Grimsley

,.

,
CHICAGO (AP) Cleveland
Chappas flied out, but Foley, batting for Greg Pryor, tied the game
;: Manager Dave Garcia couldn 't hide
•: his amazement over the key role
with a two-run homer off Victor
Cruz.
;; played by two of Chicago's lesser
With two out in the ninth and Bob·' lights, Harry Chappas and Marv
;: Foley, in an 8-7 White Sox victor y
by Molinaro on first as a result of
being hit with a pitch, Chappas, who
·: over the Indians Friday night.
went
into the game with a .163
;. "God almighty " said Garcia " I
average,
laced a 1·2 pitch down the
:: can't believe it~ I'm not taking
;: anything away from Foley or Chafr
left-field line off loser Sid Monge, ~
4, to score Molinaro with the winning
·: pas, but you expect that sort of thing
;. from Lamar Johnson or Wayne Norrun .
Chappas, noting it was his first
;: dhagen. That's baseball, a crazy
·: game. How do you fig ure it out?"
major league game-winning run bat·: Meanwhile, White Sox mentor
ted in, said, " That's baseball. If you
: • Tony LaRussa was beaming over
play long enough, those things will
: ihe performance of the two latehappen." He appeared calm and
sa id, ~~ By nature, I'm not an exinning replat-ements. " Yes, I knew
·everything was going to ha ppen
citable person. But I am a little
exactly that way, " la ug hed · numb about the whole thing."
LaRussa .
LaRussa wasn't numb and said, " I
wasn't thinking that he'd hit a gameAiming for their fourth straight
winning double but I know one thing,
victory, the Indians had rallied for
four rWJS in the top of the eighth to
he takes his whacks. He's not in·
timidated in situations like that.
go ahead 7~.
Harold Baines led off the bottom of
"I've seen him play in the. minor
leagues a nd I 've seen him play in the
the eighth with a single and LaRussa
major leagues, but I've never seen
sent Chappas to bat for Bruce
him
intimidated,"
sai d
Kimm. " I thought he might get a
LaRussa,who labeled the victory
'lfingle or something to keep the rally
'' bittersweet. ''
going," LaRussa said.

Sports
World

Six singles in the fourth inning
hurlers combined to beat the RainOutfielders named to the r 1uad
bows in the title game.
scored three Arizona runs, gtving
were FJimcona, Lyle Brackenridge
the Wildcats a H lead. They made it
of California and Jim Paciorek of
Colin Tanabe, a catcher, third
:&gt;-1 in the sixth by taking advantage
Michigan. Paul Maruffi, who played
baseman Kimo Perkins and shorof a Rainbow error after two con·
right field for St. John's, was named
tstop Eric Tokunaga joined Clemensecutive Arizona batters we.re hit by
the all-tournament team as
to
ts and Paul Hundhammer of Miami
pitches from Hawaii reliever Mark
de~ignated
hitter.
to complete the infield.
Olmos.
Arizona, after the loss to st. Jr;;;;;;;;;~~;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i
John 's, beat Florida State,
•
Michigan, Hawaii and California to
gain a berth in the title game.
Francona hit .456 in the series,
driving in six runs, and stole three
bases. His 16 total bases led the
eight-team series field .
•
Three of Francona's Wildcat
teammates joined him on the all·
tournament team, which was selected by sportswriters and spor·
tscasters Friday night following
Arizona •s 5-3 victory over Hawaii.
The other Wildcats were first
baseman Russ Clements and pitchers Craig Lefferts and Greg
Bargar. Lefferts went the distance
/
earlier in the 'week to shut out
Michigan and the two Arizona

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�-

C+-The SwldayTimes&amp;ntinel,Sunday, June 8,1980

Bambi's back

•

~

··'

,,
" ...
'

,.'

··..

.1

.,

Ron Hassey's career· family. affair

Ohio Sportlight

MILWAUKEE (AP )
Ed .
Romero's twwun double capped a ·
five-run fourth inning, leading
Milwaukee to an H victory over the
Detroit Tigers Friday night as the
Brewers celebrated the return of
Manager George Bamberger.
Ii was t;~amberger's first game
following convalqence from heart
surgery March 26 and be was accorded a two-minute standing
ovation in pre-game ceremonies.

.' .
. .. ...
l ••

C6- The Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, June 8,1980

Father lights fire, mother lights candles for backstop

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland
Indians catcher Ron Hassey learned
baseball from his father, a former
minor leaguer, and he seems to have
inherited everything but his dad's
speed.

By
George Strode

'

,.I

..

)

Parting of the ways .

-·

'

SUN.-THURS., .JUNE 8-f~
•'

Tommy John
Gets No. 200

..
.

Mel Brodt is breaking up his
marriage of three decades to track
and field.
With the completion of the NCAA
Meet in Austin, Texas, this weekend,
Brodt is retiring as Bowling Green
State UniverSity's coach for the
sport.
"Mter being married to track and
field for the last 30 years, I feel I owe
it to my wife, Jane, to spend the rest
of my life with her. After so many
years, the indoor and outdoor
seasons are hectic and begin to tire
you out," said Brodt.
However, Brodt plans to remain at
the Mid-American Conference
school as cross country coach and an
associate physical eduction
professor.
The highlight of Brodt's career
came in 1972. The Falcons finished
second in the NCAA Indoor Championships and had three national in·
dlvidual champions. They won the

'

Geoff Zahn
One-hitter

]. R. Richard
Fans 13 Giants

Dick Williams
Hu Expos hot

American
Gigolo

George Bamberger
Returns a winner

John becomes 200 Club member;
trade bait fires one~hitter at 'Jays

. ..

.
SEATTLE (AP)- Bobby Murcer
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP )
and Bobby Brown hit home runs to
Geoff Zahn, offered as trade bait
help le!t-hander Tommy John win , earlier in the week, fired a one-hit
his 200th career game Friday night
shutout as the Minnesota Twins stopas the New York Yankees defeated
ped the Toronto Blue Jays !Hl Friday
the Seattle Mariners~night.
John, 8-2, allowed just two hits in
Zahn, a veteran left·hander off to a
becoming the 80th pitcher in major
slow start this season, had a no, . league history to reach the 200hitter going until John Mayberry
·,
victory plateau. His overall record is
slapped a clean single to left with
200-144.
two outs in the seventh.
John struck out six and walked
Zahn, 4-7, had been offered by the
none, retiring the last 16 batters.
Twins to Boston for third baseman
Murcer's solo home run, his fourButch Hobson, a deal the Red Sox
th, came with two out in the sixth inrejected. Zahn walked three batters
ning off former Yankee pitcher Jim
and struck out six in his sparkling
Beattie, 3-.'i.
performance.
Brown belted a disputed two-run
The Twins backed Zahn with a 12·
hit attack. Hosken Powell and Rob
homer in the eighth. With Graig NetWilfong each drove in two runs for
tles aboard on a walk, Brown lined a
the Twins.
ball off the top of the right field fence. It was signaled a home run, his
ATLANTA (AP) - Los Angeles
sixth, but Seattle Manager Darrell
Johnson arsued that the ball was left-bander Jerry Reuss surren·
still in play. Johnson protested dered just three Atlanta hits - the
enough to be ejected by first base first with two out in the seventh inning - and the Dodgers rode home
... · umpire Ted Hendry.
While John sailed through the runs by Reggie Smith 'and Ron Cey
game with few problems, Beattie ex· to a !Hl victory over the Braves
perienced control trouble. He Friday night.
Reuss, who finished with one walk
. walked three Yankees in the third in·
·. ning but escaped without a run and five strikeouts, saw his nr&gt;-hit
bid end when Jeff Burroughs
!_ scoring.
doubled
off the center field fence.
· Willie Horton singled in the second '
inning and Tom Paciorek singled in . Reuss, 7·1, allowed only two base
runners before Burroughs double.
the fourth for Seattle's only hits.

Leaguo BueboU
gaml!lootlDcladedl

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L.PcL GB
!3 2ll .583
Z205651

Philadelphia
• Chicago

2S 21
Zl 2S
21 26
18 31

•· New York
St. LoW.s

Los Angeles

.543
.4S7
.. «7
.:Jifl

2
6

61&gt;
101&gt;

31 2ll .001

Houston

,.
!!l
l4
2ll

CincinnaU

San Diego
Atlanta
San Francisco

21 .m 2
22 .S611 2
28 .462 71&gt;
28 .417 91&gt;

Zl 30 .412 10
Friday's Games

Los Angeles 5, Atlanta 0
Montreal 7, St. Lou.ls 2
Cincinnati 4, San Diego 2
New York9, Pitl3burgh4
Philadelphia 6, Cbicago fl
Houstoo:l, San Francisco 0
SIIDdly's GamH
Pittsburgh at New York,2
st. Louis at Montreal, 2

Chicago at Philadelphia

San Diego at Cincinnati
Los Arll!eles Hl Atlanta, n
San Francisco at Houston, n

:- New York

·-

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W.
'11
24
24
l4

' Baltimore
WEST

Kansas City

·' Chicago

' Oaltland
:• SeaWe

,· Tuas
. · CalUomla
' Minnesota

,.

GB

Z1 .563 3"'
21 .5011 61&gt;
2 .490 7
2S .190 1

24 26 .480 7"'-t
21 2:6 .147 9

, Detroit

1•

L. P~t.

31 18 ,633

• Milwaukee
• Toronto
' Cleveland

31 m .6116
:! 24 .S38 31&gt;
2S 26 .490 6
24 21 .471 7
24 'l1 .471 7
20 28 .417 9 ~
2ll 30 .400 101&gt;
Friday'• Gam ..

01icqoi,Cleveland7
MJlwaukee8, Detroit t

Minnesota 5, Toronto 0
Kanus City t., Teus 2
Baltimoree, California I

NEW YORK (AP) -Lee Mazzilli,
Steve Henderson and John Stearns
each stroked twr&gt;-run singles in an
eight-run explosion as the Mets rode
their biggest inning of the season to
a . 9-4 victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates Friday.
New York was trailing 1-0 when
Mike Jorgensen opened the second
inning with a walk against Bert
Blyleven, 1-5. A single by Joel
Youngblood and a · walk to Elliott
Maddox loaded the bases with one
out. Then Doug Flynn singled for one
run and pitcher Pete Falcone
walked- forcing home another.
Mazzilli then drilled a single for a
4-1 Met lead. Frank Taveras singled,
loading the bases before Henderson's hit made it &amp;-I and finished
Blyleven. Jorgensen lined out again·
st reliever Rod Scurry but
Youngblood walked, loading the
bases again, and Stearns followed
with the sixth hit of the inning for
two more runs.

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Rick
Burleson, Jerry Remy and Tony
Perez led a 19-hit Boston assault on
Oakland pitchiJ)g as the Red Sox
walloped the A's 1~ Friday night.
Burleson had five hits and Remy
four as the two combined for seven

Boston 14, Uakland II
New York 3, Seattle 0
SlllKIIy11 Games
Detroit at Milwaukee
CleveUmd at Chic alSO
Toronto at Minnesota, 2
Baltimore it California
Boston at Oakland
Kansas City at Texas, n
New York at Sea We, n

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING {100 at bats) : Reitz, St. Louis, .354;
K. Henumdez, Sl. Louis, 349; R. Smith, Los
Angeles, ,J29; S. Henderson, New York, .324; J .
Cruz, Houston, .322.

FrtUy'1 Sportl TraouctlOIUI

BASEBAIJ.
American Leegue
BOSTON RED SOX - Siwned Micha el Bryant
and MJke Ciampa, outfieldet:!l; and Albert Nipper, pitcher. AssiMnf'd BryantBnd Nipper to Winter Haven of the Florida State League and Ciampa to Elmira of the New York-Penn Lea~o:ue.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Si~~:ned Gerry
Miller, outfielder; Mark Erfrig and Robert
Schroeck, "pitchers; and Randy Ready, second
baseman . Agred to tenus w1th Sal Favata, ln£ielder.
MINNESOTA TWINS - Placed Mike Marshall, pitcher, on waivers for the purw:;e of
giving him his unconditioned release. R~cHIIed
Mike Kinnunen, pitcher, from Toledo of the
American Assodatioo .
Natloul Leapt
CINCINNATI REDS - Signed Stelie Leppert,
second baseman; Kenneth Scafl)llce and Scott
Terry, out!ielders; Broderick Walker, shorutop;
Allthony Threatt, pitcher ; and Michael Murr.1y,
third baseman.
NEW YORK MEl'S - Signed John Gibbons,
catcher, and assigned hi.m to King~ port of the
Appalachian League.
BASKETBALL
Natlooal Ba1kttbi.U A.1J10C&amp;.IJoo
BOSTON CELTICS - Named Jimmy Rodgers

assistant coach .
SAN DIEGO CUPPERS resi~nBlions

presidents.

RUNS ; Sclunidt, Philadelphia, U; K. H"·
tll:lndez, St. Louis, 38; Roae, Philadelphia, 34 ;
l..q)e:5, Lo3 Angeles, 34; 0 . Moreno, Pittsburijh,
31 ; T~npletoz:'. St. ~is, 31; Callins, Cincinnati,
31; Griffey, Cmctnnau, 31.
RBI : Schmidt, Philadelphia, 45; G&amp;rvey, Los
Angeles, 42; Hendrick, St. Louis, 39; R. Smith,
Los An~~:elea, 36; McBride, Philadelphia, lS.
•
HITS: K. Hemandez, St. Louis, 66; Reil2, St.
Louis, 63; Templeton, St. Louis, 62; J. Cruz,
Howton, 57; R. Smith, Los An~~:eles 1 57 .
OOUBLES : Stearns, New YorK, 17 ; Rose,
Philudelphia, 1~ ; Kni~~:ht, Cin~i.rtnati , U; K. Her·
nandez, Sl. Lou1s, 13; O!amblw, Atlanta, 12.
TRIPlES: 0. Moreno, PltUburgh, 6; Trillo,
PhiladelphiH, 4; McBride, Philadelphia, 4;
Kni~ht , Cincinnati, 4; 18 Tied With 3.
HOME RUNS ; Schmidt, PhiWdelphia, 11;
Luzinsiti, Phi.ladelphia, 12; Carter, Montreal, 11 ;
Hendrick, St. Louis, II ; Garvey , Los Angeles, 11 .
STOLEN BASES: U!:Fiore, Mootreal, 28; 0 .
M()reno, Pittsburgh, 2B; R. Scott, Monlreal, 17 ;
Collins, Cincinnati, 17 ; R. Law, Los Angeles,16.

runs batted in. Perez belted the fifth
grand slam home run of his career
during a seven-run fifth-inning out·
burst, which gave the Red Sox a 12~
lead.
·
Chuck Rainey, 6-1, got the.victory
with seven innings of work.

PITCHlNG (5 Decisions ): Reuss, Los Angeles,
N , .875, 2.40; Bibby, Pittsburgh, &amp;-1, .857, US:
Welch, Los Angeles, 6-1, .857, 2.06; Ct.rlton,
Philadlephia, 10.2, .833, 1.94; JAckson, Pittsbur~h, 5-1, .833,1 .61; S~rley,&amp;.n Diego,~l , .833,
l.S3, Blue, San FnmcJ.SCo, ~2 • .800, 2.68, Bllhn·
stn, Montreal, ..._1, .1100, 1.23.
STR IKEOUTS:

c~r lton,

Philadelphia, 95 ;

Richa rd, Houston, 90; Ryan, Houston, 62;
Montreal, 80; P. Niekro, Atlan\il, 60.

Ro~~:cro,

I

cracked a leadoff single, stole
second despite a ·pitchout and went
to third on Rodney Scott's sacrifice
bunt.
After Andre Dawson walked, Car·
ter scored both runners with a
double into the left field corner, One
out later, Rowland Office br~ught

17; D. Garcia, Toronto, 11; Oliver,

Lemon, Chia~go, 13.
TRIPLES: Griffin Toronto, 7; Brett, Kansas
City, 5;_Bum~ry, Baitimore, t; Howell, Toronto,
4; Cistmo, Mmnesota, 4.
HOME RUNS : Oglivi~. MilwHukee, 14; Velez,
Torootu, ll ; Rudi, Califomla, 1; Thohlas,
Milwaukee, 10; M"yberry, Toronto, 01; Ziik,

~

2.13; Gura, Kansas City, 7·2, .T78, %.20: Martin,
Ka~City, 7·2, .T78,3.61.
.
STRIKEOUTS ~ Guidry, New york, 68;
MaURck, TeiUis, IH; F . Bannister, SeaiUc, 59; M.
Norris, Oakland, 58 ; Leonard, Kansas City ,53.

FOOTBALL.
NaUooal Foott.ll League
CLEVEI..AND BROWNS - Signed Elvis
Franks, defensive end, and Marcus Jackson
de!ensive tackle.
'

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NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS - S1~ ned Jinuny

Jordan, Quttrterback, to a series of onl!--yeBr contract~~ .

HOCKEY
Natiomll HfM:tey 1A1gue

PHILADELPHIA FLYERS - Signed Mark
Taylor, c.,:;,ter.

' .

TWO WEEKS
Frida v, Mav 30th
thru Thursday, June n

ttKramer
vs;

Kramer"
WINNER Of

6ACADEMY.
AWARDS
INCLUDtNO

BEST

PICTURE

OSU TV going big time

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Auburn
freshman Stanley Floyd handed
Southern California's James San·
ford, the world's top-ranked sprinter, his second straight defeat in the
!~meter dash, winning in a swift
10.10 seconds Friday night at the
NCAA Track and Field Championships.

DUSTIN
HOFFMAN
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Over hill,
over

The 18-year-old Floyd, from Put·
ney, Ga., flashed past early paceset·.
ter Jerome Deal, the 1979 winner
from Texas-El Paso, at the ~meter
mark and led the rest of the way. He
barely held off challenges from Sanford and Mike Roberson of Florida
State down the stretch.

After Friday's five finals, UCLA
led with 22 points, followed by
Texas-El Paso with 21, Southern
·California with 18, and Auburn and
Florida State with 12 apiece.
The meet was marred when shot-

put official James Smith was hit in
the face above the right eye on a
practice toss by Tim Scott of Texas
AXM. Smith was taken to a hospital
and the shotput final was postponed
to Saturday night.

('RED WING 1·~1
.SOFTENS
THE ·. TOUGHEST TRAILS
FAMOUS
IRISH SETTER
20-MILE-A-DAY
SPORT BOOTS

Floyd's victory was his second in
two weeks at the University of
Teus' Memorial Stadium. On May
24; he won the Quad Conference
championship in 10.07, his career

WE.Vt GOT THE
WIDEST SELECTIQN
OF STYLES AND
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best.

Roberson, the 1979 World Univer·
Slty Games cbamplon, finished
· second Friday night in 10.12 and Sanford was third in the same time. San·
ford, the favorite in .this meet in both
the 100 and the 200, also was beaten
last week at Berkeley, Calif., by Carl
Lewis of HO\ISton.

SAILING FROM Rl\IERSIDE PARK

parent's quickness, since Ron's

major league career is a dream
come true for both of them.
The Indians, too, are pleased with
Hassey, whose .320 average leads all
American League catchers. He bas
also knocked in 20 runs and hit two
homers.
In games Hassey has caught
through Thursday's off-day for the
Tribe, Cleveland has compiled a 2013 record. Overall, the Indians were

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perfect tennis in notching a &amp;-2, &amp;-2,
Solomon.
Solomon, who upset No.4 seed
Guillermo Vilas of Argentina in the
quarterfinals, played 'fine clay court
tennis but, as his coach Paul Cohen
put it: "He just couldn't find any
bullets for his elephant gun."

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BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

To most of the 18,000 centercourt
spectators, the results of today's
finals are a foregone conclusion as
Borg's precision, speed and
awesome power of concentration in·
vi ted historic comparisons.

I
I
I
I
I
I

by the Cincinnati Reds in the 22nd
round during his senior year. But he
opted to follow in his father's foot·
steps and play baseball at the
University of Arizona.
"In Tucson, that school is the
thing," Hassey said. "It was my
dream to play baseball at Arizona
like my dad did."
In college, he played third base until his senior year, when he switched
to catchlhg because the Kansas City
Royals' told him he was too slow for
any other position. The Royals had
drafted hin in the 20th round after
his junior year at Arizona.
After his senior year, the Indians
tapped him in the 18th round.
Hassey got his big chance with the
club in the middle of last season. He
batted .287 the rest of the year to nail
down the job.
"I know that I can't let up,"
Hassey says, pointing to two other
Indians who would like to be the full·
time catcber. "Bo Diaz and Gary
Alexander are good players. They
are just waiting for me to slip so they
can take my job.

AUeKA .9KU9AK

Gerulaitis, who lost to Borg in the
semifinals here last year, is the first
American to reach the French finals
since Brian Gottfried, who lost in the
1m championship to Vilas. No
American has won the French men's
crown since 1955 when Tony Trabert
defeated Sweden's Sven Davidson.

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His father isn't the only one who
pitches in when Ron is in a slump.
"When I don't get a hit for a game
or two, my mother goes down to the
Catholic church and lights a candle
forme," he said.
Hassey, who was a pitcher and
shortstop in high school, was drafted

6-0 victory over American Harold

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11
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Dream match not to be

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GALLI A COUNTY

BASES; Henderson, Oakland, 2S;
Wilson, Kansas C!ty, 23 ; J. Cruz, Seattle, I?;
Bumbry, Baltimore, 15; Molitor, Milwaukee,l5;
Wilb Teu• 15.
Rlllney, Boston, 6-1, .8$7, U9; Guidry, New
o,
1.000,1-2,
2.225;
Seattle,
7-1, .875,
York,
.800,Honeycutt,
2.9'2; Darwin,
feus,
t-1 2.64;
.a»,

...

~ho;m;e;;Ca;rt;;er;w~i;th;a~sin~g;l;e~to~r~i~h~t~-~~!!~~~~~~~~~~

T~';d~N

PITCIIING(SDecisiorJS); Fanner, Chicago, ;.

""':l=

.t,

dinals.
The Expos jumped on Bob Forsch,
4-4, in the first inning. LeFlore

.351; LaOOreaux, Minnesota, .345: Molinaro,
Chica)Jo, .343.
RUNS : Yount, Milwaukee, 43; Wilson, Kansas
City, 43; Molitor, Milwaukee, 41 ; Wills, Texas,
f.O; Burlesoo, Boston, M.
RBI : Ogliue, Milwaukee, 40; Cooper,
Milwaukee, 3!; Oliver, Texas, 39; Brett, Kansas
City, 31; Perez, Boston, 36.
HITS: Molitor, Milwaukee, 611; Wll.!on, Karuw.s
City, 68; l...andreaux, Mimesota, 67; Yount,
Mii~·Hukee, 54; Bumbry, &amp;ltimore, SJ ; Rivers,
TelUis,63.
OOUBLES : Yount, MilWaukee, 17 ; Mol"t'WJn,
Tex.at~,14;

-·

MONTREAL (AP)- Ron LeFlore
had three hits and three stolen
bases, Gary Carter hit a two-run
double in a three-run first inning
•Fr(day night, and the Montreal Expos won for the 16th time in 21 games
with a 7-2 rout of the St. Louis Car-

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG (100 at hilts): Molitor, Milwauket,
.358; Remy, BostO{l, .358; Cooper, Milwaukee,

Chlca~~:o,

PLUS

PIDLADELPIDA ( AP) - Rookie
Lonnie Smith collected three hits, in. eluding a game-winning triple
Friday night, and pitcher Bob Walk
gained his first majofleague victory
as the Philadelphia Phillles edged
the Chicago Cubs 6-5.
The Phillies led 4-2 in the fifth
when former Cub Manny Trillo
tripled and Walk drew a base on
balls. Smith then was credited with a
twr&gt;-run triple when Chicago right
fielder Mike Vail failed on an attempted shoestring catch of his
drive.
The Cubs knocked Walk out of the
game with three runs in the sixth inning to cut the lead to 6-5.
Walk gave up 10 hits, struck out
five and, for the first time in three
games since he came up from
Oklahoma in the American
Association, did not walk a batter.
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - Scott
McGregor pitched a four-hitter
Friday night to lead the Baltimore
Orioles to a &amp;-1 victory over Calilor·
nia, handing the Angels their 11th
loss in their last 13 games at home.
McGregor, 3-2, who beat tht
Angels three times last year, in·
eluding an 8-0 decision in the final
game of the American .League
Championship series, walked only
one and struck out seven in winning
his fourth straight start.

Perez slams fifth grand slam

Scoreboard

1... •
(Sa::J:y
PiU.Ixlfl&lt;h
MootreaT

HOUSTON (AP)- Houston's J.R.
Richard struck out 13 to highlight a
three-hitter Friday night and Art
Howe and Terry Puhi each got three
hits to lead the Astros to a 2-0 shutout
of the San Francisco Giants.
Richard, 7-3, did not walk a batter.
He retired 22 consecutive batters,
starting after Milt May singled in
the second inning for the Giants'
second hit and continuing until Joe
Strain singled with two out in the
ninth.
.
Jack Clark singled with two out in
the first for the other hit off Richard,
who fanned 10 or more for the 39th
time in his career.
Jose Cruz and Rafael Landestoy
combined to give Richard a 1-{) lead
in the fifth. Landestoy tripled and
scored while Cruz grounded to
second baseman Strain.
The Astros scored again in the six·
th when Joe Morgan got his second
hit of the game and scored on a triple
by Howe.

!l]e , APata~,l'ictUII
· Richard Gm in 'Amencati'Cii

Mid-American Conference outdoor
title.
But the crowning gem to !bat
season was Dave WotUe's gold
medal in the Munich Olympics 800
meters.
"After four long years of work and
education under Coach Brodt, I am
the runner I am today because of
what he has done for me. I will never
Ron Hassey
hesitate to give him the credit he
really deserves," said Wottle at the
Family Support
time.
Bowling Green Athletic Director
Jim Lessig said, "Probably no .
single event brought more visibility
to Bowling Green than Wattle's performance in the Olympics. Much of
the credit for that victory has to go
PARtS (AP) - The great Jimmy
to his coach."
Because of his sport, the native of Connors-Bjorn Borg confrontation
Fairborn, Ohio, and graduate of on the slow European clay is not to
Miami University hils traveled in be, to the delight of Vilas Gerulaitis.
The ~year-old New Yorker with
West Germany, Russia and five
the flowing blond mane kept his cool
countries in Central America.
until the last and defeated Connors&amp;1, ~. 6·7, &amp;-2, 6-4 Friday in a four•
hour semifinal match of the French
Open tennis championships.
It was only the third time in 20
Ohio State basketball may be
broadcasting."
matches that Gerulaitis has beaten
joining the big leagues of television
There is a possibility that one or Connors .
this fall and its public television
more of the bidders might protest
"Jimmy Connors has to be the gut·
Btation may provide the impetus.
the offer made by TCS, which was siest competitor of all time,"
WOSU-TV, the university's public
signed on the final sheet of the Gerulaitis said afterward. "You can
broadcasting station, put in a
proposal but not in a space required get him almost there but you can't
$495,000 bid for a three-year rights
on the form.
nail down the coffin."
package for OSU basketball.
TCS's three-year bid was far in ex·
That bid came in second to Total
Chris Evert Uoyd was trying to
cess of what the Trends Advertising
Con)munications · Systems ·Inc., of
Agency, owned by wBNS.TV in nail down the $42,500 women's prize
New Kensington, Pa., which bid
Columbus, paid for OSU basketball Saturday against Romania's free$543,600.
in the past two years. Trends paid swinging Virginia Ruzici.
The television packages include about $6,000 a game. TCS' bid
In today's match for the $53,000
extensive Ohir&gt;-station networks and
averages $14,000 for the rights to men's prize, Gerulaitis will be gunother fringes which could include
ning for his first tournament victory
each ghllle .
telecasts on independent TV chanOSU officials admit they were sur· over Borg, his practice partner and
nels and satellite broadcasts.
prised by the size of the bids. OSU pal.
Some of the station's commercial
Borg, who turned 24 on Friday, is
Athletic Director Hugh Hindman
competitors, however, are
favored
to win his fifth French
said he expects a decision by the end
questioning the ethics of a public
crown
and
gain a start on the grand
of the week.
Btation competing with commercial
slam
of
tennis,
which consists of the
WOSU is offering to cover 15 OSU
stations. ,
French
Open,
Wimbledon,
the U.S.
home games and the Athletes in Ac·
"I bave a problem philosophically
Open
and
the
Australian
Open.
lion exhibition game. WOSH 's
with an educational network com·
Borg, the defending French cham·
assistant ·director of telecom·
peting in the commercial world," · munications, Mike Mottler, said the pion, has been playing better every
said Ben McKeel, general manager
money would come from a network match of this twr&gt;-week tournament
of WCMH·TV in Columbus. "I don't
he claims to have commitments for at Roland Garros stadium. Friday,
the Swede played almost boringly
think that's the purpose of publlc and not from WOSU coffers.

Davis Hassey signed with the New
York Yankees and advanced to their
Class AAA farm club before ending
his baseball career. He was a fleet
centerfielder, nicknamed Deerfoot,
in shl!rp contrast to his son, who is a
slow-moving base runner.
But neither father nor son minds
that Ron failed to receive his

24-24.
"My father loved to pJ,.y ball with
us," Hassey said. " He would take
my brother Joe and me out to the
park. There we would hit and hit. He
made me a good hitter, taught me
the right things. We lived in Tucson,
. so we were able to practice most of
the winter.'' ·
The tutoring has continued up to
today. When his 27-year-old son is in
a slump, Davis Hassey can usually
count on a phone call.
"By talking to my dad, I can
usually figure out what I'm doing
wrong,'' Hassey said. ''He knows me
so well. After ~ll, he made me a hlt.ter. He saw me play almost all my
games in Little League, high school
and college. He gave me that push I

FRIDAY 13TH
Bean Dinner (Free with Tickets I
Pork Roast !FreewltiiTickets)
Jam Sessions
SATURDAY 14TH &amp;SUNDAY ISTH
PeuhMI.IIadft
Hockl!ltl VIIIIIY Gran
You1111 8 1 - of Blu19rau
Star Valley lloya
Townsend Br01.

Pl1111nl MI. Boys

Hlllbroed

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Admission SIO For All Three Days
$5.00 Per Dav-6to 12$1 Per Dav; $2 Per Weekend
• No Alcohol or Dogs
lnSieteArea.
e A! I Dogs on LNllles ·

LOCiteG 11: Lewlil Farley's Farm on
Fronklln Twp. 265. For Information
contct: Lewis Farley, Rt. 1, Box 233,
Jackson, Ohlo45640, (6l4l 214·3527.

I

I

I

I'

l

�-

C+-The SwldayTimes&amp;ntinel,Sunday, June 8,1980

Bambi's back

•

~

··'

,,
" ...
'

,.'

··..

.1

.,

Ron Hassey's career· family. affair

Ohio Sportlight

MILWAUKEE (AP )
Ed .
Romero's twwun double capped a ·
five-run fourth inning, leading
Milwaukee to an H victory over the
Detroit Tigers Friday night as the
Brewers celebrated the return of
Manager George Bamberger.
Ii was t;~amberger's first game
following convalqence from heart
surgery March 26 and be was accorded a two-minute standing
ovation in pre-game ceremonies.

.' .
. .. ...
l ••

C6- The Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, June 8,1980

Father lights fire, mother lights candles for backstop

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland
Indians catcher Ron Hassey learned
baseball from his father, a former
minor leaguer, and he seems to have
inherited everything but his dad's
speed.

By
George Strode

'

,.I

..

)

Parting of the ways .

-·

'

SUN.-THURS., .JUNE 8-f~
•'

Tommy John
Gets No. 200

..
.

Mel Brodt is breaking up his
marriage of three decades to track
and field.
With the completion of the NCAA
Meet in Austin, Texas, this weekend,
Brodt is retiring as Bowling Green
State UniverSity's coach for the
sport.
"Mter being married to track and
field for the last 30 years, I feel I owe
it to my wife, Jane, to spend the rest
of my life with her. After so many
years, the indoor and outdoor
seasons are hectic and begin to tire
you out," said Brodt.
However, Brodt plans to remain at
the Mid-American Conference
school as cross country coach and an
associate physical eduction
professor.
The highlight of Brodt's career
came in 1972. The Falcons finished
second in the NCAA Indoor Championships and had three national in·
dlvidual champions. They won the

'

Geoff Zahn
One-hitter

]. R. Richard
Fans 13 Giants

Dick Williams
Hu Expos hot

American
Gigolo

George Bamberger
Returns a winner

John becomes 200 Club member;
trade bait fires one~hitter at 'Jays

. ..

.
SEATTLE (AP)- Bobby Murcer
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP )
and Bobby Brown hit home runs to
Geoff Zahn, offered as trade bait
help le!t-hander Tommy John win , earlier in the week, fired a one-hit
his 200th career game Friday night
shutout as the Minnesota Twins stopas the New York Yankees defeated
ped the Toronto Blue Jays !Hl Friday
the Seattle Mariners~night.
John, 8-2, allowed just two hits in
Zahn, a veteran left·hander off to a
becoming the 80th pitcher in major
slow start this season, had a no, . league history to reach the 200hitter going until John Mayberry
·,
victory plateau. His overall record is
slapped a clean single to left with
200-144.
two outs in the seventh.
John struck out six and walked
Zahn, 4-7, had been offered by the
none, retiring the last 16 batters.
Twins to Boston for third baseman
Murcer's solo home run, his fourButch Hobson, a deal the Red Sox
th, came with two out in the sixth inrejected. Zahn walked three batters
ning off former Yankee pitcher Jim
and struck out six in his sparkling
Beattie, 3-.'i.
performance.
Brown belted a disputed two-run
The Twins backed Zahn with a 12·
hit attack. Hosken Powell and Rob
homer in the eighth. With Graig NetWilfong each drove in two runs for
tles aboard on a walk, Brown lined a
the Twins.
ball off the top of the right field fence. It was signaled a home run, his
ATLANTA (AP) - Los Angeles
sixth, but Seattle Manager Darrell
Johnson arsued that the ball was left-bander Jerry Reuss surren·
still in play. Johnson protested dered just three Atlanta hits - the
enough to be ejected by first base first with two out in the seventh inning - and the Dodgers rode home
... · umpire Ted Hendry.
While John sailed through the runs by Reggie Smith 'and Ron Cey
game with few problems, Beattie ex· to a !Hl victory over the Braves
perienced control trouble. He Friday night.
Reuss, who finished with one walk
. walked three Yankees in the third in·
·. ning but escaped without a run and five strikeouts, saw his nr&gt;-hit
bid end when Jeff Burroughs
!_ scoring.
doubled
off the center field fence.
· Willie Horton singled in the second '
inning and Tom Paciorek singled in . Reuss, 7·1, allowed only two base
runners before Burroughs double.
the fourth for Seattle's only hits.

Leaguo BueboU
gaml!lootlDcladedl

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L.PcL GB
!3 2ll .583
Z205651

Philadelphia
• Chicago

2S 21
Zl 2S
21 26
18 31

•· New York
St. LoW.s

Los Angeles

.543
.4S7
.. «7
.:Jifl

2
6

61&gt;
101&gt;

31 2ll .001

Houston

,.
!!l
l4
2ll

CincinnaU

San Diego
Atlanta
San Francisco

21 .m 2
22 .S611 2
28 .462 71&gt;
28 .417 91&gt;

Zl 30 .412 10
Friday's Games

Los Angeles 5, Atlanta 0
Montreal 7, St. Lou.ls 2
Cincinnati 4, San Diego 2
New York9, Pitl3burgh4
Philadelphia 6, Cbicago fl
Houstoo:l, San Francisco 0
SIIDdly's GamH
Pittsburgh at New York,2
st. Louis at Montreal, 2

Chicago at Philadelphia

San Diego at Cincinnati
Los Arll!eles Hl Atlanta, n
San Francisco at Houston, n

:- New York

·-

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W.
'11
24
24
l4

' Baltimore
WEST

Kansas City

·' Chicago

' Oaltland
:• SeaWe

,· Tuas
. · CalUomla
' Minnesota

,.

GB

Z1 .563 3"'
21 .5011 61&gt;
2 .490 7
2S .190 1

24 26 .480 7"'-t
21 2:6 .147 9

, Detroit

1•

L. P~t.

31 18 ,633

• Milwaukee
• Toronto
' Cleveland

31 m .6116
:! 24 .S38 31&gt;
2S 26 .490 6
24 21 .471 7
24 'l1 .471 7
20 28 .417 9 ~
2ll 30 .400 101&gt;
Friday'• Gam ..

01icqoi,Cleveland7
MJlwaukee8, Detroit t

Minnesota 5, Toronto 0
Kanus City t., Teus 2
Baltimoree, California I

NEW YORK (AP) -Lee Mazzilli,
Steve Henderson and John Stearns
each stroked twr&gt;-run singles in an
eight-run explosion as the Mets rode
their biggest inning of the season to
a . 9-4 victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates Friday.
New York was trailing 1-0 when
Mike Jorgensen opened the second
inning with a walk against Bert
Blyleven, 1-5. A single by Joel
Youngblood and a · walk to Elliott
Maddox loaded the bases with one
out. Then Doug Flynn singled for one
run and pitcher Pete Falcone
walked- forcing home another.
Mazzilli then drilled a single for a
4-1 Met lead. Frank Taveras singled,
loading the bases before Henderson's hit made it &amp;-I and finished
Blyleven. Jorgensen lined out again·
st reliever Rod Scurry but
Youngblood walked, loading the
bases again, and Stearns followed
with the sixth hit of the inning for
two more runs.

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Rick
Burleson, Jerry Remy and Tony
Perez led a 19-hit Boston assault on
Oakland pitchiJ)g as the Red Sox
walloped the A's 1~ Friday night.
Burleson had five hits and Remy
four as the two combined for seven

Boston 14, Uakland II
New York 3, Seattle 0
SlllKIIy11 Games
Detroit at Milwaukee
CleveUmd at Chic alSO
Toronto at Minnesota, 2
Baltimore it California
Boston at Oakland
Kansas City at Texas, n
New York at Sea We, n

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING {100 at bats) : Reitz, St. Louis, .354;
K. Henumdez, Sl. Louis, 349; R. Smith, Los
Angeles, ,J29; S. Henderson, New York, .324; J .
Cruz, Houston, .322.

FrtUy'1 Sportl TraouctlOIUI

BASEBAIJ.
American Leegue
BOSTON RED SOX - Siwned Micha el Bryant
and MJke Ciampa, outfieldet:!l; and Albert Nipper, pitcher. AssiMnf'd BryantBnd Nipper to Winter Haven of the Florida State League and Ciampa to Elmira of the New York-Penn Lea~o:ue.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Si~~:ned Gerry
Miller, outfielder; Mark Erfrig and Robert
Schroeck, "pitchers; and Randy Ready, second
baseman . Agred to tenus w1th Sal Favata, ln£ielder.
MINNESOTA TWINS - Placed Mike Marshall, pitcher, on waivers for the purw:;e of
giving him his unconditioned release. R~cHIIed
Mike Kinnunen, pitcher, from Toledo of the
American Assodatioo .
Natloul Leapt
CINCINNATI REDS - Signed Stelie Leppert,
second baseman; Kenneth Scafl)llce and Scott
Terry, out!ielders; Broderick Walker, shorutop;
Allthony Threatt, pitcher ; and Michael Murr.1y,
third baseman.
NEW YORK MEl'S - Signed John Gibbons,
catcher, and assigned hi.m to King~ port of the
Appalachian League.
BASKETBALL
Natlooal Ba1kttbi.U A.1J10C&amp;.IJoo
BOSTON CELTICS - Named Jimmy Rodgers

assistant coach .
SAN DIEGO CUPPERS resi~nBlions

presidents.

RUNS ; Sclunidt, Philadelphia, U; K. H"·
tll:lndez, St. Louis, 38; Roae, Philadelphia, 34 ;
l..q)e:5, Lo3 Angeles, 34; 0 . Moreno, Pittsburijh,
31 ; T~npletoz:'. St. ~is, 31; Callins, Cincinnati,
31; Griffey, Cmctnnau, 31.
RBI : Schmidt, Philadelphia, 45; G&amp;rvey, Los
Angeles, 42; Hendrick, St. Louis, 39; R. Smith,
Los An~~:elea, 36; McBride, Philadelphia, lS.
•
HITS: K. Hemandez, St. Louis, 66; Reil2, St.
Louis, 63; Templeton, St. Louis, 62; J. Cruz,
Howton, 57; R. Smith, Los An~~:eles 1 57 .
OOUBLES : Stearns, New YorK, 17 ; Rose,
Philudelphia, 1~ ; Kni~~:ht, Cin~i.rtnati , U; K. Her·
nandez, Sl. Lou1s, 13; O!amblw, Atlanta, 12.
TRIPlES: 0. Moreno, PltUburgh, 6; Trillo,
PhiladelphiH, 4; McBride, Philadelphia, 4;
Kni~ht , Cincinnati, 4; 18 Tied With 3.
HOME RUNS ; Schmidt, PhiWdelphia, 11;
Luzinsiti, Phi.ladelphia, 12; Carter, Montreal, 11 ;
Hendrick, St. Louis, II ; Garvey , Los Angeles, 11 .
STOLEN BASES: U!:Fiore, Mootreal, 28; 0 .
M()reno, Pittsburgh, 2B; R. Scott, Monlreal, 17 ;
Collins, Cincinnati, 17 ; R. Law, Los Angeles,16.

runs batted in. Perez belted the fifth
grand slam home run of his career
during a seven-run fifth-inning out·
burst, which gave the Red Sox a 12~
lead.
·
Chuck Rainey, 6-1, got the.victory
with seven innings of work.

PITCHlNG (5 Decisions ): Reuss, Los Angeles,
N , .875, 2.40; Bibby, Pittsburgh, &amp;-1, .857, US:
Welch, Los Angeles, 6-1, .857, 2.06; Ct.rlton,
Philadlephia, 10.2, .833, 1.94; JAckson, Pittsbur~h, 5-1, .833,1 .61; S~rley,&amp;.n Diego,~l , .833,
l.S3, Blue, San FnmcJ.SCo, ~2 • .800, 2.68, Bllhn·
stn, Montreal, ..._1, .1100, 1.23.
STR IKEOUTS:

c~r lton,

Philadelphia, 95 ;

Richa rd, Houston, 90; Ryan, Houston, 62;
Montreal, 80; P. Niekro, Atlan\il, 60.

Ro~~:cro,

I

cracked a leadoff single, stole
second despite a ·pitchout and went
to third on Rodney Scott's sacrifice
bunt.
After Andre Dawson walked, Car·
ter scored both runners with a
double into the left field corner, One
out later, Rowland Office br~ught

17; D. Garcia, Toronto, 11; Oliver,

Lemon, Chia~go, 13.
TRIPLES: Griffin Toronto, 7; Brett, Kansas
City, 5;_Bum~ry, Baitimore, t; Howell, Toronto,
4; Cistmo, Mmnesota, 4.
HOME RUNS : Oglivi~. MilwHukee, 14; Velez,
Torootu, ll ; Rudi, Califomla, 1; Thohlas,
Milwaukee, 10; M"yberry, Toronto, 01; Ziik,

~

2.13; Gura, Kansas City, 7·2, .T78, %.20: Martin,
Ka~City, 7·2, .T78,3.61.
.
STRIKEOUTS ~ Guidry, New york, 68;
MaURck, TeiUis, IH; F . Bannister, SeaiUc, 59; M.
Norris, Oakland, 58 ; Leonard, Kansas City ,53.

FOOTBALL.
NaUooal Foott.ll League
CLEVEI..AND BROWNS - Signed Elvis
Franks, defensive end, and Marcus Jackson
de!ensive tackle.
'

GATEWAY £UPPER FLEET
************'
GAU.JPOUS AREA CRUISES
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NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS - S1~ ned Jinuny

Jordan, Quttrterback, to a series of onl!--yeBr contract~~ .

HOCKEY
Natiomll HfM:tey 1A1gue

PHILADELPHIA FLYERS - Signed Mark
Taylor, c.,:;,ter.

' .

TWO WEEKS
Frida v, Mav 30th
thru Thursday, June n

ttKramer
vs;

Kramer"
WINNER Of

6ACADEMY.
AWARDS
INCLUDtNO

BEST

PICTURE

OSU TV going big time

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Auburn
freshman Stanley Floyd handed
Southern California's James San·
ford, the world's top-ranked sprinter, his second straight defeat in the
!~meter dash, winning in a swift
10.10 seconds Friday night at the
NCAA Track and Field Championships.

DUSTIN
HOFFMAN
IN

"KRAMER VS.
KRAM
~

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Over hill,
over

The 18-year-old Floyd, from Put·
ney, Ga., flashed past early paceset·.
ter Jerome Deal, the 1979 winner
from Texas-El Paso, at the ~meter
mark and led the rest of the way. He
barely held off challenges from Sanford and Mike Roberson of Florida
State down the stretch.

After Friday's five finals, UCLA
led with 22 points, followed by
Texas-El Paso with 21, Southern
·California with 18, and Auburn and
Florida State with 12 apiece.
The meet was marred when shot-

put official James Smith was hit in
the face above the right eye on a
practice toss by Tim Scott of Texas
AXM. Smith was taken to a hospital
and the shotput final was postponed
to Saturday night.

('RED WING 1·~1
.SOFTENS
THE ·. TOUGHEST TRAILS
FAMOUS
IRISH SETTER
20-MILE-A-DAY
SPORT BOOTS

Floyd's victory was his second in
two weeks at the University of
Teus' Memorial Stadium. On May
24; he won the Quad Conference
championship in 10.07, his career

WE.Vt GOT THE
WIDEST SELECTIQN
OF STYLES AND
SIZES AROUND

best.

Roberson, the 1979 World Univer·
Slty Games cbamplon, finished
· second Friday night in 10.12 and Sanford was third in the same time. San·
ford, the favorite in .this meet in both
the 100 and the 200, also was beaten
last week at Berkeley, Calif., by Carl
Lewis of HO\ISton.

SAILING FROM Rl\IERSIDE PARK

parent's quickness, since Ron's

major league career is a dream
come true for both of them.
The Indians, too, are pleased with
Hassey, whose .320 average leads all
American League catchers. He bas
also knocked in 20 runs and hit two
homers.
In games Hassey has caught
through Thursday's off-day for the
Tribe, Cleveland has compiled a 2013 record. Overall, the Indians were

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perfect tennis in notching a &amp;-2, &amp;-2,
Solomon.
Solomon, who upset No.4 seed
Guillermo Vilas of Argentina in the
quarterfinals, played 'fine clay court
tennis but, as his coach Paul Cohen
put it: "He just couldn't find any
bullets for his elephant gun."

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THURSDAY, JUNE 12

I Wood Streel

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BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL

To most of the 18,000 centercourt
spectators, the results of today's
finals are a foregone conclusion as
Borg's precision, speed and
awesome power of concentration in·
vi ted historic comparisons.

I
I
I
I
I
I

by the Cincinnati Reds in the 22nd
round during his senior year. But he
opted to follow in his father's foot·
steps and play baseball at the
University of Arizona.
"In Tucson, that school is the
thing," Hassey said. "It was my
dream to play baseball at Arizona
like my dad did."
In college, he played third base until his senior year, when he switched
to catchlhg because the Kansas City
Royals' told him he was too slow for
any other position. The Royals had
drafted hin in the 20th round after
his junior year at Arizona.
After his senior year, the Indians
tapped him in the 18th round.
Hassey got his big chance with the
club in the middle of last season. He
batted .287 the rest of the year to nail
down the job.
"I know that I can't let up,"
Hassey says, pointing to two other
Indians who would like to be the full·
time catcber. "Bo Diaz and Gary
Alexander are good players. They
are just waiting for me to slip so they
can take my job.

AUeKA .9KU9AK

Gerulaitis, who lost to Borg in the
semifinals here last year, is the first
American to reach the French finals
since Brian Gottfried, who lost in the
1m championship to Vilas. No
American has won the French men's
crown since 1955 when Tony Trabert
defeated Sweden's Sven Davidson.

THE MOTOR 'PARTS CO., INC.

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His father isn't the only one who
pitches in when Ron is in a slump.
"When I don't get a hit for a game
or two, my mother goes down to the
Catholic church and lights a candle
forme," he said.
Hassey, who was a pitcher and
shortstop in high school, was drafted

6-0 victory over American Harold

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11
128 MILE ROUND TRl P CRUISE

needed."

Dream match not to be

Upset highlights NCAA track meet

To fulfill future drilling programs, please write or call and be sure to
include proerty location and acreage that's available for lease.•

the,_.....----------------;-----------,(

Announced
of hv Kaze and Hal Kolker, vice

.-.
-...,.".

GALLI A COUNTY

BASES; Henderson, Oakland, 2S;
Wilson, Kansas C!ty, 23 ; J. Cruz, Seattle, I?;
Bumbry, Baltimore, 15; Molitor, Milwaukee,l5;
Wilb Teu• 15.
Rlllney, Boston, 6-1, .8$7, U9; Guidry, New
o,
1.000,1-2,
2.225;
Seattle,
7-1, .875,
York,
.800,Honeycutt,
2.9'2; Darwin,
feus,
t-1 2.64;
.a»,

...

~ho;m;e;;Ca;rt;;er;w~i;th;a~sin~g;l;e~to~r~i~h~t~-~~!!~~~~~~~~~~

T~';d~N

PITCIIING(SDecisiorJS); Fanner, Chicago, ;.

""':l=

.t,

dinals.
The Expos jumped on Bob Forsch,
4-4, in the first inning. LeFlore

.351; LaOOreaux, Minnesota, .345: Molinaro,
Chica)Jo, .343.
RUNS : Yount, Milwaukee, 43; Wilson, Kansas
City, 43; Molitor, Milwaukee, 41 ; Wills, Texas,
f.O; Burlesoo, Boston, M.
RBI : Ogliue, Milwaukee, 40; Cooper,
Milwaukee, 3!; Oliver, Texas, 39; Brett, Kansas
City, 31; Perez, Boston, 36.
HITS: Molitor, Milwaukee, 611; Wll.!on, Karuw.s
City, 68; l...andreaux, Mimesota, 67; Yount,
Mii~·Hukee, 54; Bumbry, &amp;ltimore, SJ ; Rivers,
TelUis,63.
OOUBLES : Yount, MilWaukee, 17 ; Mol"t'WJn,
Tex.at~,14;

-·

MONTREAL (AP)- Ron LeFlore
had three hits and three stolen
bases, Gary Carter hit a two-run
double in a three-run first inning
•Fr(day night, and the Montreal Expos won for the 16th time in 21 games
with a 7-2 rout of the St. Louis Car-

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG (100 at hilts): Molitor, Milwauket,
.358; Remy, BostO{l, .358; Cooper, Milwaukee,

Chlca~~:o,

PLUS

PIDLADELPIDA ( AP) - Rookie
Lonnie Smith collected three hits, in. eluding a game-winning triple
Friday night, and pitcher Bob Walk
gained his first majofleague victory
as the Philadelphia Phillles edged
the Chicago Cubs 6-5.
The Phillies led 4-2 in the fifth
when former Cub Manny Trillo
tripled and Walk drew a base on
balls. Smith then was credited with a
twr&gt;-run triple when Chicago right
fielder Mike Vail failed on an attempted shoestring catch of his
drive.
The Cubs knocked Walk out of the
game with three runs in the sixth inning to cut the lead to 6-5.
Walk gave up 10 hits, struck out
five and, for the first time in three
games since he came up from
Oklahoma in the American
Association, did not walk a batter.
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - Scott
McGregor pitched a four-hitter
Friday night to lead the Baltimore
Orioles to a &amp;-1 victory over Calilor·
nia, handing the Angels their 11th
loss in their last 13 games at home.
McGregor, 3-2, who beat tht
Angels three times last year, in·
eluding an 8-0 decision in the final
game of the American .League
Championship series, walked only
one and struck out seven in winning
his fourth straight start.

Perez slams fifth grand slam

Scoreboard

1... •
(Sa::J:y
PiU.Ixlfl&lt;h
MootreaT

HOUSTON (AP)- Houston's J.R.
Richard struck out 13 to highlight a
three-hitter Friday night and Art
Howe and Terry Puhi each got three
hits to lead the Astros to a 2-0 shutout
of the San Francisco Giants.
Richard, 7-3, did not walk a batter.
He retired 22 consecutive batters,
starting after Milt May singled in
the second inning for the Giants'
second hit and continuing until Joe
Strain singled with two out in the
ninth.
.
Jack Clark singled with two out in
the first for the other hit off Richard,
who fanned 10 or more for the 39th
time in his career.
Jose Cruz and Rafael Landestoy
combined to give Richard a 1-{) lead
in the fifth. Landestoy tripled and
scored while Cruz grounded to
second baseman Strain.
The Astros scored again in the six·
th when Joe Morgan got his second
hit of the game and scored on a triple
by Howe.

!l]e , APata~,l'ictUII
· Richard Gm in 'Amencati'Cii

Mid-American Conference outdoor
title.
But the crowning gem to !bat
season was Dave WotUe's gold
medal in the Munich Olympics 800
meters.
"After four long years of work and
education under Coach Brodt, I am
the runner I am today because of
what he has done for me. I will never
Ron Hassey
hesitate to give him the credit he
really deserves," said Wottle at the
Family Support
time.
Bowling Green Athletic Director
Jim Lessig said, "Probably no .
single event brought more visibility
to Bowling Green than Wattle's performance in the Olympics. Much of
the credit for that victory has to go
PARtS (AP) - The great Jimmy
to his coach."
Because of his sport, the native of Connors-Bjorn Borg confrontation
Fairborn, Ohio, and graduate of on the slow European clay is not to
Miami University hils traveled in be, to the delight of Vilas Gerulaitis.
The ~year-old New Yorker with
West Germany, Russia and five
the flowing blond mane kept his cool
countries in Central America.
until the last and defeated Connors&amp;1, ~. 6·7, &amp;-2, 6-4 Friday in a four•
hour semifinal match of the French
Open tennis championships.
It was only the third time in 20
Ohio State basketball may be
broadcasting."
matches that Gerulaitis has beaten
joining the big leagues of television
There is a possibility that one or Connors .
this fall and its public television
more of the bidders might protest
"Jimmy Connors has to be the gut·
Btation may provide the impetus.
the offer made by TCS, which was siest competitor of all time,"
WOSU-TV, the university's public
signed on the final sheet of the Gerulaitis said afterward. "You can
broadcasting station, put in a
proposal but not in a space required get him almost there but you can't
$495,000 bid for a three-year rights
on the form.
nail down the coffin."
package for OSU basketball.
TCS's three-year bid was far in ex·
That bid came in second to Total
Chris Evert Uoyd was trying to
cess of what the Trends Advertising
Con)munications · Systems ·Inc., of
Agency, owned by wBNS.TV in nail down the $42,500 women's prize
New Kensington, Pa., which bid
Columbus, paid for OSU basketball Saturday against Romania's free$543,600.
in the past two years. Trends paid swinging Virginia Ruzici.
The television packages include about $6,000 a game. TCS' bid
In today's match for the $53,000
extensive Ohir&gt;-station networks and
averages $14,000 for the rights to men's prize, Gerulaitis will be gunother fringes which could include
ning for his first tournament victory
each ghllle .
telecasts on independent TV chanOSU officials admit they were sur· over Borg, his practice partner and
nels and satellite broadcasts.
prised by the size of the bids. OSU pal.
Some of the station's commercial
Borg, who turned 24 on Friday, is
Athletic Director Hugh Hindman
competitors, however, are
favored
to win his fifth French
said he expects a decision by the end
questioning the ethics of a public
crown
and
gain a start on the grand
of the week.
Btation competing with commercial
slam
of
tennis,
which consists of the
WOSU is offering to cover 15 OSU
stations. ,
French
Open,
Wimbledon,
the U.S.
home games and the Athletes in Ac·
"I bave a problem philosophically
Open
and
the
Australian
Open.
lion exhibition game. WOSH 's
with an educational network com·
Borg, the defending French cham·
assistant ·director of telecom·
peting in the commercial world," · munications, Mike Mottler, said the pion, has been playing better every
said Ben McKeel, general manager
money would come from a network match of this twr&gt;-week tournament
of WCMH·TV in Columbus. "I don't
he claims to have commitments for at Roland Garros stadium. Friday,
the Swede played almost boringly
think that's the purpose of publlc and not from WOSU coffers.

Davis Hassey signed with the New
York Yankees and advanced to their
Class AAA farm club before ending
his baseball career. He was a fleet
centerfielder, nicknamed Deerfoot,
in shl!rp contrast to his son, who is a
slow-moving base runner.
But neither father nor son minds
that Ron failed to receive his

24-24.
"My father loved to pJ,.y ball with
us," Hassey said. " He would take
my brother Joe and me out to the
park. There we would hit and hit. He
made me a good hitter, taught me
the right things. We lived in Tucson,
. so we were able to practice most of
the winter.'' ·
The tutoring has continued up to
today. When his 27-year-old son is in
a slump, Davis Hassey can usually
count on a phone call.
"By talking to my dad, I can
usually figure out what I'm doing
wrong,'' Hassey said. ''He knows me
so well. After ~ll, he made me a hlt.ter. He saw me play almost all my
games in Little League, high school
and college. He gave me that push I

FRIDAY 13TH
Bean Dinner (Free with Tickets I
Pork Roast !FreewltiiTickets)
Jam Sessions
SATURDAY 14TH &amp;SUNDAY ISTH
PeuhMI.IIadft
Hockl!ltl VIIIIIY Gran
You1111 8 1 - of Blu19rau
Star Valley lloya
Townsend Br01.

Pl1111nl MI. Boys

Hlllbroed

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A-lochlon MlnHrs.

· Biuegrass Stran,ers

Admission SIO For All Three Days
$5.00 Per Dav-6to 12$1 Per Dav; $2 Per Weekend
• No Alcohol or Dogs
lnSieteArea.
e A! I Dogs on LNllles ·

LOCiteG 11: Lewlil Farley's Farm on
Fronklln Twp. 265. For Information
contct: Lewis Farley, Rt. 1, Box 233,
Jackson, Ohlo45640, (6l4l 214·3527.

I

I

I

I'

l

�~The Sunday Times..s.intinel, Sunday, June8, 1980

C-7- TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June8,19110

Grimsley..

LPGA Championship:
Nancy trying to catch second wind, Jane hoping for strong wind
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
MASON (AP) - The spectre of
· her unprecedented year in 1978 is
· haunting Nancy Lopez-Melton.
" I'm putting too much pressure on
. myself. l have to erase those first
two years fr001 my mind" said
;: Lopez-Me1ton, winner of a record
: five straight Ladies Professional
:· Golf Association tournaments two
, seasons ago.
• Victory No. 4 in that string came
: in the LPGA Championship, which
; opened this week over the 6,l13-yard
• par-72 Nicklaus Golf Center's Griz·
:- zly course.
,· "When I was winning those five in
· a row," she said, "I felt nobody
: could beat me. Everything was
: going the way I wanted it. It seemed
: like I didn't miss many putts. All
·.those !~footers and· five-footers

:. .-went in.

"I think about It now and it seems
impossible. Golf was very easy
then."
It's not so easy for her now.
Lopez-Melton has won only once in
1980. The top money winner in 1978
and 1979 stands fourth With $78,000
this year.
She hit rock bottom three weeks
ago when she took an 83 at Clifton,
N.J.
"After that 83, I went to my room.
I was sad. I woke up and I was
crymg. l was letting my frustration
out in my dreams. It was a strange
feeling. I didn't know how to react to
it," she said after a practice round
Tuesday.
"I've kind of felt sorry for myself
this year. I've made excuses. Compared to the way I want to hit the
ball, I played badly. I'm not hitting it
like my first two years. My swing
has changed. It's flat. I've got to get

it back the way it was. "
Lopez-Melton lives with her
husband, Cincinnati television sportscaster Tim Melton, in a condominium along the Grizzly 's 18th
fairway. She believes this may be
the week she snaps out of her slump . .
"I think my chances are good
here," she said before the tour·
nament began. "I've got my confidence back. And this course is good
for .me. I'm long off the tee," she
said.
The 23-year-old says she plays an
occasional nine holes on the Grizzly
when she is home and concedes she
may have an edge in one area.
"I might know these greens a little
better than the other players," she
said.

Association Championship.
"I would like to .see the wind blow
pretty hard the rest of the way, "
said the 34-year-old veteran who was
tied for the 36-hole lead at 139 with
Nancy Lopez-Melton and Sally Little
in the first major women's tournament of the year.
Blalock, still without a major
championship among her 27
professional victories in 11 years, is
acknowledged as a great wind
player. She proved it Friday. She
shot a 3-under-par 69 over the
Nicklaus Golf Center Grizzly layout
"The wind weeds out some players
who aren't adept in it. Under perfect
conditions, this course is a putting
contest. Under windy conditions, it's
a shotmakers contest,'' said
Blalock, who learned the game on an

years.
The 19711-79 LPGA Player of the
Year explained her poor start of 3
over par after the first five holes.
She knocked a ball out of bounds on
the fourth hole for a double-bogey 7.
That might have been her turning
point.
" When I started off, I was fighting
the wind. I was swinging too .hard.
That's the worst thing you can do in
the wind. When I knocked that ball
out, I settled down. I slowed my

Co-leading Jane Blalock had a
windy request Saturday in the
Ladi es Professional Golf

oceanside course in New Ham..

swing down,'' she said.

pshire.
Uttle had 70 and Lopez-Mellon 72

It helped. She birdied three of her
last 10 holes for a piece of the lead.

to create the midway tie for the lead
in this $150,000 tournament, of which
$22,500 goes to Sunday's winner.
The swirling wind, hitting 30
knots, almost blew away LopezMelton's chances for second LPGA II
Championship in the last three

r;;;:;;:;;::;;;:;;;:;;;====;;;;;

a

Cyclist took long road to fame
,...

GOLDEN, Colo. - Most athletes
try to make a name for themselves
and then retire, but motorcycle
racer Corky Keener did just the opposite.
After "laying off" motorcycle
racing for five years, Keener retur·
ned to the American Motorcyclist
Association Winston Pro Series in
1971 and within three years, he earned a national reputation as one of
the most consistent riders on the circuit.
"I turned pro in 1964 and earned
my expert rating in 1966, but I
couldn 't afford to go racing then,"
explains Keener, affectionately
known as "Mr. Dirt" for his exploits
on the many mile and half-mile dirt
tracks on the series. "Su !laid off for
a while.
" I started to get more serious
about it again in 1971 and kept
plugging away until I got some
help, " adds the 34-year-old rider.
Help came in the form of Bart
Markel, legendary three-time AMA
national champion. "I rode for Bart
in '73 and '74 and won two national
events in '7 4," notes Keener.
. Keener finished seventh in the Pro
standings that year, a feat which
helped prompt an invitation from
Harley-Davidson to, join th e
prestigious factory team.
"Everything I earned was due to
Bart," says Keener. "He instilled a

'

Corky Keener

winning attitude in me just as he has
with many other riders. He taught
me to race to win, not for third or
fourth . The biggest part of this sport
is mental and Bart played a major
role in developing my mental attitude."
Racing under the HarleyDavidson banner in '75, Keener won
back-t&lt;rback dirt track races at
Syracuse and Toledo and ·finished
fourth in the season standings. He
appeared ready to challenge cl)am·
pion Gary Scottforthe 1976 title.
The Michigan native won the
Harrington, DeL, half-mile race, but
fate then reared its ugly head when
Keener suffered a broken leg in a
crash in Peoria, Ill. He was sidelined
for the reason of the season.
" I was philosophical about the in·
iury," admits Keener. "! just
figured I'd get over it and come back
as competitive the next season."
He bounced back to finish sixth in
the Pro standings in both '77 and '78,
though he didn't win a national
event. At Syracuse last season,
Keener came within a bike-length of
winning his first national since -76,
but was just noted out by Steve
Morehead of Findlay, Ohio.
"I could have been disgusted with
myself, but I put in a 100 percent effort and did the absolute best I could
at Syracuse," recalls Keener, who
fini shed lOth in the '79 standings. " I

O'Brien says pro cage faces future challenges
LOS ANGELES (APJ - Five
years ago, Larry O'Brien - fanner
Postmaster General, chairman of
the National Democratic Corrunittee
and adviser to Presidents Kennedy
· and ·Johnson - left the political
arena and became commissioner of
the National Basketball Association.
As he turns the corner into his sixth year, O'Brien sees a challenging
time ahead for pro basketball.

And he's positive the NBA will
pass that test.

" People who have been talking
about the decline of pro basketball
may be surprised," he said. " I think
we have the potential to grow very
strong in the J!lllls."
O'Brien was interviewed about the
state of the NBA during a break in
,the meetings last week. The league 's
coaches and general managers en·
•'Everything is in our hands now,' ' . ded their three-day sessions Friday.
The scene now shifts to Coronado,
he said during a break in last week's
Calif.
", near San Diego, for the Board
annual
NBA
swnmer
meetings.
"If
1
of Governors meetings that begin
we don't move forward as I enviSion,
we have nobody to blame but our- Tuesday.
selves and I will take the primary
When O'Brien signed on as NBA
and fundamental blame.
conunissioner on June 1, 1975, the
situation was far more chaotic than
~•TIJere are no excuses anymore.
it is today. In fact, chaos was the
There might have been, in the past,
rule of thuplb for the league since it
some vital reasons for our lack d.
was formed in 1946.
progress, but they don't exist
"Even in the glory years of the
anymore. We've got our shot at it
now, and the test becomes ours Boston Celtics, whom l followed as a
fan while growing up in Springfield,
solely."

Mass., the fact is that professional
basketball was always on an uneven
keeL It was an off-and-on-again
struggle all that time," said the 62year-old O'~rien as he chainsmoked cigarettes in his penthouse
suite at the Century Plaza HoteL
" And when I came aboard, people
were saying the Oscar Robertson
(antitrust) suit had been in existence five or six years, the opposing
views were embedded in cement and
there was no area for negotiation.
Well, I couldn't accept that. I got
these people from both sides and
said, 'Let's work something out." '

in 1977, when Bill Walton led Portland to the NBA title. And behind
the scenes, O'Brien worked to
strengthen the league's weak franchises at the time - Houston, Atlanta , Indiana and New Jersey.
"I'm optimistic that this is the
start of a new period of stability and
strengthening for the NBA," said
O'Brien. "We still have problems,
such as the unchecked proliferation
of our sport on television, par. ticularly cable TV. And we have to
do a better job of marketing our
product. We want to improve the
coordination of the marketing effort
between the teams and the league of
lice."

(Continued from Page C-3 J
might be obliged to support a $10
million funding program to replace
lost revenues resulting from the
decision.
Perhaps the final irony in all of
this boycott business comes from the
alphageticallist of nations declaring
that they would indeed attend the
Games in the Soviet Union.
The first country on the list is
Afghanistan.

just remembered Bart's philosophy :
· go on to the next race and give it
your best shot. "
Durin g
th e
mid
'70s when Keener was making his
comeback from the leg injury, the
competition at each national event
increased tremendously, and he attributes it to the iuflux of young and
talented riders.
"I got a late start in racing," says
Keener. "I was already older than
most of the other riders when !·came
out of retirement in '71. Most of
these kids today are having good
years at 16, 19 or 20. They got started
in racing when they were about 12 or
13. They've got a lot of experience by
the time they' re 2C and that has
made the competition really close
and intense."
While many a veteran rider has
found it difficult to keep up wiih the
younger set, Keener enjoys this
challenge and he has no intention of
quitting just yet.
"I'm traveling around, making
good money and having the time of
my life," says Keener. "I get a lot of
enjoyment out of not only racing, but
the people."

'I

BE HIS
PRIDE &amp; JOY
on Father' s Day, June 15
Flowers, a thoughtful way
to show you care. Our shop
is brimming with gilts
designed especially for
Dads, including fresh ar·
rangements, planters, and
green and flowering
plants.

"The Way
America
Sends
love"

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard VanMeter
Ph. 992 -2039
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Oh
or 992·5721
We accept all major credit
cards, and we wire flowers
everywhere.

r··cARRiERsNEEDE01
i FOR THE DAILY SENTI.NEL
t
i•
4 ROUTES OPEN

2 IN MIDDLEPORT.- 2 IN POMEROY

••

..

Ted Turner:
Braves, Hawks owner's clones built empire
EDITOR'S NOTE - Ted Tlaroer,
lbe miWOIIIllre yacbllliiUIII and
. bueball owner, Ia aeldom Gill ollbe
llmell&amp;hl 'l'hlll monlb, to co•
sldenble laulare, be la~bed his
new cable lelevlalon newa network.
Behind lbat enterprue, 81 behind
TUrner blmaelf, are many Ted 1'urnera, and thll portrait toucbea on
mostoflbem.
By JOHN BARBOUR
AP Newsfeature Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- One of the Ted
T_urners sitting behind his desk turn.S
his eyes away and his voice cracks
ever so slightly as he ell)llains how
he too~. over his father's business at
.age 2~ because I had to. It's hard to
descnbe exactly how I felt because
my father and I were extremely
cl~. .
I decided to throw mysel,fintomy
work ~.;ret what bappened out of
my nund.
.
He says nothing more of his
father's suicide and it is nearly 30
sile~t ~nds before his eyes return
to his VISitor.
Now, at 41, the handsome
millionalre with the straight line
moustache, the straight line teeth,
the . strai~t line eyes and the
str&amp;ght line approach keeps marching straight ahead. The motto on
his desk faces his visitors with
"Lead, follow, or get out of th~
way. "
Once, with a short lead in an ocean
sailing race, a tug and barge with a
long taut cable crossed between his
yacht and the finishing buoy. The
crew urged him to turn away, risk
the lead to save the boat from being
demasted. Ted Turner held course.
It was the tug that slackened cable
and Turner rode over it to victory.
He calls his best Tenacious.
Once, he said, "If I only had a little
humility, I'd be perfect."
"I say a lot of things," he says now
in rare understatement. It leads to a
lot of other Ted Turner images.
There is the brash heretic
challenging the elite sailing
establislunent. There is the tobacc&lt;r
chewing, beer-ilrinking baseball
owner pretending to be dead on the
dugout roof while his team plays
dead on the field. There is the
devoted father of five, taking his
children sailing or for a walk in the
woodS. There is the intimidator who
tries to keep strangers off balance.
There is the adored husband, the
macho male, the respected, even
loved, boss, the man with a penchant
for saying shocking things.
But the excuse for all of this is Ted
Turner the doer. l:ie tooK rus Iatner'S
faltering venture into billboards and
rescued it. He branched into radio
and television; His "superstation" in
Atlanta, with its nenu of old movies,
old series and sports, is beamed via
satellite as far west as Hawaii. He
owns the Atlanta Braves baseball
team, the Atlanta Hawks basketball
team and part of the Atlanta Chiefs

soccer team. He piloted Coura eous
to win the America's Cup of t:z!eter
sailing in 1977 and plans to defend it
this year.
And that's not all He is stakin
everything 00 a ne~ 24-hour cab!~
television news network. That en·
terprise, reportedly coasting
something like $50 million for starters,
month.
hpesthe
it
will began
break this
what
he He
calls
stranglehold that network television
has on American values American
children, American time.'
Coincidentally, it will allow Ted
Turner's view of the world to ocupy
the same space, and maybe even
make Ted Turner a lot of money. No
one who knows him bets against Ted
Turner.
He enjays playing David in his
self.&lt;Jeclared war with Goliath. And
he does it with a kind of teenage en·
thusiasm. There is something
almost childlike in the way he
knocks doWn history into small Turneresque capsules and uses them in
a rapid fire, drawling, evangelistic
way that carries him from Armageddon to Red China, from Nero
toHitler,fromDDTtoJoanofArcin
minutes. All of it punctuated with
aphorisms and quotations:
"Where there's a will there's a
way. That's a great sta~ment and
another is 'What the mind of 'man
' and believe, the mind
can conceive
of man can achieve' ... Idleness is
the devil's workshop ... A coward
dies a thousand times, a brave man
but once."
"He moves forward so fast," says
a longtime associate, "that he may
make nine wrong decisioM, but they
are corrected by the velocity."
The same friend says, "Ted would
make Norman Vincent Peale look
·like a pessimist. He could find a
diamond in an acre of manure."
Ted Turner has found his share of
diamonds. With the money he made ·
on outdoor advertising, he moved into television and sports, parlaying
an audience of perhaps a million in
the Atlanta area into 8.5 million
households nationwide. Now the
good people of Atlanta can watch
their Braves play live and in the wee
hours on tape, and the good people of
Ringling, Okla., Eastport, Maine,
and Fleetland, Wyo., can share that
precarious pleasure via satellite and
cable.
How Ted Turner leapfrogged
copyright laws and the Federal
Communications Commission is an
example of his "damn the tor·
pedoes" Style.
Turner worked out plans to beam
his signal to one of the com·
munications satellites hoveri!lg over
the United States, and thence to the
webs of cable stations on the ground.
But there were daunting problems.
He was licensed for the Atlanta area
only, and he had leased the old
movies and TV series for that area
only.

tra competitions.
Miller said the USOC needs to
raise $9.7 million to make up for the
loss of anticipated revenues brought
about by President Carter's call for
a boycott, $8.5 million for the expanded · competitions and $12.5
million to maintain the USOC
programs.
The federal government could

provide $10 million in matching funds, although the Senate appropriations committee voted out a
bill calling for only $6 million. ACar·
ter administration spokesman said
the president would ask Congress to
increase the figure.
He also said the athletes will also
receive a special gold medal from
Congress.

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING Of

. BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC CENTER
113 Court St., 2nd floor
Hours by Appointment

THE FORMER OFFICE OF

DR. N. W. COMPTON
Wiil be open for ·business starting June 9, 1980, with Op·
tometrists R. Keith King, O.D., and Richard H. Billman
11,0.0.

.
Now an rndependent company
picks up th~ Signal and rebro~dcasts It to the cable
stations that pay the independent company a tariff. Turner
gets . notone~nt.Buthe chargesad-

vertiSfrs on his WTBS Channel17 for
reaching the larger audience. And

could get a third-round and a fifthround choice for him and l.'d like the
chance to try."
Whitley, who was the eighth
player picked in the 1977 college
draft, is one of three Bengals defensive lineman who are balking at
Coach Forrest Gregg's plans to use a
3-4 defense. ,Whitley said be does not
want to play nose guard if he cannot
get his_contract renegotiated, and
would like to be traded.

Tbat leaves Whitley to co~
and eat. WhiUey, who played last
season at 264 pounds, reported to the
Bengals' camp Cor veterans last
weekend at 282, Crawford said.
"! bad him eating for two weeks
before tbe camp," Crawford said. "I
wanted him at 290."
Crawford reasoned that the added
weight would put additional
pressure on tbe Bengals to negotiate
with or trade Whitley.

he
.now has
the_ market
attract
national
advertiSers
and totheir
fat 11'•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-~~;
wallets as well.
Ted Turner's enterprises pay him
a reported $285,000 a year, but he is
not a man who lives high on the hog.
He has three cars, including ·a Mer·
cedes, but he drives a battered often
dirty, old blue Toyota. Wh~n he
travels with his basketball team, the
long·legged players ride in first
class by contract, and the boss sits
back in tourist.

SUNDAY, JUNE 8th
2 PM til 4 PM

He lets his people handle details
a~d they ~all themselves Alley
Fighters, a kind of "We're No.2" or
Hooligan Navy esprit. He is said not
to pay lavishly, but fairly.
Turner's hired Daniel Schorr, the
former CBS reporter, as his chief
correspondent in the 65 person
Washington offoce of his new cable
news network. He's promised time
to such divergent personalities as
Bella Abzug, Ralph Nader, Phyllis
Schafly, William Simon and Richrd
Reeves.
In his small office, the walls sporting sailing pictures and one end
crammed with more than 50
trophies. Turner lights up a bummed
cigar he's trying to quit and worried
about Armageddon.

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CORNER OF 4TH &amp; SYCAMORE

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••••••••••••••••••••

And they did. The Robertson suit
was settled to the satisfaction of both.
the owners and the Players
Association, paving the way for the
absorption of four teams from the
about-t&lt;rexpire American Basketball Association in 1976. The league
enjoyed a banner year on the court

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;i ~;;;,.~;,,

Ph. 992·2920

.

CINCINNATI (APJ - The agent
for disgruntled CincilU18ti Bengals
defensiVe tackle Wiison Whitley
wants pennission to work out a
trade with another team.
Thomas Crawford said he wants
permission from the Bengals to try
to arrange a deal for Whitley. But
the Bengals are not likely to give approvaL
" Wilson wants out and I think
there's interest in him around the
league," Crawford said. "I think I

FOR MORE INFORMATION

}

Boycott threatens '84 Olympic Games
WASHINGTON (APJ - U. S.
Olympic Committee official F. Don
Miller believes the boycott of the
Swnmer Games in Moscow next
month will have an adverse effect on
the 1!1114 Games in Los Angeles.
Miller, USOC executive director,
told sports editors Friday he does
not believe the Soviet Union and
nations friendly to the Russians will
participate in the Sumriler Games in
the United States in four years.
"The Soviets now say th~y will
participate because it is now to their
advantage to say so," Miller told tbe
Associated Press Sports Editors
convention. "When we get to 1983,
depending on world tensions, the
Soviets and the other Socialist countries will not participate."
Miller also said there will be a
meeting of the presidents of the 25
National Governing BodieS of the
sports in the Summer Games in
Chicago next Tuesday to discuss the
raising of money for pre-Olympic'
and post-Olympic coinpetitiori.
Tbe USOC announced Monday the
start of a fund·raising campaiMn to
gain $30 million b)"Nciv. 1 to carry on
present training and sports
medicine programs and hold the- ex·

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••

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,,

�~The Sunday Times..s.intinel, Sunday, June8, 1980

C-7- TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June8,19110

Grimsley..

LPGA Championship:
Nancy trying to catch second wind, Jane hoping for strong wind
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
MASON (AP) - The spectre of
· her unprecedented year in 1978 is
· haunting Nancy Lopez-Melton.
" I'm putting too much pressure on
. myself. l have to erase those first
two years fr001 my mind" said
;: Lopez-Me1ton, winner of a record
: five straight Ladies Professional
:· Golf Association tournaments two
, seasons ago.
• Victory No. 4 in that string came
: in the LPGA Championship, which
; opened this week over the 6,l13-yard
• par-72 Nicklaus Golf Center's Griz·
:- zly course.
,· "When I was winning those five in
· a row," she said, "I felt nobody
: could beat me. Everything was
: going the way I wanted it. It seemed
: like I didn't miss many putts. All
·.those !~footers and· five-footers

:. .-went in.

"I think about It now and it seems
impossible. Golf was very easy
then."
It's not so easy for her now.
Lopez-Melton has won only once in
1980. The top money winner in 1978
and 1979 stands fourth With $78,000
this year.
She hit rock bottom three weeks
ago when she took an 83 at Clifton,
N.J.
"After that 83, I went to my room.
I was sad. I woke up and I was
crymg. l was letting my frustration
out in my dreams. It was a strange
feeling. I didn't know how to react to
it," she said after a practice round
Tuesday.
"I've kind of felt sorry for myself
this year. I've made excuses. Compared to the way I want to hit the
ball, I played badly. I'm not hitting it
like my first two years. My swing
has changed. It's flat. I've got to get

it back the way it was. "
Lopez-Melton lives with her
husband, Cincinnati television sportscaster Tim Melton, in a condominium along the Grizzly 's 18th
fairway. She believes this may be
the week she snaps out of her slump . .
"I think my chances are good
here," she said before the tour·
nament began. "I've got my confidence back. And this course is good
for .me. I'm long off the tee," she
said.
The 23-year-old says she plays an
occasional nine holes on the Grizzly
when she is home and concedes she
may have an edge in one area.
"I might know these greens a little
better than the other players," she
said.

Association Championship.
"I would like to .see the wind blow
pretty hard the rest of the way, "
said the 34-year-old veteran who was
tied for the 36-hole lead at 139 with
Nancy Lopez-Melton and Sally Little
in the first major women's tournament of the year.
Blalock, still without a major
championship among her 27
professional victories in 11 years, is
acknowledged as a great wind
player. She proved it Friday. She
shot a 3-under-par 69 over the
Nicklaus Golf Center Grizzly layout
"The wind weeds out some players
who aren't adept in it. Under perfect
conditions, this course is a putting
contest. Under windy conditions, it's
a shotmakers contest,'' said
Blalock, who learned the game on an

years.
The 19711-79 LPGA Player of the
Year explained her poor start of 3
over par after the first five holes.
She knocked a ball out of bounds on
the fourth hole for a double-bogey 7.
That might have been her turning
point.
" When I started off, I was fighting
the wind. I was swinging too .hard.
That's the worst thing you can do in
the wind. When I knocked that ball
out, I settled down. I slowed my

Co-leading Jane Blalock had a
windy request Saturday in the
Ladi es Professional Golf

oceanside course in New Ham..

swing down,'' she said.

pshire.
Uttle had 70 and Lopez-Mellon 72

It helped. She birdied three of her
last 10 holes for a piece of the lead.

to create the midway tie for the lead
in this $150,000 tournament, of which
$22,500 goes to Sunday's winner.
The swirling wind, hitting 30
knots, almost blew away LopezMelton's chances for second LPGA II
Championship in the last three

r;;;:;;:;;::;;;:;;;:;;;====;;;;;

a

Cyclist took long road to fame
,...

GOLDEN, Colo. - Most athletes
try to make a name for themselves
and then retire, but motorcycle
racer Corky Keener did just the opposite.
After "laying off" motorcycle
racing for five years, Keener retur·
ned to the American Motorcyclist
Association Winston Pro Series in
1971 and within three years, he earned a national reputation as one of
the most consistent riders on the circuit.
"I turned pro in 1964 and earned
my expert rating in 1966, but I
couldn 't afford to go racing then,"
explains Keener, affectionately
known as "Mr. Dirt" for his exploits
on the many mile and half-mile dirt
tracks on the series. "Su !laid off for
a while.
" I started to get more serious
about it again in 1971 and kept
plugging away until I got some
help, " adds the 34-year-old rider.
Help came in the form of Bart
Markel, legendary three-time AMA
national champion. "I rode for Bart
in '73 and '74 and won two national
events in '7 4," notes Keener.
. Keener finished seventh in the Pro
standings that year, a feat which
helped prompt an invitation from
Harley-Davidson to, join th e
prestigious factory team.
"Everything I earned was due to
Bart," says Keener. "He instilled a

'

Corky Keener

winning attitude in me just as he has
with many other riders. He taught
me to race to win, not for third or
fourth . The biggest part of this sport
is mental and Bart played a major
role in developing my mental attitude."
Racing under the HarleyDavidson banner in '75, Keener won
back-t&lt;rback dirt track races at
Syracuse and Toledo and ·finished
fourth in the season standings. He
appeared ready to challenge cl)am·
pion Gary Scottforthe 1976 title.
The Michigan native won the
Harrington, DeL, half-mile race, but
fate then reared its ugly head when
Keener suffered a broken leg in a
crash in Peoria, Ill. He was sidelined
for the reason of the season.
" I was philosophical about the in·
iury," admits Keener. "! just
figured I'd get over it and come back
as competitive the next season."
He bounced back to finish sixth in
the Pro standings in both '77 and '78,
though he didn't win a national
event. At Syracuse last season,
Keener came within a bike-length of
winning his first national since -76,
but was just noted out by Steve
Morehead of Findlay, Ohio.
"I could have been disgusted with
myself, but I put in a 100 percent effort and did the absolute best I could
at Syracuse," recalls Keener, who
fini shed lOth in the '79 standings. " I

O'Brien says pro cage faces future challenges
LOS ANGELES (APJ - Five
years ago, Larry O'Brien - fanner
Postmaster General, chairman of
the National Democratic Corrunittee
and adviser to Presidents Kennedy
· and ·Johnson - left the political
arena and became commissioner of
the National Basketball Association.
As he turns the corner into his sixth year, O'Brien sees a challenging
time ahead for pro basketball.

And he's positive the NBA will
pass that test.

" People who have been talking
about the decline of pro basketball
may be surprised," he said. " I think
we have the potential to grow very
strong in the J!lllls."
O'Brien was interviewed about the
state of the NBA during a break in
,the meetings last week. The league 's
coaches and general managers en·
•'Everything is in our hands now,' ' . ded their three-day sessions Friday.
The scene now shifts to Coronado,
he said during a break in last week's
Calif.
", near San Diego, for the Board
annual
NBA
swnmer
meetings.
"If
1
of Governors meetings that begin
we don't move forward as I enviSion,
we have nobody to blame but our- Tuesday.
selves and I will take the primary
When O'Brien signed on as NBA
and fundamental blame.
conunissioner on June 1, 1975, the
situation was far more chaotic than
~•TIJere are no excuses anymore.
it is today. In fact, chaos was the
There might have been, in the past,
rule of thuplb for the league since it
some vital reasons for our lack d.
was formed in 1946.
progress, but they don't exist
"Even in the glory years of the
anymore. We've got our shot at it
now, and the test becomes ours Boston Celtics, whom l followed as a
fan while growing up in Springfield,
solely."

Mass., the fact is that professional
basketball was always on an uneven
keeL It was an off-and-on-again
struggle all that time," said the 62year-old O'~rien as he chainsmoked cigarettes in his penthouse
suite at the Century Plaza HoteL
" And when I came aboard, people
were saying the Oscar Robertson
(antitrust) suit had been in existence five or six years, the opposing
views were embedded in cement and
there was no area for negotiation.
Well, I couldn't accept that. I got
these people from both sides and
said, 'Let's work something out." '

in 1977, when Bill Walton led Portland to the NBA title. And behind
the scenes, O'Brien worked to
strengthen the league's weak franchises at the time - Houston, Atlanta , Indiana and New Jersey.
"I'm optimistic that this is the
start of a new period of stability and
strengthening for the NBA," said
O'Brien. "We still have problems,
such as the unchecked proliferation
of our sport on television, par. ticularly cable TV. And we have to
do a better job of marketing our
product. We want to improve the
coordination of the marketing effort
between the teams and the league of
lice."

(Continued from Page C-3 J
might be obliged to support a $10
million funding program to replace
lost revenues resulting from the
decision.
Perhaps the final irony in all of
this boycott business comes from the
alphageticallist of nations declaring
that they would indeed attend the
Games in the Soviet Union.
The first country on the list is
Afghanistan.

just remembered Bart's philosophy :
· go on to the next race and give it
your best shot. "
Durin g
th e
mid
'70s when Keener was making his
comeback from the leg injury, the
competition at each national event
increased tremendously, and he attributes it to the iuflux of young and
talented riders.
"I got a late start in racing," says
Keener. "I was already older than
most of the other riders when !·came
out of retirement in '71. Most of
these kids today are having good
years at 16, 19 or 20. They got started
in racing when they were about 12 or
13. They've got a lot of experience by
the time they' re 2C and that has
made the competition really close
and intense."
While many a veteran rider has
found it difficult to keep up wiih the
younger set, Keener enjoys this
challenge and he has no intention of
quitting just yet.
"I'm traveling around, making
good money and having the time of
my life," says Keener. "I get a lot of
enjoyment out of not only racing, but
the people."

'I

BE HIS
PRIDE &amp; JOY
on Father' s Day, June 15
Flowers, a thoughtful way
to show you care. Our shop
is brimming with gilts
designed especially for
Dads, including fresh ar·
rangements, planters, and
green and flowering
plants.

"The Way
America
Sends
love"

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
Mrs. Millard VanMeter
Ph. 992 -2039
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Oh
or 992·5721
We accept all major credit
cards, and we wire flowers
everywhere.

r··cARRiERsNEEDE01
i FOR THE DAILY SENTI.NEL
t
i•
4 ROUTES OPEN

2 IN MIDDLEPORT.- 2 IN POMEROY

••

..

Ted Turner:
Braves, Hawks owner's clones built empire
EDITOR'S NOTE - Ted Tlaroer,
lbe miWOIIIllre yacbllliiUIII and
. bueball owner, Ia aeldom Gill ollbe
llmell&amp;hl 'l'hlll monlb, to co•
sldenble laulare, be la~bed his
new cable lelevlalon newa network.
Behind lbat enterprue, 81 behind
TUrner blmaelf, are many Ted 1'urnera, and thll portrait toucbea on
mostoflbem.
By JOHN BARBOUR
AP Newsfeature Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- One of the Ted
T_urners sitting behind his desk turn.S
his eyes away and his voice cracks
ever so slightly as he ell)llains how
he too~. over his father's business at
.age 2~ because I had to. It's hard to
descnbe exactly how I felt because
my father and I were extremely
cl~. .
I decided to throw mysel,fintomy
work ~.;ret what bappened out of
my nund.
.
He says nothing more of his
father's suicide and it is nearly 30
sile~t ~nds before his eyes return
to his VISitor.
Now, at 41, the handsome
millionalre with the straight line
moustache, the straight line teeth,
the . strai~t line eyes and the
str&amp;ght line approach keeps marching straight ahead. The motto on
his desk faces his visitors with
"Lead, follow, or get out of th~
way. "
Once, with a short lead in an ocean
sailing race, a tug and barge with a
long taut cable crossed between his
yacht and the finishing buoy. The
crew urged him to turn away, risk
the lead to save the boat from being
demasted. Ted Turner held course.
It was the tug that slackened cable
and Turner rode over it to victory.
He calls his best Tenacious.
Once, he said, "If I only had a little
humility, I'd be perfect."
"I say a lot of things," he says now
in rare understatement. It leads to a
lot of other Ted Turner images.
There is the brash heretic
challenging the elite sailing
establislunent. There is the tobacc&lt;r
chewing, beer-ilrinking baseball
owner pretending to be dead on the
dugout roof while his team plays
dead on the field. There is the
devoted father of five, taking his
children sailing or for a walk in the
woodS. There is the intimidator who
tries to keep strangers off balance.
There is the adored husband, the
macho male, the respected, even
loved, boss, the man with a penchant
for saying shocking things.
But the excuse for all of this is Ted
Turner the doer. l:ie tooK rus Iatner'S
faltering venture into billboards and
rescued it. He branched into radio
and television; His "superstation" in
Atlanta, with its nenu of old movies,
old series and sports, is beamed via
satellite as far west as Hawaii. He
owns the Atlanta Braves baseball
team, the Atlanta Hawks basketball
team and part of the Atlanta Chiefs

soccer team. He piloted Coura eous
to win the America's Cup of t:z!eter
sailing in 1977 and plans to defend it
this year.
And that's not all He is stakin
everything 00 a ne~ 24-hour cab!~
television news network. That en·
terprise, reportedly coasting
something like $50 million for starters,
month.
hpesthe
it
will began
break this
what
he He
calls
stranglehold that network television
has on American values American
children, American time.'
Coincidentally, it will allow Ted
Turner's view of the world to ocupy
the same space, and maybe even
make Ted Turner a lot of money. No
one who knows him bets against Ted
Turner.
He enjays playing David in his
self.&lt;Jeclared war with Goliath. And
he does it with a kind of teenage en·
thusiasm. There is something
almost childlike in the way he
knocks doWn history into small Turneresque capsules and uses them in
a rapid fire, drawling, evangelistic
way that carries him from Armageddon to Red China, from Nero
toHitler,fromDDTtoJoanofArcin
minutes. All of it punctuated with
aphorisms and quotations:
"Where there's a will there's a
way. That's a great sta~ment and
another is 'What the mind of 'man
' and believe, the mind
can conceive
of man can achieve' ... Idleness is
the devil's workshop ... A coward
dies a thousand times, a brave man
but once."
"He moves forward so fast," says
a longtime associate, "that he may
make nine wrong decisioM, but they
are corrected by the velocity."
The same friend says, "Ted would
make Norman Vincent Peale look
·like a pessimist. He could find a
diamond in an acre of manure."
Ted Turner has found his share of
diamonds. With the money he made ·
on outdoor advertising, he moved into television and sports, parlaying
an audience of perhaps a million in
the Atlanta area into 8.5 million
households nationwide. Now the
good people of Atlanta can watch
their Braves play live and in the wee
hours on tape, and the good people of
Ringling, Okla., Eastport, Maine,
and Fleetland, Wyo., can share that
precarious pleasure via satellite and
cable.
How Ted Turner leapfrogged
copyright laws and the Federal
Communications Commission is an
example of his "damn the tor·
pedoes" Style.
Turner worked out plans to beam
his signal to one of the com·
munications satellites hoveri!lg over
the United States, and thence to the
webs of cable stations on the ground.
But there were daunting problems.
He was licensed for the Atlanta area
only, and he had leased the old
movies and TV series for that area
only.

tra competitions.
Miller said the USOC needs to
raise $9.7 million to make up for the
loss of anticipated revenues brought
about by President Carter's call for
a boycott, $8.5 million for the expanded · competitions and $12.5
million to maintain the USOC
programs.
The federal government could

provide $10 million in matching funds, although the Senate appropriations committee voted out a
bill calling for only $6 million. ACar·
ter administration spokesman said
the president would ask Congress to
increase the figure.
He also said the athletes will also
receive a special gold medal from
Congress.

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING Of

. BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC CENTER
113 Court St., 2nd floor
Hours by Appointment

THE FORMER OFFICE OF

DR. N. W. COMPTON
Wiil be open for ·business starting June 9, 1980, with Op·
tometrists R. Keith King, O.D., and Richard H. Billman
11,0.0.

.
Now an rndependent company
picks up th~ Signal and rebro~dcasts It to the cable
stations that pay the independent company a tariff. Turner
gets . notone~nt.Buthe chargesad-

vertiSfrs on his WTBS Channel17 for
reaching the larger audience. And

could get a third-round and a fifthround choice for him and l.'d like the
chance to try."
Whitley, who was the eighth
player picked in the 1977 college
draft, is one of three Bengals defensive lineman who are balking at
Coach Forrest Gregg's plans to use a
3-4 defense. ,Whitley said be does not
want to play nose guard if he cannot
get his_contract renegotiated, and
would like to be traded.

Tbat leaves Whitley to co~
and eat. WhiUey, who played last
season at 264 pounds, reported to the
Bengals' camp Cor veterans last
weekend at 282, Crawford said.
"! bad him eating for two weeks
before tbe camp," Crawford said. "I
wanted him at 290."
Crawford reasoned that the added
weight would put additional
pressure on tbe Bengals to negotiate
with or trade Whitley.

he
.now has
the_ market
attract
national
advertiSers
and totheir
fat 11'•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-~~;
wallets as well.
Ted Turner's enterprises pay him
a reported $285,000 a year, but he is
not a man who lives high on the hog.
He has three cars, including ·a Mer·
cedes, but he drives a battered often
dirty, old blue Toyota. Wh~n he
travels with his basketball team, the
long·legged players ride in first
class by contract, and the boss sits
back in tourist.

SUNDAY, JUNE 8th
2 PM til 4 PM

He lets his people handle details
a~d they ~all themselves Alley
Fighters, a kind of "We're No.2" or
Hooligan Navy esprit. He is said not
to pay lavishly, but fairly.
Turner's hired Daniel Schorr, the
former CBS reporter, as his chief
correspondent in the 65 person
Washington offoce of his new cable
news network. He's promised time
to such divergent personalities as
Bella Abzug, Ralph Nader, Phyllis
Schafly, William Simon and Richrd
Reeves.
In his small office, the walls sporting sailing pictures and one end
crammed with more than 50
trophies. Turner lights up a bummed
cigar he's trying to quit and worried
about Armageddon.

SYCAMORE BRANCH

Holzer Clinic Ltd.
CORNER OF 4TH &amp; SYCAMORE

GAU.IPOLIS, OHIO

"Take this opportunity to see the new facility firsthand."

Ask

and

shall receive.

CALL 992-2156
BElWEEN 8:30 &amp;5:00

••••••••••••••••••••

And they did. The Robertson suit
was settled to the satisfaction of both.
the owners and the Players
Association, paving the way for the
absorption of four teams from the
about-t&lt;rexpire American Basketball Association in 1976. The league
enjoyed a banner year on the court

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;i ~;;;,.~;,,

Ph. 992·2920

.

CINCINNATI (APJ - The agent
for disgruntled CincilU18ti Bengals
defensiVe tackle Wiison Whitley
wants pennission to work out a
trade with another team.
Thomas Crawford said he wants
permission from the Bengals to try
to arrange a deal for Whitley. But
the Bengals are not likely to give approvaL
" Wilson wants out and I think
there's interest in him around the
league," Crawford said. "I think I

FOR MORE INFORMATION

}

Boycott threatens '84 Olympic Games
WASHINGTON (APJ - U. S.
Olympic Committee official F. Don
Miller believes the boycott of the
Swnmer Games in Moscow next
month will have an adverse effect on
the 1!1114 Games in Los Angeles.
Miller, USOC executive director,
told sports editors Friday he does
not believe the Soviet Union and
nations friendly to the Russians will
participate in the Sumriler Games in
the United States in four years.
"The Soviets now say th~y will
participate because it is now to their
advantage to say so," Miller told tbe
Associated Press Sports Editors
convention. "When we get to 1983,
depending on world tensions, the
Soviets and the other Socialist countries will not participate."
Miller also said there will be a
meeting of the presidents of the 25
National Governing BodieS of the
sports in the Summer Games in
Chicago next Tuesday to discuss the
raising of money for pre-Olympic'
and post-Olympic coinpetitiori.
Tbe USOC announced Monday the
start of a fund·raising campaiMn to
gain $30 million b)"Nciv. 1 to carry on
present training and sports
medicine programs and hold the- ex·

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�~The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday,

June 8, 1900

Carter's incumbency, bank roll wins Ohio

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WASffiNGTON (AP) - The Carter admiiJii;tration plans to hold fast
to its anti-inflation economic policies
despite the second consecutive month of dr8111atic increase · in the
nation's unemployment rate, a top
official says.
"Our ~Dost serious problem in the
economic field Is inflation," .
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller said Friday at a news confence.
Miller commented after the government reported that unemployment
surged to 7.8 percent of the labor force in May, which means there were
8.2 million workers who wanted jobs
but couldn't find the~D. The unemployment rate was 7 percent in April
and 6.2 percent in March.
The May unemploY~Dent rate was
the highest since November of 1976,
when it also was 7.8 percent, and
was the most for any month
President Carter has been in office.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - . A
proliferation of federal programs
during the past decade have
provided a multi-billion-ilollar crutch for Ohio governments - a prop
that city officials are worried an
economy-minded Congress may
whittle away.
Federal grant programs poured
$674.7 million into the Colwnbus,
Ohio area last year - 111ore than the
city of Columbus spends for its
operations in fiveyears.
Cleveland, which has a general
fund budget of about $200 million,
saw $358 million now into the area
from a lllBssive outpouring. of
federal funds for programs such as
welfare, food stamps arid ,unemploY"'fnt assistance, as well as
revenue sharing and block grants.
Federal revenue sharing started
out as a billion-dollar windfall for
the nation's cities. Today no one is
talking -,:: as some local officials did
eight yeara •go - about possible tax
cuts. 'Now the big concern among
city officials iS over cutbacks.
.
"Cleveland, like every major city,
Ia heavily rel1infl on the federal
aove111Jl1Cnt for subsidies," ·saYS

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diana to the Pennsylvania border,
along with Mahoning, Portage, ·
Trumbull and Summit. He carried
no big city south of Akron.
The senator campaigned on all or
parts of 11 days in Ohio, and spent
only one day in the Cincinnati and
Dayton area . He canceled the only
appearance he had planned in
Colun1bus.
Carter visited the state only once
- Columbus and the Cleveland area
- but Vice President Mondale and
First Lady Rosaiynn Carter were
here two days, along with the
president's mother, Mrs. Lillian

Carter also added $50,000 to what
had been a $150,000 budget - not
counting the $400,000 media blitz he
bankrolled in all of the state's II
major media markets.
Kennedy wound up spending about
$100,000 in Ohio, after allocating
$50,000 in the closing days to radio
and television spots in the greater
Cleveland area. Earlier he had
bought some radio and TV time in
eastern Ohio, so they could be heard
and seen · in neighboring West
Virginia, which also held its primary
last week.
On his first and only visit, Carter

generally defended his record and
asserted that his administration is
"turning the tide'' on the nation 's
energy, economic and foreign policy
problems.
Carter enjoyeq the support of most
state and local party leaders, including House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, the first to ·
publicly endorse him lor re-election,
in September 1979.
Riffe said he was not sUrprised
that Kennedy . won in the
economically troubled cities in nor·
thetn Ohio. " With steel and all the
other problems, he (Caiter ) was
bound to take the blame," he said.
The speaker asserted that Kennedy's vote was a protest against
Carter, rather .than an endorsement
of Kennedy. " If it hadn 't been for the
economic problems, Carter would
have devastated Kennedy up there,"
he said.
J. Patrick Leahy, executive director of the Ohio Democratic Party,
said "there is no question about it.
The economy was a negative factor
in the presi dent's campaign."

Now that the bitter primary campaign is behind them, Carter
Democrats- who also include State
Democratic Chainnan Paul Tipps hope they can persuade the Kennedy
forces to call off their campaign. ·
But Cuyahoga County Chairman
Tim Hagan , Kennedy's Ohio cam- .
paign director, sa id last week they
have no intention off doing so.
"We're still in the race," he said.
Hagan and other Kennedy backers
say they hope they can persuade the
nationa~ convention· next August to
change rules that bind delegate$ to
their designated candidates. That
would allow potential Carter defectors to vote for Kennedy.
But Tipps and Leahy say Carter
has the delegate strength to head off
any such effort.
Tipps, meanwhile, hopes Kennedy
will call it all off and help unite the
party. " It's clear that we have an
uphill battle. The key is how quickly
we can put our party back together .
We may not be able to do much until
August 14 (the start of the Convention)," he said.

--

SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1980

"One . of the most startling
things we found in our investigation is that there is little or
no question that' Congress, by a
simple majority vote, can get the
federal courts out of these matters, '' the veteran attorney·
lawmaker said.
He said the U.S. Supreme Court
and other federal tribunals
should not be pennitted to
"legislate" with edicts that hit
hardest at the state and local
levels of government.
This applies not only to busing,
but other subjects such as abortion, capital punishment, mental
health, prisons "and you name
it," said Norris.
The key thing the task force
determined is that Congress can
enact statutes saying that the
federal courts' jurisdiction does
not include certain areas of ac·
tivity, said the lawmaker.
"Congress can define the sutr
ject matter jurisdiction of the
courts,''Norris asserted.
The task force co-chairman

said the report does not contain
specific recommendations with
regard to life terms and the
removal of judges because
" there are so many alternatives."
Norris said he personally would
like to see judges appointed to
specific terms, after which they
would go before voters for
authority to continue in office.
But the report asks that
Congress initiate a constitutional
amendment that would improve
appointment, tenure and removal
procedures.
"Lifetime appointments do not
work beeause there is no accountability," Norris said.
In addition to mailing the
report to Tower, Norris and State
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAshland, plan to testify on the
issue next month at platfonn
hearings of the Republican
National Convention in Detroit.
The task force was created by
an act of the 1978 Ohio
Republican Convention.

TOP STATE PRIZE - Pleasant and Mary Ellis,
Middleport, left, won the top prize given ih Ohio in the
spring pickup sales promotion of Landmark, Inc., a
1980 Ford F-100 truck. Presenting the truck to Mr. and

The sharp increase in unem·
ployment is the result of the
recession that has the nation's
economy in its grip.
But while the jobless rate war·
sened, the inflation rate improved in
May. Wholesale prices rose just 0.3
percent during the month, the lowest
monthly increase in 2t years, the
Labor Department reported.
Wholesale prices had increased 0.5
percent in April. The slower increases in the past two months even·
tually will bring price moderation
for consumers at the retail level.
But Miller said the administration
still must focus its policies on
fighting inflation, which he said is
the best way " to hasten the day
when we get our unemployed back to
work."

Even though he acknowledged
that the recession shows signs of
being worse than expected, he said
the administration will resist a

Mrs. Ellis Friday were Jack Ca-rsey, third from left,
Meigs Landmark Manager, and Duane Wilkms, sales
manager of Landmark, Inc. Some $10,000 in prizes
were given in the annual spring promotion.

No new gas tax effort forthcoming ·

COLUMBUS, Olilo (AP) - No effort will be made this year to pass a
gasoline tax hike despite voter rejection last week of a major highway
improvement bond issue.
" There has been no discussion on
it," House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, said at week's
end. "Every poll I've seen shows the
people are opposed to it."
Reviewing unfinished business of
the Legislature, which reconvenes
change in economic policies, such as
Tuesday after a six-week campaign
endorsing a tax cut or major exrecess, Riffe noted that some state
pansion of job-creating programs.
officials wanted a gasoline tax inIn another report reflecting the
crease as an alternative to last
recession, the Federal Reserve
week's Ballot Issue 3.
Board reported Friday that conThat ill-fated proposal would have
sumer installment debt declined
allowed the transportation depart·
nearly $2 biliion in April as
ment to issue bonds, perhaps up to
Americans paid off more than they
$500 million the next five years, to
borrowed for the first time since
make badly needed repairs on
May1975.
· Ohio's deteriorarting roads and
The decline in debt, which was at
bridges.
an annual rate of 8 percent, was the
But the speaker said voters,
steepest since the government
nearly 60 percent of whom said no,
began tabulating the debt statistics probably didn't understand, or
in 1943.
perhaps believe, that the bonds
The May increase of 0.3 percent would have been paid off with
for wholesale prices, as reported in
existiog tax revenues .
the Labor Department's Producer
An effort was made in the
Price Index for Finished Goods, was
Legislature last winter to hike the
the smallest since a 0.2 percent instate's seven-cent-a-gallon gasoline
crease in September 1977.
tax two or three cents a gallon. Such
The 7.8 percent unemployment
a boost would bring in $100 millionrate for May already is above the
$150 million a year.
Carter administration's prediction
But there were are not enough
of7.2percent at year's end.

votes to pass the politically-sensitive
tax boost then and the situation has
not changed, Riffe said.
"No sir. There will not be an effort
to pass a gas tax this year. It's an
election year. I'm just being honest
about it," he added.
Members of the Senate and House
return 'Tuesday for a June session
which is expected to last two or
possibly three weeks. Leaders then
hope to adjourn until after the
November election although the
speaker said "something always can
happen to make us come back."
Most of this week's activity is expected to be in committees although
the House is scheduled to vote
Tuesday on Senate changes in a
long-debated bill to control litter.
Riffe said he expects the House to
reject the Senate amendments, sending the proposal to a joint conference committee. A bill to control
hazardous wastes was assigned to a
Senate-House committee before the
two chambers went into recess in
mid-April.

The House votes Wednesday on a
major products liability bill.
Already approved by the Senate,
the controversial legislation restricts legal actions against makers and
sellers of products blamed for injuries or deaths alleged to have been
caused by such products.
Riffe and Senate President Oliver
Ocasrk, D-Akron, said they expect
the two chambers, before summer
adjournment, to complete passage
of a bill appropriatiog $45 million. It
is needed to fund a 2 12 percent
property tax cut voted by the
lawmakers in 1979.
The appropriation was put into a
separate bill after the two chambers
feU into a hopeless deadlock over
what should be included in Gov.
James A. Rhodes' massive, $841
million capital improvements bill.
Due to high interest rates the state
would have to pay on bonds, and an
increasingly tight state financial
situation, the big state construction
bill has been tucked away, at least
for the summer.

Resort owners to file suit against firm
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
owners of the posh Rancho La Costa
resort community are entitled to
bring a libel suit against Penthouse
magazine for an article that identified them as underworld crime

figures, the state Court of Appeal
ruled.
The court said Friday that a lower
court erred when it ruled that the
owners were public figures and that
the 1975 article was therefore
privileged.

Economy-minded congress worries big city governments

•1495
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ALUMINUM ROOF KOTE

AP news' analysis

Carter will hold to economic plan

,•16995

VOLLEYBALL - Another ac t10n
;~ me for all ages 8' lloaung net
and reoulatlon s1ze bau .ncluded

NO. 19

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Federal judges who. ordered
busing to achieve racial balance
In the schools should not have had
the authority to do so, an Ohio
Republican task force maintains.
Neither should members of the
federal judiciary serve life terms
without havjng to answer to
voters, said the task force which
also believes it should be easier to
remove ailing or incompetent
jurists from the bench.
·
In a report to be sent riext week
to U.S. Sen. John Tower, RTexas, chairman of the
Republican National Platform
Committee, the 20-member task
force asks the GOP to push for
congressional action limiting the
power of federal judges.
State Rep. Alan E. Norris, RWesterville, the panel's cochaillll8n, said Friday that contrary to what has been a
prevailing opinion, that Congress
- ·without a change in the U.S.
Constitution - can act on its own
in such an effort.

$2799

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Carter.
Kennedy also sent family
representatives.
The president planned well for his
barnstonning after his staff advised
that Kennedy was planning a major
effort in Ohio. . He increased his
operation in the state from five
people in two offices to 30 staff members in nine offices.

Did judges have authority?

00

GRANULAR
, ,,

was the only major union in the state
to endorse the Massachusetts
senator. In two Kennedy counties M.ahoning and Trumbull - unem·
ployment is more than 10 percent
Statewide, it is 7.3 percent.
With the exception of Williams, ottawa, and Geagua counties, where
he barely lost, the senator carried
all the northern countie• from the In-

i~ntin~l ~ ·

'

::::.-=-

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BABY TENDER

Before last Tuesday's balloting,
Paul Tully, the senator's Ohio campaign manager, said he would be
satisfied if Kennedy kept to within 10
percentage points of the president.
Carter wound up with 51 percent of
the Democratic vote and Kennedy
with 41 while longshot candidates
Lyndon LaRouche and Richard B.
Kay shared the remainder.
Kennedy's strategy, it now is
clear, was to concentrate his efforts
in the north, where he blamed
massive unemployment in the auto
and steel industries on the president.
He aU but wrote off central and
southern Ohio and thus conceded to
Carter the more conservative areas
of the state.
At one point, Kennedy told a
cheering crowd of United . Auto
Workers in Cleveland that if every
unemployed
autoworker ,
steelworker, and rubberworker in
Ohio voted for him, "Ted Kennedy
will be the next president of the
United States."
The UAW, with 15 percent of its
225,000 Ohio members out of work,

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P ) President Carter used his incwnbency and a huge bankroll to
win Ohio's June 3 preside11tial
primary.
His rival, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, capitalized on northern Ohio's
unemploy~Dent and
economic
problems to make the race
relatively close.
Those were the observations last
week among Democrat watchers
who said carter and Kennedy both
got basically what they were ~oun­
ting on.
Carter carried 76 of the 88 counties
and emerged with 84 national convention delegates, more than enough
to claim the party's nomination in
New York next August.
And Kennedy carried 12 mostly industrialized counties in north and
northeast Ohio to win 77 delegates
and pronounce his long, bwnpy campaign still alive.
Realistically, Kennedy did not expect to defeat Carter in Ohio, the
only state where the president has
campaigned aU year.
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William Reidy, finance director for
thatflnanciaily troubled city. " If the
federal monies were reduced, it
would have a serious impact."
" This is something the city itself
could never replace," Columbus
Finance Director Michael J. Gable
said of the federal programs. "It's
the type of thing that even the state
government could.not replace."
The impact is felt in smaller communities as well. [n Chillicothe,
Mayor Clark Alexander said if it had
I)Ot been for federal funding, "we
would probably have had to raise the
Income tax, or we might have ha.d to
go to special levies on property

taxes."
About $!' million in revenue
sharing and Housing and Urban
Development block grants is helping
Chillicothe maintain ser~ices.
"They enabled us to do street
repairs and sewer work and buy gar·
bage trucks and other rolling stock,' '
the mayor said.
The government's CETA program
pays the salaries of 1,000 of
Cleveland's 10,000 workers. "Community block grants enable the city
to rebuild some of the deteriorating

capital plant-streets and sewers,"
·
Reidy said.
The federal subsidies " are very
necessary at this point," he said.
"We have to get those funds
somewhere."
Actually, the grant programs
represent a small portion of the impact of federal spending in Ohio. As
Gable said, " pro!mbiy most of all we
recognize the impact of spending in
the area ... by federal employees."
The government reports that the
total of cash flowing into Ohio last
year carne to $16.6 billion, including
$4.9 billion for Social Security
payments, $2.7 billion in Defense
Department spending and $501
million in highways funds.
Of the total, $9.3 billion was spent
in the state's six major metropolitan
areas : Cuyahoga County
(Cleveland) $2.8 billion; Franklin
County (Columbus) $2.1 billion;
~milton County (CinciiiJ1ati) $1.73
billion; Montgomery County
(Dayton) $1.17 billion; Summit
County (Akron) $109 million ; Lucas
County (Toledo) $712 million.
Although only a small part of this
was in direct financial assistance to
&lt;i

the cities, it is an indication of the
steadily growing impact of federal
spending on urban areas throughout
the nation.
Rep. Willis D. Gradison Jr., ROhio, a one-time Cincinnati city
counciiman, says federal aid is
necessary because ''the ability of
the central city to finance itself is increasingly difficult."
Compounding the problem is the
continued loss of revenues as industry and people move out of the
central city, leaving "a growing
proportion of people, like th,e
elderly, who have economic needs,"
Gradison obser1ed.
He sees federalfunds as a leveling
influence, providing "a broader
distribution of dollars from
metropolitan areas." ·
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, l).()hio, a
former Cleveland councilwoman,
sees the "critical needs" of the cities
aggravated by' probie~DS like tbe
deterioration of aging bridges.
,
"Therb no way the cities can af- ·
ford to fix thooe siructures," she
said.
·
The biggest growth in federal
spending in Ohio has been in the

area of social service programs,
which have multiplied tenfold over
the past decade.
Last year, the government poured

$3 billion into Ohio for scores of
.human service programs, including
welfare, food stamps, rent supplements and unemployment
assistance.

Attorney says Mrs. Coleman
'Must come out of hiding'
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) - The and the public. I S'!Ppose she's going
womanwhowaswithVernonJordan to have to come forward. Hopefully
when ne was shot has passed an FBI it will be over then," said Leonard, ·
lie detector test and been "ai&gt;- who became Mrs. Coleman's at• .
solutely eliminated as having any in- torney just hours after Jordan was
volvement whatever" in the crime, , gunned down in a hotel parking let
her attorney said Saturday. •
as he emerged from ber car.
He added that Martha C. Coleman
Leonard told reporters that Mrs. .
would probably subrilit to hypnosis
Coleman, who voluntarily took a
in an effort to remember more
polygraph test administered by an
details of the shootiog.
,
FBI agent ·Fridn~, "passed with ai&gt;But the attorney, Charles F .
solutely no question whatever. She
Leonard, said he believes Mrs.
now has been absolutely elmlnated
Coleman will have to come out of
as . having any involvement ., .
hiding to tell her side of the story
•
whateyer."
before public speculation over ber
The FBl had said previously that
involvement ends.
any comment on results of the
"It seems obvious to me thatjt's
polygraph test would have to come
going to be necessary that sbe do
from Mrs. Coleman's lawyer.
something with regard to the niedia

'

'I

�~The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday,

June 8, 1900

Carter's incumbency, bank roll wins Ohio

SUMMER
SALE
.,,

AT
CARTER &amp;EVANS

The only chlorine your pool needs.

MURRAY 16 H.P.
RIDING MOWER ·

' .'

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GRANULES
'

'

I~

.

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liil.

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....,..,.

GRANULAR

$1199

~ .,...

,,..

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J

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;...ot. ,;.A:'

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WASffiNGTON (AP) - The Carter admiiJii;tration plans to hold fast
to its anti-inflation economic policies
despite the second consecutive month of dr8111atic increase · in the
nation's unemployment rate, a top
official says.
"Our ~Dost serious problem in the
economic field Is inflation," .
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller said Friday at a news confence.
Miller commented after the government reported that unemployment
surged to 7.8 percent of the labor force in May, which means there were
8.2 million workers who wanted jobs
but couldn't find the~D. The unemployment rate was 7 percent in April
and 6.2 percent in March.
The May unemploY~Dent rate was
the highest since November of 1976,
when it also was 7.8 percent, and
was the most for any month
President Carter has been in office.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - . A
proliferation of federal programs
during the past decade have
provided a multi-billion-ilollar crutch for Ohio governments - a prop
that city officials are worried an
economy-minded Congress may
whittle away.
Federal grant programs poured
$674.7 million into the Colwnbus,
Ohio area last year - 111ore than the
city of Columbus spends for its
operations in fiveyears.
Cleveland, which has a general
fund budget of about $200 million,
saw $358 million now into the area
from a lllBssive outpouring. of
federal funds for programs such as
welfare, food stamps arid ,unemploY"'fnt assistance, as well as
revenue sharing and block grants.
Federal revenue sharing started
out as a billion-dollar windfall for
the nation's cities. Today no one is
talking -,:: as some local officials did
eight yeara •go - about possible tax
cuts. 'Now the big concern among
city officials iS over cutbacks.
.
"Cleveland, like every major city,
Ia heavily rel1infl on the federal
aove111Jl1Cnt for subsidies," ·saYS

SEE OUR
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87 OLIVE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

STORE HOURS

diana to the Pennsylvania border,
along with Mahoning, Portage, ·
Trumbull and Summit. He carried
no big city south of Akron.
The senator campaigned on all or
parts of 11 days in Ohio, and spent
only one day in the Cincinnati and
Dayton area . He canceled the only
appearance he had planned in
Colun1bus.
Carter visited the state only once
- Columbus and the Cleveland area
- but Vice President Mondale and
First Lady Rosaiynn Carter were
here two days, along with the
president's mother, Mrs. Lillian

Carter also added $50,000 to what
had been a $150,000 budget - not
counting the $400,000 media blitz he
bankrolled in all of the state's II
major media markets.
Kennedy wound up spending about
$100,000 in Ohio, after allocating
$50,000 in the closing days to radio
and television spots in the greater
Cleveland area. Earlier he had
bought some radio and TV time in
eastern Ohio, so they could be heard
and seen · in neighboring West
Virginia, which also held its primary
last week.
On his first and only visit, Carter

generally defended his record and
asserted that his administration is
"turning the tide'' on the nation 's
energy, economic and foreign policy
problems.
Carter enjoyeq the support of most
state and local party leaders, including House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, the first to ·
publicly endorse him lor re-election,
in September 1979.
Riffe said he was not sUrprised
that Kennedy . won in the
economically troubled cities in nor·
thetn Ohio. " With steel and all the
other problems, he (Caiter ) was
bound to take the blame," he said.
The speaker asserted that Kennedy's vote was a protest against
Carter, rather .than an endorsement
of Kennedy. " If it hadn 't been for the
economic problems, Carter would
have devastated Kennedy up there,"
he said.
J. Patrick Leahy, executive director of the Ohio Democratic Party,
said "there is no question about it.
The economy was a negative factor
in the presi dent's campaign."

Now that the bitter primary campaign is behind them, Carter
Democrats- who also include State
Democratic Chainnan Paul Tipps hope they can persuade the Kennedy
forces to call off their campaign. ·
But Cuyahoga County Chairman
Tim Hagan , Kennedy's Ohio cam- .
paign director, sa id last week they
have no intention off doing so.
"We're still in the race," he said.
Hagan and other Kennedy backers
say they hope they can persuade the
nationa~ convention· next August to
change rules that bind delegate$ to
their designated candidates. That
would allow potential Carter defectors to vote for Kennedy.
But Tipps and Leahy say Carter
has the delegate strength to head off
any such effort.
Tipps, meanwhile, hopes Kennedy
will call it all off and help unite the
party. " It's clear that we have an
uphill battle. The key is how quickly
we can put our party back together .
We may not be able to do much until
August 14 (the start of the Convention)," he said.

--

SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1980

"One . of the most startling
things we found in our investigation is that there is little or
no question that' Congress, by a
simple majority vote, can get the
federal courts out of these matters, '' the veteran attorney·
lawmaker said.
He said the U.S. Supreme Court
and other federal tribunals
should not be pennitted to
"legislate" with edicts that hit
hardest at the state and local
levels of government.
This applies not only to busing,
but other subjects such as abortion, capital punishment, mental
health, prisons "and you name
it," said Norris.
The key thing the task force
determined is that Congress can
enact statutes saying that the
federal courts' jurisdiction does
not include certain areas of ac·
tivity, said the lawmaker.
"Congress can define the sutr
ject matter jurisdiction of the
courts,''Norris asserted.
The task force co-chairman

said the report does not contain
specific recommendations with
regard to life terms and the
removal of judges because
" there are so many alternatives."
Norris said he personally would
like to see judges appointed to
specific terms, after which they
would go before voters for
authority to continue in office.
But the report asks that
Congress initiate a constitutional
amendment that would improve
appointment, tenure and removal
procedures.
"Lifetime appointments do not
work beeause there is no accountability," Norris said.
In addition to mailing the
report to Tower, Norris and State
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAshland, plan to testify on the
issue next month at platfonn
hearings of the Republican
National Convention in Detroit.
The task force was created by
an act of the 1978 Ohio
Republican Convention.

TOP STATE PRIZE - Pleasant and Mary Ellis,
Middleport, left, won the top prize given ih Ohio in the
spring pickup sales promotion of Landmark, Inc., a
1980 Ford F-100 truck. Presenting the truck to Mr. and

The sharp increase in unem·
ployment is the result of the
recession that has the nation's
economy in its grip.
But while the jobless rate war·
sened, the inflation rate improved in
May. Wholesale prices rose just 0.3
percent during the month, the lowest
monthly increase in 2t years, the
Labor Department reported.
Wholesale prices had increased 0.5
percent in April. The slower increases in the past two months even·
tually will bring price moderation
for consumers at the retail level.
But Miller said the administration
still must focus its policies on
fighting inflation, which he said is
the best way " to hasten the day
when we get our unemployed back to
work."

Even though he acknowledged
that the recession shows signs of
being worse than expected, he said
the administration will resist a

Mrs. Ellis Friday were Jack Ca-rsey, third from left,
Meigs Landmark Manager, and Duane Wilkms, sales
manager of Landmark, Inc. Some $10,000 in prizes
were given in the annual spring promotion.

No new gas tax effort forthcoming ·

COLUMBUS, Olilo (AP) - No effort will be made this year to pass a
gasoline tax hike despite voter rejection last week of a major highway
improvement bond issue.
" There has been no discussion on
it," House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, said at week's
end. "Every poll I've seen shows the
people are opposed to it."
Reviewing unfinished business of
the Legislature, which reconvenes
change in economic policies, such as
Tuesday after a six-week campaign
endorsing a tax cut or major exrecess, Riffe noted that some state
pansion of job-creating programs.
officials wanted a gasoline tax inIn another report reflecting the
crease as an alternative to last
recession, the Federal Reserve
week's Ballot Issue 3.
Board reported Friday that conThat ill-fated proposal would have
sumer installment debt declined
allowed the transportation depart·
nearly $2 biliion in April as
ment to issue bonds, perhaps up to
Americans paid off more than they
$500 million the next five years, to
borrowed for the first time since
make badly needed repairs on
May1975.
· Ohio's deteriorarting roads and
The decline in debt, which was at
bridges.
an annual rate of 8 percent, was the
But the speaker said voters,
steepest since the government
nearly 60 percent of whom said no,
began tabulating the debt statistics probably didn't understand, or
in 1943.
perhaps believe, that the bonds
The May increase of 0.3 percent would have been paid off with
for wholesale prices, as reported in
existiog tax revenues .
the Labor Department's Producer
An effort was made in the
Price Index for Finished Goods, was
Legislature last winter to hike the
the smallest since a 0.2 percent instate's seven-cent-a-gallon gasoline
crease in September 1977.
tax two or three cents a gallon. Such
The 7.8 percent unemployment
a boost would bring in $100 millionrate for May already is above the
$150 million a year.
Carter administration's prediction
But there were are not enough
of7.2percent at year's end.

votes to pass the politically-sensitive
tax boost then and the situation has
not changed, Riffe said.
"No sir. There will not be an effort
to pass a gas tax this year. It's an
election year. I'm just being honest
about it," he added.
Members of the Senate and House
return 'Tuesday for a June session
which is expected to last two or
possibly three weeks. Leaders then
hope to adjourn until after the
November election although the
speaker said "something always can
happen to make us come back."
Most of this week's activity is expected to be in committees although
the House is scheduled to vote
Tuesday on Senate changes in a
long-debated bill to control litter.
Riffe said he expects the House to
reject the Senate amendments, sending the proposal to a joint conference committee. A bill to control
hazardous wastes was assigned to a
Senate-House committee before the
two chambers went into recess in
mid-April.

The House votes Wednesday on a
major products liability bill.
Already approved by the Senate,
the controversial legislation restricts legal actions against makers and
sellers of products blamed for injuries or deaths alleged to have been
caused by such products.
Riffe and Senate President Oliver
Ocasrk, D-Akron, said they expect
the two chambers, before summer
adjournment, to complete passage
of a bill appropriatiog $45 million. It
is needed to fund a 2 12 percent
property tax cut voted by the
lawmakers in 1979.
The appropriation was put into a
separate bill after the two chambers
feU into a hopeless deadlock over
what should be included in Gov.
James A. Rhodes' massive, $841
million capital improvements bill.
Due to high interest rates the state
would have to pay on bonds, and an
increasingly tight state financial
situation, the big state construction
bill has been tucked away, at least
for the summer.

Resort owners to file suit against firm
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
owners of the posh Rancho La Costa
resort community are entitled to
bring a libel suit against Penthouse
magazine for an article that identified them as underworld crime

figures, the state Court of Appeal
ruled.
The court said Friday that a lower
court erred when it ruled that the
owners were public figures and that
the 1975 article was therefore
privileged.

Economy-minded congress worries big city governments

•1495
· MOBILE HOME
ALUMINUM ROOF KOTE

AP news' analysis

Carter will hold to economic plan

,•16995

VOLLEYBALL - Another ac t10n
;~ me for all ages 8' lloaung net
and reoulatlon s1ze bau .ncluded

NO. 19

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Federal judges who. ordered
busing to achieve racial balance
In the schools should not have had
the authority to do so, an Ohio
Republican task force maintains.
Neither should members of the
federal judiciary serve life terms
without havjng to answer to
voters, said the task force which
also believes it should be easier to
remove ailing or incompetent
jurists from the bench.
·
In a report to be sent riext week
to U.S. Sen. John Tower, RTexas, chairman of the
Republican National Platform
Committee, the 20-member task
force asks the GOP to push for
congressional action limiting the
power of federal judges.
State Rep. Alan E. Norris, RWesterville, the panel's cochaillll8n, said Friday that contrary to what has been a
prevailing opinion, that Congress
- ·without a change in the U.S.
Constitution - can act on its own
in such an effort.

$2799

~

Carter.
Kennedy also sent family
representatives.
The president planned well for his
barnstonning after his staff advised
that Kennedy was planning a major
effort in Ohio. . He increased his
operation in the state from five
people in two offices to 30 staff members in nine offices.

Did judges have authority?

00

GRANULAR
, ,,

was the only major union in the state
to endorse the Massachusetts
senator. In two Kennedy counties M.ahoning and Trumbull - unem·
ployment is more than 10 percent
Statewide, it is 7.3 percent.
With the exception of Williams, ottawa, and Geagua counties, where
he barely lost, the senator carried
all the northern countie• from the In-

i~ntin~l ~ ·

'

::::.-=-

,\l

BABY TENDER

Before last Tuesday's balloting,
Paul Tully, the senator's Ohio campaign manager, said he would be
satisfied if Kennedy kept to within 10
percentage points of the president.
Carter wound up with 51 percent of
the Democratic vote and Kennedy
with 41 while longshot candidates
Lyndon LaRouche and Richard B.
Kay shared the remainder.
Kennedy's strategy, it now is
clear, was to concentrate his efforts
in the north, where he blamed
massive unemployment in the auto
and steel industries on the president.
He aU but wrote off central and
southern Ohio and thus conceded to
Carter the more conservative areas
of the state.
At one point, Kennedy told a
cheering crowd of United . Auto
Workers in Cleveland that if every
unemployed
autoworker ,
steelworker, and rubberworker in
Ohio voted for him, "Ted Kennedy
will be the next president of the
United States."
The UAW, with 15 percent of its
225,000 Ohio members out of work,

-- -

j

Wi WCIWI

....

WI"' 42" MOWER' DECK
00

TABLETS

)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P ) President Carter used his incwnbency and a huge bankroll to
win Ohio's June 3 preside11tial
primary.
His rival, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, capitalized on northern Ohio's
unemploy~Dent and
economic
problems to make the race
relatively close.
Those were the observations last
week among Democrat watchers
who said carter and Kennedy both
got basically what they were ~oun­
ting on.
Carter carried 76 of the 88 counties
and emerged with 84 national convention delegates, more than enough
to claim the party's nomination in
New York next August.
And Kennedy carried 12 mostly industrialized counties in north and
northeast Ohio to win 77 delegates
and pronounce his long, bwnpy campaign still alive.
Realistically, Kennedy did not expect to defeat Carter in Ohio, the
only state where the president has
campaigned aU year.
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William Reidy, finance director for
thatflnanciaily troubled city. " If the
federal monies were reduced, it
would have a serious impact."
" This is something the city itself
could never replace," Columbus
Finance Director Michael J. Gable
said of the federal programs. "It's
the type of thing that even the state
government could.not replace."
The impact is felt in smaller communities as well. [n Chillicothe,
Mayor Clark Alexander said if it had
I)Ot been for federal funding, "we
would probably have had to raise the
Income tax, or we might have ha.d to
go to special levies on property

taxes."
About $!' million in revenue
sharing and Housing and Urban
Development block grants is helping
Chillicothe maintain ser~ices.
"They enabled us to do street
repairs and sewer work and buy gar·
bage trucks and other rolling stock,' '
the mayor said.
The government's CETA program
pays the salaries of 1,000 of
Cleveland's 10,000 workers. "Community block grants enable the city
to rebuild some of the deteriorating

capital plant-streets and sewers,"
·
Reidy said.
The federal subsidies " are very
necessary at this point," he said.
"We have to get those funds
somewhere."
Actually, the grant programs
represent a small portion of the impact of federal spending in Ohio. As
Gable said, " pro!mbiy most of all we
recognize the impact of spending in
the area ... by federal employees."
The government reports that the
total of cash flowing into Ohio last
year carne to $16.6 billion, including
$4.9 billion for Social Security
payments, $2.7 billion in Defense
Department spending and $501
million in highways funds.
Of the total, $9.3 billion was spent
in the state's six major metropolitan
areas : Cuyahoga County
(Cleveland) $2.8 billion; Franklin
County (Columbus) $2.1 billion;
~milton County (CinciiiJ1ati) $1.73
billion; Montgomery County
(Dayton) $1.17 billion; Summit
County (Akron) $109 million ; Lucas
County (Toledo) $712 million.
Although only a small part of this
was in direct financial assistance to
&lt;i

the cities, it is an indication of the
steadily growing impact of federal
spending on urban areas throughout
the nation.
Rep. Willis D. Gradison Jr., ROhio, a one-time Cincinnati city
counciiman, says federal aid is
necessary because ''the ability of
the central city to finance itself is increasingly difficult."
Compounding the problem is the
continued loss of revenues as industry and people move out of the
central city, leaving "a growing
proportion of people, like th,e
elderly, who have economic needs,"
Gradison obser1ed.
He sees federalfunds as a leveling
influence, providing "a broader
distribution of dollars from
metropolitan areas." ·
Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, l).()hio, a
former Cleveland councilwoman,
sees the "critical needs" of the cities
aggravated by' probie~DS like tbe
deterioration of aging bridges.
,
"Therb no way the cities can af- ·
ford to fix thooe siructures," she
said.
·
The biggest growth in federal
spending in Ohio has been in the

area of social service programs,
which have multiplied tenfold over
the past decade.
Last year, the government poured

$3 billion into Ohio for scores of
.human service programs, including
welfare, food stamps, rent supplements and unemployment
assistance.

Attorney says Mrs. Coleman
'Must come out of hiding'
FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) - The and the public. I S'!Ppose she's going
womanwhowaswithVernonJordan to have to come forward. Hopefully
when ne was shot has passed an FBI it will be over then," said Leonard, ·
lie detector test and been "ai&gt;- who became Mrs. Coleman's at• .
solutely eliminated as having any in- torney just hours after Jordan was
volvement whatever" in the crime, , gunned down in a hotel parking let
her attorney said Saturday. •
as he emerged from ber car.
He added that Martha C. Coleman
Leonard told reporters that Mrs. .
would probably subrilit to hypnosis
Coleman, who voluntarily took a
in an effort to remember more
polygraph test administered by an
details of the shootiog.
,
FBI agent ·Fridn~, "passed with ai&gt;But the attorney, Charles F .
solutely no question whatever. She
Leonard, said he believes Mrs.
now has been absolutely elmlnated
Coleman will have to come out of
as . having any involvement ., .
hiding to tell her side of the story
•
whateyer."
before public speculation over ber
The FBl had said previously that
involvement ends.
any comment on results of the
"It seems obvious to me thatjt's
polygraph test would have to come
going to be necessary that sbe do
from Mrs. Coleman's lawyer.
something with regard to the niedia

'

'I

�'
D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Agriculture and
our communitv
0'

By Bryson R.

(Bud~

Cartt&gt;r
Gallia County Extension Agt'nt
GALLIP'OUS - uOOd sanitation
ill the basis for aU fly control
programs. Nevertheless, it is often
necessary to supplement sanitation
practices with pesticides.
For successful fly control,
organize a control program that best
fits your farm. A single pesticidal
product rarely gives toe most effective and economical control. It is
normally best to use a combination
of pesticide formulations such as
baits, residual sprays, space sprays,
larvicides, etc. during the fly
season. Do not wait for heavy fly
populations. It is mucn easier and
less expensive to prevent heavy fly
build-up than to control heavy fly
populations after build-up, As fly
populations begin to build-up, take
time to treat and treat regularly.
. Remove all manure from
livestock pens as frequently as
possible. Calf and bull pens with
animals in them require special attention. It is best to clean these pens
i&gt;nce a week. A clean livestock barn
has fewer fly problenns.
· Spread the manure thinly outdoors
ln order that fly eggs and larvae can
be killed by drying.
Eliminate silage seepage areas,
wet litter, manure stacks, old wet
hay or straw bales and other organic
matter accumulations that may attract flies anywhere on the farm
Wet feed remaining at the ends of
mangers will breed flies .
Provide proper drainage in barnyards. Use clean gravel ·and other
fill to eliminate low spots in
livestock yards. Proper tilling can
reduce wet barnyards.
Resistance to residual spray
means more reliance on baits.

io 100 pow1ds per square inch using a
power sprayer or gOQd prooorllont&gt;r
type sprayer. Remove animals frw n
the building and cover feed and
water before spraying. Wear
respirator and protective clothing
during spraying. Avoid con·
lamination of feed, water, and
milking utensils. Cover drinking
cups and mangers during spraying.
Never spray in the milk house. Do
not contaminate milk, milk handling
equipment, feed or drinking water.
Call us for Bulletin 472 to get
residual sprays.

1).3- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8,1980

Cooperetlve Extension Service

The Ohio Stott Unlvtrolly

Court rules double-ceiling violates Eighth Amendment
By THOMAS RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
federal appeals court Saturday
upheld an order that so-called
" double-ceiling" of inmates at the
state correctional fa cility at
Lucasville violates the Eighth
Amendment.
However, an official of the Ohio
Department of Rehabiliation and
Correction indicated the ruling could
be appealed, possibly to the U.S.
Supreme Court.

...__...
• .::;:=.,u-..,

._.,..

~

Although fresh bail wul help control
flies, results are poor if fly breeding
is excessive. Apply baits (moist) after floor litter and manure have
been removed. Use baits liberally
for best control. Apply a minimum
4-H Vegetable Gardening projects are just one of the areas youth learn about
of four tablespoons of bait per I ,000
growing things. In addition to learning good growing practices 4-H'ers learn about
square feet of floor area. Incease
the varieties of many vegetables, growing periods, and those best suited for use as
amounts when flies are breeding
fresh vegetables or to be stored or preserved.
prolifically. Repeat as needed. Baits
BVI£mt:CU.U
should be used in conjunction with
f.alnJ ... AIKI,
wall and ceiling sprays. Either dry
H •-~
sugar or liquid syrup baits are effectivQ . Do not apply where animals
GALUPOLIS - The coming of the
gardening season means it's time to
can slip and fall or where children
can be present.
give your home freezer some · a tdays alternate with cool nights. You
BY JOHN C. RICE
foliage. As the disease worsens,
Use two ounces Diazinon 50 pertention. Right now is a good time to
may not need to spray all summer
Extensloa Agent
twisting and rolling of shoots and
cent WP per one pound of sugar per
take an inventory of what food is left
leaves occurs. Mildew will be worse
for mildew protection . However,
Agriculture, Meigs County
fi ve gallons water. Apply with a
when fall approaches, get busv!
in the freezer. Then take some time
POMEROY - No-Till Corn
on roses in shaded (especially morYou can use Benomyl, Fung_inex,,
Watch for armyworm if planted af- ning shaded) locations. It also tends
and plan your menus to use up
sprinkling can or other suitable container.
ter or in a meadow. If planting, use todevelopintheautumnwhenwarm
what's in stock, before fresh fruits
Mildex, or Acitidione-PM.
and vegetables are again in season.
Use fo ur teaspoons malathion
40 pounds of furadan per acre. This .----- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - would be 10 percent granules in 40 in·
Last year's bounty - now frozen
(Cythion) 57 percent EC per pound
ch
rows in the seed furrow . This will
- will still be safe to eat. But the
of sugar. Sprinkle lightly on aisles,
give
about four weeks of armyworm
floors, windowsills, or brush on
longer the foods set in the freezer
protection.
If already planted check
walls,. posts or uprights. Or use five
past one year, the more they will
fields
.
Examine
20 plants in dif·
tablespoons malathion (Cythion) 57
lose flavor. Texture will also
ferent
areas.
With
a moderate in·
percent EC per seven tablespoons
deteriorate. In fact, some foods may
festation,
the
corn
will
recover. If insugar, molasses (unsullurized ) or
become so mushy, your family won't
festation
is
severe,
and
eaten below
com syrup per one gallon of water.
eat them.
growing
point,
the
entire field
the
Or use malathion (Cythion ) 3.5 perSo, once your freezer stock is low,
lost.
Watch
fields
also
planted
can
be
cent ready to use formulation .
give the appliance a thorough
hay
fi
elds
or
small
grain.
Arnext
to
Residual sprays applied to walls,
cleaning before it's filled again. Jf
mywomlS can migrate from tiese
you have a manual freezer you may
ceilings, partitions, stanchions,
areas.
need to defrost it first. A manual
posts and other fly resting places are
Alfalfa Weevil - If you have
still the " mainstay" of fly control on
freezer operates more efficiently
alf~lfa with alfalfa weevil and cut it,
livestock farms . These sprays are
and saves energy when there's no
watch the regro wth. When one out of
much more effective in stanchion · frost buildup.
four buds show damage, a stubble
barns than in loose-housing
If you still have some food in the
spray is needed.
management where surfaces vary in
freezer, turn the temperature conKeeping Roses Healthy - Acthe amount of · spray applied on
trol to the coldest setting about 12
ON
cording
to C. C. Powell, Extension
them. Smooth suriaces require less
hours before you plan to defrost.
Plant Pathologist roses aren't par·
spray than rough surfaces.
This will help keep the fOod from
BRUSHES, SPONGES, SCOUR PADS, &amp; MILK FILTERS
ticularly prone to a lot of diseases.
Thoroughly wet the suriace to the
thrawing while you're cleaning.
However, the main reason why
point of runoff at low press ure of 80
Turn off the freezer and disconFIRST CHOICE
ALBACILLIN
people give upon on them or refuse
nect the current. Then, remove the
to
grow
them
in
the
first
place
·
is
food to your refrigerator. Or place it
because of disease problems! There
in a box insulated with several
are
two diseases of roses that are
layers of newspaper and cover with
quite
infectious and damaging .
a blanket._
Doz.
Doz.
BY:
are
black spot and powdery
These
Now you can get to the job of
DIANA S. EBERTS
mildew.
removing the frost build-up. No matBEEF &amp; DAIRY
BlODRY
Black spot, as the name implies, is
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
ter how thick the build-up don't use
a fungus caused disese that shows up
HOME ECONOMICS
any metal tools to remove it. Sharp
as black spots on the leaves. A while
objects may damage the freezer
MEIGS COUNTY
after the spots appear, the leaf falls
lining. Instead, use a wooden or
off. The fungus begins on the lowest
Gal.
plastic scraper. Then be sure to use
OODoz.
leaves and spreads upward as the
a safe object to scoop out the frost
plant grows. Rain or splashing
and ice - like plastic or cardboard.
CONCENTRATED
BEEF &amp; DAIRY
carries fungus spores from
water
Washing
the
freezer
is
the
next
POMEROY - It's finally spring just 56 calories in a one-cup serving.
step. Frost-free freezers as well as cleafto leaf. You cannot ignore black
again and shoppers can lookjorward
In the early 1880s, rhubarb was inspot and have nice roses. They need
manuals
need this thorough cleaning
to the appearance of springtime troduced into this country by an
to
be sprayed on a preventive health
at
least
once
a
year.
To
wash
the
infavorites,
strawberries
and amateur gardener in Maine. Now we
management
program before the
20oz.
terior,
use
a
lukewarm
water
and
rhubarb. Though many supplies are use only the stalks for eating. In
Gal .
disease
appears.
Use
benomyl,
baking
soda
solution
.
One
now being shipped in from warmer fact, the wise use of rhubarb stalks
Phaltan, Funginex, or Caplan.
tablespoon baking soda per quart
states, local produce can be ex- in pies and winemaking gave the
l lf2 BU .
Follow
labeled instructions, being
water is a strong enough solution.
pected soon. This is the peak month plant its nickname :.... " pie plant"
sure to spray both surfaces of the
Next, rinse with clean lukewarm
for strawberries.
and "wine plant."
leaves.
water and dry with a soft cloth.
Local strawberries should begin
Although the origin of the name
Powdery mildew is caused by a
A mild detergent and water
appearing about the end of this moo' " strawberry" is not definitely
4 lbs .
fungus
a s well. White powdery areas
solution is suitable to use on the outth. This will vary, of course, depen· known there are a few explanations.
or lesions show up on youngest
side of the freezer. Check the " use
ding upon where you live. One traces the name to the straw
and care" booklet of your freezer.
Strawberry prices are expected to used between the rows to keep the
Somemanufacturers recommend
be somewhat higher than last berries clean and prot~t the plants
using a cleaning wax on the outside
year's.
.
in the winter.
·3rd&amp;
surface .
Rhubarb is available throughout
Here is the agricultural advisory
Wherever its name comes from,
Sycamore,
Whether you're cleaning the inside
most of late winter and spring since the strawberry is enjoyed by many.
for Ohio as prepared Saturday by
446·2463
Gall
or
out - do not use any abrasives.
it is grown in greenhouses as well as For the best quality and flavor
the Agricultural Weather Center in
Steel wool pads and abrasive
outdoors. However, it is in larger choose strawberries with full, solid
West Lafayette, Ind.:
cleaners may scratch the suriace
supply from March through July red color, attached bright green
L nsdtlt'tl wuthcr continues acroel!l
and become a future site for stains,
with peak abundance in April and caps and freedom from moisture,
thr Ohio Vnllr•)•. Suullwd~· s urface win·
spots and odors.
May. After this month, availability dirt and decay. Proper care begins
d '" an• s till )lumping \\'a rm , mui!ll , un·
Once the freezer is defrosted and
will decreaSe with ball as much ex- at the grocery store . Make
!ilabh· a ir into lht· l'Ustnn third of the
cleaned, turn on the electricity and
pected to be marketed in June.
strawberries your last purchase at
nation. trigst·ring MCaltrrt·ll shuwcrs
let it run for about a half-hour. Then
You can take advantage of current the store, to avoid bruising. Buy only
and thundersho"''" rl!!· A cool front will
transier the food back to the freezer .
good supplies and high quality by the amount you can use within one or
drirt intH tht~ Ohio \iallq· la lt! in tht'
Doing a little freezer spring
purchaSing extra rhubarb and two days. At home, roll them
day .and ,.·idt'81Jrt•ad sho~ r. ~ art·likl'l)·
cleaning will put you in good shape
preserving it for future use. carefully from the box to a flat dish
ahead a nd aJung tht' (ronta( ad\QOCt!,
for the busy food preservation
Rhubarb is a relatively simple food or pan. Remove any decayed or sofln f'orning rainfall arnounl s will
season that's ahead. However, if you
to freeze. Select fresh, crisp, deep tened berries then cover the rest and
8\t'nlSI' (rom 8 QU8rte r•tu 8 hal?•im•h ,
red stalks that are free from fibers . refrigerate. Wash and remove caps · have not already done so, you should
hut lm~all)· ht•a\·icr ll mount8 from I 10 2
bring the gauge from your pressure
Remove the leaves and wash the
just before using.
int• ht•~S art• 1H)S8 ihlt•, ~'hilt• the Showers
HUNDREDS AND
canner in to our office to be checked.
stalks thoroughly. Then trim them
In selecting good quality rhubarb,
willlw quih· fWaltu~ during lht· mnr·
Remember, they should be checked
and cut into one or two inch pieces. look for fresh, firm, crisp stalks that
ning ami nflt•rntt.~ln houn , field delaye
EVEN THOUSANDS
year. We took out " tester" to
every
Place the dry rhubarb without are either red or pink. The stalks
will lwconw mort• widt"t!prcad as the
Columbus on May 5 to have it
sugar, into airtight containers and should be of medium thickness. Old
.-ool fro nt drih 8 into northwt•5lcrn !U'C·
OF DOUARS
checked for accuracy so we would be
freeze immediately.
rhubarb with full , developed leaves
. linn" nf the l'llalc and th t' n 8"''t.'t')J8 t'B8 1·
ready to check yours.
Rhubarb may also be frozen after
~ a rd lah• in the e \'ening.
has grown too long before being
INTEREST.
cooking. Make a cooked rhubarb
picked. Jt may be pithy, tough and
sauce following your cookbook's
stringy. Fresh rhubarb will have
directions, cook and pack into confirm stalks. A wilted, flabby apMAKE YOUR BEST DEAL
tainers. Leave at least one-half
pearance usually indicates stale
headspace in right containers and
rhubarb. This may be stringy and
WITH US AND THEN GET
freeze. Three pounds of fresh
have poor flavor.
rhubarb will yield approximately
If you intend to keep rhubarb at
FREE FINANCING THROUGH
three pints when frozen.
home for a few days before using It,
Strawberries can be frozen quite
cut off the leaves and wash the
IHCC TO THE ABOVE DATES.
easily as welL Select matured, wellstalks. Then dry them thoroughly
colored fruit that is not soft, mushy
and wrap in plastic or place them in
or overripe. Wash in cold water.
a moisture proof container and
One cup of fresh strawberries sup- refrigerate. Regardless of the
plies the average daily requirement
method of preparation, always
of vitamin C as well as some
discard the leaves as these contain
calciwn, iron, riboflavin, vitamin A
harmful amounts of soluble oxalic
and niacin. Strawberries are a jlood
acid.
Get to thote hard·lo-r.. c:h pl.c.
treat for calorie counters. There are
·
~
.
cut , cl.,r, prun1, mow , edt~',
'
\
trim Wid ••.apl A c:omfort8ba.,
\

Homemakers'
Circle

Entry-level jobs

County agent's corner

'DAIRY
· MONTH

10% DISCOUNT
AU

MASTITIS SYRINGES
$7JJ

$1250

MASTITIS SYRINGES

FLY SPRAY

$11

AEROSOL SPRAY

$4

95

MARLATE SOW
$31s

Ag weather

MASTITIS SYRINGES

$600

FLY SPRAY
CONCENTRATE

$2300

WINVANE FEEDER

sgsoo

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO, INC.

Interest Free Financing!
TRACTORS (36 HP &amp; Larger) UNTIL 3-1-81
HAY EQUIPMENT UNTIL 4-1-81
SAVEl

are hard to find
By KRISTIN GOFF
AP Business Wrller
Thomas Carey, a 22-year-old
graduate of Michigan State University, has approached abo ut 40 companies looking for work as a commercial artist since he got his
bachelor's degree last March.
"Bad luck. No luck. The market is
so tight right now there is nothing,"
he said in a recent interview from
the campus at East Lansing, Mich.
" What they are telling me is that
there are no positions open. It is not
a question of being turned down. The
hardest part is getting an interview
in the first place, " he said.
While the Michigan economy is
suffering more than other regions
because of the slumping a uto mdustry, more and more students
nationwide are likely to face such
problems in the job market this
year, economists say .
"This is definitely the worst time
to be coming out of school since
1974," when the country was in the
depths of its last recession, said Kenneth Goldstein, an economist at the
Conference Board, a business
research organization in New York.
He points to the board's Index of
help wanted advertising volume as
one sign of a business pullback in
hiring.
That index, which measures the
volume of classified "help wanted"
advertising in a bout 50 newspapers
across the country, in April took the
steepest one-month dive in the 29. year year history of the s urvey.
Its 23-point drop to 122 points, does
not specifically measure hiring
plans for youthful workers. But it is
an indication of general business
conditions. The index is measured
against a 1967 base of 100 and now
stands 33 points below the year-ago
figure of ISS.
"There is no question that the underlying tren d is down - down sharply - and it will go down further.
For any high school or college
student looking for work tllis summer, it is clearly going to be a lot
rougher than last," says Goldstein.
No one can say accurately how
bad the summer job situation may
get. But some economists suspect
that the tempora ry summer job
market will be tighte r tban the permanent job market because sum-

mer jobs are one area many

.

•' ', lr

•aty•lo-tdjUII thoulder ttrep It I

, ·

• 22 .5cc En;lno
.,'\.

JIM'S EQUIPMENT CENTER, INC.

·~·~ · ~· t~;
0 1\.
.~
·
- Ill ~·

590 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio

~-~-~·~~
~

NEW HOLLAND PARTS &amp; EQUIPMENT
SPECIAL THIS WfEK

.

plut wllh lhla

,

Eqolppoll

wllh the 1111 PM trimmer heM

~.,.

,

m-.

STOP
.BY
SOON ·

J "

end

an I " Tri·Kul W-.t II.S.. AIIG, In
I " 4-4-Tooth Saw IIIIMit of~
an opttonal KCHNry . Moctel PC

""-

' GENIE I; de1lgn-' at a
ltUihCUfi.,/ PoWit Scythe
Of ManafUarnenl Trimm•
to be opereted In any potl·
lion .

~,
•,

SUNDAY
JUNES, 1980

.

· 5:30
' 6:00

, 6:30

·

7:00

7:30

I"

Trl· lhll
1 1.c~ 1

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

6

... 0.

~

8:30

Wcil'~~. ~~NARO REPASS

I

•

1D.lMD TOBACCO SErrER .... :......~450 00
KuHN HAY TEDDER ................... ~1625 00

,

8 :00

MORNING
CATHOLIC MAS~
CHRISTOPHER etOSE·UP
BETWEEN THE LINES
@) AMERICAN PROBLEMS AND
CHALLENGES
Cil U CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
IIJ KOINONIA
O CIJ ABETTER WAY
!liD TREEHOUSE CLUB
(}) U THIS IS THELIFE
CIJ FORD PHILPOT
CIJ BANANA SPLITS
0 CIJ OLO TIME GOSPEL HOUR
@) URBAN LEAGUE
(j}) Q) ACnON NEWSMAKER
Cil U T.V. CHAPEL
CIJ DAWSON MEMORIAL BAP·
TIST CHURCH SERVICE
(1) IT IS WRITTEN
(1) EDDIE SAUNDERS
IIJ JIMMY SWAGGART
@J OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR ·
(j}) G) BIBLE ANSWERS
Cil U MORMON CHOIR
IIJ THE LESSON
(1)
THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
Cll GRACE CATHEDRAL
0 Cil OAYOFDISCOVERY
l])(jj) SESAME STREET
(j})
G)
EVANGELISTIC
QIJTREACH
CIJU ORAL ROBERTS
CHAPEL HOUR
CONTACT

@J ~MES ROBISON
(j})
LOWER LIGHTHOUSE
Q:OO (})
SINGING JUBLIEE
CIJ ROBERT SCHULLER
([) PARTRIDGE FAMILY
REX HUMBARD
ABETTER WAY
[I) NEW LIFE TEAM
STUDIO SEE
ORAL ROBERTS
MISTER ROGERS
GJ REV. A.A. WEST
GILLIGAN' S tSLANO
'Q:30
'
FAITH FOR TODAY
[I) ROBERT SCHULLER
BIG BLUE MARBtE
IT IS WRITTEN
(jJ) SESAME STREET
•'

~
11•

•

feel the pinch of economic problems
than many others.
J ack Shingelton, Michigan State
University's placement director,
estimates that, despite the
recession, the proportion of students
without· jobs by graduation this year
will only be a percentage point or
two above last year's 10 percent
figure.
In the summer job market, Manpower Inc., a temporary help company with a nationwide network of
offices, says it will recruit 13 percent
fewe r vac,.tioning teachers and
students this summer than last, or a
total of27;ooo.
" Nationally the availability of
swruner jobs has eased from the
levels of past years. But jobs in more
limited numbers do exist. These jobs
will be ha rder to find and most will
be in offiae work, " said Mitchell S.
Ftonnstein, president of the temporary belp .company based in
Milwaukee.
The Labor Department estimates
that 4 million students will be
leaving high schools and colleges to
swell the ranks of the labor force this
s ummer . Of those about 1.4 million
will be looking for permanent jobs
and 2.6 million for surruner jobs, according to department estimates.
Those figures, which apply to
people 16 to 24 years old, don't in·
elude the youthful workers who
a lrea dy have part-time jobs and will
be looking for full-time jobs this
surruner.
Among graduating college students, those with skills in demand engineering and computer science
training for instance - are heing
aggressively pursued, college
placement officers report.
F or others - with degrees in
liberal arts, humanities or other
disciplines not in great demand getting jobs has been difficult for
several years and may become
more difficult this year.

THURSDAY SESSION
POMEROY The Pomeroy
Cha pter of the Women's Aglow
Fellowship will hold a dinner
meeting Thursday at the Meigs Inn.
Speaker will be the Rev. Joe
Beasley and dinner will be served at
7 p.m. with the doors to open at 6.
The dinner is $3.50 a person and
reservations can be made no later
than Tuesday . by calling 992·3728,
992-5859, 675-3273, 949-2325 or 446-7444
in the evenings.

confining two prisoners to one cell
"violates the Eighth Amendment
prohibition against cruel and
unusual punishment."
While the court unanimously
upheld the findings of U.S. District
Judge Timothy Hogan of Cincinnati,
it rejected a claim by the state attorney general's office that the
lower court judgement was not
based upon the "totality of the conditions" at the less than !()-year old
prison.
The state, while reducing the

facility's population at the rate or 2S
a month, appealed Hogan 's ruling.
Assi;tant Attorney General Allen
Adler sought a stay from the federal
district court and the court of appeals, but both attempts were turned
back.
The appeals panel noted that these
"remedial provision s are a
reasonable response to the
violations which were found" at the
prison.
ACLU attorney Jean P. Kamp of

Columbus said the ruling amounted
to " a major victory for prisoners'
rights."
The speed at which the federal appeals court reached a decision surprised Benson.
" It was only argued last Monday,
June 2, " he said, adding that the
quickness of the ruling "points up
the importance" of the case in the
eyes of the court.
The decisiQn, however, " does not
preclude the possibility of further

Some children cannot check out
Bible in North Carolina library
WHJTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) Children whose library cards are
restricted because their parents
don't want them bringing home
"adult" books will no longer be permitted to check out the Bible from
the Columbus County Library.
The Bible is included on the
library's shelf of "adult" books not because it is considered too racy,
but because it is felt to be too dif.
ficult for children to read easily,
librarian Amanda Bible said Saturday .
" We didn't change th e
classification of the Bible," Miss
Bible said. "The truste~s simply

voted to begin a restriction policy
whic h those who were against adult
books had demanded."
One resident of this rura1 county of
50,000 people in the southeastern
part of the state complained in April
because her 12-year-old daughter
had checked out the novel " Wifey"
by Judy Blume.
Miss Blume is · a well-known
children's writer, but "Wiley," her
first book written for adults, contains explicit sexual passages.
A number of other county residents, including ministers, had spoken
in favor of restricting access to, or
banning, some adult books. County

commissioners originally voted to
take " Wifey" &lt;if the shelves, but
decided to seek an opinion on the
matter from the state attorney
general's office.
The attorney general suggested
that access to the adult books could
be limited , and the library trustees
then voted to allow parents to choose
whether to place a special mark on
the library cards of children 17 and
younger, forbidding them from
checking out books from the adult
section. The policy does not prohibit
children from reading such books in
the library.

Balloon race results announced
MERCERVILLE - On Thursday,
May 22, nearly five hundred helium
filled balloons were released by the
students of Hannan Trace Elementary School.

Hannan Trace Elementary Principal Ron Paxton is contacting the
winners to make arrangements for
the awarding of prizes. The contest

was made possible through the sponsorship of the Hannan Trace
Elementary PTO who furnished the
balloons, helium , a nd prizes.

appeal," said Charles Abercrombif,!,
the department's public information
officer.
" We have been operating under
Judge Hogan's order up until the aP:
peal was heard. There will
necessity for making any changes ln
the present manner of operation.
"Since.tbe decision .came down on
a Saturday, we obviously have no(
had time to discuss anything, But WC(
may look into the possibility of appealing to the U.S. Surpeme Court." ·

oo

Officials
halt ritual
sacrifice
NEW YORK (AP) - Authorities
raided a Bronx apartment early
Saturday' not to confiscate drugs or
guns, but to rescue 62 barnyar&lt;!
animals, the intended sacrifice of a
1
religious cult.
Ducks, guinea hens, chickens,
chicks, roosters and pigeons - a,
total of 56 fow 1 - were found in a
garage along with four baby goatS
and two sheep by police and agen~
of the American Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals .
The animals were apparently set
for slaughter by the Santera, a saint:
worship cult. AS-PCA officials plan
to find homes for the animals;
;
probably atfarnns in the area.
Seven purported cult membe~
w.ere busily chopping up herbs,
breaking coconuts" and preparing
elaborate receptacles for animal

~~.~:~~~~~~:~~~

Each balloon had a card attached
to it explaining that the balloon was
part of a balloon race and that the
finder should return the card along
with the location where it was found
as there would be a $50 U. S. Savings
Bond presented to the student whose
balloon traveled the greatest distance as well as for the finder of the
balloon going the farthest. A May 31,
1980 postmark deadline was
established for eligibility.

raid, the third in the Bronx involving
the cult in recent months.
.
" They ~ither bite, tear or cut off
the animals' heads and drain all the
blood from their bodies into vessels
on the floor and also drip the blood
over different deil!es and gods that
are on the floor," said ASPCA
Special Agent Tom Langdon,
describing the religious cer~monies.
" They (also) drink the wann
blood as it drips out of the animals,"
he said.
The ASPCA was alerted by neighbors of Emila Plasencia, in whose
home the rite was apparenUy going
to take place.
Publicity from the earlier raids
had C'iii.Sed neighbors. to become
suspicioas when they saw uie
animals being taken into the home
around 9 p.m. Friday night, according to Langdon.
·
Mrs. Plasencia was given a swnmons for harboring animals within
city limits.
The menagerie was found in a
garage attached to the rear of Mrs.
Plasencia 's home . Cult members
said they had purchased the animals
from a poultry market, although
they refused to s pecify which one.

Of the balloons released, only 11
cards were found and returned to the
school. The balloon found the closest
to the school had traveled about 13
miles and was found between Cadmus and Oak Hill, Ohio. The balloon
going the greatest distance traveled
about 90 miles to the Northeast and
was found in Doddridge County, W.
Va., by six-year old Shawn Leeson
who was playing outside at his gran·
dparents' home. Shawn lives with
his parents in Beckley, W. Va. The
balloon was released by first grade
student, Brenda McGuire who lives
with her parents, Roger and Dale at
Route I, Crown City .
The other balloons returned were
released by :
Kindergarten, Susan Moore ; first
grade, Mauro Gonzales; third
grade, Brent Unroe; third grade,
Amber Epling; fourth grade, Grady
Johnson ; fourth grade, Mike Montgomery ; fifth grade, Rbonda
Wheeler ; intermediate in·
dividualized instruction, Dirk Bartruro; eighth grade, Melvin Clagg
and eighth grade, Heather Riley.

..•

.

PETER TOWNSHEND TAKES on the rock critics in
"Jools and Jim," a song from bls new "Empty Glass"
album. The crlllcs are nevertheless giving rave reviews to
the latest solo offering from Tbe Wbo's guiding force.

MEETING POSTPONED
LAUREL CUFF - A meeting !i
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Club ·
scheduled for 7': 30 p.m. Thursday_
has been postponed until June !9 at·
the home of Ann Mash.

'!---------Sunday Television L o g - - - - - - -

.A·GREAT GIFT FOR DAD!

HDFFCO
· l '""'T?g~El

non~

seasonal employers can cut back if
)lecessary.
· Then too, students with special
skills or education are less likely to

FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL
3 GAS POWERED TRIMMER MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM.

Benson Wolman, executive director or" the American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio, hailed the court's action .
''The conditions at the facility
were challenged by the ACLU and
other organizations in a suit filed in
1975," Wolman explained.
In 1978, Judge Hogan ordered the
state to begin a gradual reduction inthe prison's population from a high
of 2,300 to 1,645 inmates.
In issuing the ruling, the U.S. 6th
Circuit Court of Appeals said that

10:00 (}) U REX HUMBARD
CIJ CHANGED LIVES
([) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
Cil KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
IIJ GO$PEL SINGING JUBILEE
(I) SESAME STREET
@J MOVIE ·(SCIENCE FICTION)
...
Fanta~tlc Voyage" 1966
(j}) G) JIMMY SWAGGART
10:30 1IJ SPIRITUAL "WAKENING
ffi MOVIE-(COMEDY·ROMANCE)

1:00 (})UMOVIE-(ORAMA)"" "Conlllcl" 1943
CIJ D. JAMES KENNEDY
Cil AMERICA'S ATHLETES 1980

lt Started In Naplea" 1960

(I) MOVIE ·(D RAMA·MYS TERY)

11

••• '

0

1

[I) ERNEST ANGLEY
·
(jJ) ZOOM
11 :00 (}) Q HUMAN DIMENSIONS
CIJ INTOUCH
(!) REX HUMBARO
I]) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'The
Old Curios it~ Shop' Little Nell and
Grandfather encounter two greedy
owneraol aPunchandJudy puppet

show.
ELECTRIC COMPANY
CD REV. HENRY MAHAN
11 :30
U
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
Cil (j}) G) ANIMALS, ANIMALS,
ANIMALS
O CIJ FACE THE NATION
(I) WORLO OF THE SEA
(jJ) BIG BLUE MARBLE

~

AFTERNOON
12:00 (}) D ATISSUE
CIJ TIME OF DELIVERANCE
Cl) (j}) ID
ISSUES AND
ANSWERS
THIS IS THE LIFE
[I) VIEWPOINT
THE OLD WEST
THE ISSUE
QHtO JOURNAL
12:30
U IIJ MEET THE PRESS
ill ORAL ROBERTS
(1) MOVIE · (DRAMA) " " The
Hum•n Jungle" 1t5•
[I) DIRECTIONS
G [I) WILD KINGDOM
@) FACE THE NATION
(fi) NOVA 'A Plague o n Our Chit·
dren' Toxic herbicides, pesticides,

i

$

and other chem ica ls mav ca use
cancer. miacarriaoe e and birth
defec ts. and the evidence Ia just
beginning to come o ut . This pro·
g ram euminestheharmfuleffecta
deadly chemtceta may have on th is
and following generationa . ~2 hra.)

(j}) Q) KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO

Series devoted ro examining and
revealing the best athletes wh o
weret orepresent 1haUnlt e d States
at the Olympics to be held in
Moscow.

••'ri\

''Edge of Doom" 1Q50

we

provide coverage of the game
between the Tampa Bay Rowdies
and the Fort Lauderdale Strikers .
hril ., 30mins .)

i

INSIGHT
[I) (iD) FRENCH OPEN
(jJ) ANTIQUES
.
2:30 (}) U CZJ LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP
CIJ THE OEAF HEAR
. (U SOCCER Atlanta Chiefs vsNew
York Cosmos
HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
3:00
AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) 000

~

"Killer Elite" 1875

(I) GREAT PERFORMANCES:
LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER
'The FUm Society of Lincoln Center
Presents - ATribute to John Hutton'
Lauren Bacalland Richard Burton
are among celebrities who pay .
tribute to the actor.acreenwrlter,
director. (90 mine.)
·

SPOLETO '80
3:30
MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
4:00 ; HE LIVES
(() (iD) ATLANTA GOLF
e.,LASSIC
'
(jj) UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'Out ot Everywhere' The arrival t'f
the Bellamy's old family nanny ,
together with Sarah'sappo,intment
u nursery maid . cauaea stormy
scenes in the servantt ' haiL (60
mlnsJ

4:30 (}) U IIJ SPORTSWORLD 1)
Professional Bowlere Aaaoc iatioh
doubles championship from las
Vegas . 2) English Derby from Eng·
land. (90 mins )

ffi
0

(jJ) GROUCHO

EVENING
6:00 (}) D llJ (f](ib)(j}j
NEWS
C!J MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••.• \lo "Wotk

m

Proud"

CHAMPIONSHIP

WRESTLING
ABC NEWS
POP GOES THE COUNTRY
BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
SUt.ME STREET
6:30
• CZJ NBC NEWS
CIJ FOCUt "'N THE FAMILY
[I) NEWS
@) CBS NEWS
ABC NEWS
7:00
IIJDISNEY'SWONOERFUL

[I) (iD) ARCHIE BUNKER'S

PLACE Archie , Murray and the
gang think they 've found a cure tor
Mr . Van Renseleer 's blindnes s and
spearhead ad rive I oralse money to
finance the operation. (Repea t)
(I) (jj) ODYSSEY 'Cree Hunters ol
Mistassinl' ln muc h the same way
that the ir forefathers did, the Cree
.lndianaoiCanada treknorthwardto
hunt and tr ap game each wtntar .
This program examines how the
tam il ies join togeJherto prepare tor
the cold months ahead. (60 mlns.)

IIJ OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR

CIJ

I

8:30 G (I) @J ONE DAY AT A TIME

II

UIO

I

lou!!..Aukayser.

8:00 CIJ •

IIJ CHIPa Panch and Jon,

hop ing to spend three vacation
day a competing in an off· road ra ce ,

THE BIG EVENT 'The

G [ll@J ALICEMel 'otopcompeti·
tor, Barney, asks Flo out and Mel
thlnkslt 's becauae he wantstotrep

11:15

her Into revealing hla secret chili
reci.Q!. (Repeat)

11:30

CI)IJJJ MASTERPIECE THEATRE

'Oiaraell' Episode II. 'Mary Anna '
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raell propoaea t.o the wealthy
widow of hiafriend and political ally
ndham Lewis. (60 mine.)

THE YEAGERS Carol!

(()@) 80 MINUTES
WAR ANO PEACE
FRENCH CHEF
7:30
WALL STREET WEEK
'Requiem for Auto Sto,cka' Host :

Cil U 1IJ

e:30

~

PORTER WAGONER SHOW

DOUBLE FEATURE 'Nighloldo'

ULIJI!aiTHE341hANNUAL TONY
AWIIADS Mary Tr.ler Moore and
Jaaon Robards w•ll earve as co·
hoets of the presentation or the
American Theatre Wlng'a Antoln ·
etta Awards, the ('MOlt preetlgloul
~Ivan In the Bro~dwaytheatre. The

i

l

obot"1180

1980 Stare: Doug McClure, Melin·

.

I]) MOVIE ·!SUSPENSE) 000
"Killer Elite" 1975
Cll UP CLOSE Guest; C.I.A . Dlrec·
tor, William Colby.
~
(I) FIRING LINE 'Who Should ·
'Reagan Pick forVice·Preaident?'
Guests: J. Daniel Mahoney, chairman of the Conservative Party of J
New York ; PauiWeyrich, executive •
director of the Committee for the "'
Survival of a Free Congraaa; P1· •
trick Buchanan, ayndlcetad columnist. Host: William F. Buckley, Jr. '
(j]) BEN WATTENBERG'S 1e80 ,
'An Interview witA Barbara .
Jordan'
•
([) RUFF HOUSE
.J
(j]) MOVIE ·!MYSTERY) "" \lo
"ThJ..LaJ!r Vonlohea" 1838
I]) u Cil IIJ 0 [I) @) (j}) •
•
NEWS
NI!WSIGHT
•
OPEN UP
NO!t-FICnON TELEVISION
'service l:ntranca' and 'Man of ' •
Wheat' This program feature• two
half hour filma about individuate in 1
our society. Theflrattollowaanaim·
less teenager who enllateln the ·•
Army ReserVe In an attempt to edd ~
direction to hla11fe. Theaecondpor·
trays the saga of a whett farmer
who goee from raga.to richtl in hie
lifetime. (80 mlna.)
PMAPULSE
CBBNEWJ.
•
MOVIE · ~
·(AOVENTUAE·WESTE13NI •••
kloftomo Kid" 1838
THE KIIG IS COMING
GJl. ABC NI!WS
"
N C LATE NIGHT MOVIE
o
MOVIE -(IIYSTEAYI'"IO
11
Not OulltW'" 1174
tla) MOVIE -(SCIENCE FIC1l()llo
COMEDY) •• "IIIUIY lftd.lhl

WM

(l}) ID SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

\!!. ~U!I.

IIJ KENNETH COPELAND

ffi

ill 700CLUB

BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va
Loa AnQ!_tel Dodgers

Yeager, the patriarch of a family
logging operation. discovers what
than bid by nalghbora. (60 minaf

11:00

Mackintosh Man ' 1973 Stars: Paul
Newman, Jamea Mason.

JIMMY SWAGGART

(() !121 UJ

10:30

Long. standing resent menta are un·
covere d between Ann and her
mother after Julie'.a boas. a
psychiatrist, cornea to dinner with
some irtteresting advice on
communicating . (Repeat)

WORLD 'The Young Runaways '
While fleeing trom their unloving
foster parents, a young girl and her
brother and si~ter have a highly
unu sual c onfrontation with the
pollee. (Conclusion; eo mins.)
oaed·Captloned)

ffi

10:00

DOUBLE FEATURE 'Tu rn over
Smith ' 1980Sters: WIIIiemConra d,
James Darren.

(jJ) ELECTRIC COMPANY

5:30

special witt feature pertormancee '·
by stars in productionnumberafrom ·
current BroadWay mueicala. (90
min B.)

REXHUMBARD
MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) " " '
" Grelle" 1978
(I)(j})CD SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

'CaeaarsPalacelnvitational ' Pert II
Witness the results of years of
dad ice tlon and training when Amer·
ice 'a premlerwomengymnaatsdls·
play their tumbling , vaulting and
balance beam skilta in th is elite
gy_mnastics competit ion.
(J) AFRICANS

1IJ PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
0 [I) ALABAMA 500

@) VOYAGETOTHEBOTTOMOF
•
THE SEA
1:3o
Hl-0
2:00 IIJ WORLD OF PENTECOST
CIJ !121 GJ NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCERLEAGUEABCSportowllt

find their holiday interrupted when
two crimin als use the event as an
excuselo retrieve gold coins from a
wrecked airplane in the desert.
epee t; eo mins.)

CIJ THINK ABOUT TOMORROW
(I) MOVIE ·(DRAMA)" \lo "Go ,
Man Go"1954
CIJ iUj ID WIOE WORLO OF
SPORTS
I]) LAWMAKERS
5:00 1IJ WIOE WORLD OF TRUTH
(!)
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS

11:46

INNY HILL SHOW

~R11TY

'

Pll. CLUit-TALIC ......,

;
12:00 l!JIIOVIE-(DRAIIA)""IO .. _
IIIII" t871
ClliiN WATTENMAG'I 1 - :
'An lnlorvlew with · larbara._.
Jorden•

�'
D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

Agriculture and
our communitv
0'

By Bryson R.

(Bud~

Cartt&gt;r
Gallia County Extension Agt'nt
GALLIP'OUS - uOOd sanitation
ill the basis for aU fly control
programs. Nevertheless, it is often
necessary to supplement sanitation
practices with pesticides.
For successful fly control,
organize a control program that best
fits your farm. A single pesticidal
product rarely gives toe most effective and economical control. It is
normally best to use a combination
of pesticide formulations such as
baits, residual sprays, space sprays,
larvicides, etc. during the fly
season. Do not wait for heavy fly
populations. It is mucn easier and
less expensive to prevent heavy fly
build-up than to control heavy fly
populations after build-up, As fly
populations begin to build-up, take
time to treat and treat regularly.
. Remove all manure from
livestock pens as frequently as
possible. Calf and bull pens with
animals in them require special attention. It is best to clean these pens
i&gt;nce a week. A clean livestock barn
has fewer fly problenns.
· Spread the manure thinly outdoors
ln order that fly eggs and larvae can
be killed by drying.
Eliminate silage seepage areas,
wet litter, manure stacks, old wet
hay or straw bales and other organic
matter accumulations that may attract flies anywhere on the farm
Wet feed remaining at the ends of
mangers will breed flies .
Provide proper drainage in barnyards. Use clean gravel ·and other
fill to eliminate low spots in
livestock yards. Proper tilling can
reduce wet barnyards.
Resistance to residual spray
means more reliance on baits.

io 100 pow1ds per square inch using a
power sprayer or gOQd prooorllont&gt;r
type sprayer. Remove animals frw n
the building and cover feed and
water before spraying. Wear
respirator and protective clothing
during spraying. Avoid con·
lamination of feed, water, and
milking utensils. Cover drinking
cups and mangers during spraying.
Never spray in the milk house. Do
not contaminate milk, milk handling
equipment, feed or drinking water.
Call us for Bulletin 472 to get
residual sprays.

1).3- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8,1980

Cooperetlve Extension Service

The Ohio Stott Unlvtrolly

Court rules double-ceiling violates Eighth Amendment
By THOMAS RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
federal appeals court Saturday
upheld an order that so-called
" double-ceiling" of inmates at the
state correctional fa cility at
Lucasville violates the Eighth
Amendment.
However, an official of the Ohio
Department of Rehabiliation and
Correction indicated the ruling could
be appealed, possibly to the U.S.
Supreme Court.

...__...
• .::;:=.,u-..,

._.,..

~

Although fresh bail wul help control
flies, results are poor if fly breeding
is excessive. Apply baits (moist) after floor litter and manure have
been removed. Use baits liberally
for best control. Apply a minimum
4-H Vegetable Gardening projects are just one of the areas youth learn about
of four tablespoons of bait per I ,000
growing things. In addition to learning good growing practices 4-H'ers learn about
square feet of floor area. Incease
the varieties of many vegetables, growing periods, and those best suited for use as
amounts when flies are breeding
fresh vegetables or to be stored or preserved.
prolifically. Repeat as needed. Baits
BVI£mt:CU.U
should be used in conjunction with
f.alnJ ... AIKI,
wall and ceiling sprays. Either dry
H •-~
sugar or liquid syrup baits are effectivQ . Do not apply where animals
GALUPOLIS - The coming of the
gardening season means it's time to
can slip and fall or where children
can be present.
give your home freezer some · a tdays alternate with cool nights. You
BY JOHN C. RICE
foliage. As the disease worsens,
Use two ounces Diazinon 50 pertention. Right now is a good time to
may not need to spray all summer
Extensloa Agent
twisting and rolling of shoots and
cent WP per one pound of sugar per
take an inventory of what food is left
leaves occurs. Mildew will be worse
for mildew protection . However,
Agriculture, Meigs County
fi ve gallons water. Apply with a
when fall approaches, get busv!
in the freezer. Then take some time
POMEROY - No-Till Corn
on roses in shaded (especially morYou can use Benomyl, Fung_inex,,
Watch for armyworm if planted af- ning shaded) locations. It also tends
and plan your menus to use up
sprinkling can or other suitable container.
ter or in a meadow. If planting, use todevelopintheautumnwhenwarm
what's in stock, before fresh fruits
Mildex, or Acitidione-PM.
and vegetables are again in season.
Use fo ur teaspoons malathion
40 pounds of furadan per acre. This .----- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - would be 10 percent granules in 40 in·
Last year's bounty - now frozen
(Cythion) 57 percent EC per pound
ch
rows in the seed furrow . This will
- will still be safe to eat. But the
of sugar. Sprinkle lightly on aisles,
give
about four weeks of armyworm
floors, windowsills, or brush on
longer the foods set in the freezer
protection.
If already planted check
walls,. posts or uprights. Or use five
past one year, the more they will
fields
.
Examine
20 plants in dif·
tablespoons malathion (Cythion) 57
lose flavor. Texture will also
ferent
areas.
With
a moderate in·
percent EC per seven tablespoons
deteriorate. In fact, some foods may
festation,
the
corn
will
recover. If insugar, molasses (unsullurized ) or
become so mushy, your family won't
festation
is
severe,
and
eaten below
com syrup per one gallon of water.
eat them.
growing
point,
the
entire field
the
Or use malathion (Cythion ) 3.5 perSo, once your freezer stock is low,
lost.
Watch
fields
also
planted
can
be
cent ready to use formulation .
give the appliance a thorough
hay
fi
elds
or
small
grain.
Arnext
to
Residual sprays applied to walls,
cleaning before it's filled again. Jf
mywomlS can migrate from tiese
you have a manual freezer you may
ceilings, partitions, stanchions,
areas.
need to defrost it first. A manual
posts and other fly resting places are
Alfalfa Weevil - If you have
still the " mainstay" of fly control on
freezer operates more efficiently
alf~lfa with alfalfa weevil and cut it,
livestock farms . These sprays are
and saves energy when there's no
watch the regro wth. When one out of
much more effective in stanchion · frost buildup.
four buds show damage, a stubble
barns than in loose-housing
If you still have some food in the
spray is needed.
management where surfaces vary in
freezer, turn the temperature conKeeping Roses Healthy - Acthe amount of · spray applied on
trol to the coldest setting about 12
ON
cording
to C. C. Powell, Extension
them. Smooth suriaces require less
hours before you plan to defrost.
Plant Pathologist roses aren't par·
spray than rough surfaces.
This will help keep the fOod from
BRUSHES, SPONGES, SCOUR PADS, &amp; MILK FILTERS
ticularly prone to a lot of diseases.
Thoroughly wet the suriace to the
thrawing while you're cleaning.
However, the main reason why
point of runoff at low press ure of 80
Turn off the freezer and disconFIRST CHOICE
ALBACILLIN
people give upon on them or refuse
nect the current. Then, remove the
to
grow
them
in
the
first
place
·
is
food to your refrigerator. Or place it
because of disease problems! There
in a box insulated with several
are
two diseases of roses that are
layers of newspaper and cover with
quite
infectious and damaging .
a blanket._
Doz.
Doz.
BY:
are
black spot and powdery
These
Now you can get to the job of
DIANA S. EBERTS
mildew.
removing the frost build-up. No matBEEF &amp; DAIRY
BlODRY
Black spot, as the name implies, is
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
ter how thick the build-up don't use
a fungus caused disese that shows up
HOME ECONOMICS
any metal tools to remove it. Sharp
as black spots on the leaves. A while
objects may damage the freezer
MEIGS COUNTY
after the spots appear, the leaf falls
lining. Instead, use a wooden or
off. The fungus begins on the lowest
Gal.
plastic scraper. Then be sure to use
OODoz.
leaves and spreads upward as the
a safe object to scoop out the frost
plant grows. Rain or splashing
and ice - like plastic or cardboard.
CONCENTRATED
BEEF &amp; DAIRY
carries fungus spores from
water
Washing
the
freezer
is
the
next
POMEROY - It's finally spring just 56 calories in a one-cup serving.
step. Frost-free freezers as well as cleafto leaf. You cannot ignore black
again and shoppers can lookjorward
In the early 1880s, rhubarb was inspot and have nice roses. They need
manuals
need this thorough cleaning
to the appearance of springtime troduced into this country by an
to
be sprayed on a preventive health
at
least
once
a
year.
To
wash
the
infavorites,
strawberries
and amateur gardener in Maine. Now we
management
program before the
20oz.
terior,
use
a
lukewarm
water
and
rhubarb. Though many supplies are use only the stalks for eating. In
Gal .
disease
appears.
Use
benomyl,
baking
soda
solution
.
One
now being shipped in from warmer fact, the wise use of rhubarb stalks
Phaltan, Funginex, or Caplan.
tablespoon baking soda per quart
states, local produce can be ex- in pies and winemaking gave the
l lf2 BU .
Follow
labeled instructions, being
water is a strong enough solution.
pected soon. This is the peak month plant its nickname :.... " pie plant"
sure to spray both surfaces of the
Next, rinse with clean lukewarm
for strawberries.
and "wine plant."
leaves.
water and dry with a soft cloth.
Local strawberries should begin
Although the origin of the name
Powdery mildew is caused by a
A mild detergent and water
appearing about the end of this moo' " strawberry" is not definitely
4 lbs .
fungus
a s well. White powdery areas
solution is suitable to use on the outth. This will vary, of course, depen· known there are a few explanations.
or lesions show up on youngest
side of the freezer. Check the " use
ding upon where you live. One traces the name to the straw
and care" booklet of your freezer.
Strawberry prices are expected to used between the rows to keep the
Somemanufacturers recommend
be somewhat higher than last berries clean and prot~t the plants
using a cleaning wax on the outside
year's.
.
in the winter.
·3rd&amp;
surface .
Rhubarb is available throughout
Here is the agricultural advisory
Wherever its name comes from,
Sycamore,
Whether you're cleaning the inside
most of late winter and spring since the strawberry is enjoyed by many.
for Ohio as prepared Saturday by
446·2463
Gall
or
out - do not use any abrasives.
it is grown in greenhouses as well as For the best quality and flavor
the Agricultural Weather Center in
Steel wool pads and abrasive
outdoors. However, it is in larger choose strawberries with full, solid
West Lafayette, Ind.:
cleaners may scratch the suriace
supply from March through July red color, attached bright green
L nsdtlt'tl wuthcr continues acroel!l
and become a future site for stains,
with peak abundance in April and caps and freedom from moisture,
thr Ohio Vnllr•)•. Suullwd~· s urface win·
spots and odors.
May. After this month, availability dirt and decay. Proper care begins
d '" an• s till )lumping \\'a rm , mui!ll , un·
Once the freezer is defrosted and
will decreaSe with ball as much ex- at the grocery store . Make
!ilabh· a ir into lht· l'Ustnn third of the
cleaned, turn on the electricity and
pected to be marketed in June.
strawberries your last purchase at
nation. trigst·ring MCaltrrt·ll shuwcrs
let it run for about a half-hour. Then
You can take advantage of current the store, to avoid bruising. Buy only
and thundersho"''" rl!!· A cool front will
transier the food back to the freezer .
good supplies and high quality by the amount you can use within one or
drirt intH tht~ Ohio \iallq· la lt! in tht'
Doing a little freezer spring
purchaSing extra rhubarb and two days. At home, roll them
day .and ,.·idt'81Jrt•ad sho~ r. ~ art·likl'l)·
cleaning will put you in good shape
preserving it for future use. carefully from the box to a flat dish
ahead a nd aJung tht' (ronta( ad\QOCt!,
for the busy food preservation
Rhubarb is a relatively simple food or pan. Remove any decayed or sofln f'orning rainfall arnounl s will
season that's ahead. However, if you
to freeze. Select fresh, crisp, deep tened berries then cover the rest and
8\t'nlSI' (rom 8 QU8rte r•tu 8 hal?•im•h ,
red stalks that are free from fibers . refrigerate. Wash and remove caps · have not already done so, you should
hut lm~all)· ht•a\·icr ll mount8 from I 10 2
bring the gauge from your pressure
Remove the leaves and wash the
just before using.
int• ht•~S art• 1H)S8 ihlt•, ~'hilt• the Showers
HUNDREDS AND
canner in to our office to be checked.
stalks thoroughly. Then trim them
In selecting good quality rhubarb,
willlw quih· fWaltu~ during lht· mnr·
Remember, they should be checked
and cut into one or two inch pieces. look for fresh, firm, crisp stalks that
ning ami nflt•rntt.~ln houn , field delaye
EVEN THOUSANDS
year. We took out " tester" to
every
Place the dry rhubarb without are either red or pink. The stalks
will lwconw mort• widt"t!prcad as the
Columbus on May 5 to have it
sugar, into airtight containers and should be of medium thickness. Old
.-ool fro nt drih 8 into northwt•5lcrn !U'C·
OF DOUARS
checked for accuracy so we would be
freeze immediately.
rhubarb with full , developed leaves
. linn" nf the l'llalc and th t' n 8"''t.'t')J8 t'B8 1·
ready to check yours.
Rhubarb may also be frozen after
~ a rd lah• in the e \'ening.
has grown too long before being
INTEREST.
cooking. Make a cooked rhubarb
picked. Jt may be pithy, tough and
sauce following your cookbook's
stringy. Fresh rhubarb will have
directions, cook and pack into confirm stalks. A wilted, flabby apMAKE YOUR BEST DEAL
tainers. Leave at least one-half
pearance usually indicates stale
headspace in right containers and
rhubarb. This may be stringy and
WITH US AND THEN GET
freeze. Three pounds of fresh
have poor flavor.
rhubarb will yield approximately
If you intend to keep rhubarb at
FREE FINANCING THROUGH
three pints when frozen.
home for a few days before using It,
Strawberries can be frozen quite
cut off the leaves and wash the
IHCC TO THE ABOVE DATES.
easily as welL Select matured, wellstalks. Then dry them thoroughly
colored fruit that is not soft, mushy
and wrap in plastic or place them in
or overripe. Wash in cold water.
a moisture proof container and
One cup of fresh strawberries sup- refrigerate. Regardless of the
plies the average daily requirement
method of preparation, always
of vitamin C as well as some
discard the leaves as these contain
calciwn, iron, riboflavin, vitamin A
harmful amounts of soluble oxalic
and niacin. Strawberries are a jlood
acid.
Get to thote hard·lo-r.. c:h pl.c.
treat for calorie counters. There are
·
~
.
cut , cl.,r, prun1, mow , edt~',
'
\
trim Wid ••.apl A c:omfort8ba.,
\

Homemakers'
Circle

Entry-level jobs

County agent's corner

'DAIRY
· MONTH

10% DISCOUNT
AU

MASTITIS SYRINGES
$7JJ

$1250

MASTITIS SYRINGES

FLY SPRAY

$11

AEROSOL SPRAY

$4

95

MARLATE SOW
$31s

Ag weather

MASTITIS SYRINGES

$600

FLY SPRAY
CONCENTRATE

$2300

WINVANE FEEDER

sgsoo

CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO, INC.

Interest Free Financing!
TRACTORS (36 HP &amp; Larger) UNTIL 3-1-81
HAY EQUIPMENT UNTIL 4-1-81
SAVEl

are hard to find
By KRISTIN GOFF
AP Business Wrller
Thomas Carey, a 22-year-old
graduate of Michigan State University, has approached abo ut 40 companies looking for work as a commercial artist since he got his
bachelor's degree last March.
"Bad luck. No luck. The market is
so tight right now there is nothing,"
he said in a recent interview from
the campus at East Lansing, Mich.
" What they are telling me is that
there are no positions open. It is not
a question of being turned down. The
hardest part is getting an interview
in the first place, " he said.
While the Michigan economy is
suffering more than other regions
because of the slumping a uto mdustry, more and more students
nationwide are likely to face such
problems in the job market this
year, economists say .
"This is definitely the worst time
to be coming out of school since
1974," when the country was in the
depths of its last recession, said Kenneth Goldstein, an economist at the
Conference Board, a business
research organization in New York.
He points to the board's Index of
help wanted advertising volume as
one sign of a business pullback in
hiring.
That index, which measures the
volume of classified "help wanted"
advertising in a bout 50 newspapers
across the country, in April took the
steepest one-month dive in the 29. year year history of the s urvey.
Its 23-point drop to 122 points, does
not specifically measure hiring
plans for youthful workers. But it is
an indication of general business
conditions. The index is measured
against a 1967 base of 100 and now
stands 33 points below the year-ago
figure of ISS.
"There is no question that the underlying tren d is down - down sharply - and it will go down further.
For any high school or college
student looking for work tllis summer, it is clearly going to be a lot
rougher than last," says Goldstein.
No one can say accurately how
bad the summer job situation may
get. But some economists suspect
that the tempora ry summer job
market will be tighte r tban the permanent job market because sum-

mer jobs are one area many

.

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•aty•lo-tdjUII thoulder ttrep It I

, ·

• 22 .5cc En;lno
.,'\.

JIM'S EQUIPMENT CENTER, INC.

·~·~ · ~· t~;
0 1\.
.~
·
- Ill ~·

590 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio

~-~-~·~~
~

NEW HOLLAND PARTS &amp; EQUIPMENT
SPECIAL THIS WfEK

.

plut wllh lhla

,

Eqolppoll

wllh the 1111 PM trimmer heM

~.,.

,

m-.

STOP
.BY
SOON ·

J "

end

an I " Tri·Kul W-.t II.S.. AIIG, In
I " 4-4-Tooth Saw IIIIMit of~
an opttonal KCHNry . Moctel PC

""-

' GENIE I; de1lgn-' at a
ltUihCUfi.,/ PoWit Scythe
Of ManafUarnenl Trimm•
to be opereted In any potl·
lion .

~,
•,

SUNDAY
JUNES, 1980

.

· 5:30
' 6:00

, 6:30

·

7:00

7:30

I"

Trl· lhll
1 1.c~ 1

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

6

... 0.

~

8:30

Wcil'~~. ~~NARO REPASS

I

•

1D.lMD TOBACCO SErrER .... :......~450 00
KuHN HAY TEDDER ................... ~1625 00

,

8 :00

MORNING
CATHOLIC MAS~
CHRISTOPHER etOSE·UP
BETWEEN THE LINES
@) AMERICAN PROBLEMS AND
CHALLENGES
Cil U CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
IIJ KOINONIA
O CIJ ABETTER WAY
!liD TREEHOUSE CLUB
(}) U THIS IS THELIFE
CIJ FORD PHILPOT
CIJ BANANA SPLITS
0 CIJ OLO TIME GOSPEL HOUR
@) URBAN LEAGUE
(j}) Q) ACnON NEWSMAKER
Cil U T.V. CHAPEL
CIJ DAWSON MEMORIAL BAP·
TIST CHURCH SERVICE
(1) IT IS WRITTEN
(1) EDDIE SAUNDERS
IIJ JIMMY SWAGGART
@J OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR ·
(j}) G) BIBLE ANSWERS
Cil U MORMON CHOIR
IIJ THE LESSON
(1)
THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
Cll GRACE CATHEDRAL
0 Cil OAYOFDISCOVERY
l])(jj) SESAME STREET
(j})
G)
EVANGELISTIC
QIJTREACH
CIJU ORAL ROBERTS
CHAPEL HOUR
CONTACT

@J ~MES ROBISON
(j})
LOWER LIGHTHOUSE
Q:OO (})
SINGING JUBLIEE
CIJ ROBERT SCHULLER
([) PARTRIDGE FAMILY
REX HUMBARD
ABETTER WAY
[I) NEW LIFE TEAM
STUDIO SEE
ORAL ROBERTS
MISTER ROGERS
GJ REV. A.A. WEST
GILLIGAN' S tSLANO
'Q:30
'
FAITH FOR TODAY
[I) ROBERT SCHULLER
BIG BLUE MARBtE
IT IS WRITTEN
(jJ) SESAME STREET
•'

~
11•

•

feel the pinch of economic problems
than many others.
J ack Shingelton, Michigan State
University's placement director,
estimates that, despite the
recession, the proportion of students
without· jobs by graduation this year
will only be a percentage point or
two above last year's 10 percent
figure.
In the summer job market, Manpower Inc., a temporary help company with a nationwide network of
offices, says it will recruit 13 percent
fewe r vac,.tioning teachers and
students this summer than last, or a
total of27;ooo.
" Nationally the availability of
swruner jobs has eased from the
levels of past years. But jobs in more
limited numbers do exist. These jobs
will be ha rder to find and most will
be in offiae work, " said Mitchell S.
Ftonnstein, president of the temporary belp .company based in
Milwaukee.
The Labor Department estimates
that 4 million students will be
leaving high schools and colleges to
swell the ranks of the labor force this
s ummer . Of those about 1.4 million
will be looking for permanent jobs
and 2.6 million for surruner jobs, according to department estimates.
Those figures, which apply to
people 16 to 24 years old, don't in·
elude the youthful workers who
a lrea dy have part-time jobs and will
be looking for full-time jobs this
surruner.
Among graduating college students, those with skills in demand engineering and computer science
training for instance - are heing
aggressively pursued, college
placement officers report.
F or others - with degrees in
liberal arts, humanities or other
disciplines not in great demand getting jobs has been difficult for
several years and may become
more difficult this year.

THURSDAY SESSION
POMEROY The Pomeroy
Cha pter of the Women's Aglow
Fellowship will hold a dinner
meeting Thursday at the Meigs Inn.
Speaker will be the Rev. Joe
Beasley and dinner will be served at
7 p.m. with the doors to open at 6.
The dinner is $3.50 a person and
reservations can be made no later
than Tuesday . by calling 992·3728,
992-5859, 675-3273, 949-2325 or 446-7444
in the evenings.

confining two prisoners to one cell
"violates the Eighth Amendment
prohibition against cruel and
unusual punishment."
While the court unanimously
upheld the findings of U.S. District
Judge Timothy Hogan of Cincinnati,
it rejected a claim by the state attorney general's office that the
lower court judgement was not
based upon the "totality of the conditions" at the less than !()-year old
prison.
The state, while reducing the

facility's population at the rate or 2S
a month, appealed Hogan 's ruling.
Assi;tant Attorney General Allen
Adler sought a stay from the federal
district court and the court of appeals, but both attempts were turned
back.
The appeals panel noted that these
"remedial provision s are a
reasonable response to the
violations which were found" at the
prison.
ACLU attorney Jean P. Kamp of

Columbus said the ruling amounted
to " a major victory for prisoners'
rights."
The speed at which the federal appeals court reached a decision surprised Benson.
" It was only argued last Monday,
June 2, " he said, adding that the
quickness of the ruling "points up
the importance" of the case in the
eyes of the court.
The decisiQn, however, " does not
preclude the possibility of further

Some children cannot check out
Bible in North Carolina library
WHJTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) Children whose library cards are
restricted because their parents
don't want them bringing home
"adult" books will no longer be permitted to check out the Bible from
the Columbus County Library.
The Bible is included on the
library's shelf of "adult" books not because it is considered too racy,
but because it is felt to be too dif.
ficult for children to read easily,
librarian Amanda Bible said Saturday .
" We didn't change th e
classification of the Bible," Miss
Bible said. "The truste~s simply

voted to begin a restriction policy
whic h those who were against adult
books had demanded."
One resident of this rura1 county of
50,000 people in the southeastern
part of the state complained in April
because her 12-year-old daughter
had checked out the novel " Wifey"
by Judy Blume.
Miss Blume is · a well-known
children's writer, but "Wiley," her
first book written for adults, contains explicit sexual passages.
A number of other county residents, including ministers, had spoken
in favor of restricting access to, or
banning, some adult books. County

commissioners originally voted to
take " Wifey" &lt;if the shelves, but
decided to seek an opinion on the
matter from the state attorney
general's office.
The attorney general suggested
that access to the adult books could
be limited , and the library trustees
then voted to allow parents to choose
whether to place a special mark on
the library cards of children 17 and
younger, forbidding them from
checking out books from the adult
section. The policy does not prohibit
children from reading such books in
the library.

Balloon race results announced
MERCERVILLE - On Thursday,
May 22, nearly five hundred helium
filled balloons were released by the
students of Hannan Trace Elementary School.

Hannan Trace Elementary Principal Ron Paxton is contacting the
winners to make arrangements for
the awarding of prizes. The contest

was made possible through the sponsorship of the Hannan Trace
Elementary PTO who furnished the
balloons, helium , a nd prizes.

appeal," said Charles Abercrombif,!,
the department's public information
officer.
" We have been operating under
Judge Hogan's order up until the aP:
peal was heard. There will
necessity for making any changes ln
the present manner of operation.
"Since.tbe decision .came down on
a Saturday, we obviously have no(
had time to discuss anything, But WC(
may look into the possibility of appealing to the U.S. Surpeme Court." ·

oo

Officials
halt ritual
sacrifice
NEW YORK (AP) - Authorities
raided a Bronx apartment early
Saturday' not to confiscate drugs or
guns, but to rescue 62 barnyar&lt;!
animals, the intended sacrifice of a
1
religious cult.
Ducks, guinea hens, chickens,
chicks, roosters and pigeons - a,
total of 56 fow 1 - were found in a
garage along with four baby goatS
and two sheep by police and agen~
of the American Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Animals .
The animals were apparently set
for slaughter by the Santera, a saint:
worship cult. AS-PCA officials plan
to find homes for the animals;
;
probably atfarnns in the area.
Seven purported cult membe~
w.ere busily chopping up herbs,
breaking coconuts" and preparing
elaborate receptacles for animal

~~.~:~~~~~~:~~~

Each balloon had a card attached
to it explaining that the balloon was
part of a balloon race and that the
finder should return the card along
with the location where it was found
as there would be a $50 U. S. Savings
Bond presented to the student whose
balloon traveled the greatest distance as well as for the finder of the
balloon going the farthest. A May 31,
1980 postmark deadline was
established for eligibility.

raid, the third in the Bronx involving
the cult in recent months.
.
" They ~ither bite, tear or cut off
the animals' heads and drain all the
blood from their bodies into vessels
on the floor and also drip the blood
over different deil!es and gods that
are on the floor," said ASPCA
Special Agent Tom Langdon,
describing the religious cer~monies.
" They (also) drink the wann
blood as it drips out of the animals,"
he said.
The ASPCA was alerted by neighbors of Emila Plasencia, in whose
home the rite was apparenUy going
to take place.
Publicity from the earlier raids
had C'iii.Sed neighbors. to become
suspicioas when they saw uie
animals being taken into the home
around 9 p.m. Friday night, according to Langdon.
·
Mrs. Plasencia was given a swnmons for harboring animals within
city limits.
The menagerie was found in a
garage attached to the rear of Mrs.
Plasencia 's home . Cult members
said they had purchased the animals
from a poultry market, although
they refused to s pecify which one.

Of the balloons released, only 11
cards were found and returned to the
school. The balloon found the closest
to the school had traveled about 13
miles and was found between Cadmus and Oak Hill, Ohio. The balloon
going the greatest distance traveled
about 90 miles to the Northeast and
was found in Doddridge County, W.
Va., by six-year old Shawn Leeson
who was playing outside at his gran·
dparents' home. Shawn lives with
his parents in Beckley, W. Va. The
balloon was released by first grade
student, Brenda McGuire who lives
with her parents, Roger and Dale at
Route I, Crown City .
The other balloons returned were
released by :
Kindergarten, Susan Moore ; first
grade, Mauro Gonzales; third
grade, Brent Unroe; third grade,
Amber Epling; fourth grade, Grady
Johnson ; fourth grade, Mike Montgomery ; fifth grade, Rbonda
Wheeler ; intermediate in·
dividualized instruction, Dirk Bartruro; eighth grade, Melvin Clagg
and eighth grade, Heather Riley.

..•

.

PETER TOWNSHEND TAKES on the rock critics in
"Jools and Jim," a song from bls new "Empty Glass"
album. The crlllcs are nevertheless giving rave reviews to
the latest solo offering from Tbe Wbo's guiding force.

MEETING POSTPONED
LAUREL CUFF - A meeting !i
the Laurel Cliff Better Health Club ·
scheduled for 7': 30 p.m. Thursday_
has been postponed until June !9 at·
the home of Ann Mash.

'!---------Sunday Television L o g - - - - - - -

.A·GREAT GIFT FOR DAD!

HDFFCO
· l '""'T?g~El

non~

seasonal employers can cut back if
)lecessary.
· Then too, students with special
skills or education are less likely to

FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL
3 GAS POWERED TRIMMER MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM.

Benson Wolman, executive director or" the American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio, hailed the court's action .
''The conditions at the facility
were challenged by the ACLU and
other organizations in a suit filed in
1975," Wolman explained.
In 1978, Judge Hogan ordered the
state to begin a gradual reduction inthe prison's population from a high
of 2,300 to 1,645 inmates.
In issuing the ruling, the U.S. 6th
Circuit Court of Appeals said that

10:00 (}) U REX HUMBARD
CIJ CHANGED LIVES
([) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
Cil KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
IIJ GO$PEL SINGING JUBILEE
(I) SESAME STREET
@J MOVIE ·(SCIENCE FICTION)
...
Fanta~tlc Voyage" 1966
(j}) G) JIMMY SWAGGART
10:30 1IJ SPIRITUAL "WAKENING
ffi MOVIE-(COMEDY·ROMANCE)

1:00 (})UMOVIE-(ORAMA)"" "Conlllcl" 1943
CIJ D. JAMES KENNEDY
Cil AMERICA'S ATHLETES 1980

lt Started In Naplea" 1960

(I) MOVIE ·(D RAMA·MYS TERY)

11

••• '

0

1

[I) ERNEST ANGLEY
·
(jJ) ZOOM
11 :00 (}) Q HUMAN DIMENSIONS
CIJ INTOUCH
(!) REX HUMBARO
I]) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'The
Old Curios it~ Shop' Little Nell and
Grandfather encounter two greedy
owneraol aPunchandJudy puppet

show.
ELECTRIC COMPANY
CD REV. HENRY MAHAN
11 :30
U
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
Cil (j}) G) ANIMALS, ANIMALS,
ANIMALS
O CIJ FACE THE NATION
(I) WORLO OF THE SEA
(jJ) BIG BLUE MARBLE

~

AFTERNOON
12:00 (}) D ATISSUE
CIJ TIME OF DELIVERANCE
Cl) (j}) ID
ISSUES AND
ANSWERS
THIS IS THE LIFE
[I) VIEWPOINT
THE OLD WEST
THE ISSUE
QHtO JOURNAL
12:30
U IIJ MEET THE PRESS
ill ORAL ROBERTS
(1) MOVIE · (DRAMA) " " The
Hum•n Jungle" 1t5•
[I) DIRECTIONS
G [I) WILD KINGDOM
@) FACE THE NATION
(fi) NOVA 'A Plague o n Our Chit·
dren' Toxic herbicides, pesticides,

i

$

and other chem ica ls mav ca use
cancer. miacarriaoe e and birth
defec ts. and the evidence Ia just
beginning to come o ut . This pro·
g ram euminestheharmfuleffecta
deadly chemtceta may have on th is
and following generationa . ~2 hra.)

(j}) Q) KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO

Series devoted ro examining and
revealing the best athletes wh o
weret orepresent 1haUnlt e d States
at the Olympics to be held in
Moscow.

••'ri\

''Edge of Doom" 1Q50

we

provide coverage of the game
between the Tampa Bay Rowdies
and the Fort Lauderdale Strikers .
hril ., 30mins .)

i

INSIGHT
[I) (iD) FRENCH OPEN
(jJ) ANTIQUES
.
2:30 (}) U CZJ LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP
CIJ THE OEAF HEAR
. (U SOCCER Atlanta Chiefs vsNew
York Cosmos
HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
3:00
AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) 000

~

"Killer Elite" 1875

(I) GREAT PERFORMANCES:
LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER
'The FUm Society of Lincoln Center
Presents - ATribute to John Hutton'
Lauren Bacalland Richard Burton
are among celebrities who pay .
tribute to the actor.acreenwrlter,
director. (90 mine.)
·

SPOLETO '80
3:30
MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
4:00 ; HE LIVES
(() (iD) ATLANTA GOLF
e.,LASSIC
'
(jj) UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'Out ot Everywhere' The arrival t'f
the Bellamy's old family nanny ,
together with Sarah'sappo,intment
u nursery maid . cauaea stormy
scenes in the servantt ' haiL (60
mlnsJ

4:30 (}) U IIJ SPORTSWORLD 1)
Professional Bowlere Aaaoc iatioh
doubles championship from las
Vegas . 2) English Derby from Eng·
land. (90 mins )

ffi
0

(jJ) GROUCHO

EVENING
6:00 (}) D llJ (f](ib)(j}j
NEWS
C!J MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••.• \lo "Wotk

m

Proud"

CHAMPIONSHIP

WRESTLING
ABC NEWS
POP GOES THE COUNTRY
BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
SUt.ME STREET
6:30
• CZJ NBC NEWS
CIJ FOCUt "'N THE FAMILY
[I) NEWS
@) CBS NEWS
ABC NEWS
7:00
IIJDISNEY'SWONOERFUL

[I) (iD) ARCHIE BUNKER'S

PLACE Archie , Murray and the
gang think they 've found a cure tor
Mr . Van Renseleer 's blindnes s and
spearhead ad rive I oralse money to
finance the operation. (Repea t)
(I) (jj) ODYSSEY 'Cree Hunters ol
Mistassinl' ln muc h the same way
that the ir forefathers did, the Cree
.lndianaoiCanada treknorthwardto
hunt and tr ap game each wtntar .
This program examines how the
tam il ies join togeJherto prepare tor
the cold months ahead. (60 mlns.)

IIJ OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR

CIJ

I

8:30 G (I) @J ONE DAY AT A TIME

II

UIO

I

lou!!..Aukayser.

8:00 CIJ •

IIJ CHIPa Panch and Jon,

hop ing to spend three vacation
day a competing in an off· road ra ce ,

THE BIG EVENT 'The

G [ll@J ALICEMel 'otopcompeti·
tor, Barney, asks Flo out and Mel
thlnkslt 's becauae he wantstotrep

11:15

her Into revealing hla secret chili
reci.Q!. (Repeat)

11:30

CI)IJJJ MASTERPIECE THEATRE

'Oiaraell' Episode II. 'Mary Anna '
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raell propoaea t.o the wealthy
widow of hiafriend and political ally
ndham Lewis. (60 mine.)

THE YEAGERS Carol!

(()@) 80 MINUTES
WAR ANO PEACE
FRENCH CHEF
7:30
WALL STREET WEEK
'Requiem for Auto Sto,cka' Host :

Cil U 1IJ

e:30

~

PORTER WAGONER SHOW

DOUBLE FEATURE 'Nighloldo'

ULIJI!aiTHE341hANNUAL TONY
AWIIADS Mary Tr.ler Moore and
Jaaon Robards w•ll earve as co·
hoets of the presentation or the
American Theatre Wlng'a Antoln ·
etta Awards, the ('MOlt preetlgloul
~Ivan In the Bro~dwaytheatre. The

i

l

obot"1180

1980 Stare: Doug McClure, Melin·

.

I]) MOVIE ·!SUSPENSE) 000
"Killer Elite" 1975
Cll UP CLOSE Guest; C.I.A . Dlrec·
tor, William Colby.
~
(I) FIRING LINE 'Who Should ·
'Reagan Pick forVice·Preaident?'
Guests: J. Daniel Mahoney, chairman of the Conservative Party of J
New York ; PauiWeyrich, executive •
director of the Committee for the "'
Survival of a Free Congraaa; P1· •
trick Buchanan, ayndlcetad columnist. Host: William F. Buckley, Jr. '
(j]) BEN WATTENBERG'S 1e80 ,
'An Interview witA Barbara .
Jordan'
•
([) RUFF HOUSE
.J
(j]) MOVIE ·!MYSTERY) "" \lo
"ThJ..LaJ!r Vonlohea" 1838
I]) u Cil IIJ 0 [I) @) (j}) •
•
NEWS
NI!WSIGHT
•
OPEN UP
NO!t-FICnON TELEVISION
'service l:ntranca' and 'Man of ' •
Wheat' This program feature• two
half hour filma about individuate in 1
our society. Theflrattollowaanaim·
less teenager who enllateln the ·•
Army ReserVe In an attempt to edd ~
direction to hla11fe. Theaecondpor·
trays the saga of a whett farmer
who goee from raga.to richtl in hie
lifetime. (80 mlna.)
PMAPULSE
CBBNEWJ.
•
MOVIE · ~
·(AOVENTUAE·WESTE13NI •••
kloftomo Kid" 1838
THE KIIG IS COMING
GJl. ABC NI!WS
"
N C LATE NIGHT MOVIE
o
MOVIE -(IIYSTEAYI'"IO
11
Not OulltW'" 1174
tla) MOVIE -(SCIENCE FIC1l()llo
COMEDY) •• "IIIUIY lftd.lhl

WM

(l}) ID SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

\!!. ~U!I.

IIJ KENNETH COPELAND

ffi

ill 700CLUB

BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va
Loa AnQ!_tel Dodgers

Yeager, the patriarch of a family
logging operation. discovers what
than bid by nalghbora. (60 minaf

11:00

Mackintosh Man ' 1973 Stars: Paul
Newman, Jamea Mason.

JIMMY SWAGGART

(() !121 UJ

10:30

Long. standing resent menta are un·
covere d between Ann and her
mother after Julie'.a boas. a
psychiatrist, cornea to dinner with
some irtteresting advice on
communicating . (Repeat)

WORLD 'The Young Runaways '
While fleeing trom their unloving
foster parents, a young girl and her
brother and si~ter have a highly
unu sual c onfrontation with the
pollee. (Conclusion; eo mins.)
oaed·Captloned)

ffi

10:00

DOUBLE FEATURE 'Tu rn over
Smith ' 1980Sters: WIIIiemConra d,
James Darren.

(jJ) ELECTRIC COMPANY

5:30

special witt feature pertormancee '·
by stars in productionnumberafrom ·
current BroadWay mueicala. (90
min B.)

REXHUMBARD
MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) " " '
" Grelle" 1978
(I)(j})CD SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE

'CaeaarsPalacelnvitational ' Pert II
Witness the results of years of
dad ice tlon and training when Amer·
ice 'a premlerwomengymnaatsdls·
play their tumbling , vaulting and
balance beam skilta in th is elite
gy_mnastics competit ion.
(J) AFRICANS

1IJ PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
0 [I) ALABAMA 500

@) VOYAGETOTHEBOTTOMOF
•
THE SEA
1:3o
Hl-0
2:00 IIJ WORLD OF PENTECOST
CIJ !121 GJ NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCERLEAGUEABCSportowllt

find their holiday interrupted when
two crimin als use the event as an
excuselo retrieve gold coins from a
wrecked airplane in the desert.
epee t; eo mins.)

CIJ THINK ABOUT TOMORROW
(I) MOVIE ·(DRAMA)" \lo "Go ,
Man Go"1954
CIJ iUj ID WIOE WORLO OF
SPORTS
I]) LAWMAKERS
5:00 1IJ WIOE WORLD OF TRUTH
(!)
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS

11:46

INNY HILL SHOW

~R11TY

'

Pll. CLUit-TALIC ......,

;
12:00 l!JIIOVIE-(DRAIIA)""IO .. _
IIIII" t871
ClliiN WATTENMAG'I 1 - :
'An lnlorvlew with · larbara._.
Jorden•

�l&gt;-4- The Sl!lldaYTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, J une 8, 1980

Kyger
' .,

••

By Rita White
S pecial correspondent
WEDDING REPORTED

, _ A weddl n~ and California trip
highlight Kyger activities.
Recent callers of Mrs. La rr y
.... Wein1ann were Mr. and Mrs . Jim
r Tolle , Leesburg, and Mr. and Mrs.
Butch McDaniel, Greenfield, 0 .
Recent weekend guests of Mr. a nd
,. Mrs. J oseph White were his mother,
Mrs. Alice White and his sis ter, Mrs.
Verna Salser and .da ughter, LaDen. - na, Sheffield Lake. While here they
: called on Mrs. Virginia Davis and
: family , Minersville, and Mrs. Munel
i'pir cs, loca l.
The Golden Rule Class met Thurs&lt;h!y afternoon at the home of Mrs.
J ean Hammack, Turkey Run Rd. After the devot iona l service a nd
business meeting, the hostess served
. refreshments to Virginia Tate, Mary
·Darnell, Editli Gardner, Ga il Sisson,
·Vilma Weimann , Shirley Oxyer,
Vera Thomas and Rita White.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Darst have
retu r ned hom e afte r attending the
··wedding o[ their daughte r, J a11•. a nd
Dav id F letcher, April26, at the , ..

1

Baptist Church, Riverside, California. They went by plane . Enroute to
California they stopped in Phoenix,
Arizona and spent a wee.kend with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burchett and
family. Also attending the wedding
were Mr . and Mrs. Mark Darst, who
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Burchett
a nd family a nd toured the Grand
Canyon in Arizona. Miss J udy Dan t ,
Rio Grande College, and Steven Darst , Ohio State University, wer e also
present at their sister's wedding.
While in California, the Darst family
visited Mr. a nd Mrs. Cha rles Simmons and family, a t Corona and
toured various points of interest , incl uding Dis neyland, Hollywood,
Universal Studios and the ''Old" and
New Campus For Christ Headq uart ers, Before returning home they ~n­
joyed a short vsit with her parents,
Mr. a nd Mrs . Wes ley Ward, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brad bury
a nd childre n, Columbus, were
recent weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Wendell Bradbury and Mr. and
Mrs . Wayne Sisson: Other recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Sisson were Mrs. Carolyn Hart,
Pickerington, and Mr. a nd Mrs.

Richard

Stssun an d An nett&lt;•,
Geor~es Creek Rd.
Recent Sunday dinner guest,; of
Mr. a nd Mrs. Tony E lkins we re Mr.
Jnd Mrs. Bob Elkins a nd son,
Mtchael, Mrs . Bumuc Wheatley,
Candy , Tina, C. H. a nd Davtd , Mr.
a nd Mrs. J.... o-ry Elkons , Leslie and
Larry a nd Mr. and Mrs. Da le
Mollohan. In the evening they all
vi.&gt;ited Mr . and Mrs. Bob Elki ns and
Mike.
Pu bl ic Notice

~----~---

LEG AL NOT ICE
TO BIDD E R S
Noli ce i s her eby give n
thai sealed bids w ill be
rece i ve d by th e City
Manager , ot th e City of
Ga ll iPOl is, Ohio at hi s offi ce
in th e Muni cipal Bu il di ng
f or
! h e r e p ai r
or
of
f 1re
r e pla ce ment
hydrant s for th e C it y of
Ga l lipoli s.
B1 ds w ill be r ecei ved at
the above na med offi ce un
til 12: 00 Noon , local tim e on
Tuesday , June 24 , 1980 and
PUbl icl y opened and r ead at
that hour and place . Bid
for ms m ay be obta ined i n
th e Office of th e Ci ty
M a nage r •. 518
Second
A Yenv c, Ctf y of Gall ipol is,
Ohio.
June a. 15

M~~E:.~~IAL SUNDAY, JUNE 15TH
FATHER'S
KNIVES

ZIP PO
LIGHTERS

ENGRAVED WITH
CHILDREN'S NAMES
-FREEOther Great Gifts
For Dad

MANY STYLES
TO CHOOSE
FROM

-BULOVA WATCHES
-CARAVEu.E WATCHES
-POCKET WATCHES
-PRINCE GARDNER WALLETS
-MONEY CLIPS
-KEY CHAINS

FREE
ENGRAVING

An-nOun ce ments - -

l

Publ•c Notice

NOTIC !. TO
CON TR A CT ORS
STA TE.OF OHIO
D E PAR TM E NT OF
TR AN SPOR T ATI ON

Card of Thank s

1

Columbu s, Oh io
May 23, 1980

Contr ac t Sa les Legal

Co py No. 80-34 1
UNI T P RI CE
CO NTRA CT
PMS-OOOS( 173)
Seated proposals wi ll be
recei ved at th e off ice of the
D i r ec tor of the Ohio Depar-

tment of Transportation,

Col umbus, Ohio, unt il 10:00
A .M .. Ohjo St andard Tim e,
Tu esday, June 74, 1980, for
improvements in :
At hens, Ga llia , Hocking,
M e ig s and WashinQfon
Coun ti es, Ohi o, on vanous
loca ti ons, b y ap pl ying
r etrofl ec tor i zed polyester
compound f or center li nes,
t a n~ li nes and c hannelizi ng
lines.
r ne Uh 10 L&gt;ep artm ent o.f
Tra ns portat io n
hereby
not ifi es a l l bidders tha t it
will aff i rmative l y insur e
th at 1n any cont r ac t enter ed into pursua nt to t_h is
ad v ert ise ment , mi nor ity
business enter pri ses wi ll be
affor ded ful l oppor tun it y to
subm i t bids in r esponse to
th is invitalion and wi ll not
be di sc rim ina t ed aga inst
on th e grounds of r ace,
color, or nati ona l ori gi n in
con sidera ti on
f or
an
award .
" Min imu m w age r ates
for ! his pro jec t have been
pr ed eterm ined as r equi red
by law and ar e set fort.h i n
t he bid pr oposa l ,"
" The date se t f or com pletion of t his work shal l be
as se t forth in th e biddi ng
pr oposa l. "
.
Each bidde r shal l be
r equi r ed to f i le with his b id
a cer ti f ied c he~ k or
cas h ier 's checK tor an
amount equal to five per
cent of hi s bi d , but in no
event more th an fifty
th ousa nd doll ars, or a bond
fo r t en per cent of his bid ,
payab le to th e D ir ec tor .
B idder s m ust apply, o n
the proper f orms. for
q ua lifica t ion at least ten
days pr 1or to t he date s~ t
f or openi n9 bi ds i n accor dance w 1t h Chapter 5525
Ohio Revi sed Code.
Pla ns and spec if ications
ar e on fil e in th e Department of Transportati on and
th e offi ce of t he Di str ict
Deput y Dir ec t or .
The Di r ector r eserves
th e rig ht to r e ject any and
all bids.
DAV IDL.WE I R
DIR E CTOR
Rev . 8· 17·73
June 1, a

A NOTE OF Thanks, ,1 want
to tha nk my fr iends t or t he
flowers, cards, visits and
prayers dur ing m y stay in
the hospital. Joa n Thacker .
Our hear tf elt t ha nks to all
who helped in any way
during the i l lness and death
of our loving wi fe and
si ster , Cora 0 . W i ll .
Espec;:lally to Dr . M org a,
Dr . Walk er , a nd nur ses a t
Holzer Hosp ita l, Ewin g
Funeral Hom e and Re v .
Wilbu r Per r in. A ll your kin . dness and pra yers w ill also
be r emem ber ed.
Her ma n Will a nd Family .
We wish to express our sin cere th anks to r ela tives,
f riends, neighbors, and
mem ber s of the M iddleport
United Pentec ost a l Churc h
for t he ir acts of ki ndn ess
shown us at the death of ou r
beloved husband, son and
bro ther, Robert A . Har t ley .
Tha nks for the c ards, th e
food, t he beautiful fl ower s
and your prayer s. T hanks
to the c hi ldren's church
g r oup f or the way s their
love for h im w as shown
while he was ill , he greatly
apprecia ted y ou r cards,
etc. Specia l thanks to
Pastor Wm . Kni ttel , for hi s
consoling words and to
Teresa
Shaff er
and
Ger ald ine Boyd for their
beaut iful songs , t o the
p a llb ea r e r s a nd
t he
Rawl in gs Coats Blow er
Funer al Home for th ei r ef fi cient se rvi ce. Word s are
insuff icient to express my
appreciation to hi s sistersin-law, Fanchon Overturf
and A vis Hartley and to the
fine nurses ( fourth floor) at
Holzer's who labored so
tenderly with our laved
one. A lso many thanks to
Dr . Ridgway , Or. Walker,
D r . Solt ice and Dr . Pren·
der gast. M a y God Bless
'( OU a ll.
Wif e Vi r ginia 0 . Vitatoc
Hartl ey, Mr. and Mrs.
Al len Hartley, Mr. and
Mr s. Kenneth Hartley and
son.

2

------~--

1 PAY h i ohest p rice ~
possible for gold and si l ver
coins, r ings, jewel r y, et c,
Contac t Ed Bu r k ett Barber
Shop, M idd lepor t .

La ne
Pi ano Tuning
Danie ls 742·2951. Tuni ng
and Repa i r Ser v ice since
1965. If no answer phon,e
992 ~ 2062 .

SWEEP E R and se wing
machine r epa ir , parts, and
supplies.
Pic k up and
delivery, Davi s V acuum
Cleaner , one half tnile up
Georges CreeK Rd. Call
446·0294 ..
" TH E BU TCH E R'S SHOPPE " formerly owned by
Vernon Lucas, under new
management, free zer beef ,
Swift sides, custom work
don e.
Call
446 - 2851 ,
Bu laville Porter Rd .

Hansher who passed away
15 years ago June 4. Sad l y
missed by daughter, son-in·
law and family . Mr . and
Mr s. Burdell M c Kinney .

HALLEY ' S Gun ard Dog
Suppli es
Just below
Racoon Bridge on Rt. 7.
Hours for June 9 a.m . to 1
p .m. Good selecti on of
shotguns of all makes and
models .
BIBLE LAND TOUR
Dept. Oct. 10, ltlO from
Ga llipoliS, Ohio. Villi Israel ~nd
Jord1R. Only 1999.00 from New

York. Egypt optlon•l addition.
Make reservation' now. For informat ion write Bible Lind
Toun . .413 4th AYt ., K. M .R .,
G11iipoUs, Ohio 4Hl1. Ph .

I

Need y person needs 2 fu ll
ml!lt t resses and 3 half mattresses . 949·2628.

Public Sale
a. Auction

MONDAY , JUNE 9, 7:00P.M.
RICHLAND AVE , ATHENS , OHIO
Have quit business &amp; leased bldg ., will sell :
12 ft. x 20 ft . &lt;can be made sma ller ) ex t ra good
metal CAPITAL COO L ER w/ like new Coplen matic
single phase compresso r , e vaporator , 8 sliding
glas.s doors, door in r ea r , ra ck s, in good r unnin g
Qrder - must be r emoved 2 days after sale. A lso
Shaefer ice cream cabinet; Scotsman Ice cub er ;
Power~ &amp; Qui.Kold chest cool ers ; meat cutting tabl e
on l"ollers w/ stainless s. top ; " Pi c-N·'Pac" floures·
cent sign 4' x8 ' ; gOOd 2 drawer NCR cash r eg ister
(f igures tax) ; misc . items.
Terms : Cash or ck. w/ p_
os. 1D.
Andrew &amp; Robert Alderman, Owners- Ph.
614-797 -2448
C. E . Sheridan, Auct.
3~3

$500 . 00 re wa r d , n o
questions ask ed f or the
ret urn of a small brown
terr ier w i th black In the
middl e of his tail . Owner
very Ill and needs the dog
back badly . Call local
sheri f f ' s office oi W. Hill at
614 -742·3093 late evenings.
LOST : Bighorn Western
sadd le. Area of Flood Rd.
H ill .
or
M i dd le port
Rewa r d. 992·2092 or 992·
7603 .
LOST : Boy 's digital watch
with leather band . Lost at
Sy racusei Ball Park Thur s.
ni ght. Reward. Any info .
call667 ·3639.

Real Estate

General

4

7

WHITE PERSIAN KIT·
TEN · housebroken, call
446·3548.
RCA Electric range, c all
4-46·4849.
FREE
ADUL T
basic
education classes. l'rep,ore
for the G.E .D. test or i m prove bas ic skills . Call
G.A.H.S. 446-4033, 4-16-3212,
or 4-46·3250.

FULL BLOODED Springer
Spaniel , mother and 7 pup·
pies. Call 3 86 ~ 9349 .
MOTHER Callico cat and
three ki ttens . Call 256-6729.
1973 356 Massey Ferguson
In loader . 992·366 1.

Iron .and brass beds, old
f ur n i t ur e, desks, gol d
rings ,
jew elry , s il v er
dollars, st erling, etc., WO;Od
ice box es, antiques, etc .
Complete
hou seho l ds .
Wri te M . D. M iller, RL 4,
Pomeroy, OH 1 or ca II 99 2
- 7760 .

10 karat, l4 kar at, 18 karat.
gold . Dental gold a nd gold
ear pins. 675 ·301 0.

Gold, silvfr or f orei gn
coins o r a ny gold or sil ve r
items. A nti que furnitur e,
glass or chi na ~ wi ll pay top
doll ar , or complete esta tes.
No item too large or too
small. Check prices befor e
selling. A lso do apprais ing.
Osby ( Qss ie ) M artin . 9926370.

REAL ESTATE

Pameroy,O.

Yard Sale

E ..cullwt Lllllng-Nit-SI , 3

YARD SALE · AI Jaycee
bldg. on Rt. 35. For Gall Ia
Junior Miss Scholarship
fina l. May 31st .

bedroom home, completely
remOdeled, ntW eorpet,
bosement, woo11
ated,
rea sonat
.:~llts.
loqted
. two lots,
Mulbtrrv AYe., Pomeroy,
Oh. Owner will htlp finance
to respom.ible party.

O
'
sO\...

1978 MERCURY ZEPHER
· S3100 . Call4-46·6677 after 7.

luslnets 0ppcH"tunity- NR ·S7,

Burlingham Slon. 12 mll~sr rom

Pomeroy on fU. JJ, complete
garage, store room, gar~ri
I •Poce, and free park ing .
• ........ , tJriced ln111e lowS20' s.

YARD SALE - All weeK .
Ma s ter
residence ,
Bulaville·Porter Rd ., .4 1h
miles off 554 .

NR-41, New LIIHnt - Nlce
country home, with 31 aern
rtear Rutland, ~ rooms w11n
bath, IJQOd OUtbuildings,
hunting,
with mineral

Three miles S. of Tuppers
Plains off Rt. 7, turn on Co .
Rd . 28 . 1t• mile, ne:d to
Riggscrest Addition . Her man Schul residence, wat ch for signs. Lots of
children ' s clothes, ex cellent cond. Boys sizes6·7.
Girls sizes 8·10·12. Lots of
other nice items and some
glassware. June 9 and 10.
Rain or sh ine,8·4.

rights. See to appreciate .
comfortaltle

Homo

-

NR-M, CION In, 6 rms.,lul·
ly fumlshad, nice porch,
yard anct aaragt. Tnts won' t

last 10119.
Chlrltl M. Harn, Realtor

Neaelt E. Carsey, lr.· Mgr .
Pf'l. "J-240l or "2·2710

We

' Porch Sale June 11 from 9·
4. 1 day only at FranK Up·
ton' s on Corner of Co. Rd .
36 and Silver Ridge Rd .
Ch ildren, adults clothes,
many other items . Rain or
shine .

have

potential
your

Real Estate- General

Real. Estate

General

Want ed to Bur

9

WI LL BU Y ol d Ir an
s mi ssi o ns,
ba tt e r 1es,
engin es, or scr ap meta l s,
e1c. Call :l 45 9HI8 .

D IAMOND S,
old coin s,
w edd i ng bands, estat e
jewelry, class r ing s, etc.
TA WN EY JEWELER S,
422 Second Av e.
GOLD. 10K, 14k , 18k , dental
gold and gol d year pins.
Ca l1 675·301 0.
W I LL BU Y ol d t r-a n·
s m iss ion s,
ba t teri e s,
engines, or sc r ap meta l s, .
et c . Ca ll 245·9188.
WA NT TO BU Y toba cco
p lan ts. Ca ll 256-1466 after 6.
D E EP WELL PUMP . Ca ll
367·0632 bef ore 2pm .
Real Estate

8

Part beag le pupp ies, 1 m.o.
old . Motherless, male and
fem ale. 985-4133.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Serv ice . Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crit18radfard.

~a~J fidta_B~Y -

=.

C A TALY T IC
CON ·
VERTER S
(use d )
aluminum, (C ans, etc .&gt;.
au tomat ic
transm iss ions
(junk ), copper , brass, lead ,
ba tteries. radiators, Call
Robert L . Harper , 675·3616
or 675·5202 .

1J __si!~] '!!l! ~~~~=
Wi ll do od ds a nd ends.
Paneling, floor tile, a nd
cei l ing ti l e. Ca ll F red
M iller 992 ·6338 .
Smal l
engine
re pa i r .
Behind old Rec r eation Center in Racine. Hrs.: 9·12
Mon .· Sat .· Opena ll d ay
Thu r s.
Some eve ni ng
hours. Bob Poo ler.
Woul d lik e to do ba bysi t t ing in my home . Rac ine
area . Ret,erences . 949-277?.

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

30" Mower when
you buy a .
Walking Tractor

beat
price.
bedroom brick. 1
room, fireplace, eat-in Kit·cn••n
sionallandscaped yard .

•

of space in this 4
bath home in Rodney . Full
basement, huge fam . room , stone
fireplace, wet bar, 2 car garage pus 1.14
acre l awn. M ove right 1n.

MANNING ROUSH, OWNER

4

for

•

A78-13 Reg. 33.99 each
Road King Perfonnance 78
Poly11ter Whlttw1111
Sturdy, durablB, and mileage-proven poly·
ester cord resists flat spotting and cold
start thump. Special tread compounds
retard wear. Reverse-molded, low, wide
and racy 78 silhouette.

AUCTIONEER

LOT MODEL CLEARANCE
OF NEW 1979 HOMES

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

,
.
,
.
v
.
.
.
h +- -d

..

DIJUN6 AUA

II:ITCHUI

IEO JI OOM

Not responsible for accidents or loss of
property.

SAT., JUNE 14, 1980
10:00 A.M.

4
92.00

Road King Premium
Sp0rt1 Tlru · ··
.
For aports, i[Tlport, and small
American cars. 4-ply rated
polyester cord body. Deep.
slped, open-rib tread.

1r •-

BEDR OOM
10' .. ..

n .o

SKYLINE 24'x44"
3 BR lo la I elect r ic sectional home, vertical rustle sldlng,
fu ll l · 12 roof pitctl , total wrap Fom ·Cor . Tt'te very best
furnitur e and carpettd throughou t .

PRICED AT U 1,SOO.

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR FOUNIMTION

I

11"

l]FJ.
,·J lL
~)_:_____]

[I ~
r

oO ,

'¥

•

•

f11 •7

•

BARON 14'x70'
2. BR Tot a l Ele ctr ic, tota l wru Fom-Cor, woodburnlng
fi r e pla ce with brick front and mantle. Gnden tub and
'Se pa rat e sho wer , stereo. The beSt of furniture 11nd
carpe te d throu ghou t.

.

PRICED AT

$14,500.

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR LOT

* NOTR

I

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES, INC.
' ' For Tne F inest In Manufactured Housing
1100 E . Malr. St.

P92· 7034

R. N . · 11 to 7 charge nurse .
Competitive salary, paid
holidays and va cation, sick
leave, pleasant working
conditions. Contact : JUdy
Barcus, R.N. , Director of
Nursing, Pinecrest Care
Center, 555 Jitckson P ike,
Gallipolis, OH 446-7112 .

WANTED · someone to
sem_ i -invalid
care for
elderly lady , Tuesday
through Friday. Call 3677545or367 ·7124.
PARTTIME piece work.
Webster ,
Ameri c a's
foremost d ictionary company needs home workers
to update local mailing
lists . All ages, experience
unneccesary . Send name,
address, phone number to
Webster , 175 5th . Ave. Suite
1101 ·747·0, New York, NY
10010.

I
Russett D. Wood
Evenings 4&lt;16-4618
Re•llor

Ken Morgan

EveningS 446-0971
Realtor

The Bush' s Town &amp; Country Gro, contents will be·
sold. Located in Wellston, Ohio. Watch fqr sale
·signs.
"STORE ITEMS"
All kinds of can goods, coats, work suits, overalls,
approx. 25 pair of leather boots, men's, ladles' &amp;
children 's shoes, all Kinds of health aid supplies,
under clothes, double barrel sling shots, coveralls &amp;
bib overalls, shirtS, blouses, all kinds of kitchen
utensils, oil lamps, kerosene heaters, garbage cans,
lard cans, coal buckets, calf buckets, paints, bug
dust, stove pipe , dampers, rakes, brooms, horse
halters, buttons, thr~ ad, an all k ind of soaps&amp; paper
items.
· •.,.
·

Pomeroy, o.

Roto bin, nails, nuts, bolts, platform scales weighs
to 1,000 lbs., set of scales, pop cooler, meat case,
electric &amp; manual adding machine, .4 door dairy box
side open 9 tt., cash register, key cutting machine,
ice cream box.
" FEED&amp;MlSC. "
Milk repla cer , dog food , rabbit pellets, oats, three &amp;
one salt, blocks, white &amp; madox salt blocks, fly fog ·
ger, ·e lectric fence charger , misc. hand tools, air
compressor , store paper roller, approx . 30 sheets
mobile home underpinning, screen wire,- 12 by 12
tarpaulin, p ipe dies, old fashion coffee machine, 16
ft . gate, woven wire, top soil, roofing, lime, sled, ce·
ment motor mix, 1-4 joints of_. in ., drain pipe, down
spouting. pipe Insulation, 2 Iron beds, sewing
machine, 2 beauty shop chairs w l dryer, .pair of
woman's old high top dress shoes, and lots of misc.
NOTE: Mr. Bush ha~ been in the Gro, store f!&gt;r
yrs. This Is oil current Gro. stock. come pre~red
for all day singing and lunch on tile ground by !he
church ladies.
' 'Not responsible for accidents''
Terms: Cash
Lunch
Positive I. D.
D•nSmllh
Jim C•m•han
949-!033
949-2701

uv,

.. ·-

-·

GET VA LUABLE tra in ing
as a younq business person
and earn good money pius
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route · c-arr ier . Phone
us r ight .o way and get on
the el igib ility list at m 2156 or 992-2157 .
Gr ill cook and waitress
wanted. Apply in person.
Crow' s
Steak
Hous e,
Pom e roy

.

Wanted : Someone to care
for semi-i nvalid lady Tue·s.·
Fri., 985·3580 or 992·5703 .

NUCLEAR
POWER
TRAINEES
Rewarding
pro·
gram offers good
salary, earn 30
days vacation with
pay, total medical
care and S2000
bonus upon com·
pletion of training
progri!m . Age
17-25. Some math
and physics re·
quired. Call: Toll
.F ree

1-800.282·1384
Ex perienced crane &lt;df.ag
line)
operator .
Send
resume to Box 428 , Racine,
Ohio 45771.

' GREEN ACRES - Three BR ranch,
nice bath, large LR, modern kitchen,
laundry, all carpeted, garage &amp; flat lot.
Wi ll qua li fy for most types of financ ing.
Immediate possession . $39 ,500.

II

NEW HOME i
. &amp; Ra e~
coon Creek . 3 bedroom cedar ranch, 2
baths , cathedral ceiling , pr ivate
master suite, dining area, 2 car garage
&amp; deck, city schools.

MON.-WED.
9 AM TO 2 PM

1N THE · LAP OF LUXURY - That's
where you will be the day you move Into
this brand new 3 BR , 2112 bath tri - level.
This home will fulfill your every dream
with the large L-shaped fam ily rm.,
equiped kitchen &amp; 2 car gorge. Located
in Clearview Estates &amp; shown by ap·
pointment.

OWN
- Qua lity
bi·level home in a quality neighborhood
off U .S. 35. 4 bedroom, 2'h bath, large
family r oom, na t. gas, ce·n t . air, 2 car
garag e plus nice large patio . Mid 60's.

Dl .A TE POSSESSION - Owners
have transf erred, need to sel this
spacious tri ·level in Rodney . 3
bedrooms, fireplace , huge family room,
2112 baths, formal dining, equipped kitchen, 2 car garage . 31• ac . yard . $69,500.

terms on this attractive 3 bedroom
ran ch. Fam i ly room , firepla ce, 2 baths,
large uti li ty room , nat. gas, cent. air, 2
car garage &amp; immediate possession .
Pric ed to se tl at $49, 900 .

A TRULY GR
-Better
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 me
quality of th is br ick &amp; frame 2 · story
home . 3 BR ' s, 211~ baths, extra la~ge LR
&amp; family rm ., f ireplace, r.ent . a1r, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH
MORE . Sho"".n by appointment.

ROOM TO ROAM - 1 think you would
say thatthi s sprawling bri ck tri - level is
one of the ni cest country homes you' ve
ever seen. This beauty is situated on _. 112
acres of land about 3112 miles from
Rodney. Why not let your fam ily enjoy 5
BR ' s, 3 baths, large l iving and dining
room, comlete kitchen, family room
with stone fireplace nd 2 car garage. Be
the first to see this one.

OLD TIMER Stylish 7 rm. home is look·
lng for a family. SO acres woods, 10
acres clear, barn , outbui ldings, fob.
base, Perry Twp, , commerc ial timber
reported , asking $43,500.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% DOWN - Older 2story home with 6
rms. &amp; bath, cellar house, sheds, large
shade trees on approx. 4 acres. Located
4 m i. soulh ot Rlo Grande on Tom ·
Woods Rd. $19,900.

ENO - 4.25 acres level land . Over .400
fl. trent age on State Route 554 . County
water available, excellent building or
mObile home site. $0,500.

"MISC."

SAVE $2,500 ON THIS ONE

I I,

CALL TOU. FREE

da y~ .

PUBLIC AUCTION

LIVING fiODM ·
IEOIIi OOM

Rewarding pro·
gram offers good
salary, earn 30
days vacation with
pay, total medical
care and S2DOO
bOn!JS upon completion of training
program . Age
17-25. Some math
and physics re quired .

Help Wanted

~

Lo~ated in Thurman, Ohio iust off R:t. US 35. The
following will be offered:

LEE JOHNSON-

NUCI.IAR
POWER
TRAINEES

WOU L D you like to be pai d
for going to college? You
can get th is: and extra s 11ke
$1500. bonus, free tran'spo r t a t i o n to exotic
.pa r adi ses like Hawai i and
Puerto Rico. life insurance
and more 1ust tor one
weeKend a month and 15
days a year in the Ohio Air
National Guard . To find out
how t his dream can come
· true f or you, call M Sgt.
M ik e Gi lmore at (6141 474·
7048 (coll ect ) nights and
1614) 497 ·0670 (coll ect )

I

10:30 A. M.

New wringer washing machine, portable sewing
mach ine, vacuum cleaner, 2 wooden BR suites, Ad·
m ira! deep freeze cheM type, Coronado
refrigerator, GE electric range, d inette set w/ 6
chairs, bedspreads. color TV, B&amp;W TV , living room
chair , iron bed, carpet, several cha irs and tables,
dishes, one lot of potted flowers, pictures, jars,
screen doors, 2 step ladders, some hand too ls, lawn
chair s. and other miscellaneous items.
TERMS : CASH
Lunch Available
ZELMA PHILLIPS WALKER, OWNER

~ f!_lp_~_il!!_f!_d- - -

TUTOR for 10 year old tor
summer months. Call 3670478 .

PUBLIC -SALE
50" Mower when
you buy a
Riding Tractor

11

---.--.----

11

General

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1980

11

HELP WANTED - posit ion
open for part time
registered nurse. Apply at
Gallia County Health Dept.
Monday thru Friday, 8 to
12. lto3 :30.

B A l&lt;li ''" N

Three Family Yard Sale
Tuesday the lOth and Wed·
nesday the 11th at JoAnn
Stewart' s on New Lime
Road from 9·5. Ra 1n or
shine.

General

9_

NEW LISTING - 3 BR
home on 2'12 acres of
land . 3 miles below Mid·
dleport off Rt. 7. Also
trailer hookup tor addi·
tiona! income.
NEW LISTING- 1 floor
plan, 3 or 4 bedroom
hOm~, nice built-in kitchen with range and
-oven on Rl . , 7 In
Pomeroy, Oh .
, : BUSINESS BUILDING
In
downtown
Rutland, 0., approx. 10
years old . Use as
business or convert to
living quarters. See to
appreciate.
NEW LISTING- 3 BR
cottage with 2 acres of
quiet ·countryside. 5
minutes from M i ddleport, 0 .
3 BEDROOM HOME - ,
Carpeted and paneled,
on Vine Street in
Racine, very clern,
ready to move into. Nice
level lot. Will also con·slder renting_
1 ACRE IN MIDDLE-,
PORT - ~ room cottage, tnt(ler hookup,
reduced to $8,000.
TAKING LISTINGS! .,
HObart Dillon, BrokerlFayManley
Branch Mgr.
Phone 992 ·2~98

Car por t Sale Monday June
9, 9-? Dick Lee residence .
Tyree Blvd. Racine, OH .

5 Kittens, 8 wKs. old. 742·
23 28.

General

DILLON

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anythinQ to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing tor
sale may p lace an ad in thi s
column. There w ill be no
charge to the advertiser .

Real Estate

.,

r - - - - - - - - - . ,'

FOUND · Hound dog, no
collar, if you can identify
and pay for ad, It' s your
dog . Cal\446 ~ 3587 .

~ a n)t!.d _to~ B~'t'_

9

AUCTION

Asso r ted ki ttens and cats.
985 ·4163.
6
Lo~s=-=,-a-::
nli
:;-;:F:-::o-:-:
un
=-do--

YARD SALE · 50 Lincoln ·
Everything .

44HJ ll ,

l oves
SMAL L PUP
children . Call446· ll12.

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

.~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June e, 1980

Giveaway

FOUND
Long haired
Chihuahua. Call 446·2971.

In Memoriam

1n Memory of James L.

4

ALL THIS FOR $39,000 - 3 BR 's, 1'12
baths, LR with stone fireplace, natural
gas heat , a ir cond., rahoe. dishwasher , •
garage, large patio &amp; fenced In front :
lawn . .

THE ENTIRE FAMILY WILL LOVE
THIS ONE - 3 or 4 BRs, 'h baths, LR
with WB f irelace, family rm., lovely ·
carpet throughout, 2 car garage, near ~
Clay School. $53,900.

' MINI FARM - Owners moved to
Florida an~ are selling lhfs lovely 3 BR
bricK home. This 6 yr. old beauty offers
lots ot good living tor some lucky family
with a large kitchen &amp; dining rm ., LR,
family rm. with fireplace , garage &amp;
barn . Located on State Route 160 approx. 6 mi. from HMC .
PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres. 15 A .
Simms Creek bottom, balance rolling
pasture &amp;.: wOOds, nice mOdular home,
large barn , several other buildings, fob.
base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
Woods Rd.

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp;
SAVE MONEY - Unfinished one story
home with 3.4 acres on RACCOON
CREEK . Located on the Green
Sa~nders Rd. near Northup. $18,500.

-

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted r GREEN TOWNSHIP PASTURE'
building lot. 1.22 acre, ni ce wooded set- FARM - 155 A . M ·L located on SR U1
approx . 6 mi. west of town. Land Is ap·
ting, c ity schools. $5,900.
p rox. 60% cleared &amp; 40% woods &amp; In·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn . Priced at
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE '
so,soo down - 9% - Ask ing $33,000 - ' S500 per acre. ·
Remodeled 2 story home, 3 BR's, LR ,
den, fam ily rm .. dining, kltch~n, 2 WB
RODNEY BIP)NELL RD. - Sectional
fireplaces, l it• acres. Located on State
home, !4x60, 4 BR, 2 baths, .l arge LR,
Route 233 between Gallipolis and Oak
equipped kitchen, cent. air, concrete
Hill.
.
block garage . lacre. $22,500 .
RACCOON CREEK FARM - 50 acres,
38 . A. bottom, 11 A, pasture, lovely
modern brick home with 3 Brs., 2 baths,
TWO MILES OUT StATE ROUTE 511
cathedral cei l ings, fireplace, large ~un
- Remodeled home lncludel6 rms, and
deck and lot.~ of other e)(tras, new metal · bath,
carport,
stove.
refrlg.~
pole barn, crib, loading chute, approx.
dishWasher, almost 2 acres of land pric1700 ft. creek fro~tage, located 4 ml.
ed tor quick sale. .
trom Meigs Mine No. 3.

1 ,.,.,,

.'

'

�l&gt;-4- The Sl!lldaYTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, J une 8, 1980

Kyger
' .,

••

By Rita White
S pecial correspondent
WEDDING REPORTED

, _ A weddl n~ and California trip
highlight Kyger activities.
Recent callers of Mrs. La rr y
.... Wein1ann were Mr. and Mrs . Jim
r Tolle , Leesburg, and Mr. and Mrs.
Butch McDaniel, Greenfield, 0 .
Recent weekend guests of Mr. a nd
,. Mrs. J oseph White were his mother,
Mrs. Alice White and his sis ter, Mrs.
Verna Salser and .da ughter, LaDen. - na, Sheffield Lake. While here they
: called on Mrs. Virginia Davis and
: family , Minersville, and Mrs. Munel
i'pir cs, loca l.
The Golden Rule Class met Thurs&lt;h!y afternoon at the home of Mrs.
J ean Hammack, Turkey Run Rd. After the devot iona l service a nd
business meeting, the hostess served
. refreshments to Virginia Tate, Mary
·Darnell, Editli Gardner, Ga il Sisson,
·Vilma Weimann , Shirley Oxyer,
Vera Thomas and Rita White.
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Darst have
retu r ned hom e afte r attending the
··wedding o[ their daughte r, J a11•. a nd
Dav id F letcher, April26, at the , ..

1

Baptist Church, Riverside, California. They went by plane . Enroute to
California they stopped in Phoenix,
Arizona and spent a wee.kend with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burchett and
family. Also attending the wedding
were Mr . and Mrs. Mark Darst, who
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Burchett
a nd family a nd toured the Grand
Canyon in Arizona. Miss J udy Dan t ,
Rio Grande College, and Steven Darst , Ohio State University, wer e also
present at their sister's wedding.
While in California, the Darst family
visited Mr. a nd Mrs. Cha rles Simmons and family, a t Corona and
toured various points of interest , incl uding Dis neyland, Hollywood,
Universal Studios and the ''Old" and
New Campus For Christ Headq uart ers, Before returning home they ~n­
joyed a short vsit with her parents,
Mr. a nd Mrs . Wes ley Ward, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brad bury
a nd childre n, Columbus, were
recent weekend guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Wendell Bradbury and Mr. and
Mrs . Wayne Sisson: Other recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Sisson were Mrs. Carolyn Hart,
Pickerington, and Mr. a nd Mrs.

Richard

Stssun an d An nett&lt;•,
Geor~es Creek Rd.
Recent Sunday dinner guest,; of
Mr. a nd Mrs. Tony E lkins we re Mr.
Jnd Mrs. Bob Elkins a nd son,
Mtchael, Mrs . Bumuc Wheatley,
Candy , Tina, C. H. a nd Davtd , Mr.
a nd Mrs. J.... o-ry Elkons , Leslie and
Larry a nd Mr. and Mrs. Da le
Mollohan. In the evening they all
vi.&gt;ited Mr . and Mrs. Bob Elki ns and
Mike.
Pu bl ic Notice

~----~---

LEG AL NOT ICE
TO BIDD E R S
Noli ce i s her eby give n
thai sealed bids w ill be
rece i ve d by th e City
Manager , ot th e City of
Ga ll iPOl is, Ohio at hi s offi ce
in th e Muni cipal Bu il di ng
f or
! h e r e p ai r
or
of
f 1re
r e pla ce ment
hydrant s for th e C it y of
Ga l lipoli s.
B1 ds w ill be r ecei ved at
the above na med offi ce un
til 12: 00 Noon , local tim e on
Tuesday , June 24 , 1980 and
PUbl icl y opened and r ead at
that hour and place . Bid
for ms m ay be obta ined i n
th e Office of th e Ci ty
M a nage r •. 518
Second
A Yenv c, Ctf y of Gall ipol is,
Ohio.
June a. 15

M~~E:.~~IAL SUNDAY, JUNE 15TH
FATHER'S
KNIVES

ZIP PO
LIGHTERS

ENGRAVED WITH
CHILDREN'S NAMES
-FREEOther Great Gifts
For Dad

MANY STYLES
TO CHOOSE
FROM

-BULOVA WATCHES
-CARAVEu.E WATCHES
-POCKET WATCHES
-PRINCE GARDNER WALLETS
-MONEY CLIPS
-KEY CHAINS

FREE
ENGRAVING

An-nOun ce ments - -

l

Publ•c Notice

NOTIC !. TO
CON TR A CT ORS
STA TE.OF OHIO
D E PAR TM E NT OF
TR AN SPOR T ATI ON

Card of Thank s

1

Columbu s, Oh io
May 23, 1980

Contr ac t Sa les Legal

Co py No. 80-34 1
UNI T P RI CE
CO NTRA CT
PMS-OOOS( 173)
Seated proposals wi ll be
recei ved at th e off ice of the
D i r ec tor of the Ohio Depar-

tment of Transportation,

Col umbus, Ohio, unt il 10:00
A .M .. Ohjo St andard Tim e,
Tu esday, June 74, 1980, for
improvements in :
At hens, Ga llia , Hocking,
M e ig s and WashinQfon
Coun ti es, Ohi o, on vanous
loca ti ons, b y ap pl ying
r etrofl ec tor i zed polyester
compound f or center li nes,
t a n~ li nes and c hannelizi ng
lines.
r ne Uh 10 L&gt;ep artm ent o.f
Tra ns portat io n
hereby
not ifi es a l l bidders tha t it
will aff i rmative l y insur e
th at 1n any cont r ac t enter ed into pursua nt to t_h is
ad v ert ise ment , mi nor ity
business enter pri ses wi ll be
affor ded ful l oppor tun it y to
subm i t bids in r esponse to
th is invitalion and wi ll not
be di sc rim ina t ed aga inst
on th e grounds of r ace,
color, or nati ona l ori gi n in
con sidera ti on
f or
an
award .
" Min imu m w age r ates
for ! his pro jec t have been
pr ed eterm ined as r equi red
by law and ar e set fort.h i n
t he bid pr oposa l ,"
" The date se t f or com pletion of t his work shal l be
as se t forth in th e biddi ng
pr oposa l. "
.
Each bidde r shal l be
r equi r ed to f i le with his b id
a cer ti f ied c he~ k or
cas h ier 's checK tor an
amount equal to five per
cent of hi s bi d , but in no
event more th an fifty
th ousa nd doll ars, or a bond
fo r t en per cent of his bid ,
payab le to th e D ir ec tor .
B idder s m ust apply, o n
the proper f orms. for
q ua lifica t ion at least ten
days pr 1or to t he date s~ t
f or openi n9 bi ds i n accor dance w 1t h Chapter 5525
Ohio Revi sed Code.
Pla ns and spec if ications
ar e on fil e in th e Department of Transportati on and
th e offi ce of t he Di str ict
Deput y Dir ec t or .
The Di r ector r eserves
th e rig ht to r e ject any and
all bids.
DAV IDL.WE I R
DIR E CTOR
Rev . 8· 17·73
June 1, a

A NOTE OF Thanks, ,1 want
to tha nk my fr iends t or t he
flowers, cards, visits and
prayers dur ing m y stay in
the hospital. Joa n Thacker .
Our hear tf elt t ha nks to all
who helped in any way
during the i l lness and death
of our loving wi fe and
si ster , Cora 0 . W i ll .
Espec;:lally to Dr . M org a,
Dr . Walk er , a nd nur ses a t
Holzer Hosp ita l, Ewin g
Funeral Hom e and Re v .
Wilbu r Per r in. A ll your kin . dness and pra yers w ill also
be r emem ber ed.
Her ma n Will a nd Family .
We wish to express our sin cere th anks to r ela tives,
f riends, neighbors, and
mem ber s of the M iddleport
United Pentec ost a l Churc h
for t he ir acts of ki ndn ess
shown us at the death of ou r
beloved husband, son and
bro ther, Robert A . Har t ley .
Tha nks for the c ards, th e
food, t he beautiful fl ower s
and your prayer s. T hanks
to the c hi ldren's church
g r oup f or the way s their
love for h im w as shown
while he was ill , he greatly
apprecia ted y ou r cards,
etc. Specia l thanks to
Pastor Wm . Kni ttel , for hi s
consoling words and to
Teresa
Shaff er
and
Ger ald ine Boyd for their
beaut iful songs , t o the
p a llb ea r e r s a nd
t he
Rawl in gs Coats Blow er
Funer al Home for th ei r ef fi cient se rvi ce. Word s are
insuff icient to express my
appreciation to hi s sistersin-law, Fanchon Overturf
and A vis Hartley and to the
fine nurses ( fourth floor) at
Holzer's who labored so
tenderly with our laved
one. A lso many thanks to
Dr . Ridgway , Or. Walker,
D r . Solt ice and Dr . Pren·
der gast. M a y God Bless
'( OU a ll.
Wif e Vi r ginia 0 . Vitatoc
Hartl ey, Mr. and Mrs.
Al len Hartley, Mr. and
Mr s. Kenneth Hartley and
son.

2

------~--

1 PAY h i ohest p rice ~
possible for gold and si l ver
coins, r ings, jewel r y, et c,
Contac t Ed Bu r k ett Barber
Shop, M idd lepor t .

La ne
Pi ano Tuning
Danie ls 742·2951. Tuni ng
and Repa i r Ser v ice since
1965. If no answer phon,e
992 ~ 2062 .

SWEEP E R and se wing
machine r epa ir , parts, and
supplies.
Pic k up and
delivery, Davi s V acuum
Cleaner , one half tnile up
Georges CreeK Rd. Call
446·0294 ..
" TH E BU TCH E R'S SHOPPE " formerly owned by
Vernon Lucas, under new
management, free zer beef ,
Swift sides, custom work
don e.
Call
446 - 2851 ,
Bu laville Porter Rd .

Hansher who passed away
15 years ago June 4. Sad l y
missed by daughter, son-in·
law and family . Mr . and
Mr s. Burdell M c Kinney .

HALLEY ' S Gun ard Dog
Suppli es
Just below
Racoon Bridge on Rt. 7.
Hours for June 9 a.m . to 1
p .m. Good selecti on of
shotguns of all makes and
models .
BIBLE LAND TOUR
Dept. Oct. 10, ltlO from
Ga llipoliS, Ohio. Villi Israel ~nd
Jord1R. Only 1999.00 from New

York. Egypt optlon•l addition.
Make reservation' now. For informat ion write Bible Lind
Toun . .413 4th AYt ., K. M .R .,
G11iipoUs, Ohio 4Hl1. Ph .

I

Need y person needs 2 fu ll
ml!lt t resses and 3 half mattresses . 949·2628.

Public Sale
a. Auction

MONDAY , JUNE 9, 7:00P.M.
RICHLAND AVE , ATHENS , OHIO
Have quit business &amp; leased bldg ., will sell :
12 ft. x 20 ft . &lt;can be made sma ller ) ex t ra good
metal CAPITAL COO L ER w/ like new Coplen matic
single phase compresso r , e vaporator , 8 sliding
glas.s doors, door in r ea r , ra ck s, in good r unnin g
Qrder - must be r emoved 2 days after sale. A lso
Shaefer ice cream cabinet; Scotsman Ice cub er ;
Power~ &amp; Qui.Kold chest cool ers ; meat cutting tabl e
on l"ollers w/ stainless s. top ; " Pi c-N·'Pac" floures·
cent sign 4' x8 ' ; gOOd 2 drawer NCR cash r eg ister
(f igures tax) ; misc . items.
Terms : Cash or ck. w/ p_
os. 1D.
Andrew &amp; Robert Alderman, Owners- Ph.
614-797 -2448
C. E . Sheridan, Auct.
3~3

$500 . 00 re wa r d , n o
questions ask ed f or the
ret urn of a small brown
terr ier w i th black In the
middl e of his tail . Owner
very Ill and needs the dog
back badly . Call local
sheri f f ' s office oi W. Hill at
614 -742·3093 late evenings.
LOST : Bighorn Western
sadd le. Area of Flood Rd.
H ill .
or
M i dd le port
Rewa r d. 992·2092 or 992·
7603 .
LOST : Boy 's digital watch
with leather band . Lost at
Sy racusei Ball Park Thur s.
ni ght. Reward. Any info .
call667 ·3639.

Real Estate

General

4

7

WHITE PERSIAN KIT·
TEN · housebroken, call
446·3548.
RCA Electric range, c all
4-46·4849.
FREE
ADUL T
basic
education classes. l'rep,ore
for the G.E .D. test or i m prove bas ic skills . Call
G.A.H.S. 446-4033, 4-16-3212,
or 4-46·3250.

FULL BLOODED Springer
Spaniel , mother and 7 pup·
pies. Call 3 86 ~ 9349 .
MOTHER Callico cat and
three ki ttens . Call 256-6729.
1973 356 Massey Ferguson
In loader . 992·366 1.

Iron .and brass beds, old
f ur n i t ur e, desks, gol d
rings ,
jew elry , s il v er
dollars, st erling, etc., WO;Od
ice box es, antiques, etc .
Complete
hou seho l ds .
Wri te M . D. M iller, RL 4,
Pomeroy, OH 1 or ca II 99 2
- 7760 .

10 karat, l4 kar at, 18 karat.
gold . Dental gold a nd gold
ear pins. 675 ·301 0.

Gold, silvfr or f orei gn
coins o r a ny gold or sil ve r
items. A nti que furnitur e,
glass or chi na ~ wi ll pay top
doll ar , or complete esta tes.
No item too large or too
small. Check prices befor e
selling. A lso do apprais ing.
Osby ( Qss ie ) M artin . 9926370.

REAL ESTATE

Pameroy,O.

Yard Sale

E ..cullwt Lllllng-Nit-SI , 3

YARD SALE · AI Jaycee
bldg. on Rt. 35. For Gall Ia
Junior Miss Scholarship
fina l. May 31st .

bedroom home, completely
remOdeled, ntW eorpet,
bosement, woo11
ated,
rea sonat
.:~llts.
loqted
. two lots,
Mulbtrrv AYe., Pomeroy,
Oh. Owner will htlp finance
to respom.ible party.

O
'
sO\...

1978 MERCURY ZEPHER
· S3100 . Call4-46·6677 after 7.

luslnets 0ppcH"tunity- NR ·S7,

Burlingham Slon. 12 mll~sr rom

Pomeroy on fU. JJ, complete
garage, store room, gar~ri
I •Poce, and free park ing .
• ........ , tJriced ln111e lowS20' s.

YARD SALE - All weeK .
Ma s ter
residence ,
Bulaville·Porter Rd ., .4 1h
miles off 554 .

NR-41, New LIIHnt - Nlce
country home, with 31 aern
rtear Rutland, ~ rooms w11n
bath, IJQOd OUtbuildings,
hunting,
with mineral

Three miles S. of Tuppers
Plains off Rt. 7, turn on Co .
Rd . 28 . 1t• mile, ne:d to
Riggscrest Addition . Her man Schul residence, wat ch for signs. Lots of
children ' s clothes, ex cellent cond. Boys sizes6·7.
Girls sizes 8·10·12. Lots of
other nice items and some
glassware. June 9 and 10.
Rain or sh ine,8·4.

rights. See to appreciate .
comfortaltle

Homo

-

NR-M, CION In, 6 rms.,lul·
ly fumlshad, nice porch,
yard anct aaragt. Tnts won' t

last 10119.
Chlrltl M. Harn, Realtor

Neaelt E. Carsey, lr.· Mgr .
Pf'l. "J-240l or "2·2710

We

' Porch Sale June 11 from 9·
4. 1 day only at FranK Up·
ton' s on Corner of Co. Rd .
36 and Silver Ridge Rd .
Ch ildren, adults clothes,
many other items . Rain or
shine .

have

potential
your

Real Estate- General

Real. Estate

General

Want ed to Bur

9

WI LL BU Y ol d Ir an
s mi ssi o ns,
ba tt e r 1es,
engin es, or scr ap meta l s,
e1c. Call :l 45 9HI8 .

D IAMOND S,
old coin s,
w edd i ng bands, estat e
jewelry, class r ing s, etc.
TA WN EY JEWELER S,
422 Second Av e.
GOLD. 10K, 14k , 18k , dental
gold and gol d year pins.
Ca l1 675·301 0.
W I LL BU Y ol d t r-a n·
s m iss ion s,
ba t teri e s,
engines, or sc r ap meta l s, .
et c . Ca ll 245·9188.
WA NT TO BU Y toba cco
p lan ts. Ca ll 256-1466 after 6.
D E EP WELL PUMP . Ca ll
367·0632 bef ore 2pm .
Real Estate

8

Part beag le pupp ies, 1 m.o.
old . Motherless, male and
fem ale. 985-4133.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Serv ice . Phone
949-2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crit18radfard.

~a~J fidta_B~Y -

=.

C A TALY T IC
CON ·
VERTER S
(use d )
aluminum, (C ans, etc .&gt;.
au tomat ic
transm iss ions
(junk ), copper , brass, lead ,
ba tteries. radiators, Call
Robert L . Harper , 675·3616
or 675·5202 .

1J __si!~] '!!l! ~~~~=
Wi ll do od ds a nd ends.
Paneling, floor tile, a nd
cei l ing ti l e. Ca ll F red
M iller 992 ·6338 .
Smal l
engine
re pa i r .
Behind old Rec r eation Center in Racine. Hrs.: 9·12
Mon .· Sat .· Opena ll d ay
Thu r s.
Some eve ni ng
hours. Bob Poo ler.
Woul d lik e to do ba bysi t t ing in my home . Rac ine
area . Ret,erences . 949-277?.

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

30" Mower when
you buy a .
Walking Tractor

beat
price.
bedroom brick. 1
room, fireplace, eat-in Kit·cn••n
sionallandscaped yard .

•

of space in this 4
bath home in Rodney . Full
basement, huge fam . room , stone
fireplace, wet bar, 2 car garage pus 1.14
acre l awn. M ove right 1n.

MANNING ROUSH, OWNER

4

for

•

A78-13 Reg. 33.99 each
Road King Perfonnance 78
Poly11ter Whlttw1111
Sturdy, durablB, and mileage-proven poly·
ester cord resists flat spotting and cold
start thump. Special tread compounds
retard wear. Reverse-molded, low, wide
and racy 78 silhouette.

AUCTIONEER

LOT MODEL CLEARANCE
OF NEW 1979 HOMES

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256-6740

,
.
,
.
v
.
.
.
h +- -d

..

DIJUN6 AUA

II:ITCHUI

IEO JI OOM

Not responsible for accidents or loss of
property.

SAT., JUNE 14, 1980
10:00 A.M.

4
92.00

Road King Premium
Sp0rt1 Tlru · ··
.
For aports, i[Tlport, and small
American cars. 4-ply rated
polyester cord body. Deep.
slped, open-rib tread.

1r •-

BEDR OOM
10' .. ..

n .o

SKYLINE 24'x44"
3 BR lo la I elect r ic sectional home, vertical rustle sldlng,
fu ll l · 12 roof pitctl , total wrap Fom ·Cor . Tt'te very best
furnitur e and carpettd throughou t .

PRICED AT U 1,SOO.

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR FOUNIMTION

I

11"

l]FJ.
,·J lL
~)_:_____]

[I ~
r

oO ,

'¥

•

•

f11 •7

•

BARON 14'x70'
2. BR Tot a l Ele ctr ic, tota l wru Fom-Cor, woodburnlng
fi r e pla ce with brick front and mantle. Gnden tub and
'Se pa rat e sho wer , stereo. The beSt of furniture 11nd
carpe te d throu ghou t.

.

PRICED AT

$14,500.

DELIVERED AND SET UP ON YOUR LOT

* NOTR

I

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES, INC.
' ' For Tne F inest In Manufactured Housing
1100 E . Malr. St.

P92· 7034

R. N . · 11 to 7 charge nurse .
Competitive salary, paid
holidays and va cation, sick
leave, pleasant working
conditions. Contact : JUdy
Barcus, R.N. , Director of
Nursing, Pinecrest Care
Center, 555 Jitckson P ike,
Gallipolis, OH 446-7112 .

WANTED · someone to
sem_ i -invalid
care for
elderly lady , Tuesday
through Friday. Call 3677545or367 ·7124.
PARTTIME piece work.
Webster ,
Ameri c a's
foremost d ictionary company needs home workers
to update local mailing
lists . All ages, experience
unneccesary . Send name,
address, phone number to
Webster , 175 5th . Ave. Suite
1101 ·747·0, New York, NY
10010.

I
Russett D. Wood
Evenings 4&lt;16-4618
Re•llor

Ken Morgan

EveningS 446-0971
Realtor

The Bush' s Town &amp; Country Gro, contents will be·
sold. Located in Wellston, Ohio. Watch fqr sale
·signs.
"STORE ITEMS"
All kinds of can goods, coats, work suits, overalls,
approx. 25 pair of leather boots, men's, ladles' &amp;
children 's shoes, all Kinds of health aid supplies,
under clothes, double barrel sling shots, coveralls &amp;
bib overalls, shirtS, blouses, all kinds of kitchen
utensils, oil lamps, kerosene heaters, garbage cans,
lard cans, coal buckets, calf buckets, paints, bug
dust, stove pipe , dampers, rakes, brooms, horse
halters, buttons, thr~ ad, an all k ind of soaps&amp; paper
items.
· •.,.
·

Pomeroy, o.

Roto bin, nails, nuts, bolts, platform scales weighs
to 1,000 lbs., set of scales, pop cooler, meat case,
electric &amp; manual adding machine, .4 door dairy box
side open 9 tt., cash register, key cutting machine,
ice cream box.
" FEED&amp;MlSC. "
Milk repla cer , dog food , rabbit pellets, oats, three &amp;
one salt, blocks, white &amp; madox salt blocks, fly fog ·
ger, ·e lectric fence charger , misc. hand tools, air
compressor , store paper roller, approx . 30 sheets
mobile home underpinning, screen wire,- 12 by 12
tarpaulin, p ipe dies, old fashion coffee machine, 16
ft . gate, woven wire, top soil, roofing, lime, sled, ce·
ment motor mix, 1-4 joints of_. in ., drain pipe, down
spouting. pipe Insulation, 2 Iron beds, sewing
machine, 2 beauty shop chairs w l dryer, .pair of
woman's old high top dress shoes, and lots of misc.
NOTE: Mr. Bush ha~ been in the Gro, store f!&gt;r
yrs. This Is oil current Gro. stock. come pre~red
for all day singing and lunch on tile ground by !he
church ladies.
' 'Not responsible for accidents''
Terms: Cash
Lunch
Positive I. D.
D•nSmllh
Jim C•m•han
949-!033
949-2701

uv,

.. ·-

-·

GET VA LUABLE tra in ing
as a younq business person
and earn good money pius
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route · c-arr ier . Phone
us r ight .o way and get on
the el igib ility list at m 2156 or 992-2157 .
Gr ill cook and waitress
wanted. Apply in person.
Crow' s
Steak
Hous e,
Pom e roy

.

Wanted : Someone to care
for semi-i nvalid lady Tue·s.·
Fri., 985·3580 or 992·5703 .

NUCLEAR
POWER
TRAINEES
Rewarding
pro·
gram offers good
salary, earn 30
days vacation with
pay, total medical
care and S2000
bonus upon com·
pletion of training
progri!m . Age
17-25. Some math
and physics re·
quired. Call: Toll
.F ree

1-800.282·1384
Ex perienced crane &lt;df.ag
line)
operator .
Send
resume to Box 428 , Racine,
Ohio 45771.

' GREEN ACRES - Three BR ranch,
nice bath, large LR, modern kitchen,
laundry, all carpeted, garage &amp; flat lot.
Wi ll qua li fy for most types of financ ing.
Immediate possession . $39 ,500.

II

NEW HOME i
. &amp; Ra e~
coon Creek . 3 bedroom cedar ranch, 2
baths , cathedral ceiling , pr ivate
master suite, dining area, 2 car garage
&amp; deck, city schools.

MON.-WED.
9 AM TO 2 PM

1N THE · LAP OF LUXURY - That's
where you will be the day you move Into
this brand new 3 BR , 2112 bath tri - level.
This home will fulfill your every dream
with the large L-shaped fam ily rm.,
equiped kitchen &amp; 2 car gorge. Located
in Clearview Estates &amp; shown by ap·
pointment.

OWN
- Qua lity
bi·level home in a quality neighborhood
off U .S. 35. 4 bedroom, 2'h bath, large
family r oom, na t. gas, ce·n t . air, 2 car
garag e plus nice large patio . Mid 60's.

Dl .A TE POSSESSION - Owners
have transf erred, need to sel this
spacious tri ·level in Rodney . 3
bedrooms, fireplace , huge family room,
2112 baths, formal dining, equipped kitchen, 2 car garage . 31• ac . yard . $69,500.

terms on this attractive 3 bedroom
ran ch. Fam i ly room , firepla ce, 2 baths,
large uti li ty room , nat. gas, cent. air, 2
car garage &amp; immediate possession .
Pric ed to se tl at $49, 900 .

A TRULY GR
-Better
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 me
quality of th is br ick &amp; frame 2 · story
home . 3 BR ' s, 211~ baths, extra la~ge LR
&amp; family rm ., f ireplace, r.ent . a1r, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH
MORE . Sho"".n by appointment.

ROOM TO ROAM - 1 think you would
say thatthi s sprawling bri ck tri - level is
one of the ni cest country homes you' ve
ever seen. This beauty is situated on _. 112
acres of land about 3112 miles from
Rodney. Why not let your fam ily enjoy 5
BR ' s, 3 baths, large l iving and dining
room, comlete kitchen, family room
with stone fireplace nd 2 car garage. Be
the first to see this one.

OLD TIMER Stylish 7 rm. home is look·
lng for a family. SO acres woods, 10
acres clear, barn , outbui ldings, fob.
base, Perry Twp, , commerc ial timber
reported , asking $43,500.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 20% DOWN - Older 2story home with 6
rms. &amp; bath, cellar house, sheds, large
shade trees on approx. 4 acres. Located
4 m i. soulh ot Rlo Grande on Tom ·
Woods Rd. $19,900.

ENO - 4.25 acres level land . Over .400
fl. trent age on State Route 554 . County
water available, excellent building or
mObile home site. $0,500.

"MISC."

SAVE $2,500 ON THIS ONE

I I,

CALL TOU. FREE

da y~ .

PUBLIC AUCTION

LIVING fiODM ·
IEOIIi OOM

Rewarding pro·
gram offers good
salary, earn 30
days vacation with
pay, total medical
care and S2DOO
bOn!JS upon completion of training
program . Age
17-25. Some math
and physics re quired .

Help Wanted

~

Lo~ated in Thurman, Ohio iust off R:t. US 35. The
following will be offered:

LEE JOHNSON-

NUCI.IAR
POWER
TRAINEES

WOU L D you like to be pai d
for going to college? You
can get th is: and extra s 11ke
$1500. bonus, free tran'spo r t a t i o n to exotic
.pa r adi ses like Hawai i and
Puerto Rico. life insurance
and more 1ust tor one
weeKend a month and 15
days a year in the Ohio Air
National Guard . To find out
how t his dream can come
· true f or you, call M Sgt.
M ik e Gi lmore at (6141 474·
7048 (coll ect ) nights and
1614) 497 ·0670 (coll ect )

I

10:30 A. M.

New wringer washing machine, portable sewing
mach ine, vacuum cleaner, 2 wooden BR suites, Ad·
m ira! deep freeze cheM type, Coronado
refrigerator, GE electric range, d inette set w/ 6
chairs, bedspreads. color TV, B&amp;W TV , living room
chair , iron bed, carpet, several cha irs and tables,
dishes, one lot of potted flowers, pictures, jars,
screen doors, 2 step ladders, some hand too ls, lawn
chair s. and other miscellaneous items.
TERMS : CASH
Lunch Available
ZELMA PHILLIPS WALKER, OWNER

~ f!_lp_~_il!!_f!_d- - -

TUTOR for 10 year old tor
summer months. Call 3670478 .

PUBLIC -SALE
50" Mower when
you buy a
Riding Tractor

11

---.--.----

11

General

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1980

11

HELP WANTED - posit ion
open for part time
registered nurse. Apply at
Gallia County Health Dept.
Monday thru Friday, 8 to
12. lto3 :30.

B A l&lt;li ''" N

Three Family Yard Sale
Tuesday the lOth and Wed·
nesday the 11th at JoAnn
Stewart' s on New Lime
Road from 9·5. Ra 1n or
shine.

General

9_

NEW LISTING - 3 BR
home on 2'12 acres of
land . 3 miles below Mid·
dleport off Rt. 7. Also
trailer hookup tor addi·
tiona! income.
NEW LISTING- 1 floor
plan, 3 or 4 bedroom
hOm~, nice built-in kitchen with range and
-oven on Rl . , 7 In
Pomeroy, Oh .
, : BUSINESS BUILDING
In
downtown
Rutland, 0., approx. 10
years old . Use as
business or convert to
living quarters. See to
appreciate.
NEW LISTING- 3 BR
cottage with 2 acres of
quiet ·countryside. 5
minutes from M i ddleport, 0 .
3 BEDROOM HOME - ,
Carpeted and paneled,
on Vine Street in
Racine, very clern,
ready to move into. Nice
level lot. Will also con·slder renting_
1 ACRE IN MIDDLE-,
PORT - ~ room cottage, tnt(ler hookup,
reduced to $8,000.
TAKING LISTINGS! .,
HObart Dillon, BrokerlFayManley
Branch Mgr.
Phone 992 ·2~98

Car por t Sale Monday June
9, 9-? Dick Lee residence .
Tyree Blvd. Racine, OH .

5 Kittens, 8 wKs. old. 742·
23 28.

General

DILLON

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anythinQ to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing tor
sale may p lace an ad in thi s
column. There w ill be no
charge to the advertiser .

Real Estate

.,

r - - - - - - - - - . ,'

FOUND · Hound dog, no
collar, if you can identify
and pay for ad, It' s your
dog . Cal\446 ~ 3587 .

~ a n)t!.d _to~ B~'t'_

9

AUCTION

Asso r ted ki ttens and cats.
985 ·4163.
6
Lo~s=-=,-a-::
nli
:;-;:F:-::o-:-:
un
=-do--

YARD SALE · 50 Lincoln ·
Everything .

44HJ ll ,

l oves
SMAL L PUP
children . Call446· ll12.

FREE GIFT WRAPPING

.~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June e, 1980

Giveaway

FOUND
Long haired
Chihuahua. Call 446·2971.

In Memoriam

1n Memory of James L.

4

ALL THIS FOR $39,000 - 3 BR 's, 1'12
baths, LR with stone fireplace, natural
gas heat , a ir cond., rahoe. dishwasher , •
garage, large patio &amp; fenced In front :
lawn . .

THE ENTIRE FAMILY WILL LOVE
THIS ONE - 3 or 4 BRs, 'h baths, LR
with WB f irelace, family rm., lovely ·
carpet throughout, 2 car garage, near ~
Clay School. $53,900.

' MINI FARM - Owners moved to
Florida an~ are selling lhfs lovely 3 BR
bricK home. This 6 yr. old beauty offers
lots ot good living tor some lucky family
with a large kitchen &amp; dining rm ., LR,
family rm. with fireplace , garage &amp;
barn . Located on State Route 160 approx. 6 mi. from HMC .
PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres. 15 A .
Simms Creek bottom, balance rolling
pasture &amp;.: wOOds, nice mOdular home,
large barn , several other buildings, fob.
base, corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon
Woods Rd.

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp;
SAVE MONEY - Unfinished one story
home with 3.4 acres on RACCOON
CREEK . Located on the Green
Sa~nders Rd. near Northup. $18,500.

-

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted r GREEN TOWNSHIP PASTURE'
building lot. 1.22 acre, ni ce wooded set- FARM - 155 A . M ·L located on SR U1
approx . 6 mi. west of town. Land Is ap·
ting, c ity schools. $5,900.
p rox. 60% cleared &amp; 40% woods &amp; In·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn . Priced at
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE '
so,soo down - 9% - Ask ing $33,000 - ' S500 per acre. ·
Remodeled 2 story home, 3 BR's, LR ,
den, fam ily rm .. dining, kltch~n, 2 WB
RODNEY BIP)NELL RD. - Sectional
fireplaces, l it• acres. Located on State
home, !4x60, 4 BR, 2 baths, .l arge LR,
Route 233 between Gallipolis and Oak
equipped kitchen, cent. air, concrete
Hill.
.
block garage . lacre. $22,500 .
RACCOON CREEK FARM - 50 acres,
38 . A. bottom, 11 A, pasture, lovely
modern brick home with 3 Brs., 2 baths,
TWO MILES OUT StATE ROUTE 511
cathedral cei l ings, fireplace, large ~un
- Remodeled home lncludel6 rms, and
deck and lot.~ of other e)(tras, new metal · bath,
carport,
stove.
refrlg.~
pole barn, crib, loading chute, approx.
dishWasher, almost 2 acres of land pric1700 ft. creek fro~tage, located 4 ml.
ed tor quick sale. .
trom Meigs Mine No. 3.

1 ,.,.,,

.'

'

�11

11

Help Wanted

11

SALES PEOPLE,
IS YOUR BUSI.NESS SLOW?
OURS ISN1.

HelpWaiiied-., -

HELP WANTED - Part
time, full time. World
Book· Cnild .Crall sales
representatives. Call 675·
3775 .

13

-

---- tnsurance

SANDY AND BEAV E R In-

surance Co. has offered
serv ices for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for al most a century .
Farm , home and personal

property
ll

coverages

av~ilable

Insurance

dividua l

INSURANCE
CLAIM
REPAIRS · caii,.W.-3407 .

to

meet

needs .

are
in-

Contact,

Lewis Hu9hes, y our nei gh·

bor and agent .

t3
__ I!:'S!'f~ t!,C ~ --A UTOMOBI.LE
IN SURANCE
been
can ·

ce ll e d ?

Lo s t

your

OJ: e r~tor ' $ license? Phone

Y'/1 -2143.

i6

'

_ __,&amp;

RadloTV

c B R ep.,a,_,i!..
r __

RON ' S T V SERVICE
Special i zi ng in Zenith .
House Calls . Call 1-30H762398 or 446·2454.

___

1&gt;-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

--------

,, - - - wanl.diooo - _._

2}~=-~~~e~ ;o1oa~·-

LAWN MOWER repa i r,
engines . frames , shar·
penlng, call «6·0355 or 4-Ci&gt;4233 offer 5 :30.

21

WE DO EAR pierc ing , buy
the earrings and get the
ears
p i erced
FREE .
Tawney Jewelers.

CASH - Loen never repay,
free details, A . L . Lutton,
P . 0 . Box 766, Gallipolis,
Oh.

Buiiness
Opportunity

·- .

14' WIDE

INflATION HELPS OUR SALES
Top commissions, sales aids, lead svstem,
management opportunities .

NG.atiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE
· ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

CAll 593-8800 FOR INTERVIEW

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
OONNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Real Estate - General

Real Estate

1980 OAKBROOK

11
Sma ll Gasoline
Engines
Uplo25 H.P.
Lawn mowers, tillers,
chain saws, motor bikes
&amp;
etc.
All
work
guaranteed . Pickup &amp;
Delivery .
PRECISION SMALL
E~GINE SERVICE
544 Upper River Rd .

MOBILE HOME
2 Bdrm., furnished,
$9,450. Down payment $984. Onlv
5159.48 per mo.
(APR 18%)
Call Immediately

WOULD LIKE TO 00
roofing , concrete and carpenter jobs. Call 388 -9945
betweenSand7 .

D&amp;W ESTATES
Rt. 93 North
Jackson, OH.

TE AC HER
w ill
tutor
students. Cal l446·7395.

General

286-3752

22

Mane to Loan

~--~~~~~--.

. i
~

FHA-vA·Convential Home:.
Loans, Columbus Fir.st:i
Mortgag e
Co.,
loa.-.

Money to Loan

MONEY • MONEY

&gt;t First

mortgages,
:second · mortgages,
,.and
refinance·
ill- c;ases. Ca II Com·
~plete Mortgage'
..,.services
iri
:Gallipolis, Ohio at
.._446-1517 for morelti
...- . I orma t •on
•
*'"
and&gt;t'
~your appointm_e nt . .,.,

************~

MorJgages,

Refinance Cases. Ex·
ample of 2nd mort·
gage loan : Appralseel value of properly
$40,000 (total of
&gt;t botn mortgages can·
... not exceed 75% of apfi
praised
value).
,. $40,000 •
7 5% &gt;t $30,000 - lsi mort·
It gage balance Sl5,000
&gt;t - amount available
Jfo for 2'1d mortgage,
$15,000. Refinance &amp;
lt- 1st mortgages can
&gt;t tolal100% of appro is·
Jt. ed value! Where f.an
&gt;t this be done? At
Compete Mortgage

i

~

--~----~----------·11'
**!:.*!:.********* **!:.****'*'****"'lt'
: ' ' $ $ $ : It'$$$$,.

~

Money

Second

lf.

Viol e]

7172

Mohey •Mon e y• :

*
ltr
*&gt;t
**
**
*&gt;t
*

_. First Mortgages &amp; Jt

( Cooki e) Viers. 463 Secon~
Ave .. Gall ipolis. Oh .• 446·:

22

.*}

*************""
&gt;t
$55 s 5 s
:::

t

Oh.

represen1at i1Je,

Wanted to Do

we Repair

CASH · Loan never r epay ,
t ree details, A. L. Luttor.t. .••
P . 0 . Box 766 , Gall i poli s,,..

Professionaf
Services

23

&gt;t

: MONEY • MONEY :

*

*First mortgages,'
.:second mortgages,,.,
,._and
refinance*
&gt;t case 5 c 11 ·~om II!
a
·Iii
.•.... plete ' Mort!lage"
,.services
in,.
lt-Gallipolis, Ohio atl6
'*446-1517 for morei
*information and
·:t~-ypur appointment.

*

lt Servic es .

&gt;t
&gt;t

*

in

Gallipolis. Ohio Phone 614-446-1117.
Please call first for

,..

----- -J and F Backhoe Servi ce .

Lice nsed an d bonded . Sep·

t 1c ta nk lll Sfa !tat iOn . Water
and gas lines. E xc awatmg
work and transit layout.
Ca ll 991 770 1.

~
~

.._
...:

**
!

inform•tlon and r.n ~
appointment.
......-

CALL
US
for
your
Photogr aph ic needs. Per ·
trait, passpo rt s, com ·
merc lal and
wedding
photography .
Tawnev
Studios, 424 Second A ve.

Bob Lane,- Sales Manager
Home : 446· 1049

Phone 446· 7900
or 446-2730

JAME S COUGHENOUR Paint jobs ins ide and out,
i:&gt;av by the job, cal l a ny
time 446 -7530.

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Ditch digg ing service. Cal l
773-5839 or 773 -5788 .

:•

Real Estate - General

---------

:,.*
•••*
*•,..

•

WJII

•

~I elf&gt; t ilno nee to qualified buyer.

: .

1*

'*
,..

*
••*

••*
•**
REDUCED- IN TOWN - LOAN ASSUMPTION
11%- COMPLETELY REMODELED - New roof ,
new maintenance-free siding, new Thermopane
windows, new wiring and plumbing . Beautiful new
kitc hen cabinets. No repai r tor years to come! Very
close to Washington Grade School. Take a tool&lt; to·
day . $36,500.00.
JUST LISTED- PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND
Apx . 16 acres just off Rt . 35 West. In vicinity of
I
Hosp ital . Would be a beautiful subdivison .

-

NEW LISTING -- TWO BI'"ROOM FRAME $12,000 HANDYMAN ~r -0\..0 - This home needs
some work but at tl
e you can afford it.
Located on Rt. 7 with over 5 acres of land . Super in·
vestment!!

c; .. ....

MOBILE HOME LOT - Apx. one acre level lOt
located 6 m i tes from t own on Sta te Rl. 218. County
water available
MOBILE H!)ME LOT - LAND CONTRACT 52,000.00 DOWN - 11'l'- ,.,_\..
_ o ·!ST - This one ac re
revet tot has hook-up,SO
_ mobile homes. 3112
miles from town . Counry water . Storage build i ng on
property .

~EW LISTING -

BEACH COTTAGE ON LAKE
JACKSON - Furnished cottage wi t h apx. 900 fl . of
li"ing space. Plenty of beautiful fronlage on Lake
Jackson with 2 docks. Nice sun bathing area . Finest
fishing . $20,000.
MAKEUSANOFFER

**

Fully equipped kitchen, tor mal dini ng r oom , family
room,~ bedrooms and two baths are some of the ex ·
tras In th iS tin e home, loca t ed on th e edge of town .
Owner says, " Bring me an offer toda y! "'

:

EVENINGS

,. BOBLANE
Jt- SUE ROUSH
•
Ji. CHERYL CUNNINGHAM

•...

•:*
**
ll-

**·
,.*
ll-

••
••
••*
••
•.
••*
*

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*,.&gt;t
*Jt-*
*Jt.
&gt;t

~

FO R SALE BY OWNER :
single story frame home
near c ity limits. Land con·
t r act available. $36,000.
Caii.W.-0026.

5 ROOM HOUSE Located

=::=aea I Estate
31

in Oak Hill. Very nice. Call
682 ·6010.

Homes for Sale

B Y OWNER · 3 bdr . house,
kitchen, F . R., wood burning fireplace, I g. level lot.
Call446-3100.
R A N CH - Assumable mor
tga ge at 91f2 percent. 3 to 4
bdr ., large family room ,
fireplace, 2 fu ll baths, laun ·
d ry r oom, 1 car garage, gas
heat, central air con·
ditioning . Fenced yard ,
patio, exc . neighborhood .
Ci t y schools, $51.900 . 10
percent down . Ca ll 4-46·7224
owner .

5 ROOM and b ath, house.
Professional- Services

BOB LANE
SALES MANAGER

5 ROOM house with
ga r age, 64 Chil l icothe Rd.
$190. pe r month income.
57500. phone 446-4038 or 446·
1615or446-l243 .

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

Real Estate - General

HOBART DILLON ,
BROKER

Homei ior Sale

..

i**************

*••••••******J

Deluxe Ford fiberg lass topper to f it ei gh t foot bed.
Coll 991 7201.

31

By owner, l arge backyard.
Ca ll446 7839.

--

--- -·- - - - - -

PR IC E RED U CE D for
quick sa.le! Frame brick 3
bdr. home is brand new . I1J2
b e~ ths . Large liv ing room
with f ire place. Beautiful
kitchen has lots of bu ilt· in
cabir1e1s. adjoins separate
d ining room . Carpeting,
heat pump, carport. Approx. I acre in quiet setting
off lower Rt. 7. Possible
loan assumption on portion
of thE' reduced price of
$46,900 at only 9lf:~ per cent.
Phone 4-16 4753 .
·~_Real

E_state- General

l'h STORY - HOUSE on
large lot on Crown City,
good cond .. upper 20's, may
land contract . Call 245· 1268.
3 BDR . HOME On B·utavllle
Rd ., also, 1979 Volare · Call
256-9355 or 379-2639 7 to 9
p .m .

Located in exc . residenti al
community , spac ious, at·
tractiv e, mai ntenance free
home loca ted on lovely
acre lot. Modern k 1tchen,
f am i ly
r oom, several
bedrooms. two baths,
basement, garage . Low
utilities. 992 1727.
Beautiful large home. Low
uti li ties, bri ck ranch style,
3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
fireplace, full basement,
family room , air con ditioner, J car garage .
Baum Addition , M e igs
County . Call985-4169.
3 Bedr oom brick . ranch.
Tuppers Plains. l'h bath,
built -i n
kitchen,
full
basemen t with wood stove ,
larg e garage. Big lot with
nice garden spot. $52,000.
667 -3288.

Real Estate- General

REALTY WORLD., - Stutes Real Estate
CONVENIENT, I
LOCATION
This inviting 3 bedroom ranch provides
the fi nest in today 's l:ving . Ba th with
shower, deluxe wood , cabinets i n
spaci ous k itchen, formal dining room,
central air cond i tioning , natura l gas
heat , budget $.45.00 mo. Single car
garage , el ec tric eye, f enced in back
yard_. Deadend street . Loan assumpt1on
POSSibl e 9% rate. Priced in the low
$40's.
~ 456

BEAUTY , QUIET, LUXURY
Ma ny more words could be used in
describing thi s 3 bedroom A -frame
located in Harrison Township. VerY
modern, 1112 baths, l iv ing room
k itchen ·dming comb1nation. This iS
located in a wooded area . Come and
see, you may not believe such a wonder ·
tul place ~o I vie is available today . 1/4 68

WOULD YOU LIKE
J BR , DR and bath on acre lot at edge of
t&lt;:&gt;wn wit h partial basement? 12' x 15'
c1nder block bldg. If inter ested, give us
acall .
#464

COMMERCIAL BUILDING!
Good investment. Recent ly remodeled
Approximately 1800 sq . ft . on mai ~
floor . ld.ea l for a g rocery. 2- 2 bedroom
apartments comple.tely remodeled .on
second floor . An older butl ding in tip·
top shape . Let us take you to t hi s one
now.
~ 473
LOCATION! LOCATION!
Wa lk to sc hool a net dow ntown shopping
from your one story hom e located on
level corner lot in a spacious and
private neighbor hood . J bdr-., 2 full
baths, bit kitchen, fireplace., attached
garage with new maintenance-free
vinyl siding, and efficient gas hea t. all
tor $55.000. Immedi ate possessio n and
owner financing ava ilable .
11462

RESTAURANT 7% Ft NANCE
Doing gre at business. 30)(10, 5 year old
building . Seating f o r 50 people. Electr1c
heat, air conditioning . Good loca tion
Looking for an excellent investment ;
calltoday . Shown by appointment . K 434
GET STARTED! 3 bedroom . ba th kit chen, living r oom . natural gas heat.
Garage. Unbealable pri ce $19,000 . N4&gt;0
YOUR OWN PRIVATE WORLD - that
presen ts privacy and beauty . This 11
acre~ , more or less, already has a lane
lead •ng to the building site, rural water
tap and lots of trees. Take a look TO ·
DAY !
~ 451
SOUTHERN HILLS SPECIAL
Drive out Lincoln Pi ke and view thi s
wonderful setting . Two bedroom
modern 1971 Fleetwood 12 ' x65 '.
Everything is impressive, drilled well ,
well kept lawn, flowers, white pol e
fences, red barn wired for elec tri ci ty ,
with loft, drivewa y . 41 acres for ca mp·
mg , nature tra ils . Loca t ed only a short
distance from State Route 790, a
blac ktop road . Let us sell th is to you . H
4
7
1
SMALL FARM
Sma ll farm without bui ldings. 56 acres.
Several acr es t ill able, land fertility bet·
ter tha n ever . Some t1mber . Septic
tan~ . E lectric avai lab le. Sc hool bus,
mall rout e. 4400 lbs. tobacco base this
year . 2200 lbs. norma l base.
11 479

IMMEDIAGE POSSESSION
3 or 4 bedroom home w ith family room
&amp;
large
l iv ing room .
Range
r~ fr igera t o r
&amp; new
Wh i rlpooi
diShwasher go V.:ith this ni ce house .
Large basement fmished . Goes out into
a large fenced back ya rd . Car-port or
co vered patio. $43,500.
11476

ANOTHER QUALITY HOME
Three or four bedrooms, living room,
large modern k i tchen -di ning room com·
b fnation, fam i ly room , must see to ap·
preciate, bath w i th shower, concrete
driveway, large patio in bac k, built-in
grill , etc . Two m etal utility buildings. 1
must stop, office manager will set me
strai g ht . I still say very c lean, exce llent
repa ir, close to town . Cal l any sa les
associa te now
# 472

20ACRES·MODERN BUILDINGS
Six room house, J bedroo ms, l V2 baths,
ba semen t, FA fuel o il furna ce. Level ,
fer ti le garden area. M odern barn, pond,
toba cco base, garage, work shop. One
of the best. 15 minute drive fr om
Gallipolis. New surfaced State Road .
Conventional financing $53.500 .

..
446·1049 &gt;t
446· 9753 ..
367·0433

a

CLOSE IN
I Jieve l acres in an exce llent locat ion on
a St Hi ghway. Close to everything . 5
room house, basement &amp; front por ch.
Barn &amp; outbuildings for r a ising your
own l ivestock.
# 477
MODERNHOGANOCATTLEFARM
219 acre productive farm . New m odern
buildings ar e now in use for hog produc·
tion . Large barn and other outbuildings
for crop storage and hous ing of cow and
calf operation . 80 acres t i llable land .
1920 lbs. tobacco base. So me timber
land . Beautiful green fi elds. Large 2
stor y light room house nas been ex ten·
sively re modeled . County water and
large pond . Strea m through farm . One
of th e better ones. Pl ease c al l now . # 480
A PLEASURE TO SEE
AND A JOY TO LIVE IN
This home 1s in move-in condition. 3
bedrooms, kitchen and dining comb mat ion, ba th, f am ii.Y room wi th wood·
burner . Well insulated . Lg . lot. A t a
price you ca n afford . In th e SJO's . 1/475

PRICED RIGHT

10 acres of private wooded land. 2
bedr-oom m obile home . Dr illed well
with pump and storage tank . Good
gar~en space along a small stream,
ut 1l1ty bldg. 10x10.. Good cond it ion.
Sma ll pond . Sacrifice price SlJ,OOO.N 4S2
VACANT LAND
36 acres, more or less. Prospect Road.
Land suitable for building lots of
acreage of your own enjoyment . Close
to Bidwell, Porter or St . Rt . 160 . Only a
t ew mintues from G allipolis . S21,500 .
N463
INVESTMENT
PROPERTY CHESHIREAREA
2 apartment houses, 3 apartments
r ented for steady income, 4 trailer
spaces. GoOd li Ving Quarters or another
del u•e rental with fu ll basement . Large
lots . Comfortable living. Top locat ion!
~ 458
PRICE IS RIGHT
If you'd l ike a modern home close to
t own with 5 acres fenced in, to enjoy,
thi s is i t . Home features 3 bedrooms,
l iving room , _family room, full base·
ment, large deluxe k itch en. natural gas
furnace, v inyl siding, new cir cular
driveway. Lots of good living here . Low
upkeep on house, low car expenses in
traveling . 'h mile from city l imits. We
are r eady to show it to you .
N 410
AFFORDABLE
Yes, indeed. Call today to see this
reasonably priced 3 bedrOom home i n
Gallipolis. Full basement. Gas furna ce.
City sewer . Needs to sell. Make us an
offer .
~ 466
LOTS - 2 lOIS. SO' x 156' each. Level.
County water available. S2.SOO for both .
Build to suit yoruself . No restrictions .
N 454

t

'LOOK AT THIS ONE
two story remodeled older home
ocated on St. Rt. 160. Just minutes
from stown and the hospital
It's
Situated on eighteen acres wi th a 'rar e
barn and outbuildings . CALL TODAYg
~ 460

NEW LISTING- GREEN COUNTRY
Quality built ranch . Quality is the key to
this beautiful 3 bedroom frame house .
Most all rooms are lar ge. L R. FR .
Delu xe fire pl ace in each . 2 baths ,
shower, 10 room s in al l. Extra block
garage-20x40 . Beautiful home in th e
country with a lm os t 3 acres of land .
Scene ry must see to appr ec iate .
1/481

1_

THE VEGETABLES ARE FREE Beautiful garden already planted . 1056
sq . ft . l iving area, 3 BR , 1112 baths, for ·
mal dining, equi pped kitcnen. F r ont
and rear decks. New concrete block 2
car garage . 2 acres partially wooded.
Kyger Creek area . $38,000.

Ron eanaday, Realtor, 446-363ti

,REA~roR e. 25 Locust St.,

Rea~ ~~3&amp;Galhpc~hs,
--

.

THE BEST OF THE REST
You ca n' t do any better than the b~st
and thi s f ine 3 bedroom home 1 th~
best, and one you' ll be proud to own
E!reathtak ing f ami l y r oom with
!.replace, 2 baths, liv ing room and din·
mg have lu x u ~ious carpeting, 2 car
~ara~e .. No ma1ntenance ex terior and
1n ter1or 1n absol utel y perfect co ndition
A MUST TO SEE'
n 5j

Co..Jntry
Home
with
stocked pond for sw1mming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath ,
carpeted . J to l7 acres
avai l able. Located appro• .
7 miles from Pomeroy of t
Rl. 7 or 33 . 446-2359 after 6.

1972 Indy Mobile Home
12' )(60'. F ir eplace, central
air, deep feeze, part ly fur
ni shed , all underp inned
and block s. Lot it sets on
can be rented . S7 ,500. 99 2
5057 or 992·6057 _

Carpeted 5 room house in
Bradbury . Has modern k it ·
chen and bath, garage, carport, 2 utility bldgs. and
garden space . Across from
WMPO. Sign in yard . 992·
SJ10.

1969 12 X60, 'J. bedroorn
Hollypa rk Trailer . Fur
nished, a .c., washer , m el a I
out-building , under pin·
ning . 99 2·2881 .

Luxurious large modern
c ountry
home
Pool.
acreage private. 3 digit
c l ass ,
in
Pom e roy Ga llipOlis area. For app t.
cal1992 -7680 _
6 rooms,
Ph
baths.
paneled, carpeted, garbage
d isposal, storm windows,
doors, exc. wi ndow air con·
ditioner, f_inished basement
w·bar, tile bath w·shower .
Reasonable . 11 5 Ebeneezer
St. 992 -5566 .

pando, 2 bdr .
1970 Ne w M oo n, 12x60, J
bdr .
1961 Vi ndal e. 10x55, 2 bd r .
1969 Broadmore. 12•60. 2
bdr .
B&amp; S
Mobile Home Sales
Pt . Pl easant W.VA.
675-4424.

s

7

8

9

"'

C-IRCLE THIS ONE
Idea l _ location tor co nv enience ,
h 1~hw_a ~s and shopp ing, this J bedroom
~n.ck 1s m exce~l~nt cond 1tion . Features
ilv1 ng room , dm•ng room with sliding
glass doors, very ni ce fin ished f am ily
room in base m ent, 1'12 baths,· 2 car '
garage. It ha s a personal ity all its own1
CA LL NOW !
NJBO

'•
'

VACANT LAND - 66 acres Harr ison
Twp., well fenced, large portion has
new woven wire with steel posts.
Estimated 10 acres fill !lble, some
timber, large road frontage . Excellent
buy $25,000.
NJ67

'

.,••'
.,~
.,'

" DO IT YOURSELF" - Fin •sh up t he
remodeling of thi s 2 story 3 BR cou ntry
home . It has been rew ired, new breaker
box, some d_ry wall work done . New roof
and r:natenal s cost ing ove r 51500 on
prem ises . County water tap paid for 1
acre of leve l ground. What a change yOu
~~ n m ake and profits unlimited for
'
.
N442

;
,.
"

:
.
•
•
:

7 500

GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE!
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORO IT !
The owners have toved this home but
the y are m oving . J bedroom ranc hjl iv·
lng room , kitchen with buil t -ins, dining
area, modern bath, l car fin ished
garage, a ll this on a nice si ze lot located
only one and a ha lf miles f rom th(' city
Priced In th e mid AO' s.
·

L · SHAPED BRICK, cedar and
tudor ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 fuil
family room with raised hea
fireplace ans tiding doors that open onto
lerrace, fully equipped kitchen. formal
entry_ ~all opens into family, kitchen
and 11v1ng room, 2 car finished garage.
Electric heat pump, cent. air . Nearly
an acre levellot ..$69,500 .
--~-- ---

THE CHOICE IS YOURS I 2 new homes
nearly completed, 3 BR , 2 baths, full
basement, hea t pump, cen . a ir c ond .,
fully carpeted. Superb qua lity and
design, $56,00.
5J ACRES - Roliing m eadows. wooded
hillside, pond. pine grove. $21,900 .
VACATION SETTING - Oller 19 acres
~long Ra ccoon Creek. Nice 2 8 R home .
Barn, other outbldg. Good develoment
potential. $4,,000.

HILLTOP FARM - Only 5 miles from
clfy . Nice -4 BR home, fam ily rm.,
equipped kitchen, 48 acres . Good pro·
ducing gas well furni shes free gas for
residence plus income . $85,000.

LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION!
- Walk tO the new Foodland market. or
across t he str eet to thPO'";pring Valley
.Pla za. Nice 3 BP C.O\. d fram e, 1'h
baths, family rm _;J:re~rag~ . Could be us·
ed as beauty shop, professional office.
$45,000.

CENTENARY - Natural cedar ranch.
nearly an acre lawn. 3 BR, fllmily rm .,
2 car garage. A showplace! $61,900.
ROLLING LAND Woods beyol1d,
quiet country road, wonderful place for
children and horses, 3 BR coloni al of··
fers all the space you' ll need . 1.4 acres
only 5'12 miles from city . $40,000.
SUPER BARGAIN - 1112 story frame
ho111e in good cond ., 3 BR, country kit·
chen, spacious level lawn, excellent
garden space. Can't be beat at 526,000.

bedroom

1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

1968 Fleetwood 12x6J, 2 :
Bdr .
,
B B. S M OBIL E HOM E:
SA LES. PT. P LEASANT ,
w v . 304-675·4424.
.

I

your
wings

*Willis T. Leaaingnam,
Realtor Pb. Home 446 ·9S39
.•Joan Boggs, Realtor ASSIIC
Ph. Hon1e : 446-3294

General

R ealtor-Auctloneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving6,000
Communities
428 Second Ave.
COII446-G552 Anytime

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

BMR 3~9- New listing . All electric home . 3 BR
ranch Situated on large fla t lot . Ca II for details!
BMR 350M- Kirkwor ~0\.0 e home on re nted tot .
LEss than $5,000!
"

WHAT AN INVESTMENT
This ad is just not bi g enough to
describe thi s farm . 100 acres m . or 1. of
prime land. Lovely, one of the f inest
older homes you ' ll e11er see . 40x40 barn,
corn cr i,b, too l shed. 75 acres ti ll able
land, 50,000 tt . ti m ber , good line fences,
2 mobile homes, a ll m ineral right s go .
Believe me this i s not even a small sa mple of a II the qualities of thi s ta rm . N416

BMR :146- In Thurman. 2 BR frame home in good
condition. Assumabl e loan.

Nev.(

GRACIO US 81-LEVEL
S58,500
•
Quality , style, beauty, all combined in
this love l y bi ·level. 3 bedroom s. 11/2
baths, huge utility room, lovely ki tc hen
wit h built-in cabinets, range, disposal.
dishwasher, large family and rec . room
w ith f ir ep lace . This home has been
tas tefully decorated. Ca ll us, and put
your family in th1s love ly home. Close
to Holzef Hospi tal We can advise you
on financing .
/1 385

carpet
IN GALLIPOLIS
3 Bedrooms - Total 6

r ooms
plu s bath .
Modern kitchen with
lots
ot
cabi n e t s,
dishwasher . SomE' new
wall to wa ll car pet.
Natural gas furnace. Ci ·
ty water and sewer . All
f or only $29,900.
~ 405

· BMR 333- M odular home, 3 BR 's, 2 baths, L R,
DR. F R with WB , kitchen inc ludes range and
ref r igerator. S itvj!t~d on 1.23 acres . Low JO's.

RYTH
YOU
NEED WITH
ONE PURCHASE
I PACKAGE OEAL J
Three bedroom , air con ·
ditioned home . 2 baths,
li vi ng room , eat·in k it chen, laundry room or
office , plu s c losets
gallore. Metal storage
b i ld ing on con crete
base, heated garage,
paved si d ewa l ks &amp;
dr iveway . Furni ture in·
el uded plus washer ,
dryer &amp; a ll kitchen ap·
pliances. Move in w1t h
just your c loth es . Many
e_
x t ras we wi ll tell you
about with a simp l e r-----::=---:~~7::"'1
phone ca ll. Plus city
schools.
~ 407

BMR 334- 1.3 acres of la nd . 8% financing. Call f or
details.
BMR 335 Located in downtown Gallipoli s. Thi s
brick has 10 spacious rooms. Must be seen!

BMR 348 Brick ranch includes 3 BRs, kitchen
with d ining area . FR with fireplace, ful l basement.
Situated on large flat landscaped lot!
BMR 139- Two story home on Second Ave. Home
has aluminum siding, includes 3 BRs, LR , OR, FR .
Call for details.
BMR 149- 30 acres with 500 fl. frontage on Clark
Chapel Road . M ineral r ights are included!

BMR 157- 3 BR f ra me house with full basement
and 32 acres of l.!lnd . Located on Eu~eka near the
dam .

A VERY LOVELY
SETTING
$22,500
12 fl . x 65 ft . Mo~ile
home situated on 1.4 A. .
1A ft. x 22 ft. f arn il y
room, 1112 baths and ~4
ft. x 43ft. carport C . ill
ed well w i th elec tri c
pump . Lovel y b lue
spruce trees line t he ·
dr ive to this ver y nea t
and wel l kept home.
CAL L TO SEE THIS
ONE TODAY .
n 51

BMR l40 - 2 story home in Patriot si tuated on 1!2
acre lot. Kitchen includes range and disposal.

LAND CONTRACT 9% INT.
, This Is a famiy room. a ll bri c k wifh 4
bedrooms and a sparkling full bath up .
·Large kitchen lined with pr etty
:cabinets. Large foyer and f ormalli\ling
•room and dining. Full basement,
· fireplace in f amily room. 2 car gar age
: attached, also a workshop and a barn .
. Situated on approx . 50 acres . This t10rne
· reflects fender, loving care and tru e

43 ACRES - Va can t land, possibility of
coal and ariculturallime.
11322
3 ACRES ~artially c leared . Oritled
well_. Electric and telepho ne serv ice
avarlable . Close to mines . 56 , 900 _ # 379

I

WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY
To t il ailS bedrooms in this exceptional ly outstanding b r i ck hom e. Formal llv·
ing room, large spacious fami ly room
with w .b. fir eplace, beautiful kitchen
w i th all bu ilt-ins and dining area . Color ·
ful cera mi c tile "baths. Full finished
basement, loads of c loset space. Large
2 car fin ished garage . Th is home is very
well constructed . Professional ly lllnd ·
sca ped. Porterbrooke Subd. City
Schools. Shown by Appointment Only!

SITTlN' PRETTY -Drive up Fourth
Ave., near the golf course, watch for
our sign on the front lawn of this beau ·
ty, 3 BR, 2 baths, country style kitchen
with cozy dinette, large corner Jot ,
beautiful trees and shrubs, $42,900.

,,I

•

Owner will help fin ance with a down
payment and carry the balance on a
LAND CONTRACT . Stately 2 story
plllary posls, J bedroom, form al entry
and large open w ind ing staircase.
Fam i ly room with plank floorin g and
w .b. f ir eplace. Formal living room.
spacious ea t · in kitchen with loads of
knotty pine cablnel s. This and much
more setting on 3 acres. Can buy only
one acre. City Schools. Give us a call for
more details.
DAIRY FARM
135 acres more or less. 1.3 miles Rae ·
coon Cr eek bottom, 40 acres creek bottom, 60 acres total ti llable. Used as a
Grade A dairy operation. 4 milkers with
automatic washers, 800 gal. bulk tanks,
2 silos (800 ton s Iotan. With silo
unloading auger. STructures e 40xSO
metal, 172x40 milk house with feed
room. 40x170 concrete stab feed lot. All
structures have concrete fl oors. 1.000
walnut and POPlar trees on f arm . Clay
Twn . rav !\r hools.
$14,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE I
On fhis 2 story, 4 bedroom home. Liv ing
room, kitchen and dining area. Fully
carpeted. 1 cr garage. Situated on a
deep lot with a garden space.
RODNEY -CORA RD.
.58 Acre, mobile home runner for a
12x60 tra iler, septic tank. rura l water
available. Very reasonab le .

RIO GRANDE AREA
Mobile home and half acre lot for only
S14,500.00 .
ACREAGE
6 Ac res more or less with a pond.
Choice building site on Blacktop Road.
ACREAGE
E)(tellent building site. 8.-4 acres more
or less. Totally fenced . Located 5 to 6
miles from the city . City schools . Prlc·
ed $14,500 .
LOW INTEREST RATES AVAILABLE
CONVENTIONAL FINANCING AS
LITTLE AS S% DOWN. V.A. · NO
DOWN PAYMENT . F . H.A. LOW
DOWN PAYMENT . MORTGI\GE
MONEY IS AVAILABLE I

RACCOON
Vaclltion
BR, rear
Creek.
$37, 500.

J

RIVER VIEW - Very nice 2 BR, new
carpet, recently redecorllted, 2 car
garage with garage apt. in c lly . $65,000.

t

ONE I!UNDRED ACRES - ApproM .
1800 ft. road frontage, blacktop road '
Rural water available, beauiiJui
building sites. Would be perfect site for
mobile home park. $100,000.

J

Bonaie L srutes, ReaHor, 446-42~
Jamil$ R. Stutes, Asslc. 446-2885

:

Joseph L Le~ch, Assot. 245-9484

,,)
I

•
''

-~

BMR 341 - L-shaped brick ranch c lose to hOspital .
Includes natural gas heat with cen tra l ai r .
FREE NATURAL GAS
143 ACRES
Approx . 10 mi . from
Gallipol is, lots of Rae ·
coon Creek frontage .
Approx . 30 acre s Rae·
coon Creek bottom l and .
Tota l of 60 acr es t ill able.
Nice 40'x60' bar n . 6
rooms, 3 bedroom hom e
with free natural ga s to
heat your home in
winter and cook you
fOOd . Lots of fruil tr ees.
NicE' countr y setting .
Seethisone.
H41 9.

BMR 338 - 12 Un i t apartments in Middleport. In ·
ventory available . { 3 bui !dings 4 units each.)
BMR 347M - Champion mobile home on rented tot.
Will sell furnished or unfurni shed. Ca ll for deta il s!
BRICK RANCH situated close to Ho lzer M.C . This
home needseKfensive repair . Can be purchased very
reasonable . Call tor details .
NEW LISTING .- Check thi s one right now . Two
bedroom cottage, w ith firep lace and woodburner,
full basement, new natural wood siding and A nder·
son windows . City schools. Call now .

R
Your
I
the beauty of the
two fi repla ces and the energy savings
of the woodburner. 3 bedrooms, full
basement and much more. Thi s home
shows excellent quality lind workman·
shi p, Call us today !
LOVE A GRACIOUS SETTING!
HDMEOFRAREVALUE&amp;CHARM
This stately 2 story home has all the
featu-res in a home ·you would ever
want! Four bedrooms, 4 full baths.
-complete built-in kitchen off from the
family room with w .b . fi replace. Form al living and dining room. Full finish ·
ed basement featur ing a large family
room with w .b . fireplace, game room
and utility room . L.!!rge 2 car garage
with opener . Covered patio and
sundeck .
Free
swimming
and
cl ubhouse area ava ilable.

'-----!

im ·
U3

.

·••uoK

EVENINGS
TOM WHITE, ASSOC .
STEVE McGHEE, ASSOC.
DONA McGHEE, ASSOC.
BETH NULL, ASSOC •
.au D McGiu!i!-Realtor-Auctioneer

Real ESiate

Gtnerlf

~

1965 Yan or 12x52 , 2 bedr .

BMR :J39F- 30 llcres in Rio Grande with 2 story
house in r:~eed of repair. Call for det ail s!

PRESTIGE AND HISTORY
Large two story house, approx. 180 yrs.
old, corner lot, Main Street Rutland .
Lots of history with th is home. Recently
removeled and red ecorated . The best of
carpet. la rg e 3 bedrooms. Soli d oak
trim , refini shed a nd something to see .
A ll copper plumbing. New wir ing. Solid
brass f txtures. 12x 16 vineyard . Make u s
a n offer, you can bu y this too chea p.
1/478

2

1971 Ca meron . 14x 65, 2"";
bedr .
1971 Fleetwood, 14x6S 3 ·
bdr ., bath lf2
I

1978 FA IRMONT mObile
home, 14x70 , total elec .
with
wood burning
firep lace. Ca ll 256·6667 .

BMR 94- Stately older home in Cheshire. Natural
gas heat. Must see to appreciate!
' BEATTHIS-$300 PER MONTH
Including pr inc ipal, interest, taxes and
insurance. On ly 9% int. Owner transfer·
red and very anxious to sell. City
schools, acre of ground more or less
living room, 2 W.B . fireplaces, kitche~
a nd din ing area . Full basement. Priced
in $40s.

K ANAU GA
MOBIL E HOM ES
La r ge selec t ion of used
10's, 12' s, &amp; 14 wide Mob ile- .
Homes. Kanauga Mob ile
Home Sale, Ka nauga, Ohio
446-966 2.

u xr

Spread

BMR 336- E)(ecutlve type home on nearly 6 acres
of land . Owner Is anxious to sell and has reduced the
price. CAll today for deta ils!

I
.-,,

1973 FairpQint,
bedroom

6

BMR 361 - Two story home i n R io Grande with 4
lar'ge B R's . Includes 3 extra lots SS I ,000 .

9'14% Fin.Jncing Available!
3 bedroom ran ch. 1'12 bath s, family
room, large kitchen area . FullY
carpeted . 15x20 out of the ground pool .
Si tuated on a large lot.
·

PRICES REDUCED · used
mobile homes and travel
tra i l e rs .
T R I - S TATE
MOBILE HOME S. CALL
446·7572.

1972 AMERICAN 14x64, 3
bdr., furnished , c alt 6756466.

~MR 342 All electric home .
throughout. Situated on 120x200 lot .

'

- Mobile Homei - ____for Sal..o
e _ __

for Sale

SMALL TRAILER , newly
remode l ed , 2 bdr ., good kit
chen . Call 367 ·782.4 or 446·

1969 12x64 MOBILE HOME
· good shape on rented lot in
Rodney, OH 245-5194.
Real Estate

ji -

Mobile Homes

-- ~-----'

BMR 344- Brick ranch includeS 3 B Rs, FR, l lf2 B's,
Central air In excellent condition. Located in county
school distr ict.

..

01110
-

REA·i i- Vliiw- of .-fabulous home. The front Is
even more fabulous . Velvet lawn studded with tall
Plnea, dogwood. 4 BR. 2 baths. familY rm .•
flr.,lace, 2 car garage. Cen . air. Assume low In·
teresI mortvage. Near city . S79,WO.
·

for boat, motor and trailer .
Ca l l J .B . at 1-246 -6047 ..

32

__

1971 Fl eetwood, 14x 65, l
bdr ., Ph batl"l .
1971 Libe ..-ty , 14x65, 2 bd r .,
1968 New Moon , l 2x60, e&gt;e -

MOB! LE HOME
45x8.
Wi II sell for $2,000. or trad e

BMR 345 - Older 2 story home in Racine. 10 rooms

General

TRULY FAIR - Custom built,
owner brick, 3 BR , 2'12 baths. full y
equipped kitchen . Recr eation rm . with
fireplace, super sized patio, attached
garage. Cen . air. You ' ll love the decor .
Assume 9% mortgage . $79,000.

Aiiitrercanaday,

2 1f:~
bat h s, rec room ,
t i rep I ace,
basement ,
garage . At Morning Star
Hts .. Lee Construction, 99'J.
3ol54 or 992 -5455.

MobileHi:unes

----'~ Sal e

90% remodeled . Two stained glass windows func·

·'

REALTY

,

NEW lor 4 Bedroom home ,

32

tiona I fireplace . Call now for complete details'!

CANADAY.

·:[Q

Mobile H0r11es
for Sal e

32

4563 1

2 t Loc ust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
Telephon e : {614) 4 46-4206

*

Real Estate

_H_omes fo! Sate

BMR 351- New Listing~ 3 BR home located in city
school district on nearly an acre of land. Only 2
miles from Gallipolis .

***************************~
Real Estate- General

· 31

NICE 5 ROOM
HOME ONLY
s17.ooo
Cir cular porch, fuel oil
F A furna ce . City w ater.
cellar, outside storage
bu i lding . Ni ce com
Jl'IUn i t y.
Pho ne for
details .
N386

446-9557
446-0552
446· 0552
245·9507
446·0552 .

Real Estate- General

,.

Real Estate

General

Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

TONE~ REALTY (0
WM. o.:TONEY - BROKF~

-'46 3087

24 STATE STREET
.:GAWPOUS, OHIO
WE DO OUR .HOMEWORK!
' .
WHAT LUCK I - Have you been look· .
lng for a hOuse in tehS&lt;O's with all of the
room you need? We have it! This house
has A -1 slding.-4 bedrooms. 2 baths. liv·
ing room1 ditiing, Complete kitchen.
familY rOOm, 2 WOOd burners, Flor ida ,
J.'()rch ~ 2 decks, redwood fence and 1·car
~a rage, located In the city school
distri c t . Need1we sav more?
BUILDING LOT - .64 of an acre in a
choice location. Minutes from town and
access to city water and sewage.
·

STATELY Lovely older home
located in the ci ty . Homes like this are
not built any more. 'l • ~d rooms
upstairs, 1 balh j;io\)CISD,,allway.
Down••· '·c.sD,R .. .. , Kit., tam . rm.,
tovetpRI ... , ctin . rm ., 1 full bath , utili·
ty rm. Plus beautiful In-ground pool. 3
car garage, basem e:nt, attic and much,
much more.
GEORGES CREEK RD. Double
wide home with 3 bdrms., kit., din . rm .•
liv. rm ., all elecric, and situated on lh
acre . Priced in the $20's.

OUT.S TANDING - Lovel y sweeping
view of the Ohio River, from this im·
maculate 3 BR ranch . This home
features LR with pretty corner frpl.,
nice kitchen, den , bC1th, C.A'/ 2 car
garage and full basement with shower.
Situated on 1 acre of lovely lawn.

BULAVILLE - 2 bdrm . home, la\-ge
IJv. rm . , k i t ., din . area, bath, util ity rm .
Large covered patio, sep. gar ., and 1
acre of lawn. Home only 4 yrs. old .
BARGAiN - 100 acres m /r with gas
well &amp; rovalties, tob. base . Lanq fenced
and locate&lt;! In Addjson Twp.

AFTER HOURS PHONE
BE&lt;;KY LANE .•• • ••. , , • , ••••• , • . 446·04S8
WALT LANE ............ ..' ...... 446· tMS8

BARGAIN - 3 Bdrm . frame with full
base., 1 bath, gas fur . Locate din the ci ·
tv and priced al$14,000.'

m
~ f A t i (JII

�11

11

Help Wanted

11

SALES PEOPLE,
IS YOUR BUSI.NESS SLOW?
OURS ISN1.

HelpWaiiied-., -

HELP WANTED - Part
time, full time. World
Book· Cnild .Crall sales
representatives. Call 675·
3775 .

13

-

---- tnsurance

SANDY AND BEAV E R In-

surance Co. has offered
serv ices for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for al most a century .
Farm , home and personal

property
ll

coverages

av~ilable

Insurance

dividua l

INSURANCE
CLAIM
REPAIRS · caii,.W.-3407 .

to

meet

needs .

are
in-

Contact,

Lewis Hu9hes, y our nei gh·

bor and agent .

t3
__ I!:'S!'f~ t!,C ~ --A UTOMOBI.LE
IN SURANCE
been
can ·

ce ll e d ?

Lo s t

your

OJ: e r~tor ' $ license? Phone

Y'/1 -2143.

i6

'

_ __,&amp;

RadloTV

c B R ep.,a,_,i!..
r __

RON ' S T V SERVICE
Special i zi ng in Zenith .
House Calls . Call 1-30H762398 or 446·2454.

___

1&gt;-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 8, 1980

--------

,, - - - wanl.diooo - _._

2}~=-~~~e~ ;o1oa~·-

LAWN MOWER repa i r,
engines . frames , shar·
penlng, call «6·0355 or 4-Ci&gt;4233 offer 5 :30.

21

WE DO EAR pierc ing , buy
the earrings and get the
ears
p i erced
FREE .
Tawney Jewelers.

CASH - Loen never repay,
free details, A . L . Lutton,
P . 0 . Box 766, Gallipolis,
Oh.

Buiiness
Opportunity

·- .

14' WIDE

INflATION HELPS OUR SALES
Top commissions, sales aids, lead svstem,
management opportunities .

NG.atiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE
SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE
· ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

CAll 593-8800 FOR INTERVIEW

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

992-2342
OONNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Real Estate - General

Real Estate

1980 OAKBROOK

11
Sma ll Gasoline
Engines
Uplo25 H.P.
Lawn mowers, tillers,
chain saws, motor bikes
&amp;
etc.
All
work
guaranteed . Pickup &amp;
Delivery .
PRECISION SMALL
E~GINE SERVICE
544 Upper River Rd .

MOBILE HOME
2 Bdrm., furnished,
$9,450. Down payment $984. Onlv
5159.48 per mo.
(APR 18%)
Call Immediately

WOULD LIKE TO 00
roofing , concrete and carpenter jobs. Call 388 -9945
betweenSand7 .

D&amp;W ESTATES
Rt. 93 North
Jackson, OH.

TE AC HER
w ill
tutor
students. Cal l446·7395.

General

286-3752

22

Mane to Loan

~--~~~~~--.

. i
~

FHA-vA·Convential Home:.
Loans, Columbus Fir.st:i
Mortgag e
Co.,
loa.-.

Money to Loan

MONEY • MONEY

&gt;t First

mortgages,
:second · mortgages,
,.and
refinance·
ill- c;ases. Ca II Com·
~plete Mortgage'
..,.services
iri
:Gallipolis, Ohio at
.._446-1517 for morelti
...- . I orma t •on
•
*'"
and&gt;t'
~your appointm_e nt . .,.,

************~

MorJgages,

Refinance Cases. Ex·
ample of 2nd mort·
gage loan : Appralseel value of properly
$40,000 (total of
&gt;t botn mortgages can·
... not exceed 75% of apfi
praised
value).
,. $40,000 •
7 5% &gt;t $30,000 - lsi mort·
It gage balance Sl5,000
&gt;t - amount available
Jfo for 2'1d mortgage,
$15,000. Refinance &amp;
lt- 1st mortgages can
&gt;t tolal100% of appro is·
Jt. ed value! Where f.an
&gt;t this be done? At
Compete Mortgage

i

~

--~----~----------·11'
**!:.*!:.********* **!:.****'*'****"'lt'
: ' ' $ $ $ : It'$$$$,.

~

Money

Second

lf.

Viol e]

7172

Mohey •Mon e y• :

*
ltr
*&gt;t
**
**
*&gt;t
*

_. First Mortgages &amp; Jt

( Cooki e) Viers. 463 Secon~
Ave .. Gall ipolis. Oh .• 446·:

22

.*}

*************""
&gt;t
$55 s 5 s
:::

t

Oh.

represen1at i1Je,

Wanted to Do

we Repair

CASH · Loan never r epay ,
t ree details, A. L. Luttor.t. .••
P . 0 . Box 766 , Gall i poli s,,..

Professionaf
Services

23

&gt;t

: MONEY • MONEY :

*

*First mortgages,'
.:second mortgages,,.,
,._and
refinance*
&gt;t case 5 c 11 ·~om II!
a
·Iii
.•.... plete ' Mort!lage"
,.services
in,.
lt-Gallipolis, Ohio atl6
'*446-1517 for morei
*information and
·:t~-ypur appointment.

*

lt Servic es .

&gt;t
&gt;t

*

in

Gallipolis. Ohio Phone 614-446-1117.
Please call first for

,..

----- -J and F Backhoe Servi ce .

Lice nsed an d bonded . Sep·

t 1c ta nk lll Sfa !tat iOn . Water
and gas lines. E xc awatmg
work and transit layout.
Ca ll 991 770 1.

~
~

.._
...:

**
!

inform•tlon and r.n ~
appointment.
......-

CALL
US
for
your
Photogr aph ic needs. Per ·
trait, passpo rt s, com ·
merc lal and
wedding
photography .
Tawnev
Studios, 424 Second A ve.

Bob Lane,- Sales Manager
Home : 446· 1049

Phone 446· 7900
or 446-2730

JAME S COUGHENOUR Paint jobs ins ide and out,
i:&gt;av by the job, cal l a ny
time 446 -7530.

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Ditch digg ing service. Cal l
773-5839 or 773 -5788 .

:•

Real Estate - General

---------

:,.*
•••*
*•,..

•

WJII

•

~I elf&gt; t ilno nee to qualified buyer.

: .

1*

'*
,..

*
••*

••*
•**
REDUCED- IN TOWN - LOAN ASSUMPTION
11%- COMPLETELY REMODELED - New roof ,
new maintenance-free siding, new Thermopane
windows, new wiring and plumbing . Beautiful new
kitc hen cabinets. No repai r tor years to come! Very
close to Washington Grade School. Take a tool&lt; to·
day . $36,500.00.
JUST LISTED- PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND
Apx . 16 acres just off Rt . 35 West. In vicinity of
I
Hosp ital . Would be a beautiful subdivison .

-

NEW LISTING -- TWO BI'"ROOM FRAME $12,000 HANDYMAN ~r -0\..0 - This home needs
some work but at tl
e you can afford it.
Located on Rt. 7 with over 5 acres of land . Super in·
vestment!!

c; .. ....

MOBILE HOME LOT - Apx. one acre level lOt
located 6 m i tes from t own on Sta te Rl. 218. County
water available
MOBILE H!)ME LOT - LAND CONTRACT 52,000.00 DOWN - 11'l'- ,.,_\..
_ o ·!ST - This one ac re
revet tot has hook-up,SO
_ mobile homes. 3112
miles from town . Counry water . Storage build i ng on
property .

~EW LISTING -

BEACH COTTAGE ON LAKE
JACKSON - Furnished cottage wi t h apx. 900 fl . of
li"ing space. Plenty of beautiful fronlage on Lake
Jackson with 2 docks. Nice sun bathing area . Finest
fishing . $20,000.
MAKEUSANOFFER

**

Fully equipped kitchen, tor mal dini ng r oom , family
room,~ bedrooms and two baths are some of the ex ·
tras In th iS tin e home, loca t ed on th e edge of town .
Owner says, " Bring me an offer toda y! "'

:

EVENINGS

,. BOBLANE
Jt- SUE ROUSH
•
Ji. CHERYL CUNNINGHAM

•...

•:*
**
ll-

**·
,.*
ll-

••
••
••*
••
•.
••*
*

**'
*,.&gt;t
*Jt-*
*Jt.
&gt;t

~

FO R SALE BY OWNER :
single story frame home
near c ity limits. Land con·
t r act available. $36,000.
Caii.W.-0026.

5 ROOM HOUSE Located

=::=aea I Estate
31

in Oak Hill. Very nice. Call
682 ·6010.

Homes for Sale

B Y OWNER · 3 bdr . house,
kitchen, F . R., wood burning fireplace, I g. level lot.
Call446-3100.
R A N CH - Assumable mor
tga ge at 91f2 percent. 3 to 4
bdr ., large family room ,
fireplace, 2 fu ll baths, laun ·
d ry r oom, 1 car garage, gas
heat, central air con·
ditioning . Fenced yard ,
patio, exc . neighborhood .
Ci t y schools, $51.900 . 10
percent down . Ca ll 4-46·7224
owner .

5 ROOM and b ath, house.
Professional- Services

BOB LANE
SALES MANAGER

5 ROOM house with
ga r age, 64 Chil l icothe Rd.
$190. pe r month income.
57500. phone 446-4038 or 446·
1615or446-l243 .

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

Real Estate - General

HOBART DILLON ,
BROKER

Homei ior Sale

..

i**************

*••••••******J

Deluxe Ford fiberg lass topper to f it ei gh t foot bed.
Coll 991 7201.

31

By owner, l arge backyard.
Ca ll446 7839.

--

--- -·- - - - - -

PR IC E RED U CE D for
quick sa.le! Frame brick 3
bdr. home is brand new . I1J2
b e~ ths . Large liv ing room
with f ire place. Beautiful
kitchen has lots of bu ilt· in
cabir1e1s. adjoins separate
d ining room . Carpeting,
heat pump, carport. Approx. I acre in quiet setting
off lower Rt. 7. Possible
loan assumption on portion
of thE' reduced price of
$46,900 at only 9lf:~ per cent.
Phone 4-16 4753 .
·~_Real

E_state- General

l'h STORY - HOUSE on
large lot on Crown City,
good cond .. upper 20's, may
land contract . Call 245· 1268.
3 BDR . HOME On B·utavllle
Rd ., also, 1979 Volare · Call
256-9355 or 379-2639 7 to 9
p .m .

Located in exc . residenti al
community , spac ious, at·
tractiv e, mai ntenance free
home loca ted on lovely
acre lot. Modern k 1tchen,
f am i ly
r oom, several
bedrooms. two baths,
basement, garage . Low
utilities. 992 1727.
Beautiful large home. Low
uti li ties, bri ck ranch style,
3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
fireplace, full basement,
family room , air con ditioner, J car garage .
Baum Addition , M e igs
County . Call985-4169.
3 Bedr oom brick . ranch.
Tuppers Plains. l'h bath,
built -i n
kitchen,
full
basemen t with wood stove ,
larg e garage. Big lot with
nice garden spot. $52,000.
667 -3288.

Real Estate- General

REALTY WORLD., - Stutes Real Estate
CONVENIENT, I
LOCATION
This inviting 3 bedroom ranch provides
the fi nest in today 's l:ving . Ba th with
shower, deluxe wood , cabinets i n
spaci ous k itchen, formal dining room,
central air cond i tioning , natura l gas
heat , budget $.45.00 mo. Single car
garage , el ec tric eye, f enced in back
yard_. Deadend street . Loan assumpt1on
POSSibl e 9% rate. Priced in the low
$40's.
~ 456

BEAUTY , QUIET, LUXURY
Ma ny more words could be used in
describing thi s 3 bedroom A -frame
located in Harrison Township. VerY
modern, 1112 baths, l iv ing room
k itchen ·dming comb1nation. This iS
located in a wooded area . Come and
see, you may not believe such a wonder ·
tul place ~o I vie is available today . 1/4 68

WOULD YOU LIKE
J BR , DR and bath on acre lot at edge of
t&lt;:&gt;wn wit h partial basement? 12' x 15'
c1nder block bldg. If inter ested, give us
acall .
#464

COMMERCIAL BUILDING!
Good investment. Recent ly remodeled
Approximately 1800 sq . ft . on mai ~
floor . ld.ea l for a g rocery. 2- 2 bedroom
apartments comple.tely remodeled .on
second floor . An older butl ding in tip·
top shape . Let us take you to t hi s one
now.
~ 473
LOCATION! LOCATION!
Wa lk to sc hool a net dow ntown shopping
from your one story hom e located on
level corner lot in a spacious and
private neighbor hood . J bdr-., 2 full
baths, bit kitchen, fireplace., attached
garage with new maintenance-free
vinyl siding, and efficient gas hea t. all
tor $55.000. Immedi ate possessio n and
owner financing ava ilable .
11462

RESTAURANT 7% Ft NANCE
Doing gre at business. 30)(10, 5 year old
building . Seating f o r 50 people. Electr1c
heat, air conditioning . Good loca tion
Looking for an excellent investment ;
calltoday . Shown by appointment . K 434
GET STARTED! 3 bedroom . ba th kit chen, living r oom . natural gas heat.
Garage. Unbealable pri ce $19,000 . N4&gt;0
YOUR OWN PRIVATE WORLD - that
presen ts privacy and beauty . This 11
acre~ , more or less, already has a lane
lead •ng to the building site, rural water
tap and lots of trees. Take a look TO ·
DAY !
~ 451
SOUTHERN HILLS SPECIAL
Drive out Lincoln Pi ke and view thi s
wonderful setting . Two bedroom
modern 1971 Fleetwood 12 ' x65 '.
Everything is impressive, drilled well ,
well kept lawn, flowers, white pol e
fences, red barn wired for elec tri ci ty ,
with loft, drivewa y . 41 acres for ca mp·
mg , nature tra ils . Loca t ed only a short
distance from State Route 790, a
blac ktop road . Let us sell th is to you . H
4
7
1
SMALL FARM
Sma ll farm without bui ldings. 56 acres.
Several acr es t ill able, land fertility bet·
ter tha n ever . Some t1mber . Septic
tan~ . E lectric avai lab le. Sc hool bus,
mall rout e. 4400 lbs. tobacco base this
year . 2200 lbs. norma l base.
11 479

IMMEDIAGE POSSESSION
3 or 4 bedroom home w ith family room
&amp;
large
l iv ing room .
Range
r~ fr igera t o r
&amp; new
Wh i rlpooi
diShwasher go V.:ith this ni ce house .
Large basement fmished . Goes out into
a large fenced back ya rd . Car-port or
co vered patio. $43,500.
11476

ANOTHER QUALITY HOME
Three or four bedrooms, living room,
large modern k i tchen -di ning room com·
b fnation, fam i ly room , must see to ap·
preciate, bath w i th shower, concrete
driveway, large patio in bac k, built-in
grill , etc . Two m etal utility buildings. 1
must stop, office manager will set me
strai g ht . I still say very c lean, exce llent
repa ir, close to town . Cal l any sa les
associa te now
# 472

20ACRES·MODERN BUILDINGS
Six room house, J bedroo ms, l V2 baths,
ba semen t, FA fuel o il furna ce. Level ,
fer ti le garden area. M odern barn, pond,
toba cco base, garage, work shop. One
of the best. 15 minute drive fr om
Gallipolis. New surfaced State Road .
Conventional financing $53.500 .

..
446·1049 &gt;t
446· 9753 ..
367·0433

a

CLOSE IN
I Jieve l acres in an exce llent locat ion on
a St Hi ghway. Close to everything . 5
room house, basement &amp; front por ch.
Barn &amp; outbuildings for r a ising your
own l ivestock.
# 477
MODERNHOGANOCATTLEFARM
219 acre productive farm . New m odern
buildings ar e now in use for hog produc·
tion . Large barn and other outbuildings
for crop storage and hous ing of cow and
calf operation . 80 acres t i llable land .
1920 lbs. tobacco base. So me timber
land . Beautiful green fi elds. Large 2
stor y light room house nas been ex ten·
sively re modeled . County water and
large pond . Strea m through farm . One
of th e better ones. Pl ease c al l now . # 480
A PLEASURE TO SEE
AND A JOY TO LIVE IN
This home 1s in move-in condition. 3
bedrooms, kitchen and dining comb mat ion, ba th, f am ii.Y room wi th wood·
burner . Well insulated . Lg . lot. A t a
price you ca n afford . In th e SJO's . 1/475

PRICED RIGHT

10 acres of private wooded land. 2
bedr-oom m obile home . Dr illed well
with pump and storage tank . Good
gar~en space along a small stream,
ut 1l1ty bldg. 10x10.. Good cond it ion.
Sma ll pond . Sacrifice price SlJ,OOO.N 4S2
VACANT LAND
36 acres, more or less. Prospect Road.
Land suitable for building lots of
acreage of your own enjoyment . Close
to Bidwell, Porter or St . Rt . 160 . Only a
t ew mintues from G allipolis . S21,500 .
N463
INVESTMENT
PROPERTY CHESHIREAREA
2 apartment houses, 3 apartments
r ented for steady income, 4 trailer
spaces. GoOd li Ving Quarters or another
del u•e rental with fu ll basement . Large
lots . Comfortable living. Top locat ion!
~ 458
PRICE IS RIGHT
If you'd l ike a modern home close to
t own with 5 acres fenced in, to enjoy,
thi s is i t . Home features 3 bedrooms,
l iving room , _family room, full base·
ment, large deluxe k itch en. natural gas
furnace, v inyl siding, new cir cular
driveway. Lots of good living here . Low
upkeep on house, low car expenses in
traveling . 'h mile from city l imits. We
are r eady to show it to you .
N 410
AFFORDABLE
Yes, indeed. Call today to see this
reasonably priced 3 bedrOom home i n
Gallipolis. Full basement. Gas furna ce.
City sewer . Needs to sell. Make us an
offer .
~ 466
LOTS - 2 lOIS. SO' x 156' each. Level.
County water available. S2.SOO for both .
Build to suit yoruself . No restrictions .
N 454

t

'LOOK AT THIS ONE
two story remodeled older home
ocated on St. Rt. 160. Just minutes
from stown and the hospital
It's
Situated on eighteen acres wi th a 'rar e
barn and outbuildings . CALL TODAYg
~ 460

NEW LISTING- GREEN COUNTRY
Quality built ranch . Quality is the key to
this beautiful 3 bedroom frame house .
Most all rooms are lar ge. L R. FR .
Delu xe fire pl ace in each . 2 baths ,
shower, 10 room s in al l. Extra block
garage-20x40 . Beautiful home in th e
country with a lm os t 3 acres of land .
Scene ry must see to appr ec iate .
1/481

1_

THE VEGETABLES ARE FREE Beautiful garden already planted . 1056
sq . ft . l iving area, 3 BR , 1112 baths, for ·
mal dining, equi pped kitcnen. F r ont
and rear decks. New concrete block 2
car garage . 2 acres partially wooded.
Kyger Creek area . $38,000.

Ron eanaday, Realtor, 446-363ti

,REA~roR e. 25 Locust St.,

Rea~ ~~3&amp;Galhpc~hs,
--

.

THE BEST OF THE REST
You ca n' t do any better than the b~st
and thi s f ine 3 bedroom home 1 th~
best, and one you' ll be proud to own
E!reathtak ing f ami l y r oom with
!.replace, 2 baths, liv ing room and din·
mg have lu x u ~ious carpeting, 2 car
~ara~e .. No ma1ntenance ex terior and
1n ter1or 1n absol utel y perfect co ndition
A MUST TO SEE'
n 5j

Co..Jntry
Home
with
stocked pond for sw1mming
or fishing , 9 rooms, bath ,
carpeted . J to l7 acres
avai l able. Located appro• .
7 miles from Pomeroy of t
Rl. 7 or 33 . 446-2359 after 6.

1972 Indy Mobile Home
12' )(60'. F ir eplace, central
air, deep feeze, part ly fur
ni shed , all underp inned
and block s. Lot it sets on
can be rented . S7 ,500. 99 2
5057 or 992·6057 _

Carpeted 5 room house in
Bradbury . Has modern k it ·
chen and bath, garage, carport, 2 utility bldgs. and
garden space . Across from
WMPO. Sign in yard . 992·
SJ10.

1969 12 X60, 'J. bedroorn
Hollypa rk Trailer . Fur
nished, a .c., washer , m el a I
out-building , under pin·
ning . 99 2·2881 .

Luxurious large modern
c ountry
home
Pool.
acreage private. 3 digit
c l ass ,
in
Pom e roy Ga llipOlis area. For app t.
cal1992 -7680 _
6 rooms,
Ph
baths.
paneled, carpeted, garbage
d isposal, storm windows,
doors, exc. wi ndow air con·
ditioner, f_inished basement
w·bar, tile bath w·shower .
Reasonable . 11 5 Ebeneezer
St. 992 -5566 .

pando, 2 bdr .
1970 Ne w M oo n, 12x60, J
bdr .
1961 Vi ndal e. 10x55, 2 bd r .
1969 Broadmore. 12•60. 2
bdr .
B&amp; S
Mobile Home Sales
Pt . Pl easant W.VA.
675-4424.

s

7

8

9

"'

C-IRCLE THIS ONE
Idea l _ location tor co nv enience ,
h 1~hw_a ~s and shopp ing, this J bedroom
~n.ck 1s m exce~l~nt cond 1tion . Features
ilv1 ng room , dm•ng room with sliding
glass doors, very ni ce fin ished f am ily
room in base m ent, 1'12 baths,· 2 car '
garage. It ha s a personal ity all its own1
CA LL NOW !
NJBO

'•
'

VACANT LAND - 66 acres Harr ison
Twp., well fenced, large portion has
new woven wire with steel posts.
Estimated 10 acres fill !lble, some
timber, large road frontage . Excellent
buy $25,000.
NJ67

'

.,••'
.,~
.,'

" DO IT YOURSELF" - Fin •sh up t he
remodeling of thi s 2 story 3 BR cou ntry
home . It has been rew ired, new breaker
box, some d_ry wall work done . New roof
and r:natenal s cost ing ove r 51500 on
prem ises . County water tap paid for 1
acre of leve l ground. What a change yOu
~~ n m ake and profits unlimited for
'
.
N442

;
,.
"

:
.
•
•
:

7 500

GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE!
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORO IT !
The owners have toved this home but
the y are m oving . J bedroom ranc hjl iv·
lng room , kitchen with buil t -ins, dining
area, modern bath, l car fin ished
garage, a ll this on a nice si ze lot located
only one and a ha lf miles f rom th(' city
Priced In th e mid AO' s.
·

L · SHAPED BRICK, cedar and
tudor ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 fuil
family room with raised hea
fireplace ans tiding doors that open onto
lerrace, fully equipped kitchen. formal
entry_ ~all opens into family, kitchen
and 11v1ng room, 2 car finished garage.
Electric heat pump, cent. air . Nearly
an acre levellot ..$69,500 .
--~-- ---

THE CHOICE IS YOURS I 2 new homes
nearly completed, 3 BR , 2 baths, full
basement, hea t pump, cen . a ir c ond .,
fully carpeted. Superb qua lity and
design, $56,00.
5J ACRES - Roliing m eadows. wooded
hillside, pond. pine grove. $21,900 .
VACATION SETTING - Oller 19 acres
~long Ra ccoon Creek. Nice 2 8 R home .
Barn, other outbldg. Good develoment
potential. $4,,000.

HILLTOP FARM - Only 5 miles from
clfy . Nice -4 BR home, fam ily rm.,
equipped kitchen, 48 acres . Good pro·
ducing gas well furni shes free gas for
residence plus income . $85,000.

LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION!
- Walk tO the new Foodland market. or
across t he str eet to thPO'";pring Valley
.Pla za. Nice 3 BP C.O\. d fram e, 1'h
baths, family rm _;J:re~rag~ . Could be us·
ed as beauty shop, professional office.
$45,000.

CENTENARY - Natural cedar ranch.
nearly an acre lawn. 3 BR, fllmily rm .,
2 car garage. A showplace! $61,900.
ROLLING LAND Woods beyol1d,
quiet country road, wonderful place for
children and horses, 3 BR coloni al of··
fers all the space you' ll need . 1.4 acres
only 5'12 miles from city . $40,000.
SUPER BARGAIN - 1112 story frame
ho111e in good cond ., 3 BR, country kit·
chen, spacious level lawn, excellent
garden space. Can't be beat at 526,000.

bedroom

1971 Shakespear, 14x65 2

1968 Fleetwood 12x6J, 2 :
Bdr .
,
B B. S M OBIL E HOM E:
SA LES. PT. P LEASANT ,
w v . 304-675·4424.
.

I

your
wings

*Willis T. Leaaingnam,
Realtor Pb. Home 446 ·9S39
.•Joan Boggs, Realtor ASSIIC
Ph. Hon1e : 446-3294

General

R ealtor-Auctloneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving6,000
Communities
428 Second Ave.
COII446-G552 Anytime

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

BMR 3~9- New listing . All electric home . 3 BR
ranch Situated on large fla t lot . Ca II for details!
BMR 350M- Kirkwor ~0\.0 e home on re nted tot .
LEss than $5,000!
"

WHAT AN INVESTMENT
This ad is just not bi g enough to
describe thi s farm . 100 acres m . or 1. of
prime land. Lovely, one of the f inest
older homes you ' ll e11er see . 40x40 barn,
corn cr i,b, too l shed. 75 acres ti ll able
land, 50,000 tt . ti m ber , good line fences,
2 mobile homes, a ll m ineral right s go .
Believe me this i s not even a small sa mple of a II the qualities of thi s ta rm . N416

BMR :146- In Thurman. 2 BR frame home in good
condition. Assumabl e loan.

Nev.(

GRACIO US 81-LEVEL
S58,500
•
Quality , style, beauty, all combined in
this love l y bi ·level. 3 bedroom s. 11/2
baths, huge utility room, lovely ki tc hen
wit h built-in cabinets, range, disposal.
dishwasher, large family and rec . room
w ith f ir ep lace . This home has been
tas tefully decorated. Ca ll us, and put
your family in th1s love ly home. Close
to Holzef Hospi tal We can advise you
on financing .
/1 385

carpet
IN GALLIPOLIS
3 Bedrooms - Total 6

r ooms
plu s bath .
Modern kitchen with
lots
ot
cabi n e t s,
dishwasher . SomE' new
wall to wa ll car pet.
Natural gas furnace. Ci ·
ty water and sewer . All
f or only $29,900.
~ 405

· BMR 333- M odular home, 3 BR 's, 2 baths, L R,
DR. F R with WB , kitchen inc ludes range and
ref r igerator. S itvj!t~d on 1.23 acres . Low JO's.

RYTH
YOU
NEED WITH
ONE PURCHASE
I PACKAGE OEAL J
Three bedroom , air con ·
ditioned home . 2 baths,
li vi ng room , eat·in k it chen, laundry room or
office , plu s c losets
gallore. Metal storage
b i ld ing on con crete
base, heated garage,
paved si d ewa l ks &amp;
dr iveway . Furni ture in·
el uded plus washer ,
dryer &amp; a ll kitchen ap·
pliances. Move in w1t h
just your c loth es . Many
e_
x t ras we wi ll tell you
about with a simp l e r-----::=---:~~7::"'1
phone ca ll. Plus city
schools.
~ 407

BMR 334- 1.3 acres of la nd . 8% financing. Call f or
details.
BMR 335 Located in downtown Gallipoli s. Thi s
brick has 10 spacious rooms. Must be seen!

BMR 348 Brick ranch includes 3 BRs, kitchen
with d ining area . FR with fireplace, ful l basement.
Situated on large flat landscaped lot!
BMR 139- Two story home on Second Ave. Home
has aluminum siding, includes 3 BRs, LR , OR, FR .
Call for details.
BMR 149- 30 acres with 500 fl. frontage on Clark
Chapel Road . M ineral r ights are included!

BMR 157- 3 BR f ra me house with full basement
and 32 acres of l.!lnd . Located on Eu~eka near the
dam .

A VERY LOVELY
SETTING
$22,500
12 fl . x 65 ft . Mo~ile
home situated on 1.4 A. .
1A ft. x 22 ft. f arn il y
room, 1112 baths and ~4
ft. x 43ft. carport C . ill
ed well w i th elec tri c
pump . Lovel y b lue
spruce trees line t he ·
dr ive to this ver y nea t
and wel l kept home.
CAL L TO SEE THIS
ONE TODAY .
n 51

BMR l40 - 2 story home in Patriot si tuated on 1!2
acre lot. Kitchen includes range and disposal.

LAND CONTRACT 9% INT.
, This Is a famiy room. a ll bri c k wifh 4
bedrooms and a sparkling full bath up .
·Large kitchen lined with pr etty
:cabinets. Large foyer and f ormalli\ling
•room and dining. Full basement,
· fireplace in f amily room. 2 car gar age
: attached, also a workshop and a barn .
. Situated on approx . 50 acres . This t10rne
· reflects fender, loving care and tru e

43 ACRES - Va can t land, possibility of
coal and ariculturallime.
11322
3 ACRES ~artially c leared . Oritled
well_. Electric and telepho ne serv ice
avarlable . Close to mines . 56 , 900 _ # 379

I

WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY
To t il ailS bedrooms in this exceptional ly outstanding b r i ck hom e. Formal llv·
ing room, large spacious fami ly room
with w .b. fir eplace, beautiful kitchen
w i th all bu ilt-ins and dining area . Color ·
ful cera mi c tile "baths. Full finished
basement, loads of c loset space. Large
2 car fin ished garage . Th is home is very
well constructed . Professional ly lllnd ·
sca ped. Porterbrooke Subd. City
Schools. Shown by Appointment Only!

SITTlN' PRETTY -Drive up Fourth
Ave., near the golf course, watch for
our sign on the front lawn of this beau ·
ty, 3 BR, 2 baths, country style kitchen
with cozy dinette, large corner Jot ,
beautiful trees and shrubs, $42,900.

,,I

•

Owner will help fin ance with a down
payment and carry the balance on a
LAND CONTRACT . Stately 2 story
plllary posls, J bedroom, form al entry
and large open w ind ing staircase.
Fam i ly room with plank floorin g and
w .b. f ir eplace. Formal living room.
spacious ea t · in kitchen with loads of
knotty pine cablnel s. This and much
more setting on 3 acres. Can buy only
one acre. City Schools. Give us a call for
more details.
DAIRY FARM
135 acres more or less. 1.3 miles Rae ·
coon Cr eek bottom, 40 acres creek bottom, 60 acres total ti llable. Used as a
Grade A dairy operation. 4 milkers with
automatic washers, 800 gal. bulk tanks,
2 silos (800 ton s Iotan. With silo
unloading auger. STructures e 40xSO
metal, 172x40 milk house with feed
room. 40x170 concrete stab feed lot. All
structures have concrete fl oors. 1.000
walnut and POPlar trees on f arm . Clay
Twn . rav !\r hools.
$14,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE I
On fhis 2 story, 4 bedroom home. Liv ing
room, kitchen and dining area. Fully
carpeted. 1 cr garage. Situated on a
deep lot with a garden space.
RODNEY -CORA RD.
.58 Acre, mobile home runner for a
12x60 tra iler, septic tank. rura l water
available. Very reasonab le .

RIO GRANDE AREA
Mobile home and half acre lot for only
S14,500.00 .
ACREAGE
6 Ac res more or less with a pond.
Choice building site on Blacktop Road.
ACREAGE
E)(tellent building site. 8.-4 acres more
or less. Totally fenced . Located 5 to 6
miles from the city . City schools . Prlc·
ed $14,500 .
LOW INTEREST RATES AVAILABLE
CONVENTIONAL FINANCING AS
LITTLE AS S% DOWN. V.A. · NO
DOWN PAYMENT . F . H.A. LOW
DOWN PAYMENT . MORTGI\GE
MONEY IS AVAILABLE I

RACCOON
Vaclltion
BR, rear
Creek.
$37, 500.

J

RIVER VIEW - Very nice 2 BR, new
carpet, recently redecorllted, 2 car
garage with garage apt. in c lly . $65,000.

t

ONE I!UNDRED ACRES - ApproM .
1800 ft. road frontage, blacktop road '
Rural water available, beauiiJui
building sites. Would be perfect site for
mobile home park. $100,000.

J

Bonaie L srutes, ReaHor, 446-42~
Jamil$ R. Stutes, Asslc. 446-2885

:

Joseph L Le~ch, Assot. 245-9484

,,)
I

•
''

-~

BMR 341 - L-shaped brick ranch c lose to hOspital .
Includes natural gas heat with cen tra l ai r .
FREE NATURAL GAS
143 ACRES
Approx . 10 mi . from
Gallipol is, lots of Rae ·
coon Creek frontage .
Approx . 30 acre s Rae·
coon Creek bottom l and .
Tota l of 60 acr es t ill able.
Nice 40'x60' bar n . 6
rooms, 3 bedroom hom e
with free natural ga s to
heat your home in
winter and cook you
fOOd . Lots of fruil tr ees.
NicE' countr y setting .
Seethisone.
H41 9.

BMR 338 - 12 Un i t apartments in Middleport. In ·
ventory available . { 3 bui !dings 4 units each.)
BMR 347M - Champion mobile home on rented tot.
Will sell furnished or unfurni shed. Ca ll for deta il s!
BRICK RANCH situated close to Ho lzer M.C . This
home needseKfensive repair . Can be purchased very
reasonable . Call tor details .
NEW LISTING .- Check thi s one right now . Two
bedroom cottage, w ith firep lace and woodburner,
full basement, new natural wood siding and A nder·
son windows . City schools. Call now .

R
Your
I
the beauty of the
two fi repla ces and the energy savings
of the woodburner. 3 bedrooms, full
basement and much more. Thi s home
shows excellent quality lind workman·
shi p, Call us today !
LOVE A GRACIOUS SETTING!
HDMEOFRAREVALUE&amp;CHARM
This stately 2 story home has all the
featu-res in a home ·you would ever
want! Four bedrooms, 4 full baths.
-complete built-in kitchen off from the
family room with w .b . fi replace. Form al living and dining room. Full finish ·
ed basement featur ing a large family
room with w .b . fireplace, game room
and utility room . L.!!rge 2 car garage
with opener . Covered patio and
sundeck .
Free
swimming
and
cl ubhouse area ava ilable.

'-----!

im ·
U3

.

·••uoK

EVENINGS
TOM WHITE, ASSOC .
STEVE McGHEE, ASSOC.
DONA McGHEE, ASSOC.
BETH NULL, ASSOC •
.au D McGiu!i!-Realtor-Auctioneer

Real ESiate

Gtnerlf

~

1965 Yan or 12x52 , 2 bedr .

BMR :J39F- 30 llcres in Rio Grande with 2 story
house in r:~eed of repair. Call for det ail s!

PRESTIGE AND HISTORY
Large two story house, approx. 180 yrs.
old, corner lot, Main Street Rutland .
Lots of history with th is home. Recently
removeled and red ecorated . The best of
carpet. la rg e 3 bedrooms. Soli d oak
trim , refini shed a nd something to see .
A ll copper plumbing. New wir ing. Solid
brass f txtures. 12x 16 vineyard . Make u s
a n offer, you can bu y this too chea p.
1/478

2

1971 Ca meron . 14x 65, 2"";
bedr .
1971 Fleetwood, 14x6S 3 ·
bdr ., bath lf2
I

1978 FA IRMONT mObile
home, 14x70 , total elec .
with
wood burning
firep lace. Ca ll 256·6667 .

BMR 94- Stately older home in Cheshire. Natural
gas heat. Must see to appreciate!
' BEATTHIS-$300 PER MONTH
Including pr inc ipal, interest, taxes and
insurance. On ly 9% int. Owner transfer·
red and very anxious to sell. City
schools, acre of ground more or less
living room, 2 W.B . fireplaces, kitche~
a nd din ing area . Full basement. Priced
in $40s.

K ANAU GA
MOBIL E HOM ES
La r ge selec t ion of used
10's, 12' s, &amp; 14 wide Mob ile- .
Homes. Kanauga Mob ile
Home Sale, Ka nauga, Ohio
446-966 2.

u xr

Spread

BMR 336- E)(ecutlve type home on nearly 6 acres
of land . Owner Is anxious to sell and has reduced the
price. CAll today for deta ils!

I
.-,,

1973 FairpQint,
bedroom

6

BMR 361 - Two story home i n R io Grande with 4
lar'ge B R's . Includes 3 extra lots SS I ,000 .

9'14% Fin.Jncing Available!
3 bedroom ran ch. 1'12 bath s, family
room, large kitchen area . FullY
carpeted . 15x20 out of the ground pool .
Si tuated on a large lot.
·

PRICES REDUCED · used
mobile homes and travel
tra i l e rs .
T R I - S TATE
MOBILE HOME S. CALL
446·7572.

1972 AMERICAN 14x64, 3
bdr., furnished , c alt 6756466.

~MR 342 All electric home .
throughout. Situated on 120x200 lot .

'

- Mobile Homei - ____for Sal..o
e _ __

for Sale

SMALL TRAILER , newly
remode l ed , 2 bdr ., good kit
chen . Call 367 ·782.4 or 446·

1969 12x64 MOBILE HOME
· good shape on rented lot in
Rodney, OH 245-5194.
Real Estate

ji -

Mobile Homes

-- ~-----'

BMR 344- Brick ranch includeS 3 B Rs, FR, l lf2 B's,
Central air In excellent condition. Located in county
school distr ict.

..

01110
-

REA·i i- Vliiw- of .-fabulous home. The front Is
even more fabulous . Velvet lawn studded with tall
Plnea, dogwood. 4 BR. 2 baths. familY rm .•
flr.,lace, 2 car garage. Cen . air. Assume low In·
teresI mortvage. Near city . S79,WO.
·

for boat, motor and trailer .
Ca l l J .B . at 1-246 -6047 ..

32

__

1971 Fl eetwood, 14x 65, l
bdr ., Ph batl"l .
1971 Libe ..-ty , 14x65, 2 bd r .,
1968 New Moon , l 2x60, e&gt;e -

MOB! LE HOME
45x8.
Wi II sell for $2,000. or trad e

BMR 345 - Older 2 story home in Racine. 10 rooms

General

TRULY FAIR - Custom built,
owner brick, 3 BR , 2'12 baths. full y
equipped kitchen . Recr eation rm . with
fireplace, super sized patio, attached
garage. Cen . air. You ' ll love the decor .
Assume 9% mortgage . $79,000.

Aiiitrercanaday,

2 1f:~
bat h s, rec room ,
t i rep I ace,
basement ,
garage . At Morning Star
Hts .. Lee Construction, 99'J.
3ol54 or 992 -5455.

MobileHi:unes

----'~ Sal e

90% remodeled . Two stained glass windows func·

·'

REALTY

,

NEW lor 4 Bedroom home ,

32

tiona I fireplace . Call now for complete details'!

CANADAY.

·:[Q

Mobile H0r11es
for Sal e

32

4563 1

2 t Loc ust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
Telephon e : {614) 4 46-4206

*

Real Estate

_H_omes fo! Sate

BMR 351- New Listing~ 3 BR home located in city
school district on nearly an acre of land. Only 2
miles from Gallipolis .

***************************~
Real Estate- General

· 31

NICE 5 ROOM
HOME ONLY
s17.ooo
Cir cular porch, fuel oil
F A furna ce . City w ater.
cellar, outside storage
bu i lding . Ni ce com
Jl'IUn i t y.
Pho ne for
details .
N386

446-9557
446-0552
446· 0552
245·9507
446·0552 .

Real Estate- General

,.

Real Estate

General

Real Estate - General

Real Estate - General

TONE~ REALTY (0
WM. o.:TONEY - BROKF~

-'46 3087

24 STATE STREET
.:GAWPOUS, OHIO
WE DO OUR .HOMEWORK!
' .
WHAT LUCK I - Have you been look· .
lng for a hOuse in tehS&lt;O's with all of the
room you need? We have it! This house
has A -1 slding.-4 bedrooms. 2 baths. liv·
ing room1 ditiing, Complete kitchen.
familY rOOm, 2 WOOd burners, Flor ida ,
J.'()rch ~ 2 decks, redwood fence and 1·car
~a rage, located In the city school
distri c t . Need1we sav more?
BUILDING LOT - .64 of an acre in a
choice location. Minutes from town and
access to city water and sewage.
·

STATELY Lovely older home
located in the ci ty . Homes like this are
not built any more. 'l • ~d rooms
upstairs, 1 balh j;io\)CISD,,allway.
Down••· '·c.sD,R .. .. , Kit., tam . rm.,
tovetpRI ... , ctin . rm ., 1 full bath , utili·
ty rm. Plus beautiful In-ground pool. 3
car garage, basem e:nt, attic and much,
much more.
GEORGES CREEK RD. Double
wide home with 3 bdrms., kit., din . rm .•
liv. rm ., all elecric, and situated on lh
acre . Priced in the $20's.

OUT.S TANDING - Lovel y sweeping
view of the Ohio River, from this im·
maculate 3 BR ranch . This home
features LR with pretty corner frpl.,
nice kitchen, den , bC1th, C.A'/ 2 car
garage and full basement with shower.
Situated on 1 acre of lovely lawn.

BULAVILLE - 2 bdrm . home, la\-ge
IJv. rm . , k i t ., din . area, bath, util ity rm .
Large covered patio, sep. gar ., and 1
acre of lawn. Home only 4 yrs. old .
BARGAiN - 100 acres m /r with gas
well &amp; rovalties, tob. base . Lanq fenced
and locate&lt;! In Addjson Twp.

AFTER HOURS PHONE
BE&lt;;KY LANE .•• • ••. , , • , ••••• , • . 446·04S8
WALT LANE ............ ..' ...... 446· tMS8

BARGAIN - 3 Bdrm . frame with full
base., 1 bath, gas fur . Locate din the ci ·
tv and priced al$14,000.'

m
~ f A t i (JII

�1).3-The Sunday Times-8entinel , Sunday, June 8, 1980
36
Real ESIIII - General

Real Estate - Gener•l

-

Real Esta te
.

Want ed

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

Wanted to buy on land con-

tract. 1'12 bath or 2 bath
home. j$500. down and S300

per month . 992·6022. Wou ld
consider r e nt ing .

--------- --

BAIRD &amp;FULLER

JS

_Lots &amp;

76

Acr~s

~c rea g e

--·- Mobile
--------Homes
for Rent
---------

l} ::: ::::L~ts~ ~c~eii!_ :::

i n M e-igs Co . w

42

BEA U TIF UL lot on lower
Racoon Creek Call 256·
6• 13.

mineral r ights, 6 or 7 ac res
clear, rema i nder wooded .
W ater
an d
ele c t r i c

paid. Cal l 992-7•79 .

barn, rough cabin, gr eat
hunting. S30,000 . 992·7312.

RE;STRICTED
BUILDING LOTS Debby Orlve ~II
ulllllles available .
STROUT
REALTY ,
446-0001.

Tw o Bed ro om
Mob il e
Hom e. A dults on ly . 992·

1

2 Bedroom Mobile Hom e,
f urni shed k itc hen, elderly
couple pre ferred. Oeposi t
r equired . No pe ts. 992-27 49 .

2 SDR . and 3 bdr. mob il e
homes, cal l 446·0175 .

~

close to town. $52,000.

has concrete r unner s and pat 1o, located in Rodney .
N 2155

10% DOWN PAYMENT &amp; INTEREST RATE Th at ' s all i t t akes fo r y ou · to m ove into this lovely
brick hOme, 2 :1,~ bath s, for mal di ni ng, ful ly
carpeted, fami ly r oom w i th f ireplace . Ni ce 1 ac r e
lot, call f or appointment .
N1847

On thi s nice double wide,

price inc ludes furnitu re and 6 acres of land, owner
leaving slate.
N 1S32

HOME -

1975 Ki rkwood, 14x65, 3
bedrooms, l'h baths, r ange &amp; refr igerator , m u st be
moved.
#1800
Nice 1970 Rebel mobile hom e,

12x60, in exc el lent cond1tion. furni shed, front porc h
&amp; a carport, storage build i ng . Loc ated on 2 ac r es of
nice land, better hurry , on ly $16,500.
N 0561

ONE OF A KIND - Not manyof t hese homes lefllo·
day atth is pri ce, $22 .500. Ca l l toda y.
N 1532
SERVICE STATION - Doing a good business, price
inc ludes a large inven tory .
N 0001
93 ACRES - Va c ant land Ad d ison Township, good
inv est m e n t. #
tOll

Evenings Call
Darvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599
Oscar Baird, Kealtor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

.

2 BDR . trailer at Ch eshire,
construction workers, or
work ing men or family

---------~~

LAND CONTRACT - A 10% inter est r ate and down
payment w il l buy you a love ly bric k -fr ame bi ·l evel
with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central a1r and H .. acr es.
Close to hospi ta l . Call for appoi ntment today . II 1465
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 ni ce lots w i th 4
rental mobil e home pads, al l are rented, eac h p ad

Houses for Rent

41

199S

t'hone
l-C614 l -992-3325
SO ACRE FARM - Good
10 roo m house with
bath , lot s of good
b ~:~ i ldi n g s . L and is about
half fenced and T .P.
w ater av a il able. Good
lay i ng la nd tor subdi vi sion
17 ACRES - With water
an d
se we r
nea r .
Located in Pomeroy .
Want $24,500.
NEW LISTING 2
bedroom
repairable
home in Pomeroy with 2
lots, c ity water, natur al
gas. and on sew er .
Wo u ld
y ou
b el i ev e
$3,500 .
SALEM
CENTER
AREA
Nice 3
bed r oom , 11/ 2 bath ,
ranch st yl e home . For
Mom a stepsaver kifchen with f ormal dining ,
and D ad, over an acre of
wooded la nd·. All this f or
just $29,500 .
RACINE - One floor
ranch st yle 3 bedroom
hom e with bath, natural
gas, city water, large
basement. garge, and
lot that is 64'x238' . Out
of all flood s. Asking
$30,o0o .
A BREAK HAS COME
IN INTEREST RATES,
BUY
WHILE
YOU
CAN. WE NOW HAVE
SOME REAL NICE
PROPERTIES.

Hciusmg
H

adquar~ers

NEW LISTING -

Furn . for r ent in Chester,
c ar pe ted ,
, newly
r emodel ed , full bilsement,
prefer to r ent to work er or
establi s h e d
p e rson,
refere nces · and deposit
required . $195 a month.

Com ·

m erci a! 40x60 gla zed file •
bu i ld ing with double

floor and full ba sement,
new metal roof on approx. 12 acre. $9,000 .00.
R E ouc;e O! - Eastern

distr ict -

with 2 children . Cal l 773·
5882.
44

Call 1·866-1731. Will be
shown by appointment ,

3 bedroom

3 AND 4 RM furni shed ap·

Sat , June 14 from 2-5.

ts. Phone 992-5434 .

stone co1ta ge on approx .

I'/' A .. w.b.t .p., enclosed
r ear porch, equipped
ki t c hen, wa sher , dryer.
Should VA or FHA .
$28.000.00 .
MIDDLEPORT 1
floor plan , 2 bedrooms,
some carpeting and
remodeling , large lot.
$26,200 .00 .
CHESTER - 8 room
house on J.~ A . with 5
be drooms , 2 bath s,
downstairs remodel ed,
bas ement ,
utility .
$17,500.
IN TOWN - 2 story , 5
rooms, l 1h baths, tots of

storage,

needs

screened i n porch , adults

seeds
34 Spanish
cheer
35 Obi, e.g.
37 Headliner
39 Adherent of:
Suffl•
40 Shaded
walk
41 God of love
42 Spool
44 Gets up
46 Aavorlng
herb
47 Man' s nickname
48 Go. by water
50 Side dishes
52 Large tubs
53 Man's
name: Abbr.
55 Profound
57 Earth god-

dess
58 Misplace
59 Free ticket
60 Pronoun
62 Edge
64 Walk
66 French artl-

cle
68 Scale note
69 Trial
70 Soak
71 Man's name
73 Metal fastener
76 Mistakes
77 Danish
Island
78 One of
Columbus's
ships
80 Commonplace
81 Meadow
82 Aromatic
plant
84 Hubbub
86 Courteous
87 State
89 ManuScripts
(abbr.)
92 Strict
95 Fortification
98 Cargo units
99 Install
101 Samp
103 Repetition
104 Mouths
105 Heavy club
106 Scale note
107 Part of "to

be"
108 Reward:
Arch.
110 Stitch
111 Compass
pt.
112 Similar
113 Hastens
115 Man' s nick-

name
117 Den
119 Ave.
120 Studies
121 Finished
124 Haovest
126 Gentle
127 Succor

128 Handsome
one
130 Girl's name
132 Depression
133 A walt settlement
134 Southern
blackbird
135 Turkish

IIIIas
137 College
bldg.
139 Skill
140 Search
14 1 Catchers'
needs
143 Ignore
145 Stalemate
146 SchoOlbooks
148 Individuals
150 Weirdest
152 Cry for more
153 Female ·
horse
154 Rage
156 Argue
157 Hinder
158 lmllaled
159 Bridge
160 Giver
DOWN
1 Praises
2Seem
3 Irons
4 Offspring
5 Finishes
6 State: Abbr.
7 High mountain
8 Planet
9 Principal
10 Welcome
11 Hurries
12 Emmet
13 Exist
14 Some lax
men: Abbr.
15 Goal

16 Rumors
17 American
wildcat
18 Ancient Per·
slans
20 Oceans
23 Asian sea
25 Facts
27 Boat
28 Narrate
31 Unusual
33 Cronies
36 Chief
38 Toll
40 Small
amount
41 Dines
43 Falsehoods
45 Girl's name
46 Fond wish
47 Spar
49 Permits
51 Roadside
hotel
52 Subject
53 Cloak
54 Girl's name
56 Peevishness
59 Office staff
60 Leander's
love
61 Short jacket
63 State
65 Time gone
by
67 Lamprey
69 Preposition
70 Altar screen
72 Blunt ends
7 4 Plutonium
symbol
76 Sun god
77 Later
79 Wine cup
83 Evergreen
85 Eskimo
boats
86 PrudiSh
87 Solar disk
88 Learning

m o. plu s deposit. 92-7.5 11 or

992-61 30.

garage, partially fenced
yard and area f or small
garden . Children per mitted . Pets also permitted

42

some

1 Bedroom, furnished apt.,
wal l to wall carpet. Water
and garbage fees paid .
Prefer married couple with
no pets. Located in Racine .

LARGE 2 bdr. unfurnished
trailer at Rio Grande . Call

446·0157.

and bui lding sites. Gdod

hunting ora . $23 ,900.00 .
LANGSVILLE - 10 yr .
old mobile home with 2
rooms built on , plus 12
acr es land, secluded
a nd
beauti f ul .
$23,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland. Jr.
992·6191

Call 423·82S7 Belpre for ap·
2 BDR . air cond. mobile
home . Adults only . Call-446 -

pointment. Available June

10, $125 mo . plus deposit.

4110 or 446· 1154.
MOBILE

HOME

·

no

ment,

ch i ldren . Ref and dep . req .

upsta irs,

Ave : $200 .

per

Second

mo.

in·

742-2474
Full Time
Office Phone 992·2259

call446·2129 or 446·2800.

SLEEPING ROOMS
rent, Gallia Hotel.

Cheshire, set up In mobile

SMALL 4 rm. turn. apart·
men! located in Oak Hill.
No children . Call682·6010.

MOBILE HOME ·· adults
only, no pets. Call367 ·7438 .

ftJt\11.\;ft ~ft

NEWLY re·decoraled 2
bdr. apart . with yard, ref.
req . Call256·6413.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

fix
102 Time period
105 Coin
109 Expires
112 Attic
113 Retain
114 Inclines
116 Girl's name
118 Electric cal·

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

~

~ , ..,

47

Gallipolis. Call446·2342 and
Ask for Mark .

THE TIR'EI:'

I&lt;AN6AROO

WAS A~RESTCc:&gt; FO!it
TR55F"A661N6 E!IECAU5E

WA5 "THI5.

WI DOW

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon .

(Answers Monday)
Jumbles ERUPT TACKY

ALWAYS

MOROSE

What an actress who wants to play In a
horror movie must take first-

and

4 children

needs to rent home right

away . Call379 ·2716.
49

KII )oF (I i l I I]

I Answer

Wanted lo Rent

bdr. apart., private, turn .,
within S mile radius of

r:r J

Yeslerday·s

and

Gen~ral

For Lease

Service Stat ion for lease
$300 month ly. Pomeroy
area . Good c r edit and work
record a must . Substantial
investment required . Good
location with good potentia I
for
sharp
aggressive
operator . For interview

call Mr . Adams, 1·304-375 ·
4893, 8:30 a.m .·4 p .m . M · F .

Store. 104·105

and

ment.

AKC

other commercialt.se.
C~ll

A x. West jumps

Shepherd

Supersonic tomato plants.

George Hill247·2961 .

monds and West with his
minimum bids· two spades
which East raises to three.
West hates to stop one trick
short of game, but he has the
sort of hand where three
spades may also be too high.
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~

:'I ULIUU

lULU

[JlJl.Hl

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa,

chair,

rocker,

ot·

,annnnn

.,nnn Ml"''nnnn nnAn c on11

nnnn

:;:: nnnc

coon

n~nnn~oon

~o

rmor1 uooo CiO

rJnc.m:., oormn rmo
DrJCt'JAD

')(!(Ji lr' C- f]

Or:!UCDC:C

ULUUUU

_ lll l IJUliUL

UUL&lt;t.:l..

D
BUMGARDNER
SALES,
THE
POOL
PEOPLE 31711 Noble Sum·
mit Rq . Middleport, Ohio:

61

size,
$325.,
&amp;
UP .
Recliners, $125., $150.,
$160 ., S17S:. and $225 . Lam·
ps from $18 . to $50. 5 pc.
dinettes from $69 . to S325.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
$235 . Table, two leaves, 6
chairs, (high backed ), $400.
Hutches, S300 . and $350.,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites, $195. S350.
(oak), Bassett Oak, $550.,
Bassett Cherry, $675 . Bunk
bed complete with mal·
tresses, $175., $250., $275.
Captain's beds, $275. com·
plele. Baby beds, $75. Mal·
tresses or box springs, full
or twin , $55 ., firm, $65 . and
$75 . Queen sets, SIBS. dr.

s

chests, S49 . Bed frames,
under S25.
· S20 . and
USED
Ranges ,
refrigerators, , TV ' s, headboards and beds. bar

stools,

1

counter

top

refridgerators,

992 ·5724 Sales, service and
supplies.
In ground and ;
above ground pools.

saw chain, bars, and all

-------- ,

Centenary Road, 446·94.42 .

CHAIN SAWS, .
hydraulic wood splitters,

::.J I nDUII CJOUU r:m Ut' DL t:Li
ruTr· r~ r"J • · un1nnu: t.tlr.'l.
ucclii onrm rmronr; r!r.L:r
..; uLu [.;UO c ceo DCC[' r.:cc:c:
~IJlJ
t:,[".UU : DIHJI: IT[T lllliJ
L..ttr •r:rwn ar1r·rr:r.n nm.:lliJtiJ
UCCCQ[ :::: OCL.

L.UUUU

UlJUL

D['CL
[l~CC

Posture Zone

Try the Posture 11

and

SWAIN

FURNinJRE

AUCTION SERVICE

I C[.['lll!
C[.[:U:

9SS Second Avenue

KeMtlh SWain, Aucl.

Gallipolis, OhiO
4$631
PH, 614·446·1171

Corn..- Tlllrd &amp; Olive
,t-_,..._--.,.__.

I

'

.,

GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT

wood

culling

A~LIS
CHALMBERS
Tractor, older type with
pull type plow on rubber 64

percent off greenware sale.
Bring container, open 9~

a.m . to 9 p.m. Drehel's.
Ceramics, 59 North Sec .
Ave .. Middleport. Call 992·
2751.

International

engine,

250 CASE KNIVES , some
limited edition, Tawney

NEW HOLLAND Super 66
baler. Call245-5546.

Closed

Sunday .

HOllOW

Fruit

BRICK ,

NEW HOLLAND BALER ·
exc. cond., call379·2400.

Pick ·

Wanted to Buy

62

Happy.,
Farm .,

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .

W VA .

diameter 10" on largest

end . $12 p-er ton . Bund led

prices

slab . $10 per ton. Del ivered

at

to Ohio Pallet Co .• Rl. 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

der, call 446·4274 or •46·
1137.

with

p.s .,

trans., A·1 cond ., $850. 1973 · plaster

ceilings,

call256· ll82.

end, complete . S700. Call
388-99()6.

JIM MARCUM Roofing

7828 alter 6.

992-5786 .

call388·9868 · Vinton, OH

1974 Ford P ickup, 6 cyl. , 3

LAIR

$1750 .00.

ches, class rings, wedding

REF . with top freezer , 18 •
ft.

perfect cond.

White, '

SISO. Microwave oven, 1 yr.
old . $270. Can see In
evenings and weekends at

507 Pecan St.

1

•'

1

brick ,
homes,

PAINTING · interior and

remode l ing , siding . Free
estimates . phone 388 -9039

or 388·9642.
BUDGET
CONSTRUCTION CO.
A ll
type
home
im·
provements · e xterior and

interior . Free esti mates.
Mike Marc um , 388·8636.

EAR CORN · Call 245·5492.
POLAROID polavislon In·:
stant movie camera with
viewing machine and light :

63

bar . Cost was S600 .. will sell
for SJOO . or best offer . Call
245·5892 .

1978 BLAZER · 4·W· D, good
mpg ., $3,950. Call 245·9503
afler4.

PAIN TING · Inter ior and
e•terlor Includi ng r oofs,
also odd jobs. Ca ll446· !9.&lt;3.

Livestock

HOLSTEIN COWS · Call
614·286·2496.

74

Motorcycles

SEARS riding lawn mower
26 in . cut . Call446·2316.
30 ln. ROTARY mower tor
Gravely tractor, $225.
Rotary
plow
and ·
cultivator, $350. Call «6· '
4149.
.
Building Supplies

KACH·ALL' PORTABLE
BLDG. All sizes, 6x10 to
12x40. see at 123V, Pine st.,
446·2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling Alley on Rt. 7, 446·
1279.
ALL TYPES of building ·'
materials, block, brick, ·•
sewer pipes, windows, lin· ; ·

leis, etc . Claude Winters, '
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245· 1
5121 alter spm.

Registered
and
non·
registered dairy goals. 742·

73 YAMAHA 256·6813

12292.
, --------~--~---

H and N DaY old or star1ed
leghorn pullets, bOth floor

or cage grown ava i lable .
Poultry
Housing
and
Automation,
Modern
; Poultry, 399 W. Main,

Pomeroy. 992·2164.
'

Autos tor Sale

1973 Capri, V·6, 4 sp., new
radials,

am ·fm

casette/ .

llood gas mileage. Sl.OOO.
667·3031.
1967 Super Sport Camara,
350 4·speed, very good con·
~Ilion . Call378-63•1.

I'

2608 after 6.
1969 HONDA street bike,
good cond ., $300. 1965
Mobile Scouttravertrailer,
good cond., $1500. Call 446·
4286.
76

......... .............. .
..................
71

1977 SUSUKI · GS 750, exc.
cond., 5200 m i res, cell 446·

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce$Sories

paneling , doors and w i n-

Call388·8596.

··

CHARLIE ' S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker
service,
sell
ra-:tlators, ,
buy

automobiles, radiators and
batteries. Call aft'e r 5. 446·
7717. .
.

POMEROY , C
99'2 621" ')

estim•tes .

1

V.E
2124.
86

SWIMlAND
150 Third Ave.
IS NOW OPEN
10 am til 5 pm

lfs pure pleasure to crochet
your favor1te pmeapple des1gn .
Use 3-ply fmgermg yarn for laq
cape wolh per ky collar Pattem
7329 : Som 10·11. 14·16. 18·10

mcluded
SHAPED 10 Itt an d llattet you.
TOPP ED by a chooce of lout

Monday thru
Saturday
"TABEX CHEPI.•CALS".

necklmes. Sew one vers 1on lor

thiS summer - another nellt
season Vou'll love it.
Punted Pattern 9072 Hall
Sizes 1 0~ . 11h, 14 ~. ~~ ~.
1 8 ~ . 20 \\, 11';, Size 14\\ (bust
37) takes 3 yards 45-onch

PHONE 446-7887

&amp;

Aluminum

FREE YOUR SELF from fussI onto lhos loght wrappong lot
~ day!tm!s that are busy or relaxr~eck m front,~
ty.back- l res h,, lemm ine.
Punted
9133 Misses
Sozes 8, 10. 12, 14, 16. 18. 20 .~
Sue 12 (bust 34) lakes 3 yards
45·inch. tab,c.

$1.75 fo• each pattetn. Add 501
lor each patteon lot first-class
oitmail. handlinJ. Send to:
QUICK 'n' EASY P~ffiWIIS 170
232 W. 18 Sl. , New York, NV 10011
FAIIIOII CATALDI (l/lj ..... Sl.ll
Dfllllllf~ CAT~IMI •35 . . ... 1.11
till MHDI.I CATA~OG ...•.•. 1.01
1.50
::-::-.:~ _........
,
1.111

.... uo

...... . 1.50

vinyl

...

~~~~~~~·!!;;·,;. ~;·,;· ,~.· : ..
1.50
z;
uo
.. !.10

. ...... uo
,....'1-lii--1
!.50
... 1.50
. . ... !.50

utility

buildings
691 Miller Drive

446-2642
Free Estim•tes

\

M . H. Repair

31711 Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OhiO
. 992·5724
Sales, service and supplies. In ground and

above ground POOls.
5· 1-lfc

u photstery

87

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave. , Gallipolis .
446·7833 or 446·1833.
MASTERCRAFT UPHOL·
STERY SHOP · Com·
merc ia! and residential. 32
years experience. Call ~-

2301 or 446·4971 .

BILL' S MO BI LE HOMES

HOWmet Patio Covers
Howmet sCreen rooms
Mobile home awnings

"I

FILLINGER Water

instatled

siding

cessories.
Free
esti mates.
Miller Drive 446·2642

DEPEND A BLE

Delivery Servi ce. Call 379-

Storm wln~ows &amp; doors

Ac ·

General Hauling

and Hom e Improvem ent s.
Free estima tes. Call 446-

Aluminum

992·3795

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
lHE POOL PEOPLE;

~. , .~~~ ~ ~~ EL

wa ter deli v ery . Ca ll 2569368 or 256-1394 anyt im e.

Nu-Prlme replacement
Home Improvements
Nu-Prime R eplacement
Windows. Storm Windows &amp; Doors. Patio
Coven ,
· Carports.

Pomeroy, Oh.

~-2-lfC

85

windows

Home

618 E. Main

1·28·1 mo .

Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
1· 22-ffc

~I
Bill's
s

gutters -spouts - concrete work. Ph. 367-0427,
36H194, l6H141. Free

Mobile

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATIO..N

9C,t~7314

Free Es1imates
Reasonable Prices

~ooflng

PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY , S20. plus tax
and old battery. We buy old
batteries. Repair batteries.

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

new or repair gutters
· and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed .

Free estimates, ~II work
fully
guaranteed .
Residential, commer cia!, Industrial I. g, . . Jecli iCI'l work.
SHA cert.
446·4627

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS.
All types home i m provemt"nts -

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit a ·n d loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

(Ff:!EE ESTIMATES)

Dump
truck . Fre
estimates . Call 388·862
or 446-9459.

OUnty

Bookkeeping
Service

ROCCit.l;

Frank Rose canst, co.
RemOdeling repair, new
construction, all types.

cei l i n g ,

dows, ~tso pa inting . Call
992·2759.

1

and

n.

.-.:,--;-,--,-...,-.,..-.,
FLOORIN G,

with grass catcher. 7 H.P. •

worM,
walks
driveways .

245·5050.
R.M .
ROOFING
&amp;
SPOUTING .
Home

949·2686

r1-

~(:• ~
~~-~Li;:-J
.lmi!ll&lt;-=-"'-' \i!i=b

down

spouts, some concrete

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING, INC .
Backhoe &amp; dozer work
by the job or by th
hour. Also licensed sep·

new
cal l

e)(ferlor, free estimates in
Gall i polis area, reasonable
rates. Call Mark White ,

Truck for Sitle. B Model
Attack tractor . Excellent
cond ition. Call 992 -7354 af ·

work,

JIM ' S

tic · tanks

see at 380 2nd St ., Pomeroy .

Gutter

367-7560

Block ,

f i replaces ,
remodeling,

~~il

REMODELING

Reese Trenching
&amp; Backhoe Service

379-2123.

1968 Ford lh ton Ranger .
· Runs good $650. 992 ·5018 or

GOLD
AND
SILVER
ter7 .
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
S;TERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
1974 Jeep CJS . $1.900. 949·
RECORD
HIGH,
2545.
HIGHEST UP·TO ·DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED ·
1972 CHEVROLET . l'h T .
BURKETT
BARBER
truck , good cond. Call 367·
SHOP, Ml DDLEPORT,
0135 between 4 and 7 week·
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.
days.
WANTED to buy, horses
and ponies ph. 379·2761.

CONST. ·

9 '

Leach Beds, Water and
Gas Lines, Electric
Lines, Pole BL!ildings.

Driveways, wa lks, patios,
porches, basements and
garages. Free estimates,

Cal l

- Free _
Estim&amp;aleEs I f
-ln1ertor
x er or
Work.

H ·; mo .

certiliedl

BILL' S CONCRETE
SERV ICE

1976 Pickup truck in good

-Fully Insured

Oexter , Ohio45726
Bill Eskew, Ph . 742· 2456
Your Place or Mine

( Ga Ilia Col!ntv

Call388·9857 .

ton pickup . E&gt;&lt;c. cond ., low
miles, best offer. Call 446-

Salem Twp. Rd . 180

Rt. l, BoxS4
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614 -843·2591

SEPTIC TANKS

spouting and si ding . 30
years experience . Free
estimates . Remodel i ng .

1974 FORD EXPLORER &gt;;,

R~:~.. ~rUih and Sproy

All types of root work,

r e pair, tex t ure
free estimates,

·Pinto wagon, a ir cond .,
auto. trans., exc . shape ,
S900. 18·5 Rockwell rear

speed. $900. 992-5057 .

STRAWBERRIES
Charles McKean Farm.
Fairfield Centenary Rd.
Call446·9442.

plast er i ng ,

c ondition.

N.

2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .

CLOTHING · shoes, misc • .
Call367·7781.

·

Geoeral Welding

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Fin est quality at lowest
possibte
prices. Call
now for free estimate.
Commercial or residential.
, Gallipolis
256-1562

Gallipolis, Oh io 4563l. Call
446 ·2572.
STUCCO

General Hauling

WILL HAUL lim estone and
grc:ivel. A lso , l ime hau ling
and sp re ading . Leo Morris
Truc ki ng Phone 742·2455.

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

Most wood prOducts. Wood
Shop, 101 Court 5 1. ,

standard

ca11 388 8274, or

77 85.

446··3344.

Gosnev,

26

Excavatio·n Servic es.
Dump truck , dozer,
backhoe.
Call 446 ·4537

CABINETS &amp; VANITIES

'12.00

~==~~~~~~==~~;:~~==;;~~~~~==::~§;~;:~~~
1 ''
ADO ONS &amp;
T ' C··--·- . .~:--

sand. All sizes . A t Richards
and Son, Upper River Rd .,
Gal l ipoli s, Oh 10. Call 446-

I;)AVISON
DEVELOPMENT

Pa1'nting
&amp;
Sa dblasti Co
n
ng •

Tr~unty

5· 14· 1 mo.

LIME STONE, gravel and

PA I NTING interi or and ex ·
terior, free estimates, call

--------bed

~:~~i9c6~

Rio Grande

85

work, new home bldg . or
rem odeling, cal l 446·2910.

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE , glass. ch ina,
anything. 'See or call Ruth
antiques,

245-9113

call367·7184 or 367·7160.

. 1972 FORD Pickup, short

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4d to 12x40

Residenti
REFRIDGERATION
a l, commer cial, J
hea t i ng , cooli ng, electr ic al

Ken Soles

and commer cial. Interior
and exterior , mobile home
roofs. Free est I mates. 17
vrs. exp . with references

245-9414. Exc. auto. fran ·
smission.
·~

D· DA Y

FREE ESTIMATES

PAINT I NG · Resident ial

GMC pickup · parting out .
almost new, 18 fl . bed. Call

SMALL

BOWER S
Swe epers ,

Gheen'S

ENGINE
STE AM
CLEANED

Sizes
" From JOXJO"

toas ter s. i ro n s, all sma ll
ap pli ances . L awn mower .
Next to Stat e H ighwa y
Gar age on Route 7, 985-

CHAIN LINK FENCE

PS ,

~ries

1600

ELWO O D
REPA IR -

H'VEYOU"
-•
"

Farm Buildings

S~i s so r s .

'DENNY

and

Call388·8205.

EXPLORER

ALLSTEEL

3825 .

spouting, home remodeling
and siding, free esti mates,
10 years local ex perience .

GMC pickup truck will sell
for parts. Call245·9414.

long wheel base. priced to
sell , 379·2761 .

SE WING
M A CH I NE
Repa irs,
serv i ce,
all
m ak es . 99 2 2284 . Th e
Fab r ic Shop, Pomeroy .
Authori zed Singer Sales
and Serv ice. We sharpen

Call367·0209 day or night .

1976 DATSUN
pickup
truck, very good cond ., call
245·9212.

Charles McKean, Fairfield

Sidewalks

Call 446·3896
or 446·3080

ALL TYPES of Carpentry

supplies .

MORRIS

35 Court St .
Gallipolis, Ohio

In sulated v inyl siding,
a l uminum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
windows . Free esti mates.

good. Rebu ilt motor , S395 .
Call446·3041 .

MAY 23 TO JUNE 10, 30

ss
Supports Your

446·4208

truck. Runs well, bOdy is

ECHO

l£0

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

Carpet Cleaning

1966 F100 FORD pickup

Farm Equipment

William Mit-

roofing

c leari ng ,

cal l446 0051.

driveway s,
base ~
ments, steps, etc. 1nsulation , residential
or
commercial.
Some r·emodeling .

STAN LEY STE EMER

auto. Call 446·2368 or 446 ·
3713 .

bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver . Call J. A . Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

queen

302

cava ting . Land

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
e V -CHISEL
PLOW

ex -

Box 89, Bidwell , Oh.,

3aa ·?877 .

chell, 388·8507 .

MEADES

WORK

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC .

ROOFING, Gutteri ng and
remodeling .

Call446·0515 .
Pickup,

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772

446·2450- 379-2458

Day · 698·8205 · Night

Trucks for Sale

FORD

Window•

E xcavating

Commercial or
Residential
Hot or Cold Proces s

Overhead Garage Doors ,
Electri c Door Operators ,
Continuous no· leak guttering

1976 FORD 1/-z ton pick up.
Short bed, low mileage, ex cellent condition . S2,B9.5 .

BURROUGHS Bookkeepin·
g machine, $50. Call 446·
2342.

cabinet, $75. Call 446· 1786.

sorvlce call 256-1"7.
Salt Every Saturday
Nlghlol7 p.m.

UCJC'I ) nramtHJ rl r: r ur.(l ur:llD
:;or_• C ~C:30 DO O C L DOC OOC

72

Plumbi ng · Heati ng

Gra nt, 446·8508 .

KUHN &amp; SAUNDERS
ROOFING

I ~·

1971.

p.s., p .b., auto., sun roof.
bright red with red in terior . Good mileage, wi l l

57

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
etnsulallon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

STANDAR D

614 ·446·

T HEISS INS ULATION ,

·

sell for $7500 . Call 388·8764
alter 5 p.m.

from $275. to S550. T abies,
$33 .·$60·$7 ©
and $85 .
Sofabed and chair, S150.
Hide-a-beds,$300 .,

THUNDERBIRD

Ave . Ph. 446·1637.

DOZ E R

statio n

tree. 949-2545.

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

We 1011 anything for
anyllocly at our Auction
llrn or In 'fCKir home. For
Information •ml pickup

::m - nnnu rm UD UUlJU WULI
n .... rn nnnrmn nr.mr,m 1 onn:

1980

ZEN 1TH stereo, am·fm
radio,
Early American

SWAIN .
AUCTION BARN

nooMonn

~~nnn~n

...JutJ nm:m nconn ao!':ln noo
' 1nr ;n r1unu nrnf ~.10nfl ODc:JO

4·H project . Call Karen
Griffith, 992·5782 after 5
p.m .

chair and loveseat, S275.
Sofas and chairs priced

thru Fri .. 9am toSpm, Sal.
446·0322

flrJnrmn r1flll:'n nnnn nr:mnrm

new parts . $150 . Call 245·
Sll92.

loman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa ,

Open 9am to 8pm, Mon.

t1!JI.1r1C

saddle and harness. Super
disposition, make excel lent

1W6

FRESH
strawberries,
Glenn' s Acres Farm . To or- ·

Household Goods

3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.

SOLUTION

wagon , body rough, some

1 Large Upright Piano .
S200. Good cond. and tuned .
742·2292.

Call

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER&amp;DOOR , INC .

under

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlAnON

Plum bing
H ea t ing
Air
. conditioning . 300 Fourt n

Carpet

1973 OLDS OMEGA · 6·cyl. ,
auto., good mpg, $950. Ca ll
245·9503 after 4.

prospec t,

Musical
Instruments

In

1975 FORD station wagon .
$400. Call 388·9789 after 6.

PONTIAC

5·29· 1 mo.

WATE R WE LL Drill i ng
an d cl eaning. Pumps sold
an d i nsta lled , Call W.T .

388-9759

su l master foam insulation.
New homes, old homes,
commercial structures.
For free es t imates call 446-

1968

.started

BEST

Steamway .
2096.

6·c yl. ,

Gelding. 2 yr. old, show

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

GEN E PL A NTS
A ND SONS

83

Roofing , siding, gutter,
build · up roof , home
repair .
·
Free Estimates

Home
Improvements

FOR

new tires, new brakes, 350
engine, $400 . or best offer .
Call446·1822 after 5 p .m.

Registered male walker
coon hound w i II run and

cy cle , $125. Call367·7238 .

A J 10 9 3 H - A 8 6 D- 5 4 C J 7 6. East cue bids two dia-

Call

Serving your area for 25 years.
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Cleaning · Call Smeltze r' s

Registered Quarter Pony

2 Ladies size 12 and 14 L i lli· ·
Ann su ites. Have never
worn . Also some other fine '
quality dresss, blouses and
leather coa t . Reason for
s~lling , don ' t f i t . 992 ·3283 .

2000

81

OLDSMOBILE

1966 PONT IAC LeMans, 2
dr ., auto. trans ., p.s., p.b., 2

and

992-5681
anytime or 992·5071 after 5.

S220.; 1 row cultivator,
$85 . ; Yamaha 100 motor·

three
spades to show a j!ood overcall and East goes mto Black·
wood and ·bid the slam after
West shows two aces.
You don't bld many slams,
but you nearl;v always get to
game. Here ts one of those
rare instances when you stop
below game.
West bids one spade over
SOuth's diamond, holding: S -

F ive

male

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINIXMS

*New homes - ex tensive remodeling
* E lectric&lt;!l works
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
S-15·1 mo.

• Replacement

German

pUppies.

old,

female .

600 E . Main St.

Gallipol is Ferry ,
30•·576·2026.

Ike Wiseman
446·]64]

The Wi~e_ft'!.a., ~!lPn~v

to

reg istered

weeks

several used c hain saws.
Pomeroy Home and Au to, ·

your own beginning Wed . 9
to dark. Sorry no checks.

I

xxxH-xD-KQJxxxC-

bells ,

{614) 698·· 3290 .

One Demonstrator Moped,

•door Bob Evans Steak
Ho•se. 800 sq. fl. office,
4,000
wa reho"se

Good bids after overcall
This is going to be a rather
advanced article since it
involves the way most expert
players handle their own simple overcalls.
In modem bidding, the
overcall may well be a good
hand with one or maybe two
suits. In other words, a good
hand that may not be suitable
for a takeout double.
Hence, partner should raise
an overcall with any band that
represents better than a minimum raise for an opening bid.
A bid of your own suit is
never a forcing bid, but merely suggests that your suit is
the best spot for a final
contract. A notrump call
shows a stopper in opponents
btd suit and 7-11 high-card
points. Seldom only seven or
as many as 11. Jump raises
are all limit bids. The only
forcing call is a cue bid of
opponent's suit. It is not a
game force, but ·at worst
shows a hand with which you

Blankets,

boots. etc. English and
Western . Ruth Re ev es

Lad ies beautiful size 8-10
wardrobe . Consists of
Evan-Pi cone classic style
sportswear includmg sum·
mer
blazer ,
blouses,
dresses, robe 'and gowns .
Will sell pieces separaely .

STRAWBERRIES ·

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soolag

ponies

CONSTRUCTION

215 Thir d Ave .. 446·3782

GEORGE'S ROOFING

Call 446·2403 after 4: 30.

Jesso~s .

VINYL SIDING

379·2376.

HAT ·

·

Cor . Four t h and Pine

Phone 446·3888 or 446-4477

Cal l

1 own er, exc .

OU STER

CARTER 'S PLUMBI NG
ANO HEAT ING

1979 TAURUS CAM PER ,
22ft., se lf contained

silver, maroon vinyl top,
sport wheels, exc. cond .

and rid ing
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·

Decorated cakes for all oc·
cas ions . Character cakes

Fi rst

$275. tak es it. Cal1446·7027.

9B,
fully equipped, exc . c ond .,
goOd gas mileage, call 446 ·
4942 .

1975

MAJ N ·

TE N A N CE · E l ec trica l,
p lu m b ing , heati n g, and ai r
conditioning . CaH 388-9698.

O&amp;F CONTRACTORS.

256-6200 evenings.

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses

4800 Sqt.tare Feet, next

storage, garage or any.

want to be in game unless
partner's overcall Is a really
bad one.
Here is an example of bidding a slam after West over·
calls one heart with one spade
holding: S-A K Q I X X H- X X
x D - A x C - x x and partner
cue bids two hearts with S - J

1974

ROUSH

Plumbi ng

DEW ITT' S PL UMB I NG
AND HEAT IN G

Home improvem ents,
room additions, sidi ng,
electrical &amp; air condi tioning, and insurance
claim repairs . Guarante ed
work.
Free
Estimates. 446-3407 .

cond ., 35 mpg hwy. Cal l

only .

FOR L-i:ASI:

BRIDGE

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a home less pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed .

Jewelers.

A " SCREAM" TEST
JumbltiJook No. 13, containing 110puzzlet,lt anllatlletorS1.75pottpald
I rom Jumble, c/o I hit ntweptper, Box 34, Norwood,N.J.C764t.lncJucle your
namt, tddrtll, lip code tnd mtkt checke payable to Ntwtptperbookl.

CHBACK

-

82

Phone 446 2735 .

i 974 TAR T AN fold down
camper, sl eeps 4.

CHEVETTE

Also
AKC
regis t ered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.

Donations required . 992 6260, noon-7 p.m., except
Tuesday, emergency ca lis

40 LB 80)( of West Vi r ginia
Chunks, low ash, low sulfur
Foster Coal Co., 446-2783.

WANT TO RENT · 1 or 2

I DOUSEX±
Answer hera:

in

Pomeroy . L arge lots. Call

HE

I

park

...

I

Straw and Felt hats and
Tony Lama and Acme
boots. Mountain Lea t her

992 7479 .

KIJ

tYONIFT

home

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of

I

PURUS

SPACE

Adults only . Conc rete patio
and walk, 900 block in town.
Large lawn a rea, water
paid, $60. mo. Call 446·4416
after 7 p .m .

MOBILE

Reslstol

Call992·3283.

Space tor Rent
TRAILER

1

for

trailers. Call379-234l.

b
KJ _I _
• .......
•• ••c..,.... ,...,."' ...

per

Cheshire has lots available
for mobile homes or travel

I MOBOL

fish
120 Touch
12~ Penny
122 Redactor~
123 Excavates
125 Variable
126 Calm
127 Chickens
129 Rational
131 Best: Comb.
form
132 Challenged
133 Chaste
134 Ventilated
136 Petitioned
138 Measuring
device
140 German IItle
141 Simple
142 Break
144 Raised
147 Female d 148 Soft food
149 Nahoor
sheep
151 African
native
153 College deg.
155 Thoron
symbOl

$30

week or $100 per month.

46

of

and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992·2583 .

Furnished Roams

12x50 MOBILE HOME · 2
fully carpeted. In

home park . Dep . req . Call
379·2341.

Jean Trussell, 949·2"0

ment. Park Central Hotel.

Room

styles

1979

facilities .

n

R oute 160 aT_Everg r een

per with sliding w indow f or
61/2 ft . Flee t si de tru ck $400.
Carl446 ·3139 after 5 p.m .

1972 FORD TORINO. 1973
Plymouth Fury .
$400 .
each. Caii24H241 .

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean

592·5478, 10·5:30 Mon .· Sat.

SLEEPING · rooms, and
lignt housekeeping apart·

Sleeping

GROOMIN G .
)udy Taylor . 614-367·7220.

West Union, Athens, Oh .

elud i ng utilities, one month
depasit reQuired. No pets,

b~r. ,

New

Apartment
for Rent

992 ·6022.

Call367 ·7167 .

Associates
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

44

POOO~E

992·2751.

Camping

FIBER GL ASS truck top·
GREAT GAS MI L EAGE
1974 M ustang II Ghla . 6

&amp; G Car'p(•l Clean ing.
clea ned .
Free
St e am
es tim at e .
Reas onabl e
rates. Scotch gu a rd . 992 ·
6309 or 742 11.

446· 3100
861 Second Av e.
Ga llipoli s, Ohio

Gaso lin e

$1850. Call446·0515.

indoor·outdoor

Resid ential &amp; r. omm er·.
cia I. Tree &amp; shrubs in-·
st alled, d es i gn ing &amp; Ia nt ing , shrubber y 1rimming , l awn need control
progr am s.

Hammonds BOdy Shop, 22 1
M ill St ., Th urman, OH . Call
245-9371 or 379·2306.

cyl. , loaded w ith ex t r as.

greenware sale . Bring a
container . 9 a.m . to 9 p. m .
Drehel ' s Ceram ics . 59 N.
Second Ave .. M iddleport,

KO TALI C
LANDSCAPING

trucks, two tones change of
color ex t ra but rea son abl e.

Business. Services

s

QUALITY .

SAND AND PAINT · m inor
body r ep air, $159. Van

78

Home
Imp rov em ents

----~1:1~!!~--­

Equipment

wks. old , Call «6-9256.

MAY 23 to J une 10.30% off

3401&gt;.

da ys and 446·4792 ni ghts.

powe r ed . Ca ll 949·2273.

SATIN Siamese rabb its , 9

LIMESTONE ,

3891.

Main St.
Pomeroy
992-2181

45

UNFURN . 1 bdr. apart·

COAL,

Roo t ing, sid ing, r Qom ad
diti on s, a ll types of gen er al
repair s, 25 years exp. 992

Auto Repair

Upper Rl . 7 Cal l 446·2445

Misc . Merchanise

--~

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc ,

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Middleport . 1·304·882·2566.

lor Rent

54

E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992·

20% ·0FF

2 Bedroom Apartment in

Mobile Homes

767·3167 or 557-3411 .

R abb i t .

197 8

food , and all types of salt .

&amp;TREES

2 Bedroom furn ished apt .
$150 plus util i ties, or $50
week,
util i t i es
paid .
Depos;t $50. 949·2875 .

woth add' l. dep. $190. mo.
plus deposit . Absolutely no
drinking. Call388·8747.

acres. pasture, woods,

89 Greek letter
90 Be niggardly
91 Precipitous
92 Theurlal
93 Salad item
94 Printer's
measure
96 The sweetsop
97 Eft
100 Down : Pre-

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS

Apartm ent tor rent. 5150

2 BOR . house with alt.

BRIARPATCH
K EN ·
NELS.
Boa~ding
and
grooming . AKC Gordon
Sellers, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446·419l.

sand , gravel, c alc ium
chlori de , fer t i lizer, dog

Manor apts. Call992 ·7787.

only, no pets. rent and dep.
Available within 2 days.
Call446·0957. No minors.

1

__ J

Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call 446· 7795.

3406,.

serv i ce. A l l types of r epair

1980 Om ni, 4 cy l., .4 speed,
f ront w heel dri ve, w arranty. $1,000 unde r new . ConSi der tr ade allow anc e. 992·
.5704 .

fa cil ities.

8J

Wi l l p ou r concre te, lay
block and br ick . Ca ll 992

ROBERTS BROT H ER S
GARAGE . 24 hr. w r ecker

- - - - -- - - 1973 Datsun, 4 speed. Good
mileage . $230. Call 992 ·3149
or 992 ·2705.

HILLCREST KENN EL ·
Boarding all breeds, c lean

pay cash or certifiecl c he&lt;;k
for antiques and coll ec ·
tib les ' or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
guns, poc ket watches and
coin c ol lections. Call 614-

77_ _

ter 6 p.m .

Persi an a nd

indoor-outdoor

USED T I RES · all sizes lo

AM· FM8 1rackslereo, new
!ores , exc . COnd . Good gas
mileage . $2,500 . 667·39Sll at ·

Home
I m p!.~~e_me'!!s

fit cars . 6 a nd 8 ply t ruc k
t ir es i!lt Ch eshire As h land
1976 Grem lin, P.S.• A.C. , St at ion i n Cheshi r e. O H .

Siamese c ~ts . Cal l 446·384.4
afler7 p.m .

Antiques

a1

4:30, 742·2746 .

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNE L, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CF A
Himalayan,

76
Auto. Parts
___ ~ !- ~ c es!O!ie s __ _

1976 Vega, 31.000 m i les in
excellent shape. Cal l after

•

AT T EN T I O N :
l iM ·
POR TA NT TO YOU) Will

Call (614) 99l-99l2
'::,-:_e~::~

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one leHer lo each square, to form
four ordinary words.

ACROSS
1 Error
6 Lantern
10 Snatch
14 Ricochet
19 Dress protectors
21 Winglike
22 Mystery
23 Each
24 Stood on
end
26 Forestall
28 Hiked
29- Moines
30 German district
3'2 Pintail
ducks
··
33 Edible

l•___

refr ige ra tor s.

must sell . Ca ll367· 168.7 .

53

71
·..:..._ _:Autos for Sal e

POOO\-"' G ROOMIN G.
Call Judy T., lor at 367·
7220.

F UR N . ,
app lia n c;es ,
clo thes, roto t iller , moving,

D i scount

Pets tor Sal e --:--

S6

r an ges .
Skagg s A p ·
pllances , 1918 East ern
Ave .. 446·7398.

LANDMMK
SERVICE STATION1

REN T ER'S assi stance for
Senior Citizens in Village

• ROOM COTTAGE · with

repair. S8,001J.OO .
PORTLAND - About 56

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Apartment
for Rent

Household Good•

d r yers,

On any Chevy or
GM truck
align ment
by
Randy
Carpenter, factory
tr;~ined
frontend
alignment
spe cialist.

~

GOOD FAMILY LIVING - Th is love ly ra nch has 3
bedroom s, family r oom wi th woodburn er , large 2
c: ar aaraae, beauti f ul 18x36 pool w ith large pa t io,

CLOSE TO ENO -

S]OO

D-9-The Sunday Times-Sent inel , Sunday, June 8, 1980
51

GO O D
USE D
AP ·
PLIA N CES · wash ers .

This Coupon
worth

332• .

OFFICE 446-701~

MOBILE

FRONT END
AUGNMENT

One bed r oo m m ob i le h ome.
FUrnis hed , all u t i l it ies

availa ble. Small pond, a

REALTY

PRICE REDUCED -

1 ---~oiiJ.--.,

'

2642.

A&amp;H Upholstering. " Now
Re · Upholstering
Car
Seats" . Pn. 992·3752 or 992·
3743.

SPECIAL SALE
ON ALL '-IECES
SALE STARTS ·JUNE 8th AND
ENDS JUNE 20th
Have
your
living
room
furniture
reupholstel'_!!d now at the lowest prices
you'll probably ever see again.
REG. LABOR SALE
PRICES SALE PRICES
STANDARD SOFAS
$115.00
$15.00
STANDARD LOVE SEATS
95.00
70.0o
STANDARD CHAIRS
60.00
45.00
Larger Sofils Also at Huge Discounts.

10% DISCOUNT ON ALL FABRIC
FREE: Estimates, Pickup, Delivery
FREE : Arm Caps &amp; Head F=Iaps
CALL NQW &amp; SAVE$$$$

BROTHERS UPHOLSTERY
EUREKI

fT.
GAWPOLJS, OHIO
256-1562
If you 're long distance feel tree to c•ll collect.
Labor prices do n~t apply if
have your own
. fabric. All work completely •uaronteecl Pfnest
quality. at th~ lowell pollfble prlcn.

vou

commercial &amp; Rtaidentlill
We have also done several churchta In
the area.
\,

�1).3-The Sunday Times-8entinel , Sunday, June 8, 1980
36
Real ESIIII - General

Real Estate - Gener•l

-

Real Esta te
.

Want ed

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

Wanted to buy on land con-

tract. 1'12 bath or 2 bath
home. j$500. down and S300

per month . 992·6022. Wou ld
consider r e nt ing .

--------- --

BAIRD &amp;FULLER

JS

_Lots &amp;

76

Acr~s

~c rea g e

--·- Mobile
--------Homes
for Rent
---------

l} ::: ::::L~ts~ ~c~eii!_ :::

i n M e-igs Co . w

42

BEA U TIF UL lot on lower
Racoon Creek Call 256·
6• 13.

mineral r ights, 6 or 7 ac res
clear, rema i nder wooded .
W ater
an d
ele c t r i c

paid. Cal l 992-7•79 .

barn, rough cabin, gr eat
hunting. S30,000 . 992·7312.

RE;STRICTED
BUILDING LOTS Debby Orlve ~II
ulllllles available .
STROUT
REALTY ,
446-0001.

Tw o Bed ro om
Mob il e
Hom e. A dults on ly . 992·

1

2 Bedroom Mobile Hom e,
f urni shed k itc hen, elderly
couple pre ferred. Oeposi t
r equired . No pe ts. 992-27 49 .

2 SDR . and 3 bdr. mob il e
homes, cal l 446·0175 .

~

close to town. $52,000.

has concrete r unner s and pat 1o, located in Rodney .
N 2155

10% DOWN PAYMENT &amp; INTEREST RATE Th at ' s all i t t akes fo r y ou · to m ove into this lovely
brick hOme, 2 :1,~ bath s, for mal di ni ng, ful ly
carpeted, fami ly r oom w i th f ireplace . Ni ce 1 ac r e
lot, call f or appointment .
N1847

On thi s nice double wide,

price inc ludes furnitu re and 6 acres of land, owner
leaving slate.
N 1S32

HOME -

1975 Ki rkwood, 14x65, 3
bedrooms, l'h baths, r ange &amp; refr igerator , m u st be
moved.
#1800
Nice 1970 Rebel mobile hom e,

12x60, in exc el lent cond1tion. furni shed, front porc h
&amp; a carport, storage build i ng . Loc ated on 2 ac r es of
nice land, better hurry , on ly $16,500.
N 0561

ONE OF A KIND - Not manyof t hese homes lefllo·
day atth is pri ce, $22 .500. Ca l l toda y.
N 1532
SERVICE STATION - Doing a good business, price
inc ludes a large inven tory .
N 0001
93 ACRES - Va c ant land Ad d ison Township, good
inv est m e n t. #
tOll

Evenings Call
Darvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599
Oscar Baird, Kealtor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

.

2 BDR . trailer at Ch eshire,
construction workers, or
work ing men or family

---------~~

LAND CONTRACT - A 10% inter est r ate and down
payment w il l buy you a love ly bric k -fr ame bi ·l evel
with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central a1r and H .. acr es.
Close to hospi ta l . Call for appoi ntment today . II 1465
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 ni ce lots w i th 4
rental mobil e home pads, al l are rented, eac h p ad

Houses for Rent

41

199S

t'hone
l-C614 l -992-3325
SO ACRE FARM - Good
10 roo m house with
bath , lot s of good
b ~:~ i ldi n g s . L and is about
half fenced and T .P.
w ater av a il able. Good
lay i ng la nd tor subdi vi sion
17 ACRES - With water
an d
se we r
nea r .
Located in Pomeroy .
Want $24,500.
NEW LISTING 2
bedroom
repairable
home in Pomeroy with 2
lots, c ity water, natur al
gas. and on sew er .
Wo u ld
y ou
b el i ev e
$3,500 .
SALEM
CENTER
AREA
Nice 3
bed r oom , 11/ 2 bath ,
ranch st yl e home . For
Mom a stepsaver kifchen with f ormal dining ,
and D ad, over an acre of
wooded la nd·. All this f or
just $29,500 .
RACINE - One floor
ranch st yle 3 bedroom
hom e with bath, natural
gas, city water, large
basement. garge, and
lot that is 64'x238' . Out
of all flood s. Asking
$30,o0o .
A BREAK HAS COME
IN INTEREST RATES,
BUY
WHILE
YOU
CAN. WE NOW HAVE
SOME REAL NICE
PROPERTIES.

Hciusmg
H

adquar~ers

NEW LISTING -

Furn . for r ent in Chester,
c ar pe ted ,
, newly
r emodel ed , full bilsement,
prefer to r ent to work er or
establi s h e d
p e rson,
refere nces · and deposit
required . $195 a month.

Com ·

m erci a! 40x60 gla zed file •
bu i ld ing with double

floor and full ba sement,
new metal roof on approx. 12 acre. $9,000 .00.
R E ouc;e O! - Eastern

distr ict -

with 2 children . Cal l 773·
5882.
44

Call 1·866-1731. Will be
shown by appointment ,

3 bedroom

3 AND 4 RM furni shed ap·

Sat , June 14 from 2-5.

ts. Phone 992-5434 .

stone co1ta ge on approx .

I'/' A .. w.b.t .p., enclosed
r ear porch, equipped
ki t c hen, wa sher , dryer.
Should VA or FHA .
$28.000.00 .
MIDDLEPORT 1
floor plan , 2 bedrooms,
some carpeting and
remodeling , large lot.
$26,200 .00 .
CHESTER - 8 room
house on J.~ A . with 5
be drooms , 2 bath s,
downstairs remodel ed,
bas ement ,
utility .
$17,500.
IN TOWN - 2 story , 5
rooms, l 1h baths, tots of

storage,

needs

screened i n porch , adults

seeds
34 Spanish
cheer
35 Obi, e.g.
37 Headliner
39 Adherent of:
Suffl•
40 Shaded
walk
41 God of love
42 Spool
44 Gets up
46 Aavorlng
herb
47 Man' s nickname
48 Go. by water
50 Side dishes
52 Large tubs
53 Man's
name: Abbr.
55 Profound
57 Earth god-

dess
58 Misplace
59 Free ticket
60 Pronoun
62 Edge
64 Walk
66 French artl-

cle
68 Scale note
69 Trial
70 Soak
71 Man's name
73 Metal fastener
76 Mistakes
77 Danish
Island
78 One of
Columbus's
ships
80 Commonplace
81 Meadow
82 Aromatic
plant
84 Hubbub
86 Courteous
87 State
89 ManuScripts
(abbr.)
92 Strict
95 Fortification
98 Cargo units
99 Install
101 Samp
103 Repetition
104 Mouths
105 Heavy club
106 Scale note
107 Part of "to

be"
108 Reward:
Arch.
110 Stitch
111 Compass
pt.
112 Similar
113 Hastens
115 Man' s nick-

name
117 Den
119 Ave.
120 Studies
121 Finished
124 Haovest
126 Gentle
127 Succor

128 Handsome
one
130 Girl's name
132 Depression
133 A walt settlement
134 Southern
blackbird
135 Turkish

IIIIas
137 College
bldg.
139 Skill
140 Search
14 1 Catchers'
needs
143 Ignore
145 Stalemate
146 SchoOlbooks
148 Individuals
150 Weirdest
152 Cry for more
153 Female ·
horse
154 Rage
156 Argue
157 Hinder
158 lmllaled
159 Bridge
160 Giver
DOWN
1 Praises
2Seem
3 Irons
4 Offspring
5 Finishes
6 State: Abbr.
7 High mountain
8 Planet
9 Principal
10 Welcome
11 Hurries
12 Emmet
13 Exist
14 Some lax
men: Abbr.
15 Goal

16 Rumors
17 American
wildcat
18 Ancient Per·
slans
20 Oceans
23 Asian sea
25 Facts
27 Boat
28 Narrate
31 Unusual
33 Cronies
36 Chief
38 Toll
40 Small
amount
41 Dines
43 Falsehoods
45 Girl's name
46 Fond wish
47 Spar
49 Permits
51 Roadside
hotel
52 Subject
53 Cloak
54 Girl's name
56 Peevishness
59 Office staff
60 Leander's
love
61 Short jacket
63 State
65 Time gone
by
67 Lamprey
69 Preposition
70 Altar screen
72 Blunt ends
7 4 Plutonium
symbol
76 Sun god
77 Later
79 Wine cup
83 Evergreen
85 Eskimo
boats
86 PrudiSh
87 Solar disk
88 Learning

m o. plu s deposit. 92-7.5 11 or

992-61 30.

garage, partially fenced
yard and area f or small
garden . Children per mitted . Pets also permitted

42

some

1 Bedroom, furnished apt.,
wal l to wall carpet. Water
and garbage fees paid .
Prefer married couple with
no pets. Located in Racine .

LARGE 2 bdr. unfurnished
trailer at Rio Grande . Call

446·0157.

and bui lding sites. Gdod

hunting ora . $23 ,900.00 .
LANGSVILLE - 10 yr .
old mobile home with 2
rooms built on , plus 12
acr es land, secluded
a nd
beauti f ul .
$23,000.00.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland. Jr.
992·6191

Call 423·82S7 Belpre for ap·
2 BDR . air cond. mobile
home . Adults only . Call-446 -

pointment. Available June

10, $125 mo . plus deposit.

4110 or 446· 1154.
MOBILE

HOME

·

no

ment,

ch i ldren . Ref and dep . req .

upsta irs,

Ave : $200 .

per

Second

mo.

in·

742-2474
Full Time
Office Phone 992·2259

call446·2129 or 446·2800.

SLEEPING ROOMS
rent, Gallia Hotel.

Cheshire, set up In mobile

SMALL 4 rm. turn. apart·
men! located in Oak Hill.
No children . Call682·6010.

MOBILE HOME ·· adults
only, no pets. Call367 ·7438 .

ftJt\11.\;ft ~ft

NEWLY re·decoraled 2
bdr. apart . with yard, ref.
req . Call256·6413.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

fix
102 Time period
105 Coin
109 Expires
112 Attic
113 Retain
114 Inclines
116 Girl's name
118 Electric cal·

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

~

~ , ..,

47

Gallipolis. Call446·2342 and
Ask for Mark .

THE TIR'EI:'

I&lt;AN6AROO

WAS A~RESTCc:&gt; FO!it
TR55F"A661N6 E!IECAU5E

WA5 "THI5.

WI DOW

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon .

(Answers Monday)
Jumbles ERUPT TACKY

ALWAYS

MOROSE

What an actress who wants to play In a
horror movie must take first-

and

4 children

needs to rent home right

away . Call379 ·2716.
49

KII )oF (I i l I I]

I Answer

Wanted lo Rent

bdr. apart., private, turn .,
within S mile radius of

r:r J

Yeslerday·s

and

Gen~ral

For Lease

Service Stat ion for lease
$300 month ly. Pomeroy
area . Good c r edit and work
record a must . Substantial
investment required . Good
location with good potentia I
for
sharp
aggressive
operator . For interview

call Mr . Adams, 1·304-375 ·
4893, 8:30 a.m .·4 p .m . M · F .

Store. 104·105

and

ment.

AKC

other commercialt.se.
C~ll

A x. West jumps

Shepherd

Supersonic tomato plants.

George Hill247·2961 .

monds and West with his
minimum bids· two spades
which East raises to three.
West hates to stop one trick
short of game, but he has the
sort of hand where three
spades may also be too high.
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~

:'I ULIUU

lULU

[JlJl.Hl

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa,

chair,

rocker,

ot·

,annnnn

.,nnn Ml"''nnnn nnAn c on11

nnnn

:;:: nnnc

coon

n~nnn~oon

~o

rmor1 uooo CiO

rJnc.m:., oormn rmo
DrJCt'JAD

')(!(Ji lr' C- f]

Or:!UCDC:C

ULUUUU

_ lll l IJUliUL

UUL&lt;t.:l..

D
BUMGARDNER
SALES,
THE
POOL
PEOPLE 31711 Noble Sum·
mit Rq . Middleport, Ohio:

61

size,
$325.,
&amp;
UP .
Recliners, $125., $150.,
$160 ., S17S:. and $225 . Lam·
ps from $18 . to $50. 5 pc.
dinettes from $69 . to S325.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
$235 . Table, two leaves, 6
chairs, (high backed ), $400.
Hutches, S300 . and $350.,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites, $195. S350.
(oak), Bassett Oak, $550.,
Bassett Cherry, $675 . Bunk
bed complete with mal·
tresses, $175., $250., $275.
Captain's beds, $275. com·
plele. Baby beds, $75. Mal·
tresses or box springs, full
or twin , $55 ., firm, $65 . and
$75 . Queen sets, SIBS. dr.

s

chests, S49 . Bed frames,
under S25.
· S20 . and
USED
Ranges ,
refrigerators, , TV ' s, headboards and beds. bar

stools,

1

counter

top

refridgerators,

992 ·5724 Sales, service and
supplies.
In ground and ;
above ground pools.

saw chain, bars, and all

-------- ,

Centenary Road, 446·94.42 .

CHAIN SAWS, .
hydraulic wood splitters,

::.J I nDUII CJOUU r:m Ut' DL t:Li
ruTr· r~ r"J • · un1nnu: t.tlr.'l.
ucclii onrm rmronr; r!r.L:r
..; uLu [.;UO c ceo DCC[' r.:cc:c:
~IJlJ
t:,[".UU : DIHJI: IT[T lllliJ
L..ttr •r:rwn ar1r·rr:r.n nm.:lliJtiJ
UCCCQ[ :::: OCL.

L.UUUU

UlJUL

D['CL
[l~CC

Posture Zone

Try the Posture 11

and

SWAIN

FURNinJRE

AUCTION SERVICE

I C[.['lll!
C[.[:U:

9SS Second Avenue

KeMtlh SWain, Aucl.

Gallipolis, OhiO
4$631
PH, 614·446·1171

Corn..- Tlllrd &amp; Olive
,t-_,..._--.,.__.

I

'

.,

GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT

wood

culling

A~LIS
CHALMBERS
Tractor, older type with
pull type plow on rubber 64

percent off greenware sale.
Bring container, open 9~

a.m . to 9 p.m. Drehel's.
Ceramics, 59 North Sec .
Ave .. Middleport. Call 992·
2751.

International

engine,

250 CASE KNIVES , some
limited edition, Tawney

NEW HOLLAND Super 66
baler. Call245-5546.

Closed

Sunday .

HOllOW

Fruit

BRICK ,

NEW HOLLAND BALER ·
exc. cond., call379·2400.

Pick ·

Wanted to Buy

62

Happy.,
Farm .,

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .

W VA .

diameter 10" on largest

end . $12 p-er ton . Bund led

prices

slab . $10 per ton. Del ivered

at

to Ohio Pallet Co .• Rl. 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689 .

der, call 446·4274 or •46·
1137.

with

p.s .,

trans., A·1 cond ., $850. 1973 · plaster

ceilings,

call256· ll82.

end, complete . S700. Call
388-99()6.

JIM MARCUM Roofing

7828 alter 6.

992-5786 .

call388·9868 · Vinton, OH

1974 Ford P ickup, 6 cyl. , 3

LAIR

$1750 .00.

ches, class rings, wedding

REF . with top freezer , 18 •
ft.

perfect cond.

White, '

SISO. Microwave oven, 1 yr.
old . $270. Can see In
evenings and weekends at

507 Pecan St.

1

•'

1

brick ,
homes,

PAINTING · interior and

remode l ing , siding . Free
estimates . phone 388 -9039

or 388·9642.
BUDGET
CONSTRUCTION CO.
A ll
type
home
im·
provements · e xterior and

interior . Free esti mates.
Mike Marc um , 388·8636.

EAR CORN · Call 245·5492.
POLAROID polavislon In·:
stant movie camera with
viewing machine and light :

63

bar . Cost was S600 .. will sell
for SJOO . or best offer . Call
245·5892 .

1978 BLAZER · 4·W· D, good
mpg ., $3,950. Call 245·9503
afler4.

PAIN TING · Inter ior and
e•terlor Includi ng r oofs,
also odd jobs. Ca ll446· !9.&lt;3.

Livestock

HOLSTEIN COWS · Call
614·286·2496.

74

Motorcycles

SEARS riding lawn mower
26 in . cut . Call446·2316.
30 ln. ROTARY mower tor
Gravely tractor, $225.
Rotary
plow
and ·
cultivator, $350. Call «6· '
4149.
.
Building Supplies

KACH·ALL' PORTABLE
BLDG. All sizes, 6x10 to
12x40. see at 123V, Pine st.,
446·2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling Alley on Rt. 7, 446·
1279.
ALL TYPES of building ·'
materials, block, brick, ·•
sewer pipes, windows, lin· ; ·

leis, etc . Claude Winters, '
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245· 1
5121 alter spm.

Registered
and
non·
registered dairy goals. 742·

73 YAMAHA 256·6813

12292.
, --------~--~---

H and N DaY old or star1ed
leghorn pullets, bOth floor

or cage grown ava i lable .
Poultry
Housing
and
Automation,
Modern
; Poultry, 399 W. Main,

Pomeroy. 992·2164.
'

Autos tor Sale

1973 Capri, V·6, 4 sp., new
radials,

am ·fm

casette/ .

llood gas mileage. Sl.OOO.
667·3031.
1967 Super Sport Camara,
350 4·speed, very good con·
~Ilion . Call378-63•1.

I'

2608 after 6.
1969 HONDA street bike,
good cond ., $300. 1965
Mobile Scouttravertrailer,
good cond., $1500. Call 446·
4286.
76

......... .............. .
..................
71

1977 SUSUKI · GS 750, exc.
cond., 5200 m i res, cell 446·

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce$Sories

paneling , doors and w i n-

Call388·8596.

··

CHARLIE ' S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker
service,
sell
ra-:tlators, ,
buy

automobiles, radiators and
batteries. Call aft'e r 5. 446·
7717. .
.

POMEROY , C
99'2 621" ')

estim•tes .

1

V.E
2124.
86

SWIMlAND
150 Third Ave.
IS NOW OPEN
10 am til 5 pm

lfs pure pleasure to crochet
your favor1te pmeapple des1gn .
Use 3-ply fmgermg yarn for laq
cape wolh per ky collar Pattem
7329 : Som 10·11. 14·16. 18·10

mcluded
SHAPED 10 Itt an d llattet you.
TOPP ED by a chooce of lout

Monday thru
Saturday
"TABEX CHEPI.•CALS".

necklmes. Sew one vers 1on lor

thiS summer - another nellt
season Vou'll love it.
Punted Pattern 9072 Hall
Sizes 1 0~ . 11h, 14 ~. ~~ ~.
1 8 ~ . 20 \\, 11';, Size 14\\ (bust
37) takes 3 yards 45-onch

PHONE 446-7887

&amp;

Aluminum

FREE YOUR SELF from fussI onto lhos loght wrappong lot
~ day!tm!s that are busy or relaxr~eck m front,~
ty.back- l res h,, lemm ine.
Punted
9133 Misses
Sozes 8, 10. 12, 14, 16. 18. 20 .~
Sue 12 (bust 34) lakes 3 yards
45·inch. tab,c.

$1.75 fo• each pattetn. Add 501
lor each patteon lot first-class
oitmail. handlinJ. Send to:
QUICK 'n' EASY P~ffiWIIS 170
232 W. 18 Sl. , New York, NV 10011
FAIIIOII CATALDI (l/lj ..... Sl.ll
Dfllllllf~ CAT~IMI •35 . . ... 1.11
till MHDI.I CATA~OG ...•.•. 1.01
1.50
::-::-.:~ _........
,
1.111

.... uo

...... . 1.50

vinyl

...

~~~~~~~·!!;;·,;. ~;·,;· ,~.· : ..
1.50
z;
uo
.. !.10

. ...... uo
,....'1-lii--1
!.50
... 1.50
. . ... !.50

utility

buildings
691 Miller Drive

446-2642
Free Estim•tes

\

M . H. Repair

31711 Noble Summit Rd.
Middleport, OhiO
. 992·5724
Sales, service and supplies. In ground and

above ground POOls.
5· 1-lfc

u photstery

87

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave. , Gallipolis .
446·7833 or 446·1833.
MASTERCRAFT UPHOL·
STERY SHOP · Com·
merc ia! and residential. 32
years experience. Call ~-

2301 or 446·4971 .

BILL' S MO BI LE HOMES

HOWmet Patio Covers
Howmet sCreen rooms
Mobile home awnings

"I

FILLINGER Water

instatled

siding

cessories.
Free
esti mates.
Miller Drive 446·2642

DEPEND A BLE

Delivery Servi ce. Call 379-

Storm wln~ows &amp; doors

Ac ·

General Hauling

and Hom e Improvem ent s.
Free estima tes. Call 446-

Aluminum

992·3795

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES
lHE POOL PEOPLE;

~. , .~~~ ~ ~~ EL

wa ter deli v ery . Ca ll 2569368 or 256-1394 anyt im e.

Nu-Prlme replacement
Home Improvements
Nu-Prime R eplacement
Windows. Storm Windows &amp; Doors. Patio
Coven ,
· Carports.

Pomeroy, Oh.

~-2-lfC

85

windows

Home

618 E. Main

1·28·1 mo .

Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
1· 22-ffc

~I
Bill's
s

gutters -spouts - concrete work. Ph. 367-0427,
36H194, l6H141. Free

Mobile

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATIO..N

9C,t~7314

Free Es1imates
Reasonable Prices

~ooflng

PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY , S20. plus tax
and old battery. We buy old
batteries. Repair batteries.

V. C. YO.UNG Ill

new or repair gutters
· and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed .

Free estimates, ~II work
fully
guaranteed .
Residential, commer cia!, Industrial I. g, . . Jecli iCI'l work.
SHA cert.
446·4627

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS.
All types home i m provemt"nts -

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit a ·n d loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

(Ff:!EE ESTIMATES)

Dump
truck . Fre
estimates . Call 388·862
or 446-9459.

OUnty

Bookkeeping
Service

ROCCit.l;

Frank Rose canst, co.
RemOdeling repair, new
construction, all types.

cei l i n g ,

dows, ~tso pa inting . Call
992·2759.

1

and

n.

.-.:,--;-,--,-...,-.,..-.,
FLOORIN G,

with grass catcher. 7 H.P. •

worM,
walks
driveways .

245·5050.
R.M .
ROOFING
&amp;
SPOUTING .
Home

949·2686

r1-

~(:• ~
~~-~Li;:-J
.lmi!ll&lt;-=-"'-' \i!i=b

down

spouts, some concrete

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING, INC .
Backhoe &amp; dozer work
by the job or by th
hour. Also licensed sep·

new
cal l

e)(ferlor, free estimates in
Gall i polis area, reasonable
rates. Call Mark White ,

Truck for Sitle. B Model
Attack tractor . Excellent
cond ition. Call 992 -7354 af ·

work,

JIM ' S

tic · tanks

see at 380 2nd St ., Pomeroy .

Gutter

367-7560

Block ,

f i replaces ,
remodeling,

~~il

REMODELING

Reese Trenching
&amp; Backhoe Service

379-2123.

1968 Ford lh ton Ranger .
· Runs good $650. 992 ·5018 or

GOLD
AND
SILVER
ter7 .
COINS OF THE WORLD.
RINGS,
JEWELRY ,
73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
S;TERLING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
1974 Jeep CJS . $1.900. 949·
RECORD
HIGH,
2545.
HIGHEST UP·TO ·DATE
PRICES . CONTACT ED ·
1972 CHEVROLET . l'h T .
BURKETT
BARBER
truck , good cond. Call 367·
SHOP, Ml DDLEPORT,
0135 between 4 and 7 week·
OHIO, OR CALL 992·3476.
days.
WANTED to buy, horses
and ponies ph. 379·2761.

CONST. ·

9 '

Leach Beds, Water and
Gas Lines, Electric
Lines, Pole BL!ildings.

Driveways, wa lks, patios,
porches, basements and
garages. Free estimates,

Cal l

- Free _
Estim&amp;aleEs I f
-ln1ertor
x er or
Work.

H ·; mo .

certiliedl

BILL' S CONCRETE
SERV ICE

1976 Pickup truck in good

-Fully Insured

Oexter , Ohio45726
Bill Eskew, Ph . 742· 2456
Your Place or Mine

( Ga Ilia Col!ntv

Call388·9857 .

ton pickup . E&gt;&lt;c. cond ., low
miles, best offer. Call 446-

Salem Twp. Rd . 180

Rt. l, BoxS4
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614 -843·2591

SEPTIC TANKS

spouting and si ding . 30
years experience . Free
estimates . Remodel i ng .

1974 FORD EXPLORER &gt;;,

R~:~.. ~rUih and Sproy

All types of root work,

r e pair, tex t ure
free estimates,

·Pinto wagon, a ir cond .,
auto. trans., exc . shape ,
S900. 18·5 Rockwell rear

speed. $900. 992-5057 .

STRAWBERRIES
Charles McKean Farm.
Fairfield Centenary Rd.
Call446·9442.

plast er i ng ,

c ondition.

N.

2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161 .

CLOTHING · shoes, misc • .
Call367·7781.

·

Geoeral Welding

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Fin est quality at lowest
possibte
prices. Call
now for free estimate.
Commercial or residential.
, Gallipolis
256-1562

Gallipolis, Oh io 4563l. Call
446 ·2572.
STUCCO

General Hauling

WILL HAUL lim estone and
grc:ivel. A lso , l ime hau ling
and sp re ading . Leo Morris
Truc ki ng Phone 742·2455.

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

Most wood prOducts. Wood
Shop, 101 Court 5 1. ,

standard

ca11 388 8274, or

77 85.

446··3344.

Gosnev,

26

Excavatio·n Servic es.
Dump truck , dozer,
backhoe.
Call 446 ·4537

CABINETS &amp; VANITIES

'12.00

~==~~~~~~==~~;:~~==;;~~~~~==::~§;~;:~~~
1 ''
ADO ONS &amp;
T ' C··--·- . .~:--

sand. All sizes . A t Richards
and Son, Upper River Rd .,
Gal l ipoli s, Oh 10. Call 446-

I;)AVISON
DEVELOPMENT

Pa1'nting
&amp;
Sa dblasti Co
n
ng •

Tr~unty

5· 14· 1 mo.

LIME STONE, gravel and

PA I NTING interi or and ex ·
terior, free estimates, call

--------bed

~:~~i9c6~

Rio Grande

85

work, new home bldg . or
rem odeling, cal l 446·2910.

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE , glass. ch ina,
anything. 'See or call Ruth
antiques,

245-9113

call367·7184 or 367·7160.

. 1972 FORD Pickup, short

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4d to 12x40

Residenti
REFRIDGERATION
a l, commer cial, J
hea t i ng , cooli ng, electr ic al

Ken Soles

and commer cial. Interior
and exterior , mobile home
roofs. Free est I mates. 17
vrs. exp . with references

245-9414. Exc. auto. fran ·
smission.
·~

D· DA Y

FREE ESTIMATES

PAINT I NG · Resident ial

GMC pickup · parting out .
almost new, 18 fl . bed. Call

SMALL

BOWER S
Swe epers ,

Gheen'S

ENGINE
STE AM
CLEANED

Sizes
" From JOXJO"

toas ter s. i ro n s, all sma ll
ap pli ances . L awn mower .
Next to Stat e H ighwa y
Gar age on Route 7, 985-

CHAIN LINK FENCE

PS ,

~ries

1600

ELWO O D
REPA IR -

H'VEYOU"
-•
"

Farm Buildings

S~i s so r s .

'DENNY

and

Call388·8205.

EXPLORER

ALLSTEEL

3825 .

spouting, home remodeling
and siding, free esti mates,
10 years local ex perience .

GMC pickup truck will sell
for parts. Call245·9414.

long wheel base. priced to
sell , 379·2761 .

SE WING
M A CH I NE
Repa irs,
serv i ce,
all
m ak es . 99 2 2284 . Th e
Fab r ic Shop, Pomeroy .
Authori zed Singer Sales
and Serv ice. We sharpen

Call367·0209 day or night .

1976 DATSUN
pickup
truck, very good cond ., call
245·9212.

Charles McKean, Fairfield

Sidewalks

Call 446·3896
or 446·3080

ALL TYPES of Carpentry

supplies .

MORRIS

35 Court St .
Gallipolis, Ohio

In sulated v inyl siding,
a l uminum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
windows . Free esti mates.

good. Rebu ilt motor , S395 .
Call446·3041 .

MAY 23 TO JUNE 10, 30

ss
Supports Your

446·4208

truck. Runs well, bOdy is

ECHO

l£0

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishing

Carpet Cleaning

1966 F100 FORD pickup

Farm Equipment

William Mit-

roofing

c leari ng ,

cal l446 0051.

driveway s,
base ~
ments, steps, etc. 1nsulation , residential
or
commercial.
Some r·emodeling .

STAN LEY STE EMER

auto. Call 446·2368 or 446 ·
3713 .

bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver . Call J. A . Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

queen

302

cava ting . Land

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
e V -CHISEL
PLOW

ex -

Box 89, Bidwell , Oh.,

3aa ·?877 .

chell, 388·8507 .

MEADES

WORK

VINTON CEMENT
FLOOR INC .

ROOFING, Gutteri ng and
remodeling .

Call446·0515 .
Pickup,

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992-2772

446·2450- 379-2458

Day · 698·8205 · Night

Trucks for Sale

FORD

Window•

E xcavating

Commercial or
Residential
Hot or Cold Proces s

Overhead Garage Doors ,
Electri c Door Operators ,
Continuous no· leak guttering

1976 FORD 1/-z ton pick up.
Short bed, low mileage, ex cellent condition . S2,B9.5 .

BURROUGHS Bookkeepin·
g machine, $50. Call 446·
2342.

cabinet, $75. Call 446· 1786.

sorvlce call 256-1"7.
Salt Every Saturday
Nlghlol7 p.m.

UCJC'I ) nramtHJ rl r: r ur.(l ur:llD
:;or_• C ~C:30 DO O C L DOC OOC

72

Plumbi ng · Heati ng

Gra nt, 446·8508 .

KUHN &amp; SAUNDERS
ROOFING

I ~·

1971.

p.s., p .b., auto., sun roof.
bright red with red in terior . Good mileage, wi l l

57

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
etnsulallon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

STANDAR D

614 ·446·

T HEISS INS ULATION ,

·

sell for $7500 . Call 388·8764
alter 5 p.m.

from $275. to S550. T abies,
$33 .·$60·$7 ©
and $85 .
Sofabed and chair, S150.
Hide-a-beds,$300 .,

THUNDERBIRD

Ave . Ph. 446·1637.

DOZ E R

statio n

tree. 949-2545.

OLD COINS, pocket wat·

We 1011 anything for
anyllocly at our Auction
llrn or In 'fCKir home. For
Information •ml pickup

::m - nnnu rm UD UUlJU WULI
n .... rn nnnrmn nr.mr,m 1 onn:

1980

ZEN 1TH stereo, am·fm
radio,
Early American

SWAIN .
AUCTION BARN

nooMonn

~~nnn~n

...JutJ nm:m nconn ao!':ln noo
' 1nr ;n r1unu nrnf ~.10nfl ODc:JO

4·H project . Call Karen
Griffith, 992·5782 after 5
p.m .

chair and loveseat, S275.
Sofas and chairs priced

thru Fri .. 9am toSpm, Sal.
446·0322

flrJnrmn r1flll:'n nnnn nr:mnrm

new parts . $150 . Call 245·
Sll92.

loman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa ,

Open 9am to 8pm, Mon.

t1!JI.1r1C

saddle and harness. Super
disposition, make excel lent

1W6

FRESH
strawberries,
Glenn' s Acres Farm . To or- ·

Household Goods

3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.

SOLUTION

wagon , body rough, some

1 Large Upright Piano .
S200. Good cond. and tuned .
742·2292.

Call

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER&amp;DOOR , INC .

under

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlAnON

Plum bing
H ea t ing
Air
. conditioning . 300 Fourt n

Carpet

1973 OLDS OMEGA · 6·cyl. ,
auto., good mpg, $950. Ca ll
245·9503 after 4.

prospec t,

Musical
Instruments

In

1975 FORD station wagon .
$400. Call 388·9789 after 6.

PONTIAC

5·29· 1 mo.

WATE R WE LL Drill i ng
an d cl eaning. Pumps sold
an d i nsta lled , Call W.T .

388-9759

su l master foam insulation.
New homes, old homes,
commercial structures.
For free es t imates call 446-

1968

.started

BEST

Steamway .
2096.

6·c yl. ,

Gelding. 2 yr. old, show

Eugene long (614) 843-3322

GEN E PL A NTS
A ND SONS

83

Roofing , siding, gutter,
build · up roof , home
repair .
·
Free Estimates

Home
Improvements

FOR

new tires, new brakes, 350
engine, $400 . or best offer .
Call446·1822 after 5 p .m.

Registered male walker
coon hound w i II run and

cy cle , $125. Call367·7238 .

A J 10 9 3 H - A 8 6 D- 5 4 C J 7 6. East cue bids two dia-

Call

Serving your area for 25 years.
Call Now for Large Savings
For Free Estimate Call

Cleaning · Call Smeltze r' s

Registered Quarter Pony

2 Ladies size 12 and 14 L i lli· ·
Ann su ites. Have never
worn . Also some other fine '
quality dresss, blouses and
leather coa t . Reason for
s~lling , don ' t f i t . 992 ·3283 .

2000

81

OLDSMOBILE

1966 PONT IAC LeMans, 2
dr ., auto. trans ., p.s., p.b., 2

and

992-5681
anytime or 992·5071 after 5.

S220.; 1 row cultivator,
$85 . ; Yamaha 100 motor·

three
spades to show a j!ood overcall and East goes mto Black·
wood and ·bid the slam after
West shows two aces.
You don't bld many slams,
but you nearl;v always get to
game. Here ts one of those
rare instances when you stop
below game.
West bids one spade over
SOuth's diamond, holding: S -

F ive

male

ROOFING
REPLACEMENT WINIXMS

*New homes - ex tensive remodeling
* E lectric&lt;!l works
*Masonry work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
S-15·1 mo.

• Replacement

German

pUppies.

old,

female .

600 E . Main St.

Gallipol is Ferry ,
30•·576·2026.

Ike Wiseman
446·]64]

The Wi~e_ft'!.a., ~!lPn~v

to

reg istered

weeks

several used c hain saws.
Pomeroy Home and Au to, ·

your own beginning Wed . 9
to dark. Sorry no checks.

I

xxxH-xD-KQJxxxC-

bells ,

{614) 698·· 3290 .

One Demonstrator Moped,

•door Bob Evans Steak
Ho•se. 800 sq. fl. office,
4,000
wa reho"se

Good bids after overcall
This is going to be a rather
advanced article since it
involves the way most expert
players handle their own simple overcalls.
In modem bidding, the
overcall may well be a good
hand with one or maybe two
suits. In other words, a good
hand that may not be suitable
for a takeout double.
Hence, partner should raise
an overcall with any band that
represents better than a minimum raise for an opening bid.
A bid of your own suit is
never a forcing bid, but merely suggests that your suit is
the best spot for a final
contract. A notrump call
shows a stopper in opponents
btd suit and 7-11 high-card
points. Seldom only seven or
as many as 11. Jump raises
are all limit bids. The only
forcing call is a cue bid of
opponent's suit. It is not a
game force, but ·at worst
shows a hand with which you

Blankets,

boots. etc. English and
Western . Ruth Re ev es

Lad ies beautiful size 8-10
wardrobe . Consists of
Evan-Pi cone classic style
sportswear includmg sum·
mer
blazer ,
blouses,
dresses, robe 'and gowns .
Will sell pieces separaely .

STRAWBERRIES ·

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soolag

ponies

CONSTRUCTION

215 Thir d Ave .. 446·3782

GEORGE'S ROOFING

Call 446·2403 after 4: 30.

Jesso~s .

VINYL SIDING

379·2376.

HAT ·

·

Cor . Four t h and Pine

Phone 446·3888 or 446-4477

Cal l

1 own er, exc .

OU STER

CARTER 'S PLUMBI NG
ANO HEAT ING

1979 TAURUS CAM PER ,
22ft., se lf contained

silver, maroon vinyl top,
sport wheels, exc. cond .

and rid ing
Everything
imaginable in horse equip·

Decorated cakes for all oc·
cas ions . Character cakes

Fi rst

$275. tak es it. Cal1446·7027.

9B,
fully equipped, exc . c ond .,
goOd gas mileage, call 446 ·
4942 .

1975

MAJ N ·

TE N A N CE · E l ec trica l,
p lu m b ing , heati n g, and ai r
conditioning . CaH 388-9698.

O&amp;F CONTRACTORS.

256-6200 evenings.

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses

4800 Sqt.tare Feet, next

storage, garage or any.

want to be in game unless
partner's overcall Is a really
bad one.
Here is an example of bidding a slam after West over·
calls one heart with one spade
holding: S-A K Q I X X H- X X
x D - A x C - x x and partner
cue bids two hearts with S - J

1974

ROUSH

Plumbi ng

DEW ITT' S PL UMB I NG
AND HEAT IN G

Home improvem ents,
room additions, sidi ng,
electrical &amp; air condi tioning, and insurance
claim repairs . Guarante ed
work.
Free
Estimates. 446-3407 .

cond ., 35 mpg hwy. Cal l

only .

FOR L-i:ASI:

BRIDGE

HUMANE
SOCIETY .
Adopt a home less pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed .

Jewelers.

A " SCREAM" TEST
JumbltiJook No. 13, containing 110puzzlet,lt anllatlletorS1.75pottpald
I rom Jumble, c/o I hit ntweptper, Box 34, Norwood,N.J.C764t.lncJucle your
namt, tddrtll, lip code tnd mtkt checke payable to Ntwtptperbookl.

CHBACK

-

82

Phone 446 2735 .

i 974 TAR T AN fold down
camper, sl eeps 4.

CHEVETTE

Also
AKC
regis t ered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795.

Donations required . 992 6260, noon-7 p.m., except
Tuesday, emergency ca lis

40 LB 80)( of West Vi r ginia
Chunks, low ash, low sulfur
Foster Coal Co., 446-2783.

WANT TO RENT · 1 or 2

I DOUSEX±
Answer hera:

in

Pomeroy . L arge lots. Call

HE

I

park

...

I

Straw and Felt hats and
Tony Lama and Acme
boots. Mountain Lea t her

992 7479 .

KIJ

tYONIFT

home

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of

I

PURUS

SPACE

Adults only . Conc rete patio
and walk, 900 block in town.
Large lawn a rea, water
paid, $60. mo. Call 446·4416
after 7 p .m .

MOBILE

Reslstol

Call992·3283.

Space tor Rent
TRAILER

1

for

trailers. Call379-234l.

b
KJ _I _
• .......
•• ••c..,.... ,...,."' ...

per

Cheshire has lots available
for mobile homes or travel

I MOBOL

fish
120 Touch
12~ Penny
122 Redactor~
123 Excavates
125 Variable
126 Calm
127 Chickens
129 Rational
131 Best: Comb.
form
132 Challenged
133 Chaste
134 Ventilated
136 Petitioned
138 Measuring
device
140 German IItle
141 Simple
142 Break
144 Raised
147 Female d 148 Soft food
149 Nahoor
sheep
151 African
native
153 College deg.
155 Thoron
symbOl

$30

week or $100 per month.

46

of

and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992·2583 .

Furnished Roams

12x50 MOBILE HOME · 2
fully carpeted. In

home park . Dep . req . Call
379·2341.

Jean Trussell, 949·2"0

ment. Park Central Hotel.

Room

styles

1979

facilities .

n

R oute 160 aT_Everg r een

per with sliding w indow f or
61/2 ft . Flee t si de tru ck $400.
Carl446 ·3139 after 5 p.m .

1972 FORD TORINO. 1973
Plymouth Fury .
$400 .
each. Caii24H241 .

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean

592·5478, 10·5:30 Mon .· Sat.

SLEEPING · rooms, and
lignt housekeeping apart·

Sleeping

GROOMIN G .
)udy Taylor . 614-367·7220.

West Union, Athens, Oh .

elud i ng utilities, one month
depasit reQuired. No pets,

b~r. ,

New

Apartment
for Rent

992 ·6022.

Call367 ·7167 .

Associates
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner

44

POOO~E

992·2751.

Camping

FIBER GL ASS truck top·
GREAT GAS MI L EAGE
1974 M ustang II Ghla . 6

&amp; G Car'p(•l Clean ing.
clea ned .
Free
St e am
es tim at e .
Reas onabl e
rates. Scotch gu a rd . 992 ·
6309 or 742 11.

446· 3100
861 Second Av e.
Ga llipoli s, Ohio

Gaso lin e

$1850. Call446·0515.

indoor·outdoor

Resid ential &amp; r. omm er·.
cia I. Tree &amp; shrubs in-·
st alled, d es i gn ing &amp; Ia nt ing , shrubber y 1rimming , l awn need control
progr am s.

Hammonds BOdy Shop, 22 1
M ill St ., Th urman, OH . Call
245-9371 or 379·2306.

cyl. , loaded w ith ex t r as.

greenware sale . Bring a
container . 9 a.m . to 9 p. m .
Drehel ' s Ceram ics . 59 N.
Second Ave .. M iddleport,

KO TALI C
LANDSCAPING

trucks, two tones change of
color ex t ra but rea son abl e.

Business. Services

s

QUALITY .

SAND AND PAINT · m inor
body r ep air, $159. Van

78

Home
Imp rov em ents

----~1:1~!!~--­

Equipment

wks. old , Call «6-9256.

MAY 23 to J une 10.30% off

3401&gt;.

da ys and 446·4792 ni ghts.

powe r ed . Ca ll 949·2273.

SATIN Siamese rabb its , 9

LIMESTONE ,

3891.

Main St.
Pomeroy
992-2181

45

UNFURN . 1 bdr. apart·

COAL,

Roo t ing, sid ing, r Qom ad
diti on s, a ll types of gen er al
repair s, 25 years exp. 992

Auto Repair

Upper Rl . 7 Cal l 446·2445

Misc . Merchanise

--~

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc ,

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Middleport . 1·304·882·2566.

lor Rent

54

E. Main St., Pomeroy, 992·

20% ·0FF

2 Bedroom Apartment in

Mobile Homes

767·3167 or 557-3411 .

R abb i t .

197 8

food , and all types of salt .

&amp;TREES

2 Bedroom furn ished apt .
$150 plus util i ties, or $50
week,
util i t i es
paid .
Depos;t $50. 949·2875 .

woth add' l. dep. $190. mo.
plus deposit . Absolutely no
drinking. Call388·8747.

acres. pasture, woods,

89 Greek letter
90 Be niggardly
91 Precipitous
92 Theurlal
93 Salad item
94 Printer's
measure
96 The sweetsop
97 Eft
100 Down : Pre-

GOOD SUPPLY
SHRUBS

Apartm ent tor rent. 5150

2 BOR . house with alt.

BRIARPATCH
K EN ·
NELS.
Boa~ding
and
grooming . AKC Gordon
Sellers, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446·419l.

sand , gravel, c alc ium
chlori de , fer t i lizer, dog

Manor apts. Call992 ·7787.

only, no pets. rent and dep.
Available within 2 days.
Call446·0957. No minors.

1

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Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call 446· 7795.

3406,.

serv i ce. A l l types of r epair

1980 Om ni, 4 cy l., .4 speed,
f ront w heel dri ve, w arranty. $1,000 unde r new . ConSi der tr ade allow anc e. 992·
.5704 .

fa cil ities.

8J

Wi l l p ou r concre te, lay
block and br ick . Ca ll 992

ROBERTS BROT H ER S
GARAGE . 24 hr. w r ecker

- - - - -- - - 1973 Datsun, 4 speed. Good
mileage . $230. Call 992 ·3149
or 992 ·2705.

HILLCREST KENN EL ·
Boarding all breeds, c lean

pay cash or certifiecl c he&lt;;k
for antiques and coll ec ·
tib les ' or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
guns, poc ket watches and
coin c ol lections. Call 614-

77_ _

ter 6 p.m .

Persi an a nd

indoor-outdoor

USED T I RES · all sizes lo

AM· FM8 1rackslereo, new
!ores , exc . COnd . Good gas
mileage . $2,500 . 667·39Sll at ·

Home
I m p!.~~e_me'!!s

fit cars . 6 a nd 8 ply t ruc k
t ir es i!lt Ch eshire As h land
1976 Grem lin, P.S.• A.C. , St at ion i n Cheshi r e. O H .

Siamese c ~ts . Cal l 446·384.4
afler7 p.m .

Antiques

a1

4:30, 742·2746 .

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNE L, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CF A
Himalayan,

76
Auto. Parts
___ ~ !- ~ c es!O!ie s __ _

1976 Vega, 31.000 m i les in
excellent shape. Cal l after

•

AT T EN T I O N :
l iM ·
POR TA NT TO YOU) Will

Call (614) 99l-99l2
'::,-:_e~::~

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one leHer lo each square, to form
four ordinary words.

ACROSS
1 Error
6 Lantern
10 Snatch
14 Ricochet
19 Dress protectors
21 Winglike
22 Mystery
23 Each
24 Stood on
end
26 Forestall
28 Hiked
29- Moines
30 German district
3'2 Pintail
ducks
··
33 Edible

l•___

refr ige ra tor s.

must sell . Ca ll367· 168.7 .

53

71
·..:..._ _:Autos for Sal e

POOO\-"' G ROOMIN G.
Call Judy T., lor at 367·
7220.

F UR N . ,
app lia n c;es ,
clo thes, roto t iller , moving,

D i scount

Pets tor Sal e --:--

S6

r an ges .
Skagg s A p ·
pllances , 1918 East ern
Ave .. 446·7398.

LANDMMK
SERVICE STATION1

REN T ER'S assi stance for
Senior Citizens in Village

• ROOM COTTAGE · with

repair. S8,001J.OO .
PORTLAND - About 56

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Apartment
for Rent

Household Good•

d r yers,

On any Chevy or
GM truck
align ment
by
Randy
Carpenter, factory
tr;~ined
frontend
alignment
spe cialist.

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GOOD FAMILY LIVING - Th is love ly ra nch has 3
bedroom s, family r oom wi th woodburn er , large 2
c: ar aaraae, beauti f ul 18x36 pool w ith large pa t io,

CLOSE TO ENO -

S]OO

D-9-The Sunday Times-Sent inel , Sunday, June 8, 1980
51

GO O D
USE D
AP ·
PLIA N CES · wash ers .

This Coupon
worth

332• .

OFFICE 446-701~

MOBILE

FRONT END
AUGNMENT

One bed r oo m m ob i le h ome.
FUrnis hed , all u t i l it ies

availa ble. Small pond, a

REALTY

PRICE REDUCED -

1 ---~oiiJ.--.,

'

2642.

A&amp;H Upholstering. " Now
Re · Upholstering
Car
Seats" . Pn. 992·3752 or 992·
3743.

SPECIAL SALE
ON ALL '-IECES
SALE STARTS ·JUNE 8th AND
ENDS JUNE 20th
Have
your
living
room
furniture
reupholstel'_!!d now at the lowest prices
you'll probably ever see again.
REG. LABOR SALE
PRICES SALE PRICES
STANDARD SOFAS
$115.00
$15.00
STANDARD LOVE SEATS
95.00
70.0o
STANDARD CHAIRS
60.00
45.00
Larger Sofils Also at Huge Discounts.

10% DISCOUNT ON ALL FABRIC
FREE: Estimates, Pickup, Delivery
FREE : Arm Caps &amp; Head F=Iaps
CALL NQW &amp; SAVE$$$$

BROTHERS UPHOLSTERY
EUREKI

fT.
GAWPOLJS, OHIO
256-1562
If you 're long distance feel tree to c•ll collect.
Labor prices do n~t apply if
have your own
. fabric. All work completely •uaronteecl Pfnest
quality. at th~ lowell pollfble prlcn.

vou

commercial &amp; Rtaidentlill
We have also done several churchta In
the area.
\,

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Debate lingers on EPA vs energy needs
EDITOR'S NOTE- It'Sa classic . water for thousands of West
conflict: proteeUon of lbe enVirginians.
vironment against energy needs. In
" Ain't none cleaner anywhere
ceatral West Virginia, it's
than the headwaters of the Little
developing the coal resources
Kanawha, " says Chidester, a large
around the headwaters ol the Uttle
man with graying hair and sharply
Kanawha River that bas spawned
cht.seled features . '' I've reached
the debate.
down in:o the river and drunk of it
BySTRATDOUTHAT
many times.11
Associated Press Writer
However, Chidester feels the
ROCK CAVE, W.Va. (AP)- Er·
future is cloudy for the Little
sel Chidester Sr. has spent aU of his
Kanawha and the half-dozen or so
life in the central West Virginia area
other rivers that originate in the
known as " the birthplace of rivers, "
region . Instead of clear, pure mouna rugged, lightly populated land of
tain streams, he is concerned that
cool, clear, free-flowing mountain
the rivers may soon become muddy,
streams.
acidic sewers, unfit for man or fish .
The streams created by this imThe problem, as he sees it, is irll·
portant Appalachian watershed
pending coa l development.
provide some of the best trout
"We did a study on the watersheds
fishing in this part of the world. They
of the Middle Fork, Tygart and
also provide untainted drinking
Buckhannon rivers and found more

HAPPY DOGS - Two dogs leap for joy when you come near - five
others just smile at you. These are just a few of the homeless animals

looking for ••nice" owners.

'

Gas tax defenders
feel higher prices
could be possible

Hoofs and Paws
By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - I've so much to tell
· you about this week - but let me
. start with the most important reminders of things that must be
done by responsible pet owners as
summer approaches.
Check your pet's shot record, get it
rabies and distemper shots, and
while you're at it, be sure to have it
checked for heart worms. There
have been increased incidents of this
killing situation and if your dog has
heart worm, is adult, some types of
wonning medicine can kill pet, i.e.:
TASK. Also, this is the time of year
that grass allergies show up with
some dogs and cats - and if this is
the case with your animal (rash,
welts, running ni&gt;se, etc.) do take
your animals to a vet rig ht away.
Then there is the yearly pain·in·theneck seige of ticks and fleas. We
recommend everyone ·keep "dip
solution" on hand and pour it over or
actually dip your pet as often as the
medicine recommends on the bottle.
If you don't want to be bothered,
call the Humane Society 992-li260 and
for a small donation you can make
arrangements. to have your pet
protected by one of our volunteers.
Next, and most certainly not least,
is vacation time. Do not just leave
your pet behind, asswning that
someone will feed and care for it.
Make arrangements with a responsible adult to do this.
The law protects your animal and
if you know of someone who aban·
dons their pet - call the number
above - It could cost the pet owner a
"bundle" in court ... and we will take
the animal and place it with more
responsible owners.
Further, with the advent of hot
weather - dog houses and animals
must 1\e provided with shade - food
on a regular basis - and lots of fresh
water often. Those animals depend
on you, folks, please don't let them

down.
Lots of calls came to us last week
and most were "ratters" let me tell
you. A nice, upset gentleman called
who was taking care of his mother's
beloved Chinese Pug - on Condor
Street in·Pomeroy - while she was
in the hospital. He put it out one mornilig in the shade with some food and
water as was his normal habit. A
couple hours later in checking on the
dog he found it dead - a strange
bowl near it with an unknown substance in it. He is having the bowl
checked out by a vet - but it looks
like poisoning.
WHY DID SOMEONE DO TillS•
You know, there are too many
people walking the streets and living
in our neighborhoods who should see
a "shrink." Keep an ey~ on yo,ur pets
if you love them - that's all I can
recommend .
Two of our agents were returning
from a run on Tuesday and obaerved
a little boy throwing a tiny black kit·
ten into a ravine near Middleport.
Needless to say, theygavethatchild
a sennon he won't forget soon and
rescued the poor animal. I'd like to
see what kind of parents that poor
boy ill growing up under the " in·
fiuence of" ... wouldn't you?
County humanitarian and "Mr.
Nice Guy" Archie Lee of Syracuse
(Lee Construction Co.) bas done it
again! He came across an unusual
male dog he named Ringo, who is
medium. size, a ll white and has a
large brown circle patch where the

Well, it seemed that the do~ was
not faring so well where he was, so
Archie took it and bought it a collar,
fed it, and then brought it AND a
nice donation to the Hun1ane
Society. Instructions : "See if you
can find it a good home - if you have
to keep it beyond the time limits I
will pay for its board." Isn't that
some guy now? Thanks, Archie the animals· love you, we love you,
and God loves you .
Another situation I want to tell you
about - a couple "separates" and
leave their home and eight pets
behind ... telling a neighbor "If I'm
not back in one week, call the dog
warden." Nice people, huh? The
humane neighbor fed the animals
for quite some time before calling
the Humane Society at which time
the caller delivered· the animals several small puppies and the
remainder adult, but young dogs ...
all very nice.
They will be listed among the
others at the end of this column as
avai lable for adoption - that is, all
but three, we have already found
homes for them. You know, if folks
with even half a functional brain
would call when they find that they
a(e going to have to leave and can·
not take their animals, we could
assist - but no, they have absolutely
no regard for their dependent
animals.
Animals, like children must be
provided for, be it a "legal will" if
you are sick or aged, instructions to
a relative or friend and action should
be directed to take place within
hours or minutes of your departure
- be it permanent or temporary.
Everyone should have a will - if you
have, is your pet mentioned in it?
If you haven't, don't forget to do it
and stipulate what you want done
with your pet. I'm assuming you will
automatically think of those who
mean something to you- humansbut seriously, "don't forget your
animals !''
O.K., now to list those dogs mentioned above, plus others who need
good homes. If interested in seeing
them, please call 992-li260 any day
noon until 7 p.m. Two puppies, cuter
than the dickens, both male, about
eight weeks old with long ears and
short hair - one white with black,
the other brown with white. A nice
looking Foxhound type about a year
old, female, very gentle and loving.
A beautiful Miniature Collie, blonde
and white, a Terrier, small, sweet
male and of course Ringo - the
white dog with the brown patch at
the left eye- really unusual and, oh,
so gentle. Then we have what I
believe to be the prettiest little kit·
tens I've seen in a long tin1e- every
color and there has got to be just the
one for y.ou.

WIFE, CHIWREN BENEFIT
AKRON, Ohi.o (AP ) - Cyrus S.
Eaton, who once held a fortune
estimated at $2 billion, has left much
of the $4.3 million remaining at his
death last year to his wife, five
children and their descendants.
The estate, which was revealed in
a partial filing in Summit County
Probate Court, represents only a
small part of Eaton's wealth, much
of which had been transferred or
given away before his death on May
9, 1979, at age 95.

WASHINGTON (APJ A
congressional veto override will
keep President Carter's dime-a·
gallon gasoline fee from showing up
at the pump, but defenders of the fee
say even bigger price increases may
be the ultimate result.
The Senate killed the fee Friday
by voting 68-10 to override Carter's
veto of a bill to repeal it. TheHouse
had voted to override the veto Thur·
sday, by a similarly overwhelming
335-34 margin.
The two votes did in the fee, ren'
dering academic the ad·
ministration's appeal of a federal
judge's order invalidating it.
But Senate Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd claims that
Congress, in taking the politically
easy course and rejecting the J(}.
cent-surcharge, may be the cause of
even higher gas prices down the
road.
Noting the upcoming June 9
meeting of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries in
Algiers, Byrd said there are rumors
that price increases and production
cutbacks are in the offing.
He said Saudi Arabia may decicte
to cut back its production by up I&lt;• 1
million barrels a day , resulting in
"an immediate tightening in the
world oil market. "
" Although there are no shortages
or gas lines in the United Sf 'es now,
this could change overnlghl. The
price of a gallon of gasoline could
rapidly increase to well over U.50,
perhaps approaching $2," the Senate
leader said.
Byrd and other defenders of the
rejected fee said OPEC might take
such steps as a direct result of the
scuttling of Carter's ilpportfee.
"OPEC seems detennined to
teach us the lesson that we must
reduce oil imports," he said.
Coincidentally, the Energy Depar·
tment gave gasoline dealers and
wholesalers permission Friday to
raise prices by as much as 1.2 cents
per gallon effective June 15.
The increases could begin showing
up at the pump immediately after
that, but a spokesman for service
station owners predicted competition would keep about half of the
dealers from imposing the full in·
crease.
The Energy Department, responding to complaints from service
station owners last year, revised its
regulations to allow for automatic
adjustments for retail and wholesale
margins every six months based on
the rate of overall inflation.
Carter, whose previous 2I vetoes
ali were sustained, became the first
Democratic president to be overrid-

e:._ye_~s·-----------4:

_left.:...
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20%0FF SAL

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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This week on
Supplement to ·

·;injth.a}J' 1rimt5 .. itntitttl
and

Joint Jleasant 1\tgi,ttr
"Serving Qver 20,000 Homes"

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Listings for
June 8-14

*Local films
Page 2

*Filin clips
*Movie
Nostalgia
Page 7

Three traffic deaths
By The Associated Press
At least three persons died in Ohio
traffic accidents during the first few
hours of the weekend, accoding to
the Highway Patrol.
The patrol records traffic
fatalities from 6 p.m . Friday to mid·
night Sunday.
The dead :
SATURDAY
BATAVIA - Robert C. Pfeiffer, 18,
Qf Williamsburg, in a two-car accident on Ohio 125 in Clennont Coun·
ty.
FRIDAY NIGHT
HAMILTON - Neil L. Blanton, 26,
of Hamilton, in a one-car accident on
a Butler County road .
RAVENNA - Chsrles L. Wingard,
21, of Ravenna, when his motorcycle
crashed oh a Ravenna city street.

e'a 1 :••

Compare

our prices
to Kmart

and Sears

AIR CONDITIONING

SER\fiCE

'1750

S ta l*A
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Todav
111
By

.

Willi• Realtor
T. Leadingham

BURGlAR-PROOF EXTERIOR DOOR

iside are equally effective ; but, of course. they do not lock a door
automatically .
For maximum security, you ca n equ ip exterior doors with an
automatic dead-lock pluS a separate ni'ght lock. In the latter, the lock
and strike fit together like a rnort lse and tenon )oint, and there is no
way a burglar can pry them apart.
The most expensive night Jock can be opened only wlth a key from
both inside and out. Even if a burglar breaks a glass beside the door,
he cannot open or for:ce the lock . The lock is dangerous, howeve-r, if
you haVe a fire and c:ln 't find the key .
If there Is anything we can do to help you in the field of real es)ate
please phone ordrop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 5i2 Second
f!,ve .. Gallipolis. Phone 446· 7"'· We're here to help .

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FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
Most Domestic Cars. Factory Trained Technicians.

TRIP

CHECK
Check tire pressure, hoses &amp; belts for wear, check fluid
levels &lt;oil, trans., brake,, power steering, etc.), install
new gas filter, inspect brake pads &amp; linings, road test,
check li

FROtn DISC BRAKE
OVERHAUL
Install new brake pads, turn brake rotors, inspect
calipers, repack wheel bearings, bleed system &amp; refill,
inspect master cylinder, road test.

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*TV Puzzle
Page 9

*Kid Stuff
Page 11

Test for leaks, check and add Up to 1 lb. of Freon; Adjust.all belts, Performance Test System, check hoses.

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Locks with a dead·bolt that is operated by a thumb·turn from the

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COMFORT BLEND

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LaRosa Fuel Co., he says,
probably will be the prime developer .
in the area.
.
Miller, who wor~ for LaRosa, .
acknowledges that the company
does "have major reserves in the
area," but he declines to discuss the
·
company's plans for the land.
"At thls time, we're not ready to '
make any real revelations," says :
Miller, who spent eight years with '
the U.S. Soil Conservation Service
before joining LaRosa. "But, I will
say abolition, or prohibition, ct.
mining will never solve our energy
problems."
He also says the company's :
reclamation plan, which was ·
devised with the help of West
Virginia University scientists and
calls for the mixing of tbe acidic ear- :
th with neutralizing materials such :
as lime, bas been approved by the ·
Department of Natilral Resources. ·

Hanes

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Wiest, a leather craftsman who
came to central West Virginia from
the Charleston area several Y!!Brs ·
ago, headed a group that stopped ·
Holly Grove's first attempt to mine
the area.
"They wanted to strip 184 acres,
and we beat them on a technicality," -·
he says. " But, they've come back
with an even bigger applicatiotl this
time. Before it's over, all of this
region will be slriJ&gt;'mined. This is
the last, great undeveloped coalfield
in West Virginia, and I've heard tbat- .
the coal companies plan to be active
in here for something like 80 years."

ELBERFELD$

The most obvious entrance for a bvrgtar .nto most names 1S via the
front or rear exterior doors, A burglar·ca n open an ordfnary Snap lock
fa !r ly easily with a thin sheet of plastic or metal. On all hinged exterior
doors, you should use a dead-lock . In this, a separate pin on the flat
side of the latch tongue .stays stuck in th e strike even when a burglar
pushes back The latch tongue.

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Kanawha," a group that has been :
trying to stave off the advent of strip ·
mining in the area.
•

den since Harry S. Truman's veto of
an immigration bill was overridden
in !952. Republican .Presidents
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M.
Nixon and Gerald Ford had a total of
19 vetoes overridden.
Opponents called the fee a $10.3
billion tax designed to help Carter
balance the budget rather than a
"conservation" fee as the White
House contended.
"It discriminates against people
who must drive. In a word, it's un· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.
fair, " said Senate Minority Leader
Howard Baker, R·Tenn. " We do not
need this additonal tax burden.''
Along with Byrd and Hart, those
voting to sustain Carter's veto were :
Sens. Bill Bradley, D-N.J.; Lawton
Chiles, [)..Fla.; Daniel Inouye, [)..
Hawaii; Claiborne Pell, [)..R.I.;
UNDERWEAR
Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn. ; Adlai
Stevenson, D-Ill. ; Paul Tsongas, [)..
Mass., and Harrison Williams, [)..
N.J.
No Republicans voted to sustain
the veto.
It was one of the severest defeats
Carter's energy policy has suffered.
In passing the fee-repeal bill over
Save NO~ on solid comfort and
Carter's veto, Congress also ex·
long
wear! Men 's white crew-neck
tended the federal debt ceiling
T-shirts.
V-necks and briefs.
through the end of June, a necessary
piece of legislatiofl if the govern·
Hanes Comfort Blend has 75%
mentis to continue to meet its finan·
cotton - m ore than other
cial obligations.
famous brands. That gives you
Opponents of the fee had attached
more comfort, coolness, and
the measure to the debt-ceiling bill
to help assure its passage.
absorbency. 25% POlyester provides
Inunediately after the Senate vote
less shrinkage, better shape
Friday, the Treasury Department
retention and longer wear.
announced it would resume the sale
of U.S. Savings Bonds.
EXCEUENT FATHER'S DAY GIFT
The sale of bonds, which constitutes a fonn of federal borrowing,
had been suspended Thursday night
when the temporary debt ceiling ex·
pired and when Carter vetoed the
bill containing the extension.

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than two billion tons of recoverable_
coal," says Dave Callaghan, director of the West Virginia Department
of Natural Resoutces. "And, so far,
this area is relatively unexploited."
Based on Callaghan's estimate
a nd today's market prices, ·the coal
is worth roughly $80 billion. And
aimost all of this buried treasure
meets the Environmental Protection
A~ency 's strictest sulphur stan·
dards for steam coal, and much of it
can be sold as high-priced
metallurgical coal, according to
Charles J . Miller.
Miller is the president of Holly
Gro"e Coal Co. of Clarksburg, a
company that. wants to open a 254acre strip mine on the headwaters of
the Little Kanawha just a couple of
miles, as the crow flies, from
Chidester's house.
Miller says his company, a subsidiary of LaRoSa Fuel Co., bas
developed the technical expertise to
take the coal and prevent the acid in
the soil from seeping down the
mountain and into the river.
"We've spent a considerable
amount of effort on this project,"
says Miller, who holds a master's
degree in soil science from West
Virginia University. "Technically,
it's the most comprehensive and
complete reclamation plan ever submitted to the Department of Natural
Resources, and we feel we can mine
that coal with relatively little environmental impact."
Chidester and his neighbor, Jim
Wiest, disagree with Miller's
assessment.
" We don't believe that this area
can be ll)ined feasibly without
damaging the quality of the water,"
says Chidester. Like Wiest, he is a
trustee fl. "Friends of the Little

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It has been more than 40 years since Sir Laurence Olivier sent romantic chills. through the f,ii~ ~orld
as Heathcliff in 'Wutherin~ Heights. · but Barbara Willers finds that the magnet1sm has not d1m1n1shed
as she discusses the actors life "with him high above New York's Central Park on THE BARBARA WALTERS
SPECIAL, airing on ABC·TV, Tuesday. June 10.

�'

Debate lingers on EPA vs energy needs
EDITOR'S NOTE- It'Sa classic . water for thousands of West
conflict: proteeUon of lbe enVirginians.
vironment against energy needs. In
" Ain't none cleaner anywhere
ceatral West Virginia, it's
than the headwaters of the Little
developing the coal resources
Kanawha, " says Chidester, a large
around the headwaters ol the Uttle
man with graying hair and sharply
Kanawha River that bas spawned
cht.seled features . '' I've reached
the debate.
down in:o the river and drunk of it
BySTRATDOUTHAT
many times.11
Associated Press Writer
However, Chidester feels the
ROCK CAVE, W.Va. (AP)- Er·
future is cloudy for the Little
sel Chidester Sr. has spent aU of his
Kanawha and the half-dozen or so
life in the central West Virginia area
other rivers that originate in the
known as " the birthplace of rivers, "
region . Instead of clear, pure mouna rugged, lightly populated land of
tain streams, he is concerned that
cool, clear, free-flowing mountain
the rivers may soon become muddy,
streams.
acidic sewers, unfit for man or fish .
The streams created by this imThe problem, as he sees it, is irll·
portant Appalachian watershed
pending coa l development.
provide some of the best trout
"We did a study on the watersheds
fishing in this part of the world. They
of the Middle Fork, Tygart and
also provide untainted drinking
Buckhannon rivers and found more

HAPPY DOGS - Two dogs leap for joy when you come near - five
others just smile at you. These are just a few of the homeless animals

looking for ••nice" owners.

'

Gas tax defenders
feel higher prices
could be possible

Hoofs and Paws
By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - I've so much to tell
· you about this week - but let me
. start with the most important reminders of things that must be
done by responsible pet owners as
summer approaches.
Check your pet's shot record, get it
rabies and distemper shots, and
while you're at it, be sure to have it
checked for heart worms. There
have been increased incidents of this
killing situation and if your dog has
heart worm, is adult, some types of
wonning medicine can kill pet, i.e.:
TASK. Also, this is the time of year
that grass allergies show up with
some dogs and cats - and if this is
the case with your animal (rash,
welts, running ni&gt;se, etc.) do take
your animals to a vet rig ht away.
Then there is the yearly pain·in·theneck seige of ticks and fleas. We
recommend everyone ·keep "dip
solution" on hand and pour it over or
actually dip your pet as often as the
medicine recommends on the bottle.
If you don't want to be bothered,
call the Humane Society 992-li260 and
for a small donation you can make
arrangements. to have your pet
protected by one of our volunteers.
Next, and most certainly not least,
is vacation time. Do not just leave
your pet behind, asswning that
someone will feed and care for it.
Make arrangements with a responsible adult to do this.
The law protects your animal and
if you know of someone who aban·
dons their pet - call the number
above - It could cost the pet owner a
"bundle" in court ... and we will take
the animal and place it with more
responsible owners.
Further, with the advent of hot
weather - dog houses and animals
must 1\e provided with shade - food
on a regular basis - and lots of fresh
water often. Those animals depend
on you, folks, please don't let them

down.
Lots of calls came to us last week
and most were "ratters" let me tell
you. A nice, upset gentleman called
who was taking care of his mother's
beloved Chinese Pug - on Condor
Street in·Pomeroy - while she was
in the hospital. He put it out one mornilig in the shade with some food and
water as was his normal habit. A
couple hours later in checking on the
dog he found it dead - a strange
bowl near it with an unknown substance in it. He is having the bowl
checked out by a vet - but it looks
like poisoning.
WHY DID SOMEONE DO TillS•
You know, there are too many
people walking the streets and living
in our neighborhoods who should see
a "shrink." Keep an ey~ on yo,ur pets
if you love them - that's all I can
recommend .
Two of our agents were returning
from a run on Tuesday and obaerved
a little boy throwing a tiny black kit·
ten into a ravine near Middleport.
Needless to say, theygavethatchild
a sennon he won't forget soon and
rescued the poor animal. I'd like to
see what kind of parents that poor
boy ill growing up under the " in·
fiuence of" ... wouldn't you?
County humanitarian and "Mr.
Nice Guy" Archie Lee of Syracuse
(Lee Construction Co.) bas done it
again! He came across an unusual
male dog he named Ringo, who is
medium. size, a ll white and has a
large brown circle patch where the

Well, it seemed that the do~ was
not faring so well where he was, so
Archie took it and bought it a collar,
fed it, and then brought it AND a
nice donation to the Hun1ane
Society. Instructions : "See if you
can find it a good home - if you have
to keep it beyond the time limits I
will pay for its board." Isn't that
some guy now? Thanks, Archie the animals· love you, we love you,
and God loves you .
Another situation I want to tell you
about - a couple "separates" and
leave their home and eight pets
behind ... telling a neighbor "If I'm
not back in one week, call the dog
warden." Nice people, huh? The
humane neighbor fed the animals
for quite some time before calling
the Humane Society at which time
the caller delivered· the animals several small puppies and the
remainder adult, but young dogs ...
all very nice.
They will be listed among the
others at the end of this column as
avai lable for adoption - that is, all
but three, we have already found
homes for them. You know, if folks
with even half a functional brain
would call when they find that they
a(e going to have to leave and can·
not take their animals, we could
assist - but no, they have absolutely
no regard for their dependent
animals.
Animals, like children must be
provided for, be it a "legal will" if
you are sick or aged, instructions to
a relative or friend and action should
be directed to take place within
hours or minutes of your departure
- be it permanent or temporary.
Everyone should have a will - if you
have, is your pet mentioned in it?
If you haven't, don't forget to do it
and stipulate what you want done
with your pet. I'm assuming you will
automatically think of those who
mean something to you- humansbut seriously, "don't forget your
animals !''
O.K., now to list those dogs mentioned above, plus others who need
good homes. If interested in seeing
them, please call 992-li260 any day
noon until 7 p.m. Two puppies, cuter
than the dickens, both male, about
eight weeks old with long ears and
short hair - one white with black,
the other brown with white. A nice
looking Foxhound type about a year
old, female, very gentle and loving.
A beautiful Miniature Collie, blonde
and white, a Terrier, small, sweet
male and of course Ringo - the
white dog with the brown patch at
the left eye- really unusual and, oh,
so gentle. Then we have what I
believe to be the prettiest little kit·
tens I've seen in a long tin1e- every
color and there has got to be just the
one for y.ou.

WIFE, CHIWREN BENEFIT
AKRON, Ohi.o (AP ) - Cyrus S.
Eaton, who once held a fortune
estimated at $2 billion, has left much
of the $4.3 million remaining at his
death last year to his wife, five
children and their descendants.
The estate, which was revealed in
a partial filing in Summit County
Probate Court, represents only a
small part of Eaton's wealth, much
of which had been transferred or
given away before his death on May
9, 1979, at age 95.

WASHINGTON (APJ A
congressional veto override will
keep President Carter's dime-a·
gallon gasoline fee from showing up
at the pump, but defenders of the fee
say even bigger price increases may
be the ultimate result.
The Senate killed the fee Friday
by voting 68-10 to override Carter's
veto of a bill to repeal it. TheHouse
had voted to override the veto Thur·
sday, by a similarly overwhelming
335-34 margin.
The two votes did in the fee, ren'
dering academic the ad·
ministration's appeal of a federal
judge's order invalidating it.
But Senate Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd claims that
Congress, in taking the politically
easy course and rejecting the J(}.
cent-surcharge, may be the cause of
even higher gas prices down the
road.
Noting the upcoming June 9
meeting of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries in
Algiers, Byrd said there are rumors
that price increases and production
cutbacks are in the offing.
He said Saudi Arabia may decicte
to cut back its production by up I&lt;• 1
million barrels a day , resulting in
"an immediate tightening in the
world oil market. "
" Although there are no shortages
or gas lines in the United Sf 'es now,
this could change overnlghl. The
price of a gallon of gasoline could
rapidly increase to well over U.50,
perhaps approaching $2," the Senate
leader said.
Byrd and other defenders of the
rejected fee said OPEC might take
such steps as a direct result of the
scuttling of Carter's ilpportfee.
"OPEC seems detennined to
teach us the lesson that we must
reduce oil imports," he said.
Coincidentally, the Energy Depar·
tment gave gasoline dealers and
wholesalers permission Friday to
raise prices by as much as 1.2 cents
per gallon effective June 15.
The increases could begin showing
up at the pump immediately after
that, but a spokesman for service
station owners predicted competition would keep about half of the
dealers from imposing the full in·
crease.
The Energy Department, responding to complaints from service
station owners last year, revised its
regulations to allow for automatic
adjustments for retail and wholesale
margins every six months based on
the rate of overall inflation.
Carter, whose previous 2I vetoes
ali were sustained, became the first
Democratic president to be overrid-

e:._ye_~s·-----------4:

_left.:...
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20%0FF SAL

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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This week on
Supplement to ·

·;injth.a}J' 1rimt5 .. itntitttl
and

Joint Jleasant 1\tgi,ttr
"Serving Qver 20,000 Homes"

•

Listings for
June 8-14

*Local films
Page 2

*Filin clips
*Movie
Nostalgia
Page 7

Three traffic deaths
By The Associated Press
At least three persons died in Ohio
traffic accidents during the first few
hours of the weekend, accoding to
the Highway Patrol.
The patrol records traffic
fatalities from 6 p.m . Friday to mid·
night Sunday.
The dead :
SATURDAY
BATAVIA - Robert C. Pfeiffer, 18,
Qf Williamsburg, in a two-car accident on Ohio 125 in Clennont Coun·
ty.
FRIDAY NIGHT
HAMILTON - Neil L. Blanton, 26,
of Hamilton, in a one-car accident on
a Butler County road .
RAVENNA - Chsrles L. Wingard,
21, of Ravenna, when his motorcycle
crashed oh a Ravenna city street.

e'a 1 :••

Compare

our prices
to Kmart

and Sears

AIR CONDITIONING

SER\fiCE

'1750

S ta l*A
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Todav
111
By

.

Willi• Realtor
T. Leadingham

BURGlAR-PROOF EXTERIOR DOOR

iside are equally effective ; but, of course. they do not lock a door
automatically .
For maximum security, you ca n equ ip exterior doors with an
automatic dead-lock pluS a separate ni'ght lock. In the latter, the lock
and strike fit together like a rnort lse and tenon )oint, and there is no
way a burglar can pry them apart.
The most expensive night Jock can be opened only wlth a key from
both inside and out. Even if a burglar breaks a glass beside the door,
he cannot open or for:ce the lock . The lock is dangerous, howeve-r, if
you haVe a fire and c:ln 't find the key .
If there Is anything we can do to help you in the field of real es)ate
please phone ordrop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 5i2 Second
f!,ve .. Gallipolis. Phone 446· 7"'· We're here to help .

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FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
Most Domestic Cars. Factory Trained Technicians.

TRIP

CHECK
Check tire pressure, hoses &amp; belts for wear, check fluid
levels &lt;oil, trans., brake,, power steering, etc.), install
new gas filter, inspect brake pads &amp; linings, road test,
check li

FROtn DISC BRAKE
OVERHAUL
Install new brake pads, turn brake rotors, inspect
calipers, repack wheel bearings, bleed system &amp; refill,
inspect master cylinder, road test.

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*TV Puzzle
Page 9

*Kid Stuff
Page 11

Test for leaks, check and add Up to 1 lb. of Freon; Adjust.all belts, Performance Test System, check hoses.

~

Locks with a dead·bolt that is operated by a thumb·turn from the

e

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COMFORT BLEND

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LaRosa Fuel Co., he says,
probably will be the prime developer .
in the area.
.
Miller, who wor~ for LaRosa, .
acknowledges that the company
does "have major reserves in the
area," but he declines to discuss the
·
company's plans for the land.
"At thls time, we're not ready to '
make any real revelations," says :
Miller, who spent eight years with '
the U.S. Soil Conservation Service
before joining LaRosa. "But, I will
say abolition, or prohibition, ct.
mining will never solve our energy
problems."
He also says the company's :
reclamation plan, which was ·
devised with the help of West
Virginia University scientists and
calls for the mixing of tbe acidic ear- :
th with neutralizing materials such :
as lime, bas been approved by the ·
Department of Natilral Resources. ·

Hanes

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Wiest, a leather craftsman who
came to central West Virginia from
the Charleston area several Y!!Brs ·
ago, headed a group that stopped ·
Holly Grove's first attempt to mine
the area.
"They wanted to strip 184 acres,
and we beat them on a technicality," -·
he says. " But, they've come back
with an even bigger applicatiotl this
time. Before it's over, all of this
region will be slriJ&gt;'mined. This is
the last, great undeveloped coalfield
in West Virginia, and I've heard tbat- .
the coal companies plan to be active
in here for something like 80 years."

ELBERFELD$

The most obvious entrance for a bvrgtar .nto most names 1S via the
front or rear exterior doors, A burglar·ca n open an ordfnary Snap lock
fa !r ly easily with a thin sheet of plastic or metal. On all hinged exterior
doors, you should use a dead-lock . In this, a separate pin on the flat
side of the latch tongue .stays stuck in th e strike even when a burglar
pushes back The latch tongue.

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Kanawha," a group that has been :
trying to stave off the advent of strip ·
mining in the area.
•

den since Harry S. Truman's veto of
an immigration bill was overridden
in !952. Republican .Presidents
Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M.
Nixon and Gerald Ford had a total of
19 vetoes overridden.
Opponents called the fee a $10.3
billion tax designed to help Carter
balance the budget rather than a
"conservation" fee as the White
House contended.
"It discriminates against people
who must drive. In a word, it's un· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.
fair, " said Senate Minority Leader
Howard Baker, R·Tenn. " We do not
need this additonal tax burden.''
Along with Byrd and Hart, those
voting to sustain Carter's veto were :
Sens. Bill Bradley, D-N.J.; Lawton
Chiles, [)..Fla.; Daniel Inouye, [)..
Hawaii; Claiborne Pell, [)..R.I.;
UNDERWEAR
Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn. ; Adlai
Stevenson, D-Ill. ; Paul Tsongas, [)..
Mass., and Harrison Williams, [)..
N.J.
No Republicans voted to sustain
the veto.
It was one of the severest defeats
Carter's energy policy has suffered.
In passing the fee-repeal bill over
Save NO~ on solid comfort and
Carter's veto, Congress also ex·
long
wear! Men 's white crew-neck
tended the federal debt ceiling
T-shirts.
V-necks and briefs.
through the end of June, a necessary
piece of legislatiofl if the govern·
Hanes Comfort Blend has 75%
mentis to continue to meet its finan·
cotton - m ore than other
cial obligations.
famous brands. That gives you
Opponents of the fee had attached
more comfort, coolness, and
the measure to the debt-ceiling bill
to help assure its passage.
absorbency. 25% POlyester provides
Inunediately after the Senate vote
less shrinkage, better shape
Friday, the Treasury Department
retention and longer wear.
announced it would resume the sale
of U.S. Savings Bonds.
EXCEUENT FATHER'S DAY GIFT
The sale of bonds, which constitutes a fonn of federal borrowing,
had been suspended Thursday night
when the temporary debt ceiling ex·
pired and when Carter vetoed the
bill containing the extension.

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than two billion tons of recoverable_
coal," says Dave Callaghan, director of the West Virginia Department
of Natural Resoutces. "And, so far,
this area is relatively unexploited."
Based on Callaghan's estimate
a nd today's market prices, ·the coal
is worth roughly $80 billion. And
aimost all of this buried treasure
meets the Environmental Protection
A~ency 's strictest sulphur stan·
dards for steam coal, and much of it
can be sold as high-priced
metallurgical coal, according to
Charles J . Miller.
Miller is the president of Holly
Gro"e Coal Co. of Clarksburg, a
company that. wants to open a 254acre strip mine on the headwaters of
the Little Kanawha just a couple of
miles, as the crow flies, from
Chidester's house.
Miller says his company, a subsidiary of LaRoSa Fuel Co., bas
developed the technical expertise to
take the coal and prevent the acid in
the soil from seeping down the
mountain and into the river.
"We've spent a considerable
amount of effort on this project,"
says Miller, who holds a master's
degree in soil science from West
Virginia University. "Technically,
it's the most comprehensive and
complete reclamation plan ever submitted to the Department of Natural
Resources, and we feel we can mine
that coal with relatively little environmental impact."
Chidester and his neighbor, Jim
Wiest, disagree with Miller's
assessment.
" We don't believe that this area
can be ll)ined feasibly without
damaging the quality of the water,"
says Chidester. Like Wiest, he is a
trustee fl. "Friends of the Little

.,

It has been more than 40 years since Sir Laurence Olivier sent romantic chills. through the f,ii~ ~orld
as Heathcliff in 'Wutherin~ Heights. · but Barbara Willers finds that the magnet1sm has not d1m1n1shed
as she discusses the actors life "with him high above New York's Central Park on THE BARBARA WALTERS
SPECIAL, airing on ABC·TV, Tuesday. June 10.

�Page Two-TV Supplement.

All the world
likes an outlaw

Page·Three-TV Supplement

...

and other chemlcala mey cauae

cancer, mlacarriagea and birth

«sunday))
SUNDAY
JUNE 8, 11180

1:00
MORNING

BY LARRY EWING
Local film fare this week offers an
adolescent "Animal House," a
cinematic version of an out-of-theparlor pastime, and something
moviegoers haven'tseen for awhilea western.
"Allthe world likes an outlaw. For
some damn reason they remember
'em." Jesse James once wrote. THE
LONG RIDERS (R) is one of the
most memorable of the dozens of
films made about Jesse James and
the Cole Younger band of outlaws.
Four sets of real-life brothers portray four sets of notorious brothers
of the past in this action-drama account of this nation's most legendary
outlaw band set in one of the most
colorful and volatile periods of
American history-David, Keith and
Robert Carradine star as the
Younger brothers; James and Stacy
Keach as Jesse and Frank James;
Randy aud Dennis Quaid as the
Miller brothers; and, Nicholas and
Christopher Guest as Bob and
Charlie Ford.
The legend of Jesse James and his
outlaw band has been given to four
film generations as stark
melodrama. "The Long Riders" is
not a glorification of Jesse James,
who became a national hero by
killing people and robbing banks,
stagecoaches and trains.
Instead, it is a vivid portrait of
these men who became folk heroes,
and looks at their ~nvironment, their
relationships and their values.
Public admiration ran high for the
outlaws who concentrated their activities againSt' tight-fisted banks
and the land-grabbing railroads. A
raid on the town of Northfield, Min-

nesota, h~wever, becomes the
fateful turning point in the gang's
career. For the first time they meet
with heavy resistance from the
townspeople, to whom they are not
Robin Hoods but desperadoes to be
captured or killed.
And killed they are-not since the
late 1960's and early '70's films of
Sam Peckinpah and Sergio Leone
has violence been recorded so
starkly or poetically.
SCAVENGER HUNT (PG) unfolds as a fast-paced comedy tale of ,
fifteen heirs to an eccentric's $200
million estate pitted against one
another in a hectic winner-take-aU
chase for bizarre items.
Director Michael Schultz ("Cooley
High," "Car Wash," "Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band") heralds
the film as "a little Chaplin, a.little
Laurel and Hardy and a lot of Mack
Sennett, all played in a contemporary framework."
The film sends its heir-to-be contestants racing madly against time
to gather the items stipulated by
their host. Each Item has an individual point value. The team with
the most points at rendezvous time
wins. One key r!!Quisite: items cannot be purchased.
'Scavenger Hunt' has a huge cast
of more than twenty principals, including such pro-performers as
Richard Benjamin, Cloris Leachman, Tony Randall, Robert Morley,
Roddy McDowall, James Coco and
Ruth Gordon.
UP THE ACADEMY (R); from
the publishers of Mad Magazine, offers just what one would expectcomic book madness set in · a
military academy for juvenile outcasts.

5:30 Cil CATHOLIC MAS$·
8:00 Cil CHRISTOPHER CLOSE-UP
. CIJ BETWEEN THE LINES
®) AMERICAN PROBLEMS AND
C!'IALLENGES
6:30 CIJ8 CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
KOINONIA
()) A BETTER WAY
TREE HOUSE CLUB
7:00
8 THIS IS THE LIFE
FORD PHILPOT
BANANA SPLITS
()) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
®)~BAN LEAGUE
(j2J
ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:30 Cil
T.V. CHAPEL
Cil DAWSON MEMORIAL BAP·
TIST CHURCH SERVICE
CIJIT IS WRITTEN
(j) EDDIE SAUNDERS
CD JIMMY SWAGGART
®liD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(j2J
BIBLE ANSWERS
MORMON CHOIR
B:OO Cil
Cil THE LESSON
CIJ THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
G_RACECATHEDRAL
(J) DAY OF DISCOVERY
(llJ S!lSAME STREET
. •
EVANGELISTIC
OUTREACH ,
8:30 Cil8 ORAL ROBERTS
Cil CHAPEL HOUR
())CONTACT
CD oPEN BIBLE
.())REV. LEONARD REPASS
®) iMES ROBISON
(j2J
LOWER LIGHTHOUSE
SINGING JUBLIEE
11:00 Cil
Cil ROBERT SCHULLER
CIJ PARTRIDGE FAMILY
REX HUMBARD
ABETTER WAY
; ()) NEW LIFE TEAM
STUDIOSEE
.
®) ORAL ROBERTS
(llJ MISTER ROGERS
(j2J. REV. A.A. WEST
11:30 CIJ GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
CD FAITH FOR TODAY
DCI) ROBERT SCHULLER
(J) BIG BLUE MARBLE
®liT IS WRmEN .
(llJ !!ESAME STREET
10:00 (I). REX HUMBARD
CHANGED LIVES
LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
GOSPEL SINGING JUB.ILEE
SESAME STREET
MOVIE -(SCIENCE FICTION)

I

Tony Awards
"The 34th Annual Tony Awards ' special. besides
presenting Antoinette Perry (Tony) Awards in
nineteen competitive categories, will provide an
entertainment program with production numbers
from current Broadway musicals, among them (top
to bottom) 'Sugar Babies,' 'Oklahoma!' and ' Peter
Pan.' The special will be broadcast. live, from the
Mark Hellinger Theater in New York City. Sunday,
June 8 on CBS-TV .

I

••• "Fan...tic Voyage" 1866

!Blm JIMMY SWAGGART

IWIOAitol MATINEES ON SAT &amp; StJN
ALL SEATS JfJST S 1.50

Station Listings
Cable

Channel
3

(2) WSAZ-TV (NBC)
(3) CBN

D

3

(4) HBO-TV(ABC)
(5) WI'BS
(6) WTVN-TV (ABC)

I

6
17
6
15
8

(7) WI'AP-TV (NBC)
(8) WCHS-TV (CBS)
(9) WMtJL.TV (PBS)
(10) WBNS-TV (CBS)
(11) WOUB-TV (PBS)

AFTERNOON
12:00

33
10

m

WOWK-TV (ABC)

(12)

13

The above listing provides channel numbers for cable subscribers.
Schedules of programs are provided by the televla.lon stations,
which reserve the right to make last-minute changes. 'l1le Sllllday
Timet Seutillells not responsible for schedule changes.
Scbedules copyright 1980 T.V. Data Inc.

lo

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10:30 Cil SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
CI)MOVIE-(COMEDY-ROMANCE)
••• "It Started In Neplea" 11180
.CIJ ERNEST ANGLEY
(llJ ~OOM
11 :00 (I). HUMAN DIMENSIONS
CiliNTOUCH
CD REX HUMBARD
(I) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'The
Old Curiosity Shop' Little Nell end
Grandt ather encounter two greedy
owners of a Punch and Judy puppet
show.
(llJ ELECTRIC COMPANY
(!2Je REV. HENRY MAHAN
11:30 (I)
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
' 1.
' .(1) (j2J. ANIMAUt,~MALS,
MALS
1:1 •
C1J FACE THE:No\TfON
WORLD OF n,lE SEA
BIG BLUE MA!IBLE

•

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VPTBE

MAGA.IKII:

ACADEMY

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lXI

AT ISSUE
TIME OF DELIVERANCE
(j2J 8J
ISSUES AND
ANSWERS
CD THIS IS THE LIFE
0(1) VIEWPOINT
(I) THE OLD WEST
®)THE ISSUE
(llJ QH!Q JOURNAL
12:30 (I). CIJ MEET THE PRESS
Cil ORAL ROBERTS
CIJMOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• "The
Humen Jungle" 11154
DIRECTIONS
()) WILD KINGDOM
FACE THE NATION
NOVA 'A Plague on Our Children'Toxlcherblcldes,pestlcidea.

I

1:30
2:00

2:30

3:00

3:30
4:00

4:30

defect a, and tho evidence is juat
beginning to come out. This pro·
gram examinee the harmful effecta
deadly chemical a may have on this
and lollowlng generationa. (2 hra.)
(j2JI KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
(I) MOVIE-(DRAMA)••• "Conflict" 11143
.
Cil D, JAMES KENNEDY
()) AMERIC~'SATHLETES 1g80
Series devoted to examining and
revealing the best athletes who
weretorepresenttheUnitedStates
at the Olympics to be held in
Moscow.
CIJ PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
0 ()) ALABAMA 500
CIJMOVIE ·(DRAMA-MYSTERY)
••\1 "Edge of Doom" 11150
®) VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF
THE SEA
HI-Q
(I) WORLD OF PENTECOST
()) (j2J •
NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sports will
provide coverage of the game
between the Tampa Bay Rowdies
and the Fort Leuderdale Strikers.
~hrs. , 30 mine.)
CZl INSIGHT
(1)®) FRENCH OPEN
ANTIQUES
LPGACHAMPIONSHIP
THED£AFHEAR
·
CIJ SOCCER Atlanta Chiels vs New
YorkCoamos
(llJ HERE'S TO YOUR HEI&lt;LTH
Cil AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(]) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Killer Elite" 11175
(I) GREAT' PERFORMANCES:
LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER
"The Film Society of Lincoln Center
Presents · A TributetoJohnHuston·
Lauren Bacall and Richard Burton
are among celebrities who pay
tribute to the actor, screenwriter,
director. (90 mins.)
(llJ SPOLETO '80
@MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
Cil HE LIVES
8 ()) ®) ATLANTA GOLF
CLASSIC
(fi) UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'Out ol Everywhere' The arrival of
the Bellamy's old family nanny,
together with Sarah ' s appointment
as nursery maid, causes stormy
scenes in the servants' hall. (60
minaj_
(I) U CD SPORTSWORLD 1)
Professional Bowlers Association
doubles championship from Las
Vegas. 2) Engliah Derby lrom Eng·
land. (90 mlns.)
Cil THINK ABOUT TOMORROW
(I) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• \1 "Go,
Mlin Go" 11154
&amp;J WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS
(I) LAWMAKERS
Cil WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
(])
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS
'CaesarsPalacelnvitatlonai"Partll
Witnesa the results ol years of
dedicationandtrainingwhenAmerica'spremierwomengymnaatadiaplay their tumbling , vaulting and
balance beam skilla in this elite
mnaatlca competition.
AFRICANS
ELECTRIC COMPANY
;
OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(llJ GROUCHO

IDle

1

em

()) itii

.
5;00

5:30

than bid by neighbors. (60 mins.)
())®) 80 MINUTES
WAR AND PEACE
FRENCH CHEF
7:30
WALL STREET WEEK
"Requiem for Auto Stock a" Host :
~uia Rukeyaer.
8:00 (1) U CD CHIPa Ponch and Jon,
hoping to spend three vacation
days competing In ari off-roadrace,
find their holiday interrupted when
two criminals use the event as an
excusetoretrievegoldcoinafroma
wrecked airplane in the desert .
epeat: 60 mlns.)
REX HUM BARD
MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) ••••
"Greaae" 1978
Cl)(l2JID SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
DOUBLE FEATURE ' Turnover
Smith' t960Stars : WilliamConrad,
James Darren.
Ill ()) ®) ARCHIE BUNKER'S
PLACE Archie, Murray and the
gang think they've found a cure tor
Mr. Van Ranaeleer's blindness and
spearheadadrivetoraiaemoneyto
linance the operation. (Repeat)
ODYS.SEY 'Cree Hunters of
Mlstassinl' In much the same way
that their forefathers did. the Cree
lndiansoiCanadatreknorthwardto
hunt and trap game each winter .
This program examines how the
familiesjointogethertopreparetor
the cold months ahead . (60 mins.)
8:30 0 ()) ®) ONE DAY AT A TIME
Long -standing resentments are un covered between Ann and her
mother alter Julie ' s boss, a
psychiatrist , comes to dinner with
some interesting advice on
communicating . (Repeat)
9:00 (I)IJ CD THE BIG EVENT 'The
Mackintosh Man' 1973 Stars: Paul
Newman, James Mason .
ffi 700CLUB
lli())®ALICEMel'stopcompeti·
tor, Barney, asks Flo out and Mel
thinks it's because he wants to trap
her into revealing his secret chili
rae~ . (Repeat)
(I) {11) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Disraeli" Episode II. 'Mary Anne '
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raeli proposes to the wealthy
· widow of hislriend and political ally
~ndham Lewis. (60 mins.)
9:30 W PORTER WAGONER SHOW
ffiiiiliD SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
DOUBLE FEATURE 'Nightside '
1960 Stars: Doug McClure , Melin·
do Naud.
lli())®JTHE341hANNUAL TONY
AWARDS Mary Tyler Moore and
Jason Robards will serve as cohosts of the presentation of the
American Theatre Wing's Antoin·
etta Awards, the most prestigious
given In the Broadway theatre . The

I

ffi

Cll&lt;ID

special will feature performances
byatarsinproductlonnumbersfrom
current Broadway musicals. (90
mine.)
10:00 Cil KENNETH COPELAN.D
@ -MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Killer Elite" 11175
CIJ UP CLOSE Guest: C.I.A. Dirac·
tor, William Colby.
(I) FIRING LINE 'Who Should
Reagan Pick tor Vice President? '
Guests: J. Daniel Mahoney, cha ir·
man of the Conservative Party of
New York ;Paul Weyrich , executive
director of the Committee tor the
Survival of a Free Congress; Pa ·
trick Buchanan, syndicated colum ·
nist. Hoot: William F. Buckley , Jr.
® BEN WATTENBERG'S 1980
•An Interview with Barbara
Jordan'
10:30 Cil RUFF HOUSE
® MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) ••• \1
"The LID Vantshea" 1938
11:oo m u w CD a mrmiiil m
NEWS
Cil NEWSIGHT
(I) OPEN UP
(I) NON-FICTION TELEVISION
'Service Entrance ' and ' Man of
Wheat' This program features two
half hour films about individuals in
our society. Thefirstfollowsanaim·
less teenager who enlists in the
Army Reserve in an attempt to add
directiontohislife. The second por·
trays the saga of a wheat farmer
who goes from rags to riches in his
lifetime: (60 mins.)
11 : 15 C1J PMA PULSE
@)CBS NEWS
11:30 ffi
1J
MOVIE
·(ADVENTURE-WESTERN) •••
"Oklahoma Kid" 1939
ffi THE KING IS COMING
([)IBJID ABC NEWS
C1J NBC LATE NIGHT MOVIE
Ill()) MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) •• I&gt;
"Not Guilty" 1974
®) MOVIE ·(SCIENCE FICTION·
COMEDY) •• "Beauty and the
Robot" 1960
11:45 Cl) BENNY HILL SHOW
@ 0) · PTL CLUB·TALK AND
VARIETY
12:00 ClJMOVIE·(DRAMA)•• 'IJ "Rollerball" 1975
([) BEN WATTENBERG ' S 1960
'An Interview
with Barbara
Jordan'
12: 15 Cl) THREE ' S A CROWD
1:00 (1)
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY
1:30 C1J NEWS
1:45 @0) NEWS
3:30 @ MOVIE · (MYSTERY) •• I&gt;"
"Gideon of Scotland Yard
1959
5:30 ffi LOVE AMERICAN STYLE

THE HElL HEAT PUMP

EVENING
6:oo

CI5aeCIJ®J®m NEws

(])MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• \1 "Walk
Proud"
CIJ
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
ABC NEWS
POP GOES THE COUNTRY
BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
!IE~ME STREE.T
6:30
• CIJ NBC NEWS
FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
NEWS
()1) CBS NEWS
ABC NEWS
7:00
CDDISNEY'SWONDERFUL
WORLD "The Young Runaways'
While fleeing lrom their unloving
foster parenta, a young girl and her
brother and aister have a highly
unusual conlronlation with the
pollee. (Conoluolon: 60 mins.)
osed·Captloned)
JIMMY SWAGGART
BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
Loa Anll!,lea Dodger•
(I) (j2J. THE YEAGER$ Co roll
Yeager, the patriarch of a family
logging operation. dlscovera what
hatred can do alter he sella land to
a Mennonite family lor lau money

1

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�Page Two-TV Supplement.

All the world
likes an outlaw

Page·Three-TV Supplement

...

and other chemlcala mey cauae

cancer, mlacarriagea and birth

«sunday))
SUNDAY
JUNE 8, 11180

1:00
MORNING

BY LARRY EWING
Local film fare this week offers an
adolescent "Animal House," a
cinematic version of an out-of-theparlor pastime, and something
moviegoers haven'tseen for awhilea western.
"Allthe world likes an outlaw. For
some damn reason they remember
'em." Jesse James once wrote. THE
LONG RIDERS (R) is one of the
most memorable of the dozens of
films made about Jesse James and
the Cole Younger band of outlaws.
Four sets of real-life brothers portray four sets of notorious brothers
of the past in this action-drama account of this nation's most legendary
outlaw band set in one of the most
colorful and volatile periods of
American history-David, Keith and
Robert Carradine star as the
Younger brothers; James and Stacy
Keach as Jesse and Frank James;
Randy aud Dennis Quaid as the
Miller brothers; and, Nicholas and
Christopher Guest as Bob and
Charlie Ford.
The legend of Jesse James and his
outlaw band has been given to four
film generations as stark
melodrama. "The Long Riders" is
not a glorification of Jesse James,
who became a national hero by
killing people and robbing banks,
stagecoaches and trains.
Instead, it is a vivid portrait of
these men who became folk heroes,
and looks at their ~nvironment, their
relationships and their values.
Public admiration ran high for the
outlaws who concentrated their activities againSt' tight-fisted banks
and the land-grabbing railroads. A
raid on the town of Northfield, Min-

nesota, h~wever, becomes the
fateful turning point in the gang's
career. For the first time they meet
with heavy resistance from the
townspeople, to whom they are not
Robin Hoods but desperadoes to be
captured or killed.
And killed they are-not since the
late 1960's and early '70's films of
Sam Peckinpah and Sergio Leone
has violence been recorded so
starkly or poetically.
SCAVENGER HUNT (PG) unfolds as a fast-paced comedy tale of ,
fifteen heirs to an eccentric's $200
million estate pitted against one
another in a hectic winner-take-aU
chase for bizarre items.
Director Michael Schultz ("Cooley
High," "Car Wash," "Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band") heralds
the film as "a little Chaplin, a.little
Laurel and Hardy and a lot of Mack
Sennett, all played in a contemporary framework."
The film sends its heir-to-be contestants racing madly against time
to gather the items stipulated by
their host. Each Item has an individual point value. The team with
the most points at rendezvous time
wins. One key r!!Quisite: items cannot be purchased.
'Scavenger Hunt' has a huge cast
of more than twenty principals, including such pro-performers as
Richard Benjamin, Cloris Leachman, Tony Randall, Robert Morley,
Roddy McDowall, James Coco and
Ruth Gordon.
UP THE ACADEMY (R); from
the publishers of Mad Magazine, offers just what one would expectcomic book madness set in · a
military academy for juvenile outcasts.

5:30 Cil CATHOLIC MAS$·
8:00 Cil CHRISTOPHER CLOSE-UP
. CIJ BETWEEN THE LINES
®) AMERICAN PROBLEMS AND
C!'IALLENGES
6:30 CIJ8 CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
KOINONIA
()) A BETTER WAY
TREE HOUSE CLUB
7:00
8 THIS IS THE LIFE
FORD PHILPOT
BANANA SPLITS
()) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
®)~BAN LEAGUE
(j2J
ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:30 Cil
T.V. CHAPEL
Cil DAWSON MEMORIAL BAP·
TIST CHURCH SERVICE
CIJIT IS WRITTEN
(j) EDDIE SAUNDERS
CD JIMMY SWAGGART
®liD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(j2J
BIBLE ANSWERS
MORMON CHOIR
B:OO Cil
Cil THE LESSON
CIJ THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
G_RACECATHEDRAL
(J) DAY OF DISCOVERY
(llJ S!lSAME STREET
. •
EVANGELISTIC
OUTREACH ,
8:30 Cil8 ORAL ROBERTS
Cil CHAPEL HOUR
())CONTACT
CD oPEN BIBLE
.())REV. LEONARD REPASS
®) iMES ROBISON
(j2J
LOWER LIGHTHOUSE
SINGING JUBLIEE
11:00 Cil
Cil ROBERT SCHULLER
CIJ PARTRIDGE FAMILY
REX HUMBARD
ABETTER WAY
; ()) NEW LIFE TEAM
STUDIOSEE
.
®) ORAL ROBERTS
(llJ MISTER ROGERS
(j2J. REV. A.A. WEST
11:30 CIJ GILLIGAN'S ISLAND
CD FAITH FOR TODAY
DCI) ROBERT SCHULLER
(J) BIG BLUE MARBLE
®liT IS WRmEN .
(llJ !!ESAME STREET
10:00 (I). REX HUMBARD
CHANGED LIVES
LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
GOSPEL SINGING JUB.ILEE
SESAME STREET
MOVIE -(SCIENCE FICTION)

I

Tony Awards
"The 34th Annual Tony Awards ' special. besides
presenting Antoinette Perry (Tony) Awards in
nineteen competitive categories, will provide an
entertainment program with production numbers
from current Broadway musicals, among them (top
to bottom) 'Sugar Babies,' 'Oklahoma!' and ' Peter
Pan.' The special will be broadcast. live, from the
Mark Hellinger Theater in New York City. Sunday,
June 8 on CBS-TV .

I

••• "Fan...tic Voyage" 1866

!Blm JIMMY SWAGGART

IWIOAitol MATINEES ON SAT &amp; StJN
ALL SEATS JfJST S 1.50

Station Listings
Cable

Channel
3

(2) WSAZ-TV (NBC)
(3) CBN

D

3

(4) HBO-TV(ABC)
(5) WI'BS
(6) WTVN-TV (ABC)

I

6
17
6
15
8

(7) WI'AP-TV (NBC)
(8) WCHS-TV (CBS)
(9) WMtJL.TV (PBS)
(10) WBNS-TV (CBS)
(11) WOUB-TV (PBS)

AFTERNOON
12:00

33
10

m

WOWK-TV (ABC)

(12)

13

The above listing provides channel numbers for cable subscribers.
Schedules of programs are provided by the televla.lon stations,
which reserve the right to make last-minute changes. 'l1le Sllllday
Timet Seutillells not responsible for schedule changes.
Scbedules copyright 1980 T.V. Data Inc.

lo

•

o ;, "

I

·,

•

'

'

1 ,

'

10:30 Cil SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
CI)MOVIE-(COMEDY-ROMANCE)
••• "It Started In Neplea" 11180
.CIJ ERNEST ANGLEY
(llJ ~OOM
11 :00 (I). HUMAN DIMENSIONS
CiliNTOUCH
CD REX HUMBARD
(I) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC 'The
Old Curiosity Shop' Little Nell end
Grandt ather encounter two greedy
owners of a Punch and Judy puppet
show.
(llJ ELECTRIC COMPANY
(!2Je REV. HENRY MAHAN
11:30 (I)
TONY'S BROWN'S
JOURNAL
' 1.
' .(1) (j2J. ANIMAUt,~MALS,
MALS
1:1 •
C1J FACE THE:No\TfON
WORLD OF n,lE SEA
BIG BLUE MA!IBLE

•

''."T·, \.'. •... \\\ •• , ...~-.-~.-·:··: ·. •••, •• •• •, •.·•••• ~..

1

........
VPTBE

MAGA.IKII:

ACADEMY

•

• •. ·• ·• • •. .. ., ., ·.:.·. -. .. ·.:·."·. •... •• ·. ·.--••• t•

-,. l. '

I

•

·" '·

'· ' ._

' ~ 'I

, ., • •

lXI

AT ISSUE
TIME OF DELIVERANCE
(j2J 8J
ISSUES AND
ANSWERS
CD THIS IS THE LIFE
0(1) VIEWPOINT
(I) THE OLD WEST
®)THE ISSUE
(llJ QH!Q JOURNAL
12:30 (I). CIJ MEET THE PRESS
Cil ORAL ROBERTS
CIJMOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• "The
Humen Jungle" 11154
DIRECTIONS
()) WILD KINGDOM
FACE THE NATION
NOVA 'A Plague on Our Children'Toxlcherblcldes,pestlcidea.

I

1:30
2:00

2:30

3:00

3:30
4:00

4:30

defect a, and tho evidence is juat
beginning to come out. This pro·
gram examinee the harmful effecta
deadly chemical a may have on this
and lollowlng generationa. (2 hra.)
(j2JI KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
(I) MOVIE-(DRAMA)••• "Conflict" 11143
.
Cil D, JAMES KENNEDY
()) AMERIC~'SATHLETES 1g80
Series devoted to examining and
revealing the best athletes who
weretorepresenttheUnitedStates
at the Olympics to be held in
Moscow.
CIJ PUBLIC POLICY FORUM
0 ()) ALABAMA 500
CIJMOVIE ·(DRAMA-MYSTERY)
••\1 "Edge of Doom" 11150
®) VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF
THE SEA
HI-Q
(I) WORLD OF PENTECOST
()) (j2J •
NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sports will
provide coverage of the game
between the Tampa Bay Rowdies
and the Fort Leuderdale Strikers.
~hrs. , 30 mine.)
CZl INSIGHT
(1)®) FRENCH OPEN
ANTIQUES
LPGACHAMPIONSHIP
THED£AFHEAR
·
CIJ SOCCER Atlanta Chiels vs New
YorkCoamos
(llJ HERE'S TO YOUR HEI&lt;LTH
Cil AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(]) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Killer Elite" 11175
(I) GREAT' PERFORMANCES:
LIVE FROM LINCOLN CENTER
"The Film Society of Lincoln Center
Presents · A TributetoJohnHuston·
Lauren Bacall and Richard Burton
are among celebrities who pay
tribute to the actor, screenwriter,
director. (90 mins.)
(llJ SPOLETO '80
@MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
Cil HE LIVES
8 ()) ®) ATLANTA GOLF
CLASSIC
(fi) UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'Out ol Everywhere' The arrival of
the Bellamy's old family nanny,
together with Sarah ' s appointment
as nursery maid, causes stormy
scenes in the servants' hall. (60
minaj_
(I) U CD SPORTSWORLD 1)
Professional Bowlers Association
doubles championship from Las
Vegas. 2) Engliah Derby lrom Eng·
land. (90 mlns.)
Cil THINK ABOUT TOMORROW
(I) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• \1 "Go,
Mlin Go" 11154
&amp;J WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS
(I) LAWMAKERS
Cil WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
(])
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS
'CaesarsPalacelnvitatlonai"Partll
Witnesa the results ol years of
dedicationandtrainingwhenAmerica'spremierwomengymnaatadiaplay their tumbling , vaulting and
balance beam skilla in this elite
mnaatlca competition.
AFRICANS
ELECTRIC COMPANY
;
OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(llJ GROUCHO

IDle

1

em

()) itii

.
5;00

5:30

than bid by neighbors. (60 mins.)
())®) 80 MINUTES
WAR AND PEACE
FRENCH CHEF
7:30
WALL STREET WEEK
"Requiem for Auto Stock a" Host :
~uia Rukeyaer.
8:00 (1) U CD CHIPa Ponch and Jon,
hoping to spend three vacation
days competing In ari off-roadrace,
find their holiday interrupted when
two criminals use the event as an
excusetoretrievegoldcoinafroma
wrecked airplane in the desert .
epeat: 60 mlns.)
REX HUM BARD
MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) ••••
"Greaae" 1978
Cl)(l2JID SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
DOUBLE FEATURE ' Turnover
Smith' t960Stars : WilliamConrad,
James Darren.
Ill ()) ®) ARCHIE BUNKER'S
PLACE Archie, Murray and the
gang think they've found a cure tor
Mr. Van Ranaeleer's blindness and
spearheadadrivetoraiaemoneyto
linance the operation. (Repeat)
ODYS.SEY 'Cree Hunters of
Mlstassinl' In much the same way
that their forefathers did. the Cree
lndiansoiCanadatreknorthwardto
hunt and trap game each winter .
This program examines how the
familiesjointogethertopreparetor
the cold months ahead . (60 mins.)
8:30 0 ()) ®) ONE DAY AT A TIME
Long -standing resentments are un covered between Ann and her
mother alter Julie ' s boss, a
psychiatrist , comes to dinner with
some interesting advice on
communicating . (Repeat)
9:00 (I)IJ CD THE BIG EVENT 'The
Mackintosh Man' 1973 Stars: Paul
Newman, James Mason .
ffi 700CLUB
lli())®ALICEMel'stopcompeti·
tor, Barney, asks Flo out and Mel
thinks it's because he wants to trap
her into revealing his secret chili
rae~ . (Repeat)
(I) {11) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Disraeli" Episode II. 'Mary Anne '
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raeli proposes to the wealthy
· widow of hislriend and political ally
~ndham Lewis. (60 mins.)
9:30 W PORTER WAGONER SHOW
ffiiiiliD SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
DOUBLE FEATURE 'Nightside '
1960 Stars: Doug McClure , Melin·
do Naud.
lli())®JTHE341hANNUAL TONY
AWARDS Mary Tyler Moore and
Jason Robards will serve as cohosts of the presentation of the
American Theatre Wing's Antoin·
etta Awards, the most prestigious
given In the Broadway theatre . The

I

ffi

Cll&lt;ID

special will feature performances
byatarsinproductlonnumbersfrom
current Broadway musicals. (90
mine.)
10:00 Cil KENNETH COPELAN.D
@ -MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Killer Elite" 11175
CIJ UP CLOSE Guest: C.I.A. Dirac·
tor, William Colby.
(I) FIRING LINE 'Who Should
Reagan Pick tor Vice President? '
Guests: J. Daniel Mahoney, cha ir·
man of the Conservative Party of
New York ;Paul Weyrich , executive
director of the Committee tor the
Survival of a Free Congress; Pa ·
trick Buchanan, syndicated colum ·
nist. Hoot: William F. Buckley , Jr.
® BEN WATTENBERG'S 1980
•An Interview with Barbara
Jordan'
10:30 Cil RUFF HOUSE
® MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) ••• \1
"The LID Vantshea" 1938
11:oo m u w CD a mrmiiil m
NEWS
Cil NEWSIGHT
(I) OPEN UP
(I) NON-FICTION TELEVISION
'Service Entrance ' and ' Man of
Wheat' This program features two
half hour films about individuals in
our society. Thefirstfollowsanaim·
less teenager who enlists in the
Army Reserve in an attempt to add
directiontohislife. The second por·
trays the saga of a wheat farmer
who goes from rags to riches in his
lifetime: (60 mins.)
11 : 15 C1J PMA PULSE
@)CBS NEWS
11:30 ffi
1J
MOVIE
·(ADVENTURE-WESTERN) •••
"Oklahoma Kid" 1939
ffi THE KING IS COMING
([)IBJID ABC NEWS
C1J NBC LATE NIGHT MOVIE
Ill()) MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) •• I&gt;
"Not Guilty" 1974
®) MOVIE ·(SCIENCE FICTION·
COMEDY) •• "Beauty and the
Robot" 1960
11:45 Cl) BENNY HILL SHOW
@ 0) · PTL CLUB·TALK AND
VARIETY
12:00 ClJMOVIE·(DRAMA)•• 'IJ "Rollerball" 1975
([) BEN WATTENBERG ' S 1960
'An Interview
with Barbara
Jordan'
12: 15 Cl) THREE ' S A CROWD
1:00 (1)
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY
1:30 C1J NEWS
1:45 @0) NEWS
3:30 @ MOVIE · (MYSTERY) •• I&gt;"
"Gideon of Scotland Yard
1959
5:30 ffi LOVE AMERICAN STYLE

THE HElL HEAT PUMP

EVENING
6:oo

CI5aeCIJ®J®m NEws

(])MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••• \1 "Walk
Proud"
CIJ
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
ABC NEWS
POP GOES THE COUNTRY
BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL
!IE~ME STREE.T
6:30
• CIJ NBC NEWS
FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
NEWS
()1) CBS NEWS
ABC NEWS
7:00
CDDISNEY'SWONDERFUL
WORLD "The Young Runaways'
While fleeing lrom their unloving
foster parenta, a young girl and her
brother and aister have a highly
unusual conlronlation with the
pollee. (Conoluolon: 60 mins.)
osed·Captloned)
JIMMY SWAGGART
BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
Loa Anll!,lea Dodger•
(I) (j2J. THE YEAGER$ Co roll
Yeager, the patriarch of a family
logging operation. dlscovera what
hatred can do alter he sella land to
a Mennonite family lor lau money

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�Page Four-

TV Supplement

•

Page Five-TV Supplement

«daytime))
MONTHRUFRI
MORNING
5:45 @ Q) FARM REPORT
5:50 ffi WORLD ATLARGE (FRI.)
@ Q) PTL CLUB-TALK AND
VARIETY
5:55 IIJ GOOD WORD
6:00 CIJ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(SXC. MON .)
W LISTEN (MON.) World AI Large
(WED.)
.(§) 0 1]) 700CLUB
&lt;.(j]) HEALTH FIELD
6 : 10 ffi WORLDATLARGE(THUR.)
6: 15 ffi ATHLETES(MON.)
ffi GUTENTAG
6:20 ffi WORLD ATLARGE (TUE.)
6:30 CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
® NEWS
(J) HEALTH FIELD
@) VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
6 :45 CIJ O MORNING REPORT
(I) A.M. WEATHER
6 :50 il2l Q) GOOD MORNING WEST
.
VIRGINIA
6:55 &lt;I2l Q) NEWS
7:00 CIJ O C!J TODAY
ffi FUN TIME
IIJ [2) Q) GOOD MORNING
AMERICA
O ® MORNING
00 HATHAYOGA (EXC. FRI.)
(j]) SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
7:30 00 VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(SXC. FRI.)
7:55 (tQ) CHUCK WHITE REPORTS
8:00 CIJ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
ffi HAZEL
0 (I:@) CAPTAIN KANGAROO
'9l SESAME STREET
8:30 . S) LUCY SHOW
9 :00 C~J 0 BOB BRAUN SHOW
(I) FAMILY AFFAIR
(6) BIG VALLEY
C1J (1~ Q) PHIL DONAHUE SHOW
0 fi)
PORKY PIG AND
FRIENDS
' 9) MOVIE (EXC . WED.) 'Lu ck ol
Ginger Coflee ' (MON ., FRI.) , 'Extra
Day · (TU E .) , Nova (WED .) .
~St ag e c o ach Expre ss' (THUR .)
10, JEFFERSONS
9:30 (5) GREEN ACRES
0 (.~, ADDAMS FAMILY
:tlj) ONE DAY ATA TIME
10:00 (~ c 0 (JJ CARD SHARKS
C3J 700CLUB
( S] MOVIE '.One Foo t In Heaven '
(MON). ' Foo t steps In th e Dark '
(TUE .). ' Wed nes day ' s Child '
(WED .). ' Run For Cover ' (THUR .),
'In A Lonely Pla ce' (FRI.)
C6J EDGI' OF NIGHT
0 ® JEFFERSONS
@ RACE FOR THE YELLOW JERSEY (WED .)
®J JOKER ' S WILD
@ Q) MORNING MAGAZINE
(J)
HOLLYWOOD
10:30 ffi 0
SQUARES
® ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
O ® ®l ALICE
00 VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(lUE.)
s2o,oooPYRAMtD
11 :00 CIJ 0 CD HIGH ROLLERS
(§) [2) Q)
LAVERNE AND
SHIRLEY
.
0 Cil@) PRICE IS RIGHT
00 VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(SXC.iE.)
.
11 :30 W O
WHEELOFFORTUNE
CIJ[2) FAMILYFEUD

wm

11 :55
11 :57

ffi NEWS
0 Cll@l NEWSBREAK

12:oo

of parts of the famous writer' achar-

MONDAY
JUNE II, 1980

AFTERNOON

m o oo mo m ®i ® m

EVENING

NEWS
VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(SXC. WED.)
C1) MISTER ROGERS
12:15 ®
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(.WED.)
12:30 W MOVIE 'Up From the Bea ch '
(MON.), 'FourGirls In Town ' (TUE.).
' The Ghost Goes West ' (WED .) .
' Those Redheads From Seattle:
(THUR.}. 'Abandon Ship' (FRI.)
Cil il2! Q) RYAN'S HOPE
CD PASSWORD PLUS
0 CIJ @l
SEARCH FOR
TOMORROW
CIJ ELECTRIC COMPANY
12:58 CI)[2) Q) FYI
1:00
DAYSOFOURLIVES
CIJ il2! ID ALL MY CHILDREN
0 CIJ ®J YOUNG AND THE
. RESTLESS
·
CIJ POLDARK
DOCTORS
2:00
CIJ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
ffi BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
Chicago Cubs
Cil [2) Q) ONE LIFE TO LIVE
0 CIJ @l AS THE WORLD
TURNS
CIJ UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
2:25 ffi NEWS (EXC. FRI.)
2:30 m O CIJ ANOTHER WORLD
® FATHERKNOWSBEST(EXC.
FRI.}_
2:58 CIJ (W Q) FYI
3:00 CIJ 700CLUB
® FUN TIME (EXC. FRI.)
(§) [2) Q) GENERAL HOSPITAL
0 @@) GUIDING LIGHT
® PAINT ALONG WITH NANCY
KOMINSKY
® VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
;!:30 ® OVER EASY
3 :57 0 ®@) NEWSBREAK
3:58 @[2) Q) FYI
4:00 CIJ 0 MR. CARTOON
ffi FLINTSTONES (EXC. FRI.)
CIJ MERV GRIFFIN
CD LUCY SHOW
.
0 Cil BOB NEWHART SHOW
® illJ SESAME STREET
®J BRADY BUNCH
(W Q) REAL MCCOYS
4:30 CIJ 0 STAR TREK
CIJ VARIOUSPl!OGRAMMING
ffi GILLIGAN' S ISLAND (EXC.
FRI.)
(J) MERV GRIFFIN
0 ® HOGAN'S HEROES
®J GOMER PYLE
[2) Q) TOM AND JERRY
5:00 (!) MOVIE (THUR.) 'The Frisco
Kid'
ffi MY THREE SONS
0 ® BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
®® MISTER ROGERS
®J MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW
5:30 CIJ O ®l M.A.S.H.
(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(])
MOVIE (TUE.) 'Jeremiah
Johnson'
® I DREAM OF JEANNIE
CIJ NEWS
0
CIJ ·
PLAY
THE
PERCENTAGES
CIJ DR. WHO
illJ ELECTRIC COMPANY
(W Q) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN .

CIJ
ffi

6 :00

CIJ IJ (!) IJ (ij@)(iiJ m

NEWS
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,LOINED IN PROGRESS)
(!) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••• " The
ln-Lawo" 1979
([) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
C1J ABC NEWS
(]) (jj) ZOOM
CIJ O C!l NBC NEWS
(I) I LOVE LUCY
fil CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
O CIJ®l CBS NEWS
(])
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
® VILLA ALEGRE
ABC NEWS
CIJ
CROSS WITS
(I) THE THIRD STORY
IIl HOGAN'S HEROES
&lt;IJ[WQ) FACE THE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
(jj) DICK CAVEn SHOW
CIJ. THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE MUSIC
(I) WORDS OF HOPE
IIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJ MUPPETS SHOW Guest :
Phylllo George.
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
BCIJ JOKER' S WILD
(])DICK CAVEn SHOW
!12lat FAMILY FEUD
MA~NEIL-LEHRER REPORT
8C!l UnLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE Charles and Caroline In·
galla become grandparents when
their blind daughter, Mary, gives
birth to a son .. butthe joyful occa·
sloniscloudedbythesuddendeath
ol Caroline' a mother. (Repeat; 60
mins.)
C1J ROCK CHURCH
(])MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• "A Different Story"
1IJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) "Summer

(I)

by Joey Sasso
CONFIDENTIAL REPO RT : Is TV 's favorite bad . guy ,
n amely J .R. Ewing of ' Dallas .' planning o n pulling a
- disappearing act come Sep t ember ? That's the rumor
m aki ng the rounds in Glitter Gulch . As regular viewers
o f ' Dalla s' kn o w . in th is season 's final episode. J .R. wa s
shot , perh ap s fat all y , which led to all th e whisper s in
Hollywood that Larry Hagman 's future w ith 'Da llas'
might be equally perilous , if he or his agent turns
:difficult' at con tr act tim e ... wh1 ch . it ju st so happens.
IS now. But H agm an . with whom I spoke briefly . very
politely and firmly r efu ted th e report s th a t he or his
c h ar act er is destined to soon quit 'Dallas.' " Th at would
be like kill ing th e golden goose." said Hagman .
laughrng . " The seri es h as been wonderful f or me. 1also
h appen to h ave a contract with Lorimar (the show's
produ ce rs ) that I'm h appy with now. I think this wh ole
thing got started in the tabl oi d s." Perh aps whaJ helped
s tart the rumors in the fir st pl ac e was the recent news
that H agman had signed an agr eement with NBC .
reportedly at n etwork chief Fred Silverman 's person al
r e quest . that once Larry is no longer a p art o f ' Dallas·
o n C BShe ca n writ e hi s own t1cket at NBC as far as .
TV mov1es and e ve n a new senes ar e concerned . But
w 1th th e sky -high ratings st1 ll gushrng 1n f or ' Dallas· th at
m1ght n o t co me to p ass for yea rs .

mo rn

mo rn

6 :30

7:00

rn

TV TI CKER : M ary R1chard s u sed t o ' Mr . Grant' Mr .
Gran t to death on th e old Mary Tyler Moore Show . But
1n real life Edward Asner prove s Mary was right afte r
all . The epitome of easygoin gn ess on th a t show. Asner
~ ec en tl y t old Dick Cavett h e w o n ' t toler a t e being c alled
Edd1e by strangers . " Unl ess y o u ' re an old friend o r
relative . it pre sumes f a m11i arrty . and a c asu al
ac qua1ntance d a re n o t do t11a t ..
. Linda Lavin . wh o
pl ays the wa1tre ss -t1tl e ch ar ac ter 1n TV 's 'Allee .' IS a
str o ng believer rn the n gh t s o f the wo rkrng w om an . And
she believes rn stre ng thenrng th o se ngh t s thro ugh her
TV c haracteriza tion s. Lavrn t old me . " It beho o ves u s
rn television to reacl1 out. t o educa te people . and to
refle c t life a c curatel y . And 1 c an d 1ssemrn ate
1nfo rmat 1on through my w o rk ab.out th1 s ternbly
underrepresented gro up o f p eople ( wo rk1ng w omen)
With whom I iden tify ." Las t ye a r she won 80 Per Cent
Award o f the N ation al Comm1 SS1o n o f Wo rking Wo men
f o r the most r ealistic dep1Ct1 o n of a wo rkrng woman on
t e leVISIOn .

8:00

(J) (W •

ONE IN A MtUION
Cuohlng does a complete turnar·
ound and bacomeo a lovable, wonderful guy af1er outlering what appears to bea heart attack and being
!!•.!!I.!U' Shirley.
llli.JIIliJWKRPINCINCINNA TIDr.
Johnny Faver's strange behavior
haa everyone at WKRP, except
Arthur Carlson, convinced thatlhe
doctor needs a doctor. (Repeat)
(]) (jj) A DAY WITH CONRAD
GREEN Israel Horowitz wrote this
hum.orous drama about a pretentiouo New York theatrical agent
who looeo his longtime friend and
muot now cope on hie own. (60

ALIMIIIMIIft-1

mina.l

.24' FLORIDIAN I

·•IIAYY·IITY El~

~.

20 Gauge Virgill VInyl Liner, Outlkll
Dlmenlion 3t'JC27', 24' Swim Area,
Cerpeted Petlo, tW wa•·Arotlftd,
Full H.P. Send filtration 8yetem,
Advenced Thr~ Wltl 8klmlll.,. tO
Yair Pro·RIIed Wwruty on Entire

.

CIJ

(D) •
MONDAY NIGHT
BASEBALL
• (I) ®J I'HYL AND MIKHY
11:00 CIJeCDMONDAYNIGHTATTHE
IIOVIES 'Women tn White' 1979
Slaro:KathrynHarrold,SuaanFian8:30

,EXTRUDED AJ,.UMINUM FENCING,

POOl.

1

l!!d &amp;!nQ!!e" teat

WAIM UP TO THESE
'IEFOII.Til PIICE IICIEASII
llle AU R

Clill

I

7:30

nerv.

(])'700 CLUB
0 CIJ MUSIC CITY NEWS
COUNTRY AWARDS
Cfl® MARK TWAIN: BENEATH
THE LAUGHTER Dan O'Herlihy
stars as Twain in this dramatization
acter not generally seen by the public. (60 mins.)
®l M.A.S.H. A severely wounded
soldier, rushed t&lt;i the poorly
equipped 4077th by chopper, will
die or be permanently paralyzed if
he doesn't receive major surgery in
20 minutes. (Repeat)
11:30 ®J HOUSE CALLS Dr. Michaela
runs an obstacle co urse keeping
histwodatesonthesamenightfrom
colliding . (Repeat)
10:00 (]) GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY 'The
Statevs Dr. Coppolino' With I he aid
of stock footage and stills,this fa sf paced exclusive re creates the
riveting murder trial of Dr. Carl Coppolino, a trial which seized America's attention during the '60s.
ffi THE COMMANDERS 'Sir Arthur
'Bomber' Harris.
Cil JAZZATTHE MAINTENANCE
SHOP 'Bill Evans Trio '
®J LOU GRANT Billie finds herself
in the protective custody of a male
chauvinist policeman bec ause of

what she knows in a grand jury case
involving a popular game show
host. (Repeat; 80 mina.)
@NEWS
10:30 (J) RISE AND BE HEALED
(!) DOOBIE BROTHERS IN CONCERT Over 25mlllion recorda have
been sold by these durable rock ' n
rollers, and you'll hear why when
you 'Listen To the Music' of all their
biggeot hits at this recent in·
concert performance.
fiD OVER EASY Guest : Milch
Miller. Hoa1: HuQh Downs.

1 , :oo

m
• CIJ rnu CIJ ®J &lt;lil m
NEWS
(J) FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
(J) LAST OF THE WILD 'Northern
Survival'

(I) DAVEAUENATLARGE
(jj) DICK CAVEn SHOW
11:30

(1)8 rn

THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gueot hoot: George Carlin. (90
mine.)
(J) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) MOVIE -(SUSPEJjSE) •••
"Silent Partner" 111711
ffi MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••••
11

Fermer'• Daughter" 1M7

CIJ (j2J •

ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
1J CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'HARRY
0: Ballinger' a Choice' When Harry
gets a call to look inlothe behavior
of Philip Ballinger, the man' a actlvl·
ties don't seem too peculiar, but
they taka a bizarre turn and some
people involved meet fatal ends.
(Repeat) 'HEC RAMSEY: Mystery
Of Chalk Hill' Stars: Richard Boone,
Pat Hingle.
(f) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE -(WESTERN) •• "HannleCeulcler" 11172
t 1:50 CIJ(j2J. BARNEY MILLER 'Bug a'
Cockroaches aren't I he only bugs
lnfes1ing Captain Miller' a sq•ad
room when an exterminator accidentally uncovers several con·
cealed microphones. (Repeat)
12:20 (I) (D). POUCE WOMAN 'Sixth
Sense' Legal technicalitleo hinder

.'

WIIAVI POlL~ STAmM AI

I

LPGA TOURNAMENT
NBC Sports will provide
coverage of the final round of
the
Ladies
Profession a l
Golfer's
Association
tour nament featuring some of the
top names in women's golf like
Nancy Lopez (pictured) on
SUNDAY, JUNE 8. To b e
telecast from the Jack Nic k laus Golf Center in Kings
Island , Ohio NBC sportscas ters Don Criqui , Carol Mann
and Marlene Floyd will be on
hand to bring you all the
exciting green-to-green action .
CHECK LISTlHGS fOR

.

cau•••••'•

AU. 11001.1 Alii COIIPLITILY _,.AI liD

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ROCKET
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I.

WOMEN IN WHITE

There is terror in the
night for Suzanne Somers
(pict ured)
when
her
romantic vacation is shattered by the ' Pani c at Lake
Wood Manor ,' an encore
presentation on 'The ABC
Friday
Night
Movie ,'

CHECII liSTINGS fOR EXACT TIME

asearchbyPepperandCrowleylor
evidence against a man believed - - - - - - - - - - - - - - responsible for a chain of murders.
(Bel!!!,at)
1:00 CIJU TOMORROW Host : Tom
Snyder. Guest : Jeff Greenfield, ·
CBS News television comman1a tor. (60 mins.)
TRANSFORMED
NEWS
~ . ;- '•
1:30'
D.JAMESKENNEDY
-..-...-"! : .
•
NEWS
1:35
MOVIE -(DRAMA) • " Death
Payoln Dollare" 11166
NEWS
I BELIEVE
2:00
2:30
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:20 CIJ MAVERICK
4:00 (J) 700 CLUB
4:20 ffi OPEN UP
5:30 CIJ WORDS OF HOPE

r----------------------------------

PANIC AT
LAKE WOOD MANOR

FRIDAY, JUNE 13.

M axx (Melissa Michaelsen ) ca t ches h er dad . N o rm an ( Joe
Santos) . reading her diary 1n '4.' on NBC-TV ' s c om ed y
ser ies ME AND MAXX . Friday . June 13.

On MONDAY, JUNE 9 ' NBC's
Monday Night At The Movie s·
will pre sent an en co re tele cast
of 'Wom e n In White.' Su san
. Fl annery. Stu art Whitm an , Patty
Duk e Astin . Kathryn Harro ld
(pi c tured ) and Sh eree North
st ar in this drama about th e
turbul ent lives o f som e o f the
staff m embers at a Fl orida
hospital , and the re lationship
between th e newly appointed ·
c h ief o f st aff and her hear t
surgeon husband .
CHECK LISTINGS f OR EAACT TIM[

U~CT

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446-1044

�Page Four-

TV Supplement

•

Page Five-TV Supplement

«daytime))
MONTHRUFRI
MORNING
5:45 @ Q) FARM REPORT
5:50 ffi WORLD ATLARGE (FRI.)
@ Q) PTL CLUB-TALK AND
VARIETY
5:55 IIJ GOOD WORD
6:00 CIJ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(SXC. MON .)
W LISTEN (MON.) World AI Large
(WED.)
.(§) 0 1]) 700CLUB
&lt;.(j]) HEALTH FIELD
6 : 10 ffi WORLDATLARGE(THUR.)
6: 15 ffi ATHLETES(MON.)
ffi GUTENTAG
6:20 ffi WORLD ATLARGE (TUE.)
6:30 CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
® NEWS
(J) HEALTH FIELD
@) VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
6 :45 CIJ O MORNING REPORT
(I) A.M. WEATHER
6 :50 il2l Q) GOOD MORNING WEST
.
VIRGINIA
6:55 &lt;I2l Q) NEWS
7:00 CIJ O C!J TODAY
ffi FUN TIME
IIJ [2) Q) GOOD MORNING
AMERICA
O ® MORNING
00 HATHAYOGA (EXC. FRI.)
(j]) SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
7:30 00 VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(SXC. FRI.)
7:55 (tQ) CHUCK WHITE REPORTS
8:00 CIJ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
ffi HAZEL
0 (I:@) CAPTAIN KANGAROO
'9l SESAME STREET
8:30 . S) LUCY SHOW
9 :00 C~J 0 BOB BRAUN SHOW
(I) FAMILY AFFAIR
(6) BIG VALLEY
C1J (1~ Q) PHIL DONAHUE SHOW
0 fi)
PORKY PIG AND
FRIENDS
' 9) MOVIE (EXC . WED.) 'Lu ck ol
Ginger Coflee ' (MON ., FRI.) , 'Extra
Day · (TU E .) , Nova (WED .) .
~St ag e c o ach Expre ss' (THUR .)
10, JEFFERSONS
9:30 (5) GREEN ACRES
0 (.~, ADDAMS FAMILY
:tlj) ONE DAY ATA TIME
10:00 (~ c 0 (JJ CARD SHARKS
C3J 700CLUB
( S] MOVIE '.One Foo t In Heaven '
(MON). ' Foo t steps In th e Dark '
(TUE .). ' Wed nes day ' s Child '
(WED .). ' Run For Cover ' (THUR .),
'In A Lonely Pla ce' (FRI.)
C6J EDGI' OF NIGHT
0 ® JEFFERSONS
@ RACE FOR THE YELLOW JERSEY (WED .)
®J JOKER ' S WILD
@ Q) MORNING MAGAZINE
(J)
HOLLYWOOD
10:30 ffi 0
SQUARES
® ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
O ® ®l ALICE
00 VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(lUE.)
s2o,oooPYRAMtD
11 :00 CIJ 0 CD HIGH ROLLERS
(§) [2) Q)
LAVERNE AND
SHIRLEY
.
0 Cil@) PRICE IS RIGHT
00 VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
(SXC.iE.)
.
11 :30 W O
WHEELOFFORTUNE
CIJ[2) FAMILYFEUD

wm

11 :55
11 :57

ffi NEWS
0 Cll@l NEWSBREAK

12:oo

of parts of the famous writer' achar-

MONDAY
JUNE II, 1980

AFTERNOON

m o oo mo m ®i ® m

EVENING

NEWS
VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(SXC. WED.)
C1) MISTER ROGERS
12:15 ®
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
(.WED.)
12:30 W MOVIE 'Up From the Bea ch '
(MON.), 'FourGirls In Town ' (TUE.).
' The Ghost Goes West ' (WED .) .
' Those Redheads From Seattle:
(THUR.}. 'Abandon Ship' (FRI.)
Cil il2! Q) RYAN'S HOPE
CD PASSWORD PLUS
0 CIJ @l
SEARCH FOR
TOMORROW
CIJ ELECTRIC COMPANY
12:58 CI)[2) Q) FYI
1:00
DAYSOFOURLIVES
CIJ il2! ID ALL MY CHILDREN
0 CIJ ®J YOUNG AND THE
. RESTLESS
·
CIJ POLDARK
DOCTORS
2:00
CIJ VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
ffi BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
Chicago Cubs
Cil [2) Q) ONE LIFE TO LIVE
0 CIJ @l AS THE WORLD
TURNS
CIJ UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
2:25 ffi NEWS (EXC. FRI.)
2:30 m O CIJ ANOTHER WORLD
® FATHERKNOWSBEST(EXC.
FRI.}_
2:58 CIJ (W Q) FYI
3:00 CIJ 700CLUB
® FUN TIME (EXC. FRI.)
(§) [2) Q) GENERAL HOSPITAL
0 @@) GUIDING LIGHT
® PAINT ALONG WITH NANCY
KOMINSKY
® VARIOUS PROGRAMMING
;!:30 ® OVER EASY
3 :57 0 ®@) NEWSBREAK
3:58 @[2) Q) FYI
4:00 CIJ 0 MR. CARTOON
ffi FLINTSTONES (EXC. FRI.)
CIJ MERV GRIFFIN
CD LUCY SHOW
.
0 Cil BOB NEWHART SHOW
® illJ SESAME STREET
®J BRADY BUNCH
(W Q) REAL MCCOYS
4:30 CIJ 0 STAR TREK
CIJ VARIOUSPl!OGRAMMING
ffi GILLIGAN' S ISLAND (EXC.
FRI.)
(J) MERV GRIFFIN
0 ® HOGAN'S HEROES
®J GOMER PYLE
[2) Q) TOM AND JERRY
5:00 (!) MOVIE (THUR.) 'The Frisco
Kid'
ffi MY THREE SONS
0 ® BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
®® MISTER ROGERS
®J MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW
5:30 CIJ O ®l M.A.S.H.
(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(])
MOVIE (TUE.) 'Jeremiah
Johnson'
® I DREAM OF JEANNIE
CIJ NEWS
0
CIJ ·
PLAY
THE
PERCENTAGES
CIJ DR. WHO
illJ ELECTRIC COMPANY
(W Q) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN .

CIJ
ffi

6 :00

CIJ IJ (!) IJ (ij@)(iiJ m

NEWS
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,LOINED IN PROGRESS)
(!) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••• " The
ln-Lawo" 1979
([) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
C1J ABC NEWS
(]) (jj) ZOOM
CIJ O C!l NBC NEWS
(I) I LOVE LUCY
fil CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
O CIJ®l CBS NEWS
(])
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
® VILLA ALEGRE
ABC NEWS
CIJ
CROSS WITS
(I) THE THIRD STORY
IIl HOGAN'S HEROES
&lt;IJ[WQ) FACE THE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
(jj) DICK CAVEn SHOW
CIJ. THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE MUSIC
(I) WORDS OF HOPE
IIJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
CIJ MUPPETS SHOW Guest :
Phylllo George.
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
BCIJ JOKER' S WILD
(])DICK CAVEn SHOW
!12lat FAMILY FEUD
MA~NEIL-LEHRER REPORT
8C!l UnLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE Charles and Caroline In·
galla become grandparents when
their blind daughter, Mary, gives
birth to a son .. butthe joyful occa·
sloniscloudedbythesuddendeath
ol Caroline' a mother. (Repeat; 60
mins.)
C1J ROCK CHURCH
(])MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• "A Different Story"
1IJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) "Summer

(I)

by Joey Sasso
CONFIDENTIAL REPO RT : Is TV 's favorite bad . guy ,
n amely J .R. Ewing of ' Dallas .' planning o n pulling a
- disappearing act come Sep t ember ? That's the rumor
m aki ng the rounds in Glitter Gulch . As regular viewers
o f ' Dalla s' kn o w . in th is season 's final episode. J .R. wa s
shot , perh ap s fat all y , which led to all th e whisper s in
Hollywood that Larry Hagman 's future w ith 'Da llas'
might be equally perilous , if he or his agent turns
:difficult' at con tr act tim e ... wh1 ch . it ju st so happens.
IS now. But H agm an . with whom I spoke briefly . very
politely and firmly r efu ted th e report s th a t he or his
c h ar act er is destined to soon quit 'Dallas.' " Th at would
be like kill ing th e golden goose." said Hagman .
laughrng . " The seri es h as been wonderful f or me. 1also
h appen to h ave a contract with Lorimar (the show's
produ ce rs ) that I'm h appy with now. I think this wh ole
thing got started in the tabl oi d s." Perh aps whaJ helped
s tart the rumors in the fir st pl ac e was the recent news
that H agman had signed an agr eement with NBC .
reportedly at n etwork chief Fred Silverman 's person al
r e quest . that once Larry is no longer a p art o f ' Dallas·
o n C BShe ca n writ e hi s own t1cket at NBC as far as .
TV mov1es and e ve n a new senes ar e concerned . But
w 1th th e sky -high ratings st1 ll gushrng 1n f or ' Dallas· th at
m1ght n o t co me to p ass for yea rs .

mo rn

mo rn

6 :30

7:00

rn

TV TI CKER : M ary R1chard s u sed t o ' Mr . Grant' Mr .
Gran t to death on th e old Mary Tyler Moore Show . But
1n real life Edward Asner prove s Mary was right afte r
all . The epitome of easygoin gn ess on th a t show. Asner
~ ec en tl y t old Dick Cavett h e w o n ' t toler a t e being c alled
Edd1e by strangers . " Unl ess y o u ' re an old friend o r
relative . it pre sumes f a m11i arrty . and a c asu al
ac qua1ntance d a re n o t do t11a t ..
. Linda Lavin . wh o
pl ays the wa1tre ss -t1tl e ch ar ac ter 1n TV 's 'Allee .' IS a
str o ng believer rn the n gh t s o f the wo rkrng w om an . And
she believes rn stre ng thenrng th o se ngh t s thro ugh her
TV c haracteriza tion s. Lavrn t old me . " It beho o ves u s
rn television to reacl1 out. t o educa te people . and to
refle c t life a c curatel y . And 1 c an d 1ssemrn ate
1nfo rmat 1on through my w o rk ab.out th1 s ternbly
underrepresented gro up o f p eople ( wo rk1ng w omen)
With whom I iden tify ." Las t ye a r she won 80 Per Cent
Award o f the N ation al Comm1 SS1o n o f Wo rking Wo men
f o r the most r ealistic dep1Ct1 o n of a wo rkrng woman on
t e leVISIOn .

8:00

(J) (W •

ONE IN A MtUION
Cuohlng does a complete turnar·
ound and bacomeo a lovable, wonderful guy af1er outlering what appears to bea heart attack and being
!!•.!!I.!U' Shirley.
llli.JIIliJWKRPINCINCINNA TIDr.
Johnny Faver's strange behavior
haa everyone at WKRP, except
Arthur Carlson, convinced thatlhe
doctor needs a doctor. (Repeat)
(]) (jj) A DAY WITH CONRAD
GREEN Israel Horowitz wrote this
hum.orous drama about a pretentiouo New York theatrical agent
who looeo his longtime friend and
muot now cope on hie own. (60

ALIMIIIMIIft-1

mina.l

.24' FLORIDIAN I

·•IIAYY·IITY El~

~.

20 Gauge Virgill VInyl Liner, Outlkll
Dlmenlion 3t'JC27', 24' Swim Area,
Cerpeted Petlo, tW wa•·Arotlftd,
Full H.P. Send filtration 8yetem,
Advenced Thr~ Wltl 8klmlll.,. tO
Yair Pro·RIIed Wwruty on Entire

.

CIJ

(D) •
MONDAY NIGHT
BASEBALL
• (I) ®J I'HYL AND MIKHY
11:00 CIJeCDMONDAYNIGHTATTHE
IIOVIES 'Women tn White' 1979
Slaro:KathrynHarrold,SuaanFian8:30

,EXTRUDED AJ,.UMINUM FENCING,

POOl.

1

l!!d &amp;!nQ!!e" teat

WAIM UP TO THESE
'IEFOII.Til PIICE IICIEASII
llle AU R

Clill

I

7:30

nerv.

(])'700 CLUB
0 CIJ MUSIC CITY NEWS
COUNTRY AWARDS
Cfl® MARK TWAIN: BENEATH
THE LAUGHTER Dan O'Herlihy
stars as Twain in this dramatization
acter not generally seen by the public. (60 mins.)
®l M.A.S.H. A severely wounded
soldier, rushed t&lt;i the poorly
equipped 4077th by chopper, will
die or be permanently paralyzed if
he doesn't receive major surgery in
20 minutes. (Repeat)
11:30 ®J HOUSE CALLS Dr. Michaela
runs an obstacle co urse keeping
histwodatesonthesamenightfrom
colliding . (Repeat)
10:00 (]) GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY 'The
Statevs Dr. Coppolino' With I he aid
of stock footage and stills,this fa sf paced exclusive re creates the
riveting murder trial of Dr. Carl Coppolino, a trial which seized America's attention during the '60s.
ffi THE COMMANDERS 'Sir Arthur
'Bomber' Harris.
Cil JAZZATTHE MAINTENANCE
SHOP 'Bill Evans Trio '
®J LOU GRANT Billie finds herself
in the protective custody of a male
chauvinist policeman bec ause of

what she knows in a grand jury case
involving a popular game show
host. (Repeat; 80 mina.)
@NEWS
10:30 (J) RISE AND BE HEALED
(!) DOOBIE BROTHERS IN CONCERT Over 25mlllion recorda have
been sold by these durable rock ' n
rollers, and you'll hear why when
you 'Listen To the Music' of all their
biggeot hits at this recent in·
concert performance.
fiD OVER EASY Guest : Milch
Miller. Hoa1: HuQh Downs.

1 , :oo

m
• CIJ rnu CIJ ®J &lt;lil m
NEWS
(J) FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
(J) LAST OF THE WILD 'Northern
Survival'

(I) DAVEAUENATLARGE
(jj) DICK CAVEn SHOW
11:30

(1)8 rn

THE TONIGHT SHOW
Gueot hoot: George Carlin. (90
mine.)
(J) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(]) MOVIE -(SUSPEJjSE) •••
"Silent Partner" 111711
ffi MOVIE ·(COMEDY) ••••
11

Fermer'• Daughter" 1M7

CIJ (j2J •

ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
1J CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE 'HARRY
0: Ballinger' a Choice' When Harry
gets a call to look inlothe behavior
of Philip Ballinger, the man' a actlvl·
ties don't seem too peculiar, but
they taka a bizarre turn and some
people involved meet fatal ends.
(Repeat) 'HEC RAMSEY: Mystery
Of Chalk Hill' Stars: Richard Boone,
Pat Hingle.
(f) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE -(WESTERN) •• "HannleCeulcler" 11172
t 1:50 CIJ(j2J. BARNEY MILLER 'Bug a'
Cockroaches aren't I he only bugs
lnfes1ing Captain Miller' a sq•ad
room when an exterminator accidentally uncovers several con·
cealed microphones. (Repeat)
12:20 (I) (D). POUCE WOMAN 'Sixth
Sense' Legal technicalitleo hinder

.'

WIIAVI POlL~ STAmM AI

I

LPGA TOURNAMENT
NBC Sports will provide
coverage of the final round of
the
Ladies
Profession a l
Golfer's
Association
tour nament featuring some of the
top names in women's golf like
Nancy Lopez (pictured) on
SUNDAY, JUNE 8. To b e
telecast from the Jack Nic k laus Golf Center in Kings
Island , Ohio NBC sportscas ters Don Criqui , Carol Mann
and Marlene Floyd will be on
hand to bring you all the
exciting green-to-green action .
CHECK LISTlHGS fOR

.

cau•••••'•

AU. 11001.1 Alii COIIPLITILY _,.AI liD

•

l

'939" -.tl&amp;&amp;ll

mptrilll
ComJ»Ietellne of lnaround poole
ndual "~· CALL•• FCT
712-4121

"''·

5471•

n...u••
nua•.
CIAI., w. ,._

•

{t

!

fV COM..ULOC SlltYtCU. INC

ROCKET
.SALE

I.

WOMEN IN WHITE

There is terror in the
night for Suzanne Somers
(pict ured)
when
her
romantic vacation is shattered by the ' Pani c at Lake
Wood Manor ,' an encore
presentation on 'The ABC
Friday
Night
Movie ,'

CHECII liSTINGS fOR EXACT TIME

asearchbyPepperandCrowleylor
evidence against a man believed - - - - - - - - - - - - - - responsible for a chain of murders.
(Bel!!!,at)
1:00 CIJU TOMORROW Host : Tom
Snyder. Guest : Jeff Greenfield, ·
CBS News television comman1a tor. (60 mins.)
TRANSFORMED
NEWS
~ . ;- '•
1:30'
D.JAMESKENNEDY
-..-...-"! : .
•
NEWS
1:35
MOVIE -(DRAMA) • " Death
Payoln Dollare" 11166
NEWS
I BELIEVE
2:00
2:30
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:20 CIJ MAVERICK
4:00 (J) 700 CLUB
4:20 ffi OPEN UP
5:30 CIJ WORDS OF HOPE

r----------------------------------

PANIC AT
LAKE WOOD MANOR

FRIDAY, JUNE 13.

M axx (Melissa Michaelsen ) ca t ches h er dad . N o rm an ( Joe
Santos) . reading her diary 1n '4.' on NBC-TV ' s c om ed y
ser ies ME AND MAXX . Friday . June 13.

On MONDAY, JUNE 9 ' NBC's
Monday Night At The Movie s·
will pre sent an en co re tele cast
of 'Wom e n In White.' Su san
. Fl annery. Stu art Whitm an , Patty
Duk e Astin . Kathryn Harro ld
(pi c tured ) and Sh eree North
st ar in this drama about th e
turbul ent lives o f som e o f the
staff m embers at a Fl orida
hospital , and the re lationship
between th e newly appointed ·
c h ief o f st aff and her hear t
surgeon husband .
CHECK LISTINGS f OR EAACT TIM[

U~CT

n•E

The Ariens 7 hp Rocket
Hler. Ths quality
performance choice of
serious gardeners tor years
can be yours, with eledrtc
start , at a big savings of
$100! For a Nmited time
only, your participating
Ariens dealer is offering
$100 off on the Ariens
RT7020 Rocket Tiller with
electrK: starter klt!
Offer good only while
suppty lasts, so get to the
Ariens Rocket Sale today
and save!

:SHINN'S
CTOR SALES
240 Upper

leon, W. Va. River Road
458-1630

Gallipolis, 0
446-1044

�Page Six- TV Supplement

((tuesday»
TUESDAY
JUNE 10, 11180
EVENING

6:oo

me
marn®JiHimNEws
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

~

INED

IN PROGRESS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC NEWS
C1.J (llJ ZOOM
6 :30
NBC NEWS
® I LOVE LUCY
CIJ
CAROL BURNE" AND
FRIENDS
O CIJ®l CBS NEWS
ill WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(llJ OVER EASY Guest : Vic
Damone. Host: Hugh Downs.
iUl 0) ABC NEWS
7:00
CROSS WITS
CIJ PUPPET TREE GANG
Cil HOGAN'S HEROES
(J) iUl 0) F ACETHE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O(J) TICTACDOUGH
ill MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
IJID NEWS
(llJ DI~K CAVE" SHOW
7:30 (I) U
®J
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
CIJ FAITHTHATLIVES
(!) WORLD'S GREATEST EsCAPES A full hour of breathtaking
entertainment breaks loose as this
thrilling rea l·lite drama follows four
young artists as they perform
death -defying acts made famous
by the logendary Harry Houdini .
Ton1 Curtis hosts.
CIJ BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
St . Louis Cardinals
CIJ iUl GJ SHA NA NA
ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
O CIJ JOKER'S WILD
ill DICK CAVE" SHOW
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
THE MISADVENTURES
8 :00
OF SHERIFF LOBO A feisty senior
citizen gets even with a real estate
developer and the law by setting off ·
dynamite charges to protest her
co nfinement in a retirement home.
(Hepeat ; 60 mins.)
(]J ORAL ROBERTS
riJ@ GJ HAPPY DAYS Fonzie 's
home away from ~orne , Inspiration
Poin t , is set to be destroyed for a
freewayrampsohepullseVerytrick
in the book to save hls.love nest.

mo m

mO

m

m

mu m

ffieP.!!a!l

0

l.IJ ®l THE WHITE SHADOW

James H~yward , soul -sick at the
death of his young cousin, who had
OD 'd on drugs, seta out to find and
kill his ' connection .' (Repeat; 60
mms_j
C1.J (llJ NOVA ' BaMiki BaNdula :
Children of lheForeat' Ararelookat
Zaire's Mbuti pygmies In their
tropical rain forest home reveals
the secrets of survival of a culture
that for thousands of years has
remained untouched by modern
civilization. (60 mins.)
8 :30 (]J GOOD NEWS
(!) CONSUMER REPORTS PRE·
SENTS ' The Medicine Show' For
consumers confused about whi ch
overthe-counter drugs are the best
buys, this exclusive offers a cure
This second segment of this enter:
tain ing and informative series
helpsshoppersmakewisechoices
in the medicine marketplace.
(j)(U)GJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
Laverne and Shirley's reunion with
Shirley's brother takes an unexpected turn when they discover he

has picked up a very disturbing
habit. (R~eat)
9:00
Cll TUESDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES ' Women In White'
1977 Stare : Susan Flannery
Robart Culp.
'·
CIJ 700CLUB
Cil MOVIE-(COMEDY)u~ "Frt.co Kid" 1979
.
(j) &lt;i2l •
THREE'S COMPANY
Jack, Janet .and Chrlaey take in a
cute but sally 75-year-old man who
repeatedly barges In on Jack' s
romantic inlertude with a gorgeous
girl , plucka Furley' a prize roses,
and soaks a couple of frisky roommates of hia own. (Repeat)

m•

::======---------:--------------BAD NEWS
BEARS
When Regi , Tanner and Engelberg gel on Ogilvie ' s ·case'
(Sparky Marcus. pictured) th e
little brains of th e Bears iay a
m a;or ·guilt trip ' on the trio that
c auses them to r un away fro m
home on 'The Bad News Be ar s. '
SATURDAY,
JUNE
14
on
CBS -TV
Ogilvie's ' mind-bender' has the
boys convinced that they are
responsible for ca using a valley wide power bl ackout . and 'th e
only way to st ay out of jail IS to
make a run for it. The ' run ' takes
t hem on an adventure with a
tough mot or cyc le gang . unt1l
Coach Buttermake r ca t ches up
to them and ·rumbles · with the
wild bun ch .

(J;IQ!e~Captloned)

DCIJ®lTUESDAYNIGHTMOVIE
'MStatlon: Hawaii' t980Stara: An·
drew Duggan, JoAnn Harris.
(J)(ll) SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS
'Patterns, Evidence aod Investigation: In this premiere episode, the
aubJ&amp;Cia explored are patterns In
everyday life that help ua discern,
the Information we gather, and the
baa].g_proceaa of !)baerving.
9 :30 (J) (12) tD TAXI Louie's romance
with girlfriend Zena takes an ou trageous twist when she brings him
home to meet her parents.

epeal)

10:00

~

&lt;i2Jm

~aria'

(11J OVER EASY Guest : Vic
Damone. Host: Hugh Downs.

m o m m • m !liD &lt;l2l m

NEWS
TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
(!) NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIVALHeadaouthtotheGrand
OleOpryHouseforthiahigh-energy
country-pop music festival featur·
ing stars like Barbara Mandrell
Lynn Anderson , ainger-comedia~
Jim Stafford and Johnny Caah'a
country -rocking daughter, Ro·
seanne Cash.
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD 'African
Elephant'
DAVEALLENATLARGE.
DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:30
8THETONIGHTSHOW'Beat
01 Carson ' Guests: Dolly Parton.
Jack Albertson, William &amp;latty.
epeat; 90 mina.)
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MOVIE -(MYSTERY) ••• "The
Stranll!r" 1948
(J) (12) •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
THE BEST OF CARSON
0 ()) CBS LATE MOVIE
'BARNABY JONES: BandOI Evil' A
bronc-buster disappears and Barnaby relies upon a conversation
overheard by a rancher' s daughter
for an Important clue . (Repeat)
'MARY HARTMAN, MARY HART·
MAN' Stars: Louise Lasser, Greg
Mullavey.
()) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®l MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •• ~
"Sabaatlan" 1988
11 :50 (J) iUl tD SOAP Cheater confesses to Jeaeica that Instead of
visiting a minister lor help with his
womanizing problema, he' s been
meeting the minis ter's teenage
daughter in an adult motel.

C1J

Station: Hawaii ,' a suspense·
thnller focusing oo the cloakand- dagger atmosphere surroundIng a government -ini ti ated search
lor a mystery Soviet submanne
m1Ss1ng off the coas t of Hawaii
a nd showcasi ng the cr ea t iVe
talents of Jack Lord . will be
broad cas t on 'The CBS Tuesday
N1gh t Movies.· TUESDAY, JUNE 10
on CBS-TV.
Jared Martin (pictured) Jo Ann
Harris and Andrew Duggan st ar 1n
the adventure film .
A Honolulu-based underwater
research and salvage firm headed
by Dana Ryan (Martm) overcomes
the dangerous asSignment of
locating and exploring the sunken
Russian sub in quest of suspected
t op-secre t technologica l data .
CHECK LISTINGS f OR EXACT

mu

ffi

m

~e;a~

TUESDAY MOVIE OF
THE WEEK ' Beautiful But Deadly'

12:30
1:00
1:20
1:25

1973 Stars: Anthony Quinn, Robert
Forster.
Cil MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) •• ~
"Ey_v Of Laura Mara" 1978
TOMORROW
(]) CHARISMA
NEWS
NEWS
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALLREPLAY

(l) OLDTIMEGOSPELHOUR

m•

1:30
2:00
2:30
2:38
3:55

~

4:00 C1J 700 CLUB
5:30 (l) JESUS IS THE ANSWER
(J) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE

®liBELIEVE

(l) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

&lt;i2JID NEWS

ffi MOVIE-(DRAMA)• "Portrallln

Terror" 1085

Trust Your Home Heat To

ma
rnarn®JiHim NEws
(])ROSS BAGLEY HOUR(JOINED
IN PROGRESS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
(J) ABC NEWS
()) (llJ ZOOM
NBC NEWS
(!)STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Red
Skelton'aFunnyFacea' Old friends
like Freddie the Freeloader and
Clem Kaddiddlehopper are just a
few of your favorite a on hand when
Red Skelton hosts this exclusive
showcasing Shields and Yarnell
YacovNoy and several other greai
masters of mime.
(J) I LOVE LUCY
(j)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
G(J)IJID CBS NEWS
Cll WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
ABCNEWS
CROSS WITS
CIJ BIBLE BOWL
(J) HOGAN'S HEROES
(J)(j2J. FACE THE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
()) TIC TAC DOUGH
,-.,. MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
1JJUNEWS
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
&lt;Il 8 COUNTRY ROADS
CIJ AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(!) MOVIE -(CARTOON) ••• " Dot
And The Kangaroo"
® ALLIN THE FAMILY
(J) MATCH GAME
WILD KINGDOM
()) JOKER' S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
THE JUDGE
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
FAMILY FEUD
(l) REALPEOPLEAgather·
ing of mystics in Florida , a racing
boatmadeofemptymilkcartons,an
ugly dog contest, and a visit to a
dime-a -dance halt are featured .
(Repeat;
60
mlns .)
oaed-Captioned)
FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) •••
"Lo.!!lfell Hundred Mltea" 1987
())112). FAMILYBuddyhaabeen
acceptedbyfourcollegea, but pretendathalahehaabeenrejectedby
all ol them because ahela awed by
the prospect of leaving home. (60
mint)
G(J)IJID CAPTAIN AMERICA An
athletic young ex -Marine becomes
crimefighter Captain America as
his lather had, years earlier, and,
augmented by a secret super·
steroid, pursues an arch -criminal
whoplanatodecimatePhoenlxwith
a _neutron bomb. (Conclusion; 60

CIJ

6:30

7:30

·~

earlier reservations to undertake

~

12:20

' EVENING

s:oo

M STATION:
HAWAII
I

(j)
fll- (j2) Gt CHARLIE'S ANGELS

WEDNESDAY
JUNE 11, 1980

7:00

~

!lmouir Nostalgia

«wednesday))

---------~~~~~~~~---=CH~[C=K~l~OSl~ON=C~S~FO:R~[~::Cl~l~0·~·---

MAVERICK
·
HART TO HART At a
scavenger hunt lor hidden jewels in
a haunted manalon, one of the
guests ia murdared --throwing the
Harts into a race against time to
reveal the killer' a Identity before
they become the next victims .
epeat ; 60 mina.)
CITY NOTEBOOK
NEWS
10:30 CIJ FAITH 20
CI.J CAMERA THREE 'Duro
Lapldo'a National ·Theater ol

11 :oo

Page Seven-TV Supplement

rn•m

II
i

I

8 :00

II
ffi

. (J) ®l WEDNESDAY NIGHT
MOVIE ' Getting Married' 1978
Stare: Richard Thomas, Bess Arm·
strong.
C1.J (1JJ HENRY MOORE This pro gram IS a portrayal of sculptor
Henry Moore, his life and his work.
(ltO min!,)
9:30 CV8 m THEFACTSOFLIFE
10:00
G
QUINCY Teenage alcohollamiainvolvedwhenaatudent
is killed in a traffic mishap , and
Quincy must establish whether the
niece of his boas, Or. As ten was
driving the car and Is possibly guilty
of_ manslaughter. (Repeat; 60
m1ns.)
® AMERICANS 'The Private Eye'
John O'Grady, Hollywood' s
NumberOnePrivateEyedescribea
his life all!• and work.
(j) &lt;i2l ut VEGA$ Dan Tanna
desperately attempts to prevent
Bea, his beautiful assistant, from
marrying a man who plana to kill her
to gain control of her daughter's
inheritance. (Repeat; 60 mina.)
C1.J GUESS WHO'S PREGNANT ·
AN UPDATE Many of the experts
who appeared in the 1977 program
'Guess Who' s Pregnant?' are reviaited and asked for their assess·
menta of the current teenage pregnancy crisis. (80 min a.)
(llJ NEWS
10:30 CIJ MAX MORRIS
(llJ OVER EASY Guest: Irwin Shaw.
Host: HI!.Q!l Downs.

m m

1 t :oo

'Dance in America: Trailblazers of
Modern Dance' The history of the
modern dance movement from the
turn oft he century through the early
30' s ia traced , using documentary
footage, photography and draw·
!!!II&amp;. (80 mina.)
8:30 W THE PRESENCE OF GOD
9 :00 &lt;Il8Cll DIFF'RENTSTROKES
(]) 700CLUB
(!) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Silent Partner" 1979

.....__. • Fast Accurant Prescription Service
• Russell Stover Candies
• Free Delivery ill the Gallipolis Area
PHone 446-1883

A gath enng o f myst1 cs 1n
Florida. a racing boat made o f
empty milk c ar t ons . an ugly
dog contes t and a vis1t to a
dime-a-dance hal l are some o f
the enjoyable highl1gh t s on
NBC-TV 's popular ' Real Peo ple .· WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11 .
Roving reporter Bill Raff er t y
(front left) goes t o the Ontan o
(Cali! .) Speedway . where veh icles are pr opelled by human
power .
John B arb our . Sarah Pur cell.
Skip Stephenson and Byron
Allen (rear . left t o right ) are the
h osts of ·Re al People .·

i

the ship in drag to be with a girl who
can ' t
stand
him .
Baretta --' Everybody Paya The
Fare' The deathbed confeaslon of
animprisonedgangaterstiraBaret·
tatoavengehiaownfather'adeath.
lliel!!.at; 2 hra., 15 mina.)
1:00 CV .
TOMORROW Host: Tom
Snyder. Guest: Anthony Summers.
investigative reporter for theSBC.

1:30
1:35
2:00
2:09
2:30
3:30
4 :00
5: 15
5:30

~

mina . )

GOODNEWS
NEWS
REX HUMBARD
ffi NEWS
ffi MOVIE-(SUSPENSE)•• " Who
Slew AunUe Roo?" 1971
IJID I BELIEVE
·
iUlm NEWS
CIJ ROSS' BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• "Devil' a
Angela" 1987
(]) 100 CLUB
(J) MAVERICK
CIJ BOB GASS

CHE CK l iSTI NGS

-

- --

9:00 a.m. · 6:00 p.m. Monday - Friday

DAVID CARR, D. 0.
2924 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 675-6971

r or• [UCT TIM[

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

U.S. OPEN GOLF
AB C Sport s will be devoting 8 '•
hours of television cove r age to
the U.S. Open Golf Championship
t o be held at Baltusrol Golf Club
1n Springfi eld . N .J .. includ1ng 11ve
18-hole co verage on the third
and fourth rounds . The pr ograms
will air TUESDAY, JUNE 12,
FRIDAY, JUNE 13, SATURDAY,
JUNE 14 and Sunday . June 15 on
AB C-TV.
The last U.S. Open held at
Baltusrol w as won by Jac k
Nicklaus (p1ct ured) in 1967 . Jack
will be ba ck , with three U.S. Open
t1t les to his name . along with
reigning Mas t ers and Briti sh
Open Champion Sevenano Bal lesteros: two -t ime Bnt1 sh Open
w1nner Tom Watson . de fen d ing
U.S. Open ChampiOn Hale l rw1n
and
PGA
Champ1on
Dav1d
Gr aham .
CHE CK liSTI NGS FOR EU CT TIM E

FAMILY CLINIC

. FREE ESTIMATES · PROMPT SERVICE
Fust Street
675-2460
Point Pleasant

REAL PEOPLE

mu m

Allergy and Dermatology

\

-======-----------------------

C1J JEWISH VOICE
(!) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •••• " Dear
Hunter" 1978
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD 'Venemoua
Snakes'
()) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(llJ DICK CAVE" SHOW
11:30
THETONIGHTSHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. (90 mins.)
C1J ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(WESTERN) ••• " Rachal and the Stranger" 11148
()) &lt;i2l Gt
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
llJ(J) YOUR TURN: LETTERS TO
S NEWS
ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOVIE -(MYSTERY) •• "Hon·
nmoon with a Stranger" 1989
11:50 wiUlm
BOATAguyboarda
-BARE"A - -- - - -LoveBoatLOVE
--' OhDale'

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.

PAY YOUR
PHONE BILl
OR CABLE
TV HERE

.·w1uao an1e.
a41 ." il?lJOWW I a41 . sauas /\1 a~ l u1
I?IAi.':S pa.':e1d ; al el o ~M .':ajU.':l iOJI?:::J pue ap1 1M
ap uopue;g a;aM s; a8e uaal a41 :;aMSU\1
: wp~

m
• w m• rn !liD ii2l m
NEWS

mmi!J

(J)()j) GREAT PERFORMANCES

Two young teenagers, faced with the coming
of an unwanted baby, attempt to find a
solut~on In this 1959 feature. Can you name
the t1tle and the two stars pictured?

SUPER
PHARMACY
• The Low Cost
Prescription Specialists
• Low Cost Photo
Finishing
• Always Specials
Throughout The Store
• Timex Watches At
Discount Prices.
CIJlii:J Health •Aid Pharmacy
~

WI ST. \lllttT

NIW liUIN W U

P•u• 111 100S

(

�Page Six- TV Supplement

((tuesday»
TUESDAY
JUNE 10, 11180
EVENING

6:oo

me
marn®JiHimNEws
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

~

INED

IN PROGRESS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC NEWS
C1.J (llJ ZOOM
6 :30
NBC NEWS
® I LOVE LUCY
CIJ
CAROL BURNE" AND
FRIENDS
O CIJ®l CBS NEWS
ill WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(llJ OVER EASY Guest : Vic
Damone. Host: Hugh Downs.
iUl 0) ABC NEWS
7:00
CROSS WITS
CIJ PUPPET TREE GANG
Cil HOGAN'S HEROES
(J) iUl 0) F ACETHE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O(J) TICTACDOUGH
ill MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
IJID NEWS
(llJ DI~K CAVE" SHOW
7:30 (I) U
®J
HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
CIJ FAITHTHATLIVES
(!) WORLD'S GREATEST EsCAPES A full hour of breathtaking
entertainment breaks loose as this
thrilling rea l·lite drama follows four
young artists as they perform
death -defying acts made famous
by the logendary Harry Houdini .
Ton1 Curtis hosts.
CIJ BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
St . Louis Cardinals
CIJ iUl GJ SHA NA NA
ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
O CIJ JOKER'S WILD
ill DICK CAVE" SHOW
(llJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
THE MISADVENTURES
8 :00
OF SHERIFF LOBO A feisty senior
citizen gets even with a real estate
developer and the law by setting off ·
dynamite charges to protest her
co nfinement in a retirement home.
(Hepeat ; 60 mins.)
(]J ORAL ROBERTS
riJ@ GJ HAPPY DAYS Fonzie 's
home away from ~orne , Inspiration
Poin t , is set to be destroyed for a
freewayrampsohepullseVerytrick
in the book to save hls.love nest.

mo m

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ffieP.!!a!l

0

l.IJ ®l THE WHITE SHADOW

James H~yward , soul -sick at the
death of his young cousin, who had
OD 'd on drugs, seta out to find and
kill his ' connection .' (Repeat; 60
mms_j
C1.J (llJ NOVA ' BaMiki BaNdula :
Children of lheForeat' Ararelookat
Zaire's Mbuti pygmies In their
tropical rain forest home reveals
the secrets of survival of a culture
that for thousands of years has
remained untouched by modern
civilization. (60 mins.)
8 :30 (]J GOOD NEWS
(!) CONSUMER REPORTS PRE·
SENTS ' The Medicine Show' For
consumers confused about whi ch
overthe-counter drugs are the best
buys, this exclusive offers a cure
This second segment of this enter:
tain ing and informative series
helpsshoppersmakewisechoices
in the medicine marketplace.
(j)(U)GJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
Laverne and Shirley's reunion with
Shirley's brother takes an unexpected turn when they discover he

has picked up a very disturbing
habit. (R~eat)
9:00
Cll TUESDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES ' Women In White'
1977 Stare : Susan Flannery
Robart Culp.
'·
CIJ 700CLUB
Cil MOVIE-(COMEDY)u~ "Frt.co Kid" 1979
.
(j) &lt;i2l •
THREE'S COMPANY
Jack, Janet .and Chrlaey take in a
cute but sally 75-year-old man who
repeatedly barges In on Jack' s
romantic inlertude with a gorgeous
girl , plucka Furley' a prize roses,
and soaks a couple of frisky roommates of hia own. (Repeat)

m•

::======---------:--------------BAD NEWS
BEARS
When Regi , Tanner and Engelberg gel on Ogilvie ' s ·case'
(Sparky Marcus. pictured) th e
little brains of th e Bears iay a
m a;or ·guilt trip ' on the trio that
c auses them to r un away fro m
home on 'The Bad News Be ar s. '
SATURDAY,
JUNE
14
on
CBS -TV
Ogilvie's ' mind-bender' has the
boys convinced that they are
responsible for ca using a valley wide power bl ackout . and 'th e
only way to st ay out of jail IS to
make a run for it. The ' run ' takes
t hem on an adventure with a
tough mot or cyc le gang . unt1l
Coach Buttermake r ca t ches up
to them and ·rumbles · with the
wild bun ch .

(J;IQ!e~Captloned)

DCIJ®lTUESDAYNIGHTMOVIE
'MStatlon: Hawaii' t980Stara: An·
drew Duggan, JoAnn Harris.
(J)(ll) SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS
'Patterns, Evidence aod Investigation: In this premiere episode, the
aubJ&amp;Cia explored are patterns In
everyday life that help ua discern,
the Information we gather, and the
baa].g_proceaa of !)baerving.
9 :30 (J) (12) tD TAXI Louie's romance
with girlfriend Zena takes an ou trageous twist when she brings him
home to meet her parents.

epeal)

10:00

~

&lt;i2Jm

~aria'

(11J OVER EASY Guest : Vic
Damone. Host: Hugh Downs.

m o m m • m !liD &lt;l2l m

NEWS
TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
(!) NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIVALHeadaouthtotheGrand
OleOpryHouseforthiahigh-energy
country-pop music festival featur·
ing stars like Barbara Mandrell
Lynn Anderson , ainger-comedia~
Jim Stafford and Johnny Caah'a
country -rocking daughter, Ro·
seanne Cash.
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD 'African
Elephant'
DAVEALLENATLARGE.
DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:30
8THETONIGHTSHOW'Beat
01 Carson ' Guests: Dolly Parton.
Jack Albertson, William &amp;latty.
epeat; 90 mina.)
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MOVIE -(MYSTERY) ••• "The
Stranll!r" 1948
(J) (12) •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
THE BEST OF CARSON
0 ()) CBS LATE MOVIE
'BARNABY JONES: BandOI Evil' A
bronc-buster disappears and Barnaby relies upon a conversation
overheard by a rancher' s daughter
for an Important clue . (Repeat)
'MARY HARTMAN, MARY HART·
MAN' Stars: Louise Lasser, Greg
Mullavey.
()) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®l MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •• ~
"Sabaatlan" 1988
11 :50 (J) iUl tD SOAP Cheater confesses to Jeaeica that Instead of
visiting a minister lor help with his
womanizing problema, he' s been
meeting the minis ter's teenage
daughter in an adult motel.

C1J

Station: Hawaii ,' a suspense·
thnller focusing oo the cloakand- dagger atmosphere surroundIng a government -ini ti ated search
lor a mystery Soviet submanne
m1Ss1ng off the coas t of Hawaii
a nd showcasi ng the cr ea t iVe
talents of Jack Lord . will be
broad cas t on 'The CBS Tuesday
N1gh t Movies.· TUESDAY, JUNE 10
on CBS-TV.
Jared Martin (pictured) Jo Ann
Harris and Andrew Duggan st ar 1n
the adventure film .
A Honolulu-based underwater
research and salvage firm headed
by Dana Ryan (Martm) overcomes
the dangerous asSignment of
locating and exploring the sunken
Russian sub in quest of suspected
t op-secre t technologica l data .
CHECK LISTINGS f OR EXACT

mu

ffi

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~e;a~

TUESDAY MOVIE OF
THE WEEK ' Beautiful But Deadly'

12:30
1:00
1:20
1:25

1973 Stars: Anthony Quinn, Robert
Forster.
Cil MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) •• ~
"Ey_v Of Laura Mara" 1978
TOMORROW
(]) CHARISMA
NEWS
NEWS
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALLREPLAY

(l) OLDTIMEGOSPELHOUR

m•

1:30
2:00
2:30
2:38
3:55

~

4:00 C1J 700 CLUB
5:30 (l) JESUS IS THE ANSWER
(J) LOVE AMERICAN STYLE

®liBELIEVE

(l) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

&lt;i2JID NEWS

ffi MOVIE-(DRAMA)• "Portrallln

Terror" 1085

Trust Your Home Heat To

ma
rnarn®JiHim NEws
(])ROSS BAGLEY HOUR(JOINED
IN PROGRESS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
(J) ABC NEWS
()) (llJ ZOOM
NBC NEWS
(!)STANDING ROOM ONLY 'Red
Skelton'aFunnyFacea' Old friends
like Freddie the Freeloader and
Clem Kaddiddlehopper are just a
few of your favorite a on hand when
Red Skelton hosts this exclusive
showcasing Shields and Yarnell
YacovNoy and several other greai
masters of mime.
(J) I LOVE LUCY
(j)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
G(J)IJID CBS NEWS
Cll WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
ABCNEWS
CROSS WITS
CIJ BIBLE BOWL
(J) HOGAN'S HEROES
(J)(j2J. FACE THE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
()) TIC TAC DOUGH
,-.,. MACNEIL·LEHRER REPORT
1JJUNEWS
(llJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
&lt;Il 8 COUNTRY ROADS
CIJ AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
(!) MOVIE -(CARTOON) ••• " Dot
And The Kangaroo"
® ALLIN THE FAMILY
(J) MATCH GAME
WILD KINGDOM
()) JOKER' S WILD
DICK CAVETT SHOW
THE JUDGE
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
FAMILY FEUD
(l) REALPEOPLEAgather·
ing of mystics in Florida , a racing
boatmadeofemptymilkcartons,an
ugly dog contest, and a visit to a
dime-a -dance halt are featured .
(Repeat;
60
mlns .)
oaed-Captioned)
FOCUS ON THE FAMILY
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) •••
"Lo.!!lfell Hundred Mltea" 1987
())112). FAMILYBuddyhaabeen
acceptedbyfourcollegea, but pretendathalahehaabeenrejectedby
all ol them because ahela awed by
the prospect of leaving home. (60
mint)
G(J)IJID CAPTAIN AMERICA An
athletic young ex -Marine becomes
crimefighter Captain America as
his lather had, years earlier, and,
augmented by a secret super·
steroid, pursues an arch -criminal
whoplanatodecimatePhoenlxwith
a _neutron bomb. (Conclusion; 60

CIJ

6:30

7:30

·~

earlier reservations to undertake

~

12:20

' EVENING

s:oo

M STATION:
HAWAII
I

(j)
fll- (j2) Gt CHARLIE'S ANGELS

WEDNESDAY
JUNE 11, 1980

7:00

~

!lmouir Nostalgia

«wednesday))

---------~~~~~~~~---=CH~[C=K~l~OSl~ON=C~S~FO:R~[~::Cl~l~0·~·---

MAVERICK
·
HART TO HART At a
scavenger hunt lor hidden jewels in
a haunted manalon, one of the
guests ia murdared --throwing the
Harts into a race against time to
reveal the killer' a Identity before
they become the next victims .
epeat ; 60 mina.)
CITY NOTEBOOK
NEWS
10:30 CIJ FAITH 20
CI.J CAMERA THREE 'Duro
Lapldo'a National ·Theater ol

11 :oo

Page Seven-TV Supplement

rn•m

II
i

I

8 :00

II
ffi

. (J) ®l WEDNESDAY NIGHT
MOVIE ' Getting Married' 1978
Stare: Richard Thomas, Bess Arm·
strong.
C1.J (1JJ HENRY MOORE This pro gram IS a portrayal of sculptor
Henry Moore, his life and his work.
(ltO min!,)
9:30 CV8 m THEFACTSOFLIFE
10:00
G
QUINCY Teenage alcohollamiainvolvedwhenaatudent
is killed in a traffic mishap , and
Quincy must establish whether the
niece of his boas, Or. As ten was
driving the car and Is possibly guilty
of_ manslaughter. (Repeat; 60
m1ns.)
® AMERICANS 'The Private Eye'
John O'Grady, Hollywood' s
NumberOnePrivateEyedescribea
his life all!• and work.
(j) &lt;i2l ut VEGA$ Dan Tanna
desperately attempts to prevent
Bea, his beautiful assistant, from
marrying a man who plana to kill her
to gain control of her daughter's
inheritance. (Repeat; 60 mina.)
C1.J GUESS WHO'S PREGNANT ·
AN UPDATE Many of the experts
who appeared in the 1977 program
'Guess Who' s Pregnant?' are reviaited and asked for their assess·
menta of the current teenage pregnancy crisis. (80 min a.)
(llJ NEWS
10:30 CIJ MAX MORRIS
(llJ OVER EASY Guest: Irwin Shaw.
Host: HI!.Q!l Downs.

m m

1 t :oo

'Dance in America: Trailblazers of
Modern Dance' The history of the
modern dance movement from the
turn oft he century through the early
30' s ia traced , using documentary
footage, photography and draw·
!!!II&amp;. (80 mina.)
8:30 W THE PRESENCE OF GOD
9 :00 &lt;Il8Cll DIFF'RENTSTROKES
(]) 700CLUB
(!) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) •••
"Silent Partner" 1979

.....__. • Fast Accurant Prescription Service
• Russell Stover Candies
• Free Delivery ill the Gallipolis Area
PHone 446-1883

A gath enng o f myst1 cs 1n
Florida. a racing boat made o f
empty milk c ar t ons . an ugly
dog contes t and a vis1t to a
dime-a-dance hal l are some o f
the enjoyable highl1gh t s on
NBC-TV 's popular ' Real Peo ple .· WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11 .
Roving reporter Bill Raff er t y
(front left) goes t o the Ontan o
(Cali! .) Speedway . where veh icles are pr opelled by human
power .
John B arb our . Sarah Pur cell.
Skip Stephenson and Byron
Allen (rear . left t o right ) are the
h osts of ·Re al People .·

i

the ship in drag to be with a girl who
can ' t
stand
him .
Baretta --' Everybody Paya The
Fare' The deathbed confeaslon of
animprisonedgangaterstiraBaret·
tatoavengehiaownfather'adeath.
lliel!!.at; 2 hra., 15 mina.)
1:00 CV .
TOMORROW Host: Tom
Snyder. Guest: Anthony Summers.
investigative reporter for theSBC.

1:30
1:35
2:00
2:09
2:30
3:30
4 :00
5: 15
5:30

~

mina . )

GOODNEWS
NEWS
REX HUMBARD
ffi NEWS
ffi MOVIE-(SUSPENSE)•• " Who
Slew AunUe Roo?" 1971
IJID I BELIEVE
·
iUlm NEWS
CIJ ROSS' BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• "Devil' a
Angela" 1987
(]) 100 CLUB
(J) MAVERICK
CIJ BOB GASS

CHE CK l iSTI NGS

-

- --

9:00 a.m. · 6:00 p.m. Monday - Friday

DAVID CARR, D. 0.
2924 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 675-6971

r or• [UCT TIM[

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

U.S. OPEN GOLF
AB C Sport s will be devoting 8 '•
hours of television cove r age to
the U.S. Open Golf Championship
t o be held at Baltusrol Golf Club
1n Springfi eld . N .J .. includ1ng 11ve
18-hole co verage on the third
and fourth rounds . The pr ograms
will air TUESDAY, JUNE 12,
FRIDAY, JUNE 13, SATURDAY,
JUNE 14 and Sunday . June 15 on
AB C-TV.
The last U.S. Open held at
Baltusrol w as won by Jac k
Nicklaus (p1ct ured) in 1967 . Jack
will be ba ck , with three U.S. Open
t1t les to his name . along with
reigning Mas t ers and Briti sh
Open Champion Sevenano Bal lesteros: two -t ime Bnt1 sh Open
w1nner Tom Watson . de fen d ing
U.S. Open ChampiOn Hale l rw1n
and
PGA
Champ1on
Dav1d
Gr aham .
CHE CK liSTI NGS FOR EU CT TIM E

FAMILY CLINIC

. FREE ESTIMATES · PROMPT SERVICE
Fust Street
675-2460
Point Pleasant

REAL PEOPLE

mu m

Allergy and Dermatology

\

-======-----------------------

C1J JEWISH VOICE
(!) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •••• " Dear
Hunter" 1978
CIJ LAST OF THE WILD 'Venemoua
Snakes'
()) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(llJ DICK CAVE" SHOW
11:30
THETONIGHTSHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. (90 mins.)
C1J ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(WESTERN) ••• " Rachal and the Stranger" 11148
()) &lt;i2l Gt
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
llJ(J) YOUR TURN: LETTERS TO
S NEWS
ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
MOVIE -(MYSTERY) •• "Hon·
nmoon with a Stranger" 1989
11:50 wiUlm
BOATAguyboarda
-BARE"A - -- - - -LoveBoatLOVE
--' OhDale'

CITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.

PAY YOUR
PHONE BILl
OR CABLE
TV HERE

.·w1uao an1e.
a41 ." il?lJOWW I a41 . sauas /\1 a~ l u1
I?IAi.':S pa.':e1d ; al el o ~M .':ajU.':l iOJI?:::J pue ap1 1M
ap uopue;g a;aM s; a8e uaal a41 :;aMSU\1
: wp~

m
• w m• rn !liD ii2l m
NEWS

mmi!J

(J)()j) GREAT PERFORMANCES

Two young teenagers, faced with the coming
of an unwanted baby, attempt to find a
solut~on In this 1959 feature. Can you name
the t1tle and the two stars pictured?

SUPER
PHARMACY
• The Low Cost
Prescription Specialists
• Low Cost Photo
Finishing
• Always Specials
Throughout The Store
• Timex Watches At
Discount Prices.
CIJlii:J Health •Aid Pharmacy
~

WI ST. \lllttT

NIW liUIN W U

P•u• 111 100S

(

�Page Eight- TV Supplement
Page Nine-TV Supplement

«thursday))

I'

I

THURSDAY
JUNE 12, 1980

I ,

6 :oo

I

I

mo mo OO®Hwm NEws

I

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
OINED IN PROGRESS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC NEWS
ill® ZOOM
6 :30 m U ffi NBC NEWS
ffi I LOVE LUCY
CIJ
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
0 00@ CBS NEWS
(I)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
@ OVER EASY Guest : I. F. Stone.

.""l

ffi

'

•

6: oo

6 :30

JUNE 12.
A New York City clergy man with a pen chant for
solving crimes. befriends an
aspinng ac tress (Kay Lenz)
who se l•fe ha s rece ntly
bec ome f•lled w1th terr or du e
to a se rie s of b1zarre even t s.
George Hea rn co-st ars.

Host : Hu gh Dow ns.

@ Q) ABC NEWS
7:00 m U
YOUTH FOR CHRIST
TELETHON ' Wh ere Have All th e
Child ren Gone?' Johnn y Cash
hos ts th is specia l wh ich fea tures a

documentary on th e social pres·
sures face d by Ieday 's yo ung

CHECK.

liSTINGS

f OR £AACI li M£

~o pt e .

W BACKYARD

7:00

(J) BOXING 'SGREATESTCHAMPIONS 'Bes t of th e Heavywei ghts'
Part I Th e world ' s heavyweigh t
champs · Dempsey, Marciano ,

)

" Grease" 1978

CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• \lo

"Girl

Named Tamlko" 1963
CI)@Q) MORK AND MINDY Mork
create s turmoil inside a hospital
when he discovers Mindy has been
heavily sedated and wrongly
scheduled for brain surgery inst ead of th e tonsillectomy sh e
checked in lor. (Repeat)
ffi BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25th
CENTURY Bu ck helps the
daughter of a tyrannical prime min·
is ter to overthrow her mother. th e
lead er of a planet where women are
th e masters. (Repeat; 60 mins.)
0 CIJ ®J THE WALTON$ Olivia
and John take pa inful ateps in
hopes of finding John-Boy still alive
after the War Department has
report ed him missing. (Repeat; eo
mina.)
Cil PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
® BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL ' A
Conversation
with
Carlos
Fuentes'
8 :30 CIJ WAKE UP AMERICA
CIJ &lt;i2J Q) BENSON Benson linds
himself stuck on a high-risewindow
ledge, trying to avoid discovery by
the business-minded husband of a
former girlfriend who turns to Benson becau se she 's love-starved.
ffiepeat)
CIJ SNEAK PREVIEWS Co -host s
Roger Eb ert and Gene Siskel take a
look ba ck at th e be st movies of the
se vent ie s, inc luding ' Annie Hall'
and 'Breaking Away '.
9 :00 ill 8 TELETHON CONTINUES
CIJ 700CLUB
CIJ&lt;i2J Q) BARNEY MILLER A Unit·
ed Na ti ons delegate' s chauffeur
turn souttobeaslaveandHarri aand
Wojo demand that he be set free .
(Bepeat)
ffi MOVIE OF THE WEEK 'The Girl
In The Park ' t979 Stars : Barnard
Hughes Kay Lenz .
0 Cil
BARNABY JONES The
search for a client' s mi ssing
daughter un cover s the sinister
seduction of beau til uI teenage g iri s
foran internation alwhltealavemarket. (Repeat; eo mins.)

®J.

9 Cry
!0 Consumed
12 Wo nderland g1r l

rn
u ma
oo®J®mNew s
(I)
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,tOINED IN PROGRESS)
(I) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CIJ ABC NEWS
CIJ® ZOOM
ill U ffi NBC NEWS
(J) WORLD'S GIOEATEST EsCAPES A full hour of breathtaking
entertainii1Jentbreak a loose as this
thrillii)Q' reliHifedrama lollowslour
young aril&amp;l a as they perf orm
death-defying ac t a made famous
by the legendary Harry Houdini .
Tony Curtis hosts .
CIJ I LOVE LUCY
00 CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
liiCIJ®J CBS NEWS
CIJ
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
ABC NEWS
CROSSWITS
STUFF
HOGAN'S HEROES
FACE THE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
Cil TICTACDOUGH
CIJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REP.ORT
®) NEWS
® DICK CAVETT SHOW
CIJ D CHILDREN OF THE THIRD
WORLD
,
CIJ THE LESSON
(J) NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIV ALHead south to th e Grand
OleOpryHousetorthishigh·energy
co untry ~ p 9p music festiva l fea turing stars like Barb ar a Mandrell,
Lynn And erson, si nger-c omedia n
Jim St aff ord and Johnny Cash's
country-rocking da ugh ter, Roseann e Ca sh.
® ALLIN THE FAMILY
00 SHANANA
ffi @ Q)
POP GOES THE
COUNTRY
O CIJ JOKER'S WILD
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J FAMILY FEUD
® MACNEIL-LEHRER REPOR T
tiJ U ffi HERE'S BOOMER
CIJ IN TOUCH
® MOVIE -(HORROR-DRAMA)
••• •• ataek Sabbath'' 1964
CIJ@ Q) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
'Pani c At Lakewood Manor' 1977
Stars: Suzanne Som ers , Robert
Foxworth.
O CIJ®J THE INCREDIBLE HULK
David Banner tries to thwart a rob bery by joining th e th ieves .
(!le~!!_at ; 60 mins.) ·
CIJ l.t1J WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
CIJU BASEBALL Cincinna ti Reds
vs St. Louis Cardinals
ffi ME AND MAXX Maxx holds off
on household chores until Norman
agrees to settle her strike for th e
same ' necessities ' that her friend
Karen haa·-a stereo, bicycle and
teleP.hone. ·
CIJ (iD WALL STREET WEEK
'Money Funda:·Looaing Interest?'
Host: Louis Rukeyser.
CIJ 700 CLUB
(J) CANDID CANDID CAMERA
Allen Funt io back again presenting
the third in this adult comedy ser·
iea. lt' a unceo-ed, spontaneous
hilarity ao only Funt - andHBO ·can
bring to the screen.

(Clue to puufe answer 1
Hate
18 Show and ·
20 EnthusiaSt iC

15

21 Beer
22 "The Way We
24 Repeal

25 Numeral su ff1x
28 W1th ·h· tt"s a clue
·r 1t" s a color
31 Boleyn
32 12 o ·clock
34 Poor
36 Concur
3 7 Chewmg --·
39 Body ac1d
41 Sco tt1 sh waterfall s
4 2 Water snake s

DOWN

I

I

2 Exdte
3 Assa m tnbe
4 Evalu ate
5 Te s t1ng places
6 Perpostton
7 Obt a1n
8 Cha ~r
I I Sowed
!3 Meado w
14 Scr ubbed
16 Hock1ng

(12).

•

Louis , Al i and more · go the rounds
fo r top -class boxing action on this
highly-acc laim ed hi st ori cal boxi ng

series.
ffi HOGAN'S HEROES
CIJ@ Q) F ACETHE MUSIC
ffi LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O CIJ TICTACDOUGH
00 MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
@ NEWS
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 CIJ ZOLA LEVITT
ffi ALL IN THE FAMILY
Cl) IN SEARCH OF
ffi COUNTRY ROADS
0 (1) JOKER'S WILD
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@ $100,000NAME THAT TUNE
® MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
@ Q)
NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
8 :00 CIJ MISSIONAIRES IN ACTION
(J) MOVIE -(MUSICAL) ••••

Meteor
5 Lor d ' s ·prayer

EVENING

Barn ard Hughes (pic tured)
stars in th e role of the priest.
Father Brown. in thi s adap tation of th e G.K. Cheste rt on
stori es to be presented on
NBC-TV 's 'Thur sday Night at
the Mov1es.. THURSDAY ,

I

CIJ

ACROSS
JUNE 13, 1980

I

I •

EVENING

«friday))

TH E GIRL
IN THE PARK

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MOVIE RATINGS
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•

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•

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* * • * Excellent
(don't miss this
·.
* * • Good (worth watching)
Fair (has its moments)
**

•

Cil

RIGHTEOUS
APPLES
'A.S.A.P.' A head to head to battle
takes place between J .T. and the
son of a leader of a white suer..emacy group.
l.t1J SNEAK PREVIEWS Co·hoats
Roger Ebert and Gene Siakel
review the latest movies.
9 :30 CIJ &lt;i2J Q) SEMI-TOUGH Barbara
Jane and Billy ·Clyde frantically
search for Shake atterheheroical·
wl~a a football game.
GOOD NEIGHBORS
CAMERA THREE 'An Interview
with John Irving'
10:00 (J) MOVIE -(DRAMA) • • \lo "Hardcore'' 1979
CIJ@ Q) ABC NEWS CLOSEUP
'Northern Ireland ' This apecial
takes a look a! the grim situation in
today ' a Northern Ireland: attheBri·
tiah Army, at the Irish aeeking in·
dependence, and at the Protes·
tanto Iiiio want to remain' part of
Brltain. l_60 mine.)
D ClJ ®l KNOTS LANDING Sid
and Karen Fairgale 'o marriage and
home life are shaken to the founds ·
tlonsll(hen Annie, Sid' a rebelliOus
daughterfromapreviousmarrlage,
comes to stay tor a vlalt. (Repeat;
60mins.)
ClJ
SOUNDSTAGE
·Joan
Armatrading '
(fi) NEWS

~

10:30

7 :30

one)

Poor (disaster)

® OVER EASY Guest: I.F. Stone.
Hoat: HI!Q_h Downs.
11 :oo
LlJ
CIJ ®J
NEWS
CIJ JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
DAVEALLENATLARGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:30
• ClJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. (90 mins.)
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• \lo " Hatchet 118ft" 1932
U.S. OPEN GOLF
D CIJ CBSLATEMOVIE 'THEJEF·
FERSONS : Lionel Cries Uncle '
Lionel's Uncle Ward pays a visit to
the Jefferson a and Louise warn a
everyone to be on their beat
behavior. (Repeat) 'PAT AND
MIKE' 1952 Stars: Spencer Trac y,
Katharine Hepburn.
ill ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE · (DRAMA) • \lo "The
Sewen Mlnutea" 1971
11:45 (J) MOVIE -(COMEDY) •• \lo "Up
From The D..!JIIha" 1879
Cil &lt;12J IIIII
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE

rn •

ma

&lt;i2l m

i

CIJ&lt;i2le

12:05 ([)
&lt;i2J
Q)
CHARLIE'S
ANG.eL$-BARETTA
1:00 Cil B TOMORROW
KOINONIA
NEWS
NEWS
1:05 ;
1: 10
MOVIE
-(ADVENTURE-DRAMA) •• \lo "C~
Beneath the Sea" 1953
1:30
. ROBERT SCHULLER
2:00
JJELIE.VE
2:24
• NEWS
2:30
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:00
MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• \lo "Flood
Tide" 1858
4:00 ~ 700 CLUB
4:50
MAVERICK
5:30
SOUND OF THE SPIRIT

8 :00

!

Detlvaedlor

8 :30

~
/

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Coaapetllloa f:., -

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lor eomtort 1nd support

CIJ
CIJ

NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'The Perfec t Stranger'

9 :00

17 French huntmg mat ch
19 Intended

23 P OSi t ions
26 Compass pomt
27 So lar -- --- 29 St atus quo
30 Foot part
33 Collar

36 Land measure
38 Not (prefl)()
40 Co mpas s d~rec h on

Answer on Page 10
(
CLJ THE ROCKFORD FILES
0 CIJ @ THE DUKES OF HAZZARD Luke an d Bo are delighted to
be able to help their Idol, guest star
Ga le Ya rb orough, famo us st ock
ca rracer, test some newequipm ent
in Haz zard County. (Repea t: 60
mins.)
CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) • • • \lo
" Father" 1967
@ NON·FICTLON TELEVISION
' Ta lking Ba c k Detro it' St ephen
Lighthill' s film follows the activiti es
of thr ee self-adm itt ed De tr oi t
revolutionari es as they develop al·
t ernative approac hes t o urb an
!![_Oblems. (60 mins.)
9:30 W MOVIE -(COMEDY) • • • " Tho
ln-Lawa " 1979
10:00 ffi PERSPECTIVE ON GREATNESS 'Eleanor Roosevelt '
UV @ C8 TENSPEED AND
BROWNSHOEE.L.useshis c ourtly
charmsto marry off a naive Russian
co untess for profit, but the happy
walkdowntheaislebecomesamad
scramble when dangerous hood·
lums snatch the bride to obtain her
priceless family heirloom. (60
mins.)
0D A MAN CALLED SLOANE
Secret agent T.R. Sloane grapples
with an army of deadly humanoids

'

Honda
for

1980

area

35 Sweet po ta toes

HEADQUARTERS
. '

10:30

11 :oo

11: 15
11 :30

controlled by a demented scientist,
wh o nee ds plut onium to f11&amp;ke his
crea tions invincible. (Repeat ; 60
min.$_,)
0 00 ®J DALLAS J.R. is ca ught
fr om a ll sides wh en a t yp hoon
delays the oil drilling in Asia as his
bank loan becomes due, then
Bobby discov er s th at J.R. has
mortgag ed Southfork Ranc h.
epeat ; 60 mins.)
NEWS
RICHARD HOGUE
(!) OH BROTHER, MY BROTHER
® OVEREASYGuest:Carlos Mon·
!gya. Host: Hugh Downs.
w U Cilffi O OO®ltW ID
NEWS
CIJ DAN GRIFFIN
® LAST OFTHE WILD 'Hippo'
DAVEALLENATLARGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
MOVIE ·(DRAMA)•• " ADIIfer·
ent Sto.a"
'
·
Cil 8 W THE TONIGHT SHOW
Hoat: Johnny Carson. (90 min s.)
CIJ ROSS BAGI.:EY SHOW
ill MOVIE -(HORROR-DRAMA) ••
1
" R• ttucu•"
1962
CIJ
U.S. OPEN GOL:F
II
CBS LATE MOVIE ' THE
AVENGERS:FearMerchant s' Four
buelneaamen ~&amp;come mental
wrecks , breaking down at seemingly innocent incidents yntilan in·
vestigation reveals that i' c om pet·
lng firm is using bizarre psychiatric
technique• to eliminate c ompeti·

12:00
1:00

~

1: 15

~

1:20
1:30
1:40

~8

CD

2:00
2: 15
2:30
2:35
3:05
4 :00
4 : 10
5:30

lion . 'THE RETURN OF THE SAI NT
One Black Sep t ember' Star s I an
Qgilvy, June Bolton.
LU ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@ I\IOVIE ' Th e Mumm y' 1959
Christopher l ee, P e t e r C~sh 1ng 21
'Th e Castl e ofT error' 1963
CIJ EMERGENCY
ill OAVIo' SUSSKIND SHOW
@ Q) ABC LATE MOVIE
m 8 CIJ
THE MIDNIGHT
SPECIAL
ClJ INSIGHT
(J) WORLD ' S GREATEST ES·
CAPES A lull hour of breathta k•ng
entertainment breaks loose as th1s
thrilling real-life dra ma follow s lour
yo ung arti st s as they perf orm
death-defyi ng act s made fam ous
by t he legendary Harry Houdm i
Tony Curtis host s.
ffi NEWS
CIJ JIMMY SWAGGART
CIJ ATlANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBAUREPLAY
@) I BELIEVE
(J) MOVIE.-(ADVENTURE) • •"'
"SevqeiiLooae" 1974
m e NEWS
.
CIJ RJ)SS BAGLEY SHOW
&lt;i2J
MARY TYLER MOORE
SHOW
@ &amp;)NEWS
CIJ 700CLUB
CIJ MOVIE-(MYSTERY)•• ~&lt;&gt; " Th e
WomM!In Green" 1945
CIJ JUST PASSING JHRU
® LOVE A~ERICAN Sl"n.E

a

OPEN

THE PERFECT GIFT FOR DAD'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE 15th

MONDAY
and FRIDAY .

TIL
. 8:00 PeM.

l\oyal Imperial
.

([arts
snoe store

by FLORSHEIM®.

"We Have The Areas Finest Selection 01 Ao11heim"

BEN FRANKLIN CO.
"The Home Of Good ·Shoes Since 1903"

Appalachian Tire Products, Inc.
.426 Viand Street

675-3930

Point Pleasant

"Your Good Yecrr Tire Headquarters"

GOOD/'iEAR
• TIRE CENTER

. • ROAD SERVICE

�Page Eight- TV Supplement
Page Nine-TV Supplement

«thursday))

I'

I

THURSDAY
JUNE 12, 1980

I ,

6 :oo

I

I

mo mo OO®Hwm NEws

I

ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
OINED IN PROGRESS)
ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
ABC NEWS
ill® ZOOM
6 :30 m U ffi NBC NEWS
ffi I LOVE LUCY
CIJ
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
0 00@ CBS NEWS
(I)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
@ OVER EASY Guest : I. F. Stone.

.""l

ffi

'

•

6: oo

6 :30

JUNE 12.
A New York City clergy man with a pen chant for
solving crimes. befriends an
aspinng ac tress (Kay Lenz)
who se l•fe ha s rece ntly
bec ome f•lled w1th terr or du e
to a se rie s of b1zarre even t s.
George Hea rn co-st ars.

Host : Hu gh Dow ns.

@ Q) ABC NEWS
7:00 m U
YOUTH FOR CHRIST
TELETHON ' Wh ere Have All th e
Child ren Gone?' Johnn y Cash
hos ts th is specia l wh ich fea tures a

documentary on th e social pres·
sures face d by Ieday 's yo ung

CHECK.

liSTINGS

f OR £AACI li M£

~o pt e .

W BACKYARD

7:00

(J) BOXING 'SGREATESTCHAMPIONS 'Bes t of th e Heavywei ghts'
Part I Th e world ' s heavyweigh t
champs · Dempsey, Marciano ,

)

" Grease" 1978

CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• \lo

"Girl

Named Tamlko" 1963
CI)@Q) MORK AND MINDY Mork
create s turmoil inside a hospital
when he discovers Mindy has been
heavily sedated and wrongly
scheduled for brain surgery inst ead of th e tonsillectomy sh e
checked in lor. (Repeat)
ffi BUCK ROGERS IN THE 25th
CENTURY Bu ck helps the
daughter of a tyrannical prime min·
is ter to overthrow her mother. th e
lead er of a planet where women are
th e masters. (Repeat; 60 mins.)
0 CIJ ®J THE WALTON$ Olivia
and John take pa inful ateps in
hopes of finding John-Boy still alive
after the War Department has
report ed him missing. (Repeat; eo
mina.)
Cil PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
® BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL ' A
Conversation
with
Carlos
Fuentes'
8 :30 CIJ WAKE UP AMERICA
CIJ &lt;i2J Q) BENSON Benson linds
himself stuck on a high-risewindow
ledge, trying to avoid discovery by
the business-minded husband of a
former girlfriend who turns to Benson becau se she 's love-starved.
ffiepeat)
CIJ SNEAK PREVIEWS Co -host s
Roger Eb ert and Gene Siskel take a
look ba ck at th e be st movies of the
se vent ie s, inc luding ' Annie Hall'
and 'Breaking Away '.
9 :00 ill 8 TELETHON CONTINUES
CIJ 700CLUB
CIJ&lt;i2J Q) BARNEY MILLER A Unit·
ed Na ti ons delegate' s chauffeur
turn souttobeaslaveandHarri aand
Wojo demand that he be set free .
(Bepeat)
ffi MOVIE OF THE WEEK 'The Girl
In The Park ' t979 Stars : Barnard
Hughes Kay Lenz .
0 Cil
BARNABY JONES The
search for a client' s mi ssing
daughter un cover s the sinister
seduction of beau til uI teenage g iri s
foran internation alwhltealavemarket. (Repeat; eo mins.)

®J.

9 Cry
!0 Consumed
12 Wo nderland g1r l

rn
u ma
oo®J®mNew s
(I)
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(,tOINED IN PROGRESS)
(I) ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW
CIJ ABC NEWS
CIJ® ZOOM
ill U ffi NBC NEWS
(J) WORLD'S GIOEATEST EsCAPES A full hour of breathtaking
entertainii1Jentbreak a loose as this
thrillii)Q' reliHifedrama lollowslour
young aril&amp;l a as they perf orm
death-defying ac t a made famous
by the legendary Harry Houdini .
Tony Curtis hosts .
CIJ I LOVE LUCY
00 CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
liiCIJ®J CBS NEWS
CIJ
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
VILLA ALEGRE
ABC NEWS
CROSSWITS
STUFF
HOGAN'S HEROES
FACE THE MUSIC
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
Cil TICTACDOUGH
CIJ MACNEIL-LEHRER REP.ORT
®) NEWS
® DICK CAVETT SHOW
CIJ D CHILDREN OF THE THIRD
WORLD
,
CIJ THE LESSON
(J) NASHVILLE COUNTRY POP
FESTIV ALHead south to th e Grand
OleOpryHousetorthishigh·energy
co untry ~ p 9p music festiva l fea turing stars like Barb ar a Mandrell,
Lynn And erson, si nger-c omedia n
Jim St aff ord and Johnny Cash's
country-rocking da ugh ter, Roseann e Ca sh.
® ALLIN THE FAMILY
00 SHANANA
ffi @ Q)
POP GOES THE
COUNTRY
O CIJ JOKER'S WILD
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J FAMILY FEUD
® MACNEIL-LEHRER REPOR T
tiJ U ffi HERE'S BOOMER
CIJ IN TOUCH
® MOVIE -(HORROR-DRAMA)
••• •• ataek Sabbath'' 1964
CIJ@ Q) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
'Pani c At Lakewood Manor' 1977
Stars: Suzanne Som ers , Robert
Foxworth.
O CIJ®J THE INCREDIBLE HULK
David Banner tries to thwart a rob bery by joining th e th ieves .
(!le~!!_at ; 60 mins.) ·
CIJ l.t1J WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
CIJU BASEBALL Cincinna ti Reds
vs St. Louis Cardinals
ffi ME AND MAXX Maxx holds off
on household chores until Norman
agrees to settle her strike for th e
same ' necessities ' that her friend
Karen haa·-a stereo, bicycle and
teleP.hone. ·
CIJ (iD WALL STREET WEEK
'Money Funda:·Looaing Interest?'
Host: Louis Rukeyser.
CIJ 700 CLUB
(J) CANDID CANDID CAMERA
Allen Funt io back again presenting
the third in this adult comedy ser·
iea. lt' a unceo-ed, spontaneous
hilarity ao only Funt - andHBO ·can
bring to the screen.

(Clue to puufe answer 1
Hate
18 Show and ·
20 EnthusiaSt iC

15

21 Beer
22 "The Way We
24 Repeal

25 Numeral su ff1x
28 W1th ·h· tt"s a clue
·r 1t" s a color
31 Boleyn
32 12 o ·clock
34 Poor
36 Concur
3 7 Chewmg --·
39 Body ac1d
41 Sco tt1 sh waterfall s
4 2 Water snake s

DOWN

I

I

2 Exdte
3 Assa m tnbe
4 Evalu ate
5 Te s t1ng places
6 Perpostton
7 Obt a1n
8 Cha ~r
I I Sowed
!3 Meado w
14 Scr ubbed
16 Hock1ng

(12).

•

Louis , Al i and more · go the rounds
fo r top -class boxing action on this
highly-acc laim ed hi st ori cal boxi ng

series.
ffi HOGAN'S HEROES
CIJ@ Q) F ACETHE MUSIC
ffi LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
O CIJ TICTACDOUGH
00 MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
@ NEWS
@ DICK CAVETT SHOW
7:30 CIJ ZOLA LEVITT
ffi ALL IN THE FAMILY
Cl) IN SEARCH OF
ffi COUNTRY ROADS
0 (1) JOKER'S WILD
CIJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@ $100,000NAME THAT TUNE
® MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
@ Q)
NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
8 :00 CIJ MISSIONAIRES IN ACTION
(J) MOVIE -(MUSICAL) ••••

Meteor
5 Lor d ' s ·prayer

EVENING

Barn ard Hughes (pic tured)
stars in th e role of the priest.
Father Brown. in thi s adap tation of th e G.K. Cheste rt on
stori es to be presented on
NBC-TV 's 'Thur sday Night at
the Mov1es.. THURSDAY ,

I

CIJ

ACROSS
JUNE 13, 1980

I

I •

EVENING

«friday))

TH E GIRL
IN THE PARK

I

e •

I

I

e •

I

I

I

I

I

a

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MOVIE RATINGS
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* * • * Excellent
(don't miss this
·.
* * • Good (worth watching)
Fair (has its moments)
**

•

Cil

RIGHTEOUS
APPLES
'A.S.A.P.' A head to head to battle
takes place between J .T. and the
son of a leader of a white suer..emacy group.
l.t1J SNEAK PREVIEWS Co·hoats
Roger Ebert and Gene Siakel
review the latest movies.
9 :30 CIJ &lt;i2J Q) SEMI-TOUGH Barbara
Jane and Billy ·Clyde frantically
search for Shake atterheheroical·
wl~a a football game.
GOOD NEIGHBORS
CAMERA THREE 'An Interview
with John Irving'
10:00 (J) MOVIE -(DRAMA) • • \lo "Hardcore'' 1979
CIJ@ Q) ABC NEWS CLOSEUP
'Northern Ireland ' This apecial
takes a look a! the grim situation in
today ' a Northern Ireland: attheBri·
tiah Army, at the Irish aeeking in·
dependence, and at the Protes·
tanto Iiiio want to remain' part of
Brltain. l_60 mine.)
D ClJ ®l KNOTS LANDING Sid
and Karen Fairgale 'o marriage and
home life are shaken to the founds ·
tlonsll(hen Annie, Sid' a rebelliOus
daughterfromapreviousmarrlage,
comes to stay tor a vlalt. (Repeat;
60mins.)
ClJ
SOUNDSTAGE
·Joan
Armatrading '
(fi) NEWS

~

10:30

7 :30

one)

Poor (disaster)

® OVER EASY Guest: I.F. Stone.
Hoat: HI!Q_h Downs.
11 :oo
LlJ
CIJ ®J
NEWS
CIJ JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
DAVEALLENATLARGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:30
• ClJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host: Johnny Carson. (90 mins.)
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• \lo " Hatchet 118ft" 1932
U.S. OPEN GOLF
D CIJ CBSLATEMOVIE 'THEJEF·
FERSONS : Lionel Cries Uncle '
Lionel's Uncle Ward pays a visit to
the Jefferson a and Louise warn a
everyone to be on their beat
behavior. (Repeat) 'PAT AND
MIKE' 1952 Stars: Spencer Trac y,
Katharine Hepburn.
ill ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE · (DRAMA) • \lo "The
Sewen Mlnutea" 1971
11:45 (J) MOVIE -(COMEDY) •• \lo "Up
From The D..!JIIha" 1879
Cil &lt;12J IIIII
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE

rn •

ma

&lt;i2l m

i

CIJ&lt;i2le

12:05 ([)
&lt;i2J
Q)
CHARLIE'S
ANG.eL$-BARETTA
1:00 Cil B TOMORROW
KOINONIA
NEWS
NEWS
1:05 ;
1: 10
MOVIE
-(ADVENTURE-DRAMA) •• \lo "C~
Beneath the Sea" 1953
1:30
. ROBERT SCHULLER
2:00
JJELIE.VE
2:24
• NEWS
2:30
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:00
MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• \lo "Flood
Tide" 1858
4:00 ~ 700 CLUB
4:50
MAVERICK
5:30
SOUND OF THE SPIRIT

8 :00

!

Detlvaedlor

8 :30

~
/

BalkelbaU ~~« 1
Coaapetllloa f:., -

t'&lt;

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l)lddld tongue 1nd ankle collar

lor eomtort 1nd support

CIJ
CIJ

NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
'The Perfec t Stranger'

9 :00

17 French huntmg mat ch
19 Intended

23 P OSi t ions
26 Compass pomt
27 So lar -- --- 29 St atus quo
30 Foot part
33 Collar

36 Land measure
38 Not (prefl)()
40 Co mpas s d~rec h on

Answer on Page 10
(
CLJ THE ROCKFORD FILES
0 CIJ @ THE DUKES OF HAZZARD Luke an d Bo are delighted to
be able to help their Idol, guest star
Ga le Ya rb orough, famo us st ock
ca rracer, test some newequipm ent
in Haz zard County. (Repea t: 60
mins.)
CIJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) • • • \lo
" Father" 1967
@ NON·FICTLON TELEVISION
' Ta lking Ba c k Detro it' St ephen
Lighthill' s film follows the activiti es
of thr ee self-adm itt ed De tr oi t
revolutionari es as they develop al·
t ernative approac hes t o urb an
!![_Oblems. (60 mins.)
9:30 W MOVIE -(COMEDY) • • • " Tho
ln-Lawa " 1979
10:00 ffi PERSPECTIVE ON GREATNESS 'Eleanor Roosevelt '
UV @ C8 TENSPEED AND
BROWNSHOEE.L.useshis c ourtly
charmsto marry off a naive Russian
co untess for profit, but the happy
walkdowntheaislebecomesamad
scramble when dangerous hood·
lums snatch the bride to obtain her
priceless family heirloom. (60
mins.)
0D A MAN CALLED SLOANE
Secret agent T.R. Sloane grapples
with an army of deadly humanoids

'

Honda
for

1980

area

35 Sweet po ta toes

HEADQUARTERS
. '

10:30

11 :oo

11: 15
11 :30

controlled by a demented scientist,
wh o nee ds plut onium to f11&amp;ke his
crea tions invincible. (Repeat ; 60
min.$_,)
0 00 ®J DALLAS J.R. is ca ught
fr om a ll sides wh en a t yp hoon
delays the oil drilling in Asia as his
bank loan becomes due, then
Bobby discov er s th at J.R. has
mortgag ed Southfork Ranc h.
epeat ; 60 mins.)
NEWS
RICHARD HOGUE
(!) OH BROTHER, MY BROTHER
® OVEREASYGuest:Carlos Mon·
!gya. Host: Hugh Downs.
w U Cilffi O OO®ltW ID
NEWS
CIJ DAN GRIFFIN
® LAST OFTHE WILD 'Hippo'
DAVEALLENATLARGE
DICK CAVETT SHOW
MOVIE ·(DRAMA)•• " ADIIfer·
ent Sto.a"
'
·
Cil 8 W THE TONIGHT SHOW
Hoat: Johnny Carson. (90 min s.)
CIJ ROSS BAGI.:EY SHOW
ill MOVIE -(HORROR-DRAMA) ••
1
" R• ttucu•"
1962
CIJ
U.S. OPEN GOL:F
II
CBS LATE MOVIE ' THE
AVENGERS:FearMerchant s' Four
buelneaamen ~&amp;come mental
wrecks , breaking down at seemingly innocent incidents yntilan in·
vestigation reveals that i' c om pet·
lng firm is using bizarre psychiatric
technique• to eliminate c ompeti·

12:00
1:00

~

1: 15

~

1:20
1:30
1:40

~8

CD

2:00
2: 15
2:30
2:35
3:05
4 :00
4 : 10
5:30

lion . 'THE RETURN OF THE SAI NT
One Black Sep t ember' Star s I an
Qgilvy, June Bolton.
LU ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
@ I\IOVIE ' Th e Mumm y' 1959
Christopher l ee, P e t e r C~sh 1ng 21
'Th e Castl e ofT error' 1963
CIJ EMERGENCY
ill OAVIo' SUSSKIND SHOW
@ Q) ABC LATE MOVIE
m 8 CIJ
THE MIDNIGHT
SPECIAL
ClJ INSIGHT
(J) WORLD ' S GREATEST ES·
CAPES A lull hour of breathta k•ng
entertainment breaks loose as th1s
thrilling real-life dra ma follow s lour
yo ung arti st s as they perf orm
death-defyi ng act s made fam ous
by t he legendary Harry Houdm i
Tony Curtis host s.
ffi NEWS
CIJ JIMMY SWAGGART
CIJ ATlANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBAUREPLAY
@) I BELIEVE
(J) MOVIE.-(ADVENTURE) • •"'
"SevqeiiLooae" 1974
m e NEWS
.
CIJ RJ)SS BAGLEY SHOW
&lt;i2J
MARY TYLER MOORE
SHOW
@ &amp;)NEWS
CIJ 700CLUB
CIJ MOVIE-(MYSTERY)•• ~&lt;&gt; " Th e
WomM!In Green" 1945
CIJ JUST PASSING JHRU
® LOVE A~ERICAN Sl"n.E

a

OPEN

THE PERFECT GIFT FOR DAD'S DAY
SUNDAY, JUNE 15th

MONDAY
and FRIDAY .

TIL
. 8:00 PeM.

l\oyal Imperial
.

([arts
snoe store

by FLORSHEIM®.

"We Have The Areas Finest Selection 01 Ao11heim"

BEN FRANKLIN CO.
"The Home Of Good ·Shoes Since 1903"

Appalachian Tire Products, Inc.
.426 Viand Street

675-3930

Point Pleasant

"Your Good Yecrr Tire Headquarters"

GOOD/'iEAR
• TIRE CENTER

. • ROAD SERVICE

�.

Page Eleven- 1V Supplement
Page Ten- 1V Supplement

«saturday»
JUNE 14, 11180
MORNING
6:00

CIJ WAKE UP AMERICA

Cil tT'S YOUR BUSINESS
@ £0CIETIES IN TRANSISTION
6 :30 Cil U SATURDAY REPORT
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ REBOP
@ FARM REPORT
7:00 Cil U BIG BLUE MARBLE
CIJ VEGETABLE SOUP
0 ({) PORKY AND FRIENDS
(liD IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
!UJ G) KENTUCKY AFIELD
7:30 CIJ IJ LITTLE RASCALS
CIJ ROMPER ROOM
CIJ MATTERS OF LIFE
ill BAY CITY ROLLERS
@ CANCER SOCIETY FILM
(]2)0) CAPTAIN CAVEMAN· TEEN
ANGELS
7:55 IUJ G) DEARALEXANDANNIE
8:00 (I)
IJ ill
GODZILLA·
GLOBETROTTERS HOUR
CIJ EVER INCREASING FAITH
CIJ !Ll TRAMAN
CIJ(I2J Gt WORLD 'S GREATEST
SUPERFRIENDS
0 Cil (liD MIGHTY MOUSE·
HECKLE AND JECKLE
Cil THE GOODIES
8:26 D CIJ®J IN THE NEWS
8 :30 CIJ MOVIE ·(WESTERN) .. \lo " No
Name on the Bullet" 1954
CIJ F AWL TY TOWERS
. 8:55 IUJ &amp;J SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
8:56 D CIJ®J IN THE NEWS
9:00
1J ill FRJ;D AND BARNEY
MEET THE SHMOO
CIJ LIFE IN THE SPIRIT
CIJIUJ&amp;JPLASTICMANCOMEDY·
ADVENTURE SHOW
D CIJ BUGS BUNNY-ROAD RUN·
NERSHOW
CIJ RISE AND FAll OF REGINALD
PERRIN
@
BUGS BUNNY AND ROAD
RUNNER
9 :25 @ &amp;J £CHOOLHOUSE ROCK
9 :26 D Cil®l tNTHENEWS
9:30 CIJ THE ROCK
Cil TWO RONNIES
9 :56 0 Cil 11m IN THE NEWS
10:00 CIJ MANNA
(I) MOVIE -(BIOGRAPHICAL) • \lo
"Valentino" 1951
ill HAROLD LLOYD 'Speedy '
10:25 IUJ &amp;J SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
10:30 (I) IJ (D DAFFY DUCK SHOW
CIJ THE LESSON
CiliUJCDSCOOBYANDSCRAPPY
DOO
I I CIJ POPEYE HOUR
@ MOVIE·(COMEDY)••• "Those
Magnlllclent men In their Flying
Machine•" 1965
10:55 iUl CD SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
11 :00 CIJ 1J ill JETSONS
CIJ STUFF
11 :26 I I Cil iN THE NEWS
JOHNNY OUEST
11:30
CIJ BACKYARD
CIJ GIGGLE SNORT HOTEL
C1J JONNY OUEST
I I Cil FAT ALBERT SHOW
CIJ GOOD NEIGHBORS
iUJ CD ACTION NEWS FOR KIDS
11 :56 I I Cil IN THE NEWS

m

\

miJ

AFTERNOON
12:00

m D ffi GODZILLA

CIJ PUPPET TREE GANG

CIJIUJ &amp;J WEEKEND SPECIAL
I I CIJ SHAZAM
Cil JULIA CHILD AND MORE
COMPANY
12: 15 (I) MOVIE ·(WESTERN-DRAMA)
•• " Bullwhip" 1958
12:30 (I) IJ FLASH GORDON
CIJ BIBLE BOWL
CIJ POINT OF VIEW
ill ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
I I (]) TARZAN AND THE SUPER
SEVEN
ill VICTORY GARDEN
IUJ &amp;J HOTFUDGE
1:00 CIJ IJ ill MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Kan sas City Royals va Milwaukee
Brewers or Chicago White Sox vs
Detroit Tigers (Region will deter·
mine g ame to be telev ised in your
area)
CIJ 700~LUB
Cil (]2) CD TRACK AND FIELD ,
VOLLEYBALL: NCAA CHAMPIONS Top·llight track and field
ectionondthebattleforthenetional
collegiate volleyball crown will be
highlighted. (90 mlns.)

(J) WALL STREET WEEK 'Money
Funds: Loosing Interest?' Hoot :
louis Rukeyser.
@ MOVIE -(DRAMA) • \lo " Girlln
the Woodo" 11158
1:30 D Cil 30MINUTES
(J) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
2 :00 CIJ ON DECK CIRCLE
8 CIJ VIEWPOINT
(J) HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
'Obesity '
2: 15 ffi BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va
Chicago Cuba
2 :30 CIJ
NEW HOPE WITH DALE
GALLOWAY
Cll!UJID U.S. OPEN GOLF TOUR·
NAME NT ABC Sports will provide
live coverage of the 18·hole third
round of play in this golf tournament
from Baltuarol Country Club in New
Jersey. (4 hraJ.
0
Cll
MOVIE
-(SCIENCE·FICTION) .. "Reour·
rectlon 01 Zachary Wheeler"
1973
Cil OLD HOUSEWORK$
@FAT ALBERT
3 :00 CIJ JUST PASSING THRU
(]) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Disraeli' Episode If . ' Mary Anne '
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raeli proposes to the wealthy
widow of his friend and political ally
'!'b'ndham lewis. (60 mlns.)
®J VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF
THE SEA
3 :30 CIJ FORD PHILPOT
Cil MOVIE ·(COMEDYi •• \lo " Frio·
co Kid" 1979
4 :00 Cil a ill MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Boston Red Sox va California An·
gels or New York Yankees va Oak·
land A ' s (Region will determine
Q!me to be televised in your area)
W KENNETH COPELAND
(]) MYSTERYI 'Rebecca'
@ SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
4 :30 @ RAT PATROL
D Cil SPORTSSPECTACULAR1)
Coverage of the WBC light·
Heavyweight
Championship
between Marvin Camel and Victor
Galindez. 2) Golden Rings Modern
Rhythmic Gymna sti cs. (90 mins.)
5 :00 CIJ BOB GASS .
ffi PUTT PUTT GOLF
Cil WINDOW ON THE WORLD
@ THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE
MUSIC
@ LAP OUILTING
5:30 CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
Cil MOVIE · (SUSPENSE) •••
"Killer Elite" 11175
CIJ THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
(liD PORTERWAGONERSHOW
@ OLD HOUSEWORK$
EVENING
6 :00

Ci)

GEORGIA CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
I I Cil CONCERN
(J) LOOK ATME 'Attachments and
Family Relations '
@ NEWS
@ LIKE IT IS
6 :30 CIJ NEWS
D Cil MUPPETSSHOW
(]) CATCH33
@ CBSNEWS
@ VICTORY GARDEN
iUJ Gt ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:00

C£'a

NEWS
CIJ BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
CIJCJCil HEEHAWGuesta:Dennis

Weaver, Clarence Gatemouth
Brown , Alan Wayne, Kenny Price ,
lulu Roman. (Repeat; 60 mlns.)
CD LAWRENCEWELKSHOW
Cil (jj) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
' Old Curiosity Shop' Grandfather
and Nell meet a flamboyant Mrs .
Jarley, who offers them a ride .
(liD BUGS BUNNY
(]2)1S1.9BBEAUTY SHOW
DANCE FEVER
7:30 CIJ
CIJ THE LUNDSTROM$
Cil GUlLTY OR NOT GUILTY 'The
State va Dr. Coppolino ' With the aid
of stock footage and stills, this fast ·
paced exclusive recreates the
riveting murder trial of Dr. Carl Cop·
pollno, a trial which seized Amer·
lea's attention during the '60s.
(J) WORLD OF THE SEA
@ GROUCHO
(]2) lit 1100,000 NAME THAT
!!,JNE
8:00 Cila CIJ BJANDTHEBEARBJ's
beautiful passenger Ia either an ea·

caped murderess from a mental institution or a woman framed for
murder.. and the anawer could put
the young trucker In a life·
and-death situation. (Repeat; 60
mina.)

CIJ 700CLUB
Cil MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) . .. \lo

"Dr. No" 1883
Cil MOVIE-(DRAMA)••• "Behold
e Pale Ho,.e" 11164
.
Cil(J2)8) 240ROBERTAn iaolated
mountain cabin becomes a make·
ahllt operating room when Thib Is
forced to perform emergency sur·
gory on an Injured student after the
240 rescue pollee are stranded by
fierce weather and rugged terrain .
(!le~at· 60 mlna.)
CJ W 1iDJ THE BAD NE.WS BEARS
Regi , Tanner and Engelberg are
convinced thatthey're responsible
for causing a power blackout and
the only way to stay out of j ail is to
make a run for it.
aD ALLCREATURESGREATAND
SMALL 'Faint Hearts'
(jj) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
' Diaraell' Episode II. 'Mar y Anne'
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raell proposes to the wealthy
widow of hlalrlend and politicalally
'!'b'ndham Lewis. (60 mins.)
8:30 aCil®J THE STOCKARD CHAN·
NING SHOW While testing a par·
ticularly adhesive glue on the air,
Susan becomes a star and co ·hoat
of Brad's program.
9 :00 CIJa SANFORD
Cil BARNEY MILLER A United Na·
tiona delegate's chauffeur turns
out to be a slave and Harri s and
Wojo demand that he be set free .
(!lepeat)
CD MISS OHIO PAGEANT
DCil®J LANDON, LANDON AND
LANDON William Windom atara as
a deceased father who returns as 8
ghost to aid his children in opera!·
ing his private detective agen cy.
~Omins . )

(J)

11

:oo

fF I'~ m •

SPEClALS
GUIDE

rn ®Hftl •

NEWS
CIJ ZOLA LEVITT
Cl)
DICK MAURICE AND
.
COMPANY
11 :30 Cil a CIJ SATURDAY NIGHT
LIVE
CIJ RICHARD HOGUE
(IJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• " De ath
Poll£~"
OW MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) ••
"Sudden Terror" 1970
(]) MYSTERY! ' Ra cing Game'
@MOVIE-(DRAMA)•• II "Witdln
the Country" 11161
(]2) Gt ABC NEWS
11 :45 Cil MOVIE-(COMEDY)•• II "Frla·
co Kid" 111711
(]2) CD MOVIE ' Plan 9 From Outer
Space' 1956 Gregory Wal c ott ,
Mona McKinnon. 2) 'Death Dream '
t972 Richard Backus, lynn Carlin .

SUNDAY
JUN!' 8, _1980 .

•

A~TERNOON
12:30 (ii) ·NOVA 'A Plagu e on Our Chil·
dren' Toxic her:b icides. pesticides,
and oth er c he mi ca ls may ca use
c an c er, ttli s carr ia ges and birth
det ec t s, and the evi de nce is ju st
beginning to come out. Thi s pro·
gram examines th e harmful effect s
deadly chemical s may have on thi s
and following generations. (2 hrs .)

EVENING
7:00 CIJ (i2j Ql THE YEAG ERS Caroll
Yeage r, th e patriarc h of a fa mily
logging operation, discovers what
hatre d ca n do aft er he se lls land to
a M ennonite family for less money
than bid by neighbors. (60 mins.)
9:30 D Cil®l THE34thANNUAL TONY
AWARDS Mary Tyle r Moore and
Jason Robard s will serve as co·
hosts of th e present at ion o f the
Am erica n Th eatre Wing's Ant oin·
ette Awards, the most prestig ious
give n in the Broa dway theatre. Th e
s peci al wi ll fea ture perform ances
by sta rs in produ ct ion numb ers fro m
c urre nt Broadway musica ls. (90
min s.)

•

MONDAY
JUNE 9, 1980

WEDNESDAY
JUNE 11 , 1980

EVENING
A DAY WITH CONRAD
GREEN Isra el Horowitz wrote thi s
humorous dra ma a bo ut a pretentious New Yo rk theatri c al age nt
who loses his longt ime fr iend and
must now cop e on his own. (60
mins.l_
9 :00 0 Cil
MUSIC CITY NEWS
COUNTRY AWARDS
CIJ(jj) MARK TWAIN: BENEATH
THE LAUGHTER Dan O'Herlihy
stars as Tw ai n in th is drama tization
of part s of th e famo us writer's char·
acternot generally seen by th e pub·
lie. (60 min s.)
10:00 CIJ THECOMMANDERS 'Sir Art hur
'Bomb er' Harris.
8 :00

iiJ (ii)

EVENING
8:00

0 CiJ@) CAPTAIN AMERICA An

athl etic yo ung ex ·Marine become s
c ri mef ight er Ca ptain Ameri ca as
his fa ther had. ye ars earlie r, and,
augmented by a secret su per·
ste roid, purs ues an arch -c riminal
whop lans todecima tePhoenixwi th
8 ne utron bomb. (Co nclusio n; 60
mins_j
9:00 CIJ (ITl HENRY MOORE Thi s pro·
gram is a portrayal o f scu lptor
Henry Moore, hi s lite and his work .
~O m i n s . )

10:00

ill AMERICANS 'The Private Eye '
John O' Grady, Holl ywood 's
Number One Priva te Eye des cribe s
his life style and work.

~hra . )

12:00 ()) HI DOUG
ffi ROCK CONCERT Gue st s:
Jimmy Messina , The Spinners ,
Mike Nesmith , Rick and Ruby.
12:30 CIJ HOLIDAYATMELODYLAND
1:00 ill 8 MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ... \lo
"Battling Bellhop" 11136
CIJ 700CLUB
1:30 Cl) MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ••
" Paaaport To China" 1962
1:45 (I)
ON LOCATION: MARTIN

Riddles

MUU

2:30

~-NEWS

' Where do frogs sit?
L

THE LESSON
2:45
• NEWS
2:50 CIJ MOVIE · (ADVENTURE) • \lo
"Loa! World 01 Slnbad" 1965
3 :00 CIJ REX HUMBARD
4:00 CIJ
COURAGE FOR CRISIS
LIVING
4 :30 CIJ ORAL ROBERTS
4 :50 Cll LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
5 :00 CIJ OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR

2. What paper makes you
itch?
3. What can you break
without touching it?

F.Y.I. • COAL POWER
America ' s ability to substantially
increase coal production in the fu·
ture is examined in this look at the
nation's attempt to exploit one of its
largest natural coal reser~es ,
locatedbeneaththeNavajoReaer·
vation in New Mexico. (60 mins.)
@ EXIT 10 • NOMADIC. LIVES
These
two
independently
produced films deal with c ouples
experiencing tensions and frustra ·
tionawitheachotherandthelrllvoa.
@mina.)
(]2). MISS OHIO SCHOLARSHIP
PAGEANT
9 :30 CIJe JOE'SWORLDSonStevela
actually looking forward to an lm·
pending strike, but Joe thlnka it
would be a real threat to him. .
. CIJ THE LESSON
10:00 CIJ 8 PRIME TIME SATURDAY
CIJ ROCK CHURCH
CIJ MOVIE · (MYSTERY) •• II
"Eyaa Of laura Mara" 11178
(IJ WHEN THE WHISTLE BLOWS
Norm dislikes his pretty 17·
year-old daughter' s new boyfriend
and convinces Randy to be her
partner in a roller disco contest .
VIC TAYBACK
(Re~~60 mlna.)
DW WI! CBS NEWS HOUR
(]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• ~ "Devil
to Pay" 1931
(jj) FRONTLINEThiadocumentary .·, - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- examines 11 years in V ietnam--.
throughthe eyes of combat camera
man Nell Davis. The program, using
footage shot by Davis and others,
asks you to view the horrors of com ·
bat from a frontline perspective .
@mins.)
·
•
10:30 Cil POP GOES THE COUNTRY
(jj) JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP 'Phil Woods Quartet ' This is
the first program in a aerie s of per·
forma nee a by the 'giants of jazz' ,
taped in small , intimate settings.
Phil Woods was voted 'Down Beat'
magazine' s t979 alto sax player of
the year, and his 'Song For Slayphua'waanomlnatedforaGrammy.

4. What kind of bath can
you
take • without
water?

answer

See If you can unscramble
these words.

5. What time is the same
spellad backward or
forward?

AARICEM
FICAAR
N R AI

6. What do you get if you
cross an insect and a
rabbit?
·g

SNAP I

'UOON '!i

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:.(uung sling

••

' 'lleq uns y

'~lfWOJd

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Word Search

1. Deep sea
2. Diving

3.

Sunken

4. Ship
5. Expedition

6.

Coral reef

7.
8.
9.

Shark
Eel
Stingray .

10. Harpoon
11. Treasure
12. Chest
13. Jewels
14. Gold

ATHLEYIC
SHOES

Boys, Men and Women

~lVII ' UIIdS ' UVJI
IIOfJI\1 '80fJ8W\I :u&amp;MSU\1

N E K N

y E 5 I E
0 N E H N X E
R u I L p T H
5 p E E D 0 A
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two on each line. For example:

R I H A D E N

2. court

u 5 u c

0 T M A K J N
J 5 I R D 0 J
p E A B 0 A E
z H w p u T G
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R 0 c H E R y
E y T 0 N y z

liUt'llii&amp;Jq '£ dfljl 'l:
8Jnse&amp;JI ' t :SJ8MIUY

Open All Day Thuriday

DAN

&amp;.

SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA

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Page Eleven- 1V Supplement
Page Ten- 1V Supplement

«saturday»
JUNE 14, 11180
MORNING
6:00

CIJ WAKE UP AMERICA

Cil tT'S YOUR BUSINESS
@ £0CIETIES IN TRANSISTION
6 :30 Cil U SATURDAY REPORT
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJ REBOP
@ FARM REPORT
7:00 Cil U BIG BLUE MARBLE
CIJ VEGETABLE SOUP
0 ({) PORKY AND FRIENDS
(liD IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
!UJ G) KENTUCKY AFIELD
7:30 CIJ IJ LITTLE RASCALS
CIJ ROMPER ROOM
CIJ MATTERS OF LIFE
ill BAY CITY ROLLERS
@ CANCER SOCIETY FILM
(]2)0) CAPTAIN CAVEMAN· TEEN
ANGELS
7:55 IUJ G) DEARALEXANDANNIE
8:00 (I)
IJ ill
GODZILLA·
GLOBETROTTERS HOUR
CIJ EVER INCREASING FAITH
CIJ !Ll TRAMAN
CIJ(I2J Gt WORLD 'S GREATEST
SUPERFRIENDS
0 Cil (liD MIGHTY MOUSE·
HECKLE AND JECKLE
Cil THE GOODIES
8:26 D CIJ®J IN THE NEWS
8 :30 CIJ MOVIE ·(WESTERN) .. \lo " No
Name on the Bullet" 1954
CIJ F AWL TY TOWERS
. 8:55 IUJ &amp;J SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
8:56 D CIJ®J IN THE NEWS
9:00
1J ill FRJ;D AND BARNEY
MEET THE SHMOO
CIJ LIFE IN THE SPIRIT
CIJIUJ&amp;JPLASTICMANCOMEDY·
ADVENTURE SHOW
D CIJ BUGS BUNNY-ROAD RUN·
NERSHOW
CIJ RISE AND FAll OF REGINALD
PERRIN
@
BUGS BUNNY AND ROAD
RUNNER
9 :25 @ &amp;J £CHOOLHOUSE ROCK
9 :26 D Cil®l tNTHENEWS
9:30 CIJ THE ROCK
Cil TWO RONNIES
9 :56 0 Cil 11m IN THE NEWS
10:00 CIJ MANNA
(I) MOVIE -(BIOGRAPHICAL) • \lo
"Valentino" 1951
ill HAROLD LLOYD 'Speedy '
10:25 IUJ &amp;J SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
10:30 (I) IJ (D DAFFY DUCK SHOW
CIJ THE LESSON
CiliUJCDSCOOBYANDSCRAPPY
DOO
I I CIJ POPEYE HOUR
@ MOVIE·(COMEDY)••• "Those
Magnlllclent men In their Flying
Machine•" 1965
10:55 iUl CD SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK
11 :00 CIJ 1J ill JETSONS
CIJ STUFF
11 :26 I I Cil iN THE NEWS
JOHNNY OUEST
11:30
CIJ BACKYARD
CIJ GIGGLE SNORT HOTEL
C1J JONNY OUEST
I I Cil FAT ALBERT SHOW
CIJ GOOD NEIGHBORS
iUJ CD ACTION NEWS FOR KIDS
11 :56 I I Cil IN THE NEWS

m

\

miJ

AFTERNOON
12:00

m D ffi GODZILLA

CIJ PUPPET TREE GANG

CIJIUJ &amp;J WEEKEND SPECIAL
I I CIJ SHAZAM
Cil JULIA CHILD AND MORE
COMPANY
12: 15 (I) MOVIE ·(WESTERN-DRAMA)
•• " Bullwhip" 1958
12:30 (I) IJ FLASH GORDON
CIJ BIBLE BOWL
CIJ POINT OF VIEW
ill ABBOTT AND COSTELLO
I I (]) TARZAN AND THE SUPER
SEVEN
ill VICTORY GARDEN
IUJ &amp;J HOTFUDGE
1:00 CIJ IJ ill MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Kan sas City Royals va Milwaukee
Brewers or Chicago White Sox vs
Detroit Tigers (Region will deter·
mine g ame to be telev ised in your
area)
CIJ 700~LUB
Cil (]2) CD TRACK AND FIELD ,
VOLLEYBALL: NCAA CHAMPIONS Top·llight track and field
ectionondthebattleforthenetional
collegiate volleyball crown will be
highlighted. (90 mlns.)

(J) WALL STREET WEEK 'Money
Funds: Loosing Interest?' Hoot :
louis Rukeyser.
@ MOVIE -(DRAMA) • \lo " Girlln
the Woodo" 11158
1:30 D Cil 30MINUTES
(J) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
2 :00 CIJ ON DECK CIRCLE
8 CIJ VIEWPOINT
(J) HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
'Obesity '
2: 15 ffi BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va
Chicago Cuba
2 :30 CIJ
NEW HOPE WITH DALE
GALLOWAY
Cll!UJID U.S. OPEN GOLF TOUR·
NAME NT ABC Sports will provide
live coverage of the 18·hole third
round of play in this golf tournament
from Baltuarol Country Club in New
Jersey. (4 hraJ.
0
Cll
MOVIE
-(SCIENCE·FICTION) .. "Reour·
rectlon 01 Zachary Wheeler"
1973
Cil OLD HOUSEWORK$
@FAT ALBERT
3 :00 CIJ JUST PASSING THRU
(]) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Disraeli' Episode If . ' Mary Anne '
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raeli proposes to the wealthy
widow of his friend and political ally
'!'b'ndham lewis. (60 mlns.)
®J VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF
THE SEA
3 :30 CIJ FORD PHILPOT
Cil MOVIE ·(COMEDYi •• \lo " Frio·
co Kid" 1979
4 :00 Cil a ill MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Boston Red Sox va California An·
gels or New York Yankees va Oak·
land A ' s (Region will determine
Q!me to be televised in your area)
W KENNETH COPELAND
(]) MYSTERYI 'Rebecca'
@ SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
4 :30 @ RAT PATROL
D Cil SPORTSSPECTACULAR1)
Coverage of the WBC light·
Heavyweight
Championship
between Marvin Camel and Victor
Galindez. 2) Golden Rings Modern
Rhythmic Gymna sti cs. (90 mins.)
5 :00 CIJ BOB GASS .
ffi PUTT PUTT GOLF
Cil WINDOW ON THE WORLD
@ THAT GOOD OLE NASHVILLE
MUSIC
@ LAP OUILTING
5:30 CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
Cil MOVIE · (SUSPENSE) •••
"Killer Elite" 11175
CIJ THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL
(liD PORTERWAGONERSHOW
@ OLD HOUSEWORK$
EVENING
6 :00

Ci)

GEORGIA CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
I I Cil CONCERN
(J) LOOK ATME 'Attachments and
Family Relations '
@ NEWS
@ LIKE IT IS
6 :30 CIJ NEWS
D Cil MUPPETSSHOW
(]) CATCH33
@ CBSNEWS
@ VICTORY GARDEN
iUJ Gt ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:00

C£'a

NEWS
CIJ BLACKWOOD BROTHERS
CIJCJCil HEEHAWGuesta:Dennis

Weaver, Clarence Gatemouth
Brown , Alan Wayne, Kenny Price ,
lulu Roman. (Repeat; 60 mlns.)
CD LAWRENCEWELKSHOW
Cil (jj) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
' Old Curiosity Shop' Grandfather
and Nell meet a flamboyant Mrs .
Jarley, who offers them a ride .
(liD BUGS BUNNY
(]2)1S1.9BBEAUTY SHOW
DANCE FEVER
7:30 CIJ
CIJ THE LUNDSTROM$
Cil GUlLTY OR NOT GUILTY 'The
State va Dr. Coppolino ' With the aid
of stock footage and stills, this fast ·
paced exclusive recreates the
riveting murder trial of Dr. Carl Cop·
pollno, a trial which seized Amer·
lea's attention during the '60s.
(J) WORLD OF THE SEA
@ GROUCHO
(]2) lit 1100,000 NAME THAT
!!,JNE
8:00 Cila CIJ BJANDTHEBEARBJ's
beautiful passenger Ia either an ea·

caped murderess from a mental institution or a woman framed for
murder.. and the anawer could put
the young trucker In a life·
and-death situation. (Repeat; 60
mina.)

CIJ 700CLUB
Cil MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) . .. \lo

"Dr. No" 1883
Cil MOVIE-(DRAMA)••• "Behold
e Pale Ho,.e" 11164
.
Cil(J2)8) 240ROBERTAn iaolated
mountain cabin becomes a make·
ahllt operating room when Thib Is
forced to perform emergency sur·
gory on an Injured student after the
240 rescue pollee are stranded by
fierce weather and rugged terrain .
(!le~at· 60 mlna.)
CJ W 1iDJ THE BAD NE.WS BEARS
Regi , Tanner and Engelberg are
convinced thatthey're responsible
for causing a power blackout and
the only way to stay out of j ail is to
make a run for it.
aD ALLCREATURESGREATAND
SMALL 'Faint Hearts'
(jj) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
' Diaraell' Episode II. 'Mar y Anne'
Now a member of Parliament, Dis·
raell proposes to the wealthy
widow of hlalrlend and politicalally
'!'b'ndham Lewis. (60 mins.)
8:30 aCil®J THE STOCKARD CHAN·
NING SHOW While testing a par·
ticularly adhesive glue on the air,
Susan becomes a star and co ·hoat
of Brad's program.
9 :00 CIJa SANFORD
Cil BARNEY MILLER A United Na·
tiona delegate's chauffeur turns
out to be a slave and Harri s and
Wojo demand that he be set free .
(!lepeat)
CD MISS OHIO PAGEANT
DCil®J LANDON, LANDON AND
LANDON William Windom atara as
a deceased father who returns as 8
ghost to aid his children in opera!·
ing his private detective agen cy.
~Omins . )

(J)

11

:oo

fF I'~ m •

SPEClALS
GUIDE

rn ®Hftl •

NEWS
CIJ ZOLA LEVITT
Cl)
DICK MAURICE AND
.
COMPANY
11 :30 Cil a CIJ SATURDAY NIGHT
LIVE
CIJ RICHARD HOGUE
(IJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• " De ath
Poll£~"
OW MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) ••
"Sudden Terror" 1970
(]) MYSTERY! ' Ra cing Game'
@MOVIE-(DRAMA)•• II "Witdln
the Country" 11161
(]2) Gt ABC NEWS
11 :45 Cil MOVIE-(COMEDY)•• II "Frla·
co Kid" 111711
(]2) CD MOVIE ' Plan 9 From Outer
Space' 1956 Gregory Wal c ott ,
Mona McKinnon. 2) 'Death Dream '
t972 Richard Backus, lynn Carlin .

SUNDAY
JUN!' 8, _1980 .

•

A~TERNOON
12:30 (ii) ·NOVA 'A Plagu e on Our Chil·
dren' Toxic her:b icides. pesticides,
and oth er c he mi ca ls may ca use
c an c er, ttli s carr ia ges and birth
det ec t s, and the evi de nce is ju st
beginning to come out. Thi s pro·
gram examines th e harmful effect s
deadly chemical s may have on thi s
and following generations. (2 hrs .)

EVENING
7:00 CIJ (i2j Ql THE YEAG ERS Caroll
Yeage r, th e patriarc h of a fa mily
logging operation, discovers what
hatre d ca n do aft er he se lls land to
a M ennonite family for less money
than bid by neighbors. (60 mins.)
9:30 D Cil®l THE34thANNUAL TONY
AWARDS Mary Tyle r Moore and
Jason Robard s will serve as co·
hosts of th e present at ion o f the
Am erica n Th eatre Wing's Ant oin·
ette Awards, the most prestig ious
give n in the Broa dway theatre. Th e
s peci al wi ll fea ture perform ances
by sta rs in produ ct ion numb ers fro m
c urre nt Broadway musica ls. (90
min s.)

•

MONDAY
JUNE 9, 1980

WEDNESDAY
JUNE 11 , 1980

EVENING
A DAY WITH CONRAD
GREEN Isra el Horowitz wrote thi s
humorous dra ma a bo ut a pretentious New Yo rk theatri c al age nt
who loses his longt ime fr iend and
must now cop e on his own. (60
mins.l_
9 :00 0 Cil
MUSIC CITY NEWS
COUNTRY AWARDS
CIJ(jj) MARK TWAIN: BENEATH
THE LAUGHTER Dan O'Herlihy
stars as Tw ai n in th is drama tization
of part s of th e famo us writer's char·
acternot generally seen by th e pub·
lie. (60 min s.)
10:00 CIJ THECOMMANDERS 'Sir Art hur
'Bomb er' Harris.
8 :00

iiJ (ii)

EVENING
8:00

0 CiJ@) CAPTAIN AMERICA An

athl etic yo ung ex ·Marine become s
c ri mef ight er Ca ptain Ameri ca as
his fa ther had. ye ars earlie r, and,
augmented by a secret su per·
ste roid, purs ues an arch -c riminal
whop lans todecima tePhoenixwi th
8 ne utron bomb. (Co nclusio n; 60
mins_j
9:00 CIJ (ITl HENRY MOORE Thi s pro·
gram is a portrayal o f scu lptor
Henry Moore, hi s lite and his work .
~O m i n s . )

10:00

ill AMERICANS 'The Private Eye '
John O' Grady, Holl ywood 's
Number One Priva te Eye des cribe s
his life style and work.

~hra . )

12:00 ()) HI DOUG
ffi ROCK CONCERT Gue st s:
Jimmy Messina , The Spinners ,
Mike Nesmith , Rick and Ruby.
12:30 CIJ HOLIDAYATMELODYLAND
1:00 ill 8 MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ... \lo
"Battling Bellhop" 11136
CIJ 700CLUB
1:30 Cl) MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ••
" Paaaport To China" 1962
1:45 (I)
ON LOCATION: MARTIN

Riddles

MUU

2:30

~-NEWS

' Where do frogs sit?
L

THE LESSON
2:45
• NEWS
2:50 CIJ MOVIE · (ADVENTURE) • \lo
"Loa! World 01 Slnbad" 1965
3 :00 CIJ REX HUMBARD
4:00 CIJ
COURAGE FOR CRISIS
LIVING
4 :30 CIJ ORAL ROBERTS
4 :50 Cll LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
5 :00 CIJ OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR

2. What paper makes you
itch?
3. What can you break
without touching it?

F.Y.I. • COAL POWER
America ' s ability to substantially
increase coal production in the fu·
ture is examined in this look at the
nation's attempt to exploit one of its
largest natural coal reser~es ,
locatedbeneaththeNavajoReaer·
vation in New Mexico. (60 mins.)
@ EXIT 10 • NOMADIC. LIVES
These
two
independently
produced films deal with c ouples
experiencing tensions and frustra ·
tionawitheachotherandthelrllvoa.
@mina.)
(]2). MISS OHIO SCHOLARSHIP
PAGEANT
9 :30 CIJe JOE'SWORLDSonStevela
actually looking forward to an lm·
pending strike, but Joe thlnka it
would be a real threat to him. .
. CIJ THE LESSON
10:00 CIJ 8 PRIME TIME SATURDAY
CIJ ROCK CHURCH
CIJ MOVIE · (MYSTERY) •• II
"Eyaa Of laura Mara" 11178
(IJ WHEN THE WHISTLE BLOWS
Norm dislikes his pretty 17·
year-old daughter' s new boyfriend
and convinces Randy to be her
partner in a roller disco contest .
VIC TAYBACK
(Re~~60 mlna.)
DW WI! CBS NEWS HOUR
(]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• ~ "Devil
to Pay" 1931
(jj) FRONTLINEThiadocumentary .·, - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- examines 11 years in V ietnam--.
throughthe eyes of combat camera
man Nell Davis. The program, using
footage shot by Davis and others,
asks you to view the horrors of com ·
bat from a frontline perspective .
@mins.)
·
•
10:30 Cil POP GOES THE COUNTRY
(jj) JAZZ AT THE MAINTENANCE
SHOP 'Phil Woods Quartet ' This is
the first program in a aerie s of per·
forma nee a by the 'giants of jazz' ,
taped in small , intimate settings.
Phil Woods was voted 'Down Beat'
magazine' s t979 alto sax player of
the year, and his 'Song For Slayphua'waanomlnatedforaGrammy.

4. What kind of bath can
you
take • without
water?

answer

See If you can unscramble
these words.

5. What time is the same
spellad backward or
forward?

AARICEM
FICAAR
N R AI

6. What do you get if you
cross an insect and a
rabbit?
·g

SNAP I

'UOON '!i

YI LAT

:.(uung sling

••

' 'lleq uns y

'~lfWOJd

JnOA '£

'Jaded ljOliJoS ' l:
' IIOOliPeOI uo '1

SH3MSNV

Word Search

1. Deep sea
2. Diving

3.

Sunken

4. Ship
5. Expedition

6.

Coral reef

7.
8.
9.

Shark
Eel
Stingray .

10. Harpoon
11. Treasure
12. Chest
13. Jewels
14. Gold

ATHLEYIC
SHOES

Boys, Men and Women

~lVII ' UIIdS ' UVJI
IIOfJI\1 '80fJ8W\I :u&amp;MSU\1

N E K N

y E 5 I E
0 N E H N X E
R u I L p T H
5 p E E D 0 A
R H D 0 N L p
I I v E E 0 p
T A c F E v I

Find the word that best connects the
two on each line. For example:

R I H A D E N

2. court

u 5 u c

0 T M A K J N
J 5 I R D 0 J
p E A B 0 A E
z H w p u T G
s c R E B 0 5
u A G K L E E
H c N D 0 5 I
v H I F 0 0 H
A A v R N 5 E
I E I A 5 L 0
c L D N T A p
E F E E R L A
0 5 T A N L E

L

I 5 J
A K A G 0 N
E R N

s

Wordslink
Igloo

1.

s
s

eskim o

pie

chest

sunken

wreck

3. underwater

apparatus

E R y R J M

u

R I T M A 0
R 0 c H E R y
E y T 0 N y z

liUt'llii&amp;Jq '£ dfljl 'l:
8Jnse&amp;JI ' t :SJ8MIUY

Open All Day Thuriday

DAN

&amp;.

SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA

,

1

, .

f .· ~· ··

,,,. ;_,·.

'I' • •
l 't

t, •· ••, ••.•• ., .,, ' • •.•

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�Proteaaional Bowlers Association
doubles championship from Laa
Vegas. 2) English Derby from England._190 min a.)
(J) Ci2) 8t WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS

Page Twelve-TV Supplement

'

Sports
SUNDAY
JUNE&amp;, 1980
AFTERNOON
1:00

2:00

2:30
4 :00
4:30

EVENING
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
7:00 Cil BASEBALL Atlanla Braves vs
Los Angeles Dodgers
1:00 Cil
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY

6:00

CiJ AMEJUCA'SATHLETES 1980

Series devoted to examining and
reve aling the best athletes who
weretorepreaenttheUnitedStates
at . the Olympics to be held in
Moscow.
0 CIJ ALABAMA 500
CIJ ffZ)
NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sports will
provide cove rage of the game
between the Tampa Bay Rowdies
and the Fort Lauderdale Strikers.
hrs . , 30 mins .)
I]) ®J FRENCH OPEN
0 CD LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Cil SOCCER Atlanta Chiefs va New
York Cosmos
0 CIJ ®J ATLANTA GOLF
CLASSIC
ffi 0 CD SPORTSWORLD I)

m

~

CIJ

action and the battle forthe national
collegiate volleyball crown will be
t!!ghllghted. (90 mlna.)
2:00 W ON DECK CIRCLE
2: 15 ·(I) BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
ChlcaQ!!..Cuba
2:30 (J)Ci2JIIJ U.S. OPEN GOLF TOUR·
NAME NT ABC Sports will provide
live coverage of the 18-hola third
round of play In this golf lournament
from Baltuarol Country Club in New
JarS.!)' . ~ hra.)
4 :00 &lt;IJ D CIJ MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Boston Red Sox vs California An -

gelo or New York Yankees va Oakland A 's (Region wilt determine
11.!'1!! to be televised In your area)
4:30 U\l.ISPORTSSPECTACULAR 1)
Coverage of the WBC LightHeavyweight
Championship
between Marvin Camel and Victor
Gallndez. 2) Golden Rings Modern
Rhythmic Gymnastics. (90 mins.)
5:00 Cil PUTT PUTT GOLF
5:30 Cil THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

(i2i li)

SA......AY, ...NI14 .

EVENING
6:00

s

(1)

GEORGIA CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING

SATURDAY
JUNE 14, 11180

7:00

.......
AR

I

MORNING
KENTUCKY AFIELD
AFTERNOON

1:00

ffi IJ aJ

MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Kansas City Royals vs Milwaukee
Brewers or Chicago White Sox vs
Detroit Tigers (Region will determine game to be televised in your

SEL:EC'riON OF

areal__

CIJ (}2) &amp;)

TRACK AND FIELD,
VOLLEYBALL: NCAA CHAM·
PIONS Top-flight track and field

•Wheel Chairs

•Oxygen Regulators
•Flow meters
•Bedside Commodes

•Canes

•Humidifiers

•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds

·Quarters

by Juanita

Tne ha i · place

•Walkers
•Crutches

mERLE noRfM"I cosmencs
Gallipolis, Ohio
43 State Street
Open Mon . thru Fri . 9 til9, Saturday 9 to 5
Phone 446-2673
Hair Stylists:
Chuck McGuire, Marty Reynolds, Karen Johnson,
Christi Reynolds, Merri. Ault, Mary Edwards,
Juanita Saunders (cosmetic consultant).

Great Gifts For Dad At
Big Discount Savings!

CONVALESCENT
EQUIPMENT
RENTAL &amp; SALES

PAGI AniR PAGE Of ENTERTAINMENT
GinS, fASHIONS, SPORTING GOODS,
WORKSHOP TOOLS AND LOTS MORI!I
Single
El.ctronically
Switched

Scans 20
channels
per second .

•Respiratory Support
Systems

HOME DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Til-COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY
56 State Street

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

)

AC ' DC . use
Bearcaf® 210

at home or
In your cor.

Automatic

Oelv:rt•

!! lr ~j(.-j

b •Or

teorch - for

f

easy to use.

new exciting
frequencies .

af quality.

color coded ,

ilf,t

Allures you

:.~·......... :. '229.M

........

lltCOUNY
...:a
••••••.•••...,.

You.
COif
APIII

-.............

YOUR CHOICE

~tainless

stHI coated case.

REG. $39.97
•
•
•
•

LAYAWAY

NOW
FOR BEST
.

.

SELECTION

o:;h11eo StratOOunQel CcSP-UP lhe ~~

c.h)Ce 101 your con 100 a'ld p(.eO to
Ke ~ !he pe1tect cro.c.e b yov
OLJdget '00 1 ns rne space-53\1
rt.&lt;:loer 11'1(}1 aM&lt;ay5 k~DS rts bael&lt; 10 1~
wall -even..,hen yDu lean baCk ntr€ tl)ty recloned p)S((ill And at COUse
you er,::w ratoounger·s suoora consuLCtQ"l metct)Qus uph::listery detail
ana Jeee&gt;tleeP cushOnt"IQ- tc.e lurn41Jfe auahty t1 a so-son vt'l'(! tnat r.vats
!1"€ rcN&gt;SI ;,t teatners

mberDa~

a her's Dati~

SPORT SHIRTS

SAVE

$1

397

No-iron poly / cotton . Short ileeves ,
chest pocket , point collor. Prints or
solid colors . Sizes 14'/, thru 17.

REG •
$4.47
EACH
Cosual co mfort in easy-care fabrics .
Short sleeves , placket front . Sporty
solid colors . Sizes S,M ,l and XL.

I
•s

88

SAYI

~-Push button ope&lt;olion.

llocklight. Water resistant .
Stainless ' ' " ' bond and

r

DRISS SHIRTS

lt-Yat • ca••••

Mu1fl-lvnction fashion wotch
with II&gt;• many featurn listed

t-l;masomcty stl3oeo a

MIN'S COOL KNIT

,CIM'.lCJ A.- . .IAIU

Famous Stratolounger®
Close-Up®recliners

,.,_ ~· ... ;,• .·•
·~ • ,.. r 1 &lt;;,'·,~ ( ...} •.•a-r- •r---.-.rart. e.1srr a·e Here J'Or taork
· s .., :.Jrr r1. 1 J&lt;;·, lfTl"'l 'rJ''
1n(j(~' Ct."/' •JO The !arnous reor,;..r
-~. ,..;[.. c, ... ·• .1' sr·l,:..t- • tro ,\a
•.~;f:r :.~r strP!C.tW ~a; OJ. .n lull
rf'\ ,. ng ......, .... ,t~,r· • r...., r'~' •11'!( r n,a • to tc.dc'lv'S srr" lf:r rrorns /~r(J at our soe
"10'1 ~-a If': (~oC£, 1 ,', H I LJf -/,•1'1 1!"'€ rr.&lt;Sl :_ r'r!Qr1.3nle reclrfE! e o€'' rtl
.,.,,- , _,. J~ IS'XI•~"J

'11t•..

MIN'S TAILORID

HOURS
MINUTES
SECONDS
DAY· DATE

• AM/PM

·• HOURLY "BEEP"
• STOP WATCH
• ALARM SETTING

Wortts from car cigarette lighter to inflote
IINo, Mach toys ,
etc. Prnsuri1es lresh
systems in boots, trollers . Delivers up
to 90 lbs. of pr.. sure.

-11.

�Proteaaional Bowlers Association
doubles championship from Laa
Vegas. 2) English Derby from England._190 min a.)
(J) Ci2) 8t WIDE WORLD OF
SPORTS

Page Twelve-TV Supplement

'

Sports
SUNDAY
JUNE&amp;, 1980
AFTERNOON
1:00

2:00

2:30
4 :00
4:30

EVENING
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
7:00 Cil BASEBALL Atlanla Braves vs
Los Angeles Dodgers
1:00 Cil
ATLANTA BRAVES BA·
SEBALL REPLAY

6:00

CiJ AMEJUCA'SATHLETES 1980

Series devoted to examining and
reve aling the best athletes who
weretorepreaenttheUnitedStates
at . the Olympics to be held in
Moscow.
0 CIJ ALABAMA 500
CIJ ffZ)
NORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE ABC Sports will
provide cove rage of the game
between the Tampa Bay Rowdies
and the Fort Lauderdale Strikers.
hrs . , 30 mins .)
I]) ®J FRENCH OPEN
0 CD LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Cil SOCCER Atlanta Chiefs va New
York Cosmos
0 CIJ ®J ATLANTA GOLF
CLASSIC
ffi 0 CD SPORTSWORLD I)

m

~

CIJ

action and the battle forthe national
collegiate volleyball crown will be
t!!ghllghted. (90 mlna.)
2:00 W ON DECK CIRCLE
2: 15 ·(I) BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
ChlcaQ!!..Cuba
2:30 (J)Ci2JIIJ U.S. OPEN GOLF TOUR·
NAME NT ABC Sports will provide
live coverage of the 18-hola third
round of play In this golf lournament
from Baltuarol Country Club in New
JarS.!)' . ~ hra.)
4 :00 &lt;IJ D CIJ MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Boston Red Sox vs California An -

gelo or New York Yankees va Oakland A 's (Region wilt determine
11.!'1!! to be televised In your area)
4:30 U\l.ISPORTSSPECTACULAR 1)
Coverage of the WBC LightHeavyweight
Championship
between Marvin Camel and Victor
Gallndez. 2) Golden Rings Modern
Rhythmic Gymnastics. (90 mins.)
5:00 Cil PUTT PUTT GOLF
5:30 Cil THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

(i2i li)

SA......AY, ...NI14 .

EVENING
6:00

s

(1)

GEORGIA CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING

SATURDAY
JUNE 14, 11180

7:00

.......
AR

I

MORNING
KENTUCKY AFIELD
AFTERNOON

1:00

ffi IJ aJ

MAJOR LEAGUE BA·
SEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK
Kansas City Royals vs Milwaukee
Brewers or Chicago White Sox vs
Detroit Tigers (Region will determine game to be televised in your

SEL:EC'riON OF

areal__

CIJ (}2) &amp;)

TRACK AND FIELD,
VOLLEYBALL: NCAA CHAM·
PIONS Top-flight track and field

•Wheel Chairs

•Oxygen Regulators
•Flow meters
•Bedside Commodes

•Canes

•Humidifiers

•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds

·Quarters

by Juanita

Tne ha i · place

•Walkers
•Crutches

mERLE noRfM"I cosmencs
Gallipolis, Ohio
43 State Street
Open Mon . thru Fri . 9 til9, Saturday 9 to 5
Phone 446-2673
Hair Stylists:
Chuck McGuire, Marty Reynolds, Karen Johnson,
Christi Reynolds, Merri. Ault, Mary Edwards,
Juanita Saunders (cosmetic consultant).

Great Gifts For Dad At
Big Discount Savings!

CONVALESCENT
EQUIPMENT
RENTAL &amp; SALES

PAGI AniR PAGE Of ENTERTAINMENT
GinS, fASHIONS, SPORTING GOODS,
WORKSHOP TOOLS AND LOTS MORI!I
Single
El.ctronically
Switched

Scans 20
channels
per second .

•Respiratory Support
Systems

HOME DELIVERY AVAILABLE

Til-COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY
56 State Street

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

)

AC ' DC . use
Bearcaf® 210

at home or
In your cor.

Automatic

Oelv:rt•

!! lr ~j(.-j

b •Or

teorch - for

f

easy to use.

new exciting
frequencies .

af quality.

color coded ,

ilf,t

Allures you

:.~·......... :. '229.M

........

lltCOUNY
...:a
••••••.•••...,.

You.
COif
APIII

-.............

YOUR CHOICE

~tainless

stHI coated case.

REG. $39.97
•
•
•
•

LAYAWAY

NOW
FOR BEST
.

.

SELECTION

o:;h11eo StratOOunQel CcSP-UP lhe ~~

c.h)Ce 101 your con 100 a'ld p(.eO to
Ke ~ !he pe1tect cro.c.e b yov
OLJdget '00 1 ns rne space-53\1
rt.&lt;:loer 11'1(}1 aM&lt;ay5 k~DS rts bael&lt; 10 1~
wall -even..,hen yDu lean baCk ntr€ tl)ty recloned p)S((ill And at COUse
you er,::w ratoounger·s suoora consuLCtQ"l metct)Qus uph::listery detail
ana Jeee&gt;tleeP cushOnt"IQ- tc.e lurn41Jfe auahty t1 a so-son vt'l'(! tnat r.vats
!1"€ rcN&gt;SI ;,t teatners

mberDa~

a her's Dati~

SPORT SHIRTS

SAVE

$1

397

No-iron poly / cotton . Short ileeves ,
chest pocket , point collor. Prints or
solid colors . Sizes 14'/, thru 17.

REG •
$4.47
EACH
Cosual co mfort in easy-care fabrics .
Short sleeves , placket front . Sporty
solid colors . Sizes S,M ,l and XL.

I
•s

88

SAYI

~-Push button ope&lt;olion.

llocklight. Water resistant .
Stainless ' ' " ' bond and

r

DRISS SHIRTS

lt-Yat • ca••••

Mu1fl-lvnction fashion wotch
with II&gt;• many featurn listed

t-l;masomcty stl3oeo a

MIN'S COOL KNIT

,CIM'.lCJ A.- . .IAIU

Famous Stratolounger®
Close-Up®recliners

,.,_ ~· ... ;,• .·•
·~ • ,.. r 1 &lt;;,'·,~ ( ...} •.•a-r- •r---.-.rart. e.1srr a·e Here J'Or taork
· s .., :.Jrr r1. 1 J&lt;;·, lfTl"'l 'rJ''
1n(j(~' Ct."/' •JO The !arnous reor,;..r
-~. ,..;[.. c, ... ·• .1' sr·l,:..t- • tro ,\a
•.~;f:r :.~r strP!C.tW ~a; OJ. .n lull
rf'\ ,. ng ......, .... ,t~,r· • r...., r'~' •11'!( r n,a • to tc.dc'lv'S srr" lf:r rrorns /~r(J at our soe
"10'1 ~-a If': (~oC£, 1 ,', H I LJf -/,•1'1 1!"'€ rr.&lt;Sl :_ r'r!Qr1.3nle reclrfE! e o€'' rtl
.,.,,- , _,. J~ IS'XI•~"J

'11t•..

MIN'S TAILORID

HOURS
MINUTES
SECONDS
DAY· DATE

• AM/PM

·• HOURLY "BEEP"
• STOP WATCH
• ALARM SETTING

Wortts from car cigarette lighter to inflote
IINo, Mach toys ,
etc. Prnsuri1es lresh
systems in boots, trollers . Delivers up
to 90 lbs. of pr.. sure.

-11.

�SAVE ON SUMMER E

ENTIALS AT MURPHY'S MARTI

COMFORTABLE
MEl'S SLIPPERS

·Slip-On or
O.tord
StyiNI

3!~.97

MEl'S POPILAI
FAIIK CASUALS

OAiwffl
IIHLIIILDIFIEU MODEL 25 "

.22 CAL. IIFLE WRH SCOPE ,
Bolt action rifle.

Ultralight spincost set. Reel comes SAVI
with mono line. 2-piece , 4'/, .ft . rod .
'7

ramp front sight, 7·shot clip magazine.

MEN'S COOLEST
SLIP-ON SAIIDALS

MEl'S AID IOYS'
IYLOII M s•Es

291

~~~11.97

REG. $3.97

Dalwa®

K••tiiCky IHie Kits

SPIIIIII
REEL

Percuulon Model KA717'

Comfortable footing I Duro·
ble hopoock uppers. Great
colors. Molded soles.

77!~~~

KA7M

COLOIIIAL PISTOL 1m

:·· 29

2597

. as••

SAVI't

=~

88

lA VI &amp;14

.• 5 col . muzzle loader. Easy to
assemble. Unfinished stock .

Quick left/ right
retrieve. Skirted
spool. Multi·disc
drag system.

OW Prl" Mett II

2-TIAY TACKLE 101

Authentic styling . Easy to
assemble. Each kit has an
unfinished wood stock .

16comportments. 14"
x 7·7/8" x 7-3/8" size.

J88

hwe

•a

Runaway favorite lor style.
comfort, savings. Nylon
upper has vinyl and
suede trim . Podded
collar, cushioned in. sole, traction sole.

Vinyl uppers in
o comfortable
crossed - strop
style. Cushiony
foam soles .

-~-- - ~-- - -- - - - ---- ·- ---11111'5 &amp; WOMEII'S I
lEACH SAIIDALS I

2 91

:,

•

97

MIIICA$1-11® IOD.&amp; IEEL

•x scope. Adjustable rear sight,

4~:'M.47

Pomper dod's tired
feet! Corduroy and
vinyl upper . Tricot
lined. Soft podded
sole. Dark colors.

• .

li!

INIFLATA-1
21U'NBOAT

88

14

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

SAYI•7

MEl'S lOIII 6 INCH
LEAIHD Wll. 1001

REGULAR'I·8

$23~97

REG. $3.97

I

''
..-. leather
upper on

Summer favorite
with o cushiony

I
I

on oil -resistant
sole . Reinforced
slitchings . Welt

-1

39!~. j

~

;,.._:::::::~~~~~~~~~~~m;ulti -loyer 1.j ii;L~-;;;~;~";~. :;.._::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~:::;;::c;on.;.s;t;ru;c;ti;on;..~;;;'; ;;.;;.

Strong poly vinyl.
78x46" deflated
size. Sow handle .
2 oar locks . Allaround tow rope .

I
.
I
7' x 7' NYL- Tlllfl 1

~
~ISU&amp;.IIM

3-lb. poly fill. Tricot lined.
Full zipper. 3olx77" size.

SAYI ,

Storm flaps on KrHned rear window
and zippered door. Sleeps 3. Includes
rope , poles, stakes. Fire retardant .

4

s.o.le

COASI HARD APPIOYED UFE YESI
Nylon shell has loom fill.
Child sizes to lit 3().50 lbs.
· ond 50·90 lbs. Adult size
fits over 90 lbs .

I

REG• •
$5.67

37

I

Triu1rnplt'' Collection

SOnSIDID
LUGGAGE
(A)
SHOULDER TOTE
lightweight. durable.
fashionable! Grained
expanded vinyl wipes
clean with soap and
water. Feature steel
frame reinforcement.
Garment strops. Fulllength zippers . Conti nental style handles .

(B) 22"
WEEKENDER

(C) 24"

PULLMAN

(D) 26"
PULLMAN

44
2644
3344
3 844

~ ........

I

t

I

'\

I

I

SIPII .ALITY, 11•" HIVE

1 CLEAI MACIIIE••

15-PC. SAE SOCKO SO

I AUTO YACUIM CLEAIEI

9 sockets, spinner
handle , ratchet. 2
extensions , speed
adaptor and case.

9711
I
I

Plugs intolighter.
cars' 12V
cigarette
16'
cord. 3 tool attachments . 36" flexible
vacuum hose.

.

' . , ..... , Poste
I oo lkz. liquid

I ~~ ~t:=- ~tt_: -=-~
.I

MECHANICS~

CREEPER

::
,
.
88
17••·
1
4

Mia

1 Strong. kiln-dried hardwood . Nylon

SAVI 'I 1

casters. Washable vinyl headrest .

I

: : : : : :...
Tour COot

I

I
I
l
1
I

$3.97
-$1.25

--212

2'12-IALLOI

IASCAI

• •7
Has corry handle

and pou r spout .

--

�SAVE ON SUMMER E

ENTIALS AT MURPHY'S MARTI

COMFORTABLE
MEl'S SLIPPERS

·Slip-On or
O.tord
StyiNI

3!~.97

MEl'S POPILAI
FAIIK CASUALS

OAiwffl
IIHLIIILDIFIEU MODEL 25 "

.22 CAL. IIFLE WRH SCOPE ,
Bolt action rifle.

Ultralight spincost set. Reel comes SAVI
with mono line. 2-piece , 4'/, .ft . rod .
'7

ramp front sight, 7·shot clip magazine.

MEN'S COOLEST
SLIP-ON SAIIDALS

MEl'S AID IOYS'
IYLOII M s•Es

291

~~~11.97

REG. $3.97

Dalwa®

K••tiiCky IHie Kits

SPIIIIII
REEL

Percuulon Model KA717'

Comfortable footing I Duro·
ble hopoock uppers. Great
colors. Molded soles.

77!~~~

KA7M

COLOIIIAL PISTOL 1m

:·· 29

2597

. as••

SAVI't

=~

88

lA VI &amp;14

.• 5 col . muzzle loader. Easy to
assemble. Unfinished stock .

Quick left/ right
retrieve. Skirted
spool. Multi·disc
drag system.

OW Prl" Mett II

2-TIAY TACKLE 101

Authentic styling . Easy to
assemble. Each kit has an
unfinished wood stock .

16comportments. 14"
x 7·7/8" x 7-3/8" size.

J88

hwe

•a

Runaway favorite lor style.
comfort, savings. Nylon
upper has vinyl and
suede trim . Podded
collar, cushioned in. sole, traction sole.

Vinyl uppers in
o comfortable
crossed - strop
style. Cushiony
foam soles .

-~-- - ~-- - -- - - - ---- ·- ---11111'5 &amp; WOMEII'S I
lEACH SAIIDALS I

2 91

:,

•

97

MIIICA$1-11® IOD.&amp; IEEL

•x scope. Adjustable rear sight,

4~:'M.47

Pomper dod's tired
feet! Corduroy and
vinyl upper . Tricot
lined. Soft podded
sole. Dark colors.

• .

li!

INIFLATA-1
21U'NBOAT

88

14

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

SAYI•7

MEl'S lOIII 6 INCH
LEAIHD Wll. 1001

REGULAR'I·8

$23~97

REG. $3.97

I

''
..-. leather
upper on

Summer favorite
with o cushiony

I
I

on oil -resistant
sole . Reinforced
slitchings . Welt

-1

39!~. j

~

;,.._:::::::~~~~~~~~~~~m;ulti -loyer 1.j ii;L~-;;;~;~";~. :;.._::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~:::;;::c;on.;.s;t;ru;c;ti;on;..~;;;'; ;;.;;.

Strong poly vinyl.
78x46" deflated
size. Sow handle .
2 oar locks . Allaround tow rope .

I
.
I
7' x 7' NYL- Tlllfl 1

~
~ISU&amp;.IIM

3-lb. poly fill. Tricot lined.
Full zipper. 3olx77" size.

SAYI ,

Storm flaps on KrHned rear window
and zippered door. Sleeps 3. Includes
rope , poles, stakes. Fire retardant .

4

s.o.le

COASI HARD APPIOYED UFE YESI
Nylon shell has loom fill.
Child sizes to lit 3().50 lbs.
· ond 50·90 lbs. Adult size
fits over 90 lbs .

I

REG• •
$5.67

37

I

Triu1rnplt'' Collection

SOnSIDID
LUGGAGE
(A)
SHOULDER TOTE
lightweight. durable.
fashionable! Grained
expanded vinyl wipes
clean with soap and
water. Feature steel
frame reinforcement.
Garment strops. Fulllength zippers . Conti nental style handles .

(B) 22"
WEEKENDER

(C) 24"

PULLMAN

(D) 26"
PULLMAN

44
2644
3344
3 844

~ ........

I

t

I

'\

I

I

SIPII .ALITY, 11•" HIVE

1 CLEAI MACIIIE••

15-PC. SAE SOCKO SO

I AUTO YACUIM CLEAIEI

9 sockets, spinner
handle , ratchet. 2
extensions , speed
adaptor and case.

9711
I
I

Plugs intolighter.
cars' 12V
cigarette
16'
cord. 3 tool attachments . 36" flexible
vacuum hose.

.

' . , ..... , Poste
I oo lkz. liquid

I ~~ ~t:=- ~tt_: -=-~
.I

MECHANICS~

CREEPER

::
,
.
88
17••·
1
4

Mia

1 Strong. kiln-dried hardwood . Nylon

SAVI 'I 1

casters. Washable vinyl headrest .

I

: : : : : :...
Tour COot

I

I
I
l
1
I

$3.97
-$1.25

--212

2'12-IALLOI

IASCAI

• •7
Has corry handle

and pou r spout .

--

�WILt

BIG MURPHY'S MART BUYS ON GIFTS DAD

A
Uf.fU.e'
"A--~

PERSONAL : CARE GIFTS AND MORE AT MURPHY'S MART!

LOVE

IHt ldHI by "Springfield"
tAl ....,.... 1\lo. . ..,.,iww CIIIIMmr

by ALUANCE

0

AUTOMATIC IAIAIE
DOOR OPEIIEIS

844

Dt* • ......, sNtiool

., (ll "l'olerll"

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

®

IJ~

36 sell-sharpening blades ,

.._ .... ..... 12..

The ultimate in security . ·~

Crypta.e II control helps to

Quality weather instruments-

prevent unintentional clos ings . 1/ 3 HP motor. Time·

most w/ rich woodgrained cosM.

Save Over

3 Micro·Grooveill floating
heads . Pop-Out Trimmer.

....,. 24''
..,. .
Modo!

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

~;•Ov•r$97

&amp; H•ahllty Moler

and AR·30

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

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

IIIPU HEAD
c•DSHAYU
OUI
LOW
PIIICI

~

1797

.

Char·flre - l c Ignitor. Twin tlalnleu
aiM! .,.,._, lllg 1•"1122'" chnwnecl cooking
grid. Aluminum body ..... '-d. Mobile/polio
ic.e............, O...lock. Includes 20"1b.
LP tank.'-· regulator. Gao not Included•

Tap-to-T...... _ k
line .... ..... built-In

...-lc hcvtter.
Deluxe 5/1 . . - ·

For all types of beards.

29'

Transistorized radio control to open
door and light garage automatically .
Dual safety adjustments . For single /
double doors to 7' high . Unossembled.

Receiver

•

PM-ISO

En•••r ,._,.,....•• •••••

Transmitter

...

Modol HPI132

'62

With AT-35

-...

Gin PRICED

"c.rilte ........ ,.....,

(f)

Mn10
:Ill(! I.

3188

Each

(C) "ltirfu" WM!Iter Stwtlelt or
(D) ......,.,... WMtller Stwtlelt •••••• • ••••••

...... Sen...........

delay light. Instant
reverse . Opens single or
double doors to 7'6" H ,

lonlco®
lrlplohetMior
Rotary la1or"'

Grid Adjusts
To 3 Heat
levels

Handsome unit can also be
hung on a wall. 5'/2 long .

. ..,.....
Model
2703

...... HIIHichl

)

14~!....

PIIOPANI

THCH

•••

Weller®

\:--__,r---1""':

REG. $9.99

Super-hot flame. Anti clog filter. Standard

pencil point burner,
burner valve assembly.

Includes fuel cylinder,

QIAII-SIZE

HANDY

STANLEY® STEEL
VACUUM BOnLE

"IELT

$25.97 1688

Reg.

Great for workingmen. Rug·
ged , heavy-gouge steel. Sole ,
sanitary stainless steel linerno gloss to break .

RMmy TMI Box
with Tote Tray

:;ve

s•'

Lilt-out tray adjusts to lit drive
scx:kets , other special tools .
19" x 1 1J2" x 7 1/ ,

"

size .

ELEC. STAPLE
lUI TACKER .
'
I

•

•

•
•

Extra-wide 1" blade locks in
place . Easy-read marks .

1 for Tho loatl® DRYER

2 ·~l~ount

IJs!!u

Buy

Soothes Dod's tired , aching feet with
thermostatically controlled heat and
vibratory massage . Four -way control.

f1
AfterAin .. ..

(A) T* 'o'

(I) Aftw Aln/

Compact travel dryer with 3 wattage

levels: 300/650/ 1:200. Fold·up handle .
Snap-on concentrator . Dual voltage.

llllotte 1300.WaH
•

T.f ....... .. 2
(C) Allor Sltne Tria (OW $flee, U.., . .") . ,

CLIP

TAPE MEASURE

Till POOT •IXIR-

OLD SPICE® .-T sns

"TnKok"® 20 Ft.

:;::.71···. s:~· s••
Plug in and shoot! Plastic
housing and steel bose. On/
off safety lock . Jam-proof.

Versatile hobby / soldering tool
cuts , smooths , solders and
bonds . Dual temperature .
Comes complete with three in·
terchongeoble tips.

I by CLAJROl~ I

SUPEIMAJ® PIO DRYER

9
.

75-n. UNGTH

Heavy-duty, 3-wire grounded
cord. Corry/ storage caddy.

:200 sq . in . plated grid.

88
13....

Wood grid/ corry handles.

Lightweight, compact model with 3
heat/ airflow settings , "Turbo -Flo"
design for high velocity airflow . Dual
voltage for worldwide travel.

Adjustable draft controls.

lly W•ter P~k®

S2U7

Extra

OYEI

long

ams

15"

.... 137

New, Improved pulsating action for on even
more invigorating massage. Easy -to-install
wall -mouM model. A terrific gift for Dad!

$1.17

Teflon~!

Pr.

coated palms.

Sllmllne
Model Tl-1760

Sllmllne
Medel Tl -35

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS

TEXAS INSTRUMENT S

LCD Slhlo-R•Ie Calwlator

DataCant• LCD Calwlator

~ functions! Algebra , trig , statistical
functions , more. 4-key memory . 8-digit
display. Includes batteries , wallet case.

Versatile compact I Percent and square root
keys , .4 -key memory , battery -saver feature.
8-digit display . Batteries and wallet case .

:;vE 1888

CORDlCAJIY

97 ,.,··:

s....., .......

:;t~'

1544

�WILt

BIG MURPHY'S MART BUYS ON GIFTS DAD

A
Uf.fU.e'
"A--~

PERSONAL : CARE GIFTS AND MORE AT MURPHY'S MART!

LOVE

IHt ldHI by "Springfield"
tAl ....,.... 1\lo. . ..,.,iww CIIIIMmr

by ALUANCE

0

AUTOMATIC IAIAIE
DOOR OPEIIEIS

844

Dt* • ......, sNtiool

., (ll "l'olerll"

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

®

IJ~

36 sell-sharpening blades ,

.._ .... ..... 12..

The ultimate in security . ·~

Crypta.e II control helps to

Quality weather instruments-

prevent unintentional clos ings . 1/ 3 HP motor. Time·

most w/ rich woodgrained cosM.

Save Over

3 Micro·Grooveill floating
heads . Pop-Out Trimmer.

....,. 24''
..,. .
Modo!

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

~;•Ov•r$97

&amp; H•ahllty Moler

and AR·30

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

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

IIIPU HEAD
c•DSHAYU
OUI
LOW
PIIICI

~

1797

.

Char·flre - l c Ignitor. Twin tlalnleu
aiM! .,.,._, lllg 1•"1122'" chnwnecl cooking
grid. Aluminum body ..... '-d. Mobile/polio
ic.e............, O...lock. Includes 20"1b.
LP tank.'-· regulator. Gao not Included•

Tap-to-T...... _ k
line .... ..... built-In

...-lc hcvtter.
Deluxe 5/1 . . - ·

For all types of beards.

29'

Transistorized radio control to open
door and light garage automatically .
Dual safety adjustments . For single /
double doors to 7' high . Unossembled.

Receiver

•

PM-ISO

En•••r ,._,.,....•• •••••

Transmitter

...

Modol HPI132

'62

With AT-35

-...

Gin PRICED

"c.rilte ........ ,.....,

(f)

Mn10
:Ill(! I.

3188

Each

(C) "ltirfu" WM!Iter Stwtlelt or
(D) ......,.,... WMtller Stwtlelt •••••• • ••••••

...... Sen...........

delay light. Instant
reverse . Opens single or
double doors to 7'6" H ,

lonlco®
lrlplohetMior
Rotary la1or"'

Grid Adjusts
To 3 Heat
levels

Handsome unit can also be
hung on a wall. 5'/2 long .

. ..,.....
Model
2703

...... HIIHichl

)

14~!....

PIIOPANI

THCH

•••

Weller®

\:--__,r---1""':

REG. $9.99

Super-hot flame. Anti clog filter. Standard

pencil point burner,
burner valve assembly.

Includes fuel cylinder,

QIAII-SIZE

HANDY

STANLEY® STEEL
VACUUM BOnLE

"IELT

$25.97 1688

Reg.

Great for workingmen. Rug·
ged , heavy-gouge steel. Sole ,
sanitary stainless steel linerno gloss to break .

RMmy TMI Box
with Tote Tray

:;ve

s•'

Lilt-out tray adjusts to lit drive
scx:kets , other special tools .
19" x 1 1J2" x 7 1/ ,

"

size .

ELEC. STAPLE
lUI TACKER .
'
I

•

•

•
•

Extra-wide 1" blade locks in
place . Easy-read marks .

1 for Tho loatl® DRYER

2 ·~l~ount

IJs!!u

Buy

Soothes Dod's tired , aching feet with
thermostatically controlled heat and
vibratory massage . Four -way control.

f1
AfterAin .. ..

(A) T* 'o'

(I) Aftw Aln/

Compact travel dryer with 3 wattage

levels: 300/650/ 1:200. Fold·up handle .
Snap-on concentrator . Dual voltage.

llllotte 1300.WaH
•

T.f ....... .. 2
(C) Allor Sltne Tria (OW $flee, U.., . .") . ,

CLIP

TAPE MEASURE

Till POOT •IXIR-

OLD SPICE® .-T sns

"TnKok"® 20 Ft.

:;::.71···. s:~· s••
Plug in and shoot! Plastic
housing and steel bose. On/
off safety lock . Jam-proof.

Versatile hobby / soldering tool
cuts , smooths , solders and
bonds . Dual temperature .
Comes complete with three in·
terchongeoble tips.

I by CLAJROl~ I

SUPEIMAJ® PIO DRYER

9
.

75-n. UNGTH

Heavy-duty, 3-wire grounded
cord. Corry/ storage caddy.

:200 sq . in . plated grid.

88
13....

Wood grid/ corry handles.

Lightweight, compact model with 3
heat/ airflow settings , "Turbo -Flo"
design for high velocity airflow . Dual
voltage for worldwide travel.

Adjustable draft controls.

lly W•ter P~k®

S2U7

Extra

OYEI

long

ams

15"

.... 137

New, Improved pulsating action for on even
more invigorating massage. Easy -to-install
wall -mouM model. A terrific gift for Dad!

$1.17

Teflon~!

Pr.

coated palms.

Sllmllne
Model Tl-1760

Sllmllne
Medel Tl -35

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS

TEXAS INSTRUMENT S

LCD Slhlo-R•Ie Calwlator

DataCant• LCD Calwlator

~ functions! Algebra , trig , statistical
functions , more. 4-key memory . 8-digit
display. Includes batteries , wallet case.

Versatile compact I Percent and square root
keys , .4 -key memory , battery -saver feature.
8-digit display . Batteries and wallet case .

:;vE 1888

CORDlCAJIY

97 ,.,··:

s....., .......

:;t~'

1544

�HIONSI MOS

I

'18

u

~ !ilk-nit

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

MEN'S COTTON
KNIT UNDERWEAR
PKG. OF 2 T-SHIRTS
REG.

$3.97

327

PKG. OF 2 BRIEFS
REG.

$3.77

267
.

•

MEN'S ~
JOIIIH SHORTS
SAVE

$1.50

497

Sporty solid colors with con·
trost trims . Elastic waist,
action-cut leg openings. Handy
button pocket. Sizes S,M,L,Xl.

~-----------------------------WELL IAILOia W11H
CAREFREE HOD LOOISI

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
REG. $14.97
Regular cut straight leg
or young men 's western style flares . l.C -ounce

shrinkage controlled cotton . Front / bock pockets
plus belt loops . Medium
blue . Waist sizes 29-.C2 .

$6
$7.97
REG.

Cool polyester/ cotton blend in
white, handsome stripes or
solid colors. Styled with but ·
ton placket , chest pocket and
short sleeves. Sizes 14 •; , to 17 .

MEN'S WOVEN
STRETCH IABARDINE DRESS SLACKS

Lasting fit with shrinkage-controlled
cotton . T-shirts with toped shoulders,
sizes S,M,L ,Xl. Briefs feature doublepanel seat, waist sizes 28-42 .

The classic look he deserves in stayneat polyester. Tailored with comfortable Bon-Rol® waistband , lour pockets
and belt loops. Choice of brown , ton ,
navy, grey or blue. Waist sizes 30-42.

Pak-Nit" Rog. TM Compax Carp.

REGULAR

$

$12 97
e

...., , ... Stella

Mea' 1 f•ll C•t
S•••r Weight
SAYI'I
White cotton / stretch
nylon . Crew length.
One size fits 9-15.

Me11' s Stretch
Crew Socks

J\lways A lreat lift For Dadl
Men's Nyle11 Dress Socks

78:.
SAVE OVER 40,-.

REG. $4.77

6·PAIR
BUNDLE

Sanitizedlll to resist
odor. Black and other
popular colors . One
size fits 10 to 13 .

,

0
••••• 't?~~ill1?
SPORT IHI.TI

5-Palr llllllllt

lu xury-soft blend of
Orion ~ acrylic and
stretch nylon . Popular
sport colors . One size
fits 10 to 13.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

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

IFcrultiln®IT~ Wcruw
Wil~CCCOXUJJf51r~
O.r Bra...

SY-TO .. LOVE

SHORTY
PAJAMAS

497
IAYI'2
Roomy and comfortable! Short sleeve top
ond knee-length pants
in no-iron poly/ cotton .
Solid colors or pol·
terns. Sizes A ,B,C, D.

REGULAR
$1.47

MEN'S KNR
SPOil SHillS

.,
5

SAVE

'2

Short sleeved . col lared V-neck in Iorge
selection of sol1d co lors . Cool , comfortable
poly tcollon lerry . Sizes S,M,l ,Xl.

MEN'S POPULAR
BASEBALL SHIRTS

.,

J97

SAVE

Solid color with contrast
air brush design on chest.
Poly knit . Sizes S,M,l ,Xl.

.....

White cotton body . 3/ _. .
length con trast s leeves ,
neck . Sizes S,M,l and XL.

o&lt;3 M lTV"
3 Oreal Stylest

IPOaTY

•ou.-up

MIN'I aODY
aiLLPOLDS

HAft

857
Mill'S AND WOMEN'S SIYLES
REG. $1.97
Summertime favorite! Prints or

colorful solids in shope-retain ing fobrics. Sizes S,M,l ond XL.

.7
5

.SUNSENSOR® SUIILASSES
Impact -resistant glass
lenses lighten and darken
with sunlight. Choice of
plastic or metal frames .
• TM Corning Gkns Wort.: a

SAYlE

'3

297

REG. $10.77
Tri -lolds , directors or
identifiers. 6 popular
fashion colors in choice
of 5 luxurious leathers.

�HIONSI MOS

I

'18

u

~ !ilk-nit

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

MEN'S COTTON
KNIT UNDERWEAR
PKG. OF 2 T-SHIRTS
REG.

$3.97

327

PKG. OF 2 BRIEFS
REG.

$3.77

267
.

•

MEN'S ~
JOIIIH SHORTS
SAVE

$1.50

497

Sporty solid colors with con·
trost trims . Elastic waist,
action-cut leg openings. Handy
button pocket. Sizes S,M,L,Xl.

~-----------------------------WELL IAILOia W11H
CAREFREE HOD LOOISI

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
REG. $14.97
Regular cut straight leg
or young men 's western style flares . l.C -ounce

shrinkage controlled cotton . Front / bock pockets
plus belt loops . Medium
blue . Waist sizes 29-.C2 .

$6
$7.97
REG.

Cool polyester/ cotton blend in
white, handsome stripes or
solid colors. Styled with but ·
ton placket , chest pocket and
short sleeves. Sizes 14 •; , to 17 .

MEN'S WOVEN
STRETCH IABARDINE DRESS SLACKS

Lasting fit with shrinkage-controlled
cotton . T-shirts with toped shoulders,
sizes S,M,L ,Xl. Briefs feature doublepanel seat, waist sizes 28-42 .

The classic look he deserves in stayneat polyester. Tailored with comfortable Bon-Rol® waistband , lour pockets
and belt loops. Choice of brown , ton ,
navy, grey or blue. Waist sizes 30-42.

Pak-Nit" Rog. TM Compax Carp.

REGULAR

$

$12 97
e

...., , ... Stella

Mea' 1 f•ll C•t
S•••r Weight
SAYI'I
White cotton / stretch
nylon . Crew length.
One size fits 9-15.

Me11' s Stretch
Crew Socks

J\lways A lreat lift For Dadl
Men's Nyle11 Dress Socks

78:.
SAVE OVER 40,-.

REG. $4.77

6·PAIR
BUNDLE

Sanitizedlll to resist
odor. Black and other
popular colors . One
size fits 10 to 13 .

,

0
••••• 't?~~ill1?
SPORT IHI.TI

5-Palr llllllllt

lu xury-soft blend of
Orion ~ acrylic and
stretch nylon . Popular
sport colors . One size
fits 10 to 13.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

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

IFcrultiln®IT~ Wcruw
Wil~CCCOXUJJf51r~
O.r Bra...

SY-TO .. LOVE

SHORTY
PAJAMAS

497
IAYI'2
Roomy and comfortable! Short sleeve top
ond knee-length pants
in no-iron poly/ cotton .
Solid colors or pol·
terns. Sizes A ,B,C, D.

REGULAR
$1.47

MEN'S KNR
SPOil SHillS

.,
5

SAVE

'2

Short sleeved . col lared V-neck in Iorge
selection of sol1d co lors . Cool , comfortable
poly tcollon lerry . Sizes S,M,l ,Xl.

MEN'S POPULAR
BASEBALL SHIRTS

.,

J97

SAVE

Solid color with contrast
air brush design on chest.
Poly knit . Sizes S,M,l ,Xl.

.....

White cotton body . 3/ _. .
length con trast s leeves ,
neck . Sizes S,M,l and XL.

o&lt;3 M lTV"
3 Oreal Stylest

IPOaTY

•ou.-up

MIN'I aODY
aiLLPOLDS

HAft

857
Mill'S AND WOMEN'S SIYLES
REG. $1.97
Summertime favorite! Prints or

colorful solids in shope-retain ing fobrics. Sizes S,M,l ond XL.

.7
5

.SUNSENSOR® SUIILASSES
Impact -resistant glass
lenses lighten and darken
with sunlight. Choice of
plastic or metal frames .
• TM Corning Gkns Wort.: a

SAYlE

'3

297

REG. $10.77
Tri -lolds , directors or
identifiers. 6 popular
fashion colors in choice
of 5 luxurious leathers.

�BI G MURPHY'S MART DISCO UNTS FO R THE YOUNG SET!
aOYS'COOL
MISH SHIRT

MURPHY•s MART SUN WEAR AND LINGERIE DISCOUNTS!
,. '
'

DELUXE PLAY YAID

Ill SAVIliS 01
PAINTERS' JEAISI
2 SIZE RAIIESI

297
Foldable. Has double drop
sides , safety mesh , foam·
cushioned vinyl floor pod ,
draft guard . 36"x36" size.

Number and
stripe

SooH

trim

37

Regular
$1.44

on sleeves.
Nylon mesh
body. Knit
yoke. Sizes
S,M,l,Xl.
Storos Moy Hnt

REGULAR $3.67

PORTABLE
PRESSURE
GATE
Reg. J77

IJIJo.. _.:._A.•. 'No ruw
MY.m

IIRLS' PLAYTIME
TERRY R.MPERS

-LS' SIZES 7-14

5tiW Color Stylt Dilly

IJCPIU/U~

Super Discount luyl

sa

Sportswear favorite . Two front
dungaree pockets and two back
patch pockets. Belt loops, yoke
back . Brush· loop, pocket on leg.
Natural-color polyester I cotton .

$9.97

BOYS' DINIM JIANS

Solid wood frame with
non-toxic finish . Adjusts
to lit openings from 26"
to 42" wide . Rigid poly·
ethylene mesh screen .

Greot styling with boot-cut
legs. 4 pockets. 12-oz. col·
.
ton . Shrinkage control. Slim
sizes 8-16. regular 8-18.
Reg. $10.97

Cool, sun-loving terry rompers
styled with elasticized neckline,
tie shoulder straps and shirred
waist. White. brights, pastels.
Acetate-nylon. Sizes S,M ,L
(3-6X).

J.IHS' SIZES 5-15

FASHIH SPECIALI
IIRLS' K.IT TOPS

99

tn'Steeler
fOLDABLE STROLLER

197
IOYS' WHnE TUIE SOC:IS
REG.

11197

$2.77

SAYE'7

h·PAIR PKG.

Folds to carry like an umbrella . Great for
shopping trips and on buses . Fabric seat
has safety strap. Steel legs and handles .

Cushiony cotton / stretch nylon blend .
Striped top . M, l fit sites 6 to 11.

100~. spun cotton. Triple roll cuff . Re·
inforced toes , heels. Sites 5 to 8 %.

·NOT SHOWN:
All -cotton painters' cloth
with two front and two bock
pockets, belt loops. Brush
loop, pocket on leg.
Natural.

Super selection of the very
latest styles. Lightweight,
carefree fabrics in popular
summer colors. Sizes 7-14.

iODDLEIS'
2-PC.Km -

s-tsns
IIFAITS'

2-PC. TDIY
SIIOilT sns

2'7
Save'1

Cotton / polyester .
Tonk tops hove
embroidery trim .

Pull-on . jog-style
shorts . Sizes: 9 to
2.- months .

TM!M•s·

IERIYKIII
s.siiiS

167
Save 30%
Cool cotton terry .
Styled with snap
shoulder strops
and elastic legs.
Sizes 1T to 3T.

Save Over

&lt;eii&lt;dk~lfll©riD

20%
Short sleeved ny·
lon tops in o wide l'~t;:::;;;;::
variety of screen
print designs. Poly·
ester jogger style
shorts with elastic
waist. Cool, very
easy to core for . ,r---.
Sizes 2T to 4T.

T•llond
BRIEFS

81ANT BOX Of 48
TODDL.ItAMitiU®
SAVEI
NOW

6"

Day / night use. For babies over 23 lbs .
LIMIT 4 BOXES

Sizes 5·7
Regular

"SUPEILAIIYES" IRA

IIILS' MIDRIFF lOPS
White ,

pretty

pastels

with lace-edge collar ,
colorful trims. Poly cottons. Sizes .. -6X .

1

37
Reg.
$1.97

For overage to full f i g · l 8 4
ures. Polyester/ cotton.
Strops adjust. Sizes:
Reg.
348·•20. White only.
$2.74

$1.17 ••••••••••

Slzesl-10
Regular $1.37 .. .. .. •

94c

Pr.

Soft polyester-cottons. Elastic waist.
legs. Double reinforced crotch. Whole.

Summer cooler. Elas ·
ticized cotton. Solid
colors , bold stripes.
One-size stretch lit .

�BI G MURPHY'S MART DISCO UNTS FO R THE YOUNG SET!
aOYS'COOL
MISH SHIRT

MURPHY•s MART SUN WEAR AND LINGERIE DISCOUNTS!
,. '
'

DELUXE PLAY YAID

Ill SAVIliS 01
PAINTERS' JEAISI
2 SIZE RAIIESI

297
Foldable. Has double drop
sides , safety mesh , foam·
cushioned vinyl floor pod ,
draft guard . 36"x36" size.

Number and
stripe

SooH

trim

37

Regular
$1.44

on sleeves.
Nylon mesh
body. Knit
yoke. Sizes
S,M,l,Xl.
Storos Moy Hnt

REGULAR $3.67

PORTABLE
PRESSURE
GATE
Reg. J77

IJIJo.. _.:._A.•. 'No ruw
MY.m

IIRLS' PLAYTIME
TERRY R.MPERS

-LS' SIZES 7-14

5tiW Color Stylt Dilly

IJCPIU/U~

Super Discount luyl

sa

Sportswear favorite . Two front
dungaree pockets and two back
patch pockets. Belt loops, yoke
back . Brush· loop, pocket on leg.
Natural-color polyester I cotton .

$9.97

BOYS' DINIM JIANS

Solid wood frame with
non-toxic finish . Adjusts
to lit openings from 26"
to 42" wide . Rigid poly·
ethylene mesh screen .

Greot styling with boot-cut
legs. 4 pockets. 12-oz. col·
.
ton . Shrinkage control. Slim
sizes 8-16. regular 8-18.
Reg. $10.97

Cool, sun-loving terry rompers
styled with elasticized neckline,
tie shoulder straps and shirred
waist. White. brights, pastels.
Acetate-nylon. Sizes S,M ,L
(3-6X).

J.IHS' SIZES 5-15

FASHIH SPECIALI
IIRLS' K.IT TOPS

99

tn'Steeler
fOLDABLE STROLLER

197
IOYS' WHnE TUIE SOC:IS
REG.

11197

$2.77

SAYE'7

h·PAIR PKG.

Folds to carry like an umbrella . Great for
shopping trips and on buses . Fabric seat
has safety strap. Steel legs and handles .

Cushiony cotton / stretch nylon blend .
Striped top . M, l fit sites 6 to 11.

100~. spun cotton. Triple roll cuff . Re·
inforced toes , heels. Sites 5 to 8 %.

·NOT SHOWN:
All -cotton painters' cloth
with two front and two bock
pockets, belt loops. Brush
loop, pocket on leg.
Natural.

Super selection of the very
latest styles. Lightweight,
carefree fabrics in popular
summer colors. Sizes 7-14.

iODDLEIS'
2-PC.Km -

s-tsns
IIFAITS'

2-PC. TDIY
SIIOilT sns

2'7
Save'1

Cotton / polyester .
Tonk tops hove
embroidery trim .

Pull-on . jog-style
shorts . Sizes: 9 to
2.- months .

TM!M•s·

IERIYKIII
s.siiiS

167
Save 30%
Cool cotton terry .
Styled with snap
shoulder strops
and elastic legs.
Sizes 1T to 3T.

Save Over

&lt;eii&lt;dk~lfll©riD

20%
Short sleeved ny·
lon tops in o wide l'~t;:::;;;;::
variety of screen
print designs. Poly·
ester jogger style
shorts with elastic
waist. Cool, very
easy to core for . ,r---.
Sizes 2T to 4T.

T•llond
BRIEFS

81ANT BOX Of 48
TODDL.ItAMitiU®
SAVEI
NOW

6"

Day / night use. For babies over 23 lbs .
LIMIT 4 BOXES

Sizes 5·7
Regular

"SUPEILAIIYES" IRA

IIILS' MIDRIFF lOPS
White ,

pretty

pastels

with lace-edge collar ,
colorful trims. Poly cottons. Sizes .. -6X .

1

37
Reg.
$1.97

For overage to full f i g · l 8 4
ures. Polyester/ cotton.
Strops adjust. Sizes:
Reg.
348·•20. White only.
$2.74

$1.17 ••••••••••

Slzesl-10
Regular $1.37 .. .. .. •

94c

Pr.

Soft polyester-cottons. Elastic waist.
legs. Double reinforced crotch. Whole.

Summer cooler. Elas ·
ticized cotton. Solid
colors , bold stripes.
One-size stretch lit .

�'IFUL HOMES WEAR MURPHY'S MART DISCOUNTS1.

SUMMER FUN STARTS WITH MURPHY'S MART
DI.SC0
1.}. ~·.
.
.
.

"SHELTON"

~F

Roadmaster·
Men's 10-Speed 26" Bike

CHOICI Of IWOI

••aallfwl Paleil
RoD• •rlz' ll•lag

DRAPIRIIS

47

$20

PAIR
63" Length

SAYI S2el0
14" Length

"AilE" TRIPLE RUFFLE
110-1101 IAOSTE nElS

SAYI $3el0

24" or 36"

Choice of "Shelton" traditional florol or "Cypress" Queen
Ann florol. Both 100'1'. polyes·
ter ... iust machine wash 'n dry
for easy care. Pinch pleated
tops. Single window size.
SHOP OUR COMPlETE LINE OF
CURTAIN AND DRAPERY HARDWARE

"CYPRESS"

96

SAVE

377

LENGTH

VALANCE

REG. 15.17
SWAG TOPPER

297

447

REG. M.47

REG. $7.47

Pretty semi-sheers of polyester
batiste. White or colors . 66" wide .

Sporty, lightweight racing model with 21"
diamond frame. 10-speecl derailleur with
wide ratio gearing. Hooded lever sidepull
caliper brakes and easy-reach dual stem
shifters. Racing saddle. Reflectorized
pedals. Disc chainguard. Sold unassembled.

''Whisper" SeMI-Sheer
SEEDED VOILE PANEL
63" OR 11" LENGTH

2

97

•

65"

Panel WIDE

Beoutifu I choice lor any room .
Machine wash, drip dry fabric .
Choose from decorator colors.

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

.......
,. ,...........
Sn....

o.r F•.... "OWl n_,r•

lanYWOWI,

PLUMP •ID PILLOW

D.,•NII PIU.. 1'lcll...

5()'11, shredded u.-.thanr
foam / 50% crushed
chicken feathers filling.
CoHon ticking. 20x28".

Stripes or floral prints in

394

SAYII

1

...

machine wash cotton. Col·
orfost. 21 "x28" size.

REG, $6,33

17

137

ova 25%

YARD

SAYI 20%

easr

Easy to sew,
to core for . large ..lee·
tion of beautifu oolld colors in popular
fashion stitches . 60" wide.
WE CAftY SIMPliCITY PATTEIINS

FAKE FIRS A.

S·ne RIGID POLY IPLAIH POOL

3•PCe COLORPUL POOL INIIMBLI

M.t6

Just odd water, and your little waders will
hove a summer full of cool fun I Constructed of rigid , one-r.iece poly plastic
that's durable and so e . Splashed with
bright colorful designs. fiJ'' diameter.

Big fun for your little dippers! . Set in·
eludes 2-ring pool : 50" diameter and 9"
deep, 16" beach boll plus 20" swim ring
(all inflated sizes). B-gauge vinyl with
colorful designs, safe-flow valves.

PR•aavnvns
REG. 346
YD.

Luxurious seal-like furs in solid
colors . Printed nylon velvets in
decor colors . 1-6 yard lengths.

6''
$9.97
REG.

REG.

$6.47

399
.

•

•ORA~E

• YEUOW

• ILUE

.,.
PUUOI
TWIN SID
PmiD

.., ......

PLAStiC
UnlESS COVEl

SAVE

'1

196

Protects tap and sides of mattress
from dirt, stains, perspiration.
4 elastic cornerS for a snug fit.

~

"FIIIICJ PI.W''

~

VB- TOWD. EIISUIILE
24

•

··~SIIDCNII

I._
SAVI

•a

cwa• CIYII

4'7

Stretches to odjuet to all positions.
Machine wash. Solid colors or prints.

LAICI

•a

44"

REG.

REG .

wiiiiPII'•Wc...,Yw
SAVI
97

1

X

lath Towel 14.37

yo;..

niP

With ~. pre-cut
and YanwnateTM
to hold and kMp yam otgao.a.d. 20x2T'
finished size. (Latch !-'&lt; nat included).

Hond Towel 12.47
Washcloth

REG.
11.37

296

IM

96c

Smort, contemporary plaid in super·
soft sheared velour. Fringed ends .
Durable blend of polyester/ cotton .

,.

ROLL·ALOIII FUNI
"SKATE" RIDE 'EM

"NWDER PUFF"
GIRLS' HOI CYCLE
SAVE

'3

•••

Pedal -powered trike for your little girl.
Rugged plastic with steerable front
wheel. Ages 2-5. Easy assembly .

~

REG.

'10.97

J77

Foot-powered ride-on for ages 1 to 3.
Durable plastic in high visibility col·
ors . Skate key steers front wheel.

Foot-Powered
"S•aker" Ride 'Em
REG.

Comfy Air
MaHress
w/PIIIow

,,,

'10.97

SPECIALI

Popular styling in a steerable riding
toy . Break-resistant plastic construction. Brightly colored. For ages 1-3.

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

99

C.

Sturdy 1-beom construction , built -in
pillow headrest. 27x72" deflated size .

. ..

~

.... .

�'IFUL HOMES WEAR MURPHY'S MART DISCOUNTS1.

SUMMER FUN STARTS WITH MURPHY'S MART
DI.SC0
1.}. ~·.
.
.
.

"SHELTON"

~F

Roadmaster·
Men's 10-Speed 26" Bike

CHOICI Of IWOI

••aallfwl Paleil
RoD• •rlz' ll•lag

DRAPIRIIS

47

$20

PAIR
63" Length

SAYI S2el0
14" Length

"AilE" TRIPLE RUFFLE
110-1101 IAOSTE nElS

SAYI $3el0

24" or 36"

Choice of "Shelton" traditional florol or "Cypress" Queen
Ann florol. Both 100'1'. polyes·
ter ... iust machine wash 'n dry
for easy care. Pinch pleated
tops. Single window size.
SHOP OUR COMPlETE LINE OF
CURTAIN AND DRAPERY HARDWARE

"CYPRESS"

96

SAVE

377

LENGTH

VALANCE

REG. 15.17
SWAG TOPPER

297

447

REG. M.47

REG. $7.47

Pretty semi-sheers of polyester
batiste. White or colors . 66" wide .

Sporty, lightweight racing model with 21"
diamond frame. 10-speecl derailleur with
wide ratio gearing. Hooded lever sidepull
caliper brakes and easy-reach dual stem
shifters. Racing saddle. Reflectorized
pedals. Disc chainguard. Sold unassembled.

''Whisper" SeMI-Sheer
SEEDED VOILE PANEL
63" OR 11" LENGTH

2

97

•

65"

Panel WIDE

Beoutifu I choice lor any room .
Machine wash, drip dry fabric .
Choose from decorator colors.

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

.......
,. ,...........
Sn....

o.r F•.... "OWl n_,r•

lanYWOWI,

PLUMP •ID PILLOW

D.,•NII PIU.. 1'lcll...

5()'11, shredded u.-.thanr
foam / 50% crushed
chicken feathers filling.
CoHon ticking. 20x28".

Stripes or floral prints in

394

SAYII

1

...

machine wash cotton. Col·
orfost. 21 "x28" size.

REG, $6,33

17

137

ova 25%

YARD

SAYI 20%

easr

Easy to sew,
to core for . large ..lee·
tion of beautifu oolld colors in popular
fashion stitches . 60" wide.
WE CAftY SIMPliCITY PATTEIINS

FAKE FIRS A.

S·ne RIGID POLY IPLAIH POOL

3•PCe COLORPUL POOL INIIMBLI

M.t6

Just odd water, and your little waders will
hove a summer full of cool fun I Constructed of rigid , one-r.iece poly plastic
that's durable and so e . Splashed with
bright colorful designs. fiJ'' diameter.

Big fun for your little dippers! . Set in·
eludes 2-ring pool : 50" diameter and 9"
deep, 16" beach boll plus 20" swim ring
(all inflated sizes). B-gauge vinyl with
colorful designs, safe-flow valves.

PR•aavnvns
REG. 346
YD.

Luxurious seal-like furs in solid
colors . Printed nylon velvets in
decor colors . 1-6 yard lengths.

6''
$9.97
REG.

REG.

$6.47

399
.

•

•ORA~E

• YEUOW

• ILUE

.,.
PUUOI
TWIN SID
PmiD

.., ......

PLAStiC
UnlESS COVEl

SAVE

'1

196

Protects tap and sides of mattress
from dirt, stains, perspiration.
4 elastic cornerS for a snug fit.

~

"FIIIICJ PI.W''

~

VB- TOWD. EIISUIILE
24

•

··~SIIDCNII

I._
SAVI

•a

cwa• CIYII

4'7

Stretches to odjuet to all positions.
Machine wash. Solid colors or prints.

LAICI

•a

44"

REG.

REG .

wiiiiPII'•Wc...,Yw
SAVI
97

1

X

lath Towel 14.37

yo;..

niP

With ~. pre-cut
and YanwnateTM
to hold and kMp yam otgao.a.d. 20x2T'
finished size. (Latch !-'&lt; nat included).

Hond Towel 12.47
Washcloth

REG.
11.37

296

IM

96c

Smort, contemporary plaid in super·
soft sheared velour. Fringed ends .
Durable blend of polyester/ cotton .

,.

ROLL·ALOIII FUNI
"SKATE" RIDE 'EM

"NWDER PUFF"
GIRLS' HOI CYCLE
SAVE

'3

•••

Pedal -powered trike for your little girl.
Rugged plastic with steerable front
wheel. Ages 2-5. Easy assembly .

~

REG.

'10.97

J77

Foot-powered ride-on for ages 1 to 3.
Durable plastic in high visibility col·
ors . Skate key steers front wheel.

Foot-Powered
"S•aker" Ride 'Em
REG.

Comfy Air
MaHress
w/PIIIow

,,,

'10.97

SPECIALI

Popular styling in a steerable riding
toy . Break-resistant plastic construction. Brightly colored. For ages 1-3.

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

99

C.

Sturdy 1-beom construction , built -in
pillow headrest. 27x72" deflated size .

. ..

~

.... .

�SUPPLEMENT TOTHE GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRI BUNE, POINT PLEASANT FIEGI., 1t::;
POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
.

A great way to store
small ports lor your
home, shop , office or
hobby. Tough pl~ti c.

J188

High-speed nylon line
trims around fences ,
walls. trees . Weighs
only 2 pounds . Save .

1'11188
Splash on the tan'1.
tolizing scent of rich-

ness! 3.5-oz .• bottle .
3.5·0z. * Cologne ,4.44
'FI 0 1 .

I

MART

IASY 1'0 JOJII
IIUOYTV

ANnwtf_,

r.:. ,,
t ,..,u; STARTS SUN., JUNE 8 · ENDS SAT., JUNE 14

3 33

l288

Men's LC.D. Digital Watches Billfolds and Trifolds
5-lunction : hour ,
mmute , second ,
month , day . White ,
or yellow gold calor .

Each

Genuine split leather
with plenty of com partme nts. tn manplea sing sty les. Save .

288
Each

•• .I
S•• ····=nz
II.AGlAia . . . . IY

... $99·
tn7.M

FAIITASIK Panasonic Mn FOil DADSI

P.1asonc AMIFM

AMIFM PORTABLE RADIO

NRTAILE RADIO

19!!.LAR

13~!$17.95

$23.95

Operates on built-in AC cord or batteries (not
included}. 3" speaker , carry handle, earphone .

Corry strap, earphone, 2'/2

MODEL RF-537

MODEl RF-504

speaker . Batteries extra.

.,

~

·~

Muoic or olarm ....._
up. SIMp IWitdl, dol•

.

.

bar. WoOd-lOok flnleh .
. MOOII. IIC-75

ELECTRONIC
FLASH FOR
l.S.RI CAMEIA

1094
SAVE '4

1 "

Hot shoe mounting foot .
Botteri e5 not included .

Canon COMPAO SIZE

YASIKA® aECTIO 35 ISM

35MM RAN&amp;EFINDIR (AMERA

RAIIGEFIIIDEI CAMERA

Comes

The Friendly

s.-ore

In order to serve everyone. we
r•serve the right to limit quontltl••·
Sorry , no sales to d•alers.
Regular prices may vary by stor•.

with sharp f / 2.8

lens . Automatic exposure
control. Sfluttor speeds
range from 1/ 30 · 1/ 620

seconds . A carry case is in·
eluded . Great gift!

srr

Handsome Dress Shirts
For Discriminating Men

6

REG. $109.94

Sup plan-Ito the Pl. Pt.aaanl R....,.llunday 'Timet hnllnel, Younplown Ylnclie.olor, Tribune Chronicle, Iunday, June I, Sturgle DaiiJ Jour· llun f,1
...VJoumal WMkly Review, Boyan Timet, Lopn DaiiJ NaW1, Adverllaer~ IEIIaml...,, Allance Review, N. . . lleuenger, Creocent
News!Norllnrnl Signal, MondaJ, June I, Central llhopper, IIICJfUI Taletlraph '""""• AdYerllaer·Trlbu,.lleneca hnllnel, Tlpp City Herald/Weol
llllon Record/Trl City Advocate, Vandalia DNmmer NeW1, TundeJ, June10, DIIJ leniJnei.T,.,._, Record Courlet, WednndaJ, June11, A"'11-anter ond MUMnger AdYeriiM&lt;, Sun./Man., June 111, 1180, Ill Ve"""' NIIWII Knox WMkly N. . ., Record Heralol, SC AdYerllaer

96
Stripes ,

Accept the Challenger'" for that best-dressed look in to·

day's shirt fash ions for men . And at those da rin g K mort ·
prices that let you select more than just one sh irt' Styled of
cool , crisp polyester / cotton that washes beautifully , resi st s
wrink ling and wilting and lets you keep on looki ng well
dressed , even when the heat is on . You 'll lind t.l\ese s h~rt s
in basic white , low· key pastels and jazzy str ipes . Com e
in today for a look at the Challenger '" shi r t se lec tio n t

4-in-Hand Ties For Men

50

The finishing touch that ties right in
with Challenger'" shirts , making them
even more stylish and unbeatable. Of
easy-to-handle polyester ... just a few
flicks of the wrist and the tie becomes.
part of your well -dressed appearance.
Select from solid colors , prints or
plaids ... put it with the Challenger '".

Each

Men's Belted Hopsack Pants
Pants that let you be in style and in
comfort! Of woven Dacron"' polyester
hopsacking !hot retains its shape and
good looks wash alter wash. Each pair
of pants has its own belt , matching in
color to the solid color of !he pants . II
Father's Day doesn't bring you a new
pants . shirt and tie, outfit yourself!
i£ OuPonTiteg . TM

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 185 UPPER RI VERRD.

$

�SUPPLEMENT TOTHE GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRI BUNE, POINT PLEASANT FIEGI., 1t::;
POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
.

A great way to store
small ports lor your
home, shop , office or
hobby. Tough pl~ti c.

J188

High-speed nylon line
trims around fences ,
walls. trees . Weighs
only 2 pounds . Save .

1'11188
Splash on the tan'1.
tolizing scent of rich-

ness! 3.5-oz .• bottle .
3.5·0z. * Cologne ,4.44
'FI 0 1 .

I

MART

IASY 1'0 JOJII
IIUOYTV

ANnwtf_,

r.:. ,,
t ,..,u; STARTS SUN., JUNE 8 · ENDS SAT., JUNE 14

3 33

l288

Men's LC.D. Digital Watches Billfolds and Trifolds
5-lunction : hour ,
mmute , second ,
month , day . White ,
or yellow gold calor .

Each

Genuine split leather
with plenty of com partme nts. tn manplea sing sty les. Save .

288
Each

•• .I
S•• ····=nz
II.AGlAia . . . . IY

... $99·
tn7.M

FAIITASIK Panasonic Mn FOil DADSI

P.1asonc AMIFM

AMIFM PORTABLE RADIO

NRTAILE RADIO

19!!.LAR

13~!$17.95

$23.95

Operates on built-in AC cord or batteries (not
included}. 3" speaker , carry handle, earphone .

Corry strap, earphone, 2'/2

MODEL RF-537

MODEl RF-504

speaker . Batteries extra.

.,

~

·~

Muoic or olarm ....._
up. SIMp IWitdl, dol•

.

.

bar. WoOd-lOok flnleh .
. MOOII. IIC-75

ELECTRONIC
FLASH FOR
l.S.RI CAMEIA

1094
SAVE '4

1 "

Hot shoe mounting foot .
Botteri e5 not included .

Canon COMPAO SIZE

YASIKA® aECTIO 35 ISM

35MM RAN&amp;EFINDIR (AMERA

RAIIGEFIIIDEI CAMERA

Comes

The Friendly

s.-ore

In order to serve everyone. we
r•serve the right to limit quontltl••·
Sorry , no sales to d•alers.
Regular prices may vary by stor•.

with sharp f / 2.8

lens . Automatic exposure
control. Sfluttor speeds
range from 1/ 30 · 1/ 620

seconds . A carry case is in·
eluded . Great gift!

srr

Handsome Dress Shirts
For Discriminating Men

6

REG. $109.94

Sup plan-Ito the Pl. Pt.aaanl R....,.llunday 'Timet hnllnel, Younplown Ylnclie.olor, Tribune Chronicle, Iunday, June I, Sturgle DaiiJ Jour· llun f,1
...VJoumal WMkly Review, Boyan Timet, Lopn DaiiJ NaW1, Adverllaer~ IEIIaml...,, Allance Review, N. . . lleuenger, Creocent
News!Norllnrnl Signal, MondaJ, June I, Central llhopper, IIICJfUI Taletlraph '""""• AdYerllaer·Trlbu,.lleneca hnllnel, Tlpp City Herald/Weol
llllon Record/Trl City Advocate, Vandalia DNmmer NeW1, TundeJ, June10, DIIJ leniJnei.T,.,._, Record Courlet, WednndaJ, June11, A"'11-anter ond MUMnger AdYeriiM&lt;, Sun./Man., June 111, 1180, Ill Ve"""' NIIWII Knox WMkly N. . ., Record Heralol, SC AdYerllaer

96
Stripes ,

Accept the Challenger'" for that best-dressed look in to·

day's shirt fash ions for men . And at those da rin g K mort ·
prices that let you select more than just one sh irt' Styled of
cool , crisp polyester / cotton that washes beautifully , resi st s
wrink ling and wilting and lets you keep on looki ng well
dressed , even when the heat is on . You 'll lind t.l\ese s h~rt s
in basic white , low· key pastels and jazzy str ipes . Com e
in today for a look at the Challenger '" shi r t se lec tio n t

4-in-Hand Ties For Men

50

The finishing touch that ties right in
with Challenger'" shirts , making them
even more stylish and unbeatable. Of
easy-to-handle polyester ... just a few
flicks of the wrist and the tie becomes.
part of your well -dressed appearance.
Select from solid colors , prints or
plaids ... put it with the Challenger '".

Each

Men's Belted Hopsack Pants
Pants that let you be in style and in
comfort! Of woven Dacron"' polyester
hopsacking !hot retains its shape and
good looks wash alter wash. Each pair
of pants has its own belt , matching in
color to the solid color of !he pants . II
Father's Day doesn't bring you a new
pants . shirt and tie, outfit yourself!
i£ OuPonTiteg . TM

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 185 UPPER RI VERRD.

$

�.........

PLACE
Save
Western-style
Sport Shirt In
Sizes For Men

68

Our

10.96

The kind of shirt that becomes
a favorite . Rugged western
styling i n smooth, wrinkle - re ~
sistont polyester / cotton. Now

•

in colorful prints and bold
plaids , and at o gilt able price!

Save 4.59

8.''

Bar Mirrors Reflect Good Times
Great

co nversation

piece!

Gi'Ve OurReg. r3.41

Dod on accent mirror lor his bar ,
with a screened print of his favorite
brew. Big 20x24" wood-groin-look
frame with print under gloss . ln bar
motif or popular brand names.

991VJ

FirslAiert Family Protection System'"
First Alert " basic kit includes
plug -i n receiving console ·and one

battery *·operated door intru sion

transmitter

to

send

wireless

E h

signal

activating

audible

ac

visual

alarms

the

at

Sale Price

~

and

Short-sleeved Shirt

OurReg.596

6.96

special shirt for Fathers Day . Very
id , very comfor1oble , and very easy

care for . Of polyester/ cotton that
looking fresh . Shop now , save.

A precision quartz clock hand -

somely mounted in an old -time
ad. Colorful silk screen prints and
mirrored background make it

Our Rsg. 48.88

bar . 16x20" pressed-wood frame.

Each

Save
Long-sleeved Sport Shirt

OurReg.T96
9.96

Perfect lor giving and getting! Perfect
with our Challenger'" jeans . Cool . crisp
polyester/ cotton in lively plaids . Set off
by two scalloped pockets . Men 's sizes.

1-Gal. Picinic Jug
Sturdy polyeth - Solo Prlco
ylene. Shoulder
spout . handy
wide mouth .

288

44-Qt. Picnic Cooler
22 '!. x 1 2 '!. x 14 Sole Price
'!•" . Leak -proof J~
drain spout.
Polyethylene .

88

Fi re·resistant Metal Chests
Choose from two roomy sizes to help Sale Price
organize and protect valuables . Both with
lock and key . 14'/, x9'(, x4" size or king
Each
size , 6'/, x12'!. xS'/4 '. luggage handle .

JlJBB

Utility Light
With 25' Cord
Our Rpg.

7.66

Save 16% to 27%

Insulated Vinyl Carry-oil Bags
Double 6-pock size in choice of popular Our3.4B
beer logo screen prints or colorful

496

Our Reg.

8.94

wet253

looks and patterns . Compact 12x6x9" size,
well insu lated. Sturdy carry ing handle.

Handy Dymo ·
Label Marker

Each

Padded Vinyl
Toilet Seot

694

OurRsg . 7 9 7
13.88

A very easy way
Ia identify things .
Red / Black '/,"x 12'
Tape. 3-Pack , 1.68

With bulb guard
and swivel hook .
Side outlet and
switch . Rugged .

Western Denim Jeans, Vest

3188

Wall Clock In Old Fashioned Ad Look

perfect for recreation room or

console.

'Batte ry r'IGI induded

Save

Save

"Soft Touch " in
decor color s .
Top -mount hinge,

easy to

install .

Your Choice

Our Reg. 10.57 . The Jeans. 'Rustler' by Wrangler'. true blue
and tough as nails . Of all -cotton denim in popular . lradi·
tiona I western styling. Available in sizes for men . Save now!
Our Reg . 10.97 . The Vest . Turns a shirt and jeans into on auf·
lit' Blue cotton denim with ~ontrast stitching. Unlined for
coolness . Snap closure and two pod&lt;ets. Sizes lor men.

Save '2
Leather Belt
OurReg.£97
8.97

"

Top -gro in leather , 1 •; , "
wide . Hand-rubbed an ·
tiqued look . For men .

Save 3e97
Men's
Western
Straw Hat

OurReg.

$8

ATHLETIC
FOOTWEAR
ONLY AT K mart

Save 3.47

11 .97

Save 2e90

Men's and Boys' Value-Plus
Canvas Basketball Sneakers

The finishing touch in
western wear . Of cool
straw !hot heads off
summer's heat.

_

Men's Leather Work Oxfords
.
The combination of Texas Steer
quality , genuine leather and the
wide D thru EE widths you want ,
make !his shoe a great buy! Black ,
oil-resistant sole and heel . Texan '
cushioned
insole , and
steel
shank construction. Save at K marl .

Great performers! All the rugged wear you expect from Iough convas
plus added com fort features and good looks of vinyl padded collar and
tongue. Shack -cushioned insole and arch . Rubber foe cop and bumper .
Heavy-duly rubber soles for qu ick starts. Men's and boys' 2 \1, -6.

Con-

trasting band and
feather trim . Men's.

$

Our Reg. 16.90

·Save18%to33%
Jeans With Fortrer~u,,o. 97_, 3. 5,
Save 17% to 29%
Stretch Nylon Dress Socks For Men
Another traditional gilt for Dad on his special day . Easy-fitting
stretch nylon in line-rib . lighlweighl· ribbed styles or with in·
lrlcale cable-knll side panel. Solid colors ; Iii sizes 10-13.

o

78¢,0

$u2r

Challenger'" jeans dare you to try them , wear them , make
them your own . Buy caralully, they'll be around lor a long
time!
Tough 10-I&gt;Z. brushed Celanese"' Fortrel 0 ' polyester/ eolian that you can tass in the wo~her an~ dryer and
forget . They hold their own wash alter wash. You'll lind the
boot-cut style in a twill and the flared-leg type in denim ,
with !he flares available in both regular and mature cut . In
whal·else-bul blue lor the color. Priced so rlghl !hat a pair
or more can be easily given to special men on Dod's Day .

'"¢
·

$

,

•

5

Men's Suede Leather Casual Oxfords ·

Cool Nylon Mesh Slip·ons For Dad

Man's Caol 'n Cushioned Vinyl Sandals

Soft, supple moc·loe shoe.•• lUI
bill lor comfort and good looks. Par- ~
tially lined with suede . New-look
roller unit sole and heel for a bold
fashion look. Save al Kmart nowl

Lightweight , a iry and comfortable I Ourlteg. 4.97
Double side gore, slip-on style for
neat fit and smooth look . Injection- ·
molded sole and heel. Dad Is sure to
·
be delighted . Men's sizes at savings .
f'r.

The secret of real comfort is in !he ax - Our R•g. 6.97
tro padding in iha Innersole. InterA A
woven croos· band styling, easy-into
....
buckled sling-back. Durable rubber
sole . Right for Dad I Save at K mort .
Pr.

&gt;ho0''350
'"

® *For1rells n r.glttered trodemork of Fiber lndu•tr lea , aubsldiory of (elan••• Corp .

3-Pr.

Save22%

Save29%

Save 6.47

;

l'r.

3so

�.........

PLACE
Save
Western-style
Sport Shirt In
Sizes For Men

68

Our

10.96

The kind of shirt that becomes
a favorite . Rugged western
styling i n smooth, wrinkle - re ~
sistont polyester / cotton. Now

•

in colorful prints and bold
plaids , and at o gilt able price!

Save 4.59

8.''

Bar Mirrors Reflect Good Times
Great

co nversation

piece!

Gi'Ve OurReg. r3.41

Dod on accent mirror lor his bar ,
with a screened print of his favorite
brew. Big 20x24" wood-groin-look
frame with print under gloss . ln bar
motif or popular brand names.

991VJ

FirslAiert Family Protection System'"
First Alert " basic kit includes
plug -i n receiving console ·and one

battery *·operated door intru sion

transmitter

to

send

wireless

E h

signal

activating

audible

ac

visual

alarms

the

at

Sale Price

~

and

Short-sleeved Shirt

OurReg.596

6.96

special shirt for Fathers Day . Very
id , very comfor1oble , and very easy

care for . Of polyester/ cotton that
looking fresh . Shop now , save.

A precision quartz clock hand -

somely mounted in an old -time
ad. Colorful silk screen prints and
mirrored background make it

Our Rsg. 48.88

bar . 16x20" pressed-wood frame.

Each

Save
Long-sleeved Sport Shirt

OurReg.T96
9.96

Perfect lor giving and getting! Perfect
with our Challenger'" jeans . Cool . crisp
polyester/ cotton in lively plaids . Set off
by two scalloped pockets . Men 's sizes.

1-Gal. Picinic Jug
Sturdy polyeth - Solo Prlco
ylene. Shoulder
spout . handy
wide mouth .

288

44-Qt. Picnic Cooler
22 '!. x 1 2 '!. x 14 Sole Price
'!•" . Leak -proof J~
drain spout.
Polyethylene .

88

Fi re·resistant Metal Chests
Choose from two roomy sizes to help Sale Price
organize and protect valuables . Both with
lock and key . 14'/, x9'(, x4" size or king
Each
size , 6'/, x12'!. xS'/4 '. luggage handle .

JlJBB

Utility Light
With 25' Cord
Our Rpg.

7.66

Save 16% to 27%

Insulated Vinyl Carry-oil Bags
Double 6-pock size in choice of popular Our3.4B
beer logo screen prints or colorful

496

Our Reg.

8.94

wet253

looks and patterns . Compact 12x6x9" size,
well insu lated. Sturdy carry ing handle.

Handy Dymo ·
Label Marker

Each

Padded Vinyl
Toilet Seot

694

OurRsg . 7 9 7
13.88

A very easy way
Ia identify things .
Red / Black '/,"x 12'
Tape. 3-Pack , 1.68

With bulb guard
and swivel hook .
Side outlet and
switch . Rugged .

Western Denim Jeans, Vest

3188

Wall Clock In Old Fashioned Ad Look

perfect for recreation room or

console.

'Batte ry r'IGI induded

Save

Save

"Soft Touch " in
decor color s .
Top -mount hinge,

easy to

install .

Your Choice

Our Reg. 10.57 . The Jeans. 'Rustler' by Wrangler'. true blue
and tough as nails . Of all -cotton denim in popular . lradi·
tiona I western styling. Available in sizes for men . Save now!
Our Reg . 10.97 . The Vest . Turns a shirt and jeans into on auf·
lit' Blue cotton denim with ~ontrast stitching. Unlined for
coolness . Snap closure and two pod&lt;ets. Sizes lor men.

Save '2
Leather Belt
OurReg.£97
8.97

"

Top -gro in leather , 1 •; , "
wide . Hand-rubbed an ·
tiqued look . For men .

Save 3e97
Men's
Western
Straw Hat

OurReg.

$8

ATHLETIC
FOOTWEAR
ONLY AT K mart

Save 3.47

11 .97

Save 2e90

Men's and Boys' Value-Plus
Canvas Basketball Sneakers

The finishing touch in
western wear . Of cool
straw !hot heads off
summer's heat.

_

Men's Leather Work Oxfords
.
The combination of Texas Steer
quality , genuine leather and the
wide D thru EE widths you want ,
make !his shoe a great buy! Black ,
oil-resistant sole and heel . Texan '
cushioned
insole , and
steel
shank construction. Save at K marl .

Great performers! All the rugged wear you expect from Iough convas
plus added com fort features and good looks of vinyl padded collar and
tongue. Shack -cushioned insole and arch . Rubber foe cop and bumper .
Heavy-duly rubber soles for qu ick starts. Men's and boys' 2 \1, -6.

Con-

trasting band and
feather trim . Men's.

$

Our Reg. 16.90

·Save18%to33%
Jeans With Fortrer~u,,o. 97_, 3. 5,
Save 17% to 29%
Stretch Nylon Dress Socks For Men
Another traditional gilt for Dad on his special day . Easy-fitting
stretch nylon in line-rib . lighlweighl· ribbed styles or with in·
lrlcale cable-knll side panel. Solid colors ; Iii sizes 10-13.

o

78¢,0

$u2r

Challenger'" jeans dare you to try them , wear them , make
them your own . Buy caralully, they'll be around lor a long
time!
Tough 10-I&gt;Z. brushed Celanese"' Fortrel 0 ' polyester/ eolian that you can tass in the wo~her an~ dryer and
forget . They hold their own wash alter wash. You'll lind the
boot-cut style in a twill and the flared-leg type in denim ,
with !he flares available in both regular and mature cut . In
whal·else-bul blue lor the color. Priced so rlghl !hat a pair
or more can be easily given to special men on Dod's Day .

'"¢
·

$

,

•

5

Men's Suede Leather Casual Oxfords ·

Cool Nylon Mesh Slip·ons For Dad

Man's Caol 'n Cushioned Vinyl Sandals

Soft, supple moc·loe shoe.•• lUI
bill lor comfort and good looks. Par- ~
tially lined with suede . New-look
roller unit sole and heel for a bold
fashion look. Save al Kmart nowl

Lightweight , a iry and comfortable I Ourlteg. 4.97
Double side gore, slip-on style for
neat fit and smooth look . Injection- ·
molded sole and heel. Dad Is sure to
·
be delighted . Men's sizes at savings .
f'r.

The secret of real comfort is in !he ax - Our R•g. 6.97
tro padding in iha Innersole. InterA A
woven croos· band styling, easy-into
....
buckled sling-back. Durable rubber
sole . Right for Dad I Save at K mort .
Pr.

&gt;ho0''350
'"

® *For1rells n r.glttered trodemork of Fiber lndu•tr lea , aubsldiory of (elan••• Corp .

3-Pr.

Save22%

Save29%

Save 6.47

;

l'r.

3so

�Save 3.08
Conquest'' Woods For
Men And Women

88

E11ch
Norlhwestern• Conquest® go lf
wood s are preci sion balanced
for . accuracy . Aluminum -and wood laminated heads and rugged LTS fluted shaft . Men's: 1, 2,
3, 5, 7, 9 . Wome n's: 1, 3, 5, 7,

Save 16% to 28%
Sports Caps For A Sports-loving Dad

Save $10

Shell of KoC1el'"
.
4 7 polyester/ cot-4 9 6
Our 2. 97 ton; cotton lin Our
to 3.47 er, drawstring .
5. 97

A new cap lor o good sport! Golf , tennis, 2
fishing , all-occasion caps in many colors,
many fabrics . All with o variety of famous
logos , emblems, design s ond trims. Save!

Men's Quartz Watches

Save16,-.
V·Leg Super Shorts

® Eaati'Min

TM

Toke time to tell Dad how much you care with a fine ,
precision -made Ever .Swiss® watch : Quartz accuracy

Your Choice
Our49.97

and Swiss movement with class ic analog styling .
Chrome with slainl!&gt;ss steel bond or in yellow finish .

Portable Quartz Clock
Radio With Flashlight
Hand -size portable" AM / FM with LCD
clock di splay . Buttons lor stopwatch,
alarm, tim e / mu sic . Even a fla shlight !
'Bofl erltn n o l •nclvde d

Save 2.91
Vinyl Garment Bag
Holds up to 6
suits . Nylon
zippers , 2 gus seted

~

7
Our

pockets.~

16.88

Save 25% to 33%
Vent'" Sanitized Support Sports Socks

J27

Our J47
Our J 97
I.BB
6" Pr.
2.22
12" Pr.
2.t.t.
ld" Pr.
Hi -Bulk Orion" acrylic / nylon/ elastic knit socks.
Vented sanitized for odor control . Sizes . 10-13.

Our

TM

Save '10

Our 5.96 Golf Gloves. Lee
Trevino" golf glove of cabretto
leather with non -twist thumb .

Playe r/ reco rd e r with automatic shut-off
met e re d reco rd volume control :
90-Min. Blank Cassette Tapes,3-Pkg. , 1.74

Save26%
Old Pal'" Tackle Box

\\VVOOdstream

Our Reg. 4 9 7

Go/d-.t one
Our44. 97

6.77

2-tray box has 15 comport Is , is worm proof , lockable .

High accuracy , constant
display of hour, minutes ,
seconds , date and dual
time . Matching band .

Sole
Price

' Boo~,;· ., no1 ind uded

!:...~~~ Save 2.91
3· Tray Tackle Box

~~-

'

Save 4.09

Your
Choice!

lee Trevino . Sombreron.,
Spalding• Centur ion ••

29973497

AC/
AM/FM Stereo
Cassette Tape Recorder

96

Golf Gifts To Please A Good Sport

Old Pal.

Men's Chronograph
Watch With Alarm
Chrome
Our39.97

Save 16% to 36%

Reg.997
tackle bo x
ro cks: lockable .

Men's Large Jewelry Box
OurReg.,BB
12.97

Save •s

Hip· roof Tackle Box

Save 2.91
18"Deluxe Gym Bag

Handsome, Buxton• jewelry b~x
lor Dod . Lilt-out tray with 3 com partments , ring rack. leather look in black. Save now .

OurReg. J 4 9 7

Roomy bag of
sturdy e x ·
ponded vinyl ; 7 9
Our7
nylon zipper .
IO.BB

19.97

4
for

trays, ad justable dividers
up

to 35 comportment s.

Save '2
Gift Jewelry For Dad
OurReg.427
6•27
Your
Choice
Great bracelets and 18" chain s
in gold -tone that looks I ike the
real thing . Good choice of link
styles and weights . Gift boxed .

Save'6

;::~r ~~~:~~~s~:
AC. Thu mbwhee l
controls , 3" speak er . Bu ilt-i n AFC.

J'587
Sale
Price

"Batte r y no t ond udO!d

OurReg. J f B B
25.88

i

'

Spincast Rod And Reel
Zebco •

-

Zebco 33

Sa·le!

Clock con b~ rramovod
to tok " with you .

Desk Set/Travel Clock

GE .
/FM Carry-along
Compact Portable Radio

Silver Anniversary

Sai•Prlc•

33

reel with10021J194
yds. of l~ne ;
2- piece rod .

3••

Save 21%
Save 20% ta 25%
Save •s
3-ln-1 Fishing Chair Fish Weighing Scale Fillet Board Or Knife

The fine quartz alarm clock
makes this modern desk set a
perfect gift far home or Dad's
office. Ball-point pen , pencil.

Converts
picnic

to

choir

9

or camping
stool. Save

97
' Lorge dial for
easy reading ; 40" tape
Our
me as u r e .
14.97

Our
4:97

Boord . with
clomp , or
steel knife in
sheath . Save .

5'99

Save '2
Wall Hold·A·Rod '"

5

Wall plaque , Our 7. 97
1 Ea. of hardwood ,
97
holds rods
Our
7.41-7. 97 and reels .

Save'4
®Pen·and·Pencil Set
OurReg .

.,lt97

14.97
' "
Gleaming chrome set with ball·
paint pen, pencil. Slim as only
Cross®Instruments ore. Dod will
know he has the finest . Boxed.

Big Savings!

Save$2

Leather-look Gun Case

Grained vinyl with soft lintlree
gun cloth lining. Varied lengths .
Our10.96 Scope·model Cose,8.96

Our 9. 96

196

Save 12%

.22 Seml·automatlc•

Sale Price
All Pro .22 Rifle Scope
0
4x15-mm
rille scope. Five
Marlin® Glanfleld model 4 4 9 6
lenses, with protective cops to
60 rifle with walnutkeep lenses from scratching .
finished hardwood stack.

Our1.97

696

Very Special! ·
'Jet System'1200-WDryer

:~~.f68
Surprise Dod with hio own hair
dryer. Powerful 1200-W, olide
switch .with 3 air-flow oellillgs .
lightweight, easy-to -handle .

-S~eclal

·------//

Savings!

1 o-wt}'Jstyllng Dryer

The Great Hot Air
Corn Popper For Dad

~~~ ai:·x~~~dh::2~97

the kernels .
Continuous ac lion . Fun lor all.

.

Sole
Prlte

Sole
Price

7

Complete with 4 attachments:
styling brush, styling handle ,
extra wide tooth comb and fine
tooth comb . 3 position switch .

Save '9
Save '7
Save 24%
7x35 ZCF Binoculars l·Qt, Steel Bottle
Mini Sport'" Light
l e o t h e r - ~~
Steel case,~~·· Soft for camp
covered, 8° .
leakproof
(trea or powOur Reg. 2.97 '
Caoe .. .. 1.97

97
Our stopper and

27.97 steel liner.

Our
:13.U

erful
light .

Save '3
Big Savings!
3" Lock·Biade Knife .22·L.R. Cal Shells·

Save27%
Sharpening Kit

Knife sharpening
kit has
97
sj)ot·
Our
~ -oz! all , hard
and soft stones.
Save.S 7.11
"fl. or:.

I

496
Our
.
6.11

Folding stoln -, 9 7
less steel blade.
Our 6.97 Pack·
Our
et Knife*,. •.97
11.97
"Without Sheath

100 high-ve- 2 J 7
loclty , long.
rille shells In
Sale
holder. Save.
Price

�Save 3.08
Conquest'' Woods For
Men And Women

88

E11ch
Norlhwestern• Conquest® go lf
wood s are preci sion balanced
for . accuracy . Aluminum -and wood laminated heads and rugged LTS fluted shaft . Men's: 1, 2,
3, 5, 7, 9 . Wome n's: 1, 3, 5, 7,

Save 16% to 28%
Sports Caps For A Sports-loving Dad

Save $10

Shell of KoC1el'"
.
4 7 polyester/ cot-4 9 6
Our 2. 97 ton; cotton lin Our
to 3.47 er, drawstring .
5. 97

A new cap lor o good sport! Golf , tennis, 2
fishing , all-occasion caps in many colors,
many fabrics . All with o variety of famous
logos , emblems, design s ond trims. Save!

Men's Quartz Watches

Save16,-.
V·Leg Super Shorts

® Eaati'Min

TM

Toke time to tell Dad how much you care with a fine ,
precision -made Ever .Swiss® watch : Quartz accuracy

Your Choice
Our49.97

and Swiss movement with class ic analog styling .
Chrome with slainl!&gt;ss steel bond or in yellow finish .

Portable Quartz Clock
Radio With Flashlight
Hand -size portable" AM / FM with LCD
clock di splay . Buttons lor stopwatch,
alarm, tim e / mu sic . Even a fla shlight !
'Bofl erltn n o l •nclvde d

Save 2.91
Vinyl Garment Bag
Holds up to 6
suits . Nylon
zippers , 2 gus seted

~

7
Our

pockets.~

16.88

Save 25% to 33%
Vent'" Sanitized Support Sports Socks

J27

Our J47
Our J 97
I.BB
6" Pr.
2.22
12" Pr.
2.t.t.
ld" Pr.
Hi -Bulk Orion" acrylic / nylon/ elastic knit socks.
Vented sanitized for odor control . Sizes . 10-13.

Our

TM

Save '10

Our 5.96 Golf Gloves. Lee
Trevino" golf glove of cabretto
leather with non -twist thumb .

Playe r/ reco rd e r with automatic shut-off
met e re d reco rd volume control :
90-Min. Blank Cassette Tapes,3-Pkg. , 1.74

Save26%
Old Pal'" Tackle Box

\\VVOOdstream

Our Reg. 4 9 7

Go/d-.t one
Our44. 97

6.77

2-tray box has 15 comport Is , is worm proof , lockable .

High accuracy , constant
display of hour, minutes ,
seconds , date and dual
time . Matching band .

Sole
Price

' Boo~,;· ., no1 ind uded

!:...~~~ Save 2.91
3· Tray Tackle Box

~~-

'

Save 4.09

Your
Choice!

lee Trevino . Sombreron.,
Spalding• Centur ion ••

29973497

AC/
AM/FM Stereo
Cassette Tape Recorder

96

Golf Gifts To Please A Good Sport

Old Pal.

Men's Chronograph
Watch With Alarm
Chrome
Our39.97

Save 16% to 36%

Reg.997
tackle bo x
ro cks: lockable .

Men's Large Jewelry Box
OurReg.,BB
12.97

Save •s

Hip· roof Tackle Box

Save 2.91
18"Deluxe Gym Bag

Handsome, Buxton• jewelry b~x
lor Dod . Lilt-out tray with 3 com partments , ring rack. leather look in black. Save now .

OurReg. J 4 9 7

Roomy bag of
sturdy e x ·
ponded vinyl ; 7 9
Our7
nylon zipper .
IO.BB

19.97

4
for

trays, ad justable dividers
up

to 35 comportment s.

Save '2
Gift Jewelry For Dad
OurReg.427
6•27
Your
Choice
Great bracelets and 18" chain s
in gold -tone that looks I ike the
real thing . Good choice of link
styles and weights . Gift boxed .

Save'6

;::~r ~~~:~~~s~:
AC. Thu mbwhee l
controls , 3" speak er . Bu ilt-i n AFC.

J'587
Sale
Price

"Batte r y no t ond udO!d

OurReg. J f B B
25.88

i

'

Spincast Rod And Reel
Zebco •

-

Zebco 33

Sa·le!

Clock con b~ rramovod
to tok " with you .

Desk Set/Travel Clock

GE .
/FM Carry-along
Compact Portable Radio

Silver Anniversary

Sai•Prlc•

33

reel with10021J194
yds. of l~ne ;
2- piece rod .

3••

Save 21%
Save 20% ta 25%
Save •s
3-ln-1 Fishing Chair Fish Weighing Scale Fillet Board Or Knife

The fine quartz alarm clock
makes this modern desk set a
perfect gift far home or Dad's
office. Ball-point pen , pencil.

Converts
picnic

to

choir

9

or camping
stool. Save

97
' Lorge dial for
easy reading ; 40" tape
Our
me as u r e .
14.97

Our
4:97

Boord . with
clomp , or
steel knife in
sheath . Save .

5'99

Save '2
Wall Hold·A·Rod '"

5

Wall plaque , Our 7. 97
1 Ea. of hardwood ,
97
holds rods
Our
7.41-7. 97 and reels .

Save'4
®Pen·and·Pencil Set
OurReg .

.,lt97

14.97
' "
Gleaming chrome set with ball·
paint pen, pencil. Slim as only
Cross®Instruments ore. Dod will
know he has the finest . Boxed.

Big Savings!

Save$2

Leather-look Gun Case

Grained vinyl with soft lintlree
gun cloth lining. Varied lengths .
Our10.96 Scope·model Cose,8.96

Our 9. 96

196

Save 12%

.22 Seml·automatlc•

Sale Price
All Pro .22 Rifle Scope
0
4x15-mm
rille scope. Five
Marlin® Glanfleld model 4 4 9 6
lenses, with protective cops to
60 rifle with walnutkeep lenses from scratching .
finished hardwood stack.

Our1.97

696

Very Special! ·
'Jet System'1200-WDryer

:~~.f68
Surprise Dod with hio own hair
dryer. Powerful 1200-W, olide
switch .with 3 air-flow oellillgs .
lightweight, easy-to -handle .

-S~eclal

·------//

Savings!

1 o-wt}'Jstyllng Dryer

The Great Hot Air
Corn Popper For Dad

~~~ ai:·x~~~dh::2~97

the kernels .
Continuous ac lion . Fun lor all.

.

Sole
Prlte

Sole
Price

7

Complete with 4 attachments:
styling brush, styling handle ,
extra wide tooth comb and fine
tooth comb . 3 position switch .

Save '9
Save '7
Save 24%
7x35 ZCF Binoculars l·Qt, Steel Bottle
Mini Sport'" Light
l e o t h e r - ~~
Steel case,~~·· Soft for camp
covered, 8° .
leakproof
(trea or powOur Reg. 2.97 '
Caoe .. .. 1.97

97
Our stopper and

27.97 steel liner.

Our
:13.U

erful
light .

Save '3
Big Savings!
3" Lock·Biade Knife .22·L.R. Cal Shells·

Save27%
Sharpening Kit

Knife sharpening
kit has
97
sj)ot·
Our
~ -oz! all , hard
and soft stones.
Save.S 7.11
"fl. or:.

I

496
Our
.
6.11

Folding stoln -, 9 7
less steel blade.
Our 6.97 Pack·
Our
et Knife*,. •.97
11.97
"Without Sheath

100 high-ve- 2 J 7
loclty , long.
rille shells In
Sale
holder. Save.
Price

�-.KROGER

SUPPl EMENTTO:
Point Pleasant Register
'oint Pleosont . W. VA .
Sunday Tlm•s Sentinel

--~·

lower Prices

Items And Prices Cood In
Silver Bridge &amp; Pomeroy

On FRESH POUt TRY
(Including TUrlf e ).
FRESH PORK B ys ·

· aeon
lun .hSmoked Ha~s
c eon Meats ·

. . ..

Canned Hams &amp;.
Wieners
-~

SOCIIn WRENCH S£T

. "'
""'O"'c"'"'
'

... '"" "' "

.

&gt;.h

~&lt;-~•-...o

'•""'ll&gt;'(f;'h

~
&gt;&lt;(I ·~

....... '&gt;0&lt;"-t••- .....

•

•,

,E'&gt;',.....,.~,....,,_c

"t•' '"'.••m.....e, .....("EE&gt;

1/

I

'!&gt;,

H

\(j('

J,

1'14

'(Y,

l;' 14

\f,

ADVERTISED IT&amp;M POLI CY

'
Each ol these advertised 1tems
JS reQuired to be
readil., available lor sale tn each Kroger Store, e• cept as
lp8dftcalty noted 1n ttMs ad. If ..w dO run out pf an ~sed
item. we will Otf8f you your d lOtce of a comparable item.
'Nhen available, retlect1ng the same sa1.-.ngs or a ra 1ncheclr.
'Nhicti will entitle vou to purchase the advert1sed 1tem at the
ad\lttrt1sed pnce wtth1n 30 daV\ .

AN LAST YEAR.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Evarythmg you buv at Kroger

1S guaranteed for you r total
sat isfactiOn regardless at manufact urer 11 you are not satls·
fted. Kroger w ill 1eplace vour item w1th the same brand or a
comparable brand or refund your pur chase pnce

Save '5

'!•" and %"Drive Wrench Set

16 metric sockets , 15 SAE

soc kets .

Reversible

rat-

&lt; het , extensions , adaptor,

Our 19.18

J~··
·
40·Pe.

13 /1 6" and 5! 6" plug
sockets 1n storage box.

8''

Carpeted Floor Mats

Set

Twin front floor mats protect
and beautify .

Ca rpeted mat ,

rubber bock . ln co~ors ~o m~tch

or contrast cars mtenor.
Ma,fchtlng Rear Malo, Pr . 6.11

Our 11.11

-

.

. Pr.

Save •29
AM/FM 8· Tr. Or Cassette
AM/ FM stereo indash comes with either Strock or cassette tope player. Fit$ most cars.
5'/..lnch Coaxial Speaker• ......... Pr.21 .8B
6x9·1nch Coaxial Speakers .... .... Pr .26.88

COPYRIGHT 1910- THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY JUNE 8 THRU SATURDAY JUNE U , 1980.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD
TO DEALERS .

Our Reg. IB. BB

6,

88
Your
Choice

Save'2

Color-accent
Splash Guards
Our Reg. f , 'IT

4!7

hot or cold
beverage s a long with you in

Protect car from

this insulated 12·
oz. cup . Comes
with sip-thru cop
to ovoid spil ls .

mud.

salt and tar. Rubbe r
guard s resis t cracking .
lading , peeling . Clip-on
a1tochment. Colors to
complement your cor .

,4,vto Dept

Save!
Handy All·steel
Automobile Ramps
Sole Price

8

15!

Multicompartment Console

Our 1. 91

Comb ination beverage and sn a ck

troy . lope ond CB mike holder .
Durabl e plast ic in choice of colo rs.

J44

Digital Quartz Auto Clock
Fits on , under or in the dash .
Dig ital readout for hours .

minutes ;

flash ing

Do it yourself and save!
All -steel ro mps lilt the
front or rear of vehicle
off the ground for eosy
repairing . Wheel cradle .
slip - resistant
incline.

73••
Our 19.81

Strl•s And

seconds.

Mf~ .

Mgy Vgry

O.~nd i "9 On la&lt;:atlon

Save '3

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE ·

OPE
24 HRS.
ADAY

Euept Closed Saturday Midnight Til 9am Sunday
Except Hinton, White Sulphur, 7th. Ave.
Charleston &amp; Williamson

USDA

CHOICE
U.S. OOV'T. GIADID CHOICI, liEf CHUCK ,

CENTEICU1
Boneless

$17 9

U.S.
GRADEDCHOICE ,
BEEF CHUCK ,

~:~~:::t . .

Chuck Steak . lb.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
BEEF CHUCK

COUNTRY CLUB All VARIETIES

Center Blade C u t $ 1 3 9

Wafer Sliced
Meats . .

Chuck Steak . lb.
JIFfY FROZEN CHUCKWAGON, BREAD EO
VEAL OR
Jiffy Cubed

-lb $ 1 4 9

Patties~ks :

Beef
SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED

i;~~h:~n
Meats ....... .

~~~:

$

1

19

Kroger Meats Are

C~;~Y;~;s

lb $ 1

Po~~h"Pak

~

9

49C

OPEN·DATED
FOR
FRESHNESS

"-'IV'-----._;

The dote stomped on the label is the last date
the package will be sold tor meat to stay fresh
for normal home use.

One More Reason Why

KROGER MEANS BEnER MEAT

$499
· lb •
SliCED
Hams . . . . • . . can
FREE
CANNED HAMS 5-LB. CAN ... $7.99
KROGER SliCED All VARIETIES

3

lx~~~h:;:HAM12-oz~

119

Meats ...... . Pkg .

SAVE
30c
PER LB.
VS.

17·Drawer
Storage
Cabinet

LAST YEAR'S

''PRICE

Our R•g. 11 .11

877

Organ izer pro·

tects

hobby

materia ls and

sm all tools .
See -thru sty rene drawers
in three sizes .

Save "3

8' 7
0

22-lnch Mechanics' Tool Box
Sturdily -constructed for heavy -du ty use . Baked finish on textured
metal. lilt-out tray . 22x8'1• x.8 '11,

ur

,, 91
·

~y Size Pkg.

The Famous Workmate •

Save22~.

Workbench f sowhorse / vise combo. Dual ·
he ight , steel frame . 29" vise jaws open lo sv• ·
wide . Swivel grips, foot leveling . Folds for easy
storing, carrying . Assembled. 29x31 Y.x26-in .

river" Ratchet Tool
Ratc:het

kit with I
. Sure ball

6

$149

Ground Beef lb .
A BLIND Of lllf &amp; HYDRAUD nXTURED

a:~~BLI PIOTEIN KIOGE$ PM)

Mixed

Fryer

Parts .... lb .
HICKORY MOUNTAIN FARMS .

(~5~~;;;· WHOLE

$

19

sole Price

Patty Mix .... 1b.

sli~~dm VALLEY
' ·lb..
Bacon ........P.kg
GWALTNEY
Great
r-Ib .
Dogs ..•. • .....P.kg .

49c

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.O.A. INSPECTED

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

119

99c (;R~;;;;Gstyle 79c
c
9
99
c
$
99
1

Hams .......... .. lb.

---

Sliced Bacon .. lb.

M~E~~ALE SLICED

Bo Iogna

$12

l · lb .
..... Pkg .

VALLEYDALE BOLOGNA 12 ·01 . PKG ... 99'

THORN AP~LE VALLEY ,

a;·:~i~G~;HOlE

.
S...Oked Hams lb.

Save 23%

Set Of Five Screwdrivers
A practical gilt every Dad can
use . Set of live plastic-handled
screwdrivers In plastic pouch.

Our 4 21

·

327

'.

Save

7-Pc. Propane Torch Kit
Our 15.11
"Hottest tip going", burns in any , , ,. . .
position . Torch assembly, fuel
8
cylinder , tips , case and more .

OR6·0Z. PKG ... 59•

1

49

$;-~t;;;iSCRYOVAC

SLICED
FREE

Ham Portions. lb.

SAVE

CClP

•
\...--

Save 2.30

3a..I

Save -2

Vise·Grip• Pliers

Drill Guide

Locking .
S lr a i g hI ~~j
jaws . 10". ·

Fits Yo",
'!.'' alec· ?;~l
trlc drills . ·

"ff'

r7

Save *6
Electric Sto'ple Gun

.

Push-button operation , built-in
staple remover. Drives S staple
sizes plus loktile•. Save now .

I?··
Our 23 •18

5-gal. Wet/dry Shop-vac• .
Heavy -duty vacuum tackles the b ig jobs inside
and out . Steel drum with automatic float shutoff value. Exhaust blower, super filtration . ~ wheel dolly , 6-ft . cord and handy accessories .

solei'rl~e

3~
·

97

·

~·

••

&lt;

�-.KROGER

SUPPl EMENTTO:
Point Pleasant Register
'oint Pleosont . W. VA .
Sunday Tlm•s Sentinel

--~·

lower Prices

Items And Prices Cood In
Silver Bridge &amp; Pomeroy

On FRESH POUt TRY
(Including TUrlf e ).
FRESH PORK B ys ·

· aeon
lun .hSmoked Ha~s
c eon Meats ·

. . ..

Canned Hams &amp;.
Wieners
-~

SOCIIn WRENCH S£T

. "'
""'O"'c"'"'
'

... '"" "' "

.

&gt;.h

~&lt;-~•-...o

'•""'ll&gt;'(f;'h

~
&gt;&lt;(I ·~

....... '&gt;0&lt;"-t••- .....

•

•,

,E'&gt;',.....,.~,....,,_c

"t•' '"'.••m.....e, .....("EE&gt;

1/

I

'!&gt;,

H

\(j('

J,

1'14

'(Y,

l;' 14

\f,

ADVERTISED IT&amp;M POLI CY

'
Each ol these advertised 1tems
JS reQuired to be
readil., available lor sale tn each Kroger Store, e• cept as
lp8dftcalty noted 1n ttMs ad. If ..w dO run out pf an ~sed
item. we will Otf8f you your d lOtce of a comparable item.
'Nhen available, retlect1ng the same sa1.-.ngs or a ra 1ncheclr.
'Nhicti will entitle vou to purchase the advert1sed 1tem at the
ad\lttrt1sed pnce wtth1n 30 daV\ .

AN LAST YEAR.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Evarythmg you buv at Kroger

1S guaranteed for you r total
sat isfactiOn regardless at manufact urer 11 you are not satls·
fted. Kroger w ill 1eplace vour item w1th the same brand or a
comparable brand or refund your pur chase pnce

Save '5

'!•" and %"Drive Wrench Set

16 metric sockets , 15 SAE

soc kets .

Reversible

rat-

&lt; het , extensions , adaptor,

Our 19.18

J~··
·
40·Pe.

13 /1 6" and 5! 6" plug
sockets 1n storage box.

8''

Carpeted Floor Mats

Set

Twin front floor mats protect
and beautify .

Ca rpeted mat ,

rubber bock . ln co~ors ~o m~tch

or contrast cars mtenor.
Ma,fchtlng Rear Malo, Pr . 6.11

Our 11.11

-

.

. Pr.

Save •29
AM/FM 8· Tr. Or Cassette
AM/ FM stereo indash comes with either Strock or cassette tope player. Fit$ most cars.
5'/..lnch Coaxial Speaker• ......... Pr.21 .8B
6x9·1nch Coaxial Speakers .... .... Pr .26.88

COPYRIGHT 1910- THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY JUNE 8 THRU SATURDAY JUNE U , 1980.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD
TO DEALERS .

Our Reg. IB. BB

6,

88
Your
Choice

Save'2

Color-accent
Splash Guards
Our Reg. f , 'IT

4!7

hot or cold
beverage s a long with you in

Protect car from

this insulated 12·
oz. cup . Comes
with sip-thru cop
to ovoid spil ls .

mud.

salt and tar. Rubbe r
guard s resis t cracking .
lading , peeling . Clip-on
a1tochment. Colors to
complement your cor .

,4,vto Dept

Save!
Handy All·steel
Automobile Ramps
Sole Price

8

15!

Multicompartment Console

Our 1. 91

Comb ination beverage and sn a ck

troy . lope ond CB mike holder .
Durabl e plast ic in choice of colo rs.

J44

Digital Quartz Auto Clock
Fits on , under or in the dash .
Dig ital readout for hours .

minutes ;

flash ing

Do it yourself and save!
All -steel ro mps lilt the
front or rear of vehicle
off the ground for eosy
repairing . Wheel cradle .
slip - resistant
incline.

73••
Our 19.81

Strl•s And

seconds.

Mf~ .

Mgy Vgry

O.~nd i "9 On la&lt;:atlon

Save '3

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE ·

OPE
24 HRS.
ADAY

Euept Closed Saturday Midnight Til 9am Sunday
Except Hinton, White Sulphur, 7th. Ave.
Charleston &amp; Williamson

USDA

CHOICE
U.S. OOV'T. GIADID CHOICI, liEf CHUCK ,

CENTEICU1
Boneless

$17 9

U.S.
GRADEDCHOICE ,
BEEF CHUCK ,

~:~~:::t . .

Chuck Steak . lb.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
BEEF CHUCK

COUNTRY CLUB All VARIETIES

Center Blade C u t $ 1 3 9

Wafer Sliced
Meats . .

Chuck Steak . lb.
JIFfY FROZEN CHUCKWAGON, BREAD EO
VEAL OR
Jiffy Cubed

-lb $ 1 4 9

Patties~ks :

Beef
SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED

i;~~h:~n
Meats ....... .

~~~:

$

1

19

Kroger Meats Are

C~;~Y;~;s

lb $ 1

Po~~h"Pak

~

9

49C

OPEN·DATED
FOR
FRESHNESS

"-'IV'-----._;

The dote stomped on the label is the last date
the package will be sold tor meat to stay fresh
for normal home use.

One More Reason Why

KROGER MEANS BEnER MEAT

$499
· lb •
SliCED
Hams . . . . • . . can
FREE
CANNED HAMS 5-LB. CAN ... $7.99
KROGER SliCED All VARIETIES

3

lx~~~h:;:HAM12-oz~

119

Meats ...... . Pkg .

SAVE
30c
PER LB.
VS.

17·Drawer
Storage
Cabinet

LAST YEAR'S

''PRICE

Our R•g. 11 .11

877

Organ izer pro·

tects

hobby

materia ls and

sm all tools .
See -thru sty rene drawers
in three sizes .

Save "3

8' 7
0

22-lnch Mechanics' Tool Box
Sturdily -constructed for heavy -du ty use . Baked finish on textured
metal. lilt-out tray . 22x8'1• x.8 '11,

ur

,, 91
·

~y Size Pkg.

The Famous Workmate •

Save22~.

Workbench f sowhorse / vise combo. Dual ·
he ight , steel frame . 29" vise jaws open lo sv• ·
wide . Swivel grips, foot leveling . Folds for easy
storing, carrying . Assembled. 29x31 Y.x26-in .

river" Ratchet Tool
Ratc:het

kit with I
. Sure ball

6

$149

Ground Beef lb .
A BLIND Of lllf &amp; HYDRAUD nXTURED

a:~~BLI PIOTEIN KIOGE$ PM)

Mixed

Fryer

Parts .... lb .
HICKORY MOUNTAIN FARMS .

(~5~~;;;· WHOLE

$

19

sole Price

Patty Mix .... 1b.

sli~~dm VALLEY
' ·lb..
Bacon ........P.kg
GWALTNEY
Great
r-Ib .
Dogs ..•. • .....P.kg .

49c

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.O.A. INSPECTED

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

119

99c (;R~;;;;Gstyle 79c
c
9
99
c
$
99
1

Hams .......... .. lb.

---

Sliced Bacon .. lb.

M~E~~ALE SLICED

Bo Iogna

$12

l · lb .
..... Pkg .

VALLEYDALE BOLOGNA 12 ·01 . PKG ... 99'

THORN AP~LE VALLEY ,

a;·:~i~G~;HOlE

.
S...Oked Hams lb.

Save 23%

Set Of Five Screwdrivers
A practical gilt every Dad can
use . Set of live plastic-handled
screwdrivers In plastic pouch.

Our 4 21

·

327

'.

Save

7-Pc. Propane Torch Kit
Our 15.11
"Hottest tip going", burns in any , , ,. . .
position . Torch assembly, fuel
8
cylinder , tips , case and more .

OR6·0Z. PKG ... 59•

1

49

$;-~t;;;iSCRYOVAC

SLICED
FREE

Ham Portions. lb.

SAVE

CClP

•
\...--

Save 2.30

3a..I

Save -2

Vise·Grip• Pliers

Drill Guide

Locking .
S lr a i g hI ~~j
jaws . 10". ·

Fits Yo",
'!.'' alec· ?;~l
trlc drills . ·

"ff'

r7

Save *6
Electric Sto'ple Gun

.

Push-button operation , built-in
staple remover. Drives S staple
sizes plus loktile•. Save now .

I?··
Our 23 •18

5-gal. Wet/dry Shop-vac• .
Heavy -duty vacuum tackles the b ig jobs inside
and out . Steel drum with automatic float shutoff value. Exhaust blower, super filtration . ~ wheel dolly , 6-ft . cord and handy accessories .

solei'rl~e

3~
·

97

·

~·

••

&lt;

�a

"&gt;

10_. SHEETS PER ROLL

Viva Towels

$

COUNTRY KITCHEN

Log Cabin
Syrup .............2..

·01 .

27

Single
Roll

Btl .

~;~~~O,SE
. Jar
C0 ffee ...........

IO·o1.

$ 37

Why buy a con with no brand . uncer1ain qua lity o~d no guoront•• of
consisiency ... when yo•.J con buy bra nds you know and 1rust tha t
ore all competitiv•ly pric•d and unconditiona lly guaront•ed for

EMBASSY

Strawberry 4·$
preserves ... '
·lb.

69

99

Jar

QUARTERS

Country Oven 2$
Pret ze IS ........

29 Country
Oven $ 09
• Mt

9-ol

Ch 1p a es ..

Pkgs·.

13 -oz

Pkg .·

qvolity ... or your money back .

.

RETURNABLE

3$

BLUE
BONNET

1-lb.
Pkgs.

-lb.

Market Basket Black Pepper

s~~~;EL
Mouth was h.

$ 29

1B·OI.
Btl • .

30• OFF LABEL,
DEODORANT

Sure
Roll-On ... ..

2.5·oz .
Ctnr .

$ 39

Therapeutic M
Vitamins. . :,·~~t.
13

Yl ll OW CLINC. SliCEOOIHAl'VIS
Avondale
Peaches ....... .

Final Net
Hair Spray .. .-~~~-

. ....

Evaporated
MI•lk .. .... .........

13-oz.
Can

NUTRO

C Evaporated
MI•lk ......... ..· ....

13·01.
Can

c

09)1

16-Ct.
Pkg.

c

Kroger
Sh er bet .........

.....

.

. Con

0

... ',:: $}59

Embassy Instant Tea .............. .
Kroger Instant Coffee ..
Avondale CoHee Creamer

Quart

Ctn.

Jo• $399
••·•··
n:, $119

.

1
39c
Oleo Margarine Quarters ....................
•
Avondale Frozen Orange JUICe.
' ·~·- 33c
Kandu Bleach
· · ";'~" 59c

Embassy Tea Bags .. . ........ ...... .. . ... '':;~' 5 39 ·
-15~

$

large Eggs

09

~h -Gal.

Ctnr.

lllfll.

I&lt;ROGER

Grade A

....
$1G
Cfll,

Johnson's
Baby Shampoo

Kroqer 20-oz.
Wh1te Bread

. ..... ......,•. $119

Bright Fabric Softener Sheets

Avondale Hot Dog Sauce ... ... .... . .. . . "~".:'

33 c '
""'...,.," 44c
. "'• 47C·

1 1.a SHU TS I'D ROll . WHITt 0« AUOttflD

Fleece Paper Towels

S$ 19

Fleece Napkins

.

'

,...c.

. ..... ..

ggc
";· ggc
Embassy Pancake Syrup . .... .
89 c
Green Mouthwash ................ ····· · ···· · ~-·
s;;;h;,tt;;;;.,lUATOIMUI= ... 0:." 89C
Avondale Rice.... .... .

20·oz.
lvs.

MARKn IASKn SELECT

GRADE AA LAJIGIEGGS

Hit

c'"'

ROUND TOP

$

z

C

49c
Avondale Pinto.Beans ......................... "··· 29c
c
Avondale Dark Red Kidney Beans ...... ·~=~ 26
'~:: · zge
Avondale Com . .... ..
.. .
Avondale Cut Green Beans ...... '.' '' .... "c~:-· 29c
Hillcrest Tomatoes .. . . . .... ..... . .·~:: 33 c
.....
22c
Kroger Tomato Paste ..
"'"
•·· 18c
Kroger Tomato Sauce ......... .

C10YUVA1Lil

Polar Pak
Ice Cream

63

co"

FREEZER PLEEZER

Assorted
Pops ..............

69e
59c
29c

·~::

Avondale Fruit Cocktail . . . . .. . .

Pak

WILSON

~:: ·

. .......

CJEANIUYUO.WHOLIKII'Hfl

$ 49

20' OFF LABEL

... ....

Kroger Tomato Juice ................
kroger Applesauce .. .. .. . .... . .. ...... "~·
co"

MA3P
KROGER FAMILY PRIDE

~;::
.~::

Rnl"fl

a$ ~~!~~

Bag

Margarine

Co"

Avondale Vegetable Oil .... .. ''. ' ..... ".~.•·.· $149

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

69

33 e

&lt;2·••· $129 I

Avondale Shortening

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

$

.·~~

Avondale Sweet Peas ....... ... .

MA2M

Blue Bonnet
Margarine

Compare the Quality!
Compare the Prices!

I(IQG(I

... DOZ. 69'

.. ······· ... 4 ~

fAMU. Y l'llO I

0

SALT &amp; PEPPER SET
VEGETABLE BOWL

I

I
I

VE&amp;ETABLE BOWL

I
I

Our lill'll. Discount Prk t

I
I
I

FIOZlN

Kroger Onion Rings . ~~~fiOZlN

2 89C:
Pecan Twirls . ... .. ::;~·.
99 C I roger Bread. . ......2"••·$1 09

$139

AUIITFANN Y'S

C&lt;luCJOrtS,.Yin(tS ••.

··

. . Sl l .99
•· · - ~

YourPr1a t-.ith coup:rt l . .

SlO.t•

In tile paHern ot your choice

I

1
I
I

SPKIAl FCMIMUlA lJGIIT 01 DAIK

1" ·
Morton Apple P11 .. ... l'lo, .
1
FIOZINI.OZ. ClNIIS. ,
$129 IIOYAlVlKIIfGOAIIISH
1-Ct $129 I
Kroger Lemonade .... ,...
Cinnamon Twists ..... l'k,:
:
,.ouN
,....,
Donuts......ll&lt;•.
1
Kroger Glaed Donuts l'k,~·
Country ft..
vwen
,.
1

•

t • -oz.

6

77c

............
10' OFF

WITH COUPON

Slnki

'

.

CoH11
aw~~•••

..•••.t•

MICIII...ucMU
11A1U IJCil111D

. :·!jpf
2
_ _ __

;

I

li.S.OJ • • •

Due_. Hines
Clkt Mit

---••••u.••
-·~
llltll1M111D

66c

~~~~~~~~II
,... 1ro
25 • OFF
ger
WITH COUPON
I
Instant Pudding -"""::~. _ .. ,.. UUOfOIII
1
6-0Z. $139
2f.LI. IM
I
.
PIIGS.
Potting
:
WITH COU,ON
. Soft
I

3

----·--lliNt
_ , 1t
lfftiC&amp;l
11111&amp;1.M.111D

aw~~

....,._.I4.11M
AIIRflt lfftiCial
mnli.DTIIII

I

I

12
DP

_ _ _ _ , . . . 2•. 1 .
AIICf It lfftiCial mn I UCM IUD

•••••••••••••••••••••

•

••

1

�a

"&gt;

10_. SHEETS PER ROLL

Viva Towels

$

COUNTRY KITCHEN

Log Cabin
Syrup .............2..

·01 .

27

Single
Roll

Btl .

~;~~~O,SE
. Jar
C0 ffee ...........

IO·o1.

$ 37

Why buy a con with no brand . uncer1ain qua lity o~d no guoront•• of
consisiency ... when yo•.J con buy bra nds you know and 1rust tha t
ore all competitiv•ly pric•d and unconditiona lly guaront•ed for

EMBASSY

Strawberry 4·$
preserves ... '
·lb.

69

99

Jar

QUARTERS

Country Oven 2$
Pret ze IS ........

29 Country
Oven $ 09
• Mt

9-ol

Ch 1p a es ..

Pkgs·.

13 -oz

Pkg .·

qvolity ... or your money back .

.

RETURNABLE

3$

BLUE
BONNET

1-lb.
Pkgs.

-lb.

Market Basket Black Pepper

s~~~;EL
Mouth was h.

$ 29

1B·OI.
Btl • .

30• OFF LABEL,
DEODORANT

Sure
Roll-On ... ..

2.5·oz .
Ctnr .

$ 39

Therapeutic M
Vitamins. . :,·~~t.
13

Yl ll OW CLINC. SliCEOOIHAl'VIS
Avondale
Peaches ....... .

Final Net
Hair Spray .. .-~~~-

. ....

Evaporated
MI•lk .. .... .........

13-oz.
Can

NUTRO

C Evaporated
MI•lk ......... ..· ....

13·01.
Can

c

09)1

16-Ct.
Pkg.

c

Kroger
Sh er bet .........

.....

.

. Con

0

... ',:: $}59

Embassy Instant Tea .............. .
Kroger Instant Coffee ..
Avondale CoHee Creamer

Quart

Ctn.

Jo• $399
••·•··
n:, $119

.

1
39c
Oleo Margarine Quarters ....................
•
Avondale Frozen Orange JUICe.
' ·~·- 33c
Kandu Bleach
· · ";'~" 59c

Embassy Tea Bags .. . ........ ...... .. . ... '':;~' 5 39 ·
-15~

$

large Eggs

09

~h -Gal.

Ctnr.

lllfll.

I&lt;ROGER

Grade A

....
$1G
Cfll,

Johnson's
Baby Shampoo

Kroqer 20-oz.
Wh1te Bread

. ..... ......,•. $119

Bright Fabric Softener Sheets

Avondale Hot Dog Sauce ... ... .... . .. . . "~".:'

33 c '
""'...,.," 44c
. "'• 47C·

1 1.a SHU TS I'D ROll . WHITt 0« AUOttflD

Fleece Paper Towels

S$ 19

Fleece Napkins

.

'

,...c.

. ..... ..

ggc
";· ggc
Embassy Pancake Syrup . .... .
89 c
Green Mouthwash ................ ····· · ···· · ~-·
s;;;h;,tt;;;;.,lUATOIMUI= ... 0:." 89C
Avondale Rice.... .... .

20·oz.
lvs.

MARKn IASKn SELECT

GRADE AA LAJIGIEGGS

Hit

c'"'

ROUND TOP

$

z

C

49c
Avondale Pinto.Beans ......................... "··· 29c
c
Avondale Dark Red Kidney Beans ...... ·~=~ 26
'~:: · zge
Avondale Com . .... ..
.. .
Avondale Cut Green Beans ...... '.' '' .... "c~:-· 29c
Hillcrest Tomatoes .. . . . .... ..... . .·~:: 33 c
.....
22c
Kroger Tomato Paste ..
"'"
•·· 18c
Kroger Tomato Sauce ......... .

C10YUVA1Lil

Polar Pak
Ice Cream

63

co"

FREEZER PLEEZER

Assorted
Pops ..............

69e
59c
29c

·~::

Avondale Fruit Cocktail . . . . .. . .

Pak

WILSON

~:: ·

. .......

CJEANIUYUO.WHOLIKII'Hfl

$ 49

20' OFF LABEL

... ....

Kroger Tomato Juice ................
kroger Applesauce .. .. .. . .... . .. ...... "~·
co"

MA3P
KROGER FAMILY PRIDE

~;::
.~::

Rnl"fl

a$ ~~!~~

Bag

Margarine

Co"

Avondale Vegetable Oil .... .. ''. ' ..... ".~.•·.· $149

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

69

33 e

&lt;2·••· $129 I

Avondale Shortening

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

$

.·~~

Avondale Sweet Peas ....... ... .

MA2M

Blue Bonnet
Margarine

Compare the Quality!
Compare the Prices!

I(IQG(I

... DOZ. 69'

.. ······· ... 4 ~

fAMU. Y l'llO I

0

SALT &amp; PEPPER SET
VEGETABLE BOWL

I

I
I

VE&amp;ETABLE BOWL

I
I

Our lill'll. Discount Prk t

I
I
I

FIOZlN

Kroger Onion Rings . ~~~fiOZlN

2 89C:
Pecan Twirls . ... .. ::;~·.
99 C I roger Bread. . ......2"••·$1 09

$139

AUIITFANN Y'S

C&lt;luCJOrtS,.Yin(tS ••.

··

. . Sl l .99
•· · - ~

YourPr1a t-.ith coup:rt l . .

SlO.t•

In tile paHern ot your choice

I

1
I
I

SPKIAl FCMIMUlA lJGIIT 01 DAIK

1" ·
Morton Apple P11 .. ... l'lo, .
1
FIOZINI.OZ. ClNIIS. ,
$129 IIOYAlVlKIIfGOAIIISH
1-Ct $129 I
Kroger Lemonade .... ,...
Cinnamon Twists ..... l'k,:
:
,.ouN
,....,
Donuts......ll&lt;•.
1
Kroger Glaed Donuts l'k,~·
Country ft..
vwen
,.
1

•

t • -oz.

6

77c

............
10' OFF

WITH COUPON

Slnki

'

.

CoH11
aw~~•••

..•••.t•

MICIII...ucMU
11A1U IJCil111D

. :·!jpf
2
_ _ __

;

I

li.S.OJ • • •

Due_. Hines
Clkt Mit

---••••u.••
-·~
llltll1M111D

66c

~~~~~~~~II
,... 1ro
25 • OFF
ger
WITH COUPON
I
Instant Pudding -"""::~. _ .. ,.. UUOfOIII
1
6-0Z. $139
2f.LI. IM
I
.
PIIGS.
Potting
:
WITH COU,ON
. Soft
I

3

----·--lliNt
_ , 1t
lfftiC&amp;l
11111&amp;1.M.111D

aw~~

....,._.I4.11M
AIIRflt lfftiCial
mnli.DTIIII

I

I

12
DP

_ _ _ _ , . . . 2•. 1 .
AIICf It lfftiCial mn I UCM IUD

•••••••••••••••••••••

•

••

1

�SMALL··GIVES 2
DELICIOUS SE!IVINGS

51

ER FRUIT

SALE~~"~~
G~

FIRST OF THE SEASON

~

=~~b~J.s... .. ..' "' 989
9C
Red Plums ................ ...... lb.

Salad Fresh Yellow
Tomatoes Sweet Corn

c

c

............... , ... Each

. .

$13 9

NEW CROP FIRST OF THE SEASON .

IN THE HUSK

~~~:::~~

C

NEW CROP FIRST OF THE SEASON

2
49
$1

::!-;..elons.............. Each$

49

ALL RI6HT, MEN •.•
TO THE WATEr&lt;: !

Q

White Grapes ............... lb.
CALIFORNIA
$13 9
Strawberries
............. Quart
CALIFORNIA STRAWBERRIES ..• PINT 75•

/

CA4P

Ear

, F;:;h 8 ggc
10
89 C
2 $1
C

Florida
limes ... . Each
Kiwi
Fruit.. .....

Lemons

I'M 6LAD TO SE!

ALL ;
lEMSMeeRED TO
WEAR !fOUR LIFe

Ti-tAT

For

Gnmny Smith
Apples ..... lb.

Far

. NOW AS IN OTHER OF
LIFE'S ENDEAVORS,

~OU

..

COOPERATION 15 VER'I
IMPO~ANT..

JACKETS

LET THE DELl DO IT
AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl DEPTS . HOT FOODS AVAILABLE I lam TIL 7pm

Fresh Baked ·
French Bread

r

10 $119
Glazed Donuts ...... ,.,
$5
Father's Day Cake .
FRESH

1/ A SHEET OR I ·INCH ROUND

Each

White shelf tags will be used for regular pricing . while
bright yellow "Cast Cutter - Bonus Buy" Togs will signol
customers that a special lower price is in effect for a
limited time . This might be o one·week special or a
reduction for as much as sewerol weeks . Yellow tags will
mark the items below .

1!11111--...liii.l

12-01 BABY RUTH

Candy Bars .....

Potato
Salad

Russer
Bologna

\

I

. . lb.

SLICED

IROOMSIDE SMOKED
SAUSAGE 01

REGULAR

BABY

.

Preserves

, _, 8 . NU MAID

Margarine .

. 87'

,

p
k
anca es ....

bO ·Cl COMFOIHS

$ lS

1

18 -0Z . SNO BO • l iQUID

Liquid Plumr

13 -01. DUNCAN HI Nil
Wit 0 111UUERRY

40 -0Z DEODORIZING

Muffin Mix .

Lysol Clean.er

40 -0l CANISTUl

41 ·01 OCEAN I PRAY
Of'AN8URV

Cocktail .

3 ·0Z . DEVIlED

·C Drinks .

Hormel Spam ..

45

C

$}49
6l 4 -0Z . TENDER CHUNK

'1 09

sp9

-01 CRAPE OR O RANGE

sps

1

Diapers

AO-Ol DINTV MOORE

Beef Stew .... .

$ lS

2

~

.69
4

E

S489

~469

!'} ( T JOHN \O N ~ lODD ' [If

. . 89' 79'

• M'tx , .. S}49
Brownte

Juice

OISPO~AB '

5 19

5-01 li QU ID OISINH CTANT

23 -0Z , DUNCAN HINES

GRAPEf~UIT

Diapers

Q A V~IM f

•O -CT COMfOII T\ TODO ' Fll

32-0Z

Cracker Jacks .. 65'

•

DISPOSA8 ' E

75' 59'

1 13-0Z 80X

A

.;·

95
79'
...

Candy Bars . 5 P 9

AI -OZ OCEAN SPRAY

1

IO .S·OZ . OOWNEYF• At&lt;£

BUTTfltMI U(

5219

2

5 27

S· OZ SWANSON (HUNI(

WHITI

81 c 75'

Chicken

1-02 G l AOl POWOU FltE!IH
OR RAIN SHOWIR

89' 79'

Air Freshener
.&amp; 75 -0Z BA lH SIZE

Jergens Soap

/55'

2

A liAV...

5

OOM, W'"'A'r

I 2·01 BUTTIRFINGIR

Tang

•

83' 69'

13·0Z . DOWNEYF&lt;.AKE
&amp;UTTERY

Waffles

1

5 15

'

MORE
ACROSS,
ANO WE'LL

ggc

FlESH

12 ·01 SMUCKER\
ITRAWBERR V

ONCE

CALL IT

DEll STYLE

93'

.
Margar1ne

T~AT WAS 6REAT !!
I'M PROUD OF ~OU !

LWW£S 60THfR '(QU!
KElP PAPI'LIN6!

$ 29

16-0Z . WHIPPfO IMPUIAI

STICK

'

DON'T LET AFEW

lb. .
$399
$2
59
Deli Style BBQ ... ...... ..... lb .
Bo.l1 ed Ham ........ rooaDu lb.
$299
$199
Hard Salami .................. lb.
Kielbasa links ............ .. lb .
$299
99
Swiss Cheese .. .. ............ lb.
Sub Sandwiches .. .... .. ... Each

lvs.

BREAD AVAILABLE ONLY AT, YOUR SILVER BRIDGE AND
POMEROY KROGER STORES

Look For The White &amp;
Yellow Unit Price
Shelf Tags

WUNDER BAR

}~

$ 19

16·01.

AMERICAN OR MUSTARD

I

•

oAY f\

:

L.oST MY .Joa •••

MY WAJ.L.tf W/4.$ frOt.fN ..

I

•·MY WIFE MN Off
1M IIS'P fl'(tlliND ••

INa,.,..

/

�SMALL··GIVES 2
DELICIOUS SE!IVINGS

51

ER FRUIT

SALE~~"~~
G~

FIRST OF THE SEASON

~

=~~b~J.s... .. ..' "' 989
9C
Red Plums ................ ...... lb.

Salad Fresh Yellow
Tomatoes Sweet Corn

c

c

............... , ... Each

. .

$13 9

NEW CROP FIRST OF THE SEASON .

IN THE HUSK

~~~:::~~

C

NEW CROP FIRST OF THE SEASON

2
49
$1

::!-;..elons.............. Each$

49

ALL RI6HT, MEN •.•
TO THE WATEr&lt;: !

Q

White Grapes ............... lb.
CALIFORNIA
$13 9
Strawberries
............. Quart
CALIFORNIA STRAWBERRIES ..• PINT 75•

/

CA4P

Ear

, F;:;h 8 ggc
10
89 C
2 $1
C

Florida
limes ... . Each
Kiwi
Fruit.. .....

Lemons

I'M 6LAD TO SE!

ALL ;
lEMSMeeRED TO
WEAR !fOUR LIFe

Ti-tAT

For

Gnmny Smith
Apples ..... lb.

Far

. NOW AS IN OTHER OF
LIFE'S ENDEAVORS,

~OU

..

COOPERATION 15 VER'I
IMPO~ANT..

JACKETS

LET THE DELl DO IT
AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl DEPTS . HOT FOODS AVAILABLE I lam TIL 7pm

Fresh Baked ·
French Bread

r

10 $119
Glazed Donuts ...... ,.,
$5
Father's Day Cake .
FRESH

1/ A SHEET OR I ·INCH ROUND

Each

White shelf tags will be used for regular pricing . while
bright yellow "Cast Cutter - Bonus Buy" Togs will signol
customers that a special lower price is in effect for a
limited time . This might be o one·week special or a
reduction for as much as sewerol weeks . Yellow tags will
mark the items below .

1!11111--...liii.l

12-01 BABY RUTH

Candy Bars .....

Potato
Salad

Russer
Bologna

\

I

. . lb.

SLICED

IROOMSIDE SMOKED
SAUSAGE 01

REGULAR

BABY

.

Preserves

, _, 8 . NU MAID

Margarine .

. 87'

,

p
k
anca es ....

bO ·Cl COMFOIHS

$ lS

1

18 -0Z . SNO BO • l iQUID

Liquid Plumr

13 -01. DUNCAN HI Nil
Wit 0 111UUERRY

40 -0Z DEODORIZING

Muffin Mix .

Lysol Clean.er

40 -0l CANISTUl

41 ·01 OCEAN I PRAY
Of'AN8URV

Cocktail .

3 ·0Z . DEVIlED

·C Drinks .

Hormel Spam ..

45

C

$}49
6l 4 -0Z . TENDER CHUNK

'1 09

sp9

-01 CRAPE OR O RANGE

sps

1

Diapers

AO-Ol DINTV MOORE

Beef Stew .... .

$ lS

2

~

.69
4

E

S489

~469

!'} ( T JOHN \O N ~ lODD ' [If

. . 89' 79'

• M'tx , .. S}49
Brownte

Juice

OISPO~AB '

5 19

5-01 li QU ID OISINH CTANT

23 -0Z , DUNCAN HINES

GRAPEf~UIT

Diapers

Q A V~IM f

•O -CT COMfOII T\ TODO ' Fll

32-0Z

Cracker Jacks .. 65'

•

DISPOSA8 ' E

75' 59'

1 13-0Z 80X

A

.;·

95
79'
...

Candy Bars . 5 P 9

AI -OZ OCEAN SPRAY

1

IO .S·OZ . OOWNEYF• At&lt;£

BUTTfltMI U(

5219

2

5 27

S· OZ SWANSON (HUNI(

WHITI

81 c 75'

Chicken

1-02 G l AOl POWOU FltE!IH
OR RAIN SHOWIR

89' 79'

Air Freshener
.&amp; 75 -0Z BA lH SIZE

Jergens Soap

/55'

2

A liAV...

5

OOM, W'"'A'r

I 2·01 BUTTIRFINGIR

Tang

•

83' 69'

13·0Z . DOWNEYF&lt;.AKE
&amp;UTTERY

Waffles

1

5 15

'

MORE
ACROSS,
ANO WE'LL

ggc

FlESH

12 ·01 SMUCKER\
ITRAWBERR V

ONCE

CALL IT

DEll STYLE

93'

.
Margar1ne

T~AT WAS 6REAT !!
I'M PROUD OF ~OU !

LWW£S 60THfR '(QU!
KElP PAPI'LIN6!

$ 29

16-0Z . WHIPPfO IMPUIAI

STICK

'

DON'T LET AFEW

lb. .
$399
$2
59
Deli Style BBQ ... ...... ..... lb .
Bo.l1 ed Ham ........ rooaDu lb.
$299
$199
Hard Salami .................. lb.
Kielbasa links ............ .. lb .
$299
99
Swiss Cheese .. .. ............ lb.
Sub Sandwiches .. .... .. ... Each

lvs.

BREAD AVAILABLE ONLY AT, YOUR SILVER BRIDGE AND
POMEROY KROGER STORES

Look For The White &amp;
Yellow Unit Price
Shelf Tags

WUNDER BAR

}~

$ 19

16·01.

AMERICAN OR MUSTARD

I

•

oAY f\

:

L.oST MY .Joa •••

MY WAJ.L.tf W/4.$ frOt.fN ..

I

•·MY WIFE MN Off
1M IIS'P fl'(tlliND ••

INa,.,..

/

�b Dave.Graue'

liS NOT GOOD

WATCHING
VIOLENCE ON 7V ALL DAY.

r

!&lt;:NOW I S~OUL.D ~AV51
GUMMO, BUT I .JUST PLAIN
· .FORso;;•• AND NOw' II'S

d

TOO LATe!

NCMI ALL I GOTTA DO IS FIND
MY WA'Y BACK 'TO~· SAlE I AN'....

01-11 O~l IT LOOI&lt;S LIKE
He RAN INiO IT 1

HOLY
MAC.KIItEL!

"TIZY ':TO IMPf&lt;OVE

~EAD

YOUR MIND.

J.-l.ING.

'
·,

'

CAPT. EASY
MISS

~LliiJKHAM

WA~TS 10 Ell::

YOUR
FR.IENP, 6L.J5iER ! ...

AMeRICA'S&gt; TOP

151\J'i THAi

CO UIIJT ~R~PI£5

I&gt;JICe·~

ARc TRYII&gt;JC3 TO ·
ltiOTIVATE BUSTER
~c;AL..LII&lt;AK

ORDER

DUH, .. CHEE!
YEA H, I 'LL SAY ...
WOUt..D YA DO ME
A FAVOR, MISS
SLINI&lt;HAM;

.

ANYTHI~~ AT ALLo
BUSTER D!:AR ...WHAT

WOULD YOU

LIKE~

.

.

by Dick: Rog ers

by c·r ooks &amp; Lawrence
_....,

WOULD 'lA 8AKS ME 50ME
GINGER SNAP COOKIE~?

MAZE MONSTER

UR , HUHHUH-HUH! ... I

LOVE
·

PRINT ii-1E I NliiAl.

SI~SER

LeiTeR~

~NAPS!

OF iH!:SIS

PICTUReS TO NAME:

THE:. MONSTER TI-IAT
L.IVISO IN THE.

·· IIIJ

GR.EEK LABYRINTH •

TO

UNCOVE:R HIS
5UPER·5ECRET
INTELLIGENCE!

6

'

..

I DOI-J'i THINK WS' RE GI:Tii N ~
HOLD 11,
THROUGH~ EVEN MO~E'I DIDt-J'i
CH i t:F~ "fOU
T!:MPT HIM ... E)(.CEPT TO BUY
MAY HAVE JLJST
roOTSY- POP~ ... AND A
HIT ON THE
~IGG!:R TV;
AI\J SWER ~

OF COURSE! A SiEAOY FLOW
OF i&amp;L.EV15t0111 GEMS!,., WHAT
A H5AD PUNX.Le'I'S GO! 0~
HIS .SHOULDERS:

COMING UP-.,. "I DR~AM OF= GOOI'IJY" FOLLOWED
BY THREE LAFF-~IOi GAME SHOW$, __....~-----.~.~
THE:N "~ARFSI&lt;Y &amp; KLUTZ" PLUS 27
FUNNY-BONE COMME~CIAL5-!
. DUH .... WOW! YOU
REALLY I&lt;NOW HOW
T'T~E:AT A FELLA,
MR. PUt..IXLSYl

·DO MA'ZE5 AMAZ6

youz•

•

•

THE WORD MAZE
WAS !=ORMED BY
SHORTEN IN~ AMAZE.
IT IS THAT WHICH

AMAZES

•

us.

CAN YOU SOL.VS
1HI~ MAZE: BY

JOININGo THE:. D~
WITH A SINGoLE. LINE ~

•

==~

=

DO NOT GoO SACK
OVER YOUR PAT~ .

Carroll &amp; McCormick

HOOPI.E
FAP! 1 H~TE HOU5E ·P~INTIN6!

./-

--t

A.M05,
A..
WOf&lt;D

WITH
YOU!

B:ZZ'Z-

MUMBLE.6111~

1

M~RTHA,

•

YOU RAN&amp;, MEMSAH I~? ··

M'LOVE,
YOU'RE.

YOU't..l... ~E PEMOI...ISH£:[? 10 KNOW I'VE JUST ~f=BN

AWARPE:P 1HE fRENCH CROIX 9E MARTINeT ME: PAL
FOR "JIN&amp;OISM AJ3oOVE: AN17 f3EVONV' BELIEF 11 ;l

ALL ··
I

'
/l•".

~,

H·HEH! 6KE 6A.ID 1 COULD fV\OW
THE L~WN R~IHER Tr\~N
.or# P~INT, iH!~ MORNING!

'

,

hkE.

Tl"\1 NKC:,

~KE'L.L Ht\VE
ME F'~INT

THI&lt;5
AFTER·
NOON!

JEEPERSl WAS

II f;F?OlJG-HI ~y' A
RE:AL FRENCH
COURIE:R?J

HE~RT - ·

•
'·

Johnny Wonder
(c/o this newspaper)
P.O. Box 1335
Santa Cruz, Ca. 95061

'

TUMBLEWEEDS ®

WOWJ EVfN

~.,......--__,

GOLLY! Pll7 HE::

HAVE: A CJ...ASS IC

·GRANP FI..OCON''?i

FRENCH FACE.
LIKE IHIS 2!.

rxJW ANI7 CALL YblJ 11MON

S01 EAI YOUR HEARl

OUI WIIH S: NVY ~ .

Send your 191
and question to:

�b Dave.Graue'

liS NOT GOOD

WATCHING
VIOLENCE ON 7V ALL DAY.

r

!&lt;:NOW I S~OUL.D ~AV51
GUMMO, BUT I .JUST PLAIN
· .FORso;;•• AND NOw' II'S

d

TOO LATe!

NCMI ALL I GOTTA DO IS FIND
MY WA'Y BACK 'TO~· SAlE I AN'....

01-11 O~l IT LOOI&lt;S LIKE
He RAN INiO IT 1

HOLY
MAC.KIItEL!

"TIZY ':TO IMPf&lt;OVE

~EAD

YOUR MIND.

J.-l.ING.

'
·,

'

CAPT. EASY
MISS

~LliiJKHAM

WA~TS 10 Ell::

YOUR
FR.IENP, 6L.J5iER ! ...

AMeRICA'S&gt; TOP

151\J'i THAi

CO UIIJT ~R~PI£5

I&gt;JICe·~

ARc TRYII&gt;JC3 TO ·
ltiOTIVATE BUSTER
~c;AL..LII&lt;AK

ORDER

DUH, .. CHEE!
YEA H, I 'LL SAY ...
WOUt..D YA DO ME
A FAVOR, MISS
SLINI&lt;HAM;

.

ANYTHI~~ AT ALLo
BUSTER D!:AR ...WHAT

WOULD YOU

LIKE~

.

.

by Dick: Rog ers

by c·r ooks &amp; Lawrence
_....,

WOULD 'lA 8AKS ME 50ME
GINGER SNAP COOKIE~?

MAZE MONSTER

UR , HUHHUH-HUH! ... I

LOVE
·

PRINT ii-1E I NliiAl.

SI~SER

LeiTeR~

~NAPS!

OF iH!:SIS

PICTUReS TO NAME:

THE:. MONSTER TI-IAT
L.IVISO IN THE.

·· IIIJ

GR.EEK LABYRINTH •

TO

UNCOVE:R HIS
5UPER·5ECRET
INTELLIGENCE!

6

'

..

I DOI-J'i THINK WS' RE GI:Tii N ~
HOLD 11,
THROUGH~ EVEN MO~E'I DIDt-J'i
CH i t:F~ "fOU
T!:MPT HIM ... E)(.CEPT TO BUY
MAY HAVE JLJST
roOTSY- POP~ ... AND A
HIT ON THE
~IGG!:R TV;
AI\J SWER ~

OF COURSE! A SiEAOY FLOW
OF i&amp;L.EV15t0111 GEMS!,., WHAT
A H5AD PUNX.Le'I'S GO! 0~
HIS .SHOULDERS:

COMING UP-.,. "I DR~AM OF= GOOI'IJY" FOLLOWED
BY THREE LAFF-~IOi GAME SHOW$, __....~-----.~.~
THE:N "~ARFSI&lt;Y &amp; KLUTZ" PLUS 27
FUNNY-BONE COMME~CIAL5-!
. DUH .... WOW! YOU
REALLY I&lt;NOW HOW
T'T~E:AT A FELLA,
MR. PUt..IXLSYl

·DO MA'ZE5 AMAZ6

youz•

•

•

THE WORD MAZE
WAS !=ORMED BY
SHORTEN IN~ AMAZE.
IT IS THAT WHICH

AMAZES

•

us.

CAN YOU SOL.VS
1HI~ MAZE: BY

JOININGo THE:. D~
WITH A SINGoLE. LINE ~

•

==~

=

DO NOT GoO SACK
OVER YOUR PAT~ .

Carroll &amp; McCormick

HOOPI.E
FAP! 1 H~TE HOU5E ·P~INTIN6!

./-

--t

A.M05,
A..
WOf&lt;D

WITH
YOU!

B:ZZ'Z-

MUMBLE.6111~

1

M~RTHA,

•

YOU RAN&amp;, MEMSAH I~? ··

M'LOVE,
YOU'RE.

YOU't..l... ~E PEMOI...ISH£:[? 10 KNOW I'VE JUST ~f=BN

AWARPE:P 1HE fRENCH CROIX 9E MARTINeT ME: PAL
FOR "JIN&amp;OISM AJ3oOVE: AN17 f3EVONV' BELIEF 11 ;l

ALL ··
I

'
/l•".

~,

H·HEH! 6KE 6A.ID 1 COULD fV\OW
THE L~WN R~IHER Tr\~N
.or# P~INT, iH!~ MORNING!

'

,

hkE.

Tl"\1 NKC:,

~KE'L.L Ht\VE
ME F'~INT

THI&lt;5
AFTER·
NOON!

JEEPERSl WAS

II f;F?OlJG-HI ~y' A
RE:AL FRENCH
COURIE:R?J

HE~RT - ·

•
'·

Johnny Wonder
(c/o this newspaper)
P.O. Box 1335
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�Clark urges American apology to Iranians
PARIS (AP) - Fonner U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark urged
the Untted ~tales to apologize for
past actions m Iran and said he is not
bothered by criticism or possible
prosecution for traveling to Iran in
defiance of a presidential ban.
"I love my country too much not to
confess" alleged American crimes
m Iran, Clark said Sunday in a
television interview. " We owe the
Iranian people a lot. We owe them an
apology. We have supported the
(deposed) shah and he has
brutalized them and he has caused
the deaths of many of them.''
Clark recommended the United
States "let things cool off" instead of
pushing economic sanctions aimed
at pressuring Iran into releasing the
53 American hostages, now in their
219th day of captivity. He predicted
sanctions would drive Iran closer to

WINTHROP
~ee;, ~ AT AU.. "Trte
~TA~ OWTWNt~r;

the Soviet Union.
Clark arrived in Paris Sunday
from Tehran where he and nine
other Americans attended a
"Crimes of America" conference
last week. All 10 face possible 1().
year prison terms and fines of
$50,000 each for violating President
Cal,"ler's ban on travel to Iran.
Asked about the possible
prosecution, Clark said, "The fine
doesn't bother me, I don't have it,
and I hope a jail term wouldn 't
bother either.
"My defense will be that America
is founded on freedoms," Clark told
interviewers on the ABC-News
program " Issues and Answers."
Asked how he felt about being
called a "traitor" in the United
States, Clark said he was just trying
"to make my country just."
Republican Sen. John Tower said

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.

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l THINK THATON5' 15

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CApj;l.-I...A, AND I n-liNI&lt;.

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"l'HAT'~ANTA~ee.

VOL. 31

in a television interview Sunday that
Clark's trip to Tehran was
"seditious" and fell into the same
cate~ory as an earlier trip by Clark
to Hanoi during the Vietnam war.
But Secretary of State Edmund
!YJuskie told television interviewers
he would be willing to meet with the
10 Americans "if any of them think
they have useful infonnation to impart.''

Clark acknowledged that the
presence of the Americans at the anti·American conference in Tehran
did not produce any concrete moves
toward the immediate release of the
hostages.
" I wasn't expecting any
miracles," he said. "We went there
believing it was impossible to do
anything immediately on the
hostages."
However, another member of the

delegation said the Americans went
to Tehran "seeking a quick solution
to a crisis that threatens world
peace.''
John Tudor Walsh, the Baptist
chaplain at Princeton University,
spoke at a news conference after he
arrived in New York along with Kay
Camp, president of the Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom.
Three other delegates flew to
Boston and said acknowledgment by
U.S. officials of past intervention in
Iranian affairs is a necessary step
toward the release of the hostages.
The three were Mary Anderson,
an economics lecturer at the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and a representlve of
the American Society of Friends;
George Wald, Harvard professor
emeritus and winner of the 1967

•

a.t

POMEkOY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

NO. 39

Nobel Prize in physiology and the
Rev . Charles Kimball, a minister
studying at Harvard.
Three other members of the
delegation returned to New York
Friday ~ and the loth American, John
GerasSI of New York, remained in
London after becoming ill. Clark,
who was President Lyndon Johnson's attorney general from 1967~9 ·
said he plaJUled to stay in Paris fo;
"a couple of days" before returning
to the United States.
In Iran, meanwhile, Tehran Radio
broadcast a Foreign Ministry denial
of a report in a Pakistani newspaper
that the three Americans held at the
ministry would be released in the
next few dsys .
The newspaper Jang, in a dispatch
from Tehran, said the release of
Charge d'Affaires Bruce Laingen,

embassy security chief Michael
Howland and political affairs officer
Cictor Tomseth would be independent of an overall settlement
of the hostage issue. The three were
visiting the ministry when the U.S.
Embassy was seized Nov. 4 and
have been under virtual house arrest
since then.
Sadr Nabavi, a member of Iran's
new Parliament, told a Western
reporter in Tehran the hostage issue
could come up for parliamentary
debate w.ithin the next ·two weeks.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
Iran's revolutionary leader, has or•
dered the Parliament to decide the
hostages ' fate. But its provisional
chairman, Yadollah Sahabi, said
two weeks ago the debate may not
begin for two months .

I

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enttne

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FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY. JUNE 9, 1980

Taxes decline,
cutbacks ·possible
From die Associated Press

OPEC discussing oil price hike
AWIERS, Algeria - The divided Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries begins formal talks today on a price compromise
that would subatantially raise the world's oil bill and increase U.S.
gasoline and heating oil costs more than 7 cents a gallon.
But conference sources said Saudi Arabia, OPEC's leading " dove"
which (ipposes the compromise, probably would reject the proposed
deal in hopes that supply and demand forces on world oil markets will
force "hawks" to accept lower prices later this year.

Priscilla's Pop
'rOU
I.OU CAN
STOP ME FROM BOUNCING
THIS TENNIS BALL ON

THE LIBRARY '3TEPS .'

WELL ,
YOU

CAN ' T .'

Jordan undergoes another operation
FORT WAYNE, Ind. - Black civil rights· leader Vernon E . Jordan
Jr., who was gwmed down in a sniper attack 10 days ago, was taken
back into surgery Sunday night. He remained in serious but stable condition, his doctors said.
Dr. Jeffrey Towles said in a statement issued through a Parkview
MemOiial Hospital spokeswoman that Jordan was operated on again
because of a breakdown 41 an abdominal incision made in earlier
surgery.
Towles said the breakdown stemmed from an abcess. The abcess
was ln the incision, not Jordan's abdomen, Towles said.

Fishennen pulled from cold waters
FRUSTRAl"ING, ISN'T

That was probably
the easiest contract
I've ever had .t

IT? WHAT GOOI7 ARE
ALL YOUR 6RAI NS

NOwr · ----.

PORT CUNTCN, Ohio - Two Trumbull County men clung to a capsized boat in Lake Erie for 18 hours before the boat finally washed
ashore on catawba Island near here Sunday, officials said.
William Tausel, 34, of Warren, and Lawrence Rodzen, 39, of Leavittsburg, told the U.S. Coast Guard they were fishing Saturday night
when their 18-fodt boat, powered by an outboard motor, capsized
during a thunderstorm. The men, wearing llfejackets, clung to the
boat through the night despite eight-fool waves.

Miami blacks scream for justice
MIAMI - Miami blacks who want justice and money from
Washington, and Cuban-Americans who want their relatives freed
from Communism planned to confront President carter today with a
flurry of picket signs and demands.
"Get angry! " Golden Frinks of the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference urged blacks at a peaceful meeting Sunday night. ''Make
Miami the word everybody uses to describe progress. They've got the
same problems aU over this country as you've got right here ln
Miami.''

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy tonight. Low tonight in the mid to upper 40s. Mostly
sunny Tuesday. High near 70. The chance of rain is 20 percent tonight
and near zero percent Tuesday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through Friday: Highs in the upper 60s and 70s Wednesday warming into the 80s Friday. Lows at night mosUy in the 40s
early Wednesday warming to the upper 50s and 60s by early Friday.

·- -

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
chronic decline in Ohio tax revenues
that reflects the impact of the
nation's recession is increasing 'the
prospect of cutbacks in state government spending.
Legislative leaders and Gov.
James A. Rhodes will meet again
this week to review the fiscal
problems and the action needed to
keep the state's two-year budget in
balance .
It is the latest in a series of "summit" meetings with State Budget
Director William D. Keip to monitor
the problem.
Meanwhile, the House and Senate
convene Tuesday for the start of a
legislative session that could run
from two to three weeks. They are
returning from a six-week, primary
election break.
A shortfall of $200 million to $300
million is forecast during the second
year of the biennial budget, which
begins July l, said,j louse Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., ~New Boston.
That deficit is due primarily to a
drop in revenue from the state's
sales tax and the sharp drop in
automobile sales.
''We're trying to look at every

alternative" for offsetting the
lagging revenues, Riffe said, including the use of an undetermined
amount of lapsed funds from the
current fiscal year, which ends June
30.
But it is unlikely there will be
enough unspent money left over to
keep the budget in balance, as
required by state law.
That makes an across-the-board
budget cut more probable, but. the
extent of the trimming is still to be
determined.
"There hasn't been a decision
made on any percentage figure,"
Riffe said, " but something has got to
be done in the second year of the
biennium."
Meanwhile, state agencies
already are taking some moneysaving steps in anticipation of the
spending reductions.
Funds for equipment purchases
were fr011en in March, and a limit on
hiring was imposed, Keip said.
Legislative leaders also are
keeping a close watch on the fiscal
impact of bills under consideration.

Applications being sought
Application forms are now
available for Syracuse residents
wishing to apply for the first annual
Carleton Memorial Scholarship to be
awarded by the board of trustees of
Carleton College, it was announced
today by Board President Herbert S.
Parker.
A $1,000 scholarship will be
presented this year to one or more of
the applicants to assist them in their
education endeavors at any accredited college, university or
technical school, Parker said.
Financial need and academic potential are the main criteria for selection of the winner(s).
The scholarship fund was
established earlier this year with
proceeds from the sale of the fonner
Carleton College land in Syracuse to
the Meigs County Board of Commissioners for a school for the mentally handicapped.
The scholarship is named as a
memorial to Isaac carleton, Sr. who
originally donated the land for
Carleton College which operated until1930.
The new school scheduled for construction beginning later this year,
is also to be named Carleton School.
Only legal residents of Syracuse
are eligible to apply for the scholarship. Application forms are
available from Milton Varian ,

treasurer of the board of Trustees of
Carleton College. Deadline for submitting the completed applications
is June 23.

ROYALTY NAMED - Sonia Ash, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Ash, Syracuse, and Gary Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glispie Howard ,
Route 4, Pomeroy, Meigs High seniors, were named queen and king of the
annual junior-senior prom held at Larry Morrison auditorium Saturday
night. Attractive decorations in red, yellow and orange carri ed out the
theme, "We've Got Tonight. " Principal James Diehl, Jr., presided over
the crowning of the queen and king.

Accidents leave three hurt

Massive clean-up
unden.eay in Ohio

Three persons were injured and
two drivers cited as the result of
three weekend accidents investigated by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
A massive clean-up and fix-up efOfficers were called to the scene of
fort continued in counties across
a four-vehicle pile-up on U.S. 35, at
northern Ohio today after weekend
storms felled power lines and hun- the Spring Valley Plaza, at 4:17
p.m., Sunday.
dreds of trees.
The patrol reports an east bound
Two people died during the storauto
operated by Bryan Donley, 21,
IIIB.
Vinton,
failed to stop in traffic and
Power had been restored to most
struck
a
vehicle driven by Collett
homes and businesses, utility ofTaylor,
67,
Dunbar, W.Va., in the
ficials said. The storms temporarily
rear.
The
Taylor
auto was pushed ininterrupted electric service to about
to
the
rear
of
a
vehicle driven by
60,000 customers of the Cleveland
Patricia
Greenlee,
36, Pl. Pleasant,
Electric llluminating Co., 4,600
which
impacted
into
the rear of an
Toledo Edison customers and 12,000
auto
operated
by
Robert
Burger, 48,
Canton residents, among others.
Gallipolis.
The damages and injuries were
A passenger in the Taylor auto, 63,
the results of at least two tornadoes
Dunbar,
claimed injury and was
and a line of severe thunderstorms
transported
to Holzer Medical Centhat hit Ohio Saturday night.
ter
for
treatment.
An Akron woman, Eleanor Dun·
There was heavy damage to the
can, 56, died when she was hit by a
Donley
auto; moderate damage to
f;illlng tree at Cedar Point
amusement park in Sandusky, and a . the Taylor and Greenlee vehicles;
and, slight damage to the Burger
46-year-old park employ~~ died of a
vehicle. Donley was cited on a
heart attack during the storm, which
charge
of failure to maintain an
included winds clocked at 60 mph,
assured
clear
distance.
officials said.

A Racine man, Shawn Bell, 18,
was cited on a charge of DWI
following a tw~&gt;-vehicle accident in
Meigs County on SR 338, just east of
milepost 6, Sunday at 7: 07p.m.
The patrol reports a west bound
auto operated by Bell and an east
bound vehicle driven by James
Kiser, 42, Racine, collided in a curve.
A passenger in the Kiser auto,
Judy Kiser, 17, displayed visible
signs of injury and was transported
by the Racine Emergency Squad to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage.
Officers were called to the scene of
a one-vehicle mishap on Bob McCormick Rd., just south of SR 160,
Saturdsy at6 a.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by cathy Chapman,
20, Gallipolis, went out of control and
passed off the left side of the roadway through a fence.
Chapma~ claimed injury, bul.,was
not urunediately treated. There was ·
heavy damage to the vehicle.

Nolan Swackhamer, retired coach,

' .

.

''EVE~YDQOY MADY? OK... 'OEM MOM ~D OAO... "'

j

Nolan Swackhamer

Nolan P. Swackhamer, 71 , wellknown former Middleport High
school coach, a resident of Mason ,
W. Va., diedathishomeSaturday.
Swackhamer, one of Laurelville's
best-known native sons, was
honored at halftime of the Class AA
championship game in the Ohio High
School Athletic Association's state
boys' basketball finals in March, .
19'15 as a nominee for enshrinement
in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
"Swackie", as he was known to his
legion of friends, was one of three
men in· Ohio ever to coach state
championship teams in two major
sports, basketball and baseball.

His Glenford Golden Horde
cagers, sparked by the talented Dick
Shrider, former Gallia Academy
basketball coach now athletic direc·
tor at Miami University in Oxford,
reached the Class B. State Tournament three consecutive years in
1939-40-41. They won all the marbles
in1941.
Sixteerl years later, Swackhamer
piloted 1 the Middleport Yellow
Jackets to the 1957 Class A state
baseball championship, the first
stale title ever for a member of the
SEOAL.
"Swackie" played three years of
varsity basketball at r..Burelville,
before entering Ohio University in

1926.

While at Athens, Swackhamer
played varsity basketball three
years and varsity tennis, two years.
His first coaching and teaching job
was at Adelphi High School. ·
Swackhamer . coached basketball
and baseball at Glenford from 193243 then left the teaching profession.
He returned in 1956 at Middleport
where he coached basketball and
baseball. He also coached golf at
Middleport and Meigs High School
from 1961-74.
Swackhamer played eight years of
semi - pro basketball after
~raduatinR from OU and officiated
high school basketball 25 years and

die~

Ohio Conference basketball lwfl
years.
Born January 11, 1909, he was the
son of the late Philip and Etta Reed
Swackhamer.
He was one of the first recipients
of the Jennings Scholar Foundation
scholarships in · 1967 and was·
honored by the class of 1960 at Middleport's Alumni Banquet.
Swackhamer was a member of the
Isaak Walton League and the Mason
United Methodist Church.
He was preceded in death by a son;
Charles P. Swackhamer, in 1969. ,
Survivors include his wife, Luctll~
J ., a son and daughter-in-laWj
(Continued on page 10)

·

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