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                  <text>12- ~ DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, March 25, 1977

HOSPITAL NEWS

~-----A~~~-i)~;th~----,! Van~e 'S

Moscow agenda settled

PLF.ASANTVAU.EY
I
: By NICHOLAS DANILOFF ductlons;
To buttress the point, reductions In -the amis
- a total ban on testing Brezhnev may aleo recaD the ceilings to which Brezbnev
Aclnit~ - WUUamSteele,
DISCHARGES - Alfred
GEORGE D. ~AWSON
Mrs . Edith Mossbarger ,
WASHINGTON (UPI) Jacksonville, N. C.; Frankie Ballance, Jr., Gallipotis; Roy
George Diamond lawson, Patriot.
Secretary of Stale Cyrus nuclear devices, both original U .S .-Soviet and former President Gerald
Stafford, Pomeroy.
ML'Cov Point Pleasant · Mrs
73. Rt . 1, Racine. was found
Funeral services will be Vance leaves for Moscow weapons and •'peaceful agreement establishing Ford agreed at VladlvOIIIok In
Discharged _ None.
~
··
d L : M · dead at his residence Thurs.· held 3 p.m. Sunday at the tonight hoping to throttle the devices":
diplomatic relations In 1933 19'14.
ennan .1or an, eon, rs.
day by two men who were Kuhner . Le wis
Funeral
·
Jn addition, the admlnlllra·
- demilitarizing the Indian called for noo-inlerference in
George Grc •n, Hartford ; delivering bottled gas.
· Home, Oak Hilt, with Rev . U.S .~vtet arms race and
Mrs . Elmer Brinker, New
Discovering the body were Froman Go lt ihue officiating . pursue a dialogue with the Ocean.
each others' internal affairs. tlon hopes to find acceptable
Haven· Mrs Jol ~ Oshel
Jerry Coleman, owner of Sun Burial will be in Hamden Kremlin on human rights, the . The talks begin in
Hobtr Medltal Center
The Vance delegation, restraints which can be
•
·
..
''
.
•
Bottled
Gas
and
Bill
Chaney.
Cemete
Middl
East
Af
·
nd
othe
(Dillcba~ges , March 241
Henderson ; Wilham Mtiler, According to the Me l s . F · ndry .
lh
e
• ncaa
r somethin~ of a diplomatic which includes U.S. anns applied to U.S. l~J~g-range
1
11
.
.
9
ne
s
ma
y
ca
a
e
ld
tr
ble
spots
Ruth Adkin s, Jo Ann Potnt Pleasant; Carla Rifilc. County Sheriff' s De pl., funeral home from 6-9 p m wor
cloud, however' corning a negotiator Paul Warnke, is Cruiae mlsslles 88 weU 88 the
ou.
·
Brumfield, Mrs. John Letart ; Brenda Stanley,
Lawson died of natural m Saturday.
· ·
In addition to _the likely week after Soviet leader expected to dispute the Soviet Backfire bomber.
Limiting the two new
Buck]ey and daughter, Patriot· Mrs. Michael Roach
caCusellsed
.
th
·
topics for diSCUSSIOn , Leonid Brezhnev ' s umterference" claim, and
.
'
a
to e scene were
p
id
t C t
'd denunciation
weapon
aystema baa plagued
Warren Campbell, Karen Mason;' James D\!fbJn,
of
the 1poir!t to the Soviet Union's
West Sheriff James J. Prolfltf.'
res en
ar ,er sat
the
negotlatio~
for more
Cbattin, Trinichia Lee Cross, Colwnbia ; Nellie Cox,
Rick ~row . prosec.utlng
EllA F. RO,STOFER
Thursday Vance s agenda administration 's · human signing of the 1975 Helsinki
than
a
year,
and
preventad
Middleport:
Mrs.
William
attorney
;
Carson
Crow,
Ella
Frances
Rostofer,
81,
would
include
:
Helen Dempsey, Bess Frum,
righ Is' crusade as an Accords - a broad range of
·
,
Ang
·e]a
assist
ant
prosecutor.
and
Dr.
Mulberry
Hgts
,
Pomeroy.
mutual
and
balanced
'
former
Secretary
of State
Albert Ga brielli, Debbie Hunter' Cottageville
intolerable interference in recognized freedoiiiJI.
Sellm J Blazew1cz
formerly of langsville, died
Henry
Kissinger
from
Haney, Arlene Hash, Lloyd Fellure, Gallipotis; Michael
Once
the
expected
Graveside services were at Veterons Memorial NATO..Warsaw Pact force re· Soviet internal affairs.
completing
a
long-term
Hayes, Ro se Lee, Mary Halley, Henderson ; Robert held today at 3 p.m. at Letart Hospital Thursday morn ing
When Vance meets him in confrontation over the human
McGlone , Mrs. Douglas Hatfield, Leon; Harry Bates, Fa lls cemetery with the Rev. ending a long Illness.
the Kremlin on Monday , rights issues concludes, the Nate~c~a~~tln
Freeland Norris offlc1aflng ,
Mrs. Rostofer was born in
Moses and son, Carrie Ofiver. Gallipolis.' Michelle Ed· Arrangements
Brezhnev is expected to two sides wiU get down to 19'16.
were un der Cabell County, W. Va .• June
Stste Department sources
charge
the new ad· three days of hard bargaining
Retba Owens, James Ran· rmnds, Apple Grove and direction of the Ewing ~. 1895 to the late Elza and
said
Vance will also be
ministration
has
spedblpb, Thomas Rose, William Ernest Heater,
- ending Wednesday - over
Point Funeral Home.
Noncy Jane White Stover.
Mr . Li!wson is surv ived by She re11red In 1960 from the
to
Moscow
cifically violated pnn· the future of the stalled U.S.· carrying
Sexton, Unda Smith, Ethel Pleasant.
one son . Lawrence Lawson , Columbus State Hospital as a
atensive "representation"
ci ples
which
former Soviet ~ negotiations.
Thompson, John Thompson,
Colum bus ;
a
brother. nurse.s' a ide. She was · Sunday School attendance
Joyce Thompson.
President Nixon agreed to in
AI his news 'conference lists, one containing the
Charle s, Ra.c lne ;
three married to Augustu s Fetty on March 20 was 50. The
1973 governlng the conduct of Thursday, President Carter names of about 300
(Births, March 24)
offering was $26.50. A report U.S...Sovlet relations.
Mr. and Mrs. William :~:~: ~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~ : ~ ~f~~~~rrr~t~~~I~~tJtt;~ ~~~~e:~~t ~!:~:~1. r~t~~. ~~~ an~h:rrs"ksu~~f!~er by
said he sought significant individuals in Russia who
Elda
,
in
Columbus.
sons,
Raymond
Fetty,
Logan
,
of
the
Official
Board
Meeting
seek to he reunitad with
McNeil, daughter , Shade ;
Ohio; Richard Lee Fetty, held on Friday evening was
American relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wright,
Langsville. and Robert ,Fetty.
LOTTERV WINNERS
given.
There
were
15
in
at·
.
Another
llst
Pomeroy
;
two
daughters
,
Vance
SIMON
MYERS
daughter, Langsville.
Thls week's wlonlng Ohio
.
Simon Myers, 80, a .resident Mrs. Jane Estes , lnterloc;hen, tendance and some of the
reportedly
is
carrying,
on
Lottery numbers:
Fla ., and Mrs. Mel (Hazel l special projects proposed
ci Oak Hil l, died Thursday in
request
of
the
American
Pot O' Gold
Curry, Hialeah. Fla.; several
lhe Oak Hill Hospital.
Jewish community, mynes
Mr . Myers was born in grondchl ldren, seven great there were voted on by the
Three-digit number
church
before
the
close of the
Soviet
citizens of Jewish
grandchildren
,
and
several
Gallia
County
on
May
19,
167.
1896, Son of the late John and nieces, nephews and cousins. Sunday- School hour were ,
the
origin
who seek
to
Three-digit nuniher
School
(Daily By EDWARDS. IECHTziN
version
replaced
She was preceded in death Bible
Euphem i a Oliver Myers.
emigrate.
899.
porents , both Vacation ), new song books,
His wife, the former Lena by her
UPIAutoWrHer
Montego.
Campbell. preceded him in husbands, and a sister.
Five- di git number
and
altar
rail.
DETROIT
(UP!)
Given
&lt;i!ath.
Services will be conducted
88798.
Worship services were held a choice between something
ftAr . Myers was a retired at 2:30p.m. Sunday, Rutland
Dwble Play
store keeper 1 ha vi ng been in Chapel, Wolker Funeral . at 10:45 with the Rev. old and something new, the
Three-digit number
that profession for 40 years. Home. with the Rev . W. H. Richard Thomas speaking average American car buyer
641.
t-e was a Worl d War I Perrin officiating . Interment from Matt. 11: 16-20 on the apparently still Is sold on
(Continued from page 2)
wUI foUow In Miles Cemetery.
~fer an and a member of the
Five-digit number Trin ity Wesleyan Church of Friends may call at the subject, "Ga mes People styling.
76574.
"I bave a firm conviction QueenCreeklntheWarrenschemeofthingslsevidentinthe
chapel any time aHer 2 p.m. Play." (l) Hide &amp; Seek,"
Qlk Hill.
Six·dlglt num her
He is survived by one Saturday unti l the hour of lhe Adam and Eve in the garden;
that styling sells cars," said way that he moved the firm along in the years after he
brother ,
William ,
of service Sunday .
950863.
(2) "Just Can't Believe," Lee A. Isco~. president of transferredittotheGOPofflclalsandinthew'aythathefinally
The fam ily will receive
Oeveland .
Two sisters survive, Mrs . friends at the chapel 2- ~ and (Doubting Thomas); (3) "My the Ford Motor Co. "You found anqtber buyer for the firm and arranged its sale,
Gift (talent) better than have to give value, but the insuringalargeJroHtforWorthlngtonandhisassociates. And,
7 9 p.m. Saturday.
Lrona ,S helton . We ll!' ton ..-nd
yours," I and n cor. (use sheet metal bas to have the Warren said, he got a big broker's commission on the final .
talents we have). (4) "We've right bends and contours." sale.
Never Done It That Way
Consumers appparently
H nothing 1else, Warren's business relationship with
Before." Use acts of devotion · agree with that philosophy Worthington and Queen Creek opened a door to Rosenzweig.
and courage. (5) Inside Track because they are giving the _ Worthington introduced Warren to Rooenzweig, Warren told
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cassell, Caledonia, Ohio by the on Mind of God" ; (6) " We're restyled and redesigned 1977 IRE reporters, although Wortjtillston said, "I didn't have
Ada , Ohio were overnight · serio.., illness of his father, the Greatest," (Pharisees models offered by the anything to do with it." There are others who say Warren knew
guests of her parents, Mr. Ted Miller, who is confined to proud). None righteous - industry-a Nong reception. Rosenzweig even earlier.
Both Ford and General
Warren said he and Rosenzweig developed a cordial
and Mrs. Clay Jorda.n the hospital after suffering "Child like faith " and
~ntly.
heart attacks. He is repor· "childish" faith two different Motors bad restyled cars to relationship, contrary to earlier statements by both that they
things _ playing in Market push when the 1977-model bad met only once or twice. Warren says they met "a number ·
Recent guests of Martha tedly improving slowly.
Mays were Don Moore;
Mr. !lid Mrs. Emzi~ Davis, place. "Be doers and not year c!awned last faD and oftirnes,"usuailyforlunch;overtheertsuingyears. ,
Warren sald he once asked RQsemweig for a politicalfavOr,
Hebron , Mr. and Mr s. Parkersburg, spent a day Hearers only." As Christians everybody eipected a battle
whichRose11%Weigsaidhecouldn'thandle. Rosenzweig, on his
Murrell Bailey, Pomeroy here with her brothers, Paul . we handle things differently. for supremacy,
we must serve God rather
It never materialized ~ part, solicl~ political rontr.ibulions at some rl. these
Route, and Sunday afternoon and W. C. Peck.
Mrs . Arthur Crabtree than men, Eph. 4. We shall no partly because a month-long meetings, Warren told IRE.
rollers were Mr. and Mrs.
Because of ~elg's requests, WJITen said, he con·
Robert Stout, local.
rnlled to see · her cousins, longer he like children, but strike against Ford delayed
The United Methodist William and Octa Gillogly in mature." Howard Flanders its cars from reaching dealer tributed to the stale Republican conunlttee and various camWomen's Group from the Albany on Sunday afternoon led singing. Joyce Archer showrooms and because car paigns of indivldusi Republicans- but never more than '100 .
was pianist and Rev. Thomas buyers decided they liked to any Individual campaign. Rosenzweig denies this and says :
'~:em pie church met with Mrs. and also visited her mother,
presented a special number, both companies' offerings. he has met Warren only once.
Paul Yeun at the parsonage Goldie Gillogly.
Th~ough the first five
But Warren and Rosenzweig also were linked Indirectly on
in Albany on Wednesday
Recent guests of Mr. and "Until Then." Attendance al
evening. Mrs. Lucy Thomas Mrs. Earl Starkey were their this service was 37. "Great months of the '77 model year, two business transactions, Rosei1%Weig was an original
gave interesting devotions. ni ece, Beulah Jones and Hour of Sharing," offering GM's "downsized" standard· promoter and stockholder of Educational Coolpuler Sylllems,
..
sized models ~re running 30 Inc., a corporation later merged with the WarrencontroUed
The group wiD meet with friend, Mabel Hixenbaugh,
$14 ·50'
was
'- ea ttle Co., which ultimately collapsed
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. per, cent ahead of the same Great Southwest Land ..
MrS. Robert Mattox in April ooth of Athens.
Woode
received
word
of
the
penod
in
the
1976-model
year
in
1972
with
a
$5
rniUion
land fraud swindle. Warren says, and
!lid a special Easter program
Mr. and Mrs . Lewis Smith
is plaMed. with Rose Mary lttended a Railroad Com· .death of their sister-in-law, while .Ford's · restyled Rooenzweig denies, that he dlscuaaed the merger with
·
Miller leading devotions.
pany meeting in Columbus on Mrs . . Clifford (Eiouise) intennediales are up 74 per Rosenzweig.
That's simple. You!
Warren also was a "consultsnt'; to Ari&amp;ona Valley Dew·
Earl Starkey and Mr. and Saturday. They visited later Hayes on Thursday and at· cent.
In the luxury field, the 1977 lopment Corp, when it arranged the 1972 sale of Jl'Operty that
Mrs.
Mendal
Jordan, in the day with their son-ln- tended at visiting hours on
Our customer is always the boss :"
Friday and services on Cadillac went through GM's resultad in appr&lt;Wmately a $225,tnt ~~:ofit for Harry Ro·
Columbia
Grange,
attended
law
and
daughter,
Mr.
and
Let us show you how important
'
Pomoha Grange at Rock Mrs. Reece Prather at Ssturdsy at the Rawlings- downsizing program -losing senzweig and his brother Newt.
the boss really is.
A true measure of how niuch political influence Ned Warren
Springs Grange held on Westerville, and stopped to Coates Funeral Home in a foot and nearly 800 pounds
.in the process - and sales was able to buy in Ari2ona with his profitable land deals may
Friday evening. Plans were see his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Middleport, o.
Mrs. Eva Bibbee is a between October
and never be known. But Indications are it W88 of subtle but
made for the annual banquet Manford Smith at Carroll, as
and special meetings with they were enroute home. Mr. patient in St. Joseph Hospital. February were up 16 per cent important benefit to Wai'ren. Political influence was also
A great many folks from from already impressive important in the Arizona legislature in fighting reforms U...
state officers were discussed. lmith is in serious condition
this area visited at White's results a year earlier. Ford would inhibit the profitability of Warren's land !Inns.
11!ws being presented to the following another stroke.
Several Warre~onnected !Inns -Including Queen Creek
state Legislation were ex·
The Busy Bee Society of the funeral home on Sunday or restyled- the Mark IV,
pained by Legislative Agent, Carpenter Baptist Church attended services there on renamed it the Mark V, and with its heavy complement of well.connected Republicans _
were charter members of the Arizona Developers Asloclation
Earl Starkey.
met with Freda Snilth. Monday for Gordon Collins of sales soared 57 per cent.
"'Ibe people who make the which lobbied strongly and ,effectively against land law
Arthur Crabtree attended a Devotions were led by Hester the Tuppers Plains area.
Easter Sunrise Service to final deciaion - the buyers re!onns.
&gt;
Lay Speak~r Workshop at Peck. Plans were made for a
Politicians control the purse string, a fact r1. llfe that
Immanuel United Methodist rummage and bake sale on he held here on April 10 at wbo vote with their dollars Cburch in Logan on Sunday Saturday, May 21 at the 6:30. Holy week services are still telling us that new is affected two key agencies- the badly underfunded real estate
1
good," said Iacocca.
department and the Maricopa County aUOrney's office which
afternoon.
TownhoUse. Work is being Wednesday, April 6.
Ford's effor)s are the best made three abortiv~ attempts to prosecute Warren.
Mr. and Mrs. William lbne on the quilt and cook·
example that styling is a
Former County Attorney Moise Berger, whoee omce was
Miller were called to lx&gt;ok projects. Those present
marketable product. While Ineffectual in brlnging"\varren to trial on bribery or perjury
were Vivian Gaston, Kathy
GM claims its standard-&amp;zed charges, complained that the prosecutor's office was chronlFrank, Emma Whittington, Mendal Jordan.
Hester Peck, Bonnie Cheadle,
Mrs. Lucy Thomas spent modeis are really an new callypoorlyfinancedandundermanned. 1becounty'alloardof
from the wheels up, Ford's Supervisors gave him only one new deputy pr,..utor In three
Metta Fisher , Lynn Ann the weekend iij Colwnbus.
McWhorter, Ida Cheadle and
Mr : and Mrs. Bob Harrison cars are ballicaDy just new yearswhUethecrlmeratesoared30percent,heclaimed.
the hostess, Mrs. Freda md family, Stoutsville, were skin on last year's chasals.
Ford's restyled ·and
EPILOGUE - Ned Warren was convicted of extortion,
recent guests of her parents,
lmith.
renamed
1977
intermediates
along
with his sonin-law, Gale Nace, in a trial In U.S. Dlatrlct
Mr. and Mrs . Carl McQuirt, Mr. and Mrs. William
are
reasonably
direct
Court
In Seattle in 19'15. The conviction waa unrelalad to land
Colwnbus, spent the weekend. Cbeadle.
for
·
the
replacements
fraud
.
His conviction Ia bel!tg appealed tO the 9th U.S. Circuit
tt their mobile home near
1976
.
m
odels.
comparable
Court
of
Appeals in Ssn Francljlco.
.
here and on Saturday
The
LTD
ll
replaced
the
Warren
has
been
indicted
and
Ia
facing
trial
in
Maricopa
evening, they and her
aging Torino, the new County for grand theft (fraud) and attempted bribery in the
trother·in·law and sister, Mr.
Thunderbird - downsized to sale of Arizona land to American servicemen In the Orient. He
and Mrs . Vernon Perry,
1\T
1\T
intermediate measurements bas also been Indicted for bribery in connection with the 111111e
called on Mr. and Mrs.
11
-replaced the Elite and the case.
Cougar with its sporty XR-7
Mr. and Mrs. Glennis
Hoffman of Chester visited
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
William Congrove and Pam.
Mrs . Bess Larkins has
returned to her home here
after spending the winter
with her daughter, Mrs: Doris
Marks at Chester.
Sets of Silverware
Recent visitors of H. E.
Kibble and Forrest were Mr.
·Ladies &amp;Men's
and Mrs. J . D. Kibble of
Take advantage of the special sale prices'lluring our two
Parkersburg, W. Va., Mr.
Watches .
and Mrs , Glenn Blake,
day sale this Friday and Saturday.
Virginia Deeter, Herman
'
'
Coffee Pots
Trlbett of Coolville and Rev.
Big
savings
on
men's
sport coats, men's dress slacks,
Elden Blake, local.
Mr. and Mrs: Alvin Reed
boy's blue jeans and slacks, men's famous make ties.
Lamps
have returned home after a
vacation trip to Florida.
Han~ng Flower Pots
Save too on 8 track stereo tapes, girl's- Easter dresses
Visiting R. E. Williams and
family were Mr. and Mrs. J .
and bonnets, women's Wrangler shirts and top$,
D
.
.
Kibble,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
women's waltz length gowns . .
Many More
The Best In Live Entertainment
Hobart
Whiteside
of
ParkersItems Reduced
burg, W. Va., Mrs. Bess
And at the Mechanic Street Warehouse a Lawn Boy
Webster of Tuppers Plains,
Open 12 to 5 p.m.
and Virgil Buckley of Belpre.
·mower specially priced at $159.95.
Thursday, Friday
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hoff.
man and daughter of
&amp; Saturday
Morehead, Ky. visited with
Pomeroy, 0.
992-3629
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Hetzer and other
relatives.
•
Mrs. Frances Reed visited
Mrs. Helen Wolf, Long
.
llottom Rd.1_recently.
, - Mrs. L. Balderson

Pennsylvanian injured
in auto-rig collision

VeleruoMtmorlalHospllal

GALLIPOLIS - Matlhew Selesky , ~4 . J. Nelson Wise were hospitalized at dama ge.
Veterans Memoria l ror lacerations and
A deer caused an accident at 2 a.m.

Going, going, going

CLOSED FOR

VACATION

WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE

Carpenter Personals

APPEARING FOR THE FIRST TIME
AT THE INN PLACE

Reedsville

ews HOtes

All KINDS
OF GIFTS

FEELINGS
4 Piece Group
From

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Open Friday Night Til 8 O'Clock

Lancaster, 0.
10 til 2

THE MEIGS INN

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 10 5 P.M.

Elberfelds· In Pomeroy·

'

t

Bush1e.s Loop.

Friday on US 35,

the path of Seiesky 's truck .

••
.,

I

.
_,.~.'r.~ . ,~
•••

INJURED IN CRASH - Matthew Selesky of Blemont,
Pa. was seriously injured in this smashed semi-rig Friday at

Autorn,akers prove
·
•
rtant
st yI e rmpo

MEIGS THEATRE

c.:ontu sion,s . They are in satisfa co ry con~ Saturday on Bob McConnick Rd. south of
tlition. Mrs. Wise was duuged with fail ure SR 160. The animal ra n into the path of a
to yield th e right l)f way.
ca r dri ven by Stanley L. Evans, 36,
A deer wa$ involved in an accident Gallijmlis. When F.vans swerved his ca r to

avoid &gt;1riking the animal it ran off the

The Gullia-Meigs Po~t State Highway
The animal ran into the front bumper road into a ditch 'and overturned. Evans
Patrol said a car driven by Marguerita M. and render of a truck driven by Danny J. was slightly in jured . There was heavy
Wise, 67 , Pomeroy, pulled onto SR 7 into Stf;' !!H11 ."2L f:rcr nvillr, O. ThrrP wHs minOr damage to hi s car.
·

Alfred
Social. Notes

three

Blcmont, Pa ., a truck driver wtts in
~ ut~rded rontlition Saturday &lt;~t the Holzer
Mcdkal Center west of here where he was
admitted Friday followin !-( an accident on
SR 7 ttl the junct ion to the Middleport

Ute junction of the SR 7 bypass and business loop to
Middleport. Selesky was rushed first to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, then to Holzer Medical Center.

unba

Father sentenced to siX' mnnths
m'
"

In trying to avoid a co llision. Selesky

lost cont rol of his truck which ran off the
roadway and overturned. Selcsky was first
taken to Vetere~ns Memorial Hospital
befor e being transferred to the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment of frac.1ured
ribs and multiple contusions and
lacerations.
Mrs. Wise and a passenger, 67-yea r old

POMEROY - Donald Eu gene Pierce.
33, Pomeroy, pleaded guilty in Meigs
County Court Friday to a charge of using
cruel punishment to his 'eight-year old
daughter one or four of his children.

+

•

tmts

_:,::N0::_
. ;_7--~--:--_.:::G::.::
AL:::.LIP:. .: O.:.:.
LI S=--~PO.:. :.IN~T...:.P.:.:LE::..:.:AS::..:.AN~T_ __ _ .::::-.SUNDAY, MARCH . . 19 77

..:.;VD;:::L_:,l.::,_
l:

j'ail

Judge Hobert t.. tsuck sentenced
Pierce to six months in the co unty ji:l il.
Charges were filed in County Court by Ca rl
R. Hysell, juvenile offl cer.

..

ttttittt
/

MIDDLEPORlPOM EROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Highway status to he reviewed
WELLSTON
cha mbers

of

-

compassi ng six prolects making up a 37-

Community and
comm erce

mile gap on the Appalachian Highway in
Clermont, Brown and Adams counties ;

leaders

representing 10 central counthern Ohio

sooner ea nn a'rklng of state and federal
funds ror the construct ion; and a funding

counties have been invited to a dinner

meeting April? at Lake White Lodge near

individua ls and com munity organizations
may use in contact ing state and fede ral
officials toward these goals.

SEORC Executive Secretary Carl
Dahlberg, Wellston , sa id tickets for the 6

p.m. April 7 meeting , at $5 per person,
may
be purchased directly. from local
way proj ects to compete on an equal basis
..chambers
of commerce within the tOwith fntcrstates fo r ava ilable federa l
county central southern Ohio area or the
funds .
The SEORC has prepared a broch ure, Pike County Chamber of Commerce,

formula change to all ow Appia chian High·

Waverly to review the status of the Ohio

Appalachian Highway.
The Wav erly meeting, to tie hosted by
the Pike County Chamber of Commerce, is
the first of three regional meetings lleing
organized by the Southeastern Ohio

suggested letters and resolutions that

Piketon, Ohio. Telephone !6141 947·5613.

Reg iona l Counc il , an nounce d SEORC

President Bob Evans of Rio Grande.
"We see k the leadership of area
cha mbers

o(

Vance in Moscow
with new hard' line

commerce in rallying

regional support for faster completion of
the 178-mlle hi ghway, Ci ncinna ti-to·
Parkersburg," said Evans .
Expected to attend Pike Co~nty's
di~ner April 7 are leaders in Pike,

'

Lawrence , Scioto , Brown , Adams,

Highland, Ross, Jackson, Vinton and
Gallia counties. In May a similar meeting
will be held in Cincinnati. In June the
Athens, Belpre and Marietta cha mbers of
commerce will host a meeting in Parkersburg.
· At the Lake White meeting an update
on the Appalachian Highway construction
progre,.s, and the importance of the
developmental route in helping to meet
Ohio's energy needs, will 'lle presented by

BOB EVANS
SEORC President
Kenner Bush, editor·,and putliisher of
The Athens Messenger and chairman of
SEORC's highway users committee.
The SEORC, said Bush, seeks "timely
completion and federal approval" of an
r; ,

counter-proposal.
By NICHOLAS OANILOFF
" U it appears fair and equitable, we
MOSCOW (UP!) ~ Secretary of State
would
take that into consideration in our
Cyrus Vance arrived Saturda y for talks
1
negotiations
with them," he said .
with Soviet leaders, saying that ' detente
Brezhnev in a Jan. 18 speech at Tula
remains in our mutual interests" but
warmng President Carter•s call for deep rejected the suggestions that his 1974
cuts in strategic arsenals is "not sutlject to agreement with Ford should be revised.
negotiation."
Sovie t Foreign

That agreement in principle assigned

Minister

Andrei

PRESENT FOR MRS. BUCK - l.'umiko Iwasaki presents an exquisitely
fashioned Japanese figurine she made herself to her host mother, Mrs. Robert
Buck, wile of Rotary President Robert Buck.

the United States and Ute Soviet Union a

Gromyko and Anatoli Dobrynin, Soviel strategic arsenal of 2,400 heavy bombers
env ironmenta l impact study en- Ambassador to Washiilgton, were at the and missiles of which 1,320 could be
airport to greet Vance in what diplomats equlpped with ,multiple nuclear warheads .
If the Russians reject Carter's proposed
said was a correct alth ough not effusive
revision, V~ ilce Will offer, a "fallback n
welcome .
''Tbe purpose of my visit is to enter into proposul.
This·second proposal would be to qui ckly
substantive discussions out of which will
the 1974 accord as it now stands.
ratify
come the framework for negotiating a
But the secorid proposal would call for
SALT
II
agreement,
"
Vance
said
.
"t
am
Fund Crusade during April.
moving immediately to a third round of
Films will be show n, li terature conscious of the rea l importance of the negotiations aimed at "deep cuts" in
reiationsl)ip
between
the
United
States
and
di~t ri buted , facts about the free cerviCal
strategic ar.~enais . The U.S. side has not
cancer clinic held monthly explained, and the Soviet Union to peace and security of defined what it means by "deep cuts" but
the world .
the names of all volunteers willing to work
"I bope my visit makes clear detente it is thought this would mean lowering the
in the crusade will be taken. The public is remains
in our mutua 1 interests and that 1974 Vladivostok ceilings to 2,000 or even
welcome.
we shall take steps to further it," Vance below.
Another element of the second proposa l
said upon arrival.
Vance, on his first visit lo the Soviet would be to delay any constraints on the
Union as secretary of state, will celebrate sophisticated new U.S , weapon, the Cruise
his 6oth birthday on Sunday. He will hold a missile, and Ute Soviet Backfire bomber
round of talks with U.S. Embassy officials until the next round of talks.
The Soviets are expected to reject this
Sunday before opeqing negotiations with
formulation
too, becmJSe they want to
high Soviet officials Monday which will .
most likely include Soviet Party Secretary impose limitations now on the American·
Cruise missile.
Leonid Brezhnev.
the crown spread and tree height.
Before
leavin
g
Brussels
Sa
turday,
A point system of the America n
Forestry Assoclation will be used. The Va nce outlin ed a to ugh American
total points are figured by adding the negotiating stance on U.S.-Soviet arms
foilowing dimensions: the sum of the control, saying President Carter's call for
circumference in inches, the height in feet "deep cuts" in strategic arsenals was
and one-fourth of the average crown fund amental and "no t su bj ect to
negotiations.''
spread (drip line I in feet.
RIO GRANDE .!.. Officers for the 1977Vance said Carter preferred a major
F or examp le : 126-in ches cir78
fiscal
yea r will be elected Monday night
cumference pius 76 feet height plus 72 feet revision of the 1974 agreement reached when the Rio Gran de Memorial
crown spread divided by · 4 equals 220 between Brezhnev and former President Association holds its annual meeting in the
Gerald R. Ford.
points.
However, Vance said that in his talks · Lyne Center classroom, Rio Grande
The tree with the most points will tie with Brezhnev, beginning on Monday, College.
declared the "Biggest l'ree m the Meigs there may be "minor aspects on which we
The session is scheduled to begin at 7
Soil and Water Conservation District" would be willing to discuss variations."
according to current president, Art·
(same boundaries as Meigs Couinty.
"Th e esse ntials of the (Cartert Lanham.
A representative of the soil Con· comprehensive package, we think are
In other matters, association memservation Service or Division of Forestry fundamental and not subject to bers will discuss proposals concerning the
wiii measure the trees that are entered. negotiation."
organization's money reserves and
,
To enter, fiii out the attached entry
Vance, thus, appeared to be setting the possible development or a village park for
form and mail to Meigs SWCD, 221 W. stage for an initial and possibly prolonged Rio Grande's you ng people.
Second At., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45169 or Box U.S.·Soviet confrontation over the
Monday's session is open to the public.
432 Pomeroy. For more information call completion of a second strategic arms Parents of all village youths are especially
992-6647 or stop by the office on the second accord .
invited.
floor of the Farmers Bank Building in
Association orficials are seeking ideas
He softened this tough line only to the
Pomeroy
·
extent that the U.S. side would be willing to for various program improvements in the
carefully weigh any constructive Soviet village.

.Cancer fund kickoff
POMEROY - The Meigs Unit of the
American Cancer Society will host an open
ho use from 2to 5 p.m. today in the banquet
room of the Meigs Inn .
The event will be in the form of a free
dessert smorgashord with coffee for the
guests who wiil kick off the annual Cancer

Big tree contest ends
April 29th in Meigs
BY BOYD A. RUTH
Conservation Service

POMEROY - The Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District is sponsoring
a

11

Big Tree Contest" from now until

Friday, April29. The Conservation district
is conducting the contest in order to
stimulat e interest In our fore st ry
resources and their wise use. About two·
thirds of Meigs County is forest land, so
you can see why the best use of this land is
so Important.
·
Ali trees that are located within the
Meigs County boundaries are eligible. The
winning tree will be determined by the
circumference measured at 41&gt; feet above
the ground 's highest point at the tree base,

Two cars stolen
from downtown
GALLIPOLIS - Two more motor
vehicles were reported stolen Friday night
from parking spaces here.
Gallipolis city police and Gallia
County sheriff's deputies were alerted to
be on the lookout for a 1974 Plymouth
RoadruMer two-door hardtop owned by
Kenneth Adkins, Rt. 2, Crown City, taken
from a parking space across from the
Gallia County Courthouse. The car Is white
with a black vinyl top and black stripes. It
has Ohio tags Z-588-V.
Charles E. Wood, 623 Second Ave. said
Saturday morning someone took his 1972 ·
Pontiac Lemans. The car four-door hard·
top cream color wilh 'a brown vinyl top.
The car has Ohio taga ~ N.
Last weekend, a i977 Chevrolet four·
wheel drive pick·up nwned by .&lt;1 :1thony
Merola, Lower River Rd., was taken from
, tbe parking lot at the A&amp;P Store. The
vehicle was recovered Wednesday night,
stripped, burned and abandoned in the
strip mining area on Turkey Run Rd. in
Cheshire Twp.

Association will

name new officers

P.m.

Entry form . "Big Tree''
Owner

Work stopped

Address
Phone No.

at Otris Craft

Exact Tree lJJcation

.
Tree Species
Circumference measured at 41&gt; ft.
above tree base.

tt
Height in feet

'

Crown sprend in ft'r l

Total points

--

in.

GA!.l.IPOJ.IS -' All day negotiations
failed to thwart a sirike at the Chris Craft
Plant located on Eastern Ave. near the
city limits here Friday.
Picket lines were set-up at the en·
trance 1o the boat engine manufacturing
plant at midnight.
According to ·a company spokesman,
105 hourly em ployees, members of Local
1583 Internationa l Association of
Machinists and Aero Spa ce Union , went on
strike following an all day negotiating

Japanese student entertained
Rotarians and Rotary Anns
Rotarians attending were Lee McComas , Joe Young, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Denison , Mr. and Mrs. Edison Baker. Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur Theobald, Mr. and Mrs.
John Werner, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Blakeslee, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Robson,
George Meinhart, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon i
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. John Rice, Mr. and
· Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Harold Hubtlard, Mr.
unusua 1talent in the fine arts as a singer, and Mrs. Dick Owen, John Will, Gene
dancer and instrumental musician. She is Grate, Rev . and Mrs. Robt:rt Bumgardner
presently the house guest of Mr. arid Mrs. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Buck.
Robert Buck of Pomeroy while atlending
school. Last Autumn she lived with the
Bernard Fultz family of Middleport, last
winter with the family of Mr. and Mrs.
AGENCY TO MEET
James Sheets, Harrisonville.
CHESHIRE
- The Gallla·Meigs
~' rid ay night Fumlko sang the Swanee
Community
Action
Agency buard of
River folk song in Japanese, played the
directors
will
hold
its
monthly meeting
autoharp accompanying her singing, and
Monday,
Ma
rch
28,
8
p.m.
in theo4'heshire
show.Vcolored slides of her home town
office.
and family.

M!ODLEPRT - Fumiko Iwasaki of
Japan, was the star of the evening Friday
at a Rotary Ann's Night held by the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club at
Heath United Methodist Church.
Ahigh school senior In Japan, Fumiko
Iwasaki is sponsored at Meigs High School
by the club. A science major (physics,
chemistry, math ), Miss Iwasaki also has

Results of area S9lid waste study ready soon
PORTSMOUTH - Printed and bound
copies of a district-wide solid waste
fea si tlility study prepared by the Ohio
Valley Re g\onal Development Com·
mission will IJe distributed soon.
The study, conducted by the planning
and research staff of the OVRDC, was
flnanc&lt;•d through funds pro~ id ed by the

solid waste ma nagement in the Ohio
VaHey Regional Development District.
Included in the management scheme are
alternative collection , storage and
disposal systems as wen as management,
financing and possible resource recovery
options for the district " explained Frank
Balmert . .OVRDC Executive Director.
Appe~larhiun Regional Commission, the
The study is based on primary and
session . The workers' contratt expired at Ohio F:nt·ironmental Protection Agen- s•condary data collected on existing
midni~ht. No further negotiations are
cy anrl OVRDC's member lo ~al govern· collection and disposal systems, current
scheduled.
•
ments. Author of the study WHS Richard L. and projected solid waste generation rates
Chri• Craft employees do not work on Poling, Senior Snlid Wa ste Planner, and le~al rcquirement.'l.
weekt:nds . Howt•vrr, r.lanl manager assisted by Dwight A. Daugherty.
"The assistance of the Ohio Environ·
Rkh:~rrl Roy Mid Snlurduy the plant wiU
" Purpose of the solid w,,_,tc fcasibiliiy mental Protection A~ency and local
f('rnfli n rlnst&gt;d Munrlay .

'

OSPBFTOMEET
POMEROY - The OhioSociely for the
Promotion of the Bull Frog will meet today
at 3 p.. m. upsta irs at the Fam1ers Ba nk
and Savings Co., l'omeroy.

TWO CULTURES MEET - Fwniko Iwasaki chats with Mrs. Jack Robson,
wife of Rotarian Jack Robson Friday evening following dinner at Heath United
MeUtodist Church. Miss Iwasaki is training for a career as a scientist.

!)tudy 'is to Sl'rv&lt;' as a long- ran~e plan [or

'

co unty health departments facilitated the
data gathering process," Baltnert said.
The 308-page study recommends
upgrading of existing collection and
disposal systems as the'first priority. The
pian also encourages the gradual shift
from utilizing small inefficient landfill
sites to the larger, muiti-c0unty landfill
sites to take advantage of lowering unit
costs.
The study recommendations include
transfer station , and states the long range
plan is designed to develop systems that
would enhance the fea sibility of a future
resource recovery program.

''I

l

\'

�{
A-3- TheSunduy Times.Sentinel, ~unduy , Murch 27, 1\!77
A-2- 'fheSWJday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, MHr•·h 27, 1~1'i

OU r..afeterias may

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

l

Area Deaths

I

l Theft of 17 weapons
probed by WVa police

after a shor t illness .
Born ~Y 30. 1893. she was
teh daughter of the late
Thomas Howe and Bertha
Parsons Howe. A lite-long
resident of Mason Coun ty ,
she was a member ot 1he
Baden Presbyterian Church .
She was pr eceded in death
by her h us ban ~ . Perr y F.
Parsons. March 15, 1958 : one
daug hter, fo ur sisters, and
three brothers.
Surviving
a re
three
daughte r s. M rs. Ber t ha

ELLA MAE GINTHER
POMEROY - Mrs. Edna

Stiles of Route 3, Pomeroy ,
has received word of the
death of her si ster -in -law ,
Mrs. Ella Mae Ginther of
Rochester , Pa , Mrs. Gin ther
is survlvei;J by her husband,
Lawrence, a former Pomeroy
resident, one daugh ter a nd
five sons .
Funeral services wer e held

Saturday at I p:m. at Todd's
Funeral Home in Sea ver., Pe .
Going from here were Mrs.

Bllrnefle. Ravens wood : Mrs .
Gladys
Durs t ,
Poi nt

Edna Stiles and Mr. and Mrs .
Edward Stiles, Middleport .

Pleasan t , and M rs. Mable
Donohue . Poin t Pl easan t :
five sons , Ra ymon d, Letar t ,

MARY ANN HOUOASHELT
POMEROY - Gr"'eside

lawrence. MI. Alto, Tom my,
New Haven. Harold , Evans,
and Rober t, Del aware, Oh1 0;
two sisters, Mr s. BessieJlil l.
l eon . Mrs . Ch loe Hill. !'oi nt
Pleasa nt ; a brother, Hol l&lt; e
Howe. Leon ' 27 grand ·
children an d 37 gre at.
.
grandchildren.
Funeral services Wil l be
held Monday at 1:30 p.m. at
the Baden Pres byte rian
Church wi th Rev . Kenneth
Durst and Rev . Herma n

servIces for Mary Ann
Houdashelt, infant daughter
of Charles anQ Mar y Bur n-

side Houdashell, Rt. 2.
Pomeroy , who died Fri da y
afternoon at birth ~t Holzer

Medical Center, will be held

at 2 p .m . today at the Miners-

ville Hill Cemetery.

Surv i ving besi (Jes t he
parents are a sister , Audr a
and maternal gran~parent s,
Harold and Ruby Sl,Jrnside,
Pomeroy .

o ow •n
e
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home after
2 p.m. Sunda y.

POINT PLEASANT - Mrs
Lora B. Parsons, 83, Rt . 2,
Leon , died Friday aftern oon
at the Holzer Medical Center

POINT PLEASANT A small arsenal of weapons,
including seven shotguns and
ten rifles, was stolen from
Hardman 's Home Center,
Thursday evening or Friday
morning, according to Slate
Police Corporal J . L. Fltz·
water Saturday mornin~ .

In seeking aid · from the
public to solve the crime,
Fitzwater issued this
statement: " If anyone has
any infonriallon th~t might
be useful in solvmg thts
crime. please contact . the
State Police." Locally, the
State Police can be reached

ward'S K eyboard owner

t or,danottl ct a ti~~· B ur~~d~~

LORA PARSONS

·'

Katie'S' Korner

.

attended

BRIDGE .
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Better safe than set
26

.A4
¥AQ62

tJ7
•AK66 2

WEST

EAST

• J 93
¥4
t A K 10 S 4
• J 97s

•108 6 S2
¥ K 10 8 3

• 662
• \0

SQUTH
"K Q7
• J 97s
• Q9 3
.QO
Both vulnerable

West

Pass
Pass

North' East

South

••
4•

1•
Pass

Pass
Pass

Open[ng lead - K t

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
"How was I to know '"
groaned South .
"No way," replied North .
"Machiavelli himself couldn' t
have used a better bit of
hocus-pocus."
West had cashed the ace and
king of diamonds and shifted
tn a spode. South had won in
bis oWl\ hand , led the five of
hearts and finessed dummy's
queen. Without a moment's
heoitation East had dropped
the eight spot.
South had returned to hi s
hand wilh the queen of elu us
in order In lead the jack of
trumps. If thai eight had been
played from 10-8 doublelon.
South would pick up the whole
!IIIII and rntk• an overtrick: If

it had been a singleton , South
would lose one hear! to West
and make his contract. Unlor·
tunately lor South. West held
th e singleton and once South
led the jack East was sure of
two trump tricks and South 's
nice game had disappeared
forever.

We ca n't absolve South
completely . He had a sure-fire
safety play at his disposal. He
could have led a low. heart in·
stead of the jack from his
hand. This would give him an
overtnck if East had played
the eight from 10-8-3 and
would have insured the con·
tract against any and all
trump breaks.

~ ~~~

ANew York reader wants to
know if anyone ever won all
th e events at a major tourna·
men\,
Back in 1934 when there
were only three events in the
Eastern championships ,
Oswald Jacoby won the mixed
with Mrs. Ja coby, Waldemar
von Zedtwitz and . t&lt;trs .
Geraldine Furlow, the open
pairs with Da vid Bruce and
the tea m of four with Bruce,
Schen'&lt; eo and Gottlieb .
Howevm tl.at was only three
events.
(Fo r a copy at JA COBY
MODERN. s end~ $1 to: " Win
at B ro dge ." c l o this
newspaper. P. 0 Box 489,
Aad• o C•ty Statio n. New Yqr~
N. Y ,100 19)

y 400'

structors for the seminar
known as the "Indy 400."
Among this outstandin g
group of instructors were
Cliff Geers, professional
~n•ultant ·, Owen Jorgensen,
w
•
Michigan State University ;
Dr. Earle Kent, Consullant
and
Engineer ;
Ben
McKiveen, prest'dent of the
Ctn
' ct' nnatt' Pt' ano Technicians
Guild (PTG) ·Chapter·, Bob
Russell ' PTG Reg ional Vice
Pres'.dent and Vt'rgt'l Smith or
the· Moody B&gt;'ble Institute.
Ward t·s dedJ'cated toward
un
' provt' ng p•'ano servt'ce tn'
the Ohio Valley area. His
. recently estahlif;hP.d musir
store, Ward's Keyboard, is
the area's newest and ts a
direct development of his
successful piano tuning and
service.
Accompanying Ward to
Indianapolis was his wile,
Rosie, who is active in the
PTG Auxiliary. She talked
with and listened to profitable
bits of information from the
other successful businesswomen associated with the
PTG Auxiliary. A special
treai was a tour ol the In·
dianapolis Museum of Art.
Bill Ward, through his
business, Ward's Keyboard,
bas recently become a
member of the Downtown
Merchants Association and
the Gallipolis Area Chamber
of Commerce. He is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ward of
New Haven.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va. - Mr. and Mrs. John C.
Wiseman II of Point Pleasant
announce the birth of their
second child, a son, March
8 at
Holzer
Medi·
cal Center. The in·
fant weighed six . pounds
and 15 ounces, was 19 inches
long, and has been named
Aaron Michael. To welrome
his brother home was Shawn
Lee, age three . Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Orland Floyd of
Pomeroy,
and
great·
ERMA CLELAND, Chester, is one of the hardest workers I grandparents are Mr. and
have ever known·
.
Mrs. Holly Sayre, Mf Alto.
She works part~ime and in her spare time she keeps right Paternal grandparents are
oo working. RecenUy she quilted two quilts in two weeks ..Thal Mrs. Evelyn Wiseman and
is really JX!Iting out the stitches.
John C. Wiseman I, both of
Point Pleasant, and great·
RODNEY NEIGLER, 21, Ra'cine, was injured in a drilling grandparents are Mr. and
accident last Thursday. He was taken to Holzer Medical Mrs . Ernest Wiseman of
Center by the RuUand ER Squad and later transported to St. Gallipolis. The mother is the
Mary's Hospital at Huntingtnn, where he will be confined for former Leta Floyd.
a~proxlmately two weeks. For those who wish to send cards
his room number is 321. He is the son of Sarah Neigler and the
late Arthur Nelgler.
MtKINNEY
MR. AND MRS. WALTER Grueser, Riverview Drive,
WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.
Pomeroy received a call from their son, Wally, who resides in - Mr. and Mrs. Peter
Summersville, N. J., with his wife and daughter, Thursday McKinney of West Columbia
evening. Might add lhat Wally was elated over a TV show he ·are announcing the birth of a.
had seen whldt included Pomeroy and other parts of Meigs son, al Pleasanl Valley
and Gallla Counties.
Hospital on March 10. The
infant weighed eight P,Ounds
and six ounces, was 2012
inches long, and named Peter
There was a documentary on energy shown over TV that Larry. He was welromed
was telecast out of New York that Wally had seen. It showed
how energy was produced by use of roal. It showed the Meigs home by his brothers,
Mines, the belt line, inside the mines, lhe Kyger Creek Power Shannon and Ralph and
Angle.
Mater·
1'1ant,the Gavin Plant, the tnwn of Pomeroy which included a sister,
nal
grandparents
are
Mr.
picture of the COID'thouse.
and Mrs . Homer Bland,
Also, It showed Bill Porter, Pomeroy attorney, as he was West Columbia, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
interviewed.
Meigs County is finally receiving lhe recognition it so Mrs. A. W. (Junior )
richly deserves. Wally's father stated that his son was so McKinney of Point Pleasant.
lluilled tn see the program, as he dearly loves Pomeroy, and Great-grandparents are Mr.
he was proud tn see the recognition Meigs County is receiving. and Mrs. Clarence Johnson
and Mrs. Lyda McKinney of
Point Pleasant, and Mrs. Icy
Bland of West Columbua.

. POMEROY - Break 19, hello there, good buddy, just
lhougllt I would "holler'' at you. What's your 2ll, old buddy'
WilY I am just coming inhl this Pomeroy tnwn, 1().4 good
buddy,catchyou later ... and on it goes .. .
·
CB radios are the biggest craze since the hula hoop and
bu~yoo~.
.
Some of the information you receive over a CB radio is
good but then again some of it is just plain visiting. You will
find however, that most of the CB operatnrs are helpful people
and are willing In aid a motorist in any way possible.
also,a CBcan be great in case of an emergency. If you can't
readt the person you are calling you can get your message
relayed by one operatnr to another.
If you haven't had the pleasure of listening In a CB you
have in store a pleasant but sometimes annoying experience.
· Signing 9ffnow -catch you later ... 10-4.

·

~lnd

GALLIPOLIS _ Bill R.
Ward, owner of Ward's
Keyboard, 46 State St., a we11
known area piano tunertechni cian, attend~d tho
I Pi .
Indiana Seminar o
ano
Technicians on Marcil II , 12
and 13 al Indianapolis, Ind.
which offered classes in·
eluding piano acoustics .and
scale design , nistortca 1
temperaments, tuning and
temperament, hammer
voicing, grand regulation and
·
11 at1on.
grand damper msta
Widely recognized piano
. .
.
tuner-tee hme1ans
were In·

By Katie Crow

NORTH IDI

be without food

1

by dlalin~ 675-1101.
Entry apparently was
made into Hardman's by
going over a fen ce in the
Garden Center area and
prying open a !Jack door.
According to Cpl. Fltz·
water , the guns are valued at
$2,455 .

POPE WON'T BUDGE
vAT!CAN CITY (UP! ) _
.
Pope Paul Vf satd Saturday
his ban on married priests
stands and that any talk of
abolishing the priestly
.
.
celibacy requirement would
aggravate prtests' Identity
crises rather than easing
them
· ·
.
Addresstng a group of
b'sh
1
French t Vops on a regu ar
visit to the attcan, the Pope
·
ed lh d · · 1 th
reJterat
e ectslon .o e
1971· World Synod
· of Bishops
· 1y
agamst ronferrtng
prtest
d'
·
·
h
w
·
or malton tnt e estern rtte
c
th
1
'
Ch
h
Roman a o 1c
urc to
·ed
Th ba d
mam 1men. E e n oes
·
Y to hastern h rtte
cnotat happ
1
·
o 1cs,
wo
ave
d' ·
11
d · d
tra J\tona Y a mttte
married men as priests.

ConRail
sued on
5 counts

WORKSHOP SET
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Newspaper Association
and the Ohio Newspapers
Foundation are sponsoring a
workshop April 4 at the
Center
for
Fawcett
Tomorrow on the Ohio State
University campus dealing
with varied aspects of a free
press and free enterprise.
Alex· Machaskee, assistant

to the publisher of The
Cleveland Plain Dealer and
ONF president, said the
workshop will be the first in a
series in Ohio to sound .out
how freedom and free en·
terprise can be improved.

Wopat reelected to
presidency of G·T
MARION - Robert M. Wopat of
Marion wsa re-elected president of
General Telephonf Co. of Ohio ~' riday at
the company's annual meetin g of
shareowners and buard members here.
It will be Wopat' s 13th year in that
position. All other existing officers and
board members, except for Raymond H.
Adkins, form erly of Dover, also were reelected . Adkins, an attorney and lonner
banker, resigned and has moved lo
Brownsville, Tex. He had been a board
member for 23 years.
B&amp;E INVESTIGATED
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
sheriff's deputies Friday investigated a
breaking and entering at a garage owned
by Dan Miller, Rt. 2, Patriot.
According to Sher iff James Mont·

waters

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Sen.
John Glenn , D-Ohio, Satur·
day launched hi s mob ile
Senate office from th e
Statehouse steps, saying the
office will travel primarily to
areas that do not have handy
access to Glenn's full-time
oil ices here and in Cincinnati.
Cleveland and Toledo.
Glenn drove t he van to its
first stop in Lancaster. where

and Aaron, and sister,
Candie. Maternal grand·
P" rents are Mr. and Mrs.
ll"rner
Bland,
West
Columbia, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. aod
l\1 r · rarsel Stone, k , West
C" t u m b i a . Great·
grandp11rents are Mrs. ley
lll:..nd of West Columbis and
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence
Joht)~On, ·Point Pleasant.'

MORE BLACKS
WASHINGTON !UP!)
Attorney General Griffin Bell
has promised to hire blacks
lor policy-level Justice
Department jobs and try to
"upgrade" jobs of black
police acroi\S t~e rountry, the
National lllark Police
AIISOciatim said today. 1

By OONAW H. MAY
WASHI NG'I'ON (UP! )
Se n. William Proxmire, DWis., act'Used the bankin g
profession Friday of failing to
live up ID its own lelevision
commercials about he lping

confronted representatives of
banking groups with samples
of their TV ads, printed out on
large charts.
"Money you save with us
goes back into your com-

TWO ALARMS ANSWERED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Fire
Dept. answered two alanns Saturday
afternoon, both to minor brush fires. The
first was at 2:14 p.m. to the John Hess
residence, old US 33, and the second at 2:41
p.m. to the Pomeroy Mason Bridge underpass.

Puzzle of Reye's
Syndrome remams
•

gomery entry was made by breaking the
padlock on the garage. Missing was a mag
chrome wheel and tire for a jeep.

He said no one has ever
come up with an adequate
way to serve rural areas and
cities which have not per·
manent offi ces.
In addition to Lancaster,
the office will stop in Circleville , Chilli cothe ,
Wa shington Courl House,
London and Marysv!Ue be· :
tween now and April 3.

U. S. senator."

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Reyes Syndrome . They were
(UP!) - One Oerember night appalled In find their doctnrs
· in 1975, 11-year -old Johnny knew tittle a bout the disease .
A few months later , DieckDieckman left his bed,
man
and three other families
walked down the dark
who
had suffered similar
hallway to the bathroom,
tragedies
chartered the
collapsed and died.
Reyes
Syndrome
Foundation,
Doctors att ri buted the
a
nonprofit
organization
In
death ID Reyes Syndrome, an
promote
research
for
the
often fata l liver a ilment
whose most frequent victims detection and treatment of
are children recovering fr om lhe mysterious disease.
"Most people don 't know
viral infections.
about
Reyes Syndrome," said
. Johnny 's parents, Mr. and
Dieckman,
foWldation presiMrs. John Di eckm an of Bendent.
"
It
is
very difficult for
zonia, had never heard of
the layman - the parent - In
detect.
"It 's basically a disease of
the liver with encephalitis of
*
• 1'h&lt;'t~lro· the brain. The liver simply
says, 'I'm going on vacation
TONIGHT THRU
and I may not return.' As a
TUESDAY
result, tnxins get .into the
blood stream and go In the

COLO~Y

•

brain .' '

Dieckman
said
the
syndrome seems to set in
three In live days after a child
appears re covered from
some type of viral illness,
such as influenza A, influenza
B, chicken pox or a ·
respiratory Infection.
"The child starts In get
lelhargtc and acts tired,"
Dieckman said. "Vomillng

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• Paint tools clean up in w arm, soapy water
• Hund reds of color s to sui t every taste

becomes

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OPENING DATE

,·

CARTOON

the proposal.

coma. If he dOesn't come oul
of the coma after 48 or 96
hoUrs, he's in trouble."
Treatment usually · is
limited In basic life su~ort
measures, Dieckman said.

help surround ing rural areas,

prevent drought-stricken

commercial by lhe Savings
and Loan Foundation.
Another, by the American
Bankers Association, shows
community scenes through
the open door of a bank vault
while a voice says: "Some of

areas and hurt the chances of

the money is right here in

town ... helping people
change things for th e be tter."
Proxrnire contended that
ba nki ng institutions as a
,.,.·hole ar en't inves ti ng
enough ln th e econom ic

.\'

areas of California from

ge tting loans fro m other

sa id

deve lopmen t of
th eir
communities. He sa id $55
billion of their $382 billion in
loans during the last lour
years went overseas.
The hearing was on a bill
Proxmire has int ro du ced
which would require bank
regulatory agencies, in ruling
on applica tions to open new

Exchange transfusions,

cranial surgery In relieve
pressure on lhe brain and
tntal "saline washouts" ofthe
blood system have also been
attempted.
A team of doctnrs at the
University of Michigan
recently developed a more
effective way of treating
severe forms of the ailment
by using special drugs to
control brain pressure.
The Reye's treatment learn
at the university's C. S. MottL
Children's Hospital reports
the survival rate has
increased from 50 to 80 per
cent In patients with
moderately severe forms of
the disease.
Dieckman ·said statistics
compiled by lhe National
C,nter for Disease Control
show a higher incidence of
reported cases ol Reyes
Syndrome in states bordering
the Great Lakes. He said
Michigan recorded 50 cases
in both 1974 and 1975.
"Essentially nothing in 26
years has been done," Dieckman said . "To the best of our
knowledge ·the only dollar
amount spent by the federal
goverrunent directly in research of Reyes Syndrome is
$100,000 compared In millions
,for other diseases.~~
Dieckman
said
the
foundation is trying In attract
federal funds into researdt at
existing medical centers. A
team of six medical advisers
from children's hospitals
throughout the country assist
the foundation in applying for
available grants.
"We are not interested in
~sslng great wealth for
the foundation or In creating
a giant bureaucracy or
research center of our own 1"
he said. "What we want In see
is the development of a
treatment for lhe disease and

the bill would create too
much paperwork, rmtke )t
harder for ur ban banks w

the Nort heast att rac ting
ca pital from the sunbelt .
He said the "bulk" of
Ame rican ba nks are "doing
very good jobs in their
areas.
Rona ld Grzy win ski ,
chairma n of the South Shore
National Bank of Chicago,
which stresses community
deve l opment, said
Proxmire's bill should be
even stronger .
He said a third of his bank's
investments are in local co mmunity development but that
the two biggest banks in
Illi nois, wl1ich he did n't

NEW EMPLOYEES Ruth Ann Curfman and Mark
Mooney are the latest additions to White's Dean &amp; Barry
Paint Town located at 700 Second Ave. in Ga llipolis. In
addition In all types of wallpa per and paint products, the
store features artist supplies. Owners are Farrell and
Marlene Houck.

11

name, have $25 million in

deposi ts but only in vest
$500,000 of it in the
co mmunity, not co unt in g
credit ca rd business.

TRI.COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY
Gallipolis, 0 .

56 State St.
Phone 446-3856

NEW SALESMAN
Terry Hamilton, Gallipolis,
has been employed as a
salesman at Thaler Ford
Sales Inc. Fonnerly wllh
the Gallipolis Auto Auction,
Hamtlton Is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High
School and attended Rio
Grande College where he
studied education.
a program of biochemical
research and epidemiological
study.
"We see ourselves as a

RESPIRATOR SUPPORT SYSTEMS,
MEDICAL OXYGEN,
REGULATORS, FLOW .METERS,

new spring fashion
Sav e $3 07 on Thrs Womens T- Str ap
Dress Sandal wr th Shapely' Mrd Heel
and Strapp ed Vamp Regu larl y S9.97

.$9 G~L.

Double Handl"e Handbags Reg $8 97 S6.47
Prices' Good thru Tuesday * M asterCharge or B!'nk Americard

HUMIDIFIERS AND SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
COMPLETE SELECTION OF
CONVALESCENT EQUIPMENT
RENTAL &amp; SALES

GAL

10 a. m . til6 p. m .

Sun . 1 til6

:__- Get to know us; you 'll like us.®-__j

Mrs. Ronald L. Saunders
Manager &amp; Sales Representative
Home Delivery ·Available ·

Sears

catalyst to get the job."

SAVE 8100
on Sears Best
undercounter
dishwasher

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONL'f'

THE HOUSE PAINT THAT
DOES WHAT IT SAYS!
• Glides on easily. co vers hairline cra cks
• Follow directions for one coat coverage
1 Smooths out to a brilliant. glossy fini sh

MARCH 27 THRU APRIL 2

SALE

•

• lets YOU control film th &lt;Ckness

GAL

Sunday thru Thursday
10 a . m. tillO p.m.
Fri. &amp; Sat. to a.m.
tilll p. m.

as you paint

• Medium gloss finish f or e)( terior trim
• Protects whi le It color complements
• ·Fast drying ; easy to apply
1 Colo rs stay bright for years

Was 1339.95
(Regular Sizel

FDIE

eFRENCH FRIES

Heavy-duty Pots 'N Puns cycle washes dishes
3 times. Plus :l spray arms make sure each
di sh ge ts thoroughly &lt;lrcn clt cd. 11its in sp11ce
of most othe r huilt-ins fM easy replacement.
Jntcr changeahl e color panels.

Small Drink
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~ ·
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17 % to 40 % off

No Rainy-Day Blues for Her!

(; rarult.•t• eahinets
E co n o m i cal ~

TO GO OR EAT HERE

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Will Be Waiting

PtrliL&amp;l
lUlU

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Gallipolis, 0.

--

ready io be

i ~ stall cd.

Wid e assortm e nt of
m1 its t o c hoo~c from
for any kitchen .

Commercial &amp;Savings Bank

Call Charlie Brown
for expert installation

This smarl you.ng woman makes monthly deposits from
her pay checks directly into her savings account where her
money earns interest for her. Open a passbook savings
account today and find out more about savings program
that that allows you to make regular savings deposits each
month.

·coMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS
BANK

Court Slreet

good·

l oo kin g c abinets ,

She has a savings account at

No Su bt.
No Coupons · No Limit

'

Opon
Mon.-Sat

JOJ Upper River Road
Across From Silver Bridge Plaza

$1449

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Semi-Tra nsparent highlight s grain
Fast dry: warm, soapy w ater cleafl-UP
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HOURS
MON.·SAT.
9 AM TO 8 PM
SUNDAY
1 PM TO 6 PM

690

.'

9

$1349

he

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

$l24~l.

LATEX CONVENIENT
TRIM PAINT! .

in,

disoriented and may become
violent. Then he may go inhl a

HELPS MAKE HOUSE PAINTING
AONE-WEEKEND JOB!

•
•
•
•

Melissa Thomas, Becky Eichinger, Andrea Batey,
Barbara Sprague; second row, llo r, John Hein, Julie
Elberfeld, Tina Spencer, Donna Frank, Unds Thomas,
Becky Ambrose, Jenni Burke, Nalhan Boatright; back
row, ito r, Carl Gagnon, Leonard Myers, Keith Bentz,
Tommy PuUins, Bill McClure, Ray Maxson, Rodney
Tripp, Randy Stewart, and John Ridenour.

THESE SIXTH GRADERS of lhe Chester Elementary
School will make up a vocal chorus backing a clown theme
minstrel show in the school auditnriwn at 8 p.m.
Saturday , April 1. The minstrel is part of a variety show to
be held to raise fu nds lor a Washington, Ii.c. trip lor the
school's safety pa troL The chorus members include,
front, I tor. Beth Teaford, Pam Miller, Missy Van Meter,

COMMISSION TO MEET
POMEROY - A regular meeting of
the Meigs County Regional Planning
Commission will be held at 3:15 p.m.
Monday in the agricultural conference
center of the Farmer~ Bank Building in
Pomeroy.

LIKE TWO STAINS FROM
THE SAME CAN!

invest in its i rnmedi~:tte
commu nity .
Bankers were divided on

one

munit y,"

it will be during the weekend.
Glenn met with citizens from
I :30 to 3 p.m. Saturday.
Glenn said money for the van .
was part of his in-state office
allowance.
The mobile office, he said,
"Offers me the chance to
e~end service to citizens who
would otherwise never t:ome
into contact with the staff of a

branches. to tak e into
account what pert~ ntage of
deposits the bank planned to

A.A . Mill igan, presidentcommunities.
Presiding over i:! Ju~aring of elect of the American
_the
Sen ate
Ba nking Ba nkers Association, agreed
Committ ee, P roxmire with Proxmire's goal but sa id

Peeling? Blistering? Cracking?

near · Hanover,

SON BORN
WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.
-Mr. at\d Mrs. Andy Stone,
West Columbia, are an·
nounclng the birth ofa son, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Feb. 26. The infant weighed
nine pounds and six ounces,
was 23 inches long, and has
been named Jonathan Mcd·
Clure. He was welcome
home by his brothers, Warren

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Department
of Mental Health and M.;otal Retardation
has forwarded a $121,132 check to the
Ga tlia County Commissioners as the
second payment on the federal govern·
ment 's share of ronstructlon rosts for a
$1.2 million mental b~lth center.
Construction on the 19,600-square-loot
center, located near the junction ol U. S.
Route 35 and State Route 160 outside
Gallipolis, is ·presenlly 55 per cent complete. The state will contribute $77,888 to
the project to he matched by local funding.
The federal · government will provide
$1,105,220 of the total $1 ,260,956 cost.

Mobile senate office opened by John Glenn

COLUMBUS (UP!) Attorney General William
Brown has filed suit on behalf
of the Ohio Environmental
Protecton Agency against
Consolidated Railroad Corp.,
seeking to recover penalties
in ronnection wllh a train
derailment near Hanover last
January.
The suit, containing five
separate counts, alleges the
derailment caused ethyl
acrylate, acetaldehyde, and
ethylene oxide to enter
surface and underg~ound
Licking County, Brown said
Friday.
Filed In Licking County
Common Pleas Court, the suit
asks that ConRail be ordered
to pay a penalty of up to
$10,000 per violation per day.
Brown charged the spilling
of
the
"dangerous
chemicals" causes unlawful
pollution of the state's
waters.
The Ohio EPA, lour days
alter· the Jan. 29 derailment,
issued emergency findings
and orders directing ConRail
In provide iml!lediate ron·
tainment of lhe chemical
spill.
.
The EPA also ordered
ConRail to submit by Feb. 9,
a written investigation report
disclosing the extent of the
underground water pollution.
The suit charges ConRail
with failing to rontain the
pollution until Feb. 14 and
with falling to submit the
required report until Feb. 22.
The romplaint also alleges
that ConRail violated the
EPA emergency findings and
orders by falling In provide
the exerptise necessary to
determine the extent and
location of chemicals
polluting the surface waters
of the state and .by failing to
provide a written In·
vestigation report on such
pollution.

FIRST CHILD BORN
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. -'Mr. and Mrs. Danny E. Rizer,
New Haven, annoWJce the
birth of their first child, a son
Friday, March 11, at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed nine poWlds
and four ounces and was 22
inches long. He has been
named
Jeremy
Jay.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Robert
Layne, New Haven, and
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon R.
Rizer, Hartford, W. Va .
Maternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Harry 0.
Layne, New Haven, and
paternal great-grandmother
is Mrs. Zelma Hawley,
Minersville.

ATHENS, Ohio (U PI) - A strike by
nonacademic employes at Ohio University
threalens to leave students retu rn ing this
weekend from spring break without meals
in their cafet erias.
About 700 members of Local1699 of the
Am erican Federation of State, Co unty and
Muni cipal Empl oyes walked out at 8 a.m.
Friday. Employes were still picketing
Saturda y morning and no furth er talks
were scheduled.
Th e strik ers Includ e • cafeteria
work ers, ma int enance personn el and
persons who man the southeastern Ohio's
school's physical plant.
·

Bank ads shakey
Proxmire claims

Oteck received as
$121,132 payment

Silver Bridge Plaza

• Ship(ling, installation extra
• Sears ha8 a ~f'dil plan lo suit mosl e'·ery m ..'Cd
• Prices ttrc calnloJr JtriccK

• Now on Ntle

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24

lSears ISILV~~tz~oGE

Hour4=-~~~0Serv•ce :-o KAHS, twt:nut 'K ANn c·~' ·

�.. . .

·,

.

A-4- The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sundav . Mard 121. l[l'/7

Young Saxhe: · chip
! off the old block

Ir----------------------~--,I
I

I

! Dateline
!

!

Gallia
By Hoban Wil1on .lr.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Shortly befo•e the ceasefire
in Southeast Asia, former
U.S. Sen. William B. Saxbe,
R.Ohio , said he thought
President Nixon muSt have

RECEIVED a note from Wilrur A. Dennis, \55 Lariat Drive,
laat week which read : "In regard to our fair city's winter·
damaged streets and water system, our city could be said w
be not wlioUy holy, but certainly holey." ·

+++

DAMAGE caused by winter 's harsh weather during
December, January and February in the Old French City will
·~~~rely total more than $300,000, possibly a half-million by the
lime aU the bills are in. It's not only Gallipolis that is in trouble
because of the severe winter weather. About every wwn and
village in the Buckeye State is in the same boat.

"taken leave of his senses"

for renewing the bombing of
North Vietnam.
Now there are those who
might be wondering if
Saxbe's son , state Rep.
Charles R. Saxbe, R·
Mechanicsburg, has taken

+++

DEPARTMENT heads aU over Ohio are now faced with
roads and streets which are aU but bnpossible wtravel. At this
time, departments sbnply don't have the money, materials or
manpower to do aU the repair work which needs to be done.
There are some emergency funds , perhaps, but you can bet
these will be spent'in plaC~&gt;s which pose the biggest problems.
There aren 'I enough emergency funds to go around, and right
now, there's no way to get more emergency money, because
the emergency is too widespread.

+++

WE understand department heads !Ire doing their best

w

get as much repair work done as they can. About the only thing
the public can do at this time is be patient and understanding.
We must aU reccgniZe tbe condi.tioos of the streets and roads
and drive accordingly. Sensible drivirlg will protect your car
from damage. Sooner or later, repairs will be made, but it is no
less than an impossible task right now.

+++

DURING the spring meeting of Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League officials held in Jackson earlier this month, Joy
Bentley, Meigs High School girls athletic direcwr, on behalf of
all girls sports teams, submitted the foUowing letter til SEOAL
~rincillllls. It reads :
March 11, 19n
Principals of S.E.O.A.L. Schools :
Tbe women coaches of the SEOAL wish w express our
concern whave the league voUeybaU champions honored at a
league banquet beginning with the 1977·78 school year. The
rationale for this is as follows :
I. Boys are honored at two banquets in two different
sports: for equality, as outlined in the Title IX regulations,
girls should be recognized at two banquets also.
. 2. It is presumed that football and basketball banquets
were originaUy set up because these were the two major sports
for boys in the league schools.
VolleybaU is a sport in which aU league schools sponsor
teams. Therefore, we consider it one of our major sports just
as footbaU is a major sport for boys.
As a major sport, it deserves recognition at a banquet .
We further feel, that to deny girls equal rights to
reccgnition at a banquet is discrbninatory. We trust that all
Principals of SEOAL schools wiU take the leadership in this
matter and end the discrimination NOW. It Is time to
administer wall students, regardless of sex. We feel that this ·
can be done in one of two ways :
A. either including girls and boys banquets together, or
B. having separate banquets whonor female participants .
U method "A" above is chosen, we would not be opposed w
having volleybaU champions traveling to the school of the
boys' footbaU champiOns for the banquet. Likewise, for
basketball. Your careful consideration in this mawr is greatly
appreciated.
Respectfully submitted on
behalf of SEOALGirls' Sports
JoyBenUey, Meigs' Girls' A.D.

+++

LEAGUE officials did not take any action on the requ est.
It wiU be discussed during the loop's annual summer meeting,

scheduled Wednesday, June 15, beginning at 10 a.m. at Athens
High School, The Plains.

+++

TWENTY' YEARS AGO , from the files of the Daily
Tribune and weekly Gallia Tbnes ... Frank L. Lyons joins
Tribune-Times composing room staff . . . Officials approve
land purchase in Raccoon Twp., on Tycoon Rd., for new Gallia
County lake ..• Linda Morris named Tri-Hi-V president at
Gallia Academy High School ... Richard A. (Dick) Moore
completes recruit tr4ining with U.S.
at Bainbridge,
Md.... Coalton of JackSon County to
Gallia County
~~ f&lt;r
activities, ·

leave of his senses.

Saxbe the younger , known
til his friends as )«lcky,

Ohio politics
joined the Ohio legislature in
1975. For two years, he sat
quietly and listened w his
elders . Like all good
freshmen, he was seen and
not heard. Tht re was
speculation that he was
biding his time for a run at
statewide office in 1978.
'ibis year, Saxbe has begun
to say .and do some
unorthodox things, not unlike
his father; who once got inw
trouble for characterizing
Patty Hearst as a "common
criminal."

UMW wants hide
of EPA chief
COLUMBUS (UPI ) District 6 of the United Mine
Workers Union in Ohio is so
upset with proposed federal
sulfur dioxide standards that
it is trying to force the
re placement of the man
charged with their enforcement.
John Guzek, UMW District
.6 president, said Friday his
union is advocating the
remova l
of
George
Alexander, Region 5 direcwr
of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agen cy
in
Chicago.
Guzek· sa id his union
wanted Alexander replaced
with John Rogers, a UMW
atwrney with District 6 in
Bellaire.
"We'd all be damn fools if
we didn't try to gel him out of
there and get Mr. Rogers
appointed in his place," said
Guzek.
Guzek said he had sent
lette rs expressing his
displeasure with Alexander
wOhio congressmen and the
U.S. EPA in Washington. On
AprU 7, Guzek said a meeting
had been scheduled with U.S.
EPA officials in Washington
on the matter.
AU!~t , the

n 0
urnew
ea er.
We're just down the road
wi th th e uniqu e G ravely lawn and
garden tract ors, featuring all-gear
---"'~
tra nsmi ssion and rugged con·
str uction for years of rel iable
..
perfor mance. And we' re
backing them up with
well -train ed mechanics
for first-class service.
Come o n in and see what's
new for your lawn and ga rd en .

-..,.
.".
..
II

OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT SALES
OPEN
9 TO 5 Mon •.fRI.

DICK FINLAW, OWNER

.
:, 9 tiL NOON ON SAT.

'".' '

'

.,....

·~

•
;:;.

.-·. ..

. ...

'' I

60 SYCAMORE ST.
GALL1POLIS, OHIO 45631
PHONE 446-3670

~GRAVEL:

•

Last January, Rocky Sax be that it iB a federal problem,
ripped Gov. James A. Rhodes oot more hand wringing and
for lack of action in solving prayer meetings, but decisive
the state's energy crisis. Last action now by the governor
week , he was helping· and the General Assembly,"
He joined in sponsoring a
mowrcyclists try to repeal
the mandatory helmet blll to drastically alter
requirement, and calling for sentencing for felonies,
open party caucuses in the including elimination of
parole, limiting judicial
legislature .
Not exactly the way to discretion and requiring
make friends
among those convlced of non-capital
Republican politicians and murders to sei'VO at least 25
earn a spot on the party's years before a pardon could
be granted.
state ticket for next year.
Last week, he said it was an
Well , it is becoming
apparent that the Roek is "arrogant and irresponsible
merely a chip off the old expenditure of public
monies" for the Department
bloek.
He says what be thinks and of Highway Safety wputout a
does what he believes w be brochure lobbying for
motorcycle helmets, and led
right, fashionable or not.
a group of motorcyclists
Take note:
When
the
Rhodes testifying against the hebpet
administration threatened to requirement.
Finally, be co&lt;Jponsored
close schoOls in the Dayton
Power &amp; Ught Co. service with a Democrat a bill W
area, which in cludes his limit closed party caucuses district, Saxbe said he a well-guarded tradition in
l cg i s la .tur e
thought this was "goin g the
"When I ran for the House,
further than anyone had an·
I told people I was going w
ticipated. "
· A week later, with the find out how w get things
energy emergency in full done and work within the
bloom, he issued this .system," said Saxbe.
"I'm sticking my neck out a
statement:
"What is needed at this little because I feel for too
tbne is not more statements long we'v~ just been against
that nothing can be done and things and have taken a back
seat w the Democrats. We
should lead and provide
constructive suggestions for
change.''
Saxbe said Rhodes "welcomes an open expression of
opinions" and his own party
leadership has "encouraged
relea sed its set of air some of the unorthodox
pollution re~ulati ons on things we've dDne. "
sulfur dioxid e emissions
Although Saxbe voted
which the union and eastern against the "s~hine" law
Ohio state lcgislawrs say will requiring open meetings, he
ruin Ohio's high-sulfur coal has done a reversal in caUing
industry by forcing utilities to for open caucuses. "I was
import low-sulfur coal.
wrong/ ' he said in another
Most utilities have decided demonstration of unusual
w import low-sulfur coal candor for a politician.
rather than install expensive
Saxbe insists he Is
''scrubbers ''
or
other "absolutely not" ready w
pollution control equipment
w comply with the proposed
regulations.
·In response to the proposed
regulatiollS, Ohio's electric
utilities and about 20
industries filed a federal suit
now on appeal before the 6th
U.S. Circuit Cow-l of Appeals

last of the unorthodox moves
ol Rocky Saxbe in carrying
on the family tradition.

1\-.5- The Swtday 'l'imcs..Scntim•l , !'iunday , Man It ?.i. l ~177

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HK EMEN CALLED
GALLI POLIS - Volunteer
firemen here were called at
7:01 p.m. Friday to Mill
Creek Rd ., one and fi ve

'

&amp;

EASTER

NEW BUICKS &amp;·PONTIACS
IN STOCK! - .READY TO GO.
• ELECTRAS • LESABRES • CENTURY REGALS • SKYLARKS
• BONNEVILLES • CATALINAS • GRAN PRIXS • LEMANS
• TRANS AMS • VENTURAS

SPORTSWEAR

Handsomely Tailored

SMITH

Trio - Texturized
Polyester Gabardine.

.· PONTIAC

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POmOLES GALORE - The residents along Layne-St.. in New Haven, have more
than their share of potholes as is evidenced by the above picture. The road, which is a part of
old Route 33 that passes through a section of the.town, is supposed to be ma intained by the
West Virg inia Department of Highways, town officials claim.

Its Exciting
European Styling
Just Right For
You . ..

f-1ordl-y. BE:Ccuse they tend to be mferior $\ones, often not
~o'J•th the dr:.cov~ · wc.e. Th::~• sa 'borgorn" you can't afford
lr·•eod, corre 'r ond ~ee .our r.ollec;tion of quolrty gerns, fo rrly
r rrrc1. 'Nc hw(' ou· dromon-:l p•ic '19 on cutting, color. cl o' i~y
ana C'JrOt weight of the s:o'le. A &gt; Amerr ccn Gem Socr ety 1ew .
rlcr'. we QLOrnntee tbe qual :y of every diamond we sell. You
r ;~be •.ure' f uetlni') \!ue value for you r money. lt'~o frie.,dly

way of dorng business.

Mayor Roush is asking
help from Rockefeller

SPRING
TONES
2 Button Styling

NEW HAVE N, W. Va. - because of' its di lapidated that, they are run ning the
New Haven Mayor Ch;Jrles condit ion.
hazard of damages.
Roush said Sa turday that he
'' We did our best to get
may soon take a delegation of Go v. Moore and Highway
resid ents from this town to Commi ssioner Ritchi e to
Charleston to convi nce st ate upgrade the road , but we got
officia ls of their respon- nowhere," sai d Mc1yor
sibility to repa ir old Route 33 Roush, "Maybe things will be

Notched Lapels
New Store
Hours
Monday thru Thu
9:30til 5:30
Friday
9:30til8 p.m .
Saturday
9:30ti15:00p .m .

fn end'~

Sunday Shoppers Welcome · Come In &amp; Browse

Looks Like A
Million At A
Modest Price.

that runs through the middle different
with
Gov .
Rockefcller. ' r
of the Bend Area town .
Pothol es a rc now so
hoping to g~t Gov.

"''m

Sizes 36-46 Reg

re marked Ma yo r Rou sh
while not ing the deplorable
con dition of the road which
palses by the home of seve ral
New Haven residents.
The roa d, which passes by
the New Haven Swimming
Pool · Rec reati on Center
complex and the town 's
sewa ge plant , actually
continues on over a bridge
that was formally closed to
tra ffic some two years ago

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at its beginnin g, that it 1s
difficult for

auto~

to trove!

any faster than 10 miles per
ho ur along it, and even at

N obody kn ows be tt er Lhan we
do th e big invest ments of t ime
nnd money th e fanner must
make- a nd th e f: mner's uni q ue

ONEOF30
WASHINGTON I UPI)
Tom Boa rdman, editor of the
Cleveland Press was one of 30
members of the news media
who met with President
Carter Friday at the White
House :

cash flow probl ems. If your
pbns fo r the fu ture require
fin ancin g of new machinery
breedin g stock , :Hidit.ionn l
land, a new build ing ... or
1

Shoes left in

$1 Per. Gal. Off

any u pgrad in g of y ou r

$ 56

Acrylic Satin ·
Latex Enamel
0 Satin finish
0 Superior hiding power
0 Use an both walls and
woodwork
0 Ex ce ptional scrubabi lity
0 Easy, water clean·up

Reg. $834
Special Price

$ 34

li

WONDERTONES'" FLAT LATEX
INTERIOR FLAT WALL PAINT
Devoe Wondertones vinyl acryli c
latex is Devoe's top selling inte-

Murder charged
in fetu s death

rior wall paint across the U.S. It
leatures smoo th application, fast
drying , easy touch-up , low odor,
and qui ck c lean .UP wilh water.

Choose fro'•l

INTRODUCING
DEVOE'S
WONDER TONE

The nU!ht belones 1o Clara

If your pulse quickens after dark, Charger Is your car. Charger
has a look that was shaped for the nig,ht. An excitement to match your
mood when you 've left the day behind. When the sun goes down and the
lights come up, move in to C.harger time. Some of us were born for the
night. Now we have a car that. belongs to us ... Charger.
'Manufacturer's suggested retail price for base Charger,
inci udi.ng white sidewall tires, and excluding options, destination charges,
taxes, and tit le fees.

Ceiling White
D
0
0
0

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•

Gr~y

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SHOE STORE
Gallipolis, Ohio

.~

•

The

FREE HEAT

MACHINE"

Reg. Price 5854
Sale Priced

Wonder-Tones~&gt;

Dodge

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Millionaire.'' " Man in the

CARL'S

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CEILING WHITE

See YOUr [)edge Dealer.•• and
(iehf UP YOUr niehf.

'1'he House of

I'XJLVERINE '
6" WELT WORK BOOT
• Pebb le te11ured cowhide
leal her
• Welt construction
• Cushion insole and sleel
sha nk arch support
• Oil resislanl neoprene sole
and heel

•
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Flat, motte finish
Easy to apply
Fast-drying
Easy, water clean-up

•

$ 99

CAROliNA LUMBER
&amp;·SUP,PLY CO.
312 6th Street
Point Pleasant
Store Hrs. Mon. • Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-12

.~-.--riM ~ ~..,_. illiiilii Dil'lli

Fin.::t!y ..thP. sen!'&gt;ibi L answ&lt;&gt;r to the
rising cost of heaiino your home. ·
Your fireplace and a FREE HEAT MACHINE.'
5 times more efficient than other systems!
, Nothing produces as much heat, lasts as long
and offers as many features as the
FREE HEAT MACHIN E.
SEE IT AT

B&amp;G ·MKT.
Phone 446·2211
913 4th

~ve •

• Jllipolis, Ohio

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profit poten t ial, co me to The
Wil ling B a nk. We ca n ar·
ra nge a whole credit package,
s pecific ally tai lored to your
farm's operat ion - and terms
to suit your cash fl ow. If
you 're a fa rmer pla nnin g t he
fut ur e, who 'll help you
pla n it for more profit?
We Will!

wanted woman
COMPfON, Calif. (UPl)It's no\ the brokenhearted
prince who's on the trail of
this modern-day Cinderella
who fled at midnight, leavi ng
her shoe behind.
It 's the cops.
An explosion rocked a
small house early Fridsy.
Neighbors said two men ant1
a woman leaped from the
blown ou t windows and fled.
Police said they discovered
the house was being used as a
la boratory
for
th e
manufacture· of PCP, the
drug known on the street as
"angel dust."
The also discovered that in
her haste, the · woman ran
right out of her shoes when
. they became stuck in some
mud .
Police were looking for a
woman whose feet match the
shoes, just like the prince
searched for Cinderella .

I

CWho'll tide yDu over 'til
harvest time?

Rock efeller's personal at- significant alon g th e road,
tenti on on the matter, q which is known as La yne St.

38-46 Longs

Ml Ml' h ,, 1t •

00

Rothschild ," " Grapes of
Wrath." "How to Marry a

control. Two

Are bargain
diamonds
o g1rl's best

"'Choose Now While The Selection Is Good"

Now

AUmOR DIES
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Nunna ll y Johnson , who
started out·as a reporter and
later became a prolific short
story author, columnist and
screenwriter of about 100
movies, died Friday at Good
Samaritan hospital after a
brief illness. He was 79. The
pictures on which he worked
as writer, producer or tloth

lo~1

burning,

trucks and 10 men responded
to the 74th alarm of the year.

•

mud will fit

AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
Darrell Roper, 21, Akron, was
charged with murder Friday
in the death of his girlfriend's
unborn child.
Police said Roper beat
Tanya Hill, 19, Akron with a
tree limb and a tire iron
Tuesday, accusing her of
cheating on him . They said he
started beating her at
Perkins Woods Park and
later at a gas station in the
presence of witnesses before
"dumping her off at St .
Thomas Hospital."
Police said the girl was 5\l
months pregnant and the
child was .dead whtn it was
taken from her Wednesd~y.

wh ere Bill Masters, Rt. 1,
Galli polis, using controlled

•

PoSition in Chicago for about
a year. He oversees
enforcement of feder al
environmental laws for the
midwestern United States.
The three-judge federal
panel is expected to hand
down a decision in the case by
May 12.
Last week, the Ohio EPA
said it would draft its own
sulfur dioxide control plan
and try to win acceptance of
it by federal authorities later
this spring.
State officials concede that
acceptance of a less-stringent
state plan is contingent on a
favorable rulin g in the
federal court suit.

Flannel Suit" and "The
Oirty Oo1.en."

\

tenths miles north of here

has been in his current

1

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SPRING

Further enforcement of the
regulatioru; were stayed ·last
November pending the
decision of a three-judge
appellate panel of Justices
Harry Phillips, George
Edwards and John Peck.
Alexander is appointed by
the direclor of the U.S. EPA
and serves at his pleasure. He

'

"

up.
But one thing seems
certain. We have oot seen the

in Cincinnati.

included

LIKE NOBODY ELSE.

make run for state attorney
general ne: t year. Tbne will
tell whether that denial holds

l

�A-0- The SWlday Times-sentinel, Sumlay, M&lt;nTh 27.. 1977

Modest tax THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS
·
m
g
hike Com

Guide to gardening

e

GALUPOlJS - A weekly guide to gardening
activities along with helpful hints on crop, cultural
practices, prepared by the Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service. Call«&amp;-4612, Ext. 32 or .stop by the Extension
Office located in the courthouse at Gallipolis for
additional information.
March 28 - Apply pre-emergent herbicides for
crabgrass control in southern Ohio . .
Mlll'ch 29 - Freezer need defrosting? Save
electricity. Do it now.
March 30 - Useful fertilizer analyses for home
gardeners are S-16-16, 12-12-12, 15-15-15, and 6-24-24.
March 31- Obtain current fruit spray
recommendations from the Extension Office.
April! - Plant aspar~gus , carrots, swiss chard;
collards, kale , .kohlrabi, leaf lettuce, onions, parsley,
parsnips, peas, early potatoes, radishes, rhubarb,
salsify, spinach, when soil and weather conditions
permlt.
April ~ - · Apply prHmergent herbicides for
crabgrass cootrol.
Planting dates are for normal seasons in Central
Ohio. Spring planting dates will be two weeks earlier
lor Southern Ohio.
BEANS
. In 1976 bush and half runner beans were severely
affected by Bean Yellow Mosaic Virus (BYMV ). Top
Crop is apparently the only bush bean which has
tolerance to most of the Bean Yellow Mosaic Virus
(BYMV) strains. It will often show mosaic symptoms,
but infection will not usually be severe enough to cause
significant yield loss,
.
All half runners are very susceptible. If half runners
are grown, the severity of Bean Yellow Moasic Virus
(BYMV) infection may be reduced by either
eliminating white clover 100 feet from plantings or by
planting beans in a plot bordered by several rows of
corn. The corn is an aphid barrier between the half
runners and white clover.

Total levied property taxes $11,723,104 to S11,318,!5ll. This
in Mason County will go up a will cause a loss of coWlty
modest 7.4 per cent in the collected taxes of $7,134.
upcoming 1977-78 fiscal year, · However, this is somewhat
according to a prepared misleading, according to
statement of valuations and Mason County Tax Assessor
taxes released by the Mason Orville ." Buck" Sturgeon.
CoWlty Board ol Education
"All lands that belong to
Thursday evening after it public utilities have been
approved the 1977-78 levy.
taken off our books and
Even more heartening placed under the Board of
from the taxpayers stand: Public Utilities, this year,"
· t · th f ct th 1 CJ
he stated
pom • IS e a
a ass I
·
taxpayers, which includes
Sturgeon went on to note
· d' ·d 1
that the Board of Pablic
m IVI ua persona1 property
,.
.
and public utilities, will only Utilities will assess the
have to pay $3,320 more than property and send back the
last year.
revenue raised to Mason
Overall,
the
county County.
property owners will pay out
IN ZAMBIA
$1,935,140 in taxes for fiscal
LUSAKA,
Zambia (UP!) year 't977-78, as-· opposed to
Soviet
PreSident
Nikolai
$1,801,552 in this fiscal year.
Podgorny arrived in Zambia
This reflects an increase of Saturday to the cheers of
$133,588.
thousands of persons chan'
The Jar~est increase is ting "Viva Russia! 11 and
reflected in the Class III "Death to the racists!"
category, or commercial Zambian President Kenneth
taxpayers, which rose $118,331 Kaunda welcomed the Soviet
from $1 ,399,590 to $1,5i7,921. president on his arrival at
This rose despite a drop in Lusaka airport 'from Dar Es
the value of commercial real Salaam, Tanzania, on the
estate, which went from second leg of his African tour.

Defendant bound over to jury
POMEROY
One
defendant was bound over to
the Meigs County Grand
Jury, nine were fined, and 14
others forfeited bonds in
CoWlty Court Friday.
Bound over by Judge
Robert E. Buck was Auston
Newsome, Syracuse, on a
charge of knowingly causing
serious physical harm to
Rudy Stewart on March 3.
Newsome posted bond in
the amount of $20,000.
Fined
were
Paul
Bumgarner, RD, Letart
Fans, $12 and costs,
speeding; Sharon Icenhower,
Pomeroy, $14 and costs,
speedi ng; Jeffrey Scott ,
Athens, $5 and costs,
defective brakes; Timothy t .
Whiteman, Logan, $10 and ·
costs, insecure load ; Melinda
K. Humphreys, Rt. . 2,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
speeding; Eli David White,
Rt. I, Minersville,. $20 and
costs, left of center; Jack Lee
Goode, Rutland , $50 and
costs, no operators license;
Thomas A. Schoonover,

Rutland, 125 and costs, no
mot orcycle endorsement ;
Jack C. Stuart, Green Belt,
Md., $13 and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were
Nancy Snyder, Rt. .1, Mid~leport , $27.50, expired
operators license; Randy Lee
Williams, Rt. I, Rutland, and
Joseph G. Griffen, Mason,
$22.50 each, unsafe vehicle;
Bernard Shamblin,
Gallipolis, Gregory R.
Winebrenner, Rt. 2, Coolville,
William R. Reed, Waterford,
Edgar Hensley ; Canton,
Howard K. Martin, South
Charleston, and Raymond H.
Sprague, Marietta , $27.50
each, speeding; Drema
J enkins , Racine, $29 .50,
speeding ; Patricia Ann
Doerfer, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
$357 .50, driving while intoxicated ; Martin L. Johnson, Parkersburg, $27.50 left
of center; Joseph G. Griffen,
Mason, ·$22.50 , unsafe
vehicle; Ronnie Johnson , Rt.
2, Racine , $37.50, speeding;
Paul D. Parsons, Gallipolis,
$28.50, speeding.

Beavers·helping
Roush projects
By John C&lt;Miper
Conservation Service
POINT PLEASANT
Walden Roush, president of
the Mason County Fair
Board, is employing beavers
tD help with projects around
lhe fairground .
When Okey King of SCS
wa s at the fair ground
recently to assist Mr .. Roush
and Johnnie McDermitt with

By Frank illll
GALUPO!JS -James Buchanan Aleshire, son of Reuben
Aleshire, the miller ,.w~s born in Gallipolis in 1856.
Col. John L. Vance, our cong·ressman and a cousin of James
appointed him to West Paint in 1876. Aleshire graduated U:
1880, a classmate of G. W. Goethals, later engineer in charge of
the construction of the Panama Canal. Goethals is also noted
as the per8on who eliminated Yellow Fever in Panama.
Aleshire was stationed at Fort Custer, Wyoming during
the last days of the Indian uprisings. While there he married
MISS Hattie Dana, a ~om~. girl.
. Aleshire later foug~t m China, Cuba, and the Philippines,
His good ·wor~ at Manila attracted him to William Howard
Taft. Aleshire s daughters and Taft's daughters became ci(M!e
fnends. ,
Aleshire was promoted t.o Brigadier General wit~ the
~artermaster Corps, stationed m Washington, . D. C.
President T~ft was often a house guest of the Aleshlres while
he was stationed there.
After retiring Alesh'
turn d to W min
di d J
2 1925 'G Allreshe~ ' e
yo g where he
e .une ·
· en.
ll'e s son, Joseph P. was also a
West Point graduate.
The Reuben Aleshire home, which.is more than a cen
old, is still standing. It is that grand old brick house just a=
Ball Furniture on Third Ave.

For Those Who May Be Interested:
THIS PAST WEEK I received a call froin Mrs. Ralph
Durst. She is seeking information .about her grandfather, Dr.
Solomon Long, who practiced at Wales (Centerpoint) in the
187~.

I CERTAINLY WANT to thank the many people for their
kind remarks to me about the talk I gave Sunday afternoon
before The Gallia County Historical Society at the Episcopal
Church. You were a wonderful audience.
BUFF SCOTT CAlLED me recently about a book which
he owns. This book has a Gallipolis connection. It is about the
trial of Bill Young, accused of murdering a Spencer famlly in
Missouri on August 3, 1877.
You~ was acquitted and immediately married a lady
from Gallipolis named Lydia A. Bray,
Young later was hung by a lynch mob. He had claimed his
bride was wQrth $75,000. Does anyone have any information .

Court rules against
new drug laws
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) The Ohio Sixth Circuit Court
&lt;t Appeals here Saturday
ruled unconstitutional that
part of Ohio's new drug law
which gives judges the power
to modify previous sentences
for drug violations.
The law was enacted in

•
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about this lady?
WHEN DR. A. B. GARRETT first came to Gallipolla k&gt; •
practice medicine in 1872 his oll'lce was in a small frame
building just above the Dooally Flats on First Ave.
He was called into the CONU!ar service in 1901, serving In
Mexico and Canada before returning here in 1928. His medical •
office and htme was then located on Third Ave., the first house
upriver from Womeldorff and Thomas l!m'dware. The house
was removed many years ago.
Dr. Garrett also owned a fruit farm aloog the Ohio river.
Mrs. Louise Brink has several items once owned by the
Garrelts.
Dr. Garrett, in partnership with R. E. Phillips, once
published a map. for sale called ''The Birdseye View of
Galllpolis."

What was the Aeolian club?

BUYERS
BEWARE!

both as an a nnouncer and

sportscaster , he is wellknown in this area and is
respected
for
hi s

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OUR BEST

Wlcoustitutional.
"We argued that it was
unconstitutional because it
infringed upon the judiciary's
power to sentence, the executive's power to commute ·
and interfered with proper

Model UC-XVI
112,000 Weekly

Grain Capacilv

MODEL

Model UC-XXX

210 .000 Weekly

Grain CliP&lt;ICil'l'

government,'' said Pizza.
"The court agreed that this
was unco nstitutional and
could not be modified."
Norris was sentenced to 10.
to-20 years in prison after he
was arrested for possession
of heroin and cocaine ''with a
street value of between $5
million and $10 million,"
Pizza said.

POMEROY LANDMARK

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

Right Prices On Tires Right For You!

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_______________________,_11!""___
GIVE ABEAUTIFUL "NEW'
LOOK AND PROTECTION
TO YOUR OLD ROOF.

''

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.. Power Streak. 78
Polyester Cord Tire

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$2 1!,!,.mil N~om

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FREE
ESTIMATES

FREE

GUARANTEE

ON .BOTH
MATERIALS ·AND

lABOR.

GALLIPOLIS - Bill Gray,
veteran announcer and
sportscaster at WJ EH-AMFM, has been promoted to
station manager of the all·
new, stereo FM facilities
currently under construction
to replace the e&lt;isting
WJEH-FM later this spring.
Gray will begin his new
duties April I be ing
responsible for supervising
and coordinating the several '
operation' of FM, Including
stalfing, programming and
sales. He will work under
direction of William C. (Bill)
Miller, vice-president and
general manager of WJEHAM-FM.
Paul E. Wagner, President
ot Wagner Broadcasting
Corporation, said; "I am
pleased that Bill Gray has
accepted this promotion for a
number of reasons. He joined
our staff shortly after the
stations were purchased 10
years ago and, except for two
years in the armed services,
has been with us the entire
time.
."As a result of his air work,

SOMETHING TO TIDNK ABOUT :

APRI.L VALUES!

ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

Bill Gray will manage
stereo FM facility

The answer to last week's question :
Ludlow Longley was a long time Chief of Police here after
the Civil War,

disposal of surface water.
July, 1976, and one section
EDWARD WRIGHT, Soil gave judges the power to
'lour reliable local co·operative fu WofR.r . ~f.t
.
Scientist of Soil Conservation modify s.entences that were
Service from . Parkersburg,' handed
down
before
was in Mason County for the enaclment of the new law.
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
purpose of assistin g wtth soils
Lucas County Prosecutor
Serving
O.l!la and Mason Counties
· reports from
various Tony Pizza, in a case
992·2181
JJ'Ojects. ·soils examinations involving Allan Murray
weremadeon the land owned Norris of New York, argued
by Warren Weaver on Sand· that section of the law was
hill Road, James
H. Lewis '
.
Jr. on Route 62 near Lakin
Hospital, the Henderson
Circuit United Methodist
Qmrch parsonage and at the
Robert Roush housing
surveys for tile drainage, development at the upper end
they ran on wa beaver busily of New Haven.
mgaged in beaver activity.
.These soil reports include
This work party held the in formation about type,
beaver at bay and a media Etructure and texture as well
representative was sum- as flooding and water
mmed to record the heaver's management features.
activity as evidence that busy
WITH TilE appearance of
beavers are at work at the "'ring, many oonservation
fairground.
co nstruction projects are
We classify Mr. Roush and being started. Drainage
Mr. McDermitt as "busy ~oerations have been going
•••
reavers'' because they are &lt;11 for nearly a month now,
RESIDENT!
AL
1~ry laithlul in promoting the
but other earthmoving
Strea kless Machine Wa·ll Washing
fair
and
the
!ami
museum.
Upholstery - Windows - Floors
1 Despite the appearance of the projects are also . bei ng
STUDDED nRES MUST BE OFF IN OHIO BY APRIL 15TH
Complete Line of . . .
I reaver and his willingness to started.
Robert Drain developed a
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Supplies
1· assist, Mr. King and the
MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC. HAS THE RIGHT TIRE FOR YOU - .AND RIGHT PRICE!
"'ring at his place on Sandhill
ethers surveyed 2,000 feet of Road. Roger Freeman dld the
drainage to be installed. construction work on this
FOR FRIENDLY FREE ESTIMATES
I ·tile
This drainage system will be JJ'Oject.
subsurface drains but will
I
Call 675·5572 After 4 P.M.
Construction on a pond at
have two or three inlets for III• Ed Sommer fann at ·
L------ ------------------~
"1 Southside will be resumed
,.,.,n. This pond is being
co nst ructed by the West
Virginia Department of
Natural Resources as a pond
in whim to rear llngerling
mrthem pike which will be
released and will swim
downstream to the Kanawha
River.
Amther similar pond is
(ianned
for construction at
-Insulates against cold
the
Roush
Golf Course at
.
'
or heat .
Plus $1.72 Fed. Ex. Tax
Mason. It Is expected to be
-Will not chip. crack or
And
tire off your car.
built this su mmer. The
peel.
grassed waterway wUl be
~ No need to tear off
!baped and reseeded at the
your roof to repair any
Clements Nursery . This
slate, metal. shingle or
waterway Is being relocated
built-up .roof, Make it
and !baped adjacent to a road
leakproof with beautiful
that Appalachian Power Co.
is using as an access road to
Granuels.
its development on the Ohio
- Choose yours in any
River at Lakin.
color of your choice.
THE WESTERN Soli
-Add years of life to
O&gt;nservatioo
District at its
your present home or
regular meeting !liscussed
·building.
• 6 ridi ng ribs gi\'e gre3t lrac tio n anU mileage., ,
vario us projects and act "S"·shaped tread patte rn and contour shoul der
tivities.
aivea ease of steering and cornering control.
One of the projects ol in• Tripl~· \empere d polyes ter cord body won' l flaHpol.
• Tufsyn rubber lread giv e• lonw·laslln&amp; streflalh.
terest to Mason County
r------------~~-~---MAIL THIS COUPON
I people is the wildlife seed
• BIJ, bold " Husky" look .
I
Hackett Granulated Roofing
IJICket that is being made
MOUNTED AND BALANCED
93 71h Ave.
Middleport, 0 . I ava ilab Je to landowners
I
PRICES GOOD THROUGH APRIL 30, 1977
Please send me further informaflon ,on
I again. This is a seed mixture
Granulated Roofing . It is understood 1 am
that can be used to benefit
I
lllder no obligation whatsoever .
I wild!We when planted on odd
Melgf Tire Center, Inc..and Goodyear Meets
areas
wherever
they
may
'
I
Please
Check)
I
· Sidewall
Roof
I occur.
-~lfctfle:lf Quality At A Low, Low Prlcel
NAM E - - - - - - - - - - - 1
The packets wlll be made
. ADDRESS
I "' in amo111ts for a quarter
acre each. The seed InCluded
CITY
ZIP
in this seed packet are buck·
wheat,
millet,
grain
sorghum , soybeans and
llln Rower. The seed packet
will sell for about $1. Orders
being taken at the district ,
at :00\l! Main Street
these seeds. They will be
lava, ilalll&lt; for d~Hvery around

Jay of the land

A-7-TheSunday Times.Senlind, Suntlay, Man·ht7. 1977

I

~~~~~----------------j

pc;of~ssionali s m

and

en ~

thilsiasm. I'm confident h ~' U
a pply the sa me type of
energy and fresh ideas to this
new venture."
Gra y, 29, a native of
Paulding, Ohio, is excited
about the challenge.
"I've always felt this area
was my home. Oepople have
been very good to me and the
station. Now it's qur opportunity to do even more for
our listeners. With the in·

~oofs

BILL GRAY
crea sed power for FM,
(70,000 watts effective
radiated power ).
our
res ponsibilities will grow.
due to the greatly expanded
coverage area, but our staff
is unique in the sense that it's
not only experienced, but
young and highly capable. We.
hope ll(e'll he aroWld a long
time tu meet the needs of our
service area."
Gray added: "We have
been planning and developing
a revised format for the new
ste reo FM station lor many
months. We have subscribed
to one of broadcasting's
foremost adult music services, which will be SUP'
plemented by news. sports
and community service
pr og rams d esig ned

,.

especially to the adult
audience.
"This type of adult FM
programming, which we
have consistently used on
WJEH-FM in the past, is
reachin g new heights of
popularity in practically
every sized market in the
nation. We're happy to be
part of that growth."
Sign on date for the new
stereo FM station, originally
set in mid-May, has now been
tentatively re-scheduled in
June, due to a defect in the
new antenna system which
required· returning it to the
factory in California for .recalibration. Erection of the
new, 240-foot, supporting
tower will be delayed until its
return.

West Virginian
cited to court

GALLIPOLIS - Thomas C.
Bush, 19, Rt. 2, Leon, W.Va.
was charged with reckless
operation following a traffic
accident at 1:41 a.m.
Saturday on MiJJ Creek St.
City police said Bush lost
control ol his car which
struck a Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric pole.
There
was
moderate
damage. ·
A hit-skip accident occurred Friday ni ght on
Second Ave. where an
unkqown vehicle struck the
southwest corner of the
building housing Remo
home, Athena Acres.
Rocc hi 's Topsey Turvey
So, anyone seei ng a Restaurant.
bea utiful old poodle (who by
the way, has heart trouble
now, very lew teeth, and is
ESTES SELECTED
practically deal) trying to
CINCINN ATl (UP!)
keep up with three frisky, University of Cincinnati
energetic black and white officials say General Motors
Bostons on our Hysell Run Corp. President Elliott M..
acreage, you are seeing quite "Pete" Estes wiJJ receive
a dog. He doesn't have much ·the 1977 Willla~ Howard Taft
time l.,ft, but the "!ajor and I Medal at the annual UC Day
are gomg to see to 1t that they Banquet April IS. Estes, 61, a
are happy ones for my faith- 1940 UC graduate, " was
ful war veteran pet, Sergeant selected for the Alumni
Ko-Ko, US Army, Retired. Association's highest award
Readers, if you have au because of his notable
interesting sto~y to !ell achievement in his career,"
aboti an an una! In your hfe, UC of[lcials said.
write to me care of The
Sentinel. Let's tell everyone
about that animal. In my
articles, I will ten you of
animals looking for good
homes · too, so be on the
lookout for my series entitled
as this one is, "Hoofs and
Paws."
·
·
Our purpose is to tell you ol
the need for your responsibility where animals are
concerned. They are not, like
children, able to tell ·YOU of
their wants, needs, hurts, etc.
::J':!&lt;Itr
You must be constantly alert
to help them when they need
. you; and most important of
all,show themyoucare. Your
reward., will be tenfold!

and paws

and he did not have to eat
· By Marlon C. Crawford
As a preface to a weekly ordinary dog food - oh no article for the Meigs County he got scraps from the mess
Humane Society, I feel that a ha \1 (and we ate pretty wei!
good introduction for me over there).
As an official mascot he
might be through one of my
eve n managed to get
own animals.
Ko-Ko is a standard Poodle, promoted upon occasion, and
the pet I'd wanted all my life made It to 'the rank ol Corand llnally got when I was In poral.
When it was time for me to
my 17th year in the Army. At
the time, I was First Sergeant return to the States for a new
ofthe first WAC Detachment assignment, I could not leave
activated in a combat wne, in my beloved dog behind to
October 1966. Just prior to the become a dog chop on some
arrival of my women from Vietnamese plate. So I o!J..
the States, a chaplain came to tained permission from the
me one day and offered me a Vie tnamese . Government,
dog as a mascot for my and TWA sent for a cage. At a
cost of over $200 I had him
women.
I will never forget how Ko- nown out of the country the
Ko loo ked that day. Hr. sa me day J left. The minute!
walked with his head high landed at Travis Air Force
and his strut made him look Base in Ca lifornia, I went to
like a thoroughbred trotter. the San Francisco InHe was handsome and he terna lional Airport, to get my
·seemed to know it. BUT, he friend, Ko-Ko .
Our next assignment took
was covered with lick bites
us
to Fort Sheridan, Ill.
and infected sores, which
where
the commander of the
W.re my first concern.
W
AC
Detachment
was Major
With the help ol the men of
E.
Joyce
Miller
of Midthe Sentry Dog Unit and an
dlcport,
who,
a
few
months
Army Vet we set out to treat
later,
promoted
Ko-Ko
to
him. He was a great patient,
Sergeant!
seeming .to know that everyIn July of 1969, both Ko-Ko
thing we did was for his own
and
I retired from the US
good. Every day I cleaned his
Army.
After living and
dozens of sores, petting and
working
in Virginia, and
resasuring him as I did so.
He turned out to be a sort of teaching in the Indianapolis
High Schools,)n 1974 we, with
tan color, soft-haired, brown
NOW YOU KNOW
eyed beauty who also turned Major Mlller; her poodle
The top Academy Award
out to be a flop as a mascot to Thomson, three Boston winner of aU time is Walt
Terriers, and two parakeets. Disney, who won 31 Oscars.
my 107 young women because
he adopted me and wouldn't came to our newly remodeled
leave my side from the first
day he carne to us. So, while
he failed as a mascot, he was
THIS WEEKS SPECIAL
a greal success as the winner
of my hea rt.
March 28th thru April 3rd
He was a feisty dog in those
days at Tan Son Nuht,
Vietnam. When he wasn't
under my leet, desk or bed,
l),e was an eag!Hyed scout,
not in search of the cnerr,y ""
were the military men who
patrolled our area , but in
search of ;tray dogs.
• The WAC Cantonment Are~.
'()ET A PEPSI AND
was his domain. When any
other animal came within
sight' Ko-Ko· squatted low,
THIS 16 OZ. ALL
· iient under the barbed wire,
tnd took off barking franNEW CARTOON
tically while I looked for tt.e
nearest exit and ran after
GlASS FOR ONLY
him. I lost 20 pounds In ·
Vietnam; I swear that at
Jtast half ol It was due . to
t)10se chases In the IOO .degre~
heat.
· ,
,,
' In January of !968. duolng
ltJe blg TElT offensive, o~r
'This Week's Glass Wil Be
post ammw\IUon II.WIIP .1118
J
hit by enemr miii1Jr lire. The •
-·ROA. ~NNER
resuhln8 expl08kln lhrtw ml'.
•
c
~ut of bed and f&amp;lltni .fpr!
•
dlture knocked J(o-K~ un·
'eonsclous. He becnme
~lgtlie tllat day . lot , tlio:
Purple Hetirt, WIJ!et\ wttm't ·
..

FISH SANDWICH &amp;
FRENCH FRIES

79e

PLUS

t

, .:·

~

the only experlenct ~e ~a.d

I

PAUL SKINNER
GALLIPOLIS
James
A.
Slllller,
President of The Jones
Boys, Inc. annoUnced
Saturday the promotion ol
Paul Skinner to the position
ol Non-foods Merchandise
Manager. Skinner has been
assis tant merchandhe
manager the pus! two
years and prior to that was
a store manager and a
buyer. Skinner Is married
to the former Becky Snead
of
Pl.
Pleasant.
They have two chUdren,
Michelle, 5, and Amy, 2.
They reside at 601 Jay
Drive, Gallipolis.

which most dog• don't have.
He had ail thom• wnmen
jlettln~ him and RpoilinM him;

~ ·~· ~ dalry1Sie:
_ ~

-

• Locust &amp; Fourth

Mlddlepcirt, o.

the ap~renti~es, · and the part management plays in
apprenticeship program. The Tri State Council includes
representatives from parts of West Virginia, Kentucky,
and Ohio. Classes are presently conducted in Portsmouth
Ironton, Chillicothe and Pomeroy, Ashland, Ky., and
Huntington, W. Va . On the left ahove are Ozzie Gwinn T &amp;
I Supervisor, and Ponney G. Cisco, director, cente; .

VOC-ED SPEAKER - Charles E. Vanderpool, right,
coordinator of apprenticeship training for the Tri..State
District Council of Carpenters, and executive secretary of
TriState District Council of Carpenters, spoke recently to
students at the Buckeye Hills Career Center on: how to
apply for apprenticeship training , qualifications and
requirements for apprentices, what the union expects of

View from the Statehouse
State a provm record in providing
COLUMBUS
Representative Ron James weatherizati on efforts to
(0-Proc torville ) today in- C"llio's needy residents .
Comm unit y Acti on
troduced legislation in the
A
genc
ie s have rece iv ed
Ohio House of Represenfed
eral
funds from th e
tatives to provide for a home
weatherization pro gram lor Communi ty Service Ad·
the eld&lt;rly, handicapped and mi nistrat ion for hom e
economically disadvantaged. weatherization pr og ram s,
James' proposal , H.B. 470, and have weatherized more
calls for an Energy Con- thHn 5,000 homes in the past
servation and Retrofit Effort 15 montl1s. But those federal
(ECARE ) program w be fun ds are lim it ed in that !lO
administered through the t"'rt~nt uf the money must be
Deparlment of Econom ic and t~ e d to pu rchase materials
Community Development. md equipm ent, making it
Stale fund s would co m- ttiffit'ult to gel enough labor
p l ement
f e dera l tomake the best use of all the
weath erization f un ds and weatherizati on funds. Ohio
mil probably rece ive about
~uuld be channelled to the 48
$10
million in fed eral
O&gt;mmWlfty At'\ion Agencies
weatherizati
on fund s this
in the state. Accordin g to
oomin
g
year,
according to
Hames, ·these agencies have
Ja mes .
"My bill stipulates that
most o[ the stat e funds must
re spent lor hir ing persons to
Agents attended
do the job, then th e
rem ai nder can be spent for
March seminar
extra materials and equipGALLIPOLIS - Lo ca 1 ment," James said .
insurance agents David S.
"The rece nt energy and
McCoy and Dottie L. McCoy weather situation has shown
were recognized as leading tLo; the severe hard sh ips
agents for The Ohio Mutual suffered by the el derly,
Insurance Association and handicapped and low income
United Ohio Insura nce re'idents and we can help by
Company and for their out- provid in g weatherization
standing service performed
in their community at the
company's annual seminar
March 18 and 19 at the
Marriott Inn in Columbus.
The semin ar inst ruct ed
agents on what's new in in·
surance lor the year and were
shown ways to improve their
agency. The agents were
complimented for serving
their communities and for
accepting and living up to
their responsibility as an
insurance consultant.

mater ials for their homes,"
ll! continued.
Weatherization

storm windows, ston11 doors
or rna teria Is
designed

jl'imarily to improve the
heating or cooling efficiency
ria dweUing unit. in cluding,
rut not limited to. ceiling,
wa ll , fl oor and dust insu lat ion, caulking and
weather stripping.
James pointed out that the
major

empha sis of the
l~isl a t ion is t o u~ funds for

a preventiv e and lasting

jl'ogram.
"Once the weathe rir.aliun
job is rune. it lasts and
jl'ovides energy sav ings from
then on,'' Jam es said , "that

ll!lps all o( us."
James added that em(ioy mmt opportuntties will
regenerat ed by the ECARE
lill.
' 'C ommunity

well as con sumers ," he said.

The ECARE bill has these

"I believe the Ohio C: ~ P eral
A"'fH:rnhly's swift a&lt;:t1vn on

thi s bill would be a long
la&gt;ling effo1t to really meet
the energy conservatio n
challenge fac ing all the
" lizcns of this nation and
state," James concluded.

COMEANCSEE
Ca p Kif T r ocl4 Caps -

J ust

ar rive d , lar ge selection.
Cricket Truck Camp er s.
Mapl e L ea f Spaccmaker ;
at '&gt;o SwiB Colony and
Pl ayMor lines.

From Rout e 1 or Racine
tak e Me1gs 28 to

Ba '&gt; han

nnd lollo w sig ns to

CODNER'S
CAMPERS
Rai nb ow Ridg e
Lonq Bott o m

POMEROY LANDMARK

FIRST FOR ALL YOUR POWlR EQUIPMENT

8 HP FRONT ENGINE.
ELECTRIC ·START 30"
Big 8-horse Br i'ggs &amp; ~ tratton eng ine
plus 4-speed tre~nsm i ssio n let s you
tra vel at speeds up to 8 mph for fast.
efficient mowing . Qu ic k and easy
shift select ion , handling is smooth
an d r esponsive with big 15"
pneumatic rear tires. Set-up and
de li very extra . (78·2274) Regularl y
!607.95 .

PUSH MOWERS
20" 3 HP M&lt;YNer Briggs
&amp; Stratton eng ine. steel
deck, si de discha r ge, 7"
wheels, loop handle . 128·
2200 1

•

~

...·

$7495

Outdoor Equipment Sales
60 Sycamore St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-3670

TURF-TILL TILLERS
l lf1 HP .Gear Dr ive
Tim e-pro ven
de sign
with vertical gear case
and 31n HP Br iggs &amp;
Stratton eng ine .· 26"
ti l l ing
width ,
12"
di am eter
tines ,
ad justa ble depth bar .
Easy - reach
clu tch
co nl rol. (28 · 2202)
Regularl y $209.30

..

SPECIAL

$16
· HOMELITE

Corne In and See Our

CHAIN SAWS
XL·W/10" BlADE

Hours
9 a.m. to S p.m. Weekly
9 to noon Saturdays

Appropriates 110
million for the biennium.
- Not more t han' 3 percent
of fund s may be expended by
DECO for adm inistrative
msLs.
Co mmunity Action
Agonci!)S arc limited to 7
Jl'rc~nt admittistrative costs.
- Materials and equipment
rurcha'"s would be limited to
~ per cen ll o40pcrcentofthe
want.
- l.1b or costs would be 50
Jl'r&lt;'ent to iO percent of the
i!TH nt.

SEE

GRAVELY!

Phone 992-2975

Atti on

Age nciffi will hire from the
un employment .rank s and
from those who meet U1e
federally established poverty
index. Tltis will be one effort
to move people from public
a'sistance roUs to payrolls.
making them producers as

TODD-GETA

Gravely Tractor Sales
204 Condor Sf.
Pomeroy, Ohio

includes

acquisition and installation of

IFYDU·HAVE
GARDENING

It's the chdrte of the pros- for a lot
. of good reasons. AGravely tractor is tough enough
to take on any JOb and come oock asking for more.
You can plow a perfect seedbed in one operation .
cultivate, spray. compost or mow w•th a cho•ce of
attachments And our exclusive all-gear drive rs
designed and built to be durable and dependable.
No belts to slip, come loose or break . If you have b•g ·
garden work to do-get a Gravely f•rst'

trovi sirns:

Reg. 1114.95

NOW ONLY

$8495

Complete Selection of Bulk

Garden Seeds. Seed Potatoes
and Onion Sets

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
Phone 992-2181
Store HouiS: Open 8:30-5:30. ·

Mill Closes at 5

�• •

A-11- The Swtdav Times-Sentitwl. Sunday . March 27. !977

;·~»~·:·:;··~·:::;~"*::~~;·~·~:==v~······~····················· ·······-·.w.·.······:·:·:,·:·•·:····..·~·~'(:·...•.

I"'
~·

:S:
·&gt;.

~~;
·

'l
i&lt;• :-·

t.h·: •-.- ..B·.-..... . .... . . d. . . . . . . -.-.~
t e en ~
,...
'

'Q&amp;a£
·

By Bob Hoeflich

·-

•

~~;

SENI0 R CITIZENS' SCENES
c:U~~~~~~il-;;n~:in~~~i1 ht~~e~~:~~;~eplace ~~~~~~nf~~~~~~ ~~~a~e~~~~
broken

again sponsor the Hom e
Program
Th "
beginning June I.
IS
program is provided for all
persons age 60 or older and is
based on the recipient's in·

:::: Main t enance
:_-!:.!.

....

POMEROY - Ken Grover, loca l professional
photographer, has returned from the 24th annual convention of
Professional Photographers of Ohio held at the Sheraton
Columbus Motor Motel, Columbus, March 19-21.
While there Ken attended seminar programs on
comptercial, industrial, portraits, negative retouching and
wedding photography . One full day, Ken was fortnnate to
spend with Rocky Gunn of Los Angeles, eam., a professional
wedding photographer.
.
Gunn formerly worked in photography at University
Motion Pictures and has now applied his skill of movie
photography to create anew concept in wedding photography.
Gunn started 1n wedding photography in 1972 and in 1916
photographed over 300 weddings,

t.'O me.

The Hom e Maintenance
Program was eatablished to
promote minor repairs to the
home. No new construction is
provided. The individual who
qualifies for home main·
tenance must provide all
material s used and the
program will provide the
labor. either paid or volun·

or rot ton porch steps. risers. water heaters.
floors, sills, rails and paint.
- Replace · or repa ir
Roruot"r water pumps or electrical circuits. etc.
'""
- Mt"nor foundation repairs,
systems. replace washers in

offe1•

'

inside floor s, walls, ceilings, CitiZens will not quality.
A spaghetti supper will be
and minor inside carpentry,
If you have questi ons served at the Senior •Citizens
concerning this program or Center Wednesday, April 6,
have repairs that will need to from 4 to 1 p.m. Tickets are
be taken care of, call992-7886. on sale for $2 for adults and
Remember , there are income $1.20 for children under 12.
guidelines that must be All proceeds go towards
followed , so all Senior supporting the Senior

yo•~r

Citizens Programs.
If you ne.ed something
special for an Easter Basket,
stop in at the Center Aprll5, 6
and 1. These are the days of
our armual Easter Bazaar
and Senior Citizens have been
creating many beautiful '
articles.

The following are examples
the Home Maintenance can
provide :
AND AMONG .OTHER TRAVELF;RS have been Chuck
- Replace loose or missing
and Daisy Blakeslee, home from spending six weeks at Winter shingles, roofing and repair
Haven, Sanibel Island and Key West, Fla.
fla shings and valley with roof
According to the Blakeslees - and remember, Chuck was cement.
the local agricultural agent for years - the damage to the
- Patch and re-nail gutter
orange crop at Winter Haven was much less than reported. and downspouts.
The Blakeslees did enjoy the shelling on Sanibel which is one of
- ReJYair or replace broken
the three best shelling beaches in the world.
or rotten window sash and
sills. Replace glass and glaze.
EVERYTHING'S COMING up roses for the musical Repair windQw screens.
production at the Chester Elementary School next Saturday
- Repair outsi~e doors,
· night at 8.
Some 24 acts have been lined up to present a variety type
program and sixth graders, who will be joined llY some junior
high schoolers, will present a minstrel show carrying out a
clown theme. Mothers of sixth graders will hold a bake sale
during the event. The point of the activity is to raise funds to
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
help some 25 members of the school's safety patrol make a trip National Center for Disease
to Washington, D. C. this spring .
Control in Atlanta has
'
teamed up with the state
BILL HOWARD, A MANAGER with Stiffler's Department health department
to
Stores, is patient at University Hospital in Columbus where determine why Ohio doctors
he underwent open heart surgery. Bill would probably like to are seeing an increased
hear from you.
number of Reye's Syndrome

'

James Marks of the state
health department, Ohio has
had about 25 confirmed and
probable cases of the syndrome.

Membership Dues
--Adult(s)at $10.00each
--Student( s) at $5.00 each
--Senior Citizen (over 60) at $5.00 each
--Family at $30.00 ea&lt;h

Please
Nrune

t•nloniul

$
How many times have you wanted to Invite guests for the
weekend but co uldn 't because you had no extra room or bed?
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•

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'

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''

____~:__J

jayne Anne Wigglesworth

PUPPETS TO PERFORM- The Theatre West Virginia's marionette production "The
Emperor's New Clothes" will appear at the Mason Public Library on Saturday, April2 at 2
·p.m. These hand crafted marionettes (string puppets ) in elegant costumes of the Orient
bring to life the popular tate of the emperor who wouldn't believe his own eyes.

Make checks payable to:
Tri-Cowity Community Concert
Association, Inc.
Indicate type of membership :
MemberName ---------------MemberName-.~--------~--­

MemberNwne---------------MemberNwne----------------

send

my

membership

cards

to :

Address------------

for Miss Ohio FHA title

yo•••· choice

t r1ull t I ttll a I

Midd/e

,

GALLIPOIJS - Miss Pam
Slayton, a senior at Gallia
Academy High School, is one
rl the seml·finaUsts competing for the Miss Ohio FHA
1977 title.
~·
Two finalists will·be chosen
!his weekend at the FHA
spring rally being held in
lancaster. Miss Slayton was
chosen to represent her
district at lhe fall VEPD
{Vocation Education Planning District) meeting at
Buckeye Hills Career Center,
November 20. Miss Kathy
Yoho was selected as first
runner-up . The VEPD in·
dudes high schools froin
Vmton, Jackson , Oak Hill,
Meigs, Hannan \race, North
Gallia, Southern South·
western, Wellston, Kyger
Creek, Eastern, BHCC and
GAHS. The two finalists will
compete at the state con·
vention
In
Columbus
followitll completion of all
state railles, where the new
Miss Ohio FHA 1977 will be
&lt;Yowned and presented' to the
mtire state convention.
The new Miss Ohio FHA
will be required to attend all
13 days of the Ohio State Fair
(August !6-28, 1977), and will
be the main public relations
representa.tlve for .FHA·
HERO at fhe fair. She will be
interviewed on TV, radio, and
by the press, make personal
appearances at the grand·
stand and other fair
programs and activities,
er:plalnlng the FHA·HERO
and the Vocatlonal Home
Economics exhibits to people
throughout the fairgrounds.
She will .also participate In
lhe Ohio State Fair Queen
Contest. She will attend
dta~er meetings and rallies
f!troughout the state, conduct
workshops and make guest
appearances. The reigning
Miss Ohio FHA Is Miss
LOrraine Sullivan, from
Fairbanks ,High School.
)JI111 Slayton was one rl the
• 1,200 delegates selected from
a half-rnlillon nationally to ·
attend the FHA National
LEadershipMeetlng last June
in St. 111uis, Mo. Selected as a
leadership meeting delegate
is one of the highest honors a
FliA or · HERO , chapter
member can achieve.
Qiterla for selection Include
rtCholastlc ochlevement ' In
b!me economics ud atra·
curricular aetlv]\let and
demonstration of high perIIOrial high standards. 'nlere
4re more than 12,1100 FHA
' ud HERO chapten of
Future , Homemakers of
America nationwide. MIA
Slayton participated In
leadership training

1
I
I
I

\.

Pam Slayton competing

t'tJJ~I~·SIZt: SI.I~F.:I•EilS

lively debate on slavery

R

l·

'

Membership cards and reciprocal concerts IIBt will be seot.later. Admission to all concerts
is by membership ooly. .

Vinton newspaper fostered

April 2nd

Keith Suiter, second vice
president; Clarence Head,
third vice president; Joe
Miller,
treasurer; Clyde
Mitchell, publicity chairman;
Mrs, Joe Moch, execuilve
secretary; Mrs. Charles
Holzer, Sr.; Mrs. W. Lewis
Brown, Mrs. Marguerite
Meier, Janet Bailey, Mrs.
Harris Doeppirig, Edwin E.
Higgins, Kenneth Davis, Rev.
Scott · Westerman, Mrs .
Rodney Downing, Mrs. Pat
Lochary, Mrs. E. Bartow
Jones.

Phone---------

ASK TOWED
POMEROY - Marriage
THERE WAS A GOOD TURNOUT Wednesday night for licenses have been issued to
the opening rehearsal of the Big Bend Minstreal Association 's Scotty Wayne Ray , 18,
spring show. However, more and more ladies are needed to Dexter , and Bonnie Lou
sing in the vocal chorus and a few more teen dancers are Jewell. 17, Dexter; David
needed also.
Leon Smith, 18, Rt . I, ReedsRehears&amp;s are being held in the vocal music room of ville , and Rita Darlene
Meigs High School and there is a side entrance so you really Burchfield , 26, Rt. 3, Athens ;
don't have to enter the school at the front. The next rehearsal Michael Ray Meadows, 24 ,
will be at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Do feel free to join the group for the Pomeroy, and Cynthia Kay
1
April 23 show. We'd love to have ya !
Novak, 25, Pomeroy, and to
Charles Hubert Hoschar, 22,
I'LL BE GLAD WHEN Margaret and Mickey get that
Rt'. 2, Racine, and Teresa
class reunion over with, won't you •
Jean Dillon , 18, Mason ..

•
Rush night of

.

Enclosed is my check for
in payment of membership dues for the 1977-78 Tri·
County Community Concert Season.

But, since Jan . 1, says Dr.

insight into the poli tical and the dry goods store of
By James Sands
GA.LLIPOLIS - In 1855 the history of the county. It also James Hamilton.
Also in town on' the third
first .paper in Gallia county to gives us insight into what
street
north was the chairbe printed outside of Vinton was like just before
making
shop of Columbus
Gallipolis went to press. It the Civil War.
James.
The Presbyterian
If we were coming into
was the "Ga"llia Republican ,"
church.
and
the Universalist
published at Vinton by A. T. Vinton from Gallipolis, we
church
were
also on this third
would see as we apHolcomb.
street.
The Gallipolis Journal proached Raccoon Creek
accused
the
Gallia a wagon-making shop Vinton had an active
north
and Masonic lodge. AT Holcomb
Republican of being an to ·· the
abolitionist paper . It was not. a cooper shop to the south. was the master in 1855. OfThe paper supported th e Near the bridge we would ficers were Henry E(lton ,
Stephen Wilcox, John E.
county Republican platform have seen a sawmill.
Crossing the bridge, we Holcomb, William Symmes,
which opposed the extension
of slavery into new states. would see immediately to the Noble Mathews, William
and
Phineas
Most Gaiiia Republicans did south the tannery of Phineas Turner ,
Mathews.
not favor doing away with Matthews. ·Farther down the
Vinton had its own market
slavery in the south. Their first side street was the
place.
Prices were flour at 4
reason was that this might tinsmith shop of George
cents
a
pound, corn 25 cents a
jeopardize the Constitution Rupp. Rupp made and sold
bushel,
sugar
9 cents a pound,
whi ch had all owed for tin sheet, iron and copper
eggs
18
cents
a dozen , and
ware as well as stoves,
slavery.
coffee
15
cents
a pound.
1855 was a year of tension grates, and hollow ware.
for Ohioans as three parties Down from Rupp was the
ran a candidate for governor. shoemaker shop of the
The campaign was as tough brothers Norton (Seth and
as any Ohio has ever had. . Nelson). Across the street
Slavery was one of the big from the shoemaker was the
issues. Because of the Gallia harness shop. Going back up
Republican, Vinton became a that street toward the main
hotbed for political debate. road was Vinton High School
At one of the county started in 1850 and Vinton
Republican meetings held in Academy founded in 1834. On
Vinton under the chair· the • corner was the
manship
of
Pennel blacksm ith shop.
To the north on the first ,
Cherrington, the party
street
closest to the Raccoon
discussed how it mi ght
were
the
grist mill, sawmill
clearly define its position so
and
carding
mill of James
as not to be accused of
McGhee.
Ashur
"Hamilton
abolitionism.
was
then
running
the
ca rding
That same week the Vinotn
mill
and
charged
5
cents
per
Lyceum meeting at th e
pound,
or
every
se
venth
'
Vinton High School debated
pcund
of
rolls.
Also
on
that
for several hours, ~~ The
Missouri Compromise." Also street was the hotel.
On the next side street, and •
that week, several Vinton
to
the south in this order were IS
residents traveled to Porter
the
stores of George Shack
to attend the Kansas Aid
and
William Sym mes, a
ineeting to find ways to help
lawyer's
office, the Holcomb
The Meigs Chapter, Order
the people who were suffering
and
Matthews
store
,
the
of
DcMoiay, will meet in
civil war in that state.
Methodist
church
and
the
Middl
eport Masonic Hall,
Later that year the Gallia
Republican carried news of ca rpentry shop of S. · North Second Ave. for its
the county meetings of the Holcot:1b, who made bureaus, annual rush night April 2, at
Free Soil and thr Know tables a.'d .•lands. At the end 7:30 p.m. with all members
Nothin~ parties. In the final of the b1oc k wa s At urgedtoa ttendnoiaterthan7
voti ng for governor in Hokomb's store, newspaper , p.m . All master ma sons
welcome also. Scott Reuter is
H11ntington township , Chase offi ce and lawyer's office.
To the north on that second maste r counc ilor, Eric
received 75 votes, Medill
(Democrat) 68, and Trimhie side street was William Scit•s, senior counrilor, and
(Whig ) 51.
. Potter's grocery, Alfred fla ll•s Sayre, juninr ronnThe Vinton paper gives an James' cabinetmakin~ shop, f'ilor

.I
I

II

--New Membership

Tri-County CommunitY Concert Aasoc.
Attn: Mrs. Donald llippensteel
P. 0 . Box 771
'
GalllpollB, Ohio 45631

cases.

MEMBERS OF OlllO ETA PHI CHAPTER of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will be holding their Easter egg and bake sale on
April9, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the New York Clothing House. If
coloring your own eggs seems like a bit of task this year, call
Sheila Reeves, 992-2449, or Maurisha Nelson, 992-1313, and
they 'll take your order. Deadline for orders, however , is April
8.

Lower Basin Street. In
addition new members will
be wllowed to attend the
concert
of
Thomas
Schumacher April 22. This
will be the inaugural recital
of the association's new
grand plano. All concerts are
held at the Gallla Academy
Hlglt School auditorium and
admission is by membership
· ooly.
The Tri.county Community
Concert Assoclatioo, which
now comprises Jackson,
Gallla and Meigs counties in
Ohio and Mason County in

-~-Renewal Membership

a

The disease. which usually
occurs in children under 16,
has a 25-30 per cent mortality
rale. It generally follows a
viral mfection and is usually
very rare.

Sarah Carsey Charlene Hoeflich
· 446-2] 42
992-215 6

·II

hOme of Mrs. Leo Bean.
First board members were

~,orld

~Eh:.~~;:e~~£i ~:~t~~s!%~ s~~::~~~:n¥:::a: L~~~:~~~~t ~~~~--~:e_::

Grande College cafoterla.
Mrs. John (Chrla) Epling,
GalllpollB, is in charge of the
event, ·which will feature
pianist David Ehrman, as
entertainment.The
association
membership drive will
continue through April 2,
Those persons not contacted
by a volunteer worker may
obtain Information and
memberships by calling 44&amp;2134 or by visiting the
association headquarters at
16 State St., GalllpllB. Mrs.
Donald Hippensteel Is drive

Rare disease
heavy in Ohio

THE FIRST HYPERTENSION clinic will be held Friday
nigbt from 5 to 1 and Saturday morning, 9-12, next weekend
with Nita Wisniski, R.N ., Meigs County Health Department, in
charge. During the hours of the clinic to be held in the lobby of
Pomeroy National Bank , you can have your blood pressure
taken free of charge.

woman 's

II

:O~a::a':- t!'~e::wfr~ t r~~e:!s se~~~~ ~~rtJo~~ :=ct~eld~ov~, I':;c.::t:;;: I

..
· 1917-78 membership soloists performing classical
campaign.
and modem music; gultarlal,

fltation'
I

Concert association opening
.77-78 membership campaign
0

guests an

'

'

GALUPOIJS - The Trl- chalnnan.
\
West VIrginia, was formed
County Community Concert
Scheduled on the 1977-78 October, !IM7 with the first

for the weekend!

teer.

r-_,._.._.,. ___._. ._. _. _. _____. .__.._. _. __..__.______, -· -1

R-1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. Mard1 27. 1971

PAM SLAYTON
workshops and values
darlfication activttles. She
also studied the expanding
role of home economics in our
ronsumer-&lt;Jriented society.
Her activities In scqool
have included GaDia Script
salesman, Galllan editorial
staff, GaUian business staff,
lliternate gymleader, office
aide and SciEnce 111d Photo
Cub. She has beEn a chapter
member of FHA for four
years where she has held the
&lt;ifices of secretary, vice
rresident II, and is currently
rresident. Site was selected
rutstandl~ sophomore, girl
of the month, and was
selee[ed as ·a state officer
candidate 1975-1976. She has
attended three state con·
ventions and was selected as
me of the 72 delegates to
represent the State of Ohio at
lhe national convention. She
was also chosen as a voting
delegate at this convention to

Moth~rs

select the national officers for
lhe !!117-1978 convention.
She has received her Junior
.and Cltapter Degrees and bas
been ~ member of the Nor·
lhup Lassies 4-H club, where
!lte has held the offices of
secretary, trea3urer, public
relations, vice president, and
is currently the club's
rresident. She was a Girl
Scout for 10 years and
assisted with , a ·Brownie
Troop for two years.
Miss Slayton has also been
a member ol the Gallla
County Junior Fair Youth
Board for two years as a
representative for FHA, She
worked as a volunteer at the
Gallia County Headstart ·
Program for three summers,
has done volunteer work at
the Gallipolis State Institute
md collects annually for
different civic projects In the
oomm111ky.
She wsa named to the
"Who's
Who
Among
American ijlgh School
Students" during her junior
year ltld is a candidate again
this year. She served on the
"PRIDE" Review Com·
mittee for the Home
Economics Department
during the !975-1916 school
year .. Pam has been accepted
It Ohio,University where she
will major In Home
Economics, (Human Environment and O.slgn,
Furnishing• and Design,
Textiles and Glothings).
Miss Sla'yton · Is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
NathanSiaytoo, Jr., Northup,
1t1d the granddaughter of
Mrs.
Mary
Slayton,
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Florence
Reynolds, Middlepcrt. Her
great-grandmother, Mrs.
Mlmle Clark, also resides In
Middleport.
'

League meets
I

GALLIPOLIS
The the fair. It wu noted that the
ProafeUl¥11 Mother's Lea8ue fair irlll run form days.

meeting Tuesday at the home
of Mrs. David Kerns wu
called to order by the
president, Mrs. Lloyd
Danner, with the members
reciting the League Prayer.
Members voted to donate
$25 to the Guiding Hand
adtoollo be Uled to promote
t1111r lnJ bl June. A dcutiiil
"'• ~, the ICbJiarlhlp loin

Aletter from Mrs. Ctarles
Bostic, South Central,
O.C.C.L. district prealdent
Will r• . She encouraged the
memberl to attend the Spring
Con(erence 111 April I&amp;. '!bote
goO. will . be Mrl. lloyd

o.nner,

~. lUck Moody,
Mn. David Kema and. Mrl.
1.-rr Re!QIIIII'.
•
wwe lllrVed

' Mr"''%'.!!

fluid ,.. al10 made.
flo M n l l * I aDd two
w~· and 11111111 cilacu.cl au~~&amp;~, ·~SUJtm
the upcOillinl horae shows Ill and !tfh. Terry Hemmer.
May 21 and 211, .and the
Nell IJIIII!Ih'a meetin8 Ia
lhe
~ of afllcera ind
"""""'" cllclded to run the
laod lluaUI CJII U.. two dlpa.
bt"'llld· at tbe bclne of
'Die club ' will alao hive • lin. Qlnld ~.
• pial boo1IJ apln tbll year at

il-"

ww

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wigglesworth, 600
Fith Ave., Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Jayne Anne, to
William Keith Bond, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bond,
Rt. 2, Cheshire. The wedding will be an event of Apri) 23 at
2p.m. at the First Baptist Church. The custom of an open
church wedding will be observed. Miss Wigglesworth is a
1976 graduate of Holzer School of Nursing, and Is
presently employed as a registered nurse at Holzer
Medical Center. Mr. Bond is presently employed at the
Holzer Medical Center X-ray department.

Marionette production slated National s eaker
P l
slated at /V'c.-J')V"Va

MASON, W. Va. - The
Theatre West Virginia
production of "The Em·
peror's New Clothes" will he
·shown at the Mason Public
Library on Saturday, April 2,
at 2 p.m.
'.'The Emperor's New
Clothes" is a full scale
marionette production with
stereophonic sound. Written
by Charlotte Charpenning,
"The Emperor's New
Clothes" has been adapted
for marionettes by Theatre

West Vtrgmta .
Twelve hand crafted
marionettes in elegant
costumes of the Orient bring
to life the popular tale of the
Emperor who wouldn't
believe his own eyes.
Two rogues, Zar and Zan,
arrive at a far eastern city
looking for adventure. They
· meet two weavers who are
being cheated by the Em·
peror's Minister. For adventure, they undertake to
expose the Minister to the

West Virginia program
heard by club members
GALLIPOLIS Mrs.
Douglas Mullineaux had
artistically decorated her
home wit~ jonquils and many
miniature
lambs
for
welcoming spring and en·
tertaining the Riverside
Study Club for its regular
meeting Tuesady.
Following a dessert course,
which included decorated
·cookies of lions and lambs,
and a social hour, the
preSident, Mrs. Florence
Wickline, called the meeting
to order. The club collect was
led by Mrs. John Allen. The
first four amendments of the
United states Constitution,
including Freedom of
Religion, Speech and the
Press; Right to Keep and
Bear arms; Quartering of
Soldiers and Security from
Unwarrantable Search and
Seizure, were read by Mrs.
Julia Lelmann.
Mrs. Allen introduced Mrs.
M. T. Epling, Sr. who had the
program for the afternoon.
Mrs. Epling had chosen for
her subject "Tours of West
VIrginia." She started her
talk by giving the reasons for
the separation from Eastern
Virginia.
They
were
geographically,
culturaily
and politically different.
Being a molll\tainous state,

Emperor , return to the
weavers aU that is due them,
and in general, make fools of
everyone who won't believe
f
what they see.
Theatre West Virginia was
Bill
GALLIPOLIS
founded in 1912 by John S.
Gebrosky
from
Wi
chita,
Benjamin. It is the state's
only professional touring Kansas, win be holding a
repertory company and is · revival starting April 3
supported, in part, by the lhrough 10 at 7:30 each
West Virginia Arts and . evening at the Bulaville
Humanities Council and the htdependent Church.
Gebrosky
has
been
West Virginia Legislature.
The produ ction will be featured oo radio, TV's "700"
shown· free to the public aub with Pat Robertson and
through the courtesy of the the PTL Club four times with
Mason Mother's Club, Mason Jim Baker. He speaks in high
Extension Homemakers, schools, · colleges, grade
Helping Hand Extension schools, churches of all
Homemakers and Betty's faiths, jails, missions and
conventions. He is a song
Beauty Boutique.
writer and the author of two ·
books.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;
Brother Bill is of Polish
descent and God uses his
GOSPEL SING SET
POINT PLEASANT, W. . huritor and his poetry to
Va.- The inspirations will reach the lost "for Jesus. He
sing at Point Pleasant High comes by faith, lives by faith, .
School Sunday at 2 p.m. and teaches faith.
The son of a Kentucky
under the sponsorship of
rroooshiner
and a former
the Point Pleasant Rescue
alcoholic,
B
iU
is also a past
Squad. Tickets are
available at the door for $4 httemational Director of the
each, and children 1% and FuU Gospel Business Men's
under are admitted free. Association.
All persons interested In a ·
· gospel singing afternoon
are Invited to aHend.

•

It

West Virginia could not
develop plantations. They
were an adventurous, in·
dependen_t, pioneer people,
BILL GEBROSKY
who did not favor slavery.
Virginia was responsible for
setting the boundary lines for
Bill &amp;ates, "Every need at
the division of the states.
lhe meetings will be met by
Interesting places
t)te Holy Spirit . Bring all your
described by Mrs. Epling
friends and neighbors who
included the several glass
have needs. Our Lord is so
factories, the . Maountaineer
~od to His people and all who
Theater, Grafton, the home of
will come to Him."
Anna Garvis, founder of
"Mother's Day," several
state parks including Black
Water Fails, Pipe Stem and :::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:: :; :: :;:;:::: :;: ;:;~;:;:;:; : ;:::::;:;:
Hawks Nest the Cannan Ski
Resort , ·Dolly Sods (a
wilderness area held by the
State of West "Vlrginia ); the
National Radio Astrology
Observatory, koown as the
CORA
The Cora lhe last meeting were read by
"Big Ear" in Pocahontas
•
Women's Society of Christian fhe secretary, Sharon JefCounty, and Berkeley
Workers met at the home of fers, and approved.
Jo-Ann Burns,- gave the
Springs, first known by the .
Mrs. Sylvia Gilliam for the
SYRACUSE - Mr. and March meeting. Mrs. Anice treasurer's report. Due to the
Indians for relief of arthritis,
inclement
weather the
and later the Summer White Mrs. William Eichinger of Wood was co-hostess.
House for President George Syracuse will celebrate their
A covered dish dinner was March meeting was the first
Washington, where he took tlth wedding anniversary on enjoyed ~t noon by 15 meeting of the year so
baths in the Mineral Springs. Sunday, Aprll3, wtth an open members and gues~s, Mrs. pledges were paid by the
Mrs. Epling ended her talk by reception at the Asbury Sandy Taylor, Amanda and members. Pledge month is
giving the Legend of United Methodist Church, !iterri, Brandi Hoff, Brian usually February.,
Secretary Sharon Jeffers
· Snowbird, the Indian Prln· Syracuse.
md Teresa Ahizer, J. R.
Hosting the celebration will Burns, Cathy McGuire, said !lte could no longer serve
cess of Seneca Rock.
,
as secretary, so the group
The meeting adjourned to by their daughters, Mrs . Roger and Floyd Evans.
reconvene April 12 at the Dlyle (Mary Jane) Gibbs and
Mrs. Lawrence Evans, the elected Glady s Akers to
home of Mrs. Howard Mrs. Unda Boyd, Parkers- rew president, called the replace her .
burg, W. Va., and Mrs. Roger meeting to order. Minutes of
Due to the illness of Etta
Leimann.
(Nancy) Hubbard, Syracuse;
Altizer the new officers will
ltld their son, John WiUiam
be formally installed at the
Eichinger, Parkersburg, W.
rext
meeting.
IN GOOD SHAPE
Va .
Thanks
fr om Lawrence
POMEROY - Mrs. Golda
Mr. and Mrs. Eichinger
Akers
,
Ray
Jeffers and
were married March 28, 1937 Mourning Roush of Pomeroy Stanley Wood for the fruit
POMEROY - Mrs. Velma council.
The chapter voted to • Pomeroy. Mr. Eichinger Is and Worthington is in good
Rue was elected president
spoosor
a student at Buckeye 1111ployed at the State Hlglt- condition at Riverside tllskets at Christmas time
the Preceptor Beta Beta
were expressed.
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi at Boys' state again this year. way Department. They have Methodist Hospital where she
Several items of business
is confined with a broken hip
Co·hostesses with Mrs . 5 ve grandchildren.
a meeting Thursday night al
were
discuss.ed Including the
Relatives and friencls d .the received in a fall recently. decillion to pay the taxes on
the home of Mrs. N~~~~ Brown were Mrs. Ruby Baer
and Mrs. Karr.
oouple are Invited .to call Cards may be sent to Room the community, building. '!be
Brown.
Wl'lng lite reception hours of 2011 in care of the hospital, business meeting closed by
Other officers named were
Olentangy River Road.
2- to 4 p.m.
Mrs. Betty Ohlinger, vice
nRST CHILD BORN
praying the W.S.C.W.
president; Mrs . Mildred
GALUPOUS - Mr. and
Prayer. Zee Altizer was in
Karr,secretary; Mrs. Norma · Mrs. Marvin Wickline Jr. ;: ;:; :;:::; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~::
dtorge of the program. She
Amsbary, treasurer, Mrs. (formerly Marsha Cox),
BUFFET PLANNED
read "He May CO(IIe Today."
SUNDAY DEADLINE
WILKESVILlE - A buffet
June
Van
Vranken, Eureka
Star
Route,
Florence GIIbert read the
Ttte deadllae for "edding supper will be held on Satur·
corresponding secretary; Gallipolis, are announcing
!l!ripture
taken fi"JIII St. Luke
aad eagagemfnt Hlices day at the Wilkesville
and Mrs. Rose Sisson, dty the firth of their ilrst chUd, a
chapter
12 :3:·40. Sharon
and IIOdety news HeiDI for Pythian Sisters hail. Charge
daughter, Melissa Dawn,
Jeffers read "VIsited Planet" '
the Stmday Timt~~-$entlnel for aditlts will he ~-50 and for about the coming of Christ to
March 22 at Pleasant Valley
Is 1% DOOII OD the Thursday children, $1.50, for the menu
Hospital. The baby 'weighed
oorth. The group sang "What
precediDC
publication. of ham, meat loaf, chicken a Frimd we Have in Jesus."
nine pounds, three and oneELECTION PLANNED
Information may be turned and noodles. salads , Daisy Evans read Psalm 1
half oonces and was 22 inches
MIDDlEPORT - Election long. Maternal grandparents
ID or mailed to the office ol vegetables, pies, coffee, tea,
111d 2 and a short discussion
rl officers will be held when we Mr. and Mrs. Ranford
tbe Gallipolis Dally and lemunaid. The supper is of the book of Psalms
lite Oh·Kan Coin Club meets Cox, Northup. Paternal
Tribune or Poma-oy Dally public and the price covers
followed .
.
• 7:30 p.m. Monday in lite wandpan!1118 are Mr. alld
SeDiillel. Epgagcmeat anJI everything one can eat.
The
next
meeting
wUI be ·
rrocial room of the Columbus Mrs. Marvin Wickline. &amp;:.•
weddmg · forma
are
Apr.il
15
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
It Southern Ohio Electric Co., Galllpo118. Matemal greatavailable upoo requesL
Aru1a
Mae
Morgan
wtth
Mrs.
Mill St., Middleport. Out-of· grandpa rents . are Mrs.
Velma
Ellis
as
ro-hostesli.
HERE
FOR
VISIT
town coin . dealers wW be Almira Coli, Gallipolis and
MIDDlEPORT - Mr. and Bible Study will be Psalms
PATIENT AT HMC
(J'esent to buy, sell, or trade · Mr. and Mrs. Shelly Slone,
Mrs.
Mark Miller of Tempe, 4, 5 and 6. Bible study leaders
POMEROY - Walter
mllector items and a 49-watt, . Crown City. Paternal greatArizona,
arrived here ThUrs- will be Etta Altizer, Regina
coin auctici1 will follow the grandparents are Mr. and Morris is a medical patient at
day
for
a
visit with relatives. Aken; and Leone Burnett.
meetiJIII. There wlll· be Mra. Forrest Wickline, the Hol~er Medical Center.
Miller
is
formerly of Meigs , There will be a plant, seed
mreohments. At'ea resident• Gallipolis, and Mrs. Okall• Room 52! A. He was admitted
111d bulb exchange.
Thurr«lay .
County .
... Invited to attend .
Berkley of Newari&lt;.

h
Eic ingerS to
observe

Cora women meet
at Gilliam home

tJnntverSaty

«.

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�B-2- The Sunday TiJ~es-s~ntinel, Sunday, Man·h 27. 1~7'7

\

I Coming

::::::::::::::::::::=::::::o::::.&lt;'l·*'i:~~ml~

Ann judson Class gathers

~~... Events

Jl"ayers oy class members.
For program, Mrs. Ethel
!leele read a poem, "Deacon
Brown's Courtship." After
singing ~' There 's Joy In
Serving
Jesus •:
and
"Heavenly Sunlight," Mrs.
Mrs .. Mae Lawrence, gave Stella S811nders gave two
VISIT HERE
POMEROY - Mrs. Mary reports. The cia ss signed readi~s, "Too Busy" and :
Beatley and grandson, Rob- oards to be sent to Mrs. Joan "Contemplation." The •
bie, Newark, were visitors !ble and Mrs. Addie Archer meeting closed with prayer
this week of Miss Katie Gulh and donated $35 to the camp by Mrs. Ruby Lewis.
The oommlttee served
and other Pomeroy friends. fund ,
For
del'()tions,
Mrs.
Violet
refreshments
to 15 members
' The Beatteys are former
Teal
read
the
Easter
story
llld
one
guest,.
Mrs. Jos~ph "
residents.
followed by volunteer Godwin.

~=·

SUNDAY
REVIV AI. begins Sunday at
the Kings Chapel Church,
7:30 P-Ill- with the Rev. Orville Carrico preaching.
There will he special singing
each night including the
Gullet Family, Shaffer
Family, Joyfinders , Bride of
&lt;llrist Singers and Get All
Excited Singers . Pastor
Ernest Baker invites the
public.
VINTON Baptist Church will
bold a baptismal service
Sunday, 3 p.m.-at the Calvary
Baptist Church, Rio Grande.
IOONDAY
GALLIA Chapter Ohio Civil
TO WED -Mr. and Mrs. Earl George, Bidwell Route
Service Employees
I
and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed, Aurora, are annOUilCing
Association Monday, 7:30
the
engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
pm . at the Grande Squares
chUdren,
Janie
George
and Thomas F. Reed, hoth of
Club Room on Eastern
Columbus.
The
brlde~o-be
is a graduate of North Gallla
Avenue. Important meeting.
High
School
and
the
Gallipolis
Buslnesa College. Her
Election of officers will be
fiance
is
a
graduate
of
Kenyon
College.
The wedding will '
held.
be
an
event
of
April
16,
2:30
p.m.
at
Trinity
Episcopal
RIO Grande Memorial
Church,
East
Broad
and
South
Third
Sts.,
Columbus.
A
Association, Lynt Center
closed
reception
wi~
he
held
at
the
TQP
of
the
Center.
Classrooms, 7 p.m. Election
of officers. Public Invited.
REVIVAL starts Monday at
Faith Temple Omrch, Debby ?r====:::::::::::=====:=:==·=====·=·==:====·=·==:===:=====:·=====::::::·=====·=·=·:·= ===:::::::========================================:::::=::;:·====t\
Drive, Rt. 141, through April2 ::::
(
with Clarice Dillon preaching. Singers will include,
among others, the Heavens ;:;:
.
.
Best Singers and the Singing
Roar Family from Piketon.
Everyone Invited. Services
lie gin at 7:30 nightly.
::::
SUMMER baseball
GALUPOLIS - Officers emergency counseling serregistration Monday, 6:30
p.m. at the Green School were installed when the vice. The reasons a 24 hour
Gallia-Pt. Pleasant Welcome telephone service is sucgym. Bring application and
Wagon Newcomers Club met cessful is because it is free,
$3 fee.
Mnnday in the community oonfidential and anonymous.
TuESDAY
Crisis Line serves the
OPEN GATE Garden Club room of the Ohio Valley oounties of Gallia, Jackson
Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Bank, Jackson . Pike Branch.
President Pam Terrizzi and Meigs. Volunteers are
Carolyn Thompson, 7:30p.m.
called the meeting to order. needed and anyone interested
There will be a plant sale.
Teresa Bihl Installed each of mould contact the Mental
GREEN PTO Tuesday, 7:30 the office rs . They· are Health Center for app.m. Miss Yvonne Scally, prestdmt, Pam Terrizzi ; vice plications. The Crisis Une
school psychologist, will be president, Susie Bailey; number is 446-1851. A
the guest speaker and secretary. Debbie Tipple and question and answer period
musical selections by the fifth treasurer 1 Fran Shaw. .
followed . Mrs . Whitney 's
and sixth grade band will be
Debbie Tiwle gave tlie presentation. The meeting
pres~nted. All parents ensecretary' s report, and Fran adjourned and. refreshments
couraged to attend.
sliaw, treasurer; reported were served.
All Interested persons are
PEMBROKE CLUB, B p.m., $36.04 is the1present total in
urged
to attend the next
with Mrs. Gene Gloss. '
the treasury after all outmeeting
April 18 in the bank
AMERICAN Legion &gt;tanding bills were paid.
oomm!Dlity
room. For more
Auxiliary will meet at the Membership chairman Joy
home of Mabel Brown, 543 Atwood introdu ced four information call Teresa Bihl,
Third Ave. Th~ foreign guests present. Two of the 44&amp;-1937; Pam Terrizzi, 446relations program will he guests were from Pt. 4435; Nancy Ball 675-1929.
presented.
Pleasant and two were from
Rio Grande. Each guest gave
a brief description of her
background and interests.
I·
The 'membership was then
brought up to date on the
special interest groups by
each of the respective

janie George, Thomas Ree¢

Mrs. Doughs P. Becker

Mary Ruth Sa.uer
wedin December
MIDDLEPORT - Mary
Ruth Sauer, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Sauer,
Route 1, Middleport, and
Douglas Paul Becker,
D.V M ., of Rio Grande, son of
IX. and Mrs. Paul Becker,
Defiance, I!XChanged wedding vows in a double ring
ceremony at the Rutland
United Methodist Church at
2:30 p.m. on Saturday, Dec.
18.
The Rev. Robert Dam,.,hroder, Rio Grande Simpson Methodist Chapel and the
Rev. Wilbur Hilt, Rutland
United Methodist Church
pastor, officiated at the
ceremony.
Organist was Mrs. Edie
Ross and soloist was her
husband, Merlyn Ross, both
instructors at Rio Grande
College. The organ selections
were "I Love You Truly,"
'1klm's Song," "Tara," the

theme song from "Gone with
the Wind." Vocal selections
included "You'll Never Walk
A1one,'' ''If,'' 11 Let It Be Me,"
"Sunrise , Sunset," "Whither
Thou Goest ," " Wedding
Song," and " The Lord's
Prayer" as the couple
kneeled during the ceremony.
The church decorations
included lighted red candles
with holly in each d. the
windows. two seven branch
chimney candelabra accented with satin bows and
red carnations at the pulpit
and arrangements of peppermint carnations in milkglass containers on the choir
rail and organ. Vows .were
repeated beneath a go ld
finished arch entwined with
red carnations and greenery
caught with satin bows and
two satin doves.
Gi'len in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
in a gown of white organza
fashioned wtth a bodice of
Chantilly lace and featuring
Queen Anne neckline and
Renaissance sleeves. The
!d&lt;irt was designed with 1111
apron effect of Chantilly lace
and seed pearls .and flowed
iJto a chapel length train.
The bride wore a matching
mantilla of illusion edged
with lace. She carried a
colonial bouquet of red roses
and statis with cranberry red
ribbon streamers tied in
lovers' kilots. She wore a
diamond wedding bell
necklace, gift of the groom.
Carrying out the tradition of
something borrowed , the
bride wore a garter made by
the late Mrs. Charles Wise
and worn by Mril. Ron Logan
at her wedding.
Mis Joy Sauer served as
!TIIid of honor for h.er sister.
!ibe wore an antique gold
velvet gown fashioned with a
deep V neckline, empire
wailltline, mandarin collar,
aid full biahop sleeves with
wide buttoned cuffs. She
carried a colonial bouquet of
red carnation• and holly w(lh
cranberry red ribbon
Ill reamers.
The bridesmaids were
Roxanna Patterson, Parkers001-g, in a gown of Identical
ayle to the maid of honor In
cranberry red velvet, and
Marlene Harrison, Gallipolis,
in a ilreat green velvet IJIWDThty carried three minuet
ro•es with gold ribbon
otream ers and all wore sprigL
cl holly in their hair.
.
Amy Well, daughter ot Mr.
and Mrs. Deryl Well, Tuppers,
Plains, wu flower girl. Her
gown was gold and white
•

flowered with a gold weskit
and she wore a headband of
minuet roses. She carried a
\Illite·wicker basket with red
rose petals. All of the attendants
wore engraved
heart-shaped lockets, gifts of
the bride.
Bill Wells of Bidwell was
best man, and ushers were
Phil Becker, Cleveland,
lrother of the groom; David
Weber, Reedsville, cousin of
the !ride. J. R. Walker, son of
Mr .. and Mrs. Jack Walker,
Rutland,' was the ringbearer.
All of the male attendants
wore grey windsor tuxedoes.
The groom's shirt was edged
in oxford gray, the ringbearer's in gold, ahd the best
man and ushers in colors
oorresponding to the bridal
attendants' gowns.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Sauer wore a
forest green gown of
polyester with a matching
jacket and black accessories.
Her corsage was of minuet
roses.
A receJtion honoring the
couple was held at the
Middlepcirt Masonic Temple
social rooms. PlaMing and
deccirating for the reception
was Mrs. Helen Sauer. The
bride's table was draped in
\Illite and caught at the
oorners with yellow sweetheart roses . Two threebranch candelabra in silver
with white tapers completed
the table decor.
Assisting wtth the refreshments were the Rutland
United Methodist Women,
Mrs . Margaret Edwards,
Mrs. Ruth Erlewlne, Mrs.
Donna , Williamson, Mrs.
Margaret Parsons and Mrs.
Marcia Denison .
Hostesses were aunts of the
bride, Mrs. Gladys Meredith,
Beverly, Mrs.
Lillian
Pickens, Mrs. Maxine
Whitehead and Mrs. Grace
Weber, Reedsville. Mrs.
Weber also assisted • the gift
table.
Presiding at the antique
crystal P\lllCh bowl and silver
coffee services were cousins
of the bride, Jane and Juli
Whitehead, ReedsviUe, and
Jean Whitehead Frydman,
Columbus, served the cake.
Guests were registered by
Barbara Hlll!hes, Gallipolis,
and Diane Tucker, Marietta.
Music for the reception was
(I'OVided by George Hall,
ll'g!¥1ist and vocalist.
The bride's traveling
oostum e was a three piece
winter white polyester
pantsuit with brown accessories.' They stayed at
Burr Oak LOdge, Glouster.
The couple resides at 621\2
West College Ave. , Rio .
Grande. The bride is a
graduate of Kyger Creek
High School, attended
Marshall University and is
oow a student at Rio Grande
College.
Dr .
Becker
grad uated from Defiance
High School , Ohio State
University, and Ohio State
School
of
Veterinary
Medicine. He 'has a
veterinary clinic at Rio
Grande.
Ott-of-(Ounty guests at the
wedding and reception were
Mr. anti Mrs. Glenn Hornish,
Deflanc~ - Or. and Mrs.
Marvin l'hiiiips, AIBn D.
Sturdevaht, Miss Denise
Talbott, Athens ; Jsmes
Mlng, Brook Park; Mr. and
Mrs. E. H. Covert, Charles
and Paula , Mrs. Sandy
Roberts, Rio &lt;:rande; Dr. and

B-3_- The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sunday. Man·h 27. i 9i•

-: Newcomers club
:- installs officers

GAL1JPOIJS - The Ann
Judson Class of the First
Baptist O!urch met in the
Fellowship Room Tuesday

evening for its regular
tminess and social meeting.
The president, Mrs. Mamie
Robinson opened the meeting
with welcome and prayer.
The secretary, Mrs. Ethel
!leele, and the treasurer,

~

;.!; ,.
~-

t

. , _ -.

'

I;,.

'

·"·.INITIATED- New members were initiated at the March meeting of the Gallipolis
Emblem Club . Pictured above are (seated, left to rlght) new members, Pam Burnett,
Dianna Boggs, Laura Wade, Iris Clifton; (second row) Marion Cochran; club president,
Carol Nibert; Virginia Gano, supreme district deputy; marshall, Kitty Ferrell and new ·
member Irene Polcyn.

ON All OUR
REG. 11.98 TO 13.88

KNIT MILL STORE
SPRING VAllEY PLAZA
•

~=

"

tash1bn
color
pnce

the

JUST

•

s14,90

OFFICIALS of the Emblem Club here are, left to right, Gallipolis president, Carol
Nibert; rMarianna Dille, supreme corresponding secretary; supreme ninth trustee,
Pauline Horton; supreme district deputy, Virginia Gano and marshall, Kitty Ferrell.

The fashion news is trim &amp;nd tailored.
The fashion color is rich. romantic burgundy.
The fashion flash is the
great low price.

Emblem Club initiates members
...

Hospital News

chairmen.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARG~S Mrs.
James McClure, Letart; Mrs.
Charles Hoffman, Letart;
Vivian

Mayes,

Point

Pleasant; Hazel Johnson ,
Point Pleasant; Freda Akers,
Point Pleasant; Morgan
O'Neil, Leon; Gerald PuUjns,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Charles Ellis
and daughter, Vinton; Robert
HaD, Point Pleasant; Bessie
Lee, Point Pleasant; Dottie
Halstead, Letart; Adda Kelly,
Point Pleasant; Richard
Danbury, New Haven; Mrs.
Thomas Darst and son, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Roy Brinker,
Jr., Clifton; and Tiffany
Piersor, Point Pleasant.

Mrs. Isaac· Frydman;
Colum hus; Mr. and Mrs. F.
R. Lands, Sr., Stoutsville; Ed
Hensch, Cleveland; Mrs.
Marcella Harrison, Miss Kay
Adkin!, Mrs. Audrey Hayes,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Bill Wells,

A need for a service and
fund raising projects were
discussed. Suggestions were
offered for each and the
membership discussed them.
Mrs. Terrizzi proposed a
potluck supper for members
and their husbands: She has
offered her home for the
·supper. Tentative date for the ·
supper is _April · 2. 'nlose
members interested should
oontact Mrs. Terrizzi at 446-

Burgundy banded sling wllh gored
strap torbelter Iii.

&lt;-:: 1f~

..

~ · Announc;~ments
lnvit~tions" ~·
1)1
'-1·
Imprinted Napkins ·
Guest Books
Cake Tops

Spec:ially priced al

jusl

Bridal Cake knives

4185.

Susie Bailey introduced the
guest speaker for the
evening, Mrs. Jean Whitney
from the Mental Health
Center who gave an interesting presentation on the
Crisis Line. She seid the
primary purpose of tlle Crisis
l.Jne is to provide a 24 hour
Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Haro14
S. Rusk, Chauncey, and Mr.
and Mrs. William Meredith,
Beverly.
The parents of the groom
hosted a rehearsal dinner at
the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.

PHOTO PLAQUES

A complete se lection that
will pleue every Bride,
yet the prices art moderate.

~ ;ltJ(]Ja,*..J.4..- ...

MITCHELL
OFFICE SUPPLY
Sec. Ave.

.

Coordinating ll!ndbago In a variety ot
classic tailored styles.

..*.

m~«Tm,.

suoES

Gallipolis, 0 .

•

STORY &amp; CLARK PIANOS
$

Stop by and examine
our samples.

Also now available full line of photo
charms, lockets, cufflinks, key
.chains, etc. Color and black and
white starting at $2.95.
These can be made from any ·photo.

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipolis
446-7494
Open Tuesdaythru Saturday 10-S
Till I on Thursday

,,

•

•
•
••
••
••
•

DRASTICALLY REDUCED

Are now av ai Ia ble at
Lear Photography.
Hand carved of real
wood not molded or .
plastic.

;.

Burgundy to.1nns up with Belgian linen
In a spectacular spectator.

$9.99

•
•
•
•
•
••
•
•

GALUPOUS - Gall ipolis
Emblem Club 199 held its
regular meeting Thursday
night , March 10 at th e
Gallipolis Elks Lodge and
initiated new members.
. Suprerr. District Deputy
Virgini · ' ano of Logan
Emble1
b ;y;3 was in&gt;talling
.er. New members wdcou1ed into the club
were Laura Wade, Dianna
Boggs. Marion Cochran, Pam
Burnett , Iri s Clifton and
Irene Polcyn.
Following the in itiation, the
Supreme Officer s of the
United States Emblem Club
were honored and given a gift
of appreciat h)n. Honored
were su preme corr~.. . . ,,ondi ng
secretary Marianna Dille,
Gallipolis Emblem Club 199;
sup rene di st rict deputy,
Virginia Gano, Logan Elbmel
Club 263 and su!l"eme ninth
trustee, Pauline Horton,
Jackson Emblem Club WO.

During the business
meeting it was announced the
May meeting will be held on
the third Thursday (May 19).
AI this meeting the club will
host a visitation for the
Supreme President Dottie
Camron from San Fernando,
Calif. Emblem Club 37.
A nominating committee
was se lected to . begin

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. John M. Watson of 2324
Eastern Ave ., Gallipolis, are
announcing the birth of their
third child, a daughter, at
Pleasant Valley Hosp ita l
Feb. 28, delivered by Dr.
Montrie.
The infant · weighed eight
pounds. 10 ounces and has
been named Courtney
Danielle.
Welcoming their new sister
home are John Keven age 4

stee"¥eless, w•th Belg•an Loopmgw alid ztpper •n back Made
ot Monsanto 's Wear-Dated" 100% nylon
Ma ny colors lo_choose !'om AI $8.00
you s•mptv can I own enough

S1zes 34-42.
Assortment of colors .

Galipolis, Ohio

I

those women who

may be anticip~ting being alone
oome tim e in the future.
The Betsey Mills Club is the
location of the conference which will
begin wtth registration at 9 a:m..

·•· presented

look at some techniques for the
woman alone to avoid intimidation

MIDDI.EPOHT - A $00
contribution to the Christina
Smith-Fund wa s made hy the

and get what she wants out of life;

and Legal Rights of Women. an
introduction to what the law has to
say about the rights of single women

:-

in such area s as credit, divorce, and

·.·

support payments.
The co;1 of the conference workshop is $10 with a special $6 rate
for women over 60. I' or registrathn
forms and further details on the
workshops, write Ms. Gretchen

::·

.,,
/
-:::

Williams , Executive Director , The

Betsey Mills Club, Marietta, Ohio,
&lt;1'1750 (614-373-4961 ).

SUNDAY
MARY Shrine 37, Order of
White Shri~Je of Jerusalem,
rehearsal 2 p.m. Sunday at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple for
~allation of officers set for
April 2.
MASON VFW Stewart
Johnson Post 9926 Sunday at 2
p.m. for election of officers.
All members urged to attend.
MONDAY
RUTLAND Garden Cl ub,
home of Mrs. R. S. Vale with
Mrs. Everett Colwell, eohostess, 7:30 Monday night.
Mrs. Harry Williamson to
demon strate macrame
hangers for flow er co ntainer s. Floral macrame
hangers to be exhibited. Star
Garden Club members to be
guests.
BEND OF' the River
Garden Club, 7:30 Monday at
the home of Mrs. Ben
Philson . Mrs. Andrew Cross
to discuss potting plants.
Arrangement of the month
will be "Suddenly It 's
Spr'ing."
TUESDAY
CUB SCOUT Pack 235
Chester-Tuppers Plains,
Tuesday 7 p.m. at scout hall
in Ches ter. Buffet style
dinner.
EVANGELIST Drummond
Thorn, speaker at Chester
Church of God, Tuesday 7: 30
p.m. Public invited.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday, noon at
the Meigs Inn.
THURSDAY
SOUTHERN Athletic
Boosters Thursday at the
high school at 7:30p.m. Final
plans for the basketball
banquet will be made.
SUTTON Township
Trustees special meeting
Thursday, 8 p.m. ' at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Purpose to review true)&lt; bids.

I

to purchase new salad bowl!'i

CLUB TO MEET
POMEROY - The UMWA
Supporters Club will hold its
monthly meeting Monday at
10 a.m. at the Eagles Hall,
Pomeroy. Candy Kidd will he
guest speaker.

KJ I

DIVIDEND ORDERED
SP RJNGFJEI.D , Ohio Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc .. Board
of Direc tors Wedn es da y
declared a regular quarterly
cash divr dend of 30 cents per
share payable .June 15, 1977,

Print answer here:

GAI .IJP01JS - Harriet rorman ec of thr Mozart
Santos
be soprano soloist wo rk . The dau~ht ..- of Mrs.
U1 Moza rt's " Reguiem" with Varney Fay• Clrndcnin, 96
lhe Wyoming Valley Oratorio Cou rt St. , Gallipolis, Mrs.
Society on Palm Sunday. Santos now lives in SwoyersApril 3, at 3:30 p.m . in St. ville. Pa . and is soloist at
stephen's Episco pal Ch urch. Temple B'nai B'rith . Kin gSo uth Frankli n St reet. ~ o n , and Lehman United
Methodist Chu rch. She Is
Wilkes·Barre, Pa.
Since her first appea rance pre sident of th e Senior
with the Wilk es-Barre .Mozart Club.
Other members of -the solo
organiza tion in 1968, the
quartet
appear in g in the
Gallipoli s native has become
"Requiem"
are contralto
a famili ar voice both in
Wyomin g Valley and in Helen Ralston. tenor Rev.
Scran ton, Pa. a nd wa s Keeler and Bass David Scott.
heard
in
til e
Ora- The 85·voice choru s a nd
torio Soc iety's 1971 per- orchestra will be under the
direction of Clifford Balshaw,

Jumt&gt;es:

The latest look in jewelry for '77 is
multiple piercing . Lei us help you
achieve your look quickly and
painlessly.
Join our earrin,g club. Purchase 5 pr .
earrings and receive 6th pr. free.

Reduced as much
as Vz or LESS!
MANY STYLES

Gallipolis, Ohio
\

to those nameU ami Mrs.

Leora Si g m~n. Mr s.
Rosemary Lyons, Mrs. Pearl
Hoffrnan 1

White.

Mrs. Gw innic

Mr s,

Isabe lle

Winebrenner, Mrs. Lillian
Dcmu!: i key , ond Shannon

to shareholders ol.record on
May 27. This will be the 107th
corisecutive quarterly cash

dividend Robbins &amp; Myers
has paid.

oow in his 23th srason as
rnnductor of the Oratorio

Society.
In ad dition to the wellknown Mozart l'Omposilion,
the concert will in clude the

AI HAVI NGNOTHING TO DO.

"[I I riJ "
.

hea rd

"Sancta

Clvitas" by Ralph Vaughan
Will iam s. The description of
tll e Holy Cit y from the King
.James Version of the Book of
Revelation will be presented
with the chorus divided into
three separaie choirs. one
~ngi n gfrom the balcony. Mr.
&amp;ott will be baritone soloist.
Contributor cards for the
eve nt may be obtained in
::rlvance from members of
lhe chorus or Board of
Directors. or at the office, 35
So uth Franklin St., WilkesBa rTo , nnne will be sold at the
door April 3. All seating is
reserved lor card holders
mtil 3:15. when others will be
admitted to any remaU1ing
space.

that funQy little brown
RUSKA.stoneware
by Arabia

SAY-AH-RAH-BEE-YAH 8~LAND
Rus ka ts the only dtnnerware you'll e11er need lor every
meal Jt s part of our selection of beau ttlu\ stonewar e
ea r t~en w a re , enamelwa re and glass by Arabia ~ o w s

the ltme to start or add to your collechon . or add your
name to our Bndal Reg1s1ry Arilbta means the best
m Scandtnalltan destgn . ana were the store thai has''

Where el.•e--

Peddler's Pantry
L - - ;)11111

&amp; Third- - - -

C lprM, Ohia- -..J

330 SECOND AVENUE

.

'"SCENE"

FREE: EAR PIERCING

THE UNIFORM CENTER

MAY 6E ' RI LED"

AN

Y

Mrs. Slavin and Mrs. Beula h

Wllite.
Refreshments wer·e served

"'II

, I An swer: Indecorous
TESTY SMACK KERNEL BECKON
behaiJIOI' m the theater- A

Yeslerda s

~.:o­

ho ste ss, Mrs . Ruth
Johnson,wrth pmes going to

Soloist Harriet Santos
szngzng zn 'Requiem'

Now arrange the circle(! leller s to
.form 1he s.urprise an swer, as suggested by !he above cAnnon

KJ I

Mr s. Werner and Uw

HARRIET SANTOS

I I

KESNIC

were made Lo provide fi ve

Easter li lies lor the church on
Caster Sunday to be taken to
shutms later. Mrs. Freda Edwards is handlin g orders for
the lilies.
The birthday song was sung
to Mrs. Cdwards and
Mrs.Nclle Werner, and Mrs.
Slavin read a poem for them .
Games were conducted by

Slavin. " guest.

OR FALL

With the purchase of one or more
earrings at just SS.OO per earring.
(24K gold over stainless steel)

,,

Prayer by Mrs. Kathy
Corbitt dosed the meeting
at ended by those named and
Mrs. Kay Logan, Mrs. Mabel
Moore, Mrs. Beatrice Buck
and guests, Mrs. Della Curtis
and Miss Patty Edwards.

I I

GHERKE'S8~

,lf!ll,

All Wur.Oat~cP ~lolhes are warrantea tor a tu ll ,.ear s p~rm a1 wear. retunO or
reptacemenl when returned w.th tag ann sill let Slip 10 Monsan to.

Second &amp; Stale

Di·xon had a poem, "Smile."

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by HennArnold andBob l ee

One special~ reduced~~
~";.p
gown rack.
-~

-

and Mrs. Cordelia Bentz read
the !Ooth Pselrn. Mrs. Agnes

ra r ely

I KJ

discusse d th eir sa le of
knives, carry-all bags and
m(epad~. Mrs. Ruby Frick,
vice president had charge of
the meeting which opened
with sing ing of "Count. Your
Blessi.ngs." The Lord 's
Prayer was prayed in unison

RATIE

.._~,

•"
••
•

Methodist Church at the
home of Mrs. Beulah utterbach and Miss Freda
Leivin g.
· The
members
also

' ""·····(··•1111•'"........ .......,.... ,..,

;/'

••
•
•••
••
•

POMEROY - The sa le of
church pictures and plates
wa s discussed at a meeting of
the Willing Workers Class of
the Ent erprise United

Busy Bee Class of the Midtlleport Firs! BaptiSt Ch urch
at a mee"ting hehl Thursday
night at the home of Mrs.
Kathryn Werner.
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavi n
presided at the meeting with
Mrs. Eva Hartley giving
devotions from Solomon with
a medillltion. It was decided
for the church kitchen. Plans

Social Willing Workers plan projects
Calendar

I I I

•

'·

to

insurance :

Alon e by Choice - Is it for you',
focu ssing on advantages. problems.
and dealing with a " couples
so~iety";
Survival Skills, a
workshop in the area of developing
techniques for determin ing suitable
work , writing a resume, and in~
terviewing: Asserting. lor Sin gles, a

EXOID

••
•

Phone 446-0687

'M»men and

planning, loans, and

Unscra mble these fDur Jumble s,
one lener to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

~

•

•
"
••"
••
••
•

..

~

.FREE-Bench, Tuning &amp; Delivery
TERMS-Uttle or,No.Down Payment &amp; 5 Yrs. '_to Pay

61 Court St

marriage, or decided against it.
"Women Alone: Coping" is the
title of a conference to be held in
Marietta April 30 which will deal
with areas of importance to single

IJ\tl}ruf ~'il

.

Great lillie wardrobe -builder by the Sho Shells~~~' d•v•s•on ol
Fairfield Under jackets. ove r pant s and Sk•rts. Mock turtl e and

•

BRUNICAR_DI MUSIC CO..

followe-d by a keynote address
presented by Ohio State Senator
Marigene Valiqu ette on the subject
of legislation impa tting on women .
Workshops will include Womm
and Money - Where Does It Go?.
· dealing with budgetin g, taxes, estate

~ ~ ~~ ~"'

and Jennifer Michelle age 3.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney E.
Hudson of Pt. Pleasant .
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. James 0.
Watson of Henderson, W.Va.
Paternal great-grandmother
is Leona Jones of Henderson .

A SHELL FOR ALL SEASO~S

..

c!Joosing new officers for the
dub who will he voted on
April14 and installed May 14.
Gallipolis Emblem Cl ub
will host the spring meeting
fnr the Ohio state Emblem
Club's and the West Virginia
Club April 16 and 17. All
members are urged tn attend.
Deadline for dues is April _!.

Watsons have third child

COMPLIMENT YOUR
EASTER OUTFIT WITH

••

DISCOUNT ON
ANY PIANO '
IN STOCK

:'

Contribution

:·:
.;-;.·.

'•

FASHION KNITS
PARTY ENJOYED
A skating party was held
recently at the Skate-A-Way
by Cub Scout Pack 235 of
Chester - Tuppers Plains With
approxiJnately. 45 cubs and
parents attending.

Conference helps women a·one
very large number have deferred

.-.

so~~OFF

-~_.,.,.-.,,,.,,.,,,,,,,,"',,-:,,,,,:::

MARIETTA - Over 15 million
l\llmen in this country are currently
either divorced or widowed. and a

..

PACK TO MEET
EAST MEIGS - Cub Scout
Pack 235 of Chester- Tuppers
Plains will hold a pack
meeting Tuesday, March 29
at 7 p.m. at the scout haD in
Chester. Abuffet style diMer
will be served.

, .-. · ....,.,., ..,.,,,,,,, ___ .·. _l_.-:,_,,,,,, ·--··.·

APRIL IS

DIAMOND

MOJW'H
SUMMER
REFRESI!ER:

DIAMOND SHOWING

COOL
COLOR
ICED WITH
WHITE.

MR. JACK 'BROWN IS
BACK BY POPULAR
DEMAND

I

I'

APRIL 1ST AND APRIL 2ND
9:00-5:00 FRI. 9:00-5:00 SAT.

l
•

J

AComplete Line of
Diamo~d ·Rings, Watches, Necklaces,
and Earrings.
2 DAYS ONLY

TONI
TODD

Corne in and see this special seoection .

CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
v

J

I

.,
'

..

"" .

'

�B-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Surnl&gt;rr. M Hr~fi 21, 1~17

&amp;a-The Sunday Tlmes.Sentin~l. Sunday, Marrlr 27: M i
~r====~=:==~====::x::~====:=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:·=·=:=:=====:=:=:====:===:===:===:::::::~==~~=::::=:===::x::=:=:::=:=:::~::::=~::·:::~~

Senior citizens ·are .helpful

li~ Community
.. . I.
.
.
w
.··~f:·)'· ·c· or·n
·
e
·
r
·
.
·
By Charlene
t
H
.
fli
'
h
"
:;&lt;
.
oe . c.

llY RUTH MIJ .I.ER

«

.....

Citizens Center tw :i been busy

·d

year.

.1

Th e

· · 'roMERO.Y - The Senior Citizens Chorus under .tbe dire&lt;.•
t tioh of Mrs. Carrie Neutzling is planning an Easter presenta·
~tiQn fo_r 2:30 on Palm Sunday at Trinity Churcl\.
· Busmess and professional men.of Middleport and Pomeroy
. will bE joining the chorus for pantomimes of .the Last Supper,
.the walk to Gethsemane, Jesus praying in the garden, the mob
conung lor Christ and the crucifixion. The final scene will
show the women at the tomb wbEre they learn of the resurrec·
tion.
Following the program there will bE a reception in the dining
room of the church. Mrs. Neutzling is asking that ministers
arOWld the county announce this in their services.
And the next rehearsal will bE Wednesday night at 7 p.m. at
Trinity and Mrs. Ne~tzling is asking that the portraying
characters11.1 well as the full choir bE tbere.

IJBIINDON

.

"l(,I'ER,9?"
/1DJKiilf 'f!

FA C tea to conclude campaign
GALLIPOLIS - A tea and
reCePtion for new and old
members of the French Art
Colony will be held this af·
ternoon from 2 to 4 at
Riverby , Gallipolis.
The tea will conclu de the
month long .membersh ip
drive· of the French Art
coionY. .. .· Gallipolis Ci ty
Manager· Richard T. (Dick)
Mills -has proclaimed Sunday

:t'''''~,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,~,,,,:;;;:m''''''''''"''''~~
: \: Sr.· .Ctttzens 1
~-~.)

f.~~

"French Art Colony Day" in
Gallipolis.
A varied musical program
will b~ presented at the
reception by Sandy Suiter, a
graduate
of
Gapital
University 's Music Con·
servatory and the Brunicardi
Brass Sextet sponsored by
the Brunicardi Music Co.

Members of the sextet are membership drive cnarnnan.
Greeting memb&lt;!rs at the
John Brunicardi on trumpet;
Jeff Buel. trumpet ; Rod door will be FAC trustees. Dr.
t haler ,
Beth
Tolliver, French horn; Donald
Kimball Suiter. trombone; Cherrington, Peggy Evans,
Charles Willis, baritone and Jack Hudson and Anita Tope
Randy Hunt. tuba. Plans for in addition to building and
the tea have bEen made by grounds chairman Harold
Florence Lintala and Sue Black.
Beverly. Barb Epling was

t

.·

.

_

G NOW

~~ 100~.

ti:\

\t/)
~

ro11on

FEATURING G ~ ~ ~ &lt;il ~

~epo~!.~&lt;ot. Cho~• ~,!~~~~~~ed~oble Doo~~~~eso~d~it~cloding

ton denim s fo r pants, jacket s.
\I'Gsts, skirts. Machine wash . dry .
45 -48 '' wide.
Reg. $2.29 to $2.69 yd.
Yau save ta $1.21 yd.

I

$48

D[;)Q@DQ
Sop.,

$1

You save 49c yd.

•

. Reg. $1 .,9 t o $1 .99 yd.
You save to 71c yd.

·

o
· o

YARD

Knnkled Bottoms. &amp; ...rerrifiIC Tops·

so ~. polyesre,/50~

cies. Mach ine wosh:d~;~';;_ ;~ ~~:~i ~~- solids and

Super Sportswear

WO\'ftn

la n-

Rog. 12.99 yd.
You saveS 1.00 yd.

Weaver 1 clo rn o"d 1a•kloth ~ol!d~"' so•, polte •rat iSO', tor
ton blend Mocl """ "'aih dry U ' ~ w•de

Reg, $2,19 to 12.49 yd.
lousaveto11cyd.

Non~~~t~~,ter lnterfaein

projects. White :nly

,

e~o~'h'-erlocing lor so many .,
rne ~ash , dry. 25 " wide.

'9

Reg. 69&lt; rd.
You ••v• 49c yd.

Sofr.

·.

Rog.S3.99yd,
••w•$1 .11 yd.

Sys.•o··
':'flnted
•
~;~
w1de.

$288

&amp; solid ~ni ts

YARD

T-Shirt Knits
Reg. S2.99yd.

SO'Y. po lyester/5o•;, cotton f locked d ots .
machine wosh , dry , 45 · wide .

$2,

$~~&amp;

.

Flocked Dots

Polyester / co tton . polye ste'r / royon blends
Machine wo5h , dry . 58·60 " wide .

You IOWB 40c yd.

Make It a point today to avoid
domineering or dictatorial Wpes.
You will react to them In a harsh
way you'll later fegret.

Ploids , florols , sce nic coilo n prints, sheers.
se mi -sheers, casements, sot ins . nove lt ies.

$248
YARD

:: LEO (Jutw 23-Aug. 22) II there's

20%·0FF

Reg. S2.99toS3.09yd.
lou save to 11.01 yd. .

Mit chell' s home . Norma n
Mitchetl presided. It was an
ocganizational meetin g with

OFFICERS INSTALLED -Officers installed by the Sew &amp; So Club Thursday evening
were (seated, left In right), Mrs. Frank Clary, secretary; Mrs. Rick Swain, vice president;
Mrs. Earl Caldwell, president and (standing), Mrs. Wyman Sheets, assistant treasurer and
Mrs. Gilbert Caldwell, reporter.

•.. ' something you need !rom a
:- peer , this may nol be a good day
~: ~ to ask for lt. Your favor could be
:"t,: granted In a way you 'll find
:~ : deJT!ean lng.

ENTIRE STOCK

•·~· LIBRA (Sopl. 23·0&lt;1. 23) You

Notions Bonanza

$,••.

Save on oronge -hondled
Finnish sclnors . Especially
great for cutting knits!

Pressing Aids

Make pressing a b reeze!

Iron-All®
Press withou1 scorching!

Ballpoints . no snog / pull.

Wlss® Scissors
Save on our complete
se lection!

Stltd! Witd!ery®

Purse Handles

12 yords of ¥, " fop e .

Choose hoop, rod and
knob.

ItS atime to remember.

And the easiest way to save and preserve the beautiful

enjoy doing things with partners,
but tod ay they could be a llablli·
ty, especially If you want to move
quickly moneywise.

Herculon®
Olefin

A hug e a sso rtm ent of items!

25
20

% OFF

lEG. PRia

20

20

%0FF

REG. PRICE

Save on long-wearing ,
stain -resis tant
Hercu ·
Ion ®o lef in . 54 " wide .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Even it you 're 8 bit behind In

your work . put If ott today. Your
heart won 't be In lt. You'll per·
form halfheartedly.

Rog. U.t9to U .tt yd.

25~.~~f
Gln.... Snep.

11)
Neither you no r your mate
• · should make a major decision
r todBY wlthQUt the other's ap.
~~ proval. Acting Independently will

GALUPOLIS - A special
remembrance was given for
Elhel T. Wead Mick, founder
of the International Order of
Jobs Daughters at the recent
meeting of Jobs Daughters of
Gallipolis Bethel 13 with 12
members present.
A short business meet ing
w.JS hel d prior to the program
l&lt;!lich featured a demon·
otration oo candy making.
Th e members viewed several
different types of molds for

, , cause a big problem.

No -uw fasteners .

Even though your co·worlcer
shares equally In what you get,
" : he may nol be as ambitious. He'll
...
need prodding to get him to pull
-~. his weight.
-

Plus many other·unlfflnrti•ed specllls on •-'•·

Hours: 10til9 Mondaythru ,Saturday-lti" Sunday
.
'Headquarters for Draperies, Slip Covers and Upholstering Materials

...

Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza-Route 7, Gallipolis, Ohm ·

Putnam Villege

Shopping Confer
Hurricano, W.Va.

·

2~

Grand Central Mall
Zane Piau
Parkersburg, W. Va. Chillicothe, Olllo

f.'ABRICS

•

\ • ·•
'111-6111 Ave,
Huntington, W. Va 1

--·

M~er

BankAmericard

®

'h ·
't •.

.

.••' ..
..
•

'

'

\

\
\

;•

'

R~HABILITI'-TION:
· 26

EMPIRE'S • • MARCH LION
SALE ENDS
THURSDAY, MARCH 31st

,_ ....,l;.
. '~
·­

d®
Ins tea

..,,

NEW

SHAPES. FROM THE SIDES ...
LIFTS FROM BELOW ..
TO MAKE THE MOST OF YOU .
If you're the type ol woman who
wanls·to mak e the mosl of herself.
the new Instead Seam less bra rs
for you II sha pes I rom the srdes
arid lifts from below lor a fuller
more beautiful frgure ... smooth ly ..
seamlessly.
The new Instead Seamless brain beige or whrle lrrcot and
del reate lace . srzes 32/36A,
32 /38B,C- to make the most·ot you 1
•• ••• ••• 0 ••• 0

\

\

••••••• 0 ••••• 0 ••••••• ••••••

STILL MANY

$200

GREAT BARGAINS

Cash
Refund
from P.laytex·

'

•
,.

(Prool of purchase requ1red
Good on purchases made by May 31 1977

LE-FT AT • • •

'

SEAMLESS
BRA by PLAYfEX "

; SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER

See store for

details.)

?'~..................................
~
:.................. ·:
.;

••• • 0 •• •••••••••• •• •• •••••••• ••••• 0 •••••••

'

.

.

-· .
.

..
•

PLUS BIG SAVINGS
DURING PLA YTEX
CROSS YOU" HEART
BRA SALE

.

NOW GOING ON

:.............................•.........................

Unusual co nd ition s cou ld

davelop lor you ~~it yeor lhot will
bring about majOr alttrlltons In
lila. Look for a change or
residence
or an additional
source of r\wenue.

Charge

....
\

~b
~~ll
Morch 27, 1177

-~ ·

around·. This includes

youth and middle aged
people, in fact everybody.
Rem ember to watch for
fu rther news.

&amp;kanymother about Stride Rite

generous gesture today you 'll
later regret. Think before you
give away tt'te store.

-.

you

LAY-AWAY

;'

PI ICES (fib, 20-Morcll 20) You
may l'm pu lslve ly mak e a

•

Ther e wi)l be a hostess on
hand to greet you and show

·--..

AOUARIUI (Jon. 20·hb. It)

REG. PRJa

evening, 7·10 p.m. Everyone
Js weh:ome to come meet old
friends and make new ones.

Dress your children up in
the finest shoes available.
Stride
Ri te shoes. We've
got many new styles .
Better lcioking , be t te r
fitt ing shoes from Str ide
Rite. Ea ster Classics .

S-evers.

· CAPRICORN (DIC. 22..Jon.

ENTIIE STOa

Hnd social hours on Friday

Easter

\

r

The center is open five days
a week from 8 a.rn.-4 p.m.

Norman an d Bonnie Mitrhe!L
Memhers present were Lee

of a speculative

Huge selection!

Notion NtCtlllties

trying to make th em better
and plan new programs and
trips. Let us know wha\ you
are interested in and we'll do
our best to get it for you .

IDm e April 15. Advisors a,re

,.,.

• nature may be offered you today .
: It will appear to be OK, but a
. major Ingredient will be lacking.

of our

center for everyone. We are

'• . SAGITlARIUS (Nov. 23·DIC.

~: · 21) Something

%0FF

%0FF

citizens

Special tribute
awarded founder

•: • VIRGO (Aug. 23•8tpl. 22) Nol a
:-- "·good day to try to work out a
~... bu si ness deal with a friend . Do it
.... when it can be accomplished In a
,,.( ' proper setting .

Flskars®
Scissors

for senior

county.

Mi tr•!Jell, Jay B ra~ ·. Greg
Mit chell , Kevin Mitchell.
J ody
election of officers held. Phili p Mitchell,
Kevin Mitchell was elected Plymale , Yickey Watkins,
JreSrdent, Yickey Williams, Joey Roberts. Calvin Dray,
vice president, Jody Plymale Marv in Baird . A guest
secretary, and Marvin Baird pre se nt wa s Mrs. Bob
treasurer. The next meeting Watkin s. - Report er Lee
will bE at Norman Mit chell's Mitchell.

The game of the evenin g
""" conducted by Mrs. Bruce
Unroe . Prize went to Mrs.
Gilbert Caldwell.
Highlight for the evening
w.J S the inauguration of the
new officers. The outgoing
president. Mrs . Lawson
Dailey, read each officer her
li!t of duties for the coming
year while Mrs. Ralph Young
pinned on their corsages.
'
Receiving a secret sister
tirthday gift was Mrs. David
Hively .
Members also had a recipe
candy making. Dianne Boggs · exchange at the close of the
was th e demonstratnr.
meeting.
A slumber party held
Refreshments were served
Sa turda y, March 26 was by the hostess.
amoWJced, . and girls were
Mrs . Monty Swain was
asked to bring their song \rel qom ed as a new member.
cards.
Attending were Mrs. Ralph
Officers and mothers · Young , Mrs. Marion Cald·
)resent at the meeting were well, Mrs. Jimmie Sheets.
Ada Coueh, Mrs. Lawrence Mrs. Frank Clary. Mrs .
McQuaid, Noreta Ga uze , Gilbert Ostergren, Mrs.
Bess Cant erb ury . Phyllis Lawson Dailey, Mrs. Monty
Knighting, Stella Layne and Swain. Mrs. Wyman Sheets.
Laura Wade.
Mrs. Earl Caldwell, Mrs.
Rick Swain, Mrs. Becky
with Major tfoople
Unroe and Mr s. Blanche

.

CANCER (Junt 21-July 221

Drapery Fabric

Cotton ond co tton / polye51er blend pr int s &amp;
solids. Machine wash , dry , 44 -45" wide.

.

- inexpensively as possible, Yo u
:-- don't want to blow It all on one
. day's lun.

Rog. $1 .59 yd.

Terrycloth

:

of the health projects planned

~: ASTRO•GRAPH

smoot~~~~~k Knits

ore rncx:h ine wash dry

Shoestring Knots 4·H Club
met March 21 at Nom1Hn

SYRACUSE - Awards Carol Adams and Joyce
: were presented at the Thurs- Thoren, and WebEio leader,
Larry EbErsbach.
~ day ni ght meeting of
The meeting opened with
: Syracuse Cub Scout Park 242
the
law of the pack, the prr&gt;
at the Syracuse Elementary
mise,
the pledge to the flag ,
.SchooL
and
the
Lord's Prayer led by
· Receiving the denner cord
Thoren
and Richard
Eric
; :was Richard Davis ; the woll
Davis.
; yin, Brian Freeman; the bEar
For the program Den I sang
i 1'in, Richard Davis, Jack '' America"
and j' America,
:- 'J ustis,and Darin Roush, and
the
Beautiful."
Den 2 SHng
-: the gold arrow, Todd Adams,
the
"Rocket
Song,"
and Den I OUR BOARDING HOUSE
t Jeff Frank, Eric Thoren and
sang "Good Night, Cubb&lt;!rs"
:- David EbErshach.
·: Plans were made for a trip while all of the cubs were in a
·: to Huntington for the Mr. Car· living circle.
'Following the meeting the
C. loon Show on April 7,
P'!Ck
had a rocket derby. The
·: New leaders of the Pack
rockets
were made by the
~ were elected and they are
boys
and
the launching pad
Pete Thoren, cubmaster;
by
the
webEios.
~· committee membErs, Bonnie
•;:Freeman and Sally · Attending the meeting were
:: :Ebersbach; Den leaders , Todd Adams and Mrs. Jim
Adams. Jeff Frank, Mrs.
Clarence Frank and John;
Eric Thoren, Mr. and Mrs.
Thor en ; Brian
· : Bernice Bede Osol Pete
Freeman, Mr s. Ga r y
·. ARIES (Morch 21 -Aprll 18) Freeman; David EbErsbach,
\. 'Much attention will be 1ocused Mr.and Larry EbErsbach and
:- '"today on domesllc matters'. All Chris; Darin Roush and Mrs.
-~ ·w ill go smoo thly , provided you
Don Roush; Richard Davis
~- 7don't try to dom inate things.
and Harold Davis; Jack
::. .TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Br· Justis, Glenna Rwrunel and
~ ..Jng that which disturbs you out In
Shirley Landers, Gary Foley,
~..f ,he open to day . Keep it locked
1-1 Jnslde and you wi ll on ly brood Eric Philson and Mr. and
Mrs. John Philson and Sarah,
..t! ~over 1t.
::;GEMINI (Moy 21-Junt 20) Enjoy and Hugh McPhail and son,
.,_; ..yo urself today. but try to do It aS Scott.

selecr~~~!!c Bonanza

Reg. S 1.49 yet

SP''"9 P''''" &gt;I.' U&lt;,u&lt; lo.u&lt; loo k P'' " " u,.J 9"""' P''"h "'
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H: Scouts get awards

anc;j blends. Machirfe
y hpdrmg prints and solids in colt
. was . ry , 44·-o4S " Wide.
ons

Prints, Puckers &amp; Gauze

Pins &amp; Needles

Open Tuesday lhru Saturday 10-5;
hll 8 on Thursday
446-7494
Spring Valley Plaza. Golllr"'"•

: . Mary Susan Bissell of Chester is in Umversity Hospital now
-_and carda may bE sent to bEr at 410 West loth Ave., Columbus,
~ &lt;43210.

.

PAIR

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY

YARD

: : HAVE A NICE WEEK.

Sl4.r Stitchers elect officers

memories of your happiest da y is with ,professional
portrai ts.
·
We are experts at bridal photography. So you can
trust us to capture the true beauty of your wedding.
Remember your wedding for years to come-with
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and wedding
and view our bridal portrait samples
I
albums.

(i

Center plus ou'r own staff and
volunteers did a ve ry ni ce job
as always. This was only one

Gallia 4-H Club News

Meeting held at Clary home

crepe stitch. and fancies .
l OOij. polyester, machine wash .
dry, 58!60" wide.
Rag.l1 .• 9ta $2.99 ycl.
You save ta $1.51 yd.

diabetic screenin g

brouW.t approx imately 260
people to the center. The
health department of Gallra
('nunty
r. ;,ll i n,..Jic;
rtty

SUCH A loving gesture Ferne B. Hayman, now recuperating at the home of her
. daughter, June Wickersham following hospitalization at the
Holzer Medical Center, will bE going home to aspic and span
:house when her health pennits.
:. For some months this winter, a crack in the bowl of the fur·
· nace at Ferne's home pennitted some smoke to come into her
GALLIPOLIS- The Sew &amp; Gilbert Caldwell reading the
·house, and we all know that smoke means dirt everywhere.
So Club met at the home of "Crucifixion" and the
: So while Ferne has !Mien ill and away from home, June was Mrs .. Frank Clary Thursday "Resurrection ." All mem·
; joined by .Mr. and Mrs. William Fox and David, Lucy for a regular meeting.
ters repeated the "Lord's
, l)Qilahue, and Marvene Beegle for a thorough cleaning and
Devotions were led by Mrs. Prayer."
! painting of the house. Ferne is very appreciative, of course,
; 41Dd says that nowhere can you find neighbors like those in the .
:::small East Letart corrununity where she lives.
·

ta ... orite

kni1 prints and linen -stitch solids
for coord inating se p(]rotes!
Machine wash. dry , 58-60" wide.
Reg. S2.99ta $3.49 ylll.
You aaw• to $1.50 ycl.

'1"

Women plan to
help with drive

...

100% PolyeSter@~ ·

Printed Knits

Chtld
• develollment d.zscusse
·
d·

MIDDLEPORT .:_ Child vation League,
about what is read to develop
a~1«.«.1.r
development in the pre- . Mrs. Rose emphasized the verbal skills should bE a
· s~hool years was discussed unportance of the years prronty m parent-child rela·
::::
by Mrs. Mary Francis Rose, bEfore lundergarten to the twnsh1ps, Mrs. Rose S~ld . She
GALLIPOLIS- The Senior Middleport kindergarten overall development of t he spoke of the learnm~ ex·
Citizens Center·, located at 220 teacher, guest speaker fo r the chrld and offered suggestJOJlS penence of takmg a chrld. to
Jackson Pike i!1 the County Thursday night meefing of on how parents can help. plat&gt;es outsrde the home, even
Home Building, is · open the Middleport Child Consl'r· Reading to a child and talking the grucery store.
Monday through Friday from
·
For a discussion, Mrs. Rose
9 a.m. In 3 p.m. The sehedule ~ ::::::::::: ::::::::;:::::::::::::::;::~ :::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::.:::.:::::::·:·::: ::·:::::::::·:·: ::::::::::::·:::::::;:;:;:;: ·:;:;:·: ·: : ·:·::::i had the membErs tell of
of activities for this week is .::.:
;.: things their pre-schoolers did
.·.
as fo llows:
,:,
which irritated them, and
Monday, March 28 - .,,:::
·:· then suggested ways in which
Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.; :,:
::::-: the incident could bE turned
Olde Time Chorus Practice. \
·:: into a learning experience.
1·3 p.m.
,,.
::: Television and its influence
:::
Tuesday, March 29 - ::,
::: on children was also discuss·
Insurance Information, 12:30 :;:
::: ed by the speaker.
p.in.; Bible Study, I :30 p.m.
Mrs. Peggy Harris presid·
Wednesday, Mareh 30 CHESTER - Meeting Eastern District in ApriL
ed at.the meeting which open·
Refreshments were served ·ed with the Mothers' Prayer.
Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.; recently at the home of Mrs.
No1111a Hawthorne the Young to Linda Well, Jane Coates, A donation was made to the
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Marilyn Spencer , Sara state scholarship loan fund . A
Thursday, March 31 - Wives Club agreed to canvas
Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m.
the corrununity for Cancer Bailey, Susie Kibble, Lila discussion was held on the
Van Meter, Kathy Stone, possibility of sponsoring a
Friday, April!- Advisory contributions.
Avice Sp~ncer, Esther child at the Guiding Hand
Council, 1 pm.; Art Class, 1-3
The club also made plans
Mayes, and Karen Young.
p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
for a party for the special
School for special olympics.
The Seniors' &lt;:Mp and too education class of the
It was agreed that the CCL
Craft Shop are open each day
will sponsor a membEr's
at !2:3o.l:W.
child to ride in the bike-a·
The Senior · Nutrition
thon.
Program serves meals at 12
Mrs. Nancy Morris, Mrs.
'
noon. The menu for this week
POMEROY - Officers Mrs. Judy Eichinger, ad· . Thelma Osborn, and Mrs.
is ·
SuSHn Blaker were named to
were elected at a recent visor.
Monday - Macaroni and meeting of the Five Point
Elected were Lea Ann the nomiating conunittee.
cheese with ham, buttered Sta r StiU:hers at the home of Gaul, president ; Melind a
The district spring con·
kale, sliced tomato salad on
Mankin , vice preSident; ference to be held on Apri116
lettuce, bread , ·butter, gin ge r
Cheryl Folmer, second vice at Gallipolis was announced.
snaps, milk.
president ; Sheila Koenig , Theme of too conference will
Tuesday - Pot roast of
bE "Womanhood." Speakers
treasurer; Tamra Clark,
beef , gravy, buttered
secretary; Pam Riebel, news will bE Marianne CampbEll,
steamed potatoes, mixed
reporter, and Lori Louks, director of corrununity rela·
vegetables, roll, butter, Tbe Almaoac
tions at the Holzer Medical
recreation leader.
By
Unite&lt;!
Press
canned apricots, milk.
Preceding the meeting club Center, and Tom Jacobs. anWednesday - Hot turkey lnternatlooal
members went to the Country cho1111an of WSAZ.TV News.
Today is Sunday, Mareh '!/, Cousins for a tnur and supper.
sandwich with gravy,
A visit to the Center of
mashed potatnes, buttered the 86th day of !977 with 2'19 to Jun ior leader of tbe club is Science and Industry in Col·
peas, jellied cranberry salad, follow.
Becky Edwards. Tag was urn bus was planned for April.
The moon is in its first !iayed followin g the meeting.
butter, ice cream, milk.
Mrs. Helen Blackston had
Thursday
Johnny quarter.
devotions. Memb&lt;!rs went to
The
next
meeting
will
bE
The morning star is Mars.
Marzetti, tnssed salad and
March 28 after school at the the Pizza Hut for
dressing, cornbread, butter, The evening stars are Mer- Eichipger home.
refreshments.
cury, Venus, Jupiter and
canned pears, milk.
Friday- Baked pork chop, Saturn.
Those born on thls date are
escalloped potatnes, buttered
under
the sign of Aries.
spinach, biscuits, butter,
American
publisher of
citrus sections, sugar cookie,
prints
Nathaniel
Currier, of
milk .
Currier
and
Ives,
was born
Choice of bEverage served
March
'!/,
1813.
This
also is
with each meBL
the
birthdate
of
actress
"Service rendered on a
non-discriminatory basis.'' Gloria Swanson (1899) and
actnr David Janssen (1931).
c·

eu ~

·~@ Dynamite

Riverby, home of the French Art Colony

:\\;

(?) @ @

IT'S A NEW JOB at a new place for Suzy Carpenter. Suzy,
who has studied home economics and design at boih Ohio State
and Ohio University, is an interior decorator at Beth's Place,
;at the new Athens Mall. She'll bE assisting people with all sorts
·of decorating problems.

supper for April so .keep ..
wa tching the paper and your
newsletter: The· garden club
wilt rneet again April 5 with
Bud Ca rter ·as the .speaker on
tawn and garden care. There
are many services at the.

dCJHlrtments, along with
nurses from Holzer Medical

rnaking plans fur lhC co rnin g

~.:: -

We are plaruiin g a . chili

Hea lth and Ohio He alth

(:ALl.] POI.IS - The Senior

your

.__ _ _1111_1111____•

__________________

IN THE SILVER BRI~E PlAZA
OPEN WEEKDAY EVENINGS TIL 9 O'CLOCK
,,

.

�B-6-The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sunday, Mal'!•h 27 • 1977

Auditions start for summe~·
production of 'Gallia Country'

Youth
me.etings
.underwayPOMEROY - Youth
meetings are being held each
Monday night at the Pine
· Grove Church, 7p,m. with the
Rev, Clyde Ferrell in charge.
The meeting opened with
group singing of "Jesus U&gt;ve
Me," and the " 8-I-B-I.rE."
- Kevin Wall .led in the U&gt;rd's
Prayer and eaeh of those attended said a Bible verse.
The Rev. Mr . . Ferrell is
holding a class for those 11
and over, and a class for age 6
to ll will be taught by Velrml
RusselL To increase· attendance, a contest is being held
and the losing team will treat
the winning team to a wiener
roast. Royal Crown bottling
caps are being saved by the
young people. An award
system for participation-was
set up with prizes at the
meeting going to the Rev. Mr.
Ferrell, Danny Ferrell,
stanley Wall and CQnnie
McFarland. Transportation
to the · meetings can be
.secured by contacting the
Rev. Mr. Ferrell at~9910.

GALI.IPOLIS - Audition
dates have been announced
for "Gallia Country," the
historical musical - drama.
being presented for the fifth
consecutive season in the
natural amphitheatre on the
Bob Evans Farms at Rio
Grande.
Greg Miller, the drama's
director, has arranged the
following schedule : Saturday , April 23, in the
auditorium, lower level,
Lafayette Mall, Second Ave.,
and Courl St., Gallipolis, 2-6
p.m.; Sunday, April24, at the
YMCA,
Pearl Street,
Jackson, 2-6 p.m,; Saturday.
April30, Music Building, Rio
Grande College, 10 a.m.-2
p.m. and Sunday, May I,
auditorium , ,lower leveL
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis, 2-6 1

_i

••

298 .SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OHIO

1

•.

A thought for the day : U.S.
politician Wendell Willkie
said, "The Constitution does
not provide for first-and
secondclass citizens."

Phone Anna Blackwood
985-3805
Bron Thomas
992-2726

FABRICS
ANNIVERSARY SALE
OUR BEST SALE EVER

SAVE$$$

One Table

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REG. '2A9.................. SALE 11.69 yd.
REG. '3.29 •• ;••••••••••••.•• SALE '2.69 yd.
Sale Prices Thruout The House

D&amp;J's HC)use of Fabrics
1 mile below Middleport on St. Rt. 7
"

~

Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program , II :30 a.m,,J2:30
p.m, Mooday through Friday·.
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham chunks,
buttered broccoli, sli ced
tomato salad4~tuce, peach
half and cake, bread, butter,
mille
Tuesday - Pit roast of
beef, buttered frozen mixed
veg~ables, ice cream, roll,
butter, milk , buttered
!teamed potatoes.
Wednesday - Hot turkey
sandwich with gravy,
mashed potatoes, buttered
peas, jellied cranberry salad,
_canned apricots, milk.
Thursday
Johnny
marzetti, tossed salad with
dressing, canned pears, corntread, b'ltter, milk .
Friday - Fried fish ,
escallq&gt;ed potatoes, Harvard
beets, citrus sections and
sugar cookie, bread, butter,

Birthday
observed

GALLIPOLIS
A
candlelight service Saturday,
Qct. 16 provided the setting
for the wedding of Linda Ann
Cochran and Michael David
Noe.
The Rev. Timothy Heaton
officiated the '6:30 p.m. double rinq ceremony at the
Grace United Methodist
Church which was decorated
with two special candelabra
and a three-branch
candelabrum, all adorned in
hows of · fall colors, Aiso
featured in the church
decorations were dried fall
· Bowers, baby's breath and a
. double kneeler. Ten single
candelabra marked the
church pews and they aiso
had bows in fall colors of bittersweet gold and yellow.
The bride is the dauqhter of
Mr. and Mrs. James R
Cochran, Rt. 2, Gallipolis and
the groom's parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Roland F, Noe, 32
Henkle Ave., Gallipolis.
Orqanist was Mrs. Merlyn
Ross and Lu Ann Sanders was
S&lt;Jloist.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride ~as a!tired
in a quiana ~own fas hioned
with a high neckline with the
bodice and long fi tted sleeves
trimmed in Venisc lace and
seed pearls. A long flowing
skirt extended into a chapel
length train. The two tier
chapel length veil edged in
lace was secured to a camelot
cap trimmed in seed pearls to
match the dress. She carried
a tangerine bououet of woodr·
soe woodroses, yellow roses
and pompons with a cascade
of yellow ros es and
sweetheart ivy.
Mrs. · Carl Ankrom,
Prestonsburg, Ky. , was
matron of honor. Other attendants were Mrs. Michael Duffy, . Gallipolis; Mrs. Mrs.
Daryl Hayes, Birmingham,
Ala.; Mrs. Bruce Wilson,
Gallipolis; Mrs, Michael
Brown, Apple Grove, W.Va.
and Mrs. James R: Cochran,
Jr., sister-in-law of the bride,
Gallipolis, Mrs. · Ankrom,
Mrs. Duffy and Mrs. Hayes
are sorority ' sisters of the
bride.
They wore long dresses of
gold polyester knit styled
with v-necl!s, empire waists
and cape sleeves. Fach carried a wicker basket of dried
flowers in an array of fall col·
ors including bittersweet,
golds and yellow. '

-·

OR Dl ET

16

oz.

7-UP••••• ~~:s.
DOMINO

SUGAR

GALLIPOilA A Mickey
Mouse birthday cake baked
by Mrs. Thebna Ward was
the central feature when
Thomas·
Jay
Smith
celebrated hi s sixth birt~day
Saturday. March 12. Jay is
the son d . Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas J . (Mickey) Smith of
Kerr-Babel Rd., Gallipolis,
Refreshments of ice cream, a
dteese tray, soft drinks and
ooffec were served with the
cake to Mrs. Bill Barcus and
!lln, John; Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Hamlhon of Jamestown and their children Cathy
and Jue ; Matt, Mark and
Nancy Smith along with the
Jllrents. Jay received several
gifts and cards.

5LB.
BAG

89~

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Ciffer Expires April2, 1977

•m

nl'l'nm

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

TUNA

6%0L
8131 ..... 33 cts tw ~•"'"·"
BankAmericard
Master Charge

Coffee, tea, buttermilk,
In 1964, an earthquake in
juice "'rved daily. Please try Alaska left 17 persons dead
to register the day before for and damages estimated at
lunch.
$750million.

TAWNEY JEWELERS

2/79'

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires April2, 1977

-

Deann Wedge, cousin of the
bride, and Debbie Lewis, both
of Point Pleasant, W,Va.
were flower girls. They wore
rna tching dresses of sheer
print in muted and oranqe
over ould polyester knit and

1972--73 was the first season for the Orpheus Trio and since
then, they have won acclaim at major chamber music series
from coast to coast. The trio members are Paula Robison,
nute; Scott Nickrenz, viola; and Heidi Lehwalder, harp ..Their
carried sma1ler versions of performance promises imaginative programming and
the attendant's baskets.
selections which "breathe a constant sense of freshness and
James Noe, brother of the discoVery."
groom, Gallipolis, was best
Those persons who are not contacted by a concert
man, Ushers. were Bill Noe, association campaign worker may still purchase
brother of the qroom , membership. next week by contacting the association office at
Gallipolis ; James R. 16 State St., Gallipolis (The Chamber of Commerce office).
· Cochran, k, brother of the Memberships cost $10 for adults; $5, students; $5, senior
bride ; Bruce Wilson, citizens (over 60) and families, $30 each. Admission to
Gallipolis, Dennis Barger, association concerts is by membership only.
London, Ky . and Carl
Ankrom, Prestonsburg, Ky.,
all fraternity bmthers of the
groom.
For her daughter's wed·
dinq, Mrs. Cochran chose a
rust colored knit gown with a Mrs. Marshal F. Phillips, Mr.
FORMS NEW PARTY
sheer printed cape and mat- and Mrs, Robert Thompson,
TOKYO (UP!) - The
ching accessories. She wore a Colwnbus ; the bride's grand- leader of the Japan Socialist
corsage of dried flowers mat- parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. party, the country's largest
chinq the dress.
Williams, Middleport; Mr. opposition group, bolted
Mrs, Noe wore a lonq blue and Mrs. AI Fenstmacher, saturday to form a new
knit dress with long sleeves groom's maternal_ grand- party, threatening the- party
and matching accessories. parents, South Pomt; Mrs . . with a new split. Saburo Eda,
Her corsage .was of dried Lillian Noe, groom's paternal 69 former vice chairman and
flowers dyed to match.
. grandmother, South Point; le~der of the party's
A reception at the chur.ch Mrs. Emmett Classing, South moderate wing, said he was
followed the ceremony. The Point; Mrs. Irene Darst, disenchanted by the party,
four-tiered chocolate cake great-grandmother of the cOntrolled by what he called
featured a fo untain ttie mid· bride, Middleport; Mrs. Ruth "die hard left-leaning
die and was decorated with Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. James leaders." He said he will
orange and gold flowers . On Lewis,_Jr', James wis, Sr., all immediately move to form a
top of the cake were a. small of Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.; new party which will follow a
bride and groom and smaller Sk1p Tombhn, Ashland, Ky.; middle-of-the-road political
flowers matching the bride's Lynn Tussey, Cynthana, Ky.; line.
buuqilet. Two baskets of dried Nancy JosepiJ, Charleston,
fall flowers were used on the W.Va.; Jansen Diener, Lansreception tables and were ing, Mich.; Chester NovH ,
later given to the couple's , Frankfort,Ky,; Mr. and Mrs.
mothers. Patricia Helton, Kent Bragg, Point Pleasant,
L.1ndon , Ky. , a sorurily sister W.Va .; Grant Stevenson,
PROTEST POI,LUTION
of the bride registered guesf-'l. Louis~ille, Ky.; Francis ColLE HAVRE, France (UP! )
Following the reception, lins, South Shore. Ky.; Mrs. - Normandy fishermen
the bride changed into a two Elizabeth Sayre, Point Plea- urged their fellow seafarers
piece green suede doth . sant, W.Va, ; Mr. and Mrs. Saturday to help block the
jacket and skirt ensemble Harold Dangler, Fvansville, port of Le Havre starting .
with matching accessories Ind.; Mrs, Jan Bragg, Point Monday morning to protest
for a wedding trip.
Pleasant, W. Va' ; Jerry increasing indu strial
The new Mrs. Noe received McGlone, Circleville; Susie pollution of the northern
her degree in Business from Mdiraw, Cincinnati; Mrs. French Atlantic coast, A
Morehead State University Byrd Perry, Salt Lick, Ky.; spokesman said the fisher·
where she was a member of Mark, Philip and Gene Hood, men will string their boats
Delta Gamma Sorority and Pomeroy; Mrs. Charles across the harbor entrance
was Lambda Chi Alpha Wright, Michigan.
for an indefinite period
Crescent Girl.
A rehearsal dinner was because "when the ecological
Noe, a member of Lambda held Friday, Oct. 15, 7 p,m. balance will have tilted it will.
Chi Alpha Fraternity, receiv- for the parenf-'l, attendanf-'l, be too late."
ed his degree in Business Ad- ·ushers and Rev. Heaton.
ministration at Morehead. He
is .employed as a salesman
for Swift andCo . in
Evansville, Ind. ·
The couple resides at 601
Fountain St., Paducah, Ky,
Out-of-town quesf-'l at the
weddihg included Mr. and

PLACE
THE
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LOFTS

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SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY
ONLY!

VIsit Our Salad Bar
Chopped Sirloin
Horne Fries
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

When something not expected
Takes place to change my plan,
I want to still be willing
To do what good I can.
God surely has a reaS&lt;Jn
When plans are changed for me ,
So, help me, U&gt;rd, wfill it,
Is now my humble plea.

month the children have
made several trips to the.
lilrary and on the nice sunny
days, the children of both
classes have spent a lot of
No corn, no beans, no Hazel,
time outside.
But still there's lots to do,
In the school, there is a lot
And I must not be idle
of supervised learning and
Until my work is thru.
play, but the dtildren have a
Lord, give wme the courage
great deal of time devoted to
To work, wwrite and say
free play, where each child
Things that will be a blessing
learned to develop his own
To others, on life's way. ·
creativity through play, how
to get along with others and
work out their problems by
themselves.
The school is now in the
"ECCE HOMO!"
process of filling their enrol!·
"Behold the Man !"
rnent for next year, so if
This did Pilate say to them
you're interested or would
In tha.t he could not condemn
like information about the
This just Man.
school, please call: Sue
Moulton , 446-9655 ; .Rose.
Behold the Man !
Miller, 446-0625: Mrs. Rick
There in Pilate's Hall He stands
Moody , 446-0122 ; Bertie
Being smote with cruel hands
Roush, 416-4274 or Barbara
This ONE Man,
Moore 446-2'795. Our enrollment can be no more than 25
Behold the Man !
children for the morning
Upon his head a crown of thorns,
class and 20 children for the
While mocking purple now adorns
afternoon class,
This meek Man,
· The morning class from 911:30 a.m. Monday through
Behold the Man !
Friday, is for four year olds.
Hailed then "King of the Jews,"
We try to get the children
But to crucify they ehoose
"""d to .the same type of
This God.man.
environment. they will be
exposed w in the public
Behold the Man!
~rhool kindergarten class, so
Was ever one more stately
that it wUI not be a trawnatic
Taking ill-will so sedate!¥
experience for them when
As TillS Man?
they attend "big" school for
the first time.
Behold the Man!
Afternoon classes fr om
Son of God so incarnated,
12:45-2:45 p.m . Monday,
Eternal life has designated,
Wednesday and Friday is for
THIS blest Man,
three year olds, This is a
' Rutland,
getting acquainted, having
-BLESS HIS HOLY NAME, Mrs. R. D, Brown,
fun class, They learn without Ohio.
definite subject matter being
overly stressed, For a three .
,_,
_,_..._.._._.._...,.. .......
· year old· just getting along
with his own· peer group is a
big adjustment. Pictured
above is part ri the afternoon
class for this school year.
Many of these children will
roove on to OlD' morning class

,_......

ARSONISTS WORK
AJACCIO, Corsica (UP!)
- Arsonists set fire and
bombed villas belonging to
industrialists, a French army
radio relay station, a cork
warehouse and a nightclub
early Saturday. Police
reported no injuries,

_____

.....

-·-··----~

·Pre-Easter Sale

ned

yC&lt;~r

OF BOYS' &amp; GIRLS' SHOES

..

Bye for now from the
QJmmtDlity Nursery School.

GIRLS' BlACK or WHITE

PATENT SHOES
Sizes 8112 to 4

$}} 99Pair

BEAUTIFUL

EASTER FLOWERS
Brin g a breath of sunsh1 ne in gay arrange-

ments to a frie nd or loved one . Our lav ish

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Sizes 8112 to 3
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N.2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Plus Tu

THE MEIGS INN

~J.11J.!!'____. .,. .____. . . ._..._.!!'..,.____...._~--~·----· U~!~~~!!!!.!!!!!~!!U . .

'

Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

'~

~

PHONE H4·991·2644

.)'AfUle~ FLORIST
m E. MAIN - POMEROY, OH!O 45769

~~~~~~-------~~------~ v

. . .....

•'

BY BARBARA MOORE
GALLIPOLIS
The
Community Nursery School,
located at th e First
Presb)terian Church, 51
State St., has finally gotten
over all the hurdles ca used by
the bad weather during the
months of January and
'February.
We would like to take this
chance wsay thank you to all
ri our wonderful mothers who
were very understanding
about our tieating problems
during this time.
We did the usual things for
February,
such
as
celebrating Valentine's Day
(with valentines and special
bags with take home treats)
and acknowledging Lincoln's
and .Washingtoo's birthdays.
Our star chart was started
in February also, with each
child getting a star for acromplishing the following :
learning to put on his or her
own outside clothing (induding cuttons and zippers),
learning lather's name and
being able to wrtte his or her
own name, learning home
address and telephone
number, know and recognize
nwnbars up to 10, know all
the basic colors and learning
to tie his or her own shoes.
For the month of March we
have worked especially on
the different motor skilis,
jumping, running, hopping,
skipping, throwing and
catching balls, cutting with
scissors, climbing and many
&lt;tilers. The children ha ve
also been learning to square
dance (not only good exercise
and wock on motor skill, but
lets of fun also ). Also this

~~~~

••

1

II

SUITS • DRESSES • PANTS - SUITS &amp;
BLOUSES by .
• J•n • Coddingtan ·

''
·"
' .
'

LEAVE WINTER BEHIND

navy blue, bone &amp; red.

•

•

- ,_
'•

Available in: White,

No corn, no beans, no Hazel,
So, I will try to write,
And trust my feeble efforts
Will bring some one delight.
I want to be a blessing
In all I do or say,
.
And this my abn in writing,
As w the Lord, I pray .

Nursery school over
winter weather hurdles

·s pring

VEGETABLE SEEDS

Open up to the summer breezes and
th e soft comfort of the SUNDANCE.
Tantalizing colors to match your every
desire . The SUNDANCE by Vogue . ··,
pretty never ·felt so good!

ALSO ON NEXT SEASON'S schedule is singer, guitarist,
composer Hal Shane who has been cited for his "astonishing
versatility:• Hand,som and charming with a beautiful baritone
voice, he is not only at home with the classics but has also
mastered such artists as Burt Bacharach and Rod McKuen, He
is accomplished im the banjo in addition to a fantastic dancing
ability.

MANY OF TilE children in the afternoon class at the
Community Nursery School, above, will move on to the
morning class for four year olds next year. The morning
class prepares the children for "big" school.

•

Easter season .

Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

anee

Last eve I kept a thinking
That Hazel would come down,
But when I found she couldn't,
I didn 't wear a frown ;
Instead, I started thinking
That corn or beans I'd get,
To fix and save for winter,
But now, it is too wet

lilies say a perfect prayer of love thos

424

1- · - · - · '

This program of dramatic
readings and discussion
relates his plays to lives
today. It is presented by
Kezia VanMeter Sproat and
Bronwynn Hopton as a part of
a 14 performance state-wide
schedule supported in part by
a . grant from the Ohio
Program In the Humanities.

.

JAY SMITH

nilk.

,

On this day in history :
In !634, Leonard and
George Calvert, English
colonists, bought a tract of 30
acres on the,St. Olarles River
and established what is now
called Maryland.
In 1933, Japan resigned
from the League of Nations.
In 1958, Nlkita Khrushchev
replaced Nikolai Bulganin as
premier of the Soviet Union.
"'
.

~., ~ft '

4-H News

Pomeroy - Meigs area
men, women and students
will be interested in par·
ticipating in the program
"Shakespeare on Women" to
be he!Ht the Meigs Museum,
IH Butternut Ave,, Pomeroy,
on Sunday, April 17 .at 2 p.m.
There is no admission
charge.
Local ·sponsors include
Alpha Epsilon Chapter of
Alpha Delta -Kappa Sorority.
Meigs County Retired
Teachers' Association., and
the Middleport-Pomeroy
Branch of the American
Association of University
~

TilE OTHER CONCERTS planned for the 1977-78 seaS&lt;Jn
include Paul Lavalle and the Chamber Music Society of Lower
Basin Street, Hal Shane and The Orpheus Trio,
"Jazz with sophistication" is what Paul Lavalle and his
group of 10 musicians (The Chamber Music Society Of Lower
Basin Street) perform. Theit lively and entertaining music is
highlighted by their dress of slightly worn and mismatched
· tuxedoes, bright socks and shirts and unpolished shues. The
music, characterizations and imagery of the 'Society" were
, created in the I!Htls by Lavalle and were the hit of radio and
records at the time. Today it's an unforgettable musical
experience- one that shouldn't be missed,

Candlelight serVice
unites Cochran-Noe

.

Public invitedto Shakespeare
presentation ·

Women.

116·2312

GALUPOUS - It's membership time again for the TriCounty Community Concert Association and those who join
will be able to attend the final concern of this year's season on
· April 22 as an added bonus. A performance by pianist Thomas
Schumacher will dedlca te the Steinway piano recently
purchased by the concern association and stored at Riverby.

.
ANNIVERSARY OBSERVED- Mr. and Mrs. Jack R. Ables of Rt 2, Racine, observed
their 25th wedding anniversary March 23 with a family celebration.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activities locate_d at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
isopen 9a.m.-4 p.m,, Monday
through Friday.
Monday, March 28- Qlrds
and Games; Square Dance,
12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday. March 29 Physical Fitness,I0:4S a.m.;
Kriitting Class, IIH1 :30 a.m.;
Cborus. 12:15·2 p,m.
Wednesday, March 30 Social Security Represen·
tative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p,m.;
Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
Thursday, March 31 Physical Filness, 10:45 a.m.;
Sing-a•Long, 12:15 p.m.
Friday. April I - Art Class,
lll-11 :30. a.m.; Bowling, 1-,'1

This morn it was a raining,
And to myself, I said,
nNo corn, no beans, no Hazel,
So, guess I'll go w bed .." '
My weary body rested
For just a little while,
But I could not stay idle,
Nor keep away a smile .

by Sarah Carsey

-·

Kerr Bobwhites met March
22 at advisor's house (Rita
Shriver), Tammy Shriver
]resided and Karen Caldwell
led devotions. Tammy
Shriver had charge of the
)l'ogram. The next meeting
will be April 19 at advi~or's
house (Rita Shriver), Advisors are Mrs. Rita Shriver
md Mrs, Wilma Caldwell.
Members present were
Becky Barr, Larry Caldwell,
Tammy Pla~ts, Karen
.Caldwell, Joyce Boggess;
Tammy Shriver, Kendi Barr,
Debbie Caldwell, Robbie
Caldwell, and Paulette
Roberts. Guests present were
Mrs. Louise Qlldwell, Darrell
Qlldwell, Sally Caldwell and
Bruce Shriver. - Reporter
•Janie Caldwell.

MUST NOT BE IDLE
By Mrs. Riley Pigott,
LoogBonom

Gallia Diary

.

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
APRIL 2, 1977

Poets' comer

_Sarah's

.-• -

PORK

Exhibit for the month of March: 60 Batiks by Williari.
Sneden of Big Rapids, Mich. on display in both galleries.
Gallery Hours ; Saturdays and Sundays, I until 5 p,m.;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10a.in. until3p.m., H.iverny.
Exhibit for- !lie month of April: Prints and poems by
children of Japan circulated by the Ohio Federation of the
~~. I
.
April 19 B p.m. - FAG. lnterdepartmenta Meetmg,
Riverby.
.
April 24 2-4 pm. - Parent-Child Workshop: Riverby .
April26, Bp,m. -F ,A.C. Trustees Meetmg, Riverby.

Ann's Bridal and
Anniversa!J Services

.

•••

'

~m.

Complete Bridal
And Anniversary
Service
Free Consultation

'

Store Hours
8 A.M.- 10 P.M.
Mon.-Sat.
tO,A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday

,..,~

RIO GRANDE - He can ESP demonstrations to his
pedal-a bicycle through New credit. During Eve! Knieval's
York traffic blindfolded. He · Snake River Canyon jwnp,
can walk through fire three Eagles, blindfolded, was
letlt from the 11dge of the mentally guided through an
&amp;lake River Canyon. He can obstacle course of fire three
accomplish amazing feats of . feet from the edge of the
canyon. He also rode a
dairvoyance.
He is not Superman, licycle six blocks through
captain Marvel or the Spider heavy New York traffic
Man. His name is Gil Eagles guided only by the "thought
and he calls himself "the waves" of an ESP researchmtertaining psychic." He'll er.
be at Rio Grande College - Eagles was horn and raised
Community COllege Tuesday, in Tanganyika, East Africa,
March 29, 8 p.m., in the He began practicing clairwyance at .the age of 10. He
oollege dining hall.
During his app~arance, was educated at Christ
Eagles promises to mystify O&gt;llege, U&gt;ndon, England, as
the audimce by correctly a psychology major, After
naming items they pro- rroving to the United States
duce at random while in 1960, he became a popular
he' s
blindfolded. psychic entertainer ap·
He says he's able to pearing at a variety of
answer questions the oolleges and conventions as
audience is thinking of and well as on television;
The Rio Grande program,
will write down names and
numbers before they think of sponsored by RGC-CC' s
Artists and Lecture Comthem.
Eagles has two startling mittee, is open to the public at
m -charge.

BY RUTH MILLER
GALUPOLIS - · Wanted.
Senior citizens - ·over 90.
Senior citizens - who are
100 or over.
' We need to know who the
· .oldest senior citizen is in our
· county .in addition to our
· o1dest·marriedeouple and the
couple who has been married
the longest, If you don 't call
or write to the senior citizens
center, how are we going to
know who to honor on our own
special Senior Citizens Day
May 17?
•
We also want some musical
entertainers or anyone with a
talent for music. If we can get
enough people interested we
. can have a talent show on
Senior Citizens Day, Are you
an old time fiddler , banjo
player or a player 'of any
musical instrument' Please
let us know as soon as
possible.
May ·11 is to be a very
special day for all senior
citizens so come on help
honor them for all the things
they have done for us.
Call 446,7000 if you know
anyone who may fill any of
the above qualifications.

..

is rapidly progressing on the
"little theatre" home. Much
renovation has taken place
in recent weeks, including the
initial construction of the stage
area and many coats of
paint. Tl)e society wishes tp
thank all of th'ose who
are showing such enthusiasm in · this extension of the society's
and anyone interested in
"little theatre" activity is
asked to contact Mrs. Wibna
Mullins, Lafayette Mall,
Gallipolis.
Dates for tnis year's
"Gallia Country" are set for
the last four weekends in
July: 6-10, 15-17, 22-24 and 2931. Ticket information will be
made .»•ailable in the near
future, •

'

Mrs. Michael D. Noe

Psychic to appear
at Rio Grande

'

POLYESTER

p.m.
Auditions will be held for
singing and acting. Each
participant should prepare
his own song, Apianist will be
provided, Dance try-outs will
be held at a later date Ito ba
announced).
Miller has announced that
more acting roles will be
offered this year, however,
anyone wishing to participate
in any other phase of theatre
(backstage , costumes ,
scenery) is invited to attend
the auditions and relay that
interest to the directorial
staff.
The Gallia Dramatic Arts
Society, producers of "Gallia
Country," following Thursday night's monthly meeting,
toured the lower. level of the
Lafayette· Mall, where work

WELL'S

'

PSYCHIC Gil Eagles will speak at the Rio Grande
College.Qlmmunlty College dining hall Tuesady, March
29 at 8 p.m.

Oldest senior
•citizens wanted
/or celebration

g

B-7-TheSw•day Times.Sentinel,Sun&lt;l~y. March 27, 1!177

~

'

CHAPMAN SHOES
Next Door To Elberfelds
· Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store

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�C-1-TheSundayTimes..Sentinei,Sunda.v, March27. 1!177

Magics . upset, 80-74

ant ers capture
io's

Warriors in
NCAA inals
QUAKER STATE
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Falcons have
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88

COLUMBUS t UP[) - Gale
Catlett, who led the
University of Cincinnati to a
25-.'i record and the Metro
S·even

Co nf ere nce

championship for the second
straight year. has been
named the 1977 Ohio College
Basketball Coach of the Year.
Catlett, 36, concluded his
fifth year a t Cincinnati with a
career mark of 109-34 for a
.762 winning percentage. The
Bearcast lost In Marquette in
the first-round of this year'S
NCAA tourney.
Ca tlett is the third
Cincinnati coach. to win the
award, sponsored by the
Columbus Dispatch . Ed
Jucker won in 1963 and
George Smith in 1958.
A native of West Virginia,
Catle tt letttered for the
Mountaineers in 1%2 and
1963. He was, an assistannt
coach at Richmond 1%4 and
1965 and was an assistant at
Davidson in 196£.
He was an assistant coach
at Kansas in 1%7 and ·was an
assistant to Adolph Rupp at
Kentucky in 1971.
In winning the award,
catlett
edged
out
Muskingum's Jim Burson,
whose tea m won the Ohio
Conference this year. Forty
of Ohio's 45 college coaches
voted.

BY GARY CLARK
figured to be one of their
MASON - Thoughts of a strong points. Also figuring to
state tournament berth arc see a great deal of action on
already being circulated the mound will be sophomore
around the bend area as the Mark Smith and Junior Rick
upcoming spring baseball Buzzard.
season
got
underway
Despite the abundant pitchSaturday with the Waharna ing stall Coach Spencer will
White Falcons visit ing be forced to play his first few
Belpre.
ga mes without the services of and calls him "Whitehorse,"
Coach Gordon Spencer, Goldsberry, Davis and a brand of scotch.
beginning his third year at Tucker on the mound due to
But Whitehead was aimost
the helm of the White Falcon the lengthy basketball the whole show for the
baseball nine, inherits a solid · season.
Warriors, 24i7, as Butch Lee
nucleus from last year's 24-11
Other probable starter s had a ·subpar game and Bo
squad which saw only three include: Tim Thompson, last Ellis wa s in foul trouble most
starters participate 'in year's home run and RBI of the second half.
graduation ce remonie s leader, behind the plate with
The quietest member of the
following a successful either Goldsberry or Davis Marquette team and a loner
diamond campaign. Spencer perched on first base; Buz- who never associates with his
has compiled a fine 36-23 slate zard figures to be at ~econd teammates, Whitehead went
in his two seasons at the bend with Riggs holding down the head-to-head with UNCC's
area school.
hot corner, the shortstop Maxwell and more than held
David Reed, Terry Tucker position will go to either Mark his own .
and Dale Lewis must be Smith or Du~e Smith.
The son Of a ministerreplaced in · the starting
In the outlield will be Sayre barber, Whitehead scored 10 one of two free throws with 13
lineup, but a squad of some 34 in center with the remaining of Marquette's last.I5 points. seconds left to boost the
candidates should make two positions going to Rod
After a terrible start, the Warriors ' edge to 49-47, but
Spencer's and his assistant Click, Mike Lambert, Mike 49crs took the lead in the Maxwell, who finished with 17
Richard Cline, job a little Goldsberry, Tim Davis or second
half
before points tied it eight seconds
easier in trying to fill those Jerry Tucker.
Whit'ehead's Jumper put later to set up the game's
slots which include two
Wahama returns to act ion Marquette back in front, 311· frantic climax.
outfield positions and one four times this wee k 37 . He scored Marquette's
Lee fini shed with 11 points
infield post.
following Saturday's ga mes, next six points as the for the Warriors, while Ellis
Heading the list of retur· weather permitting. All four Warriors increased their was held to only four.
nees for Wahama this season games are at home, and margin to 44·39, but UNCC Lew Massey, who played
will be 1976 All-Stater, Tim includes Meigs on Monday, then scored eight straight most of the second half with a
Sayre, and lost year's team Hannan Tra ce on Wed· points to take a 47-44 lead.
bloody nose, had 14 points for
batting champion, Ken nesday, Huntington Vinson on
Melvin Watkins ' pair of the 49ers, whose record is
Riggs.
Thursday and Spencer in- fr ee throws with I :41 now 28-4.
Sayre, a 5'-10'' fleet footed vades Friday.
remaining completed the
Whitehead had a gamecenterfielder, literally stole
streak,
but
Lee
scored
on
a
hi
gh 16 rebounds for
1977WAHAMA
his way onto· the 1976 Class
pair
of
long
jumpers
in
the
Marquette
and made 10 of his
BASEBALL ROSTER
AA all-state team by swiping
16
shots
from the floor.
next
1:11
to
give
Marquette
a
SENIORS - Tim Sayre, of ;
a total of 56 bases. The Tim Thompson, c; Tim 48-47 lead with 30 seconds Maxwell, who made five of
"Rabbit" as he is sometimes Davis , p, of, lb; Duke Smith, remaining.
only six field goal attempts,
called by his teammates also inf ; Mike Lambert, of ; Mike
had 12 rebound's for UNCC.
Gary
Rosenberger
sa
nk
p 1b, of; Ken
led his team in hits (35 } and Goldsberry.
Riggs, inf; Jer ry Tucker , p,
runs scored (31}, while of; Rod Click, of, and Jay
compiling a .368 batting Layne, of .
JUNIORS - Rick Buzzard ,
average.
Tom Thom pson , p, lb ;
Riggs won the team batting inf;
Phil Hob bs. lb; Kelv in
title with a fantastic .402 Honaker, c, of ; Kurt Say r e,
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - 1977,
the
diminutive
average on .27 hits in 67 of· of , inf ; Jeff Collier . p, i nf ;
ficial tripa to the plate. The Brett Holbrook'.. p, 1b ; David Hardly a day goes by in. this, Cincinnati Reds second
of; Mike Phale, his 15th spring training, that baseman has never forgotten
5'10" third sacker started off Thompson.
of ; Buddy Rose, ot ; Tim Joe Morgan isn't reminded of his baseball "roots."
slow but finished the season Litchfield , of ; Rod Van
That's why he so often finds
with a flurry of safeties to Fossen, inf, of and Da le K·lng , his · Wlique opportunity to
make baseball history by himself thinking and talking
enable him to gain the top of.
SOPHOMORE - - Kreig winning three straight Most about an MVP of another era
spot.
Sayre, inf ; Mark Sm ith, p,
· - the late Nellie Fox.
The White Falcon mound lnf; Mark Fisher, of; Jack Valuable Player awards.
And
while
winning
"! think about him all the
corps Is supposedly one of the Smith, ' c, of ; Don Rus sel, p,
baseball's
most
coveted
i
nf
and
David
Camp,
of
.
time,"
said Morgan of the
best In the state. Led by three
FRESHMEN
Fred award an unprecedented former Chicago White Sox
competent seniors In Mike
Smith, inf; Rick McKirg.a n,
Goldsberry, Tim Davis and c inf ; Vince Weaver , p, tnf ; third straight time most second base great who died of
Jerry Tucker the White t:ioctie David , c, of and Jeff surely ranks high on cancer 15 months ago. "!
Morgan's list of goals ·for guess that's because I know I
Falcon pitching staff is Arnold, lb.
t -.,--·
I

CONVERSE
FAST BREAK

HECK'S REG.

second game of Saturday's
doubleheader to detennine
Marquette's op ponent in
Monday night 's championship game.
Maxwell had scored on an
eight-foot jump shot with five
seconds left to tie the game
for unheralded UNCC, 49-49.
Two seconds ticked off the
clock before Marquette was
able to get a time out. The inbounds pass went the length
of the court to Whitehead at
the foul line, slipping through
Maxwell's hands. Whitehead
picked up the ball, took one
step to the basket and jammed it through Maxwell's
hands above the rim.
Whitehead, a 6-foot-11
junior center, played with
uncommon agg ressiveness to
score points and lead the
Warriors.
McGuire , who prides
himself as an amateur
psychologist and Usually
makes sure his players need
one by the time they leave
Marquette if they didn't when
they entered, often fails to
remember Whitehead's na me

Catlett
coach
of year

Ctepe ouhole

e Podd!d tricot coKor e ''V'

or'h fo r exlrQ comfort
ovoiloble in white and navy .

e

1

design • Fwl

HECK'S REG. $8.66 PA.

.

1·~
'·. .
·~

·Ill

?)

~

COLUMBUS (UP!} Senior Forward Doug
Brandewie scored 24 points In

wouldn't be the ball player I
am today had it not been for
his help."
Morgan's relationship with
Fox gtJes back to 1964 when
!loth were with the Houston
Astros - Fox as a veteran in
the twilight of his career and
Morgan as a raw rookie with
great expectations. Although
acutely aware that Morgan's
rapid development would
hasten his own retirement,
Fox befriended Joe and
worked on honing the
youngster's skills.
11

;~

,
'
·

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ssa!

S/1011$11,T.

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J
I'

"~1"1111' llo!lli~~~,;o,,i'""l!~,~~*'''"
"'
.JI'II'&gt;'I'!lll'·•1"'&gt;'f&gt;i:l·f&lt;~'

------"
1977 WIUTE

FALCON BASEBAlL TEAM - The
Waha!Nl Baseball Team opened its season Saturday
againlt Belpre. Frmt row, left to right: Jay Layne, Mike
Goldaberry, Ken Riggs, Tim Thompson, Tim Sayre, Tim
·Davis and Duke Smith. Second row: Rod Click, Tim Litchfield, Jack Smith, Jeff Collier, Torn Thompson, Rick

'

-~

LINDEN -McKINLEY 1801

Williams 11 !2-4) 24. J ohn
Davi s 2 (1-31 S. James Davi s 5

15-6) 15, Ferguson 2

(4.5)

8.

Todd Penn 11 (6-6) 28, Trent

Penn 0 101 ·1 0, Collins 0 I0-01
0. Totals 31 118-261 90.
BARBERTON (74)- Mark
Bodnar 4 I0-81 8, Marty
Bodnar I 10·01 2. Scoll 10 12
2) 11. Grisby 10 (5-5 28, Ward
3 10·11 6, Graham 0 10-0) o,
Bor sos 2 {1 -3) 5, Cameron 1

10·01 2, Webster 2 10·0) 4.
Totals J3 18-111 74 .
score by quarter s~
Linden
25 11 13 39- 80
Ba rbert on

Fouled

18 17 15 24--.,.-74

out

-

Marty

Bodnar , Scott. Total fouls -

Linden 12 Barberton 23. A -

14,043.

PHILS ROOT CARDS
CLEAR WATER, Fla ,
IUP IJ - Greg Lozinski
clouted a home run and a
double and drove in three
runs Saturday to power the
Philadelphia Phillies to a 7-1
rout over the St. Louis Car·
dinals in a spring training
game .

Ft. Loramie 'A' champ

BELLAIRE TENNIS SHOES
•

player ."

1977 BEND AREA BIDDY LEAGUE CHAMPS- In one of the more exciting Biddy League games of the year Friday
night at Wahama, the Mason Celtics came from behind and eventually topped the Knicks in overtime 32·28 to win the league
championship. Pictured In the first row, left to right, are Tim Compson, Joey Ohlinger, Troy Dudding .and Steve Lyons. ·
Second row: Steve Meadows, Tony Seylers, Norm Laudennilt and Coach James Dudding.
·

CONVERSE®

~onge inK&gt;It a nd

ward, dominated the action
inside, getting many of his 24
points on tip-ins or follow
shots and winding up with 20
rebounds.
"Williams and Carter Scott
are th e best kids of their size
I've ever seen in going to the
basket," said Davis. "And I'll
tell you something else, John
Davis played a heck of a
game out there today ."
Davis had 15 points and 12
rebounds and forced the highscoring Scott.to do most of his
damage from the outside.
~'red'Grisby led Barberton
with 25 points and Scott had
22.
Marty Bodnar, who got' in
early foul trouble and sat out
more than half of the game,
settled for only 2, while his
twin brother Mark ha d B.
"They were a little
hungrie r than us," sa id
Barberton coach Jack
Greynolds. "And they really
pounded us on the boards. we
played under psr, but th ey
probably made us. I think
Todd Penn is a helluva

Tournament.
Fort l.AJramie which came
into the tournament with the
worst record of the four
teams, 18-8, jumped to an
early 8-2 lead then led all the
way in handing St. Peter's
their fifth loss in 'll games.
Fort Loramie, with a 5-6
straight National League record at one time in the
MVP. Joe Morgan would like season, won 15 of its last 17
In see Nellie Fox in the Hall of ga mes to finish at 20-8. The
Fame at Cooperstown, N.Y. . Redskins, under first year
coach George Hamlin fought
"There's already been a lot off every St. Peter's charge
of guys put in the Hall of with Brandewie, a 6-4 second
Fame ahead of Nellie who team All-Ohio an, and 6.,1 Tom
weren 'I nearly as good as he Steinke, who finished with 19
was," said Morgan. ''The points, doing most of the
trouble is, infielders are scoring.
never judged by·their position
St. Peter's a former Class A
and as a consequence, their ch'!lllpion got into serious
statistics don't measure up foul trouble which had
with outfielders.
to
hurt
the
Spar"They forget all the pres- tan 's chances. Mike Dem·
sures that infielders play yan who led St. Peter's
under. We contrirute other , with 18 points and Art Varga
things - like leadership. AU fouled out late in the game.
the outfielder has to worry
But possibly the biggest
about, really, is his bat. He's key to the Fort Loramie win
told what base to throw to was holding St Peter's 8-8
after he catches a ball. I know Sophomore center Leo Brown
if I had stayed in the outfield I to just three points.
could do a lot better with my
Brown had scored 22 points
.bat."
in his team's semifinal win
Perhaps, but it's hard to ove r Ross Southeastern
imagine anyone having a Friday night.
much better all-round year
Fort Loramie which led 33than Joe Morgan in 197~ and 21 at the half was up 51.J7
'76. Unless, maybe, Joe with 7:15 left in the game.
Morgan in 1977.

lead Cinderella Fort Loramie championship game of the
to a 63-.'iO win over Mansfield Class A Boys State High
St . Peter's Saturday in the . Schoo·!
Basketball

Late Nellie Fox wa$ Joe Morgan's idol

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ATLANTA (U P! }
and it took officials one
Jerome Whitehead brutally minute to decide whether or
stuffed a dunk shot through · not it had been made in time
, the hand.s of Cedric "Corn· as McGuire frantically
bread' ' Maxwell at the buzzer argued with them in front of
Saturday to give Marquette a the scorer's table. But the
51-49 NCAA semifinal victory shot finally was ruled good
over UNC-Charlotte and keep and McGuire walked ot the
alive retiring Coach AI other side of the court with
McGuire's last chance for a 'both fists raised high.
national championship.
The injury-handicapped
Whitehead's shot occurred North Carolina Tar Heels met
just as. the buzzer went off Nevada-l.AJs Vegas in the

COLUMBUS (UP! } - "We
Linden, ranked second
did what we said we were behind Barberton in the UP!
going In do," said Columbus coaches poll all year long,
Linden McKinley coach Jene · trailed 50-48 at the end of the
Davis after his team snapped third quarter. But Penn and
top-"ranked Barberton's 51· Sterling Williams scored the
game winning streak with an first four points of the fina l
80-74 win over the Magics quarter and the Panthers
Saturday
in
the never. trailed again, leading
championship game of the by as many as 14 points, 76-62,
Ohio High Scoool Class AAA with 2:10 left.
b;lsketball tournament.
Barberton 's usually
"Nobody would believe devestating full&lt;ourt press
us, " said Davis, whose had little effect on Penn and
Panthers have now won two the Panthers and Magics'
big-school
state coach Jack Greynolds finally
championships in the last took it off.
three years. ''I really felt our
"When they called off the
semi-fi nal game against press,'' said Davis, " I told
Cincinnati l-'ISalle was the our kids 'hey, they 've given
key to our win ni ng the up.•n
championship. ''
Davis said the press was
Once again it was the the main reason he believed
electrifying play of all-Ohio his team could beat
TOdd Penn which turned the Barberton.
game in Linden's favor.
"Anybody who plays fullThe 5-10 Penn, a three-year court pressure is going to
starter and a member of the make us play up to our
all-tournament team as a pote nti al, " sa id Davis .
sophomore, scored 14 of his ''That's why I wanted to play
game~1igh 28 points in the
them so badly."
climatic final period.
Williams, a 6-3 senior for-

';

Buzzard, Kurt Sayre, and Buddy Rose. Third row : Mike
Lambert, Jerry Tucker, Vince Weaver, Mark Smith,
Kraig Sayre, Fred Smith, Rick McKirgan, David Camp
and "Doc" Hobbs. Fourth row : Don Russell, Dale King,
Rod VanFosson, Jeff Arnold, Mark Fisher, Mike Phalen, ·
David Thompson and Brett Holbrook.

.i

[t

wasn't

so

much

mechanics that he helped me
with," recalled Morgan. "He
always told me I had twice as
much natural ability as be
ever had and that it's
Impossible to teach that. But
it was mental attitude which
he taught me and it's
something I've never
forgotten.
•'The most important thing
Nellie said was to let everything take care of it.elf. In
other words, if you're not
hitting good, don 't let it affect
the rest of your game. Just go
out and do all the other things
that are part of your game
the same way and sooner or
later the hitting will take care
of Itself."
The equally int-sized Fox
won the American League's
Most Valuable Player award
In 1959 when, through a
combination of timely hitting
(.306}, boundless desire and
hustle, he spearheaded the
White Sox to their first
pennant in 40 years.
"He was always my idol,"
said Morgan. "That's why I
guess it was so Important to

me that when I finally did
meet him, he was so good to
me. Back. then, the veterans
didn't talk to the rookies and I
think if Nellie had been that
way it would have changed
my entire outlook on the
game."
Although their careers took
different routeS as the '!liE
moved into the '70s, Morgan
kept in touch wlth Fox.
''When I got to Cincinnati/'
Morgan said, "Nellie told me
that even though be had been
an American Leaguer all his
life, in his heart he couldn't
root against me in a World
Series. Now that may not
sound like much unless
you're a ballplayer and you
know how much rivalry there
really is between leagues."
It was a couple of years
later when Nellie Fox talked
to Morgan again abo~t
another personal goal.
"He was dying at the
time," Morgan related, "and
when I called him in his
hospital room in Maryland,
he told me 'I really hope you
win the MVP award. I'm
puUin' for you becau8e I know
you deserve it.' Can you
Imagine that? AU · he could
think about was me. I've
never forgotten that, either,
and quite often I wish maybe
I had done more or said more
when I talked to him. But he
always sounded so good over
the phone that he never let on
to me how sick be really
was."
That's why, in Joe
Morgan's mind, there's
another award that is even
more important than a third
I

'

'

NORTHFIELD
.
NORTHFIELD • Oh 10
(UP!) - Longshot Ace Ex·
(reSS won the $3,500 featured
ninth race at Northfield Park
Friday night, trotting the
mile in 2:07.
Tbe winner, driven by
CharlesC;rouser Jr. , returned
,.
•!B
d $8 30
.., 3·80 • • ·80 an
· ·
Darnwood was second and
Mystic Boy finished third.
The big triple oombination
rl 5-6-7 was worth $93·60 ·
A crowdtlf 4,192 wagered
.,83.714. ·

Mansfield St. Peter 's 1501
- Demyan 7 14-61 18 ;
Hegarty I 10-1) 1; Brown 1 11·
4) 3: VarQa •I0-01 8; Brooks 7
10-01 14 ; Hunter 1 12-21 4;
O'Brien o 11 ·21 1. Tota ls : 21
(8-15 150.
Fort Loramie 163) Brandewie 8 18-101 ' 24 ;
Steinke s (9-121 19; Boeckman 3 (o.o) 6: Quinli n 1 (4-6 1
6; Goldschmidt o 18-81 8;
Quinter 0 IO·ll 0. Totals : 17
(39-37) 63.
· score by quarters :
Mansfield
10 11 16 13- 50
Fort Loramie 15 18 14 16-64
F-ouled Out: Demyan,
Var a and Boeckman . Tolal
Fou~s : Fort Loramie 13.
Mansfield 2'1 . A - 12,714.

'•

�C~3- TheSundoy 'l'ilnes..."!(•nttlll'l, Suml; ly. Ma t ,,: ll '1.7. 1!177
LYNE CENTER GYM&amp; POOL SCHEDULE
Week of Morch 11, 1977
DATE- GYMNASIUM

Lowrie sparks Latin win
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Cleveland Cathedral Latin
coach Don Gacey says he
feels · ''secW"e '' when Bob
Lowrie is in the game. But,
Just think how the other coach

feels.
Lowrie, Latin's 6-&lt;l aii.Ohio
guard, put on a dazzling
display of scoring and sleight·
of-hand Friday night,
sparking the lions to an 85-{)7
victory over Ottawa-Glandorf
in the semifinals .of the Class
AA Boys State High School
Tournament.
The win , coupled with
Columbus Mifflin 's 54-52
squeaker over Dayton
Jefferson in the other
semifinal, sat up a
championship
mat ch
SaturdaY between the No . 4
(Latin) and No. 6 (Mifnin)
teams in the final UP! Board
of Coaches ratings.
II was a blistering second
half fast break, triggered by
the magnificent feeds of
1..4Jwrie, which broke open
what had been a tight game.
"Our basic offense is our
fast break," said Gacey, a .
member of the last Latin
team to play in the state
tournament (1957). "Lowrie
usually winds up with the ball
in the middle and he 's a
fantastic passer. We feel
secure when he is in there."
But, the guy who got the
whole thing rolling for the
Lions was 6-5, 205-pound
sopoomore Karl Morris, one
of tbree sophomore starters,
who matched 1..4Jwrie in
scoring with 23 points and
also led bQth teams with 18

slows you down when you
ha ve to take the hall out of
boW1dS.

1
'

Bruce Howard, a ~. J3t).
poWld senior guard who suffered an asthma attack
during the game , was the

hero of the Mifflin.Jelferson
game.
Howard banked a IUoot
jump shot off the glass with 11
seconds romaining to give the
Punchers of coach John
Smith a hard-earned win over

Jefferson .'
Miffiin , trailing 5:1-43, tied it
oo a baskets by Howard ·and
Chris Taylor to set up
Howard's deciding goal.
Jeflerson coach Norris
Brown had called time with

:JO seconds left to set up the
last shot.
Sophomore guard Joe Wat.
kins fired it up from the
corner with just under 20
semnds left. He missed and it
was rebounded by Mi!nin's &amp;-

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Leo
Brown. a 6-6 sophomore
scored 22 points and grabbed
11 rebounds Friday to lead
Mansfield St. Peter's to a 6858 win
over
Ross
Southeastern
in
the
semijinals of the Boys' State
High School Basketball Tour-

nament.'
St. Pet er's now 23-1, play·
ed Fort 1..4Jramie in Satur·
day's Class A championship
game. Fort 1..4Jramie downed
Continental 7')..50 in the other
Class A semifinal Friday .
St. Peter's ranked 13th in
the fin al UP! Board of
Coaches ratings led fr om
start to finish in handing the
4th -ranked Panthers their
second loss in 25 games.
St Pete jwnped on top 6-&lt;l in
the first two a'd one-half
minutes of Ute game and the
closest Southeastern was able
to get was 5 points, once late
rebowlds,
in the first half an.d again
Latin, 23-2, led only 41-30 at with ·1:52 left in the game .
halftime, but built the margin
But Brown who scored 14 o!
to as much as 23 points late Lo his 22points in the second half
had three free throws and
the game.
"They wore us down in the dr iving layup to hold off the
second half and we couldn't Panther rally .
"We have to be pleased
compete with them on the
boards," said Ottawa.Cland- with our boys because they
prf's Ron Niekamp. "They can really apply the
are the quic'e~ team we've pres.&lt;ure," said first year St.
Peli:'r's coach Pat Maurer.
played all year.
''We especially had trouble Sou theastern coach Larry
in the second half getting the Jordan blamed his team's
defensive rebound," sald poor start on being "super
tight. "
~- •!&lt;.amp, whose team also
" Th~y (St Peters ) settled
lL&lt;~s to fast break, "and it

,....

down first and we have to
play catch up the whole
game. We knew they were
going to be an awfully good
ball club."

other team had to go inside."
Mike Demyan and Kevin
Brooks each scored 14 for St.
Peter's while Jeff Schuler
had 21 and Coy Prater 12 to
pace Southeastern.
St. Peter's had the
rebounding edge, 42-31, and
hit on 20 of 25 free tllrows to
only six of 12 for
Southeastern.
In the other semifinal
game, All.()hio forward Doug
Brandewie scored 'll points,
even though sitting out part of
second and last time at 4-1 the game, and Tom Steinke
then won only three more added 22 to pace Fort
points the rest of the match. Loramie .
Evert, who will he going for
ST. PETER ' S 168) 7 (Q. l) 14, H eg art yO
$50,000. and her fourth Demyan
(4 -5) 4, Braw n 8 (6 -7) 22.
Virginia Slims Title today, Varga 3 (4 -Sl 10, Brook s 5 ( 4and Barker, In the finals of 4) u , O' Brien 0 {0-11 0,
0 (2 -2) 2, Nadolsk i 1
her first Triple Crown event. Hunter
(0 -0 ) 2, Totals 24· (20-251 68 .
assured· themselves of at
SOUTHEASTERN (581 Est ep 1 (0-0 ) 2, Schu ler 10 (1least $30,000.
3) 21 , Eldridge 2 (1 .3) 5.

Jordan said he favored St.
Peter's over Fort Loramie in
Saturday's title · game
because "they are better
balanced . It seems like the

Evert close
to perfect

NEW YORK (UP!) -Chris
Evert , playing close to
perfect tennis, blasted Rosie
Casals, &amp;-1, &amp;-1, Saturday and
26-year-old British sensation ·
Sue Barker upset secondseeded Martina Navratilova,
7-5, 6-4, to advance to the
finals of the $150,000 Virginia
Slims championship. .
Evert, again playing under
the watchful gaze or her Springfield is
steady companion, actor B~
Reynolds, needed Just 48 gymnastics champ
minutes to whip Casals for
the 21st time in 22 career
WHEATON, Ill. (UP!) meetings.
·Springfield, Mass. College
Evert allowed Casals only easily won the team
si&lt; points as she swept championship in the NCAA
through the first five games. Divislon !I and Ill
Casals held for the first time Gymnastics Friday.
at 5·1 but Evert crushed her
california State University
with a haseline shot down the . at Northridge edged the
line to win the opening set in University of Illinois chicago
only 13 minutes.
Circle for second place with a
Cassis saw her first two score of 381.25 to 379.50.
services broken in the second
Springfield won although it
set as Evert raced to 8 ~ had only one first place
lead. Cassis held for · the finisher, with Gary Gonzales
winning the lloor exercise.
The key was placing four
teammates in the top six allaround -finishers.

IF YOUR RUNNING IN ALL DIRECfiONS

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h
RIGHT DIRECTION

COMPLETE BANKING SERVICES
• No-Service-Charge Personal Checking
•Savings Accounts
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Pr&lt;'!ler 5 (2 .4) 12 . Car roll 0 (D Ol 0. Kelloug 3 ( 7 -2 1 B.
Schriider 3 (0-0l 6 , Duckwort h

2

4 . Totali 26 (6-121 sa.
score by quarters :
St . Pet er 's
19 17 17 15- 68
( Q,QJ

Southeastern 13 14 lA 17- 58
Fou l ed out ~ Sch u le r .
St .
Br ook s. To tal touts Peter ' s 16, Sou theas t ern 21. A
- 12 ,556 .

Aprill - 7-9 p.m. Fa m. Rec. Night
7-9 p.m. Fam. Rec. Nlghl
Closed
7 Marvin Walker, who ftred Aprii2- Cio&lt;ed
Apr il3- 2·4 p.m. Public Rec.
2·A p.m. Public Sw im
the ball to Howa rd .
7·9 p.m. College Rec.
7-9p.m. Publi c Swim
" He {Watkins ) wasn't supFa m il y Recreation Nigh ~ r esum es for th e Spri ng Quarter .
posed to shoot it then." s•id All chil dren must be accompani ed b y a p ar'l! nt or guardian .
Brown . "We set up a double
screen lor him . He was .;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;.;:::::::;::::.;:;.;-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·;;:::::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::·
supposed to shoot it at seven
seconds and everybody was
supposed to crash the boards.
Instead, the kids looked up
and the hall was in the alr ."
34
G irls
"Our . kids have won the
Cle Col1i n iNOOd · 54 warr en
Ohio High S.:h ool
cl ose ones all year," said
Weste r n Rsv 48 ·
Basketb all
Cla ss A
Smith. "They just keep their
Un ited Press. ln t trnati ona 1
(At Bowling Gr een)
Fr iday ' !!. Tournament
poise. i\.nd, ea ch time it's a
D elp hos St. J oh n 46 Ad&amp; 37
R es utt s
New Riegel .t6 H ill t op 45 (of)
different kid. Our bench did
Cla ss AAA
(At Delaware)
( At Wes1 er vi lle )
the job again . 1 think our
Co l Wa ln u t Ridge 5B Col L anc a st er Fisher 70 Sou th
depth made the diff erence." Wa Iter son 55 ( ot )
Webst er 55
Zane Tr ace 50 lnd jan V al le y
Howard led the PWlchers in Z"nesvil l e 32 Raven na 29
N 49 ( ot)
rAt Day ton )
scoring with 16 points.
(At Dayton)
Spr ingfield N 60 Day ton Co l.
F ra nkf ord A dena 51 J a ckson
"We 'venever ha d as good a Whil e 45
Cin Mothe r of M ercy 54 Ce nter 49
shooter as he ha s developed Ham
A,rcanum 62 M idd l et ow n
itt on T i)ft 50
into ," Smith said of hLq
Fe nwick 36
(At Sandu sky )
Wooster)
bespectacled littl e g"ard. T ~ledo Ce n Cath 47 Bav Ma nsfie(AI
ld St. P e t er 's 38
· Vii l ag e 45
"He just turned 17. He's a late Medin a 42 Se lby 34
Car di11al 35
bloomer."

( At Canton )
Mentor 38 Gr eensburg Gre!!n

COLUMBUS MIFFLIN
Tayl or 6 0·2 12, M1lfon
5 o.o 10, Walk er 3 2·2 B.
(54) -

Howard 8 O·D 16, New by 0 0-0

MERCE RVILLE - More
than 250 people attended the
Hannan Trace Rinky Dink
Awards Night held March 4 in
the elementary gym. Ninety
trophies and plaqu es were
award ed . to
pla yers,

COLUMBUS (UP! )
DAYTON
JEFFERSON Columbus Unden McKinley's
(521 - Mattison 4 0·0 8, Tr i pp Todd Penn, who scored 54
41 -3 91 Gist 4 2-4 10, Hayde n 5
3·3 3, Watk ins 6 0-0 12. Totals points and set up numerous
othe rs in the Panthers'
23 &amp;- 10 52.
march to the Class AAA Boys
Score by quarters :
Mifflin
16 10 18 tll-'-54 State High School Basketball
Jeffer son
10 16 l A 12~5 2 ~hampion ship , was voted the
F ouled ou t - N one . Tot al
louis - M iffl in 10, Jefferson tournamenl 's most ·valuable
pl ayer by writers and
10. A- 11.497.
sportca sters coverin g th.e
CATHEDRAL LATIN (851 event.
Totals 26 2-4 54 .

Warren 5 0·1 10. Irish 2 3· 3
7, Morris 10 3~ 6 23, Slri ckland
2 0-0 .4, Lowrie 11 1.4 73.
Harris 4 0-0 8, T yes 4 0·2 8,
Wh i te 1 0-0 2. La chm an·a Q. 1 0.

-

Totals 39 7-17 85. '
OTTAWA -GLANO.ORF
(67) - Schm iedebus h l 1-3 3;
Dick ey 7 0-1 14 , M aas 4 1-5 9,
Potha st B 12- 15 28, Lauben tt1a l

1 2-3 4, H er m if l er 2 2·2 6,
Beck flt I 0-0 2, Doep ker 0 1-2
1, Spen cer 0 0-1

32 67.

o.

Tota Is '24 19-

Score by quarters :

Cath. La li n 19 22 22 22-85
Ot t..Gi and orl 19 16 14 18-67

Harter 7 W·O·) 14, Wils~m 3 (Q .
Ol 6, Wass erma n n 1 !Q.O) ' 2.
Hom ier 7 1 \.2) 15, Ou tc alt 3
(I .J ) 7, Ford 1 ( 0-0) '1 , Man sfield 1 (0 -0) '2 , Varner 1 {0-0 )
2. Totals 24 (2 -5) so.
Score bV . Quarters :
Fort Loram ie 16 16 15 23- 70
Continenta l
14 12 13 11 - 50
Fou l ed out - N on e. Tota·l
fOuls. Fort Loram ie 9,
Continental 16. A - 13 ,7 60

ROYALS ROMP
FORT MYERS. Fla. (UP! )
- Frank White's two-run
triple highitghted a five-run
second inning Whirh carri ed
the Kansas City Royals to a 1·
I exhibition victory Saturday
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

13,910.

-

Shanklin, F. - : 10.9.
DASH
· 220-YARD
Skaggs, G. - :25.2.
440-YARD
DASH
Skaggs. G. - :54.7.
880-YARO RUN - Copley, ·
c. - 2:18.1.
MILE RUN - E. Rulz, G.

- , , 56.6 .

· TWO MILE RUN - E.
Rutz, G. - 10 : .W.5.
120-HIGH HURDLES
McGuire, G. - : 16.
180-LOW HURDLES
McGuire, G. - :21.4.
880-YARD RELAY - Won

~pener
TEAM SCORING
Team
Gall ipol is

Score
77

Ches apeak e
F airland

61
24

TOP SCORER

Kei th M cGuire, GAH S. 1611~
points . ·

Mike Skaggs, GA HS. 12'1•
points.
E ugene
poi nts.

BULLS ~. !..eft to right are Randy Montgomery, J eff
Barnes, Robbie Waugh, Chris Johnson and Billy can .
~i~

~

Twins send 8
to farm clubs
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP! ) The Minnesota Twins said
Friday they sent eight
players to the Melbourne ,
Fla., farm camp - four
· pitchers, three infielders and
an outfielder.
They ar e pitchers Mark
Wiley, Greg Field, Bruce
MacPhers on and Paul
Ausman , ou tfielder Dave
Edwards and infielders Jim
VanWyck, Sam Perlozzo and
Dan Graham.

.,,
~

~

!

I

4

'

'

I

HANNAN Trace rinky-&lt;link coaches left to right are
Bob Beaver, Robert Brumfield, Dean Wise, Bob Johnson
Ronnie Barnes and Scott Bailey.
'

Phone 446-4290

"LIFE insurance, too!
Call me for details~
1 .. \

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.

'

Stale

U I ~ OH!,

f~' "' L~e

~ome

lniurince Con'P¥11'

OHo te Sloom,ngiOI'&lt;. 111111(1 s.

W . L.
160 40

La rr y' s Wayside Furn .

24 Stale St.

... ....

taken by Lear Photography
of Spring Valley Plaza.
assi•1arrt s, • nd helper..
Rinky Dink director Jim
The
Celtics
were Chestnut was given a gift
recognized as league champs certificate from the Bastille
and six special player awa rds Men's Clothing Store.
were presented . These went
to : Mike Beaver, most
rebound s; Mark Beaver,
most points ; J eff Barnes,
most free throws; Jeff
SiGN AGREEMENT
Fowler and Alan Bailey, most
CLEVELAND (UP! )
The U. S .. Racquetball
Association and the National
Tuesdav m orn ing st an .
Racquetball
Club , the
dings tor Mar c h n . 1977
Team
Holida y In n

c. K. Snowden

"

RINKY-dink cheerleader advisors this past winter
were, front row, left to right, Patty Johnson, Arbutus
Saunders and Marian Murphy. Rear - Dana Caldwell,
Eileen Stitt and Judy Whitley.

148 52
City Ice &amp; Fue l
128 72
Vill age P i zzalnn
124 76
Peo pl es Ban k
122 78
Jaym ar 's
122 78
Vi llag e Fur ni t ure
120 80
Jo h nson 's Mob ile Hom es·
10 7 93
Ci t izens Nat . Ba nk
104 96
Si der s Jewe lers
76 1'1 4
MoHon County Ins.
69 131
Pat 's F igur am a
66 13 4
Moose Cha p te r 594
66 13 4
64 136
Gi lling ha m Drug
Ree se Truc ki n g
6,0 140
River si de Volk swag en 56 14 4
H ig h ga m e and ser ies
res pec tive ly : Sen a Edwa rds
20 6-54 9. M elvi a ward 209 .56 4.
Don na Ra yb urn 21 3 52 9.
Li ll ian Wilson 186 -500 and
M a rcia N i be rl 500. Jo Gr ea t.
house 212 -536 , Betty Re es 200
a~d Peg Th om as 20 0-564 , C leo
L1ev ln g 179 a nd Op al Casto
488 . virgin ia Gro ve r 1BO -A65 .
Lin d a R eynold s 157 and
Jennif er Harris 423 . Carolyn
Holl ey 140 and Ruth Ho ll and
37B . P eg gy Hoc k enberry 14640 3 . Hi:tie l Mar cum 182 -495.
Vick i e Juniper 15 4-395 . L yd ia
Sim on 149 -430. Pa t R eese 150376. Ga l e Bai le y 152 -389.
V il lag e FU rnit ure ro ll ed
hi g h tea m ga m e ' 945 and
Larrv 's Way side Furniture
hi g h t eam ser ies 27 37 . Split s :
Jen ri i fer Harr is 3 - 6 - ~ - 1 0 ,
Dom a He rn 5 -7, Elain e
Wa tter so n 5-6, Cathy VanWin k le 5-7, J1ov ce Barlimu s 4s, Helen Canaday 2-7, Betty
Copley 3- 10, Carole Roush 5-810 and 3 .. 10, He l en Spradling
3-1 0. Glor ia M c Danie l 2-.4 -9,
Bonn ie Be am 3-11}, D on na
Rawso n 6 -7-10, a nd Lou
Sw is h er 5-7

r:Y~~r
MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340

.
Gallipolis. Ohio

- 6' .

-·'

POLE

VAULT

Saunders, G, 10' -6".

MURDERS DENIED
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Mental patient Paul R.
Kenter, 32, Cincinnati ,
pleaded innocent Friday to
charges he murder'ed his
parents earlier this month.
He was held without bond
pending further court
proceeding's.

ACHilLES
PAD
WEDGE
BOTIOM
TERRY CLOTH
INSOLE

NO-SLIP
TONGUE
REINFORCED NYLON
SUEDE LEATHER
REINFORCEMENT .
--·AIEIBEO DESIGN
RUBBER HEELS AND SOLES

MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.
THIRD AVE. BRANCH-lHIRD·AVE.
VINTON BANK-VINTON
MEMBER FDIC
•

"Your Full Servit·e People To People Bank"
;

Turf
Builder
DEVELOPS THICK GREEN
LAWNS

5.000 SQ. FT.... 1100 OFF ... NOW 18.49
10.000 SQ. FT.... 1l'! OFF . NOW 115.49
15,000 SQ. FT.... 1JOO OFF . NOW 120.95

- Turf

"

,

~' "'
b'l&lt;

N BA SUtnd lng s
By United Press Internat io nal
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Divls.ion
w. L . Pet. G~
Philad elph ia 4• 28 .6 11 - ,
38 25 ·52 1 6 /2
Bo ston
NY Knicks
33 39 .458 11
Buff alo
28 45 .JB 4 16 1.2
NY Nets
21 52 .266 23 1·2
Central Division
W. l · Pet. GB
Houston
45 28 .616 Wash ing ton 4:1 30 .SBJ 2 1-2
San Antonio 41 33 .554 4 1-2
Cl evela nd
38 34 .528 6 1-2
New Orl eans 31 42 .425 u
At lan ta
29 45 .392 16 1-2
Western Conference
Midwes t Division
w. L· Pet. qa
Denver
44 29 .603
Detr oi t
41 32 .562 3
Ka nsas Ci ty
39 34 .53 4 5
Ch i.c ago
3B 35 .521 6
ln~ ia na
32 42 .432 12 1 2
Milw aukee
26 49 .347 19
Pacif ic D i vi si on
w. L· F'ct . GB
Los Ang eles
&lt;1 6 27 .630
Portl and
&lt;l 3 31 .573 4
GOld en State A1 33 .55&lt;1
5 1- 2
SeMt le
37 37 .500 9 1-2
PhOcn ill
28 44 .389 17 1 2
Friday's Result s.
washington t27 Boston 97
Po~tland 131 NY N e~s 103
Ph1l a 113 San Anton iO llO
Qetroit 107 Golden Sta t e 94
ln~ia n a 103 At lant a_95
Ch1 cago 105 NY Kn1c ks .a1
New Or leans 100 Kan C!lv 94, ot
M ilwaukee 112 Denver 108
LO S Angeles 118 Phoenix 93
Sunday 's Games.

•24-Hour Depository
•2 Fast Drive-In Windows
•Plenty of at-the-door Parkin~:

See Our
New M9bile
Homes With
Wood
Burning

. . ~Iilli&gt;
$1600 $2400
below

ASSIST ANTS ~ Ass istants in the rinl';y-&lt;.link program
at Hannan Trace this winter are Sherri Snodgrass, Carol
Meadows, Lana Church and Willie Church.

ll 's a Super Special. Handsome
men's nylon jogging shoe the smart look everyon e's wearing.
In red with wh ite trim.
·
Regularly $1 2.99

K.

SALE ENDS SUNDAY. APRIL 3.
WATCH YOUR MAIL THIS WEEK
FOR OUR SALE Cl RCULARS.
BE AN EARLY-BIRD SHOPPER.

)

Ruf 1, GAHS , 10

SUNDAY &amp;
MONDAY
ONLY

HIGH JUMP - Dabney , G.

HAS BEGUNI

FROM US

' NY Nets at Boston. alt .
Port land at Ph il a, aft .

NY Knlcks at washington, &amp;tt.

New Orleans 81 Ind iana, aft .

Kan City at San Anton io , a ft .
Golden St ate et Den ... er , aft .
Houston 8t Detroit
·
Clev el and ft l Chicago
Buff alo et Los Angeles
1 Phoeni x at Sea tt le

AGREES TO 'fE,RMS
ST. LOUIS (UP() - Pit·
cher Bob Fouch Saturday
agreed to term s of • three·
year contract with the St.
Loulll Cardinals.
ForiiCh, 27, had on 8-10
record and an earn ed-run
average of 3.94 last season .

N H L Standings
By United Press International
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pts . GF GA
Phitadelph 45 16 14 104 301 202
NY lstan drs 44 19 12 100 266 118
Atl anta
32 33 11 75 250 253
NY Rangers 28 34 14 70 262 293
Smythe Division

Tubele~~

5,000 SQ. FT,
1100 OFF ... NOW 111.49
10,000 SQ. FT.

•

Turf
Builder
.Plus Halts
5,000 SQ. FT.
12.00 OFF
NOW

$}5.98

szoo OFF ... NOW 121.49
15,000 SQ. FT.

40-in. whitewalls

s:r OFF ... NOW

w L T Pts. GF GA
St. Louis
30 36 9 69 217 256
Vancouver 2.t 40 12 6D 220 273
Chic ag o
24 40 11 59 221 279
Minnesota 20 36 18 56 221 283
Co lorado
19 43 14 52 210 2B9
wales conference
Norris Divi sion
w L T Pts . GF GA
~ - Mon tr eal 56 B 11 123 361 167
Pilt sbu r gh 3'2 311 3 77 229 240
Los Angel es 30 31 14 74 242 223
Wa shlng tn 21 40 14 56 203 286
Detro it
16 49 9 .t1 176 282

29.98

1

THE NEW SCOTI'S SPREADER!
Ta ke a good look a l ou r new spreader; it's
wid er! Th e new Scolls spreade r is 2 1 inches
wide . It 's also more rust res istant ... it 'l l last
for years And it spreads all Scali products

Adams Division
W L T Pts . GF GA
Buff alo
47 22 7 lDl 286 206
Bosto n
44 13 8 96 286 225
Toront o
33 29 13 79 284 ~60
CIPIJel and
24 39 12 60 226 268
&gt;&lt; Clinched d iv ision t itl e,
.,.. Fr iday's R~sutts
Was hing ton 7 NY Ranger s 2
Vanco uver 4 Cle velan d 4
Buff alo 2 Colorad o 2
· sunday'S Games
NY Islan ders at Cleve. &lt;1ft .
Chicago at NY R angers
To ronto at wash ington
Pitt sburgh at Boston
st. Lou is ·al M innesota

WHA Standings
By United Pren International

.

BuUder
Plus·2

our new
regular price
on sets of 4

STANDINGS

G. - 20''12" .

the sport, have signed a fiveyear agreement for exclusive
representation by the In·
ternatlonal Merchandising ·
Corp.
IMC is a division of International Management
Group of Cleveland, headed
by Mark McCormack. It is
the world's largest sports
management company,
which Saturday said the
agreement encorppasses
consulting, merchandising,
television rights represen·
tation and film sales .

See additional pictures
on page c-8 today.

MILE RELAY - Won by

DISCUS - McWhorter, C.
- 139'.
LONG JUMP - McGuire.

dominant force$ and main
sanctioning organizations for

.:::::::::::::::::-::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;;;:

BUILD FOR LESS
BUY A MODULAR HOME

Gall ipolis in 3: 52.6. Runners
were: · McGuire. N. Rob inson,

- 46'·5" .

MR. FRIENDLY'S

;:::::::::;:;.;.;-::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::.:-:-:-:-:;:::::::·::::::::::::::::

by Fairland in 1: 42 .3.

B. Haner, M. Skaggs.
FIELD EVENTS
SHOT PUT - Simkind, F.

t heir running of the ct;m·
cession .
·
Pictures of all groups were

Local Bowling

\

Cle Lu ther an W 59 Sa ti ne vl !l e
South ern 40

The 5-10 senior guard received'!/ of the 37 votes cast, .
with Barberton's Carter Scott
a distant second with 7.
Penn and Scott were both
unanimous choices for the
UP! all-tournament team,
which also included linden's
Sterling Williams, who had 24 ·
points in the championship
win over Barberton , Richard
Montague of Elyria and Mark
Bodnar of Barberton.

improved:
and
Mike
Rossit er. MV P. Caro lyn
Chu rch and Betsy Sheets
were presented plaques for

c hee r le a der s, co a ches,
ch ee r le ad e r adv is or s,

Penn named Most Valuable

0, Smith 3 0-0 6, Little I 0-0 2.

Fouled out' - Irish . Tota l
f ou ls-C a thed r al Latin 22,
Ott aw a G l a ndo r f 17. A-

GARS captures
RIO GRANDE - Coach
Bob Lawson's Gallipolis Blue
Devils defeated visiting
Fairland and Chesapeake in a
triangular meet at Evans
Field here Saturday af·
temoon.
It was the 1977 opener for
the defending Southeastern
Ohio League champions.
Gallipolis tallied 77 points,
Chesapea.ke had ~I and
Fairland 24. Jackson was
schecjuled to take part, but
cancelled out according to
Coach Lawson.
The Blue Devils picked up
10 first, three by McGuire,
two by Mike Skaggs, two by
Euger.e Rutz and one each by
Gary Dabney and Kim
Saunders. The Gallians mlle
relay team also triumphed.
McGuire was the top scorer
in Saturday's opener with
16~. points.
The Blue Devil c!H!aptains
.this spring are McGuire,
Skaggs, Eugene Rutz and
Kent Sawver.
Gallia's next outing is
Saturday, April2, at Ironton,
beginning at 9:30 a.m.
Here's Saturday's winning
results :
RUNNING EVENGS
tOO-YARD DASH

March 29- 7-9p.m. Co llege Rec.

March 3Q-7-9p.m . Publ ic Rec ;
March 31- 7-9p.m . Co l lege Rec.

FORT LORAMIE (10) Brandewie 12 (3-51 '27, St ein,k e
9 (4-5 ) 22. Boeckma11 5 !0 -0)
10 , Qu in li n J (2 . ~ ) 8, Gold ·
sc hmidt 1 ( 1-2J 3 . Totals JO
110-16) to.

C·ONTINENTAL I SO)

POOL
7-9 p.m . Publlc Sw im
7-9 p.m . Public Sw im
1-9 p.m. Publi c Sw im
7-9 p.m . Publ ic Sw im
7-9 p.rri. Publ ic Swi m

Marc;.h 27 - 7~'1 p.m. Co llege Rec.
Mar ch 28- 7-9p.m . Publ ic R~c .

Girls results. • •

Southeastern beaten
68-58 in A semi play

fl~

HT rinky~dink~
teams honored

·:::-:-:-:·:·:·:::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:::::;:;:::::::;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::.

0.2-The Swulay Times-Sentinel. :StnHIHI'. MH"&lt;h 27, 1:177

r

at prec1se ra tes .

REGULARLY 129.98

'25 98

INTRODUCTORY PRICE

Sears

East
,
W L · T Pts. GF GA
Quebec '
u 29 2 90 330 27 3
Cincinn a ti 37 3.t 3 77 330 275
lnd lana pl s 34 34 7 75 252 2111
New Englnd 31 38 6 68 252 269
8 1rm ngh m 30 43 3 63 267 286
lC -M inn esot 19 18 5 43 '136 1~9
West
·
W L, . T Pts. GF GA
Houston
.t6 21 6 911 296 211
.
Wlnr'J ipeg
tl2 29 2 86 336 260
San D ieg o
36 3.S .4 76 255 267
Edmont on 31 41 3 65 '216 28 6
Sean h••• credit pl•n to tuil mo81 every need
Cal g"n
26 40 S 61 217 262
II
N
i_
Phoen ix
1 27 44
.t 58 258 354
• l'rieelllnclude intta •lion
• ow OR ailtc
x·Htl m d o"b•'n ded
~
~ Satisfaction GI.Ulronl.ef!d or Your Money Bacl~
Fr•dli'S Results
. -~~ u , .
~
·
Houst on A C a lgt~rY 1
1
Edmont on ' C{nclnnol{J. ot
. ' I ;i .
San Diego 7 Phocn l11 3

IIi#

' JOO off Sellrs 42 battery

W~~ 1';!d~-in $29~2-•olt

Sears .

Sunday's Games
Edmonton at New Enq iand

:UHourPhone
aft
Se-'ee
NEA.ItS, Ror.au cK ANU t:v.
Wtnni peq at Ho uston . a tt '
·
n·•
tnd l~mapQ ii s "' ll lr mingh'am
·--.;ftiJI;Jim.w,t__ _________
Cl nclnn .1 ti a t Qu ebec
Phoenix a ! CalQ M V

-·

SILVER
BRIDGE
PLAZA. .

HARDMAN'S HOME
CENTER
"More 1'han A Lumber Yard

Lots More

---

'.

The Friendly Ones

POINT

�'

);;;··~;;;Tt'/ive in row with 100-94 win over Kansa.~. ~~.,.... ""
NBA Rouodup
UDIIed Preos International

Sll'llellm!S a rallying )Xlint
li&lt;e injured players can be
jmt the impiratioti a team
needs to start winning.
The New Orleans Jazz had
four of them .injured a week'
ago and since has reeled off
five wins in six games. The
last, a 101)..94 overtime
decision over Kan sas City
Friday night, put another
ll'imp in ihe Kings' playoff
hopes.
''The guys dipped down for
a little extra and it payed
&lt;if," said Jazz Coach Elgin
Baylor. ''We' w been playing
tough since the Phoenix game
when we had only seven

Boston with 18 points.
Paeersi03,Hawks95
John Williamson scored a
gam ..high 33 points and BiUy
Knight and Dave Robisch,
}iaying a strong game on the
boards, added Zl and 22
po ints , re spectively, for
Indiana. Len Robinson Jed the
Hawks with 31 points , while
John Drew had 29.

· Trail Blazrrs 131, Nets 103
Larry Steele and Herm
Gilliam came off the bench to
rombine ,for :li points in
helping Portland move 1\2
games ahead of Golden State
for second place in the
Paci fi c Division. Maurice
wens topped the Blazers
l&gt;itb 22 points. while Gilliam
added 20 and Steele 16.

Four players were injured
in a taxi accident just prior to
the game March 18. Aaron
James and Bud Stallworth
!till are on the injured list.
The Jazz won that game
md, afier a loss to Los
Angeles· Sunday, New
Orleans has won four games
in as mMy nights to relegate
Atlanta to the Central
Division cellar by 21'. games.
Meanwhile Kansas City's

..

combined

led the '16ers with 29 points. In . Hs l.ast ~v:'M u:au~.,.;
~ile Free added 25, Julius B!"'an Wonters e
Da _
11
Ervmg 18 and the 20-year-&lt;&gt; ld "1th 24 points,/~ e
1~
Dawkins a career-high 1~ . drldge had 19da~ "J:vld
The Spurs were paced by l:iln Issei ha
an
Larry Ke•on's 26 points.
Thompson 23 .for f~~ert
BU&lt;b 112, Nuggets 108
"111ch has lost none 0 1 s as
Two free throws by D.ave 12.
Lakeri 118, Suns 93
Meyers an d a Bob Dandn dge
uff
h
t
·
h
f'
1
·
Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar
!t s o tn t e ona mtnute
gave MilwaUkee its fifth win scored 28 points, grabbed 12

lilots as Los·Angeles reduced
its magic number to five for
dinching the Pacific Divtsion
tHle. Cazzie RusseU finished
with IS points for the Lakers
and Don Ford whh 15. Rookie
Ira Terrel! scored a careerIU'gh 22 points for the Suns,
""o lost for the 15th tlme in
"" last 17 games.
U,ir

ROTTERDAM. Holland
(UP!) - Dick Stockton of the.
United States an d !lie
Nastase of Romania qualified
Saturday to meet in Sunday's
final of the Rotterdam WCT
Tournament.
The wiMer will receive
$30,000 while second place is
worth 115,000.

In the semifinals. Stockton
defeated Wojtek Fibak of
Poland, 6-7, 7-li, 6-4, in 2"o
hours, and Nastase needed
' less than an hour and a half to
dis)Xlse of Britain's Mark
Cox, 6-4. 7-G.
Stockton and Fibak played
solid, almost clinical tenni s
with a minimum of human

errors.
In the first set there were
only seven unforced errors,
In the second set, the un·
for ced errors totalled 18, with
e i~ht of them in the two

vice losses. After 5·5 in this
tiebreak Fibak lost the next
point by doublefaultin~ . Next
Stockton's
service got home.
refer ee .
In
the
third
set there wa s
In the fir&gt;'t li ebreak Fibak
one
service
break.
It wa s
led 4-2, Stockton came back to
service break games. There 4-4 but lost the decisive point Stockton's in the third game,
were no bceaks in the opening after an excellent rally.
and that was. decisive.
set.
Nastase started by dividing
The second set tiebreak
In the oP.,ning set Fihak was erratic with seven ser- his attention between tennis
had two set points at n-~ but
lost them due to questionable
dec isions by th e service

u.s.D. ·

the set was tied 3-3, Nastase
~ot to 5-3 but next lost his
service due to fine pla y by

and took seven ~ames in a · Cox.
They traded games to 6-6.
row for a 6-4 first set and 3&lt;1

lead in the second set.
Cox came back, especially
on the stren gth of his
treacherous forehand . After

Then from 5-~ in the tiebreak,
Nastase broke service from

the ba ckline for 6-~ and held
serve to win the match.

OPEN
SUNDAlS

.
onlt!
Reputatton
.

we

and carping at the linesmen.
As a re~ull he fell behind at 2·
4 but then got to rea l playing

-

. . A cHOICE BEEF

are

men."

loss,

Bubbles HuwkiJlS led New Golclen State.
York with 24.
16&lt;rsii3 ,S purs ll0 '
Pistons 101, Warriors 94
Lloyd Free and badmp
Detroit went oo a ~3-26 center Darryl Dawkins
scoring tear over a 19-minute rombined for 22 fo urthspan to snap a four-game quarter
points
as
looing streak. The Pistons · flliladelphia rallied from a
,.,,.e led by M. L. Carr's 22 92-84 deficit with 9:33 to play
points and Leon Douglas' 18. lo take a 61'.-game lead over
· t he At 1anttc
·
Rick Harry had 19 points and Boston tn
Jamaal Wil.kes 15 to pace Division. George McGinnis

8 10A:O·fi.IA~

l

with

Chicago's 105~7 victory over
the New York Knicks, left the
Kings only one game ahead of
the Bulls for the sixth and
final playoff ,spot in the
NBA's Western Conference.
The chief architect for the
Jazz' win Friday was, as
usual, Pete Maravich . The
NBA's leading scorer
pumped in 44 points, in·
eluding the last shot in
regul!tion time - a 22-footer
l&gt;ith )J seconds left to tie the
score a 8&amp;.86 - and Otto
Moore hit eight d his ll
(llints in overtime to spark
the victory.
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Washington thrashed Boston
122-97, Indiana downed
Atlanta 193·95, ,Portland
~ipped the New York Nets
131·103, Detroit got past
Gulden
State
107-94,
flliladelphia · edged San
Antonio 113-110, Milwaukee
nipped Denver 112'108 and
Los Angeles dumped Phoenix
118-93.
Bulls105, Knicb 87
Artis Gihnore's 21 points
and Wilbur Holland' s 20
sparked Chicago to its
seventh straight win. The
Bulls, who had all five
!tarters scoring in double
· figures, h~ve not taken 14 of
their last 15 games and eight
!traight at home. New York's
Bob McAdoo led aU scorers
\\ith 28 points.
Bullets 122, Celtics 97
.
Mitch Kupcbak scored II of
tis 16 points in a 2&amp;-2 first-half
surge to spark Washington.
Elvin Hayes led all scorers
with 23 points in helping lhe
Bullets to their third straight
victory. The loss snapped
... Boston's four~ga me winning
!treak. Jo Jo White topped

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Skyliners Bowling
March 17, 1977
Standings

,,

Team
Tr i.County Sport Shop
Ohio River Realty
Si mms' Printing
Bob Evans Farm
Locai64A No. 2
· Wooten's Lounge

W. L.

n·ol.
cans

24
50 30
46 34
44 36
40 40
56

40 40
36 44
34 46 .

American Legion

33

~7

Central Supply
31 49
Local644 No. 1
30 50
Russ's Glass Shop took six
points from Central Supply .
High for Russ's Glass Shop

Switzerland
.

ace

High for Central Supply was
Shaw with a 501.
Local 644 No. 2 and

M.

p\lgs.

Wooten 's Lounge each took

tour points. High for Local 644
No. 2 was B. 0 . Casey with a ·
524. High for Wooten's
Lounge was D. Herdman with
a 552.
American Legion took olx

• 556.

Local 644 No. 1 took six
points trom Tri.Counly Sport
Shop. Hlgh for Local 644 No. 1
was H. Browning with a 552.
High for Tri.County Sport
Shop was A. Cross with a 529.
Simms' Printing and Ohio

River Really each took four
JX&gt;Inls. High for Simms'
Printing was C. Meadows
with a 522 .. High tor Ohio
River Really was Doc While
with a .101 .
V.F.W. and Bob Evans

L~~--:~~f=ar:e Margarine. . • • . • •

GLAD

.Johnson's

Market. High for American
Legion was C. Oliver with a
497 . High for Johnson's
Market was R. Ferguson with

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Egyptian President AnwP.r
Sadat wUJ make "an official ·
working vtsit" to Washington
April 4-5 at President Car·
ter's Invitation, the White
House aMounced Saturday.

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High for V.F .W. was 0 . Lloyd
with a 472. High tor Bob
Farm

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tons
eans
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Farm each took four points.

Evans

'

•

is upset
•

was J . Warren with a 561 .

from

LONDON (UP!) - Everton
improved its league position
at the expense of struggling
Tottenham Hotspur handing
out a 4-0 defeat Saturday to
the Londoners.
There were onl y thre.e
matches in Division One
because of caDs on teams for
next Wednesday's In·
rernational Soccer Matches.
Everton took the lead after
only 88 seconds through Bob
Latchford , and it never came
under any real pressure as it
swept on to victory at
Goodison Park.
Latchford took a good pass
from Bruce Rioch and
weaved his way past Keith
Osgood and Steve ferryman
before beating Barry Daines
with a strong low shot for the
best goal of the game.
Martin Dibson was brought
down by Osgood and Ralph
Coates and Andy King drove
home the penalty in the 26th
minute.
Then Coates turned a
header by Bob Latchford into
his own · net for Everton's
third goal in the 37th minute.
Four minutes from the end
Mick Lyons headed home a
rorner shot taken by Ron
Good lass.
Bristol City, struggling two
points below Tottenham,
managed to pick up a
valuable point when it held
Leicester to a scoreless tie.
It was Leicester's eighth
successive league game
without defeat. But Its aim to
get into Europe suffered a
setback from a display that
was well below its recent

40 40

Russ's Glass Shop
Johnson's Market
V.F.W.

poi nts

• •
poslhon

Bristol, struggling to avoid
relegation, had more shots on
target and was the more
aggressive side in the second
half. '
Leicester's passing was
poor, and its injury problems
wor sened when defender
Dennis Rofe limped off in the
first half with a leg injury, to
be replaced by Steve Yates.
Newcastle grabbed a
valuable two points in a Ioca .
derby, 1·0 over Middles·
brougb, that saw Middles·
brough's former England
fullback Terry Cooper sent
off in the 67th minute.
Newcastle's goal came •
after three minutes when
Derek Craig flipped on a pass
to Alan Kennedy for him to
crash home a shot into the
roof of the net.
Cooper was booked after 65
minutes by the referee
following a tackle on Nat·
trass. Two minutes later
Cooper crashed into Tom
Cassidy and the referee •
produced the red card and ;
sent Cooper off.
•
In
Division
Two, "':
Wolverhampton kept up the •
pressure on Chelsea's ..
leadership, scoring a 2·1 win •
against visitors Hull, putting,:'
the Wolves one point from the~
top. Chelsea's visit to Oldham •
bad been )Xlstponed.

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ate

SOLNIEVE, Spain (UP!) :;
- Christa Zechmeister of
West Germany Saturday •
upset Switzerland's former
double Olympic champion
. Maria Teresa Nadig in the
finals of the Parallel Slalom,
the final women's event in the
Sierra Nevada Ski Meet that
winds up the winter's World
Cup competition.
The rarely featured event
is a competition where skiers
compete in pairs on
parallel tracks, with the
winner moving on to the nut
round. None of the American
entries in the field of 26 made
it to the quarter-finals.
Zechmeister came !rom
behind in the second heat to
nose out Nadig, winner of the
slalom and giant slalom gold
medals In the Sapporo
Olympics.
Na dig defeated Zech·
meister in the first beat with
a .407 seconds margin but
seemed overconfident in the
second heat and was ·beaten .
by .618 secohds.
Austrian ski queen, Ail·
nemarie Moser Proell, won
third place by beating West ·
Germany's Ingrid Eberle In
the I'Uil-Offs for the bronze
medal. She won the lint but
by .328 seconds but lOit the
second by .035 seconda which
still gave her a comfortable
.293 seconds margin.

'

�C-1'- The Swulay Times-&amp;nl llll'i.Sund") . MmTh ~7. 11177

SETS RECORD
terfly at the 54th annual
CLE VE LAND (UPI\ - NCAA Swimming and Diving
Mike Bruner of Stanford set Championship s. knocking
· an American record Satur· Mark Spitz' last reMrd from
day in qualifying for the the NCAA books.
fina ls in the 200-yard but·

Eagles have five lettermen back this year
HY GREG BAILEY .
EAST MEIGS - With five
returning lettennen, Coach
Larry Heines' Eastern
baseball squad will have
some gaps to fill , but if some
untried youn~sters gel, this
could be the year for the
Eagles. Returning lettennen
are Bruce Riffle, who plays
just about anywhere he's
needed, seniors John Evans,
Mark Hawk, Joe Kuhn, and
sophomore Dan Spencer.
· by dropping a 7·2 decision to
Federal Hocking Thursday,
but the Eagles showed
promise, and it looked like
some of those underclassmen
will be really pushing some of
those lettennen for starting
berths.
Pitching might be a
question mark for the Eagles,
but Heines will be using the
rotation .of Spencer, Riffle,
Evans, and Hawk.
With the exception of
second base, the infield
seems solid with each · in·
fielder having experience at
his position. At first base
Hawk will be pushed hard by
Rusty Wigal, but second base
is a toss-up between Steve
Little and Jeff Goebel. Short·

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BUFFALO, N.Y . (UPI)The question didn 't even .have
tAl be asked.

"I'm coming here in good
faith," new Buffalo Braves
owner John Y. Brown wid a
news conference Friday

night. "If it's. not successful,
then at that time we'll have to
look at all the alternatives."
Brown, a personable Ken·
lucky businessman, became
sole owner of the seven-yearold Nationa l Basketball
Association franchise Friday
after Paul L. Snyder sold his
remaining 50 per cent
boiding.
Brown, who P\lrchased 50.
per cent of the Braves froin
Snyder before the start of the
current NBA season, has
been rumored to want to shift

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experience last year, will be youngsters will have to
sent to right field, but he can handle the pressure. If so, it
be plaloj)ned to just about any looks good for the Eagles.
outfield position. Dave
Following is a schedule and
Carpenter will also be getting roster for both the varsity
the nod towards right field at and reserves : •
times. ·
t971 EASTERN BASEBALL
In short, the pitching staff March 24- Fed. HQCking H
March 2s-Meigs (scrim.) A
must prove itself, and ihe March
29- ~ed . HQCking
A

the Braves to his home state.
"I have said I'd love w see
a team in my hometown, but
it didn't . work out ," the
LouisviUe native and former
owner of the Kentucky
Colonels of the defunct
Ameri ~an
Bask e tball
Association said. "And I'd
still like to see a team come

Stewart

•
•

•

CONROE, Tex. (UPI) Hughes .Stewart Friday
"I'm coming (tAl Buffalo) defeated Denmark's Torbln
with an open mind/' Brown Ulrich, the wp-seeded senior
added. "I think Buffalo can player in the world, H, 6-2, to
be a very good -market. I'm advance tAl the semifinals of
not inoving to Buffalo, but I'll the
Almaden. · World
spend enough time here."
Invitational senior tennis
Snyder, in announcing the championship.
·
sale, said it was ua very
Stewart will meet Rex
emotional time for me. The Hartwig of Australia at noon
back there.''

GREENSBORO, N.C. behind in Friday's match
(UP!)- Johnny Petraglia of play w take the lead from Bill
Staten Island, N.Y., seeking Spigner of Hamden , Conn.
his first professional victory Petraglia started the final
9nce 1974, was the top-seeded session cf match play trailing
bowler
in
Saturday's Sjiigner by ~ pins.
nationally-tele.vised finals of
Blt he picked up an early
the $100,000 BPAA U.S. Open. · lead, conlinued to widen the
Petra~lia
&gt;•me from margin and finished the night

Indians snap

168 pins ahead of Spigner,
lltlo was second-seeded In
today's games.
Rounding out the five
finalists for today's cham·
pionship play were Charlie
Venable of Brooklyn, N. Y.,
Dave Davis of Atlanta and
local favorite George Pappas
cf Charlotte.
Paraglia, a nine-time PBA
mampion wbose last victory
wasthe 1974 World Open, had
games Friday of 232, 227, 2rfl,
219, 196, 224, 226 and 267. His

losing streak

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Evans ,

Steve

I

56-game total pinfall , in·
duding 540 bonus pins, was
12,803. Alefthander, he was ~
3in match play Friday night.
Spigner, seeking liis first
PBA victory, finished with a
(&lt;tal pinfall of 12,635, jVhile
VB1.able, also a non-winner,
finished with 12,612. Davis, a
15-time winner, had 12,521
and Pappas, a four-time
mampilll, had 12,479.
, The wimer of the wur·
nament receives a $10,000
first prize.

were, first row,left to right, Faye Summers, Kim Bickers,
Les Taylor and Terry Corbin. Second row, left to right,
Pebbles Clark, Tammy Williamson, Nancy Foster and
Coach Blazer.

JUNIOR IUGH GIRLS SQUAD - Kyger Creek's
junim: high girls basketbail team compiled an 11-4 record
under first year coach Kristy Blazer. Team members

against Cleveland. certainly
hope it's nothing more .

Cleveland lndJans snap a
five-gam e losing streak with
In ex hib ition games 7~ tri~mph over the San
Frida y, veteran fi rst Diego Padres... Home runs by
basema n Bob Robertso n, . Carry Maddox and .Jerry
plagued with back trouble Martin
plus
Wayne
since the opening days of Twitchell 's strong pitching
spring training , hit a two-run lifted Phitadclphia to a 5-3
homer in his first official at- vicwry over the New York
bat of the spring to spark the Yankees, the Ph illie.•' fi fth
Pitlsburgh Pirates to a 3-2 win in six ~ames .
victory over the Detrcit Ti·
gers... Mike Vail 's pinch
Ron Fairly's solo home run
single in the 13th inning drove
in
the eight inni ng gave the
in the winning run in lhe Ne w
Toronto
Blue Jays a 4-3 win
York Mets ' 2-1 triumph over
over
Mi
nne sot a ... J .R.
Boston .
pitched
seven strong
Richard
Woody Fryman went seven
inn ings , Ju lio Gonza lez
innings, the longest by a
Cincinnati pitcher th is collected four hits and Ken
spring, to help the Reds to a 2- Boswell drove in the winning
run with a sacrifice fl y in the
1 win over Minnesota ... John
Houston
Astros' 5-4 triwnph
Hale, John Oates and Teddy
over
the · Montrea l
Martinez each hit home rims
Expos
..
.
Jeff
Burroughs hit
to give the Los Angeles
his
fourth
home
run m tl1e last
Dodgers a 5-4 vi ctory over the
three
games
to
help the
Texas Rangers.
Atlanta
Braves
to
an 11-10
Ray Fosse homered and
victory
over
the
Chica go
Ron Pruitt and Frank Duffy
While
Sox
in
13
mnings.
each had three hils to help the

•

Kyger Creek junior high girls 8-4 ·on year
whil e teammates Tammy
Williamson added five, Kim
Bickers scored four and Ruth
Sax ton had three. Li nda
Edwards scored 12 to lead
Sout hwestern 's scoring.
In the semifin al game,
Ky ger Creek Jo;t to Southern,

CHESHIRE . Coach
Kristy Blazer's Kyger Creek
junior high team ended its
season with an 11-4 record and
placed thi rd in the SVAC
junior high tournament held
recently at Symmes Va lley.
The Kyger Creek girls won
their tournament opener over
Southwestern, 30-20.
Kyger Creek 's Les Taylor
led all scoring with 18 points

mne pomts. others scoring Les Taylor added tnree.
for Kyger Creek were
In the consolation game,
Tammy Williamson, Kim Kyger Creek won by forfeit
Bickers and Faye Summers over Hannan Trace.
who coilected four each while
named to the San Francisco
Gia nts for outfielder Willie
Crawford and utility infielder
Rob Spi,rring.
Crawford; 30, batted .304
last year with the St. Louis
Cardinals in 120 gam.es and
ha s a lifetime battin g
average of .272. Sperring, 26,
batted .238 at Wichita and .258
with the Chicago Cubs before
coming to the Giants.
Andrews came to Houston
from Baltimore in 1974. Last
season he hit .256 with
.Houston and .325 w,ith minor
league Memphis. •

ANDREWS TRADED
HOUSTON (UP!) .- The
Kyger Creek's Ruth Saxton Houston Astros Saturday
and Southern's Teresa Smith traded second baseman Rob
shared scOring hoo rs with Andrews and a player to be
25-24.

.•
'

-·
,.

.
. .
agents, more mvest1gative . ....
reporting by the sports press, ~
a system of due process tAl '•
assure student-athletes of •
fundamental rights and •
funding of a national athlete ;:
insurance program.
~
"I bave seen the lives of too •
many young people scarred :;•
by indifference to ihe •
procedures that should .~
govern t!te professionals wbo ,:
guide our amateUr sports," ~
Horn said.
•

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Apr il7- x-Symmes Valley H
Aprl18-x-Norlh Galli•
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Apri i1 4- Beipre
April18- x-Kyger Creek

.:J31 and .314 in Ius f ~rst two
years m the majors. "But l
Hy GRF.G AIELLO
thin k it's a temporary
UP! Sports Writer
Thurs da y' s mode rat e setback."
11w Rc'&lt;.l Sox , who open
sprain became Friday's torn
ligament and now Fred Lynn their season at home April 7
will be sidelined at least two
weeks, which might include
the Boston Red Sox ' season· Uearcats sign
opener.
Lynn, Boston's outstanding 3 IJrep stars
center fielder, hurt his left
ankle Thursday trying w
CIN CINN ATI IUPI 1
return w second base after a Three more hi gh sc hool
fly out. X-rays were taken of football players have signed
the swollen ankle after the letters of intent with the
game and doctors at Winter Un iversity of C!ncinnati 1
Haven Hospital in Florida new UC football coac h
sai\1 Lynn suffered a Ralph St aub announ ced
moderate sprain. ·
Friday.
·
But orthopedic specialist
The latest three UC signees
Dr. Raymond Sullivan re- are Carl Woods , a 6-foot. 195·
pound lin ebacker from
~:~~~;~~ theLynninjuryFriday,
as a Cinc innati Moelle,r. Larry
tear ami said the Gill, a 6-3, 170-pound wide
American League recei ver-safety from St.
Rookie of the Year will miss Louis, Mo., Central High
at least two weeks.
School, and Breck Ha])eggcr,
"I was having a good a 6·3, 220·pound offensive·
spring, the best since I defensive tackle from Girard,
started ," said Lynn, who hit Ohio.

Spring Training Hnun1up

Petraglia top seeded in finals

27 SYCAMORE ST.

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Over 100

"

5- x-t&lt;yger

Saturday. Hartwl• defeated · Trussell, x-Mark Hawk, x·
"&amp;&amp;
Brute Riffle, Jim Davis,
Louis Ayala of Chile, 6-1, 6-2. Dave Carpenler, Kevin
The ollter semifinal match Buckley, x-Joe Kuhn, x-Dan
will have veteran Pancbo Spencer. Jeff Goebel. Steve
--'
•, •2 ·
Little, Rusty Wiga l, Joe
Gon....
es, a .,..,, "' wmner Boytes, Greg Ginther. Mark
over Beppe Merlo of Italy, Gil Ja n, Cliff Longenette,
against Sven. Davidson of Keith Wolfe. Ebby Crow.
Sweden, Davidson advanced Roger Riebel, JeH Kimes.
with a lh'!, 6-4 win over Vic /\lark Norlon, Brian Bissell ,
Mike Wil son and Leonard
Seixas.
Myers.

H&amp;R BLOCit

•

•

(Res.)

businessman Norman Sonju April26- x-Southwe;stern A
-Kyger Creek H
as the club's new president, April28-x
April29-x-Symmes Val.ley A
replacing Snyder. He said May 3-x-Kyger Creek ·
Sonju would move to Buffalo (Res.)
H
H
and head the club's May 4- Melgs (Res.)
.
May
7Trimble
(
Res.J
A
operations.
May t2- Southerri I Res .) H
May IS-Southern (Res.) A
x-S. V.A.C . Games
advances to semifinals

A

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

••

April

Lynn out 2 weeks with injury

"

H

H

Gallipolis

985-3308

•
•

March 30--Mel pre

"Aprl14- x·Sou lhern

seven years I've owned !be
team have been both high and
low times in my life."
Fo llOwin g Snyder's
announcem en t ,
Brown
immediately named Chicago

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

C-7- The Sunday Tun es.,Scntinel, Sund"Y· March 27. 1\177

April 22-Wahama
A
April 23- Wahama (Varsity
April 23-Wahama (Varsity
&amp;Res.) (2p.m.)
H
April 2s-x-North Gallla H

Brown named new Buffalo owner

with you. No extra
charge."
-

'160°
e
e
e

stop is solid with Spencer, catcher. and young Mrian
and when he's on the mound, Bissell will be backing him
Goebel will probably fill in up.
there. Third base is no
The outf ield is fairly '1rong
problem as F.vans handles with Joe Kuhn coming back
that well, but Steve Trussell to play left field . Center field
will step in when Evans is can be handled by Jim Davis,
hurling. Riffle, when not Riffle, or Bissell. Junior
pitching, is . the returning Kevin Buckley, with some

Eastern opened its season

HALF

'

swap players
CLEARWATER, Fla.
(UPI ) - The Philadelphia
Phillies . Saturday . traded
infielder Sergio Ferrer to the
New York Yankees for
outfielder Kerry Dineen.
Dineen , 24, has been
assigned to the Phillies'
Oklahoma City Fann Club
while the 26-year-old Ferrer
was sent to the Yankees'
Syracuse fann team.
Dineen, who bats left and
throws left, was New York's
fourth-round .selection in the
1973 June draft. Each of the
last two seasons, he has
played with Syracuse and the
Yankees.
He hit .253 in 59 games with
Syracuse last season, missing
a good portion of the season
with a rib Injury. He later hit
.2861n limited action with the
parent club.
Ferrer, a switch hitter,
batted .265 at Oklahoma City
last season.

Twins, 2·1

.

• NOWOPEN

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!)- Ken
Griffey singled home Ed
Annbrister with one out in
the bottom of the loth FridaY
to give the Cincinnati Reds a
2-1 victory over the Min·
nesota Twins.
Dave Revering 's pinch
single touched off the rally.
· Annbrister, after replacing
Revering as a pinch runner,
stole second and went to third
on pinch hitter Mike Lum's
long fly to the right to set the
stage for Griffey's gamewinning hit.
Woody Fryman went seven
innings, the longest by a
Red's pitcher this spring,
limiting the Twins to lour hits
and one run. Dale Murray
and Mac Scarce blanked the
Twins the-last three innings.

••
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GAINS FINALS

NEW YORK iUPil - Sue
Barker, England's 20-yearold tennis s~nsatlon , blasted
seco nd -seeded Martin a
Navratilova , 7-5 , 6·4,
Sat urd ay in the $150,000
Virginia Slims championship
to rntrr thr finals of one of the
wom rn's triple rrown events
for the first limP.

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Strenicer to
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MINNEAPOLIS (UP! )
The Minnesota Kicks said
Friday midfielder Gene
Strenicer will join the North
America n Soccer League
team·on a seven-day road trip
to play in three exhibition
games.
President and Coach
Freddie Goodwin said the
Kicks received permission
from the Toronto Metros to
invite the Hungarian-born
player to play In the spring
matches.
• Strenicer bas played for the
Metros lor tbe past .lour
seasons. He was captain of
last year 's team that beat the
Kicks~ in the championship
game.

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II

�\

Kyger Creek has eight returning lettermen
.

.

rHF.SIIIHF. - With
rt'tuming lettermen ,

5 record.

Spra gue's returnin g let·
termen are led by senior
righthander Steve Baird.
Baird was one of the area's
leading hurlers last season
and continued his fine pit·
ching last summer in legion
ball. Last Thursday night he
hurled a one-hitter against
Oak Hill.
The only hit surrendered

TV special announced

CELTICS - The Celtics won the Hannan Trace
Rinky-Dink league title. Front row, left to right, are Jeff
Rankin, Robby Bnunfield . Rear - Jeff Fowler, Steve
Harrison and Brian McGuire.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP! )- The story behind the
presentation by John Ca~
pelletti of the t973 Heisman
Trophy to his younger
brother has been made into a
television special.
The two hour drama,
"Something for Joey," will be
shown on the CBS television
network' on Wednesday , April
6 at 9 p.m.
Written and produced by
Jerry McNeely of MTM
Enterprises, the production
covers the last two years of
Cappelletti's career at Penn
State, ca pped by his winning
the Heisruan Trophy and
presenting it to his leukemia·
stricken brother.
The
fi lm
Includes

numerous football • action
scenes but concentrates on
· the love and devotion the
Ca ppelletti family shared
during John 's football
triumphs .and Joey's battle
with his fatal illness.
''I was moved to write the
story when I saw John
present the trophy to his
brother on television,"
McNeely said. "It became a
work of love after I met
members of the Cappelletti
family."
The family agreed to the
filming after Joey's death
last April.
Marc Singer plays the part
of John Cappelletti, now .a
starting running back for the
Los Angeles Rams. J eff
Lynas plays the role of Joey.

IWJy s
May 2-14

Southern

April6
AprilS
April 11
April 13
Aprll14
April 16
April 18
April 20
April 22
Aprii2S
April 27
Apr il 28
IWJy 2
IWJy'

Tht• Bobca ts finished the
the defending l'harnpion
North Gallia Pirates a run ror 1976 season jn second place
this year's SV AC buseball with an 8-4 record. Overall,
the Bobcat' enjoyed a fine 12·
title.

e i ~ht
Cnat~h

Jim Spra~ue's Kyger Creek
Bobcats are expected to givr

·

..

Meigs
at North Ga ll ia
Sou thwestern '
at Southern

at Glouster
Eastern
at Hannan Trace
Oak Hil l
Fed . Hock ing

Hannan Trace
at Eastern
a t Symmes Val ley

at Sol!thwestern

North Galtia
Sectional Tourn .

• RESERVE
BASEBALL SCHEDULE
IWJrch 30
April 7
April5
April12
Aprill5
April19
April26
April29
IWJy J
IWJy 6

Gallipolis Res,
at Gallipolis Res .
Eastern
M eigs
af Southern
Wahama
Meig~

at Wahama
a t Eastern
Sou thern

was a hannless bunt single in

the seventh inning which
broke up his no hit attempt.
other returning lettermen
include seniors, Ralph
Baylor, catcher, infeilder;
Paul Fife, infielder; Todd
Taylor, pitcher, infielder;
Ron Fraley, pitcher, out·
fielder;

Steve Shoemaker,

outfielder; Von Taylor, in·
fielder and Steve Russell,
promising sophomore cat-

cher. Russell, however, is iost
for the season ·after frac·

KYGER
March 19
Marc h 31
April2
April4

Gallipolis
446-3800

Middleport
992-6167

a t Pt. Pleasant

at Federal Hocking
Waharn a
Symmes Valley

Monk's coup .thwarted

Carter .e nergy policy
may not win applause
'

and ra'dio·television news we can setUe il," Carter said. water projects is not
directors. The transcript of
It was learned Saturday prompted by any desire to
the discussion was released that Carter is considering tax "modify the movement of
Saturday in order to give the incentives lo encourage Americans from one part of
editors a full day to publish energy saving, including a our country to another ,"
their own stories before ' rebate of up to $500 for buyers
- Transporting water from
general releas'e.
of small cars and a $500 one area to another Is neither
The President told the federal excise tax on the practical nor desirable.
editors he will try to persuade purchase of big, gas-guzzling
- The crop price supports
people to forget their regional autos.
he favors are not designed to
political differences and
Carter wld the editors he is meet production costs but
accept his energy plan as best against an "expensive crash rather " to meet the
for the nation.
program " to boost domestic international competition for
''The only thing I can see oil and gas production, but for the same commodities! '
that can be done is to put a strong effort for solar
-"! can guarantee you that
together the entire package, energy.
when you fill out your income
no single component of which
"I think probably one of the tax form for 1977, it will be
might be attractive to a best investments we can much simpler. There is no
group, but if they see that in make is to keep oil and gas in doubt about that."
its entirety it is fair and that the ground and quit wasting
- The minimum wage
the sacrifice that that group what is produced," he said. should
be
raised
might have to make is not out
automatically,
proportionally
On other topics, Carter told
of proportion to the sacrifice the editors :
to manufacturers' average
that other people might have
wages.
- His oppo~tion to some
to make, in that way I think

CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI )
- President Carter says his
forced-conservation energy
policy may please few people
when it is unveiled April 20,
but at least it will ask equal
sacrifice by all concerned.
Carter worked on papers
Saturday morning and spent
a quiet day with his family at
.Camp David, the President's
Catoctin Mountain retreat.
The President took a bicycle
ride around the grounds Wit/!
his wife and went for a dip in
the heated outdoor pool with
daughter, Amy. Friday night,
the Carters saw the movies
HYoun~ Frankenstein" anrt
"Casablanca.''
Carter discussed energy,
water, foreign affairs and
other topics Friday with a
group of newspaper editors

BY ALAN DAWSON
,;;.~ly Saturday morning and radio and television address
BANGKOK, Thailand atleinpted to seize power by late Saturday, said hi s
government agreed to give
IUPll - An Army general using Prasert's riame.
who became a Buddhist monk
Prasert , following tbe the dissident general exile in
when he was ousted as deputy surrender of the coup forces order to save the lives of the
army commander six months at Supreme Command two hostage off icers.
Tanin said Hiranyasiri
ago ended an abortive coup Headquarters later Saturday,
attempt Saturday , was allowed to travel alone to staged the. coup attempt with
surrendered two military the nearby headquarters of the support of only four field
hostages and then got the Bangkok Peactkeeping grade officers and 300 troops
stranded at tbe airport trying Foret and was undergoing who were told they were
brought to Bangkok "to save
to flee into exile.
questioning there.
Prime Minister 'l'anin the nation."
A government spokesman
identified the leader of the Kraivixien, in a nationwide
attempted coup as Gen )Chalard Hiranyasiri , sa'cked
from his position as deputy
army commander following
the military coup that seized
power last October.
Sources· at Don Muang
International airport sa id
Chalard, who became a monk
newspaper the story of a
following his dismissal, his
FORT WORTH, Tex . (UP! ) chalice and artifacts he'd
BUDGET DIRECTOR
son and three other £ield
out.
Berl Lance Is viewed by
grade army officers who - An old grubstake miner brought
"He estimated there were
Washington lnsldel'!l as one allegedly tried to stage the who worked the peaks and
millions of dollars of artifacts
of the "strong men" of the
coup tried to take a China Air canyons of New Mexico says in there. I asked him to show
a
team
of
treasurer
hunters
Carter adm!nlstratlon,
Lines flight to Taipei but that
me something. He couldn't. If
th e Taiwan government combing Vict.orio Peak for a he had, I would have told the ·
lost cache of gold never will
refused to allow them entry.
world about it, of .course.
The plane, CAL Flight 804, find it.
"But I told him, 'I'm not ,
He
says
there
is
nothing
ID
was grounded at tbe airport
going
to tell a big damn lie for
be found.
Saturday night.
"II was just a fake from the nobody .' I told him that and
The six-month old military
beginning,"
said R.G. Cbe· he just laughed. You couldn't
junta
which
controls
get under his skin-"
Thailand ordered a 9 p.m. nowt.h; 83. Chenowt.h said in
The man heading the
curfew on the capital. The 1939 he worked for tbe late current search, Norman
killing of an army division Milton E. ''Doc" Noss, whose
Scott, said a crew descended
commander early. Saturday claims of the lost cache 167 feet into a shaft which
was. the only known prompted the current se;~rch Noss was believed to have
bloodshed
in
the on the White Sands Missile used. They were stopped by a
confrontation. However, a . Range.
Noss claimed he found ro ck slide a'nd he said
junta spokesman said the city
stacks
of gold bars in a cave electronic equipment would
wouid revert to the normal I
and
brought
some of the gold be used to determine if the
a.m. curfew by Sunday.
out
before
he
accidentially shaft led any furth er.
The
tense
day -long
ci!ICAGO- (UPI) - Allen
The Army has given the
buried
the
find
while
trying ·to
Aaron Jackson, a soldier who standoff, which caused no enlarge the opening with team until sundown Monday
was cut in half by a tank panic but cleared Bangkok
to end the search.
nearly three years ago, will streets of its normally dynamite.
Chenowth said persuading
Chenowth,
who
recalled
the
appeal a federal court treming traffic, carne to a day he was hired by Noss, is people to finance his explora·
decision denying him head in mid-afternoon
convinced there never was a lions was Noss' chief occupathe Saturdy when junta Supreme treasure and claims Noss, tion.
damages
from
government, his attorney Commander Adm. Sangad
"That was his racket ,"
who was shot to death by
Chaloryoo ordered the rebels another
says.
partner in 1949, was a Chenowt.h said, "not a busiJackson, 24, who enlisted in to "surrender or else."
ness."
and con ma n.
The junta spokesman said promoter
the service to be an
Che nowth said
the
"He contacted me on inforautomobile mechanic , was on Chalard and his coplotters mation he'd received that I' dynamite blast was part of
maneuvers in May, 1974 at had abducted Army Deputy had a pickup truck, knew the the scheme. ·He said Noss
Ft. Riley, Kan ., when a tank Commander Gen. Prasert country and was a miner,'' took a case of dynamite into
ran him over. He was Thammasiri and an aide Chenowth said Friday. "He . the cave and a few minutes
discharged and now receives
hired me. I'd take him places later came back.
$1,700 a mooth in disability
"Wham ' " Chenowt.h
said '
where he wanted to go."
.· ~
pay from the Veterans
Those places, he said, "it shook the whole canyon.
Administration.
He said it was sealed off and
included Victoria Peak.
The U.S. Court of Claims in
"He bad tbe idea there was claims it was an accident."
Washington ruled that
gold in the Caballo · The old miner said he and
"deeply
although
it
Mountains, 'but there was no Noss eventually parted
symp,athizes" with Jackson,
proof whatroever of gold in because Chenowth would not
it cannot order the
the Victorio Peak area," tell the wor ld about the
government to pay damages,'
Chenowth said. " There chalices he had never seen.
Ronald Pinski, Jackson 's
"He got somebody else with
wasn't even any rumor until
attorney, said Thursday.
better eyes tban mine," Chehe started it.
Plnskl said federal law
1
'The reason I say that was nowt.h said. "It takes pretty
does not allow negligence
because of the proposition he good eyes to see something
claims to be filed against the
made me to put in a that isn't there."
CINCINNATI (UPI )
armed forces, so Jackson
Hustler
Magazine
publisher
claimed there was a breach
of enlistment contract and Larry Flynt told Scrippsasked $5 million in damges. Howard Broadcasting in a
Jackson, who had the lower report aired Friday night that
half of his body severed from he plans to expand his
his navel down, "can sit up in publishing e_mpire into news
a bucket which holds hinn and ciDTent events.
In a report broadcast on
rigid, " according · to his
WCPO-TV
in Cincinnati,
father, Raymond.
Scripps-Howard
Columbus
"It's not the easiest thing in
correspondent
Frank
Sellers By EDWARD K. DeLONG
But, because of the possible
the world to see half a body .
said
Flynt
bas
reserved
a
effect
on the auto industry
WASHINGTON (UPI ) He has gone through a hell of
magazine title, "The Ohio The administration is and
e mpl oy ment ,
a lot."
Monthly,"
in
records
on
file
congressiona
l sour ces say
considering tax measures to
Jackson is now a patient at
with
Secretary
of
Staie
Ted
President
Carter
could face
stop u.s. energy "gluttony,"
the VA Hospital in suburban
Brown.
still
opposition
on
Capitol
Hill
including one that cOUld add
Maywood.
Flynt told Sellers "The $1,000 to the price gap · if he lakes that approach.
Ohio Monthly" would be a between gas-guzzling big
Carter energy planners
news and current events cars and small, high-mileage alSo are considering a tax to
magazine
with
a autos, sources said Saturday. make natural gas cost as
"muckraking and irreverant
Probably
the
most much as oil when gas is used
tone."
Neighhorhoods
controversial tax suggestion as boiler fuel by induStries
"It's won't be an adult under coosideration would . and electric utilities,
magazine - no naked girls," put a $500 federal excise tix informed sources said. A
said Flynt.
are good places
on the purchase price of big . third tax idea is to help
Flynt said he Js also cars that use a lot of gas, but homeowners cut fuel bills
planning further expansion, give people buying more fuel- with insulation.
WASHINGTON (UP!) possibly into the daily efficient small cars a rebate
Sources also said the
Most Americans generally newspaper field.
energy
policy Presi dent
of up to $500. The tax would be
are pleased with their nei ghEarlier this week, Flynt based on a miles-per-gallon Carter will outline April 29 is
borhoods, although nea rly IDid Sellers he would move stahdard, sources said.
likely to plact relatively high
half say some of the services the editorial headquarters of
Sources said the auto reliance on nuclear power to
they receive are inadeq~ate, "Hustler" ·and "Chic" efficiency tax was proposed fill demand, although Carter
according to a government magazines from ColumbUs to because of concerns that gives conservation and use of
study.
the West Coast, while keeping present mileage standards domestic resources top
The Census Bureau and the Hustler
corporate leading to an average 27.5 ranking in his plan.
Department of Housing and headquarters in Columbus. miles per gallon by 1985 may · Administration officials
Urban Development released
Flynt said the move, which not be enough.
predict the number of U.S.
a joint study FridaY which he said was "definite" and
The buying public has reactors will grow from a
showed 82 per cent of the 72.5 would take place by the recently shifted away from present 62 to between 250 and
million households surveyed spring of 1978, was not related small cars and hack toward :;oo by the end of the century .
rated their neighborhoods to his conviction earUer this large
ones,
and
Congressiona l, admin· ·
excellent or good places to year In Cincinnati of administration officials islralion a nd industry
live while just 2.4 per cent pandering obscenity and believe there must be a sources sa1a Ule· ouumes or
gave their neighborhoods a engaging in organized crime. strong new incentive to make the Carter policy can be seen
poor rating.
The conviction has since fuel-efficient cars more in measures getting top
been appealed.
111sideration.
attractive.

Victorio Cache
tt!~~rs a fake

Amputee
seeking

MARCH

28-2930 &amp; 31
BULLETS - Left ID right are Mike Roach Danny
Bays, Mike Beaver, Jimmy Call and Dwight W~Y!lfd.

1-2

PRIME
SIDING
12"xl6 FT.

REGUlAR
'5.28 PC.

STARTS
I 1._\

I,
il, I

.....
. . ._
:::-.::-.;"""""

.·-·-........

SALE

'3''

SHEET

Give cmy room in your
home o focel ift . . . with
rithly grained wall pun·
ellng. Marked below our

71A''SAW
BLADE
B&amp;D
COMBINATION
SAL£

$449

All PAINT
AND BRUSHES

'17.88

ELEClRIC WIRE

big sale event.

2SD Foot Roll

LAKERS - Left to right are Alan Bailey Scott
Condee, Melvin Clagg. Standing - Mark Beav;,. and
Wayne Waugh.
·

REG.

4'x8' DESCRIPTION

MEDIUM lAUAN

'4.49

BRANDY BIRCH

'6.39

BUmRSCOTtH

'719

LIME

'7 .29

BLUE MINT

'7.29

SHEET

Regular S2S.99

SALE

SALE

'3.99

$}888

SALE

4" STAPLES

1

GYPSUM

REC.BOXES
16.29
'6.29
'6.29

39C
SALE

CEILING BOXES

69' box

0

BOARD
~;Z~s· ·

59c

HAND
TOOLS

SHEET

TUBE

EASTlAND PECAN

5 GAL JOINT

WESTERN CEDAR

COMPOUND

20% OFF

RegUlar 56.50 Bucket

COCOA PINE

SALE

NUTMEG

$555

BRISIOL BIRCH
.22 ft .

l/8

GOLD LACE

PAN AND

1/8

BLUE LACE

ROLLER
SET

ETOILE
Green-Brown

VIUAGE

5 A V Ei

VANITIES

30%0FF

SALE

RED BRICK

Good Seiet:tion

MESA STONE

WOOD PRE FINISHED MOULDING

I

In 'Siock

anti llllh ' Jffll ir\-

cllldod. St,otldlrd l!ut,

'49"
-----------::::::.;,:-·
-t&lt;3141"
ALL•AME ROCK
.I

WARRIORS - Kneellng left to right are Terry Cline
Greg Brumfield and Davey Lockhart. Rear - Mark Call'
Ricky Harnes and Richard Meadows.
'

INSULATION
SPECIAL t
J.M. FIBERGlASS
--------------4" FUU lliiCK
15" AND 23" WIDE

11C SQ. FT.

SPECIAL

HARDWARE
25% OFF

----

FT. PLASTIC
DRAIN PIPE
12"

4" BRUSH
REG. '5.99

TILE

14'
SQ. FT.

FURRING

'

·-'

STORE HI)URS

WE'VE
~

OOT'EMI

Phone 446·4464

PRICI!D
RIGHT!

'

I

Mon·•. Fri. 7:lO• .m. leJp.m.
S.lurd•yJ 1lO• . m. to1p .m.

4

CASH &amp; CARRY

WASIDNGTON (UP!) Henry Winkler today sent a
message to' teen-agers who
idolize him as television 's
' 1 The:Fonz' ~-thelr bodies are
a ''garden" and destroying
their minds with drugs or
alcohol could eliminate
fulfillin g dreams for the
future.
"Think of yourself as a
garden, think of yourself in
terms of what it js you want to
do, think of yourself in
respect," Winkler advised
youth in an appearance
· the
Senate
before
subcommittee on alcohol and
dru.g abuse .
Winkler abandoned the
"Fonz" look in his
congressional appearance on
closed circuit television from
a California movie set amid
some screaming fans-the
lllicked down hair gave way
ID his own long and casual

Ohio mansion
on sale soon
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Georgian-&amp;yle mansion that
was the governor's residence
until Frank Lausche moved
out in 1957 will go on tbe
auction block April 11.
Ohio Department of
Administrative Services
Director Richard D. Jackson
said a minimum bld of
$,100,000 will be required· on
the deteriorating mansion.
The buDding and grounds
on East Broad Street have
been appraised at $)50,01,10
apd by law cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that
· amount.
Jackson said
31-room
mansion would be open for
public inspection on April· 1
·and 8.

the

WHITE CEIUNG
12"112"

,..

other children from the area
abductedand 'slain during the
same 14-mooth period-girls
aged 13 to 15 were victims of
the killer ·suspected in Timothy's death because that
ritual was not followed.
The pressures are evident
in this prosperous suburb of
~.ooo to the northwest of
Detroit.
Aivira Pasciak, joining her
husband for lunch at a
fashionable, though youth:
·oriented
restaurant,
wondered out loud, "Can you
really tnmt anybody· here?"
"Look at that guy sitting
over there with the thick
sideburns," she said ID her
husband.
The reference was to one of
ap~
the reported physical characteristics of the child killer
police blamed for the four
kidnap-&amp;ayings.
style; the black leather beer, he chugged water.
The slayings over the past
motorcycle jacket was
" I don't drink any alcobol,"
replaced with a cable knit he said. "I don't like It in my 14 months have struck fear
body.'' Winkler admitted he into the hearts of many who
swea\flr.
Winkler said~ wanted his mes smoke, bUt tries to had felt sheltered from the
career "for a long time and I keep it out of the public eye. violence of the city. Adding to
could not have had it if I was . Becky Yates, a 13-year-&lt;~ld their discomfort Is the police
Mechanic Falls, Maine, depiction of tbe killer-an
not in control of myself.''
high
student, uppermiddle class
He said in college, while junior
fraternity brotpers chugged questioned Winkler on drug pro!essional who fits into the
and alcohol abuse, and community social mold and
whether he had a girlfriend . . acts oormal 99 per cent of the
"I know a wonderful lady in time.
"I guess that means
L.A,'' Winkler said. "Would
everybody's under
you like to meet her?"
"Yeah," said a breathless suspicion," said Mrs..
Becky who had testified Pasclak's husband, John, an
about the drinking habits of insurance man who lives in
some of her peers. "I'd like to nearby Troy.
The relaxed, easy going
meet you.~~
suburban lifestyle of.the com·
munitles that make up the socalled Woodward Corridor of
mostly upper crust oakland
County
has undergone subtle,
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A ·
but noticeable changes since
controversial, upcoming sixTimothy's
death.
hour television program
More
mothers
are driving
about Jesus has ~n praised
COSCHOCTON,Ohio
(UP!)
their
children
to
and from
by local Catholic officials.
State
Sen.
Sam
Speck,
Rschool.
1be
children
who
Rev . Theodore Kosse, radio
New
Concord,
may
be
toying
walk
po
so
in
group6.
Most
of
and television director for the
with
the
Idea
of
becoming
them no longer are allowed to
Cincinnati Arcbdiocesan
governor.
venture away from the
communications office, said
Speck,
featured
- ~peaker
Immediate vlcinlty of their
Friday.he joined the national
Thursday night at the Lincoln homes after d!lfk.
Catholic fUm arid broadcast
Day Diriner of the Coschocton
A young woman in a coffee
office In supporting the County
RapubUcn Party, was shop with her 3-year-old
program.
introduced as an official who
Catholic officials com- might be returning to the city daughter said, "I don't think
the people around here
plained the film "has come next as governor .
worried too much until it
under fire from some
After the meeting Speck happened in Birmingham.
religious groups in the U. S.,
confessed he was indeed
"I've been trying to
who even before · previewing considering a run for· a
remember
what I was
It, launched a national statewide office, but would
up
to
do in a small
lrought
campaign against it.''
not say which one.
town
in
New
Hampshire,"
Local Catholic officials
A thre«enn state rese- she said.
quoted Rev. Patrick Sullivan, presentatlve, Speck was
"I was told, 'don't talk to
director of the national elected to the State Senate
strangers,
don't get Into
Catholic film and broadcast 1976. He Is al.!o an asaoctate
cars.'
I
wain
't allowed to, go
office,as saying, "It would be profesaor of polltical science
to
the
drug
store
at 8 o'clock
unfo-rtunate If the large at Muskingum CoUege in New
at
night,
either.''
audience for whom the film Concrod.
was intended should miss It
because of an ill-conceived
'smear' campaign against

the 168-member police task sexually abused body was
force investigating the found in a ditch last Tuesday
slayings and the (ather of night. Police soon linked his
death by suffocation to three
children aged 6 and 11.
"When you've got a person earlier slaylngs. In each
like this on the loose, you're case, the meticulous killer
vulnerable whether you live . bathed his victims, cleaned
in the ghetto or in a $200,000 their clothes and even
manicured their fingernails
home.'' Krease said.
Timothy, an avid baseball before disposing .of the
fan
and
skateboard bodies.
All the victims were
enthusiast was abducted
from outside a Birmingham between the ages of 10 and 12.
pharmacy where he had gone Two were girls. Only Timothy
for a cantly bar at 8 p.m. the and the other boy . were
sexually molested.
night of March 16,
Police say they doubt three
His fully-clothed , but

.''·

PANELING
ADHESIVE

Gro. un~

By PAUL VARIAN
BIRMINGHAM , Mich ..
(UPI ) - Timothy's town is
worried sick about the rash of
child
kidnapln gs
and
slayings.
The latest victim, Timothy
King, 11, was buried Friday,
while authorities looked for
his sex deviate killer among
the mourn ers. Uneasy
residents wondered who
would be next.
"I think it has made people
aware
that
they're
vulnerable no matter where
they live:" said State Police
Sgt. Joseph Kreasc, head of

TheFonz makes

20% OFF

$1'9

12-2 With

- Andy

damages
.Child killings alarm Michigan town

PC.

regular low price during
thi~

KNICKS - Kneeling left to right are Scott Brumfield
Mike Brace, Paul Waugh. Rear - Mahlon Eblen Johnny
Saunders, Ernie Meadows, Not pictured
Queen.

PAGE 1-D

SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1977

NO.7

APRIL

Sf RING

•

VOL !2

•

GN.UPOUS, OHIO

, PHONE 446 4464

n
.1:"

ea· I

Catholics
• •
prm.smg

Jesus film

Speck may want
governorship

it."

•

Local Catholics also
pointed out that Cathollc film
reviewers who saw an advance ICI'eening of the film
reported, "There is nothing
E-RCALLED
more difficult for a filmMIDDLEPORT - The maker to do than a
Middleport Emergency dramatization of the llfe of
!~quad was called to 732
Christ - this fUm succeeds
Sycamore St., al 12:31 p.m. very well.
Friday for Woodrow Call who
"The.substance of the film,
waa taken to the Holzer without any fudging of the
Medical Center. All :42 p.m. , Issue, Is that Christ Is the son
the Middleport and Pomeroy of God who , performed
Emertency Sq4ads were miracle~ . riled for our sins
ceDed to SR 7 beto-.• Hobson ind roll il"lim the dead.
\« the acene • of an autn- There Is r.o ambiguity here
tractor•traller accident. about the divinity of Jesus.''
'lbree persons, Mr. and Mrs.
The film, entitled "Jesu.• of
JOhn Nelson Wise of Pomeroy Nazareth," Is to be carried by
and Mathew Fe(esky, were N~-TV on Palm Sunday and
taken to Vetenn11 Memorial F..aater ev.sinM&amp;, April 3 and
lloapltal by the two squadll. 10, from 8 p.m. to I! p.m.

Flynt to
expand

•
_empire

New tax would
hurt gas h~gs

Big Lal!or,..declares PR war on CQnservatives
.

W,WUNGTON (UP!)
Frustrated by oppo~tion oo
Capitol mu. big labor intends
to push Its legislative goals
with an unprectdented public
relallons campalg·n
portraying conservative
enemiea as "anUcivU rlghta,
antl.people, anUeverybody.''
The
new
Ai:L-CIO
campalfn.• countetlng the
NaUonal Right to Work
Committee's
slick
advertising program; was
hatched when labor lost its
first battle in the 9~th
Consreu llllt week.
"nit IW')II'tlln• delelt of a.
cootrovel'llll ''commOII'IitWl

~cketing"

bill, which would
·have let linlons picket wbole
construction sites in dllputes
with one subcontrac\or,
spelled trouble for other
items on labor's big 19TI
.agendaIncluding an
increase in the nilninnum
wage and repeal of state
rlghUo-work laws.
Compounding the surprise
on the _picketing bill,
President Carter double·
Crossed AFJ...CJO President
George Meany the next day
by advoca tlng a weak
minimum wage increaae.
AFI..CIO ofllcials concede
these setbacu indicate a

In
labor's
weakness
traditional
ability
to
command
support
of
politicans elected with union
money. Labor spent nearly
$20 million electing Carter
and coogressmen last year.
defeat
also
.But
strengthened labor's
determination.
"It's only the lop half of the
first inning, and we haven't
even ccme out swinging yet,"
Sllid Tom Donahue, Meany's
top aide.
The counler-attack .begins
Tuesday, when Donahue
plans · to make a speech
assailing conservatives who

oppose labor Jegtslatlon. The

AFUIO's political directors
meet later in the week to
work out further details.
"We are not going to
continue to let ourselves be
sitting ducks for the right
wing,"
an
AFLCIO
spokesman said. uwe're
going to expose them
(conservatives) as anti-dvil
rights, anti-people, anti everybody."
He said the campaign will
include newspaper
advertising and an effort to
confront congressmen
personally with some of the
millions of workers who

benefit from labor legislation.
"We are going to find real
live people to tell their
story," he said. For instance,
he suggested an AFUIO ad
might portray a worker
forced to collect welfare as an
Income supplement under
Carter's minimum wage

!X'oposBI.

This will be the first time
the union has used
nontraditional means of
lobbying Congress. The only
comparable campaign is the
familiar " union label"
c ommercia) wit h
testimonials from Ladies

Garment Workers members.
The Right to Work Commit·
tee's effective advertising
against the picketing bill was
supplemented by employersupplied postcards that non·
union workers sent to Carter
and Congress. House leaders
clainn the issue generated as
much mail as the debate·over
VIetnam.·
"Hour opponents are going ·
to use postcards, then we're
going to use real people,'' the
AFUIO spokesman said.
"Basically, we are going to
be more aggressive, more
public_."

''

I

�•
~2-The Sunday

. ,c::;;;;~~::=:;;;:j .
f::::

POMEROY -Developing a profitable beef herd requires
a lot of good judgment. The most important decision a cow.caH
operator makes, though, is when he selects a bull, said Randall
R. Reed, Extension beef cattle specialiat at Ohio State
University, as he talked on March 18 about the new Bull Test
Station at the Eastern Ohio Resource Development Center,
Belle Valley.
·
"The kind and type of herd bull determines the quality of
calvesandreplacementheifersprnducedforatleastthenext2
to3years.Bythetimeaproducerdecidesabulllsnolwork!ng,
the 3rd or 4th calf crop may be on the way," said Reed.
That's why it's so Important to use a performance tested
bull, he said. This reasoning, and a few dollars, built the Ohio
Bull Test Station last year, and the first set of more than 100
performance tested bulls from It will be offered for sale on
April 2li at 6:3!1 p.m.
Since selection is the tool to create desirable genetic
changes in a herd, a goal based on the needs of a particular
herd should be set. Then select and measure the economically
· important trails involved In reaching that goal. Weaning
. · weight, yearling weight, and weight per day of age are all
.-~ economically importan~ highly correlatA!d, and measurable,
said Reed. Type or grade may be considered, but it is more
: : difficult to measure. Yearling weight or 18 months weight is
. : important to a breeder who raises herd replacements. Bulls at
· · the Test Station have both pre-weaning and post-weaning
· records,
·
.
Reed suggested the following guidelines for selecting a
· . bull: a minimum weaning weight of 500 poWlds and preferably
. 600 to 650 pounds, average dally gain on feed of about 3 or
. · better, minimum weight per day of age of 2.5 to 3 poWlds or
: better, and a minimum 365 day weight of about 1,000 pounds.
.
The ratio for 2«i day weight, gain on test, weight per day of
, age, and 365 day weight are important considerations.
The fact that a bull has been performlince tested is not the
. only important consideration. How well he scored on the test
· must be critically evaluated. Reed said to watch for these
: items in a buU's record:
(1) Lower gain on test than weight per day of age. This

growth, :'~:'

usually Indicates that u.i bull had rapid early
tapering off, and may not reach adequate mature size. Avoid
bulls that weigh 600 pounds at weaning, 1,000 at yearling, and
1,100 or 1,200 at 2 years. Trained vi,sualappraisal of skeletal
development is a pretty acrurate method on yearling bulls or
where 550 day weights are not available.
(2) Watch lot a large difference between gain on test and
weight per day of age. This Indicates compensatory gain that
may make up for a poor milldng dam. Bull test entrance ·
requirements of 2.25 poWlds per day of age will eliminate
many of these bulls.
.
Other points to consider when buying a bull are: Make
sure the bull is structurally sound in his skeletal make up. He
should be masculine, but not at too·early .an age. This often
results in early sexual maturity and small mature size.
Testicles should be well developed and of normal size. Buy a
bull with performance records to exceed that of your cow herd.
He should have a long, clean, fairly smooth muscle structure
rather than the short, thick "bunchy" kind.
·
Weaning weight is important as a measure of the milking
ability of the bull's dam. This is a particularly important trait
if offspring are to be used as herd replacements.
The impact of bull selection will depend on the traits for
which he \vas chosen in the fits! place. Practically all traits are
heritable, but In varying amounts. For example, weaning
weight i.s 30 percent heritable, yearling weight is 60 percent
heritable, and niature weight is 80 percent heritable.
Important carcass characteristics range from 70 perceht
heritability for loin.eye to 30 percent for carcass grade and 25
percent for conformation scores at weaning. Other traits are
also heritable.
As the general level of performance ability of the herd ·
advanced both in ability to gain and grape, the more difficult it
becomes to make additional improvements. In high
performance herds you may backslide llfl]ess you make
judicious selections on the herd bulls. Select carefully, and
utilize all available and pertinent information; it is your most
challenging decision, Reed said.

ON OKINAWA
POINT PLEASANT
· 'Marine Private . First Class
Tracy W. Wolfingbarger, son
of Ruth Wolfingbarger of
Route 2, Box 191, Point
Pleasant, has reported lor
duty with the Jrd Marine
By Steve Hiblnger
the importance of selecting
Division, on Okinawa. He
District Conservatlolli!t
the proper species to suit
: joined the Marine Corps in
GALLIPOLIS - In last ' your forage program.
May, 1976.
week's column I discu8sed Selection should be based on
management capabilities,
desired yields and soil and
site conditions. Once the
seeding mixture is decided,
selection of seeding practices
and techniques is necessary.
One important technique is
the use of no-till methods
which recently has gained in
popularity, especially in the
steeper areas of Ohio.

Agriculture and Upcoming weather
our community will guide cattle prices
By Bryson R . f Bud) Carter
.
Ga Ilia County Extension Agent

[; ALI.IJ'OI.iS ~ Here are
some tips for home gardeners
that we have not had space to
list in our weekly garden
calendar.
Soli Preparation
Doh't . work garden soil
when too wet. The soil
structure will be damaged to
the extent that valuable pi)re
space will be lost. If worked
too wet, clay soils become
hard and difficult to work
throughout the growing
season ,
$oil dry enough to work
shatters easily. Determine ff
soil is dry enough by
squeezing a handful of soil
gently in your fist. If the soil
crumbles when released, it is
dry enough to work. Soil too
wet to work forms a mud ball
as pressure Is applied.
Grape Pruning
March is the .best time to
prune grapevines., Delayed
spring prunlng may result in
"bleeding" or sap now from
the vines, but this generally
does little or no harm to the
vines.
Pruning Trees
.Prune trees every year.
Remove aU dead, ·diseased
and broken. branches and the
w~aker of two crossing
· branches that are rubbing
tog ether. Remove upright
growth, including watersprouts and growth excluding
light from · the center of the
If no-till is your deciswn, tree. Drooping branches that
the Cooperative E&lt;tension interfere with traffic or
Service has a bulletin (F7 on mowing should be removed.
Agronomy Tips) which explains the 10 important steps Veterans Memorial Hospital
to follow in reseeding hay or
Admitted - Dana Howell,
pasture fields.
. Shade ; Margretta Wise,
r''l1 review these steps and . Pomeroy;
John
Wise,
if you need further details or Pomeroy; Ruth Thornton,
more information, see me or Umg Bottom; Kevin Oi1er,
the County Extension Agent: Langsville.
FIELD SELECTION,
Discharged
Rollin
Ideally pick well·drained Bearhs.
fields with silty soils. Well
drained soils warm faster in
the spring than do wet soils. growing period.
FERTILIZE ANNUALLY
This gives the seed a quick
germination and stronger - No productive forage will
chance for survival. No-till is remain productive unless its
less satisfactory in wet fields, "fed" properly. Plants need
in general, than conventional proper nutrition as much as
Wl animal does.
tillage methods.
Remember; if you want
SOIL TEST - We're back
more Information 011 these
to the old phrase "test don't guess." Fertility levels steps, contact the Soil Con·
and pH conditions are as servation Service or County
. necessary on no-till as any Extension Office,, in your
other type of seeding.
· area. Services are offered
regardless of race, creed,
USE THE SOIL TEST nationality,
sex or religious
Once you have the test
results, follow · the recom· affiliation.

Three Gallians

DON'T WAIT. ORDER NOW BEFORE
THE PRICES GO UP. FROM THE AREA

at Conference

WAREHOUSE AT POMEROY, 0.

""'
, POMEROY lANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGA .
•

,

Serving Meigs , G1lli•1nd
Mason Counties ·
PHONE 9'2· 2111

Ston Houn : OP.n 8:30. 5: 111. Mill Closll!~ a1 ~ P.M.

The Land Bank has been lending money to farm~rs for
60 years ... from one generation to another.
It's because we unde rstand the special needs of
farmers that we've estaolished this kind of dependability.
That's why we -o.lfer long-term financing with llexible .
rep~yment
ans. Next lime you 're th inking about
cred it, visit your local Land Bank
228 Upper River Road
Gallipolis Ph. 446-0203
Clyde B. Walker Mgr.

THEBANKOFGENERA.T~I·O·N-S818818~--~-.aaaaaaaaa..

DAIRY.
PRO
a new Concept in
Dairy Feeding!
UP TO 600 LBS. MORE MILK
PER COW PER YEARl
The CRF Dairy-Pro Feeding Concept' has resulted in
dairy feeds which will produce r:nore milk because, for
the first tim e the proper balance of soluble to insoluble
protein has been di scovered. fn one test of 12 herds,
the differe nce was equivalent to 600 lbs. more milk per
cow per year, in another it was eq uivalent to 1800 lbs.
New LANDMARK solubility-balanced dairy feeds are
i6 and 18% complete concentrates and a 40% supplem ent. Ask us about Dairy-Pro, including the
LANDMARK forage evaluation program.
·
'Paierfrt&gt;gltrrmlnn pending

Jack W. Carsey,

POMEROY LANDMMK

Mgr.

Serving: Meigs, Gallia and
Mason counties. Open: 8:305:JO. Mill closes at 5 p.m.

Phym-2~.

Ft~E_I
71019

•

•

in WU3ville ·
GALLIPOLIS - Three
persons from this area joined
more than 300 managers and
directors of the Federal Land
Bank Association (FLBA ) in
Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and
Tennessee recently at the
Galt House in the 1977
Managers and Shareholders
Conference at Louisville, Ky.
Clyde B. Walker, manager
of the Gallipolis· FLBA , said
he attended with Carl L.
Webster, field assistant, and
Darrel Young, director.
Hosted by the Federal Land
Bank of Louisville, the
Conference included reports
by bank officers regarding
operatiqns of the Fourth
District Land Bank System.
At the opening session of
the Conference; Federal
Land Bank President Paul F.
Bachman introduced a slide
presentation
co ,mmemoratlng the 60th Anniversary· of the Federal
Land Bank System depicting
the growth and development
that the Fourth District has
experienced.
Bachman also reported
that on January 20, 1977, the
FLB reached a milestone in
its service to farmers in the
District by reaching $2 billion
in loans outstanding. In S\1
doing, the Bank becomes the
fourth of the twelve 'district
land hanks to reach this
mark.
Other speakers ·were
Carroll C. 'Cardwell, deputy
governor of the Farm Credit
Administration
in
Washington, D. C., and Dr. C.
Bronson
Lane,
vice
president-operations, Dairy
Farmers, Inc., Orlando, Fla.

L

coold continue longer. But
UPI FARM EDITOR
just how lar and how fast the
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ Uquldatioo goes - fac!Drs
Weather conditloos through whi ch c ould have maj or
the rest of this year will help impact on the cattle economy
determine whether caltle and consumer beef prices prices will rise gradually will depend primarily on
through the next few years or weather and other uncertain
head into a dramatic boom conditions, the rep&lt;~rt said.
followed later by a bust, an
In the past, Agriculture
,
economisla
have frequently
Agnculture Department made forecasts
on the basis
specialist says.
Eoonomist James Nix said of possible "average"
in a special Livestock and weather in the future. But
Meat Situation summary Agriculture Secretary Bob
report widespread drought in Bergland, Insisting the
90111e parts of the country, weather almost never Is
combined with an unusually average, haa sald he wants
cold winter, hs . produc~ forecasts now to show the
"serious concern" about the possible alternatives.
·
pace at which cattlemen are
Nix's report did that. He
reducing their herds.
presented two alternate
At the moment, Nix ex- "scenarios" for cattle and
plained, cattlemen are in !be· beef prices over the next few
"liquidation phase" of a years:
cattle production cycle. On
In "Alternative A the heels of he,avy and Favorable Weather, " Nix
continuing economic losses said the rate of herd
for several yeal'!l, the u.s. liquidation would moderate
inventory of cattle and calves and would "bottom out"
has been cut · from 131.6 during 1978. Cattle and beef
million head in January, 1975, prices would rise gradually
to 122.9 mUlion head at the and.moderately through 1980
beginning of this year.
in reaction to a 10 to 14 per
Further liquidation is Cl!nl decline through that
~cted during 1977 -and it
(Continued on page D-8)

••
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~ROTECT

k

"•

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you the invoice or cost on any new

••

1977 Chrysler or Plymouth in stock.
Gallipolis Chrysler will then negotiate

'

-~·

70 CHEVY CAMARO
2 dr.,

•

••

CENTRAL SOYA HAS A
COMPLETE PACKAGE.

AND GET AFREE
50 LB. BAG OF
HI-M MINERAL

v.a, auto.,

P.S .

WHILE SUPPLY lASTS
CENTRAL SOY~
of Ohio, Inc.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

'2995 .

'1795

71 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE

•
•
•

Staion Wagon ,
reck.

••
••

4 Dr.,

v.a. auto.,

'2295

le SJ:bre Scdm"l

70 CAPRICE

P .S., air, vinyl roof.

P.S., luggage

1977 Buick Le Sabre

4 Dr. , V-ll, auto ., air .

'2695

'1195

-·•

6 cyl, auto., P.S , air .

74 CHEVY IMPALA

•

V.a, auto.,

the month of March.

P.S .. air, special

73 DODGE DART SWINGER

'3695

••

v.a, auto .,

V.jl, auto ... P.S., 8 ft . bed. Sharp .

4 dr ., V.jl, auto., P.S., air, vinyl roof.

Pickup with custom top, P .S., P.B., Rally
1\ileels.

-·•

HT,

73 FORD FlOO RANGER

74 CHEVY EL CAMINO

•••
••

to this offer in February, we are extending this offer thru

'2395

71 CH,EVY MALIBU

. '995

•
•

•

offer. See us Today! Due to such a tremendous response

mdille interior.

'2195

70 DODGE DART

•

2 Dr.,

4 Dr., v.a, alto. , air, P.S., P.B., vinyl roof,
extra nice.

2 Dr., 6 cyl., standard.

•
•

l

73 FORD GRAN TORINO

73 CHEVY IMPALA

'1095

YOUR CAmE

.•

J..-,

All These Are In Stock and Ready To Go.

•

. FROM GRASS TETANY. ·

the deal with you. We will not turn down any reasonable

• CORDOBA • • 7 CORDOBA • 2 VOLARE • 10 FUll SIZE CHRYSLERS • 1 ASPEN
• 2 PLYMOUTH GRAN FURY BROUGHAM • 1 DODGE VAN • 2 SPORTSMAN WAGONS

--

ON WIND VANE FEEDERS

FACE FLY ATTACHMENT
OPTIONAL

Gallipolis Chrysler Plymouth will show

••

SAVE 5%

$140000 Discount from Sticker Price!

.• .•• •

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.

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Rt.7

•• •w
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Notices
BRI NG YOUR MO WERS R tille1 s m
tor repcur to ovo1d a sure rush .
A ll ty pes of sow s 8. tooh
sharpened . Gcnero1or and
s ta r le• rcpa11 . 562 4 th Avd. Ph
A46 -1562

LAST YEAR FOR THE
BIG DODGE

SEJ: US f-OR THI: ,BEST BUY IN
DIAM ONDS , From one. e•gh 1h
CT . to ? CT ., Compare our
pr •ces anywhe re.
Tawn e y

Pets lor Sale
BOA RDING 8 AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; "P Kennel~ . 388-827&lt;1 . Rl.
554 . 'r milcecst ofPort er .

138 Bushels
Regular s19.00 Sale Price

•1600

•••
••
•

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Durable &amp; Rugged
.These boxes sell regular at 510.95
0n Sale
· ,

8 ,s

,

Fulton Thompson Tractor Sales
Ph. 992-5101

'

I

I

ORACONWYNO Cctlery -l&lt; ennel ,
CFA Siamese cmd Himal ayans
(Per sians) Cob . AKC
Chow
Chow·s dogs. Stud serv1ce O"d
litter evalua tion 1-'h . 446 -3844

I

5 IN STOCK

•

••

DACHSHUND PUPPY , ma le , r eg.
red , $75 , Ph . 446·A999
BO AR DING AND AKC YORK SHIRE
AND WEST Highland Whit e Ter ·
riers . Circle l Kennel. Ph.

~

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•

NOW THROUGH MARQI 31, 1977 WITH THE PURd!AsE OF A 1l HP
GEAR
DRIVEN CUB CADET.
PURCHASES AFTER THIS DATE .
Will RECEIVE A'175.00 CASH DISCO~NT THROUGH APRIL 30, 1977.
SO HURRY IN NOW FOR BIG SAVINGS.

NEED TOOL BOXES FOR
YOUR MACHINERY?

BUY NOW

"••

"'

'

WE CAN STill ORDER ONE FOR YOU

-

•

992-2176 '

P~eruy,

TOY Poodles , and long haired
Chihuahuas puppies , AKC Reg .
!"-:;"

:

-

G'rfN SHOOT at the Raci ne Gun
.Club every
unday, I pm

'Assorted mea t .

•

~y - pos.s

lor elderly' bdy

every Sunday . 12 noon ,

'f'Ei6. WE ha~e

.
Sheets , $2.00 HL

i'\lso , Ann i~ers arv So le , Monday . 28th thru April&lt;lth .

LOANS AVAILABLE , Bu•inaS$ arrd
lorm, ·520,000 up . Confect Mr .
Gray (2161 845·6666.

'&gt;

.

'

RE G. Old Englrsh Sheep dog . Ph .'
44 6·0974 .
'

Notice!

Prall's Meat Mkt .
{Pleo!anton Meal Processing ,_

NOTICE,

No oppoinment nec&amp;uory . Call
{614 ) 593 ·8655, hours •. 9:00 ti ll
b:OO 7 Pomeroy Road . Athens ,

. A$Y DOGS lovnd d r'lsi ng t Ottlf;
en my form in Grea t Aencf wi ll
, . sho t.
~ori s Jackson.

'

~~-·-

processing. Retail, wholesale .

R.A!-CINE FIRE Oep
Gun Shoot e..-ery
6 p .m . at the ir
iashan . Oh io .
CARE

~- :::.....::::.:

Inc .) Custom sloughlering, an d

.
SHOOTING MA TC , jus t off Rt . 7

0.

CE NrENAR Y W OO D S P ~ T
GROOMING FACi li1E S Pro tos
sionol Ser vr(es offer ed
all
breeds . all styles. Ph . 446 ·0231

Ph . 44b·0057 .

'

3rd Street

RISING STAR KENNEL
Boarding. lndoor -Ou1door Run s .
Groo rmng. All Breeds Clean
Sanitary fa c•ldres Che!&gt;h1re Ph
367 -0292

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'·

in
;prl~ote
h o me .
l oc al
,eferences. Phone
. JJOS .

..

446·4824 .

CARROLL
NORRIS
'
.'
DODGE

wltL

MEIGS EQUIPM.ENT

$4695

Ph . 446-4 191

••
••

••
"
~
•,;

Canary yellow, black vinyl top,
automatic, factory air . power
steering , power brakes. ral ly
wheels. Compare At

BRIAR PATCH Kenne ls . Boarding ,
Grooming AKC Gordon set ·
ters , English Cock er Spon re ls,

•
•

•
•

1976 CAMARO LT

HILLCR EST KE NN El
AKC DOBERMAN$, qu·a ldy pu p
lro rn Chomp•on blood lme
~fo( k , pup usuolty O\l(llt abl e
reds or blo ck s, stud se r\1 1Ce Ph .
446· 465 4

The same principle as above.
This will 11 burn" the grass .

•l
•..
•

SPRING HAS SPRUNGDoc THE GRASS HAS RIZ.
Says: THIS IS WHERE
THE GOOD BUYS IS!

Jewele r ~.

ROYAL MONACO

'200 CASH DISCOUNT

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-2282

•
•

.r-·

..

no matter how you cut it!

•

4 door sedan, low miles.

'595

.••

•
•
the quality is Ill®

species that the 2,4-D won't
kill. This is especially im·
portant in fields where you
don't want to kill exisiing
grass, but have to stunt its
growth until the seedling is
strong.
SEED IN APRIL OR
AUGUST - Seed early
enough in the spring that dry
weather won't damage the
seeding; and early enough in
the fall that frost won't 1\ill
the young plants.
GRAZE
OR
MOW
FREQUENTLY - During
the establishment period
reduce other plant competition as much as possible,
ROTATE G.RAZING Rotational gra~ing increases
yields by minimizing damage
from trampling and allowing
the plant a longer recovery

This Offer Out!

•

START NOW•••

{

Ch~ck

•

•

p••••-•-••••••••••••••-••••••

GRAZE
OR
MOW
CLOSELY- Very seldom is
clipping or grazing shorter
than 2" height desirable. This
is the exception. Shorter
vegetation gives less competition for new seedlings.
. APPLY 2,4-H - This seems
to be totally forgotten. Every
year several farmers try to
forget the chemical control
and go ahead with seeding.
This has to be done. Broad·
leaf vegetation has to be
controlled to allow the seed·
lings a chance to get large
enough to be competitive.
APPLY PARAQUAT - ·

NEW HOllAND BOX SPREADER

,

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

mendations.

SPEUAL!

. Pomeroy

Make cuts to give the tree the
desired direction of groWth.
Pruning Roses
Prune rose bushes. an·
nually. Remove all dead and
spindly growth and cut canes
back to live wood. If no live
bud, are left, remove the
entire ·cane. Remove the
weaker of two crossing
. branches. Shape the plant by
cutting the strong canes to a
uniform height. In Ohio,
strong plants can be pruned
to a height of 24 to 30 inches.
Nursery Stock
When nursery stock arrives
and cannot be planted im·
mediately, it must be kept in
good condition prior to
planting. Be sure that root
systems do not dry out or
otherwise become damaged.
Keep the roots of plants in
moist (not so.ggy ) sa nd ,
sawdust or peat moss in as
cool an area as possible.
Plants tightly packed in
bundles should be opened and
ventilated to prevent fungus
growth.
,

~3- The Sw1day Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Mard127, 19'77

11y BERNARD BRENNER

.

Ten steps are important
in reseeding hay, pasture

TAKE ADVANT~GE

•

I

Times.Senlinl'l. Sunday. Marl'll 27, 1977

Oh.
SWEEPER and sewing -mo~i~e
repair , f:lorls and suppl ies . Pick
up and delivery . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, •; , mile up Georges

Creek Rd . Ph. ••6-029•.

PASCUA' E ' Electrical Service.
446·271 ~ d1.•y or night .
BEGIN your ~pring cleaning

by

having your (o rpets deoned by
besl method known , RPrl)ove
oil the dirt. Make your carpet
Jock

11tw

'-~t.mo t ,

ogom.

For

l ret:r

co11379·2b62

DEAD Stckk retno11e d t-..! -:- r: hargc
Call245 5514 .

FREEZER BEEF SALE
USDA Choice Beef , Side 79 cen t
per lb., Quarters , 69 cent per
lb .. Hind quarters, 89 cents per
lb. cut, wrapped ond fro:en
free . Colt · Com Sands , Bill
Crowford ,Cisca Stalnaker . or
Ronnie McCoy . At your Friendly
Kroger Store, Ph . 446 -3923 .
WE DO PORTRAITS, Commerico l
and Wedding Pho tography .
olso Pan port photos , also
copies and lull line ot Amateur

FREE, One year old Med. size
block leomle dog, Has b~en
Spoded , oil sh ots , fr~e to good
home. ow ner mo vi ng, Ph .
44b-4b51 '

PEKE·A ·POO , 1 mole Reg
!ihots , $50., Ph . 44b ·208b .

all

RISIN G STA ~ Kennol Boordu1g ,
lndoor-Ou'tdoor run s. gr¢on,ing
oil breeds. cleon sanitary
loci lilie.s. Cheshire . Phone \61 4)

FRAMES We haYe o~er 100 frames
367 -0292.
we mus t se ll to mak e room for
new stock , Man~ d iscontinu od 'HOOF HOLLOW. Buy , sell, 1rode
fram e~ mark ed at cost . Lear
or trai n horses . RUTH REEV~S
Pho tography , Spri ng Volley
trainer. Phone fbi A) 698.3290.
~~010 ' Ph , 446 ' 749 d dosed Mon · POODLE GWOOMI NG , reasonable
y.
role s. Co li for oppt , 742-3 162 .
Supplie~wney Sludio s.
THURMAN HOUSE , ont ique!i. Fur · DOBERMAN PI NCHER Pups AK C,
t-IIGLEV "S"BARBERSHOP
nitv re .stnpp ,ng , repo~r on·
14 week s block and 1u-.1 . lll• ~
WW re ·open ,. April I , Hr s. f1 oh1·8 ' dretinished. Coun ty Rd .8 ot135 .
cr&lt;H.:Oed, rCi d tu t.oll &lt;,hot~ .
pm , Tues . thru Sot .. Pl. .
Centervi ll e Vi llage, 245 ' 9479
Phom~ 74'].'}967 o~tm 5 p.m .
4460001
IN COMfTAX , RETURN S Et iGli SH SPRIN GER
Sponu:- ts

RAWl£1CHt-10MEPROOUCJ S Mr
Croom . Dog and Hor~e Sup ·
ptle ~
Nitw
Ufl'ah•r !lhlp
f hth lurc . Ph , 367 07(12.

1-'Hlf'ARI:.O

SIAl· ~

1\ND

f-EOE:I~Al. DAY OR EVt NING~ .
1) . Y' ~ hrp Wnlt ~· Wlut e .
:14 ~· ~0~

Pup~

AKC l1ve1 and wh 1re

2

1976 MALIBU
CLASSIC
dr ., light brown , saddle Landau

2
top. factory a ir , po wer steering.
power brakes , radial tires , super
clean .

$4395

1972 PONTIAC
LEMANS
dr. H.T.. local one owner , on ly

35 ,000 miles on th is like new car in
showroom condition . Beige paint,
automat ic trans .. power steering .
Small V-8.

'2295

112

steering, camper topper, 8,000
miles. local own er .

PRICED FOR THE
11
BARGAIN HUNTER"

1974 PONTIAC
Ventura Coupe. local one owner .
lo w miles , automatic , s ix
cy l i no~ r. power steering, power
brakes. vinyl inte rior, new tire s.
e xtra clean .

1976 DODGE
PICKUP
ton c ustom, automat ic. power

1973 CHRYSLER
Newport Custom 2 Dr ., tully
equipped, N.A. D.A. Book Price
$2175.00. Our Pr ice

'1695

'2495

"Special-See It Today"

GIANT SELECTION OF NEW CARS IN STOCK!
WE BEAT BIG CITY DEALER PRICES!
•

See Bill Gene Johnson, "arlnnd Wood,
Bob Bricll'les, or Greg Smith

IG,MAC &amp; BANK FINANCING I ISUNDAY SHOPPERS WELCOME! I

SMITH BUICK· PONTIAC, INC.

r;

""t'ck) old. I·Qid 111at brtJd
Ch·unp1on bloodlu.1 o~ , (.'.,ll Jim
((utrh, ••. ~4 / 7706 , ur 99'1 ~·421:1 .

GALLIPOliS, 0.

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-·••
•

-•
•

.,•

.
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"

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�•
!&gt;+-Tlw Sunda v Tiines-Sentmel , Sunda)', MHrch 27, 1977

(}.5- The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel, Sw ulay, March 27, 1977

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , Help Wanted

/

UZEUPYOUR
dESTDEALAT

To Crow About
In
for YOU!

WE·CAN'T"
WAIT

DAN THOMPSON

'.

7&lt;2 315&lt;

~.

BIG

EW CAR SAL~

1973 MUSTANG MACH 1.......... $2695
1973 FORD LTD 4 DR ............. $2395
Power stee r.ng, V 8, automatic transm ission. A C. AM
rad1o, dual sport m1 rror.s, baby blue w 1th dark blue
v inyl top, sharp match 1ng 1nter 1or

1972 QfEV. CAPRICE 4 DR ...... ..S1995
Autom atic t ransmi ss ion , Power steering , a1r
condition mg. power brakes, AM 8 track stereo, cru ise
control , bl ack wtth matching Inter ior. wh ite vinyl top

1976 FORD MAVERICK 4 DR SAVE $$

CAN YOU MEET YOUR
QUALIF I CATIONS
As a lull.flm• or
port fi medisfr~bufor ?
We r equtre
J
S~ , 99 5 Inve nt ory t n
vest me nt
20 hours p er montJ'I
good ref ere n ce
For Resu lts- Not P ro m tses
Ca ll c oll ect

MI SS WI LLI AMS

....

1976 FORD MUSTANG 11 ... $$SAVE $$
Mach 1, ra lly sport pack, V.6, power steer ing, AM
rad1o, new car warranty

sewtck l ey , P A

SMITH NELSON MOTOR
500 E. Main

RETIRES GENTLEMAN WANTS
LADY HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE

992-2174

IN Ph 379 2573
Spnng mlo a career thts spr1 ng
Bnng beau ty g•fl s and other
great A von Products to your
oreo H•gh S Flextb le hours
Cell 4-i6 1058 or 7 ~ 2 2354

SALE HOURS
@a .m to 1 p m Mon lllru Fri., Sal. h.m. to 5 p.m.
SERVICE HOURS
8 am to 4 30 p m Mon . fhru Fr. Cio&gt;ed Sal.

VB , power steenng , AM rad iO w1th tepe. rally wheels,
white elder to r , r ed tn ter ior .

1973 FORD BRONC0...................'3495

FUL L OR PART TIME TO lease
acrea ge for go5 and ad

Ra ng er p a ck , V8~ power st eenng , au t omat tc
tr ansm iSSion, Wide wh ate spoke w h ee ls wtth w ide mud
and snow hre~

UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO
PO Box 7-4

IRONTON OHIO

-BOOKKEEPER
- - _- - - - - , and Typ1sl won ted

1975 FORD F250 +4 lON PICKUP'3995
power steer 1ng, a utomat tc transm tss lon, aux

•

springs

•

495

!~?Jw?.!~g. ~J~ar.~~~~n~;;;:~~~·,;n~~ 1J•----------------------

1972 FORD FlOO PICKUP........ ~~~~~=~c
VB. standard tran smt ss ton , li ke new hn tsh

A REAL BUYI

See Pat H1l l, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good dea l on a new or used vehicle.
Open Evemngs T1l6 : 00
Except Thursday and Saturday
Closed Sunday

JUNK ouio en d

:c--~·-~

P.S., P.B., air, lilt wheel, swivel bucket

seats, auto., console, 29,800 actual miles.
Excellent Condition.

Middleport, 0 .

'8900
76 Cadillac Coupe

PORCH SALE Dm•e a lt tt le sa ve a
lot Sto rts Fn doy Come lo Don
v1 lle Turn ngh t ol s1gn come
opprox1mo1ely 1/, m•le Oepr es
s1on bottles pocket k ntves
clo ti'les for &amp;nllre fam ily ,
ossor 1ed glassware
Phone

Deville, full powe r an d air .

742 2&lt;8 1

'8800
74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille
Full power and air, viny l roof

YRAD SALE, Mt:tn Tues Wttd
Lorge "' Fomtly Wo men , Men
ond childs dolh tng all stzes
also lo ts ofmtc 1tems . Appro x,
2 mdes up Mdl Creek

•5500

f&lt;Ar Karr' s

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
" You' ll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992 ·5342
GMC Fl NANCING
Pomeroy
()pen Evenings Ti16:00 - Til5p.m. Sat.

long Bottom

LOST LEWELLYN BIRD dog wh&gt;fe
w 1th brown spots over one eye
m PQrtlond Phone 843 2591

•

LOST 3 lleoglo dog; , 2 puJ» ond
one fu ll grown vtCintty of
Ph.

L40·33&lt;6
RED &amp; WHITE leogle on' R. VoHey Hdl •n Mmersv.!le.
• Feme It! red eye~ , nome Wh1he
Child 5 pet
Ph on e Jer ry
Grueser. 949 2805 Reward to
a ny one
~n o w r ng
the
w her@Obouts of thrs dog

'

Phone 7• 1 307 -i

Robb•h

Liv ing room furniture, vanety of hand
tools, Warm Morning heater, kitchen
cabinet, drop leaf table, metal beds , walnut
dresser, waffle iron (antique). several
collectors items, several rockers (some
old ), pair parlor chairs (nicel , bedroom
furnishings, 4 Bentwood chai rs (natural
wood color) , pie safe (no doors) , 2
chl.ffrobe s . cedar chest, church bell
complete (large and nice), sofa bed (old)
set golf clubs , trunks. numerous Items not
listed

See one of these courteous salesmen : PeiP.
Bum s. Lloyd Me Laugh lin or Mar von
Keebaugh .

lld

9854111

REGISTERED NEW ZEALAND Red

furniture store in Racine, Ohio on 3rd Street
next to the post office. Everything the store
Will be sold.

Ful l power 8. equlpmenl . full stereo, T&amp;T wheel,

pa ss.

1975 FORD· ..... ••••••• ..... •$2895
Torino 4 dr , dark green fin ish, black vinyl trim, 351 V·8
autom attc, P. st eering &amp; br akes, wheel covers, rad io,
local 1 owner car

1974 MONTE CARLO CPE. .... $3795
Green linish. green cloth trim, 1ir, •utomafic, power

Auct. Note : There should be something of
interest for everyone as this is only~ partial
listing. Sale inside if bad weather. TermsC.sh, Positive I. D..
BRADFORD AUCTION CO.
Signed A. C. Bradford
Ph. 949-2000 or 949-2487
Racine, Ohio
Not Respo;:;:!lle For Accidents

vinyl roof.

1972 QfEV. IMPAlA CPE.··· ~ ·$1895
V 8 automa f tc, P S., bra kes, ra dio, good t ires, 2 tone
green

Alf , V·B. automa tiC , P S, P B , rad io

1972 VEGA 2 DOOR ............'695
4 cy i , a ut omatic, radio

1969 BUICK 4 DR..............'695

peo p le
to
su b ma r i n es.

work
1ets,

on
and

Grea t
mor e

1971 CHEVEU£ "6"............ '795

256 6800

4 Door. autom atic, r adio.

TRUCKS

5&lt;3&lt;

3J ten mtles north of Pomeroy
Lorge lo ts wtth concret e pot •os ,
s• dewolk s runners ond off
streel pork mg Phone 992·7H9

lARGE 60 FT un furnlshed tro1ler
m excellent cond1tton on corner
lol m M1ddleport Has expondo
hvmg room ond potto Adul1s
only Must prov •de ref erences
Call
2101 In dovt tme ond
992-131 9afler6p m

m

-

-LOW week ly ond mon thly rates at
-~--~~

_ L1bby Hotel, 4•6·1 743

1973 CHEVROLET C&amp;C 2 TON.. '3695
Big six 2'12 cu •n , 4 speed, 15,000 2 speed r•ar ax le
Ready to work B25 t lfes .

LOVE SE AT SAVE$1 00
WHEN YOU BUY A TWO PIECE
LIVIN G ROOM SUITE AT
$2'19 95 RICE'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE BS&lt; 2ND AVE PH
446 9523

F RE ~

lON CREW CA8'1448

Body good, ru ns good

66 WH IT£ 4 000 tr acto r 220 Cum
mm s 15 spd lo mden , good rub
ber 6-4 Ra vens 24 ft lomden
axe runni ng
dump trad er

•

con d , S10 000 Ph 379 2326
SINGER GOLDEN TOUCH AND
Sew, , does 1t all Ztg Zags,
Sew s on kn11t s au to bull on
hole Makes des1gns M an y
oth er fe atures Ju st hke new
Orlg
Pnce $S•9 95, onl y
$129 95 cosh or terms Co li

•

Come In and IQOk fhom over Buy or place your
order More com ing soon.

&lt;46 2B76
REDUCED PRICES on new Pool
Tables Phone 675-3738

Hurry In For A Good DEAL

TEAM OF MULES. Ph Roymond
Cor ter 446-4o.t6
ELECTRIC Range oppr ox 6 yrs

old

Locahon 4 miles north of Gallipolis on Rt. 1
at Georges Creek Rd. in the Georges Creek
Grange Hall.

LISTING IN PART : Gas range, r ofrlgerafcr, 7 piece
dlnetf set, 2 five piece dlneff set s. oak chest of dr awers,
2 TV ' s, wlck•r sola, J sofas. 3 k lfch@n cabinets, one
with roll , Dexter twin tub washer. 3 ufllify cabinets.
wardrobe w1fh m irrors, blonde 3 piece bedroom suite, •
stuffed matching chairs, 2 pla tform rockers. 2 sluffed

OWNER ROBERT BUTRICK
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
Kttlnefll Swoin
AucfionMn
Dtryl Albtn
G.ollioolis, Ohio
Ook Hill, 0 .

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

nms

Ph

cond Ph. 446 1909
1B FT LYMAN BOA! w1lh 85 HP
Merc ury, $1,000 Call after 5
p m ph 446.J 360
ONE ANTIQUE ICE BOX sohd

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

wh1te oak Bro ss hardwcrv
with porcelo tn mtertor exc
cond . call4o46 104

" Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
()pen Evenings Until&amp; p.m.

;

2 HOLSTEIN

HEIFERS

FRESH

other to fresi'len soon, Ph

446·1 909
GOOD MIXEO HAY, 15() Boles
Ph 24S 5B53
FURN
METAl BED S also
dresser s
luggage or bed
spread tables, 2 Modern Br
Su1tes. 2 desk s wtth cha1rs ,
Ptne br •u tte , long boy mat
tres s box springs an9 rotles.
Ph 446 2•77 or A46 Jq69 even

RV SHOW &amp; SELL AT

UBERTY BELL HOMES

n
SWIMMING

MARCH 25 • APR. 14

g

s

POOL SUPPLIES .

667·31 46

Central Ohio's lines! selection of motor
homes. Mini homes. travel trailers. tent
campers and 5th wheels. Bring your trade·
1ns. Save from $1,000 · $2,000.

M F 150 Tractor $3 000 2 8 N Ford
Trocl or , $1 ,050 each new 3 pi
H1tch dtsc $275 . New Brush
Hog. 5 ft $335 Plows $2. and

up , Ph
576 2606

304 576 232B

or

SUN-UP
THE Sun Furnace,
Oealer~htp s ov01loble m you r
county We offer o pro cl tc ol
solar ' ystem , which produ ces
60·60 per cent of Space Heo t• ng
and Domesftc Hot Wol er needs
Comple te factory ou embly
Units now tnsto ll ed and work
lng, Free Trotning No Fran·
chlse Fe• Reply Th• Sal01re Co
PO Box 639 C1rcl evllle Ohio

Open 9-8 Daily. Saturday &amp; Sunday ti 16.
17' to 25' Mini-Homes. 20'-31' Motor Homes.
Plus a wide selection of used vehicles.
Call collect 614-837-6890 . Located 15 miles
south of Columbus on US 33, at Carroll,
Ohio.

&lt;3113

0

302 F Eng , 4 spd hans compl ete
r.t»u 11t , low mllas,
367-7198
or 4,.6 661 1

Pn.

1972 FLH HARLEY Dovd , lull
LIGHT houiekHplng room, r ork
Centro! Hotel

TARA .
TOWNHOUS
APARTMENTS
2 ledioom
Townshuses
1112 .., ..
Ply Only One Utility
Addison. CJ!Iio
For lnform&amp;fion
Call Shirley Ad kin•

367·7250
l -- - - - - '.

dreu. lots of chrome, exc
cond. coli .u6-971 0 after 5 pm

BRADBU~Y RENTALS, 1\PI\RI·
MENTS, 2 ond 3,'11duh• only ~ no

360 cc y~l97~d;t;
street biko. $200 Ph 675 121 2

pols, Dop Rog , Ph. 446 0957
BETIER Clotnln; -,o
- ,.k-'
..-P

....

11 Oood Ustd Po•'lon

save uo.oo on a new

Het11oint Rtfrlttntor •
1 Good Ulld McCullough

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

SJ'RING VALLEY .
GREEN APARTMENTS
""'--~

'

\

onion sets.

PomiiOJ Landmark

JANUARY &amp; FEBRUARY 1977
Spectol pnce s on upholstermg
l urn•ture Coli now for fr ee
e s 11m o t e
Mowr e y s
Upholstery Rt l Box 124 Poml
Pl easant W Va Ph 675 4154
BABYSITTING m my hom.c i'love
r eferences Phone 4AO 4737
-

MmnhingJmdHeating CARTE RSPLUMBI NG
AND HEATING
Cor Fou rlh &amp; Pme
Phone 446 3888 or 446 44777

STA NDARD
Plumbtng Healing
21 5 Thtrd Av~ 446 3782

GENEPLA NTS&amp; SON
Pl UMBING - Heotmg - A 1r
Cond1 110ntng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph 446 1637

DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Rou te 160 o f Evergreen
Phone 446 2735

good cond rebut lf eng
4-46 2342, ask for Don Jr

coli

TO ECO NOMIZE on I vel unde1 pm
vour mobile home and anchor
for sofetjl Fosler Mob1l e- Home
Ser Ytce 446 278J or Elmer ~k• d
more A46 3A79
AULT MOBILE HOMES SERVICE
Slw tmg onchonng and pot•o ~
call 446 3608 alter 4

TRI SlATE MOB ILEHOMES
I '210

~as t ern

A11e

GALLIPOLIS OH
1973 L•ncoln 14 x b-i 2 Br
1972Costel 11Jo:65 3Br
19b9 Ltbeny 12 x 50 I B•
1970 Holley PUI 12 Jo: 60 3 Br
1973 Ledgerwood TT 21 Fl
19b0 Regol l Ox 50 2 Br

M A IN

PO MEROY. 0
NE W ll:,l i NU - Sou thern
stv l e h ome.
excellent
loca tt on 1n Pomer oy ver
mce ktfchen , l 1vtng room,
dmt ng room , 2ba 1hs, utt l 11y
Cfl d basement Plus two

ren ta l
apts
124.000 00
NE W LISTING
bedrooms,

BAND SMOBILEHOMES
PT PLEASANT W VA
197 1 Nohono l 12xb01 Br
1973 lmpe110l Mono1 12 ,. 65 2 Br
1971 1N OY 12x65 2 Br oil elec
1974 Hometle lA I( 70 3 Br cen
trol o1 r

2 BR 12x50 mob1l e home w 1th 01r
Ph 446 0294
1972 FAIRPOINT Mob1 le Home
12xb0 Partly furn1shed wllh
central mr cond tt loner $4800
Co(l A46 2405 aft er 5 30
MOBILE HO ME 12x55 2 Br Ph
388 8838 alte r 5
TRAILER AND LOT 4 Mdes lrom
HMC Ph 44 6 4584
12 x 60 WIT H 20 x 8 room to ta l
elec at Tup pers PIom s For rent
or ~ ol e Phone 667 3305
12 x 60 TRA ilER on 2 ocres spr mg
wafer on natural gas S5900
Phone 992 3955
11 x50 Mobile Hom e on 1 acre of
land wtt h 26 sq II bloc k
butldmg at De xter Drilled wel l
d ose to mmes Phone 7 42 2509
I 970 11x50 '1 bedrm home 1972
1 2 ~e 4 5 one bed room mob•l e
home 20 new mowe r Can be
seen ot 493 Broodwav St M•d
dlepor t Phone,992 553S

WATER SOFTENER
let Pomeroy

Landmark

soften &amp; conclltion your
wate r and a Co -op water

softener , Model UC.XVI
Now Only•

_
279 95

Let

us

test

your

wa1er

Free

Pomeroy Landmark
~.lackW Carsoy , Mgr
Pllone 992 2181

1976 HO NDA 750 1700 m•les ex
ce ll ent cond tlt o n
Ph on e
985 3919 after 6 p m ~-"
RE GENCY 16 Ch ann el Ht l o po ltce
sc ann er 10 crvstol s $150
Phone992 77 49
1974 HONDA 360 2000 acl uol
mtles oYe r $600 of ex tra s, om
fm r odto wi th tope ctga rette
l1ghter cargo com er w1 nd
, h.e \d w•th wmd break er cra sh
bars lots of chrome, mon v
more ex tras not me ntion ed
Phone 7-i2 2025 after 5 p m or
7" 2 2211 be fore 5 p m and ask
for Dovtd
RABBIT S FOR So le Ideal for
Ea ster All co lors an d mes

$2 SO ond up Coli 992 7013
Gene Wholey Dorw tn, Oh•o

SINGER GOLDEN Touch N Sew
does 1t alii Ztg Zags ses on
k ntl
oulomat lc buttonholer
mak es des1gns and monv other
f eatur es
Just like new
O n gtnal pnce $54 9 95 M ust
sell , only $129 95 Cosh or
terms Coll1992-51~6--::--::-:~

TWO FENDER Amps, Pre C 8 S
Showman 15 m speaker, Bond·
ma ster re11erb two 12 tnch
spe akers Phone 992 61 37

USED

FORESTRY

EQUIPMEN T

Barko l oa der Model 6170
Sen es 60B C, Franklin Mode l
I JOB Morbark 636 Oeb ork er
s-n 627 Contact Oenms Smurr

Phone (614) BJB 5345
sole $700 Coli '1'12 2513
9 FT TRUCK topper for sol e $75
Phone 7•2·1648
CALVES. ONE week to 10 mon th s

old Phone 843 2353
1972 KAWASAKI 175 Enduro
M an y ex tras In good sh ape
$350 or best off er Phone

'1'12·3367 .
1971 HONDA 35() Good cond•·
tt on, crash ba r and s1ssy bar
Call Georg e Grate, 742 2103

BRADFORD Au ctio neer Com SEPTIC TANK S clean ed Modern
pl e te Ser11 1ce Pho ne 949 2487
Sontto tton 992 3954
or 949 1000 Roctne Oh10 Cri ll
Wil l do roo f t ng~ constructmn
Bradford
plumbmg an d hea ling No 1ob
ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR too Iorge or too small Phone
Sweepers toasters u ons al l
742 2348
sm all oppl1 onces l awn mo we r
CARPENTER
l loonng
cedmg
nex t to Stole H ghwoy Gar age
ponel 1ng Phone 9911759
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985
MOB ILE Home Repmr
Elec
3825
plumbmg
and
heotm
g
Phone
REMOD~ LI NG Plurnbmg heo tmg
and all types of general repa1r
Wo rk guaranteed 20 yea rs e:o:
p ~ence ~~~e 992_2~9
SEW ING MACHINE Repo 1rs ser
vtce all mak es 992-22 94 The
Fo bn c Sh op
Po me r o v
Au l homed Smger So les ond
Serv1ce We si'lorpen Sctssors

relnge ra tor freezer,
Ad m~ral l1npen cl Duplex $375

~~~c,:'i~ ~~~metsp :~f~n~:
New
Sid e walks,
Consfrucfoon
&amp;
Remodeling

DAVID BRICKLES
General Contracting
Route 2

Pom eroy, Ohto 45769
Free EshmafesPh 992-7119

2 YR OLD Regt sfered Tennessee
Wolktng more , $2 50 Phone

742·315()
GOOD GAROEN rototd ler

$50

Phone '1'12-7330

PROFESSIONAL

(6a.) 667 3653
1972 FORD E
·.cCcc
Oc.N-c
O-LI"N_E
_- 100 Von
Phone m .6137

--·--

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
(614) 98S·4155

Chester , Ohio
10· 11·1 mo(Pd)

r........

Semces

A•11~b~
Btown tltGWalls &amp; AttKS

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0 .

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At ·
992-2206 or 992.7630
"The Ortgtnators
Not The Imitators"
2 23 1 mo

Vmyl and alummum
siding, storm win·
dows and insulatiOn .
Ca II Professiona Is

Ball Siding Co.

Free

sron

FREE WBE JOB

lARRl,..~~~~DER
~1 0

I m,

WITH OIL CHANGE
AND FILTER
AT

bath ,

bed r ooms , u t tldy , n 1c e
k i t c hen , c ar petmg , ca r
po rt, tn good location

$30,000 00
NEW FURNACE -

FA

fuel oil fu rn ace. l acre
moder n kitc hen, ca r petmg ,
pan ell tng
r ea ll y n eat

$16,500 00
NEW KITCHE N -

The

ki tc he n tn th 1s 12 room
horne ts un bel1eveabl e
for m al d 1nmg, large l1v tng
lht s
yo u
m us t
see

120,000 00
OLD HOM E - Love 1n or
ren t, th ts 2 bedr oom house
a

01

l arg e lot

$4,800 00
ACE RAG E -

IS

only

We

have

sev er a I p arcels fo r home

• tes. call tod ay
NEE OS REP AI R -

We

l-ave a few houses thai
need pa1n t and f1 xed up,
1nvest ment polenlia!, ca ll

loday
IF YOU REAL LY
TO
SE L L
PROP ER T Y
TODA Y We have
for

f ar m s

an d

WANT
YO U R
C A LL
bu yer s
newer

homes
HENRY E CLELAND
BRO KE R

~•I'll

ltHIIIor llliMI_., "''""

,_

fl. Hl-2174

Automatic
Transmission Serv1ce

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE
RATES

Route 3, Pomeroy, 0.

TR
ANY PilCH
ANY SIZE

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.
Located in Langsvi lie
Box 28-A
R uttand , 0~110 4 5775
Ph (614) 742 2409
We Deliver
12 22-4 mo s

Free Estimates

Reedsville, 0 . Ph 378·6250
3 27 ·1 mo

Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge.
Carpet- Lino.-Tiie
Phone Mlkt Young II
m -2206 or "!-7630
2·23·1 me

HAFFEL TS CARPETING

WE M AKE BUY ER A ND
S ELL E R
CON TACT S
TH RO UG J.i
O THER
BU S IN E SS
E N
TER'PRISE S .AS WELL .AS

T HE

REA L

E STA T E

BU SIN E SS
NEW F A RM l i STI NG
Large 21 1 sl ory par 11a l ly
r em ode led home S1H .ng on
86 acres or rand 1us t a shor t
dnve fr om Gall pol •s and
t h ~ Power Plan ts House 1S
he at ed wd h •Is ow n ga s
well su pplymg a forced a• r
furn ace system P r• ced at
$54 ,000 , and a ba r ga•n at
that pr 1ce Call tn toda y f or
more det ails
PRICE CU T
On l h ts ve r y neat 3
1n Gall iPOlts
bed r oom
Sc hool Dts tr •c t You wo u ld
have to see the .n t ertor of
th •s home to real•z e how
n1ce •I r eally 1S tor th e
money
P r •ced at only
128 000
BSAC REF AR M
Se ll ing m Ga ll •pol•s Sc hool
Oi sl nc l N1c e 3 bedroom
h ome WhiC h h as been
c omp l ete l y
remode l ed
r ecen ll y Outs•de bulld 1ng s
and fences are •n qood
co nd 1t•on coa l and m 1n eral
r tgh t s are unto uc hed
Pnced at S43 ,000
NI CE J BE D ROOMS
On C hat ~
n· 1 St r eet
tn
Ga ll 1 r~
·
ome wo r k
needs
.. on th•s one
but lh \
... e 1S r•ght

GARA GE
A PARTME N T
Mod ern 3 BR home
teatur es a large 14X2A L R
conve n1ent kilchen , wv..
carpe t gas heal clos e to
town and ba r gam pnced at
$19 ,500

of land Located on US 3S
near R1o Grande Owner IS
rehnng and has ag r eed to
finance to the nght par t y
Potenltal Plus for $55,000

HUNTE R' S D ELIG HT 53 5 ac r es M 1 mos tl y
wood ed . tdea l for you r
week en d camp Loc at ed 1n
Morgan Twp and pn ced at
\ 12 500
1019 CH AT HAM AV E ~
INCOME PROPERT Y - 1
story dou ble w1th 5 r ms
and bath down and 1 rm s
and balh u p $19 900

BAR B USINESS &amp; "H OT E L
B~ your own boss w ttl
th1 ':i on ce 1n a ln cl me 1n
vestment Located on a
co rn er \ol 1n Mtddl epo r t
Call \or mor e tnlorma1 10n
CIT Y- V ACA NT lA ND Appro,., 5 7 acres runn1ng
f rom
Fou r th
Ave
to
C h•c kama u ga
C reek
$6 ,500 Don ' t wa ft 10 bU',I
buy and wa tt

M i l l CRE E K RD
story home t eature s 6 rms
bath basem en t and lla t lot
at t ne edge of t own $14 ,500
GO O D FOR N OTHIN G
exc ept hunt1ng and cam
pmg
180 acre s of th e
wildest cou n try m GaH1a
Cou nt y
L ocated m the
Wayn~ N at tonal Forest and
pn ce d a t $ 195 p er a cre All
coal gas and oil 1nc luded
A1
PI ZZ A BU SI NE SS
ex. ce tte nl opport unJi y fo1
some bUSiness m1ndc
per son Th ts large co r ne
tot wdh a modern bn c
bu•l d1nq •S a good place It
start Can be bouqhl W1ll
or w tth out equ1pmC'nl Cal
tor appom1men t

•

T AVER N
Oper a ted by
sa me t amd~ for JO yrs
Good l'q u1pme nt e)(ce tt cnl
toca110n , terms an d 1ncomf'
l tgu r es
available
to
qual 1f1cd buyer Ca ll to r
oppo. nt me nt

R IO GR ANDE TH E
ONE
YOU ' VE
BEEN
WA I TING FOR - Lovel y
br•ck ranch oflers over ?100
sq tl o f mode r n I v lng
wh1c h nc ludes 3 BRs 2
ba ths, c omp l e te k 1lc he n
wdh
m 1crowave o11en
forma l d tntn9 roo m . forma t
foyer lar ge family r oom
w 1th t 1r ep lace, heat pump ,
large patto and 2 car
garage
BU I LDING OR MOB I LE
HOME SITE - Ap prox. 5
acres abou t 13 m1 from
town
Land Is flat w 1\h
frontag ~ on a B T rd and
cou nty wat er available
55 000
M OB I LE H OME PARK Small , close to town , good
1nc ome, easy 10 tak e c are
of, call tor mor e tn·
to r m at1 on

F I FT H AV E
$18 00(.,
barga 1n prt ced 6 rm and
pa th stu cco ICalures 2 Br s
up and 1 down large bac k
porc h and alm ost new s t ee l
qarage

LOG CAB I N - Not many
rett lt k e th ts one Rus t tc
18x20 ltvt ng r m teat ur es
large ston e ftrepl ace
1
large BR 1n loll bath n 1ce
kit chen wdh refr •g
&amp;
range new f urna ce &amp; 1a r ge
fl at ro t Lo c at ed n ear R io
Grande&amp; bar ga m pm:ed at
$14,000

LOOK I NG FOR BU St N E S~ ~
CA l l TOD AY WE HA VE
SEVERAL EXCELLENT
OP PORTUN ITIE S

Li STIN GS N EE DED W E
A D VE RTI S E
N ATI ONAL lY - WE BUY
- SELL - TR ADE

HARTWEll ELECTRONICS

STUCCO plastenng ond plaster
rep o •r TeK i urad ced• ng sw1rl
!loot or brush des tgn 31 yr
exp Wo rk by the hour or by the
10b If you ore gomg to bu1ld or
re model stu cco the oulstde of
your home so11e half on heat,
stucco •s os strong as bnck
cos ts less Commencol ond
Res all work gort Ph Tn Co
Plcstermg Stucco Ph 25b 1181
SKAGGS APPLIANCES Go pod us
ed Refn g
ranges woshers
and dtyen. Ph 446 7398

SANOY AND BEAVER INSURANCE
CO hos offered serv •ces for
Fir e Insu rance co11era ge 111
Gall•o Co for olmos l o cen tu ry
Far ms homes a n&lt;~ personal
pr o p erty
co'lle ro ges
ore
OYOtloble to mee t lndtv1dual
needs Co ntoct Cha rles Neal
your ne t~ b o r ondoge nt

Ph 4.6 8533
NEW TV SHOP
7S6 2nd Ave , ELECTRONIC TV
CLINIC Ser call $5 95 W&amp;
ser vtc e all
mak es.
Ph

446·3900
K OT~ LI C

LAN DSCAP ING
RESI DENTI AL AND COMMER
CI AL

Sh1u bs
tr ees
rock
gar d ~n s oil Instal led and
gu 01 onteed Ph 446·3100

BRICKLAYING Phone 675·2B79

SPRING FENCEI ALE

on Chom L•nk ond Bo sk e1 weo11e
TV Rep mr
r edwood
c ol i
f or
lr ee
245 S365
eslunoles 3b7 7224 bel ore 3 00
PM
1 532 05 09 onvt1me
s Fen ce
Newman
PASQUALE lnwlotmg 103 Cedar
51 Golilpolts Ph 446 2716 or
446 1092
CUSTOM REMODELING 20 yea r s
expenence 3B8 8308 New dry
wall cei ling w• th sw1rl or tex
ture desig ns Ot her dry wall
repo 1r vtny l wall popenng new
bo ths new k 1tchens Anvthtng
m re model tng or repotr
BOBS
CB
Rad io
Equtp
e11e ryt hmg m Two W oy Rod to
Anten nas and occes Geor ges
Creek Rd , Gollt pohs 4~6 4517
SMIT H EXCAV ATI NG
dozer
backhoe tre ncher du mp I ruck
work don e at reasonable rates
Ph 446 3q9 1 John Smt th Jr

J&amp;J PORTABLE
CLEANING SERVICE
S p~ c lall •ln g

In

Heavy

Equipment, Trucks, etc.
446-2Wi

Jerry Skelton, Owner
Box3Zl
GaiUpolls, Ohio 45631

BORDERS GARAGE DOOR SER
VICE Com memol and .restden W1ll do odd JObs roofmg pam
lt ng, gutter work Phone 992
hal spect oliZing in operotor s,
7&lt;0'1
Loc ol 256 6-472

COUGH ENOUR WATER DELIVERY
446 3962 or 4.-i6 .f 262 ony~ m !,__
DOZ ER WO RK excovotmg land
cloonng P~6 · 005 1

Nob1l Summtl Rood, Rt 1 Mtd
dleport 992 572 4 Complete
Sa les Servtce and Supplies

REMODELING

Services Offered
Ptclure Tube Sp~ct ol 1st~

D. BUMG-ARDNER POOL SALES

CUSTOM

large LR &amp;. Kitchen, 3 BR 's,

dmmg rOQm , 011 furnace
NEAR LAKE JACKSON - 161 and flat lot 1n Thurman
A m 1 roll 1nq l an d mos•l v ASS UME 8 PER, CENT
wood s &amp; br ush , otd hOuse, lo•s MORTGAGE &amp; SAVE ON
ot s•a'e rd tr ontaqe, ~200 per C,l.OSING COSTS . ThiS
acr e
modern ranch offers lots of
VACAN T LAND ON ROUTE good ll v1ng for only 532,900
Spec1al features are 3 BR,
141
&gt;~ 2 A m 1 4 A bo"Om
bat~s.
equ tp ped
fr an ' s on Mud Creek balance P f2
•n w oods some co mmcr ctol k ttc h en , f amtly room ,
•nnber \1? .000
carpel gas heat, central
COUNTRY H OME W ITH a 1r , garage and all ut ilit ies
EV E:HY TH I NG
Makea n Ca ll f or appo1ntment
aJ)p o 1'1 ' 1'1 ent lo see lh• S 4 ROOM TO ROAM I thmk
yr old br,c k located abo ut you would say that this
7 11'11
fr om HM C Th1S spraw l tng bnck tr t leve l 1s
beauty 1S sllua1ed on 104 on e of the ntcest country
acr es of land 1n the c ily
homes y ou've ever seen
o;choor d•sl wdh 3~ m •
Th is beaut y Is stt uated on
fron tage
an
Ra ccoon
Cree k
Other
spec1at 4 1f2 acres of !and about Jllz
t eatur es are 1 BR's J 11 mdes from Rodney Why
baths , fa mily rm w1th WB not le t your fa mil y entOY 4
t 1r e placc , f or mal dm1ng BR ' s, 3 baths , large lt vt ng
rm
t orm ar enl ranc e
and dtn tng room , comp let e
taund r',l
rm
la r ge k ttchen , fa m ily r oom wtth
screene d 1n pa t10 and 1 car
ston e fireplace and 2 car
qarao e Over S 100 000
garage Be the f1rst to see
VA C A NT
LA N D
IN
th1s one
H A R R I SO N TWP
115
VA L UE ,
APPEAL ,
ncres rotl1n g ra nd , mostly
LOCATION - ThiS home
Vo/OOdcd
t ob
base
&amp;
has It a ll 1400 sq ft bn ck
m m era t r1ght s mcfud ed
r anch ts hke ne w and
$26 000
contatn s 3 BR , 2 bath s.
large LR
with
WB
BEEF CA TT LE COUN
ftrepl ace, double ga ra ge
TR Y - JOO acres mos tly
c tean r oll1ng pa sture lnnd
and 1 25 acres of fl a t lot tn
f en ced &amp; c ro ss f enced , J
the c tt y school dtst nct
barn s tob base old home
A SOUND IN V ESTMENT
$250 per acr e
desc n bes th ts 53 acre tr act

N OW , L ET U S SE L L
YOUR P ROPERTY

EUREKA

Buddtng Electm ol Plumbing
Textured and swtrl CEt iltngs
Dr ywa ll and custom f tre places

N'!bfl Sum mil R01d
Rt. 1
Middleport, 0 .
99! 5724
Complete
S1ies
and
Strv1ce and Supplies
3 14 1

&lt;&gt;!lice
q46-7900
Home
446 -1049
LET THE
GALLERY SELL
YOUR PROPERTY.

STAR RO UTE For your carpet
needs
Fr ee estimat es Ph
4•b· l 158

All

FOUR U tn Super trtck type Fen
ton whHis lor Plymou th of
Ford $110 Also, four 15 in
alum mags for Chev y, $110
Both set s lnclud• lugnut s and
cops Phan•992-5169.

855 SECOND AV ENU E
GALLIPOLI S OH rO

m•

3-16-1 m o

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

)

PRI CED REDUCED TO
S13 ,000 - Owner says sell
thts 6 room and bath home
w1th new alum1num siding,

CR OWN CI TY
256 14 56
er t1 s1 ng Wtfh.

Cheshire, Ohio
Phone 614-367-0626

Service

so '

13'RANCH MANAt ER

NEW LIS T ING
BABY
FARM
6 acres mostly
l iftable near Eureka Com
lor ' able 6 rm . &amp; ba•h hom£'
smart farm . lob ba!.e lo's ot
fr u1' tr ees , $17 ,500

OT HER CO UNSELORS

CHESHIRE
ASHLAND

EXPERIENCED

F,.. tho

Est1mates

No Sunday Call s Plea se
3Sll S1 mo

WtiiOOIIS&amp;DOOIS
IIPIAtffllllll
WIIOOWS
MIIMINUM
SIDINQ.SOfiiTT
__il[t£_15-AWIUNGS

,h. 992.3993

Young's
. . Carpeting

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

- BlOWn

lnsulall011

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's Carpeting

__ -

serv tce! Hour M T T 9 6, W F
9 7 Sat . 9 5 "The M otorcycle
Peopl• of Sou theastern Ohto
A then• Sport Cyt las Inc 20 W
Stim son Av e , Athens Ohto

FREE ESTIMATES

JACKS BEE SUPPLIE S Reedsv1ll e
Oh •o Bee §uppl•es ond equ p
ment Phone {614) 378 6357

PHOTOGRAPHY

1

.. SS CRA GAR wheels $1 25 Phone

CLINIC New

1 V shop Electr oni c T V Clmlc
Servtce coll , $5 95 Color B&amp;W
antenna syst ems slereo s elC
572 South Th1 rd M•dd lep9rl
Phone 992 6306 Corry m and
sove moneil

3· 11 ·1 mo pd

20 CU FT

Coli 992 3373
FIREWOOD , LOCUST Posls ond
dog• Phone 742 2323

992 58SB
ELECTRONIC T.

AND MARTIN
EXCA VA TIN G dozer loader and HOWERY
ccvof•n g
se p t 1c syste ms
back hoe wo rk du mp trucks
dozer backhoe dump truck
and lo-boys l or h1re w1ll haul
l• me~ t o n e
grovel
bla ck top
l1l l dtrt to so tl ltmestone and
pavmg Rt 143 Phone 1 {6U )
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
698 7331
fers day phone 992 7089
mght ph one 992 -3525 or 991
5232
EXCA VA fiN G Backhoes Dm er
trenche r low Boy dump tru ck
EXCA VAT ING dozer backhoe
!ruck s sept1c systems Bdl
and dttcher Charles R Hoi
Pu llms Phon e 992 2478 dov or
f1 eld
Bock Hoe Ser v1ce
n•ght
Rutland Oh 1o Phone 74 2 2008 ~

7&lt;2·21B7

Phono (614) S92 1692

4

k1tchen

Business Services

METAL KITCHEN cabtnets , green,
excell ent con d•hon
Phone

---

ONLY

ul ll •l y, yar d A GOO D
BU Y ONL Y $7 ,22500
NEW HOME ~ I acre , 3

rmo A
1

Heal .Estate for Sale

HOM~!,

992 2259, 992 2568
985 4112

Clltln Saw ••• ••••• •• • • stl ' VNMHI\ - HA RLEYDAVIDSON
1 ooo41 usttl to" Hotpolnt
AND CAN -AM , Motorcycles
Now In 1toclil , complete lint
Complt tt sales and Fonlosttc
of Dulll 1 ardin sttds tnd

GENERAL Cont ractors Oo all
masonory carpen ter 8. plumb
mg lnsto ll ond repo•r all
dnveway s Ph 446 9587

lln l Estate for Sale

Hank Clelan d Assoc1ate

after 4_....._..,...
p m m 76BS----.--

Supply Co.

lmlllttllllt ecc:ncv.

992 5BJ&lt;

-

Waaled lD Do

USED MOBil~
CALL576 2711

'

R• al Estate for Sal e

60 Syc amore Sf

r ecent overhaul, ex tra s Ph one

colon gl~tamlng , u ee Blue
lustr e carp.t cleon t r , Rent
elec tric tharJ~pooer 11 . Centrol

""·"*'

OUTDOOREQUIPMENT SA LE S

185 $UZUK1197• 3000lotol m1les,

FOR

I &amp; 2 Hdraom unfurnllllld

FOR SALE or Trode for other pro
perty Three nver lots Wa ter
Stree t Syrocuse $5500 Phone

NEW HOLLAND 68 Hoy Boler for

Spec1ol No 100, LBS, Cl on ne,
$69 95 Al l type pool suppltes
and Chem1col s Roger Hornsb y
Pool Co
Coolvil le
Oh

chairs, roaster cooker, 2 gas heaters. 2 room dividers,

odd cha irs, coo- coo d ock. sma ll pedlsfal fable. antique
dressor and vanity, weight r.,Qucer, baby bed, pictures
of ail kinds. m•rrors, rugs, bar stools, utility fables,
coffee tables and end tables, record cablnot, 2 metal
beds, 2 old trunk s, vanity stool, vacuum cleaner, 2
small chest of orawers, desk, record rac k and lets of
miscellaneous.

olso &lt;- 14 by B

5 PIECE BEDROOM SUTIE good

pm

MARai 31 AT 1 P.M.

$40

Chrome Reverse
446-4737

ONE BEDROOM unfur opt all
ele&lt; Phone 992 -57-4 2 ofler S

PUBLIC AUCTION

~

Ports Servtce
KUBOTA 4 Wheel
On ve Troc lors wtt h
12 to30H P Dtese l
Engmes

Kaswosk1 Ph 44 6 4-i 06 after 4

FARM ON nver 51 acres 7 rooms
ond both Phone 992 5908
FURNISHED APT for rent Phone
992-3975 or Wl 257 1

-

1973 KAWASAKI 100 cc for $300

p~BO AT AND TR AI LER w1th electriC
mot or or rs, life rockets bo t·
tery and bonerv charger Al so
197 1 Che11 Impala custom
axe cand Ph 446 0911

992-2126

~~

Two Meta l Bu1idmgs 8 h x 10 ft
$ 15
o lf
reg ul ar p r~ c e
Galhpohs Block Co 123 1/aPtne
St Golltpolts, Ohto 4 ~6 2783

Fold down, never used .

~

~

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Ph 4&lt;6 3670

1975 APACHE TRAILER ....... '2095

1971 FORD

-

CLOSE OUT

NEW GE 40 Channel CB 1972 175

US Navy Recruit(ng
221 Columbus Rd.
Athens,OH
Ph. 593-3566
Collect "

3 AND -i RM fu rms hed and un
fu rn1shed opts Phone 992·

-

LAYNE SNEW &amp; USED FURNITURE
NEW

hey $1 15 ear corn 2 whee l
form tra1ler, good shape Ph

surface sh 1ps . Top benefits
Ca reer t r atning
fut u r e.
For
tnformat ton see

FIREWOOD Ph 4A6 A999

CHAROLIA BULL 1000 lbs , boles

Local 1 owner. good f ir es, auto .. r adio.

Bv T.E.C. &amp; Turtle Tap
TEc.MINI HOMES

cond1l1011 Col i or see Carl Mor
ns Rutland 7" 2 2932

WANTE D TO buy ol der home
poss•bly tn need of repo•rs w1th
USED STATIONARY , SINGLE or w1 thout ocreoge or out
bu1ld•ngs, town or co un try
CYCltNDER Gas eng1ne Hop
Wme Har ry Ly k tns Hc rnson
per cooled w1th cos t 1ron fl y
M 1ch1gon J8625 Ph one (517 )
wheels Pay cosh Wnte to Box
539 38BB
500 In core of the Gallipol iS
Dolly
Tr.b un e or ca l l DI SC ARDED CAR Bo1t en es
219 848 •2 11
lawn mower s
fill e rs , e tc

SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1977 10:30 A.M.

1977 CADIWC SEDAN DEVIU!

Estate Wagon, local I owner cor, whi te radial fires. air
cond•f•onlng. V·8, automatic, power steer ing &amp; brakes,
radio, dark r.,Q ''"'sh, black vlny ! Inferior. rock, B

SMAL L HOUS E TRAILER ,n good

ANTIQUES, Furn ond Mtsc 1tems

I have decided to discontinue my used

Hollow

992 776/J

buy livestock coll367 7533

or Flem tsh G1ont
Phone 67 5 39A S

1975 OfEVEU.E .......... ••• • '3995

CHEVY CUST. VAN
The Navy Is looking for

.

1975 25 h CAVELC A OE lro•ler ou
cond1110ned ond se11eral other
eaclros m good cond•t •on Call
after 6 p m 992 5394

BE THE aorlv btrd and get m on
SPRI NG
SPECI AL S tra vel
lro•lers tr uck campe rs cops
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
ot Codner s Campen Rambow
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE
Rld9e long Bollom Oh10
WILKESVILLE (6141669 37B5
Rou te 7 South of Tup pers
FULLER 8ru 5h Pro ducts fo r so le
Pl o1ns Oh 1o toile Me•gs 28 and
follow s1g ns or cont act Robert
Phone 992 34 10
Codner ot {61J) 843 2621 l or
CAMP ER
$bOO
Al so
horse
dtrectlons
tra ~le r $450 Phone (614) 698
3290
STAR CRAFT M1n1 Moton Tr o"el
"!:£.o•ler, an d fold dowm Spec1ol
STEREO
NEW AM FM stereo
TRAVEl STAR 25 Fl SC S4 499
rod 1o co mbmatton $1 29 95 or
Fold downs star t $1 850 and up
eas y ter ms Co1 1992·3965
We se ll se rvtce and quality
SHAKESPEARE BASS Boot I A
CAMP CONLEY STAR CRAFT
1976 Mercury 20 h p wtth elec
SALES Rt 62 N Pt Pleas ant
Inc star t 1976 trlt tro1 ler plu s
othe f ex tras $1695 Phone

l ove Seal $175 D1nette Ch o•rs
$10 each Mediterranean sofo
and love seot $325 Ear Am sofo
&amp; cha1r. wood tr1m $275,
moder n sofa chotr loveseot
$275, sofa bed wtth mot chJng
chat r $150 Rechner s $100 and
up Tab les , CoHee. end He x·
you
ag o n .
map le
or
ptn e
Mr s
MoDel Cle land
wt f e
$50t~o c h mogoz •ne
r oc k s,
ch1ldren and grondchtldren of
992 3126 , C P R&gt;lll e
ma pl e$29
book case $20 .
Rev Thos A Cleland
Bo• ton Rock11r $55
maple FISHER WOOD Burmng sto ... es and
1oble o4 c ho~rs $175 dtne lle
form lumber PHONE Fo(e my er
tab le and S IX chmn $69 dt nell e
and Salm ons l umber Co Inc
lob le ond four cho1rs $55 Bunk
Rt 7 M tddleport Ohto (614)
Peds complete $150 ma tt re ss
WE WISH To expr ess our grot ttude
992·7425
and box spri ngs $50 eo maple and thanks t o our fnends
6 gun cob mel $155 chest of STRAW BERRIES In bask ets and
ne tghbor s and relohves for
flats now beonn g pons1e s
drawer $50, map le desk &amp;
many act s of kt ndness prayers
cabbag e
lelluce
broc;colt
chot rs , $ J.t0
food, and flowers dunng th•
coul•flower Brussel s Spro uls
death of our lovmg wi fe one!' GOOD USED
on1ons Cleland Forms and
mother The Nol a Egger s fom •· l 1v1 ng Room SUi te 3 desks elec
Ger ol dtne
G r ee nh o u se
ly
.
Inc broom , wood rock er gos
Cl eland
healer 2- Upr tg ht Freezers ,
Te lev1stons color &amp; block 1975 HONDA XLIOO goo d cond t
w htte, conso les &amp; p ortables
l •on Prtced S300 1976 Z.SO Hon
woshen, drvers ranges cop
do mmt Irati exce llen t co nd1
WANTED TO r ent w tth poss1ble
avoc ad o
go l d
per
lion $300 Phone 991 5606
ophon to buy 50 to 200 acres
refngerators, capper avocado
secl uded la nd some lllloble
HOUSE
TRAIL ER WHEELS and t1res
gold dtneffe set bedroom
w tfh mhab•tob le house Colu m·
2 ~ tn ch b oy s b1 ke C 5 Hom eli te
su1tes beds chests dressers
b1c Sctplo Bedford or Ru tland
chc1n sow two 2 whee led
o ffice desk woo den k ttchen
Tow nsh tp s
Wr ite
To ny
tra der l rom e5 ftr ewood baby
~: ob m et onhque spool bed
Russego 1331 Meadow Rood
swmg o melle 2 It h1gh lruck
tables lamps chotrs other
Columbus Ohio 43212
topper
smell
refr tg ero tor
1tems , coli A46 0322 day or
Ph
one
992
5947
eve
mn
g
3
m1
out
Bulov
tll
e
off
CORN or Soybean ground m
Rl 160
Rutl and or M1ddleport or eo 5
- - - --c~::::
ot r es and up Phone 992 2703
GRAVEL YTRACTORS

••

WILL BUY HORSES AND PONIES WAN TED TO SUY fema le COU NTRY Mol:ule Home Pork Rt
Ne~ not be tested w tll als o
Poodl e
Coli
m 1n1o f ur e

CLOSE-OUT

SAVE$

Kempe r

OLD FURNITURE ~ee boxes br ass
b eds
etc
c omplete
households Wnte M 0 M 1ller
Rt 4 Pomeroy Ohlo or coli

SULK Y FOR Gravely tractor
Phone 9JI2 7202 10 any cond1
han

AUCTION

ALL FULLY EQUIPPED

$SO REW A,RD to onyone knowmg
t he w hereabouts o f two
aluminum extens1on lodd11r1i
and red wheelbarrow token
ftom luther Borloe res1de&lt;1Ce,

CASH JI I tor junloi. cars Fry e s
Truck and Auto WR ECKER SER
VICEl Phone 742-208 1

SLEEPING Rooms, weekly roles
Pork Central Hotel

NOW IN STOCK
4-1977 SEDAN DEVILLE$ &amp;
&amp;
1-1977 COUPE DEVILLE

NEL reg•s tered or el1 gtble Full
11me opentng ol 0 Bleness
Memor•ol Hospllol m Athen\
Ohto (home of Oh to Unt vers t
ty) Contact Per so nnel Depl
(61 • 593 5551 ) An equ al op
portun ty em plov er

NOW at REDUCED Prtc es
SAVE, Ray Houck Fence Center
1 776 2237 or I 353 4668

fat her , and grandfather who
passed away March 22 1969
Ther&amp; IS o sad bu t sw eet
remembrance
There 1s o memory fond and
!rue
There IS 0 token of affection
Father,
And o hear tache still lor

leu tha n 10,000 miles, showroom c lean

W Vo

CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCES

~N~LO
~
V~
I N~G~m
--e~m-o_r_
y _o~f~hus~b-ond

Sport about, 6 cyl., auromaflc, power steering &amp; brakes ,
deluxe equi pment, whlt.. wall tires, luggage nck, dark

TIMBER
Pomeroy Forest Pro
duc h Top p11c.e lor st ondmg
sawtim ber Coli Kent Hanby
I 4"b 8570

WANTED
CH!PWOOO
Pole ~ ,
rTJ Oxl mum dtometer 10 mches
on largest end sa per ton
bund les slobs $6 per ton
Deltv ered to Oh•o Pollet Com
pony Rt 2 Pomer oy Ohto
Phone 992 26EN

The wor ld may change from ye ar
j o year ,
And fnends from day to day ,
But ne-verw1ll the one we loved
From memory puss away
The McK•nley' Fom tly

1976 AMC ti)RNET .......... '3895

MEDICAL LABORATORY PERSON

dollar

Ph 2&lt;5 5050

G ARAGE SALE Rear 188 Walnut
Oh•o
Str ee t, M 1ddleporl
March 29th and 30th " 10 o m
1111 "' p m Men s women s
good cloth mg other usef yl
11ems

Must type • S WPM and hove
clencol comon sense Fulll• me
Salary open Send resume to
D S P 0 Box 436 Pt Pl easant,

PER SONS 1B 65 Be a Soroh
Coven try Foshton Show d •re&lt;:tor
1n your orl"O No mvestment
No deltve ry Excellent ar ra nge
CASH potd for oil mokes and
men! to odd to you r fom tly 1n
models of mobile homes
come For oppotnl ment coli
Phone area code 61 4 A23 9531
4A6 0368

NIG HTCR A WLER S
top
-~po • d Phone 446 0883

1967

steering, r adio, tape, 10,000 miles, rust p r oofi ng.

steering and brakes, rldlo,

who passed owoy
Sunday Marc h 26th

Easler

While fini sh, rtd vinyl Interior, lufom•flc, power

green fi nish,

Al l TYPES o f butldmg mQ ten ols COAL limestone and colctum
chlo r1de ond colctum bnne for
block , bnck se wer ptpes wm
dust control and spectol mt•mg
daws
hnte li , etc
Cl aude
so li for formers Mom Street
w .nten, RI O Grande 0 Ph one
Pomeroy Ohto or phon e 992
2-45-5 121 after 5
3891

M~ K1nley

Mobile Homes lor Sale

t:amping Equ1pmeul

¥or Sale

for&amp;le

IN LOVING Memory ol 0 . E (Moe)

'•

-SAVING TIME IS H«M1976 VEGA ESTATE WAGON ... '3595

742 2331

IF YOU ho ve o serv1ce to offer MOVING OUT Goroge Sale St art
won t to buy or sell some ththg
Sot
?
Ctrc! e Dr •n Plantz
oe look tng for work
or
Sub off Bulov tlle Rd
wha tever
you II get resul ts GARAGE SALE -M
c:o-n~,o-:So
-1fo ster wit h o Sent tnel Wo nt Ad
10 5, Good buys left from o
Co11 992 1156
Bus d ose out Sql! . Used
LARGE GARAGE Sole east on
Rel r1g
Sw•vel , rotil er pop
681 2nd house from Tupper s
cooler cosh reg and oddmg
mach cloth1n g new and used
Plo ms School Sa turday and
m1SC tlems 6th house on left
Sunday Household ttems bab y
pass Jumbo 1n Centenary
clothes Qnd sw1n g htro mce
'-hddren en d women s doth1ng
gouges mtsc

Devil le, l1ghl blue w1lh blue vinyl roof, de l·
egen ce inter ior, full power and air, AM· FM
slere,o rad1o and tape, lilt and telescoping
wheel.

GOOD USED FURNI TURE h cep
trng Up ~os tered ~ 4~6~

lil»r~tC-=~ =~

BUYS

COINS, CURRENCY tok ens old
poc ~ el watches end chc tns
s1 iv er and gold We need 1964
and older stlver co1 ns Buy sell
or l ro de Coli Roger Wamsley

'3200
Phone 388-8502

76 Cadillac Sedan

metal Ph

388 8776

1974 QfEVEU.E MALIBU CLASSIC

Dan Thorn pson Ford

~ c r op

OUTSTANDING

.

1971 BElAIR 4 OOOR········ ..$895

AVON

1975 PONTIAC AREBIRD ........... '3995

Demo crui se control.

4;12 -741 3120

Monda y F ri d ay , , a m. -6

OYNA FL UI DS, LT C

AM FM tape, light bl ve fm1 sh, new car warranty

992-2196

SE LL

we ha ve "
pa t E-n t ed
aurom o11ve product sue
cess f ut s •nce 197A We
prov•de
company
establi shed accounts and a
gtonerous reb&gt;!lle pr ogram

6 cylinder, automahc transm iss ion, power stee nng ,

vs,

WE'RE DIFFERENT
WE
DO N ' T
PR OMI SES

We have over 40 new cars and tr ucks in
stock and we need good used cars so now is
the time to trade fo r that new Buick,
Pontiac or G. M. C. Don't forget when you
buy a new car or truck from Smith Ne lson
we w1ll grease it FREE as long as you own
your car. So why pay for grease jobs. We
ar e your Friendly Dealer, we care about
you. We have the sharpest pencil in town so
why, not buy your next car from the
dealerships that cares about you. See one of
these friend ly sa lesmen Ceward Ca lvert,
J. D. Story or Bill Nelson.

Power stH'ring, automatic transm ission, AM 8 track
st er ~ . fastba ck model

EXPERIENCED BODYMAN needed
for Hynll', Used Cars Con1oct
Harold H~sell , alter 5 p m

I1'S OUR

[FoRD]

MERRI MAC has opemng lor Party
Pion
SupiiHv•sors
and
Dem ons trators 1n ~our areo
Htghesl
commtn•on
no
de live ry
or
call•cttng
Demonstrate top quoHty toys
and gtfls Coli collect to Ann
Baxter 1319) 556 8881 or wn to
MERR I-MA C, 801 Jackson,
Dubuque lowo 57001

-F or Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

C&amp;R

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales
Nobtl SUmmit Rd.
Rf. 1, Midd lepor f
992 ·5724

Complete Sales,

SeiVice and Supplies.

PA INT

1

SEWI NG· Al TER A TIOiS
Uph o!s t itrtng ,
d r o es
reasonable 572 South T trd
A ve
M• ddle pod
Phone

992 6306
&amp; WAL LPAPER PIANO TUNIN G l one Daniel s 12

-------

CENTER Restdenho l co mmer
yea rs of servtee
Ph one
c1ol tntenor . e~~: te r 1 o r los t
992 20B2
ecanom •col, rel• oble brush
mrles s spray oil ty pes of wa ll WILL TRIM or tul trees or shru b
covermg, no JOb lao large or • bery Phon e 949 2545
smoll Pttrsano hzed servtce by FREE INSPECTION for term ites t
own er We cor ry o co mplete line
An '( smg le dwe lling residence
of Ben 1amtn Moore
patnls
!reoted for ter mlies S109
Insur ed
fr ee
446 9458 ,
Southern P~s~ Control Ra ctne •
esttmotes 2,&lt;4~ 2nd
Ohto
Phon e ~49-'2803

-

EHMAN WATER DEliVERY SER ~49 27116
VICE Ph 379 2n6 or 379·2133 f REE INSPE(fi ON
Dec rease thos e fuel btlls and m
f"reose the value of you r home
w11h a fireplace f rom LOGUE

CO NTRACTI NG
FREE
ESTIMATE S PHONE 3BB 9'139

,,

Ant smgle
for ·
Southern Pc ~ l
Ohto
Phone
lrecl,:~d

949 2786

�~-rrn. SundayTimes-Sentmel,Sundav. March27,1977

For Best Results Use Sunday Ti:r~es·Sentinel Classifieds

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate for Sale

ll:i'iilEfillffidUESIIJio
~
- ;...- -

•

~

..! Heal ..:state £or Sale

VS REALTY
Brbnch

Real Estate £or Sale

.:::-=

Real ..:Stale for Sale

keal Estatrlur Sale

Real ..:stale for Sale

Heal Eslllte for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

H&lt;·al Eslatc £or Salr

Heal Estate £or Sale

CANADAY REALTY

Ph.

Bonnie Stutes

Merrill Carter

Associate

Associate

~ome

446-2885

.. .

.-J.,.,. . . . .

NOW IS THE
. TIME TO BUY

'

\'·

bnck located tn Countrv Atr Estates Call now and le t
us show you one of 1he cleanest and best kept homes In
the area One and a half baths 3 BR 's, combtnatlon
kttchen and dmmg, large LR. two car garage with

storage area, metal storage building on concrete one

th rd~we llland~caped lot Call now'

_

WHY BUILD' This 3 BR all brick ranch has
everything FULL BASEMENT, FIREPLA&lt;i:E , 2 full
baths, plus carpeti ng , thermo pane windows. ea l ·ln
kitchen wl1h range, oven, refng , dtsposal and
dtshwasher , 2 car garage, heat pump, c:en air, city
schools Much, much more LOW $SO's

__

i~i~~~~if~a~h~o!~m;;e~ :w~l~tlh

that greatest of
luxur tes room 1o spare 4 BR, 3 fu l l ba1hs, family rm ,
formal dlnrng rm , spactous llvt ng rm , 2 car garage
sundeck, all electric cen atr Kttchen ts a wife's
dream
sso s

RIVERFRONT HOME
3 BEDROOMS
Beautiful v1ew on the Oh to
Rlyer rtght f r om your
l1vmg room l1ke to boat
fiSh &amp; re)ax each evenmg
an your own R 1verfront' 6
rooms remodeled hom e
nice
modern
k1tchen
F &amp;B por ches, nat gas
forced a~r fu rnac e all
rooms are ntcely carpeted
Your own water sys tem
Wh1te
alum
out s •de
covertng 2 large n1cely
sha&lt;led lots w1th 3 cher r y
tr ees &amp; one peach A very
econom1c place to l1ve
WOOD BURNING

BRICK AND FRAME TRI LEVEL 4 BR, 2 full baths,
lg formal dln1ng rm, livi ng rm , features lg bay
window grac1ous foyer, 2 car garage, pa1!o Cen air,
electric furnace Deep, plush carpeting throughout
More lu)(ury for 1he money than you've ever Imag ined I
3 7 acres UPPER S40's

Ca II now and let's take a look at the home of Le Grand
Th is home Is rust nght for the tamt ly wtth youngster
Three BR 's, large LR k•tchen w1th lots of cabmets, fo-J..l
basement
fenced backyard, very
frtend ly
ne•ghborhood S31 ,900

COUNTRY CHARMER . I 8 acres tully fenced with a
white ra•l fence Immaculately kept 3 BR, 1'12 bath
frame ranch Features lg fam•ly kitchen with lots of
cabmets, range &amp; oven Carpeted throughout All
electr
LOW $30's

Pet. Down Payment
about 11 today.
Excellent mob de home or
bU1Id1ng s1te 31 14 acres m
Add1son townsh 1p ss 000 00
11 yo u are mterested m a
modern home and a few
acres pr1ced m the m1 d
S.:IO s ca II soon The owner
1S very anx1ous to sell
Try ng to make up your
m md on 18 Portsmouth
Rd ? Better hurry spr1 ng
Is here rt ~hould sell soon
An ell:cellent buy on Evans
Hi s .:1 Brs and a full
d1v 1d£' d basemen t w th
fa mily room plus l 1ke new
carpet on the ma1n floor
Call soon the pnce 1S only
$25,900
Pr ce Red uced to S6500 on
1 32 Acres 4 m lies out on
the r igh t on St Rt 141 Call
now

1f

you quahfy . Ask

If }IOU are seeking 1n
vestment
property
pe:rhaps you should con
Sider our l ls tlr~ crmammg
3 2 acres P .. ( \ of Rt 141
on Ne1o~,.(\\.)' Rd Th1s
pro per!}~
a liveable
hOU"" fl l ~ 101 of spa ce for
future development Th ere
IS 500 ft of fro ntage on
Nei ghbor ho od Rd
Call
now

Anot her ex c mvestment
property 1s located m t he
Vil lage of Chesh1re Th 1S
property IS located near t he
Gav1n Pla nt and conlams
1 13 acr es of clean l and
w lh an Older home (I lYe on
or rent) w th a near new
for ced a1r gas furna ce and
a modern bath Ca ll now
Th1S could be a money
mo:tker

LIST Willi VS REALTY TODAY. We devote full
:time to selling your property. Real estate is our
on~ business.

PHONE ~52-ANmME
~28

2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Buanes~~ibullfle:~ Business Uppoduuities
SERVICE STATION for lease Small LET US HELP YOU BUILD A
BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN Hus
tnYestment requ1red Mu st be
agg ress •ve and desH e to work
bond and w1fe con work
wilh people
Phone (304)
together Ouhlandmg fnco me
342 8161 for deto1I S
Poss1ble Troln tng g•ven Send
names address ond !elephone
OWN YOUR own busmess Work
no to Jadee Enterpmes 2958
for yourself Set jiOUr own
G1bbs Cts Ashland Ky 41101
hours Rewords ore there for
the !ak1ng Coli Mr Adams
(304) 342 816 1
SUN UP , the SUN Furnace
Dealerships available m your
county We offer a proct1col
solar system wh1ch producers
60 00 percent of Spoce Heating
and Domestic Hot Water needs
Complete factory assembly
Umfi now mstolled and work
tng Free ero1ng NO F~AN
CHISE FEE Reply The Solmre
Co, P 0 Box 639, C~rclev1 ll e
OH43113

Mobile ifumes forRI!Ilf
2 BR MH $100 3 BR MH $115
Ph 446 0175
MOBILE HOMES LOTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COM
MUN!TY
~ot ot ed on Rt 141 City woler c1 ty
schools 5 mm from Gallipolis
and Holter Hosp1tal
60 MH dean c
1en1 to
HMC also trod&amp;r lot for rent
Ph ''6 3805

12

It'

WE'RE DIFFERENT
WE
DON'T
SELL
PROMISES
We have a patented
automotl\le product sue
cess ful s1nce 197.!1 We
prov1de
company
established accounts and a
ge nero us rebate prog r am

CAN YOU MEET YOUR
QUALIFICATIONS
Asafull·llmoor
Jlllrl-llme dJSirlbutor?
I

We require
$4,995 Inventory Investment
ao hours per month
good reference
For Results- Not Prom1 ses
Call collect
MISS WILLIAMS
412 741 l720
Monday Fr~dey , 9 a m 6
pm
DYN A FLUIDS . LTD
Sew1CMI.ty , PA.:;__ _..J

FIREPLACE
Beautiful 7 room home
~ ~~:~:jrgn 1n a much des1red
11,
1n Midd lepo r t All
entences Th e best
e alu m S1d 1ng, n1ce
aded
front
por ch,
modern k •tchen nat gas
forced a1r furnace w 1th
central a 1r garage lots of
shrubbery level gree n
grassv lot Also a re nta l 3
r oom house on teh rear of
th1S beautiful lot brlng mg
m a n1ce monthly 1ncome
Th1S proper ty 1S pqced
nght ca ll now

NICE 3
BEDROOM HOME
Near go ld course
ThiS
home has a n1ce la rg e
11 vmg room , bath m odern
lutchen , utility room
Fe n ced 1n yard wlth
se veral large shade trees
In city but has the prlv.!!lcy
of th e cou ntr y A well kep t
home
t hat IS prtced
reasonab l y Call Now
2ACRES
4 ROOM COTTAGE
Remodeled n1ce l evel 2
acr e l ot
C1ty water
blackto p road , close to
V1nton la nd IS 1n grass and
garden some trutt trees
Tw o uti11ty b\dgs , n 1ce
extra bu 1ldmg lot House
haS 2 bedrooms, ilv •ng
room
ntce Slle bu lit 1n
kitc hen plus a bathroom
!mmed.ate possession ,
good buy ONLY $12,000 00

If you want lots of room close to GallipoliS th1 s could
be It'
'

10

16ACRES
8 ROOM HOME

Up to 5 bedrooms, 22'x26'
I v 1ng
r oom
wllh
a
beaut1fu l Y1ew f r om 1ts bay
w1ndow Furnace modern
k1tchen wdh table top
ra nge,
wall
O\len,
m 1crowaye OYen , buill m
cabinets
Newly buil t
garage, F &amp; R porches,
cel lar ,
storage
bldg
12'x24 Lots of good slle
t 1mber mel walnu t trees ,
garden space Al l mmeral
r~ghts goes f r ontage along
Sto!l te Highway No 7 Call
Now

8 ACRES 2 story
home
barn a nd
outbuildings
2
black top road Lg
spot s 15,000

J BR
athe r
wells
garden

~~:~~~:~~~~~~~in~~~~of~.s
~~~,:~~
n

main
and the
on
level level
with
sildtng glass doors leading to a
I
Has a sunken
pit with wood burnmg fireplace, I I
room and
modern kitchen c omplete with all
cabinets,
dishwasher, disposal and range Home Is total electric
with centra+ air Th~ Inter ior of thts ts very rusti c with
beamed calhedral cei ling s This could be your dream
home setti ng on 6 acres of woodland Approx. 3 miles
from Gallipolis No sight seers pl ease

REDUCEDS2,000 00
COLONIAL HOME
One of the attrac t 1\le older
two
story
homes
1n
Ga ll iPO l i S. 7 rooms, 4
bedrooms 21h baths , bUi ll
10 k1tchen , FA na tural gas
fur nace , mce large front
por ch screened m back
po rch N1ce lot with 4 car
garage m back close to
churc h &amp; bus.ness sec t ion
downtown Th1S propert}l IS
1n good cond1t10n and
pr ceQ to sell
261 ACR ES
BRICK HOME
9 ro oms, 4 bedrooms, ba th
8. shower f ull basement,
front &amp; back porches,
modern kitchen , ga r age, 2
dnlled wells 3 barns , mi lk
house, silo, 8 G pasture,
to bacco base L ook th is
farm over Has been a
da 1r y farm
6 609 lb
tobacco biise

REDUCED 52 000
OWNER TRANSFERR E D
Sp ttt level J bedr ooms 6
roams ma1n floor 2 roams
lower floor Large fam1 l y
r oom 2 baths alum1num
Sl dthg (gO ld ) Ther mopane
w1ndows and stor m doors
N1 ce modern k1lchen neat
1n eac h r oom garage
Rural
water
sys t em,
copper p lu mb m g N1 cc
clean lik e new hom e

BEDROOMS
ROUTE !88
Gall po 11 s School D tsl nct
Lots ot rpom, bn sem ent.
fam1ly room 212 balhs,
garage, modern k1fchen ,
wood burnmg
f irepl ace,
n1ce patiO w ith a barbecue
grill l arge lot and garden
space, stora ge buildtng,
approx 8')(10' Close to
Rodn ey Priced r]ght
4

4 VACANT LOTS
Located 1rt Po r terb r ook
Subdl\1 s1on onadpr1ced at
only S5 000 00 earh
OWNERS
TRANSFERRE D
Lookmg tar a ntce hOme
almost new ' Close to
H M L Rt 35 Ro1nch Style
home , 3 bedrooms built m
kitchen very n 1ce ful l
basement 1 ca r garage
Large lot Ga ll pol is School
Dtslr1 ct
Muc h d esi red
area Pr 1ce S3A 500

BRICK HOME
LtKE NEW
6 rooms pl us 1"? bat hs,
family ro om 3 bedrooms,
pat1o.garage wilh concr ete
drtveway Ru ral Water
System, central a1r nice
modern kttc hen w1 fh d1&amp;h
washer Steel ouls1de doors
&amp; thermopan-e-w 1ndows
Th1s home tS less then a
year old In Gall •poll s C1ty
School System close to
HM C
Located on a
landscaped 112 acre lo t
Pnced low
N E W LISTING
SPACIOUS TR I L EVEL
Are you t1red of cr amped
corners or n eetl some
grow1ng room? Then look
at lh1s spac•ous home
fe atur1ng a tarq e llvmg
room d1n1ng roo m modern
buil t 1n kit chen w1th dish
was her , n1 ce fa mily room
w11 h wood burn1ng
firep la ce 2• 1 baths
4
bedrooms two car gara ge
w1th Concrete dr1vewa}l
C1 ty school diStr iCt ThiS
hOme has character don t
wa1t to see
213 ACRE S
9 Room home FA fur
nace
wood bur n 1ng
firep lace d barns , m lk.
house, 500 gallon m1l k tan k,
good ten c1 ng , all mi nera l
nghts goes lots of pasture
approx 25 acres of llllabte
Off Stale Route 218
HERE IS YOUR
FARM - 81A
A good all around farm 1S
hard to come by 6 room
house basement granary
for corn storage 700 bu
Barn 75 x60 '
2 s lory
chtcken house 1n good
cond1t10n, 20 acres of 1op
teye l land 35 acres blue
grass pasture , 1700 lb
tobacco base, rHCe pond , 2
conc rete watering tr oughs;
very a t 1ract1vc sod ded
water d1vers1on This fa rm
IS 1'\lgh ty prod uct1 ve - If
you want a good far m, ca l l
us now

AHOY BOATERS' OhiO
Rlver Frontage buddi ng
S1tes appro ved far bu1ldmg
perm 1t , esch lot oyer 1 acre
w1lh 100 r1ver frontage
Rural water tap S7 500
BUILD YOUR HOME on
thiS beaut1futlot tusl a few
mdes from City , 110'x2SS'
LeYel w1th just enough
slope for good dr81nage
C1ty schools rural water
S5 ,500

POSSUM TROT ROAD
Bu dding lot With barn, 275
road frontage Rural water
availab le $5,500
OWNER RELOCATING IN
area and m ust sell thts
bus1nts s bulld1nQ and
home , ldMI for almost any
type bus tness, O\ler 1 900
sq fl , show room , work
area attractive. carpeted
office
upstairs ,
a
tastefully de corat ed 3 SR
hOm e large modern k 1l
chen ,
cerpet l ng
throughout
Separate
heating for bolh floors,
central a1r can&lt;l 1t1onlng ,
lots ot parking space, super
locahon uo~500

COMMERCIAL LOT &amp;
BUILDING
In city Of
Gallipolis Lot 66xl7.ot Ct t y
water and gas Bu ilding tn
good c:ond
Immediate
po ssess ion S25 000
ROUTE 160 Ni ce 3 SR
bath fuel oil furnace
garag e, cel lar hOuse very
n1ce 1 acre 101 1 Rural
water S24 000

w,

RIVERVIEW an&lt;l lots of
pr1vacy on t hl s lg double
lot 2Story 3 BR home gpod
cen heatmg system , storm
doors and wi ndow s Ex
tenor good Do a little
f 1xm' 1ns de and save SSS
$24,500
NEEDS YOUR FAMILY
Large 2 stor y J BR ho me
niC::ely decorated , famll\1
rm , Eat m kitchen w1th
lo ts ot cabi nets, pan try
Spac1ous law n, concrete
pat1o gas fu rna ce garag~
Near p la ygrou nd and
tenn is cour t $27,000
'STOP 1 Nearly new 2 SR
home, all electric , t ul ly
carpeted, lg 12'x20' l iving
rm "Cu te as a bU1ton"
kitchen w 1th range , oven ,
refng &amp; diSpOSlll Utility
rm wlth washer and dryer
Two tot s, 75'x 150' and
IOS'x150' C1ty schOols ,
rural water 126,500

IT ' S A HONEY FOR THE
MONEY! 3 BR , US St l!!el
sldmg, storm doors and
wmdows. carpeted hard
wood fl oor s nearly new
gas furnace , carport , yard
fen ced with cham link
fence IN CITY All yours
for on l y S21,000
CHEAPIEI 2 BR frame
k1tchen uhllt}l rm &amp; bath
City water , gas heat In
CitY $7,000

WE NEED LISTINGS!

RON CANADAY, REALTOR
'

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associ ate
~~6- 3636

Any Hour

THE OWNER HAD IT CUSTOM BUILT - Now ~au
ca n en JOYa better home beca use he 1ns1sted on th e best
qual1 ty construction Installed befter floor caver1ng s
and light f1 xtures Des 1gned a terr 1f1 c k it chen He
pick ed the largest lot tn the subdiYIS ton so you can
have a ga r den or la rge playground for the kids Th1 s
well des1gned 3 bedroom home tnciudes dtnmg area
and qaraqe Less t han $40,000

'.

JUST LISTED
TWO YEAR OLD Brick Ranch ONner transferred
Bhe the f tr st t o see thiS outstandtng 3 bedroom home
w ith basement
Attract tYe kitc hen (dishwasher
range). 2 baths, partial ly fin ished famtly room Good
corner lot west of town lUSt off US 35

IN
Just
,
I
bath &amp; 2 ha lf baths, large ut il ity room , small basement,
large 2 car garage, fenced In back yard Located at 15
Vln1on Ave, low pr ice of $24,900
NEW BRICK RANCH - Just completed and w a1tmg
for you Has 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths, kttchen w1th range,
dish washer &amp; disposal, bea utltul ca rpel, I caf garage
Located on 2 acres with a nice vtew of the nver $33,500

II

•

NEW LISTING - Lovely ra~ch w1th 3 bedrooms, niCe
bath, kitchen w1fh range. f ull basement with fam 1ly
room garage, located close to Rodn ey $30 000

Don't Be Spook~ By Cold Weather
Brand new 4 bedroom spl1t level wtth 2 f ull baths,
fabulous k!tchen, large living and dmmg area , fully
carpeted wit~ ce n1ral a1r and garage Unfln1shed
family room M1d fort1 es buys tht s fantast1c home

IN TOWN - Good 1nvestment or com mer ctal site 2
houses on a f ull city lot Located on Oli ve St Pme
red uced to $26 500

SMALL BUS I NESS LOCATION - ThiS property has a
a shop, In front Have you r home
and busmess together, zoned commercial and loca1ed
a1 1918 Eastern Ave Ca ll tor more m farmat1 on

3 bedroom home and

••
•

IN TOWN - Good home ha s 6 rooms, bath
basemen t yer y n1ce lot Good buy for $19,500

full

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We sell 1nything for
1nvbody at our Auchon
B1rn or In yuor home . For
1nformat1on 1nd piCkup
serv1ce call 256 19'7
Sale Every Saturd•v
NiOhtlt1 p m

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swain , Auct
Corner Third &amp; Olive

Strout
Realty

32 State SrreeT
Ph. 446-1998
A. A. Ntbert, Broker
Buy that home of your
own! Th1S Ph yr old br1ck
and frame rancher has 3
bedrooms. kltcnen dln1 ng
area comb med, 12 x 20'
liv ing room , elec heat, lg
garage, rural water, and a
no 11.200 lot
Newt Brick Rancher Close
to hospital on a 100'x200'
lot This well built home
has3bd rms , llvlngroom,
d1nmg room ca rpet plenty
of close ts , cop pl um bing
and 1S wel l Insulated Make
your dreams come true
with th is one•
New Lhtlng 6 room frame
home, 111 brlck front Th1s
hOme has 2 bedrooms plus
electric baseboard heat.
well insula ted, rural water ,
lind B 100' )( 200' lot Th iS
home would b! J.a good
star ter home
l:a l l 0
Woods 4~6 9210
~.-6 1998
Build your own home on
th ese spacious lots In the
VInton Area 2 lots with
appro)(l mately 2 a each
Buy one or buy both snd
have a mIn I farm Call D
Evans 388 8111
76 A Farm old house and
outbuildings, 12 11 111 1llble
11 1. Mini Fum Trailer
site, outbuildings
3 A R1coon Creek . WJ!'II
f enced 2 water taps
BY OW~ER 2'11 yeor old 3 br , 2
storr In Pork Lone Subd•v
toto electric central o•r fully
carpeted rongt~ , dishwasher,
d1sposol slidmg glon doors. on
patio LR DR Fam rm , fln1sh
ed goroie 111i baths Dlvorc
ed must tell lmmedtote oc
cuponcy REPU CEn to
900
Compare th a pnce ogcun st
... ther homes I n thu
neighborhood Ph 446 4012
Ext bS or 446·7801 oiler 5!30
pm

p1

RUTLAND - Nice older
rome In good shape with 3
IEdrooms, equipped k1 t
chen, fu ll basement, coal
furnace, double garage and
nice Jot 536,000
JUST LISTED - NICe old
t:nck 3 bedroom home w tth
modern k ttch en , ba th,
dn1ng wtth ftrepla ce, 2
r:orches, patio and 3 ca r
garage w ith slorage All for
t/5,000
JUST LISTED - 45 acres
of woods , good old 2
bedroom trailer. rural
water , sep ti c tank and
IJ'I vacy $11,500
MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroom frame home, 2
baths, garage on corner
ll!llel Jot Want Sl2,000 ,
2 BUILDING LOTS - At
Rock Springs, rural water
ava liable $5,000
JUST
LISTED
4
IEdroom trick hom e, large
di n ing,
Jiving
with
fireplace Utility roo,, full
basement and level corner
lot, 1112 baths for $24,000
MIDDLEPORT Car
!"'led A bedroom ranch
type home, lots of c losets,
gas forced air • furnace,
disposal! and co.-ner Jot for
Miy S18,000
SITE LOCATORS
DROP IN WHERE YOU
CAN BUY WITH CON
FIDENCE G BRUCE
AND
HELEN
L.
ASSOCIATES
MODERN FARM HOUSE wllh
almost I acre rich g• ount:f
~w
lots of nice
s ho ~e tree • :J br , rnod kit ·
~ .m Iorge dining room hord·
wood llorHlng gas furnoc:e
good drilled well Ph J79 2137
may be seen anytime
'

...

,

34 ACRES - Nt ce S room house lust remode led, new
bath , new kitchen, new carpet n1ce fireplace, ,has 1
large barn and 5 smaller buildings Located on
Fa~rvtew Road close to Mercervtlle $28,500

tncorporate&lt;t
No 200 - 9 tenths of an
acre, level ground, roads
on three sides, 12x60 mobile
home plus an older
dwellmg w1th 2 garages,
downstatrsca rpeted this Is
a gOOd mvest ment, close to
mmes Prtce sso,ooo

No. 197 - I 21 hundreds of
an acre w tth lovely 2 BR
hame l ca rp eted, large
utility room and shop,
large ga rden site, entrance
to back make property
possible of addlt!OJTat lots
Pme $24,000
No 199 - 1 3 acres with
24x60 double wide 4 BR and
2 baths, close to mine area
Price $20,000
No 201 - 28 acres more or
less, has 2 bedrooms. fully
carpet~ . modern kitchen.
partial basement, own gu
well, fruit trees, large
garden spot, also 22x3A
born, and a 1971 Skyline
12x60 mobile home Price

s.s,ooo

No 101 - 3 , acr11 with
12xso
mobil e
home .
beoutlful view of the river,
20 miles from town, would
make
nice
summer
vacation apot . Pricti7.SOO
No. 101 - H0111e and lot In
town, aluro. aiding and
wlndowa. ahort wolk to
stor... l'rlce 17,100.

f'omtrav104 w. ""'" ln·11H
Alter Hnur1 C11i

80 ACRES - Good farm wi th a 4 bedroom house, new
bath, forced air furnace , large barn
garage, large
tobacco base, call for mare mformatlon

+

•

..'

WE NEED LISTINGS, WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS THAT WE CAN'T SATISFY. LIST WITH
OHIO RIVER REALTY TODAY .
Evemngs Colt
John Fuller
446-4327
Lot Johnson
256-6740
Earl W1nters
446·3828
Doug Wethorhott 446-4244

Love At F~rst S1ght
Just J m il es from town a
lovely 3 bedroom ra nch
wdh distinct kitchen &amp;
dlnlng area plus garage
and large flat la ndscaped
lot C1ty schools , water ,
sewer , na tur al gas Pr1ce
S27 ,900

m

"1-1121
CUNTACT1
Lolt PlllltV

l(lnCh

Wood Burning Flreplac~
Move to town m a n1ce cozy
3 bedroom home w1th w b
f1repl ace, mod ern k1tchen
and lam l!y room Mod ern
gas tu r na~:e - now No
ma 1ntenance sl dlng , small
!Of, tmmed le te occupancy
Don' t MISS See1ng ThiS
10 11.~0 Brl g.ed ter mob1t t:
hOm e w 1th 1 3 acres land
cacpeted thro ughout. 2
bedrooms, all f urnttu r e
excel l ent ne•gh
goes
borhood near Cadmus, only
17 600 00

Beauttful Ranch Sty le, 3 bedroom bnck, 2 car fm tshed
garage , located on Watson Rd , Gallipolis City S D
heat pump, rural water central sewage co llection
newt 1 lmmedtafe possess1on Prtce $44 000

NER ANXIOUS T
l 8Ull01NG LOTSlmagme
Ium bus gentleman
For: $27 000 00 you can ow n
sell 1mmedtatety
th 1S attra ctive .ran ch 3
1 good b uil ding tats
bedrooms, large k1lchen
R 10 Gra nde W1de
and d1n1 ng
Plus a b10 """"' '" to earl }I b.rd buyers
fam11y room Owner wilt
1 to 20 acres w1th or
help finance a Quali fied
t tr ees, f lat to rolling
buv.er Close to town
look and make your

.
Your own ' pnvi!te
world
w1th wrap around deck Th a t presents prtvacy
beauty d1gn lty and that
wonderful tee 11ng yo u get
lt\lln9 m the count ry Th1 S
out standing 2 ye ar ol d
r es1 den ce
off ers
.4
bed r oom s. 2 fir epl aces
t am1IY
roo m
formal
d n ng hu ge rec room, 3
baths, a stu dy and a crow 's
nest 15 to 18 acres r olling
wooded
wonderland
surrounding th iS bea u1y In
c1ty school d1strlct

'

,I

or

CQmmew ol propert}l approx 17
acre s level land loco1ed at
Tuppers Pla•ns on Oh1o Route
7 Phone(614) 667 (&gt;304

3 SEDROOM 2", both bllevel
WBFP .n fom1ly room 2 cor
goroge d1shwo5her nice loco
11on on I ocre lot 1n Me1gs Co
Askmg $46 ~00 Phone 992 2"'92

NEW 3 bedroom hou~e . bu1lt In
kttchen both ond 1/1 Phone
742. 2306 or contact M1IO 8 Hut
ch1son Rutland Ohio

NICE OLDER HOME m Mmetsvdle
Pm.ed for qu lck sale 1 and
so11en tenth ocres w1th lru1 t
fl oes Good ronlol property
olso space for trOller Coli
949 25b31or utlounat1011
7 or
ocr es
wooded land " ' Rork Sp1lngs
Phon(' 992 'J/69

'

'I .

FOR SALE
New house In Porter Brook
Sub
Bnck
front,
3
bedrooms, l'h baths, large
tamtly roam , ex. large lot,
ex nice carpeting 446 1304
446·3831

15 AC~ES OFF New l 1mo Rood
neor Forrest Acres Park" Phone
742 2336

a

.

4 Bedroom Home 3 ca r
garage s tuated on 6 77
acres tusl ouls1de the C1ty
of Gal l 1potts C1ty water
and sewer
large llvmg
room
wood burn1ng
f~repla ce
1n base m en t
Pr~ce
upper S20 s

We Ha11 e Only On e ISO ll: 96
lot on L1ddy Hollow Rd for
$4 000

NEW LISTtNG
In CI IY
loca ted Wllhtn lwo blocks of
downtown shoppmg area
Two aparlment structure
or can be converted back to
10 room home
Both
aparlmenls
have two
bed r ooms, l1\l mg room
d1n ng room kttchen and
ful l bath Can be purchased
tod ay for mcome produc ng
t"'rnoerty Pr lce $37 000 00

FON SALE All elec nearly new
horne m Rutlond oreo Bose
men1 3 t'&gt;edrooms attached
goroge ,
$79 900
Phone
741 253 1
3 BEDROOM ra nch I 1h baths 1
acre all elec flmshed garage
~ u lly
carpeted Fl'o'EI Potnl &lt;,
oreo $30 000 Phone 991 29:28
oltQt 5 p n'l

11\
LU
1

1 for more

Com pact and, Com lorta bl e
approxtmately 4 m1les
no rth of Holzer Hosp1fa l ,
adtaccnt to Rt 160, pnce
517 ooo Also rental mob1le
home a va 1labte l or S9,600
Rem od e l ed H ome
On
East er n Ave , natura l gas,
tiiY wat er Pr1ce $10 500

E. N. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-4500

CALL 446-3643

APP~O)( IMA 1ElY

Here's yo ur opportu n1t y 1o
go m bus ness for yourself
we have a retail ~ilo re
w th act1ve busme ss pl us
two rent a Is s1tuated on a
80 X150 IOI Wilhtn the CitY
of Gall1pOI 1S Call for more
mformat1on

l Bed room cilrpeted home ,

ClO ACRES 1 MILE
FROM
HOLZER
HO SPITAL Over 60
acres of beaut1ful ,.r. ~oll ng
wooded htlls end va ll eys
perfectly
w1th a r dge
s tu ated from 1 to 8 estates
The v1ew IS breath tak ing.
yet 1t's ru st a step awey
from the m1ddle of the
growth ar ea, west o f
Gal l i polis It 's yours all of
1t f or $.40,000 DO

3 BEDROOM HOUSE for sole neor GEORGE HOB STETTE R Reo!
Estate Broker Pomero y Ohio
Eastern High School Full bose
CHESTER - 3 acres land 3
ment 2 cor garage fam1ly
bedroom house 2 baths stond
room ,
firepla ce
Phone
up shower storm doors and
985 3867
w1ndows
woll
to woll
2 ) fOR'( 4 Bedrm bnck home 1n
carpelmg
refngeralor and
Middleport Phone 992 3457
stove 2 outbu 1ldmgs Plentjl of
fru1t trees Very good cond•·
3 BEDROOMS home all elec , I
hon Pnced $35 000 Hilton
bo1h ,1uti li I¥ room by k1tchen
Wolle
Salesman
Phone
115 1&lt; 11 5 lot 1 cor garage m
9&lt;9 2589
Rutland Phone 742 2869

5 ROOMS BA.nt utllllie!t double
co1 garage on Io rge lot m Don
v1lle on S R :ns
Phon.::
/42 &lt;J017

.&gt;

2 L ots w1!h well water
near R 10 Gra nde ca ll for
mor e 1nformat1on

REAL ESTATE SAI.ES NEEDS LISTINGS

GEORGE HOBSIETTER Jr Reo!
Eltole Broker Pomeroy Oh1o
RACINE
2 46 acres
3
tiedrooms living room kit
~ h en
bath
corpe ling
draperies , fuel 01l heat centr al
o1r
ca nd•tlo rltn g
stove
refrigerator
hookup for
washer and dryer lron1 porch
on Tuppers Plom s Chester
waltJr sy5 tem ApprOKtmotely
1!,
m1le lrom Racine Phone
949 2589 f'nced $15 900 H1lton
Wolle Salesman

If you haYe always wa nted to operate your own
bus mess here s your opportun ity II We have recently
listed a going busmess
take po~sesslon, ~ nd begin
.. nnglng the cash reg1ster Drive m business located on
1/a acre, new drtlled well sewage treatm ent plant.
pr1ce m cludes all equ1pment and mven1or y Located on
Ohio si de from new d ock bemg constructed 11 Oh10
R1ver Cal l for more mformat 1on

Grand£
Inform"'

THE LEADER IN GALLIA~UNTY
500 2ND AVE~

(Nerlookmg the c1ty has a commanding , panoram tc
Ytew of the Ohto R1ver Valley Th is 3 bedroom.
carpeted home has most everythtng tncludmg central
A C , 211 baths, pnvate dresstng room beautiful
k1tchen w bu1 lt m oven disposal , dishwasher , formal
d1nmg room , 2 wood burnmg f1replaces electnc
garage door opener , c1ty water tfs own natural table
rack and pencil cave Situa ted on 22 acres of land,
plenty of pnva cy 11 The step down voluminous fam1 ly
room exhtbtts a cathedral ce1r1ng solid stone wa ll ,
ltreplace and a bea uttful v1ew from every w1ndow
Deft ntf ly a show place to be proud of
shown by
appm n1ment only

5 Acre•SO ~ ""' Land , R o

E. M. WISEMAN 446-3796

8 PCT. FHA &amp; VA
FINANCING AVAILABLE
NOW

VA·FHA 30 yr fmoncmg Ireland HOUSE, 6 ROOMS and bolh 6
ond three fourlh acres ms1dEt
Mortgage 77 E Stole Athens
c11y hmlts New s1d mg and
592 3051
storm wmdows 3 acres fenced
THE U S FOREST SERVICE "
lor small posture $18 500
dlsposmg of the proper1y
Phone 992 7352
located of 2105 S lith m Iron
7
ROOM HOUSE new carpet
ton Oh1o The property con
roof , 1nsulot1on owner l1nonc
s1sls of Lorge corner lot w11h
ed Call 9'92 7&lt;154
garden area two story frame
dwelling with 3 bedrooms ltv 6 1h acres garden spot some
lng room dmlng room kllchen
posture firewood w1lh wood
both ond o half, full bosement
burning "ltove fu el oil heat
storm wmdows
hardwood
outbu•ld1ngs 2 bedroom house
floors f~replace gs heal cen
near hospttal and toWn
tral a1r m eKcellent cond1 t1on
$19 500 P.llone 992 5947
The dwelling can only be oc
qu•red by elt'chonge tor pnvote
land lymg w1th1n the Wayne
National Forest Purchase Boun OWNER LEAVING AREA 3 Br
dory Tho•• mteres ted shou ld
Bnck Lorge Uv1ng room Iorge
contact th• On•tnct Ranger at
fom1ly and d1nmg ro.om comb1n
710 Pofk Ave , Ironton OH or
ed 2 cor garage Ph "'46·7892
teleph one 532 3223 or
HOUSE FOR SALE , 2 Bedroom
532-7401
Home Downtown Ph 44b·2857
4 Br Home on I OCI e lol B1dwell
EUREI&lt;A
1 Hr room house fully
area. Ph 388 8746
&lt;:orpetea '•replace goroge
THREE BEDROOM RANCH r~O U SE
bloclo.. to l 1 r1v~ 1'1ver frontage
11/t barh 1 CKre all el8( •nc,
below dom Ph 256 1350
flntsh.d gor'9P, fully carpeted
Ftve Pomls area $30 000. Ph FOR SALE BY OWNER All elee!"'
Home one Hoar 2 B• !J bose
614
2928 otter 5 pm
1nenl I01'5 of upper and lowc1
da(k OYer looks beout1lul Rae
FOR SAlE BY OWNER 2 8•
house In city close to SC-hools
coon R1'1e1 LdT SltC 75 1&lt; 300
'eos O fi CI Ph 256 6472
$12 000 call-4"'b 2103

70 Acres Good Home Close to Metgs Mtnes
Perfect for a Country Boy who work s tn the city the
mtnes, or wherever You can raise t hose beef caHle,
your ki ds can ha ve a horse and you can r a1se the crop s
to fe ed them and sttll keep \lOUr 10b Extra good
comp letely remodeled farm home (S bedrooms tf need
bel Barn and other ou1but ldmgs Don ' t pass th 1s one
by wtthout look 1ng Priced under $50,000 And Includes
12 acres of excellen1 bottom ground Some furniture
sf a }Is wtth property

Halt Way To Heaven
One of the cleanest, room test .4 bedroom homes r ou'll
see for $.!13,900 Formal double door en trance, arge
living&amp; dining, b•g fam•ly room , 4 bedroom s. 2 baths 2
ca r garage and fenced In yard •

LIKE FISHING - The season will soon be here, mce 2
bedroor:n mob1le home w1th furn11ure , county water,
Jlh acres of nice land Located close to Tycoon Lake

16 ACRES - New Li sting, small farm w1th a good 4
bedroom home, nice bath, good well, sever a l bu1ldtngs,
very nJCe land Located on St Rt. 554. $30.000

One of the Area 1 s Mos1 Beau1tful
It 's a year old but looks and 1s. better than new. 3 large
bedrooms, formal d1n 1ng. fanla stlc fireplace tn the
family r oom, 2 baths, extra n1ce carpef1ng plus 2 ca r
garage You also have th~ use of a pool and club house
for pri va te par1 tes or gat henngs It's a heck of a good
buy

Must Be Sold ThiS Month
MaYing out of sta te and earnestly desires to sell
quickly I have never wa lked 1nto a home where I was
mare plea santly surprised This richly appotnted 4
bedroom Early Amen can home has had the touch of an
expert In a recent r emodeling &amp; redecorahng I t's
elegant, charming and so pleasantly homey you won't
want to leave It Fam ily r oam 1ndudes W B ftreplace .
the wife approved kitchen (range 1!. refng I modern
gas furnace Priced well under market

BIDWELL - N1ce 3 bedroom home, bath w1th shower ,
famtly room . beautiful carpet, very n1ce and m
excellent condlt ton $24,900

,·-

One of the Ar ea's Fmesl""
Thts IS your mvdat1on to VISit another wor ld A brand
new 2 story, 3 bedroom co loma I w1 th ali the charm and
elegance you have ever dreamed about Central ha ll
forma l l1vmg and dlnmg rooms," attrac11ve well
planned kttchen - most handsome w b f1repla ce. 3
large bedroom s, 2 baths, ov'erstzed 2 car garage plus a
huge tlat lot

VERY PRIVATE - YET IS
AT THE EDGE OF TOWN - Its like l1v1ng 1n the
coun try - You can have your garden and all your pets
as well
as en1oy some peace and qu1et w1th lots
of c lean co untry a•r Thts 1s a very good 3 or 4 bedroom
w t1h fam 1ly room . mce k ttchen , large w b f treplace,
screened side porch 2111 baths M 1d Forties

IN TOWN - Nice ranch with 3 bedrooms. large
k it chen , dtntng room. natural gas heat wtth centra l atr,
1 car garage, wor kshop lmmedtate possess 1on,
located at 205 K•nlon Dr ONLY S29 500

,

Virgil B. Sr , Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
Phone 992-3315

RUSSELL WOOD REALTOR
44€-1066

..tt-t~

1"

UNU~UAL LOCATION -

10 ACRES - Looking for that perfect b\11ldmg Site?
This land ts clear on the f ront and nice woods m the
back Located on Ebenezer Carmel Rd $10,000

TEAFORD

Ken Morgan
Eventngs
446·0971

One of the most outstandmg homes m Gall ja County

'

m.ooo

MASSIE
REALTY

Ru ssell D Wood
Evenmgs
4464618

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL - ThiS love l y home Is just l •ke
new. 3 bedrooms, 1 11~ baths, ntce kttchen, ful!y
carpe1ed 1 c ar garage N ice leve l

·.

John F Hunt Real Estate Inc
Br Ofl1ce (Jrdeii' JIIe Oh1o
474 7518 416Maln SI
300 oc most oil 11lhable 40 plu s
bu beans posl4 yrs Good corn
land New automollc leed lot
Plenty of born s 2 ponds
Owner ret1nng Farm located
off 93 So of Jockson 0 Coli
leek P1ckles1mer 474 4687
Area code 614
HUNT
190 oc do1ry form setup w1th 90
frees tolls 2 silos 40 ton m1x
m1ll Surge mllkmg parlor
au tomaf1c feed system dean
and ready lor a 100 head herd
l ocated on old 124 near
Oh10
Colt Leek
Beave r
P1ckles1mer ~H 4687
Area
Code 614
HUNT
IREL AND AND ASSOC MOR
TGAGE COMP Spec1olizmg m
FHA and VA Home loons. Also
RefinanCing 463 2!'1d Ave
locoted 2nd floor Goll1pol1s
Ph "6 7172
.tl BR f-tOME w1th wall to wall
corpeJ ~ ~~~ ~ ~~~ -2 LOTS ON Raccoon Creek 01llon
S.,;\.. 1 pproved sephc sys tem
lns•olled Counfy woter ovatl
on ot Ph 675 3000 after 8 ph
44~ 0682

We Have Never Seen A Better
Bus1ness Opportuntty
Perfect for any fam1 ly - young and startmg out sem1 retired , or 1he guy who has k1ds he wants to send
to college You' ll have your money back out of the
bu stness end of thts dea l m less than 5 yrs - 8 motel
un 1ts that do extr emely we ll A good 3 bedroom home
and one of the very best lacat tons 1n town overlookmg
th e beautiful Oh1o Books reopen to a senaus buyer
Pr 1ced nght and don ' t let the down payment scare you
Shown by appointm ent at your conventence

•

CLOSE TO TOWN - Good frame home, 3 bedrooms,
bath, full basement, large Jot Located on Kelton Rd
$18 500

ROUTE 3l INVESTMENT
OPPORTUN IT Y
Estab ltsh ed mobile home
park, near Spr mg Va ll ey
Pl aza Rake m lhe rent
while you watch your 1n
vest m el')t grow In value Th1s 1S Ga ll1a Coun ty's
fastes t growmg area and
th1s property 1s pnced to
sell Ca ll or stop by the
off ce for more details
PINE TREE SETTING, 13
acres, large ga r den spot
nearly new 3 BR ,
bath
hom e a ll elec tn c fu lly
carpeted formal d.n 1ng
eal1n k1tchen with range
and refrtgerator, carport
rural water S3 4 000

THIS IS tT AND YOU CAN AFFORD IT - Yes this Is It
tf you've been looktng for a fife pl ace, a dry basem ent
a fenced yard 3 large bedrooms a beaut iful built 10
k tf chen, central a1r clty schools nice carpeti ng Tht s
IS 1t and yo u can afford 1t

•

I GOING to
market value
hon'"s, 10 rooms

S8ACRES
SROOM HOME
211::~ m iles from Ga ll•pol•s
N1ce wooded bulldmg lot at
the top of th e hil l Som e
rn arketable ttmber, also
spaces for tw o m ob il e
Home
has
3
no m es
be droom s, bath eat 1n
ki tchen , bu ilt In cab1nets
and elec trt c stove llvmg
room
In clly school
d1str1ct Call Now

HOUSE AND 17
AVAILABLE BLDG
LOTS
Have you been lookmg for a
home w1th a coun t ry set
tmg' Stop looking , here 1t
IS A n1ce home Wtth 3
bedrooms, bath showe r,
modern k•tchen W1th bUilt
m cabine ts , double smk,
liv ing r oom , .., uel oil for ced
a ir furnace, new stee l
si ding recent ly mstalled,
city wale f, also has a sm al l
barn , outbuild i ngs and
cellar Approx 21h acres
Look th1s oyer

FAMILY LIVING - Extra nice ra nch ,
bedrooms.
formal dining, fart1lly r oom w1th f ireplace, covered
patio, lovely ktfchen w1th built ms. centra l a1r, extra
room for den or off1ce, I car garage with electriC
ooener Price ~~uced t o s",900

'

74 ACRES, 1400 lb tobacco base, good pasture fenced ,
pond, some tillable land, timber, mineral rights
Comtortabl e3 BR. balh. 2 story home Good large barn
and other outbuil dings S37,000
190 ACRES 60 t il lable 100
acres paslure fenced 2
ponds , tobacco base some
l mber 3 barns , other
outbldg 4 BR bnck home
nearly
complete d
F~replace
1n LR
full
basement garage Perfect
tor beef cattle Call for
appomtment

!teal t::mte for Sale

''

ReaHor
WHITE HOUSE
7 rooms plus basement, 3 or 4 bedrooms~ 1112 baths,
patio, modern k itchen with dishwasher, 2 cor gorage. 2
wood burnln9 firepla ces. ceiling beoms In living room,
large 240'180 Jandscoped lot with Jots of shrubbery, 3
sides of lot f~nc~d In, circle driveway , located on a
blacktop Fa lrflelo-Centenary Rd In Gallipolis School
Dlsl A beautiful home on a nice level acre lot Call for
an appomtment to see th is lovely home

CALL 446-3643

••
•

:

Make an appotntment to look it over. lns tde and out If
you ltke modern
,.,..
,.. llv mg, you will love thts one

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

Ph. Home 379·2184

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Re~~l Estate Agency
style

R eal Estate for ~ale

GALL/A COUNTY'S LARGEST

446·3636

ONner IS very anxtous to sell thts very n tce

Heal Estate fur Sale

THE WISEMAN AGENCY

Locust 51 .
Gallipolis, Oh1o

251/ 1

BUD McGHEf Manager

R eal t:statc £or Sale

GALLIPOLIS
BY OWNER . J BR, F R,
LR, DR, F1re place, 1'12
botlls, ott eloctnc, central
air, 2V1 yr. old brttk ranch,
quattty
built
home,

ovedoaking Ohio R1ver on 3
plus A., 4 m1tos South
Gatltpolls, 01110 on Rt. 7, all
carpeted ,
equipped
kitchen. Must see to
appreCiate. Call now for an
appointment. 446·7911 .
HOMESITES fo F sale 1 acre and
up M1ddleport near Rutland
Coli q92 7481
NEW 3 bft.droom hou5e 2 baths
all eioc 1 acre Middleport
close to Rut land Phone 99:2
7•81
SMAll form for sole 10'1. down
owner ilnonced Monroe Coun·
ty W Vo Phone (304) 772
3102 o• ('lO&lt;) 772 3227
COUNTRY form lo11d wllh seclud
ed woods water and good oc·
r.ess In Monroe County W Vo
$1 000 down coli (304) 77'l
3102 or (304) 771 3227

Nestled Wtttun A Wooden
Area on J Acre s of Land
ad1acent to Orchard Hill
Rd Th1s 4 or 5 bedroom
home would be the pride of
any ow n er
Two .wood
burn1ng f1repla ces * grace
both the l•vtng room and
tam 1ly room Heated and
cooled by lhe modern
econom •cal heat pump
system GalliPOI 5 C1ty S 0
concrete dnvewey com
pl e tely surrounds srni!OI I
pond at the entrance to t he
property Shown by ap
po.nlment nnlv
Tw o Bay Bus 1ness Bulldmg
m Ew1ngton , along Rt 160
Buy now for S15 000
91 Frontage ~long Rt 7 1n
G:row n C1ly 2 lots m Crown
Manor S 0 Price 55 ,000
8 Acres of Land below
Eureka , sullable for mo bile
hom e S1te rural water
well mobile home hook up
Pr 1ce ss 300
lookin g t or I nves tm ent
Lanlj •n G.a!,• ,_. .... o , ? We
have 5t ~
enced, 20
ilcres o t ~ plenty of
road fro ... dge off Rt 160
near V1nton Pr1ce S25 000

n

Or Invest m 20 Acre s uo
Morgan Twp road fran
tage on Rowlesvlllc Rd
Pr1ce S17 000
Ow ell l ng and Contents of
hom e lor:ated on Mad1son
Ave , pl us a 26 :d2 b lock
bu il ding w!lhm the city of
Gallipolis Pr1ce 520,000
Rig ht Now ! 11 1 520 ,000 00
w ill buy a modern one
fl oor, 3 bedroom
all
electnc home 1n Gall ipOliS
C1ty
Sc hoo l
01Str1ct
Si tuated on 120'x75' lot
Carpeted ell:ccpt tar k1t
chen • nd bath
new .
condition , rural wa te r
ce n1ral sewage roll e,lton ,
hlr~ c ktoo streets

Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real E•tate 4.. 1066

In B1dw ett , 2 beoroom
hOme S1lu at ed on 21 7 acr es
new l y 1nstall ed hOI water
tank and F A
furnace
Pnce only $14 ,000
l Bed""t:lm Hom e located
on Chlll1cot he Rd w1thm
ctty of GalliPOliS natural
gas F A furnace CttY
wa te r and sewer P 1 bsths ,
basement
pnce
'UI I
S26 900

Two Bedroom Cottage 1n
CI IY on Sp ruce St reet
Na tu ral gas fu el c1ty water
and sewer W thm easy
walkmg dtstance to stores
N1ce ~~ rrang eme nt for
smgl e person or couple
Pnced $11 ,000 00
3 Bedroom Cottage car
pet ed , modern k1tchen ,
Si tuated on 85 K90 lot ,
Sanders H 1ll Add
city
water c1t y school d1Sinct
Pnce S'!J 000 00
1 Acre Sulld1ng Lot s
situ at ed
on
Rodney
Harr 1sburgn Road Rural
waler ava ds bte
Price
$4 ,000
2400 Sq
Ft
Bu il ding ,
c;lt ua te d on large lot
overtook 1ng the Oh !o R 111er
w th lnc1 ty of Galllpolts
Pnce SlO SOC

V1 ew The Ohto River from
t1"11S 1 bedroom cottage
located wllh1n the city C1ty
water and street Pnce
$11 000
Lookmg for a good buy., J
bedroom home 1n Ka na uga
areo!l carpe•'
modern
k1fchen ~ ' afl eltng
wel l lns u
•• ttral A C
SltUo!lted ,d. 80'x269' lot
Large 25'xAO' garege
Pn ced for only S21 ,500 00
In B•dwe ll , 4 bedrooM 2
stor}l . c arpeted nome ..
storm windows and door s,
large garden area , good
location on corner lot
Pnce sn ,ooo

NEW LI$_TINO Neat 3
bedroom ranch slluate&lt;l In
Green Acres S 0 , on Iaroe
100 xl-48 lot Gallipol is City
School D1strlc:t , clty water
ow ner moy mg out of ste te
Price S32,500
IF YOU ' RE PLANNING
TO SELL , CALL US, WE
HAVE
A
LIST
OF
PROSPECTIVE BUYER$,
AND WE ' RE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU

IF YOU DON'T SE! THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
IN THIS AD •• CALL , WE
MAY IE ABLE TO FIND
IT FOR YOU

�!»- The Sunday Times.Senlinel, Sun&lt;I"Y· MH!'l'h 27. 1977
t'or Rent
SLEEPING room$ for rent , Goll io
Hotel
OFFICE space, downtown, 514 Se
tond Ave 446,()()08,

STORE BUILDING IN HENDERSON
W. Vo

FIRST

Ph. 446-9662.

FLOOR

Television log for easy viewing·

Auto Sales

BRADBURY

fFF .

APT . 729 2nd Ave., Adults only no pets , Oep. Req ., Ph.
446-0957.
BRADBURY ~ENTAL ,: 4 Room cot-

toga , w rt h both and scree"ed In

po rch. Adults only . no peb,
Dep . Req ., Ph . &lt;446-0957,
TWO Bedroom, mobile home , fur ni shed , $125 mo . plus utilities
Neighborhood
Rd .
Ph .
446-4757.

Nl:WGMC
l ruck ~@Odqvorter s
1970VW
.
1974 ', 1 CMCP1ckup

1973 •, 1 (hev . PU
1974 ', 1 GMC Pickup
1973 ' , Che..-. P1ckup
1974 ', T. GMC PU
f(H5 Ford Mu stang II
1972 ' , T Che~· pkk.up
1- 1975 three-fou rth T Chcv PU
1974 •, r. Chev . PU
19721hree-fourth T. Chell . PU
1973 EIComino with top
1973 GMC Astra w -oir , slidi ng 5th
\-Vheel
1974 'r T. FordPU
1971 I, T. GMC PU
1972 Pinto
1972 • 1 TGMCPU

Bulo vtile Rd . Prefer m iddle ag-

1976 CAMARO 305. 2 barrel!
automatic . silver wifh red
pu1stnFing . Still under warranTy . Col 99'1-57f.fl .

' 1

TO N f1.ickup , new !ires ,

1974 CHEVY CORVETTE , 350 4 harrell . 29 .000 miles. sil..-er wi th
Dlack leather in ter ior. power
siitdows , lodory a·ir condition ing
AM ·FM
radio . T- top ,
telescop iC and till steerjng
wheel , new set of Michelin
rodiol tires w ith less than 500
m1els . Phone 742 -2025 oher 5
p.rn or 742-2211 before 5 p .m.
ond osk for Do..-id .

-

1974

GMC

Pickup .

Phone

'1'11·J188.

1975 JEEP CHEROKEE .

p .b .. ps,
OuadJolrock . Good tir es.
Ph one {304) 877 - 23~0.

1972

VEGA ,

S800.

Phone

949-2307.

of Discovery. 8; Ja"mes Robison Presents 10; Rex

Hurnbard 13; Open Bible 15 .
9:oo-Robert Schuller 4 : Oral Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass 8; Better Way IS;
Mister Rogers 20.
9: 3G-What Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8; It Is Written
10;· Jim Franklin 13; This Is The Life 15; Sesame St.

1972 DODGE Charge1 . air , V-8
automatic. power disc. brakes.
power s t.eering , rear defros ter.
rear speak er, buc ke t seal , e nd
co nsole'. rollt wheels , steel
belted radials·. ..-myl rool ,
$1850 . Phone992 -51o9 .

1961 FAlCON SPORT COUPE',
good cond. Ph. 446-3375 after 6
. p .m .
•

1976 PONTIAC Trans Am . 1973
Chevy Pickup with topper . Ph .
304 ~'881 - 1346 .

.

09 MERCURY 2 Dr ., auto .. di sc
brakes . Ph . 446·2878
(A.D.
Qeville , 1973
1971
Plymouth Fury Ill. 1973 Chevy .
Truck CustOm 10, 1972 Bronco
Four Wheel Dri..-e . Ph .
446-9818.

Ph 41116·3870

lil..e new , ~Je ry , very good
cond ., Phone 4"46-9523 or
446· 1-443

68 El Camino , 327 4 spd .. Mech .
sound . Ph . 446 -0231.

Pil72 FORD Ra nche ro . loaded
$1995 . , 1966 VW_Beetle , $625 ..
Both with e.tro tires . Ph .
446-7440.

13; Focus on ColumbUs 4.

12: oo-News Conference-44: Issues &amp; Answers 6; Face
· the Nation 8; Evangellslic Outreach 13; Soundstage
20.
...
12: 3o-Meet the Press 3,15; Directions 6: Cham .•,..
plonshi p Fishl ~g 9;- The ISsue 10;. Lower Llghthou'"
13.
.
1:OQ--Telathon Continues 3; Movie "Si lent Night,
.Bloody Night" 4; ; AmeriCa's Black Foru"! 6;

1977 DODGE VAN , Pori. Cust .,
a ss ume payments . Ph . 256-1295 •
aher 5.
1970 PlY . VALIA NT DUSTER. 340 4
spd .. new t ires ond rim . low
nitleage plus elc. , be st offe r .
call 388-9835.

$A ,QOO

firm . 1966 Dodge Van . $250 .
1955 Har ley Da vidson Trllee .

$750. Ph . 446·8510

1974 CHE VElt E. Malibu Cla s'iic .
PS , PB , AC. tilt wheel. swivel
bu cket $eo ts , auto. on floor .
con'iole . 29 .900 octuol miles,
burg undy with white vinyl top
Reo I sharp, $3200 . Ph . 446-2342
ask for Debbie , 8 a.m. to 5 p .m .
after 5:30 ca ll388-8502.

1971 CHEVELlE MAliBU . 307. 3
spd .. 2 dr. Ph. 446-3732.

1974 HONDA CB 200. wrecked ,
sell lor parts . Phone 446 ·3732 .
1974 MU STANG II MACH I, good
con d. Coli before 6 p .m.
675-3375. ask lor Rick .

1968 Chr ysler , good cond. $600.
Ph . 446-4426.

1974 PIN TO RUANABOUT , Four
speed . one owne r , Exc. cond .,
Must sell $1758. Call 675· 1607
after 4:30.

1972 PINTO RU NABOUl , exc.
cond . 01,. In! 50,000 miles ,
$1250 . Ph . 446 7904.

1973 OlDS DElTA 88 . PS ,PB, o i1
cond .. AM ·FM rod1 o, good
Ph .
446 ·1 703 or
con d .,
446-1522

Iron side 13.
12 :oo-ABC News 6; Hawa ii Five·O 10.
12:30--ABC News 13.
1:30o&lt;'Peylon Place 4.
MONDAY, MARCHl!, 1977

11 :3Q-Anlmals, Animals, Animals 6; Tesllmony Time

ht. 286.

65 FORD ', T. Pick.up , ex c. con d ..
low mileage . Ph . 446-6611 .

9 N FORD TRACTOR. 1967 GMC
Truck , 10 spd. , electr ic motor .
Hi ft . t ruc k bed . Ph. 367-7533.

6:GO-:-Sunrlse Semester 10.

Issues &amp; Answers 13; Wrestling 15; Nova 20; In-

OncJ;! Upon a Classic 33 .

2:30--Movle " Bride of the Gorilla" 4; Internal
Revenue Service 1!:1.

3:oo-Publlc Polley Forums 15; Third Testament 33 .
3:3G-Boxlng 6,13.
4: oo-Telethon.Contlnues 3; Movie "River of Mystery"
4; Golf a,10; Music City Special 15; Anyone for

SUNDAY CROSSWORD
PUZZLER
BUNDA Y.MwA 11, zg11
ACROSS

1 Em"• ¥11KH"
70utofdlte

711hMtafgllla
77 Grttk ..,..,.
78 SymbOl tor nttan
71Hrtlll

137HH..ntybodltl
131 Journay
141 Pronoun
142Woodltlvtlltl

11French•rtlct.

11 hlm1n

20 Sne~tl

.cltvtty
1115 4noor•-voat
hair nm

27Tticlullc•
111Poet
H FIHtdlmentll
H F1m111 dMr
31 Prtnt1r'1
102 Mound
Mr~ne
denty
IMIIUrt
104 Stparatt
21 Writing.,.,,...
84 ~11n1
1411Pttnllh for
34 Coneec~ta
tO&amp; Pot1eem1 n
ment
85 Grw•lttter
"thrH" .
38 Ar1bl1~ chief·
(ltlng
22118
87 Tt'lrH-tlllt ftll 148 EncountertG ·
taln
101 Unllnltrntlng
23 Path ofNrth
89 Aclntal¥llubt· 1 152 ElrtPI goddlaa
38Cyblc metera
per1ona
lboul thlaun
IInce
1~3 TPitng doni
40 Mtbrtw month 108 Ptlchtrl
24 Plfllll
90 Strl~l oul
1 155 W11r..1
421rtlti1H
110 PIQI
25 Mln'l niCkMme 112 Form
· 1157 Ptrlodt ol Um1 44 V~l
11 1 ChlfiCierllliCI
215 Alttrnoon per~4 Time long etnce 1 151 Sun god
&amp;B Dtcllrtd
112 Loved one
1111
Pill
180 Mor1y1
&amp;8 Unk)(tk
11 .. Buy biCk
28 Mllrtl)l"tltnl
Q! E.IIPtrl
1 &amp;2 Frtgrlnl
Btemlth
1 1 8 Mlli'a nlch1m1
30 Otpand1 on
Ill HINHII
fOOIItock
~- 150 Conllm(M:)t
117 lubrltllll
32 Cyprtnold tt1h
97 Kicked
184 4non
51 Symbol for
1 1II Jog
33 Bcold
99 OPinwork ltbrlc 1II Pttcllul
tlllurlum
121 Otmlge
35 Rlv1r In AlriC:I
100 Gr11t bultlrd 118 Lilli II ·
63 81 IWW of
122 SPHCt'l
37 Stc:ludld
101 ,llmbi
169 Hlr¥..11
55 NOll of ICIIt
123 R-clllltr•d
vtlleyl
102 Dlrtlcult
170 look lb.edl"t
58 Wllhlrtd
nur11 Wbbr.l
31Abouncl
103,1rtnt {colloq.) 161 NtWIII
58 Rill
125C!vllln)ury
40 BtVIfiOI
I OS EngriVII wllft
9/'llrt
1 27 .... , •• nickname
4tAtlllt(tbbr.)
IC!d
62GIIDforbftalt'l 121Procluctd
43Dtl~ntte
107El!ll
e5AIIO
129C•IIIng
•s E"«:oun11r1
10Q Prtflx: wrong
DOWN
88 Story
130 All
47 Aupua (lbbr .) 110 Evtrgrllfl trHI
8i Color
131 Spoors
&amp;I Arome.
111 Walk on
I Brlage
70 BIII'IO(I'I 1111
133 Confl1gration
•ea~gtn ·
113Pirtatnlngtotnt 2Tinut
72Dulrrtll
138Ptrformlr· 1152 Dtfrlud
dtwn
·
3 Printer 's
73 ElrlhQulkll
138 Flaltlah
s• Bt•mlrcftea 1 14 Ou•rr•t
m1uure
75 OpenWOfk labric140 C1ng•
158 M11t1
·
1 15 COmPIII point
ol P1rtorm
78 Ar1i11'1 bo1rd 1-43 Alllrnallng cur 57 OU·Ctrrylng
11 e Vtnlurieomt
5 Allltutt
77 Mur11
rent ltbbr.l
.vt'llll
117 NIIIVt meltl
8 Killed
79 Lflkl tt'lrcug, . 144 Alii bird
59 RIOt
118 To aotk fltx
7 P11nl11imo
80 Almlll'\tlelertCI 1 48 lrlllll
81 Grlt~llt~l
120 o·relk letter
ltbbr .)
82 Frolic
U8 Girl' a rtlmt '
82 EQUII
121 AI thla pl1ce
8 Prllll 'l VIII83 Fcundtllon
1 50 GOCidellof dlt·
83 Rly1r lt!ande
122 cun ar1Wer
ment
e• Shut a noltlly
cord
841.111n conjunc· 1231nlttl .
9 S()w
151 DIDIOrrtiCY
tlon
124 Frutt ctkt
tO C1plt1t ot
66 tn mi.lt lc, ftlgh '1 53 Sn1k•
81 Con)unotton
126 Schoolbook
Or1gon
18 EltclrllltcfPirl l· 154 Plncft
87 Man'l nlekn1m1 128 Burn wlth hot
11 Roman otttctala
ell
158 Wllgt'lt ollndll
•a
Mountlln like
will&lt;
12 Ccn)unc"llcn
1!I Dlpoal1
g
89Ccmmunton
l"l""hldl
891111an'l nttmt
130 Enrol l
13 Tr1nagreu
u u. o
J 4 Encour1g1
pltlt
t 83 Sttlmahlp
[tbbr .J
71 ThoM holding
I 32 Top of t'Ouat
15 Dltltnee run·
90 Apolhtclry 'a
llbbr.)
otlk:t
134 Frock
"'"
w1tght (pi.J
1es Note of ec::ate
72 Bllmlah
13!5 Mlgh
16 Pigpena
91 WllrCI
187 ComDIII DOinl
1• NHda
136 Article
t 7 Bitter vetch
93 Lowering villi

12 J~Mtetlftl
11 "lo'*"'ln"

Bt Edlblt-Med
82 S..1ontng
83 Lur1

·

6:15-f'arm Report 13.
.
6: 2Q-Not For. Women Only 13.
· 6:3Q-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Sun rise Semes ter a;
&gt;./Aedlx 10.
6 : 5~ood Morning , West VIrginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:oo-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; .Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:3Q-Schoolles 10.
7: 45-Sesame St. 33.
8:00--Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8.1 0.
8:3G-Big Val ley 6.
· 9:oo-A.M: 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15; Andy Griffith a:
Mi ke Douglas 10.
9:3Q-Cross-Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration B.
IO :OG-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Double Dare

fin ity Factory 33.
1:3G-Aware 6; Sportsman's Friend 13; Zoom 33.
I :45-NBA Basketball 8,10.
l :oo-Superstars 6,13: Insight 15; Classk Theatre 20;

76 Cobro Jl , V-6 , aut o. on flo or,
bu clo.et seats , Am . FM stereo
tape , $4900 . Ph . 446 -3180.

1969 O LDS CUTLASS, air cond. ,
low mile~ very ~ l eon , 109 il, 2nd
Ave . Coli Mon .-Fr i. 446-1642,

Then There Were None" 8; Face the Nation 10;

Hen ry M ahan 13; Once Upon a Classic 20.

1971 FORD GALAXIE 500; 4 Dr .
HT. A ir, radial tires, PS, om
rad io 895. Ph . 446-3237 alter 5
pm .

.

20; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
8:QO--Movie " Filght lo Holocaust" 3, 4,15; SIK Mlllion
Dollar Man 6,13; Rhoda a, 10; Prevln &amp; the Pittsburgh 20,33.
8:3G-Phyllls 8,10.
9:oo-Swltch 8,10; Masterp iece Thealre 20,33.
America 20.
ll ;oo-News 3,4,8,10, 13,1); FBI 6; Capitol Beat 33;
Opening Soon at a Theater Near You 20.
11: 15-CBS News a,10; Music Hall Am~rica 15.
ll:JQ-Star Trek 3; Movie "Mirage" 4; Movie "And

10 :3G-Garner Ted Armstrong 4; Jimmy Swaggart 6;
Robert Schuller 8; The World Tomorrow 13; Zoom
20.
n :oo-Doctors on Call 4; Re• Humbard 8.15; Rev .

1970 KARMEN GHIA, good cond ,
Ph. 446-1542.

1977 .VEGA HATCHBACK , 4 spd .,
good
gas mileage , . Ph .

367-754a.

51'0 33.

7: 3Q-Antlq~es

IO :·oo-Telethon Continues 3; Church Serv ice 4: Leroy
Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8: Movie " Madame
Curie" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Robert Schuller 15.

72 GRANO TORINO 351 . engine. 2
bbl. 58,000 miles. good cond .,

1975 JEEP RENEGADE ,

Hogan's Heroes 10; Parent to Parent 13; Li1tle

Mermaid 15; Sesame St. 20; Wall Street Week Jl.
6:30--News 6; NBC News 4,15; 30-Minutes 8; World
Press 33; $25.000 Pyram id 10; N0wsrnakers '77 13.
7:oo-World of Disney 3,4,15; Hardy Boys 6,13; 60·
Minutes 8,10; Crockett's Vl,tory Garden 20; Sludlo

a:oo-Day of Discovery 4; Communique 6: Church
Service 10; Happiness Is 13; Sesame St. 10.
a:3Q-Yours for the Asking 4; Gospel Caravan 6; Day

1974 MUSTANG II , Mach L Ask for
Ri clo. at (304 ) 675-3375 before 6 · 1973 FORD LTD, PS, PB, AUTO.
Good tires . air , $lb(Xl.OO Ph .
p.m . Good c.o nd ition , must selL
245 -5864.
J
197~ DODGE DART, 318 engine,
1970
PLY
Duster,
6
ely
,
3 s.pd ..
automafit;, 1 owne r. 50 .000
~500 .. 3 bike mo tor9cle tra iler
m1les . good conditio n, $1300,
$50 ., Ph .. 675·2943 after 5 pm .
Phone 742-2446:
1972 DODGE Dart . 318 engine
automatic , 1 owner , 50 000
miles. good condition , $1300.
Phone 742-2446

5:oo-Easter Is 15; The Way II Was 33. ~
5;3Q-FIInts1ones 15; Agronsky at Large20; Consumer
Survival Kit 33.
6:oo-News ~ ; Andy Grlfllfh 6; ; Andy Williams 8;

20.

1971- AMC MATADO R, p.s .. p.b.. 1970 PLY. DU STER , 340, 4 speed·, 4
bbl. , low mileage, "plus ex tros ,
V-8 automa tic , new battery,
con be seen at 825 3rd A..-e . or
and front hres . Makes good ·
coi1388-8BJ5 .
work.
cor . $550 . Phone
949 -2660,
1972 MERCURY MON TEGO. t ires
good co ndition. Coll992 -3994.

Documentary Showcase 20 ; ·Montcige. 33 .

7: 55-Biack Cameo 4.

"6-1532

Au to Sales

4:3G-Wide World of Sports 6,13; Waliy's Workshop 15;

Thinking in Black 8; Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13 .
7:3Q-Your Health ' ' Bullwlnkle 6; Porky Pig 10;
Amazing Grace Bible Class 13.

133 Pine St.

ed co uple . Ph . 446-2871 .

Tennyson? 20; Americana 33.

Forums 10; Newsmaker ' 77 13.
7:oo-Telethon Coptlnues 3; Tennessee Tuxedo 6;

SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS, INC.

HOUSE . 5 rooms with back on

1964

SUNDAY, MARCH l7, 1977
6:oo-Thl s Is The Life 10.
6:3G-Jerry Falwell•; Talking Hands B; Publ ic Polley

1

I 43 Ptrfcwma
tc&amp; lrulllaUO·

•a

eo

''

Admiral.

DUPLEX

Electronic
Cooking Centen
Admiral,

with us!
PlANNING APillA PARTY

~ll
• Freezers
• Stereos
• Dlshwashe.s

PHONE
THE AU NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
- Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas.
our delicious subs while you
sip your fa¥orite suds.
· Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

- Tn,

. MAINTAINS LEAD
HILTON HEAD ISLAND,
s. C. (UP! ) - Tom Watson
maintained his · Jead but
Danny Edwards, who started

tne day one stroke behind,
began to fade in early third·
round play Saturday of the
$225,000 Heritage . Golf
Classic.

EEL
rrmrn
RRmJRE

·The longer you own it,
the more you like it.

BAKER FURNITURE

)

....!b&lt;'t .-

SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, Spain (UP!) - Spanish
authorities said today incredlbl~ confusion surrounded the site
of history's worst aviation disaster but that the Panam flight
recorder indicated a Panam 747 turned into the path of a Dutch
KLM 747 roaring down the runway at 1B6 miles per. boor foi
takeoff.
The Spanish Air Ministry reported that 599 persons were
ldlled in the crash that was so 'fiery the asphalt nmway melted
as fuel aboard'U!e two jwnbos exploded in a serie~~ of blasts
that scattered bits of wreckage for a quarter of a mile.
The U.S. Embassy also reported 599 persons killed including
350 Americans and aU 249 persons aboard the KLM Charter
fly!ng tourists to the Canary Isla~Panam had put the figure
at about 575. The previous worst disaster was the crash of a
Turkish Airways DCIO near Paris on March 3, 1974, when ~

Dinah 13.
4: 15-Little Rascals 4.
4:3G-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4,8;
Emergency One! 6; Fllntstones 15.
s:oo-Btg Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:JQ-Adam -124; News6; Elec. Co. 2o.J3; Adam ~ 12 13.
6:oo-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3Q-NBC News3,A,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowl ing for
Dollars 6: News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three
Sons 15 ; Characteristics of Learning Disabilities 20;
Know Your Schools 33.
7:3Q-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Search of 4;
Muppet Show 6; Gong Show B; MacNeii.Lehrer
Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville on the Road 15 .
a:oo-NCAA Basketball 3,4,15; Brady Bunch 6,13;
Jeffersons 8, 10; Microbes &amp; Men 20,33.
8:3Q-Bustlng Loose 8,10.
9:0o-Perry Como 6,13; Maude 8,10; Palllsers 20,33.
9:3G-AII's Fair 8, 10.
10 :oo-Movle "All the Fighter" 3,4,15; Oscar Awards
6, 13; CBS News Special 8,10; News 20; Soundstage
33.
.
I0:3G-Farm Digest 20.
·
11 :OQ-News 3,4,8, 10,15.. Monly Python's Flying Circus
20; Black Journal 33 .
ll:JQ-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Koiak 8; Mary Hartman
10; ABC News 33.
12:0G-Movle "The Quiller Memorandum" 10; Janaki
33.
12 :3G-News 6,13.
12 :4G-Movle "To Commit a Murder" 8.

persons died.
HospitalB in Santa Cruz said they had treatejl 89 survivors,
all aboard the Panam plane that had taken off from los
Angeles oil a charter flight for Las Palmas where the Ameri·
can vacationers were 1o ·have boarded a ship for a Mediterranean cruise. Hospitals said 12 persons were treated and
released and 77 were still hospitalized.
Airport officials said they had recovered U!e Hight record
from the wreckage of the Panam jumbo, The sq.called "black
box" records cooversations between the pilot and the air
controller's office and Is useful in investigations of fatal
crashes because it also records altitudes and-speeds.
The SpaniBh news agency Cifra said that a replay of the tape
of contacts between the control tower and the two airplanes
showed that the Panam captain was given orders to stand by

oo the taxiway. But the pilot apparently mistook the runway
Pansm spokesman said. their 747 was hit broadside by the
for the taxiway , Cifra said,
speeding KLM plane as the Panam plane was taxiing to ita
A Panam spokesman in New York expressed skepticism takeoff point. BoUJ planes had been diverted 1o Santa Cruz
over the Cifra report. He said it just was not possible to sift when a bomb explosion in a florists shop at Las Palmastorced
through the mass of information in a Hight recorder ir) s~ch a closing of that airport in these Spanish islands off the
short time and that the technical means of doing so were not Mor&lt;iccan coast.
available at Tenerife airport.
Antonio Cubillo, the Algiers-based chief of the Canary Island
The Cifra report was not confirmed by authorities .and the Liberation movement, claimed responsibility for the Las
captain of the Panam plane was quoted by Cifra as blaming Palmas explosion and said his Marxist, separatist movement
groWJd fog for the collision. It quoted Capt. VictorS. Grubba, of would continue its war against Spain WJtil Spain gave the
Centerport, N.Y., as saying that his plane was moving slowly Canary Islands independence.
in U!e fog when it was hit by a Dutch KLM 747 late Sunday
A Spsnish government source said "incredible confusion"
afternoon.
was surroundipg U!e disaster site . One reason was that Santa
"We did not see anything until it happened," Grubbs was Cruz airport, the only one in Tenerife island, has been closed
quoted as sayiJI_s.
(Continued on page 8)

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVII NO. 242

for boy escapees

said, uwe ' have immecJtate
job openings in several of our
programs and we will be glad
.to discuss Air Force opportunities with anyone ir)terested." The team wOl be at
the Honday .Inn , intersection
of Route 7 and Interstate 77
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Saturday, April 2.

l

'
THE INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR of Thinking Day
was carried out in costuming worn at right by these troop
representatives, LariSsa long and Melinda Mankin,
Chester Brownie and Juniors. Tahiti: Sherri Bell. !IJ!cino
Juniors, Spain; Debby Werry, Pomeroy, Juniors, Hawail,
and Patty'M~Salerrteenter-Brownie&gt;s ;China, l~t to
right.

HEIRLOO

. I' , -

ABOVE, MELODY WEST, front, of' Racine Junior
Troop 1137, came costwned as a buU to represent Spain.
Others left to right are Terri Combs of the Rutland Troop,
Gennany; Kathy Pickens, Syracuse Brownies; Holland,
and Kenda Rizer, Racine Brownies, Switzerland. With the
scouts are Mrs. Pat Thoma, sezyice unit director, and
Mrs. Becky Mankin, right, Thinking Day chairman.

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••
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Fumiture Dept.
3rd Floor·

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

By United Press International
BROOK PARK, OHIO - SAFETY FORCES and Service
department.employes voted over the week~nd to accept new
contracts, ending strikes thaJ had restricted city services,
municipal spokesmen said. Safety forces members, wbo
walked out last Monday morning, were back at work today
following a 55-2 vote to accept a new one-year contract
JrOviding a $1,350 raise, paid overtime, health henefits and
training bonuses. .
:&gt;ervtce depsrtment workers, wbo began their strike
March 10, accepted a package giving 56-cent.an.Oour raises
this year and next and tromptly hauled away 10 truckloads of
refuse piled up at a temporary dump at the service garage.
Regular pickup serVice was scheduled to resume today. .

'i '
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SALE

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"'

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&lt;·. ;·, : ·. ·..'

Thinking was about others
,,

By Charlene Hoeflich
CHESTER - International Thinking
!Joy was celebrate(! by the Meigs County
Girl Scouts Sunday at the elementary school
here.
Mrs. Becky Mankin· was chairman for
the celebration which featured scouts in
cxrstuming of several countries pre&amp;enting
songs, games and dances of the land each
·
represented.
Mrs. Pat Thoma, Meigs Girl Scouts unit
service chairman, welcomed the scouts and
about 100 parents and friends. Mrs. Jane
Wise was at the piano for the ceremonial
opening whidl included the Girl Scout
pledge and promise presented by the

Syracuse Juniors , and group singing of
"God Ble\ss America."
Mrs. Mankin was mi stress of
ceremonies with the Pomeroy Juniors
~esenting Hawaii, the Salisbury Brownies,
Rhodesia; the Racine Juniors, Spain; the
Rutland Brownies, Germany; the Chester
BroWnies and Juniors, Tahiti; the Syracuse
Brownies and Juniors, Holland; and the
Salem Center Brownies, China.
For the finale the girls sang, "Make
New Friends," "The Brownie Smile Song,''
and "Yankee Doodle ." ' The Syracuse
Juniors retired the colors.
Foods from the various countries were
served following the program.

.
Bleeding statue, miracles, inspire

Episcopal bishop to revqke license
CITY COUNCIL WILL be presented

CLEVELAND legislation tonight requiring all homeowners in the city to
install smoke detectors or face fines and possibly jail.
Democratic Councibnen D~vid Collier of Ward 17 and
Bilsil M. Russo of Ward 19 say the proposed ordinance would
give homeowners WJtil July I, 1978, to install the devices,
which Russo says cost from $20 to $30. "I think that most
people would probably be more than glad to comply
vohmtarily anwway," Russo said. "Having a law will just spur
them on a little."

•.

EDDY!tl'ONE, Pa. (UPI)
The Rev. Chester
Olszewski says his role in the
discovery of a bleeding statue
in his church and miracles in
his parish is the real reaB&lt;m
the Pennsylvania Episcopal
Diocese revoked his Ucense.
The diocese's official
· BRAZZAVILLE, CONGO - A CONGOLESE MIUt:ARY rea110n for its action was the
court today sentenced [our persons, including a former unauthorized ceremonies
Jremler kl Ufe imprisonment as the result of the assassination Olszewski performed.
of President Marien Ngouabi, officials announced. The
milltary government renewed warnings against any attempt
'-Ain.i n. a
by "agitators to trollt by _the present situation to create hatred
u-......,-e
and divlaion and promote disorders."
Brazzaville Was cairn although a dusk-to-dawn curfew was
enforced. Officials said life sentences were given former
Prime Minister Pascal I.Jssouba, fermer Coagolese Workers' .
party official Claude Ernest NdaUa, Antoine Mayltoukou and
·Rubin Moogala, who were not otherwise Identified. Ai.J. were
New officers and the ad·
convicted of compllctty in the slaying of Ngouabi.
visors ol the Meigs Chapter,
F'Uture·Farmers of America,
BEIRtrr, lEBANON - OVER RJGHI'IST objectioTI8, the &lt;ttended the district officers
cabinet \Oday ·appointed Col. Victore Kliouri as the new lraining session March 21 at
ciXnmander of the Lebanese army. Rightists in east Beirut the Washington County Joint
went oo strike today to protest the JrOposed changes in the
army high conunand hours after a maaaive bomb blast Vocatlonai College, Gar;·
destroyed the home of Foreign and Defense Minister Fuad &amp;Ill day, ~esident; Patty
Byer, vice ll'esident; Steve
Blllroa.
, Kno\11'1, 47, commander of the Lebanese army;a armored Kinsel, treasurer and Lee
divlalon8 was appointed by President Elias Sarkla with the l~wls, 'student advisor,
approvill of the Lebanese Cabinet. Khouri replaces Gen. learned responsibilities of
offices . Everett
Hanna Said, a right!Jt and a known aupporter of the "Lebanese their
ltlicomb
and Allan Holter,
Front" - an alliance ofi!Uljor·right-wtngpollticalfactlons.
are faculty advisor.
T~ ~ new executive com· ·
mittee
met March 24 to plan
ENVELOPII:S WANTED
the 1il77-78 term activities.
Students of the Meigs .mere they will be picked up The chapter's fifth annual
l'.bunty schools are asked to by a reJresentative of the ptrt~~t&lt;~tudent banquet will
return their "Send. a Mouse to Meigs Un~ of the American · IE held at 7 p.m. on AJril 5
CoUege" envelopes to their . Cancer Society late in the with Sue Clark, U!e state
respecti..., !lchoolB this w~k week.
sentinel, a,tspeaker.

FFA

session held
at college

Olszewski claims he has a
bleeding ststue in St. Luke 's
church in this southeaBtern
Pennsylvania community
and that there have been
"miraculous" visions and
occurrences in the parish in
recent montha.
The Right Rev. Lyman C.
OgUby, bishop of the
PeiU!Sylvania diocese, late
last
wceek
revok.ed,
Olszewski's license. He said
the disciplinary action was
taken because Olszewski per·
formed "unauU!orized ri\!!s
and ceremonies in public
worship."
The 33-year-old ex-marine
says he and his parishioners .
will oppose the decision.
''We'll have to be removed
bodily," · Olszewski said.
"They'll have to bring in the·
pollee with clubs and dogs."
The Buffalo, N,Y. native,

said he and his parishioners
do not want a schism. "We
just want the bishop to accept
what Is occurring here at St.
Luke's," Olszewski said.
The controversy over the
siH:alled bleeding statue
developed when it was
discovered in late 1975 in the
home of a parishioner, Mrs.
Anne Poore. Mrs. Poore and
others claimed they saw
blood appear on U!e hands
and feet of the statue of
Christ,
A few months later,
Olszewski had the statue
placed on the altar at St.
Luke's where he says it still
bleeds periodically.. He also
cllijfns parishioners have
been cured of crippling
illnesses during church services.
In addition, he says parish·
(Continued on page 8)

A shotgun, tape player,
automobile, CB radios, even
two cast iron dinner bells,
figured in thefts reported to
Meigs County Sher~f James
J. Proffitt over the weekend.
An all·points bulletin Is out
!Dr two boys believed to have
ltolen the car.
The auto ta ken right out of
the yani of John Tillis, RD 4,
Reedsville, early Sunday
rooming, apparently figured
in the escape of the juveniles
from the Fairfield School for
Boys.
One
theft
occurred
Saturday, March 19, but was
oot reported WJtil March 25.
Otarles Morton Butcher, Rt.
4, Pomeroy, said a 12 gauge
automatic shotgun and an
eight track tape player were
ltolen from his residence.
Glenn Baker, RD, Reeds·
ville (Success Road ) told the
sheriff's department
Saturday that sometime
Friday night two cast iron
dinner bells were stolen from
his property.
The stolen car switch
report began Sunday at 3:30
am. when John Tillis, Rt. I,
Reedsville, reported that his
stepdaughter's 1971 Ford ·
Mustang had "just been .
!tolen ."
Tiltis said he heard a noise,
went out to investigate, and
discovered the car missing.
Tillis started south in his car
in search of it and found a
1970 Ford car sit ling along SR
7 on Massar Hm a short
&lt;istance from his horne.
The car's engine was
warm; its gas tank . empty.
The vehicle had been "hot·

'

1

it near the Tillis residence, in
turn taking the Tillis vehicle.
Th e escapees are from
Lawrence and Montgomery
&lt;XJunties.
In the abandooed car from
Rockbridge deputies .found a
J. C..Penney CB Radio that
appeared to have been ripped
from a car. Later Sunday
morning Russell Shields,
Tuppers Plains, called to
advise that during the early
morning hours someone had
tried to steal his car, had
~ied off the ignition switch
cxrver and removed a J. C.
Penney CB Radio. The serial
numbers matched the CB
found in the abandoned auto.
The department also
received a tall from Roland

Torrence, Tuppers

Plain~,

that someone had tried to
!teal his car during the night
mtl that the swttch had been
lroken. An all·points bulletin
has been issued for the stolen
car and escapees from FSB.
At 4 a.m. Sunday, the
sheriff's department in·
'"stigated a traffic accident
thatoccurredonSR 7northof
Pomeroy.
Richard L.
Hunter,
Columbus, told deputies he
was traveling south when an
mldentified vehicle traveling··
mrlh crowded him off the
mad causing him to hit a
Ltilily pole. There was heavy
damage to the ca r. There
were no injuries and no
ar!'est .

MINES CLOSED
Members of lbe United Mlne Workers union struck the
No. 3 mine of the Soutbem Ohio Coal Co. In Meigs County
late Sunday and banda of roving pickets eiosed tbe firm's
· No. I an1 No. Z mine early tOOay.
The reason for the strike al the No. 3 mine was not
Immediately determined.
1be strike and piekellng has forced 1,500 minen off the
job. ·
A meeting was scheduled for IOOay between UMW
offtelalll an1 represeolallves of th~ coal company.

:~;~~~~~~~~~ ~:~~j~~i~~r~~~~~t;j~~:frj;j~~~~r:~:r~t:~/~~:~:~:~I~~~~ t:~~~:j~j;~~j;j:~:~:j:~:~~j:~:~~I~~t~~~~~~~~~~~:~ ~ :~ ~ ~ ~

Court to rule
on NiXon tapes

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Supreme Court today agreed
to decide whether tapes of Richard Nixon's conversations,
It was learned later in the used to help convict his closest White House illdes of Watergate
rooming that the 1970 Ford offenses, may be publicly distributed.
The justices will hear argwnents next fall or winter on the
oot of gas had been stolen
·wring the night in Rock· former president's objections to further publicizing of the
bridge, Ohio, Hocking recordings played to the jury during the 1974 trial. The issue
Qrunty, sometime alter 8 wlli be decided later by written opinion.
p.m.
In t~e interim, / in played at cocktail parties and
Sunday morning the
in satiric productions."
lberiffs office learned from accordance with a d~on
But the appeals court said,
the Security office at Fair· by the U.S. Court of Appesls "The embarrassment Mr.
field School for Boys, Lan· in Washington, arrangements Nixon anticipates Is largely
caster, that two juveniles had have been in JI'Ogress mass that which results whenever
escaped Saturday, the last marketing of the tapes misconduct or questionable
trace of them . in the Rock· pending conclusion of the conduct is exposed."
lawsult.
!ridge area.
The material does not
U.S. District Judge John
It was theorized that the
encompass
all that was
ffiCapees look the car at Sirica had barred dlstribulioo subpoenaed from the White
the
Watergate
Rockbridge, then abandoned until.
defendants had exhausted House at the time of the trial
- only what was heard in the
their appeals,
But the appeals court ruled courtroom.
Texts are available in
this was not serious enough
bookstores
t~roughout the
Rain ending early tonight and noted U!at none of the
country.
Other
cooversations
md clearing, lows tonight defendants th~lves had
remain
conlictentiill.
around 55. Partly sunny and objected.
Slrica was told the National
Nixon contended his
warm Tuesday, highs 75 to 80.
Archives
could distribute the
Otances of rain M per cent personal privacy .was
tapes
to
the
Jllblic for 75 to
&lt;Brly tonight, decreasing to invaded by placing the tapes
$4
per
one.Jtour
cassette reel
in lll'ivate hands "to be
·:!l per cent Tuesday.
or $5 kl $5.75 per ooe-hour
tape reel.
wired.''

Weather

sa.

District 17 la-wyers hosted- in Pomeroy Saturday 1,,ti?f:@:~:t~''ttnt:~::~: : : : t: : i:
Welcome was extended by
Meigs Probate and Juvenile
Judge Manning Webster,
!l'esident of the locill bar
association, w~en District 17
ri the Ohio Bar Alisociation
met Saturday al the Meigs
Inn .
·
During the afternoon
session ,IW!ich began at 3
p.m ., Neil DOion, Logan,
district rxecutive ·rommitteeman, .ll'talded. Be~r

jamin Suffron, Columbus,
addressed the attorneys and
' elhibited new legal forms for
· t11e irt probate cxrurts. The
new forms are standardized
to be used throughout the
~ie and are designed to
simplify probate court
li'OCedW'es.
·Robert A. Manning,
Qrlumbus. director of tne
Jllblic affairs of the state

asso~iation,
spoke on
legislation, specifically of
laws pending in the
legislature that may affect
the judicial system or the
ll'actice of la·w. During the
business session Gary Frye of
Marietta was named new
ertecutive cxrmmltteeman.
A 6:30 p.m. din her
(X'eet:ded the evening session
when Jamllle Jamaro.

0

'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Search pressed

Air Force has job openings

LBERFELDS

enttne

MONDAY,1 MARCH 28, 1977

1: ()G....-Tomorrow 3,4; Ironside 13.

COLUMBUS - A special
team of Air Force recruiters
from Detachment 514, here,
will be in Marietta April 2 to
interview persons interested
In any of several Air Force
programs.
Detachrilent Commander,
Major William D. Sheppard,

•

at y

e

2:oo-News 13.

R~gular
Your assurance of quality. From
inside, out - only the finest
materials are used.

Panam 147's wrong turn blamed or
599 deaths, including 350 Americans

Sesame St. 20,33; Movie "Satan's Harvest" 10;

Upcoming
(Continued from page D·2)
year in per capilli beef
supply.
Later, as cattlemen began
to rebuild ll!eir herds, the
price advance presumably
would halt, but changes
would be comparatively
gentle.
In " Alternative B Drought Persists," Nix said
changes would be more
dramatic, With gr112ing ·poor,
grain crops low and fOQd
prices·high, cattlemen would
step ijp liquids lion of their
herds.
This would hold down the
pace of price · increases
tllrough 1977 and part of 1978,
but after that the sharp drop
in the available beef supply
would touch off sharp and
dramatic price increases for
both cattle and beef.

...

8.10; Mike Dougla~ 13.
10:3Q-Holl ywood Squares 3,4,15; Pr1ce·ts Righi 8,10.
11 :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Morn ing Show 13;
ll lec. Co. 20.
11 :3Q-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,1 5: Happy Days 6,q;
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 : 5~ B S News a; Ms. FIKlt 10.
12 :oo-News 3,4,6, 10; SeconH Chance 13; Name That
Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.
12 :30--Lovers &amp; Friends 3,1 5; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search, for Tomorrow 8,10.
~:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;
Young &amp; ihe Resile .. 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1: 3G-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Famlll' Feud 6, 13; As
The World Turns B.lO. •
2:oo-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:3G-Doctors 3,4;15; One Life lo Live 6,13; Gui ding
Light 8, 10.
3:oo-Another World 3,4, 15; All In The Family a, 10;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
·
3: 15-General Hospital 6,13.
3:3o-Mafch Game 8,10: Lilias Y&lt;!ga &amp; You 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8;

·~

I

Toledo, president of the O~io
!late Bar Assn., spoke !ising
the topic , "The Lawyer on
Trial" taking up problems
relating to the legal
Jrofessional such as advertising. The district is
rna de up of the bar
associations of At~ens ,
Hocking, Meigs, Mo~gan ,
Noble and Was~ingt on
Counties.

EXTENDED OliTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of sbowers
··:wedne~~day . Fair Thursday
and Friday. Turning ~ler
with highs Wedaesday In
tbe 70s and low 80s, coolin1
by Friday to blgbs In the
upper40sand IowSO.. Lowo
in the mid aDd upper 2k.

•

\

\\

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