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                  <text>10- The Datly &amp;&gt;nttnel, ~ltddleport·Pomeroy. 0 .. Fnduy, Oct . ~1. l97i

$15,000 gift received
for community project

Crime control funds .a pproved fo~ SE area
rrg10nal cnminal juslll'e
COLU MB US . Ot1
Gov . Janws A Rhodt•s has information S) stem and
announced approval of 1\\0 creatmg divrrsmn programs
grants totalm g mur~ than as altrruatins to detention .
11us grant Will be SU~
1198,000 m r nme n mtrol
funds to tho Ohto Valley plen1Pnt£'d. wnh $19.222 from
Reg10nal
Devel opment loca l sources.
The Sel'nnd g ra nt. for
Commissio n
t OVRDC I
$25
,391,
will
fund
a
Portsmouth .
specializ~d
tralning
pro
~rmn
The first grant, for $1 72,991,
will fund an adult dl\·orsion for the OVHDC adu lt
system for OVRDCs nino· diversion sr stcm . In the
county area in S?uthern Oh10, pr ogram. · corrE'ctiunnl
Major projects ln the system personnel wilt receive adin cl ude establishing a dit ional tr aining th rough

senuna r s.
workshops

conferen ces.
and

on-site

trainin~ .

This Rrant

~· ill

be

SUi&gt;"

plemented local!)· with $2.821.
The State of Ohio awarded
the Rrants under the federally

$19.6 million Cmnprrhensive

Criminal Justice Phm for
1977.
The following nine counties

appr0\100 provisions of Ohio's

!

available until '78

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

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was ca lled to New St.
Thursday afternoon for
\lobart Templeton who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 11 :51 p.m .• the
squad went to Route 143 for
Handy Randolph who was
also taken to the same
hospital. At 6:53p.m. , the fire
department answered a call
on a trash collection center on
&lt;;o unty Road !, off Route 325,
to e 11:~in guish a blaze there.

EnJOY th at mone~·· in · th e·va u It feeling 1
With a safely·insured Savings Account.
Alld with all ou r interest ...
you' ll get more than your money back.

~pomeroy
rutlar)d

h•'f*'l plaine
Member

FDIC

MEETING SLATED
The Meigs Area Holiness
Association meeting will be
held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the Danville Wesleyan
Olurch. The Kings Musicians
,will be playing and there will
be special vocal numbers by
the Gospel Voices. Speaker
for the meeting will be the
Rev. lla rbert Ailing.. The
public is invited.

EDNA STILES

the bank of
thec.ntury
•• 4. . . . 1812

l\)1 make the cifference ;•

IT'S A

HALLOWEEN
·CONTEST

I

Will vote for levy

Funera l services for Mrs.
Mrs. Edna Stil es , 79, of
•
Ferne B. Hayman , 76. Route R,oute J , Pomeroy , died Dear Sir :
We have three chtldren lllal have graduated from •
2. Rac ine , who di~..d Wed- Friday morn ing at Veterans
nesday at Holzer Med ical Nlemorial Hospital.
Soutliern High School We supported llle school district while
Center , will be held at 1 p .m .
She was born Aug . 23, 1898, llley were in school.
Saturday at the Ewing a daughter of the late
We now have a daugllter in high school and a boy in the
Funeral Home rather than at Lawrence and Julia · Dill
high. We want them to graduate like our other children
junior
l p.m . Sunday as announced Ginther .
earlier .
She was also preceded by did willlout having their education disrupted. We will vote for
Besides her daL•ghter . Mrs. five- .brofhers, Carl , Arthur, llle levy so llley will be able to get back in sc hool.
Ju ne Wi ckersham of Rac'l ne , Ca'ward , John, and Dougta·s :
For us this is the most economical way for our children to
Mr s. Hayman Is surv ived by her husband Elias· in 1968 .
get
through
lllls school year . Tuition at Meigs for one mont~ for •
five grand ch i ldren , Jeff
Surviving are a son, Ed:.
Wickers ham , at
home ; ward E. of Middleport.· a our two would cost us more than lhe G 'r.~ mill levy will increase\
Ma rvene Beegle, Ra ci ne ; daughter , .Mrs .' Hers chel our taxes for one year.
··
Jim Wickersham , Jacldyn Uulia) Norr is of ·Rac ine;
We
can
only
express
our
concern
for
our
own
children
but.
Hodge and Mary Wicker . three granddaughter s; Mrs .
sham , all of Columbus , five Carl IKay) Platter of Mid- hope there are enouRh other parents of Soulllern Local School.
great -grandch il dren
and dleport , M rs. James (Bar- District that will support their children to pass the ,levy. severai ·J') ieces and nephews . bara) Fr:y of Pomeroy, Mrs. Mr . and Mrs. Danny Brown. BOx 102, Minersville, Ohio.
Mrs . Hayman, well known Ea rl (NihaJ Cra ddock of
•
throughout the county , was a Au9usta, Ga .; two grandsons.
licensed practical nurse and Roger Sfi les of lexington,
workedforanumberofyears Ky ., Clarence Nor ris of
at the former Meigs General Racine ;
two
great Hospital. Fr iends may call at granddaughters , Ruth An n
Since I wrote my last letter to the Sentinel 1 have had some
the Ewin g Funeral Home.
and Sue E llen Fry ; two great - contacts wanting to know what I am talking about. Maybe I
grandsons . Jason Stiles and
should clarify my lllink ing .
.
·
Matthew Craddock ; four
There
has
been
too
much
influence
brought
to
bear on.
sisters , El izabeth Young and
SLSD by ouiside sources. This is my opoinion and I think that'
Margaret Vogler o f New
Brighten ,
Pa .,
M i ldred
pressure will continue. The passage of this 61&gt; mill levy will
Menge l of Rochester , Pa ..
affect'
!his district like a pain pill affects a person· suffering:
Beulah Latham of War ren;
with
a
bad disease . We need a cure and not a stop gap
one brother , Lawrence of
program . We need a base or method of taxation that
Rochester , f.!a. ; several
nieces, nephews and cousins .
distributes the costs in a fairer way . Writing Columbus means
Funera l services wil l be 2 nothing . We have to use 'some more forceful way. A minority ol
Holzer Medical Center
p.m . Sunday ·a t the Ewing
(Discharges Oel. 19)
real estate own_ers pay the preponderance of th~ taxes here . I •
Funeral Home with the R'e v .
Unda Di1xer, Jessie 1-!oward Shively offlcia~~ng . am retired and want out of the ITUlinstream, and when you:
Bowman ,
Stanf or d Burial will be In Beech Grove come knockin g on OW' door for more and more taxes what can
you expect but resistance'! Wait till you get there. And I don't
Cremeens , Patricia Dent, Cemetery . Fr iends may call
at the funeral home after 7
want sympathy or any handouts .
Mildred George , Tina Gibbs. this evening .

A\1 c~ildren up to t~e age of 16 can win if they design either
the ugliest, the prettiest or the most original Jack-O- lantern
in the area.
There will be two age groups. The first for children up to 10
years old and the second group for children from 10 to 16
years of age.

.

The winners In each age group and category will receive
.
.
a ·$10 pm:e.
You can design the Jaclc-0-Lantern any way you wish and
bring it in any time, but no later than closing timeOct.' 25, 1977.
,
Let's get those ]ack-0-Lanterns Designed and bring them
in to Farmers Bank Today.

Farmers Bank
•n mno Y, mno

//

Now Y

Maxl!l .ut .. .l ~&gt; u • dOCe For

Each DepoSitor

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wed·
nesday, a chance of
showers Monday and
Wednesday and fair
Tuesday. Highs will. be In
lhe 60s and lows will be In
lhe 40s.
:;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::

•

•

tmts

'

GALLI POLlS- P0INT

12 NO. 38

OCTOBER

tional, and this requires a
sizeable sum of money ."
Harold
Brown,
city
manager, said that the city
has applied for Federal aid,
and we are optimistic in
obtaining these funds . Brown
said. "We feel that $50,000
raised at the local level will
provide sufficlent evidence
that this community is behind
the recreational project. It
would influence the Federal
agencies to provide funds lo
be used in completing the
project as a public assistance
,. program."
Miles T. Epling, co·
chairman of the eommittee,
Continued on A·3

tnfittt

1977

Ml

PRICE 25 .

· Kn

Poor case .

·

If this levy pa sses and llley get back 599ner thru. later, I
think (he peop' ' are interested in what they get back too . To be
frank , ! know enough about school to know that the scholastic
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Wibna Par· goals can be raised. Educational goals written on paper don't
mean anything; it's what happens to the students.
malee, Middleport : Dori s
lt- is my opinion athletics are over emphasized and not
Stevens, Shade; Joseph
enough lhought is given to the intellectual achievements.
Marcinko , Reedsville .
Discharged·
Willie Sports and gaines ha ve their plilce, but a child will nOt have a
Adams , Media Schoonover, lab, a shop, or be exposed to formal learning very long ill his
life . Make it count while you can.
Eber Gillian , Christi Moody ,
I am not against good schools. I am against the political
Thoma s Sarver, Sr, Michael
system
that is trying to impose this kind of taxation on me .
Nice.
How about a payroll tax or a sales tax?
Gayle Price
· MEETS SATURDAY

RACINE - Ra cine Lodge
461, F&amp;AM , will hold a
special meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday with work to be in
the Master Masons Degree.
All Master Masons are invited.
OBSERVANCE SET
·Pomeroy Chapter 80, Roya l
Arch ~asons , will observe
Religious Affirmation Sun·
day with members of the
Middleport
Presbyterian
Olurch al the 10:30 a.m.
morning worship service
Su&gt;day,
All
Masons,
DeMolay, Eastern Stars and
Job's Daughters are urged to
join with the companions of
P_!!meroy Chapter in the
observance.

FILM TO BE VIEWED
A 45-minute color family
fibn, "The Littlest Apostle,"
will be shown at the Meigs
County Infirmary at 7:30
p.m. Sunday under the
sponsorship of the L8urel
Cliff Free Methodist Olurch.
The film story centers around
a Christian family taking a
Christian vacation which
resultS in a meaningful
adventure. humor and an
impressive setting. The .
public is invited .
LOCATION CHANGED
Because of the recent fire
at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. morning
worship at 9:30 . a.m. and
Sunday School at 10:30 a .m.
will be held this Sunday at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall.

SEEK LICENSE
Marriage licenses were
issued' to Michael Jay Small.
26, Rt . I. Dexter. and Karen
Ann Fer ato. 23. Rl.l, Dexter:
David Dale Price. 26,
Syracuse. and Mary Virginia
Krawsczyn, 21, Middleport.

would have to be doubled to accomplish the project of
building the new water tank and installing some new
water lines. Pictured breaking ground are, fron\ left, John
Laswick. program director for the U.S. Dept. of HUD who
was speaker: Mason County Commission President
Hobert Powers; Mrs. Olarlotte Jenks, councilwoman and
longtime village official who delivered the welcome;
Robert Wingett , president of the Mason County Development Aulllority; Mason Mayor Fred Taylor arid Calvin
Smith, engineer for the town and project coordinator.

.

Bi-swing action back . Water
repellent. Leg closure. Waist
and cuff Mjustments. zip front.
Zip pock1 ·
SIZES Short 38·46
Reg. 36 -56
Long 38 -48

caPI1aPtt

BROWN DUCK
OVERALL 6BF
Comfort. Freedom. Long Wear . Dbl
knees. po~kets. Elastic suspenders,
tool loops, etc.
SIZES 32-50

Get Ready For Winter

See our complete selection of
Carh'a rtt BrOwn ~uck Work ·Clothes .
Stop in now, buy what you need
while we have complete range of
o; izes .

Winter Caps and Hats - Gloves - Heavy
Weight Socks - Jackets . Sweaters. Buy
early ·or use our lay -away plan.

caPI1aPtt

caPI1al..,tt
BROWNDUC~

BLANKET-LINED
JACKET 6BLJ
Bi-swing action back. Cuff i!nd
waist · adjustments. Snaps for.
matching hood , etc .
SIZES Reg. 36 -50
Long 42 -48

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

IN

PRESENTED PLAQUE - Roper! Wingett, president of the non-profit Mason County
Development Aulllority, was presented a plaque from the Town of Mason during Saturday's
groWtdbreaking for lts $239,000 water project. Mayor Fred Taylor, left, made llle
presentation in recognition of Wingett's efforts toward tbe.Town of Mason getting a 100 pet.
Ht1D Community DeVelopment Block Grant for the project.

.

RACINE Jesse E .
Brinker, Pa st Illustrious
Master of Bosworth Council
No. 46, ·Pomeroy, was installed as Sixth Arch In·
spector of the Grand Council
of Royal and Select Masters
of Ohio, Oct. 4, at the Grand
Council Session held at the
Masonic Temple, Columbus.
This is a great honor to
Bosworth Council. and to
Metgs County Masons.
Mr. Brinker, Who is very
active in M.asonic circles has
. been a member of Racine
Masonic Lodge No. 461 for
nearly 30 years. He is a
Knight of the York Cross of
Honor, a thirty-second degree
Mason, member of Aladdin
Shrine, Past President of
Twin City Shrine Club, Past
Patron of Racine Chapter
Order of the Eastern Star,

.

CHESHIRE - The Gallia •
Meigs Community Action

burg, W. Va. Joe also is a
member of Racine Masonic
Lodge, a Vork Rite Mason,
Member of Aladdin Shrine
and Racine Order of the
Eastern Star. Mr. and Mrs.
Brinker also have three
grandchildren, Eddie and
Penny Sue Wolfe, and Joey
Brinker.
Mrs. Brinker .is also a busy
person, she is employed by
the County Commissioners)
as the Grants Administrator
for the CETA programs. She
is presently the Supreme
illstructress of Mary Shrine,
and Mr. and Mrs. Brinker
will be installed as Worthy
Patron and Worthy Matron of
Racine Olapter Order of the
Eastern Star for lhe coming
year. They were the
presiding officers of this
organization 20 years· ago.

Past Watchman of Shepherds
of Mary Shrine, Past Deputy
Supreme Watchman of
Shepherds of the White
Shrine of Jerusalem, and a
member of the Knight
Masons of leland.
. Mr. Brinker is a retired
diesel engineer having
worked 26 years for Union
Barge Line, Pittsburgh, Pa.
He now owns and operates his
own business. He and his
wife, Naoma, have lived in
Racine, for the past 35 years.
They are the parents·of three
· children, Ron who is a
musician, presenlly playing
in North Carolina, Joan·
Wolfe, Syracuse, an em·
ployee of Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and Joe, Little
Hocking , who is an ac·
countant employed by a
trucking firm in Parkers·

..

JESSE E. BRINKER

Bids will be opened Tuesday
POMEROY - Bids for the
sale of bonds for the con·
struction of a school for the
mentally retarded will be
opened Tuesday, Oct. 25 in
the office of the county

GALLIPOUS - A Gallia
Countian's ballot on Nov. 8 is
a . white card ·10% (ten and

.

tlfree-&lt;tuarters inches) long
and 3\14 (three and onequarter) inches wide. Top

part, perfectly square at
3\l•inches, is detachable as a
stub.

Instead of marking an "X-'
you punch a hole . It's easy.
It's simp!~.

• _\/

auditor.
At 2:30 p.m. the Meigs
County Board of Com·
missioners will meet in
special session to consider
the bids.

:"'.•,~
· '
¥

'

.....

Men's Flannel Shirts

'

~'

SECOND, push the lop of
lhe ballot down over the
lwo knobs filling Into the
holes.

.

-. .
j

THIRD, 18ke your llny
"Slicker" and punch ~
through hole opposite name
of your favorite.

.

',.!

"

. '

~··

·- -·

{'·"'''

Cf~f£~
FIRST, slip your ballot
Into the slot unlll It goes as
far as It can go.

·.,.'

--

·.!'''

house and three banks Thursday for 216 precinct
election officials. Allowing

-..

.

•'.

'

Just how simple was
demonstrated - and ;, being
demonstrated in the court

~

,,,

\

SIZES 30-44

y

Agency Board of Directors
will hold its monthly meeting
on Monday, Oct. 24, at 7:30
p.m. in the central office.

MEET MONDAY

Gallia voters will punch a hole instead of marking an X

Dbl knees &amp; pockets~ ,Tool loops,
z1pper fly, etc. Great for hunting.
Touoh !

Union Su i ts find Th ermal Underwear .
Complete selection of sizes - Get set
now for colder wea th er to come.

Mayor Charles Pyles, Delores Wolfe, president of the
emergency squad, Harold Circle, captain, Randall
Roberts, emergency chief who accepted the check, C. T.
Wolfe, commander of the Post who made the
presentation, Pauline Wolfe, adjutant of the post, and
Harry Willford, chaplain. · .,

recently by Grand Council

·BROWN DUCK
WORK PANTS 62W

WOrk Flannels - · Sport Flannel~
Western F lann ~ls - Dress Flannels
Terrif ic select ions now .
·

$1,000 DONATION MADE - Racine Legion Post 602,
Thursday night, presented lhe ·Racine ER Squad with a
· check in llle amount of $1,000. The money is to be used to
purchase a radio in the amount of $650. The balance of the
money will Qe used lo purchase additional emergency
equipment. The radio will enable the squad members to
transmit directly to respective hospitals. Shown are, 1-r,

]. E. Brinker is honored

· APPOINTMENT MADE
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Carl Gorby was
appointed lo the Soldiers
Relief Commission to fill the
unexpired tenn of the late
Ernest A. Nicholson.
Clarence William Andrews
was granted a divorce from
Esther Marie Andrews.
Marriages dissolved were
Thomas C. Clelland and Lois
J. Clelland, Sharon Steele and
Frank Steele; Wilovene W.
Rutl and James D. Rutt .

BROWN DUCK
QUILT-LINED
COVERALL 9960

Men's Department
1st Floor

ELBER

BREAKING GROUND FOR WATER PROJECT Ground was formally turned Saturday for the $239,000
Town of Mason Water Project which is completely funded
by a U. S. Housing &amp; Urban Development Community
Block Grant. The HUD grant, obtained by Mason Mayor
Fred Taylor and Council with as~istance from U. S. Sen .
Robert C. Byrd and the Mason County Development
Authority, allowed the project to be undertaken willlout
any increase in water rates . It had initially been projected
- prior to the grant being obtained -;- lllal the water rates

C!3 Pl1a l..,tt

Men's Winter Underwear
$_40,000

Swimming Pool Funtl Committee. Looking on are Miles T.
Epling, left , fund co-chairman, and M. Ha.rold Brown. city •
manager.

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

in which the company
operates. The Gallipolis
funds will be distributed in
three equal annual payments.
Paul Knotts, co-ehairman
for the Swimming Pool Fund
Committee, in making the
presentation at the meeting,
said,-"This Hobbins &amp; Myers
check, as the first $5,000
installment, is a tremendous
start in the forthcoming fund
raising campaign for the pool
program. We know the
swimming pool is in the
ground," he continued, "but a
bath house, adequate access
road, parking area and sewer
lines must be completed
before the pool is truly func·

The cry is "get the kids back in school. " Nothing has come
to my attention lllat lhe school administration or teachers did
•
to keep !hem lllere in the first place . All I heard was "you
didn 't vote that 10 mill levy." The teachers did not seem to
OU
OW wanttotrusttheStateofOhio afewdaysorweeks.
If the students love that school the way some of their
letters indicate and want to ask !IS for sacrifices why don't they.
The Gaboon viper , found in create !hat image ? I have seen students on the streets and
the tropical rain lorests of roads when I knew they belonged in school . I have heard of
Africa, has the longest fangs lllings happening around school that hurt the school image
of any snake ; measurements with the public. Not long ago a walkout took place at Soulllern,
of up to 2 inches have been over, I considered, llle most trivial of issues. What lllose
recorded.
students said wa s as transparent as glass. They had a mighty

ELBERFELDS
The Farmers Bank is going to celebrate Halloween
by having a Jack-0-Lantern Contest:-

ACCEPTS GIFT- John Allison, second from right,
accepts check from Paul J . Knotts. general manager of
Robbins &amp; Myers, an\1 co-chairma n of the Gallipolis

niversary in 1978.
Significant a nd worthy
community projects in
selected pla.nl locations are
being awarded grants to help
commemorate the com·
pany's birthday and to ex·
pres s
gratitude
and
recognition to the community

Hospital News

Phyllis Gill, Kathryn Grose ,
Virginia Guinther, Bessie
Henry. Mabel Hughes ,
Dorothy Jenkins , Mark
Johnson, Eva Leach, !da
Massie, Harley McCully ,
Samuel McKirlney, Robert
Myers. Melissa Nance, Della
Norton, Jamie Pennington\,
Th omas Rayburn, Jam es
Richmond, Harold Rickard
Sr .. Mrs. David Rothgeb and
daughter, Joyce Staltsman,
Pamela Saylor, Ruth Stone,
Ida Thompson. Janel Watson,
Reba Wilcoxen.
(Birtbs0cl.19)
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cotton,
a son. Pl. Pleasant: Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Dillon, a son,
Crown City; Mr. ·and Mrs.
Larry Hughes. a daughter,
Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
·Douglas Pugh. a daughter,
Crown City; Mr . and Mrs.
Eddie Van Mater, a
daughter. Mason; Mr. and
' Mrs. Ronald White. a son,
Cheshire.
(Discharges Oct. 20 I
Leslie Adkins, Wyman
Barcus, Ruth Breeden, Clay
Burns; Maxie Camden , Terri
Davis, Cathy Erwin, Doldie
Ewing, Mildred Franklin ,
James Fridenmaker , Jennifer Helm , Mrs . Robert
Hersman and daughter,
Garnet Holley, Anthony
Jones, Clarence Jones, John
Kilgour, Pauline Linton , Tara
Martill, Carol Perkins, Mrs.
Curtis Prater and son. Oleryl
Roush, Velsia Roush. David
Souders , David Stricklen,
Douglas Wickline, Deborah
Wolfe, Linda Wolfe.
(Births Oct. 20)
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Burks,
a son, Fraziers Bottom: Mr.
and Mrs. David Reed, a son,
Jackson .

bank

GALf JPOLIS - Robbins &amp;
Myers announced Saturday
durinM a meeting with John
Allison. President of the City
Commission
and
City .
Manager M. Harold Brown
. that the Cjty Recreational
Program has been selected
by the Centennial Awards
Committee of the company as
a recipient for a $1~,000 grant.
to be used towards the
compleVon of the program's
swimming pool facilities .
The -. announcement was
made by Paul J . Knotts,
general manager of the local
Electric Motor Divisi on.
Robbins &amp; Myers is
ce lebrating its tOOth . an·

!

Claiins too much outside influence

REVIVAL PLANNED
A revival will be held at
7·:30 each evening at the New
Stiversvllle Community
Olurch, Wednesday through
Saturday. On Wednesday ;
Ja ck Cornell, Sr.. will be
speake r and the pastor,
James Clark, Jr., will speak '
on Thursday and Saturday
evenings . The
Friday
speaker will be Art Tucker
from the St. John United
Methodist Church, Parkers·
burg. There will be special
vocal music and the public is
UJVited.
.

natlona ·

'

A.rea Deaths
FERNE B. HAYMAN

COLUMBUS·- Responding measure, H. B. 90, 0,1. 17,
to numerous calls to the 1977.
Bureau of Motor Vehirles.
To obtain an identi fi cation
Registrar. Dean L. Dollison ca rd. the applicant must be at
stressed today that iden· least 18 years old, a resident
tification ca,rds for non· of lhe state, and not licensed .
drivers 18 years of age or as an operator of a motor
older, will not be available vehicle in Ohio or any other
until Jan . 17. 1978.
licensing jurisdiction .
Under Ohio law, once a bill
The ccst of the card will be
is signed by the Governor, it $3, and can be obtained at the
does not take effect for a 90- local deputy registrar's office
day period. Governor James beginning Jan. 17. 1978.
A. Rh odes okayrct thr

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

and Vinton .

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

ID cards won't be

LOTIERY f&gt;ll)MBERS
This week 's wlnnJng Ohio
Lottery
number.s:
Gold number - 9.
Wblte number .,..- 44.
Blue number- 952 .
Extra Cash
5M692.

are in OVRDC : Adams,
Brown, GaUia, Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Hoss. Scioto

·:\ ·~

FOURTH, when you've
voted que page, turn the. .
~ page and repeal for other
candidates In field.

FIFTH. pull lh e ballot
out oflheslot. and give it to
the oflicial to pull the top
stub ofl.

SIXTH. Ina Belle Sibley
In courthouse shows how lo
put ballot In envelope
belore turning II ln.

tor a few absentees, there
were about 100 at each of two
sessions, Thursday afternoon
and Thursday night. ' '
Kathy Naughton of Virginia
Beach, Va., an employe of
Computer Election System,
Berkley, Ca lif. , did the
demonstrating. Officials
described her as young. pre!·
ty, blonde, and highly competent and enthusiastic.
Counting the ballots will be
by mac hine, fast and
painless. Each local precinct
will deliver the ballots, and, if
there's any delay mcounting
with ·lightning speed, the
delay is the time it takes to
get the ballots to the county
election board.
Presiding judge of each of
36 polling places will pick up
supplies
· unpunched .

\

undetached ballots and
envelopes for the voters to
put lllem in and other items
- from 9 a.m. to noon lhe
Saturday before the election.
On election day th e
presiding judge will have
assigned his four workers to
lllese j~bs, starting at 6:30
a.m.: one in charge of
demonstrating the vote
record~r
to· voter and
depositing voter ballot' cards
in ballot box; another in
charge of the signature poll
bo&lt;Jk : a third in charge of the
clerks' book; and the other in
d~arge of giving out the of·
ficial ballot cards.
The polls close al 7:30p.m.
Upon completion of all work
assignments, the presiding
Continued on A·3

..

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u:k
E

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A-3- The Sunday Tunes-sentmel Sunday Oct 23 1977
A &gt;-TheSunda' T n s..S&lt;ntmel Sunda&gt; Od 2J to

,---------------------------1
f opinion
10el&lt;omed TiM')
L.t'ttrr

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should~

a re

less thw 300 \\ ords long or be subjeet to reduction by
the &lt;dlt&gt;r\ and must br &gt;tgued "lth the signee s ad
dre" '\ am" ms\ be .. tthheld upon publication
Ho\oH'\er on rt"((Ut"~t 1amts "-Ill be dtsdosed Letters
sh uld b, n ~ood ta.te addressing lssu.. not per
s nal il es

(~me~ nu d •.tmut ( h1ldre11
1
Dea S r
1
I~'" bt't'n on o\bt fthcS utler l"t:O i s h 10lboard
I (Ithtpastt'" md ahalf )tals l\\ as st rletted but"ten
I tlll t"{ILP"-It alltp nlpptlOtltt"nt f1llthetl 1 fDeuH
I Htll "I I td t&gt;s got&lt;d If It ot n) dul) I sene 111 tlus area I

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IT rldilfe Som I) opposes 1ssue
\l e 1 i)e&lt;' f th&lt; Olu Chapter f The 1\oldlife S &gt;eoel\
1g ruusl &lt;pp
passage f Issue:'&lt; 2 winch " ould proh obot
use f the leght ld trap n Oh The Wtldhfe Soctel\ s an
mtemattonal profess onal orgaruzatl n concerned "' th proper
n anagE'n ent f ' ldhfr reso 1rces Oh10 Chapter r embers
mdudl \ tldhfe ma tag£&gt;rs adnurustrati:'l rs rest&gt;a rch sctent sts
and educat rs
&amp; un&lt;J." ldl fe nanagen en pernuts a regulated han est

of surplus fur bearmg anunab In add attor tt sometunt"s
reqwres t&gt;lect e re O\. at of aruma is to reduce damage to
Tops a d pr pert and reduction of anunal populatoons to
con trol tlTe spread of d sease The health and \\ ell be ng of both
turnans and domPst c anu1als are often m ol\ed
Tr appm~ ts freq entl1 the most effective means of
har esttng su rplus an mals and con r oll ng a noma l
popular ons I n an i s tuat ons the leghold trap os the onl)
ef!ett e tool as \\ £ll as then ost hun18ne tool avrulable Other
n etiwds of conLro suc h as the use of pmsons rna} waste
aluable ildl fe resources and ktll nontarget anm1als
ncludmg domest c anm als
Management ofOh o S \\ ldhfe resources s and should be
the funcuon of tl e exerutJve branch of goverrunent
Management b) const tullona 1 a mendment IS too mflextble to
be orkable Issue No 2 s mtended to prohtbll forever the use
f a wildl fe management tool for whoch m man)
ctrcum~t an ces

there s no effective substltute

The Oh o Chapter of The Woldlife Socoel\ formly believes
that a No 1ote on Issue 2 ts a vote for sound scoenttftcall)
based management of Ohio s prec ous wtldlife Resources Smcereil Duane A Tolle Presodent Ohio Chapter The
Wild! fe Soc ety

Can t pia) around th1s time
To the 10 ers and taxpa)ers n the Southern Local School
Dtstr ct
For the past month 1\e have been hearmg pro and con on
the 6 5 rrull le 1 I a m deeply disappomted m some of our
former educators The- a re cuttmg off the hand that fed them
for so mam years
Too much pol t cs and personal feelmgs are be ng InJected
mto tlus s tuat on We cannot pia) around" th the future of our
childr en - our most prec ous possesswn
None of us wants to pay higher taxes but our dollars do not
stretch as far as the) used to As for the people who ha1e
bought up a lot of land tf you can t afford the taxes on ot you too
are d ng somethm g \\Tong
Sure there are some thmgs gomg on m school that we don t
like but I have attended a lot of school board meetmgs and I
haven t noticed oo man) of ) ou people !)Jere If I don t like
what I see I go nto school and 10 ce my opon on Thts IS my
duty as a paren~ and a c uzen
Vote YES for the levy and then go to the polls agam m
November and 1ote agaon on the school board I m sure you all
read the headlones of the Sentmel Oct 19 We woll be rece vmg
more revenue " th the ne~&lt; plant and then we can drop back
agaon to our present m.1lage
Let s 21111 ork together and let our children know that we
do care about what happens to them and theor future
If you can vote no on the en ergency levy and go to bed and
sleep- fme We wouldn t be able to do that so we are votong
YES - Mr and Mrs George Yonker Rt 2 Racone 0

Will borrow
money tf levy
ts passed
Fnda y Saturday
and Sunday

Wrth

- - Nona e;.,oo

PLUS

COLO:\'
·
•
•
l'ht•IJ/r•·
Ton1ghllhru
Tuesday

RACINE - Meet ng tn
spect al sess on Thursday
mght the Southern Local
Sch oo l Dtstnct Board of
Educatoon
adopted
a
resolutiOn to borrow money
and open schools tf the 6 5
mtll operatmg levy ts appro' ed at Tuesday s spec tal
electiOn
If at all possoble With the
passage of the levy schools
woll be reopened on Oct 27
according to the board s
deciSIOn The next regular
meetmg of the board wtll be
Oct 27
Attendmg the meetong were
board members Robert
Sayre Dallas Htll Jack
Bostock Davod Nease and
Greg Roush
Johnoy s Legacy
John Chapman
alias
Johnny Appleseed planted
apple seedltng nursenes 111
clearmgs out West before the
p oneers arr ved He planted
to hts dytng day March 18
1845 near Fort Wayne Ind
where hos grave s now the
center of a small park Some
of hts trees slt ll stand though
many belteve the last one
toppled tn a storm near
Mansf el d OhiO on June 2
1959 - after bear ng apples
for more than 100 years
CLOSED MONDAY
GAl I !POLIS
The
Galltpol s Post Off ce woll be
closed Monday There woll be
specoal dehvery and lock box
servtce The last rna II w II
leave Gall polls at 4 30 p m
Monday

MASON DRIVE-IN
Fnday Saturday
&amp; Sunday
October 21 2 ~ 23
Plus

A Tale of

Two Critters
Cartoon

1 f 11 t
' ' t.:.

I a I uld

r b lt h uuts t pen the JaWS t r en \ e
has t vcn&gt;d It av
" 1s ' Stith' eunsutuh mal a nendment

t I itd \\ dkctl mt
s •t~ lssut N

tlowu g udo Ira(&gt;' It d ..,. 11&lt; t ullaw gwts ,.,. hun ton~ If a
•J • tt\ f tl
~ers say Ye s ot woll utlaw steel traps t1 at
l iH 11 d d b1 r g
ua s f suffl~ • g and pam t amn als that
•
rl r l kn 1 11
shoul ln get ff a path L' 11111 unl) used
u n lCrl t.."'\1 abc ut our dtildren tnd l1e tr futw e We nred
\Jt nab ant.! I ldr~:n wh d n 1 kn w that the sla te reqwres
g ~I s.: h ' Is t prep re ur&lt; htldren f &gt;r this hie
! rapt; t be c \erl'd
l a~ t n Lt e ))oard ' en: long before l n :ahzed Y. P Y. ere
i\lt) b&lt; d) II) th n~ should be all \led to walk the I elds
'ton the b&lt;st f u &lt; at c mhtu n Mr Ord nl rmed us he had '' ~t is and al n~ U e streams wtth ut fea r of be ng rna med for
Ulst rud~X! tJ e tc uhers a nd Jam I rs thtl') m ust t:onse n e on
hfe r suffcrong f r h urs be( re ntl'Clmg death
suppl es m d m ther areas \\ e ha \ e tned as much as posstble
Yes f 1 Sta te Issue 2 1 eic'l: l o day w II eltm nate these
u: cut d \\ n-.:s. penses m e\ er~ \liay
traps - S neerely D&lt; n Arndt 1190 St Cia r Ave Hrumlton
I fmd It h 1 d tu see " I) son e people can t understand that Ohto 4&gt;01, 1,131 863-4937
t takes much n r e n 01 e\ to. operate a sch )()l today Jtc;;t as 11
t.ake,S n u ~..h 1 re to kl't'p a home gomg
I l n I hkc pa1u g more taxes my self but l ah wolhll!l t What IS best fur children~
s; cnf ed t keep ur hildren 11 the Southern Loc al School
Re Spec a\ Election to J&gt;BSS 6 5 null levy n Southern Local
D str &lt;.:t We mu~t fa ee our r espons b hUes as cthze LS and
SCh JOI Dostnct on Octol)er 25 1977
open the S&lt;:h I doors b) 1utmg \ ES on Oct 25 for the 6 5n II
The t tme has comt! to put as1de OW' personal differences
le') - R bert K S;!) re Board Pres dent
and get back to the rnatn ssue which IS What s best for nur
choldre o• fs ot faor for our children to l)e out of sch ool JUS!
\1 a ling whole the adults trv to make up theor monds about what
H)droe/elfnc plant brg boost
to do" I don I think t s
Maybe we don t hke the ways our schools are beong
Dear Ctttzens
H 11 can 11e on Southern Local School Dtstr ct afford to operated but lets not punish the children for ot Lets vot~ YES
chance losmg ur schools b\ vollng down the 6&lt; null operating on October 25 get the chi ldren back n sr:hool and then work
lei) " W th the boost vhich the h'droelectnc plant at Ractne out our differences wtth the school board and teachers
INks and the Oh o Rl\er br dge at Great Bend (now reaht es)
Thank ; ou - Sonc'erely Mrs Marvtene Beegle Portland
"II gl\e the econonv of our dostrtct we ca n 1 afford to lose
Oh o
The State Department has made it clear that we must go
above the 20 nulls 11 e are now pa) lll!l for operating our schools
before 1 ore help " ll be avrulable If we don t meet state An rtem of thought
requtren en ts 11e can be forced mto consolidation How would
An otem of thought to the voters of the Eastern Loca l
thos affect our taxes' Thonk t o~er l)efore Oct 25 Lets ge t our
School
D stroct
ch oldren back on school - A taxpayer and rei red teacher
Thts
letter ~oncerns the upcommg election of School Board
Anna E Htlldore Syracuse 0
members n the Eastern Local distnct m whtch I am a
candtdate
There are several good candtdates runrunj( so there ts a
Parents need help
pretty wode cho11;e
My rnam concern IS that one of the candodates IS a school
Dear Parents
As tlte parents of a student at Me gs Ju ruor H gh School we teacher n another d1stnct
Now this letter os not to try to pull votes to myself or to cut
need you to help on the de1 elopment of a Parent Teacher
Forum The purpose of th s forum os to prov de a medmm anybody down many way because I have a lot of respect for
through 1\hiCh parents and teachers could 1\0rk together to thts man as a gentleman and a goo(! froend and also a great
develop the full potenltal of the Juruor Hogh School for ols deal of respect for the U!achers tn our dtstroct
But wtth the rtsmg problems fac ng the schools today m
students
On Tuesda) October 25 all persons who have an nterest negollatJOns with the 0 E A and the 0 A P S E "tth whtch I
on the educational prog rams of Meogs Jumor Htgh School are have had recent encounters ot would be almost m posstble for
on• ted to attend the motoal meetmg of th s school year of the a teacher servmg on the board to stt across the table from a
group of teachers and try to negotiate a teacher s contract and
Parent Teacher Forum at 7 30 p m n the School Cafeteroa
Wtthout vqur parttcopatwn this Forum ma; not successfully keep the best onterest of our school diStrtct foremost m hts
mmd You rrught 21Ve thts some thought before you choose
shed the bonds of ots onfancy
At thiS meetmg we w U doscuss the opera! ons of Me gs your candtdall!s --Clifford Longenette Rt 1 Reedsvtlle
Junt\)1' Htgh
Ohoo
Please brmg your fr ends and JOin us at the ~ orum
Meettng so we rna) start buildmg a firm foundatton for the Two real basJc needs
future See ) ou there - Smcerely ~Jan Kmg Prestdent on
behalf of Metgs Jun or H gh Parent Teacher Forum
Dear Sir
Dw-mg the past two weeks we have heard vanous opmwns
Yes vote w1ll end trapprng
concerrung the 6 5 m II levy to be voted on on Southern Local
Dtstnct on Oct 25
State fssue No 2 appear ng on the November ballot
There are two real baste needs of a good commumty
should be of great concern to parents ~mmal lovers and all These are your churches and schools Once you lose etther you
soon lose mterest and umty among the people of the
others opposed to suffermg and patn
If a maJOrity of the-voters mark Yes on this ballot ot wtll commumty We personally do not want to lose etther
ehmmate the dangers of strong steelleghold traps or any other
We have two ch ldren attendmg S L S D As we see them
trapp ng de\1Ce that causes continued prolonged suffermg to facmg the possobohty of mossong a year of school 11 makes us
feel that we as parents have fatled them on some way We are
btrds or anunals and possobly hwnans
Nobody knows for certam how many such traps are now thankful for those who supported the schools and gave us an
oemg used b) nexpenenced and expenenced trappers The opportumt) to obtam an educatwn
state ossues one license covermg huntmg and lrappmg The
We agree that there ts a more fatr method of taxat on than
hunrer and-&lt;&gt;r trapper pays the one proce for the one license
that of the real estare owners but until we can force a change
and can hunt or trap everyth ng that ts legal wtth that I cense
on the poiittcal system of taxatwn why puntsh the chtldren of
Accord ng to Ohto law there are trappmg seasons for our dtstrtct who have no vote on the tssue
raccoon m nk muskr~t fox opossum skunk weasel and n
So as real estate owners m S L S D we are m full support
30 northern and eastern count es there IS a season for trappmg of the 6 5 moll levy so our chi ldren can contmue thetr education
beaver Of all the se creatures of nature on ly the beaver mmk the same as those of ne ghbormg commumtles now wothout
and muskrat cannot be shot Only trapped The rest can l)e shot further delavs - Mr and Mrs Ronald salser Box 363
Rae ne Ohio 45771
or tra~ped
It s llegal to trap rabbots deer squtrrel grouse turke}
11 oodchuck partrodge quad pheasant and crow Most
Urges support of levy
trappers know this Some non trappers know this But what
many non trappers - nclud ng many hunters - 11 house dogs Dear Edttor
- don t know IS that ste.el traps must l)e covered hidden
I am wr tmg askong for a Yes vote Oct 2&gt; to pass our 6 ;
from voew by leaves twtgs dirt etc State law says NO mill lfavy
PERSON shall set on land any leghold trap or flesh batt that ts
Ifithe levy fails and the school doesn t open unttl Janual"}
not covered
tltere s a possobtlity of anotlter closmg m April whoch means a
So the only 1 vtng thmg who knows where the trap s lost year for everyone
hidden IS the trapper The ch ld look ng for autumn leaves
I have two boys and certatnly hope they can complete the
doesn t know The husband and wtfe strolhng through the year I understand how people on a fiXed ncome feel but
woods enJoymg a walk wtth thetr dog don t know Theor dog surely they can see if the levy IS passed what the revenue from
doesn t know Netther do the rabb Is squ rrels deer quat! and the hydrneleclnc plant would mean to our commumty But we
pheasants
must pass the levy to beneftt from 1t
State law requ res that NO PERSON shall set a trap m a
It makes me proud to see an old teacher of rrune and my
path com monly used by humans or domestoc ammals That s boys also workmg for the levy to help reopen our schools No
a worn path seldom followed b} children seekmg autumn folks she tsn t the kmd U&gt; receove ret rement and s1t back and
leaves seldom followed by folks huntmg walnuts seldom say who cares about the schools•
followed bv a dog whether he be a Cocker Spamel or a Coon
She 1s a real dedicated retired school teacher Tuesday we
Hound
woll see how many we have hke her
State law also says all traps mus&lt; be checked every 24
I am not complammg about our present school board but
hours Any " ld a mmal an) domestoc anunal any small tt seems no member ever wants to serve a second term and
chtld could concetvably be caught n a steel trap for 24 hours smce the state matniy runs the schools why doesn t some of
l)efore help ar oved suffermg a broken leg extens ve our people m the area 1ke a lawyer banker and so forth who
bleedong extreme pam prolonger hunger And none of these would make good candida res for school board members gtve
caught and held unl l found or unto! the trapper arr ved " auld the future a thought?
have to be what the trapper was legally allowed to catch After
Please vote yes Tuesday Oct 25 for the emergency levy
possobly 24 hours of suffenng the trapped ammal - legal or of Southern Local School dtstrtct - A parent and taxpayer
ollegal - would then be put out of tts m1sery wtth a club or Mrs Vtrgorua Rees Rae ne Ohw
p stol or turned loose to spend the rest of Is life on three feet
The purpose of trapp ng s for the fur according to the
trapper Such trappmg also prevents raccoons m nk Issue b~gger than trappmg
muskrats beaver and other fatr game from laking over the
The amendment to ban cerljm types of trappmg 1\htch
11orld they cant orgamze and attack Suet. trappmg h Ids
comes up for vote m the Noveml)er electiOn worrtes me deeply
down the populat on of these enem es so as not to contammate and not for the reason gtven by so many opponents
our rovers and dronking water so they won t bomb us or set
It happens that I have no quarrel w1th trappmg or huntmg
traps for us
allowed at the present ltme but there os a much btgger tssue
The average man cannot set a steel leghold trap w thout
JUSt trapping
us ng a foot to press down the sprmg and a hand to lock the hereItthan
ts the attempt by certam element by the people to dtctare
sleelJaws That s how strong that show much pressure IS set 11hat others can dO It 1s a throwback to the days when women
loose when the trap os sprung Many wtld and domestoc went around wreekin~ saloons wtth hatchets to the day of the
ammals when trapped would have to be ktlled before the trap
could be opened Because the trapper agam would have to use
Sunday Ttmes-sentmel

0 "

1

&lt; Rl

Closed For Season

IN THE SERVICE
VALDOSTA Ga - Shtrley
A Johnson daughter of Mrs
Luctlle Swam of Rt 2
Gallopolts Ohto has been
promoted to atnnan ftrst
class m t he U S Atr Force
Atrman
Johnson
an
aerospace ground equipment
mechamc ts assigned at(j
Moody AFB Ga With a umt
of the TaN teal Atr Command
The a1rman IS a 1970 graduate
of Calha Academy Hogh
School

POSTS BOND
POMEROY
Mary
Ramey Route I Reedsvtlle
posted a $100 bond and was
ordered to keep her chtldren
m school when she appeared
m Metgs County Court Fnday
on a charge of fa tlmg to have
her chtldren m school The
charge was filed by Otts
Knopp county school at
tendance offtcer who was
asststed by Carl Hysell
county juvemle offocer

For Free catalog

:0~

Tour Escort

G

ive someone
speqal ol)e of
out spec1~ l flo
ral arrangement•'
All typ es

WA'Y61y 0

- Personally escorted
- Jet f ghts v a SwiuA r

per peiSOn --enroute
International Lmes
Hotel accommodat ons

Double Occupancy
10 Day Journey
T0 H0 IY Lan d

ol-

Just none to twelve
months of career
tra1mng woll prepare
you for a well payong
t0b
We spectaltze 1n
preparmg you for one
of the followong tob
areas
Bus ne ss Management
Superv1s1on
Account ng
Bu s ness
Ownersh p
Secretary
Typtst
Recept onist

Oft ce

Bookkeeper Clerk Typ st
and related jobs
-Day or N1gl1l
ClassesApproved by OhtO
Stale Board of School
&amp;
College
Regoslratton RN OS8S

ts

Get started - send
above coupon YIStl
school olfoce or call
446 2239

Gall pohs

•
'I

'
''

~

local

'1199 per
Double Occupancy

-All s ghtsee ng adm ss. ons

exper enced

Eng sh

l1 Day Tourney To
Holy Land&amp;
Swttzerland

1:24 1978 speak
ng tour escort lam l ar th
tn e s ble ro accompany the tour on F b
Feb. 1;r
r
all s
ng excurs ons
e 21 Marth 3, 1978
Wnte for a free brochure
...,.....,...... GAlliPOLIS
or call (614) 446 0699
w

ghtsee

FLOWERS by GEORGE
21 CEDAR ST

PHONE 446 9721

b~:i~DI

'

Thomas C Breech

All ""' &amp; Local taxes
-Conti nental breakfast da v
-Lunc h &amp; d nner da IV
-An

&gt;

0 rector

th meals

33 Court St

Galltpolts 0

GENEVA WELLS
GALLI POLIS
Geneva
V nlon d ed n Veterans
Memor at Hospl a
Fr day
even ng
n Penny . Ky

daughter of
the late Dolly Bart ey and E
M Ba t ey who surv ves and
res des n East M cDowel

Ky

She s also surv ved by her
husband James We s Rt
V nton whom she marr ed on
June 26 954 at Douglas Ky
Also surv v ng a e four s&lt;ms

Bobby Pope and Arnold Pope

Newark Oh o Leroy Pope
Gonza les La Johnny Pope
M d(fleport
one daughter
M s B I (Nancy) Johnson
Newark One s ep san and
one step daughter surv ve
Larry Wells Columbus and
Mrs Carlos Harless Ft
Per ce
Fla
Fourteen
grandch ldren surv ve
Seven brothers and two
s sters
Andrew Ba tley
Portsmou h M !ton Bartley
Ho lywood
Fla
E Is

Bartley Wheelw ghl
E Bartley V rg e

Ky
Ky

Chester Bart ey Yeager
Ky
Jerry Bart ey Penny
Ky
Thomas
Ba tley
Romulus M ch Mrs Max e
E sw ck P kev le Ky M s
Hazel Ka ser Oe x er One
brother preceded her n

death
Funeral serv ces w II be
he d 1 p m Monday at Me
Coy Moore Funeral Home

Bu1.a

wI

be

n V nlon

Metnor a Park
Fr ends may ca I at the
funeral home on Sunday from
1 4 and 1 9 p m

JOHN E HAl LIDAV

Crown Coty a d M Steven
New 18 Gallipolis
$120 50 - Donna Shaw
fraud by deceptwn valued
less than $150
$112 - Garner W Troppletl
33 Crown C ty overload
(6 820 pounds)
$32 - Lmda S Ebhn 29
Ga lhpol s Dav d H Mohler
28 Galllpohs and Jack E
Crawford 56 South Pomt all
three assured clear dtstanc'C
Voctor E Cook 18 Rt 3
Proctorvolle and Charles E
Kasee 20 Galhpolts both
speed
$27
All of these speed
Larry W Call 19 Rt 3
Gallipohs Wenda M Hunt
22
Kerr
Robert E
Nocholson 22 Jackson and
Robert E Denn ~ Rt 2 Proc
torvtlle
$22- Steven I Tippett 21
Canal Wmchester and Roger
D Vaught 18 Cmc nnato
both followmg too closely
The remaonder were charged
wtth speed Emmett R
Thompson 23 Gall polls
Dallas Lee Dunn '7
Gobraltar Mich Davod C
CUnmngham 22 Galltpoiis
Harold V Coughenour 28 Rt
1 Gall polts Loren Nolan 42
Palnot Star Route and
Michael W Marctun 23 M d
dleport

SUNDAY
WEIGH pony pull at Calha
C&lt;&gt;unty Coon Club at I p m
Admtssoon $1
MONDAY
OPEN house at Ohw Valley
Chnsttan School from 7 to 9
pm
GALLIA CHAPTER OCSEA
at the Grand Squares Club
Room on Eastern Avenue
TUESDAY
THE AMERICAN Legoon
Auxohary Umt 27 meet at the
legton hall at 7 30 p m
SEW AND SO Club at the
home of Dorothy Beaver at 7
pm
FOUR H
ADVISERS
recogmtwn banquet 7 p m
Green Elementary School
RIVERSIDE Study Club at
Mrs M T Erlmg Sr at I
pm
WEDNESDAt
PYTHIAN S1sters meet at K
of P Hall at 7 30
THURSDAY
BLOODMOBILE wdl be at
Church of the Nazarene from
noon until 6 p m Use 2nd Ave
entrance

$15,000••.

Bv EMIL SVEILIS
LENINGRAD US S R
t UP!) - A concerted effort
by Sovtet authortlles to
ehmmate
Lemngrad s
dissodent leaderslup through
mtgrahon tmprtsonment or
ex ale has senously curta led
the movements orgamzed
actov1 ty Western ofhcta ls
SBid Saturday
They sa od the Sovtet
government sensttove to

Contmued from A 1
made a plea to the c ty ad
mmtstratwn to put renewed
effort behond the program m
VIew of the generous em
memorattve gtft from
Robbms &amp; Myers
Epling
potnted
out
Robbms &amp; Myers os an m
dustr1al cttlzen m our com
mumty and thev have
awarded us thetr IOOth an
mversary grant as a measure
of thetr destre to contnbute to
a commun ty cause m whtch
we have placed great 1m
portance We not only thank
R &amp; M for theor gtft he went
on but must be aware they
have tossed the mtttattve to
us These funds can only be
used tf we complete the
proJect I hope we can fmd
the same measure of com
mumty deme to ratse the
addttwnal funds needed

cnbcJsm about Its hwnan

rtghts pollctes IS allowtng
speedier
than
usual
emtgratwn
of
Jewtsh
disstdent leaders
As for pohhcal dtsstdenls those who do not want to
emtgrate but rather stay and
work to change (he sysrem vtrtually all actiVIsts have
been sentenced to prtson
terms or Stbenan extle
The sources satd other
Important factors m the cam
paogn mclude the current
Belgrade followup to t he
Helsmki Secunty Conference
and the forthcommg 60th
anmversary of the Bolshevtk
Revolution where the Sovoets
want to portray themselves
as one btg happy famtly

Gallia •••

'

drtver of t he vehiCle con

t nued on !'he accodent s
under mvest1gat on
Froday
evemng
th e
department recetved a report
30
from Jane Lane
Gall polls She reported that
around 8 40 p m she wa s
travelmg east on CR 24
toward Pomeroy JUst off SR
7 when she nottced an o I
delivery truck backong ont
the roadway She stopped her
car but the truck cont nued to
back up and struck the front
'
0
end of her vehocle Both
learnmg centers to ass1st drtvers got out and looked
teachers m mdov dualtzmg over the car hut d dn t see
any damage I ater when she
mstruct10n
We thonk the course wtll got to a more ll ghte I a ea she
offer ms ghts for the prac discovered that the hood was
t c ng educator who destres to sprung
Fog "as heav) at the tome
Ms
meet student needs
of
the acctdent The drover of
Bauer noted
the
truck was Bret Wyatt and
She md cated that area
owned
by ExcelSior 0 I Co
profess•onal teachers are
Pomeroy
There were no
onvtted to take the three
C
itatiOns
tssued
credit hour course wh ch wtll
Sher ff deput es are m
be offered Monday 6-8 50
vestogatmg
the breakong and
p m for 11 weeks begmmng
ng
of
the
George Shuler
enter
December 5
res
dence
on
Shady Cove
Ms Bauer also sa d that
Road
below
M ddl eport
college students who are
There s no tnf ormatiOn
preparong for teach ng
careers would fmd the course ava !able m regard to
anythmg m sslng
valuable
They are also mvesttgatmg
Tmtton for restdents of
the
breakmg and cntermg of
Galloa Jackson Metgs and
the
Jarrell Restaurant at
V nton Counties IS $39 Pre
Letart Falls No add tonal
regostratoon o.s scheduled for
October 26 and ftnal tnformatton was avatlable
regtstratton on Nov 28 For Both mctdents are under
add twnal nformatwn phone onvesttgatoon
245 5353

MAY ENROLL NOW
EAST MEIGS - Res dents
who "ant to complete their
htgh school educatoon may
enroll m a G E D adult
educat on program bemg
held at the Eastern HighSchool room 204 Monday
Tu esday and Thursday
even ngs from 6 to 9
The program IS open to all
persons 16 and older who are
not enrolled n a publtc
school There ts no charge
and materials are provtded
1 hose woshmg more In
formation may call 985 3329

one-on-one rssue

RIO GRANDE How does
a teacher gove mdtvtdual
attent on to students when
there are 30 35 choldren on a
smgle class?

That s the quest ion a
course at R o Grande College
and Commumty College w ll
attempt to answe1 when t IS
offered durtng wmter quarter
begmmng Nov 29
Jndov dual zed In
structoon w 11 I elp par
t copants explore ways of
teach ng students one-to one
even m the mtdst of a large!"
class
Lmda Bauer ass1stant
professor of educatiOn satd
the class wtll examone
orga nozat onal desogn for
offenng nd vtdualtzed at
tentwn to publtc school
st udents and explore the
vanous ways chtldren learn
She satd an mtegral part of
the class " ll be developmg

s

MAKING THAT
ONCE IN A
LIFETIME CHOICE!
•

Choos ng your engagement
and wedd ng
ngs w I
probab y be one of the most
mport ant dec s ons of your
fe Trust us to he p you

r~&gt;lurnb1~1
~~

TAWNEY'S
JEWELERS
,___

412 Second Ave
Galhpol
Oh1o
___;
_ _..J

User charge hill endorsed
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Oh oo Valley In provement
Assoctatlon has endorsed a
b II passed by the U S House
of Representtves that would
unpose a user charge on
commerc al craft travehng

I

presented award
CINCINNATI (UP!) ~
Forst Nattonal Bank of
Cmcmna lt has receoved the
1977 Busmess Support of the
At ts Award from the Ohio
Arts Council
The bank was recogmzed
for ots sponsorship of the free
C ncmnatl Symp hony
Orchestra park concerts
First Nat onal has been the
sole sponsor of the concerts
smce 1973 A total estunated
aud ence of 600 000 persons
has attended the free
concerts
Formal presentatiOn of the
award was made Frtday
n ght at Cmcmnat1 s Musoc
Hall

on nland waterways such as
the Oh o Rovet
The ndustry-supported as
soc1alton actually doesn t
want any waterway usage
tax aCL'OI ding to Wtlham J
Hull a lobbyist for the group
But the btl! they ve endorsed
1s the least damagmg of
ava !able alternattves for the
Ohto Rover basm economy
he sa d
The b ll s atmcd at
recovermg 100 percent of the
operatmg and mamtenance

costs of the mland waterway
systems m the f rst fove
years plus oO percent ol new
constructwn costs n the next
f ve years It has the full
backtng of the Carter
admtmstratwn
The measure would take
the form of a four-cent per
ga llon fuel tax for two years
after which 1t would be ratsed
to stx cents
Hull charged the tax would
mcrease operatmg costs of
barge hnes by 4 percent The
assocoat on held ti.S annual
meetmg thiS week m Cmcm
nato

IN
••••••••
.,
.......
.
.. CONCERT
··::::::
••••

...••:•

•

105

8

ISears I Console color
TV with ren1ote control

.........

::::::::.•.
•• •
••
•••••
••

IS) U cfagC

vol

c lur

••

••

•••

Contmued from A I
JUdge must return u w1 It ,,

r,

to the board of elect ons
With a U the ballots and other
suppbes he or she ptcked up
Saturday

y
BILLY "CRASH" CRADDOCK
AND
JERRY LEE LEWIS

Unless You Book Early· You May Not
Have A Happy Thanksgiving Or A
Merry ChrlstmaL If You Are Planning
A Trip During The Holidays - Make
Your Airline Reservations And Travel

~~ GAlliPOLIS

Bl LLI E JO SPEARS
MEMORIAL FIELD HOUSE

Fnday No ..mber 11th 8 00 PM
5450

••

"T1'raw1 i\gency

••••••

,.;.
Ph. 446.0699

SALI
Was *779.95

Spectal Guest

••••
•••••
••••••

Arrangements. •• NOW I

GallipoliS, Ohto

Accordmg to witnesses the

by Doug Adams Rt 1
Reedsvolle was parked on the
lot at the Tuppers Plams
Datry Queen whet t was
struck by a blue colored
vehtcle woth whtte stnpes No
reg1strat1on number WCJS
obtatned

was gone

Course will explore

THANKSGIVING and CHRISTMAS

33 Court St.

Waldo served on the U S
Army European Th eatre
&lt;lurong World War fJ He was
d sc harged on 1946 woth the
rank of MaJor
!'he Southern Oh o native
has served Columbus Mutual
I 1fe Insurance Company for
27 years and 11as elected
prestdent m 1968
He IS very acttve on the
msurance mdustry In ad
d toon he IS a member of a
number of ctv c and serv1ce
orgamzat ons
He and Ius w1fe Lorna
resode on Upper Arl ngton
They have three ch ldren

Hit-skip mishap probed
POMEROY
Meogs
County Shenff James J
Proffott and deput es are
onvestogatmg a hotsktp ac
elden! that occurred at
Tuppers Plaons Frtday at
approxomately 8 40 p m
A 1971 Ford Mustang owned

NEW ORLEANS (UPI)
It was the case of the
puckering pickpockets
Jurgen Kflhmann 21 a
tourist from Munlch West
Germany told pollee six
women ran up to him wbfle
be walked along Bourbon
Street and began kfsolng
him alfeclionalely
Alter they stopped and he
walked away he noticed
his wallet wfth 150 German
marks - worth aboyt ~ ­
-

Underwrit ers OrgrrP m 1955

Cmcmnah bank

Mi£htgan s Mott Choldrens
Hd!;ptt:al In some cases
thO"~ IS even a threat of
de!lth
.
~ases were reported m a 3().
mile radius around the coty
tn~ud ng the western edge of
mttropol tan Detro t

•

GALUPOLfS - Munocopal
Judge Rol)ert S Betz Frtday
fined four men who made
thetr aRpearance l)efore htm
and conhnucd one case
He assessed a fme of $200
and costs - cosl' are $12 75
- from Ronald J Voreh 18
Rt l Gall polis on Vorell s
plea of gutlty to a charge of
hit sktp
The olheo three men also
pleaded gmlty Luther John
Moore to a charge of
disorderly conduct and hiS
fme was $50 and costs Oran
C Barry J r 30 Rt 1 Proc
torvtlle $10 and costs speed
Davtd M Prater 31 Jackson
$10 and costs loss of load
Charles
Thompfoon
forfeited bond on each of
three charges totaling
$231 50 the charges were
wtth bond forfeiture on each
$120 50 trespass $70 50
me na ctng
anfl $40 50
disordeoly conduct
George Roper! Whote
pleaded not guo ltv to a charge
of assault and battery and
Judge Betz contmued the
case to Nov 22
Fonettures mcluded these
$512 - Nelson E Dray 20
Rt 2 Galhpohs DWI
$312 also all DWI - Harley
( E Taylor 32 Galllpohs
Charles L Whitt 44 Rt 2

Leningrad dissidents
hit by Soviet pressure

~~: o:"i~e D~n~~~~~:; ~f

-

COURT NEWS

She was born Ocl t4 t923

z

ANN ARBOR Moch (UP!)
- Que tors already faced wtth
a senous outbreak of croup m
r htldren
were
asked
saturday to help Canadian
health offtctals find a family
pos:;ogly carrymg dophtheroa
Dr Lucy Duncan a
l ambton County Ontano
health offlctal satd she asked
ph)/,soctans to locate Mr and
Mrs Rocky Lunham of Ann
Arbor whp v stted the Kettle
Pomt lndoan Reserve 'three
weeks ago
Four con!trmed cases of
dlphtherta have developed on
Ute reserve across the St
Clair Rtver from Port Huron
A fiftll case of the dtsease that
bloCks breathmg passages ts
suspected Ft ve houses on tile
reserve were quarantmed
Dr Duncan satd the
Luilhams sought treatment
for Uteor sock chtld oo the
re~erve but left before
d P.htheroa was suspected
::;he satd the tnfant may have
h.oa the disease and the
patents may be carrymg the
de~dly bactena but health
off1c1als will not know unltl
the family can be rested
Anyone vtsitmg the reserve
be\ween Sept 30 and Oct 12
could also have contracted
the illness she satd
Also area health off1c als
reP"fted no new croup cases
Satl'lrday m an outbreak that
ha&lt;C affitcted 20 children l)e
tw'l)'n the ages of one and
seven durmg the past three
weeks At least SIX of the
chijdren were hospitalized
an4 tubes were mserted m
therr throats to rud breathing
€£"OUp
lS.. a
common
childhood aolment thai causes
se11ere coughmg Doctors
sail! the Ann Arbor stram was
pattrcularly vtolent
'In thts outbreak whtch
shO:ws no sogns yet of levehng
off: the age range IS grearer
an!l the vtrulence os much

Addoson $22 and co&gt;ts
speedmg Alban Taylor Ht
3 Racme $100 and costs
three days conlmement $50
suspended
confonement
year
suspended
one
pro bat aon no operators
ltcense
Forfeoung bonds were BtU
f Santos Athens Davod E
Kettlewell Canton Paul
l aughlln Salem Da1 td
Taylo•
Mineral Wells
Robert W Gore Zanesvtlle
Bolly Prater West loberty
Ky Edward Spotler Sr
Canton Paul E Gtlbert
Ashland Ky Kenneth Mont
gomery Clay W Va $30 50
each speedmg Gregory D
Medley Mtnersvolle $28
speedmg Bobby Jo Adams
Jr Rt 3 Pomeroy $&gt;3
dosorderly conduct Nancy
Cole Tuppers Plams $30 55
exp1red operators license
Ster\mg
W
Rayburn
Syracuse $30 55 speedong

ror UMBUS - Ralph E
Waldo was elected to the
Board of D rectors of
Columbus and Southern Ohto
Electr c Company at the
October boa rd meeting
C'haorman of lhe Board H J
Gru eser announced that
Waldo ftll s the vacancy
followmg the ret rcment of
John E "flalhday of Gallopohs
effcctove Oct t6
Wa ldo IS pres dent of
Colun bus Mutual I fe In
surance Company
A 1940 graduate of !'he Ohto
State Untvers ty Waldo also
ach eved the Chartered L fe

We Is 54 a res dent of Rt 1

Assistance
sought in
Michigan

Enroll Now at
Southern Htlls School
of Bustness

Tour Escort Portsmouth

tale T I y and Garel Buckley

W II am B shop a daughter

For A Better Job
Faster

Worlds three great fa ths V1s1t the shr nes
that recall the greatest events of h story . )..
the tragedy of the Cross and the tr umph of
Jf... \
Jesus over death
Pastor ScoH Rawl ngs

12 at

Svrv v ng are two b others

Yeau~er
former y
of
Chesh r e d ed Fr day at her
res1den ce n Co umbus
Sh e was born n Penn
syl'lan a a daughter of the
Ia e M
and M s W II am
Dany She was also preceded
n death by her husband
Mote Yeauger
n 1959 a
s stet: and a half bother
Su r v v ng are a son

mal

Stay n Jerusalem the Hqly C ty to the

Cana

Mercy Hosp tal Co umbus
She was a daughter of the

\/lOLA YEAUGER
CHESHIRE - M s Vola

1&gt;0!1

Come w1th us to H1s Land Fmd Bethlehem
where the first Chnstmas took place See
Nazareth the Gahlee and the Rever Jordan

65

Columba d ed Oct

Amemorial serv ce w 1 be
announced late due to the
hasp tal za t on of h s w fe
She was n ured n a fal at
the nu s ng home last week
T~ body w I be cremea ted

__,.,

Southern Hills
School of BUSiness

F orence Sm th

W nchester forme ly of West

Q"&gt;bert Mer n Tanner 88 a
res~ ""lt of th s c ty and
a ve o Ga l Ia County d ed
F day in a ours ng home
t ere He was born n Perry
r w p June 7 889 son of the
Ia e Henry and Emma Jane
Ta n er:
He marred Hele Lew s
Sept
S 1~27 She urv ves
lllo!_lg w h a daugh er Mrs
L ridsle y (A eel Foote
l&lt;a amalOo
M ch
two
grandch d en a s s er Mrs
T homas R chards of R o
Grande and a brother
Dw ght E Tanner of Tucson

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

YOUR TOUR FEATURES

and
Fran c s
Thomas
Co umbus
Funeral services were held
Oct 15 at the Myers Funera
Home and bur a was n the
Obetz Cemetery

FLORENCE SMITH
WEST COLUMBIA

ROBERT TANNER
KALAMAZOO M ch

Address ::-::-:-=----1

Ave

T o edo and many relatives
and
close
friends
n
Co umbus
R k had been pay ng at
he Front Page Lounge n
New 0 e ans
when he
became too II to carry on
R k
46
was bu r ed
Sa tu day morn ng n Sl delt:

ero

Anyon e w sh ng to wr te h s
pilrents he address s D
Rav Saunde s Rt 7 Box
725 4
S dell
Lou sana
10459

coupon

4 4 Second

Coats F..u nera
Home in
M dd
t Burial w
be n
Grave H II Cemetery at
Chesh re

La

s~s:a!: F~~~~

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGED - Charles
W Warden
Ill
Che
shtre
Ray W
Jus
us Pomeroy Je my Hoi
ley Crown Ctty
Mrs
Van el Marr Letart Mrs
Lawrence Thompson Pomt
Pleasant Mary Hams
Mason Debboe Co leman
Moddleport Famous Hart
Potnt Pleasant Johnny
Wamsley Pomt Pleasant
Arthur Helton Kentucky
Mrs John H pes Po nt
Pleasant Roy McCo) Point
Pleasant Emma McDaniel
Potnt Pleasant Mrs Donald
Roush Mason and Joe
Wtlhams Leon

Parents
home Saturday
where he lapsed nto a coma
R k was born n Columbus
and has many fr ends n
Ga I pol s
N orthup and
rela ves In Ga Ia County
R k was a renowned
co cert pan st s nger and
composer and a graduate of
Ju lard n New York He
recent y did some work w th
Th e In k Spots now tou r ng
the states and n Europe He
never rna red He leaves his
parents and one aunt in

W !tam Buckley M ddleport
Esther Keefer One and
Char es
Buckley
aunl
n Columbus Da sy M nersv I e and two s sters
Maw.we I uncle and w fe n V ·g n a E s M ddleport

Like a good neigltbol
Homt QrToc• Bloom

POMEROY - Ftfteen
defendants were lmed and 14
others forfeited bonds m
Meogs County C&lt;lurt Froday
Fmed by Judge Robert E
Buck
were
Donald
Swearengen Rutland $18
and costs speedtng Charles
Sham Parkersburg Herl)ert
Grate
R uti and
Noah
Chasteen Rt 1 Middlepot t
and
Barton
Repa ss
Galllpohs $10 and costs each
speedmg
George
M
Freeland Syracuse $19 and
costs speedtng James H
Woodyard Rt 2 Pomeroy
$93 and costs overload Gary
Black Rutland $10 and costs
unsafe vehtcle James E
Pnce
Canton
Jeffrey
Eubanks Byesville and
Junmoe Kmg Rt 1 Mmers
vtlle $11 and costs each
speeding Edward Cump
ston Walker W Va and
The
Ronald Wtndland
Plams $15 and costs each
speeding Charles W P eh

Sl dell

"UFE 10surance, too'
~..all me ror details~
~==;::--

and the f ollow n g step
ch dren A l en Yeauger
Norman Yeauger both of
For da
Max Y eauger
Penn ngton
Va
Paul
Yeauger
M cConnellsv•l e
Pearl Yeauger Charleston
W Va
Delma
Hawley
Chesh re Marv n Yeauger

Chesh e
and
Alfred
ll&gt;l6 He had been In the New Yeauger 'M nersv lie
Or eans hasp tal tor some
Funeral arrangements a e
t me and was brought to his be ng made by the Raw I ngs

A

TAKE YOUR CHOICE-

Rev Arnold Meckstroth

Saunders son of The ma and
Dav d Ray Saunders d ed at
4 20 P m Wednesday a the
home of h s parents In Slidel l
lou sana
R k had been sutler ng
from the effects of cancer
s nee .an operation of January

l4 Stole 51
Phone 446 4"\90

Holy Land Tours

MOONSHINE COUNTY
EXPRESS r PGJ
CRAZY MAMA

\ eterans Memorial Hospflal
Adrmtted - Randy Ran
dolph
Pomeroy
Lor e
Faulk Pomeroy
Warren
D scharged
Black Lmda Clarke Er
nest ne Wtll ams
Rtta
Parsons Lena Hetlman
Hamson Rood and Mal)el
Wolkerson

Area Deaths
RIKl SAUNDERS
GALLIPOLIS Rlk

(

Hospital News

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

The Perfect
Gift For Any
Occasion

!

Halliday retires
from C&amp;SOE board

Judge fines 15,
14 forfeit bonds

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

r diculous Eoghteenth Amendment whoch started thtS country
d wn the path of la"lessness and orgamzed cruue
Small but vocoferous mmontoes enjoyed telhng others
how they sha 11 I ve l'hetr ways are devtoWl They use the
t'Ourts to gam ends then aJunty does net want As in the case
of the Maryla ul woman who forced the endtng of prayers m
t ur schiX Is N w such am nonty wants to Ioree the govern
ment to remo1 e the famohar words In God we trust from
our coms
It should be overlooked that a large number of the pet1t1on
sogners who back the lrappmg amendment I ve m CUyahoga
County where tltere ts abnost no lrappmg Nonetheless they
want to tell people 10 other rural counlles how they can ltve
It IS thts rubbhng at liberty that leads to loss of our rights
If the current trappmg amendment s adopletl l)e sure of one
th10g they wtll next move against all trappmg and then
agamst ftshtng and then agatnst huntmg Theor hunger for the
r ght to tell others what to dots msatlable They woll move on to
den) campers the right to camp bestde streams Impose
restnctwns of boatmg and dectde who may take the lamtly car
out for a Sunday drive
l don t hke long hatr on boys or men but I have no destre to
have a law passed about ot I don t hke large centraltzed
schools which force children to lose two or three preciOus hours
of each day ridiOg the bus around the country but I wouldn t
ca mpatgn agamst them Each little hbert) taken away from
you and me reduces the total liberty for which we fought 10 a
haU-dozen wars
The urban backers of thos trappmg law are unrealistic I
have seen many of these bleeding hearts abandon kottens along
country roads because they couldn t bear to dtspose of thell)
hwnanely not carmg that the k ttens are exposed to hideous
dangers and wtll and tf they survtve destroy countless song
btrds that keep do\\11 msect population
There IS a story about the stprekeeper who nol ced that
moce were mbblong at a btg wheel of cheddar cheese He sad
there no need to worry they took so small bttes In a matter of
weeks them ee had eaten the entire wheel of cheese
The only wa) to preserve the liberties l' e che.rish
dr ve the tntce out now Let them go on mbbhng annd~j~~~:~~~.
destroy many of the cheriahed rights hobb es and e
we now possess Httler began wtth a few restrictions and went
on to despollsm lndora Gandhi suppressed one lottie law alll!r
another until lnd a lost ots hbertoes
An amendment agamst trappmg may not seem so earth
shaken a thmg by tlseU but ot IS another srep tn the curtalbnent
of our long eherished rights and hberties People bke many of
these who would back thiS amendment would be very happy to
sponsor another amendment tellmg us whtch nights we mayl
kiss our wtves - Smcerely yours Allan Keller Foxktll Farm
Tuppers Plams 0

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PLAZA

�A+-'!'he SWldaY Tunes-Sentinel. SWlday, Oct. 23, 1977

Police Dedication of Scipio High SchQol in 1931 recalled
probe _
By Bob Hoefli ch

POMEROY
"Magnificent in its a ppoint·
ments. standing majestically

wrecks

•

GALLIPOUS - Gallipolis
police at 12 :27 Saturday
afternoqn investigated a
minor collision In the parking
lot of. Bob Evans Drive-In on
Eastern Avenue.
They said that Shirley J .
Clay, 19, Rt. I, Gallipolis, had
parked, and Mamie N. Robinson, 69, Gallipolis, attempted
to park in the space next to
the Clay car. The Robinson
car struck the rear bwnper of
the parked'car.
Severe damage was done to
one car , driven by Ellis
Buchanan, 39, Athens, down
Eastern Avenue just below
Bell Street.. when It was
s tr.uc k f rom be hind .
Buchanan had slowed for
another vehicle ahead of him
making a right tum.
Behind him, Daniel B. Hill,
in a pickup, could not stop in
time and he hit the Buchanan
car. Hill , 24, lives on Rt. 1,
Gallipolis. Moderate damage
was done the pickup. Hill was
charged with failure to stop
within the assured clear
distance and posted $32 bond
for his appearance in
Gallipolis Municipal Qlurt.
Time of the Buchanan-Hill
wreck was 2:47p.m. Friday.
At 2:08 p.m. Friday, Alice
Faye Rice, 34, Point pleasant, backed from a parking
place on Second Avenue just
above Qlurt Street, and did
not see Sheryl Yvette
Johnson, 23, Gallipolis, head·
ed ctown Second Avenue, as
she pulled into the Sheets
Sohio"' service station .
Damage was minor.
All :40 p.m. on Portsmouth
Road, Charles A. Burris, 17,
Rl 2, Gallipolis, headed
toward town, stopped to
niake a left tum into the
WJEH driveway. Behind
him, eastbound !!everly L.
Salyers, 21, Rt. 1, Waterloo,
could not stq) her vehicle in
time and biDilped the Burris
car in the rear.

Earnings
annotmced
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Cin·
cinna ti Gas &amp; Electric Co.
has annoWlced earnings of
$3.1~ per common share for
the 12 months ending last
Sept . 30.
Earnings fo r the most
recent fiscal year compared
to a $1.50 per common share
figure, for the same period
'!hich ended Sept. 30, 1976.
~&lt;The increase in earnings
resolted primarily from the
effect of more t han $80
million per year of gas and
electric rate increases
obtained during the latter
part .of 1976,;, the company
·noted in a statement released
Friday .
Gas sales for the most
recent 12 mooths were up 1.l
percent, while retail electric
sales increased 9.4 perce nt.

B&amp;EPROBED
GALI..IPoUS - Under investigation Saturday was a
breaking and entering at. the
White Palace restaurant on
Second Avenl!e in Gallipolis.
Police said tliat the invaders
got in by removing a fan from
the west end of the l)w,Jding.
They took $25 in cash and $10
worth of candy and cookies.

which

is

familiar to

the

people of Me1~s Count)'
today .
Major
Charles
To\\nsend raised_ the money

like a queen en thron("d upon for the . i11shtute and was
an E&gt;minenct of beauty. a teaching there .in 1861 when
monument tu t he progressive , the rail to arms ('atne .
P r ominent
among
his
spirit of its bu ilders."
These words were among students were Sen . J . L.
the praise to the Scipio High Ca rpenter , Dr. J . R. Clark
Schoo l. exist ing today only as and Col. E. P. Brooks.
Major Townsend resigned
an elementary school. just a
his
position. raised )20 me11 'in
littl e over 4~ years ago whe.n
that
section, joined the .colors
the school was dedicated at
of
the
30t h Regt . O.V.I., ilnd
ceremonies on Dec. ~ . 1931.
went
to
wa r as their captain .
Mrs. Kenneth Welsh , Route
His
brother,
Hugh Townse11d.
2, Pomeroy, saved a report on
ta
ught
.
his
unexpired term
the dedication ceremonies
written by the late J. F. and joined the 921ld Regt.
Bowles. Sci pio High School O.V.I., throwing the torch of
served well at first. but little learning to a long line of able
by
little .
enrollment and dist inguished teache rs in
decreased and finally it was the persons of John Campconverted into its present bell . Thomas Peden, Ma rion
grade school status and is F igley . Ju dge J ohn H.
now li part of the Meigs l..ocal Locha r y, Abraha m Hu tchinson. J ohn A: Gotschall,
School District .
John
Peyton, John Paynter ,
The account by Bowles
W,
C.
Merritt , C. .E. Price.
follows :
At the dawn of the 19th Asa Hoskins and George H.
century a body of armed Crow.
Charles a nd Hugh Townhorsemen from Kentucky
rode into this part of the Ohio send both graduated at Ohio
country and struck camp University before the war.
where the Col. E. P. Brooks Hugh made the sup reme
home now stands in sacrifice on the battle field of
Harrisonvi lle. They tied their Missionary Ridge in the
horses to trees and shot at a ca rna ge of that ga llant
ma rk while the supper of wild charge up th e hill that swept
game was cooking. Breaking the Rebels from their breastcamp the next morning they works and won the battle. His
went up among the high hills body was brought home by
Golden .
Ma jor
aroWld Downington, near the Major
At hens Co unty li ne, and Township return ed un sett led . The forebea rs of scathed. beca me a Iawver
the's e men had followed and a fine orator and .waS at
Boone into the "Dark and one time Secretary of State
Bloody Ground " from the for Ohio.
There are the hi storica l
Carolinas and Virginias and
associations
of a tmmship
had helped to win Kentucky
that
gave
to
the world such
for civilization.
men
as
Sen
. Thomas A.
The Downington settlement
Welch,
Judge
l..ochary, Col.
was soon enlarged by a
E.
P.
Welch,
Col. E. P.
stream of settlers that poured
Brooks
and
Dr.
John M.
through the passes of the
Davis,
the
greatest
educator
Alleghenies from the East.
Meigs
County
ever
produced.
From this melting pot of the
two sections, the North a nd These are t tie fine traditions
~ uth , emerged a virile in- of a worthy people , men and
who
in
the
telligent people destined to. women,
leave their impress upon this culmination of their work, the
section of OhiO&lt; Her e at fulfillment of their vision
Downington was founded the have ca rried the torch of
fi rst school of hi gher education to heights their
education in Northwestern fo refather s never dreamed
Meigs County, the DeCamp of.
Now a fe w words about'.
Institute in Scipio Township.
Ha
rrisonville a nd
the ·
The princi pal contributors
memorab
le
ded
icati
on
.
were the Townsends, Wells,
Under
headlines
·Morgan's
Douglases, Riggs, Hanings,
DeCa mps, Goldens an d Men Mei gs Melod ra ma
f

Downings, ev~ry n~me of

Everything but
children allowed
CULV ER CITY , Calif.
(UPI ) - Californ ia la w
pr o h i bit s ho u s in g
discrimination against single
women, homosexuals, longha irs a nd persons with
unusual political and moral
beliefs.
But the law does not yet
include children or fa milies
with children,
.
Municipal Court Judge
Harold L Cherness pointed
that out Friday in upholding
California law which allows
private apartment owners to
reject families with minor
children.
He ruled in the case of a
Marina ·Del Rey , Ca lif.,
couple, Stephen and l..ois
Wolfson.
The judge said the couple childless when It first signed
its lease - was aware of
prov isions in their lease
forbiddii.g children and was
obliged to follow it.
When the Wolfsons had

their son_, Adam, in 1975, they
violated th~ir lease and must
now vacate their $350 a month
apa rtment at Marina Point
Harbor, the judge said.

M.cmorable.' tht• \Hllrr om·('
USt'l1 the follo\\ lll!-! w,)rds :
'HnrnsuiWille. named m
honor of th e Illustrious
T1pperanoe Ht•ro m tht' early

forties and the

~em

of Meigs
C~IUOty's \\'Cstern hills. is
cham11ngly l&lt;X:aled in a vast
naturj\l amphitheater. all but
surrow1ded by towering hills
of scenic beauty wht•rr ris('
the

drcnmy

waters of

murmuring

Littl~

l,eading

Creek that bears them awnv

on their course to the seas&gt;
To this pi&lt;\Ure has been
added the &amp;1piu High School
building. "' Magnificent in its
appointments, standing
majesticalty like a quet'"n
enthroned upon un eminence
of beauty, a monument to the
prog r essive spirit of its

builders that opens wide the
door of hope to the preciou$
boys and girls of S&lt;iPio. sets
their goal and guides them in
their destinies.
'
it is an hour of whieh ~cipio
may well be proud lDbear the
name of the great com-

t•ndurr safe rrom
enenues \\ 1thm as long us Old
Glory float s over the St·hool
huuses and pupil$ are taught
to sing songs Uml instill
patriotism and to smg them
~ ith the spint Hnd the fervor

11\l'llt Will

with which these boys and
girls sang .
The fir st ~pcaker introduced was H. A. Miller.
the bmldcr who has built 27
school and college bu ildings
• in Southern Ohio. 'l11e people
took it . for gra nted that a
builder could not mukc a
speech but '· Bob" as he is
familiarly known surprised
· them all by making a timely
speech· in well chosen
language used in putting his
ideas

ranks and a city was to be
taken, Scip io was the fi rst to

The

nex t

present and he made up in
QUaht
y what was lacking in
1
numbe1·s in a n i11 s pl ring

speech t hat held up to the

mander of the Roman legions ~_youth .

that humb led the pride of
Ham1ibal, one of the world's
g r l:!u test generals. When
Scipio was a soldier in the

across ~

spea ker ' was Prof. Asa
Hoskins. a rising yo ung
educator from Bedfo rd . He
was the only ex-principal of
t he Harrisonvi ll e schoo ls

presen t

s hining

examples of the success of
our illustrious men. stressed

the fact that a great major ity
of them came from humble
homes in the countrv and
point ed to th e 'g rea t

of Ol1iu. His effort justi fied
Ius rrputation and r eneeted
great credit upon the position
he holds. He said so many
good thi ngs in support of
etlucation and laudatory of
the people of this section that
there is not space to quote
them. One thing was th at,
est imated by their average
earn ing capacit)' in life, a
high sc hool ~ r a duat e is
worth fifty thousand dollars
and turning to th't! boys on the
bleachers, he inquired, ' How
many of you boys a re going to
be wort h fift y thousand
dol la rs?' lea ving the · impression that if Harrisonville
High gra~ uates only one boy
and he makes good; it well
justifies the expense of the
new building.· The central
thought around which he built
his discourse was that there
is no excellence without labor
in any fi eld of endeavor and
that we cannot scale the
heights of success without
pay ing the price. When one
realizes that Dr. Clifton is
looking after the welfare of
one million and a half school
children and meeting a
&gt;i ream of callers every day.
yo u must conclude that a
signa l honor was conferred
upon Scipio High School by
his presence that day. .
At the close of his speech,
Miss Bowles
Pale
Moon''
a nd " sang:
Indian "Lm•e

w~

-.

,...

.

1\y IIAKIU ~;r t.~:EilS
!at mndel, but a girl can be
BARABOO, Wis. 1UPI l
HOLLYWOOD ( UPl ) too thin as well.
It 's a long way frum Siberia
What does the world's leading
"Heavy legs are a killer to \Viscvnsin lmt twv &lt;'n:UlCS
model agency look for in a
and have r ui ned more named Vladimira and Kyta
glrl to decorate magazin~
Ca r eers tha n any sing le don' t seem to mind CJ bit.
covers, 1V commercials and
factor. Teeth can be fixed
Th ey were in t heir
advertising campaigns?
but even an attractive no~ eggshells when taken from a
Eileen Ford, who heads the
with a bulbous ti p will ruin a nest on 'the bleak slopes of
largest such agency in New
girl's chances.
eastern Siberia a nd sent on a
York, ans~rs quickly and
1'So me of the m os t
10,000 mile journey. They
candidly:
successful
models
aren't
the
we re ha tched a t th e
" [ prefer classica llY
most beautifuL TI1ey are the U ni ve r s~ t y (lf Wi sco nsinbeautiful girls like Candice
Bergen . Wide-set eyes ones who ha ve mastered the Madison July 10 and 12 - the
technique nf makeup .
first Siberian cranes ever
straight'\I}OSes, long necks, ~
" I believe models are the
good mouth and long legs." . healthiest girls in the world . born in captiv ity .
After a ! 0-&lt;lay quaraJ .ti ne
Among the beauties Ms.
I've been teaching them to
Ford and her husband Jerry eat well for 31 years now. to make sw-e tht birds did not
have discovered ov~r th~ Even aft er they leave have As ia's Newcastle
dise ase, a virus that attacks
years are the likes of Suzy modeling
th e
girls' the digestive system, U1ey
Parker, L.auren Hutton Jean measurements r emain the
Shrim pton, Maud Adams. same for years afterward . 11 were taken from Madison to
th e 65-a.c r e far ,m of ltlf'
Sunny Harnett Barbara
Eileen has written a new
Minty and Cheryi Tiegs.
book , -" Beauty Now and
Most of them have become
Forever /' for al"'women : but
rich and famous. Others, especially those over 35 who
such as Bergen, Jane f onda would li ke to sleek down to
and Ali MacGraw have gone nnodel dimens ions.
on to become millionaire
There a re chapters on
movie stars.
exercise, diet, makeup, hair
For whatever reason, the care and sex. Clearly, Ms.
Fords have learned that Ford pra cti ces what she
blondes do have lJlOre .fun as· preaches. She's been old
models. At least they are enough to vote for more than
more in dema nd than a quarter century, but looks
By GREGORY JENSEN
brunettes. Few redheads to be in her 30s.
LONDON (UPI) - Three
ever become top models.
hundred
years ago this month
Ma ny of her
most
The Fords' most successful successful models lived with a dashing baronet married a
llJI'(lels can earn as much as Eileen ,
learning
th e 12-year-old London girl and
~.000 a year for 10 years.
as a res ult the U. s.
techniques of the trade.
After that, it's a gradual
" A model shoul d get government has a landlord
downhill slide.
•
started no later tha n 18 " today.
Eileen Ford is a pert , good- Eileen said . "Personality ls
So do the embassies of 21
looking blonde berself. She not really a big contr ibuting ot her countries , not to
did soine modeling in her factor to a successful model. me ntion hotels like the
youth and came to dlsci&gt;ver Nor is animation .
Qlrinaught and Claridge's
there is mi&gt;re longevity and
plus
residents of l..ondon ·~
''Those who succeed all
profit in grooming, training share
ritziest
s quare.
a
common
and booking models than determination to excel!. It's
The baronet wa s Sir
being one.
more than a matter of just Thomas ,Grosvenor and his
She began as a Conover striking a pose . The good ones bride was Mary Davies. She
model and still is proud of the are creative . A great model ha1l just inherited the fields
fact that she was the cover can
goo d which are now the gold-plated
make
a
girl for the Co lumbia ph o t og r apher
l o o k districts of Mayfair a nd
Minerva Knitting Bpok. ·
Belgravja - 300 acres of
outstanding.
The Fords see some ~ .000
some
of 1 the most expensive
"The ideal situation Is a
beauUful hopefuls a yea r. commun ion a mong girl, r eal estate on earth.
Only a fraction meet the camera and photographer"
The Grosvenor fam ily still
physica l r equireme nts of
· Magazine covers are the owns them .
·
their agency. They have only least re munerative
to · . "Generally speaking,the
160 models under contract. models, bringing only $137 for b1gger the London estate the
"The. Ideal model is ~ feet 8 a day 's work. A one-shot ad bette r its chance of surv iving
and 116 pouilds, ~' Eileen said. fetches a handsome $1,000. as a unit, " said Lord Gros"She should have fine bones,
A 13-week TV commercial venor , the handsome 26-yearbroad shoulders and slender com m ~ nds no less than old who is the richest urban
hips . The bust should not be $2,500 . The jackpot for landlor d in Britain .
too large because clothes models, however, are those
" The Bedford estate, Cadodon't fit correctly.
rare million dollar, five-year gan 's, Onslow - theSe are all
"Good legs are essential. contracts for cosmetic firms. pretty much as they began .
They should be long from the
Aske d wh y so few And, of course, ours."
knee do wn. Models generally outsta nding . models ha ve
By "ours" the earl - .the
are at their peak between the graduated to acting stardom, futur e .0)lke of Westminster
ages of 26 and 29.
Eileen said, "It's difficult lor - mean t U1e famous swathe
'~ Facial bone st ructure is
a star model to step do.wn to of London known as the
important. High cheek bones rank beginner in movies or . Grosvenor Estate. He and his
photograph well. Round faces television. And by the time a fa mily ha ve just mounted a
are difficult because . weight model esta blishes herself it curious ·exhibition to mark
ob sc ur es indi v idual makes for a late beginning as the 300th anniversary of its
features .
beginning in that lucrative
an actress."
"I r ely on my fir st impresHow does Eileen feel about Grosvenor-Davies ntal'riage .
sion of a girl and I'm seldom the . co un tr y's
leading
Mary's inheritance, known
wrong . A woman's secret is in glamour
girl , Farra h then as the Manor of Ebury.
her eyes.
Fawcett-Majors?
at that time was a stretch of
11
There is no such til~ as a
marsh a nd meadow on the
outski rts of town . The

t
t
Mt;
.· · t
" '"' "' ·

MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 8:00 P.M.

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ldll\

Grosvenor was born.

"We sold Pimlico," he said
casua lly - it was like an
Ameri.can saying he'd sold
Greenwich Village or San
Francisco's, Nob Hill - " to
raise money to expand o verseas. ' '

· These days, as the exhibit
' demonstrates, the Grosvenor

,.

By LEWIS LORD

WASHINGTON '( UPI)
Three decades have passed
smce a group of smartlyuniformed pilots fle w a
variety of Anny, Navy and
Marine Corps airplanes
during World War II - and
they still aren:t considered

Nature Conserva tion of the
Suviet

Department

of

Agr k ulture. But when the
Vla dimira · str_etched her m ista ke was discovered
brown~ti nged wings and · 'V lad f m i r'' be cam~
zoomed graeefully upwards, "VIadimira:"
a breath-taking picture above
'Arc(liba ld said he hopes to veterans.
th e a utumn -hu ed Ba raboo obta in mo re eggs from
The reason, says Sen .
hillsi de.
Siberia and raise about 16 ,Barry Goldwater,-is they are
When they a re "'!t showi ng pa irs of cranes, enough to women .
off for visitors the two chicks eliminate inbr eeding .
The Arizona senator is
are kept in an artificially- . "There a re about 360 birds leading an effort to extend
lighted pen. The lighting is 111 t he w1ld now," Arcllibald veterans' benefits to U1e 850
mea nt to simulate the " land . ~ld.They ar~ an enda ngpred fo rm er Wo men's Airforce
of the midn ig llt sun" ~ species llecause the Cllinese Service Pilots, known during
conditions of SiberitJ so t he and Indian ma rshes where the war as WASPs.
.
bi rds will feel a t home enough they :1inte r are drying up .
"The
oo
ly
thing
wrpng
with
The Soviets, lacking the
those girls was that they were
ex pertise to incubat.e. raise
girls,"
Goldwater conte nds.
and breed the cra nes
Their
wa rtime lead.e r,
themselves, arrangell to have
famed
avia
trix Jac'(juelirre
the eggs fl own to the United
(;()chra.n
Odi
um , agrees.
Sta tes through a 1972
"
Th
ey
·
ser ved
t heir
Environmenta l Agreement
country,"
Mrs.
Odium
tol d
between the lwo m~tions. Nine
UPI
from
her
ranch
at
Indio,
Soviet scientists traveled to
ea stern Siberia and ma nagt.'tl Calif. "They fl ew everything
to collect five eggs.
Vladimira and Kyta werL
renowned painting / " The hatched fr om the only fe rtile
Blue Bny," now in Los eggs.
An geles. An account book in
The 1CF expe cts to be able
the show r ecords his to send eggs back to the
purchase of it in 1809 for 100 Soviets in about th ree years.
poWlds (now $175).
The Soviets will slip the eggs
But the Grosvenors put mto the nests of commun
their own names on the cranes.
. J.nndon they owned, and the
The fo ster parent- common
names are still there.
cranes ar e expec ted to teach
hasThe exhibition is held in th e Siber ia n ctan es tu
Davies Street, named for mi gra te t o Iran for the
Ma ry . Ac ross Grosve nor winter, where the wetlands
Square is Au dley Street, are pr otec ted by . the
named for the uncle who first government. Siberian cranes
bought
Mary 's
acr es . once "lived in Iron, so the
Belgrave, as in Belgravia is project would re-establish the
a family title and Eaton, ~ in species to tha t country.
the square, a family name .
" Cranes have been on the
And near the southern edge Earth for at least 60 million
of today's Grosvenor Esta te years," Archibald said. " If
is Ebury Stree t, named for U1is experiment works and
the manor tha t 12-year -old we establi sh a breeding flock
gir l brought . as a dowery to in western Asia, we 'll have
Long &amp;
h~r wedding 300 years ago,
kept a particularly beautiful
and which her descendants species fro m bec omin g
still own .
Short
extinct."

Estate build' factories and
centers . in
Vancouver, hotels and office
blocks in Ha waii , sheep

from B29s down to Piper
Cubs.'' .
Mrs. Odlwn, a winner in
the Bendix transcontinental
race . in 1937 and 1938,
orgamzed the WASPs in 1943,
a year after she took a group
of Ame r ica n women to
Engl'an d to fl y trans port
pla nes in the British war
effort.
She reca lled there were
1,074 women ser ving in the
WAS P pr,ogralll! They piloted
pla nes df' all ~ the military
ser v1ces to and from various
. points in the United States.
relieved th at
" They
number of men to go into
comba t /' she ·said. "They
rel ie ved men in all the
branches of service ."

TI1ey stayed busy, she said,
a nd
wer.e
co nsidered
c?mpetent pi1ots. Thi r tyeight of them died in crashes
but, sh e said, " that was ~
lower fa tality rate than that
of the men doing the same
wurk."

POMEROY LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Phone 992-2181
Store Hours8 :-30 to 5 ~ 30 ·
Mill ClosesatS :OO P . M.
Serving Meigs , Gallia
&amp; Mason Counties

&amp;

statwns and more offices in

Australia.
But its heart is in that
price less a·creage ruf!{l ing
almost unbr okenly (rom
Oxford Street to Victoria
Station.
It embr aces famous
squares and quaint backa lley " mews," en ough
apartments to house 'I small
city and shops enough for a
large one. II' includes Park
L.a ne and Ea ton Squa re,
Loodon 's most exclusive r esidential square - and the U.S.
embassy .
The embassy - the only
Ame r ica n e mbassy over
which the U.S. government
does not have full control ocC uPies i Is Grosvenor
~:.e site on a 999-year
"I believe it runs out in
2949," Grosvenor laughed.
''It'll see us all out, that

Grosvenor, a lAinatick ."

ME ETING HELD
Families of frie nd s of
Camp 633~ of Mode rn
Woodmen of American enjoyed the Walt Disney liim ,
" The Ugly Dachshund " at
their Octobet meeting ~t the
Produ ction Cr edit Ass n.
meeting room. Refreshments
were served. Tom Dunca n
Special Representative fo;
M.W.A., is secretary of the
local camp.

DRESSES

· s hopping

The 2nd Earl Grosvenor
bought, but could not hold
Ga in sboro ug h ' s world :

APPALACHIAN
STOVE COMPANY

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The sweeping lines, recessed entry &amp;
shake shingles give this home a look
of traditional warmth &amp; privacy .

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Inside, refreshing new design in novations complement todays way
of living ,
.
The Penth'luse can be everything
you want in a hdme .

COMPARE THESE FEATURES THIN
COME IN AND COMPARE OUR PIICEI

=

• Wood Burning Firepla ce
• Carpet - living Room, Din ing Room,
Den &amp; on Bedrooms

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disability income insurance.

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SAVE HUNDREDS ON THIS ONEI

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SQUAD CAI~Lr~ O
PO M.EROY
- . Th e Like agaod
Pomeroy Emergency Squad · ·neighbor, ·
was ca lled to 104 Spring Ave.
Stale Farm
at 2:15 p.m. Friday for
is !her e.
Evelyn Lewis who wa s taken
.
•' ~
to Veterans Memor'ia l •'' I ' '' '.'• ,Jt'.r
..
•r
Hospital.

~rl

!!/tlltlllllllllltll IIll tttlltttttntttttlllttttttttttltt lll tttt llll tllllll UUUIUittl!llllliUUtllllllllllltlllllliiDIIIIIIIIlfiliittttlltttllllltttttlttlllll ttlltttittttttt lllllllliiiiHUUHTIIllllllllLIIlll

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See me for State Farm
single premium

.1
~~·

SPORTS
WEAR

Of fering th'e
INDEPENDENCE
by
C. E.M. I. , an e ffic ie nt ai d ig ht stove th a t
s urpasse s th e F isher · in qua lit y and
und e r c uts it in pr ice .
Al so .GREAT-0-LATORS for fir ep laces an d
a fr ee sta nd ing fir e pl ace . Ashl ey wood
hea ters a nd HUSQVARNA c hain saws .
We're In Carpenler,, Jusl Off Rt. 143
Phone 698 -7191

"When ,You're sick ·==~
or hurt and can't
work, your car
payments don't stop:'

simmer feature !

00

KV-2 101

pe r pe rson ,
t w.in

Grosvenor family archives

foll uw s its urbanizati on
through three centuries.
The exhibit ' s unspoke n
theme "is the tenacity with
which great British families
hold onto lahd.
"Parts of the esta te have
been sold thls century," it
notes , "but the Mayfair and
Bc lgravia parts, with one or
two small exceptions, ha ve
remain ed in ta c t to the
present day ."
One large chunk was sold
about the
time Lord

PARTY PLANNED
· Ohio .Valley Grange 2612
Letart Falls will sponsor a
Halloween party at the Leta rt
Falls Communit y Hall
Monday evening, Oct. 31 at
7:30 p.m . for all the children
in Letart Township .
D Solid-slate controls for
Refreshmen ts will be
three way cooking 0 Fasl · served and each child will be
cook by tempm loJe with
given a treat. All children ~re ·
the automatic control senasked to com e masked.
sor D Fast cook by time
Prizes will Ke given.
with the di gital timer 0
D Sl ow cook using th e
Model RE9.44

SS99_

fa scinating exhibit from the

.
the birth of t heir first child ·lease."
·
The
Grosvenor
famil
y,
Della Ma rie, born October
while
laodowners
in
Br
itain
at Holzer Medical Center .
Grandparents are Mr. ~nd for more tha n 900 years,
Mrs. Herbert. Pugh and Mr . hasn 't managed to hold onto
and Mrs. Dale C. Warner, everything it owned.
Poor Mary Davies couldn 't
both of Minersville. Greateven
hold onto her sanity
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Herm a n Wa rn er of when the dashing baronet
Pomeroy, Mrs. Hazel Pet- died. Sbe was judged insane
tibone of l..owell, Ohio and in 1705, and an ·act of
Mrs. Wilma Pugh of Stock- parliament in t he exhibition
calls her ' 'Dame Mary
port, Ohio. ·

THIS.TIME
MAKE IT .
HOTPOINT!

ever. You' ll believe it . Trinitron Plus. "It's a Sony."

0
rom

.

7

~ u tomat i c

F

"They have a 5,000 mi le
·
t'
t th 1 ·
nugra
Hm rou e • e ongest
of
a ll cranes."

,.

. Ridge, Pomeroy, a nnounce

Rose Bowl

vour Ca li for nia Holiday, aboard a TWA
charter jet . 6 days on fhe Coast- San
Francisco, Monterey and L. A.

"Siberian cranes are
incredible flyers ," he said.

accomplishment to date ha s

CHILD ARRIVES
POMEROY - Mr . and
Mrs. Ala n Pugh , Cherr y

Go with the Bucks
to
the

Depart Columbus, Dece mbe r 28th. forQ

trancs.

ln breed .
At fir!.tt Vladimira was
thought to be a male and was
named Vladimir. in hunnr of
Dr. Vladimir Flint, dircclor
nf the Centra l I ~borC:Jtury fur

reviews past ·300 years

_ ·,·-~~
~-J-.1~_.:_·_;.· BROWN~
·
~

been learning tn fly . f,Cflr~e
An·hibald, ICF director, smd
flight is inStinctive for

London's richest
landlord
.

MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM

,

l utcrn ,; .diunal Crane
FnWldation in BHral:MHl.
There
they live
pmnpcred, cornfurtable and
safe - for Ule sole purpose nf
pruducing more of t heir ki nd.
They a re fed, housed
exercised, weig h ed'
exam ined and loved at the'
~ iq ue crane ,pr eserve, along
w1th I) \ her representati~es of
14. ~·f the 15 ~ra~e spec1es.
I he fled ghngs growth has
been stnkmg. They grew to
more than a f{x1t during the
guarantine period and three
months later were neatly
fo ur feet ta lL Adult cra nes
range in height from three to
six feet.
Their mos t importa nt

II)'- VERNON SCOIT

0 UNIVERSI-TY ARTIST SERIES

"A FLASHY MUSICAL!
~ AUDIENCES LOVE IT."
c..
- Ctms t•ilfiWJ. O;J''' News
I&lt; ~
• · ·

Seek benefits
for 1ady vets·

'
Ford can pick em Cranes grow up in Wisconsin

superintendent , John W. ,
Frank of Chester, a WorlcL.
War veteran and a graduate
of Ohio University by hls own
efrort s. Supt. Frank is modest ·
and unass uming , yet he
Is
a
live
educational l~ader , full of enthusiasm and thoroughly in
Jove with his work. President
Wyatt of the Board of
Education. is authority for
the statement that he Is ablf
supported by a staff of fine
teachers. We cannot wlthhofd
administration for any Meigs
Qlunty boy or girl who pays
the price and m~ke• good the
fad that he has been in
charge of Harrisonvllle for
audience.
Sci pio High School is for- five years, speaks volumes in
t unate in having as its his behalf.

r=
t
t
t
t

Science Today

Scott's World

closing address was made by
JohnS. Frank, father of Supt.
F rank, a member of the
Meigs County School Board
and an old-(ime teacher who
received the better part of his
education at the National
at
Normal · Un iversity
Lebanon. His address was a
comparison of the old and the
new methods of teaching and
his presence there wa s mu,ch
appreciated . Prof. Lewis'
won·derful co unty band,
composed
of
young
mu sicia ns , closed
the
exercises with a st irrin g
selection that brought loud
appla use from the bi g

mount the wa lls. He courted possibilities in store - in this
the greatest peril and none cou ntry of ours fo r the
surpassed him in va lor . Ove r American boy of am bition
the portal of this high sehoul who will pay the price.
building _the name of Scipio is
A fine dfnner was then Song" after which she and
ch iselled in stone, there. to served by t he ladies of the Mrs. Rachel Warner ren·
remain for ages to perpetuate parent -teachers association. de red the piano duet, ·The .
hi s grea tn ess an d t he The afternoon session was · Slars and St ripes For ever , •
memory of a people who had opened by the co untry or- that wa~ well received. Thls
the vision and the co urage to chestra under the di rection of was followed by Prof. George
mak e t his mo nu me nt to Prof. Lewis and they were Morris, another state offi cial,
higher educat ion possible.
generously applauded. The
The peo pl e of Sci pi o speaker of the day was then which he congratulated the
honestly divide on quest wns introduced , Hon. John L. people of Sc1p1o for giving the
of domestic policy but as a Clift on, Director of Education boys and girls a chance. Th e
unit the)' are progressive,
patriotic, far-sighted, loyal to
home institutions and can be
found in, the front rank of
every fo rwa rd movement. In
all wars, the flo wer of
Scipio's young manhoo d has
~p r un g to the colors and by
thei r valor have given added
luster to th e name theY so
proudly bear.
Scipioans. joined by many
fri ends of education in the
adjoi ning to wnships, dedicat ed
t hei r
hig h
school buil ding to t he
cause of higher ed ucation
at Harrisonville onFriday,
Dec. 5, with spl endid
speeches, bea utiful and inA modern mobile homE! may be the
spiring orchestral, vocal and
in st rum ental music. Supt.
best solution to y our housing needs.
John W. Frank presided in
Take a loo k at how nice mobile
the foren oo n ~ n d Co unt y
Supt. C. N. Wagner in the
hom~ living can be .. . then, see
aftern oo n session. Th e
exercises opened with two
us for the financing. you'll get
stirr ing patriotiC songs by the
combined grade and high : '
school students, "The Red
White a nd Bl ue" · and
"Col umbi a, Gen of th e
Ocea n"
cond uct ed
by
Adrienne Bowles. The writer
...
r
was Impressed strongly with
the feeling that this gov e~n -

CJhe

A..s--1'heSundar Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Oct. 23, 1977

i=
I
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• &amp;elwood Cobi nets LU~URY

~urfoce Cook ing
• Isla nd Kitth en
Unit, Eye le vel Oven, l.C cu. h .
Refr ige ra tor
• Sto rm W indows through9u t

.A,spholt Shin;l e Ro of - U.l. Approved
Wood Paneling t hr O~,~ ghout .
Insul a ted lapped Alum inum Sid ing
Rece ssed Porc h Entry

ATAPRICE FAR BElOW ACOMPARABLE SITE-BUILT HOME

See It Today .

.§

•
•
•
•

\

"

Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.
· · ''For ..Tiie fin~si in Manufaciured Housing" , , ·

i

~ 1100 E. MAIN STREET

992-7034

POMEROY

itttttIll Ill Ill ll Ittl lltll Ill Ill ll ll 1ll Ill IIll ll Ill Ill Ill Ittl ttttttlllttlllll ll till tt tt II ll tttlll 1Ill1Ill Ill Ill ll lllfltt till Illlllllll tt ll tt lllllllllll ttt Ill tt tttt ttltl ttl ttt tt lllll tt tt tt tt ttt tt tt tt ttlllllltttH lHt , ·

'
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�A-6- The Sunday Tunes-Sent mel , Swuht) , O&lt;:t. 23. 19&gt;7

Busine..~s

Religion in America

.•

todRy

.

Church, State and the IRS American safet.y razor tries for comeba~k .
Tht'

lly OA \ 'JD E . . ANDERSON
l ' Pl Rf'ligio n Write-r

Is

the

govprnment

"wall of separation" between
church and state ?

''t-xdusarely reh~tous " Hnd
lht1Stl which are not.
llw rh url"ht&gt;S contend that
it as not pn1prr for tht'
g~),·enunent to make sut'h
d ist 111 ct ions be(·ause it
izwolves drfinition of what is
relig.ion and what is ll\)t ru1d
thus is an unconst it utional

lf so, how much nf is of
flt'ct'SSi t y"

Those are questions that
ha\'e \=OO('t.&gt;rnffi. ,a growing

number of religious leaders
- particularly as they view
mo 1•es by the Int erna l
HE'\·enue Service .
But at a recent conference
'"' religious liberty sponsored
b) Baptist Joint Committee
on Public Affairs. a topranking ms official defended
the agency's
growing
in\'olvement in religion.
Alvin D. Lurie , asistant

commissioner of the IRS for
employe plans and exenipt
organizations ," told the

conference that the IRS rules
on "integrated auxiliaries"
were desig ned to inhibit the
"proliferation of the phoney
ch ur ch" and not aimed at
mvl1lving the govt"rrunent in

defining religion .

"mtt&gt;gratt'&lt;l

sin('r the IRS hrst 1ssued
re-gulations whi&lt;'h St1ught to
.di!-.1in~uish between a. .·tt,·ittes
of churches whlc·h are

increasingly mm·ing to ward
undt"rmining the histork
...,.

JSSUt' l'l

auxillant·s·· has ·bt-en ~~ ttHWil
in the sid~ (lf tt~ chun·hrs

~"'lnfen•m•t&gt; . rnnablt' L
s the
r;.mking 11mwnty member lln
t!w House \Vays and ~~lean.!:i
(',lllUIUUN' wl;kh t·msiders

II) LEKil\' f'llPt:
·u PI Rusim·ss \\'rilt•r

:-&lt;EW YOHK 1t iPi l - After
llu•
F&lt;'d&lt;•ral
Trade
all t~•x ll·~islalifl n .
('ummisslnn
ruled la st
Thr ··intrgratNt nuxilia.ry· · Fl•bruary that Philip Morris.
questi&lt;lrl, ('\lUlplicatetl as It is. l nr .. e&lt;,uld rwt st·ll its
1s eurrent1y 11t the l'enter of ·America n Safl•tv Raznr Co. tn
churcll~st at quest ions.
R.im1n f\·b rl'el Iiid1':; Hi&lt;' Pen
But U1e fe rvor with whith it Cu . more than 275 t•mphl)'Ces
·is brmg debated . the growing t'f the raz~1r l'nmpany werr
su.spa•ion among some that laid tiff .
allrgr&lt;Uy phoney religions
Prospects [(II' th4.' 102-year
arc abusing t'lx exempt old cum p~ny , fuuntlt&gt;cl in
, .status. und thl' lntre~ ing Brm1klyn but wtlich has lx'en
r flle of g(we rm'ner'l t in .~ a ll in StaUnton. Va ., {tlr Sfltne
~lspects of life indicate Utat
ye ars, loo ked raU1er bleak .
&lt;'hurl'h·state relati ons a re
WiU1 ils Gem and StM
going to b£&gt; a m on~ · th£' most single-edge blade. the firm ,
pressi ng al1d mntroversial whiL"h pioneered the safety
issues fadng the church in razor. was :1 bad third in sales
tl1e next se\'eral years.
to Gillette and· Schick, ahd in

tJ1e 17 years 1t had been a part
of Philip Morris, it had s tnnd
sttll on sp ttc of fast stepping
natwnal L'f..'onmny .
lts shart' nf Ihe ( lumestic
market did ri!ie fn1111 an1w1d
12 pt.•r cent tu 17.3 per cent in
1965 a.s tl1e resu lt of heavy
ad\'ertising but i't promptly
fell back again when the
emnpaign ended .
American Sa fe ty Razor
never di.d see m to fit
J"H"hculady well into Philip
Mnrris's dgarette, beer and
0ther varied operations .
Unless Philip Morris was
willing to pour a lnt of money
into it next year. il 'Iooked as
if American Safety Razor
. was doomed to con tinued
Srnw decline.

l'n ltld hm·e memlt the
loss fvr St&lt;.-twlt~~n uf 600 more
jobs and an $8 rnHHon annual
p;i)TOIJ.
Even lhnugh Amertl'ctn
T h;tl

Safety Ua:wr had pre-tax
earnings tlf $1.6 milli nn on
sales of $42 million in 1976,
finding another buyer h, step
in nnd replace the encrgctie
and optimistic Baron Bich
sel'med a forlorn hope .
But 53-year &lt;•ld John R.
Baker , American Safety
R;tzor 's president, thought
differently . He felt the
company had a winner in the
Flicker, its five-blade dial-ablade fur women, and that its
Personna a nd private label
blade business ruuld U. made
ln gro w. He also felt that a

liVING ROOM &amp; HALL
Offer includes living room
and hall only up to 300 sq.

ft.

Laving around on dirty
carpets?
Get
them
steamed so they'll be in
great shape for winter.
Furniture Stanley Steemed

s cot~J.lg~t.lr
. PROTECTION

MEIGS, VINTON
&amp; GAlliA CO.
614-446-4208

.
Stlbstanttal 11W111Jl'l' of IIICII
stall hk~ the f1n11 s ingle-cd~e
(;cnl su fct\' ru7ur.
So Bakr; 1ll'~ i.tnized a leum
11f the t•nlllJKIIl) 's excl'utives
t1 • takl' Ull' l'lltllpany out of lhe
Phllip MmTiti fold . Between
them, thCy enuld only raise

$600,000 tu buy l'Qtlity, and
Philip Mvrris put a price of
million 1m the
Cllm pany, fee ling it l'nuld
ri:lise at leas t that by
liquidating American 8afety
Ra1.111' .
A deal was put tuge.t.her in (j
few months . Virginia banks

$16 .75

UH.' national &lt;Jvcrage.

Rio CC scheduled on Oct. 26

Th&lt;• fi rst thing Baker and
ltis iJSsueia tes did when Uley
I"C&lt;IliZl'&lt;-l they were goin'g to
gel rontrol was to starl
retn rin ~ ~ ~me of

the laid...,lff

workers. Their next move
was tu adopt a $2 million
advertising budget for the
i.·oming year.
Philip Morri:;, seeing Httle

Jl&lt;'ssibi!ity of an adequate
rclurn , had cut Safety
Hazo r 's

adVCI'tising uuUays

gradually frvm $2.5 millinn tu
$800,000 a y~ar
t\merica n bu siness in
gene
ral will watch the
pitt up $9million and U1e state
pn,gress
of American Safety
of Virginii:l $250,000. 1\fterrl
iW
II'
as
a
newly indCpl•ndent
&lt;'unsiderablt' parleying, the
firm
seeking
answers tn the
F edera l
Econo mi~.:
Develupmcnt Authority mad!! question uf which is really
a $6 million grant , tht! largest bcue r, the per ils and
of
so far made under the u· p p (1 r l u n i t i e $
a'uthority's aid to depressed independence or U1e financial
..... ...... ,..,.
.areas pm~ ram . _ Staunton's clt,ak of being part of a
.. ·fiuii lly. had acceded to unem ployment rate is above conglomerate .
publication of such tasteless
fiction .
\
With ·her career future in
doub\, Hamill is expected 111
provide strong guidance.
Blood ," due for publication Mrs. Onassisis not ooe to"rest
E SELECTION OF
bv Random House Nov. 21. m her laurels - one Viking
Bantam Books has purchased lx••k 011 imperial Russian
the soft cover rights for a fas hion entitled, "In the
· .f'tgure sum.
Russian St)•le.' ' She has
rep1.-te d stx
Mrs. Onassis woo a $26 definite ideas for other books
million settlement from the and Hamill cculd be helpful in
estate of Onassis last month their formulation.
'
•Home Oxygen
•Oxygen Regulators
after a hard-won out&lt;'f-court
Marriage in the near futw·e
battle wit~Onassis· only heir, Ill a public figure of less than
• Hospital Beds
•Rowmeters
daughter Christina . Mrs. first rank, such as Hamill, ,
•Wheel Chairs
Onassis resigned last week seems to be a remote chance
··Bedside Com1mo~les
from her e&lt;litorial job at for Mrs. Onassis after having
•Canes
Viking Press in protest to the been First Lady and wife ol
. •Humidifiers
publishing firm 's new novel, one ofB tht eh world 's richetst
•Walkers
•Respiratorv Support.
"Shall We
Tell
the men. u er marrtage o
'J
President."
Onassis, much older than she
•Crutches
Systems
The bo ok by Jeffrey and of shady business
HOME DELIVERY AVA 1LA BL E
Archer. a former member of reputation, also was a
the British Parliament. is shocDonker. for Jdackie fanhs""'~
sensational in its depiction of
··
I un errate er Ill·
an assassination plot against dependence," a close friend
" President" Ted Kennedy in told UP! , referring to Hamill.
56 State Street .
Gallipolis. 0 .
1981 (a plot that is aborted ). "Shewouldfindithardtotop
Mrs . Ronald L. Saunders
Mrs. Kennedy objected to her record of husbands in the
Manager B. Sales Representative
reports that she, a former news. Maybe.;she will opt for
614 -446-3856

infrinf!ement on th e free
exl"rctse M religion .
Lurie maintained that the
ms had been fo rced mto
issuing the regulations and
subsequent defanitio ns of
what does and · does not
const itute an mtegrated
auxiliary for tax purpose by
C&lt;Jngress.
Notin g U1at !he IRS. in
response to the complaints by
churches , had made ..signifi- .
ca nt alterations" in the
definition before putting the
regulations inlll effect .
Laurence N. Woodworth,
·
assistant secretary of the
NEW YORK (UP!) - Mrs. plei&gt;e ia n Ita !ian desceent,
Treasury for tax poli cy , also
Jacqueline Onassis, newly was formerly married to an
told the conference theWlemployed, appears to ·be heiress of th e Gardiner
government had been forced moving it1to an w1rharted but family, hereditary lords of
into defining religion.
lively cha pter of her life the 17th century manor of
He cited a case where an influence d by syndic ated Gardiner 's Island off Long
individual started his 0 \\11 columnist Pete Hamill. her Island. Ha mill has no such
church, and added, '·whether constan t escort.
link to blue bl oodlines .
that constitutes a religion or
Not that Hamill , a n Brooklyn born , he started his
wheth er it doesn 't. the uurelenting critic of the eareer as an · ad agency
government is for ced into America n Establishmerit production and art assistant.
trying to draw a hne who Ji,·ed until recently with He was ma rried to a Puerlll
somewhere there, otherwise activi st actress Shirley Rican. but uqw is divorced.
anybody can step in and call Mac l.ain e. ha s pr opose d His column regularly depicts
anything the)·· re engaged in a
marriage to the former First the pligh t of America's
religious activity:·
Lady. There are those who depressed racia l minorities,
Woodworth said he would say Mrs. Onassis will never including the Hispanics.
ccnsider the possibility that
marry again, preferring to
He is a man of considerable
the definition of the term remain U1e eternal relict of charm and writing talent
integrated auxiliary - it now
President John F. Kennedy which is earning him a small
includes clmrch-run hospitals
and Greek shipping tycoon fortune this year. His Chicago
but not colleges, orphanages Aristotle Onassis.
Tribune-N .Y. News Syn
or homes for the aged But she has assswn ed a dicate col umn appears
cculd be changed to some new life style with Hamill. in
the
New
York
extent but he did not go into She makes many more public· Daily News_ and a douq
specifics.
appearances with him than other papers and he has
" !for one would be gl ad to
· ~t~il~e_!K~e~n~ne~d~y~~so~m:eo:n:e~q~u~it:e~d~iff:er:e:n~l.-"--==================::~-look at your proPosals,'' h.e with any other escort in her· ..,:wr::!!it~te~n2ia...:n:!:o;:v_;ei!:,._:':;!'F2l~es~h~an~d!_,.im~e~m~b~e:!:r_!ofL
told the · church rep- tw o wid owhoods . She
en joys
his
resentative s," .. . and give obviously
cm'npany
,
appearing
more
you a considered response .·'
One participant, however , vivacious a nd more beautiful
Rep . Barber C&lt;Jnab le , R· . than ever.
In this she follows the lead
N.Y., told the conference he
of
her widowed sister,
would consider introducing a
Princess
Lee Radziwill , who
bill which would repeal the
is
the
exclusive
companion ofl '
- tax code provisio ns that
Peter
Tufo
,
a
n
attorney
who ·
introduced the prickly term
serves
as
New
York
Crty;:,.,.'.'&gt;;.:t',\;
"integrated auxiliary ...
" ] enjoy an occasional Commission of Co1rrecti&lt;"
chance Ul kick 1the) Treasury in charge of alf city prisons.
Tuf o, a Chicagoan of
in·the face." C&lt;Jnable to ld the

RIO GRANDE - Prereglstration for winter
quarter classes at Rio
Grande College and Com·
munity College will be held
Wednesday, Oct. 26, 9 a.m. to
4:30p.m., and 6 to 9 p.m.
According to college of·
ficials , students whu are
c urrently enrolled ut th e
school aAd those who are
planning on taking particular
classes winter quart er are
urged to take advantage of
the pre-registration op·

portunity.
Pre· re g(stratiun will be
held In Community Hall and a
special schedule has been
established to facilitate the
process. Students who are
currently in Psychology 101,
, Freshman Orientation, will
pre- r egiste r fr om 9-10 :30
a.m. After that, students will
be asked to come at the
followin g times according to
their last names:
l0 :30-Jl : l5 a .m., L-M;
ll : 15-no~n . I. .I. K: noon -12:45

.

·Jim Walter has a
great home bug
·.
forgou · ·

2: 15-3, S, T; 3·3:45, F, G. H;
3:45-4 :30, D. E.
Open registration will be
available from 6-9 p.m. for
those unable to make- use 'of
the daytime schedule.
Winter quarter classes will
begin Tuesday, Nov . 29. Final
registration is scheduled for
Monday, Nov. 28. For additional information phone
245-5353.

·r

Clinic held

every Monday

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NEW AUTMOB!LES again returned to the R. H. Rawlings and Sons Co. location; now
owned by Crow's Steak House, in Middleport Friday afJernocn and evening"when a new car
show was held at the lot. New aut o enthusiasts drifted in and out of the s.how staged by Tom
Rue Motors, Dan Thompson ~' ord. Middleport, and Smith-JIIe lson Motors and Po·meroy.
Motor Co., Pomeroy. The show called a "jamboree" by the sponsors, the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce, featured in conj unct ton with the event, special sales by merchants
and a fish fry by the Middleport Fire Depm·tment.

Collins blasts 'bail out'
COLUMBUS
State
Senator Oakley C. Collins (R·
Ironton) S"aturday charged
that a proposed congressional
"hail-out" of the financia lly
troubled Socia l Se~urity
system could mean real
trouble and financial loss for
many Ohio workers.
Collins reported that a bill
now being considered by the
House Ways and

Mean s

Conunittee would require all
state and local government
workers and employees of
non-profit organizations to

financed should be expected
to pay for others whose
systems have not been well
run," h'e added.
"I urge all state and local
government workers and
e mployees of non-profit
organizations to immediately
or
call
their
write
Congressman and indicate
their strong opposition to this
type of legislation," Collins
stated. "Only in this way can
enough pressure be brought
to bear to block this unwise
and ill-considered bill," he
concluded.

co me under provisions of the
Social Se curity system.
··O ur state and local
retirement sy.stcms are all in
excellent fi na ncial . co n·
dition." Collins said. "Ap·parcntly the Congress wants
tu shore up a faltering Social
Sec urity
sys tem
with
reti rement systems such as
ours thAt are now on a sound
monetary base. Ther e is
absolutely no r eason why
members of those retirem e ~t
programs that have been well
managed and responsibly

CLOTHES

ARE IN!

Winter Coats

~ IJ" j 1:-'

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kOoz-~
.

' ,. 1\o

It

Come see our large variety
of top-quality winter coats.
Lots of styles and sizes in
fine wools and leather.

r:: P,;

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Junk calls

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Denims from Lee
Shirts, skirts. jackets.
leisure suits. Jeans in
straight cuts and bells.
Pre-Washed . Quilted Just
about any style for any
member of the famil y

Together u:e"ll build ••• and you'll S.4VE 1'IONEY!
Together , .. you, your family · and Jim Walter can

build a NEW, PERMANENT home ... a whole lot of
home for less money than you would believe possi·

ble. Together we'll build TODAY 'S BEST INVESTMENT. Here's how- We'll provide the mortgage
financing. You furnish the property. We'll build your

new hOme, completely finishing the outside in every
detail ... and we'll finish the inside to the stage you

tell us to ... up to 90% complete. You tell us where
to stop. Then you and your family can take over and
cut your overall building costs to the bare bone. Do
as much or as little of the inside work as you like ...
but the more you do, the less your cost will be and
the greater will be the return on your Investment.

Together we'll build your new home .. _TO DAY'S
BEST INVESTMENT that can be like cash in the
bank, gaining in value year afler year.

INSTANT MORTGAGE FINANCING TO
QUALIFIED PROPERTY OWNERS. Generally, mortgage money is scarce and hard to find.

Hundreds of Shirts

Western cuts for
men, women and kids. From flannel to laney.

and it's instant, witH no third parly 'to · deJa~- credit
approval. We handle the details in just a few days ·

Boots, Belts, Hats and so much more.

.. . lhen construclion begins. So don't wait around
while building costs continue to soar. Contact Jim

But, at Jim Walter Homes, we firiai'tce our homes .. ,

Walter Hom.es today.

Open seven days a week from 9 to 9.
Master Charge is accepted in the
"
General Store.

6vtA4tB

FARMS ®

··SAUSAGE SHOP &amp; GENERAL STORE;
· Route 35 · .R1o Grande . Oh1 b

llsrHOM.E S
CHESAPEAKE, OHIO 45619

606 1st Ave. South

Old Highway 52
P.O. Box 250
PH. 867-3153

NITRO, W; V~. 25143
P. 0. Box 637

·,

U. S. ·Hwy: 25 East

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

The LEXINGT-ON
4 BEDROOMS- 2 BATHS.

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'"""""'" o!~il.:

"t oo·f·~ .:.~
·o · ·~_l"'_j" '
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choose. When you have ALL' Ihe facts, we think
you'll choose Jim Walter as your builder.

FREE FULL-COLOR CATALOG!
Fill out and mail. No obligation.

r------------I
We are mterested in mo;e mformat.on about Jrm Walte-r
Homes. Pl~ase send your fulf.color catalog of homes
I

understand . there •s no obl•ga!IOn

I NAME _____________________________
I ADDRESS ----,---------------------LCITY
STATE ___ ZIP• _ _ _

I

Telephone {or neighbors}·-·

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If rural route pl•a•• give diredion•

11 I own property in

Chief Gaskins said that
thousands of dollars worth of
items were taken.
Items taken include tape
decks, citizen band radios;
clothing and tools.

que~tiun

st:ientiht.: artides

the value of ' an annual exam1natiou. Their value lies in
tile adequacy of the examinCJlion and the doctor's use uf it
to ht:lp you with a preventive
medidne program plu s your
willingness as a patil!nt lu

·follow his advice. The latter
often limits its usefulness.
My remarks here Hl'e
directed towa rd adult
pat. ents, I assume the doctor
has all the past history and
knows any medica l cum~
plamls yuu have. Beyond that
it is an imporUmt time to
review your. living habits as
they have such an impact on
the important illnesses. That
means· a review of your
habits in terms uf smoking,
consumption uf alcohol, cof·
fee and other beverages, exercise,·sleep and tendency to
use medieatiuns.
Important medical pr~r
blems that can benefit from
ea rly detection or prevention
include heart and vascular
diseases (including strokes),
cancer , Uiabetes, liver
disease and emphysema of
the lungs. An ilnportant tool
to accomplish this is the anltual examination.
'!'he physical examina ti on
should include observation of
the amount uf body fat under
the skin . You cai1lell too, an"d
it is important. The blood
pressure ( a risk factor in
· heart attacks and strokes)
should be measured and if on
the high side something:
should be dune - usually in
the patient's lifestyle tu un·

"l
B00k mo b· l e

schedule
Bookmobile Schedule tor
Meigs County :
Middleport Elementary, 911:30 a.m.; 12-12:30 p.m.;
Salisbury Elementary, 1-3;
Burlingham 4-4: 15 ; County
Road 40-Snowville 4:45-5: 15;
Pageville,
5:30-6;
Harrisonville, 6:30-7 :15; Wolf
Pen, 7:45-11; Junction 143-7,
8:15-11:30.
.
Thursday, Oct. 27 - Racine
Elementary, 9:30-12; Port·
land Elementary, 1-3;
Portland Community, 3: 15·
3:45; Stiversvi!le, 4-4:30;
Great Bend, 5-5:30; Racine
Bank, 6·7 :30; Minersville·
Brown's Trailer ct., 7:45-11.

pruve at. A rccU.J examma·
lion wilh a ringer is i:J must for
all uver 35. This will include a
pl'Ustatc exuminatlun in men.
After all , cancer uf the colon
and rectun\, is the second
must common cause of ·
eanccr deaths in both sexes
t:tnd prostate cancer is the
third most corrunon cau$e in
men. A pelvic examination

with a Pap ' test lin those no
Iunger virginal) and breast
examination should be done
in all adu lt women fur similar
rcasons 1

A blood test should include
measurement uf hemnghlbin
fQI· screening for an anemia,
a while cell count to detect
cv1dcnce of infection or
leukemic
disorders,
cholesterol (another major
ri sk factor fur vascular
disease.), · a 2-hour after
eating b!uud glucose as a
diabetes screen, one test of
liver function (an enzyme or
other ).
'
A chest X ray will help in
the early diagnosis of lung
eant-er (the leading cause of
cancer deaths) and provide
information on
other
discascs.

An

electrocar·

PH. 727-2296
- ____________;,. . . . .,____________________
L------------County.

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diogram should !x) done at
•
least once in everyone age 35
or over. It makes a good l!ase
line if you have trouble later. ' A·t'outin.e urinalysis screens
.•
fur k1dney disorders.
There arc other things that
can be done and some tests ·
tlwt could be substituted for
'
these. But if you are in·
Lerested in preventing or ear..
'
ly detection of the big ones . ''
these are the main determinations that should be part
uf the annual examination. I
have dealt with the annual ex·
amination in greater detail in .
The Health Letter number
10-2, Your Valuable Medical

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Ex~mirw. tion, which I . ·sen..

ding you. Others who want
this issue ean send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, selfHddrcssed envelope for it to
m.s in rare of this newspaper,
P.O. Bux 326, San Antonio,
TX 78292.

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controlled

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WASHINGTON (UP!) "Junk calls" could be controlled like "junk mail. "
The White House said
Friday it has asked the
Federal Communications
Commission to deal with not
only "junk" advertising ca lls
made by automatic dialing
systems, bu.t all forms of
· · telephone solicitation .
The FCC regulates U.S .
communications, and is
considering a· ban on
unsolicited
ca lls
by
automate,&lt;~ dialing systems
which make call after call
and deliver a re co rded
message .
The White House Office of
Telecommunications Policy
urged t.l\e FCC to expand its
study of the question.
"Solicitation by phone, re- .
gar.dless of the tnethod,
·raises' SeriOUS questllJnS
concerning the inf ~ingement
of individual privacy," the
White House said.
It also said "non-commercial" calls - such as political
or charitable solicitations could be exempted.

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He is married to the former
Lois Harris Wood and they
have six children. Thomas is a
member of the DHIA,
Artificial Breeders Cor·
poration, the Farm Bureau
and the Harmony
Baptist
Church.

·FOOD MARKET

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IS HAVING A

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CORRECTION

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IN TODA Y'S PAPER

STARTS MONDAY, OCT. 24

KROGER'S INSERT
THOMAS BUMGARNER
of production.
Since 1971 when he began
operating the farm, he has
completed conservation
practices conslstning of 9,410
feet of tile, 155 acres con·
se..Vation cropplng system, 57
· acres past~re improvement
and 1.8 acres of grassed
waterway.
Before moving to Southside,
he was employed by Oldtown
Farms, north of Point
Pleasant.

COCA-COLA
SHOULD READ

ENTIRE GROCERY STOCK MUST GO
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SAVE

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

'239

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NOT •1.39
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KROGER CO.

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REVIVAL

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FEATURING

THE

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l
T
BILL MORRIS SINGERS
II I

OCTOBER 23 THRU OctOBER 27
7 PM.NIGHTLY .·, .
.

OFF

ALL ITEMS WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST - NO LIMITS
..

DON'T MISS IT• .•-.•

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PUBLIC IS INVITED

Ughthouse Tabernacle Assembly of God
RT. 160

152 THIRD AVENUE

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VISITS HERE
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Kruse and son,
Jobn, formerly of Middleport,
visited Thursday with Edison
Hobstetter and Eleanor
Zeiher, Middleport.

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costs and what your . monthly mortgage payment
woulQ be for any of our homes built on your prop ..
erty to whatever stage of inside completion. you

today

'

lly Lawrence E. Lam!&gt;, M.D.
DEAR DH . LAMB ..
Millions uf people go fur a
yearly checkup to their doc·
tnr or various institutions.
I,1n afraid many of these are
either lou perfunctory cJr tuu
elabor•ate. You would render
£;~
real scrvke to th(!se
millions if you would let them
know what you consider a
meaningful checkup . Being
one of the vast number, I
thank you.
DEAH READEH - Many

110000.0

GET ALL THE FACTS FROM JIM
WALTER TODAY. We wanl you to know alllhe
facts about Jim Walter quality-built homes. We
would like for you to see all oft he more than twenty
models offered. We would like to tell you the exact

1

should be

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Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

fair in Lancaster, Ohio.
Ms . Dulaney made the
acquaintance &lt;if Ms. Cline on
a bus ride en route from
Missouri to Parkersburg. Ms.
Cline and her baby got on at
Q)lumbus on their way to the
county fa ir.
All three reportedly got off
at Lancaster to visit the fair
toge ther . Ms. Dulaney
allegedly caught a bus to
Parkersburg with the baby,
whom she was wat ching
while Ms. Cline purchased
some coffee.
Police theorized Ms.
Dulaney lock the child to fill
the void left by her
miscarriage, not knowing he
-.-ould have died. She waived
extradition and was returned
to Lancaster Friday night.

Second man arrested
•
ln Pt. Pleasant B&amp;Es

PT. PLEASANT - Point
Pleasant
Police · have
POMEROY - Preventable arrested a second man in
childhood diseases continue connection with alleged
to strike causing the activity surrounding those
in· early morning · automobile
discomfort
and
convenience of illness and breaklng and enterings
bringing complications that October 10 here.
all too often lead to death or · Taken into custody at 6:15
permanent disabillty, Mary p.m. Friday was Eddie A.
Myers,
county
health Mayes, 34, Rt. 2 Leon.
Mayes was arraigned
department nurse, reports.
Mrs. Myers points out that before Magistrate John
the health department "Andy" W.ilson Friday
conducts an immunization evening on the felony charge
clinic every Monday from 9 of buying and receiv ing
a.m. to 11 a.m. and from 1 to 3 stolen property. He posted a
p.m. Polio, measles, mwnps, $2,000 bond.
rubella, diphtheria, tetanus
Arrested earlier this week
and pertussis can all be was Nicky Kerwood. 20, Point
prevented through the Pleasant, on a charge of
procedure of immunization . grand larceny. He remains in
However, they still afflict jail in lieu of posting a $2,500.
"More arrests may be
thousands of children each
forthcoming
in this case,"
year because the im·
stated
Point
Pleasant
Police
munizations
were
not
Chief Jim Gaskins.
received.
~
Both persons were arrested
' Mrs. Myers asks that
residents insure• their as the outgrowth of at least 26
children are protected by the automobile breaking and
vaccinations through a check enterings that occurred in the
with their doctors. Anyone northern part of Point
wishing any information Pleasant.
about the immunizations
clinics held at the health
department may call Mrs.
Myers at 992-3723.

HEALTH

Bumgarner SCS Supervisor
has

OUR WINTER

PARKE;RSBURG, W. Va .
(U PI ) - A three•week old
infant in need of medical care
was reunited with his mother
Friday night after detectives
arrested the young woman
who stole him.
Arrested for child-stealing
was Susan Louise Dulaney.
19, Parkersburg, who suf·
fered a miscarriage two ·
months ago in Missouri.
The infant, the son of Viola
Cline of Columbus, Ohio,
suffers from a congenital
blood deficiency and liver
ailment. He was returned to
his mother Friday night after
being examined at a local
hospitaL
The baby was taken from
its mother more than a week
ago during a visit to a county

•

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Mr. Thoma s Bumgarner, a
dairy farmer who resides at
Southside,
been appointed
to finish the term of his
brother, Edward Bumgarner,
on the Board of Supervisors of
the Western Soil Conservation
District. Edward Bumgarner
resigned to accept the appointment
as exe c utiv~
secretary of the State· Sotl
Conservation Committee, and
is
headquartered
in
Charleston.
Thomas leases a 447-acre
dairy farm and has 100 milk
cows and 100 replacements.
He raises all the feed for the
cows. All of the cropland and
pasture land is In a high state

GfNEl?AL SIORE

DON CASTO, Miners·
ville, eompleted bls basle
training at Fort Slll, Okla.,
In July and ls now stationed
al Fort Campbell, Ky .,
where be Is residing wllh
bls wife, Marcella, the
lormer Marcella Hartman
of Chester, daughter of
Henry and Nara Hartman,
Chester.

rr~
r~-.~
......~ ; y£· - .IJIJl~ p

moves into lively chapter .

TRI-COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY

n.m.. A, B, C; 12 :45·1:30, P,
Q, R; 1:30-2 :15, N, 0, U-Z ;

l

Jacqueline Onasis's life

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Infant reunited
·with his mother

Winter quarter pre-rigistration at

ALESCENT
EQUIPMENT
RENTAL&amp; SALES

ANY

•

A-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, DeL 23, 19n

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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• A.,_TheSw1&lt;lay Times-St!ntinel. Sunda\', Oct. 23. 1977

B-1- The Sw1day Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 23, t977

·wild, wooly ·turn of century
~marked Green twp. ·g old rush

Woman's World

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BY JAMES SANDS
With the coming of the 20th
century . Gallians looked back
over the past century and
could see many l'hanges. The
first few years of the l!Oth
eentury were to· briJlg other
changes. but much of the old
remained.
Gallia County was st ill
depend ent upon agriculture.
The 1902 agricultural cens us
showed Green Township had
more horses (393) and more
hogs 1676 than any other
township.
Perry was ,f.e leader m

rattle li.2431 "ilh 1\'a~&gt;Ut
set·ond with 1,11!. Morgan

; 1etded 1,000 barrels in the Gret&gt; n To"' ns hlp . Nothing
first two wreks . AboUf a mut·h t' \'t•r ra nw ul thiS

was the first in sheep with
2,622: and Clay had first m
mules with 21.
The cwerage- ''alut~ of these
animals in 1902 was follows :

nwnth later u well "'as

horses, $45, cattle $1 5, sheep
S3.-hogs 13, and mules $40. To
gtvt&gt; some 1dea of com·
pa ra tive valu~. a carriage
was worth $30 in 1902.
The new things that came
to the county were these. Oil
was disco\'ered in Ches_hire
township . The first well was
the Coughenour well, which

discu\'errd that would pump
ftve ba rn•ls a day. The oi l Cheshire through the spon•.
boom "·as brought. on by 'the sorship of the Cheshire Public
possibilities of tht• gas ~ ltnpr ovt•mt•nt Counci l
ope rated enginE" . In 1902 l'rrc~ed street lights. That
Wumel dorff's livery beca me soml' yl·ar thr streets l"lf
the hrst two car owne r in the (~allipolis were bricked by
co'unty when they , bought a the Camd(•n Ci a ~' Com pany of
pair of 71 "! horSt&gt;power autos. Ma so n
Cou nty,
Wes t
Tbere ' t!! ~ ~ ·* c a stir in Virginia . In 1905 Gallipolis's
Green TolhL. -,~ :l • . J9Q.I whrn first fi1·e ·and 10 sta rted
.gok1 was c. . .;&lt;· overrd by business under the name Qf
Alonzo fletche-r. The-re was the
Ga llipolis Novelty

murh talk of a gold rush .to

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Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

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th~ last eentury.
The excitemen t created

COMPOUND
BOW

development, public r~lations
and human relations.
The seminar was held in
the School' Board Room at the
Vocational Center on Oct. 17,
18 and 19 from Ba.m.. through
4 p.m. Each st udent was
required to _, perform a
teaching assignment during
thf seminar. Mr. Smith and
Adult Education Supervisor,
Scott Coddington, agreed lhat
additional seminars ·may 'i·be
held at the Career Center to
meet the educational needs of
local law enforcement
agencies.

Local officers completing
the seminar were: William

Wells, Rio Grande College
Security : Lt. George R.
Plants. Gallia
Co unty
Sheriff's Department; Chief
Robert Shaw, Rio Grande:
Sgt , Caro l W. Manley ,
Gallipolis State Institute; Lt .
Silas Hamilton, Gallia County
Sheriff's Department : Harry
Smith , State Department of
Vocational Education and LL
D. R. White, Gallia. County
Sheriff'S Dept.

Route 85
tree value
is high
ALBANY, N.Y. (UP!) Residents of an Albany
suburb place a high value on
the trees lining Route B5 - .
$17,500 apiece.
That was the approximate
cost of a State Department of ·
Transportation
decision
Friday to accede to the
wishes of New Scotland,
N.Y., residents and leave 20
trees standing along Route B5
when two mlles of the road

SAVE '40
Was '219.95
• l'ahl'ic

Ma~tPr

The original plan called for
Elec.

t.lryt•r shnt • nff at .JJJ't··sPt

l ... v~l ..• nu mnr•p ~llf"Sf'wnr·k
~J .. f:nanP'' tnmblt·s clntht•.; uftf'l'
dl'l·in .. tu lll'l(&gt; ·lil"t'\'t•nt l;l'iuklirt

• w.. ;..

1'
~

~

Capacity fm· hi!-( ln~d s
• Fnll ..... idth Load·A·Dot"'
• Nf.W Tnnch·up cyclf' fno· o·t•movinl!
"Tinklf'S fl'fllll pack ..d HI' stm·pd rlnthilll!

•

Greenfield boys went over to
take the place and give an
exhibition of the wild . and
Wooly west. After cavorting
around conslderably 1 lhey
kicked O\'er the ice cream
freezer and this· aroused the

ire of the Sand Fork boys and
they lit into them and gave
them a lashing. The lestival
was broken up in confusion."
The other incident took
place at the school on
George 's creek . The teacher
at the school was Elijah
Johnson. Mr. Johnson was
crippled and used a crHtch.
Two Dailey boys and a Chick
, boy deci~ed to have some fun
at the teacher's expense and
hid Mr. Johnson's crutch. The
teacher went after the lj_oys
with a poker iron when one of
the boys pulled a knife on the
teacher. The four rolled on
the ground until help cou ld
come. The Gallipolis Bulletin,
in reporting this story, said
that the sa me thing had

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

46 QUART

16 QUART

LIFT TOP

DISH PAN

Lao·~:•;

Ken moll". Sl1lid a.'\ J Sears/

Gas ' dryers UO extra

· This odver.lieetl ilt&gt;m is readilv
available for !'lalf' a!"i adverti., ed.
J\t'nmore"' 1 dr)·erS require t•ilher :,:n~ or Plec•lric·al
c=onnt.- l'lur..; nut in('~tlflt•tl in t}w J•ric·t·~ .;hown.
Shippir-1:', in~tullation c·xtru.
• ScMt.'i h :.-. a t·r l' dit plan lu .. uit musl t'\'E'rY m'l'd
• l_.ricr ~ ••t:•· Cn!alu" prit·•'·"
•. Sale Ends Nov. 2S

8at 1 .~ (aclion Gu.aranl1•;;d or Your Munf'Y Hac)t

1

Sears 1 s1~~!~

1 "••1"• 111• ul ' S!ou1• :-;,;.,,,,.

·, ·,,e;,l•u.: )., l'h""'' 446-2770 S t:AUS, Uut;uun\ ANI&gt; CU .
21 Ho·ur ~hone Servict

·I

BRIDGe

removing the trees and

widening the road .
Not widening the highway
means not meeting federal
standards .
Not meeting the standards
means losing about $3!i0,1JOO
in federal aid.
That makes the trees worth
about $17,500 apiece.

REVIVAL SCHEDULED
STIVERSVILLE ~ A
revival will .be held at' 7:30
p.m. Wednesday 'through
Saturday, Oct. 26 throull
Oct. 29, at the New Sliversville Comm unity Church .
Jack Clark, Jr ., will speak on
Thursday and Saturday
even ings; Jack Cornell, Sr.,
on Wednesday . and· Art
Tucker of the St. John United
Methodist Church, Parke.rsburg on r' riday' There will be

special singing each evening
and the public is invi ted .

..

'300

WASHINGTON (UPI) The Consumer Product
Safety Commission, in the
face of controversy over

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

flame retardant chemicals in
children's sleepwear, has

36 QUART

WASTE ·
BASKET

.

decided to allow untreated
fabrics to be used .
_
The c&lt;mmission voted 4.{)
Thursday to modify existing
rules so fabrics which
previously required chemical
treatment could be sold
without it. The requirement
for flame.resis!ilnt fabric
was dropped entirely for
pajamas smaller than size

SnRIIO

:fiRE PLACE LOG

'100

HDW.

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

DEPT.

1.

Controversy has errupted
in recent years over the
potentially cancer-eausing
chemica Is used to meel the
CPSC's requirement that
children's sleepwear be
flame retardant.
The commission acted on a
staff
report
that
manufacturers switching to
fabrics which themselves are
flame-resistant and thus
comply
with
.federal
standards without chemical
treatment.
A furor arose over the ban
on the chemical Tris, and

1¥2 ION
HYDRAULIC lACK

1 3/4 BUSHEL

LAUND

BASKET
$200 ·
DEPT.

HOUSEW.

AUTOMOTIVE ·
DEPT.

20"

siinilar 'questions have been
'raised about an alternative
flameretardant, Fyrol FR-2.
The commission \'Oted earlier
this week not to block sales of
sleepwear treated with Fyrol.
Commission Chairman
John
Byington
said
modi fica lion of the rules may
result "in some slight change
in the type of protection
offered, ' ' but-the commission
considers the change to be in
· the public interest . ·

Child born
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs.
Rndney Karr, 249 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, are announcin~ the
~irth of their first child, a son,
Rory Charles Karr, born Oct.
3 at tile O'Bleness Hospital in
Athens. The infant weighed

seven pounds, nine ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Marshall, Chesapeake, and the
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Karr, Jr., Middleport. Great·
grandparents are Mr: and
Mrs. Charles R. Karr, So·.,
Pomeroy .

3WAY

•

lUG

(Address of the author is
P. 0 . Box 3, Barlow, Ohio
4571 2).

1

-·

AUTO DEPT.

AUTO. DEPT.

HEARTH

POLAROID
ONE STEP

BROOM

guan, alive

BATON ROUGE, La . .
(VPI )- For those who were
wondering, a Louisiana State
University zoologist reports
the Peruvian white-winged
@Jan, last seen in 1877 and
beUeved extinct, is alive and
well in the foothills of the
Andes.
Dr. John P. O'Neill, who
recently returned from
expedition to the Andes with
four graduate students,
reoorted he siehted at least 14
white·winged guans. He said
severa l hundred more Of the
birds probably live in the
area where liis team made its
sightings.
. ' White-winge d gu,ans, .with a
wingspreads of about 30
inches and long tails, have a
brilliant red-{"1range throat .

STORM
WINDOW

II OZ.

GILtmE FOAMY

HARDWARE
DEPT.

66¢

88C

e lEG .e LIME • MENfHOL

KIT

COSMETIC

~

DEPT.

.

GALLIPOLIS - Deborah state · title. She woll also
Beegle, R.N., was chos.en become . the
official
1977-78 GaUoa Co~nty Moss representatove locally f~r the
Hope for the Galloa County Cancer Socoety, and w1l~ be
Un:t of the Ameroca~ Ca~c~r a\'a!lable to speak .at \'aroous
Socoety at the orgamzato~n s functoons , actiVIties and
annual busmes.s meetmg meetmgs.
,
GiftS for Mrs. Beegle were
Wednesday e\'enmg held m
the French Fi\'e lfundred
Room · at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs . Beegle, a resident of

Blacks to mark
anntversary

donated by the First National
Bank, Commercial &amp; S~vings
Bank, Ohio Valley ·sank,
Clark Jewelry Store, Ber·
nadine's, Fruth Pharmacy,
Ambleside Garde.n Center
and Floral Center, Pat's
Nationwide Figurama and

RUTLAND-The children of
Mr. and Mrs. Warren D.
Black of Rulland will llust an
open house in hunur uf thei r
parents' 35th wedding . an.
niversary.
The celebration will be held
from 2 to 4 p.m. on Sunday
Oct. 30 at the home of Mr.and
Mrs. Black in Rutland.
Relatives and friends of the
couple are invited to call during the open house hours.
Mr. and Mrs. Black were

BobEvansSausageShop. She
also received the Miss Hope
Winner's Sash and Charm.
Ginger Smith received, as
first runner-up, gifts from
Cox.'s Department Store,
Country Fare and Donnelli's
Pizza
·

Crisis seminar attracts over fifty

Crown City, is a graduate of
the Holzer School of Nursing
and is currently employed at
GALLIPOLIS - More than
Holzer.
fifty per,;ons attended an all
First
runner-up was · day seminar on " Ministry to
Virginia (Ginger) Smith, Persons in Crisis-," held in the
L.P.N., a graduate of French Five Hundred Room
Parkersburg. Community at the Holzer Medical Center
College who is also employed on Tuesday, October lB.
at Holzer. Other conteStants
Sponsored by the Con·
were Rebecca Burger and
tinuing Education Committee
Charlene McKenzie, R.N.
The Miss Hope program is of .the hospital's Volunteer
designed to stimulate interest Chaplains' Association, the
in the activities of the purpose of this annual fall
American Cancer Soclety. seminar was to help the
Volunteer
Miss Hope, always a nurse or hospital's
nursing student; symbolizes Chaplains and other area
the advancing quality of care clergy
become
better
and treatment to the cancer . equipped to deal with crisis.
patient which brings 11 hope 1' Topics of discu:j§ion included
for a cancer free world. The the practical theory for basic
Miss
Hope
program crisis intervention , surgical
enllghtens and educates those crisis involving loss of body
who fear cancer.
image in such cases as
This was the second year amputations, cr isis of a
for the Miss Hope program in stroke or heart attack and
. Galli a County. The local crises inVolving children.
program is one of few con·
Speakers during the day
t~s in Southeastern Ohio.
Last year's Miss Hope for included Robert Huestis,
Gallia County, Bridget Cloak, M.D., Charles E. Holzer,
R.N. , served as mistress of M.D., Bridget Cloak, R.N.,
ceremonies for Wednesday Oscar W. Clarke, M.D.,

Lamaze class
to begin
!
.

JEWELRY DEPT.

DEPT.

an

They previously were known
nn ly from three stuffed
specimens in museums.

'28''

HARDWARE

Pictured from ihe left are Bridget Cloak, R.N., last year's
Miss Hope; Ginger Smith, L.P.N ., first runner-up ; Mrs.
Seegle; and Don Pullins, president of thelocal unit .

Priscilla Ferguson, R.N. ,

James E. Levernier, M.D.,
Nancy Casteel, R.N ., the
Reverend Albert MacKenzie
and the hospital's Director of
Chaplaincy Services, the
Reverend Arthuc C. Lund.
Opening the seminar was the
Re\'erend Robert Dam·
schroder, chairman of the
hospital's
Volunteer
Chaplains' Association.

married on Oct. 31, 1942 at
Gallipolis by Justice of the
Peace Earl Moure. Thev have
resided in Rutland during
must of their Ini:lrriage and
are the parents of seven
chi ldren, Jeny •. Black,
Rutland '; Ronald Black, Dan·
viHe, Ruger Black, Rutland,
Kenneth Black, New Haven,
W. Va .; Mrs. Deborah
Gilmore, Rutland, Lynda and
Brynda Black, at home. They
also have 10 grandchildren.

Oscar W. Clarke, M.D., one of several speakers at the
Seminar on Ministry to Persons "l Crisis, as he discussed
the crisis of a stroke and heart attack .
A'ITEND WEDDING
POMEROY-Mr. and M1·s .
Aaron Kelton, Pomeroy, cmd
Mr. a11d Mr. and Mrs. Johll
Fultz and son, Mar&lt;.\ were i11
Xenia Su11day to attend the
wedding of Ret. Col. Lyston
Fultz, and Mrs. Mary E.
McMillan at the Faith Cum·
munity Methndist Church.

They were joined for the wedding by William F. Fultz,
Kim Fultz O' Burn, and Anita
"' ultz Mason, Columbus. Col.
Fultz is the uhde o£ those .
named above ami was born
and reared in Middleport. He
and his wife will spend the
next U1rec months in Vienna,
Fla.

'

CAMERA

in mountains

MISS HOPE NAMED - Deborah Beegle, R.N. was
named the 1977-78 Gallia County Miss Hope for the local ,
unit of the American C811cer Society during a special
program Wednesday evening at Holzer Medical Center. ·

Participants
were
e\'aluated on a brief talk
about cancer and cancer
. nursing, their reaCtion to a
situational problem, poi~e,
personality and appearance
in uniform.
Judges were Gene Brown,
• Richard Cloak, Thelma
Elliott, .Lureva Mullins ,
David Strang, and Donald
Warehime.
As GaUia's Miss Hope, Mrs.
Beegle will compete in
Colunnbus in January for the'

'177

MaQn*Wi~~

PLANS TO WED- Rev. and Mrs. Charles L. Hively
Route I, Gallipolis, are announcing the engagement and
forthcommg mamage of their daughter, Doris Jean, to
Rev. Mark Irwm, 22 Henkle A\'e., Gallipolis. Mark is the
son of Rev. and Mrs. Napoleon J. Irwin Milton w Va
Miss Hively is a 1977 graduate of Kyger C~eek High &amp;hool
and IS employed at Burger Chef. Her fiance is a 1970
graduate ?f Milton High School and a 1972 graduate of
West V1rg1n1a State College with an Associate of Science
Degree in Industrial Technology as an Electronic
Technician. He is now employed at the Goodyear Tire and
Rubber Company at Apple Grove. W. Va . as an
mstrwnent electrician, The gracio!Js custom of an o~n
church wedding will be an event of December 2 at 7:30
p.m. at the Old Kyger F .W.B. Church, followed by a
receptoon m the church fellowship hall.

-

night's event.

WRENCH
P"*dl '"- frwt, u _,

Dons Hively

.....
i

Children's sleepwearDeborah Beegle' selected as Miss Hope
·causes ·controversy

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

~ "·«

•

BIN

happened five years earlier
with a different teacher.

White-winged

ENGAGED - Mr: and Mrs. Kenneth Michael,
Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Tammy Lynn, to
Sammy Lee Little, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Little of
Middleport and foster son ofMr .and Mrs. . John
Krawsczyn, Jr., also of Middleport. Both Moss Michael
and her fiance are 1976 graduates of Meigs High School.
He now attends the Ohio Institute of Technology in Col urn·
bus and is a partlime employe at Sears. Miss Michael is
presently employed by the Bureau of Public Debt in
Parkersburg, W. Va. The wedding will be an e\'ent of Sun·
day, Nov. 20 at the l!eathUnited Methndist Church •. Mid·
'• dleport. The gracious cnstom of open church woU be
observed with the Rev. Robert Bumgarner offocoatong. A
reception will follow in the church social room.

'159

are repaired .

tll'\' llf"~~

~

•2••

celebrations which annually
moved from one Gallia
v'illage to another were

"The Frede boys g8vc an
ice cream festival at their
store on Sand Fork last
Saturday night and a lot of

SPORTING GOODS

ARM
GUARD
.

ville. These players were
paid a salary, and hence it
cou ld be· said that Gallipolis
had a professional baseball
team. In one ga me against
Charleston with the score tied
at 3to 3, a fight broke out. The
umpire. unable to get order,
awarded the game · to
Gallipolis. Incidentally, the .
umpire was from Gallipolis.
The big Fourth of July

co ntinued . In 1902 the
ce lebration was held at ·
Centerv ille with a crowd of
over 2.000 . There were
speeches,
a
musical.
fireworks , and barrel. sack,
foot , mule, greasy · pig, and
greasy pole races .
Two incidents reported by
the papers in 1902 and 1905
proved that GaUia was st ill a
little bit in the frontier world ,
even in the new century .

\"
Tammy Michael

LEATHER

from Lancaster and Zanes·

RIO GRANDE·- Six local Vocational Education. Harry
area 'police officers have Smith of the State. Depart·
recently completed the Law ment of Vocational Education
Enforcement Instructors' was the coordinator of the
Seminar in cooperation with seminar. Mr. Smith taught
Adult Education at Buckeye • the officers: proper lesson
Hills Career Center and the planning techniques , proper
Trade and Industrial Division classroom
teaching
of the State Department of techniques , curriculum

•

BLACKTAIL HUNTER

1902 Gallipolis's baseball
team. frustrated over losing
to Charleston and Ashland.
derided to recruit players

Lawmen complete seminar
•

, Pomeroy-Middleport

• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

over to the 20th century. ln

•

992-2156

446-2342
'

over football and baseball in
the 19th c;entury was carried

AMONG THOSE taking part in the law enforcement instructor's seminar at Buckeye
Hills are, left to right: William Wells, Rio Grande College Security ; Lt. George R. Plants.
Gallia County Sheriff's Department ; Chief Robert Shaw. Rio Grande; Sgt. ·carol W.
Maniey, Gallipalis State Institute; Lt . Silas Hamilton. GaUia County Sheriff's Department:
Harry Smith, State Department of Vocational Education and Lt . D. R. White, Gallia C&lt;lUnty
Sheriff's Department. ·

Charlene Hoeflich

Com pany .
l\·1any thin gs , howev er.
.remained the same. National
touring com panies like the
Chicago Opera Company and
the Alvin Joslin Company
were coming to Gallipolis'
Opera hou se. just as (hey had

&lt;-------. ,

'

Catherine Benet

ma ltt&gt;r,
In 1901 thE' v11lagC' (If

.

Rebecca .:&gt;m&lt;lU
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Small, Crown City, an.nounce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Rebecca, to
Dwight Morgan Lloyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Uoyd,
Route 1, Oak Hill. Miss Small is a 1968 graduate of Hannan
Trace High School and is presently employed by the
Gallia Soil andWater Conservation District. Her fiance is
a 1967 graduate of Southwestern High Scll?"l and a 1971 ·
graduate of Bliss College. He is presently,m partnershop
with his parentsm their dairy !ann. The wedding will be
an event of Saturday, January 7, at 2 ~ 30 p.m . at
Mercerville Missionary Baptist Church with Rev. Jack
Templeton officiating. The graciou&lt; custom n! open
church will be observed.

..

ATHENS- The next series
of
Lamaze
childbirth
preparation classes, spon·
sored by O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, will begin Sunday,
Nov. 6. This class is for
couples whose expected date
of delivery is prior to Feb. 13.
Included in the six-week

...~.

Susan Lanning

course are: relaxation and

brefthlng techniques for ·
labor, instruction in the
physiological and emotional
aspects of the birth process,
exercises for physical
preparation of the body and
familiarization with hospital
procedures.

The fee for the series is $25.
Those planning to attend, who
have not pre-registered,
Mould call Pamela Colliet,
511:1-5049'

•

.

-

-

•

•

J

FIVE GENERATIONS - The fifth generation "f Mrs. ullie Wright of 2C Neil Ave ..
Gallipolis is pictured here. Seated is Mrs. Wright's oldest daughter, Mrs. Ella Fife of Mlll
Creek Hd. Standing is Mrs. Fife's daughter, Mrs. Esther Massie, of Columbus Ohio and
seated is Mrs. Massie's dau~hter, Mrs. Dorthy Lynn Bny!'e nf Omaha, Nebr~ska . Mrs.
Boyce is holding her first child,I .•ah C&lt;orrtl;sia Lynn Boyce.

•

---

-

TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lanning, Route a;
Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement arid apo
proaching marriage of their daughter, Susan Ann, to
Jerry W. Well, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Well Route 1
Shad~. The wedding will bean event of Nov. l9 at'6:30 p.m:
at Trtnoty Church with a reception immediately following
the ceremony in the church social room. The grllcious
&lt;'UStom of open church will be observed. Miss Lanning is
employed as a secretary at the Gen. James M. Gavin
Plant in Cheshire. Her fianc'e is employed at the Hiver
Transportation Division at Lakin, W. Va.

�•
: '

.

B-2- The Sunday Tm:es-SentmeL Sunday, Ort. 23. 19n

· I

Miss Snyder united in marriage ISr~; l~

POMEROY -On Sa turd;"·
S•.&gt;pl. 17. &lt;tl 2 p.m. Biu·LR•r~
Ann Snyder. dHughter of ~1rs .

n.·nl. Sht•l'&lt;.HTit'tl ~ l&gt;uuqul'l of
~ l•lh1 W daiS It'S and l'i:li'!!Oil IHilS
\'llh Uaby's Ort•a th and

Eh)lst' S1Wdt&gt;r. cmd tht• lall•
Frt•d Sny(ter. and Tt•rry 1..

grct'IH.'ry.

LeWIS. sun uf Mr. nnd ~trs .
L. I .eY.ds. wl're unnt.•tl
in marnage at U1c hunk• uf
llln;. VIUiet Millhom•.
The Rev. RirhHrd Thvmas
pt&gt;rfo rmed the t·andlig hl
t•t.•remony . Attendrwt.s \\'t'rt'
Bton~ rly Culhns ami Glt•n
Cia rk.
Fur her weddtng t ht' bndt&gt;
was attired· in ~ floor length
t·ggshell ){own wlth L!reen a('~
Vtr~il

c:U~t~~~~;~.;izens ~~~~~ I Calendar

activities loeated at the
SUN DAY
Pomeroy Junior High &amp;·hool
THE NEWSMEN Quarter,
is open 9 a.rn.-4 p.m., Monday Charleston, W. Va .. to be at
through Friday.
Pomeroy Church of the
Monda y, Octo ber 24 Nazarene,
co rner
of
Ca rds · and Games. Square Mulberry and Union, Sunday
Dance, 12:45-3 p.m.
for both Sunday School and
Tuesday. October 25 morning worship services.
Macrame Class, 10 a. m.- t2 Rev . . Clyde Hend erson.
noon ; Chor us, 12:4S-2 : IS p.m. pastor, invites public to both
. Wednesday, October 26 services.
Soc ial Securi ty Representative, 9:30 a. m.-12:30 p.m.: , POMEROY CHA PTER 80,
Flu Shot Clinic, 10 a .m.: RAM ,observanceo[religious
' 2: IS p.m.
affirm at ion Sunday at
Games. 12 : 4••
Thursday , October 27 ~ Middleport Presbyterian
Nutrition Education, ll,.a.m.: Cilurch at 10 :30 this morning.
Horses hoes , 12: 4s-2 p.m. ; All Maso ns , DeM olay,
Sing-a-Long, t2:4S-2 p.m.
Ea stern Star and Job' s
Friday. October 28 _ Daughters urged o join in
Knitting a.nd Cro chetin g observance .
Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon : Art
MONDAV
REV . AND Mrs. Ca rl
Cl ass, 10 a .m.-! 2 noon ;
Bowling, 1·3 p.m.
.
Nagle, missionaries to the
Senior Nutrition Program, Americ~n Indians, Cha~­
t2 noon·t2:4S p.m .. Monday , be,rs •. Am ., wtll have spectal
missionary services Monday,
through Friday.
Monday - Roast beef, 7:30 p.m . at ~om roy
mashed potatoes, creame~ Wesleyan Hlllme~s
urch,
tomatoes, ca rrot cake, bread, on S.R. 14_3. ~Re .. Dewey
butter. milk.
JUng-;-past or, tn vttes the
Tuesday - Meatloa f - public.
. .
gravy, buttered canned
REVIVAL AT Trinity
mixed vegetables. shredded Christian Assembly , Coo llettuce • mayonnaise sweet \'til e, Monday through
potatoes, peach c; bble r, Sunda~. with Angel \~rez
bread, butter, milk.
.from Teen Cilallenge . m
Wednesday
Fried Cleveland as evangehst .
chicken, dressing, buttered Services wtth spectal smgmg
peas. caiUied apricots. bread. each evenmg, 7:30 p.m. Rev ...
butter milk.
Gtlbert Spencer. pastor.
Thu~sday - Macaroni and invites the public . _
cheese with ham• f hunks,
BEND 0' T HE River
buttered spinach. jelhed fruit Gai'den Club, 7:30 Monday
coc ktail , peanut butter nig h! at the home uf Mrs.
cookies, bread, butter, milk. Bert Grinun. Fur roll ca ll
Friday - Turkey 'roll, au nll'mbcrs ar-e to tell lluw
gratin potatoes, buttered nature affirms the cxlsl~JH:c
gree n bean s, pineapple of Gud. Fur the arrangenwnt
s lices , cornbread, butter, of lhe month, the theme will
milk.
be "Harvest Muon."
Coffee, tea and buttermilk
BETHF.i. 62, International
served daily.
Order uf Job's Daughters.
7:30 Monday mg llt at the
p,nl lcroy Masoml' Te1 nple .

A l't'l't:'Plh•ll "as ht•ld 1111·
llh'dtatl'l)' fi..I JliJWIIIg tht.•

l.'t•n·nwny. Tht· bndt•'s to.tbll'
ft·mun•d a t hree ltt.'t't'd r&lt;~ kt&gt;
\\l t h p111k Hlld blm.• t'OSl'S ~k·
t'.ti bv Nann Roush. Till' t•a kc
~~ as ·SL'I"n'&lt;i with pun l'h, huni
d\k.'U\Tt•s, nuts and nunts .
F ur their wetidm~ tnp tilt!
1..'\)Uplt&gt; went lu Bla L·k WHtt' l '

Fi:t lls. They nuw r~stdc at
West c:olumb ia, W. VH .

CANCER

--

Answer line
Amerlcln C1ncer Society

•

.
I

..

A regular feature , prepared by the American Cancer
Society, to help save your life from cancer.
A llardware store salesman explains : " A lot of my
customers keep telling me to quit smoking, but nobody tell$ me
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Lewis
ho.w. It's a tough habit to shake !"
' ··
ANSWERiine : A quick call or visit to your American
Cancer Society Unit will provide you with "how to"
information and ·perhaps an invitation to a smoking
withdrawal progran1. Forth~ moment, how about these ideas•
Pick a Q (Quit) day and just quit. If you can't, smoke one less
cigarette a day. Make each cigarette you smoke a special
decision and put off making the decision. Tell your friends ,
customers and family that you are quitting because a public
commitment bolsters will-power. Did you know tllat your food
wi!l_ l"ste better• Every time you are inclined to smoke ask
GALUPOLIS- The Gallia
yourself: IWlg cancer? heart · disease? emphysema' Are
- Pt. Plea sa nt Welcome
cigarettes worth lung cancer or heart disease or emphysema?
Wagon Newcomers Club held
A SUn belt resident asks : ·'Is too much sun the only cause of its general meeting recently.
skin cancer?
· J oy Atwood, membership
ANSWERiine : While excessive sun exposure is the major
chairperson,
introduced
- and preventable - cause of much skin cancer, some cases
three guests.
are caused by exposure to other kinds of radiation. CancerAmong topics discussed in
causing chemicals, e.g., ·arsenic, burns, and a genetic
the business meeting were
predisposition can also act in the development pf skin cancer.
the style show held last
Fortunately, most skin cancers, because they are so highly
month , the district convisible, are detected while the disease is in an early stage and
are therefore highly curable. Because of your place of ference held in Parkersburg
last week and the money
residence, you should be especially careful about sun
raising projects and ot her
exposure.
activities
planned for the
A day care center worker asks : "How accurate is the Pap .
remaining
year.
test?"
The speakers were Mrs. REV. ARLEfY CRAVENS
ANSWERline : The Pap test is a quick and painless
WILL BE ·SPEAKER procedure during which a sample of vaginal fluid and cells Eleanor Strang from the The Reverend Arley
scraped from lhe surface of the cervix are collected !or later American Cancer Society Cravens, of Nitro, W. Va.
spoke
on
se lf ·
microscopic examination. It is almost 100 percent accurate in who
will be the evangelist at
examination
for
breast
detecting cancer of the uterine cervix (the neck of the womb).
The first Church of God,
cancer.
The test can actually detect cancer" before the onset of
Refreshments were serVed 109 Gartleld Meoue in
symptoms. There is, however, another kind oi uterine cancer,
by
Carolyn Purcell and Chris Gallipolis for one week
endometrical cancer, which begins in the lining of the womb.
beginning Monday , OcMitchell.
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
The Pap test is only about 60 percent effective in detecting this
tober .24 and continuing
were
l4
in
atThere
Mrs.
John Fultz were in
kind of uterine ca ncer.
through Sunday, October . Athens Thursday even ing to
tendance
.
Next
meet
will
be
'lbere are other techniques that are . used to detect
Monday, Nov . 21 at 7:30p.m. 30. Mr. Cravens is a
attend the first performance
endometrial cancer and they can also be performed in a
graduate
of
Gull
Coast
at
the
Jackson
Pike
branch
of
of the season of the Ohio
physician's office or clinic. Nonelheless, Pap tests are
Bible
College,
Houston,
the
Ohio
Va
lley
Bank.
University Symphony OrImportant lor women..from the tim~ they become sexually
· Texas and earned a
chestra under the direction of
active throughout life, To safeguard her health, each woman
master's
degre'e
in
John Ferritto.
should have routine pelvic examinations including a Pap test
Theology
from
Clarksvllle
Their son , Marc , a
!"'d wllatever other teS4 her. physician suggests. This is
school of Theology, Clarkssophomore, is a member of
Important because when uterine cancer Is detected in an early
vflle, Tennessee. The
the orchestra. The program
·
stage, the chances ·of cure are excellent.
Church
of God invlies you
included " Overture, to La
A computer programmer asks: "What is thermography '"
to hear this outslandlng
Fo r za del · Destmo ," by
ANSWERllne.: Thermography is a way of recording the
Giuseppi Verdi; "Symphony
heat patterns of the skin. While it is not as reliable as other
Twenty-one members of preacher of the "Word of
No. 29, J lpus 289" by Alan
methods (such as breast x;ays and physical examination) ; the council of the Gallia Cuun- God. The music will be
Hovhannes with Henry
thermography is used in conjunction with them to detect
ly·Senior Citizens Center held directed by Mrs. Pearl
Charles Smith, associate
possible breast cancer. Abnormalities within the breast raise
their regular meeting TIJUrs- Elliott. Special singing
will
slog
each
groups
conductor of the Minnestora
lhe temperature of the affected area and it is this cllange that
dHy ·afternoon at the center on
The
nursery
wlll
evening.
Orchestra,
as the soloist , and
lhennography is able to register.
,
Jackson Pike, including three
be
open
each
service.
The
"Symphony
No. I in C. Minor,
newly elected members.
services
begin
each
O
pu
~
68,
"
by Johannes
The trio is President Bill
at
1:30 p.m.
evening
Brahms.
Marc
, a student of
· Jenkins, re-eleded, ami Dr.
Pro(.
Ernest
Bastin, is a
Edna Getlles and Mrs. Mae
of
the
brass choir
member
Lawrence.
the
trumpet
gui!d.
and
Also present was the Rev.
POTLUCK
SET
Pearl Casto, successor to the
The Kyger Creek Band
late Rev . Linson H. Stebbins,
will have a potluck
Hoosiers
retired
I · repres.•nti ng
supper
at
5:30 Tuesday
clergymen.
Dewey
Walker,
.
Exhibit for the month of OCtober - Antique Exhibit
evening.
Bring
three covered
Vinton, was elected by counfeaturing a Victorian Kitchen in Gallery I and Stoneware and
dishes
and
silverware
. They
. ..
Yellow Ware in Gallery 11. The majority of items on exhibit are
cil tu succ'eed J . Sherman
will
have
a
short
meeting
loca lly owned and loaned to the French Art Colony for this
Porter, resigned, to finish the
TO GET $15,000
afterwards . This is to get
Exhibit.
.
unexpired term.
POMEROY
Meigs
The council will elect of- acquainted with the new band County will receive $1S,OOO
. Gallery Hours - Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m . until S
ficers fur 1978 at itS Nov. 17 director.
p.m.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until3p.m.
from t he capital imOCtober 23-2 p.m.-4 p.m. - Parent Cilild Workshop, Mrs. meeling.
provements budget bill which
Margaret Brim, Instructor. Hal~~w~~.n Art including the
was passed by the Ohio
sphere, cone, cube and cYJinder. No charge; open to all
Food Safety
Legislatur-e Thursday, Sen.
children; all materials supplied. Not necessary · to be a
Childhood Diseases
To prevent food bo rne Oakley Collins reports. The
member of the French Art Colony. Penny Moore, Cilairman,
Has your child been im- illnesses, the Food and Drug amoWJt will be used at the
Riverby .
.
munized against diphtheria; Administration . cautio ns Forked · Run Stale park for
OCtober 25 8 p.m.,. F .A.C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby.
tetanus and whooping cough? consumers to refrigerate left- anti-pollution
compliance.
Exhibit for the month of November, Opens on November S,
Against polio, measles, and over foods immediately. Hot
1977- J ohn Ruthven "The World of John Ruthven, Wildlife German measles? Beca use foods do not have to cool first.
fewer cases of these diseases -----,=~-------'----------,
Artist," 35 prints.
.
are seen tha
'th
t r
November 14, 8:15 p.m. - Reception for members and
n
e
pas •
f 1m many people assume there is
guests to meet John Ruthven . Mr. Ruthven will present a i
no need to be immunized
and talk on PrintMaking. A great opportunity to meet and talk against them ... but the
with the artist. Riverby .
da
ent1rel~
November JS, 8 p.m. - F .A.C. Interdepartmenta l
nger still exists. The Food
and Drug Administration
Meeting, Riverby ·
advises parents to be sure
Tilllt'l the l)rObl~m "'f hdo.l •.,..oth th•i ottl
November 22, 2 p.m.-4 p.m. - Parent-Child Workshop; that their children be
lurw to 1how yo" tlw dh•ol ul~l v yummy
Penny Moore, Cllainnan.
prot ected by getting the
'"I lui·'~ ulllww !J''"'"'"' l··•ll"'' " ' "~ ''
December 11, 2 p.m.-4 p.m. - Christmas
for
. t .
W •• 1htl .._,, h••&lt;t. hut (ou
II&gt;
1 1.
I
' &lt;Hr&lt; h IIIO· on , [IV JIH"" t)u , 'iU';'~u e~ &lt;.IIO'
members and immediate families, ~~~~~~~~--~a:p:pr~o:p~ri:a:e~m:
, the
o ~cu::a~Io:n:s~
.
specia l guest. Riverby .

Newcomers
club meets

·,

Marc Fultz
.
peifor1ts

Tl i t:~Ui\ Y

AMJo:IUl'i\ 1\1

J\ -.sueraTHttl

uf

Unl\l!I' S i t).
W u iiH"I I,
M 1ti dh· p~ , rr ~ I ~, tJJit' ruy a l'l'tl

Br~. u 1dt,

7 : ~0

TuL·Sday

ttl

Mt.' IJ~S ll1 g fl Sd''"'l lii.Jra r} .
PriiJ! I ;un 1111 ht·~•lt h SC I'VIL'l'S.

MEIGS Junior High School
parent-teacher lorwn, 7:30
p.m . tn the school cafeteria .
John Morawill talk on the
school.
AMEIUCAN Legion AUX·
lliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
both junior and senior units,
- 7:30 Tuesday aHhe hall. Nan-

cy Kohhever, Gallia-MeigsJacksun Men tal Health
Center, will be the speaker.
MEIGS County Garden
Clubs Association, 7::10 p.m.
Tuesday at Trinity Church.
Winding Trail to be host club.
MEIGS AREA Holiness
Assn. nieeting , Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. at Danville Wesleyan
Chu rch. The Kings Musicians
will play and special singing
by the Gospel Voices.
Speaker will be the Rev.
Herbert Ailing. Public invited .

'

-

.

YOUR MONEY

mode

of softness

~~· ~ll~ hdv~

j

Vitamins
"Synt hetic " · vitamins
manufactured
in
the
laboratory are identical to
the natural vitamins found in
foods, says the Food and
Drug Administration . The
body cannot tell the difference and gels the same
benefits from either source.
X'Ray Records
Be sure to tell your doctor
and dentist about any x rays
you have had taken recently, ,
advises the Food and Drug
Admi nistraito n'. By maintaining a· personal x-ray
record, patients can provide
physicians with a readily
available list of previous xray examinations so that
unnecessary duplication ca n
be avoided. Write for :
"Personal X-Ray Record"
FDA, CR~. PO Box 4646,
Chicago, Ill. 60680.

137 PINE ST., GALLIPOLIS, 0.

CDUHT!tY STORES

700 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, 0.

••,,

··-

•

JOAN OF ARC

KIDNEY BEAN
PRE-(JIRISTMAS

LEMON

.-

FOR BEAUTIFUL,
SPARKLING
DISHES

FRESH

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DIAMOND SALE

••"

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Buy now and save 20% on diamonds
of all sizes and qualnies. Up to 2.01) ct.

. p 'l

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All diamonds have been carefully_graded to insure you
of tru e value . Your selection carr ies a written cert ified
appra i sal an added adv ant'age of diamond
pur Chases at Paul Da vi es .

.'

An ex tensive selection of lad les and gents rings,
pendan1s , earrings , st i ck pins and t ie mOunts will be on
hand ,to set your d iamond into beautlful diamond
jew'e lry .

15lfz OZ.
CANS

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BIG SAVINGS! .

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$ 99
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color safe
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PRICE

WITHOUT
GOOD ONLY AT

OFfER EXPIRES

TllE JONES BOYS

UH I

COUPON

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10-30-77

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4Days0nly

---

mo91ne shoes

STORE HOURS:
9 A.M. TO 9. P.M. DAILY
NOON TO 8 P.M. SUNDAYS

2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:

Senior Citizens
Have Session

m
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HERE'S WHERE YOU GET

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woven gabardine solids!
Machine w a sh , dry .

45" Wide

SALTINES

60"Wide

Reg. S2.99 yd.
You saveS 1.31 yd.

$1

Many co l ors .

Reg. S3.99 yd.

:'

You save 11.11

$2

68
Y~RD

I

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Acetate / nylon or Arnel ® triac eta t e / nylon

ve lour for .robes , jogging outfi ts ! Machine
wash . dry , 48" &amp; 54" wide .

'
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Rag. S2.29 yd.

Trlacetate/lilylon
Rag. $3,49 yd.

$1~

S2~

Sare SJ.5l rardl

Save Sl.OI fardl

.Printed Knits

Pinwale Corduroy

dry, 60" wlda.

Cotton and cotton/polyester
blend corduroy solids. Machin•
wash, dry, 45" wide.

Rag. $3.99 yd.

Reg. $3.29 yd.

'

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ALL STAR·

.Plush Velour

100,-. polyester printed knits far
draues. blouaas. Machine wash.

I

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11

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oog Food

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•• g . $4.99 yd .
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"WILSON" THE COUPON MILK

Nice Selection of

EVAPORATED MIlK

Dried Flowers

Country Fare
,____ In Spring Valley

PRINCE

11

Moo &amp; Fr1 t1l8 p.m .
Tuc §. Wt'd . Sil t tt!Sp .m

Thur sday tU o noon

"II It's New We'it Got II"

9~ THIN SPAGHETTI

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3 '1 ELBOW MACARONI 3 '1

PINT

16

PKG.

PRINCE

16 oz.

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13
CANS

PKGS.

Sale For: MOnd~y, October 24th Thru Sunday, October ·30th
•

•

.

�.

.

Pickens-Peavley vows spoken
POMEROY-J~;nc.t Pu.:ke ns •
&lt;mtl Jac.:k E. Pcetvlcy were
marnetl on St•pt. 3 at the
Carlctuu Clmrrh. Kmgs bury
Hoall w1th the Hcv. Gary
Kiug uffH.: iatmg at the
cercll1olly.
The Unllc is the daughlt:r: of
Mrs. Ola St. Clair, RoUte 2,
PoHil!I'Y , and the late Avery
St. Clair, and the groom is the
sun of J&lt;Jck Pectvley, Ddruil 1
Mich. ami the li:Jtc Mary
Pt~avlcy .

- ~'~
•

,.

Seledwns of nuptial music.:
was presented by Mrs, Kathy
J uhnsun
before
the
t'CI IH.ll e light ce remony .
Condles were li~hted by
Vicky Peavley Hnd KHthy
Pic.:kens during the song,
·· Love Story."
The bride and groom wHlkl'tl doWn the aisle together.
She was altirt&gt;d in .a fluor

-;-

HOLIDAY BAZAAR PLANNED - The women of the
church are
preparing for their annual holiday bazaar to'be held Nov . I~ fr om 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. at the
church in•Gallipolis . Among the items for sale this yea• will include baked goods, canned
goods, homemade candy, a large variety of handcrafted items and dried nnwer
arrangements: The ladies invite the public to do their Christmas shopping early at the
bazaar.

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

Paint Creek to mark 114 years
GALlJPOLIS - The Paint
Creek Regular Baptist
Church, 833 Third Ave., wiU
celebrate the !44th anniversary of the church
Sunday , Oct . 23.
The church got its name, as
it was founded on Paint Creek
(the small stream that nows
a long Texas Road and empties in to the Chickamauga ).
The church was organized in

COLORING .BOOKS

2 •

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It's crafted in rawhide leather. And
it's a moccasin that takes the rough
places in·stride . Sporting a tie, it
walks luxuriously on a genuine crepe
sole with a new demi-wedge. On the
side, the famous OldMaine
Trotters sulky.
Kent

THE SHOE CAFE
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dinner at 12:30 p.m. The
anniversary services begin at
2:30p.m.
Special musi c will be
furnished by the Ironton
Commlmity Gospel Chorus.
The anniversary message
will be delivered by Rev.
Nyle D. Borden, who is pastor
of Forest Run Baptist
Church, Pomeroy , Ohio and
also the chaplain in the
department of Corrections at
the Ohio State Penitentiary,
Columbus, Ohio.
..Yj) U are invited to attend
any part of, or the all day
·worship and celebration of
one of the city's landmark's
birthday. You ' ll find a
welcome from the pastor,

.•.,,~··· .,.,.,·,·······&lt;·· - ~ · ·•

'""'l

1
Mr. and Mrs. jack Peavley

POMEROY-Members uf
the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club
will have a halloween party
at the Sportsman Inn i(l
Athens Wednesday night at
6:30.
Meeting recently at the
home of Mrs. Evelyn
Gilmore, the club members
heard reports on the recent
yard sale. Games were
played with prizes going to
Mrs. Lenora McKnight, Mrs.
Pandora Collins, and Mrs.

Next meeting will .~ hosted
by Mrs. McKnight.
The Halloween theme Was
carried outin the food an~

Lafayette
Mall
Downtown
Gallipolis

GALLIPOI.JS - The activities at the Senior Citizens
Center, 220 Jackson Pike, are
listed as follows for this
week :
Monday, October 24--Biood
Pressure Check, I : 15-2: 15
p.m. ; Chorus, 1:15-3 p.m .
Tuesday, October 25 Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m.
: W.ednesday, October 26 QuiltiJ!g, 9 a .m ..J p.m. ; Card
Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, October 27 Bible Study, I : 15-2: 15; Billy
Graham Crusade Trip if an
reservations are filled - bus
leaves at I: 30 p.m.
Friday, October 28 - Art
Class, 1-3 p.m.; Nutrition
Games, 1·3 p.m .; Social
Hour, 7 p.m .
The Senior Nutrition
Program wlll serv,e the
following menu at noon :
Monday Roast beef,
gr'a vy, mashed potatoes,
stewed tomatoes, hot rolls,
butter , prune cake, milk.
Tuesday Meatloaf,
buttered canned mixed
vegetables , shredded lettuce
with · mayonnaise, bread ,
butter, peach cobbler, milk.
Wednesday - Chicken,
dressing, buttered peas,
bread,
butter ,
canned
apricots, milk.
Thursday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham chunks, ,
spinach, je)lied fruit cocktail,
bread, butter, peanut butter
Friday - Glazed hamloaf,
au gratin potatoes, buttered
green beans, corn bread,
butter, pineapple slices, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
('Services rendered on a
non-discriminatory hasis." .

1

Halloween party planned

~i.,.·:_.':, . .SCa;:'.'&lt;·/ednda:;r;;r·~;w.:&lt;· ~;e~r~:":~~ ~~~ ~~~!e

cookies, milk.

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CUT CRYSTAL

ENAMEL.ROASTER

1833, moved lo what is now
738 Third Ave. in or about ·
1840. The present location
was occupied in 1871 and the
main sanctuary is the
original building built 106
years ago.
On the 23rd there will be the
reg ular morning services,
Sunday School 9:15 a .m.,
worship service 11 a.m. , a
c,ove r ed dish fe llowship

lci1glh guw1\ c,f t:andlcllght
guiuno fashioned in peasant
style w1lh lacmg up the frunt
panel. He won~ a m::ildnng
shirt Jn peasant style. Buth
were designed and made by
tile l.Jritle .
The maid of hunol' wa s Mrs.
Patru.:1a Santlersun, Delrvit ,
Mich . She wore a fluor length ·
guwu uf d1estnut brown
~uiana in a wrctp ctruuntl
!ilyle, 1 and_ c&lt;HTwd a silk
pcac.:h colored rOSe. BesTinan
wtts Ray Varian, Mason , W.
Va. He wore a shirt similar to
the grmnn's shirt. Bulh were
made by the bride.
The buffet •lyle reception
wHS given by the euuple at the
Meigs Inn ~ PQrneroy. A three
tiered c.:ake centered Lhe
bride's table and un an adjuining table were ham, roast
beef, cheeses, reli~h plates'

decorations
with
Mrs.
Gilmore serving a salad
course.
Mexlcal X Rays
Diagnostic x rays are an
essential part of medical
care. But x rays are potentially hannful if the patient is
exposed to too much
radiation. The Food and Drug
Administration recommends
the use of special shields to
protect the reproductive
organs during x ray
ex}(minations. When you
have x rays made, remember
to ask your physician or xray
technician if using a shield is

1

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Animal Drugs
.The Good and Drug Ad· :
minist'ration cautions .,.~
livestock producers lo play it · :.:
safe before treating sick •
anima ls. There's no room for ";
guesswork with animal drugs ::
so be sure you know what's ::
wrong . Mistakes can kill your •
livestock or cause illegal ~ :
residues at market time. So, :·;: •
when in doubt, contact your • ;~
vete.rinarian or extension • :
agent.
·-

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pockets.

IJ I (II

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From
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ITHE UNIFORM CENTER . ~;;
L366 SECOND AVE.~------~---GALLIPOLIS, OHIO_..:J~ ~

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DOWNTOWN STORE
BONUS BUYS
THE FAMILY PLACE T.O SAVE

4 DAYS ONLY • SUN., MON., TUES., WED.
MR.C~FEE

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Misses' Reg . $1.67

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Elastic waist. legs. 5-10.

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Men's Sleeveless
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Coordinated Shirt.

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REG. $11.88
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design whi1e ca n opener·
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Soft acrylic sweaters . Crisp, no -iron
polyester-cotton shirts. Coordinating solids
or solids·fan,cies. S, M, L, XL.

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dnps and nut• . All uf the
Utblcs Wl!r'C cov-;red in guld
cmd had tam.llcs on them .
Asslslmg i:il the rcc.;cpt1on
we re Mrs. Ganwt Varii:ln ,
Mr~. Nancy Bur-ns, Mrs, Myr·
tle St. Clair, and J oe Pcavley .
The c.:oUJJic nor reside on
Collc~e St. 111 Syracuse .

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·9- Th•' Sutnd:1y Tunes.S.nhnel, Sunday , Oct. 2:1, 1977

· B-8- The Sunda:o Tunt&gt;s...st&gt;ntmt.'l. Sunda ~ . O..·t. 23. 1977

'

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Holzer- volunteers honored and
entertained at annual luncheon

•

GAI.l.IPOl.!S - More than t his year 's officers had
sevent y mem bers o( th e graciously agreed to continue
Holze r Me&lt;lic a l Ce nter for another year . By a
Volum ce r St~ r v i cc Leagu e unanimous
vote,
Mrs .
attended the Fifth Annual McGinness wa s re-elec ted
• Volunteer Awa rtls l.unciJeon president, Jan ~ ! Ludlum,
on Thursday in the Frene h vice pr esident and Floren ce
Five Hundred Hoo111 at the LintaJ~ . secretary.
hospit al.
Mrs.
B"ttY · Mrs. Walker, assisted by
McKinness, president of the Hugh Kirkel, then presented
g roup, pres id ed at t he the volunteer service awards
rt-rog nition luncheon.
to those who had achieved
Foll owi ng
words
o f from 100 to 500 hours, 500 to
wel C"om e
fr om
Mrs. 1.000 hours, and the one
McG inness. Hugh P. Kirkel. volunteer who had passed the
presid ent of the Holzer 1,000 hours of service mark
Medical Center and Mrs. this year .
Ma ry
J eann e
Walker,
Reeeiving the award for
._.- Director of Volunteer Ser- 1.135 hours this yeat. a serfor volunteer servire. Awarded were Edna Cook, Gisela
vices , an exeiting program vice pin containing two rubies
Alonzo . Betty Janko, Jake Ra msay , Nat Radeker.
wa s pres ent ed by C. L. and a single diamond. was
" Jobnny" Ecker, well known Mrs . Reva Evans .
J .JI.
loca l aet or , voealist a nd · · Those who passed the 500
1
enteJ1ainer, .a ccompanied by hour mark included Edna
~
Mrs . Edie Ross at the piano . Cook, 582 1~ hours; Gisela
~
Ecker in . his usual en- , Alonzo, 505"' hours; Nat
thusiastic and delightful Ra de ke r , Jak e Ramsay,
maMt'r. sang a number, of Deanna Morgan and Betty
songs from the early and mid- J a nko. 500 hours each.
1800s, with the flair of Aaron
Reeeiving their first secCopeland arrangements. His vice award for 100 hours and
selections included folk less t han 500 hours were Ann
songs, love ba llads, humor Borders, Phyllis Burleson
and gospel interpretations, and Betty Rupert , 100 hours ;
with a few approp riate words Wanda Jamison and Kathy
of hi'story about each of his Yoho, 105 hours : J oan Leget.
· renditions .
112 bours ; ..Barbara Bouldin
He recog nized Mrs. Ross and Janet Hughes, 1!5 hours ;
and her a rt ist ry as his ac- Olive Miller , 139 hours;
'
('{tmpanist at the Wurlitzer Barbara Fish, 197 1:. hours
·-~~'*"'''
Co ncert Console piano, and Mildred Wickline, 278 "'
provided thro4gh t the cour- hours.
tesy of Bill W3rd , owner of Vol unteers n ot receiving
Wa rd's Key board located in awards Thursday continue to
dov.'llt own Gallipolis.
accumulate hours, and
Follo wing the program by rece ive the appropriate
Ecker. the a nnual business award when the pass 100, 500,
meeting, including the 1,000 and 3,000 hours.
eleetion of officers was held.
Mrs. Walker reported that
•
Mrs.
Gloria
Adams,
Chairduring
the past yea r ,
')
woma n of the Nominating volunteers ha d contributed
Betty Rupert, Phyllis Burleson, Mildred Wickline. Janet
Committ ee, a nnounced that 12.191 hours, oompared to
Hughes.

Mrs . Mary Jea nne Walker, far left, and Hugh P .
Kirkel , preSidrnt of ttl~ Holzer Medical Center, presents
awards to the ladies who have passed the 500 mar~ hour

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. Among those ladies rece1vmg their first service

award for 100 hours and less than 500 were Olive Miller,

Rio Grande cake show planned for Nov; 5
RIO GRANDE - The third
annual R,.io Grande ca ke show
will be held this yea r on
Saturday, Nov. 5, at the
Rodney Community building
in Rodney, Ohio.
The 1976 cake show was a
large success with 80 cakes
being en.tered fr om co n-

t estant s · from
severt:ll
counties and also from out of
state.
This yea·r •s cake show
hopes to be even bigger and
better with approximately
100 cakes bein g entered .
Anyone wishing to enter a
decorated cake is to contact

J. C. WOOFTER, M.D.
DEMA TOLOGIST
(DISEASlS &amp; TUMORS OF SKIN)
When : 1st &amp; Jrd Thursdays
9 A. M . Until Finished
Where : Dr . Ridgeway's Office
Mulberry Heights
(Across from Ve t . Mem . Hospital)
Pomeroy, Ohio - 992-3380

I

•

GAI.I.IPOI.lS
The
Holzer ~1edic al Center School
of Nursing had a busy week
and a very positive one, fir st
by reeeiving an important
approval notification from
the State of Ohio, and then an
evening with the high school
guidance counselors of the
area so that in depth in·form a tion
about • the
hospital's ~hool of Nursing
could be shared with . them .
In a letter from the State of
Oh io Board of Nursing
Education and Nursing
Registration, Janet Byers,
R.N., Director of Nursing
Education , reeeived officia l
notification that the Board
had voted to grant full approval to the Holzer Medical
Center School of Nursing.

•

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1928
Pictured in the Main Lounge of Davis Hall, making
arrangements for an evening with High Schoo l Guidance
Counselors. are (I I Janet Byers, R. N• . Director of the
Holzer Medical Center School of Nursing and (4) Lennie
Davis, R.N., Instructor.

John Ecker , accompanied by Edie Ross , entertained
at the awards luncheon .
9,662 one yea r ago. She expressed her appreeiation for
the dedication and loya lty of
the volunteers, emphasizing
t heir importance to the total
hospital staff. She sa id she
looked forward to an even
bigger yea r of volunteerism
at the Holzer Medical Center
4r 1978.

'

Drug Labels
The labe ls on non prescription medicines tell
the user when to take the
dr ug 1 how often,·a nd when not
to take it. To LISe medicines
wisely, the Food a nd Drug
Admin"istraHon advises
"'nsumers to read t he label
carefully before each use .

Welcome Wagon
club activities

New books rekased

Symbols on Labels
,
The Food a nd Drag Administration is . often asked
th e meaning of certain letters
which appear on food labels.
The symbol "R" signifies
that the trademark on the
label is registered with the U.
S. Patent Offite.
The symbol which consists
of the letter " U" inside the
letter " 0 " is one whose use is
authorized by the Union of
0 r t h o d o x 'J c w is h
Congregations of America ,
for usc of foods which comply
with ttie J ewish dietary laws.
The symbol "K" is used for
certain food manUfacturers
to indicate that the food is
" Kosher ," that is, it complies
with the Jewish dietary laws
and its processin'g has ··been
under the direction of a rabbi.

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GALLIPOLIS - New books Gaskin ; Family Affairs, by
Jane
Wat~ins ;
Regent
t et~~~S:vd by the Gallia County
[,t
on October 20. were : ' Square, by Forbes Bramble;
FICTION - Death work, by
Hed Sky at Night, by Jane
McLendon; The Girl,
Hodge; The Danger Tree, by
Catherine Cookson; A SeaOlivia Mannirlg; Yukiko, by
Tree, by Rosamon d
Ma cDonald Harris ; The
.e~~~;~:Tht~e: Memsahib, by Wine makers, by J ack
le1
; Flickers, by
Bickham: Madder Music, by
Rock; Beggannan ,
Peler DeVries: The Ice Age,
Irwin Shaw:
by
Margaret Drabbte ;
by . Roderi c k
Snowbound Six 1 by Ri cha rd
Borrowed Plumes, by Sllirn ; The Queen and Lord
R os;e !E~e n
Milne ;
The
M, by Jean Ptaidy; Treasure
by
Glendon
Hunt ,
by
Frederick
The Mesmerist,
Buechner ; The Beasts of My
Felice Picano ; Girl, by
Fields , . by David Cr ea tori;
Green; Blood · and
So ld ier in Paradise , by
is Going Nuts, by
Burtpn Wohl; Daniel Martin,
:hri:sto~•her Leopold ; Song of
b)• John Fowles; In the ~' l esh ,
:olomon, by Toni Morrison;
by Hilma Wolitze r ; The
Summer of the Spanish
Aphrodite, by David Chan!'on1an
by
Catheri ne
dler. ·- •

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~~~·. 22 -

at
I p.m .

NON-F ICTION - Cyclone
Taylor , by Eric Whitehead ;
Letters on Uterature a nd
Polities 1912-.1972, by Edmund
Wilson ; Marina and Lee, by
Priscilla Mc Millan ; Su ccess! , by Michael Korda ; All
the Years of American
Popular Music, by David
Ewin; Ain 't !a Wonder ... and
Ain't You a Wonder Too !, by
Jess Lair ; The Jennifer
Project, by Cly de W.
Burlewn ; The Rockefeller
Inheritance,
by
Alvin
Moscow ; Scarlett O'Hara's
, Younger Sister. 1 by Evelyn
Keyes; Shroud. by Robert W.
Wilco x; When We Went First
Class, by E llen Williamson;
Nothing t o Fear, by Fraser
Kent: For the Love • of
Children, by Edward · E.
Ford; The Illustrated Elvis,
by W. A. Harbinson.

Cathy Curry

SOFT DRINKS WITH
EACH PillA
EATEN ON PREMISES
EAT IN OR
CARRY OUT·

meal replacements; non·

Special Guest

.SERVICE

OPEN SUNDAY 4:00 TIL 11:00

MEIGS INN

PIZZA SHACK
PHONE 992-6304

JESSI COLTER

_

............ ;:

FRI., NOV. 4 8 P.M.
TICKETS O.N SALE NOW
!(J, \e: !10 AiL Sf.-.T !. ftE$ ~~Yt D
P\1..6 CUil f f $EIIVI( E ( H.Ioll(', (
(.I \II( U r-11~~ A. .-.11 ~NI .o.M OJ lit I~

V

carbo nat ed breakfast
beverages fortified with
Vitamin C; and such main
di shes as macaroni a nd
cheese , pizza, stews, and
casseroles.
~ So consum ers can ', be
assured of gelling proper
level of nutrients when ~ing ·
such foods, the Food and
Drug Administration is
establis hin g
voluntary
. nutritiona l g uide lin es. A
product that complies with an
FDA guideline may include
on its label a statement that it
meets t he U. S. nutrition
qua lity · guideline for that
· particular cl~ss of food .

.qo O\l~r biq
OUR GREAT NEW SWEATERS ARE
SURE TO MAKE A BIG, WARM HIT
THIS FALL AND WINTER.AND YOU
CAN MAKE YOUR OWN HIT LOOKS
BY LAYERING YOUR FAVORITES.

.'
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STOP IN SOON, MAKE YOUR
SELECTION AND SAVE .;IKE
NEVER BEFORE.
LAY t\WAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS.

&lt;M
N

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Gillian's
Fashion Center
OnTheT

ORDER BY MAIL NOW
WA HU&gt;I JtNNI~ ttJN II NGION U VK.: Lt.N I ~II

" Ot-4 (.TV(:C i:NltRPL ..... AHUNTINGIO'-I . W VA
Ctl!llfltD ( tltCKS CJI MONH OIIOfll
CALl fQIIINFOI M.ATIO&gt;I/!QtJ .&amp;4)0

IIJNTINCT(Jt aVIC CENTER

..

Nutrition Tip
Nutrition la beling lets you
.in on what 's inside the
package . Read la bel s on
foods to see what nutrients
they supply, advises the Food
and Drug Administration.

••

Card group at

·Revival
planned

An awards luncheOn was enjoyed Thursday in the French Five Hundred r oom of Holzer
Medical Center.
·

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TO.WED - Mr . and Mrs. Chester H. Curry of New Haven
announce the e ngagement and apProaching marriage of their
daughter, Cathy Ann , to Terry Robert Tucker , son of Mr . and
Mrs. Luther Tucker, Mason.
Miss Curry isal976 graduate ofWahama High School a nd
is ~mployed by the Credit Bureau of Point Pleasant. Her
fiance, also a 1976 graduate of Wahama, is employed by the
American Electric Power Company.
The wedding will be an event of Nov.l9, 2 p.m~ at the New
Haven United Methodist Church. The Rev. John Campl&gt;ell
wiU- officiate the double--ring ceremony, with a reception
following . The gracious custom of open church will be observed.
DAUGHTER BORN
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. a nd
Mrs. David Bryan Jr. a nnounce · the birth of a
daughter, born at University
Hospital in Columbus on Oct.
11. The infant was named
Heidi Lyon and weighed eight
pounds four and a half ounces ·
and measured 20'% inches
long . Maternal grandparents
are ' Rev. and Mrs. Jerry
Lewts of Gallipolis. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. David G. Bryan of
Patriot Star Route.'
ELECTED TO OFFICE
Jay Allen Jarvis, son of Mr.
a nd Mrs. Howell Jarvis of 429
LEwis 1lrive, Gallipolis, has
been elected vice president of
Pi Epsilon Phi Literary
Society a t Bob Jon~s
University, Greenville, S. C.
A 1976 graduate of Gallia
Academy, Gallipolis, he is a
sophomore at BJU majoring
in church administration .

profession .

or .

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Hutzer Medical Center .
Two presentations were
made . Mrs . Byers spoke on
nu.rsing education , pa st ,
present and future . She
touched on the changing
phi'isophy of the nursing
profession , the limitless
opportunities nuring offers to
today's high school graduate,
and the growing importance
of the skilled nurse.
Z. Brent Fry, Director of
Continuing Education, Extension Division of the Ohio
University, a lso spoke to the
guidan ce counselors who
were in attendance at this
specia l program and th e
Holzer Medical Center School
of Nursing.
A question and answer
. session followed Mrs. Byers'
and Mr. Fry's presentations.
Mrs . Byers commented
that her one concern was that
she had hoped for a large
attendance of counselors
from the high schools in the
Southeastern Ohio Valley, so
that more students would
have had the opportunity to
hea r first hand, from their
counselors,
the
great
potential available to them
today in the n ursing

She added that she was
recently notified that !he
June 1977 graduation class of
Oct. 25- Cards at Lois PWegar at I p.m . Call Susie Bailey
t he Holzer Medical Center
at 446-7765 .
School of Nursing, who took
October 25 - Card Group- at Lois Phlegar 's home . Call
their
State
Board
Susie Bailey 446-7765 for more infonnation.
.
Examinations in early July in
November 3- Crafts - at Garre n Snyder 's home. We will
Ohio (32), West Virginia (2)
be making Chrisimas tree ornaments. Call Debbie Tipple 446and Virginia (l ); had suc1851 for more information.
cessfully
passed
· the
Nov. 4 - Garage Sale.
·
.
.
examination in. Jive,areas
Nov. 9 - Coffee ill Carolyn Purcell at 10 a.m . Call Cmdy
nursing service and are now
Potter, 446-4460 .
.
.
~ registered nurses in their
Nov. 15 - Christmas shoppmg day m Parkersburg .
respective states.
Nov. 17 -Evening bridge at 7:30.
Nov. 18 -Bake sale.
,...-----~-------------,
Nov. 21 - General meeting ·
'
.

'

FREE FOUNTAIN

were special guests of the
School of Nursing for a buffet
dinner followed by~ program
and to ur of Davis Hall. home
of the hospital's School of
Nursing. The counselors had
the opportunity to meet Mrs.
Byers and other members of
the facuhy, along with Hugh
R. Kirkel, president of the

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Nutrlllonal Quality
Ma ny foods today are
manufact ured into products
that are different from
traditiona 1 foods ... frozen
dinners; breakfast cereals;

guidance counselors from
numerous schools in the area

®

Mrs. Walker a nd Mr . Kirkel presented. a service pin for services of 1.135 hours this year
to Reva Eva ns·.

SUNDAY
SPECIAL

Commenting on the reeetpt
of this letter. Mrs . Byers
expressed her pleasure in
having this continuing approval from the State of Ohio.
It emphasizes the school's
continuing high quality of
education , so basic to the
competence of today 'S
nurses.
On Tuesday evening ,

•

the cake shoJ,i,· chairman , .
· Mrs. Betty Carpenter, at 2455363 or write her at 793 Gavi n
Drive, Rodney , Ohio for r ules
and information .
The public may view the
cakes free of charge from
9:30 to 4 the day of the show .
Several workshops will be
presented througho ut the day
by out of state cake instructors for a fee of Sl fo r
each 45 minute demonstration.
Mrs. Murleen Sherwood, a
professional cake instructor
from Belle, W. Va . will be
judging the ca ke show.
Trophies and ribbons will be
awarded for each to p four
winners in the 16 different
divisions. Also many door
prizes will be given away that
have been donated by cake
companies.

Nursing school gets approval

I

MASON - Nightly revival
services a t the Maso n
Assembly of God, Dudding
Lane, Mason , will begin· with
Evangelist Don Payton as
guest speaker.
The services will begin at
7:30 p.m. each evening and
will last from Ocl. 26 through
Nov. 6.
A native of Kentucky, he
bega n his ca reer a s a
minister at the age of 14, and
has been active since.
Rev. Payton attended
Evangel Bible Institute in
Kentucky and transferred to
Trinity Bible Instit ute in
Ellendale, North Dakota,
Upon graduation , he was
granted a license to minister
by the Assemblies of God a nd
has been engaged as a fulltime evangelist since Apri1,
1976.
Rev. and Mrs. Payton will
be ministering in singing a nd
preaching each night.
Everyone is welcome.

6
pho1o .

c
.
hat

m

[ru forl.-ck,
forloYe,
I ~.·

fond wishes,

fun,
Ishared
memories

an evening
at Davis Hall, are (I)
' McAfooes,
., lnstructor ·a t
School Guidance
hospital's School of Nursing and (r) Donna Reynolds, R .N., School Health Nurse .

OPEN SUN.DAY
1:00 TIL 6:00
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10:00 TIL 9:00

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA-GALLIPOLIS .

,, ..

fZJ

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creations for yourself.
A favorite photograph
reproduced on photo l'!'lefal
and moUnted on fine jewelry

, wh ere cra11s·men sl!!l

care

4QT.SLOW
COOKER ·'
pol has No-Stick interior, "see-thru ··

cleaningandovenorrangeiOp
cooking.

different
heat
'I I the dial
in simings,
between~:"';~';'"~'~'"---~~::J~~---==$:18:.:00====::~~
REG.
~

PORCELAIN
WESfBEND -ON~ ALUMINUM

Ladies'

100 pel
Nylon
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'wn e1 e C!a!l smen s 1111

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FOR

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Blue, Pink ,

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DENIM JEANS

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SIZES 36 to 46
SIZES 48 to 52

l ow-watt heat base has 5

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446-7494

'1 0"

• Pot remowes hom base fo• easy
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Your photograph is returned
unharmed. Photo Charms ...
the most personal gifts in the
world .
Color Charms starting at $4.50

SPRIN.G VALLEY PLAZA - GALLIPOLIS ·

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LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY

Wrangler
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BLUE DENIM
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PRICES IN EFF ·ECT S\,JN. THRU WED .

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WEST BEND

....

The perfect all occasion gift.
The most personal jewelry

FOUR WAYS TO SHOP :
CASH,
CHARGE,
LAYAWAY ,
MASTER
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Reg .
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s to

13

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5 Ot . Durch O~o~
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• Comfort-contoured hahdle·s have convenienl
hanging rings- you can store this cook set any-

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SUITS
•

LUGGAGE

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PHYSICAL THERAPY
Back supports and Braces
Cervical Collars
Cervical Pi !lows
Traction Kits
Portable Whirlpools
Slatted Bed Boards·
Circulating Hot Water Pads
Breast Prosthesis
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Ankle-Knee Supports
Rib Belts
Crab Canes- Walkers
Wheelchairs
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NEEDS.

i&amp;tne
IReaJimal ltn&amp;IJID&amp;
"Serving Patient and Physician"

529 Jackson Pik~
Phone 446~2206
Spring :v'alley Plaza
Ma ster Charge. VISA, Golden Buckeye
Card
·
Herman L. Dillon . Physical Therapist

tMrs . D. Dillon.
Manager

FI.N.

Mrs . Susan Taylor, R . N.
Asst . Manager

~

$19.

PRICE

SizeS

S-M· L-

XL

Moonglo Gold
Sky Blue
All S ize Ca ses
Available .

Campus
a nd
Is l and
Brands.
Red,
Green. Roya l
and Tan .

and

Sea

BOYS'
LEATHER-LIKE
P.V.C.

DRESS
AND
SPORT
SHIRTS

$488
REG. '8.00 to
'11.00 VALUES
Sizes S-M-L-XL
and 14'h to 16%

COATS

.

1.

$1

~ SNAP FRON

'j .

With Pile Lin ing .
Sizes 8 l o 18
In Assorte d l,.eather
Co lor s.

�,

• I

:

-·

B-10- The Sunday Tunes-&amp;ntinel, $umla_,. l.kt. 23, 197i

The 1\unday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Oct. 23, 1977

Boss Night marks national BPW ·week

•

llV CATIIERINE HENET

GALLIPO LI S
The
Galh pohs chapter of the
Business and ProfeSSional
Women·s Organization
celebrated Boss Night and
National BPW week with a
dmner at Oscar's on Monday

night. It was the 21st annual
observation of bosses ni ght as
th e l adi~s honorf"d th,.l r

'
· Dinner was then served und problems.
Dr ~ Hay es also noted that
en Joyed followed by Mrs.
Grant Introducing cha ir- the United States does not
followed by Gladys Grant, woman Pam Matur.a who pl an for long range crisis
prestdent, welcoming the gave opening rema rks and events as we concern our·
women. their bosses and th e then asked that each member selves with the power of the
special guest speaker. Dr
Introduce herself and her presidency in a four year
11me hmit. He also asked 1f
Paul C. Hayes. PreSident of boss
Rio Grande College and Rio
Madge Neal presented the the United States would
Graode Community College
Woman of the Year award to continue to support the
Lucy Earwood, a member Universal Declaration of
whoso dedication and hard Human Rigts as adopted by
work wrthin the o.rganizahon the United Nations over 30
ha s lon g been acknowledged. years ago.
Upoh his closing remarks,
Mrs. Matura then m·
troduc ed Dr. Hayes who Dr. Hayes was presented
selected the top1 c of the with a check by the
day . Also announced' was Futurist and how they affect organization which he
World Community Day to be our lives.
designa ted for the Rio
observed on Nov. 4 at the
Many large orgamzauons, Grande scholarship fund.
Heath Umted Methodist Dr Hayes noted , Will make
Church. Thank you notes predictions for at least 100
were read from the Pomeroy years in advance, but will
Emergency s&amp;uad for a donaupqate their f\IJding s ever~
Cosmetic Injury
tion, and from the Auxiliary fiv
e to ten years with the
at Veterans Memorial changing of variables
What 1f a cosmetic causes
Hospital for a gift of money to relevant to the area of study . an mjury ? Report it to the
be used for toys .
,
Among many of the manufacturer , whose name.Cards were signed for Roy problems which will be dealt and address are on the label.
Reuter, a patient at Veterans, with by the futurist are such _. Also report Itt~ the F'ood and
and Mrs. Lillie Starcher of matters as mterdependence D~~g , Admmistrallo_n,
Newport. A letter was read of nations food instead of D1v1s1on of Cosmetlc$
from Mrs. Starcher. Mrs m1htary w~apons as a means Technology, HFF-140,_200 C,
June Sayre reported on the of political power and the Street. S.W., W?shmgton ,
recent distnct meeting held area of fetus unplantatiOn• D.C. 20204. You w1U be dolllg
at Manetta.
With 1ts many moral and legal a public service.
The meeting followmg a
day of qlllltmg at the church
TO SET A TABLE
and was presided over by
Mrs. Karl Grudser, preS!·
dent. The group sang "Jesus ~
~
Loves Me" and Mrs. Helen
Maag presented the program
from "Ideals " Prayer was
Hand Cast Metal with the soft paTina of
by Mrs. Betty Koch with Mrs.
pewter . It goes casual or formal and relates
Maag &lt;eading scripture from
so warmly to any decor.
Romans 12, I to 6. Readmgs
Included " Halloween
Memones" by Mrs. Mary
Russell, "The Ten P01;1hve
Corruna ndmenls " by Mrs
June Sayre, ' " Autumn" by
Mrs. Kathryn M1ller , "The
Hand of G~" by Mrs.
Mildred Phillips, "Lord ,
Make Me an Instrument of
Peace " by Mrs. Koch, "The
Bread of Life" by Mrs. Stella
Grudser, ·•start the Day with
Jesus " by Mrs. Helen Maag,
and ·•Sweeping Statement"
by Mrs. Doris Grueser.

olverines ·upset, 16-0

employers and professions .
Marianne B. Ca mpb ell
gave the mvocatlon and was

down .
Rogmd kicked another held
goal - for 31 yards - 57
seconds before the end of the
half to give t he Gophers a 13.()
lead at halft1me.
Leach hred a bomb to Rod
Feaster in front of the goal
two seconds before the
halftime gun but it bounced
off his fmgers.
Rogind then kicked a 32yard field goal to put Minnesota ahead 16-ll with 4·22
left in the game, and the
Gophers fought off Leach's
last minute passmg efforts.
Rogind also missed a pair
of fi eld goal attempts. He
tried one from 48·yards out
but the ball h1t the crossbar
and bounced up a nd back. He

\ Workshop is slated•

1

-,
NATIONAL BPW WEEK OBSERVED - The
Gallipolis chapter of the Business and Professional
Women's group marked the week with their annual Boss
Night d1Mer Guest speaker for the evemng was Dr . Paul

,

C. Hayes of Rio Graode Olllege-Community College,
p1 ctured wlth chan·,..·oman Pam Matura : Lucy Earwood ,
selected as woman or the year and club president Gladys

Grant.

POMEROY-The workshop
on developing a comprehenSIVe plan of evangelism to be
held this week was announced at the Wednesday night
meeting of the Umted
Method 1st Women of the
Mmersv&lt;lle Church.
The workshop w1U he held
at the Rock Spnngs Umted
MethodiSt j:hurch on Thurs-

SUNDAY
WEEKI.ONG revival starts
7:30p.m. Dee&lt;ereek Freewill
Bapllst Church
REVIVAL at Light House
Tabernacle Assembly of God
from Oct. 23 through the 27; 7
p.m. nightly . B11l Morris
Smgers.
LARRY JUSTUS preaching
at Pme Grove Free Will
Baptist 'Church at 6·30 p. m
Midway Trio singmg
PROVIDENCE Miss10nary
Baptist Church w1th Don
Eaton at 7 p.m.
MONDAY
REVIVAL at Eureka United
Chrisl!an Church from Oct. 24
thru the :wth. Rev . Curtis
Sheets at 7. 30 nightly.
TUESDAY
LADIES Program Uplift at 7
pin. at Gallipolis Christian
Church.

Patncia Athey and Harry Montgomery
WILL WED - Mr and Mrs. Clayton E Athey, New
Haven, are announcmg the engagement and forthcommg
marnage of the1r daughter , Patncia , to Harry D Montgomery , Jr., NAS.Naval Base, JackSonVIlle, Fla ., son of Mr .
and Mrs. Harry Montgomery, Sr. , Trenton, Tenn.
MISS Athey is 1975 graduate of Waha,ma High School,
1977 graduate of Cabell VocatiOnal Center of Nursing and IS
presently employed at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Her fiance IS
a 1974 graduate of Peabody High School in Trenton and is
presently serving in the U.S. Navy. He is serving on the USS
Independence Aircraft Carrier, ending up a six-month cruise
m the Mediterranean Sea.
The weddillg ceremony will be an event of Nov. 5 at the
New Haven Umted Methodist Church w1th the Rev . John
Campbell officiating. The double-ring service will begin at 2
p.m. The gracious custom of open church w11l be observed.

a

CLASS
RINGS
For

ClARK'S
Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohto

Senior
Citizens
say. , ,
BY RUTH MILLER
GALLIPOLIS - The Galha
Co unty Seni or Citizens
Garden Club held their
monthly meetmg recently at
the center There were five
members present for the very
mterestmg sesswn
The plantmg and care of
bulbs for spring nowers was
the topic of d1scusslon . Also
discussed was the idea of not
having the garden club but
the few members there were
really interested 1n continuing with the club. For our
November meetmg we are
planmng on making some
new If ems for the craft shop
to sell at Olristmas tim e.
We would welcome a ny new
members or vtsttors who

DANCE PLANNED
GALLIPOLIS
Bill
Evans, club caller, w111 he
calling an "All Singing Call
Deborah Hill
Dance" Satvrday, October
29, for the French C1ty
ENGAGED - Mr and Mrs. Cecil Hill of Cottageville are Swingers Square Dance Club.
announcmg the forthcoming marnage of thetr daughter , The dance, which will be held
Deborah Lynn , to John Daniel Strange, son of-Mr. and Mrs from 8-11 p.m , will also
Robert Strange , Letart.
feature
a
" Halloween
Deborah is a 1977 graduate of Point Pleasant High School Theme." Costumes are not
and Is presenUy employed at Pleasant Valley Hospital. John reqUired for the evening The
is a 1975 graduate of Wahama Hlgh School and 1s employed at dance w1ll he held at the TriRocky Top Dairy F ann of Letart.
Grande Square Blllldmg, 1622
The wedding ceremony will be held Nov . 26 at the Creston Eastern Avenue.
All area square dancers are
Church, Leon, 3 p.m. The gracious custom of open church will
mvited
to attend.
be observed with a reception following at the church.
Cosmellc Law
A cosmetic is investigated
by the Food and Drug Administration when FDA
receives many complaints of
injury The law gives FDA
authonty to take legal action
only after a cosmetic has
been shown to cause hann, or
when its label Is misleading.

&gt;-

YOUR BRIDAL REGISTRY"SHOP
Food Overfill
Most dry foods , such as
rereals, candtes, dessert
mixes , and noodle products,
are actually overfilled - that
is, they we1gh more than the
label states.

WHERE ELSE?

Peddler's Pantry
STATE &amp; THIRD GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'.,

300 SECOND AVE.

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

446-1611

Fixed The
Way You
Like 'em.

would like to participate in
our activ111es. Next meeting
will be November I at the
center at I :30 p.m. Come and
bring some ideas for the
garden club members.

64~
lOa.m.to 10

FOOTLONG H
Mon &amp; Fri
9 JOtd8pm
l Tues Wed . Thur .
&amp; Sat
9 JOitiSp.m

"

The Fall Cl'a ssic

VISA

Popular Shp-on w1th Low
Heel Tr 1COI Un1ng

Rog S7 99 SAVE S2 77

5.22

. Women's S1zcs

PfPDUI
lUlU

·Get to know us; you'll like us: _
Open

Man .sat.

JOJ Uppei- River Road

9a m t1IYP m .
Sun 1\116

Across tram S1lver Bridge Plaza

•

PriCe GoOO lh ru Tuo5day • Ma sterChargc IJI5il or Ask Aboul Ou1 Wy11waw Pl.."tn

'

~

'\

2nd &amp; Olive

lialli_polis, 0.

LONDON FOG® ALL-WEATHER COATS
You ' ll look good, C'o' Cn, lf lhc weo:1 th er dot•5n ' l
111 lhc tM IIOn s n um bu Oflf'
r,u ncorll (o,npl ctrfy lf'l&lt;lchmc washo:1ble Sho wn &lt;lrt' ru::. t 1 o f t he m(lny r;; lylcs lnr
rqn 18 ru ::. t rt- cL'IYl'd, 1n clut1rn g sevf:' r,ll wrlh np ou t wa rm ltnrng s At 1snn l 'i ,1
rnod 1tu·d t, l'rlc h st yh• Ill Cl .l Cih Cloth" 65 per C('n l Fori rei Potycstrr JSti~'' f 1.11 t
Ct:l mbPd Cotton Ful l Harmon y c h f'ck pnnt lm1 ng Pcl!tc 01 l f'Qu iM 'iiJP~ 6 to 18
T;m or Khc1k1 80 00 . T,ltnlfiY Is lunnrl l.t •l lpd w d h Sild dlc pt iC I.I• Is 111 ' l
1
Cloth" ·•!lord W1•rtvr of 65 fJPr cent O;'!rcon Potyc51N 35 prr ern I Com bed c~~~~~·
Pl' h fp .... cll vQut,u &lt;; ll(''i 6 to ~(l Frrnch V.lnlll.'l or Snow Wh 1fp , 75 Q&lt;J

•

•

It' s very difficult to get the
most out of it. :•
In the second row behmd
Andretti and Hunt w1ll be
John Watson of Northern
Ireland and Hans Stuck of
West Germany, who both
drive Brabhams.
Jacques l..affite of France
in a L1gier-Matra and Jody
Scheckter of SoUth Afr~ca will
he 1n the third row.
Jody's older brother, Ian,
was originally scheduled to
participate in the Japan
Grand Pr1x but was barred
by the Japanese Just1ce
Mmistry - which refused
htm entry into the Pnnntrv .

ron e ..

Kentucky marched
yards after the second h&amp;u
kickoff w1th Williams turning
m a 47-yard r\,Ul two plays
before Ramsey connected
w1th
Trosper for the seC!ond
knee ) is sore, but I've got to
touchdown
Bryant kicked his
walland see . l'll give 11 every
second
field
goal w1th 4:38
11
shol.
left
m
the
third
penod to g1ve
Meanwhile, an injury also
the
Wildcats
a
21HJ lead.
IS expected to keep Bengals'
Six plays later , Kelly
controversial defens1ve back
Melvin Morgan from startmg Kirchbaum intercepted a
aga1nst the Broncos
• Georg1a pass and Ramsey led
Morgan, who must report the Wildcats to their thira
to NFL Commisswner Pete touchdown, hitting Wilson in
Rozelle on Monday to d1scuss the corner with 12:03 left to
his forearming of Steelers' play . The Kentucky reserves
receiver J ohn Stallworth, marched 74 yards for the
could play some, however final touchdown With Deaton
The second year pro from completing three passes fo&lt;
Mississippi Valley ins1sted 43 yards ill that drive.
his meeting with Rozelle
won't affect h1s style of play.
" I'm still going to be
aggressive," he said "I'm
not saymg that h1t (on
Stallworth) was aggressive .
I'm just saymg I try to be
aggressive. I don't try to hurt
anybody ."
Denver, w1th a sparkling :;.
0 record and fresh from a
KANSAS CITY, Mo (UP!)
resounding 30-7 wm over the - Whitey Herzog Fr1day
Super Bowl champ Oakland
spiked rumors that he would
Raiders, are shght favorttes
manage the Ca liforma Angels
to beat the Bengals, who show in 1978 by signing another
a disappointing 2-3 record.

the undefeated
Denver Broncos, concedes
Bengals' head coach Bill
Johnson.
However, Johnson refuses
to flatly rule Anderson out of
the game and indiCates the
chmce between 'Anderson and
backup quarterback John
Reaves probably won't he
made until just before game
tlme.
Asked about the status of
Anderson, who suffered
strained ligaments in his left
knee against the Pittsburgh
Steelers Monday night,
Johnson said, "He is the
same as (Bengals' defens1ve
lineman) Coy Bacon.
"And Coy Bacon is very,
very doubtful. I don't expect
Coy to play ~ The kind of guy
he is, he would play ( desp1te
his injury), but it's silly to
risk further injury."
But Johnson added about
both Anderson and Bacon, "It
, is not final yet. As game time
approaches, who knows."
Said Anderson, who did
only about half his usual work
in practice this week, "It (the

MINNEAPOLIS (UP!)
Twenty-six members of
Minnesota's undefeated 1927
fQotball team, including All~erica tackle and fullback
Bronko Nagurski, attended
the
Minnesota-Michigan
football game Saturday as a
part of their 50th reunion.
The Minnesota team . that
year beat Michigan 13-7 in the
annual Little Brown Jug.
The 1927 players, who had a
record of 6-0-2, were to he
honored at a brief ceremony
at halftime.
The 1927 Gophers on hand
Saturday were back Harold
Almquist, Rock Island, Ill.;
back William Brownell,
Mliineapolis; tackle Malcolm
Fryckman, Seattle, Wash.;
guard George Gibson,
Midland, Tex .; assistant
coach Louts Gross, Min·
neapolis; back Edwin
Haislet, Minneapolis; end
Kenneth Haycraft, Hawaii;
end S. J. Haycraft, Dallas,
Tex.
Center Anton Hulstrand,
Hibbing; center George
M~ckinnon, Washington, D.
C.; tackle Albert Maeder, St.
Paul; back George McPartlin, St. Paul; manager I.
E. Meagher, Minneapolis; ,
cefiter - Arthur Tulvey,
Prescott, Anz.; back John
Murrell, Dallas.
Tackle and fullback Bronko
Nagursk1,
International
Falls ; back Malvin Nydahl,
Minneapolis; Bob Spears,
Cleveland, Ohio, son of coach
Doc Spears; manager Harlan
Strong, Minneapolis; end
Robert Tanner, Excelsior:
Minn .
End George Tuttle, Minneapolis; taekle Edw~rd
Ukl&lt;elberg, Arizona; back' E.
N. Vanduzee, Louisiana; end
and guard Leonard Walsh,
Washington, D. C. ; back
Lloyd West)n, New York
City; end Roger Wheeler,
Minneapolis .

Royals
. ~rehire
Herzog
one~year

(;olftotunnannent
on in. Columbus
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio High School Athletic
AsSOciation 's boys state golf
tournament got underway
Friday at the Oh10 State
University Scarlet Course,
with Upper Arlmgton,
Uhrichsville Claymont and
Gatesmills Hawken taking
the lead in their respective
classes.
The top five Class AAA
schools after Friday were:
Upper
Arlington
324;
Youngstown Ursuline 328;
Parma Padua 329; Toledo St.
John 333; and Sylvama
Northview 335.
The top five in Class AA
were : Uhrichsville Claymont
331 ; Dublin 333; Dayton Oakwood 336; Orrville 345; and
Coshocton 347.
The top five Class A schools
were: G8tesm1lls Hawken
340 ; Elmore Wondmnre 350;
Marino Catholic 351 ; St.
Henry 363; and Middletown
Fenwick 367.

The top five individual
leaders in Class A were : Tom
Farkas, Gatesm11ls Hawken,
80; Todd McCormack, Gatesmills Hawken, 82; Steve
Burner, Elmore Woodmore,
84: Dave Wensmger, Marion
Cathohc, 84; and Burton
Jamieson , Toledo Ottawa
Hills, 86.
In Cla ss AA the leaders
were: Tom Walters , Dayton
Oakwood, 73; Jeff Wright,
Uhrichsville Claymont, 77;
B1ll Borchers, Sunbury Big
Walnut, 79 ; Mark Ottelln,
Dublin , 81; and J1m Tredway,
Orrv1lle, 86.
T11e leaders 10 Class AAA
w'ere : Juhan Taylor, Young stown Ursulme , 72; Art RObidoux, Parma Padua, 78;
M1ke Dz1enny, Toledo St.
John, 78; Bill Wr obbel,
SylvHma Nnrthview, 78;
Dave Trautman , Upper
Arhngtn n, 78. and Ryan
Gr1rd ,,n , Uppe r Ar ltnJ,! tnn,
79.

up with a 297 batting
average. Norman is shU best
classified as "promising ."
S&lt;! , 10 1977 at least, the
Seaver deal looked good for
the Reds.
Bu t the Perez trade
didn 't.
Cincy gave up on the
popular first sacker because
ofil. his age , but Perei
continued to clout for
Montreal, hlttmjl 283 and
driving in 91 runs . Along with
Perez, the Reds sent the
Expos lefty reliever Will
McEnaney, who posted a
halfway decent 3.93 ERA in
'77
Cincy didn't have an
effective southpaw reliever
most of the year
In exchange for Perez, the
Reds got pttchers Woody
Fryman and Dale Murray.
Fryman quit midway through
the season and Murray, although tie had a 7-2 record in
relief, had a 4.94 ERA.
At
least
Perez '
rep la ce m e nt , Danny
Driessen, came through .
Dnessen batted 300, hit 17

homer s had 91 RBi s.
Dr1essen also st..(}le :n bases,
compared w1th Perez' four,
and played a lot better first
base than some crltics
expected.
Eastwick, unloaded to St.
LouiS after a spat with Reds
officials, only had a S-9 rec ord
and a 3.90 ERA this season,
but he is young and could
rebound, possibly hauntmg
Cincy
Doug Cap11la, wh o came
over to th~ Reds for
Eastwick, was 7-8, w1th a 4.46
ERA
AU told, there were both
pluses and minuses in the
Reds' personnel moves. How
much they helped or hurt is
debatable. But, there were
other factors too.
Manager Sparky Anderson
complained that hiS regulars
missed more signs !ban he
could believe.
And, good t rades or bad,
Anderson refused to blame a
lack of personnel for not
wmmng another world cham~
paonsh1p .

agreement

to

handle the Kansas City
Royals, whom he has
directed to two straight
Westerii Division titles.
Her"og,
45,
earned
Manager of the Year honors
in 1976 when he gu1ded the
Royals to a gQ-72 record for
their first divisional title. He
directed the Royals to their
second divisional crown in
1977 by posting the best
record in baseball at !02-60.
But each year, the Royals
went down to defeat in the
Amencan League Champion.
ship Senes ill five games to
the New York Yankees. And
each tlme , the Yankees
scored the dec1s1ve run in the
mnth mning of the fifth game.
" Whitey has don~ an outstandmg job as manager of
the Royals," sa1d Royals
general manage r Joe Burke.
"We are very happy with his
work antl he IS happy with the
orgamzat10n , which gives us
ari excellent relationship.
"All we discuss•d was a
one·year contract and we are
both happy. We are hopeful in
the future to negotiate a
string of 25 consecutive oneyear contr acts to break
Walter Alslon's stnng of 24
nne-year cnntracL'i wtth the
D(l(l~ers."

and hit him with a perfect 41- Easley.
The Nittany Lions put the
yard pass for a touchdown on
game
on ice with a late sePenn State's first scrunmage
cond
balf
surge. Fuslll8 capplay of the game.
ped
an
80-yard
drive with his
On West Virgima's second
second
touchdown
pass of the
play following the ensuing
game,
a
12-yard
toss
to a divkickoff, Dave Riley fumbled
ing
Scott
F1tzkee.
a pitch and linebacker Rick
Defensive tackle Bruce
Donaldson recovered for
Clark
intercepted a Diln Ken'
Penn Sate on the WVU 17.
dra
pass
to set up Geise's seTwo plays later, Geise wenl
cond
touchdown,
on a oneover left tackle from seven
yard
plunge.
A
punt
on West
yards out for the touchdown
Virginia's
next
possess1on
and Penn State led 21-ll after
resulted in Cefalo's
just 4:46 of play.
touchdown
return.
The
Mountaineers
two yards for
Fusina
ran
answered with their only
Penn
State's
final
&lt;!COre mthe
touchdown of the first balf, a
third
quarter.
one-yard run by Walter
The Mountaineers got second half touchdowns from
Tom Pridemore on a brilliant
IOQ-yard runback with an i/1·
terception, Riley's one-yard
run and Kendra's eight-yard
pass to Cedric Thomas.
EVANSTON, IU. (UP!) good at 4;58 m the llrst less than two minutes left
A ragged Ohio State squad quarter when Freshman when Payton scored his
overcame SIX turnovers tailback Joel Payton scored second touchdown, on a !Saturday and defeated the first of his two touch- yard plunge.
Northwestern 30-15 m a B1g downs, this one on a 4-yard
Ohio State put the game out
Ten Conference game on a plunge.
of reach w1th 10:41 remaming
The Buckeyes made it 14-3 in the th1rd quarter when
pair of touchdowns by Freshwith little more than a minute Gerald faked a handoff
man Joel Payton.
The Wildcats, playing remaining in the quarter through the middle and
before 29,563 homecoming when Jeff Logan took a pitch scooted around left end for a
fans, 'converted two turn· from quarterback Rod 24-yard touchdown. And the
overs by the fifth-ranked Gerald and sprinted over Buckeyes scored their fmal
Buckeyes into first-half from the 5-yard Une 1
touchdown
with
7.40
FJ.NDLAY, Ohio (UP!) However, Northwestern remaining in the game on a
scores. The win left OSU in
Fmdlay
College
The
undisputed first place in the capitalized on the second one-yard plunge by Paul basketball squad will host a
Buckeye turnover when Campbell.
Big 10 standings.
Republic of China National
Northwestern made It 35-15
No!lhwestern, which fell to quarterback Steve Bobowski
men's team Nov. 10 as part of
0-7 on the year, took a 3-0 lead intercepted a Gerald pass when
fullback
Harold a National Association of
on Sam Poulos' 44-yard field and returned it to the Ohio Gillmore, who rushed for 121 Interco llegiate Athletics
goal with 9:33 left in the first State 34. Freshman quar- yards on 23 carr1es, broke international exchange
quarter. The score was set up terback Dana Hemphill, into the end zone on a !Fyard
program.
by Jeff Logan's fumble at the making his second start, then run. The touchdown was set
Teams from Sc otland,
threw a 33-yard scoring strike up by freshman tailback Don Czechslovak1a, Portugal and
Northwestern 41.
After Poulos missed a 51- to Mike Taylor who wrestled Johnson's 44-yard run North- the Republic of China will he
yard field goal attempt, the the ball away from Joseph western's second attempt at a tourmg the United States
Buckeyes who hiked their Allegro in the end zone with two·point conversion was during the month of
record to 6-1, took the lead for 10:10 remainmg m the half. , unsuccessful
November playing colleges
Dhio State made it 21-9 wiili'
and universities.
The tour will be capped off
by an eight-team tournament
m Kansas City the third
weekend m November, also
involving four U S. schools.
By ED SAINSBURY
second touchdown, contest, controlling the TroPrior to the Chinese visit to
UPI Sportswriter
Buergmeier, holding for Jans expertly until the Irish Findlay, they will play at Rio
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP!) - place kicker Dave Reeve, got had a 28-pomt lead. "Hertel Grande and visit Taylor
Joe Montana passed to Ken a bad pass from center, completed five of his first (Ind.) University after thetr
MacA!ee for two touchdowns preventing the kick, so !jCven passes, but then tlirew Findlay trip .
and ran for another two instead he scrambled right, 11 before his next completion.
The games will he played
Saturday to lead Notre then left and completed a He "'ound up with two under international rules of
Dame, wearing green jerseys two-point conversion pass to interceptions and tlle Trojans the
Federation
of
• for the first time since !!163, to Tom
Domin .
Then lost the ball tw1ce on fumbles. International Basketball
It was Notre Dame's ·fifth Association, mcludmg the use
a 4~19 upset triumph over Burgnrneier was holding for
win
against two losses , and of the 30.,;econd clock.
No. 4-ranked Southern an ll\tended field goal of 50
California.
years by Reeve and turned 1\ the1r first victory in four
Mac Alee , with eight pass into a fake on which he ran 20 years over the TroJans It
receptions for 97 yards, yards to the Trojan 13 to set was Southern Cal 's second
scored touchdowns on up a MacA!ee touchdown defeat agamst f1ve wins.
It was the first time the
catches of 13 and one yard pass.
while MQO!ana twice went
Notre Dame turned over Irish wore g ree ~ jerseys
over on a ~neak from the 1- the ball fo\11' limes on fumbles since a ga me 1 agamst
yard
line. Sophomore and once on a pass Syracuse in Yankee Stadmm
fullbback D~ ve Mitchell . innerception and one of the on Thant&lt;_sglVlng, 1963, a
plunged four yards for Notre Trojan scores was the result game delayed by the
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Dame's first score and of one of the fumbles Perry assassination the previous
Sophomore,
quarterback
defensive tackle Jay Case ran Eurick lost the ball on the Friday of President John F.
Bnan
Broomell
put together
30 yards for the other touch- Irish 5 and Tro)80S tackle Kennedy .
his
best
game
as
a starter as
down after Bob Gohc blocked Mario Celotto caught the ball
Temple
held
off
chargmg
B·W TRIUMPHS
a punt by
Southern in thh air and went in
Southwestern
Loutstana
for a
BEREA, Ohio - Running
California's Marty K1ng.
unmolested
for
the
27-20
victory
Saturday
afbacks
Roger
Andrachik
and
Notre Dame's last score touchdown.
at
Veteran' s
Another Mitchell fumble, Paul Ernst combmed for ternoon
came with 12 seconds to play
on a four-yard ' pass from rrecovered
by
Walt more than 100 yards and Stadium.
Broomell, a defensive back
Rlllily Liscfi to Kevin Hart. Underwood on the Irish 21 scored two touchdowns each
la•
st season anH an inas
Baldwin
Wallace
But Irish dlens!Ve back plus a pass interference
Tom Burgmeier deserved , penalty to the 3, set up destroyed Ohio Wesleyan 35- consiStent quarterback
recognition as a hero, too . He Southern Ca l' s second 17 in an Ohio Conference Blue through Temple's first hve
games this season, rushed for
mtereepted one of the touchddown on a three-yard Division battle Saturday
Andrachik scored on runs 77 yards and completed hve
Trojans' passes by Rob run by Lynn Cain while the
Hertel and returned 38 yards th1rd score came on a 14-yard of five and three yards, and passes for 57 yards and one
111!" Southern Cal territory, pass from Hertel to Calvin Ernst went over from the 11 touchdown . He directed three
and the 28 as Baldwin- Temple scoring drives as the
then twice he helped the Irish Sweeney.
llUl pnm~' m the board .
The entire Notre Dame Wallace built up a 28-10 half- Owls evened thel[ record at 33. '
First , after Notre Dame's rlofcnse plaved a spectacular time lead
and Tangerine bowls, Penn
State later added three more
touchdowns in a 3:52 span of
the second period, climaxed
by a 57 -yard punt return by
Junmy Cefalo, for a 42-7
halftime lead and coasted the
rest of the way.
Millen, 6-foot-1 'h , 253pound sophomore, got the
N1ttany Lions rolling after
middle guard Randy Sidler
blocked Ken Hatton's punt.
Millen scooped up the ball on
the three and barreled into
the end zone.
Following a Mountaineer
punt, Fusina spotted tight end
Mickey Shuler streaking
alone down the left s1deline

Bucks down Wildcats

Ken is doubtful starter
against

sa vmgs.
Gullett, desp1te so me
InJuries, had a sparkling 14-4
record for the Yanks. The
Reds certainly co uld have
used
that
kmd
of
performance.
Cincy got that kind of
record, 14-3, from Seaver
after he came over from the
New York Mels, but it was
not enough .
The Reds ·gave up several
players tll get Tom Terrific,
but the deal has not yet
appeared overly costly. Pat
zachry, Doug Flynn, Steve
Henderson and Dan Norman
went over to the Mets. ,
Zachry, despite · bein g
National League co-Rookie of
the Year for the Reds in '76,
was only 10-13 with a 4.25
earned run average in '77.
Flynn , who d1dn't play
regularly for the Reds but
was used extensively by the
Mets, hit only .197 w1th no
homers and JUSt 19 RB!s in
'77.
'
Henderson did have a good
year for the Mets and wound

'

.

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

Penn State defeats Mountaineers

pa~sing

ATHENS , Ga , (UPI ) - opening mmutes oi the th1rd underdog , gamed only 38
Kentucky quarterback quarter, and then fin1shed yards in the first half and d1d
Dernck Ramsey put on a With a flour1sh by throWing a not get ins1de the Kentucky 45
royal passin g performance 12-yarder to Felix Wil;;on in until the final quarter when
for the Pnnce of Wales the opening minutes ·&lt;if the Ramsey a nd the other
Wildcat regulars took a rest.
Saturday, throwing for three final quarter.
Kentucky, healing Georg18
touchdowns to lead the
Kentucky got 1ts other
Wildcats to a~ VIctory over points on two 51 - yard for only the third lime in 21
Georgia.
field goals and three years, simply manhandled
Ramsey caught Georgia off extra pomts by Joe Bry- the Bulldogs, but was unable
balance with a one-yard toss! ant and a IO.yard touch· to get 1ts f~rst pomts until
to Freddie Williams for down pass fr om reserve Bryant kicked hiS f~rst held
Kentucky's first touchdown quarterback Mike Deaton to goal with 8:14 left 10 the Tirst
wtth 2: 28 left in the first half, Gregg Nord with 3:34 left in half aftet m1ssmg a 52-yarder
four minutes earlier
threw a 17-yard touchdown the game.
,
The
W1ldcat s'
f1r st
pass to Dave Trosper in the
Georgia, only a two-point

•
reunion

,,

You drive just as fast as you
can . The course is simple but

Ramsey -shows royal

J

FOOTLONG HOTDOGS

of Brl~ain , who won the pole
positions following qualifying
sessions held Frtday and
Saturday over the 13-lap, 2.71
mile Fuji International
Speedway CircUli.
Andrett1, 37, broke the
course ~a p time of one minute
12.77 seconds he established
last. year by postmg a new
time of I: 12.23. Hunt came in
second With a time of I: 12.39
in a McLaren .
Japanese sponsors sa1d
10,500 spectators were on
hand dunng Saturday 's official practice session.
Andrett i, who drives a
Lotus, said, " I will go all the
way from the start tomorrow.

.

26 attend

'') :f:':-:':::':/·:=:·:':·:::.:::{-:"SP

"Fixed The Way·
You Like 'Em"

. l

, ,~ GOTEMBA, Japan (UPI )
\ (- ,Mario Andretti and James
: ~· Hupt won pole position s
, : ~among the 23 dnvers from 15
~~ nations who Wlll demonstrate
·: ,their skU!s in the Japan
• : Grand Prix Sunday , thiS
'year 's 17th and final Formula
1 World Championship race .
Although the event has lost
.some of its luster w1th
Austria's Nikki I..auda out of
It after being declared the
,year's world champion, tens
o~ thousands of fans are
expected to pay admission
fees ranging from $5 to $118 to
see the race
Top favorites are Andrett1
• • of the United States and Hunt

CINCINNATI (UP!) - It Is
j'very, very doubtful" that
injured Cincmnati Bengals
quarterback Ken Anderson
w1U be able to start today

Rt. 35 West

Reds' trades good, and bad

~dretti-Hunt win Pole

'

lAFAYmE MAU

passes wh1le Mmn esota
tri ed again from 32-yards but
didn't
lose the ball once and
Mike Jolly of Michigan broke
Carlson escaped without an
through and blocked it.
Michigan, moving mainly mtercept10n .
on Leach 's passes and
Hucklcby's runs, reached tht!
Minnesota 18 ea rly· in the
fourth quarter but stalled .
Carlson, a 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld, 188- By RICK VANSANT
pounder from Deerfield, Ill.,
CINCINNAT I (UP!) - The
whom Coach Cal Stoll started Tony Perez deal was a bust.
for the first time 10 an effoH The Tom Seaver trape was a
to get the Gopher offense wmner .
moving, passed for 60 yards
The loss of Don Gullett
and led a Minnesota offense hurt. The departure of Doug
which outgamed M1 chigan Flynn d1dn 't.
250 to 202 yards .
Fo'r the Cmcmnat1 Reds, a
The Wolverines were dramatically different
plagued with three fumbl es ballclub m 1977 than in 1976,
and lost the ball all three numerous player shuffles
bmes. Minnesota also in· produced some, gains, some
tercepted two of Leach's losses
Vanous observers have
formed various opiniOns
about the overall result - but
two facts go undisputed - the
1916 verswn of the Reds won
the world championship, the
1977 cast didn't.
Jan tried to come in with a
A look at what happened in
South African passport; J ody 1977 to the former and the
has a British passport .
new Reds produ ces some
Japan supports a 1973 interesting comparisons.
United Nat10ns resolution
First, Gullett, the ace of the
agamst competition by South p1tchmg staff, took a free
African sports figures in agent jump to the new world
international events.
champion New York Yankees
Jody Scheckter, winner of at the end of the 1976 season .
the Canadian Grand Pnx, IS The Reds, of course, got
second behind Lauda m the nothmg in exchange for
overall standmgs and An· G\,liJett except some flnancia l
drett1 IS m third place. Andretti blames mechanical
troubles for keeping h1m
from the top, saymg, "engine
problems have kept me from
By JOE JUUANO
accumulatmg points thts
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa
year. There have been five
(UP!) - Quarterback Chuck
engme blow-ups. "
Fusma passed for two
touchdowns and ta!lback
Steve GeLSe ran for two more
1n a 42-point f1rst half that
carried ninth-ranked Penn
State to a 4~28 rout of West
touchdown was set up when Virginia.
M•ke Ma&lt;lm blocked a
Defensive t~ckle Matt
Geol'gta
punt,
giving Millen ran three yards With a
Kentucky possesSion at the blocked punt to spark a 21·
Bulldog 33. Kentucky moved point explosion in the first
to a first down at the Geor gia five minuts of the game that
four on the runnmg and helped the Nittany Lions, 6-!,
passmg of Ramsey, but faced to their 19th stra1ght victory
a fourth-and-goal at the over the Mountameers, 4-3.
Georgia one before Ramsey
Playing before scouts from
caught
the
Bulldogs the Orang!, ' Oltton, Sugar
expectmg a run and flipped
the ball to Williams. who w··
alone in the back of the e

'••
{.

,,

I

Findlay to
host tea·m

from China

..

'•1
'

.
;-·
'

Notre Daine defeats USC

Temple in
27-20 win

•

~
~

\

•·.

'·'·

�..

C-3 'fhe Swrday Times.Sentrnel, Sunday. Oct. 23, 1977

Bulldogs beat Marauders
Rl· Donald Dudding
ATHENS --' Amid a bundle
of bad breaks here ~' riday
mght, the visiting Meigs
Marauders could not rec()ver

RON CA LCAGNI. 'nephew of Dr. and Mrs. Gordon
Amsbary, Gallipolis. is the nwnber one quarterbal'k on
Arkansas' f&lt;»tball squad this fall. He appeared on
natiunal TV during the R~:~zorbac ks ' JJ-.9 lof).s tol'exas on
Oct. 15.

Stabler last
among passers

READY FOR TACKLE - North Gallia's Bill Lookado.&gt; t18) gets ready to make the stop
on Harman's Stere Rocle\·itch ! 82 1. North Gallia won 47-ll. Bruce Gabriel Photo.

Pirates in 4 7-0 romp
VINTON- For the second

ya rd run pu;hed the final
eount to 47-&lt;J
Pacing 'lorth Gallia defen·

straight \\eek, Coach John

Blake's .'&gt;orth Gallia Piraees
had a banner offensive night
getting 361 total l'ards in a
47-Q romp

0\·e r ~

offense to a minus

Scores

non-league

foe , H annan.

Fl'iday•s Ohio

Sem or running back Rex
Justice ha d another outstan-

ding efford scoring four
touchdowns while getting 130 1
yards rushing. According to a 1
team spokesman, the yar- 1
dage puts him over the 1,000
mark for the season.

North Ga llia put the game
on ice early with a b1g 22
point period.
. Justice opened the sconrig
with a 58 ya rd run with 8: l l
left in the canto. A pass from

quarterba ck Sam Smith to
Justice was goocl for the twopoint co nversion ~ J ustice
came back four min utes later
on a 50 yard pass play from
Smith. A run for the EP's was
stopped.
With just 31 seconds left in
the first· quarter, Marty
Glassburn too a 20.yard aerial
from sen ior Bill L'Ookadoo.
Lookadoo then goeth got the
extra p'oints.

Two more Pirate scores in
the second period pushed the
count to 3:HJ at the hall.
Lookadoo . crossed the
goalline on a three yard un.
Bub Pl~nts ' kick was good.
Justice struck paydirt in
the final minutes of the
quarter on a 20 ya r·d pass
fr&lt;&gt;m Smith .
In the third stanza. J ustrce

zoomed ov-er '· from seven
yards out. A run for the con-

ve r sion

was

stop ped.

Sophomore Tim Howell's 21

sively was senior Curt Nolan
with 12 tackles .
North Gallia held Hannan 's

High School
Football Results
United Press I nternationa I
Ada J6 Spencerfille 6
Akro n Buchtel 15 Akron
Fire stone 3
Ak ron East 17 Akron Ellett 7
!lie)
Akron Garfield 42 Akron

South 0
Akron Springfield 13 Field 0
Allen East 32 Crestview 12
Alliance 24 Salem o
Arilherst 12 Brookside 0
Antwerp 24 Hol gate 12
Arlington 32 Arcadia 0
Asl'1tabula Harbor 14 Madison

0
Ashtabu l a Edgewood 14
Geneva 6
Ausl jntown Fitch 14 Boardman 0
Avon 14 Keystone 6
Barberton 17 Walsh Jesui t l-3
Barnesville 26. Shenandoah 7,
Beaver Local 21 Toronto 29
Bel laire 13 Cambridge 0
Bellevue 16 Upper Sandusky 6
Belpre 14 Nelsonville. York Q
Berea 14 East Cle Shaw 0
Berkshire 20 Newbu.r Y 6
Bexley 14 Big Walnut 12
Bryan 24 Montpelier 23
Buckeye 25 ColUmbia 8
Bucyrus 27 Galion 20 .
Cadiz 10 Jefferson Union 9
Canfield 26 Warren Kennedy

13
Canton McK inley 15 Canton
T imken 0
Cardington 17 Fredericktown

25 yards

rushing and minus 2 yards
overall.
North Gallia is idle this Friday. Hannan 34 plays powerful Wahama.
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT H . NG
Firs! Downs
I 10
Yards Rushing
-25 25()
YardS Passing
23 Ill
Total Yardage
·2 361
Attpts.
17 8
Passes Compt.
6 5
Interceptions
0 4
Fumbles
3 2
FumblesLost
0 I
Penalized
6-34 6-50
By Quarters:
0 0 0 0- 0
Hannan
22 13 6 6- 47
N.Gallia

Cin
Cin
Cin
Cin

McNicholds 55 Locklan(l 0
MoEiller 24 Cin Bacon 0
Northwest 21 Cin Turpin 8
Oa" Hi lls 14 Forest Park

12

Cin Sycamore 19 Made i ra 14
Cin Woodward 36 Cin Taft 0
Col Acadeniy 27 Olentangy 7
Coldwater 36 New Bremen 0
Colonel
Crawford
41
Ridgedale 14
Columbiana
41
Western
Reserve 0
Colu mbus Gr.ove 28 Bluffton
15
Covington 33 Graham 14

NEW YORK (UP II - The
World Champion Oakland
Raiders have fallen to second
place in their division and
Ken Stabler is ranked dead
last among starting quarterbacks in the AFC but
Coach John Madden scoffs at
any talk of complacency
huring his club.
"Those are the thmgs some
people write after you win the
Super Bowl," Madden said
earlier this week a~ he
prepared his club to face the
New York Jets Sunday .
"They put it in a desk until
you lose a game and then they
plop it in."
The Raiders ·saw their 17·
game winning streak end.
abruptly Jast i Sunday when
the Denver Broncos blasted
them 3!f-7. Stabler, the most
valuable player in the Super
Bowl rout of Minnesota in
January 1 had seven . pa sses
interce~'t ed in one of his most
dismal days as a pro.
"It asn't fun looking "at
those films ," said Madden.
·· we go over mistakes so they
don't happen again and then
we want to forget about it.
When it's yo ur fir~1loss in 18
gan\es and that loss is 3!f-7
with eight turnovers, it's a
depreSsing thing but it's
something that had ·to be
done.
"We just have to get ou rselves going again, do the
things we've been doing all
along when we were winning.
We have to sta rt against the
Jets and we can't take them
light!F We have a lot of
respect for the New England

0
Carlisle 41 Valley View 0
Celina 20 Van Wer t o
Centervil le 35 Xenia 3
Chagri n Falls 7 Orange 0
C2in Aiken 24 Cin Withrow 6
Cin Colerain 28 Cin Anderson
7
Cin Elder 38 Cin St . Xavier 0
Cin Hughes 12 Wa ln ut Hills 8
Cin LaSalle 26 Cin Purcell 7

Southwestern is
beaten by Green
FRANKIJN FURN&lt;\CEGreen 's Bobcats increased
their season record to 6+1
here Friday night with a IOJ&gt;sided :m-8 non-&lt;:onfe renc~ vic~
torv over Southwestern.
ihe hosts opened game
scoring wlth an 88--yard ·run
by Kevin McDavid in the first
perrod. John Neal ran the
two-point conversion .
ln the second stanza, Dale
Galban rambled in from six
yo rds out. Bill Chase got the
extra pOintB.
.,. .
The Bobcats scored again
in the thi rd perwd on a six
yard
pl un ge.
S teve
Shumachcr got the two poi nt
conversion tor a 24-Dlead.
Gree n got it.o; final six·
points in the fou rth period on
a 15 yard run by Bill Darhng.
A run for the extras was stop-

ped.
Southwestern got its only
score of the night in a four
yard pass from junior
quarterback Gene La)1on to
senior end Larry Carter.
Shenn Potter got the EP's.
Southwestern, 2·5, will host
Hannan Trace Friday.
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
SW G
First Downs
I! 16
Yards Rushing
70 276
Yards Passing
107 67
Total Yardage
177 343
Passes Attpt.
29 5
Passes Compt.
10 4
Interceptions
0 0
FW)1bles
0 I
Fumbles Lost
0 1
Penalized
8-110 5-ii5
By Quarters :
Southwestern 0008- 8Green
8885- 30

Patriots - we barely beat
them in the Playoffs last year
- and we 're impressed with
the fact that the Jets beat
them.
.
" I'm also impreSsed with
Richard Todd. He'• shown
tremendous improvement
and he's the kind of quarterback who can put pressure
on a defense. He's big and
strong, can run the ball and
can throw it. He can hurt you
a lot of ways." _
Todd, the second·year pro
who like Stabler is a product
of the U•iversity of Alabama ,
is ranked fifth in the AFC
passing statistics.
Oakland's loss left the
Raiders at 4·1 , a game behind
unbeaten Denver in the AFC
West .". New '(ork is 2-3 under
new coach Walt Michaels,
whO began his coaching
ca reer as an assistant at
Oakland,
.
But the Jet team that beat
New England might not be on
the field against Oakland
Sunday. Injuries to key
personnel have hurt the Jets
and there will be several
secon d~Une players in the
defensive lineup against one
. of the most explosive offenses
in foot ball.
Outsider linebacker Bob
Mart in is definitely out and
strong safety Shafer Suggs is
doubtful. Tackle Carl Bar·
zilauskas is questionable and
linebacker Greg Buttle and
end Lawrence . Pillers will
play despite injuries.
On offense, Marvin Powell,
the No . l draft choice from
SoUthern California, is
questionable with a sore
knee , wide receivers Richard
Caster and David Knight. a re
probables and rookie Kevin
Long is scheduled to start at
fullback in place of another I
rookie, Charles l'{hite.
"I'm not afraid of them,"
· sa id Long , the first !,()()().yard
~usher in history at South
Ca rolina. "I know about the
Oaklands and the Pittsburghs . They try to intimidate you. They like to do
things like throw punches at
you but you can't let them
ruin your mind. You've got to
go out and play your game.
Once the game starts, your
team"has to set the tempo and
you go out and bring it to
them. That way you don't
have to worry about them
doing it to you."

.

.

'·"

'
Sports Transac.ti~ns
By Un1ted Press International
Friday

and deactivated l inebacker ·sob
Mart in and
satety
Shaler
Suggs .
'

Boueball
Kansas C i ty Sig ned
Manager Wh i tey Herzog to a

one vear con trae r.

San Francisco Sig ned
r ight handed pi tchers Ed Plank
and A lan W irth, l eft handed
pitcher John Joh nson , and tirst
baseman Ricl1 .3rd Murray.

-'
.

Prg Football
Atlanta Rick Kav .

· M innesota

•.I

..

.

SiQned li nebacker

-

Attention
Honda
Owners

'' !t-·. '·"
\:·
'":

stron9

Put

safety W indlan Ha ll on wa ivers

and rele-ased him .

Bring
in
Your
Bike

N,e w Orleans Returned
cen ter Lee Gross to their
roster .
New York Jets - Atti11ated
tackle Marvin
Powell
and
d ~ fens i ve end Tan·lo. Marshail

AHM

Day Roth .26 Day Jefferson 0
Deer Park 26 Milford 14
Delphos S( Jphns 27 Lima

Bath 20
Delta 1) Ar chbold 0

l SAKRETE®

Money-Sawing Winter
Serwlce Discouli1

BOXER ARRESTED
LAS VEGAS, Nev. ( UP[) ~
Heavyweight boxer Louis
Esa was arrested Friday on a
fugitive warrant from
Fl orida for aggra vated
assault and battery. .
State narcotics agents said
the charge stenuned from an
alleged coca ine deal in
Florida several days ago .
Esa was scheduled to box
"Big" John Tate of Knox·
ville, Tenn. , who won a
bronze · medal in the Dlym·
pies, Saturday at the Aladdin
Theater . ..

Oil Change &amp; Lube

Carb and Valve Adjustment

New Points and Plugs

New Air Filler

0

.

Dublin 27 Buckeye Valley 13
East Knox 26 Centerburg 12
Eastern Meigs 18 Hannan
Trace 3
Eastlake North 13 Mentor o
Eastwood 34 Lakota 0
Eaton 38 Preble Shawnee 0
Edison 22 Mapleton 0
Elida 21 Kentoh 6
.
Federal Hocking 14 Vinton
County 6
Findlay 28 Mansfield Sr 0
' Firelands 21 Cle Lutheran
West 0
Fort Frye ~27 Warren Local 16
Franlclln 40 Madison 1~
Gaha nna 30 Worthington 9
Garfield Hts 27 Parmp Senior
6
Goshen 22 Amelia 6
\.
Grand Valley 29 Jonathan
Alder 6
Green 30 Southwestern 8
Greenhills 26 Taylor 0
Greenyiew 2.5 Clinton Massey
6
The
mix for nearly · e~Jery conGreenvi lle 14 Northr idge 13
crj!e '.need ~ SAKRETE Concrete Hamilton Badin :28 Carroll 0
Mix Easy to use, economical too. Ham ilton Twp 13 Teays·

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1979

-i

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'

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BEll HONDA SALES

Make
something
out of tt!

I

Gallipolis

SUNDAY
ONLY
MEN'S
, Repeat INSULATED
of a
LEATHER

Sell Out

BOOTS

SHOES
Silver Bridge Plaza

costs .
A

wood .burr1er

e)( fra
large
f ireQo)( .

3
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5

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_
POWELL'S
Everyone Invited to Powell's Supervalu Meigs Jaycees Annual Halloween Party
Monday , Oct . 31, 6 p.m .

5

2 . 14

Thomas
(Athens)
Player
Walton
Johnson
Smathers
Chaney
Halter
Schanzenbach
Passing
f Me ius)

TCB YG
7
9
7
10

-3
17
26
34

'

34

I

21

YOU CAN'T DO BETTER
ANnvHERE

Gum
Thomas

14-2 3
2- 1 1

13

0

9

0

298 SECOND Sl
POMEROY, OHIO

(Athens!
A-C I YG TO
Wa lton
18-4 2
Score by quarters :

51

o-

Vine:&amp; Th ird ~altipolis, 0 .

•

"

--

Meig s

0 0 0

Athens

7 12 0 o ~ 19

WHO'SGOT THE BALL - llappears as if two separate types of action are occ urring in
the Athens-Marauder game above . At left, Athens ' Jim Chaney (22) is tackling an unknown
Marauder. At right. it looks like an unknown Maraudel' is tackling John Riggs ( 45 ).

0

Lyle Alzado has no vendetta
it was just my turn ," .he said.
Jackson, a starting free
"But since the first game of safely for the Bengals two
the season, things have been years ago, has 29 tackles so
going well for me and I don't fi::lr this season and Bronco
expect any changes."
coach Red Miller said
Although Alzado won ' t be Jackson had his best game of
any more brutal than usual, the season last Week in
the Bengals will have to Denver '~ 30.7 rout Qf the
con tend with a defensive unit Super Bow l Champion
still riding high on its total Raiders .
domination of the Oakland
"Bernard is rea lly looking
Raiders a week ago.
good for us," Miller sa id . " In
And among that much- the Oakland game he was in
heralded defensive corps, on five ta ckles, had one assist
second in the AFC,-are two and three pass defenses. He's
Broncos hoping to turn in rea lly coming around ."
"s uper" performances
Tom Jackson, described as
before friends and relatives the most vQccd and emotional
expected at the Cincinnati me mber uf the Broncos •·
stadium.
' 'headhunters' ' hnebs-ckers
" I'm going to really be unit, said he 'Viewed Denver's
fired up," said linebacker 17-7 loss to Cincinn(:lli last
Tom Jackson, who grew up in year as a deciding factor in
Cleveland, several hundred the club's fail ure to make the
miles from Cincinnati. "I got playoffs.
about 30 of my relatives and
"That game made a big
friends who will be there difference ," said Jack::-on,
watching me and I want to
look good. "
Bernard Jackson, who was
acquired from the Bengals in
a trade earlier this year, said
he was looking forward to
returning to Cincinnati to
show his former teammates
how he'd progressed.

By JAMES LAWIU:NCE
DENVER (UP! ) - For
whatever it's worth , the
Cincinnati Bengals won't
bave to worry about Denver
Bronco Lyle Alzado holding
a grudge in Sunday 's
matchup between the two
NFL teams at Cincinnati's
Riverfront Stadium.
Alzado, a 6-3, 260 poWld
defensive end and one of the
Broncos'
most
potent
weapons , spent th e 1976
regular season on the
. sidelines as a result of a knee
injury suffered on the first
play of the season opener
against Cincinnati.
" I don 't plan any vendetta
against the . Ben gals," said
Alzado, who this year was
presented a prestigious
" Good Guy" award by a
nationally known distillery
for on-and-&lt;1 ff the field deeds.
Alzado, who has sta~le_d in
every game this season to
help the Broncos to a 5.0
mark , best iri the club 's 18
year history, so far this
season has been in on 38
tackles and has· had several
quarterback sacks.
· "I guess that injury last
year was just meant for me -

•

FOOTBALL

lndepenctence
22
South
Amherst 0
Johnstown 49 Utica 9
Ket Fairmont E 26 Ke t
Fa i rmont W n
Kyger 'Creek 22 Ale)(ander 0
Lake Perry 28 Jefferson 19
Lakeview 22 Champion 16
La kota
21
Middletown
Fenw i ck 16
Lebanon 27 Mason 0
Leetonia 6 Stanton 0
Leipsic 28 M cComb 0
Licking Valley 14 Hea lth 12
Lima 28 Middletown 20
Lis bon 35 United loca l 14
London sa . Bellefonta ine 20
Lorain Adm King 7 Marion 6
Lorain
Clearview
39
Wellington 0.
Lorain Ca t h 25 Garfie ld
Trinity 0
Lorain Senior 20 Fremont

sa&lt;Jw'ERMATE-----,

It Comes T o - -

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wa s harassing the
Raiders' bench during last
week 's game. "We finished
with a 9--5 mark last season,
but I r ea lly belie\Ce Jt
probably cou ld have been 10--5
orbetter if we hadn't lost to
Cincinnati .
''That's my personal incentive for Sunday's game," he
smd.
Miller said competitive ly,
he placed Cincinnati in the
same class as the Raiders
and expected his squad to
meet
the
challenge,
particularly since the
Bengals would be fighting to
recover from Monday night's
loss to Pittsburgh.
"The Ben gals are one of the
fastest teams we'll have to
play this year," said Miller.
"I expect a hard hitting game
with no let downs on · our
behalf."
who

,.
f

Ross 0
Louisville 35 Glen Oak 17·
Loveland :28 Glen Este 6
LyndhUrst Brush 49 Maple
Hts 6 ..
Mansf iel d
Madison
40
Coshqcton 0
Mansf i eld Malabar 7 New
Philadelph i a 0
.
Marion Elgin 21 Carey 7
Marion Pleasant 34 Wynford

... tJ,:f

f:...:

ld .

Marysville 39 North Un ion ~
Massillon 30 Col Eastmoor 0 .
Mayfield 7 Euclid 6
Meadowbrook 6 Woodsfield 0
Mechani cs burg 12 Fairbanks

0

Miami E 25 Sidney Lehma n
Cath 6 •

'ATI,A'NTA !UP!) - Rick
Kay, a four·year veteran
linebacker waived by the Los
Angeles Rams earlier this
week, was signed Friday by
the Atlanta Falcons to
replace injured Fulton
. Kuykendall.

.
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$3 7 95

CHERRIOS
Mch092&amp;43oo
10 ()Z.
.jfflf·

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. HANDS UP - All defensive lineman are taught to
raise the ir hands when it appears a pa~s 1s commg . Here
the Bulldogs' Mike Born (81) has his arms extended
against the passing arm of Mergs Quarterback George
Gwn.

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Good Only At Powell's
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October 29,

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OCTOBER 29, 1977

1

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Garf ield 13
Harrison 27 Finneytown ·-:20"
Hi.cksv i lle 21 Ec;jgerton 14
Hi lliard 33 Wh i tehall 19
Howland
13 . Campbell
Memorial 0
Huron 6 Sandusky St . Marys 5

: O'DEll
LU~BER COMPANY

PRICES EFFECTIVE
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Ham1lton Ross 20 Twin
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THIS WEEK'S

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thru Oct. 29th

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Gallipoli s, Ohio

Sports transactions

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Wayland

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~

SWAIN'S GOT IT - Hannan Trace's David Swa1n
returned to the starting lineup Friday night against
Eastern. Swain was injured last week against the North
Gallia Pirates. He is shown catching .a pass in the photo
above. Tom Beaver photo .

ARE

- 07~~~

•. 't

LOWER THAT HEAD - An unidentified .Hannan tackler grL&gt; ready for the kill on,
Pirate rurining back Bill Lookadoo (18). Other Pirates in the action arr Rex Justit'C I 20) 1ind
Sam Smith tlO) alongside Hannan's Dion Brumfield (50). Bruce Gabriel Photo .

•BANKAMERICARD

MODULAR HOMES
'

lhe kick for Meigs on the 17
returning it to the 35 yard
line. But the Marauders did
not keep the ball very long.
Two plays later -the Bulldogs
1n time as Coach Les
recovered
a
fumble .
Walker's Bulldogs rolled to a However. possession of the
19.0 victory.
ba II by Athens in the second
After a disappointing first half was of little con·
series, the Bulldogs punted sequence, because Meigs'
from their own 26 yard line defense held them scoreless.
only to recover Meigs' fumble
Van Wilford led Meigs in
to reg a in possession at the 35- rushing with t6 yards out of 7
yard line.
carries, and Jim Chaney led
Eight plays later, Athens the Bulldogs with 34 yards out
scored by sending Jack or 10 carries.
Schanzenbach eight yotds..
Friday, Meigs travels to
Schanzenbach booted· the Gallipolis while Athens plays
extra point good to make the ]..()gan at Logan.
St'ore 7-IJ with 5:30 left in the
Team Statistics
first quarter .
M
A
Three series later, Brent Yards Rushing
89 176
26
29
Stanley recovered an Athens Lost Yds . Rush .
6J 147
furrible on the Marauder 33 Net Rush .
16
18
yard line. But Me1gs' luck Pass . Alt .
3
4
was soon gone. Two plays Pass . Camp .
Intercept .
3
2
later Athens' Jeff Coutant Yards Pass .
24 51
picked off a Meigs pass and To!. Yards
87 198
then rambled 24 yards for a Plays
47
66
touchdown, making the score Fumbles
3
2
13-&lt;J. The try for the extra Fumbles Lost
3
2
Penalties
1-5 8-60
puint was no good.
Punts, no. yd:; .
5·99 3-114
~·ate struck once again for
Punts
Ave
.
19.8 38
the Marauders, when another
Punts Blocked
0
0
~ss was intercepted, this
Ind . Net Yards Rushing
time- by AI Walton, wloo
!Meigs)
retumed it 22 yards to the Player
TCB YG
Meigs 23 yard line. Three Willford
7 16
plays later a pass to
Schanzenbach was good for
six· more points, pushing the Crestview 21 Jefferson
$pri"gfleld 6
score 19.0.
Crooksville
21
West
The second half opened Muskingum
9
with ,Brent BoHn receiving Cuyahoga Falls 34 Stow 1

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Store Hours 8:30 to 5:30
Mill Closes At 5:00P. M.
Serving Meigs, Gallia
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79e

MYSTERY
SPECIAL
SUNDAY
&amp; MONDAY
. .
.

•
·.

�1

C+- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday, 0&lt;.'1. 23, 1977

Q~arterback
By GREG AIELLO
UPI Sports Writer
~arlerba ck was the wrong
position to be playing lor the
Pittsburgh Steelers the last
limf they played Houstoo .
There were mistakes. Six
Pittsburgh passes were mtercepted, leading to a Zl-10
Houston \ictorv.
There were i'njuries. Pitts.
burgh wound up using a
defensive
back
at
quarterba ck alter Terry
Bradshaw broke his left "Tist
and backup Mike Kruczek
separated his right shoulder.
So Houston Coach Bum
Phillips figures tile Steelers
will keep a tighter grip on the
football Sunday when the
Oilers visit Pittsburgh to help
unravel the three-way lie for
first place in the AFC Central
Division.
"I don'! expect them to'
throw the football to us six
times this week, tllat's for
sure,'' Phillips said . ''In fact ,
I think they 'll play it pretty
close to the vest and play
well .''
Bradshaw disregarded his
doctor 's advice Monday night
and played with a half-cas! oo
his wrist. Bradshaw does his
passing with his right arm, of
course, and completed lklf.S
for 117 yards. Nothing wrong
there. But he fumbled three
times on handoffs and
pitchouts in the Steelers' 20-14
victory over Cincinnati .
" Terry Bradshaw's got
that bro~en left 1\Tist and it's
got to · be bothering him
some," Phillips said. ''But
they can run tile football
anyway . In fact , they can run
the
football
against
anybody ."
There is also the matter of
tile Pittsburgh defense , top-

C4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sw1dav. Oct. 23. 1977

P&lt;tstnrmi sUffered agalnst tht!'

rated in Ute AFC.

TI1e Oilt:-rs art:&gt; the only

Central Division team ever to
beat Pittsburgh at home.
B&lt;&gt;th teams have 3-2 r('('ords.
tile same as Cle\'eland. which
plays Buffalo Sunday. The
Oilers lost to Cleveland 24-23
last week. largely beca~ of
an injury quarterback Dan

Steelers.

Pastoruti's spramed ank..lt..
was supposed to keep lum out
against Cleveland . But h&lt;•
relie\'ed an ineffecth·e John

startt'r

UI-!Uin~t

Plttsbw·gh.
but Phillips smd he plans hl

u,..;c him

ln nther
Bnhiuwre
England,

Philadelphia.
Detruit a~ Sun l&lt;'rancisc\),
Green Boy at Tampa Bcty,
~ames Sunday .• ·Nrw Orleans at St. LtlUiS cmd
\'isits
New lhe New York GmnL~ at
Denver is at
Washington.
Kansus City at
Los
Ang(&gt;les
hosts
Oakland at the Mmnesota,,Monday nighl .
Jl•ts. SeHUle- at
New En~land, 3-2, lll't&gt;ds a

Had! and completed il'&lt;•f-lo
passes. for 89 yards bef•&gt;re re-

Cindnnati,

in juring the ankle . Paswruu

New \'ork
Miami, Atlanta at Chicago,

is listed as a questionable

&amp;ln Diego,

D&lt;1llas

victory

at

O\'l'r un~aten

15-Ul

linemen

Leon Gray and John

Hmmah , the Patriots' highscoring ofCense is ro lling
again. But the questionable

defense may have trouble
stopping Cults' qullrterback
Bert Jones ,' t~e NFL 's
leading passer. Baltimoce is

5 0 0 1.000

"·Balt i more
.. .,•., Mia·m;
New !::ngland
NY Jets
Buffalo
Houston ·

Pi ttsburgh
Cleveland
Cinc innat i

-410 .800

Central
W. L.
3 2
3 2
3 2
'l

Detroit
Ch icago
Green Bay
Tampa Bay

OPEN Dilftr
8-9

guard again s t a letdown
against Cincy.
.. We have said all along
that we ex~d uur team tn
play its best 3gainst the very

best teams," said Miller.
·· we'll have to do that again

most o£ Monday night 's 20-14
loss to !he Pittsburgh Steelers
after suffering "~ trained
ligaments" in his left knee.

muvt'&lt;l resen•e J &lt;,hn Reaves
lnl&lt;• tile Nu. I quarterbacking
sh•l in the1r depth chart.
As if their lc•sing record
wasn't enough trouble , the
Ben~uis also come into the
game caught up in the latest
SWirl uf controversy over pro
football '' violenee .•·

in the

ouf'Otl

Wo ru..-n ,._, rlfht,. liwwt .,_.tmu on oil 1ttm1 111 !flit 1111 . /lion• S~~ldlo dule rs. Nor r~t'"' n'ih.. i~Jt tJpo911pllic al ~rrott .

INCLUDES:

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 29, 1977.

2 Breau Olrs . W{B.ck
2 leg Qtn. W/Bcac:k
2 Nech · 2 Pkgs. of Gibletr

e. ~\.~o

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Hlo. Pig. 1

$

Sirloin Steak

1.09

Kulflass~

East
·,
W. L. T. Pet.

ROPE
STYLE

3 2 0 .600
2 3 0 .400
2 ' 30 .400
2 3 0 .• 00

lb.

GOLDEN GRISP ~ S...~

SJ2~

Pile•

W. L . T . Pet .·
4 1 '0 .800

3 2 0 .600

KRAH • SliCED NATURAl

2 J 0 .400
1 4 0 .200
0 5 0 .000

Swiss
Cheese.

,

W. L. T;· Pet.

Los Angeles
Atlanta

3 •2 0 .600
3 2 o .600
New Orleans
1 4 0 .200
· San Francisco
0 S 0 .000
SUnday's Games

$•59
.&amp;

12 .. . Pig .

I

Slieed Baeon
, •• b.

2-lb.
Pkg.

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s-.
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lb.

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Cat Food

ARMOUR ;, STAR'
HOT DOGS . : . • . . . • . . . . • . . . . . • • . . . • . . . 1 -~. "''· ft

FAMILY PAK BONELESS SHELL SIRLOIN STEAK ••••••

liEf HOI DOG! . .... .... .......... , . • . . • 6 . ,;,:
SliCED LUNCH MEATS •• , , ••••••••• , , , , , , 12-u . I'll.
SLICED BACON .••..••...•...•.•• , , .•.. 1.• • "'•· 11

5
lb.

1.98

6 to

6.5-oz.
Cons
RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., OCT. 29, 1977
Wo rnorve ,..e ritllt lo lifllit qvM iiTiu
in lili• od. Nona told to

tn

111

he~s

Not ruponsillle
errou . htoih otfottin thr•

f11r typogroplllcol
s.tvnlow. Ott. 241, 1971.

2

1 3 0
1 4 0

2
2

Cinc innat i
Friday ' s Results
Houston 6, C inci S
Quebec 4 , Indian 1 (ot .tie)
· New Eng S, Winnip..eg 2
Sunday's Game

Birmingham at Wihnlpeg
NHL Standings
By United Press International
Campbell Conferenc e
Piltrick DillfSion

W. L T. Pts.

4 a· 0
8
Atl anta
·
2 0 2
6
NY Rangers
2 1 1
.S
N'Y Islanders
1 2 2
.4
Smythe Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Vancouver
2 1
1
.5
Chic~go
1 1 2
.4
Colorado
0 2 2
2
M i nnesota '
0 4 0
0
Sf . Louis
0 &lt;1 0
0
Wales &lt;;ol)ferenc e
Norr is Div ision

1

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3·1b.67t

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Urbana 52
Clark
Northeastern 0
Vanda li a 8 M ia misburg 1
Versailles 22 Bethel 20
wadsworth 19 BrecksVi lle 1
. Wapakon,eta
8
Ottawa
1 Giandorf 6 .
Warren Harding 48 Cle East
Tech 14
Wau seon 14 Evergreen 6
Wayne 10 S prtn~t i e ld S 0
Wellsville 14 Bndgeport 0
West Geauga 25 Aurora 0
West Holmes 14 Carrollton J
Wes t Jefferson 17 N!w

Albany 0

Whee ler sburg IS Portsmouth
NO 6
Wic ktille 35 Warrensville 8
W i l liams burg 22 West~rn
BrOwn 14

Willovghby South 33 Bedlor•
Wi lmington

....••.

---

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'

1~

25

Washington

CH 13

Cleveland

3 1 0
'
I 1 I
3
Toronto
l
2
I
J
Bt&gt;ston
Friday's Result
NY ls lnders 3, A! lanta 3 {t ie)

Plne•ple
Stt~wiMrry

Chee1e, Hamburg , Pepperoni

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for

Snaw nee

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Buffalo

0

Twinsburg 25 Kenston 6
Upper Arlington 27 fv\arietta
20
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P1ll

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Jeno's Pizza

Sparkling Clus1ers

Bag

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w.

L T. Pts.
4 0 1
9
·2 1 1
5
l 3; I
3
1 2 0
2

Sheridan 0 New Le x ington 0
(tie)
Sidney 14 Trotwood Madison
6
Solo n 34 Chardon 12
Southeastern 47 Waynesville

Springf ie ld Cath 40 Indian
Lake 7
St. Henry 12 Marion Locat'O
St. · Marys 40 Def iance 8
Star k Perry 42 Carton S 0
Strongsville
10
North
~oyatton 0
Swan ton 33 L iberty Center 0
Tinora 24 Edon 0
·
Tipp City 21 Bel lbrook 0
Tol St. Johns 19 Anthony
Wayne 0
Tal Wh i tmer 21 Wayne
(Mich .) 0
Troy 21 Dayton Stebbins 0
Tusc arawas Valley 39 Sa ndy
Vall-ey 0

rapes

FOODS

BRIGHT &amp; EARLY IMITATION

Garden Green Limas. •••

Ph il adelphia

Montreal
Los Angeles
Pittsburgh
.Wa""Sh jngton

Norwalk 24 Tiffin Colum bian
12
Oakwood 23 Dix ie 7
Omsted Falls 7 Westlake 0
Oregon Clay 12 Tol St rltc h 6
Orrvi lle 41 Fairless 0
Ostego 26 Genoa 13
Par..k.way 64 Bradford 41
Parma
Norman dy
38
Lakewood 16
Parma Va l ley Forge 25
Midpark 14
Patr ick
Hen ry
52
N.
BaIt Imore 0
Ph i lo 12 Ri ver . View 3
Piketon 36 Paint Valley 6
Port Clint on 14 Bedford
!Mich. ) 7
Portsmouth 14 Ashland (Ky .)

Spr ingfie ld
Greenan 6

Monday 's Game

1 1 0

·'

Southern Loca l 40 Sebr ing 19
Springboro 47 Kings 6
Sp.r ingf ield N 14 Beavercreek
6

dt~lrl .

NY Giants at St . Louis , night

Birming h am
Edmonton

•

Va .J 0

Tampa Bay at San Fran

A·

New Concord J G 31 Tri Valley 0
Newark 27 Grove .City 6
Newcomerstow n 49 Garaway
0
Nordon i a 21 Kent Rooseve lt
20 .
.
.
Nor1 h Adams B West Union 0
Nort h Canton Hoover· 20
Dover 14
Nort h Olnlsted 14 Medina 0
North Ridgevi l le 46 Oberlin 21
Northmont 28 Piqua 7
Northwest 20 Tus law 8
Northwestern 13 Kenton

Shelby 21 Willa rd 8

Phila at Wash
PittSbgh at Baltimor e
San Dgo at Mi am i

1 2 2

14

Calh 6

Oak land at Denver

Ind i anapo li s

'·

· Root stown 23 Streetsboro 1.4
Sandusky 7 E lyria 6
.
· Shadyside 20 Linsley (W.

Minnesota at Atlanta
NY Jets at New Eng

· WHA Standings
By United Pr~ss lnternation.al
w. 1 t . pts .
New England
· A 1 1 9
· Winnipeg
.4 1 0 8
Quebec
'1 2 1 5
Houston
2 2 0 .t

I Friday's

E 12

Puffed

Detroit at Dalla s

.

Princeton 7 Fairfield 0
Ra venna 23 Tallmadge 9
Revere 27 Norton 14
Ridgewood 31 Tuscarawas

Dog Chow ••••••• 75·1b. a.9
19
W;t~; COnditioner • SJ59
J~o;y Liq. Detergent 8q~
....:n
Wheat or Kiee •••

Houston at Cinci
Kansas City at Clevand
L.A . at New Or leans

I

Portsmouth W 32 Portsmouth

PURINA Beef &amp; Egg

Chicago at Green Bay

mvicatoinry.,,must
be littered
with
opponents
injured
by a sneak
elbow or a tackle intended to
1

7

Coupon Goad

~--

I

Ridge 12

-::::1

ARMOUR {:( STAR GENUINE

VELVET

Cheese Spread

~-rARE '·~ '' U.S.D.A. CHOICE

l-Ib.
Pkg.

1 4 0 .200

-

N. College Hill 28 Reading 0

Franks

0 5 0 .000

~;~r::,;, c~~c~~~edt~,;,~~

screen they often take to be
the state of the art, worthy of
emulation . It does young
athletes no good to be taught
by example that the path to

Napoleon 28 Bowling Green 0
NatiQnal Trait 22 New Miami

GOLDEN

JUMBO BEEF FRANKS ••• ••••• •••

" Players of college age and
younger watch llle pros," the

Miam i Tra ce 78 Circlevil le 0
Mid"V iew 14 Vermilion 13
.l'v\.ill er
14
Zanesville
Rosec rans 0
Minerva 21 Lake 7
Mingo 20 Bellaire St. Johns 8
Minster 20 Ansonia 12
Mohawk 19 Riverda le 13
Mt . Gilead 46 Crestl ine 20
Mt . Healthy 31 Norwood 7
Mt . Vernon 12 Delaware 6

•·

3 0 .400

5 0 0 1.000

gs

~

.
e
, 00

WILSON CORN KING

CREAMER

"only casualty."

••

~

-

Eggs_~~: ~.,
'

..,.,1~ C: ·

\

FAMILY
PAK

0 .600

.iu nday 's Games
ounato at seaTtle

play for the rest of llle night.
More elbows were thrown,

grid scores

CJaieken Parts

1().6

0 .600

Oak lana at NY Jets
New Orleans at St Louis
Atla nta at Chicago
Kansas City at San Dgo
Detro i t at San Fran
Baltimore at New Eng
Monday'l Game
Minnesota at LA .

incidents seemed to poison

nationally~elevised

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

SUNDAY

0 .600

Cleveland at Buffalo
Da ll as at Phi l a
Oen11er at Cinci
Gr een Bay at Tampa Bay
Houston at P ittsbgh
NY Gia nts at wash
Seattle at Miami

Rut Andl'rsnn may not be &lt;:Jt
Uu~ euntrnls Sunday - and 1f
he is, he certainly won't be
100 per cent physically.
Anderson . had to sit out

,.\\).
to"s

Bot.

T. Pet.

West

favorite, bas lost three of its

Sunday, Oenver defenders
intercepted Oakland's KeMy
controversy.
Denver is soaring with a 5.-0 Slabler seven timeS.
After the big win at
record and carries the NFL's
longest current win streak of Oakland, 10,000 fans 1U1'ned
seven games over from l ast out at the Denver airport to
welcome home the bucking
season.
The orange·dad Broncos, Broncs.

reoHy be explnsi ve ."

ft'-9·
r --- I'"""
"
-C.'t •~ q,l
.

4 1 0 .800

Central

Ci nci nnati, a pre-season

4-0l·

3 2 0 .. 600

NY Giants

quarterback Ken· Anderson
on the injured list and also
has been caught up in lhe
latest NFL "violence"

The fired-up Broncos, undefeated and sky-high after
last weekend's rousing 30-7
IJ'ouncing of the Super Bowl
champ Oakland fuliders, are
slig ht favorites over the
troubled Bengals in one of !he
NFL's top mat&lt;:hups Sunday .

,.Qt.

National Conference

Minnesota

win lor them .

emotionaUy .

with Ken Anderson ttt the
t'l llllrHis, their ••ffense ('an

. ..\.,ee"'lti11

W. L. T. Pc:t.
' 5 0 0 1.000

Seattle
Kansas C!ty

Da ll as
Washington
Ph il adeiPh.ie
SL Louis

are convinced Namath can't

Denver Broncos are much
higher than that .
Cincinna U is the Ohio River
Ci ty, with an .. elevation
dropping down to 450 feel.
And that's just about where

first five games, has premier

unnecessarily after tlleir part
in a play .was over ."
The ' news paper,
comp laining the officials
"seemed oblivious" to "such
viciou.sness,'' warned that
pro football won'l be the

3 2 0 .600
2 3 0· .400
I 4 0 .200

West
Den11e-r
Oakland
San D iego

at the Denver airport to greet
U1e Broncos following their
big win in Oakland. It should
be interesting to see whether
U1e Broncos suffer a letdown
· agai nst
Cincinnati .
~arterback Ken AndeJ'liOn,

Bengals.
Pat Haden will start again
for l.&lt;&gt;s Angeles Monday night
against Minnesota and Joe
Namath says he's not
injured. Looks like the Rams

the Cincinnati Bengals are

Ctncmnat1, ~:~.s the Bengals
are a playoff-type team that
can play great defense, and

with the Steelers,
C1ncy's Melvin Morgan was
criticized for d('('king John
Stallworth with a forearm .
Likewise, Pittsburgh's Mel
BlnWlt was criticized for
slarrumng into Bob Trwnpy .
The mcidents prodded the
Charlotte IN .C.) Observer to
make pro football "violence"
its lead editorial Wednesday.
Unde r
the
headline
"Playing Dirty - Violence
Rising
in NFL,"
the
newspaper said, "Those two

Anderson

t11

players were kicked, runners

LARGE WHITE

W. L. T. Ptt.

remaining unbeaten teams,
Some 10,000 fans showed up

with strained knee ligaments,

i! listed as doubtful for the

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Denver is the Mile High City,
with an elevation of exactly
5,280 feet :
But emotionally , the

gate, but we said nu way ,"
repurted a team uffic1al.
·· w~ · ..,e walled a long time for
who apprnpl;'iately ca ll their . this. 'l1h! players were eatinJ.{
defen &amp;,.e ·' Oran~e Crush,"
it up ."
ha\'e given up only 33 points
New Denver coach Bnb
in tl1e first five games. Last
"Red" Miller is trying to

~arne

said he
phty svme
Sun&lt;tty, he was officially
hsted as ·'doubtful" for the
game ·1 n tile weekly NFL
injury rep&lt;•rt and tile Bengals
Altlm~h

" hopes"

and pass receivers were hit

THOROFARE GRAD£ " A"

Ame ri can Conference
Eut

011e of the leab'Ue's three

Baltlm&lt;•re to stay in the AFC
East race. With the return of

Pro Standings
NFL Shndings
By Un ited Preu International

Emotional
Broncos tackle Be:rigals
.

bad position in Pittsburgh-Houston games

lh1s week 1f we are tn wm at

"The airj)(JI't pt•uple wuntl'd
t..• divert us tu an nutlym~

. ; WOOdm ore 14 Elmwood 2
Wy oming 26 Cin Western
·
·
Hills 6
Youngs Mooney 18 Youngs
Ursul ine 14
Youngs North 28 Youngs East
16
Youngs Rayen 20 Girard 0
Zanesville 28 Lancaster 27

•

•

�C-&lt;;-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Oct 23, 1977

Ironton speed is too
much for Blue Devils
.

--erals beat White -Falcons

.

•

IRONTON - The kicking
ga me a nd Iront on's speed
pro\'ed to be a big difference
her e Friday night as Coach
Bob Lutz's Fi ~ht ing Tigers
blanked visitin g Ga llipoli s 24·
0 to rema il) a!i1·e in the 1977
Southeast em Ohio League
m le chase.

Se nior

J erry

Taylor

ret um ed a Greg Harrington
punt 23 yards on the initial
play of the second period to
set up Ir onton's first touch·
do "11 0n the last play of the
third
period,
r-ooton
scored again. this time
foll~"·ing a sPectacular 4~
yard ruoback of a Mike
Staggs punt by speedy
Juan Thomas .

total washer with two agitators
to do different kinds of wash ...

ROBINSON RETURNS KICKOFF -_ Galli~·s Nick
Robinson --(-right ,' No. 24, with bail I returns an Ironton

kickoff 25 yards during Friday 's SEOAL ba ttle a t Iron ton.
On left is Tim Che valier . Closing in is Ironton 's Tom
Wilema n 162 ).

Ironton's · fine 'sophomore
end. J oe Fletcher. put it out of
reach wtth a 30-yard field
goal with 5:27 left in the
gam e. F ina l Tiger score
ca me following a 24-yard
GAHS punt late in the game.·

Although sen iors

Jackson wins
first loop tilt

Juan

Thomas and Bodie Deeds led

Ironton ruruters with 86 and
74 yards respectively, it was
the fine quanerbaci&lt;lng of
senior Bobby Williams and
blocking of junior fullback
Rod Boykm which did the
Blue Devils in.
Boykin scored all three
Tiger t ouchdowns on runs of
'five and on e yard and on a 12·

WILLI!\J'\1S ON THE GO - Ironton quarterback Bobby Williams t7 l was sacked three
times by GAHS defenders Friday, but on several otherocca~ijlns, he broke Blue Devil
tacklers after being caught deep in the Tiger ba ckfield and turned the broken plays into
large gains for the Tigers. GAHS defenders are Dan Staggs ( 74 ) and Jeff Golden t 68\.

yard aeria l from Wi1liarns.
Fletcher was true fr(lm
12 7placement after each touch- Deeds
Boyk in
down .
"
W ill iams
II3 29
2.6
GAHS controlled the baU Taylor
'
2 2. 0
2 3 1.5
throughout the first half. Lewi s
41 213
5. 1
running 32 plays to the Tigers TOTALS
16. Ironton finished strong,
PASSING
ho ld ing the Blue Devils
{Gallipo li s) .
C-A I YG TO
without a first down in the PLAYER
Willis
5· 12 0 35 0
second ha If.
TOTALS
5-'12 d J5 0
GAHS threatened once,
(I ront()n)
shortly after .the initial PLAYER ·
C·A t YG TO
2-9 0 36 0
Ironton score in the second Williams
TOTALS
2-9 0 36 0
period.
Nlck Robinson returned
TEAM STATISTICS
Fletcher's kickoff from his
Department
G
own 12 to the GAHS 37.
First Downs
6 14
The Blue Devils marched Yards rushinq
122 249
Lost rushi·ng
35 36
43' yards in 12 plays, but the Net rush ing
87 213
drive died on Ironton's 20 · Passattempts
12
9
with 3:061eft in the first half. Complet1ons
5 • 2
F GAHS S t M ·
Intercepted by
o
o
or
; c.o~ . . orrlson .. Yardspa,ssing
35
36
had44 yardsmmnetrtps. The Total yards
122 2d'9
tough Ironton defense limited Plays
48 50 ·
Gary0abneyto36yards inll Returnyards
.74 109

~i

·

carr.te~.

.

or

W!llts, playmg one

Fumb les
, . Lost fumbles
hts Penalt ies

best games for the Blue
Devils, hit rive of 12 aerials
(n o interceptions ) for .35
yards .
.
Ironton led in statistics,
picking up 14 first downs to
G ll . · · Th T'
h d
a Ia s SIX.
e . tgers. a
249 total yards m 50 plays
from scrimmage. ~A HS
totaled 122 yards in 4a plays.
Gallia suffered two in·
juries .
Mike
Fife,
so phomor e
lineman,
surrered a concussion early
in lhe game. Greg Harrington, sophomol;'e quarlerbaek and defensive
baek, suffered a knee fn·
jury In lhe second ball.
The victory left Ironton
with a 5-2 season mark. Inside the SEOAL, the defen·
ding champions are in third
place with a 3-1 mark . .
Gallipolis dropped to H
overall and 1-3 in league play.
Friday, Gallipolis will host
Meigs while Ironton will host
Jackson .
Here
are
Friday'~
!)t atistics :
INOIVIOliAL NET
YAROS -R-USHING
(Gallipolis I
PLAYER
TCB YG AVG.
Morr ison
9 44
4.8
Dabney
11 36 3.2
Caldwel l
3 9 3.0
Will is
.. 9 2
.2
Rob inson

Wa ndling
TOTALS

3

1

1 ·5
36

87

0

o

o

4.40 J.5

Punts
8-233 • -123
Recovered enemy fumbles : ·
N~~:ring _ Boykin , 12.yard

Logan team,·42 to 0

..

from

B~ykin ,
t h~rd ,

s .yard run ,. o· oo
( Fletcher , k~tk l :
Fletcher, JQ.yard field g oal .
5: 27 fourth : Boykin , 1-yard
r~n. 2:50, fourth { Fletcher ,
kiCk I.
Sc~re .bY quarters :
Gall i polis
o o o o---;. o
Ironton
0 7 7 1o---;.24
NEXT GAHS GAME
Ocf. 28, Meigs, home .

NBA

By

Standings

Un ited Press

Internat ional
Eastern Conference
Atlantic DilliSion
W. l. Pet. GB
New York
r 0 1.000
P hiladelp h
r o 1.000 •
B uffalo
1 0 1. 000 Boston
0 1 .000 1
NewJersey
0 1 .000 J l ?

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL , Ohio
(UP! I - Fancey Persuasion,
with Bonnie Feliciano up,
won the featured eighth race
Friday at Thistled own,
running the mile in I :39 and
paying $5 to win.
The 2-9 daily double of
Flustrated and Taminy Fool
paid $55.60.
A crowd of 3,733 bet
$448,350.

Cen tral DtVISton

Wash ing ln
San Antonio

Cleveland

New Orl ens
Atlanta

W. L. Pet. GB
1 0 1.000
1 1 .500
••

1 ·1

1. ~

sao

1 1 500

11

0 0 .000
12
0 2 .000
11 ·7
W es t ern Conference
Midwest Division
W. l. Pet. GB
L. h icago
3 0 LOOO
Denver
2 0 1. 000
11
M il walJke
1 1 .500 11 1
Detroit
I 'l .333 2
Kansas City
1 '} . ~3 3 2
Ind iana
0 2 .000 21 2
Pacific Division
W. l. Pet . GB
Hous ton

1

1 1 :~

Ch ic&lt;tgo 122 , Ind iana 119
wa sh 11 7, De tro it 109

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
PODIATRIST

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE

P hoen ix at L .A .
s·an Ant at Seattle ·

The fabulous

HAllAm

standings

ANAHEIM (UP! ) - Carlos
May, purchased by the California Angels fr om the New
York Yankees Sept. 16,
Friday declared himself a
free agent under the six-year
rule of the cw-rent agreement
b etwe en major
leagu e
baseball .and the players'
association . ·

rl~

~)

&amp;LOIETiomas®
.
in person!
.SAT.,.NOV. 1f ... _7:30PM
ATHLETIC &amp;"
,
CONVOCATION CENTER
-

OHIO UNIVERSITY-

TICKETS : $5.00. $3.50 (All seats reserved)

RT. 2 NORTH

PHONE (304) 428.0000

New Or lean s 11 1, N .J 103
Portland 106, Seattl e 99
Golden St a t e 122. San Ant 111
. Sunday's Games

CiJrly Neal and All-Star Variety Show!

of His OHice

HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

Denver 106 , L .A . 101
K itn City 95 , Houston 94

Grid

Score by qu arte rs:
Wellston
7 0 0 6- 15
Ja ckson
6 6 ~ 8- 23

irJ

Handwash1M. ag itator saves water.
e nc r ~y. tune, wht n washing small,
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~~ THIS. TIME

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR .
Phon e 992-2181
Store Hours 8: 30 io 5:30
Mill Closes Al5 : 00 P . M.
Serving Meigs. Gallia
&amp; Mason Counties

MAKE IT
'HOTPOINT!

.

ON SALE :
/
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(Athens)
Chuck Leary's Hou se of Good Musi c
(Parkersburg)
Zide 's Sport Shoppe (Mariella)
Risch 's Drug Store (Logan)
Talley•Zulgadt (Zanesville)
INFO : 614 594-5031

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SPIRIT OR ANGEL-A figure dressed in white appeared on the field midway through the game calling
himself the "spirit moving the White Falcons." Terry
Angel was underneath the white suit and here he attempts
to move sophomore quarterback Rick Bamitz. It must
have worked as Barnitz scored on a 17-yard punt return
late in the final period.

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2 181
Store Hours8:30to 5: 30
Mill Closes ai 5 : 00P . M.
Serving Meigs, Gallia
&amp; Mason Counties

Largest field ever
to compete

GIVE ABEAUTIFUL "NEW''
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·

MAIL THIS COUPON
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ZIP
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L--------------------J

blocking is No . 35 Jack Smith. Pictured for Winfield is No. •
21 Phil Hamilton and No. 55 Chuck Dillion.

Interceptions
3
I
Fwnbles
3
8
Fwnbles Lost
2
3
Penalties
~9
10.74
PuntsAvg
8-31.1' 5-27.8
Off Plays
67
70
SCORING
1 2 3 4 Tot
Winfield
6' 14 8 6 34
Wahama
0 0 0 16 16
Wln- Tribble 1 yard run (kick
no good)
·
Wln - Tribble 4 yd run

(Wallace pass from Tribble)
Win- Wallace 42 yd pass from
Tribble (run failed )
Win • Schirtzinger 9 yd run
(Schirtzinger run )
Win - Schirtzinger 11 yd run
(run failed)
Wah - Hankinson 57 yd run
(Elias run)
Wah -Rick Barnitz 17 yd punt
return (Blessing pass from R.
Barnitz)

r-------------------,

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'

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Starring Meadowlark Lemon ,

Wishes to Announce the Relocation

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

halftime.
Fullback Dave Emerson
powered over from the thr ee
yard line and Smith aaded the
pla cement in the th ird
quarter .
The talent - laden Chieftains put 21 ,points on the
board in the final period on a
one yard run by Kemper,
followed by a 43 yard pass
from Gasser to end Marty
Hallett , and finally on a .31
yard by Brad Tucker. with
Smith kicking all of the extra
points.
Logan 's awesome offense
rolled up 460 yards that included 293 rush ing and hitting
on eight of 11 passes for 167
yards. They had I 7 first
do\\ns.
With six minutes remaining
in the contest Senior Mike
Powers replaced Gasser at
the quarterback post and
· guided the Chiefs to their
final touchdown.
Kemper carried 21 times
for 131 yards with Emerson
adding 72 yards in 10 tries.
While Gasser was quarterbackin g he completed six
of nine aerials for 115 yards
with Hallett snaring three for
83 yards and Armstrong
grabbing four for 69 yards.
Waverly managed just five
first down s, had 86 rushing
yards , and completed two of
eight passes for 47 yards with
two intercepted .
Logan's defense played
tough as they never permitted the Tigers inSide the
t;hief 40 yard line throughout
Lhe contest.
Score by quarters:
Logan
7 7 7 21--42
Waverly ·
0 0 0 0- 0

WAVERLY - Tailback
J ohn Kemper paced the
undefeated Logan Chieftains
to a 42-0 romp over the
Waverly Tigers Friday night
as he ran for 131 yards and
two touchdo\\1}5.
The joys of Homecoming at
Waverly were spoiled by the
Chiefs as they ran and passed
to their seventh win of 1977
'and extended their overall
victory stre~k to 13 spanning ·
two seasons.
Logan scored in the first
period on a 20 Yard pass from
Scott Gasser to end Mark
Armstrong and Jeff Lee
Smith kicked the point after.
Kemper tallied the first of
his two TD's on a three yard
run in the second period with
Smith's kick making it 14.{) at

Williams, 9: 21
second , (Fletcher , kick) ;
pass

Phoenix
1 0 1.000
1 0 1.000
.3 Porlland
Go lden Sta t
2 1 .667
·5 los Angele s
1 2 .333
2.4 Seattle
0 2 .000
Friday's Results

( Ironton)
PLAYER
TCB YG AVG.
Thoma s
12 86 7.1

l

Waverly crushed by

JACKSON - Tailback J osh Wellston is now alone in the
Jenkins scored all of SEOAL basement.
Jackson's 23 points Friday • Jenkins returned the
night as the lr.onmen game 's opening kickoff 82
defeated visiting Wellston 23- ...... yards for a touchdown on his
15 in a thrilling contest at second attempt as Wellston
Jackson .
was ca lled offsides on the
Jenkins tallied three touch- first return which carried
downs, kicked a 26 yard field only to the Jackson 33 yard
goal, a nd ran for a two point line .
With 1:32 remaining In the
ecnversion as the lronmen
posted their ,firs! league first quarter Wellston took
victory of the season while the lead on a 15 yard scoring
run by Curtis Jayjohn and an
extra point kick by Jeff
Montgomeroy.
Jenkins tallied on a five
yard run with 4:27 left in the
second period and Jackson
led 12-7 at halftime .
The only scoring in the
lhird period was a successful
.. TEAM ALL G~LE~ P OP 26 yard field goal by Jenkins
L09an
7 0 0 268 38 with 57 seconds remaining to
Pt. Pleasant 7 1 o 167 33 give Jackson a 15-7 lead.
Athens
6 1 o 77 56
Wellston's Rockets made a
Ironton
5 2 0 154 6' thriUer of it on the first play
Rock Hi ll
3 • 0 91 105 of the fourth quaner when
Coa l Grove · 3 4 0 88 106
Meigs
2 s o 46 90 quarterback Lowell Settles
2 5 o 76 182 found Tom Baker with a 66
Jackson
WaVerly
2 5 0 46 109r yard· scoring st rike and
Wellston
2 5 0 71 16• 1 M t
·
d t
Gallipolis
1 6 o 50 140
on gomeroy .passe . o
Non -SEOAL results:
Jerry Patton for the two potnt
South Point 26 Rock Hill 7
conversion that knotted the
Wayne 20 Coa l Grove 8
score at 15el5.
Pt . Pleasa nt 27 Ripley 13
The clock showed 7:50 left
SEOAL VARSITY
when Jenkins burst over from
TEAM
W.l,.P POP theoneyardlineandthenran
Logan
4 0 0 163 26 the two point conversion to
Athens
4
0 0 43 7
h 1
23 151 ea.
d
Ironton
3 1 0 87 33 givet e ronmena Meigs
2 2 o 40 40 but th-e game wasn't over.
Gall ipol is
1 3 o 18 35
Wellston took the ensuing
I 3 0 54 92 kickoff and marched to the
Jackson
Wa ver ly
, I 3 0 8 77 J k
17
d 1·
Wel lston
o 4 0 21 124
ac son
ya~
me be f ore
TOTALS
111 16
o 434 434 the drive fizzled out and JHS
Friday 's results:
took over a nd ran the final
Athens 19 Meig s 0
two minutes off the clock .
Ironton 24 Gallipolis 0
J en kins c8rried for 194
Jackson 23 Wel lston 15
Logan 42 Waverly o
yards in 33 carries as Ja ckson
showed 17 first downs , 253
Oct. 28 games ;
Coa l Grove a t. Roc:k Hill
yards on the ground, and
Ravenswood at Pt . Pleasant
completed
no passes in fiVe
Athens at Logan
·
Jackson at Ironton
attempts.
Me igs at Gallipolis
Wellston had II first downs ,
Wa Ver ly at. Weqston
67 yards rushing, tand hit
eight of 15 pa sses for 178
yards with one intercepted .

Jayjohn led the Wellston
ground game with 67 yards in
J11trips.

THIS TIME
MAKE IT
HOTPOINT!

Wahama's Bacthel Field.
The loss, only the second of the year for Coach Marcus
Rice's crew brought an end to the faint hopes of a slate
playoff berth in the 1977 grid season, . and was • . bitter
disappointment to 17 Falcon seniors, who played their fmal
home game of the year. , •
Winfield, by far the best defensive Une of Winfield.
team W ahama has faced in Hankinson also scored the
recent
years, used
a White Falconllfirst touchdown
devastating offensive attack on a beauUful ~7 yard run ·
in building a comfortable 21).6 early in the ·final period.
Winfield scored in every
halftime lead in rolling to their
sixth win this seaSon against quarter with the first' six
one loss. Last nights victory pointer coming on a one-yard
over the White Falcons, by all plunge by Tribble to cap off a
probability, will vault the 40-yard drive, whtch tooli
Generals right hack Into the seven plays. The conversion
state playoff picture due to the attempt !aile~ when the PAT
line Wahama season record. A kick hit the upr ight and
Winfield win over Poea, next bounded
away. With 0:47 ...,,,_ ,
weeks opponent, would atmost remaining in the inttial
insure a spot for the Generals quarter Winfield led by a 6-0
ENDSWEEP- Wahama's No. 25 Kevin Roush, with
in post season play.
margin.
·
the hall, moves it on this end sweep. Ahead bf him
In last nights action, .Cha[lle · The Generals second score
Tribble, Winfields' out· came just :51 seconds later
standing quarterback , scored when Tribble scampered in
back to · pass and finding Falcons second touchdown.
two touchdowns and. passed · from four-yards out with 11.:56
nobody open raced 57 yards Hankinson hit Greg Blessing
for anothe~ In directing the left in the half. The drive
for the Falcons first touch- for the point after to complete
General offense which piled covered 33-yards in 3 plays
down. David Elias ran the the scoring and make the final
following a Falcon fwnble
up 364 . total y~~rds.
extra point to make it 34-8.
score 34·16.
Trlbbles' teammates In the Tribble hit Harry Wallace on a
the ensuing kickoff Vince
Wahama will· now meet
backfield, Greg Schirtzinger fake kick for the point after to
Weaver nailed Kelly Chapman Hannan next Saturday night
and Harry Wallace, accounted make it 14-0 Winfield.
back on the Winfield 9-yard at7 :30p.m . inagamethatwill
for ' most of the offensive
The final touchdown of the
line and three plays later the be played at Point Pleasant
success lor the Putnam half came 1:40 later when
Generals were pushed hack to High School, so that all the
Countians with some very Tribble .hit Wallace over the their own three where they
fans can be accommodated in
impressive individual middle with a 42- yard strike
were forced to punt.
the inter-county battle.
statistics in addiUon to scoring with 10 : 16 left on !M--ciock._
H""'Y Wallace, punting out Hannan, under first year head
22 ~ints between them.
The extra point attempt falled
of his own end-zone, shanked coach Randy Clark, sports a 3Buzzard
tackled
Despite the defeat , Wahama when
the ball off the side of his foot 4 season slate following a 47-0
had Its .stars .also In Kurt Schirtzinger short of the goal
resulting in a short kick, loss last night to North Gallla .
Sayre and Rick Buzzard on and Winfield suddenly led by a
which took a higl\ hop at the
STATISTICS
Defense and Ken Himkinson 20-0 score at Intermission.
17-yard
line .
Winfield
WAHAMA WINFIELD
on offense . Sayre, 5-10-"
Schirtzinger made It 26-0 at Wahama's Rick Bamitz took
First Downs
8
15
155 •
pounds
senior the 10 :08 mark in the third the hall on the hop and surYds Rush.
36-115 W-199
linebacker played a super period 'when he scored on a 9
prised everyone by racing up Yds Pass.
60
165
ballgame by contributing a yd jaunt that was set Up by a
the middle for the White Total Yds
175
364
whopp,ing II Individual tackles 38 yard pass play from Trthble
Passing
f&gt;.23
6-15
all of which were of bone to Wallace. Schirtzinger also
crushing caliber. Buzzard made .good on the conversion
followed close behind with 10 attempt to make it 26-0.
tackles and also had one pass
As the fourth quarter
interception to his credit.
opened
the
Gene~als
Hankinson, the games' threatened. to make the game
offensive standout saw only a rout when they scored for
one half of action after sitting fifth time of the night.
out the first two quarters dUe Schirtzinger went the final 11
to an injury, The junior signal- yards to make it 34-0 and
caller started the second half .complete the visitors scoring
and rushed for 54-yards in 9 .as the PAT attempt failed ..
carries and coinple~d 3 of 15
Wahama. finally got on the
passes for 53-yards under the scoreboard wit 9:07left to piny
heavv rush of the interior when Ken Hankinson laded

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STATE &amp; THIRD

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO·

MARTINSVILLE , Va. Martinsville are among 10
(UP!) - One of the largest drivers entered in the "Kit
fields ever to compete at Cars".
Bobby Allison of Hueytown,
Martinsville Speedway will
move onto this town's 525- Ala., plans to compete in both
'mile track Wednesday to ends of the .twin bill.
Defending champions for
begin preparations fo'r
Sunday's $107,960 Cardinal the Cardinal 500 are Geoff
Bodine of Bellingham, Mass.,
500 Classic. ·
In
the modified race and Jack
. The group includes 178
Bland
of Riverdale, Md. , the
drivers from !9 ·s tates and
Canada. Among the drivers late-model ·sportsman .
After registration and
will be Nascar National Lete
Model Sportsman Champion . inspection Wednesday,
L. D. Ottinger of Newport, modifi~d cars will go through
Tenn ., National Modified time trials Thursday and
Champ Jerry Cook of !Wme, sportsman cars will compete
N. Y., and 14 previous in trials on Friday , The 20
fastest carS on bOth days will
Martinsville winners.
The drivers boast of a qualify for Sunday's races.
The remainder of each 40combined 1977 total of 422
car starting field will be
victories.
The Nascar National decided Saturday in six, 25Championship double header ia p qualifying races, three for
includes a 250-lap race for each division.
The modified race will be
modified cars and a 25Q-Iap
race for late-model sports- run first when the Cardinal
500 gets underway a t 12:30
man.
Ninety·five sportsman cars p.m. next Sunday.
and 83 modifieds are entered,
with only the fa stest 40
starting in each race.
First place in the sportsATLANTA · (UP!) - The
- man race pays $6,775, while Atlanta Hawks, running low
the m odified winner will earn on big~ame players. salaries
$6,675. There is a $1,000 bonus and fans, launch their lOth
in each event for the driver NBA season tonight' against
Cleveland .
lead i n~ the most laps. •
In addition, the Chrysler
Star
forward
Tru ck
Corporation · has posted Robinson is gone, having
. $30,000 .in contingency money signed as a free agent with
for drivers running Its "kit th e New Orleans Jazz . The
cars'' and finishing among Hawks also traded Joe
the top 10 in the sportsman Merlweatiter to the Jazz a nd
rac-e . "Kit car" winners will dealt J,ou Hudsnn to Los
ecllect a $9,995 bonus.
Angeles. Hudson had been the
Grand Nation's! drivers nnly origina l member
the
Ramo Stott of Keokuk , Iowa , club which moved here from
a nd Budd y Arrington of St ' I ,I lUi S .

or

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C&amp;- The Sundar Times-sentinel, Sunday: Oct. 23. 1977

~lacks

Big

Bobcats blank Spartans, 22-0

top Ripley

('HESIIIHE-

U\'cngcd thrt't.' str;u ght los:;t•s

andcr here t-:nda,\· mght walh
a 2'.:!4.1 VIctory

LYNt: CE NT~K SCIIIWULE
W•·ek uf ll&lt;'t. 24, 19ll
DATE-{;YMNASI UM
POOL
Oct. 24-Closed- 1ntrmnurals
6-10p.m. Coli. Swim
Gym f1 0or closed: weight
l'«lm &amp; rackctball room Open 8-10 p.m.
Oct. 2:&gt;-Closed-JV Bas~el ba ll Practice 6-10p.m. Open Swim

yard run later in the first
period to tie the score. li e
then gathered in the second
ha lf kickoff and raced 96
Gym floor closed; weight
yards to put the Big Blacks in
room &amp; ra cke tball room Open 8-10 p.m .
the lead for good.
Sommer added an eight · Oet. 26-Ch1sed- lntramurals
8-lOp .m ., Coil . Swim
G}'ln floor closed ; weight
yard sco ring run later in the
rnom &amp; racketball rum'n Open 8-10 p.m .
third · period before Hipley
quarterba ck Jerry Ocheltree Oct. 27-Closed
Closed
1-9 p.m., F'amily Night
sc"o red on a one-yard burst. . Oct. 28- 7-9 p.m., F'amilyNight
2-4 p.m., Open Swim
Sommer the n ended th e Oct. 29-2-4 p.m. , Open Rec.
scoring with a four-yard run Oct. 30-2-4 p.m., Open Rec.
2-4 p.m., Open Swim
7-9 p.m., Open Rec.
7-9p.m. Open Swim
in the fourth quarter.
. Sorhmer gained 128 yards
· on 21 ca rries.

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

Hipley
7 0 0 6-'-13
Pt. Pleas.
7 0 14 6--27
ace spikes. Janet Groves and
- -R- Britton 3 run ball kick )
Tina Nibert led the spikers
P - Sommer 40 run (Smith
with 9 points each.
kick I
The JV lost to Ironton. 12· P - Sommer 96 kickoff
15, 1&gt;-3, la-7. After a first
return (Smith kick I
game win the JV fell victim to
P - Sommer 8 run (Smith
a strong spiking attack by the
kick I
Ironton JVs lod by Nancy
H - 'Ocheltree 1 run (pass
for the ·~ xtra points failed .
Jenkins. The Angels' JV, was
·
Dave Campbell led HT's of- failed )
led by Christy Strang in
P - Sommer 4 run (kick
fense with 69 yards.
lRONTON - The Blue serving with 9 points. Maria
Frank Mooney · had 60.
failed I
Angels rruJVed to an un- Alderigt and Kim Jividen led
Eastern's Rusty Wigal 'coldisputed second place in the in net play.
lected 15 tackles for the Eagle
SEOAL by defeating Iront on
In the last week of season
defense . Mooney and Woodall
Ironton . co mpetition the Angels have
Thursday · at
led the Wildcat defense.
Waverly leads in the league three matches, all takmg ,
MIAMI
(UP!)
The
The loss left Hannan Trace
with a perfect a-{). GAHS now place at home. South Point
with a 2-5 record. The Seattle Seahawks will start stands at 4-1 with Ironton travels to Gallipolis for a
Wildcats go to Southwestern Steve Myer at quarterback following at 3-2. Two games match to begin with JV action
Friday. Eastern has a night against the Miami Dolphins remain in league play .
at 6 p.m., vars1ty at 7 p.m.
off on iU; schedule but may Sunday, alt.hough Jim Zorn
The Angels took the first Logan will be the opponent on
has recovered from a knee game 1!H! with strong serving Tuesday to begin at 6:30 and
play Miller.
ailment . a team spokesman by lileb bie Shaw and spiking Meigs will finish the SEOAL
STATISTICS
D~PARTMENT
E HT said Friday.
· by J anel Groves and Tiha and overall play in a· home
Zorn has been the , regular Nibert. The Ironton girls took · match for parents' night to
First Downs
4 11
Yards Rushing
155 138 quarterback, but has missed an early lead in the seco nd · begin at 6:30.
Yards Passing
124 62 the last three games with the game with the Angels playing
Total Yardage
262 217 injury . Meanwhile; Meyer catchup. The ·game finished
Passes Attpl.
13 14 has been effective, nilting 20 at14-16 in favor of Ironton as
P!lb!ls Com pt.
6 5 of 30 passes for 252 yards and their sophomore spiker, D.
Interceptions
I 0 four touchdowns in a 30-23 Vinson. spiked the last Points
o
Fumbles
0 2 win over Tampa Bay last to the floor. The Angels took
Fumbles lost
0 1 week .
RACE JAN. 21
The spokesmf!n a lso said the third game · 15..'! never
Penalized
&gt;-46 4-30
really
letting
Ironton
come
GALLIPOLIS
The
defensive lineman Steve Nie·
By Quarters:&lt;
back
to
get
in
the
game.
At
9-7
Gallipolis
Areawide
Striders
Eastern
-r(s 6 6- 18 haus will not start, but will the Angels' time out started track club fourth annual City
H. Trace
0 0 3 Of 3 probaBly see ac tion in pass the rally to take the match. Park to Mound Hill race will
rush situations . Niehaus has
been
sidelined
since J~nel Gro~es 1~ all serve rs be held on Jan. 21 at 2 p.m.
undergoing shoulder surgery w1t~ 13 pomls m the match. and not Jan. 11 as stated in
The Angels hlt over 100 sp1kes ''·Friday's Daily Tribune.
. Aug. 1.
.
at the Ironton defense wtlh 22

Blue Angels
move into

Kuhn paces .Eagle victory

'

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OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, October 30th
THE AMSBARY EYE CLINIC .
Across From
Kessel's Mkt, .

548 Jackson Pike
1 PMTJLS' PM
Phone 446-7036

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second place

.lndi'ans
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CLEVELAND (UP!)
The Cleveland Indians will

THF
'JTANDARO
SLJI'PI Y

raise box and reserve ticket

pric es $1.00 next seaso n,

(0

il'lc.rease general admission

prices 50 .ents, and leave
bleacher tickets at $1.00, the
team announced Friday .
The new rates will be $3.00
for general admission, $4.50
for reserved and $6.00 for box
seats. A cliib spokesman said
in the American League 13
te ams have comparable
prices, four . slightly higher
and eight lower.
Monday night will remain
the " family night" discount
plan, there will be discounts

THl-

STANOARD

SUPPLY

co
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to groups of 25 etr more, and

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&lt;;TANDI\~0

Saturday afternoon
will continue.

games

SU Pl'l Y

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NEW YORK (UP!) - NBA
Commissioner Larry O'Brien
is not a boxing fan when the
combata nt~ are \"BA players
and the arena is a basketball
court, so Thursday .he fined
Los Angeles center Kareem
Abdu1-Jabbar a record $5,000
for punching Milwaukee ·
Abdul-Jabbar, who has a
broken hand fr om the
Tuesday night inc ident,
escaped without a suspension
because of the severity of his
injury. Benson, an All-

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Commercial &amp; . Savings
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COMMERCIAL &amp;SAVINGS
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America fr om Indiana ,
suffe r ed a mild concussion
and lacerations when he was

prt•vc nt violNH·e wiihin tlw
NP.\ ."

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SUf'~'L

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yards in 23 · carries while

new life at the 49 yard }ine.

Geiger cullcocted 125 yards in

Two plays later, senior

tailback Marcus Geiger
broke loose on his longest
gain' of the night, a 4a yard
run around· his right side.
Randy (Whitey ) Lucas kicked the extra point for a 7-{)
lead. That le•d stood at the
half because the Bobcat
defense
On the opening kickoff of
the third period, spc'edy
senior Mike Casey took the
ball on a reverse then rambled 88 yards for the second KC
touchdown . Kyger Creek,
which genera lly kicks all its
extra point.';, used so'me
razzle-dazzle as Brian Sut·
phin ran in the lw&lt;rpoinl con·
version.
Alexander, given a new life
after recovering a Bobc•t
fun1ble on a punt. ·moved the
ball to the KC 18 before
Claude Cornelius, senior
linebacker, pounced bn a
Spartan fwnble. From there,
the Bobcats put together
another

s ustained

Defensively , Coac h
Sprague praised his entire
w1lt tackles Darrell Jones
and Semaki Corf ias ;
linebackers, Claude ·cor·
nelius. Geiger, ends, Roger
Spaulding, and Mike Hendrickson ;
co rnerba cks ,
casey, Randy ,Lucas, . Mark
Curnutte •nd Brian Sutphin
and safeties, Von Taylor,
Scott Richards and Tim
Nibert fur their ouU;tanding
play .
The Spartans were held to
- just 67 yards on the ground
and 91total yards .
Kyger Creek &gt;-1 gpes to
Symmes Valley Friday.
Alexander's record drot&gt;"
ped to 1).6.1.
STATISTICS
A KC
Department
10 17
First Downs
67
264
Yards Rushing
30
29
Yards Passing
97 29,3
Tot•l Yardage
6 5
Passes Atlpt.

drive

2 I

PassesCompt.

0 0
Interceptions
2 2
Fwnbles
2 I
Fwnbles lost
Penalized
1~ 6-00
By Quarters :
Alexancter ·
00 00- 0
0 7 15 0-22
K. Creek

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Daylight saving to end
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I
HONORED WITH PLAQUES - Mary McFarland
and Usa Gllland, hoth senior students at Wahama Higl)
School, were honored with plaques from the McDonald's
All-American Band for nomination into the band. Miss
McFarland was also a finalist and is one of two persons in
West Virginia who will march with the band. Shown, I. to

r., Michael Harbour, assistant band director; Larry
!.amber, manager of the Athens, 0 ., McDonalds who
presented the plaques; 'Miss McFarland ; Miss Gilland;
Charles Yeago, band director ; and John Kaznoski,
principal.

Thousand defy court
By JOHN SPETZ
KENT,Ohio (UP!/ ~ More
than 1,000 Kent State
University protestors defied
a court order Saturday and
held a campus rally against
coostructfon of a gymnasium
.annex , but were prevented

from occupying the site by
police in riot gear anned with
lear gas caruslers.
The recrea tional facility is
located near the site where
four KSU studenl• were shot
and killed by Ohio .National
Guardsmen in 1970.

Protestors, many from out.

olslale, first assembled in the
university co mmohs , but,

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By NICHOLAS DANH..OFF
WASHINGTON (UPI) Two months after President
carter signed the Panama
Canal
treaties ,
their
supporters tn the State
Department and Coogress
are fearful the White House is
losing its battle to win
popular support for the
accords.
One gloomy department
official likened the While
House offensive so far to a "a
fleet of mosquitOes."
The treaties must be
ratified by two thirds of the ·
Senate to take eflect.
However, polls showing
w'idespread
public
disapproval are pushing
many senators against them
- or at least forcing the
lawmakers on!D the fence .
That department official
working 'ro explain policy to
grass roots America says the
latest public opinion polls

show no significant shift.
"Maybe in two · or· three
mon ths we'll see a shift. But
for ,the monienl nothing
significant has happened."
An experienced diplomat
and a treaty supporter, the
official said, "What we ooed
are heavy hombers, but what
we have is . a flee! of
mosquitoes. Contrary tD what
some people think the federal
goverrunent just does not
operate a propaganda
machine."

Carter budgeted time io
stwnp for the treaties during
his present cross countrv

mur. And negotiators Sol
Linowitz and Ambassador

Ellsworth Bunker
are
planning to follow up.
But the Stale Department
has ooly about .25 persons
qualified to explain the
intricacies of the accords. It
depends on local ·groups w
provide expenses since the
department has no extensive
funds for traveling speakers.
Yet Sen. William Scott, a
staunch treaty opponent,
doesn' I .... believe
the
administration is at a
disadvantage.

Carter on tour

NEWSI I I
NEWSI I I
NEWSI I I
PARKING LOT OR WAREHOUSE SALE
.

,\1!'1'

1

((I

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.

APPROXIMATELY $2000;00 ARE TO BE GIVEN AWAY IN PRIZES
ONLY FOR INDUSTRIALS, BUILDERS, DEALERS AND CONTRACTORS
FIRST TIME AT STANDARD SUPPLY

Please by to have Friday, October 28, 1977 Reserved For Standard

Supp~

26 ITEMS WILL BE GIVEN AWAY AS DOO. PRIZES
'
Drawing will be held on October 28, 1977 af 5:00p.m.
You .M ust Be Present To Wlnl
Wear~

', 1•\NU/\RD

. ., u f

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bring them in With yOu. We are going to promote their merchandise at such low prices that it's hard to
believe. (You may never get these prices again!)

( 0

representaliye.
2. HENRY F'URNACE CO. (air heating, air cooling, air cleaning, air circulation, and moisture
control). Mr. Greg Miller will be the representative .
· l . F. E. MYERS (The name that works for you ... water systems), Mr. Lynn Sheets and Mr.
Larry L. Fisher will be representing Myers Pumps.
4. GERBER FIXTURES (bathr oom fixtures and water closets) . Mr. Ernie Browning will be
representing .
s. OWENS CORNING (fiberglass reinforced components division) Mr. Albert A. Ackel will be the
representative for the Owens Corning Co .
o. THORSON TOOL CO. {all kinds of mechanics tools, unconditionally guarwnteed). Their
.
representative win oe Mr . R. PhillipS; Frye .
·7. KENNEDY MANUFACTURING CO. (metattool boxes, chests. and cab ~nets). Mr. J . J. Jordan
will be representing the company.
.
1,
8. JACKSON WATER LIEATERS (water heaters of all kinds and sizes}. Mr. Ri!:k Dillinger will
be demOn strafing Jackson Solar Water hNting.svstems and a heat GAINER .
9. ELJER PLUMBINGWA RE (plumbing fixtures). Mr . Joseph MiddletOwn will be representing
1he Eljer Co.
io. SELL AND GOSSETT PUMPS .( Hoffman specially) . Mr. William F . Hershey Jr. will be
.-epresenting Bell and Gossett.
·
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Dedicated to Serving You Better

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Mon. thru Fri. 8-5
• Sat. 8-12

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substitute for any prizes
wherever necessaiY.

to be last

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proud to announce the visit of the tollowing mapufacturer's representatives on Oc;tober 28,
1977, between 8:00A.M. and 5:00 P.M. If you have any ques1ions or problems with any produt•. please

1. BLACK AND O'ECKER Industrial and Contractors tools. Mr. Lyle Houck will be the

Monday

r~NI1fi.RD

"l I I' I Y

'"

Phone 614-353-5101

T H!
Slf1NI fi.R[)
')UF'Pl Y

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observance
WASHINGTON (UP!) Mooday will mark the final
observance of Veterans Day
oo the fourth Monday in
October.
•
Effective next year, the
observance will revert to the
originai.Nov. II dale, the day
the nation· has honored its
heroes since the end of World
War I.
The October Veterans Day
observance was put into
effect by the so-&lt;:alled
"Monday Holiday Law"
enacted by Coogress in 1968.
The date for celebrating
three established national
holidays was changed so that
observances fell oo Mondays,
giving workers a three-day
weekend . The other two
Monday holidays which will
continue are C(llumbus Day
and George Washington 's
birthday.
,
.
Veterans organizations, led
by the American Legion, rook
strong exception to the
change in the Veterans Day
dale and began working with
stale legislatures tD have the
dale changed hack tD Nov. lt.
The American Ugion, in i\3
efforts to return to the
traditional date, said "!D
most Americans, Veterans
Day is not just an excuse' for
another long weekend. The
day honors the many
thou5ands of men and women
·who gave their Uves in the
defense of the nation. ... .II is
not just another holiday," ·
Legislation returning the
dale to Nov. II was approved
by Coogress last year and
signed by President Gerald
Ford. In the meantime,
legislatures in most of the
s~les had approved similar
laWs.

underscoring
his
commitment to a stran·g mili-

tary force within hours of his
surpise announcement a new
U.S..Soviet strategic arms
agreement may be only
weeks away .

·

' The president, in the midst
of a th~ee-day western tour,
flew to Offutt Air Force Base
near Omaha from Des
Moines, where he discUssed
fann price issues with a
group of eight Iowa farmers
Saturday morning.
From

Nebraska. ,

Saturday's ilchedule took him
on to discussions of water

policy and the Panama Cahal
treaties in Denver, and a
$1,000-a-plate Democratic
fund raising dinner in Los
Angeles.
During his visit to Strategic
Air Command headquarters,
carter addressed all the approximately
150
SAC
faci1ities over a nationwide

closed-circuit broadcast
hookup, telling an estimated
2,000 persons of his concerns

Certain areas will not be
affected by the lime change ...
Arizona , parts of Indiana,
Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands and American
Samoa are permanently on
standard time.
Indiana, which is dissected

by central and standard time
zones, has a special situation

members of the "Vietnam · in the time change.
Veteran 's Against the War,"
to an area about 600 yards

Six

counties

in

the

counties are in the central
time zorie .

· The other 80 counties in
Indiana, a round Indianapolis,
Fort Wayne and South Bend,
remain on standard time
throughout the year ·:.~nrll will

not change their clocks .
Those counties, however, are
in the eastern time zone

which will once again put
them one hour ahead of the
other 12 counties.
The presen! system of
starting daylight lime on the
last Sunday · in April and

fight expected
over social security

By DONALD H. MAY
WASH! NG TON (UP!)
There is hardly a person in

a major fight Wednesday.

opposition from U.S. military
leaders, who fear U.S.
negotiators may have offered
too . much by way of
compromise.
The SALT II treaty aims at
putting exact numerical
limitations on specific
categories of strategic
weapons, including the new
U.S. cruise missile.
Starling his Iowa visit,
carter exchanged views with
a group of farmers for more
than an hour, telling them it
is likely the United Stales will
expand the sale of crops to
other countries.
"I think there'S a good
chance we'll expand our
export opportunities," he
said, noting that U.S. farm
export levels already -have
risen in dealings with the
Soviet Union.
The president mel with the
fanners at the home of
Woody and Mary Diehl,
where he had spent the night.

newsPapers

warned

the ·

government Saturday the
crackdown on the black. press
would not intimidate them.
ln a joint statement, the
editors said that if the
government actioos ''are

in-

tended to intimidate other

America without a stake in

H.R. 9346, a bill to overhaul
the. Social Security program,
which com~s 'to the House
floor for what promises to be

benefits.
About 107. million workers
contribute to the system
through payroll taxes.

editors, we record that we World editor Percy Qoboza
have rio intention of altering and Weekend World news
our way of conducting editor, Aggrey Klaa~te .
newspapers. ''
He also silenced Donald
"We wish our readers and Woods, the White editor of the.

the government to take note
of this," they said.
Pollee and Justice Minister
Jimmy Kruger Wednesday
closed down two black news,
papers, the World ahd
Weekend World, and detained

Energy package hurting
rather than taxes could lead measure is still m be passed.
By ELMER V(. LAMMI
to the loss of President
Byrd said he would try to
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Carter's
entire
energy
·
discourage
senators from
Senate Democratic Leader
package.
adding
amendments
calling
Robert Byrd said Saturday
The
West
Virginia
for
the
crude
oil
·
tax
or for .
efforts tD amend a Senate
Finance Committee energy Democrat said he would urge taxes on gas-guzzling cars
tax bill calling for tax .credits ·Opponents not to try to amend and industrial uses of Oil and
the bill, but to Jet it go to a gas - all included in the
conference called to work out

who heat with

differences . between House
and Senate bills.
Senate liberals have vowed
tD fight the committee bill,
which would provide $40
billion in tax credits and

oil can 'rest'

incentives but does not
include taxes on crude oil and

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Petroleum Marketers
Association said Saturday
that heating oil supplies were
at an all-lime high and that
homeowners who heal their
homes with oil can "rest
easy" about any potential
shortages this winter.
" Billions of gallons of
heating oil are in full tanks .in
basements, utility rooms or
in underground tanks on

other energy taxes requested
by Carter and passed by the
Holliie.
Byrd told reporters he
fears an extended Senate
. battle over the measure ,
which was approved this
week by the committee on a
131o 5 vote, could result in its
defeat and possible loss of the
entire energy package.
· "I favor a crude oil tax,"
Byrd said, "but I would vote
against an amendment to add
it if I fe It the result would be a
straitjacketing of the Senate
conferees and the ultimate
demise of the energy

House measlU'e.

vaccinatiOns

against

which there is no real dispute,
is expected to iake care of

immunizations their child
needs and they've beim told
that Oct. 24 is the cutoff
dale," Charter said. "After
that date, the child will itol be
allowed in school without this
inununization."
City health director Dr.
William Clexton said parental apathy forced the
crackdown.
"Most of the parents are at
an age when they really don't
remember well back into the
'liOs when polio was obviously
evident because of hundreds
of braces and iron lungs" he
said.

'

Clexton said health officials
expe.cled parents to jam free
clinics around the city during
the weekend in an effort to·
beat the Monday deadline.
The city began taking a
hard-nosed approach to the
problem following a nearepidemic of measles in the
schools two years ago.

new agreemenl

with the

more than half the Social
Security deficit over the next
· 7&gt;years.
.
Other changes are causmg
pohttcal agon~ .
The btll · raises employer
and employe payroll taxes
ove~ . the .n ext decade m
addtlton tD mcreases already
wrttten moo eXIstmg law. F'or
example, a $15,000-a-year
worker now pays $877.&gt;0 in
annual Soctal Secur1ty taxes.
In 1987 hew.ould pay $967 ,:;o
upder ex1sung law, $1,03!i
un.~er the House bill. .
A lot of me'!'bers w11l vote
agalliSl the . b1ll beeause of
Ulese ta,x.mcreases, '' sa1d one

congressiOnal staff member.
"The vote will be close."
In another . effort to bring ·
more_money mto the system,
the b1ll would requ1re some 6
m1ll10n federal, slate and
local goverrunent worke~s
and employes of ~onilrof1t
organ~zat1oos to J_om Soc1al
Securtly m 19821 wtlh a study
w be completed by 1980 oo
how to do it.

Boy, 13, defuses

\

Energy: The presjdent's gauge of success

Soviets to draw some lstitf

rate, the disability fund will
run out of money in 1979; the
retirement fund, in the early
1980's. The projected deficit
for the next 10 years in the
~etirement and disability
programs is $113 billion.
The causes include the
recent recession, and the fact
that , .while today there are
three workers for every
retiree, in the next century
there will be only two
workers per retiree, pushing
the cost per worker up. ·
Another cause is what

tD the standard ofliving at the
time, as retirees in 1976.
This one .change, ahoul

issued in Detroit

childhood diseases.
·
It is the second ultimatum
this year for new students
who ignore state requirements for protection
homeowners ' or business
against measles, rubella,
properties,'' said Roger
whoop(ng cough, diphtheria,
Dreyer, executive vice
polio and letatnus.
president of the association.
Russell Charter, head of
"Healing oil dealers have package."
He said he does not expect a the immunization program,
billions of gallons · more in
their own.bulk storage plants. filibuster oo the bill and said 9,000 children· received
Marine lenninals are full to hopes it will be passed and exclusion notices in March
the brim. Midwest"'" sent to the conference and a bout 2,000 actually were
reserves have never been committee by the end of next turned away from class.
week.
Ahout a,OOO of he children
higher.
The negotiators must work receiving the !~test warnings
"Energy crisis? There isn't
any, as far as 'Oil heating is out major difrerences are left over from last spring,
between an omnibus House Charter said.
concerned," said Dreyer.
bill and five separate Senate
" The parents have been
bills, of which only the tax notified through a notice what

several years . At the present

next 75 years so each
generation of retirees would
be about as weU off, relative

Second ultimatum

By WILLIAM SILBERG
DETROIT (UP!) -'- City
health officials have promised 12,000 elementary school
children a quick trip home
from class Monday if they
show up without required

program. Four out of five
adults between the ages of 21
and 64 are covered by its
disability insurance.
Medicare, providing health
care for more than 25 million
elderly and disabled persons,
is part of Socia I Security, and
is the only part operating in
the black .
The rest of the program has
been running at a deficit for

East London Daily dispatch
and one of the country's most
persistent critics of lhe
goverrunent's racial policies.
Woods was bal)ned for five
years and prevented from
working as a journalist or
columnist.
· Kruger also declared 18
black consciousness
organizations unlawful and
ordered them liquidated,
virtually totally muzzling all everyone concedes was a
mistake made by Congress in
vocal black dissent .
Criticism, I rom inside and 1972 when it geared benefits
outside
South
1\frica, tD inflation in such a way
followed the move, which thai, by the next century,'
local commentators said ·some people wou1d receive
would lead to the rise of more more in retirement than they
radical black leaders tban the inade working.
The House bill takes away
more than ftO who were
that
windfall and stabilizes
detained.
retirement benefits for the

Washington's . Window

for the nation's security.
Friday night, during a
speech in Des Moines, the
president said, "I predict that ·
within• a few weeks we will
have a strategic arms
By HEL.EN THOMAS
limitatio~ agreement (with . UP! White House Reporter ·
the Soviets) that will be the
WASHINGTON (UP! ) pride of the country. ,
President Lyndon Johnson
" And from thai we will used to say there comes a
proceed to the goal ' of time when ~ou have wpullbe
reducing the.._ number of whole stack in. For President·
nuclear weapons in the world . Carter,. the whole stack is
to zero ."
apparent,ly
his energy
Carter's surpnse package, which he is having a
announcement was matc:hed hard time selling. .
Corter has decided that the
in Moscow by Soviet
success
of his administration
President
Leonid
Bre'thnev,
.
who said in a speech that and · Cong'ress this · year
SALT II negotia tions have depends on what he gets in
suddenly unde rgone ~&gt; a the way of an energy
definite change for the program .
Having put welfare reform
better."
Congressiohal sources and and tax reform on the back
State Department officials burner for this sesSinn have said they expect any when Demncratic leaders

Ninety-five out of 100

Some 33 million persons, children and their mothers
one out of seveh Americans, . are protected by survivors'
draw monthly Social Security insurance
under
the

to other press in South Africa
JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (UP!) - Nineteen
edilors-in-.chief of South
Africa's
English-language

returning ·!D standard time oo
the hist Sunday in Ocrober
was set by Jaw in 1966 under
the Uniform Time Act.
The act permitted a stale tD
exempt iU;elf in whole or in
part from the lime changes
which resulted in the current
patch work system .

M~jor

'

protestors, who were told not

tD hold the rally on campus
earlier this week by KSU
President Brage Golding.
Go1ding's proclamation,
was upheld Friday by .
Portage County Common
Pleas Judge J. Philip Jones.
Chief Cleveland U.S.
District Judge Frank J .
Battisti refused to intervene
in the dispute between '
Golding and the protestors,
who claim construction of the
facility will desecrate the
area where the four . KSU
students were killed . .

Home owners

on air command
OMAHA, Neb. (UP! ) President ·Carter loured
Strategic Air Command
headquarters . Saturday,

a.m.

Evansville, observe daylight
time and · will turn their
clocks hack one hour. The 12

Black press crackdown no scare

T HI
',I /IN[)f,Pf)

By GENE BEHNHAKDT
WASHINGTON (UP]) Ne,Jt
Sunday •'
most
Americans get back that hour
of sleep they lost. in April
when the nation went on
daylight saving time.
Standard time resumes
officially at 2 a.m. on Oct. 30,
meaning those areas that
have been on daylight lime
for the past six months should
set clocks back one hoUr to 1

Northwesi, around Gary and
wh~n confronted by police, from the con•truction site Hammond, and six counties
withdrew to an area bounded · near. a nursing student's in the southwest, aroun\1
by four dormitories to dorm where the rally began.
regroup.
KSU officials said a "fully
They then marched, led by adequate" security .force was
ready to deal with the

President losing battle
on·-·-h is ·canal treaties

WOLVERINE ·- 9"
WILOERNESS ' BOOT

PAGE 1-0

SUNDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1977

.VOL ! ? NO. 38

25 cracks.

behind the running nf Casey
and Geiger.
Kyger . Creek scored its
final touchdown with just 19
seconds remaining in the
third period on a five-yard ·
run by Geiger. The score was

TH f

TH ~
S 1 1\NPfd.'O

Y

1004-1018 Findlay St .
Portsmouth, Ohio 45662
'

punished ' accordingly. Every
player in t he NBA is nn m•tice
that I oppose fi ghting during

pow ers of my 4J(fit:c to

D

set-up on a clutch 29 yard Oi&gt;'
tiun pass from Casey to
sen ior Scott Richards . The
rest of the contest was a
defensive stru~ le.
Indi vidua ll y, Kyger
Creek's running backs, casey
and Geiger enjoyed another
fine night. Casey hall 129

Claude Cornelius giving KC

THE STANDARD SUPPLY

said O'Brien. "Conduct of
this natur·e will nc1t be
to lerated and will be

matter what .t he.

TH I
~

YOUR ONE STOP
SOURCE SINCE 1910

recklessness of s.uch action., ' 1

garn~s. n ..

PH
"1 fl. N [),'\

end on a !me defensive
stop.
Midway in the second
period, the Bobcats took controt at their 37 yard line. Four
playsl•ter,theGallianswere
forced to punt by an agg1·essive Spartan was ~rged with roughing punter

Promotional Prices Good Only on Friday, Oct. 28, 1977
and Saturday, Oct. 29, 1977
We reserve the right to

decked .
"The fa ct that a single ,
swift act of violence resulted
in inju ries to two players
points up the danger and

pnlv"l'atiPn . I will usc all the

Silver Bridge plaza-Spring Valley Plaza
Court Street

THf
STr.NrJARO
',lJ p 1'1 y

ro

rookie center Kent BenSon.

Member FDIC

before a stout Hobe•l ddcnsc
l•lllc'&lt;i the march. Willi l11e
ball at the 30, KC defenders
threw Paul Moore and
quarterback Dave R""d for
losses of 16 ya rds forcing a
punt.
roach Jim Sp rague's
deft•ndlllg SVAC champs then

It was the farsl tilnc the
Bobcilts had beaten an Alexander (ootball tt•am stn('c the
1972 season.
The .Spartans took the open- put tog:~ther a long sustained
ing kickoff from its 4i yard, .AI:lve mov ing (rom their 22 to
sl ript' tQ the Kyge r Cn •t•k :lO the Spartan \iix only lu sec it

a nd marched 73 yards lo
score with Robbie Britton
running the last three yards.
Then Sommer took over .
Sommer srorcd on a 40~

MERCE RVI LLE--J oe after a scoreless first period
KWm, ~enior running back in- when Kuhn ended a :;s yard
jured two weeks ago in the march with a sh·yard run. A
Kyger Creek game , returned kick for the EP sailed wide.
Coach Larry Cremeens '
to form here Friday night in
leading the Eastern Eagles to Wildcats got back into the
an 18-3 fW AC win over Han- game in the third quarter
when Ed Whitt connected on
nan Trace.
Kuhn rushed for two a :!&gt;-yard field goal.
The Eagles made the score
touchdowns, caught a TD
pass and collected 96 yards in 12-3 at the end of the canto
when quarterback Brian
14 carries;
Bissell
hit Kuhn on a 26--yard
Coach Joe Mitchem's
TD
pass.
A pass for. the conEagles increased their
version
failed.
season record to 4-3 with a
In the final 12 minutes,
score in each of the last three
Eastern
scpred On a five-yard
quarters.
run
by
Kuhn,
Again , a pass
Eastern drew first blood

l'n•ck

l u ll UII-t"Oilfl' rtml'l' fiK' :).!.c1t~

I'UINT PLEASANT - Pete
- Somlll£'r scored four touch·
dol\1\S Friday night as Point
Plea•ant defeatod Hipley ?:713.
Point, rankoct ninth last
wee k in the Class AAA
ratings, spotted ,Ripley . an
early 1-U lead. The Vikin~ s. 62. took the opening kickoff

AGGRESSIVE RUNNING - Uaping, churning, t;.isting and tW:"ing about sum~ up
the maneuvers of Point Pleasant Senior Pete Sommer (20) Frtday m~ht as he turned m a
sensational perfonnance by scoring all four touchdowns-including one of 96 yards on the
kickoff starting the second half-in the Big Blacks' 27·7 rout ?f Ripley Frid~y night. Here,
Sommer is tripped up by Ripley's Mitch Carmichel (46 ) wh1le gomg h1gh m the a1r 111 an
effort to avoid him . At left is !'PHS Senior Scott Howard.

Ky~cr

().J - 1'he Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 23, 1977

energy legislation the
centerpiece of his first year in
office. On that, he has
decided he should be judged ,
but he also has put members
of Congress on notice that
they too are on the block.
There is little question that
Carter is beginning. tD feel
more isolated as president .
Nothing is going right.
When ot hers say he ha s
bitten off more than he can
chew in his first year' carter
con soles himself by telling· a11
comers that he has ta ckled
head·on issues that are "all

highly controversial,
inevitably, predictably, and
almoost all of !herr\ have been

delayed U)(t long."
He sees the d11Wnswing in
complained they had en1mgh,
the
popularity ~u ll s and
·•n their plate -- Carter made

recognizes that he has bee~
hurl politically by laking on

making progress."
Carter sa id that he recog-

the " multiplicity" of issues.

nized ''th e natural inclination
of the ne ws media and
American
people
to
concentrate on the ex:citing

But he told a group of
editors recently , "I think as

far as the best interest of the
country is concerned, there is

nothing that I w9uld
withdraw frdm just to cre~le
an increased . se nse of

stories, the defeats and
combat and the debates and
di sag .r eeme nt s · and
arguments."
·
.

So far, Carter has refrained
harmony . or achievement."
from laying a 'glove on the
His fiustratinns were
manifest When .he also said, senators who have gutted his
" If we got 10 different major energy legis lation and
conce ntr uted his e~ ttack on
things nn the fire at one time
and. ;.ve \liin and finally finish · . the nil and gas lou bies: But
the reorganization package , the lobbies don't vote on
legislation and the senators
and urban program, or
do .
.stimulus package, and we
still have nine or sn mcwe
To keep peace in the party
than we are working on, it • and
the
lines
of
lunks likt: things are e~ ll
colnl n unication open, Carter
('r1nfused and Wt! &lt;:jl't! nut
has •)bvi_o~sly decided it is

better tD withhold criticism of
the Senate.
"I have coofidence in the
Senate," he iold a news
conference while the facts
show that the Senate has
shown little confidence in his
program .
So it is with Carter,who has
not learned tD wheel and deal
with the lawmakers. He also
has failed to convince the
Senate leadership that they
should carry the ball for .him,
now that he has made energy
the touchstone of his administration. He also seems w
have failed to persuade the
American people that the
energy shortage is bad " and
is going to gel worse" as he
,puts it.

bomb near home
STRONGSVILLE, . &lt;¥1io
(UP!) - A 13-year-&lt;Jld boy
looking for his dog found and
defused a born b planted a few
feet from the family home
Saturday morning.
Bill Dietz found a 14-inch
gas cylinder with a lighted
fuse and cut the fuse with a
knife. He and other family
me111bers· were searching for
their dog about 2 a.m. when
he spotted the dev ice in some
shrubs at the front of the
house .
Mrs. Brenda Dietz said she
had no idea why anyone
would want to hoinb her
home .
Sgt. Victor Kovacic of the
Cleveland pollee bomb squad
said the device appeared to
have been made by someone
with a high school level
knowledge of chemistry.
I

'•

�•

().2-The SWldav Tm1e&lt;-&amp;nt nel Sw da) Ott 23 1977

D-3- The SWldav Tlmes-Senltnel SunrlHv IWt ?.:1 1!177

Ohio politics

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Ohio at crossroads on two critical issues
8) LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Repvrter
COLUMBUS ( UP! l - Ohto ts reaching a crossroads

espec1all\ n the General AssPn bJ) of fu:stenng tndustr al
expans on ar d help n~ schools survn e
The Ja~,~, makers \\ant to do both but don t know how the tw

goals are son ellmes tn d rect confltct
Thetr consternation '-' 3:; ev dent last -..eek at Ylrtualh every
turn particularly lll the quest on of expandmg borrowmg
powers for Ute schools
The Cle. eland school dtstr ct asked for e.traordmary bor
rowmg powers to offset a $19 null1on debt aod keep schools
open for the rest of the lear
Legtslatl\ e leaders reasoned that tt " ouldn l be fatr to
exclude other !manctally-strapped schools so the proposal
was extended to a~ distr cts certil ed for clostng later lhts
year

spee-d nt up Ue 'era II reduction of tangible personal property
tax.e s for bustness and u dustry

he Ia"' ttkers " l'n nuv 1s Grant ng, nt&gt;\\
borr wmg poY.ers would take the p1essure ff an) upc nm g
votes m pr pert~ tax IlCreases f r ~ch 11l per ttu g 1 ne;
EH•n then

m lustres and ass1st

n~ &lt;: mmu~ntles

- Sc ale p ssagc f a btU all Wlflll t U&lt;J r b mks I &gt;pen
b1 1 r hcs :~cr ss U1e st 1te \lo 3S VIewed by naJ n t} De nocrats
as a sti r uiLLS to the state s et:onumy
nak ng n ney
ava1lable for c nstruct10n and JObs
The Democrats have long soug h~ to discourage tax breaks
f r mdustry rna ntatmng lnd \I dual taxpa) ers should get
t ehef f1rst
Prompted by the steel tndustry s dire Circumstances and by
Gov James A Rhodes the legislators are overconung lhetr

Baader-Meinhof
hits at Europe

OK lifting
debt limit
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohto Board of Regents
Frtday endorsed a proposed

Enjoyed the Business and Professtonal Women s Boss
Ntght at Oscar son Monday Sam Neal did a great Job wtth the
fall fohage arrangements and the conversation

~as

very

stunulatmg Most of alii en1oyed listenmg to Dr Paul Hayes
prestdent of Rio Grande College.Commumty College Bemg
the Canad an freak I am JUSt to Sit and listen to hun read the
phone book would have been a pleasure Dr Hayes IS blessed
wtth a most lyncal and nch accent wh1ch IS native to many of
the areas m Canada HIS top1c for Ute evenmg was the futuriSt
and what we can expect m the next 100 years It was one of the
most informative talks I ve heard 10 ages While I sat and took
notes many thought tt was for the purpose of the paper Not so
I plan to keep them for my personal use While everyone has
read Future Shock Dr Hal es talk went rn a somewhat
different dtrec tion It was a most enJoyable evemng
Don t forget to buy candy from the Ltoness Club durmg the
month of October The money wtll go to the vu;ually
handicapped a most worthy cause
JOY

~ot~f-the-week Weepmg may erxlure
cometh 111 the mornmg Psalms 30 5

for a mght bul

The Classtcal Greek Study Club ccnducted by Dr Ray
Coutant at R oGra nde IS commg along at a steady pace Keep
up the good work all you lovers of Greek
Books-&lt;Jf-the week Moe Howard and the 3 Stooges and
Superman from Sertalto Cereal If a tnp mto Ute past ts your
dea of fun then get these two books The 3 Stooges book IS at
Ute library ( as soon as I return 11 that IS ) and I found the other
one m Chtcago Talk about memones What better memortes
for a child to have than these two great televts1on ser1es As a
child I wanted to be etther Lots Lane or a gypsy who would be
flown around the world by Superman And I always felt sorry
for Larry because he looked so helpless lsn l fantasy great'
Chet come back soon

the Nov 8 ballot to lilt the
$750 OliO lumt on state bonded
mdebtedness
The regents also approved
ftve new degrees and degree
programs at variOUS colleges

that un verSitles would have

to draw students from the
busmess world and the
umve rs1t1es surround ng
commumhes rather from

high school graduates
Repeal of the Conslttutional
debt lumt will be one of four
tssues on the November

ge neral election ballot
In tts place Ute proposed
amendment would allow the
Oh1o General Assembly to
auUtortze the sale of bonds m

~ve~:~unt

uedboto dst:: ..

Six TTUJre
"""
are recovered
MANILA The Ptuhppmes
(UP! ) - Search crews Salur
day recovered the bodies of
stx more U S servicemen

Police nip Uneasiness
Kent State pervaded
mob rally rock group
KENT Ohto (UP! ) Pohce moved m Saturday
afternoon on the Kent State
Umverstty campus to break
up a prohibited rally by
vartous groups opposed to
construcllon of a gyrnnastum
annex near the s1te where
four students were shot m
1970
At the close of a rally of
more
than
I 000
demonstrators pohce some
mounted on horseba ck
moveil rnto the crowd to force
Ute protestors across the
street anckoff campus
At least one lear ga s
caruster was thrown
More tea r gas

was

launched mto the crowd later
m the afternoon Peg gy
Watts a student a New York
Umvers ly al Stony Brook
N Y collapsed from the
effects of the gas and was
treated at the scene
Thts ends the rally but
not the demonstration

said

the ftnal speaker at the rally
whtch had
progressed
Without mc1dent smce noon

But then pollee moved 10 to
read a court order barrmg
any campus demonstration

against construclton of the
faetlity and at the same time
push protestors off crunpus
Earlier m the afternoon
poltce barred pmtestors from
the actual constructwn stte
The protestors wtthdrew to
n

area

near

other

J rm ttor1es then marched to
the so uth campus stte where
e rai l began
{S fflc!als satd a fully
~
secunty force was
d) to deal w1th the
testors who were told not
ld the rally on campus
er th1s week by KSU
restde9t Brage Goljling

By ROYAL BRIGIITBD..L
GIU.SBURG Miss (UPI)
An uneasmess among
members of the Lynyrd
Skynrd rock group as they
boarded thetr chartered au
craft foreshadowed tis fatal
pluge mto a MissiSSIPPI pme
forest
Wednesday the day before
the crash the nght eng10e of
the lwm-propeller Convatr
240 brtefly lost power on a
flight from Mlllll11 to Green
vtlle S C the fourth stop on
a planned three-month tour
A sill foot flame shot fnn
the nght engme satd Ken
neth Petden 24 a soWld
tecluuc1an for the nmemember group It wasn t
burrung fuel 1t was literally
exploding fuel
Pilot Walter McCreary
assured Petden the engme
would be worked on at the
next stop Baton Rouge
where a concert was schedul
ed Frtday N.,.vertheless the
group dooded to vote at
Baton Rouge whether to con
tinue the tour on a bus if
another plane could not be obta10ed
Cass1e Games a backup
vocaltst and sister of gwtanst
Steve Games constdered
ntling m the eqwpment truck
wtead of the plane But she
went along wtth the group
About 50 rrules northeast of
Baton Rouge the engme
coughed and sputtered for
several rrunutes then seemed
to smooth out
Steve Lawler 28 a lighting
expert from Houston was
nding m the tatl of the plane
playmg poker wtth several
others They resumed the1r
card game when the engmes
appeared to 101prove but re
matned apprehellSive

killed mUte crash of a Manne
corps helicopter 10 rugged
)Ungled mountams tn the
cen tral Plultppmes brmgmg
Ute death toll to 24
Another 13 men were
mjured when the CH53
Stkorsky
Sea Stallion
crashed and burned m a
ravme Frtday dur10g a U S
7th Fleet amphibious landing
exerCISe Frtday
A. U S Navy spokesman
sa1d one soldter suffered
mjurtes durtng the rescue
operations on Mtndoro tsland
about 100 miles south of
Manila
(A US Navy HMH-362
heltcopter crashed 111 the
Mediterranean sea off Stelly
Saturday because of rotor
trouble but all e1ght crewmen
were rescued by the
helicopter

earner

G1¥1dalcanal )
The spokesman a l the Subtc
Bay naval base north of
Manila satd a1137 men aboard
the Marme helicopter were

the

Bonn

governme nt s t ough antl

terronst poltctes
ArS&gt;ntsls set ftrc to etght

West German co mpames

tounst buses m ~entral Pans

legal ons and tourist buses
ac ross Europe tn the f !th

Fr daj ntghla nd ea rly Satur
day and attempted to burn
the o! hc es of th e West

consecuttve day of vwlence

and umverSltJeS
In a report to the regents

Chancellor James A Norton
satd that fall enrollment on
state campuses was up 2 5
percent to 304 488 students
Thts 1s the stable pertod
before the declme
satd
Norton addding that enroll
men! was expected to drop
about a thud to 240 000
students by 1995
Norton satd the pred cted
enrollment dechne meant

protestmg

By RAF AELA SEPPALA
PAR IS ( UPI I - Supporters
of the Baader Meinhof urba n
guerr lias Saturday attacked

Const tut ona l amendment on

at the end of an ulcer ca usmg week We ve been so
rushed and swamped wtlh matertal that to borrow a popular
phrase I cculd JUSt scream

whicl I se m mufac

ru ng fac1ht1es

Regents

•

reluctance to furmsh mdustrtal ta. mcenllves
Heres the confhct m st of those mdustrlal taKes go toward
the operat on of set ools a d there were warmngs last week
t1 al any tax redu•h ns " uld under&lt;'UI local fmancmg of the
sc h • 1 systcn s
1;'1e ult1 nate ansv. er seems dear the IHwmakers must
someday st on wrestle wtlh "t only the total school ftnancmg
pt oblem but the .tax structure which underwntes tt the two go
hand m-hand
But the leg stators are fearful &lt; f undertaktng such a
stt uggle particularly w1th an eleclt n year comtng up whtch
may cha rt Ohto s poltttcal course far mto the future
So tt appears that unless sotlc extraordinary leadershtp ts
exhi btted Ute legtslature wtll coni nue to hanille the two ISSues
- mdustrtal tax mcent ves a nd school hnancmg - gmgerly
ltke a pa tr of ftrecracke rs seekmg to defuse them wtlh each
new development and I opmg they don t go off before the 1978
electton

But 1t "as vu:nble 10 these other developments
- The legislators mserted a pr vlston tn the cap tal n
p1 vements appropnatto 1 requ~r~ng the use or American s(eel
tn state c 111strucuc n pr ]eCts
- 11tey stuck m the same btU $4 5 nulhon for attractmg

In addilt n a nwt her f leg slat rs fav r s&lt;rappmg the
L1Jrren S\sten of sch(l( I fmanung and ad pt ng an ent rei\
new one Those Ia\\ makers percetvedth~ b&lt; rr Hng btU I be a
mere Band Aid furesta llmg the ne liable
So the btU was about to be defeated when US Dtstnct C urt
Judge Frank J Balllstt ordered Cleveland sch &gt;Ois to &gt;lay pen
regardless of thetr I nanc a! condiu n 11 at teed t
The borr wmg question was deferred u tt I after the dust ha&gt;
settled from the school district ballot tg n operatmg le\1es
Nov 8
Meam' h le there ts a crosscurrr t m thf;&gt; f rm f a nsmg
ttde lor encourag ng tndustnes to expa td a nd n odermze thetr
plants
It \\OS seen last week tn House Jl'lssage fa btll drast calll
cutting taxes on new mach nes tools and t her cqUipn ent and

N MEMORY&lt;tlf au fa ke

Hijacker walking
Vietnam casualty
SHIRLEY G BEEGLE state exarruner was honored
recently a t a r egtonal exammers semtnar held at Burr
Oak State Lodge for mentor10us s~rVIJ'e performed whtle
conductmg an aud t of the Galha Lo&lt;al School Dts!rtct
Beegle of the Aud tor s Schools Dmston was presented
" th a servtee pm bv State Aud tor Thomas E Ferguson
for her noteworthy efforts n complet ng the aud1t of the

school d ts!ncl Gallta Local School Dtstr ct had been
consol dated bv four school dtslncts making the audtt
compltcated and dtfftcult Whtle perforrrung the aud t
Beegle completed two fmanctal cash analyses and was
also responstble for a tta nee assigned to her She res des
m Racme

Coup foiled
by military
TEGUCIGALPA
Hon
duras
(U P!)
The
government
of
mtlt
tary leader Juan Alberto
Melgar Castro has crushed
an attempted coup d etat m
Hondura s a Te guctgalpa
radio statton reported
Saturday
Radto statiOn WRN one of
the largest tn the Central
Amertca co untry said the
coup was lolled durmg the
past 36 hours but gave no
details
All gove rnm ent off1ces
were closed for the weekend
and no offtctal comment was
unmed1ately avatlable
Whtle the rad1o report was
be1ng broadcast Melgar
Castro was n netghbormg
Ntcaragua ccnferrmg wtth
Prestdent Anastasio Somoza
After a three hour meetmg
at Somoza s vtlla south of

Banker to
withdraw
big reward

Managua Melga r Castro
reportedly left to return to
Teguctgalpa
Relat10ns between the two
co untnes have been tense m
recent wee ks because of
N1caraguan c ha rg es that
Honduras 1s g vmg sanctuary

to Sand msta guefrtllas
trymg to overthrow the
Somoza reg1me

Melgar Castro took power
m a 1975 bloodless coup that
erthrew the
government of
O\

m hta ry
Oswaldo

Lopez Arellano who also
came to power through force
Honduras 1s the second
largest natton m Central
Amertca
but has an
estunated populatton of only
about 2 7 mtlhon perscns
most of whom ltve 1n rural
areas

It ts prtmartly an
agrtcultural country whose
major exports are coffee
bananas and tunber

By JON SWEET
GRAN D ISLAND Ne b
IUPI) - He " as a Boy Scout
a holder of the Bronze Star

hard drugs or anythmg ltke
that he wasn t affiliated at
any ttme w1th tt
Hannan achieved the rank
Scout
the
of
Ltfe
orgamzati on s second h ghest

and a straight arrow sort-an

easy gomg guy who went
downlull 1n VIetnam
Then Thoma s Michael
Hannan hiJaCked an rurplane
released hts hostages and
turned his sawed-off shotgun
on hunseil
Friends m his horne town of
Grand Island indicated the 29
year old \\ ho killed hunself
Thursday mght came back
fr om Vtetnam a walking
casua lty
M1ke Hamtk who knew
Hannan at Grand Island Cen
tral Cathohc Htgh School and
roomed with hun a semester
at Kearnel Slate College
sa d He was a cahn easy
go ng guy who went downhtll
tn V elnam
Hamik a Grand Island
phannac

ra nk

and was a sport s
staodout while In htgh school

FBI Spectal Agent Rtehard
Whitaker satd when Hannan

left the Army tn 1971 he
became nvolved with the
antrestabltshment

st satd he came

home once and found Hannan
stll ng on the hvmg room
floor Hannan told him he had
crawled through a wmdow

I dtdn l Utmk too much
about 1! then Hamtk sa d
but I knew the servtce had
screwed hun

element

He was agamst b g
corporatiOns
He went to Mumesota and
actually lived m a log cab m
of! the land He le t hts hair
grow and actually became a
\\ 1lderness man
After hvmg Utts "ay lor
about two years Whttaker
sa td Hannan went ljl.
Berkeley Caltf where he
agam changed hts actual
appearance
He shaved himself and got
a
clean -c ut
hatr cut
Whitaker satd He was st1ll
antt-establtshment but not
the henmt type He "ould
]om m sec ety but was also
st II rematmqg to hunself He
was gomg back mlo ac
ceptmg

up

Hannan volunteered for the
Army m 1969 and went to
V elnam m the Signal Corps
where he earned a Bronze
Star for Mentonous Servtce

Before he went m he was
stratght sa1d Jeff Hayman
a Grand Island hfe msurance
salesman who knew Hannan
Then while he was tn I got
letters from him He was
geltmg mto the drug scene
over there Drugs controlled
his life
Hall CoWlty Sheriff C T
Heaclley satd a law enforce
ment profile on Hannan
showed he may have at one
t1me or two smoked some
martjuana A:; far as any

positions of prior

German tour l&amp;ll offtces on

the French capt tal
A violent
exploston
severely drunaged a Pans
apartment where poll ee
found
expl os tves
and
pamphlets favorable to the
West Gcnnan Red Army
b'l"OUp
In the sou thwestern French
Clll of Toulouse butane gas
bottles " ere set on ftr e al the
West Gern an Consulate a
pnvate German telephone
company and a computer
manufacturmg fLrm pollee

satd
The self pro t:l ;:r1med
Andreas
Baad e..r
Cot 1mand
group cla uned
responstbltty for the rotlliftiseattacks m a telephone ca ll

The group ts named after the
leader of Ute West German
Red Army Factton who d1ed
m his cell at Stamheun pr son
Tuesday w th 1\\o other urban
guerrill as after collapse of a
plane htJack attempt to wm
the1r release
In Italy pollee reported

mmor damage from bomb
attacks on a parked German
bus tn Bolzano and a BMW
auto showroom m Sassart

In Parts and the Normandy
port of Roue n graffttt
fa vo rabl e to the West
German te rror st groups

mushroomed One stg11 m
of
Notre Dame
front
' ca thedral m P a ns read
The Red Army Fact1on
uves On whtle another m
Rouen procla med (West
Gennan Chancellor Helmut)
Schmtdt Ktlls what hts
Pohcy Generates
West Gennan authorttles
have
requested
extra
secunty and protection for 23

and very mountarnous

Earlier reports had ltsted
39 servteemen 10cludmg four
crew members aboard the
heltcopter
Most of the VIctims were
Martnes but the spokesman
S81d U S Navy and Atr Force
personnel also may have
been aboard the chopper The
names of the dead and
10Jured were betng wtthheld
pendmg nottftcatton of thetr
famil1es

By TOM HILLSTROM
NEW YORK (U PI )
Banker ChriStopher Janus
satd Saturday he ts w th
drawmg hts $150 11011 reward
for tnformat oh lead ng to the
mtsstng Pektng Man foss Is
after h1s four year search
produced ma rr age offers
death threats and ch cken
bones - but few leads
I am wtlhdrawmg the
reward as of Dec 31 •nd hope
to return fullttme to my m
vestment bank ng busmess
Janus satd n announc ng an

Weather

end to the hunt that cost h m
more than $2011 11011 and took

Partly cloudy tomght with
lows between 45 and 50 A
chance of showers w1th h ghs
between 60 and 65 The
probabll1ty of prectpltatton ts
30 percent

h1m on sea r ch mtsswns
through four contments

NOW YOU KNOW
President Ulysses S
Grant s vice president was
chrtstened Jeremtah Jones
'olbath but became Henry
W lson because he ltked a
character ,by that name n a
l:x ok he once read

Th e humano d foss tls
thought to be at l ea~t 5011 11011
years old and cons dered
pnceless by anthropolog sts
dt sH ppeared aftPr U S
Ma nnes took them

nto

custody near Pektng at the
onset of World War II
Janus 65 sa1d the Ch nese
asked h•m for hei r• n
recuverun; the bones durmg a
vtslt he made to the Chma
rna nl lnd f ur yea rs ago

ex

so

deorl~

p aye

s

Happy

You lovi ng ch ld en and g and
chid en
N LOVING memory of Be tho

Moe Mille wka passed owov
one yeo ago today There s on
open gate
At ke and of the ood
Thr ough wh ch each mus go
a on e.
And he e n a I ght we cannot

•••

Ou fa her do ms H sown
Bevond the go e ou loved one
F nds hopp ness and es
And hare s co mfa t n he
thought
That &lt;:1 lov nQ God knows best
Sadly m ssed by dough e M s
John K Cia k po ents M and
M s
Stanley Swa n and
b a hers and s ste s

earlter damaged the offtces
of th e West German a rhne
LufUtansa
T oun s t organ' zahons
throughout France reported

between the two have been

tnasSJve cancellations from

German

cemetery

and

and son
Ian y

John S C oak s and

N LOV ING memo y of ou deo
Fa he F ed Co l ns who pass
ed owoy Oc ob&amp; 23 9()3
Thousand hough s o f one so

deo

others

Hannan

who

Thoughts bock to s enes ong
passed
T ne o Is on bu memo es lost
Sod y m ssed br dough e s
l oren a M R ce F o en ~ l
MeDon iBI Be n e e V Rose

GUN SHOOT Roc ne Gun Cub
e e y Sun of e noon Foe o
Chock guns on 'I
Asso ed
mea ts

THERE WIL L be no h~n ng no
I Its pass ng a nd no e:.-cep ons
on my p ope y Bob MeG ow

--SKATE A WAY
~-

Schedule Ho o
ween Po ty So
Oct 29 h
Races P :res Saloons
Open Wed F
and Sol n es
7 30
0 00 A a loble fo
p a te pQ es
Mon Tues
Thu s n es So o StJn of e
oons
Bus
onspo to on
can ce lled Phone 9B5 3929 o
985 qqqb
THE
RA CINE Volun ee
Oepa men w I sponso a gun
shoo every Sotu da'l at 7 p m
a the bu ld ng n Ba shon Foe
to y cho ke guns only

$100 REWARD
For

th e
recove r y
of
n or mat on lead ng 1o th e
recovery o f Engl sh Coon
Ho v nd lost or stolen n the
v c n tv of Mercer v I e

Se pt
further

R

18

1977

For

nformat on call

chard Houck

256

6701

SWEEPER and sew hg mach ne
l!lpo r ports and suppl es P ck
up and del \18 y Oov S Vacuum
m le up Geo ges
( leone
Creek Rd Ph 44b 029.4

clean ng prov1dcs n ce appearance cow comfort

I
I

liVe a! o m fall a;s sltmrh o

I

pe 11 and vet

Carmichael Farm Supply
8 Miles West of Silver Bndge on Rt 35

~~~~~,..

I
I

OLD FURNITURE ce boxes b ass
beds on beds etc camp e e
hausekolds W e M 0 M lie
Rt 4 Pome oy Oh o a co I

99277/IJ

Current opening IS a sa larted day shtft

JXJ S hon wlfh excellent benef ts

INSTRUMENT ELECTRICIAN

Applicants should have prev ous exper ence or

tra tmng n mdustr al
nstrumentalton

pneumat c and electromc

MAINTENANCE MECHANICS
Seekmg quahf ed mechamcs for general plant
mamtenan ce lnduslrtal or related expenence
requtred

GOOD USED

Interested person s should make appl cat on request by
contact ng

Cu o c ock
o onge
ee
3
Free:rers washe s 2 bed oom
su tes
5 desks
sew ng
mach nes d nette oun~ able
4 cha s 2 mope paste beds
poster bed TV s et gero ors
drye s
ranges
bedr oom
su tes beds chesb dre~&amp;se s
table s
amps cho s o he
tams book case co I 446 0322
Mohdayth uF doy9to 8pm
Sotu day 9 a 5 p m 3 m o ut
Bul&lt;:~ 'l Ue Rd

The Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
Potnt Pleasant

W Va 25550

Phone (304) 576 2041 Ext 280
TWO TO ten oc es w h good
bu d ng s e o olde home
su ob e t o emodel ng wote
and e eel c ty o va loble close
o ho d op cod Co I 992 7036
of e 5 pm
:::.__ _ _ _ _ __
60~_4:.:_
7:......_

GOOD/YEAR
An Equal Opportumty Employer

REFRIGERA TOR

CHIP WOOD
Po e s
nox
d ome te 10 on a ges end $8
pe on Bundled slob $6 pe
on De l ve ed o Oh o Polle
Co R 2 Pome oy 992 2689

FOR THE BEST N FURN TURE
UPHOLSTERING F ee Es motes
P ck up ond del 'le y se v ce
co Mow ey s Upho!s e y P
Pleasant W Va 675 4154
LIGHT housekeep ng room Park
Central Hoe

Ph
GOOD USED
upho ste ed
Ph A460322

FURN JURE not
and app onces

GOOD USED

REGRIGERATOR

OVER 4 000 lb Tobocto
lea5e o

TIMBER
Topp ces fo
Top Quolty
POMEROY FORREST PRODUCTS
Co 992 5965

WANT SOMEONE to c eon house
992 2936

3 BEDR MOBILE HOME 14 x 70
$ 75 mo p us depos t Rt I
B dwell
ova fable
lost of
August 6 I.4 772 2566

PAPER CARR ER needed n he
V n on area
P e au coil
446 2342 between 8am and

BRADBURY RENTALS FU n shed
Op&lt;l tment Second floor No 3
and A $.45 depos
Adul s no
pe s Coii4A6 0957

Spm

ond
Pod

ANT QU E OAK FURNITURE toney
ron beds s one 10 s etc Coli

2&lt;5 5050

LIGHT WEIGHT CHIMNEY BlOCK
8x13

and
on
Gal o
Co
611 Th rd
po '
Oh o

TOTAL ELECTRIC MOBILE HOME
Coll446 2760

SALES PERSON NEEDED by Colum
bus beauty supply f m to cove
sou he n Oh o te r ory Fo n
er'l ew
co
6 .4 237 2549
Man th u Fr Scm o Spm

LOS T SATURDAY Sep
3 be
ween 6 and 8 pm on County
Rood
neo G onge Hal and
C oss Roads neo Ru and l on g BABYSITTER fo 3 ch d en Ages
8 6 and 3 n B dwell Po 1•
ho med s :re block mo e dog
w h w h e an che st feet p of
Schoo l 0 s r ct Coli 388 87.45
o and nose Answe s o P e
ofte 5pm
y Pow f f ou nd he needs
med ca t on
SIOO
ewo d
992 5126 Owne I and g ey
ngfo e u nofdog
3 AND 4 RM fu n shed o~ J.ln
fu n shed ap s Pho e fl2
5434

Gall pots

Block

SALE
EVERYDAY
2 PC LIVING ROOM
SUITES STARTING
AT 139 95
REFRIGERATORS
125.00 AND UP
GAS SPACE HEATERS

House near R o G ande on Tyn
Rhon Rd Co 992 S693 Man
h u Fn 9om to 3pm Even ngs
and weekends coB 367 7150
TWO BEDROOM mob le home
$ 25 3 bed oom mob le home

S SO

Co ••6 0175

N CE 3 bedroom house on nice
eve ot w h concrete po che$
S 65 o month Neols Ren of
Call446 0157
Bed oom house on Is Ave Coli
446 3746
FIVE ROOM HOUSE n own Col
446 2103
SM.All FURNISHED HOUSE Adu Is
only Co 4A6 0338

from '19 95 &amp; UP

DINETTE SETS
'24 95 and up
Vanety of stands &amp;
tables to choose from
starltng from 53 50

CHEST OF DRAWERS

'15 95 UP
Bedroom Sutles
3 pc $89 95 up

MARTIN
FURNITURE

BR ARPATCH Kennels Board ng
G com ng AKC Go don ~e
te s Engl sh Cocke Span els

feu ono Serv ces offe ed a I
b eeds a styles Ph 446 023
NEt AK C Chow Chow dogs
CFA S omese and H ma oyan
(Pe sons) Place Ch stmo$ k t
en and $p ng puppy o de s
now son) Ph -446 3844
AKC REG
Ge man Shephe d
pups $65 Best wo ch dog n
count y
Coli
286 2939
Jackson
cocke

TWO PUPPIES
Fu I blooded
Doberman P nscher and A
doe $50 each (gll 388 8666
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy S"'ll
ode o t a rn New and used
sodd es Ru h R~~te ves A bony

(614 690 3290

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc e y
Co lil ne and adopt on Serv ce

992 76110 742 3 62 992 5427

TRAILER SPACE for en
hookup 992 3162

HOUSE FOR RENT 2 l&gt;dr lam ly
oom both n5ufoted Adults
p eferred no pats downtown
Th d Ave $150 man h Coli

446 1734

NtCEL Y fu n ~&amp;hed two bedroom
gpo ment A r co nd t aned
Adul s only nqu re at Shep
po d Sales and Serv ce at F st
and 01 \le

2 BEDROOM HOUSE

n own

Wall to Wo I carpet built In
stove and oven $200 pe
month Ref and dep required

Co11&lt;46 2B57

Send your own pe sonol:red
phot o g eet ng co ds 25 fo
$7 50 unt I Novem be
15
Towney Stud os

Reody for

TRISTATE MOB lE ~OMES
GAlliPOliS OH 0
968 FLEETWOOD 12 x 60 3 bdr

91&gt;5 RCHARDSON 12 xlll
969 TOPPER 12 x 52 1 bdr
1971

PROWLER

TT

3 bd

SC

974 KENT 10 x 40 mob le home
Neve
been
used
Cal
446 1508

USED FU~NITURE
ROOM SUITES

and can
house n

PULLETS AND
3888617

COAL I mestone and cole um
ch o de and cole um b ne to
dus cant ol and spec al m x rtg
Call
so to fa me s Ex t:e ls o Sa t
Wo ks Ma n S ee Pome oy
1200
Oh o o phone 992 3891

FRYERS

~cl&lt;

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condtt on your
water and Coop water
softener Model UC SVI

Now Only

'279.95

let us test your water Free

FOR SALE
New Co Op water and
softeners model VC SVI

Only $279 95

Save $50 00 on a new
Hotpotnt Refr•!ilerator
1 New 20 cubrc ft Ct1est
Freezer
$25 DO Otscount
(I) Good Refrrgerator $200
I
Good
Used Amana
Uprtght Freezer
S2SO 00
I Good Used Homehte

Xlt2 Chan Saw

st25

1 Good Used Hame l te
Cha n Saw
$125
1 Good Used.. Home hte
Cham Saw
$120
1 Good Used Hot Po nl
Refr gerator
$125
1 Good Used Hotpotnt
Electrtc Stove
5100
1 Good Used Untco
VVasher
5125

Pomerov landmark

.:Jack W Carsey Mgr
Phone 992 2181

for spec al

lNS &lt;&lt;6

col us
ales on p ope ty

YOU'RE IN CONTROL
WITH THE XLe AUTOMATICt
Lightw~ght, precJSlOn balanced Weighs
less than 8'h lbs.. With 10' bar and exclu
SIVe SAFE T TIP that prevents klekback.
Easy: fast starting Automatic chain oiling
Softone"' mufiler
FOR ONLY

YARD SALE Mon Oct 24 at
Au stin
Wo te s
es den ce
8 oodwoy St Roc ne 0 ~
Oc) 22 dnd
om o 9 pm
es dence RD
843 2164

BASEM~NT

birein COIIIrofwtth Holts all&amp;

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

SALE Oct 24
Oct
29 4 3 Spr ng A'le Pome y
B cycles clo h ng d shes cof
fee tab e

GARAGE SALE Mon Oc 24 and
Tues Oc 25 10 am o 5 pm
W lmo H
Casto
SR 124

o

...~~~~ ..~------------------------~~
Chester

Route 7

Have d1scontmued Datry operattons and
wtll sell on thts date the followtng

DARN SALE Sa
Sun Oct 23 9
Edgar Brewers
I Portland Oh o

EXCLUSIVE SAFE-TTIPN
PREVENTS KICKBACK'

Near Middleport Ohto State
County 3 Watch for s1gns

=====

Po o:~"~"d'---SUNDA Y ONLY Basemen Sa e
29'1 W ight St ee
Pome'roy
H cfu obed co hes andm sc

GENERAL &lt;;ontractors Do 0
mosonory carpenter &amp; plumb
ing
nstoll and rej)O
dr vewoys Ph .446 9587

34 YEAR OLD mothe of two w I
bobys t any hour n my home
Call.446 4346 1
W Ll BA.BVSIT In my home on RJ 7

Coll256 6089

·y

Untco cool tng un I - complete w th ptpe
ltne m1ikers and compresser Two Ford
Tractors 600 and 641 good cond1t1on good
rubber manure spreader baler 442 All1s
Chalmers (n1ceJ dtsc pull type Tworow
crop plow S1iage chopper and blower one
row corn p1cker P T 0 dr ven seeder hay
rake (old) Farnng Crates chan saw and
few m1sc terns
Not many mtsc so be on ttme
OWNER FRANKHAROLO
Not responstble for acctdents
Terms Cash Checks wtth posthve l 0
Aucltoneer Rtch Gardner
Jacksonvtlle Ohto
"

APPLES FI TZPATRICK 0 cho ds
Phone
S o e Rou e 68q
W lkes.... ll e 669 3785
CUT HEAT NG Cos s Shenandoah
ba s c wood heo er
M ke
Authe zed Deale
Bo gon
Ha sonv I e 742 270.4
F REWOOO $4 0 co rd
del ve ed
and

843 2933

O NE ANTIQUE oak d esse $ 50
3 pc bedoom sue $25
Cedo wa d obe $50 4 d owe
chest d awe
(p ne)
$50
0 esse (p ne) $60 Metal bose
k tchen cob net $35 These a
des a e al n excellent cond
t on ond con be see n o 102
Po k S M ddlepo Oh o on y
f e&lt;:~lly nte es ed
966 CHEVROLET for port s Good
26 3 VB moo $75 992 2747
of erSpm
963 CHEVROLET DUMP Truck
900x20
es amos neww h
a 968 moto In ex:cellen cond
ton
S1200 o
bes
offe

9&lt;9 2 24

976 GRAVELY TRACTOR w th
geo box
oto v cu lt vo o s
30
oto y mowe
sulkey
742 2573

Call

(304)

TWO HORSE TRAILER $600 new
po n ob Co 367 7405

MCCUllOUGH MNl MAC Cho n
Sow $65 (30&lt;1) 773 5975

CLARINET good cond t on
(gl .446 7532

$70

(614) 592 1692

1976 HONDA 750 Supe Spo I Ex
I OS $1 495 f m 992 5240
LARGE VE LVET solo New baby
h:cellen cond on New baby
boss ne e Beaut ful gloss op
coffee table 992 3283
CONN TRUMPET
$75
Buffe
C o ne $350 (304) 773 5 63
1968 THUNDERBIRD
l ke new
975 Con Am 25 M us c I gh
Geese and ducks 742 2376
Reasona ble offe s occep ed

Spl t and
s ocked

197.4 12 x 50 Cameron Mob e
Home furn shed $3600 Sea s
Co dspot chest frae:rer 12 cub c
f $200 10 x b Sears meal COPPERTONE RANGE 20 w de
slo age bu d ng unossemb ed
opt s :re G E Refr ge ato
$275 1976 T umph Bonnev le
G een 14 cu ft (304) 675 5203
750 CC motorcycle $1400
coda chest f ne cond tan ONE
$75 3 speed boys b cycle I ke
,ew $60 Mus sell all tem5
s one
Con ac
S eve
Stebb n$
....J=~==""-~~~-245 5030
AC
FRYERS

YAMAHA HARLEY DAVIDSON &amp;
Con Am Mota cycles Compte e
soles and fan ast c se v ce
Hous MT T96WF 97 So
9 5 The Mo o eye e Peo ple of
Sou keostern Oh o
A hens
Spa t Cycle5 Inc 20 W S m5on
Avenue A hens Oh o Phone

MINI B KE ALMOST
949 2379 ofte 5

new

HAVE a h ghly prof table and
beaut ful Jeon Shop of your
own Feotur ng the Ia es n
teans den ms and po rtsweo
$14 500 ncludes beglnn ng n
vento y f xtu e5 and tro nlng
You may hove your store open
n as I tie as 15 days Co
onyt me for M Jackson (205)

582 •308

FOR SALE
3 Year Old Food Servtce
Bus ness
excellent
locatton
2.0 percent plus
yearly growth est
1917
gross $'5 000 Own your
bustness wtth less than
S40 ooo
Investment
Contact .,_

BUSiness
Opportunity
P D Box 862
Jackson

Ohto 45640

GROW EARTHWORMS for p of
F ee data
WORM WORLD
8 0 S Joseph ne Oen ve
Co o 802 0 or cg M
James

.....:'::o:::l:::"::
"'-'(=30::3:.cl.!..7:.:
7B
:..:.:l0::2:::6'--~~­
ANN DA LEV S Upho s e y
Po tlond OH 843 2542

STARCRAFT FALL SALE
Mn
motor 20 22 t ovel t a le s 8
5 $3 799 25 7 bunk house
$&lt;II 875 fold downs $1700 &amp; up
Tro ler An F eeze $2 99
gallon We sell se v ce &amp; qual
ty Open Sundays Camp Con
ley Storcrof Sole Rt 62 N of
Pont P eosont

NANNY GOATS

Co

256 6582

2300

FIREWOOD to sole Buy now ortd
save Co 367 7672

COAL AND L MESTONE del vored
Coli David Vgughon at 245 5309

o ed leopa d geld ng 5 month
o d Illy Coli24S 9369

GRAPEFRUIT PILL with 0 adax
p on mo e conven ant han
g opef u s
Eo
sot sfy ng
meats and ose we ght Revco
Drug

COMPLfTE HOLSTEIN DISPERSAL
BILL BAR FARM

SOUTHSIDE, W. VA.

On the farm located on Route 3S 1pprox 12 miles
south of Point Pleasant m Muon County W Va

I

REG STEREO POLLED He efo ds
One 1 vea old bu Ex ce en
Club Stee prosper
eody o
wean A so ou herd bu
7
y ~ o d exce ent d spos on
A supe o blood RRS Fa ms
992 5565 0 992 2826

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29
10:30 A.M.
165 HEAD OF HOLSTEINS 165
40 Registered - 125 Grades
85 Cows - 80 Heifers Including 3 due soon after sale

16 bred s nee July lsi

PUBLIC AUCTION
locahon 210 Jefferson St
Chevrolet Garagl!

SAT., OCTOBER 29, 11 A.M.

achmen s L !i.e new ask ng
$2250 Phone (6 14) 698 3290

BRAND NEW golf co t w th se.,en
dubs
most v lou nomenls
bo e v used $85
Cho lene
Hoef ch 992 5292

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29 AT 10 A.M.

FARM AUCTION

CAMPER
$600
A so
ho 5&amp;
o e $.450 Phone (6 4) 69B

3290

FREE CANDY ClASSES
lea n how to mold you own hal
day candy chocolate covered
cherr es etc ot Bet y s (aka
C eotlons n Rodney Oh o Call
Betty Corpente 245 5363 fo
enro lmen and nfo mat on
Candy $ 20 o lb

HARLEY EBLIN • OWNER

COFFEE
TA BlE S
2
UPHOLSTERED ROCKERS 1 P NE
HUTCH &amp; BUFFET LIKE BRAND
NEW
R CE S FURN 857SE
COND 446 9523

THREE

f you ore a non smoke

TWO BEDROOM 1964 Mob e
Home w h ex ens on $1600
975
Su1uk
380
$900
985 4268 ofte b
972 VINDALE 4 I( 70 w h 2
k l chen
pu lou s cen a o
opp onces w h d sh washe
unde p nn ng excellen cond
t on One owner 992 3439

CALL EVENINGS 992-5947

2 LtV NG
COUCH 2

RAY HAWK INS AGENCY

GRAIN FED FREEZER BEEF Ph
446 07/IJ

FIREWOOD $25
oad
367 05B6
1969 PRICE MEYERS mob le home
2 • b5 Also 1973 Commun y F REWOOD PHONE &lt;46 •999
mob le home
2 x 50 Co
APPAlOOSA HORSES I loud co
256 467 ofte 5pm
12 x 64 FLEETWOOD w th expiBn
do Co11245 5175

gos

Ftrewood gas floor furnace house doors
both mstde &amp; outstde smk hot water
heater bath tubs com odes foundalton sand
rocks 9 &amp; 12 week old ptgs

HORSES FOR SALE R d ng horses
wo k ho ses pon es and tack
of all k nds Call367 7533

2

2 x 66 Holly Pork Tro ler w th
expondo woshe and d ye
cl shwasher underp nn ng 12 x
12outbldg Ph 606 638 .&lt;1060
HOUSE FOR lease on ncoln n
Pome oy 5 bed ooms Depos
equ ed 992 3489 after 5 pm

BTU DUO THERM

FOR SALE

•

NEW IDEA I row corn p cker 2 GUN TRADER Wholesale 5hot
she s s ugs et c O ve 200 new
g ov y beds 00 bushe John
and used guns Buy sel t ode
Deere g nder m xe
All
W II t ode guns fo G ave y
moch nary n very good cond
'tEllOWSTONE
truck
1972
T octo s go den
e s molo
1 on Call 2.45 506.4
cgmpe U ft self canto nlitd
cydes
Go Co ts
boots
USED MAYTAG washer Just
malo s e ec c ool mo o s
L ke new con be see at Halley
rebu t
he
cond
Call
Anyl h ng of '10 ue F fe s South
Ashland Service Station $1800
446 2765
3 d St M ddlepo t 992 7.494
or make offer
HAY Coli 245 5496
HOTPOINT WA SHER neve used
Mn
S 19B
Beds de co mmo de ST ARCRAFT FALL Sa e
SUPER GEN E LOWREY ORGAN
TroVe
mo o s 20 and 22
ch ome frame w th po I goad
SBOO Seo s Hum d fier and ~ r
Tro le s 18 5 $3 799 25 7
cond t on
$ 22 50
c eaner $75 Call.446 7508
Bunkhouse S4 875 Fo ld down
304 773 52 16
BROWNS HARDWARE
$ 700 up We sell se v ce and
ELECTR C DOUBLE O'len onge n
V NTON OHIO 388 B179
qug y Open Sundays Camp
good cond I on 94.q 2768
40' OFF REGULAR RETAIL ON
ConeySacoftSoes R 62
ANY me chandlse n stotk un 8 WE EK OLD p gs 949 2857
N of PI P easant
1sold out

BANDS MOBILE HOMES
PT IILEASANT W VA

367 0292
CENTENARY WOODS PET
GROOM NG FACILITIES P o

Mope o
$69 95 At
Fu n tu e
Gall pol s

1967 VW VAN co peted new
po n
good
es
excellent
co nd t on Call (6 .f) 378 6307

FARM FENCE POSTS AL
1973 B oodmo e 14x64 2 b
973 Dar on 11x60 2 br
1972 V c o an .4x67 3 b
baths
972 Covent 'I 12x65 3 b
969 Slo esmon 2x60 2 b

Bemco

hea er 2 pc ear y amer can
I ., ng oom su te Walnut cof
fee and end table s ngle bed
mop e wo nut d n ng oom
tab e Col 446 4757 of e 3pm

PULLETS AND
388 8617

20 N 2nd Ave
Mtddleport Ohto
Phone 992 6370

ORAGONWYND CATTERY KEN

HGLEV S BARBER SHOP OPEN 8
to S ClOSED SUNDAY &amp; MON
DAV GIFTS BOOKS &amp; POTTERY
WE VE MOVED TO A BIGGER

8X8

27B3

Ill 000

Vanety to Choose

ons

Boo d ng ndoo Ou door Runs
G oom ng A B eeds C eon
San to y foe I t es Chesh e Pk

DEAD S ock remo\led No cha ge
Call245 55 .4

b&lt;:~se for

ent Ph 446 0 66

FOR RENT OR LEASE Ove 4 000
bs
tobacco
bose
Robe
Queen Pti .441&gt;-0 68

OR

AND FREEZER UPRIGHT
CHEST Ph 446 0322

RANGES

Washe s and drye s GENE
SKAGGS 1918 Ease n A'le
Ph .4.46 7398

__ _

Co 1379 2157

985 3308

dr" thng

Personnel Department

AKC REG

t

Itt ng (md ma11 re h tUIIJ rg spttms

CO NS CURRENCY tokens old
pocke wa ches gnd cha ns
s '18 ond god We need 1964
ond o lde s lve (o ns Buy se
o
ode Coli Rage Woms ey
7112 233

New o il up op desk &amp; cha r
$150 Be-doom sute $300
$250 Mad te aneon sofa and
ove sea $325 Eo Am sofa B.
cho
$300 Lo'le seat S1 50
mode n sofa cha
ovesea
$275 sofa bed w th ma ch ng
cho $150 RM ne s $ 00 and
up Tabes CoHee oak Hex
agon maple o p ne $60 e&lt;:~ch
Rocker $55 maple o p ne
able 4 cha s $225 Hu ch
$275 7pc Onate$ 09 Spc
D nette $55 00 Bunk beds com
pete$ 150 ekes old awe $40
Queen s :re mattrRs s &amp; bo)( sp
ngs set S 30

Seek ng a career or tented mdlvtdua I w th
ex per ence or educahon tn all phases of ndustnal

Ph &lt;&lt;6&lt;191
RISING STAR KENNEl

West German tounsl..l who
knew had planned to spend
hohdays m France

HomeliteXC
Automatic during
Saw Buck Days.

Jamesway CAREFREE ® stalls are hot d p gal
v tn zed tn s de and ou t for long I fe Nothmg IS
anchored n concrete Attract e des gn s mpl fies

Fares P o
fo sand ng
992 59~5 o
8570

SAlE

ma ttre ss and box

sprng
$llq95
wolnu f n sh beds
Co b n and Snyde
955 Second Avenue
0

..6

BUILDING o bene servce ou
custo me s OUTDOOR EQUIP
MENT SALES G ovely Trocto s
Jet Rt7 &amp; 35 upper R 'ler Rd

I
I "CAREFREE"® STALLS:
I
I
I
I
I
I

--

TIMBER
Pome oy
duel!• Top p ce
sow mbe
Co I
Ken Hanby
44 6

A HIDE A BED 992

Oi enb ngsotny eo

dented by the Hannan famtly
and

CASH pg d fo a molles and
nodels o f mobile homes
Pho e a eo tode 6 4 423 953

FURNITURE

Tw n Sets

The Goody ear T1r e &amp;
Rubber
Company s Pomt Pleasant Plant located at
Apple Grove 1n Mason County ts seekmg
qualtfted applicants for the followtng
po s1t1ons
INDUSTRIAL DRAFTING

N LO~ NGo me no y ol 0 v li e A
C ook s sho passed away 2
yeo s ago Oc abe 22 1975
Sod y m ssed by w l e lou a

Utrew ftrebombs at Ute West

ltfe
ago Hannan mel George
Davtd Stewart 29 and the
two traveled around the
country before hold10g up a
bank m Atlanta Sept 2
Allegations of homosexua hty

NEW

to wh ck you e

always n ou
b hdoy Dod

nstltutions and compames m
Athens where extremists

accounted for followmg an

all m~ht search of the area
descrtbed as mostly Jungle

Pau R

Ho rrs on hsksb kdoy
toM 23
DHp n ou heo s and
ou
I ves s o ~&gt;~ery spac a p ace fo
one loY ng fQ he who we m n

Oak Htll

0 Close to the

L1st ng n part
Upr ght p ana 2 padded c ha s
ch fforobe ron bed camp e te
v ng roo m su t e new
Repo Grandfathe C ock 6 It t a I a r cond t oner
r ed ner end tables 2 smoke stand s ecor d p ay e
G bert mantel cock
TV
se t of Encydoped a
Br tann ca clocks Bu ffalo 22 cal ber revo ver
2
gauge M odel 37 th ca pump gun pocket kn ves 3
square st and tabes w th fan cy leg s p ctures lamps
ccrttage organ pays good w th lot s of c arv ngs 3 p ece
poster bedroom su te sew ng mach ne dresser 2
organ stoo s cedar chest cast ron bank qu Its
refr gerator freezer comb nat on gas ange d nette
se1 18 cu tt che st freezer d eep wei pump &amp; t a nk
bench gr nder lots of hand tool s 7 n power saw 2
lawn mowers garden hose &amp; ree step ladders lots of
books Nat ona c-ash reg ste
ben ch v ce c oncrete
m xe r w th motor ke new con c r e te w r:e wal fuel o
furnace wr nger type washer 2 large f oor fans ots of
shelv ng &amp; d sp la y
acks
automat c d yer
com mere a l Hoba rt m ea t sl ce r Toledo c oun er sea es
It gas c rculat on
2 commercia m ea case:; 0 It &amp;
hea t er 2 ce cream bo xes arge pop ca se 1967 Ford
runs good
969 Chev r ol et p ckup uck
t on and lots
of sm a ll &amp; m sc tern s

OWNER ESTATE OF SIMON MYERS
AOM WILLIAM MYERS
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
K C' nne th Swatn
Gall pol s Ohto

AUC~ONEERS

Lunch W I Be Served

Daryle Alban
Oh1o

oak Htll

Cootlnuous testing program for 25 years

DHI average ll 385 3 9 516
The herd has averaged from 3 8 pd lo 40 pd for the
pasl tO years
Cows sell ng wllh Individual records lo 23 190M ano
955F
Many sel ng over 15 OOOM and 600f
This s a home bred herd - all the heifers and the
major ty of the cows have been raised on the farm The
herd has been art flctally bred for years to Sire Power
bu sand sel lng are 10 Elevat ons 18 Je1 Streams U
f ransm tters 9 Merry Kings 8 Charms 6 Luckys 12
Charmcross 4 Fury I vans and many others by good
S re Power bu Us
A number of cows w th over 100 OOOM sell a ong with

lhe r offspring The grades are ldenlllled as to the sl res

ana

and dams a number are recently fresh
many are
due to freshen shortly after the sale The herd has been
r g dly culled for a number of years The cows show
lois of eta ry character and have very desirable udders
The he fers are well grown by top s res and from the
best cows ln the herd
An e Kc ellent place to purchase quallty Ho steins reg stered or gr.ade - cows or heifers The owners
have been n the dairy business for years have always
used the best breed ng ava1lable and have Pstabllshed

a

fine herd
Tested for

\nterstale shipment -

Pregnancy

checked
Ttrms Cash Sate in a tent

C1t1logs an request

Nol ResponSible for Ae&lt;ltlenls
W A &amp; SIDNEY BARKER
A DOTY REMSBURG
Box 166A
Sa le Mgr &amp; Aud oneer
SouthStdt W Vo
NORMAND Htll Assoctote
304-475 4506
Jerrerson ~ryland
3011 473 8214
304-47t 2m
G C l ...le) Sommer
Local Representlllve
Soulltslde W Vo
304 675 1013

•

�•
lH - Tht&gt; Sund,1:. fHnt&gt;s ....~t.'llltm•l, SumJa,:., tkt 23, t!l; ;

D-5- The Sunday Ttmes.SCnti11el, Su11day. Oct. 23, 1977

For Best .Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Ht&gt;ul J.: .. tutt&gt;

(ur ~ulto

Real E.ta!e- fm Sale

~tale

--- ------ Real~IIF-Sale _- ~--

llf•al t:•lat .. iur Sate _

rorsru..

R~ul l!:slalt' for Sale

flea! ,!,;•tale (or Sail!
ECONOMY

l

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
REALTOR

Branch

LET~ s MAKE A DEAL - SPII, trade or
land contract You need a house and lh1s
may be It EJt cellent tocatlon south of tm... n
ovac.Laok 1ng t he nver Dandy J bedroom
w 1th fam i ly room and kitchen
F ull
basement modern hear system 11 _· _ac
plus good-~!orage bull dtn g and an old barn
ttd~-al for the k1ds pony )

.....
WILL TRADE FOR FARM OR SMALLER

CALL 446-3643

HOME - Attrac11ve 4 bedroom ranch wit h
fu ll basemen t. Fin tshed family room
( mcludes bu il t in bar ). 2 baths, su ndeck
overtook tng the nver and 6 _ac of woods
0\.vner will trade for fa r m or other
proper l y .
•

LO AN- Aq uaJtfted buyer can assume t he
P.,rese~ t F .H A loan Ex tra ntce bi level
featunng a huge f ln1shed fam1 l y and rec
roo m 4 bedrooms bu il t m k1tchen , 2 baths
and 2 car garage Owner work tn g ou t of
town W1ll accep t ftrst reasonable offer .

BEST BUY ON THE MARKET - You can
buy thts 3 year old home toda y for several
thousand dollars Jess than tf can be bud t
for
4 bedrooms tncludlng a master
bedroom th a t •s absolute ly out of thts
world . Forma l enfrance and d1n1ng.
superb k itchen . very attracti ve family
room wtth w b frrep lace, sundeck and
ga rden 1n rear Fvll basement wtth f 1n tsh
rec room plus 2 car garage and the use of
a commun 1ty sw tmmtng pool If y ou ' re
took1n g for a spec1al home th 1s on e must be
seen

NEW LISTING IN VINTON · Loca ted ad1ace111 toRr
160, tn Vtn ton 2 or 3 bedroom vt llage wa fer , lot sne
-H'x127' Buy no w tor $16.000 00

O'D
1
1\..

NEW LISTING -

New L1sl!ng Pictu re yourself owmng this
tmm aculate and beauttfully decorated J
bedroom frame home Features a ve ry
spactous eat ,, k1 tc hen and most
attra ctive l tvtng room
Superb taste
describes t he carpet select1on throughout
th 1s f1 ne home An excel lent neighbor hood
for you and t he kids

HOME &amp; 1', ACR E S -

BUY
YOUR
BUILDIN G LO TS
BEFORE SPRING BRINGS IN FLATION .

o.st 150,000
2N D AVE N UE~ 2 BLOCKS FR OM CITY

HOM E

IN

i

MEIG S CO UNTY PROPERTY
IN MIDDL E PORT - A large 2 story
frame resftng on a large lot Forma l
d ining, n•ce k tlchen and baseme nt
Carpet throughout 1 ca r garage

530,000,
8 ACRE S - Front age onf Rt 124 A
good bu1ld 1ng comple te ly f urn tsh ed
Has 2 mobile home sttes w1 t h sept1t
tan&lt; . 120.000

HOME AND 11 AC RES -

on 325 near Rto Grande , J acre wooded
lots (some w tth lake fronta geJ only 4
mdes from town , J or 4 acre s1tes m R 10
Grande , J• acre in Centenary
(2) Acreage close town - 65 acres of
beauttfut h1 lls and valleys Exce llent
locatton : wooded sttes overloo~mg the
rtver l mile from town A very prlvate
locat1on atop a htgh hill

THE

CO UN TRY - noo sq tt of gra c•ou s l tv •11g
tn thts sp acious 3 bedroo m bnck ranch
locared tn ru ral Gall ta County , Th•s ftn~
home features formal entrance and din 1ng,
2 baths . beaut tful kt t chen an d breakfast
area ' Huge famt l y room w1th w b
f1rep lace Inc ludes J beautiful acres - all
pn ced at $69 ,900 Extra land available .

HERE ' S THE ONE YOU ' VE B~EN
LOOK lNG FOR - An attract 1ve-11 1 yr old
3 bedroom sp l1f levej 8 m 1 fr om t own Has
a fami ly room downstatrs, la rge l1vmg
room , 2 baths , and a very peaceful loca tion
on fhts acre lot surrounded by woods
S35,000 Extra land available
LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME - Let us
show you t hts brand new 3 bedr oom br ick
and frame ranch . This home has a very
attrac t1ve k1tchen. 2 ba ths and a beautiful
ftreplace 6" tnsulation tn the walls and
floors, 12" overl1ead makes th1s home an
energy saver Located of f Rt 7 near Clay
Grade School S4 1·.900
;

a 2 story

SOUT RN HILLS
REAL ESTATE
446-6610
THI S IS OUR FIRST NEW
OME

FOR
TH E
MARKET
One story, 7 r m, 3 b .r , 11~

If you ar e looki ng for- a farm let us show·
yo u th 1s dandy 18 acres f1llable balance in
a fenced pas t u r e and woodland
Compltmen ted by an attract1ve 2 story 4
bedroom 11ome Beauflful kitchen (wt th
range, r'efngerator &amp; oven) Centr al oil
heat, 2 car garage and large barn

delightful 3 bedroom frame home w1fh two
types of heaf (central gas fur nace and a
wood burn tng furance) to save on fuel .
This home 1nctudes a large edt in kttchen ,
d1 v1 ded basement w1th rec room and
ca rpe t throughout Resttng on a 1 acre lot

NEW LISTING -

on Rt 588 . 133. 900

VI NTON - A lar_ge Jl2 stor y frame home
wt th 4 bedrooms Has a n a Hract 1ve ea t 1n
k1 t chen, l1v ing room .. baths, and util ity
r oom Forced a1 r od f urnace &lt;~0 ' fron ta ge
on Ja ckson St Cal l Dan Evans at 388-8111
for more infor ma t iOn . S18,500

RE.Al

A

home fo r t he young coup le getting started
or for any economy minded fam1ty A 1' ~
story 4 bedr oom 11ome wtfh large livmg
room , family or dintng room , and n1ce
kttchen Easy to heat $26,500

Garage a nd wor kshop,
good cattle barn, room ro
hang and cu r e tobacco Ap prox. 20 acres tillable, 20
acres pa~ture , six acres
timber, some fruit trees,
n1 ce stwby
patch, all
rounded out with a scen 1c
pond for wa fer and r ecrea
tton. Th ts one ts pnced to
se ll Please ca ll and lets get
acquatnted .

2. · Trainrng
3. Service
4. Onlv
Sentor
Ap_praisal
Se rvice
in SE
Ohio

NEAR lEC T A - 101 acr e
farm w•l h 45 A t il lable, 5
rm house , 3 ba r ns, seve r al'
otne r outbuildings, cellar
house, spnng wa ter &amp; a
3500 lb , fob base . $50,000

VACANT
ROONE Y

LAND

NEAR

~
Approx 55
1~\fe l
&amp; ro l lt ng

acr es of
fa r m land w1 t h pond. tob
base , barn &amp; co wa ter
Th iS prop er t y front s on 2
rc;l s tn a very destrab le
location Lot s of potential
for sss.oon
N EA R T YC OON lA KE 38 5 acre farm Is level &amp;
rol li ng land with about 15
acres ti llable &amp; tile ba1ance
m woods l 11 story home
ha s bee n ntcely remod eled
&amp; offers .t BR 's , n1ce k 1f
chen w1th stove &amp; ref r lg ,
otl furnace &amp; w w ca r pe t

H ERE ISA

-

;;,;;
-;.;;;
-~~

=-:..:

- -

- - - - - - .-:.-.-.. -

514 2nd Ave.
LOTS OF LOTS -

Loca ted

on Gr aham Sc hoo l Rd,

Linco ln Pdo:.e &amp; Georges
Cr eek. Rd Mob il e homes
welco m e

BE YOUR OWN BOSS W1th
t ht s
we ll
es t abl iS hed
gro ce r y bu s1ness Per fect
for a f am tl y oper ati on
L 1111 ng Qu arter s ar e ' at
ta che d Call for detail s

VA LU E

24 acre farm 1s
mqstly llllable &amp; teatures a
very ntce 2 story home wtlh
8 1-ms
&amp;
bath
The
downstatrs is brand new
Also •nc lude d are a 50x60
barn , silo &amp; 3 sm all
bU1IdtnQS ThiS property IS
located J• mi. nor th of
HMC on Route 160
A PPEAL -

BE AUTY IN THE WOOD !
- Qu al i f Y bu il t r anc h styl~
home 1S sit uated on 17
acres of p1nes ove r looktng
U S 35 approx . 4 m1 . west
Of Rio Gr ande T h is low
m a1n t ena nce
home Is
cove r ed wlt h b rt ck &amp;
alu m mum &amp; fe a tu r es 3
B R's, large L R W1lh stone
11r eplaGe. n1ce k 1tchen &amp;
dining area , 2 ga r ages &amp; a
cel lar house. First time on
the market SSO's
SWIMMI NG POOL
l'ot:W
B1 level nea r town ofl ers
tots of goo d liv1n g for some
lucky fa m il y Br 1c k and
f rame beauty features 3
BR 's, 2 bath s, c om~Jiete
k 1tchen with ~diShwa sher,
range &amp; re t rig ., 20)(24
fam il y rm . 2 car garage
an_d large lot near town ,

OVERLOOKING

RIVER

- Nice 2 BR cottage ts
locat ed on Route 7, 4 ml
sou th of tow11 on 97 acre
Dri ve bX t his one &amp; you' l l
adm tt its barga in pr iced at
$. 151500 .

B E EF
CATTLE
COUN l'RY 1&lt;2 a cres
clean hlll past ure, good
fences, 2 ba rn s, old house,
fo b ba se , l ots of rd .
fro nta ge Wa ln u t Tw p.,

$45,000.
RUSTIC
RAN CH
QUALIT Y BUilT - 3 BR
beau ty 1S less than 1 yr old
and features natu r al wood
s1d1ng , full basement W1th
poured concrete walls ,
dou b le garage, k1 t chen
with Cornmg co ok top , self
cleanmg oven, d1sp and
dishwasher
Owners
leaving area Prt ce d to sell.

-

SELL - TRADE

We are p leased to offer th i S good farm '" sta rt 1ng
our business of service to you Some 100 acres' " a lt.
we es t1mate 30 ac r es ti l lable, some ntce level f ields
along cr eek, som e up on hd ls, 1500 lbs. tobacco base.
some 50 acres pa st ure land, the rest 1s Qood f1m ber,
su1 t able f or hunting or woodlo t. Six r oom f r am e
house, modern in all ways, basemen t. r u ra l w ater
system, farm
and ot her buildi n gs-Good'
Ne1g)1borhood C ~ l N OW !
1

'

Spect&lt;lltz1ng in FHA and VA
Home loons Also Refm oncmg
463 2nd A\le loco led 2nd f loor
Gall 1n"l1 1'1 11 • 7 17?

PAY LOW MEIGS COUNTY TAXES 35 ACRE FARM , modern nome
and sttll dnve to power plants
and mtnes 1 3 bdr 2 1h both All
appl1once&amp; and niuch more,
Asking SSS,OOO Co ll 992-2492.

Iorge bOrn , tobacco bose 28
acres Mla ble, near Wa terlOo.
Would trade for house w1tl1
smaller acreage. Call ~3 -24j7

(l4 xtS-t4 X11 ·11K IO)

2 full

bathroom s, LR 2h.14, compl ete k it chen with
appliances and tots of c ab tnel s. uti li t y room in cluding a
centra l va cuum syst em You will also hke the
oversi zed 2 car garage w1th auto door opener . Thi s
spac1ous home is situ at ed on 1.84 a cr es and ts loca ted
Onl y 2 miles f rom Gallipolis Call now for an appointment
I

JUST LISTED -

Newe r

ranch type home in M id
d l eport ,
3
bedrooms,
ca rpet ing, paneling, rea lly
nrce $18,500 00.

JUST LI STED -

Bea utr ful

hom e site or s1tes. 5 rn il es
from St . Rt 7 on a paved
r oa d , abou t 10 acres.

It you

IN

A 3

BEDROOM

HOME

Solid brick ranch with tots of e xtras This fine home
has perhaps the preHiest k1tchen 1n the area , and the
lucky buyer gets all of the appliances . You wtll also
en lOY the delightful bnck fireplace located in the livmg
room. Thi s lovely home 1s located on Lincoln Pike Rd .
at the edg e of Centenar y . Call now, there are lots of
features I would like to tell you

ca ll , COME IN FOR INF O
PRICE REDUCED - 6
Pomeroy . ONL Y 112,000 00
RANCH - 12 y rs . old, 3
bdrm s., dtn ing rm, living
rm ., carpet mg and r eall y

4 BR. HOUSE on one acre lo t in
Bidwell Ph 368-87.46 _
NEW 3 BDR. HOME. Full b&lt;J semen t, garage, n ib~ lot, on
Geo rges Creek Rd
Co lt
.t-46 l.t1 26 after 4pm .
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 bat hs ,
oil ele( ., I acre, M1 dd lepor t
dose to Rutland Pfo.one 992-

Good
Business
Bldg ,
located at 60S w. Main St.,
Pomeroy , Ohio . Presently
occupied by a going
business Bldg. has deluxe
apartment
overhead
bringing In good Income
Pnced on inspection only .
can be seen any time from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m . Inquire at
605 W Mai n St., Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45149 .

--

JBEDROOMS

the great outdoors, you will love our listing

ELrreka . There are nearly 30 acres ol h1ll land to
roam . From the highest point you can see several
m1les of the beautiful Ohio R1ver. As if that ' s not
enough , f feel sure you Will enjoy the comfort of an
older home that has been updated w1th a new kitchen,
bath, plush carpet and much more . See this one soon .
Owner w1ll help qualified buyer finance

.

'

• ntnll
,,
~

2 YR . OLD RANCH has lots
to offer fo r only $32.900.
Features ar e 3 BR 's, large
LR &amp; fam1ly rm .• k1tchen
wtth stov e, r efng ., dishwasher &amp; breakfast bar,
laundr y rm .• cent. a1r &amp;
swimmmg
pool.
Thi S
beauty IS located m B1dwell
&amp; would pro bably go FHA

or VA . STROUT REALTY ,
446-0008,

t

TEAFORD[B

~ ,N&gt;,
'

REAl! OR

o)"

Get seHied m thts very comfortable
BR home
before winter sets in. You wtll be heafmg with natural
ga s for about S40.000 per month (budget) This home
also has a full basement with fin i shed family room .
Priced to sell at S.2S,900.

VIRGIL B, TEAFORD, SR .
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
· Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

BUILDING LOT - Almos t
one acr e m t own wtl h wa ter
and eledn c ava ilable .

WE ARE PRESENTLY RUNNING VERY LOW ON LIST INGS DUE TO EXCELLENT SALES . ..JL YOU PLAN TO SELL WHY NOT GIVE US A CALL. WE NEED HOMES IN THE PRICE RANGE OF
$35,000 T0$65,000. ALSO FARMS OF ALL SIZES. THANK YOU FOR LIST,ING WITH US.

SECLUDED -

WE THANK YOU FOR LISTING WITH US

PHONE 446-0552 ANYTIME
428 2nd AVE.

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

A lme 3

bedroo m mod ern ho m e
w i t h f ull basem ent, garage.
la r ge fam tly room tha t has
a ston e f ir eplace, bu tit in
books hel ves , s lidi ng g lass
door s l ea ding t o th e
sw imming pool
L an d ,
scaped tot with Norway
Spr uce,
f l oWer s
a nd
shru bber y

LARGE

HOME

Beaut1fu l v1ew on t he Oh10
,River r 1ght from yo u r
liVI ng room L 1k e to boat.
f1sh S. re l ax each evenmg
on your ow n R tve rf ro nt ? 6
r ooms r emode led home,
n1 ce modern k1tchen, F . &amp;
B porches , nat gas f orced
atr furnace, all roo ms are
n1c ely ca r pe t ed Your own
wa ter system Wh 1te a lum
ou tstde cove r ing , 2 larQe
n1ce l y shaded lots wd h 3
che r ry trees &amp; one peac h A
ve r y economical pla ce to
l iVE'
12 acres and ho r.1e
near no grande
Be the ftrst to see t h1S we ll
kept ho m e, features 3 B R ,
2 ba ths, la r ge llvmg r oom .
modern kitc hen wt th bu•ll ·
In ca bine ts, stove &amp; r efng
&amp; ta m 1l y room . Tota.l
electnc Stng l e car garage,
work shop , storage room &amp;
othe r buildings - too l shed ,
cella r house &amp; ch 1cken
hOuse 12 A ot clear ed
r oll tn g la nd wtth stocked
farm pond, tru tt tr ees ,
grape v mes &amp; la r ge pme
t r ee5 Some ta r m equ 1p
ment &amp; a t r a il er space also
go wi t h t he rea l es t ate
FO R
A
GOO D
IN
VESTMENT PRO P E RT Y
CALL US NOW!
7 ROOM HOME

Phone.,92-3325

WE NEED LISTINGS

AND MINI FARM
Over 3 Acres of good fa tr ly
levella nd Good fenc1ng on
three Stdes
226 2
ft
f r ontage of blacktop road
Wi th a two story r ed barn
app rox size 30'K33' with a
Al l m mera l
meta l root
r 1ghts goes . Nice 7 r oom
fr ame home wt f h ba th
Some ca r peting . City wa ter
sys tem . PR I CED T O SEL L

NOW -

O NL Y S17,900,00

Th is rs a very modern attracti ve bnck.
hom e loca ted only a short d tslan ce I rom
c1ty school s. 3 SR , ba th , shower, very ntce
kit chen, lo ts of cabmels &amp; a lm ost all
appltances posstbl e tn cl uded Basement.
nat . gas FA . furn , cent ral air. very nice
carpet Many more tnvttlng fea t ures
incl ud 1ng new carport &amp; cha1n lin k fence
Thts hom e is In top cond11ion SELLING

REASONAB LE .

BRIC K HOM E
Th iS Is a nt ce home on 2nd
Ave ' 1n GallipOliS
4
bedrooms , basement , 2
wood burn tng
f1r ep la ces.
nat gas F A. furna ce Th1s
home could be used as a
two apt rental bu1td.ng .
Close to bu stness sectton
Look lh1S ov:er
12

AC R ES - B A R N ~

MO BIL E HO ME
1987 lbs
toba cco base,
approx 1 acres til lab le , 5
acres t 1mber, Clay Twp ,
, Ga lli PO l iS C1IY School D1 st
K1rkwood, 2 bedroom hom e
has 1ts own water sys t em ,
1,000 ga l se plic tank All
mtneral rtght s goes 1' 1
miles off Sta le Htghw ay 7
Ca ll for mote detatl s
4ACRE S MOR E

OWNER SAYS SELL
NOW ,. PRICE REDUCED
Be the l~r st to see lh1 s
OLDIE
but a GOODIE
Th1S home was bu1ll 1n the
tale 1800's , but &lt;S m l1p lo p
shape It tea tur es a for ma l
dmmg room w1th a wood
bur ning lire p tace , very
mode r n
k 1l c h en
w 1t h
bu1llin cabs , and eat area,
ntcc l arge I1V1ng room , 2
baths . for mal ent r y I rom a
,larg e f ront
por ch,
4
bedroom s, 2 bedrooms
have buill m dfsks Jh 1s
home has new wtnng and
nat gas forced &lt;u r fu r na ce
and humtdltter
2 ~erge
patiOS and (j bUIIt ·ln Side
porcH- and surro unded by
'seve ral large shade trees ,
also has a garage 1\'11
med 1ale possess1on
Call
now for appl

OR LESS

Wooded Lot Some pme
trees App r ox . 1 m 1le from
Centena r y on Herman
Northup Rd PICK YOUR
OWN BLDG SITE
WOOD -BU RNIN G
FIR E P LACE
Beau llf ul 7 room home
loca ted 1n a much des,re.;
loca tiOn in Mtddlepor t All
c1 ty conven1ences Th e best
gra de a lum S1d1ng, nice
shaded
f ron t
por c h ,
modern kit chen nat ~as
force d a1 r fur nace wi t h
centra l at r , garage, lots of
shrubbery, level green
grassy lot A lso a rental 3
room house on teh r ear of
th1 s beau t ifu l lot brmgmg
1n a nrce montll ly mc&lt;:lm e
Th1 s- proper ty IS pr iced
r 1oht , cal l now
6ROOM
REMODELED HOME
2 or more bedrooms , a lu~
s 1d 1ng, lots of built m
cabine ts, city '".'ater , one
car ga r age , niC e shady
f ron t porc h Ba t h wdh
shower Par t ta l basement
wi th c~ ll a r Shtng le roof ,
Lar ge lot A REAL BUY
F O R TH E MO N EY
H E RE I S A GOOD

lOACRES

WOODED AREA
vaca nt land - al l m11;era1
rig h ts g(1t-s A good pla ce to
retr eat Hunt or lust be bY
you r se lf ONLY !114 ,90000
L AND CONTRACT

6 r oom s, 2 story , wood
burn1ng f 1rep1 ace, c it y
water on a larg e lot 11'1
V tnton
S'? , OOQ
down
payment and $1 33 31 pe1
month Just l1 ke r ent Ca ll
tor mor e tnfor mal!On
S PRIN G VALLEY

SUBDI V I SION
Va cant tot s - n1ce stze
building lots wlfh ~I I
uhl1hes th ere
Lot s1ze
101 8' by 17 1 2' Beller get
ll)m nOw
CITY PROPERT Y

NICE COTTAGE

5 room s, '1 or 3 hcdr6om s.

b&lt;~lh , part 1a l basement,
na t qas F A, fu rna ce, onu
floor pla n Close to Super'
Mark et ,
Dr ug
St or e ,
Lun dr v. wclktnq dJsta nce
of Downto wn Stores Good
bac kyard qar dt&gt;n space
Ca ll now , 11 you want 1n
Ga lltpO IIS , Pr1 ce d ONLY

$23 ,900 00

BU Y

6 Room s, J B R appt'O)(, 111
m1
f ro m
Ga l l1p OI1 S
Elect n c FA tu r nace with
ce ntra l air . modern k tl chen, Ga ll tpOIIS C1ty Schoo l
D1s t
Fu l ly
carpe ted,
GalltpO I IS Ctty Wa ter ,
sewage syst em
M€1al
outstde door s &amp; tner mopane windows Small
children goes to Green
Schoo l Nice level l and
scaped lot AL L OF TH IS
FOR DNL Y $30,000,

ONLY $7~.000
Nt ce 3 bedrooms ,
11vmg room , modern P
kllchen
w ilh
bU 1
cab1ne ts Full basen 1Pnl,
almost new qas for ced a1 r
turn ace &amp; hoi wn l er he at er
Loca ted w1th m t he c1ty
llm,ts Looltmg tor a n tc('
cl ea n t10me , c l oo;e to
sh opptng Mea A BUY ,
CALL NOW ,

5

bedroom hom e wdh a f u ll
base ment tn a good q u iet
ne ighbor-hood Nat ural gas
centr al hea t tng , ct t y water
and lar ge tot Buy th is one
furn ished or u nfurnished .

STROUT

NEW RAN CH, three bedroom ,
carpeted, ftreploce, carport
Tuppers Plams (bl.t ) btl7 -3327
NEW ONE year old'bi lev11l home
3 bedroom 1 '/, both , garo9e,
rec reation room . 1 1 acres .
Eagl e Rtdge 949·2745.

No. 21' - New 3 bedroom
ran ch type hom e. fully
ca rp et ed ,
singl e
ca r
garage 100x400 lot Pri ce

$26,500 .

rto .

200
Bus1 n ess
buildi ng. located on 1h acre
pa r t 1cal. str eet on three
si des. ba th ; ca rpe t in g.
paneling r gas heat, C't fy
wa ter, attached garage,
has addit ional hook -up f or
trailer , 12x60 mobile home
to be sold sepci ra te. Pnce
s 3o, OOO.
Imm e di a t e
possession
w e need listings of all
kind s. Farms, vacant land
and residential property .
Call us to see 11 we have·
som elh ing .rou m1ght need .

NICE ONE acre butlding st tEts ,
port ly-wooded, near Me1gs
High School 992-5523
2 YR . OLD RANCH has tots to offer tor only 532,900.
Features are 3 SA' s, large LR &amp; family rm ., kitchen
w tth stove, refrig , dishwasher &amp; breakfast bar,
laundry rm ., cent air &amp; swimming pool. This beauty is
located 1n Bidwell &amp; would probably go FHA or VA • .

STROUT REALTY, 446-0008.

AUCTION SALE , _every l ues ond
Frl at 7 pm New ond used
merchandise at Oh10 R1 ver A uC:
!ton, Metgs Plozo , M1ddleport
Oh1o .• Home Phone [304)

After Hour s ta It

992-7133
CONTACT:

'I

Lots Pauley
Branch Manager

MINI FARM - 14 acres
rolling land, completely
remodeled 11!2 story home,
log barn, &amp; pond located on
Ha on a n Trace Rd . in

Hamson Twp, STROUT
REALTY , 446-0008.

HOUSE FOR Sale at 1651 Lincoln
Hts Cbll 992•7..,.71, before 3 pm .
and after 5 call 992·3376.
COUNTRY HOME 12 x 64 Mob1le
Home Three bedroom . 1 baJh.
I 1/ 10 acres For more informatton , call 742 2376.

NEW MODERN all electnc three
bedroom home Bu 11t-1n kif·
chen Basement. Lorge lol
Gra\le l Htl l , M1 dd leport
9'12 5 t 88 or 9'12 9'175

THREE ACRES on CR 4 I ' I~ m1 out
of De)( fer $2 200. 982 4123.

___ -- --

MODERN 3 bdr . ranch for lease
Rodney orea. A-..atloble Oct.
15 $225 per month, plus security deposit Wr1t e Box 808, c-o
Gallipolis Doil y rr~ b une ,-" 625
Thi rd Ave , Golli pohs , 0 ~~ -

--

ANY' PERSON who hos onythmg to _,___
gtve owoy ond does not offer or
attem pt to oHer any other lhing ,-- -- -'-- - - - - - - . ,
for sole moy place an ad m this
FOR SAL~
column There w11l be no
BEAUTY SALON
chorge to the ad-..ert.ser
E x cellent
downto w n
PUPP Y, ott black , Very cute
l o cat1on ,
e stabli s he d
Needs att enllon. Coll245-5062.
bustness, good equtpmen t .
STROUT REALTY
SMAll DOG loves children Hos
446-0008
hod all shots, Ca ll 388-8498
~er 6p rn

Large

ea t -in k itchen , ut tl lty roo m ,
J ni ce size bedrooms , bath
w 1th shower a nd attached
garage on n ice lot nea r

Rutland $30, 200 for F HA
a nd VA
RT . 33 ATHENS CO . -

~

'

OPENING SOON

Sp t tf lev~! 3 bedroom home
w ith b at h a nd ce nt ra l
hea tmg. Eq u ipped k1t che11
w it h L -shaped bar and
ga ra ge. Has its own water
su pp ly Ji-&lt;~ acr e fo r tu st

$2 1,500
RACINE AREA -

Nice 3

bed room f r am e home w1 th
large livmg , step saver
k tf c he n, fam1ly r oom ,
carport and large lot

A REALTOR CAN WEED
OUT A BUYER ·FROM A
TALKER . LIST WITH US,
AND DON ' T BE MISLED.
Helen L . Teaford

G. Bruce Teaford

REDUCED THREE bedroom , 2 '!1
both spl1t -foyer ot Fi v11 Po1nts
$42 500 992-2492
CommNCial property appro)C 17
ocres level land located ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Rou te
7 Phone (614 ) 667 6304

-

~

-

-

VA FHA , 30 yr f monctng Ireland
Morlgoge. 77 E Stole, A then !.
phone {614) 592 3051
2

BAIRD &amp; FULLER REALTY
1218 EASTERN AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house , FA . fltrnoce storm wm
dow s ftreplace m M1ddlepor1
Phone 992 3457

we

buy land . homes a

Ta lk to u ~ 1f
wan t to se ll
Call us tor compl ete
estate int ormall o n a
des&lt;:r10 110ns .
WE
HAVE
OTHER
LIS TIN GS &amp; PI C TUR E
OF A l l OUR LI STI NG
IN T HE OFFI CE COM
I N &amp; lET US H ELP WIT
YOUR REAL ESTAT
farm ~

446-7013

Associates

TWO A ND one ha lf acre lot w1th 2
buddmgs well wo ler Al l set
up tor total electriC tro 1l er
locoted tn l angsville . Oh1o ,

742 2965

773-547 1

804 W. Main
992-2298
Pomeroy

COUNTRY farm land w1 th ~
ed woods water and good oc
cess 1n Monroe County W Vo
$1 000 down, coU (JO.t) 77'1 HOMESITES for sale, 1 ocre and
up. Middleport, n- ar Ru tlctnd.
3102o• (~4\2?2·3227
Call 992-748 1
\

RIVERFRONT HOME

992-2259, 992-619 1
992- 2568

Now i s the t ime to select your but tdmg lot. We are
offenng a one acre lot (139 x 314 1 w1th rural water
nearby , Thts 'tot is nearly flat and is located onlv si x
miles from Gallipolis. Owner prefers nol to ha ve
mobile homes. If you have a good work r ecor-d easy
fman cmg can be arranged.

Chillicot he Road for on l y $6,900 OO? We have just ltsted
a J bedr oom home Wi th lt vt ng , d ining , k tt chen and on e
bedroom on f ~rst floor. 2 bedroom s and bath upsta 1r s
Use for low cos t home, or i"ental

IF YCU' R'E PLANNIN G,
T'Q S ELL. C ALL U S. W E IF Y OU DON ' 'T S E~ THE·
H AVE
A
LI ST
OF PRO PE RT Y YOU WANT
PR OS.PEC TI VE BUY E RS IN THI S AD , C A LL. ' WE
A ND WE ' R E
A N X IOU ~ MAY B E AB LE TO FINt
TO SE RV E Y OU
IT F OR Y OU .

14 ACRE S

6 ROOM HOUSE
5 ~des f rom Ga llipo l ts
N ice 3 B.R home, 2 bath s
!'1 1ce moder n kitchen with
electric range &amp; re f ,
garbage dtsposa l
Rur al
water system . N1ce settmg
- M use nestled 1n cleared
area m woods Must see
thi s home on the inside .

ro om
frame ,
bat h ,
wor ks hop , 4 l ot s
In

good l oca t ro~ . 126,600 00 .
OVER SO PROPERTIES
TO CHOOSE FROM LET
OUR PHOTO LISTING
SERVICE HELP YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
HANK, KATHY &amp;
LEONA
ASSOCIATES

New listmg - 5.80 acres located on Rt . 588 ju st 2111:
mil es froi'n ~ Galhpoh s , This land ha s a hvabl~ house
plus several building tot s. look tor our s1gn, g1ve us a
ca 11 . 1 wtll be happy to show you th1 s property .

on

WE NEED LISTINGS , IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SELLING GIVE US A CALL .... LET US HELP YOU!

IN GAL LI I;l'O LI S
One of the a !tractive older
two s1ory
hom cs
1n
Gal l ipoliS , 7 rooms, 4 B R ,
21 1 ba lhS, bulltm k1 t, F A
nat gas furnace , n1ce large
f ront porch , screened in
back porc h . niCe lot w1 l h 4
car garage 1n back , close to
chu r ch and busmess sect
downtown Tilts property Is
in good conditiOn &amp; pr1ced
to se ll

basement. a pp r ox
15
acr es, ba rn , fencmg Don ' t

A NEW HOME INTERESTED

NI C E CO L ONI A L HOME

W B.F.P., 3 lldr ms , fu ll

Take a look at this one,. l am SU re y ou Will lik e what you
se .'. New pamt, very mce carpet, Thermo pane
windows, and it 's well in sulated. For conveni ence and
l!conomv this owner has recentl y tn stalled a heatpump, this provides summer cooftng and winter
heatmg . Call for an appomtmenf today , Mid nos .

TOP QUALITY, 3 BEDROOM HOME : Eleva ted

Westbrook Subdtvtslon located on
Bulavt lle- Porter Rd .. approx J11:2 miles
from Galltpolts Beauti ful J BR modern
ranch st yle homew1 lh large fam ily room &amp;
a ftreplace Thts home looks like new. Ntce
landscaped yard w1 th shrubbery , 7 room s
plus bath &amp; shower Ntce carpeting, n~t
gas forced air furnace w1 t h centra l atr,
c 1t y wa t er &amp; ..,sewage. Thermopane
wtndows T hts I S a nice home close t o
Gal l tpolis &amp; priced at a low, low pr1ce

2 story

frame business bl dg .,
convert the ups t a~rs mto an
apartmen t, open a busmess
in the down. Thts locahon
has a lways been a money
ma k er $11 ,200 00

JUST LISTED -

LISTING
8 ROOM HOUSE IN CITY

NE W ON THE MARK ET

wa n t a r ea l ly a l l ur~ng
hom e t hat pr ovides every
imag tn ab le confen1ence and if you ca n affort 1t 1 We
have one ava1 tab le
It
fea tures , 2 ba th s, 2 dtning
areas, larg e k1 t , fam tly
rm. , l 1ving r m , wt t h

Wmter 's coming an9 1f you prefe r natural gas heat ,
check thi s one out right now. Last year ' s budget was
only $28.00 per month . You will hke the lg . LR and
kitchen , both w1th cathedral ce1hng s, l Lg . BR 's, bath ,
and uti lity area Solid hardwood flo:or s w ca rpet 1n the
LR 'and hall Lots of storage including a metal storag e
bui lding . Call now M1d nos.

MINI -FARM : 4 bedroom house wl th 17 ac r es, nea r
VI nton. Prope rt y borders Rt 325 and Ra ccoon Cr eek
Includes on e large outbuil di ng , 20')(100' and corn cr ib
Buy now f or on ly 539,500 00
panoram ic view of th e bea utiful Oh lo R1 ver Si tua ted
on 1 11 acr e lot, on ly 58 mil es fro m Ga lli po l1 s on Lower
R. 1ver_ . Rd ., Galli pol iS Ct t y School Dt st. M any
ame n• t tes· 2112 baths, ca rpeted foyer, solid oak fl oors
and .tn m, t tle wa ll s and floor tn bath, 2 w -b f ~rep l ac es,
fam 1ly r oom , 2 car gara ge wit h til e f loor , work bench
2tc., cen tr al air cond and 18'x8' r ed wood and ceda r
observa f ron deck. Al l for $69,000 00 A lso, ad 1acent 1 41
acre to t ava 1la bte wtth pu r chase of home. Call for more
tn for m atton

70 Nice

taylng acres , barn , pond ,
n1cely remode led 1 f loor
p l an horne
w1 t h fu ll
basement. wood burning
F P., carpeftng , garage ,
great for· weekends. full
fime home or tax deduc
tion . $38,000.00.

113,100 00
JUST LISTED -

Lookmg for A acr es on Sl1oestr ing Rl d_.ge, we ha 'V e 1t,
tnc ludmg rural water, electrtc hook up" fence and gate
Pn ced now l or S 10,000.00,

SMAll form for sole, 10% down , ·
owner financed Monroe (oun ty, W Vo Phone (304) 772·
~_E2 or (304 ) 772 32'27

CO

BR ' s

A large lot (2 .98 acres} 1n Charola i s Hills . Thi s i s a
restricted subdivision tor the pr ot ect ton of the owners.
Gtve us a call toda y.

7'!iB I .

MORTGAGE

3 Lg .

151 ACRE FARM . Near Vinton Inc ludes til lable an ...
t tm ber land. Also , 4 bedroom home, eq uipment shed
Bott om land borders Raccoon Creek Ca ll for m or e
inform at ion

-

rRE LAND

loatures

Lot on Debby Or. ( 150 x ISO J. Th1 s IS one of the few lots
remaining in the subdiv1s1on.

FOR SAlE

L IST I NGS N EE DED W E
AO V ERTI SI:
NATIONALl Y - WE BUY

Take a loo k at the outs1 de of t hts very f1ne L shaped
bnck hom e and let your Imagination gu1de you
through . If you see a formal entrance and sunken LR
w1fh a WB fi r eplace, a for mal dining room , a lovely
k1t chen w1th lots of wor-kin g area, th r ee lg . BR s each
15x 1S, two full bath'S and lots of clo set spa ce. Your
1maginahon is near being r eali stiC . Wh at have . not
VIS ualited on the main floor are the edra specia l hght
fi xtu r es and th e htgh qual ity workmanship and
matenats that have gone Into th1 s fine home. It i s al so
doubtful that y ou thought about the spacious and
complet ely fini shed basement It ha s f i ve finished
room s Including a complete bar, fam i ly room with
firep lace, play room , kitchen and one BR . this home IS
pric ed well below replacement cost . Make a special
effort to see thi s one before you buy. Pnced i n the mid
S70s.

hvmg _space, tnctudmg a lar ge fam1ly room featuring a
beauttful br ick fireplace. This ve ry tine home also

APPROX . J ACRES · On cornt:!r
lot al ong
Neighborhood Rd No mob ile homes Pr ice S1 8,000 00.

REAL ESTATE

VA CANT LAND
FOR SA LE
Twc n ty one ac.,-es, 700'
frontag e, low pnced tor
qut ck sale E1ght acre s
• lt l labl e, 12 acres pe r ma nent pasture - some wood
ed area Th1S land has pl en ·
ty water . good fen ces, barn
that needs r epair 1300 lbs .
toba cco base a lone wdl
o:; oon make you monev

TWO STORY : 3 bedroom home includ mg 3-50' Kl50 '
lots overlooking Ohio River Price $16,000

10 ACRES : Fron t s on Neighborhood Rd. Bui ldmgs lots
no mobil e homes Pn ce $15,000.00

to your property

GOOD FARM

•

moder n bnck and frame r anch w1 th 3
spaetous bedrooms, .a large k 1tchen,
fa m i l y room and all IS beauti f ul ly
ca r pe ted Located on Lincoln Ptkerlghtoff

Ph. 446-0008

and flat lot In Thurman

1

NEAR CENTENARY - LOW S30's. - A

'

looki ng for lois of floor space space? Check thi s one

~u~ r-i~ht now_
! It' s an all bnck r-anch wifh 1900 sq. ft of

on ly St7,500 00

Ave, Gallipolis Pn ce $17 ,500.00

World's largest, the leader since 1900
in serving -~he nation's buyers and sellers.

LO C ATION

FOLLOW RT 218 and litt le Bu ll Skm Rd to
Macedon1a Rd and see th1s 3 bedroom home s1tua ted
on l.a acre lot Ca l l for 'an appomt ment to see Price

.COMMER CIAL BUILDING , Located 1222 Second

INC.

STORE

FIVE BEDROOMS : Centrally located along 400 block
of Second Ave Hom e JS d1 v 1ded to make ren tal
apartment ifdestred 2 ktt chens, 2 bathroo ms, ca r port,
full basement. steam heat W1lh1n easy walking
d1 stan ce of downt own Pnce S35;ooo 00 .

EXCELLENT STARTER HOME - A fine

Rt 141

-

NEW LI STING : Small cottage , located on Rt 160, jusr
outs1de Ctty lim tis, nice ga r den area, fenced In yard,
garage . Prtced to sell 523 ,500.00

A very

STROUT REALTV

d tnlng room . oil furnace

CALL NOW-WE'RE
ANXIOUS
A GOOD FARM BU Y
Forty-e1ght ac r es, a Very
attr at t tve Gen fa r m . Good
TO BE
n1ne room coun try home
Buil t- tn kt tchen, r unning
OF SERVICE
water and some carpe t

Call now for personal servic e

NEAR ADDAVILLE SCHOOL -

JU ST LISTED -

197S Vind a le mob1le home. 14 ' ;.:!7 ', all electrtc The
average electnc bil l for last year was 569 .00 a month
Thts moblle home 1s on a large corner lot in the VI llage
of Vtnton and in excellent con d1t1on t hroughout It has a
covered patio 30'x8 ' and a1r cond1t1oning Includes new
house furniture , color TV and all t he good 1es Has
l arge garage and work area You need to see th1s tO'
apprec 1ate 11. Pnced at less than repla cement cost

attractive br~ck a nd frame ranch
Feat ures 3 bedrooms. lovely fam il y room 1
n1ce ki tche n and carpeted t hroughout
Good netghborhood for kids Excellent
garden space $31 ,900

comfortable 3 bedr oom frame home wtth a
large l1vmg room &amp; fami l y r oom , eat-m
kitchen (range and r etngerator tncl uded)
and a scen1c 5 acre wooded lol located on
Rt 160 near Vi nton $29,000 Call Dan
Evans at 388 811 1 for more infor mation

PRICED REDUCED fO
$13,000 - Owner says sell
this 6 room and bat h home
with new a lu m inum st ding,
large LR &amp; kitchen, 3 BR' s,

Over 27 acres wit hm four miles of Gallipolis . Ideal
bU 1I d1ng_sites, e1ther level land or wooded area,
Ga lltpolls school svstem , black top road and rtJra l
wat er Ca n be used as s mall farm •f so d esir ed .
sma ll ba rn, a pprox 12 a cres levelland pill S 383 tb
to ba cc o ba se . Call , we wa nt to help you.

SEN IOR
APPRAI SER

JACKSON ST. -

-

N E W LI STING : 40 acres. wdh three bedroom house,
garage &amp; two outbuildings, rural water &amp; well Loca ted
near Cora on Tom Wood Rd Pr ice $28 ,000 00

SAV E ON THOSE FUEL Bt LLS - See thos

story frame home res t ing on 7 acres. Has a
large llvmg room with w b f~rep l ace,
dming room , J bedrooms, ktfchen and
ce llar Front &amp; back porches, coal house,
barn and good storage build tng S20.000

----- -----

'

NEAT, CLEAN , 3 bedroom home located m Btdwel l.
near schoo l, fu ll basement, la rge lot, 150' x140 1 Rural
water Pr ice r educed, S28 ,SOQ

FAMILY - An af fordable 3 bedroom
ranch located m Jay Or1ve off Rt 35 . Th 1s
f1ne home features a ntce eat in kitchen,
large a ttractive fam ily room , II 1 bath'S
and central atr You must see fhts one
today

NEW LI ST ING - VINTON - A large oldl

FRAME RANCH WITH S ACRES -

N E W LI STI NG, Located on lower Rtver Rd , a
beaut1 ful view wtth river frontag e; J bedroom. new l y
renovated , carpeted
you must see to apprec1ate .
Wood burntng firepla ce . new hot water tank. F.A fuel
oil furna ce 8J a cr e lot. all for 530,000 00

We Need Your Home or Farm ·To Sell

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

N EA R T YC OON LA KE · 3 nc. res, plus . new firep lace
( f ir ewood alread y c ut ), 16'x 17' l1v1nq room, 3
be droom s. carpet ed. 700 feet ot road frontage ,
Ga lltpolis C1ty School District Pnce $35 000 C!O

J UST WAITING FOR YOU AND YOUR

LIVE IN TOWN - UNDER S30,000 - Live

Her e's your chance to qe t
s t a rt ed
1n your
own
businl?-ss Th •s ,property 1S
located 1n Vinto n , Ohto &amp;
can be bougl;t tor $12 ,900
plus stock 8. equ1pment

LAND FOR
DE VELOPMENT

Arthu.r A. N1ber t
Rea tlor

A C , 14' x2 4' garage, ljlal. gas , S39PO monthly budget .
Pr 1c e $30,000 00

•

m an excellent neig hborhood but l1ve ,
t'own 1n this spac1ous .&lt;t bedroom frame
home Has formal d tning , br and new
k:ttchen . f am tly room and shaded lot

HARDWARE

baths, large f u lly equ 1pped
tc hen, l!v tng room , tam•
ly room , wlfh beautifu l
woodburntng f 1reptace
Nt ce Stze lot, county water
Many other outstanding __ _
fea tur es , for a · mOde rn
home Th1s IS one you will
be proud to own.

TO YOU.

FOUR BEDROOM : St fua l ed on 4U :0.1.xl' lot w1 thtn c1ty
of Galltpol ts 2 baths, lg l tvln g r oom . 12 ' x22 ', central

117 acres
01e of the best bee f farms in Southeastern
Ol1o 90 'ac res of h1gh ly tmproved hay and
pasture. 30 acres of wooded pa sture New
fence , 2 ponds , 6 automattc cattle
fountams, 3 metal ba rns w tfh concrete
loaftng pad s b uilt in feeders , gra tn
storage load ing shute w1th head gate
Dr ive over most of it m your car . In
add1t1on there 1s a wonderful 3 bedroom
frame home with a n 1ce fam tl y room w1th
w b fireplace , modern bu i lt tn ki tchen . P 1
baths, 2 car carport . excellent loca t ion on
a state h ighway 9 m 1 from HMC

A REAL STONEYBROOK - 62 ACRES -

~·

--.::::..__j

your lifetime to own and operate your own
bus1ness 12 unit economy pr iced motet
that can be expanded at very ti ttle ex
pense A carry out beer and wine store
that's domg a super business and a won derfu l large home . Includes 5 or 6
Qedrooms, 2 kttchens , etc. For more information call Ike Wiseman .

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3796
' E.N. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-4500
500 2ND AVE.
CALL 446-3643
GALLIPOLIS

frame w1th 4 large bedrooms , famt l y
room , basement , garage and workshop ,
Call Mr W1seman at 446 4500

Bonme St ut es
Rea Itor Assoc .

FOR SALE OR L EASE : Modern one-s tory: briclt
bu ilding. over 14,000 sq ff , part basemen! , nat gas,
central a1r condttiontng La rg e recepti on room . over 60
rooms, vanous stzes Ideal locatton , parktng a r ea
accommodates e:.:cess of 40 autos Located adjacent to
GallipoliS Golf Course Call or stop ln for more
information .

E XCELLENT
BUS I N E SS
OP
PORTUNI TY - MOTEL - CARRY OUT
- RESIDENCE - May be the chance of

( 1) We have 68 acr es of beautifu l woods

PARK - A spaCIOUS 2 st or y, ~ bedroom
brtck home 1n the heart of downtown Has
a large family room wlfh f1replace, dtnmg
room 2 baths and a 2 car carport A
bea u tifu l fenced tn backyar d fo r the ktds .
M td SJO' s
,

DR EAM

~~he bes t v1ew of

A CHARMIN G LITTLE OOLL HOUSE -

An attrac t tve b1 -l evel featunng 4 large
bedrooms, ntce lnnng room , kitchen and
d1n1ng area 8. 1 12 baths A very.n•ce 24' xJ6 '
garage w1t h concrete f loor and a real fme
garden spot Located m Gallta Cp Sch

YO U R

S P ECT ACU LAR VIEW - ARCHITECT
DE SIGN E D RANCH - Absolutely one ol

A GENT LEMAN 'S f ARM -

NOW' S THE TIME TO D 1'Y thts FHA
approved . well '
ry clean 3
bedroom •anch ~~
1 with built
1n range . garae ~
~ v11 a large lot off
Georges Creek S/9 900

Willis T.
teadingham
Realtor
Evenings 446-9539
Gallia County's Fastest Growing R eal Estate Agency

446-1066
N EW LIST IN G: Thr ee bedroom ra rpeted home in
Plantz Subd1v , two ex t ra lots, total dimens ions
180' x1JO ' FA nat gas furnace , S2J 00 monthly-budget
NEW LISl' IN GS: Three bedroom . carpeted homes, all
electric . s1tualed on 75' xl20 ' lo ts Availab le for one
year lease, or buy for S25.000.00 w1 th conventtonalloan ,
or land con tra ct Call for mor e 1nformat1on .

the Oh1o valley and only 3
mmules from downtown. 22 acres of woods
and beautifully desi gned . J bedroom y shaped res tdence that w ill please the most
dtscnmmatmg . Unusually n1ce k ttchen
(all appl1ances mcluded} . 212 baths and a
family room that is ou t of th1s world . Large
stone firepla ce A peaceful setttng ~1th a
vt ew that would be hard to match .
:Arrangements to see th1s can be made at
your convenience.

•'-...

Manager

RUSsELL WOOD REALTOR

•

OWNE R TR A NS FE RR E D VE R Y
ANX IOUS TO SEL L, ASS UME F.H A

! •

129 , 900 ,_ STROUT
REALTY. 446.0008

BUD McGHEE

Ken Mor gan
Evenmgs
444-097 1

MtNOED?

Cooking, heating &amp; hot
water are al mcluded lor
\26 per month '" this
modern 3 BR ranch. Th1s
home is m excellen t con dit iOn &amp; loca ted on a large
f lat lot m Country Air
Estates . Pnced t o sell at

VS REALTY

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

~lassifieds

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel

Let Ou r Real Estate Ag ency offer the following
se r vi ces to you.
1, Profess 1ona li $m
2. E'x pe r~ ences
3. Fnendly .and Assi sting
4 Si n centy

To our fri end s in Gallia County , let our
years of experience help you with your rea I
es ta te ne eds .

NEE DS

WE BUY SELL 0

T RA DE
WE TH ERHOLT
~

B ROKER , 446 -4244

OSCAR BAIRD, REALTOR

Earl Win t ers 446-3818
John Caudt H 675-4107

JOHN FULLER, REALTOR

~ ALE S A SS OCI A T

�'

•
D-7-The Sundily Times-Sentinel, Swulay, Oct. 23, 1977

1}&lt;;- The Sunda\' Tmws-Sentml'l, Swnla) . O&lt;·t.' 23, 19/i

For Best Results Use Sunday .Times Sentinel Classifieds

County agents' co:rner
POM EROY - A ~rief sw mn aril uf the Athens Fecdt•r ( 'a If

Rt'lll EsiBtP lor Sui~

,

llt·al E•talt- fur ~ale

n eat t:otate fur Sale

Business Services

CANADAY REALTY
'

IB
; ,' l

1S ', Locust St.

808 lANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
· G ALLIPOLIS , OHIO

Gallipolis . Ohio ·

446-3636

NEW LI S TING
Y ol• navP a beau r .tu l sce n ic
v •ew ot l ht&gt; Ohio River in
lh t s roc ar ,on wtl hi n t h e ci Ty
limits T he r e a r e se vera l
lot s

KingsbuiJ
Home Sales

446 - 7~00

Office

WE NEED YOUR
PROPERTY TO
SELL NOW!

lnvol v ed

in

th iS

•Mobile
Home
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
•Tie- Downs
•Awnings - Carports
•Insurance
Repairs
See us at 1100 E•~t Main
Slrftl, Pomeroy , Ohio or

si re

w •th a n1ce '1 s tor y
3
betlr oom hom e . an u na !

ta che d g a r age a nd a
m o bile nom e This ho m e on
Th 1S si te can b e bou gh t
w i thout th e mobil e home
and o n ~ ex tr a buildi ng si te.
Al so . The bu ild 1ng site or
the mobile home and lot
could be purcha sed in
div idua ll v . This pr oper ty
off ers The potenti a l for an
e ..:q ui s i te
p ic n ic.
re cr ea t ion , aM boat dock
area lor your enjoymen t .
Ca ll in toda y for nlor e
1n form at 10n .

NEW HOMES in a new community
designed with your family in mind!
• Appro.: . 1 acre wooded lots
• Over 1,300 sq. ft . liv ing area
• 2 car garage
• 2 full batl'ls
• Heat pump, cen . air
• Energy saving constru c tion
• Fireplace
• Expertlv built
.S45,900 &amp; under

NEW liSTINGS VACANT LAND
1.· 5 acre t r~ c t 6 mile out
Rou t e
21 8
on
r i gh t :

$9 ,500 .00 .
2. J acre tra ct at corner of

15 acr e tr ac t
near Eureka : $8. 500 .00 .
.s. App r o~~: . 10 acre t r act

near Eu reka : sa,soo.oo .

5. Beaut1 f ut bui ld ing site

NEW liSTING
RENTAL INVESTMENT
5 un1 T apa rt m en t build ing
on Up per Second Av ~n u e In

BIDWEll VILlAGE , 2 story 4 SR home i n \~OO d con .
Eat -in k i tc h~n ha s nearly new cabinets , new hot water
tank . Storm doo r s af]d w indows . New roo f. Garag:e . 1
ac re level lot . If you' re budget m inded beHer take a

CALL AT HOME :
Bob lane
446-1049
W&lt;ttt La;ne
446-0458
Becky Lane
446·0458
Oen,·er H iqtev
446-000"2
Kenny Ratliff
367 -7529
Terry O' OeHi56-6831 or 256·
640 2 .

look!. s18.000.

Wel l constructed,

tastefull y decorated , J BR block and frame , 1' 2 baths,
15' xl 7' l i vin g rm .• family rm . Wel l planned k itchen,
dining area. L g: . l evel lot . Near Gav in a('l d K vg:er Creek
plants. l ~o k t his ov er . y ou 'l l be plea sant ly surp r ised !

RENT BEATER! P2 stor y . J Br . fra me in ci ty, 26 ' x32 '
concr ete block ga r age with cement f loor Ci t y water
and sewage. Gas heat . Clea n, we ll ma in ta 1ned, $18,900 .

Nal iona l A dvert ising Wi th
Gallery of H oi""'~ S .

$29,500.

'

.

.

PIANO TUNING and Repoir . lone
Daniel!&gt; . 997-2082 12 years ser·
vice to Tr i·County RefereriCe:
Elberlelds.
'

'-t

GREAT BUSINESS lOCATION near old Rt 35 just a ,

LOOK - COMPA~E and you ' ll ag r eE th is home has a
lot to off er for $20.000. Lower Rt . 7 and Oh io Ri ver
fr ont age . 2 st~ r ~ fr ame wi th nearl y new siding . 4 BR .
Lg spacious _l iVI ng r m . wi t h fi rep lace. Din ing rm . wi ll
seat the la rges t fami l y in comfort . Rura l w ater, cit y
school s.

WANT TO ,Po. Toke down trees ."
Free estimore. Call evenings
992 5947

fe W miles fr om city . Ideal for garage, body 'shop,
plumbing or con vert to sales room for florist. grocery
etc . Over 1,900· sq. ft. dow nstair s wi th attract i ve
carpe ted off ic e, 3 BR , tastefull y decorated home
upsta irs. Ca r pet ing throughout . Lots of 'park ing space.
O.•mer relo ca ted in area . $40.500.

BOB 'S CB
Rodlo
Equip ..
everything in Two-Wov Rodio,
Antennas and acces . Georges
Creek Rd ., Gallipolis. 446-4517.

WE NEED LISTINGS!

SMITH EXCAVATING . dozer .
backhoe. lrencher, dump tru ck,
work done at reasonab le rates .
Ph . 446-3981 , John Smilh Jr .

RON CANADAY, REALTOR

BORDER'S GARAGE DOOR SERVICE , Commericol and residential . specioliz ir.~g in .o.perotors .
local256-b472.

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associate

446-3636

DOZER WORK , excavating , land
c!earing , Ph. 446-0051

4.ny Hour

STANLEY
STEEMER CARPET
CLEANt:R , Any living room and
hall $29.95 up to 300. Sq , Ft.,
Southeastern Ohio . No. I
Carpet
Cleaners ,
Ph ,
614-446-4208,

8 aturday. O~ to hrt:tr ?2

BRIDGE

CARTER'SPLUMBING
AND HEATING

• Oswald and Jim Jacoby
•

Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446-44777

Nortn wins 'deal' award
NORTH WI

22

oil A 4
.. 7 2
• B 6 32

. "' A K 10 6 4
EAST

WEST
.. 9 8 3 2
WJ l0 3
• Q9 7 4
.. 8 5

• 75
• AKQ 9 5
.. J 10 s
.. . Q .1 2

SOUTit
o~~K Q J1 06

WB 6 4
• AK

Pass

4.

Pass
Opening

l e.:~d

would have made his contract.

AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735

If he had led a small club and

played low !roin dummy instead of that heart , all the
defense could do would be to
cash a second heart to keep
South from making an over ·

trick .
MOBILE HOMES LOTS
Or North could ha ve said GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COM-

Pass
- Jilt

~ ~~~ 12 x 65 Mobile home ." 'furnished .

I.

West , North Ea st
Pass

OEWITT'SPLUMBING

something stronger such as ' MUNITY
•·pJij y b ridge ~" or maybe locotedonRt . l-4 1. citywoter. city
"U
b ·
.
•
schools , S min . from Gallipolis
s~. y our ra1n . lf you have
and Holzer Hospital .
one .
T\111
In any event North m erel y
0 .BEDROOM rryo bile home,
'd " D I "
d
fur ntshed . close fo town Dep
sal .
ea
an
gets out and ref. requ ired. Adult~ only :
award .
Coll446-4757 after 3pm .

• 9 73
North-South vulner able

I"'
2"'

STANDARD
Plumbing · Heal ing
" What could I have done? ' '
215 Tn.ird Ave., 446-378~
co mp l ained So u th . " The
GENE PLANTS &amp; SONS
defen se was too good ."
PLUMBING - Heating - Air Con·
North could have said any dit1on lng , 300 Fovrfh Ave . Ph .
nur'nber of thing s s tarting with
446-16.37 .

th e mild suggestion that South

Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Jacobv
We have just decided to esta blish a "Jacoby Silence is
Golden" award to that bridge
player who r emains silent un ·
der the greates t provocation.
West held the first trick
with the jack of hearts and

promptly shifted to a low
trump.
South woo in his hand and
l ed a set:o nd heart. Back·ca me

a second trump and South had
to lose a third heart and a
dub

Adults only. no pets . 2 bdr .
tatalelectric . C~ll367 . 7438 .

.
A Ca nadian reader wants to

kn ow our rebid with : ·

·

. ,.

• AK654 .KQ8 +J 10 2 olo53
We have opened one spade
and pa rtne r has responded
CUSTOM REMODELING, 20 years
two hearts.
exper ience , 388-8308 . New dr y
woll ceiling with swirl or tEi~e ·
Our rebid is three hearts.
fure designs . Other dry wall ,
We consider two spades a
repair , vinyl wallpapering, new
second choice.
baths , new kitchens . Anything
;, remodel ing or repair .
(For
cop y o f J A C0 B Y
MODERN, send $1 ~o: " Win at r---:-:----- --,
Bndge." cl o rt11s newspaper..
P.,O. Box 489. Radio Cify Sta rton,
100191
New

a

----'-'-'---"'='"'='----

HOME

IMPROVEMENTS

Storm
WindQws,
Storm
Doors,
Replacement
Windows.
Patio
Covers,
Aluminum
Siding
arid
Accessories . Call

Bill'S
• .

..

"-

_,,....

WINTER ANO BEAUTIFY TOUR MOBILE

HOM£. We hue naillbll ill 1 waritt) of
colors,~ lilt·llmt tluminum 111cletp1nn·

-

m&amp;. rOll your PNU of 11incl and to
MlnfJ fOUl insiHIIICI COlli&gt;'"' Itt US
tie down JOUr moiHie IMimt. flltse tie

loto- l Attics
sroRM
WINDOWS l DOORS

clowns are mec:hlniuM, insblltd to

nsurt m11imum ufety. Contlel utiGJ
1 ~11Jiit' awninJ. 0.'1 wail trll Kt
fo~nts on rwr roof, Itt us cOlt it now
and stop polentill lttk5. CAll

IEPtMiEMINT

WINDOWS
ALUIINUI
SIDtiiC-SOifln
GUnEIUWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER

!191-7031 01 STOP 81 1100 E. MAIN
ST.! POME!OT, Oti!O FOR A FREE
ES IMAIE.

SpKust. OhiD
Ph. t!l-J99l

Kin£1bUf'l Home Sales

Wood Stoves
~,

PARTS · lABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES Ph. l1U250
IHiiswillt, 0.

fri
H~A~~FU~rr~:
EFEL

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC;
Ph. m -2174

773-5955

Lakin. W . Va .

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
I

Saves 30 pet. ro so pet.
on healing cost

1-17- lfC

10-18 -1 mo.

Experience and
fully insured
Free Est.
(a II U7 -6479

10-14-1 mo. pd.

446-264~

PASQUALE lnsulaling . 103 Cedar
St., Gallipol is. Ph . 446-2716 or

~-~

_.6-Hln.

CHAIN LINK FENCING , WOODEN
FEN(:ING, AWNINGS , Patio
covers , Ault's Home Improvements . Ph . 4.46·3606 after
4.

ALLEN'S GENERAL CONTRAC·
TORS, remodeling. house ·wiring . house plumbing . free
estlmotes . 446 · ~10

PAlTRY 'S CARPENTRY
· remodelinQ . Pointing .

367-7672
REESE TRENCHING

ond
Call

SERVICE.

BACKHOE. DOZER , DITCHER and
dump truck . Concrete work .
Hatfield Backhoe Ser ., Rutland,
Oh. Ph . 742-2008or 446-2786.

DACK TERMITING SPECIALIST,
PEST CONTROL . licensed. INsured.
Fr ee
Inspection .
Member NPCA and OPCA, C.
M. Hell. Wilkesville, Ohio . Ph .

water. sewer. electric , gas line
669-4914,
or ditches . 12 inctles wide fa 5
tt . deep . Water line hook ups . V. E. FILLINGER Water Delivery
Call after 4pm 367-7560
Service , Ph . 379-2114 or
379-"n.
WATER WELL drilling and clean·
ing. William T. Grant Call ROOFING ,
HOME
IM 742-2&amp;79 after 6pm .
PROVEMENTS, PAINTING,
Carpenter work . general
LIMESTONE . gravel and sand . All
repior . PH . -446 ·-4316 or
sizes . AI Richards and Son , Up·
446-8568 .
per River Rd., Gallipolis , Ohio.

_M&gt;Ir446-77BS.
CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCE.
DUTY'S BUILDING AND REMODEL- Roy Houck Fence Center . Free
ING. FREE

256-1352.

ESTIMATES .

Call

TV SERVICE. Electronic TV Clinic,
756 Second Avenue Hours 9om
to 5pm , Monday thru Solurdoy.
Cloled Thursday. Service calls
S14.95 Cal f 446·3980.
EARL·s BODY SHOP
b32 Fifth Avenue, Konougo , Ohio
Coll 446-4091
24 years experienc&amp;

estimates . Ph. 1·776-2237 ,

-

llo S.nU,

SPARE TIME INCOME. Refilling
and colleding money from
~EW TYPE high·quolity coin
ope rated dispensers in your
area . No selling. To qualify,
you mu st hove car. refere(lces ,
$1000. to $4000. cosh . Partial
f
inonc ing . available . Ttlree to
•ev en hours wheekly con net exce 1lent mont ly income . More
full time . For persor'lol intercob &amp; chassis, tandem drive '
, p
1968 ,;. "T.. Ford Pickvp
· view, wnte ittsburch Vending
SOMMERS GMC
Supply. 106 " Corson Stre&amp;t ,
Monroeville , Po . 15146 or coli
TRUCKS , INC .
133 Pine St .
Collect 412·856·8239. When
writing pleose include your
,.,
· • 446·2532
phone number

--··

.1966

FORD

MUSTANG. Coli

•••

l, Pr;h:liltf'l
0.
Carpet U

•'

Phone Mike Youn1

c;.. p~.,.

••
•

992-2206 Of 9'.12.7630
"Tht Orijinl.,.

••
•

Not The lmltltoB

10 20-1mo .

Our 60th anni
versary is an appropriate time to salute the
greatest producer of food
and fiber in the world American tarmers.
Sixty years ago, the Land Bank w•&gt;&lt;""".;
established to help the farmer by
providing dependable , long-term
financing .
we·ve changed a lot over those
years . but our Purpose has remained
the same ... to prov•de farmers w1th
THE BANK OF
the cred•t to produce that food
and fiber.
GENERATIONS
Clyde B. W•lker Mgr.

•

AI

-

..,.,J,.'l.-

1231 1'10.

•

•

. PARTS FOR 1971 Galoxie Ford for
sale. Phone 992-5856 .
·

BRADFORD , Auchoneer , Com·
plete Service. Phone 949-2.487
of 949·2000 . Racine , Ohio , Cri tt

1976
MER C ~RY · BOBCAT
Runabout . Aut omatic
4·
~radford .
cyl inder. $2 .b00 . Cal! 949.'2111.
ELWOOD
BOWERS REPAIR after 4:00pm .
·
Sweepers , toasters, irons , all
1969 CHEV~OLET ST AliON Wagon
small appliances lown mower.
Townsmen 327 . New ·point,
next lo State l:ligtlwav Garage
good condit ion , 9-pauenger,
on Route 7. Ptlone (614) qB5·
$695 or besT offer. 949·2124.
JB,5.

PiNTO STATION Wagon , REMODELING . Plumbing . heating
2300 cc engine. oir conditioned .
and all types of generol repair.
autornalic , new ti res , low
Work guoron.teed 2.0 _years e ~~: ·
mileog,. e;.~ c ellenl condi tion .
per i&amp;nce . Phone m -2409 .
Call992·2208 .
SEW~NG MACHINE Repoln . ser ·
1975 FORO F-2SO .. l!. ton truck .
vice, all makes , 992·2284 . The
Good condition , 4-sp., good
Fabri c Shop , Pomeroy .
tires . will toke !rode. 1968
Authorized Singer Sales ond
Chevrqlet station wagon . Ru As
Service . We sharpen Scissors . ,
· good . $250, will trade .
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
949·2270.
backhoe work ; dump tru cks
1976 CADILLAC SEDAN deVille.
ond lo·boys for hire; will haul
22 .000 ml One oWner, fully·
fill dirt , to soil , limestone and
equipped including burglary
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jel ·
alarm . Excellent condition ,
fers , day phone 992·7089, night
owner must sell. Coli (304 )
phone 992-3525 or 992 · 5232 ,
882·284:) , or con be seen ol 702
EXCAVATING . doler , backhoe
4th St ., New Hoven , W. Vo .
ond ditcher . Charles R. Hot·
' 1973
PLYMOUTH
STATION
fie ld , Bock Hoe Service ,
wagon . 9 passenger . New botRutland . Ohio. Phone 742·2008.
tery . New ti r es
$1400 .
WILL do roof ing , construction ,
992 3789 .
plumbing and heating . No iob
1971 PINTO, $300. 1973 Yamaha .
foo Iorge or too small. Phone
$250. 949-2498.742-2348 .
1973· PONTIAC LEMANS. Air 2· HOWERY AND . MARTIN Ell ·
dr .. hor~top . white in ca'lor ,
coveting , septic systems,
350, 1q69 Bonanza Travel
doler , backhoe , dump truck ,
Trailer . 19 ft., fully -equipped ,
lime:stone, grovel. blacktop
also Coleman Furnace. 1q70
paving , Rt. 143. Phone I (614)
GMC pickup truck . 1912 Chevy
69B·7331.
lJ• ton pickup with comper,
51700. 992·3927 or con tad lorry BATHROOMS AND Kit chens
remodeled, ceramic tile . plumDugan .
bing , corpenfry. and general
1976 FORD GR~NAOA . Block with
maintenance . 13 years ex•; , black vmyr top. AM·FM
perience . 992-3685.
radio , P.S.. P.B.. A.C. E~ecellent
condition. 20,000 miles. Colt EXCAVATING . BACKHOE . dozer . ·
trencher . low boy . dump
alter6pm , 742·3187 .
trucks . septi.c systems. Bill
1975 OLDS CUTLASS in good con Pvllins . phone 992-2478 . day or
dition. 843-2734 .
night .
1972 PINTO. 949·2761 , alter 5 dur·
ing the week and onytime
weekends .
Q

MOBIL£ HOME
SERVICE

1977 CAMARO
P.S., P.B., A.C.. AM-FM
stereo, r.a fly Wheels, red
with red and while interior.
12,000 mites. $4775.

Ca 11446-2991

1974 THUNDERBIRD. All block. PS ,
PB, AC, cruise, tilt wheel, AM
FM 8 I rack, 6. Woy power seats.
One owner. Only 21 ,000 miles.

'

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

..
'

Aesidentia I
and
eommercial.
Call fo-r
estimate, 24 hour service .

Anyday, anytime.
Phone 91~- 3806

•

•

JaCk's Septic
Tank SeMce
Box34

Chester, Ohio

1977 MONTE CARlO, loodod.
8,.000 miles. Showroom condi·
tlon. $5300. Call••6-1595 .
71 FURY with '383 eng. air cond.
PS, PB. 8 track tope player,
Auto, green with green vlnvl
top. 446·4226
19'76 VW RABBIT . auto, vnder
20,000 miles, exc . cond $3,695 .

Caii••6-•31S

1973 DODGE VAN , auto ., AC ful·
ly c'orpeted, 4 new tires. $3100.

Cati675-20U.
1977 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
MARK VCall••6-3156.
1975 DOOGE DART CU~TOM, 318
outa .. PS, foe . oir , vlnly top.

Catl388;9'169.

1975 GREMLIN , PS, radio . 28 ,000
miles , one owner . $1600. Colt

SANOY AND BEAVER Insu rance
675·5022
3BB-B591 .
Co. hos offered serv 1ces for life
1q74
COMET
,
6
cyl.
out.
$1700;
1969
FORD 350 WRECKER . Call
Insurance coverage in Goll io
1954 Mercvry $500 . • Phone
256·146? after 5pm.
C ou n t~ for almost o century.
367·0541
Form, home and personal pr o·
1971 FORO EXPLORER . Call
perty coverages ore ovodoble 1968 PLYMOUTH SPORT FURY.
446·1.542.
to meet individual needs. Con·
autO floor stlitt: Body . tires and
1976 V W RABBITT, one owner.
loci Emmell Church , your
motor in good condition . 383
$3400. Call US-5498.
neighbor and agent .
eng., P~.:and PB. C~~~-

The rats prefer it,
and we guarantee it!

A A A CONTRACTORS. Bo&lt;khoe,,
dozer, dump truck . Work domli
by the hour or by the job. For:
free estimates . Call256· 1921 .

MACHIN~

SHOP
SERVICES
PORTABLE
WELDING
SERVICE

4

babbiting ,

RAT BAIT

•

Gallipolis, Ohio

Vint Street
M
;',lJ.n~W,,

st.-urturc us o sui) &lt;..-clfldi tiCincr .
Cc1mpust rt":iults fr.,m the (lccumposition

~~r

organk

ma t ~r ials . Tu rmKiucc Cflffipact. use compusting materia ls
SUt'h a~eaves, .grass clippings, rema ins uf fl ower and
vegetc1ble pla nts af ter harvest, wt-&gt;eds befor e going lu seed ,
S;traw a nd hay, vegetable tops and pCJ!Iings nutrients for

microo()rganisms of decay-as supplied by fertilizers
moisture il nd air . •

•

Make cnmJl&lt;&gt;St by building a pile or heap as follows : First
layc1· - plant residues G-12 inches thick , second layer garden sn il or sharp sard in layer about I inch thick, tl1ird
layer - lhm layer of fertilizer to promote decomposition.
Mmslen the three layers of materials but do not make them
soggy wet. Repeat the layering process until the heap is about
5 feet deep and turn periodically to admit air. Compost is ready
to use wh en it i s dark brown and )nose wh en turned .

&lt;:ALLIPO I.lS

It is gw d

Uu.!iincss on t he part of 9
pruducer lo provide enough
storage to la ke ca r e of his
c r op , David McK enzi e ,
County Exec utive Director of

ASCS. sa id . ' " Provi ding
stor age on his fa nn is one
way a fa m 1er ca n be sure he
has a place for his cr op ."

dr y m ~

equipm ent . loan
program can help fanners
p r ovide a d eq uat e o n-farm
f a c ilities," Mr . M c K enzie
~a ill . A fann stori-lg e l oqn ca n
be used to fi nanre up to 85
per cent uf t he Cust of new
storage str u&lt;.t ures. The loan
m ay be repa id fl \rer an 8-year

storage
the 197i

period at 7 percent interest A
15 percent down payment is
req uired. Loans are available
to growers of wheat, fee d
grain , soybea ns, and higher
moisture fo rage and silage,
McKenz ie sa id.

a nd

greater independence in their

Acco rd in g to a USDA
re p ort, comm er c i a l gra in

storage space will
this fall , and about
bushels of on-farm
will be needed for

be tight
3 billion

crops.

" ~"" arm e rs

''The farm

Agriculture and
•
our community

stora ge

ca n

e x er ci se

m arketing operation s

Conservation involves
good management
By Steve Hlbluger
District ConservatlonJst
Soli Cons. Service
GALLIPOLIS
Good
conservaUon management is
often a forgotten or neglected
principal. This applies to our
farm land, construction sites,

and

our woodland.
·
Wildlife conservation is
often thought of as merely

micro-organism

decay ,

an

o&lt;ygen shortage can occur.
Primarily, this oxygen
shortage is on the bottom of
the pond or lake.
If a serie~ of warm or hot.
dilys has warmed the water,
even less oxygen is available
to fish . A cold rain in the
summer or a rapid cooling of
surface temperatures In the

for this process.
This problem is not a
dominant problem to pond
owners .

If

does

occur ,

suita ble storage." McKenzie
sa id another advantage of
farm storage is tha t the
commodity can be made
available f or domestic and
export use in a short time.
F.ariners ' are advised to
make maximum use of
present farm storage and to
overc ome the lack of

adequate storage by con·
strucUng additional farm
facilitie s . For more in·
formation on the facility loa n

however . Keep these hazards program, contact the Gallia
in mind before building a county ASCS office.
pond within a watershed that
Applicants for
ASCS
has potential to be over programs will be given equal
fertilized.
consideration without regard
Better yet , have~ihe Soil to race, color, sex, creed or

autumn can cause the war·

Conservation Service... do all
pond site evaluations for you.

ignoring an odd-area on o1,1r
farms . But , c onservation
involves management - not

mer water on the bottom to
rise and tho cooled water on
lop to sink to the bottom.

They are trained to evaluate
all aspects -good and badabout the potential site .

neglect.

Thus the name " tumnver "

· During our Pond Clinic in
August, several technical

wit h

national origin .

By Bryson R. &lt;Bud ) Ca rter
G a llia County E ~ten s io n .Agent
GALLI POI.IS -

How do

you det ermine wh en t o give a
da iry cow a one way t ru ck

up, or she
kicked once too oft en, or
som ething else, but dair y men
do have their reaso ns for

mast itis fl are

culling and when to culL Dr.
Don Pritchard of the OSU
Da iry Science Department
suggests that dai rymen
develop a checklist of culling
reasons a nd use this list in
their dec ision makin g
process.

Dr . Pritchard lists 10
questions to be considered on
each cow before deciding her
future in the herd :
I - Is her production 2percent or m or e below the
herd average ?
2 Is she a chronic
mastitis case ? Check this one
closely , because a cow with a
chronic mastitis case is a low

need care, maintenance

tO- Is she an old cow, and
is the availa ble bam space
needed for fr eshenin g
h ei fe r s ? In ot her wo rd s,
should the old make way fo r
the new' Fresh heifers are
probabi¥ going to have a
better ge netic potential fo r
high produ ction than old er
c ows,
es p eci a ll y
if a
prog re ss ive A.l . progmm i s

used in the herd.
No w you are probabl y
asking if the answer to any
on e of the se questions is yes,

Chance·.- He suggests a yes

ment.

answer

problems at calving time are
not pleasant and are costly to

have in the herd.
6 - Does she have an un·
desirable disposition? Does
she run when she sees you, or
does she kick whenever you
touch her udder? These are
undesirable traits
that

and West Germany from
Oct. 21 through Nov. 2.

in favor of culling, sell the
animal .

lo other cows in the herd
through· th~ milking equip·

producer and, in addition ,

a problem or that cause

Kuwait, Iran, Israel, Italy

other reason s plus t he pr ice is

could be spreading mastitis

calving illnesses such as
retained placenta, metritis,
or milk· fever? Cows that are

SECRETARY of the
Treasu·ry Michael
Blumenthal Joms the
ranks of adminiStration
globetrotters with a sevennation tour of the Middle
East
and
Europe.
Blumenthal will visit
Egypt, Saudi Arabia,

woultl pr oba bl y get for a co w

sold lor bee! purposes, theo i£

is that an indication the co w
should be culled?
Pritchard says that it may
be for some dairymen, bul .
usually he would recommend

or more ? -Long dry periods
are costly to the dairyman
and may indicate the cow has
a problem of becoming
pregnant, a trait you don't
want in your herd.
·
4- Is she a hard milker? Is
her udder shape or teat
structure such that you have
trouble milking her '
5- Does she have a history
of calving difficulties or. post

Conservation practjces

men have t oday, timid t'OWS
usually wi ll not get th e
amount of feed requ ired for
them to be hi ~l&gt; producin g

ride to the marketplace'
Dairy men use some type of , animals.
gui del ines to help them
9 - Is the price of beef
deci de when to cu ll a cow. It good' Check market prices oi
may be tha t she had another beef anima ls and what yo ~

3- Will she be dry 4 months

Lay ofthe land

specialists tried to point out
that properly managing a
pond took considerable effort.
Proper management is not
only "throwing the little ones
back into the pond."
The Soil Conservation
Service engineers and
probably
the
largest
BY JOHN COOPER
supervise many pond • con·
in
Ma.On
County.
sycamore
Soli ~ons. Servic.e
struction activities. In every
PT. PLEASANT - Nearly We looked at the tree and the
case, an in depth site investigation is done. Often , all -&lt;:01\ servaton practices fractured stump that was
we're accused of looking for a need care and maintenance. remaining. The tree at the
needle in the haystack . After Dr. Alexander McCausland base measured 24 feet 8 inall, what could be easier than with farms on Route 35 and ches in circumference . One
piling a bunch of dirt across a Rout~ 62 on top of Dead Man's limb which went off about 12
draw and damming a ravine Hill requested the Western feet from the hase was 3 feet
or draw, right' Wrong! Soil Conservation District to · · or more in diameter. The tree
Extensive evaluation of the perform the maintenance on had been hollow lor quite
soils and the entire watershed his ponds and springs . some time and in looking at
this tree we could not help but
is necessary. The importance Examin~tion of the ponds and
of
prop..
wastershed springs showed that some remember a Picture in one of
our early history books of
evaluation came to light this trees and cattails were
.West
Virginia showing the
growing along the edge of the
past week .
Pringle
Brothers living in a
Any of you that have had a water and on one pond had
huge
syca!'llore
tree in
·pond site investigation done caused a gully in · th e
Webster
County.
This
one
by ·us (SCS) know that we emergency splllway.
'wasn't
quite
big
enough
to
shy away from sites that · The springs ne.eded to be
.
live
ln,
but
it
was
interesting
have drainage from animal filled again with earth around
feedlots, heavily cropped the top because of the con- to see.
fields or septic tanks within stant trampling by livestock
as they watered at the trough .
the watershed.
In 1947, the state of Maine
Sediment can fill the pond. In order to repair these ponds
was declared a disaster area
and
springs
the
district
will
Animal waste and septic tank
seepage can stagnate the · use their bulldozer to refill as forest fires caused dilmage
the gully and open the normal estimated at $30 million.
water.
In 1955,J:Igo Dinh Diem was
overflow
at the pond so as to
Ken Tomlinson , Game
chosen
to take over the South
prevent
frequent
use
of
the
Protector for Gallia County
Vieblamese
government in
investigated an incident emergency spillway. Some
the
country's
first free
recently that e&lt;poses another "earth and gravel will be
election.
He
later
w~s
threat to pond water quality placed around the trough in
assassinated.
from these sources - over order that the area around
these trou~hs will be more
fertility.
As Ken relayed the story stal)fe.
to me, ponds that have a high
Donald Nowlin has started
level of fertility (whether
done by coincidence or on on a spring development on
purpose) are very susceptible his land on Jerrys Run Road.
to a process called "turn- Okey King of SCS helped him
over." The resujt is a partial plan the development. The
spring consists of a single
or total fish kill.
water vein coming out of the
Turnover results in an
oxygen shortage in the water hill near the base. A concrete
wall with ten feet of tile
supply.
In highly fertile ponds, behind it will be installed to
microscopic plants and collect the water and to be
animals thrive and multiply. , conveyed to a silt trap. The
A Cloudy day or a series of water will then go to a
cloudy days can cause the reservoir at a lower
STA.NDAnD
pholosynthetic processes to elevation.
TlinEE·POINT
-.- MOUNTEO
stop and a result is that these
Work has been completed
micro-organisms die from
on the Harold Mynes pond
and a watering facility on his
farm on Chestnut Ridge. The
pond is a semi-dugout type
pond with a small watershed.
4" D A
A diversion 300,Ieet long was
CY tlNDER
built to supply additional
water for the pond. A con·
crete watering trough was
.
constructed in a pasture field
at a lower elevation. The
district bulldozer did the
work on this pond and a work
crew of the district did the
trough construction.
\

1

should be noted along with
production and calving
abilities.
·
1 - Is she below the herd's
average body type? Check.
body confirmation to see if it
comes.up to specifications for
your herd.
B - Is she a timid cow ?
With the type of drylot
housing systems most dairy-

be

cows

given more of

to

four

or

more

milk warrants culling of
some cows, and this checklist

makes a good guide foe
dairymen to use .

.. ,.,...

.
BIG DEAL :

\

A

ON A NEW

DEUT:.: ":

Come tn now and
b u y a l ue l sovtng
- Deut z o ~r · co l led
dresel t ra ctor and
w e II ma ke you a
deo l you co n t
affo rd to t urn

do w n .

Fulton-Thompson

A thought for the dily :
American writer
Carl
Sandburg said, "I tell you the
past is a bucket of ashes."

110 Spdng Ave .
Pomerov , 0 .

AE INF O AGEO
Wl: DGE

SI-IUl OF F"

;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~l:a:c:k~o:f~o:xy~g:e:n~.~A~s~th:e:s:e~d~e:ad
•

GET YOUR

••

:·•

61-1" ' '-4'"~

AUCTION

TOBACCO BEDS

•

•

SATURDAY

I

Jump' On

12:30 P.M.
At the home of Ada Bays, State Route 124 at lower
corporation line of Racine, Ohio. ·
This is a benefit sale of donated and consigned articles,
all proceeds to go to the Building Fund ol the Westeyan
Methodist Church of . Racine, 0 .
·

SPRING•••
•
l•
.•

This is~ partial listing subject to some changes and
additions : Gas stoves, ranges &amp; l'leaters, wringer
washers, 8' metal garage door, brass kettle. porch
swings, jars &amp; jugs, single metal bed, double Iron beds
hand tools, canning· jars, porch gate, picture frames:.
push .type garden plows, cl'licken crate, antique
augers, log chains, w i re cable, Iron pulley, block &amp; line,
baskets, metal oven, child's wagon , chairs and
rockers. patiO davenport ; small tables &amp; stands ·
typewriter, distles &amp; novelty glassware .
'

•

'••

-

*FUMIGATION COVERS
*BROMO-GAS '1.10 lb.

•
•

*APPLICATORS

•1.00 lb. case lots

•

CEJITRAL SOYA
ul Obio, Inc.,
.&amp;rlpolis, Ohio

A number of pieces of furniture and a lot of useful
articles has been promised. Something for everyone
'
come and help a good cause. It will be appreciated.
Terms : Cash
Critt Bradford, Auctioneer
Not responsible for accidents

\

Recent new cooperators of
the district include Ronald H.
Riffle, on Bear Hollow Ridge
with ao acres in the farm,
Dean W. Smith at Hartford on
his 800-acre farm, Norman
· Lieving at Letart with 10
acres and Madison Bowles at
Southside with 60 acres.
We wer~ __on the Madison
Bo"jles farm planning and
~urveying for tile drainage.
This drainage was needed to
get rid of water on each side
of a road that is used as u
travel lane. While on the
farm, Mr. Bowles mentioned
that a huge sycamore tree
along the river had fall en. We
had.seen the tree a few ye:m
ago whil e 1t was still :;t a ndi n~

&lt;.lnd n•n i i ' I II I )Cr c~ tha t il w;1 ~

'

I

l

I-I EAV·Y OU H
PUS f-1 BLO CK

Ready This Fall and Get the

•

:;

CATEGORY 1 or 11 3 Pt. Mounting .
Powerful 4" "double acting" cylinder (25,000
lbs . force at 2000 PSI) to split the many
varieti.es of woods used tor heal energy and
fireplace burning . (Speed and- Fpr ce Depend s
on Tractor Hydraulic ~ystem.)
Reinforced Wedge construction that allows lor
a s mooth and controllable split.

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.
992~2176

a

When should you cull
dairy cow? You be the judge;.
but use ' sound reasons in
making your decisions.
'

Tractor Sales

AUTOMATIC VAL VI'

a

questions before mal&lt;ing a
cow a strong candidate for
cuUing.
Pritchard sa ys the surplus
supply of milk current! ~
depressing the fann price of

'' LOG-.SlPL8TfER"

With~ toda,l

Upper Route 7
Kanauga. Ohio

.I

CORN

J.D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.

•

••

M&amp;G MACHINE
SHOP

OCTOBER 29, 1977

FRESH

If you aren't com plete ly sa 11sf1 ed tha i loose
bai t Pur ina Rat Control Pelle ts are mo re palatable I han
any o th e r rat bM yo u've used. Pun na wil l refund the
full purchase pnce SEE US FOR DETAILS
Punna Ral Co rilro l Pelle ts- :j 1 Wltl1 1he fa rm
market, ~1 witl1 ra ts. shou ldn't they be lf1 wt lh you?

.

Steel fabrication, complete
s·fock Of steel : rounds,
plates and structuals.

•

PURINA
RAT CONTROl
PELLETS

l 'o•m p.l~t in~ l.t••• n ·s a nd Ul ht•r Hesidut·s
is b&lt;-t h an urg;tnit rertilizer and a Suil
l'Hnditionl'f . It s pri mHry va lue is its mod ifying effec t ori sedI

F arni storage
good business

The New Kelley...

....--=-a;.
' '

LEADING
COMPETITIVE

Public walk in business
industrial or constructio~
business welcomed.
Large lathes and boring
mills.
Meta II zing, welding and

I .

l&lt;n"7 FORD VAN, 8 pass., v 8,
ovto.,PS, PB, tinted glou, fully
.carpeted, AM FM radio. Manv
ell:tros . Coll2•5·5533 .

RAT CONTROL PELLaS

Tri Slate Upholstery Shop. '
1163 SeCond Avenue . Gallipolis
446-7833, Evenings 4-46·1~

or Too Small

Bill'S
446-2642

Purina~.

· -·9-pd .

Free Estimates
No Job Too largE

Anchoring, Skirting,
Awnings,
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint, Set-up
and Re-levellinq Call.

•'

Agent yAgrit·ullure

Cull\1)11 ~1

our streams and rivers

farmer deserves~
a lot ofcredit.

•

Coii4•6-•04S.

NEWGMC
. Truck H&amp;Odquorten
1974 1/r T. GMCPickup
11~74 y, T. GMC Pickup
1973 '/, Chev. Pickup
1974 V, T. GMC PU '
1-- 1973 ~ T. Chev . PU
1974 '/ r T. Chev . PU
1973 ElComino with top
.
1974 t; , T. Ford PU
. 1973 thre·e.fourth T. Ford PU
11~74 three -fourth Chev . PU
1974 three -fourth T. GMC PU
1971 GMC 9500 Tractor
1974 '/, T. Ford Pickup
1968 1 T. Ctlev. Cob &amp; Chassis
1973 International 1800 Series .

Young's
Carpeting
Koo~

-=-

The American

•
••
•••
••
•
••

Superior
Ste1m Eltrattion

Bissell Siding Co.
Frtt blim'ilts

-••

~

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.
Storm Windows &amp; Insulalion.
Call Professionals

Alocal contrKtOf
Phone 94!1-2801
Of 949-2860

water. Rlnse m a clear, warm water with a small amount of
household diSinfectant added . Dry gnurds thoroughly and sort
nut poor specunens n?t hkely lo keep in storage , arrangements
ur other uses (lfle ITUght make of them.
Cu,re gourds by placing them on several layers of newsJli&gt;per In a 70 to ao degree place where there is air circulation.
Us&gt;WUy th1s takes from ~ to 4 weeks, depending on weather
conditions and the SIZe of the gourds. A small hole drilled
thmughlhe flower end of large, hard shell gnurds helps speed
U&gt;e drymg process. Gourds are dry when seeds rattle on
shaking the gourd. Store cured gourds in a cool dry plac'C.

Au.lotnatic
Transmissiotl Semco

CAIT IIIION

ITOYliAND
fiAEPUCU

di?.

SWAIN

tr

M:Jt

s~em begins to dry and turn brown , or when the leaves start to
Afte~ haryestjng, gow·ds may be washed in warm, soapy

HH -.

~ 974

" COUNTRY PLACE " . 5.3 ac res, barn , chi cken h o~se
and grana r y. Good fence . d SR home, f amil y rm .,
ga ra ge. F uel oi l f urnace . Lots of spa ce for fam ily
li vi ng "$32 ,500 .
.

SUPER YARD! Nearly a n acr e su rrounded. by trees .
Wel l c ared for 2 BR fr ame home , eat -in ~i tc hen , f ue l oil
furna ce . Storage bldg . Rural wa ter , city Sc hool s.
E xc ell ent buy at ~22 . 500 .

c.r• .

Ga!lipolis The r e is m uc h
demand in this area by
r ent er s f or apartm ents. Jf
you are I he ty pe of investor
who li k es r esi denti al rental
proper ty this Ia~~; shelter
coul d off er you an exce llen t
hedge aga inst taxa t io n and
inf l ation .

J BR ranch wi th U.S.
Steel si d ing , hardwood floors . ea t -in ki tchen w i th range
an d re fr ig. Low ut il i' y bill s. Carport, 31 2 ac r es w it h
300' rd . f rontag e on Rt. 588 . Just m inutes · from
dow ntow n Gall ipolis . $28.500 .

TAKE A CLOSER LOOK -

on

t he Oh io R iver in th e ci ty
Hm1TS .

VALUE - LOCATION-· lAND.

OLIVE STREET Withi n walk ing d ist ance
dow ntown. 3 BR fra me . Nice eat-in k 1tct1 en . Gar age.
Na tur al ga.s furna ce . Godo con d. $30.000.

I

sa .soo .oo .

KRINER -SAND HOlLOW RD . Good. co mforta ble 2

44

fr-

J . Ap p r ox .

story , 3 BR fram e ho me. Fam ily k itchen w ith rang:e
a('l d r efr i g: . Ful l basement, nea r ly new fue l oil f urna ce.
Over 5 acres with several good bldg . si tes . Cit y schools .
$37,000 .

WARM AND FRIENDLY Gather around the
fi r ep!ace in · _the fa mily rm . and en joy the wi nter
e'l entng s. Th1s 3 BR br ick , all elec t ric r anch ha s a
Wa rm Morn in g wood burner fo r a dded co mfort and
ecoliom y_. Wor k saver kitc hen wi th lot s of cab 1nets,
r ange, q1shwasher, and d isp . 34' acre lot . $37,500 .

Service
1l'11m1
tfMo ....,_, Trvcli; w 14.1...._-

with an exis t i n g
con cre te blOc k bu ildi ng :

----------------------------down t own . A p pro~~; . J ~ acre wooded lot offers excellen t
vi ew . pr ivacv. 3 BR red wood home, eat in k itchen
fea t ures d ining area with pict ure win dow, ha r dwood
floo r s, car port Ga s fu rnace heat. S35,000 .

Radiator~

SAVE ON TOUR FUEl BILL THIS

lntulllion Smic•
firllltill&amp; Awaia~

10-29-lmo.

EXPERIENCED

._....,..,,.

.....

'

Road

'

ORC~AR.O ~ll. L - One o f the n1cest nieg hbor hood s in
the c1ty . Wt f htn walki ng d i stance of sc hool s a nd

,Pho~e 992 -7034 .

FREE ESTIMATES

Ro ute 325 and Cor a Mills

Drive out Rt. 160 (from Holzer Medical Center) turn
left on Rt . SS4 at Porter . . t=ollow Rt . 554 a short
dr s tance until you see our sign on the right .

JUST LISTED! - ON"n your own business . Rest auran t
w it h equipmen t . Nearly n ew bld g. Cal l for more
de ta il s. Sl8 ,000 ..

Sale held on October 13, sh ows U&gt;e r;lllowing result"
. At{\la l of 336 steers averaged 488 pounds with an average
pr1ce Of $188.76. Tl&gt;e range was from $25.50 to $41.50 per
hundredweight.
Heifers totaled 372 and averaged 475 pounds each with a n
average price of $141.08. The arnge on the heifers was from
$22.75 to $37 per hundredweight.
·
1be ne&lt;t Feeder Calf Sale will be held at Gallipolis on
Oc toller Zl.
. This )'car's Ohio apple crop Is down considerably,
pa111cular!y &gt;n !he central and southern parts of the state.
Thus, the cost of apples is much higher than in more recent
years.
. Your lavnrft,e supplier may loo k like he is ripping you off
With nme or mO!'e doll~rs per bushel, but remember he had tn
go ne&lt;t do.&gt;r to Michigan, Pennsylvania, etc., lor a supply this
ye~ . H1s price is detennined by ·the cost he had to pay. So
don.t feel too badly about this year's apple cost - everyone is
paymg f&lt;l' the late freezes and dry spring and summer.
Harv~liug and Curing Gourds
Harvest hard shelled and ornamental go urds when the

By John C. Ri ce
Exl c n sj~,n

POMEROY, 0.

�().8 -T h~ Sw1da1·
Tunes..S,•nlinel. Sundar.
O&lt;·t.' 23.
•
•

19i7

J

-

•

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

f=or Sund•J· Oct. 23, 1877

Bernice Bede Osol

..

ft~m
~ ITlcrW[})(flffi\1

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
6.1;3

'&lt;'~c a r nat ,on

ot

\. IS"lnu
1 Sma t ... asse t

6 1'"'u"'datK,"
· 1 NO'

~

Ir an~

· 8 w · ~ ess
· 9 Las!oer .
.:0 S,o, or!;!-stlaoea
.:1 (;ems

"9

7-l Partof\nOIIn

~

35 SJomerge
36 Jumpf'O

38 S rnol er
JQ Hall'

-ll Buna te
-l;? P•ohrbrts
-lJ Encountere-d

Heann:y

113Ma le
11-1 Not ot scale

Doctr ne

51 Roman tyrant
5:! Tanga ny11(a ter -

1 15 Scene

36

CIPI IO US

~ ~~~~noon 1),\f

al f rst

11 7 C haslrse
1 18 Stony r. dge
1 19 Dm11t11 sn
5 ~ E&lt;it
12 0 Ch a ldea n c rt\
55 Sma ll wheets
S~Un1t0f
1 21 S1ng1e ttem s
123 Turf
Jaoa nese c ur ·
12 .1 Atgon ou 1n lnre ncy
Oians
58 Per .a os o111m e
125 Tr ade d 'or
EJ .Oepos •tS
Money
61 Ooe n ng
12 6 oe r,o rm
t2 Declare
5..1 Auoees la bb' 1 ·12 .. Clrmb1ng oa tm
65 ~rench art1c1e
129 Gr eek p• tnce ss
n tory labbr l

53 E1t. 1SI

JJ

1·-16

1 :) 4

-1 1 Prohrbi!S

. -1 2 Stor.:tge com
oanmer,ts
-14 Mol ars
-1 ~Rabbi!
-H3 Oftrcr3 sum
mons
-19 Sou ttl AmN rCan
mamm,t l
50 Spoor .._
5 4 Hes rtate"S
55 Young co .,..
56 Band ot ector
59 Places for war

M ore COnlPI~

Qo,., r-\ cue!..
ot !fle

Goad~ss

woo a
·

102

Ot'~.Ht•ssrd'ns

39 Ol!spr .nq

1-l4 SM

1J 8

99
tOO

Je De&gt;test

1.12 Oeclate
I

LOCi\I IQMS

J~ HerJil'~

• 5,) Reta· ' est.lbl,sh
n1er11

'51 K .rc1 o f wool

DO WN
1 Laun

Male deer lpl 1
3 Unemployed
-1 Three - toea
~

HERE'S MY PERSONAL INVITATION TO
SEE THE FORD IN YOUR FUTURE •••
'78 FORD FAIRMONT"

oever,tge
F,1s tened
Issue torth
Sattrng .. ess£&gt;1
Etectrrl ed o&lt;~rll

tte s
105 Stall
106 tnslr uCI
107 Arct rc w rnO
109 Jorn
• 1 1 1' Senror c tr:z ens
112 Frsh
1 13 Beer mgredrent
1 16 Ur:rt at SramesP
currency
118 Cheers
1 19 Sorrows
17.2 Pett~ ruler
1 :? 4 Fr rgrnens
125 M r).

THE BEITER USED CARS ARE FOUND WHERE THE
BEST NEW CARS ARE SOLD, WHERE ELSE BUT
SMillf.NELSON MOTORS. JUST ASAMPLE

~ l at hs

s"

1 3 Part o f cnurcn
14 Frss rle roc k
I 5 Nal!v e ot 10n1a
t6 Contend
1 7 Mans nrckname
21 Dun1s hm ent

7S' ANNMIISARY

••
•••

:••
••

unscramble these lour Jumbles ,
one letter to each square, to 1orm
four ordinary word s.

LIDAP

••

~~---· :

••
•
••

...• .
••

NOW'S YOUR JIME TO BUY

••
•
•••
••
••

TRIHM
1

rJ

DISCOUNT PRICES
76 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille _ _ _ _ •7900

WfoiAT HE' DID

Red with ~hite vinyl roof , white leather inter ior , ful l
power and factor y air, fu ll stereo, cruise control. T&amp; T
wheel .

)VHEI\J He GOl'

iHE "R'U:5H·OFF.
Now arrange the circled letter s to
form the surprise allSwer, as sug·
gested by the above canoon.

IJ I . I
Printanswerhero:"[

I I I I I I I
·

TV Log for easy viewing
SUNDAY, OCTOBER l3, 1977
6:00--AG·USA 4; This is the Life 10.
6 : 3~Jerry Falwell 4; Ta lking Hands 8; American
Problems andCha llenges 10.
7:00--Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Eddie Saunders 6;
Thinking In Black 8; Treehouse Club 10;
Newsmc1ker ' 77 13.
7 : 3~ Th is Is the Life 3; Your Health 4; Show

My

People 6; Jerry Falwell 8; Urban League 10;
Amazing Grace Bib le Class 13.

&amp;:DO-Mormon Choir 3 ~ Day o1 DiscOvery .4 ; Grace

Cathedral 6; Church Service 10; Dr . E.J . Daniels
presents Happiness Js 13; Sesame Street 20 .

8:3G-Oral Roberts3 ; J immy Swaggart 4; C~lebratlon
of Pra ise 6; Day' of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard 13; Open Bible 15.
9:00--Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Oral Roberts 10;
Robert . Schuller

4;

Leonard ~epass 8 ;

. :J.qaer.s 20.

Rex Humbard 6; Rev .
Ernest Angley 15; M ister

.

.

9 : 3~What Does The Bible Plainly Say? 8; It 1s

Written 10; Jim Franklin 13; Zoom 20 .
. 10:0Q-Chr lst is th e Answer 3; Church Serv ice 4;
Communique 6; Chr istian Center 8; Sesatne· Street

20 ; Movie " What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?"
10; Jl mmv Swaaqart 13; Gospel Singjng· Jubllee15.
lO : J~Big Blue Marble 3: Yours for the Asking 4; Rex
Humbard 8; Hot Fudge 6i Garner Ted Armstrong

13.·
11 :00--TV Chapel 3; Doctors on Call 4; Notre Dame
Highlights 6; Rex Hum bard 15; Rev . Henry Mahan
13 ; Infini ty Factory 20 .
11 : 3~At Issue 3; Focus on Columbus 4; West VirginiaHighlights 8; Med lx 13; Electric Company 10.
12 : 00-Meet The Press 3,4, 15; IssueS and Answers 6;

Evangelistic Outreach 13; Rebop 20.
'77 3,15; News Conference·• 4; College
Footbal 1'77 6; NFL Today 8; The Issue 10: Willard
Wilcox 13: Music 20 .
12 : 5~NFL Follies 10.
1: 00- NFL Football 3,4,15,8,1 0; Directions 6;
1 1 : 3~NFL

·~

Washington Week ln
Answers 13; Nova 20.

Review

33;

Issues

and

~

1:».-America's Black Forum 6: Town Topics 13; Live
trom Lincoln Center 33.

2:00--Aware 6; Public Pol ley Forums 13; Age of
Uncertainty 20.
·
2 : 3~Anlmals, Animals, Animals 6.
3:00--San Pedro Beach Bums6; Tony the Pony 13; Pro
Sdccer 20 .
3:31)--{;llffwood Avenue Kids 13.
4:00--NFL Football 3,4,15; Movie "They Call Me
Trinity" 6: WVU Extension Services 8; Movie
" Never Too Late" 10; Movie " All The King's Men
1); Documentary Showcase 20.

6:00--Let' s Deal With It 6; Face The Natlon.8; Parent
•Effectiveness 33 ; Bay City Rollers ·JO ; Fran Curci :

Football 13: Rebop 20.
6 :3~News 6;
30 Minutes 8; ~rench Chef 20.33;
13.

(

I

r

(Answers Monday)

Jumbles: LIBEL GUEST PAUNCH

Answer ; Why he wasn't tlred after not sleeping

tor days-,HE SLEPT NIGHTS

Minutes 8(10; Crockett's VIctory Garden 20 ; Firing

Line 33.
7:3~A ntlques

76 Cadillac Sed. DeVille

75 CadillaC Coupe DeVille Was

MONDAY, OCTOBER 14,1977
Report 13; 5 : 5~PTL Club 13;
Sunrise Semester 10: 6 : 2~Medlx 10.

5 : 4~Farm

5 : 5~

6:30-Columbus Today .4 ; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8;
6 : 4~Morning Report 3; 6 : 5~Good Morning West
Virginia 13; 6 : 5~Chuck White Reports 10; Good
Morning, Trl State 13,
·
7:00--Today 3,4,15; Good l.,jornlng America 6,13; CBS
News 8: Bullwinkle 10.
7 : 3~Schoolles 10; 7 : 4~Sesame St. 33 .
8:0G-Capt. Kangaroo··a.10.
9:00--Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15; Fam ily
Affair 8, 10.
9 : 3~Edge of Night 6: Andy Griffith 8; Here's LucyJ U
10 : 0~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Big Valley 6; Here's
Lucy 8; Joker's Wild 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 : 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4,15: Pr ice is Right 8, 10.
ll : O~Wheel of Fortune 3,15: Marcus Welby, M.D. 4;
Happy Days 6, 13; E lee. Co . 20.
11 : 3~Knockout 3,15; Family Feud 6 , 13; Love of Life
8,1 0: Sesame St. 20,33.
11 : 5~CBS News 8: Laying Free 10.
12:00--Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; To Say The · Least
15; Dlvorc~ Court 8; Midday 13 .
12:3~Bob Braun 4; Chico &amp; the Man' 15 ; Ryan 's Hope

6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10; ~lee. Co. 33 .

1:00--Gong Show 3; New• 8: All My Chi ldren 13 ; Young
&amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15.
1:3()-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; A s The World Turns

8,1 0.

Reme mbers 20;

Equal Justice

Under Law 33 .
3: 15-General Hosp i tal 6,13; 3:30- Mat c h Game 8, 10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Lowell Thomas Remembers

33.

·'

••

1

was moo NOW

•••

s2900

••

••
•••

Full !)Ower; air, stereo.

See one ot' these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris. Marvin Keebauqh or George Harris.

•••
••
••
••
•

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

Kotak 8,10; Visions 20,33 .
11 : 00--News 3,4,6,8, 10,1 3. 15.
11 : 1~ABC News 6; CBS News 8,i0; PMA Pulse 15.

10; PTL Club 13; Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.
12 :00--FBI6; Movie "The Secret of Monte Cristo" 10;
Janakl 33,
12 : :~Notre Dame Highlights 8: ABC News 13.
1:3()-Peyton Place 4.

••
••
•

5900

1

•
10,000 , ••
••
Bronze, tan , vinyl roo1. leather Interior , full pOwer and
••
a ir, cruise control, AM-FM stereo tape .·

77 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille

lO :oo-Gabriel Kaplan Presents the Sma II Event 6, 13;

11 : Jo-Mo'lle "The Movie Maker" 3; Movie " The
Dese.rt Fox" .4 ; Movie " The Man with the Power "
6, 15; Second City TV 6; 700 ClubB; Face The Nation·

moo NOW

•••

Full power, fac tory air , leather sea1s, T&amp; T wheel ,
stereo, 32,900 miles .

9:3()-Ailce B. 10.

Lowell Thomas

Wa s moo NOW 17900

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

20 .

8:00--Happy Birthday. Las Vegas 6,13; Rhoda 8.1 0;
Evening at Symphony 20,33
8:3~First Fl·fty Years-A Closer Look 3,4,15; On Our
Own 8,10.
9:00--AIIIn The Fami ly 8,10; Dickens of London 20,33.

••
•
•••
•

Light bl ue. blue vinyl roof , de·elegance interior , fu ll
power and a ir, AM-FM stereo with tape. T&amp; T steering
wheel.

STYMIE

Marie 6,13; 60

Pyramid 6,13; 2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15: One
Life to Live 6.13: Guiding Light 8,10.
3:00--Another World 3.4.15; All In The Family . B,1 0;

" Hot Spell" 8.
5:00--Amerlcan Short Story 20; Nova 33 .

'7]

a.

2 : 0~$20, 000

4 : 3~Movle

tjewsmaker

7:00--World of Disney 3,4, 15; Donny

Yesterd.ay·s

•
•••
•••

~ 0 I~ Ll"l OS
4 : 0~Mister

Cartoon 3; Little Rascals.Our Gang 4;
Gong Show 15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's Is B;
Sesame St . 20,33 Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dlrah 13.
4 : 3~My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4;• Brady
Bunch a, 10; Little Rascal.s 15.

•

My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Miste r Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5:3()-{)dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
5:oo-Bonanza 3;

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.

6:QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4,15; Carol Burnett a. Friends 6;
CBS News 8,10; As We See It 10; ABC News 13.
7:00--Truth or Cons. 3; Cross.Wits 4; Liars Club 6;
Marty Robbins Spotlight 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 1J; Gilligan's Is . 15; Prime Time 20; Know
Your· schools 33 .

7 : 3~That Nashville Music 3; New Truth or Cons. 4;
Muppet Show 6; Match G'ame PM 8; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Repoort 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid
Camera 13: Nashville on the Road IS.
8:00--Little J!~ use on the Prair ie 3.4.15; Emergency
One 6; Peanuts 8,10; Age of Uncertainty 20.33; San
Pedro Beach Bums 13.
8 : 3~Fat Albert 8.10.
9:1)()-&gt;Movie "The Night They Took Miss Beautiful"
3.4, 15; NFL Footba 116,13 ; Betty White 8,1 0; Images
of Aging 20; Fall of Eagles 33; Maude 8, to.
10 : 0~Rafferty 8,10; News 20 ; Something Personal33.
10 : 3~V TR 33; Farm Digest 20.
'
li · O~News 3,4,8, 10,15; Dick Cavett 20; MacNeil .
Lehrer Report 33 . ·
11: J~Johnny Carson 3,4~ 15;

Movie "You Lie So Deep,
My Love" 8; Movie " The Desperate Ones" 10; ABC
News 33 .

12 :0 ~News6 , 13 ; Janakl33 ; 12 : 3~FBI6 ; lronslde13 .
l . O~Tomorrow 3, 4; 1:30--Mary Hartman 10; News

13.
Movie Channel 4 -

5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Chino (PG)

9 &amp; 11 P.M. - The Women IR&gt;
Cable Channel S 5 p.m·.- PPJHS Football
7 p.m. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7:30 p.m. Y PPHS ·Ripley Football
10 :00 p.m. - 700 Club .

"You'll Like Our Quality way
Of Doing Business"
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evel'lings Til6:00-Til5 p.m. Sat.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PROJECT : DR . SAMUEL
L. BOSSARD
MEMORIAL LIBRARY
Sealed proposals wil t be
received u nt il 12 :00 noon
November 1, 1977 at the
Gal l i a
County
Oislricl
Li brar v, Th ird and Slate
st ree t , Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
for furnish ing mater ia ls and
tabor for t he execution and
construction ot Di" . Samue l L ,.
Bossard Mem oria! Librsrv ,
Ga ll i Polis, Ohio , i n ac ,
cordance wilh the draw ings
and speclf ic.atlons and other
co ntra ct documents Dreoared
by Roberf L. Grcin 1 · &amp;
Associates ,
Arch.ilects .
Proposals will '· b~ open ed
immediately thereafter an d
publicly read at the office of
t he Clerk ·Treasurer .
Proposals w il\ be r ei::e ived
lor the General Consl ruclion
C ontract only . The
in
sl ruclions to the Bidders,
Draw ing s , Specifications ,
Proposal Forrns and o ther
contract Documents may be
ob Ia ined at the office 01
Rober t
L.
Grant
&amp;
Associates , Architects , 1515
Bethel Road , CO lu mbus , Oh io
43220, (614) 457 -4141.
Deposit shal l be SSO .OO per
set. which wi.ll be refund ed
provid.iqg lhe documents ar e
r eturned , shipping charges
prepaid , ih good condit ion
wilh!n len (lO.l days after ! he
rec e i pt
of
bid ,
Tt1e se
docum en ts arc on t ile at . ltle
G atl ia
Coun ty
Oi s1 r icl
Library ColU mbu s Dodg e
Reports, 1050 Freeway Dr i ve
Norlh , Su i te 209, Columbus ,
Ohio 432'19 and !he Builders
Exchange of Columbus, 11 75
Dublin Road , Columbu s, Oh io

A32 15.

All bidders must be in
State
c onformanc e w i th
Equal
Ernptovment Op

'

•

.

Jo n a than E . Louden'·-;
Depu ty Cterk .Treasurer •
Gall i a County' ·
D istr ict L ib rary
Board of Tr ustee-s
Oct . 9, 16, 23, JO

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We se ll anythilfq
tor ,
anybody .. t our Auction
.BArn or in vuor hom e. For
rnlo~mahon ,lnd pickup
~c rvrcc

call 25/) 1967

Sille E verv Sa turday
Niqht t~ t 1 p.m .

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Menneth Swnin , ~uct.
Corn er Th•rd &amp; ('llivr-

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
21) Fam lty oriented activities will
be the ones -,cou 'll get the most
kicks ou1 of today. Spend your
time with kith and krn .

ALL OF OUR CARS ARE IN RECONDITIOrt THRU OUR
SERVICE DEPARTMENT. THEY HAVE BEEN WINTERIZED,
SAFETY CHECKED AND ARE IN GOOD RUNNING
USED CAR SPECIAL

Large Selection
New 4-Wheel Drive
Ton Pickups &amp;Surburban
Chevy G2o~~~~~~~s7,995

.

~76

Chevy.Van G20 .... s5,495

~~ 73

Chevy Series... ... ..... $3,395

..

3

6

~---~....
$2...
19--5--+-"!"!"!"""~$1995
2

P.S.,

s3295

..

..

s3395

..

$2195

. $2495

$3195

$2995

~

.USED CARS

sz995

New Hope

·'69 Chevelle Wagon ...,... s699

Vinton

:',75 Ford Torino4.or......$2,595

'72 Maverick2-or.. :....... sl,595

..

In For AGOOD DEAL

Qlue Lake

porlunity ReQurrements and
inc l ude EEO F orms in the ir
bid proposa Is .
A cer tified check payabl e
to " Gall ia County D ist r ict ...
Library" or a properlY '"
secured A lA Form of Bi~ ·
Bond , in any amoun t equalio on
S percent of tt1 e total bid shall ,,..
be submitted wit h the bid . · ..
Th e own er reser ves th e righ' t ·•
to accept or reiect any or all ''
po!rrts of any bid .
,,.
The successfu l bidder wilt
be r eQuired to f urn ish a · '
sa ti sfac l ory performance
bon.d for one -hundred percent
( 100 percent) ot the Contract ·
price No b ids may be with . '
drawn for at lea.s t six tY (60) , 1
days after ,tt1e sc.he d ul ·e d
closing lim e tor lh ~ rece ipts.. '
of bids .

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

a

•

SELL-DOWN

THIRD &amp;COURT

SCORPIO (Oct .. 24-Nov . 22) II at

.} 4 Scout II ............... s2,895

~•

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

alt possible , try to combine
business with p.leasure today
You ha\le th e knack for wheeling
~nd dealing In a con vivi al selling

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

••

WE'RE CLOSING OUT ALL '77 DODGES
AT DEALER'S COST AND BELOW~--

LIBRA (Sepl. 23 · 0Ct. 23)
C h ailne l your ene rgres int o
some th ing pr o duC IJ" e today
rather than JUSt t"'king rt easy.,
You'll be happier 11. you 're industrious. Find out more about
yourself by sen ding for your
copy ot Astra-Graph Letter . Mait
50 ce nts for each and a tong ,
self - a ddre sse d , stamped
envelope to Astr a-Graph , P.O
Box 489, Rad io C1ty Station , N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify your
birth sign .

and family , after having S()ld Cleveland where Margo and
their home on · the Carter Sonny James were per· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Don' t be afraid to make difficult
Road, are having a new home forming.
decisions today - you r judgMrs. Alice Gayle Thompbuilt on a lot near . her
ment Is extremely keen and
parents' home, Mr . and Mrs. son was a recent overnight you 'll t1ave the cou rage ot you r
guest of her parents, Mr. and convic tion s.
Shelly 0. Slone.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Pullins of Mrs. Brady Sheets.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
Mr. and Mrs . James Your fina ncial prospects conWyandotte, Mich., called on
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Steger Moore, Parkersburg , were tinue to look nitty again today .
Sunday dinner guests of their Keep on top of situations that
recently.
could show a profit.
·
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Mr. and Mrs. Darvln Banks daughtel', Mr. and Mrs.
of Dayton were recent guests ' Kennison Saunders and PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
•
Don 't be too surprised at the
of his mother, Mr. and Mrs . family.
num ber. of admiring glances and
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Charley
Emmit Halley .
co mpliments you get from
Mr . and Mrs. Craig JohnS()n were recent guests members of the opposite sex .
1973 CAPRICE
1973 GMC 'h Ton Pick·Up
Belleville have moved from of his mother, Mrs. Edward Someth ing extra-special is going
P.S., P.B., air, split seat, custom
speed, ely., good mechanical
Bidwell to his grandfather's Johnson and Mrs . Mary for you tod ay.
farm home, Mr. and Mrs . Wolford.
ARIES (Morch 21·April19) Dointerior
condition.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Pullins ing things lor loved ones is what
Stanley Belleville, on the
3/ ..
John Creek Rd. They pur· (the former ShirleY Mae w1\l alfo-rd you the greatest
plea sur e toda y. Put their needs
chased it from his grand· Saunders of Wyandotte fir st.
mother, the wife of the late Mich.) spent a few days
1974 OLDSMOBILE 98
1975
Sianley Belleville. Mrs. visiting relatives and friends TAURUS (April 20-May 20) This
is a QCjiOd day to· visit a male
Ftberglass ra•sed roof. bunks, screen , 12 '1/ ., electric relngerator ,
Belleville moved to the home in Gallia County. They visited fnend o f yours wt1o you 've been
door, air, power locks, seat &amp;
Air,
P.B., Am-Frn radio,
turnac;e, Porta Potti, stove , dinette, 350 v.a eng ., auttlmabc. P.S.,
her sister, Mrs . Wilma out of ·touch wl1h lately . He'll be
they vacated at Bidwell.
windows, custom interior, black
low mileage
P.B. , a•r cond ., AM / FM stereo rad1o and tape , W·W t•res. red and
Mrs ..Amy VinS()n and three , Haycraft and her aunt. Mrs. delighted to see you again.
wh1te. Only 10,000 m1les and c;lean as new .
of
Gallipolis.
Ollie
Oliver
children were Sunday guests
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your
velvet , loaded
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Queen, ambitions are easily stimulated
of her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Ml'\
Frank
Queen,
Mr.
and
today if there is a possibi li"ty for
Haskell Saunders.
Mrs. Cleeland Willis and Mrs . Rex Unroe, Charley personal gain . Something iS
NOVA .SS
1974 MUSTANG II
:{ravel top , 258 cu 1n 6 cyl. eng1ne . auto. trans., hke new tires ,
Matthew attended Queen , Mrs. Ermabelle brewing that should keep you
son
(,ad10 , 2 wheel dr rve
qu rte busy.
Auto .. trans., P.S.·, P.B., V-8,
Auto., lhis is one owner car
Parent.s '
Day at the SisS()n, Perry Queen. Mr. and
CANCER
(June
21-July
22)
Mrs.
James
Slone,
Mrs.
Ella
white lett~r Remington tires
and has been taken care of!
Georgetown College at
Georgetown, Ky .. where her Mae Cox and daughter Waste no lime in acting upon inlormation you 'll receive today
c
daughter, Lou Ann Willis, is a Wanda Cox, all attended the tha t ca n advance your self·
owner. 350, V-8 , Automa ttc power steenng and brakes, rally
funeral
of
Mr.
Albert
Queen
freshman .
Interests. Speed is essentiaH
l'heels, chrome equJpment, mtenor paoeled and insulated.
Little Angela King was a Jr. at the Heck's Fllneral LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)
1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER
CARLO
•carpeted , ready to add your own ~mpfng equrpment.
dinner guest Sunday of Mr . Home at Milton, W. Va.
•
Underplay yo ur role in joint ven•
Black with red cloth interior,
4 speed over drive, P.S., low
Mrs. Ruth Waugh, Mrs . tures today. Feed the ideas to
and Mrs. Brady Sheets.
Thelma
Boster
and
son
others.
but
let
them
take
the
extra
sharp
John Robert. Spurlock
m;leage .
60
celebrated his birthday David, Charlotte Pinkerman, bows. The only thing that's im·to8 " c.ab 10 axle, extra good 82~•20 l.res, 1~ ,000 lb., 2·speed.
• •
portant Is the results .
recently
on
Saturday Teresa, Kathy and Brian
::.292 cu . m. engine. Real sohd!
evening. Those helping him Rose were· recent guests of VIRGO (Aug .. 23-Sepl. '22) Tne
••
celebrate were Mr. and Mrs . Mr.s. Marybelle Mooney and :; pirit ot cooperation is strong ·
1973 CHEVROLET
1975 DODGE DART ·
with in you today and since you
Earl Spurlock and son, Mrs. Bertha Craig.
are so willing, others in turn will
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Pullins of be helptut to you .
4 door. auto., one owner, low ,
David, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
4 wheel drive, auto., low mileage
Halley an.d S()n Bobbie, Mr . Wyandotte, Mich ., and Mrs.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
mileage .
·and Mrs. Hollis Mooney and Ollie Oliver of Gallipolis were
.·----~~~~~~~~-----daughter Amy, Frances recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. ·
" The freedom of the press
Thompson
and
Nancy Harold Saunders and family . is one of the great bulwarks of
Mrs. Blache Stevers was a liberty and can never be
Mullins. They all enjoyed
birthday cake and ice cream . recent patient at the Holzer restrained but by despotic
Alvin Garrott of Cincinnati his regular appointment
He received several nice Medical Center.
governments."
•
was acMr.
and
Mrs.
Darvin
Banks
has passed away. He was a Sunday and
-George Mason
gifts.
By Ada Keels
companied
by
his
daughters.
of
Dayton
spent
a
brother-in-law
few
days
of
Mr.
Lloyd
Mrs . Louise King was a
Word came to this com·
Several
people
were
sick and
J.
B.
Banks
and
came
to
Lloyd's
with
Mrs.
Howell
who
recent guest of Mrs. Eva
munity
that
Mrs.
Mary
Allen
not
able
to
attend
services.
home
place
and
spent
many
·
family
and
they
all
visited
' Y·8, automatrc.
·
Barcus.
Payne Lee had passed away
'
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young,
days hunting , which both
Mr . and Mrs . Clifford Mr. J. B. Banks who is a
Mn.
Eleanor
While
in
a
hospital
in
Cleveland
By
spent overnight with
Dayton,
patient
at
the
Holzer
Medical
enjoyed.
Mooney and son were recent
Mrs.
Jesta
Mathews
of
Saturday
evening.
She
was
her
mother,
Mrs . Mary
Those
on
the
route
at·
Center.
. guests of 1\fr. and Mrs .
Dirk green tm1sh, blk. vinyl .t nm, 351 V-8. automatiC, P.S., P.B.,
Howard
and
family
Tuesday .
Mettle
Payne's
only
Columbus
spent
the
weekend
·
tending
the
·Bob
Evans
Mrs.
Stanley
Mooney
Stanley E. Mooney and S()n,
:wheel W\'ers. radio , local 1 owner . ·
with
her
mother,
Mrs.
Desta
daughter.
Her
grandparents
Mr.
Glen
Elkins
received
celebrated
·her
birthday
Festival
over
the
weekend
Lower River Rd. ·
Swick.
were Mr. and Mrs. Will
that
his
grandfather
at
word
and
Mrs.
Flo
Hurt
,
were
Mr.
recently.
Her
husband
helped
Mrs . Faye Clark of
Mrs.
Virgie
Houck
called
Payne,
Rio
Grande,
before
Charlestown,
Ohio,
had
a
and
Mrs.
Jim
Howard
Mr.
her
celebrate.
Chesapeake, Mrs . Odessa
Beatrice
Bush
moving
to
Cleveland
to
spend
on
Mrs.
recent
operation
and
had
and
family,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard
Galloway , Mr. and Mrs.
Wednesday.
their last days among their
William
Howard
and taken a tum for the worse .
Oakey Johnson were recent Wilcox and family, Salt Lick,
0Sm~a~II~V~·B~.:au~t~om~at:ic~.~P~.S~,~ra~d~IO~.~g~~~t~ir~e~s.~C~Ie=a~n~l-------­
Mrs.
Hazel
Sterbenz
of
children.
The
funeral
was
children,
Mrs
.
Ruby
Hurt
and His mother , Mrs . Ivan
Va.,
were
recent
over·
W.
guests of Mrs. Edward
'lt9.2126
·
Pomeroy
Columbus
spent
the
weekend
held
at
Cleveland
Wed·
Elkins, was called to Charlesnight
guests
of
her
mother,
children
.
Johnson . and Mrs . Mary
Open Evenlng1 yntll I p.m •
with
her
mother,
Mrs.
Lucy
nesday.
Her
many
friends
are
town Tuesday evening.
Rev
.
Cuffie,
Ironton
,
filled
and
Mrs.
Emmit
Halley
.
Mr.
Wolford.
Hartsook.
S()rry to hear of her passing.
her
brother,
They
also
visited
Mr. Kennison Saunders
Mr . and Mrs. Wendell
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young,
celebrated his birthday Mr . .1. B. Banks at the Holzer
Woodruff
of
Obetz
spent
the
Dayton,
were caljed home
Medical
Center.
recently.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Monday
in
Gallipolis to make
weekend
with
Mrs.
Robert
Spent'llr
spent
Mr. and Mrs. Kennison
Karl Harder.
arrangements for the pass~ng
Parents
Day
with
her
Saunders are announcing .the
Mrs. Esta Downard called . of Frank's father who dted
Janice, Dick Bell and Goldie, birth o( a S()n at a Parkers· daughter, Carla, who is a
Frank Carpenter lind his wife burg, W. Va., hospital. He sophomore at Rio Grande on Mrs. James Snyder Sunday.
I
Monl!ay evening.
Mr~. Audrey Jean Pryor,
Leah and Greg Reams, weighed eight and one-hall College.
called
her
Mrs. Shirley Smith, Rio Cmcmnat&lt;,
The Rev. Jerry Galloway
Chester Kite and Martha, pounds and
.' By Ruby Saunders
is being
The personal property of the late Frieda M . Faehnle
The following descendents Vicky Vernon, Peggy and welcomed by two little and Rev. Bobbie Galloway Grande, spent Monday with mother, Mr~. Ada . Keels,
will be ~ld at 504 S. lrd Ave. in Middleport, Ohio,
and relatives of Floyd Car· Scott, Mindy Kite , Ed brothers, Nils and Jamie. were guest speakers at the her mother, Mrs. Thelma Sunday evenmg statmg Mr.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
penter attending were: In Salyers, Alec Roese and They named him Wesley Eureka United Christian Barnes,
.4 poster bed w -dresser and bench, 8 straight cha ir s, 3
number 114. His wife, Lucy Julia, Steve Roese, Connie Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. James ·Church.
David White called on Mr.
wash stands one w-marble top, corner cupboetr d s,
The Rev. Grady .Crowell of and Mrs. Ben Steppe Wed·
and children, Fred, Elmer, and Mia, Jerry Roese, Sherry Moore of Parkersburg are the
china closet , upholstered love seat cha ir, 5 ro cki ng
Margaret\ Bradley, Nora and Brad, Mike Barcus Qnd maternal grandpilrents. Mr. Cincinnati will be the nesday morning.
chairs, .4 drawer bureau. round &amp; oblong tables,
Wooten, Goldie Bell, Frank, Kathy, Geo. Carpenter, and Mrs. Harold Saunders evangelist for a series of
Mrs. Jan Rees and S()ns
marble top Stand, hall tree, cu rved arm chair, dropThe Almallac
Martha Kite, Julia Roese, LaurH, David, Debbie, Chris· are the paternal grand· meetings at the Victory spent Tuesday with her
leaf tables, 4 &amp; 6 legs, 4 round stands. crys tal tear drop
Press
United
ti ~ nd Bob, Heather, parents and Mrs . Ruby Baptist Church beginning mother, Mrs. Peggy Stevens By
lamp, day .bed , 5 pc. bedroom suite, 2 drawer bedside
Geroge and Ethel Price.
International
fabl e , shaving mug , 3 pc. stoneware, oak chest. J pc .
The families and relatives Shonda, Bonnie Fain and Saunders Is a great· Oct. 21 thrvugh Nov. 6. The and uncle, David Ward.
sedional bookcase, chair &amp; ottoman . co uch &amp; chair, 2
Today Is Sunday, Ol:t. :1.'1,
pastor, Rev. Ke nneth
were : Luther Carpenter, Shawn, Peggy Carpenter, grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. Avery Adkins
drawer stan d, Iron mantle clock , 1 set H av il ilnd china ,
Gladys Hallback, Arnold Dorothy Fannin, Eddie Price,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley Sanders, invites the public to have returned home after th~ 296\h day of 1977 with 69 to
napple, cut ~ l ass d ishes nd gl·a sses, c ut g l as~
.compote.
follow
.
Carpenter, his wife Sue and . Ethel and Robert, Pastor and family, Centerpoint, attend and hear this inspirin~ . spending several days
sugar &amp; cr ea mer . Ste rling Silver 5 serving piec es W·
The
moon
is
approaching
children, Katrina, Freddie, Gerald Brown and Norma, were recent guests of Mr. and speaker .
touring the Smoky Moun·
mon~ ram F ., 8 silver souven ir spoon s, 6 nickle silver
its full phase.
Mr. Winfield Vinson of tains,
Jackie,
Rhonda
and Bill Lyons, Joyce and Renee, Mrs. Emmit Halley.
teaspoons, 5 knives &amp; 4 forks flat si l ve r plate , silver 7
The lnornjng stars are
Rebecca; Mike Carpenter, Mary Wood, Vernon Mlll&lt;:r ,
serv ing p ieces, 6 grapefruit spoon s, 1 butter dish . 11
Mr. Shelly Slone and Mr. ' Louisa, Ky., is spending a f~w
Jupiter,
.Mars, Venus and
Christi ,
Chuck Richard Slone called at the days with his son, Mr. and
Rita, Charles, Patty, Michael Pam,
teaspoons, 6 for ks, 1 tablespoon , 2 knives, 23 spoons ,
Saturn.
silver plate sugar &amp; creamer , doll ·tab le &amp; c ha i r ,
and Keith, and Donna Davis. Chambers, Lori and Alicia, Heck's Funeral Home at Mrs . James Vinson and
The evening star is
typewr iter tables, wicker f lower stand s and mi sc .
of God on the Hannan Trace
Elmer Carpenter, Bea his Ted Carpenter, Cathy Janice, Milton, W. Va. in . honor of family .
items .
Mercury
.
Rd.
Oct.
17.
The
Rev.
Orville
Mrs.
Vertie
Halley
has
wife,
Leo
Carpenter. Russell Taylor and Wanda, Albert Queen Jr.
"MISC."
on
this
date
are
Those
born
Carrico
and
son,
Norman,
are
Virginia, John, Jim, Lori and James Potter. Everyone
' Mr. and .Mrs. Jack Queen been ill with a very bad cold
G.
E.
refrigerator
,
color
T .V. , kitchen table W-4 c hairs ,
the evangelists. There is under the sign of Scorpio.
Mlssie·; Donna Faye Potter enjoyed it very much and is were recent guests of Mr. and for a few days .
quilts,
blankets,
comforters,
vases, lamps, t able &amp;
French actress Sara Bern"
Rev. Leonard Uhrich of special singing each evening.
a;ild Ronnie, Don Hall and ·held annually.
Mrs. Owen Queen of Milton,
11oor, throw rugs. card tab les, ce dar chest. metal
Mrs. Rosie Brumfield, Mrs. hardt and American talk
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mooney, W. Va.
Tri-State Bible College at
'\'ammie, Sue Carr, Bob
cabinets, m i rror, Hoover sweeper, end tables. radio .
Mary
Phillips were recent show host Johnny CarS()n
Bradley, Norma, )tobie Mrs . Sarah Halley, Mrs.
electric fan , pi cture, m lsc . dishes. pot s.' pans and sma II
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Spurlock South Point, was guest
appl iance .
IS\
James, Kenny Bradley, Connie Waugh and daughter, and two S()nS and Mrs. Gale speaker at the . Victory. guests of Mrs. Mary Wolford were .born on Oct. 23 - she in
1845
and
he
in
1925.
and
Mrs.
Edward
JohnS()n
,
."COINS&amp;
JEWELRY"
Baptist
Church
Sunday
Crystal,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Terry Hubbard, Roger
Green were recent guest's of
In 1915, an estimated 2,500
5 Silver Dollar s, 1935
Mr .. and Mrs. Stanley E .
Bradley, Janice, Kendra, Angell and her mother, Mrs. " Mr . and Mrs. Robert Halley evening. He was a very good
Gold $5 .00 pieces, 1913 Ind ian
women
marched
in
New
York
of
Mooney
were
recent
guests
Minnie
Shaffer
were
recent
speaker,
the
Rev
.
and
Mrs.
Kermit
Bradley
and
and family .
Gold $5 .00 Pieces. 1880.86 Liberty
City demanding the right to
Margaret, Gordon Woolen guests of Mrs. Marybelle
Jermey Spencer has been Kenneth Sanders are on Mr. and Mrs.: Robert Halley
1
Soli
ta ire Diamond ring approx. 6 Karat , · pearl
vote throughout the United
and Nora, Joan Kaminsky, Mooney and Mrs. Bertha ill for 'a few days with the S()re \lllcation in the southern and family .
necklace, bracelet and earr: in gs and assorted costume
Mr. and Mrs. Harold States.
states.
Marie Beth and David, Craig.
jewelry.
throat.
In 1942, the British 8th
Saunders
attended the
Mrs.
Laura
McGuire
has
Stanley
E.
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Carleen Praete, Lisa and
ESTATE OF FRIEDA M. FAEHNLE
Mr. and Mrs . Manual King
Army launched an offensive
l,iike James M. Mont- returned home after spending
Cash
Positive 10
.Lunch
spent a recent weekend with Mooney were recent guests of Loretta Lynn and Conway at El Alamein , Egypt,
D. Smith
J . Carnahan
T. Donohue
gome~y, our county sheriff, severa l days · with her his son, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley Twitty show at the new field
. 949.2033
house in Hpntington Friday starting a campaign that was
949·2708
742.3048
his wife Norena and children, children at Grove City and
King and family near Akron . and S()n.
1
to
sweep
the
Axis
forces
out
' Not responsible f~r accidents or loss ot property"
evening
.
Th~y
are
Grand
Ole
A
revival
meeting
will
Columbus
,
Jammie, Heidi and Jason;
While there they all visited
of North Afripl .
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Um:oe the Harding Audition at begin at the Big Four Church Opry stars.
Craig !Fisher, Pat Bailey and

']6

..........
1977

I

l&gt;rllr• Hl r .. .11

rHII' U on .. r..-rt,

Be prepared for a more act1ve
year than usual Somett1 ing btg
rs rn !he ofl 1ng lor you that will
expand your socra t1nteres ts and
grve you the opportunity to r
tr avel

~ '77 T~UCK CLEARANCE

POMEROY, OHIO

by Henri Arnotd and Bob Lee

~

lO IIi

See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Darrell Dodrill for a Good Deal on a New or Used
Vehicle.
·
Open Evenings Till7 : oo except Thursday and Saturday. Closed Sunday.
992·2196
rt, o.

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
THAT SCRAMIILED WORD GAME

Whf'" .. lnf'li&lt;A llf'f' .. ,

DAN THOMPSON FORD

Don't forget you owe it to yourself to check with us before you buy
any car new or used. We can save you money . We are The Friendly
Dealer . Call one of these Friendly Salesmen, Ceward Calvert, J . D.
Story or Bill Nelson .

500 E. MAl N ST.

FORD
-

THE FINEST IN. NEW CARS, USED CARS AND SERVICE!

1977 BUICK REGAL 2 DR. HT LOADED.••••••• , • , ............ '5595
1976 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR HT ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~··•••••'5395
1975 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR WEU EQUIPPED •••••• ••• • • • ... •• ....... • '4195
1975 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, CLEAN •••••••••••••• • • ••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • '4495
1974 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR. (TAKE A LOOK) •••• ••••••• •••••••, ............. 13195
1974 OLDS. LUXURY 98 4 DR ••••• •••• ••••• ••• , •• ~, ••••••• ••••••••• •••• •• 13495
1973 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR. A LOCAL ONE OWNER••••••••••••••••••••••••••&gt;2295
1973 FORD GALAX IE 500 2 DR HT ............ ••••• ............. ••• ••• ~. ••'2295
1972 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DR HT ........................... •••••• ....... 11995
1972 BUICK SKYlARK 2 DR HT ........... •• ..... • •....................... '1995
1971 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR. A Good Second Car........... •• ... , ......... , 11195
1971 PONTIAC GRANDVILLE .... ; ......................·••• ; ........ 11195
1970 FORD MAVERICK, FULLY CHECKED••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'895

Sh fU

60 Secure
12ti Thu:oe tklno eu
61 ProCeed
armad rllo s
63 Sl rooery
128Drn
66 Note ol sca le
IJO Aflr rmat tve ... ate.
1 J1 Cubrc rneter
67 A s~ate {a bb r 1
68 Oeg rr~ded
132 Judge
70 seas on ed
I 35 Roster
~ 1 Snake
13 7 Aoove
~2 Su fi" hke
1 138 Orst r rc t rn Ger7~ Feet 1ndtg nan1 at
marw
7 5 Leather maker
1.tO Pe c:Ja \ d1g rl
77Crvl!kedove
t42Fuss
~ 8 Vessel s cur 'led
t d 3 For shame- '
1-l4 Cred 11 \J Obr I
olank. tng
80 Whee l tracks
1.t5 Latrn con1-unc
83 E'JCl ll!A te
t ron
86 M a11 s name·
14 7 Pro11oun
·aa Sco\t tsh ta nd- 1'18 Svmbollo•
Owner
dysorosn.lrJ1

5 Be-nold'
6 Candtd
.. Oeleat
8 Harves t go d
dess
9 Faroe Is lands
wh1r w rnd
t 0 Sags
1 1 Utm ost p01n i s
1 2 q oman number

..._

Dri ve the '78 Fairmont and you 'll see why il's the right
car for Ieday's driving. Easy handling . Roomy comfort.
Fairmont has 90% of lhe inlerior space of tod ay's cars
like Chevy Impala. Fairmont is rig hl for today a nd the
years to come. Fitteen minutes behind the whee l will
tell you th is , a~r much more.

ALL '77 DODGES
MUST GO•••

Oct. 23, 1977

tel tur rum

JS rrunsactrori
J,

New Falrmonl
4·Door Sedan

94 4ero iC: events
96 Mans nu;::knam~
96 Atca hotrc

'1t!nt bones

JJ

89 l uor rc ate s
• 90 Crvrhan detenSt'
lat&gt;br t
&lt;;ll s~·mbol lor

26 tn c:J IVIOu .tiS
30 He,\P
J' Ha o,nq orom

•ng

110 Clottlesmake rs
11 2 Fe rt o rmer

-l 8 M unlctpal,\y

sum"'1er

1 ~1~ Pn3t , dC' Yw n
1-1\."'~ (iroull (it lhrt;!('
1 J I Qrg.H1. 01 ht'df

108 Large tmd

-1- 5 Memoranaa
-l 6 Note at scal e

lor

,_.,.- Gre.1t oust,ml
I J8 frt_&gt;Shi'l

87 Ptece tor onto
90 Havmg
sc a !loped edQe
-32 Piaythmg
93 Gra~estone' ·
95 Water nvmph
... 97 Po~;,er sta"-e
98.Pronoun
99 Comoa'ss ·oc,,.,t
I Ot Cuts
I 03 Src k
I 0&lt;1 ArrQ\I'o DOtSOn
105 Broaden

-''CIIH.)Un

Fren~h

25 1\nock
'27 Mor e pre

l•es

ng

85 Read

1

3 4 DromOr'IIOI\

-19

1 3-l Rock.\ n111

8-l Galewa ..·

.:0 6 RJtof\ill
2 ~ Soanrsh rl.bbr
.?9 C"'Orce oar!
30 rrar"~st \ es
J' Foat1na r
32 '-4a ., s n.an'e

-1 ~

- • R1'o'er 1s 1ana
~ 3 Oen1 ed
shruos
;-g Trap.
81 Slik.worm
82 Oetace

23-Fre~ t•Cl\('\
2 4 WC"-rlh ess ea ....

J3

1JJ

1

23 E\"t&gt;tg,een tre-E&gt;

· vreoc:J ''sh

i' • Con1oact
6'!-l L~ases ·

-:8 Flo wer

22 Aa 1st'

1 3 • lei 1 stana
1 3.:' Br-l l•d nlly col .

BIBCIBR

ASTRO•GRAPH

ANTIQUE ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCT. 29, 1977
11:00 A.M.

'.

�1

•

[).10-The Sunday Tunes.Sentmel, Swtday, Oct 23, 19Ti

HOOFS. • .and. • .PAWS

On farm front

Iowa senator calls
for anot4er project

D1ck
tune for

sen~ttnr ,

another sueh pnlJect, tlus
tune \\tth emphasts on the
Sovtet Umon s agncultural
producttvtt~

and ach\ tty

bn1a dl\' ·C \1 nce~\1 E'd
longrange r esearch project on
SO\'Iet
agnculture
be

1t1

world trade
Clark, a member of both
the Senate ~ groc ulture
Corrumllee pnd the Senate
Foretgn
Reiattons
~omm ittee
gave some
suggestiOns durmg a recent
address to a convcnuon of t he
Amencan Assoctatton for the
Advancement of Sla\'IC
Studtes
·•we smtpiy do not know
what " e need to kno" if we
are to make reliable
forecasts
of
Sovtet
agncultural producllvtty and
of SoVIet mvolvemenl m the
world ecooomy ,' Clark saod
He satd tl was an ISSUe thai
dtrectly affects Ameman
farmers and fann mterests
because one of every four
acres tn Amenca 15
cultivated for a

uutoated

man~ nf the proeedures of the

He scud the ne" stud~
mtght be done under ausptces
of the National Endowment
for t)Ie Humamlles, the
Natwnal Sctence Foundation,
or
., en
the
Slate
Department
"What I fl1 suggestmg ts a
l ongl't~SSIOilaih · _ f und...~d..
resea rch operatiOn tfiat
would mtegrate scholarship
from many dtsctplmes from
econom ics and agronomy, of
co urse, but also fr om
socoology, demography and
geography, plus an mput
from the advanced areas of
polnocal theory such as
decosoon-making and bureaucratoc confhct models,"
Clark satd
A mmmJUm of fove yea rs
" ould be requtred. Clark
satd and 10 \ e-ars ts more
t ea hSuc

foretgn

~al ~
C£stat&amp;.
Today :

·~~~
Famtltes

e

:

•
•

•••

FAlliNG FOR FRJUS

Many
people
go
e househunt 1 ng
'"
a
e remarkably casual way ~
• and some t 1mes end up
• mak ng costly m•stakes
One of the m•stakes &lt;1
• nousehunter can make 1s to
• buy the frill mstead of the
e house All too often a
• family Will fall •n love w• lh
• an eye catch•n g feature
e and
buy the wrong house
Th tS m•stake happens..~
• frequently and m all pnce

•
•

t

By

W1ll1s T Leadmgham
Realtor

•••
e•

•

w

MONSIGNOR OONALD E HORAK , son of Mr and Mrs
Ge&lt;Jrge Horak of Pomeroy and Flonda, woll serve as chatrman
of the mstallalwn comrmttee of the Installation of BIShop
Albert H Ottenweller which has been set for Nov. 22at St. John
Arena m Steubenvtlle Many Pomero) residents shared m the
celebration a fe1&gt; montlis back when Father Horak became a
monsognor and a specoal observance was held at the Sacred
Heart Church m Pomeroy

·········~··············

••
•••

e•
•
e

perhaps adopting

Harvard Prujf'ct which was
fmanced b) the Defense
Department

market and often makes the
dtfference
b~tween
&lt;:1
profttable or nohiJrofllable
operation
"In the past decade, tl1e
ScJVOet Umon has been the
most volatile element m t11e

•••
••
••
•

POMEROY - The Ohi&lt;• Senate has od••ptl'd a resoiutoon
C(lngr;.Uulaung I. ' W ~kC001as, Maddlepo. •rt. on re&lt;.'t!IVlng
Mct~s ((1unty's Outstandmg Semor CitlZfll Award
Tht&gt; C{lmmendatlon ptllnts out that McComas has exh1bated
wuque leadershapskills m the area nf educatmn h;::~vmg served
m varwus adn~umstrativ~ postllons fullowmg Jus empl0)1nent
as d te.tC'her m several elementary schools Through(IUt has 49
)Par L'.Jfl'l"r, he demonstrated remarkabte wtsdom , coura ge
and vtswn 111 fulfilling his responsabthlles as a teacher,
prmctpal, supermtendent of schools and school dtslrlcl clerk,
tl1e commendatton states It further states that he IS , Indeed, a
commumly4mnded ondmdual and has been very acttve in
many educatoonal. religious, cultural. recreational and youth
activities Showmg a strong comnutment to young people, he
has taken tune to gtve them personal recogmtion for theor
acc(lmpltshments
Needless to say, Mr McComas has been a htghly regarded
restc\ent for man} )ears and a most deservmg one nf any honor
bestowed upon hun

mueh more th:m 1~ kn~.wm
about lhr mteractwn ll f
climate P••pulallon and
go\'errunent m the USSR
Clark suggests that a

oo the So\'tet Unum
It 1s

l\teags t.A1Wtly Humane Suc1tty

mtrmat10nal gram nMrket, '
C1ark s~ud We m't"{l tn kmm
\\ h£'th~r tl IS reahstJL' for lLS to
expect tht! So\ tt&gt;ts to stabthze
thetr rule m the market. and
for that "e n~ro lL) know

WASHINGTO:O: \U Pl l Back ut the earl\ 1950 s tht•
government Imtlated a
special acadt&gt;nuc effl,rt
called the Har,•ard Pn&gt;ject on
So\1et Soctet) tl' do resl'.lrch
Now, an Iowa
Clark bei'K;\ e:s

lly ~1AtUON (;. I:RAWHIRD

sk•p
over
careful constderat 10n of the
ma 1or facto rs because
someth.ng mtnor nas really
grabbed the m Th e lure
may be a cha rmong
f~replace , a gl-amourous
ltgMtmg 1txture, a garage

CLARICE J DIAMOND wrotes that she recently gamed
ownershtp of several coptes of the Rutland Htgh School )earbook for,the years of 1936, 1947, 1948, 1959, 1950and 1951
Dtamond wntes that the books are of no value to her but
feels they must have sentunental value to someone m the
Rutland area Doamond ts prunarily mterested on the
colleclton of memorabilta of farm life as tl was m pre-war
ttmes and m her hobby ran mto the }earhooks Anyone
mterested may contact her at 1010 Olive St , Flatwoods, Ky .
41139

POMEROY - Flash 1The MeJgs County Humane Soctety's
'llmfl Shuppe ts movmg! But, don't worry , II'S not gomg very
far - JUSI up the street two butldings. next door (other stde) of
R"biiiSI&gt;n's Cleaners, almost across the street yet. from Ihe
Pomeroy Pust Office The butldmg ts a not bad lonkmg hltie
white house, but lt nee(Js some work before we can g_et nur
Items and pe;1ple muved uver to open up We 'd like to gel
moved m by Novt&gt;mber I , but we need '(&lt;&gt;me vulunlee'" to paml
and dn~eneral repatr w1.. k !trsli-lf any of you folks have some
spare time and talent, do eall Mrs F1sher at 992-5427 today
(Sunday) or " eekend days after 6 p 111 Anythmg you can do to
help us out will be apprectaled
Every mu..-e m awh1le I eover U1e subject of the need ror
neutenn g and spa) mg animals Well' let's face tt , I bug you a
lot (and peo•pie can SB) tt's not bemg reahsllc until they are
blue m the face, bu t 1 sllll say there ts no excuse for prople not
ha\ mg thts done to thetr anunals
aod "cannot afford tt" os
no excuse Prople who cannot afford to have thts done, cannot
afford the animal to begm wtth') Just the [fast week there was
an arttcie m the Grtt about the need to neuter ma le cats T~&gt;e
author of the arttcie pomted out that •f after neutermg your
male cal tt stoU continues to foght other cats, prowls - and tf
the habol started before surgery - conl mues to spray, you may
not have had your male neutered early enough It wa s
suggested that you get the dectston of the vet as to when the
male cat should be castrated The arti cle went on to stale thai
the surge~ y done soon enough woll cause your cat to more than
likely stay home - therefore he woll be less apt to contact
disease or get paonful wounds - from cat foght.s - tha t gove
germs easy penetration He would be safer from possoble death
Ut the streets
Female cats, the author goes on to say , matures faster
than a male and should be spayed as early as a vetermaroan
advtses to prevent unw anted kittens My own hltle IJ zbel goes
"tthm the next couple of weeks for her operatoon I haven't told
her yet - I'm waiting for JUst the nght mome nt She won 't be
the ftrsl one to call me a "part) pooper "
While hrnne m Mochtgan for three weeks recently, I found
that the Leg Hold trap IS an tssue up there too - so 11 looks as
ttmugh more than those of us m Ohio must g1ve thu• 1~~1\P ~rea l

MAKING THE ROUNDS os the current edttion of "Go,''
th e Go!id) ear ttre dealer magazme. John and Mart!} n Ful tz
are featured 111 an article m the ed.auon 'The artlde whtch
outhnes the ph•losophy of Fultz m the tore busmess in the
operatmn or the Metgs Ttre Center, features also mterestmg
photos of picturesque Pomeroy taken from across the nver
and Fultz about hts dulles at the center A mce article which, of
course, wtll be read nationally
MRS HATTIE RUSSELL, formerly of Pomeroy, who has
been hvmg m California for a number of years, armed on town
Thursday to spend several days vosttong woth old fnends and
relatives m town. Hattie mdicates that she ts qmte happy m
Westmmtster, Cslif, where she os now hvmg but does like to
get back home now and agam Thts was her ftrst return m
three years and she also has spent seme tune m Columbus with
fnends on this trek

HAVE YOU ~VE R HAD the good fortune to recetve a note
fr om Ailegi a W•ll" Allegra ts one of those busy people who
door opener . or even a e takes time out to JOt notes of such a positive, complune~tary
dogwood m bloom
• na tUI e lo people who are domg thm gs. A note fr om Allegra can
Y1eld1ng to superf•c •al •
make )Our day, as no doubt many Metgs resodents can tell you
attractions l•ke these can
Hang m there, Allegra, you are almost exdusove
result '" your fam1ly •
wLndmg

up

•

wLth

a e

thoroughly •nsuttable
house Bear 1n mtnd that
these
same
allur •ng
features ca n usually be
added to another house at a
retat•vely sm a l l cos t ,
constder~n? the amount of
the overal purchase
If 1here IS anything we
can do 1o help vou 1n the
f1eld of real estate please
phone or drop tn at
LEADINGHAM
REAL
ESTATE , 512 Second Ave ,
Gallipolis Phone 446-7699
We're here to help'

e

ANEW OONTEST by The Farmers Bank and Savmgs Co

e
• should put some mterest m creating Jack-o·lanterns The bank
•
•
•

.
e

1s stagmg a contest for two age groups The "tdear" ts to

create a )ack&lt;&gt;·lantern tn an ugliest, prettiest or most ongonal
category with entroes to be JUdged and $10pnzes to be awarded
the best entnes 111 the three categones Age groups are up to 10
and 10 through 16.

•

•

•
•
t
•
e

.... .................... ,
e

~

By BOYD A RUTH
Soil Cons Service
POMEROY
Pnme
farmland wtll be tden·
(!!ted
on three Oh10
co un ties as a part of
the 122 polot counties
nauonauy to rece1ve an In~
ventory of Important Fann·
land Inventory maps for
Wood and Hancock counties
are now available. Maps for
Fatrfoeld County, the third
pilot county , will be ready
shortly after the first of the
Tl)e project, under the
leadership of the SCS, will
Identtfy and locate on maps
ail prmte farmland across the
Untied States on a county by
co ~nty basts The areas
odenllfled woll be the best land
available to produce food,
ftber, forage, and otl seed
crops
-~..
Sool survey Information woll
be the ba sts lor odentifymg
these agnculture areas so

THISTIME
MAKE IT ~W-E'V-E
~~~~~~ HOTPOJNT! ~~~P~~s~L~=NING
1

L-OW
- ER-ED-

0 Deluxe h1 / low cooking center D
Eye level controls C Mtcrowave oven
wtth automatic temperature control
sensor 0 Surface cook top wtth 2 8"
&amp; 2 6" Calrod• u111IS D Area l beauty
now m The New NaturalS 1M colors

Mode l RH966GV

CARE
••• EVERYWHERE
Fast, Dependable Service

1

NOW RENT
CARPET CLEANING
SYSTEM AT NEW

LOWER
;RATES

DISCOUNT

llulpolntPOMEROY LANDMARK
Jac k W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992 -2181
Store Hours 8 :30 to 5: 30
Mtll Closes at 5:00P.M.
Serving Me1gs, Gallo a
&amp; Mason Counltes

hal&lt;( IIKik Ynu wnuld be mteresllng m knowmg thai It has

t '_~, ry wr ~

and oet r•rolcssro ntll
resulrs

MON$399
THRU
HALF DAY
THURS

(4H0URS)

O'OELL LUMBER CO.
" "''~ ...

Galllpol•s

omportant on Ohoo and across
the natton After the prune
farmland areas are tdenllfted, the SCS wtil asstst local
people on tdentofying unique
farmland areas, and ad·
dtttonal farmland or state

Uns cowttry You wtll also be mterested tn knowing that the
trappers have survtved m those places where tl was outlawed
They JUSI found better ways of domg the Job - whtch is called
"progress," folks
~ We have a lot of mce anunals ava~la.ble for adoptaon thts
week, so do give these pe&lt;Jple a call.
Sprmger Spamel, spayed, 10 months old, 992-5427
,
Setter, female, 4 mo old, beautiful brown and whtte, 11432657
c;olhe pupptes, female, two, 742--2282
Poodle, gray, female
B1rd dug, female, wh1te
lrtsh Setter, male
Beagle, male, 992-3012
Houng type, spayeil, ali shots , ~lack aod white, 6 mo. old,
882-3113
Collte - Lab, female , 8 1110 old
Moxed Breed Hound type, 6 mo. old, male
Sehnauzer type, female, 2 years old
Poodle-Colhe, 3 1110 old, male, 743-3162
Mixed breed puppoes, woil be la rge. Loveable 3mo old, one
os ail black w-brown paws, one ts ail white, and the other IS
brown 992-5284;
'l'oy Shelkte, 3 years old , male, brown, white and black.
Good wtth children.
Cat, male, black and whtle, short haor , good mouser 367·
7127

German Shepherd, female , 8 mo. old 742-3162
Bo.er-German Shepherd puppies, 6 weeks old (look like
Boxers l 992-2621
Cats, long hatred wtth two kittens, one black, other gray ·
992-7297.
Cats, ooe black and whtle 2 mo old, other gray stroped
wtth whtte feet and we think she's pregnant 742-3162
That's ot for thos week, folks, but don'llorgel, we need
some volunteers at tl&gt;e Thnft Shoppe and we can also use your
"unused" ttems for sa le there If yuu hav.e ttems to donate, the
shoppe os open Thursday U.rnugh Saturday
I

Scouts emphasize safety

Mental Hea lth Center. Topocs
to be covered during the
co urse of the trammg include
mlerpersonal relattonshops ,
HUNTINGTON - Fall and he sa td, lS tbe safe swtm the basos of roght dectstons for famoly
and
marriage
\l.r nter
actiVIties
are defen se plan set up by healthful loving and moral problems , alcoholism and
begmmng tn the Cub Scout Scoutmg more than 40 years conduct "
drug abuse, sexuaUty, suicode
packs, Scout troops, and ago that ha s been a model
prevention ,
and
conExplorer posts of the Tro- protectiVe method ever smce
fidentiality .
State Area Counctl, Boy
• Intelligent dosctphne ts
Trammg wlll last for SIX
Second training
Scouts of Ameroca - and wtth based on stroct but fa or
weeks and the classes woU •
them comes a renew ed superVIS ion,'' Mose r ex·
meet from 9 a m to 1 p.m on
emphasts on safety
plamed • A leader mu st session Nov. 2
Saturday
and from 7 to 10
I
" We tn Scoutmg-USA commumcate the reasons for
GALLIPOIJS - Do you p.m on Wednesday evenongs
believe that mgelhgent rules and procedures to gam want to work for CriSislme'
All you need to apply ts an
dosc1plme ts the tndovtdual's thetr full acceptance When
On Nov 2, at 7 p m , CriSis· attitude of canng and con·
basoc defense throughout hts boys fully understand thetr lme will begin its second cern for people and a genu me
hfe ," satd Budd L Moser, purpose, they are likely to volunteer traonon g class mterest tn helpmg others
Council V1ce President conform "
Classes are presented free by Contact Donna Roth at ~
"That's why we stress a boy's The aun ts to gam the boy's the staff of the Gallta - 5556 or ta ll the Crtsis&gt;tne for
personal code of conduct to understandmg and ac- Jackson - Metgs Commumty an a pphcatton
assure safety m all Scoutmg ceptance of a personal code of
acttvlttes ••
•
conduct, Moser sa1d, and the
Moser ctted \l ostro ct vitality of hos personal code
camporees, troop campouts wiD depend on the strength of
and hikes, and Cub held trops a self-tmp osed di sciplin e.
as the types off all and wmter " Self-dtsctphne
ts
an
acttvJhes that call fon the~'"""'" esse ntial 1ngred1ent ln
highest safety standards
character developm ent ,"
PARKERSBURG, W.Va
Mtssourt to Parkersburg and
Scoutmg , Moser declared , Moser saod "Not only os 11 the
(UP!)
A
19-year-old
VISited the faor togeUter
has been a leader m the basic defense agamst
Parkersburg
woman,
who
Accordmg to police , Ms.'
health and safety field smce potential hazards of adpollee
say
recently
had
a
Dulaney
boarded a bus to
Its birth m 1910 An example, venturous acttvtty, tt IS also
rmscamage and may have Parkersburg while she was
·-~
wanted to replace her loss, supposed to be wa tchtng I he
has been arrested for baby so hos mother coulcj buy
allegedly stealmg a baby seme coffee .
from a casual acquamtance
The three-week-old mfant,
dectstons
The
prorne
farmwho
suffers from a congemtal
and local unportance
These omportant farmland land areas are odentofted by blood deficiency and liver
rna ps will provide state and the SCS, not designated as a1lment , was returned to hts
local people wtth another such The decosoon to mother, Voola Clme , of
Fateful Congress
source of information to help designate the land for Columbus , Oh10 , Froday
The
20th Congress held by
specoflc
use
rests
wtth
state
rught
them make mformed land use
the
Sovtet
Commumst party
and local offtcoals
Pollee charged Susan
The maps wotl
be Lomse Dulaney wtth stealing Feb. 14·25, 1956, was one of
available at all SCS county the baby, but saod she was the most fateful gatlterlngs of
offiCeS throughout the state, probably unaware that the modern times. At the Moscow
family, and the hrst and can be used by anyone child could have died wolhout sesstons, Ntkita S. Khrush·
chev denounced Joseph
generatoon lrish-Amertcan The mventory will contmue proper medical attentwn.
Staltn,
repudtated the
Raffertys The Irtsh were unto! all Ohio counttes are
The
suspect waoved
chosen because m 1880 they mapped and the tnformatoon extradition and was returned cruelties of Stalinism and
proclatmed a new policy of
were the btg immogrant available for _local use
to Lancaster, Ohio
peaceful coexistence with the
Important farmland maps
population, unsktlled and
The baby was taken from
are now bemg prepared for Its mother tnore than a week West. The new party line
desperately poor.
The acting ts splendid on the s1x other counhes m the state ago durmg a vtstt to a coun(Y. alienated Chinese Com·
first episode, woth standout oncludmg Delaware, Cler· fair m Lancaster The two munists and hastened the
spht that continues to divide.
performances controbuted by mont, Rtchland , Lucas, women had struck up an
the Communist world.
Molo O'Shea as the patrtarch Montgomery, and Warren. acquamtance on a bus from
of the Raffertys , Paulme
Flanagan as hts devout and
lovmg wife. and Wilham
Prtnce as Ute seruor Wheeler
who collects Oroental art and
railroad bonds
But ot ts not the talent of the
actors, nor the wntmg
abthttes of the wroters, that

Lost her own baby
woman steals another

.

TV•••in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP!)
AmeroCRn televiSion finally
has its answer to such elegant
British productions a s
'•Upstairs, Downstairs" - an
adventure into dramattzed
social history that os as
American as the Broo ldyn
Bridge
The show ts "The Best of
Farmhes," which will begm
an eighti'art senes on PBS
Oct 27 wtth a two-part
specoal. In almost all PBS
areas, the tune will be 9·11
pm ,
Eastern
time
Thereafter the show wlll go to
hour-long programs
The producers of the show
are an unlikely group CTW. Voewers will be more
famoh ar w1th them as
Chtldren's Televtston
Workshtp , Ute folks who gave
Amer1ca "Sesame Street"
and
"The
Electroc
Company " Thts ts their forst
venture onto adult drama
" The Best of Families"
chose the years from 1880 to
1900 for \he same reason that
the Brltosh dramas have paod
such close attention to the
era, because It was a llme of
change as the old methods
gave way to the age of
electrictty
and
mass
production The scene os New
York Ctty
The sh ow even has oiS own
Alistair Cooke on the person
of John Houseman to set the
s• enc w1thm 1ts h1stoncal
co ntext He IS not as
Amencan as apple pi e
" Families ' · goes
''Upstairs, 011\HLStairs" one
better on thal tt shows three
lev els nf Amertcan hfe - the
wealthy and anstocraltc
Wheelers w1lh a son m the
banking ondustry , the moddle
class Lathrop · Baldwin

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
CARPET DEPARTMENT • 3RD FLOOR

estabhshes "Families" m a

spectal category
"Families" displays a pas·
soon for authenttcoty that
extends from historical
accuracy m maJor events to
such details as telephone
etiquette m the gay '90s. The
program even ha!l Its own
food consultant, duly listed m
the credits crawl, so tltat
donner partoes at the
Wheelers and free lunch at
Fttzpatrock 's saloon rmg
equally true
"I kept finding myself in
the mtddle of a room sayong,
'I can't believe that in the
Jill!&amp; oobody ever satd
whatever, " Ethel Wmant
sa1d m an 1ntevoew, smohng
half wtth pnde and half with
rebel that "Fam1Ues" was
a1r..-eady
Ms. Wmant, executive producer of "T he Best of
Famthes. ·• has spent 20 yem s
m televiSion and dramd
productllm, mcludmg 1973-75 '
as vtce presodent, talent and
castong, for the CBS
TeleVIsum Network Never
ha s she been uovnlved m the
pa111stakmg
h1stoncal
rutpocking that produced the
authentl('lty u( ttus series

e
at
en tine
Panamanians approve treaties 2-1

LEES
CARPETS

Wmteru:e your home w1th
Lees Carpets When It's
snowy and blustery outstde
there Is nothong better than
coming ms1de to warm
carpeted floors by lees
Come 1n and see the large
selection of carpet samples
by
lees and other
nationally advertised
brands of carpet Choose
the carpet vou hke, we'll
come to your home and
gtve you the complete
mstalled
price .
We
guarantee the 1nstallat1on
by
our
own
carpet
mechaniCS to please you

Matn Store and Mechanoc Street Warehouse open Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday from 9:30A. M. to 5 P.M.- On
Frtday 9:30 A.M. to 8 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

Fifteen Cents

' Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 24. 1977

- &lt;~I ready been outlawed m 19 countries or the world ( wetre
supposed to be Ute most CIVIlized) and three and a half states tn

Prime farmland to be identified·

year

afast cooking microwave oven on top and
aself-cleaning oven-range on bottom ...

..

Vol. 28,

PANAMA CITY, Panama (UP!) - Panarnamans gave a
resounding "si" to new canal treahes by a 2-to·l margm
Sunday, leaving Ute future of the strategoc waterway m the
hands of the U S. Senate
Voting off1coals sald between 90 and 95 per cent of 800,000
ehg1ble voters m thts nallon of 1 7 nullion persens cast ballots
for or agamst Ute treahes, which turn control of the strategoc
waterway aod ots adjacaent zone over to Panama by the year

predfJted a 90 per cent ''yes" vote
One treaty covers the turnmg over of the 51-mole canal to
As he watched the votes beong tallied at the Legosiabve Panama by 2000. The second t!lM;rs neutrahly of the canal
Palace, Carlos Lopez Guevara, another treaty negotiator, after the year 2000, mcludong the U S nght to mlervene
satd: "A massive vote In favor wasn't expected because we're mohtaroly.
paymg a prtce for the treaty
Torrojos satd he never doubted a VIctory because "the pe;1ple
"We're sending a message to the U.S Senate that we're not wanted a peaceful solution" to end Amencan control of the
entirely sahsfted woth the !rea ties "
' Waterway that runs through Panama to lonk the Atlantoc and
Woth Panama 's approval of the pacts, the next step ts up to the Pacohc oceans
the U S. Senate, which must ratify the treatoes before they take
"Thousands of mothers voted today so theor s.ons would not
effect
have to die m a bloody battle they did not provoke," TorroJOS
" I have never had any doubt that the Senate would ratify the told a natoonwtde radio audience. "I was aware that these
treaties," Gen Omar TorrtJOS, the Panamanoan head of state, people were wattmg for a reply wtUt votes and not woUt boots,
saod Just before the polls closed
nfles or cannons "

2000.

WtUt 30 per cent of the votes counted, there were 149,718 yes
votes, 76,311 no votes and 3,230 nullifted ballots
Panama's choef treaty negotiator, Romulo Escobar
BeUtancourt, earlier had estunated tbat 115 per cent of the
voters would favor the treaties. U.S. offictals m Panama had

..

t~~~~~"-~".~"!.&lt;&amp;-:·:·~~"»-'"="'-:.,,~,\.~:~o:·~:·~X::·~::::::..,-.;:::::::~":o.~

PTA

INews . • . in Briefsl
•

By United Press InternaUonal
WASHINGTON - NON-ALLERGIC makeup os a better
bet for Halloween tnck.(Jf-treaters because popular face
nlasks can sltp and block the wearer's VIew of an oncommg
car, the American Optometric Assoctatton says
Many Halloween masks easily shp out of place, the
assoctation said, bampermg VISIOn at mght

OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - An
emergency resolutoon
opposmg federal legtslallon,
placmg Ohio and all other
public employee retirement
systems
under
Social
Security ,
was
overwhelmingly adopted Sunday
rught by more than l,OOO
delegates at the openmg of
the t hree-day annual Ohio
Parent-Teacher Assocoatoon
convention
The 336,tJOO..member group,
saod President Robert E
Lucas, "os standing formly
behind teachers and other

CLEVELAND - STATE REP EDWARD FEIGHAN and
Muntcipal Courts Clerk Denms Kuemtch, two Democrats wtth
a difference, meet m the Nov 8 general election to determme
who will be the next mayor of Cleveland
In the Oct. 4 prunary both cand1datesde[eated Republican
Mayor Ralph J Perk, who was seekmg hos fourth term Wtth
less than half the coty 's 273,000 voters turnoug out, Kucmoch
beat Perl&lt; by about 2,000votes and Fe1ghan by aboutl,OOO
YOUNGSTOWN - A SENIOR JAPANESE trade offtctal
says hos country mtght have agreed to steel omport quotas
weeks ago tf the UrutedStates had proposed them, the Youngstown Vmdocator saod m a copyrtghted arttcle Sunday:

WASHlNGTON - VLADIMIR BUKOVSKY, the Sovoet
disstdent who catalogues the horrors of Russoan mental
institutions, plans an ll ctty speaking tour of tile Umted States
as a guest of Ute AFUIO, ot was announced Saturday
Bukovsky, 34, left the SoVIet Uruon on late 1976 m an
exchange of political pnsoners&lt;~nd IS working on an account of
experiences m Soviet psychtatnc onstttut1ons

~nf1rmation.

WOUld

Coin club will hold session

substantially reduce current
The OH·KAN Com Club will
benefits
under
Ohoo meet this evening m the
retirement systems and sub- social rooms of the Columbus
stanhally increase requored and Southern Ohio Electroc
con lrtbuhons
by
the Company,- Moll Street,
Middleport. A socoal hour and
trading sesSion precedes the 8
p m meetmg, when out of

town com dealers w1U be
present to buy, sell, or trade
collector's otems. A 32lot coin
auction woll follow the
meettng and refreshments
will be served. Area resodents
interested are mvtted to
attend.

stopping m Minneapolis on
his return from Los Angeles
to pick up tbe a1llng senator.
Humphrey, Carter sa1d, IS
"tile greatest Amencan that I
know, the No 1 Democrat In
our country and a man ..
admtred throughout the
world.
"It's gomg to mean a great
deal to our country to have
him back where he belongs,
agam serving the Amerocan
people," Carter told a crowd
of wellwishers at the aorport.
Humphrey, looking thm
and pale, told the crowd that
"gettmg back to Washington
os gomg to be good therapy,

BRUNSWICK, Ohto (UPI) hours' tune and about ball a
- Four persons were killed mile apart. The second did an
Sunday mght m an expolston estimated $8,000 damage to a
home
m the
tltat wrecked a home on the model
fashionable Forest Hills sub- Whospertng Orchard
diviSIOn . All four bodoes were subdtviston m Strongsvolle, a
development owned by
recovered early today.
1977 VICA QUEEN J ero Faulkner was crowned by the
Brookfteld Homes, whoch had
The
vtctims
were
not
retirmg queen, Brenda Btshop, In ceremonoes Frtday at
an
offtce m the model home
immediately
identified,
but
Metgs Hogh School Saturday Moss Faulkner partoctpated
Fore
Chief Harvey Wenzel
tile
home
was
that
of
Mr.
and
m the regional compelltion held at the Morgan Hogh
declmed
to speculate on the
Mrs.
Donald
Swmeheart.
A
Sehool m McConnelsvtile
neoghbor reportedly told possoble cause of the Swmepolice the couple had three heart home explosoon
Cy Reffert, a neoghbor of
boys, one away at college.
The bodies were taken to the Swineheart's, satd he and
Medina Commumty Hospolal
m nearby Medtna
The explosion was the
second of two wtUtm !w.o
. : ..·... . ·. . . ..:
·-""'
EXTENDEO.OUTLOOK
A chance of showers
The driver of a car involved off the left stde of the highway
Wednesday and Friday,
tn a two-car accident at 9 15 through a fence. There was
but lair Tbunday. Highs In
a.m. Sunday on SR 325 was minor damage
the 60s Wednesday and
United Press International
A deer was blamed for an
charged with AWOL from
Thul'llday, and In the 70s
Two separate trafftc acciFort Lee, Va followmg In· accodent at 12:14 a.m Sunday
Friday. Lows In the 'Os and dents at Dayton helped boost
vestogatoon of the accident by on the Cora-Rodney Rd. at
low 50s.
the Ohio weekeod trafftc
the Galloa-Meigs Post State the ]Unction of the Vanco·
fatality loll to seven m as
Highway Patrol.
Fatrfleld Rd.
many miShape.
According to the report, an
The patrol saod Ronald G. Money suit is
The deaths mcluded two
auto operated by Jerry J Taylor, 20, Elyria, swerved
pedestroans,
one a h1t.skop
filed in Meigs
Sargent, 19, Grove Coty, his car to moss the animal.
VIctim, and one mo·
A suot for money has been torcyclist.
stopped to dtscharge a The vehocle went off the
filed
m Meigs County Com·
passenger, Thomas C roadway str1kmg an em·
Three persons died Frtday
mon
Pleas
Court by Otto A after the 6 p m. start of the
Sargent, 24, Vtnton H1s car bankment.
was struck tn the rear by an
At 4:45 p.m. Sunday on TR Marcmko, Rt 1, Reedsville, weekend perood, three
auto operated by Albert D 4, south of SR 588, cars driven agamst Grange Mutual InSchrock, 26, RuUand.
by Stephen K. Thomas, 16, surance Co., Columbus and
Schrock was charged woth Gallipolis,
and David Eastern Local School
failure to stop wtthm the Wiseman, 18, Gallipolis, Dislroct
Plaintiff seeks $5,850 for
assured clear distance; sideswoped on a hillcrest.
Sargent was charged with There was moderate damage legal fees In defen,ding the
actoon brought by ClaYton
parking on the roadway and and no charges were filed.
A !mal Sunday accident Schartoger and $12,500 for
AWOL. Thomas Sargent
suffered mmor mjuroes in the occurred at 8 p.m. on the punihve damages.
Gary Edward Michael,
Bidwell-Rodney Rd . where
nushap.
Leaf pickup will begin m
Two-year old Kelly H James F. Evans, 47, Btdwell, Pomeroy and Victona Jane the Volla_Ke of Middleport on
Hemby of Gallipolis was backed his car into a dotch . Michael, Pomeroy, filed for Tuesday, Oct 25 and woll
Injured man accident at 12 50 Evans was charged with dissoluhon of marriage.
contmue for the next weveral
p.m. Sunday on SR 218, one DWI.
weeks
The forst of three Saturday
mile seuth of SR 7. She was a
Resodents are asked to rake
SQUAD CALl.'!
passenger on a car operated acctdents occurred at I p.m.
The Pomeroy Emergency their leaves out to the curbs.
by Freddie Whtte , 46, on SR 143 on Me1gs County Squad answered a call to The leaves will be pocked up
GaUopohs
where Jeffrey Needs, 21, New Kerr's Run at 6 48 a m free of charge by the village
Their car struck the rear of Haven, W.Va. lost control of Monday for John Moon who employees
one driven by Judy L his car whole attempting to was taken to Veterans
The pockup schedule for
Fellure, 31, Gallipolis White remove a wasp. H1s vehicle Memorial Hosp1tal.
thos week wtll be Tuesday,
was cited to Murucopat Court ran off the roadway stroking
At 4:49 p.m. Sunday, the first ward ; Wednesda; ,
for failure to stop wothon the an embankment There was squad was called to Peacock second ward; Thursday,
assured clear distance.
mmor dama ge and no Ave., for Gregory Sauvage, thtrd ward; Froday, fourth
A smgle car acCldent oc· charges were filed.
who was taken to Veterans ward. This schedule will be
Jeffrey L Pomter, 18. Memoroal Hospotal
curred at 2 a m Sunday on
contmued until most of the
CR 30 on Me~gs County east of Loveland, 0 was charged
At 10 .06 p.m. Saturday, the leaves have been pocked up
wtth failure to yteid the roght fire department went to
SJO
Burnong of leaves t!l'lrgjltnSt
Offocers saod Phylhs I. of way foliowong an acc tdent Shenang Sprmgs, the scene of village ·ordmances Vi8lators
Edwards, 25, Ra cone, lost at 3 10 p m Saturday at the a recent fire , to e&lt;tongutsh woll be prosecuted a spokes(Continued on page 8)
control of her car wh1ch ran
smouldertng embers
man said
I(
"l

charged
after wreck

I

TUESDAY MEETING
Meigs OAPSE chapter 17
will meet Tuesday at 7·30
p m . at the jumor high •chool
m ~.. Jdleport

11

Also at the openmg sessiOn,
jheOhlo PTA gave ot.s highest
award to Wolham Judd,
veteran Cincmnah auto
dealersh op operator and
savmgs and loan offictal He
has served on local, county
and state boards of educatiOn

AWOL

Croup outbreak
•
IS
subsiding

GET LICENSES
Marriage licenses were
issued to Vernon Ray Little,
'll, Rt. 1, Middleport and
Sheryl LyM Little, 26, Rt 1,
Middleport;
Steven
Kalinowski, 25, Bidwell and
Betty Ann Coleman, 21,
Cheshire, Kenna H. Bush,
Jr.,33, Cheshire and Kathy S.
Darst, 24, Cheshire; Michael
Clarence Hilliard, 23, Long
Bottom, and Mary Ellen
Lowery, 22; -i.ong Bottom.

lt

employer and the employee,''
Lucas satd
The legoslatoon would affect
Ohio's State Teacher Retirement System, School Employees Retirement System
and Pubhc Employees
Retorement System.

for more than on~half
century
The PTA at the Stewart
Tradohonal
School,
a
Columbus city school wtth 345
pupils, was gtven the
"Natoonal PTA membership
award for outstandmg umt tn
Ohoo " for 1977, havmg
enrolled 709 members.
Mrs. Jean Dye, National
PTA vice president for
legislative activity, outlined
six prooroty ISSUes to be
bandied by Ute group durmg
the 1977-78 school year,
mcludmg reducmg excesstve
VIolence on televtston
In the keynote adddress,
Mrs Dye satd other pending

that's what my doctors told
me. They've done about as •
much for me h'lJ'e as tltey
think they can."
C1ting the "Ute healing
strengths" commg from !f
faith m God, family and
fnends, Humphrey SBld he
Will ''never give in and never
gJve up"
"I feel so much better," the
66-year-old liberal satd, but
he admitted, "Everythmg of
course ts relative."
The former vi.ce president
was expected to make hos
hr~t appearance OJL the
Senate floor Tuesday. Aides
said he would stay m the

Explosion kills fo11r

VALLELUNGA, ITALY - A PORSCHE-TURBO 935
dnven by the Dmo-Morescht team won the sox-!tour endurance
race for Silhouette class sport.scars Sunday, govlng the West
German auto company the 1977 class champ1onsh1p.
The wmnmg Porsche completed 249 laps at an average
speed pf 82 5 mph to take the checkered flag . Another Porsche·
Turbo driven by Ute Victor-Monttcone team fimshed second,
ooe lap behind

"The child IS welloow, and
ot is unlikely Ute baby ever
had diphtheria," Atwater
saod.
Four cases of the disease,
which shuts off breathing
passages,
have
been
confirmed on the reserve,
and a fifth was suspected.
Ftve
houses
were
quarantmed, with police
enforcmg the isolation
Ontario health officials
were seekmg persons who
visited the reserve between
Sept 30 and Oct. 12. Anyone
who was on the reserve was
urged to seek tmmediate
medocal tests.

bec ause

federal legislation

WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen. Hubert Humphrey,
clinging to a " never gtve up"
spirit despite moperable
cancer, is "back where he
belongs" today. He returned
to Washington aboard Air
Force One
Hwnphrey, who has been
undergomg treatment m Mmneapolis for two months,
returned to the nation's
capotol Sunday for the ftrst
time smce an operation rn
August found tbe moperable
tumor m tile pelvic area.
PreSident' Carter ended a
• U.ree-day tnp through the
Midwest and West by

WASHINGTON - IT WILL BE THE PEOPLE of Ohoo vs
Alaskan natives this week when an Interwr Department board
consoders changmg the name of North Amenca 's tallest peak,
MI. McKinley ,to tis ongmal lndtan name - Denali, mearung
"lile Great One "
A committee of the U. S Board on Geographic Names woll
constder requests from the lndtans, Alaska's governor and one
Senator to call the 20,32().foot Alaskan peak by tts Ta nana
indian name.

ANN ARBOR, Mich (UP!)
- An outbreak of severe
croup appeared to be
subsoding today and health
offoctals reported Ute end of a
medical crosos mvolvmg
diphtherta.
About 20 children have
suffered severe cases of
croup mUte past three weeks.
However, county healtit offi·
coals said no new cases were
reported in Ute area, leading
them to hope that the
outbreak In a 3(knile radius
was sube1ding.
Washtenaw County Health
Director John B. Atwater
SBld tests on a family sought
by Canadian medical officials
for suspected diphtheria
found no traces of the
disease.
Mr. and Mrs. Rocky
Lunham of Ann Arbor bad
lileir SICk baby treated at the
Kettle Point Indian Reserve
In Ontar-io three weeks ago
while they were traveling.
A diphtlteria outbreak at
the reserve prompted a
search for tbe family because
doctors feared the child
mtght have Uoe deadly
disease or Uoat tile parents
were carrying lt. But Atwater
sa1d the family was found.
during the weekend and
preliminary tests were
pegatlve, altitough samples
were sent \0 a laboratory for

public employees m Ohio,
who are opposed to any
attempt by the U S Congress
to mandate the mcorporahon
of our state retirement
systems
mto
Soctal
Secunty "
Mandatory proviSions of
the b1ll, slated for a House
vote this week, are opposed

Smce a favorable vole had been anticipated, there were oo
publtc ce iebratoons m downtown Panama City. Bars that had
been closed ~urmg the voting opened soon after the polls
closed
Sox U_N representatives and 24 academicoans from the
Umted States and Latin Amenca toured most of the 3,038
pollmg checktng for vwlations
One man, Juan Carlos Voloy, saod he had voted "no" eoght
limes and took reporters to eoght pollmg stations where hos
name appeared.
" If I could vote no that many times, think how many tunes
people could vote yes.
The electoons board satd ot would look mto the charges.

issues mcluded school
doscopllne problems and
alternative solutions,
implementation of the
Education
of
All
Handocapped Children Act,
energy crtsis effects on
education, &lt;:ollective bargammg ornpact on schools,
and famoly educatiOn and
strengtltenmg Ute family.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight .
Showers likely Tuesday High
today and Tuesday 65 to 70
Low tomght 50 to 55

Humphrey returns to Capital

WASHINGTON - THE NATION 'S DEATH Row
population has rtsen to 397 as the Supreme Court prepares to
review Ohoo's capital purushment law
F1gures comptled by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund,
counsellor many of the condemned, show more than 45 per
cent are black Fourteen persons awaiting execution have
Sparush surnames, one ts an Indian and ftve are women
'

OOLUMBUS- OHlO SECRETARY OF STATE Ted W
Brown has been accused of misrepresenting the Impact that
revoking the "mslant registration law" would have on 22 rural
counties, which had not reqwred proor voter regtstratton m the
past.
"Instead of merely hastenong a regtstratoon process that
bas already begun, as Mr Brown clauned last week, the
amendment (Issue I) would set the stage for locahzed pohttcal
chaos," SBld Regma W O'Leary, co-ehaorman of the Citizens
to Save the Roght to Vote.

oppose~

No. 134

. ..

... . ..

Seven killed
in accidents

Leaf pick·up

•

his family heard the blast
about 7:40 p. m.
HI went to the sewmg room
and looked out Ute window,"
he said The sode of his house
was laying over, ot had blown
out the livtng room wall.
• "I hollered to my wife, 'My
God, theor house blew out,"'
he continued "By the tune I
ran out the door, the whole
house was up m flames "
Reffert saod the exploston
blew out windows m hos
home.

underway in
Middleport

capotal 10 days to two weeks,
Uoen return to Mmnesota for
further
chemotherapy
treatments
"I know of no one who
exemplifies what our country
stands for better tban he, "
Carter satd.
"Every elderly person In
our nation, every poor person
tn our nation, every black
person on our nation ...
everyooe who lives in some
despaor knows they have one
staunch and undying friend m
Sen Hubert Humphrey,"
Carter saod
Humphrey first came to
national attention at Ute 1948
Democratic National
Convention when his demand
for a c1v1l nghts plank
prompted the walkout of the
seuthern Democrats led by
Strom Thurmond. Many of
his Ideas have become
national programs, Including
tile Peace Corps
The plane that brought
Humphrey
home
to
Washmgton was the same one
that carroed Humphrey to
Atlantic City, N J., in 1964
when Lyndon Johnson chose
him ~s hts vice presodential
runnmg mate.

Today is
last one
in October

WASHINGTON (UPI) Veterans Day Is observed
today for the last time In
October before tile natloo
returns to the traditional
Nov. II date marking Ute IIUt
hour of the IIUt day of the
lith month when the guns fell
silent on the battle fields of
World War I
Congress, spurred by de·
rnands for hollday weekends,
passed a "Monday Holiday
Law" in 1968 to cbange the
observance of Utree national
holidays from dates of the
year to fixed Mondays
Veterans organizations, led
by the Amerocan L!lglon,
chalfenged the change In the
• dale for Veterans Day date
and began working with state
legislatures to have Ute date
changed back to Nov . II .
Legtslatlon returning the
date to Nov. II was approved
by Congress last year and
Signed by Prest4ent Gerald
Ford. Legislatures In most of
the states already have
approved slmUar laws.
Max Cleland, head of the
Veterans Administration and
a V1etnam veteran who lost
both legs and an arm, urged
Americans "to observe
Veterans Day in a manner
that will let our nation's
veterans know tltat their
MEET TONIGHT
sacrifices arc and always will
The Law Enforcement be
recognized
and
Explorer Post 230, sponsered apprectated "
by the sheriff's department,
The Monday observation of
will meet this evening at 8 Colwnbus Day and George
p m . at the sheriff's office Washington 's birthday will
New members are welcome remam unchanged

"'

.

'"

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