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                  <text>12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~roy, O., Frtday,

Area deaths
John L. Bentz

••

WINNER- Cel Jenkins, 19, Racine, won an all-expense paid trip for
two to Pittsburgh, Pa., to attend a concert. Cel won the trip for having the
best display of advertising in the "Be A Pepper" contest sponsored by Dr.
Pepper. The contest was aired over WXIL Parkersburg.

HOSPITAL :'\E\\ S
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted--Allen
Blackwood ,
Pomeroy; Evelyn Murray, Middleport; Robert Good, Middleport;
Lawrence Darst, Middleport; Freda
Fields, Pomeroy; Benjamin Moore,
Middleport.
Discharged-Walter Haggy, Clara .
Adams, Myrna Beaver, Melvin Kirby.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGE'S MAY 8
Wendell Chapman, Stella Clark,
Diana Clonch, Opal Conger, Raymond Cox, Teresa Crouch, Oral
Eads, Rosa Griffin, Jolm Grueser,
Mrs. Tim Gumpf and daughter,
Janet Hall, Marjorie Henry, Chris
Johnson, Elber Johnson, Louise
Jones, Lula Lawrence, Woodrow
Martin, Calra McManis, Clinton

Murphy Jr ., Harry Perkins,
Theodore Riley Sr., AstoHo Rocchi,
Cheryl RusseU, Linda Shinn, Mary
Shupe, Harry Strater, Bessie Swain,
Clarence Waugh, James Wyatt.
BffiTHS

Mr. and Mrs. Denny Adkins, son,
Grimm's Landing ; Mr. and Mrs.
William Cash, daughter, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Rush Thompson,
daughter, McArthur.
NAMED TO BOARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Historical Society bas &amp;!)pointed Dr. Frances K. Harding to
its board of trustees, succeeding
Mrs. Joy Wade Moulton, who left the
board recentiy.
The new trustee is the widow of
Dr. Warren G. Harding II, a former
board member.

1n our May 8th Patio Ad our 4 Leg
Gym Set is incorrectly pictured and
described.
It does not include 2 passenger lawn
glyder and is not a Gym Dandy and
is brown and green,
Sunday Store Hours 1-6
We regret any inconvenience this
may have caused our customers.

Jolm L. Bentz, 90, Racine, died
Friday at Coshocton.
Mr. Bentz was born June I, 1889ln
Ohio, a son of the late WilliamS. and
Lydia A. Weaver Bentz. He was
preceded in death also by his wife,
Bertha E. Wickline Bentz, four
sisters and a brother.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Russell (Helen) Rhodes, Manetta; a
son, William W. Bentz, Coshocton;
four sisters, Mrs. Ernest (Kathleen)
Ashley, Salem; Mrs. Helen Mineard,
St. Cloud, Fla.; Mrs. Dorothy Whitmer, Delaware, and Mrs. Isabel
. Wilson, Columbus, five grandchildren and five great ,
grandchildren.
Mr. Bentz was a member of the
Racine Baptist Church.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday at the Racine Baptist
Church with the Rev. Don Walker officiating. Burial will be in the Plants
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home from 2
to 4and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. The body
will be taken to the church to lie in
state from 1 p.m. until time of services on Monday.

Barbara J. Hoffman
Barbara J. Hoffman, 24, Circleville, formerly of Pomeroy, died
Thursday morning at her residence.
She was born Nov. 20, 195li in
Columbus, a daughter of Robert and
Bess Hendricks Tobin. She was a
member of the First United
Brethren Church in Christ, Columbus, and had served in the U.S. Army.
Surviving are her husband, Kenneth; a son, Robert, Circleville; her
mother, Bess Hendricks, ·Middleport; her paternal grandmother,
Wanda Dennis; maternal grandmother, Neva Gary, both of Columbus; three brothers, Tbomas, with
the U. S. Navy in California; Robert
with the Navy in Hawaii, and Arthur, Middleport; two sisters, Mrs.
Rick (Terti) Smith and Mrs. Tina
Hendricks, both of Middleport.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday at the Mader-~
Funeral Home in Circleville with the
Rev. Don Yocum officiating. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday and from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. Burial
will be in Forest Cemetery at Circleville.

Harriett Powell
Mrs. Harriett (Hattie) Powell, 82,
Racine, died Thursday night at the
home of a daughter, Mrs. Clifford
Beegle, Racine.
Mrs. Powell was born Nov. 20,
1897. a daughter of the late Joseph
and Armintha Thomas McElroy.
She was also preceded in death by
her husband and several brothers
and sisters.
Surviving are two daughters, Mias
Addie Powell and Mrs. Mattie
Beegle, Racine; a son, Gerald (Gig)
Powell of Pomeroy; a sister,
Mrs.M~ry Circle, Racine; six grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and

VOLKSWAGEN DOES IT AGAIN

~

Meigs County happenings •• •

several nieces and nephews.
DISCO DANCE
.
A disco dance will be held from 8
Mrs. Powell was a member of the
to 11 :30 p.m. Saturday at the Orchid
Racine Chapter, Order ·of Eastern
Star.
Room under the sponsorship m
Music Unlimited. Chaperones will
Funeral services will be held at 2
be present.
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Carl Hicks officiating. Burial will be in GreenMUSICAL PLANNED
wood Cemetery. Eastern Star. rites
GRANTS DIVORCE
Students of the Meigs Junior High
will he held at 7:30p.m. this evening.
In Meigs County Common Pleas
S!:hool will stage a spring musical at
Friends may call at the funeral
Court Laura J . Self was granted a
7 p.m. Tuesday in the school
home from 7 to 9 this evening. In · divorce fr11n J . B. SeH on charges d
auditorium. Direction for the event,
lieu of flowers friends may make
gross neglect of duty.
open to the public, is by Ed
contributions to the Laurel Cliff
Harkless.
Health Club.
'
OPEN HOUSE SET
Edna Summerfield
An open house will be held Sunday
FUND ESTABLISHED
at
I
p.m.
at
the
Grange
beginning
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP) - Ohl~
Mrs. Edna M. Summerfiled, 91,
Hall
at
Rock
Springs
Fairground
in
State
University
has established .a
Rt. 1, Long Bottom died early today
observance
of
the
IOOth
birthday
of
journalism
scholarship
fund l1i
at Holzer Medical Center following a
Goldie
Colmer.
memory
of
Paul
N.·
Williams,
.Pullt;
brief illness.
zer
Prize
winning
journalist
and
Mrs. Summerfield was born at
who
died
in
October
faculty
member
BRUSHFIRE
Vadis, Lewis County, W. Va. the
!W76.
The Pomeroy Fire Department
daughter of the late Charles and
The lund was made possible bY
was called to near Harrisonville at
Statira Rinehart Lamb. She was
gifts
of more than $5,1XX1 from frien3:37 p.m. Thursay to extinguish a
preceded in death by her husband,
ds
and
colleagues of Williams.
'
brushfire.
Daniel T. Summerfield in 1957. She
was also preceded in death by four
brothers.
She was a member of St. Paul's
United Methodist Church, Tuppers
Plains.. She had been a resident of
Ohio the past 66 years.
She Is survived by four sons, Earl
Summerfiled, Murraysville, Pa.;
A Hallmark card tells her best how m uch you
Buel Summerfield, Charleston ;
love her. Mother's Day, Sunday. May 11.
Charles Summerfield, Savannah,
c 1980 H01llmark Cards. Inc
Ga., and Rexal Summerfield, Reedsville; two daughters, Mrs. Herbert
(Irene) Parker, Syracuse, and Mrs.
Cecil (Mildred) Caldwell, Reedsville; two sisters, Mrs. Georgia
Clifford, Columbus, and Mrs. Opal
Pow~ll, Gallipolis;
17 grandchildren, 30 great grandchildren and one great great granddaughter.
Funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. at St. Paul's United
Methodist Church with the Rev.
Richard Thomas officiating. Burial
will be in the Tuppers Plains
Christian Cemetery. The body will
lie in state at the church one hour
prior to services. Friends may call
at the White Funeral Home in
Coolville after 7 p.m. on Saturday.

A Message
for Mother

Veterans •••

195 Upper River. Rd.

446-9800

Gallipolis, 0 . ·

(Cont inued trrrn ,;age 1J

•

unba
VOL. 15 NO. 15

tmts

GALLIPOL1.)- POIN I PLEASANT

SUNDAY, MAY 11, 1980

••

tnltttt
MIDDLEPOR l- I'OM EROY

PR ICE 35 CENTS

Divers seek
more bodies
.

ByMATIBOKOR
Associated Press Writer
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) Divers resumed their grim task in
Tampa Bay Saturday, searching f«r
more bodies entangled in the twisted
steel and concrete rubble left when
the SWlShine Skyway bridge COlla!)sed after being rammed by a huge
phosphate ship.
At least 32 persons were killed in
the Friday morning accident, which
happened during a blinding, rushhour rainstorm. Officials feared the
death toll could go higher.
Meanwhile, Coast Guard Cmdr.
Wllliam Murray said the pilot on
board the Summit Venture, Jolm
Lyro, was guiding another ship, the
720-foot Liberian freighter Jonna
Dan, when it hit the bridge and
caused W),IXXI in damage on March
8. The state Board of Pilot Commissioners said it had begun an investigation. Lyra could not be
reached for comment.

I

Coast Guard Lt. Steve Venckus
said today that divers had found a
bwnper from a Volkswagen Rabbit
near the accident site, possibly indicating a car authorities did not
know about had plunged off the
bridge. There was no Rabbit among
the three cars found by divers hours
after the accident.
However, the divers could not tell
immediately ho\v long the bumper
had been on the bottom, Venckus
said.
Only 18 bodies had been recovered
before rescue operations · were
halted by bad weather and darkness
Friday night. Most of the victims
were passengers aboard a
Greyhound hus that plunged into the
bay when the 1,400 feet of road gave
way.
Only one man survived the fall.
His pickup truck bounced off the 60&amp;foot freighter Swnmit Venture, then
bounced into the water. He swam
free. his forehead gashed.

service organizations, businesses,
industries,
government
agencies,
ultimately
each individual
citizen.
On this expanded team, the
hospital works with others in
assessing the community's health
needs and in identifying the best
ways to meet them.
New services, programs, or
facilities may be needed. Changes
may be required in existing ones.
The system must be flexible to meet
the needs of a chaDging community.
It would be easy to stop there, to
place the entire responsibility for
community health on readily identified institutions. But realistically,
success '·m meeting conununity
needs depends to a great extent on
the responsiveness and participation
of the people who make up the community.
Each citizen has an individual
responsibility to community health.
The most basic is safeguarding personal health, maintaining a healthy
life-style, and setting a healthy
example for others. The individual
also has a responsibility for being informed about the health services
available and for making efficient
and effective use of them.
For those who want more direct
involvement, opportunities exist as
volunteers and part-time workers in
hospitals and other health
organizations. Individuals also can
participate actively in hospital
governing bodies, local health
system agencies, and other areas of
health leadership.
1be "we" in "We're America's
Health Team" isn't just limited to
hospitals and health professionals. It
encompassses everyone. Meeting
our community's health needs takes
teamwork in the broadest sense. It's
a responsibility to be shouldered by
all.
and

World focus

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

r•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·----------..

From'l'be

Bush has reason to stay in race

t

WASHINGTON - George Bush ·has a lot of reasons for staying in the
'ltepubllcan presidential race. Put them all together and they spell: why not.
As well as any politician, Bush knows the mathematics -the cold figures
of the delegate count - are against him. But he persists : He has nothing to
lose, and anything can happen.
Bush is quick to say that 49 percent of the delegates going to the
Republican National Convention in Detroit will ~ot be legally bound to any
candidate.

Premier criticizes lack of training
TOKYO (AP l - In an apparent swipe at senior Vice Premier Deng
Xiaoping, Premier Hua Guofeng has criticized the decline in communist
ideological training in the face of China's massive modernization program.
But it remained to be seen whether the thrice-purged Deng, chastized for
his pragmatism in the past, was in serious trouble again.
Hua chose an important forum - a meeling of political commissars in
Peking late last month- at which to voice his veiled criticism of Deng.

CAN'T

BE SEAT./

Independence vote slated May 20

You just can't beat FULL-SERVICE BANKING
for effi ciency, economy, convenience and
personal satisfaction. We'll gladly explain
how our Complete-Service concept can serve you.

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy

naliona
bank

MONTREAL - The people mQuebec decide in a referendum May 20
whether to take a big step toward pulling their largely French-speaking
province out of the Canadii,UI confederation.
No matter which side wins, Canada's political structure is expected to undergo a major overhaul, and the repercussions will be felt in the United
States.
The voters are being asked to give the provincial government a mandate
to negotiate "sovereignty-association" with the other nine provinces and the
Canadian federal government.

Peaceful strike rally concludes

the bank of
the century
established 1872 .

FDIC

EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio - As a two-hour rally planned by striking police
and firefighters over union representation ended peacellllly Saturday,
representatives began gearing up for the first set of negotiations since the
dispute began.
The talks, set lor for noon Sunday, were scheduled after city officials
reached an "understanding" early Saturday with leaders of the strikers,
who walked off the job Tuesday, said safety forces' attorney Michael Kapp.

Weather forecast
Cloudy with a chance of showers or thunderstonns Sunday. High near
00. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Ohio Exteuded Oudoolo:
By Tile Allooclated Press
Monday lbrougb Wednesday- Achance of sbowen Monday aud Tueaday,
fair Wednesday. Lows Monday in the upper 5011 to mid 111111 aDd Tueaday and
Wednesday in the SO.. Hlgbl Monday aud Tuesday eo to 8S aDd Wedneaday 55

-..reo.

.

Goven1ment approves loan

MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
IN JUNE 3, 1980 PRIMARY
"QUALIFIED TO SUIT THE

..

State and nation a I ..... . ....................... 0 -1
TV guide ..................... .. ........ .. _ .. _ 0 •9

floor.

REPUBUCAN CANDIDATE FOR

Choose From
.
•9 Rabbits
•4 Sciroccos
•1 Dasher
· Get'em While They Last#

twinbilL . . C-1

we have a fine selection to Mother's Day cards plus gift wrap

CLELAND, JR.

DUE TO THE EYER INCREASING DEMAND FOR OUR PRODUCTS,
RIVERSIDE V.W. HAS MADE A SPECIAL PURCHASE OF (15)
FACTORY FRESH, EXTRA CARS FOR YOUR iNSPECTION, MOST
ARE ALREADY HERE WHILE OTHERS ARE ARRIVING DAILY!

Mama?.. . B-1

Rio splits

- ribbon · gift enclosures. Select what you need on the 1st

HENRY HANK"
5PECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE"

Area ~~aths .............................• , . .. . A· 6
Cla_ss•f_led ads .......•........•..•..•.•....... 0 •4.9
Edotonal ........ . .............•..... . .... . ... A-2
Farm news ........ , •............... • ........ . o-2
Loca I .........••... . ........•..... .. . . ..•. .. A-l -8
Lotestvle ........... . ...... . ................ B-1-.10
Sports .. . •.................. . . ... _.... . ..... C- 1-8

Did you remember

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were Issued to
Tbomas Eugene White, 26, Long Bottom, andSuanDiane Bennett, 27, Rt
1, Ree&lt;bville; Rlchardo Lee Bolin,
23, Rutland, and Brenda Elaine
Splres, 22, Rutland.

11

11

Where It is Inside

NEEDS OF. MEIGS COUNTY."

HENRY E.

TERM BEGINNING JANUARY 2, 1981

"Hank"
JR.

WASHINGTON (AP) The
government approved $1.5 blllion in
loan guarantees Saturday for the
financially plagued Chrysler Corp.
after the automaker secured private
financial backing needed for the
federal package.
Treasury Secretary G. William
Mlller said If the plan were not approved, the nation's third largest
autommobUe manufacturer would
have exhausted lts funds by the end
of thla month and "would have found

itself unable to continue."
Under the plan, Chrysler will be
able to draw up to $500 million in
loan guarantees beginning in 2%
weeks. Approval of the plan by the
Chrysler Loan Guar!llltee Board
followed an agreement earlier
Saturday between Chrysler and the
Canadian government on a separate
loan support program.
That agreement allowed the company to put together a $1.43 bWlon
private financing package.
1

CHECKS HOLDING TANK CAPACITY- Four wells are located on
property owned by Thomas Hart - a dozen other rigs are within view of
his land.
·

MEIGS OIL BOOM - One area influenced by the recent installation
of aU rigs lies on Old U.S. 33, near Darwin. In open fields on both sides of
that highway are stationed numerous producing oil and gas wells.

Interest in oil -- black gold -- keyed
by successful drilling in Meigs area
By LARRY EWING
GAUJPOLIS - A noimber of
Meigs Countians are speaking·
seriously and personaUy these days
about "undiscovered resources,"

"new au, -- "wma-tall profits'
taxes."
Interest in the subject of oil-the
proverbial black gold-has been
keyed by the successful drilling of a

number of wells in many areas of
that Southeast Ohio area.
One area particularly influenced
by the recent installation of oil rigs
lies on Old U.S. 33. near Darwin. The

first few miles of that road presents
a scene reminiscent of the film
"Giant" ; but, on a noticably smaller
scale. In open fields on both sides of
(Cont inued on pag e A·J)

Islamic party takes commandmg lead
By Tile Associated Press
The Islamic Republican Party,
many of whose members demand
spy trials for the American hostages
in Iran, took a commanding lead
Saturday in returns from the runoff
round of the Iranian parliamentary
election.
Officials in Tehran said the new
Parliament, which must decide the
hostages' fate , will probably con-

vene within two weeks.
For the 53 hostages, who reportedly have been scattered among 13
Iranian cities, Saturday was the end
of their 27th week in captivity.
As the election results mounted,
confusion developed over when Iran
will get a prtme minister and
Cabinel, its first full permanent
government since the revolution
that toppled Shah Mohanunad Reza

Pahlavi in February 1979.
The Tehran newspaper Bamdad
said President Abolhassan BaniSadr would appoint the ministers
within one week, and the new goverrunent's first duty will be to try to
resolve the U.S.-Iran crisis.
But another newspaper, Ettelaat,
quoted Sadegh Tabatabai, a top official in the prtme minister's office,
as saying that because of "recent

developments, I don 't think Mr.
Bani-Sadr will appoint a prtme
minister before the commencement
of Parliament." He did not elaborate
on the 'developments.''
The prtme minister's office has
been vacant since Mehdi Bazargan
resigned after the seizure of the U.S.
Embassy and American hostages
last Nov. 4.
1

Eight wasn't enough for Ohio family,
20 c!tildren to visit 'mother' today
RUSSIA, Ohio (AP) - ' For there was an RB factor in its blood.
Mother's Day, all of Emily Grillot's
"The doctor said that we shouldn't
children were to gather at home
have any. more because they would
either be retarded or be born dead, ••
today - all20 of them.
Eight of them planned to return she said. "Nine months taler, we had
home in honor of the occasion,
a healthy, bouncing boy.' •
joining the remaining 12 who still
All of the couple's 13 daughters
and seven sons are healthy. even
live there.
Mrs. Grillot and her husband,
though one Is deaf. They range in
Marion, who live on a farm in this age from Jane, 31, to Beth, 7.
tiny Shelby County community,
Only 12 of her children currentiy
never expected to have such a large are living at home. But at one time,
.17 children shared six bedrooms,
clan.
"My husband comes from a two kitchens and two bathrooms .
family of seven and he Sllid he
" For a while, we only had one
thought we ought to have seven, bathroom," she said. "There WaS a
too," the 52-year-old mother said. "I lot of standing in line."
Mrs. Grillot, who plans to have no
thought I'd be doing good to have
more children, supplements the
any ."
Her third child dled during farm income by doing contract work
pregnancy, when the couple learned

for an electric company. Still, there
have been some hard times.
" Our oldest daughter was 16
before she ever had a dress that was
bought in a store," she said.
Food always has been plentiful,
however.
" I can a lot, I put up maybe a
thousand quarts of stuff and we get a
lot of things in large quantities,
especially meat, •' she said.
And although the house Is virtually
spotless, house eleaning is not taken
as seriously as it once was.
"After I had about a dozen kids, I
started to cool off on house
cleaning," Mrs. Grillot said. "It
doesn't make much sense to spend
all day cleaning when you're going
to have 12 kids bouncing in fr0111
school every afternoon."

Despite the hard times and hard
work, Mrs. Grillot said she's never
regretted being pregnant for nearly
a third of her life. But surprtsingly,
her large family has bothered
others.
"Ever since I had my fourth, I've
been getting flack from people who
don't think it's tight to have large
families," she said. "I used to cry
about lt, but now I just tell them,
'You handle yours and I'll handle
mine.'

.

"There'll a lot of happiness in a
large family. I think it really
deepens the love and concern a,
husband and Wife have for each
other. And I think the kids learn to
respect one another.
"I feel sorry lor people who only
have one or two children.''
.
-··

·,

�___,.,.

. A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

iunb&amp;Jl ~imts· ~tntintl

)

Gallipoli~' Dr. Morgan to head OSMA meet this week

OU~l=OLKS
, __ _c;,;L;;:;lU'IbW;,;

Opinions and Comments

._s_
.c_.-~
Jlt.\Ml,)'S BEE!-1
COOPED UP \W

TI-lE WHITE \-jOL)£L
~ow l-IE's G0\1-l •
CAHI?A\61-JIW: ••

~unllaJ? ~imes- ~entinel

.

GALLIPOUS - Thomas W.
Morgan, M.D., Gallipolis, president
of the Ohio State Medical
Association (OSMA ) will preside at
this year's allllual meeting, to be
held May 11-14 in Stouffer's Cincinnati Towers, Cincinnati.
Theme this yea r is "Our Society
Moves Ahead - 1980."
Two issues of prime importance to
be considered at this year's meeting
of the OSMA House of Delegates wiU
be cost containment and the
proposed changes in medical ethics.
A highlight will be the OSMA 1980
Distinguished Service Award to be
made to Albert Sabin, M.D., of Cincinnati, recognized internationally
as the man who developed the oral
polio vaccine.
With so much emphasis on the
political scene this year, a special
feature will be Tuesday's luncheon
speaker, the renowned Washington
columnist , Robert D. Novak,
speaking on "Politics : 1980." Novak
is a part of the writing team of
Evans and Novak whose colWTUl,
"Inside Report," is syndicated in
more than 250 newspapers here and
abroad. Novak is often described as
a news hungry journalist who
specialized in investigation and
probing analysis, instead of annchair conunentary.
In keeping with this same strong
ffeling about government and
politics, during his presidential address m Sunday evening, Dr.
Morgan warns of the adverse effects
on quality medical care resulting
from the unwarranted intrusion of
regulatory agencies, such as the
Federal Trade Corrunission , along
with excessive restri ctive
legislation. He calls ·for increased
unity within the profession along
with more effective long range planning, in order to guarantee preser·
vation of high level professionalism
in medicine.
Dr. Morgan joined the staff of the
Holzer Medical Center as an attending surgeon in 1952 and became
the Chainnan of·the Department of
Surgery at the hospital in 1968, a post
he continues to hold. A graduate of
Washington and Jefferson College,
he holds his medical degree from
Harvard Medical School and completed his surgery specialty training
at Ohio State University. He was
certified by the American Board of
Surgery in 1955.
Actively nationally in the

l-IE BETfER STICK W\TI-\
A ?L~~E- A~D OOf

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publi~ab~. However, on l"t!()Utst, names will be disclosed . U:tters should be in good ta t 8 d·
dressmg w ues, not personalities.
ll e.
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. . . . . . ~-·~d·-

Crossover voting
State officials are getting " munerous questions" about
.c rossover voting in Ohio's June 3 primary, but it's difficult
to tell if the queries are inspired by any of the various
presidential contenders.
: Secretary of State Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr. , the state's
top elections official, said Friday he thinks interest may
:h ave been spurred by the attention given crossovers in
states which already have held primaries.
Ohio supporters of former California Gov. Ronald
H eagan, who seeks the GOP presidential nomination,
.c laim he could benefit from crossovers in Ohio. They cite
:Reagan's success in getting support from disgruntled
Democrats, especially among blue collar workers, in other
·states.
. Congressman John B. Anderson. R-Ill, had similar success in early GOP primaries, but he is now an independent
candidate and his name is not on the primary ballot.
Opposing Reagan in the GOP primary is former United
Nations Ambassador George Bush, a moderate
· Republican whose backers claim he attracts independent
. and Democratic support.
At the same time, President Carter and Sen. Edward M.
. Kennedy, D-Mass. , the two major candidates in the
· Democratic contest, are not generally seen by Ohio's
political observers as likely recipients of any significant
GOP crossover support.
Crossovers occur when a voter registered to one party
casts a ballot in the other party's primary.
It can be done in Ohio, but not in good conscience, unless
the voter can swear he or she voted for a majority of the
other party's candidates in the last state general electiQn.
If that is the case, the voter asking for the other party's
ballot may sign a statement, witnessed by the presiding
polling place judge.
Although pollworkers can challenge.the person's right to
. vote, he or she must be allowed to cast a ballot.
:- Under the secret ballot process, there is no way to check
: how a person voted previously.
:: Ohio law says, more or less, that "if·some people want to
: swear a false oath, then they must live with their ~on­
: science," said Wayne Hill, the secretary's com:. munications director.
Anderson is waging a legal battle to try to get his name
:. on the November ballot, which is used by voters of both
: parties.
. His switch to independent status came after he had
: qualified prior to a March 20 deadline to get his name on
:· the June 3 ballot as a GOP candidate.
However, he subsequently had it removed and said he
: would seek to have overruled an Ohio law under which in: dependent candidates for the November ballot must also
: file by the March 20 deadline.

.Today in history.
· Today is Sunday, May 11, the
i32nd day of 1980. There are 234 days
left in the year.
: Today's highlight in history :
·. On May 11, 1949, Israel was adinitted to the United Nations.
: On this date:
; In 1674, Peter Stuyvesant became
governor of New Amsterdam.
· In 1858, Minnesota was admitted
to the union as the 32nd state.
·; In 1943, the first American
:territory was regained from Japan
ijn World War II , as U.S. forces ianlied on Attu Island in the Aleutians.
': In 1974, Julie Eisenhower said her
father, President Richard Nixon,
told his family he would not resign
as long as one member of Congress
·~upported him .

• •

Ten years ago, a tornado ripped
through Lubbock, Texas, killing 20
people.
Five years ago, reports revealed
that South Vietnam's new rulers
planned nationwide elections to
unify North and South Vietnam.
Last year, the United States and
China signed an agreement settling
claims over property confiscated in
the Chinese revolution, clearing the
way for a bilateral trade pact.
Today's birthdays: Songwriter Irving Berlin is 92. Artist Salvador
Dali is 76. Comedian Phil Silvers is
68.

Thought for today: There is no
security on this earth. There is only
opportunity. - Gen . Douglas
MacArthur (1681H964)

'
"Why did you pick Muskie, for crying out
loud ?"

HOLDING TANKS - Interest in the subject of oil in Meigs County
has been keyed by the successful drilling of a number of wells in many
areas of the community. Jack Hart is pictured examining holding tanks
located on property owned by his father.

Interest.

••

(Continued from page A· ll

Stelle Group readies for world's end
By Tom Tiede
STELLE, Ill. (NEA) - Inflation ?
Political rot? Mount St. Helen's ? If
you think things are bad now, wait
two decades. The economic and
political structures will break down
altogether. Volcanic eruptions will
kill billions of people, and on May 5,
in the year 2000, the world as we
know it will end.
That, anyway, is the quite serious
belief of the 120 folks who occupy
this pleasant company town on the
northeast Illinois plains. The com·
pany is The Stelle Group, a
philosophic brotherhood whose
members have built their own
village with a goal toward surviving
the coming planetary catastrophe.
Even now the town is preparing
for the last days. Residents are
stockpiling food in their larders&gt; ·
They are fortifyulng their homes for
the earthquake that will accompany
the mountain explosions. They are
building schools to teach childen
reading, writing and civil defense.
At length the villagers hope to
float a gigantic airship in which they
will escape the ravages. They will
remain in the clouds until such time
as the global tunnoil has concluded,
and then will set down on an island in
the Pacific Ocean where they will
build a new and more promising
society.
No·, they aren't crazy. Not certifiably, anyway. Neither do the
1

people of Stelle seem to be religious
or generational zealots. They are
bright, middle-class capitalists who
happen to subscribe to the expostulations of a fonner cabinet
maker who claims he has been
touched by great expectations.

credibility. Perhaps because he's as
simple as his ideas. He speaks in a
monotone, avoids color at all cost
and is tailored by J. C. Penney. His
own people say he has the charisma
of a stone step, and could not sell
footwear in a tack factory.

Will float giant airship
Richard Kieninger, the chosen
one, says it all began in 1945. He was
17 on the occasion, and received a
visit from a man he identifies as
" Dr. White." The latter said he
represented a mystic association
which had evidence of the inevitable
end. Kieninger insists Dr. White was
no!lmy.
'te instructed Kieninger to
or · e people who were opposed to
the otion of dropping dead in 2000.
He taught the boy a secret language,

renamed hirri Eklai Kueshana ,"
meaning " The Harbinger of Atlantis," and reportedly carved proof of
his visit inlo young Kieninger's leg .
OK, it does sound contrived. And
Kieninger, now 53, compounds the
suspicion by reducing his narrative
to the simplicities of a comic book.
Life on earth started in a place
called "Mu," he says. The new
world island in the Pacific is to be
called, nicely enough , " The
Kingdom of God."
But, somehow, Kieninger has
41

Yet nearly 800 people have lived in
Stelle since it was formed in 1973.
Probably because Kieninger
preaches old-time values as well as
2lst-&lt;:entury survivaL " We may
have had members who did not think
the world is going to end," he says,
"but everyone has agreed with the
brotherhood 's way of life."
That way is: charity, community
and, Christianity, Kieninger says
Stel!s is far from being utopia, but it
is an alte rn ative to the
predominately combstive society.
"We have a wholly positive attitude
here. We aren't against anybody. We
try to help each other, and to learn
and to grow log ether."
In a phrase, Stelle is a village of
cooperative volunteerism. The 24().
acre plot (60 miles south of Chicago)
was purchased with contributed
money. Each of the 34 homes has
been constructed with neighborly
assistance. There are no t:lxes;
residents donate tithes to raise
operating capital

The people of Stelle write their "' :
own rules of behavior. They hold an- " '
nual meetings to decide political and ..
economic directions. They are even
allied in entrepreneurial matters ; '.
there are four business concerns in ..
the village, and the employees are ·responsible for policies as well as
profits.
Keininger says it all works out
quite well. However, he concedes there may be a custom or two in con- ..
tention. For example: some women •
wonder if The Stelle Group is a tad •
sexist- the village expects "female •
Egos," as they're called, to stick to •
the traditional roles of housewives •
and mothers.
Nonetheless the community seems •
to prosper. And Kueshana, er, •
Kieninger, has been encouraged to
start a second survival village, :
" Adelphia," in Texas. In addition, :
he says there are at least 4,000 non- •
resident loyalists now receiving •
literature and information regar- •
ding the terDJination.
Eventually, as global conditions •
worsen, Richard Kieninger believes
that hwulreds of thousands of people -.
all over the world will join his ex- : ·
traordinary vigil And if they qualify ...
for inclusion in the brotherhood they
will be booked aboard the1lig airship ..
that will save believers from the
end.
The airship leav.es May ~. 2000.:·
Sharp, no doubt.
b .

Business mirror

Study reveals 'radical switch' in lifestyles
NEW YORK (AP ) - " Never
before," said Albert Sindlinger, the
consumer economist whose col11-pany ha s been questioning
Americans for more than 25 years,
"have we seen such a radical switch
in the way people live."
" The President thinks he has
merely contained inflation," said
the head of Sindlinger &amp;Co., which
conducts 1,300 interviews a week,
most of them on money matters.
" But he has collapsed the

economy."
Sindlinger /Co.'s analysis is based
largely on interviews, but with some
theorizing added. Combined, the interviews and the assumptions made
from them constitute a grim report
on economic leadership.
These conclusions follow
telephone interviews by the Media.,

Pa. company, with each interview
consisting of between 40 and 50
questions and lasting between between 15 and 20 minutes.
-Retail buying has dropped
precipitously, as masses of people
realize suddenly that without the full
use of their credit cards they have in
effect no money to spend. "Buying
plans have been frozen."
- Millions of Americans who owe
federal taxes sent in their returns
last month without enclosing checks.
Some did so after being turned away
by banks when they sought to
borrow funds with which to pay.
Albert Sindlinger, founder of the
company and a pioneer in consumer
polling, zeroed in more intensely on
the buying and tax issues after the
Federal Reserve announced recent
figures for the money supply.

Sindlinger, who had been accurately anticipating the supply by
asking consumers about their finan·
ces and then projecting the figures
fo r the population as a whole, found
his forecasts inexplicably off the
mark.
For the three weeks to mid-April ,
for example, he had projected a gain
in the money supply - money in circulation and in checking accounts of about $29 billion. The Fed,
however, reported a figure close to
$20 billion. Somehow, somewhere, $9
billion was unaccounted for.
Seeking the reason, and assuming
that the Fed's ligures would not be
revised (they still might be ), Sindlinger's staff asked even more
specific questions in interviews.
After studying them, Sindlinge r
estimates that probably one-third of

taxpayers, illiquid and perhaps e
Wl3ble to get loans, filed without. ...
paying. That factor, he estimates ac-...
counts for $2 billion or more.
He found that another group, ·
mainly those in relatively . high ·.
brackets, seems to have paid with ···
checks drawn on money market
mutual funds, a recent phenomenon, .
with transactions never being coun- " .
ted as part of the money supply. His ,..
estimate: Another $2 billion or so.
The final $5 billion is probably the '··
most significant, according to Sin- · '
dlinger, because it seems tO:"
represent a collapse of retail sales. · :
'In 25 years I have never seen so...
many buying plans evaporate so , .
quickly ," he said. " It was the first
time in history that masses of people .. ,
suddenly realized that without credit
ca rds they had no money."
"

The government: spending, hiring, lending
NEW YORK (AP) - As the
economy drops into recession, with
jobs being lost and businesses
collapsing, there remains one area
of enterprise that is doing well,
ba~ed on the standard measurements.
This area of enterprise reports
that it 's revenues are up. It is expanding. It is hiring. It is spending.
It is lending.
It too may experience a downturn
in its revenues, because no piece of
the economy structure stands alone.
Like an erector set, the parts all
fit together, and sometimes they all
come down together too.
But for the time being, it seems to
be able to go its way. U.S. Steel and
General Motors are 'closing plants
and laying off workers, but this enterprise has just vpened up a brand
new, fully equipped department

The expansion, into the lucrative
education market, was viewed as indicative of more to come, because
the enterprise's other departments
have been growing at a pace faster
even than any private concern.

It just passes on the expenses.

In fact, it has money to spare, and
not just in guarantees to Chrysler
Corp., which otherwise might have
to declare bankruptcy. Other loans
and guarantees are growing fast and

Today's commentary
The enterprtse, of course, is the , soon may total $500 billion.
U.S. Govenunent, which doesn't feel
Many knowledgeable financial
very obligated to watch how it
people, including congressional
aides and private sector officials,
spends its dollars but which is now
are deeply wotried about the pracplannng to expand the budget for its
tice, but it goes on unchecked
Wage and Price Stability Council.
because, it seems, the money ill
While private enterprises have
found themselves shut out of regular
there to be lent.
dedt markets, government hasn't
It ill accumulated from taxes,
which have ~n growing, and by
had to worry very much. lt gets its
bt'rrnwing, whic'h has been growing.
money becau.se it can afford to pay.

that highway are stationed
numerous producing oil and gas
wells.
Four such rigs are located on
property owned by Thomas Hart-a
dozen others are within view of his
land. One of the rigs is powered by
natural gas coming from the well.
Through a lease agreement with
Adams Drilling Company, four wells
are pumping an estimated 400

barrels of crude oil a month into
three holding tanks installed on the
Hart property.
The lease arrangement calls for
the property owner to receive oneeigth of the sale price-less upfront
taxes-of the oil produced. That oil is
now selling for approximately $38
per barrel.
According to Hart, the wells areafter the surge of the original tap-expected to level-off at a producing
capacity of between 240 and 280
barrel! a month. The wells are expected to continue producing for between five and 10 years, or longer.

The government now owes about ,., ·
$850 billion, but it has a steady and , .
growing income - taxes - to cover
it.

•

. ·~

Much has been made recently of ...
balancing the budget, but whatever .
balance is achieved will be at a very ..
high level. Budget balancing does •..
not require spending cuts. It can be. ••
achieved through higher revenues.
If the recession is long and deep, , .
as it seems it will be, government!&amp;,;;
come too will sluink. Government ·
has no financing other thai).~
borrrowlng, its abllity to collect• •
revenues, and the printing press. ··
It's one pung for household IlJid. ·
business revenues to shrivel. But~
when it finally hits government the ..
noise will be. awful. That's when the ...
public sector of the economy comes,;:;
to appreciate recession.

•••

1!Biarp
GALLIPOUS - D. Kenneth
Morgan, former city manager of
Gallipolis and now associated with
the Russell Wood real estate agency,
brought back with him from Florida
some art in color from the Bradenton Herald.
The art is signed "Watterson 80."
The artist is Keith Watterson.
The name may mean nothing to
you unless you were a follower of the
Gallipolis Little League in the mid60s. Or, even farther back, you may
have known Keith's mother and
father - the Bill Wattersons.
First, there's a 16-page tabloid entitled the " Pittsburgh Pirates Scrapbook," and the art adorns the cover,
a caricature of Willie Stargell with
his bat. It's a good likeness of ol'
Willie.
Then, there 's the cover of
''Manatee magazine," with an
almost photographic picture on the
cover of the tabloid insert of which
we have only the front sheet. Across
the top is a drawing of
the Manatee, a me - s!lrok
sidewheeler excursion boat with
many people aboard ; below
it on the left is a _st~am_
locomotive, and on the right is a
white-bearded old gentleman.
Keith's signature is not only in his
own hand but printed vertically "illustration/Keith Watterson. "
Also, there's a tabloid of 20 pages
entitled "Community Clubs," and
Watterson cover shows a bespectacled guy reading the same tabloid
with the same cover.
Morgan also brought back the top
part of Section C of a Sunday paper
- March 16 was the date - with a
leprechaun in green garb, a long
clay pipe extending from his mouth.
He's standing on a tree stump, emptying a kettle of coins. It's all about
St. Patrick and the Irish.
Finally, there's a full page painting of a warrior of medieval days,
his sword upright, armor over his
chest and head; his hearded face is
showing under the metal brim.
Who is Keith Watterson ? He's the
illustrator for the Bradenton
Herald; he took art at Manatee
JU!Iior College at Bradenton ; he's
the oldest of four children of Bill and
Marianne Preston Watterson.
Marianne Watterson, RN, is in
hemalology. You'll remember her
as a nurse at Holzer Hoepital. Blll
Watterson, charter member of the
crew at WJEH radio, now is vicepreSident of Arbuckle, French, and
Green . Bradenton realtors. The

grandchildren.
Delegates attending from Gallia
County will be Thomas P. Price, Jr.,
M.D., along with Daniel H. Whitely,
M.D., alternative delegate . •From
Meigs County, E. S. Villanueva,
M.D. wiU be attending as delegate,

with Joseph J . Davis, M.D., as alternative delegate to the OSMA House
·of Delegates.
Oscar W. Clarke, M.D., Gallipolis,
will be attending as chairman of the
Ohio Delegates to the American
Medical Association.

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AUTO REPORTED STOLEN
GALIJPOUS - The theft of 11"
auto was investigated Fridar by tpe
Gallla Coun!Y Sheriff's ~According to a report -filed ' wil.b
that department, a 1974 Pontiac
Fire bird owned by Billy Walters was
removed from his Rt. I, Northup,
residence overnight.

~allipollg

By J . Samuel Peeps

American College of Surgeons, Dr.
Morgan has served as president of
the Ohio Chapter of the American
College of Surgeons, was a founding
member of the American Trauma
Society in 1972, is a fellow of the
American Association for Surgery of
Tra\lffill, and has served in a number of capacities in the Ohio State
Medical Association, now completing his year as president.
He will continue in a leadership
capacity with the OSMA, as the Immediate Past President during the
coming year 1980-81 . Of significance
this past year, under Dr. Morgan's
leadership, the OSMA surpassed for
the first time in its history, a membership of over 12,000 physicians.
Dr. Morgan and his wife Deanna,
reside on Cedar Street in Gallipolis.
They have five children and three

l - l926 art i ~l : Erne!il H. ShepMd J

president of the finn is Carl French,
fonner manager of the Gallipolis
Department Store. The Wattersons
have been in Bradenton 12 years.
In Gallipolis, Keith Watterson was
third baseman for the Little. Lea~n~e
White Sox, coach of whom was
Dick Thomas . Dick's Little
Leaguers won three straight city
championships back to back. Some
of Keith's teanunates were Pete
Neal, Fireball Jamison, Kim
Meadows, Jim Noe, Jim Steinbeck,
Keith Black, and Ricky Boone.
THE COLONIAL, dubbed by the
Jackson Journal-Herald as "one of
southeastern Ohio's best-known
restaurants and a Jackson land·
mark for many years," has been
sold to Jim and Renna· Geitz,
Jackson Coll!ltY natives who have
lived in Florida the last two years.
Selling it were Lou and Bernice Farmer, who came to Jackson from
Pike County in 1947 to run the
Colonial along with Wayne and
Hosey Wick; the Farmers bought
out the Wicks in 1962.

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. A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

iunb&amp;Jl ~imts· ~tntintl

)

Gallipoli~' Dr. Morgan to head OSMA meet this week

OU~l=OLKS
, __ _c;,;L;;:;lU'IbW;,;

Opinions and Comments

._s_
.c_.-~
Jlt.\Ml,)'S BEE!-1
COOPED UP \W

TI-lE WHITE \-jOL)£L
~ow l-IE's G0\1-l •
CAHI?A\61-JIW: ••

~unllaJ? ~imes- ~entinel

.

GALLIPOUS - Thomas W.
Morgan, M.D., Gallipolis, president
of the Ohio State Medical
Association (OSMA ) will preside at
this year's allllual meeting, to be
held May 11-14 in Stouffer's Cincinnati Towers, Cincinnati.
Theme this yea r is "Our Society
Moves Ahead - 1980."
Two issues of prime importance to
be considered at this year's meeting
of the OSMA House of Delegates wiU
be cost containment and the
proposed changes in medical ethics.
A highlight will be the OSMA 1980
Distinguished Service Award to be
made to Albert Sabin, M.D., of Cincinnati, recognized internationally
as the man who developed the oral
polio vaccine.
With so much emphasis on the
political scene this year, a special
feature will be Tuesday's luncheon
speaker, the renowned Washington
columnist , Robert D. Novak,
speaking on "Politics : 1980." Novak
is a part of the writing team of
Evans and Novak whose colWTUl,
"Inside Report," is syndicated in
more than 250 newspapers here and
abroad. Novak is often described as
a news hungry journalist who
specialized in investigation and
probing analysis, instead of annchair conunentary.
In keeping with this same strong
ffeling about government and
politics, during his presidential address m Sunday evening, Dr.
Morgan warns of the adverse effects
on quality medical care resulting
from the unwarranted intrusion of
regulatory agencies, such as the
Federal Trade Corrunission , along
with excessive restri ctive
legislation. He calls ·for increased
unity within the profession along
with more effective long range planning, in order to guarantee preser·
vation of high level professionalism
in medicine.
Dr. Morgan joined the staff of the
Holzer Medical Center as an attending surgeon in 1952 and became
the Chainnan of·the Department of
Surgery at the hospital in 1968, a post
he continues to hold. A graduate of
Washington and Jefferson College,
he holds his medical degree from
Harvard Medical School and completed his surgery specialty training
at Ohio State University. He was
certified by the American Board of
Surgery in 1955.
Actively nationally in the

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ll e.
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~,!"" tbs lllhiO.~. Elsewhere $38.00 per year: six months $20.00 : three months Sll 00 : motor route

....90 mon y.
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.S UI

months f21).00; three months $1 1.00.

'

~ Associated Press is exclusivtl)" entitled to the use for pubhcallon of all ne••1s dispatches
credited to the n~w3paper and a.l!'iO the local news published herem.

(!lib

~~

. . . . . . ~-·~d·-

Crossover voting
State officials are getting " munerous questions" about
.c rossover voting in Ohio's June 3 primary, but it's difficult
to tell if the queries are inspired by any of the various
presidential contenders.
: Secretary of State Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr. , the state's
top elections official, said Friday he thinks interest may
:h ave been spurred by the attention given crossovers in
states which already have held primaries.
Ohio supporters of former California Gov. Ronald
H eagan, who seeks the GOP presidential nomination,
.c laim he could benefit from crossovers in Ohio. They cite
:Reagan's success in getting support from disgruntled
Democrats, especially among blue collar workers, in other
·states.
. Congressman John B. Anderson. R-Ill, had similar success in early GOP primaries, but he is now an independent
candidate and his name is not on the primary ballot.
Opposing Reagan in the GOP primary is former United
Nations Ambassador George Bush, a moderate
· Republican whose backers claim he attracts independent
. and Democratic support.
At the same time, President Carter and Sen. Edward M.
. Kennedy, D-Mass. , the two major candidates in the
· Democratic contest, are not generally seen by Ohio's
political observers as likely recipients of any significant
GOP crossover support.
Crossovers occur when a voter registered to one party
casts a ballot in the other party's primary.
It can be done in Ohio, but not in good conscience, unless
the voter can swear he or she voted for a majority of the
other party's candidates in the last state general electiQn.
If that is the case, the voter asking for the other party's
ballot may sign a statement, witnessed by the presiding
polling place judge.
Although pollworkers can challenge.the person's right to
. vote, he or she must be allowed to cast a ballot.
:- Under the secret ballot process, there is no way to check
: how a person voted previously.
:: Ohio law says, more or less, that "if·some people want to
: swear a false oath, then they must live with their ~on­
: science," said Wayne Hill, the secretary's com:. munications director.
Anderson is waging a legal battle to try to get his name
:. on the November ballot, which is used by voters of both
: parties.
. His switch to independent status came after he had
: qualified prior to a March 20 deadline to get his name on
:· the June 3 ballot as a GOP candidate.
However, he subsequently had it removed and said he
: would seek to have overruled an Ohio law under which in: dependent candidates for the November ballot must also
: file by the March 20 deadline.

.Today in history.
· Today is Sunday, May 11, the
i32nd day of 1980. There are 234 days
left in the year.
: Today's highlight in history :
·. On May 11, 1949, Israel was adinitted to the United Nations.
: On this date:
; In 1674, Peter Stuyvesant became
governor of New Amsterdam.
· In 1858, Minnesota was admitted
to the union as the 32nd state.
·; In 1943, the first American
:territory was regained from Japan
ijn World War II , as U.S. forces ianlied on Attu Island in the Aleutians.
': In 1974, Julie Eisenhower said her
father, President Richard Nixon,
told his family he would not resign
as long as one member of Congress
·~upported him .

• •

Ten years ago, a tornado ripped
through Lubbock, Texas, killing 20
people.
Five years ago, reports revealed
that South Vietnam's new rulers
planned nationwide elections to
unify North and South Vietnam.
Last year, the United States and
China signed an agreement settling
claims over property confiscated in
the Chinese revolution, clearing the
way for a bilateral trade pact.
Today's birthdays: Songwriter Irving Berlin is 92. Artist Salvador
Dali is 76. Comedian Phil Silvers is
68.

Thought for today: There is no
security on this earth. There is only
opportunity. - Gen . Douglas
MacArthur (1681H964)

'
"Why did you pick Muskie, for crying out
loud ?"

HOLDING TANKS - Interest in the subject of oil in Meigs County
has been keyed by the successful drilling of a number of wells in many
areas of the community. Jack Hart is pictured examining holding tanks
located on property owned by his father.

Interest.

••

(Continued from page A· ll

Stelle Group readies for world's end
By Tom Tiede
STELLE, Ill. (NEA) - Inflation ?
Political rot? Mount St. Helen's ? If
you think things are bad now, wait
two decades. The economic and
political structures will break down
altogether. Volcanic eruptions will
kill billions of people, and on May 5,
in the year 2000, the world as we
know it will end.
That, anyway, is the quite serious
belief of the 120 folks who occupy
this pleasant company town on the
northeast Illinois plains. The com·
pany is The Stelle Group, a
philosophic brotherhood whose
members have built their own
village with a goal toward surviving
the coming planetary catastrophe.
Even now the town is preparing
for the last days. Residents are
stockpiling food in their larders&gt; ·
They are fortifyulng their homes for
the earthquake that will accompany
the mountain explosions. They are
building schools to teach childen
reading, writing and civil defense.
At length the villagers hope to
float a gigantic airship in which they
will escape the ravages. They will
remain in the clouds until such time
as the global tunnoil has concluded,
and then will set down on an island in
the Pacific Ocean where they will
build a new and more promising
society.
No·, they aren't crazy. Not certifiably, anyway. Neither do the
1

people of Stelle seem to be religious
or generational zealots. They are
bright, middle-class capitalists who
happen to subscribe to the expostulations of a fonner cabinet
maker who claims he has been
touched by great expectations.

credibility. Perhaps because he's as
simple as his ideas. He speaks in a
monotone, avoids color at all cost
and is tailored by J. C. Penney. His
own people say he has the charisma
of a stone step, and could not sell
footwear in a tack factory.

Will float giant airship
Richard Kieninger, the chosen
one, says it all began in 1945. He was
17 on the occasion, and received a
visit from a man he identifies as
" Dr. White." The latter said he
represented a mystic association
which had evidence of the inevitable
end. Kieninger insists Dr. White was
no!lmy.
'te instructed Kieninger to
or · e people who were opposed to
the otion of dropping dead in 2000.
He taught the boy a secret language,

renamed hirri Eklai Kueshana ,"
meaning " The Harbinger of Atlantis," and reportedly carved proof of
his visit inlo young Kieninger's leg .
OK, it does sound contrived. And
Kieninger, now 53, compounds the
suspicion by reducing his narrative
to the simplicities of a comic book.
Life on earth started in a place
called "Mu," he says. The new
world island in the Pacific is to be
called, nicely enough , " The
Kingdom of God."
But, somehow, Kieninger has
41

Yet nearly 800 people have lived in
Stelle since it was formed in 1973.
Probably because Kieninger
preaches old-time values as well as
2lst-&lt;:entury survivaL " We may
have had members who did not think
the world is going to end," he says,
"but everyone has agreed with the
brotherhood 's way of life."
That way is: charity, community
and, Christianity, Kieninger says
Stel!s is far from being utopia, but it
is an alte rn ative to the
predominately combstive society.
"We have a wholly positive attitude
here. We aren't against anybody. We
try to help each other, and to learn
and to grow log ether."
In a phrase, Stelle is a village of
cooperative volunteerism. The 24().
acre plot (60 miles south of Chicago)
was purchased with contributed
money. Each of the 34 homes has
been constructed with neighborly
assistance. There are no t:lxes;
residents donate tithes to raise
operating capital

The people of Stelle write their "' :
own rules of behavior. They hold an- " '
nual meetings to decide political and ..
economic directions. They are even
allied in entrepreneurial matters ; '.
there are four business concerns in ..
the village, and the employees are ·responsible for policies as well as
profits.
Keininger says it all works out
quite well. However, he concedes there may be a custom or two in con- ..
tention. For example: some women •
wonder if The Stelle Group is a tad •
sexist- the village expects "female •
Egos," as they're called, to stick to •
the traditional roles of housewives •
and mothers.
Nonetheless the community seems •
to prosper. And Kueshana, er, •
Kieninger, has been encouraged to
start a second survival village, :
" Adelphia," in Texas. In addition, :
he says there are at least 4,000 non- •
resident loyalists now receiving •
literature and information regar- •
ding the terDJination.
Eventually, as global conditions •
worsen, Richard Kieninger believes
that hwulreds of thousands of people -.
all over the world will join his ex- : ·
traordinary vigil And if they qualify ...
for inclusion in the brotherhood they
will be booked aboard the1lig airship ..
that will save believers from the
end.
The airship leav.es May ~. 2000.:·
Sharp, no doubt.
b .

Business mirror

Study reveals 'radical switch' in lifestyles
NEW YORK (AP ) - " Never
before," said Albert Sindlinger, the
consumer economist whose col11-pany ha s been questioning
Americans for more than 25 years,
"have we seen such a radical switch
in the way people live."
" The President thinks he has
merely contained inflation," said
the head of Sindlinger &amp;Co., which
conducts 1,300 interviews a week,
most of them on money matters.
" But he has collapsed the

economy."
Sindlinger /Co.'s analysis is based
largely on interviews, but with some
theorizing added. Combined, the interviews and the assumptions made
from them constitute a grim report
on economic leadership.
These conclusions follow
telephone interviews by the Media.,

Pa. company, with each interview
consisting of between 40 and 50
questions and lasting between between 15 and 20 minutes.
-Retail buying has dropped
precipitously, as masses of people
realize suddenly that without the full
use of their credit cards they have in
effect no money to spend. "Buying
plans have been frozen."
- Millions of Americans who owe
federal taxes sent in their returns
last month without enclosing checks.
Some did so after being turned away
by banks when they sought to
borrow funds with which to pay.
Albert Sindlinger, founder of the
company and a pioneer in consumer
polling, zeroed in more intensely on
the buying and tax issues after the
Federal Reserve announced recent
figures for the money supply.

Sindlinger, who had been accurately anticipating the supply by
asking consumers about their finan·
ces and then projecting the figures
fo r the population as a whole, found
his forecasts inexplicably off the
mark.
For the three weeks to mid-April ,
for example, he had projected a gain
in the money supply - money in circulation and in checking accounts of about $29 billion. The Fed,
however, reported a figure close to
$20 billion. Somehow, somewhere, $9
billion was unaccounted for.
Seeking the reason, and assuming
that the Fed's ligures would not be
revised (they still might be ), Sindlinger's staff asked even more
specific questions in interviews.
After studying them, Sindlinge r
estimates that probably one-third of

taxpayers, illiquid and perhaps e
Wl3ble to get loans, filed without. ...
paying. That factor, he estimates ac-...
counts for $2 billion or more.
He found that another group, ·
mainly those in relatively . high ·.
brackets, seems to have paid with ···
checks drawn on money market
mutual funds, a recent phenomenon, .
with transactions never being coun- " .
ted as part of the money supply. His ,..
estimate: Another $2 billion or so.
The final $5 billion is probably the '··
most significant, according to Sin- · '
dlinger, because it seems tO:"
represent a collapse of retail sales. · :
'In 25 years I have never seen so...
many buying plans evaporate so , .
quickly ," he said. " It was the first
time in history that masses of people .. ,
suddenly realized that without credit
ca rds they had no money."
"

The government: spending, hiring, lending
NEW YORK (AP) - As the
economy drops into recession, with
jobs being lost and businesses
collapsing, there remains one area
of enterprise that is doing well,
ba~ed on the standard measurements.
This area of enterprise reports
that it 's revenues are up. It is expanding. It is hiring. It is spending.
It is lending.
It too may experience a downturn
in its revenues, because no piece of
the economy structure stands alone.
Like an erector set, the parts all
fit together, and sometimes they all
come down together too.
But for the time being, it seems to
be able to go its way. U.S. Steel and
General Motors are 'closing plants
and laying off workers, but this enterprise has just vpened up a brand
new, fully equipped department

The expansion, into the lucrative
education market, was viewed as indicative of more to come, because
the enterprise's other departments
have been growing at a pace faster
even than any private concern.

It just passes on the expenses.

In fact, it has money to spare, and
not just in guarantees to Chrysler
Corp., which otherwise might have
to declare bankruptcy. Other loans
and guarantees are growing fast and

Today's commentary
The enterprtse, of course, is the , soon may total $500 billion.
U.S. Govenunent, which doesn't feel
Many knowledgeable financial
very obligated to watch how it
people, including congressional
aides and private sector officials,
spends its dollars but which is now
are deeply wotried about the pracplannng to expand the budget for its
tice, but it goes on unchecked
Wage and Price Stability Council.
because, it seems, the money ill
While private enterprises have
found themselves shut out of regular
there to be lent.
dedt markets, government hasn't
It ill accumulated from taxes,
which have ~n growing, and by
had to worry very much. lt gets its
bt'rrnwing, whic'h has been growing.
money becau.se it can afford to pay.

that highway are stationed
numerous producing oil and gas
wells.
Four such rigs are located on
property owned by Thomas Hart-a
dozen others are within view of his
land. One of the rigs is powered by
natural gas coming from the well.
Through a lease agreement with
Adams Drilling Company, four wells
are pumping an estimated 400

barrels of crude oil a month into
three holding tanks installed on the
Hart property.
The lease arrangement calls for
the property owner to receive oneeigth of the sale price-less upfront
taxes-of the oil produced. That oil is
now selling for approximately $38
per barrel.
According to Hart, the wells areafter the surge of the original tap-expected to level-off at a producing
capacity of between 240 and 280
barrel! a month. The wells are expected to continue producing for between five and 10 years, or longer.

The government now owes about ,., ·
$850 billion, but it has a steady and , .
growing income - taxes - to cover
it.

•

. ·~

Much has been made recently of ...
balancing the budget, but whatever .
balance is achieved will be at a very ..
high level. Budget balancing does •..
not require spending cuts. It can be. ••
achieved through higher revenues.
If the recession is long and deep, , .
as it seems it will be, government!&amp;,;;
come too will sluink. Government ·
has no financing other thai).~
borrrowlng, its abllity to collect• •
revenues, and the printing press. ··
It's one pung for household IlJid. ·
business revenues to shrivel. But~
when it finally hits government the ..
noise will be. awful. That's when the ...
public sector of the economy comes,;:;
to appreciate recession.

•••

1!Biarp
GALLIPOUS - D. Kenneth
Morgan, former city manager of
Gallipolis and now associated with
the Russell Wood real estate agency,
brought back with him from Florida
some art in color from the Bradenton Herald.
The art is signed "Watterson 80."
The artist is Keith Watterson.
The name may mean nothing to
you unless you were a follower of the
Gallipolis Little League in the mid60s. Or, even farther back, you may
have known Keith's mother and
father - the Bill Wattersons.
First, there's a 16-page tabloid entitled the " Pittsburgh Pirates Scrapbook," and the art adorns the cover,
a caricature of Willie Stargell with
his bat. It's a good likeness of ol'
Willie.
Then, there 's the cover of
''Manatee magazine," with an
almost photographic picture on the
cover of the tabloid insert of which
we have only the front sheet. Across
the top is a drawing of
the Manatee, a me - s!lrok
sidewheeler excursion boat with
many people aboard ; below
it on the left is a _st~am_
locomotive, and on the right is a
white-bearded old gentleman.
Keith's signature is not only in his
own hand but printed vertically "illustration/Keith Watterson. "
Also, there's a tabloid of 20 pages
entitled "Community Clubs," and
Watterson cover shows a bespectacled guy reading the same tabloid
with the same cover.
Morgan also brought back the top
part of Section C of a Sunday paper
- March 16 was the date - with a
leprechaun in green garb, a long
clay pipe extending from his mouth.
He's standing on a tree stump, emptying a kettle of coins. It's all about
St. Patrick and the Irish.
Finally, there's a full page painting of a warrior of medieval days,
his sword upright, armor over his
chest and head; his hearded face is
showing under the metal brim.
Who is Keith Watterson ? He's the
illustrator for the Bradenton
Herald; he took art at Manatee
JU!Iior College at Bradenton ; he's
the oldest of four children of Bill and
Marianne Preston Watterson.
Marianne Watterson, RN, is in
hemalology. You'll remember her
as a nurse at Holzer Hoepital. Blll
Watterson, charter member of the
crew at WJEH radio, now is vicepreSident of Arbuckle, French, and
Green . Bradenton realtors. The

grandchildren.
Delegates attending from Gallia
County will be Thomas P. Price, Jr.,
M.D., along with Daniel H. Whitely,
M.D., alternative delegate . •From
Meigs County, E. S. Villanueva,
M.D. wiU be attending as delegate,

with Joseph J . Davis, M.D., as alternative delegate to the OSMA House
·of Delegates.
Oscar W. Clarke, M.D., Gallipolis,
will be attending as chairman of the
Ohio Delegates to the American
Medical Association.

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AUTO REPORTED STOLEN
GALIJPOUS - The theft of 11"
auto was investigated Fridar by tpe
Gallla Coun!Y Sheriff's ~According to a report -filed ' wil.b
that department, a 1974 Pontiac
Fire bird owned by Billy Walters was
removed from his Rt. I, Northup,
residence overnight.

~allipollg

By J . Samuel Peeps

American College of Surgeons, Dr.
Morgan has served as president of
the Ohio Chapter of the American
College of Surgeons, was a founding
member of the American Trauma
Society in 1972, is a fellow of the
American Association for Surgery of
Tra\lffill, and has served in a number of capacities in the Ohio State
Medical Association, now completing his year as president.
He will continue in a leadership
capacity with the OSMA, as the Immediate Past President during the
coming year 1980-81 . Of significance
this past year, under Dr. Morgan's
leadership, the OSMA surpassed for
the first time in its history, a membership of over 12,000 physicians.
Dr. Morgan and his wife Deanna,
reside on Cedar Street in Gallipolis.
They have five children and three

l - l926 art i ~l : Erne!il H. ShepMd J

president of the finn is Carl French,
fonner manager of the Gallipolis
Department Store. The Wattersons
have been in Bradenton 12 years.
In Gallipolis, Keith Watterson was
third baseman for the Little. Lea~n~e
White Sox, coach of whom was
Dick Thomas . Dick's Little
Leaguers won three straight city
championships back to back. Some
of Keith's teanunates were Pete
Neal, Fireball Jamison, Kim
Meadows, Jim Noe, Jim Steinbeck,
Keith Black, and Ricky Boone.
THE COLONIAL, dubbed by the
Jackson Journal-Herald as "one of
southeastern Ohio's best-known
restaurants and a Jackson land·
mark for many years," has been
sold to Jim and Renna· Geitz,
Jackson Coll!ltY natives who have
lived in Florida the last two years.
Selling it were Lou and Bernice Farmer, who came to Jackson from
Pike County in 1947 to run the
Colonial along with Wayne and
Hosey Wick; the Farmers bought
out the Wicks in 1962.

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�AoO-TbeSundayTimes-&amp;ntinel,Sunday, May 11,1980

PVH lists celebration activities
POINT -PLEASANT - The
Pleasant Valley Hospital Nursing
Care Unit will be celebrating
National Nursing Home Week May
11-16. The public is invited to. participate.
During National Nursing Home
Week there will be many special activities open to the public. On
Mother's Day, May 11, a Tea will be
held at the Pleas;mt Valley Hospital
Nursing Care Unit from 2 to 3 p.m. in
the Recreation Room . Every
relatives and friend of residents are
cordially invited.
On Monday at 2 p.m. there will be
helium
balloona races.
resident
will
release
balloonEach
filled
with
helium outside the Nursing Care

u~e card mailed to the Nursing

away will win a prize for the resident
who released that balloon. There
will be a time limit of one month for
return!!~~ cards.
Tuesday, the Nursing Care Unit
will celebrate " Hillbilly Day." This
day begins with old fashioned
clothes worn by residents, a country
noon meal and ends with entertainment by the "Charlie Lilly
and the Poorside" country western
band at 6 p.m. Everyone is invited.
On Wednesday residents will display
crafts they have made starting at 2

p.m. in the Nursing Care Unit.
Thursday has been designated fun
day with bingo as the main en·
tertainment.
Friday will be king and queen day.
A king and queen will be selected by
popular vote by the residents and
staff of the Nursing Care Unit. Tbe will be crowned at 2 p.m. and reign
fortheday.
The National Nursing Home Week
events at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Nursing Care Unit are open
to everyone.
·

~.,

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Start someth•lt:J.Q ID

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MUSICAL- This pony chorus will be a feature of a
musical to be staged at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport under the direction of
Ed Harkless. Making up the group are, first row, 1tor,
Katie Klein, Katrina ' Donahue, Susan Bryant, Marla
Wilson, Gayla Haning, Amy Erwin, and Tracey Me-

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the theater"

MELVIN NEI..WN RECEIVES
AWARD
CLOVIS, N. M. - Staff Sergeant
Melvin R. Nelson, whose wife, Loretta, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
RobertL. SawyersofMason, W.Va.,
is a member of an organization that
has received the U. S. Air Force
Outstanding Unit Award at Cannon
Air Force Base.
The U. S. Air Force Outstanding
Unit Award is earned by members of
an Air Force unit for exceptionally
meritorious service or outstanding
achievement that clearly sets the
unit apart from similar units.
Sergeant Nelson is a 1960 graduate
of Yamato High School, Tokyo,
Japan.

children. Pictured 1 tor, fr ont row are, John Henry,
Mary Moore, Robyn Smith, Lisa Rider, and Denise
Stegall; back row, Giordana Baker, Rick Hawley, Jack
Peterson, Ray Try all, and Dewey Autherson.

BEll
HONDA SALES

RT. 7

PH. 446·2240

GAUIPOUS

SOFA

for

yourwnewho=
•

it

call and J-:" l' t .•n•m d\(•

THICK LAYERS
PADDING COVER THE
FLEXSTEEL SPRINGS

FLEXSTEEL

What's Your Choice?

FrNE U Pt-IOLS'I'EREil Fl TH!'\TITilE

' " "'!'•""

Now Available Through The -- ..

McGINNESS-STAMLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nick Johnson , Accou~tant E xec utive
452 2nd .twe .
Phon e 446 ·1761
Gallipolis

ONE DAY

SIX MONTHS
Minimum Deposit$10,000

Earnie's checking -savings pl.:n
earns you 511•% interest every
day on your total sav ings account
balance. Write checks as you
need to. Sav ings account interest
- checking account convenience.
Ask for" Earnie!"

5.25%
Annual Rate

This Money Market Certificate
rate is effective every Thursday.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding
of
interest.
Automatically renewable at
maturity at the prevailing rate.
The actual return to investors on
Treasury ' s Bills is higher .

9.459%

5.46%
Annual Yield

- - - - - - --- - - - -

D
OPT

:

Gl.EST

OPT

~~ PANTRY

-~
· --~--~~.,_.~===-~--~==~
QDSE ,~~--==~5'-1'":...-+1-s'-9"--+-- lo'-z"-+--- 14'-3"...::::,/----'1---- 9 · 9 ' ~

MODEL 5214 2B BFKSD RA

ORDER NO. 8124

HH

by Fairmont Homes, Inc.
52
•Front Bay Window

•Plumbed for Washer

•Gas Furnace

•Carpet in Hall

•Gas Range

•Rear Bath

•Carpet in living Rm.

We ott er th e CK Ciu sivc S yr .
Buy er s Prot ect ion Plan in thi s

area.

$9995

Minimum Deposit $500

The rate · shown below for this
Certificate is applicable this
month and is related to the
average 21f2 year yield of
treasury securities. Interest is
compounded daily and is paid
mont hly ,
quarterly,
semi ·
annually, or annuallY.

For those investors Wht.J preter a
longer term this certificate earns
the same rate and is issued under
the same regulations as the 2'12
year, certificate . Interest is compounded daily ~nd paid monthly,
quarterly, semt ·annually, or an·
nually. MAY RATE

10.50% 11.23% 10.50% 11.23%
:Annual Rate

6 IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Annual Yield

We a lso ha ve modul a rs
tc res t W. Va. hou s ing mon ey.

Delivered and set up t;m your lot

PATENTED
·SPRINGS
WATCH-SPRING STEEL THAT UTILIZES
THE "ARCH" AND PROVIDES THE
MOST COMFORTABLE AND DURABLE
SEAT SPR ING AVAILABLE

HARDWOOD
(MOSTLY OAK) FRAMES
KILN DRIEO AND
SEALED AGAINST MOISTURE

SOFA &amp; MATCHING
LOVE SEAT
. NYLON "FLOCKED IN
EARnfTONES WITH BLUE

IN STOCK

· Interest must remain on deposit a full year to earn annual yield. There is a
substantial penalty for premature withdrawal of Certificate funds . Minimum
Deposit ss.ooo for Monthly 1nterest.

BLUE NYLON
VELVET

SLEEP SOFAS

which qualify tor th e low m·

•5 Yr. Buyers Protection Plan •Furnished

Only

3¥2 YEARS

Annual Yield

SPRING EDGE FOR
GREATER SEATING COMFORT

WED., MAY 14

Minimum Deposit $500

MAY RATE

DOUBLEDOWELLED,
GLUED AND SCREWED-IN
. -.. CORNER BLOCKS

UNTIL

21h YEARS

Annual Rate

00

IN STOCK

If you haven't been to Empire Furniture you hav.e
missed shopping the largest furniture store in the
area.

' "n nl"· ••• •I

:---- -

IN EARTH TONES WITH BLUE

ARM

IN STOCK

see n and heard
ad vcrt~&lt; o n~ abo ut

sav1n gs!
·\ U.o., ' I' '"·" "'

NYLON FLOCKED VElVET

SEAT CUSHION S WITH SUPERIOR
COMFORT ARE MADE OF
DUAL LAT EX RUBBER
BACKS ARE PADDED IY!TH
OR HEAV'I DENSITY
POLY URElHANE FOAM,
POLYURETHANE FOAM WRAPPED
VESTER FIBERS OR
IN POLYESTER FIBRE
. - · - SOFT COTIOH

100% POLYESTER

"·'"" "

Alls tate H onw u w ne r~ 1n su r a1Kt'
A nd no w, i t' s~ v;:ul n bl ell!'rt ' . at uur
a ge ncy. Bu t, d1d yo u know that if
you r house is 5 ycms old or le:-.:-.. v1n1
may q ua lify lOr Allsl&lt;il&lt;''s "N" w
Hou se 10 Percent Di :-;cuu nt '' ••n vuur
bas1c pre m1um '!
·
A II sta te h i..l !i found 1l cns t:-. IL•,.;,.;
to 1nsure newe r ho me.-.; , :lll rltlwv 'n_•
G tve u s

IN STOCK
SOFA &amp; CHAIR

BROWN FLORAL

HAPPY HOUSE

,.' .'

UPHOLSTERY MATERIAL
SELECTED FROM
FLEXSTEEL'S ''THOUSANDPLUS"
COLLECTION OF FABRICS

Allstate can save you 10%
on 11 Good Hands" insurance

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Charles Starzynski,
Albany; Rose Deem, Racine;
George Starcher, Pomeroy; Linda
Jacks, Langsville; Dennis Hart,
Middleport.
Bentley,
Discharged-Naomi
James Meadows, Lasch Douglas,
Albert Bolen, Ross Kent.

X

~o!I1J

~~DII-

Here in Gallia County

pass ing th1 s savJ ng:-; nn tn vuu .

•14

~"''

'729

IN STOCK

Gallipolis
" Across from

ffiLLBILUES - A hillbilly theme will be carried
out by these students in the musical to be presented at
the Meigs Junior High, 7 p.m. Tuesday evening. Admission for the musical, which is under the direction of
Ed Harkless, will be 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for

"c e rt to the tport
ol rnolorcycllng

All '80 MODELS

417 Seco nd Av e.

FLEXSTEEL FINE FURNITURE
BEGINS ON THE INSIDE TO ASS URE
QUALITY, COMFORT, BEAUTY AND DURABILITY

d •r1o r onthe
!ll rte t. ,, ., 1
gr111 WI Y to 1ntro ·
duce hfSI -t rmt

479

1

Derifield
Jewelry

HAS EVERVTHINC:I

An t conomltl l

1M I Uy-to-rldt
du l l·purpO tl
molorcycle In I he

Early Am erica n wa rmth acce nt ed
w ith mell ow lini shed so lid oak
tnm. A massive design with thick,
weltless seat cushions, attached
p illow backs and button-t ulted
p rllow arms.

WITH WHITE WELT
IN STOCK

..

EACH DEPOSITOR INSURED UP TO $100,000 BY THE FDIC, AN AGENCY O'F
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

Expect more from

Valley
Four lo( eUont to
Men1ber : F DI (..

1en~

you better.

•••
••

-•
:.
•

~

~

~

·'

�AoO-TbeSundayTimes-&amp;ntinel,Sunday, May 11,1980

PVH lists celebration activities
POINT -PLEASANT - The
Pleasant Valley Hospital Nursing
Care Unit will be celebrating
National Nursing Home Week May
11-16. The public is invited to. participate.
During National Nursing Home
Week there will be many special activities open to the public. On
Mother's Day, May 11, a Tea will be
held at the Pleas;mt Valley Hospital
Nursing Care Unit from 2 to 3 p.m. in
the Recreation Room . Every
relatives and friend of residents are
cordially invited.
On Monday at 2 p.m. there will be
helium
balloona races.
resident
will
release
balloonEach
filled
with
helium outside the Nursing Care

u~e card mailed to the Nursing

away will win a prize for the resident
who released that balloon. There
will be a time limit of one month for
return!!~~ cards.
Tuesday, the Nursing Care Unit
will celebrate " Hillbilly Day." This
day begins with old fashioned
clothes worn by residents, a country
noon meal and ends with entertainment by the "Charlie Lilly
and the Poorside" country western
band at 6 p.m. Everyone is invited.
On Wednesday residents will display
crafts they have made starting at 2

p.m. in the Nursing Care Unit.
Thursday has been designated fun
day with bingo as the main en·
tertainment.
Friday will be king and queen day.
A king and queen will be selected by
popular vote by the residents and
staff of the Nursing Care Unit. Tbe will be crowned at 2 p.m. and reign
fortheday.
The National Nursing Home Week
events at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Nursing Care Unit are open
to everyone.
·

~.,

mr

Start someth•lt:J.Q ID

~~

your neighborhood
HONDA
XRBD

HONDA ATC®7 0
Mahon; second row, Kim Roush, J ody Miller, Brenda
Cunningham, Debbie Werry, Kim E blin, Teresa Pratt,
and Susie Barker ; third row, Ruth Fry, Sue Nonnan,
Karen Spencer, Jolene Moodispaugh, Trina Reeves,
Debbie Porter, and Becky Arnott.

FLEXSTEEI:
FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE

I1~piil~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~iiiiiiiiii~~~..j:
e

Care Unit from the farthest point

MUSICAL- This pony chorus will be a feature of a
musical to be staged at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport under the direction of
Ed Harkless. Making up the group are, first row, 1tor,
Katie Klein, Katrina ' Donahue, Susan Bryant, Marla
Wilson, Gayla Haning, Amy Erwin, and Tracey Me-

OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8 P.M.

~&gt;&lt;
m[J)

Honda'• ama lltll li r1 d1.1 rC blkt
w lt ll ! lv t · IJM~td trtnlml l l lon
~ a rt llat)lt 71. T cc lour·"rokt
t ng'l nt II 11'11 Idol Wl'/ 10 lntiO ·

~~

OuCIIliQ IMifl 10 0 11"1 I IOIIIQ .

'629

rings

~
~

M

HONDA CT70
A si •HIIeg ~l M ln1 Tl aii!JJ.
Dl ~ ll dit$11)rJf!d IO •n l roduce

ALL FLEXSTEEL IN STOCK
OR SPECIAL ORDERED

THIS STYLE
CAN BE SPECIAL ORDERED
IN ANY COLOR

4 to 5 WEEK DELIVERY
ON ALL SPECIAL ORDERS.

you or your youngslers
IO the JOY ol !ld'"l) l •ght ·
we•glll iiJrHI easno-op8f1U!.

'629

FLEXSTEEC
A deptllOi ble m •ni dir1 ~1ke
th t t ' s per fect lor the youn g

r•cer LIQht wt•ont ana e.sv

I ct.

10 o per11e

READY TO GO.

the theater"

MELVIN NEI..WN RECEIVES
AWARD
CLOVIS, N. M. - Staff Sergeant
Melvin R. Nelson, whose wife, Loretta, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
RobertL. SawyersofMason, W.Va.,
is a member of an organization that
has received the U. S. Air Force
Outstanding Unit Award at Cannon
Air Force Base.
The U. S. Air Force Outstanding
Unit Award is earned by members of
an Air Force unit for exceptionally
meritorious service or outstanding
achievement that clearly sets the
unit apart from similar units.
Sergeant Nelson is a 1960 graduate
of Yamato High School, Tokyo,
Japan.

children. Pictured 1 tor, fr ont row are, John Henry,
Mary Moore, Robyn Smith, Lisa Rider, and Denise
Stegall; back row, Giordana Baker, Rick Hawley, Jack
Peterson, Ray Try all, and Dewey Autherson.

BEll
HONDA SALES

RT. 7

PH. 446·2240

GAUIPOUS

SOFA

for

yourwnewho=
•

it

call and J-:" l' t .•n•m d\(•

THICK LAYERS
PADDING COVER THE
FLEXSTEEL SPRINGS

FLEXSTEEL

What's Your Choice?

FrNE U Pt-IOLS'I'EREil Fl TH!'\TITilE

' " "'!'•""

Now Available Through The -- ..

McGINNESS-STAMLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nick Johnson , Accou~tant E xec utive
452 2nd .twe .
Phon e 446 ·1761
Gallipolis

ONE DAY

SIX MONTHS
Minimum Deposit$10,000

Earnie's checking -savings pl.:n
earns you 511•% interest every
day on your total sav ings account
balance. Write checks as you
need to. Sav ings account interest
- checking account convenience.
Ask for" Earnie!"

5.25%
Annual Rate

This Money Market Certificate
rate is effective every Thursday.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding
of
interest.
Automatically renewable at
maturity at the prevailing rate.
The actual return to investors on
Treasury ' s Bills is higher .

9.459%

5.46%
Annual Yield

- - - - - - --- - - - -

D
OPT

:

Gl.EST

OPT

~~ PANTRY

-~
· --~--~~.,_.~===-~--~==~
QDSE ,~~--==~5'-1'":...-+1-s'-9"--+-- lo'-z"-+--- 14'-3"...::::,/----'1---- 9 · 9 ' ~

MODEL 5214 2B BFKSD RA

ORDER NO. 8124

HH

by Fairmont Homes, Inc.
52
•Front Bay Window

•Plumbed for Washer

•Gas Furnace

•Carpet in Hall

•Gas Range

•Rear Bath

•Carpet in living Rm.

We ott er th e CK Ciu sivc S yr .
Buy er s Prot ect ion Plan in thi s

area.

$9995

Minimum Deposit $500

The rate · shown below for this
Certificate is applicable this
month and is related to the
average 21f2 year yield of
treasury securities. Interest is
compounded daily and is paid
mont hly ,
quarterly,
semi ·
annually, or annuallY.

For those investors Wht.J preter a
longer term this certificate earns
the same rate and is issued under
the same regulations as the 2'12
year, certificate . Interest is compounded daily ~nd paid monthly,
quarterly, semt ·annually, or an·
nually. MAY RATE

10.50% 11.23% 10.50% 11.23%
:Annual Rate

6 IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Annual Yield

We a lso ha ve modul a rs
tc res t W. Va. hou s ing mon ey.

Delivered and set up t;m your lot

PATENTED
·SPRINGS
WATCH-SPRING STEEL THAT UTILIZES
THE "ARCH" AND PROVIDES THE
MOST COMFORTABLE AND DURABLE
SEAT SPR ING AVAILABLE

HARDWOOD
(MOSTLY OAK) FRAMES
KILN DRIEO AND
SEALED AGAINST MOISTURE

SOFA &amp; MATCHING
LOVE SEAT
. NYLON "FLOCKED IN
EARnfTONES WITH BLUE

IN STOCK

· Interest must remain on deposit a full year to earn annual yield. There is a
substantial penalty for premature withdrawal of Certificate funds . Minimum
Deposit ss.ooo for Monthly 1nterest.

BLUE NYLON
VELVET

SLEEP SOFAS

which qualify tor th e low m·

•5 Yr. Buyers Protection Plan •Furnished

Only

3¥2 YEARS

Annual Yield

SPRING EDGE FOR
GREATER SEATING COMFORT

WED., MAY 14

Minimum Deposit $500

MAY RATE

DOUBLEDOWELLED,
GLUED AND SCREWED-IN
. -.. CORNER BLOCKS

UNTIL

21h YEARS

Annual Rate

00

IN STOCK

If you haven't been to Empire Furniture you hav.e
missed shopping the largest furniture store in the
area.

' "n nl"· ••• •I

:---- -

IN EARTH TONES WITH BLUE

ARM

IN STOCK

see n and heard
ad vcrt~&lt; o n~ abo ut

sav1n gs!
·\ U.o., ' I' '"·" "'

NYLON FLOCKED VElVET

SEAT CUSHION S WITH SUPERIOR
COMFORT ARE MADE OF
DUAL LAT EX RUBBER
BACKS ARE PADDED IY!TH
OR HEAV'I DENSITY
POLY URElHANE FOAM,
POLYURETHANE FOAM WRAPPED
VESTER FIBERS OR
IN POLYESTER FIBRE
. - · - SOFT COTIOH

100% POLYESTER

"·'"" "

Alls tate H onw u w ne r~ 1n su r a1Kt'
A nd no w, i t' s~ v;:ul n bl ell!'rt ' . at uur
a ge ncy. Bu t, d1d yo u know that if
you r house is 5 ycms old or le:-.:-.. v1n1
may q ua lify lOr Allsl&lt;il&lt;''s "N" w
Hou se 10 Percent Di :-;cuu nt '' ••n vuur
bas1c pre m1um '!
·
A II sta te h i..l !i found 1l cns t:-. IL•,.;,.;
to 1nsure newe r ho me.-.; , :lll rltlwv 'n_•
G tve u s

IN STOCK
SOFA &amp; CHAIR

BROWN FLORAL

HAPPY HOUSE

,.' .'

UPHOLSTERY MATERIAL
SELECTED FROM
FLEXSTEEL'S ''THOUSANDPLUS"
COLLECTION OF FABRICS

Allstate can save you 10%
on 11 Good Hands" insurance

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Charles Starzynski,
Albany; Rose Deem, Racine;
George Starcher, Pomeroy; Linda
Jacks, Langsville; Dennis Hart,
Middleport.
Bentley,
Discharged-Naomi
James Meadows, Lasch Douglas,
Albert Bolen, Ross Kent.

X

~o!I1J

~~DII-

Here in Gallia County

pass ing th1 s savJ ng:-; nn tn vuu .

•14

~"''

'729

IN STOCK

Gallipolis
" Across from

ffiLLBILUES - A hillbilly theme will be carried
out by these students in the musical to be presented at
the Meigs Junior High, 7 p.m. Tuesday evening. Admission for the musical, which is under the direction of
Ed Harkless, will be 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for

"c e rt to the tport
ol rnolorcycllng

All '80 MODELS

417 Seco nd Av e.

FLEXSTEEL FINE FURNITURE
BEGINS ON THE INSIDE TO ASS URE
QUALITY, COMFORT, BEAUTY AND DURABILITY

d •r1o r onthe
!ll rte t. ,, ., 1
gr111 WI Y to 1ntro ·
duce hfSI -t rmt

479

1

Derifield
Jewelry

HAS EVERVTHINC:I

An t conomltl l

1M I Uy-to-rldt
du l l·purpO tl
molorcycle In I he

Early Am erica n wa rmth acce nt ed
w ith mell ow lini shed so lid oak
tnm. A massive design with thick,
weltless seat cushions, attached
p illow backs and button-t ulted
p rllow arms.

WITH WHITE WELT
IN STOCK

..

EACH DEPOSITOR INSURED UP TO $100,000 BY THE FDIC, AN AGENCY O'F
THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

Expect more from

Valley
Four lo( eUont to
Men1ber : F DI (..

1en~

you better.

•••
••

-•
:.
•

~

~

~

·'

�A~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May

II, 1980

Two persons injured in Meigs accident
Harry Clay AUDllller
COOLVILLE - Harry Clay
Awniller, 92, died Friday evening at
Hartland Nursing Home Devola

Ohio.
'
'
Mr. Awniller was born in New
England, West Va., the son of the
late Henry Clay and Lucy Brookhart
Aumiller. He was also preceded in
death by 13 brothers and sisters.
He attended Calvary Conununity
Church, Belpre and was·a fanner in
the Athens County area most of his
life.
He is survived by several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev. Tim Synder officiating.
Burial will be in Torch Baptist
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. on Sunday.
PAULE. BURTON
RACINE - Paul E. Burton, 59,
Racine, formerly of Middleport,
died May 6 at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Huntington,
W. Va.
He was born Nov. 22, 1920, son of
the late Ernest M. and Carrie S.
Beabout Burton. He was a veteran ri
World War 11. Besides his parents,
he was preceded in death by a
brother, William R Burton.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Ernestine Fischer, Racine, and Mrs.
Wilmetta Leifheit, Pomery ; a
brother, Elmer S. Burton, CoiUI!lbus; a sister-in-law, Mrs. M!lry Burton, Middleport; two nieces, Mrs.
Susie Hill, Syracuse, and Mrs. Millie
Dorgan, Columbus, and two
nephews, Roger Leifheit, Pomeroy,

COMPLETES REQUIREMENTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio - American
Electric Power Co. announced
Friday It has completed aU
requirements for Its acqlllsltion of
the Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
C&amp;OE thus. becomes the elrhlb
. operating electric uUilty subsidiary
of AEP, wblcb Is moving Its
headquarters from New York to
Columbus.
AEP Chairman W.S. White Jr.
said stock exchanges were being
consummated as of Friday. Those
tendering tbelr shares quaWy for
AEP' s payment of a 55\2cents per
share dividend on June 10, be said.
'

and Robert Burton, Columbus.
Memorial services wiD be held
later.

MARY PALMER
DOVER - Mary Palmer, 58, wife
of fonner Gallipolis Moore Store
manager Wade Palmer, a native of
Gallia County, died at 5 a.m. Satlll'day in a Dover Hospital.
Other survivors include two
children, Judy Palmer of Akron and
Keith P11lmer, Dover; two brothersin-law, Wayne Palmer, Cheshire,
and Donald Palmer, Rt. I, Bidwell,
and a sister-in-law, Mrs. Marie
Thomas, Rt. l, BidweU.
Funeral services will be held at
10:30 a.m. Tuesday from the Unnhert-Gibb Funeral Home at New
Philadelphia. Calling hours will be
held at the funeral home from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Mmday.

Starvation
•
SigllS seen

GALLIPOLIS - Two persons
were injured·and one driver cited as
the result of two recent accidents investigated by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a one-vehicle accidsPt in Meigs
County, on CR 3, Thursday at 11 :50
p.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Charles Starzynskl, 22, Albany, went out of control, passed off the roadway and
overturned.
Starzynski displayed visible signs
of injury and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.
Starzynski was cited on a charge
ofDWI .
Officers were called to the scene of
a tw~rvehicle accident oil SR 141,
Friday at 4:57 p.m.
The patrol reports an east bound
auto operated by Harold McGuire,
34, Gallipolis, was sideswiped by a
vehicle driven by Karen Johnson, 30,
Gallipolis, while turning into a
private drive.
The Johnson auto continued,

foUowing collision, off the left side of
the roadway into a ditch.
Johnson displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment.
There was moderate damage to
the vehicles.
Meanwhile, one person was injured and two drivers were cited as
the result of three , accidents investigated Friday by Gallipolis City
Police.
Officers were caUed to the scene of
a one-vehicle accident on Mill Creek
Rd., at 3:29 p.m.
Police report an auto operated by
Mark A. Brown, 16, Gallipolis, swerved to avoid an unidentified oncoming vehicle and passed off the .
roadway.
·
Brown claimed injury, but was not
inunedlately treated. The vehicle
was demolished.
The patrol investigated a twovehicle mishap at the intersection of
Third Avenue and State Street at
3:52p.m.
Police report a north bound auto
operated by Nancy J. Shafer, 23,
Scottown, failed to obey a traffic

NEW YORK {AP)- Dramatic increases in the numbers of starving
mothers and children seeking rice
on the Thailand border signal a
second wave of massive famine and
hunger in Cambodia, according to
CARE .
Louis Samia, executive director of
the relief organization, made an
urgent appeal Friday for funds after
getting a first hand telephone report
on the famine from a CARE
representative in Thailand.
Me anwhile, United Nations
Secretary General Kurt Waldheim
announced that a U.N. conference on
humanitarian aid to Cambodians
will he held on May 26 .and May '1:1 in
Geneva, Switzerland, at the request
of the Economic and Social Council.
Samia said, "Conditions our staff
in Thailand describe are similar to
those observed last fall when the fi r·
st wave of starving refugees poured
across Ule border."
He said more than 250 transient
mothers a nd small children have
been arriving daily for the past two
weeks at Nong Chan, a major border
relief distribution point, to pick up a
ration of rice and return to the in·
terior of Cambodia .
Samia said food is being rushed to
the area but more money is needed.
CARE, located at 66o First Ave. in
New York City, has distributed aid
worth more than $3 million to the
refugees. It has helped feed 15,000
persons daily at four refugee camps
and distribute emergency relief kits,
rice and rice seed.

light and traveled into the path of an
east bound vehicle driven by ArdeUa
G. Belville, 35, Waterloo.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Shafer was cited on a
charge of failure to obey a traffic
conlrol device.
Officers investigated a tw~&gt;­
vehicle accident at the intersection
of Locust St. and Fourth Ave., at

1:05p.m.
Police report an auto operated by •
Angela L. Garland, 16, Pt. Pleasant,
turned off L«ust onto Fourth and
struck a south bound vehicle driven
by Charles E . Gatewood, 31,
Gallipolis .
Garland was cited on a charge of
failure to yield. Both vehicles incurred moderate damage.

Store Hours:

Mort-Sat. 8 am-10 prr.

BUY NOW FOR
SPRING DELIVERY
AND SAVE 1156
Reg. sg25 Special

$769
LOGAN MONUMENT CO. INC.
POMEROY , 0 .
leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.

VINTON, 0 .
James o . Bush, Mgr.
Ph . 388·8603

Ph. 992· 2SBB

Sunday 10 am·IO pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
DONALD LEACH

Promotion
announced.
CHESHIRE - Donald W. Leach
has been promoted to the position of
'Lnit Supervisor at Ohio VaUey Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek
Station, effective May 1, according
toL. R. Ford, Jr., Plant Manager.
Leach joined OVEC in 1965 as a
laborer in the Labor Department.
in 1967 he transferred to the
Operations Department as a utility
operator and in 1976 was promoted
to equipment operator.
Leach is a native of GaUia County
and a graduate of Cheshire High
School. Don and his wife, Dorothy,
res1de at Rt. I, Cheshire, and are the
parents of three children: Marcia,
John and Roger.

LIMITED OFFER! '
DIRECT TO YOU FROM HOTPOINT!

Offer applies to al l retail purchases Aprill thru May 3l, 1980 on se lected Hotpoint quality appliances shown.

CASH FACTORY
REBATE!

CO UN TER
'• MICROWAVE
CABINET OVEN &amp; DELUXE 30"
OVE N-RANGE WITH BLA CK
GLASS WINDOW DOORS'
Microwave

Model RVM4 2

30" Ran ge
Model RB747GA

Discount '50
Hotpoint Rebate 1100

a gaaden tractor

Ariens feels that buying a garden trac tor is something that deserves time and thought. Deli berate
co mpa risons between var i.ous makes shou ld be
made before a decision is reached .

DEL UXE 23 5 CU. FT. REFRE SHMENT CE NTER
WITH ICE &amp; WATER THRU TH E DOOR
Gl Adjustabl e door sh elves in cabinet section
13 4 Freezer shelves in door and cabinet 0
Removabl e freezer basket 0 Juice can dispen ser El Rol ls-out-on-wheels. ;,;000 , CS F 2~DA
NO TE: $50 ReDa/e

also

avarla ble on Model CSF22MA. no t illustrated.

S~VE '150

1

100

Hotpoint Rebate

'50

SAVE '150

CASH FACTORY REBATE
FOR THE PAIR!'

The following questions are those you should ask
any dealer when making your tra clo r compari sons:

0

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs High
School Madrigals presented the
program at the Friday night
meeting of the Middleport- Pomeroy
Rotary Friday night held at the
Heath United Methodist Church.
The 14 students presented several
selections, " Broken Hearted Me", ·
I Love a Piano", "Ships' \ uSing Me
a Plain Old Simple Song" and
themes from TV shows. The
program was weD received.
Guests were Bill Knight of Pt.
Pleasant and Jake Kobel of
Gallipolis.
Twenty Rotarians attended. Jack
Walker, president, presided and dinner was served by the ladies of the
church.

£,"\Do wou need to remove the mower deck
Ubofore altachtng a !iller or tronl blade on
your tractor?

·n

How are attachment• driven with your tractor?
~ How many belt• are needed?

O

What lolhe capaclly or your tractor's goo
tank? How many hours of grass cutting can
I got wllh onelank·lull ?

The answers to these questions and olhers you 'll
want to ask will be very reve91ing . Ariens wei~
comes a th orough compar ison •and is confident
that the ir Garden Tractors will be sta nd-out qua lity
favori tes when you've made it.
Take this list with you when you make your rounds .
You'll be glad you did.

SUPERIOR FRANKIES
12

Dryer
Model DLB 2880A

DELUXE 13 CYCLE BU lLT-IN
~
WASHER'M DISHWASHER'

v,

M1.dt&gt;

·'}.0'1•'!)

Discount
Hotpoint Rebate

SAVE

DISCOUNT 550 Pr.
HOTPOINT
REBATE $40

sso
SJO

•ao

.. Jt[

SAVE
'90

$20 Aeoate rJiso avan au1e on Washer Model WLW4700A

-f+o-tp..oi..rt

•

DELUXE 30" HI· LO COOKING
CENTER WITH BLACK
GLASS WINDOW DOORS'
Model AH966GY

DISCOUNT
$50
Hotpoint Rebate$100

and Dryer Model DLB2650A, not illustrate rJ.

.

SAVEtO

FUNDS RECEIVED
POMEROY - Gov. James A.
Rhodes announced that the Bureau
of Motor Vehicles has the second
distribution of 1980 license tax
revenues totaling $24,953,798.62
ready for disbursement to local
governmlmt. Meigs County will
receive fQ1 ,962.'1:1.

E-Z·CARVE BONELESS

USDA CHOICE

985-3308

CHESTER; OHIO .

POME .... -Y LANDMARK
M'lin Street
Store Hours : 8: 30 to 5:30

" Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties"
Ja~k W. ,C arsey, Mgr.
Mill Closed at S:OO P.M.

Pom - ·oy
.oone 992·2181

$
129

.

CHUCK STEAK..... ~~ ..~

$}Sg

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROASI........

·

CALIFORNIA

STRAWB ERR IES...'!.7
PARKAY

MARGARINE......~. 2/

TWO FACE CHARGES
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City
Police issued two citations Friday.
Ray A. Smith, 26, Gallipolis, was
cited in a charge of trafficking in
drugs.
Cited on a charge of DWI was
James L. Groves, 31, Vinton.

$ 19

LIQUID DETERGENT

DAWN ............... ::~;... 1

$

1

$ 09

BORDEN'S

Cottage Cheese -~~Of.

1

~ Fl:J\VORITE

·

Barbecue SauCe!~2~5

ICE CREAM ....... :.~A·L·
'COUP\JN ,-

ELF

KOOL-AID
10 QT. CAN
All FLAVORS
Offer No. J749

I

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

oz.

WIENERS .......... ::~·..

KRAFT

17'\. Do you have an etflclenl two-•tage snow
thrower or are you limited to 21 single stage?

THIGHS ............... ;~·. 7

GALUPOLIS- Seven cases were
terminated in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday.
James J. Morrison, 32, Vinton, for·
feited $35 on a charge of possession
of an open flask.
Forfeiting $30 on a charge of
assured clear distance was Arlene
F . Morton, 19, Bidwell.
James Henson, 20, Gallipolis, for·
feited $40 on a charge of no wheel
protection.
Paul D. HoUey, Crown City,
waived $30 on a charge of
prohibiting free movement of
vehicles.
Waiving $30 on a charge of improper backing was Harold W. Flint,
48, Gallipolis.
David L. Payne, 19, Ga llipolis, for·
feiled $30 on a charge of failure to
obey a traffic control device.
Forfeiting $30 on a charge of ex·
cessive speed was David K. Mullins,
'1:1, Gallipolis.

ARTICLES FILED
COLUMBUS - Secretary of State
Anthony J . Celebrezze, Jr. said
Saturday articles of incorporation
have been filed with his office in
Columbus by Middleport Coin Laull-'
dry,Inc.
Incorporators are M. James
O'Dell and M. 0. O'DeU. M. James
. O'Dell, Gallipolis, is the agent.

How long does it take and how easy Is it to
put on and take oH your mower deck?
(NOTE- aok lor a demonslrallon)

V

CHICKEN BREASTS OR

Madrigals
•
entertazn

Seven cases end

Five ln1POrtcw at questions
to ask when bUying

· PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1980

Lim it 1 Per Custo'mer
G(lod Only at Pow e ll ' s
Offer Expires May 17, 1980

$}39

::: .

25 LB.
BAG

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
OfiP.r Expires M·. y 17,1980

)!I~ :;

FLOUR

~ ~~

u 'm it 1 Pe r Customer
Good Only al Powell ' s
Offer Expires May 17, 1980

5l8.
BAG

79e

.
·-Limit 1 Per ~ u s tomer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
May 1 1980

�A~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May

II, 1980

Two persons injured in Meigs accident
Harry Clay AUDllller
COOLVILLE - Harry Clay
Awniller, 92, died Friday evening at
Hartland Nursing Home Devola

Ohio.
'
'
Mr. Awniller was born in New
England, West Va., the son of the
late Henry Clay and Lucy Brookhart
Aumiller. He was also preceded in
death by 13 brothers and sisters.
He attended Calvary Conununity
Church, Belpre and was·a fanner in
the Athens County area most of his
life.
He is survived by several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev. Tim Synder officiating.
Burial will be in Torch Baptist
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. on Sunday.
PAULE. BURTON
RACINE - Paul E. Burton, 59,
Racine, formerly of Middleport,
died May 6 at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Huntington,
W. Va.
He was born Nov. 22, 1920, son of
the late Ernest M. and Carrie S.
Beabout Burton. He was a veteran ri
World War 11. Besides his parents,
he was preceded in death by a
brother, William R Burton.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Ernestine Fischer, Racine, and Mrs.
Wilmetta Leifheit, Pomery ; a
brother, Elmer S. Burton, CoiUI!lbus; a sister-in-law, Mrs. M!lry Burton, Middleport; two nieces, Mrs.
Susie Hill, Syracuse, and Mrs. Millie
Dorgan, Columbus, and two
nephews, Roger Leifheit, Pomeroy,

COMPLETES REQUIREMENTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio - American
Electric Power Co. announced
Friday It has completed aU
requirements for Its acqlllsltion of
the Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
C&amp;OE thus. becomes the elrhlb
. operating electric uUilty subsidiary
of AEP, wblcb Is moving Its
headquarters from New York to
Columbus.
AEP Chairman W.S. White Jr.
said stock exchanges were being
consummated as of Friday. Those
tendering tbelr shares quaWy for
AEP' s payment of a 55\2cents per
share dividend on June 10, be said.
'

and Robert Burton, Columbus.
Memorial services wiD be held
later.

MARY PALMER
DOVER - Mary Palmer, 58, wife
of fonner Gallipolis Moore Store
manager Wade Palmer, a native of
Gallia County, died at 5 a.m. Satlll'day in a Dover Hospital.
Other survivors include two
children, Judy Palmer of Akron and
Keith P11lmer, Dover; two brothersin-law, Wayne Palmer, Cheshire,
and Donald Palmer, Rt. I, Bidwell,
and a sister-in-law, Mrs. Marie
Thomas, Rt. l, BidweU.
Funeral services will be held at
10:30 a.m. Tuesday from the Unnhert-Gibb Funeral Home at New
Philadelphia. Calling hours will be
held at the funeral home from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Mmday.

Starvation
•
SigllS seen

GALLIPOLIS - Two persons
were injured·and one driver cited as
the result of two recent accidents investigated by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a one-vehicle accidsPt in Meigs
County, on CR 3, Thursday at 11 :50
p.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Charles Starzynskl, 22, Albany, went out of control, passed off the roadway and
overturned.
Starzynski displayed visible signs
of injury and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.
Starzynski was cited on a charge
ofDWI .
Officers were called to the scene of
a tw~rvehicle accident oil SR 141,
Friday at 4:57 p.m.
The patrol reports an east bound
auto operated by Harold McGuire,
34, Gallipolis, was sideswiped by a
vehicle driven by Karen Johnson, 30,
Gallipolis, while turning into a
private drive.
The Johnson auto continued,

foUowing collision, off the left side of
the roadway into a ditch.
Johnson displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment.
There was moderate damage to
the vehicles.
Meanwhile, one person was injured and two drivers were cited as
the result of three , accidents investigated Friday by Gallipolis City
Police.
Officers were caUed to the scene of
a one-vehicle accident on Mill Creek
Rd., at 3:29 p.m.
Police report an auto operated by
Mark A. Brown, 16, Gallipolis, swerved to avoid an unidentified oncoming vehicle and passed off the .
roadway.
·
Brown claimed injury, but was not
inunedlately treated. The vehicle
was demolished.
The patrol investigated a twovehicle mishap at the intersection of
Third Avenue and State Street at
3:52p.m.
Police report a north bound auto
operated by Nancy J. Shafer, 23,
Scottown, failed to obey a traffic

NEW YORK {AP)- Dramatic increases in the numbers of starving
mothers and children seeking rice
on the Thailand border signal a
second wave of massive famine and
hunger in Cambodia, according to
CARE .
Louis Samia, executive director of
the relief organization, made an
urgent appeal Friday for funds after
getting a first hand telephone report
on the famine from a CARE
representative in Thailand.
Me anwhile, United Nations
Secretary General Kurt Waldheim
announced that a U.N. conference on
humanitarian aid to Cambodians
will he held on May 26 .and May '1:1 in
Geneva, Switzerland, at the request
of the Economic and Social Council.
Samia said, "Conditions our staff
in Thailand describe are similar to
those observed last fall when the fi r·
st wave of starving refugees poured
across Ule border."
He said more than 250 transient
mothers a nd small children have
been arriving daily for the past two
weeks at Nong Chan, a major border
relief distribution point, to pick up a
ration of rice and return to the in·
terior of Cambodia .
Samia said food is being rushed to
the area but more money is needed.
CARE, located at 66o First Ave. in
New York City, has distributed aid
worth more than $3 million to the
refugees. It has helped feed 15,000
persons daily at four refugee camps
and distribute emergency relief kits,
rice and rice seed.

light and traveled into the path of an
east bound vehicle driven by ArdeUa
G. Belville, 35, Waterloo.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Shafer was cited on a
charge of failure to obey a traffic
conlrol device.
Officers investigated a tw~&gt;­
vehicle accident at the intersection
of Locust St. and Fourth Ave., at

1:05p.m.
Police report an auto operated by •
Angela L. Garland, 16, Pt. Pleasant,
turned off L«ust onto Fourth and
struck a south bound vehicle driven
by Charles E . Gatewood, 31,
Gallipolis .
Garland was cited on a charge of
failure to yield. Both vehicles incurred moderate damage.

Store Hours:

Mort-Sat. 8 am-10 prr.

BUY NOW FOR
SPRING DELIVERY
AND SAVE 1156
Reg. sg25 Special

$769
LOGAN MONUMENT CO. INC.
POMEROY , 0 .
leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.

VINTON, 0 .
James o . Bush, Mgr.
Ph . 388·8603

Ph. 992· 2SBB

Sunday 10 am·IO pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
DONALD LEACH

Promotion
announced.
CHESHIRE - Donald W. Leach
has been promoted to the position of
'Lnit Supervisor at Ohio VaUey Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek
Station, effective May 1, according
toL. R. Ford, Jr., Plant Manager.
Leach joined OVEC in 1965 as a
laborer in the Labor Department.
in 1967 he transferred to the
Operations Department as a utility
operator and in 1976 was promoted
to equipment operator.
Leach is a native of GaUia County
and a graduate of Cheshire High
School. Don and his wife, Dorothy,
res1de at Rt. I, Cheshire, and are the
parents of three children: Marcia,
John and Roger.

LIMITED OFFER! '
DIRECT TO YOU FROM HOTPOINT!

Offer applies to al l retail purchases Aprill thru May 3l, 1980 on se lected Hotpoint quality appliances shown.

CASH FACTORY
REBATE!

CO UN TER
'• MICROWAVE
CABINET OVEN &amp; DELUXE 30"
OVE N-RANGE WITH BLA CK
GLASS WINDOW DOORS'
Microwave

Model RVM4 2

30" Ran ge
Model RB747GA

Discount '50
Hotpoint Rebate 1100

a gaaden tractor

Ariens feels that buying a garden trac tor is something that deserves time and thought. Deli berate
co mpa risons between var i.ous makes shou ld be
made before a decision is reached .

DEL UXE 23 5 CU. FT. REFRE SHMENT CE NTER
WITH ICE &amp; WATER THRU TH E DOOR
Gl Adjustabl e door sh elves in cabinet section
13 4 Freezer shelves in door and cabinet 0
Removabl e freezer basket 0 Juice can dispen ser El Rol ls-out-on-wheels. ;,;000 , CS F 2~DA
NO TE: $50 ReDa/e

also

avarla ble on Model CSF22MA. no t illustrated.

S~VE '150

1

100

Hotpoint Rebate

'50

SAVE '150

CASH FACTORY REBATE
FOR THE PAIR!'

The following questions are those you should ask
any dealer when making your tra clo r compari sons:

0

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs High
School Madrigals presented the
program at the Friday night
meeting of the Middleport- Pomeroy
Rotary Friday night held at the
Heath United Methodist Church.
The 14 students presented several
selections, " Broken Hearted Me", ·
I Love a Piano", "Ships' \ uSing Me
a Plain Old Simple Song" and
themes from TV shows. The
program was weD received.
Guests were Bill Knight of Pt.
Pleasant and Jake Kobel of
Gallipolis.
Twenty Rotarians attended. Jack
Walker, president, presided and dinner was served by the ladies of the
church.

£,"\Do wou need to remove the mower deck
Ubofore altachtng a !iller or tronl blade on
your tractor?

·n

How are attachment• driven with your tractor?
~ How many belt• are needed?

O

What lolhe capaclly or your tractor's goo
tank? How many hours of grass cutting can
I got wllh onelank·lull ?

The answers to these questions and olhers you 'll
want to ask will be very reve91ing . Ariens wei~
comes a th orough compar ison •and is confident
that the ir Garden Tractors will be sta nd-out qua lity
favori tes when you've made it.
Take this list with you when you make your rounds .
You'll be glad you did.

SUPERIOR FRANKIES
12

Dryer
Model DLB 2880A

DELUXE 13 CYCLE BU lLT-IN
~
WASHER'M DISHWASHER'

v,

M1.dt&gt;

·'}.0'1•'!)

Discount
Hotpoint Rebate

SAVE

DISCOUNT 550 Pr.
HOTPOINT
REBATE $40

sso
SJO

•ao

.. Jt[

SAVE
'90

$20 Aeoate rJiso avan au1e on Washer Model WLW4700A

-f+o-tp..oi..rt

•

DELUXE 30" HI· LO COOKING
CENTER WITH BLACK
GLASS WINDOW DOORS'
Model AH966GY

DISCOUNT
$50
Hotpoint Rebate$100

and Dryer Model DLB2650A, not illustrate rJ.

.

SAVEtO

FUNDS RECEIVED
POMEROY - Gov. James A.
Rhodes announced that the Bureau
of Motor Vehicles has the second
distribution of 1980 license tax
revenues totaling $24,953,798.62
ready for disbursement to local
governmlmt. Meigs County will
receive fQ1 ,962.'1:1.

E-Z·CARVE BONELESS

USDA CHOICE

985-3308

CHESTER; OHIO .

POME .... -Y LANDMARK
M'lin Street
Store Hours : 8: 30 to 5:30

" Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties"
Ja~k W. ,C arsey, Mgr.
Mill Closed at S:OO P.M.

Pom - ·oy
.oone 992·2181

$
129

.

CHUCK STEAK..... ~~ ..~

$}Sg

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROASI........

·

CALIFORNIA

STRAWB ERR IES...'!.7
PARKAY

MARGARINE......~. 2/

TWO FACE CHARGES
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City
Police issued two citations Friday.
Ray A. Smith, 26, Gallipolis, was
cited in a charge of trafficking in
drugs.
Cited on a charge of DWI was
James L. Groves, 31, Vinton.

$ 19

LIQUID DETERGENT

DAWN ............... ::~;... 1

$

1

$ 09

BORDEN'S

Cottage Cheese -~~Of.

1

~ Fl:J\VORITE

·

Barbecue SauCe!~2~5

ICE CREAM ....... :.~A·L·
'COUP\JN ,-

ELF

KOOL-AID
10 QT. CAN
All FLAVORS
Offer No. J749

I

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

oz.

WIENERS .......... ::~·..

KRAFT

17'\. Do you have an etflclenl two-•tage snow
thrower or are you limited to 21 single stage?

THIGHS ............... ;~·. 7

GALUPOLIS- Seven cases were
terminated in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday.
James J. Morrison, 32, Vinton, for·
feited $35 on a charge of possession
of an open flask.
Forfeiting $30 on a charge of
assured clear distance was Arlene
F . Morton, 19, Bidwell.
James Henson, 20, Gallipolis, for·
feited $40 on a charge of no wheel
protection.
Paul D. HoUey, Crown City,
waived $30 on a charge of
prohibiting free movement of
vehicles.
Waiving $30 on a charge of improper backing was Harold W. Flint,
48, Gallipolis.
David L. Payne, 19, Ga llipolis, for·
feiled $30 on a charge of failure to
obey a traffic control device.
Forfeiting $30 on a charge of ex·
cessive speed was David K. Mullins,
'1:1, Gallipolis.

ARTICLES FILED
COLUMBUS - Secretary of State
Anthony J . Celebrezze, Jr. said
Saturday articles of incorporation
have been filed with his office in
Columbus by Middleport Coin Laull-'
dry,Inc.
Incorporators are M. James
O'Dell and M. 0. O'DeU. M. James
. O'Dell, Gallipolis, is the agent.

How long does it take and how easy Is it to
put on and take oH your mower deck?
(NOTE- aok lor a demonslrallon)

V

CHICKEN BREASTS OR

Madrigals
•
entertazn

Seven cases end

Five ln1POrtcw at questions
to ask when bUying

· PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1980

Lim it 1 Per Custo'mer
G(lod Only at Pow e ll ' s
Offer Expires May 17, 1980

$}39

::: .

25 LB.
BAG

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
OfiP.r Expires M·. y 17,1980

)!I~ :;

FLOUR

~ ~~

u 'm it 1 Pe r Customer
Good Only al Powell ' s
Offer Expires May 17, 1980

5l8.
BAG

79e

.
·-Limit 1 Per ~ u s tomer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
May 1 1980

�.I
I
I
I

was much public support from the
Southern Athletic Boosters.
The Boosters are thanking aU persoll8 who gave donatioll8 to ht;lp send
the team and cheerleaders to the
state tournament. The generous support from the public enabled the
Boosters to send aU the varsity and
reserve basketball players and
cheerleaders to the state tournament with all of these expenses
paid. Great!!!

By Bob Hoeflich

'I

If you are looking for work and
plan to make application with the
Southern Ohio Coal Co., don't just
" bust" out there, because it may be
a ·trip II) vain.
Beginning May 15 changes will
take place in the process for making
application. Experienced underground coal miners may apply
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.; inexperienced underground miners and aU other persoll8
applying for work are to apply from
9 a.m. to 12 noon and I to 3 p.m.,
Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Experienced applicants in under·ground mining are those who have
put in a minimum of 45 working
days.
No applicatioll8 will be mailed,
.thus aU persoll8 must apply in per-

son.

The Racine High School Alumni

Association will be selecting a 1980
Alumni Queen at its reunion also on
May24.
Candidates are Brenda Ash,
Camellia Beinger, Kim Dugan, Tony
Hudson and Melissa !hie. The queen
will be chosen by a vote of those attending the banquet which is at 6
p.m.
Tickets at $5.50 each are available
for the Racine reunion at the Village
Cut Rate, Racine Food Market,
Cross and Sons or by sending a selfaddressed stamped envelope to Barbara ·Pierce, Route 2, Box 44,
Racine. Deadline for reservatioll8 is
May 19. The dance following the
banquet is open to the public with admission to be charged at the door.

derwent major surgery Thursday at
Holzer Medical Center. It was one of
those worry situations but things are
"lookin' good."

j Additional ~es

Tuttle, Rt. 1, Long Bottom; Rollan
Torrence, Tuppers Plains; Charlotte
M. Erlewine, Rt. 1, Dexter; nenea
Swain, RFD, Reedsville; Raymond
L Wilcox, 37240 S.R. 124, Midctieport· Emest Spencer, Main St.,
Rutland ; Myrtle Clark, RFD, Middleport ; Gracie L. Wilson, Carsey
Rd., Albany; Susan Cleland, Box
124, Chester; Joan McLain, RD 2,
Racine; Olin D. Boothe, 1161&gt; W.
Main, Pomeroy; Howard Logan, 201
Condor St., Pomeroy; Hazel Barnhill Tuppers Plains; Betty A.
Ba~onick, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Twenty-five additional names were drawn Friday
for posible grand jury duty, May
term.
Names drawn for possible duty
were : L. Ruth Bradford, Racine;
Betty Jean Ross, Racine; Nonna J .
Amsbary Custer, Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
Marcia Arnold, Rt. I, Minersville ;
Peggy M. Houdashelt, 124 Union
Ave, Pomeroy; Linda Edward, Rt.
I, Long Bottom; Danny S. Zlrkle,l25
Peacock Ave., Pomeroy; Marlene
Wilson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Roger C.
Turner, Box 1, Langsville; Dorothy
L. Smith, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Thomas
E . Edwards, Minersvllle; Glenn

I somehow misplaced my notes
with all of the details of Carrie and
Bill Kennedy and their three months
stay in the Florida sunshine while
the rest of us were freezing. Carrie
and Bill were also during their trip
able to spend the ' Easter holiday
period with their son, Joe and
family , near Memphis, Tenn. So without detail - just let me say,
welcome home to Carrie and Bill.

Allen Ball, Pomeroy, is a patient
at Doctors' Hospital in Columbus,
where he has undergone surgery.
Cards may be sent to him at the
hospital, 1087 Dennison Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43201. The room number is
312South.
Florence Ann Bearhs of Capital
Financial Services in Pomeroy un-

draWn for jury du~

Let's all get Sohio. In the free enterprise system, how dare Sohio sell
gasoline at a price \thich is a better
deal for the coll8umer?!! You keep
smiling now.

By Bob Hoeflich Tim es-Sentinel staff writer

Did you remember Mama??

A general screening will be held at
the time the application is comThe Southern High Basketball
.pleted. Those who are unable to sub- team had a fabulous year and there
)nit applications during the r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
·designated times may call 614-286·5051 to set up a special assignment.
: The general office of the company
is located in Meigs County, three
miles south of the Appalachian Higlr
.way (Route 346 ) on Route 689.

•••••••••••••••••
••
•
Watch
:
••
••
••
For
Our
•
· A couple of lines were dropped
•
•
·from a story in Friday's Sentinel •
Ad In
••
.relating to the medical staff at •
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• Wednesday's ••
· That was unfortunate and we're •
·sorry. The four names omitted from •
•
•
:the staff includes those of S. •
•
••
Paper.
:Blazewicz, Z. Dayo, M. Dayo and J. •
Witherell. AU are medical doctors.
••
••
: Women of the Pythian Sisters •
WE WILl
••
:Lodge at Wilkesville are getting •
·ready for a smorgasbord to be •
••
BE AT
s taged at the lodge hall on May 17. •
That's next Saturday. The hours will •
••
lHE
be 5 to 8 and the price Is $3 for adults •
·and •1.50 for children.
••• CONVERSATION •••
There are some members of the •
••
HOUSE
class of 1955 of Pomeroy High School •
:who are ''lost" as far as the class •
•• MAY 16, 17, 18 ••
reurnonisconcerned.
••
They are Ramora Blankell8hip,
"Ernest Bowen, Gentle Brown, Jr., •
• AND REMEMBER, ••
Barbara Ann Clouse Hess, Hester •
Caruthers Eblin, Donna Parfitt •
••
WE HAVE THE
· White, ·Bonita lee Bryan, Eugene •
Clair Story, Eva Flora Hayes and •
•
LARGEST FACILITIES •
David Clayton Still. II you have an •
•
••
. address on any of these people, •
IN
THE
AREA,
please notify Tom Smith at 992-.'W83 •
•
·at once. Time is
out since . •
•
AND
2
MERCURY
the alumni banquet and dance are •
••
scheduled for May 24 at the Meigs •

,.

POMEROY - Today ... a day to
remember ... a love like no other ...
the love of your Mother.
The pleasant observance of
Mother's Day was made a national
event by the United States Congress
on May 8, 1914, but actually the
origination of the occasion dates
back to 1907.
Credited with the establishment of
this "special day " is Anna Jarvis
who organized a church service at
Grafton, W. Va., in tribute to her
Mother. The carnation became at
that time a tradition also, being used
during that first tribute because it
was the favorite flower of Miss Jarvis' mother.
It seemed only natural that Miss
Jarvis had come un with an idea

3~e~rice
Full-view
Door Mirror

Un5cented

~~1

lf!poo
or Rinse

l'

Spray

Breck ·!&gt; Hair Care

~o~!.2.
2
e
Ch inet Plates

15-oz' shampoo15-oz' creme rinse
conditioner, or 9-oz." hair spray .
"Fl . Oll.

14x50" mirror with
walnut-colored,
bossed frame .

"" Nel wt.

which would be extremely popular
with people - the idea of basic love
and the relationship between mother
and child .
Miss Jarvis - who never became
a .mother - before her death
became disillusioned with her own
creation due to the commercialism
which crept into the Mother's Day
observance.
Today, Mother's Day is an occasion of warmth and love. Commercial aspects have remained,
with the day being a time for flowers
and gift giving .
Did you "Remember Mama"
today? Whatever your gilt, I hope
you wrapped it generously in the
original intentions of the day - love
and respect.

Disposable for hot
or cold food .
Foam Cup

96~

so ct . ... J/51

l,!!

Pepsi

2

Polyester Tank Tops

21iter plastic
bottle. SAVE .

Pkgs'l

140 Paper
Napkins

Classic tanks in bright colors.
Misses· sizes. Save!

OurReg.88' . Each
one-ply 13x12.25 "' .
Total 159 sq in.

running

High School cafeteria,
·This particular reunion class will
have a social hour at the Meigs Inn
from 4 to 6 p.m. on May 24 to discuss
"those good old days at Pomeroy
High" prior to the reunion of the entire association.
Incidentally, the deadline for
reservatioll8 for the Pomeroy High
Alumni event is May 21 and tickets
are available locally at the New
York Clothing House or Swisher and

:
•
•
•
•
•

FACTORY TRAINED
MECHANICS.

••
•

.

SAVE

••

.'""

••

••
•••
•••

Our Reg. 1 ' Focal"'
110112Color Print
Film, ASA 100 .... 88c

Two Prints Plus Developing

~DC

U
B
Dazzle Aire

Bring in your film for developing and printing
and get a second print at no extra charge .

Our
Skein 1.27
E

, 'Proc.ul rtg not lnciudK

Yarn

4-plyCreslan ~ acrylic/nylon k nittin~
worsted . Solids , ombres . 3· ozs.
' Amerlc:1n Cyanamid Reg. TM

~""'I

.,.., W1 .

Maybe candy or

a Dice card ..•

$' J

. Outdoor
.Extension

Ruffles Potato Chips

-

No. 80-1 00

9

1

2 Days Only

GE ® Steam/dry Iron

NEW PINTO PONY

4

Favorite varieties the whole fami ly
will enjoy. 6 to .1 1-ozs.• Save .

•
•

wt.

••

Our 4.57

•

•

For lawn or garden .

Mama

82
5

4 ~ur5.97

50' Garden Hose

00

514500

Deferred Payment Price.....

5564

00

15.5%

4!?r9.17
.fencing 14"x25'
coated galvanized
steel.

*Does Not Include Tax,
License or Title Fees.

.:T:WO R·IVERS FORD

Cour
1.48

32-oz. • Glass Plus •

lass. appliances .
and more . In
mgger~ray container.

100% vinyl , 518 in.
diameter .

25ft. roil of white

~

••

Fertilizer

Total Payments of

. ._

.~

'"'
~
..... -.. -- -rc -

wi'

dress ...

56'-64'

Drop Cloth Or 60-Yd. Tape
9x12 -tt. indoor/outdoor drop cloth.
60-yd. roll 'la-in . mask ing tape.

I~!'!.
~o.aa

Swivel Base
1.9 Liter Jug

·vv;;

•

3 'Jour
FOR

can

always use a oew

~

Each
Our Reg . 2.57

K mart · Air Filters
O e~ ality

filters to fit most U.S.
and foreign cars. Save,

• One-touch pol~rlrlc
• Carrying handle
• For home, office,
patio, picnic
Aladdtn·s ~

1-qt .
pump-A-Drlnt«••·, 6.47

Poi11t Pleasant
••

•

Packaged Cookies

&gt;

Down Payment ....................... 419 00
Amount Finance................... 3778 00

675-1490

...

17

* Selling Price.. -...... ..............~4197. 00

Rt. 62

Our
Reg .
57'

3Pkg.

~-

SO lb. bag covers 5,0JO sq. ft .

Annual Percen,age Rate

•
•
•
'

Dishcloths·

' Net

FIRST PAYMENT DUE JULY 1, 1980

'107. 20 X 48 Months···-·······-

'

Flowers
Mom?

0

$419. Down
$107.2° Per Month

Finance Charge·-· ·· ···- ··- .........1367

17
Our Reg . 2.27

~r;~~~~!!!!"!~~~~~~~ ~choice. Hemmed .

00

•

I

A II ·cotton wonder
weave in check
pattern .
Color

25 steam vents . Durever • cordset.
Alumi num soleplate. fabric dial.

•

?oz. package. SAVE.

Heavy-duty cord
for indoor or out .
3 - w1re grounded .

j·

MOTHER·s DAY BOUQUET

�.I
I
I
I

was much public support from the
Southern Athletic Boosters.
The Boosters are thanking aU persoll8 who gave donatioll8 to ht;lp send
the team and cheerleaders to the
state tournament. The generous support from the public enabled the
Boosters to send aU the varsity and
reserve basketball players and
cheerleaders to the state tournament with all of these expenses
paid. Great!!!

By Bob Hoeflich

'I

If you are looking for work and
plan to make application with the
Southern Ohio Coal Co., don't just
" bust" out there, because it may be
a ·trip II) vain.
Beginning May 15 changes will
take place in the process for making
application. Experienced underground coal miners may apply
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.; inexperienced underground miners and aU other persoll8
applying for work are to apply from
9 a.m. to 12 noon and I to 3 p.m.,
Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Experienced applicants in under·ground mining are those who have
put in a minimum of 45 working
days.
No applicatioll8 will be mailed,
.thus aU persoll8 must apply in per-

son.

The Racine High School Alumni

Association will be selecting a 1980
Alumni Queen at its reunion also on
May24.
Candidates are Brenda Ash,
Camellia Beinger, Kim Dugan, Tony
Hudson and Melissa !hie. The queen
will be chosen by a vote of those attending the banquet which is at 6
p.m.
Tickets at $5.50 each are available
for the Racine reunion at the Village
Cut Rate, Racine Food Market,
Cross and Sons or by sending a selfaddressed stamped envelope to Barbara ·Pierce, Route 2, Box 44,
Racine. Deadline for reservatioll8 is
May 19. The dance following the
banquet is open to the public with admission to be charged at the door.

derwent major surgery Thursday at
Holzer Medical Center. It was one of
those worry situations but things are
"lookin' good."

j Additional ~es

Tuttle, Rt. 1, Long Bottom; Rollan
Torrence, Tuppers Plains; Charlotte
M. Erlewine, Rt. 1, Dexter; nenea
Swain, RFD, Reedsville; Raymond
L Wilcox, 37240 S.R. 124, Midctieport· Emest Spencer, Main St.,
Rutland ; Myrtle Clark, RFD, Middleport ; Gracie L. Wilson, Carsey
Rd., Albany; Susan Cleland, Box
124, Chester; Joan McLain, RD 2,
Racine; Olin D. Boothe, 1161&gt; W.
Main, Pomeroy; Howard Logan, 201
Condor St., Pomeroy; Hazel Barnhill Tuppers Plains; Betty A.
Ba~onick, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Twenty-five additional names were drawn Friday
for posible grand jury duty, May
term.
Names drawn for possible duty
were : L. Ruth Bradford, Racine;
Betty Jean Ross, Racine; Nonna J .
Amsbary Custer, Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
Marcia Arnold, Rt. I, Minersville ;
Peggy M. Houdashelt, 124 Union
Ave, Pomeroy; Linda Edward, Rt.
I, Long Bottom; Danny S. Zlrkle,l25
Peacock Ave., Pomeroy; Marlene
Wilson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Roger C.
Turner, Box 1, Langsville; Dorothy
L. Smith, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Thomas
E . Edwards, Minersvllle; Glenn

I somehow misplaced my notes
with all of the details of Carrie and
Bill Kennedy and their three months
stay in the Florida sunshine while
the rest of us were freezing. Carrie
and Bill were also during their trip
able to spend the ' Easter holiday
period with their son, Joe and
family , near Memphis, Tenn. So without detail - just let me say,
welcome home to Carrie and Bill.

Allen Ball, Pomeroy, is a patient
at Doctors' Hospital in Columbus,
where he has undergone surgery.
Cards may be sent to him at the
hospital, 1087 Dennison Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43201. The room number is
312South.
Florence Ann Bearhs of Capital
Financial Services in Pomeroy un-

draWn for jury du~

Let's all get Sohio. In the free enterprise system, how dare Sohio sell
gasoline at a price \thich is a better
deal for the coll8umer?!! You keep
smiling now.

By Bob Hoeflich Tim es-Sentinel staff writer

Did you remember Mama??

A general screening will be held at
the time the application is comThe Southern High Basketball
.pleted. Those who are unable to sub- team had a fabulous year and there
)nit applications during the r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
·designated times may call 614-286·5051 to set up a special assignment.
: The general office of the company
is located in Meigs County, three
miles south of the Appalachian Higlr
.way (Route 346 ) on Route 689.

•••••••••••••••••
••
•
Watch
:
••
••
••
For
Our
•
· A couple of lines were dropped
•
•
·from a story in Friday's Sentinel •
Ad In
••
.relating to the medical staff at •
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• Wednesday's ••
· That was unfortunate and we're •
·sorry. The four names omitted from •
•
•
:the staff includes those of S. •
•
••
Paper.
:Blazewicz, Z. Dayo, M. Dayo and J. •
Witherell. AU are medical doctors.
••
••
: Women of the Pythian Sisters •
WE WILl
••
:Lodge at Wilkesville are getting •
·ready for a smorgasbord to be •
••
BE AT
s taged at the lodge hall on May 17. •
That's next Saturday. The hours will •
••
lHE
be 5 to 8 and the price Is $3 for adults •
·and •1.50 for children.
••• CONVERSATION •••
There are some members of the •
••
HOUSE
class of 1955 of Pomeroy High School •
:who are ''lost" as far as the class •
•• MAY 16, 17, 18 ••
reurnonisconcerned.
••
They are Ramora Blankell8hip,
"Ernest Bowen, Gentle Brown, Jr., •
• AND REMEMBER, ••
Barbara Ann Clouse Hess, Hester •
Caruthers Eblin, Donna Parfitt •
••
WE HAVE THE
· White, ·Bonita lee Bryan, Eugene •
Clair Story, Eva Flora Hayes and •
•
LARGEST FACILITIES •
David Clayton Still. II you have an •
•
••
. address on any of these people, •
IN
THE
AREA,
please notify Tom Smith at 992-.'W83 •
•
·at once. Time is
out since . •
•
AND
2
MERCURY
the alumni banquet and dance are •
••
scheduled for May 24 at the Meigs •

,.

POMEROY - Today ... a day to
remember ... a love like no other ...
the love of your Mother.
The pleasant observance of
Mother's Day was made a national
event by the United States Congress
on May 8, 1914, but actually the
origination of the occasion dates
back to 1907.
Credited with the establishment of
this "special day " is Anna Jarvis
who organized a church service at
Grafton, W. Va., in tribute to her
Mother. The carnation became at
that time a tradition also, being used
during that first tribute because it
was the favorite flower of Miss Jarvis' mother.
It seemed only natural that Miss
Jarvis had come un with an idea

3~e~rice
Full-view
Door Mirror

Un5cented

~~1

lf!poo
or Rinse

l'

Spray

Breck ·!&gt; Hair Care

~o~!.2.
2
e
Ch inet Plates

15-oz' shampoo15-oz' creme rinse
conditioner, or 9-oz." hair spray .
"Fl . Oll.

14x50" mirror with
walnut-colored,
bossed frame .

"" Nel wt.

which would be extremely popular
with people - the idea of basic love
and the relationship between mother
and child .
Miss Jarvis - who never became
a .mother - before her death
became disillusioned with her own
creation due to the commercialism
which crept into the Mother's Day
observance.
Today, Mother's Day is an occasion of warmth and love. Commercial aspects have remained,
with the day being a time for flowers
and gift giving .
Did you "Remember Mama"
today? Whatever your gilt, I hope
you wrapped it generously in the
original intentions of the day - love
and respect.

Disposable for hot
or cold food .
Foam Cup

96~

so ct . ... J/51

l,!!

Pepsi

2

Polyester Tank Tops

21iter plastic
bottle. SAVE .

Pkgs'l

140 Paper
Napkins

Classic tanks in bright colors.
Misses· sizes. Save!

OurReg.88' . Each
one-ply 13x12.25 "' .
Total 159 sq in.

running

High School cafeteria,
·This particular reunion class will
have a social hour at the Meigs Inn
from 4 to 6 p.m. on May 24 to discuss
"those good old days at Pomeroy
High" prior to the reunion of the entire association.
Incidentally, the deadline for
reservatioll8 for the Pomeroy High
Alumni event is May 21 and tickets
are available locally at the New
York Clothing House or Swisher and

:
•
•
•
•
•

FACTORY TRAINED
MECHANICS.

••
•

.

SAVE

••

.'""

••

••
•••
•••

Our Reg. 1 ' Focal"'
110112Color Print
Film, ASA 100 .... 88c

Two Prints Plus Developing

~DC

U
B
Dazzle Aire

Bring in your film for developing and printing
and get a second print at no extra charge .

Our
Skein 1.27
E

, 'Proc.ul rtg not lnciudK

Yarn

4-plyCreslan ~ acrylic/nylon k nittin~
worsted . Solids , ombres . 3· ozs.
' Amerlc:1n Cyanamid Reg. TM

~""'I

.,.., W1 .

Maybe candy or

a Dice card ..•

$' J

. Outdoor
.Extension

Ruffles Potato Chips

-

No. 80-1 00

9

1

2 Days Only

GE ® Steam/dry Iron

NEW PINTO PONY

4

Favorite varieties the whole fami ly
will enjoy. 6 to .1 1-ozs.• Save .

•
•

wt.

••

Our 4.57

•

•

For lawn or garden .

Mama

82
5

4 ~ur5.97

50' Garden Hose

00

514500

Deferred Payment Price.....

5564

00

15.5%

4!?r9.17
.fencing 14"x25'
coated galvanized
steel.

*Does Not Include Tax,
License or Title Fees.

.:T:WO R·IVERS FORD

Cour
1.48

32-oz. • Glass Plus •

lass. appliances .
and more . In
mgger~ray container.

100% vinyl , 518 in.
diameter .

25ft. roil of white

~

••

Fertilizer

Total Payments of

. ._

.~

'"'
~
..... -.. -- -rc -

wi'

dress ...

56'-64'

Drop Cloth Or 60-Yd. Tape
9x12 -tt. indoor/outdoor drop cloth.
60-yd. roll 'la-in . mask ing tape.

I~!'!.
~o.aa

Swivel Base
1.9 Liter Jug

·vv;;

•

3 'Jour
FOR

can

always use a oew

~

Each
Our Reg . 2.57

K mart · Air Filters
O e~ ality

filters to fit most U.S.
and foreign cars. Save,

• One-touch pol~rlrlc
• Carrying handle
• For home, office,
patio, picnic
Aladdtn·s ~

1-qt .
pump-A-Drlnt«••·, 6.47

Poi11t Pleasant
••

•

Packaged Cookies

&gt;

Down Payment ....................... 419 00
Amount Finance................... 3778 00

675-1490

...

17

* Selling Price.. -...... ..............~4197. 00

Rt. 62

Our
Reg .
57'

3Pkg.

~-

SO lb. bag covers 5,0JO sq. ft .

Annual Percen,age Rate

•
•
•
'

Dishcloths·

' Net

FIRST PAYMENT DUE JULY 1, 1980

'107. 20 X 48 Months···-·······-

'

Flowers
Mom?

0

$419. Down
$107.2° Per Month

Finance Charge·-· ·· ···- ··- .........1367

17
Our Reg . 2.27

~r;~~~~!!!!"!~~~~~~~ ~choice. Hemmed .

00

•

I

A II ·cotton wonder
weave in check
pattern .
Color

25 steam vents . Durever • cordset.
Alumi num soleplate. fabric dial.

•

?oz. package. SAVE.

Heavy-duty cord
for indoor or out .
3 - w1re grounded .

j·

MOTHER·s DAY BOUQUET

�8-:l-TheSunday Times-Se~tinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

B-2:-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

\Annual membership
tea today at FAC

.

Several area engagements are announced

working mostly in acrylics on canvas and in watercolors. Her use
color and the imaginative approach
characterize her work .
Chairing the reception ill Bobbie
Holzer, assisted by Lucy Earwood.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, a short
program will be presented at Riverby by members of the Madrigals
from Gallia Academf High School,
directed by Anne Fischer.
Both continuing members and new
members of the French Art Colony
are urged to attend this afternoon's
Membership Reception, and in particular to meet Mrs. Richards and
hear the music of the Madrigals.

GALUPOLIS The Annual
Membership Tea and the 01&gt;'
portunity to meet the outstanding artist who is exhibiting at Riverby for
the month of May, will aU take place
this afternoon between 2 and 4 p.m .
at the home of the French Art
Colony, 530 First Avenue in
Gallipolis.
Special guest this afternoon will be
Lola Barcus Richards of Springfield,
Va., who has a great number of her
paintings and prints hanging in both
Galleries at Riverby. Mrs. Richards
is a native of Gallia County and a
graduate of Gama Academy High
School. She is a versatile artist,

joyce Swisher
and Vincent Hill

Stephanie Kitzmiller

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E . Swisher of
Bi!lwell are announcing the engagem.nt and approaching marriage of
th~lr daughter, Joyce Ellen, to VincejJt George Hill, son of Mr. and
Mfs.frank Hill, Gallipolis ..
lotiss Swisher ill a graduate d.
Kyger Creek High School and
~ived her B.S. and M. Ed.
Dojgrees from Miami Univeruty.
S* is employed as a chemistry
tftcher at Gallia Academy High

&amp;two!.

Hill is a graduate of Gama

AOsdemy High School and received
~ B.S. Degree from Rio Grande
College. He is presently pursuing his
~ter's Degree at Ohio University.
He is- employed as a mathematics
te•cher at Gallia Academy High
S&lt;$ool.
the wedding will be held on Satur~. June 14, at Little Kyger Congregational Church, Rt. 1, Cheshire.
The custom of open church will be

BRISTOL , Tenn .
The
engagement and approaching
marriage of Stephanie Gail KitzMIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs .
miller, Bristol, Tenn ., and Steven
Robert E. Hartley , 1519 Seventh St. ,
Edward Walburn, Eden, N. C., is
Moundsville, announce the
being announced.
engagement of their daughter,
Miss Kitzmiller is the daughter of
Cheryl Ann, to Charles Randel King,
the Rev. Niles Edward Kitzmiller,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. King,
Brilltol, and Mrs. R. G. Edwards,
417 W. Brentwood Ave., MoundsErwin Tenn., and her fiance is the
ville, and grandson of Mrs. Mabel
son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Edward
Winebrenner, Middleport, and Mrs.
Walburn, Middleport.
Edith King, Chester.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Miss Hartley graduated from John
Unicoi County High School at Erwin
Marshall High School and is a senior
and is a sophomore at the East Tenat Marshall University where she
nessee State University. Mr .
plans to work toward a master's
Walburn graduated from Meigs
degree m speech and language
High School , the Virginia Intermont
pathology.
College, and is employed at the AdHer fiance graduated from Meigs
vance Auto Store in Eden, N. C.
High School and West Liberty State
The open church wedding will be . College with a bachelor's degree in
an event of Aug. 30 at the First Bai&gt;' accounting. He is employed as an
tistChurch in Bristol, Va.
executive sales representative with
Atlantic Steel of Atlanta, Ga.
The couple plan to be married on
June28.

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

GALUPOUS- Ac.tivities for this
week at the Senior Citizens Center,

220 Jackson Pike, are:

Karen BrowninR
-

Mr. and Mrs.

Hdiwa••rl Browning, Gallipolis, are
of their
Lou, to Vaughn
;+~~~:~:~the, soengagement
of Mr. and Mrs.
!I

'l'aiJlnr, Bidwell.

bride-to-be is a senior at
Academy; the groom-to-be is
graduate of Buckeye Hills
r.ki"Por Center. She is employed at
he is selfoi!mployed at
View Dairy.
wedding will be an event of
Aa•nist 16 at the Gallipolis Christian
church will be observed .

--------------- -.

Che ryl Hartley
and Charles King

Monday, May 12 - Chorus, 1-J
p.m.
Tuesday, May 13 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11 :15 a.m.; Bible Study,l-2.
Wednesday, May 4 - Macrame
Class, l-3 p.m.; Card Games, 1-3 ;
Bible Study at Vinton Nutrition Site.
Thursday, May 14 - Council
Meeting, l: 30 p.m .
Friday, May 15- Art Class, 12:303 p.m. ; Medicare Training at Crown
City Site, 12 :30 p.m .; Crime Prevention Session, I p.m.; Social Hour, 7
p.m.
Sunday, May 18 - Dedication of
Multi-Purpose Community Building
Open House, 2-5 p.m .
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the fallowing menus:
Monday - Fried fish; · baked
potato, coleslaw, bread, butter, canned pears, milk.
Tuesday - 8¥ed chicken, boiled
potato in jacket, mixed vegetables,
bread, butter peach with whipped
topping, milk .
Wednesday - Wieners, mashed
potatoes, sauer1&lt;raut, celery and
radish sticks, bread, butter, butterscotch pudding, mill&lt;.
Thursday - Ham loaf, buttered
rice, buttered peas, bread, butter.

Wedding
plans made
Gary Snowden, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Caroll Snowden, Gallipolis, will
wed Sherry Van Dyke, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Van Dyke,
Hebron, Ohio, in vows to be repeated
at the First Presbyterian Church, 65
N. Third Street, Newark, May 18 at 2
p.m.
Open church will be observed. A
reception will follow at the church .

jacqueline Powell
McARTHUR - Mr. and Mrs. Jack
F . Powell, Route I, McArthur, Ohio
are proud to 'e ngagement of their
daughter, Jacqueline J. Powell to
Richard C. Vititoe o{ 1416 Striebel
Rd., Columbus.
She is a student at Vinton County
High School.
Viti toe is a 1978 graduate of Vinton
County High School and ill employed
at Mid-5tate Sales in Columbus. A
summer wedding is being planned.
She is the granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Swick of Route 1,
Bidwell.

'Quiet Day' planned by church
GALUPOUS - The Wednesday
Morning Prayer Group of Grace
United Methodist Church is sponsoring a Quiet Day, Wednesday,
May 14.
It is a day lor Christians to gather
and share in fellowship and quiet
meditation. Since Pentecost is not
far off, the group chose for the topics
of the four speakers, the gifts of the
Holy Spirit. The speakers will be
Barbara Neal, Dorothy Shaw, Carol
Johnson, and Barbara Sheridan.
The day will begin at 9:30 a.m.
with registration. Hostesses will be
Alice Wiseman, Edna Gettles, Alice
Amsbary, and Madge Eachus. In the
Chapel, at 10 a.m. the first speakers
will talk on Wisdom, Knowledge,
Faith, Healing, and Miracles. From

La Leche League to meet
MIDDLEPORT - All women interested in nursing their babies are
invited to attend a meeting of the La
Leche League of Gallipolis to be held
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
the League leader, Bev Splete. Information on the meeting can be obtained locaUy from Mrs. Debbie
Grueser, 992-3844.
"The Family in Relation to the
Breastled Baby" will be the topic for
informal discussion with emphasis
on how to manage the first hectic
weeks with not only the baby but the
entire family . Books on childbirth,
child care, and breast feeding are
available from the Lending Library.

COUNCIL TO MEET
A meeting of the newly formed
Meigs Local Talented and Gifted Advioory Council is scheduled for 7:30
p.m . Tuesday at the Meigs High
School Library.
Dan Morris, director of instruction
in the district • will
and curriculwn
0
head the meeting at which it is hoped
to formulate a document that might
be presented to the Meigs Local
Board of Education for adoption in
relation to a program for the gifted
of the district.

:.

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;

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............ ._ r.

GALUPOUS - Exhibit for the
mlmth of May - Multi-media Pain-.
and Prints by Lola Barcus
· hards, Springfield, Virginia.
· allery Hours - Tuesdays and
days, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Saturs and Sundays, 1 p.m.-5 p.m.
ay 11, 2 p.m.-4 p.m . - Annual
~mbership Tea at Riverby .
SQ_eeial guest: Lola Barcus Richards
Springfield, Virginia, whose
mlllti-media paintings and prints
e up tbe May exhibit. An Oi&gt;'
unity to "Meet the Artillt."
cia! music provided by a group of
Madrigals, from Gallia
A demy High School, under the
&lt;Utection of Anne Fischer, at 3
o'clock. Tea chaired by Bobbie
H.lzer, assisted by Lucy Earwood.
t&lt;fay 17, 2 p.m. - Spring recital by
vdcal students of Ed Harkless at
Rtverby.
r&amp;Y 18, 2:30 p.m.-4 p.m. Cl)ildren's Workshop in CLA'V,
~erby. Instructor, Corinne Lund.
Registration, ~; for children age 8
arid older. Call Janet E . Byers at446J9ila to pre-register.
May 'll, 7:30 p.m. - F.A.C. Intel-aepartmental Meeting, River by;
9 ~.m.- F.A.C. Trustees Meeting.
:June 24, 3 p.m. - Deadline lor en~es to be submitted for the July 4th
River Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Cl\aired by Jan Thaler. E!!try blanks
available at Riverby or at PJ's, or
ca'u 446-1819 to request one, or write
the French Art Colony, Box 472,
G!lllipolis, Ohio 456,'11.
ll'uly 4, 1 p.m.-5 p.m. - River
Rkreation Festival Art Exhibit in
t$. City Park in downtown
Gallipolis; if rain, will be at Riverby.

off

••

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y ~

assistin~.

AMOS CJ;tOSS REPORTS
FOltDUTY
Marine Pvt. Amos B. Cross Jr.,
son Gladys J. and Amos B. Cross
Sr. of Route I, Langsville, has
reported for duty at the 2nd Marine
Division, Marine Corps Base, Camp
Lejeune, N.C.
'
Meigs High
A 1979 graduate
School, Pomeroy, he joined tbe
Marine Corps in November,1979.

or

or

servation League South Central
Dilltrict Spring Conference will be
beld Saturday , May 17, from 9 a .m._
3 p.m. at the Rodney United
Methodist Church. Featured
speaker for this event is Mrs. Kay
Pearson whose presentation is entitled, "What's Cooking in Nature."
Kay Pearson and her husband
Merle, live on a farm f'ast oi
Fremont, Ohio . The land is farmed
by neighbors and, in addition to the
tillable acres, the farm includes thirty acres of woodlot - ideal for
foraging wild foods . The Pearsons
~~e two sons : John, a physicist,
livmg m the Colwnbus area, and
Gary, a veterlnartan, in North
Dakota. It was Gary who sparked
Kay's interest in wild foods when he
sent her Euell Gibbon's books
"Stalking the Wild Asparagus" and
" Stalking the Wild Herbs."
Pearson first tried her hand at
making jelly from violet blossoms
and was so delighted with the resnits
that she experimented further with
wild foods . Friends became interested in these unusual dishes, and
Kay was asked to speak at loeal garden clubs concerning wild foods. The
whole thing mushroomed from
there.
She has amassed a large file
wild-food recipes and is working at

or

''Service rendered on a non-

100% NYLON SAXONY

$8 ~. YD.
7

WITH PAD
COMMERCIAL TYPE

WOOD TABLE
&amp; CHAIR SETS

Rubber Back
·cARPET
100% NYLON
, 350
CASH 'N
SQ. YD. CARRY

GALUPGLIS - The French City
her talk with prepared products of
Campers held the monthly meeting
which she has been speaking which
recently at the Buckeye Rural Elecall may sample
tric bullding with 19 members and
The day will begin with
one visitor present.
registration and coffee hou.- at 9
Mter a short business meeting,
a.m. Mrs . Judy Isaacs, S. Central
refreshments were served by BiU
District President, will conduct the · and Mildred Seyfried. A program
opening business session at 9:30
was presented by the visitor, Josette
a.m. Mrs. Janet Zinn, State Vice · Baker, Director of Parks for the
President, will conduct an OCCL
Raccoon Creek County Park. She
Workshop at 10:15 a.m. Mrs. Josette
gave a talk on facilities and future
Baker, Director, 0 . .Q. Mcintyre
plans for the park and showed slides.
Park District, will present a
The park will open to the public on
workshop and slide illustrations on
tbe c\uTent progress and future
projections of the park located on
Raccoon Creek, at t: a .m.
A picnic-style luncheon will be served at noon by the United Methodist
Women of the Rodney Church. At 1
p.m. Mrs. Mary Lucas will entertain
the Conference on the piano and
organ with music geared to enhance
the theme of the day which is "A
Saturday in the Park." Mrs. Pearson will speak at 1:45 a.m. following
which will be the closing business
session, door prizes, and refres&amp;
COLOR PRINTS
menttime.
S•ze~ 110, 126 &amp; 135 fr om
GAF. futt olnd atMr pOpular I 1Im__
::;,
Registration fee is $1.50, luncheon
Ont roll Pff coupOn.
/
fee, $3.50. Last-minute reservations
THIS COUPON MU5T ACCOM,.-:,;; ot~"ou""- N
may be made no later than Monday
evening, May 12, by camng Mrs.
5 x 7 COLOR
v v }
Mary Louise Hennesy at 446-7822 or
Mrs. Jean Gillespie at 446-3969.

!-········----249

POINT PLEASANT Point
Pleasant Branch of AAUW will sponsor a Book Author Luncheon Saturday, May 17, 12:30 p.m. at
Presbyterian
Church,
Point
Pleasant, Eighth and Main Streets.
Wallace E. Knight, author of
"Lightstruck," a novel, published in
1979, will be present. Knight, a
native of Charleston, W. Va. is also
the author of many short stories and
poems, which have been printed in
"Atlantic Monthly," "Best
American Short Stories," "Mother
Jones," "River Cities Monthly," and
other publications.
Knight received a bachelor's
degree in English from West
Virginia Wesleyan CoUege, and a
master's degree in English from
Ohio University. Fr(Jil 195(}.1955 he
served as business editor for the
Chrilltian Gazette. Knight is com-

munications manager of Ashland
Oil, Inc . as well as adjunct professor
of journalism at Marshall University.
His novel "Lightstruck" describes
how a mysterious beam of light
illuminates briefly, yet decisively,
the lives of a group of U!&gt;'!o-then insignificant people.
Symbolism, bombastic language,
as well as tbe philoeophy of Goethe:
... "The most important things can't
be proved" ... and also a reference to
Strauss' cheerful 'Voices of Spring,"
express of how poverty,
imagination, the yearning for. God's
intervention, and simply one's own
perceptiveness affect things seen or
believed to be seen - move through

New arrival

to be
held on May 29 was planned during
the Tuesday night meeting of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Pauline Hysell, worthy matron,
and Thomas Edwards, worthy
patron, presided at the meeting with
Bessie King, deputy grand matron
as a guest.
For inspection all members are
asked to take a pie. An inspection
dinner will be held at 5:30 'at tbe .
Meigs Inn for officers and their
guests. A practice was announced
for 7:30 on Tuesday, May 'll.
Initiatory work was exemplified
with Mabel Goeglein and Judy
Jewell as protem candidates. It was
noted that Marie Curd had presented·
a 50 year pin to Henrietta Jenkins on
April25 at her home. 1
The chapter will observe a dinner
on Saturday, May 10. Line officers
are to attend a meetiqg at Belpre on
May 18. Refreshments were served
in the social room by Ann Hemsley
and Virginia Salser. A silent auction
was held. A products party foUowed
the meeting.

GALUPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Wills, Gallipolis, are announcing the birth of their first
child, a daughter, born April 6 and
weighing seven pounds, 12 ounces.
She was named Mandy Rae.
Maternal grandPi'rents are Mr.
and Mrs. H. F . McFarland, Vinton;
paternal grandparent is Mrs. Betty
Wills, Pomeroy. Great-grandparent
is Mrs. Alma White, Gallipolis; and
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Myers, Reedsville.

Inspection

~~R~-a?n:3?o

'

'275

100% Nylon
1 nstalled w / pad

..

All styles &amp; sizes, 3 colors of maple, oak, dark or light
pine, with or without vinyl seats.

'9

99

To

'11

SQ . YD .

SAVE '50

Astro Turf
SQ. YD.

99

CASH 'N CARRY
Installation

! 98

.

~~,~~~~~~~~!~

stand11rd s1 ze Kod3tolor nesat Nes

nr shde~

.

EACH

c

lomot l!lfr ord~r

£'l
1-••'iil"iili--ili'
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PRINTS from SLIDESJ4
" v~,
No trm1 t to

t~e number

/,

of slides or to the number

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J
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~~:~f:~~~~l~:.::.::·.f 49c

~.~.~~~~.~.~~!~'"':&gt;

May 24, and be dedicated August 23
and 24.
.
The next meeting will be held June
5 at Kanauga Roadside Park with a
potluck dinner preceding . All members ate urged to attend; visitors
are welcome .

---------·

p.in.

PHONI -.9591_

Prices Effective Today thru Saturday, May 17
''W~

Resem t~e liighrto timii-Quantitj'

r:TT.:TYr.:!T

BONELESS

BO~_ELESS

Chuck
Roast

Chue_k
Steak

•1 ~.7

•] ~7

FRESH LEAN

SLAB

GROUND BEEF
39

•

BY THE
LB.

LB.

MIXED
FRYER PARTS
u.s.

ECKRICH

NO.1

49e

LB.

FRANKS

•1••

POUND
PKG.

FRESHEST PROiJUt:E If/ TOWN

IDAHO

NEW YELLOW

Baking Potatoes
10-LB.
BAG

'159

Cooking Onions
3-LB.
BAG

FRESH GREEN

69°

ROME BEAUTY

CABBAGE

APPLES

~A~-

LB.17e

'1 09

---------~

2~

MILK

GALLON PlASTIC

BROUGHTON

COTTAGE
CHEESI
24 OZ. CTN.
SPRING KNITMATES
IN EARTH TAN AND
SUMMER WHITE TO

DEL MONTE
CUT GREEN BEANS

ROYAL CREST

UONS LADIF.'i NIGIIT SET
PGMEROY - The Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club will hold
ladies night at 7 p.m. Thursday at
Meigs Inn. A special program has
been arranged and awards will be
presented to club members lor service and attendance.

BUTTERMILK
HALF
GALLON

89°
COKE, TAB, SPRITE

29

oz.

CAN

&amp; MELLOW YEU.OW
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

2 LITER
BOffiE

•

09

STOKELY CATSUP
14 oz.

some
17

Kitchen Prints

oz.

CAN

SCOTCHGARDED
Installed

SQ. YD.

GALLIPOLIS ·FLOOR COVERING
&amp; BUILDING
·SUPPLY

. .'

NYLON

$615

.,-.

·-

Yll;l SJP.EH, GAUIPOUS, OHIO

~---

has-

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or

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

269

TAWNEY STUDIOS

TOMEETMAYZZ
MIDDLEPORt - The annual
meeting of the Pomeroy
congregation
Jehovah's Witnesses, Inc., has be set for May 22at
9:30 p.m . at Kingdlm hall, 37319
State Route 124, Middleport.

JOH

(

of pr•nts per sl 1de.
JACH
the novel.
THIS _COUP'ON MlJST ACCOMPANY DIIDlJt
Several actions abruptly move
GOOd 11 W»l!z F'hoto Oe•tets - Up &gt;tn 5/J I/ 80
from location to location, time
period to time period - the writing
style lacks smooth transitions,
which make reading the novel ha~~e c op~pr1nt5 made from yo1.1r
EACH
'
somewhat laborious. Yet, the ra ~o r •te color 1nstant or regol~r ~na~ ots.
.
THIS COUP'OH MUST ACCOiiiii'.HT OIUllll ' \
philosophical statement 'there are
GoOO 11 WliiU ---· iiii~ I/Bcreations that e.dst only as they're
allowed to exist by their observer,' 8 x 10 COLOR
~
redeems tbe passages which had
confused tbe reader earlier, and" negatn1t! or onsin1l slide.
EACH
avarice, deception, calculating
0
THIS COUI"'N MUtT ACCOM,.I.IIT orou'\
.,
greed, all are punisbed in a manner
il••l
""'
iiiiii
~
iil-.iiiiliii'
_
.Wo••
niost effective to those guilty of
126 Kodacolor Film $1.68
them. Tbe questions, enigma,
Reg. 52.25
mystery linger long after the book is
C-110 Kodacolor Film $1.69
laid down, say reviewers.
Reg. 52.25
Tickets for tbe Book Author Luncheon are $5.50 and are available
frcim AAUW · Members of Poili
424 Second Ave.
Pleasant Branch and at Point SerGallipolis
vice Store, Point Pleasant.

'475SQ . YDInstalled
.

Cut loops

)89

_ c___o.iiiiliii'iiil)lio-

Book Author Luncheon planned next weekend

Many Wills

discriminatory basil!."

putting them all together in book
form.
Some of the most popular redoes
pertain to the cattail. " The root of
the cattail can be made into a flour
that has the same analysis as wheat
flour - this cattail-root flour makes
an excellent substitute for wheat
flour in baking. The tender stalks of
the cattail may be eaten as one eats
celery, or they may be cooked and
eaten as asparagus. The budding.
cattail spike is also an excellent
vegetable, and the pollen may be
used as a flour substitute," she says.
The dandelion is used for jelly,
lea, wine, and fritters . The root is a
coffee substitute. The tender green
plant, in early spring, is eaten as a
delicious salad.
Nettles are served as spinach.
Queen Anne's lace ill served as fritters. Acorns are ground Into meal
and used as one uses cornmeal. Day
lily tubers, stalks and blossoms are
served in tasty ways. Purslane ill
served as a salad or made into
all may sample.
Milkweed is served as broccoli
and chickweed made into a
nutritious salad. Sumac is made into
a refreshing "lemonade" and into a
tart jelly which ill excellent served
with meats. These are but a Jew
samples of wild foods.
Mrs. Pearson wiU demonstrate

THIS tOUP'OH Mun ACCilMnHY

pineapple upside down cake, milk.
Friday - Tuna salad, buttered
green beans, butterell corn, bread,
butter, applesauce, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
Reservations are to be made between 8 and 9 a.m. to guarantee a
meal for the day. Persons not
making a reservation must wait until everyone else is served.

I

I! I/ '):_.o,./ ,.
'

,.

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10:30 to 11:30 a.m. will be the Quiet
Time for meditation. At 11 :30 a.m.,
there will be a lunch with beverages
provided by the Hospitality Committee: Janet Johnson, Bonnie Swindler. Attendants are asked to bring a
sack lunch. A nursery will be
provided for pre-school ~hil~ by
Betsy Crank, nursery supel'VlSOr.
At 12:30 p.m., the speakers will
talk on "Prophecy, Discernment of
Spirits, Tongues, and Interpretation
of Tongues," followed by the Quiet
Time. The closing in the Chapel will
culminate with Holy Communion
with Rev. James Frazier.
Barbara Neal ill general chairman
with Carol Cremeans, Carol Johnson, Barbara Sheridan, Dorothy
Shaw, Ethel Robinson, Marjorie
Gatewood, and Mildred Jenkins

RO~NEY - The Ohio Child Coil'

IGANTI

GARDENERS TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport
Amateur Gardeners will meet at 8
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Everett Taylor, Lincoln Heights.
Mrs. Lois Pauley will give a demonstration on craft work.

I

/

or

OCCL Spring Conference Saturday

Campers meet

1

oy

If you're
turned on to
regattas, ·tying a
bowline, and
river rafting, you .
want a shoe to do more
than look the part . We have
this great Sebago fashion in a wide
range of sizes.

·~~'~i &lt;l'JR...fiO
C7t'D _fo tuJ.
'(J lit !DPWtVI'f

The
ShOe .Ca£1.e

:lOOSecondAn.
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis. 0 .

ALPO BEEF

DOG FOOD
25 LB.
BAG
.•

•s•9

HOLSUM SPECIAL

SUCED WHITE BREAD

JOY

DIStMASHING UQUID ..
22 oz.

somE

HJ.DRI
.
.
tOILET TISSUE

20 OZ. LOAF

4-ROLL
3FOR'109

89°

PAIC

..

�8-:l-TheSunday Times-Se~tinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

B-2:-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

\Annual membership
tea today at FAC

.

Several area engagements are announced

working mostly in acrylics on canvas and in watercolors. Her use
color and the imaginative approach
characterize her work .
Chairing the reception ill Bobbie
Holzer, assisted by Lucy Earwood.
At 3 p.m. this afternoon, a short
program will be presented at Riverby by members of the Madrigals
from Gallia Academf High School,
directed by Anne Fischer.
Both continuing members and new
members of the French Art Colony
are urged to attend this afternoon's
Membership Reception, and in particular to meet Mrs. Richards and
hear the music of the Madrigals.

GALUPOLIS The Annual
Membership Tea and the 01&gt;'
portunity to meet the outstanding artist who is exhibiting at Riverby for
the month of May, will aU take place
this afternoon between 2 and 4 p.m .
at the home of the French Art
Colony, 530 First Avenue in
Gallipolis.
Special guest this afternoon will be
Lola Barcus Richards of Springfield,
Va., who has a great number of her
paintings and prints hanging in both
Galleries at Riverby. Mrs. Richards
is a native of Gallia County and a
graduate of Gama Academy High
School. She is a versatile artist,

joyce Swisher
and Vincent Hill

Stephanie Kitzmiller

Mr. and Mrs. Robert E . Swisher of
Bi!lwell are announcing the engagem.nt and approaching marriage of
th~lr daughter, Joyce Ellen, to VincejJt George Hill, son of Mr. and
Mfs.frank Hill, Gallipolis ..
lotiss Swisher ill a graduate d.
Kyger Creek High School and
~ived her B.S. and M. Ed.
Dojgrees from Miami Univeruty.
S* is employed as a chemistry
tftcher at Gallia Academy High

&amp;two!.

Hill is a graduate of Gama

AOsdemy High School and received
~ B.S. Degree from Rio Grande
College. He is presently pursuing his
~ter's Degree at Ohio University.
He is- employed as a mathematics
te•cher at Gallia Academy High
S&lt;$ool.
the wedding will be held on Satur~. June 14, at Little Kyger Congregational Church, Rt. 1, Cheshire.
The custom of open church will be

BRISTOL , Tenn .
The
engagement and approaching
marriage of Stephanie Gail KitzMIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs .
miller, Bristol, Tenn ., and Steven
Robert E. Hartley , 1519 Seventh St. ,
Edward Walburn, Eden, N. C., is
Moundsville, announce the
being announced.
engagement of their daughter,
Miss Kitzmiller is the daughter of
Cheryl Ann, to Charles Randel King,
the Rev. Niles Edward Kitzmiller,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. King,
Brilltol, and Mrs. R. G. Edwards,
417 W. Brentwood Ave., MoundsErwin Tenn., and her fiance is the
ville, and grandson of Mrs. Mabel
son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Edward
Winebrenner, Middleport, and Mrs.
Walburn, Middleport.
Edith King, Chester.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Miss Hartley graduated from John
Unicoi County High School at Erwin
Marshall High School and is a senior
and is a sophomore at the East Tenat Marshall University where she
nessee State University. Mr .
plans to work toward a master's
Walburn graduated from Meigs
degree m speech and language
High School , the Virginia Intermont
pathology.
College, and is employed at the AdHer fiance graduated from Meigs
vance Auto Store in Eden, N. C.
High School and West Liberty State
The open church wedding will be . College with a bachelor's degree in
an event of Aug. 30 at the First Bai&gt;' accounting. He is employed as an
tistChurch in Bristol, Va.
executive sales representative with
Atlantic Steel of Atlanta, Ga.
The couple plan to be married on
June28.

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

GALUPOUS- Ac.tivities for this
week at the Senior Citizens Center,

220 Jackson Pike, are:

Karen BrowninR
-

Mr. and Mrs.

Hdiwa••rl Browning, Gallipolis, are
of their
Lou, to Vaughn
;+~~~:~:~the, soengagement
of Mr. and Mrs.
!I

'l'aiJlnr, Bidwell.

bride-to-be is a senior at
Academy; the groom-to-be is
graduate of Buckeye Hills
r.ki"Por Center. She is employed at
he is selfoi!mployed at
View Dairy.
wedding will be an event of
Aa•nist 16 at the Gallipolis Christian
church will be observed .

--------------- -.

Che ryl Hartley
and Charles King

Monday, May 12 - Chorus, 1-J
p.m.
Tuesday, May 13 - S.T.O.P.
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
11 :15 a.m.; Bible Study,l-2.
Wednesday, May 4 - Macrame
Class, l-3 p.m.; Card Games, 1-3 ;
Bible Study at Vinton Nutrition Site.
Thursday, May 14 - Council
Meeting, l: 30 p.m .
Friday, May 15- Art Class, 12:303 p.m. ; Medicare Training at Crown
City Site, 12 :30 p.m .; Crime Prevention Session, I p.m.; Social Hour, 7
p.m.
Sunday, May 18 - Dedication of
Multi-Purpose Community Building
Open House, 2-5 p.m .
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the fallowing menus:
Monday - Fried fish; · baked
potato, coleslaw, bread, butter, canned pears, milk.
Tuesday - 8¥ed chicken, boiled
potato in jacket, mixed vegetables,
bread, butter peach with whipped
topping, milk .
Wednesday - Wieners, mashed
potatoes, sauer1&lt;raut, celery and
radish sticks, bread, butter, butterscotch pudding, mill&lt;.
Thursday - Ham loaf, buttered
rice, buttered peas, bread, butter.

Wedding
plans made
Gary Snowden, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Caroll Snowden, Gallipolis, will
wed Sherry Van Dyke, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Van Dyke,
Hebron, Ohio, in vows to be repeated
at the First Presbyterian Church, 65
N. Third Street, Newark, May 18 at 2
p.m.
Open church will be observed. A
reception will follow at the church .

jacqueline Powell
McARTHUR - Mr. and Mrs. Jack
F . Powell, Route I, McArthur, Ohio
are proud to 'e ngagement of their
daughter, Jacqueline J. Powell to
Richard C. Vititoe o{ 1416 Striebel
Rd., Columbus.
She is a student at Vinton County
High School.
Viti toe is a 1978 graduate of Vinton
County High School and ill employed
at Mid-5tate Sales in Columbus. A
summer wedding is being planned.
She is the granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Swick of Route 1,
Bidwell.

'Quiet Day' planned by church
GALUPOUS - The Wednesday
Morning Prayer Group of Grace
United Methodist Church is sponsoring a Quiet Day, Wednesday,
May 14.
It is a day lor Christians to gather
and share in fellowship and quiet
meditation. Since Pentecost is not
far off, the group chose for the topics
of the four speakers, the gifts of the
Holy Spirit. The speakers will be
Barbara Neal, Dorothy Shaw, Carol
Johnson, and Barbara Sheridan.
The day will begin at 9:30 a.m.
with registration. Hostesses will be
Alice Wiseman, Edna Gettles, Alice
Amsbary, and Madge Eachus. In the
Chapel, at 10 a.m. the first speakers
will talk on Wisdom, Knowledge,
Faith, Healing, and Miracles. From

La Leche League to meet
MIDDLEPORT - All women interested in nursing their babies are
invited to attend a meeting of the La
Leche League of Gallipolis to be held
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
the League leader, Bev Splete. Information on the meeting can be obtained locaUy from Mrs. Debbie
Grueser, 992-3844.
"The Family in Relation to the
Breastled Baby" will be the topic for
informal discussion with emphasis
on how to manage the first hectic
weeks with not only the baby but the
entire family . Books on childbirth,
child care, and breast feeding are
available from the Lending Library.

COUNCIL TO MEET
A meeting of the newly formed
Meigs Local Talented and Gifted Advioory Council is scheduled for 7:30
p.m . Tuesday at the Meigs High
School Library.
Dan Morris, director of instruction
in the district • will
and curriculwn
0
head the meeting at which it is hoped
to formulate a document that might
be presented to the Meigs Local
Board of Education for adoption in
relation to a program for the gifted
of the district.

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GALUPOUS - Exhibit for the
mlmth of May - Multi-media Pain-.
and Prints by Lola Barcus
· hards, Springfield, Virginia.
· allery Hours - Tuesdays and
days, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Saturs and Sundays, 1 p.m.-5 p.m.
ay 11, 2 p.m.-4 p.m . - Annual
~mbership Tea at Riverby .
SQ_eeial guest: Lola Barcus Richards
Springfield, Virginia, whose
mlllti-media paintings and prints
e up tbe May exhibit. An Oi&gt;'
unity to "Meet the Artillt."
cia! music provided by a group of
Madrigals, from Gallia
A demy High School, under the
&lt;Utection of Anne Fischer, at 3
o'clock. Tea chaired by Bobbie
H.lzer, assisted by Lucy Earwood.
t&lt;fay 17, 2 p.m. - Spring recital by
vdcal students of Ed Harkless at
Rtverby.
r&amp;Y 18, 2:30 p.m.-4 p.m. Cl)ildren's Workshop in CLA'V,
~erby. Instructor, Corinne Lund.
Registration, ~; for children age 8
arid older. Call Janet E . Byers at446J9ila to pre-register.
May 'll, 7:30 p.m. - F.A.C. Intel-aepartmental Meeting, River by;
9 ~.m.- F.A.C. Trustees Meeting.
:June 24, 3 p.m. - Deadline lor en~es to be submitted for the July 4th
River Recreation Festival Exhibit.
Cl\aired by Jan Thaler. E!!try blanks
available at Riverby or at PJ's, or
ca'u 446-1819 to request one, or write
the French Art Colony, Box 472,
G!lllipolis, Ohio 456,'11.
ll'uly 4, 1 p.m.-5 p.m. - River
Rkreation Festival Art Exhibit in
t$. City Park in downtown
Gallipolis; if rain, will be at Riverby.

off

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assistin~.

AMOS CJ;tOSS REPORTS
FOltDUTY
Marine Pvt. Amos B. Cross Jr.,
son Gladys J. and Amos B. Cross
Sr. of Route I, Langsville, has
reported for duty at the 2nd Marine
Division, Marine Corps Base, Camp
Lejeune, N.C.
'
Meigs High
A 1979 graduate
School, Pomeroy, he joined tbe
Marine Corps in November,1979.

or

or

servation League South Central
Dilltrict Spring Conference will be
beld Saturday , May 17, from 9 a .m._
3 p.m. at the Rodney United
Methodist Church. Featured
speaker for this event is Mrs. Kay
Pearson whose presentation is entitled, "What's Cooking in Nature."
Kay Pearson and her husband
Merle, live on a farm f'ast oi
Fremont, Ohio . The land is farmed
by neighbors and, in addition to the
tillable acres, the farm includes thirty acres of woodlot - ideal for
foraging wild foods . The Pearsons
~~e two sons : John, a physicist,
livmg m the Colwnbus area, and
Gary, a veterlnartan, in North
Dakota. It was Gary who sparked
Kay's interest in wild foods when he
sent her Euell Gibbon's books
"Stalking the Wild Asparagus" and
" Stalking the Wild Herbs."
Pearson first tried her hand at
making jelly from violet blossoms
and was so delighted with the resnits
that she experimented further with
wild foods . Friends became interested in these unusual dishes, and
Kay was asked to speak at loeal garden clubs concerning wild foods. The
whole thing mushroomed from
there.
She has amassed a large file
wild-food recipes and is working at

or

''Service rendered on a non-

100% NYLON SAXONY

$8 ~. YD.
7

WITH PAD
COMMERCIAL TYPE

WOOD TABLE
&amp; CHAIR SETS

Rubber Back
·cARPET
100% NYLON
, 350
CASH 'N
SQ. YD. CARRY

GALUPGLIS - The French City
her talk with prepared products of
Campers held the monthly meeting
which she has been speaking which
recently at the Buckeye Rural Elecall may sample
tric bullding with 19 members and
The day will begin with
one visitor present.
registration and coffee hou.- at 9
Mter a short business meeting,
a.m. Mrs . Judy Isaacs, S. Central
refreshments were served by BiU
District President, will conduct the · and Mildred Seyfried. A program
opening business session at 9:30
was presented by the visitor, Josette
a.m. Mrs. Janet Zinn, State Vice · Baker, Director of Parks for the
President, will conduct an OCCL
Raccoon Creek County Park. She
Workshop at 10:15 a.m. Mrs. Josette
gave a talk on facilities and future
Baker, Director, 0 . .Q. Mcintyre
plans for the park and showed slides.
Park District, will present a
The park will open to the public on
workshop and slide illustrations on
tbe c\uTent progress and future
projections of the park located on
Raccoon Creek, at t: a .m.
A picnic-style luncheon will be served at noon by the United Methodist
Women of the Rodney Church. At 1
p.m. Mrs. Mary Lucas will entertain
the Conference on the piano and
organ with music geared to enhance
the theme of the day which is "A
Saturday in the Park." Mrs. Pearson will speak at 1:45 a.m. following
which will be the closing business
session, door prizes, and refres&amp;
COLOR PRINTS
menttime.
S•ze~ 110, 126 &amp; 135 fr om
GAF. futt olnd atMr pOpular I 1Im__
::;,
Registration fee is $1.50, luncheon
Ont roll Pff coupOn.
/
fee, $3.50. Last-minute reservations
THIS COUPON MU5T ACCOM,.-:,;; ot~"ou""- N
may be made no later than Monday
evening, May 12, by camng Mrs.
5 x 7 COLOR
v v }
Mary Louise Hennesy at 446-7822 or
Mrs. Jean Gillespie at 446-3969.

!-········----249

POINT PLEASANT Point
Pleasant Branch of AAUW will sponsor a Book Author Luncheon Saturday, May 17, 12:30 p.m. at
Presbyterian
Church,
Point
Pleasant, Eighth and Main Streets.
Wallace E. Knight, author of
"Lightstruck," a novel, published in
1979, will be present. Knight, a
native of Charleston, W. Va. is also
the author of many short stories and
poems, which have been printed in
"Atlantic Monthly," "Best
American Short Stories," "Mother
Jones," "River Cities Monthly," and
other publications.
Knight received a bachelor's
degree in English from West
Virginia Wesleyan CoUege, and a
master's degree in English from
Ohio University. Fr(Jil 195(}.1955 he
served as business editor for the
Chrilltian Gazette. Knight is com-

munications manager of Ashland
Oil, Inc . as well as adjunct professor
of journalism at Marshall University.
His novel "Lightstruck" describes
how a mysterious beam of light
illuminates briefly, yet decisively,
the lives of a group of U!&gt;'!o-then insignificant people.
Symbolism, bombastic language,
as well as tbe philoeophy of Goethe:
... "The most important things can't
be proved" ... and also a reference to
Strauss' cheerful 'Voices of Spring,"
express of how poverty,
imagination, the yearning for. God's
intervention, and simply one's own
perceptiveness affect things seen or
believed to be seen - move through

New arrival

to be
held on May 29 was planned during
the Tuesday night meeting of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Pauline Hysell, worthy matron,
and Thomas Edwards, worthy
patron, presided at the meeting with
Bessie King, deputy grand matron
as a guest.
For inspection all members are
asked to take a pie. An inspection
dinner will be held at 5:30 'at tbe .
Meigs Inn for officers and their
guests. A practice was announced
for 7:30 on Tuesday, May 'll.
Initiatory work was exemplified
with Mabel Goeglein and Judy
Jewell as protem candidates. It was
noted that Marie Curd had presented·
a 50 year pin to Henrietta Jenkins on
April25 at her home. 1
The chapter will observe a dinner
on Saturday, May 10. Line officers
are to attend a meetiqg at Belpre on
May 18. Refreshments were served
in the social room by Ann Hemsley
and Virginia Salser. A silent auction
was held. A products party foUowed
the meeting.

GALUPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Wills, Gallipolis, are announcing the birth of their first
child, a daughter, born April 6 and
weighing seven pounds, 12 ounces.
She was named Mandy Rae.
Maternal grandPi'rents are Mr.
and Mrs. H. F . McFarland, Vinton;
paternal grandparent is Mrs. Betty
Wills, Pomeroy. Great-grandparent
is Mrs. Alma White, Gallipolis; and
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Myers, Reedsville.

Inspection

~~R~-a?n:3?o

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1 nstalled w / pad

..

All styles &amp; sizes, 3 colors of maple, oak, dark or light
pine, with or without vinyl seats.

'9

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To

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SAVE '50

Astro Turf
SQ. YD.

99

CASH 'N CARRY
Installation

! 98

.

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stand11rd s1 ze Kod3tolor nesat Nes

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EACH

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£'l
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PRINTS from SLIDESJ4
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No trm1 t to

t~e number

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of slides or to the number

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May 24, and be dedicated August 23
and 24.
.
The next meeting will be held June
5 at Kanauga Roadside Park with a
potluck dinner preceding . All members ate urged to attend; visitors
are welcome .

---------·

p.in.

PHONI -.9591_

Prices Effective Today thru Saturday, May 17
''W~

Resem t~e liighrto timii-Quantitj'

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Chue_k
Steak

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GROUND BEEF
39

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BY THE
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10-LB.
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Cooking Onions
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APPLES

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24 OZ. CTN.
SPRING KNITMATES
IN EARTH TAN AND
SUMMER WHITE TO

DEL MONTE
CUT GREEN BEANS

ROYAL CREST

UONS LADIF.'i NIGIIT SET
PGMEROY - The Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club will hold
ladies night at 7 p.m. Thursday at
Meigs Inn. A special program has
been arranged and awards will be
presented to club members lor service and attendance.

BUTTERMILK
HALF
GALLON

89°
COKE, TAB, SPRITE

29

oz.

CAN

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2 LITER
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269

TAWNEY STUDIOS

TOMEETMAYZZ
MIDDLEPORt - The annual
meeting of the Pomeroy
congregation
Jehovah's Witnesses, Inc., has be set for May 22at
9:30 p.m . at Kingdlm hall, 37319
State Route 124, Middleport.

JOH

(

of pr•nts per sl 1de.
JACH
the novel.
THIS _COUP'ON MlJST ACCOMPANY DIIDlJt
Several actions abruptly move
GOOd 11 W»l!z F'hoto Oe•tets - Up &gt;tn 5/J I/ 80
from location to location, time
period to time period - the writing
style lacks smooth transitions,
which make reading the novel ha~~e c op~pr1nt5 made from yo1.1r
EACH
'
somewhat laborious. Yet, the ra ~o r •te color 1nstant or regol~r ~na~ ots.
.
THIS COUP'OH MUST ACCOiiiii'.HT OIUllll ' \
philosophical statement 'there are
GoOO 11 WliiU ---· iiii~ I/Bcreations that e.dst only as they're
allowed to exist by their observer,' 8 x 10 COLOR
~
redeems tbe passages which had
confused tbe reader earlier, and" negatn1t! or onsin1l slide.
EACH
avarice, deception, calculating
0
THIS COUI"'N MUtT ACCOM,.I.IIT orou'\
.,
greed, all are punisbed in a manner
il••l
""'
iiiiii
~
iil-.iiiiliii'
_
.Wo••
niost effective to those guilty of
126 Kodacolor Film $1.68
them. Tbe questions, enigma,
Reg. 52.25
mystery linger long after the book is
C-110 Kodacolor Film $1.69
laid down, say reviewers.
Reg. 52.25
Tickets for tbe Book Author Luncheon are $5.50 and are available
frcim AAUW · Members of Poili
424 Second Ave.
Pleasant Branch and at Point SerGallipolis
vice Store, Point Pleasant.

'475SQ . YDInstalled
.

Cut loops

)89

_ c___o.iiiiliii'iiil)lio-

Book Author Luncheon planned next weekend

Many Wills

discriminatory basil!."

putting them all together in book
form.
Some of the most popular redoes
pertain to the cattail. " The root of
the cattail can be made into a flour
that has the same analysis as wheat
flour - this cattail-root flour makes
an excellent substitute for wheat
flour in baking. The tender stalks of
the cattail may be eaten as one eats
celery, or they may be cooked and
eaten as asparagus. The budding.
cattail spike is also an excellent
vegetable, and the pollen may be
used as a flour substitute," she says.
The dandelion is used for jelly,
lea, wine, and fritters . The root is a
coffee substitute. The tender green
plant, in early spring, is eaten as a
delicious salad.
Nettles are served as spinach.
Queen Anne's lace ill served as fritters. Acorns are ground Into meal
and used as one uses cornmeal. Day
lily tubers, stalks and blossoms are
served in tasty ways. Purslane ill
served as a salad or made into
all may sample.
Milkweed is served as broccoli
and chickweed made into a
nutritious salad. Sumac is made into
a refreshing "lemonade" and into a
tart jelly which ill excellent served
with meats. These are but a Jew
samples of wild foods.
Mrs. Pearson wiU demonstrate

THIS tOUP'OH Mun ACCilMnHY

pineapple upside down cake, milk.
Friday - Tuna salad, buttered
green beans, butterell corn, bread,
butter, applesauce, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.
Reservations are to be made between 8 and 9 a.m. to guarantee a
meal for the day. Persons not
making a reservation must wait until everyone else is served.

I

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'

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10:30 to 11:30 a.m. will be the Quiet
Time for meditation. At 11 :30 a.m.,
there will be a lunch with beverages
provided by the Hospitality Committee: Janet Johnson, Bonnie Swindler. Attendants are asked to bring a
sack lunch. A nursery will be
provided for pre-school ~hil~ by
Betsy Crank, nursery supel'VlSOr.
At 12:30 p.m., the speakers will
talk on "Prophecy, Discernment of
Spirits, Tongues, and Interpretation
of Tongues," followed by the Quiet
Time. The closing in the Chapel will
culminate with Holy Communion
with Rev. James Frazier.
Barbara Neal ill general chairman
with Carol Cremeans, Carol Johnson, Barbara Sheridan, Dorothy
Shaw, Ethel Robinson, Marjorie
Gatewood, and Mildred Jenkins

RO~NEY - The Ohio Child Coil'

IGANTI

GARDENERS TO MEET
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport
Amateur Gardeners will meet at 8
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Everett Taylor, Lincoln Heights.
Mrs. Lois Pauley will give a demonstration on craft work.

I

/

or

OCCL Spring Conference Saturday

Campers meet

1

oy

If you're
turned on to
regattas, ·tying a
bowline, and
river rafting, you .
want a shoe to do more
than look the part . We have
this great Sebago fashion in a wide
range of sizes.

·~~'~i &lt;l'JR...fiO
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The
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Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis. 0 .

ALPO BEEF

DOG FOOD
25 LB.
BAG
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22 oz.

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PRICES Ill EFFECT THROUGH
SATURDAY, MAY 17
WHilE QUANTITIES
LAST!

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$8.!1!1 SET

HECK 'S REG .
$7.!1!1

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Endo rsed by Carlton Fisk . Cowh ide
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crotch lacing . Vertical split., X· lace d
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web . Fleece lined wrist stra p. E"cl u·
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styling. Sizes 6· 18 .

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spool repl acement. Enough line included
for one season's use. 211 lbs . net wt.

Fn tii' IS 11'\Chldl Dto..n Cw 111.ot1 Gt&gt;C4 naM IIt. pra f'l'loUf!I ·Gflill , ,..,...""" o •..,_
~~~-oes .

al"l(l pad .ctr-,

PKCi.

f'!'la tc: ~

roo ~~t~Gm • ec1ooro ,..,.,..,.,.,• .,&lt;&gt;fl,.

CHOICE

;: 5 18~

HECK 'S REG.
S26.1Ut EA.

s12aa

4 0n lv

S'DITS D£11.

HECK 'SAEG.
$1!1.09

~.000/)

HAIDWAIE DE,,

22 OZ. WINDEX

RYOBI

UL TRA·LITE SPINNING REEL
Despite their reasonable price. these ekirted spool reels feature Ryob• ' s e:Aclu·
sive interna l automatic / menu• l pickup and other precision Ryobt features lor
better fishing .

Glt10

CHOICE

AIID
GltiiOII

HICK'SAIG.
TO $24.88 EA.

--.....

SHRUB SALE·

TRIGGER

GLASS
CLEANER

89(
HICK ' S RIG .
$1.27

HDUSIWAIE

Dfl1.

Reg.
.
Price
..._,•• i· RHODODENDRON, Yellow Tag. ;............ 10.99

Sale
Price
6.44

· RHODODENDRON, Blue Tag ...... .. .. ...... 14.99

9.66

12 0.1, VANISH

AUTOMATIC

BOWL CLEANER
CHOICE OF I LUI 01 Gllll

79~ACH
HICK 'S R.G. $1 . 15 U .

IOUSIWAII•II'f.

ASSORTED LAMP SHADES

25% OFF
HECK'S REG. PRICES

;:Taxusand Yew, Yellow Tag .. .. .. ........... 10.99
Am Ornamental Shrubs, red Tag .......... 8.44

Asst. Omam ental Shrubs, Green Tag .... .. . 3.99

6.44
4.88

2.39

ASSORTED
FESCO PLASTIC

1:V. IUSHEL

LAUNDRY BASKET

$299

37 %. " xfl '

WINDOW SHADES
37~x6'

window shades fit most
standard sir:e windows . Ideal for
fitter.ino hot summer sun .

FLOWER POTS
e 15111" 01 16" WIIR POT
WITI 'OLI fit• All
ILACI5TAII
e 14" POT WID SAIUI

18" TALL LAMPS

Choou 11011'1 a uon•e t8"" tt H Ct proe• dli .lll(tn.-d l1mp1 by Crown.

C~Ofhll

a cc e ntin{l

1188

cer am.c bua1. A betul llu t 1GIGI111on to

CHOICI
. HECK 'S AIG.
SS,!IOEACH

CAPRICE

$399
EAC:H

;~;;;·~IG. $
$HI.OO

~our

HOUSIWAIIII,.

�OPEN DAILY 10 TO 9
SUNDAY 1 TO 7

LE STAn....

1 P.M.
UNDAY, MAY 1

o~nomorh

EURE~A

UPRIGHT

11 HP 36 INCH

VACUUM

RIDER LAWN MOWER

GILLITTE

LIGHTED

Exc lusive Diai·A·Nap"' adjusts to any
carpE't height. Triple-ca re cleaning power gets out imbedded dirt , grooms as it
clea n s . Duai · Action Edge Kleener ®
cleans that last tough inch, right up to
the baseboards . Huge top-filling disp os·
able dust bag prevents clogs, keep suction strong. Lifetime lubricated motor.

$72222

ZOOM ·MAKE-UP MIRROR
The Onlw Exclusive Zoom In Zoom Out Dia l

REG. 1888.88

HECK'S REG. . . . . . . . . . . . . . '.23.46
AD PIICE . ..... ... . ..... ' 19.88
LESS MFCii'S ............ '10.00

s Only
140611
Key lgn,tion slllttii'IQ. Heavy Duty

YOU,. .

.

DIRECT DR IVE TRANSAXLE w i f,
brake &amp; automolive di fferent i al

d i~

C\iST
A"ER
MFGR 'S REBATE

7•287 5

section l spee-ds forward, 1 re veru
REAR DISC HARGE cuffi ng d«k
Twin bl&lt;1des for ful l 36 " cut
Synchro Ba lance&lt;! Br iggs &amp; Stranoo
Engm~ H i imp;,clgr llle

, ss49~,,

LADIES'
LADI ES'

SHORT SETS

G.E.

Ladies 2 piece terry short sets with
basic pull ·on short and mat ching to p.
Assorted style tops . Sizes S M L.

AM·FM PORTABLE RADIO

TERRY TOPS
Ladies' fashionable short sleeve and
sleeveless terry tops, styled with keyho le
V-neck or collar Sizes S·M·L and 42 ·46. ·

ss66

FM I AM portabl e radio. Two· way power. 5" speaker
delivers BIG sou nd.

HECK'SREG.
$44.!16

HECK ' S REG.
$6!1 .!16

PRICES Ill EFFECT THROUGH
SATURDAY, MAY 17
WHilE QUANTITIES
LAST!

SJ7''

HECK'S REG.
$8.!1!1 SET

HECK 'S REG .
$7.!1!1

WILSON
A115UI

CATCHER'S MITT

LADIES '

SHORTS

Endo rsed by Carlton Fisk . Cowh ide
leather. Double break model. Sk ip
crotch lacing . Vertical split., X· lace d
.,...._,\,._
web . Fleece lined wrist stra p. E"cl u·
4;&gt;0 ~,~sive pro-toe feature .

Ladies navy denim and painter
cloth shorts with 2 front pocket
styling. Sizes 6· 18 .

o·•.,

·,,--~~~';:·~\ $1999
a..

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

· . .!' .

?l rt
" , )! \
.
z_ ."
..
.

,t......

\

4 ONLY

~

!•

~~~ .

HECK ' S REG.
$7.!19

HECK 'S REG.
$28.!1!1

WESTCHESTER
MOUNTAINEER

SUNDAY GOLF BAG
8" Handsome Sun day bag . Adjusta ble laced
divi d ers . Large ball pocket . Natural Duck
I Sunse t Tan

HECK'S REG.
$24.9!1

PKG. OF48

®
AUTOMATIC

S1888

SUPER DAYTIME

DISPOSABLE DIAPERS

IRANSMISSIDI

FLUID

$439

HECK 'S REG.
$4.!1!1 PKG .

S,DITS DfiT.

BERKLIY

BLACK &amp; DECKER

SHADOW

9" NYLON LINE
GRASS TRIMMER

SPIN CAST 01 SPINNING IOD
.;J J

r:;J i

:I

M~~ '"9 '" d•out .., 1980 t~ e.tii'-Y

Snaoo-,. • tO! l ily n.w con.:ept

11'1

!tan.ng

-::om~a r a o._ oaat~~y 1rw:1 g.,-tormanca. Stladow lealvres 1 OIIPholl
co..-QO! tl t p¢wef IICI !Nil ofl ers ~IC:h..:l .efll&lt;lrYTI J 11112 re~t •V I I CIIQI'I
Tr-.~ tr t ri SIUC i tll 1~ brawn ro4 bl t l'lio l hl~l brttMl .... ,.. t n&lt;l vo4&lt;l I C:C: eflll

•o&lt;u w 11n

Trims grass and light weeds along fences,
agai nst walls , aro und trees and ga rdens.
H1gh speed ny lon line, safe r than a bla de.
Spool designed for fast and easy advanc·
ing of nylon cutting line len gths . Quick
spool repl acement. Enough line included
for one season's use. 211 lbs . net wt.

Fn tii' IS 11'\Chldl Dto..n Cw 111.ot1 Gt&gt;C4 naM IIt. pra f'l'loUf!I ·Gflill , ,..,...""" o •..,_
~~~-oes .

al"l(l pad .ctr-,

PKCi.

f'!'la tc: ~

roo ~~t~Gm • ec1ooro ,..,.,..,.,.,• .,&lt;&gt;fl,.

CHOICE

;: 5 18~

HECK 'S REG.
S26.1Ut EA.

s12aa

4 0n lv

S'DITS D£11.

HECK 'SAEG.
$1!1.09

~.000/)

HAIDWAIE DE,,

22 OZ. WINDEX

RYOBI

UL TRA·LITE SPINNING REEL
Despite their reasonable price. these ekirted spool reels feature Ryob• ' s e:Aclu·
sive interna l automatic / menu• l pickup and other precision Ryobt features lor
better fishing .

Glt10

CHOICE

AIID
GltiiOII

HICK'SAIG.
TO $24.88 EA.

--.....

SHRUB SALE·

TRIGGER

GLASS
CLEANER

89(
HICK ' S RIG .
$1.27

HDUSIWAIE

Dfl1.

Reg.
.
Price
..._,•• i· RHODODENDRON, Yellow Tag. ;............ 10.99

Sale
Price
6.44

· RHODODENDRON, Blue Tag ...... .. .. ...... 14.99

9.66

12 0.1, VANISH

AUTOMATIC

BOWL CLEANER
CHOICE OF I LUI 01 Gllll

79~ACH
HICK 'S R.G. $1 . 15 U .

IOUSIWAII•II'f.

ASSORTED LAMP SHADES

25% OFF
HECK'S REG. PRICES

;:Taxusand Yew, Yellow Tag .. .. .. ........... 10.99
Am Ornamental Shrubs, red Tag .......... 8.44

Asst. Omam ental Shrubs, Green Tag .... .. . 3.99

6.44
4.88

2.39

ASSORTED
FESCO PLASTIC

1:V. IUSHEL

LAUNDRY BASKET

$299

37 %. " xfl '

WINDOW SHADES
37~x6'

window shades fit most
standard sir:e windows . Ideal for
fitter.ino hot summer sun .

FLOWER POTS
e 15111" 01 16" WIIR POT
WITI 'OLI fit• All
ILACI5TAII
e 14" POT WID SAIUI

18" TALL LAMPS

Choou 11011'1 a uon•e t8"" tt H Ct proe• dli .lll(tn.-d l1mp1 by Crown.

C~Ofhll

a cc e ntin{l

1188

cer am.c bua1. A betul llu t 1GIGI111on to

CHOICI
. HECK 'S AIG.
SS,!IOEACH

CAPRICE

$399
EAC:H

;~;;;·~IG. $
$HI.OO

~our

HOUSIWAIIII,.

�~TheSundayT!me&amp;Sentinel,Sunday , May 11, 1!81

MONDAY
REVIVAL at North Bethel United
Methodist Church begiMing Monday at 7:30p.m. The Rev. Freelsnd
Norris will be the guest speaker. The
Rev. Charles Domigan is the pastor.
Singers are invited to participate.
MEIGS COUNTY Ministerial
Association Monday at 9:30a.m. at
the Meigs Ministry offi~. Mill St.,
Middleport.

Community Corner
Crooks receives special flag

Mr. and Mrs. Rick Bamett

Local man marries in
Arkansas March vows
DeWITT, Ark. - Miss Donna
Louise Kemp and Rick Barnett exchanged wedding vows March 16, at
2 p.m. at the Gillett United
Methodist Church. Parents of the
couple are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred F.
Workman of Gillett and Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Barnett of Gallipolis,
Ohio. Grandparents of the couple
are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Bergschneider of Gillett, Mrs. Floyd
Workman and the late Rev. Workman of Gallipolis, Ohio, and the late
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnett, .Point
Pleasant, West Virginia.
Rev. Harold Rogers officiated at
the double ring ceremony. The
couple stood before the altar
beneath a brass candleabra archway holding white tapers. White
wicker floor baskets of mixed spring
flowers ~11d brass seven-branched
candelabi'BS with white tapers completed the setting.
Nuptial music was furnished by
Mrs. Thelma Gordon, organist, and
Miss Karla Cunningham, soloist,
who sang the Wedding Song.
The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore an original gown
she designed and made. The white
jacquard satin dress featured a fitted bodice with a Queen Ann
neckline. The full skirt was gathered
at the waist in the back and formed a
chapel length train. The long beU
sleeves, the neckline and the hem
w.ere trimmed with lace edged in
pearls. The lace was handmade by
the bride's mother. Her chapel
length veil of illusion was trimmed
in handmade lace and was· secured
by a Juliet cap accented with re- ·
embroidered lace and pearls. She
wore a pearl necklace and earrings,
a l!ift from the l!Toom. The · bride

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4 :30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, May 12- Blood Pressure
Clinic, 10 a.m.-12 noon; Square Dance, 12 : ~ p.m.
Tuesday, May 13 - Yard Sale, 9
a.rn.-3 p.m.; Chorus, 12:4:&gt;-2 p.m.
Wednesday, May 14 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.12:30p.m.; Games, !-2:30p.m.
Thursday, May 15 - Craft
Sharing, 10:15 a.m.; Kitchen Band,
12:46-2p.m.
Friday, May 16 - Bowling, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through
Friday.
Monday- Meatballs in mushroom
gravy, green beans, cole slaw,
lemon pudding • cinnamon crumb
topping, bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Ham and navy. beans,
Harvard beets, buttered spinachvinegar, ice cream, cornbread, butter,mUk.
Wednesday - Chicken and rice
casserole, buttered peas, tossed
salad-homemade French dressliig,
chocolate cake • white frosting,
bread, butter, milk.
Thursday - Salmon loaf, buttered
potatoes, stewed tmnatoes, fruit
cocktail, butterscotch cookie, bread,
butter, milk.
Friday - Baked steak, mashed
potatoes, buttered carrots, fi'Ulted
gelatin, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a cboice ol wbuie
milk or butterrnilt served dally. .
Please register fiN! day belort you
plan to eat. Pomeroy 44&amp;-78811: • '

carried a nosegay of silk white, blue
and yellow roses in a hand crocheted
holder with white lace ribbon.
Miss Lillie Kemp, sister of the
bride, was maid of honor. Matron of
honor was Mrs, Margaret LehrnaM.
They wore floor length A-line gowns
of light blue crepe back satin with a
gathered collar. They carried silk
nosegays of white roses and blue tipped carnations in hand crocheted
holders with blue lace ribbon.
Miss Geneie Barnett, sister of the
groom, carried the rings on a pillow
matching the bride's dress. She
wore a floor length blue gingham
down with a bow in the back.
The groom was a'ttired in a black
tuftdo with a white pleated shirt. He
wore a blue silk rosebud on his lapel.
Johnny Lehmann was best man.
Greg Bland, McGehee, was groomsman. Ushers were Robert Reed and
Dale Reed, cousins of the bride.
They wore black tuxedoes with blue
pleated shirts. They pinned blue tipped carnations to their lapels.
Mrs. Debby Bland, McGehee, was
in charge of the bride's book. The
table was covered in a white
heirloom lace cloth that belonged to
the bride's great-grandmother. A
white memory candle with blue silk
~ and a wicker basket of seroUs
were on the table.
Mrs. Workman chose for her
daughter's wedding a beige terry
suede dress and wore a white sweetheart rose silk corsage. Mrs. Barnett wore a light blue suit and a silk
corsage of white sweetheart roses.
A:; the couple left the church, they
presented their mothers and the
bride's grandmother a long stemmed blue rose that was made by the
bride.

Bible school plans made
MIDDLEPORT - Bible school
plans were discussed at the Monday
night meeting of the Young Adult
Class held at the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Catherine Russell presided at the
meeting with Steve Pickens giving
the opening prayer. Devotions by
Nancy Morris were on the origin of
Mother's Day and a poem. The
group discussed Bible school, the
church softball team, and ways to
improve attendance. Next meeting
was set for June 2 at 7 p.m. at the
home of Ms. Russell. Steve Pickens
will have devotions, and Mrs. Morris
will serve refreshments.
Larry Picke• had the closing
prayer and Ms. Russell and Becky
Painter served refreshments .
Others attendillg were Vicki Smith,
Larry Pickens, and Ruby Hysell.

•

r

Dick Knight, who has been living
in Marietta for some time now, left a
week ago for Wisconsin. He bas been
transferred to the Wisconsin Electric Power Co. and his wife and
daughter will join him there after
school is out later this month.
For Chet and Annie, they have

mixed emotions - happy lor his
employment job advancement but
unhappy that it takes him and his
family so far away.
Before he left there were family
gatherings. Terry and his family
came to Marietta and were joined at
Dick's by their parents and Bill and
Ula Matlack for a weekend IX
togethemess.
While Kevin King has given up
music as his major at Ohio Universi·
ty, he still plays with the O.U. Jazz
Band. Last week the band went on
tour presenting concerts at Lancaster, A:;hland, Huron, Lakewood,
Sparta and Zanesville, and yesterday went to Columbus for competi·
tion at Ohio State.
Mrs. Pearl Little of Rutland is
hospitalized in Florida but making
good progress now. For those who
would like to send her a card the address is Holy Cross Hospital, 47Zi
North Federal Highway, Room 416,
South, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33308.
Mrs. Littie and her husband,
Russell, who died earlier this year,
have been such community boosters
through the years. It would be nice
to remember her now.

POMEROY - Plans have been
completed for the open church wedding of Debra Kay Bailey, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Bailey,
Pomeroy, and Charles Byrne
MuUen, Son of Mr. and Mrs. Don E.
Mullen, Middleport.
The wedding will take place on
Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at the Sacred
Heart Church, Pomeroy. A half-hour
of nuptial music will precede the
ceremony with Phyllis Hackett,
organist, and Lois Burt, soloist. Pam
Miller and Ann Forbes will register
the guests.
The Rev. Fr. Paul Welton and
Rev. David MaM will perform the
ceremony. Matron of honor will be
Karen Lisle, West Jefferson, and the
bridesmaids will be Shelly Wood,
Pat Vaughan, Carmel Evans, and
Joyce Seelig, Pomeroy, with Kelly
MuUen as a junior bridesmaid,
Flowergirls will be Kerrie and
Jacinda Mullen. Jason 1.isle will be
ring bearer.

+u.~

Joe Freeman of Pomeroy will be
best man, and the groomsmen will
be Keith Bailey, Sean · Mullen,
Michael Mullen, Patrick Mullen,
and Brian Mullen.
The bride-elect Is employed in the
office of Dr. Charles L. Fulks,
Athens. Her fiance is self-employed
with his lather at Mullen lllsurance
Agency, Inc., Pomeroy.

Send Hallmark cards
to graduates because their
achievements
deserve your best
wishes.

VISITING EVANGELIST The Chapel HIJl Cbl!l'Ch of Cbrlst
extelllls an IDvllaUon Ia lbe pubUc
Ia altend a series of less0111
presented by V. l". Black, MobUe,
Ala., wbo bas preached for lbe
Plateau Church of Cbrlsl ID

Each of these advertised items is required to be readily
available for sate at or below the advertised price in each
A&amp;P Store, except es specifically noted in this ad.

Brings you the security of meat price ceilings on all fresh beef
~rk,· veal, lamb, poultry and fish now thru may 17th. The~ :
pr1ces can be lowered in the form of weekly advertised specials
s~ch as ~hose in this ~d. B~t A&amp;P guarantees the regular retails
Will not Increase dunng th1s period. Look for the posted meat
ceiling prices at A&amp;P.

day services are 9:30a.m., 10:30
a.m., and 8 p.m. Monday througb
Tbunday, services wliJ be 7:30

p.m.
SPONGE IN CELEBES SEA
The Celebes Sponge, which con·
sists of a stem with cuplike sponge
growing from a half-dozen stalks, is

'~{!~
42 Court St

Happy
her's Day
Like a good nrlghbor. Sta te Form i8 thrrr.

C. K. SNOWDEN

UATI fAiflll

417 Second Ave.

tii1l
~-

Phone 44H290

IPHUIIAN(I

STATE FARM INSUR ANCE COMPANIES
Home OH• ce~ Oloom oi'IQ!t"n H ~ no• ~

"Home Of Beautiful K1tchens"
286-3786
675-2318 '
Point Pleasant
Jacksan, 0.

Alumni dance set

$17 g

From the Tropics - Ripe

Golden Bananas
Mild, Medium

lb.

lb.

~·

Yellow Onions.

30'"1 lb.

c Ann

Page

Sliced Bacon .

cocA:coLA

8

16-oz.
Btls.

Plua o.po.tl

8·16 oz.
Btls.

$}29
Plus
tax &amp;

dep.

PEPSI
6pack .

S}l? +Tax

6% Cold Beer &amp; Wine

GALLIPOLIS ICE CO.
DRIVE THRU
CARRY OUT
rst Ave.

FREEZER
SALE
BIG SAVINGS!
Buy any A,.,.• .FREEZER
and take home everything you
need to freeze everything •••
AT NO EXTRA COST!

ADDITIONAL SUP9lieS '1.69

YOU'LL 'DO BETTER WITH
A&amp;P'S ECONOMY SHOP
Generic Liquid l2-oz.
DISH
Btl.

DmRGENT

HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS
GENERAL. MERCHANDISE

~
z

Cubic Foot SlzH

Chests

PHONE

Terrace
§FIAT
111

''"II"'~

CHAISE • • •

• A 31·pc.

Uprights •-•.
13 to 23

BRUNICARDI MUSIC INC.
~87

YOU'LL DO BETTER WITH
A&amp;P 'S DAIRY BUYS

Sun

• ' 27C"' ~HOSE
"'~ v.m50Ft.
8
f''"'"'''"
l-

.

~'ltJW\\X

111
'''''"

.,,

YOU'LL DO BETTER WITH
A&amp;P'S FROZEN FOOD BUYS

S9efl""""'"_

•

• • •

•••

~~~!

COOLER •.••
2-Gal.

SPillKLING
CAN ••••••

Square, Hall-Moon, Full Round Chunks

Hamburger, Pepperoni,

sI59.,. . . gMN
~AGE
PIZlA
_

~SIYROFMM

--OVER 20 GUITARS BY MARTIN

661

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

. 30-01.

GUITAR SALE

(

Ground Chuck

George Michael Cremeans
celebrated bis first birthday April 30
at the home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Michael D. Cremeans,
Kanauga.

a.oz.
BEMS • • Can

~

39

Extra Lean

George Cremeans

1

CORNER 3RD &amp; COURT STS.

TQ Help You Fight Inflation

Items and prices effective thru Sat., May 17, 1980
Quantity Rights AellervecL

MobUe. He bas also written a
number of boob oo stewanllblp.
Black lw dedicated blmaelf to
lbe promoUoo of lbe Alabama
CbrlsUan CoUege since 1980. Sllll-

Gallipolis, Oh.

Chesrure-Kyger
CHESifiRE - The CheshireKyger Alumni Association will hold
its aMual banquet and dance on
Saturday, May 24 at Kyger Creek
High School.
RegisiratiO'n will begin at 6 p.m. in
the lobby.
Reservations are to be made in advance by calllng Mrs. Reese at the
high school at 367-7377. Tickets are
$7.50 in advance or $8 at the door..
Reserva lions are asked so that
adequate food can be provided.
The banquet will begin at 7 p.m.
with the meal being catered by Boll
·Evans. The menu will consist of
steak, green beans, mashed
potatoes, salad, roils, pie, iced tea
and coffee.
Bob Polcyn, graduate of 1965, will
be the master of ceremonies for the
evening. Special classes honored
will be 1930, 1950, 1955, and 19'10.
Immediately following the dinner,
a dance will be held in the
auditorium from 9 p.m. to midnight
featuring "ItomicSounds."
Officers this year are Gary Clark,
president; Pauline White, vice
president; Carol Coleman, recor·
ding secretary, and Bob Polcyn,
treasurer.
The officers extend a special invitation to all alumni to attend an
evening with old classmates and
special friends.

Fresh meat prices

Graduation
Congratulations!

found in the Celebes Sea at a depth of
3,000 feet.

Marriage plans told

A&amp;P puts the lid on

.

FREEZETTE®
FOOD SAVER
SET

'
BEGAN IN 19011
. .
Futurism is an ltalian art and
literature movement. It was started
in 1909 by the poet Marinetti to
glorify the machine age. ·

Getting an American flag for
your birthday might not excite too
many people, but Walter Crooks is
really pleased with the one he got.
His son,_ Gene,
arranged. for the
large silk flag
with embroidered
stsrs to be sent to
his father. It had
flown over the U.
S. Capitol on
HoefUch
April 15 and came to Mr. Crooks
with a certificate noting that it had
been reserved for him at the request
of the Hon. Charles McC. Mathis,
Jr., U.S. Senator, to be given to him
as a birthday gift from his son.
For more than 13 years, Gene, now
Captain Walter Gene Crooks, has
been in the U. S. Navy. He and his
family reside at Annapolis, Md. and
Gene does his dental work. at the
Naval Academy.

•

0

•

a
s 99

• ea.

I

. . .a0

Leaf

0

0

0 ...

Or chOpped

~ A&amp;P

5
- SPINACH ,
'''1111111 ;:

99
4 $1

C

12-oz .

10-oz.

• •

Pkgs.

mL'ils

Ann Page

9 To 24-oz.
, • , Pkg.
Sh,lrp, Hickory, Smoke, Pimiento,
Kraft

CHEESE

6-oz.

••

• PkQ.

J

�~TheSundayT!me&amp;Sentinel,Sunday , May 11, 1!81

MONDAY
REVIVAL at North Bethel United
Methodist Church begiMing Monday at 7:30p.m. The Rev. Freelsnd
Norris will be the guest speaker. The
Rev. Charles Domigan is the pastor.
Singers are invited to participate.
MEIGS COUNTY Ministerial
Association Monday at 9:30a.m. at
the Meigs Ministry offi~. Mill St.,
Middleport.

Community Corner
Crooks receives special flag

Mr. and Mrs. Rick Bamett

Local man marries in
Arkansas March vows
DeWITT, Ark. - Miss Donna
Louise Kemp and Rick Barnett exchanged wedding vows March 16, at
2 p.m. at the Gillett United
Methodist Church. Parents of the
couple are Mr. and Mrs. Alfred F.
Workman of Gillett and Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Barnett of Gallipolis,
Ohio. Grandparents of the couple
are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Bergschneider of Gillett, Mrs. Floyd
Workman and the late Rev. Workman of Gallipolis, Ohio, and the late
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnett, .Point
Pleasant, West Virginia.
Rev. Harold Rogers officiated at
the double ring ceremony. The
couple stood before the altar
beneath a brass candleabra archway holding white tapers. White
wicker floor baskets of mixed spring
flowers ~11d brass seven-branched
candelabi'BS with white tapers completed the setting.
Nuptial music was furnished by
Mrs. Thelma Gordon, organist, and
Miss Karla Cunningham, soloist,
who sang the Wedding Song.
The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore an original gown
she designed and made. The white
jacquard satin dress featured a fitted bodice with a Queen Ann
neckline. The full skirt was gathered
at the waist in the back and formed a
chapel length train. The long beU
sleeves, the neckline and the hem
w.ere trimmed with lace edged in
pearls. The lace was handmade by
the bride's mother. Her chapel
length veil of illusion was trimmed
in handmade lace and was· secured
by a Juliet cap accented with re- ·
embroidered lace and pearls. She
wore a pearl necklace and earrings,
a l!ift from the l!Toom. The · bride

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4 :30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, May 12- Blood Pressure
Clinic, 10 a.m.-12 noon; Square Dance, 12 : ~ p.m.
Tuesday, May 13 - Yard Sale, 9
a.rn.-3 p.m.; Chorus, 12:4:&gt;-2 p.m.
Wednesday, May 14 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.12:30p.m.; Games, !-2:30p.m.
Thursday, May 15 - Craft
Sharing, 10:15 a.m.; Kitchen Band,
12:46-2p.m.
Friday, May 16 - Bowling, 1-3
p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through
Friday.
Monday- Meatballs in mushroom
gravy, green beans, cole slaw,
lemon pudding • cinnamon crumb
topping, bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Ham and navy. beans,
Harvard beets, buttered spinachvinegar, ice cream, cornbread, butter,mUk.
Wednesday - Chicken and rice
casserole, buttered peas, tossed
salad-homemade French dressliig,
chocolate cake • white frosting,
bread, butter, milk.
Thursday - Salmon loaf, buttered
potatoes, stewed tmnatoes, fruit
cocktail, butterscotch cookie, bread,
butter, milk.
Friday - Baked steak, mashed
potatoes, buttered carrots, fi'Ulted
gelatin, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a cboice ol wbuie
milk or butterrnilt served dally. .
Please register fiN! day belort you
plan to eat. Pomeroy 44&amp;-78811: • '

carried a nosegay of silk white, blue
and yellow roses in a hand crocheted
holder with white lace ribbon.
Miss Lillie Kemp, sister of the
bride, was maid of honor. Matron of
honor was Mrs, Margaret LehrnaM.
They wore floor length A-line gowns
of light blue crepe back satin with a
gathered collar. They carried silk
nosegays of white roses and blue tipped carnations in hand crocheted
holders with blue lace ribbon.
Miss Geneie Barnett, sister of the
groom, carried the rings on a pillow
matching the bride's dress. She
wore a floor length blue gingham
down with a bow in the back.
The groom was a'ttired in a black
tuftdo with a white pleated shirt. He
wore a blue silk rosebud on his lapel.
Johnny Lehmann was best man.
Greg Bland, McGehee, was groomsman. Ushers were Robert Reed and
Dale Reed, cousins of the bride.
They wore black tuxedoes with blue
pleated shirts. They pinned blue tipped carnations to their lapels.
Mrs. Debby Bland, McGehee, was
in charge of the bride's book. The
table was covered in a white
heirloom lace cloth that belonged to
the bride's great-grandmother. A
white memory candle with blue silk
~ and a wicker basket of seroUs
were on the table.
Mrs. Workman chose for her
daughter's wedding a beige terry
suede dress and wore a white sweetheart rose silk corsage. Mrs. Barnett wore a light blue suit and a silk
corsage of white sweetheart roses.
A:; the couple left the church, they
presented their mothers and the
bride's grandmother a long stemmed blue rose that was made by the
bride.

Bible school plans made
MIDDLEPORT - Bible school
plans were discussed at the Monday
night meeting of the Young Adult
Class held at the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Catherine Russell presided at the
meeting with Steve Pickens giving
the opening prayer. Devotions by
Nancy Morris were on the origin of
Mother's Day and a poem. The
group discussed Bible school, the
church softball team, and ways to
improve attendance. Next meeting
was set for June 2 at 7 p.m. at the
home of Ms. Russell. Steve Pickens
will have devotions, and Mrs. Morris
will serve refreshments.
Larry Picke• had the closing
prayer and Ms. Russell and Becky
Painter served refreshments .
Others attendillg were Vicki Smith,
Larry Pickens, and Ruby Hysell.

•

r

Dick Knight, who has been living
in Marietta for some time now, left a
week ago for Wisconsin. He bas been
transferred to the Wisconsin Electric Power Co. and his wife and
daughter will join him there after
school is out later this month.
For Chet and Annie, they have

mixed emotions - happy lor his
employment job advancement but
unhappy that it takes him and his
family so far away.
Before he left there were family
gatherings. Terry and his family
came to Marietta and were joined at
Dick's by their parents and Bill and
Ula Matlack for a weekend IX
togethemess.
While Kevin King has given up
music as his major at Ohio Universi·
ty, he still plays with the O.U. Jazz
Band. Last week the band went on
tour presenting concerts at Lancaster, A:;hland, Huron, Lakewood,
Sparta and Zanesville, and yesterday went to Columbus for competi·
tion at Ohio State.
Mrs. Pearl Little of Rutland is
hospitalized in Florida but making
good progress now. For those who
would like to send her a card the address is Holy Cross Hospital, 47Zi
North Federal Highway, Room 416,
South, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33308.
Mrs. Littie and her husband,
Russell, who died earlier this year,
have been such community boosters
through the years. It would be nice
to remember her now.

POMEROY - Plans have been
completed for the open church wedding of Debra Kay Bailey, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Bailey,
Pomeroy, and Charles Byrne
MuUen, Son of Mr. and Mrs. Don E.
Mullen, Middleport.
The wedding will take place on
Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at the Sacred
Heart Church, Pomeroy. A half-hour
of nuptial music will precede the
ceremony with Phyllis Hackett,
organist, and Lois Burt, soloist. Pam
Miller and Ann Forbes will register
the guests.
The Rev. Fr. Paul Welton and
Rev. David MaM will perform the
ceremony. Matron of honor will be
Karen Lisle, West Jefferson, and the
bridesmaids will be Shelly Wood,
Pat Vaughan, Carmel Evans, and
Joyce Seelig, Pomeroy, with Kelly
MuUen as a junior bridesmaid,
Flowergirls will be Kerrie and
Jacinda Mullen. Jason 1.isle will be
ring bearer.

+u.~

Joe Freeman of Pomeroy will be
best man, and the groomsmen will
be Keith Bailey, Sean · Mullen,
Michael Mullen, Patrick Mullen,
and Brian Mullen.
The bride-elect Is employed in the
office of Dr. Charles L. Fulks,
Athens. Her fiance is self-employed
with his lather at Mullen lllsurance
Agency, Inc., Pomeroy.

Send Hallmark cards
to graduates because their
achievements
deserve your best
wishes.

VISITING EVANGELIST The Chapel HIJl Cbl!l'Ch of Cbrlst
extelllls an IDvllaUon Ia lbe pubUc
Ia altend a series of less0111
presented by V. l". Black, MobUe,
Ala., wbo bas preached for lbe
Plateau Church of Cbrlsl ID

Each of these advertised items is required to be readily
available for sate at or below the advertised price in each
A&amp;P Store, except es specifically noted in this ad.

Brings you the security of meat price ceilings on all fresh beef
~rk,· veal, lamb, poultry and fish now thru may 17th. The~ :
pr1ces can be lowered in the form of weekly advertised specials
s~ch as ~hose in this ~d. B~t A&amp;P guarantees the regular retails
Will not Increase dunng th1s period. Look for the posted meat
ceiling prices at A&amp;P.

day services are 9:30a.m., 10:30
a.m., and 8 p.m. Monday througb
Tbunday, services wliJ be 7:30

p.m.
SPONGE IN CELEBES SEA
The Celebes Sponge, which con·
sists of a stem with cuplike sponge
growing from a half-dozen stalks, is

'~{!~
42 Court St

Happy
her's Day
Like a good nrlghbor. Sta te Form i8 thrrr.

C. K. SNOWDEN

UATI fAiflll

417 Second Ave.

tii1l
~-

Phone 44H290

IPHUIIAN(I

STATE FARM INSUR ANCE COMPANIES
Home OH• ce~ Oloom oi'IQ!t"n H ~ no• ~

"Home Of Beautiful K1tchens"
286-3786
675-2318 '
Point Pleasant
Jacksan, 0.

Alumni dance set

$17 g

From the Tropics - Ripe

Golden Bananas
Mild, Medium

lb.

lb.

~·

Yellow Onions.

30'"1 lb.

c Ann

Page

Sliced Bacon .

cocA:coLA

8

16-oz.
Btls.

Plua o.po.tl

8·16 oz.
Btls.

$}29
Plus
tax &amp;

dep.

PEPSI
6pack .

S}l? +Tax

6% Cold Beer &amp; Wine

GALLIPOLIS ICE CO.
DRIVE THRU
CARRY OUT
rst Ave.

FREEZER
SALE
BIG SAVINGS!
Buy any A,.,.• .FREEZER
and take home everything you
need to freeze everything •••
AT NO EXTRA COST!

ADDITIONAL SUP9lieS '1.69

YOU'LL 'DO BETTER WITH
A&amp;P'S ECONOMY SHOP
Generic Liquid l2-oz.
DISH
Btl.

DmRGENT

HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS
GENERAL. MERCHANDISE

~
z

Cubic Foot SlzH

Chests

PHONE

Terrace
§FIAT
111

''"II"'~

CHAISE • • •

• A 31·pc.

Uprights •-•.
13 to 23

BRUNICARDI MUSIC INC.
~87

YOU'LL DO BETTER WITH
A&amp;P 'S DAIRY BUYS

Sun

• ' 27C"' ~HOSE
"'~ v.m50Ft.
8
f''"'"'''"
l-

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111
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YOU'LL DO BETTER WITH
A&amp;P'S FROZEN FOOD BUYS

S9efl""""'"_

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2-Gal.

SPillKLING
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Square, Hall-Moon, Full Round Chunks

Hamburger, Pepperoni,

sI59.,. . . gMN
~AGE
PIZlA
_

~SIYROFMM

--OVER 20 GUITARS BY MARTIN

661

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

. 30-01.

GUITAR SALE

(

Ground Chuck

George Michael Cremeans
celebrated bis first birthday April 30
at the home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Michael D. Cremeans,
Kanauga.

a.oz.
BEMS • • Can

~

39

Extra Lean

George Cremeans

1

CORNER 3RD &amp; COURT STS.

TQ Help You Fight Inflation

Items and prices effective thru Sat., May 17, 1980
Quantity Rights AellervecL

MobUe. He bas also written a
number of boob oo stewanllblp.
Black lw dedicated blmaelf to
lbe promoUoo of lbe Alabama
CbrlsUan CoUege since 1980. Sllll-

Gallipolis, Oh.

Chesrure-Kyger
CHESifiRE - The CheshireKyger Alumni Association will hold
its aMual banquet and dance on
Saturday, May 24 at Kyger Creek
High School.
RegisiratiO'n will begin at 6 p.m. in
the lobby.
Reservations are to be made in advance by calllng Mrs. Reese at the
high school at 367-7377. Tickets are
$7.50 in advance or $8 at the door..
Reserva lions are asked so that
adequate food can be provided.
The banquet will begin at 7 p.m.
with the meal being catered by Boll
·Evans. The menu will consist of
steak, green beans, mashed
potatoes, salad, roils, pie, iced tea
and coffee.
Bob Polcyn, graduate of 1965, will
be the master of ceremonies for the
evening. Special classes honored
will be 1930, 1950, 1955, and 19'10.
Immediately following the dinner,
a dance will be held in the
auditorium from 9 p.m. to midnight
featuring "ItomicSounds."
Officers this year are Gary Clark,
president; Pauline White, vice
president; Carol Coleman, recor·
ding secretary, and Bob Polcyn,
treasurer.
The officers extend a special invitation to all alumni to attend an
evening with old classmates and
special friends.

Fresh meat prices

Graduation
Congratulations!

found in the Celebes Sea at a depth of
3,000 feet.

Marriage plans told

A&amp;P puts the lid on

.

FREEZETTE®
FOOD SAVER
SET

'
BEGAN IN 19011
. .
Futurism is an ltalian art and
literature movement. It was started
in 1909 by the poet Marinetti to
glorify the machine age. ·

Getting an American flag for
your birthday might not excite too
many people, but Walter Crooks is
really pleased with the one he got.
His son,_ Gene,
arranged. for the
large silk flag
with embroidered
stsrs to be sent to
his father. It had
flown over the U.
S. Capitol on
HoefUch
April 15 and came to Mr. Crooks
with a certificate noting that it had
been reserved for him at the request
of the Hon. Charles McC. Mathis,
Jr., U.S. Senator, to be given to him
as a birthday gift from his son.
For more than 13 years, Gene, now
Captain Walter Gene Crooks, has
been in the U. S. Navy. He and his
family reside at Annapolis, Md. and
Gene does his dental work. at the
Naval Academy.

•

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•

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s 99

• ea.

I

. . .a0

Leaf

0

0

0 ...

Or chOpped

~ A&amp;P

5
- SPINACH ,
'''1111111 ;:

99
4 $1

C

12-oz .

10-oz.

• •

Pkgs.

mL'ils

Ann Page

9 To 24-oz.
, • , Pkg.
Sh,lrp, Hickory, Smoke, Pimiento,
Kraft

CHEESE

6-oz.

••

• PkQ.

J

�84-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

Group plans
•
everung
Bible fare
SYRACUSE - An evening Bible
school, July 211-Aug. 1, was planned
during a meeting of the Willing ·
Workern Missionary Society of the
First Church of God, Syracuse.
Mrs. Alice Loomis led devotions
readiog two poems entitled "High
Resolve," and "Self Plty." Scripture
was taken from II Cor. 12 and Joy
Clark led in prayer with the group
singing, ''The Longer I Serve Him. •'
Society offices to be filled were
discussed along with money-making
projects. It was decided to continue
the calendar system.
A prayer circle was held for a
member who is ill after which the
group sang "Isn't He Wonderful." A
benevolence committee was
organized with Jan Jenkins, Mary
Voss, and Alice Loomis being elected to serve on the committee .
Mrs. Loemis served refreshments.
Daisy Sisson closed with prayer.

Supplement to Medicare insurance discussed

Della Carnahan is 105 today
By KATIE CROW
Times-5entlnelslaH writer
Believed to be the oldest living resident of Meigs County is Della Carnahan.
Mrs. Carnahan is 105 today . Her family tells us that she is still able to
do her work as always but not for a long period of time.
She still reads her Bible and does watch some television. Her address
is Rt. 1, Long Bottom for those of you who may wish to remember her
with a card.
Another lady who has made the 100 year mark ·
is Goldie Colmer. Mrs . Colmer will be 100 tomorrow.
. In celebration of her birthday an open house is
bemg held today, beginning at I p.m. at the Grange .
HaU at Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Her address is Shade, Ohio 45776.
You ladies deserve to be honored. Congratulations to you both.

ons Ph~rmacy

A Price

..
.,

.'

., .

ou should be sui / tes ting
your land twice a year!
Because a soil tes t can tell

you if your land can give ano ther

high powered . yield-busting
performanC'e. All soil con tams
organ ic matter . but tests indicate
that the org.1nic contf'n t in soils is

decreas ing. One reason is hea vy

applicati on of nitrogen. And heary
appl ications of nitrogen in soils
containing decre.:tsing amflunts of
organi&lt;: matt er &lt;:ause rapid
depletion of the organi sms needed
for proper nutr ien t conversion.

DANCE, DANCE

WASffiNGTON (AP) - The
National Endowment for the Arts
says that thus far this fiscal year it
has .awarded a total of 306 grantstotaling $4,343,950 in federal funds
oombined with $730,800 in nonfederal donations - for the support
and curiclunent of the American
dance.

- Enjoy the Better Part of Life" in
which those attending were reminded that there are many good
reasons to pause and enjoy the

Remember
SUNDAY
".RESTORATIONS" singing at the
DeerCreekChurchat7:30p.m. Rev.
Pat Bialey will be preaching. Rev.
Steve Wright, pastor, welcomes
everyone.
VICI'ORY BAPTIST Church ordination service for Pastor Terry
Noble, 2 p.m. Public invited.
MONDAY
OAPSE Chapter 682 at Centerville
Elementary, 7:30p.m.

JONF3 PROMOTED
Marine Lance Cpl. James H.
Jones, son of Ayward C. and Pansy
M. Jones of Route 2, Box 11, Racine,
has been promoted to his present

rank while serving with , 3rd Force
Service Support Group on Okinawa. •
A 1979 graduate of Southern High
School, he joined the Marine Corps
in April, 19'19.

A

3

.,

Dealer

628 Fourth Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone 614-446-4081
After5:00 P.M.
'
S~a-Bom l"llect.l~o .-. ·\~ ._ n
EVery day more and more farmers
t~rn to the Sea-Born program .

Dealers who care about the soil in
their areas are needed to help spread
tlie word. Yoo could prcxfuce a very
gOod inco"'" while doi ng something
ypu really want and enjoy. Contact
Sea-Born today and find oul more.

.

Sea Bom: Rush information and facl"
on th e Sea-Born program for better suit
care and conservation farm ing.

.

A~ress•------------------

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___

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1am interested in becoming a Sea-Born
Oealer.

De !lOs~

SCOT

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Plus

VALLEY BELL ·

program recommends another

want! That's what Sea-Bom wants!
Find out more Mail coupon today!

PKGS.

8 CT.
PKGS.

'

you want! That"s what your children

Sliced

'l. Daity 9 to S &amp; Sun. 1 to s

I

increase in the con tent o f humu..,
contained in the soil. That's what

99

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Ph . 9"2·5776
Syracuse, OH . .

presentsSummer Playwear /Summer Citywear

fertilizer. the Sea-Born

complete soil test. The information
obtained from this test wi ll show on

Have a nice week .

the Way
You Like "
It

,J,

We Want Your Business.

ACTJVlTIF.jj

tomorrow is the monthly Blood
Pressure Clinic from 10 a.m. unW 12
noon. Be sure and stop at the yard
sale scheduled for Tuesday at the
Center. You'll find a great variety of
items, from crafts to used furniture!
If you think you accumulate a lot of
junk in your attic, you have got to
stop and see what we have saved for
the last seven years.

LEAN NO
WASTE

complete line of bedding
and vegetable plants .
Plus blooming hanging
baskets &amp; foliage .
"Season Special"
Bedding Plants
90c In Dozen Paks

"==l§§§§~

Iter tl1e harvest, before
applying any Fall plowdown

persons never try ·to high pressure
you. They will give you time to talk it
over with friends or relatives.
5. Do not pay cash. Always pay by
check, money order or bank draft
made out to the insurance company.
Never make a check payable to an
individual.
6. Always write down the name,
address and telephone number of the
agent and insurance company so you
can foUow up if there is any delay in
getting your insurance policy.
If the Information and Referral
staff can assist you, call992-7311.

BOIL
HAM:

2

20 YE RS

S

clause. This means only one company will pay regardless of how
many insurance policies you have.
2. Be sure you know : a. When the
new insurance policy begins paying .
b. If any medical conditions are permanently excluded or not payable
until a future date. c. About
replacing existing coverages .
Remember a new insurance policy
usually has a waiting period. (If you
do get a new insurance policy to
replace an old one, keep the old insurance policy in effect until the new
one becomes effective.)
3. Beware of the governmental
look, envelopes, etc., or correspondence that begins with "Dear
Medicare Members." Remember,
no private insurance company
selling Supplemental Insurance is
affiliated with or endorsed by the
, Federal Government.
4. Take your time. Don't be high
pressured. Beware of "short term"
enrollment periods or "last chance
to enroll" statements. Ethical sales-

NOW OPEN
FOR SPRING SEASON

'

ea -Horn has a program o f
micronutrien t addit ives that
l·uuld mean a r eduction in
nitrogen requirements. And the
micronutrient seilweed formula
provi des plant hormones essential
to growth and development; it
supplies m icronutrients needed to
.support the plant's enzyme system ;
nutrients in the formula stimula te
bacterial act ion to release soil
homf' n11trients .

Unfortunately, not all insurance
companies or agents are honest.
Here are some shopping tipa to consider when an insurance agent
comes to your door or you receive a
letter in the mail.
I. Don't buy more policies than
you need. Many insurance policies
have a "coordination of benefits"

beautiful things in life such as !}lac
blossoms, cuddling small IJC:luu;::s,
discovering nature with toddlers,
and listening to the pitter patter ti
rain on the rooftop. To conclude the
program, the group sang "God Be
With You Till We Meet Again."
Attending were Nancy and Carrie
Morrisey, Mary Jo and Laura
Buckley, Jennifer, Sara and Shanna
Machir, Kathryn and Debbie Windon, Opal and Laura Eichinger,
Marilyn and Trisha Spencer, Pat
and Susan Wolf, Crystal and
Jonathan Raybtirn, Gayann and
Suzanne Clay, Kathryn, Janet and
Judy Mora, Denise and Jennifer
Mora, Grace Gumpf, Linda King,
Laura Mae Nice, Mabel Van Meter,
Evelyn Hollon, Bertha Smith, Barbara Tripp, Altona Karr, Helen
Wolf, Ruth Karr, Ethel Orr, Melanie
Stethem, Betty Lou Dean, Twila
Buckley, Mary Holter, Esther
Wright, Gladys Spencer, Esther
Mays, Jackie Frost, Ruth Erwin,
Chloris Gaul, and Leona Machir.

You, Mother.''
Twila Buckley read " Take Time

T.oaU mothers everywhere a "Happy Mother's Day."

THAT HAS MADE US
FAMOUS·FOR YEARS.
WE ,WILL FOR THIS WEEK BE
ROLLING BACK PRICES
AS THEY WERE

Your Soil Had
ACheck-up?

CHESTER - The first annual
mother-daughter dinner ti the
Chester United Methodist Church
was held Thursday evening at the
church with 46 attending.
Following the dinner an informal
program was presented for the
guests. Marilyn Spencer read "Why
God Made Little Girls" followed by
the song, "Happy Mother's Day" by
Trisha Spencer, Suzanne Clay,
Susan Wolf, Sara Machlr, Carrie
Morrissey and Jennifer Mora .
"Grandma Left a Trunk Full of
Love" was read by Nancy Morrissey
and there was a duet, "Mother's
Prayers Have Followed Me" by
Ruth Karr and Helen Wolf. Jennifer
Machir read "Mothers Aren't
Allowed to Get the 24 Hour Bug" and
the church choir sang "God Be With

Willoughby Hill, Chester, is a patient at Holzer Medical Center.
Willoughby for several years was the Meigs County Juvenile officer.
His room number is 201 A for those who wish to remember him.

BARNHOUSE ENLISTS
DaVid Bal'nh!luse, son of Mr. and
mrs. Floyd Barnhouse, Cook Road,
Hemlock Grove, enlisted in the U. S.
Air Force's Delayed Enllstment
Program recenUy according to S
Sgt. Robert Marszal, Air Fort•
Recruiter at Wright- Patterson.
Iiarnhouse, who will be a I980
l!l'llduate of Meigs High School, is
scheduled for enllstment in the
Regular Air Force on August 28.
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's . six-week basic training
COUI'Sjl, he is scheduled to receive
teclmlcal training in the M:miUons
Systems Career Field.

~»payments of Medicare.

Church has mother-daughter
fare last Thursday evening

This little piggy went to market and this little piggy went aU the way
to Riverview Drive, Lincoln HiU, Pomeroy.
Mary and Walter Grueser discovered a pig in their yard this week
and could not imagine where it came from.
Mter alerting the police, the animal was taken into custody. The pig
had walked aU the way from Chester to Lincoln Hill. Quite a jaunt.

AND QUALITY MERCHANDISE

When Was
the Last Timte

POMEROY - Insurance to supplement the costs that Medicare
does not pay becomes very important as the cost of medical services sky rocket. Reputa.ble insurance companies are aware of this
problem and are providing a Supplemental Insurance. This kind of insurance is called Medi-Gap Insurance and pays the deductible and

CROW
Pam Crow, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, extends her sincere thanks to the young
couple who found her wallet and turned it in at the Kroger Store Friday
evening.
Pam left her wallet in the phone booth and didn't realize it was missing until it was announced over the P .A. system that a wallet had been
found.
The wallet was returned and a reward given.
Since we read so much of the "bad" news it is a pleasure to write
about the "good things" that happen and know that there are honest people in the good old U.S.A.

NOW CELEBRATING
I.TS 20th YEAR IN THE
SAME LOCATION WITH
THE SAME LOW PRICES

McNUTI' ASSIGNED
U. S. FORCES, Germany- Staff
Sgt. Michael A. McNutt, whose wife,
Mary, and parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Otis H. McNutt, live in Hartford,
recently was assigned as a tank
turret repairman with the 122nd
Maintenance Battalion in Hanau,
Germany.
McNutt, who entered the Army in
January 1968, received his high
school diploma through the General
Educational Development program.

Y

Senior Citizens' Scenes

Katie .'s Korner

L

Compare and Save

L

E
Remember
Memorial
Day.
Giant
Selection
of
Wreaths
..&amp; Flags ,

SWEET BRIAR PEPPER
4 oz.
BOX

E
,

'tLCe

&amp;~on1

9Jhatmacy
.

&gt;•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPEN TODAY 1 TO 4

Remember
.
Graduation
. With
Cards,
Candy
and
Gifts.

I

89 ~

FREE BOX

I

I MORTON SALT WITH EACH PURCHASE WITH COUPON
I

Good
L••••••
IDAHO BAKING

-

At Barr's.

5/14/80
10 lb.

$

POTATOES ............. ;.... ~.~~.......... 139 ·
we reserve tht riqht to limit quantities .

or,mate

,t~

..~ ~:

tl

'

!
•
•

.•

�84-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

Group plans
•
everung
Bible fare
SYRACUSE - An evening Bible
school, July 211-Aug. 1, was planned
during a meeting of the Willing ·
Workern Missionary Society of the
First Church of God, Syracuse.
Mrs. Alice Loomis led devotions
readiog two poems entitled "High
Resolve," and "Self Plty." Scripture
was taken from II Cor. 12 and Joy
Clark led in prayer with the group
singing, ''The Longer I Serve Him. •'
Society offices to be filled were
discussed along with money-making
projects. It was decided to continue
the calendar system.
A prayer circle was held for a
member who is ill after which the
group sang "Isn't He Wonderful." A
benevolence committee was
organized with Jan Jenkins, Mary
Voss, and Alice Loomis being elected to serve on the committee .
Mrs. Loemis served refreshments.
Daisy Sisson closed with prayer.

Supplement to Medicare insurance discussed

Della Carnahan is 105 today
By KATIE CROW
Times-5entlnelslaH writer
Believed to be the oldest living resident of Meigs County is Della Carnahan.
Mrs. Carnahan is 105 today . Her family tells us that she is still able to
do her work as always but not for a long period of time.
She still reads her Bible and does watch some television. Her address
is Rt. 1, Long Bottom for those of you who may wish to remember her
with a card.
Another lady who has made the 100 year mark ·
is Goldie Colmer. Mrs . Colmer will be 100 tomorrow.
. In celebration of her birthday an open house is
bemg held today, beginning at I p.m. at the Grange .
HaU at Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Her address is Shade, Ohio 45776.
You ladies deserve to be honored. Congratulations to you both.

ons Ph~rmacy

A Price

..
.,

.'

., .

ou should be sui / tes ting
your land twice a year!
Because a soil tes t can tell

you if your land can give ano ther

high powered . yield-busting
performanC'e. All soil con tams
organ ic matter . but tests indicate
that the org.1nic contf'n t in soils is

decreas ing. One reason is hea vy

applicati on of nitrogen. And heary
appl ications of nitrogen in soils
containing decre.:tsing amflunts of
organi&lt;: matt er &lt;:ause rapid
depletion of the organi sms needed
for proper nutr ien t conversion.

DANCE, DANCE

WASffiNGTON (AP) - The
National Endowment for the Arts
says that thus far this fiscal year it
has .awarded a total of 306 grantstotaling $4,343,950 in federal funds
oombined with $730,800 in nonfederal donations - for the support
and curiclunent of the American
dance.

- Enjoy the Better Part of Life" in
which those attending were reminded that there are many good
reasons to pause and enjoy the

Remember
SUNDAY
".RESTORATIONS" singing at the
DeerCreekChurchat7:30p.m. Rev.
Pat Bialey will be preaching. Rev.
Steve Wright, pastor, welcomes
everyone.
VICI'ORY BAPTIST Church ordination service for Pastor Terry
Noble, 2 p.m. Public invited.
MONDAY
OAPSE Chapter 682 at Centerville
Elementary, 7:30p.m.

JONF3 PROMOTED
Marine Lance Cpl. James H.
Jones, son of Ayward C. and Pansy
M. Jones of Route 2, Box 11, Racine,
has been promoted to his present

rank while serving with , 3rd Force
Service Support Group on Okinawa. •
A 1979 graduate of Southern High
School, he joined the Marine Corps
in April, 19'19.

A

3

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628 Fourth Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone 614-446-4081
After5:00 P.M.
'
S~a-Bom l"llect.l~o .-. ·\~ ._ n
EVery day more and more farmers
t~rn to the Sea-Born program .

Dealers who care about the soil in
their areas are needed to help spread
tlie word. Yoo could prcxfuce a very
gOod inco"'" while doi ng something
ypu really want and enjoy. Contact
Sea-Born today and find oul more.

.

Sea Bom: Rush information and facl"
on th e Sea-Born program for better suit
care and conservation farm ing.

.

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1am interested in becoming a Sea-Born
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De !lOs~

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program recommends another

want! That's what Sea-Bom wants!
Find out more Mail coupon today!

PKGS.

8 CT.
PKGS.

'

you want! That"s what your children

Sliced

'l. Daity 9 to S &amp; Sun. 1 to s

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increase in the con tent o f humu..,
contained in the soil. That's what

99

Hubbard's
Greenhouse
Ph . 9"2·5776
Syracuse, OH . .

presentsSummer Playwear /Summer Citywear

fertilizer. the Sea-Born

complete soil test. The information
obtained from this test wi ll show on

Have a nice week .

the Way
You Like "
It

,J,

We Want Your Business.

ACTJVlTIF.jj

tomorrow is the monthly Blood
Pressure Clinic from 10 a.m. unW 12
noon. Be sure and stop at the yard
sale scheduled for Tuesday at the
Center. You'll find a great variety of
items, from crafts to used furniture!
If you think you accumulate a lot of
junk in your attic, you have got to
stop and see what we have saved for
the last seven years.

LEAN NO
WASTE

complete line of bedding
and vegetable plants .
Plus blooming hanging
baskets &amp; foliage .
"Season Special"
Bedding Plants
90c In Dozen Paks

"==l§§§§~

Iter tl1e harvest, before
applying any Fall plowdown

persons never try ·to high pressure
you. They will give you time to talk it
over with friends or relatives.
5. Do not pay cash. Always pay by
check, money order or bank draft
made out to the insurance company.
Never make a check payable to an
individual.
6. Always write down the name,
address and telephone number of the
agent and insurance company so you
can foUow up if there is any delay in
getting your insurance policy.
If the Information and Referral
staff can assist you, call992-7311.

BOIL
HAM:

2

20 YE RS

S

clause. This means only one company will pay regardless of how
many insurance policies you have.
2. Be sure you know : a. When the
new insurance policy begins paying .
b. If any medical conditions are permanently excluded or not payable
until a future date. c. About
replacing existing coverages .
Remember a new insurance policy
usually has a waiting period. (If you
do get a new insurance policy to
replace an old one, keep the old insurance policy in effect until the new
one becomes effective.)
3. Beware of the governmental
look, envelopes, etc., or correspondence that begins with "Dear
Medicare Members." Remember,
no private insurance company
selling Supplemental Insurance is
affiliated with or endorsed by the
, Federal Government.
4. Take your time. Don't be high
pressured. Beware of "short term"
enrollment periods or "last chance
to enroll" statements. Ethical sales-

NOW OPEN
FOR SPRING SEASON

'

ea -Horn has a program o f
micronutrien t addit ives that
l·uuld mean a r eduction in
nitrogen requirements. And the
micronutrient seilweed formula
provi des plant hormones essential
to growth and development; it
supplies m icronutrients needed to
.support the plant's enzyme system ;
nutrients in the formula stimula te
bacterial act ion to release soil
homf' n11trients .

Unfortunately, not all insurance
companies or agents are honest.
Here are some shopping tipa to consider when an insurance agent
comes to your door or you receive a
letter in the mail.
I. Don't buy more policies than
you need. Many insurance policies
have a "coordination of benefits"

beautiful things in life such as !}lac
blossoms, cuddling small IJC:luu;::s,
discovering nature with toddlers,
and listening to the pitter patter ti
rain on the rooftop. To conclude the
program, the group sang "God Be
With You Till We Meet Again."
Attending were Nancy and Carrie
Morrisey, Mary Jo and Laura
Buckley, Jennifer, Sara and Shanna
Machir, Kathryn and Debbie Windon, Opal and Laura Eichinger,
Marilyn and Trisha Spencer, Pat
and Susan Wolf, Crystal and
Jonathan Raybtirn, Gayann and
Suzanne Clay, Kathryn, Janet and
Judy Mora, Denise and Jennifer
Mora, Grace Gumpf, Linda King,
Laura Mae Nice, Mabel Van Meter,
Evelyn Hollon, Bertha Smith, Barbara Tripp, Altona Karr, Helen
Wolf, Ruth Karr, Ethel Orr, Melanie
Stethem, Betty Lou Dean, Twila
Buckley, Mary Holter, Esther
Wright, Gladys Spencer, Esther
Mays, Jackie Frost, Ruth Erwin,
Chloris Gaul, and Leona Machir.

You, Mother.''
Twila Buckley read " Take Time

T.oaU mothers everywhere a "Happy Mother's Day."

THAT HAS MADE US
FAMOUS·FOR YEARS.
WE ,WILL FOR THIS WEEK BE
ROLLING BACK PRICES
AS THEY WERE

Your Soil Had
ACheck-up?

CHESTER - The first annual
mother-daughter dinner ti the
Chester United Methodist Church
was held Thursday evening at the
church with 46 attending.
Following the dinner an informal
program was presented for the
guests. Marilyn Spencer read "Why
God Made Little Girls" followed by
the song, "Happy Mother's Day" by
Trisha Spencer, Suzanne Clay,
Susan Wolf, Sara Machlr, Carrie
Morrissey and Jennifer Mora .
"Grandma Left a Trunk Full of
Love" was read by Nancy Morrissey
and there was a duet, "Mother's
Prayers Have Followed Me" by
Ruth Karr and Helen Wolf. Jennifer
Machir read "Mothers Aren't
Allowed to Get the 24 Hour Bug" and
the church choir sang "God Be With

Willoughby Hill, Chester, is a patient at Holzer Medical Center.
Willoughby for several years was the Meigs County Juvenile officer.
His room number is 201 A for those who wish to remember him.

BARNHOUSE ENLISTS
DaVid Bal'nh!luse, son of Mr. and
mrs. Floyd Barnhouse, Cook Road,
Hemlock Grove, enlisted in the U. S.
Air Force's Delayed Enllstment
Program recenUy according to S
Sgt. Robert Marszal, Air Fort•
Recruiter at Wright- Patterson.
Iiarnhouse, who will be a I980
l!l'llduate of Meigs High School, is
scheduled for enllstment in the
Regular Air Force on August 28.
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's . six-week basic training
COUI'Sjl, he is scheduled to receive
teclmlcal training in the M:miUons
Systems Career Field.

~»payments of Medicare.

Church has mother-daughter
fare last Thursday evening

This little piggy went to market and this little piggy went aU the way
to Riverview Drive, Lincoln HiU, Pomeroy.
Mary and Walter Grueser discovered a pig in their yard this week
and could not imagine where it came from.
Mter alerting the police, the animal was taken into custody. The pig
had walked aU the way from Chester to Lincoln Hill. Quite a jaunt.

AND QUALITY MERCHANDISE

When Was
the Last Timte

POMEROY - Insurance to supplement the costs that Medicare
does not pay becomes very important as the cost of medical services sky rocket. Reputa.ble insurance companies are aware of this
problem and are providing a Supplemental Insurance. This kind of insurance is called Medi-Gap Insurance and pays the deductible and

CROW
Pam Crow, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, extends her sincere thanks to the young
couple who found her wallet and turned it in at the Kroger Store Friday
evening.
Pam left her wallet in the phone booth and didn't realize it was missing until it was announced over the P .A. system that a wallet had been
found.
The wallet was returned and a reward given.
Since we read so much of the "bad" news it is a pleasure to write
about the "good things" that happen and know that there are honest people in the good old U.S.A.

NOW CELEBRATING
I.TS 20th YEAR IN THE
SAME LOCATION WITH
THE SAME LOW PRICES

McNUTI' ASSIGNED
U. S. FORCES, Germany- Staff
Sgt. Michael A. McNutt, whose wife,
Mary, and parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Otis H. McNutt, live in Hartford,
recently was assigned as a tank
turret repairman with the 122nd
Maintenance Battalion in Hanau,
Germany.
McNutt, who entered the Army in
January 1968, received his high
school diploma through the General
Educational Development program.

Y

Senior Citizens' Scenes

Katie .'s Korner

L

Compare and Save

L

E
Remember
Memorial
Day.
Giant
Selection
of
Wreaths
..&amp; Flags ,

SWEET BRIAR PEPPER
4 oz.
BOX

E
,

'tLCe

&amp;~on1

9Jhatmacy
.

&gt;•

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPEN TODAY 1 TO 4

Remember
.
Graduation
. With
Cards,
Candy
and
Gifts.

I

89 ~

FREE BOX

I

I MORTON SALT WITH EACH PURCHASE WITH COUPON
I

Good
L••••••
IDAHO BAKING

-

At Barr's.

5/14/80
10 lb.

$

POTATOES ............. ;.... ~.~~.......... 139 ·
we reserve tht riqht to limit quantities .

or,mate

,t~

..~ ~:

tl

'

!
•
•

.•

�B-lG-The Swxlay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11 , 191!0

Rutland Garden Club provides flowers
RUTLAND - Meeting recently at
the home of Mrs. Albert Woodard ,
the Rutland Garden Club completed

Monday, May 12 - Darwin, Duncan 's Store, 1:45-2 :15 p.m.;
Pageville , Church, 2:45-3 :15;
Harrisonville, Sohio Station, 3:30-4;
New Lima Road, I mi. S. of Fort
Meigs, 4:11)-5 (Short fibn at 5:30);
Rutland, Depot Street, 6:1&amp;-7.
Tuesday, May 13 - Long Bottom,
Post Office, 3-4 p.m. (Short film at
3:15); Reedsville, Reed's Store,
4:36-li:41i (Short fibn at 4:45); Tuppel'S Plains, Arbaugh Housing, 6: 157 (Short film at 6:30) ; Baum Addition, 7:36-3.
Wednesday, May 14 - Torch, Post
Office, 4-4:30; Hockingport, Community Bldg., iHi :41i; Coolville,
School Lot, 6:1&amp;-7 (Short fibn at
6:30); Riggs' Addition, 7:36-3 :15
(Short film at 7:4!i).
Thursday, May 15 - Mulberry
Hts. Infirmary, 1:4&amp;-2:30 p.m.;
Chester, Methodist Church, 3-3: 30;
Keno, N. Side of Keno Bridge, 3:4&amp;4:15; Racine, Home National Bank,
4:41)-5:30 (Shortfilmat5) .
Racine, Wagner's hardware, 5:306:15, (Shortfilmat6:4!i).

Mrs. Michael Tipton

Morbitzer, Tipton wed
I,

COLUMBUS - St. John the
Evangelist Church was the setting
for the marriage of Marsha Jean
Morbitzer and Michael Erman Tipton March 29. The Rev. John
Fulcher officiated at the 10:30 a.m.
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William E. Morbitzer, 3514
Seabrook Ave. , Columbus, and the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence H. Davis of Rio Grande.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Erman Tipton, 1569 Rosehill
Rd ., Reynoldsburg.
Pre-nuptial music was presented
by the organist.
The bride was a ttl red in a gown of
ivory imported silk organza ,
featuring a highrise bodice, wedding
ring neckline and long bishop
sleeves. The entire bodice front and
back were accented with imported
Alencon lace motifs and tiny seed
pearls. Motifs of lace also accented
the sleeves and cuff. The A-line skirt
fell gracefully to the. floor and extended into a chapel train in back. A
deep flounce highlighted the skirt
and a shower of Alencon lace motifs
cascaded down the front of the skirt

and around the back. The hemline
was edged with matching lace. Her
veil was of imported ivory silk
illusion edged with Alencon lace and
held in place with a Juliet cap
covered with matching lace and
pearls.
Mary Rose Jackson was her
sister's maid of honor. She wore a
. peach silk, floor-length dress, with a
v neckline and short two layered
gathered sleeves. Christine Jackson,
the bride's niece, was flower girl.
She wore a beige, high neckline,
dress with tiny rosettes scattered
throughout. A gathered ruffle
around the skirt was accented with
matching lace.
Erman Tipton served his brother
as best man.
A reception was held at Walnut
Hills Country Club following the
ceremony.
The bride is employed by Columbus Recreation and Parks Department as a Recreation Instructor at
Barnett Recreation Center.
The bridegroom is an electronic
technician at Industrial Electric
Heating Inc.
The couple left after the reception
for a trip to Florida.

OPEN SHOWER FRIDAY
CHESTER - An . open. bridal
shower wiU be held Friday at 7:30
p.m. at the Chester United
Methodist Church in Chester
honoring Debbie Windon, brid~lect
of Rodney Chevalier. Friends and

relatives of the couple are invited to
attend ..Debbie is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil Windon, )loute 3,
Pomeroy, and Rodney is the son ci
Mrs. Betty Chevalier, Tuppers
Plains. The shower is being hosted
by friends of the couple.

C.!- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May II, 1980

Rev. Darst turns 80
CHESHIRE - Rev. B. L. Darst
celebrated his 80th birthday at his
home at Cheshire Monday evening,
April28.
Those present were Mary Sigman,
Ershel , and Katie, Willie, Ruth,
Kristy and Scotty Curfman ri
Cheshire; Roy and Anna Lemley.
Bidwell; Dayton and Sarah, Ronnie,
Marylin, Trishia and Donnie Spencer, Chester; AI and Nina, Matthew
and Mandy Wassel of Terre Haute;
Ind. ; Budd Junior Darst, Lonnie and
Sharon and Usa Darst, Middleport;
John and Shirley, Johnnie and Randy Sigman of Addison.
He received many gifts. A birthday cake, decorated by his granddaughter, Nina Wassel, was served
with ice cream, coffee and punch.

DAVTOMEET
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans, will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
chapter home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Refreslunents will be served and all members are asked to be
present.

plans for provi ding tabl e
arrangements for the Rutland Alwnni Association banquet on May 24.
Mrs. Ralph Turner presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Woodard giving
devotions using the story ·or Ruth
and Naomi in poem form from
Ideals, Guideposts suggestions for
the use of words, "God Bless" in
daily communication, and a Helen
Steiner Rice poem, "We, Too, Shall
Uve Again." She also read an article entitled "When Is a Weed a
Flower?''
The creed and collect were given
and members answered roll call by
naming a favorite shrub. Mrs.
Geneva Moore, sister of Eva Robson, was a guest.
Invitations to the open meetings
of the Bend 0' the River Garden
Club and the Rutland Friendly Gardeners were read. Mrs. Virgil Atkins
expressed appreciation for contributions by the club for the Grange
banquet held at the Salisbury school.
A report on the Region II meeting
held in Athens was given. Attending
were Mrs. James Nicholson, Miss
Ruby Diehl, Mrs. Robson, and Mrs.
Charles Lewis. The fall regional
meeting will be held in Gallia County
Oct. IB.
A certificate of recognition from
Rep. Ron James to members of the
Rutland Club for contributions to the
community and the Gallipolis
Developmental Center was
displayed as was a certificate of appreciation from the Center. The Center monthly report, bulb catalogues
and a tentative sc)ledule for a flower
show to be held in July were also
displayed at the meeting.
Mrs. Woodard noted that she attended the Knox County Council of
Garden Clubs show at the University
of Tenneesee's Athletic Center on
April 20, a part pf the arulUal dogwood festival held there.
Named to the nominating committee were Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs.
Woodard, and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine. An exhibit and identification of tree· and shrub cuttings
was conducted by Mrs. Robert
Canaday. Mrs. Turner displayed a
flowering branch and spring
blossoms arrangement, The
program introduced by Mrs. Virgil
Atkins began with a report on "Grow
Your Own Shrubs from Cuttings"

taken from Plants Alive magazine
by Mrs. Nicholson who noted that
propagating new plants from slips or
cuttings is not a recent idea but
began with early man. She said that
growing new plants and rooting cuttings .remains an enjoyable and
rewarding art and for some children
the start of a fascinating hobby. Success with rooting landscape plants
does not require professional nursery experience.
She said that cuttings can be taken
in the fall, stuck into the ground to
take root, protected from the cold
weather and new plants will be on
their way by spring. Softwood cuttings are taken from parent shrubs
during the growing season, but hardwood cuttings are taken during the
donnant season.
Mrs. Robson reviewed " Barking

c

Up the Right Tree" noting that wb. ·•
choosing a tree for the lawn, the winter appearance should be considered. She suggested that a leafless tree with colorful bark can be a
thing of beauty, a clump of gray birches stands out even against the winter snow.
It was pointed out by Mrs. Robson
that white bark is pleasant all year
round and the effect ill often
heightened on trees with bark that
flakes off or peels away in strips or
sheets creating layers.

Redmen, lose shot
at MOC crown

Mrs. Erlewine suggested gar' dening ideas for May including tempering houseplants for their move
outdoors, and the care of African
violets. A dessert course was served
by Mrs. Woodard and Mrs. Bernard
Ledlie, co-hostess.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

LIVING
ROOM
SUITE

SALE
With the purchase
of any 2 or 3 piece living

but tie Malone and ODU for second.
Rob Day and Tony Fiscus came on
for Rio starter and winning pitcher
Jim Blauvelt to hold off Malone after
the Redmen came up with the
gamewinners. Day went 1% Innings
while Fiscus got the final out of the
game on a grounder with the bases
loaded to record the save.
Jim Derrow, who single loaded the
bases and set the stage for Cluxton's
walk in the fifth, paced the seven-hit
RGC attack in the lidlifter with two
hits in three appearances.
The Pioneers pounded out 12 hits
against Redmen ace Dave Wright in
the first 4% frames in scoring two
second-inning markers and three
more in the fourth. Malone added
8-4.
two more in the sixth off Fiscus, who
Mount Vernon and Malone meet
later this week to settle the issue. If . allowed only one hit the final 21'.1 innings.
Mount Vernon sweeps the twinbill, II
Larry Carter and Jeff Gongwer
will have sole posession of the chamcollected
the only singles off Isler .
pionship while ODU places second
The
Redmen
entertain Otterbein
and Malone third. If Malone sweeps,
today
in
a
I
p.m. doubleheader
it wins the MOC outright and ties
before
traveling
to Marietta
Mount Vernon and ODU for second.
Tuesday.
Asplit would also give Mount Vernon the undisputed championship,
RIO GRANDE - Jim Perry rapped a two-run single and Mike Cluxton walked with the bases loaded in
the fifth inning produced the winning
runs in the fll'$1 contest Friday to
give the Rio Grande Redmen a shot
at the Mid-Ohio Conference baseball
title with a 3-1 victory.
However, Malone pitcher Bruce
Isler came back in the second game
to fashion a twll-hitter on the mound
to take the Redn)en's chances away.
Malone's 7~ victory in the second
game of the important loop
doubleheader left the Redmen with a
final 8-,5, fourth-place MOC mark to
Mount Vernon's 9-3 , Ohio
Dominican's final 9-5 and Malone's

•
•

·I

Horner fans 13, ends

~~~S :hnt2n~':'l~len!!:~!.l

room suite receive

'100 to '300 OFF
PLUS : FREE, YOUR CHOICE, A BRASS BED OR A
WOODEN ROCKER.

walked nine Meigs batters but
struck out 13 to move Warren
· Local into the first round of Class
AA district baseball play with a&amp;2 victory over the Marauders in
the sectional finals Friday at
Athens Hil!b School.
Mei~ took a I~ lead in.
the top of the second inning on a
home run by Terry Wayland, but
Warren tied the game in the third
on a single and triple and took the
lead in the fifth with a single run.
Warren posted its three insurance runs in the sixth on an
error, two doubles and a single.
The Marauders threatened to
, tie it in the seventh after drawing
four str&amp;ght walks from Homer
to produce one run, but left the

"We had men m sconng
position in five of the seven innings, but we couldn't come up
with the clutch hit," Meigs Coach
Dale Harrison said. "Homer was
overpowering."
Jeff Wayland, who tossed a
one-hitter at New Lexington last
Saturday to move the Marauders
into the sectional finals, started
for the Maruaders and took the
loss with relief help from Tom
Owens. Both combined to strike
out four hitters, give up eight hits
and walk only one.
Terry Wayland, Roger
Kovalchik and Steve Ohlinger
collected the three Meigs hits.
Kovalchik and Ohlinger's
safeties were singles.

I

SUDE, FRANK, SUDE - Rio Grande's Frank Gregory heeds the advice of Redmen Coach Tom Meadows (right) while moving into scoring
position in_the fourth inning of the first game Friday against the Malone

SWIIS captures district berth
SYRACUSE - Wayne Sizemore's
towering pair of home runs paved
the way for the Southwestern
Highlanders' second straight trip to
the Class A district baseball tournament in Chillicothe.
Wayne's two solo shots in each of
the first two innings - two of the
three Southwestern hits off two
Southern pitchers-backed brother
Keith's !:!-strikeout, complete-game
effort on the mound to edge the Tornadoes 3-2 in Friday's sectional final
contest here .

URPHYS
Save thru Saturaay, May 17

aau.u a

CINCINNATI (AP) - Dan
Driessen hit a two.-run homer and
Tom Seaver survived three
Philadelphia home runs as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the Phillies 5.-3
Saturday.
The game was highilghted by an
early pitching duel between Seaver,
i-1, and loser Steve Carlton, &amp;-2.
Neither gave up a hit until the fourth

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delivery without any success. The Athens righthander
whiffed 13 Blue Devil batters in handing GARS its first
shutout of the season Friday, 12.0.

GAHS blanked by Bulldogs

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FRUSTRATION - Gallia Academy shortstop Tony
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SPRING
TIME!

Keith blanked the Tornadoes
lh,rough the first six frames, but
Kent Wolfe's bases-loaded single in
the seventh narrowed the contest to
one run before Sizemore worked out
of the jam to record SWHS' second
tourney win.
Last Saturday, the Highlanders
toppled Southern Valley Athletic,
Conference Co-Champion Kyger
Creek&amp;-2.
Eastern and Southern, both 6-3 in
the SVAC, will battle it out Monday

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.IL~~~~!!;,!~~~!!R~P~H~Y~'S:.!D~O~W~N!JT~O~W!!N~~a!~~!.il!f~~l...J

at Eastern to decide who shares the
honor with the 7-3 Bobcats.
The Highlanders took a :HI lead after Sizemore's first roundtripper
:when Todd Baker drove in Jay
Burleson with a sacrifice fly.
Burleson plated the fourth Southwestern run after Sizemore's second
blast by scoring on a wild pitch.
Paul Cardone and Bryan Wolfe
singled while Joe Bob Hemsley
reached on an error to load the
Southern basepaths for Kent Wolfe's
hit.

Keith Sizemore walked three batters and scattered four hits to Kent
Wolfe and one each to Bryan Wolfe
and Cardone while striking out the
side in the second.
Scott Russell nicked Southern
starter and loser Kent Wolfe for the
only other Southwestern hit. Dale
Teaford finished on the mound for
the Tornadoes.
The Highlanders face Crooksville,
winner of the Nelsonville sectional,
at Unioto High School Tuesday at 2
p.m.

Driessen homer gives
Reds winning edge

Curtalns·Drap es•Palnt
•

College Pioneers. The Redmen won the opener to stay. alive in the MidOhio Conference race, but was shut out 7~ in the finale. (Times-Sentinel
photobyDonNaus)
·

I

, The Athens Bulldogs had four runs
' on the scoreboard about as soon as
they climbed off the bus.
Four innings later, seven straight
Bulldogs climbed on base in leading
to eight Athens runs.
Meanwhile, Athens pitcher Jolm
Born doled out just two Gallla
Academy hits - a first-Inning;
leadoff single to Chuck Derifleld and
a fourtb-inning leadoff safety to Kenny Brown - and struck out 13 Blue
Devils to hand GARS its first shutout
of the campaign and sixth loss in
eight games Friday, l:Hl .
The Bulldogs ganged up at "the
plate for 15 11!ts in giving Academy
starter Kenny Brown his roughest
outing of the season. Athens rapped
four stralght hits with one out in the
opening frame before teeing the ball
up for four singles and a pair of
doubles to chase the GAHS righthander in the fourth after scoring three

times.
No. 2 Blue Devils hurler Tony
Wether came on in the fourth and
was greeted with a run-scoring
single by Hubert Cooksey. Weiher
induced Scott Burson to ground out
to third baseman Paul Duncan and
force Jack Wilson at the plate, but
another Athens runner came home
on an error byJ&gt;uncan and two more
crossed on a double to right by Todd
Nuzum. Chris Tenoglla brought
home the. eighth tally with a
sacrifice fly.
The Blue Devils' only scoring
threat came during the third inning.
Duncan and Derifleld walked with
one out.. Duncan moved to third after
Phil King hit into a force play, but
King was caught in a rundown at
third to end the inning.
Born struck out a pair of GAHS
batters mfour innings and finished
off Athens' second victory over the

Blue Devils in two weeks by fanning
the side in the seventh.
The only other batter to reach
base off Born was sophomore Steve
Thompson on a fifth-inning walk.
Freshman Darren Haner finished
up for the Blue Devils, striking out
four Bulldogs and retiring the
visitors in order during the final two
innings.
Tenaglia enjoyed a 3-for-3 day at
the plate with two RBis while Jim
Cooksey went 3-for-4 and Fred Ross
z-for.J with a pair of RBis along with
Wilson to lead the Athens attack.
The Bulldogs, 4-7 in Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League play and &amp;-14
overall after an 0,9 start, collected 13
of their 15 safeties off Brown, who
sUpped to 4-3 for the season.
Gallipolis feU to H in the league
after winning its first six .SEOAL
games. Overall, the Blue Devils are
11-8.

''

..

Philadelphia's Bake McBride hit
his first home run of the season in
the fourth, Larry Bowa got an inside-the-park homer in the fifth inning when Cincinnati outfielders
Dave Collins and Sam Mejias
collided in left-center trying to snare
his liner and Mike Schmidt hit a
towering shot in the sixth for his ninth homer, tops in the majors.
Carlton, who had II strikeouts
before be was lifted for a pinch hitterin the eighth, gave up his first hit
to Collins in the fourth but he was
erased on a double play.
The Reds scored twice in both the
fifth and sixth innings. Driessen's
sixth home run of the season came in
the fifth after Mejias walked.
Carlton walked Seaver to open the
sixth a sacrifice and Junior Kennedy's double tied the score.
Kennedy scored when shortstop
Bowa dropped Ray Knight's pop fly

.

. r,~
• .,
I

in short center field and the Reds added a run off Tug McGraw in the
eighth on Dave Concepcion's triple

and a wild pitch.
Seaver was relieved by Tom
Hume to start the eighth inning.

Lee helps own cause
MONTREAL (AP) - Bill Lee
collected a pair of hits and scored
the go-ahead run to record his fim
victory of the season with clutch
relief from Elias Sosa as the Montreal Expos downed the New York
Mets 5.-3 Saturday.
Lee, l.J, got off to a shaky start as
the Mets took a :HI lead in the first
inning. Lee Mazzilli led off with a
single and Frank Taveras beat out a

bunt. After a double steal, J oe1
Youngblood singled both runners
across.
The Expos got one run back when
Gary Carter clubbed his tOOth
career home run and third of the
season in the second inning. They
tied the score with two out in the
third when Larry Parrish singled
and scored on a double by Carter.
Kevin Kobel, ().3, was the loser.

Brewers edge Orioles
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Hot-hitting
Dick Davis lined an RBI double in
the second inning and scored the goahead run after a single in the fifth,
leading the Milwaukee Brewers to a
5.-3 victory over the Baltimore
Orioles Saturday.
The Brewers broke a 1-1 tie in the
fifth on Davis' single, a double by
Gorman Thomas and a sacrifice fly
to deep center field by Paul Molitor.

The hit by Davis was his lith in his

last 21 times at bat.
The Brewers scored three runs in
the seventh to make lt &gt;I. Thomas
walked with two out and took third
on a bloop single by Buck Martinez.
Molitor, Robin Yount · and Cecil
Cooper followed with RBI singles,
chasing loser Scott McGregor, 1-2.
The winner was Lary Sorensen, z2.
.

·~

BOB WREN

One or camp instructors

. . .Page C-3
Scoreboard. . Page C-.!J

WAYNE GARLAND
wants to pitch

TOM SEAVER
Won't hang around

. .. Page C4 .

... Page C-6 .

Ohio Sportlight. .. Page C-7 ·

�B-lG-The Swxlay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11 , 191!0

Rutland Garden Club provides flowers
RUTLAND - Meeting recently at
the home of Mrs. Albert Woodard ,
the Rutland Garden Club completed

Monday, May 12 - Darwin, Duncan 's Store, 1:45-2 :15 p.m.;
Pageville , Church, 2:45-3 :15;
Harrisonville, Sohio Station, 3:30-4;
New Lima Road, I mi. S. of Fort
Meigs, 4:11)-5 (Short fibn at 5:30);
Rutland, Depot Street, 6:1&amp;-7.
Tuesday, May 13 - Long Bottom,
Post Office, 3-4 p.m. (Short film at
3:15); Reedsville, Reed's Store,
4:36-li:41i (Short fibn at 4:45); Tuppel'S Plains, Arbaugh Housing, 6: 157 (Short film at 6:30) ; Baum Addition, 7:36-3.
Wednesday, May 14 - Torch, Post
Office, 4-4:30; Hockingport, Community Bldg., iHi :41i; Coolville,
School Lot, 6:1&amp;-7 (Short fibn at
6:30); Riggs' Addition, 7:36-3 :15
(Short film at 7:4!i).
Thursday, May 15 - Mulberry
Hts. Infirmary, 1:4&amp;-2:30 p.m.;
Chester, Methodist Church, 3-3: 30;
Keno, N. Side of Keno Bridge, 3:4&amp;4:15; Racine, Home National Bank,
4:41)-5:30 (Shortfilmat5) .
Racine, Wagner's hardware, 5:306:15, (Shortfilmat6:4!i).

Mrs. Michael Tipton

Morbitzer, Tipton wed
I,

COLUMBUS - St. John the
Evangelist Church was the setting
for the marriage of Marsha Jean
Morbitzer and Michael Erman Tipton March 29. The Rev. John
Fulcher officiated at the 10:30 a.m.
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William E. Morbitzer, 3514
Seabrook Ave. , Columbus, and the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence H. Davis of Rio Grande.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Erman Tipton, 1569 Rosehill
Rd ., Reynoldsburg.
Pre-nuptial music was presented
by the organist.
The bride was a ttl red in a gown of
ivory imported silk organza ,
featuring a highrise bodice, wedding
ring neckline and long bishop
sleeves. The entire bodice front and
back were accented with imported
Alencon lace motifs and tiny seed
pearls. Motifs of lace also accented
the sleeves and cuff. The A-line skirt
fell gracefully to the. floor and extended into a chapel train in back. A
deep flounce highlighted the skirt
and a shower of Alencon lace motifs
cascaded down the front of the skirt

and around the back. The hemline
was edged with matching lace. Her
veil was of imported ivory silk
illusion edged with Alencon lace and
held in place with a Juliet cap
covered with matching lace and
pearls.
Mary Rose Jackson was her
sister's maid of honor. She wore a
. peach silk, floor-length dress, with a
v neckline and short two layered
gathered sleeves. Christine Jackson,
the bride's niece, was flower girl.
She wore a beige, high neckline,
dress with tiny rosettes scattered
throughout. A gathered ruffle
around the skirt was accented with
matching lace.
Erman Tipton served his brother
as best man.
A reception was held at Walnut
Hills Country Club following the
ceremony.
The bride is employed by Columbus Recreation and Parks Department as a Recreation Instructor at
Barnett Recreation Center.
The bridegroom is an electronic
technician at Industrial Electric
Heating Inc.
The couple left after the reception
for a trip to Florida.

OPEN SHOWER FRIDAY
CHESTER - An . open. bridal
shower wiU be held Friday at 7:30
p.m. at the Chester United
Methodist Church in Chester
honoring Debbie Windon, brid~lect
of Rodney Chevalier. Friends and

relatives of the couple are invited to
attend ..Debbie is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil Windon, )loute 3,
Pomeroy, and Rodney is the son ci
Mrs. Betty Chevalier, Tuppers
Plains. The shower is being hosted
by friends of the couple.

C.!- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May II, 1980

Rev. Darst turns 80
CHESHIRE - Rev. B. L. Darst
celebrated his 80th birthday at his
home at Cheshire Monday evening,
April28.
Those present were Mary Sigman,
Ershel , and Katie, Willie, Ruth,
Kristy and Scotty Curfman ri
Cheshire; Roy and Anna Lemley.
Bidwell; Dayton and Sarah, Ronnie,
Marylin, Trishia and Donnie Spencer, Chester; AI and Nina, Matthew
and Mandy Wassel of Terre Haute;
Ind. ; Budd Junior Darst, Lonnie and
Sharon and Usa Darst, Middleport;
John and Shirley, Johnnie and Randy Sigman of Addison.
He received many gifts. A birthday cake, decorated by his granddaughter, Nina Wassel, was served
with ice cream, coffee and punch.

DAVTOMEET
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans, will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
chapter home on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Refreslunents will be served and all members are asked to be
present.

plans for provi ding tabl e
arrangements for the Rutland Alwnni Association banquet on May 24.
Mrs. Ralph Turner presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Woodard giving
devotions using the story ·or Ruth
and Naomi in poem form from
Ideals, Guideposts suggestions for
the use of words, "God Bless" in
daily communication, and a Helen
Steiner Rice poem, "We, Too, Shall
Uve Again." She also read an article entitled "When Is a Weed a
Flower?''
The creed and collect were given
and members answered roll call by
naming a favorite shrub. Mrs.
Geneva Moore, sister of Eva Robson, was a guest.
Invitations to the open meetings
of the Bend 0' the River Garden
Club and the Rutland Friendly Gardeners were read. Mrs. Virgil Atkins
expressed appreciation for contributions by the club for the Grange
banquet held at the Salisbury school.
A report on the Region II meeting
held in Athens was given. Attending
were Mrs. James Nicholson, Miss
Ruby Diehl, Mrs. Robson, and Mrs.
Charles Lewis. The fall regional
meeting will be held in Gallia County
Oct. IB.
A certificate of recognition from
Rep. Ron James to members of the
Rutland Club for contributions to the
community and the Gallipolis
Developmental Center was
displayed as was a certificate of appreciation from the Center. The Center monthly report, bulb catalogues
and a tentative sc)ledule for a flower
show to be held in July were also
displayed at the meeting.
Mrs. Woodard noted that she attended the Knox County Council of
Garden Clubs show at the University
of Tenneesee's Athletic Center on
April 20, a part pf the arulUal dogwood festival held there.
Named to the nominating committee were Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs.
Woodard, and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine. An exhibit and identification of tree· and shrub cuttings
was conducted by Mrs. Robert
Canaday. Mrs. Turner displayed a
flowering branch and spring
blossoms arrangement, The
program introduced by Mrs. Virgil
Atkins began with a report on "Grow
Your Own Shrubs from Cuttings"

taken from Plants Alive magazine
by Mrs. Nicholson who noted that
propagating new plants from slips or
cuttings is not a recent idea but
began with early man. She said that
growing new plants and rooting cuttings .remains an enjoyable and
rewarding art and for some children
the start of a fascinating hobby. Success with rooting landscape plants
does not require professional nursery experience.
She said that cuttings can be taken
in the fall, stuck into the ground to
take root, protected from the cold
weather and new plants will be on
their way by spring. Softwood cuttings are taken from parent shrubs
during the growing season, but hardwood cuttings are taken during the
donnant season.
Mrs. Robson reviewed " Barking

c

Up the Right Tree" noting that wb. ·•
choosing a tree for the lawn, the winter appearance should be considered. She suggested that a leafless tree with colorful bark can be a
thing of beauty, a clump of gray birches stands out even against the winter snow.
It was pointed out by Mrs. Robson
that white bark is pleasant all year
round and the effect ill often
heightened on trees with bark that
flakes off or peels away in strips or
sheets creating layers.

Redmen, lose shot
at MOC crown

Mrs. Erlewine suggested gar' dening ideas for May including tempering houseplants for their move
outdoors, and the care of African
violets. A dessert course was served
by Mrs. Woodard and Mrs. Bernard
Ledlie, co-hostess.

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S

LIVING
ROOM
SUITE

SALE
With the purchase
of any 2 or 3 piece living

but tie Malone and ODU for second.
Rob Day and Tony Fiscus came on
for Rio starter and winning pitcher
Jim Blauvelt to hold off Malone after
the Redmen came up with the
gamewinners. Day went 1% Innings
while Fiscus got the final out of the
game on a grounder with the bases
loaded to record the save.
Jim Derrow, who single loaded the
bases and set the stage for Cluxton's
walk in the fifth, paced the seven-hit
RGC attack in the lidlifter with two
hits in three appearances.
The Pioneers pounded out 12 hits
against Redmen ace Dave Wright in
the first 4% frames in scoring two
second-inning markers and three
more in the fourth. Malone added
8-4.
two more in the sixth off Fiscus, who
Mount Vernon and Malone meet
later this week to settle the issue. If . allowed only one hit the final 21'.1 innings.
Mount Vernon sweeps the twinbill, II
Larry Carter and Jeff Gongwer
will have sole posession of the chamcollected
the only singles off Isler .
pionship while ODU places second
The
Redmen
entertain Otterbein
and Malone third. If Malone sweeps,
today
in
a
I
p.m. doubleheader
it wins the MOC outright and ties
before
traveling
to Marietta
Mount Vernon and ODU for second.
Tuesday.
Asplit would also give Mount Vernon the undisputed championship,
RIO GRANDE - Jim Perry rapped a two-run single and Mike Cluxton walked with the bases loaded in
the fifth inning produced the winning
runs in the fll'$1 contest Friday to
give the Rio Grande Redmen a shot
at the Mid-Ohio Conference baseball
title with a 3-1 victory.
However, Malone pitcher Bruce
Isler came back in the second game
to fashion a twll-hitter on the mound
to take the Redn)en's chances away.
Malone's 7~ victory in the second
game of the important loop
doubleheader left the Redmen with a
final 8-,5, fourth-place MOC mark to
Mount Vernon's 9-3 , Ohio
Dominican's final 9-5 and Malone's

•
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walked nine Meigs batters but
struck out 13 to move Warren
· Local into the first round of Class
AA district baseball play with a&amp;2 victory over the Marauders in
the sectional finals Friday at
Athens Hil!b School.
Mei~ took a I~ lead in.
the top of the second inning on a
home run by Terry Wayland, but
Warren tied the game in the third
on a single and triple and took the
lead in the fifth with a single run.
Warren posted its three insurance runs in the sixth on an
error, two doubles and a single.
The Marauders threatened to
, tie it in the seventh after drawing
four str&amp;ght walks from Homer
to produce one run, but left the

"We had men m sconng
position in five of the seven innings, but we couldn't come up
with the clutch hit," Meigs Coach
Dale Harrison said. "Homer was
overpowering."
Jeff Wayland, who tossed a
one-hitter at New Lexington last
Saturday to move the Marauders
into the sectional finals, started
for the Maruaders and took the
loss with relief help from Tom
Owens. Both combined to strike
out four hitters, give up eight hits
and walk only one.
Terry Wayland, Roger
Kovalchik and Steve Ohlinger
collected the three Meigs hits.
Kovalchik and Ohlinger's
safeties were singles.

I

SUDE, FRANK, SUDE - Rio Grande's Frank Gregory heeds the advice of Redmen Coach Tom Meadows (right) while moving into scoring
position in_the fourth inning of the first game Friday against the Malone

SWIIS captures district berth
SYRACUSE - Wayne Sizemore's
towering pair of home runs paved
the way for the Southwestern
Highlanders' second straight trip to
the Class A district baseball tournament in Chillicothe.
Wayne's two solo shots in each of
the first two innings - two of the
three Southwestern hits off two
Southern pitchers-backed brother
Keith's !:!-strikeout, complete-game
effort on the mound to edge the Tornadoes 3-2 in Friday's sectional final
contest here .

URPHYS
Save thru Saturaay, May 17

aau.u a

CINCINNATI (AP) - Dan
Driessen hit a two.-run homer and
Tom Seaver survived three
Philadelphia home runs as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the Phillies 5.-3
Saturday.
The game was highilghted by an
early pitching duel between Seaver,
i-1, and loser Steve Carlton, &amp;-2.
Neither gave up a hit until the fourth

lritttD"d ........ ..,... •
hot recolf stort. lhr•••••
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$99.. 97

To Remember

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

May 26, 7980

WE CLEAN UPHOLSTERY
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delivery without any success. The Athens righthander
whiffed 13 Blue Devil batters in handing GARS its first
shutout of the season Friday, 12.0.

GAHS blanked by Bulldogs

REG. 14.44

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Keith blanked the Tornadoes
lh,rough the first six frames, but
Kent Wolfe's bases-loaded single in
the seventh narrowed the contest to
one run before Sizemore worked out
of the jam to record SWHS' second
tourney win.
Last Saturday, the Highlanders
toppled Southern Valley Athletic,
Conference Co-Champion Kyger
Creek&amp;-2.
Eastern and Southern, both 6-3 in
the SVAC, will battle it out Monday

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at Eastern to decide who shares the
honor with the 7-3 Bobcats.
The Highlanders took a :HI lead after Sizemore's first roundtripper
:when Todd Baker drove in Jay
Burleson with a sacrifice fly.
Burleson plated the fourth Southwestern run after Sizemore's second
blast by scoring on a wild pitch.
Paul Cardone and Bryan Wolfe
singled while Joe Bob Hemsley
reached on an error to load the
Southern basepaths for Kent Wolfe's
hit.

Keith Sizemore walked three batters and scattered four hits to Kent
Wolfe and one each to Bryan Wolfe
and Cardone while striking out the
side in the second.
Scott Russell nicked Southern
starter and loser Kent Wolfe for the
only other Southwestern hit. Dale
Teaford finished on the mound for
the Tornadoes.
The Highlanders face Crooksville,
winner of the Nelsonville sectional,
at Unioto High School Tuesday at 2
p.m.

Driessen homer gives
Reds winning edge

Curtalns·Drap es•Palnt
•

College Pioneers. The Redmen won the opener to stay. alive in the MidOhio Conference race, but was shut out 7~ in the finale. (Times-Sentinel
photobyDonNaus)
·

I

, The Athens Bulldogs had four runs
' on the scoreboard about as soon as
they climbed off the bus.
Four innings later, seven straight
Bulldogs climbed on base in leading
to eight Athens runs.
Meanwhile, Athens pitcher Jolm
Born doled out just two Gallla
Academy hits - a first-Inning;
leadoff single to Chuck Derifleld and
a fourtb-inning leadoff safety to Kenny Brown - and struck out 13 Blue
Devils to hand GARS its first shutout
of the campaign and sixth loss in
eight games Friday, l:Hl .
The Bulldogs ganged up at "the
plate for 15 11!ts in giving Academy
starter Kenny Brown his roughest
outing of the season. Athens rapped
four stralght hits with one out in the
opening frame before teeing the ball
up for four singles and a pair of
doubles to chase the GAHS righthander in the fourth after scoring three

times.
No. 2 Blue Devils hurler Tony
Wether came on in the fourth and
was greeted with a run-scoring
single by Hubert Cooksey. Weiher
induced Scott Burson to ground out
to third baseman Paul Duncan and
force Jack Wilson at the plate, but
another Athens runner came home
on an error byJ&gt;uncan and two more
crossed on a double to right by Todd
Nuzum. Chris Tenoglla brought
home the. eighth tally with a
sacrifice fly.
The Blue Devils' only scoring
threat came during the third inning.
Duncan and Derifleld walked with
one out.. Duncan moved to third after
Phil King hit into a force play, but
King was caught in a rundown at
third to end the inning.
Born struck out a pair of GAHS
batters mfour innings and finished
off Athens' second victory over the

Blue Devils in two weeks by fanning
the side in the seventh.
The only other batter to reach
base off Born was sophomore Steve
Thompson on a fifth-inning walk.
Freshman Darren Haner finished
up for the Blue Devils, striking out
four Bulldogs and retiring the
visitors in order during the final two
innings.
Tenaglia enjoyed a 3-for-3 day at
the plate with two RBis while Jim
Cooksey went 3-for-4 and Fred Ross
z-for.J with a pair of RBis along with
Wilson to lead the Athens attack.
The Bulldogs, 4-7 in Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League play and &amp;-14
overall after an 0,9 start, collected 13
of their 15 safeties off Brown, who
sUpped to 4-3 for the season.
Gallipolis feU to H in the league
after winning its first six .SEOAL
games. Overall, the Blue Devils are
11-8.

''

..

Philadelphia's Bake McBride hit
his first home run of the season in
the fourth, Larry Bowa got an inside-the-park homer in the fifth inning when Cincinnati outfielders
Dave Collins and Sam Mejias
collided in left-center trying to snare
his liner and Mike Schmidt hit a
towering shot in the sixth for his ninth homer, tops in the majors.
Carlton, who had II strikeouts
before be was lifted for a pinch hitterin the eighth, gave up his first hit
to Collins in the fourth but he was
erased on a double play.
The Reds scored twice in both the
fifth and sixth innings. Driessen's
sixth home run of the season came in
the fifth after Mejias walked.
Carlton walked Seaver to open the
sixth a sacrifice and Junior Kennedy's double tied the score.
Kennedy scored when shortstop
Bowa dropped Ray Knight's pop fly

.

. r,~
• .,
I

in short center field and the Reds added a run off Tug McGraw in the
eighth on Dave Concepcion's triple

and a wild pitch.
Seaver was relieved by Tom
Hume to start the eighth inning.

Lee helps own cause
MONTREAL (AP) - Bill Lee
collected a pair of hits and scored
the go-ahead run to record his fim
victory of the season with clutch
relief from Elias Sosa as the Montreal Expos downed the New York
Mets 5.-3 Saturday.
Lee, l.J, got off to a shaky start as
the Mets took a :HI lead in the first
inning. Lee Mazzilli led off with a
single and Frank Taveras beat out a

bunt. After a double steal, J oe1
Youngblood singled both runners
across.
The Expos got one run back when
Gary Carter clubbed his tOOth
career home run and third of the
season in the second inning. They
tied the score with two out in the
third when Larry Parrish singled
and scored on a double by Carter.
Kevin Kobel, ().3, was the loser.

Brewers edge Orioles
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Hot-hitting
Dick Davis lined an RBI double in
the second inning and scored the goahead run after a single in the fifth,
leading the Milwaukee Brewers to a
5.-3 victory over the Baltimore
Orioles Saturday.
The Brewers broke a 1-1 tie in the
fifth on Davis' single, a double by
Gorman Thomas and a sacrifice fly
to deep center field by Paul Molitor.

The hit by Davis was his lith in his

last 21 times at bat.
The Brewers scored three runs in
the seventh to make lt &gt;I. Thomas
walked with two out and took third
on a bloop single by Buck Martinez.
Molitor, Robin Yount · and Cecil
Cooper followed with RBI singles,
chasing loser Scott McGregor, 1-2.
The winner was Lary Sorensen, z2.
.

·~

BOB WREN

One or camp instructors

. . .Page C-3
Scoreboard. . Page C-.!J

WAYNE GARLAND
wants to pitch

TOM SEAVER
Won't hang around

. .. Page C4 .

... Page C-6 .

Ohio Sportlight. .. Page C-7 ·

�C-2~TheSundayTiJnes.Sentinel,Sunday, May 11, 1980

.JGrays win Buck scrimmage
ByTIMPUET
A11oclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) - Two John
Epitropoulos fwnble recoveries and
pass interceptions by Todd Bell and
Mark Eberts led to touchdowns as
Ohio State's Gray team scored a 20-7
victory over the Scarlet squad in the
Buckeyes' spring inlrllllQuad football g!lllle Saturday afternoon.
Vlade Janakievski kicked field
goals of 40 and 21 yards, Calvin
Murray scored on a three-yard run,
and Bob Atha threw to Ray Myers
for a touchdown for the victors.
'lbe only Scarlet score came on an
; ~yard return of an intercepted
• Atha paas by Rod Gorley.
: · First string quarterback Art
~Schlichter, playing for the Scarlet
;team, completed only eight of 26
• passes for 104 yards and had three
: throws intercepted.
' Schlichter's efforts were over; sbadowed by Atha's work as a field
:general, as the sophomore from
:worthington was named the game's
:most valuable offensive player.

TENNIS

. NEW YORK (AP) - Vitaj
: Amritraj of India, continuing his
•giant-killers role, ousted Victor Pee: ci of Paraguay 6-4, H in the quar: terfinal round of the $500,000 Tour: nament of Champions at Forest
Hills.
: In other matches, Mexico's Raul
· Ramirez scored a &amp;-2, U,IH victory
:over Wojtek Fibak of Poland; John
:McEnroe took an easy &amp;-I, 6-3 vic:tory over Brian Teacher; and Vitas
:Gerulaitis stopped Hungary's
· Balasz Taroczy 6-4, 7-6.
: GREENVIlLE, S.C. (AP) : Roscoe Tanner survived a tough
: challenge from his coach, Dennis
· Ralston, to take a &amp;-2, 2-6, 7-5 first: rowtd victory in a $50,000 tour:nament.

I Charlie's fear subsides innings later

Epitropoulos was awarded honors as
the top defensive player.
A crowd of 26,343 was on hand for
the game, which lacked the expected
. offensive fireworks. No offensive
play went for greater than 20 yards,
with Jim Gayle's 20-yard rwt for the
Scarlet late in the game being the
longestgainerofthe day.
Murray was the leading ground
gainer for both teams, picking up 95
yards in 28 carries.
Concerning Schlichter's perfonnance, Coach Earle Bruce said,
"I thought the great defense did an
exceptionally fine job of pressuring
him and covering the receivers. "
Schlichter admitted, "I don't know
the reason things went so poorly
today. We just weren't clicking real
We made a few mistakes early. This
hurt u.s and we just .!JI'ver got on
track."
·--..
Atha gave credit to his linemen for
his showing, saymg, "I didn't throw
real well , but they executed well.
The line did a great job for me."
'lbe Gray team got on the
scoreboard first on Janakievski's royard field goal with 6:31 remaining
in the first quarter and took a I~
lead on Murray's touchdown run
with4 :16 to play in the quarter.
Both scores were set up by
Epitropoulos' recoveries of fwnbles
by Gayle.
The Gray made it 17-9 in the
second quarter on Atha's touchdown
pass to Myers with 4:54 left in the
half. Bell's interception, which was
taken to the Scarlet 21&gt;-yard line, got
that drive going.
Gorley's interception return, the
Gray team's only score of the game
and the longest play of the contest,
came.with 9:24 left in the third quarter.
Janakievski closed out the scoring
with his second field goal with I :25 to
play in that quarter. The interception return by Eberts to the 21yard line set up the three-pointer.

:Marauders get scare
·• but post 15th win
POMEROY
The Meigs
; · ·Marauders girls softball squad
received a fourth-inning scare from
the Gallia Academy Blue Angels after taking a 14-3 lead, but withstood
a seven-rwt GAHS rally to post their
15th victory of the season against
one loesSaturday morning,1~13 .
:
Three Gallipolis errors and hits by
: Beth Bartrum, Cindy Thompson and
· Pam Crooks got the Marauders off
&gt; to aiH lead in the first inning before
:· 'hits from April King, Bartrum aod
~ Susan Zirkle added four more in the
&lt;second.
:: Meigs moved to an 11-rwt lead af: • ter the third inning behind a two-run
: double by Tonia Ash.
•' 'lbe Blue Angels picked up three
_; walks, forced Meigs into three
: errors received a double by Lisa
·; Roush with the bases loaded and two
; out to highlight GAHS' fourth-inning
• scare.

The winners added two runs in
each of the last two innings to
preserve the victory for Terry
Wilson, who struck out five and
walked five in going the distance.
Bartrum and Zirkle each banged
out three of the Marauders' 12 hits
while Crooks added two more.
Margaret Evans collected two of
the Blue Angels' six hits off Wilson
while Sheri Howard slanuned a
triple.
Gallipolis fell to ().151or the season
after falling victim to Meigs lor the
second time and a 14-run seventhinning rally by Waverly Wednesday.
The Marauders pulled out a 6-5
victory over Parkersburg High
Friday for their 14th victory. Meigs
squares off with South Point at
Gallipolis' Memorial Field Tuesday
in the opening round of the Class AA
district tournament.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Charlie
Leibrant admitted he was an intimidated 23 year-old when he marched to the mound Friday night to
face the "star studded"
Philadelphia Phillies.
"I was a little intimidated to start
with," said Leibrandt who was still a
college playe'i at Miami University
of Ohio 22 months ago.
· " I was facing guys I've read about
all my life. This team has more big
power hitters, plus a guy named
(Pete ) Rose, who is a baseball
hallmark."
Nine innings and seven hits later,
Leibrandt, 3-2, had a 5-2 victory and
now leads the Cincinnati Reds With a
2.10 earned run · average and two
complete games under his belt in the
National League.
" You have to give the kid a lot of
credit," said Phils Manger Dallas
Green, whose team is now 5-2 in
May. "We have been htting the ball
real well this month and have bunched our hits together, but he shut
down my big guys completely," he
said, referring to Greg Luzinski and
Mike Schmidt, the league's home
run leaders.
Liebrandt, Cincinnati's lone lef-

!hand starter, gave up seven hits,
walked three and struck out one .
" You can't measure the help I get
from (catcher) John Bench. He lets
me know just what to throw and
where to throw it," said Lei brandt.
"I still
make
pitches.
I've
had have
bettertostuff
otherthe
times
than ·
I've had tonight. My curveball just ,
dido 't feel right so I stayed pretty
much with my fastball and sinker."
The big hit for Cincinnati was a
three-rwt, bases loaded triple in the
fifth inning by reserve outfielder
Sam Mejias, who was filling in for
the injured George Foster. It was
also Mejias' 28th birthday.
"I've had quite a celebration. My
wife came to town yesterday with
Sam Jr., our eight-mont!HJ!d boy.
The triple tonight made it a perfect
birthday."
The Reds have won five of their
last six games and are back Within a
few percentage points of first place
in the National League West after
Houston's ~ loss to Atianta Friday
night.
Philadelphia's first rwt came in
the first when Rose walked, then
moved to second on an infield out
and took third on Luzinski's fly to

center. He scored on Bob Boone's
double to left,
Rose has reached base safely in
every Phillies game this sea~n except the April 15 contest w1U1 Sl
Louis.

lr-------~;:~::::::••llliilii

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GaUipolis, OH.

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New York at Montreal , 2

Philadelphia al Cincinnati
San Francisco at Chicago
LosAngeleut St. Louia
Houatonal Atlanta
Pii1RburghatSanDiego

·~

! ·6~
o~ • .,.,
!~ g : ~~
1214 ...
...,." 4
10 14 .411
5
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MUwaukee
Baltimore

Cleveland

Detroit
WEST

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15 12 .:;56

·Guidry solves problem;

.f,

:: While Guidry was solving the
. mystery of three consecutive shaky
:l&gt;utings, Dr. Bob Watson provided all
the necessary assistance by driving
. ·in all five runs With a three-rwt
·homer in the first inning and a two:rwt double in the eighth.
~· In other American League action,
lhe Baltimore Orioles downed the :Milwaukee Brewers f&gt;-2, the Kruisas
'City Royala edged the Boston Red
;!lox 11-5, the Texas Ranger's nipped
the Chicago White Sox 2-1 in II in• • the Detroit Tigers shaded the
'California Angels 11-5 in 10 and the
'Cleveland Indians turned back the
:se&amp;tUe Marinern 4-1. The Toronto:Pakland game was rained out.
• Willie Randolph led off the New
York first with a single, Koosman
1"nisplayed Ruppert Jones' bunt and
:til'atson followed With a tOO-foot shot
:OVer the right-center field fence.
:Watson added a lwo-rwt double off
:John Verhoeven in the eighth,
J}though the runs were charged to

Koosman.
: Meanwhile, Guidry scattered nine
:&amp;its walked two and I struck out
iight. He lost his shutout bid With
~o out in the ninth when Dave EdJrards singled and Willie Norwood
:l)omered. After walking Butch
:}'t'ynegar, Guidry gave way to
·Gossage, who fanned pinch hitter

-Rick Sofie!d.
• "I think it was my best outing of
the year," Guidry said. "I've got to
establish my fast ball first, then get
eute with the other stuff. The
problem I've been having is that I'd
stay even as long as it was scoreless,
but I seemed to relax when we got
ahead.
"But tonight I had the idea and
stayed on top With my fast ball. All I
needed was one good game to get
back on top. I just needed to blow the
ball by the hitters."
"I've batted against Jerry before
in the National League," said Watson. "He likes to set you up with the
slow breaking ball, maybe get ahead
on the count. The count was 1-2 and
he got a last ball up, out over the
plate. I hit it real good, but this is a
big ballpark so I was surprised when
it went out."

BW Madlock is still sweating out
his appeal of a suspension and $5,000

fine.
Meanwhile, the Pittsburgh Pirate
infielder is making other National
League teams pay for it.
Playing on wlult virtually amounts
to borrowed time, ~adlock made the
most of it Friday night, slugging a
home run and game-winning
sacrifiCe fly to help the Pirates beat
the San Diego Padres,4-3.
"I hit a lot of homers here in San
Diego, but I don't kno,; why," said
Madlock, whose solo shot in the
eighth pulled the Pirates into a 3-3
tie before his sacrifice fly won it in
the ninth. "I usually try to hit the
ball on the ground. ''
Madlock said he "hit a fastball up
and out"
Bob Shirley for his
homer. Then in the nin~, he slugged
his game-winning fly ball off San
Diego's ace reliever, Rollie Fingers.
"You don't want to get behind
Fingers," said Madlock, who hit the
first offering from the mustachioed
right-bander. "He's one of the best
relievers in the business.''
Although Madlock has been
suspended and fined for a run-in
With umpire Gerry Crawford during
a game against Montreal, he has
been allowed to play pending his ap-

Chi~a4o,

W~y'aGame

NewYorii5, Minnesota2
Baltimore s; Milwaukee :z
Teus2,Chicagoi,llinnings
Detroit&amp;, CaWornia 5, 10 imings
Toronto at Oakland, ppd ., rai.n
Cleveland ot,Seattle 1
SIUiday' aGamea
Kansii.!ICity at8o.'lton
MinnesotaatNewYork
BaltlmoreatMilWa"'ee
-~
.. _
Toronto at Oakland
Cleveland at Seattle
Ch.l.cagoatTeXIUI,n
Mooday'aGam~
Teusat&amp;ltimore,n
Minnesota at Boston, n
Kansas Ci ty at New York, n
Only games scheduled

Philadelphlll 107, 1As Angeles l04,series tied I·
I

~J

~-•tatCaWo-;..

TI~IlU.

I"~: PerMinn~
· ~~~~ ;88. ~!:·

35;
....., ..... ~:aWl:,
..,..,.., ...,; wn .... , , BaToultlms,ore,
... -N
'" ; Rl vers, Texas , Holool. •
l J ,· Moll tor, Mil waw.~~oee,
DOUBLES, D. Garcia, To.onto, It; Morri:!on,
Chicago,
11); McRae,
Kamas8;City, 10; Chiatgu,
B. Bell,
Texas, 9; Yount,
Milwaukee,
8; OUver, Texa.s , 8.

~

Baine:~,

Friday's Sports TraoncdoWI
IWEBALL
American LeJioa
BOSTON RED SOX - Recslled Keith MacWborter, fitcher, from _Pawtucket of ~
ternationa League. Designated Stan Papt , In·
fielder, for reassignment.
FOO'I'IIALL
Natlooal FootbaU League
BUFFALO BIL~ - Signed Jack Quinn and
Steve Carpenter, defensive backs; Mark Rob-

N•tjooaJ Hodey Lague

BA'inNG (50 at bats ): Staub, Te!UlS, .412:
Wathan, Kana., City, .391 ;, Molinaro,
.373; Summers, Detroit, .368; OgilVIe,
Milwaukee, .368.
RUNS : Wills,
24; Yount, Milwaukee,
22 ; Bumbry, 8altimore, l9 ; Tram.nwll, Detroit,
19; Kemp, Detroit , 19.
RBI : Velez , Toronto, 23; 8 . BeU,
23 ; 1Johnson , Chicago, 22; BonneU, Toronto, :!D;
OUver, Texa3,20.

Texa.~,

SICW'day' a Game
LoaAilgelesatPhiladelphia
Sudriy'aGame
LoeAgnelesatPbiladelphfa
WedDr:lday,
U
PhiladelphiaatLosAngeles, n
Friday,
PhitadelMllyll
hl.a if
Loe A.nge1esat o....
,Lln, necessary
.,.......y,
Y
Plliladelpllia at Los Angeles, d ne«ssary

nesota, 3.
HOME RUNS : Velez, Toronto, I ; R.e, Jac:Uon.
New York, 7; Rudi, California, 7; Fisk, Bolton.
6; Mayberry , Toronto, &amp;; &amp;naUey, Minneaota,l;
I... Roberlii, Seattle, 6.
STOLEN BASES: Hendenon, Oaklllnd, 10;
Wills, Tens, 10; Bumbry , Baltimore; t,camr,
caUfoml.a, I ; WU!on, Kansu ctty,l.
PITCHING { :J Dectaiona) : Hooeycut, Seattle,
s-o, 1.000, US ; John , New
1.000, 2.11;
Norria, Oe.klan, 4-4), 1.000. O.+l ; Worthlm,
Chicago, 3.0, l .tXKl, 3.N ; Corbett, Minnelota, s.G,
1.000 ; %.66; Barker, Cleo;eland, t-1 , .100, U7 ;
Stieb, Toronto,
..lm, 2.Z3; Redfern, Minnesot.a • 4--1 , .1100,1.69.
Yorlt ..
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry, New
, ow; nar
fern, Minnosola, 33; Norri.l, Oakland, Jl;
Leo nard • v.
c·t
30
D A ....:ater Seattle 21•
n.41-nsas 1 y, ; DCLIIIIUO •
'
'
MaUack, Texu, 28.
.

York,~.

~1

o~

;n-

Playoff•

By The Associated Preas
- "I found out what I was doing
Wr-ong. I was not pushing off and
coming over the top like I did when I
lhrew well," New York Yankees'
ace pitcher Ron Guidry ~d Friday
!light after blanking Minnesota for
~ innings before needing last-out
j!elp from Rich Gossage as the New
.York Yankees defeated the Twins f&gt;-

AMERICAN LEAGUE

s.mdly, M,iyf
Lo, Angl!l@st09, Phlladelphia 182

Semllillal RGUd

Madlock overcomes his

Ga~e.

NBA Playolb

Friday'• Game.

J1UPLES : 8,.11, Kansu City, t · Grlllln,
Tor«\lo, 3; Nonlhagon, Chicago, 3; Wii.OO, Kar&gt;
sas City , 3; Castino, MinnHola 3; Powell, Min-

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Oakland
Texas

13 1! .500 !
14
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11 l$ .t tl
n 16 .407 b

Minne8ota

AMERICANI..E.AGUI!
EAST
New Vorl
Toronto
Barton

1~

Kanaao Clly
Seatue
Califomi.a

Scoreboard---

Belt of Seveo
Tueodar., AprO !I
Minnesota 6, Philade phla 5
-New York Islanden 4, Buffalo I
lbllnday,May l

bins Keith Richartbon, Aaron Wiley, and Joe
N~n. wide receivers ; LarT)' Reid, Jim Walsh,
and Dan Conway, fullbacks ; Gregg Jefcoat and

Philadelphia 7, Minnesota 0
New York Islanders 2, Buffalo 1, 2 ot
Sl.tlantay' Mliy 3
New York Islande~ 7, Buffalo4

Hennan Parker, guards ; Card Nord, tight end;
Jay Caffey, tackle; Mark Oeniaon, Unebacker ;

Sondlly' May 4

.11nd Mike Patrick and Mike Deut.!lch, punters.

Philadelphia 5, Minnesota 3

Taesday'a Games

Buffalo 7, New York Islanders f , New York
leadseries3-1
Philadelphia 3, Minnesota 2, Philadelphia
leads series, 3-1
Tbunday'1 Gam~
Philadelphia 7, Minnesota 3, Philadelphia wins
series 4-1
Buffalo 2, New York Islanders 0, New york

leada .series S-2

Saillrday'a Game
Buffalo at New York b.landen
Tueoday,MayU

New York IslanderS at Buffalo, if necessary

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Elsewhere in the National League,
the San Francisco Giants stopped
the Chicago Cubs 6-3; the New York
Mets nipped the Montreal Expos 2-1;
the St.Louis Cardinals powtded the
Los Angeles Dodgers lf&gt;-7; the Atianta Braves defeated the Houston
Astros ~ and the Cincinnati Reds
turned back the Philadelphia
Phillies 5-2.
Reliever Kent Tekulve tied a
major league record with his third
victory in three games. Tekulve,
who has not allowed a rwt in hla last
11 appearances, retired'the final six
straight batters to improve his
record to !MI.
Tekulve's third triumph in three
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~--Times-Sentinel
01 ele~~
~Anc
·~taeso

BULLETIN .
IRONTON - Wellston scored 104\'z points to claim the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League boys track championship, just completed at
Ironton's Tank Memorial Stadiwn.
Jerry Patton, With victories in the 100-meter dash and long jwnp, led
the Golden Rockets to a one-point victory over the Athens Bulldogs m
the team standings.
.
Waverly was third while the hosts finished fourth, Logan fifth,
Gallia Academy sixth, Jackson seventh and Meigs eighth.
Gallipolis' highest finish was second by Dan Staggs in the shot put
(131-6\'z) while Meigs' highest was turned in by Chris Judge m the high
jump (tied for fifth withGAHS' Todd Nibert at 5-6).

I RED WING I·~

The Reds came right back and tied
the game on a first-inning sacrifice
fly by John Bench, which scoring
Ken Griffey. They went ahead In the
second inning when Dave Col.l.i.nS
scored on Griffey 's single.

C-3-'lbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swtday, May 11,1980

hioValley

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UPPE. ROUTE 7
G.ALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Four locations to serve you better.
Member: FDIC
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GALUPOLIS - Former Ohio
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major-league scout Bob Wren wiB
join Howard Bozman, BW Morgan
and Gallia Academy Head Baseball
Coach Jim Osborne wiB conduct a
three-day baseball clinic for boys
and girls age 7-18 Jwte 2-4 at
Memorial Field her;e.
'lbe three ~ioll.'l wiB be conducted from 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. In the
event of rain, the clinic wW rwt the
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On-the-field instruction wW include fundamentals in hitting, pitching, baserunning, bunting, defense, sliding and game situations, with
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Ribbons wW be awarded to each
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Each camper who attends all.
three sessions will also receive a
detailed boolllet containing the fund&amp;menta!s covered at the clinic and
a certificate ol completion.
'Ibe entry fee for the three
sessions is '19 in advance or $211 at
.the gate. Some of the proceeds will
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Entry forms are available at
Gallia Academy High School. For
. more information, contact Coach
Osborne at 446-3212 or 446-3250.

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�C-2~TheSundayTiJnes.Sentinel,Sunday, May 11, 1980

.JGrays win Buck scrimmage
ByTIMPUET
A11oclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) - Two John
Epitropoulos fwnble recoveries and
pass interceptions by Todd Bell and
Mark Eberts led to touchdowns as
Ohio State's Gray team scored a 20-7
victory over the Scarlet squad in the
Buckeyes' spring inlrllllQuad football g!lllle Saturday afternoon.
Vlade Janakievski kicked field
goals of 40 and 21 yards, Calvin
Murray scored on a three-yard run,
and Bob Atha threw to Ray Myers
for a touchdown for the victors.
'lbe only Scarlet score came on an
; ~yard return of an intercepted
• Atha paas by Rod Gorley.
: · First string quarterback Art
~Schlichter, playing for the Scarlet
;team, completed only eight of 26
• passes for 104 yards and had three
: throws intercepted.
' Schlichter's efforts were over; sbadowed by Atha's work as a field
:general, as the sophomore from
:worthington was named the game's
:most valuable offensive player.

TENNIS

. NEW YORK (AP) - Vitaj
: Amritraj of India, continuing his
•giant-killers role, ousted Victor Pee: ci of Paraguay 6-4, H in the quar: terfinal round of the $500,000 Tour: nament of Champions at Forest
Hills.
: In other matches, Mexico's Raul
· Ramirez scored a &amp;-2, U,IH victory
:over Wojtek Fibak of Poland; John
:McEnroe took an easy &amp;-I, 6-3 vic:tory over Brian Teacher; and Vitas
:Gerulaitis stopped Hungary's
· Balasz Taroczy 6-4, 7-6.
: GREENVIlLE, S.C. (AP) : Roscoe Tanner survived a tough
: challenge from his coach, Dennis
· Ralston, to take a &amp;-2, 2-6, 7-5 first: rowtd victory in a $50,000 tour:nament.

I Charlie's fear subsides innings later

Epitropoulos was awarded honors as
the top defensive player.
A crowd of 26,343 was on hand for
the game, which lacked the expected
. offensive fireworks. No offensive
play went for greater than 20 yards,
with Jim Gayle's 20-yard rwt for the
Scarlet late in the game being the
longestgainerofthe day.
Murray was the leading ground
gainer for both teams, picking up 95
yards in 28 carries.
Concerning Schlichter's perfonnance, Coach Earle Bruce said,
"I thought the great defense did an
exceptionally fine job of pressuring
him and covering the receivers. "
Schlichter admitted, "I don't know
the reason things went so poorly
today. We just weren't clicking real
We made a few mistakes early. This
hurt u.s and we just .!JI'ver got on
track."
·--..
Atha gave credit to his linemen for
his showing, saymg, "I didn't throw
real well , but they executed well.
The line did a great job for me."
'lbe Gray team got on the
scoreboard first on Janakievski's royard field goal with 6:31 remaining
in the first quarter and took a I~
lead on Murray's touchdown run
with4 :16 to play in the quarter.
Both scores were set up by
Epitropoulos' recoveries of fwnbles
by Gayle.
The Gray made it 17-9 in the
second quarter on Atha's touchdown
pass to Myers with 4:54 left in the
half. Bell's interception, which was
taken to the Scarlet 21&gt;-yard line, got
that drive going.
Gorley's interception return, the
Gray team's only score of the game
and the longest play of the contest,
came.with 9:24 left in the third quarter.
Janakievski closed out the scoring
with his second field goal with I :25 to
play in that quarter. The interception return by Eberts to the 21yard line set up the three-pointer.

:Marauders get scare
·• but post 15th win
POMEROY
The Meigs
; · ·Marauders girls softball squad
received a fourth-inning scare from
the Gallia Academy Blue Angels after taking a 14-3 lead, but withstood
a seven-rwt GAHS rally to post their
15th victory of the season against
one loesSaturday morning,1~13 .
:
Three Gallipolis errors and hits by
: Beth Bartrum, Cindy Thompson and
· Pam Crooks got the Marauders off
&gt; to aiH lead in the first inning before
:· 'hits from April King, Bartrum aod
~ Susan Zirkle added four more in the
&lt;second.
:: Meigs moved to an 11-rwt lead af: • ter the third inning behind a two-run
: double by Tonia Ash.
•' 'lbe Blue Angels picked up three
_; walks, forced Meigs into three
: errors received a double by Lisa
·; Roush with the bases loaded and two
; out to highlight GAHS' fourth-inning
• scare.

The winners added two runs in
each of the last two innings to
preserve the victory for Terry
Wilson, who struck out five and
walked five in going the distance.
Bartrum and Zirkle each banged
out three of the Marauders' 12 hits
while Crooks added two more.
Margaret Evans collected two of
the Blue Angels' six hits off Wilson
while Sheri Howard slanuned a
triple.
Gallipolis fell to ().151or the season
after falling victim to Meigs lor the
second time and a 14-run seventhinning rally by Waverly Wednesday.
The Marauders pulled out a 6-5
victory over Parkersburg High
Friday for their 14th victory. Meigs
squares off with South Point at
Gallipolis' Memorial Field Tuesday
in the opening round of the Class AA
district tournament.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Charlie
Leibrant admitted he was an intimidated 23 year-old when he marched to the mound Friday night to
face the "star studded"
Philadelphia Phillies.
"I was a little intimidated to start
with," said Leibrandt who was still a
college playe'i at Miami University
of Ohio 22 months ago.
· " I was facing guys I've read about
all my life. This team has more big
power hitters, plus a guy named
(Pete ) Rose, who is a baseball
hallmark."
Nine innings and seven hits later,
Leibrandt, 3-2, had a 5-2 victory and
now leads the Cincinnati Reds With a
2.10 earned run · average and two
complete games under his belt in the
National League.
" You have to give the kid a lot of
credit," said Phils Manger Dallas
Green, whose team is now 5-2 in
May. "We have been htting the ball
real well this month and have bunched our hits together, but he shut
down my big guys completely," he
said, referring to Greg Luzinski and
Mike Schmidt, the league's home
run leaders.
Liebrandt, Cincinnati's lone lef-

!hand starter, gave up seven hits,
walked three and struck out one .
" You can't measure the help I get
from (catcher) John Bench. He lets
me know just what to throw and
where to throw it," said Lei brandt.
"I still
make
pitches.
I've
had have
bettertostuff
otherthe
times
than ·
I've had tonight. My curveball just ,
dido 't feel right so I stayed pretty
much with my fastball and sinker."
The big hit for Cincinnati was a
three-rwt, bases loaded triple in the
fifth inning by reserve outfielder
Sam Mejias, who was filling in for
the injured George Foster. It was
also Mejias' 28th birthday.
"I've had quite a celebration. My
wife came to town yesterday with
Sam Jr., our eight-mont!HJ!d boy.
The triple tonight made it a perfect
birthday."
The Reds have won five of their
last six games and are back Within a
few percentage points of first place
in the National League West after
Houston's ~ loss to Atianta Friday
night.
Philadelphia's first rwt came in
the first when Rose walked, then
moved to second on an infield out
and took third on Luzinski's fly to

center. He scored on Bob Boone's
double to left,
Rose has reached base safely in
every Phillies game this sea~n except the April 15 contest w1U1 Sl
Louis.

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·Guidry solves problem;

.f,

:: While Guidry was solving the
. mystery of three consecutive shaky
:l&gt;utings, Dr. Bob Watson provided all
the necessary assistance by driving
. ·in all five runs With a three-rwt
·homer in the first inning and a two:rwt double in the eighth.
~· In other American League action,
lhe Baltimore Orioles downed the :Milwaukee Brewers f&gt;-2, the Kruisas
'City Royala edged the Boston Red
;!lox 11-5, the Texas Ranger's nipped
the Chicago White Sox 2-1 in II in• • the Detroit Tigers shaded the
'California Angels 11-5 in 10 and the
'Cleveland Indians turned back the
:se&amp;tUe Marinern 4-1. The Toronto:Pakland game was rained out.
• Willie Randolph led off the New
York first with a single, Koosman
1"nisplayed Ruppert Jones' bunt and
:til'atson followed With a tOO-foot shot
:OVer the right-center field fence.
:Watson added a lwo-rwt double off
:John Verhoeven in the eighth,
J}though the runs were charged to

Koosman.
: Meanwhile, Guidry scattered nine
:&amp;its walked two and I struck out
iight. He lost his shutout bid With
~o out in the ninth when Dave EdJrards singled and Willie Norwood
:l)omered. After walking Butch
:}'t'ynegar, Guidry gave way to
·Gossage, who fanned pinch hitter

-Rick Sofie!d.
• "I think it was my best outing of
the year," Guidry said. "I've got to
establish my fast ball first, then get
eute with the other stuff. The
problem I've been having is that I'd
stay even as long as it was scoreless,
but I seemed to relax when we got
ahead.
"But tonight I had the idea and
stayed on top With my fast ball. All I
needed was one good game to get
back on top. I just needed to blow the
ball by the hitters."
"I've batted against Jerry before
in the National League," said Watson. "He likes to set you up with the
slow breaking ball, maybe get ahead
on the count. The count was 1-2 and
he got a last ball up, out over the
plate. I hit it real good, but this is a
big ballpark so I was surprised when
it went out."

BW Madlock is still sweating out
his appeal of a suspension and $5,000

fine.
Meanwhile, the Pittsburgh Pirate
infielder is making other National
League teams pay for it.
Playing on wlult virtually amounts
to borrowed time, ~adlock made the
most of it Friday night, slugging a
home run and game-winning
sacrifiCe fly to help the Pirates beat
the San Diego Padres,4-3.
"I hit a lot of homers here in San
Diego, but I don't kno,; why," said
Madlock, whose solo shot in the
eighth pulled the Pirates into a 3-3
tie before his sacrifice fly won it in
the ninth. "I usually try to hit the
ball on the ground. ''
Madlock said he "hit a fastball up
and out"
Bob Shirley for his
homer. Then in the nin~, he slugged
his game-winning fly ball off San
Diego's ace reliever, Rollie Fingers.
"You don't want to get behind
Fingers," said Madlock, who hit the
first offering from the mustachioed
right-bander. "He's one of the best
relievers in the business.''
Although Madlock has been
suspended and fined for a run-in
With umpire Gerry Crawford during
a game against Montreal, he has
been allowed to play pending his ap-

Chi~a4o,

W~y'aGame

NewYorii5, Minnesota2
Baltimore s; Milwaukee :z
Teus2,Chicagoi,llinnings
Detroit&amp;, CaWornia 5, 10 imings
Toronto at Oakland, ppd ., rai.n
Cleveland ot,Seattle 1
SIUiday' aGamea
Kansii.!ICity at8o.'lton
MinnesotaatNewYork
BaltlmoreatMilWa"'ee
-~
.. _
Toronto at Oakland
Cleveland at Seattle
Ch.l.cagoatTeXIUI,n
Mooday'aGam~
Teusat&amp;ltimore,n
Minnesota at Boston, n
Kansas Ci ty at New York, n
Only games scheduled

Philadelphlll 107, 1As Angeles l04,series tied I·
I

~J

~-•tatCaWo-;..

TI~IlU.

I"~: PerMinn~
· ~~~~ ;88. ~!:·

35;
....., ..... ~:aWl:,
..,..,.., ...,; wn .... , , BaToultlms,ore,
... -N
'" ; Rl vers, Texas , Holool. •
l J ,· Moll tor, Mil waw.~~oee,
DOUBLES, D. Garcia, To.onto, It; Morri:!on,
Chicago,
11); McRae,
Kamas8;City, 10; Chiatgu,
B. Bell,
Texas, 9; Yount,
Milwaukee,
8; OUver, Texa.s , 8.

~

Baine:~,

Friday's Sports TraoncdoWI
IWEBALL
American LeJioa
BOSTON RED SOX - Recslled Keith MacWborter, fitcher, from _Pawtucket of ~
ternationa League. Designated Stan Papt , In·
fielder, for reassignment.
FOO'I'IIALL
Natlooal FootbaU League
BUFFALO BIL~ - Signed Jack Quinn and
Steve Carpenter, defensive backs; Mark Rob-

N•tjooaJ Hodey Lague

BA'inNG (50 at bats ): Staub, Te!UlS, .412:
Wathan, Kana., City, .391 ;, Molinaro,
.373; Summers, Detroit, .368; OgilVIe,
Milwaukee, .368.
RUNS : Wills,
24; Yount, Milwaukee,
22 ; Bumbry, 8altimore, l9 ; Tram.nwll, Detroit,
19; Kemp, Detroit , 19.
RBI : Velez , Toronto, 23; 8 . BeU,
23 ; 1Johnson , Chicago, 22; BonneU, Toronto, :!D;
OUver, Texa3,20.

Texa.~,

SICW'day' a Game
LoaAilgelesatPhiladelphia
Sudriy'aGame
LoeAgnelesatPbiladelphfa
WedDr:lday,
U
PhiladelphiaatLosAngeles, n
Friday,
PhitadelMllyll
hl.a if
Loe A.nge1esat o....
,Lln, necessary
.,.......y,
Y
Plliladelpllia at Los Angeles, d ne«ssary

nesota, 3.
HOME RUNS : Velez, Toronto, I ; R.e, Jac:Uon.
New York, 7; Rudi, California, 7; Fisk, Bolton.
6; Mayberry , Toronto, &amp;; &amp;naUey, Minneaota,l;
I... Roberlii, Seattle, 6.
STOLEN BASES: Hendenon, Oaklllnd, 10;
Wills, Tens, 10; Bumbry , Baltimore; t,camr,
caUfoml.a, I ; WU!on, Kansu ctty,l.
PITCHING { :J Dectaiona) : Hooeycut, Seattle,
s-o, 1.000, US ; John , New
1.000, 2.11;
Norria, Oe.klan, 4-4), 1.000. O.+l ; Worthlm,
Chicago, 3.0, l .tXKl, 3.N ; Corbett, Minnelota, s.G,
1.000 ; %.66; Barker, Cleo;eland, t-1 , .100, U7 ;
Stieb, Toronto,
..lm, 2.Z3; Redfern, Minnesot.a • 4--1 , .1100,1.69.
Yorlt ..
STRIKEOUTS: Guidry, New
, ow; nar
fern, Minnosola, 33; Norri.l, Oakland, Jl;
Leo nard • v.
c·t
30
D A ....:ater Seattle 21•
n.41-nsas 1 y, ; DCLIIIIUO •
'
'
MaUack, Texu, 28.
.

York,~.

~1

o~

;n-

Playoff•

By The Associated Preas
- "I found out what I was doing
Wr-ong. I was not pushing off and
coming over the top like I did when I
lhrew well," New York Yankees'
ace pitcher Ron Guidry ~d Friday
!light after blanking Minnesota for
~ innings before needing last-out
j!elp from Rich Gossage as the New
.York Yankees defeated the Twins f&gt;-

AMERICAN LEAGUE

s.mdly, M,iyf
Lo, Angl!l@st09, Phlladelphia 182

Semllillal RGUd

Madlock overcomes his

Ga~e.

NBA Playolb

Friday'• Game.

J1UPLES : 8,.11, Kansu City, t · Grlllln,
Tor«\lo, 3; Nonlhagon, Chicago, 3; Wii.OO, Kar&gt;
sas City , 3; Castino, MinnHola 3; Powell, Min-

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Tbr!Migb Fridlly'l

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Kanaaselty 6, Bo.'lton 5

W. L. PeL GB 1 9 5
1 9

Oakland
Texas

13 1! .500 !
14
.483 3
11 l$ .t tl
n 16 .407 b

Minne8ota

AMERICANI..E.AGUI!
EAST
New Vorl
Toronto
Barton

1~

Kanaao Clly
Seatue
Califomi.a

Scoreboard---

Belt of Seveo
Tueodar., AprO !I
Minnesota 6, Philade phla 5
-New York Islanden 4, Buffalo I
lbllnday,May l

bins Keith Richartbon, Aaron Wiley, and Joe
N~n. wide receivers ; LarT)' Reid, Jim Walsh,
and Dan Conway, fullbacks ; Gregg Jefcoat and

Philadelphia 7, Minnesota 0
New York Islanders 2, Buffalo 1, 2 ot
Sl.tlantay' Mliy 3
New York Islande~ 7, Buffalo4

Hennan Parker, guards ; Card Nord, tight end;
Jay Caffey, tackle; Mark Oeniaon, Unebacker ;

Sondlly' May 4

.11nd Mike Patrick and Mike Deut.!lch, punters.

Philadelphia 5, Minnesota 3

Taesday'a Games

Buffalo 7, New York Islanders f , New York
leadseries3-1
Philadelphia 3, Minnesota 2, Philadelphia
leads series, 3-1
Tbunday'1 Gam~
Philadelphia 7, Minnesota 3, Philadelphia wins
series 4-1
Buffalo 2, New York Islanders 0, New york

leada .series S-2

Saillrday'a Game
Buffalo at New York b.landen
Tueoday,MayU

New York IslanderS at Buffalo, if necessary

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Acquired Paul Ricker, tight end, and Danny
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NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS - S1gned Doo
Westbrook, wide receiver, to a series of four oneyear contracts.
HOCKEY
Natloaal Hockey League

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LOS ANGELES KINGS - Signed Paul
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PIDLADELPIUA FLYERS - Recalled Rick
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Bailey , derenRIIM!n; ~ paul Evans, center,
fran Matne of the Amen can HOC'key League.

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Elsewhere in the National League,
the San Francisco Giants stopped
the Chicago Cubs 6-3; the New York
Mets nipped the Montreal Expos 2-1;
the St.Louis Cardinals powtded the
Los Angeles Dodgers lf&gt;-7; the Atianta Braves defeated the Houston
Astros ~ and the Cincinnati Reds
turned back the Philadelphia
Phillies 5-2.
Reliever Kent Tekulve tied a
major league record with his third
victory in three games. Tekulve,
who has not allowed a rwt in hla last
11 appearances, retired'the final six
straight batters to improve his
record to !MI.
Tekulve's third triumph in three
games bed a record held by six
others but most recently accomplished by Sparky Lyle with the
\New York Yankees in 1977.

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~--Times-Sentinel
01 ele~~
~Anc
·~taeso

BULLETIN .
IRONTON - Wellston scored 104\'z points to claim the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League boys track championship, just completed at
Ironton's Tank Memorial Stadiwn.
Jerry Patton, With victories in the 100-meter dash and long jwnp, led
the Golden Rockets to a one-point victory over the Athens Bulldogs m
the team standings.
.
Waverly was third while the hosts finished fourth, Logan fifth,
Gallia Academy sixth, Jackson seventh and Meigs eighth.
Gallipolis' highest finish was second by Dan Staggs in the shot put
(131-6\'z) while Meigs' highest was turned in by Chris Judge m the high
jump (tied for fifth withGAHS' Todd Nibert at 5-6).

I RED WING I·~

The Reds came right back and tied
the game on a first-inning sacrifice
fly by John Bench, which scoring
Ken Griffey. They went ahead In the
second inning when Dave Col.l.i.nS
scored on Griffey 's single.

C-3-'lbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swtday, May 11,1980

hioValley

_Qoorl Dnl!:...aL

UPPE. ROUTE 7
G.ALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Four locations to serve you better.
Member: FDIC
I

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GALUPOLIS - Former Ohio
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join Howard Bozman, BW Morgan
and Gallia Academy Head Baseball
Coach Jim Osborne wiB conduct a
three-day baseball clinic for boys
and girls age 7-18 Jwte 2-4 at
Memorial Field her;e.
'lbe three ~ioll.'l wiB be conducted from 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. In the
event of rain, the clinic wW rwt the
next session from 1-4:30 p.m.
On-the-field instruction wW include fundamentals in hitting, pitching, baserunning, bunting, defense, sliding and game situations, with
special emphasis placed on sportsmanship, cooperation and goal setting.
Ribbons wW be awarded to each
age group-winner in the running, hitting and throwing events, while a
Mental Attitude Award will also he
awarded.
Each camper who attends all.
three sessions will also receive a
detailed boolllet containing the fund&amp;menta!s covered at the clinic and
a certificate ol completion.
'Ibe entry fee for the three
sessions is '19 in advance or $211 at
.the gate. Some of the proceeds will
go toward the Gallia AcadeJllY
baseball program.
Entry forms are available at
Gallia Academy High School. For
. more information, contact Coach
Osborne at 446-3212 or 446-3250.

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�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May II, 1980

C+-TheSundayTimes-Seritlnel, Sunday, May 11. 1980

•

It's 'Chocolate Thunder,' not 'blunder'
'They should know better
than to mess with my .name
like that. ' -- Dawkins

'·

it and he showed it. He was a completely different ballplayer."
" In the opener Sunday I blew my
cool," said Dawkins, who picked up
three early fouls in that game and
finally fouled out in the fourth quarter. " I didn't stay in and play my
game. I got out of the offense. This
was a different story. I got myself
going early and got better and bet-

by of the Sixers' hotel in Los Angeles
Wednesday prior to the second game

By ALEX SCHARRE
AP Sports Writer
Plfll..ADELPiflA (AP ) - Darryl
Dawkins , who plays center for the
Philadelphia 76ers when he ISn't
reaming the wilds .of his adopted
planet Lovetron, lists "Chocolate
Thunder" among his favorite
nicknames.
So he didn 't react too kindly when
a couple of Los Angeles writers,
unimpressed by his Ill-minute per·
formance in the Lakers' 109-102 victory in the opening game of the
National Basketball Association

of the series. "I'm no dessert . But
they can call me whatever they want
- I know I'll come up solid."
Hours later, the &amp;-foot-11, 2S2pound Dawkins did just that, scoring
2S points in 39 minutes and playing a
solid aU-around game in helping the
Sixers even the best'of-seven playoff
finals with a 107-104 victory.

ter.''

To keep Dawkins out of foul
trouble and in the game, Cunningham switched him away from
the Lakers' awesome center ,
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar, and had him
guard Los Angeles' less potent forward, Jim Chones. While AbdulJabbar was brilliant with 38 points
and 14 rebounds against slender
Caldwell Jones, the move worked in
that Dawkins managed to stay off

The fourth game of the series, will
be played here Sunday afternoon.
Game Five is scheduled for Los
Angeles Wednesday night.
Game Three, played saturday afternoon, was also at the Spectrum.
" Darryl is a guy who wants to
win," sai d Sixers Coach Billy Cunningham. " He ~willing to work for

championship series, changed his
nickname to "Chocolate Blunder" or worse, "Chocolate Pudding."
·' They should know better than to
mess with my name like that," said
Dawkins as he killed time in the lob-

Tigers wonder if 'Bird' will fly agru.n
ched three scoreless innings Thur·
sday while yielding only one hit.
" I'm encouraged by that," Camp- •
bell said. "That might change

BUlLETIN
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP )- Mark
"The Bird" Fidrych's baseball
future apparenUy was still up in the
air after he met Friday with Jim
Campbell, Detroit Tigers president
and general manager, and officials
of the Evansville Triplets, Detroit's
American Association farm club.
Campbell called rumors of
Fidrych's retirement "just
speculation" after meeting with
Evansville manager Jim Leyland
and general manager Chuck Murphy.
He ~d additional meetings on the
future of the 1976 American League
rookie of the year, who was assigned
to Evansville this spring, are planned durihg the weekend.
Until Thursday, Fidrych's future
looked bleak after four poor performances with Evansville.
However, he struck out five and pit-

the bench.
The victory enabled the 76ers to
take away the homecourt advantage
in the series, which Los Angeles had
earned by winning 60 games during
the regular season to 59 for
Philadelphia.
"We came out to their building
and got a split," said CuMlngham.
"We would rather have won two, d
course, but we have to be satisfied.
Now they have to win at least once In
Philadelphia."
No Laker team has won in
Philadelphia since 1975, a streak of
nin~ losses. It's a streak that's about
to end, says Chones.
" We know we are better than they
are," claimed the Los Angeles for·
ward. " We know we can come back,
and we know we can win on the road
in the playoffs.

everything."

DETROIT (AP) - Mark " The
Bird" Fidrych can't pitch like he
used to and Jim Campbell wonders if
he ever will again.
Campbell, the Detroit Tigers'
president and general manager,
said he was going to Friday to Evansvllle, Ind., where Fidrych is
assigned to the Triplets of the
American Association.
Campbell was to huddle with
Fidrych, Triplets' Manager Jim
Leyland and Chuck Murphy, general
manager of the minor league club.
Fidrych, who was on the Tigers'
spring training roster, was shipped
to the Triplets just before Detroit
broke camp.

In four starts at Evansl1ille,
however, the 1976 American League
rookie of the year has pitched 15%
innings , given up 25 hits, is ().2 and
has a 9.39 ERA.
In his last start, Fidrych pitched to
four men, getting one out and giving
up three hits against Oklahoma City.
"I don't have the first idea what
we' re going to do," Campbell said
Thursday. " I'm just going down to
visit. Certainly, we're concerned.''
"My greatest hope is that Mark
can pitch again. But hope springs
eternal, I guess," said Campbell. "I
just don't know, though . I wish I

season .
Murphy said in a telephone con·
versation Thursday that Fidrych
" has no velocity, no snap" when he
pitches.

did,II

After posting a 19-9 record in his
rookie season, Fidrych injured his
knee during spring training the
following year. After the knee
healed, he hurt his arm and never
has · been the same since. Fidrych
was 6-4 in 1977, 2-0 ln 1978 and ().3last

Campbell would not rule out
on Fidrych's weak right
shoulder, a lthou~h he conceded that
such operations on baseball pitchers

s ur ~ery

'' He won't say his ann hurts,"

generally have been.unsuccessful .
" I don't know the answer, " Campbell conceded . "I know one thing .
Right now he can 't pitch."
Even though he is assigned to
Evansville, Fidrych remains on the
Tigers' 40-man roster and will
receive his full $130,000 salary this
year, regardless of what is decided
over the weekend.
Fidrych needs 10 more days in the
major leagues to qualify for his pen-

Murphy satd, however, that
Fidrych has changed his motion
while throwing in the bullpen the
past week. Meanwhile, Fidrych is
out of the Triplets rotation.
said Murphy. "He'll double-talk you.
He doesn't have anything on the ball.
He's just not pitching like he used

to.

11

sion. Campbell promised Fidrych
two years ago he would get that, no
matter what. If he no longer could
pitch, Fidrych would qualify simply
by being placed on Detroit's
disabled list for 10 days.

"He's sort of in a gray area right
now," Murphy said. "We've got to
think about the rest of the team. I
just hope Mark and Jim Campbell
will get it squared away ."

Garland may
knuckle his
CLEVELAND (AP) - Wayne
Garland may try to knuckle his way
back to stardom in the American
League.
The former 20-game winner with
the Baltimore OMoles says he has
begun experimenting with a
knuckleball during game action this
season. Garland, 29, hurls for the
Cleveland Indians and has seven
years remaining on a !().year, $2.3
million contract with Cleveland.
Garland's three seasons in
Cleveland have been plagued by
arm and shoulder injuries, and he is
currently trying to make a
comeback from surgery on a rotator
cuff of his right shoulder.
Garland has seen only limited ac·
tion so far this season, but tried the
knuckler for the first time last Sunday in a game Cleveland lost to the
Toronto Blue Jays.
He used the pitch about 4ll percent
of the time in four innings of work.
He did not allow a run in the first
three innings and yielded just one
hit. Otto Velez ripped a Garland
slider for a home run in the fourth inning.
~&lt; J'm convinced Wayne can win in
the majors as a knuckleball pitcher," said Manager Dave Garcia
after watching Garland's performance .
· Garland maintains that he has
known how to throw the pitch for
years. But he says he is hesitant to
change a style that has been successful for him in the past.
" I really don't know where the
knuckleball fits in with my other pitches," he said. "Naturally, I was
pleased to see it work well, but it's
not correct to say that I'm becoming
a knuckleball pitcher.
"I learned it off of TV or
somewhere. I saw the grip and I just
started experimenting with it. I
throw it by using two fingernails to
grip the ball. The knuckleball is not
something I just came up with."
He said he used the pitch occaslonal;y early in his major league
career.
"In 1974, (OMoles Manager ) Earl
Weaver said it was my best pitch,"
Garland said. "But it seemed like
my fastball and screwball took over.
I just threw them more and sort of
put the knuckler in the closet.
"I really can't pitch more than once or twice a week in relief. I've told
Dave Garcia that. Everyone knows.
The knuckleball might help me
bounce back faster."
I

Pole more
than status

.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Qualifying on the pole, the Inside of
the front row of the starting field for
the Indianapolis 500 mile auto race,
is more than a bid for prestige and
publicity. It's a decided advantage
which Is what makes saturday's first fitlY of time trials so important at
the motor speedway.
In the past quarter century, the
fastest qualifier on the first day of
time trials has gone on to win the Indianapolis 500 five times. The second
place starter has won four times,
and the No.3 qualifier has won three
times.

..

-•'' ..
c '

'.
'

.".'
..
,•

'

Only four times since 1955, in fact,
has the winner come from farther
back than eighth in the 33-car starting field.
The last one to d.o that was Johnny
Rutherford, who threaded his way to
the front from a 25th-place start en
route to his first Indy victory in 1974.
In 1974 when Rutherford qualified
at 190.~ mph, he had to start in the
ninth row, although only A.J. Foyt's
191.632 speed bettered his.
\1

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ByJlMCOUR
AP Sports Writer
SEAITLE (AP) - The Incident in
the Baltimore elevator in late July
epitomized left-bander Rick
Honeycutt's 1979 season with' the
Seattle Mariners.
Honeycutt, a likeable Georgian
with a puckish sense of hwnor,
jocularly reached inside a box of
steamed crabs being carried by catcher Bob Stinson and tapped one
with a mallet.
In the throes of a batting slwnp,
Stinson, a veteran who is normally a
placid fellow, responded by pun·
ching Honeycutt in the mouth.
''I guess,'' Honeycutt said with a
chuckie, "I did something in the
wrong place at the wrong time."
Honeycutt can iaugh at the past
now. After his first five starts of
1980, be was baseball's winningest
pitcher - with a 5-0 record. In 42¥.1
innings, he had three complete
games, a shutout against the defending American League West champion California Angels and a 2.55
earned run a1erage.
In 1979, he finished 11-12 with a 4.04
ERA after opening with an ().4
record and a 7.06-plus ERA.
"About. a year ago at this time,"
Honeycutt recalled, " I had my head
between my legs and I kept waiting
to see if they wanted me to pack my
bags."
He wasn't kidding, either. He went
to the Mariners' pitching coach, Wes
Stock, and asked if he was headed to
the team's Pacific Coast League
farm club at Spokane. He was told
no .
· " It's a lot more fun when you're
winning, of course," Honeycutt said
of 1980. " If there's any difference
between myself now and myseH a
year ago, it's confidence.
"It's my third year in the major
leagues and I have a lot more confidence in myseH. I know I can go
1 out - even with mediocre stuff now
- and pitch a good ball game. I
wasn't that confident in myseH
before."
Honeycutt grew up in Oglethorpe,
Ga., and played baseball at the
University of TeMessee. He was Pittsburgh's No. 17 choice in the June
1976 free agent draft and pitched for
Niagara Falis and Shreveport in the
Pirates' farm system in 1976 and
1977.
The Mariners acquired him July
'll , 1977, in a trade for pitcher Dave
Pagan. Pagan is now out of baseball.
Although Honeycutt was only pitching in Class AA baseball at
Shreveport,
Seattle general
manager Lou Gorman liked
Honeycutt's potential from the
scouting reports he saw. All he
I, needed was experience, Gorman
concluded.
Honeycutt pitched in 10 games for
the Mariners in 1977 and was f&gt;.ll
with a 4.90 ERA in 1978.
"Physically," the 2f&gt;.year-old
1 southpaw said, "I may be a little bit
stronger, but mostly my improvement has been mental. My
whole outlook is a lot better this
year."
HOCKEY
ATLANTA (AP) - Atlanta
Flames owner Tom Cousins said It is
likely he will sell the financially
troubled NHL club to businessmen
in Calgary, Alberts, within the next .
few weeks.
But Cousins said the sale depends
upon whether he is satisfied that the
city of Calgary and province of
Alberta are conunltted to bnllrttna a
$30 million coliseum that would
become the clubr new home •

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May II, 1980

C+-TheSundayTimes-Seritlnel, Sunday, May 11. 1980

•

It's 'Chocolate Thunder,' not 'blunder'
'They should know better
than to mess with my .name
like that. ' -- Dawkins

'·

it and he showed it. He was a completely different ballplayer."
" In the opener Sunday I blew my
cool," said Dawkins, who picked up
three early fouls in that game and
finally fouled out in the fourth quarter. " I didn't stay in and play my
game. I got out of the offense. This
was a different story. I got myself
going early and got better and bet-

by of the Sixers' hotel in Los Angeles
Wednesday prior to the second game

By ALEX SCHARRE
AP Sports Writer
Plfll..ADELPiflA (AP ) - Darryl
Dawkins , who plays center for the
Philadelphia 76ers when he ISn't
reaming the wilds .of his adopted
planet Lovetron, lists "Chocolate
Thunder" among his favorite
nicknames.
So he didn 't react too kindly when
a couple of Los Angeles writers,
unimpressed by his Ill-minute per·
formance in the Lakers' 109-102 victory in the opening game of the
National Basketball Association

of the series. "I'm no dessert . But
they can call me whatever they want
- I know I'll come up solid."
Hours later, the &amp;-foot-11, 2S2pound Dawkins did just that, scoring
2S points in 39 minutes and playing a
solid aU-around game in helping the
Sixers even the best'of-seven playoff
finals with a 107-104 victory.

ter.''

To keep Dawkins out of foul
trouble and in the game, Cunningham switched him away from
the Lakers' awesome center ,
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar, and had him
guard Los Angeles' less potent forward, Jim Chones. While AbdulJabbar was brilliant with 38 points
and 14 rebounds against slender
Caldwell Jones, the move worked in
that Dawkins managed to stay off

The fourth game of the series, will
be played here Sunday afternoon.
Game Five is scheduled for Los
Angeles Wednesday night.
Game Three, played saturday afternoon, was also at the Spectrum.
" Darryl is a guy who wants to
win," sai d Sixers Coach Billy Cunningham. " He ~willing to work for

championship series, changed his
nickname to "Chocolate Blunder" or worse, "Chocolate Pudding."
·' They should know better than to
mess with my name like that," said
Dawkins as he killed time in the lob-

Tigers wonder if 'Bird' will fly agru.n
ched three scoreless innings Thur·
sday while yielding only one hit.
" I'm encouraged by that," Camp- •
bell said. "That might change

BUlLETIN
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP )- Mark
"The Bird" Fidrych's baseball
future apparenUy was still up in the
air after he met Friday with Jim
Campbell, Detroit Tigers president
and general manager, and officials
of the Evansville Triplets, Detroit's
American Association farm club.
Campbell called rumors of
Fidrych's retirement "just
speculation" after meeting with
Evansville manager Jim Leyland
and general manager Chuck Murphy.
He ~d additional meetings on the
future of the 1976 American League
rookie of the year, who was assigned
to Evansville this spring, are planned durihg the weekend.
Until Thursday, Fidrych's future
looked bleak after four poor performances with Evansville.
However, he struck out five and pit-

the bench.
The victory enabled the 76ers to
take away the homecourt advantage
in the series, which Los Angeles had
earned by winning 60 games during
the regular season to 59 for
Philadelphia.
"We came out to their building
and got a split," said CuMlngham.
"We would rather have won two, d
course, but we have to be satisfied.
Now they have to win at least once In
Philadelphia."
No Laker team has won in
Philadelphia since 1975, a streak of
nin~ losses. It's a streak that's about
to end, says Chones.
" We know we are better than they
are," claimed the Los Angeles for·
ward. " We know we can come back,
and we know we can win on the road
in the playoffs.

everything."

DETROIT (AP) - Mark " The
Bird" Fidrych can't pitch like he
used to and Jim Campbell wonders if
he ever will again.
Campbell, the Detroit Tigers'
president and general manager,
said he was going to Friday to Evansvllle, Ind., where Fidrych is
assigned to the Triplets of the
American Association.
Campbell was to huddle with
Fidrych, Triplets' Manager Jim
Leyland and Chuck Murphy, general
manager of the minor league club.
Fidrych, who was on the Tigers'
spring training roster, was shipped
to the Triplets just before Detroit
broke camp.

In four starts at Evansl1ille,
however, the 1976 American League
rookie of the year has pitched 15%
innings , given up 25 hits, is ().2 and
has a 9.39 ERA.
In his last start, Fidrych pitched to
four men, getting one out and giving
up three hits against Oklahoma City.
"I don't have the first idea what
we' re going to do," Campbell said
Thursday. " I'm just going down to
visit. Certainly, we're concerned.''
"My greatest hope is that Mark
can pitch again. But hope springs
eternal, I guess," said Campbell. "I
just don't know, though . I wish I

season .
Murphy said in a telephone con·
versation Thursday that Fidrych
" has no velocity, no snap" when he
pitches.

did,II

After posting a 19-9 record in his
rookie season, Fidrych injured his
knee during spring training the
following year. After the knee
healed, he hurt his arm and never
has · been the same since. Fidrych
was 6-4 in 1977, 2-0 ln 1978 and ().3last

Campbell would not rule out
on Fidrych's weak right
shoulder, a lthou~h he conceded that
such operations on baseball pitchers

s ur ~ery

'' He won't say his ann hurts,"

generally have been.unsuccessful .
" I don't know the answer, " Campbell conceded . "I know one thing .
Right now he can 't pitch."
Even though he is assigned to
Evansville, Fidrych remains on the
Tigers' 40-man roster and will
receive his full $130,000 salary this
year, regardless of what is decided
over the weekend.
Fidrych needs 10 more days in the
major leagues to qualify for his pen-

Murphy satd, however, that
Fidrych has changed his motion
while throwing in the bullpen the
past week. Meanwhile, Fidrych is
out of the Triplets rotation.
said Murphy. "He'll double-talk you.
He doesn't have anything on the ball.
He's just not pitching like he used

to.

11

sion. Campbell promised Fidrych
two years ago he would get that, no
matter what. If he no longer could
pitch, Fidrych would qualify simply
by being placed on Detroit's
disabled list for 10 days.

"He's sort of in a gray area right
now," Murphy said. "We've got to
think about the rest of the team. I
just hope Mark and Jim Campbell
will get it squared away ."

Garland may
knuckle his
CLEVELAND (AP) - Wayne
Garland may try to knuckle his way
back to stardom in the American
League.
The former 20-game winner with
the Baltimore OMoles says he has
begun experimenting with a
knuckleball during game action this
season. Garland, 29, hurls for the
Cleveland Indians and has seven
years remaining on a !().year, $2.3
million contract with Cleveland.
Garland's three seasons in
Cleveland have been plagued by
arm and shoulder injuries, and he is
currently trying to make a
comeback from surgery on a rotator
cuff of his right shoulder.
Garland has seen only limited ac·
tion so far this season, but tried the
knuckler for the first time last Sunday in a game Cleveland lost to the
Toronto Blue Jays.
He used the pitch about 4ll percent
of the time in four innings of work.
He did not allow a run in the first
three innings and yielded just one
hit. Otto Velez ripped a Garland
slider for a home run in the fourth inning.
~&lt; J'm convinced Wayne can win in
the majors as a knuckleball pitcher," said Manager Dave Garcia
after watching Garland's performance .
· Garland maintains that he has
known how to throw the pitch for
years. But he says he is hesitant to
change a style that has been successful for him in the past.
" I really don't know where the
knuckleball fits in with my other pitches," he said. "Naturally, I was
pleased to see it work well, but it's
not correct to say that I'm becoming
a knuckleball pitcher.
"I learned it off of TV or
somewhere. I saw the grip and I just
started experimenting with it. I
throw it by using two fingernails to
grip the ball. The knuckleball is not
something I just came up with."
He said he used the pitch occaslonal;y early in his major league
career.
"In 1974, (OMoles Manager ) Earl
Weaver said it was my best pitch,"
Garland said. "But it seemed like
my fastball and screwball took over.
I just threw them more and sort of
put the knuckler in the closet.
"I really can't pitch more than once or twice a week in relief. I've told
Dave Garcia that. Everyone knows.
The knuckleball might help me
bounce back faster."
I

Pole more
than status

.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Qualifying on the pole, the Inside of
the front row of the starting field for
the Indianapolis 500 mile auto race,
is more than a bid for prestige and
publicity. It's a decided advantage
which Is what makes saturday's first fitlY of time trials so important at
the motor speedway.
In the past quarter century, the
fastest qualifier on the first day of
time trials has gone on to win the Indianapolis 500 five times. The second
place starter has won four times,
and the No.3 qualifier has won three
times.

..

-•'' ..
c '

'.
'

.".'
..
,•

'

Only four times since 1955, in fact,
has the winner come from farther
back than eighth in the 33-car starting field.
The last one to d.o that was Johnny
Rutherford, who threaded his way to
the front from a 25th-place start en
route to his first Indy victory in 1974.
In 1974 when Rutherford qualified
at 190.~ mph, he had to start in the
ninth row, although only A.J. Foyt's
191.632 speed bettered his.
\1

Elevator
incident
·elevates
lefty

Pennufare

way back

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PIZZA
CHEESE • • • • • • • •1·11.4-o.Pkg. $1,69
PEPPERONI •••• llb.l••· •••· $2,69
COMBO • • •
1-lb ll·oz. Pkg. $2,89

~~~P.!!~ !ANS • •..• . •.••• u-o1. can 28C

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KIELBASA or SMOKED SAUSAGE. ••••• lb. 1 1.79
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RING LIVER •••••••••• , •.••••.•• lb 1 1.79

WIENERS-tea.orTeJGISize • • • • • • • • • • • • 'J.Ib. Pkg . 5 1.4 9
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THOROFARE

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ByJlMCOUR
AP Sports Writer
SEAITLE (AP) - The Incident in
the Baltimore elevator in late July
epitomized left-bander Rick
Honeycutt's 1979 season with' the
Seattle Mariners.
Honeycutt, a likeable Georgian
with a puckish sense of hwnor,
jocularly reached inside a box of
steamed crabs being carried by catcher Bob Stinson and tapped one
with a mallet.
In the throes of a batting slwnp,
Stinson, a veteran who is normally a
placid fellow, responded by pun·
ching Honeycutt in the mouth.
''I guess,'' Honeycutt said with a
chuckie, "I did something in the
wrong place at the wrong time."
Honeycutt can iaugh at the past
now. After his first five starts of
1980, be was baseball's winningest
pitcher - with a 5-0 record. In 42¥.1
innings, he had three complete
games, a shutout against the defending American League West champion California Angels and a 2.55
earned run a1erage.
In 1979, he finished 11-12 with a 4.04
ERA after opening with an ().4
record and a 7.06-plus ERA.
"About. a year ago at this time,"
Honeycutt recalled, " I had my head
between my legs and I kept waiting
to see if they wanted me to pack my
bags."
He wasn't kidding, either. He went
to the Mariners' pitching coach, Wes
Stock, and asked if he was headed to
the team's Pacific Coast League
farm club at Spokane. He was told
no .
· " It's a lot more fun when you're
winning, of course," Honeycutt said
of 1980. " If there's any difference
between myself now and myseH a
year ago, it's confidence.
"It's my third year in the major
leagues and I have a lot more confidence in myseH. I know I can go
1 out - even with mediocre stuff now
- and pitch a good ball game. I
wasn't that confident in myseH
before."
Honeycutt grew up in Oglethorpe,
Ga., and played baseball at the
University of TeMessee. He was Pittsburgh's No. 17 choice in the June
1976 free agent draft and pitched for
Niagara Falis and Shreveport in the
Pirates' farm system in 1976 and
1977.
The Mariners acquired him July
'll , 1977, in a trade for pitcher Dave
Pagan. Pagan is now out of baseball.
Although Honeycutt was only pitching in Class AA baseball at
Shreveport,
Seattle general
manager Lou Gorman liked
Honeycutt's potential from the
scouting reports he saw. All he
I, needed was experience, Gorman
concluded.
Honeycutt pitched in 10 games for
the Mariners in 1977 and was f&gt;.ll
with a 4.90 ERA in 1978.
"Physically," the 2f&gt;.year-old
1 southpaw said, "I may be a little bit
stronger, but mostly my improvement has been mental. My
whole outlook is a lot better this
year."
HOCKEY
ATLANTA (AP) - Atlanta
Flames owner Tom Cousins said It is
likely he will sell the financially
troubled NHL club to businessmen
in Calgary, Alberts, within the next .
few weeks.
But Cousins said the sale depends
upon whether he is satisfied that the
city of Calgary and province of
Alberta are conunltted to bnllrttna a
$30 million coliseum that would
become the clubr new home •

�~The Sunday Time:H&gt;entinel, Sunday,

C- 7 ~The Sunday Times-&amp;:ntinel , Sunday, May 11, 1980

May II , 1980

Finley indicates team still for sale

Today's

A's even amazing Charlie 0

Sports
World

'i·.

i

By Will Grimsley

Seaver won't hang around
When Tom Seaver returns to Shea
Stadium, as he did Monday night in
the colors of the Cincinnati Reds,
one might expect him to conjure up
all sorts of nostalgic - and perhaps
bitter - memories.
The mad scene that Oct. 16 day in
1969 when the once " Futile and
Frustrated Mets" emerged from
their cocoon as the " Miracle Mets,"
winners over favored Baltunore in
baseball's World Series.
Jubilant spectators pouring onto
the field to rape the sacred sod,
pulling up huge chunks for
:;ouvenirs. The big blase city of New
Vork busting out of its seams.
· The quiet efficiency of Ma nager
Gil Hodges. The dynamic pitc hing
duo of Seaver and J erry Koosman
(43 victories between them). Dmrn
Clendenon's three home runs. AI
Weis, a .255 hitter, reaching beyond
his norm by batting .455 .
The repeat act of 1973, again in the
World Series but beaten in seven
games by the likes of future Yankees
such as Reggie Jackson, Catfish
Hunter and Ken Holtzman, all
wearing Oakland A's uniforms. The
rallying cry of relief ace Tug
McGraw, '' Yougotta believe!''
" Sure, I have fond memories,"
said Seaver, prior to taking the
mound against his former teammates in only his third Shea appearance since he was traded to the
Reds in June, 1977.
" I'm happy to be coming home to
New York but I'm not one to wallow
in sentiment. I don't engage in
recriminations. I don't sit around
and mope and think of what might
have been.

" I am ve ry happy where I am. I
am with a great ball club which I
think will win the division and
maybe the World Series. Although I
live in Connecticut and spend my off
months in this area, I can't honestly
say I miss New York .
" When you're playing baseball.
you don't feel homesick for a ny city .
You're putting on your uniform
seve n days a week, hitting airports,
packing and unpacking luggage,
working every day and a lot- or·
nights . Your home is the dugout."
Seaver made his first return to
Shea in a rival un'iform Aug. 21, 1977,
some two months after being traded,
beating Koosman 5-1. He didn 't pitch
here in !978 but last season, on Aug.
26, he hurled an 8-0 shutout. The
Mets have beaten him two out of
three at Cincinnati's Riverfront
Stadium.
Now 35 years old, one the great
right-handed pitchers of all time,
Seaver appears headed lor certain
Hall of Fame immortality. In his 13
major league seasons, through 1979,
he has compiled the remarkable
record of 235 victories, 2,887
strikeouts and an earned-run
average, baseball's true gauge of
mound efficiency, of 2.55.
He ranks fifth in the all-time list of
strikeout specialists .with 2,887 compared to Walter Johnson 's firstplace 3,508. His ERA is second only
to ,Johnson's 2.37 among pitchers
who have worked more than 3,000 innings.
"I would like to get 300 wins,
naturally, but I won't press. My aim
is to be a consistent pitcher. When I
find I'm not, I won'! hang around
just to boost my statistics," he said.

Where is 'Mex' on off-day?
It was an off-&lt;lay for Lee Trevino,
so where could you find pro goU's
garrulous, free-spirited " Super
Mex?"- upstairs, hitting golf balls,
that's where.
. He is like the postman who spends
his holiday taking long hikes in the
country. He never tires of golf - or
people.
On this occasion, the litUe shot-

making magician was stealing the
show at the New York Coliseum,
demonstrating a training ginunick
called "Sweet Spotter." The club
head reflects the exact spot where it
makes contact with the ball .
A man in the long lines awaiting
an audience with the game's most

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He said he believes the team will

remain in Oakland indefinitely, but
that the Oakland Raiders will be
playing in Los Angeles in 1981. .
"There is no way the Coliseum
board will pennit the A's to move
with eight years remaining on their
lease and with the threat of the
Raiders moving," said Finley.
"They're not going to wind up with
that uh mausolewn (the Oakland
collie~) empty. They won't allow
it to become a white elephant."

GET YOUR MONEY
IN THE GOING RATE

GOLF
DALLAS (AP) - Tom Watson
toured the Preston Trail Golf Club
with a 6-under-par 64 lor a twG-shot
lead over Curtis Strange and George
Cadle in the first-round of the
$300,000 Byron Nelson Golf Classic.
ATLANTA (AP) - Pam Higgins
fired a 6-under-par 67 for a onestroke lead over Kathy Ahem and
Marlene Floyd in the first round of
the $100,000 Atlanta LPGA event.
PARIS (AP ) - Greg Norman of
Australia and Britain's Maurice
Bembridge shot 6-under-par 66s and
tied for the lead at the halfway point
of the 64th French Open with 133s.

Martin has given the A's a new
confidence, said Finley.
" The team is young and needs a
leader. Billy is a leader and he has
them believing in themselves.
That's so important in this game.
You've gotta believe in yourselves."
Finley said he gives Martin a wide
rein, a luxury not many A's
managers have enjoyed.

going on now."

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By

An AP Spoi1B Analysis
By FRED ROTHENBERG
AP Spo11B Writer
In some cities, the NBA on CBS
isn't orr CBS. The game might be
dribbled over to a n independent
station but, then again, it may nnt he
seen at all.

George Strode

The 'eyes' have it
Quarterback Fran Tarkenton of
fast.
the Minnesota Vikings earned fame
After testing quarterbacks on six
with his quick feet, but an expert
pro teams - the Browns, Lions,
says Sonny Jurgenson made good
Bucs, Patriots, Bills and Cowboysanother way- with shifty eyes.
Bailey found that Cleveland's Brian
" More important than quick feet Sipe had the fastest eyes among acIs quick eyes - how fast a person tive passers.
can move his eyes from point to
But a quarterback with slow eyes
point," says Howard Bailey, an
need not despair. Bailey worked
ocular motor specialist_ who
with Sipe to improve his eye
operates the Athletic Perception Inmovement from 4.2 times per second
stitute here and in LaJolla, Calif.
in 1978 to 4.8 times last year.
Batley's business is measuring an
"It's difficult to say how imathlete's eye movements and
portant it is," said Cleveland quarhelping him improve his vision. He's
terback coach Chuck Shofner, " but
tested quarterbacks from several
it stands to reason a quarterback
pro football teams as well as college
has got to move his eyes. It's a learplayers in several sports.
ned skill. Last year from the start of
"Peripheral vision is overrated/'
the seson to the end our quarsays Bailey, holding his hands three
terbacks showed a significant diffeet apart and telling his subject to
ference in how quickly they could
look between them . " You are aware
move their eyes because of Howard
Bailey's program ."
that I am holding my hands up.
That's peripheral vision.
The program, which costs $500,
"But you can't tell hom wany
has college subscribers including
fingers I'm holding up . To do that,
Notre Dame, Michigan, Michigan
you must look directly at my hands.
State, Arizona State, San Diego
The accurate span of recognition is - State, San Diego State, Norvery small."
thwestern Louisiana, Central
Bailey applies this principle to
Michigan and Cleveland State.
sports. It is advantageous for a quarWhile football teams have been
the most interested so far, Bailey
terback to be able to move his eyes
quickly from point to point on the
believes he can help basketball and
baseball players also. San Diego
field, and tests prove some quarterbacks can move their eyes
State's baseball hitting improved
quicker than others.
significantly after the course.
Jurgenson, for example , had the
"It Is difficult to hit a baseball
traveling 90 miles an hour when your
most mobile eyes Bailey ever
checked. He could move his eyes
eyes move only 30 miles an hour, "
Bailey said. " Take Gary Alexander
from side to side 4.9 times a second.
of the Indians. He strikes out so
Given three seconds of pass protection, Jurgenson ~auld look acmuch because he is swinging at a
blur. If he could move his eyes as
curately at aimost 15 different spots
on the field before throwing .
fast as the ball is pitched, it would be
Bailey found some quarterbacks
like swinging at a stationary otr
whose eyes moved only half that
ject.''

A warning to Ali

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NAME=---- - - - - - - - - - - : - - - ADDRESS: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
PHONE: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
TYPE OF POOL: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
AGE OF POOL: _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ __
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SPECIFIC PROBLEMS: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
(ALGAE, FOGGY WATER, ETC.)

Promoter Don King has a warning
for Muharrunad Ali if the former
champion isn 't ready for World
Boxing Association champion Larry
Holmes this summer:
" If Ali isn't in shape, he'll be comroiling suicide.' '
King has lined up the Ali-Holmes
showdown for July 11 in a 165,000seat stadium in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil.
" Ali is the grea test of all time,"
said the promoter . a one-time
Cleveland numbers operator and
Ohio convict. " Undoubtedly, he's the
most identifiable figure on earth.
" But· you have to remember one
thing - Holmes has a monumental
record. He is 3~. He's been fighting
in the shadow of a legend all of his
life. Even when Ali wasn't around,
Holmes was fighting the ghost of a
legend.
" Now he has his big chance. "
Ali was an honored gues t at
Wilberforce Unive rsity's commencement and held a press con-

ference in connection with his visit .
But life wasn't alWays a bed of
roses for King. He served four years
in the Ohio Penitentiary after being
c.onvicted of manslaughter in an
early morning street fight that
fatally wounded Sam Garrett.
Nevel;theless, King is not ashamed
of his past.
.
" Actually, I'm proud of it," he
said. " There 's not going to be any
denial. I believe you ca n't walk the
line of neutra litY: You have to take a
side and stand up for what yo u
believe in .' '

About 15 of c;:BS' 200 affiliates
aren't showing tlle National Basketball Association's championship
series between Los Angeles and
Philadelphia . WSPA in Spartanburg, S.C., one of the key dissenters, hasn't had anybody storm its
station in protest, either .
" We have an obligation to show
programs that people want to see. "
said David Handy, station-program
manager of WSPA. "All the evidence that we have is that not too many
people want to watch it."
The NBA's final round is akin to

TV Sports
baseball's World Series and football's Super Bowl in capping a
season and crowning a champion but
certainly not in television appeal.
While the last Super Bowl game
and five of the seven 1979 World
Series games were in prime time, no
NBA playoff game will get the highvisibility time slots normally reserved for " M.A.S.H." and "The Dukes
of Hazzard."
The reason is simple. The NBA
just doesn't attract enough viewers
to warrant prime time exposure.
Although CBS Sports would love to
air one of its prize products when
more people are watching TV , the

'We are being
used as pawns'
By HAL BOCK

URGENTLY _NE_E!:':_';'
OIL AND GAS LEASES
GALLIA COUNTY
· To fulfill tufure dnlling programs, pl ease write or call and be sure to
1nctude proer t v location and acreage that 's availabl e for l ease.
UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
P . O. BOX 142

It has been nearly a month now
since · the United States Olympic
Committee officially decided not to
send a team to the 1980 Swnmer
Games at Moscow and the reality of
the situation is settling in on athletes
who were preparing for the competition.
There is a feeling of anger in some
and acceptance in others. But
mostly, there is a sense or
frustration at the idea of politics interfering with a sports competition.
Rower Anita DeFrantz, a bronze
medalist at Montreal in 1976,
initiated a class action s uit
challenging the boycott and
charging that USOC did not have the
jurisdiction to decide the issue . '
" I want to go to the Olympics· in
1980," said DeFrantz, who is an attorney. "The purpose of the suit is to
give the athletes the right to decide
the Issues for themselves. Some of
the plaintiffs have made it clear that
they wouldn't go, but they want the
right to decide."
Realistically, DeFrantz cannot go
to the Games. Because hers is a
team sport, sbe could not compete as
an individual. What's more, she
couldn't afford the trip without
USOC financial support, anyway.
"We are being used as pa wns,' '
charged DeFrantz.

Phone 1-53'1-1)101

~O hi o4563 8

" Now that we're no longer useful,

AP Spoi1B Writer

nobOOy cares."
Super swimmer Tracy Caulkins, a
...

17-year-old who was considered a
cinch for a medal in Moscow, said: '
"I still feel a little disappointed at
losing the opportunity to compete ,"
she said. " But I've accepted it now
and I'm just trying to do my best in
the mee!J! I'll swim in this summer. I
think the sooner you accept it, the
better off you'll be and the better off
your swirruning will be."
Caulkins naturally felt hurt a t first. " It hurt a lot," she said .
" I've never gone. I've talked to
people who've gone and they told me
what I'll be missing.
" When the decision wa s announced, I felt that I wanted to go
but I also wanted to support my
country . I am an American . I had
mixed feelings .
" Now, a lot of pressure has been
relieved . The wondering is over. A
definite decision has been made and
I've got to make the best of it."
Many athletes expect an alter
native event to be arranged for countries supporting the American
position. Because of that possibility
as well as national and other international competitions, they ar e
maintaining their training regimens
as if they were preparing for the
Olympics.

'

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And you've asked!. • • .

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'

National
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Perhaps mindful of his own experiences , King said, " No matter
what the odds, if you're steadfast
and tenacious in what you do, you
can make it in America.
" The doors of opportunity are
here, but they' re not going to open
for vou. You got to kick doors down.
Yo~ must demand . You must take.
But you have to stay withm the
rules."

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Golden Bear's slump
Jack Nicklaus has undergone a
.radical change in his short game,
trying to shake a puzzling slump that
has left golf's all-time money winner
winless in 197~ and 1980.

.

seasons . Each year the audience •
level dropped," said · Handy . '
"During those four years, the CBS ·,
stations in Atlanta and Charlotte
(N.C.) both stopped carrying the
NBA. We thought if the two markets :
east and west of us stopped covering :
the NBA, we would get some fallout.
But we didn'thavl! any growth.
" The audience was so low we
couldn't find people interested in
buying local sales. The ratings for
golf and tennis are also low, but at
least there is some sponsor interest.
" The other two networks were
trouncing us from January to May.
They were beating us with movies."
So WSPA decided to switch and
not fight anymore. On Sundays, the
station's viewers can see "VIrgil
Ward 's Championship Fishing
Show," movies, "Fishing with
Roland Martin" and "Sports
Afield."
"They all do better than the NBA
did, " Handy said.,

network's affiliates and entertainment division rejected the
idea.
So Wednesday night's second
game was seen live in the east at
11 :30 p.m., but on tape on all of CBS'
West Coast affiliates, except Los
Angeles. If the series goes to a sixth
game Friday, May 16 , in
Philadelphia, starting at 8:05 p.m.
EDT, it would be seen on tape-delay
almost everywhere . The sixth game
could be a championship-clinching
game, and it would be a sorry thing
for sports fans to learn the result on
their late news stations.
But that's what happens when the
NBA's ratings become little league
compared to some of the other
major sports shows on the weekend
and, of course, any entertainment
programming a t night - even
though the league's regular-season
ratings were up 12 percent and its
playoffs are up 16 percent.
" We carried the NBA for four

~--...

Nicklaus, now 40, has a n 18-y~a r
professiona l career that is unparalleled. He's won an unprecedented 15 major cham(Continued on Page~ )

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in the team, which finished last in
1979. Finley has ooen trying to sell
the club for several years.
" Billy makes the game interesting, the way I like it," he said.
Finley said he doesn't think the
A's can win the American League
West this season, " but I don't think
it's impossible. I'd be extremely
happy if they play .500 baseball."

The A's are still for sale, said
Finley, "but I don't have any talks

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'Billy (Martin) makes the game
interesting -- the way I like it'
-- Charlie Finley

(Continued on Page~)

OPEN DAILY lo-9
SUNDAY 1-6

Tues., Wed .

ClUCAGO (AP) - The Oakland
A's are amazing everybody with
their early success this season, including owner Charlie Finley.
The young A's, currently holding
first place in the American League
West, remind Finley of the Oakland
team that won three straight world
championships in the early '70s.
"The speed is there, you have
some good, young pitching anns and
some pretty good hitting," Finley
said in an interview published
Friday in the San Jose Mercury in
California.
"They are beginning to show
many of the same traits my championship teams showed. They're
coming." ·
Finley said new manager Billy
Martin has restored his enjoyment

NBA on CBS sometimes
isn't on CBS -- or on at all
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____....,.____________________ ·'·
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�~The Sunday Time:H&gt;entinel, Sunday,

C- 7 ~The Sunday Times-&amp;:ntinel , Sunday, May 11, 1980

May II , 1980

Finley indicates team still for sale

Today's

A's even amazing Charlie 0

Sports
World

'i·.

i

By Will Grimsley

Seaver won't hang around
When Tom Seaver returns to Shea
Stadium, as he did Monday night in
the colors of the Cincinnati Reds,
one might expect him to conjure up
all sorts of nostalgic - and perhaps
bitter - memories.
The mad scene that Oct. 16 day in
1969 when the once " Futile and
Frustrated Mets" emerged from
their cocoon as the " Miracle Mets,"
winners over favored Baltunore in
baseball's World Series.
Jubilant spectators pouring onto
the field to rape the sacred sod,
pulling up huge chunks for
:;ouvenirs. The big blase city of New
Vork busting out of its seams.
· The quiet efficiency of Ma nager
Gil Hodges. The dynamic pitc hing
duo of Seaver and J erry Koosman
(43 victories between them). Dmrn
Clendenon's three home runs. AI
Weis, a .255 hitter, reaching beyond
his norm by batting .455 .
The repeat act of 1973, again in the
World Series but beaten in seven
games by the likes of future Yankees
such as Reggie Jackson, Catfish
Hunter and Ken Holtzman, all
wearing Oakland A's uniforms. The
rallying cry of relief ace Tug
McGraw, '' Yougotta believe!''
" Sure, I have fond memories,"
said Seaver, prior to taking the
mound against his former teammates in only his third Shea appearance since he was traded to the
Reds in June, 1977.
" I'm happy to be coming home to
New York but I'm not one to wallow
in sentiment. I don't engage in
recriminations. I don't sit around
and mope and think of what might
have been.

" I am ve ry happy where I am. I
am with a great ball club which I
think will win the division and
maybe the World Series. Although I
live in Connecticut and spend my off
months in this area, I can't honestly
say I miss New York .
" When you're playing baseball.
you don't feel homesick for a ny city .
You're putting on your uniform
seve n days a week, hitting airports,
packing and unpacking luggage,
working every day and a lot- or·
nights . Your home is the dugout."
Seaver made his first return to
Shea in a rival un'iform Aug. 21, 1977,
some two months after being traded,
beating Koosman 5-1. He didn 't pitch
here in !978 but last season, on Aug.
26, he hurled an 8-0 shutout. The
Mets have beaten him two out of
three at Cincinnati's Riverfront
Stadium.
Now 35 years old, one the great
right-handed pitchers of all time,
Seaver appears headed lor certain
Hall of Fame immortality. In his 13
major league seasons, through 1979,
he has compiled the remarkable
record of 235 victories, 2,887
strikeouts and an earned-run
average, baseball's true gauge of
mound efficiency, of 2.55.
He ranks fifth in the all-time list of
strikeout specialists .with 2,887 compared to Walter Johnson 's firstplace 3,508. His ERA is second only
to ,Johnson's 2.37 among pitchers
who have worked more than 3,000 innings.
"I would like to get 300 wins,
naturally, but I won't press. My aim
is to be a consistent pitcher. When I
find I'm not, I won'! hang around
just to boost my statistics," he said.

Where is 'Mex' on off-day?
It was an off-&lt;lay for Lee Trevino,
so where could you find pro goU's
garrulous, free-spirited " Super
Mex?"- upstairs, hitting golf balls,
that's where.
. He is like the postman who spends
his holiday taking long hikes in the
country. He never tires of golf - or
people.
On this occasion, the litUe shot-

making magician was stealing the
show at the New York Coliseum,
demonstrating a training ginunick
called "Sweet Spotter." The club
head reflects the exact spot where it
makes contact with the ball .
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He said he believes the team will

remain in Oakland indefinitely, but
that the Oakland Raiders will be
playing in Los Angeles in 1981. .
"There is no way the Coliseum
board will pennit the A's to move
with eight years remaining on their
lease and with the threat of the
Raiders moving," said Finley.
"They're not going to wind up with
that uh mausolewn (the Oakland
collie~) empty. They won't allow
it to become a white elephant."

GET YOUR MONEY
IN THE GOING RATE

GOLF
DALLAS (AP) - Tom Watson
toured the Preston Trail Golf Club
with a 6-under-par 64 lor a twG-shot
lead over Curtis Strange and George
Cadle in the first-round of the
$300,000 Byron Nelson Golf Classic.
ATLANTA (AP) - Pam Higgins
fired a 6-under-par 67 for a onestroke lead over Kathy Ahem and
Marlene Floyd in the first round of
the $100,000 Atlanta LPGA event.
PARIS (AP ) - Greg Norman of
Australia and Britain's Maurice
Bembridge shot 6-under-par 66s and
tied for the lead at the halfway point
of the 64th French Open with 133s.

Martin has given the A's a new
confidence, said Finley.
" The team is young and needs a
leader. Billy is a leader and he has
them believing in themselves.
That's so important in this game.
You've gotta believe in yourselves."
Finley said he gives Martin a wide
rein, a luxury not many A's
managers have enjoyed.

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By

An AP Spoi1B Analysis
By FRED ROTHENBERG
AP Spo11B Writer
In some cities, the NBA on CBS
isn't orr CBS. The game might be
dribbled over to a n independent
station but, then again, it may nnt he
seen at all.

George Strode

The 'eyes' have it
Quarterback Fran Tarkenton of
fast.
the Minnesota Vikings earned fame
After testing quarterbacks on six
with his quick feet, but an expert
pro teams - the Browns, Lions,
says Sonny Jurgenson made good
Bucs, Patriots, Bills and Cowboysanother way- with shifty eyes.
Bailey found that Cleveland's Brian
" More important than quick feet Sipe had the fastest eyes among acIs quick eyes - how fast a person tive passers.
can move his eyes from point to
But a quarterback with slow eyes
point," says Howard Bailey, an
need not despair. Bailey worked
ocular motor specialist_ who
with Sipe to improve his eye
operates the Athletic Perception Inmovement from 4.2 times per second
stitute here and in LaJolla, Calif.
in 1978 to 4.8 times last year.
Batley's business is measuring an
"It's difficult to say how imathlete's eye movements and
portant it is," said Cleveland quarhelping him improve his vision. He's
terback coach Chuck Shofner, " but
tested quarterbacks from several
it stands to reason a quarterback
pro football teams as well as college
has got to move his eyes. It's a learplayers in several sports.
ned skill. Last year from the start of
"Peripheral vision is overrated/'
the seson to the end our quarsays Bailey, holding his hands three
terbacks showed a significant diffeet apart and telling his subject to
ference in how quickly they could
look between them . " You are aware
move their eyes because of Howard
Bailey's program ."
that I am holding my hands up.
That's peripheral vision.
The program, which costs $500,
"But you can't tell hom wany
has college subscribers including
fingers I'm holding up . To do that,
Notre Dame, Michigan, Michigan
you must look directly at my hands.
State, Arizona State, San Diego
The accurate span of recognition is - State, San Diego State, Norvery small."
thwestern Louisiana, Central
Bailey applies this principle to
Michigan and Cleveland State.
sports. It is advantageous for a quarWhile football teams have been
the most interested so far, Bailey
terback to be able to move his eyes
quickly from point to point on the
believes he can help basketball and
baseball players also. San Diego
field, and tests prove some quarterbacks can move their eyes
State's baseball hitting improved
quicker than others.
significantly after the course.
Jurgenson, for example , had the
"It Is difficult to hit a baseball
traveling 90 miles an hour when your
most mobile eyes Bailey ever
checked. He could move his eyes
eyes move only 30 miles an hour, "
Bailey said. " Take Gary Alexander
from side to side 4.9 times a second.
of the Indians. He strikes out so
Given three seconds of pass protection, Jurgenson ~auld look acmuch because he is swinging at a
blur. If he could move his eyes as
curately at aimost 15 different spots
on the field before throwing .
fast as the ball is pitched, it would be
Bailey found some quarterbacks
like swinging at a stationary otr
whose eyes moved only half that
ject.''

A warning to Ali

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SPECIFIC PROBLEMS: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
(ALGAE, FOGGY WATER, ETC.)

Promoter Don King has a warning
for Muharrunad Ali if the former
champion isn 't ready for World
Boxing Association champion Larry
Holmes this summer:
" If Ali isn't in shape, he'll be comroiling suicide.' '
King has lined up the Ali-Holmes
showdown for July 11 in a 165,000seat stadium in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil.
" Ali is the grea test of all time,"
said the promoter . a one-time
Cleveland numbers operator and
Ohio convict. " Undoubtedly, he's the
most identifiable figure on earth.
" But· you have to remember one
thing - Holmes has a monumental
record. He is 3~. He's been fighting
in the shadow of a legend all of his
life. Even when Ali wasn't around,
Holmes was fighting the ghost of a
legend.
" Now he has his big chance. "
Ali was an honored gues t at
Wilberforce Unive rsity's commencement and held a press con-

ference in connection with his visit .
But life wasn't alWays a bed of
roses for King. He served four years
in the Ohio Penitentiary after being
c.onvicted of manslaughter in an
early morning street fight that
fatally wounded Sam Garrett.
Nevel;theless, King is not ashamed
of his past.
.
" Actually, I'm proud of it," he
said. " There 's not going to be any
denial. I believe you ca n't walk the
line of neutra litY: You have to take a
side and stand up for what yo u
believe in .' '

About 15 of c;:BS' 200 affiliates
aren't showing tlle National Basketball Association's championship
series between Los Angeles and
Philadelphia . WSPA in Spartanburg, S.C., one of the key dissenters, hasn't had anybody storm its
station in protest, either .
" We have an obligation to show
programs that people want to see. "
said David Handy, station-program
manager of WSPA. "All the evidence that we have is that not too many
people want to watch it."
The NBA's final round is akin to

TV Sports
baseball's World Series and football's Super Bowl in capping a
season and crowning a champion but
certainly not in television appeal.
While the last Super Bowl game
and five of the seven 1979 World
Series games were in prime time, no
NBA playoff game will get the highvisibility time slots normally reserved for " M.A.S.H." and "The Dukes
of Hazzard."
The reason is simple. The NBA
just doesn't attract enough viewers
to warrant prime time exposure.
Although CBS Sports would love to
air one of its prize products when
more people are watching TV , the

'We are being
used as pawns'
By HAL BOCK

URGENTLY _NE_E!:':_';'
OIL AND GAS LEASES
GALLIA COUNTY
· To fulfill tufure dnlling programs, pl ease write or call and be sure to
1nctude proer t v location and acreage that 's availabl e for l ease.
UNIVERSAL PETROLEUM CO.
P . O. BOX 142

It has been nearly a month now
since · the United States Olympic
Committee officially decided not to
send a team to the 1980 Swnmer
Games at Moscow and the reality of
the situation is settling in on athletes
who were preparing for the competition.
There is a feeling of anger in some
and acceptance in others. But
mostly, there is a sense or
frustration at the idea of politics interfering with a sports competition.
Rower Anita DeFrantz, a bronze
medalist at Montreal in 1976,
initiated a class action s uit
challenging the boycott and
charging that USOC did not have the
jurisdiction to decide the issue . '
" I want to go to the Olympics· in
1980," said DeFrantz, who is an attorney. "The purpose of the suit is to
give the athletes the right to decide
the Issues for themselves. Some of
the plaintiffs have made it clear that
they wouldn't go, but they want the
right to decide."
Realistically, DeFrantz cannot go
to the Games. Because hers is a
team sport, sbe could not compete as
an individual. What's more, she
couldn't afford the trip without
USOC financial support, anyway.
"We are being used as pa wns,' '
charged DeFrantz.

Phone 1-53'1-1)101

~O hi o4563 8

" Now that we're no longer useful,

AP Spoi1B Writer

nobOOy cares."
Super swimmer Tracy Caulkins, a
...

17-year-old who was considered a
cinch for a medal in Moscow, said: '
"I still feel a little disappointed at
losing the opportunity to compete ,"
she said. " But I've accepted it now
and I'm just trying to do my best in
the mee!J! I'll swim in this summer. I
think the sooner you accept it, the
better off you'll be and the better off
your swirruning will be."
Caulkins naturally felt hurt a t first. " It hurt a lot," she said .
" I've never gone. I've talked to
people who've gone and they told me
what I'll be missing.
" When the decision wa s announced, I felt that I wanted to go
but I also wanted to support my
country . I am an American . I had
mixed feelings .
" Now, a lot of pressure has been
relieved . The wondering is over. A
definite decision has been made and
I've got to make the best of it."
Many athletes expect an alter
native event to be arranged for countries supporting the American
position. Because of that possibility
as well as national and other international competitions, they ar e
maintaining their training regimens
as if they were preparing for the
Olympics.

'

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'

National
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SALE

Perhaps mindful of his own experiences , King said, " No matter
what the odds, if you're steadfast
and tenacious in what you do, you
can make it in America.
" The doors of opportunity are
here, but they' re not going to open
for vou. You got to kick doors down.
Yo~ must demand . You must take.
But you have to stay withm the
rules."

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Golden Bear's slump
Jack Nicklaus has undergone a
.radical change in his short game,
trying to shake a puzzling slump that
has left golf's all-time money winner
winless in 197~ and 1980.

.

seasons . Each year the audience •
level dropped," said · Handy . '
"During those four years, the CBS ·,
stations in Atlanta and Charlotte
(N.C.) both stopped carrying the
NBA. We thought if the two markets :
east and west of us stopped covering :
the NBA, we would get some fallout.
But we didn'thavl! any growth.
" The audience was so low we
couldn't find people interested in
buying local sales. The ratings for
golf and tennis are also low, but at
least there is some sponsor interest.
" The other two networks were
trouncing us from January to May.
They were beating us with movies."
So WSPA decided to switch and
not fight anymore. On Sundays, the
station's viewers can see "VIrgil
Ward 's Championship Fishing
Show," movies, "Fishing with
Roland Martin" and "Sports
Afield."
"They all do better than the NBA
did, " Handy said.,

network's affiliates and entertainment division rejected the
idea.
So Wednesday night's second
game was seen live in the east at
11 :30 p.m., but on tape on all of CBS'
West Coast affiliates, except Los
Angeles. If the series goes to a sixth
game Friday, May 16 , in
Philadelphia, starting at 8:05 p.m.
EDT, it would be seen on tape-delay
almost everywhere . The sixth game
could be a championship-clinching
game, and it would be a sorry thing
for sports fans to learn the result on
their late news stations.
But that's what happens when the
NBA's ratings become little league
compared to some of the other
major sports shows on the weekend
and, of course, any entertainment
programming a t night - even
though the league's regular-season
ratings were up 12 percent and its
playoffs are up 16 percent.
" We carried the NBA for four

~--...

Nicklaus, now 40, has a n 18-y~a r
professiona l career that is unparalleled. He's won an unprecedented 15 major cham(Continued on Page~ )

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in the team, which finished last in
1979. Finley has ooen trying to sell
the club for several years.
" Billy makes the game interesting, the way I like it," he said.
Finley said he doesn't think the
A's can win the American League
West this season, " but I don't think
it's impossible. I'd be extremely
happy if they play .500 baseball."

The A's are still for sale, said
Finley, "but I don't have any talks

2.17

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on rear wheels

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'Billy (Martin) makes the game
interesting -- the way I like it'
-- Charlie Finley

(Continued on Page~)

OPEN DAILY lo-9
SUNDAY 1-6

Tues., Wed .

ClUCAGO (AP) - The Oakland
A's are amazing everybody with
their early success this season, including owner Charlie Finley.
The young A's, currently holding
first place in the American League
West, remind Finley of the Oakland
team that won three straight world
championships in the early '70s.
"The speed is there, you have
some good, young pitching anns and
some pretty good hitting," Finley
said in an interview published
Friday in the San Jose Mercury in
California.
"They are beginning to show
many of the same traits my championship teams showed. They're
coming." ·
Finley said new manager Billy
Martin has restored his enjoyment

NBA on CBS sometimes
isn't on CBS -- or on at all
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C3-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

'

I.

.Derby filly enters Preakness
since 19(i9, when Tomy Lee went
back to California to bow out of the
race for the second jewel of the
Triple Crown.
" We weren't waiting to see who
was in the race or anything like
that," said Bert Firestone from his
Cotoctin Stud farm in Waterford,
Va. "We just wanted to make sure
she was all right. We were only
waiting to see how she responded to
the Derby, and she's come back like
a tiger.
"We think she's better at a mile
and a haif (the Belmont distance),
but if we had skipped the Preakness
and won the Belmont, we would have
asked ourselves, ' What wd you do
that for ?' No, our main concern was
the conwtion of the filly , that's all,"
Firestone added.

BALTIMORE (AP) - A battle of
the sexes is expected to highlight the
Preakness Stakes when Genuine
RIM, the East Coast favorite, com·
petes with her male counterpart
from the Weot Coast, Codex.
Genuine Risk, the first filly to win
the Kentucky Derby in 65 years,
could become the first of her sex to
win the Preakness Stakes since
. Nellie Morse crossed the finish line
in 1924.
The owners of Genuine Risk kept
the racing world in suspense until
Friday when they announced her en·
try in the 13/16 mile race at Pimlico
Race Course next Saturday.
Had she not been entered, Genuine
Risk, who is due to arrive at the
Preakness barn this weekend, would
have been the ·first Derby winner

t:JJlio

Rodgers, a Tour pro and protege of
Runyan, suggested the new chipping
style to Nicklaus during the 1980 Loo
Angeles Open.
Nickla us scoops the ball on chip
shots, popping the ball onto the
green in a hand-dominated motion.
Some skeptics raise their eyebrows.
But Nicklaus is sold on his new chipping.
"I'm absolutely a total believer in
it. I know what I'm using will even·
tually pay off. It's so much better
than anything I had," said the win·
ner of 84 tournaments throughout
the world.

Bengal re]J claims smear
.
said Tuesday night. "But I don't
have the capability of writing
memos to all the player reps ... and
Ed and Gene so far have not retur·
ned my phone calls. ''
Cobb received a telegram last
week from Upshaw telling him he
was barred from the racquetball
tournament "because of your un·
certainty about the union and your
views on special events ... "
Cobb said he believes the
allegations were based on an earlier
conversation between him and Gar·
vey. He said his independent views
about the union and his silence on
the controversy over the new rival
National football League Players
Union has been interpreted as
ilisloyalty.
"As far as I can tell, Gene barred
me from the racquetball tournament
on the basis of a conversation I had
with Ed Garvey. He's going on
someone else's word about my s.,.
called attitude and taken it upon
himseif to punish me," Cobb said.
Cobb's opposition to the union·
league agreement was based on the
union's inability to win a free-agent
market similar to that of the major
league baseball players.
"We tried to keep the agreement
from going into effect," he said. "We
were upset with the compensation.
We thought it was just as bad, if not
worse, than the Rozell Rule," which
was declared unconstitutinal.

MaFvin Cobb, player represen·
tative of the Cincinnati Bengals,
claims . the manag~ment of the
National ' Football League Players
Association is conducting a campaign against him.
The Cincinnati safety was barred
from playing in the NFLPA racquetball toumam~t in Chicago last
weekend by President Gene Upshaw. It was learned Tuesday that
Executive Director Ed Garvey cir·
culated a memo among league
player representatives that was
critical of Cobb.
Cobb, an alternate member of the
NFLPA executive board, was
among a group who tried in court to
overturn the new agreement with
the league in 1m.
Since then, Cobb has proposed that
Upshaw and Garvey be required to
debate his agent, Howard Slusher,
and attorney Gerald Tockman at the
June player representative meeting.
"His loyalty has been
questioned," Upshaw told 1be Cincinnati Enquirer. "But it's an in·
lerna! situation. It'll be up before the
executive corrunittee. I'd rather nit
get Into a mud-slinging thing in the
papers. I'm ilisappointed that he
decided to make it public." Garvey
had no comment.
"I would much prefer not to go
public with my conflict with the
leadership of the NFLPA," Cobb

I
I

(Continued from Page C-6)
captivating personality presented
.
him with a handful of umbrellas, one
of them with a putting blade at the
end of the handle.
"You sure these things are not
lightning rods?" Lee said. "Don't
want anything else to .do with tight·
ning."
Trevino bas not fully shaken the
harrowing &lt;pemory of the summer
of 1975 when he was struck by light·
ning while playing in the Western
Open - a bolt that almost wrecked
biB career.
The 40-year-old Mexican·
American, a grammar school
dl'opout, Marinegunnerandonetime
golf hustler, is now back - better
than ever, by his own admission and injecting a breath of freoh air in·
to a tour suffering from a blandness
and lack of identity.
"I'm playing better than I ever

He has been famous for his taming
of par fives, but Nicklaus said, "The
reason I changed the short games
was that I was starting to not score
well on the par fives."
Distance is Nicklaus' major difficulty with his new chipping. "The
only time I ever got the ball to the
hole in the Masters was when I said,
'Hit it like you're going to hit 20 yar·
ds by the hole,"' he said.
Nicklaus said he used half chip

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COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) Despite the glare d publicity
focused on Ohio's presidential
primary, Ohioans will make important decisions In the June 3
primary a lot closer to home.
All 88 counties are slated to
nominate two canwdates for com·
~ioner from each party, along
w1th candidates for sheriff
prosecutor, recorder coroner'
treasurer, engineer a~d clerk of
courts.
When the smoke clears, more than
1,500 persons will have been
nominated as standardbearers for
their respective parties in the
November general election.
A random survey around the state
indicates most of the incwnbent of·

ficials are seeking re-election and
are unopposed for their respective
nominations.
However, there are exceptions.
One noteworthy contest is in
Richland County where former
Sheriff Thomas Weikel, who served
more than five months in jail after
pleading no contest to coercion and
assuault, is seeking the GOP
nomination to return to that office.
Richland COWlty's Republicans
have disclaimed Weikel, and instead
have endorsed his opponent, Albert
O'Neill, who was appointed sheriff
after Weikel reoigned as part of a
plea bargaining arrangement.
Democrats there say they have an
excell~t chance of capturing the
sheriff's office which over the years

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - The odds
against him seem insurmountable
now, but day after day Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy insists he will not abandon his race for the Democratic
preoidential nomination that looked
like it was his for the asking only six
months ago.
"I'm still hopeful about it," the
Massachusetts senator said in an interview while campaigning in
Nebraska. "I still realize that we're
in an uphill fight and we're the underdog, but I mean I'm not prepared
to think in lennB other than to be

successful.' '

"You get into it for the be9t of
reasons, and it turns Ot!! to be tough
going," says one aide who bas
known Kennedy for more than a
decade. " I just think it's in his
character that whatever he does, he
wants to do it very well. I don't think
he knows it any other way."
"It may sound corny," another
aide said, "but he really does
represent a constituency, even if it's
only 30 percent."
They offer different reasons to ex-

Diversified industry
should shield areas
CINCINNATI (AP) - Even
though the inflation rate for southwestern Ohio, northern Kentucky
and southeastern Iniliana exceeded
the national rate for the third year in
a row, the diversification of industry
should shield the area from an impending recession, say economists
for the Cincinnati Planning Commission.
Priceo in the seven county area in·
creased by 12.8 percent from
November 1978 to November 1979
while the rate for the nation was 12.2
percent, the report said.
1be report involved the Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Area in
Greater Cincinnati, including
Hamilton, Clermont and Warren
counties in Ohio; Campbell, Kenton
and Boone in Kentucky, and Dear·
born in Indiana.
"It might be that local prices have
lagged behind the reot of the nation
and now we are catching up," said
Dev Saggar, p!4nner economist.
''I Cllll't really say what it is,' ' said
Dr. Saul Pleeter, economic con·
sultan! for the city. "Food prices, for
Instance - it could be that we have
lost so many chain store operations
and the prices went up because there
is more competition for fewer
outlets."
Pleeter said commoility group
priceo are increasing more rapidly
in the area than nationally. These include food , home ownership,
medical care, fuel and utilities.

SSggar doesn't think passage of a
balanced national budget will ease
inflation anywhere.
"Balancing the budget does
nothing to stop inflation. The only
way to stop inflation is to reduce the
purchasing power," Saggar said.
The economists reported that
because of the area's divel'!lity of industry, the average worker's pur·
chasing power is not likely to decline
soon. That is why they agree that if
there is a recession, it will be mild in
the Ohio River Valley.
Unemployment in the area is in
better shape than nationally and is
not expected to increase. Employmentactually increased'3.1 per·
cent in the period compared to 2 per·
cent nationally.
SSggar said unemployment in
Ohio increased from 5.4 percent to
5.7 percent while unemployment in
the metropolitan area fell from 4.9
percent to 4.4.
" Unlike many major cities, Cincinnati is not solely depeniling on
one major industry. Yes, the auto
worker may suffer, but that in·
dustry's work does not necessarily
destroy other wversified industries
we have in Cincinnati," Pleeter said.
" We still have a large volume rl
financial corrunitments for com·
mercia! construction that will last at
least another year and will provide
pretty stable employment in that
area,' ' Pleeter said.

Actress Moreau wins French award

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446-1995
today's

D

classified

bas traditionally been occupied by a
Republican.
Richard Petty, a former state
highway patrolman, is the endorsed
Democratic canwdate.
.
In Mahoning County, Sheriff
George D. Tablack, named to his of·
fice last year following the death of
the previous sheriff, has opposition
in the Democratic primary from
James Traficant, a Youngstown
reoident who heads up a local anti·
drug program.
But Tab4tck, former longtime
member of the Ohio House, is the endorsed Democrat.
In Columbus, Franklin County
Sheriff Harry J. Berkemer will have
opposition in the Democratic
primary as he seeks a third term.

Robert Slatzer, who lists himself
as a private investigator and has
sought the nommation unsuccessfully twice before, goes
against the Incumbent.
There is a three-way race in
Franklin COWlty for the GOP
sheriff's ·nomination, between
Robert Foster, a former Secret Ser·
vice Agent; Bob Co~UJCr, a probation
officer, and Russell A. Bennett, a
former deputy sheriff.
In Dayton, where Montgomery
County Sheriff Tom Wilson is unopposed in the GOP primary, there is a
heated battle for a spot on the county
commission resulting from the
retirement of Commissioner Charles
Lewis.
Charles F. Horn is the endorsed

Republican for Lewis' seat, while
two Democrats are competing for
their party's nomination. Tiley are
James L. Manning, Wayne Township school board member, and Ed
Fanning, a local Democratic party
worker.
Another commission race stirring
intereot is in Cleveland, where now
fewer than five Democrats and one
Republican are lined up for the seat
held by GOP Commissioner Virgil
E. Brown, who seeks re-election.
Democrats in the race include Tim
Hagan, Cuyahoga County
Democratic chairman; John E.
Gallagher Jr., preoident of the
Cleveland Board of Education, and
Frank Pokorny, onetime member of
the Ohio House who resigned as

commissioner in 1978 after pleading
guilty to misconduct in Office.
Taking on Brown in the GOP fray
will be Nary M. O'Malley, a teacher
and member of the Fairview Park
Board of Education.
In Toledo, incumbent Com·
missioner James Holzerner, a for·
mer Democratic state represen·
tative, seeks re-election but has opposition in the primary. His two opponents are Bonnie Rhonehouse and
Francis Szollosi.
Toledo also has a local ballot issue
which is drawing interest. It is a
proposed abortion statute, similar to
one in Akron which regulates abor·
lion clinics and stresses that women
seeking abortions must provide their
'' infonned consent."

Kennedywon'tgiveup junbaJ! lt'imts- jentintl

~

oi the yeatt

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shots from 50 yards, blooping the
ball. "With this thing, I can go ahead
and rip it. But I can't convince
myself of that. I've just got to con·
vince myself. It's a matter of
working with it," he said.
He will have only two tuneups for
his new short game before the U.S.
Open at Baltusrol, N.J., in June. He
will play in the Byron Nelson Classic
May 11-11 and his own Memorial
Tournament May 22-25.

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I

second. 1 wasl9 under par in Hawati
He beat out NicklaWJ for the U.S.
_ and second. Fourteen under par
Open crown at Oak Hill In
at Ne Orl
d E' htee
Rocheoler, N.Y., in 1968 and three
w eans - secon · •g
n years later beat Big Jack In a
under par at Houston last week lose the playoff.
playoff for the title at Merion In Ard·
"Tom Watson can hold them off more, Pa.
for a while, but I'm the last of the
Lee won the British Open In conOld Guard still hanging in there. secutive years, 1971·1972, and capo
Tom is 30, I'm 40. Tom is the best. tured the PGA in 1974. Only the
But I'll get my licks in," he said.
i::.ters of the majors ha! escaped
Super Mex bas been doing just ,-:=~--------that. Besides biB three second place
finishes this year, he bas won the
SSQOO
Tournament Players Championship
(TPC), the tour's showcase, and
For any information con·
boosted his earnings to $186,181,
victing the persons respon ·
second only to Watsoo's$240,525.
Sible for the fires on the 500
Trevino burst upon the bigtime
block of second and Third
golf scene at Baltusrol in
Aves ., Gallipolis, Ohio. All
!Springfield, N.J., in 1967, stealing
information will be strictly
some of the thunder from Jack
confidential.
Nicklaus, the winner, and Arnold
Contact:
Palmer, who finished second.
James A..Northup
A wisecracking Yogi Berra, he
went on to become Nicklaus' chief
FJ~=-~~i;f

S]JOrf[~Jlt ___________________________________________w_d._"_he-sa~·-id_,'_'a-nd--Ik_re_p_f_~_·_hin__g .-c-ha_ll_~_g_er_a_nd_a_aro
__w_d_fa_vo_~_te_.__

(Continued from Page C. 71
pionships and around $3.5 million.
But the long-hitting Ohioan won
less than $60,000 a year ago. And he
wd not win a single American Tour
tournament for the first time since
he turned pro in 1962.
Even a poor, 3-over·par £inish in
the Masters earlier this month fails
to ruffle Nicklaus, however.
" I've played bad tournaments
before," he said. "I'm not concerned
about any part of my game except
putting numbers on the boa rd."
Nicklaus has a new chip shot
originated by Paul Runyan . Phil

I

Only two fillies have ever run in
more than one of the Triple Crown
races, a series which concludes this
year with the Belmont Stakes on
June7 .
Careful finished fifth in the Derby
in 1921 and 12th in the Preakness,
while Nellie Flag was fourth in the
1935 Derby and seventh in. the
Preakness. No filly bas started in
the Preakness since 1939.
Besides Genuine Risk and Codex,
the field also includes Jack
Klugman's Jaklin Klugman, the
Derby's show horse, Judith Zouck's
Samoyed and J .K. Perrin's Knight
Landing, second in the Woodlawn
Stakes.
A decision is expected today on
Locust Hill Farm's Blue Ensign, ihe
winner of the Woodlawn Stakes at
Pirnlico last week.

Today's Sports World _______~

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CANNES, France (AP) - Actres&amp;director Jeanne Moreau was
awarded France's Legion of Honor
on Friday at the opening of the 1980
Cannes Film Festival.
Jean-Philippe Lecat, minister d
culture and conununication, presented the award to Miss Moreau at a
januned ceremony at this 33rd Cannes film festival, the world's largest
and most important international

film gathering.
The Legion of Honor is awarded in
recognition of distinguislred military
or civil service.
The festival this year is notable for
the increased role women play in
many key films selected for competition. The films are judged by a
panel headed this year by American
actor Kirk Douglas.

plain it, but biB aides say that
President Carter's rival for the
nomination is as determined in
private as he is in public. Asked
whether there has been any talk in
his inner circle that Kennedy should
pull out of the race, another
longtime aide replied, "No, and I'd
like to see someone try to convince
him. ' '
The aides preferred to remain
anonymous.
Since he announced his candidacy
last Nov. 7, Kennedy bas campaigned six days a week, sometimes
14 to 16 hours a day. U anything, his
schedule bas become more grueting
as he sank behind Carter in the polls
and finally became the longshlt
challenger that he is.
It wasn't always that way. When
Kennedy launched his campaign,
many Democrats felt the senator
had a chance to wrest the
nomination from Carter.
Kennedy himself talks in practical
political terms - national convention delegates and a belief that
somehow his campaign issues will
begin to attract the voters he needs.
His aides say that despite his deter·
mination, both public and private,
he is fully aware of the obstacleo in
his path.
According to The Associated
Press delegate count, Carter bas
1,3116 of the 1,666 national convention
delegates he will need to be
nominated at the party meeting in
August. KeMedy baa 721, and needs
to win 75 percent of the 1,264
delegates remaining to be selected.
Under most COWlts, Carter Is vir·
twi.lly assured of going over the top
on June 3, when California, Ohio and
New Jersey are among eight states
electing 696 delegates on the final
day of the primary season. Under
the party's system of proportional
representation, Carter' could lose all
eight sta~ by an unlikely 2-to-1
margin and still pick up more than
200 delegates. Those 200, plus what
he is likely to win between now and
then and at state conventions after
June 3, almost certainly will put him
well over the magic nwnber.

30,000 CUBAN REFUGEES
EG!lN AIR F:ORCE BASE,' Fla.
(AP) - While the flood of Cubans
coming to the United States cootinues, refugees have begun to
trickle out of a Florida Panhandle
tent city for new homes around the
country.
The total number of refugees
arriving in Florida now has topped
30,000 as the two-week-old
"Freedom Flotilla" brought 3,000
arrivals Friday.
One woman and 16 men on Friday
left the facility at this air base near
Fort Walton Beach where more than
9,000 Cuban refugees are being
processed.

VOL. 15 NO. 15

SUNDAY, MAY 11 , 1980

PAGE 1-D

Carter bullish on America
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Preos Wrtter
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Fieliling
questions from the public for the fir·
st time in more than eight months,
President Carter has pictured himself as bullish on America In general
and on Secretary of State EdmundS.
Musltie in particular.
At a "town hall meeting" Friday
at Temple University in Philadlphia,
Carter was so high on Muskie he
almost seemed to be giving the back
of his hand to Cyrus R. Vance,
Musltie's resigned predecessor.
Though White House press
secretary Jody Powell insisted the
president intended no criticism of
Vance, Carter's words seemed to
speak for themselves :
"My hope is that with Ed Muskie
coming on board he will play a
somewhat different role than the one
Secretary Vance played because of
the difference in background and
temperament and attitude. I see Ed
Muskie as being a much stronger
and more statesmanlike senior
citizen-figure who will be a more
evocative spokesman for our
nation's policy."
Carter said he wd not think

Muskie would get "nearly so bogged
down" as Vance in administering
the State Department - "handling
the visits of a constant stream of
diplomats who come to
Washington.''
Carter said there had been "no
basic ilisagreements" between or
among himself, Vance and Br·
zezinski. He said the idea of such a
split was "primarily a creature of
the American news media and there
is no basis in fact for it."
Vance quit April 28 because of
disagreement with the administration decision to attempt a
military rescue of the U. S. hostages
in Iran.
As for the president bullishness
about America, he was almost
ebullient io forecasting a dramatic
decline in the inflation rate by mid·
summer and "a quick rejuvenation"
in homebuilding and conswner purchase of such big ticket items as
automobiles and applianceo.
On his first speaking trip since
Oct. 29 - six days before the
American hostages were seized in
Tehran - Carter said he had expected the April24 attempt to rescue
them to succeed. He concluded that

only a streak of bad luck caused it to
be aborted .
Prior to the town hall meeting,
Carter addressed the World Affairs
Council of Philadelphia. There he
said "detente with the Soviets
remains our goal." But he added
that "the Soviets must und~nd
that they cannot recklessly threaten
world peace - they cannot conunit
aggression - and still enjoy the
benefits of cooperation with the
West."
Carter argued that it would be "an
historic error" to underestimate the
possibility that Afghanistan might
be transformed by Soviet intervention from a buffer zone
"against aggression into a launching
pad for future incursions.' '
He promised the United States
" will continue to impose economic
and political costs on the Soviet
Union until it withdraws its armed
forces and restores the in·
dependence of Afghanistan."
If that is done, he said, the United
States will be prepared to reconsider
the SALT II ,Jll1llS limitation treaty
and go on to negotiate even broader
arms curbs with Moscow.

Auto 'leaders to visit Wh.ite House
WASHINGTON (AP) - With the
deepening slwnp in the auto industry, President Carter is sure to
give industry leaders a sympathetic
hearing when they visit the White
House Wednesday.
But whether the auto executives
will be able to get the administration
to · shift its free trade policies into
reverse is another question.
Rep. Mary Rose Dakar, [).()hio,
whose Cleveland Wstrict has been
hard bit by auto layoffs, called Carter's meeting with industry leaders
"a hopeful sign."
"We've been batting our heads
against the wall," she said,
referring to efforts by some
congressmen to get the ad·
ministration to act on limiting
Japanese imports.
Rep. Ron Mottl, [).()hio, of Pai1Il8,
also was hopeful that the meeting
signals a possible change in the administration's view on imports.
"1bey're free traders at this
point," MotU said, adding that in
view of mOWlting layoffs, "I don 'I
see how they can afford to be ."
In talking with a group of senators
last Wednesday, top executives of
General Motors, Ford, American
Motors and Chrysler said temporary
relief is needed while they retool to

meet shifting consumer demand for
smaller, more fuel-&lt;!fficient cars.
"The question was raised of
negotiations with Japan to reduce
imports during the critical next two
or three years, while there is a lur·
nover (in the United States) to more
efficient cars," said Sen. Gaylord
Nelson, [).Wis., one of the senators
who attended the private meeting.
But Carter's special represen·
tative for trade negotiations, Reubin
Askew, expressed opposition to even
temporary trade reotrictions.
Askew, who is in Japan this
weekend on a tour of the Far East,
said imports of fuel-efficient cars
meet consumer demand. As a result,
it's more in the public interest to let

the market take its course - even if
a felV years are needed for U.S.
automakers to roll competitive cars
off their lines, he added.
While in Japan, Askew was ex·
peeled to meet with Japanese
automakers to discuss possible ex·
pansion of Japanese investment in
the UnitedStates and the lowering of
barriers to U.S. exports to Japan.
Meanwhile, United Auto Workers
President Douglas Fraser has been
conducting his own campaign to
prompt the government to act on
Japanese imports, which are partly
to blame for mushrooming layoffs
and plant closings that have hit
more than 200,000 autoworkers, he
said.

Sea search resumes
FORT MYERS, Fla . (AP) - A
Coast Guard plane was resuming the
search early Saturday for eight
crewmen who abandoned a sinking
125-foot freighter weot of here.
Officials said the freighter, whose
name sounded like the "Ottoman" in

a mayday, reported water pouring
over its decks about 100 miles west
of Fort Myers in the Gulf of Mexico
Friday night.

\

A faint mayday from the freighter
said the crew was abandoning ship.
The Coast Guard said further at·
tempts to contact the vessel were unsuccessful .
A Coast Guard helicopter, a HC..
131 search plane and several tugs
were ilispatched to the area, but the
aircraft wd not locate the freighter
Friday night, the Coast Guard said.

Bank robbery suspects caught after daring wild chase
NORCO, Calif. (AP) - Sheriff's
deputies caught three persons Saturday believed to have been involved
in a daring bank robbery, capped by
a wild escape in which a deputy was
killed and the robbers fired M-16
rifles and tossed explosiveo at
pollee.
Authorities began picking their
way through the snowy, brushcovered San Gabriel Mountains at
first light. The robbers eluded them
after the Friday holdup at the
Security Pacific National Bank in
Norco, which was timed with a stopwatch.
1be three, who were not Identified,
were apprehended without any shots
being fired, pollee said. They were
caught in the area in whicl: police
had sighted a man believed to have
been a robber wounded in the

•

getaway, but it was not immediately
clear whether he was one of the
three caught.
san Bernadino County Sgt. Mike
Howell said authorities were looking
for one or two other fugitives.
The gunmen were pursued by
police in a wild chase Friday along
mountain highways. A deputy
sheriff and one of the robbers wed in
the gunfire.
·nu-ee bystanders at the bank, six
deputies from Riverside County, one
deputy from San Bernardino County
and a California Highway Patrol of·
ficer suffered minor injuries in the
incid~t. officials said.
The gunmen also are wanted in
connection with four San Diego
Ccunty robberies and were being
followed by FBI agents In that county Friday before the gangster-style

holdup of a bank ill N'Orco, The
Associated Press has learned.
An FBI agent who asked not to be
identified said detectives "lOll! the
suspects" when they tried to transfer the tall to authorities in neigh.
boring Riverside Coun'Y.
Another law en!Ottement source
said San Diego police detectives
may have followed the suspects all
the way to San Bernardino - only to
lose them- on the same day.
Within hours, the "Two Minute"
gang hit a Security Pacific National
Bank in this small community 60
miles east of Los Angeles.
One rea.•on authorities believe the
suspects are the s8me who escaped
with about $60,000 in several San
Diego cases is that the gang times its
robberies with a Rtopwatch, the FBI
agent said.
\~

"One guy holds a stopwatch and
they always get out within two
minutes," he said.
1be six skl·masked bandits burst
into the bank just before closing
time, ordered bank workers and
patrons to lay face down on the floor
and then scooped up an estimated
$19,000 from tellers cash drawers.
But as the gunmen - armed with
M·16 rifles - ran from the bank
they were met with a fuSmade ri
gunfire from Riverside County
sheriff's deputies. A running battle
on city streets raged as the banwts
plied into a wailinl! van.
Bill Smith, vice president of
Security Pacific's Riverside division
headquarters, Said there were about
10 customers in the bank when the
gunmen entered the lobby and
yelled, "Everybody hit the floor. "

"Everybody did as they were told,
then one of the gunmen vaulted the
teller's counter and started grabbingthe money," he said.
1be bandit's getaway driver was
shot to death a short distance from
the bank, and the other gunm~n
abandoned the bullet-riddled vehicle
and stole a pickup truck .
" You could hear shotgWlS and
small anns and at least one submachine gun," said Jim Lyon, who
was working in an Office ne:rt to the
bank. "I went running outside and I
saw three ski·masked individuals
hop ,into the back .of a utility pickup
truck that they had COQIIII8lldeered
from a young fellow who was driving
by at the time and it sped off."
A police helicopter was ilisabled
by show, but landed safely, said
CP.P officer Harry Forsberg, and a

patrol car was hitjb~ a train during
the pursuit. No ini,uries were reported in either incident.
Riverside County sheriff's Sgt.
Robert Matheny said deputy Jamea
B. Evans, 39, was killed as some 30'
law officers- including two SWAT
teams - exchanged sporadic gunfire with the bandit.. in the Lytle
Creek area near the Cajon Pass.
1be fatally wounded robber was
tentatively identified as Jerry Dean
Ivan.
In Riverside, FBI spokesman Bill
Smith said of the bandits, "We know
the principals. We have had an interest in them for some time."
He said the group had allegedlY
been involved in a string ol robberies in the San Diego area, but
declined to give further details .

.

�I·

C3-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

'

I.

.Derby filly enters Preakness
since 19(i9, when Tomy Lee went
back to California to bow out of the
race for the second jewel of the
Triple Crown.
" We weren't waiting to see who
was in the race or anything like
that," said Bert Firestone from his
Cotoctin Stud farm in Waterford,
Va. "We just wanted to make sure
she was all right. We were only
waiting to see how she responded to
the Derby, and she's come back like
a tiger.
"We think she's better at a mile
and a haif (the Belmont distance),
but if we had skipped the Preakness
and won the Belmont, we would have
asked ourselves, ' What wd you do
that for ?' No, our main concern was
the conwtion of the filly , that's all,"
Firestone added.

BALTIMORE (AP) - A battle of
the sexes is expected to highlight the
Preakness Stakes when Genuine
RIM, the East Coast favorite, com·
petes with her male counterpart
from the Weot Coast, Codex.
Genuine Risk, the first filly to win
the Kentucky Derby in 65 years,
could become the first of her sex to
win the Preakness Stakes since
. Nellie Morse crossed the finish line
in 1924.
The owners of Genuine Risk kept
the racing world in suspense until
Friday when they announced her en·
try in the 13/16 mile race at Pimlico
Race Course next Saturday.
Had she not been entered, Genuine
Risk, who is due to arrive at the
Preakness barn this weekend, would
have been the ·first Derby winner

t:JJlio

Rodgers, a Tour pro and protege of
Runyan, suggested the new chipping
style to Nicklaus during the 1980 Loo
Angeles Open.
Nickla us scoops the ball on chip
shots, popping the ball onto the
green in a hand-dominated motion.
Some skeptics raise their eyebrows.
But Nicklaus is sold on his new chipping.
"I'm absolutely a total believer in
it. I know what I'm using will even·
tually pay off. It's so much better
than anything I had," said the win·
ner of 84 tournaments throughout
the world.

Bengal re]J claims smear
.
said Tuesday night. "But I don't
have the capability of writing
memos to all the player reps ... and
Ed and Gene so far have not retur·
ned my phone calls. ''
Cobb received a telegram last
week from Upshaw telling him he
was barred from the racquetball
tournament "because of your un·
certainty about the union and your
views on special events ... "
Cobb said he believes the
allegations were based on an earlier
conversation between him and Gar·
vey. He said his independent views
about the union and his silence on
the controversy over the new rival
National football League Players
Union has been interpreted as
ilisloyalty.
"As far as I can tell, Gene barred
me from the racquetball tournament
on the basis of a conversation I had
with Ed Garvey. He's going on
someone else's word about my s.,.
called attitude and taken it upon
himseif to punish me," Cobb said.
Cobb's opposition to the union·
league agreement was based on the
union's inability to win a free-agent
market similar to that of the major
league baseball players.
"We tried to keep the agreement
from going into effect," he said. "We
were upset with the compensation.
We thought it was just as bad, if not
worse, than the Rozell Rule," which
was declared unconstitutinal.

MaFvin Cobb, player represen·
tative of the Cincinnati Bengals,
claims . the manag~ment of the
National ' Football League Players
Association is conducting a campaign against him.
The Cincinnati safety was barred
from playing in the NFLPA racquetball toumam~t in Chicago last
weekend by President Gene Upshaw. It was learned Tuesday that
Executive Director Ed Garvey cir·
culated a memo among league
player representatives that was
critical of Cobb.
Cobb, an alternate member of the
NFLPA executive board, was
among a group who tried in court to
overturn the new agreement with
the league in 1m.
Since then, Cobb has proposed that
Upshaw and Garvey be required to
debate his agent, Howard Slusher,
and attorney Gerald Tockman at the
June player representative meeting.
"His loyalty has been
questioned," Upshaw told 1be Cincinnati Enquirer. "But it's an in·
lerna! situation. It'll be up before the
executive corrunittee. I'd rather nit
get Into a mud-slinging thing in the
papers. I'm ilisappointed that he
decided to make it public." Garvey
had no comment.
"I would much prefer not to go
public with my conflict with the
leadership of the NFLPA," Cobb

I
I

(Continued from Page C-6)
captivating personality presented
.
him with a handful of umbrellas, one
of them with a putting blade at the
end of the handle.
"You sure these things are not
lightning rods?" Lee said. "Don't
want anything else to .do with tight·
ning."
Trevino bas not fully shaken the
harrowing &lt;pemory of the summer
of 1975 when he was struck by light·
ning while playing in the Western
Open - a bolt that almost wrecked
biB career.
The 40-year-old Mexican·
American, a grammar school
dl'opout, Marinegunnerandonetime
golf hustler, is now back - better
than ever, by his own admission and injecting a breath of freoh air in·
to a tour suffering from a blandness
and lack of identity.
"I'm playing better than I ever

He has been famous for his taming
of par fives, but Nicklaus said, "The
reason I changed the short games
was that I was starting to not score
well on the par fives."
Distance is Nicklaus' major difficulty with his new chipping. "The
only time I ever got the ball to the
hole in the Masters was when I said,
'Hit it like you're going to hit 20 yar·
ds by the hole,"' he said.
Nicklaus said he used half chip

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COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) Despite the glare d publicity
focused on Ohio's presidential
primary, Ohioans will make important decisions In the June 3
primary a lot closer to home.
All 88 counties are slated to
nominate two canwdates for com·
~ioner from each party, along
w1th candidates for sheriff
prosecutor, recorder coroner'
treasurer, engineer a~d clerk of
courts.
When the smoke clears, more than
1,500 persons will have been
nominated as standardbearers for
their respective parties in the
November general election.
A random survey around the state
indicates most of the incwnbent of·

ficials are seeking re-election and
are unopposed for their respective
nominations.
However, there are exceptions.
One noteworthy contest is in
Richland County where former
Sheriff Thomas Weikel, who served
more than five months in jail after
pleading no contest to coercion and
assuault, is seeking the GOP
nomination to return to that office.
Richland COWlty's Republicans
have disclaimed Weikel, and instead
have endorsed his opponent, Albert
O'Neill, who was appointed sheriff
after Weikel reoigned as part of a
plea bargaining arrangement.
Democrats there say they have an
excell~t chance of capturing the
sheriff's office which over the years

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - The odds
against him seem insurmountable
now, but day after day Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy insists he will not abandon his race for the Democratic
preoidential nomination that looked
like it was his for the asking only six
months ago.
"I'm still hopeful about it," the
Massachusetts senator said in an interview while campaigning in
Nebraska. "I still realize that we're
in an uphill fight and we're the underdog, but I mean I'm not prepared
to think in lennB other than to be

successful.' '

"You get into it for the be9t of
reasons, and it turns Ot!! to be tough
going," says one aide who bas
known Kennedy for more than a
decade. " I just think it's in his
character that whatever he does, he
wants to do it very well. I don't think
he knows it any other way."
"It may sound corny," another
aide said, "but he really does
represent a constituency, even if it's
only 30 percent."
They offer different reasons to ex-

Diversified industry
should shield areas
CINCINNATI (AP) - Even
though the inflation rate for southwestern Ohio, northern Kentucky
and southeastern Iniliana exceeded
the national rate for the third year in
a row, the diversification of industry
should shield the area from an impending recession, say economists
for the Cincinnati Planning Commission.
Priceo in the seven county area in·
creased by 12.8 percent from
November 1978 to November 1979
while the rate for the nation was 12.2
percent, the report said.
1be report involved the Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Area in
Greater Cincinnati, including
Hamilton, Clermont and Warren
counties in Ohio; Campbell, Kenton
and Boone in Kentucky, and Dear·
born in Indiana.
"It might be that local prices have
lagged behind the reot of the nation
and now we are catching up," said
Dev Saggar, p!4nner economist.
''I Cllll't really say what it is,' ' said
Dr. Saul Pleeter, economic con·
sultan! for the city. "Food prices, for
Instance - it could be that we have
lost so many chain store operations
and the prices went up because there
is more competition for fewer
outlets."
Pleeter said commoility group
priceo are increasing more rapidly
in the area than nationally. These include food , home ownership,
medical care, fuel and utilities.

SSggar doesn't think passage of a
balanced national budget will ease
inflation anywhere.
"Balancing the budget does
nothing to stop inflation. The only
way to stop inflation is to reduce the
purchasing power," Saggar said.
The economists reported that
because of the area's divel'!lity of industry, the average worker's pur·
chasing power is not likely to decline
soon. That is why they agree that if
there is a recession, it will be mild in
the Ohio River Valley.
Unemployment in the area is in
better shape than nationally and is
not expected to increase. Employmentactually increased'3.1 per·
cent in the period compared to 2 per·
cent nationally.
SSggar said unemployment in
Ohio increased from 5.4 percent to
5.7 percent while unemployment in
the metropolitan area fell from 4.9
percent to 4.4.
" Unlike many major cities, Cincinnati is not solely depeniling on
one major industry. Yes, the auto
worker may suffer, but that in·
dustry's work does not necessarily
destroy other wversified industries
we have in Cincinnati," Pleeter said.
" We still have a large volume rl
financial corrunitments for com·
mercia! construction that will last at
least another year and will provide
pretty stable employment in that
area,' ' Pleeter said.

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bas traditionally been occupied by a
Republican.
Richard Petty, a former state
highway patrolman, is the endorsed
Democratic canwdate.
.
In Mahoning County, Sheriff
George D. Tablack, named to his of·
fice last year following the death of
the previous sheriff, has opposition
in the Democratic primary from
James Traficant, a Youngstown
reoident who heads up a local anti·
drug program.
But Tab4tck, former longtime
member of the Ohio House, is the endorsed Democrat.
In Columbus, Franklin County
Sheriff Harry J. Berkemer will have
opposition in the Democratic
primary as he seeks a third term.

Robert Slatzer, who lists himself
as a private investigator and has
sought the nommation unsuccessfully twice before, goes
against the Incumbent.
There is a three-way race in
Franklin COWlty for the GOP
sheriff's ·nomination, between
Robert Foster, a former Secret Ser·
vice Agent; Bob Co~UJCr, a probation
officer, and Russell A. Bennett, a
former deputy sheriff.
In Dayton, where Montgomery
County Sheriff Tom Wilson is unopposed in the GOP primary, there is a
heated battle for a spot on the county
commission resulting from the
retirement of Commissioner Charles
Lewis.
Charles F. Horn is the endorsed

Republican for Lewis' seat, while
two Democrats are competing for
their party's nomination. Tiley are
James L. Manning, Wayne Township school board member, and Ed
Fanning, a local Democratic party
worker.
Another commission race stirring
intereot is in Cleveland, where now
fewer than five Democrats and one
Republican are lined up for the seat
held by GOP Commissioner Virgil
E. Brown, who seeks re-election.
Democrats in the race include Tim
Hagan, Cuyahoga County
Democratic chairman; John E.
Gallagher Jr., preoident of the
Cleveland Board of Education, and
Frank Pokorny, onetime member of
the Ohio House who resigned as

commissioner in 1978 after pleading
guilty to misconduct in Office.
Taking on Brown in the GOP fray
will be Nary M. O'Malley, a teacher
and member of the Fairview Park
Board of Education.
In Toledo, incumbent Com·
missioner James Holzerner, a for·
mer Democratic state represen·
tative, seeks re-election but has opposition in the primary. His two opponents are Bonnie Rhonehouse and
Francis Szollosi.
Toledo also has a local ballot issue
which is drawing interest. It is a
proposed abortion statute, similar to
one in Akron which regulates abor·
lion clinics and stresses that women
seeking abortions must provide their
'' infonned consent."

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shots from 50 yards, blooping the
ball. "With this thing, I can go ahead
and rip it. But I can't convince
myself of that. I've just got to con·
vince myself. It's a matter of
working with it," he said.
He will have only two tuneups for
his new short game before the U.S.
Open at Baltusrol, N.J., in June. He
will play in the Byron Nelson Classic
May 11-11 and his own Memorial
Tournament May 22-25.

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I

second. 1 wasl9 under par in Hawati
He beat out NicklaWJ for the U.S.
_ and second. Fourteen under par
Open crown at Oak Hill In
at Ne Orl
d E' htee
Rocheoler, N.Y., in 1968 and three
w eans - secon · •g
n years later beat Big Jack In a
under par at Houston last week lose the playoff.
playoff for the title at Merion In Ard·
"Tom Watson can hold them off more, Pa.
for a while, but I'm the last of the
Lee won the British Open In conOld Guard still hanging in there. secutive years, 1971·1972, and capo
Tom is 30, I'm 40. Tom is the best. tured the PGA in 1974. Only the
But I'll get my licks in," he said.
i::.ters of the majors ha! escaped
Super Mex bas been doing just ,-:=~--------that. Besides biB three second place
finishes this year, he bas won the
SSQOO
Tournament Players Championship
(TPC), the tour's showcase, and
For any information con·
boosted his earnings to $186,181,
victing the persons respon ·
second only to Watsoo's$240,525.
Sible for the fires on the 500
Trevino burst upon the bigtime
block of second and Third
golf scene at Baltusrol in
Aves ., Gallipolis, Ohio. All
!Springfield, N.J., in 1967, stealing
information will be strictly
some of the thunder from Jack
confidential.
Nicklaus, the winner, and Arnold
Contact:
Palmer, who finished second.
James A..Northup
A wisecracking Yogi Berra, he
went on to become Nicklaus' chief
FJ~=-~~i;f

S]JOrf[~Jlt ___________________________________________w_d._"_he-sa~·-id_,'_'a-nd--Ik_re_p_f_~_·_hin__g .-c-ha_ll_~_g_er_a_nd_a_aro
__w_d_fa_vo_~_te_.__

(Continued from Page C. 71
pionships and around $3.5 million.
But the long-hitting Ohioan won
less than $60,000 a year ago. And he
wd not win a single American Tour
tournament for the first time since
he turned pro in 1962.
Even a poor, 3-over·par £inish in
the Masters earlier this month fails
to ruffle Nicklaus, however.
" I've played bad tournaments
before," he said. "I'm not concerned
about any part of my game except
putting numbers on the boa rd."
Nicklaus has a new chip shot
originated by Paul Runyan . Phil

I

Only two fillies have ever run in
more than one of the Triple Crown
races, a series which concludes this
year with the Belmont Stakes on
June7 .
Careful finished fifth in the Derby
in 1921 and 12th in the Preakness,
while Nellie Flag was fourth in the
1935 Derby and seventh in. the
Preakness. No filly bas started in
the Preakness since 1939.
Besides Genuine Risk and Codex,
the field also includes Jack
Klugman's Jaklin Klugman, the
Derby's show horse, Judith Zouck's
Samoyed and J .K. Perrin's Knight
Landing, second in the Woodlawn
Stakes.
A decision is expected today on
Locust Hill Farm's Blue Ensign, ihe
winner of the Woodlawn Stakes at
Pirnlico last week.

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CANNES, France (AP) - Actres&amp;director Jeanne Moreau was
awarded France's Legion of Honor
on Friday at the opening of the 1980
Cannes Film Festival.
Jean-Philippe Lecat, minister d
culture and conununication, presented the award to Miss Moreau at a
januned ceremony at this 33rd Cannes film festival, the world's largest
and most important international

film gathering.
The Legion of Honor is awarded in
recognition of distinguislred military
or civil service.
The festival this year is notable for
the increased role women play in
many key films selected for competition. The films are judged by a
panel headed this year by American
actor Kirk Douglas.

plain it, but biB aides say that
President Carter's rival for the
nomination is as determined in
private as he is in public. Asked
whether there has been any talk in
his inner circle that Kennedy should
pull out of the race, another
longtime aide replied, "No, and I'd
like to see someone try to convince
him. ' '
The aides preferred to remain
anonymous.
Since he announced his candidacy
last Nov. 7, Kennedy bas campaigned six days a week, sometimes
14 to 16 hours a day. U anything, his
schedule bas become more grueting
as he sank behind Carter in the polls
and finally became the longshlt
challenger that he is.
It wasn't always that way. When
Kennedy launched his campaign,
many Democrats felt the senator
had a chance to wrest the
nomination from Carter.
Kennedy himself talks in practical
political terms - national convention delegates and a belief that
somehow his campaign issues will
begin to attract the voters he needs.
His aides say that despite his deter·
mination, both public and private,
he is fully aware of the obstacleo in
his path.
According to The Associated
Press delegate count, Carter bas
1,3116 of the 1,666 national convention
delegates he will need to be
nominated at the party meeting in
August. KeMedy baa 721, and needs
to win 75 percent of the 1,264
delegates remaining to be selected.
Under most COWlts, Carter Is vir·
twi.lly assured of going over the top
on June 3, when California, Ohio and
New Jersey are among eight states
electing 696 delegates on the final
day of the primary season. Under
the party's system of proportional
representation, Carter' could lose all
eight sta~ by an unlikely 2-to-1
margin and still pick up more than
200 delegates. Those 200, plus what
he is likely to win between now and
then and at state conventions after
June 3, almost certainly will put him
well over the magic nwnber.

30,000 CUBAN REFUGEES
EG!lN AIR F:ORCE BASE,' Fla.
(AP) - While the flood of Cubans
coming to the United States cootinues, refugees have begun to
trickle out of a Florida Panhandle
tent city for new homes around the
country.
The total number of refugees
arriving in Florida now has topped
30,000 as the two-week-old
"Freedom Flotilla" brought 3,000
arrivals Friday.
One woman and 16 men on Friday
left the facility at this air base near
Fort Walton Beach where more than
9,000 Cuban refugees are being
processed.

VOL. 15 NO. 15

SUNDAY, MAY 11 , 1980

PAGE 1-D

Carter bullish on America
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Preos Wrtter
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Fieliling
questions from the public for the fir·
st time in more than eight months,
President Carter has pictured himself as bullish on America In general
and on Secretary of State EdmundS.
Musltie in particular.
At a "town hall meeting" Friday
at Temple University in Philadlphia,
Carter was so high on Muskie he
almost seemed to be giving the back
of his hand to Cyrus R. Vance,
Musltie's resigned predecessor.
Though White House press
secretary Jody Powell insisted the
president intended no criticism of
Vance, Carter's words seemed to
speak for themselves :
"My hope is that with Ed Muskie
coming on board he will play a
somewhat different role than the one
Secretary Vance played because of
the difference in background and
temperament and attitude. I see Ed
Muskie as being a much stronger
and more statesmanlike senior
citizen-figure who will be a more
evocative spokesman for our
nation's policy."
Carter said he wd not think

Muskie would get "nearly so bogged
down" as Vance in administering
the State Department - "handling
the visits of a constant stream of
diplomats who come to
Washington.''
Carter said there had been "no
basic ilisagreements" between or
among himself, Vance and Br·
zezinski. He said the idea of such a
split was "primarily a creature of
the American news media and there
is no basis in fact for it."
Vance quit April 28 because of
disagreement with the administration decision to attempt a
military rescue of the U. S. hostages
in Iran.
As for the president bullishness
about America, he was almost
ebullient io forecasting a dramatic
decline in the inflation rate by mid·
summer and "a quick rejuvenation"
in homebuilding and conswner purchase of such big ticket items as
automobiles and applianceo.
On his first speaking trip since
Oct. 29 - six days before the
American hostages were seized in
Tehran - Carter said he had expected the April24 attempt to rescue
them to succeed. He concluded that

only a streak of bad luck caused it to
be aborted .
Prior to the town hall meeting,
Carter addressed the World Affairs
Council of Philadelphia. There he
said "detente with the Soviets
remains our goal." But he added
that "the Soviets must und~nd
that they cannot recklessly threaten
world peace - they cannot conunit
aggression - and still enjoy the
benefits of cooperation with the
West."
Carter argued that it would be "an
historic error" to underestimate the
possibility that Afghanistan might
be transformed by Soviet intervention from a buffer zone
"against aggression into a launching
pad for future incursions.' '
He promised the United States
" will continue to impose economic
and political costs on the Soviet
Union until it withdraws its armed
forces and restores the in·
dependence of Afghanistan."
If that is done, he said, the United
States will be prepared to reconsider
the SALT II ,Jll1llS limitation treaty
and go on to negotiate even broader
arms curbs with Moscow.

Auto 'leaders to visit Wh.ite House
WASHINGTON (AP) - With the
deepening slwnp in the auto industry, President Carter is sure to
give industry leaders a sympathetic
hearing when they visit the White
House Wednesday.
But whether the auto executives
will be able to get the administration
to · shift its free trade policies into
reverse is another question.
Rep. Mary Rose Dakar, [).()hio,
whose Cleveland Wstrict has been
hard bit by auto layoffs, called Carter's meeting with industry leaders
"a hopeful sign."
"We've been batting our heads
against the wall," she said,
referring to efforts by some
congressmen to get the ad·
ministration to act on limiting
Japanese imports.
Rep. Ron Mottl, [).()hio, of Pai1Il8,
also was hopeful that the meeting
signals a possible change in the administration's view on imports.
"1bey're free traders at this
point," MotU said, adding that in
view of mOWlting layoffs, "I don 'I
see how they can afford to be ."
In talking with a group of senators
last Wednesday, top executives of
General Motors, Ford, American
Motors and Chrysler said temporary
relief is needed while they retool to

meet shifting consumer demand for
smaller, more fuel-&lt;!fficient cars.
"The question was raised of
negotiations with Japan to reduce
imports during the critical next two
or three years, while there is a lur·
nover (in the United States) to more
efficient cars," said Sen. Gaylord
Nelson, [).Wis., one of the senators
who attended the private meeting.
But Carter's special represen·
tative for trade negotiations, Reubin
Askew, expressed opposition to even
temporary trade reotrictions.
Askew, who is in Japan this
weekend on a tour of the Far East,
said imports of fuel-efficient cars
meet consumer demand. As a result,
it's more in the public interest to let

the market take its course - even if
a felV years are needed for U.S.
automakers to roll competitive cars
off their lines, he added.
While in Japan, Askew was ex·
peeled to meet with Japanese
automakers to discuss possible ex·
pansion of Japanese investment in
the UnitedStates and the lowering of
barriers to U.S. exports to Japan.
Meanwhile, United Auto Workers
President Douglas Fraser has been
conducting his own campaign to
prompt the government to act on
Japanese imports, which are partly
to blame for mushrooming layoffs
and plant closings that have hit
more than 200,000 autoworkers, he
said.

Sea search resumes
FORT MYERS, Fla . (AP) - A
Coast Guard plane was resuming the
search early Saturday for eight
crewmen who abandoned a sinking
125-foot freighter weot of here.
Officials said the freighter, whose
name sounded like the "Ottoman" in

a mayday, reported water pouring
over its decks about 100 miles west
of Fort Myers in the Gulf of Mexico
Friday night.

\

A faint mayday from the freighter
said the crew was abandoning ship.
The Coast Guard said further at·
tempts to contact the vessel were unsuccessful .
A Coast Guard helicopter, a HC..
131 search plane and several tugs
were ilispatched to the area, but the
aircraft wd not locate the freighter
Friday night, the Coast Guard said.

Bank robbery suspects caught after daring wild chase
NORCO, Calif. (AP) - Sheriff's
deputies caught three persons Saturday believed to have been involved
in a daring bank robbery, capped by
a wild escape in which a deputy was
killed and the robbers fired M-16
rifles and tossed explosiveo at
pollee.
Authorities began picking their
way through the snowy, brushcovered San Gabriel Mountains at
first light. The robbers eluded them
after the Friday holdup at the
Security Pacific National Bank in
Norco, which was timed with a stopwatch.
1be three, who were not Identified,
were apprehended without any shots
being fired, pollee said. They were
caught in the area in whicl: police
had sighted a man believed to have
been a robber wounded in the

•

getaway, but it was not immediately
clear whether he was one of the
three caught.
san Bernadino County Sgt. Mike
Howell said authorities were looking
for one or two other fugitives.
The gunmen were pursued by
police in a wild chase Friday along
mountain highways. A deputy
sheriff and one of the robbers wed in
the gunfire.
·nu-ee bystanders at the bank, six
deputies from Riverside County, one
deputy from San Bernardino County
and a California Highway Patrol of·
ficer suffered minor injuries in the
incid~t. officials said.
The gunmen also are wanted in
connection with four San Diego
Ccunty robberies and were being
followed by FBI agents In that county Friday before the gangster-style

holdup of a bank ill N'Orco, The
Associated Press has learned.
An FBI agent who asked not to be
identified said detectives "lOll! the
suspects" when they tried to transfer the tall to authorities in neigh.
boring Riverside Coun'Y.
Another law en!Ottement source
said San Diego police detectives
may have followed the suspects all
the way to San Bernardino - only to
lose them- on the same day.
Within hours, the "Two Minute"
gang hit a Security Pacific National
Bank in this small community 60
miles east of Los Angeles.
One rea.•on authorities believe the
suspects are the s8me who escaped
with about $60,000 in several San
Diego cases is that the gang times its
robberies with a Rtopwatch, the FBI
agent said.
\~

"One guy holds a stopwatch and
they always get out within two
minutes," he said.
1be six skl·masked bandits burst
into the bank just before closing
time, ordered bank workers and
patrons to lay face down on the floor
and then scooped up an estimated
$19,000 from tellers cash drawers.
But as the gunmen - armed with
M·16 rifles - ran from the bank
they were met with a fuSmade ri
gunfire from Riverside County
sheriff's deputies. A running battle
on city streets raged as the banwts
plied into a wailinl! van.
Bill Smith, vice president of
Security Pacific's Riverside division
headquarters, Said there were about
10 customers in the bank when the
gunmen entered the lobby and
yelled, "Everybody hit the floor. "

"Everybody did as they were told,
then one of the gunmen vaulted the
teller's counter and started grabbingthe money," he said.
1be bandit's getaway driver was
shot to death a short distance from
the bank, and the other gunm~n
abandoned the bullet-riddled vehicle
and stole a pickup truck .
" You could hear shotgWlS and
small anns and at least one submachine gun," said Jim Lyon, who
was working in an Office ne:rt to the
bank. "I went running outside and I
saw three ski·masked individuals
hop ,into the back .of a utility pickup
truck that they had COQIIII8lldeered
from a young fellow who was driving
by at the time and it sped off."
A police helicopter was ilisabled
by show, but landed safely, said
CP.P officer Harry Forsberg, and a

patrol car was hitjb~ a train during
the pursuit. No ini,uries were reported in either incident.
Riverside County sheriff's Sgt.
Robert Matheny said deputy Jamea
B. Evans, 39, was killed as some 30'
law officers- including two SWAT
teams - exchanged sporadic gunfire with the bandit.. in the Lytle
Creek area near the Cajon Pass.
1be fatally wounded robber was
tentatively identified as Jerry Dean
Ivan.
In Riverside, FBI spokesman Bill
Smith said of the bandits, "We know
the principals. We have had an interest in them for some time."
He said the group had allegedlY
been involved in a string ol robberies in the San Diego area, but
declined to give further details .

.

�W - The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, May II, 1980

D-2-The Sundjiy Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11 , 19110

Economists say recession will
be mild in Ohio River Valley

Agriculture ant!
•
our communitv

CINCINNATI (AP) - Even
though the inflation rate for southwestern Ohio, northern Kentucky
and southeastern Indiana exceeded
the national rate for the third year in
a row, the diversification of industry
should shield the area from an impending recession, say economists
for the Cincinnati Plann ing
Comission.
Prices in the seven county area irr
creased by 12.8 percent from
November 1978 to November 1979
while the rate for the nation was 12.2
· percent, the report said.
The report involved the Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Area in
Greater Cincinnati, including
Hamilton, Clennont and Warren
counties in Ohio; Campbell, Kenton
and Boone in Kentucky, and Dearborn in Indiana.
·
" It might be that local prices have
lagged behind the rest of the nation
and now we are catching up," said
Dev Saggar. planner economist.
" I can't really say what it is,'' said
Dr. Saul Pleeter, economic consultant!or the city. "Food prices, for
instance - it could be that we have
lost so many chain store operations
and the prices went up because there

By Bryson R .fBudj Cartt·r
Gallia Count y Extension Agt·nt
GALLIPOUS - Nests or tents of
the eastern tent caterpillar are
becoming a part of the landscape
along fence rows and in homeowner
trees in many parts of Gallia County. This insect has been increasing in
numbers the past few years and
shows no signs that it is about to let
up. Besides making a tree look unsightly with the webs it constructs in
the crotches of limbs and branches,
the caterpillars have big appetites
and often completely eat all tbe
leaves off a small tree.
Aside from defoliating the trees,
the caterpillars arouse much concern among area residents when
they migrate in mass in search of
new food or a place to complete their
development. During periods of
migration, caterpillars may be seen
by the thousands traveling over
roads, streets, driveways, and
sidewalks. It becomes virtually inr
possible to drive or walk in these
areas without squashing them. The
favorite food of the caterpillar is
wild cherry trees followed by apple.
It may be found also feeding on
peach, plum, pear, rose, hawthorn,
and many different shade and forest
trees.
The larvae or worms leave the tents to feed several times a day but
return to the tents when not feeding.
Where trees are small and only a
few involved, the eastern tent cater·
pillar can be brought under control
.without the aid of insecticides if a
person will apply any one of the
following teclmiques : 1) Hand
destruction of webs and larvae. 2)
Burning of webs with a name on a
rag on a pole. 3) Pruning out webs
and destroying them. 4) Destroying
egg masses before spring. 5)
Removing wild cherry trees. Any
one of these methods. if done

thoroughly, will help reduce the tent
caterpillars.
The best time to control tent caterpillars is while they are small and
before the leaves are half open on
wild cherry trees. Most people wait
until tents appear in the trees before
they attempt to apply control
measures. Since the caterpillars eat
so much foliage , just about any in·
secticide will kill them. The in·
sectk;des in the following list have
been singled out because they are
most readily available and effective
against this pest. They are: Sevin,
Sevimol, Dursban, Orthene or
Methoxychlor.
Our Beef Fi tting and Showing
Demonstration and Beef Princess ·
Queen Contest was held last week at
the Fairgrounds. Darlene Jenkins

GALUA BEEF QUEEN - Diana Jenkins (1980 Gallla County Beef
Queen) is shown here with Kim Bickers and Roberts Hamilton, first runner-up at the 1980 Gallia County Beef Round-Up.

was crowned i•Beef Princess" and

Diana Jenkins was crowned "Beef
Queen." Both girls are daughters of
Bob and Anna Jenkins of Rt. 1, Nor·
thup.
Heather Riley, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Riley, Eureka Star
Route, was Beef Princess first Run·
ner-up and Roberts Hamilton,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hamilton, Rt. 2, Vinton, was Beef
Queen first Runner·llp.
George and Nona Woodward,
Marion and Carolyn Caldwell. Bob
and Anna Jenkins, C. A. and April
Duncan, Merrill and Thelma Rose,
Casby and. Bettie Meadows, French
City Florist, Mark and Annette
Jividen, Tombo and Jackie Woodward, Wayne and Jane Jividen,
Terri Jividen, Harry and Mary Lou
Fellure, The Ohio Valley Bank,
Glendon and Pat Elliott, David and
Cindy Graham, Glenn and Jackie
Graham sponsored the event.

Homemakers'
Circle
lt' ~IW"I"'!

Anmt
BY

year's recession .

· But Federal Reserve Board Chair·
man Paul A. Volcker, AFL-CIO
President Lane Kirkland and
economist Herbert Stein say they
are not convinced the time is right.
The disagreement over a tax cut
emerged Friday as the Business
Council, a prestigious group of about
100 corporate officials, held its semiannual meeting at a Virginia resort.
The meeting continues today.
hi other economic developments
. Friday: - Inflation at the wholesale
level slowed down in April as prices
rose 0.5 percent, the smallest
amount in 11 montbs and far less
than March's 1.4 percent surge. Until April, wholesale prices were ac·
celerating at an 18 percent annual
rate. If last month's pace continued,
prices would rise only 6.2 percent a
year, although a continuation of this
trend is considered unlikely.
-Sales at the nation's retail stores
continued their slump in April,
falllng 1.2 percent overall and a huge
9.7 percent in the depressed auto
section. Since January, retail sales,
seasonally adjusted, have sagged 5.2
percent, as the economy headed into
a recession.
Despite the call for a tax cut at the
economic conference here,
President Carter has said.he will not
consider cutting taxes until the
government is sure it can balance its
budget next year for the first time
since 1969. Congress, meanwhile,
has turned aside Republican-backed

efforts to reduce taxes.
Reginald Jones, chainnan of the
General Electric Co. and of the
Business Council, sa id he was " upset... to see a budget balanced by in·
creasing revenues" rather than by
cutting federal spending.
Economists for the business group
estimated that more than $60 billion
of the money Carter intends to use to
balance his $612 billion budget next
year comes from " new" taxes such
as the so-called " windlall profits
tax" on oil, the proposed gasoline
conservation fee, higher Social
Security taxes and the so-called " innation creep" that pushes people into higher tax brackets.
The incentive for cutting taxes,
Jones predicted, will occur in the
third quarter this year. At that time,
he said, the economy is "going to be
in such bad straits" that the candidates for the presidency are
"going to want to get aboard" the
tax cut bandwagon.
Irving S. Shapiro, chairman of
E.I. du Pont de Nemours &amp; Co.,
agreed: " ! would condition the tax
cut on an expenditure cut as well.
The Ameiican public has begun for
the first time to understand this, and
they have begun to demand it" in the ·
voting booth.
Volcker, who has headed the
Federal Reserve since last fall , said
he did not believe the recent sharp
drop in business activity "is
equivalent of a judgment that the
economy is on a persistent, downhill
slide."
' Asked if he felt a tax cut especially one with about half earmarked to help business - was a
wise move, Volcker replied, " No, I
don't at this stage."

•
••
•

THANKS

Microwave Lessons
GALLIPOLIS - Microwave
cooking is rapidly changing from an
expensive girrunick for warming up
left.:Overs to an energy-efficient way
to prepare gourmet meals. This
method of cooking is becoming more
and more popular. Market reports
predict that one out of every ten
households will have a microwave
by the end of the year.
Studies have shown that househ91ds with a microwave oven and a
conventional range can use anywhere from 14 to 50 percent less
energy than the households with
only a conventional range. However,
to achieve this energy savings one
needs to know how to use one's
microwave oven efficiently.
The Gallia County Cooperative
Extension Service is offering a
lesson on microwave cooking to
anyone who is interested in learning
how to use their microwave oven
more efficiently. We will cover some
of the points in selecting a micr&lt;&gt;waveoven.

We will not only be sharing ideas
and suggestions for using your oven,
but we will be giving you some new
recipes. There is also a door prize to
be given away. Registration will be
50 cents at the door.
The lesson will be given on May 15,
1980 at 7:30p.m. at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center.

Agriculture
weather

TO THE POMEROY VOLUNTEER FIRE

•

DEPARTMENT AND ALL OTHERS WHO

.
i
:
•

:

•

JOHN AND MARILYN FULTZ AND
t
EMPLOYEES OF THE MEIGS TIRE
•
CENTER EXTEND THEIR SINCERE THANKS •

:

:

:
•

ASSISTED IN EXTINGUISHING A FIRE AT :
THE MEIGS TIRE CENTER LAST TUESDAY
NIGHT. A MAJOR DISASTER WAS
AVERTED AS THE RESULT OF THE QUICK
ACTION Of THE POMEROY FIRE
DEPARTMENT.

:

t
t .
:
•

•••••••••••••••••••••
,
.

'

.

l"I.J.IU!.

E:J;IaUIOCI .\lrDI,

···················~~

i

tlt.TTI~~

Ho-F...ro:oaiiiiUI"' '

Officials disagree
on tax cut proposal
HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP) - Some
of the nation's lllp corporate
executives believe that business and
personal income taxes should be cut
$25 billion next year to help the
United States recover from this

An)'bod )

By The Associated Press
Here's a l ook at the agricultural
weather · forecast · from the Ag
Weather Center at West Lafayette,
Ind.:
Low pressure moving out of the
central plains will replace the high
pressure that has dominated Ohio
weather for the past few days. It will
mean a chance for shower activity
by Sunday, providing much needed
rain .
The rain is likely to be light in
most areas with amounts of over a
quarter inch only in scattered areas.
Winds, and the threat of showers
will make spraying conditions poor
this weekend and through the early
part of next week. Field working
conditions will be good today,
although blowing dust will he unpleasant. High soil temperautres mostly in the 60s - may fall a few
degrees later this weekend and early
next week as cloudiness increases
and air temperatures fall once
again. Minimum values should n~
fall out of the low 40s, leaving mean
bare soil temperatures in the low 50s
by early next week.
The threat of showers is expected
to last through Monday and Tuesday
before fair skies appear Wednesday .
·Wetting may not replace all the
moisture lost during the past several
days. The past week of virtually no
rainfall left the state from seven to
eight tentbs below normal for the
period.
Top.soil conditions should improve
however and subsoil moisture is still
adequate over most of the state.
Temperatures are expected to fall
below normal by mid week. That
will keep evaporative losses below
those of the past week.
TOUCH UP CHIPS
Mascara ca n be used to brush and
touch up, ··hips and scratches on furniture.

PRINCESS - Shown with Darlene Jenkins (1980 Gallia County Beef
Princess) are Kim BiCkers , standing (1979 Beef Princess) and Heather
Riley, first runner-up.

MARIJUANA PATCH AND PLANT BED beds located off Horse Creek Rd ., near Eureka. The
DESTROYED - Deputies of the Gallia County department reports the area has been used in previous
Sheriff's Department Friday destroyed three plant years to raise similar crops.

result of political pressure. The independents have threatened to
protest by shutting down hundreds
of Ohio gas stations for three days
prior to the June 3Ohio primary.
ERA Deputy Administrator
Douglas G. Robinson, who outlined
the proposed rule change at a press
briefing, was asked about that
allegation. He said he had no
knowledge of any pressure from the
White House.
Robinson said the April 30 order
by Melvin Goldstein, director of the
Office of Hearings and Appeals, was
rescinded because "we believed the
rulemaking procedure was a more
appropriate way to make the
change."
Bode said he was pleased that the
government "finally recognized the
dimension of the problem." But he
said the independent dealers, some
of whom claim they face bankruptcy
because of price competition, were
still concerned at the 45-day delay
before Sohio's prices rise.
Neither Sohio nor the DOE could
say immediately how much of a
price hike may be coming.
"We're going to have to look at it
(the rule change) in detail before we
can interpret the impact," said company spokesman Tom Liberti.
Robinson would say only that
Sohio's prices " may very well be
raised by as much as they would
have under Goldstein's order."

The difference is that the proposed
change in the DOE's entitlements
program affects the industry nationwide, whereas Goldstein's order affected only Sohio's prices in Ohio,
Robinson said.
The DOE official said that
although other oil companies will
benefit by having crude oil costs
dropped about $1.04 a barrel,
average prices for gasoline
throughout the country will remain
about the same.
Sohio takes 53 percent of the
Alaskan North Slope oil, drawing
more than 725,000 barrels of crude
oil a day through the Alaskan
pipeline.
Robinson said the pricing
inequities under the entitlements
program also benefited Exxon and
Arco but to a lesser degree. Each of
those firms takes 20 percent of the
North Slope oil.
Chevron also benefited because it
buys large quantities of the Alaskan
crude, Robinson said.
He said North Slope oil was
classed with imported .oil under the
entitlements program because it '
costs $7 to $10 a barrel to transport
that oil to U.S. refineries.
But the soaling cost of foreign oil . ,
threw the program out of whack,
giving North Slope oil users a ~ per
barrel cost advantage, the DOE official said.

GALLIPOLIS
Advance
registration application forms with
$4.5CI entry fees for the third annual
fun run and races must be received
by Beverly Jackson at Holzer
Medical Center Library by 5 p.m.
Wednesday, May 14.
The event will be held Saturday,
May 17, at the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds.
Application forms for the three
separate races are available from
Ms. Jackson at the hospital library,
or from members of the employee
recreation conunittee.
Mter Wednesday evening's ad·
vance registration deadline, the fee

will be $5 and registration will be
available at 9 o'clock on Saturday,
May 17, the morning of the fun run
and races.
Several people have been gettlllg
in shape for this third annual ev~t.
Included are Charles E. Holzer, Jr.,
M.D., president of the medical staff
of the hospital. In fact, Dr. Holzer
went all the way to Massachusetts to
participate in the Texon Five
College Marathon on Sunday, May 5,
running a challenging 26.5 mile course. The marathon began at Smith
College in Northampton, Mass.,
going to Mt. Holyoke College, then to

Predict job losses, crime
CINCINNATI (AP) - The wives
and mothers of Ohio, Indiana and
Kentucky truckers have joined their
men to fight congressional plans for
deregulating the trucking industry,
a move they say will cost 146,000 jobs
in the state.
Gerald Kiser, president of the Cincinna Teamsters Local 100, told a
Thursday news conference that 2,500
of those jobs would be lost in the Cincinnati area if federal trucking
regulations are repealed.
Kiser and a group on the distaff
side predicted job losses, increased
competition among truckers, safety
hazards due to unregulated "wildcat" operators, and the demise of
small businesses that can't compete
in an unregulated shipping price
war.
Among . other things, the federal
govenunent licenses trucks and
routes, and inspects and controls
shipping and cargoes.
Kiser and a group of trucking
wives and mothers returned this
week from Washington after
meetirig with area congressmen to
protest a proposal to deregulate .the
industry.
The bill passed the Senate by a 7().
20 vote. The women were critical of
U.S. Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum,
J).()hio, who voted for deregulation
April15.
" ! always thought we, as small
people, were a part of the policy
making part of the Congress and the
elected representative was the voice
of power," said Mrs. Martha Starr.
She is an over-the-road driver.
She met last month in Washington
with Metzenbaum and Rick
Neustadt, an aide to President Carter.
" Senator Metzenbaum first
refused to see us . He later set up a 2
p.m. appointment, then canceled it.
We actually ran into him accidentally in the hallway of the
Senate and had to stand in the
. hallway to talk to him," Mrs. Starr
said.·
In a Jetter to Local 100, Met~en bau · n wrote, "I strongly bel.ieve
tt&gt;at c-ompetition, not govemment
rcg•Jiations and price-fixing , best

t

serves the interests of the American
economy and consumers. I also
believe that the present system of
regulation in the trucking industry is
highly inflationary."
The women said other area
Congressmen either did not support
deregulation or wanted to study the
measure before voting on it in the
House of Representatives.
Mrs. Joyce Barnes said her
husband and four sons aFe· drive
trucks. She said she tried to tell U.S.
Reps. Gene Snyder and ~rry

Hopkins of Kentucky ' that
deregulation would cause safety
hazards and crowded highways.
"I think they understand what the
problem will be if the industry is
deregulated," Mrs. Barnes said.
Kiser estimated that if
deregulation is passed, about 500,000
jobs would ~ lost to Teamsters
across the country.
"Right now, we have the best transportation system in the world, but if
it is deregulated, it will not be,"
Kiser said.

Pleeter said commodity group
prices are increasing more rapidly
in the area than nationally. These irr
elude food , home ownership,
medical care, fuel and utilities.
Saggar doesn't think passage of a
balanced national budget will ease
inflation anywhere.
" Balancing the budget does
nothing to stop inflation. The only
way to stop inflation is to reduce the
purchasing power,' •Saggar said.
The economists reported that
because of the area's diversity of industry, the average worker's purchasing power is not likely to decline
soon. That is why they agree that if
there is a recession, it will be mild in
the Ohio River Valley.
Unemployment in the area is in
better shape than nationally and is
not expected to increase. Employment actually increased 3.1 per·
cent in the period compared to 2 percent nationally.
Saggar said unemployment in
Ohio increased from 5.4 percent to
5.7 percent while unemployment in
the metropolitan area fell from 4.9
percent to 4.4.

"Unlike many major cities, Clncirmati is not solelY dependent oo
one major Industry. Yes, the auto
worker may suffer, but that iJI.
dustry's work does not n~y
destroy other diversified lndlllltrla
we have In Cincinnati," Pleeter said.
"We still have a large volume ~
financial commitments for CtDmercial construction that will last at
least another year and will provide
pretty stable employment In that
area, •' Pleeter said.

DIRECTOR APPOINTED
COLUMBUS, 0. (AP) - The Ohio
Rail Transportstion .,\uthority on
Friday named Robert J. Casey, a
fonner executive of Amtrak, as its
executive director.
Casey, a native of Youngstown,
served with Amtrak from 1975 until
earlier this year. In 1974, wbile
executive director of the Natiooal
Association of Railroad Pllllllellgers,
he authored and promoted a plan to
develop high-speed rail service between Cleveland, Youngstown and
Pittsburgh.

Advance application forms for. fun run due Wednesday

Cheap gas coming to an end
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
motorists have about a month and a
half more to enjoy some of the
cheapest gasoline in the nation.
But for the state's independent oil
dealers it will be another month and
a half of struggling until a new
Department of Energy regulation
takes effect.
The DOE announced Thursday a
proposed rule change that would
eliminate by July 1 a price advantage .held by Standard Oil Co.
(Ohio) and some other oil companies
using Alaskan North Slope oil.
Sohio now sells gasoline for as low
as $1.06 a gallon. The average price
for gasoline across the country is
over $1.20 a gallon, and some independent dealers complained thai
it cost them more to buy their
gasoline wholesale than the price the
state's biggest retailer was charging
at the pump.
Sohio dominates the Ohio gasoline
market with 27 percent of the sales.
Thursday's order from the
Economic Regulatory Administration had been expected sin·
ce last week, when DOE Deputy
John Sawhill stepped in to rescind a
temporary order that would have
forced Sohio to impose an inr
mediate hike of about 10 cents a
gallon.
William Bode, lawyer for the Ohio
Independents for Survival, charged
that Sawhill's intervention was the

is more competition for fewer
outlets."

left, administrator of
Holzer Clinic, Ltd., fills out a pre-registration fonn for his children to participate in the Third Annual Fun Run and Races to be held on Saturday
morning, May 17. Pointing out specific details on the fonn is Beverly
Jackson, right, hospital librarian, who is handling registration for the
event, sponsored by the hospital 's employee recreation committee.

..

BY:
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

Hampshire College, from there tp
Amherst College, and finishing at
the University of Massachusetts in
Amherst. More than 500 men and
women were registered for ·this Five
College Marathon.
In a report directly from
Massachusetts, Dr. Holzer said that
be completed the 26.5 miles in five
hours and two minutes. The winner
was Steve Nojeim, a graduate
student from the University &lt;i
Massachusetts, who ran the course
in two hours, 34 minutes and 56
seconds.
Coming in fourth was the winner
of the women's division of the
marathon, 23 year old Nancy Conz of
East Hampton, who completed the
26.5 mile course in two hours, 35
minutes, 53", less than 10 minutes
behind first place.
Dr. Holzer said, "It was a
beautiful day, sunny and with a head
wind, which made all the running
times slower. The course is far more
difficult than the one used in the
much publicized Boston marathon,
or even the Baltimore marathon
race. The hills were particularly
steep, particularly near the end of
the course," he added.
In commenting on his participation in the Five College
Marathon, Dr. Holzer said, "Running in last Sunday's marathon was
one of the greatest days of my life.
Anyone hwo plans to run next Saturday in the hospital's third annual fun
run can have the very same kind of
exhilirating txperience. Of course
it's not as long a race, but it will be
jUst as much fun for a short course,
and the best possible exercise for
both men and women, boys and
girls."
Participants in Saturday's events
may register for any one of the three
scheduled. The 6.0 mile race will
begin promptly at 10 o'clock on
Saturday morning, followed by the
3.0 mile and the 1.5 mile, both
scheduled to start at 11 o'clock.
According to Ron Saunders, chairman of this year's run, and Walt
Saunders, assistant chairman, the
course at the Gallia County
Fairgrounds will coYer blacktop,
gravel roads and grass paths. Six
trophies will be awarded, a winner
and nmner-up in each of the three
races. In addition, ribbons will be
given to the winners in specified age

groups. All those who register in advance by Wednesday evening 's
deadline, are assured a special red
tee shirt, inscribed "Holzer Medical
Center Fun Run, 1.5, 3.0, 6.0,"
bearing the colorful Holzer seal
Awards will be presented around
noon .
Those who preregister should
check in at the Main Stage at the
Gallia County Fairgrounds between
9 a.m. and 10 a.m. on Saturday morning. Those who wish to register on
Saturday morning, should also be at
the Main Stage by 9 o'clock, and
may register by palng the $5 fee.
All participants must come to the
fairgrounds dressed to run, as
shower and dressing facilities are
not available. The races are open to
all age groups. However, any entrants who are under age 18 must
have the signature of a parent for
permission to participate.

Bill vetoed by Gov. Rhodes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has vetoed a bill
creating a non-commercial trailer
classification in Ohio 's motor
vehicle licensiJ;lg law.
He said Friday he was sympathetic to the measure's purpose,
but it fails to accomplish it.
Rhodes said it was designed to lift
the burden of a $15 hike in trailer
license fees this year from the
shoulders of owners of noncommercial trailers.
" This is an admirable purpose,
and one which I fully support," he
said, adding, however, that the bill
"will not accomplish that purpose in
an equitable and efficient manner."
The governor cited several
technical difficulties with the

proposal, Including one provision
that would provide a rebate to
owners of non-commercial trallers
who registered and paid the fee hike
prior to the bill's effective date.
However, there is no current
distinction In the law between CtDmereial and non-commercial
trailers. Rhodes said "the language
in the bill may not pennlt the
Registrar (of motor vehlcltlll) to
make any reimbursement at all."
He added in his'veto message that
he was preparing legislation "to
fairly and equitably reimburse
everyone who registers a trailer that
is used for non-commercial plU"pOIIe5
this year. I am hopeful the General
Assembly can give this legislation
prompt attention when it returns to
Session next month. •'

County ·agent's corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
ExteDSIOD Ageol
Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - We have been getting a lot of calls concerning the worms that are now making the webs in
the crotches of some of thre trees
such as apple, wild cherry, and other
fruit trees. This worm is called the
Eastern Tent Caterpillar.
In most cases there is little that
can be done economically to control
this serious pest. However, if you
have fruit trees or a tree in your
yard which you do not want
defoliated, I suggest you do the
following immediately.
·Apply one of the following
pesticides - Sevin (50 percent wettable powder) at the rate of 2
tablespoons per gallon of water; or
Methoxychlor (50 percent wettable
powder) at the rate of 2 tablespoons
per gallon of water; or Malathion (27
percent liquid) at the rate of 2
teaspoons per gallon of water; or Orthene at the rate of I~ tablespoons
per gallon of water. Do not apply Orthene to nowering crabapple. There
are probably other fonnulations of
these insecticides than I have mentioned. U you use a different for-

mulation than mentioned here,
please consult the label or call our
office.
. Any of these materials should be
sprayed on the leaves and branches
of the trees to the point of run-off.
Thorough coverage is important for
good control. Repeai after a rain or
as needed.
Something To Think About ...
Americans spent an estimated $329
billion on food in 1979, with fanners
getting about $76 billion of the
amount.
Feeder Calf Results ... A graded
feeder calf sale was held in April. 300
head were sold with an average
weight of 522 pounds. The top pen of
steers brought $84 per cwt. The
steers averaged 547 pounds in
weight and $66.42 in price. The top
lot of heifers brought $67.50. The
heifers weighed 504 pounds and
brought $59.74.
Alfalfa Weevil ... Start checking
fields now. Remember, when 5(] to 70
percent of the leaves start showing
damage it is time to spray. Damage
to fields are not the same. Check
each field at least once per week and
spray only if necessary. We have a
list of recommended chemicals in
the office.

Pesticid'} Safety .. . The
agricultural industry has had its
problems with pesticides. Due to the
misuse of a few chamicals, we have
all had to suffer. Many cbemlcala
are oow restricted and Jmre
cbemicals will be restricted In a few
years. 1bere are some things we can
do to use pesticides safely.
1. Use no more than the recommended amount.
2. Do not apply sprays or dusts on
windy days.
3. Try to apply insecticides wben
honey bees are not visiting that crop.
4. Thoroughly clean application
equipment after use if it will be used
for something else.
5. Take a bath and wash clothing
after using pesticides.
6. Sprayers used with 2,4-D; 2,4,1&gt;T; or 2,4-DB should be given a
special cleaning with anunonla or
activated charcoal and detergent.
7. Burn empty pesticide containers that are burnable (keep out
of the smoke).
8. Rinse metal containers three
times or crush and bury 18 inches
deep in an isolated area,
For more information on storlJI8
or mixing, call us.

Youth takes walk in Gallipolis in '39, later U. S. president

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~.

DOWNWITII
ment.
IDGH BLOOD PRESSURE
10. If you drop out of therapy you
POMEROY - The month of May can always start again.
has been proclaimed National High
Here are the answers:
Blood Pressure Month. During this
1. True. High blood pressure
month various agencies will be em· usually has no symptoms.
phaslzlng educational lnfonnation
2. True. Controlled blood pressure
on this subject in order to help the also lessens the risk if kidney
public to better understand and ap- disease.
propriately handle high blood
3. False. High blood pressure can
be controlled but rarely cured.
pressure.
Test yourself .bY answering the
4. True. You must stay on treatfollowing questions true or false :
ment to keep your blood pressure un1. You can have high blood der control.
pressure and still feel fine.
5. False. The doctor prescribes ef2. Treating high blood pressure fective therapy. You control your
can lessen the risk of heart disease own blood pressure by following
your treatment plan.
and stroke.
6. True. The family 's emotional
3. You can cure your high blood
pressure with medication.
and practical support can make it
. 4. High blood pressure must be easier to control your high blood
treated every day for the rest of your pressure.
7. False. Associate your pills with
life.
5. The doctor can control high a normal daily activity - it's im- .
porttant to.remember them.
blood pressure.
8. False. Tell your doctor about
6. Your family can help you stay
your symptom!!. He or she can subon treabnent.
7. It's 0. K. to forget your stitute another medlealiot'l:
9. False. Good ctmmunication bemedication now and then.
8. You should stop taking your tween you, your doctor, and your
high blood . pressure pill if side- family is necessary for control.
10. True. It's better not to drop out,
effects bother you.
9. You shouldn't bother anyone , but you can start again - and sucabout your problems with treat- ceed.

-·-·-•

-------·

Passed Our House
Down Front Street the young man
would have passed by Warth's lumber yard, a couple of new brick
homes, a tiny post office, and two
taverns - the Our House and the
Eagle. Ed Naret's drug store and
doctor's office was then in the
deVacht building, and he was adSome of the passengers, including vertising that he bought ginseng.
Also on Front Stret Hiram could
a student whose first name was Hirhave
heard the sounds of Abram Anam, took the opportunity to wander
derson,
.the blacksmith, as well as
along Front Street and across the
those
of
the Front Street brickPublic Square.
makers arid carriage makers.
Hiram might have carried with
Gallipolis was a thriving town of
him
on this jaunt his valise, which
about 1,400 residents and the levee,
had
all
of his important papers in it.
we can imagine, was a beehive of acHis
initials
H.U.G. stood out as a
tivity in May, with draymen pulling
source
of
embarrassment
to him.
their carts and hawkers selling their '
His
father
had
etched
the
initials
on
wares. No doubt sheep and pigs were
the
valise
without
realizing
that
being driven from the Market House
on the · Public Square toward the H.U.G. might be misinterpreted by
levee where they would be taken to some women.
Little did Hiram realize that his
Pittsburgh cw- Cincinnati, the latter
name
would continue to be a source
being nicknamed "Porkopollil.
of discussion the rest of his life.
Pi-obably Galltpol!s would have
Coagreoslonal error
reminded Hiram d three towns
His reason for being on the boat
where he had gone to school that day was that he was heading off
Georgetown, Ripley, and Maysvllle 1.0 West Point to take the place of the
- as the last twn were also busy Bailey boy of Georgetown who had
been di~missed because of poor
river towns.
BY JAMES SANDS
GALUPOUS - It was a besutiful
May afternoon in 1839 when a steamboat docked at the Gallipolis levee.
The captain announced that there
would be a tw&lt;&gt;-hour layover in the
French city so that supplies could be
brought on board.

------~---------- ··- ---., ,

'

--···-

··--- - - - -·-- -

grades. The Congressman who had
recommended Hiram had thought
his name was Simpson instead of
Hiram. At West Point the military
officials said they had a commission
for a Simpson and not a Hiram and if
he was a Hiram and not a Simpson
he could go back home. It was then
that Hiram did change his name to
Simpson, rather than fight military
logic.
Had Hiram strolled across the
Public Square in Gallipolis he would
have seen a neat court house, a jail,
a market house and about 30 shops
surrounding the square.
Hated slgbt of blood
We are sure that Hiram - or Lyss
as his close friends called him wondered what military life would
be like. Lyss was good wi~ a gun,
but he hated the sight of blood and
had even passed out o•.ce when be·
saw a dead buck. He also liked to
ride a horse and he was gOOd at it.
But his real reason for wanting to go
to West Point was the oPPortunity to
see the world.
Little did Lyss know that some of
his classmates at West Point would
become famous tbe world over men likP William Tecumseh SherIW n. It was Shennan who would

give Lyss the nickname of· Uocle
Sam or Sam for short. In fact durtng
his four years on the Hudson, Hiram
was known·only as Sam.
AD U39 J0Ul11111
Probably Hiram would have stopped by the office of the Galllpoll.!!
Journal to buy the latest paper. 'I1Ie
Journal in 1839 was already getting
ready for the 1840 election by coming
out in support of William Henry
Harrison. 1bey said weekly that
"old Van (Van Buren) was a used up
man... The cultural center or
Gallipolis In 1839 was the Lyceum 111
State Stret. The Journal would likely
have carried that week a transcript
of the latest speech given at the ,
Luceum.
We can imagine that few people
gave notice to this young man. He
would return to GaJIIpoll.!! on a
couple of other OCC88lons on hla way
back from school. It la certain that
no one In GaWpoll.!! ever bad au
lnklin« that thla young man would
grow up to be a famousgeneralllld
later a president. Hiram's fuli Dime
was Hiram Ulyaaes Grant but
because of that Congresslllllll error
he came to be known throuib hiatGry
as Ulyll8e8 Simpson Grant.
·~-·-

'

.

·- -·--·-------- ---·---.:

�W - The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, May II, 1980

D-2-The Sundjiy Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11 , 19110

Economists say recession will
be mild in Ohio River Valley

Agriculture ant!
•
our communitv

CINCINNATI (AP) - Even
though the inflation rate for southwestern Ohio, northern Kentucky
and southeastern Indiana exceeded
the national rate for the third year in
a row, the diversification of industry
should shield the area from an impending recession, say economists
for the Cincinnati Plann ing
Comission.
Prices in the seven county area irr
creased by 12.8 percent from
November 1978 to November 1979
while the rate for the nation was 12.2
· percent, the report said.
The report involved the Standard
Metropolitan Statistical Area in
Greater Cincinnati, including
Hamilton, Clennont and Warren
counties in Ohio; Campbell, Kenton
and Boone in Kentucky, and Dearborn in Indiana.
·
" It might be that local prices have
lagged behind the rest of the nation
and now we are catching up," said
Dev Saggar. planner economist.
" I can't really say what it is,'' said
Dr. Saul Pleeter, economic consultant!or the city. "Food prices, for
instance - it could be that we have
lost so many chain store operations
and the prices went up because there

By Bryson R .fBudj Cartt·r
Gallia Count y Extension Agt·nt
GALLIPOUS - Nests or tents of
the eastern tent caterpillar are
becoming a part of the landscape
along fence rows and in homeowner
trees in many parts of Gallia County. This insect has been increasing in
numbers the past few years and
shows no signs that it is about to let
up. Besides making a tree look unsightly with the webs it constructs in
the crotches of limbs and branches,
the caterpillars have big appetites
and often completely eat all tbe
leaves off a small tree.
Aside from defoliating the trees,
the caterpillars arouse much concern among area residents when
they migrate in mass in search of
new food or a place to complete their
development. During periods of
migration, caterpillars may be seen
by the thousands traveling over
roads, streets, driveways, and
sidewalks. It becomes virtually inr
possible to drive or walk in these
areas without squashing them. The
favorite food of the caterpillar is
wild cherry trees followed by apple.
It may be found also feeding on
peach, plum, pear, rose, hawthorn,
and many different shade and forest
trees.
The larvae or worms leave the tents to feed several times a day but
return to the tents when not feeding.
Where trees are small and only a
few involved, the eastern tent cater·
pillar can be brought under control
.without the aid of insecticides if a
person will apply any one of the
following teclmiques : 1) Hand
destruction of webs and larvae. 2)
Burning of webs with a name on a
rag on a pole. 3) Pruning out webs
and destroying them. 4) Destroying
egg masses before spring. 5)
Removing wild cherry trees. Any
one of these methods. if done

thoroughly, will help reduce the tent
caterpillars.
The best time to control tent caterpillars is while they are small and
before the leaves are half open on
wild cherry trees. Most people wait
until tents appear in the trees before
they attempt to apply control
measures. Since the caterpillars eat
so much foliage , just about any in·
secticide will kill them. The in·
sectk;des in the following list have
been singled out because they are
most readily available and effective
against this pest. They are: Sevin,
Sevimol, Dursban, Orthene or
Methoxychlor.
Our Beef Fi tting and Showing
Demonstration and Beef Princess ·
Queen Contest was held last week at
the Fairgrounds. Darlene Jenkins

GALUA BEEF QUEEN - Diana Jenkins (1980 Gallla County Beef
Queen) is shown here with Kim Bickers and Roberts Hamilton, first runner-up at the 1980 Gallia County Beef Round-Up.

was crowned i•Beef Princess" and

Diana Jenkins was crowned "Beef
Queen." Both girls are daughters of
Bob and Anna Jenkins of Rt. 1, Nor·
thup.
Heather Riley, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Riley, Eureka Star
Route, was Beef Princess first Run·
ner-up and Roberts Hamilton,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hamilton, Rt. 2, Vinton, was Beef
Queen first Runner·llp.
George and Nona Woodward,
Marion and Carolyn Caldwell. Bob
and Anna Jenkins, C. A. and April
Duncan, Merrill and Thelma Rose,
Casby and. Bettie Meadows, French
City Florist, Mark and Annette
Jividen, Tombo and Jackie Woodward, Wayne and Jane Jividen,
Terri Jividen, Harry and Mary Lou
Fellure, The Ohio Valley Bank,
Glendon and Pat Elliott, David and
Cindy Graham, Glenn and Jackie
Graham sponsored the event.

Homemakers'
Circle
lt' ~IW"I"'!

Anmt
BY

year's recession .

· But Federal Reserve Board Chair·
man Paul A. Volcker, AFL-CIO
President Lane Kirkland and
economist Herbert Stein say they
are not convinced the time is right.
The disagreement over a tax cut
emerged Friday as the Business
Council, a prestigious group of about
100 corporate officials, held its semiannual meeting at a Virginia resort.
The meeting continues today.
hi other economic developments
. Friday: - Inflation at the wholesale
level slowed down in April as prices
rose 0.5 percent, the smallest
amount in 11 montbs and far less
than March's 1.4 percent surge. Until April, wholesale prices were ac·
celerating at an 18 percent annual
rate. If last month's pace continued,
prices would rise only 6.2 percent a
year, although a continuation of this
trend is considered unlikely.
-Sales at the nation's retail stores
continued their slump in April,
falllng 1.2 percent overall and a huge
9.7 percent in the depressed auto
section. Since January, retail sales,
seasonally adjusted, have sagged 5.2
percent, as the economy headed into
a recession.
Despite the call for a tax cut at the
economic conference here,
President Carter has said.he will not
consider cutting taxes until the
government is sure it can balance its
budget next year for the first time
since 1969. Congress, meanwhile,
has turned aside Republican-backed

efforts to reduce taxes.
Reginald Jones, chainnan of the
General Electric Co. and of the
Business Council, sa id he was " upset... to see a budget balanced by in·
creasing revenues" rather than by
cutting federal spending.
Economists for the business group
estimated that more than $60 billion
of the money Carter intends to use to
balance his $612 billion budget next
year comes from " new" taxes such
as the so-called " windlall profits
tax" on oil, the proposed gasoline
conservation fee, higher Social
Security taxes and the so-called " innation creep" that pushes people into higher tax brackets.
The incentive for cutting taxes,
Jones predicted, will occur in the
third quarter this year. At that time,
he said, the economy is "going to be
in such bad straits" that the candidates for the presidency are
"going to want to get aboard" the
tax cut bandwagon.
Irving S. Shapiro, chairman of
E.I. du Pont de Nemours &amp; Co.,
agreed: " ! would condition the tax
cut on an expenditure cut as well.
The Ameiican public has begun for
the first time to understand this, and
they have begun to demand it" in the ·
voting booth.
Volcker, who has headed the
Federal Reserve since last fall , said
he did not believe the recent sharp
drop in business activity "is
equivalent of a judgment that the
economy is on a persistent, downhill
slide."
' Asked if he felt a tax cut especially one with about half earmarked to help business - was a
wise move, Volcker replied, " No, I
don't at this stage."

•
••
•

THANKS

Microwave Lessons
GALLIPOLIS - Microwave
cooking is rapidly changing from an
expensive girrunick for warming up
left.:Overs to an energy-efficient way
to prepare gourmet meals. This
method of cooking is becoming more
and more popular. Market reports
predict that one out of every ten
households will have a microwave
by the end of the year.
Studies have shown that househ91ds with a microwave oven and a
conventional range can use anywhere from 14 to 50 percent less
energy than the households with
only a conventional range. However,
to achieve this energy savings one
needs to know how to use one's
microwave oven efficiently.
The Gallia County Cooperative
Extension Service is offering a
lesson on microwave cooking to
anyone who is interested in learning
how to use their microwave oven
more efficiently. We will cover some
of the points in selecting a micr&lt;&gt;waveoven.

We will not only be sharing ideas
and suggestions for using your oven,
but we will be giving you some new
recipes. There is also a door prize to
be given away. Registration will be
50 cents at the door.
The lesson will be given on May 15,
1980 at 7:30p.m. at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center.

Agriculture
weather

TO THE POMEROY VOLUNTEER FIRE

•

DEPARTMENT AND ALL OTHERS WHO

.
i
:
•

:

•

JOHN AND MARILYN FULTZ AND
t
EMPLOYEES OF THE MEIGS TIRE
•
CENTER EXTEND THEIR SINCERE THANKS •

:

:

:
•

ASSISTED IN EXTINGUISHING A FIRE AT :
THE MEIGS TIRE CENTER LAST TUESDAY
NIGHT. A MAJOR DISASTER WAS
AVERTED AS THE RESULT OF THE QUICK
ACTION Of THE POMEROY FIRE
DEPARTMENT.

:

t
t .
:
•

•••••••••••••••••••••
,
.

'

.

l"I.J.IU!.

E:J;IaUIOCI .\lrDI,

···················~~

i

tlt.TTI~~

Ho-F...ro:oaiiiiUI"' '

Officials disagree
on tax cut proposal
HOT SPRINGS, Va. (AP) - Some
of the nation's lllp corporate
executives believe that business and
personal income taxes should be cut
$25 billion next year to help the
United States recover from this

An)'bod )

By The Associated Press
Here's a l ook at the agricultural
weather · forecast · from the Ag
Weather Center at West Lafayette,
Ind.:
Low pressure moving out of the
central plains will replace the high
pressure that has dominated Ohio
weather for the past few days. It will
mean a chance for shower activity
by Sunday, providing much needed
rain .
The rain is likely to be light in
most areas with amounts of over a
quarter inch only in scattered areas.
Winds, and the threat of showers
will make spraying conditions poor
this weekend and through the early
part of next week. Field working
conditions will be good today,
although blowing dust will he unpleasant. High soil temperautres mostly in the 60s - may fall a few
degrees later this weekend and early
next week as cloudiness increases
and air temperatures fall once
again. Minimum values should n~
fall out of the low 40s, leaving mean
bare soil temperatures in the low 50s
by early next week.
The threat of showers is expected
to last through Monday and Tuesday
before fair skies appear Wednesday .
·Wetting may not replace all the
moisture lost during the past several
days. The past week of virtually no
rainfall left the state from seven to
eight tentbs below normal for the
period.
Top.soil conditions should improve
however and subsoil moisture is still
adequate over most of the state.
Temperatures are expected to fall
below normal by mid week. That
will keep evaporative losses below
those of the past week.
TOUCH UP CHIPS
Mascara ca n be used to brush and
touch up, ··hips and scratches on furniture.

PRINCESS - Shown with Darlene Jenkins (1980 Gallia County Beef
Princess) are Kim BiCkers , standing (1979 Beef Princess) and Heather
Riley, first runner-up.

MARIJUANA PATCH AND PLANT BED beds located off Horse Creek Rd ., near Eureka. The
DESTROYED - Deputies of the Gallia County department reports the area has been used in previous
Sheriff's Department Friday destroyed three plant years to raise similar crops.

result of political pressure. The independents have threatened to
protest by shutting down hundreds
of Ohio gas stations for three days
prior to the June 3Ohio primary.
ERA Deputy Administrator
Douglas G. Robinson, who outlined
the proposed rule change at a press
briefing, was asked about that
allegation. He said he had no
knowledge of any pressure from the
White House.
Robinson said the April 30 order
by Melvin Goldstein, director of the
Office of Hearings and Appeals, was
rescinded because "we believed the
rulemaking procedure was a more
appropriate way to make the
change."
Bode said he was pleased that the
government "finally recognized the
dimension of the problem." But he
said the independent dealers, some
of whom claim they face bankruptcy
because of price competition, were
still concerned at the 45-day delay
before Sohio's prices rise.
Neither Sohio nor the DOE could
say immediately how much of a
price hike may be coming.
"We're going to have to look at it
(the rule change) in detail before we
can interpret the impact," said company spokesman Tom Liberti.
Robinson would say only that
Sohio's prices " may very well be
raised by as much as they would
have under Goldstein's order."

The difference is that the proposed
change in the DOE's entitlements
program affects the industry nationwide, whereas Goldstein's order affected only Sohio's prices in Ohio,
Robinson said.
The DOE official said that
although other oil companies will
benefit by having crude oil costs
dropped about $1.04 a barrel,
average prices for gasoline
throughout the country will remain
about the same.
Sohio takes 53 percent of the
Alaskan North Slope oil, drawing
more than 725,000 barrels of crude
oil a day through the Alaskan
pipeline.
Robinson said the pricing
inequities under the entitlements
program also benefited Exxon and
Arco but to a lesser degree. Each of
those firms takes 20 percent of the
North Slope oil.
Chevron also benefited because it
buys large quantities of the Alaskan
crude, Robinson said.
He said North Slope oil was
classed with imported .oil under the
entitlements program because it '
costs $7 to $10 a barrel to transport
that oil to U.S. refineries.
But the soaling cost of foreign oil . ,
threw the program out of whack,
giving North Slope oil users a ~ per
barrel cost advantage, the DOE official said.

GALLIPOLIS
Advance
registration application forms with
$4.5CI entry fees for the third annual
fun run and races must be received
by Beverly Jackson at Holzer
Medical Center Library by 5 p.m.
Wednesday, May 14.
The event will be held Saturday,
May 17, at the Gallia County Junior
Fairgrounds.
Application forms for the three
separate races are available from
Ms. Jackson at the hospital library,
or from members of the employee
recreation conunittee.
Mter Wednesday evening's ad·
vance registration deadline, the fee

will be $5 and registration will be
available at 9 o'clock on Saturday,
May 17, the morning of the fun run
and races.
Several people have been gettlllg
in shape for this third annual ev~t.
Included are Charles E. Holzer, Jr.,
M.D., president of the medical staff
of the hospital. In fact, Dr. Holzer
went all the way to Massachusetts to
participate in the Texon Five
College Marathon on Sunday, May 5,
running a challenging 26.5 mile course. The marathon began at Smith
College in Northampton, Mass.,
going to Mt. Holyoke College, then to

Predict job losses, crime
CINCINNATI (AP) - The wives
and mothers of Ohio, Indiana and
Kentucky truckers have joined their
men to fight congressional plans for
deregulating the trucking industry,
a move they say will cost 146,000 jobs
in the state.
Gerald Kiser, president of the Cincinna Teamsters Local 100, told a
Thursday news conference that 2,500
of those jobs would be lost in the Cincinnati area if federal trucking
regulations are repealed.
Kiser and a group on the distaff
side predicted job losses, increased
competition among truckers, safety
hazards due to unregulated "wildcat" operators, and the demise of
small businesses that can't compete
in an unregulated shipping price
war.
Among . other things, the federal
govenunent licenses trucks and
routes, and inspects and controls
shipping and cargoes.
Kiser and a group of trucking
wives and mothers returned this
week from Washington after
meetirig with area congressmen to
protest a proposal to deregulate .the
industry.
The bill passed the Senate by a 7().
20 vote. The women were critical of
U.S. Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum,
J).()hio, who voted for deregulation
April15.
" ! always thought we, as small
people, were a part of the policy
making part of the Congress and the
elected representative was the voice
of power," said Mrs. Martha Starr.
She is an over-the-road driver.
She met last month in Washington
with Metzenbaum and Rick
Neustadt, an aide to President Carter.
" Senator Metzenbaum first
refused to see us . He later set up a 2
p.m. appointment, then canceled it.
We actually ran into him accidentally in the hallway of the
Senate and had to stand in the
. hallway to talk to him," Mrs. Starr
said.·
In a Jetter to Local 100, Met~en bau · n wrote, "I strongly bel.ieve
tt&gt;at c-ompetition, not govemment
rcg•Jiations and price-fixing , best

t

serves the interests of the American
economy and consumers. I also
believe that the present system of
regulation in the trucking industry is
highly inflationary."
The women said other area
Congressmen either did not support
deregulation or wanted to study the
measure before voting on it in the
House of Representatives.
Mrs. Joyce Barnes said her
husband and four sons aFe· drive
trucks. She said she tried to tell U.S.
Reps. Gene Snyder and ~rry

Hopkins of Kentucky ' that
deregulation would cause safety
hazards and crowded highways.
"I think they understand what the
problem will be if the industry is
deregulated," Mrs. Barnes said.
Kiser estimated that if
deregulation is passed, about 500,000
jobs would ~ lost to Teamsters
across the country.
"Right now, we have the best transportation system in the world, but if
it is deregulated, it will not be,"
Kiser said.

Pleeter said commodity group
prices are increasing more rapidly
in the area than nationally. These irr
elude food , home ownership,
medical care, fuel and utilities.
Saggar doesn't think passage of a
balanced national budget will ease
inflation anywhere.
" Balancing the budget does
nothing to stop inflation. The only
way to stop inflation is to reduce the
purchasing power,' •Saggar said.
The economists reported that
because of the area's diversity of industry, the average worker's purchasing power is not likely to decline
soon. That is why they agree that if
there is a recession, it will be mild in
the Ohio River Valley.
Unemployment in the area is in
better shape than nationally and is
not expected to increase. Employment actually increased 3.1 per·
cent in the period compared to 2 percent nationally.
Saggar said unemployment in
Ohio increased from 5.4 percent to
5.7 percent while unemployment in
the metropolitan area fell from 4.9
percent to 4.4.

"Unlike many major cities, Clncirmati is not solelY dependent oo
one major Industry. Yes, the auto
worker may suffer, but that iJI.
dustry's work does not n~y
destroy other diversified lndlllltrla
we have In Cincinnati," Pleeter said.
"We still have a large volume ~
financial commitments for CtDmercial construction that will last at
least another year and will provide
pretty stable employment In that
area, •' Pleeter said.

DIRECTOR APPOINTED
COLUMBUS, 0. (AP) - The Ohio
Rail Transportstion .,\uthority on
Friday named Robert J. Casey, a
fonner executive of Amtrak, as its
executive director.
Casey, a native of Youngstown,
served with Amtrak from 1975 until
earlier this year. In 1974, wbile
executive director of the Natiooal
Association of Railroad Pllllllellgers,
he authored and promoted a plan to
develop high-speed rail service between Cleveland, Youngstown and
Pittsburgh.

Advance application forms for. fun run due Wednesday

Cheap gas coming to an end
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
motorists have about a month and a
half more to enjoy some of the
cheapest gasoline in the nation.
But for the state's independent oil
dealers it will be another month and
a half of struggling until a new
Department of Energy regulation
takes effect.
The DOE announced Thursday a
proposed rule change that would
eliminate by July 1 a price advantage .held by Standard Oil Co.
(Ohio) and some other oil companies
using Alaskan North Slope oil.
Sohio now sells gasoline for as low
as $1.06 a gallon. The average price
for gasoline across the country is
over $1.20 a gallon, and some independent dealers complained thai
it cost them more to buy their
gasoline wholesale than the price the
state's biggest retailer was charging
at the pump.
Sohio dominates the Ohio gasoline
market with 27 percent of the sales.
Thursday's order from the
Economic Regulatory Administration had been expected sin·
ce last week, when DOE Deputy
John Sawhill stepped in to rescind a
temporary order that would have
forced Sohio to impose an inr
mediate hike of about 10 cents a
gallon.
William Bode, lawyer for the Ohio
Independents for Survival, charged
that Sawhill's intervention was the

is more competition for fewer
outlets."

left, administrator of
Holzer Clinic, Ltd., fills out a pre-registration fonn for his children to participate in the Third Annual Fun Run and Races to be held on Saturday
morning, May 17. Pointing out specific details on the fonn is Beverly
Jackson, right, hospital librarian, who is handling registration for the
event, sponsored by the hospital 's employee recreation committee.

..

BY:
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

Hampshire College, from there tp
Amherst College, and finishing at
the University of Massachusetts in
Amherst. More than 500 men and
women were registered for ·this Five
College Marathon.
In a report directly from
Massachusetts, Dr. Holzer said that
be completed the 26.5 miles in five
hours and two minutes. The winner
was Steve Nojeim, a graduate
student from the University &lt;i
Massachusetts, who ran the course
in two hours, 34 minutes and 56
seconds.
Coming in fourth was the winner
of the women's division of the
marathon, 23 year old Nancy Conz of
East Hampton, who completed the
26.5 mile course in two hours, 35
minutes, 53", less than 10 minutes
behind first place.
Dr. Holzer said, "It was a
beautiful day, sunny and with a head
wind, which made all the running
times slower. The course is far more
difficult than the one used in the
much publicized Boston marathon,
or even the Baltimore marathon
race. The hills were particularly
steep, particularly near the end of
the course," he added.
In commenting on his participation in the Five College
Marathon, Dr. Holzer said, "Running in last Sunday's marathon was
one of the greatest days of my life.
Anyone hwo plans to run next Saturday in the hospital's third annual fun
run can have the very same kind of
exhilirating txperience. Of course
it's not as long a race, but it will be
jUst as much fun for a short course,
and the best possible exercise for
both men and women, boys and
girls."
Participants in Saturday's events
may register for any one of the three
scheduled. The 6.0 mile race will
begin promptly at 10 o'clock on
Saturday morning, followed by the
3.0 mile and the 1.5 mile, both
scheduled to start at 11 o'clock.
According to Ron Saunders, chairman of this year's run, and Walt
Saunders, assistant chairman, the
course at the Gallia County
Fairgrounds will coYer blacktop,
gravel roads and grass paths. Six
trophies will be awarded, a winner
and nmner-up in each of the three
races. In addition, ribbons will be
given to the winners in specified age

groups. All those who register in advance by Wednesday evening 's
deadline, are assured a special red
tee shirt, inscribed "Holzer Medical
Center Fun Run, 1.5, 3.0, 6.0,"
bearing the colorful Holzer seal
Awards will be presented around
noon .
Those who preregister should
check in at the Main Stage at the
Gallia County Fairgrounds between
9 a.m. and 10 a.m. on Saturday morning. Those who wish to register on
Saturday morning, should also be at
the Main Stage by 9 o'clock, and
may register by palng the $5 fee.
All participants must come to the
fairgrounds dressed to run, as
shower and dressing facilities are
not available. The races are open to
all age groups. However, any entrants who are under age 18 must
have the signature of a parent for
permission to participate.

Bill vetoed by Gov. Rhodes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has vetoed a bill
creating a non-commercial trailer
classification in Ohio 's motor
vehicle licensiJ;lg law.
He said Friday he was sympathetic to the measure's purpose,
but it fails to accomplish it.
Rhodes said it was designed to lift
the burden of a $15 hike in trailer
license fees this year from the
shoulders of owners of noncommercial trailers.
" This is an admirable purpose,
and one which I fully support," he
said, adding, however, that the bill
"will not accomplish that purpose in
an equitable and efficient manner."
The governor cited several
technical difficulties with the

proposal, Including one provision
that would provide a rebate to
owners of non-commercial trallers
who registered and paid the fee hike
prior to the bill's effective date.
However, there is no current
distinction In the law between CtDmereial and non-commercial
trailers. Rhodes said "the language
in the bill may not pennlt the
Registrar (of motor vehlcltlll) to
make any reimbursement at all."
He added in his'veto message that
he was preparing legislation "to
fairly and equitably reimburse
everyone who registers a trailer that
is used for non-commercial plU"pOIIe5
this year. I am hopeful the General
Assembly can give this legislation
prompt attention when it returns to
Session next month. •'

County ·agent's corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
ExteDSIOD Ageol
Agriculture
Meigs County
POMEROY - We have been getting a lot of calls concerning the worms that are now making the webs in
the crotches of some of thre trees
such as apple, wild cherry, and other
fruit trees. This worm is called the
Eastern Tent Caterpillar.
In most cases there is little that
can be done economically to control
this serious pest. However, if you
have fruit trees or a tree in your
yard which you do not want
defoliated, I suggest you do the
following immediately.
·Apply one of the following
pesticides - Sevin (50 percent wettable powder) at the rate of 2
tablespoons per gallon of water; or
Methoxychlor (50 percent wettable
powder) at the rate of 2 tablespoons
per gallon of water; or Malathion (27
percent liquid) at the rate of 2
teaspoons per gallon of water; or Orthene at the rate of I~ tablespoons
per gallon of water. Do not apply Orthene to nowering crabapple. There
are probably other fonnulations of
these insecticides than I have mentioned. U you use a different for-

mulation than mentioned here,
please consult the label or call our
office.
. Any of these materials should be
sprayed on the leaves and branches
of the trees to the point of run-off.
Thorough coverage is important for
good control. Repeai after a rain or
as needed.
Something To Think About ...
Americans spent an estimated $329
billion on food in 1979, with fanners
getting about $76 billion of the
amount.
Feeder Calf Results ... A graded
feeder calf sale was held in April. 300
head were sold with an average
weight of 522 pounds. The top pen of
steers brought $84 per cwt. The
steers averaged 547 pounds in
weight and $66.42 in price. The top
lot of heifers brought $67.50. The
heifers weighed 504 pounds and
brought $59.74.
Alfalfa Weevil ... Start checking
fields now. Remember, when 5(] to 70
percent of the leaves start showing
damage it is time to spray. Damage
to fields are not the same. Check
each field at least once per week and
spray only if necessary. We have a
list of recommended chemicals in
the office.

Pesticid'} Safety .. . The
agricultural industry has had its
problems with pesticides. Due to the
misuse of a few chamicals, we have
all had to suffer. Many cbemlcala
are oow restricted and Jmre
cbemicals will be restricted In a few
years. 1bere are some things we can
do to use pesticides safely.
1. Use no more than the recommended amount.
2. Do not apply sprays or dusts on
windy days.
3. Try to apply insecticides wben
honey bees are not visiting that crop.
4. Thoroughly clean application
equipment after use if it will be used
for something else.
5. Take a bath and wash clothing
after using pesticides.
6. Sprayers used with 2,4-D; 2,4,1&gt;T; or 2,4-DB should be given a
special cleaning with anunonla or
activated charcoal and detergent.
7. Burn empty pesticide containers that are burnable (keep out
of the smoke).
8. Rinse metal containers three
times or crush and bury 18 inches
deep in an isolated area,
For more information on storlJI8
or mixing, call us.

Youth takes walk in Gallipolis in '39, later U. S. president

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lit

..'

Finance ~ ava/1/Jble.

I: ~MEEiGs EQUIPMENT
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Ph.
~.

DOWNWITII
ment.
IDGH BLOOD PRESSURE
10. If you drop out of therapy you
POMEROY - The month of May can always start again.
has been proclaimed National High
Here are the answers:
Blood Pressure Month. During this
1. True. High blood pressure
month various agencies will be em· usually has no symptoms.
phaslzlng educational lnfonnation
2. True. Controlled blood pressure
on this subject in order to help the also lessens the risk if kidney
public to better understand and ap- disease.
propriately handle high blood
3. False. High blood pressure can
be controlled but rarely cured.
pressure.
Test yourself .bY answering the
4. True. You must stay on treatfollowing questions true or false :
ment to keep your blood pressure un1. You can have high blood der control.
pressure and still feel fine.
5. False. The doctor prescribes ef2. Treating high blood pressure fective therapy. You control your
can lessen the risk of heart disease own blood pressure by following
your treatment plan.
and stroke.
6. True. The family 's emotional
3. You can cure your high blood
pressure with medication.
and practical support can make it
. 4. High blood pressure must be easier to control your high blood
treated every day for the rest of your pressure.
7. False. Associate your pills with
life.
5. The doctor can control high a normal daily activity - it's im- .
porttant to.remember them.
blood pressure.
8. False. Tell your doctor about
6. Your family can help you stay
your symptom!!. He or she can subon treabnent.
7. It's 0. K. to forget your stitute another medlealiot'l:
9. False. Good ctmmunication bemedication now and then.
8. You should stop taking your tween you, your doctor, and your
high blood . pressure pill if side- family is necessary for control.
10. True. It's better not to drop out,
effects bother you.
9. You shouldn't bother anyone , but you can start again - and sucabout your problems with treat- ceed.

-·-·-•

-------·

Passed Our House
Down Front Street the young man
would have passed by Warth's lumber yard, a couple of new brick
homes, a tiny post office, and two
taverns - the Our House and the
Eagle. Ed Naret's drug store and
doctor's office was then in the
deVacht building, and he was adSome of the passengers, including vertising that he bought ginseng.
Also on Front Stret Hiram could
a student whose first name was Hirhave
heard the sounds of Abram Anam, took the opportunity to wander
derson,
.the blacksmith, as well as
along Front Street and across the
those
of
the Front Street brickPublic Square.
makers arid carriage makers.
Hiram might have carried with
Gallipolis was a thriving town of
him
on this jaunt his valise, which
about 1,400 residents and the levee,
had
all
of his important papers in it.
we can imagine, was a beehive of acHis
initials
H.U.G. stood out as a
tivity in May, with draymen pulling
source
of
embarrassment
to him.
their carts and hawkers selling their '
His
father
had
etched
the
initials
on
wares. No doubt sheep and pigs were
the
valise
without
realizing
that
being driven from the Market House
on the · Public Square toward the H.U.G. might be misinterpreted by
levee where they would be taken to some women.
Little did Hiram realize that his
Pittsburgh cw- Cincinnati, the latter
name
would continue to be a source
being nicknamed "Porkopollil.
of discussion the rest of his life.
Pi-obably Galltpol!s would have
Coagreoslonal error
reminded Hiram d three towns
His reason for being on the boat
where he had gone to school that day was that he was heading off
Georgetown, Ripley, and Maysvllle 1.0 West Point to take the place of the
- as the last twn were also busy Bailey boy of Georgetown who had
been di~missed because of poor
river towns.
BY JAMES SANDS
GALUPOUS - It was a besutiful
May afternoon in 1839 when a steamboat docked at the Gallipolis levee.
The captain announced that there
would be a tw&lt;&gt;-hour layover in the
French city so that supplies could be
brought on board.

------~---------- ··- ---., ,

'

--···-

··--- - - - -·-- -

grades. The Congressman who had
recommended Hiram had thought
his name was Simpson instead of
Hiram. At West Point the military
officials said they had a commission
for a Simpson and not a Hiram and if
he was a Hiram and not a Simpson
he could go back home. It was then
that Hiram did change his name to
Simpson, rather than fight military
logic.
Had Hiram strolled across the
Public Square in Gallipolis he would
have seen a neat court house, a jail,
a market house and about 30 shops
surrounding the square.
Hated slgbt of blood
We are sure that Hiram - or Lyss
as his close friends called him wondered what military life would
be like. Lyss was good wi~ a gun,
but he hated the sight of blood and
had even passed out o•.ce when be·
saw a dead buck. He also liked to
ride a horse and he was gOOd at it.
But his real reason for wanting to go
to West Point was the oPPortunity to
see the world.
Little did Lyss know that some of
his classmates at West Point would
become famous tbe world over men likP William Tecumseh SherIW n. It was Shennan who would

give Lyss the nickname of· Uocle
Sam or Sam for short. In fact durtng
his four years on the Hudson, Hiram
was known·only as Sam.
AD U39 J0Ul11111
Probably Hiram would have stopped by the office of the Galllpoll.!!
Journal to buy the latest paper. 'I1Ie
Journal in 1839 was already getting
ready for the 1840 election by coming
out in support of William Henry
Harrison. 1bey said weekly that
"old Van (Van Buren) was a used up
man... The cultural center or
Gallipolis In 1839 was the Lyceum 111
State Stret. The Journal would likely
have carried that week a transcript
of the latest speech given at the ,
Luceum.
We can imagine that few people
gave notice to this young man. He
would return to GaJIIpoll.!! on a
couple of other OCC88lons on hla way
back from school. It la certain that
no one In GaWpoll.!! ever bad au
lnklin« that thla young man would
grow up to be a famousgeneralllld
later a president. Hiram's fuli Dime
was Hiram Ulyaaes Grant but
because of that Congresslllllll error
he came to be known throuib hiatGry
as Ulyll8e8 Simpson Grant.
·~-·-

'

.

·- -·--·-------- ---·---.:

�0+-The Sunday nn-&amp;ntinei, Sunday, May II, 1980

M- The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1900

Children display patriotism during park tour
81• C.lla Roush

•

accompamed b\' several teachers

HANDS OVER TIIEIR HEARTS a nd heads upLifted to the Amen can
fla g. these young JAC 1 · ~ 'r ' rs rectted the Pledge to the flag durin g
activtt tes Frtday at Tu·Endle-Wet Park m Pomt P leasant The day " as a
demonstratiOn of patn oltsm hosted by the Col Charles l.ewts Chapter
NSDAR for nearly 230 children from Ordrance and Central elementar)·
schoo ls

and thetr pr mc tpals, George
~·hiler of Central and Btll Barker
of Ordra nce
They '"ere \\elcomed at Tu·
Endt e-Wet by the tr hostesses and

II

4 FAM IL. Y YARD SALE .
.tas P ike ned to Zl nn ·s L an
di ng. Clothi ng all sizes In
eluding ex t r a lar ge d resses
and sl ack s, ant1que diShes,
A von bottl es, tew el r y
tapes, fu r n1t ur e, toys and
m1sc
Stobart's G r een house now
open
Hangtng baskets,
bed d1ng pl ant s, t omatoes,
cabbage, pepper s, Rt 2
Racm e, Ohto 949 2342

I

5 Famr tv Yard Sate. 238
Condor St , Bac k of Land
mark, Pomer oy T hu r s , a,
Frr 9, Sa t 10 9 4 each day
R u m ma ge
Sale
M1d
dl e p or t ,
Old
Mart1n
Restau rant Sa t and M on
5 t am tltes
Thr ee Fa mtlv Yard Sale,
lot s and lots of cht ldren's
clothes W omen's c lothes
also Lots of m1sce l taneous
Tuesday and Wednesdav at
t he James F ink restd ence
on Depot Street 10 Ru tland
Rummag e Sale
Frtday
a:"td Saturday, 16th and 17th
at old Martm Restaurant,

Expenenced Stdlng
Staller 992 2772

Help Wanted

In

Gene r al Offtce Work M ust
be able to tvpe K now ledge
Postm g
of boOkkeeping
and F .t1ng Send Res ume to
Box 743, Pom eroy, OH

GE T VALU ABLE tratmng
as a young bus.ness person
and earn OOOd m oney plus
som e grea t gifts as a Se n
t1 ne1 route ea r ner Phone
us n ght away and gf t on
the eltg tbl ltt y list at 992·

WANT ED: Girl lo do local

2156orm 2157

telephone wor k for Cotum
bus based 011 co opera tmg
tn tht s area . Call 614 459·

GIR LS AND GUY S Start

2988

wor k tod&lt;i'Y
Larg e
southern f •rm ha s i m ·
mediate open i ngs fo r 7
sharp g1rls and guys to
travel w1th un1que young
bustness group, doing
p r omotional
sale s
throuQhout L as Vegas,
M1am1, Hawa 11 and most
major c ittes In resort
areas
No exper1ence
necessary We Will trat n
Must be 17 or older and
some high school requtred
Podg1n0
and
tran sportatton furntshed , plus
all expense advance during
trainmg
Above average
earn1ngs and raptd ad·
vancement .
If free to
travel and able to start at
once, contact M1ss Jovan
Napter, Monday
only,

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDER S
Not1ce

1S

2

Aneqpetemeets

PubliC Nottce

hereby g1ven

I wou ld l•ke to e:.:press my

Sincere tha n ~!; To all my
frtends whO remembered
me on my 91 st b1 r 1hday Of
the many cards I rece111ed ,
each held a spec 1al pl ace tn
my h eart at ha p py
memor 1es You were very
k m d and may God bless
e._-er yone of you
Cla r a Roush
We would l tke to e:.:pr ess
our s1ncere thanks to
r elat1ves
f r 1ends an d
netghbors who were so
very k1nd tn our t1me of
need All contr~but 1 ons of
fOOd and flowers were
much
apprectated
A
spec tal thanK you to
Re11erend
Porter
The
Ru tland
Emergency
Squad, the Ewmg Funera l
H ome
and
to
the
pa l lbea r er s and M r and
M r s Jake Warner for the
mus1c Also to the Metgs
Coun t y Shenff s Depart
men t and escort
M rs
Robert Cla r k son
La rr y and fam ily

M ay4, 11

EAR111QUAKECAUSE
Earthquakes are caused,
according to an old
Japanese legend, by a
giant catfish lymg asleep
beneath the ISlands. It
holds its tail in 1ts mouth
and whenever tt bttes down
in its sleep 1t stirs m pain and Japan quakes

IN LOVI NG MEMORY of
Cecil L Terrv 1911 to May
5, 1979
You a r~ not forgotten loved
one,
Nor w tll vou ev er be,
As long as li fe and memory
l ast,
We w tll remember t hee-,
We mt ss you now our hear
ts are sor e,
As t1 m e goes b y we mtss
you more
Your l0111ng sm ile, vour
gent le fa ce ,
No one c an frll your 11a c ant
place
Sadl y m tssed b y fam tly and
f n ends

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Standard bidding customs
btdder The most frequent
wa) ts to u se a stmple ove rca ll to get mto actwn
When you oven•a 1\ you need
some htgh-card strength
We su ggest a mmtmum of
seven H C P It ts far m or e
Im portant that you have a
good su1t Y ou need at least a

Whe n you open the btddmg
your atm IS to get to a sl am
ga me or sa fe part-score
contract You are startmg to
exchange Informati on and
your hrst requirement for a
normal openmg btd ts that you
hold over 10 htgh-card potnts
Wh en you compete agam st
an adve rse opemng btd you do
so for one of three reaso ns
I You wa nt to start
a campa tgn leadtng

five-ca rd su1t fo r a one-l evel

m'ercall and r eall} need at
least s1x tf you have to go to
the t wo level

The second way 1s th e tak·
double Th iS double asks
your partner to btd and defl
mtel y 1s not for penalties It ts
usually an a ttac kmg m eas ure
eoUl

to a slam , game or
part scor e of vour

own

to show preparatiOn for any·
th tng your partner may b1d

2 You wa nt to mdl ·
cate the ltne of
def ense agamst an
anticipated adverse
contrac t
3 You want to cro wd

t he

and the htgh-card equtvalent

or

It

har d

destrable the ta keout double
The thtrd way IS the btd of
o ne notrump It usuaJi y show s
the equ tvalent of a standa rd

for

your opponents to
r each th e1r best f mal

opemng notrump w1th at least
one stopper m the opponent's

contrac t
There are t hree w ays to
compete agams t the opemng

'tfl\lrul ]e)11

opemng

b1d Th e fewer
ca r ds yo u have m your
o pponen t's btd sutt the mor e

btd d tn g and

m ake

an

oy Henrt Arnold and Bob lee _

Unscramole these tour Jumn les
one teMer to each square 10 lorm
fOUl oratnary words

t
I I I J

I

S •o

l

Wh AT TI... E
F'"i rLANDE R'1"&lt;6
R'OMAN WOULD "AV E

1 PAY highest pnces
poss tble for gold and Silver
coi ns, n ngs , 1ew e1 r y, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Mtddleport

LOVED 10 DO .

I DOINIE j
I I r (j
"[I I I I j r I I J'
1

!

too much - STANO HIM

Jumbht86o:'lk No U - onla1tllngl10 puzzles.,isawallablo torS t 15pv~ tpaltl
llom Jurroble cro th• ~rtwo;pe per 6 (!~34 Norwooa.N J 07648 tr o:.t~.;tl5 •• ,Jf
n am~

adO! I.l.i'"'

~:ip r (l{l•• ll'l • nt11\-t"

cttec"-s pal"''&gt;'t- 10 Ne"

~

'

~

•·

t

- -- -- J

..

ANCIENT LODGE . JJ
F&amp;AMot
Gallipolts, Oh1o
Supports The
J M1ll Levv
For The
Gu1d10g Hand School

w e Re patr All
Sm all Ga soline
Engmes
Up to 25 1-t . P
Lawn mower s, 1tller s,
cham saw s, motor b tk es
&amp;
e tc
All
work
gua r anteed P1ckup &amp;
O e h~o~e ry

PRECISION SMALL
ENGINE SERVICE
54 4 Upper R1 11 er Rd

44 6 2096

AT TN

PE " formerly owned by
Vernon Lucas, under new
management, freezer beef,
Swtft Stdes, custom work
done
Ca l l
"'46 2851,
Bulavtlle Porter Rd

held Sat Mav 24th 1980

be

l 1ve 60' s m us 1c For more
tnformat 1on contac t 367
02U

FOR SALE

John Oeer.e tractor 40 ,
MF tractbr lSO , Ford
tractor 8,000 , Baler No
12, Bush Cutter 4', S' r 6',
3 pt d1sks, plows , gra
der baldes 6 &amp; 7ft ., cui
11vator J pt. , wheel d1sks
12 &amp; 8 ft. , 2·105 Wh ite
tractor . Ph 446·4641

Announcements

3

THE

LEARNING

Call Jan Betz (4.t6 20481 or
Linda carey ( 4-&amp;6 3948 ) for
tnformation

FOR THE BEST buy in

d•amonds, &amp; tewelry oo t o
Tawney Jewe lers, Com
pare pnces and values
You can save a for tune
shopping at Tawney ' s, "'22
Second Ave, Gall tpolis, Oh ,
many of our i tems priced at
200 gold , and 9 00 Stiver

BRADFORD , Au ctt onee r ,
Complete Serv tce Phone
9"'9 2487 or 949 2000 r ac .ne,
Oh 10, Cr 1tt Bradford
Odds and Ends Sh op at the
old Reuter s ga s Sta tton on
SR 33 at the f oot of Rose
Hdl
Open f or busmess
M onday , Ma y 12 Ttll August
31 Open Monday through
Saturday 9 ttl 8 anyone
wantmg to sell th10gs we' ll
p1ckup and sell on a 50 pet
50 pet bas•s Any one w tfh
antt ques or handcrafted
1Tems we' ll sell on an 80
pet 20 pet bas ts We do
ptc kup , sellmg , bookwork ,
and r eturn any t htng over 30
days old Woul d lti(e people
to do own pncmg. Carolyn
Lew ts at 992 2921 or Kathy
RE ynolds at 992 5981

We sell anytntng for
anybody at our Auctton
Barn or tn vour home. For
tnformat1on and . ptclcup
servtce call 256 1967
~le Every S.turday
N1ght at 1 p m

771 7

ANY PERSON who has
anything to gtve awav and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other th•ng tor
sa le may place an ad 1n this
col umn There w111 be no
charge to the advertt ser
PUPPY and c at

Call 256

930.
TEN YOUNG ROOST ERS
Ca tt256·MJ4

LOST 3 yr old m ale dog
Pa rt l abrador , r eddt sh
Wean ng ch a1r
col or
coll ar Rewar d Ca ll 4.46

WILL BUY Old fran
smissions ,
bat1eries,
engines, or scrap metals,
etc Call 245 9188

LOST Young bl ac k and
tan female h ound Kerr
Be thel Rd
or Georges
Creek area RE WA R D For
•nformat•on lead1ng to
r ecovery Call 446-9780

Iron and brass beds , old
f urnt ture , desks, gold
nngs , te welry, Si l ver
dollars, ster l1 ng, etc., wood
1ce boxes, ant1ques, etc
Co mplet e
households
Wrtte M 0 M1iler, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992

LOST

776Q

Smal l

or 614 985 4325 or
shertff

Gold IOk. 14k, 18k. dental
gold and gold year p1ns,

10 kara t, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold Dental gold and gold
ear P•ns 675 3010
Gold , stl ve r or fore1gn
co tns or any gold or Stiver
tfems Ant1que turntture,
glass or chtna , will pay top
doll ar, or complete estates.
No ttem roo large or too
sm all Check pnces befor e
sellmg A lso do appraismg
Osby 10ss te) Martm 992

Cats and K tttens A l l Stzes
and colors 992 7805

SANOY ANO BEAVER In

AUTOMOBILE

IN

SU RANC E
been
can
c el l e d ?
L ost
yo u r
operator 's lt cense" Phone
992 2143

Insurance

6370

surance Co has offered
ser vtces for . f tre tnsurance
coverage •n Gall 1a County
tor al most a century
Farm , hom e and personal
propert y coverages are
availab le to meet tn
d1vidua l needs
ContacT,
Foster L ew ts, your ne 1gh
bar and agent

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

All th e ~bo ~o~e equ1p . ts m good work1ng conct1tton
and W1ll be left hooked up day of sale for demonstra·
f1on . Th1 S w tll be an excellent opportunity tor
anyone to purchase a good business - everyth•ng 1S
r eady to operate and IS 1n good 1oca11on - close to
downtown, bank, and post offtc~ . If sold as a going
bustness, rent can be worked out with landlord .
Parkmgarea .
Thts busmess IS being sold bv Small Bustness Adm .
ol Ohto and Will be sold as one un1t and then by
Ptecem eal - final sale which ever WiljY IS higher. All
machm er y removed by purchaser bY Mar' 19
Nothmg shown before ctav ot sate Terms - cash, cerTified check. or check w l! etter of credtt lrom your
bank Not r espon sible for accidents.
Bill Janes m Charge of Sale.
Auc t 1oneE"r - 81 1t J anes. Phone S57· 34 l l

- ··- ---'
I

..... .. ,. .... _.. ,. .... " . .

'

'44-

House, Rt 35, Gallipolis,
OH

ONLY $28,500.00

ACREAGE - 10 Acres
va cant land, gas, elec
trt c ,
and
water
avatlable
Close to
Metgs High Sc hoo l, good
building si tes, lots of
road
frontage.

$10,000 00
ACREAGE -

Approx .

140 Acres with frame
house, all minerals , call
for details!

OFFICE HOURS

FREEl
II
30" Mower when
you buy a
Walking Tractor
ROUSH, ,....~ .......

Monday rhru Sat

9·5
Also Mon . &amp; Fri.
Eventngs Unt1IB P.M.

1

REALTOR
Cle,and, Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
Henry

742 -2474
Jean Trussell 949· 2660

GRAVEL V TRACTOR SALES
Ph. 992 2975
Pomeroy,

. Keep your chin up and
· you'll trip over a fire
: hydrant.

Oh10

••

'

co ... ert'd pilho, etec hlta1,

cen air Shown by •ppt

onty

• ••ltJ4

Real Estare- General

bedroo m

hom e

RIVER VIEW HOME
FOR SALE
5

m1nutes from C11y Park
2 story frame , 4 B R: ' s,
hvmg room w1th W.B
fireplace, eat •n ktt
chen
Basement and
garage.
Pnced
at

$39,500.

Call Dayt.me , 446-1615
After S 446-1244
Real Estate - General

985·4197

r
t
t
t
t

Jr.

t

on

house. and

buil d ing s
So me
m.nerals Ca ll Today
ma1ntenance free home
T h1s hOme has so man y
ntce fe atures such as
mtero wave, Mohawk
ca rp et
t hroug hout,
fa m ily r o om with
ftreplace , hand sta med
woodwork W e tust can' t
nam e them alll 1 G1ve us
a call for m ore info On

t
t
t

A real

dream home•• 1

JUST ONE LOOK That's all It will take to
fall '" lov e w•th th•s 3
bedroom, total elec tr ic
home
Sttua ted on
almost an ac re Close to
M ei gs Htgh on Cr ew Rd
Pr1 c e redu c ed
to

f

f

$39 ,900.00.
EXTRA WELL KEPT 3

bedrooms, 1 ba t h, ~ ~ t
chen and uttl i tv . Rural
water . Si tuated on n1ce
stze lot 1n Hutchtson
Subd1vls •on
Call for
more deta ils
we need homes 1n the

l

furnoshed

1n

-

lui

6 rms

n~ee

porch

tong

8UU I 1tUI Hom e -

Close

lo

NR 50

Lake

Snowden

tx&gt;aulllut selling

I&lt;Hge tov

'
----

1ng room ~~ond t amoly room
loreplace- illl buill on kol
chen J e R 1'11 bo"JIM lull
basement 15 acres all elec

We'll cover it all.. .for you.

totsol h oc kor y nuts and
Boatong swommong
avadacte

rnc

deer

Stutes Real E state

21 LOCUST STREET

Nlil 61

New L os hng - Nice
coun try home woth 31 acres

near Ru tland S rooms w th
ba th
good outbu• ld•ng.,
1'1un tmg wi!h m •neral

446-4206

r •ght s See 10 app r ecta te

•

REALT.Y WORLD .

&lt;

Pro perl y NR 511 M•ddlcporl bu s nes~
4

rcn tcd aport
"

ment ~

C h il rt~ ~M H ave~ lileallo r
Neac.t E Carsey B r M &lt;;lr
Ph t 91 2403 o r 9'12 1190

PRICE REDUCED TO SELL •
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - 9'2%

OWNER FINANCED'

We nav e potenTial
buyers- need your
hsttngs.

Real Estare - General

WOOD REALTY, INC.--f

446-1066

'

t

t
t

I
Russell 0 Wood
Evenmgs 446· 4418
Realtor

(II

I ~ ves tm en l

Ken Morgan
E11en1ngs 446-0971
Realtor

f

MODERN

BRICK

HOME

Sprtng Valley home offers 1658 sq It pl us a full
basem ent J bed r oo m s, 1 baths, f ully equ tpped Ktt
chen, f orm al dtnmg r oom, l1vtng and f am11y rooms
ProfessiOna l ly landscaped lawn , large patt o and
easy ma tnt enance swtmm1 ng poo l, cus tom
dr apenes, plush carpe t 1ng , tastefu ll v combtned
wtth hardwood t loors, w b fi r ep l ace, m an y d1st tnc
t 1ve bu tlt 1n s, central a tr gas gr il l and LOW
UT ILITIES combtne to make fh1s home a pl easur e
to own Call for detail s and a look at a home that
comb1nes co mf or t, convcntence and good ta sl e a ll
on te rms you can l1ve w1th'
LAND CONTRACT 9% INT
Th ts tS a tam1ly ho me, all br tck w tth 4 bed r ooms and
a spark l1ng ful l ba t h up La rge k ttc hen ltned wt t h
pr ett y cab 1nets Large foyer and fo rm a ll lvtng room
and d m mg Ful l baseme nt l •rep l ace 1n family room ,
2 ca r garage atta ched, also a w orks hop and a bar n
S1tua ted on appr ox 1ma tely 59 acr es Thts home
refl ects tender. lov 1ng care and true value

LOVE A GRACIOUS SETTING!
HOMEOFR4REVALUE&amp;CHARM
T h1s st ately 2 s1or v nom e has all the feat ur es tn a
hom e you would ever went 1 fou r bedrooms, .4 full
bat hs
complete bu11t m kttchen off f rom
the l amll y room w tth w b fi re pl ace F or mal I1V1 ng
ana dtntng room Full ftn1s hed ba sem ent featu nng a
large fam ily room w•th w b f trepla ce, game room
and uttltty room L arge 2 car garage w 1tn opener
Co ver ed pati o and sun dec k Free sw1m m tng an d
club house ar ea availab le

JUST LISTED THIS RIVERFRONT
ALL BRICK HOME

t

WOODLANU
325
BEAT TH!S- SJOO .OO PER MONTH
lnc l udtng pn nc tpla , Inter es t, taxes and tnsura nce
Onlh 9% tnt Owner t ransfer red and v er y anxwus to
sell Ctt y school s, acre of gro und mor e or less , lt V1n g
room, 2 w b fi replaces, ~1 fc h e n &amp; dint ng area F ull
basement prtced m S40' s

DAIRY FARM

20ACRE FARM - 4 bed room home, l ivmgr m , dt n
r m , kt t &amp; 1 bedrrn downs tatrs, basement, F A fur
nace ru r al water, barn &amp; out butld.ng, ntce ga r den
ar ea Loc ated on R t 554 near Eno Bu y now tort
$53,000 00

'

t
t
~3~~=

f

Situated ac rp ss from t he elem entar y school on t
J ackson Pt ke Vil lage wa ter, F A Otl l urn ace, l ar ge
g arden area, downsta .rs bedr oom and bath ,
beauti fUl shade tree A home vou would ce rt a •nl y
en1ov S37 ,500 oo

MINI FARM - 611 ACRES - No house but has
small ba r n Located 1ust off Rt 14 1, at Ce nte nar y
Buy now for $20.000 00
BUY THI S 3 BEDROOM ho me tn Ewtng ton,
sttua ted on St Rt 160 and ready tor you 2
1~replace s, well water Buy now tor only $8,500 00

FO~

r.umc~

Ju sr IN T IME
SPRIN G. J ucd1uu. •
l1vtng rm , dmtng rm , k1 t , 1 bath, w1th 6 acres,
more or less, n1ce garden area Pnvacy of th e coun ·
try but close enough to town Buy now fo r S29,900 00
Prevtousl y adverl1 sed f or $34,000 00 You must see
the 1ns1 de to apprec1atet t

3 OR 4 B E OR OOM coff age located on Clarl&lt;'s
Chape l Rd .. near Po rter Approx 9 miles from
hasp , house, garden and 21!7 acr~ . n1ce garden
area Buy now tor $30, 000 00

t
t p::: :' :::~~~:ul:~:w;,:~: :::,~smrent
4

1

j

'

P• oe r·

1v ? wel l we have lUST ltste- "f prooe rrv located on th e
100 bl ock on F ourth Ave Consi sts tf two r ental ; Cell i
us for more tn t orm at .on, vo u' l l be Jllad v ou d1dl

L _.,.....
I

To fi ll ailS bedrooms tn th1S except tonally outstand
tng brtc k home T h1s home has every th1ng for you r
comfor t Fo r ma l l tv1ng room, la r ge spac1ous t amtly
r oom w 1th w b f trepla ce, be autiful kttche n wtt h al l
built tns and dlntng area Colo rfu l ceramtc 1de
baths Full f1n1shed base ment , loads of close t space
L arge 2 car f~ntshed garage Th ts nome ts ver 11 we ll
constru cted Profes s1onally landscaped
In an
outstandt ng locat ton - Porterbrooke Subd Ct1y
Schoo l s Shown bv Aooo tnt me n1On ly 1

6 49 A cres mor e or less of tall gr een p tne an d
wood land Located south of R to Gra nde on State R1

NEW LISTING - 3 bed room home stfuated w1thu1i
the city, nat gas F A furna ce, tul1 bdse ment, ap

$15,000 00 to SJO,OOO 00

Phone 742-3092

to respons•l:lle part y
Coml ortiii DII H ome

Jj NEW LISTING IN

Al most

Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .
Phone 742-2003

Oil Owne-r w•ll nelp l onance

t
t
t

185

pnce range for our
qualified buyers. Give
us a call!!!
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .

I01S

t'
t
,_

acres
more or less
Sttuated on Van Zandt

ty 169,000 .00

General

Pomeroy

"''·" "'"' on •

Almost 8 ac res on Hysell
Run 2 bedroom home
H as 2 rur a! w ater taps
and 2 septt c systems

BRICK

tw o

tor aCJCJ• I•o na!
co mto Call torCJei&lt;J ilS

Call About These Many
otners we Hav e.
Forest Cassady, Brok er
Call V1rg101a Hayman

to se ll a! only $25,500 00
NEW LISTING

Old

Ave

ouold•ng

BEAUTIFUL,

on an acre w tth cellar
and 2 bulldmgs Lo ts of
d1fferent trutls Pn ced

Rd .

on

yea r

General

BY OWNER
Down St. Rl 7;

IOCilll'd

over look •ng Rt 141, only 1 mtle fr om GaiiiPOl tS
c orp 11m 1ts 7 w ' b ltreplaces t amtly r oo m'" ba se
me n! , Ji '~ baths, m any bu tl 1 tns, house and 2 1 1::~
ac res, buy now tn th e S60 s Posstb ll 1ty of mort gage

Stale R! 124 Srtuated

Onl y $21 ,500 00
NEW LISTING -

Rea l Estate

WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY

General

Hobsten~r.

General

Your tam 1 l ~ Wt l l love the beauty of t he t\vo
ftreptaces and the ener gy sav.ngs of the wood
bur ner 3 bedroom s, ful l basem en t and muc h more
T hts home show s excellent qual tty and wor k man
Sh tp Ca ll us tod ay 1

NEW LISTING - Neal
2

J

bedroom home, full
basement, WBFP , n1ce
sitti n g
p o r ch
with
ba u t1ful river view
M ust be seen, Jlh stones
of excellent l tveabilttv

~GRAVELY.

St.

bldgs

Broker
1

We servtce what we sell

Condor

forf!plau 2 ur gar , corner tot
(0 • au I, c lructar or tve stor

PHONE 742-2003

The Gravely 30-mch rotary mower cuts
nght through the toughest grass and weeds
and does a good JOb on your lawn as well
The mower IS tough.wtth all -gear d trect
dnve. all-steel deck and anu-scalpmg
roller.The tractor IS also all-gear d nven
Call us for a free d emonstrauon

110

HMC l br ranch, k1t , DR bath,
area , lg
FA w w b
ul1t

after 6

ln"&gt;UI&lt;I it'd
lily boll!.

S21 ,SOO -

All shrfls,

Wa sher and Dryer Ca ll
E va Hollon a t 985 3980

NEW LISTING - 3 YrfJ
old E xcellent cond1t ton ,
r anch 1.8 acres of m ce
laytng land, fully equtp
ped kttchen , 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, other
features $36,900 00
NEW L! STING - Han·
dvman' s spec 1al Could
be 2 famtiY 10 Pomeroy

Sale Oy Owner

Green Etem sc hools , 3 mt from

593 7322

day

e

MANNING

FDr

General

ul

Mu lb e-rry

last

Real Estate - General
Real Estate

WANTED Full t1me hve
1n position for group home
which serves persons who
are
developmentally
dtsabled 1n Galltpolls,
week · end
part · t1me
pos ttion also available
Contact John Lehew at 446

Y92 -22S9

18 vrs old Apply tn per

Real Estate

PERSON to clean house.
oo per hOur, colt 4.t6·t259

s.1

l'&lt;lfd and gartlge T h1 5 won 1

2 bedroom 10
old house, nea r
For ~c d Run L ak e on l 5
acres

son No phone calls please

Oeadlme for appllcatton
w1th resume· 5 31 ao

Wanl$12,500 00
NEW LISTING

SO" Mower when
you buy a
Riding Tractor

be

C1fy Hall , Athens, Oh10

help wanted

w &lt;'ll

N lil - 51, close

BUILDING LOTS - 1 5
t o 2 acres, total 9 lots,
clean a nd r eady tor
hou se, c tt y water and
e 1ec t r1c
availab l e,
located on R f 7 approx
15 m t n ut es
above
Pomeroy

45631

Barrett, President, AOR
TA Board of Trustees, co
(6141

co.

FARM 84 acres of
till abl e and ha y fte ld
mos t ly fence d, w1th 2
ponds, fea tur 1ng new er
home, large gar age and
barn 1ust m .n ut es from
t h e n ew
P ort l and
bn dge

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

LOROBI ' S PIZZa, Stiver
Bndge Plaza
Help wan·
ted, week ends only . Must

home, 9 to "' Salarv Ret
requested Call ""llo 2153

Real E stat e

Help Wanted

11

mv

In

Pom erov , 0

ly

825 THIRD AVENUE

adm1n•strat1on of the
mult1 county public bus
system ir1 Southeastern
Ohto Respons•ble for the
general management of the
system. Serves as project
dtreclor for !he AORTA
Rural
Pubt1c
Tran
sportat ton (or related
field l from a fully ac
cred1fed college or untver
Stfy or equ1valent ex
perlence In transit system
adm1n•strat1on
Should
have a background of
public fmanclng, gran
twrtt1ng ,
protect
1m
plementation, commun tty
tnvolvement, promotton
and planning. Send resume
and contact· Mr Donald

must have experience and
references Apply 1n person
only to Western Pancake

$17 ,500 00
VERY NICE

&amp;

GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE

TA Board of Trustees
through
a
contract
agreement Rate of Pay.
Salary per year negotiable
based on pnor expenence
($15,000 year mmrmum)
Genera I
Description ·

GRILL COOK and wa1tress

Chester,
room house
on J,~ ac re w1th 5
be drooms , 2 ba t hs,
downsta i rS rem odeled,
b asem e nt ,
uttltty

PUG PEPPER

BOX 800 C/0

TA) Responsible To AOR

Help Wan ted

Ex ec utove l!5!ong - NR ~~ 3
oedroom nome compleTely
remooe led
new c il r pel
oa~ement

Belpre, Ohto

Executive Director, Ap
palach1an Oh10 Regwnal
Transit Assoclat1on CAOR

George

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

21.

tv

HOBSTETTER
REALTY 1

992-2342
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

OnkJJI;

.m_ IIi
We'll give our Mll'lltoyou.

WANTED

45701,

OPENI NG FOR a part
ttme clerk fyptst
Tn•s
pos ttton requires a person
who can work wtthout
asstst ance or close su per
vtsmn after be1ng proper ty
framed Hr s 9 a m to 2
p m M on Fn Taktng ap
pllcatlons Frtdav May 9th
tra m 9 a m to l p m at t he
7 UP and Peps• w arehouse
Rt 7 tn Chesh 1re, OH

BA BYSITTER

Real Estate- General

by

S Cash S for tunk c ars
Frye' s 742 2081 Open 9 5
Closed Sunday an d Mon

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

1-,

~~

HELP

Real Estate

W1ll sell the compl ete 1n~entory of the Sf1mson Dry
Clean.ng Shop constst1ng of htgh quahty equipment
and supplies tor the Small Bust ness Adm of Ohto
Distnct offtce at 85 Marconi Blvd , Columbus, Oh1o.
Sa l e 1n Athens, Oh1o at 28 West Sttmson Ave.
Sh1elds dry clean1ng mach tne, complete w t cooker,
sol ut 1on tank, etc ( 40 lb cap ) , large Huebsc h
dryer { ..0 l b cap ) w / sta1 nless steel t ank 1n ex
ce llent cond , lar ge solution storage tank , Fulton
boiler (200 lb ca p ) 15 H P complet e w/ blow down
ra nk &amp; m o tor , commerc• a l HD Ruud hot water tank
( 100 ga l cap L Wayne H D a1r compressor (220V ) 3
HP extra gOOd , Hueb sc h steam dryer ( 125 lb cap.),
tw o M ilnor a uto wa shers w/ stai nless steel tubs
w / new m otor s (25 lb cap ), three New Yorker
steam presses, complete , CISSell plants steam unit,
Ctssell puff tr oner , 3 un1t Un tpress shirt presstng
m ach tne, complete unt t for sh ~r ts , two form
f1n tshers for coats, and jackets, complete , Ctssell
st eam spott1 ng t able. comple te, C1ssell presser,
Bock centr tfugat ex trac t or , dam p bo x. shtrt folder .
work table fo r fold1ng shtr ts, B Vac 0 y v acuum
system , a la rge t able of parts, steel &amp; brass f1ttmgs ,
stea m lines, belts, st eel cables, etc , three sma ll
sca les , pant s &amp; sht r t rac ks, lot 1r on r ac k s, t tme
clock &amp; rack, R CAllen cash reg tste r , Burroughs
addmg mach 1ne . "' dr f ile cabi net, 3 counters
wt form.ca tops, portable w •ndow st gn , outstde
S1gn, elec door eye , F rtgt da tr e r ef r1 gera tor, and
other 1tems n ot li Sted

Needed

1!.._

11 01 747 M, New York, NY
10010

Res pon s ible for daily pos tong and month ·
btlltngs for small manufacturing com ·
pany. Typing a must. Som e accounttng
background a plus .

local vendtng co., must be
neat, dependable, and have
H S. education Prefer ages
25 and over, apply tn per
son Monday or Wed., 1 p.m
to 3 p m to Laughlin Ven
dtno Co
44 State St ,
Gall1poi 1S

1642, ext 332, at!er 4 30
p m Buckeye Community
Servtces An Equal Op
portun1ty Employer

YOUHAVETHECOVERAG~?

Parenthood of Southeast
Oh1o, 8 Nort h Court St ,
A thens, Oh 45701 An Equa I
Opport um ty Employer

Sheet

P ARTTlME P IECE w ork
We bster,
AmeriCa's
for emost d ictionary com
p any needs hom e workers
to update local matltng
l ists. All ages expen ence
unnecessar y Send name,
address, phone number to
Webs ter, 175 5th A ve Sutte

Send complet e r e sume, m conltdence to :

WI L L BUY old tran
sm• ss 1ons ,
b att e r1es,
eng 1nes, or scrap metals,
etc Call245 9188

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO

by May 23,1980 to Pl anned

EXPERIENCED

metal man fabncatton and
1nstall atton, gOOd wages
w1th
•nsurance
and
vacatton
Good work ing
condit1ons, No Phone calls,
appl y tn per son at 152 Thtrd
Aile, Ga l li&amp; Refngerat1on

11

re.t"&gt;Oililble

Responsible tor dav to day

local

1J

JEWELERS,

422 Second Ave.

brown

AUCTION SERVICE

Sale for Small Business Adm . of Oh10
Monday, Mav 12 atl2:30 O'Clock Noon
28 West Stimson Ave .. Athens, Ohio
Dry Cleaning Shop, Complete

TAWNEY

ter nor, b lack and Wh1t e
m a r k m tddle of ta tl
Needed badly f or srck pe r
son
Generou s r eward
Please, qut ckl y, please
614 742 3093 or 614 -&lt;46 8674

smart 992 2897

Insurance

coins ,

weddmg bands, estate
1ewe1ry, cl ass r1ngs, etc.

1 SMAL.L PUPPY Call379
2326
Part Coll ie pup Cu te and

old

675·3010

SWAIN

PUBLIC AUCTION

DIAMONDS,

LOST on Johnson Rd
hound , b lack With wh•1 e
nng ~ ro u n d neck, wh 1t e
chest, wht te on f oreh ead,
wh1te tip on ta ll We1ghs
about 50 lbs A n~ wers to th e
name " So" Asa H oll y Jr
2525 COlliS Ave
Hun
Ttngton 30"' 525 644.3

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Kenneth Sw•in, A~Kt
Corner Thtrd &amp; Ohve

per, 675 3616 or 675 5202

Giveaway

13

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

LOST · Tool box In VIC tn tt y
of car wash on Ea stern If
found tntac t r eward. 446

4249

4

CON
(used ,

alum mum) , &lt;cans, etc),
automattc
transmtss1ons
( JUnk ), copper, brass, lead ,
batteries, radta tors, tndtan
arrowheads, and locust
posts Call Robert L. Har

Tr ee

Nursery School ts ac
cepflng chil dren for the
September class. Three
and four year Old Children
are eligible for enrollment

d leport, Oh10 61"' 992 2751
Public Sale
&amp; AUCtiOn

CATALYTIC
VERTERS

Lost and Founct

6

oft soN Second Ave1 , Mtd

K CHS

gradua tes! Classes o1 1960·
69, ftrst annual 60's pa r ty To

Nu· Prime replacement
Windows
Storm Wlr)dows &amp; doors
Aluminum
&amp;
vinyl
sid1ng
Howmel Pat1o Cover-s
Howmet screen rooms
t..o\ob1le home awntngs
Alum1num
u1111ty
b•l•ldmgs
691 M1ller Drive
'446· 2642
Free ESttmates

· ~ · #

" THE BU TCHER ' S SHOP

8

Announcements

-- .. · - -- -- ........... ..

sewrng

FA YE ' S GI FT SHOP New

II

I

and

machtne repa1r, parts, and
suppl tes
Ptck up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , one hal f m tl e up
Call
Georges Creek Rd
oU6 0294

l ocat 1on Next to Hetner s
Bread Store Flowe r s tor
M emor• al Day

Bill's _]'

Jumbles INEPT DOGMA KNIGHT SHADOW
Answer What Iiley couldn 't do when ' fatso dra nk

SWEEPER

FOR THE MONTH of Feb

~

(Answers Monoay)

Announcements

Orehel ' s Ceramtcs Green
ware 30% off Glazes 20%

E!rt.,.s

Printanswerhere

3

992 2082

o!'I-E '""P~ov,."':J

Now arrange lhe ctrcled leners to
rorm 'he surpnse answer as sug
gesteel by the above car1oon

Yesterday s

Lane
Pta n o Tun1ng
Da n tels 7.42 2951 Tun1ng
and Rep a1r Servtce s1 nce
1965 If no answer phone

In me mory o
ammy
Slayton, who d1ed May
10, 1979. We mtss you at
sc noot and
r1d1ng
btcycles wtth us We
m1ss you when we are
pla y1ng You wer~ a
good
fnend
Your
fr tends and lay mates

ors)uj bJ
ElMORTH

GUN SHOOT EV E RY
FR IDAY NIGHT 7 30 P M
FACTORY CHOKE ONL Y
RA CI NE GU N CLU B

In memo r y of Ar thur E
Koen1g who passed awav
May 11 , 1976
Gone but not forgotte n, nor
Wtll you e~o~e r be
Sadlv m tssed by w tfe,
Ruth child r en and gr and
children

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Announcements

Ptek1 ng up an E as y p lay
or gan
tn
your
ar ea
looktng for a res pon stble
part y to 1ak e over pay m en
ts Call cre dtt manager
collect 614 592 5122

bar

SU it
i NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN !

~ ~ ~U;:lt!.!J •

3

"T her e's an ope n gate at
the end of the road
Th r oug h wh tch eac h must
go a lone and th er e,
1n a l •ght we c an not see ,
Ou r Fa ther clat m s h1S own ,
Beyond th e gate, you r
loved one,
ftnds happ 1n ess and r estA nd ther e tS comfort iM the
thought,
Th at a IO\/Jng God knows
best "
Robert Ne lson Clar k, son
of John L a nd Weltha
Nelson Cla r k was bor n
N ove mber 4, 191 2, 1n
Downington, Me tgs Coun
tv , Oh to He departed th ts
li f e unex pe ctedly at h ts
home .n Harr tsonvtlle ,
Oh w on A pn l 2.4 , 1980. at
the age of 67 years, 5 m an
ths and 20 da ys Hts death
com es as a ter rt ble shoc k ,
an d a feeli ng of gr eat toss,
to h ts be r ea ved f am tly and
many fn ends
He wa s preceded tn death
by h1 s pare nts, a brother
J ames Clar k , and an 1nfan t
son , M 1ckey Nelson Cl ark
On J une 16, 1933, he was
unt fed in m arnage , 1o Lol a
F 1l key and to th ts unton,
two sons w er e bor n--one of
w ho m su r vtves , Larry
Clark, of Middlepor t, Ohto
Best des h tS de voted com
pant on and son , he lea ves a
d aughter tn l aw Joy, three
g randdaughter s,
Tamra,
Penn y, and wen dy Cla r k, a
S1Sfer , L Ou•se Dt xon, a
br othe r Mark of Al bany ,
Ohto, also several n teces
and nephews
' B ob, ''
a s he w as
f amt l tarl y known , had
r et 1red fr om hts pos•hon as
" Supermte nden1 of Htgh
w ays " tn M et gs Coun ty,
December 1, 1978, end 1ng
fortv three vears of publ tc
ser v tce tn The county He
has also ser ved on t he
M etgs County Boa r d of
Co m miSS IOn er s f or t en
years He w as w ell ~now n ,
havt ng been a livestock
dealer 1n Metg s Coun tv tor
forty seve n ye a rs and
owned and opera ted a ca1
t ie far m near Harr 1son
vtlle He was ever rea dv to
lend a hel p tng hand t o a
fnend 10 tieed - and wtll be
greatly mtssed by a ll hiS
frtends and netg hbors'
Sunset and even m g sta r ,
And one clear call for met
A nd mav there be no
moantng of the B ar
When I cut out to sea
Twiltght and even tng bell,
And afTer th at the dar ~ 1
And mav mere be no sad
ness of farewe l l
When ! emba r k ,
For th ough f r om out our
bou rne of t 1me a nd p lace
The flood m ay bear me f ar ,
I hope to see m y Ptlot f ace
to face ,
When I have crossed the

BRIDGE
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alao Sontag

In Memonam

2

IN MEMORY of Lest a 0
Gatewood
It ma y be an yw he r e at a iL
Wh en happy memones
star t,
Those m emor 1es of yester
day,
That so de l1ght th e heart
Th ose
verv
sp ec 1al
m emor 1es,
That T1me cannot erase,
And rn t he hea r t t hey' ll
alwavs,
Hold a ver y spectal place
Sad ly mt ssed by chil dren,
and grandc hildren

Card of Th an ks

tha t sealed b tds wdl be
r ece1ved by th e c lty
M anager , of The City of
Ga lit polls, Oh1o at his off•ce
m th e Mun tci pal Bulfdtng
for two gasoltne pumps and
key control systems for
each pump tor use at the
C•f Y M amtenance Garage
Btds Will be recetved at
the above named offiCe un
td 12 00 Noon, local r.me on
T uesday, May 20 , 1980 and
publ1cly oepned and r ead at
t hat hour and place 8 1d
for m s may be obta1ned '"
t he Oft tce of the City
M an ag er,
518
Second
Ave nue, c,ry Of Gal li pOliS ,
Oh1o

In Memonam

••

1mmed1ate open tng for
Soc1a l
Worke r
w•th
Bachelor ' s Degree , ex
penence 1n cns•s coun
seltng, based In Me1gs Co ,
w!llmg to travel 1o ne1gh
bornmg counties Must be
htghly or ganiZed, wil l have
d1verse responslbtltltes
Half ttme posttton to start.
poss1ble Increase to three
fou r th or full Send resume

11am to 4pm at !he Holldav
Inn
HOSTESS

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays.

11

IMMEDIATE OPENING
FOR AN
INVOICING CLERK

Pat Clonc h 9 to-3;

Wanted !o Buy

- -_ --H.!!e_Wanted _

Hele W~ted

HELP WANTED

Mrddleporl BetOg he ld bv

9

11

Full t tme and part t1me RN
or LPN II 7 Co n1act M r
Ztd Hin at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fr1dav 9 5.

Rumma go

sale 50 Nell Ave M onday
thru Sat urday, 9 ttll ?

chairman of the JAC Club
the comer of the park where,
Committee for the DAR
hands over hearts, they pledged
Another spectal note to the
thetr devotion to the American
program was added by about 20
Flag.
voungsters from the Jack and J 1U
Durtng the program , a
Day Nursery who attended along
touching moment occurred when
wtth their dtrector, Dottte
one of the hostesses, Mrs Arnett,
Campbell, and ass,.tant dtrector,
asked the assembled youngsters
Robtn Bias. Onlookers were
tf they knew the sigmftcance of
deltghted wtth the tykes' renthe flag be mg flown at half-staff
ditiOn of " Amer1ca " and the
After it was explamed that thiS
pledge to the flag
was bemg done as a rem mder of
In addttton to touring the
the Amertcan s be in g held
ManSion
House, the chtldren
hostage m Iran, Mrs Arnett
wer
e
s
hown
the legendary
asked the ch!ldren to bow thetr
French
Plate
and
t he marked
heads for a moment of silent
graves
of
Cornstalk.
Ann Batley
prayer on behalf of the hostages'
a
nd
Co
l
Charles
Le •11 s
safe ret urn Mrs Arn ett ts
namesake of the local DAR
c ha pt er Refr es hment s concluded the chtldrens' vtstt
radiation that exceeded the NRC
NOTIFICATION GIVEN
Clubs mvtted from Central
PORT CUNTON, Ohio - The quarterly limit while the plant was mcluded th e Stars ahd Stnpes
Toledo Edison Co. has been notified shut down for reactor refueling.
Clu b Ya nk ee Doodle Dandy
by the Nuclear Regulatory CornPreliminary findings of an NRC Club, Mmute Men Club, Betsy
nussion of three posstble procedural mqwry pomted to a probable failure Ross Clu b a nd Rhododendron
violations when a worker was ex- to take an adequate radioactive sur- Cl ub
posed to radiation at the Davis- vey pnor to entermg the affected
lnvtted from Ordnance were
Hesse nuclear power station earlier area and procedures oullined for th e Sta tue of Ltbe rt y Club ,
·~month
preparation to work m areas of high Ltberty Bell Club. The Patnots
The worker, who was not iden- radiation were not followed com- Club and George Washmgton
tified, was exposed to a dose of pletely.
Clu b

who mcluded Mrs. Donald
Waldte. Mrs Norman l.tevmg,
Mrs F.ugene Sterrett. Miss
Kathertne Wtlson. Mrs. Eldrtdge
Sauer. Mrs Milton Miller, Mrs
Homer Martm. Mrs.· Lee F..
Gtbbs. Mr s. Hillis Faudree, Mrs
James W Carpenter and Mrs.
Earl H Arnett All of the women
wer e dressed 1n colomal
rostwnes
The young JAC members, both
in the morning and the afternoon,
gathered at the base of the Pomt
Pleasant ba ttle monument to
present pat rtoh c programs Ln·
cludmg the JAC Club song and
the smgmg of " America". They
then proceeded to thr flagpolr at

wavmg youngsters converged on
Point Pleasant's Tu-Endie-Wei
Park Fnday m an old-fashioned
display of patriotism that would
have made this country's founding fathers proud.
More than 23 Juruor Arnen can
Cttizens Club members from Central and Ordnance elementary
schools were at the park m the
monung a nd afternoon respec.
lively as specJal guests at the
Colonel Charles LeWIS Chapter of
the Daughters of the Amencan
Revolution.
The children. carrymg their
flags a nd many wearmg headbands and to uches of the "red,
\\hlte and blue" marched down
Mam Street on thetr way to the
park. pass mg along thetr route
over 20 fl uttermg Amencan flags
put out m honor of the occas10n by
merchants The chtldren were

•
•
•

MI CHIGA N

~utdes

POINT PLEASANT - Flag-

~:: : :

Yo rdSo!o

7

t
t

t

t
t
t
t

WOOU RE AL T't , IN C
'
J•2•L•ocusT s T, GAL Li re..
· •;s- ..,.__

I

135 ac res more or less I 3 mtles Raccoon Creek bot
tom , 40 acres, cr eek bottom , 60 ac r es toTal tillable
u sed as a Gr ade A dat r y opera t 1on, .4 m il ker s wt th
au tom at tc washer s, 800 ga l bulk tanks 2 stlos {800
tons total ) Wtth silo un loadmg auger Str uct ures
40 x80 m eta L 172 x 40 m tlk house \W tf h f eed room,
40 x17 0 c oncre te slab f eed lot A l l st ruc tur es have
conc r ete f loor s 1,000 walnut and poplar trees on
farm Cl ay Twp , C1t y Schools

FINANCE
Ow ner w tll help ftnance Wtth a down pa y m en t and
car r y the balance on a LAND CON T RACT Statel y 2
storv P•llary posts, 3 bedroom, form a l entry &amp; large
ope n WIMdt ng sta1rcase Fam11y room w tth plank
floortng &amp; w b f1rep1ace F orma l living room,
spa ct ous eat tn k• tchen w1th loads of knottv p 1ne
cab 1n ets Th1s and much more sett1ng on 3 acres
Can buy onlv one acre Ct t y schools G1ve us a call
for more detatls

RODNEY ·CORA RO.
58 Ac r e, mobde hom e r un ner f or a 12x.60 t r ader,
septt c tank, r ural wa ter availa bl e Ver y r easonable

RIO GRANOE AREA
M obt le h ome and ha lf ,a cre lot for only $14 ,500 00

GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE!
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORD IT!
The own er s have tov ed t hts home but they ar e mO\
mg You wtll know the ca re tt has had as soo n as you
ope n lhe door. Jus t e1ght yea rs old 3 bedroom
r anc h , ltv1ng room , k itchen w1th built tn s, d ini ng
area, m odern bat h, 1 car f.nt shed garage, a II t hiS on
a nt ce size lot located only one and a half miles from
the ct ty Pnced tn the mtd "'O's.

NEW LISTING!

9V.. o/o Financi ng Avatlable 1 3 bedroom ranch, ll/2
baths, fa mtl y room, large k ttch en area Fu ll v
carpeted 15:.:20 out of the ground pool Si t uated on a
large lot
ACREAGE - Exce llent butldtng s1te 8 4 ac res
more or less Totally fenced L oc ated 5 to 6 miles
trom the c1ty C1ty Schools Priced $14,500.00 .

114,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE!
On this 2 story, 4 bedroom home. Living room , k tt·
chen &amp; dtn.ng area Fully carepeted. 1 car garage.
Sttuated on a deep lot with a gardP.n space.

m

Bonnie L Stutes, Realtor, 446-4206
James R. Stiltes, Assoc. 446-2885 ·L[!
Joseph L lAach, Assoc. 245·9484 -" '" 0 ~
'

v

�0+-The Sunday nn-&amp;ntinei, Sunday, May II, 1980

M- The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel, Sunday, May 11, 1900

Children display patriotism during park tour
81• C.lla Roush

•

accompamed b\' several teachers

HANDS OVER TIIEIR HEARTS a nd heads upLifted to the Amen can
fla g. these young JAC 1 · ~ 'r ' rs rectted the Pledge to the flag durin g
activtt tes Frtday at Tu·Endle-Wet Park m Pomt P leasant The day " as a
demonstratiOn of patn oltsm hosted by the Col Charles l.ewts Chapter
NSDAR for nearly 230 children from Ordrance and Central elementar)·
schoo ls

and thetr pr mc tpals, George
~·hiler of Central and Btll Barker
of Ordra nce
They '"ere \\elcomed at Tu·
Endt e-Wet by the tr hostesses and

II

4 FAM IL. Y YARD SALE .
.tas P ike ned to Zl nn ·s L an
di ng. Clothi ng all sizes In
eluding ex t r a lar ge d resses
and sl ack s, ant1que diShes,
A von bottl es, tew el r y
tapes, fu r n1t ur e, toys and
m1sc
Stobart's G r een house now
open
Hangtng baskets,
bed d1ng pl ant s, t omatoes,
cabbage, pepper s, Rt 2
Racm e, Ohto 949 2342

I

5 Famr tv Yard Sate. 238
Condor St , Bac k of Land
mark, Pomer oy T hu r s , a,
Frr 9, Sa t 10 9 4 each day
R u m ma ge
Sale
M1d
dl e p or t ,
Old
Mart1n
Restau rant Sa t and M on
5 t am tltes
Thr ee Fa mtlv Yard Sale,
lot s and lots of cht ldren's
clothes W omen's c lothes
also Lots of m1sce l taneous
Tuesday and Wednesdav at
t he James F ink restd ence
on Depot Street 10 Ru tland
Rummag e Sale
Frtday
a:"td Saturday, 16th and 17th
at old Martm Restaurant,

Expenenced Stdlng
Staller 992 2772

Help Wanted

In

Gene r al Offtce Work M ust
be able to tvpe K now ledge
Postm g
of boOkkeeping
and F .t1ng Send Res ume to
Box 743, Pom eroy, OH

GE T VALU ABLE tratmng
as a young bus.ness person
and earn OOOd m oney plus
som e grea t gifts as a Se n
t1 ne1 route ea r ner Phone
us n ght away and gf t on
the eltg tbl ltt y list at 992·

WANT ED: Girl lo do local

2156orm 2157

telephone wor k for Cotum
bus based 011 co opera tmg
tn tht s area . Call 614 459·

GIR LS AND GUY S Start

2988

wor k tod&lt;i'Y
Larg e
southern f •rm ha s i m ·
mediate open i ngs fo r 7
sharp g1rls and guys to
travel w1th un1que young
bustness group, doing
p r omotional
sale s
throuQhout L as Vegas,
M1am1, Hawa 11 and most
major c ittes In resort
areas
No exper1ence
necessary We Will trat n
Must be 17 or older and
some high school requtred
Podg1n0
and
tran sportatton furntshed , plus
all expense advance during
trainmg
Above average
earn1ngs and raptd ad·
vancement .
If free to
travel and able to start at
once, contact M1ss Jovan
Napter, Monday
only,

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDER S
Not1ce

1S

2

Aneqpetemeets

PubliC Nottce

hereby g1ven

I wou ld l•ke to e:.:press my

Sincere tha n ~!; To all my
frtends whO remembered
me on my 91 st b1 r 1hday Of
the many cards I rece111ed ,
each held a spec 1al pl ace tn
my h eart at ha p py
memor 1es You were very
k m d and may God bless
e._-er yone of you
Cla r a Roush
We would l tke to e:.:pr ess
our s1ncere thanks to
r elat1ves
f r 1ends an d
netghbors who were so
very k1nd tn our t1me of
need All contr~but 1 ons of
fOOd and flowers were
much
apprectated
A
spec tal thanK you to
Re11erend
Porter
The
Ru tland
Emergency
Squad, the Ewmg Funera l
H ome
and
to
the
pa l lbea r er s and M r and
M r s Jake Warner for the
mus1c Also to the Metgs
Coun t y Shenff s Depart
men t and escort
M rs
Robert Cla r k son
La rr y and fam ily

M ay4, 11

EAR111QUAKECAUSE
Earthquakes are caused,
according to an old
Japanese legend, by a
giant catfish lymg asleep
beneath the ISlands. It
holds its tail in 1ts mouth
and whenever tt bttes down
in its sleep 1t stirs m pain and Japan quakes

IN LOVI NG MEMORY of
Cecil L Terrv 1911 to May
5, 1979
You a r~ not forgotten loved
one,
Nor w tll vou ev er be,
As long as li fe and memory
l ast,
We w tll remember t hee-,
We mt ss you now our hear
ts are sor e,
As t1 m e goes b y we mtss
you more
Your l0111ng sm ile, vour
gent le fa ce ,
No one c an frll your 11a c ant
place
Sadl y m tssed b y fam tly and
f n ends

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Standard bidding customs
btdder The most frequent
wa) ts to u se a stmple ove rca ll to get mto actwn
When you oven•a 1\ you need
some htgh-card strength
We su ggest a mmtmum of
seven H C P It ts far m or e
Im portant that you have a
good su1t Y ou need at least a

Whe n you open the btddmg
your atm IS to get to a sl am
ga me or sa fe part-score
contract You are startmg to
exchange Informati on and
your hrst requirement for a
normal openmg btd ts that you
hold over 10 htgh-card potnts
Wh en you compete agam st
an adve rse opemng btd you do
so for one of three reaso ns
I You wa nt to start
a campa tgn leadtng

five-ca rd su1t fo r a one-l evel

m'ercall and r eall} need at
least s1x tf you have to go to
the t wo level

The second way 1s th e tak·
double Th iS double asks
your partner to btd and defl
mtel y 1s not for penalties It ts
usually an a ttac kmg m eas ure
eoUl

to a slam , game or
part scor e of vour

own

to show preparatiOn for any·
th tng your partner may b1d

2 You wa nt to mdl ·
cate the ltne of
def ense agamst an
anticipated adverse
contrac t
3 You want to cro wd

t he

and the htgh-card equtvalent

or

It

har d

destrable the ta keout double
The thtrd way IS the btd of
o ne notrump It usuaJi y show s
the equ tvalent of a standa rd

for

your opponents to
r each th e1r best f mal

opemng notrump w1th at least
one stopper m the opponent's

contrac t
There are t hree w ays to
compete agams t the opemng

'tfl\lrul ]e)11

opemng

b1d Th e fewer
ca r ds yo u have m your
o pponen t's btd sutt the mor e

btd d tn g and

m ake

an

oy Henrt Arnold and Bob lee _

Unscramole these tour Jumn les
one teMer to each square 10 lorm
fOUl oratnary words

t
I I I J

I

S •o

l

Wh AT TI... E
F'"i rLANDE R'1"&lt;6
R'OMAN WOULD "AV E

1 PAY highest pnces
poss tble for gold and Silver
coi ns, n ngs , 1ew e1 r y, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Mtddleport

LOVED 10 DO .

I DOINIE j
I I r (j
"[I I I I j r I I J'
1

!

too much - STANO HIM

Jumbht86o:'lk No U - onla1tllngl10 puzzles.,isawallablo torS t 15pv~ tpaltl
llom Jurroble cro th• ~rtwo;pe per 6 (!~34 Norwooa.N J 07648 tr o:.t~.;tl5 •• ,Jf
n am~

adO! I.l.i'"'

~:ip r (l{l•• ll'l • nt11\-t"

cttec"-s pal"''&gt;'t- 10 Ne"

~

'

~

•·

t

- -- -- J

..

ANCIENT LODGE . JJ
F&amp;AMot
Gallipolts, Oh1o
Supports The
J M1ll Levv
For The
Gu1d10g Hand School

w e Re patr All
Sm all Ga soline
Engmes
Up to 25 1-t . P
Lawn mower s, 1tller s,
cham saw s, motor b tk es
&amp;
e tc
All
work
gua r anteed P1ckup &amp;
O e h~o~e ry

PRECISION SMALL
ENGINE SERVICE
54 4 Upper R1 11 er Rd

44 6 2096

AT TN

PE " formerly owned by
Vernon Lucas, under new
management, freezer beef,
Swtft Stdes, custom work
done
Ca l l
"'46 2851,
Bulavtlle Porter Rd

held Sat Mav 24th 1980

be

l 1ve 60' s m us 1c For more
tnformat 1on contac t 367
02U

FOR SALE

John Oeer.e tractor 40 ,
MF tractbr lSO , Ford
tractor 8,000 , Baler No
12, Bush Cutter 4', S' r 6',
3 pt d1sks, plows , gra
der baldes 6 &amp; 7ft ., cui
11vator J pt. , wheel d1sks
12 &amp; 8 ft. , 2·105 Wh ite
tractor . Ph 446·4641

Announcements

3

THE

LEARNING

Call Jan Betz (4.t6 20481 or
Linda carey ( 4-&amp;6 3948 ) for
tnformation

FOR THE BEST buy in

d•amonds, &amp; tewelry oo t o
Tawney Jewe lers, Com
pare pnces and values
You can save a for tune
shopping at Tawney ' s, "'22
Second Ave, Gall tpolis, Oh ,
many of our i tems priced at
200 gold , and 9 00 Stiver

BRADFORD , Au ctt onee r ,
Complete Serv tce Phone
9"'9 2487 or 949 2000 r ac .ne,
Oh 10, Cr 1tt Bradford
Odds and Ends Sh op at the
old Reuter s ga s Sta tton on
SR 33 at the f oot of Rose
Hdl
Open f or busmess
M onday , Ma y 12 Ttll August
31 Open Monday through
Saturday 9 ttl 8 anyone
wantmg to sell th10gs we' ll
p1ckup and sell on a 50 pet
50 pet bas•s Any one w tfh
antt ques or handcrafted
1Tems we' ll sell on an 80
pet 20 pet bas ts We do
ptc kup , sellmg , bookwork ,
and r eturn any t htng over 30
days old Woul d lti(e people
to do own pncmg. Carolyn
Lew ts at 992 2921 or Kathy
RE ynolds at 992 5981

We sell anytntng for
anybody at our Auctton
Barn or tn vour home. For
tnformat1on and . ptclcup
servtce call 256 1967
~le Every S.turday
N1ght at 1 p m

771 7

ANY PERSON who has
anything to gtve awav and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other th•ng tor
sa le may place an ad 1n this
col umn There w111 be no
charge to the advertt ser
PUPPY and c at

Call 256

930.
TEN YOUNG ROOST ERS
Ca tt256·MJ4

LOST 3 yr old m ale dog
Pa rt l abrador , r eddt sh
Wean ng ch a1r
col or
coll ar Rewar d Ca ll 4.46

WILL BUY Old fran
smissions ,
bat1eries,
engines, or scrap metals,
etc Call 245 9188

LOST Young bl ac k and
tan female h ound Kerr
Be thel Rd
or Georges
Creek area RE WA R D For
•nformat•on lead1ng to
r ecovery Call 446-9780

Iron and brass beds , old
f urnt ture , desks, gold
nngs , te welry, Si l ver
dollars, ster l1 ng, etc., wood
1ce boxes, ant1ques, etc
Co mplet e
households
Wrtte M 0 M1iler, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992

LOST

776Q

Smal l

or 614 985 4325 or
shertff

Gold IOk. 14k, 18k. dental
gold and gold year p1ns,

10 kara t, 14 karat, 18 karat,
gold Dental gold and gold
ear P•ns 675 3010
Gold , stl ve r or fore1gn
co tns or any gold or Stiver
tfems Ant1que turntture,
glass or chtna , will pay top
doll ar, or complete estates.
No ttem roo large or too
sm all Check pnces befor e
sellmg A lso do appraismg
Osby 10ss te) Martm 992

Cats and K tttens A l l Stzes
and colors 992 7805

SANOY ANO BEAVER In

AUTOMOBILE

IN

SU RANC E
been
can
c el l e d ?
L ost
yo u r
operator 's lt cense" Phone
992 2143

Insurance

6370

surance Co has offered
ser vtces for . f tre tnsurance
coverage •n Gall 1a County
tor al most a century
Farm , hom e and personal
propert y coverages are
availab le to meet tn
d1vidua l needs
ContacT,
Foster L ew ts, your ne 1gh
bar and agent

SERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

All th e ~bo ~o~e equ1p . ts m good work1ng conct1tton
and W1ll be left hooked up day of sale for demonstra·
f1on . Th1 S w tll be an excellent opportunity tor
anyone to purchase a good business - everyth•ng 1S
r eady to operate and IS 1n good 1oca11on - close to
downtown, bank, and post offtc~ . If sold as a going
bustness, rent can be worked out with landlord .
Parkmgarea .
Thts busmess IS being sold bv Small Bustness Adm .
ol Ohto and Will be sold as one un1t and then by
Ptecem eal - final sale which ever WiljY IS higher. All
machm er y removed by purchaser bY Mar' 19
Nothmg shown before ctav ot sate Terms - cash, cerTified check. or check w l! etter of credtt lrom your
bank Not r espon sible for accidents.
Bill Janes m Charge of Sale.
Auc t 1oneE"r - 81 1t J anes. Phone S57· 34 l l

- ··- ---'
I

..... .. ,. .... _.. ,. .... " . .

'

'44-

House, Rt 35, Gallipolis,
OH

ONLY $28,500.00

ACREAGE - 10 Acres
va cant land, gas, elec
trt c ,
and
water
avatlable
Close to
Metgs High Sc hoo l, good
building si tes, lots of
road
frontage.

$10,000 00
ACREAGE -

Approx .

140 Acres with frame
house, all minerals , call
for details!

OFFICE HOURS

FREEl
II
30" Mower when
you buy a
Walking Tractor
ROUSH, ,....~ .......

Monday rhru Sat

9·5
Also Mon . &amp; Fri.
Eventngs Unt1IB P.M.

1

REALTOR
Cle,and, Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
Henry

742 -2474
Jean Trussell 949· 2660

GRAVEL V TRACTOR SALES
Ph. 992 2975
Pomeroy,

. Keep your chin up and
· you'll trip over a fire
: hydrant.

Oh10

••

'

co ... ert'd pilho, etec hlta1,

cen air Shown by •ppt

onty

• ••ltJ4

Real Estare- General

bedroo m

hom e

RIVER VIEW HOME
FOR SALE
5

m1nutes from C11y Park
2 story frame , 4 B R: ' s,
hvmg room w1th W.B
fireplace, eat •n ktt
chen
Basement and
garage.
Pnced
at

$39,500.

Call Dayt.me , 446-1615
After S 446-1244
Real Estate - General

985·4197

r
t
t
t
t

Jr.

t

on

house. and

buil d ing s
So me
m.nerals Ca ll Today
ma1ntenance free home
T h1s hOme has so man y
ntce fe atures such as
mtero wave, Mohawk
ca rp et
t hroug hout,
fa m ily r o om with
ftreplace , hand sta med
woodwork W e tust can' t
nam e them alll 1 G1ve us
a call for m ore info On

t
t
t

A real

dream home•• 1

JUST ONE LOOK That's all It will take to
fall '" lov e w•th th•s 3
bedroom, total elec tr ic
home
Sttua ted on
almost an ac re Close to
M ei gs Htgh on Cr ew Rd
Pr1 c e redu c ed
to

f

f

$39 ,900.00.
EXTRA WELL KEPT 3

bedrooms, 1 ba t h, ~ ~ t
chen and uttl i tv . Rural
water . Si tuated on n1ce
stze lot 1n Hutchtson
Subd1vls •on
Call for
more deta ils
we need homes 1n the

l

furnoshed

1n

-

lui

6 rms

n~ee

porch

tong

8UU I 1tUI Hom e -

Close

lo

NR 50

Lake

Snowden

tx&gt;aulllut selling

I&lt;Hge tov

'
----

1ng room ~~ond t amoly room
loreplace- illl buill on kol
chen J e R 1'11 bo"JIM lull
basement 15 acres all elec

We'll cover it all.. .for you.

totsol h oc kor y nuts and
Boatong swommong
avadacte

rnc

deer

Stutes Real E state

21 LOCUST STREET

Nlil 61

New L os hng - Nice
coun try home woth 31 acres

near Ru tland S rooms w th
ba th
good outbu• ld•ng.,
1'1un tmg wi!h m •neral

446-4206

r •ght s See 10 app r ecta te

•

REALT.Y WORLD .

&lt;

Pro perl y NR 511 M•ddlcporl bu s nes~
4

rcn tcd aport
"

ment ~

C h il rt~ ~M H ave~ lileallo r
Neac.t E Carsey B r M &lt;;lr
Ph t 91 2403 o r 9'12 1190

PRICE REDUCED TO SELL •
LOW DOWN PAYMENT - 9'2%

OWNER FINANCED'

We nav e potenTial
buyers- need your
hsttngs.

Real Estare - General

WOOD REALTY, INC.--f

446-1066

'

t

t
t

I
Russell 0 Wood
Evenmgs 446· 4418
Realtor

(II

I ~ ves tm en l

Ken Morgan
E11en1ngs 446-0971
Realtor

f

MODERN

BRICK

HOME

Sprtng Valley home offers 1658 sq It pl us a full
basem ent J bed r oo m s, 1 baths, f ully equ tpped Ktt
chen, f orm al dtnmg r oom, l1vtng and f am11y rooms
ProfessiOna l ly landscaped lawn , large patt o and
easy ma tnt enance swtmm1 ng poo l, cus tom
dr apenes, plush carpe t 1ng , tastefu ll v combtned
wtth hardwood t loors, w b fi r ep l ace, m an y d1st tnc
t 1ve bu tlt 1n s, central a tr gas gr il l and LOW
UT ILITIES combtne to make fh1s home a pl easur e
to own Call for detail s and a look at a home that
comb1nes co mf or t, convcntence and good ta sl e a ll
on te rms you can l1ve w1th'
LAND CONTRACT 9% INT
Th ts tS a tam1ly ho me, all br tck w tth 4 bed r ooms and
a spark l1ng ful l ba t h up La rge k ttc hen ltned wt t h
pr ett y cab 1nets Large foyer and fo rm a ll lvtng room
and d m mg Ful l baseme nt l •rep l ace 1n family room ,
2 ca r garage atta ched, also a w orks hop and a bar n
S1tua ted on appr ox 1ma tely 59 acr es Thts home
refl ects tender. lov 1ng care and true value

LOVE A GRACIOUS SETTING!
HOMEOFR4REVALUE&amp;CHARM
T h1s st ately 2 s1or v nom e has all the feat ur es tn a
hom e you would ever went 1 fou r bedrooms, .4 full
bat hs
complete bu11t m kttchen off f rom
the l amll y room w tth w b fi re pl ace F or mal I1V1 ng
ana dtntng room Full ftn1s hed ba sem ent featu nng a
large fam ily room w•th w b f trepla ce, game room
and uttltty room L arge 2 car garage w 1tn opener
Co ver ed pati o and sun dec k Free sw1m m tng an d
club house ar ea availab le

JUST LISTED THIS RIVERFRONT
ALL BRICK HOME

t

WOODLANU
325
BEAT TH!S- SJOO .OO PER MONTH
lnc l udtng pn nc tpla , Inter es t, taxes and tnsura nce
Onlh 9% tnt Owner t ransfer red and v er y anxwus to
sell Ctt y school s, acre of gro und mor e or less , lt V1n g
room, 2 w b fi replaces, ~1 fc h e n &amp; dint ng area F ull
basement prtced m S40' s

DAIRY FARM

20ACRE FARM - 4 bed room home, l ivmgr m , dt n
r m , kt t &amp; 1 bedrrn downs tatrs, basement, F A fur
nace ru r al water, barn &amp; out butld.ng, ntce ga r den
ar ea Loc ated on R t 554 near Eno Bu y now tort
$53,000 00

'

t
t
~3~~=

f

Situated ac rp ss from t he elem entar y school on t
J ackson Pt ke Vil lage wa ter, F A Otl l urn ace, l ar ge
g arden area, downsta .rs bedr oom and bath ,
beauti fUl shade tree A home vou would ce rt a •nl y
en1ov S37 ,500 oo

MINI FARM - 611 ACRES - No house but has
small ba r n Located 1ust off Rt 14 1, at Ce nte nar y
Buy now for $20.000 00
BUY THI S 3 BEDROOM ho me tn Ewtng ton,
sttua ted on St Rt 160 and ready tor you 2
1~replace s, well water Buy now tor only $8,500 00

FO~

r.umc~

Ju sr IN T IME
SPRIN G. J ucd1uu. •
l1vtng rm , dmtng rm , k1 t , 1 bath, w1th 6 acres,
more or less, n1ce garden area Pnvacy of th e coun ·
try but close enough to town Buy now fo r S29,900 00
Prevtousl y adverl1 sed f or $34,000 00 You must see
the 1ns1 de to apprec1atet t

3 OR 4 B E OR OOM coff age located on Clarl&lt;'s
Chape l Rd .. near Po rter Approx 9 miles from
hasp , house, garden and 21!7 acr~ . n1ce garden
area Buy now tor $30, 000 00

t
t p::: :' :::~~~:ul:~:w;,:~: :::,~smrent
4

1

j

'

P• oe r·

1v ? wel l we have lUST ltste- "f prooe rrv located on th e
100 bl ock on F ourth Ave Consi sts tf two r ental ; Cell i
us for more tn t orm at .on, vo u' l l be Jllad v ou d1dl

L _.,.....
I

To fi ll ailS bedrooms tn th1S except tonally outstand
tng brtc k home T h1s home has every th1ng for you r
comfor t Fo r ma l l tv1ng room, la r ge spac1ous t amtly
r oom w 1th w b f trepla ce, be autiful kttche n wtt h al l
built tns and dlntng area Colo rfu l ceramtc 1de
baths Full f1n1shed base ment , loads of close t space
L arge 2 car f~ntshed garage Th ts nome ts ver 11 we ll
constru cted Profes s1onally landscaped
In an
outstandt ng locat ton - Porterbrooke Subd Ct1y
Schoo l s Shown bv Aooo tnt me n1On ly 1

6 49 A cres mor e or less of tall gr een p tne an d
wood land Located south of R to Gra nde on State R1

NEW LISTING - 3 bed room home stfuated w1thu1i
the city, nat gas F A furna ce, tul1 bdse ment, ap

$15,000 00 to SJO,OOO 00

Phone 742-3092

to respons•l:lle part y
Coml ortiii DII H ome

Jj NEW LISTING IN

Al most

Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .
Phone 742-2003

Oil Owne-r w•ll nelp l onance

t
t
t

185

pnce range for our
qualified buyers. Give
us a call!!!
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .

I01S

t'
t
,_

acres
more or less
Sttuated on Van Zandt

ty 169,000 .00

General

Pomeroy

"''·" "'"' on •

Almost 8 ac res on Hysell
Run 2 bedroom home
H as 2 rur a! w ater taps
and 2 septt c systems

BRICK

tw o

tor aCJCJ• I•o na!
co mto Call torCJei&lt;J ilS

Call About These Many
otners we Hav e.
Forest Cassady, Brok er
Call V1rg101a Hayman

to se ll a! only $25,500 00
NEW LISTING

Old

Ave

ouold•ng

BEAUTIFUL,

on an acre w tth cellar
and 2 bulldmgs Lo ts of
d1fferent trutls Pn ced

Rd .

on

yea r

General

BY OWNER
Down St. Rl 7;

IOCilll'd

over look •ng Rt 141, only 1 mtle fr om GaiiiPOl tS
c orp 11m 1ts 7 w ' b ltreplaces t amtly r oo m'" ba se
me n! , Ji '~ baths, m any bu tl 1 tns, house and 2 1 1::~
ac res, buy now tn th e S60 s Posstb ll 1ty of mort gage

Stale R! 124 Srtuated

Onl y $21 ,500 00
NEW LISTING -

Rea l Estate

WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
WALTON SIZE FAMILY

General

Hobsten~r.

General

Your tam 1 l ~ Wt l l love the beauty of t he t\vo
ftreptaces and the ener gy sav.ngs of the wood
bur ner 3 bedroom s, ful l basem en t and muc h more
T hts home show s excellent qual tty and wor k man
Sh tp Ca ll us tod ay 1

NEW LISTING - Neal
2

J

bedroom home, full
basement, WBFP , n1ce
sitti n g
p o r ch
with
ba u t1ful river view
M ust be seen, Jlh stones
of excellent l tveabilttv

~GRAVELY.

St.

bldgs

Broker
1

We servtce what we sell

Condor

forf!plau 2 ur gar , corner tot
(0 • au I, c lructar or tve stor

PHONE 742-2003

The Gravely 30-mch rotary mower cuts
nght through the toughest grass and weeds
and does a good JOb on your lawn as well
The mower IS tough.wtth all -gear d trect
dnve. all-steel deck and anu-scalpmg
roller.The tractor IS also all-gear d nven
Call us for a free d emonstrauon

110

HMC l br ranch, k1t , DR bath,
area , lg
FA w w b
ul1t

after 6

ln"&gt;UI&lt;I it'd
lily boll!.

S21 ,SOO -

All shrfls,

Wa sher and Dryer Ca ll
E va Hollon a t 985 3980

NEW LISTING - 3 YrfJ
old E xcellent cond1t ton ,
r anch 1.8 acres of m ce
laytng land, fully equtp
ped kttchen , 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, other
features $36,900 00
NEW L! STING - Han·
dvman' s spec 1al Could
be 2 famtiY 10 Pomeroy

Sale Oy Owner

Green Etem sc hools , 3 mt from

593 7322

day

e

MANNING

FDr

General

ul

Mu lb e-rry

last

Real Estate - General
Real Estate

WANTED Full t1me hve
1n position for group home
which serves persons who
are
developmentally
dtsabled 1n Galltpolls,
week · end
part · t1me
pos ttion also available
Contact John Lehew at 446

Y92 -22S9

18 vrs old Apply tn per

Real Estate

PERSON to clean house.
oo per hOur, colt 4.t6·t259

s.1

l'&lt;lfd and gartlge T h1 5 won 1

2 bedroom 10
old house, nea r
For ~c d Run L ak e on l 5
acres

son No phone calls please

Oeadlme for appllcatton
w1th resume· 5 31 ao

Wanl$12,500 00
NEW LISTING

SO" Mower when
you buy a
Riding Tractor

be

C1fy Hall , Athens, Oh10

help wanted

w &lt;'ll

N lil - 51, close

BUILDING LOTS - 1 5
t o 2 acres, total 9 lots,
clean a nd r eady tor
hou se, c tt y water and
e 1ec t r1c
availab l e,
located on R f 7 approx
15 m t n ut es
above
Pomeroy

45631

Barrett, President, AOR
TA Board of Trustees, co
(6141

co.

FARM 84 acres of
till abl e and ha y fte ld
mos t ly fence d, w1th 2
ponds, fea tur 1ng new er
home, large gar age and
barn 1ust m .n ut es from
t h e n ew
P ort l and
bn dge

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

LOROBI ' S PIZZa, Stiver
Bndge Plaza
Help wan·
ted, week ends only . Must

home, 9 to "' Salarv Ret
requested Call ""llo 2153

Real E stat e

Help Wanted

11

mv

In

Pom erov , 0

ly

825 THIRD AVENUE

adm1n•strat1on of the
mult1 county public bus
system ir1 Southeastern
Ohto Respons•ble for the
general management of the
system. Serves as project
dtreclor for !he AORTA
Rural
Pubt1c
Tran
sportat ton (or related
field l from a fully ac
cred1fed college or untver
Stfy or equ1valent ex
perlence In transit system
adm1n•strat1on
Should
have a background of
public fmanclng, gran
twrtt1ng ,
protect
1m
plementation, commun tty
tnvolvement, promotton
and planning. Send resume
and contact· Mr Donald

must have experience and
references Apply 1n person
only to Western Pancake

$17 ,500 00
VERY NICE

&amp;

GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE

TA Board of Trustees
through
a
contract
agreement Rate of Pay.
Salary per year negotiable
based on pnor expenence
($15,000 year mmrmum)
Genera I
Description ·

GRILL COOK and wa1tress

Chester,
room house
on J,~ ac re w1th 5
be drooms , 2 ba t hs,
downsta i rS rem odeled,
b asem e nt ,
uttltty

PUG PEPPER

BOX 800 C/0

TA) Responsible To AOR

Help Wan ted

Ex ec utove l!5!ong - NR ~~ 3
oedroom nome compleTely
remooe led
new c il r pel
oa~ement

Belpre, Ohto

Executive Director, Ap
palach1an Oh10 Regwnal
Transit Assoclat1on CAOR

George

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

21.

tv

HOBSTETTER
REALTY 1

992-2342
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

OnkJJI;

.m_ IIi
We'll give our Mll'lltoyou.

WANTED

45701,

OPENI NG FOR a part
ttme clerk fyptst
Tn•s
pos ttton requires a person
who can work wtthout
asstst ance or close su per
vtsmn after be1ng proper ty
framed Hr s 9 a m to 2
p m M on Fn Taktng ap
pllcatlons Frtdav May 9th
tra m 9 a m to l p m at t he
7 UP and Peps• w arehouse
Rt 7 tn Chesh 1re, OH

BA BYSITTER

Real Estate- General

by

S Cash S for tunk c ars
Frye' s 742 2081 Open 9 5
Closed Sunday an d Mon

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

1-,

~~

HELP

Real Estate

W1ll sell the compl ete 1n~entory of the Sf1mson Dry
Clean.ng Shop constst1ng of htgh quahty equipment
and supplies tor the Small Bust ness Adm of Ohto
Distnct offtce at 85 Marconi Blvd , Columbus, Oh1o.
Sa l e 1n Athens, Oh1o at 28 West Sttmson Ave.
Sh1elds dry clean1ng mach tne, complete w t cooker,
sol ut 1on tank, etc ( 40 lb cap ) , large Huebsc h
dryer { ..0 l b cap ) w / sta1 nless steel t ank 1n ex
ce llent cond , lar ge solution storage tank , Fulton
boiler (200 lb ca p ) 15 H P complet e w/ blow down
ra nk &amp; m o tor , commerc• a l HD Ruud hot water tank
( 100 ga l cap L Wayne H D a1r compressor (220V ) 3
HP extra gOOd , Hueb sc h steam dryer ( 125 lb cap.),
tw o M ilnor a uto wa shers w/ stai nless steel tubs
w / new m otor s (25 lb cap ), three New Yorker
steam presses, complete , CISSell plants steam unit,
Ctssell puff tr oner , 3 un1t Un tpress shirt presstng
m ach tne, complete unt t for sh ~r ts , two form
f1n tshers for coats, and jackets, complete , Ctssell
st eam spott1 ng t able. comple te, C1ssell presser,
Bock centr tfugat ex trac t or , dam p bo x. shtrt folder .
work table fo r fold1ng shtr ts, B Vac 0 y v acuum
system , a la rge t able of parts, steel &amp; brass f1ttmgs ,
stea m lines, belts, st eel cables, etc , three sma ll
sca les , pant s &amp; sht r t rac ks, lot 1r on r ac k s, t tme
clock &amp; rack, R CAllen cash reg tste r , Burroughs
addmg mach 1ne . "' dr f ile cabi net, 3 counters
wt form.ca tops, portable w •ndow st gn , outstde
S1gn, elec door eye , F rtgt da tr e r ef r1 gera tor, and
other 1tems n ot li Sted

Needed

1!.._

11 01 747 M, New York, NY
10010

Res pon s ible for daily pos tong and month ·
btlltngs for small manufacturing com ·
pany. Typing a must. Som e accounttng
background a plus .

local vendtng co., must be
neat, dependable, and have
H S. education Prefer ages
25 and over, apply tn per
son Monday or Wed., 1 p.m
to 3 p m to Laughlin Ven
dtno Co
44 State St ,
Gall1poi 1S

1642, ext 332, at!er 4 30
p m Buckeye Community
Servtces An Equal Op
portun1ty Employer

YOUHAVETHECOVERAG~?

Parenthood of Southeast
Oh1o, 8 Nort h Court St ,
A thens, Oh 45701 An Equa I
Opport um ty Employer

Sheet

P ARTTlME P IECE w ork
We bster,
AmeriCa's
for emost d ictionary com
p any needs hom e workers
to update local matltng
l ists. All ages expen ence
unnecessar y Send name,
address, phone number to
Webs ter, 175 5th A ve Sutte

Send complet e r e sume, m conltdence to :

WI L L BUY old tran
sm• ss 1ons ,
b att e r1es,
eng 1nes, or scrap metals,
etc Call245 9188

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO

by May 23,1980 to Pl anned

EXPERIENCED

metal man fabncatton and
1nstall atton, gOOd wages
w1th
•nsurance
and
vacatton
Good work ing
condit1ons, No Phone calls,
appl y tn per son at 152 Thtrd
Aile, Ga l li&amp; Refngerat1on

11

re.t"&gt;Oililble

Responsible tor dav to day

local

1J

JEWELERS,

422 Second Ave.

brown

AUCTION SERVICE

Sale for Small Business Adm . of Oh10
Monday, Mav 12 atl2:30 O'Clock Noon
28 West Stimson Ave .. Athens, Ohio
Dry Cleaning Shop, Complete

TAWNEY

ter nor, b lack and Wh1t e
m a r k m tddle of ta tl
Needed badly f or srck pe r
son
Generou s r eward
Please, qut ckl y, please
614 742 3093 or 614 -&lt;46 8674

smart 992 2897

Insurance

coins ,

weddmg bands, estate
1ewe1ry, cl ass r1ngs, etc.

1 SMAL.L PUPPY Call379
2326
Part Coll ie pup Cu te and

old

675·3010

SWAIN

PUBLIC AUCTION

DIAMONDS,

LOST on Johnson Rd
hound , b lack With wh•1 e
nng ~ ro u n d neck, wh 1t e
chest, wht te on f oreh ead,
wh1te tip on ta ll We1ghs
about 50 lbs A n~ wers to th e
name " So" Asa H oll y Jr
2525 COlliS Ave
Hun
Ttngton 30"' 525 644.3

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Kenneth Sw•in, A~Kt
Corner Thtrd &amp; Ohve

per, 675 3616 or 675 5202

Giveaway

13

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

LOST · Tool box In VIC tn tt y
of car wash on Ea stern If
found tntac t r eward. 446

4249

4

CON
(used ,

alum mum) , &lt;cans, etc),
automattc
transmtss1ons
( JUnk ), copper, brass, lead ,
batteries, radta tors, tndtan
arrowheads, and locust
posts Call Robert L. Har

Tr ee

Nursery School ts ac
cepflng chil dren for the
September class. Three
and four year Old Children
are eligible for enrollment

d leport, Oh10 61"' 992 2751
Public Sale
&amp; AUCtiOn

CATALYTIC
VERTERS

Lost and Founct

6

oft soN Second Ave1 , Mtd

K CHS

gradua tes! Classes o1 1960·
69, ftrst annual 60's pa r ty To

Nu· Prime replacement
Windows
Storm Wlr)dows &amp; doors
Aluminum
&amp;
vinyl
sid1ng
Howmel Pat1o Cover-s
Howmet screen rooms
t..o\ob1le home awntngs
Alum1num
u1111ty
b•l•ldmgs
691 M1ller Drive
'446· 2642
Free ESttmates

· ~ · #

" THE BU TCHER ' S SHOP

8

Announcements

-- .. · - -- -- ........... ..

sewrng

FA YE ' S GI FT SHOP New

II

I

and

machtne repa1r, parts, and
suppl tes
Ptck up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , one hal f m tl e up
Call
Georges Creek Rd
oU6 0294

l ocat 1on Next to Hetner s
Bread Store Flowe r s tor
M emor• al Day

Bill's _]'

Jumbles INEPT DOGMA KNIGHT SHADOW
Answer What Iiley couldn 't do when ' fatso dra nk

SWEEPER

FOR THE MONTH of Feb

~

(Answers Monoay)

Announcements

Orehel ' s Ceramtcs Green
ware 30% off Glazes 20%

E!rt.,.s

Printanswerhere

3

992 2082

o!'I-E '""P~ov,."':J

Now arrange lhe ctrcled leners to
rorm 'he surpnse answer as sug
gesteel by the above car1oon

Yesterday s

Lane
Pta n o Tun1ng
Da n tels 7.42 2951 Tun1ng
and Rep a1r Servtce s1 nce
1965 If no answer phone

In me mory o
ammy
Slayton, who d1ed May
10, 1979. We mtss you at
sc noot and
r1d1ng
btcycles wtth us We
m1ss you when we are
pla y1ng You wer~ a
good
fnend
Your
fr tends and lay mates

ors)uj bJ
ElMORTH

GUN SHOOT EV E RY
FR IDAY NIGHT 7 30 P M
FACTORY CHOKE ONL Y
RA CI NE GU N CLU B

In memo r y of Ar thur E
Koen1g who passed awav
May 11 , 1976
Gone but not forgotte n, nor
Wtll you e~o~e r be
Sadlv m tssed by w tfe,
Ruth child r en and gr and
children

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Announcements

Ptek1 ng up an E as y p lay
or gan
tn
your
ar ea
looktng for a res pon stble
part y to 1ak e over pay m en
ts Call cre dtt manager
collect 614 592 5122

bar

SU it
i NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN !

~ ~ ~U;:lt!.!J •

3

"T her e's an ope n gate at
the end of the road
Th r oug h wh tch eac h must
go a lone and th er e,
1n a l •ght we c an not see ,
Ou r Fa ther clat m s h1S own ,
Beyond th e gate, you r
loved one,
ftnds happ 1n ess and r estA nd ther e tS comfort iM the
thought,
Th at a IO\/Jng God knows
best "
Robert Ne lson Clar k, son
of John L a nd Weltha
Nelson Cla r k was bor n
N ove mber 4, 191 2, 1n
Downington, Me tgs Coun
tv , Oh to He departed th ts
li f e unex pe ctedly at h ts
home .n Harr tsonvtlle ,
Oh w on A pn l 2.4 , 1980. at
the age of 67 years, 5 m an
ths and 20 da ys Hts death
com es as a ter rt ble shoc k ,
an d a feeli ng of gr eat toss,
to h ts be r ea ved f am tly and
many fn ends
He wa s preceded tn death
by h1 s pare nts, a brother
J ames Clar k , and an 1nfan t
son , M 1ckey Nelson Cl ark
On J une 16, 1933, he was
unt fed in m arnage , 1o Lol a
F 1l key and to th ts unton,
two sons w er e bor n--one of
w ho m su r vtves , Larry
Clark, of Middlepor t, Ohto
Best des h tS de voted com
pant on and son , he lea ves a
d aughter tn l aw Joy, three
g randdaughter s,
Tamra,
Penn y, and wen dy Cla r k, a
S1Sfer , L Ou•se Dt xon, a
br othe r Mark of Al bany ,
Ohto, also several n teces
and nephews
' B ob, ''
a s he w as
f amt l tarl y known , had
r et 1red fr om hts pos•hon as
" Supermte nden1 of Htgh
w ays " tn M et gs Coun ty,
December 1, 1978, end 1ng
fortv three vears of publ tc
ser v tce tn The county He
has also ser ved on t he
M etgs County Boa r d of
Co m miSS IOn er s f or t en
years He w as w ell ~now n ,
havt ng been a livestock
dealer 1n Metg s Coun tv tor
forty seve n ye a rs and
owned and opera ted a ca1
t ie far m near Harr 1son
vtlle He was ever rea dv to
lend a hel p tng hand t o a
fnend 10 tieed - and wtll be
greatly mtssed by a ll hiS
frtends and netg hbors'
Sunset and even m g sta r ,
And one clear call for met
A nd mav there be no
moantng of the B ar
When I cut out to sea
Twiltght and even tng bell,
And afTer th at the dar ~ 1
And mav mere be no sad
ness of farewe l l
When ! emba r k ,
For th ough f r om out our
bou rne of t 1me a nd p lace
The flood m ay bear me f ar ,
I hope to see m y Ptlot f ace
to face ,
When I have crossed the

BRIDGE
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alao Sontag

In Memonam

2

IN MEMORY of Lest a 0
Gatewood
It ma y be an yw he r e at a iL
Wh en happy memones
star t,
Those m emor 1es of yester
day,
That so de l1ght th e heart
Th ose
verv
sp ec 1al
m emor 1es,
That T1me cannot erase,
And rn t he hea r t t hey' ll
alwavs,
Hold a ver y spectal place
Sad ly mt ssed by chil dren,
and grandc hildren

Card of Th an ks

tha t sealed b tds wdl be
r ece1ved by th e c lty
M anager , of The City of
Ga lit polls, Oh1o at his off•ce
m th e Mun tci pal Bulfdtng
for two gasoltne pumps and
key control systems for
each pump tor use at the
C•f Y M amtenance Garage
Btds Will be recetved at
the above named offiCe un
td 12 00 Noon, local r.me on
T uesday, May 20 , 1980 and
publ1cly oepned and r ead at
t hat hour and place 8 1d
for m s may be obta1ned '"
t he Oft tce of the City
M an ag er,
518
Second
Ave nue, c,ry Of Gal li pOliS ,
Oh1o

In Memonam

••

1mmed1ate open tng for
Soc1a l
Worke r
w•th
Bachelor ' s Degree , ex
penence 1n cns•s coun
seltng, based In Me1gs Co ,
w!llmg to travel 1o ne1gh
bornmg counties Must be
htghly or ganiZed, wil l have
d1verse responslbtltltes
Half ttme posttton to start.
poss1ble Increase to three
fou r th or full Send resume

11am to 4pm at !he Holldav
Inn
HOSTESS

It Pays To Advertise. • .Advertise Where It Pays.

11

IMMEDIATE OPENING
FOR AN
INVOICING CLERK

Pat Clonc h 9 to-3;

Wanted !o Buy

- -_ --H.!!e_Wanted _

Hele W~ted

HELP WANTED

Mrddleporl BetOg he ld bv

9

11

Full t tme and part t1me RN
or LPN II 7 Co n1act M r
Ztd Hin at Pomeroy Health
Care Center Monday thru
Fr1dav 9 5.

Rumma go

sale 50 Nell Ave M onday
thru Sat urday, 9 ttll ?

chairman of the JAC Club
the comer of the park where,
Committee for the DAR
hands over hearts, they pledged
Another spectal note to the
thetr devotion to the American
program was added by about 20
Flag.
voungsters from the Jack and J 1U
Durtng the program , a
Day Nursery who attended along
touching moment occurred when
wtth their dtrector, Dottte
one of the hostesses, Mrs Arnett,
Campbell, and ass,.tant dtrector,
asked the assembled youngsters
Robtn Bias. Onlookers were
tf they knew the sigmftcance of
deltghted wtth the tykes' renthe flag be mg flown at half-staff
ditiOn of " Amer1ca " and the
After it was explamed that thiS
pledge to the flag
was bemg done as a rem mder of
In addttton to touring the
the Amertcan s be in g held
ManSion
House, the chtldren
hostage m Iran, Mrs Arnett
wer
e
s
hown
the legendary
asked the ch!ldren to bow thetr
French
Plate
and
t he marked
heads for a moment of silent
graves
of
Cornstalk.
Ann Batley
prayer on behalf of the hostages'
a
nd
Co
l
Charles
Le •11 s
safe ret urn Mrs Arn ett ts
namesake of the local DAR
c ha pt er Refr es hment s concluded the chtldrens' vtstt
radiation that exceeded the NRC
NOTIFICATION GIVEN
Clubs mvtted from Central
PORT CUNTON, Ohio - The quarterly limit while the plant was mcluded th e Stars ahd Stnpes
Toledo Edison Co. has been notified shut down for reactor refueling.
Clu b Ya nk ee Doodle Dandy
by the Nuclear Regulatory CornPreliminary findings of an NRC Club, Mmute Men Club, Betsy
nussion of three posstble procedural mqwry pomted to a probable failure Ross Clu b a nd Rhododendron
violations when a worker was ex- to take an adequate radioactive sur- Cl ub
posed to radiation at the Davis- vey pnor to entermg the affected
lnvtted from Ordnance were
Hesse nuclear power station earlier area and procedures oullined for th e Sta tue of Ltbe rt y Club ,
·~month
preparation to work m areas of high Ltberty Bell Club. The Patnots
The worker, who was not iden- radiation were not followed com- Club and George Washmgton
tified, was exposed to a dose of pletely.
Clu b

who mcluded Mrs. Donald
Waldte. Mrs Norman l.tevmg,
Mrs F.ugene Sterrett. Miss
Kathertne Wtlson. Mrs. Eldrtdge
Sauer. Mrs Milton Miller, Mrs
Homer Martm. Mrs.· Lee F..
Gtbbs. Mr s. Hillis Faudree, Mrs
James W Carpenter and Mrs.
Earl H Arnett All of the women
wer e dressed 1n colomal
rostwnes
The young JAC members, both
in the morning and the afternoon,
gathered at the base of the Pomt
Pleasant ba ttle monument to
present pat rtoh c programs Ln·
cludmg the JAC Club song and
the smgmg of " America". They
then proceeded to thr flagpolr at

wavmg youngsters converged on
Point Pleasant's Tu-Endie-Wei
Park Fnday m an old-fashioned
display of patriotism that would
have made this country's founding fathers proud.
More than 23 Juruor Arnen can
Cttizens Club members from Central and Ordnance elementary
schools were at the park m the
monung a nd afternoon respec.
lively as specJal guests at the
Colonel Charles LeWIS Chapter of
the Daughters of the Amencan
Revolution.
The children. carrymg their
flags a nd many wearmg headbands and to uches of the "red,
\\hlte and blue" marched down
Mam Street on thetr way to the
park. pass mg along thetr route
over 20 fl uttermg Amencan flags
put out m honor of the occas10n by
merchants The chtldren were

•
•
•

MI CHIGA N

~utdes

POINT PLEASANT - Flag-

~:: : :

Yo rdSo!o

7

t
t

t

t
t
t
t

WOOU RE AL T't , IN C
'
J•2•L•ocusT s T, GAL Li re..
· •;s- ..,.__

I

135 ac res more or less I 3 mtles Raccoon Creek bot
tom , 40 acres, cr eek bottom , 60 ac r es toTal tillable
u sed as a Gr ade A dat r y opera t 1on, .4 m il ker s wt th
au tom at tc washer s, 800 ga l bulk tanks 2 stlos {800
tons total ) Wtth silo un loadmg auger Str uct ures
40 x80 m eta L 172 x 40 m tlk house \W tf h f eed room,
40 x17 0 c oncre te slab f eed lot A l l st ruc tur es have
conc r ete f loor s 1,000 walnut and poplar trees on
farm Cl ay Twp , C1t y Schools

FINANCE
Ow ner w tll help ftnance Wtth a down pa y m en t and
car r y the balance on a LAND CON T RACT Statel y 2
storv P•llary posts, 3 bedroom, form a l entry &amp; large
ope n WIMdt ng sta1rcase Fam11y room w tth plank
floortng &amp; w b f1rep1ace F orma l living room,
spa ct ous eat tn k• tchen w1th loads of knottv p 1ne
cab 1n ets Th1s and much more sett1ng on 3 acres
Can buy onlv one acre Ct t y schools G1ve us a call
for more detatls

RODNEY ·CORA RO.
58 Ac r e, mobde hom e r un ner f or a 12x.60 t r ader,
septt c tank, r ural wa ter availa bl e Ver y r easonable

RIO GRANOE AREA
M obt le h ome and ha lf ,a cre lot for only $14 ,500 00

GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE!
THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORD IT!
The own er s have tov ed t hts home but they ar e mO\
mg You wtll know the ca re tt has had as soo n as you
ope n lhe door. Jus t e1ght yea rs old 3 bedroom
r anc h , ltv1ng room , k itchen w1th built tn s, d ini ng
area, m odern bat h, 1 car f.nt shed garage, a II t hiS on
a nt ce size lot located only one and a half miles from
the ct ty Pnced tn the mtd "'O's.

NEW LISTING!

9V.. o/o Financi ng Avatlable 1 3 bedroom ranch, ll/2
baths, fa mtl y room, large k ttch en area Fu ll v
carpeted 15:.:20 out of the ground pool Si t uated on a
large lot
ACREAGE - Exce llent butldtng s1te 8 4 ac res
more or less Totally fenced L oc ated 5 to 6 miles
trom the c1ty C1ty Schools Priced $14,500.00 .

114,500
TOTAL CASH PRICE!
On this 2 story, 4 bedroom home. Living room , k tt·
chen &amp; dtn.ng area Fully carepeted. 1 car garage.
Sttuated on a deep lot with a gardP.n space.

m

Bonnie L Stutes, Realtor, 446-4206
James R. Stiltes, Assoc. 446-2885 ·L[!
Joseph L lAach, Assoc. 245·9484 -" '" 0 ~
'

v

�• I

• '

•

•

18
12

11

SECRETARY
RECEPTIONIST
255 Third Avenue
Apply In Person
~ Accepting a pplications
· thr ough Ma y 9Th

PA INT JOBS, or odd jobs.
houses c leaned, call 446·
1794.

Real Estate

General

18

Wanted to Do

-~---~-

LAWN ¥OWER repair,
engines, frames , shar·
pening, call 446·0355 or 4.46·
4233 after 5 :30.

WOULD LIKE to do dairy
or farm work . 8 yrs. ex·
perience . Call -146 -0626.

11
Wanted to Do
EXPERIENCED mother
will care to and love your
children In my home. Call
446-7108.

Real Estate

Real Estate

Radio TV
&amp; CB Repair

'

Real Estate

General

General

Owner will finance . This atTracive br.ck front ranch
With tn-taw quarters on lower level with complete
ktTch en ftrst floor , family room with woOd·burntng
ftreplace , gas heat w1th atr, huge covered patio.
Situated on 3 lots wtfh hookup for tra1ler! lm ·
maculate condttion throughout .
~all or stop and see Donna Sw1sher 446 ·4313 .

CENTURY 21

1-276-5311

Equipment and Parts for a
complete TV service shop .
For more information call
992-2522 ,

... AND CONTR.ACT - Buy th is attractive 3 bed room
house for $2,000 down at 12°0 1nter es t . Loca ted '" the
V 111age of Bidwe ll , owner wants to sell now
111 572
LAND CONTRACT - A 10°o 11'"':' .~~~ 1dlt' c111u down
paym ent will buy you a lovely br 1ck frame b1·leve 1
w1th 3 bedroo ms, 2 baths, cen tra l atr and Jl/.s acres .
Close to hosplla l Ca ll t or appo1 ntment today N1465
DREAM HOME IN THE COUNTRY ~ Lovely bri ck
ranch has J bedroom~ , 2"1• baths, formal dining, fUI ·
ly c arpeted , beautiful k 1tchen with self clean 1ng
range, d iSpoSal &amp; diShwasher, family room with
brick fireplace , full basement, heat pump and 2 ~ar
garage. Located on 1 acre , room for garden, 2 mtles
oft Rt 279 behind Thurman .
~ IB47

OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE Over 2,000sq . 11 . of e•ceilent decorating
in thi s spacious 3 bedroom bri ck in
town . Master su1te ha s h1s &amp; her walk in
OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE ~ At · close ts &amp; prtvate bath, family room,
tr active 2 story Colon 1al overlOOking
f1replace, 3 fu ll baths, modern equipped
th e nver on upper lst Ave Big beautiful
k1t chen &amp; formal d ining, FA nat gas &amp;
roo m s with oak fl oor s, very pretty
centra l a1r Large l andscaped yard .
woodwork, 4 bed room s, 2112 baths, 5 Good buY for $75.000 .
fi re places, famtly room , eq u•pped ktt
chen, formal d1n1ng, F .A na t. ga s &amp; 2
car garage Tht s home is in very good
condi ti on and sets on a large tree shad
ed yard with use of r1ver fron t In th e
seventi es

BIDWELL· ROONEY RD. - Good ranch home with
2 bedrooms, bath , storage building and garden
space. On ly $12,500 .
~ 1532

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EXCELLENT BUILDING LOT Build your
dream home this spring on th1S lovely lot. Conta 1ns 2
acres front 1S flat &amp; c leared w ith stream &amp; woods 1n
back 'city sch d1ST , c lose to Rio Grande, $10,900
'
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~1108
MOBILE HOME ~ 1975 Kirkwood , 14x65. 3
bedrooms, Ph baths, r ange&amp;. retngerator, must be
moved.
11800
CLOSE TO ENO - N1Ce 1970 Rebel mobile home,
12x60 in excellent condition, furnished, front porch
&amp; a c~rport , storage bulding and an Oltver t ractor
Located on 2 acres of nice land , better hurry, only
$16,500.
~0561

Evenings Call
Darvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599
Oscar Baird, ReaHor '446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

Spread
your

Real Estate

General

Real estate

General

wings

We cover over
7 m1llion mtles
to find you a home.

OWNER MAY HELP FINANCE ~
Th1s Riverfront residence in Cheshire
Attrac ti ve 2 story A bedroom home of
f en ng an ea t ·1n ktfchen, forma l dining,
2 fu ll baths, w .b f 1replace, love ly wood
work, full basement, sunporch, nat. gas
heat plus 111 acre yard sloping to the
river ' s edge. Th 1s could be an e)(ce llent
buy. Call us for your showing .

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

EVERYTHING YOU NEED
WITH ONE PURCHASE
(PACKAGE DEAL )
Three bedroom , a1r condtt1oned home 2
baths, 11ving room , eat· in kitchen, laun ·
dry room or off•ce, plus close ts gal lore
Metal storage building on concrete
ba se heated garage, paved sidewalks
&amp; d~1veway Furn 1ture inc lude.d plus
washer , dryer &amp; all kit chen appltances
Move in with just your cloth~s . M~ny
ex tras we w111 tell you about w1th a stm ·
pie phone call..fllus c1ty schools. If 407

77 ACRE FARM ~ Between Jackson &amp;
Gallipolis. This scenic rolling cattle
farm otter s several large tillable fields ,
plenty of pasture and some woods. ~5%
c leared. Several springs, bar"n , cattle
shed plus an old house for storage . Also
a large 2 story part1ally remodeled 4
bedroom home 1117 mile off Rt . 36
567,500

GRACIOUS BI · LEVEL
$58,500
Quality , style. beauty all comb1ned ;n
t hislc vely b1 ·leve l. 3 bedror"lmS, l /2
baths, huge utility room, love ! ~ k1 tchen
with built·in cabinets, range, c..tsposal,
dishwasher, large family and rec.. room
with fi re l ~ce . Thi s home has been
tastefully decorated . Call us, and put
your family in th1s lovely home: Close
to Holzer Hospital. We can adv1se you
.;n fi'lanc 111g.
~ 385

LAND CONTRACT
AVAILABLE
ON THIS HOME
N1 ce cou ntry home with
131;, A 5 BR and bath ,
n1ce kitc hen
Drilled
well &amp; ru ral water
ava 11 abl e. Home has
v1nyl s1 ding and forced
a1r furnace
Kyge r
Creek Sc hool OiStrt c T. If
2
9
6
NICE 5 ROOM
HOME ONLY
$17 ,000
Cir cular porch, fu el otl
FA f urnace C• tY water,
ce llar, outs 1de st orage
buildin g
N1 ce com
mun i ty
Phone tor
deta ils.
#386 r---------:;:::""~~

AVERY
LOVELY SETTING
$22,500
11 II x 65 II . M0b1le
ho me Sit ua ted on 1.4 A .
14 II x 22 II lam ily
room, 11 ~ bath s and 111
ft x 43 ft c arport Dril l·
ed w ell wt l h elec tn c
pu m p
Lo v e l y blu e
spruce tr ees l1ne th e
drive to th1 S very nea t
and wel l kept home
CALL TO SEE THI S
ONE TODAY
I 351

219 ACRE FARM - N1 ce rolltng farm
near Patriot on a paved road 30 + acres
tillable, balance in pasture &amp; woodland
Large barns, tobacco &amp; corn, can be
l eased out. Also includes a modern 4
bedroom home plus 12x60 mobil e home
Call for details .

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ASSUME 9% MORTGAGE Large
r emodeled 2 story hom e in Rto Grande.
ncludes 4 or 5 bedrooms, 3 full baths.
family room w / f1rep1ace, equtpped kit ·
chen ,. full basement, deck , V1nyl siding,
larg e garage w / workshop, nat . gas
heat Situated on a large yard near
Lyne Center Owner must sell NOW .

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY IN RIO
GRANDE - Proffitab le la undromat 1n
th e V illage of R1o Grande . Includes 22
washer s ( new co1 n cha ngers) , 10 dry er s
plus dry c1ea n1ng mach1ne·. P arkmg
area for cu stomers $39,500 Ca ll fo r 1n
fo .
OWNER VERY ANXIOUS - Has 2
homes on thei r hand s and need t o se ll so
ar e r eady to cut pr1ce Se ller Will offer
low 1nterest ftnancing fa a qualif 1ed
buyer Low util1ty blils (nat . gas), 2
fir eplaces, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, !Orm a l
d 1n1ng, bea ut•ful beamed ce111ng tn
famil y room. cen tral a1r and l a rg e fl ~ t
l ot Top notch ne•g hborhood . You can I
make a better dea l than this . Was pric
ed at $59,900 but wt ll listen to arw offer .

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE BUILDING
- Nea r l y new brick building on Rt . 35
near Shopptng Cen ter. Perfect for of
fices (Doctor , Dent•st , Lawyer , CPA ,
Insurance, Real Estate, etc. ) Owner
• will help finance

~

.OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE
Th1s beaut1 fu l well decora ted 3 yr old 2
story brick &amp; cedar home . YI(U ' II enjoy
the space th1s ftne home offe r s •n
eluding family room and w b fireplace,
2 111 baths, formal dining plus a large
• equ1pped kitchen, with radar range &amp;
lots ot cab1nets, 2 patios, l arge wood
dec k, 2 ca r garage plus 1 4 acres in
Green Grade School area . Loan
assumpt1on

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PINE SETTING
$27,500
3 bedroom mobi le home,
large l1ving room, eat in
&gt;ttchen . 36x36 heated
aJuminUm garage IJ'I jfh
conc.-ete floor . Call for
'•i Is of this lovely
v&lt; : y well kept place. All
thl' situated on 1 acre M
&amp; '- of beautiful pine
trees.
N 388

COUNTRY ROAD
TAKE ME HOME
!FARM WITH
1SJ A . M, OR L.)
!NEW LISTING I
Four bed room tarm
hosue, l1ving room, din·
1nq room, eat· 1n kitchen,
2 wrches, barn, frui t
c1 1ar &amp; much, much
more
Large tobacco
base, rich in minerals.
Call for more informa ·
tion .
N409

or

EXTRA INCOME
PROPERTY CLOSE
TO HOSPITAL
5 rooms, remodeled
home with bath, LOS
acres of land . Rural
water, 10' x12 ' storage
o ldg 2 rental 11'x60'
rlome fully furnislled,
renting IOf' a total 1150
per month
Sev~fel
young apple trees, nice
tnodernhOftlle to live in
plus
extra rent~rs
money .
#391

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BIG PRICE REDUCTION Owner
tr ansferred, must sell 1mmed1ately
Very clean &amp; well kept 4 bedroom bi ·
level 1n a famtly onented neighborhood
off Rt . 35 . large family room, • 2112
baths, built tn kitchen (nice cab1nets&gt;.
torma l d1nmg room. nat . gas heat &amp;
central a ir, 2 car ga rage and pat 1o. 1
year home buyer protection . Assume
7% mortgage.

~ ' 20/0

ASSUME
MORTGAGE Paym ents of $475 mo. on t hi S 4 or 5
bedroom br ick home resting on 3 acre
• landsc aped grounds with a sma ll pond .
Th e sp ac ious home in c lu des 2
f •r eplaces, large tam!ly room, 2 baths, 2
private pat 1os plus a long circular dr 1ve
lead •ng to the residence. 5 mtles from
town off
8 $77,800

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OWNER TRANSFERRING - Anxious
to selllh 1s quality 3 bedroom split-level.
Situated on a large flat I~'" ~ ar Rodney ,
this f1ne home ~'~'ft.t\t'~l} ·pped eat· in
kitchen. fan
ll\!~~ ~place , fami ·
ly room,
cathedral ceiling in
I1V1ng room, patio, 2 ca r garage and
more. Make us an offer

rec.9.~.,1,

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c" ~ " ,.,~~_ ,. "~'"'lA''""'"h•

BMR -333 " Modular Home" 3 BR ' s, 2 baths , LR, DR .
FR Kitchen 1ncludes stove a nd r efrig All thi s plus
separate ut1 l tty r oom Sttu ated on 1.23 Acres Low
SJO' s
BMR-334 " Will Consider Land Contract" I 3 Acres
of bareland on Jackson Pike . Call for details ! 8%
F1nancing .
BMR -335 " Handyman Specia l " This bri ck has 10
spacious rooms Located in downtown GallipoliS.
Must be seen!
BMR -336 ~ " At the Edge of Town " Situated on
nearly six acres of land Executive type home
tea t unng 2 WBFP' s Call today , owner 1s anxious!
1mmediate occupancy
BMR ·94 " For Large Famtly " Deluxe older home 3
BR ' s, LR , DR , and family room Natural gas heat
Must see to appreciate. Excellent tocat 1on 1n
Cheshire !
BMR ·137A " LOOK Into This" Brick ranch includes
3 BR ' s, complete kitchen with dinmg area . FR w1th
fireplace , full basement . All thi s and more on flat
(120&gt;&lt;180) lot in super sub·divison .

9% MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION - E•cel lent loca tion at 113 2nd Ave . Large
remodel ed 2 story 10 room alum . sided
home witt\ 4 or S bedrooms, llh baths, 2
f1rep1aces, family room, formal dining,
equipped eat·in kitchen w / pantry, sun·
porch, study, f.a . nat. gas heat, tn·
sulated, new wir ing , furna ce &amp; water
heater, floored att1c and more . Located
on a large tree shaded yard. SOO's.

BMR · 139 " Leave the Car" and walk to town . Older
two story home on Second Ave. Home has
aluminum siding, includes3 BR 's, L R, DR , and FR .
Less than $30,000!

BMR -157 "River View " 3 BR frame house W1th full
basement and 32 Acres of land . Kitchen has 20ft of
cabinets . 1 ncludes range and refrigerator .

NEW LISTING Lovely 4 or 5
bedroom brick &amp; frame split located in
Centenary This 4 yr. old home offers
family room w/ fireplace, 2 full baths,
equipped eat-in kitchen. forma l dining,
patio, 3 car garage pus 100' x232' yard
with a lo,ely swimming pool. This one
has it all. 9 1!~% mortgage assumption .
$70's,

u.. ,,..., ... ,.,. Ulk""'t'l '

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Real Estate- General

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BMR -340 "Garden Space " , Older 2 story home in
Patriot situated on lh Acre lot. 3 BR 's, LR , DR, and
kitchen including diSPOSal and range. Southwestern
1
School Dist.
'
BMR ·341 "E n joy Your Own Pond ", L -shaped brick
ranch on a 3.56 Acre lot. 3 BR 's, 2 baths, L ·shaped
LR with DR, FR with stone FP. mud room , fully
equipped kitchen. Partial basement . Natural gas
heat with central air.

NEW LISTING - Remodeled w1thin the last year
Carpet throughout This home i s just right for a
retired couple or for newlyweds. Loan assumption
at C)(lly 9 1f•~ int•rest. S29,900. Call for detai ls .

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•I'- •' ~

'':''-·-== =c.

' • ' .. ltot ..... '\)'oOCI.M'1::
1flil I " ' II ( ""'

Professional
Services

CALL
US lor
your
photograph ic needs. Por·
trait, passports, com ·
mercia! and wedding
photography .
Tawney
Studios. 424 Secon~ Avo .

Bri ck,
ran ch· styl e,
J
bedroom ,
2 1/:oo
bath ,
f ireplace, full basement w
family room , a .c., 2·car
garage , Baum Addn ,
Meigs Co Call after 6 p m
985-4169 ,

6 Rooms, llf:oo baths and
shower, carpeted, paneled,
finished basement w ·bar,
garbage d 1sposal , ~form
windows, doors, come see
it to appreciate it 992·5566 .

Large Attractive home on
exceptionally ntce acre lot.
Syracuse. Modern kit chen ,
2 baths, basement, garage.
Many extras . '192-7727

'"''!'" 1

!lfla1U!

HOME ·- Buy furnished or unlutr.;shed
l.beated on a rented lot. Unfurnished only $5,SIJO.OO.

EVENINGS
TOM WH I TE , ASSOC.
STEVE McGHEE, ASSOC .
DONA McGHEE, ASSOC.
BI!TH NIILL, ASSOC .
BUD McGHEE-R:eitltor· Auctioneer

.,

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446-9557
446-055~

446-0552
245-9507
446·0552 '

•

IN RODNEY · di)&lt;Jble lot, 2
bdr home, gas, water out·
building , good g~rden
space. ask1ng 525,000. Call
collect, 642 2025. Evenings
after 6 or call 245·5403 after

Strout

s.

Realty

BRICK HOME 3 bdr ., 1'12
bath, full y carpeted, on apPri me
prox 11/J acres.
location ,
city
school
di strict . 567.500 Call .w.7247 .

446-0008

Floor plan home in
Syracuse, OH . 1 3 acre . 3
bedroom, 11ull baths. wall
to wall ca rpet , centra l a1r,
kitchen, d1ning rm ., laun·
dry rm . To tal elec Also
wood burning stove and
dbl. ca r garage Contact
Richa rd Weav er on College
Rd .

*******•···~**"fl
Real Estate

General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

General
MINI
selling th 1s lovely 3 B bn ck hom e Th1s 6 yr old
beauty offers lots of gOOd living for some lu cky
family with a large ki t chen &amp; dining rm., LR , fami ·
!y rm . w•th f trepla ce, garage &amp; barn Locat ed on
State Route 160 approx. 6 mi. from HMC
PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres. 15 A Simms Creek
bottom, balance rollmg pasture &amp; woods, n1ce
modular home, la rge barn, several other building s,
tab base, cor ner of SR 141 &amp; the Vern on Woods Rd.

TONEY REALTY ( o

OUTSTANDING - Lovely sweeping
view of the Ohio River, from this im ·
maculate 3 BR ranch. This home
features LR with pretty corner frpl. ,
nice kitchen, den, bath, C.A ., 2 car
garage and full basement with shower .
Situated on 1 acre Of lovely lawn .

WM. D. TONEY • BROKF~

.446-3087
24 STATE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OHIO
WE DO DUR .HOMEWORK!

BUILDING LOT ~ .64 of an acre in a
choi c:e location Minutes from town and
access to ci ty water and sewage

Willa Davis, Associate
Becky Lane, Associate

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unf•ntshed one story home w i th 3.4 ac res on RA C·
COON CREEK . Located on t he Green Sa under s Rd .
near Nort"up. $18,500.
ROOM TO ROAM - I think you would say that thi s
sprawling bri ck tri· level is one of t he nicest count ry
homes you ' ve eve r seen . This beauty 1s situated on
.41/2 acres of land about 3111 miles from Rodney Why
not let your famtly en1oy 5 BR ' s, J baths, la rge li v·
ing and dining room, comlete k1tchen, f amtly room
with stone fireplace nd 2 ca r garage Be the first to
see this one.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE ~ $6.500 down .
- 9o/o - Ask1ng $33.000 - Remodeled 2 story home,
3 BR' s, LR , den, familY rm ., dining, kitchen, 2 WB
fireplaces , J lh acres Located on State Route 233
betwee n Gal lipOl iS and Oak Hill.

WE BRING PEOPLE HOME

CARRY OUT~ Business only_ Reduced to $12.500. A gOOd investment lor the
money. Stock included. located in
Cheshire .

MIDDLEPORT - Gracious older 2
story home. 3 Bdrm .,
baths, kit.,
d1n. rm., full basement and situated on
a choice corner lot. Easy access to
shopping ,

Rul Estate- General

PRETTY RANCH - With a new 2 car
garage attached . 3 bdrms, bath , utili·
ty , kit.: liv. rm ., large fam rm , w 1th
Frankltn F . P . and new carpet plus 112
acre lawn. Located 1n K .C. Oist .

MEMORIES - Restored to colonial
charm 5 bdrm home with a lot of ex
t ras . New k1t., carpet throughout, new
gas furnac e, w b f p , 2 fu ll bath s, new
Sldtng, 3 car garage a"'d much more
Call today on this lov'"ly hom e. Will
trade for a farm

Have you been looking for a house in the
S40' s with all of the room you need? We
have it! This house has A· l sidtng. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining,
complete kitchen, family room, 2 wood
burners, Florida porch, 2 decks, red
WOOd fence and 1 car oar age, located In
the city school district.

446-0844
446-0458

ACREAGE - 100 acres, m -1. 70 acres
cleared, 30 wooded, gas well with
royallies, lob. base. all fenced and
l ocated in Adison Twp.

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - SUPER BUY- FHA· :;
VA · CONVENTIONAL - This 3 y r old bi leve l is .;
l1ke new &amp; must be sold this m ont h. 3 or 4 BR' s, 21!1
baths, family rm ., heata lator ftreplace, low heat
bills, Clay grade school, Gall i a Aca demy High
School Call for Appointment.
.. ~
TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588 ~ Remodel ed home includes 6 rm s and bath, carpor t, sto ve,
refrig ., dishwasher, almost 2 acres of land priced
tor quick sal e

General

A TRULY GRACIOUS HOME - Better Homes and
Garde ns would be taken by the bea uty of th 1S
spac 1ous hom e set on a beaut1ful landscaped lot
abundant with shrubbery &amp; frontage on the OHIO
RIVER . Words cannot descri be the quality of th1s
b rick &amp; frame 2 story home 3 BR 's, 2112 baths, extra
large LR &amp; fam11y rm ., ftreplace, cent. a1r, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH MORE . Shown
by appointment .

Real Estate

GREEN TOWNSHIP ~ PASTURE FARM ~ 155 A.
M ·L located on SR 14 1 approx 6 m 1. west of town.
'Land is approx 60% cl ea r ed &amp; 40% woods &amp; in·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn Pr i c-ed at $500 per
acre
RODNEY BIDWELL RD. -

Sec t ional home, 14x60, -

4 BR , 2 baths, large LR , eq utpped k itc hen, cent. a1r ,
concrete block garage . 1 acre . $22 ,500
IN THE LAP OF LUXURY ~ That 's where you will
be the day you move into th is brand new 3 BR , 21f2
bath tn- level. Thts home will f ulfill your every
dream with the l arge L shaped family rm , equ ip
ped kitchen &amp; 2 car garge. Located 1n Clearv iew
Estates &amp; shown by appointmenJ
ALL THIS FOR SJ9,000 - l BR ' s, llf&gt; baths, LR with
stone f treplace, natural gas heat, air cond , ra nge,
d•shwasher. garage, large pat1o &amp; fenced 1n front
lawn .
FARM-CLOSE IDN
Th ree m iles down river from Ct1Y
limits . 3 BR home . This kitchen and 1iv·
ing room are the showplace of the
house . You w•ll be impressed at th.e
remodeling and how mother has kept 1t
so clean and charming 54 acres, some
ti mber, pasture and I I liable land . Good
barn toba cco base . This is what more
ask for. Please call, we will expla1n . A
good buy Don't wa1t
/1446
CIRCLE THIS ONE
Ideal location for conven1en ce,
highways &amp; shopping. thi s 3 bedroom
brick is tn excellent condition. Features
livtng room, d ining room with slidtng
glass doors, very nice finished family
room in basement, 11h baths, 2 car
garage . It has a personality all its own!
CALL NOW
N380,
BETTER THAN NEW is this tutor and
stone styled 3 yr old home wiht more
features than can be described. 1675 ~q.
ft. entry hall , unique liv ing room, fami ly room, formal dining room, 3
bedrooms. PI• baths. A honey of a kit chen with built·in appl lances. 2
fireplaces, lull basement. pantry. Silting on 2 acres with older 7 room house
and outbuildings. Looking for a lot for
your money, cheCk with us on this on~ .
Priced 1n the $50 s.
#363
PRICED RIGHT
Ten acres of private wooded l and , 12x60
2 bedroom mobile home . Drt lled well
with pump and storage tank. Good
garden space along a small stream ,
uft lity bldg . 10' x10' good cond1tion
Small pond . Sacrifice price $13,000.1/452

SQ NICE TO COME HOME TO! Owner has reduced the price on th i ; 53
acre farm!
Newly · remodeled
J
bedroom home, barn, tobacco t :.se,
pond, plenty of water, 30x42 new rr.etal
building witfl concrete floor. Tc &lt;e a
look. you ' ll like it. Red1Jced to sell
NOW! $41,500 .
~ 295
THIS ONE SPARKLES!
Cozy and immaculate is this 3 bedroom
ranch . Living room, kitchen &amp; dining
combmat1on with patio doors. bath,
garo!!ge. Lg flat lot. Maintenance free
exterior. City school district. Green
Elementary 3 miles from Holzer
Medical Center. Don't let this terrific
buy pass you by Priced in tower $40's.
~ 450
LOCATION! LOCATION!
Walk to school and downtown shoppmg
from your one story home located on a
level corner l ot in a spacious and
pnvate neighborhood . 3 odr. 2 lull
ba ths, bit kitchen , fireplace , attached
garage with new maintenance·free
vinyl siding, and effi cient gas heat, all
for $55,000. 1mmed1ate POSSession and
owner financing available.
11462
VACANT LAND - 66 acres Harrtson
Twp., well fenced , large portion has
new woven wire wi t h stee l posts.
Estimated 10 acres Tillable, some
timber, large road frontage . Excellent
buy $15.000.
N367
LOTS ~ 2 lots . 50' x156' each . LeveL
County water available . $1.500 lor both .
Build to suit yoruself. No restr ictions.
, 454

CONVENIENT, IN -TOWN LOCATION
New listing , This inviting three
bedroom ranch provides the finest in to
day's living, bath with shower, del ux e
wood ca binets in spac•ous k •tchen, for
mal dtn 1ng room , ce ntral air condition·
mg, natural gas heat, budget $45 .00 mo.
Stngle ca r garage, electric eye, fenced
1n back yard . Deadend stree1. Loan
assumpt1on poss1ble 9% rate. Prtced in
the lowS40's
N 456
' 'SHOW OFF"
Warm and inviting throughout, th 1s
nice 3 bedroom home, 1S defin itely a
pleasure! Ntce living room , dining
room, 20x12 garage, aluminum Siding
and storm Windows, and a very nice
chain link fenced yard SPe for yourself
today , show off'to your frtends tomor·
row! Priced in the $30's .
If 444
INVESTMENT
PROPERTY ~
• CHESHIRE AREA
2 apartment houses, 3 apartments
rented for steady income, 4 trailer
spaces . Good living quarters or another
deluxe rental with full baseme nt Large
lots . Comfortable living . Top location! 11

4

5

8

INVESTMENT LAND
Ideal locat•on, 9 acres, more or less .
Lots of road frontage, one mi le from
R10 Grande, Sf . Rt. 35 past Abie 's Auto
Parts . Interested? Better cal l now!/1372
RESTAURA~T

Money making
operation
doing
business at present time. 2100 sq . ft .
brick w•th off1ce and storage room
Electnc heat, central air . Bu i fd 1ng 5
yrs. old . Completely furnished . Room
for expansion .
/1434

TWO WISHES
If COMFORT and CONVEN I ENT
LOCATION are important, see this nice
3 bedroom ranch style home located off
State Route 35 . Featuring living room,
din ing and kitchen combined , bath,
ut1lity room, and garage You ' ll be
pleased with the peacefulness of home
and yard! Take a moment to enjoy a
IObk today! Prtced in the $30' s.
f/455
SUPER STARTER
Th1s neat lt ttle house would be a perfect
retirement or starter home New fuel
oil furnace , small basement , new bath,
nice lot If you're looking for a home
like this, CALL TODAY! Priced at
$14,500 .
N 445
THE BEST OF THE BEST
You ca n' t do any better than the bes t ,
and t hts ftne 3 bedroom home I S the
best, and one you' ll be proud to own .
Breathtaking famtiY room wdh
fireplace, 2 baths , l 1ving room and d1n·
mg room have lu xurious carpeting, 2
car garage . No maintenance exter ior
and mter1or in absolutely perfect condi·
lion . A MUST TO SEE!
1153
THINK SUMMER
We have 38 acres of land, a well con
structed barn , oth~r outbuild tngs 7
room house, 4 room basement , Garden
area , tarm1ng area , pasture for several
animals, plenty woods for firewood . Get
ready for spnng , thi s can be yours and
If U4
much more for 522,500
LAND CONTRACT!
Financing is no problem on th 1s 3•1:!
acres. Older 2 bedroom home. Make an
1deal hide: a·way , hunting cabm or
home. Meigs County , Make offer. ~ 411

RACCOON CREEK FARM ~ 50 acres , 38 A bottom , 11 A pastu re, lovely modern bn ck home With 3
Brs ., 2 baths, cathedral ce1l ings. firepla ce, large
sun deck and lots of other ex tras, new metal pole
barn , crib, loadmg chute, approx. 1700 ft. creek
frontage , located 4 mi. from M ei gs Min e No . 3.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE ~ 20% DOWN
- Older 2 story home w 1th 6 rm s &amp; bath , cellar
house, ~heds , large shade trees on approx. 4 acres .
Located 4 mi. south of R10 Grande on the Tom
WOOds Rd. S 19.900 .
RIO GRANDE AREA ~ Approx 45 acres vaca nt
land , county water, pond , some tt mber , n ice
building sites, c ity schools . $18 ,000
ENO - 4.25 acres level land Over 400 ft. frontage
on State Route 554 . Count y water availa ble, ex·
cellent buildtng or mob ile home site $6,500
CROUSE BECK ROAD ~ Restn cl ed bulidmg lot
1.22 acre, n• ce wooded se tt•n g, c1ty school s 55,900

GREEN ACRES - Th ree BR r~'1Ch, nt ce bath,
large LR . modern kllc"•-ucEO ·. all carpeted,
garage &amp; flat lot. R 0 .... y TOr most types of
financing . ImmediaTe possession. $39,500.

e

WHEN YOU HAVE THAT SPECIAL HOME IN MIND, WE CAN HELP YOU FIND IT.
Real Estate

General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

General

ROll Estate- General

Real Esta;te

General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

CANADAY:
REALTY

BMR -338 " 12 uni t Apartments " 3 b\Jildings, 4 units
each. Inventory avaitable. Locl!lted in M iddleport.

44

23

3c:1_ _H
= omes for Sale

BMR ·339F "Need a Farm " 30 Acres in Rio Grande
with 2 story house in need of repair . Call for com
pletedelails .

BRICK &amp; CEDAR BEAUTY 1'1&gt;
ACRES - Over 1500 sq ft of nearly
new liv•ng space 3 bedrooms, large
family room with a charming fireplace,
eat·in k1tct1en, bath w/ shower, carpet
t hroughout and atta ched garage Nice
iay1ng land located tust off Rt . 160.
$49,900.

A~~~t...

: MONEY · MONEY

&gt;t First mortgages,
:second mortgages,
22
Money to Loan
,.and
refinance
,.
$$$$$$
,. &gt;teases. Call Com·
lt Money -Money·Money &gt;t :plete
Mortgage
lfoFirst mortgages, second*
mortgages &amp; refinance...._
,.services
in
cases. Call Complete....~...._Mortgage
:Gallipolis,
Ohio
at
Servtces inJt
.... Gallipolis, Ohio ant446·1517 for more
lt446-1517 tor more in-&gt;t
and
*formation and your ap·Jt- &gt;tinformation
Jt-pointment.
:vour appointment.

Housing
H adquarters

BMR ·149 " Developme nt Land " 30 Acres with 500ft .
of front footage on Clark Chapel Rd. M1nera1 nghts
are inch:Jded!

1.-----------------·-----..-

BMR·361 " The Place for Kids " Two story home tn
Rio Grande with 4 large BR 's Inc ludes 3 extra lots
Cal l for an appointment!

MODERN 2 STORY IN RIO GRANDE
- 4 or 5 bedroom home on L 1nwood
onve . Incl udes a spacious living ~O?m
w fireplace, Island k itchen, dm.ng
room, 1112 bath, full basement w ·rec .
roo m , 2 ca r garage, nat gas heat a~d
ce ntral air Situated on corner lot . S50

J•mCo'"'"'· :·~·~·~·;l·::6~;~::· ···

~- ~ ~

BMR ·C361 " Bu siness Rt 7" Middleport Grocery
store w1th c-2 beer a nd w1n e li cense Includes all
stock and equipment needed for comp lete opera·
t1on .

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 3 or 4 bedroom ranch off Rt . 35. In·
cludesequtpped kttrt-~i .n ·mal dining,
2'h baths, firepla ~t:V ... ement with
bar room, rec. r c.
u. family room , 2
car garage, nat. gas heat &amp; cent. air.
$59,900 .

C•n Evo11nl,
••~
,
....
1 . ~ M.trr.ton, • . _ ..
,aw. '

......*****'******..'**

Re•l Est~te - General

Real Estate - General

BMR -343 "Frame and Permastone " located in
Crown City on 137x1SO lot LR . DR , FR , 3 BR 's.
Carpeted throughout. Natural gas heat. Partial
basement .

BRICK OFFICE BUILDING Located on corner lot in town . over ~400
sq . ft . with J offices presentl y occupted
Also 1ncludes an older rental house
Ca ll for details.

e . N. W11eman , Broktr, 446 4SOO E¥e.

t.EW- LISTI NG - Nlce4
bedrooms in Pomeroy,
w ithin walking distance
of stores. Has nice bath,
hot
water
heat,
carpeting, new k1tchen
and copper plumbing .
Near playground .
NEW LISTING ~ Brick
v.eneer
ranch ,
3
bedrooms. 2 lull baths.
several nice closets,
mOdern equipped kit·
chen, storm wtnctbws,
family room, fu JI base·
ment , carport, and nice
large lot. $47,500.
MODULAR SITE - A
acres out of town on
Leading Creek water
with sept1c tank and
electricity.
SOLID BRICK - 3 or 4
bedrooms, new bath, all
new kitchen, formal dining, and on a level lot
near stores and school .
$38,500.
OPPORTUNITY
Here IS your chance for
ll
c heap home or
business or both. Has a
bath, natural gas, and
wa.ter tor only S12.000.
4 LOTS ~ and nice 6
room home Has central
heat and city water. A
nice home for just
$25,500
WE CAN SAVE YOUR
TIME, YOUR MONEY,
AND CARPET WEAR
BY LISTING YOUR
PROPERTY WITH US.
Want to try our protec·
lion plan. CALL 992-3325
or'l92·3876.

FHA-VA -Conventlai Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgage
Co .,
loan
representative,
V i olet
!Cooklel Viers, 463 Second
Ave., Gallipolis. Oh ., 4467172

Mortgage
• Mon ey
Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinanci ng
your present home CON ·
VENTIONAL 5 Pet . down,
SECOND MORTGAGES .
VA· No down payment ,
FHA· Low down payment,
FHA-245-Graduated paym ent program, FHA 265Subsidy program . Call 592 3051 , Ireland Mortgage Co.,
77 E. St~te St .. Athens. OH

BMR -342 "L arge Flat Lot" All elec tric home New
ca rpet throughout. 3 BR ' s, Ph baths, tully equipped
~lichen. Attached garage. Situ~ ted on 120' •100' lot.

ASSUME 9" &gt;% MORTGAGE - Owners
moving and have priced this home to
sell. J bedrooms, fami ly room &amp;
fireplace , 2 baths, eat·in kitchen ,
nat. gas heat, cent . atr &amp; 2 car garage .
Located in Jay Dnve off Rt 35. Only
$49,900!!

REAL ESTATE

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

22

NEW LISTING - In Ra cine, you will find a very
lovely 2112 story home. Th 1s f 1ne home 1S presently
being renovated . (About 90% fini shed) Mostly
restored to its origtnal des1gn. You must see rh1sone
to really appreciate. Call now .

NEW LISTING 81t,% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - A quality built 2 yr
old brick &amp; cedar ranch oft Rt. 160 Ex·
cellent decor , 3 bedrooms, 2 tul! bath.s,
formal cnn 1ng , a most attrac t1ve ktt·
chen arrangement. pat10 doors~ co~y
fir ep lace, 2 car garage, central a1r &amp;
ac yard

ikt W11eman, Brok•r. 44f·11't,, C:Ye.

216 t.. Se~ond Street

----Money to loan

Money to Loan

PARADISE in scenic Ra ccoon Twp . 120 acres of
mostly woodland with a very liveable cottage. Also
a small barn to house your favonte farm an1ma 1s.
Call for complete details.
,
ASSUMABLE 81 12% LOAN - Lovely bnck ranch,
tour mites from HMC This fine home features 1112
baths , b1g family room with f irepl ace, plus much
more. Situated on a large well landscaped lot . Cal l
for comp lete details .

OWNER MUST SELL!! - Leavmg the
area and must sacrif1ce this attractive
5 bedroom split . There' s enough space
for everyone and a large yard fer the
K1ds . •nc ludes equ ipped kitchen , formt31
dining, 2 full baths, family room &amp;
s1zed 2 ca r garage New wood deck ,
pa t1 o &amp; central air . Located near
Rodney on landscaped corner lot City
schools.

WISEMAN

I~~

:a_

Realtor-Auctioneer "
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
serving 6,000
Communities
428 Second Ave .
€all446·0552 Anytime

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YOUR own leans and sportswear shop l Offer the
latest in jeans, denims and
sportswear. 114,115(). Includes Inventory, fixtures,
etc. Complete Store! Call
ALMA, toll free, 1-800-8744780.
'

GOOD FAMILY LIVING --:- Th 1s lovely ranch has 3
bedrooms, fami ly room w1th woodb.urntnQ, large 2
car garage, beautiful 18x36 pool w1th l arge pat 1o,
cl ose to town ·Redu ce d to $52,000.
N 1995

lOS KEN ION - Nt ce 2 bedroom home 1n
town Exce llent for ret iree or young
couple. 1ncludes eat 1n kit chen, h w
f loors (ca rpet ), garage, nat . gas hea t &amp;
smal l yar d. pri ced at $32,500.

*Joan Boggs, Realtor Asspc
Ph . Home: 446-3294

22

OFFICE 446-7013

REAL ESTATE
BUSINESS BUILDING
m downtown Rutl and,
0 ., approx 10 yrs old .
Use as business or con
vert to l 1v tng quarters .
See to apprecia te
NEW LISTING , 3 BR
cott age wi th 2 acres of
qu1et co untr ys1dc . 5
minutes fr om M td
dleport, 0 .
l BEDROOM HOME .
ca rpeted and pane led,
on V tn e SN- ee t tn
Ra c me , ve r y clea n,
ready TO move into Nice
level loty Wil l also co n
Stde r r entmg
1 ACRE
IN MI.D ·
DLEPORT 4 room
cott age, trad er hookup,
Reduced to $8,000 .00
2 BDRM. HOME ~ 4
ac res, walk1ng d1stance
to Mi ddleport
2 BEDROOM COT TAGE
Pan e l ed
throughout
New fur
nace . Middl epor t area .
$10,500
TAKING LISTINGS!
Hobart Dtllon , Broker
Fay Mantey,
Branch Mgr.
Phone 992· 2598

Real Estate - General

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

DILLON

RON ' S TV SERVICE
Spec ializ i ng In Zenith .
House Ca l ls . Call 1 304-576
2398 or 446-2-&lt;54

General

21

W il l do odds and ends paneling, floor ttl e, cetll ng
til e 992-63:18

OPEN 2 TO 5
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
413 FOURTH ·ST.
KANAUGA

ALBAN REALTY

Wantedt0i5o --

Gi ve piano lessons to begin ·
ners and adanced student
in my home. Also tea ch
chording and transposing if
interested ca ll992-5403.

W itl cl ean house. Call 667·
3423 or 667 ·6373.

16

··~--=---~===;;;-12'
Slluations wanted

Situations Wanted

ID

RE.A.LTOR '

'-

BRICK AND CEDAR 4 BR , 2 baths,
familY rm ., with fireplace , formal dining, deck, 2 car garage. Cen . air cond.
only 2 yrs. old . Near city In secluded 2
ac . pine tree setting Assume 9% mor
tgage. 579,900 .

Ron canaday, Realtor, 446-JG:ib

L-SHAPED BRICK, cedar and stucco
tudor ranch, 3 bedroms , 2 full baths,
family room with raised hea r th
fireplace and sliding doors that open on·
to terrace, fully equipped ki tchen, for ·
mal entry hall opens into family, ki t ·
chen and living room, 2 car tmished
gar vge . E lectric heat pump, c~n . air .
Nearly an acre l evel lot. S57, m .

A'ua;ey tanada~. Realtor 446-36~
25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

Ttu:: CHOICE IS YOURS! 2 nP'/1 hom es nearly com:
pleted, J BR , 2 baths, tult b · 'iement. heat . pump,
cen . air cond .. fully carpe l eo . Su perb qualiTy and
dfi':1QO , $56,000.
ASSUME1ow interest mortgage. 3 BR , 1'12 baths,
brick and frame , attached garage. Super locat1on.
$45,000 .

EYE PLEASER near Rio Grande, Col·
onial 4 BR , 2 story, family rm .,
fireplace, formal dmmg, slate entry .
Approx 3 ac. Most talked about home
in the area . S94,000 .

ROLI.tNG LAND WOOds beyond,
QU iet country road, wonderful place for
children and horses. 3 BR c:olonial of-.
fers all the space you ' ll need 14 dcres
only Slh miles trom ciTy , s.o,ooo .

NEARLY 2 A'RES - 3 BR, 1'1• baths. 2
story w 1th full basel""'ent. Trees galore,
approx. 4 rn i les from R10 Grande.
$35.000,

OAK STAIRWAY - Granite firepi'ace,
Window seat in dining rm., just a few of
the exceptional things you 'll find in thiS
lovely home. 3 BR, 1'12 baths. full basement Extra large lot with garden
space . $38,500.
~
HILLSTOP FARM only Smiles from ci ·
ty . Nice 4 BR home. family rm ., eq~ip­
ped kitchen, 48 acres . Good producmg
gas well furnishes free gas for
res1den ce plus income $85,000.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE! Roomy
modern ranch , 3 B R, eat· in kitchen,
new root, new furnace , Chain link
fence Attached garage. Extra room
now used for workshop would make
nice family room. Kyger Creek Schools.
Nearly an acre. Country surroundtngs
only f ew m l 1e' trom city , $27.500 .

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NINE ACRES - -NiCe 4 BR home ,.,_, .• '"..
ty room. country kitchen, 2poches.
Garage . Several outbldg. Near Rio
Grnde. $44,900.

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•

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12

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SECRETARY
RECEPTIONIST
255 Third Avenue
Apply In Person
~ Accepting a pplications
· thr ough Ma y 9Th

PA INT JOBS, or odd jobs.
houses c leaned, call 446·
1794.

Real Estate

General

18

Wanted to Do

-~---~-

LAWN ¥OWER repair,
engines, frames , shar·
pening, call 446·0355 or 4.46·
4233 after 5 :30.

WOULD LIKE to do dairy
or farm work . 8 yrs. ex·
perience . Call -146 -0626.

11
Wanted to Do
EXPERIENCED mother
will care to and love your
children In my home. Call
446-7108.

Real Estate

Real Estate

Radio TV
&amp; CB Repair

'

Real Estate

General

General

Owner will finance . This atTracive br.ck front ranch
With tn-taw quarters on lower level with complete
ktTch en ftrst floor , family room with woOd·burntng
ftreplace , gas heat w1th atr, huge covered patio.
Situated on 3 lots wtfh hookup for tra1ler! lm ·
maculate condttion throughout .
~all or stop and see Donna Sw1sher 446 ·4313 .

CENTURY 21

1-276-5311

Equipment and Parts for a
complete TV service shop .
For more information call
992-2522 ,

... AND CONTR.ACT - Buy th is attractive 3 bed room
house for $2,000 down at 12°0 1nter es t . Loca ted '" the
V 111age of Bidwe ll , owner wants to sell now
111 572
LAND CONTRACT - A 10°o 11'"':' .~~~ 1dlt' c111u down
paym ent will buy you a lovely br 1ck frame b1·leve 1
w1th 3 bedroo ms, 2 baths, cen tra l atr and Jl/.s acres .
Close to hosplla l Ca ll t or appo1 ntment today N1465
DREAM HOME IN THE COUNTRY ~ Lovely bri ck
ranch has J bedroom~ , 2"1• baths, formal dining, fUI ·
ly c arpeted , beautiful k 1tchen with self clean 1ng
range, d iSpoSal &amp; diShwasher, family room with
brick fireplace , full basement, heat pump and 2 ~ar
garage. Located on 1 acre , room for garden, 2 mtles
oft Rt 279 behind Thurman .
~ IB47

OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE Over 2,000sq . 11 . of e•ceilent decorating
in thi s spacious 3 bedroom bri ck in
town . Master su1te ha s h1s &amp; her walk in
OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE ~ At · close ts &amp; prtvate bath, family room,
tr active 2 story Colon 1al overlOOking
f1replace, 3 fu ll baths, modern equipped
th e nver on upper lst Ave Big beautiful
k1t chen &amp; formal d ining, FA nat gas &amp;
roo m s with oak fl oor s, very pretty
centra l a1r Large l andscaped yard .
woodwork, 4 bed room s, 2112 baths, 5 Good buY for $75.000 .
fi re places, famtly room , eq u•pped ktt
chen, formal d1n1ng, F .A na t. ga s &amp; 2
car garage Tht s home is in very good
condi ti on and sets on a large tree shad
ed yard with use of r1ver fron t In th e
seventi es

BIDWELL· ROONEY RD. - Good ranch home with
2 bedrooms, bath , storage building and garden
space. On ly $12,500 .
~ 1532

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EXCELLENT BUILDING LOT Build your
dream home this spring on th1S lovely lot. Conta 1ns 2
acres front 1S flat &amp; c leared w ith stream &amp; woods 1n
back 'city sch d1ST , c lose to Rio Grande, $10,900
'
'
~1108
MOBILE HOME ~ 1975 Kirkwood , 14x65. 3
bedrooms, Ph baths, r ange&amp;. retngerator, must be
moved.
11800
CLOSE TO ENO - N1Ce 1970 Rebel mobile home,
12x60 in excellent condition, furnished, front porch
&amp; a c~rport , storage bulding and an Oltver t ractor
Located on 2 acres of nice land , better hurry, only
$16,500.
~0561

Evenings Call
Darvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599
Oscar Baird, ReaHor '446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

Spread
your

Real Estate

General

Real estate

General

wings

We cover over
7 m1llion mtles
to find you a home.

OWNER MAY HELP FINANCE ~
Th1s Riverfront residence in Cheshire
Attrac ti ve 2 story A bedroom home of
f en ng an ea t ·1n ktfchen, forma l dining,
2 fu ll baths, w .b f 1replace, love ly wood
work, full basement, sunporch, nat. gas
heat plus 111 acre yard sloping to the
river ' s edge. Th 1s could be an e)(ce llent
buy. Call us for your showing .

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

EVERYTHING YOU NEED
WITH ONE PURCHASE
(PACKAGE DEAL )
Three bedroom , a1r condtt1oned home 2
baths, 11ving room , eat· in kitchen, laun ·
dry room or off•ce, plus close ts gal lore
Metal storage building on concrete
ba se heated garage, paved sidewalks
&amp; d~1veway Furn 1ture inc lude.d plus
washer , dryer &amp; all kit chen appltances
Move in with just your cloth~s . M~ny
ex tras we w111 tell you about w1th a stm ·
pie phone call..fllus c1ty schools. If 407

77 ACRE FARM ~ Between Jackson &amp;
Gallipolis. This scenic rolling cattle
farm otter s several large tillable fields ,
plenty of pasture and some woods. ~5%
c leared. Several springs, bar"n , cattle
shed plus an old house for storage . Also
a large 2 story part1ally remodeled 4
bedroom home 1117 mile off Rt . 36
567,500

GRACIOUS BI · LEVEL
$58,500
Quality , style. beauty all comb1ned ;n
t hislc vely b1 ·leve l. 3 bedror"lmS, l /2
baths, huge utility room, love ! ~ k1 tchen
with built·in cabinets, range, c..tsposal,
dishwasher, large family and rec.. room
with fi re l ~ce . Thi s home has been
tastefully decorated . Call us, and put
your family in th1s lovely home: Close
to Holzer Hospital. We can adv1se you
.;n fi'lanc 111g.
~ 385

LAND CONTRACT
AVAILABLE
ON THIS HOME
N1 ce cou ntry home with
131;, A 5 BR and bath ,
n1ce kitc hen
Drilled
well &amp; ru ral water
ava 11 abl e. Home has
v1nyl s1 ding and forced
a1r furnace
Kyge r
Creek Sc hool OiStrt c T. If
2
9
6
NICE 5 ROOM
HOME ONLY
$17 ,000
Cir cular porch, fu el otl
FA f urnace C• tY water,
ce llar, outs 1de st orage
buildin g
N1 ce com
mun i ty
Phone tor
deta ils.
#386 r---------:;:::""~~

AVERY
LOVELY SETTING
$22,500
11 II x 65 II . M0b1le
ho me Sit ua ted on 1.4 A .
14 II x 22 II lam ily
room, 11 ~ bath s and 111
ft x 43 ft c arport Dril l·
ed w ell wt l h elec tn c
pu m p
Lo v e l y blu e
spruce tr ees l1ne th e
drive to th1 S very nea t
and wel l kept home
CALL TO SEE THI S
ONE TODAY
I 351

219 ACRE FARM - N1 ce rolltng farm
near Patriot on a paved road 30 + acres
tillable, balance in pasture &amp; woodland
Large barns, tobacco &amp; corn, can be
l eased out. Also includes a modern 4
bedroom home plus 12x60 mobil e home
Call for details .

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ASSUME 9% MORTGAGE Large
r emodeled 2 story hom e in Rto Grande.
ncludes 4 or 5 bedrooms, 3 full baths.
family room w / f1rep1ace, equtpped kit ·
chen ,. full basement, deck , V1nyl siding,
larg e garage w / workshop, nat . gas
heat Situated on a large yard near
Lyne Center Owner must sell NOW .

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY IN RIO
GRANDE - Proffitab le la undromat 1n
th e V illage of R1o Grande . Includes 22
washer s ( new co1 n cha ngers) , 10 dry er s
plus dry c1ea n1ng mach1ne·. P arkmg
area for cu stomers $39,500 Ca ll fo r 1n
fo .
OWNER VERY ANXIOUS - Has 2
homes on thei r hand s and need t o se ll so
ar e r eady to cut pr1ce Se ller Will offer
low 1nterest ftnancing fa a qualif 1ed
buyer Low util1ty blils (nat . gas), 2
fir eplaces, 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, !Orm a l
d 1n1ng, bea ut•ful beamed ce111ng tn
famil y room. cen tral a1r and l a rg e fl ~ t
l ot Top notch ne•g hborhood . You can I
make a better dea l than this . Was pric
ed at $59,900 but wt ll listen to arw offer .

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE BUILDING
- Nea r l y new brick building on Rt . 35
near Shopptng Cen ter. Perfect for of
fices (Doctor , Dent•st , Lawyer , CPA ,
Insurance, Real Estate, etc. ) Owner
• will help finance

~

.OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE
Th1s beaut1 fu l well decora ted 3 yr old 2
story brick &amp; cedar home . YI(U ' II enjoy
the space th1s ftne home offe r s •n
eluding family room and w b fireplace,
2 111 baths, formal dining plus a large
• equ1pped kitchen, with radar range &amp;
lots ot cab1nets, 2 patios, l arge wood
dec k, 2 ca r garage plus 1 4 acres in
Green Grade School area . Loan
assumpt1on

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PINE SETTING
$27,500
3 bedroom mobi le home,
large l1ving room, eat in
&gt;ttchen . 36x36 heated
aJuminUm garage IJ'I jfh
conc.-ete floor . Call for
'•i Is of this lovely
v&lt; : y well kept place. All
thl' situated on 1 acre M
&amp; '- of beautiful pine
trees.
N 388

COUNTRY ROAD
TAKE ME HOME
!FARM WITH
1SJ A . M, OR L.)
!NEW LISTING I
Four bed room tarm
hosue, l1ving room, din·
1nq room, eat· 1n kitchen,
2 wrches, barn, frui t
c1 1ar &amp; much, much
more
Large tobacco
base, rich in minerals.
Call for more informa ·
tion .
N409

or

EXTRA INCOME
PROPERTY CLOSE
TO HOSPITAL
5 rooms, remodeled
home with bath, LOS
acres of land . Rural
water, 10' x12 ' storage
o ldg 2 rental 11'x60'
rlome fully furnislled,
renting IOf' a total 1150
per month
Sev~fel
young apple trees, nice
tnodernhOftlle to live in
plus
extra rent~rs
money .
#391

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BIG PRICE REDUCTION Owner
tr ansferred, must sell 1mmed1ately
Very clean &amp; well kept 4 bedroom bi ·
level 1n a famtly onented neighborhood
off Rt . 35 . large family room, • 2112
baths, built tn kitchen (nice cab1nets&gt;.
torma l d1nmg room. nat . gas heat &amp;
central a ir, 2 car ga rage and pat 1o. 1
year home buyer protection . Assume
7% mortgage.

~ ' 20/0

ASSUME
MORTGAGE Paym ents of $475 mo. on t hi S 4 or 5
bedroom br ick home resting on 3 acre
• landsc aped grounds with a sma ll pond .
Th e sp ac ious home in c lu des 2
f •r eplaces, large tam!ly room, 2 baths, 2
private pat 1os plus a long circular dr 1ve
lead •ng to the residence. 5 mtles from
town off
8 $77,800

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OWNER TRANSFERRING - Anxious
to selllh 1s quality 3 bedroom split-level.
Situated on a large flat I~'" ~ ar Rodney ,
this f1ne home ~'~'ft.t\t'~l} ·pped eat· in
kitchen. fan
ll\!~~ ~place , fami ·
ly room,
cathedral ceiling in
I1V1ng room, patio, 2 ca r garage and
more. Make us an offer

rec.9.~.,1,

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c" ~ " ,.,~~_ ,. "~'"'lA''""'"h•

BMR -333 " Modular Home" 3 BR ' s, 2 baths , LR, DR .
FR Kitchen 1ncludes stove a nd r efrig All thi s plus
separate ut1 l tty r oom Sttu ated on 1.23 Acres Low
SJO' s
BMR-334 " Will Consider Land Contract" I 3 Acres
of bareland on Jackson Pike . Call for details ! 8%
F1nancing .
BMR -335 " Handyman Specia l " This bri ck has 10
spacious rooms Located in downtown GallipoliS.
Must be seen!
BMR -336 ~ " At the Edge of Town " Situated on
nearly six acres of land Executive type home
tea t unng 2 WBFP' s Call today , owner 1s anxious!
1mmediate occupancy
BMR ·94 " For Large Famtly " Deluxe older home 3
BR ' s, LR , DR , and family room Natural gas heat
Must see to appreciate. Excellent tocat 1on 1n
Cheshire !
BMR ·137A " LOOK Into This" Brick ranch includes
3 BR ' s, complete kitchen with dinmg area . FR w1th
fireplace , full basement . All thi s and more on flat
(120&gt;&lt;180) lot in super sub·divison .

9% MORTGAGE ASSUMPTION - E•cel lent loca tion at 113 2nd Ave . Large
remodel ed 2 story 10 room alum . sided
home witt\ 4 or S bedrooms, llh baths, 2
f1rep1aces, family room, formal dining,
equipped eat·in kitchen w / pantry, sun·
porch, study, f.a . nat. gas heat, tn·
sulated, new wir ing , furna ce &amp; water
heater, floored att1c and more . Located
on a large tree shaded yard. SOO's.

BMR · 139 " Leave the Car" and walk to town . Older
two story home on Second Ave. Home has
aluminum siding, includes3 BR 's, L R, DR , and FR .
Less than $30,000!

BMR -157 "River View " 3 BR frame house W1th full
basement and 32 Acres of land . Kitchen has 20ft of
cabinets . 1 ncludes range and refrigerator .

NEW LISTING Lovely 4 or 5
bedroom brick &amp; frame split located in
Centenary This 4 yr. old home offers
family room w/ fireplace, 2 full baths,
equipped eat-in kitchen. forma l dining,
patio, 3 car garage pus 100' x232' yard
with a lo,ely swimming pool. This one
has it all. 9 1!~% mortgage assumption .
$70's,

u.. ,,..., ... ,.,. Ulk""'t'l '

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Real Estate- General

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BMR -340 "Garden Space " , Older 2 story home in
Patriot situated on lh Acre lot. 3 BR 's, LR , DR, and
kitchen including diSPOSal and range. Southwestern
1
School Dist.
'
BMR ·341 "E n joy Your Own Pond ", L -shaped brick
ranch on a 3.56 Acre lot. 3 BR 's, 2 baths, L ·shaped
LR with DR, FR with stone FP. mud room , fully
equipped kitchen. Partial basement . Natural gas
heat with central air.

NEW LISTING - Remodeled w1thin the last year
Carpet throughout This home i s just right for a
retired couple or for newlyweds. Loan assumption
at C)(lly 9 1f•~ int•rest. S29,900. Call for detai ls .

m
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•I'- •' ~

'':''-·-== =c.

' • ' .. ltot ..... '\)'oOCI.M'1::
1flil I " ' II ( ""'

Professional
Services

CALL
US lor
your
photograph ic needs. Por·
trait, passports, com ·
mercia! and wedding
photography .
Tawney
Studios. 424 Secon~ Avo .

Bri ck,
ran ch· styl e,
J
bedroom ,
2 1/:oo
bath ,
f ireplace, full basement w
family room , a .c., 2·car
garage , Baum Addn ,
Meigs Co Call after 6 p m
985-4169 ,

6 Rooms, llf:oo baths and
shower, carpeted, paneled,
finished basement w ·bar,
garbage d 1sposal , ~form
windows, doors, come see
it to appreciate it 992·5566 .

Large Attractive home on
exceptionally ntce acre lot.
Syracuse. Modern kit chen ,
2 baths, basement, garage.
Many extras . '192-7727

'"''!'" 1

!lfla1U!

HOME ·- Buy furnished or unlutr.;shed
l.beated on a rented lot. Unfurnished only $5,SIJO.OO.

EVENINGS
TOM WH I TE , ASSOC.
STEVE McGHEE, ASSOC .
DONA McGHEE, ASSOC.
BI!TH NIILL, ASSOC .
BUD McGHEE-R:eitltor· Auctioneer

.,

I

446-9557
446-055~

446-0552
245-9507
446·0552 '

•

IN RODNEY · di)&lt;Jble lot, 2
bdr home, gas, water out·
building , good g~rden
space. ask1ng 525,000. Call
collect, 642 2025. Evenings
after 6 or call 245·5403 after

Strout

s.

Realty

BRICK HOME 3 bdr ., 1'12
bath, full y carpeted, on apPri me
prox 11/J acres.
location ,
city
school
di strict . 567.500 Call .w.7247 .

446-0008

Floor plan home in
Syracuse, OH . 1 3 acre . 3
bedroom, 11ull baths. wall
to wall ca rpet , centra l a1r,
kitchen, d1ning rm ., laun·
dry rm . To tal elec Also
wood burning stove and
dbl. ca r garage Contact
Richa rd Weav er on College
Rd .

*******•···~**"fl
Real Estate

General

Real Estate- General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

General
MINI
selling th 1s lovely 3 B bn ck hom e Th1s 6 yr old
beauty offers lots of gOOd living for some lu cky
family with a large ki t chen &amp; dining rm., LR , fami ·
!y rm . w•th f trepla ce, garage &amp; barn Locat ed on
State Route 160 approx. 6 mi. from HMC
PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres. 15 A Simms Creek
bottom, balance rollmg pasture &amp; woods, n1ce
modular home, la rge barn, several other building s,
tab base, cor ner of SR 141 &amp; the Vern on Woods Rd.

TONEY REALTY ( o

OUTSTANDING - Lovely sweeping
view of the Ohio River, from this im ·
maculate 3 BR ranch. This home
features LR with pretty corner frpl. ,
nice kitchen, den, bath, C.A ., 2 car
garage and full basement with shower .
Situated on 1 acre Of lovely lawn .

WM. D. TONEY • BROKF~

.446-3087
24 STATE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OHIO
WE DO DUR .HOMEWORK!

BUILDING LOT ~ .64 of an acre in a
choi c:e location Minutes from town and
access to ci ty water and sewage

Willa Davis, Associate
Becky Lane, Associate

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unf•ntshed one story home w i th 3.4 ac res on RA C·
COON CREEK . Located on t he Green Sa under s Rd .
near Nort"up. $18,500.
ROOM TO ROAM - I think you would say that thi s
sprawling bri ck tri· level is one of t he nicest count ry
homes you ' ve eve r seen . This beauty 1s situated on
.41/2 acres of land about 3111 miles from Rodney Why
not let your famtly en1oy 5 BR ' s, J baths, la rge li v·
ing and dining room, comlete k1tchen, f amtly room
with stone fireplace nd 2 ca r garage Be the first to
see this one.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE ~ $6.500 down .
- 9o/o - Ask1ng $33.000 - Remodeled 2 story home,
3 BR' s, LR , den, familY rm ., dining, kitchen, 2 WB
fireplaces , J lh acres Located on State Route 233
betwee n Gal lipOl iS and Oak Hill.

WE BRING PEOPLE HOME

CARRY OUT~ Business only_ Reduced to $12.500. A gOOd investment lor the
money. Stock included. located in
Cheshire .

MIDDLEPORT - Gracious older 2
story home. 3 Bdrm .,
baths, kit.,
d1n. rm., full basement and situated on
a choice corner lot. Easy access to
shopping ,

Rul Estate- General

PRETTY RANCH - With a new 2 car
garage attached . 3 bdrms, bath , utili·
ty , kit.: liv. rm ., large fam rm , w 1th
Frankltn F . P . and new carpet plus 112
acre lawn. Located 1n K .C. Oist .

MEMORIES - Restored to colonial
charm 5 bdrm home with a lot of ex
t ras . New k1t., carpet throughout, new
gas furnac e, w b f p , 2 fu ll bath s, new
Sldtng, 3 car garage a"'d much more
Call today on this lov'"ly hom e. Will
trade for a farm

Have you been looking for a house in the
S40' s with all of the room you need? We
have it! This house has A· l sidtng. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining,
complete kitchen, family room, 2 wood
burners, Florida porch, 2 decks, red
WOOd fence and 1 car oar age, located In
the city school district.

446-0844
446-0458

ACREAGE - 100 acres, m -1. 70 acres
cleared, 30 wooded, gas well with
royallies, lob. base. all fenced and
l ocated in Adison Twp.

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - SUPER BUY- FHA· :;
VA · CONVENTIONAL - This 3 y r old bi leve l is .;
l1ke new &amp; must be sold this m ont h. 3 or 4 BR' s, 21!1
baths, family rm ., heata lator ftreplace, low heat
bills, Clay grade school, Gall i a Aca demy High
School Call for Appointment.
.. ~
TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588 ~ Remodel ed home includes 6 rm s and bath, carpor t, sto ve,
refrig ., dishwasher, almost 2 acres of land priced
tor quick sal e

General

A TRULY GRACIOUS HOME - Better Homes and
Garde ns would be taken by the bea uty of th 1S
spac 1ous hom e set on a beaut1ful landscaped lot
abundant with shrubbery &amp; frontage on the OHIO
RIVER . Words cannot descri be the quality of th1s
b rick &amp; frame 2 story home 3 BR 's, 2112 baths, extra
large LR &amp; fam11y rm ., ftreplace, cent. a1r, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH MORE . Shown
by appointment .

Real Estate

GREEN TOWNSHIP ~ PASTURE FARM ~ 155 A.
M ·L located on SR 14 1 approx 6 m 1. west of town.
'Land is approx 60% cl ea r ed &amp; 40% woods &amp; in·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn Pr i c-ed at $500 per
acre
RODNEY BIDWELL RD. -

Sec t ional home, 14x60, -

4 BR , 2 baths, large LR , eq utpped k itc hen, cent. a1r ,
concrete block garage . 1 acre . $22 ,500
IN THE LAP OF LUXURY ~ That 's where you will
be the day you move into th is brand new 3 BR , 21f2
bath tn- level. Thts home will f ulfill your every
dream with the l arge L shaped family rm , equ ip
ped kitchen &amp; 2 car garge. Located 1n Clearv iew
Estates &amp; shown by appointmenJ
ALL THIS FOR SJ9,000 - l BR ' s, llf&gt; baths, LR with
stone f treplace, natural gas heat, air cond , ra nge,
d•shwasher. garage, large pat1o &amp; fenced 1n front
lawn .
FARM-CLOSE IDN
Th ree m iles down river from Ct1Y
limits . 3 BR home . This kitchen and 1iv·
ing room are the showplace of the
house . You w•ll be impressed at th.e
remodeling and how mother has kept 1t
so clean and charming 54 acres, some
ti mber, pasture and I I liable land . Good
barn toba cco base . This is what more
ask for. Please call, we will expla1n . A
good buy Don't wa1t
/1446
CIRCLE THIS ONE
Ideal location for conven1en ce,
highways &amp; shopping. thi s 3 bedroom
brick is tn excellent condition. Features
livtng room, d ining room with slidtng
glass doors, very nice finished family
room in basement, 11h baths, 2 car
garage . It has a personality all its own!
CALL NOW
N380,
BETTER THAN NEW is this tutor and
stone styled 3 yr old home wiht more
features than can be described. 1675 ~q.
ft. entry hall , unique liv ing room, fami ly room, formal dining room, 3
bedrooms. PI• baths. A honey of a kit chen with built·in appl lances. 2
fireplaces, lull basement. pantry. Silting on 2 acres with older 7 room house
and outbuildings. Looking for a lot for
your money, cheCk with us on this on~ .
Priced 1n the $50 s.
#363
PRICED RIGHT
Ten acres of private wooded l and , 12x60
2 bedroom mobile home . Drt lled well
with pump and storage tank. Good
garden space along a small stream ,
uft lity bldg . 10' x10' good cond1tion
Small pond . Sacrifice price $13,000.1/452

SQ NICE TO COME HOME TO! Owner has reduced the price on th i ; 53
acre farm!
Newly · remodeled
J
bedroom home, barn, tobacco t :.se,
pond, plenty of water, 30x42 new rr.etal
building witfl concrete floor. Tc &lt;e a
look. you ' ll like it. Red1Jced to sell
NOW! $41,500 .
~ 295
THIS ONE SPARKLES!
Cozy and immaculate is this 3 bedroom
ranch . Living room, kitchen &amp; dining
combmat1on with patio doors. bath,
garo!!ge. Lg flat lot. Maintenance free
exterior. City school district. Green
Elementary 3 miles from Holzer
Medical Center. Don't let this terrific
buy pass you by Priced in tower $40's.
~ 450
LOCATION! LOCATION!
Walk to school and downtown shoppmg
from your one story home located on a
level corner l ot in a spacious and
pnvate neighborhood . 3 odr. 2 lull
ba ths, bit kitchen , fireplace , attached
garage with new maintenance·free
vinyl siding, and effi cient gas heat, all
for $55,000. 1mmed1ate POSSession and
owner financing available.
11462
VACANT LAND - 66 acres Harrtson
Twp., well fenced , large portion has
new woven wire wi t h stee l posts.
Estimated 10 acres Tillable, some
timber, large road frontage . Excellent
buy $15.000.
N367
LOTS ~ 2 lots . 50' x156' each . LeveL
County water available . $1.500 lor both .
Build to suit yoruself. No restr ictions.
, 454

CONVENIENT, IN -TOWN LOCATION
New listing , This inviting three
bedroom ranch provides the finest in to
day's living, bath with shower, del ux e
wood ca binets in spac•ous k •tchen, for
mal dtn 1ng room , ce ntral air condition·
mg, natural gas heat, budget $45 .00 mo.
Stngle ca r garage, electric eye, fenced
1n back yard . Deadend stree1. Loan
assumpt1on poss1ble 9% rate. Prtced in
the lowS40's
N 456
' 'SHOW OFF"
Warm and inviting throughout, th 1s
nice 3 bedroom home, 1S defin itely a
pleasure! Ntce living room , dining
room, 20x12 garage, aluminum Siding
and storm Windows, and a very nice
chain link fenced yard SPe for yourself
today , show off'to your frtends tomor·
row! Priced in the $30's .
If 444
INVESTMENT
PROPERTY ~
• CHESHIRE AREA
2 apartment houses, 3 apartments
rented for steady income, 4 trailer
spaces . Good living quarters or another
deluxe rental with full baseme nt Large
lots . Comfortable living . Top location! 11

4

5

8

INVESTMENT LAND
Ideal locat•on, 9 acres, more or less .
Lots of road frontage, one mi le from
R10 Grande, Sf . Rt. 35 past Abie 's Auto
Parts . Interested? Better cal l now!/1372
RESTAURA~T

Money making
operation
doing
business at present time. 2100 sq . ft .
brick w•th off1ce and storage room
Electnc heat, central air . Bu i fd 1ng 5
yrs. old . Completely furnished . Room
for expansion .
/1434

TWO WISHES
If COMFORT and CONVEN I ENT
LOCATION are important, see this nice
3 bedroom ranch style home located off
State Route 35 . Featuring living room,
din ing and kitchen combined , bath,
ut1lity room, and garage You ' ll be
pleased with the peacefulness of home
and yard! Take a moment to enjoy a
IObk today! Prtced in the $30' s.
f/455
SUPER STARTER
Th1s neat lt ttle house would be a perfect
retirement or starter home New fuel
oil furnace , small basement , new bath,
nice lot If you're looking for a home
like this, CALL TODAY! Priced at
$14,500 .
N 445
THE BEST OF THE BEST
You ca n' t do any better than the bes t ,
and t hts ftne 3 bedroom home I S the
best, and one you' ll be proud to own .
Breathtaking famtiY room wdh
fireplace, 2 baths , l 1ving room and d1n·
mg room have lu xurious carpeting, 2
car garage . No maintenance exter ior
and mter1or in absolutely perfect condi·
lion . A MUST TO SEE!
1153
THINK SUMMER
We have 38 acres of land, a well con
structed barn , oth~r outbuild tngs 7
room house, 4 room basement , Garden
area , tarm1ng area , pasture for several
animals, plenty woods for firewood . Get
ready for spnng , thi s can be yours and
If U4
much more for 522,500
LAND CONTRACT!
Financing is no problem on th 1s 3•1:!
acres. Older 2 bedroom home. Make an
1deal hide: a·way , hunting cabm or
home. Meigs County , Make offer. ~ 411

RACCOON CREEK FARM ~ 50 acres , 38 A bottom , 11 A pastu re, lovely modern bn ck home With 3
Brs ., 2 baths, cathedral ce1l ings. firepla ce, large
sun deck and lots of other ex tras, new metal pole
barn , crib, loadmg chute, approx. 1700 ft. creek
frontage , located 4 mi. from M ei gs Min e No . 3.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE ~ 20% DOWN
- Older 2 story home w 1th 6 rm s &amp; bath , cellar
house, ~heds , large shade trees on approx. 4 acres .
Located 4 mi. south of R10 Grande on the Tom
WOOds Rd. S 19.900 .
RIO GRANDE AREA ~ Approx 45 acres vaca nt
land , county water, pond , some tt mber , n ice
building sites, c ity schools . $18 ,000
ENO - 4.25 acres level land Over 400 ft. frontage
on State Route 554 . Count y water availa ble, ex·
cellent buildtng or mob ile home site $6,500
CROUSE BECK ROAD ~ Restn cl ed bulidmg lot
1.22 acre, n• ce wooded se tt•n g, c1ty school s 55,900

GREEN ACRES - Th ree BR r~'1Ch, nt ce bath,
large LR . modern kllc"•-ucEO ·. all carpeted,
garage &amp; flat lot. R 0 .... y TOr most types of
financing . ImmediaTe possession. $39,500.

e

WHEN YOU HAVE THAT SPECIAL HOME IN MIND, WE CAN HELP YOU FIND IT.
Real Estate

General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

General

ROll Estate- General

Real Esta;te

General

Real Estate

General

Real Estate

CANADAY:
REALTY

BMR -338 " 12 uni t Apartments " 3 b\Jildings, 4 units
each. Inventory avaitable. Locl!lted in M iddleport.

44

23

3c:1_ _H
= omes for Sale

BMR ·339F "Need a Farm " 30 Acres in Rio Grande
with 2 story house in need of repair . Call for com
pletedelails .

BRICK &amp; CEDAR BEAUTY 1'1&gt;
ACRES - Over 1500 sq ft of nearly
new liv•ng space 3 bedrooms, large
family room with a charming fireplace,
eat·in k1tct1en, bath w/ shower, carpet
t hroughout and atta ched garage Nice
iay1ng land located tust off Rt . 160.
$49,900.

A~~~t...

: MONEY · MONEY

&gt;t First mortgages,
:second mortgages,
22
Money to Loan
,.and
refinance
,.
$$$$$$
,. &gt;teases. Call Com·
lt Money -Money·Money &gt;t :plete
Mortgage
lfoFirst mortgages, second*
mortgages &amp; refinance...._
,.services
in
cases. Call Complete....~...._Mortgage
:Gallipolis,
Ohio
at
Servtces inJt
.... Gallipolis, Ohio ant446·1517 for more
lt446-1517 tor more in-&gt;t
and
*formation and your ap·Jt- &gt;tinformation
Jt-pointment.
:vour appointment.

Housing
H adquarters

BMR ·149 " Developme nt Land " 30 Acres with 500ft .
of front footage on Clark Chapel Rd. M1nera1 nghts
are inch:Jded!

1.-----------------·-----..-

BMR·361 " The Place for Kids " Two story home tn
Rio Grande with 4 large BR 's Inc ludes 3 extra lots
Cal l for an appointment!

MODERN 2 STORY IN RIO GRANDE
- 4 or 5 bedroom home on L 1nwood
onve . Incl udes a spacious living ~O?m
w fireplace, Island k itchen, dm.ng
room, 1112 bath, full basement w ·rec .
roo m , 2 ca r garage, nat gas heat a~d
ce ntral air Situated on corner lot . S50

J•mCo'"'"'· :·~·~·~·;l·::6~;~::· ···

~- ~ ~

BMR ·C361 " Bu siness Rt 7" Middleport Grocery
store w1th c-2 beer a nd w1n e li cense Includes all
stock and equipment needed for comp lete opera·
t1on .

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 3 or 4 bedroom ranch off Rt . 35. In·
cludesequtpped kttrt-~i .n ·mal dining,
2'h baths, firepla ~t:V ... ement with
bar room, rec. r c.
u. family room , 2
car garage, nat. gas heat &amp; cent. air.
$59,900 .

C•n Evo11nl,
••~
,
....
1 . ~ M.trr.ton, • . _ ..
,aw. '

......*****'******..'**

Re•l Est~te - General

Real Estate - General

BMR -343 "Frame and Permastone " located in
Crown City on 137x1SO lot LR . DR , FR , 3 BR 's.
Carpeted throughout. Natural gas heat. Partial
basement .

BRICK OFFICE BUILDING Located on corner lot in town . over ~400
sq . ft . with J offices presentl y occupted
Also 1ncludes an older rental house
Ca ll for details.

e . N. W11eman , Broktr, 446 4SOO E¥e.

t.EW- LISTI NG - Nlce4
bedrooms in Pomeroy,
w ithin walking distance
of stores. Has nice bath,
hot
water
heat,
carpeting, new k1tchen
and copper plumbing .
Near playground .
NEW LISTING ~ Brick
v.eneer
ranch ,
3
bedrooms. 2 lull baths.
several nice closets,
mOdern equipped kit·
chen, storm wtnctbws,
family room, fu JI base·
ment , carport, and nice
large lot. $47,500.
MODULAR SITE - A
acres out of town on
Leading Creek water
with sept1c tank and
electricity.
SOLID BRICK - 3 or 4
bedrooms, new bath, all
new kitchen, formal dining, and on a level lot
near stores and school .
$38,500.
OPPORTUNITY
Here IS your chance for
ll
c heap home or
business or both. Has a
bath, natural gas, and
wa.ter tor only S12.000.
4 LOTS ~ and nice 6
room home Has central
heat and city water. A
nice home for just
$25,500
WE CAN SAVE YOUR
TIME, YOUR MONEY,
AND CARPET WEAR
BY LISTING YOUR
PROPERTY WITH US.
Want to try our protec·
lion plan. CALL 992-3325
or'l92·3876.

FHA-VA -Conventlai Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgage
Co .,
loan
representative,
V i olet
!Cooklel Viers, 463 Second
Ave., Gallipolis. Oh ., 4467172

Mortgage
• Mon ey
Available. New homes, old
homes, and refinanci ng
your present home CON ·
VENTIONAL 5 Pet . down,
SECOND MORTGAGES .
VA· No down payment ,
FHA· Low down payment,
FHA-245-Graduated paym ent program, FHA 265Subsidy program . Call 592 3051 , Ireland Mortgage Co.,
77 E. St~te St .. Athens. OH

BMR -342 "L arge Flat Lot" All elec tric home New
ca rpet throughout. 3 BR ' s, Ph baths, tully equipped
~lichen. Attached garage. Situ~ ted on 120' •100' lot.

ASSUME 9" &gt;% MORTGAGE - Owners
moving and have priced this home to
sell. J bedrooms, fami ly room &amp;
fireplace , 2 baths, eat·in kitchen ,
nat. gas heat, cent . atr &amp; 2 car garage .
Located in Jay Dnve off Rt 35. Only
$49,900!!

REAL ESTATE

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

22

NEW LISTING - In Ra cine, you will find a very
lovely 2112 story home. Th 1s f 1ne home 1S presently
being renovated . (About 90% fini shed) Mostly
restored to its origtnal des1gn. You must see rh1sone
to really appreciate. Call now .

NEW LISTING 81t,% LOAN
ASSUMPTION - A quality built 2 yr
old brick &amp; cedar ranch oft Rt. 160 Ex·
cellent decor , 3 bedrooms, 2 tul! bath.s,
formal cnn 1ng , a most attrac t1ve ktt·
chen arrangement. pat10 doors~ co~y
fir ep lace, 2 car garage, central a1r &amp;
ac yard

ikt W11eman, Brok•r. 44f·11't,, C:Ye.

216 t.. Se~ond Street

----Money to loan

Money to Loan

PARADISE in scenic Ra ccoon Twp . 120 acres of
mostly woodland with a very liveable cottage. Also
a small barn to house your favonte farm an1ma 1s.
Call for complete details.
,
ASSUMABLE 81 12% LOAN - Lovely bnck ranch,
tour mites from HMC This fine home features 1112
baths , b1g family room with f irepl ace, plus much
more. Situated on a large well landscaped lot . Cal l
for comp lete details .

OWNER MUST SELL!! - Leavmg the
area and must sacrif1ce this attractive
5 bedroom split . There' s enough space
for everyone and a large yard fer the
K1ds . •nc ludes equ ipped kitchen , formt31
dining, 2 full baths, family room &amp;
s1zed 2 ca r garage New wood deck ,
pa t1 o &amp; central air . Located near
Rodney on landscaped corner lot City
schools.

WISEMAN

I~~

:a_

Realtor-Auctioneer "
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
serving 6,000
Communities
428 Second Ave .
€all446·0552 Anytime

21

YOUR own leans and sportswear shop l Offer the
latest in jeans, denims and
sportswear. 114,115(). Includes Inventory, fixtures,
etc. Complete Store! Call
ALMA, toll free, 1-800-8744780.
'

GOOD FAMILY LIVING --:- Th 1s lovely ranch has 3
bedrooms, fami ly room w1th woodb.urntnQ, large 2
car garage, beautiful 18x36 pool w1th l arge pat 1o,
cl ose to town ·Redu ce d to $52,000.
N 1995

lOS KEN ION - Nt ce 2 bedroom home 1n
town Exce llent for ret iree or young
couple. 1ncludes eat 1n kit chen, h w
f loors (ca rpet ), garage, nat . gas hea t &amp;
smal l yar d. pri ced at $32,500.

*Joan Boggs, Realtor Asspc
Ph . Home: 446-3294

22

OFFICE 446-7013

REAL ESTATE
BUSINESS BUILDING
m downtown Rutl and,
0 ., approx 10 yrs old .
Use as business or con
vert to l 1v tng quarters .
See to apprecia te
NEW LISTING , 3 BR
cott age wi th 2 acres of
qu1et co untr ys1dc . 5
minutes fr om M td
dleport, 0 .
l BEDROOM HOME .
ca rpeted and pane led,
on V tn e SN- ee t tn
Ra c me , ve r y clea n,
ready TO move into Nice
level loty Wil l also co n
Stde r r entmg
1 ACRE
IN MI.D ·
DLEPORT 4 room
cott age, trad er hookup,
Reduced to $8,000 .00
2 BDRM. HOME ~ 4
ac res, walk1ng d1stance
to Mi ddleport
2 BEDROOM COT TAGE
Pan e l ed
throughout
New fur
nace . Middl epor t area .
$10,500
TAKING LISTINGS!
Hobart Dtllon , Broker
Fay Mantey,
Branch Mgr.
Phone 992· 2598

Real Estate - General

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

DILLON

RON ' S TV SERVICE
Spec ializ i ng In Zenith .
House Ca l ls . Call 1 304-576
2398 or 446-2-&lt;54

General

21

W il l do odds and ends paneling, floor ttl e, cetll ng
til e 992-63:18

OPEN 2 TO 5
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
413 FOURTH ·ST.
KANAUGA

ALBAN REALTY

Wantedt0i5o --

Gi ve piano lessons to begin ·
ners and adanced student
in my home. Also tea ch
chording and transposing if
interested ca ll992-5403.

W itl cl ean house. Call 667·
3423 or 667 ·6373.

16

··~--=---~===;;;-12'
Slluations wanted

Situations Wanted

ID

RE.A.LTOR '

'-

BRICK AND CEDAR 4 BR , 2 baths,
familY rm ., with fireplace , formal dining, deck, 2 car garage. Cen . air cond.
only 2 yrs. old . Near city In secluded 2
ac . pine tree setting Assume 9% mor
tgage. 579,900 .

Ron canaday, Realtor, 446-JG:ib

L-SHAPED BRICK, cedar and stucco
tudor ranch, 3 bedroms , 2 full baths,
family room with raised hea r th
fireplace and sliding doors that open on·
to terrace, fully equipped ki tchen, for ·
mal entry hall opens into family, ki t ·
chen and living room, 2 car tmished
gar vge . E lectric heat pump, c~n . air .
Nearly an acre l evel lot. S57, m .

A'ua;ey tanada~. Realtor 446-36~
25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

Ttu:: CHOICE IS YOURS! 2 nP'/1 hom es nearly com:
pleted, J BR , 2 baths, tult b · 'iement. heat . pump,
cen . air cond .. fully carpe l eo . Su perb qualiTy and
dfi':1QO , $56,000.
ASSUME1ow interest mortgage. 3 BR , 1'12 baths,
brick and frame , attached garage. Super locat1on.
$45,000 .

EYE PLEASER near Rio Grande, Col·
onial 4 BR , 2 story, family rm .,
fireplace, formal dmmg, slate entry .
Approx 3 ac. Most talked about home
in the area . S94,000 .

ROLI.tNG LAND WOOds beyond,
QU iet country road, wonderful place for
children and horses. 3 BR c:olonial of-.
fers all the space you ' ll need 14 dcres
only Slh miles trom ciTy , s.o,ooo .

NEARLY 2 A'RES - 3 BR, 1'1• baths. 2
story w 1th full basel""'ent. Trees galore,
approx. 4 rn i les from R10 Grande.
$35.000,

OAK STAIRWAY - Granite firepi'ace,
Window seat in dining rm., just a few of
the exceptional things you 'll find in thiS
lovely home. 3 BR, 1'12 baths. full basement Extra large lot with garden
space . $38,500.
~
HILLSTOP FARM only Smiles from ci ·
ty . Nice 4 BR home. family rm ., eq~ip­
ped kitchen, 48 acres . Good producmg
gas well furnishes free gas for
res1den ce plus income $85,000.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE! Roomy
modern ranch , 3 B R, eat· in kitchen,
new root, new furnace , Chain link
fence Attached garage. Extra room
now used for workshop would make
nice family room. Kyger Creek Schools.
Nearly an acre. Country surroundtngs
only f ew m l 1e' trom city , $27.500 .

'

'

'

NINE ACRES - -NiCe 4 BR home ,.,_, .• '"..
ty room. country kitchen, 2poches.
Garage . Several outbldg. Near Rio
Grnde. $44,900.

�D-9-The Sunday Times-Senttnel, Sunday, May 11, 1980
D-8-The Sunday Tim~ntinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

~'..

Homes tor Slle

42

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

sl

-

il'Y OWIIIER · 3 bdr . house,

kitchen, F .R. , wOOd bur

2 BDR and 3 bdr mobi le

nino fireplace, lg. level tot
Call 446·3100.

homes, call 446·0175

3 BDR ., BRICK ranch style
nome for sale 2 baths, fully
c.rpeted, attached garage,
on n1ce lo t . Just off Rt 2 in
Gall ipolis Ferry Call 675·
632'/afler 5
32

Mobtle Homes

.

for Sale
i~13

Fa~rpo1nt ,

l4x65

bedroom

2

1971 Cameron, 14X.65, 2
bedr
1971 Fleetwood, 14x6S 3
bdr , bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14x6S 2
bedroom
1965 Y a nor 12)(52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; s MOB IL E HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT ,
wv 304 675 4.424

12x60 1 bedroom trailel"', 2'h
m 11es from hOSPital at
Evergreen S160 a month

446 0157

-

---

-

---

TWO BDR mob1le home
Ref . req Call 446 2317 or
379 2119
2 BDR . TRAILER · pnvale
tot. adults only lifo pets, St
Rl. U1 nea r Centenary
Call 614 643 2644

-

Ap artm en1
44
- - for R ent -

-

-

3 A N D A RM furn1shed ap·
ts Phone 992 5434

--

UNFURN I bdr apart
ment, upstat rs, Second
Me $235 per mo. on
clu d1 ng ut il 1t1eS, one month
depostt requtred No pets,
call 446·2129 or 446·2800

12X4.5 add a room trailer
and le1rge l1vmg room and
util tty room , and bedroom
$2900 00 Call between 10
and4at'l'l2 6173

FURNI SHED Bachelor's
apartm ent 154 Ftrst Ave ,
$180 permo Call 4.46 1243
or 4.46 161 5

1971 F leetwood, l4x65, J
bdr , 1'12 bath
1971 Liberty, 14x6S, 2 bdr ,
1968 New Moon, 12x60, ex
pando, 2 bdr .
1970 New Moon. 12x60, 3
bdr
1961 Vindale, 10x55, 2 bdr
1969 Broad more, 12X60, 2
bdr
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sa l es
PI Pleasanl w VA
675 4.424

45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEP IN G ROOMS for
rent, Ga tl ta Hotel
Wtll ca re for elderl y person
1n my pr.vate home 992
6022
---

46

.

Space for Rent

CO UNTRY MOB IL E Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomero y Large lots Call
992-7479

SPRII\IG SA LE
Used
mobtle homes and travel
trailers
TRI STA T E
MOBILE HOME S CALL
446·7572

I TRAI LER SPACE
Adults only . Concrete pat to
and walk , 900 block 1n town
Large lawn area, w ater
paod, $60 mo Ca ll 4.46 4.416
after 7 p.m

1973 12x70 CARR I AGE
HOUSE Mob1le home.
Total electrtc, air con
dit1oned ,
new
carpet
t hroughout. 2 bedrooms, 2
baths, bay windows, palio
door, furnished Equopped
w olh name brand ap
pliances $7,950. Call 256
6623 .

TRAILER Space tor r ent .
Ca ll 4.46 8561
47

KANAUGA MOBILE
H
0
M
E
s
L arge se lection of used
10's, 12' s, &amp; 14 wtde Mobtle
Homes Kanauga M ob1 le
Home Sale, Kanauga, Ohto
446·9662
1972 FAIRMONT mob1le
home, 12 &gt;&lt; 60, 2 bdr , nat or
bottl e gas, partially furn ,
new carpet. Must see thts
one Ca ll 4.46 7340 after 4 30
pm

Wanted to Rent

1973 KIRKWOOD 12x60 2
bdr. mobile home in good
cond , one ye ar old a or
co nd , washer , dryer
$5,500 Any morning 367
0109 Without washer, drver,
a1r cond , 55,000

141 WIDE
1980 OAKBROOK

ME!~Ebil~

MOBilE HOME
51
2 Bdr , furn1 shed , S9,450
Down paym en t $984 On
ly Sl59 .48 per mo (APR
18% ) .
Calli mm ed ta te ly

D&amp;W ESTATES
Rl. 93 l\lorth
Jackson, o H .
286·37S2

35

Lots &amp; Acre•!Se

2 13 acres, city ' school
district, reslrocted building
lot. 4.46·:)043 afler 6
10 ACRES on Cen ter point
Rd., 1 mtle from Rio Gran ·
de, rural water 614 262 ·
5916 ,

'
RESTRICTED
BUILDING LOTS all
DebbY Drive
utilities available .
REALTY ,
STROUT
446·0008.

-

--.

41

Houses for Rent

Ill ICE Mobile Home in co ty.
cent. air, furn ished, adults
o~ty . 4.46·0338.

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FUR NITUR E
SOfa, cha1r, rocker, ot
tama n, 3 tab les, SSOO Sofa,
cha •r and 1o11esea t I $275.
Sofas and chairs pnced
from $275 to $550 Tables,
$33 ·$60·$7 '
a nd $85
Sol abed and cha1r, $150
H od e· a beds,$300 , queen
size,
UP .
&amp;
$325 '
Reclmers, $125 ' $150 .,
$160 .. $175 , and $225 . Lam·
ps from $18 lo sso 5 pc
dinettes fr om $69 to $325
Wood Tabl e and 4 chatrs,
$275 Table, two leaves, 6
chaors, 1hogh bacKed), $400
Hutches, $300 and $350 ,
maple or pt ne fin iSh
Bedroo m sui tes , $275
(wh ol e), $3 25
( pecan ),
$350 (oak ), Bassett Oak ,
$550., Basse!! Cherr y, $675
BunK bed complete w ith
mattresses, $175., $250 '
$275. Captain 's beds, S275
complete Baby beds, $75
Mattresses or bo&gt;&lt; springs,
full or twin, $55., form, $6.5.
and $75. Queen sets, $185. 5
dr chests , $49 Bed frames ,
$20 .
USED
refrige rators ,
Ranges,
dressers, TV's,
head·
bOards and beds Swivet
bar
s tool s ,
rocker ,
lavatory 2 counter top
refridgerators, rec liner
3 miles out Butavolle Rd
Open 9am to 8pm , Mon
lhru Fri , 9am l o Spm , Sal
«6 0322
GOOD
USE D
AP ·
PLIAIIICE S
washers,
dryers,
ref r ige rato rs,
ranges .
SK aggs
Ap ·
pllances, 191 8 Eastern
Ave , 446 7398

HOUSE. 5'h rm on Story
Run Rd. Modern. Desire
older couple. Call 3&lt;17· 7350.
VERY· NICE 3 bdr., house,
1 car garage, tota l electric ,
Located 3 miles from HMC
One child, ref. and dep.
req., 5285. per mo. Call 4.46·
3192.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

7 BDR mobile hOme, call
4.46·0508.

G E REFRIDGERATOR ·
GOOd COnd , $50. Call «6
1489
BASSE TT donette set with 6
chaors. Call 446·2706
53

Ant1ques

ATTENTION
I IM
PORTANT TO YDUI Woll
pay cash or certif•ed check
tor ant1ques and collec·
t•bles or enttre estates
Nothtng too large Also,
gu ns,· pocket watches and
coon collecto ons Call 614·
767 3167 or 557·3411 .
ATTEN TI ON
liM
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or certi f ted check
tor ant1ques and col lec
t1bles or entire estates
Nolhong too larg e. Also,
guns, pocket w•tches and
co1 n co llect•ons Ca ll 614
767 3167 or 557 34 11

54

M isc. Merchanise

COAL,
LIME ST ON E,
sand, gra11el. ca lctum
chloride, f erttltzer, dog
food , and all types of sa lt.
Excels1or Sal t Work s, Inc,
E Ma •n St , Pomeroy , 992
389 1
IN STO CK for 1mmediate
del tvery , IJart OUS SIZeS Of
pool k 1ts Do· it yourself or
let us tnstall tor you D.
Bumgardner Sa les, Inc
992 5724

Decorated Cakes, charac
ter cakes or sheet cakes
'1'12 634 2 or '1'12 2583
Whole relrog erator, gOOd
c ond , freezer on top . $60.
667 3958 .
Ridmg and lawn mower
paris Gas eng . up to 8 h p.
Vertical and horizontal.
Mostly used parts some
rotot ll ler and chain saw
parts, 4· 7 p .m . '1'12·5583.

and
FURNITURE
9S5 Second A venue
Gall opoli s, Ohoo
4563 1
614· 446· 1171

RISING STAR Kennel
Board ong Call367 0292

HUMAN E
SOCIE T Y
Adopt a homeless pet
Heal thy , shot s, wormed
Donat1ons required 992
6260, noon 7 p.m .
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
pon1es and ndtng
I essons .
Everythtng
i magtnable m horse eq utp·
ment
Bla nkets, belts,
boots, etc . English and
Western . Ruth Reeves
I 614) 698··3290

BUILD I NGS!! !
LAST
CHAN CE
AT
THESE
PRICES - All st eel cl ear
span buildmgs
(Major
Mfg )
20x24x10 '
for
$3,070 00 - 30' x48 'xl2' for
$4,120.00 - 40' X48' xl4 ' for
$5,096 .00 - 48' x72 'xl4' for
$7 ,407 00 F 0 B Factory
Call co llecl today 614·294·
2675 tot 8 p.m
40 LB Box of Wesl Virginia
Chunks, low ash, low sulfur
Foster Coal Co., 446 2783.
BURROUGHS Bookkeepin
g machine, $50 Call 446·
2342,
D
BUMGARDNER
SA LES ,
THE
POOL
PEOPLE 31711 l\loble Sum ·
mil Rd . Middleport, OhiO
992 5724 Sales, service and
supp11es.
In ground and
above ground pools
1973 PLYMOUTH Scamp
auto, A .C. Slant 6, 2 gtrls
btcycles, 2 10 ga t milk
cans, 1 hand w el l pump
3&lt;17 74.41
500 sq fl AUTHEN TIC
Oak barn s1dmo Used wm
dows, with storms and
screens . Call 446 4141 after
6p.m
MURRY Lawn mower with
Briggs and Stratton engine
Call446·0218.
5 H. P rotc tiller · used only
short season . Call 446 ·0689
BUILDII\IGSI!! Last chan·
ce at these pnces .. All stee I
c lear span buildings
(Ma;or mfg.) 20'X24'x1 0'
for $3,070 , 30'x48'xl2' for
S4, 120.. 40'x 48 'x l4 ' tor
$5 ,096
48'x72'x14' f or
$7,407. F .D. B Factory Cat I
collect toady · 614 294·2675
lol8p.m

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy T aytor at 367·
7220
DRAGONWYND
CA T ·
TERY · KENIIIEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
H •malayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Call 446 3844
after 7 p.m .

FOR SALE · saw mill · no
blace. needs new lumber
bearing mandll 1972 Dodge'
lf.o ton · needs work, SJOO. 5
front tow·away wench
S250 1974 Ford Mu•tand, 2'
large bowling machines
late evenings or early mor '
nlngs call742·3093.
Building Supplies

ALL TYPI::S of building
materialS, blocK, bricK
sewer pipes, windows, lin .'
tets, etc. Claude Winter•
Ri o Grande, 0 . Phone US '
5121 after 5pm ,
KACH· ALL PORTABLE
BLDG All sizes, 6xl0 I 0
12x40. See at 123112 Pine St.
4.46·2783 or 3 houses below'
Bowling Alley on Rl. 7, «6 .
: 279

Livestock
SEVEN · EIGHTS Ababian
Mare, Regtstered (have
the papers) 3. with colt , 388·
9713

S &amp; G Carpet Cteanmg

Business Services

Steam
cleaned
Free
estimate
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard 992
6309 or 7 42· 2211
·

CHICKENS
Call Larry
Sayre, 304 895 33 19

- . . ............
..... . . ...
.....
. . _ . '""

71

~

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

,.

Autos lor Sale

1976 Honda , 1974 Chevy,
1970 Chevelle, 1979 Caprice,
Car Realty Inc «6·7118

SEWING CLASSES

Starling Soon
Call tor Registra t i on

Business-Farms - Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, prolil and loss statements, all
federa l and slate form s.

1974 MUSTAN G II GHIA · 6
cyt., 4 spd ,, loaded w tlh e•
tras Good gas mileage .
$1895. Call 4.46 0515 after
s ·oo .

992-5320

For all
needs.

618 E . Main

Pomeroy, Oh ,

your

sewing

THE
SEWING CENTER

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
992·3795
4-2 I f

1973 OLDS Omega , $950 .
1978 Chevy Blazer , $3,950 .
Call245·9503 after 5.
1974 MUSTANG
6, auto., vinyl
am·fm stereo,
maKe olfer . Call

Middleport, 0 .

c-.,..1

-4·19· lmo .

POMEROY,O.
992·621 s or
992 ·7314
1·28 I mo

Ptcking up a piano in your
area . L.ookmg for a respon ·
Sible party to take over
payments . Call c redtt
manager collect 6141 ··592 ·
5122
Wurl ttlr organ, 9 In struments, 5 rythms , per·
cuss1on, casset te recorder·
player
Call
992 ·7858
even1ngs .

61

Farm EqUtpment

Brush Hog Good
cond $200 742 3117 after 5.
Lllwn tra ctor, 154 In
I ernat tonal Lowboy , 60 tnch
mower, A ·1 condit1on . Call
742· 2211 before 5 and 985·
4338 after 5 and ask for
03\Jid .
ECHO CHAt N SAWS ,
hydraulic wood splitters,
saw chain, bars, and all
wood cutti ng supplies
Charles McKean , Fairtoeld
Centenary Road, 446·9442
N Ford Tractor, 3pt hitch,
double plows. Call4.46 4635.
STEEL
BUILDII\I GS!!
Must Sell!
Immediat e
Delivery! 40'x66 'x l4', I
24' x15' Door Lots of Extras.
Other sizes avaoalable w 1lh
factory rebates!
Call
colleci61N63 1334.

1978 Otds Cu tlass Suprem e.
A c , power sea ts, am·fm,
selltras
992 ·6215
ex
Vtnyl top Prt ce d to

T·•hirts

Rea • .nable Prtces

Howard
., 2862
949 _2160
1. 22-ffc
I

BOB'S
- vmyls1dmg
~ Gutter work
- Soffit
- Garages
- Carports
- Room additions

Trucks for Sale

Call Aller 5 P . M.

1979 Ford Pockup, 6ft bed,
loaded w ith extras . 4.46
1552 . Call ater 5 p.m

992·6323
4 27 pd .

lnternattonal Tn ·a&gt;&lt;el
Gas eng 19 fl dump Bed
needs some work Good old
truck, no rust S3,200 4· 7
p m 992-5583

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1979 Ford Pockup TrucK for
sale Seen by appotntment
'1'12 7310
1978 Ford V ·8 Pickup
Tru ck Heavv duty springs
for pullmg ca m per Good
cond $3,800 949 2042

Call for Free Stdtng
Esttmate, 949·2801 or
949 ·2860. No Sunday
calls.
5· 11 mo

1977 Chevrol et P1ckup , 6
cyt , 3 speed Good gas
m1 lea ge 992 5636 after 5

1965 Chevy
Halt to n
Pickup, 6 cyl 1 standard
sh ofl, runs good. M ake good
work tru ck 985 4346 .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1S

1978 Glaslron 154 fast boat
w 90 h p. M ercury motor,
w trim and t i lt Mercury
Thruster t ro lling motor,
drive on trailer 9419 2869 or
992 6305

1978 CHEVROLET Diese l ·
B1g George, 31 ,000 miles ,
$5 ,500 Call4.46 6672

"

62 .

1971 GMC 3/• T t r uck, 4
whl dr . Hydraulic wOOd
splitter Two chain saws, 16
inch bar . Call446 7145

63

vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto ,
p s , p b , topper Pos1tive
t ractton front and r ea r 985
4339
79 CUSTOMIZED Dodge
Max t Van PS, PB, AM·F M
8 track stereo, air, 1 owner
10,000 miles $10,500 388 ·

BIOS.
74

Motorcycles

1976 KAWASAK I 400, gOOd
shape, SBOO Call446·6578.
HONDA TRA IL · 90, $225
Call379 2430.
1978 XL·250 HONDA motor
cycle Must se ll Call 446

PIG S for sa le 843·4734.
H 3. N Da v old or started
leghorn pullets, bOth floor
or cage grown available.
Poultry
Hou si ng
and
Automation ,
M odern
Pouttry,399
w . M ai n,
Pomeroy . Phone 992· 2164
Young Roosters for sale
Sl.OO Catt985·4288
HOLSTE IN bull
S75 . Call256·6315

calvos,

PEIIIDLETOI\I REBUILT
BATTERY . $20. plus tax
and old battery We buy old
batteries. Repair batteries
Call 388·8596

Boa!$ and
Motors for Sale

1978 CHECKMATE U·Mate
11 ski boat
150 H P.
Evtnrude motor tow tow
drive on trailer
Price
$6,500. Ca ll 384 3794 after 5
pm .
1972 17 fl TR I· HUL L In·
board-outboard , 4 cyt .
Chevy, M ercury power
tr im, full canvas, moori ng
co ver and tr r Reasonable
Ca ll4.46·7438 .
Checkmate U mate II
.5"i boat 150 h p Evenrude
t1totor. Two low dr ive on
t ra il er . $6,500 38.ct ·379.4 af ·
ter 5 p.m .
1 97~

HAVE YOUR

GOLf
LESSONS

ENGINE
STEAM
CLEANED
'12.00

Family Plan
Available

Tri-County
General Welding

John Teaford
Phone :

Salem Twp. Rd. 110
Dexter, Ohio 4572'
Bilf Eskew, Ph. 742-24S.
Your Place or Mine
5·9 1 mo

77

( 614) 985·3961
4 14 1 m o

SAND AND PAINT · minor
bodY repair, $159. Van
trucks, two tones change of
color extra but reasonable .
Hammonds Bodv Shop, 221
Mill 51 , Thurman. OH . Call
245·9371 or 379· 2306

78

7586

1978 VOLKSWAGEN Cam·
per · exc. cond., Call 256·
6758.

Homfl
lmprovem1nts

PARTS for 1974, 2 dr , Ford
2096 .
MavericK .
And Chevy
en)l if le 327, complete, set of
air..- shocks for Camara.
THEISS INSULATION, In·
Call 4.46·4364.
-Sulmaster foam Insulation.
New homes, otd hOmes,
co mmercial structures .
ONE 6'1' fl , one B fl . lac·
For tree estimates call 446·
tory t r uck topper Call 245
1971 .
5050.

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 hr. wrecker
service All types of repa ir .
Upper Rl 7 Call 4.46·2445
days and «6·4792 nights .

- FRONT END
AUGNMENlS
by
Randy
Car·
penler,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
spe ciallJNDMARK

SERVICE STAroN
Ca II I 614) 992·9932
• Pomer uy, 0.

Free Estimates

complng
Equipment

FOR BEST In Corpel
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Sleamway. Call 614·446·

1972 Chevy Monte Carl o
body parts. Also 350 eng. w
4 barrel and auto. transm isslon After S Man ·
Frt , week ends anyttme
992 ·2779

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
buill-up
roof
and
home
repair.

388-9759

Fl BER GLASS trucK lop·
per wolh &gt;II ding window lor
6'1' ft F Ieels ide truck $400
Call446 3139 alter 5 p.m .

II
USED tires, all sizes
Cheshire Ashland. Call 367

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

Auto Repair

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
we buy and sell rad talors,
ba tter ies, etc Call4.46·7717

77

Ltvestock

14 month old pole Hereford
bull 992-7 458.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

3664.

75

Real Estate Loans
13% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay ment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
$2S,OOO ; 5% down on
balance. FHA 265 Substdy Program. FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
Open M · W·F 9 :00 to I · 00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office 992·7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomero , OH .

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

p.m

Gas tnboard outboard
m otor, S175 For more in ·
formatton 742 23 15

GOLD
AI\ID
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS ,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC IT E MS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP· TO DAT E
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURK ETT
BARBER
SHOP , Ml DDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL '1'12 3476

31711 Noble summ11 Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992·5724
Sales, servtce and sup-Plies. In ground and
above ground pools.
S I tfc

Vinyl and Aluminum :
Siding

1976 FORD 1h ton pocK up .
Short bed, low m ileage, ex ·
cellent cond tT ton . $2,895 .
Ca ll446·0515

OLD COINS, pockel wat·
ches, class nngs, wedding
bands , dta monds Gold or
so lver Call J A , Wam sley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coon Shop, Athens, OH . 592·

THE POOl PEOPLE

69

JOHN DEERE tractor 40,
M F trac tor, 150, Ford
tractor 8000, M .F . bater No.
12, bush cutler , Aft, 5 fl , 6
fl., three point dtsks, plows,
grader blades , 6 and 7 ff
Cultt\'ator , J pomt, wheel
disks , 12 and 8 ft , 2 lOS
wh1te tractor .

ANTIQUES ,
FUR ·
NITURE , glass, china,
anyth1ng See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, an tt ques, 26 N
2nd, Modd leport, OH '1'12
3161

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

1978 Ca mar a, 20,000 miles,
ex t ras, excellent cond1t1on
1976 Chevy Monza , 27 motes
per gallon $1800 00 Call
9'12· 7060

73

novelty

All types of roofing, new
and repatr, gutters ,
downspouts, commer
Ctal &amp; r es •denttal .
949 ·2160 Pomeroy
797· 2432 Athens
Tom Hoskms or
Gerald Clark
21 years expenence. All
work guaranteed.
Free Estimate
4·24 1 m o

rI~==========+======~~~~j~:;:;;;;~;;::~

1977 Cordoba , v1ny l top,
a.c, p.s., p.b, crutse con
trot, rear w 1ndow defogger,
leather seats $1,800 92
3886

12

and

or tndtviduals .
Shirts S4.00 Each
"We pr~nt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 614·949· 2358
Evenings &amp; Weekends
5·8·1 mo

FrP~ Est 1mates

1974 Interna tional V·B wi th
16 foot van bo x and
hydrauloc toft $3700 00. Call
9'12·6173 between 10 and 4

CHIP WOOD . Poles max
d •ameter 10" on largest
end $12 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Deltv~ red
to Ohoo Patte! Co , Rt 2,
Pomer oy 992 ·2689

4141mo.

shirts for potiticeans,
ball teams, businesses

1967 MASSEY FERGUSON
135, gas, very gOOd cond,
1380 hour&gt;, $4150 Call 256·
6475 ,

Wanted to Buy

Rutland, 0.
Ph, 742· 2455

exc.~f~~~~~~~~~~r~~~~~~i~illr~~=~~~~~=l

1974 Ford Tonne Take
over pa yments. J •m 's Gulf
Statton , Rt 7 and 33 Ask
for Bill W1ll1am s

Musical
Instruments

MORRIS

cond , $2,600, Call 245 5130
after
5 p m39,ooo miles,
dr sedan,

AKC Reg long ha.red mat e
Daschund , champion s~red ,
Ca II 446· 194-4

-

Frank Rose Const. Co.
Remodeling repa~r , new
construc_tion, all fvpes .
Free esttmates , all work
lu".y
guaranteed .
ReSidential, commer ~
cial, industrial ..&amp;. Mm ::.'
g, -icaT work.
MSHA Cert .
446·4627

GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT
1nsutated vtnyl siding,
aluminum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
windows Free estimates .
Call3&lt;!7·0209 day or night.
PAINTING • Residential
and commercial. Interior
and exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free esllmotes. 17
yrs. exp. .;,llh reference•
call3&lt;!7·n84 or 3&lt;17·7160.
ALL TYPES ot Corpentry
work, new home bldg . or
remodeling, call446·2910.
P.O. I NTING Interior ond ex·
ter lor, free estimates, c::all
4.46··3344

2·14 lfc

81

Home
Improvements

MEADES roofing and
$1&gt;0Utlno, home remodeling
and 5ldl ng, free estimates,
10 year&gt; local experience
catt388·9869 .
STUCCO · pla•lering ,
pla&gt;ter repa ir , texture
ceilings, free estimates,
call256·1182.
JIM MARCUM Rooting
•pouting and $ldlng 30
year&gt; eKpertence . Free
estimate•
Remodeling
Caii388·98S7 .
BILL'S CONCRETE SER
VICE
Driveways, walks, patios,
porche$, basements and
garages. Free eslimates,
call388·9868 · Vonlon, OH
R McKEE 3. COMPANY · .
Blacktop,
drtvewoys,
parking lol$, patching,
seatcoating,
concrete
sidewalks Free estimates,
25 years experience. Call
797·2648. 21 Converse St.,
Chouncey, OH ,
LAIR COI\IST. · Block,
brick , fireplaces , new
nomes, remodeling, call
379-2123.
PAINTING · lnlerlor ond
exterior, free estimates in
Galltpoll• area, reasonable
rates. Call Mark White,

245-5050.

CABINETS&amp; VANITIES
Most wOOd product!, WOOd
Shop, 101
Court St .,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Call
4.46·2572.

R.M .
ROOFING
&amp;
SPOUTING .
Home
remodeling, •ldlng. Free
estimate•. phone 388·9039
or 388·9642 .

HOUSE AND TRAILER
ro:&gt;f repetr, pa inting, tree
e$llmates Call 446· 1562.

REMODELIIIIG · Palnllng,
carpenter work. room ad·
dillon•. Coll675· 2521.

&amp;1

Home
lm rove ments

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
4.46 4208

DENNY
CHAIN liNK FENCE
FREE ESTIM ATES

Ken Soles

All types of roof1ng, new
repa1r, gutters &amp;
down spouts. Commer
cial residential.
9:49· 2160 Pomeroy Area
797 ·2432 Athens Area
Tom Hasktns or
Gerald Clark
21 years e)( pertence, all
work guaranteed. Free
est1mates .

&amp;

Home
1mproveme'!_t s

do remodel 1ng ,
root1ng, patnt10g , plumbtng
and elect Free es t1mates
Cal l Charles Sinclair , 985
4121
pa•nt.ng and trim
work Barn pa1nting Free
est1mates
M •nor roof
repair. 992·3627
Root

A DVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER 3. DOOR , INC
Overhead Garage Doors,
Electrtc Door Operators,
Continuous no· leak gut
tering
Day · 698·8205 · N oght

R1oGrande
VINTON CEMEI\IT
FLOOR INC
Bo x 89, Btdwell , Oh ,
388-9877. s tdewa lks,
drt veways,
ba sements, steps, etc. In
sulatton, r estd ent1al
or
comm erc tal.
Som e remod elmg

BILL'S
Home Improvements
Nu-Pr.me Replacement
Window s Storm Wtn·
dows &amp; Doors. Pat1o
Cov ers ,
Carports .
Mob1l e
Home
Ac cessone s.
Fr ee
es ttmates.
691 Mtller Dnve 446· 2642

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

81

Will

ROOFING, Guttering and
remodeling. William Mit
chell , 388·8507

241-9113

LEO

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1975 TOYOTA
less than
book, 1 owner, good con·
dolton . Call 675 2927.

1978 Camara, st lver w·
black intenor, 45,000 mt ,
a c, p b , p.s., best of f er
992 6330 after 6 p m

S7

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV · CHlSEL
PLOW

Gutter work , down
spou t s, some c:oncrete
wort. ,
walks
and
drivewa ys.
(FREE ESTIMATES)

II Gh oa, V ·
roo f , a.c.,
p.s., p.b .,
«6 7739.

BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS.
Boarding
and
groomong . AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446 4191

china

DINETTE SET
ant oque
tove seat and cha ir , Ca tI
4.46·0508

63

1977 FORD L TO Landau, 4
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
I ndoor·outdoor
facilittes .
Also AKC Reg Dober ·
mans. Call446·7795 .

6462

OLD HAR I LAND
Call245·5050

---

a nd

5 Ft

55

Supports Your
Posture Zon e
Try !he Posture II

--Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KE NNEL S
Boarding, all breeds Clean
I ndoor outdoor
facilittes .
Also
AKC
reg 1stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

Chocolate
Sa te
All
chocolate in stock $1 30 per
pound whtle 11 lasts at
Carousel Confectionary ,
Moddleport

"OR LEASE
4800 Sqt..ar e F ee t, nex t
door Bob Evans Steak
Hot..se. 800 sq. ft off•ce,
4 , 000
warehot..se
1~ storage, garage or any
other comm erc tallJ se
Call Ik e Wts eman
446·3643
The Wt scman Agencv

S6

LIV II\IG ROOM SU ITE and
electnc furnace Call 256
6058

HOUSE tn t he coun try with
f1re pla ce or stove
3
children and 3 outs 1de pets
Call 446 3072

UNF modern 2 bdr apart
ment overlook mg the park
$160 per month refer en
ces Please call446 1819

Approximately LOOO ft . of
rough cut walnut lumber,
aged 742 3117 after 5

POODLE
GROOMING
J udy Taylor 614 367 7220

Potted tomato plants An
drew Cross, Letart Falls,
Oh .

For Lease

sS -· a-U,idul SU tifs -

MAY TAG wringer washer
Call 3&lt;17 71 87

WAN T TO RE NT l or 2
bdr apart ., pr 1vate, furn ,
w1thin 5 m tle radius of
Ga ll opolo s Call446 2342 and
Ask for Mark

.,

8x50 T RAILER 3 Bdr. par
tially furn $2800. Call 388
9792

H -ousehOidGOQd-, 16 CU B tC upright freezer,
595, G.E auto. washer, 595
Harvest gold gas ra nge,
;95. Re cond . Maytag
ringer washer. $95 36 in
electric range, sas . RCA
color TV , S85 , AVA 30 in
electric range, $95. SKaggs
Applillnce, 4A6·7398

.

RE NTER ' S aSSI Stance for
Senter C1t1zens m VIllage
Manor apts Call '1'12 7787
SLEEPIN G rooms, and
l 1g ht housekeep. ng apart
ment Park Centra l Hot el.

1969 K1rk.wood mobile
home 12&gt;&lt;60, two bedroom,
unfurn1 shed, le1rge liVIng
room and d101 ng room At
Kanauga $3200 00 Call 304
882 2466

Home
I m rovements

11

SWIMLAND
150 Third Ave.
IS NOW OPEN
10 am til 5 pm
Monday thru
Saturday
''TABEX CHEMICAlS"
PHONE 446-7887

It

Home
I m rovements

CARPENTER WORK
com pl ete remodelmg by AI
Tromm, 742 2328 Referen·
ces

Home
Improvements _
WALL PAPERING and
pamtmg 742 2328
Plumbi n9-

82

- ~_H~a tlng

Rooftng , Sldtng, room ad
dlttons.all type s of general
repa1rs , 25 vears ex·
per •ence 992 3406.
Carpenter work, cetling,
floors. doos. panel•ng 992·
2759

Plumbmg

82

QUAL IT Y
MAIN
TENANCE
Electncat,
plumbing, heat1ng , and a1 r
conditton1ng Call 388 9698

STANDARD
Plumbing Heating
215 Thord Ave , 446·3782

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 4.46 2735

GEORGE 'S ROOFING
Roofmg, Sldtng, gutter,
bulld ·up roof , home
repatr.
Free Esttmafes
388-9759

81

Home
I mprovements

Dozer, backhoe and tren
cher Sepllc syslems, com
pl etc serv1ces Hourly or
cont ra ct
Eng1neer1ng,
layout and const ruct10n
8111 Pull lOS 992 2478

s3.00 AND UP
10 to S Saturday
1 lo 5 on Sunday

Reese Trenching
&amp; Backhoe Service

ffi

w m

i

Ii
~

•••J,to

HersheL
9:30 Q I]) t10J THE JEFFER·
SONS L1some
onel wanoncets t o
keep
in ·a·llfet lme news from
Geo rg e end Lo utse, but
when they acci dentally
ftnd out, theyrespon dw1th
more

anger

than

84

CIJ

"·

·:

J~;£:T~:;~::tYoor"

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, trans, all smaJJ
appliances . Lawn mower.
l\lexl to Slate Highway
Garage on Roule 7, 98.53825
85

Gener•l Hauling

WILL HAUL limestone and
gra vel. Also, lime hauling
and spr eading Leo Morns
TrucKong Phone 742·2455
LIMESTONE, gravel ond
sand All sizes At Richards
and Son , Upper Rtver Rd.,
Gallipol iS, Ohio. Call .«6·

77 65
JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery Call 256·
9368 anytime .
V.E. FILLI NGER Water
Delivery Service. Call 379·'
2124.
86

M . H. Repair

BILL' S MOBILE HOMES
and Home Im provements.
Free est1mates. Call 446·
2642.
Upholstery

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Ftnest quality at lowest
posstble prices. Call
now tor tree estimate.
com IT)erc1al or residentiaL
256·1562

r---------------------~--------------------~---------------------L-------------------­

SUNDAY PUZZLER

JOY

KENNETH

COPELAND

ffi THEVALIANTYEARS

Wtns ton Churchill
Q CIJ 1m TRAPPER
JOHN M.D . The remote
world ofpolll lc&amp;l terronsm
suddenly ts not so remote
to Trapper when he fmds
h1m se lf 1n a fnghtenmg
pred1cament. force d to
make a cho1ce between
death for a pat•ent or hts
ex-w11e,
Melame
l8_epeat , 60 mms)
Cll FIRING LINE ' All ard
Lowenatemon Ftrmolme
A Retr ospective· Host
W1ll1am F Buckley, Jr.
ITIJ OVER EASY 'Four
Alone The Older Wom en
m Amenca· Hos t Hugh
Downs v•s•ls w1th lour
women to talk about the1r
•nd1vtdual ways of makmo
1t 1n a society whi ch has
generally not prepared for
the
elderly ,
and
apecif tcally no t fo r th e
older woman (60 mms )
10: 15 ffi MOVIE~DRAMA)" 'Ia
" Gauntlet" 1977
10:30 (I) RUFF HOUSE Gue ol
Famous tnallawyer , Mel·
Vtn Beth
11 :00 (J)0 CIJI1lQ CIJ®J(U)
C!) NEWS
(]) NEWSIGHT
ffi OPEN UP
I])
NON·FICTIDN
TELEVISION 'On Com
pany Bus mess' Part I of a
three part documentary
wh1ch explores Amertcan
tore tgn po liCY and th e
ways in wh1c h 11 has been
Influen ced over the last 30
years by the C I A (60
mms)
(ll) WHO REMEMBERS
MAMA? A docum en tary
ex.plormg the econom1 c
and emotional devas ta·
lion expenenced by
mtddle aged women wh o
lose thetr role as
homemakers due to
d1vorce (60 mtns )
11 : 15 CIJ ABC NEWS
11) PMAPULSE
®J CBS NEWS
11 ,30 (J) OMOVIE ·(DRAMA)
•• \AI "The Gay Lady"
1944
(])
THE KING IS
COMING
(j) BENNY HILL SHOW
I1J WRESTLING
Q
CIJ
MOVIE
·(MYSTERY)' " Murder
Motel" HH5
1m MOVIE ·(WESTERN)
•• " 100 Rlflea" 1969
(U) Q) ABC NEWS
11:45 W C!l PTLCLUB· TALK
AND VARIETY
12:00 (j) THREE ' S A CROWD
12. 1S ffi MOVIE ~COMEDYI
" !,', " An Almost Perfect
Aflolr" 1979
I1J NEWS
1:00 (I) MOVIE ·(MYSTERY !
••., " Paranoiac" 1963
1:45 il2) Q) NEWS
2:50 ® MOVIE ·(SCIENCE
FICTIONI' 'Ia " Agenllor
Harm " 1966
4 :40 CIJ UNTOUCHABLES

~

IIJ.

SEWING
MACHINE
Repatrs,
service,
all
makes. 992 ·2284.
The
Fabr1c Shop , Pomero';' .
Authonzed Singer Sale.s
and Service We sharJMtn
SCISSOrS

E lect rical
&amp; Refngerat 10n

D DAY
RE FRIDGERATION
Res•den t •al, commerc1al,
hea t •ng cooling, electr1cal
serv1ce Ca l l 388 8274 , or
388 9'163

(Bepeet)

10:00

Electrical
&amp; Retrigeratton

TR IS TATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Galtopolts.
446 7833 or 446·1833

Nurs ery m en
D esi gn e r
Contractor

Sunday Television
show Will feature Mathew
(]) THE OLD WEST
Sa ad Muhammad defend·
@THE ISSUE
•no h1s WB C Light Heavy·
(ll) OHIO JOURNAL
MORNING
we tght Champ1onah1p
12,30 (J) 0 11) MEET THE
5:30 (j) CATHOLIC MASS
aga1nst loula Pergaud
PRESS
6:00 ffi
CHRISTOPHER
{iOmma)
CIJ
ORAL
ROBERTS
CLDSE·UP
liJ
SPORTSWORLD
CIJ DIRECTIONS
CIJ
BETWEEN .THE
Coverage of the Interns·
Q
CIJ
WILD
KINGDOM
LINES
tiona! Tra ck and F1eld
i!ID FACE THE NATION
®) AMERICAN PROB·
Meet at the campus of
CID
NOVA
'TheGreenMa·
LEMS
AND
UCLA (90 mlns )
ch1
ne'
W1ththehelpofnew
l;!:fALLENGES
5:00 (]) WIDE WORLD OF
ac•ent1f1c
research
and
6:30 W I I CHRISTOPHER
TRUTH
t1me lapse photograph y,
~OSEUP
CIJ UNTOUCHABLES
the compleJut 1es and
CIJ KOINONIA
(ll)
ELECTRIC
myatenes of the plant
(I) A BETTER WAY
COMPANY
world
are
exammed
(60
; TREEHOUSE CLUB
5·30 (]) OLD TIME GOSPEL
min~
7:00
0 THIS IS THE LIFE
HOUR
il2)Q)
KIDS
ARE
PEOPLE
ffi FORD PHILPOT
ITIJ GROUCHO
ffi
TERRY 1·.00 l2J
IQOO
AT ISSUE
COLE·WHITAKER
EVENING
SPECIAL
Q C1J OLD TIME GQ.
CIJ
D. JAMES KENNEDY
6:00
Cll
OQ
(])@j NEWS
SPELHOUR
CII AWARE
ffi
CHAMPIONSHIP
1m URBAN LEAGUE
CD
PROGRAM
WRESTLING
il2)
CD
ACTION
UNANNOUNCED
CII ABC NEWS
NEWSMAKER
Q CIJ®) SPORTS SPEC·
I1J POP GOES THE
7:30 (J) 0 T .V. CHAPEL
TACULAR t) Strongeol
COUNTRY
ffi DAWSONMEMORIAL
Man in Foo tball. featurmg
I])
BILL MOYERS'
CHURCH
BAPTIST
8 NFL players competmg
JOURNAL
SERVICE
1n power events 2) FE!
(ll) SESAME STREET
IT IS WRITTEN
World Cup EQueetnan
(i}) Q)
TRI·STATE
EDDIE SAUNDERS
Champtonshtpa (At press
TODAY
AND
JIMMY SWAGGART
t1me , theexactttme ol th1s
TOMORROW
1m OLD TIME GOSPEL
broadc ast
wa s
not
6:30 ClJ 0 11J NBC NEWS
HOUR
determmed)
CIJ FOCUS ON THE
il2) Gl BIBLE ANSWERS
I]) MOVIE -(COMEDY)
FAMILY
8:00 (J) 0 MORMON CHOIR
••• " The Prlncell And
ffi
MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE)
CIJ THE LESSON
The Plrate 11 194•
••111
" Street Killing"
II&gt; THREE STOOGES 1:30 @
THIS WEEK IN
1976
AND FRIENDS
BASEBALL
CII NEWS
CII
GRACE
CIJ
AMERICA'S ATH·
Q CIJ®J CBS NEWS
C_ATHEDRAL
LETES 1980 . Senes
(U) Iii ABC NEWS
11.iJ CIJ
DAY OF
devoted to examtnmg and 7:00 (]] 0 11) DISNEY'S
DISCOVERY
revealing the best ath ·
WONDERFUL WORLD
I]) (ll)
SESAME
letes who were to repre ·
'Goofy Takes A Holiday
STREET
se nt the Umted States st
Gooty daydreams hte wa y
il2) II) EVANGELISTIC
the Olympics to be held m •
around the worl d tn one
QUTREACH
Moscow
htlanoua adventure after
8:30 (J)I I ORAL ROBERTS
(ll) HOCKING VALLEY
another, m c ludm~ a bull
(]) CHAPEL HOUR
BLUEGRASS
f1ghttn Mex1co, attgerhunt
CII CONTACT
G}) C!) HI-Q
m lndta and a game 1n the
11) OPEN BIBLE
2 00 11J 0 TONY BROWN
World Serlea (60 mina)
Q CIJ REV. LEONARD
CIJ
WDRLO
OF
(]) JIMMY SWAGGART
REPASS
PENTECOST
@ NASHVILLE ON THE
®) JAMES ROBISON
CIJ ON DECK CIRCLE
ROAD
il2&gt; Q)
LOWER
11) INSIGHT
I]) (U) Iii ABC MOVIE
LIGHTHOUSE
(ll) ANTIQUES
SPECIAL 'The Return 0 1
8.00 (J) 8
SINGING
ACTION
TheK 1 ~ 1980
JUBLIEE
NEWSMAKER
Q CIJ ttOJ BOMINUTES
IIJ ROBERT SCHULLER 2 15 @
BASEBALL Atlanta
® WAR AND PEACE
CIJ LOSTIN SPACE
Braves
vs
Houston
ITIJ FRENCH CHEF
CII REX HUMBARD
Aatros
7·30 ® PORTER WAGONER
I1J ABETTER WAY
2:30 (J) 0 CD BYRON NEL·
SHOW Guests l 1ttle
Q
C1J
CHRISTIAN
SON GOLF CLASSIC
Oav1d
Wtlkms, Kathy
CENTER
(]) THE DEAF HEAR
t:Jl'.der
STUDIO SEE
CIJ(j2)Q) TOURNAMENT
IJ1J WALL $TREETWEEK
ORAL ROBERTS
QJ CHAMPIONS
The Tape Tells Al l' Guest
MISTER ROGERS
(ll) HERE'S TO YOUR
Stan Wetnate1n, te chmcal
fl1&gt; Q)
REV. JIM
HEALTH
analyst
Host
loUis
FRANKLIN
3:00 (]) AT HOME WITH THE
Ruk_!Yser
8:30 11) FAITH FOR TODAY
BIBI.E
B.OO ill O 11J CHI Po Jon end
IIJ CIJ
ROBERT
0 CIJ®J NBA BASKET·
Panch are tatled tor conSCHULLER
BALL CHAMPIONSHIP
tempt of court when they
()) BIG BLUE MARBLE
GAME At press lime. the
ref use to 1dent1fy a pot1ce
i!ID !TIS WRITTEN
exact 11me and s1te of the
mformanl dunngthet nal of
SAME STREET
game
were
not
a mobster (Repeat, 60
REV. A.A. WEST
determtned
mma.)
10:00
REX HUMBARD
CIJ GREAT PERFDR·
(]) REX HUMBARD
,
CIJ CHANGED LIVES
MANCES ' When Hell
ffi
MOVIE
([).
LEAVE IT TO
Freezes Over , I'll Skate'
~SCIENCE-FICTION)•••
BEAVER
Vmnette Carroll 's mus• cal
"Moonraker 11 1979
CIJ KIDS ARE PEOPLE
produclton paystnbute to
® MOVIE ·(COMEDY)
TOO
black poetry and song,
•• % ''Ghoat and Mr.
11) GOSPEL SINGING
from Gospel to Disco and
Chicken " 1866
BILEE
from slave quarter aer·
Q C1J 1m
ARCHIE
SESAME STREET
mons to conte mp orary
BUNKER' S
PLACE
0
MOVIE ~DRAMA) "
!t!.tcs (60 mms)
Arch1e
suffers
a
double·
11
Ttll Them Willie Boy II
U.ll MYSTERY I 'Sergeant
edged shock ··flrs t M•ke,
Here " 1K9
Cr1bb' AScotlandYardde
Glona and grandson Joey
ilZl Q)
JIMMY
!active 1s assigned to
appear unexpected ly on
f&gt;WAGGART
solve some or the moat
h1a doorstep for a hohday
10:30 CIJ
SPIRITUAL
baffling cr1mes of V1 ctor·
reumon and than he d1 a
AWAKENING
1an England (60mtns.)
covers why (Repeat, 60
([) MOVIE -{MUSICAL) 3:30 CIJ MISSIONARIES IN
mma)
" A Star It Born"
ACTION
(fi)
ODYSSEY
®
1854
I!J TIME WAS .. 19705
·o o~ka · s B1g Moka ' Th1s
ERNEST
Ill Cll
Heo·a documentary aer·
program focuses on Ong
ANGLEY
tea concludes th1s month
ka , aNewGumaan ,andhis
(fi) ZOQM
with a look at the197o·a, a
organ•zat1on ol a huge
HUMAN
t1:00 I])
•
deca de wh1ch w•tneaaed
moka a ceremoma l pre ·
DIMENSIONS
such memorab le events
eenlat1on of g1tts used to
INTOUCH
as Wa tergate contmued
promote one's soctal and
REXHUMBARD
U S. mvolvement In V10t ·
political s1and1ng (60
ONCE UPON A CLAS·
nam. the mvaston of Cam ·
ffi iOS)
SIC 'Carrie's War' Carne
bodla, the celebra tion of 9:00 ffi 700 CLUB
and N1ck leave for Scot ·
Amenca 's btcenlenn lal .
C1J 11) THE BIG EVENT
land to join their mother
the raptd deve lopment of
' Capr1corn One' 1978
(ll)
ELECTRIC
hand computers, Joggmg ,
Stars Elliott Gould ,
COMPANY
and disco fever 0 1ck
James Brolin
(U) ID
REV. HENRY
Cave tt hosts
0 CIJ @&gt; AL CE Carroe
lj!.HAN
4 :00 CIJ HE LIVES
S~a rp l~s 1J8YS a vtSit to
BILL DANCE'S
11:30 (iJ 8
(ll) UPSTAIRS, DOWN·
he1 son tvtel .andMelpaya
STAIRS 'G uest ol Honor'
QUTDOORS
her b.'\c k by getttng a
C1J il2) ID ANIMALS,
King Ed'tfard VII accepts
psychosomatic
back·
ANIMALS, ANIMALS
an invitat ion to d1ne wilh
ach&amp;Jwhen she tuea to
IIJ CIJ FACE THE
the Bellamys . (60 m1ns )
take ove r th e d1ner s k1t·
NATION
chen (Repeat)
4:30 (J)
0
MOVIE
()) WORLD OF THE SEA
ll) (ll) MASTERPIECE
·(WESTERN)" " Lock,
(fi) BIG BLU! MARBLE
THEATRE 'M y Son . My
Stock and Barrel" 1i70
Son ' Maeve becomes th e
I])
THINK ABOUT
AFTERNOON
toast ot London w11h
TOMORROW
l1V18'S hit song (60
12:00
AT ISSUE
CiJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) 0 "
OF
ffi
TIME
SUNDAY NfGHT
D!LIVERANC!
MOVIE · An gel On My
II&gt; II}) ID ISSUE S AND
Shoulder 19SO Stars
ANSW!RS
(t} il2) Gl WIDE WORLD
Peter Strauss . Barb&lt;Ha
I1J THISIS THE LIFE
OF SPORTS Toda(s
D ()) VIEWPOINT

84

87

.u6-3100

MAY 11,1980

METAL CULVERTS
6"
thru 48" 1n stock 12", $5 10
fl, 18", $7.15 II., 24" , $9 85
ft , also 4" and 6" plastic
corrogated co1 1 pipe, 4"
and 6" schedule 40 PVC
ptpes and s1nks
Call
collect, Jackson , OH 286·
5930 Ron Evans BacKhoe,
located 3 mls south on Sf
Rt 93 toward OaK Holt

L•mestone for dr.veways.
Pomeroy Mason area 367·
7101

Holly, junipers, yews , red cedar' &amp;
cypress mulch, landsca!)e leftovers .

( Gallta Collnfy
Certotoed)
I~""'' " Beds, Wafer and
Ltnes , Electnc
IL'""''• Pole B1.1ildlngs.

E xcavattng

83

WE DO BACKHOE and
dozer work. Call446 4916

AZALEAS
.....................
~5. 95
Pink&amp;Red

35 Court St
Ga ll tpolls, Oh1o
Call446 ·3896
or -146-JOB O

Amana centralatr con
d 1t10n1ng un1t. 2.4,000 BTU
Pr1ced at $100 00 Phone
992 2522

WA TER WELL Drollong
and cleaning Pumps sold
and mstalled , Call W T
Grant, «6 8508

LANDSCAPE
MATERIAL SALE

Fumiture Stripping
and Refinishing

Plumbing

&amp; Heati:.:.
ng
. __ _

CARTER'S PL UMBING
AND HEAT I NG
Cor Fourth and P1ne
Phone 4-46 3888 or 446 · «77

Hom e
Improvements

---

62

&amp; Heat!.!!.i_

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Ptumbtng
Heatmg
Atr
condtfion.ng . 300 Fourth
Ave Ph. 446 1637

81

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All typ es home 1m ·
provement s - Roofmg
gutters - spouts - con crete work . Ph. 367·0427,
367·0194 , 367·0141. Free
esttmates.

DAVISON
DEVELOPM ENT
Excavatton Servtces.
Dump truck , dozer,
backhoe
Caii446·4SJ7

81

W~

NOilOlOS

ACROSS
1 Clutch
6 Algenan
seaport
10 Orrental
nurse
14 Of a gram
19 Retrea t
2 1 Leander 's
love
22 Not one
23 Branched
24 Manage
26 Fa 1ntest
28 Bests
29 Yellow
ocher
30 Fashoon
32 Maned ones
33 Sh1p channels
34 Posed
35 Cut
37 Baseball
team
39 Acorn, e g
40 Feltnes
41 S1amese
COinS
42 Morays
44 Neater
46 Transac t ton
47 Liberate
48 Regulalton
50 Debt cerltlt·
cafe
52 Coupl e
53 Ra1lroad
(abbr)
55 Stmp le
57 Compass
pt
58 Depos11s
59 Servant
60 Greek letter
62 Goa l
64 Accomplished
66 Scale note
68 Greek letter
69 Young salmon

70
71
73
75
77
78

Scultl e
Pace
Tens1o n
Err an!
AI th1 s place
Anc1en1
chan at
80 Solkworms
81 Weoght of
lndta
82 Exoles
84 Certam
ch1ckens
86 Tolle of
respec t
87 Clot hong
89 Small rug
92 Item of
propert y
95 Man 's name
98 Performs
99 European
nver
10 1 Plant runner
103 Be borne
104 Legal matters
I 05 Fll
106 Art1cte
107 Parr (abbr 1
108 Let ta ll
110 Contatner
111 Teut on ic
derty
11 2 Mountatn
lake
113 Employed
11 5 Pronoun
117 Shout
119 Dr
120 Yearn
121 Made
believe
124 Burden
126 Eat
127 Peruse
128 Sowed
130 Cab le
132 Wither ed
133 Tumbled
134 Evergreen
~~tree

135 Capuchon
monkeys
137 Flower
139 Macaw
140 La nd map
141 Par t of step
143 Ac comploshment
145 Greek teller
146 Smaller
148 Soc oa t
gatherrngs
150 Grated
152 Th oroughfare
153 Wooden
ptns
154 Venture
156 Calm
157 Rema ons at
ease
158 Drreclt on
159 Brrdge
160 Hebrew fes
I tval
DOWN
1 Twelv e dozen
2 Grumb le
3 StudiO
4 Kntght
5 English
baby car·
nage
6 Exclamatton
7 Commun1st
8 Seed coatong
9 Candtdate
10 Con cernmg
1 1 Bryophyl e
12 Emmel
13 Pronou n
14 Clods
15 Soul Fr
16 Kotchen
appli ance
17 Landed
property
18 Brrd s'

homes
Short )acket
Soaks
Redact
Gneves
Appoonlment
3 1 Gera1n t's
wtfe
33 S1rong wtnd
36 Fruot
38 Paradose
40 Autos
41Dry
43 Wmter veh icle
45 Spatn
46 Surgocal
st otch
47 Comely
49 God of love
51 Temporary
shelters
52 Separated
53 Ran t
54 Inlet s
56 Amuse
59 Compulsory
60 Harbor
6 1 Roman date
63 Malad;ust ed
ones
65 Transgresses
67 Abstr act
betng
69 Slate Abbr
70 Church d ossent er
72 Semesters
7 4 Three-toed
slo th
76 Chaldean
C1 ly
77 Greek poet
79 Siaon
83 Soft tood
85 Bear up
86 Pon ochle
l erm
87 Unusual
88 Mapl e
20
23
25
27
28

89
90
91
92
93
94
96

genus
Greek letter
Degraded
Doctrme
Snake
Lo ng step
Thus
Ktnd ol

cheese
97 Tear
100 N1ton symbol
102 Chnstmas
ca rol
105 Rattonal
109 Farm tmpte1
ment
112 ForK prong
113 European

mountams

~

114 Slop
116 Spreads for
drytng
118 Den
120 Buccaneers
12 1 Antmat coat
122 Sea nymphs
123 Heedless
125 Let !all
126 Deduce
127 Htnd part
12g Exprres
13 1 Asceltc
132 Saltne
133 Escape
134 lntt1al
136 Alg onqutan
lnd1ans
138 Downy d uck
140 Pos1t1ve
14 t Tatters
142 Harvest
144 Three Sp
147 Explosove
Abbr
t48 Edible seed
149 Mrs Sp
15 1 Extst
153 Heb rew letter
155 Printer's

measure

�D-9-The Sunday Times-Senttnel, Sunday, May 11, 1980
D-8-The Sunday Tim~ntinel, Sunday, May 11, 1980

~'..

Homes tor Slle

42

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

sl

-

il'Y OWIIIER · 3 bdr . house,

kitchen, F .R. , wOOd bur

2 BDR and 3 bdr mobi le

nino fireplace, lg. level tot
Call 446·3100.

homes, call 446·0175

3 BDR ., BRICK ranch style
nome for sale 2 baths, fully
c.rpeted, attached garage,
on n1ce lo t . Just off Rt 2 in
Gall ipolis Ferry Call 675·
632'/afler 5
32

Mobtle Homes

.

for Sale
i~13

Fa~rpo1nt ,

l4x65

bedroom

2

1971 Cameron, 14X.65, 2
bedr
1971 Fleetwood, 14x6S 3
bdr , bath 'h
1971 Shakespear, 14x6S 2
bedroom
1965 Y a nor 12)(52, 2 bedr
1968 Fleetwood 12x63, 2
Bdr
B &amp; s MOB IL E HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT ,
wv 304 675 4.424

12x60 1 bedroom trailel"', 2'h
m 11es from hOSPital at
Evergreen S160 a month

446 0157

-

---

-

---

TWO BDR mob1le home
Ref . req Call 446 2317 or
379 2119
2 BDR . TRAILER · pnvale
tot. adults only lifo pets, St
Rl. U1 nea r Centenary
Call 614 643 2644

-

Ap artm en1
44
- - for R ent -

-

-

3 A N D A RM furn1shed ap·
ts Phone 992 5434

--

UNFURN I bdr apart
ment, upstat rs, Second
Me $235 per mo. on
clu d1 ng ut il 1t1eS, one month
depostt requtred No pets,
call 446·2129 or 446·2800

12X4.5 add a room trailer
and le1rge l1vmg room and
util tty room , and bedroom
$2900 00 Call between 10
and4at'l'l2 6173

FURNI SHED Bachelor's
apartm ent 154 Ftrst Ave ,
$180 permo Call 4.46 1243
or 4.46 161 5

1971 F leetwood, l4x65, J
bdr , 1'12 bath
1971 Liberty, 14x6S, 2 bdr ,
1968 New Moon, 12x60, ex
pando, 2 bdr .
1970 New Moon. 12x60, 3
bdr
1961 Vindale, 10x55, 2 bdr
1969 Broad more, 12X60, 2
bdr
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sa l es
PI Pleasanl w VA
675 4.424

45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEP IN G ROOMS for
rent, Ga tl ta Hotel
Wtll ca re for elderl y person
1n my pr.vate home 992
6022
---

46

.

Space for Rent

CO UNTRY MOB IL E Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomero y Large lots Call
992-7479

SPRII\IG SA LE
Used
mobtle homes and travel
trailers
TRI STA T E
MOBILE HOME S CALL
446·7572

I TRAI LER SPACE
Adults only . Concrete pat to
and walk , 900 block 1n town
Large lawn area, w ater
paod, $60 mo Ca ll 4.46 4.416
after 7 p.m

1973 12x70 CARR I AGE
HOUSE Mob1le home.
Total electrtc, air con
dit1oned ,
new
carpet
t hroughout. 2 bedrooms, 2
baths, bay windows, palio
door, furnished Equopped
w olh name brand ap
pliances $7,950. Call 256
6623 .

TRAILER Space tor r ent .
Ca ll 4.46 8561
47

KANAUGA MOBILE
H
0
M
E
s
L arge se lection of used
10's, 12' s, &amp; 14 wtde Mobtle
Homes Kanauga M ob1 le
Home Sale, Kanauga, Ohto
446·9662
1972 FAIRMONT mob1le
home, 12 &gt;&lt; 60, 2 bdr , nat or
bottl e gas, partially furn ,
new carpet. Must see thts
one Ca ll 4.46 7340 after 4 30
pm

Wanted to Rent

1973 KIRKWOOD 12x60 2
bdr. mobile home in good
cond , one ye ar old a or
co nd , washer , dryer
$5,500 Any morning 367
0109 Without washer, drver,
a1r cond , 55,000

141 WIDE
1980 OAKBROOK

ME!~Ebil~

MOBilE HOME
51
2 Bdr , furn1 shed , S9,450
Down paym en t $984 On
ly Sl59 .48 per mo (APR
18% ) .
Calli mm ed ta te ly

D&amp;W ESTATES
Rl. 93 l\lorth
Jackson, o H .
286·37S2

35

Lots &amp; Acre•!Se

2 13 acres, city ' school
district, reslrocted building
lot. 4.46·:)043 afler 6
10 ACRES on Cen ter point
Rd., 1 mtle from Rio Gran ·
de, rural water 614 262 ·
5916 ,

'
RESTRICTED
BUILDING LOTS all
DebbY Drive
utilities available .
REALTY ,
STROUT
446·0008.

-

--.

41

Houses for Rent

Ill ICE Mobile Home in co ty.
cent. air, furn ished, adults
o~ty . 4.46·0338.

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FUR NITUR E
SOfa, cha1r, rocker, ot
tama n, 3 tab les, SSOO Sofa,
cha •r and 1o11esea t I $275.
Sofas and chairs pnced
from $275 to $550 Tables,
$33 ·$60·$7 '
a nd $85
Sol abed and cha1r, $150
H od e· a beds,$300 , queen
size,
UP .
&amp;
$325 '
Reclmers, $125 ' $150 .,
$160 .. $175 , and $225 . Lam·
ps from $18 lo sso 5 pc
dinettes fr om $69 to $325
Wood Tabl e and 4 chatrs,
$275 Table, two leaves, 6
chaors, 1hogh bacKed), $400
Hutches, $300 and $350 ,
maple or pt ne fin iSh
Bedroo m sui tes , $275
(wh ol e), $3 25
( pecan ),
$350 (oak ), Bassett Oak ,
$550., Basse!! Cherr y, $675
BunK bed complete w ith
mattresses, $175., $250 '
$275. Captain 's beds, S275
complete Baby beds, $75
Mattresses or bo&gt;&lt; springs,
full or twin, $55., form, $6.5.
and $75. Queen sets, $185. 5
dr chests , $49 Bed frames ,
$20 .
USED
refrige rators ,
Ranges,
dressers, TV's,
head·
bOards and beds Swivet
bar
s tool s ,
rocker ,
lavatory 2 counter top
refridgerators, rec liner
3 miles out Butavolle Rd
Open 9am to 8pm , Mon
lhru Fri , 9am l o Spm , Sal
«6 0322
GOOD
USE D
AP ·
PLIAIIICE S
washers,
dryers,
ref r ige rato rs,
ranges .
SK aggs
Ap ·
pllances, 191 8 Eastern
Ave , 446 7398

HOUSE. 5'h rm on Story
Run Rd. Modern. Desire
older couple. Call 3&lt;17· 7350.
VERY· NICE 3 bdr., house,
1 car garage, tota l electric ,
Located 3 miles from HMC
One child, ref. and dep.
req., 5285. per mo. Call 4.46·
3192.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

7 BDR mobile hOme, call
4.46·0508.

G E REFRIDGERATOR ·
GOOd COnd , $50. Call «6
1489
BASSE TT donette set with 6
chaors. Call 446·2706
53

Ant1ques

ATTENTION
I IM
PORTANT TO YDUI Woll
pay cash or certif•ed check
tor ant1ques and collec·
t•bles or enttre estates
Nothtng too large Also,
gu ns,· pocket watches and
coon collecto ons Call 614·
767 3167 or 557·3411 .
ATTEN TI ON
liM
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or certi f ted check
tor ant1ques and col lec
t1bles or entire estates
Nolhong too larg e. Also,
guns, pocket w•tches and
co1 n co llect•ons Ca ll 614
767 3167 or 557 34 11

54

M isc. Merchanise

COAL,
LIME ST ON E,
sand, gra11el. ca lctum
chloride, f erttltzer, dog
food , and all types of sa lt.
Excels1or Sal t Work s, Inc,
E Ma •n St , Pomeroy , 992
389 1
IN STO CK for 1mmediate
del tvery , IJart OUS SIZeS Of
pool k 1ts Do· it yourself or
let us tnstall tor you D.
Bumgardner Sa les, Inc
992 5724

Decorated Cakes, charac
ter cakes or sheet cakes
'1'12 634 2 or '1'12 2583
Whole relrog erator, gOOd
c ond , freezer on top . $60.
667 3958 .
Ridmg and lawn mower
paris Gas eng . up to 8 h p.
Vertical and horizontal.
Mostly used parts some
rotot ll ler and chain saw
parts, 4· 7 p .m . '1'12·5583.

and
FURNITURE
9S5 Second A venue
Gall opoli s, Ohoo
4563 1
614· 446· 1171

RISING STAR Kennel
Board ong Call367 0292

HUMAN E
SOCIE T Y
Adopt a homeless pet
Heal thy , shot s, wormed
Donat1ons required 992
6260, noon 7 p.m .
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
pon1es and ndtng
I essons .
Everythtng
i magtnable m horse eq utp·
ment
Bla nkets, belts,
boots, etc . English and
Western . Ruth Reeves
I 614) 698··3290

BUILD I NGS!! !
LAST
CHAN CE
AT
THESE
PRICES - All st eel cl ear
span buildmgs
(Major
Mfg )
20x24x10 '
for
$3,070 00 - 30' x48 'xl2' for
$4,120.00 - 40' X48' xl4 ' for
$5,096 .00 - 48' x72 'xl4' for
$7 ,407 00 F 0 B Factory
Call co llecl today 614·294·
2675 tot 8 p.m
40 LB Box of Wesl Virginia
Chunks, low ash, low sulfur
Foster Coal Co., 446 2783.
BURROUGHS Bookkeepin
g machine, $50 Call 446·
2342,
D
BUMGARDNER
SA LES ,
THE
POOL
PEOPLE 31711 l\loble Sum ·
mil Rd . Middleport, OhiO
992 5724 Sales, service and
supp11es.
In ground and
above ground pools
1973 PLYMOUTH Scamp
auto, A .C. Slant 6, 2 gtrls
btcycles, 2 10 ga t milk
cans, 1 hand w el l pump
3&lt;17 74.41
500 sq fl AUTHEN TIC
Oak barn s1dmo Used wm
dows, with storms and
screens . Call 446 4141 after
6p.m
MURRY Lawn mower with
Briggs and Stratton engine
Call446·0218.
5 H. P rotc tiller · used only
short season . Call 446 ·0689
BUILDII\IGSI!! Last chan·
ce at these pnces .. All stee I
c lear span buildings
(Ma;or mfg.) 20'X24'x1 0'
for $3,070 , 30'x48'xl2' for
S4, 120.. 40'x 48 'x l4 ' tor
$5 ,096
48'x72'x14' f or
$7,407. F .D. B Factory Cat I
collect toady · 614 294·2675
lol8p.m

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy T aytor at 367·
7220
DRAGONWYND
CA T ·
TERY · KENIIIEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
H •malayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Call 446 3844
after 7 p.m .

FOR SALE · saw mill · no
blace. needs new lumber
bearing mandll 1972 Dodge'
lf.o ton · needs work, SJOO. 5
front tow·away wench
S250 1974 Ford Mu•tand, 2'
large bowling machines
late evenings or early mor '
nlngs call742·3093.
Building Supplies

ALL TYPI::S of building
materialS, blocK, bricK
sewer pipes, windows, lin .'
tets, etc. Claude Winter•
Ri o Grande, 0 . Phone US '
5121 after 5pm ,
KACH· ALL PORTABLE
BLDG All sizes, 6xl0 I 0
12x40. See at 123112 Pine St.
4.46·2783 or 3 houses below'
Bowling Alley on Rl. 7, «6 .
: 279

Livestock
SEVEN · EIGHTS Ababian
Mare, Regtstered (have
the papers) 3. with colt , 388·
9713

S &amp; G Carpet Cteanmg

Business Services

Steam
cleaned
Free
estimate
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard 992
6309 or 7 42· 2211
·

CHICKENS
Call Larry
Sayre, 304 895 33 19

- . . ............
..... . . ...
.....
. . _ . '""

71

~

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

,.

Autos lor Sale

1976 Honda , 1974 Chevy,
1970 Chevelle, 1979 Caprice,
Car Realty Inc «6·7118

SEWING CLASSES

Starling Soon
Call tor Registra t i on

Business-Farms - Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, prolil and loss statements, all
federa l and slate form s.

1974 MUSTAN G II GHIA · 6
cyt., 4 spd ,, loaded w tlh e•
tras Good gas mileage .
$1895. Call 4.46 0515 after
s ·oo .

992-5320

For all
needs.

618 E . Main

Pomeroy, Oh ,

your

sewing

THE
SEWING CENTER

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION
992·3795
4-2 I f

1973 OLDS Omega , $950 .
1978 Chevy Blazer , $3,950 .
Call245·9503 after 5.
1974 MUSTANG
6, auto., vinyl
am·fm stereo,
maKe olfer . Call

Middleport, 0 .

c-.,..1

-4·19· lmo .

POMEROY,O.
992·621 s or
992 ·7314
1·28 I mo

Ptcking up a piano in your
area . L.ookmg for a respon ·
Sible party to take over
payments . Call c redtt
manager collect 6141 ··592 ·
5122
Wurl ttlr organ, 9 In struments, 5 rythms , per·
cuss1on, casset te recorder·
player
Call
992 ·7858
even1ngs .

61

Farm EqUtpment

Brush Hog Good
cond $200 742 3117 after 5.
Lllwn tra ctor, 154 In
I ernat tonal Lowboy , 60 tnch
mower, A ·1 condit1on . Call
742· 2211 before 5 and 985·
4338 after 5 and ask for
03\Jid .
ECHO CHAt N SAWS ,
hydraulic wood splitters,
saw chain, bars, and all
wood cutti ng supplies
Charles McKean , Fairtoeld
Centenary Road, 446·9442
N Ford Tractor, 3pt hitch,
double plows. Call4.46 4635.
STEEL
BUILDII\I GS!!
Must Sell!
Immediat e
Delivery! 40'x66 'x l4', I
24' x15' Door Lots of Extras.
Other sizes avaoalable w 1lh
factory rebates!
Call
colleci61N63 1334.

1978 Otds Cu tlass Suprem e.
A c , power sea ts, am·fm,
selltras
992 ·6215
ex
Vtnyl top Prt ce d to

T·•hirts

Rea • .nable Prtces

Howard
., 2862
949 _2160
1. 22-ffc
I

BOB'S
- vmyls1dmg
~ Gutter work
- Soffit
- Garages
- Carports
- Room additions

Trucks for Sale

Call Aller 5 P . M.

1979 Ford Pockup, 6ft bed,
loaded w ith extras . 4.46
1552 . Call ater 5 p.m

992·6323
4 27 pd .

lnternattonal Tn ·a&gt;&lt;el
Gas eng 19 fl dump Bed
needs some work Good old
truck, no rust S3,200 4· 7
p m 992-5583

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1979 Ford Pockup TrucK for
sale Seen by appotntment
'1'12 7310
1978 Ford V ·8 Pickup
Tru ck Heavv duty springs
for pullmg ca m per Good
cond $3,800 949 2042

Call for Free Stdtng
Esttmate, 949·2801 or
949 ·2860. No Sunday
calls.
5· 11 mo

1977 Chevrol et P1ckup , 6
cyt , 3 speed Good gas
m1 lea ge 992 5636 after 5

1965 Chevy
Halt to n
Pickup, 6 cyl 1 standard
sh ofl, runs good. M ake good
work tru ck 985 4346 .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

1S

1978 Glaslron 154 fast boat
w 90 h p. M ercury motor,
w trim and t i lt Mercury
Thruster t ro lling motor,
drive on trailer 9419 2869 or
992 6305

1978 CHEVROLET Diese l ·
B1g George, 31 ,000 miles ,
$5 ,500 Call4.46 6672

"

62 .

1971 GMC 3/• T t r uck, 4
whl dr . Hydraulic wOOd
splitter Two chain saws, 16
inch bar . Call446 7145

63

vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1979 Ford 150 4x4, auto ,
p s , p b , topper Pos1tive
t ractton front and r ea r 985
4339
79 CUSTOMIZED Dodge
Max t Van PS, PB, AM·F M
8 track stereo, air, 1 owner
10,000 miles $10,500 388 ·

BIOS.
74

Motorcycles

1976 KAWASAK I 400, gOOd
shape, SBOO Call446·6578.
HONDA TRA IL · 90, $225
Call379 2430.
1978 XL·250 HONDA motor
cycle Must se ll Call 446

PIG S for sa le 843·4734.
H 3. N Da v old or started
leghorn pullets, bOth floor
or cage grown available.
Poultry
Hou si ng
and
Automation ,
M odern
Pouttry,399
w . M ai n,
Pomeroy . Phone 992· 2164
Young Roosters for sale
Sl.OO Catt985·4288
HOLSTE IN bull
S75 . Call256·6315

calvos,

PEIIIDLETOI\I REBUILT
BATTERY . $20. plus tax
and old battery We buy old
batteries. Repair batteries
Call 388·8596

Boa!$ and
Motors for Sale

1978 CHECKMATE U·Mate
11 ski boat
150 H P.
Evtnrude motor tow tow
drive on trailer
Price
$6,500. Ca ll 384 3794 after 5
pm .
1972 17 fl TR I· HUL L In·
board-outboard , 4 cyt .
Chevy, M ercury power
tr im, full canvas, moori ng
co ver and tr r Reasonable
Ca ll4.46·7438 .
Checkmate U mate II
.5"i boat 150 h p Evenrude
t1totor. Two low dr ive on
t ra il er . $6,500 38.ct ·379.4 af ·
ter 5 p.m .
1 97~

HAVE YOUR

GOLf
LESSONS

ENGINE
STEAM
CLEANED
'12.00

Family Plan
Available

Tri-County
General Welding

John Teaford
Phone :

Salem Twp. Rd. 110
Dexter, Ohio 4572'
Bilf Eskew, Ph. 742-24S.
Your Place or Mine
5·9 1 mo

77

( 614) 985·3961
4 14 1 m o

SAND AND PAINT · minor
bodY repair, $159. Van
trucks, two tones change of
color extra but reasonable .
Hammonds Bodv Shop, 221
Mill 51 , Thurman. OH . Call
245·9371 or 379· 2306

78

7586

1978 VOLKSWAGEN Cam·
per · exc. cond., Call 256·
6758.

Homfl
lmprovem1nts

PARTS for 1974, 2 dr , Ford
2096 .
MavericK .
And Chevy
en)l if le 327, complete, set of
air..- shocks for Camara.
THEISS INSULATION, In·
Call 4.46·4364.
-Sulmaster foam Insulation.
New homes, otd hOmes,
co mmercial structures .
ONE 6'1' fl , one B fl . lac·
For tree estimates call 446·
tory t r uck topper Call 245
1971 .
5050.

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 hr. wrecker
service All types of repa ir .
Upper Rl 7 Call 4.46·2445
days and «6·4792 nights .

- FRONT END
AUGNMENlS
by
Randy
Car·
penler,
factory
trained
frontend
alignment
spe ciallJNDMARK

SERVICE STAroN
Ca II I 614) 992·9932
• Pomer uy, 0.

Free Estimates

complng
Equipment

FOR BEST In Corpel
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Sleamway. Call 614·446·

1972 Chevy Monte Carl o
body parts. Also 350 eng. w
4 barrel and auto. transm isslon After S Man ·
Frt , week ends anyttme
992 ·2779

Roofing,
siding,
gutter,
buill-up
roof
and
home
repair.

388-9759

Fl BER GLASS trucK lop·
per wolh &gt;II ding window lor
6'1' ft F Ieels ide truck $400
Call446 3139 alter 5 p.m .

II
USED tires, all sizes
Cheshire Ashland. Call 367

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

Auto Repair

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
we buy and sell rad talors,
ba tter ies, etc Call4.46·7717

77

Ltvestock

14 month old pole Hereford
bull 992-7 458.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

3664.

75

Real Estate Loans
13% lnterest-30 Yrs.
PARK FINANCIAL
VA &amp; VA Automatic
Loans, No Down Pay ment. Federal Housing
Loans, 3% down on
$2S,OOO ; 5% down on
balance. FHA 265 Substdy Program. FHA 245
Gradual Payment Mort.
Open M · W·F 9 :00 to I · 00
Other Times
By Appointment
Office 992·7544
Home 992-6191
107 Sycamore St.
Pomero , OH .

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

p.m

Gas tnboard outboard
m otor, S175 For more in ·
formatton 742 23 15

GOLD
AI\ID
SILVER
COINS OF THE WORLD
RINGS ,
JEWELRY ,
STERLING SILVER AND
MISC IT E MS PAYING
RECORD
HIGH ,
HIGHEST UP· TO DAT E
PRICES CONTACT ED
BURK ETT
BARBER
SHOP , Ml DDLEPORT,
OHIO, OR CALL '1'12 3476

31711 Noble summ11 Rd.
Middleport, Ohio
992·5724
Sales, servtce and sup-Plies. In ground and
above ground pools.
S I tfc

Vinyl and Aluminum :
Siding

1976 FORD 1h ton pocK up .
Short bed, low m ileage, ex ·
cellent cond tT ton . $2,895 .
Ca ll446·0515

OLD COINS, pockel wat·
ches, class nngs, wedding
bands , dta monds Gold or
so lver Call J A , Wam sley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coon Shop, Athens, OH . 592·

THE POOl PEOPLE

69

JOHN DEERE tractor 40,
M F trac tor, 150, Ford
tractor 8000, M .F . bater No.
12, bush cutler , Aft, 5 fl , 6
fl., three point dtsks, plows,
grader blades , 6 and 7 ff
Cultt\'ator , J pomt, wheel
disks , 12 and 8 ft , 2 lOS
wh1te tractor .

ANTIQUES ,
FUR ·
NITURE , glass, china,
anyth1ng See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, an tt ques, 26 N
2nd, Modd leport, OH '1'12
3161

D. BUMGARDNER
SALES

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

1978 Ca mar a, 20,000 miles,
ex t ras, excellent cond1t1on
1976 Chevy Monza , 27 motes
per gallon $1800 00 Call
9'12· 7060

73

novelty

All types of roofing, new
and repatr, gutters ,
downspouts, commer
Ctal &amp; r es •denttal .
949 ·2160 Pomeroy
797· 2432 Athens
Tom Hoskms or
Gerald Clark
21 years expenence. All
work guaranteed.
Free Estimate
4·24 1 m o

rI~==========+======~~~~j~:;:;;;;~;;::~

1977 Cordoba , v1ny l top,
a.c, p.s., p.b, crutse con
trot, rear w 1ndow defogger,
leather seats $1,800 92
3886

12

and

or tndtviduals .
Shirts S4.00 Each
"We pr~nt ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph. 614·949· 2358
Evenings &amp; Weekends
5·8·1 mo

FrP~ Est 1mates

1974 Interna tional V·B wi th
16 foot van bo x and
hydrauloc toft $3700 00. Call
9'12·6173 between 10 and 4

CHIP WOOD . Poles max
d •ameter 10" on largest
end $12 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Deltv~ red
to Ohoo Patte! Co , Rt 2,
Pomer oy 992 ·2689

4141mo.

shirts for potiticeans,
ball teams, businesses

1967 MASSEY FERGUSON
135, gas, very gOOd cond,
1380 hour&gt;, $4150 Call 256·
6475 ,

Wanted to Buy

Rutland, 0.
Ph, 742· 2455

exc.~f~~~~~~~~~~r~~~~~~i~illr~~=~~~~~=l

1974 Ford Tonne Take
over pa yments. J •m 's Gulf
Statton , Rt 7 and 33 Ask
for Bill W1ll1am s

Musical
Instruments

MORRIS

cond , $2,600, Call 245 5130
after
5 p m39,ooo miles,
dr sedan,

AKC Reg long ha.red mat e
Daschund , champion s~red ,
Ca II 446· 194-4

-

Frank Rose Const. Co.
Remodeling repa~r , new
construc_tion, all fvpes .
Free esttmates , all work
lu".y
guaranteed .
ReSidential, commer ~
cial, industrial ..&amp;. Mm ::.'
g, -icaT work.
MSHA Cert .
446·4627

GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT
1nsutated vtnyl siding,
aluminum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
windows Free estimates .
Call3&lt;!7·0209 day or night.
PAINTING • Residential
and commercial. Interior
and exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free esllmotes. 17
yrs. exp. .;,llh reference•
call3&lt;!7·n84 or 3&lt;17·7160.
ALL TYPES ot Corpentry
work, new home bldg . or
remodeling, call446·2910.
P.O. I NTING Interior ond ex·
ter lor, free estimates, c::all
4.46··3344

2·14 lfc

81

Home
Improvements

MEADES roofing and
$1&gt;0Utlno, home remodeling
and 5ldl ng, free estimates,
10 year&gt; local experience
catt388·9869 .
STUCCO · pla•lering ,
pla&gt;ter repa ir , texture
ceilings, free estimates,
call256·1182.
JIM MARCUM Rooting
•pouting and $ldlng 30
year&gt; eKpertence . Free
estimate•
Remodeling
Caii388·98S7 .
BILL'S CONCRETE SER
VICE
Driveways, walks, patios,
porche$, basements and
garages. Free eslimates,
call388·9868 · Vonlon, OH
R McKEE 3. COMPANY · .
Blacktop,
drtvewoys,
parking lol$, patching,
seatcoating,
concrete
sidewalks Free estimates,
25 years experience. Call
797·2648. 21 Converse St.,
Chouncey, OH ,
LAIR COI\IST. · Block,
brick , fireplaces , new
nomes, remodeling, call
379-2123.
PAINTING · lnlerlor ond
exterior, free estimates in
Galltpoll• area, reasonable
rates. Call Mark White,

245-5050.

CABINETS&amp; VANITIES
Most wOOd product!, WOOd
Shop, 101
Court St .,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Call
4.46·2572.

R.M .
ROOFING
&amp;
SPOUTING .
Home
remodeling, •ldlng. Free
estimate•. phone 388·9039
or 388·9642 .

HOUSE AND TRAILER
ro:&gt;f repetr, pa inting, tree
e$llmates Call 446· 1562.

REMODELIIIIG · Palnllng,
carpenter work. room ad·
dillon•. Coll675· 2521.

&amp;1

Home
lm rove ments

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
4.46 4208

DENNY
CHAIN liNK FENCE
FREE ESTIM ATES

Ken Soles

All types of roof1ng, new
repa1r, gutters &amp;
down spouts. Commer
cial residential.
9:49· 2160 Pomeroy Area
797 ·2432 Athens Area
Tom Hasktns or
Gerald Clark
21 years e)( pertence, all
work guaranteed. Free
est1mates .

&amp;

Home
1mproveme'!_t s

do remodel 1ng ,
root1ng, patnt10g , plumbtng
and elect Free es t1mates
Cal l Charles Sinclair , 985
4121
pa•nt.ng and trim
work Barn pa1nting Free
est1mates
M •nor roof
repair. 992·3627
Root

A DVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER 3. DOOR , INC
Overhead Garage Doors,
Electrtc Door Operators,
Continuous no· leak gut
tering
Day · 698·8205 · N oght

R1oGrande
VINTON CEMEI\IT
FLOOR INC
Bo x 89, Btdwell , Oh ,
388-9877. s tdewa lks,
drt veways,
ba sements, steps, etc. In
sulatton, r estd ent1al
or
comm erc tal.
Som e remod elmg

BILL'S
Home Improvements
Nu-Pr.me Replacement
Window s Storm Wtn·
dows &amp; Doors. Pat1o
Cov ers ,
Carports .
Mob1l e
Home
Ac cessone s.
Fr ee
es ttmates.
691 Mtller Dnve 446· 2642

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

81

Will

ROOFING, Guttering and
remodeling. William Mit
chell , 388·8507

241-9113

LEO

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1975 TOYOTA
less than
book, 1 owner, good con·
dolton . Call 675 2927.

1978 Camara, st lver w·
black intenor, 45,000 mt ,
a c, p b , p.s., best of f er
992 6330 after 6 p m

S7

eHOWARD
ROTOVATOR
eV · CHlSEL
PLOW

Gutter work , down
spou t s, some c:oncrete
wort. ,
walks
and
drivewa ys.
(FREE ESTIMATES)

II Gh oa, V ·
roo f , a.c.,
p.s., p.b .,
«6 7739.

BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS.
Boarding
and
groomong . AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446 4191

china

DINETTE SET
ant oque
tove seat and cha ir , Ca tI
4.46·0508

63

1977 FORD L TO Landau, 4
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
I ndoor·outdoor
facilittes .
Also AKC Reg Dober ·
mans. Call446·7795 .

6462

OLD HAR I LAND
Call245·5050

---

a nd

5 Ft

55

Supports Your
Posture Zon e
Try !he Posture II

--Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KE NNEL S
Boarding, all breeds Clean
I ndoor outdoor
facilittes .
Also
AKC
reg 1stered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

Chocolate
Sa te
All
chocolate in stock $1 30 per
pound whtle 11 lasts at
Carousel Confectionary ,
Moddleport

"OR LEASE
4800 Sqt..ar e F ee t, nex t
door Bob Evans Steak
Hot..se. 800 sq. ft off•ce,
4 , 000
warehot..se
1~ storage, garage or any
other comm erc tallJ se
Call Ik e Wts eman
446·3643
The Wt scman Agencv

S6

LIV II\IG ROOM SU ITE and
electnc furnace Call 256
6058

HOUSE tn t he coun try with
f1re pla ce or stove
3
children and 3 outs 1de pets
Call 446 3072

UNF modern 2 bdr apart
ment overlook mg the park
$160 per month refer en
ces Please call446 1819

Approximately LOOO ft . of
rough cut walnut lumber,
aged 742 3117 after 5

POODLE
GROOMING
J udy Taylor 614 367 7220

Potted tomato plants An
drew Cross, Letart Falls,
Oh .

For Lease

sS -· a-U,idul SU tifs -

MAY TAG wringer washer
Call 3&lt;17 71 87

WAN T TO RE NT l or 2
bdr apart ., pr 1vate, furn ,
w1thin 5 m tle radius of
Ga ll opolo s Call446 2342 and
Ask for Mark

.,

8x50 T RAILER 3 Bdr. par
tially furn $2800. Call 388
9792

H -ousehOidGOQd-, 16 CU B tC upright freezer,
595, G.E auto. washer, 595
Harvest gold gas ra nge,
;95. Re cond . Maytag
ringer washer. $95 36 in
electric range, sas . RCA
color TV , S85 , AVA 30 in
electric range, $95. SKaggs
Applillnce, 4A6·7398

.

RE NTER ' S aSSI Stance for
Senter C1t1zens m VIllage
Manor apts Call '1'12 7787
SLEEPIN G rooms, and
l 1g ht housekeep. ng apart
ment Park Centra l Hot el.

1969 K1rk.wood mobile
home 12&gt;&lt;60, two bedroom,
unfurn1 shed, le1rge liVIng
room and d101 ng room At
Kanauga $3200 00 Call 304
882 2466

Home
I m rovements

11

SWIMLAND
150 Third Ave.
IS NOW OPEN
10 am til 5 pm
Monday thru
Saturday
''TABEX CHEMICAlS"
PHONE 446-7887

It

Home
I m rovements

CARPENTER WORK
com pl ete remodelmg by AI
Tromm, 742 2328 Referen·
ces

Home
Improvements _
WALL PAPERING and
pamtmg 742 2328
Plumbi n9-

82

- ~_H~a tlng

Rooftng , Sldtng, room ad
dlttons.all type s of general
repa1rs , 25 vears ex·
per •ence 992 3406.
Carpenter work, cetling,
floors. doos. panel•ng 992·
2759

Plumbmg

82

QUAL IT Y
MAIN
TENANCE
Electncat,
plumbing, heat1ng , and a1 r
conditton1ng Call 388 9698

STANDARD
Plumbing Heating
215 Thord Ave , 446·3782

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 4.46 2735

GEORGE 'S ROOFING
Roofmg, Sldtng, gutter,
bulld ·up roof , home
repatr.
Free Esttmafes
388-9759

81

Home
I mprovements

Dozer, backhoe and tren
cher Sepllc syslems, com
pl etc serv1ces Hourly or
cont ra ct
Eng1neer1ng,
layout and const ruct10n
8111 Pull lOS 992 2478

s3.00 AND UP
10 to S Saturday
1 lo 5 on Sunday

Reese Trenching
&amp; Backhoe Service

ffi

w m

i

Ii
~

•••J,to

HersheL
9:30 Q I]) t10J THE JEFFER·
SONS L1some
onel wanoncets t o
keep
in ·a·llfet lme news from
Geo rg e end Lo utse, but
when they acci dentally
ftnd out, theyrespon dw1th
more

anger

than

84

CIJ

"·

·:

J~;£:T~:;~::tYoor"

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, trans, all smaJJ
appliances . Lawn mower.
l\lexl to Slate Highway
Garage on Roule 7, 98.53825
85

Gener•l Hauling

WILL HAUL limestone and
gra vel. Also, lime hauling
and spr eading Leo Morns
TrucKong Phone 742·2455
LIMESTONE, gravel ond
sand All sizes At Richards
and Son , Upper Rtver Rd.,
Gallipol iS, Ohio. Call .«6·

77 65
JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery Call 256·
9368 anytime .
V.E. FILLI NGER Water
Delivery Service. Call 379·'
2124.
86

M . H. Repair

BILL' S MOBILE HOMES
and Home Im provements.
Free est1mates. Call 446·
2642.
Upholstery

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Ftnest quality at lowest
posstble prices. Call
now tor tree estimate.
com IT)erc1al or residentiaL
256·1562

r---------------------~--------------------~---------------------L-------------------­

SUNDAY PUZZLER

JOY

KENNETH

COPELAND

ffi THEVALIANTYEARS

Wtns ton Churchill
Q CIJ 1m TRAPPER
JOHN M.D . The remote
world ofpolll lc&amp;l terronsm
suddenly ts not so remote
to Trapper when he fmds
h1m se lf 1n a fnghtenmg
pred1cament. force d to
make a cho1ce between
death for a pat•ent or hts
ex-w11e,
Melame
l8_epeat , 60 mms)
Cll FIRING LINE ' All ard
Lowenatemon Ftrmolme
A Retr ospective· Host
W1ll1am F Buckley, Jr.
ITIJ OVER EASY 'Four
Alone The Older Wom en
m Amenca· Hos t Hugh
Downs v•s•ls w1th lour
women to talk about the1r
•nd1vtdual ways of makmo
1t 1n a society whi ch has
generally not prepared for
the
elderly ,
and
apecif tcally no t fo r th e
older woman (60 mms )
10: 15 ffi MOVIE~DRAMA)" 'Ia
" Gauntlet" 1977
10:30 (I) RUFF HOUSE Gue ol
Famous tnallawyer , Mel·
Vtn Beth
11 :00 (J)0 CIJI1lQ CIJ®J(U)
C!) NEWS
(]) NEWSIGHT
ffi OPEN UP
I])
NON·FICTIDN
TELEVISION 'On Com
pany Bus mess' Part I of a
three part documentary
wh1ch explores Amertcan
tore tgn po liCY and th e
ways in wh1c h 11 has been
Influen ced over the last 30
years by the C I A (60
mms)
(ll) WHO REMEMBERS
MAMA? A docum en tary
ex.plormg the econom1 c
and emotional devas ta·
lion expenenced by
mtddle aged women wh o
lose thetr role as
homemakers due to
d1vorce (60 mtns )
11 : 15 CIJ ABC NEWS
11) PMAPULSE
®J CBS NEWS
11 ,30 (J) OMOVIE ·(DRAMA)
•• \AI "The Gay Lady"
1944
(])
THE KING IS
COMING
(j) BENNY HILL SHOW
I1J WRESTLING
Q
CIJ
MOVIE
·(MYSTERY)' " Murder
Motel" HH5
1m MOVIE ·(WESTERN)
•• " 100 Rlflea" 1969
(U) Q) ABC NEWS
11:45 W C!l PTLCLUB· TALK
AND VARIETY
12:00 (j) THREE ' S A CROWD
12. 1S ffi MOVIE ~COMEDYI
" !,', " An Almost Perfect
Aflolr" 1979
I1J NEWS
1:00 (I) MOVIE ·(MYSTERY !
••., " Paranoiac" 1963
1:45 il2) Q) NEWS
2:50 ® MOVIE ·(SCIENCE
FICTIONI' 'Ia " Agenllor
Harm " 1966
4 :40 CIJ UNTOUCHABLES

~

IIJ.

SEWING
MACHINE
Repatrs,
service,
all
makes. 992 ·2284.
The
Fabr1c Shop , Pomero';' .
Authonzed Singer Sale.s
and Service We sharJMtn
SCISSOrS

E lect rical
&amp; Refngerat 10n

D DAY
RE FRIDGERATION
Res•den t •al, commerc1al,
hea t •ng cooling, electr1cal
serv1ce Ca l l 388 8274 , or
388 9'163

(Bepeet)

10:00

Electrical
&amp; Retrigeratton

TR IS TATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Galtopolts.
446 7833 or 446·1833

Nurs ery m en
D esi gn e r
Contractor

Sunday Television
show Will feature Mathew
(]) THE OLD WEST
Sa ad Muhammad defend·
@THE ISSUE
•no h1s WB C Light Heavy·
(ll) OHIO JOURNAL
MORNING
we tght Champ1onah1p
12,30 (J) 0 11) MEET THE
5:30 (j) CATHOLIC MASS
aga1nst loula Pergaud
PRESS
6:00 ffi
CHRISTOPHER
{iOmma)
CIJ
ORAL
ROBERTS
CLDSE·UP
liJ
SPORTSWORLD
CIJ DIRECTIONS
CIJ
BETWEEN .THE
Coverage of the Interns·
Q
CIJ
WILD
KINGDOM
LINES
tiona! Tra ck and F1eld
i!ID FACE THE NATION
®) AMERICAN PROB·
Meet at the campus of
CID
NOVA
'TheGreenMa·
LEMS
AND
UCLA (90 mlns )
ch1
ne'
W1ththehelpofnew
l;!:fALLENGES
5:00 (]) WIDE WORLD OF
ac•ent1f1c
research
and
6:30 W I I CHRISTOPHER
TRUTH
t1me lapse photograph y,
~OSEUP
CIJ UNTOUCHABLES
the compleJut 1es and
CIJ KOINONIA
(ll)
ELECTRIC
myatenes of the plant
(I) A BETTER WAY
COMPANY
world
are
exammed
(60
; TREEHOUSE CLUB
5·30 (]) OLD TIME GOSPEL
min~
7:00
0 THIS IS THE LIFE
HOUR
il2)Q)
KIDS
ARE
PEOPLE
ffi FORD PHILPOT
ITIJ GROUCHO
ffi
TERRY 1·.00 l2J
IQOO
AT ISSUE
COLE·WHITAKER
EVENING
SPECIAL
Q C1J OLD TIME GQ.
CIJ
D. JAMES KENNEDY
6:00
Cll
OQ
(])@j NEWS
SPELHOUR
CII AWARE
ffi
CHAMPIONSHIP
1m URBAN LEAGUE
CD
PROGRAM
WRESTLING
il2)
CD
ACTION
UNANNOUNCED
CII ABC NEWS
NEWSMAKER
Q CIJ®) SPORTS SPEC·
I1J POP GOES THE
7:30 (J) 0 T .V. CHAPEL
TACULAR t) Strongeol
COUNTRY
ffi DAWSONMEMORIAL
Man in Foo tball. featurmg
I])
BILL MOYERS'
CHURCH
BAPTIST
8 NFL players competmg
JOURNAL
SERVICE
1n power events 2) FE!
(ll) SESAME STREET
IT IS WRITTEN
World Cup EQueetnan
(i}) Q)
TRI·STATE
EDDIE SAUNDERS
Champtonshtpa (At press
TODAY
AND
JIMMY SWAGGART
t1me , theexactttme ol th1s
TOMORROW
1m OLD TIME GOSPEL
broadc ast
wa s
not
6:30 ClJ 0 11J NBC NEWS
HOUR
determmed)
CIJ FOCUS ON THE
il2) Gl BIBLE ANSWERS
I]) MOVIE -(COMEDY)
FAMILY
8:00 (J) 0 MORMON CHOIR
••• " The Prlncell And
ffi
MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE)
CIJ THE LESSON
The Plrate 11 194•
••111
" Street Killing"
II&gt; THREE STOOGES 1:30 @
THIS WEEK IN
1976
AND FRIENDS
BASEBALL
CII NEWS
CII
GRACE
CIJ
AMERICA'S ATH·
Q CIJ®J CBS NEWS
C_ATHEDRAL
LETES 1980 . Senes
(U) Iii ABC NEWS
11.iJ CIJ
DAY OF
devoted to examtnmg and 7:00 (]] 0 11) DISNEY'S
DISCOVERY
revealing the best ath ·
WONDERFUL WORLD
I]) (ll)
SESAME
letes who were to repre ·
'Goofy Takes A Holiday
STREET
se nt the Umted States st
Gooty daydreams hte wa y
il2) II) EVANGELISTIC
the Olympics to be held m •
around the worl d tn one
QUTREACH
Moscow
htlanoua adventure after
8:30 (J)I I ORAL ROBERTS
(ll) HOCKING VALLEY
another, m c ludm~ a bull
(]) CHAPEL HOUR
BLUEGRASS
f1ghttn Mex1co, attgerhunt
CII CONTACT
G}) C!) HI-Q
m lndta and a game 1n the
11) OPEN BIBLE
2 00 11J 0 TONY BROWN
World Serlea (60 mina)
Q CIJ REV. LEONARD
CIJ
WDRLO
OF
(]) JIMMY SWAGGART
REPASS
PENTECOST
@ NASHVILLE ON THE
®) JAMES ROBISON
CIJ ON DECK CIRCLE
ROAD
il2&gt; Q)
LOWER
11) INSIGHT
I]) (U) Iii ABC MOVIE
LIGHTHOUSE
(ll) ANTIQUES
SPECIAL 'The Return 0 1
8.00 (J) 8
SINGING
ACTION
TheK 1 ~ 1980
JUBLIEE
NEWSMAKER
Q CIJ ttOJ BOMINUTES
IIJ ROBERT SCHULLER 2 15 @
BASEBALL Atlanta
® WAR AND PEACE
CIJ LOSTIN SPACE
Braves
vs
Houston
ITIJ FRENCH CHEF
CII REX HUMBARD
Aatros
7·30 ® PORTER WAGONER
I1J ABETTER WAY
2:30 (J) 0 CD BYRON NEL·
SHOW Guests l 1ttle
Q
C1J
CHRISTIAN
SON GOLF CLASSIC
Oav1d
Wtlkms, Kathy
CENTER
(]) THE DEAF HEAR
t:Jl'.der
STUDIO SEE
CIJ(j2)Q) TOURNAMENT
IJ1J WALL $TREETWEEK
ORAL ROBERTS
QJ CHAMPIONS
The Tape Tells Al l' Guest
MISTER ROGERS
(ll) HERE'S TO YOUR
Stan Wetnate1n, te chmcal
fl1&gt; Q)
REV. JIM
HEALTH
analyst
Host
loUis
FRANKLIN
3:00 (]) AT HOME WITH THE
Ruk_!Yser
8:30 11) FAITH FOR TODAY
BIBI.E
B.OO ill O 11J CHI Po Jon end
IIJ CIJ
ROBERT
0 CIJ®J NBA BASKET·
Panch are tatled tor conSCHULLER
BALL CHAMPIONSHIP
tempt of court when they
()) BIG BLUE MARBLE
GAME At press lime. the
ref use to 1dent1fy a pot1ce
i!ID !TIS WRITTEN
exact 11me and s1te of the
mformanl dunngthet nal of
SAME STREET
game
were
not
a mobster (Repeat, 60
REV. A.A. WEST
determtned
mma.)
10:00
REX HUMBARD
CIJ GREAT PERFDR·
(]) REX HUMBARD
,
CIJ CHANGED LIVES
MANCES ' When Hell
ffi
MOVIE
([).
LEAVE IT TO
Freezes Over , I'll Skate'
~SCIENCE-FICTION)•••
BEAVER
Vmnette Carroll 's mus• cal
"Moonraker 11 1979
CIJ KIDS ARE PEOPLE
produclton paystnbute to
® MOVIE ·(COMEDY)
TOO
black poetry and song,
•• % ''Ghoat and Mr.
11) GOSPEL SINGING
from Gospel to Disco and
Chicken " 1866
BILEE
from slave quarter aer·
Q C1J 1m
ARCHIE
SESAME STREET
mons to conte mp orary
BUNKER' S
PLACE
0
MOVIE ~DRAMA) "
!t!.tcs (60 mms)
Arch1e
suffers
a
double·
11
Ttll Them Willie Boy II
U.ll MYSTERY I 'Sergeant
edged shock ··flrs t M•ke,
Here " 1K9
Cr1bb' AScotlandYardde
Glona and grandson Joey
ilZl Q)
JIMMY
!active 1s assigned to
appear unexpected ly on
f&gt;WAGGART
solve some or the moat
h1a doorstep for a hohday
10:30 CIJ
SPIRITUAL
baffling cr1mes of V1 ctor·
reumon and than he d1 a
AWAKENING
1an England (60mtns.)
covers why (Repeat, 60
([) MOVIE -{MUSICAL) 3:30 CIJ MISSIONARIES IN
mma)
" A Star It Born"
ACTION
(fi)
ODYSSEY
®
1854
I!J TIME WAS .. 19705
·o o~ka · s B1g Moka ' Th1s
ERNEST
Ill Cll
Heo·a documentary aer·
program focuses on Ong
ANGLEY
tea concludes th1s month
ka , aNewGumaan ,andhis
(fi) ZOQM
with a look at the197o·a, a
organ•zat1on ol a huge
HUMAN
t1:00 I])
•
deca de wh1ch w•tneaaed
moka a ceremoma l pre ·
DIMENSIONS
such memorab le events
eenlat1on of g1tts used to
INTOUCH
as Wa tergate contmued
promote one's soctal and
REXHUMBARD
U S. mvolvement In V10t ·
political s1and1ng (60
ONCE UPON A CLAS·
nam. the mvaston of Cam ·
ffi iOS)
SIC 'Carrie's War' Carne
bodla, the celebra tion of 9:00 ffi 700 CLUB
and N1ck leave for Scot ·
Amenca 's btcenlenn lal .
C1J 11) THE BIG EVENT
land to join their mother
the raptd deve lopment of
' Capr1corn One' 1978
(ll)
ELECTRIC
hand computers, Joggmg ,
Stars Elliott Gould ,
COMPANY
and disco fever 0 1ck
James Brolin
(U) ID
REV. HENRY
Cave tt hosts
0 CIJ @&gt; AL CE Carroe
lj!.HAN
4 :00 CIJ HE LIVES
S~a rp l~s 1J8YS a vtSit to
BILL DANCE'S
11:30 (iJ 8
(ll) UPSTAIRS, DOWN·
he1 son tvtel .andMelpaya
STAIRS 'G uest ol Honor'
QUTDOORS
her b.'\c k by getttng a
C1J il2) ID ANIMALS,
King Ed'tfard VII accepts
psychosomatic
back·
ANIMALS, ANIMALS
an invitat ion to d1ne wilh
ach&amp;Jwhen she tuea to
IIJ CIJ FACE THE
the Bellamys . (60 m1ns )
take ove r th e d1ner s k1t·
NATION
chen (Repeat)
4:30 (J)
0
MOVIE
()) WORLD OF THE SEA
ll) (ll) MASTERPIECE
·(WESTERN)" " Lock,
(fi) BIG BLU! MARBLE
THEATRE 'M y Son . My
Stock and Barrel" 1i70
Son ' Maeve becomes th e
I])
THINK ABOUT
AFTERNOON
toast ot London w11h
TOMORROW
l1V18'S hit song (60
12:00
AT ISSUE
CiJ MOVIE -(DRAMA) 0 "
OF
ffi
TIME
SUNDAY NfGHT
D!LIVERANC!
MOVIE · An gel On My
II&gt; II}) ID ISSUE S AND
Shoulder 19SO Stars
ANSW!RS
(t} il2) Gl WIDE WORLD
Peter Strauss . Barb&lt;Ha
I1J THISIS THE LIFE
OF SPORTS Toda(s
D ()) VIEWPOINT

84

87

.u6-3100

MAY 11,1980

METAL CULVERTS
6"
thru 48" 1n stock 12", $5 10
fl, 18", $7.15 II., 24" , $9 85
ft , also 4" and 6" plastic
corrogated co1 1 pipe, 4"
and 6" schedule 40 PVC
ptpes and s1nks
Call
collect, Jackson , OH 286·
5930 Ron Evans BacKhoe,
located 3 mls south on Sf
Rt 93 toward OaK Holt

L•mestone for dr.veways.
Pomeroy Mason area 367·
7101

Holly, junipers, yews , red cedar' &amp;
cypress mulch, landsca!)e leftovers .

( Gallta Collnfy
Certotoed)
I~""'' " Beds, Wafer and
Ltnes , Electnc
IL'""''• Pole B1.1ildlngs.

E xcavattng

83

WE DO BACKHOE and
dozer work. Call446 4916

AZALEAS
.....................
~5. 95
Pink&amp;Red

35 Court St
Ga ll tpolls, Oh1o
Call446 ·3896
or -146-JOB O

Amana centralatr con
d 1t10n1ng un1t. 2.4,000 BTU
Pr1ced at $100 00 Phone
992 2522

WA TER WELL Drollong
and cleaning Pumps sold
and mstalled , Call W T
Grant, «6 8508

LANDSCAPE
MATERIAL SALE

Fumiture Stripping
and Refinishing

Plumbing

&amp; Heati:.:.
ng
. __ _

CARTER'S PL UMBING
AND HEAT I NG
Cor Fourth and P1ne
Phone 4-46 3888 or 446 · «77

Hom e
Improvements

---

62

&amp; Heat!.!!.i_

GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Ptumbtng
Heatmg
Atr
condtfion.ng . 300 Fourth
Ave Ph. 446 1637

81

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All typ es home 1m ·
provement s - Roofmg
gutters - spouts - con crete work . Ph. 367·0427,
367·0194 , 367·0141. Free
esttmates.

DAVISON
DEVELOPM ENT
Excavatton Servtces.
Dump truck , dozer,
backhoe
Caii446·4SJ7

81

W~

NOilOlOS

ACROSS
1 Clutch
6 Algenan
seaport
10 Orrental
nurse
14 Of a gram
19 Retrea t
2 1 Leander 's
love
22 Not one
23 Branched
24 Manage
26 Fa 1ntest
28 Bests
29 Yellow
ocher
30 Fashoon
32 Maned ones
33 Sh1p channels
34 Posed
35 Cut
37 Baseball
team
39 Acorn, e g
40 Feltnes
41 S1amese
COinS
42 Morays
44 Neater
46 Transac t ton
47 Liberate
48 Regulalton
50 Debt cerltlt·
cafe
52 Coupl e
53 Ra1lroad
(abbr)
55 Stmp le
57 Compass
pt
58 Depos11s
59 Servant
60 Greek letter
62 Goa l
64 Accomplished
66 Scale note
68 Greek letter
69 Young salmon

70
71
73
75
77
78

Scultl e
Pace
Tens1o n
Err an!
AI th1 s place
Anc1en1
chan at
80 Solkworms
81 Weoght of
lndta
82 Exoles
84 Certam
ch1ckens
86 Tolle of
respec t
87 Clot hong
89 Small rug
92 Item of
propert y
95 Man 's name
98 Performs
99 European
nver
10 1 Plant runner
103 Be borne
104 Legal matters
I 05 Fll
106 Art1cte
107 Parr (abbr 1
108 Let ta ll
110 Contatner
111 Teut on ic
derty
11 2 Mountatn
lake
113 Employed
11 5 Pronoun
117 Shout
119 Dr
120 Yearn
121 Made
believe
124 Burden
126 Eat
127 Peruse
128 Sowed
130 Cab le
132 Wither ed
133 Tumbled
134 Evergreen
~~tree

135 Capuchon
monkeys
137 Flower
139 Macaw
140 La nd map
141 Par t of step
143 Ac comploshment
145 Greek teller
146 Smaller
148 Soc oa t
gatherrngs
150 Grated
152 Th oroughfare
153 Wooden
ptns
154 Venture
156 Calm
157 Rema ons at
ease
158 Drreclt on
159 Brrdge
160 Hebrew fes
I tval
DOWN
1 Twelv e dozen
2 Grumb le
3 StudiO
4 Kntght
5 English
baby car·
nage
6 Exclamatton
7 Commun1st
8 Seed coatong
9 Candtdate
10 Con cernmg
1 1 Bryophyl e
12 Emmel
13 Pronou n
14 Clods
15 Soul Fr
16 Kotchen
appli ance
17 Landed
property
18 Brrd s'

homes
Short )acket
Soaks
Redact
Gneves
Appoonlment
3 1 Gera1n t's
wtfe
33 S1rong wtnd
36 Fruot
38 Paradose
40 Autos
41Dry
43 Wmter veh icle
45 Spatn
46 Surgocal
st otch
47 Comely
49 God of love
51 Temporary
shelters
52 Separated
53 Ran t
54 Inlet s
56 Amuse
59 Compulsory
60 Harbor
6 1 Roman date
63 Malad;ust ed
ones
65 Transgresses
67 Abstr act
betng
69 Slate Abbr
70 Church d ossent er
72 Semesters
7 4 Three-toed
slo th
76 Chaldean
C1 ly
77 Greek poet
79 Siaon
83 Soft tood
85 Bear up
86 Pon ochle
l erm
87 Unusual
88 Mapl e
20
23
25
27
28

89
90
91
92
93
94
96

genus
Greek letter
Degraded
Doctrme
Snake
Lo ng step
Thus
Ktnd ol

cheese
97 Tear
100 N1ton symbol
102 Chnstmas
ca rol
105 Rattonal
109 Farm tmpte1
ment
112 ForK prong
113 European

mountams

~

114 Slop
116 Spreads for
drytng
118 Den
120 Buccaneers
12 1 Antmat coat
122 Sea nymphs
123 Heedless
125 Let !all
126 Deduce
127 Htnd part
12g Exprres
13 1 Asceltc
132 Saltne
133 Escape
134 lntt1al
136 Alg onqutan
lnd1ans
138 Downy d uck
140 Pos1t1ve
14 t Tatters
142 Harvest
144 Three Sp
147 Explosove
Abbr
t48 Edible seed
149 Mrs Sp
15 1 Extst
153 Heb rew letter
155 Printer's

measure

�!).!~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, May

11, 1980

Hoofs and Paws

By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - There is a
magazine that comes out
periodically called the Humane
Society of the United States News.
In the latest issue there was an ar·
ticle that is sort of what I've been
telling you aU for years now - that
animals require tihe attention and
love of people to survive. Well, it
seems that it works in the reverse
too.
I would like to quote this item en·
titled "Take Two Terriers and Call
Me in the .Morning." Evidence thaI
pet ownership is good for your health
is mounting.
Dr. Aaron Catcher of the University of Pe!UlSylvania, who conducted
a ~tudy showing heart disease
patients who owned pets had a better
survival rate tihan such patients who
did not own pets, has completed a
new study on pet-people interaction.
The new study measured the heart
rate and blood pressure of individuals as tihey talked to other
people or read out loud, then again
as they petted and talked to their
dogs. When they were relating to .
their dogs, their blood pressure was
significantly lowered.
As blood pressure tends to rise in
stressful situations and fall in
relaxing ones, these results seem to
indicate that petting your dog or cat
is good for your health - sort of a
mini-vacation from the stresses of
everyday life.
In a survey of people's attitudes
toward their dogs, Dr. Catcher found
out 80 percent said they talked to
their dog as to a person, and many
confided in their dogs. One hundred
percent of the dog owners believed
the animal was sensitive to their
feelings. Dr. Catcher is currentl¥
working on a study of tihe interaction
of children with pets.
Prelimtnary results from it show
their blood pressure is also lowered
as they talk to and pet their animals.
Clearly we need our pets' com·
panionship as much as they need
ours.
One other article in the same
magazine mentioned above should
be read very carefuly - I tell you, I
will eat no more veal! Entitled
"Veal Calves - Young Victims of
Farm Technology," the article goes
on "Veal Calves in the U. S. are subjected to the most brutal
deprivations of any farm animals.
They are taken from tiheir mothers
within a day of being born and are
loaded on cattle trucks and shipped
to auction.
Inevitably, some of the babies die
just from the stress of trans·
portation and handling. Those that
live to he auctioned face a short life
oi pain and frustration. Having been
purchased at the auction, they are
sent to he fattened in a process
which creates so-&lt;:aUed "milk fed"
veaL
They are tied in stails so narrow
they cannot turn around, exercise,
or socialize with other calves. Romping and playing in the fields would
toughen the calves' muscles, so the
farmers tether them in these stalls
to keep the meat as tender as
possible. Deprived of motihers, frien·
ds, or even hwnan contact for tihe
most part, the young animals stand

IMothers have played special

in the darkness on slanted floors for
four months with nothing to do but
eat.
No roughage is provided in their
diet, so they are not even able to
ruminate, or 'chew the cud, '' a most
basic drive for bovines. Their diets
are kept deficient in iron because
iron makes meat red and the U. S.
consumer, we are told, demands
pink veal, even though the color has
little to do with the taste of the
product.
The iron deficient diet keeps the
calves anemic, weak and sick for the
duration of their short lives. Regular
doses of antibiotics must be given
the calves to ward off the diseases
their weakened and stressed condition makes them prey to. Veal is a
speciality, luxury product, and is not
a necessity in anyone's diet. The
hwnane consumer can demand better · conditions for these playful
calves by refusing to purchase milk
fed veal until significant changes
are made."
Before telling you what animals
we have for adoption, I must once
again warn aU of you who love your
pets that to ignore the shots that are
recommended by vets is to endanger
not only their lives but other animals
it comes in contact with. There are
people who have a fit and a half
when we take strays we find that
have distemper to vets and he
euthanizes them.
We hate to do this- but we cannot
endanger our own animals or the
homeless ones we occasionally keep
until we can find homes for them. It
takes expense, time, and facilities
· that just aren't available ... and in
most cases it is too late anyway by
the time we get hold of the poor
animals.
For those of you who think it is
terrible that we put these animals
out of their misery - let me suggest
that YOU provide the funds to pay
their hospitalization, provide tihe
hours of care necessary to doctor
them, provide the isolated building
or room for them, and we will be
more than happy to allow you to do it
rather than put those poor innocent
animals down. No one hates it more
than we who end up making that trip
to the vet because some irresponsible family didn't properly protect
their pet.
It is our responsibility to use tihe
membership's money oo minor
veterinarian care and offer only
healthy animals for adoption to the
public. We provide the necessary
shots, worm, and do a general health
check on all animals as they are
received by us. Most are also
cleaned up and some are groomed all are properly fed, loved, and
provided witih a flea collar, as well
as given a niQe clean place to live
and sleep temporarily.
Animals who need pennanent
homes now with good people are: A
male Retriever about a year' old; an
adult Plott, female, black and quite
large; a red short haired 4 or 5 month old pup; two male part Cocker
types, a Shepherd, Irish Setter, and
several mixed breeds that are really
cute but hard to describe. If interested in a nice pet, why not call
992-&lt;l260 and make an appointment to
see what we have. Please call between noon and 7 p.m. any day.
j

for tents containing one to four persons. An additional dollar will be
charged for tihose campers containing air conditioning, and 50 cents
will be charged for water or electricity.
Tents containing five or more persons will be charged 50 cents for
each additi.onal person over four.
No reservations are being taken
for camping.

For " Mother's Day," what would
you give the mother who has everything ? George Washington gave to
his mother a beautiful home in the
Virginia town of Fredericksburg.
Every day Confederate General
Robert E. Lee took his ailing mother
for sunny rides through Alexandria
in a canopied carriage. And though
"Stonewall" Jackson 's mother died
when he was just seven years old, he
took her memory, and the pink
luster teapot she bequeathed him on
her deathbed, with him even to the
field of battle.
Mothers have often played a
special role in the lives of America's
greatest leaders. Patrick Henry's
propensity for liberty was inspired
by his mother's dedication to
religious freedom; George
Washington once said, "All that I am
I owe to my mother." Born to a
cultured and learned family,
Woodrow Wilson gained from his
mother an appreciation for music
and literature which helped him to
become one of the nation's most
popular presidents.
Today, these and other maternal
influences can be seen in many of

Virginia.'s historic homes. Nearly
100 noteworthy plantations, homes
and estates are open to the public in
the Old Dominion, and each provides
a close look into the family life of
many of the nation's most prominent
figures. Nine homes of Virginia's
eight presidents still stand. So do the
homes of all seven of the State's
signers of the Declaration of In·
1
dependence.
In 1772, George Washington purchased a lovely clapboard home in
Fredericksburg for his mother. A
strongly independent woman, Mary
Washington had raised her five
children on the family's farm on the
outskirts of town, and only through
the generous persuasion of her son
did she consent to leave Ferry
Farm . • Soon,

however,

Mary

Washington was receiving many
celebrities of her day in her new
home , and it was here that Lafayette
came to pay his respects to the
"mother of the greatest American."
Early in 1789, the newly-elected
first President of the United States,
George Washington, carne to receive
his mother's blessing before going to
New York for his inauguration. This
was their last farewell, as Mary

Ripley native
views disaster
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (~P) When he was a young boy, Pat
McGinley watched as his father
participated in rescue operations
among the twisted, steel rernams of the Silver Bridge after it collapsed
into the Ohio River, killing 46 people.
Now, 12 \'z years later, McGinley, a
Ripley native, was on the scene of
another bridge disaster- that of the
Sunshine Skyway Brid~e . which
spans the mouth of Tampa Bay in
Florida.
McGinlev is an emergency
medical t~chnician in St. Petersburg, Fla., where a ship struck
the Sunshine Skyway Bridge Friday
morning tearing away a portion of
the hug e steel structure. A
Greyhound bus, two cars and a
pickup truck plunged into the bay
with the destroyed section.
At least 31 persons were killed, the
Coast Guard said.
McGinley watched as rescue
teams searched the mouth of Tampa
Bay ·for survivors of the bridge
disaster.
·"The road comes up and then
there's nothing," McGinley said
during a telephone interview with a
Charleston reporter shortly after the
accident. "It just disappears."
McGinley said he was listening to
a ham radio Friday when he heard
that a cargo ship was about to ram
the bridge. He said he arrived at the
scene about 10 minutes after the
accident. Coast Guard boats arrived
a few minutes later. he said.
"They have quite an entourage

Washington did not live to see her
son again. In celebration df Mother's
Day, a recreation of this important
event took place on the steps of
the Mary Washington House in
Fredericksburg, May 1~JJ.
Evidence of the close bond between Robert E. Lee and his mother
can he found in three of the Lee
family homes in Alexandria. The
beautiful Federal-style home where
Robert E. Lee grew up contains handsome antiques which reflect late
18th and early 19th century life in the
city. Across the street, the LeeFeodal! House is furnished with
many priceless possessions of one of
Virginia's finest families; and the
exquisite mansion at Arlington.
National Cemetery stands as proud
testament to the twining of three
Virginia aristocracies.
Left parentless by the death of his
mother, " Stonewall" Jackson
remained devoted to her throughout

his military career. On every campaign of the Civil War he carried the
tiny ceramic teapot his mother had
givllll him, and on many occasions
claimed that his mother spoke to
him in visions before his greatest
battles.
The pink luster teapot is on display,
at the only home the Confederate
general ever owned, located in
Lexington. The Stonewall Jackson
House contains one of the largest
collections of Jackson memorabilia
in the nation.
Because of the preservation ef- ·
forts of various groups and individuals in Virginia, hundreds of
17th, 18th and 19th century homes
survive, and nearly 100 are open to
the public.
For more information about
Virginia's historic homes, write the
Virginia State Travel Service, 6 North Sixth Street, Richmond, Virginia
23219. Telephone: 804/786-4484.

r··················~1····i

~

C£state ~

:

Today

•

By

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with boats.
In describing the 15-mile bridgecauseway, McGinley said the
structur e re sembles the Silver
Bridge, which collapsed at Point
Pleasant in 1967.
" It's the sa me type as the Silver
Bridge except it's a lot bigger,"
McGinley said. "The Silver Bridge
had two big spires - one on each
end . This one is like taking that and
putting a great big one right in the
middle," he said.
He described weather condidtions
in the St. Pete area just prior to
Friday's disaster.

.

Willi• T. Leadingham
Realtor

•

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Ave., Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699. We're here to help.

•

NASSAU, Bahamas (AP) - Accusing Cuba of an "illegal and unprovoked" air attack on a gunboat
and a terrifying flyover of a remote
island town, the Bahamas today
enlisted U.S. help in the search for
four seamen believed killed in the incident.
The Bahamian National Security
Council said it was protestinl( the
Cuban actions "in the strongest
terms," would consult the United
Nations Securit)' Council about

e
VOL 31 NO. 20

e

A Racine woman was killed Satur·
day night during a pedestrian accident on SR 124, reports the GaUlaMelgs Post Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene within the
village limit.., at 8:45p.m., officers
report Lydia Wolfe, 76, Rte . 2,
Racine, walked into the path of a
west bound auto driven by Jackie
Cwrunons, 19, Racine.
Wolfe was pronounced dead at tihe
scene by Meigs County Coroner Dr.
Ray Pickens. The body was
removed to Ewing's Funeral Horne
in Pomeroy.
The patrol reports the in·
vestigation of the accident has been
completed and that no charges will
be filed.
Meanwhile, three people died in a
gasoline tanker truck collision with
two cars Sunday morning on SR 7,
near Proctorville. Approximately
3,500 gallons of gasoline spilled onto

back

the highway.
The accident forced the Lawrence
County Sheriff's Department to
close the highway from Proctorville
to Bradrick until noon yesterday. In
addition, 14-20 families in the immediate area of the accident were
evacuated and electrical service
was cutoff to prevent igniting the
gasoline.
The accident occurred at 6 a.m.
south of the bridge over Indian
Guyan Creek. Some of the gasoline
spilled into the creek.
Killed were Paul F. Johnson, Jr.
24, Rt. 2, Chesapeake; William
Dallas Wilson, 37, Rt. 2, Chesapeake,
Rt. 2, and William E. Mannon, 24, of
Proctorville. AU were in a car
driven by Johnson.
Also injured were the truck driver,
James Mooney, '!1, Huntington, and
Kathy Hamlin, 33, Proctorville,
driver of a second car involved.

Four people hurt
•
zn traffic wreck
'Called to the scene in Meigs Coun·
ty on SR 7 at 3 p.m., officers report a
south bound auto operated by Edward Tanner, 68, Reedsville, had
slowed in traffic to turn.

$20

A south bouDd vehicle driven by
Timothy Sauters, 17, Pomeroy,
failed to stop and struck the Tanner
auto tn the rear.
Both drivers clatmed injury, but
were not immediately treated. A
passenger in the Tanner auto, Max
T81Uler, 40, Reedsville, also claimed
Injury, but was not treated.
A passenger in the Sauters'
vehicle, Victoria Brooks, 19,
RuUand, displayed visible signs ri
injury and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.
The Tanner auto was demolished.
There was moderate damage to the

Sauters' vehicle. Sauters was cited
on a charge of failure to maintain an
assured clear distance.
Meanwhile, damage was light to
two cars in an accident at the intersection of Main and Court Sill. at
1: 15 p.m, Sunday. Pomeroy Police
said a car driven by Robert Bowles,
Pomeroy, hacked tnto a car·driven
by Russell Brown, Pomeroy.
Police also reported the
recovering of a bicycle stolen Friday
from a West Main St. home.
The bicycle was found in West
Columbia, W. Va., and has been
returned to the owner.

DEER STRUCK
A deer was struck when it ran into
the path of an auto drive by James
L. Justice, Washington, W. Va.,
Saturday at 7:55 p.m. tbe Meigs
County Sheriff's Department reported.
Justice was traveling south on U.
S. 33 when the incident occurred.

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respected.''

Prime Minister Lyndon 0. PindUng was rushing home from London after hearing about the inciden~
according to Deputy Prime Minister
Arthur D. Hanna.
Bahamian Minister for External
Affairs Paul Adderley said he had
received a message, "purporting to
have come from the Cuban government," that claimed Cuban officials
believed the Flamingo was a pirate
ship attacking the fishing vessels

and kidnapping the crew.
"Flamingo was of classical naval
design, was painted gray naval
colors, was flying the Bahamian
flilgs and bore other marks of identification that would clearly
distinguish her as a government
ship," the council protested.
The govenunent gave this account: The two Cuban flshinl( boats
were seized 1\'z miles south of Cay
San Domingo, a tiny island midway
(Continued on pag'e 10)

en tine

MONDAY, MAY 12, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

According to the Lawrence Couilty
Sheriff's department, Johnson's car
was traveling north in the wrong·
lane. Mooney headed south,swerved
his truck trying to avoid the car, but
rolled over, colliding with Johnson's
car and the Hamlin vehicle.
A fourth Lawrence Countian killed
Sunday was Terry Hughes, 25, South
Point, who died in a one-car accident
on a Lawrence County road.
In aU, 19 traffic deaths were recor·
ded in Ohio during the weekend. The
Ohio llighway Patrol death count
runs from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.

Two bodies
recovered
from river
POINT PLEASANT - Two
bodies, one still unidentified, were
found this past weekend floating in
the Ohio River near Letart, according to the · Mason County
Sheriff's Department.
One man, identlffed as· Garnett
Edmund Pritt, 28, Rt. 5, Charleston,
was found in tihe river near Letart
Island, 15 miles north of Point Plea·
sant, Saturday, 5:20 p.m., according
to Sheriff'soDeputy G. M. Kearns.
The Pritt body, found by Harold
and James Meadows, Mason, while
fishing near the island, had been
reported missing three weeks ago
following a boating accident on Mill
Creek, Jackson County.
The body was recovered from the
river by New Haven Fire Depart·
ment members Bill James, Ray
Ungaro, and Chuck Zerkie, and was
transported to the State Medical Examiner's Office in South Charleston
for autopsy, following an initial examination by Mason County Coroner
John Grubb.
Also at tihe scene were Mason
County Sheriff James C. Hall,
Deputies J. R. McCoy and G. D.
Kaylor, and Trooper Mike Bright, of
the Ripley Detachment West
Virginia State Police, who had investigated the boating accident
three weeks ago.
An employee of the Racine Locks
and Dam notified the Sheriff's
Department of the other body Sunday,12:34p.m.
Upon arrival, Sheriff Hall and
Deputy G. M. Kearns found the aJ&gt;parent drowning victim in the river,
between the third and fourth pier of
the dam.
The body was recovered by the
New Haven Fire Department, and
was sent to the State Medical Examiner's Office following examination by Dr. Richard Slack, assistant
coroner, tor identification and
autopsy.

Sheriffs deputy
saves woman's life

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Sale Price
564.95
Factory Rebate -$10.00

• S1m Pie aim-and shoot operat•on

Duncan Town is on Ragged Island,
about 65 miles north of the easter:n
Cubacoast.
·
In Washington, the State Department issued a statement saying the
initial reports indicated Cuba was
guilty of a "gross violation of international law."
The Bahamian coun.cil, after a 12bour meeting in Nassau, demanded
assurance from Cuban officials
"that, in future, the territorial integrity of the Bahamas will be

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO,

•

e

Cuban MIG jet fighters strafed and
sank the gunboat.
Cuban officials reportedly said
they thought the Royal Bahamas
Defense Force gunboat was a pirate
ship.
On Sunday morning, the government said, Cuban jets, a transport
plane and a helicopter made
simulated rocket runs just above the
treetops of Duncan Town for several
hours. The helicopter allegedly landed briefly.

Racine woman, four others
die in area traffic wrecks

Patrol.

~up'lo

taktng action against Cuba and is
demanding reparations to he named
later.
The U.S. Coast Guard and
Bahamian officials were to search
today for four seamen missing and
presumed dead in the waters just
south of Cay San Domingo.
The Bahamian govenunent said
that on Saturday night, after the 103foot gunboat Flamingo seized two
Cuban fishing · boats suspected of
poaching in Bahamian waters.

,.

Four people were injured Sunday
dulng a two-vehicle accident investigated by the Ohio Highway

mone•rback too!

Middleport, Ohio

•

•

down here." The bay "was thick"

FrontS~.

•
•

:

,.

$5

e

1f you are one of the many potential real estate investors who have •

Odemories

Swimming at Krodel Lake will he
$1 for adults and 50 cents for
children. Plans are being made for
swimming lessons in July and
August. The fee for the lessons will
be $10 for tihe two-week course.
Mini-golf charges will remain at $1
for 18 holes at Krodel Park, and paddle boat charges will remain at $1
for one-half hour, two people.

:

•

ELBERFELD$

THE FLEA BAG
309 North

'Illegal' Cuban assault leaves four dead

role for America's leaders

Krodel Park open house set
PI'. PLEASANT- The city of Pt.
Pleasant will hold an open house at
Krodel Park, May 17-18.
The open house has been planned
so area residents can view new ad·
ditions made to the park since the
original plans were completed.
All activities at the park will he
free during the open house days,
with the exception of camping.
Refreshments will also he served.
According to Ms. Georgianna
Sommer, city recreation director, if
the weather permits, tihe park will
officially open following the open
house. If tihe weatiher is inclement,
tihe park will open on Memorial Day.
Camping at the facility is already
open.
Ms. Sommer has also announced
rates changes for the rental of the
fort, picnic shelter, and clubhouse at
Krodel Park, and for swimming at
Krodel Lake.
Fort Randolph, located at Krodel
Park, is available for rent at a fee of
$50 per day. The large picnic shelter
at Krodel Park is available for $15
for half a day . This rate will begin on
Memorial Day.
There are four small shelters and
one large picnic shelter at the park,
with tihe small shelters being
available for free. These shelters
will not be reserved for any group or
individual, however.
The Krodel Clubhouse is available
for rent for reunioos, showers,
meetings, etc. at a fee of $20 for one
side, and $25 for the side witih the kitchen. The entire building is
available at $50.
It was noted by Ms. Sommer that a
new room had been added to the
clubhoUSe.
Campers at Ktodel Park should
· note that the camping fee h~s been
Increased to $6 per night for camJ&gt;ers. and recreation vehicles, and $3

·'

TICKETS - Mrs. Sharon Hawley of Middleport is pictured with the winning tickets in the weekly drawing of The Sentinel
SecUrity Sw\lCI)IItakes. With Mrs. Hawley is Tim fl!!lsteat! of the Advertising department of The Daily Sentinel. Winners will be announced in
the advertisement of participating merchant.. in Tuesday's Sentinel. The
winnersmustnotifyTheSentinel within four days to pick up their prizes.
Winners in this week's drawing will receive a $50 savings bond and f50 lJi
script money which can be spent at the participating merchant..' stores.

Quick action by a Gallla County
Sheriff's Department deputy may
have helped save the life of a Henderson, W.Va. woman early Sunday
morning.
.
At 3:22a.m., according to a report
filed with that affice, Janie Sue
White went Into a mild seizure in the
parking lot of the Western Pancake
House. Deputy Asa Rucker, wbo was
doing security work tn the area,
came to her assistance.
Deputy Rucker called the Gallia
County Emergency Medical Service
and upon returnlng to the woman
discovered she had stopped
breathing.
Rucker applied mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation to 'the victim as 11
relative transported them to Hotzer
Medical Center in a private auto.
White r~ved and was trea\ed
and released tn the emergency room
ofHMC.

EVENT SET - Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
signed a proclamation Thursday night setting aside
May 16 and 17 as Poppy Days in the village. Members
of the American Legion Auxiliaries of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 and Lewis Manley Post 263 will be on the
street.. selling poppies the proceeds from which go into

assisting disabled veterans and their families. Shown
with Mayor Hoffman are Love Batey, Little Miss POJ&gt;PY for Unit 128, and from the left, Mrs. Lula Hampton,
president, and Mrs. Zuelelia Smith, poppy chainnan,
Unit 283, Mrs. Erma Hendrix, president, and Mrs.
Martha Hanel, poppy chainnan, Unit 128.

Fire loss
set at

$25,000
Loss was estimated at $25,000 as
the result of a fire which destroyed a
tenant house on the Charles Theiss
Great Bend farm at 10:15 p.m. Sunday.
The Racine Fire Department had
three trucks and 20 men on the scene
untll12:30 a.m. Monday. The house
was engulfed in flames wben the
The house
department arrived.
was unoccupied but had been
cleaned up ready for OCCjlpancy by a
tenant today.
·
Cause of the fire has not been
determined and investigation is continuing, the Racine Department
reporta.
There is Insurance
coverage. The Syracuse Fire Department was called to assist with
water and Pomeroy also received a
call on the upriver fire.
At 7:50 a.m. Sunday, the lire
department went to the old
lockhouse in Portland to extinguish
a brush fire.

The Pomeroy Fire Department
answered several calls over the
weekend.
At 12:40 p.m. Saturday the department was called to near the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds to extinguish a
brush fire and at 9:45 p.m. went to
Crow's Steak House where a deep fat
fryer had caught fire with little
damage incurred. At 10: 29 p.m. Sunday the department went to Great
Bend to possibly assist witih a tenant
house flre on the Charles Theiss

home.
The Middleport Fire Department
was called to the Imperial Electric
Co. at 9:09 p.m. Sunday where a
trash pile was on fire.
The blaze was contained by 9:15.
At IO:Ii p.m., the department's
emergency unit went to 95 Coal St.
for Everett Hoffman wbo was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Storms pound
Central Ohio
By Tbe Anoelated Preis
Severe thunderstonns pounded
central and southern Ohio Sunday
night with high winda and large hall.
The most serious damage occurred in the greater Coluinbus area
where winda reached nearly 60 miles
an hour arid where heaVY ratns an!!
baseball size hall were reported.
A fUMe! cloud was also spotted in
the area, but it appaently did not
(Continued on page 10 )

From the Associated Press

First non-stop balloon trip ends
MATANE, Que~ - Maxie Anderson and his son Kris landed the
"Kitty Hawk" safely in a treetop near the St. Lawrence River in
eastern Canada today, ending the first non-stop balloon flight across
North America .
The balloon came in at 7: 25 a.m. EDT on the wooded edge of a
clearing six miles east of Matane in Quebec.
Both men were uninjured. They were unshaven, reddened by wind
and looked tired.
Malane is about 28:i miles northeast 'of Bangor, Maine, and about
I,100 miles north of the planned landing site in Kitty Hawk, N.C. Unexpected winds had carried the balloon far north of the plotted flight path
for the last half of the 3,000-mile journey.

Ohioans to get more Kennedy views
ClEVELAND - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who was in Cleveland
over the weekend, plans to make himself and his views even more
familiar to Ohioans before the state's June 3 primary.
The Massachusetts Democrat is clinging to a slim hope that he may
still be able to woo his party's presidential nomination away from
President Carter.
Kennedy hustled through two c.impaign appearances and two
television interviews in Cleveland on Saturday- his second trip to the
city in as many weeks. He then announced Sunday that he will visit
Cincinnati, Canton, Akron, Toledo, Youngstown and Cleveland again
before the primary.

Senate set to okay balanced budget
WASIDNGTON - The Senate is set to approve the first balanced
federal budget In 12 years, but the final vote was delayed until late
tonight to allow senators a long w.eekend for campaigning.
The Senate abandoned last week's drive to finish action on the $612.9
billion 1981 spending package after ending a 17-hour session that began
Thursday and spilled over into early Friday morning .
To give the 34 senators up for rHlection extra time to stwnp for
votes, Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, ~W. Va., delayed
votes 00 the remaining 15 budget amendments until late this afternoon.

Pontiff ends 11-day African tour
AI:IWJAN, 1vory '-'OBSt- t'llpe Jonn t'llul II ended his African tour
today with a visit to a leper hospital to express his solidarity with the
sick everywhere on the continent.
The pope said he went to the hospital at Adzote, 35 miles north of
Abidjan, to "embrace all the other lepers and sick of the country and
in au of Africa."

Weather forecast
Cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstonns tonight. Low
tonight in the upper 60s. Cloudy with showers and thunderstorms
likely Tuesday. High tn the mid to upper 80s. Chance of ratn 50 percert
tonight and 70 percent Tuesday. •
Oblo Extended Outlook
By Tbe Alsoelated Preis
Wednesday lbreugh Friday- Chance of llbowen Wedllesd1y 111111
'l'bw'lday. FatrFrlday. Lowalo lbenpper50s tomldl8aon Wecloelday
dropping to lbe .0. Friday moi'DiDI. Hlgba 85 to 75 Wedlleadly lllllllo
lbe tGII Tbanday 111111 Frldav.

.""

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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