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                  <text>M;i;::u:el.~id~epo!rt·P~!r~vA~:~un~D~;~h~---- !
(lJOnUDull!l tram pase 1)
1
l
result of the accident.
He was taken by the
Pomeroy Emergency Souad
to Holier Medical · Center
after
examination
at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
A Medical Center spokesman reports Teaford is in
good condition.
The highway patrol in·
vestigated two additional
accidents Thursday.
At 6:30p.m., a farm tractor
operated by Melvin Ours, 49,
Crown City, was struck in the
left rear by an auto driven by
George G. Houck, 25, Crown
City.
The incident occurred on
Peters Branch Rd., nine·
tenths of a mile northwest of
County Rd. 1 in Ohio Twp.
According to the patrol, the
south bound vehicle operated
by Houck rounded a curve
left of center, and struck the
Ours' tractor.
There were no injuries.
Houck was cited for left of
center.
Still under investigation is
a mishap that occurred on SR
160 in Vinton .
According to the patrol, a
parked vehicle owned by Rita
E. Hager, Bidwell, was
struck in the left side by an
auto operated by Roger D.
Meade, 30, Bidwell.
Investigating off ice rs
report that at 11 :25 p.m. the
Meade vehicle pulled from a
service station, struck the
Hager auto, and left the scene
of the accident.
There was moderate
damage to voth vehicles.
Meade was cited for hit·
skip.

ROSS CLELAND
Ross Windsor Cleland, 66,
Chester, died Thursday
evening
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Born
December 3, 1911, he was the
son of the late Vern and
Mable Windsor Cleland.
Mr. Cleland was the Fire
Chief of the Chester Fire
Department, a member of the
Odd Fellows Lodge and the
Junior Order Df United
Mechanics, and was em·
ployed in the Chester School
System for 42 years.
Surviving are his wife,
Erma Reed Cleland ; three
sons, Larry of Chester;
Vernon of Columbus, and
SFC Jerry Cleland of
Oklahoma ; four grand·
children, Diana and Debbie
Celand , Oklahoma, and Mary
arid Greg Hibbs, Chester; and
three step-grandchi ldren ,
David, Ditter and Kious
Gewitsch, Oklahoma .
Funeral services will be
held Sunday at I p.m. at the
Ewing Chapel in Pomeroy
with the Rev . George Pickens
officiating. Burial will follow
in the Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

Pope Paul

(Continued from page I)
- the principle of respecting
the laws of nature, the
principle of a conscious and
et hically responsible
parenthood."
The pope also said: "We
Now you Know
Great Falls, Mont. , is the must recognize that the
windiest city in the United church of Christ is a living
States with an average wind and vital reality even though,
not tnday and not only from
speed of 13.1 mph.
without, voices are raised
that are happy to stress its
difficulties , to give the
impression it is lethargic, to
announce its coming death
throes or fatal decom·
position."

INTEREST
On Certificates
Of DepcSt

'1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term
Effect ive rate with com ·
pounding ' ·"

per unt .

Ninetv day interest pena!1y

if

withdrawn

bef ore

maturity date .

The Athens County

5av in!iJ5 &amp; Loan Co .
w. Main St .
Pomeroy . Ohio

-

FSIJC

----·-

He denoun ce d this as
"obviously a challenging
criticism that goes well
beyond the healthy need of
the church to purify itself
continuously in its progress
along the way of the cross and
the resurrection ."
The pope said he was well
aware of the church's
problems "both in countries
where they are trying to
suffocate religious freedom
and in those where the same
freedom is being used by
some of its adherents to
pervert its creed and sap its
institutions."

GET LICENSE
A marria ge license was

issu ed in Meigs Co un ty
Thur sda y to Law rence
Randolf Smith, Jr .. 27 ,
Mason, and Heidi Jill Ashley ,
18, Racine .

----...:....~WHERE
IT GOES.

E. L. GAUDIN
Rose Sisson, Pomeroy,
received word of the death of
her brother·in·law, E. L.
Gaudin on Wednesday in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. Mr. Gaudin
was the husband of the for·
mer Olga Angeletti of
Pomeroy. Following services
in Fort Lauderdale, the body
will be taken to the Miller
Funeral Home in Cincinnati
where services will be held on
Monday.

N
Hospital ews
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions - Rhonda
Nelson, Rutland ; and Nellie
Lemley, Portland.
Discharges - Sampson
Hall, Robert Bowles, Phyllis
Blake, Grande! Wamsley,
Homer Bradshaw, and
Bernard LaValley, Sr.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges June 221
Deborah Bevan, Chad
Briggs, Kevi.n Byus, Marjorie
Callicoat, Bobbi Hale, Cathy
Hammond, Larry Hudson ,
Lester Hudson, Wilda
Hudson, Judy Hunt, Eleanor
Jarrell , Judith Krebs, Clyde
Law, Dorsi! McCoy III , Edna
McManis, Wilson Moore,
Rut h Pattock, Amanda
Prince, Mary Russell, Keith
Stewart , Sherry Storrer,
Edward White . Charles
Wilson .
!Births I
Mr. and Mrs . William
Sk idmore, a son, Bidwell:
Mr . and Mrs. Timothy
Williamson, a daughter,
Jackson.

Otamher
.
represents
his
chief
Richard E·. Chambers,
Middl eport, represented
Chief J , J. Cremeans and the
Middleport Police Depart·
ment at the fourth National
Police Self-Defense In·
~tru(1ors training seminar
held June 13·16 at the
Netherland-Hilton Hotel in
Chambers received
training instruction in the
areas of physical evaluation
of officers, coping with
stress , psycho-motor
training, baton teuhniques,
program design, close
quarters confrontation, and
training female personnel .
He was appointed chair·
man of the Correct ion s
Committee for the Law
Enfor ce ment Lia is on
Division of the United States
Karate Assn.
During the coming year,
Chambers will be responsible
for the coordination and
exchange of techniques and
tr aining programs for
co r rec tions personne l
throughout the United States.
The Middleport man has
been promoted to the position
of '' intermediate instructor''
of the PR·24 by Lon Anderson
of the Monadriock Corp.,
which developed the PR-24
and is in charge of instructor
certification . The rank of
"intermediate instructor" is
currently the highest level of
instruction available with
this law enforccmenl In·
Previously there were only
13
" intermediate
in·
structors" in the United
States.
Chambers now w1ll ·be able
to not only certify officers to
carry the PR-24 but w111 be
also able to certify officers to
the " basic instructors" in the
techniques of the PR-24.

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
· the century
established 1872

.

events
FRIDAY
p.m.
Queen
registration; queen luncheon
and queen rides on P. A.
Denny.
5 p.m. - Tennis tour·
nament, Middleport.
6 p,m.- Parade. Falls ·city
hot air balloon rides following
parade.
8:30 p.m. - 1978 Regatta
Queen Crowning followed by
Rio Grande College Chorale
program, 8:30 p.m. on Lynn
St.
8 to 10 p.m. - Disco dance
on P. A. Denny.
10:30 to 12:30 p.m.- Disco
dance on P. A. Denny.
SATURDAY
Morning - Falls City hot
air balloon rides.
10 a.m. - Casting derby ,
tennis court, Pomeroy.
11 a.m. - Big Wheel race.
10 to 12 - Senior citizens
boat ride.
10 a.m. - Art contest at
library.
ll a.m. - Boat parade
leaving Middleport.
l p.m. - French City Ski
Club show.
2 p.m. - Local boat races .
12 :45·2 :45 p.m. - Boat
rides.
3:30 to 5:30 p.m. - Boat
rides.
3 p.m. - Eat·a·thon at
Burger Chef.
6:15 to 8:15p.m. - Boat
ride.
6 p.m: - ~'rog jump.
8 p.m . - Frog derby .
9 p.m. to 1 a.m . - Fire
de pa rtment
dance
at
Pomeroy Elementary SchooL
9 p.m. to midnight - Dance
on P A. Denny.
SUNDAY
12 noon to 5 p.m. Heritage Sunday at Meigs
Museum.
10 a.m. til ? - Finals of
tennis tournament on
Pomeroy court.
I to 5 p.m. - CarnivaL $2.50
ride all you want .
12 :30 p.m. - Power boat
racing begins.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Sometimes it's not the big
things, but the little things,
which keep politicians and
statesmen
from
their
scheduled appointments.
And that's why 132 mem·
bers of the Ohio General
Assembly, who were ex·
peeled to start their summer
vacation today, instead will
be back at the Statehouse,
wrestling with a $202 million
supplemental appropriations
bill and several minor but
controversial measures.
Majority leaders said they
expected it would take five or
six hours to iron things out
and leave for the summer
after passing the ap·
propriation which includes
$115 million in grants and
loans to ensure that public
schools will remain open next
fall.
Things seemed to be going
smoothly until after dinner
Thursday when Democratic
House and Senate leaders
began quarreling over the
fate of several minor bills.
Sessions broke up abruptly
at 10 :30 p.m. after a summit
meeting in the office of
Senate President
Pro
Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D·
Northfield.
And disgruntled House
members scurried to reclaim
the hotel rooms they had
checked out of hours earlier
in anticipation of going home.
The lawmakers did clear 34
bills to the desk of Gov.
James A. Rhodes, one of
them the school management
bill which is the second part
of the majority Democrats'
plan to keep schools
operating withn their fiscal

resources.
Although a conference
committee report had been
swift ly and informally
written on a single point of
difference between the two

SON BORN
Marine Staff Sgt. and Mrs.
Stephen Chapman, Iwokuni,
Japan announce the birth of
their second child, a son,
Stephen Lyle who was born
on the birthday of his sister,
Brandee, on June 12. The
infant weighed 7 pounds and 9
ounces . The
paternal
grandmother is Marcella
Chapman, Middleport, and
the paternal grandfath er,
SQUAD RUNS
Julius Chapman, Rt. 4,
At 6:30p.m. Thursday the Pomeroy. Maternal grand·
Middleport Emergency father is Frank Comfort, of
Squad answered a call to Canada .
Chester for Ross Cleland, a
medical patient, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
REUNION SET
HositaL
The annual Randolph
At 7:48 p.m. they went to reunion will be held June 25 at
939 Ash Street for Jean Ar· the state park on the right on
mentrout who was treated on U. S. Rt. 33 going north. All
the scene.
relatives of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Randolph and
friends are invited. Basket
dinner at noon .

JUDGMENT SOUGIIT
A judgment in the amount
of $1,173.20 and costs was
filed in Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court Thursday by
Charles J . and VIrginia S.
Pennington, Middleport,
against William R. Williams.
Pomeroy.

MAY SALES
May 1978 sales ' of Series E
&amp; H United States Savings
Bonds in OHio were ~I
million. At the end of May,
the State attil!ned 4() percent
of its 197B Sales GoaL
Theodore T. Reed , Jr., Meigs
County Volunteer Savings
Bonds Chairman, reported
May sales of Savings Bonds
in the county were 122,088.
The· county achieved 31.2
percent of its annual sales
goal May 31.

Miss Blaettnar is
'78 Regatta Queen

Legislators' vacation
plans ·are interrupted

Cincinnati.

~1rument.

Money's slippery stuff. Gets away.
A Checking Account stops slippage.
Memory in a book!
Open a Checking Account today.
Tighten up.

Here, S
Regatta

SERVICES SCHEDULED
The sixth annual outdoor
services conducted by John
Elswick at the Albany Riding
Club grounds beginning
Tuesday and extending
through July I. Services will
be 7:30 each evening. The
Lamar Sego Family of
Macon, Ga ., will be singing
on June 27·28; the New Life
Quartet on June 29 ; the Bill
Morris Singers on June JC and
the Messengers on July !.

HOMECOMING SET
The
Fairview
Bible
Church, Rt.l , Letart, W. Va.,
will hold a Homecoming June
25. Sunday School will be held
at 9:30 and 10 :45 p.m. with a
covered dish dinner to begin
at noon . Everyone is
welcome.
A song and praise service
will begin at I :30 p.m. with
gospel singing by the Newsmen from Charleston .
Speaker wUI be Brother Bob
Albright from Henderson, W.
Va.

VBS SLATED
The
Fairview
Bible
Church, Rt. I, Letart, wiU
hold a five-day Vacation
Bible School and Night
Revival June ~30.
The Bible School will be
held from 9:30 a.m.·l2 noon
dally with revival service
nightly at 7:30p.m. Speakers
will be Clyde Fleld5 and Don
RA:Jach. Special singing will be
by local churches.
j

chambers on the ap·
propriations bill, Ocasek said
no committee was officially
appointed.
He brandished a scrap of
paper containing seven oJ&gt;.
jections he had to t~e version
cleared by the House prior to
dinner on a 77-16 vote.
But It was understood
Ocasek wanted House action
on a Senate • passed blll
providing tax credits for
home insulation before he
would bring a conference
report to the Senate floor.
"The house has custody of
that bill," said Ocasek
cryptically. "We're going to
come back tomorrow mor·
ning when we're clear·
headed and fresh ."

''I have no comment."
grumbled Virgil Riffe, House
speaker, as he strode to' his
office and declined to
elaborate on the dispute.
House bills on agricultural
pollution and the appoint·
ment of substitute municipal
court judges also were hung
up and were understood to be
part of the difficulty.
The bill cleared the House
after 90 minutes of debate
during which minority
Republicans tried a variety of
unsuccessful tactics to divert
more money from the state
surplus to schools or return it
to the taxpayers.
The major amendment
adopted on the floor watered
down language, inserted
earlier ir the day in the House
Finance Committee,
broadening powers of school
districts to arrange long-term
loans with private lending
institutions.
Ocasek
and
other
lawmakers have opposed
borrowing as a method of
bailing schools out of their
financial problems . They
argue it would only force
them deeper into debt.
The appropriations bill,
modified only slightly since it
left the Senate last week,
included $35 million for state
employee pay raises, $20
million to hike aid to families
with dependent children by 9
percent, $10 million for In·
dustrial development and $13
million for a variety of
purposes.
It contains $75 million in
direct additional subsidies to
school
distri cts ,
con·
cent rating on those in need of
money to keep from closing

next fall.
The bill also provides for a
$40 million state loan ·
program
from
which
financially· troubled districts
may borrow under strict
terms.
Rep. Scribner L. Fauver,
R·Elyria,
· had gained
committee approval earller
in the day of an amendment
allowing school districts to
borrow from private banks
from one calendar year to the
next without state Controlting
Board approval.
Fauver's amendment
allowed the districts three
years to repay the loans,
taking some of the pressure
off the state loan fund.
However, the full House
voted 7(}.23 for an amendment
by Rep. Thomas P.
Gilmartin, D·Youngstown,
limiting the private loans to
next school year and
requiring that they be repaid
by June 30, 1979.
Gihnartin's amendment
also limited the private loans
to 25 percent of a school
district's annual budget.
Republicans complained
this change would severely
reduce the chances of
keeping schools open next
fall, because they would not
be able to repay ' the loans
within a year.
Although the bill was
written to bring the state's
funding of the "equal yield"
school subsidy formula to 100
percent, lawmakers agreed
that the concept of the for·
mula was dislodged by $21.7
million worth of special
subsidies to needy school
districts.
"l think we can hold a
memorial service for the
equal yield formula," said
Rep. Myrl Shoemaker, [)..
Bourneville, chairman of the
House Finance Committee.

"The name was wrong to
start with."
However, Shoemaker said
the bill would "have the ef·
feet of trying to keep the
schools open for the balance
of this calendar year."
Shoemaker said that
without the addition or $13.$
miUion in special school
subsidies guaranteeing at
least a 10 percent increase in
state aid for every school
district in the state, 83
districts might have been
forced to close.
He pointed out that the
extra money would "put

some districts on the gravy
train," and warned that
"these superintendents
better not build that into their
budgets the nett time."
Republicans
were
systematically shot down as
they tried to take the school
loan and welfare money,
divert it to big city :school
districts and eliminate the 10
percent guarantee.
.Despite warnings of a
"taxpayers' revolt," House
members voted 79·12 against
returning the entire $202
million to the taxpayers in the
form of an income tax refund.
Rep . Donna Pope, R·
Panna, t.ried in vain for an
amendment to preclude the
use of state funds for court·
ordered purposes, including
the purchase of buses to
achieve racial integration of
schools.
Mrs. Pope's amendment
was tabled on a voice vote to
majority Democrats avoided
the discomfort of a rollcall.
Rep. W. Bennett Rose, R·
Lima, disputed Shoemaker's
contention that the bill would
at least temporarily solve the
school financing problem.
"The people of Ohio are
smarter than to believe that
through this half-baked bill,
we've done our job," he said.
The school management
bill sent to Rhodes enables a
school district to better
estimate its revenues and
expenditures, and places
stricter controls on the school
district treasurer's cer·
tificat10n of revenues of fund
operating programs.
Under some circumstances
- when a district has been
certified to close because of a
deficit - the State Board of
Education can assume
operating and fiscal control
over the district.
Local
school
ad·
ministrators will also be
required to undergo fiscal
training coordinated by the
state, funded by a $241,000
state appropriation.
Sen. Marcus A. Roberto, [)..
Ravenna, who carried the bill
through the Senate ~. noted.
that school financing Is a
"partnership" between the
state and local govemmentJ.
" lt is my opinion that the
process of state involvement
in the operation or schools are
indeed substantial revisions
which I think will be helpful,"
said Roberto. "This proposal
will help prevent problems."

Democrat fete draws 60 persons
Sixty people came out to
the potluck supper and rally
'n1ursday night in Rodney
Gran ge Hall to hear
Democrats advocate ele:ction
of the entire Democratic Par·
ty ticket.
While the pleas they heard
ranged from Gubernatorial
Candidate Dick Ce leste to the
county conunis.iuner and
county auditor posts,
everyone cununended the
"Wright Brothers" - Floyd
amd Donald Ray - for
organizing such a successful
meeting at grass roots level.
Floyd Wright presided and
introduced each speaker and
the musical entertainment
which preceded the ora tory .
Donald Ray nut only helped
his brother set up the affair
as co-c haim1an , but took
movies.
''Apathy is spreading all
over our land. People need to
get involved in their govern·
ment."
That was the hard&lt;Ore
message given by Roy
Newell, principal speaker ,
who is an administrative aide
to State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson and head of the
Auditor's speakers' bureau .
Fonner Demucratlc State
Chairman William Lavelle of
Athens spoke on behalf of
Dick Celeste. Bob Kline, also
Athens, spoke for Jerry
Adams, candidate for state
representative in the 91st
district.
With the legislature in ses·
slon, neither Ron James, 92nd ·
district representative, nor
Myrl Shoemaker could attend
at Rodney .
Also speaki ng were James

Plummer for Congress and
Jack Hillyer for state
senator.
Gallia County candidates
present were County Auditor
Dorothy Condee and Lonnie
Burger, for conunissioner.
The Happy Four of Vinton
Baptist Church and the N~
Life Trio sang.
Besides the Wri ght
Brothers, those doing the

PICNIC SET
Members of the French
City Swingers Square Dance
Club are urged to attend the
annual club picnic and
election of officers . The
picnic and business meeting
will be held Sunday, June 25
at 7 p.m. at Fortification HilL
Club members are asked to
bring a covered dish, hot dogs
or hamburgers, drink, and
your own table service.

work were Mr. and Mrs.
Donald E. Wright, Terri
Wright, Cherri Wright, Karen
Morgan, Cynthia Morgan,
Kim Morgan, Don Coleman,
Jeff Cook, Bill Dray, and
Lora Voreh.
It was a regional rally , with
guesls coming not only from
Ga!lia County but also from
Meigs, Jackson, Athens, and
Mason Counties.

REMINDER GIVEN
Middleport Pollee Chief J .
J. Cremeans remind5 Mid·
dleport residents all vehicles
must be off S. Second Avenue
between Mill and Mulberry
Streets by 4 p.m. this af.
ternoon to make way for the
Regatta parade.
Cremeans sayd he appreciates the cooperation of
the public in past years and
hopes to have the same sort of
cooperation this year.

POMEROY - ·cathy Blaettnar,
dauR!lter of Mr. anrl Mrs. John William
Blaettnar, Pomeroy,. was named 1978 Big
Bend Regatta Queen Friday night from a
field or 10 contestants.
Miss Blaettnar· was crowned by the
1977 queen, Niese! Duvall. She was
presented flowers, a large trophy and
gifts.
First runnerup in the competition was

Teresa Carr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Carr, Tuppers Plains, with Judy
Perry, who makes her home with an aunt,
Mrs. Bess Webster, Tuppers Plains, being
second runnerup . Brenda Frecker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth .
!'reeker, Reedsville, was named third
runner-up.

\
NIESEL DUVALL, 1977 Big Bend Regatta Queen, presents trophy to the 1978
Regalia Queen contest winner, Cathy Blaettnar of Pomeroy. Miss Duvall also
crowned the new queen .

unba
VOL. 13 NO. 21

HANES
POCKET T-SHIRTS
100 per cent cotton-short sleevesmen's sizes small (34-36), medium
(38-40), large (42-44), extra large
( 46-48).
Soft, comfortable, absorbant,
and color fast.
Solid colors - light blue, gold;
Dartmouth green, navy and red.

Weather
Partly cloudy Saturday,
with showers or thun··
dershowers possible late In ,
the day and highs in the low ,
or mid 80s. Probability of
precipitation is near zero
percent today, 10 percent ,
tonight and 30 percent
Saturday.

Men's and Boys' Dept. -lsi Floor

'

ceremonies.
Some I&gt; visiting queens, the largest

group since the regatta began, were seated
on the platform and were introduced
during the queen festivities.
Among the group were Mary Mora,
Pomeroy, Meigs Dairy Princess : Pam

Miller, Gallia County Dairy Princess:
Pam McMahon, R1ver Festiva l Queen in
Gallia County, and Miss Batey, a Meigs
Junior Miss.

Others represented were the Ohio Hill
Festival at Quaker City; Miss
Pottery Festival and her prin cess,
Crooksville; International Mining and
Manufacturing Festival at Cadiz; Ohio
~'olk

fCuntinucd U/l rage A-21

+

tmts
SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1978

GALLI POLIS- POINT PLEASANT

CATHY BLAEITNAR, Pomeroy, seated, was named 1978 Big Bend Regatta
Queen Friday night in Pomeroy. Behind are members of the court and from the
left , they are : Teresa Carr, fir st runnerup ; Judy Perry, second runne rup , and
Brenda Frecker, third runnerup . Miss Blaettnar also won the Miss Congeniality
-~
.

tntint
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

and humid, with !ihowers or thun·

Deputies break
up fight; four
persons cited
•

'

~

i

.,

.

"'"~~-~ ~ '

.

VANDALS REOE(X)RATED the restroom at the Vinton Village Park Thurs·
day . VIllage residents stated Friday that the incident may have been a political
ototomonl. Cwtrovi!'•Y has surroWided law enforcement efforts for some months
in Vinton . VU!age councilmen moved this year to reduce the salary of Vinton
Marshal, E. W, Widger, and are investigating the possibility-of contracting with
theGallia County Sheriff's Department for around-the.., lock protection and patrol.

GALLIPOLIS - Five Galiia County
Sheriff's deputies were calledd to the
scene of a fight on the perking lot of the
Green Gables Tavern, Upper River Rd .,
Gallipolis, at I :41 a.m. Saturday.
The first officer responding to the
ea rly morning call was Roger Bran·
deberry .
Arriving at the scene, he and special
deputy Archie Meadows discovered approximately 75 people in Ihe parking lot, 10
to 12of whom were involved in a fight.
As officer Brandeberry attempted to
break up the disruption, a man broke from
the crowd and ran from the scene.

Believe it or not,
Americans pay less

Hit-skip charged

following incident
Gallipolis City Pollee ·cited James B.
'Morris, 35, Gallipolis, on charges of
operating a vehicle without a license and
leaving the scene of an accident Friday at
8:08p.m.
Investigating officer H. Moy ~r
reported that a vehicle operated by Morns
struck three parked cars in the Mumcapal
Parking Lot, and that Morris then left the

Federal proposals criticized

Brandeberry pursued the individual and
captured the suspect after a 100 yard foot

Overall taxes:

WASHINGTON (UP() - Americans pay
the highest property taxes and the lowest
sales taxes in the industrial world,
rectrding to an authoritative study of
international lax burdens.
On an · overall basis, however,
Americans spend less of their earnings for
taxes than the citizens of any other
advanced country. And the most recent
U.S. trend Is for reduced taxes compared
with escalations in France, Sweden,
Greece and other industrial countries.
The conclusions are contained in an
Organir.ation for Economic Cooperatioo
and Development study of IIIli patterns
since 1965 In the world's 23 most

first place honors during Friday's 14th annual Brg Bend
Regatta parade. See additional regatta pictures on 5-A , Coli
and [).[.

FIRST PLACE WINNER - This attractive float of the
Chester Council, No. 323, Daughters of America, captured

industrialized countries.

The OECD study depicts taxes in
comparison with each n•tion's Gross
Domestic Product, or total output of goods
and servi ces within each country's

borders. a formula eliminating income
from overseas investmenLC! and services.
When goverrunent revenue is broken
down to source. OECD said the United
States collects more from property !axes
than any other country.
Of all taxes collected in the United
States, 13.6 percent derives from property.
Sweden received the lowest amount from
property, 1.11 percent.
But the United States collected less in
sales taxes - 18.1 percent of aU revenue than any other country. The sales lax was
the primary source of state income in
Greece, 49.5 percent, and Ireland, 46.5
percent.
OECD also said taxes in relation to GOP
rose between 1975 and 1976 - the latest
year for which data Is available - In
Finland, F'rance, Greece , Ireland and
Sweeden.
Just the opposite occurred in the United
Slates, Austria , Belgium and Holland.
For all taxes combined in relation to the
GOP, the United States ranks In the
middle of the 23 countries. But in relation
to per capila income, the U.S. tax burden
is the lowest.

WASHINGTON ( UPI ) - Scientists ca ncer-causing substances.
The regulatioos would classify potential
representing the oil industry viewpoint
chase .
cancer&lt;ausers
on the basis of eurr~nt
The suspect was later identified as said Saturday that federal proposals for evideoce, including data from animal
limiting workplace exposure to cancer
George Curry, 23, Cheshire.
causing
substances represent a "meat axe tests, and then foreclose that classification
Offil.'" Brandeberry reports that as he
from reconsideration .
was leading Curry to lhe sheriff's cruiser, approach" and a "Dark Ages" mentality .
"Does OSHA realize what effect such
The American Petroleum Institute
a threatening crowd lormed around the
close-minded
prejudgments can have on
deputy and his suspect . After making his issued a series of statements by scientists scientific progress ?" asked Dr . Rulon W.
way to the cruiser, Brandeberry ca lled fbr scheduled to testify at federal hearings on Rawson, direeiDr of the Booneville Ccn!er
the issue this week.
back-uo suooort frnm All units .
Regulations sought by the Occupational for Research oo Cancer Cause and
Responding to the call were Lt. Alva
Prevention in Salt Lake City .
L. Sullivan, Deputy James L. Hatfield, and Safety and Health Administration would
Rawson said preventing reconsideration
Spec1al Deputy Leo Johnson. Sgt. 0. H. establish procedures and classifications of the classifications was Hreminiscent of
for restricting occupational exposure to
Hen~erson of the Ohio State Patrol was
the anti-intellectualism of the Dark Ages."
&gt;1and ing by at the scene.
Dr. Melvin First, in written testimony
Owner of the tavern . Sam Salem.
released by API, said the complex task of
Boy, 17, sentenced
Identified David Donnelly, 21 , Eureka Star
setting standards for about 2,500 suspected
Rt., as the supposed instigator of the in· to youth eommis~ion
carcinogens "calls for the exercise of
informed judgment and prolesswnul
cident.
Donally was taken into custody by
POMEROY - A 17-year old male competence rather than a meal axe
offi cer Brandeberry. Also arrested was youth , returned to Meigs County after approach that fails to account for the
Jeffrey Maynard, 19, Gallipolis, who being apprehended by authorities '" unique properties of each substantc:·
allegedly threatened Brandeberry.
Cleveland. Tenn ., appearing before Meigs
First is professor of environmental
Brandeberry ordered the tavern County Juvemle Judge Manning Webster health engineering at Harvard 's School of
closed , and called for the crowd to was committed to the Ohio Youth Com· Public Health .
mission. Maximum Security Institution.
Another witness, Dr. Jolln Thorpe nf
disperse.
The officer reports that he was then Indian fliver , ncar Massillon , Ohio. He will EJ&lt;Xon Corporation, chairman of APJ's
harassed by Drema Marcum, 23 , remain there 9·tl months.
Medicine and Biological Science Deparl ·
Juvenile Officer Carl R. Hysell took ment. said API is committed to protectmg
Gallipoilis, who was arrested on charges ol
the youth to the institution on Wednesday. worke rs' health.
disorderly conduct.
This is the first commitment of th1s
Thorpe said an API alternative proposa l
Officers report that-.,after the arrests,
bottles were thrown by 'the crowd at the type to the Ohio Youth Commission by the builds upon procedures used by other
Meigs County Juvenile Court, which Is for federal agencies. includin H the
deputies on the scene.
The crowd was dispersed , and the area hard core delinquents with lengthy records Environmenlal Protection Agency .
They require two decisions - whether
!Continued on page A·2 )
of serious offenses.

the substance poses a carcinoge nic risk to
man, and if so, what regul ator y action is

!ippropriate.
"Quite simply," Thorpe said, "OSHA
cannot hope to determine what level of
regulation is feasible for a particular sub·
st&lt;lnce unless it resolves, to the best of 1ts
ability , such question s as the potency of
the subst&lt;Jnce, the danger posed by the
substance at various exposure levels, and
tlle costs or achieving various exposure

levels:'

Weather
Pa1ily cloudy today. with
showers or th undershowers
possible and highs in tile low
or mid lllls. Probability of
precipll&lt;lt!on is 40 percent.
DELEGATES RETURN HOME
POMEROY- S1x young Meigs County
men return to their homes today from
uurndmg Buckeye Boys State at Bowling
Gn:cn State University .
Kmn Kmg served as a State Highway
Patrolman; Dave Hedrick as a deputy

sheriff. Keith Krautter , as sheriff of·
DeWeese County ; Seth Hill as a City
Co uncil member: Greg Becker as deputy
registrar of Wagonsellcr Co., and Charles
Kennedy as a member of the house of
representatives.

Power off over an
hour friday evening
C.ALIJPOIJS - Apparently caused by
an uve&gt;·luad , u Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company line fed from the
Georges Creek substation was out of
operation fur a little over an hour Friday
evtming.

The uulage, from 6tu a little after 7 p.m.·
Friday, ·hit the Silver B1·idgc Shopping
Pl~zH, the rest of Kanauga, etnd u'privcr lu

but not includin~ Cheshire.

Our House museum

has international visitors
GALU POLIS - Our House musewn had

an lnternatlunal air briefly May 6 and June

9,aL'Cording toMary Allison, curator.
Signing the register un the fonner dati·
was Jack Ublnnov, Moscow, USSR. un
June 9 and throo Germans , Hans and F.lsc·
Schmidt, son Rolf, who wrote "Gic"cn,
0eul.ii(:hJurKI" un the re~ister QS their ~tl·
dress. Deul.ii(:hJund is the German W&gt;ll'd (ur
Germany.

JUNE FUNDS OISTRmUTED
POMEROY - June State School
Foundation subsidy payments lor Meigs
County school districts tota led $210,416.64
following deductions for employe and
teacher retirement.
Amounts received by each local
district include: Eastern, $44,066 .22;
Meigs, $114,094.2S, and Southern, '
$&gt;2,256.17.
In addition the Meigs County Board of
Educatioo received a direct allowment of
$14.670.07.

\.
II)N AND BROTHER of GaUia Countlans, Wayne McCully , Columbus,
Invented and deolgned this grinder at work at French City Meats. Watching the
machine are Ray Myers, product formulator , and Larry Pyles, production
manager.

FRENCH CITY MEATS Crinder Operator Richard Slone lifts large hunk of
meat to go irito shiny receptacle of Wayne McCully invention In experimental use.
Helping Is Product Formulator Ray Myers. (See story and additional pictures on
page A·2) .

,.

'

PRICE 25 CENTS

dershowers possible Monday and
Tuesday and highs In the upper 80s or
lower 90s. Fair and cooler Wednesday,
with highs In the lower 80s. Lows mostly
will be In the 60s through .the period.

El.berfelds in Pomeroy
I

an excellent program following the queen

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday, warm

Moyer's report states that the Morris
vehicle turned from Court St. and started
to head north through the parking lot when
the left front bumper of the aulo struck and
caught on the rear bumper of an auto
owned by Clinton N. Mcfarland,
Gallipolis.
The McFarland vehicle was pushed
sideways Into the left rear fender of an
auto owned by Roger D. Garrett,
Gallipolis.
The Morris vehicle then pulled to the
right, striking an auto owned by Vaughn
W. Johnson, Gallipolis, in the Jell rear
(Continued on pa~e A·21

JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER SHIPMENT

providing her own guitar accompaniment ,

and Randy Batey and Becky Pooler
presented a dance numbe, , The Rio
Grande Chorale of Merlyn Ross presented

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

scene.

ELBERFELDS

All of the winners were ,presented
flowers , trophies and gifts. Miss Blaettnar
was also selected by the girls as Miss
· Congeniality winner of the Regatta Queen
competition.
Presiding at the ceremonies were Bill
Quickel, co-chairman of the Big Bend

Regatta ; Mary Ault , Tonya Davis and
Miss Duvall. Kim Batey, a Meigs County
Junior Miss, presented several numbers

I

'

�A-2- The Sunday Times-5enlinel. Sunday. June 25, 1978

Blaettnar. • •
(Continued from page A-1)
State Fair; Deer Creek Darn Days, Arm. strong; l)tica lee Cream Festival; Middlefield Swiss Cheese Festival; Green
Co untry Town Festival, Chillicothe;
~inbridge · Fall Festival of' Leaves;
Moonshine Fest ival at New Straitsville,
and the Parade of the Hills at Nelsonville.
Introdu ced also were the court
members of the regatta queen contest in
1977. They are Debbie Holsinger, first
rurmer·up; Tracie Weese, second runnerup and Rhonda Hudson Hannahs, Miss
Congeniality.

Hit-skip •..
(Continued from page A·l 1
fender and tailgate door.
The McFarland and Johnson vehicles
incurred moderated dama ge. There was
slight damage to the Garrett vehicle.
The auto driven by Morris incurred
slight damage to the -left front fend er.
moderate damage to the right front fen der.
City Police investigated two other
accidents invol ving pa rked car s on
Friday.
At 4:47 p.m .. an unknown vehicle
backed into. a car o ~ned by Debi Bailey.
Gallipolis. The Bailey vehicle was parked
on Second Ave. in front of the Fountain ot
Youth Beauty Salon .
Officers investigated an accident on
Second Ave. at 2.: 29 p.m. Acco rding to the
police report , a vehicle owned by Dean E.
Newman, Gallipolis, was illega lly parked
m front of 636 Second Ave. when it was
sideswiped by an auto driven by Wil liam
M. Sibley, 18, Gallipolis. There wils no
report of damage, or of citation.

Deputies ..•
tContinued from page A-1&gt;
cleared at 2:12 a.m.
Curry, Donnally, and Maynard were
charged with disorderly co nduct and inca rcerated in the county jail until 6:15
a.m., when they were releaocd after
posting bond.
Marcum was released on bond without
being incarcerated.

REQUEST IS DENIED
ATHENS, Ohio iUPl i - The Ohio
Umversity board of trustees Saturday
denied a request by a fa culty group to hold
an election in the fall to decide if faculty
members want to organize a union .
The board' told the Ohio Un iversity
Facu lty Association, which is affiliated
with the Ohio Education Association , that
the board would authorize an e!ettion only

McCulty's invention

Ghashmi killed
'
agency reports

GALLIPOLIS ~ French
City Meats, Inc., a Landmark
Food Company, is currently
undergoing an extensive
plant improvement project.
The company will soon be
marketing items under the
Landmark Food label, at
which time numeroll!i sliced
luncheon meats wlll be
available
in markets
throughout Ohio, West
Virginia, and Kentucky.
One new and attractive
package that is available now
in many loca l markets is
French City sliced bacon.
Sales for this particular item
have tripled since its in-

BEIRUT. Lebanon (UP)) - The Iraqi
News Agency Saturday said Norlh Yemen
President Lt. Col. Ahmed al Ghashmi had
been assassinated - the seco.nd
as.&lt;;assmalion of a Yemeni chief of slate in
eight month.s.
In a dispatch from the North Yemen
capital of Sanaa, the Iraqi agency said that
Ghashmi was killed by a booby-trapped
parcel carried by an envoy from
neighboring South Yemen.
Ghashrni, 39, came to power last October
after unidentified gunmen assassinated
the former President. Lt. Col. Ibrahim AI
Hamdi.
The Iraqi agency quoted Radio Sanaa as
say ing that the assassination of.Ghashrni
"took. place when an envoy from
Democratic (South 1 Yemen President
Salim Robaya Ali was pr.Sent to deliver a
message to President Ghashmi ."
"The envoy was carrying a booby trap
parcel that went off when opened, killing
President Ghashmi and the envoy " the
Iraqi agency said.
'
WAYNE A. McCULTY, P. E., Columbus, former Gallia Countian, looks at the record
with Bill Frazee, French City Meats plant manager, and two others of the company's high
brass: Terry Frye, quality control ma~ager, and Larry Pyles, production manager.
McCully, mventor&lt;lesigner of the grinder with which French City Meats is experimenting,
1s the son of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. McCully, Bidwell, brother of Gene and Bill McCully,
Galhpohs, and Mrs. Lois Stout, Btdwell.
·

Three men charged
with open flasks
GALLIPOLIS - Gaillipolis City Police
Friday cited William E. Fulk s, 20, Scottown ; Roger D. Estep. 19. Scotto wn; and
Timothy J . Cook, 20, Proctorville, on
charges of possession of open fla sks in
public use areas .
Shirley M. Shmigal, 24, Gallipolis, was
ci ted for excessive speed .
Cited Saturday on charges of excessive speed were Patricia J . Newshutz,
19, Gallipolis ; Sherri J. Johnson, 21,
Gallipolis ; J erry L. Nibert , 42, Gallipolis ;
Oscar E. Davies, 40. Patriot Star Rt.; and
Preston F. Coughenour, Gallipolis.
SENATOR BYRD IS ASKED
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President
Caner has asked Senate Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd, !).W. Va ., to go to
Europe as his "emissary and personal
representative" to urge West German and
British leaders to follow through on
commitments to the North Atlantic Treaty
Alliance, Byrd said Saturday.
Caner also ha s asked Byrd to visit
Madrid to assure the Spanish government
of continued U. S. support and to express
apprec ia tion for Spain's defense
coo peration .

. I

if the state would establish proper
procedures and regulations gove rning
pu blic employee bargaining.

.,II_

Of BUSINESS

SPECIAL
Sunday thru Saturday
June 25 thru July 1

FISH
DINNER
SPECIAL
eCole Slaw
•Roll &amp; Butter

Sunday Times.Sentinel
Pubhstll'U cVl'l)' Suml.uy ll)' 1111·
Oh tJ Vc!ll c)' Pulll1:ih111 g Cu.·
,\'1Lli!11U l'\ h:1 , fr ll'

GAI .I.IPOI.IS
01\II.V TRIHUNt~

Transfers

Iii'! Tlun l Avt•., f:all1puhs, Ohw
~ )I~ II

Puhh.,l ll'd

John Hopkins, Jr. to Della
Hopkins, Lawrence Hopkins ,
Mabel G!isher, aff. for trans.,
Pomeroy.
Lawrence
Hopkins ,
Elizabeth M. Hopkins to
Leonard L. Lentz, Lots,
Pomeroy.
Doris V. Miller nka Doris
V. Jackson, Afftdavit of
Death. Lebanon.
Doris V. Miller, Doris V.
Jackson, Isaac D. Jackson to
H. C. Dawkins, R. D. Camev.
51 acres, 65 rods. Lebanon.
Dessie Boggess, Affidavit,
Letart.
Deryl E. Well, Doris Ann
Well to Beryl A. Wilson,
Linda A. Wilson, .078 acre,
Orange.

,

-·

l'Xl't'l)l

l'Vl'r~'

w•·••kdOJ y t'\' l'lllltg

SH1 Ul' tlll) '.

. Cia,'\.~

St't'Otl tl

Pu.,tagt• Patd a l i:;t ll ipulls. Oln u
~ 5C~!L

TIIEOAIL\' SJo:NT INf:t.
Ill Court .St., Pumcruy, 0 . ~ 5169
PuiJIL\ IM."ll 1!\lt'ry llt't1•k day ~ \' CIHII"
e."&lt;t:ept Saturdity Eu tcrcd ij.S St.'(:ull!l
dom mculmg 111a\ll•r Ill Pomervr:
Olnu PLI.!il Ofrrcc.
Hy t•a rner tlculy and Sunlle~y 7~
• ]A'I' Wl..'\'k. Multlt ruu\t: l.'l.Z5 pt&gt;r
1111 ~1 \ h .

MAIL
SUHSCR IP'TION ltATF'..S
Till: GillhpuiL~ J)arly TnUunc 111
Uln\1 &lt;md Wt.ost Vtti(Uilll one )'tilr •
W .OO . .om: rnrmlh.'i Sll .$0 , thn.~ 11101 1·
Or !&gt; $i 00 . U~e~· hl:rc S2ti.OO per )'t•;u·.
:oo rx mnrrlhs $1 3.50; lllr~'t' munthli '

puiJI Il'll lli..lll uf all new.~ t ii SJ»ildw ~
t' l' t'lll t ~r l Ill the nc ~~t'.S I)il]lt!l' lrml abu
t111· lot·allli''A'SJIUlJii!&gt;llt.'tl herem

Polaroid's
complete
Polavision
system including
camera, player
and film.

99
REGULAR '2.55

PHONE 44~1611

ABA

r------·-·-

I

Social
!.Calendar 1
1

TUESDAY
SPEC IAL . MF:ETIN G,
Racine Louge 4GI, F&amp;AM,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Work in
the EA Degree . All Ma sons
welcome.
«
AGLOW BIBLE S'nJDY
and praise service Tuesda y
9:30a.m. at the home of Mrs.
Dale !Shirley ) Priddy, Hysell
Run Road , Pomeroy. Mrs.
Barbara Sheridan will be the
speaker. All ladies welcome.
For additional information
call 992-7281.

PfPILU
·I &amp;fill

client if his client ignores his
advice and proceeds' Is it the
lawyers' obligation to blow
the whistle on his client'
Lawyers will invoke an
attorney-&lt;:lient privilege in
reply."
Spann in a speech during
the ann~! meeting of the
DtinoisStateBar Association
said confident iality
'
whether it is asserted by
accounlants, physicians or
journalists - is under attack
by tbe public.
"Confidentiality is giving
way to accountability," he
said. "And accountability is
the new watchword for all
professions, the law included,
as our various publi cs
demand more available and
beler se rvi ces than ever
before ."
Spann said a special ABA
comm]$sion
has been
ap poinled to study the
language of the present code
and recommend changes.

ESCAPES INJURY
MENTOR, Ohio (UPIJ
William 1.. Cla us, 40 , Collins,
escaped Injury Friday when a
train hil his tra ctor - trailer
rig , but he wa s cited for not
obeying railroa d crossi ng
oi~nals .

1\

FIGURES RELEASED
May 1978 sales of Series
E&amp;H United States Savings
Bonds in Ohio were $41
million. At the end of May,
the State attained 40 per cent
of its 1978 Sales Goal.
C. Leo n Saunders, Gallla
County Volunteer Savings
Bonds Chairman, reported
May sales of Savings Bonds
tn the Co unty were $19,062.
The county achieved 31.6 per
cent of its annual sales goal
May 31.

Ask me about
Life Insurance
byourway
of living.
! off~ rue p1ogr.11ms dt!i!P'M!d lor
10.:Idy' 1fcurilnJ.h«! manied woman.
homeownt'l"f,lJgh rncOITH! people.
5l\ldenli, yoong6dulu:. and chlkllan.
too CaiJ me lOt' drtalb

C. K, SNOWDEN
NEW LOCATION
41l Second Ave.
"Oide Court"
~-...Golll .. lls
n•n ••••

S1 11e Falin lrl1
lnii!IIOC t CDmp•nv

~t~Jt~t0 1' «

BIOI)rn•"W~ !l~ot

p 11241

Pclarold Introduces Polavlslon.
• Jus! shoot. drop the Photota pe casselle &gt;nlo
Ihe player and seconds tater you're wat ch·
1ng lull-color Instant movies.
• No knobs to adJust
• See wllat you shoot 1n v1v1d col ors Ill
seconds.
• So easy to use. !he k&gt;ds can do 11. Automatic
ca mera. Automati c vrew&gt;ng.

TAWNEY'S STUDIOS

&amp;llne folk arc sound sleepers

424 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

Sunday thru Saturday
June 25 thru July 1

CHICKEN
SNACK·BOX

39

.No.
Sub$titutes

e2 PIECES CHICKEN
•MASHED POTATOES &amp; GRAVY
•ROLL

~~~Itt
·2nd·&amp;OUVE ST.

Function of fellowship often misuTJ;derstood
EDITOR'S NOTE- FoUowlng Is lbe lint of a series
of tbree articles etplaln!ng tbe function ollbe lellowsblp
of Aleobollc~ Aoonymoua. Tbe article• will be Jlllbllsbed
oo consecutive. Sundays.
· "Aicoh.olics Anonymous, though existent as a fellowship
in 'the Tri-County area for more than three decades, has
long gone unpublicized and is often misunderstood.
', During a recent gathering, some of the persons actlye in AA locally, decided the public needs to know about
th~ purposes of their non-profit group.
. With this thought in mind, and with the hope that the
end result will be a better understanding of the prevalant
disease of alcoholism, which affects some 612 million
Americans, and an inspiration for othera to attend
meetings, AA opened its doors for a representative of the
Times-Sentinel to attend one of its sessions.
The present location of the meetings of AA is not impartant. But, for background purposes, it should be
pointed out that weekly Alcoholics Anonymous sessions
have been conducted in the Tri-Counly area since the
early 1940's.
The first meetings of the local AA were held in now nonexistent dry cleaning shop in Point Pleasant.
While. down through the years, most persons have not
been aware of the functions and purposes of AA, its
reasons for existence are simple, but specific. They are :
Alcoholics Anonymous Is a fellowship of men and
women who share their experience, strength and hope
~with each other thai they may solve their common
. problem and help others ·to recover from alcoholism.
The only requirement lor membership to a desire to
stop drinking. There are no dues or fees for AA mem-

bersblp; II Is seU-supporUng through contrlbutloDll of
those wbo attend. AA Is not a111ed with any sect,
denomination, politics, orgaohation, or lnaUIUtlon; does
not wish to engage In any controversy, neither endorses
nor opposes any causes. Its primary purpose Is lor those
who parllclpate In AA to slay sober and help other
alcoholics to achieve sobriety.
The fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymoll!i was founded
in 1935 and has more than a million members in more
than 29,000 local groups in the United States and abroad.
· The fellowship , with international headquarters being
the General Service Office of Alcoholics Anonymous, Box
159, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y., is based onr
ones willingness to admit he is powerless over alcohol.
AA, in its litterna\ional monthfy journal, cites 12 steps

All White
or Dark Meat
AdditkJnal
Charge

.

GaHipolis Stare On~·.

i4nppr

·.

GAwPOLIS.
SE1WJCE PHONe

44tJ.·2M

( 8) Made a list of all persons we had harmed , and
became willing to make amends to them all.
(91 Made direct amends to such people wherever
possible, except when to do so would injure them or
others.
f 10) Continued to lake personal inventory and when we
were wrong promptly admitted it.
(II) Sought through prayer and meditation to improve
our conscious conta ct with God as we understood blm,
praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the
powe~ to carry that out.
1121 Havmg had a spiritual awakening as the result of
these steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics,
and to practice these principles in all our affairs.
NEXT: AA MEMBERS SPEAK OUT

that members must lake enroule to overcoming the
complex problem. They are :
(I ) We admitted we were powerless over alcohol-that
our lives had become unmanageable .
(2) Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
(3) Made a decision to turn our will and our lives Over
to the care of God as we understood him.
(4) Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of
ourselves.
(5) Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another
human being the exact nature of our wr~ngs.
(6) Were entirely ready to hav e God remove all these
defects of character.
(7) Humbly asked Him to reiiUlve our shortcomings.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JULY 1ST

~•·•~-~~•******************~~~~x~~x*************
~:::::::::~

couco® I' Dl••••••r

ICOOBY D0011 POOL
GAl COOKOUT GRILL
days, finding scarcely any
BY TOM SAUNDERS
GALLIPOIJS - One of the thing . After shooting three
oldest
ceme teries
in squirrels, Safford was
Gallipolis was located on preparing them for the skillet
l&gt;tate St. Gallia Academy , the while his companions napped
: old broom factory and the by the fire. Hearing a noise in
_houses east of the high school some bushes Salford saw a
are located on land that was deer's legs and, grasping his
rifle, drew a bead on where
: once a burial site. •
This area was the last the animal's body should be.
Just before he could press
; resting place of 2,500 persons.
More than 100 years ago the the trigger, his companions
: land was built over, changed, awakened, and, seeing him in
:and filled in until practically that position, yelled : "Inall trace of its boundaries dians." The deer took to its
heels, and the hunters dined
· were lost .
Early historians record on squirrel. - t S., Rt . I Box
·that a large mound stood on 33S, Bidwell, 0.
: the center of thts lot at the
· west end of State St. The
early settlers utilized what
' had long been an Indian
• buriaf,place and before that a
depos'l'tory for Mound Builder
dead. The mound was ex·
cavated and examined by a
· BY GLENNA SHULER
state archaeologist in the
Rev . and Mrs. Otis
. early forties , and some relics
Chapman
attended a birthwere taken to Columbus.
day
party
in honor of their
A large furniture fact ory,
granddaughter,
Jill McOa in.
· the Fuller - Hutsinpiller Co.
recently
in
Nelsonville
.
(The Ohio Valley Furniture
Delbert
Underwood,
Co.), was erected on the site
of the cemetery. Workmen Columbus, spent a day
' etcavating for the buildings recently with Mrs. Velma
, often found remnants of Sargent.
Mr . and Mrs. Squire
human bones and headstones
below the surlace. This plant Taylor. Baltimore, 0., were
burned in 1911 and was never rece ~t overnight guests of
Mrs. Velma Underwood. On
rebuilt .
Indian arrowheads, flints Sunday they went to
for striking fire, and even cemeteries to decorate
stone axes were constantly graves of their family and
(l&lt;und on the old burial site. attended church services at
The late Dr. Charles G. Gay 'county , W. Va .
Parker's
Indian
relic
Mrs . Marie Spires and
collection contained several Stephen called on Mrs .
Items found on this site.
Florence Caldwell, Mr. and
· When the Pine St. cemetery Mrs. Curtis Caldwell, Ann
was organized in 1849 a and Sara .
number of bodies were
Mrs. Cheryl Young, Reedsmoved to this cemetery. Its ville, called on Mr. and Mrs.
title was vested In perpetual Marlin Rife a day recently.
ownership to the city.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Boone Is thought to William Frazier, William and
have been living at Pt. Patty, a day recently were
Pleasant four years before Mr. and Mrs. Danny Little,
Gallipolis was settled. Ac- Kimberly and Scotty, Mr. and
cording to traditions Boone Mrs. Eugene Nutter Imboden
hunted with Joseph Vanden- and Micah Nutter, Mr. and
Benden of Gallipolis.
Mrs. Dow! Little, Chicago,
· The first whipping post Mrs. Carol Fitch, Rt. I
ever erected in Gallia county Cheshire, Mr. and Mrs .
stood in the city park beside Jackie Little, Rt. I, Midthe old courthouse. This post dleport .
was in use before 1808.
Mrs. Velma Sargent and
The French dealt with sister, Mace! Gandee, and
offenders in a manner that their brother, Darius Un.provided amll!iement for the derwood of Ga!Upolis atpopulace as well as punish- tended church services at
. ment for the offenders - they Scott Depot a day recently.
" threw them In the frog pond. They called on their aunt,
.:. From 1838 to !8119 the Mrs. Ruth Whaling.
. Gallipolis Journal missed
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
but one weekly publication, In Marlin Rife a day recently
:'taG3
during
General were· Mr. and Mrs. Danny
, = Morgan' s raid In Gallla Young and Tony&amp; of Parkers··County.
burg and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
·; c. D. Kerr's father, . Rupe, Kyger.
• William Sprigg Kerr, was
Mrs. Otis Chapman Is
: proprietor of what was called spending the week with Mr.
' he "Cow pasture store."
and Mrs. John Chapman at
· • In !838 Ford model A Albany.
" windshields sold for $2.00,
Mrs. Marie Spires and
· murnera SI ..IO, and brake
Stephen
called on Mrs.
- linings were S1.30. •
Rhonda
Markins
a day
In 1804 three dollars was
recently
.
: the bounty paid for wolves
Denny Spires called on the
kllled In GaUla County. Six
Bob
White family a day
'hundred and seventh-live
recently
near Athens.
~ dollara was paid out In 1810.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Denny Spires,
· "': Tradition bas It that the last
Denise,
Julie
and Stephen,
: polf was killed In Ga!Ua
spent a recent evening with
.. eounty in t840.
: &amp;bert Safford and two Mrs. Muriel Spires and Irma
':hunters were employed to kill Bales. Mrs. Rhonda Markin .
:pme for the French settlers. and Jeremy and Rita White
They had hunted for three were there .

Storys .Run

laceration of the foot. He was
treated by the squad and
taken Lo Veter.ans Memorial
Hospital by private car.
At 9:48 a.m. Saturday, the
squad 'returned to Brownell
Ave. lor Mrs. Gemma Casci
who was ill. She was taken to
lhe office of Dr. J . J. Davis
and from there to the Holzer
Medi ca l Center .

-uthersdun 'tsnore.

Alcoholics anonymous:

th ~ Ji 00 f:Lse ~.~o· hcrc Ui.OO; ~ IX rnun - ~
Ur:; $13.50: thtt.."t 1110/llll,'j 17,$() ,
The Umh.'tl Prcs.11 lrrlt•rnlh.11Utl 1 .~
cxd usrt.'cl)' t' llllllt•d lu tlu: u:.e fnr '

QUINTET STANDS back of meat ground by McCulty grinder at French City Meats .
Left to right, the live are Wayne A. McCully, P: E., Columbus, inventor-designer; Bill
Frazee, plant manager ; Terry Frye, quality control manager; Larry Pyles, production
manager ; and Ray Myers, product formulator.

CHICAGO (UP! ) The
American Bar AsSociation 's
code of professional ethics
should be revamped to help
lawyers regain public trll!it,
ABA President William B.
Spann, Jr ., said Saturday.
Spann , reacting to recent
studies concludin g lawyers
are
the
leas t-trusted
professionals in the United
States, said the new code
should reflect higher ethical
standards, permit lawyers to
advertise and solicit clients
and define the various roles
of the lawyer in the legal
process.
"These changes will assist
us in regaining the lost
confidence of the public," he
said.
Spann said the present code
fails to advise lawyers on how
to behave in
many
situations .
"For example, assuming
lite lawyer refused to take
part in payoffs or other such
dubious activities and
assuming he further strongly
advises against them "
Spann said. " Do his duti~s
stop there, or has he an
obligation to denounce his

A.J~The Sunday Times-Sentinei,Sunday, June 25, 1978

$7 all; tnrrtur ruu\1' SU5 rnurrtl ll)' .
Ti ll' Dail)' &amp; ntlrll'i. nnt.• ) t•;u·
r-'.2.00; 1'i iX 11\UtiHL'i $11 .:&gt;0: tl lt t'Cillllll •

.d
SQUAD RUNS
preSJ ent says
M~ld~~~~~;O~Tm e~ge~~;
was called to Brownell
code should he changed Squad
~ve., at 3: 58p.m. Friday for
Carlos Stepp, 9, who had a

SOUTHERN HILLS

eCholce of Potatoes

.

Meigs
Property

i

troduction .
One unique piece .::;,
equipment that French Cll.j£
Is experimenting with is a 40: ,
horse power grinder that can
produce a much higher
quality ground product at a
high rate.
The grinder was lnvenl.ed
and designed by Wayn e
McCully of Columbus. Waxne
is working as a design consultant for the Rtrtz
Manufacturing Co. "of
California and has been
working at the French City
facility for the past few weeks
doing field tests.
"
Wayne is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. T. A. McCulty of Bidwell, arid the brother of Gene
and Bill McC ully of
GaUipolis, and Mrs. Lois
Stout of Bidwell.

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RACINE; Wis. fUPI ) - was accused Frida voftrying 125,000 women in America's
The Caner administration to cover up the faci there are armed forces.
The national commander of
the Veteran s of Foreig n
FAll ENROLLMENT NOW OPEN
War s, J ohn Wa sy lik of
Y•u C.n DottIn A Year or L"ut
S~ndusky, Ohio, luld the 1978
Wisconsin VF'W Convention
the number of women in the
military would expand to
Coll..,.t-Lovel Diploma Coursos : Accounting &amp;
200,000 by the ea rly 1980s.
Mtnll!tmtnt - Stcrtlarlat - Gentrol
That would require a deci sion
Olflco.
on wheth er to have women
serve in combat in any fu ture .
A private bull""' school for lilt discrlmlnoting
wa rs, Wasylik said.
student. Mtro lllan 16 YNrt' txporltnct In l•b
,loctmont willl area tmptoyen.
According to Wasylik the
Soviet Union has only 10,000
Wrllt, C. II 44t·2Ut or VIsit tor Catatot.
women in its am1ed forces
and Israel 8,000.
SQiOOl.
He wa s generally critical of
the nation's voluntee r army .
He said it had proved a
RN05UI
414Znd AYt. .
G.tllpolls
failure
and many enl istees
Tllomu c. Br-h, Director
joined
the
military because
-Nol.aHlllaltd wllll tny olhtr sc..,.lthey could not fi nd employment elsewhere.

•Large Fish Tall

•

. reported 'unique
. .
'·
IS

Adminislralion is accused of minor c·m·crup

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lettuce keeper • Set of 6 tumblers • ~et bowl
S!ralner • Colander • Set of 2 ice cube trays
Dustpan • 8 qt. wastebasket • 10 qt. dllhpon
Cutlery troy • 'h i!Ollon decanter • 10 qt . pail

G. C. MURPHY CO• .• .THE FRIENDLY STORE
------S-IL-V,.ER;;;..;;.BR;;,;;;.:I~E _PLAZA STORE

GAUON

�A-2- The Sunday Times-5enlinel. Sunday. June 25, 1978

Blaettnar. • •
(Continued from page A-1)
State Fair; Deer Creek Darn Days, Arm. strong; l)tica lee Cream Festival; Middlefield Swiss Cheese Festival; Green
Co untry Town Festival, Chillicothe;
~inbridge · Fall Festival of' Leaves;
Moonshine Fest ival at New Straitsville,
and the Parade of the Hills at Nelsonville.
Introdu ced also were the court
members of the regatta queen contest in
1977. They are Debbie Holsinger, first
rurmer·up; Tracie Weese, second runnerup and Rhonda Hudson Hannahs, Miss
Congeniality.

Hit-skip •..
(Continued from page A·l 1
fender and tailgate door.
The McFarland and Johnson vehicles
incurred moderated dama ge. There was
slight damage to the Garrett vehicle.
The auto driven by Morris incurred
slight damage to the -left front fend er.
moderate damage to the right front fen der.
City Police investigated two other
accidents invol ving pa rked car s on
Friday.
At 4:47 p.m .. an unknown vehicle
backed into. a car o ~ned by Debi Bailey.
Gallipolis. The Bailey vehicle was parked
on Second Ave. in front of the Fountain ot
Youth Beauty Salon .
Officers investigated an accident on
Second Ave. at 2.: 29 p.m. Acco rding to the
police report , a vehicle owned by Dean E.
Newman, Gallipolis, was illega lly parked
m front of 636 Second Ave. when it was
sideswiped by an auto driven by Wil liam
M. Sibley, 18, Gallipolis. There wils no
report of damage, or of citation.

Deputies ..•
tContinued from page A-1&gt;
cleared at 2:12 a.m.
Curry, Donnally, and Maynard were
charged with disorderly co nduct and inca rcerated in the county jail until 6:15
a.m., when they were releaocd after
posting bond.
Marcum was released on bond without
being incarcerated.

REQUEST IS DENIED
ATHENS, Ohio iUPl i - The Ohio
Umversity board of trustees Saturday
denied a request by a fa culty group to hold
an election in the fall to decide if faculty
members want to organize a union .
The board' told the Ohio Un iversity
Facu lty Association, which is affiliated
with the Ohio Education Association , that
the board would authorize an e!ettion only

McCulty's invention

Ghashmi killed
'
agency reports

GALLIPOLIS ~ French
City Meats, Inc., a Landmark
Food Company, is currently
undergoing an extensive
plant improvement project.
The company will soon be
marketing items under the
Landmark Food label, at
which time numeroll!i sliced
luncheon meats wlll be
available
in markets
throughout Ohio, West
Virginia, and Kentucky.
One new and attractive
package that is available now
in many loca l markets is
French City sliced bacon.
Sales for this particular item
have tripled since its in-

BEIRUT. Lebanon (UP)) - The Iraqi
News Agency Saturday said Norlh Yemen
President Lt. Col. Ahmed al Ghashmi had
been assassinated - the seco.nd
as.&lt;;assmalion of a Yemeni chief of slate in
eight month.s.
In a dispatch from the North Yemen
capital of Sanaa, the Iraqi agency said that
Ghashmi was killed by a booby-trapped
parcel carried by an envoy from
neighboring South Yemen.
Ghashrni, 39, came to power last October
after unidentified gunmen assassinated
the former President. Lt. Col. Ibrahim AI
Hamdi.
The Iraqi agency quoted Radio Sanaa as
say ing that the assassination of.Ghashrni
"took. place when an envoy from
Democratic (South 1 Yemen President
Salim Robaya Ali was pr.Sent to deliver a
message to President Ghashmi ."
"The envoy was carrying a booby trap
parcel that went off when opened, killing
President Ghashmi and the envoy " the
Iraqi agency said.
'
WAYNE A. McCULTY, P. E., Columbus, former Gallia Countian, looks at the record
with Bill Frazee, French City Meats plant manager, and two others of the company's high
brass: Terry Frye, quality control ma~ager, and Larry Pyles, production manager.
McCully, mventor&lt;lesigner of the grinder with which French City Meats is experimenting,
1s the son of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. McCully, Bidwell, brother of Gene and Bill McCully,
Galhpohs, and Mrs. Lois Stout, Btdwell.
·

Three men charged
with open flasks
GALLIPOLIS - Gaillipolis City Police
Friday cited William E. Fulk s, 20, Scottown ; Roger D. Estep. 19. Scotto wn; and
Timothy J . Cook, 20, Proctorville, on
charges of possession of open fla sks in
public use areas .
Shirley M. Shmigal, 24, Gallipolis, was
ci ted for excessive speed .
Cited Saturday on charges of excessive speed were Patricia J . Newshutz,
19, Gallipolis ; Sherri J. Johnson, 21,
Gallipolis ; J erry L. Nibert , 42, Gallipolis ;
Oscar E. Davies, 40. Patriot Star Rt.; and
Preston F. Coughenour, Gallipolis.
SENATOR BYRD IS ASKED
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President
Caner has asked Senate Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd, !).W. Va ., to go to
Europe as his "emissary and personal
representative" to urge West German and
British leaders to follow through on
commitments to the North Atlantic Treaty
Alliance, Byrd said Saturday.
Caner also ha s asked Byrd to visit
Madrid to assure the Spanish government
of continued U. S. support and to express
apprec ia tion for Spain's defense
coo peration .

. I

if the state would establish proper
procedures and regulations gove rning
pu blic employee bargaining.

.,II_

Of BUSINESS

SPECIAL
Sunday thru Saturday
June 25 thru July 1

FISH
DINNER
SPECIAL
eCole Slaw
•Roll &amp; Butter

Sunday Times.Sentinel
Pubhstll'U cVl'l)' Suml.uy ll)' 1111·
Oh tJ Vc!ll c)' Pulll1:ih111 g Cu.·
,\'1Lli!11U l'\ h:1 , fr ll'

GAI .I.IPOI.IS
01\II.V TRIHUNt~

Transfers

Iii'! Tlun l Avt•., f:all1puhs, Ohw
~ )I~ II

Puhh.,l ll'd

John Hopkins, Jr. to Della
Hopkins, Lawrence Hopkins ,
Mabel G!isher, aff. for trans.,
Pomeroy.
Lawrence
Hopkins ,
Elizabeth M. Hopkins to
Leonard L. Lentz, Lots,
Pomeroy.
Doris V. Miller nka Doris
V. Jackson, Afftdavit of
Death. Lebanon.
Doris V. Miller, Doris V.
Jackson, Isaac D. Jackson to
H. C. Dawkins, R. D. Camev.
51 acres, 65 rods. Lebanon.
Dessie Boggess, Affidavit,
Letart.
Deryl E. Well, Doris Ann
Well to Beryl A. Wilson,
Linda A. Wilson, .078 acre,
Orange.

,

-·

l'Xl't'l)l

l'Vl'r~'

w•·••kdOJ y t'\' l'lllltg

SH1 Ul' tlll) '.

. Cia,'\.~

St't'Otl tl

Pu.,tagt• Patd a l i:;t ll ipulls. Oln u
~ 5C~!L

TIIEOAIL\' SJo:NT INf:t.
Ill Court .St., Pumcruy, 0 . ~ 5169
PuiJIL\ IM."ll 1!\lt'ry llt't1•k day ~ \' CIHII"
e."&lt;t:ept Saturdity Eu tcrcd ij.S St.'(:ull!l
dom mculmg 111a\ll•r Ill Pomervr:
Olnu PLI.!il Ofrrcc.
Hy t•a rner tlculy and Sunlle~y 7~
• ]A'I' Wl..'\'k. Multlt ruu\t: l.'l.Z5 pt&gt;r
1111 ~1 \ h .

MAIL
SUHSCR IP'TION ltATF'..S
Till: GillhpuiL~ J)arly TnUunc 111
Uln\1 &lt;md Wt.ost Vtti(Uilll one )'tilr •
W .OO . .om: rnrmlh.'i Sll .$0 , thn.~ 11101 1·
Or !&gt; $i 00 . U~e~· hl:rc S2ti.OO per )'t•;u·.
:oo rx mnrrlhs $1 3.50; lllr~'t' munthli '

puiJI Il'll lli..lll uf all new.~ t ii SJ»ildw ~
t' l' t'lll t ~r l Ill the nc ~~t'.S I)il]lt!l' lrml abu
t111· lot·allli''A'SJIUlJii!&gt;llt.'tl herem

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ABA

r------·-·-

I

Social
!.Calendar 1
1

TUESDAY
SPEC IAL . MF:ETIN G,
Racine Louge 4GI, F&amp;AM,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Work in
the EA Degree . All Ma sons
welcome.
«
AGLOW BIBLE S'nJDY
and praise service Tuesda y
9:30a.m. at the home of Mrs.
Dale !Shirley ) Priddy, Hysell
Run Road , Pomeroy. Mrs.
Barbara Sheridan will be the
speaker. All ladies welcome.
For additional information
call 992-7281.

PfPILU
·I &amp;fill

client if his client ignores his
advice and proceeds' Is it the
lawyers' obligation to blow
the whistle on his client'
Lawyers will invoke an
attorney-&lt;:lient privilege in
reply."
Spann in a speech during
the ann~! meeting of the
DtinoisStateBar Association
said confident iality
'
whether it is asserted by
accounlants, physicians or
journalists - is under attack
by tbe public.
"Confidentiality is giving
way to accountability," he
said. "And accountability is
the new watchword for all
professions, the law included,
as our various publi cs
demand more available and
beler se rvi ces than ever
before ."
Spann said a special ABA
comm]$sion
has been
ap poinled to study the
language of the present code
and recommend changes.

ESCAPES INJURY
MENTOR, Ohio (UPIJ
William 1.. Cla us, 40 , Collins,
escaped Injury Friday when a
train hil his tra ctor - trailer
rig , but he wa s cited for not
obeying railroa d crossi ng
oi~nals .

1\

FIGURES RELEASED
May 1978 sales of Series
E&amp;H United States Savings
Bonds in Ohio were $41
million. At the end of May,
the State attained 40 per cent
of its 1978 Sales Goal.
C. Leo n Saunders, Gallla
County Volunteer Savings
Bonds Chairman, reported
May sales of Savings Bonds
tn the Co unty were $19,062.
The county achieved 31.6 per
cent of its annual sales goal
May 31.

Ask me about
Life Insurance
byourway
of living.
! off~ rue p1ogr.11ms dt!i!P'M!d lor
10.:Idy' 1fcurilnJ.h«! manied woman.
homeownt'l"f,lJgh rncOITH! people.
5l\ldenli, yoong6dulu:. and chlkllan.
too CaiJ me lOt' drtalb

C. K, SNOWDEN
NEW LOCATION
41l Second Ave.
"Oide Court"
~-...Golll .. lls
n•n ••••

S1 11e Falin lrl1
lnii!IIOC t CDmp•nv

~t~Jt~t0 1' «

BIOI)rn•"W~ !l~ot

p 11241

Pclarold Introduces Polavlslon.
• Jus! shoot. drop the Photota pe casselle &gt;nlo
Ihe player and seconds tater you're wat ch·
1ng lull-color Instant movies.
• No knobs to adJust
• See wllat you shoot 1n v1v1d col ors Ill
seconds.
• So easy to use. !he k&gt;ds can do 11. Automatic
ca mera. Automati c vrew&gt;ng.

TAWNEY'S STUDIOS

&amp;llne folk arc sound sleepers

424 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

Sunday thru Saturday
June 25 thru July 1

CHICKEN
SNACK·BOX

39

.No.
Sub$titutes

e2 PIECES CHICKEN
•MASHED POTATOES &amp; GRAVY
•ROLL

~~~Itt
·2nd·&amp;OUVE ST.

Function of fellowship often misuTJ;derstood
EDITOR'S NOTE- FoUowlng Is lbe lint of a series
of tbree articles etplaln!ng tbe function ollbe lellowsblp
of Aleobollc~ Aoonymoua. Tbe article• will be Jlllbllsbed
oo consecutive. Sundays.
· "Aicoh.olics Anonymous, though existent as a fellowship
in 'the Tri-County area for more than three decades, has
long gone unpublicized and is often misunderstood.
', During a recent gathering, some of the persons actlye in AA locally, decided the public needs to know about
th~ purposes of their non-profit group.
. With this thought in mind, and with the hope that the
end result will be a better understanding of the prevalant
disease of alcoholism, which affects some 612 million
Americans, and an inspiration for othera to attend
meetings, AA opened its doors for a representative of the
Times-Sentinel to attend one of its sessions.
The present location of the meetings of AA is not impartant. But, for background purposes, it should be
pointed out that weekly Alcoholics Anonymous sessions
have been conducted in the Tri-Counly area since the
early 1940's.
The first meetings of the local AA were held in now nonexistent dry cleaning shop in Point Pleasant.
While. down through the years, most persons have not
been aware of the functions and purposes of AA, its
reasons for existence are simple, but specific. They are :
Alcoholics Anonymous Is a fellowship of men and
women who share their experience, strength and hope
~with each other thai they may solve their common
. problem and help others ·to recover from alcoholism.
The only requirement lor membership to a desire to
stop drinking. There are no dues or fees for AA mem-

bersblp; II Is seU-supporUng through contrlbutloDll of
those wbo attend. AA Is not a111ed with any sect,
denomination, politics, orgaohation, or lnaUIUtlon; does
not wish to engage In any controversy, neither endorses
nor opposes any causes. Its primary purpose Is lor those
who parllclpate In AA to slay sober and help other
alcoholics to achieve sobriety.
The fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymoll!i was founded
in 1935 and has more than a million members in more
than 29,000 local groups in the United States and abroad.
· The fellowship , with international headquarters being
the General Service Office of Alcoholics Anonymous, Box
159, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y., is based onr
ones willingness to admit he is powerless over alcohol.
AA, in its litterna\ional monthfy journal, cites 12 steps

All White
or Dark Meat
AdditkJnal
Charge

.

GaHipolis Stare On~·.

i4nppr

·.

GAwPOLIS.
SE1WJCE PHONe

44tJ.·2M

( 8) Made a list of all persons we had harmed , and
became willing to make amends to them all.
(91 Made direct amends to such people wherever
possible, except when to do so would injure them or
others.
f 10) Continued to lake personal inventory and when we
were wrong promptly admitted it.
(II) Sought through prayer and meditation to improve
our conscious conta ct with God as we understood blm,
praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the
powe~ to carry that out.
1121 Havmg had a spiritual awakening as the result of
these steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics,
and to practice these principles in all our affairs.
NEXT: AA MEMBERS SPEAK OUT

that members must lake enroule to overcoming the
complex problem. They are :
(I ) We admitted we were powerless over alcohol-that
our lives had become unmanageable .
(2) Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
(3) Made a decision to turn our will and our lives Over
to the care of God as we understood him.
(4) Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of
ourselves.
(5) Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another
human being the exact nature of our wr~ngs.
(6) Were entirely ready to hav e God remove all these
defects of character.
(7) Humbly asked Him to reiiUlve our shortcomings.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JULY 1ST

~•·•~-~~•******************~~~~x~~x*************
~:::::::::~

couco® I' Dl••••••r

ICOOBY D0011 POOL
GAl COOKOUT GRILL
days, finding scarcely any
BY TOM SAUNDERS
GALLIPOIJS - One of the thing . After shooting three
oldest
ceme teries
in squirrels, Safford was
Gallipolis was located on preparing them for the skillet
l&gt;tate St. Gallia Academy , the while his companions napped
: old broom factory and the by the fire. Hearing a noise in
_houses east of the high school some bushes Salford saw a
are located on land that was deer's legs and, grasping his
rifle, drew a bead on where
: once a burial site. •
This area was the last the animal's body should be.
Just before he could press
; resting place of 2,500 persons.
More than 100 years ago the the trigger, his companions
: land was built over, changed, awakened, and, seeing him in
:and filled in until practically that position, yelled : "Inall trace of its boundaries dians." The deer took to its
heels, and the hunters dined
· were lost .
Early historians record on squirrel. - t S., Rt . I Box
·that a large mound stood on 33S, Bidwell, 0.
: the center of thts lot at the
· west end of State St. The
early settlers utilized what
' had long been an Indian
• buriaf,place and before that a
depos'l'tory for Mound Builder
dead. The mound was ex·
cavated and examined by a
· BY GLENNA SHULER
state archaeologist in the
Rev . and Mrs. Otis
. early forties , and some relics
Chapman
attended a birthwere taken to Columbus.
day
party
in honor of their
A large furniture fact ory,
granddaughter,
Jill McOa in.
· the Fuller - Hutsinpiller Co.
recently
in
Nelsonville
.
(The Ohio Valley Furniture
Delbert
Underwood,
Co.), was erected on the site
of the cemetery. Workmen Columbus, spent a day
' etcavating for the buildings recently with Mrs. Velma
, often found remnants of Sargent.
Mr . and Mrs. Squire
human bones and headstones
below the surlace. This plant Taylor. Baltimore, 0., were
burned in 1911 and was never rece ~t overnight guests of
Mrs. Velma Underwood. On
rebuilt .
Indian arrowheads, flints Sunday they went to
for striking fire, and even cemeteries to decorate
stone axes were constantly graves of their family and
(l&lt;und on the old burial site. attended church services at
The late Dr. Charles G. Gay 'county , W. Va .
Parker's
Indian
relic
Mrs . Marie Spires and
collection contained several Stephen called on Mrs .
Items found on this site.
Florence Caldwell, Mr. and
· When the Pine St. cemetery Mrs. Curtis Caldwell, Ann
was organized in 1849 a and Sara .
number of bodies were
Mrs. Cheryl Young, Reedsmoved to this cemetery. Its ville, called on Mr. and Mrs.
title was vested In perpetual Marlin Rife a day recently.
ownership to the city.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Boone Is thought to William Frazier, William and
have been living at Pt. Patty, a day recently were
Pleasant four years before Mr. and Mrs. Danny Little,
Gallipolis was settled. Ac- Kimberly and Scotty, Mr. and
cording to traditions Boone Mrs. Eugene Nutter Imboden
hunted with Joseph Vanden- and Micah Nutter, Mr. and
Benden of Gallipolis.
Mrs. Dow! Little, Chicago,
· The first whipping post Mrs. Carol Fitch, Rt. I
ever erected in Gallia county Cheshire, Mr. and Mrs .
stood in the city park beside Jackie Little, Rt. I, Midthe old courthouse. This post dleport .
was in use before 1808.
Mrs. Velma Sargent and
The French dealt with sister, Mace! Gandee, and
offenders in a manner that their brother, Darius Un.provided amll!iement for the derwood of Ga!Upolis atpopulace as well as punish- tended church services at
. ment for the offenders - they Scott Depot a day recently.
" threw them In the frog pond. They called on their aunt,
.:. From 1838 to !8119 the Mrs. Ruth Whaling.
. Gallipolis Journal missed
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
but one weekly publication, In Marlin Rife a day recently
:'taG3
during
General were· Mr. and Mrs. Danny
, = Morgan' s raid In Gallla Young and Tony&amp; of Parkers··County.
burg and Mr. and Mrs. Leo
·; c. D. Kerr's father, . Rupe, Kyger.
• William Sprigg Kerr, was
Mrs. Otis Chapman Is
: proprietor of what was called spending the week with Mr.
' he "Cow pasture store."
and Mrs. John Chapman at
· • In !838 Ford model A Albany.
" windshields sold for $2.00,
Mrs. Marie Spires and
· murnera SI ..IO, and brake
Stephen
called on Mrs.
- linings were S1.30. •
Rhonda
Markins
a day
In 1804 three dollars was
recently
.
: the bounty paid for wolves
Denny Spires called on the
kllled In GaUla County. Six
Bob
White family a day
'hundred and seventh-live
recently
near Athens.
~ dollara was paid out In 1810.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Denny Spires,
· "': Tradition bas It that the last
Denise,
Julie
and Stephen,
: polf was killed In Ga!Ua
spent a recent evening with
.. eounty in t840.
: &amp;bert Safford and two Mrs. Muriel Spires and Irma
':hunters were employed to kill Bales. Mrs. Rhonda Markin .
:pme for the French settlers. and Jeremy and Rita White
They had hunted for three were there .

Storys .Run

laceration of the foot. He was
treated by the squad and
taken Lo Veter.ans Memorial
Hospital by private car.
At 9:48 a.m. Saturday, the
squad 'returned to Brownell
Ave. lor Mrs. Gemma Casci
who was ill. She was taken to
lhe office of Dr. J . J. Davis
and from there to the Holzer
Medi ca l Center .

-uthersdun 'tsnore.

Alcoholics anonymous:

th ~ Ji 00 f:Lse ~.~o· hcrc Ui.OO; ~ IX rnun - ~
Ur:; $13.50: thtt.."t 1110/llll,'j 17,$() ,
The Umh.'tl Prcs.11 lrrlt•rnlh.11Utl 1 .~
cxd usrt.'cl)' t' llllllt•d lu tlu: u:.e fnr '

QUINTET STANDS back of meat ground by McCulty grinder at French City Meats .
Left to right, the live are Wayne A. McCully, P: E., Columbus, inventor-designer; Bill
Frazee, plant manager ; Terry Frye, quality control manager; Larry Pyles, production
manager ; and Ray Myers, product formulator.

CHICAGO (UP! ) The
American Bar AsSociation 's
code of professional ethics
should be revamped to help
lawyers regain public trll!it,
ABA President William B.
Spann, Jr ., said Saturday.
Spann , reacting to recent
studies concludin g lawyers
are
the
leas t-trusted
professionals in the United
States, said the new code
should reflect higher ethical
standards, permit lawyers to
advertise and solicit clients
and define the various roles
of the lawyer in the legal
process.
"These changes will assist
us in regaining the lost
confidence of the public," he
said.
Spann said the present code
fails to advise lawyers on how
to behave in
many
situations .
"For example, assuming
lite lawyer refused to take
part in payoffs or other such
dubious activities and
assuming he further strongly
advises against them "
Spann said. " Do his duti~s
stop there, or has he an
obligation to denounce his

A.J~The Sunday Times-Sentinei,Sunday, June 25, 1978

$7 all; tnrrtur ruu\1' SU5 rnurrtl ll)' .
Ti ll' Dail)' &amp; ntlrll'i. nnt.• ) t•;u·
r-'.2.00; 1'i iX 11\UtiHL'i $11 .:&gt;0: tl lt t'Cillllll •

.d
SQUAD RUNS
preSJ ent says
M~ld~~~~~;O~Tm e~ge~~;
was called to Brownell
code should he changed Squad
~ve., at 3: 58p.m. Friday for
Carlos Stepp, 9, who had a

SOUTHERN HILLS

eCholce of Potatoes

.

Meigs
Property

i

troduction .
One unique piece .::;,
equipment that French Cll.j£
Is experimenting with is a 40: ,
horse power grinder that can
produce a much higher
quality ground product at a
high rate.
The grinder was lnvenl.ed
and designed by Wayn e
McCully of Columbus. Waxne
is working as a design consultant for the Rtrtz
Manufacturing Co. "of
California and has been
working at the French City
facility for the past few weeks
doing field tests.
"
Wayne is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. T. A. McCulty of Bidwell, arid the brother of Gene
and Bill McC ully of
GaUipolis, and Mrs. Lois
Stout of Bidwell.

Polaroid's •
instant movies
are here!

RACINE; Wis. fUPI ) - was accused Frida voftrying 125,000 women in America's
The Caner administration to cover up the faci there are armed forces.
The national commander of
the Veteran s of Foreig n
FAll ENROLLMENT NOW OPEN
War s, J ohn Wa sy lik of
Y•u C.n DottIn A Year or L"ut
S~ndusky, Ohio, luld the 1978
Wisconsin VF'W Convention
the number of women in the
military would expand to
Coll..,.t-Lovel Diploma Coursos : Accounting &amp;
200,000 by the ea rly 1980s.
Mtnll!tmtnt - Stcrtlarlat - Gentrol
That would require a deci sion
Olflco.
on wheth er to have women
serve in combat in any fu ture .
A private bull""' school for lilt discrlmlnoting
wa rs, Wasylik said.
student. Mtro lllan 16 YNrt' txporltnct In l•b
,loctmont willl area tmptoyen.
According to Wasylik the
Soviet Union has only 10,000
Wrllt, C. II 44t·2Ut or VIsit tor Catatot.
women in its am1ed forces
and Israel 8,000.
SQiOOl.
He wa s generally critical of
the nation's voluntee r army .
He said it had proved a
RN05UI
414Znd AYt. .
G.tllpolls
failure
and many enl istees
Tllomu c. Br-h, Director
joined
the
military because
-Nol.aHlllaltd wllll tny olhtr sc..,.lthey could not fi nd employment elsewhere.

•Large Fish Tall

•

. reported 'unique
. .
'·
IS

Adminislralion is accused of minor c·m·crup

DJ1H
.. ERN HI US

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lettuce keeper • Set of 6 tumblers • ~et bowl
S!ralner • Colander • Set of 2 ice cube trays
Dustpan • 8 qt. wastebasket • 10 qt. dllhpon
Cutlery troy • 'h i!Ollon decanter • 10 qt . pail

G. C. MURPHY CO• .• .THE FRIENDLY STORE
------S-IL-V,.ER;;;..;;.BR;;,;;;.:I~E _PLAZA STORE

GAUON

�.

'

A-4- The Sunday Times-sentinel. Swtday. JW1e 25, 1978

A-6-The S111day Times-&amp;lntinel, Sunday, June 25, 1976

Merchants plan

Frenchman led Union regiment

Rancher getting his day in court

1wt show July 3

loo k of a desertea town.
train for Gallipolis.
Citizens in Gallipolis ,
Pla~ed in fOmmand of
Addison. ·Swa n Creek. and
thi5 rtgiment ~·as Colonel
Cheshire ii•·ed each day in the
Charles Dr\'illiers .
fear that Confederat e
DeVillieu was. an im·
marauders would cross the
migrant from France who
Ohio and take over their
claimed to have been an
towns.
officer In lhr Freach army.
· On July 7, 11161, o••er 600 To show how bard up the
men left Camp Dennison for
Union was for offlcen at
Gallipolis to protect the old
the beginning of the war, no
" F ren ch City ... Th ese
check '~''85 ever made on
re&lt;'ruits who would later be
De\'Ulfm' credentials and
pan of the lith OVI were
it is likely that he was an
abOut as green as green could
impostrr,
He
was,
be . Most of them had been
however, a master of
mech anics In Cincinnati and
sword play and wllh this
had been at Camp Dennison
knowledge was able to
less than two weeks. They
feign military competence,
had sca rcely been drilled at
at least for a little while.
all and were not even given
The reg iment traveled
guns until they boarded the from Cincinnati to Hamden
Station on the Marietta and
Cincinnati Railroad and then
transferred to the Hocking
Valley Railroad which took
them to Oak Hill.
At Chillicothe ilnd Hamden
the men were, in the words of
Captain Lane (whose journal
gives us much infonnation on
this trip), "treated to aU the
substantia ls and delicacies
that could be produced."
The regiment arrived at
Oak H1ll in the late afternoon
of July 8. At 7 p.m. DeVilliers
or dered the men on an all·
ni ght forced march to
Gallipolis, a distance of some
· 30 mi les.
Within the first few miles
the men showed signs of
dist ress and exhaustion. In
Captain Lane's words , 11 To
relieve thei r swollen feet,
many took off their boots and
walked m stockings, while
others cut their boots open .
One after another the articles
of extra clothing and luggage
were thrown to the roadside."
Any semblance of order in
the ranks was soon gone.
Gould ACTIVAIR'" battenes last tw1ce as
DeVilliers rode from one
long as ord1nary oanenes Because they use
end of the ranks to the other
the a ~r around us to help produce electrlcily
using "oaths and vile abuse."
The a1r doesn t get 1nto the battery
Some time that evening the
until you peel the battery off the protective
regiment began to arrive at
stnp rn the fumble-free battery pack So
Center ville . DeVillier s
Ac ! · ;a ~r sta1 s fresh 1111 you use 11
pushed ahead with some of
~sl-. GS to tell you the whole Gould
the men. But Captain Lane
~ , -,a r s:c·\ The battery lhat lasls tWICe
ordered a halt and rest. The
3; -:~ng do 'oe or dinary battenes you're
villagers offered the use or
~ s '19 ro.\
th e Calvinistic Methodis t
Ch urch in Centerville as well
as the M.E. church just west
of town .
At daybreak the towns·
folk were found to be busy
Riverside Professional Bldg .
preparing breakfast for the
P.O. Box 511 , 444 W. Union St.
men
before they set out for
Athens , Ohio 45701
Gallipolis. They arrived at

BV JAMES SANDS
GALUPOIUS - On April
12. 1861. Confederate tri&gt;ops
opened fire on Ft. Sumter and
thus the Ci\'il War had begun.
On April 15. President Unroln r ailed for 15,000
volunt &lt;'&lt;'rs t10.lf&gt;3 were asked
to •·oiunteer from Ohio ). By
June more than 20,000
Otuoans had volunteered to
squash the rebellion in the
South.
In May and JW1e a reign of
terru r existed along, the Ohio
River as citizens JOined fi rst
ooe side and then the other.
Confederate sympathizers at
Point Pleasant had driven
many Union sympathizers
from their homes and by late
June Point Pleasant had the

Now you can
cut the number
of hearing aid
batteries
you're using
inhaH.

GALLI POLIS
Th e
Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association will sponsor a pet
show and parade on Monday.
July 3, beginning at 4 p.m. in
the Public Square.
The event is being held· in
Cllnnection with the river
re creation festival's Kids
Day activities.
Categories are : Most
imaginative, prettiest, and
patriotic, with first, second
·and third place prizes being
awarded in each category.
First place award is $10,
second $5 and third $3.
Pat Bastiani is chainnan.
the laller,lale that evening
and discovered DeVllliers
wailing. DeVilliers
threateaed court-martial,
but ironically it was
DeVilllen who was court·
marllaled about a year
after this , for stealing
silverware from Point
Pleasant citheu.
The day that the lith Ohio
arrived at Gallipolis Con·
federates had attacked and
robbed the steamboat Fanny
Burns not farm from
Gallipolis. Part of the lith
commandeered the boat
Leslie Combs and went in
pursuit. Another part of the
regiment took up camp in
Point Pleasant.
On July 17 the lith Ohio
was sent to Pocataligo Creek,
some 12 miles south of
Chareston, to rejoin the rest
of the lith. The part of the
regiment that DeVilliers had
taken ahead was captured by
the . Confederates at Scarey
Creek, Virginia, because of
DeVilliers' ignorance.
Fortunatel y for the Union
cause, it soom became a little
more choosey about their
officers. A good part of this
lith Ohi o went on to
distinguish
itself
at
Chickamauga and Chattanooga.

COMPLETES COURSE
- Dale E. Lear, owner and
manager
of
Lear
Photography, Spring
Valley Plaza, Galllpolls,
reten tly returned from
Winona Lake, Ind., alter
participating in a week
long coune on Vcpkcupals .
of Professional Portraiture
at the Winona School of

VOLUNTEERS HOLD CLASS - On Monday, June 12,
four members of The Gallia County Volunteer Emergency
Squad held a first aid cillss. Upon the request of Tom
Bittner, an Emergency First Aid Cla.ss was taught to
~pproximately 50 students. All of the students were
members of Youth Conservation Cor~ (YCC). Students
were taught the basics of first aid to the sick and injured.
Greg Fruter, a spokesman for the GCVES squad, said all
the students pertormed well. All the students learned how
to lnunobillzeand splint all possible fractures and what to
do to prevent shock and how to control bleeding. In the
near future the GCVES squad plans to return to the YCC
camp at Rio Grande and teach Multi-Media First-Aid and
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. The instructors were
Greg-Frazier EMT·A; Rick Holley EMT-A-Parame&lt;11c ;
Helen Holley EMT·A and Susie K. Snyder EMT·A . Frazier
thanked all students fer participationg. The students are
statiooed at a camp in Rio Grande, under tbe direction of
Ken Porter. Porter told the squad members that they
would soon be working at Camp Francis Asbury in Rio
Grande. The YCC group is employed during the summer
by ~e Ohio Department of Natural Retwurces. They
ret"e1ved a small swn of money and a high school credit
for their efforts.

A GOOD
"bt:ASONS
to see your good
neighbor agent

SECOND Pl..ACE WINNER - An outstanding float was that of the Ohio Farm Bureau "A voi~ of
agriculture."

Change of venue granted in court
ASHI..AND, Ohio (UP!) Ash la nd Co unty Common
Pleas Court Friday granted a
change of venue roc the
murder trial o( Edward
Fields, 31, Memphis, Tenn .,
charged in the death or a
thr ee-year-old boy whose
body was foun d alon g
Interstate 71 in Ash land
County last October .
Officials did not determine
which court would handle the
trial.
Fi e ld s' a tt or neys
contended their client could
not receive a fair trial in
r\shland County because of
pre-trial publicity in the
nationwide search for Fields.
He is accused of the beating
death of Artenchy Williams
Ill, Memphis.
No date has been set for

CAR •HOME
LIFE • HEALTH

Mike Swiger
992-7155
149 S. Third St.
Middleport, 0.

Prolessloaal Potograpby.
Tbe course was designed to
help the photographer
revise or Improve his
profeuiooal technique.
Portrait llgbllog,
corrective camera work,

environmentals, and the
photography of men ,
women, and brides In the
studio were covered. Tbere
were also lectures on
compositioa, color, quality,
studio operations, and
business management.

Lik~ a good .n~fghbor,
Sta~ farm Is thtre.
I!Afl , •• ,.

A
ltATEPADI
IN~I COMWIIU
. . . . Ofac:.H: lh
I

•

.....

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND

2 WEEKS -JUNE 25 thru JULY

9

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LIID H• Paint
· • Quick dlylng diJilblt lilltlnilh
• RHIIto bltotorw, pooling, m!ldow
• E11y wateJ cltan·up

~~~~~~r 112.49

SAVE $4.so

UMW will
ARABIAN SI"YLE - Ruth Reeves, Albany , rides her
Arabian horse wearing the traditional garb and re galia .

Other side of the bridge
June 19, 1978
The People on tbe Other Side ofthe Bridge (West Main St.)
Paul Simon is doing an excellent job on the River-Bank
Cleanup .- (East Main and small portion of West Main St. )
There is life oo thl! other side ofthe bridge!
Most people think that territory below the bridge belongs
10 Middleport. However, what they don't know, Pomeroy
extends midway of Twin Cities Gateway's parking lot !
Recently, two new bU5inesses opened below the bridge in
Pomeroy. The town of P&lt;rneroy likes to acknowledge the fa ct.
Regatta week is here - so here come the city crews to cut
weeds five feet or less from the street . And usually, if we are
lucky the weeds are cut again before it frosts .
It has been five years sin~ we purchased our property ,
The lot across from us keeps getting thicker and higher with
brush and debris .
We pay property taxes and try to keep our property up.
Vehicles not currently licensed are not pennitted. So, why
should brush and weeds be ? This condition harbors disease
carrying insects .
Recently,! read Council was to write letters to out-of-town
property owners to clear their lots.
If this was dooe - why haven 't there been results' The
city could take other action to clean the vacant lots and charge
the owners.
Why can't some thing be done'
Every night debris is picked up from our lawn - where
passersby throw wastes. Aren 't there signs available to be put
up warning people of littering and the penalties and enforcing
this by the police department ! Also , wtder the bridge is
disgraceful to the town .
We, the people on the other side of the bridge enjoy and
would like to have a view of the Beautiful Ohio River the year
round.
We are looking and waiting on action from someone . Sharon Riffle, 810 W. Main St. , Pomeroy, Ohio.

• Quick drying, tiiY to UN
• Euy Wllet' cteln-up

4.50

1

AZUSA, Calif. (UPI I - An
hour-long series of explosions
leveled a chemical plant and
rocked a wid e area of
Southern California Friday
night.
At least five people were
injured .
More than 100 firefighters
from Los Angeles County,
Atusa, West Covina, Covina
and LaVerne fire companies
were fighting the names seen
from up to 20 miles away.
There were three buildings
reportedly involved .
" The Nora c Chem ical
Company exploded and there
Is one heck of fire," said a fire
dispatcher at Azusa, 20 miles

Other questions involved
several items missing from
Miss Congdon's bedroom. A
basket and some of the jewels
missing from the mansion
allegedly were . foW1d in a
Bloomington, Minn ., hotel
room occupied by the
Ca ldwe lls while they were
visiting Minnesota after the
slayings. And a byzantine
coin mi ss in g from the
mansion W'IS ma iled to the
Caldwells' address fr om
Duluth early June 27 in an

,
We believe that you, our customers, are deserving of caring,
professional service. With that concept in mind , we strive to meet
your highest expectations. Our trained staff takes the time to insure
you have the proper service, privacy , confidentiality and the care
and respect you deserve . We firmly believe you are the strongest
link in our business . As we look to the future with faith and
confidence- in this , our second year of business, we thank you lor
your past patronage and pledge to serve you in an honest. sincere
way in teh future .
Herman and Dee Di llon

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

SUN. lliRU SAT.

Y'S GIRL, ALL-IN-ONE
PANTY &amp; PANTY HOSE

SUPER
DISCOUNT
NOW!

2 pkg.

Regulor

'3.00

'1.5\1

Wh•ta. poa'tel .'. , ~"""- coJ·
or oc•tal• lrCOt • ith ekll·
,IJC WOI)I, leg bonds. 5 · ~

9-7 MON.-sAT.
12~

SUNDAY

MEIGS PWA

A-B

Cotton crotch .

ASSORTED FABRICS
44" -45" WIDlli
REG.~DENIM

NOWI
POLYISTIR

DOUBLEKNIT PAIIIS
MISSES'
Reg. ~~

'3°0

11---------...--

S.YEAR CERTIFICATE

%

STAINLESS STEEL

SCISSORS

·

ANNUAL
RATE

•
an annual yield of

12" !1
TO

Reg. '2.17

~

%.

•

MINIMUM '1000.

HR. The professional way to clean your
carpets yourself- for a haction of the professional
cost. Deep-cleaning power hfts out ground-in dirt
to put "like new" beauty back into your carpets.

Cli1

7FT.

I POUND lAG

POmNO
lOlL
REG.

!ld(

8 FT.

Reg. ~ARKEJ
1

99~

CERTIFICATE

U. S. Treasury Bill rates at time

Automatic cord lo

ond hordwa,..

TUBULAa TRIKI
REG.

'1396
'

Sturdy tubular steel frame.

Rent it at

Reg. '

PolO
There is no penalty for premature
withdrawal in the ~t of the death of

~\-tlS ~··t~

ACE HARDWARE

97~

A smooth ltne
to toel
Stzes

INDIANA, Pa. (UP!) The United Mine Workers
federal credit union will build
a
new
II · million
east of Los Angeles. " We are headquarters on the outskirts
so busy we are una ble to get of Ebensburg, credit unioo
officials said Friday .
any details right now"
The credit wtion's board of
" We have an original huge
explosion with a tremendous directors said th e twe&gt;-story ,
fir e," said a batallion chi ef at 20, 000 -square-foot stucco
the scene. "We have tanks building will be located on a
still in danger of going up. L 5(H!cre site adjacent to the
can't believe there wasn 't intersection of Routes 219 and
222. Ground will be broken
someone killed."
July
8 with UMW President
A spokesman sai d th e
Arnold
Miller as featured
co mpany manufa ctures a
variety or products and th e speaker .
The UMW has a long-range
cause of the explosion was
program
of new credit union
unknown .
Four
per so ns
were bra nch offices, unioo officials
reportedly taken to In· said. They expect th e next
tercommu nit y Hospital in branch office to be built in the
Covina.
Pitl•burgh area .

luyl

~~~
'tl~¢\~

JUNE 25 · 31

SUPER BUYS

lonus

~~"~

MURDER CHARGED
OMAHA , Neb. iUPIJ
Police say a 15-year-old boy
jumped from the bushes in a
city park Friday and stabbed
a 9-yea r-old girl , inJuring her,
then killed her 14-year-old
babysi tter who came to her
rescue.

GJiBal ~tae(Dr:»e PHILOSOPHY

348 2nd Avenue

Sizes 10.18

REDWOOD LOUNGE
FURNITURE SEniNG

own hand?

DOWNTOWN STORE

SIZES

TINTS SLIGHTlY HIGHER

992·3662

mansion ?

enve lope addressed in
Caldwell's hand.
But why would Caldwell
take the basket and the
jewels to Colorado and bring
them back to Minnesota ? And
why would he mail the coin in
an envelope addressed by his

line

structure

"Steam"
Carpet Cleaning
System

446-4554

Denver . Why would a
murderer 'risk apprehension
for speeding? If he stole the
nurse's car for a getaway,
how did he get to the

Explosions level plant

Let Us Help You Ease
Into Summer

• Cha• rnltttnt Qklll finish

SUNDAY Hi

trial and Fields remains in
Ashland Cowtty jail in lieu of
$50,000 bOlld.
The child's mother Yvoone
Williams is being held in the
Ashland Cowtty jail pending
a pre-sentencing report after
she pleaded guilty in Swrunit
County to a charge of child
endangerment.
·

infancy.
It has become clear from
his cross-.,xamination that
Thomson will concentrate on
questions raised by the
prosecution's case. Foremost
is how Caldwell could have
committed the murders in
Duluth about 3 a.m.
Only two flights left Twin
Cities airport in time for the
appointment, and no one has
beC(I able to prove he was on
either one.
A police witness said Cald·
well would have had to drive
Mrs. Pietila's car, stolen
from the mansion, at 70 miles
an hour for more than 150
miles to reach Minneaoolis in
time to catch a flight to

have new

Bllilla'B Bast Gl•
H• and Trim Paint

529 JACKSON PIKE
HOURS
MON-SAT. 9 am : 8 PM

ARNOLD DffiBLE
.
BRAINERD. Minn. (UPli
- Slight, wispy haired Roger
Caldwell, a rancher who
looks more like a bookkeeper,
finally will have his chance to
prove he is innocent of the
slaying of his millionaire
mother-in-law and her nurse .
During seven weeks of
trial,
the prosecution
presented 100 witilesses in an
attempt to prove Caldwell, 44,
of Golden , Colo., killed 83year-old spinster heiress
Elisabeth Congdon so his wife
could share In th e $50 million
Congdon fortune .
Miss
Congdon
was
smothered in her bed at the
sprawling, 39-room Congdon
mansion on the shore of Lake
Superior in Duluth. Her night
Nurse, Velma Pietila, 66, was
bludgeoned )Vith an antique
candlestick . Prosecutors
contend the nurse was killed
when she discovered the
murderer in the house.
Witness after witness
offered testimony to support
the state's contention the
Caldwefls ran up such
"W1imaginable " debts that
Caldwell, 44 , was driven to
murder to gel his wife's $8.2
million share of the spinster's
estate .
Next Tuesday , on the first
anniversary of the slayings,
defense attorne y Douglas
Thomson will beg in to
counter the prosecution's
case before the jury of eight
men and four women.
Thomson has given no
indication whether he will
present testimony from
Caldwell or his wife , Marjorie
Congdon LeRoy Caldwell, 43,
an orphan Miss Congdon
adopted and raised from
B)'

THE JONES BOYS
137 Pine St., Gallipolis
700 W. Main St., Pomeroy

10" front wheel. Rear step.
SOLD UNASSEMILED

S- THE FRIEN

MUI

tile Certificate ow11er.

Dl

'1alleyBank

~

ali ipOlis. Oh io

Member FDIC

11• To Better Serve You

•

�.

'

A-4- The Sunday Times-sentinel. Swtday. JW1e 25, 1978

A-6-The S111day Times-&amp;lntinel, Sunday, June 25, 1976

Merchants plan

Frenchman led Union regiment

Rancher getting his day in court

1wt show July 3

loo k of a desertea town.
train for Gallipolis.
Citizens in Gallipolis ,
Pla~ed in fOmmand of
Addison. ·Swa n Creek. and
thi5 rtgiment ~·as Colonel
Cheshire ii•·ed each day in the
Charles Dr\'illiers .
fear that Confederat e
DeVillieu was. an im·
marauders would cross the
migrant from France who
Ohio and take over their
claimed to have been an
towns.
officer In lhr Freach army.
· On July 7, 11161, o••er 600 To show how bard up the
men left Camp Dennison for
Union was for offlcen at
Gallipolis to protect the old
the beginning of the war, no
" F ren ch City ... Th ese
check '~''85 ever made on
re&lt;'ruits who would later be
De\'Ulfm' credentials and
pan of the lith OVI were
it is likely that he was an
abOut as green as green could
impostrr,
He
was,
be . Most of them had been
however, a master of
mech anics In Cincinnati and
sword play and wllh this
had been at Camp Dennison
knowledge was able to
less than two weeks. They
feign military competence,
had sca rcely been drilled at
at least for a little while.
all and were not even given
The reg iment traveled
guns until they boarded the from Cincinnati to Hamden
Station on the Marietta and
Cincinnati Railroad and then
transferred to the Hocking
Valley Railroad which took
them to Oak Hill.
At Chillicothe ilnd Hamden
the men were, in the words of
Captain Lane (whose journal
gives us much infonnation on
this trip), "treated to aU the
substantia ls and delicacies
that could be produced."
The regiment arrived at
Oak H1ll in the late afternoon
of July 8. At 7 p.m. DeVilliers
or dered the men on an all·
ni ght forced march to
Gallipolis, a distance of some
· 30 mi les.
Within the first few miles
the men showed signs of
dist ress and exhaustion. In
Captain Lane's words , 11 To
relieve thei r swollen feet,
many took off their boots and
walked m stockings, while
others cut their boots open .
One after another the articles
of extra clothing and luggage
were thrown to the roadside."
Any semblance of order in
the ranks was soon gone.
Gould ACTIVAIR'" battenes last tw1ce as
DeVilliers rode from one
long as ord1nary oanenes Because they use
end of the ranks to the other
the a ~r around us to help produce electrlcily
using "oaths and vile abuse."
The a1r doesn t get 1nto the battery
Some time that evening the
until you peel the battery off the protective
regiment began to arrive at
stnp rn the fumble-free battery pack So
Center ville . DeVillier s
Ac ! · ;a ~r sta1 s fresh 1111 you use 11
pushed ahead with some of
~sl-. GS to tell you the whole Gould
the men. But Captain Lane
~ , -,a r s:c·\ The battery lhat lasls tWICe
ordered a halt and rest. The
3; -:~ng do 'oe or dinary battenes you're
villagers offered the use or
~ s '19 ro.\
th e Calvinistic Methodis t
Ch urch in Centerville as well
as the M.E. church just west
of town .
At daybreak the towns·
folk were found to be busy
Riverside Professional Bldg .
preparing breakfast for the
P.O. Box 511 , 444 W. Union St.
men
before they set out for
Athens , Ohio 45701
Gallipolis. They arrived at

BV JAMES SANDS
GALUPOIUS - On April
12. 1861. Confederate tri&gt;ops
opened fire on Ft. Sumter and
thus the Ci\'il War had begun.
On April 15. President Unroln r ailed for 15,000
volunt &lt;'&lt;'rs t10.lf&gt;3 were asked
to •·oiunteer from Ohio ). By
June more than 20,000
Otuoans had volunteered to
squash the rebellion in the
South.
In May and JW1e a reign of
terru r existed along, the Ohio
River as citizens JOined fi rst
ooe side and then the other.
Confederate sympathizers at
Point Pleasant had driven
many Union sympathizers
from their homes and by late
June Point Pleasant had the

Now you can
cut the number
of hearing aid
batteries
you're using
inhaH.

GALLI POLIS
Th e
Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association will sponsor a pet
show and parade on Monday.
July 3, beginning at 4 p.m. in
the Public Square.
The event is being held· in
Cllnnection with the river
re creation festival's Kids
Day activities.
Categories are : Most
imaginative, prettiest, and
patriotic, with first, second
·and third place prizes being
awarded in each category.
First place award is $10,
second $5 and third $3.
Pat Bastiani is chainnan.
the laller,lale that evening
and discovered DeVllliers
wailing. DeVilliers
threateaed court-martial,
but ironically it was
DeVilllen who was court·
marllaled about a year
after this , for stealing
silverware from Point
Pleasant citheu.
The day that the lith Ohio
arrived at Gallipolis Con·
federates had attacked and
robbed the steamboat Fanny
Burns not farm from
Gallipolis. Part of the lith
commandeered the boat
Leslie Combs and went in
pursuit. Another part of the
regiment took up camp in
Point Pleasant.
On July 17 the lith Ohio
was sent to Pocataligo Creek,
some 12 miles south of
Chareston, to rejoin the rest
of the lith. The part of the
regiment that DeVilliers had
taken ahead was captured by
the . Confederates at Scarey
Creek, Virginia, because of
DeVilliers' ignorance.
Fortunatel y for the Union
cause, it soom became a little
more choosey about their
officers. A good part of this
lith Ohi o went on to
distinguish
itself
at
Chickamauga and Chattanooga.

COMPLETES COURSE
- Dale E. Lear, owner and
manager
of
Lear
Photography, Spring
Valley Plaza, Galllpolls,
reten tly returned from
Winona Lake, Ind., alter
participating in a week
long coune on Vcpkcupals .
of Professional Portraiture
at the Winona School of

VOLUNTEERS HOLD CLASS - On Monday, June 12,
four members of The Gallia County Volunteer Emergency
Squad held a first aid cillss. Upon the request of Tom
Bittner, an Emergency First Aid Cla.ss was taught to
~pproximately 50 students. All of the students were
members of Youth Conservation Cor~ (YCC). Students
were taught the basics of first aid to the sick and injured.
Greg Fruter, a spokesman for the GCVES squad, said all
the students pertormed well. All the students learned how
to lnunobillzeand splint all possible fractures and what to
do to prevent shock and how to control bleeding. In the
near future the GCVES squad plans to return to the YCC
camp at Rio Grande and teach Multi-Media First-Aid and
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. The instructors were
Greg-Frazier EMT·A; Rick Holley EMT-A-Parame&lt;11c ;
Helen Holley EMT·A and Susie K. Snyder EMT·A . Frazier
thanked all students fer participationg. The students are
statiooed at a camp in Rio Grande, under tbe direction of
Ken Porter. Porter told the squad members that they
would soon be working at Camp Francis Asbury in Rio
Grande. The YCC group is employed during the summer
by ~e Ohio Department of Natural Retwurces. They
ret"e1ved a small swn of money and a high school credit
for their efforts.

A GOOD
"bt:ASONS
to see your good
neighbor agent

SECOND Pl..ACE WINNER - An outstanding float was that of the Ohio Farm Bureau "A voi~ of
agriculture."

Change of venue granted in court
ASHI..AND, Ohio (UP!) Ash la nd Co unty Common
Pleas Court Friday granted a
change of venue roc the
murder trial o( Edward
Fields, 31, Memphis, Tenn .,
charged in the death or a
thr ee-year-old boy whose
body was foun d alon g
Interstate 71 in Ash land
County last October .
Officials did not determine
which court would handle the
trial.
Fi e ld s' a tt or neys
contended their client could
not receive a fair trial in
r\shland County because of
pre-trial publicity in the
nationwide search for Fields.
He is accused of the beating
death of Artenchy Williams
Ill, Memphis.
No date has been set for

CAR •HOME
LIFE • HEALTH

Mike Swiger
992-7155
149 S. Third St.
Middleport, 0.

Prolessloaal Potograpby.
Tbe course was designed to
help the photographer
revise or Improve his
profeuiooal technique.
Portrait llgbllog,
corrective camera work,

environmentals, and the
photography of men ,
women, and brides In the
studio were covered. Tbere
were also lectures on
compositioa, color, quality,
studio operations, and
business management.

Lik~ a good .n~fghbor,
Sta~ farm Is thtre.
I!Afl , •• ,.

A
ltATEPADI
IN~I COMWIIU
. . . . Ofac:.H: lh
I

•

.....

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND

2 WEEKS -JUNE 25 thru JULY

9

Bllddlilllllt All
LIID H• Paint
· • Quick dlylng diJilblt lilltlnilh
• RHIIto bltotorw, pooling, m!ldow
• E11y wateJ cltan·up

~~~~~~r 112.49

SAVE $4.so

UMW will
ARABIAN SI"YLE - Ruth Reeves, Albany , rides her
Arabian horse wearing the traditional garb and re galia .

Other side of the bridge
June 19, 1978
The People on tbe Other Side ofthe Bridge (West Main St.)
Paul Simon is doing an excellent job on the River-Bank
Cleanup .- (East Main and small portion of West Main St. )
There is life oo thl! other side ofthe bridge!
Most people think that territory below the bridge belongs
10 Middleport. However, what they don't know, Pomeroy
extends midway of Twin Cities Gateway's parking lot !
Recently, two new bU5inesses opened below the bridge in
Pomeroy. The town of P&lt;rneroy likes to acknowledge the fa ct.
Regatta week is here - so here come the city crews to cut
weeds five feet or less from the street . And usually, if we are
lucky the weeds are cut again before it frosts .
It has been five years sin~ we purchased our property ,
The lot across from us keeps getting thicker and higher with
brush and debris .
We pay property taxes and try to keep our property up.
Vehicles not currently licensed are not pennitted. So, why
should brush and weeds be ? This condition harbors disease
carrying insects .
Recently,! read Council was to write letters to out-of-town
property owners to clear their lots.
If this was dooe - why haven 't there been results' The
city could take other action to clean the vacant lots and charge
the owners.
Why can't some thing be done'
Every night debris is picked up from our lawn - where
passersby throw wastes. Aren 't there signs available to be put
up warning people of littering and the penalties and enforcing
this by the police department ! Also , wtder the bridge is
disgraceful to the town .
We, the people on the other side of the bridge enjoy and
would like to have a view of the Beautiful Ohio River the year
round.
We are looking and waiting on action from someone . Sharon Riffle, 810 W. Main St. , Pomeroy, Ohio.

• Quick drying, tiiY to UN
• Euy Wllet' cteln-up

4.50

1

AZUSA, Calif. (UPI I - An
hour-long series of explosions
leveled a chemical plant and
rocked a wid e area of
Southern California Friday
night.
At least five people were
injured .
More than 100 firefighters
from Los Angeles County,
Atusa, West Covina, Covina
and LaVerne fire companies
were fighting the names seen
from up to 20 miles away.
There were three buildings
reportedly involved .
" The Nora c Chem ical
Company exploded and there
Is one heck of fire," said a fire
dispatcher at Azusa, 20 miles

Other questions involved
several items missing from
Miss Congdon's bedroom. A
basket and some of the jewels
missing from the mansion
allegedly were . foW1d in a
Bloomington, Minn ., hotel
room occupied by the
Ca ldwe lls while they were
visiting Minnesota after the
slayings. And a byzantine
coin mi ss in g from the
mansion W'IS ma iled to the
Caldwells' address fr om
Duluth early June 27 in an

,
We believe that you, our customers, are deserving of caring,
professional service. With that concept in mind , we strive to meet
your highest expectations. Our trained staff takes the time to insure
you have the proper service, privacy , confidentiality and the care
and respect you deserve . We firmly believe you are the strongest
link in our business . As we look to the future with faith and
confidence- in this , our second year of business, we thank you lor
your past patronage and pledge to serve you in an honest. sincere
way in teh future .
Herman and Dee Di llon

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA

SUN. lliRU SAT.

Y'S GIRL, ALL-IN-ONE
PANTY &amp; PANTY HOSE

SUPER
DISCOUNT
NOW!

2 pkg.

Regulor

'3.00

'1.5\1

Wh•ta. poa'tel .'. , ~"""- coJ·
or oc•tal• lrCOt • ith ekll·
,IJC WOI)I, leg bonds. 5 · ~

9-7 MON.-sAT.
12~

SUNDAY

MEIGS PWA

A-B

Cotton crotch .

ASSORTED FABRICS
44" -45" WIDlli
REG.~DENIM

NOWI
POLYISTIR

DOUBLEKNIT PAIIIS
MISSES'
Reg. ~~

'3°0

11---------...--

S.YEAR CERTIFICATE

%

STAINLESS STEEL

SCISSORS

·

ANNUAL
RATE

•
an annual yield of

12" !1
TO

Reg. '2.17

~

%.

•

MINIMUM '1000.

HR. The professional way to clean your
carpets yourself- for a haction of the professional
cost. Deep-cleaning power hfts out ground-in dirt
to put "like new" beauty back into your carpets.

Cli1

7FT.

I POUND lAG

POmNO
lOlL
REG.

!ld(

8 FT.

Reg. ~ARKEJ
1

99~

CERTIFICATE

U. S. Treasury Bill rates at time

Automatic cord lo

ond hordwa,..

TUBULAa TRIKI
REG.

'1396
'

Sturdy tubular steel frame.

Rent it at

Reg. '

PolO
There is no penalty for premature
withdrawal in the ~t of the death of

~\-tlS ~··t~

ACE HARDWARE

97~

A smooth ltne
to toel
Stzes

INDIANA, Pa. (UP!) The United Mine Workers
federal credit union will build
a
new
II · million
east of Los Angeles. " We are headquarters on the outskirts
so busy we are una ble to get of Ebensburg, credit unioo
officials said Friday .
any details right now"
The credit wtion's board of
" We have an original huge
explosion with a tremendous directors said th e twe&gt;-story ,
fir e," said a batallion chi ef at 20, 000 -square-foot stucco
the scene. "We have tanks building will be located on a
still in danger of going up. L 5(H!cre site adjacent to the
can't believe there wasn 't intersection of Routes 219 and
222. Ground will be broken
someone killed."
July
8 with UMW President
A spokesman sai d th e
Arnold
Miller as featured
co mpany manufa ctures a
variety or products and th e speaker .
The UMW has a long-range
cause of the explosion was
program
of new credit union
unknown .
Four
per so ns
were bra nch offices, unioo officials
reportedly taken to In· said. They expect th e next
tercommu nit y Hospital in branch office to be built in the
Covina.
Pitl•burgh area .

luyl

~~~
'tl~¢\~

JUNE 25 · 31

SUPER BUYS

lonus

~~"~

MURDER CHARGED
OMAHA , Neb. iUPIJ
Police say a 15-year-old boy
jumped from the bushes in a
city park Friday and stabbed
a 9-yea r-old girl , inJuring her,
then killed her 14-year-old
babysi tter who came to her
rescue.

GJiBal ~tae(Dr:»e PHILOSOPHY

348 2nd Avenue

Sizes 10.18

REDWOOD LOUNGE
FURNITURE SEniNG

own hand?

DOWNTOWN STORE

SIZES

TINTS SLIGHTlY HIGHER

992·3662

mansion ?

enve lope addressed in
Caldwell's hand.
But why would Caldwell
take the basket and the
jewels to Colorado and bring
them back to Minnesota ? And
why would he mail the coin in
an envelope addressed by his

line

structure

"Steam"
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Denver . Why would a
murderer 'risk apprehension
for speeding? If he stole the
nurse's car for a getaway,
how did he get to the

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Into Summer

• Cha• rnltttnt Qklll finish

SUNDAY Hi

trial and Fields remains in
Ashland Cowtty jail in lieu of
$50,000 bOlld.
The child's mother Yvoone
Williams is being held in the
Ashland Cowtty jail pending
a pre-sentencing report after
she pleaded guilty in Swrunit
County to a charge of child
endangerment.
·

infancy.
It has become clear from
his cross-.,xamination that
Thomson will concentrate on
questions raised by the
prosecution's case. Foremost
is how Caldwell could have
committed the murders in
Duluth about 3 a.m.
Only two flights left Twin
Cities airport in time for the
appointment, and no one has
beC(I able to prove he was on
either one.
A police witness said Cald·
well would have had to drive
Mrs. Pietila's car, stolen
from the mansion, at 70 miles
an hour for more than 150
miles to reach Minneaoolis in
time to catch a flight to

have new

Bllilla'B Bast Gl•
H• and Trim Paint

529 JACKSON PIKE
HOURS
MON-SAT. 9 am : 8 PM

ARNOLD DffiBLE
.
BRAINERD. Minn. (UPli
- Slight, wispy haired Roger
Caldwell, a rancher who
looks more like a bookkeeper,
finally will have his chance to
prove he is innocent of the
slaying of his millionaire
mother-in-law and her nurse .
During seven weeks of
trial,
the prosecution
presented 100 witilesses in an
attempt to prove Caldwell, 44,
of Golden , Colo., killed 83year-old spinster heiress
Elisabeth Congdon so his wife
could share In th e $50 million
Congdon fortune .
Miss
Congdon
was
smothered in her bed at the
sprawling, 39-room Congdon
mansion on the shore of Lake
Superior in Duluth. Her night
Nurse, Velma Pietila, 66, was
bludgeoned )Vith an antique
candlestick . Prosecutors
contend the nurse was killed
when she discovered the
murderer in the house.
Witness after witness
offered testimony to support
the state's contention the
Caldwefls ran up such
"W1imaginable " debts that
Caldwell, 44 , was driven to
murder to gel his wife's $8.2
million share of the spinster's
estate .
Next Tuesday , on the first
anniversary of the slayings,
defense attorne y Douglas
Thomson will beg in to
counter the prosecution's
case before the jury of eight
men and four women.
Thomson has given no
indication whether he will
present testimony from
Caldwell or his wife , Marjorie
Congdon LeRoy Caldwell, 43,
an orphan Miss Congdon
adopted and raised from
B)'

THE JONES BOYS
137 Pine St., Gallipolis
700 W. Main St., Pomeroy

10" front wheel. Rear step.
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•

�A-.'1- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

ha~e . begun

Superstars

auditing past movies

S:mday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 25,1978

~

By VERNON SCOTr
HOLLYWOOD (UP! ) The former chief of Columbia
Pictures who embezzled
$60,000 from his company is
to be sentenced this week.
Ilut h.is case is just one in a
huge . Hollywood quagmire
that has many superstars
auditing past movies to see if
they were cheated.
Co lumbia, already besmirched by the admission of
David Begelman thai he had
signed bogus signatures to
company ch'ecks, was jolted
again last week with the
revelation that Audrey
Usner, chief accountant of
the studio 's comm ercial
division , had been charged
with embezzling $275,000
through
phony
travel
operations.
Begelman , 56, was to be
sentenced Wednesday. His
sentence could range from 10
years in prison ID probation.
According to some actors
directors and producers, such
finagling is nickel-and-&lt;lime
stuff compared to the
manipulations of major
studio corporate powers who
may be raking in millions of
dollars that don't rightfully
belong in studio coffers .
Because of the complexity
of moviemaki ng and the
enormous sums of money
involved in production and
profits , there are myriad
opportunities for tricky
ixlokkeeping, skimming and
fme-prmt rip.&lt;&gt;ffs in compli cated contracts.
Th ere are domestic taxes,
foreign l&lt;!xes, print costs,
do uble bills and other
mvolved computations.

At the moment such stars
as Robert R e d f o r d, Steve
McQueen and Sean Connery,
among many, are having past
movies audited for financial
accounting.
The trouble begins when a
superstar signs for a $10
million film, is given a $1
million salary and five
percent of the net profits.
Before the actor sees a dime
of his percentage, the studio
must split its gross profit s
with the distributor and the
theater.
Tacked on to the costs are
overhead operaiing expenses
for filming on the lot ,
including salaries, telephone
bills , transportation,
equipment rental, lega l
charges , publicity and
promotion and a thousand
other items.
When the picture runs its
course and the star hollers for
his share of the net, the studio
produces ledgers showing no
substantive profit was made.
The star screams like an
eagle and hires a certified
public
accountant
to
rummage through the books.
Michael Caine and Connery
have jointly sued Allied
Artists over their pr ofit
participation in "The Man
Who Would Be King " in
which they costarred.
The actors claim the movie
made money and that they
are owed some $218,000.
Allied Artists is suing tbe
actors for $21.5 million for
defamtory remarks they 've
made about the company.
Actors, pvod u ce r s,
directors and even writers
in
profit
involved

HEADQUARTERS FOR

· participation a lmost automatically hire accountants
to protect their interests.
Connery paid $8,000 to have
"The Man Who Would Be
King" aud ited . Steve
McQueen is checking. into
"Papillion ."
Dustin Hoffman, Wildwood
Productions ( Redford ),
newsmen Robert Woodward
and Carl Bernstein, along
with director Alan Pakula
anawrite.r William Goldman
joined in having "AU the
President's Men" audited at
Warner BroS.
Auditing film company
books has become • big
business for Solomon and
Finger, a top CPA fil'm in
Beverly Hills and New York.
Bennett Newman, a
partner in lhe firm, says the
intricacies of financing ,
merchandising, reco rd
albums, paperback nove l

versions and sales to ca ble
and network television of· a
successful fihn increase the
need for auditing movie
ixloks.
"The fact that more actors
and
directors
are
participating increases the
demand for our services,"
Newman said.
Newman
refused
to
speculate whether film
companies purposely divert
profits from participanlll.
But
Earl
Owensby,
president of EO Corp'., the
largest motion picture studio
in the United States outside
Hollyw ood, · says maj or
studios syphon off millions.
"BY the lime they get
through with below-the~ine
a nd above-the-line
bookkeeping, somebody is
taking a couple of million and
going home with it." ••id

hit movie to television.
"Let's say 'Film A' earned
$100 million and is sold to a
network,'' the producer sa id.
"It is part of a package with
Driver/' ~~ wolbnan ' ' and the 'Film B' and 'Fihn C' both of
like - Owensby said, "Make which were box offi ce flops.
a picture in Hollywood and
"The network pays the
you're charged 25 percent of Studio $2 million for all three.
the budget for overhead for Ilut the studio puts 11.5
openers.
million on the books as
"I made my first picture, payment for 'Film B' and
'Challenge,' for Cinemation. 'Film C' which have no profit
They had a small art film participants. The producer or
titled "Challenge to be Free." actor with a percentage in
They took the money my 'Film A' doesn 't get a dime!' '
picture made and credited it
Another indu s tr y
to tbeir own picture. It cost spokesman said, "There are
me $400,000. But there was no uncounted ways a studio can
point in filing
suit. steal from a producer with ~
into percentage of the profits.
Cinemation went
bankruptcy."
"Assume a picture goes out
One
irate
producer with high expectations and an
ex plained how studios advance booking of $18
commonly steal from profit million. The exhibitors are
participants through sale of a soaked a · big percentage to

March on atom.ic plant site
By RON AMAADON
SEABROOK,N.H. (UPI )Ant i-nu clear protesters
trying "education" instead of
civil disobedience Saturday
marched by the hundreds
onto the Seabrook atomic
power plant site where they
planned a three-day camp-in,
rally and energy fair.
They sang "We Sha ll Overcome" and carried ecology
flags and signs readin g
"nukes are not healthy for
children or other living
things ."
An occupation of the $2.3
billion SeabrOilk construction

site last year, with a pledge to
remain
until
for cibly
removed, led to 1,414 arrests
on criminal trespass charges.
This year the organizing
Clamshell AUiance agreed to
a lega l demonstration
confined to an 18-acre section
of the 715-acre seacoast site
in hopes of attracting
supporters scared off by· the
threat of arrest.
Clamshell spokesmen said
they expec ted 3,000-4,000
demonstrators would be on
the site by late afternoon .
Clam s he ll spo kesma n

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Owensby, whose studios are
located iri Shelby, N.C.
A se lf-made millionaire
and pr oducer of nine
exploitation films - "Death

-

Harvey Wasserman of
Montague, Mass., said last
year members made their
point about stopping nuclear
power with arrests. "This
year we're doing it with
education," he said.
Demonstrators invited the
public to an energy fair and
rally with name en tertainers
Sunday .
Some 200 demonstrators
arrived at the start of the
week to go door-to-door in the
power plant's neighborhood,
discussing their fears the
plant could release deadly
radiation and that its cooling
system would harm marine
by Gill Fox life offshore.
Dozens of sailboats today
formed an offshore picket
line of the rig that is drilling
undersea tunnels to transport
ocean water used to cool the
reactor. The tunnels will
return water to the ocean bed
39 degrees warmer than its
original temperature.
About 800 demonstrators
cut a ribbon on a rutted dirt
access road at 9:50a .m. and
marched onto the 18-acre

demonstration site loaned by
the Public Service Co. of New
Hampshil'e, lead company in
the New England consortium
building the 2,300-megawatt
plant.
They were greeted by the
smell of rotting garbage (the
site once was a dwnp), which
overpowered tbeir own
strong aroma of suntan lotion .
and insect repellent.
Attorney General Thomas
Rath, who negotiated the
agreement for a legal demonstration , said 100 to 200 police
would be on hand, and "a
good deal more " would be out
of sight but availa ble if
needed. Predicting no
trouble, he squinted at the
bright sun and said, "It
appears as !hough things
should go as well as the
weather. ''
Adjutant General John
Blatsossaid !,OOOmembers of
the National Guard were on
drill duty this weekend
around New Ham~hire and
would be available if needed.
He said 400 of them were in
armories near Seabrook.

show it The exhibitor gets 10
percent of the profits, the
studio 90 percent.
"Then the picture bombs,
costing the exhibitors plenty.
The studios don 'I want to
alienate the theater owners.
So they make up for it on a
profitable
film
by
cooperative advertising and
sweetening the percentage
break from 20-.'10 percent to
3().70 percent.
"In reality the hit picture
should go for 11}-90 so the
profit participation has been
cut by 20 percent which
doesn 't show on the books."
The phrase commonly used
for hanky'-pank y in the
motion picture industry is
"Chinese bookkeeping" - a
simple means for preventing
stars,
directors
and
producers from collectin g
their share of the profits.
II would seem that no
studio is beyond the pale
except one, Disney Studios.
The studios have batteries
of attorneys and crackerjack
accountants working their
side of the disputes. Often
studio claims of expenses,
costs, taxes and profit and
loss
statements
are

legitimate.
. ·
But more often than not it
pays for the stars to follow
!hell' audits with law suits.
Natalie Wood collected a sixfigure settlement for her
percentage of "Bob and Carol
and· Ted and Alice."
Ryan O'Neal won a fortune
in a dispute over the profits of

"What's Up Doc?"
Cary Grant won a
settlement from Columbia
after suing !he studio for
seiling his old films ~ TV
below their genuine value.
Dean Martin went to court
for his share of "Airport" and
Universal paid up.
Director WiUiam Freidkin
settled his "Exorcist" suit for
an undisclosed six-figure
amount.
William Peter , Blatty,
author and screenwriter of
"The Exorcist." claimed
Warner Bros. owed him $1.5
million for " improperly
charged expenses."
One studio spokesman, who
asked not to be identified,
said, "It's ali a matter of
interpreting contracts. In any
case, it 's the lawyers who
make the most of tlle money
in these matters."

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Seeing

DERIFIELD JEWELRY

Is
Believing

417 Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Oh io
" Across from the Colony Theater"

"All you need is some lresh air. Put a new filter
in your air conditioner!"

One of the
Finest Homes

Catherine Benet
· Barbara lson and David Thomas
PLANS TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Donald !son of Milford,
Ohio, announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of
!hell' daughter, Barbara Jean , to David Wendell Thomas, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell B. Thomas, Gallipolis. The bride~lect
is attending Ohio State University and wiU graduate in August.
Her fiance is a graduate of Gallia Academy and was graduated
from Ohio State University in 1977. He is presently employed
by lbe Ohio Department of Conunerce, Division of Banks.
Wedding vows will be exchanged October 14, 2:30p.m. at the
Immanuel Baptist Olureh in Columbus, with the Rev. Alvis
Pollard officiating . The gracious custom of open church will be
observed with a ''eception immediately following the
ceremony.

Forum to end first series
GALUPOUS - The final
in the first series of Mental
Health Forums presented by
the Gallia -·Jackson • Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center will be held at the
Gallia facility on Tuesday,
Jun e 27, 1978, in the
Multipurpose Room.
The series will concl ude
with a presentation of
.. Punch and Judy" by a
puppet troupe from Jackson
County under the leadership
of four area agencies .
Leaders for the troupe and
props and stage for the
preeentollona are provided
by the Jackson Co unty 4-H
Cl ub, Jackson County Arts
Co un ci l, Ja ckson City
Libra(y and the Ment al
Health Cent er . The program
will be appropriate for both
children and adults.
There will be a light luncheon served at the cost of $1
per person beginning at 12
noon . The actual presentation
of the program will begin at
12:1&gt; p.m. and conclude at I
p.m. so that members of the
community may enjoy the
luncheon and program on
their lunch hour. If you do not
wish to participate in the
luncheon, you may bring your

own lunch. No reservations
are necessa ry .
All interested adults and
children in the community
are cordially invited to at·
tend .

Vacation Bible School
GALLIPOLIS CHRISTIAN CHURCH
JUNE 26-30

~

6:30-8:30 p.m.

NURSERY THROUGH ADULT
EVERYONE WARMLY WELCOMED

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 446·9553 OR 245-5064
Christ Ce flterell
For Christ Centered Living

Large el.egant hom~ ju~t one mile south of downtown Gallipolis
overlookmg the Oh1o River, situated on a Imost three acres of
beautiful trees, decorative rocks, and a fish pond. Home consists
of four bedrooms, 21!2 baths, two wood-burning fireplaces formal
li~ing ro~'!'' ~ining room, large cherry paneled den, and' central
a!r condthonmg. Located on the grounds is a 17X35 in-ground
swimming pool with bath house and refreshment area. To add to
all of this, a panoramic view of the Ohio River from the Silver
Bridge to Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. This is truly one of the finest
homes in the area. First time offered for sale. Upper price
bracket.
Located at 140 Garfield Heights. For further information contact
Doc Smith, 446-2840 or 446-2282.

Daleanna Little
TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Dale Little, Route 2,
Pomeroy are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Daleanna Little, to
Rick McKnight, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McKnight ,
Pomeroy . Miss Little is a student at Meigs High School.
Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of Meigs High School and is
employed at Gall ipolis Parts Warehouse. The open church
wedding will be an event of Jul y 16 at2:30 p.m. at the Zion
Church of Ch rist, Rutland . John McArthur will perform
the double ring ceremony followmg a half hour of music
scheduled to beg in at 2 p.m. A reception will foll ow in the
church social room .

Jeannie Boggs and Lester Jeffers
WILL WED - Mr. and Mrs. Lewis A. Boggs of
Athens, Route 5, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter . Jeannie , to Lester
.Jeffers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene L. Jeffers , Albany,
Route 2. The bride-elect is a 1977 graduate of Alexander
High School and is presently employed as a clerk at Ohio
Uni versity. Her fiance , a 1978 graduate of Ale.ander High
School, is presently employed with his father and grand·
father on their poultry and dairy farm near Albany. An
open chu rch wedding is planned for July 29, at 2 p.m. at
the Christ the King Catholic Church on Mill St. in Athens.

Story
proves
false

Ladies Aid meets
ADDISON - The Addison
Ladies Aid was called to
order by secretary, Lou
Grubb, In the absence of
president, Jewell Russell.
· The fil'st order of business
was the election of Trilba
Patterson as president pro·
tern for the evening.
The secretary and treasury
reports were read and ac·
cepted by motion . Thirteen
members answered roll ca ll
and seven gues ts were
present . Eleven visits to the
sick and shut-ins were made
with 18 get-well ca rds and
nine sympat~y cards sent.
A baby shower was plann ed
for the July meeting for Mrs.
Richard Barcus. Friends

wishing to attend may do so.
Door prize winners for the
evening were Lou Grubb,
Goldie Warren, Ada Harding,
Vema Neal, Sherri Grubb,
Patti Ellis, Velva casey,
t;mma Johnson and Mary
Barcus. ·
Trllba Patterson was the
program director for the
meeting . The
program
consist ed
of
prayer
and a Bible card game.
Winning a prize for giving the
most correct answers was
Ada Hardin g.
Refreshments were served
by Vel va Casey , Donna
Davis, Lou Grubb and Verna
Neal.

Wedding plans announ.ced
MIDDLEPORT-The open
church wedding or MisS
Sherry Denise Kin g,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William King, and Hitk
Meckstroth, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm Meckstroth, Cincinnati, will be held on Satur·
day, Jul y I, at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, at
2:30p.m.
Music will be presented by
Mrs. Margaret Blaetlnar,
orga nist, a half hour
preceding the ceremony. The
Rev. Fr. Paul Welton will
perform the double ring
ceremon y with the bride to
sing the "Lord's Prayer" ac·
companied by her brother,
Kevin, on the organ .
Guests will be rel!istered by

Carol Meckstroth, Cinci nnati ,
sister o! the prospective
groom.
The bride's attendanu; w!lt
oo Mrs. Kathy Johnson , Middleport, matron uf honor ;
Mrs. Debbie Fihlaw, Long
Bottom, Mrs. Bonnie Bullach ,
Dayton, Mrs. Linda Mason,
East Canton , bridesmaids ,
and Heather Finalaw, Long
Bottom, flower ~ irl.
Den nis Clepper of Cincinnati will be the best man for
the groom, with Terry
Shepherd, Huntington, Dan
Meckstroth, Cincinnati, and
fke Shamblin, Wheeling, W.
Va. as the ushers. Rick Brennan, Cincinnati , will be the
ring bearer.
Serving at the reception
LINDA STEWART
will
be Mrs. Bessie King.
FINISHES STUDIES Mrs.
Farie Cole , Mrs .
Linda Stewart graduated
Delores
Bailey, and Mrs.
Sunday, June II, from
Gertrude
Finiaw. A reception
Hoelting Technical College
GALUPOUS - Mr. and will be held at the home of the
with an auodale degree In
Mrs. Lawrence McQuaid Sr. bride immediately following
registered nursing. She
of 88 Pine St. held their the ceremony.
finished with high honors
famlly reunion and 53rd
and a lOlBI average of U , anniversary at Black Lick
she It now walling to take
Park in Reynoldsburg, Ohio.
her stale boards In July.
Those attendlng were Mr.
Mlsa Stewart Is lbe
NAME NOTED
and Mrs. L. W. McQuaid Jr.
daughter of Mn. Leona
POMEROY-Ryan Lemley
of Elyria, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Stewal'(, Pomeroy.
James McQuaid , IIndy , was ringbearer at the wed·
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs. ding of Julia Ann Hutchison
Homer McQuaid, Michel, and Andrew B. Vaughan,
Jamie, Gallipolis; Mr and Sept. 24 at the Pomeroy
Mrs. Gene McQuaid, Joe, Unilt'&lt;i Methodist Church. He
John
and Mark , Robin, is the nephew of the b de. His
CONTEST SLATED
Lorain;
Luzon McQuaid, name was unintentionally
The Jackson , Ohio Fourth
Leigha,
Amy
and Brandon, omitted from la st Sunday's
of July Celebration will have
Gallipolis;
Mr
. and Mrs. account of the wedding.
an Old Time Fiddlers and
Rob
ert
Strait
(Mary
Banjo , Picking Contest as a
McQuaid),
Ellen
of
new feature this year. The
Lithopolis;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earl
best fiddler or banjo picker
( Virginia
wiD receive a $60 prize. The Dennison
David
of
contest wiU be beld on the McQuaid ),
Manpol\'er Park at 3 p.m. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
GET LICENSES
July 4th In Jackson. There is Lawrence McQuaid III ,
POMEROY - Marriage
no entry fee but fiddlers and , Lawrence IV and Erin, Mr. licenses were issued to
blnjo players are asked to and Mrs. James McQuaid, Wayne D. Wetzel, 20, Cil'·
tend in a letter to Hargas Kim, Kelly and Cristy, clevllle, and Tamara F .
McKenzie, 283 Main St ., L&lt;Jrain; Mr. and Mrs. Blake, 19, Pomeroy ; Kenneth
Jacbon, Ohio giving their Lawrence McQuaid, Sr., Allen Roush, 18, Rt . 4,
name and inllrumenl lfiey HarTy, Gallipolis. Two guests Pomeroy, and Lisa Ann
were Lori Riley and Mickey Prater, 18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
will play. ,,
Smurr.
'

Reunion held

in the Area!

ENGAGED - Chief Warrant Officer 2 (USMC) and
Mrs. William D. Adkins, 3507 Chosin Circle, Jacksonville,
North Carolina, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Catherine Cora Benet, to J ohn Wilson Braley ,
son of Mr . and Mrs. William H. Braley, 5302 West Pea
Ridge Road, Huntington, West Virginia. The couple will
be married in an open church ceremony on September 8 at
the Pea Ridge l!nited Methodist Church, Huntington ,
West Virginia , at seven-thirty in the evening. Rev . 0. A.
Judd, uncle of the bride elect , and Rev. John Grandstaff
will officiate. Miss Benet is a 1973 gra duate of Quantico
High School, Marine Corps Base, Quantico, Virginia. She
was graduated cum laude from Rio Grande College, Rio
Grande, Ohio in 1977 with a BS in communications. She
was a member of Phi Kappa Delta Speech Fraternity and
Zeta Theta Chi Social Sorority. She was listed in Who's
Who In Poetry in American Colleges and Uni versities and
Who's Who Among Students in American Colleges and
Universities. She is a member of .the Gailia County
Citizens for Mental Retardation Committee and is
employed by the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. as the society
editor for the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Sunday TimesSentinel. Mr. Braley is a 1968 graduate of Barboursville
High School and a 1975 graduate of Marshall University,
Huntington, West Virginia, with a BSCE degree In civi l
engineering. He is employed by the West Virginia Depart·
ment of Highways as the assistant bridge engineer for
district two.

•I

Summer Theater to open season
with 'Love and Other Nonsense'
ATHENS - The Ohio
Valley Summ er Theater
(OVST ) will open its 1978
season with the musical
revue, "Love and Other
Nonsense,' ' which will be
offered as part of ·a dinner •
theater combination at the
OhiQ University Inn on
Richland Aven ue in Athens.
The music for this unique
revue looks at love in all its
aspects. It ranges from
Opera to Countr y and
·Western, and includes
Broadway show tunes and
"pep" numbers. The show is
fun for all ages as it moves
through musical renditions
not on ly of the warmth and
tenderness of love, but its
humor and complexities. The
production will run June 29 ,
30; July I , 2, 5-9, and 12-16.
The cast of " Love and
Other Nonse nse" includ es
severa l singers who are
familiar to OVST audiences
from previous years. Gay
Dalzell's past Ohio University and OVST credits include
roles in "Sing Out Sweet
Land ,'' " Jesus Christ
Superstar," " Madame ·
Butterfly,'' and last summer's production of " I Do! I
Do!" While touring with The
Appalachian Green Pa rk
Project she met her husband ,
Bruce. The couple will be
singing together again this
summer, doing feature
numbers in " Love, and Other
APPLY FOR LICENSE
Two ·coupl es applied for
marriage license in Galiia
Co unty Probate Court
Wednesday.
Applying were Robert E.
Armstrong, 35, Crown City.
lineman, and Patty J .
Howard, 29 , Gallipolis, activity therapy specia list .
Also applying on Wedn~sday were Alan Ladd
Kuhn, 21, Northup, meat
packer, and Cynde Rae Pope,
18, Gallipolis, cashier.
Applying on Thursday were
William R. Shaw, 20,
. Gallipolis, Holzer Laundry
employee and Debra Day
Smith, 18, Bidwell, Holzer
laundry employee .
MATRONS TO MEET
Past Matrons of Pomeroy
Chapter O.E.S. will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. J . W. McMurray , Mason .

Nonsense."
Emily Vacolas will be
making her fo urth ap·
pea ranee for OVST thi s
summer. She sa ng in the
musical revue , " Rhythm ,
Rhyme, and Romance,'' last
summer, the swnmer before
that she sang in "Gershwin
Tonight" and five sununers
ago she played Aut Nettie in
the OVST production of
"CarouseL "

Jim Bonkowski, who will be
a senior vo ice student in the
Ohio University Music
Department next year, was a

cast member in the OVST
shows ·'Gershwin Tonight,"
and •·or Thee I Sing ." He has
also appeared in many
Universi ty dramatic and
operatic performances in·
eludi ng " Madame But·
terfiy," "Showboat, " Amah!
and the Ni ght Visitors," and
"The Marriage of Figaro." In
the singing competition of the
National Assoc iati on of
Teachers of Singing, Jin1 has
placed ei ther second or third
in the state of Ohio for the
past three years.
Dean Bryenton , Matthew

Griffen, Steve VeShancey,
Tony Coleman, Cindi Walker ,
Terri Parsons, and Debbie
Knause round out the cast .
The Inn 's comfortable
surroundings and the easy
atmo sph ere of the OVST
revue allow the audience to
relax and enjoy the show.
For more information
contact the OVST box office
in Kantner Hall from LO a.m .
to 6 p.m. Monday through
Friday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday, or 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
evenings of performance .
(614) 594-!iOIO.

country music is like a
sermon from the Bible
By MARIAN E. McQUIDOY
DES MOINES, Iowa I UP!)
- It's easy to find something
to write a country song about
today, one composer says,
because there are plenty of
stray dogs, unhappy men and
good-looking women running
around .
Billy Porter, 50, said the
problem with the profession
is getting people to actually
kn ow who wrote the song and keeping food on the l&lt;!bie
and a roof over his head.
" lt 's got to be a labor of
love," Porter said. "There
really isn't a whole lot of
money in it - unless you
make it real big. And that
happens so far and few
between.
"Songwriters are starving
In Iowa as they are in
Nashville. I've been working
at the business for upwards of
20 years and now am working
with a pretty big company in
New York, but I'm still
working at the dry cleaners to
make sure f can still eat and
have a place to live.
"I suspect I will do it until !
die - or make enough money
song-writing to live on."
Porte r's lirst published
song wa s 'Honky-Tonk
Waltz.'
When he started, Porter
said, he chose country and
western music because it is
"real."
" It 's about the common
people, what bugs them, what
they like and what hurts
th em:: · Porter said . "And as

lon g as there· are tra ins.
lon ely people, stray dogs
there will be things to write
about. It is truly amazing ."
He said gettin g ideas for
songs is like a minister I&lt;! kin g
his sermon from th e Bible .
"It 's that ea sy. The re is no
way w run out of ideas. It's
kind of scary. You can walk
down the stre&lt;Jt and have
ideas from everyon e you

see," Porter said.
Coun try music itself has
changed , he said.
"It's not good old country
anymore," he said. i•There
are those who are trying to
reach more people . They're
starting to mix il up a little
and put a little middle of the
road stuff in so they can
reach the additional people.
And that's not as good ."

Old time picnic is enjoyed
COLUMBUS - Sun day ,
June ll , Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Harder and Ginii-; "'Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Harder, T. J. and
Stephanie and Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Reiser and daughter
held a Steam-up picnic in
Columbus. This was the first
steaming of .Ted Harder 's,
1915 HP Huber Engine No.
10707
after
complete
restoration .
The picnic was potluck
style.
in the afternoon after
enjoying the Steam Engine, a
1909 Stone burr grist miU was
used to grind com mear,
whole wheat flour, and buck·
wheat flour.
Also on display were other
pieces of ma chinery that was
restored by Ted Harder.
Those going from Ewington
were Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
Harder and Jeffrey, Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Harder and
Kathryn Evans. From Vinton
were Mrs. Phyllis Mulholand,
son Anthony an d Donna

Dewitt from Bidwell. Phyllis'
other son Rick McClaskey
was also able to be at the
picni c from Whet ston e
Center, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Cletus Harder. Todd,
Robin and Karl Edward and
friend, Rick George from
Rutland . There were 130
registered guests at the
picnic.

HOME AGAIN
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, J r. have
returnt'&lt;l from a visit at Lake
Ua, Iii. with their son a~d
da u~hter-in -law, Mr. and
Mrs . Joe Gilmore and
dau~hter, Shannan . While
U1ere they sa w the ir grand·
daughter in her first dance
redtal at the Ubertyville
High School. They also went
to Walworth , Wisc.' to see the
new farm home of their son
and his family .

NEW YORK (UPI) - On
May 19, 1978, United .Press
International carried an item
in its Peopletaik colum n
conc erning the financial
relationship between Yasmin
Kahn and her mother Rita
Ha yworth
and
their
inheritance from Aly Kahn.
The UP! item was based on
a story published by the
London Daily Mail on May 1!,
1978. UPf has been advised
that
the
st ory
was
substantiall y inaccurate .
While the London Daily Mail
stands by its story, UP! has
been un able to verify
independently its accuracy.
UP! regrets any embarrassment which its use of the
story ma y have caused Miss
Kahn .
She has declined UPI's
offer to be interviewed on the
subject.

New books
released
Adult books released by the
Gailia Coun ty District
Library on June 22 were :
Fiction
The Man With the
President's Mind, Ted
Albeury ; Copsi castle, Juliet
Astley : Heathcliff, Jeffrey
Caine; Vortex, Jon Cleary ;
Something To Make Us
Happy, Linda Crawford;
Killed in the Ratings, William
L. DeAndrea ; The Cult, Max
Ehrlich ; The Park, Don
Golll; Paint Me a Million,
David L. Goodrich; A Woman
of Independent Means,
Elizabeth F. Hailey; Ail My
Sin s Remembered, Joe
Haldeman; Bl ue in Chicago,
Bette Howland ; Bad Con·
nections, Joyce Johnson; The
Hour Before Midnight , Velda
Johnston ; Fear With out
Children, I rene Kampen ;
Victim of the Aurora,
Thomas Keneaily; The
Valkyrie Encounter, Stephen
Marlowe; Mot her 's Day,
Robert Miner; An Answer in
the Tide, Elisabeth Ogilvie;
Riv er of Light, Brenda
Peterson ; Street of the Five
Moons, Elizabeth Peters ;
The Glitteri ng Prizes ,
Frederic Rapha el; The Paths
of the Sea, Pierre Schoen·
doerffer ; Vemom , Alan
Scholefield: California
Dreemz, Benjamin Stein;
Eve rm ore, Barbara
Steward; Gloryhits, Bob
Stickgoid; A Double Shadow,
Frederick Turner; A Family
Fortune , Jerome Weidman ;
The Blond Baboon, Janwillem van de Wetering .
Non-Fiction
The Builders, Martin
Mayer; How Not to Split Up,
Jane Appleton; Americans,
Desmond Wilcox; Microwave
Cookbook, Better Homes and
Gardens ; How to Remodel
and Enlarge Your Home,
Marie E. Daniels ; Alabama,
a History, Virginia Van der
Veer Hamilton.

�A-.'1- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

ha~e . begun

Superstars

auditing past movies

S:mday Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 25,1978

~

By VERNON SCOTr
HOLLYWOOD (UP! ) The former chief of Columbia
Pictures who embezzled
$60,000 from his company is
to be sentenced this week.
Ilut h.is case is just one in a
huge . Hollywood quagmire
that has many superstars
auditing past movies to see if
they were cheated.
Co lumbia, already besmirched by the admission of
David Begelman thai he had
signed bogus signatures to
company ch'ecks, was jolted
again last week with the
revelation that Audrey
Usner, chief accountant of
the studio 's comm ercial
division , had been charged
with embezzling $275,000
through
phony
travel
operations.
Begelman , 56, was to be
sentenced Wednesday. His
sentence could range from 10
years in prison ID probation.
According to some actors
directors and producers, such
finagling is nickel-and-&lt;lime
stuff compared to the
manipulations of major
studio corporate powers who
may be raking in millions of
dollars that don't rightfully
belong in studio coffers .
Because of the complexity
of moviemaki ng and the
enormous sums of money
involved in production and
profits , there are myriad
opportunities for tricky
ixlokkeeping, skimming and
fme-prmt rip.&lt;&gt;ffs in compli cated contracts.
Th ere are domestic taxes,
foreign l&lt;!xes, print costs,
do uble bills and other
mvolved computations.

At the moment such stars
as Robert R e d f o r d, Steve
McQueen and Sean Connery,
among many, are having past
movies audited for financial
accounting.
The trouble begins when a
superstar signs for a $10
million film, is given a $1
million salary and five
percent of the net profits.
Before the actor sees a dime
of his percentage, the studio
must split its gross profit s
with the distributor and the
theater.
Tacked on to the costs are
overhead operaiing expenses
for filming on the lot ,
including salaries, telephone
bills , transportation,
equipment rental, lega l
charges , publicity and
promotion and a thousand
other items.
When the picture runs its
course and the star hollers for
his share of the net, the studio
produces ledgers showing no
substantive profit was made.
The star screams like an
eagle and hires a certified
public
accountant
to
rummage through the books.
Michael Caine and Connery
have jointly sued Allied
Artists over their pr ofit
participation in "The Man
Who Would Be King " in
which they costarred.
The actors claim the movie
made money and that they
are owed some $218,000.
Allied Artists is suing tbe
actors for $21.5 million for
defamtory remarks they 've
made about the company.
Actors, pvod u ce r s,
directors and even writers
in
profit
involved

HEADQUARTERS FOR

· participation a lmost automatically hire accountants
to protect their interests.
Connery paid $8,000 to have
"The Man Who Would Be
King" aud ited . Steve
McQueen is checking. into
"Papillion ."
Dustin Hoffman, Wildwood
Productions ( Redford ),
newsmen Robert Woodward
and Carl Bernstein, along
with director Alan Pakula
anawrite.r William Goldman
joined in having "AU the
President's Men" audited at
Warner BroS.
Auditing film company
books has become • big
business for Solomon and
Finger, a top CPA fil'm in
Beverly Hills and New York.
Bennett Newman, a
partner in lhe firm, says the
intricacies of financing ,
merchandising, reco rd
albums, paperback nove l

versions and sales to ca ble
and network television of· a
successful fihn increase the
need for auditing movie
ixloks.
"The fact that more actors
and
directors
are
participating increases the
demand for our services,"
Newman said.
Newman
refused
to
speculate whether film
companies purposely divert
profits from participanlll.
But
Earl
Owensby,
president of EO Corp'., the
largest motion picture studio
in the United States outside
Hollyw ood, · says maj or
studios syphon off millions.
"BY the lime they get
through with below-the~ine
a nd above-the-line
bookkeeping, somebody is
taking a couple of million and
going home with it." ••id

hit movie to television.
"Let's say 'Film A' earned
$100 million and is sold to a
network,'' the producer sa id.
"It is part of a package with
Driver/' ~~ wolbnan ' ' and the 'Film B' and 'Fihn C' both of
like - Owensby said, "Make which were box offi ce flops.
a picture in Hollywood and
"The network pays the
you're charged 25 percent of Studio $2 million for all three.
the budget for overhead for Ilut the studio puts 11.5
openers.
million on the books as
"I made my first picture, payment for 'Film B' and
'Challenge,' for Cinemation. 'Film C' which have no profit
They had a small art film participants. The producer or
titled "Challenge to be Free." actor with a percentage in
They took the money my 'Film A' doesn 't get a dime!' '
picture made and credited it
Another indu s tr y
to tbeir own picture. It cost spokesman said, "There are
me $400,000. But there was no uncounted ways a studio can
point in filing
suit. steal from a producer with ~
into percentage of the profits.
Cinemation went
bankruptcy."
"Assume a picture goes out
One
irate
producer with high expectations and an
ex plained how studios advance booking of $18
commonly steal from profit million. The exhibitors are
participants through sale of a soaked a · big percentage to

March on atom.ic plant site
By RON AMAADON
SEABROOK,N.H. (UPI )Ant i-nu clear protesters
trying "education" instead of
civil disobedience Saturday
marched by the hundreds
onto the Seabrook atomic
power plant site where they
planned a three-day camp-in,
rally and energy fair.
They sang "We Sha ll Overcome" and carried ecology
flags and signs readin g
"nukes are not healthy for
children or other living
things ."
An occupation of the $2.3
billion SeabrOilk construction

site last year, with a pledge to
remain
until
for cibly
removed, led to 1,414 arrests
on criminal trespass charges.
This year the organizing
Clamshell AUiance agreed to
a lega l demonstration
confined to an 18-acre section
of the 715-acre seacoast site
in hopes of attracting
supporters scared off by· the
threat of arrest.
Clamshell spokesmen said
they expec ted 3,000-4,000
demonstrators would be on
the site by late afternoon .
Clam s he ll spo kesma n

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Owensby, whose studios are
located iri Shelby, N.C.
A se lf-made millionaire
and pr oducer of nine
exploitation films - "Death

-

Harvey Wasserman of
Montague, Mass., said last
year members made their
point about stopping nuclear
power with arrests. "This
year we're doing it with
education," he said.
Demonstrators invited the
public to an energy fair and
rally with name en tertainers
Sunday .
Some 200 demonstrators
arrived at the start of the
week to go door-to-door in the
power plant's neighborhood,
discussing their fears the
plant could release deadly
radiation and that its cooling
system would harm marine
by Gill Fox life offshore.
Dozens of sailboats today
formed an offshore picket
line of the rig that is drilling
undersea tunnels to transport
ocean water used to cool the
reactor. The tunnels will
return water to the ocean bed
39 degrees warmer than its
original temperature.
About 800 demonstrators
cut a ribbon on a rutted dirt
access road at 9:50a .m. and
marched onto the 18-acre

demonstration site loaned by
the Public Service Co. of New
Hampshil'e, lead company in
the New England consortium
building the 2,300-megawatt
plant.
They were greeted by the
smell of rotting garbage (the
site once was a dwnp), which
overpowered tbeir own
strong aroma of suntan lotion .
and insect repellent.
Attorney General Thomas
Rath, who negotiated the
agreement for a legal demonstration , said 100 to 200 police
would be on hand, and "a
good deal more " would be out
of sight but availa ble if
needed. Predicting no
trouble, he squinted at the
bright sun and said, "It
appears as !hough things
should go as well as the
weather. ''
Adjutant General John
Blatsossaid !,OOOmembers of
the National Guard were on
drill duty this weekend
around New Ham~hire and
would be available if needed.
He said 400 of them were in
armories near Seabrook.

show it The exhibitor gets 10
percent of the profits, the
studio 90 percent.
"Then the picture bombs,
costing the exhibitors plenty.
The studios don 'I want to
alienate the theater owners.
So they make up for it on a
profitable
film
by
cooperative advertising and
sweetening the percentage
break from 20-.'10 percent to
3().70 percent.
"In reality the hit picture
should go for 11}-90 so the
profit participation has been
cut by 20 percent which
doesn 't show on the books."
The phrase commonly used
for hanky'-pank y in the
motion picture industry is
"Chinese bookkeeping" - a
simple means for preventing
stars,
directors
and
producers from collectin g
their share of the profits.
II would seem that no
studio is beyond the pale
except one, Disney Studios.
The studios have batteries
of attorneys and crackerjack
accountants working their
side of the disputes. Often
studio claims of expenses,
costs, taxes and profit and
loss
statements
are

legitimate.
. ·
But more often than not it
pays for the stars to follow
!hell' audits with law suits.
Natalie Wood collected a sixfigure settlement for her
percentage of "Bob and Carol
and· Ted and Alice."
Ryan O'Neal won a fortune
in a dispute over the profits of

"What's Up Doc?"
Cary Grant won a
settlement from Columbia
after suing !he studio for
seiling his old films ~ TV
below their genuine value.
Dean Martin went to court
for his share of "Airport" and
Universal paid up.
Director WiUiam Freidkin
settled his "Exorcist" suit for
an undisclosed six-figure
amount.
William Peter , Blatty,
author and screenwriter of
"The Exorcist." claimed
Warner Bros. owed him $1.5
million for " improperly
charged expenses."
One studio spokesman, who
asked not to be identified,
said, "It's ali a matter of
interpreting contracts. In any
case, it 's the lawyers who
make the most of tlle money
in these matters."

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Seeing

DERIFIELD JEWELRY

Is
Believing

417 Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Oh io
" Across from the Colony Theater"

"All you need is some lresh air. Put a new filter
in your air conditioner!"

One of the
Finest Homes

Catherine Benet
· Barbara lson and David Thomas
PLANS TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Donald !son of Milford,
Ohio, announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of
!hell' daughter, Barbara Jean , to David Wendell Thomas, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell B. Thomas, Gallipolis. The bride~lect
is attending Ohio State University and wiU graduate in August.
Her fiance is a graduate of Gallia Academy and was graduated
from Ohio State University in 1977. He is presently employed
by lbe Ohio Department of Conunerce, Division of Banks.
Wedding vows will be exchanged October 14, 2:30p.m. at the
Immanuel Baptist Olureh in Columbus, with the Rev. Alvis
Pollard officiating . The gracious custom of open church will be
observed with a ''eception immediately following the
ceremony.

Forum to end first series
GALUPOUS - The final
in the first series of Mental
Health Forums presented by
the Gallia -·Jackson • Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center will be held at the
Gallia facility on Tuesday,
Jun e 27, 1978, in the
Multipurpose Room.
The series will concl ude
with a presentation of
.. Punch and Judy" by a
puppet troupe from Jackson
County under the leadership
of four area agencies .
Leaders for the troupe and
props and stage for the
preeentollona are provided
by the Jackson Co unty 4-H
Cl ub, Jackson County Arts
Co un ci l, Ja ckson City
Libra(y and the Ment al
Health Cent er . The program
will be appropriate for both
children and adults.
There will be a light luncheon served at the cost of $1
per person beginning at 12
noon . The actual presentation
of the program will begin at
12:1&gt; p.m. and conclude at I
p.m. so that members of the
community may enjoy the
luncheon and program on
their lunch hour. If you do not
wish to participate in the
luncheon, you may bring your

own lunch. No reservations
are necessa ry .
All interested adults and
children in the community
are cordially invited to at·
tend .

Vacation Bible School
GALLIPOLIS CHRISTIAN CHURCH
JUNE 26-30

~

6:30-8:30 p.m.

NURSERY THROUGH ADULT
EVERYONE WARMLY WELCOMED

FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 446·9553 OR 245-5064
Christ Ce flterell
For Christ Centered Living

Large el.egant hom~ ju~t one mile south of downtown Gallipolis
overlookmg the Oh1o River, situated on a Imost three acres of
beautiful trees, decorative rocks, and a fish pond. Home consists
of four bedrooms, 21!2 baths, two wood-burning fireplaces formal
li~ing ro~'!'' ~ining room, large cherry paneled den, and' central
a!r condthonmg. Located on the grounds is a 17X35 in-ground
swimming pool with bath house and refreshment area. To add to
all of this, a panoramic view of the Ohio River from the Silver
Bridge to Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va. This is truly one of the finest
homes in the area. First time offered for sale. Upper price
bracket.
Located at 140 Garfield Heights. For further information contact
Doc Smith, 446-2840 or 446-2282.

Daleanna Little
TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Dale Little, Route 2,
Pomeroy are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Daleanna Little, to
Rick McKnight, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McKnight ,
Pomeroy . Miss Little is a student at Meigs High School.
Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of Meigs High School and is
employed at Gall ipolis Parts Warehouse. The open church
wedding will be an event of Jul y 16 at2:30 p.m. at the Zion
Church of Ch rist, Rutland . John McArthur will perform
the double ring ceremony followmg a half hour of music
scheduled to beg in at 2 p.m. A reception will foll ow in the
church social room .

Jeannie Boggs and Lester Jeffers
WILL WED - Mr. and Mrs. Lewis A. Boggs of
Athens, Route 5, are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter . Jeannie , to Lester
.Jeffers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene L. Jeffers , Albany,
Route 2. The bride-elect is a 1977 graduate of Alexander
High School and is presently employed as a clerk at Ohio
Uni versity. Her fiance , a 1978 graduate of Ale.ander High
School, is presently employed with his father and grand·
father on their poultry and dairy farm near Albany. An
open chu rch wedding is planned for July 29, at 2 p.m. at
the Christ the King Catholic Church on Mill St. in Athens.

Story
proves
false

Ladies Aid meets
ADDISON - The Addison
Ladies Aid was called to
order by secretary, Lou
Grubb, In the absence of
president, Jewell Russell.
· The fil'st order of business
was the election of Trilba
Patterson as president pro·
tern for the evening.
The secretary and treasury
reports were read and ac·
cepted by motion . Thirteen
members answered roll ca ll
and seven gues ts were
present . Eleven visits to the
sick and shut-ins were made
with 18 get-well ca rds and
nine sympat~y cards sent.
A baby shower was plann ed
for the July meeting for Mrs.
Richard Barcus. Friends

wishing to attend may do so.
Door prize winners for the
evening were Lou Grubb,
Goldie Warren, Ada Harding,
Vema Neal, Sherri Grubb,
Patti Ellis, Velva casey,
t;mma Johnson and Mary
Barcus. ·
Trllba Patterson was the
program director for the
meeting . The
program
consist ed
of
prayer
and a Bible card game.
Winning a prize for giving the
most correct answers was
Ada Hardin g.
Refreshments were served
by Vel va Casey , Donna
Davis, Lou Grubb and Verna
Neal.

Wedding plans announ.ced
MIDDLEPORT-The open
church wedding or MisS
Sherry Denise Kin g,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William King, and Hitk
Meckstroth, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm Meckstroth, Cincinnati, will be held on Satur·
day, Jul y I, at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, at
2:30p.m.
Music will be presented by
Mrs. Margaret Blaetlnar,
orga nist, a half hour
preceding the ceremony. The
Rev. Fr. Paul Welton will
perform the double ring
ceremon y with the bride to
sing the "Lord's Prayer" ac·
companied by her brother,
Kevin, on the organ .
Guests will be rel!istered by

Carol Meckstroth, Cinci nnati ,
sister o! the prospective
groom.
The bride's attendanu; w!lt
oo Mrs. Kathy Johnson , Middleport, matron uf honor ;
Mrs. Debbie Fihlaw, Long
Bottom, Mrs. Bonnie Bullach ,
Dayton, Mrs. Linda Mason,
East Canton , bridesmaids ,
and Heather Finalaw, Long
Bottom, flower ~ irl.
Den nis Clepper of Cincinnati will be the best man for
the groom, with Terry
Shepherd, Huntington, Dan
Meckstroth, Cincinnati, and
fke Shamblin, Wheeling, W.
Va. as the ushers. Rick Brennan, Cincinnati , will be the
ring bearer.
Serving at the reception
LINDA STEWART
will
be Mrs. Bessie King.
FINISHES STUDIES Mrs.
Farie Cole , Mrs .
Linda Stewart graduated
Delores
Bailey, and Mrs.
Sunday, June II, from
Gertrude
Finiaw. A reception
Hoelting Technical College
GALUPOUS - Mr. and will be held at the home of the
with an auodale degree In
Mrs. Lawrence McQuaid Sr. bride immediately following
registered nursing. She
of 88 Pine St. held their the ceremony.
finished with high honors
famlly reunion and 53rd
and a lOlBI average of U , anniversary at Black Lick
she It now walling to take
Park in Reynoldsburg, Ohio.
her stale boards In July.
Those attendlng were Mr.
Mlsa Stewart Is lbe
NAME NOTED
and Mrs. L. W. McQuaid Jr.
daughter of Mn. Leona
POMEROY-Ryan Lemley
of Elyria, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Stewal'(, Pomeroy.
James McQuaid , IIndy , was ringbearer at the wed·
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs. ding of Julia Ann Hutchison
Homer McQuaid, Michel, and Andrew B. Vaughan,
Jamie, Gallipolis; Mr and Sept. 24 at the Pomeroy
Mrs. Gene McQuaid, Joe, Unilt'&lt;i Methodist Church. He
John
and Mark , Robin, is the nephew of the b de. His
CONTEST SLATED
Lorain;
Luzon McQuaid, name was unintentionally
The Jackson , Ohio Fourth
Leigha,
Amy
and Brandon, omitted from la st Sunday's
of July Celebration will have
Gallipolis;
Mr
. and Mrs. account of the wedding.
an Old Time Fiddlers and
Rob
ert
Strait
(Mary
Banjo , Picking Contest as a
McQuaid),
Ellen
of
new feature this year. The
Lithopolis;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earl
best fiddler or banjo picker
( Virginia
wiD receive a $60 prize. The Dennison
David
of
contest wiU be beld on the McQuaid ),
Manpol\'er Park at 3 p.m. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
GET LICENSES
July 4th In Jackson. There is Lawrence McQuaid III ,
POMEROY - Marriage
no entry fee but fiddlers and , Lawrence IV and Erin, Mr. licenses were issued to
blnjo players are asked to and Mrs. James McQuaid, Wayne D. Wetzel, 20, Cil'·
tend in a letter to Hargas Kim, Kelly and Cristy, clevllle, and Tamara F .
McKenzie, 283 Main St ., L&lt;Jrain; Mr. and Mrs. Blake, 19, Pomeroy ; Kenneth
Jacbon, Ohio giving their Lawrence McQuaid, Sr., Allen Roush, 18, Rt . 4,
name and inllrumenl lfiey HarTy, Gallipolis. Two guests Pomeroy, and Lisa Ann
were Lori Riley and Mickey Prater, 18, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
will play. ,,
Smurr.
'

Reunion held

in the Area!

ENGAGED - Chief Warrant Officer 2 (USMC) and
Mrs. William D. Adkins, 3507 Chosin Circle, Jacksonville,
North Carolina, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Catherine Cora Benet, to J ohn Wilson Braley ,
son of Mr . and Mrs. William H. Braley, 5302 West Pea
Ridge Road, Huntington, West Virginia. The couple will
be married in an open church ceremony on September 8 at
the Pea Ridge l!nited Methodist Church, Huntington ,
West Virginia , at seven-thirty in the evening. Rev . 0. A.
Judd, uncle of the bride elect , and Rev. John Grandstaff
will officiate. Miss Benet is a 1973 gra duate of Quantico
High School, Marine Corps Base, Quantico, Virginia. She
was graduated cum laude from Rio Grande College, Rio
Grande, Ohio in 1977 with a BS in communications. She
was a member of Phi Kappa Delta Speech Fraternity and
Zeta Theta Chi Social Sorority. She was listed in Who's
Who In Poetry in American Colleges and Uni versities and
Who's Who Among Students in American Colleges and
Universities. She is a member of .the Gailia County
Citizens for Mental Retardation Committee and is
employed by the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. as the society
editor for the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Sunday TimesSentinel. Mr. Braley is a 1968 graduate of Barboursville
High School and a 1975 graduate of Marshall University,
Huntington, West Virginia, with a BSCE degree In civi l
engineering. He is employed by the West Virginia Depart·
ment of Highways as the assistant bridge engineer for
district two.

•I

Summer Theater to open season
with 'Love and Other Nonsense'
ATHENS - The Ohio
Valley Summ er Theater
(OVST ) will open its 1978
season with the musical
revue, "Love and Other
Nonsense,' ' which will be
offered as part of ·a dinner •
theater combination at the
OhiQ University Inn on
Richland Aven ue in Athens.
The music for this unique
revue looks at love in all its
aspects. It ranges from
Opera to Countr y and
·Western, and includes
Broadway show tunes and
"pep" numbers. The show is
fun for all ages as it moves
through musical renditions
not on ly of the warmth and
tenderness of love, but its
humor and complexities. The
production will run June 29 ,
30; July I , 2, 5-9, and 12-16.
The cast of " Love and
Other Nonse nse" includ es
severa l singers who are
familiar to OVST audiences
from previous years. Gay
Dalzell's past Ohio University and OVST credits include
roles in "Sing Out Sweet
Land ,'' " Jesus Christ
Superstar," " Madame ·
Butterfly,'' and last summer's production of " I Do! I
Do!" While touring with The
Appalachian Green Pa rk
Project she met her husband ,
Bruce. The couple will be
singing together again this
summer, doing feature
numbers in " Love, and Other
APPLY FOR LICENSE
Two ·coupl es applied for
marriage license in Galiia
Co unty Probate Court
Wednesday.
Applying were Robert E.
Armstrong, 35, Crown City.
lineman, and Patty J .
Howard, 29 , Gallipolis, activity therapy specia list .
Also applying on Wedn~sday were Alan Ladd
Kuhn, 21, Northup, meat
packer, and Cynde Rae Pope,
18, Gallipolis, cashier.
Applying on Thursday were
William R. Shaw, 20,
. Gallipolis, Holzer Laundry
employee and Debra Day
Smith, 18, Bidwell, Holzer
laundry employee .
MATRONS TO MEET
Past Matrons of Pomeroy
Chapter O.E.S. will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. J . W. McMurray , Mason .

Nonsense."
Emily Vacolas will be
making her fo urth ap·
pea ranee for OVST thi s
summer. She sa ng in the
musical revue , " Rhythm ,
Rhyme, and Romance,'' last
summer, the swnmer before
that she sang in "Gershwin
Tonight" and five sununers
ago she played Aut Nettie in
the OVST production of
"CarouseL "

Jim Bonkowski, who will be
a senior vo ice student in the
Ohio University Music
Department next year, was a

cast member in the OVST
shows ·'Gershwin Tonight,"
and •·or Thee I Sing ." He has
also appeared in many
Universi ty dramatic and
operatic performances in·
eludi ng " Madame But·
terfiy," "Showboat, " Amah!
and the Ni ght Visitors," and
"The Marriage of Figaro." In
the singing competition of the
National Assoc iati on of
Teachers of Singing, Jin1 has
placed ei ther second or third
in the state of Ohio for the
past three years.
Dean Bryenton , Matthew

Griffen, Steve VeShancey,
Tony Coleman, Cindi Walker ,
Terri Parsons, and Debbie
Knause round out the cast .
The Inn 's comfortable
surroundings and the easy
atmo sph ere of the OVST
revue allow the audience to
relax and enjoy the show.
For more information
contact the OVST box office
in Kantner Hall from LO a.m .
to 6 p.m. Monday through
Friday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Sunday, or 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
evenings of performance .
(614) 594-!iOIO.

country music is like a
sermon from the Bible
By MARIAN E. McQUIDOY
DES MOINES, Iowa I UP!)
- It's easy to find something
to write a country song about
today, one composer says,
because there are plenty of
stray dogs, unhappy men and
good-looking women running
around .
Billy Porter, 50, said the
problem with the profession
is getting people to actually
kn ow who wrote the song and keeping food on the l&lt;!bie
and a roof over his head.
" lt 's got to be a labor of
love," Porter said. "There
really isn't a whole lot of
money in it - unless you
make it real big. And that
happens so far and few
between.
"Songwriters are starving
In Iowa as they are in
Nashville. I've been working
at the business for upwards of
20 years and now am working
with a pretty big company in
New York, but I'm still
working at the dry cleaners to
make sure f can still eat and
have a place to live.
"I suspect I will do it until !
die - or make enough money
song-writing to live on."
Porte r's lirst published
song wa s 'Honky-Tonk
Waltz.'
When he started, Porter
said, he chose country and
western music because it is
"real."
" It 's about the common
people, what bugs them, what
they like and what hurts
th em:: · Porter said . "And as

lon g as there· are tra ins.
lon ely people, stray dogs
there will be things to write
about. It is truly amazing ."
He said gettin g ideas for
songs is like a minister I&lt;! kin g
his sermon from th e Bible .
"It 's that ea sy. The re is no
way w run out of ideas. It's
kind of scary. You can walk
down the stre&lt;Jt and have
ideas from everyon e you

see," Porter said.
Coun try music itself has
changed , he said.
"It's not good old country
anymore," he said. i•There
are those who are trying to
reach more people . They're
starting to mix il up a little
and put a little middle of the
road stuff in so they can
reach the additional people.
And that's not as good ."

Old time picnic is enjoyed
COLUMBUS - Sun day ,
June ll , Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Harder and Ginii-; "'Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Harder, T. J. and
Stephanie and Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Reiser and daughter
held a Steam-up picnic in
Columbus. This was the first
steaming of .Ted Harder 's,
1915 HP Huber Engine No.
10707
after
complete
restoration .
The picnic was potluck
style.
in the afternoon after
enjoying the Steam Engine, a
1909 Stone burr grist miU was
used to grind com mear,
whole wheat flour, and buck·
wheat flour.
Also on display were other
pieces of ma chinery that was
restored by Ted Harder.
Those going from Ewington
were Mr. and Mrs. Bradley
Harder and Jeffrey, Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Harder and
Kathryn Evans. From Vinton
were Mrs. Phyllis Mulholand,
son Anthony an d Donna

Dewitt from Bidwell. Phyllis'
other son Rick McClaskey
was also able to be at the
picni c from Whet ston e
Center, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Cletus Harder. Todd,
Robin and Karl Edward and
friend, Rick George from
Rutland . There were 130
registered guests at the
picnic.

HOME AGAIN
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs.
Elza Gilmore, J r. have
returnt'&lt;l from a visit at Lake
Ua, Iii. with their son a~d
da u~hter-in -law, Mr. and
Mrs . Joe Gilmore and
dau~hter, Shannan . While
U1ere they sa w the ir grand·
daughter in her first dance
redtal at the Ubertyville
High School. They also went
to Walworth , Wisc.' to see the
new farm home of their son
and his family .

NEW YORK (UPI) - On
May 19, 1978, United .Press
International carried an item
in its Peopletaik colum n
conc erning the financial
relationship between Yasmin
Kahn and her mother Rita
Ha yworth
and
their
inheritance from Aly Kahn.
The UP! item was based on
a story published by the
London Daily Mail on May 1!,
1978. UPf has been advised
that
the
st ory
was
substantiall y inaccurate .
While the London Daily Mail
stands by its story, UP! has
been un able to verify
independently its accuracy.
UP! regrets any embarrassment which its use of the
story ma y have caused Miss
Kahn .
She has declined UPI's
offer to be interviewed on the
subject.

New books
released
Adult books released by the
Gailia Coun ty District
Library on June 22 were :
Fiction
The Man With the
President's Mind, Ted
Albeury ; Copsi castle, Juliet
Astley : Heathcliff, Jeffrey
Caine; Vortex, Jon Cleary ;
Something To Make Us
Happy, Linda Crawford;
Killed in the Ratings, William
L. DeAndrea ; The Cult, Max
Ehrlich ; The Park, Don
Golll; Paint Me a Million,
David L. Goodrich; A Woman
of Independent Means,
Elizabeth F. Hailey; Ail My
Sin s Remembered, Joe
Haldeman; Bl ue in Chicago,
Bette Howland ; Bad Con·
nections, Joyce Johnson; The
Hour Before Midnight , Velda
Johnston ; Fear With out
Children, I rene Kampen ;
Victim of the Aurora,
Thomas Keneaily; The
Valkyrie Encounter, Stephen
Marlowe; Mot her 's Day,
Robert Miner; An Answer in
the Tide, Elisabeth Ogilvie;
Riv er of Light, Brenda
Peterson ; Street of the Five
Moons, Elizabeth Peters ;
The Glitteri ng Prizes ,
Frederic Rapha el; The Paths
of the Sea, Pierre Schoen·
doerffer ; Vemom , Alan
Scholefield: California
Dreemz, Benjamin Stein;
Eve rm ore, Barbara
Steward; Gloryhits, Bob
Stickgoid; A Double Shadow,
Frederick Turner; A Family
Fortune , Jerome Weidman ;
The Blond Baboon, Janwillem van de Wetering .
Non-Fiction
The Builders, Martin
Mayer; How Not to Split Up,
Jane Appleton; Americans,
Desmond Wilcox; Microwave
Cookbook, Better Homes and
Gardens ; How to Remodel
and Enlarge Your Home,
Marie E. Daniels ; Alabama,
a History, Virginia Van der
Veer Hamilton.

�8-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 25, 19'18
B-2- The Sundav Times-sentinel, SWJday, JWJe 25, 1978

Bell-Hart vows made

... to welcome Larry Ewing to our staff. Larry is 011e of my
"bestest" friends from years gone by. We were at Rio Grande
togetherfiveyears ago debaters and Larry finally ended up as
one of my journalism teachers. We are very happy to have him
oo our staff and all know he will simply 'S!OP the presses' (pun
intended) with his writing. Welcome to the crazy fourth estate,
Larry.
While plans are being made for the holidays, there was one
group working very hard for a race. The Guiding Hand School
Cubs were in Columbus this weekend to compete in special
olympics. The kids worked and practiced for such a long time
and were so excited about the trip. Gallia County can be proud
of these students.
Book~f-the-week : Total Joy by Marable Morgan. While
nothing like the Total Women this book contains one ol the
greatest secrets of a happy life, accept with grace. Mrs.
Morgan's philosophy makes a lot of sense. If you're a winner
accept with graceful quietness and if you lose or are unhappy
~·"'' .vnur lil• then acceot !hines with a graceful joy. Really it
'"bemg a total person and liking yourself ... something few can

eo.
Quote~f-the-week: Acknowledge Him in all thy ways and
He shall direct thy path. The Bible.

The editorial staff of the Tribune is suffering from the
same lousy summer cold. We are sniffing and hacking in the
same horsey harmony. When will it all end 'I
Well, there was something in the air ... the season of
marriages will continue for a while as an early autumn
wedding is planned. Like Anne Lindbergh, I feel like standing
so very straight when I'm beside him ... he has a nice smile,
the patience of a saint and is simply wonderful ...

SEEKS DIVORCE
Springfield. They have no
GALUPOUS- Juanita R. children.
Filing for dissolution of
Starkey, Gallipolis, filed for
divorce from James R. marriage were Margaret R.
Starkey, GaUWolis, in Gallia Grim, and John 0. Grim. ·
County Comnllrl Pleas Court They were married on March
Friday . The couple was 18, 1947, and ha ve four
married Nov. 14, 1969 in children.

sn••

Sec:oilll n

•

·

just Arrived-

~·

More Great
Sun Dresses

---

POLYESTER KNITS
TWO GROUPS

60"
60"

REG. TO 16.49 YD.

REG. TO
1
4.99 YD.

$28.8YD.

POLYESTER GABARDINE
Sura lme Plus Stretch.
54" · 60". Lots of Colors.

25%

RACINE-In a candlelight
t"eremony at the Letart Falls
United Methodist Church on
April29at6:30 m the evening,
Lorna Dawn Bell and Brut-e
Edward Hart exchanged
wedding vows.
.
The bride is the daughter of
Don and Lois Bell, Racine,
and the groom is the son of
Rubert and Lillie Hart,
Racine. The double ring
t"eremony was performed by
the Rev. Steven Wilson and
the Rev. David Harris. Music
was presented by lillian
Hayman, pianist, with selections including "Time In a
Bottle", "If", "My Sweet
Lady" and classical pie&lt;.-es.
The church altar was
decorated with two sevenbranch candelabra trimmed
with
greenery
and
candlelight ribbons . The
aisles were lined with single
candelabra with the greenery
and ribbon accent. Candles
were also used in the windows
and there was an arrangement of bridal wreath. on the
piano.
The bride was escorted to
the altar by her father. She
wore a gown of quiana with a
chantilly lace bodice accented with seed pearls, a
Queen Anne neckline, and
long filled sleeves featuring
lace cuffs with pearl trim.
The skirt flowed into a chapel
train. The bride's fingertip
veil of illusion with chantilly
and sead pearl motifs fell
from a headpiece covered
with lace and pearls. The
gown was designed by her
mother.
The bride carried a
cascade of gardenias, bridal
pink roses, white hyacinth
blossoms, lily of the valley
and baby's breath with a
touch of aqua fugi pompons,
yellow static, white lilac,
Boston fern and sweetheart
ivy. Her only jewelry was a
silver necklace, gift of the
groom.
Beverly
Cunningham ,
Racine, and Nancy Cross,
Letart Falls, were attendants
for the bride. They were in
gowns of identical design in
aqua and yellow fashioned
with V necklines, long full
sleeves and A-line skirts, with
accent trim in white at the
neckline and cuffs. They carried nosegays of pink
miniature carnations. while
hyacinth blossoms, agua fugi
pompons, white lilac, yellow
static, baby 's brealli and
daisies lied with aqua and
yellow ribbon . Their headrings of flowers matched their
bouquets. The attendants'
gowns were made by the
bride.
Olivia Cunningham was the
flower girl and she wore a
long · peasant style dress of
aqua and yellow floral on a
candlelight background with
a ruffle al the bottom. She
carried a small wicker basket
of flowers similar to those of
the attendants tied with aqpa
and yellow ribbon .
Alan Cunningham, Racine,
was best man and the
groomsman was Brett Hart,
Colwnbus. Joseph Grimm,
Columbus, and Brice Hart,
Racine, were ushers. The
best man and groomsman
wore carnation boutonnieres
in yellow and aqua, the
ushers, pink rose boutonnieres . All of the men were attired in tuxedos or light brown
and while shirts with brown
trim. The groom's bouton·

niere was white hyacinth
blOSl!oms, while lilac and
bilby's breath. The father of
the bride wore white
miniature carnations.
For the couple's wedding,
Mrs. Bell wore a mint green
gown of quiana with a V
neckline and long sleeves. IL
tied in front at the waist and
fell into soft · gathers. She
wore white accessories and a
eorsage of while gardenia
and while hyacinth blossoms.
Mrs. Hart was in a peach
jacket dress ensemble with
white act.-essories and she
also had a corsage of while
gardenia and while hyacinth
blossoms.
. A reception honoring the
couple was held at the Letart
Faiis Community Building.
Hostesses were Crestlyn Hill,
Racine; Nacine Euler, Pinch,
W. Va.; Linda Jewel, Letart,
W. Va.; Betty Morris and
Beverly Wickline, Letart
Falls. Guests were registered
by Linda Turley, Racine, and
Beth Ann Hart distributed the
wedding programs and the
rice bags.
The refreshment table
featured a four tiered cake
with candlelight frosting
trimmed in white and
decorated with clusters of
flowers to match the bride's
bouquet. The cake was top.
ped with white wedding bells
while the third tier held a
small aqua heart with wedding rings. A small arrangement of flowers in a silver
bowl was on the second tier.
Used to either side of the cake
were double silver
Ca ndelabra with ar rangements of aqua camatiuns,fugipompons,
and
yellow daisy pompons.
Crystal bud vases of aqua,
pink and yellow spring

flowers wene used on the
guest tables along with silver
candle holders.
Following the reception the
bride changed into a white
gauze dress and wore a
gardenia corsage. They
honeymooned in Florida .
Bruce and Lorna Hart now
neside at Sharon Woods, 1922
Grande Rue Circle, Columbus.
The bride is a graduate of
Southern High School and
Hixon's School of Floral
Design and attended Ohio
Slate University. She is ·
employed al Maple Lee
Flowers as a floral designer.
Mr. Hart graduated from
Southern and Ohio Stale
University with a bachelor o
of science in computer
science. He is employed at
the Ohio Slate University
Center fur Human Resources
Research, and is affiliated
with the ACMC Association
for Computing Machinery
and the Ohio Slate University
Astronomy Club.
Out-of-town guesta at the
wedding and reception were
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Back, ColMr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart
umbus; Cecil Hill, Winfield,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Hayman and family, Laurel,
Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hayman and family, Westerville; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Grinun, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Grimm, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Euler and Lori,
Pinch, W. Va.; Robert
Grinun, Ms. Gail Harrison,
Ms. Laurie Rickman, Larry
Wilcoxen, Colwnbus; and
Barbara Fisher. Bridgeport.
GALUPOUS - Exhibit for the month of June 19'18 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart
"Multi-Faceted
Perceptions," Pedro L. and Laszlo 'a. Koeentertained with a rehearsal
dinner for the wedding party Kro~pecher, Artists and Architects of Athens, Ohio. Oils,
at the Meigs IM. A buffet lun- acrylics, watercolors, etchings,.silk screen and graphics.
Gallery Hours - Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. until 5
cheon was held at the bride's
p.m.:
Tuesdays and Thursdays,10a.m. untU 3 p.m.
home.
. June 20 - Entr:,; and authorization forms for the July 4
Rtver Recreation Festival Exhibit in the City Park due Jan
Thaler and Sue Beverly, ca&lt;hairwomen. 7:30p.m.- F.A.C .
Interdepartmental Meeting. 9 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees
Meeting, Riverby .
July 4 - II a.m.-45 p.m. - River Recreation Festival
Exhibit, Gallipolis City Park.

OFF

REG. 13.98 YD. TO 15.49 YD.

SINGER SEWING SALE
NBN, USED, DEMO, CLEARANCE
EXCELlENT SELECTION
FANTASTIC SAVINGS

French City Fabric Shoppe
Gallipolis,

SinOtr ApprOYtd Dtlllr
.t.\on .· FrL 9:l0 . 1:00 p.m.
TiltS ·· Wtd .-Thurs .· Sit. f : JO • S: N p.m .

o.

By JOHN GOODBODY
PARIS (UP! ) - Monaco's
Princess Caroline and her
fiance, Parisian man-about town Philippe JWJot, dined on
champagne and baby lobster
at a Maxim's party thrown by
friends from Texas and
danced WJtil the early hours
today.
The gala was the climax of
their hectic Paris social
roWJd marking the end of the
22-year~ld princess's final
exams in philosophy and
child psychology and the
start of celebrations for her
wedding in Monte Carlo next
week.
Paris' most famous
restaurant was the setting for
the party hosted by Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Wyatt of Houston,
longtune friends of Monaco's
Princess Grace and Printe
Rainier. Caroline and
Philippe were among 130
guests.
The four-course dinner
began with boiled baby
lobster with butter sauce,
followed by sauteed duckling
with fresh asparagus. After
. ~a lad and cheese there was a
special Maxim 's Iced rasp-

I

Keesee-Ashley wedding
plans are announced
MIDDLEPORT--Plans
have been completed for the
open church wedding of Wanda Keesee, ds ughter of the
Rev. and Mrs. James Keesee,
539 Bryant ·Place, Middleport, to Dwight Ashley,
son of Roger Ashley, Guernsey County, and Mrs. Josie
Callahan, Coshocton.
The wedding will be an
event of Saturday, July I, a!
the Christian Baptist Church
which is located on the Route
7 by-pass near the intersection of Route 7 and Union
Ave., Pomeroy. The father of
the bride will perfunn the
ceremony a\2 :31l p.m. following a program of music by
Mrs. Ethel Fry, Massilon,
pianist, and Mark Trammell,
Alliance, vocalist to begin at 2
p.m.
The bride-elect will be
escorted lu the altar by her
grandfather, Raymond
Keesee, Hysell Run,
Pomeroy.
Maid of honor for the brideelect will be her twin sister,
Verenia, and the bridesmaids
will be Angela Keesee, also a
sister, Carol Herstine, Canton , and Kim Prall, Rittman .
Kathy Bradford of West
l..llfayelte, will be the flower
girl.
Ruger Ashley of Coshocton
will serve as best man for his
brother and the ushers will be

Clyde Trarrunell, Alliance ;
Mike Wexler, Massilon, and
Gary Bradford, West
Lafayelle. Steven Slaton,
Galion will be the ring
bearer. Guests will be
registered by Carol Bradford,
West Lafayette.
,
A reception will be held immediately following the
ceremony at the church. Linda Bradford, West Lafayette,
will be a hostess.

Honor Roll
POMEROY - Principal
John Lisle has aMounced the
final six weeks honor roll at
the Salisbury Elementary
School. Making a grade of
"B" or above in all their
subjects to be listed on the •
roll were :
First Grade - Mary
Butcher, Melodi Carl, Traci
Casto, Marc Corsi, Decker

,------··-·1·
1
I

Social

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

1

1

~endar 1

MONDAY
BIBLE SCHOOL Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
Monday through Friday 9 to
11 :30 a.m. dally. Closing
program July 2, 7:30p.m.
MONDAY
BEND 0' THE RIVER
Garden Club, 7:30 Munday
night at the home of Mrs. Ber.nice Carpenter. Members to
take their favorite arrangements and the program
will include a discussion of
the arrangements.
BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
through Friday at St. Paul
United Methodist Church,

Princess Caroline begins
her wedding celebrations

BUY, SAVE AND SEW
Suraline. Suralme Plus,

r--.-.-·---

berry souffle.
11ut for the moment at
The wines w~re magnums lealll, her mind is on festivity
of Moet and Chandan rather than phllo110phy.
Champagne (1971), and a red
Chateau Leuville Pay-Fere
(1971 ). Then the guests
danced to three orchestraa.
The party was just one of
about a half · dozen
celebrations In French before
the wedding. These included
a garden party by night club
king Jean Castel and another,
younger bash hosted by
Junot's friend and witness for
the wedding.
The bridal couple kept their
schedule open today for last·
minute arrangements before
flying to Monaco Saturday.
Though Caroline's wedding
is not the 11111aah spectacular
her parenta' was 22 years
ago, the strain has been
enough to make the princeas
put off one of her main
written exam1 untU October.
Her mother says that,
although she would be
delighted to become a
grandmother, "I hope
Caroline will not experience
motherhood immediately.
She would, In fact;" like ~ •
continue her sturH~::i • btt."

Tuppers Plains, 10 until noon
daily. Closing program July
I, 7:30 p.m.
BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. daily
at Chester Grade School.
BIBLE SCHOOL at
Gallipolis Christian Church
Monday through Friday 6:30
to 8: 3ll p.m. each evening.
BIBLE SCHOOL at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
Monday through Friday 9 to
ll::lll a.m. dally. Program on
Sunday, July 2, at 7 p.m.
TIJESDAY
PAST MATRONS OF
Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.
will meet at the home of Mrs.
Thelma McMurray, Mason.
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

Cullums, Patricia Davis ,
Matthew Gibbs, William
Gilkey, Nick King, JeMifer
Reed , Joan Simpson, Jody
Taylor, Michelle Taylor ,
Aaron Williams, Wesley
Yoq.
Second Grade - Aliaon
Jones , Charlotte Hart,
Rachel Stone, Artie HuMel,
Audra Houdashelt, Tamra
Vance, Dalllly Hall, Kevin
Donald King, Kevin Victor
King , Sue Ellen Fry, Angela
Sloan, ShaMan Slavin, David
Beagle, William Brothers,
Michael Meadows, Timothy
Jeffers, Michele Folmer.
Third Grade - April Clark,
Heather Cullum s, Todd
Cullums, Phillip King,
Brenda Sinclair.
Fourth Grade - Rose
Barnhouse, Jodi Harrison,
Rodney Harrison, Barbara
Hatfield , Darren Hayes,
Kevin Mowery, Tim Sloan,
Anita Smith, David Warth.
Fifth Grade - Eddie Dill,
Ruth Ann Fry, Cynthia
Hazelton, Timmy LeMaster,
Teresa Pratt, Denise Stegall,
Jackie Welker, Sandy Hoyt.
Sixth Grade - Mike
KeMedy, Angie Pratt, Paula
Swindell.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m.-l p.m., Monday
through Friday .
Monday, June 26 - Square
Dancing, 12: »3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 27 Knitting and Corchetlng
Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon;
Chorus, 12:3G-2 p.m.
Wednesday, June 28 Social Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.;
Games, !2:3G-2 p.m.
Thursday, June 29 · Health Scneen!ng Clinic at
Center, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; Old
Man's Cave Trip, leave
center at 8:30 a.m.
Friday, June 3ll - Art
Class, 10 a.m .-12 noon ;
Knitting and . Crocheting
·Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon;
Bowling, H p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program,
12 noon to 12:45 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese • ham bits, spinach hard cooked egg slice, orange
and grapefruit sections,
pineapple upside down cake,
cornbread, butter, milk.
Tueaday - Baked pork
chop, sweet potatoes, brussel
sprouts, applesauce, bread,
butter, milk.
Wednesday - Johnny
Marzetti (beef, tomatoes and
macaroni), green beans,
cottage cheese salad - chives
chopped, caMed peaches whipped cream, roll, butter,
milk.
Thursday - Hamburg
"deluxe" on bun, pickled beet'
and cheese sticks, peas,
sherbet, milk.
Friday - Turkey roll Gravy, mashed potatoes,
broccoli · cheese sauce,
lemon pudding, bread,
butter, milk.
Coffee, tea, buttermilk,
skim mUk and juice served
dally.
Please register the day
before you plan to eat.

GALUPOLIS - Terri Ann
Campbell, former student at
Gallia Academy High School
and now a resident of Birmingham, Alabama, recently
graduated as a professional
model from the Barbizon
· School of Modeling of New
York.
A Junior at McAdory High
School in Birmingham, Terri
is a member of the Alabama
State Youth Choir; chosen as
one of 42 vocalists out of 350
young men and women ·
competing from the .entire
state of Alabama. She is now
on tour with the group
through Frlodia, Georgia,
Louisiana and Alabama.
In addition she is active as
a vocalist in the Joint Heirs, a
six member group at her
church, the First Assembly of
God, and also a soloist in the
church.
This past year she was a
participant in the Miss
McAdory Pageant for her
high school and was a finalist
in the competition, becoming
a member of the Queen's
Court.
Terry is the greatgranddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John C. Campbell of the

PORTLAND - Telephone
843-3364 . COAD · Senior
Nutrition Weekly Menu for ,
the Satellite Site at the
Reorganized Church of Jesua
Christ of the Latter Day
Saints, Old Town Flats, is
llimllar to the above menu.
Please call in your reser- .
valion.

Family

~ ~Heroes,''

to

RIO GRANDE'-

is

sing

big dneam is to rejoin his
three war buddies - Kenny,
Adcock and Monroe in
Eureka, California, to start a
worm fann.
The worms would eat
garbage which in tum would
tum into a million dollar
sa nitation engineering
project. The idea was born
between bullits and watching
human life decay in the mist
of suffering. Men would be
driven to grasping dreams to
maintain a reality. For the
critics who .would scoff at
such an idea, well to borrow a.
line from Harrison Ford, 'you
would have had to have been
there.'
Dunn escapes from· a New
York VA hospital and hops a
bus headed for Sedalia,
Missouri. On the way he
meets Ca~l Bell who is
ruMingoulon her wedding .to
a never seen Joel. Boy meets
girl and by Ohio the two are
falling in love. Their
romantic involvement is
handled with a gentle
realism.
Carol and Jack make it to
Sedalia to find Kenny a mere
reflection of the man he used
to be. Ford's performance is
the essence of what happened
to many vets. Living alone
with no desire for female
company , he drowns out his
life with beer, racing and
shooting a rifle "borrowed"
from the war. Kenny, like so

many others, has drifted into
a state of mere existence. Not
understanding the political or
moral issue of the war, he
only remembers the number
of men blown apart in front of
him. For him, it is far too
much to think about. He
declines going to New Mexico
to find Adcock with a half
promise of making il ...
sometime.
The search for ' Adcock
proves fruitless. He went out
for a beer·and his wife (Oliva
Cole of Roots fame) hasn't
seen him since. She is left to
cope with the ugly bourgeois
house in the suburbs dream.
Cole handles the problem
with loving kindness when
she states, "I used to think it
was ine but not any more ... "
Suddenly Carol and Jack
are on their way to Eureka to
find Monroe. Throughout the
movie he has been the
mystery figure and the
staying force for Dunn,
Kenny and Adcock. Monroe,
the golden boy, the leader,
the one they all looked up to,
Monroe guides them to
Vietnam and the effect of his
life is still with them.
Arriving at the Monroe
home is like a scene that will
never
happen .
Dunn
questions Monroe's parents
about his comings and
goings, only to go berserk
when they informed him that
Monr{)e died in Vietnam

saving the lives of his friends .
Dunn explodes out of the
house, dodging imagery
bullets, tanks and human
infernos. Dunn comes to grip
with reality as he recalls
Monroe saving his life and
dying as a result of it. For
DuM, Vietnam is finally
reckoned with.
While the artistic value of
the film might open itself for
argument, the ponit is that
America is finally facing her
greatest mistake. During the
height of Vietnam one movie
was made about the war,
"The Green Berets :" a John

Wayne epic that everyone
would like to forget. Today, it
is a different story. Movie
goers are treated to good
films about the war such as
Jane Fonda, Jon Voight and
Bruce Dern in " Coming
Home." Francis Ford Cop.
pola 's miltimillion dollar epic
called " Apocalypse Now''
starring among others,
Harrison Ford, and "The
Boys in Com pany C."
America is facing the war;
nearly ten years too late.
The issue of Vietnam is still
strong and emotional heated.
Whil e Torn Hayden ran
for
a
unsuccessfully
California senate sea t, his
motto was a realistic
philosophy ; the radicalism of
the 60s is becoming the
common scene of the 70s.
Long live those with insight.

Gift
!AS NI:.AR AS YOUR PHONE!

446-1647

times have women been

rudely awakened in the

~ ~lliuu.al

middle of the night by their

The Jack

Somppi Family of Decatur, men beating the nightmare
Dlinois, will be the Gospel out of their lives ? For some,
singers at the aMual Calvary there would be no escape.
Jack DuM had been in and
Baptist Church Picnic on
Sunday evening, JWJe 25, at out of VA Hospitals since the
the Bob Evans Shelter House returning from Vietnam. His
in Rio Grande.
Rev . and Mrs. Somppi and
their two daughters pastor
the Mound Street Christian
Church in Decatur and have
had a great ministry in song
throughout the Mid-west.
They will lead in the Vesper
service at 7 p.m. The picnic
supper will be held at 5:30
p.m. with a fellowship. time
scheduled to begin at 4 p.m.
Mrs. David Wickline will be
in charge of the general
program with Pastor Charles
I Lusher leading the vespers.

I

il Bridal shower recently hosted
:I

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ANY
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and hall only up to JOt oq.
ft.

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TREE GALLERY, JACKSON,

Gallia, Meigs
&amp; Vinton Co.
614-446-4208

OHIO.

PROTECTION

Harry O'Dairy thinks
. the best
place to stop for an after
practice or after the
game treat is
DAIRY ISLE

A

ldany tsle ~
Mloldltport, o.

One sleeper,

preaches his role of DuM's
war buddy, KeMy . The hard
guy image of space battler
Hans Solo is softened into a
drifting, embittered loner
who is haunted by the
memory of the war.
Winkler and Ford have
created the essence of the
Vietnam vet who came back
and could ·not fit into the
American mainstream .
Haunted by the lack of regard
of human life and the
memory of deadtime and
search and destroy missions
and the issue that tore the
county apart, these men
could no\ c.ome back and join
in the life that they had left
behind. America had men
coming back who had lost
more than an arm or leg;
they had lost their loves and
any dream they ever had of a
normal Ciistence.
While the intellectual
debate has centered around
"good films" and "bad
films" and the issue of
tasteful movies (like tasteful
nudity, violence and trash),
we should remember that not
every piece of art should
bring the world to tears or
laughter or receive critical
acclaim. Sometimes , the
message is the medium and
everything else falls into
second place.
The magic about "Heroes"
is the detailed chara cter
development. Jack and
KeMy are the perfect archetypals for the Vietnam
vets. The ironic point about
the vets of Vietnam is their
love-hate relationship with
the country and the Vietnamese people . While
dodging the fire of Vietnam,
the men would dream of the
girls they were going lo bring
back to start houses or the tea
ceremonies to incorporate
into their daily lives or any
one of a thousand other things
about 'Nam. They hated it,
but how could they wipe it out
of their lives? Their rhetoric
was filleJ with Southeast
Asian dialogue and a trip
back to the States could not
change it all. How many
times after the war did old
buddies get together to laugh
about il all, or how many

, !Iridal
'-"t\

it···

r

'
~

Open Sunday
1 to 6

:r -------------··-·- -·- ·-·- ·- ------,

BY FRIDAY, JUNE 30TH.
AnER JULY 1ST AT APPLE

-+---+-

BY CATilERINE BENET
Among Hollywood circles
there is an expression which
is becoming fact. "You can
always tell when a war is
over; Hollywood starts
making movies about it."
Fact is fact. Hollywood is
turning out epic after epic
about the Vietnam conflict
and the effect on the country
and the social values of its
people.

taking the movie audience by
storm while being thumbed
down by critics who perhaps
never went to war or who.
experienced only on an intellectual level.
Henry Winkler, as ex-Army
man Jack DuM gives at most
a stable performance. Outside of a few physical
movements it is impossible to
associate him with the ghost
of Arthur Fon:r.arell!.
Winkler's versatility as an
actor is displayed on both the
comic and serious level. He is
believable as the frightened
Dunn who is running away
from his past while dreaming
of jumping head on into the
future. Winkler will become a
fine actor one day, "Heroes"
TERRI CAMPBELL
is just a spring board for
better things.
Lower River Road and Mrs. L. V. Crawford of Jackson
Sally Fields, as the runReacie Crawford and the late Pike, all of Gallipolis.
away bride-to-be (a role she
played again in "Smokey and
the Bandit"), has matured
into an actress of substance.
This role is not the best
proving grounds for that
capa bility but she does evolve
into the role of Carol Bell with
a certain depth. Fields Is best
at supporting male actors in
comedy while she carries
dramatic scenes alone. Carol
Bell is confused about her life
and gives every indication
that Vietnam was some place
Time magazine took a lot of
pictures of. Her response to
DuM's Vietnam hitch is like
that of a side show freak . For
women like Carol Bell
Vietnam never became a
reality until years later.
The biggest and certainly
most surprising perfonnance
comes from Harrison Ford of
"Star Wars" fame. Ford does
a 90 degree tum as he ap-

BIRTHDAY CEI..EBRA TED - Rosie Raines is a very special person . Thursday, June
22, she crossed a milestone and became a century old. Mrs. Raines, a resident at Pinecrest
Care Center celebra.ted her birthday .with a cake and a day filled with many cards and
telephone calls w1shmg her a happy birthday. Among those sending cards were President
~d Mrs. _Junmy Carter and Clarence Miller. Mrs. Raines was born in Racine, West
Virginia. She married Edward Raines, a Spanish America soldier. They lived in the coalne•as and beCame the parents of two children, A. J., pictured with his wife and Marie
Roush of Charleston, West Virginia. Mrs. Raines is a favqrite at Pinecrest and' is noted for
her alertness and Christian faith. Mrs. Raines was recently honored as Gallia County's
oldest person during Senior Citizens' Week.

UVING ROOM &amp; """"•

LAYAWAYS AT COUNTRY
FAIRE. SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA, MAY BE PICKED UP

Children o the War

Terri Campbell graduates from
New York modeling school.
.

m.mi

; POMEROY-Miss Sharun
: Hill, bride-elect uf Mark Mal• son, was honored with a
: bridal shower on June 2 at
; Maplewood Lake. Hostesses
, were Kathy MeDaniel ,
•111elma Cw1diff' Connie and
: Debbie Hill.
: A blue and yellow co lor

Donna Malson, Audrev Patterson, June Dewhurst', Ruse
Patterson, Ilea Dugan.
Sherrv Deeter. Kathv and

Leah Matson, dIoria
McDaniel, Roma Sayre and
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Melntyre.

Gallia 4-H Oub News

Little Kyger Valley Boys 4H Club met June 14 at Little
; scheme was carried out &lt;tnd Ky ge r
Churc h.
Mike
' the cake wa s inscribed "Best Shoemaker presided and
: Wishes Sharon and Mark." Steve Waugh led devotions.
: Games were played with Bob Misner demonstrat ed
: refreshments being serve-d to how model rockets work.
; Hope Drake, Gloria Decker, Jim Misner told how to care
• Shi rley Sm ith , Florenee for Hamst ers. The next
: Deeter, Phyllis McMillian, meeting will be June 28 at
; Sue Ervin, Wi~na Ervin. Little Kyger Church. Advisor
: Peggy Ervin, Becky Hensler is Paul Shoemaker. Members
; and Rachael, Betty Sayre, present were Tom Waugh, Ed
· Patty Hensler, Mrs. Don Moore; Cary Martin, Bill
: Sayre, Eloise Malson, Chris Swisher, Mike Swisher, Mark
: Dailey, Valerie Matson, Gar- Gilmore, Todd Rothgeb,
; cia Adams and Christy, Jane Shawn Thomas, Rusty
• McDaniel Davis, Emileen Layne. Guests present were
: Sayre, and Helen Hill.
Chuck Martin, Bill Ross,
Sending gifts were Brer1da Greg Smith. - Reporter Rob
Cunningham, Sharon Cundiff, Waugh.
Marie Roberts, Eloise Smith,
Charlotte Wolfe, Louise
Gluesencamp, Nicki Wilson ,

REUNION SLATED
All relatives, family and
friends of the late Alexander
Lang and Mary Longstreth
Halliday are invited to a
reunion at Forest Acres Park
Colu mb•• d1~monds from J I~0.
located three miles south of
Harrisonville and three miles
north of Rutland on County
t.l
Road Three on July 9. A
basket dinner will be served
t.n
424 Second Ave.
at 12:30 p.m. and all persons
G1llipolls
are responsible for their own
table service.
-

Columbia

Shinin' On 4-H Club met
May 17 at Mrs. Jackie Davis'
home. Shari Davis presided.
Mrs. Bettie Clark had charge
of the program. She showed a
movie on "Tips on Sewing."
It showed how a garment
must fit the model well.
Advisor is Mrs. Davis.
Members present were Susan
Bennett and Shari Davis.
Guests present were Mrs.
Shang, Mrs. Copley, Debbie
Hayslip, Natalie Shang, Lori
Copley, Teresa and Kelly
Stowers, Darlene Shortridge
(Rio Silver Thimbles 4-H
Club ). - Reporter Annl~
Cook.

TAWNrv.S
JnilEL£RS

Ladies'

TANK

SI~VER BRIDGE
P~AZA

Picnic to be held

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wedding
day
everything must be
just perfect .. . from
the bridal gown to
the flowers. We
Ia ke speci a I pride
ln arranging the
dramatic beauty of
our corsages.
bouquets, floral
centerpieces.
We
know they ' ll be
perfect!

REG. s oo
PRICE 6

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THERMAL HAIR-STYLING
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"When words aren't enough send ... ,

FLOWERS by GEORGE
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On your wonderful
U6· 33S3

POMEROY -A picnic on
July 27 at the home of Mrs.
Cora Beegle and Miss Shirley
Beegle was planned during a
meetihg of the Twin City
Shrinettes at !he horne of
Mrs. Lora Byers.
Avisit of the high priestess
and her court in September
was discussed. Refreshments
were served to Mrs: Erruna
Clatworlhy' Mrs. Mary
Bowen, Mrs. Beegle, Mrs.
Clara 'Adams, Mrs. Mary
Hughes, Mrs . Barbara
Dugan, Mrs. Mary Cleek,
Mrs. Jean Moore, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs. Edrw
Slusher and a j!uesl, Miss
Kathryn Hysell.

Like the two
of you, our rings
are made
for each other.

AGREAT ASSORTMENT
OF

99

Phone 446-9721
Gallipolis

•

•

'

�8-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 25, 19'18
B-2- The Sundav Times-sentinel, SWJday, JWJe 25, 1978

Bell-Hart vows made

... to welcome Larry Ewing to our staff. Larry is 011e of my
"bestest" friends from years gone by. We were at Rio Grande
togetherfiveyears ago debaters and Larry finally ended up as
one of my journalism teachers. We are very happy to have him
oo our staff and all know he will simply 'S!OP the presses' (pun
intended) with his writing. Welcome to the crazy fourth estate,
Larry.
While plans are being made for the holidays, there was one
group working very hard for a race. The Guiding Hand School
Cubs were in Columbus this weekend to compete in special
olympics. The kids worked and practiced for such a long time
and were so excited about the trip. Gallia County can be proud
of these students.
Book~f-the-week : Total Joy by Marable Morgan. While
nothing like the Total Women this book contains one ol the
greatest secrets of a happy life, accept with grace. Mrs.
Morgan's philosophy makes a lot of sense. If you're a winner
accept with graceful quietness and if you lose or are unhappy
~·"'' .vnur lil• then acceot !hines with a graceful joy. Really it
'"bemg a total person and liking yourself ... something few can

eo.
Quote~f-the-week: Acknowledge Him in all thy ways and
He shall direct thy path. The Bible.

The editorial staff of the Tribune is suffering from the
same lousy summer cold. We are sniffing and hacking in the
same horsey harmony. When will it all end 'I
Well, there was something in the air ... the season of
marriages will continue for a while as an early autumn
wedding is planned. Like Anne Lindbergh, I feel like standing
so very straight when I'm beside him ... he has a nice smile,
the patience of a saint and is simply wonderful ...

SEEKS DIVORCE
Springfield. They have no
GALUPOUS- Juanita R. children.
Filing for dissolution of
Starkey, Gallipolis, filed for
divorce from James R. marriage were Margaret R.
Starkey, GaUWolis, in Gallia Grim, and John 0. Grim. ·
County Comnllrl Pleas Court They were married on March
Friday . The couple was 18, 1947, and ha ve four
married Nov. 14, 1969 in children.

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RACINE-In a candlelight
t"eremony at the Letart Falls
United Methodist Church on
April29at6:30 m the evening,
Lorna Dawn Bell and Brut-e
Edward Hart exchanged
wedding vows.
.
The bride is the daughter of
Don and Lois Bell, Racine,
and the groom is the son of
Rubert and Lillie Hart,
Racine. The double ring
t"eremony was performed by
the Rev. Steven Wilson and
the Rev. David Harris. Music
was presented by lillian
Hayman, pianist, with selections including "Time In a
Bottle", "If", "My Sweet
Lady" and classical pie&lt;.-es.
The church altar was
decorated with two sevenbranch candelabra trimmed
with
greenery
and
candlelight ribbons . The
aisles were lined with single
candelabra with the greenery
and ribbon accent. Candles
were also used in the windows
and there was an arrangement of bridal wreath. on the
piano.
The bride was escorted to
the altar by her father. She
wore a gown of quiana with a
chantilly lace bodice accented with seed pearls, a
Queen Anne neckline, and
long filled sleeves featuring
lace cuffs with pearl trim.
The skirt flowed into a chapel
train. The bride's fingertip
veil of illusion with chantilly
and sead pearl motifs fell
from a headpiece covered
with lace and pearls. The
gown was designed by her
mother.
The bride carried a
cascade of gardenias, bridal
pink roses, white hyacinth
blossoms, lily of the valley
and baby's breath with a
touch of aqua fugi pompons,
yellow static, white lilac,
Boston fern and sweetheart
ivy. Her only jewelry was a
silver necklace, gift of the
groom.
Beverly
Cunningham ,
Racine, and Nancy Cross,
Letart Falls, were attendants
for the bride. They were in
gowns of identical design in
aqua and yellow fashioned
with V necklines, long full
sleeves and A-line skirts, with
accent trim in white at the
neckline and cuffs. They carried nosegays of pink
miniature carnations. while
hyacinth blossoms, agua fugi
pompons, white lilac, yellow
static, baby 's brealli and
daisies lied with aqua and
yellow ribbon . Their headrings of flowers matched their
bouquets. The attendants'
gowns were made by the
bride.
Olivia Cunningham was the
flower girl and she wore a
long · peasant style dress of
aqua and yellow floral on a
candlelight background with
a ruffle al the bottom. She
carried a small wicker basket
of flowers similar to those of
the attendants tied with aqpa
and yellow ribbon .
Alan Cunningham, Racine,
was best man and the
groomsman was Brett Hart,
Colwnbus. Joseph Grimm,
Columbus, and Brice Hart,
Racine, were ushers. The
best man and groomsman
wore carnation boutonnieres
in yellow and aqua, the
ushers, pink rose boutonnieres . All of the men were attired in tuxedos or light brown
and while shirts with brown
trim. The groom's bouton·

niere was white hyacinth
blOSl!oms, while lilac and
bilby's breath. The father of
the bride wore white
miniature carnations.
For the couple's wedding,
Mrs. Bell wore a mint green
gown of quiana with a V
neckline and long sleeves. IL
tied in front at the waist and
fell into soft · gathers. She
wore white accessories and a
eorsage of while gardenia
and while hyacinth blossoms.
Mrs. Hart was in a peach
jacket dress ensemble with
white act.-essories and she
also had a corsage of while
gardenia and while hyacinth
blossoms.
. A reception honoring the
couple was held at the Letart
Faiis Community Building.
Hostesses were Crestlyn Hill,
Racine; Nacine Euler, Pinch,
W. Va.; Linda Jewel, Letart,
W. Va.; Betty Morris and
Beverly Wickline, Letart
Falls. Guests were registered
by Linda Turley, Racine, and
Beth Ann Hart distributed the
wedding programs and the
rice bags.
The refreshment table
featured a four tiered cake
with candlelight frosting
trimmed in white and
decorated with clusters of
flowers to match the bride's
bouquet. The cake was top.
ped with white wedding bells
while the third tier held a
small aqua heart with wedding rings. A small arrangement of flowers in a silver
bowl was on the second tier.
Used to either side of the cake
were double silver
Ca ndelabra with ar rangements of aqua camatiuns,fugipompons,
and
yellow daisy pompons.
Crystal bud vases of aqua,
pink and yellow spring

flowers wene used on the
guest tables along with silver
candle holders.
Following the reception the
bride changed into a white
gauze dress and wore a
gardenia corsage. They
honeymooned in Florida .
Bruce and Lorna Hart now
neside at Sharon Woods, 1922
Grande Rue Circle, Columbus.
The bride is a graduate of
Southern High School and
Hixon's School of Floral
Design and attended Ohio
Slate University. She is ·
employed al Maple Lee
Flowers as a floral designer.
Mr. Hart graduated from
Southern and Ohio Stale
University with a bachelor o
of science in computer
science. He is employed at
the Ohio Slate University
Center fur Human Resources
Research, and is affiliated
with the ACMC Association
for Computing Machinery
and the Ohio Slate University
Astronomy Club.
Out-of-town guesta at the
wedding and reception were
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Back, ColMr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart
umbus; Cecil Hill, Winfield,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Hayman and family, Laurel,
Md.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hayman and family, Westerville; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Grinun, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Grimm, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Euler and Lori,
Pinch, W. Va.; Robert
Grinun, Ms. Gail Harrison,
Ms. Laurie Rickman, Larry
Wilcoxen, Colwnbus; and
Barbara Fisher. Bridgeport.
GALUPOUS - Exhibit for the month of June 19'18 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart
"Multi-Faceted
Perceptions," Pedro L. and Laszlo 'a. Koeentertained with a rehearsal
dinner for the wedding party Kro~pecher, Artists and Architects of Athens, Ohio. Oils,
at the Meigs IM. A buffet lun- acrylics, watercolors, etchings,.silk screen and graphics.
Gallery Hours - Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. until 5
cheon was held at the bride's
p.m.:
Tuesdays and Thursdays,10a.m. untU 3 p.m.
home.
. June 20 - Entr:,; and authorization forms for the July 4
Rtver Recreation Festival Exhibit in the City Park due Jan
Thaler and Sue Beverly, ca&lt;hairwomen. 7:30p.m.- F.A.C .
Interdepartmental Meeting. 9 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees
Meeting, Riverby .
July 4 - II a.m.-45 p.m. - River Recreation Festival
Exhibit, Gallipolis City Park.

OFF

REG. 13.98 YD. TO 15.49 YD.

SINGER SEWING SALE
NBN, USED, DEMO, CLEARANCE
EXCELlENT SELECTION
FANTASTIC SAVINGS

French City Fabric Shoppe
Gallipolis,

SinOtr ApprOYtd Dtlllr
.t.\on .· FrL 9:l0 . 1:00 p.m.
TiltS ·· Wtd .-Thurs .· Sit. f : JO • S: N p.m .

o.

By JOHN GOODBODY
PARIS (UP! ) - Monaco's
Princess Caroline and her
fiance, Parisian man-about town Philippe JWJot, dined on
champagne and baby lobster
at a Maxim's party thrown by
friends from Texas and
danced WJtil the early hours
today.
The gala was the climax of
their hectic Paris social
roWJd marking the end of the
22-year~ld princess's final
exams in philosophy and
child psychology and the
start of celebrations for her
wedding in Monte Carlo next
week.
Paris' most famous
restaurant was the setting for
the party hosted by Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Wyatt of Houston,
longtune friends of Monaco's
Princess Grace and Printe
Rainier. Caroline and
Philippe were among 130
guests.
The four-course dinner
began with boiled baby
lobster with butter sauce,
followed by sauteed duckling
with fresh asparagus. After
. ~a lad and cheese there was a
special Maxim 's Iced rasp-

I

Keesee-Ashley wedding
plans are announced
MIDDLEPORT--Plans
have been completed for the
open church wedding of Wanda Keesee, ds ughter of the
Rev. and Mrs. James Keesee,
539 Bryant ·Place, Middleport, to Dwight Ashley,
son of Roger Ashley, Guernsey County, and Mrs. Josie
Callahan, Coshocton.
The wedding will be an
event of Saturday, July I, a!
the Christian Baptist Church
which is located on the Route
7 by-pass near the intersection of Route 7 and Union
Ave., Pomeroy. The father of
the bride will perfunn the
ceremony a\2 :31l p.m. following a program of music by
Mrs. Ethel Fry, Massilon,
pianist, and Mark Trammell,
Alliance, vocalist to begin at 2
p.m.
The bride-elect will be
escorted lu the altar by her
grandfather, Raymond
Keesee, Hysell Run,
Pomeroy.
Maid of honor for the brideelect will be her twin sister,
Verenia, and the bridesmaids
will be Angela Keesee, also a
sister, Carol Herstine, Canton , and Kim Prall, Rittman .
Kathy Bradford of West
l..llfayelte, will be the flower
girl.
Ruger Ashley of Coshocton
will serve as best man for his
brother and the ushers will be

Clyde Trarrunell, Alliance ;
Mike Wexler, Massilon, and
Gary Bradford, West
Lafayelle. Steven Slaton,
Galion will be the ring
bearer. Guests will be
registered by Carol Bradford,
West Lafayette.
,
A reception will be held immediately following the
ceremony at the church. Linda Bradford, West Lafayette,
will be a hostess.

Honor Roll
POMEROY - Principal
John Lisle has aMounced the
final six weeks honor roll at
the Salisbury Elementary
School. Making a grade of
"B" or above in all their
subjects to be listed on the •
roll were :
First Grade - Mary
Butcher, Melodi Carl, Traci
Casto, Marc Corsi, Decker

,------··-·1·
1
I

Social

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

1

1

~endar 1

MONDAY
BIBLE SCHOOL Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
Monday through Friday 9 to
11 :30 a.m. dally. Closing
program July 2, 7:30p.m.
MONDAY
BEND 0' THE RIVER
Garden Club, 7:30 Munday
night at the home of Mrs. Ber.nice Carpenter. Members to
take their favorite arrangements and the program
will include a discussion of
the arrangements.
BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
through Friday at St. Paul
United Methodist Church,

Princess Caroline begins
her wedding celebrations

BUY, SAVE AND SEW
Suraline. Suralme Plus,

r--.-.-·---

berry souffle.
11ut for the moment at
The wines w~re magnums lealll, her mind is on festivity
of Moet and Chandan rather than phllo110phy.
Champagne (1971), and a red
Chateau Leuville Pay-Fere
(1971 ). Then the guests
danced to three orchestraa.
The party was just one of
about a half · dozen
celebrations In French before
the wedding. These included
a garden party by night club
king Jean Castel and another,
younger bash hosted by
Junot's friend and witness for
the wedding.
The bridal couple kept their
schedule open today for last·
minute arrangements before
flying to Monaco Saturday.
Though Caroline's wedding
is not the 11111aah spectacular
her parenta' was 22 years
ago, the strain has been
enough to make the princeas
put off one of her main
written exam1 untU October.
Her mother says that,
although she would be
delighted to become a
grandmother, "I hope
Caroline will not experience
motherhood immediately.
She would, In fact;" like ~ •
continue her sturH~::i • btt."

Tuppers Plains, 10 until noon
daily. Closing program July
I, 7:30 p.m.
BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. daily
at Chester Grade School.
BIBLE SCHOOL at
Gallipolis Christian Church
Monday through Friday 6:30
to 8: 3ll p.m. each evening.
BIBLE SCHOOL at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church
Monday through Friday 9 to
ll::lll a.m. dally. Program on
Sunday, July 2, at 7 p.m.
TIJESDAY
PAST MATRONS OF
Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.
will meet at the home of Mrs.
Thelma McMurray, Mason.
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

Cullums, Patricia Davis ,
Matthew Gibbs, William
Gilkey, Nick King, JeMifer
Reed , Joan Simpson, Jody
Taylor, Michelle Taylor ,
Aaron Williams, Wesley
Yoq.
Second Grade - Aliaon
Jones , Charlotte Hart,
Rachel Stone, Artie HuMel,
Audra Houdashelt, Tamra
Vance, Dalllly Hall, Kevin
Donald King, Kevin Victor
King , Sue Ellen Fry, Angela
Sloan, ShaMan Slavin, David
Beagle, William Brothers,
Michael Meadows, Timothy
Jeffers, Michele Folmer.
Third Grade - April Clark,
Heather Cullum s, Todd
Cullums, Phillip King,
Brenda Sinclair.
Fourth Grade - Rose
Barnhouse, Jodi Harrison,
Rodney Harrison, Barbara
Hatfield , Darren Hayes,
Kevin Mowery, Tim Sloan,
Anita Smith, David Warth.
Fifth Grade - Eddie Dill,
Ruth Ann Fry, Cynthia
Hazelton, Timmy LeMaster,
Teresa Pratt, Denise Stegall,
Jackie Welker, Sandy Hoyt.
Sixth Grade - Mike
KeMedy, Angie Pratt, Paula
Swindell.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m.-l p.m., Monday
through Friday .
Monday, June 26 - Square
Dancing, 12: »3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 27 Knitting and Corchetlng
Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon;
Chorus, 12:3G-2 p.m.
Wednesday, June 28 Social Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.;
Games, !2:3G-2 p.m.
Thursday, June 29 · Health Scneen!ng Clinic at
Center, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; Old
Man's Cave Trip, leave
center at 8:30 a.m.
Friday, June 3ll - Art
Class, 10 a.m .-12 noon ;
Knitting and . Crocheting
·Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon;
Bowling, H p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program,
12 noon to 12:45 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese • ham bits, spinach hard cooked egg slice, orange
and grapefruit sections,
pineapple upside down cake,
cornbread, butter, milk.
Tueaday - Baked pork
chop, sweet potatoes, brussel
sprouts, applesauce, bread,
butter, milk.
Wednesday - Johnny
Marzetti (beef, tomatoes and
macaroni), green beans,
cottage cheese salad - chives
chopped, caMed peaches whipped cream, roll, butter,
milk.
Thursday - Hamburg
"deluxe" on bun, pickled beet'
and cheese sticks, peas,
sherbet, milk.
Friday - Turkey roll Gravy, mashed potatoes,
broccoli · cheese sauce,
lemon pudding, bread,
butter, milk.
Coffee, tea, buttermilk,
skim mUk and juice served
dally.
Please register the day
before you plan to eat.

GALUPOLIS - Terri Ann
Campbell, former student at
Gallia Academy High School
and now a resident of Birmingham, Alabama, recently
graduated as a professional
model from the Barbizon
· School of Modeling of New
York.
A Junior at McAdory High
School in Birmingham, Terri
is a member of the Alabama
State Youth Choir; chosen as
one of 42 vocalists out of 350
young men and women ·
competing from the .entire
state of Alabama. She is now
on tour with the group
through Frlodia, Georgia,
Louisiana and Alabama.
In addition she is active as
a vocalist in the Joint Heirs, a
six member group at her
church, the First Assembly of
God, and also a soloist in the
church.
This past year she was a
participant in the Miss
McAdory Pageant for her
high school and was a finalist
in the competition, becoming
a member of the Queen's
Court.
Terry is the greatgranddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John C. Campbell of the

PORTLAND - Telephone
843-3364 . COAD · Senior
Nutrition Weekly Menu for ,
the Satellite Site at the
Reorganized Church of Jesua
Christ of the Latter Day
Saints, Old Town Flats, is
llimllar to the above menu.
Please call in your reser- .
valion.

Family

~ ~Heroes,''

to

RIO GRANDE'-

is

sing

big dneam is to rejoin his
three war buddies - Kenny,
Adcock and Monroe in
Eureka, California, to start a
worm fann.
The worms would eat
garbage which in tum would
tum into a million dollar
sa nitation engineering
project. The idea was born
between bullits and watching
human life decay in the mist
of suffering. Men would be
driven to grasping dreams to
maintain a reality. For the
critics who .would scoff at
such an idea, well to borrow a.
line from Harrison Ford, 'you
would have had to have been
there.'
Dunn escapes from· a New
York VA hospital and hops a
bus headed for Sedalia,
Missouri. On the way he
meets Ca~l Bell who is
ruMingoulon her wedding .to
a never seen Joel. Boy meets
girl and by Ohio the two are
falling in love. Their
romantic involvement is
handled with a gentle
realism.
Carol and Jack make it to
Sedalia to find Kenny a mere
reflection of the man he used
to be. Ford's performance is
the essence of what happened
to many vets. Living alone
with no desire for female
company , he drowns out his
life with beer, racing and
shooting a rifle "borrowed"
from the war. Kenny, like so

many others, has drifted into
a state of mere existence. Not
understanding the political or
moral issue of the war, he
only remembers the number
of men blown apart in front of
him. For him, it is far too
much to think about. He
declines going to New Mexico
to find Adcock with a half
promise of making il ...
sometime.
The search for ' Adcock
proves fruitless. He went out
for a beer·and his wife (Oliva
Cole of Roots fame) hasn't
seen him since. She is left to
cope with the ugly bourgeois
house in the suburbs dream.
Cole handles the problem
with loving kindness when
she states, "I used to think it
was ine but not any more ... "
Suddenly Carol and Jack
are on their way to Eureka to
find Monroe. Throughout the
movie he has been the
mystery figure and the
staying force for Dunn,
Kenny and Adcock. Monroe,
the golden boy, the leader,
the one they all looked up to,
Monroe guides them to
Vietnam and the effect of his
life is still with them.
Arriving at the Monroe
home is like a scene that will
never
happen .
Dunn
questions Monroe's parents
about his comings and
goings, only to go berserk
when they informed him that
Monr{)e died in Vietnam

saving the lives of his friends .
Dunn explodes out of the
house, dodging imagery
bullets, tanks and human
infernos. Dunn comes to grip
with reality as he recalls
Monroe saving his life and
dying as a result of it. For
DuM, Vietnam is finally
reckoned with.
While the artistic value of
the film might open itself for
argument, the ponit is that
America is finally facing her
greatest mistake. During the
height of Vietnam one movie
was made about the war,
"The Green Berets :" a John

Wayne epic that everyone
would like to forget. Today, it
is a different story. Movie
goers are treated to good
films about the war such as
Jane Fonda, Jon Voight and
Bruce Dern in " Coming
Home." Francis Ford Cop.
pola 's miltimillion dollar epic
called " Apocalypse Now''
starring among others,
Harrison Ford, and "The
Boys in Com pany C."
America is facing the war;
nearly ten years too late.
The issue of Vietnam is still
strong and emotional heated.
Whil e Torn Hayden ran
for
a
unsuccessfully
California senate sea t, his
motto was a realistic
philosophy ; the radicalism of
the 60s is becoming the
common scene of the 70s.
Long live those with insight.

Gift
!AS NI:.AR AS YOUR PHONE!

446-1647

times have women been

rudely awakened in the

~ ~lliuu.al

middle of the night by their

The Jack

Somppi Family of Decatur, men beating the nightmare
Dlinois, will be the Gospel out of their lives ? For some,
singers at the aMual Calvary there would be no escape.
Jack DuM had been in and
Baptist Church Picnic on
Sunday evening, JWJe 25, at out of VA Hospitals since the
the Bob Evans Shelter House returning from Vietnam. His
in Rio Grande.
Rev . and Mrs. Somppi and
their two daughters pastor
the Mound Street Christian
Church in Decatur and have
had a great ministry in song
throughout the Mid-west.
They will lead in the Vesper
service at 7 p.m. The picnic
supper will be held at 5:30
p.m. with a fellowship. time
scheduled to begin at 4 p.m.
Mrs. David Wickline will be
in charge of the general
program with Pastor Charles
I Lusher leading the vespers.

I

il Bridal shower recently hosted
:I

The Best
Cleaning Your
Carpet Ever Had

ANY
Offer lncludoo living room
and hall only up to JOt oq.
ft.

Furntrvrt Stan~rt SIHmed

TREE GALLERY, JACKSON,

Gallia, Meigs
&amp; Vinton Co.
614-446-4208

OHIO.

PROTECTION

Harry O'Dairy thinks
. the best
place to stop for an after
practice or after the
game treat is
DAIRY ISLE

A

ldany tsle ~
Mloldltport, o.

One sleeper,

preaches his role of DuM's
war buddy, KeMy . The hard
guy image of space battler
Hans Solo is softened into a
drifting, embittered loner
who is haunted by the
memory of the war.
Winkler and Ford have
created the essence of the
Vietnam vet who came back
and could ·not fit into the
American mainstream .
Haunted by the lack of regard
of human life and the
memory of deadtime and
search and destroy missions
and the issue that tore the
county apart, these men
could no\ c.ome back and join
in the life that they had left
behind. America had men
coming back who had lost
more than an arm or leg;
they had lost their loves and
any dream they ever had of a
normal Ciistence.
While the intellectual
debate has centered around
"good films" and "bad
films" and the issue of
tasteful movies (like tasteful
nudity, violence and trash),
we should remember that not
every piece of art should
bring the world to tears or
laughter or receive critical
acclaim. Sometimes , the
message is the medium and
everything else falls into
second place.
The magic about "Heroes"
is the detailed chara cter
development. Jack and
KeMy are the perfect archetypals for the Vietnam
vets. The ironic point about
the vets of Vietnam is their
love-hate relationship with
the country and the Vietnamese people . While
dodging the fire of Vietnam,
the men would dream of the
girls they were going lo bring
back to start houses or the tea
ceremonies to incorporate
into their daily lives or any
one of a thousand other things
about 'Nam. They hated it,
but how could they wipe it out
of their lives? Their rhetoric
was filleJ with Southeast
Asian dialogue and a trip
back to the States could not
change it all. How many
times after the war did old
buddies get together to laugh
about il all, or how many

, !Iridal
'-"t\

it···

r

'
~

Open Sunday
1 to 6

:r -------------··-·- -·- ·-·- ·- ------,

BY FRIDAY, JUNE 30TH.
AnER JULY 1ST AT APPLE

-+---+-

BY CATilERINE BENET
Among Hollywood circles
there is an expression which
is becoming fact. "You can
always tell when a war is
over; Hollywood starts
making movies about it."
Fact is fact. Hollywood is
turning out epic after epic
about the Vietnam conflict
and the effect on the country
and the social values of its
people.

taking the movie audience by
storm while being thumbed
down by critics who perhaps
never went to war or who.
experienced only on an intellectual level.
Henry Winkler, as ex-Army
man Jack DuM gives at most
a stable performance. Outside of a few physical
movements it is impossible to
associate him with the ghost
of Arthur Fon:r.arell!.
Winkler's versatility as an
actor is displayed on both the
comic and serious level. He is
believable as the frightened
Dunn who is running away
from his past while dreaming
of jumping head on into the
future. Winkler will become a
fine actor one day, "Heroes"
TERRI CAMPBELL
is just a spring board for
better things.
Lower River Road and Mrs. L. V. Crawford of Jackson
Sally Fields, as the runReacie Crawford and the late Pike, all of Gallipolis.
away bride-to-be (a role she
played again in "Smokey and
the Bandit"), has matured
into an actress of substance.
This role is not the best
proving grounds for that
capa bility but she does evolve
into the role of Carol Bell with
a certain depth. Fields Is best
at supporting male actors in
comedy while she carries
dramatic scenes alone. Carol
Bell is confused about her life
and gives every indication
that Vietnam was some place
Time magazine took a lot of
pictures of. Her response to
DuM's Vietnam hitch is like
that of a side show freak . For
women like Carol Bell
Vietnam never became a
reality until years later.
The biggest and certainly
most surprising perfonnance
comes from Harrison Ford of
"Star Wars" fame. Ford does
a 90 degree tum as he ap-

BIRTHDAY CEI..EBRA TED - Rosie Raines is a very special person . Thursday, June
22, she crossed a milestone and became a century old. Mrs. Raines, a resident at Pinecrest
Care Center celebra.ted her birthday .with a cake and a day filled with many cards and
telephone calls w1shmg her a happy birthday. Among those sending cards were President
~d Mrs. _Junmy Carter and Clarence Miller. Mrs. Raines was born in Racine, West
Virginia. She married Edward Raines, a Spanish America soldier. They lived in the coalne•as and beCame the parents of two children, A. J., pictured with his wife and Marie
Roush of Charleston, West Virginia. Mrs. Raines is a favqrite at Pinecrest and' is noted for
her alertness and Christian faith. Mrs. Raines was recently honored as Gallia County's
oldest person during Senior Citizens' Week.

UVING ROOM &amp; """"•

LAYAWAYS AT COUNTRY
FAIRE. SPRING VALLEY
PLAZA, MAY BE PICKED UP

Children o the War

Terri Campbell graduates from
New York modeling school.
.

m.mi

; POMEROY-Miss Sharun
: Hill, bride-elect uf Mark Mal• son, was honored with a
: bridal shower on June 2 at
; Maplewood Lake. Hostesses
, were Kathy MeDaniel ,
•111elma Cw1diff' Connie and
: Debbie Hill.
: A blue and yellow co lor

Donna Malson, Audrev Patterson, June Dewhurst', Ruse
Patterson, Ilea Dugan.
Sherrv Deeter. Kathv and

Leah Matson, dIoria
McDaniel, Roma Sayre and
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Melntyre.

Gallia 4-H Oub News

Little Kyger Valley Boys 4H Club met June 14 at Little
; scheme was carried out &lt;tnd Ky ge r
Churc h.
Mike
' the cake wa s inscribed "Best Shoemaker presided and
: Wishes Sharon and Mark." Steve Waugh led devotions.
: Games were played with Bob Misner demonstrat ed
: refreshments being serve-d to how model rockets work.
; Hope Drake, Gloria Decker, Jim Misner told how to care
• Shi rley Sm ith , Florenee for Hamst ers. The next
: Deeter, Phyllis McMillian, meeting will be June 28 at
; Sue Ervin, Wi~na Ervin. Little Kyger Church. Advisor
: Peggy Ervin, Becky Hensler is Paul Shoemaker. Members
; and Rachael, Betty Sayre, present were Tom Waugh, Ed
· Patty Hensler, Mrs. Don Moore; Cary Martin, Bill
: Sayre, Eloise Malson, Chris Swisher, Mike Swisher, Mark
: Dailey, Valerie Matson, Gar- Gilmore, Todd Rothgeb,
; cia Adams and Christy, Jane Shawn Thomas, Rusty
• McDaniel Davis, Emileen Layne. Guests present were
: Sayre, and Helen Hill.
Chuck Martin, Bill Ross,
Sending gifts were Brer1da Greg Smith. - Reporter Rob
Cunningham, Sharon Cundiff, Waugh.
Marie Roberts, Eloise Smith,
Charlotte Wolfe, Louise
Gluesencamp, Nicki Wilson ,

REUNION SLATED
All relatives, family and
friends of the late Alexander
Lang and Mary Longstreth
Halliday are invited to a
reunion at Forest Acres Park
Colu mb•• d1~monds from J I~0.
located three miles south of
Harrisonville and three miles
north of Rutland on County
t.l
Road Three on July 9. A
basket dinner will be served
t.n
424 Second Ave.
at 12:30 p.m. and all persons
G1llipolls
are responsible for their own
table service.
-

Columbia

Shinin' On 4-H Club met
May 17 at Mrs. Jackie Davis'
home. Shari Davis presided.
Mrs. Bettie Clark had charge
of the program. She showed a
movie on "Tips on Sewing."
It showed how a garment
must fit the model well.
Advisor is Mrs. Davis.
Members present were Susan
Bennett and Shari Davis.
Guests present were Mrs.
Shang, Mrs. Copley, Debbie
Hayslip, Natalie Shang, Lori
Copley, Teresa and Kelly
Stowers, Darlene Shortridge
(Rio Silver Thimbles 4-H
Club ). - Reporter Annl~
Cook.

TAWNrv.S
JnilEL£RS

Ladies'

TANK

SI~VER BRIDGE
P~AZA

Picnic to be held

I
$10. Yoluo. Holene Curtis Designer Edition Porm

UNIPERM ACID WAVE

I

~-....:~-­

'----------.....J

-.,Jwo-.....:C::.J

~,

Very Famous

Maker

•SOLIDS
•STRIPES
• UJO% POLYESTER
•M~NY COLORS

wedding
day
everything must be
just perfect .. . from
the bridal gown to
the flowers. We
Ia ke speci a I pride
ln arranging the
dramatic beauty of
our corsages.
bouquets, floral
centerpieces.
We
know they ' ll be
perfect!

REG. s oo
PRICE 6

22's

$10 .. Volue. Unr.s., Cut &amp; Blow.Ory

THERMAL HAIR-STYLING
$17.50 Volue. Suppltmenh the heir with proloin

PROTEINE PERM

o·•s

28 Cedar St.

.
•

N

0 ·

0

N
L
y

w

"When words aren't enough send ... ,

FLOWERS by GEORGE
••

I

J

'

On your wonderful
U6· 33S3

POMEROY -A picnic on
July 27 at the home of Mrs.
Cora Beegle and Miss Shirley
Beegle was planned during a
meetihg of the Twin City
Shrinettes at !he horne of
Mrs. Lora Byers.
Avisit of the high priestess
and her court in September
was discussed. Refreshments
were served to Mrs: Erruna
Clatworlhy' Mrs. Mary
Bowen, Mrs. Beegle, Mrs.
Clara 'Adams, Mrs. Mary
Hughes, Mrs . Barbara
Dugan, Mrs. Mary Cleek,
Mrs. Jean Moore, Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs. Edrw
Slusher and a j!uesl, Miss
Kathryn Hysell.

Like the two
of you, our rings
are made
for each other.

AGREAT ASSORTMENT
OF

99

Phone 446-9721
Gallipolis

•

•

'

�OPEN DAILY
8 TIL 9
CLOSED
SUNDAYS

are

SUPER MARKETS

SUPER MARKETS

·. tltAIS
, $AT.,

. 7sc =~~.~OUIIl
SAV£
.. ""'" ... '"""~RlD
SEAW,S650
... ·-··"~ ss75·
Pta PltiOIIE

pENNYFAR

COUPON

·

********

MISSION 10 . ..

ROUT£43 Al GlAUGA

'

Adults
t~''•"•r).

Southern
Peaehes

W11'ti
pENNY FARE

coupoN -----.-e-•-••

·----··s·4·-7swl,.ti FAREs~oo
pENNY
If

Ch1"ldren

*

couPoN

FLORIDA

Sweet
Corn·

IS SEASON
T~ennvFare
cashiers
4 N£W SHOWS
upons !rom
. d
Ill' 4 .. Ill . . . . .

•

*
*
*
* Bananas
*
*
*
*
*
*
Pattie
*
5/kz.1 oc *
GRAVY MIXES 3:.
* ,.,,
e
28(
*
* Cube
--·3.
_,
32'
* Steak
38'
* $J89
--NtllC-==:-·
- - ·.. . , ••
*
....
_ _."'
*
••-7-.,... 44'
_ __ _............ 48c
* 5uper1or Frank"1es
.......
41'
* · Pork
Chops
*
MiSHm
•::64'
as_,.,_
66c

~

Get discount _co P hase Requ1re
No Addi,lonal urc

SOUND RIPE

lb.

lb.

S;edless Grapes•••••• lb.
"DRISCOll" BRAND

.

Strawberries ••••••• pint
Pineapple •••• _•••••• Each
"DOlE"

ROASTED

Peanuts ••••••••••••• lb.

~Beef

Mf~

I IMI

, . . . C.

.

1001 MATOIES • _ _.,. ~

Ill~ GROUND IEif formerly
Ground Chuck~-:·;:· .

SPAGHETTI :-• • · ,.._ ...

TOMATOES ••••• l ·U • .aAPPLESAUCE. • • • 1...

CQUNTRY STYLI

Ground
Beef
5-lbs. or more

Spare Rills

$
'"·SJ 29

CUPS •••• -• ••

°

BAGELS •••••• •,........

$
n.... 99 c

RICE-A.aotll.............. ""

SUGU •• • •••• ,... ..

.

-77( IOSIIER SPEllS • - ·.. 61(
SANDWICH COOliES ,,,:
-·
. 78(
nAUAN DllSSING. :.· U' SALAD OLIVES • •
_ . __
98c
98(
FROSBD FUIES.
HONEY ••••• ...,. ....
$108
llfM-- -s121
STEAl
SAUCE.
•
•
DOG FOOD ••••••'~
'IWIC

II!Mc.IY- Jftr.

49

lb.

o o o o ,.. .

SLICED RIB SIDE

....

U.S.D.A. CHOICE IOUND 110111

9'$1 71

Shou ld er Stea k • • • • • • • •.

,,_,

Frozen Foods

Rib
Steaks

Perch Fillets .. 1 11 . ,., s1.55
Cod Fillets ... 1.11 ,., 51.59
5
heese
Pina
.
IJ .. .. ,., 1.09
llltOS
Hamburg Pina 1u.... ,.,.s1.09
MltO'
'
Pepperoni Pinau.ts·••· ~"~H •

79

BONE·IN

....

I...

lkt . ...

A-1

1.... . ....

tltht 0 "' , . . ,

~t4&lt;Pd

Chle•en

Lee or Breast
Quarters

Chicken
Parts

:J9

Pork loin Roast .. . ... 11

SJ 49
•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

••. SJ89

lOINHAlf
Pork
loin Roast ..•.. ~.

Bottom
Round

·chuck
Roast
BLADE CUT

SJ 35

SJ •59

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

lb.

fiDOU fADOU

I"·

lb.

lb.

EYE OF ROUND STlAK . . . .. lb. '2.19

• Ch"1ckens J0."'... . . . . ..
Roast1ng

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

large$
End

1·1b.
Pkg •

1.... ,

II II Mill

• • • • • • lb.

Chuek
Roast

CornJCinl
Fran Irs

SLICED LOIN SIDE

RIB QUARTER

POTATOES

IONUSIUY
WILSON

PorkChotu

MUSJAID19 oz. Squeeze BotHe

•

LARGE

SWEET MilD

lb.

SJ 35

EX'rRA UAN GIOUND liEf forMerly

Cucumbers

Bunches

lb.

lOIN QUARTER

PIICMI.

.a .

!!

lb .

GREEN TOP RADISHES OR

$

49

$

,........
R
d
d
G
. . . . ;;.~~__;;..;;•~;;._---:::.:r~o.;;un-=-w oun
.... • • • • •·

(II

CUTLERY

69c
Green Onions . • • • • 3 69c
Spanish Onions. •
29c
Leaf Lettuce • • • • • • • • •

Chuelr

PRISH

3-lbs. or more

-

·

FRESH CRISP

NOME GROWN

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Economical Alternative
1 To Ground a..flll

I'IUSIIIf .

89"
69"
.
99"
69"

r--------,1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Beef Short Ribs . .. . ~ 1.19
Boneless Stew Beef 11 5 1.59
Sliced Beef Liver ... .. 69'
Beef Shank .... 1• • • • :1.09

79c Ch"•c.ken Breasts ,_;.,... • • • • •.51• 13 .
IJ.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

~~'ki"tt

Chfc•en
Lees

Top Round
Steak .

$

,,

. . z---

....

*
**
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* SNACKS •
*
*
*
*
*
*
**
*
*
*
*
*"'- KEDTEA

Setni Boneless Ham w10u 011'0111011 • -::~ ~~. 98' Armour * Star Sliced Bacon . . . . . . . ~~~: s1.71
HMI Sllcta c..tt, c.. • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~- 5 1.79 Armour * Star Sliced Lunch Meat 12-01 . ,., . S1.19 ...,...""S~p1rlor Frtnkle1 •••• •• •••••• •• 1s.o.."" 99• s., 1rier IIHf Ft a:l:Jes. • • . . • . . • . • . . 114•. ,... s1. 09
----------------------------------~ ...,...-

********************

,.u..•.,_,.

15(

IRM

.

GlllTIM ........ .........

'ac
.

25'
fiNCH ONI"ON DIP ~: 32'
'LuNCH BAGS •••
32'
CHOW,MEIN NOODLES 37c
mcRUST MIX ••• ~::.·· 38'
II'OiaT- - 1 -- Y.l('ACI

CORN • • • • • • • • 1,..,, c.

10-Ct. ,...

fAciAL TISSUES • • .,..... 42'

-MARSHMALLOWS.

48'
SALAD CHERRIES •• -:· 48'
BARBECUE SAUCE • ':;~· 58'
BOWL CLUNER •• • ~::, 64c
nor
68c
CAT LinER ••• •
68C
...
SPEARS .. ... ... ~··
FLUFF • • ~ .... ........... 84c
MIX • • • ~~- 78c FOR BABY . .... 1:.·aac
BREAD DOUGH •• ~~- 88' . MOUTHWASH •••• I::•·$1 18
S1 01 . MASON JARS • • •c! !':~~ $168
DEODORANT. • • • i!:·
c.tT

•

1......

YWICIIU•UL IC

Oliii'ICI niCI

1... ..,

lilT-

.1

�OPEN DAILY
8 TIL 9
CLOSED
SUNDAYS

are

SUPER MARKETS

SUPER MARKETS

·. tltAIS
, $AT.,

. 7sc =~~.~OUIIl
SAV£
.. ""'" ... '"""~RlD
SEAW,S650
... ·-··"~ ss75·
Pta PltiOIIE

pENNYFAR

COUPON

·

********

MISSION 10 . ..

ROUT£43 Al GlAUGA

'

Adults
t~''•"•r).

Southern
Peaehes

W11'ti
pENNY FARE

coupoN -----.-e-•-••

·----··s·4·-7swl,.ti FAREs~oo
pENNY
If

Ch1"ldren

*

couPoN

FLORIDA

Sweet
Corn·

IS SEASON
T~ennvFare
cashiers
4 N£W SHOWS
upons !rom
. d
Ill' 4 .. Ill . . . . .

•

*
*
*
* Bananas
*
*
*
*
*
*
Pattie
*
5/kz.1 oc *
GRAVY MIXES 3:.
* ,.,,
e
28(
*
* Cube
--·3.
_,
32'
* Steak
38'
* $J89
--NtllC-==:-·
- - ·.. . , ••
*
....
_ _."'
*
••-7-.,... 44'
_ __ _............ 48c
* 5uper1or Frank"1es
.......
41'
* · Pork
Chops
*
MiSHm
•::64'
as_,.,_
66c

~

Get discount _co P hase Requ1re
No Addi,lonal urc

SOUND RIPE

lb.

lb.

S;edless Grapes•••••• lb.
"DRISCOll" BRAND

.

Strawberries ••••••• pint
Pineapple •••• _•••••• Each
"DOlE"

ROASTED

Peanuts ••••••••••••• lb.

~Beef

Mf~

I IMI

, . . . C.

.

1001 MATOIES • _ _.,. ~

Ill~ GROUND IEif formerly
Ground Chuck~-:·;:· .

SPAGHETTI :-• • · ,.._ ...

TOMATOES ••••• l ·U • .aAPPLESAUCE. • • • 1...

CQUNTRY STYLI

Ground
Beef
5-lbs. or more

Spare Rills

$
'"·SJ 29

CUPS •••• -• ••

°

BAGELS •••••• •,........

$
n.... 99 c

RICE-A.aotll.............. ""

SUGU •• • •••• ,... ..

.

-77( IOSIIER SPEllS • - ·.. 61(
SANDWICH COOliES ,,,:
-·
. 78(
nAUAN DllSSING. :.· U' SALAD OLIVES • •
_ . __
98c
98(
FROSBD FUIES.
HONEY ••••• ...,. ....
$108
llfM-- -s121
STEAl
SAUCE.
•
•
DOG FOOD ••••••'~
'IWIC

II!Mc.IY- Jftr.

49

lb.

o o o o ,.. .

SLICED RIB SIDE

....

U.S.D.A. CHOICE IOUND 110111

9'$1 71

Shou ld er Stea k • • • • • • • •.

,,_,

Frozen Foods

Rib
Steaks

Perch Fillets .. 1 11 . ,., s1.55
Cod Fillets ... 1.11 ,., 51.59
5
heese
Pina
.
IJ .. .. ,., 1.09
llltOS
Hamburg Pina 1u.... ,.,.s1.09
MltO'
'
Pepperoni Pinau.ts·••· ~"~H •

79

BONE·IN

....

I...

lkt . ...

A-1

1.... . ....

tltht 0 "' , . . ,

~t4&lt;Pd

Chle•en

Lee or Breast
Quarters

Chicken
Parts

:J9

Pork loin Roast .. . ... 11

SJ 49
•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

••. SJ89

lOINHAlf
Pork
loin Roast ..•.. ~.

Bottom
Round

·chuck
Roast
BLADE CUT

SJ 35

SJ •59

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

lb.

fiDOU fADOU

I"·

lb.

lb.

EYE OF ROUND STlAK . . . .. lb. '2.19

• Ch"1ckens J0."'... . . . . ..
Roast1ng

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

large$
End

1·1b.
Pkg •

1.... ,

II II Mill

• • • • • • lb.

Chuek
Roast

CornJCinl
Fran Irs

SLICED LOIN SIDE

RIB QUARTER

POTATOES

IONUSIUY
WILSON

PorkChotu

MUSJAID19 oz. Squeeze BotHe

•

LARGE

SWEET MilD

lb.

SJ 35

EX'rRA UAN GIOUND liEf forMerly

Cucumbers

Bunches

lb.

lOIN QUARTER

PIICMI.

.a .

!!

lb .

GREEN TOP RADISHES OR

$

49

$

,........
R
d
d
G
. . . . ;;.~~__;;..;;•~;;._---:::.:r~o.;;un-=-w oun
.... • • • • •·

(II

CUTLERY

69c
Green Onions . • • • • 3 69c
Spanish Onions. •
29c
Leaf Lettuce • • • • • • • • •

Chuelr

PRISH

3-lbs. or more

-

·

FRESH CRISP

NOME GROWN

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Economical Alternative
1 To Ground a..flll

I'IUSIIIf .

89"
69"
.
99"
69"

r--------,1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Beef Short Ribs . .. . ~ 1.19
Boneless Stew Beef 11 5 1.59
Sliced Beef Liver ... .. 69'
Beef Shank .... 1• • • • :1.09

79c Ch"•c.ken Breasts ,_;.,... • • • • •.51• 13 .
IJ.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

~~'ki"tt

Chfc•en
Lees

Top Round
Steak .

$

,,

. . z---

....

*
**
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* SNACKS •
*
*
*
*
*
*
**
*
*
*
*
*"'- KEDTEA

Setni Boneless Ham w10u 011'0111011 • -::~ ~~. 98' Armour * Star Sliced Bacon . . . . . . . ~~~: s1.71
HMI Sllcta c..tt, c.. • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~- 5 1.79 Armour * Star Sliced Lunch Meat 12-01 . ,., . S1.19 ...,...""S~p1rlor Frtnkle1 •••• •• •••••• •• 1s.o.."" 99• s., 1rier IIHf Ft a:l:Jes. • • . . • . . • . • . . 114•. ,... s1. 09
----------------------------------~ ...,...-

********************

,.u..•.,_,.

15(

IRM

.

GlllTIM ........ .........

'ac
.

25'
fiNCH ONI"ON DIP ~: 32'
'LuNCH BAGS •••
32'
CHOW,MEIN NOODLES 37c
mcRUST MIX ••• ~::.·· 38'
II'OiaT- - 1 -- Y.l('ACI

CORN • • • • • • • • 1,..,, c.

10-Ct. ,...

fAciAL TISSUES • • .,..... 42'

-MARSHMALLOWS.

48'
SALAD CHERRIES •• -:· 48'
BARBECUE SAUCE • ':;~· 58'
BOWL CLUNER •• • ~::, 64c
nor
68c
CAT LinER ••• •
68C
...
SPEARS .. ... ... ~··
FLUFF • • ~ .... ........... 84c
MIX • • • ~~- 78c FOR BABY . .... 1:.·aac
BREAD DOUGH •• ~~- 88' . MOUTHWASH •••• I::•·$1 18
S1 01 . MASON JARS • • •c! !':~~ $168
DEODORANT. • • • i!:·
c.tT

•

1......

YWICIIU•UL IC

Oliii'ICI niCI

1... ..,

lilT-

.1

�R-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. June 25, 1978

Is your house pklnt just like. one of the family?

)fiss
Layton
weds
••

" BELPRE - Miss Reba
!'ty nn Layton, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Tom
Roettker, 800 George St.,
Be lpre, 0 ., and Philip
Glen Welch. son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. G. Welch, Vineent,
0 .• were mamed May 12 at
the Vincent Urutecl Methodist
Church at Vincent, 0.
The candle light. double·
11ng ceremony we~s offil'iet ted
bv the Hev. James Sands.
~irs . Terr;· Mu1·ph y.
orga rust, presen ted · tradi·

Uonal and l'Ontc mpu re~ry
music, and du ring the
ceremony , sang " T he Lunl' s

Prayer" while the couple
kneit at the altar.
The church was decora ted
with tw u seve n branch
candelabra , altar fl owers
ami fcnnily pews wert' mark-

ed w1th while bows. Candles
wtth greenery aruund them ,
we rt~ in each winduw.
Ill ma rriag~

Given

by her

[J!lrents. and escorted to the
altar by her step-fat her, the
brl(le wore

H

ful'ma l white

puiy-kn1t gown featuring an
en1pire waistline and fi tted
bodice with key-hole neckline
edged with a wide band uf
Vc111se la ce. The waist \\'as

l'ircled with matching lace
and the lung straight sleeves
lll:ld H wide founce over wrist .

The full A-line skirt was edg,.,j with a band of Venise
flower~ and had a i on~ at·
tached 1'11apei train .
T lw Un tie 's veil, a twutiemJ· walking length man·
Iilla , f si lk illusion with
Venise lace edging. was held
in place b1• her bandea u type
cap t·uvercd in matching lace
and

e~ ece n ted

with

seed

pearls.
She carried a bridal buu·
quet uf white r uses mounted

on the whlte Bible ea rried by
the groom 's muther at l1er
wedding .

Bridal attendants were
Miss Paula Ann Welch, sister
of the groom, and Miss Wen·
dy Layton, s1ster of the bride,
who wore identi call igill blue

stem while rose and wore
white roses in their hair.
Flower girl wa s Miss Kelly
Burnfield, cousin of the
groom. She carried a basket
uf tinted daisies and rose
petals and wore a pale pink
print ed dress with an off
white skirt trimmed with
lace.
Ushers were Gary Seamon
and Robe rt Morehead .
Hingbearer wa s Hubby
Morehead. all friends of the
bride and groum.
A reception was held in the
social room uf the church
where a three-tiered blue
tnmmeq wedding cake
c'Cntered the bride's table
with punch bowls on an ad·
joining table. Tinted daisies
wrre used in flur~l or·
rangements. and a blue and

Sunday-Monday
&amp; Tues.

. ...

"

', \l
• -\ r

Tonight thru
Thursday

JENNIFER BARNHART
TURNS THREE
Jennifer l.tJulse Barnhart
celebrated her !bird birth·
day on June 8 at the home
of her parents, Wayne and
Marsha
Barnhart,
Pomeroy. A Bugs Bunny
theme was carried out.
Attending were Mrs. Nettie
Barnhart and Elaine, Mrs.
Mabd Patton, James and
Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Hayes and Dennlse, Ronnie
Anderson, Mrs. Mina
Gorby and Shellle Sheppard. Sending gifts were
Mr. aod Mrs. William
Thornton, Mr. and Mrs.
William Grueser and Mr.

and Mrs. Herman Martin.

CARTOON

MAY GET CARDS
EAST MEIGS - Eastern
Hi gh School students may
pick up their grade ca rds at.
the high school beginning
Monday between 9 a .m. and 3
p.m.

SUNDAY SPECIAL
GROUP OF
LADIES'
DRESS SHOES

&amp; SANDALS
Hush Puppies, Natural
Walker, Ri sque' .
Values to $25 .00

'I
J
I

$10 00

I

ftTt

SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Some people also had their
first exposure to plant-love by
their
parents
or
grandparents.
"I think almost everybody
has a fond memory of a
grandmother talking to a
poinsettia to encourage it to
bloom - even though it was
after Christmas," she said.
"And it seemed to work

civilization . lt stems from the
ecology craz.e of several
years ago when everyone
went for growing things,"
said Hazel Grill.
·
"Then, everyone wanted to
help the environment and
bring in more plants and it
spread to houseplants . And
now everybody wants their
own houseplant."

Luncheon ·hosted to
honor Roxanna Patterson
POME HOV-- Mary Ruth
and Joy Sauer and Tina Nie~·i
entc rt~in rd recently with a

yellow theme was cil rried

out.
Presiding at the punch
bowls were Mrs. Marilyn
Burnfield and Mrs. Ortun
Wallace. aunts of the groom.
Mrs. Dennis Fortney and
Mrs. Dennis Trotter .fri,nds
uf the family, served the
ca ke. Also assisting at the
reception were Mrs . Dennis
Bid denger, Mr s. Ruy
Jameson and Mrs. Ron Me·
C01nas.
Mrs. Bruce Nibert. aunt uf
the bride , and Mrs. Tim
Johnson, cousin of the groom,
registered the guests.
The bnde is a graduate uf
· Buckeye Hills Ca reer Cen ter
at R1o Grande. The groom
graduated from Warren High
Schuoi and a tt end ed
Park ers burg Co mmunity
College. He is. employed at
Furma Scientific.
The couple resides on
Barclay St. , Belpre.
Guests were present !rum
Culwnbu s, Ga lli[J&lt;Jiis, Pt.
Pleasant , Barlow. Vincent ,
Belpre, Fleming and Marietta .

dresses. ca rried Cl single lung
•

111 Ctl '~ R0 'N I[J,_ An•·

l!Y MARIAN E. McQUIDDY
DES MOINES, Iowa I UP!)
- Housr plants may be all
tlle rage. but an official of the
Society of Iowa Florist says
there's no need to get ca!Tied
away and tickle U1em under
the leaves.
''The idea of a green plant
as a pet is something which is
a byprodu ct
of our

ilrid;li

luncheon

honoring

Huxanna Pat.lcr sun who wa s

marri ed yeotc1·day tu .Juhn
Hugheo .
The buffet luncheon was

Dorothy Rife, .Mia Vaughan ,
pink wedding bells on the Stephanie Minor, Diane
tab le by wh ite satin Carsey. Sherry Reuter , Jan
Pullins, Cathy Hoffner, Janet
strt!amers.
A prize was wun by Duruthy Hughes, Teresa Patterson.
Hife. The guest list included Rubin Dewhurst, Ingrid
Mary Price, Joyce Hut· Ha wley . and J eannie
cl1 isun. Jayne · Hutcliisun, Slawter.
above being conncded to

scrw d from a tab!t• &lt;:overed

in green wit11a bridal cenlel··
p! ect• and pink

Mr. and Mrs. Pbilip Wekh

tr~pers.

Guests

were sea ted at a ta ble
covered in green with pHstel
dCJisy cen terpiece and green
l1urTica nL' candles .

Gift s · for

the

personal

shuwl'l' were placed on a

table covered in whi te with
p111k wedding bells from

Otester
News Notes
CLARICE ALLEN
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Chester fi re department met
Wednesday evening at the
firehouse for th e regular
meeting, with president ,
Karla Chevalier in charge.
The meeting opened with The
Lord's Prayer followed by
roll call being ans wered by
nine members . Mmutes of the
pr('v ious meeting were read
by secretary, Clari ce Allen
and th e treasurer' s report by
Opal Wickham . A card of
than ks from the Co nr oy
fam ily was read and cards
were sent to Pauiine
Hidenour , who is ill , and to
Clara Conroy. A motion to
buy material for kitchen
curtains was made by Cleo
DeTry and seconded by Karla
Chevalier. Curt ains will be
made by Karla and Sheila
Taylor. The new cards have
arrived and can be purchased
fru m any member. Ne w
commi.ttees were named as
fulluws, Ways and Means,
Sheila
Ta ylor.
Karla
C.11eva lier, Est her Ridenour.
Si na Batley. and lnzy Newell.
F'ire and resc ue, Clarice
Allen , Cleo DcTray, Opal
Wickham and Betty Newell.
Good of Order, Margaret
Ch ri sty, Dorothy My ers,
F:th el Orr. Gaye Ga ul.
Pauline Rideno ur and Opal
Casto. Communi ty service,
F:rma
Cleland ,
Opa l
Ei chinger , Marcia Keller,
Jea n Frederick and Clara
c:n~ro y. Meeting ad journed
and will meet again on Jul y 5
at the firehouse.
Ross and Larry Cleland
were business visitors in
Columbus Monday.
Mr. and Mrs . Spence
Tederick , Old Washington.
called on Mr. and Mrs . John
W1 ck ham Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Ch ri sty
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Wuod spent the weekend in
Pittsburgh and att ended the
ball ~ame on Sunday.
Mr. and Mr s. John
Wick ham were supper guests
uf Mrs. Lucy Gaul on Wed·
ncsday.
Mr . and Mrs . Char les
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Co lumbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Eich inger. Hi o Grande,
were weeken d guests of Mrs.
Opal Eichin ge r and Laura
HY

SHANNON BEVINS
TURNS SIX - Shannon
Dale Bevins, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donnie N. Bevins.
201812 Eastern Ave .,
Gallipolis, celebrated his
sixth birthday May !6 with
a parl'y at bls borne. His
cake was baked and
decorated by his father In
the theme of Star Wars.
Refreshments were served.
Atlendlng were biB sister,
Oonlse, his mother and
father, Pee Wee, Susie,
Cuble, Ogle Robinson ,
Sarah, Randy , Penny
Simpson. Chris Plymile,
Toby Ault, Samantha
Phillips, Carr! and Shelli
W~s , Jean and Marie
Perry, Julie Syrus, Tina
White, Jodi Burns, Kaley
and Steve Goelllng, Greta
and Eddie Barthelmas,
Stephney Cbapman ,
Wanda Clay and sister,
Lenora Ann, Becky and
Amy
Bush,
Molly
O'Rourke, Charlie, Lisa,
Kaye Keithly. Sending gifts
were Mr. and Mrs. John
Starling of Bluefield,
Virginia. Mr. and Mrs.
Orvill Bevins of Turkey
Creek, Kentucky Larr y
Sommersvllle of Pt.
Pleasant. He also received
a card irom his aunt and
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Arvlle
Starling of Chespeake,
Virginia. Visiting this week
are his grandparents,
Starling and Donna
Starling, a cousin from
High Point, N. C.

Apple Grove

News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Juanita Justice of
Pomeroy took her father,
Preston Parsons. Mrs. Edna
Parsons and son, Mark, to
Kin Folks Restaurant Sunday
for dinner in observance of
Father's Day at Point
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Melvin
of Tampa , Fla. sp~nt Monday
till Wednesda y with Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
Vi sitin g Mr. and Mrs.
Hoge r Roush and new
dau ght er, Kimberly Lynn
were Mrs. Marie Michael ,
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Jarrell ,
Mark , Marshall and Mike ,
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pickett
and Tracy , Mrs. Raymond
Grady, Rev. David Harris,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
Mr . and Mrs. Da!Tell Norris
and Tracy, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe,
Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and
Cindy, Mrs. Ronnie Russell,
Mrs. Roberta Lewis, Mrs.
Charlotte Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Michael, Becky
and Chuck, Danny Thoma,
Mrs . Crestly n Hill , Mrs.
Kathryn Hunt , Mrs. Margie
Hunt , Kyle Wi ckline, Mrs.
Russell Findley, Ed Findley.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Par·

DONISE BE\' INS
TURNS NINE - Donise
Jan Bevins, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Donnie N.
Bevins, 2018 •, Easter n
Ave., Gallipolis. celebrated
her ninth birthday May 30
with a party at her home.
Her cake de corated with
Raggedy Ann aod Andy on
top, was baked by her
father . Refreshments were
served. Attending were her
brother, Ahannon ; her

mother and father , Randy,
Sarah, Penn y Simpson,
Chris Plymlle, Toby Ault,
Samantha Phillips, Carr!
W'esi, Julie Syrus, Sue,
Tina, Bobby White, Jodi
Burris, Marie, Jean Perry.
Kenny , Susie, CuDie, Ogic.

Pee Wee Robinson, Cristi
Clark, Tammy Ellys on,
Lisa and l.eia, Jan e
Phillips and Hetty Perry.
Those sending gifts were
Kay e Keit hly . Larr y
Sommersville,
Wand a
Clay, Mr. and Mrs. John
Sta rling of Bluefield ,
Virginia , Mr. and Mrs.
Orvlll Bevins of Turkt·y
Cree k, Kentu cky, Jan e
Phillips and Betty Perry .

sons spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Broo ks at
Letart, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs, Don Bell,
Mrs. Beverl y Cunningham,
Brice Hart were in Columbus
and helped Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Han move to their new
apartment . The newlyweds
are at home to their friends at
Town House in Sharon
Woods, 19t2 Grande Hue
Circle. Columbus. 0. 43229.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hayman
and famil y of Laurel. Md.
''Pent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
Keith .
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Richert
and son, Michael, of Clear·
water, Fla. spent a week 's
vacation with their grand·
mother, Mrs. Gladys Sh1ellls
and family.
Mrs. Don Hiffle and
children of Whe elers burg,
Ohio are spending two weeks
with Mr. and Mrs. Lester
ll&lt;Jush and famil y.
Mrs. Mary Roush is a
med ical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hosp ital. Mr s.
Pauline Hili is a patient at
lloize r Medi ca l Center,
Gallipolis. Cards would be
appreciated.
Beth Ann and Mark Theiss
of Raci ne spent Tuesday with
Mrs. Till Webb.
Mr. and Mrs. Ge rald
·Hayman visited Wednesday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Hayman at Thomas
Fork .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox, so n
David spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell at
Newark, 0 .
Orville Hunt of Pleasantvill e, 0., Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Hunt of Georgia
visited Mrs. Margie Hunt,
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt an d
family.

Shower held
RUTLAND
Miss
Roxanna Patterson, bride elect of John Hughes, was
honored with a bridal shower
at the home of Mrs. June
Dewhurst with Mrs. Audrey
Patterson as co-hostess.
Games were played with
prizes going to Pauline Tillis,
Faye Sauer and Ja net
Hughes. Refreshments were
se rved to Pauline Bentley,
Bea Dugan. Neva Kennedy,
Faye Sauer, Pauline Tillis,
Janet Hughes, Betty Hutchison, Adelene France,
Connie Black, Rose Patterson
and Penny Dewhurst . Sending gi ft s were Teresa
Patte rson, Lizzie Geary ,
Bertha Evans. Margar et
Parsons, Mary Sauer, J oy
Sauer. Katie Fink. Jayne
Hutchison , Joyce Hutchison,
Phyllis Hal ey . Chery l
Lem ley. Carrie Moore, Ethel
Chapman. Ann Webster.

Officers
elected
for club

POMEROY--Officers fu r
the 1978-79 year were elected
at the Thursday meeti ng uf
(he Huck Springs Better
Health Club held at the Rock
Spnngs United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Nancy Morris
was hostess for Ihe meeti ng.
Elected were Mrs. Martha
King, president : Mrs. Helen
Blackston. vice president ;
Mrs . Ja cki e Zi rkle,
treasu rer ; and Mrs. Judy
Hym phreys, secretary . Mrs.
L&lt;,nora Leifh eit, retiring
president thanked everyone
for cooperation during the
past year.
Fur the program. Sharon
Michael explained tile fw1e·
lion uf the Cancer Society.
The Almanac
Donations were made to the
United Press International
Cancer t-und and the Red
Today is Sunday, June 25, Cross.
the I 76th day of 1978 with 189
The salute to the flag and
to follow.
the Lord 's Prayer opened the
The moon approach ing its meeting attended by 13
last quarter .
members and seven ch ildren.
TI1ere is no morning star. The contest prepared by
The evening stars are Mer- Wiimett.a Leifheit was won by
cury, Ven us, Mars, Saturn Martha King and Tara Hwn·
and Jupiter.
plireys. Next meeting will be
Those born on this date are a picnic for members and
Wider the sign of Ca ncer.
their familie s at the roadside
F'rench composer Gustave park unHuute 3:t, July 20 al ti
Charpentier was born June p.m.

'

then..''

Now, the sales of green
plants . are growing for
florists, specialty garden
stores and plant boutiques .
"It 's a whole new business.
There are lovely, very smart
boutiques all catering the
plant phenomena . The green
plants are outselling cut
flowers in some areas," she
said .
But treating the plants like
humans is a fad , like hulahoops, she said.

"It's a craze. Those who
have a green thwnb will do
well with their plants and
those who don 't won't ," Mrs.
Grill said. "There are some
plants that will have troubles,
no matter how much talking
you do to them.
She said it's great fun to
talk to plants and to treat
them like pets or people "but
there is a limit ," admitting
that some people carry the
plant~ove to extreme.
"I talk to my plants a littl e
bit, one has a name. But the
true test in a plant is its care.
If you water your plants
properly and give them the
necessary light and fertilizer,
it shouldn't be necessary to
do much more," she said .
" I took a palm to ch urch
and went up during the week
to check it for red spiders . As
I was rubbing my fingers
· around the leaves and on the
stem , the pastor walked by
and explained that my care
was why it was doing so well.
" And all I was doing was
looking for bugs."

VBS SLATED
ALFRED - Bible School
will L'f' held at the Alfred
United Methodist Church
June 26 through June 30 from
9a.m. to 11 :30a.m. daily . Th e
closing program will be on
F'riday, June 30 at 8 p.m. A
picnic will be held at noon on
Friday for the children and
parents. Classes and teachers
are, beginners, Dorothy
Calaway and Doris Dillinger;
primary, Marjorie Guthrie
and Gay Ann Burke; juniors,
Charlotte VanMeter and Kate
Rodehaver ; teens, Thelma
Hend erson · and Susan
Pullins; pian ist, Fl orenc e
Spencer ; dire ctor, Janic e
Pullins. For additiona l in·
formation call 980-3$62.

Cl;;f.Fe-:?j~?~~~~e:h!,'.! -.. ·~ .. Illinois
~~~ rois~rRe~~: ~~~ ~::d~~~~~~· ~~b=~~ ~~d :~gb~";.~ss~~~~i.

Beaver took place at the
home of the bride's grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Douglas Darst, on Roush
Lane, Cheshire.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gleason
Gilbert, Gallipolis . The
groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Rudy Beaver, Eul'eka
Star Route.
The Rev. Miles Trout of
Cheshire performed the
double ring ceremony . The
bride wore a white floor
length gown, featuring a
fitted bodice, and tied in
streamers at the shoulders.
Her only jewelry was a silver
necklace given to her by her
teacher, Mrs . Thomas
Rieser.
Miss Sherry Gilbert , sister
of the bride, was maid of
honor. She wore a floor length
gown of tight blue.
The groom wore a light
,.· blue suit and his best man
·was Carl Beaver, brother of
the groom.
For her daughter's wed·
ding Mrs. Gilbert wore a
beige gown with matching
accessories, and the groom 's
mother, Mrs. Beaver's gown
was coral.
There was a beautiful three
tiered cake of pink and white,
shaped in a heart design . It
was topped by a miniature
bride and groom. Cake was
served with punch, mints and
nuts, with Mrs. Ellen Gilbert,
aunt of the bride, presiding at
the punch bowl.
The couple Is now residing
at Route 3 Gallipolis. ·
The wedding guests were
Mrs. Mable Beaver and
Marsha, Mrs . Carolyn
Kingery and Regina, Mrs.
Frances Kingery, Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Russell and Paula,
Mrs. Nellie McGuire, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Beaver and
Michele, Shawn Byus, Mrs.

Brady Jr ., Rhonda Reynolds
and Paul, Jr., Rhea• Amos,
Mr. and Mrs. Gleason

.
Mrs. Miles Trout. :Friends
and relatives wish them a
long and happy ma!Tiage.

1

·June 28 - Exercise Group RSVP, Julie Ormsby, 446-2070.
June 30 - Couple 's volleyball 7 p.m. RSVP Pam Terrizzi
446-1485.
July~ - Exercise Group Julie Ormsby RSVP 446-2070.
July 8- Bake sale 9a.m. till3p .m. Haskins-Tanner.
July 12 - Exercise Group RSVP Julie Ormsby 446-2070.
July 12 - Picnic at Krodel Park II a.m. till p.m. Bring
sack lunch.
July 19 - Exercise Group RSVP Julie Ormsby 446-2070.
July 20 - Evening Bridge Chris Mitchell 7:30 p.m. RSVP
446-7739.
July 26 - Exercise Group RSVP Julie Ormsby 446-2070.
July 28 - Couples bowling 9 p.m.
Welcome Wagon is open to any interested party in tbe
area. Call Chris Mitchell at 446-7739or Ann Raub at388-9804 for
more information.

SUNDAY
HOME Mission worker, Dale
Pearson at Ptne Grove FWB,
1:30 p.m.
ADDISON FWB Sunday
School picnic, after Sunday
School at Addison Roadside
Park. Brtng covered dish .
PAINT Creek Regular
Baptist Youth Service 7 p.m.
'th B th c 1 · M' ·
w1
ro er a vm mms .

SUNDAY
SPECIAL services at the
Jubilee Christian Center with
John Fellure 7:30p.m.
MONDAY
· REVIVAL at Church of God
Holiness until July 10 with
Rev Winfield Roe Arkansas,
'
1.30 ' p m

A thought for the day :
British
writ er
John
Galsworthy said, "If you do
not think about the futur e,
you cannot have one."
RETIJRN HOME
POMEHOY - Mr. and
Mrs.
Vin ce nt
Knight,
Heather, Vince nt and
Christopher have returned
home following a 10 da y trip
to Panama City, Fla. They
visited with Mrs. Knight's
sister and husband, Mr. and
Mrs .
John
Bagshaw,
Columbus, Georgia.

With MIKASA
from

humc Wednesday night.

Peddler's Pantry

Mrs . Joni Huffman had
d lHrge of the meeti ng with

Mrs. Ann Bro wning giving
tile tretlsurcr's re purt. She
al.su gave a report of a rece nt
yar d sale. Mrs. Ev elyn
Gill nun~ gc:IVe the secrctC::try's
report. The stuffc~l monkey
project fur the pediatric ward
at Ve te rans Memori al
Hospita l was discus sed .
liames 'were pla yed with
prizes guing tu Mrs . Martha
Huffman. Mrs. Joni Hoffman '
and Mrs. I.enora McKnight.
Mrs. Lucy White won the dour
prize.
Refr eshments were served
tu thuse named and Mrs. Pan·
dura Cullin s, Mrs . Flo
Strickland , Mrs. Shirley Bai·
ty, and Mrs . Ca rol yn
McDanie l. Mrs. Brenda
Pralcr, visiting here from
Kentuck y. assisted Mrs.
Boy~r in serving.

· Introductory Offer 10 Pet. Off
State &amp; Third
Gallipolis, Ohio

WHO'S

WED~~DA y

GOLDEN CIRCLE of Grace
I h
B in
UMC noon . unc eon . r g
table serv1ce and covered
dish .

S INC E

16G8

Writing lnstr umeniS in
14 Karat Gold F•lled
Pen or Pencil .

Se1

$17.50

. $35 .00

SUNDAY
FRENCH City Swingers
$quare Dance Club, a.mual
(amily picnic and election of
office rs. Bring covered dish,
table service, drink and hot
dog. or hamburgers, 7 p.m.,
Fortification Hill.
MONDAY
GALLIA Chapter, OCSEA,
bu siness meeting at the
Grande Squares Club Room
on Eastern Ave.
GALUPOUS Chapter O.E.S.
No. 283 regular meeting 7;30
p.m. Initiation , presentation
of fifty year pin. Refresh·
ments followin g.
TIJESDAY
MENTAL Health Forwn. 12
noon to 1 p.m.. luncheon
se rv ed, Gallia Center,
prese ntation by " Puppet
Troupe" .
LAFAYETTE
Unit
27
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at New
Legion Home. Installation of
officers .

CLARK'S
JEWELRY STORE
l42

REPRESENTATIVE HERE
GALLIPOLIS - Betty
Morgan, area representative
for The Ohio Commission on
Aging, Golden Buckeye
Program, will be at the
Treasurer's office at the
Co urthouse to take ap·
plica lions for the free Golden
Buckeye Card, June 26 to
June 30 from 10 a.m. until 3
p.m.

NOW?

Second Avo.

Gallipolis

Rep. Cor nea'! Uavis, a
black Chi cago Democrat
sponsoring ERA, agreed .
"You think I want to talk my
heart out for nothing~ " Davis
asked . " For all I'm con·
cerned , ERA is dead."
Leading ERA foe Phyllis
Schlafly of Alton, who was in
Arizona Thursday to raise
mon ey
for
anti-ERA
veto session.
Democratic House Leader · legislative candidates, called
Michael Madigan ruled out a the vote " a wonderful vicvote before June 30. Asked tury.
' We're winning. I think
when ERA might be revived,
they
lose votes eve ry time
Madigan said, " Nut during
they bring it up. Enough 1s
the spring session. Absolutely
enough.
Doesn't
the
not."

they wanted to regroup
before making any decisions.
They have several options,
including calling a vote again
in the House before the
scheduled adjournment June
30, introducin g an ERA
resolution in the Senate, or
waiting until the General
Assembly meets for its fall

,-·
·
-·
·
·
·--·,
I Sr. Citizens I
l Calendar I

CROss·

GALUPOUS - The Senior
Citizens Center will sponsor
the activities below for this
week :
Monday, June 28- Chorus,
l : lii-3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 27 Physical Fitness, 11: I~ a.m.;
S.T.O.P., 10:30 a.m.; Birth·
day Party, 1:30 p.m .
Wednesday, June 28 Card Games, 1-3 p.m.;
Movies , I :30 _p.m.
Thursday, June 29 Physical Fitness, 11:15 a.m.:
Bible Study, 12:45·1:45 p.m.;
Craft Demonstrations for
Girl Scouts, I p.m.
Friday, June 30 - Cin·
cinnati Reds Game (Bus
leaves aO p.m. ; Art Class, I·
3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program will serve the
following meals:
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham bits, spinach
with hard-cooked egg slice,
orange and grapefruit sec·
tions on lettuce . cornbread,
butter, fruit in season, milk.
Tuesday - Baked pork
chop, baked sweet potato,
applesauce, brussel sprouts,
bread, but ter, apricot
dessert, milk.
Wednesday - Johnny
Marzetti and cheese melted
on top, ltalianne green beans,
cottage cheese salad with
chopped chives, roll , butter,
chilled peaches with whipped
cream, milk.
Thursday - Hamburger
"Deluxe" on bun, relishes,
peas, butter, sherbet, milk.
Friday - Baked turkey ,
gravy , whipped potatoes ,
green beans, bread, butter,
lemon meringue pie, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
"Services rendered on a
non-discriminatory basis."

Legislature have anything
else to do?"

ERA pressure this month
from both sides was intense.
Mrs . Schlafly this week ac·
cused th e Cart er ad·
ministration of telling
Chicago May or Michael
Bilandic to line up pro-ERA
votes or lose federal money.
Gov. James R. Thompson,
though hobbled by a bad
back, spent part of his time
this week trying to persuade
lawmakers to vote for ERA;
U . Gov . Dave O'Neal at the
same time made calls to
legislators asking them to

vote against it. O'Neal later
apologized for emba!Tassing
Thompson.

REVIVAL
ASH ST. FREE WILL
BAPTIST CHURCH

tn Middleport

Services are at 7: 30 p.m.
with Evangelist Paul
Taylor from Price, Utah .

SPECIAL SINGING

JULIE MYERS
TURNS THREE - MIBs
Julie ADD Myers, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Myers of Route I Ray,
celebrated her third birth·
day Saturday, June 10 with
a party at her home. After
opening her many nice
cards and gifts, her guests
were served a Dooilld Duck
cake with Ice cream and
pop. Julie Is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Myers of Rio
Grande •nd Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Wright of lloute
I Ray.

Stop supporting

your local · ·taunCiry!
Get a Hoover®
portable
washer
Gets clothes clean faster. Can actuall
than washing in coin laundries. Great
condominiums, cottages, mobile~'~~"'"'
-··:··'":;
.

cheaper
apartments,
any home.

SAVES 7 WAYS!
o WATER
• ENERGY
o TRAVEL
• DETER GENT

• ADDITIVES
o DRYER TIME
• SPACE

\

\'

.Washes

24pounds
in30
minutes!

Find out why~ all

Jee~ n .

Hecent dinner guests of
Miss Luci lle Smith have been
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hites,
Middleport , Eleanor, Carolyn
and Russe ll Smith , Pomeroy.
Gary Spragu e, Elyria,
spent the weekend with
Dennis Ei chin ge r. Denni s
and Gary were fraternity
brothers while attending Ohio
State.
Harold Newell and Bob

'
I
I
I
I
I'

Welcome Wagon
club activities

Meeting hosted
POMEROY -- Mrs . Nettie
Buyer hosted a meeting of the
Sew-Rite Sewing Club at her

By DAVID FIELDS
SPRINGFIELD, lll. (UP!)
- The llllnois House has
rejected the Equal House
Amendment for the second
time this month and apparently will not take up the
controversial issue again, at
least until the fall.
Despite last-minute
pressure tactics and stalling
by pro-ERA forces Thursday,
the measure fell two votes
short of the 107 needed on a
105-71 tally. It is technically
alive because it was put on
postponed consideration and
can be called any time before
a new General Assembly is
seated in January.
Illinois is the last northern
industrial state that has not
ratified
the
proposed
women's rights amendment
to the Constitution. Three
more states must ratify the
amendment by March 22,
1979, unless Congress extends
the deadline.
The previous ERA vote
came June 7. It fell six votes
shy of the necessary threefifths majority. Supporters
scheduled a vote several
times this week but delayed a
roll call because head counts
indicated a vote would be too
risky.
ERA supporters, surprised
and confused by the loss, said

·I

25, 1800.

On this day in hi•'lory:
In 1876, Gen. George Custer
and his force of 208 men were
ambushed by Sioux Indians in
the battle of the Uttle Big
Horn in Montana .
In 1950, North Korean Communists invaded South
Korea.
In 1962. the U.S. Supreme
Court han ded down a decision
barrin g prayer in public
schools.
In 1973, White House
attorney John Dean told a
Senate committee President
Nixon joined in a plot to cover
up the Waterga te break-in.

House votes down
=~~ - -E
·. RA .tor second· tl.me

0\'er are sWitching to Allstate
auto insurance.

Wood attended the bail game
in Cincinnati Wednesday
afternoon .
Thursday eveni ng guests of
Lucille Smith were Roger
Willoughby , Phoenix, Miss
Audrey Rell, Mrs. James
Bell, Mrs. F'rank Gandiano,
all of Stanford, Conn.
D. D. Cleland, Columbus,
visited with Denzel Cleland
Monday.

Why are 80 many drivers swi tching.
their insurance to Allstate ?
We'll give you lots of rea~ns.
Allstate offers lots of spectal
rates and disco unts. Good Driver.
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Mileage. Young Married. And more.
And Allstate offers today' a moat
advanced claim handling. Coast
to COIIBl· ·Fast. Convenient.
We think you'll finq a
difference with Allstate.
So compare companies. Find out
why the owners of ov~r ~ine
million cars are now m good
hands. " Call or come in.

You can't ~ watching your child every
minute of every day. That's why you need
.,,. rprl, the child protection latch for
cabinets and drawers.
'
To a small child all those bottles and
containertt under the sink are toys or
something to eat or drink.IIJIIdhgttrd will
keep curious and mischievou s tots out of
cabinets and drawers. Yet, adults can get
in quickly and easily. Protect your
children. lnstallltl&gt;ll'·'rJJlt

has-

James Keusoli
for Summer

'"'

Fashion Coordklates Sz. 6-18

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�R-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. June 25, 1978

Is your house pklnt just like. one of the family?

)fiss
Layton
weds
••

" BELPRE - Miss Reba
!'ty nn Layton, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. Tom
Roettker, 800 George St.,
Be lpre, 0 ., and Philip
Glen Welch. son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. G. Welch, Vineent,
0 .• were mamed May 12 at
the Vincent Urutecl Methodist
Church at Vincent, 0.
The candle light. double·
11ng ceremony we~s offil'iet ted
bv the Hev. James Sands.
~irs . Terr;· Mu1·ph y.
orga rust, presen ted · tradi·

Uonal and l'Ontc mpu re~ry
music, and du ring the
ceremony , sang " T he Lunl' s

Prayer" while the couple
kneit at the altar.
The church was decora ted
with tw u seve n branch
candelabra , altar fl owers
ami fcnnily pews wert' mark-

ed w1th while bows. Candles
wtth greenery aruund them ,
we rt~ in each winduw.
Ill ma rriag~

Given

by her

[J!lrents. and escorted to the
altar by her step-fat her, the
brl(le wore

H

ful'ma l white

puiy-kn1t gown featuring an
en1pire waistline and fi tted
bodice with key-hole neckline
edged with a wide band uf
Vc111se la ce. The waist \\'as

l'ircled with matching lace
and the lung straight sleeves
lll:ld H wide founce over wrist .

The full A-line skirt was edg,.,j with a band of Venise
flower~ and had a i on~ at·
tached 1'11apei train .
T lw Un tie 's veil, a twutiemJ· walking length man·
Iilla , f si lk illusion with
Venise lace edging. was held
in place b1• her bandea u type
cap t·uvercd in matching lace
and

e~ ece n ted

with

seed

pearls.
She carried a bridal buu·
quet uf white r uses mounted

on the whlte Bible ea rried by
the groom 's muther at l1er
wedding .

Bridal attendants were
Miss Paula Ann Welch, sister
of the groom, and Miss Wen·
dy Layton, s1ster of the bride,
who wore identi call igill blue

stem while rose and wore
white roses in their hair.
Flower girl wa s Miss Kelly
Burnfield, cousin of the
groom. She carried a basket
uf tinted daisies and rose
petals and wore a pale pink
print ed dress with an off
white skirt trimmed with
lace.
Ushers were Gary Seamon
and Robe rt Morehead .
Hingbearer wa s Hubby
Morehead. all friends of the
bride and groum.
A reception was held in the
social room uf the church
where a three-tiered blue
tnmmeq wedding cake
c'Cntered the bride's table
with punch bowls on an ad·
joining table. Tinted daisies
wrre used in flur~l or·
rangements. and a blue and

Sunday-Monday
&amp; Tues.

. ...

"

', \l
• -\ r

Tonight thru
Thursday

JENNIFER BARNHART
TURNS THREE
Jennifer l.tJulse Barnhart
celebrated her !bird birth·
day on June 8 at the home
of her parents, Wayne and
Marsha
Barnhart,
Pomeroy. A Bugs Bunny
theme was carried out.
Attending were Mrs. Nettie
Barnhart and Elaine, Mrs.
Mabd Patton, James and
Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Hayes and Dennlse, Ronnie
Anderson, Mrs. Mina
Gorby and Shellle Sheppard. Sending gifts were
Mr. aod Mrs. William
Thornton, Mr. and Mrs.
William Grueser and Mr.

and Mrs. Herman Martin.

CARTOON

MAY GET CARDS
EAST MEIGS - Eastern
Hi gh School students may
pick up their grade ca rds at.
the high school beginning
Monday between 9 a .m. and 3
p.m.

SUNDAY SPECIAL
GROUP OF
LADIES'
DRESS SHOES

&amp; SANDALS
Hush Puppies, Natural
Walker, Ri sque' .
Values to $25 .00

'I
J
I

$10 00

I

ftTt

SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Some people also had their
first exposure to plant-love by
their
parents
or
grandparents.
"I think almost everybody
has a fond memory of a
grandmother talking to a
poinsettia to encourage it to
bloom - even though it was
after Christmas," she said.
"And it seemed to work

civilization . lt stems from the
ecology craz.e of several
years ago when everyone
went for growing things,"
said Hazel Grill.
·
"Then, everyone wanted to
help the environment and
bring in more plants and it
spread to houseplants . And
now everybody wants their
own houseplant."

Luncheon ·hosted to
honor Roxanna Patterson
POME HOV-- Mary Ruth
and Joy Sauer and Tina Nie~·i
entc rt~in rd recently with a

yellow theme was cil rried

out.
Presiding at the punch
bowls were Mrs. Marilyn
Burnfield and Mrs. Ortun
Wallace. aunts of the groom.
Mrs. Dennis Fortney and
Mrs. Dennis Trotter .fri,nds
uf the family, served the
ca ke. Also assisting at the
reception were Mrs . Dennis
Bid denger, Mr s. Ruy
Jameson and Mrs. Ron Me·
C01nas.
Mrs. Bruce Nibert. aunt uf
the bride , and Mrs. Tim
Johnson, cousin of the groom,
registered the guests.
The bnde is a graduate uf
· Buckeye Hills Ca reer Cen ter
at R1o Grande. The groom
graduated from Warren High
Schuoi and a tt end ed
Park ers burg Co mmunity
College. He is. employed at
Furma Scientific.
The couple resides on
Barclay St. , Belpre.
Guests were present !rum
Culwnbu s, Ga lli[J&lt;Jiis, Pt.
Pleasant , Barlow. Vincent ,
Belpre, Fleming and Marietta .

dresses. ca rried Cl single lung
•

111 Ctl '~ R0 'N I[J,_ An•·

l!Y MARIAN E. McQUIDDY
DES MOINES, Iowa I UP!)
- Housr plants may be all
tlle rage. but an official of the
Society of Iowa Florist says
there's no need to get ca!Tied
away and tickle U1em under
the leaves.
''The idea of a green plant
as a pet is something which is
a byprodu ct
of our

ilrid;li

luncheon

honoring

Huxanna Pat.lcr sun who wa s

marri ed yeotc1·day tu .Juhn
Hugheo .
The buffet luncheon was

Dorothy Rife, .Mia Vaughan ,
pink wedding bells on the Stephanie Minor, Diane
tab le by wh ite satin Carsey. Sherry Reuter , Jan
Pullins, Cathy Hoffner, Janet
strt!amers.
A prize was wun by Duruthy Hughes, Teresa Patterson.
Hife. The guest list included Rubin Dewhurst, Ingrid
Mary Price, Joyce Hut· Ha wley . and J eannie
cl1 isun. Jayne · Hutcliisun, Slawter.
above being conncded to

scrw d from a tab!t• &lt;:overed

in green wit11a bridal cenlel··
p! ect• and pink

Mr. and Mrs. Pbilip Wekh

tr~pers.

Guests

were sea ted at a ta ble
covered in green with pHstel
dCJisy cen terpiece and green
l1urTica nL' candles .

Gift s · for

the

personal

shuwl'l' were placed on a

table covered in whi te with
p111k wedding bells from

Otester
News Notes
CLARICE ALLEN
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Chester fi re department met
Wednesday evening at the
firehouse for th e regular
meeting, with president ,
Karla Chevalier in charge.
The meeting opened with The
Lord's Prayer followed by
roll call being ans wered by
nine members . Mmutes of the
pr('v ious meeting were read
by secretary, Clari ce Allen
and th e treasurer' s report by
Opal Wickham . A card of
than ks from the Co nr oy
fam ily was read and cards
were sent to Pauiine
Hidenour , who is ill , and to
Clara Conroy. A motion to
buy material for kitchen
curtains was made by Cleo
DeTry and seconded by Karla
Chevalier. Curt ains will be
made by Karla and Sheila
Taylor. The new cards have
arrived and can be purchased
fru m any member. Ne w
commi.ttees were named as
fulluws, Ways and Means,
Sheila
Ta ylor.
Karla
C.11eva lier, Est her Ridenour.
Si na Batley. and lnzy Newell.
F'ire and resc ue, Clarice
Allen , Cleo DcTray, Opal
Wickham and Betty Newell.
Good of Order, Margaret
Ch ri sty, Dorothy My ers,
F:th el Orr. Gaye Ga ul.
Pauline Rideno ur and Opal
Casto. Communi ty service,
F:rma
Cleland ,
Opa l
Ei chinger , Marcia Keller,
Jea n Frederick and Clara
c:n~ro y. Meeting ad journed
and will meet again on Jul y 5
at the firehouse.
Ross and Larry Cleland
were business visitors in
Columbus Monday.
Mr. and Mrs . Spence
Tederick , Old Washington.
called on Mr. and Mrs . John
W1 ck ham Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Ch ri sty
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Wuod spent the weekend in
Pittsburgh and att ended the
ball ~ame on Sunday.
Mr. and Mr s. John
Wick ham were supper guests
uf Mrs. Lucy Gaul on Wed·
ncsday.
Mr . and Mrs . Char les
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Co lumbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Eich inger. Hi o Grande,
were weeken d guests of Mrs.
Opal Eichin ge r and Laura
HY

SHANNON BEVINS
TURNS SIX - Shannon
Dale Bevins, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donnie N. Bevins.
201812 Eastern Ave .,
Gallipolis, celebrated his
sixth birthday May !6 with
a parl'y at bls borne. His
cake was baked and
decorated by his father In
the theme of Star Wars.
Refreshments were served.
Atlendlng were biB sister,
Oonlse, his mother and
father, Pee Wee, Susie,
Cuble, Ogle Robinson ,
Sarah, Randy , Penny
Simpson. Chris Plymile,
Toby Ault, Samantha
Phillips, Carr! and Shelli
W~s , Jean and Marie
Perry, Julie Syrus, Tina
White, Jodi Burns, Kaley
and Steve Goelllng, Greta
and Eddie Barthelmas,
Stephney Cbapman ,
Wanda Clay and sister,
Lenora Ann, Becky and
Amy
Bush,
Molly
O'Rourke, Charlie, Lisa,
Kaye Keithly. Sending gifts
were Mr. and Mrs. John
Starling of Bluefield,
Virginia. Mr. and Mrs.
Orvill Bevins of Turkey
Creek, Kentucky Larr y
Sommersvllle of Pt.
Pleasant. He also received
a card irom his aunt and
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Arvlle
Starling of Chespeake,
Virginia. Visiting this week
are his grandparents,
Starling and Donna
Starling, a cousin from
High Point, N. C.

Apple Grove

News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Juanita Justice of
Pomeroy took her father,
Preston Parsons. Mrs. Edna
Parsons and son, Mark, to
Kin Folks Restaurant Sunday
for dinner in observance of
Father's Day at Point
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Melvin
of Tampa , Fla. sp~nt Monday
till Wednesda y with Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
Vi sitin g Mr. and Mrs.
Hoge r Roush and new
dau ght er, Kimberly Lynn
were Mrs. Marie Michael ,
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Jarrell ,
Mark , Marshall and Mike ,
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Pickett
and Tracy , Mrs. Raymond
Grady, Rev. David Harris,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
Mr . and Mrs. Da!Tell Norris
and Tracy, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe,
Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and
Cindy, Mrs. Ronnie Russell,
Mrs. Roberta Lewis, Mrs.
Charlotte Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Michael, Becky
and Chuck, Danny Thoma,
Mrs . Crestly n Hill , Mrs.
Kathryn Hunt , Mrs. Margie
Hunt , Kyle Wi ckline, Mrs.
Russell Findley, Ed Findley.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Par·

DONISE BE\' INS
TURNS NINE - Donise
Jan Bevins, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Donnie N.
Bevins, 2018 •, Easter n
Ave., Gallipolis. celebrated
her ninth birthday May 30
with a party at her home.
Her cake de corated with
Raggedy Ann aod Andy on
top, was baked by her
father . Refreshments were
served. Attending were her
brother, Ahannon ; her

mother and father , Randy,
Sarah, Penn y Simpson,
Chris Plymlle, Toby Ault,
Samantha Phillips, Carr!
W'esi, Julie Syrus, Sue,
Tina, Bobby White, Jodi
Burris, Marie, Jean Perry.
Kenny , Susie, CuDie, Ogic.

Pee Wee Robinson, Cristi
Clark, Tammy Ellys on,
Lisa and l.eia, Jan e
Phillips and Hetty Perry.
Those sending gifts were
Kay e Keit hly . Larr y
Sommersville,
Wand a
Clay, Mr. and Mrs. John
Sta rling of Bluefield ,
Virginia , Mr. and Mrs.
Orvlll Bevins of Turkt·y
Cree k, Kentu cky, Jan e
Phillips and Betty Perry .

sons spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Broo ks at
Letart, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs, Don Bell,
Mrs. Beverl y Cunningham,
Brice Hart were in Columbus
and helped Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Han move to their new
apartment . The newlyweds
are at home to their friends at
Town House in Sharon
Woods, 19t2 Grande Hue
Circle. Columbus. 0. 43229.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hayman
and famil y of Laurel. Md.
''Pent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
Keith .
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Richert
and son, Michael, of Clear·
water, Fla. spent a week 's
vacation with their grand·
mother, Mrs. Gladys Sh1ellls
and family.
Mrs. Don Hiffle and
children of Whe elers burg,
Ohio are spending two weeks
with Mr. and Mrs. Lester
ll&lt;Jush and famil y.
Mrs. Mary Roush is a
med ical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hosp ital. Mr s.
Pauline Hili is a patient at
lloize r Medi ca l Center,
Gallipolis. Cards would be
appreciated.
Beth Ann and Mark Theiss
of Raci ne spent Tuesday with
Mrs. Till Webb.
Mr. and Mrs. Ge rald
·Hayman visited Wednesday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Hayman at Thomas
Fork .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fox, so n
David spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell at
Newark, 0 .
Orville Hunt of Pleasantvill e, 0., Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Hunt of Georgia
visited Mrs. Margie Hunt,
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt an d
family.

Shower held
RUTLAND
Miss
Roxanna Patterson, bride elect of John Hughes, was
honored with a bridal shower
at the home of Mrs. June
Dewhurst with Mrs. Audrey
Patterson as co-hostess.
Games were played with
prizes going to Pauline Tillis,
Faye Sauer and Ja net
Hughes. Refreshments were
se rved to Pauline Bentley,
Bea Dugan. Neva Kennedy,
Faye Sauer, Pauline Tillis,
Janet Hughes, Betty Hutchison, Adelene France,
Connie Black, Rose Patterson
and Penny Dewhurst . Sending gi ft s were Teresa
Patte rson, Lizzie Geary ,
Bertha Evans. Margar et
Parsons, Mary Sauer, J oy
Sauer. Katie Fink. Jayne
Hutchison , Joyce Hutchison,
Phyllis Hal ey . Chery l
Lem ley. Carrie Moore, Ethel
Chapman. Ann Webster.

Officers
elected
for club

POMEROY--Officers fu r
the 1978-79 year were elected
at the Thursday meeti ng uf
(he Huck Springs Better
Health Club held at the Rock
Spnngs United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Nancy Morris
was hostess for Ihe meeti ng.
Elected were Mrs. Martha
King, president : Mrs. Helen
Blackston. vice president ;
Mrs . Ja cki e Zi rkle,
treasu rer ; and Mrs. Judy
Hym phreys, secretary . Mrs.
L&lt;,nora Leifh eit, retiring
president thanked everyone
for cooperation during the
past year.
Fur the program. Sharon
Michael explained tile fw1e·
lion uf the Cancer Society.
The Almanac
Donations were made to the
United Press International
Cancer t-und and the Red
Today is Sunday, June 25, Cross.
the I 76th day of 1978 with 189
The salute to the flag and
to follow.
the Lord 's Prayer opened the
The moon approach ing its meeting attended by 13
last quarter .
members and seven ch ildren.
TI1ere is no morning star. The contest prepared by
The evening stars are Mer- Wiimett.a Leifheit was won by
cury, Ven us, Mars, Saturn Martha King and Tara Hwn·
and Jupiter.
plireys. Next meeting will be
Those born on this date are a picnic for members and
Wider the sign of Ca ncer.
their familie s at the roadside
F'rench composer Gustave park unHuute 3:t, July 20 al ti
Charpentier was born June p.m.

'

then..''

Now, the sales of green
plants . are growing for
florists, specialty garden
stores and plant boutiques .
"It 's a whole new business.
There are lovely, very smart
boutiques all catering the
plant phenomena . The green
plants are outselling cut
flowers in some areas," she
said .
But treating the plants like
humans is a fad , like hulahoops, she said.

"It's a craze. Those who
have a green thwnb will do
well with their plants and
those who don 't won't ," Mrs.
Grill said. "There are some
plants that will have troubles,
no matter how much talking
you do to them.
She said it's great fun to
talk to plants and to treat
them like pets or people "but
there is a limit ," admitting
that some people carry the
plant~ove to extreme.
"I talk to my plants a littl e
bit, one has a name. But the
true test in a plant is its care.
If you water your plants
properly and give them the
necessary light and fertilizer,
it shouldn't be necessary to
do much more," she said .
" I took a palm to ch urch
and went up during the week
to check it for red spiders . As
I was rubbing my fingers
· around the leaves and on the
stem , the pastor walked by
and explained that my care
was why it was doing so well.
" And all I was doing was
looking for bugs."

VBS SLATED
ALFRED - Bible School
will L'f' held at the Alfred
United Methodist Church
June 26 through June 30 from
9a.m. to 11 :30a.m. daily . Th e
closing program will be on
F'riday, June 30 at 8 p.m. A
picnic will be held at noon on
Friday for the children and
parents. Classes and teachers
are, beginners, Dorothy
Calaway and Doris Dillinger;
primary, Marjorie Guthrie
and Gay Ann Burke; juniors,
Charlotte VanMeter and Kate
Rodehaver ; teens, Thelma
Hend erson · and Susan
Pullins; pian ist, Fl orenc e
Spencer ; dire ctor, Janic e
Pullins. For additiona l in·
formation call 980-3$62.

Cl;;f.Fe-:?j~?~~~~e:h!,'.! -.. ·~ .. Illinois
~~~ rois~rRe~~: ~~~ ~::d~~~~~~· ~~b=~~ ~~d :~gb~";.~ss~~~~i.

Beaver took place at the
home of the bride's grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
Douglas Darst, on Roush
Lane, Cheshire.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Gleason
Gilbert, Gallipolis . The
groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Rudy Beaver, Eul'eka
Star Route.
The Rev. Miles Trout of
Cheshire performed the
double ring ceremony . The
bride wore a white floor
length gown, featuring a
fitted bodice, and tied in
streamers at the shoulders.
Her only jewelry was a silver
necklace given to her by her
teacher, Mrs . Thomas
Rieser.
Miss Sherry Gilbert , sister
of the bride, was maid of
honor. She wore a floor length
gown of tight blue.
The groom wore a light
,.· blue suit and his best man
·was Carl Beaver, brother of
the groom.
For her daughter's wed·
ding Mrs. Gilbert wore a
beige gown with matching
accessories, and the groom 's
mother, Mrs. Beaver's gown
was coral.
There was a beautiful three
tiered cake of pink and white,
shaped in a heart design . It
was topped by a miniature
bride and groom. Cake was
served with punch, mints and
nuts, with Mrs. Ellen Gilbert,
aunt of the bride, presiding at
the punch bowl.
The couple Is now residing
at Route 3 Gallipolis. ·
The wedding guests were
Mrs. Mable Beaver and
Marsha, Mrs . Carolyn
Kingery and Regina, Mrs.
Frances Kingery, Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Russell and Paula,
Mrs. Nellie McGuire, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Beaver and
Michele, Shawn Byus, Mrs.

Brady Jr ., Rhonda Reynolds
and Paul, Jr., Rhea• Amos,
Mr. and Mrs. Gleason

.
Mrs. Miles Trout. :Friends
and relatives wish them a
long and happy ma!Tiage.

1

·June 28 - Exercise Group RSVP, Julie Ormsby, 446-2070.
June 30 - Couple 's volleyball 7 p.m. RSVP Pam Terrizzi
446-1485.
July~ - Exercise Group Julie Ormsby RSVP 446-2070.
July 8- Bake sale 9a.m. till3p .m. Haskins-Tanner.
July 12 - Exercise Group RSVP Julie Ormsby 446-2070.
July 12 - Picnic at Krodel Park II a.m. till p.m. Bring
sack lunch.
July 19 - Exercise Group RSVP Julie Ormsby 446-2070.
July 20 - Evening Bridge Chris Mitchell 7:30 p.m. RSVP
446-7739.
July 26 - Exercise Group RSVP Julie Ormsby 446-2070.
July 28 - Couples bowling 9 p.m.
Welcome Wagon is open to any interested party in tbe
area. Call Chris Mitchell at 446-7739or Ann Raub at388-9804 for
more information.

SUNDAY
HOME Mission worker, Dale
Pearson at Ptne Grove FWB,
1:30 p.m.
ADDISON FWB Sunday
School picnic, after Sunday
School at Addison Roadside
Park. Brtng covered dish .
PAINT Creek Regular
Baptist Youth Service 7 p.m.
'th B th c 1 · M' ·
w1
ro er a vm mms .

SUNDAY
SPECIAL services at the
Jubilee Christian Center with
John Fellure 7:30p.m.
MONDAY
· REVIVAL at Church of God
Holiness until July 10 with
Rev Winfield Roe Arkansas,
'
1.30 ' p m

A thought for the day :
British
writ er
John
Galsworthy said, "If you do
not think about the futur e,
you cannot have one."
RETIJRN HOME
POMEHOY - Mr. and
Mrs.
Vin ce nt
Knight,
Heather, Vince nt and
Christopher have returned
home following a 10 da y trip
to Panama City, Fla. They
visited with Mrs. Knight's
sister and husband, Mr. and
Mrs .
John
Bagshaw,
Columbus, Georgia.

With MIKASA
from

humc Wednesday night.

Peddler's Pantry

Mrs . Joni Huffman had
d lHrge of the meeti ng with

Mrs. Ann Bro wning giving
tile tretlsurcr's re purt. She
al.su gave a report of a rece nt
yar d sale. Mrs. Ev elyn
Gill nun~ gc:IVe the secrctC::try's
report. The stuffc~l monkey
project fur the pediatric ward
at Ve te rans Memori al
Hospita l was discus sed .
liames 'were pla yed with
prizes guing tu Mrs . Martha
Huffman. Mrs. Joni Hoffman '
and Mrs. I.enora McKnight.
Mrs. Lucy White won the dour
prize.
Refr eshments were served
tu thuse named and Mrs. Pan·
dura Cullin s, Mrs . Flo
Strickland , Mrs. Shirley Bai·
ty, and Mrs . Ca rol yn
McDanie l. Mrs. Brenda
Pralcr, visiting here from
Kentuck y. assisted Mrs.
Boy~r in serving.

· Introductory Offer 10 Pet. Off
State &amp; Third
Gallipolis, Ohio

WHO'S

WED~~DA y

GOLDEN CIRCLE of Grace
I h
B in
UMC noon . unc eon . r g
table serv1ce and covered
dish .

S INC E

16G8

Writing lnstr umeniS in
14 Karat Gold F•lled
Pen or Pencil .

Se1

$17.50

. $35 .00

SUNDAY
FRENCH City Swingers
$quare Dance Club, a.mual
(amily picnic and election of
office rs. Bring covered dish,
table service, drink and hot
dog. or hamburgers, 7 p.m.,
Fortification Hill.
MONDAY
GALLIA Chapter, OCSEA,
bu siness meeting at the
Grande Squares Club Room
on Eastern Ave.
GALUPOUS Chapter O.E.S.
No. 283 regular meeting 7;30
p.m. Initiation , presentation
of fifty year pin. Refresh·
ments followin g.
TIJESDAY
MENTAL Health Forwn. 12
noon to 1 p.m.. luncheon
se rv ed, Gallia Center,
prese ntation by " Puppet
Troupe" .
LAFAYETTE
Unit
27
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. at New
Legion Home. Installation of
officers .

CLARK'S
JEWELRY STORE
l42

REPRESENTATIVE HERE
GALLIPOLIS - Betty
Morgan, area representative
for The Ohio Commission on
Aging, Golden Buckeye
Program, will be at the
Treasurer's office at the
Co urthouse to take ap·
plica lions for the free Golden
Buckeye Card, June 26 to
June 30 from 10 a.m. until 3
p.m.

NOW?

Second Avo.

Gallipolis

Rep. Cor nea'! Uavis, a
black Chi cago Democrat
sponsoring ERA, agreed .
"You think I want to talk my
heart out for nothing~ " Davis
asked . " For all I'm con·
cerned , ERA is dead."
Leading ERA foe Phyllis
Schlafly of Alton, who was in
Arizona Thursday to raise
mon ey
for
anti-ERA
veto session.
Democratic House Leader · legislative candidates, called
Michael Madigan ruled out a the vote " a wonderful vicvote before June 30. Asked tury.
' We're winning. I think
when ERA might be revived,
they
lose votes eve ry time
Madigan said, " Nut during
they bring it up. Enough 1s
the spring session. Absolutely
enough.
Doesn't
the
not."

they wanted to regroup
before making any decisions.
They have several options,
including calling a vote again
in the House before the
scheduled adjournment June
30, introducin g an ERA
resolution in the Senate, or
waiting until the General
Assembly meets for its fall

,-·
·
-·
·
·
·--·,
I Sr. Citizens I
l Calendar I

CROss·

GALUPOUS - The Senior
Citizens Center will sponsor
the activities below for this
week :
Monday, June 28- Chorus,
l : lii-3 p.m.
Tuesday, June 27 Physical Fitness, 11: I~ a.m.;
S.T.O.P., 10:30 a.m.; Birth·
day Party, 1:30 p.m .
Wednesday, June 28 Card Games, 1-3 p.m.;
Movies , I :30 _p.m.
Thursday, June 29 Physical Fitness, 11:15 a.m.:
Bible Study, 12:45·1:45 p.m.;
Craft Demonstrations for
Girl Scouts, I p.m.
Friday, June 30 - Cin·
cinnati Reds Game (Bus
leaves aO p.m. ; Art Class, I·
3 p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutrition
Program will serve the
following meals:
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham bits, spinach
with hard-cooked egg slice,
orange and grapefruit sec·
tions on lettuce . cornbread,
butter, fruit in season, milk.
Tuesday - Baked pork
chop, baked sweet potato,
applesauce, brussel sprouts,
bread, but ter, apricot
dessert, milk.
Wednesday - Johnny
Marzetti and cheese melted
on top, ltalianne green beans,
cottage cheese salad with
chopped chives, roll , butter,
chilled peaches with whipped
cream, milk.
Thursday - Hamburger
"Deluxe" on bun, relishes,
peas, butter, sherbet, milk.
Friday - Baked turkey ,
gravy , whipped potatoes ,
green beans, bread, butter,
lemon meringue pie, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
"Services rendered on a
non-discriminatory basis."

Legislature have anything
else to do?"

ERA pressure this month
from both sides was intense.
Mrs . Schlafly this week ac·
cused th e Cart er ad·
ministration of telling
Chicago May or Michael
Bilandic to line up pro-ERA
votes or lose federal money.
Gov. James R. Thompson,
though hobbled by a bad
back, spent part of his time
this week trying to persuade
lawmakers to vote for ERA;
U . Gov . Dave O'Neal at the
same time made calls to
legislators asking them to

vote against it. O'Neal later
apologized for emba!Tassing
Thompson.

REVIVAL
ASH ST. FREE WILL
BAPTIST CHURCH

tn Middleport

Services are at 7: 30 p.m.
with Evangelist Paul
Taylor from Price, Utah .

SPECIAL SINGING

JULIE MYERS
TURNS THREE - MIBs
Julie ADD Myers, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Myers of Route I Ray,
celebrated her third birth·
day Saturday, June 10 with
a party at her home. After
opening her many nice
cards and gifts, her guests
were served a Dooilld Duck
cake with Ice cream and
pop. Julie Is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Myers of Rio
Grande •nd Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Wright of lloute
I Ray.

Stop supporting

your local · ·taunCiry!
Get a Hoover®
portable
washer
Gets clothes clean faster. Can actuall
than washing in coin laundries. Great
condominiums, cottages, mobile~'~~"'"'
-··:··'":;
.

cheaper
apartments,
any home.

SAVES 7 WAYS!
o WATER
• ENERGY
o TRAVEL
• DETER GENT

• ADDITIVES
o DRYER TIME
• SPACE

\

\'

.Washes

24pounds
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Find out why~ all

Jee~ n .

Hecent dinner guests of
Miss Luci lle Smith have been
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hites,
Middleport , Eleanor, Carolyn
and Russe ll Smith , Pomeroy.
Gary Spragu e, Elyria,
spent the weekend with
Dennis Ei chin ge r. Denni s
and Gary were fraternity
brothers while attending Ohio
State.
Harold Newell and Bob

'
I
I
I
I
I'

Welcome Wagon
club activities

Meeting hosted
POMEROY -- Mrs . Nettie
Buyer hosted a meeting of the
Sew-Rite Sewing Club at her

By DAVID FIELDS
SPRINGFIELD, lll. (UP!)
- The llllnois House has
rejected the Equal House
Amendment for the second
time this month and apparently will not take up the
controversial issue again, at
least until the fall.
Despite last-minute
pressure tactics and stalling
by pro-ERA forces Thursday,
the measure fell two votes
short of the 107 needed on a
105-71 tally. It is technically
alive because it was put on
postponed consideration and
can be called any time before
a new General Assembly is
seated in January.
Illinois is the last northern
industrial state that has not
ratified
the
proposed
women's rights amendment
to the Constitution. Three
more states must ratify the
amendment by March 22,
1979, unless Congress extends
the deadline.
The previous ERA vote
came June 7. It fell six votes
shy of the necessary threefifths majority. Supporters
scheduled a vote several
times this week but delayed a
roll call because head counts
indicated a vote would be too
risky.
ERA supporters, surprised
and confused by the loss, said

·I

25, 1800.

On this day in hi•'lory:
In 1876, Gen. George Custer
and his force of 208 men were
ambushed by Sioux Indians in
the battle of the Uttle Big
Horn in Montana .
In 1950, North Korean Communists invaded South
Korea.
In 1962. the U.S. Supreme
Court han ded down a decision
barrin g prayer in public
schools.
In 1973, White House
attorney John Dean told a
Senate committee President
Nixon joined in a plot to cover
up the Waterga te break-in.

House votes down
=~~ - -E
·. RA .tor second· tl.me

0\'er are sWitching to Allstate
auto insurance.

Wood attended the bail game
in Cincinnati Wednesday
afternoon .
Thursday eveni ng guests of
Lucille Smith were Roger
Willoughby , Phoenix, Miss
Audrey Rell, Mrs. James
Bell, Mrs. F'rank Gandiano,
all of Stanford, Conn.
D. D. Cleland, Columbus,
visited with Denzel Cleland
Monday.

Why are 80 many drivers swi tching.
their insurance to Allstate ?
We'll give you lots of rea~ns.
Allstate offers lots of spectal
rates and disco unts. Good Driver.
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Mileage. Young Married. And more.
And Allstate offers today' a moat
advanced claim handling. Coast
to COIIBl· ·Fast. Convenient.
We think you'll finq a
difference with Allstate.
So compare companies. Find out
why the owners of ov~r ~ine
million cars are now m good
hands. " Call or come in.

You can't ~ watching your child every
minute of every day. That's why you need
.,,. rprl, the child protection latch for
cabinets and drawers.
'
To a small child all those bottles and
containertt under the sink are toys or
something to eat or drink.IIJIIdhgttrd will
keep curious and mischievou s tots out of
cabinets and drawers. Yet, adults can get
in quickly and easily. Protect your
children. lnstallltl&gt;ll'·'rJJlt

has-

James Keusoli
for Summer

'"'

Fashion Coordklates Sz. 6-18

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This week only!
Save $20 oH regular purchase price of
Hoover portable washer at partie[paling
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..

�C-1-The Sunday Times-Sentmel , Sunday, June 25, 1978
B-8- The Sunday Ttmes-&amp;mtmel, Sunday, June 25. 1978

China program presented
by Mrs. Edison Hollon

Homemakers'
Circle

POMEROY -A program un
Chma taken frum Response
nliJgazmc was presented by
Mrs Edtson Hollon at a n~
l'cnt meellng of ,the Umted
Melhulhst Women of the
~'orest Run Church
Durmg the prugt e:ml there
11as a dtscusswn on duldren

ftaturmg
Annt&lt; Anybo.ly

BY BETTIE CU RK
Esteasloo

and women

AIZ~Dl,

wtth a cum·

P-' 1su11

Hom• Etooomlcs

BYBETI'IECLARK
Extension Agent, Home Economics
If expenses for your household continue to add up faster
Ulan income, you may need new ways to balance your
spendmg plan Here are some suggestions to help brmg the two
nearer togelller
Get More Money . After checkmg pnont~es and comparmg
vanous needs agamst funds , you may say "We w1ll have to

..

have more money."

of old and new
changes 111 Clnna mdudu1g
the Mautsm 1 eltgwn which IS
the belief of one-fuu1th of the
world t(J(Iay
Tin ee Clunese hvmns that
11cre 11rttten by out•tandmg
Clunese !cadets were played
bv Mrs Vernal Blackwood
They were taken from the
Methodist Hymnal, R1se to
Gteet the Sw1 ". "Never
Ftn get God's Dmly Care "
and "The Bread of Llfc, Fur
AJ I Men ll roken "
Mrs A11n Watson, Pl'eSt-

-

I

1

!

1

By Charlene Hoeflich . 1

There 's nutlung qwte hke the anUc1pat10n 11f birth and fur
the Ri chard Long fam1ly th ere 1s real excitement on the f1ont
porch
The1r hang1n~ basket IS the nestm~ place fur a rob1n who
these days IS fa 1lhfull y setl m ~ on three small eggs She seems
nut distuilx.'&lt;i al all when the famil y gathers on the porch, or
when Beverly carefull y reaches w1der·neath the nest lo water
the plant
And now the wailing game .....
Had such a mce nole f1 um Mrs Fanmc Glassburn of
Gallipoli s, whu happens to be a daughter of a CIVIl War
veteran There are so few left now Mrs Glassburn and he1
Sister, Wmm e Phillips of Bidwell are the daughters of Cincmnalus Tuppmg, a Civil War soldier who thed 111 1918 He was
mustered out wi\h h1s regtment on Sept. 3, 1864 .

WAS GRADUATED
MIDDLEPORT - 2nd Lt.
William D. Swisher, a 197B
graduate of Ohw St ale
Unlvc rs lly , Co lumbus ,
recently rece1ved h1s Army
Reserve commiSSI On through
the ROTC program at the
school. He IS the son of Mr
and Mrs. Wtlilam E SwiSher,
571 Grant St , Middleport. He
Is a 1974 graduate of Metgs
. H1gh School

A lost cassette tape m a plashc case is causmg concern fur a
lot of pen pie
l{et orded on the tape IS the wedding ce1emony of llun11a
Weber Hnd Steve Jenk1ns which look place a week agu yesterday at the Um led Meth&lt;xllst Church
.Jane WISe had recorded the ceremony She removed the
tape from the recorder, lllought she handc'&lt;i 11 tu her mother ,
and after returmng home fuund that her mother didn 't have 11
l11e church and the church grounds ha ve been searched .
Perhaps someone p1cked 11 up lhmklng 11 was an empty tape
or some ch1ld found 11 and took 11 home It 's re~lly m v~l uub l e OJunty Heart Association .
to Oonna and Steve Just ca ll Jane W1se. 742·2nl , or the
Just as wtth the bike-a-thon, sw1mmers w11l get sponsors
Webe1 s, 742·2143
who pa y fur laps The forms for sponsors are available at the
pool now and will be put 111 other locatiOns lu be announce'&lt;!
Vacation time is here and among the travelers returmn~ tins later Fur those under 18, a parent's stgnalure ts rcqmred
week were Mr . and Mrs. Leonard Van Meter, Sr of Pumcroy
Swimmers may swun nu rnurc than one hour nor 100 laps
and H1chard Rahrle , son of Mrs Van Meter , Clulhcothe They whiChever comes ftrst. They w11l be allowed to rest anytime
traveled to Florida to vtstt Mr and Mrs Dw1ght Heed Mrs . dunng the sw1m but that tone w11l be mcluded tn the total
Heed !Nonna ) ts Mr. Van Meter's daugllio·r. and lie gut" look swonming time Guards w1ll be on duty .
at ills first great-grandchild, Mellss~ Dawnc, ~ randdaughter
F'1rst, second and third place awards w11l be g1ven for the
of the Ree&lt;,Is, born on May 27 She IS tile daughleJ' of Debra must laps or the must money And for all participants bnnglng
Heed Slonaker
m S5 or more a special patch w11l be awarded .
Mr. and Mrs . Reed are former res1dents vf Pumcruy and for
Just thmk . all thts fun and muncy for the Heart Association
the pasl12years have lived in f' londa
too !
r;

Something new for the Middlcpon'l JXKolASWim ...-Uwn w1U be staged !hell• w Jui}' 18 fut tile Me1gs

IIi\ VP. A N!CP. WEEK !

'

ASSORTED SELECTION

OF

BOYS'

DENIM
SHORTS
Just the thing for your boy!
Frayed leg shorts made of 100
percen t pre shrunk denim
Reg and slim sozes, 8 to 18

SHOES
50% OFF

from the
i
B c Childhood Center i

WAS PROMOTED
POM EROY - William D
Clark , son of Mrs Evelrn
Clark of 105 Pleasant R1dge,
Pomeroy, has been promoted
to staff sergeant in the U S
Air Force. Sergeant Clark , a
m1ssile system analyst
specia hst, ts assigned at f E
Warren AFB , Wyu , with a
unn of the Strategic A1r
Command The se rgeant Is a
1972 htgh school graduate
fil s wife, Diana, IS th e
daughter ol Mr and Mrs. D
D. Rapp at ll950 Case Road.
Bellevue, M1c!t

BOSTON (UP!) - LUIS East to 8% games With an 8-3
Tiant, backed a pair of RBI vtctory over the OriOles
The 37-year old Tiant , who
apiece from Butch Hobson
picked
up h1s !98th career
and R1ck Burleson , Improved
wtn,
ytelded
home runs by
h1s unblemished rocord to 7~
R1ck
Dempsey,
Eddte
by pitchtng a seven hitter
Murray
and
Doug
Dcc1nces
tn
Sat urday to help the firstplace Boston Red Sox m- pllchmg h1s fifth complete
STRASBOURG (UP! ) country surprtsmgly trailed fine form this sununer by crease the1r lead over game. He walked two and
Thomas Wessinghage, West France 94-87 on the first day outsprtnting France's Baltunore Onoles in the AL struck out SIX and rellred 15
Germany's brilliant middle of their track and field meet. Francts Gonzales and
distance runner, was a rare
In damp, wmdy conditions, Philippe Dien tn the 1500
winner Saturday when his Wessinghage continued his meter race to clock 3 minutes
43.10 seconds.
Wes singhage recentlv
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople clucked 337 b 111 East Berhn
~0Mf-i!'IIN6
and 3 39.4 in Cologne, ahead
\PQ!f.DIC.TIN6\ f-VEN
of World 1500 meters record
ruo•1.&lt;c. P~l)SL.f:Mn.'Vf-BEEN
6166ER' ~ holder Filbert Bay1 of TanPLI'.N TO
zania.
END CRIME.
Wess1 nghage was never
SY MI'IKIN&amp; se riously pressed by the
DEf'UT'i
French patr and surged home
!)f\ER!FF~
first, while Gonzales, beaten
OF PEOPLE by Wessinghage m Cologne
WALI'.IN'
last Thursday, JUS! got home
Tt-\E IR
ahead of his talented 21-yearDO&amp;$.;'""'-.,. old compatriot Dien, who was
unknown at the start of the
season.
Sholputter
Klaus
14-15 YEAR-OLD division wmners m Saturday's
Reichenbach was well below
annual Gallipolis Annual Jaycees JUmor golf tournament
hts fmest form but sttll
were, left to rtght, Bob Marchi , first; Gene Wood , second
reached a year best of 63 feet,
and John Craft, thtrd
8'h in. (19.42 M).
Franz-Peter
HofmeiSter
and Bernd Hernnann, two of
West Gennany's talented 400
R6~Nl'Z I N6
meter
runners, took first and
Tt-l E.
third
m
a slow race.
N1 6HT
Bntam led France 93'hPATROL";,
6 - l ' 67'-' at the half way stage of

PRICES IN EFFECT

$ 48

HECK'S REGULAR

A

DA UGHTER BORN
POMEROY - Mr and
Mrs Johnny Harrison, the
fo rmer D1ana McAng us.
Ironton, are announcing the
birth of a SIX pound, nine
ounce daughter, Amy Beth,
on June 18 at the Lawrence
General Hospital In Ironton
Maternal grand mother IS
Mr s
Mary
McAng us,
Svracuse. and the paternal
g~andparents arc Mrs . Laura
Harrison, Pomeroy, and J ohn
F. Hamson, Holland . The
maternal great-grandparents
are Mr and Mrs Allie
Grueser , Monnessen , Pa ,
and
paterna l
great·
gra ndparents arc Mr . and
Mrs
Wilbur
Howley,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs
Floyd Ha rnson, Rulland
Paternal great - great ·
gran dfa t her "
Ernest
Ham son, Hutland, and
maternal great . great •
grandmother is Lydia Hysell ,
Syracuse Mr. and Mrs
liamson alS&lt;o have a son,
John Martin, 4'"

Tiant wins 7th tilt

Wessinghage rare winner

~--

Mason UMW has meeting

r·----------------,
II
Community!
t
I
Corner I

SPORTS

the Pansh." Members sang
Fa1rest Lord Jesus", and
devotiOns were by Mrs. Juh11
&amp;·ott who read ·Can the Canmng " and · Dues God Always
G1vc Us What We Ask 111
Prayer j" She concluded w1th
prayer
Mrs . Fred Nease read "
poem. 'New Urge " Dur1ng
lhe busmess mectmg mJnuil':;
of tile prevwus mectmg wert•
1·ead ond a love uffenng was
taken . A letter was read
about a new banner to be
made and ente red m a contest
at the fall meet1ng
A donatwn was made
toward the new speaker
system recently mstalled
TI1e next meetmg will be a
ptcmc at Route 33 Slllte Park.
A total of 73 Sick and shutm
calls fur two months were
reported. Refreshments were
served by the hostesses , Mrs.
Henry Thomas and Mrs
Urana Thomas

Some ways to get more money mclude havmg an additional
member of the household take a full or part-time JOb, working
more overtune, or producmg marketable 1tems at home that
can be sold at a profit. If the household has its own business or
farm, you mtght make changes to increase mcome or cut
Ucnt. opened I tw rneelmg
expenses.
wtlh a 1 c.: ulmg, Pr aver for
If an additwnal member of your household dectdes to take
a JOb, some 1tems to cons1der - to be sure the net mcome will
t ••
.... justlfy the cost - include the skill and traming that w1ll
determme gross earnmgs. Then make deductions for
additiOnal work related expenses, such as mcome and soCial
I
b
i
secunty taxes; mcreased clothmg, food and trans!
'
portatiOn costs; and servtce purchases that had prevwusly
I
been performed by the additional job holder - such as ca re of
I
chtldren. home mamtenance , and household work.
Use of Credit. The use of credit would allow your household
We've firushed a busy , happy year at the Community
to buy some things sooner when cash ts short However, tl only Childhood Center. Now we are planning for next year, and
postpones or spreads out payments and may add finance
there are openmgs for new students.
charges which mcrease the cost of thu~gs purchased Three
The Center seeks to offer a total enrichment program for
types of consumer credit are avatlable: charge accounts, the young child We endeavor to provtde a loVIng and
UlSlallment purchases and consumer loans. Consumer loans stunulalmg atmosphere tn which each ch1ld will feel free to
are avrulable from such sources as credit un10ns . banks. explore and develop his own interests and abiltties
sav mgs aod loan assoctaltons and small loan compames
In a non-graded, free-learnmg atmosphere children more
In all cases. buying willl tnstallment payments or using
eas1 ly learn to express their own feelings, and to respect the
consumer loans means paymg mterest or ca rrymg charges
feelings of others. They have the confidence to try new
Many cred1t-card charge accounts also have a fmance charge experiences because they are allowed to proceed at their own
1f llley are not paid in full wtthm 30 days after you are btlled . rate.
When you use credit, here are two rules that you can keep
They grow m self-dlsclplme that permits them to work,
the cost down : (I l make as large a down payment as possible play, and cooperate with others without losmg llle abtlity to
and (2) pay the balance as qwckly as possible. Always bu)'lng lllmk and judge for lllemselves
on the mstalimenl plan may be a sign of poor planmng,
Many different med1ums fur learning are offered at the
however, the occastonaJ use of credit may be a way to get more Center The cht!d IS encouraged to get to know hts world
sat1sfaction from the money you have .
lllrough science expenences, exploratwn of his enVIronmenl,
Do II Yourself It 1s possible to live better than your and an exposure to literature . Art, music, rh)1hrn acttvllles,
income might suggest if you use more time and less money to and a vane!)• of language experiences help the chtld learn to
produce Ule thmgs you want . You can get more from )Our commumcate hts feelin gs and ideas.
income by gardemng, ca nmng, bakmg, remodelmg, sewmg,
Large and small muscle centers offer the opporturuly to
makmg simple home repairs. doing routine car mamtenance develop fmer coordmatton By limihng enrollment, the Center
and, possibly even helpmg m home bmldtng and maj or home controls the teacher to chtld radio The teachers know each
repatrs
child. They act as ca talysts to stunulate the chtld's creat1ve
cunos1ty, developmental skills, self-reliance, and feeling of
D&lt;Hl-yourself activities requtre tune, Skill, equipment and se lf-worth
physical effort. If these resources are not available. money
The Center 1s located at the Grace United Methodist
may be wasted rather than saved You can develop some sk11ls Church, at Second and Cedar. There are openmgs for children
such as sewmg, gardenmg , pamting, and domg simple between the ages of three and five. There are two alternal1ve
carpentry Start wtlh small and mexpens1ve proJects to schedules Monday lllrough Friday (9-!1:30), or Monday ,
develop your skills before moving on to bigger projects.
Wednesday , and Friday (!1-11 :30) .
Be an Informed Consumer. ll is a challenge to learn what
Mothers of younger children may feel the1r cltild would be
you are buymg There are more hbers , models, appliances , more comfortable attendmg only three mornl!lRS a week.
services and gadgets today than ever before Unless you
The tuition per month for the full week IS $30 and for th€
carefully defme what ts needed ma product and then select an lllree morning week is $22 week . Monthly tuition for a family
1tem w1th the features that best meet that need, money can be With two children enrolled ts $50 Please call Glona Danner
spent without the need bemg satisfied.
( 446-9550 ) for more mformat1on
Learnmg about a product or services before you go
shoppmg is one way to be a more efftcient consumer As you
shop, learn more by readmg labels and exammtng products
Talk wtth salespeople, too . Learn to know when they are
proVIding real mformauon and when they are just encouragmg
MAS ON
The
Um ted !9. Gtfts were g1ven .
you to buy U!arn to resist h1gh pressure selling and Impulse
The hostesses were Hulh
buying. Shop w11Jl a list - to help you come home with the MethodiSt Women met tn the
Walker,
Lorene Harless and
church basement President,
thmgs you need and leave the unnecessary 1tems m th€ store
Gladys
R1ley
Cornmuh1ty Facilittes. Olller ways to stretch your money Sarah Spencer, opened the
Attendmg ~ ere Max1ne
mclude the use of free or low-cost commumly factllttes and mretmg w1lh prayer
Arnold
, Frances Stewart.
The program, "The One
sharmg sen1ces w1th neighbors. Parks, recreation centers,
Cathenne Sm1th. Marga,ret
Parent
Family,"
was
led
bv
museums and art gallenes offer much enteruunmenl at little
or no cost UkewlSe, tax-supported health departments , adult LaVera Yeager The scnp- P1ckens, Eve lyn Proffilt ,
Gladys R1lcy, Earlene
education programs and libraries provide some free serv1ces turc wa s 'Wh oever does
Bumgardner, Sarah Speneer,
w11l
of
my
fath
er
the
You and your netghbors may exchange babystlttng, errand
Lorene
Harless.
Rut~
IS
my
mother,
brother,
runnmg and other services that save each other money
and SISler ." It
"a s Walker, Hazel Smith, .June
Ram ona
an 1nlerestmg program wtth VanMatr e.
Sydenslncker and Helen
much discussion
The fa ther-son banquet was Bal1on.
d1seussed It was held June
~._....

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SUN LOUNGE

HELSINKI (UP!)
Olympic champion Ma c
Wilkins braved ram and wmd
to wtn the discus at the
traditional Saartjarvt Mldsununer Track and F1eld
Games Saturday w1th a throw
of 217 feet, 2 mches (66 2
meters) and launch four
American victories.
Carl McCullough won the
400 meters in 47.6 seconds
ahead of Eu ropean 800 meter
indoor champwn Markku
Taskmcn of Fmland 1n 48.0

McEnroe
in finals
LONDON 1UP! ) - John
McEnroe of Douglaston . New
York, could be tn line for h1s
first b1g pay day after upsetting Australian Cohn
Dibley 6-3,8-9,6-2 Saturday to
reach the finals of the $175 ,()0()
lnternattonal Tennts Tour·
nament at Queens Clu b,
London.
The 19-year-old American
rollege champion, who only
turned pro earlier th1s month
after leaving Stanford,
Sunday meets veteran Tony
Roche of Australta, h1s sentor
by 14 years who dumped New
Yorker Sandy Mayer 3~, 6-3,
~-

The
fourth-seeded
McEnroe, chasmg the $17,500
ftrst pme , played twi ce
Friday.
Roche had to . thank a
racket cha nge to virtually
eliminate Mayer when he was
in a wiruung puSillon against
the Austraban.
The Amertcan was leading
5-4 in the third set when
Roche hred a fierce
backhand volley which
proved a wiMer but broke a
string in his racket . The
Australian swapped his
racket, steadied himself and
drilled in rocket-like serve
whtch ktcked up the center
line chalk and left Mayer
rooted.
To serve proved a match
saver for the Australian who
then broke Mayer's serve In
the 13th game to set up his
appearance tn the final

w1th a Gary ~livers posting
fourth spot m 48.7.
In the 3,000 meters J1m
Crawford clocked 8 mmutes
1.2 seconds to wm ahead of
Turkey's Mehmet Yordaeon
in 8:02.6 Wllh Amencan Doug
Brown tlj1rd m 8 04.0.
Former World Reco rd
Holder AI Feuerbach had to
hght fur h1s wtn m the shot
putt,
thruwmg 67-31''.!
(20 51M ). on ly '• mch clear of
European mdoor champiOn
ReiJO Stahlverb of Fmland
who threw 67-3'• (20aM ).
In the final main event of
the day, Turkey 's Sermet
Dimurlenk won the 1,500
meters m 3:46.2, edging out
Amencan M1ke Manke on
3·46 3 Jose-Manuel Apascal
of Spain was third 10 3 46 3
and George Melley, U.S was
fourth m 3 46 4 Amencan
steeplecasc specialist Henr y
Marsh was seventh w1th
3 48 7
The matn section of the
two-day event will be held
Sunday when the bulk of the
33 America ns here Will be m
act 1on. The orgamzers are
also hopmg for better
weather to tmprove on the
2,500 spectators for the first
day

For sun lime Indoor outdoor

hurlers ·

Sunday's Probable Pitchers
United Press International
tAll Times EDTJ
American U!ague
New York (Gullett 2~ 1 at
Detroit IB 1llmgham 5-'1), !·30
p.m
Ba lllmore 1D. Mal1tnez 641 at Boston (Torrez 10-3 ),
2:00pm.
Toronto I Moore 2-1 and
Garvtn 2-7) at Cleveland
(Clyde 4·2 and W1se 4-10). 2,
2.00 p m.
Mmnesota 1Zahn 7-5 and
Enckson 7-5 ) at Ch1cago
(Stone 6-5 and Htnlon !~ ).
2:1&gt;
pm.
GIVE UP RIGHTS
Oakland
tKeogh 4-'1 1 at
MILWAUKEE CUP!)
Kansas City !G ura S-1 ), 2 30
The Milwaukee Bucks, m a
su rpri se announcement pm.
Seattle (Parrott I~ ) at
Friday mght. sa1d they have
Milwaukee (Trvers 3-3), 2:30
g1ven up draft nghts to
forward-center Kim An- pm.
California (Aase 4-3 ) at
derson of M1sso un , and the
Texas (Med1ch 1-3), 8:35p .m
Ponland Trail Blazers are
National U!ague
free to stgn htm
Chtcago
(R. Reuschel 8-'1 )
The Bueks had made Anat Philadelphia (Christenson
derson thetr seventh choice m
the recent college draft even H), .!_:35 _p.m.
P1ttsbur~h (Candelarta 7·
though Anderson had been
61 at New York (Bruhert 1-5),
drafted but d1d not s1gn the
year before w1th Po11land. 205pm
Montreal (Rogers 8-7) at
Mtlwaukce indi ca ted 1!
St
1--'ltiili 'tDenn6 !Hi), 2:15
would battle wtlh Portland
pm
for the nghts to Anderson ,
Atlanta (Easterly 2-'l and
who played m Italy after
Huthven 2~) at San Fra nfailing to come to terms wtlh
CISCO (Halicki 4-1
a nd
Portland
Knepper
8-5 ), 2, 3:05p .m
The Bucks sa1d upon
Cmcinnall (Moskau ~2 ) at
revtew of the matter they
Los
Angeles (John 8-5 ), 4:00
acknowledged Portland's
pm.
exclusive right to negotiate
Houston (Rtchard 6-7 and
with Anderson and s1gn him .
Lemongello 6~) at San D1ego
(Shirley 3-8 and Rashmussen
2-71, 2, 4:00pm.

1971
RACE AT YOUR OWN RISK
WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR ANY ACCIDENTS

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BOAT-

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Sports
briefs.

•

ORCHARD PARK. li Y
I UPli - The Buffalo B1lls
announced Fnday the
s1gnmgs of llle1r two secondround
draft
cho1ces,
defenstve end Dee Hardtson
of North Carohna and
defenstve lmeman Scott Hutchmson of Florida
W1th the s1gmng of
Hardtson and Hutchmson, the
team has s1gned hve of 1ts
first stx draft picks.

PORTLAND, Ore (UP! )Dr. Bob Cook, team phystctan
for the Portland Trail
Blazers, satd Fnday he has
no reason to be alarmed over
the progress of Bill Walton 's
recovery from a broken foot.
Cook said 1l IS a break that
will take tune to heal, and
Walton is at a hot sprmgs spa
tn Eden , AriZ., treating hls
foot with mudpacks and hot
water, which Cook beheves
14 to 15 year-old divtslon went wtll help. Additional x-rays
to Gene Woods (89) and John will be made when Walton
Craft (91) respectively .
returns to Portland.
Both Rusty and Bob wtll
represent the Gallipolis Area
J aycees in the Ohio Jaycees'
NEW YORK ( UP I) State Tournament on Julv 31 Michael Burke, prestdent of
and Aug I at the Little Madison Square Garden,
Turtle Country Club in Friday confirmed pubhshed
reports that he has spoken
Columbus
Other scores m the tour- w1th promoter Don Km g
nament were·
about a pos1t1on w1th the
14-15 year old dlvtslon Garden but md1cated that no
Mtke Craft 93: Mark Allen 93: deal has been made .
Tim Skidmore 93, Tom R1ser
"No arrangement has been
98; Rtck Martm 102; and consummated as yet, " sa1d
Todd Fowler 107
Burke m a prepared
16-18 year old divisiOn, sta tement. "We have talked
Brad Rodger s 82, Andy to Don Km g about a nonPersinger 82; Phil Cox 83, exclusive arrangement
Dave Beatue 67 : Jeff Beattie whereby Madtson Square
Garden would co-promote
89, and Dallas Love 91
Mtke Kamman, Jay cee bolling matches We are also
Tournament chairman. talking w1th Bob Arwn 1a
extended his thanks to the rival boxing promoter) "
followmg pe&lt;Jple and merchants for helpmg sponsor
NEW YORK I UP! I ---' The
the tournament and th e
New York Yankees Fnday
wmners tnp to Columbus.
Howard B. Sa unders, recalled second baseman
Gallipolis Golf Course , Bob Damaso Gawa from their
Saunders, Quaker State, Tacoma farm club of the
Gtlltngham Drugs, Johnson's Pac1f1c Coast League to ftll
Market; F1rst National Bank, the roster spot opened when
Commerc tal and Savmgs pllcller Jun "Catf1sh" Hunter
Bank, Ohio Valley Bank, and was placed on the disabled
list
Ct rcle's Cafetena.
Garcia IS an emergency
replacement fm Wtlhe Randolph , who was flown back to
NASHVILLE . Tenn I UP!) New York Fnday to have hts
- Clay Stapleton resigned a1lin g nght knee cxammed.
Thursday as athlellc director
of Vanderbilt University
ST LOUIS (UP)) - August
The
resignation
of A. Busch Jr. , president of the
Stapleton IS effective Aug 31
St. LOUIS Cardmals, Friday
He has been Vanderbilt's lashed out at h1s last-place
athlellc dtrector stnce ballclub, accusmg the
February of 1973 .
players of g1vmg less than

Saunders, Marchi
win JC tourney
GALLIPIOLIS - Rusty
Saunders and Bob Marchi
won their respecttve dtv1s10ns
in the second annual Jaycee
Golf Tournament which was
held Saturday on the
Gallipohs Golf Course
Rusty, an 18 year-old ,
who attends Marshall, shot a
s1x ove r par 74. He had
identical nme-hole scores of
37 Second and third place in
the 16 to 18 year-old div1s1on
went to J D. Jones (7&gt;) and
Jeff Clary 178) respecllvely
Bob, a Ia year-old from the
c1ty, shot an 82. He had
consistent rounds of 41-'11
Second and third place m the
WASHINGTON STATE
WINS &gt;,000 METERS
LONDON - Triple World
Record Holder Henry Rono of
Kenya, a student at
Washmglon Stale Umvers1ly,
added another lltle to h1s
collection Sat urday when he
won the 5,000 meters at the
Brttish AAA track and field
champ10nsh1ps w1th a meet
record of 13 20.8.
Olympi c champton Don
Quame of Jama1ca won the
200 meters m 20.79, ahead of
James Gilkes of Guyana m
20 81 With Amencan James
Sandford third tn 21 08.
Another title to go overseas
was the 400 meters where
Maurtce Peoples of the
Umted States posted 45 78 to
win .
Tom McU!an of the Umted
States won the 800 w1th a
smooth p1ece of accelerauon
in the finishing straight,
clocking 1. 48.49

Brookhaven Med1ca l Center
m crtt1cal condtllon WedINBOARDOR OUTBOARD_StGNATURE- - - nesday , was reported In
stable condition Saturday.
There will be a SJ entrance lee. All entries will be taken et
He was stricken at the
the boat ramp by the French City Sk i Club Inc 1rom 2 until A
Preston Tra1l Golf Club
o'clock. Plea&gt;e bring 1111&gt; entry lorm filled out .
where a frequent golfing
companion, Dr. Frank J.
Altlck, noticed his condttion.
SKI RACE
" He saw r1ght away that I
SUNDAY, JULY l
needed blood . I had lost all
1971
RACE AT ·YOUR OWN RISK
my color .. I don 't know how
WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
much blood they gave me, but
FOR ANY ACCIDENTS
they said I was pretty low,"
DRIVER _ _ _ _ SK!ER _ _ _ HOR SE POWERMantle said.
"The whole thing never
INBOARD OR OUTBOARD_ COLOR OF BOAT- - bothered me until we were
driving to the hospital I could
Signalure of Drlver_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Signelure ol Skier
tell the doctor was pretty
too much."
w ncerned . Then he put me
ttl ;;:,ere will be a 52 entrence fee. All entries will be laken at
Mantle , admitted to the tnto tntenstve care, wtth no
.,. •1 k I promp by 1he French City Ski Club the from 2 until 4 inte nsive care un1t of
, .c oc . lease bring this entry form filled oul.

proved tts major league lea dmg wmnmg percentage
lo .700 , scored three more
runs m the Sixth.
W1th one out m the s1xth,
F1sk walked and Fred Lynn
doubled to chase loser Scott
McGregor, 8-5 Rehever Joe
Kcrngan Intentionall y

walked George Scott, but
th en proceeded to walk
Evans on four pitches to force
home Boston 's foul1h run
Burleson 's sharp grounder
caromed off the heel of
second baseman B11ly
Snnth's glove fur a two-run
smgl e that capped the mmng.

Foyt hopes to
add to winnings
ByGARYKALE
UP! Sports Wrller
MT POCUNO (UP! )- " If
I leav e thiS world today, I'll
know I've done everyth10g
I'v e wanted lo do m hfe " A J . F'oyt.
From lhe lime A J F'oyt
J r • drove h1s f1r•t battery operated car as a 5-year-old ,
the flest) Texa s has lived
auto rac10g, With a recent
dabble 10 horse racmg that
ha s brou~hl h1m modest
success

Foyl IS the wmnmg esl
dnver m USAC history He
ha s won the Indianapoli s 500
mtler an unprecedented four
limes and guns for h1s lh1rd
Schae[er 500 tnumph Sunday
And 1t 's been a ball all the
way for th e fabulou s Fo)t
Whil e Foyt concentrates on
his ftrst love - auto racmg h1s son, Anthony Joseph Foyt
Ill, wou ld rath er stalk the
horse barns than the o1l
soaked p1ts of Indy or some
other presl1g10us track
" I'm not d1sappomted he's
not mlo auto racmg," says
the burly 43-year-old dn ver
who probabl y has more scars
than any other dnver from
thts dangerous professiOn . " I
feel I'm domg what I really
want to do and I'm successful I want h1m to be the
same way "
"My son was the leadm g
tramer dunn g one stage at
Churchill Downs. He breaks
my horses, trams them and
gets them 10 shape for the
races Kids these days have
too much free tune, so I gave
my bo) somethmg to do He
was inlerested m show horses
as a kid and I get mterested
because l wanted him to get
mv olved m somethmg. If not
auto racmg, then somethmg
he really wanted to do"

their best efforts
Busch satd, "While I do not
mtend to make any drast iC
moves (It the present t1me , I
want this message ea rned
loud and clear - the B1g
Eagl e, the Boss, Guss1e. 1 e,
whatever they want to call
me , 1s not happy I'm tired of
excuses " The Cardmals last
pennant was 111 1968
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Wilham G Barry, llle chmrman
of the New York Stale Racmg
and Wa ge rmg Board, Fnday
announced he has resigned
from the positwn for personal
and fmanctal constderat10ns
Barry IS takmg a seruor
management posl\lon w1th
Reliance Group , Inc , an

insurance

Foyt said Ton y Ill had
some ''hornble" expenences
al Ind1anapohs as a
yuWlgsler "and 1t spooked
h1m He was real smallml964
when he saw Edd1e Sachs get
ktlled He was m the stands 10
1973 when th ey had a cham·
, eactl on crash and Swede
Savage was ktlled "
Foyt, considered a ptoneer
1n buildm g engmes that
finally powered Indy -type
ca rs to speeds of 200 miles an
hour. has fully recovered
from mJunes at Oaytona last
February Abroken shoulder
wnst and arm hampered hi
work on a de ve lopmer
program for a new coyot
whiC h he will start from lh
second ro" Sunday at Pocon
Raceway
The l'ar was dnven for th~
f1 rst ume at lndwnapolis Ia •
month and hmshed seventh
Last weekend 1t suffered
wmg and

chass1s damage

whtn ll shpped off a loadmg
ramp enroute to Milwaukee.
"It was enough to make you
s1ck, ' say s F'o)1. who bab1es
ever) thmg he owns " It wa s
tern ble see10g 1t broken up.
llul like anyth10g else that
breaks, you ptck up the
p1cces. mend 11 and stal1

ove r "
F'oyl spent three years
deSi gnmg and develop10g the
ca r and eng10e and wonders 1f
he tsn 't too old for a return to
the drawmg board now that
Cosworth has matched h1s
engme experltsc

'I dun'tknowlll want to go
through the developing
program aga10," he muses.
·' J knew last year they were
catching up. I'll tr} to get
through th1s season and then
make up my mmd "
In addl!wn, Foyt must
dec1de wh eth er he'll go to
England 10 September for
USAC's debut before a
Eumpean audience The two
weeks abroad may be too
much tune away from the
shop
"I'v e been so far beh10d
sc hedule bec uase of my mJUrleS, that I vc been playmg
catch up "
BeSides. some of his horses
,.,11 be runn10g about that
ume and Foyt has to keep a
mt 1cal eve on how th e other
A J IS ·makUl~ out 10 the
equ10e venture.

Penn sylvama. wher e he
works, and to keep Ius JOb
wllh llle North Arnencan
Fence Co, located near
Pittsburgh. for the two-year
probationary penod.

orga n zr~tJo n

lo cated 10 New York .
However, he w11l remam as
head of llle board for about a
month , until Gov Hugh
Carey can find a replacement
for the $55,000-a-year JOb

BALTIMORE I UPl
Four veteran players,
mcludmg fullback Roosevelt
Leaks. have signed thetr 1978
contracts w1th the Ba ltunore
Colts, tt was announced
F'ndav
Lea.ks , who rushed for
WASHINGTON (UPII more
than 1,000 yards last
The Board of Player
season,
defens1ve back Tun
Represcnlallves of the NFL
Baylor.
lineba cker Derrel
Players Assoc tatton ha s
Luce
and
light end Jurume
ordered veteran Na lwnal
Kennedy
stgned one-year
Football U!ague players not
contra
cts,
brmgmg
the total
to report to pre-season
number
of
veteran
pla yers
traming camps before July
under
contract
to
39
21, it was announced Thursday
As soc1at1 on exe cutive
DALLAS I UP!) - Former
director Ed Garvey sa1d the New York Yankees' slugger
umon act1on was taken M1ckey Mantle , hospttallzed
becaus e of "w 1despread w1th a bleedmg ulcer, was
abuse of the terms of the 1977 unproved Fnday and doctors
co ll ec ti ve bargatnlng sa1d he m1ght be released
agreement, wh1ch states that durmg llle weekend .
visitors and no telephone out of the hospital, I'll st1ll players should not report
Mantle , 47 , wa s admitted to
That's when I reahzed 1! was have to take 1t easy,' ' Mantle unul 15 days before llle first
llle
intensive care unit of
more serious than l thought." said.
regular pre-season game
Brookhaven
Medical Center
Mantle's 536 career home 11le first game IS scheduled
Mantle satd that when he
Wednesday
m crtttcal
passed his 40th birthday, he runs rank sixth on the all- for Aug 4 "
condition.
"He
was
seriously
stopped worrying so much ume list and he added 18 m
11l
and
was
cntical
but we
about Hodgkins disease, the the World Senes play as a
too
k
hun
off
that
ltst
," Dr
NASHVnJ.E
,
Tenn
(UPI
)
lymphatic disorder that member of 12 pennant winFrank
J
.
Alllck
said.
''I
can
Former
National
Football
killed his father before he ners and seven world
assure
you
now
he's
very
,
League
q~arterback
Joe
Gilchampionship teams w1th the
turned 40.
"I ftgured that once I got Yankees . He led the liam wa s placed on probation much okay. He's taking food
past 40, that was all behmd Ameri ca n League m homers for two years Frtday after and dmng a lot better "
me. If I knew I was going to four times w1th 37 in 1955, 52 pleadmg guilty last month to
WASHINGTON (UP!)
live this long, I'd have taken In 1956, 42 m 1957 and 40 tn carrying a weapon and
possession
of
a
small
amount
Three
Washington Redsktns
better care of myself," he 1960.
&amp;
of
marijuana
.
players
- running back Jim
Three t1mes Mantle was
said
Crunmal
Court
Judge
John
Klick,
defensive
, end Wtll
the
Amencan
Hospital supervisor Unda named
L.
Draper
suspended
Wynn
and
linebacker
Mike
Boyle satd the outlook for League 'r Most Valuable
Gilham's
45-&lt;lay
workhouse
McGraw
were
placed
on
Mantle's recovery was good. Player and narrowly mtssed
sentence
but
ordered
him
to
wa1vers
Fnday
AU
had
been
"But I've got to take it easy the honor on l wo other ocremain
tn
a
drug wtth the club for less than a
to be sure the bleeding won 'I casions
rehabilitation
program
m season
stal1 again. Even when I get

Mantle continues to improve
DALLAS (UP! ) - Former
New York Yankees Hall of
Farner Mickey Mantle,
suffering from a bleeding
ulcer but continuing to improve, hopes to be released
from the hospital by Monday.
Mantle, 47, who htt 536
home runs during his career
with the Yankees, said he
suspected his rigorous
sched ule of nationwide appearances ' co ntribut ed
greatly to his Illness.
"I've been dotng a lot of
traveling, " he said. "It seems
like wherever I go, there's
aways a cocktail party.
Maybe l was drinking a little

•

ST. LOUIS 1UPI) - TI1e St.
1--'l UIS Cardmals Frtday acqutred right-handed pitcher
Roy Thomas on wa1vers from
llle Houston Astros
Thomas has been pitching
w1th the Aslros' farm club at
Charleston
'"
the
lnternattOnal League. He was
.w1th the Astros at llle end of
last season and p1tched four
games m relief

\6-18 YEAH-OLD diVISIOn wmners m Saturday's
annual Gallipolis Area Jayl'I'Cs junior golf tournament
were, left to rtght, Rusty Saunders , first; J D. Jones.
second and Jeff Clary , third .

BOAT RACE
SUNDAY, JULYl

anytime Designed end built lo
la st .
Tub uter
steel
con strvctton .

Heck's
Reg.

Sa nderson reached her best
mark of 1978 wtth a Javelin
throw of 209 feet, 4 inches
163.80 Ml to show that she is
returning to form after losmg
to East German World
Record Holder Ruth Fuchs a
fortrught ago.
France's most excttmg
woman athlete on show was
Chantal Rega, who soundly
defeated Bntam's Beverley
Godda rd and European
bronze medahst Andrea
Lynch m a cnsp 100 meters
wtth a tune of 11.17

of the last 17 men he faced
Hobson stroked hts 15th
homer m the third to gam a II lie fur Boston, followmg
Dempsey's fourth in toe top
of the innmg Murray made 11
2-1 wtlh a 440-foot shot an
mmng later , but Carlton Fisk
agam !led it w1th h1s etghlh
homer m the bottom of the
fourth.
Hobston put the Red Sox
ahead for good m the hfth
when h1s stogie scored
Dw1g ht Evans, who had
doubled off the center held
fence. Boston. whtch tm-

�C-1-The Sunday Times-Sentmel , Sunday, June 25, 1978
B-8- The Sunday Ttmes-&amp;mtmel, Sunday, June 25. 1978

China program presented
by Mrs. Edison Hollon

Homemakers'
Circle

POMEROY -A program un
Chma taken frum Response
nliJgazmc was presented by
Mrs Edtson Hollon at a n~
l'cnt meellng of ,the Umted
Melhulhst Women of the
~'orest Run Church
Durmg the prugt e:ml there
11as a dtscusswn on duldren

ftaturmg
Annt&lt; Anybo.ly

BY BETTIE CU RK
Esteasloo

and women

AIZ~Dl,

wtth a cum·

P-' 1su11

Hom• Etooomlcs

BYBETI'IECLARK
Extension Agent, Home Economics
If expenses for your household continue to add up faster
Ulan income, you may need new ways to balance your
spendmg plan Here are some suggestions to help brmg the two
nearer togelller
Get More Money . After checkmg pnont~es and comparmg
vanous needs agamst funds , you may say "We w1ll have to

..

have more money."

of old and new
changes 111 Clnna mdudu1g
the Mautsm 1 eltgwn which IS
the belief of one-fuu1th of the
world t(J(Iay
Tin ee Clunese hvmns that
11cre 11rttten by out•tandmg
Clunese !cadets were played
bv Mrs Vernal Blackwood
They were taken from the
Methodist Hymnal, R1se to
Gteet the Sw1 ". "Never
Ftn get God's Dmly Care "
and "The Bread of Llfc, Fur
AJ I Men ll roken "
Mrs A11n Watson, Pl'eSt-

-

I

1

!

1

By Charlene Hoeflich . 1

There 's nutlung qwte hke the anUc1pat10n 11f birth and fur
the Ri chard Long fam1ly th ere 1s real excitement on the f1ont
porch
The1r hang1n~ basket IS the nestm~ place fur a rob1n who
these days IS fa 1lhfull y setl m ~ on three small eggs She seems
nut distuilx.'&lt;i al all when the famil y gathers on the porch, or
when Beverly carefull y reaches w1der·neath the nest lo water
the plant
And now the wailing game .....
Had such a mce nole f1 um Mrs Fanmc Glassburn of
Gallipoli s, whu happens to be a daughter of a CIVIl War
veteran There are so few left now Mrs Glassburn and he1
Sister, Wmm e Phillips of Bidwell are the daughters of Cincmnalus Tuppmg, a Civil War soldier who thed 111 1918 He was
mustered out wi\h h1s regtment on Sept. 3, 1864 .

WAS GRADUATED
MIDDLEPORT - 2nd Lt.
William D. Swisher, a 197B
graduate of Ohw St ale
Unlvc rs lly , Co lumbus ,
recently rece1ved h1s Army
Reserve commiSSI On through
the ROTC program at the
school. He IS the son of Mr
and Mrs. Wtlilam E SwiSher,
571 Grant St , Middleport. He
Is a 1974 graduate of Metgs
. H1gh School

A lost cassette tape m a plashc case is causmg concern fur a
lot of pen pie
l{et orded on the tape IS the wedding ce1emony of llun11a
Weber Hnd Steve Jenk1ns which look place a week agu yesterday at the Um led Meth&lt;xllst Church
.Jane WISe had recorded the ceremony She removed the
tape from the recorder, lllought she handc'&lt;i 11 tu her mother ,
and after returmng home fuund that her mother didn 't have 11
l11e church and the church grounds ha ve been searched .
Perhaps someone p1cked 11 up lhmklng 11 was an empty tape
or some ch1ld found 11 and took 11 home It 's re~lly m v~l uub l e OJunty Heart Association .
to Oonna and Steve Just ca ll Jane W1se. 742·2nl , or the
Just as wtth the bike-a-thon, sw1mmers w11l get sponsors
Webe1 s, 742·2143
who pa y fur laps The forms for sponsors are available at the
pool now and will be put 111 other locatiOns lu be announce'&lt;!
Vacation time is here and among the travelers returmn~ tins later Fur those under 18, a parent's stgnalure ts rcqmred
week were Mr . and Mrs. Leonard Van Meter, Sr of Pumcroy
Swimmers may swun nu rnurc than one hour nor 100 laps
and H1chard Rahrle , son of Mrs Van Meter , Clulhcothe They whiChever comes ftrst. They w11l be allowed to rest anytime
traveled to Florida to vtstt Mr and Mrs Dw1ght Heed Mrs . dunng the sw1m but that tone w11l be mcluded tn the total
Heed !Nonna ) ts Mr. Van Meter's daugllio·r. and lie gut" look swonming time Guards w1ll be on duty .
at ills first great-grandchild, Mellss~ Dawnc, ~ randdaughter
F'1rst, second and third place awards w11l be g1ven for the
of the Ree&lt;,Is, born on May 27 She IS tile daughleJ' of Debra must laps or the must money And for all participants bnnglng
Heed Slonaker
m S5 or more a special patch w11l be awarded .
Mr. and Mrs . Reed are former res1dents vf Pumcruy and for
Just thmk . all thts fun and muncy for the Heart Association
the pasl12years have lived in f' londa
too !
r;

Something new for the Middlcpon'l JXKolASWim ...-Uwn w1U be staged !hell• w Jui}' 18 fut tile Me1gs

IIi\ VP. A N!CP. WEEK !

'

ASSORTED SELECTION

OF

BOYS'

DENIM
SHORTS
Just the thing for your boy!
Frayed leg shorts made of 100
percen t pre shrunk denim
Reg and slim sozes, 8 to 18

SHOES
50% OFF

from the
i
B c Childhood Center i

WAS PROMOTED
POM EROY - William D
Clark , son of Mrs Evelrn
Clark of 105 Pleasant R1dge,
Pomeroy, has been promoted
to staff sergeant in the U S
Air Force. Sergeant Clark , a
m1ssile system analyst
specia hst, ts assigned at f E
Warren AFB , Wyu , with a
unn of the Strategic A1r
Command The se rgeant Is a
1972 htgh school graduate
fil s wife, Diana, IS th e
daughter ol Mr and Mrs. D
D. Rapp at ll950 Case Road.
Bellevue, M1c!t

BOSTON (UP!) - LUIS East to 8% games With an 8-3
Tiant, backed a pair of RBI vtctory over the OriOles
The 37-year old Tiant , who
apiece from Butch Hobson
picked
up h1s !98th career
and R1ck Burleson , Improved
wtn,
ytelded
home runs by
h1s unblemished rocord to 7~
R1ck
Dempsey,
Eddte
by pitchtng a seven hitter
Murray
and
Doug
Dcc1nces
tn
Sat urday to help the firstplace Boston Red Sox m- pllchmg h1s fifth complete
STRASBOURG (UP! ) country surprtsmgly trailed fine form this sununer by crease the1r lead over game. He walked two and
Thomas Wessinghage, West France 94-87 on the first day outsprtnting France's Baltunore Onoles in the AL struck out SIX and rellred 15
Germany's brilliant middle of their track and field meet. Francts Gonzales and
distance runner, was a rare
In damp, wmdy conditions, Philippe Dien tn the 1500
winner Saturday when his Wessinghage continued his meter race to clock 3 minutes
43.10 seconds.
Wes singhage recentlv
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople clucked 337 b 111 East Berhn
~0Mf-i!'IIN6
and 3 39.4 in Cologne, ahead
\PQ!f.DIC.TIN6\ f-VEN
of World 1500 meters record
ruo•1.&lt;c. P~l)SL.f:Mn.'Vf-BEEN
6166ER' ~ holder Filbert Bay1 of TanPLI'.N TO
zania.
END CRIME.
Wess1 nghage was never
SY MI'IKIN&amp; se riously pressed by the
DEf'UT'i
French patr and surged home
!)f\ER!FF~
first, while Gonzales, beaten
OF PEOPLE by Wessinghage m Cologne
WALI'.IN'
last Thursday, JUS! got home
Tt-\E IR
ahead of his talented 21-yearDO&amp;$.;'""'-.,. old compatriot Dien, who was
unknown at the start of the
season.
Sholputter
Klaus
14-15 YEAR-OLD division wmners m Saturday's
Reichenbach was well below
annual Gallipolis Annual Jaycees JUmor golf tournament
hts fmest form but sttll
were, left to rtght, Bob Marchi , first; Gene Wood , second
reached a year best of 63 feet,
and John Craft, thtrd
8'h in. (19.42 M).
Franz-Peter
HofmeiSter
and Bernd Hernnann, two of
West Gennany's talented 400
R6~Nl'Z I N6
meter
runners, took first and
Tt-l E.
third
m
a slow race.
N1 6HT
Bntam led France 93'hPATROL";,
6 - l ' 67'-' at the half way stage of

PRICES IN EFFECT

$ 48

HECK'S REGULAR

A

DA UGHTER BORN
POMEROY - Mr and
Mrs Johnny Harrison, the
fo rmer D1ana McAng us.
Ironton, are announcing the
birth of a SIX pound, nine
ounce daughter, Amy Beth,
on June 18 at the Lawrence
General Hospital In Ironton
Maternal grand mother IS
Mr s
Mary
McAng us,
Svracuse. and the paternal
g~andparents arc Mrs . Laura
Harrison, Pomeroy, and J ohn
F. Hamson, Holland . The
maternal great-grandparents
are Mr and Mrs Allie
Grueser , Monnessen , Pa ,
and
paterna l
great·
gra ndparents arc Mr . and
Mrs
Wilbur
Howley,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs
Floyd Ha rnson, Rulland
Paternal great - great ·
gran dfa t her "
Ernest
Ham son, Hutland, and
maternal great . great •
grandmother is Lydia Hysell ,
Syracuse Mr. and Mrs
liamson alS&lt;o have a son,
John Martin, 4'"

Tiant wins 7th tilt

Wessinghage rare winner

~--

Mason UMW has meeting

r·----------------,
II
Community!
t
I
Corner I

SPORTS

the Pansh." Members sang
Fa1rest Lord Jesus", and
devotiOns were by Mrs. Juh11
&amp;·ott who read ·Can the Canmng " and · Dues God Always
G1vc Us What We Ask 111
Prayer j" She concluded w1th
prayer
Mrs . Fred Nease read "
poem. 'New Urge " Dur1ng
lhe busmess mectmg mJnuil':;
of tile prevwus mectmg wert•
1·ead ond a love uffenng was
taken . A letter was read
about a new banner to be
made and ente red m a contest
at the fall meet1ng
A donatwn was made
toward the new speaker
system recently mstalled
TI1e next meetmg will be a
ptcmc at Route 33 Slllte Park.
A total of 73 Sick and shutm
calls fur two months were
reported. Refreshments were
served by the hostesses , Mrs.
Henry Thomas and Mrs
Urana Thomas

Some ways to get more money mclude havmg an additional
member of the household take a full or part-time JOb, working
more overtune, or producmg marketable 1tems at home that
can be sold at a profit. If the household has its own business or
farm, you mtght make changes to increase mcome or cut
Ucnt. opened I tw rneelmg
expenses.
wtlh a 1 c.: ulmg, Pr aver for
If an additwnal member of your household dectdes to take
a JOb, some 1tems to cons1der - to be sure the net mcome will
t ••
.... justlfy the cost - include the skill and traming that w1ll
determme gross earnmgs. Then make deductions for
additiOnal work related expenses, such as mcome and soCial
I
b
i
secunty taxes; mcreased clothmg, food and trans!
'
portatiOn costs; and servtce purchases that had prevwusly
I
been performed by the additional job holder - such as ca re of
I
chtldren. home mamtenance , and household work.
Use of Credit. The use of credit would allow your household
We've firushed a busy , happy year at the Community
to buy some things sooner when cash ts short However, tl only Childhood Center. Now we are planning for next year, and
postpones or spreads out payments and may add finance
there are openmgs for new students.
charges which mcrease the cost of thu~gs purchased Three
The Center seeks to offer a total enrichment program for
types of consumer credit are avatlable: charge accounts, the young child We endeavor to provtde a loVIng and
UlSlallment purchases and consumer loans. Consumer loans stunulalmg atmosphere tn which each ch1ld will feel free to
are avrulable from such sources as credit un10ns . banks. explore and develop his own interests and abiltties
sav mgs aod loan assoctaltons and small loan compames
In a non-graded, free-learnmg atmosphere children more
In all cases. buying willl tnstallment payments or using
eas1 ly learn to express their own feelings, and to respect the
consumer loans means paymg mterest or ca rrymg charges
feelings of others. They have the confidence to try new
Many cred1t-card charge accounts also have a fmance charge experiences because they are allowed to proceed at their own
1f llley are not paid in full wtthm 30 days after you are btlled . rate.
When you use credit, here are two rules that you can keep
They grow m self-dlsclplme that permits them to work,
the cost down : (I l make as large a down payment as possible play, and cooperate with others without losmg llle abtlity to
and (2) pay the balance as qwckly as possible. Always bu)'lng lllmk and judge for lllemselves
on the mstalimenl plan may be a sign of poor planmng,
Many different med1ums fur learning are offered at the
however, the occastonaJ use of credit may be a way to get more Center The cht!d IS encouraged to get to know hts world
sat1sfaction from the money you have .
lllrough science expenences, exploratwn of his enVIronmenl,
Do II Yourself It 1s possible to live better than your and an exposure to literature . Art, music, rh)1hrn acttvllles,
income might suggest if you use more time and less money to and a vane!)• of language experiences help the chtld learn to
produce Ule thmgs you want . You can get more from )Our commumcate hts feelin gs and ideas.
income by gardemng, ca nmng, bakmg, remodelmg, sewmg,
Large and small muscle centers offer the opporturuly to
makmg simple home repairs. doing routine car mamtenance develop fmer coordmatton By limihng enrollment, the Center
and, possibly even helpmg m home bmldtng and maj or home controls the teacher to chtld radio The teachers know each
repatrs
child. They act as ca talysts to stunulate the chtld's creat1ve
cunos1ty, developmental skills, self-reliance, and feeling of
D&lt;Hl-yourself activities requtre tune, Skill, equipment and se lf-worth
physical effort. If these resources are not available. money
The Center 1s located at the Grace United Methodist
may be wasted rather than saved You can develop some sk11ls Church, at Second and Cedar. There are openmgs for children
such as sewmg, gardenmg , pamting, and domg simple between the ages of three and five. There are two alternal1ve
carpentry Start wtlh small and mexpens1ve proJects to schedules Monday lllrough Friday (9-!1:30), or Monday ,
develop your skills before moving on to bigger projects.
Wednesday , and Friday (!1-11 :30) .
Be an Informed Consumer. ll is a challenge to learn what
Mothers of younger children may feel the1r cltild would be
you are buymg There are more hbers , models, appliances , more comfortable attendmg only three mornl!lRS a week.
services and gadgets today than ever before Unless you
The tuition per month for the full week IS $30 and for th€
carefully defme what ts needed ma product and then select an lllree morning week is $22 week . Monthly tuition for a family
1tem w1th the features that best meet that need, money can be With two children enrolled ts $50 Please call Glona Danner
spent without the need bemg satisfied.
( 446-9550 ) for more mformat1on
Learnmg about a product or services before you go
shoppmg is one way to be a more efftcient consumer As you
shop, learn more by readmg labels and exammtng products
Talk wtth salespeople, too . Learn to know when they are
proVIding real mformauon and when they are just encouragmg
MAS ON
The
Um ted !9. Gtfts were g1ven .
you to buy U!arn to resist h1gh pressure selling and Impulse
The hostesses were Hulh
buying. Shop w11Jl a list - to help you come home with the MethodiSt Women met tn the
Walker,
Lorene Harless and
church basement President,
thmgs you need and leave the unnecessary 1tems m th€ store
Gladys
R1ley
Cornmuh1ty Facilittes. Olller ways to stretch your money Sarah Spencer, opened the
Attendmg ~ ere Max1ne
mclude the use of free or low-cost commumly factllttes and mretmg w1lh prayer
Arnold
, Frances Stewart.
The program, "The One
sharmg sen1ces w1th neighbors. Parks, recreation centers,
Cathenne Sm1th. Marga,ret
Parent
Family,"
was
led
bv
museums and art gallenes offer much enteruunmenl at little
or no cost UkewlSe, tax-supported health departments , adult LaVera Yeager The scnp- P1ckens, Eve lyn Proffilt ,
Gladys R1lcy, Earlene
education programs and libraries provide some free serv1ces turc wa s 'Wh oever does
Bumgardner, Sarah Speneer,
w11l
of
my
fath
er
the
You and your netghbors may exchange babystlttng, errand
Lorene
Harless.
Rut~
IS
my
mother,
brother,
runnmg and other services that save each other money
and SISler ." It
"a s Walker, Hazel Smith, .June
Ram ona
an 1nlerestmg program wtth VanMatr e.
Sydenslncker and Helen
much discussion
The fa ther-son banquet was Bal1on.
d1seussed It was held June
~._....

iunbav ~imes· imtintl

Heck's
Reg.
'4.99

AMERICAN ELECTRIC

HAMBURGER
COOKER

M0534

the women's meet. Tessa

Wilkins discus winner

MIRRO

4 QUART PRESSURE POT
Thts speed cooker turns out thrilty meat cuts to juicy
m one third the ftme requ tred wtth old:~:1::/~:~~d methods, with more vitamins and mmerals
~I
Vegetables keep the1r natural flavor and
I
The unbreakable pressure control automatically
ulates pressure at 15 pounds Removable, selfli ng gasket Rack. rectpe direcfton book included .

:,

tendet·ness

Cooks hamburgers. sma ll
steaks ,
and
gr ills
sandwtches In minutes .

Speed 1oests mullins ,
bagels and nut bread Flip

over cooking tray for round

or square food Items.

$999
Heck's Reg. '14.96

HECK'S REG.
$12.99

JEWELRY DEPT.

JEWELRY DEPT.

MIKE'S
FISHING BAIT

FRABIL

FISHING CREEL

• 1111 IIIIIALMM• 01111-IAO Hfl
• ILO.P\IIOI!II_CIIIT ...S

•
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'1.99 each
SPORTS DEPT.

Heck's Reg. •3.19
SPORTS DEPT.

WINDEX

IVORY

OVEN CLEANER

16 oz.

Heck's Reg.
'1.54

_.. u -

Heck's Reg. 69•

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEW ARE DEPT.

VINYL

SUN LOUNGE

HELSINKI (UP!)
Olympic champion Ma c
Wilkins braved ram and wmd
to wtn the discus at the
traditional Saartjarvt Mldsununer Track and F1eld
Games Saturday w1th a throw
of 217 feet, 2 mches (66 2
meters) and launch four
American victories.
Carl McCullough won the
400 meters in 47.6 seconds
ahead of Eu ropean 800 meter
indoor champwn Markku
Taskmcn of Fmland 1n 48.0

McEnroe
in finals
LONDON 1UP! ) - John
McEnroe of Douglaston . New
York, could be tn line for h1s
first b1g pay day after upsetting Australian Cohn
Dibley 6-3,8-9,6-2 Saturday to
reach the finals of the $175 ,()0()
lnternattonal Tennts Tour·
nament at Queens Clu b,
London.
The 19-year-old American
rollege champion, who only
turned pro earlier th1s month
after leaving Stanford,
Sunday meets veteran Tony
Roche of Australta, h1s sentor
by 14 years who dumped New
Yorker Sandy Mayer 3~, 6-3,
~-

The
fourth-seeded
McEnroe, chasmg the $17,500
ftrst pme , played twi ce
Friday.
Roche had to . thank a
racket cha nge to virtually
eliminate Mayer when he was
in a wiruung puSillon against
the Austraban.
The Amertcan was leading
5-4 in the third set when
Roche hred a fierce
backhand volley which
proved a wiMer but broke a
string in his racket . The
Australian swapped his
racket, steadied himself and
drilled in rocket-like serve
whtch ktcked up the center
line chalk and left Mayer
rooted.
To serve proved a match
saver for the Australian who
then broke Mayer's serve In
the 13th game to set up his
appearance tn the final

w1th a Gary ~livers posting
fourth spot m 48.7.
In the 3,000 meters J1m
Crawford clocked 8 mmutes
1.2 seconds to wm ahead of
Turkey's Mehmet Yordaeon
in 8:02.6 Wllh Amencan Doug
Brown tlj1rd m 8 04.0.
Former World Reco rd
Holder AI Feuerbach had to
hght fur h1s wtn m the shot
putt,
thruwmg 67-31''.!
(20 51M ). on ly '• mch clear of
European mdoor champiOn
ReiJO Stahlverb of Fmland
who threw 67-3'• (20aM ).
In the final main event of
the day, Turkey 's Sermet
Dimurlenk won the 1,500
meters m 3:46.2, edging out
Amencan M1ke Manke on
3·46 3 Jose-Manuel Apascal
of Spain was third 10 3 46 3
and George Melley, U.S was
fourth m 3 46 4 Amencan
steeplecasc specialist Henr y
Marsh was seventh w1th
3 48 7
The matn section of the
two-day event will be held
Sunday when the bulk of the
33 America ns here Will be m
act 1on. The orgamzers are
also hopmg for better
weather to tmprove on the
2,500 spectators for the first
day

For sun lime Indoor outdoor

hurlers ·

Sunday's Probable Pitchers
United Press International
tAll Times EDTJ
American U!ague
New York (Gullett 2~ 1 at
Detroit IB 1llmgham 5-'1), !·30
p.m
Ba lllmore 1D. Mal1tnez 641 at Boston (Torrez 10-3 ),
2:00pm.
Toronto I Moore 2-1 and
Garvtn 2-7) at Cleveland
(Clyde 4·2 and W1se 4-10). 2,
2.00 p m.
Mmnesota 1Zahn 7-5 and
Enckson 7-5 ) at Ch1cago
(Stone 6-5 and Htnlon !~ ).
2:1&gt;
pm.
GIVE UP RIGHTS
Oakland
tKeogh 4-'1 1 at
MILWAUKEE CUP!)
Kansas City !G ura S-1 ), 2 30
The Milwaukee Bucks, m a
su rpri se announcement pm.
Seattle (Parrott I~ ) at
Friday mght. sa1d they have
Milwaukee (Trvers 3-3), 2:30
g1ven up draft nghts to
forward-center Kim An- pm.
California (Aase 4-3 ) at
derson of M1sso un , and the
Texas (Med1ch 1-3), 8:35p .m
Ponland Trail Blazers are
National U!ague
free to stgn htm
Chtcago
(R. Reuschel 8-'1 )
The Bueks had made Anat Philadelphia (Christenson
derson thetr seventh choice m
the recent college draft even H), .!_:35 _p.m.
P1ttsbur~h (Candelarta 7·
though Anderson had been
61 at New York (Bruhert 1-5),
drafted but d1d not s1gn the
year before w1th Po11land. 205pm
Montreal (Rogers 8-7) at
Mtlwaukce indi ca ted 1!
St
1--'ltiili 'tDenn6 !Hi), 2:15
would battle wtlh Portland
pm
for the nghts to Anderson ,
Atlanta (Easterly 2-'l and
who played m Italy after
Huthven 2~) at San Fra nfailing to come to terms wtlh
CISCO (Halicki 4-1
a nd
Portland
Knepper
8-5 ), 2, 3:05p .m
The Bucks sa1d upon
Cmcinnall (Moskau ~2 ) at
revtew of the matter they
Los
Angeles (John 8-5 ), 4:00
acknowledged Portland's
pm.
exclusive right to negotiate
Houston (Rtchard 6-7 and
with Anderson and s1gn him .
Lemongello 6~) at San D1ego
(Shirley 3-8 and Rashmussen
2-71, 2, 4:00pm.

1971
RACE AT YOUR OWN RISK
WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR ANY ACCIDENTS

DRtV.c E:::=---HORS EPOWER _ _ _ COLOR OF
BOAT-

'17.99

Today's

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Sports
briefs.

•

ORCHARD PARK. li Y
I UPli - The Buffalo B1lls
announced Fnday the
s1gnmgs of llle1r two secondround
draft
cho1ces,
defenstve end Dee Hardtson
of North Carohna and
defenstve lmeman Scott Hutchmson of Florida
W1th the s1gmng of
Hardtson and Hutchmson, the
team has s1gned hve of 1ts
first stx draft picks.

PORTLAND, Ore (UP! )Dr. Bob Cook, team phystctan
for the Portland Trail
Blazers, satd Fnday he has
no reason to be alarmed over
the progress of Bill Walton 's
recovery from a broken foot.
Cook said 1l IS a break that
will take tune to heal, and
Walton is at a hot sprmgs spa
tn Eden , AriZ., treating hls
foot with mudpacks and hot
water, which Cook beheves
14 to 15 year-old divtslon went wtll help. Additional x-rays
to Gene Woods (89) and John will be made when Walton
Craft (91) respectively .
returns to Portland.
Both Rusty and Bob wtll
represent the Gallipolis Area
J aycees in the Ohio Jaycees'
NEW YORK ( UP I) State Tournament on Julv 31 Michael Burke, prestdent of
and Aug I at the Little Madison Square Garden,
Turtle Country Club in Friday confirmed pubhshed
reports that he has spoken
Columbus
Other scores m the tour- w1th promoter Don Km g
nament were·
about a pos1t1on w1th the
14-15 year old dlvtslon Garden but md1cated that no
Mtke Craft 93: Mark Allen 93: deal has been made .
Tim Skidmore 93, Tom R1ser
"No arrangement has been
98; Rtck Martm 102; and consummated as yet, " sa1d
Todd Fowler 107
Burke m a prepared
16-18 year old divisiOn, sta tement. "We have talked
Brad Rodger s 82, Andy to Don Km g about a nonPersinger 82; Phil Cox 83, exclusive arrangement
Dave Beatue 67 : Jeff Beattie whereby Madtson Square
Garden would co-promote
89, and Dallas Love 91
Mtke Kamman, Jay cee bolling matches We are also
Tournament chairman. talking w1th Bob Arwn 1a
extended his thanks to the rival boxing promoter) "
followmg pe&lt;Jple and merchants for helpmg sponsor
NEW YORK I UP! I ---' The
the tournament and th e
New York Yankees Fnday
wmners tnp to Columbus.
Howard B. Sa unders, recalled second baseman
Gallipolis Golf Course , Bob Damaso Gawa from their
Saunders, Quaker State, Tacoma farm club of the
Gtlltngham Drugs, Johnson's Pac1f1c Coast League to ftll
Market; F1rst National Bank, the roster spot opened when
Commerc tal and Savmgs pllcller Jun "Catf1sh" Hunter
Bank, Ohio Valley Bank, and was placed on the disabled
list
Ct rcle's Cafetena.
Garcia IS an emergency
replacement fm Wtlhe Randolph , who was flown back to
NASHVILLE . Tenn I UP!) New York Fnday to have hts
- Clay Stapleton resigned a1lin g nght knee cxammed.
Thursday as athlellc director
of Vanderbilt University
ST LOUIS (UP)) - August
The
resignation
of A. Busch Jr. , president of the
Stapleton IS effective Aug 31
St. LOUIS Cardmals, Friday
He has been Vanderbilt's lashed out at h1s last-place
athlellc dtrector stnce ballclub, accusmg the
February of 1973 .
players of g1vmg less than

Saunders, Marchi
win JC tourney
GALLIPIOLIS - Rusty
Saunders and Bob Marchi
won their respecttve dtv1s10ns
in the second annual Jaycee
Golf Tournament which was
held Saturday on the
Gallipohs Golf Course
Rusty, an 18 year-old ,
who attends Marshall, shot a
s1x ove r par 74. He had
identical nme-hole scores of
37 Second and third place in
the 16 to 18 year-old div1s1on
went to J D. Jones (7&gt;) and
Jeff Clary 178) respecllvely
Bob, a Ia year-old from the
c1ty, shot an 82. He had
consistent rounds of 41-'11
Second and third place m the
WASHINGTON STATE
WINS &gt;,000 METERS
LONDON - Triple World
Record Holder Henry Rono of
Kenya, a student at
Washmglon Stale Umvers1ly,
added another lltle to h1s
collection Sat urday when he
won the 5,000 meters at the
Brttish AAA track and field
champ10nsh1ps w1th a meet
record of 13 20.8.
Olympi c champton Don
Quame of Jama1ca won the
200 meters m 20.79, ahead of
James Gilkes of Guyana m
20 81 With Amencan James
Sandford third tn 21 08.
Another title to go overseas
was the 400 meters where
Maurtce Peoples of the
Umted States posted 45 78 to
win .
Tom McU!an of the Umted
States won the 800 w1th a
smooth p1ece of accelerauon
in the finishing straight,
clocking 1. 48.49

Brookhaven Med1ca l Center
m crtt1cal condtllon WedINBOARDOR OUTBOARD_StGNATURE- - - nesday , was reported In
stable condition Saturday.
There will be a SJ entrance lee. All entries will be taken et
He was stricken at the
the boat ramp by the French City Sk i Club Inc 1rom 2 until A
Preston Tra1l Golf Club
o'clock. Plea&gt;e bring 1111&gt; entry lorm filled out .
where a frequent golfing
companion, Dr. Frank J.
Altlck, noticed his condttion.
SKI RACE
" He saw r1ght away that I
SUNDAY, JULY l
needed blood . I had lost all
1971
RACE AT ·YOUR OWN RISK
my color .. I don 't know how
WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
much blood they gave me, but
FOR ANY ACCIDENTS
they said I was pretty low,"
DRIVER _ _ _ _ SK!ER _ _ _ HOR SE POWERMantle said.
"The whole thing never
INBOARD OR OUTBOARD_ COLOR OF BOAT- - bothered me until we were
driving to the hospital I could
Signalure of Drlver_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Signelure ol Skier
tell the doctor was pretty
too much."
w ncerned . Then he put me
ttl ;;:,ere will be a 52 entrence fee. All entries will be laken at
Mantle , admitted to the tnto tntenstve care, wtth no
.,. •1 k I promp by 1he French City Ski Club the from 2 until 4 inte nsive care un1t of
, .c oc . lease bring this entry form filled oul.

proved tts major league lea dmg wmnmg percentage
lo .700 , scored three more
runs m the Sixth.
W1th one out m the s1xth,
F1sk walked and Fred Lynn
doubled to chase loser Scott
McGregor, 8-5 Rehever Joe
Kcrngan Intentionall y

walked George Scott, but
th en proceeded to walk
Evans on four pitches to force
home Boston 's foul1h run
Burleson 's sharp grounder
caromed off the heel of
second baseman B11ly
Snnth's glove fur a two-run
smgl e that capped the mmng.

Foyt hopes to
add to winnings
ByGARYKALE
UP! Sports Wrller
MT POCUNO (UP! )- " If
I leav e thiS world today, I'll
know I've done everyth10g
I'v e wanted lo do m hfe " A J . F'oyt.
From lhe lime A J F'oyt
J r • drove h1s f1r•t battery operated car as a 5-year-old ,
the flest) Texa s has lived
auto rac10g, With a recent
dabble 10 horse racmg that
ha s brou~hl h1m modest
success

Foyl IS the wmnmg esl
dnver m USAC history He
ha s won the Indianapoli s 500
mtler an unprecedented four
limes and guns for h1s lh1rd
Schae[er 500 tnumph Sunday
And 1t 's been a ball all the
way for th e fabulou s Fo)t
Whil e Foyt concentrates on
his ftrst love - auto racmg h1s son, Anthony Joseph Foyt
Ill, wou ld rath er stalk the
horse barns than the o1l
soaked p1ts of Indy or some
other presl1g10us track
" I'm not d1sappomted he's
not mlo auto racmg," says
the burly 43-year-old dn ver
who probabl y has more scars
than any other dnver from
thts dangerous professiOn . " I
feel I'm domg what I really
want to do and I'm successful I want h1m to be the
same way "
"My son was the leadm g
tramer dunn g one stage at
Churchill Downs. He breaks
my horses, trams them and
gets them 10 shape for the
races Kids these days have
too much free tune, so I gave
my bo) somethmg to do He
was inlerested m show horses
as a kid and I get mterested
because l wanted him to get
mv olved m somethmg. If not
auto racmg, then somethmg
he really wanted to do"

their best efforts
Busch satd, "While I do not
mtend to make any drast iC
moves (It the present t1me , I
want this message ea rned
loud and clear - the B1g
Eagl e, the Boss, Guss1e. 1 e,
whatever they want to call
me , 1s not happy I'm tired of
excuses " The Cardmals last
pennant was 111 1968
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Wilham G Barry, llle chmrman
of the New York Stale Racmg
and Wa ge rmg Board, Fnday
announced he has resigned
from the positwn for personal
and fmanctal constderat10ns
Barry IS takmg a seruor
management posl\lon w1th
Reliance Group , Inc , an

insurance

Foyt said Ton y Ill had
some ''hornble" expenences
al Ind1anapohs as a
yuWlgsler "and 1t spooked
h1m He was real smallml964
when he saw Edd1e Sachs get
ktlled He was m the stands 10
1973 when th ey had a cham·
, eactl on crash and Swede
Savage was ktlled "
Foyt, considered a ptoneer
1n buildm g engmes that
finally powered Indy -type
ca rs to speeds of 200 miles an
hour. has fully recovered
from mJunes at Oaytona last
February Abroken shoulder
wnst and arm hampered hi
work on a de ve lopmer
program for a new coyot
whiC h he will start from lh
second ro" Sunday at Pocon
Raceway
The l'ar was dnven for th~
f1 rst ume at lndwnapolis Ia •
month and hmshed seventh
Last weekend 1t suffered
wmg and

chass1s damage

whtn ll shpped off a loadmg
ramp enroute to Milwaukee.
"It was enough to make you
s1ck, ' say s F'o)1. who bab1es
ever) thmg he owns " It wa s
tern ble see10g 1t broken up.
llul like anyth10g else that
breaks, you ptck up the
p1cces. mend 11 and stal1

ove r "
F'oyl spent three years
deSi gnmg and develop10g the
ca r and eng10e and wonders 1f
he tsn 't too old for a return to
the drawmg board now that
Cosworth has matched h1s
engme experltsc

'I dun'tknowlll want to go
through the developing
program aga10," he muses.
·' J knew last year they were
catching up. I'll tr} to get
through th1s season and then
make up my mmd "
In addl!wn, Foyt must
dec1de wh eth er he'll go to
England 10 September for
USAC's debut before a
Eumpean audience The two
weeks abroad may be too
much tune away from the
shop
"I'v e been so far beh10d
sc hedule bec uase of my mJUrleS, that I vc been playmg
catch up "
BeSides. some of his horses
,.,11 be runn10g about that
ume and Foyt has to keep a
mt 1cal eve on how th e other
A J IS ·makUl~ out 10 the
equ10e venture.

Penn sylvama. wher e he
works, and to keep Ius JOb
wllh llle North Arnencan
Fence Co, located near
Pittsburgh. for the two-year
probationary penod.

orga n zr~tJo n

lo cated 10 New York .
However, he w11l remam as
head of llle board for about a
month , until Gov Hugh
Carey can find a replacement
for the $55,000-a-year JOb

BALTIMORE I UPl
Four veteran players,
mcludmg fullback Roosevelt
Leaks. have signed thetr 1978
contracts w1th the Ba ltunore
Colts, tt was announced
F'ndav
Lea.ks , who rushed for
WASHINGTON (UPII more
than 1,000 yards last
The Board of Player
season,
defens1ve back Tun
Represcnlallves of the NFL
Baylor.
lineba cker Derrel
Players Assoc tatton ha s
Luce
and
light end Jurume
ordered veteran Na lwnal
Kennedy
stgned one-year
Football U!ague players not
contra
cts,
brmgmg
the total
to report to pre-season
number
of
veteran
pla yers
traming camps before July
under
contract
to
39
21, it was announced Thursday
As soc1at1 on exe cutive
DALLAS I UP!) - Former
director Ed Garvey sa1d the New York Yankees' slugger
umon act1on was taken M1ckey Mantle , hospttallzed
becaus e of "w 1despread w1th a bleedmg ulcer, was
abuse of the terms of the 1977 unproved Fnday and doctors
co ll ec ti ve bargatnlng sa1d he m1ght be released
agreement, wh1ch states that durmg llle weekend .
visitors and no telephone out of the hospital, I'll st1ll players should not report
Mantle , 47 , wa s admitted to
That's when I reahzed 1! was have to take 1t easy,' ' Mantle unul 15 days before llle first
llle
intensive care unit of
more serious than l thought." said.
regular pre-season game
Brookhaven
Medical Center
Mantle's 536 career home 11le first game IS scheduled
Mantle satd that when he
Wednesday
m crtttcal
passed his 40th birthday, he runs rank sixth on the all- for Aug 4 "
condition.
"He
was
seriously
stopped worrying so much ume list and he added 18 m
11l
and
was
cntical
but we
about Hodgkins disease, the the World Senes play as a
too
k
hun
off
that
ltst
," Dr
NASHVnJ.E
,
Tenn
(UPI
)
lymphatic disorder that member of 12 pennant winFrank
J
.
Alllck
said.
''I
can
Former
National
Football
killed his father before he ners and seven world
assure
you
now
he's
very
,
League
q~arterback
Joe
Gilchampionship teams w1th the
turned 40.
"I ftgured that once I got Yankees . He led the liam wa s placed on probation much okay. He's taking food
past 40, that was all behmd Ameri ca n League m homers for two years Frtday after and dmng a lot better "
me. If I knew I was going to four times w1th 37 in 1955, 52 pleadmg guilty last month to
WASHINGTON (UP!)
live this long, I'd have taken In 1956, 42 m 1957 and 40 tn carrying a weapon and
possession
of
a
small
amount
Three
Washington Redsktns
better care of myself," he 1960.
&amp;
of
marijuana
.
players
- running back Jim
Three t1mes Mantle was
said
Crunmal
Court
Judge
John
Klick,
defensive
, end Wtll
the
Amencan
Hospital supervisor Unda named
L.
Draper
suspended
Wynn
and
linebacker
Mike
Boyle satd the outlook for League 'r Most Valuable
Gilham's
45-&lt;lay
workhouse
McGraw
were
placed
on
Mantle's recovery was good. Player and narrowly mtssed
sentence
but
ordered
him
to
wa1vers
Fnday
AU
had
been
"But I've got to take it easy the honor on l wo other ocremain
tn
a
drug wtth the club for less than a
to be sure the bleeding won 'I casions
rehabilitation
program
m season
stal1 again. Even when I get

Mantle continues to improve
DALLAS (UP! ) - Former
New York Yankees Hall of
Farner Mickey Mantle,
suffering from a bleeding
ulcer but continuing to improve, hopes to be released
from the hospital by Monday.
Mantle, 47, who htt 536
home runs during his career
with the Yankees, said he
suspected his rigorous
sched ule of nationwide appearances ' co ntribut ed
greatly to his Illness.
"I've been dotng a lot of
traveling, " he said. "It seems
like wherever I go, there's
aways a cocktail party.
Maybe l was drinking a little

•

ST. LOUIS 1UPI) - TI1e St.
1--'l UIS Cardmals Frtday acqutred right-handed pitcher
Roy Thomas on wa1vers from
llle Houston Astros
Thomas has been pitching
w1th the Aslros' farm club at
Charleston
'"
the
lnternattOnal League. He was
.w1th the Astros at llle end of
last season and p1tched four
games m relief

\6-18 YEAH-OLD diVISIOn wmners m Saturday's
annual Gallipolis Area Jayl'I'Cs junior golf tournament
were, left to rtght, Rusty Saunders , first; J D. Jones.
second and Jeff Clary , third .

BOAT RACE
SUNDAY, JULYl

anytime Designed end built lo
la st .
Tub uter
steel
con strvctton .

Heck's
Reg.

Sa nderson reached her best
mark of 1978 wtth a Javelin
throw of 209 feet, 4 inches
163.80 Ml to show that she is
returning to form after losmg
to East German World
Record Holder Ruth Fuchs a
fortrught ago.
France's most excttmg
woman athlete on show was
Chantal Rega, who soundly
defeated Bntam's Beverley
Godda rd and European
bronze medahst Andrea
Lynch m a cnsp 100 meters
wtth a tune of 11.17

of the last 17 men he faced
Hobson stroked hts 15th
homer m the third to gam a II lie fur Boston, followmg
Dempsey's fourth in toe top
of the innmg Murray made 11
2-1 wtlh a 440-foot shot an
mmng later , but Carlton Fisk
agam !led it w1th h1s etghlh
homer m the bottom of the
fourth.
Hobston put the Red Sox
ahead for good m the hfth
when h1s stogie scored
Dw1g ht Evans, who had
doubled off the center held
fence. Boston. whtch tm-

�,,

C-2- The Sunday Times&lt;ienlinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

Unser favored in Pocono race ·to
ByC.ARV KALE'

Major LeaGue sranding s
By United Press lnlernalional
Nationa l League

East

Ph ila
Ch'icago
Montreat
PiHsbrgh
New York
51. Lou is

W.
34
35
35
JO
31
1S
West

L.
29
30
J.ol
34
40

Pet. GB
.SdO .138
.507

"}
41-z
.4J7 7
44 ) 67 1'1
.469

W L. Pet.
San Fran
Cinc ina ti

GB

4)
42
38
JD
31

24 .642
1.7 609 1
LOS Ang
30 559 51 J
Houston
J&lt;l .469 111 1
San Diego
37 .456 1"1 1 .'
Atlanta
27 38 .41 5 15
Fn da y ' s Results
Ph ila 6, Ch ic ago 1, 1st
Phil a 6. Chicago 1, 2nd
NY J, P ittsbu rg h"} , 11 tnns
St Lo uis 8, Montreal 4
San Diego J, Houston 0
Los Angeles 1, Cinc i nnati 0
San Franc isco 9, At lanta 0
Sunday 's Games
P ittsb urgh at New York
Ch 1cago at Phi lade lph ia
Montreal at St Lou i s
Cincinn ati et Los Angeles
Ho uston at San Dieg o. 2
Atl anta at San Fran 2

American leagul"
Eas t
W. l Pet . GB
48 21 696
Bost on
40 18 sea 7' 1
Ba lt i mre
40 "18 588 71 2
New York
3B 30 .559 91 2
Mil wa uke
Det roit
33 33 500 13 ' 1
29 36 ,446 17
Clevelnd
21 45 .318 25 1 'i
Toronto
West
W. L Pet. GB
Ka n City
36 Jl 537 1
Texas
36 32 .529
1
Cali f
36 33 .sn
1
1
Oakland
34 36 .'d86 J 1
Chi c ago
31 36 . 463 s
M1nesota
28 38 42&lt;~ 71 1
Seanle
24 47 .338 t 4
Friday 's Result s
Tex as 7, Cali forn ia 0. 1st
Te xas 8. California 4 , 2nd
Kan City 5, OAkland J. 1st
Oak land 5, Kan Ci!y 4, 2nd

UPI Sports Writer
Cleve land B. ioronto 3
MT, POCONO, Pa. (UP! )
Bo ston 5, Balt ih1ore '2
New York 11, Detro it J
- AI Unser has come full
M innesola 2, Chicago 1
cycle. He began the Cosworth ·
Seat tle J , Mi l waukee o
revolution in 1976 by winning
Sunday ' s Games
Salf1m0re at Boston
the
Pocon.o 500 and made
New York at Detroit
history
last month when the
Toronto at Clevel and
Mmnesota at Chic ago
British·built engine powered
Oall.land at Kansas City
his car to victory in the
seattle at Milwau kee
Cal ifornia at Te)( aS, night
prestigious Indy 500 .
Unse_r rates as fa vorite to
l.nfernational Leagu e
.repeat
·in today's Pocono
Untted Press International
W. l. Pel . GB race, the second even t in the
Charleston
46 21 .676
USCA's triple crown of 500
Richmond
35 28 .556 8' ,
milers
that concludes with
Pawtucket
34 31 .523 10 1 7
Tidewate r
3J 3J . 507 1 p 1 the Ca lifornia later this
Toledo
30 31 .492 121 2 summer . Danny Onga is sits
Columbus
28 33 .459 1-11 7 on the pole.
Rocheste r
28 3d .45 2 15
A. J. Foyt, the only dri ver
Syracuse
21 45 .328 231 ~
Friday 's Result s
Charleston 10 , T idewater 1
Ri chmond 6, Pawtucket 2
Sy racuse 7, Columbus 6. lsi , 8
in nings
Colum bus 5, Syracuse 4, 2nd ,
7 inn ings
Ro&lt;;hes ler 7, Toledo 0
Today 's Game s
Charlest on at Tidewater
Pawtucket at Richm ond
Syracuse at Col umbus
Roches ter at Toledo

NEW YORK I UP!) - The
New York Giants Thursday
announced the signing of tw o
draft choices, defensive back
Odis McKinney and run ning
back Billy Taylor.
McKi nney. 6-foot-2, 187
pounds, was the team 's No. 2
draft pi ck and is from
Colorado, while th e IHJ, 215pound Taylor, their fourth
draft choice, is frnm Texas
Tech.

to win the Pocono 500 twice,
be moa ns the fact that
Cosworth has finally caught
up to his V-8 and that he's
running out of time in ari
attempt to surmount a new
challenge
for
engine
leadership.
" I was so advanced with
my engine that it took others
five years to catch up, " says
royt. "If I want to stay
competitive, I've got to come
up with some new design. I
built my car so that the
center of gravity was so low
that everybody laughed. at
me.
" I run with about an inch
clearance to the ground and I

get real scared when I have to race. Gordon Johncock says
stradd le some big pieces of this could be topped under
debris rolling toward my car. ideal weather conditions.
Roger Penske's dynamic
But that CG gave me stability
duo
of Tom Sneva and Mario
and helped me win a lot of
races."
And\etti . must rank high in
Dr . Joseph Mattioli ; cons1dermg pt:JSSID1e wuu1ta.,
director of Pocono Raceway, for today's eighth running
indicates thai one of the which tak es the green flag at
doininant fa ctors in the in· I p.m. EDT.
Sneva has been playing a
creased speeds anticipa ted in
today's race is the re-paving bridesmaid role at Inof the second turn. Several dianapolis with second-place
drivers say it is now possible finiShes to Foyt last year and
to run that arc flat out. Others Unser this season. The for·
mer school teacher won his
coplain about it.
John Rutherford set the only 500 race at Pocono last
existing record of 156.701 · year.
Andretti , disappointed over
miles per hour on the tri-oval
co urse while winning the 1974 the fa ilure to increase his

PROVIDENCE, R. L
tU Pl i - Dwight Williams'
days as a starting guard for
Providence College are over .
Accused of stabbing a
fellow stu dent With a paring
knife , Willia ms permanently
withdrew from sc hoo l
Friday, a Providence spokesman said .

" It was hi s decision." said
spokesma n Joseph McAleer.
Williams, a sta rt ing guard
on the basketball team for the
last t~&lt;'o yea rs, wa s

suspended after he allegedly Wednesday to charges of
s tabbed
R ay m o nd assault with a dangerous
Romagnola, 22, of Somerset, weapon and carrying a
Mass ., April 12 over a $10 bet
on a game of pooL
McAleer said Williams
withdrew before the schoo l's
discipllflary comm ittee ruled
on whether he co uld return
for his senior year in Sep·
tcmber.
Williams is free on $3,500
personal recog nizan ce
By FRED MeMANE
pending a July 18 pre-trial
UP! Sports Writer
hea ring. He pleaded innocent
Bill Lee, who bolted the
Boston Red Sox last week to
protest their trad ing hi s
fri end
Bernie
Carbo,
returned to action Friday
night and promptly regained
his old title as the "King of
Garbage."
Price
He stopped the Baltimore
Orioles on ei ght hits in
pitching the Red Sox to a 5-2
Th!n::Smg
victory , which enabled them
Equipment
to take a 7'-'-game lead in the
American Leag ue East.
Lee outdueled 10-ga n!C
•Air Cond~ioning
winner Jim Paimer and won
for the fir•1 time since May
•Wh~ewall
26, with an assortment of
breaking pitches that had the
Radials
batters completely off stride.
He did not strike anyone out,
•Sport MimliS
but walked only two.
"I kept them off-ba lance,"
said Lee . "Me and Mike
•Deluxe Wheel
Cuellar (former Orioles '
pitcher) have a lot in
Cowels
common. We'd both be great
sanitary engineers."
Carlton Fisk, Lee's bat•Radio Actom. Pk&amp;,
terymate, provided the offenSive support with a three-run
bomer in the first inning.
Elsewhere in the AL, New
York routed Detroit , 12-3,
Seattle blanked Milwaukee,
3-0, Minneso ta
edged
Chi cago, 2- 1, Cleve land
whipped Toronto, 8-3, Texas
swept a double-header from
California , 7~ and 8-4 , and
Kansas City beat Oakland , 5-3
then lost, 5-4 .
Yankees 12, Tigers 3:
Chris Chambli ss hit a
grand slam homer in the fir st
inning and Roy White added a
thr eerun blast to cap a sevenrun si xth as the Yankees
\\
pummeled the Tigers. Sparky
Lyle, in relief of Ed Figueroa,
got the victory and Milt
Wilcox too k the loss.
Mariners 3, Brewers 0:
Glenn Abbott pitched a
fo ur-hitte r in helping the
Mariner s to their fifth
straight triumph and his first
shuto ut of the season. Leon
Roberts, Bob Stinson and
Craig Reynolds each singled
home a run for Sea ttle.
Twins 2, White Sox I:
Craig Kusick's ninth-inning
homer for Minnesota sent
Chicago to its fourth straig ht
defeat. Dave Goltz pitched a
fi ve-hitter to snap Ken
Kravec's five~a me winning
strea k.

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•

of heartbreak in 1973 when
Roger McCluskey , the f!ontrunner, ran out of fuel in the'
final lap and an astonished
Foyt passed him to take the
checkered fla g.
" ·
The race that year was the
most competitive of the
series with nine drivers
taking turns at the lead· and
the lead itself changing hands'
28 times. Foyt had started
from 14th place that year;
and the following year was in
the race onir briefly, with:
drawing w1th a broken
upright after 20 laps.
.
The next year he returned
to become the only two-time
Pocono 500 winner.
• ....:·

Sliver Bridge Plaza
'

[

Spring Valley

'v.,

Indians 8, Blue Jays 3:
Gary Alexander and Jim
Norris drove in three runs
ea ch and Rick Waits
scattered seven hits to spark
the Indians. Otto Velez
homered for Toronto.
Rangers 7-8, Angels 8-4:
Bobby Bonds hit a pair of
three -run homers in the
opener and Ferguson Jenkins
tossed a five-hitter for his 41st
career shutout. Texas won
the nightcap when Reggie
Cleveland pitched out of a
bases-loaded jam in the
seventh inning.
Royals 5-4, A's 3-5:
George Brett drove in three
runs with a double and triple
to lead the Royals in the first
game a s Paul Splittorff
notched his ninth triumph.
Oaklanq won the nightcap
behind a four-run third
inning.

Falcons sign
5 more players
ATLANTA (1JPI) - Five
more players, includi~g Nebraska
guard
Stan
Waldemore, ha ve signed with
the Atlanta Falcons as the
clu b prepares for next
month 's training camp.
All 15 of Atlanta's choices
have been signed and will
report to the Greenville, S.C.,
training camp July 15.
Waldemore, 6-3, 268
pounds, was the third round
selection. Others signed were
Colorado linebacker Brian
Cabra l, 6-0, 209 pounds,
fourt h round ; Ohio State
linebacker David Adkins, IHJ,
212 pounds, eighth round;
West Virginia defensive
safety Tom Pridemore, 5-10,
186 pounds, ninth round : and
Jackson State running back
Hick ~ Patton, the club's lOth
round pick.
Veterans will not report to
the training camp until July
23. The tea m opens its
preseason schedule Aug . 7
against the New York J ets.
l'adres 3, Astros 0:
Gay lord Perry, now 8-2,
tossed a four-hitter en route
to his 50th career Shutout,
tying him with Baltimore's
Jim Palmer for the majorleague lead among active
pitchers.

was a member of UPI's
New England Team.
Romagnola received
stitches in his shoulder
was released from
hospital one day after
incident.

Dodgers I, Reds 0:
Steve Garvey's nin th
homer for the Dodgers
backed the three-hit pitching
of Burt Hooton before ··a
sellout crowd of 51,068 in Los
Angeles . Hooton, ·· 6-6,
outdueled Fred Norman: 8-4,
with his first Shutout of the

All·
two
and
the
the

season .

Busch ups
with Cards
lienee is getting very thin ,''
over what he described ' as
tl1elr "loose · and carefr ee
attitude."
There were no need 'for
excuse:; Friday night.
Jerry Morales , George
Hendrick and Ted SirmJlqns
each drove in two runs and
the Cardinals scored ' fi ve
runs in the fifth to knock out
loser Rudy May, &amp;-7 . .,Ellis
Valentine and Andre Dawson
hit homers for Montreal and
Simmons hit one for the
Cards.
"I suppose he (Busch ) has
a right to be upset ," said
Simmons. " It's not like we're
not trying, but I hope this' acts
like a catalyst !!I' a ~arne
winning streak ."
In other NL games, Pliifa-.
delphia swept a doilb~
header from Chicago by
identical &amp;-1 scores, New
York edged Pittsburgh, ~2 . ·

By IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Sports Writer
The St. Louis Cardinals
defeated the Montreal Expos ,
8-4 , Friday night, but their 2544 record is the league's
worst and team President
August Busch loose d a
barrage in a st.aU,ment to the
media against his team's
" loose
and
carefree
attitude."
The statement was not read
to the players before the
game and at least one of them
is happy it wasn 't.
"I'm glad I didn't read it
before the game ... I might
have tried too hard," said
winning pitcher Pete Vuckovich, 4-4 . "I need the right
balance of agg ress ivenes s
and relaxation ."
Busch, in hi.s statement ,
criticized the Cardinals for
committing "constant mental
errors," and said , "my pa·

'

Rangers may
sign Vachon
ByJIMCOUR
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Rogie Vachon knows what
he's doing isn't good for
hockey but he also knows he
has to take his money ahd run
while it's there.
There is strong speculation
that Vachon , the Los Angeles
Kings' premier goaltender
the past seven seasons, will
sign a five-year contract with
the New York Rangers ihls
week for an estimated
$600,000 per season. The
Rangers raided the Winnipeg
Jets of the World Hockey
Association and si gned
Swedes Anders Hedberg and
mr Nilsson.
Vachon made $150,000 in
the ,last season of his contract
with ,the Kings in 1977-78 and
'the Kings reportedly are
willblg to pay him $300,000 a
year ,to keep him.
Naturally, in the face of
what the Rangers are said to
be· willing to give him, the
Kings' offer doesn't come
close to what Los Angeles
, .owner Jack Kent Coo ke needs
· ·:to get him to stay .
· ' 'Right now," Vachon said,
'"I 'm rated among the top two
goa ltenders in the National
Hockey League along with
Ken Dryden of the Montreal
Canadiens and I feel I have to
be.pllid as one of the top two
god enders.
"Look at which baseball
players are signing for now .
Some free agents are signing
lor $2 million and $2.5 million.
"I know a contract like
mine probably is going to
hurt hockey in the long run
. and it's all going to have to
stop some day but it's not the
players' fault. It 's the fault of
management. They're willing
· to give us !hat kind of money
· and the players would be
crazy not to take it. Speaking
for all the players, I know we
·probably would play fo r half
of what we're getting now and
stili be happy ."
Va chon, 32, played in the
Dwar's Cup sports celebrity
tennis tournament In Las
Vega•. Nev ., last week. He
became a free agent June I
along wilh two other Kings'
stars, defenseman Gary
Sargent and center Butch
Goring.
Since the end of last season,
tbe NHI. has been reduced

•

:: 1::

WELLINGTON
SAFETY TOE

'

.

from 18 to 17 clubs with the
merger of Cleveland and
Minnesota. Vachon forecasts
the demise of five more NHL
teams and the entire WHA in
the near future .
"There 's a lot of bad
hockey in both leagues," he
stated. "I would like to see
better hockey all year
around. There's no reason for
bad hockey. A team like
Cleveland wasn't there so
why should you try to keep a
team that's not going to be
there.
"I think everybody wants
better quality hockey. Of
co urse , it'll mean less jobs
but that's the way it's going to
be. I see 12 solid teams competitively and financially
- in the next few years. Then
hockey probably would get a
national television contract ."
Vachon says it has been a
turbulent month. He says he's
found it hard to sleep some
nights.
He denies a deal is set with
lhe Rangers. His agent , he
says, also has been talking
with the Chicago Black
Hawks and the Detroit Red
Wings. · He says candidly
there's only about a 25 pert'ent chance that he will be
back with the Kings next
season.
''We're down to three
teams now,'' he said, ''and we
don't know what's going to
happen. We're going to take
the best offer and come ba ck
and see if the Kings can
match it.
"I'm looking for a five-year
contract . I'm 32. If I sign a
five-year
contract ,
it
probably will be my last one .
We would hate to move. We
would like to stay in Los
Angeles. But I'm looking for
security for my family Ia
wife and three children)."

Top hitters
M1jor Le~gue Leaders
By United Pre.ss International
Ba.Hing '

(&amp;ned on lSO at bah)
National League
Burrogh s Atl
Puhl Hou

Griffey Cin

69 281 90 .320

Bowa P hil
LA
Lopes LA

61 260
53 195
58 212
62 224

~ mith

Driessen Ci.n
Madlock SF
Foster Cin
Parker P it
Clark SF
Si m m o ns St . L
CBrew Min
Piniella NY
Rice Bas

ReynoldS sea
Lezcano Mi l
Lynn Bas
Jackson Cl l

Tues .• Wed ., Sal. filS
Thurs. til
12 noon

WOLVERINE 10':.:
WESTERN BRAZOS

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76
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•

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Saturday, August 5, 1978

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....•

have to beat the Reda and we
have to beat the Giants."
" It was just too much Burt
Hooton tonight," Cincinnati
skipper Sparky Anderson
said. "But I'm still very
happy with our position in the
standings .
"I think the team tha t wins
it will have less than 100
victories. But I still think the
Dodgers are as good as club
as they were last season ."
In Frida y night's game, the
Reds made their biggest
threat in th e fifth when Cesar
Geronimo singled and Junior
Kennedy walked to open the
inn ing.
Don
Werner
attempted to bunt but Garvey
threw out Geronimo on a
close play at th ird and Hooton
then retired Norman an d
Rose.
Garvey preferred to talk
about tha t throw to third than
his hom e run that won the
game.
"I think we ha ve to make
those kinds of plays now, " he
said. "We have to be aggressive and make things happen.
We can't sit around waiting
for th ings to happen."
While the surprising Giants
have been relatively injury
free th is season , the Dodgers
and Reds have had their
problems in that department.
Missing from the clubs ' sixth
meeting of the season were
four regulars- Reggie Sm ith
and Rick Monday of the

days."

GALLIPOLIS
Th e
Gallipolis Pony League
Braves swept both ends or a
twinbill from the Giants on
Memorial Field Friday,
winning the opener 16-3 and
the nightcap , 10-3.
In the opener, Tom Reiser
was credited with the win.
Terry Adams was charged
with the loss.
For the winn ers, Chris
Kemper had a double while
John Rocchi had a single and
doubl e. T. Williams ·and
Adams each had singles for
the Braves.
In the finale, Larry Roberts
was credited with the si n.
Joey Wilcoxin was charged
with the loss.
For the winn ers, Mary
Glenn had two singles while
Jonathan McCabe had a
single and home run. John
Rocchi had two singles.
For the Giants, Chuck
Sanders had a single and
double.

HONDA'S

Oil proof sole and heel

Honda PA-50 Moped • '"" ""

•

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Apollo I outdueled Young Tar
Gar in the stretch Friday
night to grab 'a head victory
in the featured ninth race at
Scioto Downs.
The winner, dri ven by Dave
Rankin, covered the mile in
I :59 3·5 and returned $9.60,
$4.20 and $2.60. Young Tar
Gar was second and Star
Skipper showed.
Chief Lollo won the lOth
race, kicking off a 7-6-3
trifecta combination that was
worth $2,374.20. Show Em All
came in second and Tresie
finished third .
A crowd of 6,760 wagered
$526,524.

In the opener of an
important t hree-game
weekend series , a sellout
crowd of 51,068 at Dodger
Stadium saw Hooton record
the fourth Dodger shutout of
the season .
Outdueling Fred Norma n,
8-4, with his third complete
game of the year, Hooton
gave up a single by Pete Rose
in the first inning, a single hy
Cesar Geronimo in the fifth
inning and a double by Dan
Driessen in the ninth.
"This was a big lift for
me," said Hooton, who
evened his record at 6-6.
"Hopefully , it 'll be a big shot
in the arm for the club. We
have to beat the clubs ahead
of us because it means a full
game every time we do. We

BOOT

1978

11-......
'

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Tan . Iough oil -lannod

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

236 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

themselves - and not the
ByJIMCOUR
Giants.
UP! Sports Writer
AfU,r the Dodgers beat the
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Reds
1~ Friday night on the
The San Francisco Giants
three-hit
pitching of Burt
lead the National League
Hoolon
and
Steve Garvey 's
West by two games over the
sixth-inning
home
run, Los
Cincinnati Reds and five and
Angeles
has
a
4-2
advantage
a half over the defending NL
kingpin Los Angeles Dodgers. over Cincinnati this season .
" They're all cruci al,"
·But the Dodgers and Reds,
insisted
Dodger Manager
although they won 't . come
Tommy
Lasorda
when asked
right out and say it, still
about
the
importance
of the
believe th e Giants are a
Los
Angeles
win
.
"The
big
pretender and not a title
thing
when
you're
playing
a
contender.
d
ub
above
you
is
that
you
In other words, the Dodgers
and Reds feel the division have to beat that club.
title will be settled between Winning the first game of this
series was a big game for

"It 's a gradual thing,"
Bench said. "First I have to
start throwing and swinging
the bat. BY Sunday, I should
know when I'll be able to
pla y. It may be about five

Braves cop
double win

ELCONA

6-9.

228
16 1
286
233
59 192
62 227

American Leagu e : : Wilson ,
KC
27 ;
Dil on e,
Oak
25 :
LeFlor e, Del and Cruz , Sea 23 ;
Pafek, KC and Wil ls, Te K 22.
Pitchi ng
Victor ies
National League : Grimsley,
Mil
11 .4;
Blue.
SF
10.d ;
Bonham , Ci n 8 1; Perry , SO 8·
2: Zach ry, NY 8·3, R.Reuschel ,
Chi and Norman , Cin 8.4;
Seaver , Cin . John , LA and
Knepper . SF 8·5 ; Ca r lton , Ph il
and Fors ch, SI. L 8.6 ; Niek ro ,
Atl and Rogers , Mll 8 1.
American League: . Guidry ,
NY 11 .0 ; Ta nana, Cal 11·3;
Flana gan , Batt II 4; Torrez .
Bo s 10 .J ; Palmer. Ball 10·5.
Earned Run Average
1Bued on 6J innings pitched)
National League : Sarmient o,
Cin 1. 94 ; Halick i , SF 2.05;
R.Reuschel , Ch i 2.07 , Btue , SF
2.23 ; Rogers, Mtl 2.25.
Am erican League: . Guid ry .
NY 1 50 ; Palm er , Ball and
Keough , Oak 2.06 ; Tanana, Cal
2.52 ; Wa ih . Clev 2.53 .
Strikeouts
National League : . Richar d,
Hou 123 ; Niekro. Atl 97 ; Blue.
SF 91;
Se ave r ,
Cin · and
Montefusco, SF 89.
Amer lc11n League : Rvan , Cal
Ill ; Guidry , NY Ill ; F lanag an ,
Bait 82; Leonard . KC 72 ;
Tanana , Ca l and Underwood ,
Tor 65.

II Vachon does leave the
Kings to sign with the
Rangers - or another club there will be compensation
involved . NHL president
.John Ziegler decided that
Which brings up an Interesting question - what is
Vachon worth in terms of
players?
" It's like betting," Vachon
replied . "Some teams
probably figure they would
need me more than other
teams."

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

61
A7
69
65

P itt 20.

CLOSE OUT

Phone~

•

66 246 75 .305
67 233 7l .305

54 184
52 162
63 217
51195
Home Runs
National League : Foster , Cin
and Lu zi nski, Ph il 15 ; King .
man, Ch i U ; Mon day, LA 12 ;
Smith, LA . Parker , Pi tt and
Winfield, SO 1L
American League : Rice. Bas
22 ; Baylor, Cal 18 ; Thompson ,
Oet 17 ; Thomas , Mi l 16 ; Evans,
Bas 15
Runs Batted In
National League : Fosler , Ci n
52 ; Garvev . LA 45 ; Montanez ,
NY 44 ; i\1\o rga n, Cin , Cey, LA
and Luz inski. Phil 43 .
American League : R ice , Bos
65 . Staub , Del dB ; Hobson, Bas,
Baylor , Ca l , Thompson . Det
and Zlsk , Tex 46.
Stolen Bases
National League : ,. Moreno ,
Pitt 31; Cedeno . Hou 23 ; Lopes ,
LA . Maddo x , Phil and Taver as ,

MOBILE HOMES INC.

B·D-EE

50 189 59 .31 2
68 269 83 .309
64 249 76 .305

Cubbage Min
Sundberg Tex
Cooper Mil

a-~~t

Mon. &amp; Fri.
lil8p .m .

.319
.'J 18
.316
.31 3

American Le,tgue
G. AB. H. Pel .

14X70

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,I
I

83
62
67
70

Dod gers and the Reds'
J ohn ny Bench and J oe
Morgan .
Bench was back with the
Reds after being hospitalized
for a week because of a lower
back strain .

Dodgers, Reds still feel
Giants just 'pretenders'

G. AB . H. Pet .
6~ 21 1 68 .3 222
57 2l3 75 .3219

away FREE•••

S Bank
25 Co urt Street

concealed knife with a blade
of more than three inches.
Williams of Buffalo, N.

Lee pitched
5-2 victory

BONANZA

'.

lead in Formula One racing
because of mechanical
problems in Sweden last
Saturday, is racing in his own
backyard for this event.
The Nazareth, Pa., driver
said, "I'm hoping this is my
year at Pocono. It seems I've
been doing everything there
but win the race."
Andretti is the all-time lap
leader in this middle leg of
auto racing's triple crown,
having led the pack for a total
of 249 laps . Foyt Is a distant
second at 179 laps. But last
year, Andretti's crew
miscalculated on his fuel
needs and his tank ran dry
on the !97th lap - three laps
from the finish.
Foyt capitalized on thistype

Williams withdraws from school

Doc

=-;-"-;' ~ ~:. .'
' , ·:

C-3- Tbe Sunday Times-&amp;!n!inel , Sunday, June 25, I!V8

GALLIPOLIS

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•

�,,

C-2- The Sunday Times&lt;ienlinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

Unser favored in Pocono race ·to
ByC.ARV KALE'

Major LeaGue sranding s
By United Press lnlernalional
Nationa l League

East

Ph ila
Ch'icago
Montreat
PiHsbrgh
New York
51. Lou is

W.
34
35
35
JO
31
1S
West

L.
29
30
J.ol
34
40

Pet. GB
.SdO .138
.507

"}
41-z
.4J7 7
44 ) 67 1'1
.469

W L. Pet.
San Fran
Cinc ina ti

GB

4)
42
38
JD
31

24 .642
1.7 609 1
LOS Ang
30 559 51 J
Houston
J&lt;l .469 111 1
San Diego
37 .456 1"1 1 .'
Atlanta
27 38 .41 5 15
Fn da y ' s Results
Ph ila 6, Ch ic ago 1, 1st
Phil a 6. Chicago 1, 2nd
NY J, P ittsbu rg h"} , 11 tnns
St Lo uis 8, Montreal 4
San Diego J, Houston 0
Los Angeles 1, Cinc i nnati 0
San Franc isco 9, At lanta 0
Sunday 's Games
P ittsb urgh at New York
Ch 1cago at Phi lade lph ia
Montreal at St Lou i s
Cincinn ati et Los Angeles
Ho uston at San Dieg o. 2
Atl anta at San Fran 2

American leagul"
Eas t
W. l Pet . GB
48 21 696
Bost on
40 18 sea 7' 1
Ba lt i mre
40 "18 588 71 2
New York
3B 30 .559 91 2
Mil wa uke
Det roit
33 33 500 13 ' 1
29 36 ,446 17
Clevelnd
21 45 .318 25 1 'i
Toronto
West
W. L Pet. GB
Ka n City
36 Jl 537 1
Texas
36 32 .529
1
Cali f
36 33 .sn
1
1
Oakland
34 36 .'d86 J 1
Chi c ago
31 36 . 463 s
M1nesota
28 38 42&lt;~ 71 1
Seanle
24 47 .338 t 4
Friday 's Result s
Tex as 7, Cali forn ia 0. 1st
Te xas 8. California 4 , 2nd
Kan City 5, OAkland J. 1st
Oak land 5, Kan Ci!y 4, 2nd

UPI Sports Writer
Cleve land B. ioronto 3
MT, POCONO, Pa. (UP! )
Bo ston 5, Balt ih1ore '2
New York 11, Detro it J
- AI Unser has come full
M innesola 2, Chicago 1
cycle. He began the Cosworth ·
Seat tle J , Mi l waukee o
revolution in 1976 by winning
Sunday ' s Games
Salf1m0re at Boston
the
Pocon.o 500 and made
New York at Detroit
history
last month when the
Toronto at Clevel and
Mmnesota at Chic ago
British·built engine powered
Oall.land at Kansas City
his car to victory in the
seattle at Milwau kee
Cal ifornia at Te)( aS, night
prestigious Indy 500 .
Unse_r rates as fa vorite to
l.nfernational Leagu e
.repeat
·in today's Pocono
Untted Press International
W. l. Pel . GB race, the second even t in the
Charleston
46 21 .676
USCA's triple crown of 500
Richmond
35 28 .556 8' ,
milers
that concludes with
Pawtucket
34 31 .523 10 1 7
Tidewate r
3J 3J . 507 1 p 1 the Ca lifornia later this
Toledo
30 31 .492 121 2 summer . Danny Onga is sits
Columbus
28 33 .459 1-11 7 on the pole.
Rocheste r
28 3d .45 2 15
A. J. Foyt, the only dri ver
Syracuse
21 45 .328 231 ~
Friday 's Result s
Charleston 10 , T idewater 1
Ri chmond 6, Pawtucket 2
Sy racuse 7, Columbus 6. lsi , 8
in nings
Colum bus 5, Syracuse 4, 2nd ,
7 inn ings
Ro&lt;;hes ler 7, Toledo 0
Today 's Game s
Charlest on at Tidewater
Pawtucket at Richm ond
Syracuse at Col umbus
Roches ter at Toledo

NEW YORK I UP!) - The
New York Giants Thursday
announced the signing of tw o
draft choices, defensive back
Odis McKinney and run ning
back Billy Taylor.
McKi nney. 6-foot-2, 187
pounds, was the team 's No. 2
draft pi ck and is from
Colorado, while th e IHJ, 215pound Taylor, their fourth
draft choice, is frnm Texas
Tech.

to win the Pocono 500 twice,
be moa ns the fact that
Cosworth has finally caught
up to his V-8 and that he's
running out of time in ari
attempt to surmount a new
challenge
for
engine
leadership.
" I was so advanced with
my engine that it took others
five years to catch up, " says
royt. "If I want to stay
competitive, I've got to come
up with some new design. I
built my car so that the
center of gravity was so low
that everybody laughed. at
me.
" I run with about an inch
clearance to the ground and I

get real scared when I have to race. Gordon Johncock says
stradd le some big pieces of this could be topped under
debris rolling toward my car. ideal weather conditions.
Roger Penske's dynamic
But that CG gave me stability
duo
of Tom Sneva and Mario
and helped me win a lot of
races."
And\etti . must rank high in
Dr . Joseph Mattioli ; cons1dermg pt:JSSID1e wuu1ta.,
director of Pocono Raceway, for today's eighth running
indicates thai one of the which tak es the green flag at
doininant fa ctors in the in· I p.m. EDT.
Sneva has been playing a
creased speeds anticipa ted in
today's race is the re-paving bridesmaid role at Inof the second turn. Several dianapolis with second-place
drivers say it is now possible finiShes to Foyt last year and
to run that arc flat out. Others Unser this season. The for·
mer school teacher won his
coplain about it.
John Rutherford set the only 500 race at Pocono last
existing record of 156.701 · year.
Andretti , disappointed over
miles per hour on the tri-oval
co urse while winning the 1974 the fa ilure to increase his

PROVIDENCE, R. L
tU Pl i - Dwight Williams'
days as a starting guard for
Providence College are over .
Accused of stabbing a
fellow stu dent With a paring
knife , Willia ms permanently
withdrew from sc hoo l
Friday, a Providence spokesman said .

" It was hi s decision." said
spokesma n Joseph McAleer.
Williams, a sta rt ing guard
on the basketball team for the
last t~&lt;'o yea rs, wa s

suspended after he allegedly Wednesday to charges of
s tabbed
R ay m o nd assault with a dangerous
Romagnola, 22, of Somerset, weapon and carrying a
Mass ., April 12 over a $10 bet
on a game of pooL
McAleer said Williams
withdrew before the schoo l's
discipllflary comm ittee ruled
on whether he co uld return
for his senior year in Sep·
tcmber.
Williams is free on $3,500
personal recog nizan ce
By FRED MeMANE
pending a July 18 pre-trial
UP! Sports Writer
hea ring. He pleaded innocent
Bill Lee, who bolted the
Boston Red Sox last week to
protest their trad ing hi s
fri end
Bernie
Carbo,
returned to action Friday
night and promptly regained
his old title as the "King of
Garbage."
Price
He stopped the Baltimore
Orioles on ei ght hits in
pitching the Red Sox to a 5-2
Th!n::Smg
victory , which enabled them
Equipment
to take a 7'-'-game lead in the
American Leag ue East.
Lee outdueled 10-ga n!C
•Air Cond~ioning
winner Jim Paimer and won
for the fir•1 time since May
•Wh~ewall
26, with an assortment of
breaking pitches that had the
Radials
batters completely off stride.
He did not strike anyone out,
•Sport MimliS
but walked only two.
"I kept them off-ba lance,"
said Lee . "Me and Mike
•Deluxe Wheel
Cuellar (former Orioles '
pitcher) have a lot in
Cowels
common. We'd both be great
sanitary engineers."
Carlton Fisk, Lee's bat•Radio Actom. Pk&amp;,
terymate, provided the offenSive support with a three-run
bomer in the first inning.
Elsewhere in the AL, New
York routed Detroit , 12-3,
Seattle blanked Milwaukee,
3-0, Minneso ta
edged
Chi cago, 2- 1, Cleve land
whipped Toronto, 8-3, Texas
swept a double-header from
California , 7~ and 8-4 , and
Kansas City beat Oakland , 5-3
then lost, 5-4 .
Yankees 12, Tigers 3:
Chris Chambli ss hit a
grand slam homer in the fir st
inning and Roy White added a
thr eerun blast to cap a sevenrun si xth as the Yankees
\\
pummeled the Tigers. Sparky
Lyle, in relief of Ed Figueroa,
got the victory and Milt
Wilcox too k the loss.
Mariners 3, Brewers 0:
Glenn Abbott pitched a
fo ur-hitte r in helping the
Mariner s to their fifth
straight triumph and his first
shuto ut of the season. Leon
Roberts, Bob Stinson and
Craig Reynolds each singled
home a run for Sea ttle.
Twins 2, White Sox I:
Craig Kusick's ninth-inning
homer for Minnesota sent
Chicago to its fourth straig ht
defeat. Dave Goltz pitched a
fi ve-hitter to snap Ken
Kravec's five~a me winning
strea k.

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•

of heartbreak in 1973 when
Roger McCluskey , the f!ontrunner, ran out of fuel in the'
final lap and an astonished
Foyt passed him to take the
checkered fla g.
" ·
The race that year was the
most competitive of the
series with nine drivers
taking turns at the lead· and
the lead itself changing hands'
28 times. Foyt had started
from 14th place that year;
and the following year was in
the race onir briefly, with:
drawing w1th a broken
upright after 20 laps.
.
The next year he returned
to become the only two-time
Pocono 500 winner.
• ....:·

Sliver Bridge Plaza
'

[

Spring Valley

'v.,

Indians 8, Blue Jays 3:
Gary Alexander and Jim
Norris drove in three runs
ea ch and Rick Waits
scattered seven hits to spark
the Indians. Otto Velez
homered for Toronto.
Rangers 7-8, Angels 8-4:
Bobby Bonds hit a pair of
three -run homers in the
opener and Ferguson Jenkins
tossed a five-hitter for his 41st
career shutout. Texas won
the nightcap when Reggie
Cleveland pitched out of a
bases-loaded jam in the
seventh inning.
Royals 5-4, A's 3-5:
George Brett drove in three
runs with a double and triple
to lead the Royals in the first
game a s Paul Splittorff
notched his ninth triumph.
Oaklanq won the nightcap
behind a four-run third
inning.

Falcons sign
5 more players
ATLANTA (1JPI) - Five
more players, includi~g Nebraska
guard
Stan
Waldemore, ha ve signed with
the Atlanta Falcons as the
clu b prepares for next
month 's training camp.
All 15 of Atlanta's choices
have been signed and will
report to the Greenville, S.C.,
training camp July 15.
Waldemore, 6-3, 268
pounds, was the third round
selection. Others signed were
Colorado linebacker Brian
Cabra l, 6-0, 209 pounds,
fourt h round ; Ohio State
linebacker David Adkins, IHJ,
212 pounds, eighth round;
West Virginia defensive
safety Tom Pridemore, 5-10,
186 pounds, ninth round : and
Jackson State running back
Hick ~ Patton, the club's lOth
round pick.
Veterans will not report to
the training camp until July
23. The tea m opens its
preseason schedule Aug . 7
against the New York J ets.
l'adres 3, Astros 0:
Gay lord Perry, now 8-2,
tossed a four-hitter en route
to his 50th career Shutout,
tying him with Baltimore's
Jim Palmer for the majorleague lead among active
pitchers.

was a member of UPI's
New England Team.
Romagnola received
stitches in his shoulder
was released from
hospital one day after
incident.

Dodgers I, Reds 0:
Steve Garvey's nin th
homer for the Dodgers
backed the three-hit pitching
of Burt Hooton before ··a
sellout crowd of 51,068 in Los
Angeles . Hooton, ·· 6-6,
outdueled Fred Norman: 8-4,
with his first Shutout of the

All·
two
and
the
the

season .

Busch ups
with Cards
lienee is getting very thin ,''
over what he described ' as
tl1elr "loose · and carefr ee
attitude."
There were no need 'for
excuse:; Friday night.
Jerry Morales , George
Hendrick and Ted SirmJlqns
each drove in two runs and
the Cardinals scored ' fi ve
runs in the fifth to knock out
loser Rudy May, &amp;-7 . .,Ellis
Valentine and Andre Dawson
hit homers for Montreal and
Simmons hit one for the
Cards.
"I suppose he (Busch ) has
a right to be upset ," said
Simmons. " It's not like we're
not trying, but I hope this' acts
like a catalyst !!I' a ~arne
winning streak ."
In other NL games, Pliifa-.
delphia swept a doilb~
header from Chicago by
identical &amp;-1 scores, New
York edged Pittsburgh, ~2 . ·

By IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Sports Writer
The St. Louis Cardinals
defeated the Montreal Expos ,
8-4 , Friday night, but their 2544 record is the league's
worst and team President
August Busch loose d a
barrage in a st.aU,ment to the
media against his team's
" loose
and
carefree
attitude."
The statement was not read
to the players before the
game and at least one of them
is happy it wasn 't.
"I'm glad I didn't read it
before the game ... I might
have tried too hard," said
winning pitcher Pete Vuckovich, 4-4 . "I need the right
balance of agg ress ivenes s
and relaxation ."
Busch, in hi.s statement ,
criticized the Cardinals for
committing "constant mental
errors," and said , "my pa·

'

Rangers may
sign Vachon
ByJIMCOUR
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Rogie Vachon knows what
he's doing isn't good for
hockey but he also knows he
has to take his money ahd run
while it's there.
There is strong speculation
that Vachon , the Los Angeles
Kings' premier goaltender
the past seven seasons, will
sign a five-year contract with
the New York Rangers ihls
week for an estimated
$600,000 per season. The
Rangers raided the Winnipeg
Jets of the World Hockey
Association and si gned
Swedes Anders Hedberg and
mr Nilsson.
Vachon made $150,000 in
the ,last season of his contract
with ,the Kings in 1977-78 and
'the Kings reportedly are
willblg to pay him $300,000 a
year ,to keep him.
Naturally, in the face of
what the Rangers are said to
be· willing to give him, the
Kings' offer doesn't come
close to what Los Angeles
, .owner Jack Kent Coo ke needs
· ·:to get him to stay .
· ' 'Right now," Vachon said,
'"I 'm rated among the top two
goa ltenders in the National
Hockey League along with
Ken Dryden of the Montreal
Canadiens and I feel I have to
be.pllid as one of the top two
god enders.
"Look at which baseball
players are signing for now .
Some free agents are signing
lor $2 million and $2.5 million.
"I know a contract like
mine probably is going to
hurt hockey in the long run
. and it's all going to have to
stop some day but it's not the
players' fault. It 's the fault of
management. They're willing
· to give us !hat kind of money
· and the players would be
crazy not to take it. Speaking
for all the players, I know we
·probably would play fo r half
of what we're getting now and
stili be happy ."
Va chon, 32, played in the
Dwar's Cup sports celebrity
tennis tournament In Las
Vega•. Nev ., last week. He
became a free agent June I
along wilh two other Kings'
stars, defenseman Gary
Sargent and center Butch
Goring.
Since the end of last season,
tbe NHI. has been reduced

•

:: 1::

WELLINGTON
SAFETY TOE

'

.

from 18 to 17 clubs with the
merger of Cleveland and
Minnesota. Vachon forecasts
the demise of five more NHL
teams and the entire WHA in
the near future .
"There 's a lot of bad
hockey in both leagues," he
stated. "I would like to see
better hockey all year
around. There's no reason for
bad hockey. A team like
Cleveland wasn't there so
why should you try to keep a
team that's not going to be
there.
"I think everybody wants
better quality hockey. Of
co urse , it'll mean less jobs
but that's the way it's going to
be. I see 12 solid teams competitively and financially
- in the next few years. Then
hockey probably would get a
national television contract ."
Vachon says it has been a
turbulent month. He says he's
found it hard to sleep some
nights.
He denies a deal is set with
lhe Rangers. His agent , he
says, also has been talking
with the Chicago Black
Hawks and the Detroit Red
Wings. · He says candidly
there's only about a 25 pert'ent chance that he will be
back with the Kings next
season.
''We're down to three
teams now,'' he said, ''and we
don't know what's going to
happen. We're going to take
the best offer and come ba ck
and see if the Kings can
match it.
"I'm looking for a five-year
contract . I'm 32. If I sign a
five-year
contract ,
it
probably will be my last one .
We would hate to move. We
would like to stay in Los
Angeles. But I'm looking for
security for my family Ia
wife and three children)."

Top hitters
M1jor Le~gue Leaders
By United Pre.ss International
Ba.Hing '

(&amp;ned on lSO at bah)
National League
Burrogh s Atl
Puhl Hou

Griffey Cin

69 281 90 .320

Bowa P hil
LA
Lopes LA

61 260
53 195
58 212
62 224

~ mith

Driessen Ci.n
Madlock SF
Foster Cin
Parker P it
Clark SF
Si m m o ns St . L
CBrew Min
Piniella NY
Rice Bas

ReynoldS sea
Lezcano Mi l
Lynn Bas
Jackson Cl l

Tues .• Wed ., Sal. filS
Thurs. til
12 noon

WOLVERINE 10':.:
WESTERN BRAZOS

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76
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51 .31 5
68 .3 13
61 .3 13

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have to beat the Reda and we
have to beat the Giants."
" It was just too much Burt
Hooton tonight," Cincinnati
skipper Sparky Anderson
said. "But I'm still very
happy with our position in the
standings .
"I think the team tha t wins
it will have less than 100
victories. But I still think the
Dodgers are as good as club
as they were last season ."
In Frida y night's game, the
Reds made their biggest
threat in th e fifth when Cesar
Geronimo singled and Junior
Kennedy walked to open the
inn ing.
Don
Werner
attempted to bunt but Garvey
threw out Geronimo on a
close play at th ird and Hooton
then retired Norman an d
Rose.
Garvey preferred to talk
about tha t throw to third than
his hom e run that won the
game.
"I think we ha ve to make
those kinds of plays now, " he
said. "We have to be aggressive and make things happen.
We can't sit around waiting
for th ings to happen."
While the surprising Giants
have been relatively injury
free th is season , the Dodgers
and Reds have had their
problems in that department.
Missing from the clubs ' sixth
meeting of the season were
four regulars- Reggie Sm ith
and Rick Monday of the

days."

GALLIPOLIS
Th e
Gallipolis Pony League
Braves swept both ends or a
twinbill from the Giants on
Memorial Field Friday,
winning the opener 16-3 and
the nightcap , 10-3.
In the opener, Tom Reiser
was credited with the win.
Terry Adams was charged
with the loss.
For the winn ers, Chris
Kemper had a double while
John Rocchi had a single and
doubl e. T. Williams ·and
Adams each had singles for
the Braves.
In the finale, Larry Roberts
was credited with the si n.
Joey Wilcoxin was charged
with the loss.
For the winn ers, Mary
Glenn had two singles while
Jonathan McCabe had a
single and home run. John
Rocchi had two singles.
For the Giants, Chuck
Sanders had a single and
double.

HONDA'S

Oil proof sole and heel

Honda PA-50 Moped • '"" ""

•

SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Apollo I outdueled Young Tar
Gar in the stretch Friday
night to grab 'a head victory
in the featured ninth race at
Scioto Downs.
The winner, dri ven by Dave
Rankin, covered the mile in
I :59 3·5 and returned $9.60,
$4.20 and $2.60. Young Tar
Gar was second and Star
Skipper showed.
Chief Lollo won the lOth
race, kicking off a 7-6-3
trifecta combination that was
worth $2,374.20. Show Em All
came in second and Tresie
finished third .
A crowd of 6,760 wagered
$526,524.

In the opener of an
important t hree-game
weekend series , a sellout
crowd of 51,068 at Dodger
Stadium saw Hooton record
the fourth Dodger shutout of
the season .
Outdueling Fred Norma n,
8-4, with his third complete
game of the year, Hooton
gave up a single by Pete Rose
in the first inning, a single hy
Cesar Geronimo in the fifth
inning and a double by Dan
Driessen in the ninth.
"This was a big lift for
me," said Hooton, who
evened his record at 6-6.
"Hopefully , it 'll be a big shot
in the arm for the club. We
have to beat the clubs ahead
of us because it means a full
game every time we do. We

BOOT

1978

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Gallipolis

themselves - and not the
ByJIMCOUR
Giants.
UP! Sports Writer
AfU,r the Dodgers beat the
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Reds
1~ Friday night on the
The San Francisco Giants
three-hit
pitching of Burt
lead the National League
Hoolon
and
Steve Garvey 's
West by two games over the
sixth-inning
home
run, Los
Cincinnati Reds and five and
Angeles
has
a
4-2
advantage
a half over the defending NL
kingpin Los Angeles Dodgers. over Cincinnati this season .
" They're all cruci al,"
·But the Dodgers and Reds,
insisted
Dodger Manager
although they won 't . come
Tommy
Lasorda
when asked
right out and say it, still
about
the
importance
of the
believe th e Giants are a
Los
Angeles
win
.
"The
big
pretender and not a title
thing
when
you're
playing
a
contender.
d
ub
above
you
is
that
you
In other words, the Dodgers
and Reds feel the division have to beat that club.
title will be settled between Winning the first game of this
series was a big game for

"It 's a gradual thing,"
Bench said. "First I have to
start throwing and swinging
the bat. BY Sunday, I should
know when I'll be able to
pla y. It may be about five

Braves cop
double win

ELCONA

6-9.

228
16 1
286
233
59 192
62 227

American Leagu e : : Wilson ,
KC
27 ;
Dil on e,
Oak
25 :
LeFlor e, Del and Cruz , Sea 23 ;
Pafek, KC and Wil ls, Te K 22.
Pitchi ng
Victor ies
National League : Grimsley,
Mil
11 .4;
Blue.
SF
10.d ;
Bonham , Ci n 8 1; Perry , SO 8·
2: Zach ry, NY 8·3, R.Reuschel ,
Chi and Norman , Cin 8.4;
Seaver , Cin . John , LA and
Knepper . SF 8·5 ; Ca r lton , Ph il
and Fors ch, SI. L 8.6 ; Niek ro ,
Atl and Rogers , Mll 8 1.
American League: . Guidry ,
NY 11 .0 ; Ta nana, Cal 11·3;
Flana gan , Batt II 4; Torrez .
Bo s 10 .J ; Palmer. Ball 10·5.
Earned Run Average
1Bued on 6J innings pitched)
National League : Sarmient o,
Cin 1. 94 ; Halick i , SF 2.05;
R.Reuschel , Ch i 2.07 , Btue , SF
2.23 ; Rogers, Mtl 2.25.
Am erican League: . Guid ry .
NY 1 50 ; Palm er , Ball and
Keough , Oak 2.06 ; Tanana, Cal
2.52 ; Wa ih . Clev 2.53 .
Strikeouts
National League : . Richar d,
Hou 123 ; Niekro. Atl 97 ; Blue.
SF 91;
Se ave r ,
Cin · and
Montefusco, SF 89.
Amer lc11n League : Rvan , Cal
Ill ; Guidry , NY Ill ; F lanag an ,
Bait 82; Leonard . KC 72 ;
Tanana , Ca l and Underwood ,
Tor 65.

II Vachon does leave the
Kings to sign with the
Rangers - or another club there will be compensation
involved . NHL president
.John Ziegler decided that
Which brings up an Interesting question - what is
Vachon worth in terms of
players?
" It's like betting," Vachon
replied . "Some teams
probably figure they would
need me more than other
teams."

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles

61
A7
69
65

P itt 20.

CLOSE OUT

Phone~

•

66 246 75 .305
67 233 7l .305

54 184
52 162
63 217
51195
Home Runs
National League : Foster , Cin
and Lu zi nski, Ph il 15 ; King .
man, Ch i U ; Mon day, LA 12 ;
Smith, LA . Parker , Pi tt and
Winfield, SO 1L
American League : Rice. Bas
22 ; Baylor, Cal 18 ; Thompson ,
Oet 17 ; Thomas , Mi l 16 ; Evans,
Bas 15
Runs Batted In
National League : Fosler , Ci n
52 ; Garvev . LA 45 ; Montanez ,
NY 44 ; i\1\o rga n, Cin , Cey, LA
and Luz inski. Phil 43 .
American League : R ice , Bos
65 . Staub , Del dB ; Hobson, Bas,
Baylor , Ca l , Thompson . Det
and Zlsk , Tex 46.
Stolen Bases
National League : ,. Moreno ,
Pitt 31; Cedeno . Hou 23 ; Lopes ,
LA . Maddo x , Phil and Taver as ,

MOBILE HOMES INC.

B·D-EE

50 189 59 .31 2
68 269 83 .309
64 249 76 .305

Cubbage Min
Sundberg Tex
Cooper Mil

a-~~t

Mon. &amp; Fri.
lil8p .m .

.319
.'J 18
.316
.31 3

American Le,tgue
G. AB. H. Pel .

14X70

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,I
I

83
62
67
70

Dod gers and the Reds'
J ohn ny Bench and J oe
Morgan .
Bench was back with the
Reds after being hospitalized
for a week because of a lower
back strain .

Dodgers, Reds still feel
Giants just 'pretenders'

G. AB . H. Pet .
6~ 21 1 68 .3 222
57 2l3 75 .3219

away FREE•••

S Bank
25 Co urt Street

concealed knife with a blade
of more than three inches.
Williams of Buffalo, N.

Lee pitched
5-2 victory

BONANZA

'.

lead in Formula One racing
because of mechanical
problems in Sweden last
Saturday, is racing in his own
backyard for this event.
The Nazareth, Pa., driver
said, "I'm hoping this is my
year at Pocono. It seems I've
been doing everything there
but win the race."
Andretti is the all-time lap
leader in this middle leg of
auto racing's triple crown,
having led the pack for a total
of 249 laps . Foyt Is a distant
second at 179 laps. But last
year, Andretti's crew
miscalculated on his fuel
needs and his tank ran dry
on the !97th lap - three laps
from the finish.
Foyt capitalized on thistype

Williams withdraws from school

Doc

=-;-"-;' ~ ~:. .'
' , ·:

C-3- Tbe Sunday Times-&amp;!n!inel , Sunday, June 25, I!V8

GALLIPOLIS

•

•

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RECORDING TAPE
Stock up now for all your re cord1ng·
needs' Buy one cassette and get tile
second FR EE - no ll m•t Reco rd mu s 1c to
ta ke wllil, you on sum mer tnps , to the
bea ch. on ptcn 1cs Make l1ve recordmgs
of summe r even t s , co n ce rts . family
gathenngs . Take advantage of th1s casse lt e tape bargam now - tile mor e you
buy , th e more you 'll sa ve ' Buy ·e m by Ihe
case a nd save up to S13 14 (C-90)! Sale
ends 6t 3017 B.

60-MINUTE

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II A DIVISION OF rANDY CORPORATION

•

�....

C-4- The Sunday Times.Sentmel, Sunday, Jw&gt;e 25, 1973
LYNE CENTER. SCHEDULE
Week of June 26, 1978
TIME
DATE- ACTIVITY
J •.sp .m.
J une 26 Open Swim -Gym
6·8p .m.
1·5p.m.
June 27 Open Swi m -G ym
1·5p.m.
June 28 Open -Sw im Gym
1·5 p.m.
June 29 Open Swim.Gym
8-10 p.m.
12 noon-4 p.m .
June 30 Open Sw lm·Gym
Ju ly 1 CLOSED
July 2 CLOSED
July 3 CLOSED
Ju ly 4 CLOSED
NOTE : New Rates.
1·1 hour blocks, $.50 chil d · x . S1.00 adult.
3-4 hou r blocks, 51.00 child . x $1.50 adult .
No adm ittan ce unless yo u ha ve the correct amount of

mone y.

x - Ch il d r efers to anyone under 1B years of age.

NOTE : Lessons

Reg istrati on for 'the secon d sess ion of You th Swim Lessons
w ill be held at 4 p.m . on Wed nesda y, July 5 in the lobby of Lyne

Center.

add it ton

to

a rea

physi cians, train er s and

on sports_ am.l medicine has

coaches of high school and
college athletic teams are
inv ited to participate in the
program which begins at 9
a.rn
View ing locations are the
third Ooor conference room
at O'Bleness and 1he fifth
floor classroom at Holzer.
Athens coordinator for the
project is George Ebers!. 5946401, Ex tens ion 306 . Th e
Ga llipolis coordinator is Bob
Hail s, 446-5145.

been scheduled for June 28 by
the Ohio Vall ey Medica l
Mic r owave
Tele\'i s io n
System.
It will feature Robert J .
Murphy, M.D., physician for
Ohio State Uni versity' s
athl etic teams. Through the
medical microwave system,
pa rti cipants at O'Blenness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
and Holzer Medica l Center in
Gallipolis will be able to tal k
directly lo Dr. Mu rphy.

Friday's linescores
{ 1st gam eJ
Oa k
000 100 020- J 7 1
KC
201000 \0x - 5 6 2
La ng ford , Johnson (31. So sa
(SJ and Ess ian , Newm an (8J;
Sp littorfi. Hrabosky (8) and
Por ter . W- Spl ittor lf 19 6 ). L ~
L angford ( 1 Sl. HR - OaKiand ,
Dunc an ( 2 )

National L eagu e

( ts t gam e)
Ch i

000000 IOD--1 60

Ph il a

002 000 40x

6 10 0

RO ber t s M cGlothen (7) and
Rad e r , Ruthven , McGraw (8 1
and Foo t e. W - ~u lh ven (3 n l
- Ro ber t s (3 21 HRs Ch icago .
0 e J c s us (3/. Ph ll adetph ra .
Mar t in ( J ), Maddox ( 4\

(2 nd gam e)

Oak
004 100 000- 5 9 I
KC
00 1000111 - 41 22
Con rov. Br ober g ( .d J, Lac ey
Ph ila
30000030x
6120
Lamp , Ge1set t 7l. Moore ( lJ fBI , Sosa (8 J. Hea11 er 1o (9 ) and
and (OIC , Rader ( 7) , LonbOr g , Essian . L eona r d, M 1!1gOr i (SJ
and Por ter W - Broberg 17 6).
McGr aw I BJ an d Boone wL- Leonaro (7 10 ). HR - Oak
Lonbor g (6 Sl L- L amp ( 2 81
lan d , Pa ge (7)
(2nd gam e)
Ch i

000000010·

I 6 I

( 11 1Mnln 9 5)

New York

Tor
000 010 020- 3 7 1
Cle11e
010 004 20)( - 8 11 0
Jeff er son , Lem an czy k (6J.

HR - New Yor k, Mawll i ( 5)

Ball

Pitt sburgh

000 001 100 00- ) 9 0

001 000 100 01· J 9 0 Co l em an (7) an d Milner ; Wa it s
D Rob ,nson , Tekulve ! 8), and D1a1 w Wai ts 15 n. L(57) . HRs- Ci e11 e
Whitson ( 11 \ and Over . 011 (8/ , Jelfer son
Koosman . Lo c kwood (8 ), l and , Ale )( an der ( 11 ): Toront o,
Vele l (3 )
Mur ray ( IO J and Stearn!&gt; w
Murray (33 ) l Wh ,tson ! 12 J
010 000 001 -

2 80
S 10 1

Bos
300 01 0 lOxMil
0101 00 11o- 4 10 l
Palmer and Dem psey ; Lee
Sl L
150 000 ?Ox - 8 8 0 and Fl'i&gt; K W- l ee (8 3). LM av . Twt tchell (2), SchatLed
Palmer ( 10 5)
HR!!.- Boston.
er [J ). At k. inson (7 ) an d Car t er ; F1Sk ( 7) , Baltimore , Mora (31
Vuc k ov •c h . L itt ell
{7)
ano
Sw tShCr W- VuckOIII(h (4 4). l N Y
400 007 00 1- 12 101
- May (6 n HR s M ontrei!ll , De l
100 110 QOO- 3 12 2
Val en t •ne ( 10 ), Dawson ( 10 ),
F1guer oa, Lyle { 5), M cC al l
51 Lou1S, S1mmons (7).
(9 J ana Munson , W•l co)( , SyKes
(O J. Morr 1s (6 ) and Ma y WHous
000 000 000 0 4 J Ly&lt; le (51 )
L - W dcox ( J 6)
San Ogo
000 010 lb. 3 10 I HR S New Yo rk , Cham bliSS.
Dixon and Batd w tn . Per ry {ol, While (61
an d Swee1 . W Per ry (8 7 1 L
Oi)(Qn ( 33 )
M 1nn
010000 001
2 51
Ch 1
000 001 000- 1 5 2
C10C 1
ooiJ 000 000 0 3 1· Golll and Wyn egc1r , K r ~vec
LA
000 001 QQ-. · 1 7 0 ~nd Nahorodny W- Golt t {.'i 4 )
Norman , Bt1 1r (81 and L Krav ec
(65 J
HR M 1n
Wer ner . corre ll (8l. Hooton neso1a, Kusic: k. (71
and Y eager W Hooton ( 6 6 ) L
110000001
3100
-- Nor man ( 8 4 ) HR LO S An Sea
M!l w
000 000 000 0 4 1
geles . Garvey ( 9 )
Abbott and St inson ; Caldwell
Ali a
000 000 000 0 51 and Mart ,n eJ W Abbott () 4)
Sa n Frn
611 DOO lOx
9170 L Ca ldwell (7 5)
Hanna , Solomon OJ, Camp
bell (7) and Murphy , Poc oroba
{7 ), Blu e and H 1lt W Blue ( 10
4) L Hanna ( {j 71 HRs San
Fran c1sco . Cru l ( .4 1, Wh l! f ,eld
15 1
SMITilFIELD, R.I. (UP! )

Bonds 1 ( 11 i

- The man who built the
Br yant College athletic
program into one of the most
successful college-division
programs in New England
has resigned to become
athletic director at Stonehill
College in North Easton .

( 2nd gam e)

M a s~ .

Am er ic an Lu gue

&lt;1s t gam el
Cali f

000 000 000- 0 5 1

0\0 330 OOJ. - 1 6 0
D M iller ( 6) and
Downmg , Jcnk 1ns and Sund
berg w J en~tns (8 J l. L
Te)(aS
Kna pp ,

Kna pp- (7 bl

T e • a~ .

HR s

Cal1 f

0000011 10
101 110 31x

4 11 1
8 11 1
Gn ff ln , Har t lel l !5) M ill er
(7) an d Humphrey , Do wn• ng
Tex as

(8 J; AlexMder Clell'eland ( 7)
and E II1S W Al cxMder ( ~ .d J
L Gr 1flln (0 JJ
HR Cc1 llfor

PH OEN IX, Ariz. iUPl) Mel Makin of Oregon held
ont o his early lead and won
the rapid·flre pistol event
Friday at the 16th U. S. 1nt e r nati ona l Shootin g
Championship.
Makin, of Aumsville, Ore.,
fired a final round total of 590,
pushing his overall record to
L763 points for the three-da y
match.
Olympic Gold Medali st
l.ann v Bassham of San Antonio; Texas, took a victory in
the small bore competition by
fini shing with 3,465 points, an
eight point margin over
second place winner Kurt
Fit z·Randolph of El Paso,
Texas.

Karen Monez of Ft . Ben·
ning, Ga ., was the top woman
shooter in small bore free
rifle with 3,42() and John
Akemon of Johnson City,
Tenn. , posted high civilian
honors with 3,369.
Akemon also won the Open
Air Rifle Championship,
earning a pla ce on the World
Championship squad with his
!,116 score.
In the Women 's Open Air
Rifle Match, Sue Ann San·
dusky of Ft. Worth, Texas,
took top honors with 1,167
while Mary Elizabeth Nor·
ckauer of Baton Rouge, La.,
was the top woman shooter
wtth her rapid-fire score of
1,685 .

Walton plays with fracture

n 1a , Ba ylor t 18 )

Maj or Leagu e Ba se ba ll Res u!1s
Bv Un ited P ress Inte r na ti ona l

Stadium, the Reds have
playe&lt;,l before 16,962,268
p11 ying fans on &gt;97 playmg
dates, an average crowd of
28,412.
To put that in perspective,
it is roughly the equivalent of
&gt;97 consecutive sell-outs at
old Crosley Field, the cozy,
little home of the Reds before
Ri verfront Stadium wa s
built.
In addition , another

pistol event in Phoenix

to be shown June 28
In

CINCINNATI - When the
Cincinnati Reds return home
next Friday (June 30) to meet
the Los Angeles Dudgers, it
wrll mark the eighth an·
niversary of the opening of
Riverfront Stadium and the
17-millionth regular season
payin g custom er will go
through the turnstiles.
Since June 30, 1970, when
the Reds and Atlanta Braves
met fo r the first event in the

Makin captures rapid-fire·

Special TV program
ATHE NS - A special liv.e
two-way television program

Riverfront attendance to
hit 17 million on .]une 30

Tom Folliard Frida y announced his resignation as
Bryant athletic director and
basketball coach, the posts he
had held for the past 10 years.

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP)) Portland Trail Blazer Center
Bill Walton has played two
yea rs with a broken wrist ,
according to his fri end Jack
Scott.
Scott, a former athletic
director at Oberlin College,
made the statement in a
speech to the City Clu b of
Portland conce rni ng th e
misuse of drugs in the NBA,
stating Walton broke his left
wrist near the end of hi s
second year with the Trail
Blazers.
" It just never healed,"
Scott sa id. "The Trail Blazer s
screwed the bone together
but it 's still not heal ed
properly. He's been playing
for the past two years with his
wrist still broken."
Walton, the NBA 's most
valuable pla yer in 1977-78, is
in Arizona soaking a broken
foot in mineral waters of a
health spa, Walton missed the

end of the NBA season with a
foot injury, then broke his
foot while playing in the
pla yoffs with a pain killer.
NAMED COACH
CIN CIN NATI (UP ll
Amateur baseball coach
Gordoo Vetorino was named
Friday as head baseball
coach at Xavier University,
succeeding Bill Wolff who
resigned last month .
COA CHES NAMED
NEW YORK (UP!) - Fred
Stolle of the New York Apples
and Rod Laver of the San
Diego Friars were named
Saturday as the coaches for
the fourth annua l World
Team tennis All-Star Match.
Stolle and Rod Laver will
direct HI-player squads in the
July 14 match in Las Vegas,
Nev. The rosters are being
chosen by vote of the World
Team tennis coaches.

Hertel selects football

prospect at the recent rooki.e
mini-{:amp. He's big and
strong, a good thrower and a
good runner."
At Southern Cal, Hertel
threw 19 touchdown passes
last year and completed 132
of 245 aerials for 2,145 yards.
Hls collegiate career totals
were 176 completions in 321
attempts for 2,812 yards and
28 touchdowns.

veteran
Bengal
CINCINNATI (UPI )- Rob of
quarterbacks
Kenny
Hertel , the University of
Anderson
and
backup
John
Southern California qual'\erReaves.
back who was good enough at
"I know It will be tough ,"
baseball to be drafted by the
1,335,900 fa ns have attended San Diego Padres, picked pro said Hertel. "The two of them
World Series, Championship football oveT pro baseball and have been around for years.
Series,
All-Star
and signed a cootract with the Hopefully, I'll be able to learn
exhibition games, bringing Cincinnati Bengals.
something from them. I don't
the paid attendance total for
The 6·1, 191-pounder figure to go in and play right
baseball games at Riverfront drafted in the fifth roWld by away."
·
Stadium to 18,298,168.
8engals' general manager
the Bengal!, signed Friday .
TORONTO (UP! )- Victor
The Reds' aU-time record
"Throughout my college Paul Brown indicated there's Cruz, a right-handed relief
attendance for one season at career I had to rna ke a a possibility Hertel might be pitcher, was called up from
Crosley Field was 1,125,928. declslon every year - it was ·tried somewhere else.
Syracuse of the International
At Riverfront, the 8-year always football versus
"Hilmer Rice (the Bengals' League Friday by the
avera ge is 2,!20,283. The baseball," said Hertel, an quarterback coach ) is Toronto Blue Jays, who
Reds have drawn more than infielder on the diamond . famiiiar with him and has placed pitcher Doo Kirkwood
2,000,000 fans in each of the "Now, I've chosen football as high hopes that he might on the 2!-day disabled list.
la st five seasons, including a a career."
work into more than a third
This is Kirkwood 's second
clutrrecord 2,629, 708 in !976,
That also means Hertel will quarterback," said Brown, time on the· disabled list this
and are well on their way to a be going up agairutt a couple "He looked like a very good season.
sixth consecutive 2,000,000
season in 1978. Home attendance will go over the
1,000,000 mark for 1976 on the
night of the anniversary.
There have been 67 crowds
of 50,000 or more at River·
front , including 49 for regular
season games. A 50th "50" ,is
already assured since aU
tickets for Friday's doubleheader with the Dodgers have
already been sold.
A good supply of tickets
still remains lor the · other
games of the upcoming series
with the Dogers on Saturday
(July 1) and Sunday (July 2)
as well as lor all remaining
home games this season.
Call In Orders 992-6292
Here are the total paid
attendanc e figures sin ce
CREAMY OLD FASHIONED
Featurin9 salad bar , chili and much , much
more!
Riverfront StadiUm opened in
1970:
'
Reg ular Season
(597 dates)
16,962,268
World Series
games (II )
595,075
Championship Se rie~
games (9)
446,196
Kid Glove games (8) 234 ,681
All-Star game (I )
51 ,631J
Pre-season exhibition
(I I
8,1IO
Totals
18,298,168

Served
In
Frosted
Mugs

~s'\\!n ~tt.v.l!GioWJ

ROOT
BEER

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI IUP! I
Alpine Lady, ridden by J.D.
Rodrigu ez, won Friday's
featur ed race at Ri vers
Downs 3-4 length ahead of
Peppermight with Round
Circuit finishing third.
Sally Gooden and Master
Fighter won the first two
races to return $22.40 in the
daily double on the 12 and 9
combination .
A crowd of 3,493 wage red
$369,732.

'\u11 11iul• rlo1

!,,.,,

1o I t!io ),. . ._,
.,1 111-.d• h nidi, u .o-.l u·llo·-.-.
h !It lu 11 l.•llo"t r 1h&lt;~ r
ftl&lt;lll • I Llll l111
/11 1 II I II
I••IJ '.111

1...... \lid
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t.. I Ill I" I
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.23.09

Athens County Savings &amp; Loan

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND

Richard E. Jones, Manager

SUPPLY COMPANY
312 Sixth Street
Point Pleasant
675·1160
r Ho u• •

8 a.rw 3 p m

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·--·:.·· . . ..... ~

RACINE - In Pony League
Action Thursday , Racine
downed Eastern by a score of
11-£. Kent Wolfe had the win
and Greg Wigal was the
losing pitch er. Wigal struck
out 10 and issued 3 walks.
Brian Wolfe and Kent Wolle
combined to b1rike out 6 and
wa lk 7.
Jo"or Racine, Kent Wolfe and
Richard Wolfe each had a
triple. Collecting singles were
Kent Wolle, Bob Lee, J ohn
Port er and Allen Pape.
R. Gaul and Greg Cole each
got on base with a double.
Greg Wiga l, Greg Cole, Mike
Bissell and Charles Richie
each had sin gles fo r Estern .
This win gives Racine a 3-2
record and Eastern a 2-2.
Another Pony Leagu e
game watched the Pomeroy
Royals win over Rutland with
a score of 12·7. Steve Ohlinger
collected the win and Guy
Shuler the loss. The pi tching
staff of Brian Swann, Brian
Whaley, and Steve Ohlinger
combined to fan 9 an d walk 9.
For the winning team Steve
Ohlinge r had a home run and
Brian Swann had a double.
Coll ecting singles were Brian
King, Randy Murray and
Brian Whaley, each with two.
Rick Smith, Tony Jewell , and
John Smilh had on e si ngle

CHESTER - Chest er TeeBall recorded their second
victory out of five contests by
defeating Tuppers Plains 2213 Tuesday night.
It was a close game until
the fourth inning when
Chester's bats came alive
with 10 rWIS after two outs.
Leading batters for Chester
were Eric Sims with two
triples, one with bases

21l&gt; West Main St.

992-6655

OFFICE HOURS: MONDAY THRU WEDN ESDA Y9to 3,
9to 12-FRIDAY 9 5

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MATERIALS AND
lAID.

RACINE - In Little
League contest, the Racine
Cardinal s downed the
Syracuse Indians with a score
of 35-10. Jason Hill of Racine
could do no wrong, he was the
winning pitcher, hit 7 out of 7
hits , 3 doubles and 4 singles,
scored 7 rurut and had 13
RBI's. Kevin Curfman also
had a perfect day at the plate,
hitting six out of six, four
doubles and two singles.
Mike Chancey collected the
loss for the Indians. Vance
made a fine effort for
Syracuse chalking up a home
run and a double. Getting
doubles for Syracuse also
were Adams and Chancey.
Other leading hitters for
Racine were David Saimons,
with two home runs, Lyons
and Wolfe with a triole. .
4511 816 35 15
R
s
200 125 10 8

POMEROY - Other Little
Lea gue action, found the
Pirat es , winning over the ·
Tigers by a close score of 5-4.
Nick Riggs was the winning
pitcher and Ron Denn the
losing . The combined effort of
Bryan Betzing and Nick
Riggs fanned 12 and walked 9.
Tigers' Parker Long and Ron
Denny struck out 9 and put 8
on.
apiece.
Hitting lor the Pirates were
Raisi ng their battin g Paul Duff, Bryan Betzing,
average for Rutland were Fred Colburn, Bryan Zirkle
Todd Eads with a double, and Ryan Oliver.
Mart y Spangl er and Todd
Those cOnnecting for the
Snowd en each wi th two Tigers were Ron Denny,
singles and Steve Patterson Chris Shank, Tim Gilkey and
with one single.
Parker Lon g.
p
101 JIH 6
001 300-4 4
GAME ON TV
T
NE W YORK (UPI ) - Th e
New York Yank ees an·
MIDDLEPORT - In a
nounced Saturday that next tension filled Pee Wee game
Monday night 's ga me with the Middlep ort Mustangs
the Boston Red Sox will be battled hard to defeat the
tel ev ised in the metropolitan Dale C. Warner team 9-2.
area by ABC· TV although it is Pitch ing for the winning team
not a sellout.
were Tim Cassell, and Darrln
Under ordinary condit ions, Drenner who fann ed 4 and
the Yankees could Impose a walked 7. P. King and R.
TV blackou t in th e Harrison combined to strike
metropolitan area unless th e out 7 and walk 3.
game was so ld out. A Yankee
Eri c Johnson, Terry Little
spokesman sai d the club and Jeff Nelson had triples .
offi cia ls thought the fan s Hitting singles were Eric
deserved the opportunity to Johnson , Jeff Nelson, Lester
see the game because of its Stewart, and Darrin Drenner.
Jenny Couch and D. Norris
Importance.
co llected the only two hits for
the Dale C. Warner team ,
both singles.
005 02- 7 2 2
w
050
4x- 9 7 4
M

peel.

ASK ABOUT OUR

by host nations.
Both sides have been In
· the final before. Argentina
lost to Uruguay In the firstever World Cup 48 years
ago and Holland was edged
2-1 by the Germans In 1974
alter clipping Argentina 4-0
In the earlier stages.
Whatev er the outc ome
Sunday the presence of
Argentina and Holland is a .
victory for attacking football.
Holland has emerged as the
tournament 's leading scorer
so far with 14 goals followed
by Argentina, whose six-goal
bonanza against
Peru
boosted its total to 12.
Holland's Austrian .. born
manager, Ernst Happel, has
retained the attacking policy
of his predecessor, Rinus
Mi chels , while Argentin e
Coach Cesar Menotti, has
said he tried to model his
approach on the Dutch format of "total football ."

Summer league results

or heat.
-Will not cllip, crack or

All Deposits Insured io $40,000 By the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation

flll ! lll'oili·d I U h l ll !-'

By MORLEY MYERS
BUENOS AIRES !UPi l ~
Dutch nerves as much as
skills will be tested to the full
Sunday wh en Holland takes
on Argentina and 77,000 rabid
fa ns for soccer's greatest
prize , the World Cup.
The white-hot atmosphere
of the River Plate Stadium
will be no place for the ner·
vous Sunday. Although
Holland had to face a home
crowd in the 1974 fina l against
West Germany, the Munich
roar is like the whisper of a
falling leaf compared to the
fecered assault on the ears
provided by the passionately
partisan Argentinians.
Bookmak ers made the
Dutch 9-4 favorit es to win this
battle of two continents, but
sta tistics show no European
team has ever beaten South
American opposition in any
final and four o! th e previous
10 World Cups have been won

-Insulates against cold

Substantial Interest Penalty for Early Withdrawal

I'

09

days before the start of the
All-England Champ ionships.
Navratllova , picking up the
$14,000 fi rst pr ize, had to save
a match poin t in the 14th
game of the third set with a
c,-isp backhand volley then
raced on to her two·hou r and
seven·m inute victory.

Accounts in which interest is compounded daily, Lon~ Term

lll'-11111 lit II\ -.

1!\'- II IH" I IIIII

before a capacity 77 ,000
crowd in the Ri ve r Plate
Stadium whi ch at times
whistled in deri sion.
Italy took the lead in the
38th minu te through a simple
hea ded goal by Franco
Ca usio from a Paolo Rossi
pass. But they tired after the
interval and Brazil tied the
score on a goal by Neli nho in
the 63rd min ute.
Brazil , fourth-placed in the
1974 Cup, scored the winning
goal in the 71;;t minute with a
volley from Dirceu.

our many high yield savings plans. We have Day of Deposit

"ll'••\1

.II

.II I d

It was a raggeo game

that"s coming to them! You can , too, when you open one of

Jlt

'-,j' j1 ),

tlill'-.11

BUERNOS AIRES (UPI )
- Brazil defeated Italy 2·1
Saturda y in a desultory and
lack-luster game to tak e third
place in the World Soccer
Cup.
The Brazilians thus ended
their cup participation
without losing a game, but as
in previous performances,
their display was sporadic at
best. Italy too k fourth place
but compared to the stylish
soccer it showed earlier in the
competiti on, Sat urda y's
displa y had as much appeal
as a plate of cold spaghetti.

EASTBOURNE, England
(UP1 )
Martina
Navratilova upset Chris
Evert S-4 , 4-9, 9-7 in the final
of the $75,000 Eastboume
Women ' s Int ernati onal
Tennis Tournament Saturday
to give herself a massive
psychological boost over the
Wimbledon fa vo rite nnly two

Some pl aces t1ave pr etty gooO c hr c k ~

en . Some off er fa1r roo l beer . Others ,

'

... "

Brazil defeats Italy, 2-1

Financially speaking, our Savings Account customers get all

WITH $1,000

,I

Calisthenics.''
She said her weight lifting program includes all types of
lifts, curls and pres$0s from a variety of positions.
"What doesn 't mean I go straight through them, " she said .
"I may wash dishes between the leg curls and overhead
presses. ''
Mrs. Barrilleaux decided to enter the natiooal competition
after seeing an article in a !Jody-building magazine.
Competition was In three categories, muscle tone,
symmetry and presentation.
"The winner in my division wa s a 17-year-Qld high school
gymnast and the average age of all the .contestants was only
22," Mrs. Barrilleaux said.
"Everyone was understandably nervous," she said when
she returned home. ''I have no trouble talking to a plane full of
passengers and I make friends quite easily, but to be standing
alone under a spotlight and posing for the fir st time is qui te
another matter."
She said she scored best in the muscle tone competition,
but noting her age , said "If there'd been a category for nerve, I
guess I'd have won that easily .
"All in all it was quite a unique experi ence," she said.
"The audience responded quite well toa fem ale contest. "

share of the pie?

OF DEPOSIT

\•11111

BY ORVAL JACKSON
RIVERVIEW , Fla . (UPI ) - Duris Barrilleaux , a well·
proportioned airline stewardess, entered her first Women's
Physique Contest June 17, a national competition at Canton,
Ohio, and finished third among six contestanls in her height
class.
·
Her 36-25-37 hody on a 5{oot.,'i, 115-i)ound frame obviously
Impressed the live women judges.
Not a bad showing for a stewardess in her first
competition, and certainly an astounding showing by a mother
of five and five times a grandmother who will be 47 in August.
Body building is not a new hobby for Mrs. Barrilleaux
(pronounced Barrio).
.
She advocates good health, good habits and good bodies,
and practices what she preaches, as do her husband Sterling,
the children and the grandchildren.
· "Three days a week I train with weights, about an hour
and a half each day ," she said. "Three days a week I work with

Navratilova nips olris Evert

So Make Your Savings Grow
Faster At. ....
The Meigs Branch of the
Athens County Savings &amp; Loan Co.

The best for $2 less!

7-7,000 to see World Cup tilt

Prokity cops

Both sides ha ve players
who can tum the tide of
events with splash es of
brilliance. Mario Kempes, a
long-hair ed, lon g·legged
striker who can split defens es
with his lightning feints, is
the Argentine Holland fears
most.
Ht is a very dangerous
player and will have to be
watched very carefully. We
have made special plans
lor marking him ," said
Happel. ·

Summer league
standings
Standin gs for Middleport.
Pomeroy-Rutlan d Pee Wee.
for week endin g J une 22:

TEAM
Middleport Must ang s
Rutland Reds

WL
8 I
7 3

Dal e C. Warner

6 4
5 4

Rutland Ange ls

M iddleport Cubs

4 6

Pizza Shack

2 7

Powell's

2 7

Next week's games :
Monday, June 26 -

Middl eporl Cubs at Rutland
Reds; Rutland An ge ls at

The role of poli ci ng
Kempes will fall largely on
Rudi Krol, the ice-cool
ca ptain of the Dutch team.
For Holland , midf ield
general Johan Neeskens is
the mainspring behind th e
'' clockw ork orang e , "
creating the changes. lor Rob
Rensenbrink and J ohnn y
Rep, while Arie Haan's 30yard bazooka specials are
guaranteed to keep Argentina
Goa lie Fillol on his toes.
Th e Argentine defense,
marshaled by Skipper Daniel
Passarella, has conceded
only three goa ls aga in st
Holland 's seven . But the
Dutch attack· on all front s,
while the South Americans
rely mainly on Kempes and
Luque , and use their other
men to prop up the
rearguard.
Thirty minutes extra time
will be played if Sunday's
game ends In a draw and if
there is still no result the
replay is scheduled for
Tuesday .

Middl eport
M usla n cs :
Powe l l's at Pizza Shack ;
Bye: Dale C. Wa rner
Wednesday , June 28 Powe ll ' s at Dale C. Warne r .
Thursday ,

June

29

-

Middleport Musla ngs at
Middlefort Cu bs; Rutla nd
Reds a Rutland Ang els; Dale
C Warner at r izza Shack ;
Bye: Powell 's .

M iddleport Bra ves

6 4

Middl eport Ind ian s

6

Harr isonvil le Bobcats

4

0 10

Next week ' s games :
Monday 1 June 26 - Mid ·
dlep ort Ind ians at Ru t land
Dodg ers ; Har riso nv i lle at
M iddl epor t Braves .

Wednesday /

Rutland

June

Dodg ers

Harr ison v ille .
Thursday, June
Mi ddleport Bra ve s
dleport India ns.

28

al

29

at Mid-

r------------------1
MAIL THIS COUPON
I

Hackett Gnnul1ttd Roofing
I 9l7th Avo.
Middleport, tl. I
I Aease send me fur!hor In format ion on I
I Granulated Roofing . It Is understood 1am 1
I 111der no obligation whatsoever .
I

' Roof

0

Sidewall

0

(Please Ched)

I
I

NAMt.-----------------------1
ADDR.ESS
- -- - - - - - - Z I P - - - t

will
wc::Ult~

thro ugl1 Aug. 4. Those

ing to take lessons must )
registerbefore the les~on s
begin · at the pool, 992·9968.
Youngsters under five will
nut be accepted for lessons
this year. Adult cla sse~ will
also be offered. Mary Jane
Deeley wi ll be the instr uctor
and all clas~e~ except life
savi ng will be $10. Ltfe sav ing
daos will be $15.

NEW SUMMER HOURS
KINGSBURY HOME SALES
ARE NOW OPEN
9:00 A.M. THRU 9:00 P.M.
MON. THRU SAT.
1:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SUNDAY

140 hp

SEE

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES, INC.

DOUG'S
MARINE
Sales &amp; SerYite

POMEROY, 0.

1100 E. MAIN

(614) 992-5652

Q

808 W. Main 51.
I
9
Pomeroy, OH 4l76~:)

PH. 992·7034

Special Price
This Week!

•

1978 FORD 23 FT.
MOTOR HOME

-

* LESIURE TIME LT DUTCHESS MODEL
COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED,
DUAL AIR, HAS OWN GENERATOR,DUAL
HOLDING TANKS. SLEEPS 6. HAS
FORCED AIR FURNACE.

1978 LTD II 4 DR

brake s. au tomat ic tr ans., full
viny l roof , dual pa int str ipes,
opera wi ndo ws , w - s-w tire s,
conven ien ce group, f inger t i p
speed control, air cond it ioning ,
del uxe bu m per grou p, dua l rea r

seat speakers, am radio, T. glass,
del uxe wheel covers, bod y side

mldg s. Stk. No. lll

~::o

NOW ' 6 1 9 0

1978 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

1978 LID II 4 DR

302 eng ine, power steeri ng and

Lig ht blue , 351 eng ine, pow ~ r
steeri ng an d brakes. a~t?m~tiC
transm ission, ai r con d 1f ton 1ng ,
lull vi n yl roof, pa int str ipes, all
vi n y l tr im , W · S· W tires, deluxe
whee l covers , t i n t ed gl ass .
conven ie n ce
gr o up , d el u lCe
bu mper gr oup, am radi o.

Was
\6764

Now 56 2 2 0

4 dr . Town car, V-8 eng i n e. power
steer i n g · and
brakes ,
a ir
cond it ion in g, automat ic l ran s.,
ope r a w i ndow s, head l a m p ,
co n v en ie nc e gr ou p, def r oste r
group, tilt steer ing wheel, speed
control, interval wiper s, town car
opti on , a p pe aran ce
gr ou p .
inter ior tig ht group. power lock

group. SPECIAL THIS WEEK

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
2 DR SEDAN

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
FUTURE

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON

Dark brown • .4 cy l. en~ine , powe r
stee r ing , am r ad io. int er ior
accen t group, dual m irror s. t_r im
ring s and hub cap.

cy l. engi ne. po wer steering ,
front and rea r bum per guard s,
am ra dio , dua l br ight m irrors ,
878x 14 w-s-w t ir-es . S.tk. . No. 446 .

Si l ver . 6 c yl . eng ine, au toma tic
tra n s, power st eer in g and
brakes, air condition ing. ex terior
an d i n t er ior ac cent. l uggag e
ra c k, am radio, tr im r ings and
hub caps. Stk . No. 497.

4

Stk. No . 471
Was
14298

Was
NOW • 4 0 7 0

14602

1978 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON

1978 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON
Medi um blu e, 4 cyl. engi ne,
automat lc tran s., power steeri ng,
W· S-W t ires, luggage ra ck. Stk .

No . 524

~~~4

NOW ' 4 4 0 0

Med iu m chestn ut mel.,

4

cyl.

eng ine, automatic tr ans., power
stee r ing, w-s-w ti r es, luggage
rack. dual sport m irror s. Stk . No.

Was
Sl659

NOW$5290

1978 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON
4 c yl. eng ine , power stee r in g .
whi t eside wa ll tires, roof lug gag e
ra c k . Stk . N o. 644

612
NOW ' 4 2 8 0

~;:4

NOW ' 4 3 8 0

~~:a

NOW ' 4 0 9 0

~~-----------~~-------------+-------------1

1977 FORD COURIER
GREEN RANGER XLT

automat ic t rans .• 4 engine. am fm radio, t inted glass, western

1978 FORD FIESTA

1978 FORD FIESTA

White. 4 cyl. engine, i nter ior

3 dr . hatchba ck. dark red

decor group. heavy duty hand! ing
pkg .. vinyl insert body side
mould ings .

meta lli c. 4 cyl. eng ine, A speed
t rans .• Ghia group , wh ite sid e

sw ing lock mirr ors. rear step

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP! ) - Seco nd · seeded
J ohn Prok ity of Charleston
won the boys 14 crown In the
Ohio Valley District Tennis
Cbampionships Saturday by
defeating eighth - seeded Kep
Smith of Dayton , Ohio, S-4, 2·
6,~ .
Top-seeded Josh Marwill of
Dayton st opped second seeded Jonathan Kass of
Columbus 6-1 , 6-3 to capture
the boys championship.
Eugene Hagan of Dayton,
took third place by beating
third-seeded Todd Peters of
Cincinnati 6-2, 6-1 .
Ashraf Bedwan of Dayton
defeated Jerry Solomon of ·
Columbus 6-3, 4-li, H in a
battle of unseeded players for
third pla ce in bo~s 12.

lessons

begin July 24 and cunltnue

f!:JM

Mere 1400

Optional 7 foot box, 3 speed

boys crown

swi.nun mg.
Swim ming

FOR MODULAR HOMES
BY AU. AMERICAN

G1ves top perlormance at
all speeds!

for week ending June 22 :

WL
8 2

MIDD LEPORTMrs.
Cherole Burdette, Middleport
Pool manager, has announced tha t the pout will be open
from !2 noon tu 5 p.m.
weekdays and l tu 6 p.m. un
Sat urda ys and Sun days
beginning Munday .
There will be night swim·
ming fr om 7 to 9 p.m. un
Wednesday nights wi th
regular athnission charge or
2!i cents fur those with season
tickets . Plans are also being
made fo r Saturday ad ult

Mercury
1400

Sta ndings for Littl e L eagu e

TEAM
Rul land Dodgers

New Middleport pool
hoQrs are announced

wa ll t ir es, am rad io, moveab le
fron t vent w indows.

bumper , W·S·W t ir es .

Was
149:16

NOW ' 4 5 0 0

~;:4

Was
Now•4300

NOw'$4800

SSI66

'

2 LINCOLN VERSAILLES NOW IN STOCKI

FORD SALES
362 JACKSON PIKE-RT. 160 &amp; 35
ACROSS FROM HOllER MEDICAL CENTER
For a good deal see Tom Sprague, Melvin Utile, GariJ
.Rudolph, Morris Sheets, David Beaver, Pete Somerville,
Nancy Fowler, Sandy Gatewood.
PH. 446-3575

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�....

C-4- The Sunday Times.Sentmel, Sunday, Jw&gt;e 25, 1973
LYNE CENTER. SCHEDULE
Week of June 26, 1978
TIME
DATE- ACTIVITY
J •.sp .m.
J une 26 Open Swim -Gym
6·8p .m.
1·5p.m.
June 27 Open Swi m -G ym
1·5p.m.
June 28 Open -Sw im Gym
1·5 p.m.
June 29 Open Swim.Gym
8-10 p.m.
12 noon-4 p.m .
June 30 Open Sw lm·Gym
Ju ly 1 CLOSED
July 2 CLOSED
July 3 CLOSED
Ju ly 4 CLOSED
NOTE : New Rates.
1·1 hour blocks, $.50 chil d · x . S1.00 adult.
3-4 hou r blocks, 51.00 child . x $1.50 adult .
No adm ittan ce unless yo u ha ve the correct amount of

mone y.

x - Ch il d r efers to anyone under 1B years of age.

NOTE : Lessons

Reg istrati on for 'the secon d sess ion of You th Swim Lessons
w ill be held at 4 p.m . on Wed nesda y, July 5 in the lobby of Lyne

Center.

add it ton

to

a rea

physi cians, train er s and

on sports_ am.l medicine has

coaches of high school and
college athletic teams are
inv ited to participate in the
program which begins at 9
a.rn
View ing locations are the
third Ooor conference room
at O'Bleness and 1he fifth
floor classroom at Holzer.
Athens coordinator for the
project is George Ebers!. 5946401, Ex tens ion 306 . Th e
Ga llipolis coordinator is Bob
Hail s, 446-5145.

been scheduled for June 28 by
the Ohio Vall ey Medica l
Mic r owave
Tele\'i s io n
System.
It will feature Robert J .
Murphy, M.D., physician for
Ohio State Uni versity' s
athl etic teams. Through the
medical microwave system,
pa rti cipants at O'Blenness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
and Holzer Medica l Center in
Gallipolis will be able to tal k
directly lo Dr. Mu rphy.

Friday's linescores
{ 1st gam eJ
Oa k
000 100 020- J 7 1
KC
201000 \0x - 5 6 2
La ng ford , Johnson (31. So sa
(SJ and Ess ian , Newm an (8J;
Sp littorfi. Hrabosky (8) and
Por ter . W- Spl ittor lf 19 6 ). L ~
L angford ( 1 Sl. HR - OaKiand ,
Dunc an ( 2 )

National L eagu e

( ts t gam e)
Ch i

000000 IOD--1 60

Ph il a

002 000 40x

6 10 0

RO ber t s M cGlothen (7) and
Rad e r , Ruthven , McGraw (8 1
and Foo t e. W - ~u lh ven (3 n l
- Ro ber t s (3 21 HRs Ch icago .
0 e J c s us (3/. Ph ll adetph ra .
Mar t in ( J ), Maddox ( 4\

(2 nd gam e)

Oak
004 100 000- 5 9 I
KC
00 1000111 - 41 22
Con rov. Br ober g ( .d J, Lac ey
Ph ila
30000030x
6120
Lamp , Ge1set t 7l. Moore ( lJ fBI , Sosa (8 J. Hea11 er 1o (9 ) and
and (OIC , Rader ( 7) , LonbOr g , Essian . L eona r d, M 1!1gOr i (SJ
and Por ter W - Broberg 17 6).
McGr aw I BJ an d Boone wL- Leonaro (7 10 ). HR - Oak
Lonbor g (6 Sl L- L amp ( 2 81
lan d , Pa ge (7)
(2nd gam e)
Ch i

000000010·

I 6 I

( 11 1Mnln 9 5)

New York

Tor
000 010 020- 3 7 1
Cle11e
010 004 20)( - 8 11 0
Jeff er son , Lem an czy k (6J.

HR - New Yor k, Mawll i ( 5)

Ball

Pitt sburgh

000 001 100 00- ) 9 0

001 000 100 01· J 9 0 Co l em an (7) an d Milner ; Wa it s
D Rob ,nson , Tekulve ! 8), and D1a1 w Wai ts 15 n. L(57) . HRs- Ci e11 e
Whitson ( 11 \ and Over . 011 (8/ , Jelfer son
Koosman . Lo c kwood (8 ), l and , Ale )( an der ( 11 ): Toront o,
Vele l (3 )
Mur ray ( IO J and Stearn!&gt; w
Murray (33 ) l Wh ,tson ! 12 J
010 000 001 -

2 80
S 10 1

Bos
300 01 0 lOxMil
0101 00 11o- 4 10 l
Palmer and Dem psey ; Lee
Sl L
150 000 ?Ox - 8 8 0 and Fl'i&gt; K W- l ee (8 3). LM av . Twt tchell (2), SchatLed
Palmer ( 10 5)
HR!!.- Boston.
er [J ). At k. inson (7 ) an d Car t er ; F1Sk ( 7) , Baltimore , Mora (31
Vuc k ov •c h . L itt ell
{7)
ano
Sw tShCr W- VuckOIII(h (4 4). l N Y
400 007 00 1- 12 101
- May (6 n HR s M ontrei!ll , De l
100 110 QOO- 3 12 2
Val en t •ne ( 10 ), Dawson ( 10 ),
F1guer oa, Lyle { 5), M cC al l
51 Lou1S, S1mmons (7).
(9 J ana Munson , W•l co)( , SyKes
(O J. Morr 1s (6 ) and Ma y WHous
000 000 000 0 4 J Ly&lt; le (51 )
L - W dcox ( J 6)
San Ogo
000 010 lb. 3 10 I HR S New Yo rk , Cham bliSS.
Dixon and Batd w tn . Per ry {ol, While (61
an d Swee1 . W Per ry (8 7 1 L
Oi)(Qn ( 33 )
M 1nn
010000 001
2 51
Ch 1
000 001 000- 1 5 2
C10C 1
ooiJ 000 000 0 3 1· Golll and Wyn egc1r , K r ~vec
LA
000 001 QQ-. · 1 7 0 ~nd Nahorodny W- Golt t {.'i 4 )
Norman , Bt1 1r (81 and L Krav ec
(65 J
HR M 1n
Wer ner . corre ll (8l. Hooton neso1a, Kusic: k. (71
and Y eager W Hooton ( 6 6 ) L
110000001
3100
-- Nor man ( 8 4 ) HR LO S An Sea
M!l w
000 000 000 0 4 1
geles . Garvey ( 9 )
Abbott and St inson ; Caldwell
Ali a
000 000 000 0 51 and Mart ,n eJ W Abbott () 4)
Sa n Frn
611 DOO lOx
9170 L Ca ldwell (7 5)
Hanna , Solomon OJ, Camp
bell (7) and Murphy , Poc oroba
{7 ), Blu e and H 1lt W Blue ( 10
4) L Hanna ( {j 71 HRs San
Fran c1sco . Cru l ( .4 1, Wh l! f ,eld
15 1
SMITilFIELD, R.I. (UP! )

Bonds 1 ( 11 i

- The man who built the
Br yant College athletic
program into one of the most
successful college-division
programs in New England
has resigned to become
athletic director at Stonehill
College in North Easton .

( 2nd gam e)

M a s~ .

Am er ic an Lu gue

&lt;1s t gam el
Cali f

000 000 000- 0 5 1

0\0 330 OOJ. - 1 6 0
D M iller ( 6) and
Downmg , Jcnk 1ns and Sund
berg w J en~tns (8 J l. L
Te)(aS
Kna pp ,

Kna pp- (7 bl

T e • a~ .

HR s

Cal1 f

0000011 10
101 110 31x

4 11 1
8 11 1
Gn ff ln , Har t lel l !5) M ill er
(7) an d Humphrey , Do wn• ng
Tex as

(8 J; AlexMder Clell'eland ( 7)
and E II1S W Al cxMder ( ~ .d J
L Gr 1flln (0 JJ
HR Cc1 llfor

PH OEN IX, Ariz. iUPl) Mel Makin of Oregon held
ont o his early lead and won
the rapid·flre pistol event
Friday at the 16th U. S. 1nt e r nati ona l Shootin g
Championship.
Makin, of Aumsville, Ore.,
fired a final round total of 590,
pushing his overall record to
L763 points for the three-da y
match.
Olympic Gold Medali st
l.ann v Bassham of San Antonio; Texas, took a victory in
the small bore competition by
fini shing with 3,465 points, an
eight point margin over
second place winner Kurt
Fit z·Randolph of El Paso,
Texas.

Karen Monez of Ft . Ben·
ning, Ga ., was the top woman
shooter in small bore free
rifle with 3,42() and John
Akemon of Johnson City,
Tenn. , posted high civilian
honors with 3,369.
Akemon also won the Open
Air Rifle Championship,
earning a pla ce on the World
Championship squad with his
!,116 score.
In the Women 's Open Air
Rifle Match, Sue Ann San·
dusky of Ft. Worth, Texas,
took top honors with 1,167
while Mary Elizabeth Nor·
ckauer of Baton Rouge, La.,
was the top woman shooter
wtth her rapid-fire score of
1,685 .

Walton plays with fracture

n 1a , Ba ylor t 18 )

Maj or Leagu e Ba se ba ll Res u!1s
Bv Un ited P ress Inte r na ti ona l

Stadium, the Reds have
playe&lt;,l before 16,962,268
p11 ying fans on &gt;97 playmg
dates, an average crowd of
28,412.
To put that in perspective,
it is roughly the equivalent of
&gt;97 consecutive sell-outs at
old Crosley Field, the cozy,
little home of the Reds before
Ri verfront Stadium wa s
built.
In addition , another

pistol event in Phoenix

to be shown June 28
In

CINCINNATI - When the
Cincinnati Reds return home
next Friday (June 30) to meet
the Los Angeles Dudgers, it
wrll mark the eighth an·
niversary of the opening of
Riverfront Stadium and the
17-millionth regular season
payin g custom er will go
through the turnstiles.
Since June 30, 1970, when
the Reds and Atlanta Braves
met fo r the first event in the

Makin captures rapid-fire·

Special TV program
ATHE NS - A special liv.e
two-way television program

Riverfront attendance to
hit 17 million on .]une 30

Tom Folliard Frida y announced his resignation as
Bryant athletic director and
basketball coach, the posts he
had held for the past 10 years.

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP)) Portland Trail Blazer Center
Bill Walton has played two
yea rs with a broken wrist ,
according to his fri end Jack
Scott.
Scott, a former athletic
director at Oberlin College,
made the statement in a
speech to the City Clu b of
Portland conce rni ng th e
misuse of drugs in the NBA,
stating Walton broke his left
wrist near the end of hi s
second year with the Trail
Blazers.
" It just never healed,"
Scott sa id. "The Trail Blazer s
screwed the bone together
but it 's still not heal ed
properly. He's been playing
for the past two years with his
wrist still broken."
Walton, the NBA 's most
valuable pla yer in 1977-78, is
in Arizona soaking a broken
foot in mineral waters of a
health spa, Walton missed the

end of the NBA season with a
foot injury, then broke his
foot while playing in the
pla yoffs with a pain killer.
NAMED COACH
CIN CIN NATI (UP ll
Amateur baseball coach
Gordoo Vetorino was named
Friday as head baseball
coach at Xavier University,
succeeding Bill Wolff who
resigned last month .
COA CHES NAMED
NEW YORK (UP!) - Fred
Stolle of the New York Apples
and Rod Laver of the San
Diego Friars were named
Saturday as the coaches for
the fourth annua l World
Team tennis All-Star Match.
Stolle and Rod Laver will
direct HI-player squads in the
July 14 match in Las Vegas,
Nev. The rosters are being
chosen by vote of the World
Team tennis coaches.

Hertel selects football

prospect at the recent rooki.e
mini-{:amp. He's big and
strong, a good thrower and a
good runner."
At Southern Cal, Hertel
threw 19 touchdown passes
last year and completed 132
of 245 aerials for 2,145 yards.
Hls collegiate career totals
were 176 completions in 321
attempts for 2,812 yards and
28 touchdowns.

veteran
Bengal
CINCINNATI (UPI )- Rob of
quarterbacks
Kenny
Hertel , the University of
Anderson
and
backup
John
Southern California qual'\erReaves.
back who was good enough at
"I know It will be tough ,"
baseball to be drafted by the
1,335,900 fa ns have attended San Diego Padres, picked pro said Hertel. "The two of them
World Series, Championship football oveT pro baseball and have been around for years.
Series,
All-Star
and signed a cootract with the Hopefully, I'll be able to learn
exhibition games, bringing Cincinnati Bengals.
something from them. I don't
the paid attendance total for
The 6·1, 191-pounder figure to go in and play right
baseball games at Riverfront drafted in the fifth roWld by away."
·
Stadium to 18,298,168.
8engals' general manager
the Bengal!, signed Friday .
TORONTO (UP! )- Victor
The Reds' aU-time record
"Throughout my college Paul Brown indicated there's Cruz, a right-handed relief
attendance for one season at career I had to rna ke a a possibility Hertel might be pitcher, was called up from
Crosley Field was 1,125,928. declslon every year - it was ·tried somewhere else.
Syracuse of the International
At Riverfront, the 8-year always football versus
"Hilmer Rice (the Bengals' League Friday by the
avera ge is 2,!20,283. The baseball," said Hertel, an quarterback coach ) is Toronto Blue Jays, who
Reds have drawn more than infielder on the diamond . famiiiar with him and has placed pitcher Doo Kirkwood
2,000,000 fans in each of the "Now, I've chosen football as high hopes that he might on the 2!-day disabled list.
la st five seasons, including a a career."
work into more than a third
This is Kirkwood 's second
clutrrecord 2,629, 708 in !976,
That also means Hertel will quarterback," said Brown, time on the· disabled list this
and are well on their way to a be going up agairutt a couple "He looked like a very good season.
sixth consecutive 2,000,000
season in 1978. Home attendance will go over the
1,000,000 mark for 1976 on the
night of the anniversary.
There have been 67 crowds
of 50,000 or more at River·
front , including 49 for regular
season games. A 50th "50" ,is
already assured since aU
tickets for Friday's doubleheader with the Dodgers have
already been sold.
A good supply of tickets
still remains lor the · other
games of the upcoming series
with the Dogers on Saturday
(July 1) and Sunday (July 2)
as well as lor all remaining
home games this season.
Call In Orders 992-6292
Here are the total paid
attendanc e figures sin ce
CREAMY OLD FASHIONED
Featurin9 salad bar , chili and much , much
more!
Riverfront StadiUm opened in
1970:
'
Reg ular Season
(597 dates)
16,962,268
World Series
games (II )
595,075
Championship Se rie~
games (9)
446,196
Kid Glove games (8) 234 ,681
All-Star game (I )
51 ,631J
Pre-season exhibition
(I I
8,1IO
Totals
18,298,168

Served
In
Frosted
Mugs

~s'\\!n ~tt.v.l!GioWJ

ROOT
BEER

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI IUP! I
Alpine Lady, ridden by J.D.
Rodrigu ez, won Friday's
featur ed race at Ri vers
Downs 3-4 length ahead of
Peppermight with Round
Circuit finishing third.
Sally Gooden and Master
Fighter won the first two
races to return $22.40 in the
daily double on the 12 and 9
combination .
A crowd of 3,493 wage red
$369,732.

'\u11 11iul• rlo1

!,,.,,

1o I t!io ),. . ._,
.,1 111-.d• h nidi, u .o-.l u·llo·-.-.
h !It lu 11 l.•llo"t r 1h&lt;~ r
ftl&lt;lll • I Llll l111
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t.. I Ill I" I
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.23.09

Athens County Savings &amp; Loan

CAROLINA LUMBER
AND

Richard E. Jones, Manager

SUPPLY COMPANY
312 Sixth Street
Point Pleasant
675·1160
r Ho u• •

8 a.rw 3 p m

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noon $o1urdoy

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·--·:.·· . . ..... ~

RACINE - In Pony League
Action Thursday , Racine
downed Eastern by a score of
11-£. Kent Wolfe had the win
and Greg Wigal was the
losing pitch er. Wigal struck
out 10 and issued 3 walks.
Brian Wolfe and Kent Wolle
combined to b1rike out 6 and
wa lk 7.
Jo"or Racine, Kent Wolfe and
Richard Wolfe each had a
triple. Collecting singles were
Kent Wolle, Bob Lee, J ohn
Port er and Allen Pape.
R. Gaul and Greg Cole each
got on base with a double.
Greg Wiga l, Greg Cole, Mike
Bissell and Charles Richie
each had sin gles fo r Estern .
This win gives Racine a 3-2
record and Eastern a 2-2.
Another Pony Leagu e
game watched the Pomeroy
Royals win over Rutland with
a score of 12·7. Steve Ohlinger
collected the win and Guy
Shuler the loss. The pi tching
staff of Brian Swann, Brian
Whaley, and Steve Ohlinger
combined to fan 9 an d walk 9.
For the winning team Steve
Ohlinge r had a home run and
Brian Swann had a double.
Coll ecting singles were Brian
King, Randy Murray and
Brian Whaley, each with two.
Rick Smith, Tony Jewell , and
John Smilh had on e si ngle

CHESTER - Chest er TeeBall recorded their second
victory out of five contests by
defeating Tuppers Plains 2213 Tuesday night.
It was a close game until
the fourth inning when
Chester's bats came alive
with 10 rWIS after two outs.
Leading batters for Chester
were Eric Sims with two
triples, one with bases

21l&gt; West Main St.

992-6655

OFFICE HOURS: MONDAY THRU WEDN ESDA Y9to 3,
9to 12-FRIDAY 9 5

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ESTIMATES
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lAID.

RACINE - In Little
League contest, the Racine
Cardinal s downed the
Syracuse Indians with a score
of 35-10. Jason Hill of Racine
could do no wrong, he was the
winning pitcher, hit 7 out of 7
hits , 3 doubles and 4 singles,
scored 7 rurut and had 13
RBI's. Kevin Curfman also
had a perfect day at the plate,
hitting six out of six, four
doubles and two singles.
Mike Chancey collected the
loss for the Indians. Vance
made a fine effort for
Syracuse chalking up a home
run and a double. Getting
doubles for Syracuse also
were Adams and Chancey.
Other leading hitters for
Racine were David Saimons,
with two home runs, Lyons
and Wolfe with a triole. .
4511 816 35 15
R
s
200 125 10 8

POMEROY - Other Little
Lea gue action, found the
Pirat es , winning over the ·
Tigers by a close score of 5-4.
Nick Riggs was the winning
pitcher and Ron Denn the
losing . The combined effort of
Bryan Betzing and Nick
Riggs fanned 12 and walked 9.
Tigers' Parker Long and Ron
Denny struck out 9 and put 8
on.
apiece.
Hitting lor the Pirates were
Raisi ng their battin g Paul Duff, Bryan Betzing,
average for Rutland were Fred Colburn, Bryan Zirkle
Todd Eads with a double, and Ryan Oliver.
Mart y Spangl er and Todd
Those cOnnecting for the
Snowd en each wi th two Tigers were Ron Denny,
singles and Steve Patterson Chris Shank, Tim Gilkey and
with one single.
Parker Lon g.
p
101 JIH 6
001 300-4 4
GAME ON TV
T
NE W YORK (UPI ) - Th e
New York Yank ees an·
MIDDLEPORT - In a
nounced Saturday that next tension filled Pee Wee game
Monday night 's ga me with the Middlep ort Mustangs
the Boston Red Sox will be battled hard to defeat the
tel ev ised in the metropolitan Dale C. Warner team 9-2.
area by ABC· TV although it is Pitch ing for the winning team
not a sellout.
were Tim Cassell, and Darrln
Under ordinary condit ions, Drenner who fann ed 4 and
the Yankees could Impose a walked 7. P. King and R.
TV blackou t in th e Harrison combined to strike
metropolitan area unless th e out 7 and walk 3.
game was so ld out. A Yankee
Eri c Johnson, Terry Little
spokesman sai d the club and Jeff Nelson had triples .
offi cia ls thought the fan s Hitting singles were Eric
deserved the opportunity to Johnson , Jeff Nelson, Lester
see the game because of its Stewart, and Darrin Drenner.
Jenny Couch and D. Norris
Importance.
co llected the only two hits for
the Dale C. Warner team ,
both singles.
005 02- 7 2 2
w
050
4x- 9 7 4
M

peel.

ASK ABOUT OUR

by host nations.
Both sides have been In
· the final before. Argentina
lost to Uruguay In the firstever World Cup 48 years
ago and Holland was edged
2-1 by the Germans In 1974
alter clipping Argentina 4-0
In the earlier stages.
Whatev er the outc ome
Sunday the presence of
Argentina and Holland is a .
victory for attacking football.
Holland has emerged as the
tournament 's leading scorer
so far with 14 goals followed
by Argentina, whose six-goal
bonanza against
Peru
boosted its total to 12.
Holland's Austrian .. born
manager, Ernst Happel, has
retained the attacking policy
of his predecessor, Rinus
Mi chels , while Argentin e
Coach Cesar Menotti, has
said he tried to model his
approach on the Dutch format of "total football ."

Summer league results

or heat.
-Will not cllip, crack or

All Deposits Insured io $40,000 By the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation

flll ! lll'oili·d I U h l ll !-'

By MORLEY MYERS
BUENOS AIRES !UPi l ~
Dutch nerves as much as
skills will be tested to the full
Sunday wh en Holland takes
on Argentina and 77,000 rabid
fa ns for soccer's greatest
prize , the World Cup.
The white-hot atmosphere
of the River Plate Stadium
will be no place for the ner·
vous Sunday. Although
Holland had to face a home
crowd in the 1974 fina l against
West Germany, the Munich
roar is like the whisper of a
falling leaf compared to the
fecered assault on the ears
provided by the passionately
partisan Argentinians.
Bookmak ers made the
Dutch 9-4 favorit es to win this
battle of two continents, but
sta tistics show no European
team has ever beaten South
American opposition in any
final and four o! th e previous
10 World Cups have been won

-Insulates against cold

Substantial Interest Penalty for Early Withdrawal

I'

09

days before the start of the
All-England Champ ionships.
Navratllova , picking up the
$14,000 fi rst pr ize, had to save
a match poin t in the 14th
game of the third set with a
c,-isp backhand volley then
raced on to her two·hou r and
seven·m inute victory.

Accounts in which interest is compounded daily, Lon~ Term

lll'-11111 lit II\ -.

1!\'- II IH" I IIIII

before a capacity 77 ,000
crowd in the Ri ve r Plate
Stadium whi ch at times
whistled in deri sion.
Italy took the lead in the
38th minu te through a simple
hea ded goal by Franco
Ca usio from a Paolo Rossi
pass. But they tired after the
interval and Brazil tied the
score on a goal by Neli nho in
the 63rd min ute.
Brazil , fourth-placed in the
1974 Cup, scored the winning
goal in the 71;;t minute with a
volley from Dirceu.

our many high yield savings plans. We have Day of Deposit

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It was a raggeo game

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tlill'-.11

BUERNOS AIRES (UPI )
- Brazil defeated Italy 2·1
Saturda y in a desultory and
lack-luster game to tak e third
place in the World Soccer
Cup.
The Brazilians thus ended
their cup participation
without losing a game, but as
in previous performances,
their display was sporadic at
best. Italy too k fourth place
but compared to the stylish
soccer it showed earlier in the
competiti on, Sat urda y's
displa y had as much appeal
as a plate of cold spaghetti.

EASTBOURNE, England
(UP1 )
Martina
Navratilova upset Chris
Evert S-4 , 4-9, 9-7 in the final
of the $75,000 Eastboume
Women ' s Int ernati onal
Tennis Tournament Saturday
to give herself a massive
psychological boost over the
Wimbledon fa vo rite nnly two

Some pl aces t1ave pr etty gooO c hr c k ~

en . Some off er fa1r roo l beer . Others ,

'

... "

Brazil defeats Italy, 2-1

Financially speaking, our Savings Account customers get all

WITH $1,000

,I

Calisthenics.''
She said her weight lifting program includes all types of
lifts, curls and pres$0s from a variety of positions.
"What doesn 't mean I go straight through them, " she said .
"I may wash dishes between the leg curls and overhead
presses. ''
Mrs. Barrilleaux decided to enter the natiooal competition
after seeing an article in a !Jody-building magazine.
Competition was In three categories, muscle tone,
symmetry and presentation.
"The winner in my division wa s a 17-year-Qld high school
gymnast and the average age of all the .contestants was only
22," Mrs. Barrilleaux said.
"Everyone was understandably nervous," she said when
she returned home. ''I have no trouble talking to a plane full of
passengers and I make friends quite easily, but to be standing
alone under a spotlight and posing for the fir st time is qui te
another matter."
She said she scored best in the muscle tone competition,
but noting her age , said "If there'd been a category for nerve, I
guess I'd have won that easily .
"All in all it was quite a unique experi ence," she said.
"The audience responded quite well toa fem ale contest. "

share of the pie?

OF DEPOSIT

\•11111

BY ORVAL JACKSON
RIVERVIEW , Fla . (UPI ) - Duris Barrilleaux , a well·
proportioned airline stewardess, entered her first Women's
Physique Contest June 17, a national competition at Canton,
Ohio, and finished third among six contestanls in her height
class.
·
Her 36-25-37 hody on a 5{oot.,'i, 115-i)ound frame obviously
Impressed the live women judges.
Not a bad showing for a stewardess in her first
competition, and certainly an astounding showing by a mother
of five and five times a grandmother who will be 47 in August.
Body building is not a new hobby for Mrs. Barrilleaux
(pronounced Barrio).
.
She advocates good health, good habits and good bodies,
and practices what she preaches, as do her husband Sterling,
the children and the grandchildren.
· "Three days a week I train with weights, about an hour
and a half each day ," she said. "Three days a week I work with

Navratilova nips olris Evert

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The best for $2 less!

7-7,000 to see World Cup tilt

Prokity cops

Both sides ha ve players
who can tum the tide of
events with splash es of
brilliance. Mario Kempes, a
long-hair ed, lon g·legged
striker who can split defens es
with his lightning feints, is
the Argentine Holland fears
most.
Ht is a very dangerous
player and will have to be
watched very carefully. We
have made special plans
lor marking him ," said
Happel. ·

Summer league
standings
Standin gs for Middleport.
Pomeroy-Rutlan d Pee Wee.
for week endin g J une 22:

TEAM
Middleport Must ang s
Rutland Reds

WL
8 I
7 3

Dal e C. Warner

6 4
5 4

Rutland Ange ls

M iddleport Cubs

4 6

Pizza Shack

2 7

Powell's

2 7

Next week's games :
Monday, June 26 -

Middl eporl Cubs at Rutland
Reds; Rutland An ge ls at

The role of poli ci ng
Kempes will fall largely on
Rudi Krol, the ice-cool
ca ptain of the Dutch team.
For Holland , midf ield
general Johan Neeskens is
the mainspring behind th e
'' clockw ork orang e , "
creating the changes. lor Rob
Rensenbrink and J ohnn y
Rep, while Arie Haan's 30yard bazooka specials are
guaranteed to keep Argentina
Goa lie Fillol on his toes.
Th e Argentine defense,
marshaled by Skipper Daniel
Passarella, has conceded
only three goa ls aga in st
Holland 's seven . But the
Dutch attack· on all front s,
while the South Americans
rely mainly on Kempes and
Luque , and use their other
men to prop up the
rearguard.
Thirty minutes extra time
will be played if Sunday's
game ends In a draw and if
there is still no result the
replay is scheduled for
Tuesday .

Middl eport
M usla n cs :
Powe l l's at Pizza Shack ;
Bye: Dale C. Wa rner
Wednesday , June 28 Powe ll ' s at Dale C. Warne r .
Thursday ,

June

29

-

Middleport Musla ngs at
Middlefort Cu bs; Rutla nd
Reds a Rutland Ang els; Dale
C Warner at r izza Shack ;
Bye: Powell 's .

M iddleport Bra ves

6 4

Middl eport Ind ian s

6

Harr isonvil le Bobcats

4

0 10

Next week ' s games :
Monday 1 June 26 - Mid ·
dlep ort Ind ians at Ru t land
Dodg ers ; Har riso nv i lle at
M iddl epor t Braves .

Wednesday /

Rutland

June

Dodg ers

Harr ison v ille .
Thursday, June
Mi ddleport Bra ve s
dleport India ns.

28

al

29

at Mid-

r------------------1
MAIL THIS COUPON
I

Hackett Gnnul1ttd Roofing
I 9l7th Avo.
Middleport, tl. I
I Aease send me fur!hor In format ion on I
I Granulated Roofing . It Is understood 1am 1
I 111der no obligation whatsoever .
I

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0

Sidewall

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(Please Ched)

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NAMt.-----------------------1
ADDR.ESS
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will
wc::Ult~

thro ugl1 Aug. 4. Those

ing to take lessons must )
registerbefore the les~on s
begin · at the pool, 992·9968.
Youngsters under five will
nut be accepted for lessons
this year. Adult cla sse~ will
also be offered. Mary Jane
Deeley wi ll be the instr uctor
and all clas~e~ except life
savi ng will be $10. Ltfe sav ing
daos will be $15.

NEW SUMMER HOURS
KINGSBURY HOME SALES
ARE NOW OPEN
9:00 A.M. THRU 9:00 P.M.
MON. THRU SAT.
1:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SUNDAY

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1978 LTD II 4 DR

brake s. au tomat ic tr ans., full
viny l roof , dual pa int str ipes,
opera wi ndo ws , w - s-w tire s,
conven ien ce group, f inger t i p
speed control, air cond it ioning ,
del uxe bu m per grou p, dua l rea r

seat speakers, am radio, T. glass,
del uxe wheel covers, bod y side

mldg s. Stk. No. lll

~::o

NOW ' 6 1 9 0

1978 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

1978 LID II 4 DR

302 eng ine, power steeri ng and

Lig ht blue , 351 eng ine, pow ~ r
steeri ng an d brakes. a~t?m~tiC
transm ission, ai r con d 1f ton 1ng ,
lull vi n yl roof, pa int str ipes, all
vi n y l tr im , W · S· W tires, deluxe
whee l covers , t i n t ed gl ass .
conven ie n ce
gr o up , d el u lCe
bu mper gr oup, am radi o.

Was
\6764

Now 56 2 2 0

4 dr . Town car, V-8 eng i n e. power
steer i n g · and
brakes ,
a ir
cond it ion in g, automat ic l ran s.,
ope r a w i ndow s, head l a m p ,
co n v en ie nc e gr ou p, def r oste r
group, tilt steer ing wheel, speed
control, interval wiper s, town car
opti on , a p pe aran ce
gr ou p .
inter ior tig ht group. power lock

group. SPECIAL THIS WEEK

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
2 DR SEDAN

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
FUTURE

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON

Dark brown • .4 cy l. en~ine , powe r
stee r ing , am r ad io. int er ior
accen t group, dual m irror s. t_r im
ring s and hub cap.

cy l. engi ne. po wer steering ,
front and rea r bum per guard s,
am ra dio , dua l br ight m irrors ,
878x 14 w-s-w t ir-es . S.tk. . No. 446 .

Si l ver . 6 c yl . eng ine, au toma tic
tra n s, power st eer in g and
brakes, air condition ing. ex terior
an d i n t er ior ac cent. l uggag e
ra c k, am radio, tr im r ings and
hub caps. Stk . No. 497.

4

Stk. No . 471
Was
14298

Was
NOW • 4 0 7 0

14602

1978 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON

1978 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON
Medi um blu e, 4 cyl. engi ne,
automat lc tran s., power steeri ng,
W· S-W t ires, luggage ra ck. Stk .

No . 524

~~~4

NOW ' 4 4 0 0

Med iu m chestn ut mel.,

4

cyl.

eng ine, automatic tr ans., power
stee r ing, w-s-w ti r es, luggage
rack. dual sport m irror s. Stk . No.

Was
Sl659

NOW$5290

1978 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON
4 c yl. eng ine , power stee r in g .
whi t eside wa ll tires, roof lug gag e
ra c k . Stk . N o. 644

612
NOW ' 4 2 8 0

~;:4

NOW ' 4 3 8 0

~~:a

NOW ' 4 0 9 0

~~-----------~~-------------+-------------1

1977 FORD COURIER
GREEN RANGER XLT

automat ic t rans .• 4 engine. am fm radio, t inted glass, western

1978 FORD FIESTA

1978 FORD FIESTA

White. 4 cyl. engine, i nter ior

3 dr . hatchba ck. dark red

decor group. heavy duty hand! ing
pkg .. vinyl insert body side
mould ings .

meta lli c. 4 cyl. eng ine, A speed
t rans .• Ghia group , wh ite sid e

sw ing lock mirr ors. rear step

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UP! ) - Seco nd · seeded
J ohn Prok ity of Charleston
won the boys 14 crown In the
Ohio Valley District Tennis
Cbampionships Saturday by
defeating eighth - seeded Kep
Smith of Dayton , Ohio, S-4, 2·
6,~ .
Top-seeded Josh Marwill of
Dayton st opped second seeded Jonathan Kass of
Columbus 6-1 , 6-3 to capture
the boys championship.
Eugene Hagan of Dayton,
took third place by beating
third-seeded Todd Peters of
Cincinnati 6-2, 6-1 .
Ashraf Bedwan of Dayton
defeated Jerry Solomon of ·
Columbus 6-3, 4-li, H in a
battle of unseeded players for
third pla ce in bo~s 12.

lessons

begin July 24 and cunltnue

f!:JM

Mere 1400

Optional 7 foot box, 3 speed

boys crown

swi.nun mg.
Swim ming

FOR MODULAR HOMES
BY AU. AMERICAN

G1ves top perlormance at
all speeds!

for week ending June 22 :

WL
8 2

MIDD LEPORTMrs.
Cherole Burdette, Middleport
Pool manager, has announced tha t the pout will be open
from !2 noon tu 5 p.m.
weekdays and l tu 6 p.m. un
Sat urda ys and Sun days
beginning Munday .
There will be night swim·
ming fr om 7 to 9 p.m. un
Wednesday nights wi th
regular athnission charge or
2!i cents fur those with season
tickets . Plans are also being
made fo r Saturday ad ult

Mercury
1400

Sta ndings for Littl e L eagu e

TEAM
Rul land Dodgers

New Middleport pool
hoQrs are announced

wa ll t ir es, am rad io, moveab le
fron t vent w indows.

bumper , W·S·W t ir es .

Was
149:16

NOW ' 4 5 0 0

~;:4

Was
Now•4300

NOw'$4800

SSI66

'

2 LINCOLN VERSAILLES NOW IN STOCKI

FORD SALES
362 JACKSON PIKE-RT. 160 &amp; 35
ACROSS FROM HOllER MEDICAL CENTER
For a good deal see Tom Sprague, Melvin Utile, GariJ
.Rudolph, Morris Sheets, David Beaver, Pete Somerville,
Nancy Fowler, Sandy Gatewood.
PH. 446-3575

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�G-7-The Sunday Times..S.ntinel,SWJday, June 25, 1978
C.£- The SWlday Times..Sent1nel, Sunday, June 25. 1978

Collins' life full of irony
on a chair so photographers
could get a better shot of him.
Most of Ute other "Nazis"
looked like teen-agers.
But these members of the
National Socialist Party of
America were getting more
attention Utan .ever.
That news conference
marked the cancellation of
Collin 's plan to march his
group into Skokie.
Collin foWlded his own neoNazi party in Ute Marquette
Park area in the early 7Us,
after being kicked out of the
lar ge r, Vir gi nia-based
National So cialist White
People's Party - formerly
the American Nazi Party,
founded by George Lincoln
Rockwell. He was ousted'
when it was discovered his
faUter, Max, is Jewish - a
survivor of the Nazi deaUt
camp at Dachau.
Co ll in
found
some
sympaUty for his dogma in
Ute Marquette Park area, a
white, blue&lt;ollar enclave on
the city's Southwest Side just
a few blocks away from a
predominantly black area .
When black groups started
holding march~ in the park a
few years ago, violence erupled. White residents, fearful
that blacks would ruin their
neighborhoods, clashed wiUt
black demonstrators. Bottles

By ROBERT MACKAY
CHJCAG.O (UPI ) - Frank
Collin's life is fiUed wiUt
irony .
It is ironic that Utis short,
chubby, baldinR man. the
· seH-proclaimed leader of
abo~t 15 radicals who call
themselves Nazis, could
receive so much publicity and
generate so much in!A!raction
by Utreatening to march in
one Chicago suburb.
It is ironic Utat Collin, who
is half Jewish, calls Jews
"howling crea tures " and
Utrea tens to march in the
predominantly Jewish
suburb of Skokie, where
many survivors of Nazi Germany's death camp~ live.
It is ironic Utat a man who
preaches hate and bigotry
has done so much for the
principles of free speech and
asse mbly .
Collin , 33, and his followers
appeared at a news confrence
Thursday wearing their
brown, swastika·bearing
uniforms or Adolf Hitler's
Nazis, and were surrounded
by
reporters
a nd
photographers anxious to get
a picture or to hear Collins'
latest proclarna.tion.
An older member of
Collin's group, a man abo ut
50, strapped a holster and gun
aroWJrl his waist and stood up

and rocks flew.
Collin capitalized on it.
He sought a permit to hold
a rally in Marquette Park but
was told he would need to post
a high liability insurance
bond in case of violence. He
sought a parade permit for
Skokie and was denied
because of three village
ordinances that prohibited
groups who wear military
Wliforms.
With the aid of the
American Civil Liberties :
Unlon and ACLU attorney
David Goldberger, a Jew,
Collin fought both denials in
Ute courts. Using Ute First
Amendment's right to free
speech and assembly as their
main argument, the ACLU
and Collin won both cases,
Utough Ute ACLU lost many
Jewish
members and
contributors in Ute process.
The Supreme Court ruled
Ute Skokie ordinances were
unconstitutional, and a
federal judge in Chicago
ruled the Chicago Park
District's bond requirement
was a ruse to prevent
controversial groups from
assembling in the city's
parks. Other "controversial"
groups will benefit from Utose
decisions, including those
Collin says he hates.
HWldreds of thousands of

FREE RIDES - The Falls City Hot Air Balloon,
tethered at the Me1gs football Field in Pomeroy, offered
free n des after friday' s Big Bend Regatta Parade. The
balloon , whi ch won the 1977 Kentucky Derby Festival
Balloon Ra ce, was fu rnished through the courtesy of Bob
Marchi .

people all over the world read
about the planned Skokie
march ,
about
Skokie
resident,s who recalled the
Nazi deaUt camps. Every
kind of group, from the
militant Jewish Defense
League to gay rights
orRanizations, planned to
attend
a
co unterdemonstration in Skokie. It
appeared there would be
violence.
But after winning the Mar-

Agriculture and
•

r----------------~--------·
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
Will No! Interfere with Present Employment
No Selling Required to Start
We are selecting distributors for fast moving products
in Gallipolis.Pomoroy.Middleport ond surroundintl
counties. These products publicized In newspopers,
TV, magazines, etc.

Twenty.five year old company will place products In
grocery

d~partment,

I
I
I
1
1

I
I

drug stores, super markets, gift

shops, etc. Distributor will service these retail outlets
monthly, requiring approximately 20 hours spore lime
per month.
CPA reports $99.00 and up profit per day on compony
operations. Figure the incom, you desire per month.
Each location requires 5399.00 investment. You may
have 15, 20 or 25 locations to start. Company secures
locations and installs products for you.
This is a bonafide offer and if you are not sincere about
owning your own business, or do not meet the above
financial requ irements, let's not waste each others
time.

L

PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW, CALL
Mr. Bill Higgins, Huntington. WV , 304-529·1 331
Todaythru Wednesday - 9 A.M. to9 P.M.
S.E.I., Cumming, Ga . (Near Atlanta)

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

SALE DAYS
JUNE 26th

THRU
JULY 8th

Grain
results

County agent s ·corner

beetles - on seeded and set sun. Part the grass. If chinch
BY JOHN C. RICE
COLUMBUS t UP!) - The
POMEROY - High tern- cukes and melons ; seed bugs are present, the light
average cash grain prices peratures over the last few maggots - protect beans, will excite them and they will
(per bushel) paid to fijrmers days with less rainfall have corn , cucurbits, peas wiUt a move to a darker area and
c
by grain elevators in the ushered us into the summer see d treatment: onioq you will be able to see them .
To sample for sod webBY
STEPHEN
HIBINGER
there
will
be
an
appraisal
By Bryson R. t Bud) Carter
principal marketing areas of in most of Ohio. Vegetable ma gnet~first brood flies will
District Conservationist
eva luation and consolidation. Ohid-after the markets closed · insect activity will increase peak soon; Eu ropea n corn worms, take your two index
Gallia County Extension Agent
SoU Coos. Service
Next, a program for resource Friday until the markets rapidly under these ideal borer - moth activity; and fingers and open a trough a
GALLIPOLIS - On July 10 conservation
will
be close Monday :
foot or so long. Examine the
conditions , says William F. ca rrot beetle - on celery.
BY BRYSON R. CARTER
For
the
latest
control
opened area for worms . If
~• 8 p.m. in the meeting room developed.
North eas t Ohio: No. 2 Lyon ,
Extension
EnExtension Agent, Agriculture
in the Community Mental
Once the national program wheat $2.1!8; No. 2 shelled tomologist at The Ohio State recommendations, consult you find worms in half or
Gallla County
Health Center, there will be a is developed, each ;tate will corn $2.30; No. 2 oats $1.44 ; University.
the County Extension Office more of places checked, treat
GALLIPOLIS - There are three Extension educational public meeting to discuss the implement the program in a No . 1 soybeans $6.53.
Better check the garden and req\!l!st the 1978 bulletin the lawn. Try again in a week
activities C(llling up in the next few weeks for Gallia County Resources Conservation Act way that is consistent with
Northwest Ohio : No . 2 now, he said, and treat if" 459 entitled "Vegetable In- if you fail to find any the first
national policy, but tailored wheat $2.93; No. 2 shelled necessa ry, for : imported sect and Disease Control for time .
farm families. One of these is the Corn-Herbicide Trial of 1977.
Meeting at Ute John Payne farm near Vinton, this coming
That evening we will allow to its individual needs.
For chinch bugs , use Sevin,
corn $2.32 ; No. 2 oats $1.42 ; cabbage worm - egg· laying; Commercial Growers."
every person to voice his or
Hopefully, many people No . I soybeans $6.63.
CHINCH
BUGS,
diazinon,
Spectracide, ethion ,
Monday evening, June 26 at 7:30p.m.
ca bbage flea beetles - set
Aspon,
Dursban,
or Trithion.
The meeting will be held just off State Ratite 325, souUt of her opinion on the Natural will attend the meeting on
SOD
WEBWORMS
Central Ohio: No . 2 wheat and seed crucifers; cabbage
For
sod
webworms,
use
Remember
what
the
chinch
Vinton oo the Roy Holcomb Road.
.
Resource problems of Gallia July 10.
$2.97; No. 2 shelled corn root maggot - first brood
During the meeting, visitors will be able to view results of County. From these local
Those who wish to com- $2.35; No.2 oats $1.60; No. 1. near peak; striped cucumber bugs and sod webworms did Sevin, Diazinon, Spectracide,
several com weed spray trials that we are conducting this meetings, each state will ment , but cannot attend soybeans $6.56.
to lawns last year1 Well, Dy lox , Bay gon , Dursban,
year . John Underwood, our Area Extension Agronomist and consolidat e the reports and a should use the questionnaire
they'll be back this year, but ethion or Aspon. Follow label
West Central Ohio : No. 2
sales representatives of various chemical companies along national policy will be printed below.
just how severe is hard to directions.
wheat $2.96; No. 2 shelled
This questionnaire is very corn $2.40 ; No. 2 oats $i.56;
SPRAY CHERRIES TO
with the Payne family will be Utere to discuss weed control in developed from these comdetermine this early.
ments. Long-range and short- broad and general - please No. I soybeans $6.60.
WARD OFF BIRDS
The weather during May
'corn.
term
USDA
conservation
feel
free
to
attach
specific
Birds
start to eat cherries
The secood activity will be the 1978 Southeastern Ohio
was anything but normal Southwest Ohio : No. 2
just
as
they
begin to ripen .
programs
will
reflect
the
answers.
Return
them
to:
wet
and
cold,
resulting
in
a
Dairy Field Day which will be held in Lawrence County on
wheat $2.98; No . 2 shelled
public
opinions,
wants
,
and
.•
Soil
Conservation
Service,
529
And
about
the
only thing one
Tuesday·, June 'J:1 . The host farms for the Field Day will be two
slow spring. Normally , May
corn $2 .39; No. 2 oats $1 .50;
needs.
J
ackson
Pike,
Gallipolis,
ha
s
had
to
protect the
is
a
very
active
month
for
different farms - the Dr. and Mrs. John Pratt farm at South
No. I soybeans $6.60.
cherri
es
from
the birds is
Through the Hesource Ohio.
insects.
But
don
't
let
down
Point and the farm of Mr. and Mrs. J. Schneider of
Trend : No. 2 wheat,
cover
the tree.
netting
to
Conservation
Act
pro
cess,
Comment
on
one
or
all
of
your
guard.
Warm
(hot)
Chesapeake, Ohio . Activities will start at Ute Pratt farm on
Wlchanged; No. 2 shelled
Now , there is a chemical
weather ha s those pe sts
Rankins Creek Road at 10:30 a.m. The farm is one mile south initially the natural resources these items or list any item corn, un changed ; No. 2 oats,
will be appraised . This ap- that is not included below ..
moving in now in increasing one can spray on the cherries
of Ute Symmes Creek bridge at Getaway, Ohio.
un changed ; No. I soybeans,
GAL.LIPOLIS - Tuesday·, number s.
at the time they start to ripen
Your comments Will sharply lower.
This field day will be similar to tbe one we had at the praisa l will consider the
July 18 marks the date for the
Entomolog ist
Hichard that will repel birds. It is
Charles Lewis farm in Mason County last year. All dairymen quality and quantity, the become a part of a . per1978 4-H "Speak for Safety" Miller suggests that you treat Mesurol 75 per cent wettable
capabilities and limitations, manent record kept on hie at
in Gallia CoWlty are encouraged and welcome to attend .
Contest.
The contest will take now for both chinch bugs and powder, registered as a bird
'!'he third rna lor event coming up will be our Annual Beef the changes in condition or this office.
pla
ce
at
7:30 p.m. in the sod webworms in central repellent on cherries . Apply
Please take a few seconds
Cattle - 4-H Twilight Field Day to be held at Ute Marion stat us and alternatives
P
r
o
du
c
tion
C r edit Ohio. Second generation two and one-third to five and
BY
ADA
KEELS
Caldwell farm on Thursday evening, July 6. Plans have not conservation measures of to comment. We need your
Associatio
n
Building
on treatment will be at the one-third pounds · per acre
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Glen
Elkins,
been finalized for Utis event but it will be held in the evening, these resources. The public opinion.
Route
7
in
Gallipolis.
local,
visited
their
uncle
and
This form must be signed to
normal time - August 10 to with a conventional spray as
again, at Ute Caldwell farm south of Northup, Ohio, on Lincoln meeting is a factor in this
The contest is open to any 4· 211.
aunt
,
Dr.
Chester
Pryor
and
a fuli coverage spray as
appraisa
l.
be
valid.
Pike. Two of Ute major items that we will be discussing Utis
wife over weekend and at- H member, with trophies
How to Check for These cherries begin to ripen. Do
After the initio! appreisa l.
year concern farm census and alternatives for fence
tended the 25th silver wed- being awarded for first and Pests - select at lea st three not apply more than a total of
construction.
ding
anniversary of Dr. C. second pla ces in both a Junior places to take samples. If three times per season or
So, take some time out this next couple weeks from your
TO
WHAT
EXTENT?
Pryor
and wife Saturday Division (ages 13 • nd there are some brown pat- within seven days of harvest.
WHAT ARE YOUR CONCERNS?
busy schedules to attend one or more of Utese Extension
you nger) and a Senior ches of grass, take samples in Homeowners with one or two
Loss of g ood farmland
evening.
activities. We will be glad to have you visit with us.
Dewy Keels received word Division (ages 14 and older). the transition area between trees may use three-four
From what causes
from his sister, Mrs. Ger- Winn ers will advance to green and brown . Get down tablespoons per gallon ol
trude
McDani el
of com petit ion in the Area on your hands and knees water , if you are able to fin d
Flooding
Chillicothe. She see ms to be "Speak for Safety" Contest facing the direction of the it in small containers.
and will be recognized at the
Improper land use
improving.
Rev. M. Cuffie fil led his County Achievement Night in
Soil eros ion
appointment at New Hope September.
From w hat ca uses
Topics can include any
church Sunday morning. His
area
which deals with safety
fa
mil
y
accompanied
him.
Waler quality and pollution
The ch urch folks were glad to. and need to be only three to
From what causes
BY DIANA S. EBERTS
over the area and allowing
see him ba ck. The winter was fi ve minutes in length. This is
Other wildlife habitat
Extension Agent,
the liquid to be absorbed.
so bad we did not have man y an excellent opportunity for
Woodland
any 4-H'34!' To register for
Home Economics
This will present the liquid
services.
Beauty or natura l areas
the competition, contact the
Meigs County
from being forced into the
Mrs.
M
ary
Howard
visited
Histori cal site s
POMEROY - Spills on carpet fibers or spreading
her brother, John Hutcheson, Gall ia Co unty Ext ension
NAME :
carpeting are a hazard of over a large r area .
who is a patient in Holzer Office, 446-4612, ext. 32, prior DEUTZ AIR·COOLED DIESEL TRACTOR
living. No matter how careful
As the towel becomes wet,
Medical Center. He is better to July 14.
Return t o: Soil Conservation Serv ice
AND DEUTZ·FAHR TURBO MOWER
a person may be, spills still use dry towels and press the
at
this writing.
529 Jackson Pike Rm . JOBC
occur on both wall·to-wall towels against the pile to
Mrs. Minnie Ga rn s of
Gal li polis, Ohio 45631
force out more of the liquid. A
carpet and rugs .
Providence and sister , Mrs.
"Know what action to take method of forcing out much of
Bessie Smith of Bidwell Sunday .
when i!Omelhlng Is spilled on the liquid is by removi ng the
visited an old friend, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Payne
ca rpeting, " says Judith shoes and stepping on the Lay of the land
Daisy Ross Sunday af· of Mt. Carmel church at
Wessel, Extension home towels. The more liquid that
ternoon.
Bidwell attended services at
management and equipment is removed will mean the less
Mrs. Viola Elkins and Mrs. our church Sunday morning.
specialist at The Ohio State which will have to be
Lewis Elkins of J ac kson The other members attended
removed by some other
University.
visited the former's son, Glen Sunday School co nvention at
Most spots can be removed means, or th e less to produce
Elkins Tuesday evening. Mr. Ironton, Ohio.
by taking the proper at1ion a permanent stain .
Lewis Elkins' wife was ta ken
Hev. Cuffle of Ironton filled
immediately . However, some
All substances which are
to.Holzer Medical Center with his appointment Su nday
carpeting can be dyed and spilled are not liquids. Some
a heart attack. She is doing morning to a nice crowd. His
some dyes used in beverages, of them will be solids, semiwife and daugh ter s acBY JOliN COOPER
1931. He said that most good.
foods and medicines may lllll ids or syrupy . It will
Mrs.
Mary
Howard,
loca
l,
companied
him .
Soli Cons. Service
springs dried up, however he
actually dye the fiber . The depend upon what the so il is
Mrs. Mary Howard visited With this tea m on your
PT. PLEASANT - The said there were a few good visited her brother, John
longer these types of spills as to how it should be spring development has been
springs scattered around to · Hutcheson, who is a patient in her brother , John Hut cheson, farm you ca n cut crops
are allowed to remain on removed. In most cases a compl eted on the Ea rl Keefer ge t water for themselves as Holzer Medical Center.
who is a patient at Holzer we t or dry, five to seve n acres per
carpeting , the more diffi cult vacuum cleaner is aU that is
Mrs.
Murle
Howard
,
loca
l,
Medical
Center fo r pa st
farm on Sa ndhill Road .
well as for,livestock.
they will be to remove.
needed. However , if the solid
was on the electi on board several weeks. He expects to hour - even more with the la rger model. Your airThis was ·done by means of
When a staining substance is very small particles, some a catch basin bei ng placed in
go to his home at Corinth cooled Deu tz tractor will give you maxim um acres
We were on the Charles Tuesday.
is spilled on carpeting, the may become entrapped in the the spring and a concrete
Dewy Keel s received word soon.
pe r gallon . Minimum down time . Your Deutz-Fahr
Gray place near New Haven
fibers swell and the stain gets fibers and complete remova l wall installed below the catch to help him plan the use of his that an old friend he formerly
Mrs. Edna Cooper has been Turbo Mower cuts smoot hly witho ut plugging. Ask
inside th e fib ers, whi ch will not be possible with a basin in order to insure that
land and management of it worked with , Lem Craddol ph ill with a sprin g cold .
fo r fi eld demonstration
makes it more difficult to vacuum alone .
Deacon Robert Cooper
the seepage water wou ld mostly from a wildlife stand- of Blackfi&gt;rk, Ohio wa s in the
A large portion of most enter the catch b&lt;lsin.
remove . If immediate action
point. Mr. Gray and his son hospital in Oak Hill a few visited Deacon Harold Payne
is taken to remove the sub- semi-solids and syrupy spills
Aconcrete watering trough are both very much in· days but is back home and recently.
stance before the fiber s have can be picked ~p with a round was constructed about 50 feet
Mr s.
Mary
Howard
terested in developmeqt of was able to attend church
a chance to swell, a stain may spoon . When performing this below the spring and the pipe the land. Wildlife and their services at Union church rece ived word from her
DIKUTZ
task, tak e care not to cut or used to carry the water from
not res ult.
own recre ational use were Sunday morning. Everyone da ughter, Mrs. Maria nna
FAHR
The first step in preventing damage the ca rpet yams or
Pomeroy, 0.
Spring Ave.
the catch basin to the trough. the chief considerations. We was glad to see him at Morgan who lives at Youngsa permanent stain is to ab- fiber s. If the semi-solid is The spring appeared to be an pointed out severa l things in church.
town , Oh io stating they are
sorb as much of the liquid muc which has been tracked
Nora McDaniel of Berlin, fair at Utis writing.
extremely good vein of water th ei r wood land that they
spill as possible. Any clean in on shoes, after the excess is and th ere should be no
Ohio
called on her aunt.
should do and some that they
white absorbent material can scraped off it is usually better qu estion but that it will should not do. Th e woodland Daisy Ross recently.
be em ployed. Facial tissues, to allow the remainder to dry provide adequate water for behind their house consists
J ess McDaniel of Oak Hill
toilet tissues, paper towels, and then remove it with the livestock grazing in the field chi efly of sugar maple , visited his aunt, Daisy Ross,
tea towels and bath towels vac uum . Some additional
in which it was installed. The bu ckeye and elm trees with a
can be used. Remove the first remova l procesur es are work crew of the Western Soil few oak mixed in. There are
portions by placing the towels normally applied.
11 11111111111111111111111111111111
Conservation District did the many grapevines grow ing in
installation.
some of the trees.
Mrs. Keefer was prsent
We point ed out that
when the concrete was being removing some of the elm
poured into the tro ugh forms would 'be desirable and that a
and she sai d, "We've been few of the buckeye could be
THE HARRISONVILLE 4- family picnic at Lake Hope wanting to get this done for removed and possibly plant a
H Girls Honor 'Club met JWJe will be planned at the next years. I'm real glad we are few pine in the openings that Don ' t take your farm
chemicals for granted. You
16, at the Presbytieran meeting. - Laura Smith, finally getting it completed ." would be made.
can
get into trouble if you
Mr.
Keefer
plans
to
build
a
Church with 10 members and reporter.
do.
Many
cases of insecticide
pond
in
another
pasture
field
one advisor in attendance.
poisioning often is passed off
THE
CHESTER
CHAMPS
to
provide
water
in
that
area
.
The club members discussed
as a "bad case of nerves "
some
money
making 4-H Club met June 13 at the
during planting, so take
Plans are progressing by
projects. For the project John and David Edwards
care. Don Kuhlman , ex·
lesson, Ute members made residence with six members several landowners to install
tension en tomologist at the
ca rmel crunch, cookies, and one advisor in at- subsurface drainage during
University of Illinois, says
prolonged handling of toxic
biscuits, and prepared a tendance. The project lesson the coming visit of the ditPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va. products over a 15·20 day
ch icken meal. Flower was a hike. The members ching machine. '!'he ditcher is
projects were also discussed. collected and named leaves. expected to start in Mason (UP!) - Four ponds at Ute planting period could
The next meeting wlll be held Refreshments were seved by County about July I. Land- McClintic Wildlife Station produce blurred visio n,
headaches, nausea, chest
In ApprecU.ti.on to DBirymen, Central Soya Offers
June 27, at the Presbytlcran Unda and Becky Edwards. - owners who are making plans near Point Pleasant have been constriction
, and possible
Kevin
Flck,
reporter
.
are
Francis
Stevens.
Dale
Church . ...: Becky Ward,
closed to fishing and all other death. Insecticides as a
Nibert, Roy Yauger, Mason
reporter .
These Dairy Month SpecU.ls . ..
THE MER RY MAKERS 4· County Farm Museum, and recreational activities until group are more potent than
further notice, the Depart- herbicide s. Here are a few
H
Club
met
June
17
at
the
Edwin
Rayburn.
James
0
.
THE COUNTRY Chicks 4-H
ment of Natural Resource! sa fety procedures to cut
Club met June 14, at the Rock Brenda Bentz residence with Plants is also planning to said Friday.
down the risks in using in·
Springs Church with 12 seven members and two install a drainage system, but
E.
Can
tner,
Wildlife
secticides,
pesticides, and
Dan
herbicides: Stay upwind
members and one advisor In advisors. The club discussed he will dig his ditch with a
attendance . Brenda Chap· plans for a float for the backhoe. Surveys have been resources chief, said the ponds when mixing or pouring pes·
plear was chosen to represent Regatta parade, and that made for part of these land· provide a good habitat for ticides; Avoid in hal ing
the club on the fashion team. items for the auction are owners and surveys will be waterfowl and must be protec- fumes or dust ; Wear long·
AND
slheeved s hirtswwhen handblib.ng
The next meeting wlll be held need ed. Demonstrations made on the others in the ted.
1
" Duetoalimitedquantltyof c emlca s;
ear ru er
June 28, at the Rock Springs were given by Brenda Bentz near future .
Ut gloves while mixing or
on
house
plants
and
by
Robyn
Church. - Kim Eblin,
good waterfowl habitat in e pouring; Wear unvented
Pitzer on creative arts .
During the time that Roger state, all available habitat for goggles and other protective
reporter.
Refreshments were served Powell, district technician, these birds must be In- clothing as suggested by the
by
Brenda Bentz. - Angie wu sur veyi ng on the tensively managed;'' Cantner pesticide label; Avoid slollTHE MIXED MINDS 4-H
Spencer,
reporter.
Rayburn !ann. Mr. Rayburn sald. "Since ponds one, two, 'ping or over-filling.
Club met June IS, at the Blll
commented
about 8everal three and 20 are eltceUent
Anderson residence with
thint;s.
He
said
that in 1930 waterfowl resting
seven members and three
and
SHAKES
ISLAND
that
Oldtown
Creek
dried up brteding areas, harassment
advlaors in attendance. The
HIJ.O, Hawaii (UPI) - A along his farm and that the
club decided to paint the
sharp
earthquake shook the drou ght was extremely has to be kept ata mlnlmwn."
Pomeroy Elementary
Cantner safd "only official
Sprint Avo.
playground equipment on entire island of 'Hawall severe. He said that It did not
I
U
Ill
ill
be
l'~fllti'OV Ohio
I
June 29. Refreshments were Friday but caused no damage rain any great amount from ~~:~~l:tbe~
"w
11111111111111::1!1111:: 1!11111111111111
or
injuries.
March
,
1930
to
February,
~~erved by BUI Anderson. A

our commumty

quette Park court decisioo,
Collin amounced he had only
threatened to march In
Skokie to obtain his right to
free speech in his own
neighborhood park.
At his news conference, he
dramatically amoWlced that
his small, ragtag band of
followers would not march in
Skokie but would rally July 9
in Marquette Park.
.
At least one black group
plans to confront him Utere.

RCA topic of
July 10 event

;

.

Contest

slated

July 18

New Hope

Spills on carpeting

are hazard of living

PAINT
BRUSHES

20% OFF

·sPRAY

ENAMEL

$1.48 CAN
1 GAL BUCKET

sg!J!I

SALE

----------lATEX S£MI GLOSS

Project completed

lg group o
richly grained

'•

. 2· GIL BUCK£T

ENAMEL PAINT

on Earl Keefer farm

finishes.

PANELING
WHITE AND
COLORS

s-r

wESitn C£DAR

Gel.

Sale

'6.99

CHMTIQUE-00
SAU '5.53
MRS. 0 . 0. MciNTYRE once was a te.!cher in
Gallipolis. She is p1ctured here 111 a photograph made
more Ulan 70 years ago as she stood with her kindergarten
class. In Ute rear w1Ut her is Helen Mauck, who became
the fir st wife of John Galbreath, and the chapel at Ohio
University is named for her. Stairstepped 1n height from
the lef t in the front are Lucy V. Bovie, Kathryn
Mullineaux, Nelle Shaw, and Joseph ine Mullineaux .
Maybelle Hope Small married 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Feb. IB,
t908. She sa1d that she was a kindergarten teacher before

TOOLS

IlL HAND
TOOlS

Released From Hosplta l
RANGOH. Ma ine 1UP! I CINCINNATI ! UPI I - Cm- A record brea king field 1s an·
cmna ti Reds catcher Johnn) tic1pated for the fourt h
Bench was released from an nu al
Paul
Bunyan
Chmt Hospi tal friday and Marathon bemg held at the
headed to Los Angeles to join University of Mame at Orono
h1s teammates.
. Ju ly 15.
He has be€n hosplllllized
Marathon director Richa rd
mu st of the week fo r McCralh said by frida y 140
•reament of a lower ba ck out -o f-state ra ce rs
. .tra in.
inclu di ng 1976 winn er
Be nch, who h&lt;1sn 't been Wilham Hine of Boston - had
·•ble to start a game since registered fo r the contest and
~ ay 27 because of his bad
it looked lik e this year 's fi eld
hack, isn'l ex pe cted to play will easily top Ute previous
for severa l clays unWl he record of 294 runners who
regams his stre n~th .
signed up last year.

Tfle OHE Rf.O. l N M EN T AMU S( ~ f; NT

CO

IJPESE NT S

TAHOE

GUmR
SPECJAI.

41 ~

REO BRICK

GYPSUM

:::':I

DRD

0

.

AI~Wwllw

3/B"X4X8

SJ.25

i)

I

·Fiberglass
ltsulatiol

''

SHEET

%"X4X8

4" FULL THICK
15" &amp; 23" WIDM

SJ.4Q
Sheet

Special

. 4"ll0 FT.

SOliD &amp;
PERFORATED

'2.49
Saturday, 7:30 am to noon

THURSDAY JULY 13 8:00PM
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
FESTIVAl k.AfiNG $8 ifJ _IMIIHJt,QW!J JCI
Pl { (Jijl f1 ,f' PviCr [Hilolf ,f
C,Vl( f!~'lH&amp;Ai [/li M·.' ~. I'

ORDER BY MAIL NOW

17 OLIVI ST.

FWAI
Y01Md
Hnl

GALLIPOliS, OHIO

HUNTINGTON CIVIC CENTER

JUNE IS

DAIRY MONTH ,

WIVES FOR THEIR HARD WORK IN PRODUCING

NATURE'S MOST PERFECT FOOD

MILK

•1.00 oH on each bag of
K·Aff·~ milk replacer

Mon.-fri. 7:30 am to 5 pm

· CARTER AND EVANS INC.
Building Supplies

FULTON·TlKlMPSON
TRACTOR SALES

CENTRAL SOYA SALUTES AREA DAIRYMEN AND THEIR

McClintic

DRAIN
PIPE

PEA

aarl·
lacls

Meigs 4-H Club News

Four PondsClosed At

SALE
SPECIAL GUF STS

A

BRANDY BIRCH
SALE 15o5.3

AWM

20% 0 "

she was married.

IRON

WHITE

Happy Pair

·..

•1.00 oH on Anchor or Gilt
Edge Dalri-Fiy-Sols

FULTON-OOMPSON
TRM:lOR SALES

:re::.

'

•

CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc.
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

�G-7-The Sunday Times..S.ntinel,SWJday, June 25, 1978
C.£- The SWlday Times..Sent1nel, Sunday, June 25. 1978

Collins' life full of irony
on a chair so photographers
could get a better shot of him.
Most of Ute other "Nazis"
looked like teen-agers.
But these members of the
National Socialist Party of
America were getting more
attention Utan .ever.
That news conference
marked the cancellation of
Collin 's plan to march his
group into Skokie.
Collin foWlded his own neoNazi party in Ute Marquette
Park area in the early 7Us,
after being kicked out of the
lar ge r, Vir gi nia-based
National So cialist White
People's Party - formerly
the American Nazi Party,
founded by George Lincoln
Rockwell. He was ousted'
when it was discovered his
faUter, Max, is Jewish - a
survivor of the Nazi deaUt
camp at Dachau.
Co ll in
found
some
sympaUty for his dogma in
Ute Marquette Park area, a
white, blue&lt;ollar enclave on
the city's Southwest Side just
a few blocks away from a
predominantly black area .
When black groups started
holding march~ in the park a
few years ago, violence erupled. White residents, fearful
that blacks would ruin their
neighborhoods, clashed wiUt
black demonstrators. Bottles

By ROBERT MACKAY
CHJCAG.O (UPI ) - Frank
Collin's life is fiUed wiUt
irony .
It is ironic that Utis short,
chubby, baldinR man. the
· seH-proclaimed leader of
abo~t 15 radicals who call
themselves Nazis, could
receive so much publicity and
generate so much in!A!raction
by Utreatening to march in
one Chicago suburb.
It is ironic Utat Collin, who
is half Jewish, calls Jews
"howling crea tures " and
Utrea tens to march in the
predominantly Jewish
suburb of Skokie, where
many survivors of Nazi Germany's death camp~ live.
It is ironic Utat a man who
preaches hate and bigotry
has done so much for the
principles of free speech and
asse mbly .
Collin , 33, and his followers
appeared at a news confrence
Thursday wearing their
brown, swastika·bearing
uniforms or Adolf Hitler's
Nazis, and were surrounded
by
reporters
a nd
photographers anxious to get
a picture or to hear Collins'
latest proclarna.tion.
An older member of
Collin's group, a man abo ut
50, strapped a holster and gun
aroWJrl his waist and stood up

and rocks flew.
Collin capitalized on it.
He sought a permit to hold
a rally in Marquette Park but
was told he would need to post
a high liability insurance
bond in case of violence. He
sought a parade permit for
Skokie and was denied
because of three village
ordinances that prohibited
groups who wear military
Wliforms.
With the aid of the
American Civil Liberties :
Unlon and ACLU attorney
David Goldberger, a Jew,
Collin fought both denials in
Ute courts. Using Ute First
Amendment's right to free
speech and assembly as their
main argument, the ACLU
and Collin won both cases,
Utough Ute ACLU lost many
Jewish
members and
contributors in Ute process.
The Supreme Court ruled
Ute Skokie ordinances were
unconstitutional, and a
federal judge in Chicago
ruled the Chicago Park
District's bond requirement
was a ruse to prevent
controversial groups from
assembling in the city's
parks. Other "controversial"
groups will benefit from Utose
decisions, including those
Collin says he hates.
HWldreds of thousands of

FREE RIDES - The Falls City Hot Air Balloon,
tethered at the Me1gs football Field in Pomeroy, offered
free n des after friday' s Big Bend Regatta Parade. The
balloon , whi ch won the 1977 Kentucky Derby Festival
Balloon Ra ce, was fu rnished through the courtesy of Bob
Marchi .

people all over the world read
about the planned Skokie
march ,
about
Skokie
resident,s who recalled the
Nazi deaUt camps. Every
kind of group, from the
militant Jewish Defense
League to gay rights
orRanizations, planned to
attend
a
co unterdemonstration in Skokie. It
appeared there would be
violence.
But after winning the Mar-

Agriculture and
•

r----------------~--------·
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
Will No! Interfere with Present Employment
No Selling Required to Start
We are selecting distributors for fast moving products
in Gallipolis.Pomoroy.Middleport ond surroundintl
counties. These products publicized In newspopers,
TV, magazines, etc.

Twenty.five year old company will place products In
grocery

d~partment,

I
I
I
1
1

I
I

drug stores, super markets, gift

shops, etc. Distributor will service these retail outlets
monthly, requiring approximately 20 hours spore lime
per month.
CPA reports $99.00 and up profit per day on compony
operations. Figure the incom, you desire per month.
Each location requires 5399.00 investment. You may
have 15, 20 or 25 locations to start. Company secures
locations and installs products for you.
This is a bonafide offer and if you are not sincere about
owning your own business, or do not meet the above
financial requ irements, let's not waste each others
time.

L

PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW, CALL
Mr. Bill Higgins, Huntington. WV , 304-529·1 331
Todaythru Wednesday - 9 A.M. to9 P.M.
S.E.I., Cumming, Ga . (Near Atlanta)

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

SALE DAYS
JUNE 26th

THRU
JULY 8th

Grain
results

County agent s ·corner

beetles - on seeded and set sun. Part the grass. If chinch
BY JOHN C. RICE
COLUMBUS t UP!) - The
POMEROY - High tern- cukes and melons ; seed bugs are present, the light
average cash grain prices peratures over the last few maggots - protect beans, will excite them and they will
(per bushel) paid to fijrmers days with less rainfall have corn , cucurbits, peas wiUt a move to a darker area and
c
by grain elevators in the ushered us into the summer see d treatment: onioq you will be able to see them .
To sample for sod webBY
STEPHEN
HIBINGER
there
will
be
an
appraisal
By Bryson R. t Bud) Carter
principal marketing areas of in most of Ohio. Vegetable ma gnet~first brood flies will
District Conservationist
eva luation and consolidation. Ohid-after the markets closed · insect activity will increase peak soon; Eu ropea n corn worms, take your two index
Gallia County Extension Agent
SoU Coos. Service
Next, a program for resource Friday until the markets rapidly under these ideal borer - moth activity; and fingers and open a trough a
GALLIPOLIS - On July 10 conservation
will
be close Monday :
foot or so long. Examine the
conditions , says William F. ca rrot beetle - on celery.
BY BRYSON R. CARTER
For
the
latest
control
opened area for worms . If
~• 8 p.m. in the meeting room developed.
North eas t Ohio: No. 2 Lyon ,
Extension
EnExtension Agent, Agriculture
in the Community Mental
Once the national program wheat $2.1!8; No. 2 shelled tomologist at The Ohio State recommendations, consult you find worms in half or
Gallla County
Health Center, there will be a is developed, each ;tate will corn $2.30; No. 2 oats $1.44 ; University.
the County Extension Office more of places checked, treat
GALLIPOLIS - There are three Extension educational public meeting to discuss the implement the program in a No . 1 soybeans $6.53.
Better check the garden and req\!l!st the 1978 bulletin the lawn. Try again in a week
activities C(llling up in the next few weeks for Gallia County Resources Conservation Act way that is consistent with
Northwest Ohio : No . 2 now, he said, and treat if" 459 entitled "Vegetable In- if you fail to find any the first
national policy, but tailored wheat $2.93; No. 2 shelled necessa ry, for : imported sect and Disease Control for time .
farm families. One of these is the Corn-Herbicide Trial of 1977.
Meeting at Ute John Payne farm near Vinton, this coming
That evening we will allow to its individual needs.
For chinch bugs , use Sevin,
corn $2.32 ; No. 2 oats $1.42 ; cabbage worm - egg· laying; Commercial Growers."
every person to voice his or
Hopefully, many people No . I soybeans $6.63.
CHINCH
BUGS,
diazinon,
Spectracide, ethion ,
Monday evening, June 26 at 7:30p.m.
ca bbage flea beetles - set
Aspon,
Dursban,
or Trithion.
The meeting will be held just off State Ratite 325, souUt of her opinion on the Natural will attend the meeting on
SOD
WEBWORMS
Central Ohio: No . 2 wheat and seed crucifers; cabbage
For
sod
webworms,
use
Remember
what
the
chinch
Vinton oo the Roy Holcomb Road.
.
Resource problems of Gallia July 10.
$2.97; No. 2 shelled corn root maggot - first brood
During the meeting, visitors will be able to view results of County. From these local
Those who wish to com- $2.35; No.2 oats $1.60; No. 1. near peak; striped cucumber bugs and sod webworms did Sevin, Diazinon, Spectracide,
several com weed spray trials that we are conducting this meetings, each state will ment , but cannot attend soybeans $6.56.
to lawns last year1 Well, Dy lox , Bay gon , Dursban,
year . John Underwood, our Area Extension Agronomist and consolidat e the reports and a should use the questionnaire
they'll be back this year, but ethion or Aspon. Follow label
West Central Ohio : No. 2
sales representatives of various chemical companies along national policy will be printed below.
just how severe is hard to directions.
wheat $2.96; No. 2 shelled
This questionnaire is very corn $2.40 ; No. 2 oats $i.56;
SPRAY CHERRIES TO
with the Payne family will be Utere to discuss weed control in developed from these comdetermine this early.
ments. Long-range and short- broad and general - please No. I soybeans $6.60.
WARD OFF BIRDS
The weather during May
'corn.
term
USDA
conservation
feel
free
to
attach
specific
Birds
start to eat cherries
The secood activity will be the 1978 Southeastern Ohio
was anything but normal Southwest Ohio : No. 2
just
as
they
begin to ripen .
programs
will
reflect
the
answers.
Return
them
to:
wet
and
cold,
resulting
in
a
Dairy Field Day which will be held in Lawrence County on
wheat $2.98; No . 2 shelled
public
opinions,
wants
,
and
.•
Soil
Conservation
Service,
529
And
about
the
only thing one
Tuesday·, June 'J:1 . The host farms for the Field Day will be two
slow spring. Normally , May
corn $2 .39; No. 2 oats $1 .50;
needs.
J
ackson
Pike,
Gallipolis,
ha
s
had
to
protect the
is
a
very
active
month
for
different farms - the Dr. and Mrs. John Pratt farm at South
No. I soybeans $6.60.
cherri
es
from
the birds is
Through the Hesource Ohio.
insects.
But
don
't
let
down
Point and the farm of Mr. and Mrs. J. Schneider of
Trend : No. 2 wheat,
cover
the tree.
netting
to
Conservation
Act
pro
cess,
Comment
on
one
or
all
of
your
guard.
Warm
(hot)
Chesapeake, Ohio . Activities will start at Ute Pratt farm on
Wlchanged; No. 2 shelled
Now , there is a chemical
weather ha s those pe sts
Rankins Creek Road at 10:30 a.m. The farm is one mile south initially the natural resources these items or list any item corn, un changed ; No. 2 oats,
will be appraised . This ap- that is not included below ..
moving in now in increasing one can spray on the cherries
of Ute Symmes Creek bridge at Getaway, Ohio.
un changed ; No. I soybeans,
GAL.LIPOLIS - Tuesday·, number s.
at the time they start to ripen
Your comments Will sharply lower.
This field day will be similar to tbe one we had at the praisa l will consider the
July 18 marks the date for the
Entomolog ist
Hichard that will repel birds. It is
Charles Lewis farm in Mason County last year. All dairymen quality and quantity, the become a part of a . per1978 4-H "Speak for Safety" Miller suggests that you treat Mesurol 75 per cent wettable
capabilities and limitations, manent record kept on hie at
in Gallia CoWlty are encouraged and welcome to attend .
Contest.
The contest will take now for both chinch bugs and powder, registered as a bird
'!'he third rna lor event coming up will be our Annual Beef the changes in condition or this office.
pla
ce
at
7:30 p.m. in the sod webworms in central repellent on cherries . Apply
Please take a few seconds
Cattle - 4-H Twilight Field Day to be held at Ute Marion stat us and alternatives
P
r
o
du
c
tion
C r edit Ohio. Second generation two and one-third to five and
BY
ADA
KEELS
Caldwell farm on Thursday evening, July 6. Plans have not conservation measures of to comment. We need your
Associatio
n
Building
on treatment will be at the one-third pounds · per acre
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Glen
Elkins,
been finalized for Utis event but it will be held in the evening, these resources. The public opinion.
Route
7
in
Gallipolis.
local,
visited
their
uncle
and
This form must be signed to
normal time - August 10 to with a conventional spray as
again, at Ute Caldwell farm south of Northup, Ohio, on Lincoln meeting is a factor in this
The contest is open to any 4· 211.
aunt
,
Dr.
Chester
Pryor
and
a fuli coverage spray as
appraisa
l.
be
valid.
Pike. Two of Ute major items that we will be discussing Utis
wife over weekend and at- H member, with trophies
How to Check for These cherries begin to ripen. Do
After the initio! appreisa l.
year concern farm census and alternatives for fence
tended the 25th silver wed- being awarded for first and Pests - select at lea st three not apply more than a total of
construction.
ding
anniversary of Dr. C. second pla ces in both a Junior places to take samples. If three times per season or
So, take some time out this next couple weeks from your
TO
WHAT
EXTENT?
Pryor
and wife Saturday Division (ages 13 • nd there are some brown pat- within seven days of harvest.
WHAT ARE YOUR CONCERNS?
busy schedules to attend one or more of Utese Extension
you nger) and a Senior ches of grass, take samples in Homeowners with one or two
Loss of g ood farmland
evening.
activities. We will be glad to have you visit with us.
Dewy Keels received word Division (ages 14 and older). the transition area between trees may use three-four
From what causes
from his sister, Mrs. Ger- Winn ers will advance to green and brown . Get down tablespoons per gallon ol
trude
McDani el
of com petit ion in the Area on your hands and knees water , if you are able to fin d
Flooding
Chillicothe. She see ms to be "Speak for Safety" Contest facing the direction of the it in small containers.
and will be recognized at the
Improper land use
improving.
Rev. M. Cuffie fil led his County Achievement Night in
Soil eros ion
appointment at New Hope September.
From w hat ca uses
Topics can include any
church Sunday morning. His
area
which deals with safety
fa
mil
y
accompanied
him.
Waler quality and pollution
The ch urch folks were glad to. and need to be only three to
From what causes
BY DIANA S. EBERTS
over the area and allowing
see him ba ck. The winter was fi ve minutes in length. This is
Other wildlife habitat
Extension Agent,
the liquid to be absorbed.
so bad we did not have man y an excellent opportunity for
Woodland
any 4-H'34!' To register for
Home Economics
This will present the liquid
services.
Beauty or natura l areas
the competition, contact the
Meigs County
from being forced into the
Mrs.
M
ary
Howard
visited
Histori cal site s
POMEROY - Spills on carpet fibers or spreading
her brother, John Hutcheson, Gall ia Co unty Ext ension
NAME :
carpeting are a hazard of over a large r area .
who is a patient in Holzer Office, 446-4612, ext. 32, prior DEUTZ AIR·COOLED DIESEL TRACTOR
living. No matter how careful
As the towel becomes wet,
Medical Center. He is better to July 14.
Return t o: Soil Conservation Serv ice
AND DEUTZ·FAHR TURBO MOWER
a person may be, spills still use dry towels and press the
at
this writing.
529 Jackson Pike Rm . JOBC
occur on both wall·to-wall towels against the pile to
Mrs. Minnie Ga rn s of
Gal li polis, Ohio 45631
force out more of the liquid. A
carpet and rugs .
Providence and sister , Mrs.
"Know what action to take method of forcing out much of
Bessie Smith of Bidwell Sunday .
when i!Omelhlng Is spilled on the liquid is by removi ng the
visited an old friend, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Payne
ca rpeting, " says Judith shoes and stepping on the Lay of the land
Daisy Ross Sunday af· of Mt. Carmel church at
Wessel, Extension home towels. The more liquid that
ternoon.
Bidwell attended services at
management and equipment is removed will mean the less
Mrs. Viola Elkins and Mrs. our church Sunday morning.
specialist at The Ohio State which will have to be
Lewis Elkins of J ac kson The other members attended
removed by some other
University.
visited the former's son, Glen Sunday School co nvention at
Most spots can be removed means, or th e less to produce
Elkins Tuesday evening. Mr. Ironton, Ohio.
by taking the proper at1ion a permanent stain .
Lewis Elkins' wife was ta ken
Hev. Cuffle of Ironton filled
immediately . However, some
All substances which are
to.Holzer Medical Center with his appointment Su nday
carpeting can be dyed and spilled are not liquids. Some
a heart attack. She is doing morning to a nice crowd. His
some dyes used in beverages, of them will be solids, semiwife and daugh ter s acBY JOliN COOPER
1931. He said that most good.
foods and medicines may lllll ids or syrupy . It will
Mrs.
Mary
Howard,
loca
l,
companied
him .
Soli Cons. Service
springs dried up, however he
actually dye the fiber . The depend upon what the so il is
Mrs. Mary Howard visited With this tea m on your
PT. PLEASANT - The said there were a few good visited her brother, John
longer these types of spills as to how it should be spring development has been
springs scattered around to · Hutcheson, who is a patient in her brother , John Hut cheson, farm you ca n cut crops
are allowed to remain on removed. In most cases a compl eted on the Ea rl Keefer ge t water for themselves as Holzer Medical Center.
who is a patient at Holzer we t or dry, five to seve n acres per
carpeting , the more diffi cult vacuum cleaner is aU that is
Mrs.
Murle
Howard
,
loca
l,
Medical
Center fo r pa st
farm on Sa ndhill Road .
well as for,livestock.
they will be to remove.
needed. However , if the solid
was on the electi on board several weeks. He expects to hour - even more with the la rger model. Your airThis was ·done by means of
When a staining substance is very small particles, some a catch basin bei ng placed in
go to his home at Corinth cooled Deu tz tractor will give you maxim um acres
We were on the Charles Tuesday.
is spilled on carpeting, the may become entrapped in the the spring and a concrete
Dewy Keel s received word soon.
pe r gallon . Minimum down time . Your Deutz-Fahr
Gray place near New Haven
fibers swell and the stain gets fibers and complete remova l wall installed below the catch to help him plan the use of his that an old friend he formerly
Mrs. Edna Cooper has been Turbo Mower cuts smoot hly witho ut plugging. Ask
inside th e fib ers, whi ch will not be possible with a basin in order to insure that
land and management of it worked with , Lem Craddol ph ill with a sprin g cold .
fo r fi eld demonstration
makes it more difficult to vacuum alone .
Deacon Robert Cooper
the seepage water wou ld mostly from a wildlife stand- of Blackfi&gt;rk, Ohio wa s in the
A large portion of most enter the catch b&lt;lsin.
remove . If immediate action
point. Mr. Gray and his son hospital in Oak Hill a few visited Deacon Harold Payne
is taken to remove the sub- semi-solids and syrupy spills
Aconcrete watering trough are both very much in· days but is back home and recently.
stance before the fiber s have can be picked ~p with a round was constructed about 50 feet
Mr s.
Mary
Howard
terested in developmeqt of was able to attend church
a chance to swell, a stain may spoon . When performing this below the spring and the pipe the land. Wildlife and their services at Union church rece ived word from her
DIKUTZ
task, tak e care not to cut or used to carry the water from
not res ult.
own recre ational use were Sunday morning. Everyone da ughter, Mrs. Maria nna
FAHR
The first step in preventing damage the ca rpet yams or
Pomeroy, 0.
Spring Ave.
the catch basin to the trough. the chief considerations. We was glad to see him at Morgan who lives at Youngsa permanent stain is to ab- fiber s. If the semi-solid is The spring appeared to be an pointed out severa l things in church.
town , Oh io stating they are
sorb as much of the liquid muc which has been tracked
Nora McDaniel of Berlin, fair at Utis writing.
extremely good vein of water th ei r wood land that they
spill as possible. Any clean in on shoes, after the excess is and th ere should be no
Ohio
called on her aunt.
should do and some that they
white absorbent material can scraped off it is usually better qu estion but that it will should not do. Th e woodland Daisy Ross recently.
be em ployed. Facial tissues, to allow the remainder to dry provide adequate water for behind their house consists
J ess McDaniel of Oak Hill
toilet tissues, paper towels, and then remove it with the livestock grazing in the field chi efly of sugar maple , visited his aunt, Daisy Ross,
tea towels and bath towels vac uum . Some additional
in which it was installed. The bu ckeye and elm trees with a
can be used. Remove the first remova l procesur es are work crew of the Western Soil few oak mixed in. There are
portions by placing the towels normally applied.
11 11111111111111111111111111111111
Conservation District did the many grapevines grow ing in
installation.
some of the trees.
Mrs. Keefer was prsent
We point ed out that
when the concrete was being removing some of the elm
poured into the tro ugh forms would 'be desirable and that a
and she sai d, "We've been few of the buckeye could be
THE HARRISONVILLE 4- family picnic at Lake Hope wanting to get this done for removed and possibly plant a
H Girls Honor 'Club met JWJe will be planned at the next years. I'm real glad we are few pine in the openings that Don ' t take your farm
chemicals for granted. You
16, at the Presbytieran meeting. - Laura Smith, finally getting it completed ." would be made.
can
get into trouble if you
Mr.
Keefer
plans
to
build
a
Church with 10 members and reporter.
do.
Many
cases of insecticide
pond
in
another
pasture
field
one advisor in attendance.
poisioning often is passed off
THE
CHESTER
CHAMPS
to
provide
water
in
that
area
.
The club members discussed
as a "bad case of nerves "
some
money
making 4-H Club met June 13 at the
during planting, so take
Plans are progressing by
projects. For the project John and David Edwards
care. Don Kuhlman , ex·
lesson, Ute members made residence with six members several landowners to install
tension en tomologist at the
ca rmel crunch, cookies, and one advisor in at- subsurface drainage during
University of Illinois, says
prolonged handling of toxic
biscuits, and prepared a tendance. The project lesson the coming visit of the ditPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va. products over a 15·20 day
ch icken meal. Flower was a hike. The members ching machine. '!'he ditcher is
projects were also discussed. collected and named leaves. expected to start in Mason (UP!) - Four ponds at Ute planting period could
The next meeting wlll be held Refreshments were seved by County about July I. Land- McClintic Wildlife Station produce blurred visio n,
headaches, nausea, chest
In ApprecU.ti.on to DBirymen, Central Soya Offers
June 27, at the Presbytlcran Unda and Becky Edwards. - owners who are making plans near Point Pleasant have been constriction
, and possible
Kevin
Flck,
reporter
.
are
Francis
Stevens.
Dale
Church . ...: Becky Ward,
closed to fishing and all other death. Insecticides as a
Nibert, Roy Yauger, Mason
reporter .
These Dairy Month SpecU.ls . ..
THE MER RY MAKERS 4· County Farm Museum, and recreational activities until group are more potent than
further notice, the Depart- herbicide s. Here are a few
H
Club
met
June
17
at
the
Edwin
Rayburn.
James
0
.
THE COUNTRY Chicks 4-H
ment of Natural Resource! sa fety procedures to cut
Club met June 14, at the Rock Brenda Bentz residence with Plants is also planning to said Friday.
down the risks in using in·
Springs Church with 12 seven members and two install a drainage system, but
E.
Can
tner,
Wildlife
secticides,
pesticides, and
Dan
herbicides: Stay upwind
members and one advisor In advisors. The club discussed he will dig his ditch with a
attendance . Brenda Chap· plans for a float for the backhoe. Surveys have been resources chief, said the ponds when mixing or pouring pes·
plear was chosen to represent Regatta parade, and that made for part of these land· provide a good habitat for ticides; Avoid in hal ing
the club on the fashion team. items for the auction are owners and surveys will be waterfowl and must be protec- fumes or dust ; Wear long·
AND
slheeved s hirtswwhen handblib.ng
The next meeting wlll be held need ed. Demonstrations made on the others in the ted.
1
" Duetoalimitedquantltyof c emlca s;
ear ru er
June 28, at the Rock Springs were given by Brenda Bentz near future .
Ut gloves while mixing or
on
house
plants
and
by
Robyn
Church. - Kim Eblin,
good waterfowl habitat in e pouring; Wear unvented
Pitzer on creative arts .
During the time that Roger state, all available habitat for goggles and other protective
reporter.
Refreshments were served Powell, district technician, these birds must be In- clothing as suggested by the
by
Brenda Bentz. - Angie wu sur veyi ng on the tensively managed;'' Cantner pesticide label; Avoid slollTHE MIXED MINDS 4-H
Spencer,
reporter.
Rayburn !ann. Mr. Rayburn sald. "Since ponds one, two, 'ping or over-filling.
Club met June IS, at the Blll
commented
about 8everal three and 20 are eltceUent
Anderson residence with
thint;s.
He
said
that in 1930 waterfowl resting
seven members and three
and
SHAKES
ISLAND
that
Oldtown
Creek
dried up brteding areas, harassment
advlaors in attendance. The
HIJ.O, Hawaii (UPI) - A along his farm and that the
club decided to paint the
sharp
earthquake shook the drou ght was extremely has to be kept ata mlnlmwn."
Pomeroy Elementary
Cantner safd "only official
Sprint Avo.
playground equipment on entire island of 'Hawall severe. He said that It did not
I
U
Ill
ill
be
l'~fllti'OV Ohio
I
June 29. Refreshments were Friday but caused no damage rain any great amount from ~~:~~l:tbe~
"w
11111111111111::1!1111:: 1!11111111111111
or
injuries.
March
,
1930
to
February,
~~erved by BUI Anderson. A

our commumty

quette Park court decisioo,
Collin amounced he had only
threatened to march In
Skokie to obtain his right to
free speech in his own
neighborhood park.
At his news conference, he
dramatically amoWlced that
his small, ragtag band of
followers would not march in
Skokie but would rally July 9
in Marquette Park.
.
At least one black group
plans to confront him Utere.

RCA topic of
July 10 event

;

.

Contest

slated

July 18

New Hope

Spills on carpeting

are hazard of living

PAINT
BRUSHES

20% OFF

·sPRAY

ENAMEL

$1.48 CAN
1 GAL BUCKET

sg!J!I

SALE

----------lATEX S£MI GLOSS

Project completed

lg group o
richly grained

'•

. 2· GIL BUCK£T

ENAMEL PAINT

on Earl Keefer farm

finishes.

PANELING
WHITE AND
COLORS

s-r

wESitn C£DAR

Gel.

Sale

'6.99

CHMTIQUE-00
SAU '5.53
MRS. 0 . 0. MciNTYRE once was a te.!cher in
Gallipolis. She is p1ctured here 111 a photograph made
more Ulan 70 years ago as she stood with her kindergarten
class. In Ute rear w1Ut her is Helen Mauck, who became
the fir st wife of John Galbreath, and the chapel at Ohio
University is named for her. Stairstepped 1n height from
the lef t in the front are Lucy V. Bovie, Kathryn
Mullineaux, Nelle Shaw, and Joseph ine Mullineaux .
Maybelle Hope Small married 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Feb. IB,
t908. She sa1d that she was a kindergarten teacher before

TOOLS

IlL HAND
TOOlS

Released From Hosplta l
RANGOH. Ma ine 1UP! I CINCINNATI ! UPI I - Cm- A record brea king field 1s an·
cmna ti Reds catcher Johnn) tic1pated for the fourt h
Bench was released from an nu al
Paul
Bunyan
Chmt Hospi tal friday and Marathon bemg held at the
headed to Los Angeles to join University of Mame at Orono
h1s teammates.
. Ju ly 15.
He has be€n hosplllllized
Marathon director Richa rd
mu st of the week fo r McCralh said by frida y 140
•reament of a lower ba ck out -o f-state ra ce rs
. .tra in.
inclu di ng 1976 winn er
Be nch, who h&lt;1sn 't been Wilham Hine of Boston - had
·•ble to start a game since registered fo r the contest and
~ ay 27 because of his bad
it looked lik e this year 's fi eld
hack, isn'l ex pe cted to play will easily top Ute previous
for severa l clays unWl he record of 294 runners who
regams his stre n~th .
signed up last year.

Tfle OHE Rf.O. l N M EN T AMU S( ~ f; NT

CO

IJPESE NT S

TAHOE

GUmR
SPECJAI.

41 ~

REO BRICK

GYPSUM

:::':I

DRD

0

.

AI~Wwllw

3/B"X4X8

SJ.25

i)

I

·Fiberglass
ltsulatiol

''

SHEET

%"X4X8

4" FULL THICK
15" &amp; 23" WIDM

SJ.4Q
Sheet

Special

. 4"ll0 FT.

SOliD &amp;
PERFORATED

'2.49
Saturday, 7:30 am to noon

THURSDAY JULY 13 8:00PM
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
FESTIVAl k.AfiNG $8 ifJ _IMIIHJt,QW!J JCI
Pl { (Jijl f1 ,f' PviCr [Hilolf ,f
C,Vl( f!~'lH&amp;Ai [/li M·.' ~. I'

ORDER BY MAIL NOW

17 OLIVI ST.

FWAI
Y01Md
Hnl

GALLIPOliS, OHIO

HUNTINGTON CIVIC CENTER

JUNE IS

DAIRY MONTH ,

WIVES FOR THEIR HARD WORK IN PRODUCING

NATURE'S MOST PERFECT FOOD

MILK

•1.00 oH on each bag of
K·Aff·~ milk replacer

Mon.-fri. 7:30 am to 5 pm

· CARTER AND EVANS INC.
Building Supplies

FULTON·TlKlMPSON
TRACTOR SALES

CENTRAL SOYA SALUTES AREA DAIRYMEN AND THEIR

McClintic

DRAIN
PIPE

PEA

aarl·
lacls

Meigs 4-H Club News

Four PondsClosed At

SALE
SPECIAL GUF STS

A

BRANDY BIRCH
SALE 15o5.3

AWM

20% 0 "

she was married.

IRON

WHITE

Happy Pair

·..

•1.00 oH on Anchor or Gilt
Edge Dalri-Fiy-Sols

FULTON-OOMPSON
TRM:lOR SALES

:re::.

'

•

CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc.
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

�~-The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sw1dav. June 25.

1978

Camp experiences rewarding
BY BOYD RU1ll
Meigs Soil &amp; Water
Conservation District
Meigs County
Phone 99Z.Q647
POMEROY - "I rea lly
lea rned a lot and ha d a fun
time, 11 says Brian J ohnson
about the Forestry Camp he

attended last week at Hidden
Hollow Camp Grounds near
Mansfie ld, Ohio. Forestry
Camp is one of the finest

ca mpS in the United States
that is devoted to the teaching
of conserv ati on ethi cs to
young people.
The program included the
study of the relationship of
trees to each other as a
community, the identification
of the import ant species, how
to se lect trees
for
reforestation, and how to
plant them and ca re for the
plantation.

Craft class in old
farm tools offered
RIO GRANDE - Th e
opportunity to hand craft
your own wooden fann im·
plements is being offered
through Rio Grande College
and Community College and
Bob Evans Fam1s.
Eighteenth century farm
tools, the fourth of nine craft
workshops held at the Bob
Evans Craft Bam, Rt. 35.
wesl of Ga llipolis, will begin
July 10 and run through July
14.
The course will teach
students the methods of
making hay forks. wooden
ralles, stock ca nes and other
pioneer tools.
Times lor the workshop will
be 9-11 :30 a.m. and 1-4 p.m.
Monday thru Thursday. The
F'riday session will be from 911 a.m.
All • tools needed to construct the implements will be
provided including shavin g
horse, draw kni fe, spoke
shave and froc. Students

must bring with them work
gloves, work clothes and
comfortable work shoes.
Cost for the five day course
is 130.
The School of Homestead
Living, as the group of nine
workshops is called. will offer
other courses throughout the
summer. Others will be :
Wool Spinning, Chair Caning.
Poltery and Blacksm ithing.
To register for the wooden
farm took workshop call (614 1
245-5353, Ext. 255 or mail
name, add ress, phone
number and check lor S30
made payable to Rio Grande
College, to Bernie Murphy,
Office
of
Co ntinuing
Educati on. Rio . Gra nde
College and Com munity
College, Rio Grande. Ohio.
456H.
Deadl ine
lor
registral ion is Thursd ay,
July 6.
Information on lodging and
mea Is lor the five days is
ava ilable upon request.

Ga11ia 4-H Quh News
Gallia County 4-H K-9
Korps met June 20 at the
fair groun ds . Mi ssy de
Lamerans had charge of the
program, speaking on huw to
teach your dogs new things.
She demonstrated how to
teach your dog to stand
wi thout sitting. Advisor is
Mrs. de Lamerens. Members
present were David Barr,
Linda Benthall. Missy de
Lamerens, ian Mykel, Tonya
Sattle r , Th omas Savage ,
Timm y Spurloc k, Jose ph
Vallee. and Jane Elen Wood.
Guest s were Ch arl ene
Benthall and John Benthall.
Reporter - Linda BenthalL
Rock Hill Ranchers met
June 6 at the Lewis home.
Scott Lewis presided . Lynn
l.&lt;!wis gave a demonstration
on wood fini shing and Scott
l.&lt;!wi s gave a gun safety
demonstrati on. There will be
a ca r wash at the Rio Grande
firehouse Saturday , July 8
beginning at 12:30. The next
meeting will be held at Bob
Eva ns June 30. Advisors are
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Elliott.
Members presen t wer e
Wa yne Lewis. Scott Lewis,
Lynn Lewi s. Scott Elliott,
Cllad Lewis and Melody Tate.
Parents pr esent were Mr.
end Mrs. Bill Lewis. Report er
· Jack Hannan .
4-H Lassies met June 15 at
Maude Pe rsi nge r 's. Mr s.
Persinger presided and had
charge of th e program .
Demon~1rati o n s w!!re: Mary

It also included a fi eld trip
to Kaple 's Sawmill, Northeast of Mansfield where instructors showed how logs
_and lumber are scaled ,
graded and sorted . The
students got an opportunity to
see the entire sawmill including a debarker, saw and
chipper. They saw how the
entire log is utilized with the
slabs made into chips for
paper production, a material
that was previously wasted.
The group toured th e
Mohican State Forest and
saw a fire fighting demon;tration given by Division of
Forestry personnel. Each
camper is assigned to a study
group for the entire week of
camp . The se groups are
identified by leaf groups such
as: yellow poplar, maple,
ash, white oak, et c.
At the end of each session
an exa mination is given in
each subj ect area. The top
ten students are recognized
~t graduat io n. The top
-§tudent from both weeks is
chosen as the Junior Conse rvationist of the Year and
will receive his award at the
Ohio Fores try Assoc iation
Annual Meeting .
Brian, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Johnson, Portland,
was sponsored.to the ca mp by
the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District as part
of their educational program.
Wee ks, Robin Henderson .
Reporter - Kern Hemphill.
Shinin ' On 4-H Club met
June 21 at Mrs. Jackie Davis'
home. Shari Davis presided.
Annie Coo k demonstrated
"Clothes For School,"
making a skirt , vest, blouse ;
·'Sports Clothes," making a
suit. We di sc ussed fair
stickers and a 4-H booth at
the fair. We went over times
and dates of judging. The
next meeting will he held at
Mrs. Davis's home June 28.
Adviso r is Mrs. David .
Members present were Shari
Davis and Annie Cook. A
guest prese nt was Tina
Adkins. - Reporter Annie
Cook.

Beth Weeks, How to Siart
Afri ca n Vi olets: Kim
Swanger, Dusting Mit ; Teri
Henderson, Characteristics
of Thread ; Robin Henderson,
The Grain of a Fabric. Roll
was taken and members gave
demonstrations. The meeting
adjourned. Hecreation and
refreshments were served.
There wa s no bu siness
meelin~ . Adviso rs are Mrs.
Maude Perstnger and Mrs.
PLEASANT VAlLEY
Barbara Simpkins. Members
II
present were Teri Hender son ~
Kim Swanger, Miki Roy, DISCHARGED - Brian
Jayn e Sim pkins. Kel ly Burns, Bidwell: Mrs. Carl
Kosmo, Carol Lee Paulson, Garrison , Racine; Edward
Kern Hemphill. Mary Beth Finley, Racine.

13'111 ANNUAL RIVER
RECREATION FESTIVAL PARADE
GaiUpvlls, Ohio
Official Entry Blaoll
1978 Theme : "America, Another Year of Freedom."
July 4, 1978

CXganization~-:;--,--,-----------

----.~,

Ohio Politics

• ..-,.•
II .: .•

Assembly hits rocks on school finance hill

•._.....
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.
..
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,. itntintl
VOL. 13 NO. 21

I
SRP26CX -O
Town and Count ry -

Wood -

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Sur fa ce

-

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massacred
•
THE TWIN CITY SHRINERS organization participated In the annual parade Friday nll!ht kicked off
the 14th ·annual Big Bend Regatta .

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in tn1m y

11'11 y.~.

Taking pride in the products lhey
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You have the feeli ng tha t they
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the school bill unstuck) to help attract Republican support with
amendments were unsuccessful.
Riffe did not enjoy being made to look like the villain, and his
caucus had some unkind words for Ocasek.
It appeared that Ocasek was holding up the school funding
bill lor the tax credit measure.
But it could be the other way around. The theory has been
advanced that the tax credit proposal is a facade for Ocasek's
attempts to water down or even hold up the school bailout.
The Ohio Education Association, with which .Ocasek is
frequently aligned , opposes what the Legislature and the
governor are trying to do to prop up the schools and keep them
open under the guise of financial stability.
Representatives of the OEA kept a low profile during the
last-ditch negotiations at the end of the week. Perhaps it was
because Ocasek was doing their work for them.

Marshals impose
•
•
strict security

13 whites

Mail entry to . Gallipolis Area Olamber 1 of
Commerce, Post Off1 ce Box 465, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
All entries must be in prior to Wednesday, June 28.

FLEX STEEL

relief for individuals.
Ocasek has squirmed lor months as the Legislature adopted
all sorts of tax relief lor business and industry at Rhodes'
request. It was time, he reasoned, lor something lor the
individual property owner.
So when the House was ready to lock up without acting on a
bill providing income tax credits lor home improvements, the
red flag went up in the Senate.
Although tax relief is a hot item these days, Riffe was unable
to get his entire caucus oo go along with the tax credit bill ..
Some Democrats joined with Republica ns in expressing the
fear that any mo,re tax breaks would endanger the fiscal
mlegrtty of the state budget.
OcaSek's insistence that Riffe come up with the votes to pass
the bill was like trying to extract blood from a turnip . Too
many members either didn't like the idea or were absent.
Even efforts by the Rhodes administration (which wanted

By ROBERT KIECKHEFER
CHICAGO (UP!)
Fearing a possibly violent
confrontation between Nazis
and anti-Nazi activists, police
and fed era l marshals
imposed strict secu rity lor a
Nazi march Saturday at the
Federal Center Plaza.
"We don't know who 's
going Ill show up but we want
to be ready for anything,"
one federal marshal said .
The mi li tan t Jew ish
Defense League and black
and Puerto Rican groups sa id
they would stage counter-

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ .

FRIGIDAIRE

PAGE l·D

SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1978

~~~
-- -·I

Name of individual _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

MADEFOR YOU

eluding bailout money lor the schools sped toward a conclusion
In the Legislature last week with the blessing of the governor,
it was too good to he true .
Ocasek is a firm believer in carrying the existing :school
subsidy formula to its conclusion - full funding by the state to see if it works.
But in order to secure enough votes to pass the school finance
bill, the Legislature had to tack on some special bonuses to
make sure no districts lose money. The "equal yield" formula
was out the window.
· Moreover, expanded borrowing powers for schools antagonized Ocasek, who believes that would only drive schools
deeper in debt and preclude any further local tax effort.
Although there were denials all around, Ocasek apparently
had a commitment from Riffe that before the lawmakers
adjourned for the summer they would pass some kind of tax

SRP26AX-O

Type of entry _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Slalebo~ Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Just when it lookrd like the Ohio
General Assembly was sailing toward agrC"ment on a stopgap
soltltio~ to the state's school funding problems last week, the
ship hit the the rocks.
The r!l&amp;son was a long.:Simmering disagreement between
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Northlield,
and House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, over
the way to deal with Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Riffe has been more than willing to cooperate with the
Rhodes administration on matters he views as beneficial to the
legislative Democrats .
·
Ocasek's philosophy is so different from Rhodes' that he
finds it difficult to stomach ffi8DJI of the governor's
shenanigans.
So when the $202 million supplemental appropriation in-

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Shark escapes after
13 hour battle at sea
"The fi sh woo lair and White several yea rs ago further away from land.
For mos t of the day ,
provided the inspiration for
square."
Sweetman
said the shark
the
novel
and
movie
"Jaws."
B~ JOHN MOODY
played
peek-.'1-boo
with the
The
shark,
believed
to
be
a
MONTAUK , N.Y. (UPI ) boat,
its
lin
cutting
the
man-ea
ting
Great
White
For 13 hours, Capt. John
surface
of
the
choppy
seas
rarely
found
in
the
North
Sweetman thought he'd be
Lragging today about how he Atlantic, was estimated at occasio nall y, t hen
caught a 2-ton, man-eating between 3,000 and 4,000 submerging Ill continue its
Great White shark. But his pounds and 25 to 28 feet in fight foc freedom .
The " Ebb Tide" crew harpoon line snapped , , length.
Sweetman,
his brother Jim
Sweetman
spotted
it
and
a
leaving him with a frayed
and
six
others
- was kept
smaller
shark
about
15
miles
rope and a broken dream.
company
for
the
last several
off
shore,
and
standing
10
Sweetman, skipper of the
hours
of
its
hunt
by
six other
feet
away
from
the
fish
charter boat "Ebb Tide,"
boats,
which
contributed
gored
the
bigger
one
with
a
watched a fi sherman's
dream elude him Friday harpoon just behind the lop ratioos of beer, soda and
sandwiches.
night after being dragged 14 dorsal fin.
When helicopters carrying
The
wound
was
not
serious,
miles through the Atlantic
Ocean by the mammoth fish and the huge fish shot away newsmen and photographers
he harpooned In the morning from the boat on a 15().foot began hovering overhead, the
off the shore of Montauk, a !Alther of stainless steel cable, mariners took to posing near
remote resort town at the heading for deeper waters the edge of their boats,
eastern tlp of Long Island and dragging the 15.-ton, 411- harpoons poised.
Carl Darenberg, the
where the sighting of a Great foot "Ebb Tide" 14 miles
manager of the Montauk
Marine Basin who was in
oouch with Sweetman via
ship-to-f!hore radio, said the
captain reported the shark
broke a three-eighths inch

Amnesty offered
200,000 persons

and other political opponents
of his regime .
At least 200,000 Lunda rePresident Mobutu Sese Seko
Saturday responded to U.S. fugees reportedly are living
and Western pressures for In Angola and neighboring
reform by offering a general Zambia and the rebels are
amnesty to more than 200,000 being recruited and lrained
refugees and political there In refugee camps.
Lunda
tribesmen
opponents living in Angola
reportedly made up the bulk
and Europe.
The move was seen as a of rebel forces that invaded
first response to demands Zaire's Shaba province last
from the United States, month. Many of Mobutu 's
Canada and West European other political opponents
countries who have told bave lived lor many years as
Mobutu to liberalize his exiles in Europe, especially
regime and end official Brussels and Paris ..
Mobutu said he would
corruption, which has
both the t!Hlation
contact
devastated Zaire's ecoo(JJ\y,
Organization
of African Unity
If he wants more financial
(OAU)
and
the U.N. high
ald.
commission
for
refugees to
In his second major
political speech In four days, supervise the return of all
Mobutu said he will "urgently refugees and exiles to Zaire.
The American, Canadian,
submit" to the leglalatlve
assembly "a law for general British, French, and West
German ambassadors all
political amnesty."
, Mobutu did not give details called on Mobutu earlier thb
of the program but It was week and told him further
expected to apply to Lunda loog.term econ&lt;mlc aid from
tribesmen, the former the West was contingent upoo
Katanca rebela who aouaht his adopting sweeping
~ce in the former domestic reforms.
Beljdan Congo in the 198011,

thick nylon line connected to
the cable at 8:43 p.m., about
30 miles so utheast of
Montauk, and disappeared.
At nightfall, one of the two
55-gallon gray and white
barrels used as buoys oo the
cable line was visible above
sea level, but the shark's
tugging pressure kept the
other submerged.
Suddenly, the second barrel
bobbed to the surface and
Sweetman knew he had lost
his quarry.
" It was a good light. The
fish won fair and square,"
Sweetman said, vowing to
return to sea today to renew
the hunt.
"I own a part of him," the
shark hunt er reportedly
said .
"There's great disappointment here," Darenberg sa id.
"We all wanted to see it, it's
really a shwne. We had a
taxidermist sta nding by and
a marine biolog ist was ready
to come out. "

SALISBURY, Rhodesia
(UP! ) - Black guerrillas
massacred 13 whites.
including a 3-weeks-old baby,
at a missiOn school in the
eastern border area of
Rhodesia, the military command said today .
The military said three
men, two women, seven girli:
and the infant died in the
attack Friday at the Elim
Pentecostal Mission in the
Vumba mountains.
missi on
Ho we ve r,
headquarters in London
reported 12 had died and a
13th, a woman , had survived.
All those killed were white
miSSionaries and their
families, authorities said .
In London, John Smyth ,· a
member of the Elim
Pente costal International
Missions Boa rd sa id at
mission headqu arters at
Cheltenham, England hi s
organization was told the
guerrillas. knifed the missionaries to death before 250
black schoolch ildren at the
school's playing field.
He identified the survivor
as Mary Fisher, 32, and said
she was believed hospitalized
in either Salisbury or Umtali .
He identified the dead as
Philip and Sandra McCann
and their two children, Joy
and Philip, both under 5;
Philip and Sue Evans and
their daughter Rebecca, also
under 5; Joyce and Roy Lynn
and their 3-week-old daughter
Pamela; Catherine Picken,
53, and Wendy White, 35.
"We understand the
guerrillas came into the
school and made the 250
schoolchildren go into the
playing fields and witness the
sta bbing to death of the
missionaries," he said.

By RAYMOND WILKINSON
KINSHASA, Zaire (UPI) -

A FROG AND clowns were part IJl the large rade that traveled from Middleport to
Pomeroy Friday night.
·

demonstrations.
The JDL in New York
reported seve ral hundred
members had traveled to
Chicago and would hold a
peaceful
counterdemon·
&gt;tration at the plaza.
The United Committee
Against Injustice also
planned
a
counterdemonstration
and
a
spokesman sa id the group
would try to convince persons
attending a Puertn Rica n Day
parade downtown to join in
the anti-Nazi protest .
Chicago police so urces said
seve ral thousand counterdemonstrators were expected
to confront a group of no
more than 75 Nazis at the

plaza.
A spokesman for the
Ge n e ral
Se rvice s
Adminstration said security
had been boltered at the
federal building and that a
tea m of federal magistrates
would he in court to set bond
for anyone arrested.
Authorities said anyone arrested would be taken to the
federal lockup at the Disksen
Federal Building, across the
street from the plaza. The
lockup can hold 800 prisoners.
Nazi leader Frank Collins
billed the rally as a "victory
rally to celebrate winning
back our rig hts of free
speech."
The Nazis had planned a
Sunday march in Skokie, a

pred ominantly
J ewish
suburb, and thousands of
Jews and sympathizers had
vowed
a
counterdemonstrati on. But the
Skokie march was canceled
Thursda y night after a judge
said they could hold a July 9
rally in Marquette Park,
located in a racially troubled
neighborhood.
Saturday's counter-1lemoostrations at the federal plaza
were expected to draw some.
of the 50,000 persons who had
been expected at an anti-Nazi
rally in Skokie. That rally which had been scheduled for
Sunday - was called off
when the Nazis scrubbed
plans for their Skokie march.

Renew ouster efforts
CHAHLESTO N, W.Va .
(UP!) - Miners seeking to
recall United Mine Workers
President Arnold Miller said
they will renew their efforts
to remove the ailing 55-yearold president following the
upcoming fourweek miners'
vacation period.
And, some reports indicate
wildcat strikes will be held in
the post-vaca lion period by
miners protesting the health
care syst em now under
private insurance companies
instead of the UMW Health
and Retireme nt Funds.
UMW spokesman Frank
Powers said the union the
Bitwninous Coal Operators
Association are working on
the health care problems.
"The BCOA says they are
totally committed to making
the system work," Powers
said. "We think the problem
is going to ·be taken care of. "
Powers said he has seen no
recall petitions, and he
expects Miller to return Ill
Washington next week. Miller
is gradu ally doing some
work , but when he'll return to
the union office is between

Miller and his doctor, Powers
said .
Wes t Virginia miners
usually take the first twoweek period, starting
Monday. but a few take the
. second two-week period
beginning July 10.
Bill Bryant, organizer of
the move to recall Miller,
said Friday he 's heard
nothing since submitting
petitions with :&gt;:1,000 names oo
UMW Secretary Treasurer
Bill Essellltyn oo March 8.
Bryant said petitioners
have 31 ,000 names against
Miller, who has not been
active in union affairs since
being felled by a stroke and
heart attack foll owing
negotiations of a new soft coal
contract in late March.
Now that the initial recall
petitions have been filed, it is
Esselstyn's duty to prepare a
petition listing the charges
and Miller 's answers, then
mail them to local unions. H,
within 30 days, 30 percent of
th e union's 270,000 members
sign the petitions, Essellltyn
would be directed to set up an
election .

Bryant said he feels Esselstyn, who was elected with
Miller, has been dragging his
feet "to an extent.n
Esselstyn was unavailable
lor comment.
Bryant said he hasn 't
pressed the effort because of
confusion following the Jl().
day UMW strike, and now
. because of vacations.
"We're definitely going to
push it after vacatioo," the
anti-Miller leader said . "I
think if we don't have some
type of positive leadership,
we're not going Ill have a next
coo tract."
Strength for the petition
drive is heaviest in southern
West Virgina District 17 and
District 29 , the union's two
biggest districts, and District
12 In Ullnois.
Bryant said there are
allegations of some duplicate
names of 4,000 petitioners In
western Kentucky 's District
23, but he said some of the
petition s there brough t
different charges against
Miller
than
Br ya nt's
petitions.

Carter is 'fence mending'
By JAMES L . OVERTON
HOUSTON (UP!) - Presidenl Carter met with 100
members of the black community Satu rday in an
intense, private session
aimed at "fence mending"
and assuring his supporters
their voices are heard at the
White House.
Blacks emerged from the
meeting, which ran· three
times the scheduled 15
minutes, saying they bad
managed a dialogue with the
president but that no specific
questions were answered.
"Fence mending was part
of the president's trip ," said
Rep. Barbara Jordan, DTexas,
one
of
the
participants . "He is in
trouble with some of the
black leadership.
"The president's trip here
helped smooth the waters in
terms of his relations with the
black leadership. I do not
think the president is in
trouble with the rank and file
blacks."
Black leaders asked for the
meeting because they seek a
more direct line of
communication with the
White House.
"The president acquitted
himself to this group vef)'
well ," Miss Jordan said. "He
did not get specific to
quesli011s proposed to him.
He did not go into details but
did ... give a springboard to
the
development
of
programs."
The bla cks specifically
asked C11rter about the
impact ofllis urban poiicies

on pove rty areas within
affluent cities; his intentions
about appoinilng a black to a
high leve l White House staff
position ; and the placement
of more blacks to high
positions in the government .
"It 's big, in the Congress,
and developing, " Miss
Jordan said of .. the urban
policy program. "Targeting
will perhaps yield the policies

we seek. 11
But she said Carter offered
no real hope on the White
House appointment.
"The president said that he
and Vice President Mondale
were the best a venues in the
administration , that he had
resisted departmentalizing
his staff," she said. "He
urged us to deal with him
directly."

Beef growers will benefit
CHICAGO (UI'I J - Consumer food prices~ led by
risi ng heel costs, will climb
higher during the rest of 1978,
and ranchers and ca ttle
growers will be the
beneficiaries, Secretary of
Agriculture Bob Bergland
[lllys.
Bergland told a news
conference Friday estimates
by the USDA show 1978 food
prices will be 8 to 10 percent
higher than last year's
prices.
In Chicago to address the
Agricultural Economics
Club, the secretary said
about half of the rise in meat
costs had been caused by
"dramatically increased

SEARCH HELD
SOUTH CHARLESTON,
Ohio (UP!) - Deputies from
Clark and Greene counties
searched Friday for a man
who robbed the Springfield
Bank of SOuth Charleston of
an undetermin&amp;lj amount of
money Friday afternoon.

demand lor beef, especially
hamburger . He predicted
demand will push prices
higher, affecting both food
bought in resta urants and at
supermarkets.
He cited internat ional
.weather conditions and unstable market developments,
especially lor beef producers,
as the main reasons behind
the explosion in food costs
this year.

BILL SIGNED
SA CRAMENTO, Calif.
(UP!) - Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. Saturday signed a
$5 billion bill to ease lor one
year the financial crunch of
Proposition 13 on local
govemments In California.
"Two weeks ago, no one
would have believed a bill of
this magnitude and complexity could be passed in two
weeks," said the to-year-old
govemor, who bitterly opposed Proposition 13 before
the June 61electlon.

�~-The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sw1dav. June 25.

1978

Camp experiences rewarding
BY BOYD RU1ll
Meigs Soil &amp; Water
Conservation District
Meigs County
Phone 99Z.Q647
POMEROY - "I rea lly
lea rned a lot and ha d a fun
time, 11 says Brian J ohnson
about the Forestry Camp he

attended last week at Hidden
Hollow Camp Grounds near
Mansfie ld, Ohio. Forestry
Camp is one of the finest

ca mpS in the United States
that is devoted to the teaching
of conserv ati on ethi cs to
young people.
The program included the
study of the relationship of
trees to each other as a
community, the identification
of the import ant species, how
to se lect trees
for
reforestation, and how to
plant them and ca re for the
plantation.

Craft class in old
farm tools offered
RIO GRANDE - Th e
opportunity to hand craft
your own wooden fann im·
plements is being offered
through Rio Grande College
and Community College and
Bob Evans Fam1s.
Eighteenth century farm
tools, the fourth of nine craft
workshops held at the Bob
Evans Craft Bam, Rt. 35.
wesl of Ga llipolis, will begin
July 10 and run through July
14.
The course will teach
students the methods of
making hay forks. wooden
ralles, stock ca nes and other
pioneer tools.
Times lor the workshop will
be 9-11 :30 a.m. and 1-4 p.m.
Monday thru Thursday. The
F'riday session will be from 911 a.m.
All • tools needed to construct the implements will be
provided including shavin g
horse, draw kni fe, spoke
shave and froc. Students

must bring with them work
gloves, work clothes and
comfortable work shoes.
Cost for the five day course
is 130.
The School of Homestead
Living, as the group of nine
workshops is called. will offer
other courses throughout the
summer. Others will be :
Wool Spinning, Chair Caning.
Poltery and Blacksm ithing.
To register for the wooden
farm took workshop call (614 1
245-5353, Ext. 255 or mail
name, add ress, phone
number and check lor S30
made payable to Rio Grande
College, to Bernie Murphy,
Office
of
Co ntinuing
Educati on. Rio . Gra nde
College and Com munity
College, Rio Grande. Ohio.
456H.
Deadl ine
lor
registral ion is Thursd ay,
July 6.
Information on lodging and
mea Is lor the five days is
ava ilable upon request.

Ga11ia 4-H Quh News
Gallia County 4-H K-9
Korps met June 20 at the
fair groun ds . Mi ssy de
Lamerans had charge of the
program, speaking on huw to
teach your dogs new things.
She demonstrated how to
teach your dog to stand
wi thout sitting. Advisor is
Mrs. de Lamerens. Members
present were David Barr,
Linda Benthall. Missy de
Lamerens, ian Mykel, Tonya
Sattle r , Th omas Savage ,
Timm y Spurloc k, Jose ph
Vallee. and Jane Elen Wood.
Guest s were Ch arl ene
Benthall and John Benthall.
Reporter - Linda BenthalL
Rock Hill Ranchers met
June 6 at the Lewis home.
Scott Lewis presided . Lynn
l.&lt;!wis gave a demonstration
on wood fini shing and Scott
l.&lt;!wi s gave a gun safety
demonstrati on. There will be
a ca r wash at the Rio Grande
firehouse Saturday , July 8
beginning at 12:30. The next
meeting will be held at Bob
Eva ns June 30. Advisors are
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Elliott.
Members presen t wer e
Wa yne Lewis. Scott Lewis,
Lynn Lewi s. Scott Elliott,
Cllad Lewis and Melody Tate.
Parents pr esent were Mr.
end Mrs. Bill Lewis. Report er
· Jack Hannan .
4-H Lassies met June 15 at
Maude Pe rsi nge r 's. Mr s.
Persinger presided and had
charge of th e program .
Demon~1rati o n s w!!re: Mary

It also included a fi eld trip
to Kaple 's Sawmill, Northeast of Mansfield where instructors showed how logs
_and lumber are scaled ,
graded and sorted . The
students got an opportunity to
see the entire sawmill including a debarker, saw and
chipper. They saw how the
entire log is utilized with the
slabs made into chips for
paper production, a material
that was previously wasted.
The group toured th e
Mohican State Forest and
saw a fire fighting demon;tration given by Division of
Forestry personnel. Each
camper is assigned to a study
group for the entire week of
camp . The se groups are
identified by leaf groups such
as: yellow poplar, maple,
ash, white oak, et c.
At the end of each session
an exa mination is given in
each subj ect area. The top
ten students are recognized
~t graduat io n. The top
-§tudent from both weeks is
chosen as the Junior Conse rvationist of the Year and
will receive his award at the
Ohio Fores try Assoc iation
Annual Meeting .
Brian, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Johnson, Portland,
was sponsored.to the ca mp by
the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District as part
of their educational program.
Wee ks, Robin Henderson .
Reporter - Kern Hemphill.
Shinin ' On 4-H Club met
June 21 at Mrs. Jackie Davis'
home. Shari Davis presided.
Annie Coo k demonstrated
"Clothes For School,"
making a skirt , vest, blouse ;
·'Sports Clothes," making a
suit. We di sc ussed fair
stickers and a 4-H booth at
the fair. We went over times
and dates of judging. The
next meeting will he held at
Mrs. Davis's home June 28.
Adviso r is Mrs. David .
Members present were Shari
Davis and Annie Cook. A
guest prese nt was Tina
Adkins. - Reporter Annie
Cook.

Beth Weeks, How to Siart
Afri ca n Vi olets: Kim
Swanger, Dusting Mit ; Teri
Henderson, Characteristics
of Thread ; Robin Henderson,
The Grain of a Fabric. Roll
was taken and members gave
demonstrations. The meeting
adjourned. Hecreation and
refreshments were served.
There wa s no bu siness
meelin~ . Adviso rs are Mrs.
Maude Perstnger and Mrs.
PLEASANT VAlLEY
Barbara Simpkins. Members
II
present were Teri Hender son ~
Kim Swanger, Miki Roy, DISCHARGED - Brian
Jayn e Sim pkins. Kel ly Burns, Bidwell: Mrs. Carl
Kosmo, Carol Lee Paulson, Garrison , Racine; Edward
Kern Hemphill. Mary Beth Finley, Racine.

13'111 ANNUAL RIVER
RECREATION FESTIVAL PARADE
GaiUpvlls, Ohio
Official Entry Blaoll
1978 Theme : "America, Another Year of Freedom."
July 4, 1978

CXganization~-:;--,--,-----------

----.~,

Ohio Politics

• ..-,.•
II .: .•

Assembly hits rocks on school finance hill

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VOL. 13 NO. 21

I
SRP26CX -O
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the school bill unstuck) to help attract Republican support with
amendments were unsuccessful.
Riffe did not enjoy being made to look like the villain, and his
caucus had some unkind words for Ocasek.
It appeared that Ocasek was holding up the school funding
bill lor the tax credit measure.
But it could be the other way around. The theory has been
advanced that the tax credit proposal is a facade for Ocasek's
attempts to water down or even hold up the school bailout.
The Ohio Education Association, with which .Ocasek is
frequently aligned , opposes what the Legislature and the
governor are trying to do to prop up the schools and keep them
open under the guise of financial stability.
Representatives of the OEA kept a low profile during the
last-ditch negotiations at the end of the week. Perhaps it was
because Ocasek was doing their work for them.

Marshals impose
•
•
strict security

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relief for individuals.
Ocasek has squirmed lor months as the Legislature adopted
all sorts of tax relief lor business and industry at Rhodes'
request. It was time, he reasoned, lor something lor the
individual property owner.
So when the House was ready to lock up without acting on a
bill providing income tax credits lor home improvements, the
red flag went up in the Senate.
Although tax relief is a hot item these days, Riffe was unable
to get his entire caucus oo go along with the tax credit bill ..
Some Democrats joined with Republica ns in expressing the
fear that any mo,re tax breaks would endanger the fiscal
mlegrtty of the state budget.
OcaSek's insistence that Riffe come up with the votes to pass
the bill was like trying to extract blood from a turnip . Too
many members either didn't like the idea or were absent.
Even efforts by the Rhodes administration (which wanted

By ROBERT KIECKHEFER
CHICAGO (UP!)
Fearing a possibly violent
confrontation between Nazis
and anti-Nazi activists, police
and fed era l marshals
imposed strict secu rity lor a
Nazi march Saturday at the
Federal Center Plaza.
"We don't know who 's
going Ill show up but we want
to be ready for anything,"
one federal marshal said .
The mi li tan t Jew ish
Defense League and black
and Puerto Rican groups sa id
they would stage counter-

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ .

FRIGIDAIRE

PAGE l·D

SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 1978

~~~
-- -·I

Name of individual _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

MADEFOR YOU

eluding bailout money lor the schools sped toward a conclusion
In the Legislature last week with the blessing of the governor,
it was too good to he true .
Ocasek is a firm believer in carrying the existing :school
subsidy formula to its conclusion - full funding by the state to see if it works.
But in order to secure enough votes to pass the school finance
bill, the Legislature had to tack on some special bonuses to
make sure no districts lose money. The "equal yield" formula
was out the window.
· Moreover, expanded borrowing powers for schools antagonized Ocasek, who believes that would only drive schools
deeper in debt and preclude any further local tax effort.
Although there were denials all around, Ocasek apparently
had a commitment from Riffe that before the lawmakers
adjourned for the summer they would pass some kind of tax

SRP26AX-O

Type of entry _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Slalebo~ Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Just when it lookrd like the Ohio
General Assembly was sailing toward agrC"ment on a stopgap
soltltio~ to the state's school funding problems last week, the
ship hit the the rocks.
The r!l&amp;son was a long.:Simmering disagreement between
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Northlield,
and House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, over
the way to deal with Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Riffe has been more than willing to cooperate with the
Rhodes administration on matters he views as beneficial to the
legislative Democrats .
·
Ocasek's philosophy is so different from Rhodes' that he
finds it difficult to stomach ffi8DJI of the governor's
shenanigans.
So when the $202 million supplemental appropriation in-

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Shark escapes after
13 hour battle at sea
"The fi sh woo lair and White several yea rs ago further away from land.
For mos t of the day ,
provided the inspiration for
square."
Sweetman
said the shark
the
novel
and
movie
"Jaws."
B~ JOHN MOODY
played
peek-.'1-boo
with the
The
shark,
believed
to
be
a
MONTAUK , N.Y. (UPI ) boat,
its
lin
cutting
the
man-ea
ting
Great
White
For 13 hours, Capt. John
surface
of
the
choppy
seas
rarely
found
in
the
North
Sweetman thought he'd be
Lragging today about how he Atlantic, was estimated at occasio nall y, t hen
caught a 2-ton, man-eating between 3,000 and 4,000 submerging Ill continue its
Great White shark. But his pounds and 25 to 28 feet in fight foc freedom .
The " Ebb Tide" crew harpoon line snapped , , length.
Sweetman,
his brother Jim
Sweetman
spotted
it
and
a
leaving him with a frayed
and
six
others
- was kept
smaller
shark
about
15
miles
rope and a broken dream.
company
for
the
last several
off
shore,
and
standing
10
Sweetman, skipper of the
hours
of
its
hunt
by
six other
feet
away
from
the
fish
charter boat "Ebb Tide,"
boats,
which
contributed
gored
the
bigger
one
with
a
watched a fi sherman's
dream elude him Friday harpoon just behind the lop ratioos of beer, soda and
sandwiches.
night after being dragged 14 dorsal fin.
When helicopters carrying
The
wound
was
not
serious,
miles through the Atlantic
Ocean by the mammoth fish and the huge fish shot away newsmen and photographers
he harpooned In the morning from the boat on a 15().foot began hovering overhead, the
off the shore of Montauk, a !Alther of stainless steel cable, mariners took to posing near
remote resort town at the heading for deeper waters the edge of their boats,
eastern tlp of Long Island and dragging the 15.-ton, 411- harpoons poised.
Carl Darenberg, the
where the sighting of a Great foot "Ebb Tide" 14 miles
manager of the Montauk
Marine Basin who was in
oouch with Sweetman via
ship-to-f!hore radio, said the
captain reported the shark
broke a three-eighths inch

Amnesty offered
200,000 persons

and other political opponents
of his regime .
At least 200,000 Lunda rePresident Mobutu Sese Seko
Saturday responded to U.S. fugees reportedly are living
and Western pressures for In Angola and neighboring
reform by offering a general Zambia and the rebels are
amnesty to more than 200,000 being recruited and lrained
refugees and political there In refugee camps.
Lunda
tribesmen
opponents living in Angola
reportedly made up the bulk
and Europe.
The move was seen as a of rebel forces that invaded
first response to demands Zaire's Shaba province last
from the United States, month. Many of Mobutu 's
Canada and West European other political opponents
countries who have told bave lived lor many years as
Mobutu to liberalize his exiles in Europe, especially
regime and end official Brussels and Paris ..
Mobutu said he would
corruption, which has
both the t!Hlation
contact
devastated Zaire's ecoo(JJ\y,
Organization
of African Unity
If he wants more financial
(OAU)
and
the U.N. high
ald.
commission
for
refugees to
In his second major
political speech In four days, supervise the return of all
Mobutu said he will "urgently refugees and exiles to Zaire.
The American, Canadian,
submit" to the leglalatlve
assembly "a law for general British, French, and West
German ambassadors all
political amnesty."
, Mobutu did not give details called on Mobutu earlier thb
of the program but It was week and told him further
expected to apply to Lunda loog.term econ&lt;mlc aid from
tribesmen, the former the West was contingent upoo
Katanca rebela who aouaht his adopting sweeping
~ce in the former domestic reforms.
Beljdan Congo in the 198011,

thick nylon line connected to
the cable at 8:43 p.m., about
30 miles so utheast of
Montauk, and disappeared.
At nightfall, one of the two
55-gallon gray and white
barrels used as buoys oo the
cable line was visible above
sea level, but the shark's
tugging pressure kept the
other submerged.
Suddenly, the second barrel
bobbed to the surface and
Sweetman knew he had lost
his quarry.
" It was a good light. The
fish won fair and square,"
Sweetman said, vowing to
return to sea today to renew
the hunt.
"I own a part of him," the
shark hunt er reportedly
said .
"There's great disappointment here," Darenberg sa id.
"We all wanted to see it, it's
really a shwne. We had a
taxidermist sta nding by and
a marine biolog ist was ready
to come out. "

SALISBURY, Rhodesia
(UP! ) - Black guerrillas
massacred 13 whites.
including a 3-weeks-old baby,
at a missiOn school in the
eastern border area of
Rhodesia, the military command said today .
The military said three
men, two women, seven girli:
and the infant died in the
attack Friday at the Elim
Pentecostal Mission in the
Vumba mountains.
missi on
Ho we ve r,
headquarters in London
reported 12 had died and a
13th, a woman , had survived.
All those killed were white
miSSionaries and their
families, authorities said .
In London, John Smyth ,· a
member of the Elim
Pente costal International
Missions Boa rd sa id at
mission headqu arters at
Cheltenham, England hi s
organization was told the
guerrillas. knifed the missionaries to death before 250
black schoolch ildren at the
school's playing field.
He identified the survivor
as Mary Fisher, 32, and said
she was believed hospitalized
in either Salisbury or Umtali .
He identified the dead as
Philip and Sandra McCann
and their two children, Joy
and Philip, both under 5;
Philip and Sue Evans and
their daughter Rebecca, also
under 5; Joyce and Roy Lynn
and their 3-week-old daughter
Pamela; Catherine Picken,
53, and Wendy White, 35.
"We understand the
guerrillas came into the
school and made the 250
schoolchildren go into the
playing fields and witness the
sta bbing to death of the
missionaries," he said.

By RAYMOND WILKINSON
KINSHASA, Zaire (UPI) -

A FROG AND clowns were part IJl the large rade that traveled from Middleport to
Pomeroy Friday night.
·

demonstrations.
The JDL in New York
reported seve ral hundred
members had traveled to
Chicago and would hold a
peaceful
counterdemon·
&gt;tration at the plaza.
The United Committee
Against Injustice also
planned
a
counterdemonstration
and
a
spokesman sa id the group
would try to convince persons
attending a Puertn Rica n Day
parade downtown to join in
the anti-Nazi protest .
Chicago police so urces said
seve ral thousand counterdemonstrators were expected
to confront a group of no
more than 75 Nazis at the

plaza.
A spokesman for the
Ge n e ral
Se rvice s
Adminstration said security
had been boltered at the
federal building and that a
tea m of federal magistrates
would he in court to set bond
for anyone arrested.
Authorities said anyone arrested would be taken to the
federal lockup at the Disksen
Federal Building, across the
street from the plaza. The
lockup can hold 800 prisoners.
Nazi leader Frank Collins
billed the rally as a "victory
rally to celebrate winning
back our rig hts of free
speech."
The Nazis had planned a
Sunday march in Skokie, a

pred ominantly
J ewish
suburb, and thousands of
Jews and sympathizers had
vowed
a
counterdemonstrati on. But the
Skokie march was canceled
Thursda y night after a judge
said they could hold a July 9
rally in Marquette Park,
located in a racially troubled
neighborhood.
Saturday's counter-1lemoostrations at the federal plaza
were expected to draw some.
of the 50,000 persons who had
been expected at an anti-Nazi
rally in Skokie. That rally which had been scheduled for
Sunday - was called off
when the Nazis scrubbed
plans for their Skokie march.

Renew ouster efforts
CHAHLESTO N, W.Va .
(UP!) - Miners seeking to
recall United Mine Workers
President Arnold Miller said
they will renew their efforts
to remove the ailing 55-yearold president following the
upcoming fourweek miners'
vacation period.
And, some reports indicate
wildcat strikes will be held in
the post-vaca lion period by
miners protesting the health
care syst em now under
private insurance companies
instead of the UMW Health
and Retireme nt Funds.
UMW spokesman Frank
Powers said the union the
Bitwninous Coal Operators
Association are working on
the health care problems.
"The BCOA says they are
totally committed to making
the system work," Powers
said. "We think the problem
is going to ·be taken care of. "
Powers said he has seen no
recall petitions, and he
expects Miller to return Ill
Washington next week. Miller
is gradu ally doing some
work , but when he'll return to
the union office is between

Miller and his doctor, Powers
said .
Wes t Virginia miners
usually take the first twoweek period, starting
Monday. but a few take the
. second two-week period
beginning July 10.
Bill Bryant, organizer of
the move to recall Miller,
said Friday he 's heard
nothing since submitting
petitions with :&gt;:1,000 names oo
UMW Secretary Treasurer
Bill Essellltyn oo March 8.
Bryant said petitioners
have 31 ,000 names against
Miller, who has not been
active in union affairs since
being felled by a stroke and
heart attack foll owing
negotiations of a new soft coal
contract in late March.
Now that the initial recall
petitions have been filed, it is
Esselstyn's duty to prepare a
petition listing the charges
and Miller 's answers, then
mail them to local unions. H,
within 30 days, 30 percent of
th e union's 270,000 members
sign the petitions, Essellltyn
would be directed to set up an
election .

Bryant said he feels Esselstyn, who was elected with
Miller, has been dragging his
feet "to an extent.n
Esselstyn was unavailable
lor comment.
Bryant said he hasn 't
pressed the effort because of
confusion following the Jl().
day UMW strike, and now
. because of vacations.
"We're definitely going to
push it after vacatioo," the
anti-Miller leader said . "I
think if we don't have some
type of positive leadership,
we're not going Ill have a next
coo tract."
Strength for the petition
drive is heaviest in southern
West Virgina District 17 and
District 29 , the union's two
biggest districts, and District
12 In Ullnois.
Bryant said there are
allegations of some duplicate
names of 4,000 petitioners In
western Kentucky 's District
23, but he said some of the
petition s there brough t
different charges against
Miller
than
Br ya nt's
petitions.

Carter is 'fence mending'
By JAMES L . OVERTON
HOUSTON (UP!) - Presidenl Carter met with 100
members of the black community Satu rday in an
intense, private session
aimed at "fence mending"
and assuring his supporters
their voices are heard at the
White House.
Blacks emerged from the
meeting, which ran· three
times the scheduled 15
minutes, saying they bad
managed a dialogue with the
president but that no specific
questions were answered.
"Fence mending was part
of the president's trip ," said
Rep. Barbara Jordan, DTexas,
one
of
the
participants . "He is in
trouble with some of the
black leadership.
"The president's trip here
helped smooth the waters in
terms of his relations with the
black leadership. I do not
think the president is in
trouble with the rank and file
blacks."
Black leaders asked for the
meeting because they seek a
more direct line of
communication with the
White House.
"The president acquitted
himself to this group vef)'
well ," Miss Jordan said. "He
did not get specific to
quesli011s proposed to him.
He did not go into details but
did ... give a springboard to
the
development
of
programs."
The bla cks specifically
asked C11rter about the
impact ofllis urban poiicies

on pove rty areas within
affluent cities; his intentions
about appoinilng a black to a
high leve l White House staff
position ; and the placement
of more blacks to high
positions in the government .
"It 's big, in the Congress,
and developing, " Miss
Jordan said of .. the urban
policy program. "Targeting
will perhaps yield the policies

we seek. 11
But she said Carter offered
no real hope on the White
House appointment.
"The president said that he
and Vice President Mondale
were the best a venues in the
administration , that he had
resisted departmentalizing
his staff," she said. "He
urged us to deal with him
directly."

Beef growers will benefit
CHICAGO (UI'I J - Consumer food prices~ led by
risi ng heel costs, will climb
higher during the rest of 1978,
and ranchers and ca ttle
growers will be the
beneficiaries, Secretary of
Agriculture Bob Bergland
[lllys.
Bergland told a news
conference Friday estimates
by the USDA show 1978 food
prices will be 8 to 10 percent
higher than last year's
prices.
In Chicago to address the
Agricultural Economics
Club, the secretary said
about half of the rise in meat
costs had been caused by
"dramatically increased

SEARCH HELD
SOUTH CHARLESTON,
Ohio (UP!) - Deputies from
Clark and Greene counties
searched Friday for a man
who robbed the Springfield
Bank of SOuth Charleston of
an undetermin&amp;lj amount of
money Friday afternoon.

demand lor beef, especially
hamburger . He predicted
demand will push prices
higher, affecting both food
bought in resta urants and at
supermarkets.
He cited internat ional
.weather conditions and unstable market developments,
especially lor beef producers,
as the main reasons behind
the explosion in food costs
this year.

BILL SIGNED
SA CRAMENTO, Calif.
(UP!) - Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. Saturday signed a
$5 billion bill to ease lor one
year the financial crunch of
Proposition 13 on local
govemments In California.
"Two weeks ago, no one
would have believed a bill of
this magnitude and complexity could be passed in two
weeks," said the to-year-old
govemor, who bitterly opposed Proposition 13 before
the June 61electlon.

�D-3- The Sundav Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 25 , 197 ~

D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

TELEVISION
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For Be$t Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Olassifieds
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•
SUNDAY,J UN EJS 191B
6 :QO--AG-USA 4' For You .. Biack' Woman a · This Is
The Life 10.
·
'
&lt;~&lt; 3 D--C hristopher Closeup 3; Jerry Fa lwell 4, Talking
• Hands B; American Problems &amp; Challenges 10
· 1 :QO--Th ls Is The . Life 3: Jer ry Fa lwell 4; Eddie
, Saunders 6' Thtnklng In Black 8; Treehouse Club
· 10; Newsmaker ' 1B 13 .
~.: JD--TV Chapel l; You r Health 4: Show My People 6;
Jerry Falwell B; Urban League 10; Blbte Answers
; 13; Jimmy Swaggart 15.
a; oo--Mormon Choi r 3: Day of Discovery 4; Grace
• Calhedral 6; Church Service 10: Christ for the
: World 13; Some of God's Children 1S; Sesa meS( 20.
8~3()-()ral Roberts 3, Jimmy Swagga r t 4; Celebration
• of Praise 6: Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
~ Presents 10; Willard Wi lcox 13 ; Open Bible IS.
9, oo--Gospel Sing ing Jubilee 3; Robert Schuller 4; Rex
; Hum~ard 6; Rev Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts
. 10: J•m Franklin 13: Ernesl Ang ley 15; Mister
Rogers 20
! :3D--What Does The Bible Pl ai nly Say? 8: 11 Is
~~ Written 10 ; Church Service 13 , Zoom 20.
· ~ h~lst Is The Answer 3:. Church Service 4 ;
Chr ls1•an Center B; Sesame Sf 20; Movle " Heller in
• Pink Tight s" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Gospe l
• Singing Jubilee 15.
!O:JD--Rex Humbard 3; Yours for lhe Asking 4; Hoi
Fudge 6; Dr . Thea Jones 8; Garner Ted Armst rong
13.
l_l :OD--Ooctors on Call 4, Big Blue Marb le 6; Ernest
Angley 8: Rev He nry Mahan 13; Rex Hu m bard 15;
, Infinity Factory 20.
11 :3D--Big Blue Marble J ; Animal s, An imals, An ima ls
6, 13; Focus on Columbus 4; Elec. Co. 20
12 QO--At Iss ue 3; News Confer ence 4 ; Issues &amp; An swers 6, 13 ; Face The Nation 8; The Issue 10.
Spiritual Blr1h 15; In Sea r ch of the Rea l America
20
12:3D--Meet The Press 3, 4,1 5, Communique 6 ·
Testi mony Time Today 8; Face The Nation 10:
Eva nge li s t Cal vin Evans 13, Dick Cavett 20 .
'
l :DO-A m erica 's Black Foru m 6; Bob Jones Un l versltv
8; Was hington Week I ~ Review 33 ; Mov1e " The Song
of Bernadelle" 10, Movie " Mr . Smllh Goes fo
Was~lng1 o n " 13; How To 20.
I :3D--Tony Brown ' s Journal 3; Lill ie Rasca ls 4: Tony
. Browns Journa l 6; Tennis 8; Wall Street Week 33;
•, PTL Club 15; Hocking Va lley Bluegrass 20.
1 . 55-- Ftlm . 4; 2:oo-Mov 1e " The Fo ur Poster" 3:
., Movie " Tarzan 's New York Adventure" 4; Awa r e
w 6: Advocales 33 ; Good Morn ln' Blues 20.
2:3D--Church of God 6; Movie " Divorce His" 8· J ·OD-Movle " Tarzan &amp; the Green Goddess"
Great
Perfo r mances 33 ; Rosenberg .Sobell Case
Revisited 20 .
I :JD--Tennis 13; Grealesl Sports Legen ds 6 · Th is Is
The L ite 15.
'
4:oo--Baseball3,4 ; Sporlswor ld 15; Te nnis 6; Golf 8, 10 . •
f3D--Bix Beiderbecke 20: Blue Collar Capita lis m 33 .
&gt;:QO--Amer lcan Sportsman 6,1 3: Old Fri ends . New
: Friends 2() ; Nova 33.
:! :3D--Insight 15 ; Elec. Co. 20: 6:QO--Lel's Deal With 11
~ 6; To Be Announced 8: Honest Al 's Tigers 10;
~ Tow nTop ics 13. Be tter Way IS; Zoom 20. Tur ... nabout 33
1-: JD--News 3,4,6; NBC News 15: Concern 8; Wild
:" Kingdom 10. New~ m ake r '18 13; Nova 20. Mcn1age
.. 33.
t oo--World of Dis ney 3,4. 15 ; Hardy Boys-Nan cy Drew
~ 6.13 ; 60-M inu tes 8, 10; Meeti ng of M inds 33 .
7,:3~ rockett ' s Victory Garden 20.
~oo-- Prolect U. F .O. 3,4, 15: Lucan 6,1 3; Rhoda 8, 10;
, Prevln &amp; the Pittsburgh 20; Keyboard Sonatas 33.
~3()-()n Our Own B, 10.
leo-- Pollee Story 3,4. 15; ABC Theatre 6,13. All 1n T he
: . Family 8,10; Poldark It 20,33 .
9t3D--AIIce B. 10; 10 :QO-Switch 8.1 0; Austi n City Limits
;" 20; Firing Line 33 .
ll :QO--News 3,4,6,8,10. 13, IS ; Janakl 33 .
l 1: 15--ABC News 6; CBS News 8,10; PM A P ulse 15.
11 :3D--Movle " T he Unfaithful " 3; Mo vie " Run A
Crooked Mile" 4; Movie " FI Igh llo Holocaust" 15;
FB I 6; 700 C lub 8: Movie " Come Back. Litt le
Shebba " 10, PTL Club 13
12 :3D--Second CllyT .V 6. 1·3D--Marcus We lby. M.D.
•. 4 ; ABC News 13.
MONDA Y, JUNE 26. 1918
5:45-- Farm Report 13 ; 5:50--PTL Club 13 ; 6:QO-PT L
Club 15 ; Sum me r Semester 10.
6:3D--Cotumb us Today 4; News 6: Su mme r Semester
• 8; Pubtlc Affa ir s 10 , 6:45--Mo rn lng Reporl 3;
6 :50--Good Morning . West Virginia 13 ; 6 :55--News
13 .
7:QO--T oday 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6. 13 ; C BS
News 8; Porky P ig 10 . 7:25--Chuck Wh ite Reports
10.
7: JD--School les 10 ; B:oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. 33 .
1: 00- Merv Griff in 3: Phi l Donahue 4. 13. 15 ;
•· Emergenc y One 6 . Brady Bunch 8: Pass l'he Buck
10
9:3D--Andy Griffith 8. Family Altair 10
IO :QO--Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Nigh I 6; Pass The
. Buck B; Joker 's Wild 10; To Te ll The Trulh 13: Over
Easy 33 .
l0 :3D--Hotlywood Squares 3.4, t5 ; High Hopes 6: Pri ce
' Is Right B. 10: S20,000 Pyramid 13 ; Pain t Along with
Nancy Kaminsky 33 .
I) ·QO--H igh Rollers 3, 4,15; Happy Day s 6, 13;.
1'] :3D--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13 ;
Parlr ldge Family 4; Lo ve of Li fe 8. 10 ; 11:55-C BS
; News 8; Loving Free 10 .
IQ :QO--Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10 ; Sanford &amp; Son IS;
Midday Magazine 13; Watch Your
, Gambit B;

.4 ;;

1978 AMC CON.CORD D/L

• Buckel seals, air cond .
• AM· ~M stereo &amp; tape
• Landau roof &amp; • more

Ford Free Wheeling Courier

1 STATION WAGON AND lHREE SEDANS IN STOCK

Tough new way to go Truckin ' ln style.
-~-

OPEN T ILL 1 P .M.
• •.;;;;a.... , Except Thursday &amp; Saturday tlt5 :
Closed Sundoy

'"""""

DAN THOMPSON FORD

"All ~ars equipped with: Air conditioning, Power '
Steenng~ ~ower Brakes, Individual Reclining Seats in
soft feel vmyl, Automatic Transmission, Radio, Vinyl
Top~ Color:keyed wheel covers, 258 Cl D six cylinder
engme, white wall tires. Light group. Protection group.
FACTORY WARRANTY

See Rocky Hupp, Dorrell Dodrill or Pot Hill, Gontrol
Monager, for a Good Deat on 1 New or Used Vehicle
992-2196
Middleport,

o:
OJI\.AII SAlOH 2-~ OR • -DR.

• AI

r cond., oulo.
• AM-FM radio, p.s ., p.b.
•&amp; more

1977 Chevelle Malibu. 4895
5

&lt;.oupe . While over green . 250, 6 cyl. engine, automot lc
tr ans .. power st . &amp; brakes. power door locks &amp;
windows. co mtort ill. AM-FM rad io, deluxe equipment.

Less than 12,000 m1les. Co. car, never titled .

5

1974 Chevelle .••••• ~7:~·~. 1695
2 Seat Wagon , VS engine, automatic trans ., p. steering ,

THAT

GREAT CUTLASS FEELING

See~· of these COUI'teous salesmen .
.Pete Burris, Marvin Keeb•ugh or George Harris.

CONTINENlAL MARK XIX . 19'1&gt;
ft. tro~e l troilar , sleeps b. fully

equipped . Call6 1 4 · 2~ · 6&lt;0'1 .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
m -SJ42

You'll Uko Our Quoltty Woy of Doing luslneu" GMC Flnonclng
Open EVtnlfttS Unt116 :- n l Sp.m. Sat.
I'II~Mm"

needs some pa int work , rad io, like new tires .

Hotel

1972 Plymouth Fury II 895
1971 Dodge Polara4 DR s759
Polara 4 Dr , V.8, au tomatic, P.S.. radio. Barga in
pr iced

1976 GMC %Ton •••••• 53695

SlEEPING

MAGNUM XE
The Totally Personal Approach
To Driving Excitement.

1974 GMC 1h Ton .••••• 52295
8 fl . wi de bod y. V B, automatic, P .S., P . B., good ti res .
Step bumper .

1974 Dodge Van •••••••• s3995
Con version 318 V·8. automatic, p.S. &amp; P . B., good tires,
sound mechan ically. n ice in1erlor conversion, ice box ,
bed

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

"2-2126

. Pomeroy
Open Evenin9stiiB :OOp.m.

m3 MON TE CARl O landou P I
P.B., A.C. , AM 8•trock stereo.
Ea:cellenJ condit ron
Sl700.
8&lt;3-2b22.
1968 VW BUG. $400. 9'12-5858

--

19 70 CH£VHI E automatic trans
6 cyl $350 Call 9'12·1376
"
1913 PINTO SQUIRE Stollon
wagon w1lh a ir. new tlrtl , mag
whee l' E~ecell ent condltron
Phonfl qq2·1058.

1977 VOLAR£ ROAD Runne r. 318,
black wit h Supe r Poclo. . A.C Jqb7 BUt( I( GS
Runs-good
,s tereo. Alter\ 5:30 or onvtr me
new - oint , ro ily wheel•
weekends, coll 949 2828
9!15 -47:'6 alter 6 S400.

:00.

Truck Headquarter s
1973 Ford Von
1974 1/t T. Chev. PU

, 197-t three· fourth Chev . PU

1971 GMC9500Troctor
1973 F700 Ford Dump Truck
1973 Novo
1q'72 Datsun PU
1974 Chev . 11t T. PU
1977 Ford Pickup
1972 Ford Van

ROOMS .AND

hght
PARK

1974 EL DORAD0 .......................... ~295

2,584 LB. TOBACCO LEASE . Call
256·6038 after bpm .

1973 CADIUAC CPE. DEVILU ........... .'1995

BRADBURY RENTALS
7')(1 Second Ave .
446-0'157

1974 CADILlAC SED. DEVIu.£ .............'3695

housekeeping

rooms ,

CE NTRA LHOlEL

Eff . Apt. Adults only . No pels .

Drive Home A Winner

MOBilE HOME . 3 BR .. lurni•hed
on Raccoon A:d .. no pets , n~
children , $135 plus secu n ty

depo1 il . Phone .. 46·1728
lRAILER. Caii67S..IIB6

I%7Chev . IT Truck
1975GMC ll . Truck
FURN ISHED APT . Upstairs , 3 rms
1976 Ford 11.. T. Truck
and bath . Prefer one adul!
Bedllnen , heavy duty , reor step
Wr ite Bo~e 856, c-a Gallipolis
bump•r .
Dolly Tribune .
SOMMERSGMC
MOBilE HOME LO l In city . Call
lR UCKS, INC
446-1680
133 Pine St .
446·2S32 .
TWO BDR mobllt home in CentHoura: 8 om to 6:30pm
neory No pets. Dap req . Coli
446-4292 .
197B MERCURY COUG AR . $200. FOUR RM . APT .. upsta irs . 1 adults
and takt ovtr payments. 1977
only . Rof . &lt;eq . Coll446·4063.
Ford y, T., • whl dr .. V-8, auto.
CLEAN rug&amp;, like new . 10 easy to
55800. Coll388· '1325.
do wiTh Bl ue Lustre . Rent elec 1974 VEGA HAlCHBACK . good
tr ic shompooer, S2. Cen tral
cond. new e~ehousl system.
Supply.
$700. or trade fo r pickup
THREE RM FURN APT . witn
camper . Coll379-22,.7 .
prlvote bath. second floor . Coli
1977 CHEVY lRUCK . 11.000 miles.
&lt;46-221 s.
S4200. wllh compor top. 1916
Ford truck . 52100. Call COUNlRY MOBILE Homo Park .
•46-304S.
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy.
Largo
lo ts . Call 9'12-7&lt;79.
1,72 MONTE CARLO, auto., PS,
air , AM-FM radio, radials. SENIOR CITIZENS· Ou&lt; new
51250 . Coll2~ · 6011.
renter1 onlatance. you may be
able to live In our apartment
19S3 l '!t T. GMC with flat dump
tor le11 than $50 a mont h. For
bed. Good running cond . Coli
Informat ion , contact
more
2S6·6247.
VIllage Manor Apartments
1976 DODGE CHARGER, P.S..
9'12-11B7.
P .B., AM8 track atereo, a
,
CORNER
LOT for traile r apace an
bucket seats, burgundy whltelon·
riv
erfront.
992-2238
or
dou lop 13500 Pn 446-5111 of tor
9'/HJO.&lt; .
1974 BLAZER , AC , PS , P8. tilt
2:30PM
whul, other e~etras . Prlct : 1970 fORO PICKUP. 5500. Coli lWO BEDROOM unlurnlohed opt.
$4000. Coii446-3J.45.
J88.8SS6.
_;C:::
a::,
ll '1'12
= ·:22
.:: :8:::.·:...._
8
_ _ __
197b GRANADA GHI.t., 6 cyl .. 1973 CHEVY '/, T. PIC~UP , good I CHURCH FOR rontln Syracuse. All
warranty . rod lois . .A.C , tJCtros .
cond . Colt367-0S.Ot.
Furnished. Phone 9'12-5249.
SllOO. or toke 0\18t paymentt .
Mayme Custer Manning.
1969 FORO ECONOLINE VAN.
Caii2S6-9304 , 6pm to 9pm .
ne.d1 work . Runs good . S150 TRAILER SPA.CE for r•nt n.ar
75 CHEV. PICKUP, V~ Ton , A whHI
Call4-16·7398.
·
Chos ttr . 9BS-3979.
dr l•• · Ph. 4-16-4086.
197~ OOOG£ VAN: '14 Cha&lt;gor SMAll BACHElOR aportmont .
1916 OlOS CUlLASS SUPREME .
SE . Call361·1220.
lurnlohed. In Middleport . Coli
Koo lvent awn ings , mobilt
9'12·3173 or 9'/2.5013 .
home roof pooin t . Call 1962 FOI!D FAIRLMIE. lor parts,
446·3918.
S12S .. Top ahell fits Chry. or
Fo&lt;d '1. T . $125. Call367-nB1 .
1977 '16 T. PICKUP, 8500 mi., e MCJ .
cond . SA500. Coll245.9213.
1972 COIIVElTE CONVERTIItlE 2
tops. 3SO, ,. spd., 1967 Chevy'•;,
WILL SELL OR l RADE 1969 Lincoln
T,
pickup: Two 16' tandem open
Contenentin•llor good pickup .
traHera. Fireplace manrle with ' TRADE: TWO loll In Pomero~ . WUI
_ c_a_ll ~~S -~
9S~2:::_
B .,___ _ ,
mirror ond trim Bel t offer on
trode fo r bulldo1er or motor
19b7 FORD PICK UP. b cyi . std . Just
any t o f Ihe above. Call
nome . Colll -304·648·5602. Fort
rebuilt. Call 367-0-412 .
256·6711 .
Gay , WV.

See One of the courteous Salesmen : .,.,e Burris,
Morvin Koebeugh or Gtorat H1rrls

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll Like Our Qu•llty Way of
Doing Business" GMC Financing
99 2·53 42- 0pen Eveni119s Until6: oo
Til5 PM Sat. -Pomerov

SEE IT TODAY AT

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
Corner 3rd &amp; Court

1969 CHEVELLE MALIBU. 4 spd
tron a. Call.u6-16-46
'

"Your Chevy Deoler"

NEWGMC

1976 Pinto
t97S I\ l . GMC

1 owner, good t ires, V-B, automatic , P.S., P.B., rad io.

IN STOCK I NEW CHEVY
VAN CONVERSIONS, MOTOR
HOMES, SPORT PICKUPS,
4 WH. DRIVE PICKUP,
EL CA INO, BLAZERS.

LOW weekly and mon th ly rotes ot
li bby Ho tel. "46-1743

SLEEPING rooms for rent , Goll io

5

V-B. automalic, P .S., good tires Pr iced to go .

A Leader Any Way
You Loolc At It ••

191T'PTNTO wrth radia l tire s and
new shocks . In good condition.
9q2-7285aher &lt;4 pm .
1976 ~- DOOR PINTO. Good t1re s.
rod ro, heater. Good mileage
&lt;4 - c~l . std. shift 1973 Olda s8
Roya le , full vinyl Interior , AM·
FM rad io , A.C. , tilt steeri ng
wheel , flnttd glou , 55 ,000
milea. Contact Joe Struble
...!_9!_-3424 after 5:30pm .
1972 TOYOlA COROLLA 1000 2·
door stohon wagon Motor
recently rebu_i h. Som8 rus t on
bo_?~ 99~3S74 ,

1971 DODGE CHARGER . outo ,
AC .. S995 . Al•o . 19b5 Dodge ,
aut o , $1~5 .
Evenin g•
300 73-5619.

GaiWpolis

!.?.7!u,P~.~~b~ape,

super

stock wheels.

1977 CHRYSLER

c~~w

nice air, p:w ., p.s .•

p.b.

$4295
$5395

1975 INTERNATIONAL

SCOUT II

Auto ., p.s .• p.b., • wheel drive, V-8,
lock In hubs.

1974 OLDS VISTA
CRUISER
9 Passenger, air, low mileage, p.a.,
p.b.

'

\!?~J49Y~ ~~~RtnSfo9.RT$3695
Sharp., automatic on ltoor, bucket
seats .

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

"Loco led on W. Ve . Side Of Pomii'OY·MIIrldgt (1041 m.sm

•• Mouth 33.

b

3D--Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15 ;
Search for To morrow 8, 10 ; French Chef 33.
1; oo--For Richer. For Poorer 3; Al l My Children 6.13;
• News 8; Young &amp; lhe Restless tO; Not tor Women
Only 15; Keyboard Sonatas 33.
I ·3D--Days of Our Llve5 3.4.15; 6ne Life to Live 13,6; ·
Five REd Herrings 33.
2 :3D--Doctors 3,4. 15 ; Guiding Light a.10; 3:QO• Another Worl d 3,4 , IS; General Hospital 6, 13 ; Lltlas
~ Yoga &amp; You 20.33.
3:3D--A tl In The Family 8.10; Pr ime Time 20; Book
Beat 33.
~: oo--Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer , For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 2(),33: Match Game 10; Dinah 13 .
4.3o--My Three Son s 3: Gi ll igan' s Is . 4; Batman 10 ;
Little Rascals 15.
S·QO--Here Come The Brides 3; My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8. Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20.33;
' Voyage to 1he Bollom ollhe Sea 10; Emergency One
13; Pefflcoat Junct ion 15 .
·
$; 3D--Odd Couple 4; News 6; E lec . Co. 20,33; Hogan 's
Heroes IS.
' :oo--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;
Making Things Grow 33.
6:3D--NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
' CBS New,s 8, 10: Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
1:0D--Cross-Wits 3.• : Newlywed Game b.l3: Marty
Robbins' Spotl ight B; News 10; Gill igan' s ts . 15;
Daniel Foster, M .D. 20; Shepherd's P ie 33 .
1:3D--Thal Nashvi ll e Music 3; In Search of 4; Moppet
: Show 6; Match Game PM B; Mac Neil-Lehrer
• Report 20,33 ; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13;
; Nashville On the Road IS.
~ : DO-Littl e House on The Pra irie 3,4, 15; Baseball6, 13;
• Jeffersons 8,1 0: Cons umer Surv ival Kit 20,33 .
l :Jo--Good Times 8,10; Turnabout 20,33 .
t :Oo-Movle "The Girl from Petrovka" 3,4,1S; Mash
• 8,10; Canal Zone 20,33 ; 9:3D--One Day At A T ime

:

8, 10.

~ o : oo--Lou

Grant B, 10: 11 :co--News 3.4.6.8.10. 13,15.
l1:3D--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Soap 6,13: Movie
: "Spellbound" 81 Mov ie " The Five Pennies" 19 .
~1 : 4D--To Be Announced 33; 12 :DO-ABC News 33.
~2 : 05--Pollce Story 6,13; 12 :3D--Janakl 33;

•

:1 :0&lt;&gt;-·Tomorrow 3,4; I : 15-- News 13 .

••

For Best Results Use Times-Sentinel
~~.f:tp;t,af ~-

0

;

~.

'

;

~ment

-·----------:.; ::'T"-==-.;::;' ;:::

=-

~- -'-,::-

_·
~~

f;l,'fsified~
-

-·~=-

::-:..-"::'-:;:: ::... ::. .;-

8 8. S MOBilE HOMES, Pt Plea·
In memory of Jame!&gt; H Beaver on JUNK aut o and sc rap metal . Ph 1974 ESCAPADI: 25 ft motor
se nt, W . Vo. bes rdeH ec ~ ' s
3B8.8776.
h•s b1rthdc y.
home rw th extras 5000 mdes AL L WOOO 9 puace bedroo m
suite bed, doub le dress~r and
1973 8roodmare 14 K 64 2
We ore thinl'llng o l you . Son on
$1A ,OOO 614 992-2438 or
Price
GOOD USED FURNITURE : nol
mirror , chest hutc h bachelor
bedroom
your btrthdoy .
304·773 -5707'
upholstered, and app lianCes
ches t. corne r ches t, desk and
1973 Dorion 14 x602bedraom
Thrnktng of the po st. and oil the
Ph . 446·0322
1977 STARCRA FT FOLD down
choir. In gels Furnrture. $499
1972 Victorian I 4 x 67 3. bedroom.
let Pomeroy Landmark
t
nt e mones'
com pe r . sto"e refrrgera tor.
complete 992 2035 . Alte r 5 coli
2 bath
, Just as we sow you lasl
GOOD USED REGR IGERATOR
soften &amp; ·condition your
304 ·882.2038 .
I
972
Coventry 12 K 65 3 bedroom
How could our hearts forget yo u,
AND FREEZER UPR IGHl OR • Opens to 2111 Slee ps 8. Perfect
water with Co-op . water
' cond1t1on 742-2750
1969
Statesman 12 x 60 2
Son.
CHESl , Ph . 441&gt;·0322 .
HA V. TIMOTHY &amp; orch ard grass
.....
--softener, Model UC-SVt,
bedroom .
Whe n eve ryth ing we do. reminds - -· ----- ---.
COONE
R
's
CAMPER
S
on
Rainbow
~egu lor
sq
ua
re
ba
les
l iMBER
Now Only
R1dge . Reueot1onal vehrdes
us.
Available now on wagons Any
COAl, LIM ESTONE , san d, gra vel,
Top pnce!i lor
Of ho ur s spen t with you
and
occessorres
,
rentol
Off
amount
Get
hoy
before
ca lc1 um chloride , fert ilizer, dog
Top
Quality
Let' us test your water Fret;
Our thought s an d lave ore w1lh
Oh1 o Rt 7. south of Tuppers
storage at sow frce . Pau l Sayre
food , ond all t~ p es of salt , h ·
POMEROY
FORREST
PRODUCTS
you .
Pla1ns. Take CR 28 to 8oshan
Great Bend Road , Rt 338 .
ce ls1or Salt Wo rk s. Inc .. E. Mo1n
Cal
l
992.$%5
Althoughwe are aport .
Co li Robert Codn e r, Long Ba t·
Po rt land , 643-4591 .
St., Pomeroy . 992-3891 .
We wi ll a lways hove you d ose to
tom , Oh1o .
9.,.!_ack W. C.rsey , Mgr .
us
S n-o~~~~J;f;;~(ubc~;; ,
BE ST SELE CTION of the best woo d
sta ves in Sour heosrern Ohio
Becau se you are .n o ur heart.
245 -53-48
Phone 992-2181
Mrss tng and loving yo u Mom, 22 FT . REVELL A , self con ta ined
Jo tul Ma rso, Elel Tirolia ,
~oi and Fam ily . _ _
THRE E OR FOUR steel frh ng
~x_c _:_o~d~ ~~!!_.4_~6·2J9~
Tempwood , and Naf huo Zron
cobrnets. Call 446·1015 or 1q FT NOMAD . goad cond , self
Hea t Co , 8 Putnam Dr. (off Mr ll
1976 F.150 FORD pic kup Powe r
con ia tned. Call446-2q95 .
446· 1243'--,-Sf ) A1hen s b 1_. 592-6079 or
steermg b roke ~ . aut o. Irons
614-69b-I IB7 .
BULLDOZER· will trade small · cAM-PER - siee;-6~ · -:ery- Q~-;;d
Nlchorlnt, Sklrtl1'1!1 1
AM-FM ste reo w1th tope
bus tne:u property in Gallipolis .
shape
Coll
245-93q3,
W~ WISH to thank everyo ne
player. 37 ,000 m1les El(cellent
Awnings,
P•tlo
Coli 256-6038 after bpm .
-- - -- eve ryone who helped us when
condr tran $3750 Call days
1 Cover~. Cuports,
our house was burned I also ANTIQUE ROLl TOP DESK and
~92 - 554 5 o r even ~n g s q~9- 2216 ,
Roof P1int, Set-up ' HONDA 125 on -all road mo tor cy·
wooden fr ltn g cabinet . Coli
--=.7- ::_.....:- ,....:=
wish to thank the C8er's a nd
245 5050.
--~-==-=-..:::::the churches .
____
-·=.:::~
and R•levtlint Call.
cle tor sole Excellent co ndi·
The Jumo r Hohoin ger Famdy .
GOO D USE D FREEZER . Coli . All TYPE S of budding mater 1ols.
f1on . Phone 9.119- 22::1~9:.__ _
446-7003or446·07B I
block , b nc k sewer p 1pes. win .
1976 FORO F 350 heavy duty . B x
HEAVY DUTY TRAILER HITCH for• dows. lrn tels, etc Claude
10 bed 6 It cattle rock. 4·
pickup truck. Call 44b-7440
Wmters. Rio Grande . 0 . Phone
speed. P 5 . P.B. All gouges.
17 000 mdes 949-2273.
SWEEPER ond sew mg machine _..,!venrngs:c·- - - - - - - _!4~_
5 1_21 _
af_
te~---- ___ _
repo1r , pa rts and suppli es Prck PORCH FOR MOBI LE HOME . 36 ot LAYNE'S NEW &amp;UIED fURNITURE
APPALOOSA HORSES Stud ser· CO LOR fV Coli 992 2q86 otter 0
up and delive ry. Davis Vacuum
40" high. Co ll446·3023
NEW
pm
vice $50 reg mares. S35
Cleane r. 1;1 mi le up Geo rges
Sola, chair. roc ker olloman J
g
rade
mo
res
Also
breedrng
NEW HOLLAND b6 bole r. I H 3
Creek Rd Ph 446·0294
tab les . $501)' Bedroom su1tes.
TIM BER POMEROY Fores t Pro ·
s tack . Call 245.q369 Ri o
pt , 4 row cu lt ivators I H 203
$tbS.S250 $300-$500 30 e lec
ducts. Top price lor stondmg
PA SQUALE Eleclrico l Ser\IICe .
Grande
comb me wrth gram head Coli
Inc
ranges,
$200
E
or
Am
sofa
so
w
trmber
.
Call
q92
-5965
or
.
.
446-27 16 day or nrght
949 ·2033
8. chai r $300 modern solo FUll SIZE AN D QUEEN SIZE BED
Kent Hanby , 1-446-8570.
THURMAN HOU SE. on ~q-;;es. Fur :
charr , loveseat $275 Rec liner s
DING Captom's bed tab le 1973 DATSUN p1ckup. Phone
n11ur e st rrpp1ng , repair and OLD FURNITURE . ice bo)(es. brass
$100 a nd up· Tables $b0 eac h
la mp, laundry tub baby bed
992 ·3803 O&lt; 992 -6729:.:_·- - - BURROUGHS SENII-MAliC oc·
bed s. iron beds desks e tc ' SwivE! I roch rs $1 25 Ma ple or
re l mi~he d . Co unty Rd 8 off 35
comple
te wrth m ottres~ Carb in
cou n tmg ma ch1ne
Phone
complete
househo
lds
Writ~
1977
ROTO TILL ER . Cotl
Ce nt e r"¥ 1\le Vdlage
Closed
pme tabl e . 4 cho irs $225 Hutch
and Sny der Fu rniture . 955 Se
992 21S6. The Daily Sentrnel ,
M
.D.
M1
lle
r,
RL
4,
Pomeroy
or
Monday &amp; Tuesday . Evenrn gs
$225 &amp; $275 , , 7 pc Ornette.
cond Ave .. 446-1171 .
_l_·b_14_-2!}_:_246:_4:...- - Ill Court Street, Pomeroy ,
co11 992-7760 .
by appointment 245- 9479
$1()9 5 pc D1nette $55 00. 9 pc SALE ON CACl l &amp; SU
lq78
RM 250 Suzuk r. Will trade lor
Oh.a .
:..:
C
:.,
C...,
Ul
:c
EN
-cT
:
:::
S.
I
.. ·----·$160 Bunk bed ~ complete SlSO
WANT TO buy · 5 or 6 h . tr acto r
cor 01 sell S1200 949-2367
FOR DEAD I TOCK REMOVAl
7 pr1c e sole on unusu al porch &amp;
UI ED lRACTORS
$225 matt resses or bo )( spr·
blade
Natha n Van am a n
CALL 245·5514 .
.
patiO
hang
ing
bo
5kets
GE
REFR IG ERA fOR Gas cookmg MF135 Drese l MF230 Diesel
1.1gs . ftrm SbO ea .. ches t ol
742-2101.
Glo s!i h o u s e
Wo rk s
MF150 Dreset MF735 D1esel ·
stove K•tchen cab ine ts Double
CITY CAB
•Irower $38
Greenhouse. Stew a rt , Oh10
WANT TO buy Small blac k Che"y GOOD USED
MFI65 Dresel · MF285 Diesel s1nk 992 729.11 .
1 DAYS bto 12
Open Thursday Sunday . Many
motor . qe5-41 33.
MF 1135 Diesel Cob air &amp;
Co lt -446 0451
D•Hks, Retrrgerotors, Sweepers.
Viole ts , Gmgers Red Begonia HAY FOR more rnt ormol•on call
hea te r
Dryers . ranges . cotfee and end
949.2822.
Oleffenb,chlo 8 Fer ns . Ph
NEW &amp; USEO IMPLEMENTS.
tables TV's, dmell es. beds,
lR EEHA VEN CERAMICS
bb2 -21 42
1970 HONDA CL 350 mot orcycle . MF9 Boler . MFt O Bal er - MF1 20
tables lamp s. chorrs. oth er
Greenwa re and supplies . Day
Bale r . Matthe ws Rotary Scy th e
Go a d ~;ondif1on .
$300
1tems
Call
4.116·0322
Monday
D
GRADER
Ca11367-04b7
ROA
and n1g ht colsses Cus tom f1r ·
. MF880 Semi -moun ted 6 botthru Friday 9 to 8 p m . Satur·
24
7'
2~,.:.7.:.
6 ·:.__ _
mg. 446 2155 . l ocated oT
1974 MARLIN JH BOAT . 455 Olds
tom Plow
MF520 12 ' Disc ·
day
9
to
5
p m 3 m1 ou t
Ka nougo , Oh.
and Berkl ey pump
Coli H &amp; N Ooy old or sta rted leg horn
MF200
2
R
ow
Chopper · MF39 2
Bulavrlle
Rd.
pullets both floor or coge
446-4078.
Row Planters · Mec:hanrcol
WE WI LL BUY you r o ld dromonds
·-------..-·
-grown
ovorl
a
ble
Po
ultry
HouS·
FOR lHE BEST IN FURNilU RE
Transpl anter
and a ntique jewel ry TAWNEY
GO CAMPING AMERICA
rng and Aut omollon Modern
UPHOLSTERING , Fre e Estrmates 1975 PENlON 400: Jq7b Honda XR
IHINN 'S TRACTOR SAL ES
JEWELRY . 422 2nd Ave.
W1th Coachmen RVs Qual ity 75 Coll446 -4078
Poultry
399
W.
Main
St
Pick
up
and
delivery
service,
..
Phone 458-1630
built
.
priced
right
.
Dozen
s
of
Pome roy. Phone 992 -2164
coli Mowrey's Uphols tery Pt.
BUYING . All United States sil ver
SElliNG OUT
leon. W. Vo.
models
wi
th
a
wrde
range
a
l
Pleasant , W. Vo 675-415.. .
corns . top pr1ces. higher prrces
Cors . dump truck Ford bock hoe, KNIGHT TEMPLAR un1l orm com
lam
rly
-pleosing
floor
plon
s
See
lor silver dollon a nd ea rly
Case bull dozer . several dif plete w1 th occessor1es. Size 42.
them today ! Apple Cit y Rec reo· FARM FENCE POSlS. ALL SIZEI .
wins MTS Com Shop Call
fe re nt items . Co li be tween qam
Phone 9'n-3969
over
6
,000
to
choose
from
,
lionel
Vehicle"
s
.
RL
35,
1
mr.
446· 1642 or 446·0690 . Pay cosh
a nd 3pm ~~9 ~=!_2_
2_
SI 99 and up , shingles , S 14 95
wes t of
Jack son ,
Oh
..
---- 12 FOOT SEA loo t olumrnum boot
per
sq
.
And
e
rson
windows.
1976
HARLEY
DA
VIDSON
ELEC.
_
614 - 2Bb · 5c~1..:
00
::c.._ _ ._ __
5 '' h p Johnson moTor with 6
studs. o the r burldrng moter,ol ,
TRAG UD E !u lly dre ssed. 2.000
gal. lank . Also '2 cyl Man
1961 DI VCO MOlOR HOME .
Open d oily 9 7, Frank s Bargo1n
ac tual m1les Must see to op·
tgomery Ward small mo tor and
Sl500
1962
Inte
rnat
ional
NO ITEM TOO large or too small
Cen ter , Rf 160' Porter , Ohio
preciote. $4800 fnm . Col i
Windows .
Sha kespeare 12 volt motor. Storm
school bus camper, S1SOO Co lt
W1ll buy I prece or co mpl e te
882-3332 alter 4pm or see at
good condil ia n All lor $350
REFR
IG
ERA
lORS,
WASHERS
AND
Storm
Ooors ,
245-5178
.
hou~eha l d New , used . or anti·
208 Oak St . New Hoven , WV.
109 Kerr St . Pomer oy. Phone
DRYE RS WRINGER WASHERS
·Replacement
Winque!lo Ma rtin's Fu rni ture , 20 N
IOlH ANNIVERSARY SALE
992 -3&lt;07
RANGES All SOLD WITH ON E ALVAREZ
ACOUITIC
7nd St. Midd leport . Phone We ha"¥e redu ced our prices ogo1n
dows. P•tio~ toYers.
GUARANTEE WE ALSO SER·
lr ke new . Call CROSBY CRUISEREllE 17' bool.
G UIT AR
992 b370
for thrs special e vent . 21' Travel
VICE APPLIANCES SK AGGS ~ _446-4656 alter 5 30pm
Aluminum Sidino 1nd
Ju
s!
the
th
ing
lor
o
shorl
o~er ­
Star SC , SS,-&lt;489 ; Now SA ,37S ..
CHIP WOOD . Poles ma)C ,
APPLIAN CES . ' 1918 EASTERN
nile
or
ski1ng
with
the
b50
MerAccessories. Call
TZ
B
X
Chlo
r~
not
o
r
and
Ch
lorrne
rn
Fold dow ns , $1869 . and up Us·
d1ome 1er 10" on la rges t end , $8
AV E.. Co ll44b-739B.
cur y motor . Make us on alter
Ground ond Abo"e Ground .
ed 20 ft . mini motor. outo o wn·
per ton. Bundled slob, S6 per
Phone 992-2304 May be seen
POOLS HARRISON'S SER VICE
ing , 25 "· oft . We sell se rv ice PEN DEL TON REBUILT BA llER IES
ton . De li .,.e r e~ to Oh1a Palle t
01 Doug's Manne. Pome roy.
$18
with
e)(change
,
new
ones
CENTER
4.11
7
Second
Gallipolis
,
and qua li ty Open 12 to 1
Co .. At. 2, Pomeroy 9q2 2b8q .
$31 guaranteed 388-8596
P~one 446·9'233
--·
weekdays . Sunday I to • · Comp
APPALACHAIN SlOVE . Greatest
COI NS. CURR ENCY . toke ns. old
Con leyStorcroft Sales, Rt. 62 SWIMMING POOLS and supplies. Horses and pany s elsa buy
~elec tion ot wood and coo l
pocket watche• and chams
North of Pt. Pleaaont .
heater'S . Wa rehouse prices .
tng round and abo"¥&amp; gr ou nd .
live
stoc
k,
horses
,
catt
le
hogs
!&gt;river a nd gold We need 19M
Moving to Mrddleparf Coli 1q71 DATSUN 1 1 ton pickup . 4.
HOLIDAY POOlS, Hunting ton.
Ph
388-9303
etc
.
t
91b
24
FT.
TRAVEL
TRAILER
.
and older silve r coins . Buy , sell
speed , new clu t&lt;h muff ler
bl4 -698-71 ql , .
W.Va. Call 304-429 4788
sleeps 6, self con ta ined . Call
or tr ade Call Roger Wamsle~
BOAT, 1971 Broadwater, 30 It
brokes ond pa m! . 25 m.p.g
446-1358
SWIMMING POOLS. In and above
742·2331.
Cobin Cr u i~ e r a nd tra iler . load· TRUCK TO PPER , $150, Frve 16 B S1 300 Ca11991-7539 .
lug rruck tires ond wheels ,
ground Full s, rvtce . Su pplres
ed . best office or trade . Value
1972 MERCURY, P 1 .. P.B., A. C.
$1 00 . 614 ·593.1390
and pools in stack 0 Bumgord·
S12,000. Phone 446 ·.:77
::..:&lt;::.
5__
No 27 1nternotion al ba ler , 2000
ner So les. 3171 1 Nobel Summ rt
1971 INTERNA TIO NA L ' ·, ton
bu. ea r corn . 9S5 -3537 ofler 6
Mood, Mrddlepo rf, Oh. Call 1q73 FORD p1c kup , short bed 6
p1c kup truc k. q92.7413
_:y~ n[_ Phone 24~~ ~
58:.___
pm 985 41 31
992.5724.
lWO
ROW
CO
RN
CU
LT
IVATOR
loc
Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
USED lRACJORS ·
tractor Call 4,.6·43l 4.
one let1 er to each square, to form
MF1 35 0 1esel
MF230 DieseJ·
tour orctlnary words
MF 150 Diesel · MF235 Diesel
ALLIS CHA l MER S H028 Bu lldozer .
MFib5 Dresel- MF 285 Dresel
$7000 Coll 367 ·0&lt;b7 .
MF1135 Diesel , Cob . air ond
15
CU . fl . DEEP FREEZE . chest
Heater
type
21 1 yrs. old Also 6 mob1le
NEW &amp; US ED IMPl EME Nl S
home
t~res
on
r~ms .
MF9 Boler MF10 Boler MF120
Reaso
nable
Coll44b-3013
located at 300 South College Avenue in Rio Grande,
Boler - Mollhews Rotar y Scythe
Ohio . The following will be off1!red :
MFBBO Semi· Mounted 6 bottom LOWERY 44 ORGAN , $1500 Call
plow · MF520 12' drsc · MF2 2
3BB·B772
5 piece breaklasl sel. oval cherry table . 3 e lectr ic
row chopper
MF39 2 row
CHERRIE
S 40¢ per qt Pick your
hea ters , nig ht stand , AM-FM Zenith radio. asserted
planTer s
me c hon rc ol
a wn Coll 44b·0412.
transplanter SHINN S TRAC
appl iances , 12x20green carpet, throw rugs, end fables ,
lORSALES
pole lamps, 2 e lec. tons . Avon bollles, electric blanket.
ADMI RAl DUPLE X srde by s1de
Phone 458 -1630
re friger ator. While good cand
some picture frames. Hotpoi nt washer &amp; dryer ,
LE ON. W VA
C aii446 · &lt;~~8B5
antique d ishes. Norge deep freeze , RC A ste reo, W·AM·
3E5"T10 STAY ' COOl. •
FM rod lo, meta l drums, electric dr ill, 'I•" cable,
1912
PERRY
BASS
BOA
l
,
20
HP
WHE.N CAPTU~ED I!SY
electric boxes . top link , hog walerer . hot shot and fo rm
1q77 HO NDA 360 , good cond l it·
Mercury e ng .. depth l ~nde1 ,
C.ANN16A1.5r, ~0~
equ ipmen t, and ot her col l ectors ite ms and
tie over 3 000 m rles. Call
troll1ng motor. tro1l er $1400.
388 -850
..:..::
4·_ _ _ __
miscel laneous Items.
Coll 446·0081
NO'T "TO DO "THI6.
lunch Avaltoble
TERMS : CASH
CHIMNEY BlOCKS, bu ddin g 1973 HONDA 450. exc. cond Coli'
moteno ls . Gotl rpa lrs Bloc k Co.
388 8794
Now arrenge the cl tclod letters to
&lt;4b-2783 .
1977
2b SKIFF CRAFl wrth tra1le r.
form the.. surprise answer, as sug·
SEALY MAllRESS SALE . NEW IN ·
l oaded sleeps 6, head . galley .
gesled by ihe above cartoon
NERSPRING
MA llRESSES.
monne rodro. AM-FM s. tereo
DOUB l E SIZE. S64 .9S WAS
Boo t h ou~e at Golilpol1s Boa t
S69.95. RICE'S NEW AND UIEO
Cl ub O\l ailoble Call 2.115-92 13
FURN llU RE, 85&lt; IECON D AVE.
1975 INTE RNAII O NAl Cub
446-9523
(....._.Monday)
Cad ette ndrng mower, 10 HP,
USED FUR NITURE
Koehler eng1ne wrth elect.
Yeslerday s I Jumbles DOUBT QUEEN FARINA BEHELD
AUCTIONEER- LEE JOHNSON
I SEl OF QUEEN SIZE SPRINGS
sta rt , 42" mower dec~ snow
.
Answer: WhM hl1 diving equipment bualn. .
Crown City - 2S6-6740
AND MA !TRESS . TWO 5 PC.
blade , l1ke new. Coli _._. 6 4556
ABOUTTO GO UNDER
DIN EllE SElS . 1 LtV . EM . SUi lE,
- ~er 5pm _
----I SET OF SPR INGS AND MATFor Sunday . June 2S
sual opportunities may an se to
1975
FORD
3000
D1esel
tractor
TRESS, I MATlR ESS, 1 SMALL
e nable you to tum a p ro f1t
244 hrs , Anno Pros e
ORGAN 1 HOBBY HOR IE .
446 1871.
Re lax wilh one eye open
RI CE"S NEW AND USED FUR· ...._._Honersville
__..
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov . 22) In
NllURE , 854 SECOND . AVE
197&lt; HARL EY DA VID SO N
soctal selttngs you are . ex ·
446·9523 .
Superspo rl Coli 446·4023 after
tremely magnet iC today A li t lie
Spm .
group wtll qu1c kly cl us ter about STRAWB ER RIES. piC k you r own.
bOC o quart. Bring own con· HA Y FORSAl E Coli 446-0313 .
you . hke mot hs attrac ted to a
--... I01nen. Call245 5121
Ilame
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
!1) Your melh ods may no t be
readily appar ent to oth e rs
7 Used Air Conditioners
toda y but th ey will get resu lts
S49.95 to $269.95
in stock from
June 25, 1978
Their unort hodox nature will
The year ahead will not be one not make th em any less e lfecSevera I Used 1 &amp; 2 pc.
of you r ru n-ol-th e -mtll . rou tine l tve
$50.00 up
Living Room Suites
penods Th ere a re many s ur· CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19)
$229.95
15 cu. ft. Used Chest Freezer
pn ses ahea d M o~t o t th e m will A splendid day lor bra in stor m·
~

~

--

'289.95

Pomeroy Landmark

-·
lliiil!il

MOBIL£ ii»ME
SERVICE

_

BilL'S

446-2642

-

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

-

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------

---

~-

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-- ---------

-- -----------··

dE

IMPROVEMOOS

-- -

-~---

------

BlU'S
446-2642

--

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I TANCE

Dl

PUBLIC SALE

I []

SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1978-10:00 A.M.

INJOT

I KJ

IHUHRTSb
III

II

Nmr. GET

DELORES E. FORGEY,
OWNER

crrn A 'TIXIJ"
w•-

ASTRO•GRAPH

-~

Bernice Bede Osol

~Yl~rm

~ lDOllJwillrulJ

DISPERSAL SALE

be pleasa nt

CA NCER (June 21-J uly 221 If
yo u 'l.•e oot something you 'd
lik e 10 push today olfe ts a
p r~ m e oppor1u nl1y 10 do It
You ·..,e got you r act togeth er
and yo ur approach would be
dramaltC Fmd out to whom
you 're roman ttcally s utl ed b y

sendmg tor you r copy of A stroG•ap h Lcll e r Ma 11 50 cen ls lor
eac h and a long , sell ·
addre ss ed , s tamped envelope

ing with con l1dant s In th e
process you will come up wtth
marve lous , wor kable co nce pts .

AQUARIUS (Je n. ZO· Feb. 19) A
commercial idea you 've been
laying with should not be left to

ga1her du sl 11 mlgnt provide
you with that destrable second
source of Income .
PISCES (~eb . 2~Merch !0)
Avail yourself ol any oppo rtu·
nity to go somewhere and meet
new people One yo u' re ln lrO·
duced to could prove very

IO As tro·G•ap h. P 0 Box 48g .
Rad oo City Sta ti o n. N Y. 10019. important to ~our futu re .
ARIES (Milch Z1·Aprll11) Oon'l
Be s ure lo s pec•l y blflh sign .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can · try to assume the mantle of
uno bt rus t'o'ely tak e charge of leadership loday You 'll re alize
situations impoflant to th ose • greate r s hare ol lhe booly by
yo u care lor . and put them tn being a fo llower.
the prope r con te~ l today . Your TAURUS (Aprlt 2~Mow 10) N.ew
ad e pl ha ndling w111 amaze oth- projecls are especially lavore d
lo r you today . They can be
e rs
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl .
One reward ing , and will be more so
ot th e reaso ns you 'll be so If !here 's some lype of un iQue
warmly re cei ved lo.day IS your twls1 Involve d .
.
ll a1r lot mak ing conlem po rarles GEMINI(Itlly !!.June !0) Don 'l
lhlnk lhal the be ue r •deas you be in11mlda1ed today by s ituasupply them wtlh rea lly are tions measared In huge fig ures. Approac h 1h lngs wllh
!heirs
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0 cl. 23 ) AI· logic and for1hrlg hl ness and
though Jh1 s may no t be a you'll come o ut on lop.
! NEW SPAPER ENTEAPfU5E ASSN )
normal work day f01 you. unu ·

m

lHE MT. VERNON FARM DAIRY HERD
HENDERSON, W.VA.
Sale will be held of Jack Cronk Form, 3 miles above
Henderson on Stole Rt. No. 35.

.

The MI. Vernon Form s uffered 1 crippling lire of tour
buildings on Aprlt 15 01 this yur.
•
93 Adult Cows - 36 Bred Heifers
56 cows are now In production, balance of herd In
different stages of pregnancy . This Is an old ,
established herd, good aged . bang tested, milk weig hts
will be announced day of sale. All bred a nimals are
bred Ia • Holstein bull or top qual ity. 49 heard are to
freshen within the ne xt 90 days; 21 head lo freshen
within next 30 days .
Heifers ere posture bred otter Nov . 10, 1977.

SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1978-10:00 A.M.
MT. VERNON FARM, JAft1ES B. SHADLE
HENDERSON, W. VA.
AUCTIONEER - A. Doty Remsburg
SALESMANAGERS - P11t 5ommer6J!-1013
Jock Crlflk 615·2176
Lunch Will Be Served

S50.00 up
550.00 up
$299 .95
Jpc. Living Room Suites (NEW)
529.95 up
Sev . Used Breakfast Sets
$200 .00
19" Portable Color T.V.'s
S38.oo
&amp;
s5a.oo
ea .
4 Orawer Filing Cabinets
51 0.00 ea .
Several Used Lamps
$49 .95
1 Maple Boston Rocker
$188.00
ea .
2 Berkline Like New Recliners
$1
69
.95
5 pc. Glass Top Breaklast Sets
$29.95 up
Sev. Chest &amp; Dressers
$169.95 ea .
2- Bedroom Suites
$199.95
1- 7 pc . Bedroom Suite

4 Used Elec. Dryers
Severa I Gas &amp; Elec. Stoves

Many, Many More Items too Numerous to
List . Drive A Little and Save A Lot.

�D-3- The Sundav Times-sentinel, Sunday, June 25 , 197 ~

D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

TELEVISION
VIEWING

For Be$t Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Olassifieds
•

r-~~--~JU~MP~R=IGm~IN~--~~~

,,,

REGAn A
WEEKEND

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
INVITES YOU AND YOUR FAMILY TO

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
500 E. MAIN ST.

emus

PH. 992-2174

POMEROY, 0.

1976 Buick Regal, 2 dr., red &amp; white, like new only
1975 AMC Pacer, air, cruise, am-fm, one owner.
1974 Ford T- Bird, this Bird is loaded, cheap at
1974 Ford Maverick, 2 dr., low mileage, extra clean.
1974 Olds Omega 2 dr. H. B., only 43,621 miles. sharp.
1974 Pontiac Ventura 2 Or., clean, local owner. good buy.
1973 Ford Ga I. 500 2 dr. HT. This is one nice 73 model.
1973 Buick Century 2 dr .• air, sold this one new, nice.
1973 Buick Century 4 dr., extra clean &amp; like new inside.
1972 Buick Skylark, 4 dr. s~. Blue with blue interior.
1972 Buick Skylark, 4 dr., air, this is one niCe car.
1972 Ford Ga I. 500 4 dr . H.T., runs extra good
1971 Cad. 2 Dr. HT, low mileage, a nice 71 model.
1968 Pontiac Catalina, 4 dr., makes a good work car.

DAN THOMPSON FORD

75th
ANNIVERSARY

'

$4695
$2795
$3795
$2395
$2695
$1995
$1495
$2195
$2395
$1595
$1795
$995
$1695
$295

Your Friendly Dealer
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, see or call one of
These Friendly Salesmen: J.D. Story, Ray Douglas, or Bill Nelson.

•
SUNDAY,J UN EJS 191B
6 :QO--AG-USA 4' For You .. Biack' Woman a · This Is
The Life 10.
·
'
&lt;~&lt; 3 D--C hristopher Closeup 3; Jerry Fa lwell 4, Talking
• Hands B; American Problems &amp; Challenges 10
· 1 :QO--Th ls Is The . Life 3: Jer ry Fa lwell 4; Eddie
, Saunders 6' Thtnklng In Black 8; Treehouse Club
· 10; Newsmaker ' 1B 13 .
~.: JD--TV Chapel l; You r Health 4: Show My People 6;
Jerry Falwell B; Urban League 10; Blbte Answers
; 13; Jimmy Swaggart 15.
a; oo--Mormon Choi r 3: Day of Discovery 4; Grace
• Calhedral 6; Church Service 10: Christ for the
: World 13; Some of God's Children 1S; Sesa meS( 20.
8~3()-()ral Roberts 3, Jimmy Swagga r t 4; Celebration
• of Praise 6: Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
~ Presents 10; Willard Wi lcox 13 ; Open Bible IS.
9, oo--Gospel Sing ing Jubilee 3; Robert Schuller 4; Rex
; Hum~ard 6; Rev Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts
. 10: J•m Franklin 13: Ernesl Ang ley 15; Mister
Rogers 20
! :3D--What Does The Bible Pl ai nly Say? 8: 11 Is
~~ Written 10 ; Church Service 13 , Zoom 20.
· ~ h~lst Is The Answer 3:. Church Service 4 ;
Chr ls1•an Center B; Sesame Sf 20; Movle " Heller in
• Pink Tight s" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Gospe l
• Singing Jubilee 15.
!O:JD--Rex Humbard 3; Yours for lhe Asking 4; Hoi
Fudge 6; Dr . Thea Jones 8; Garner Ted Armst rong
13.
l_l :OD--Ooctors on Call 4, Big Blue Marb le 6; Ernest
Angley 8: Rev He nry Mahan 13; Rex Hu m bard 15;
, Infinity Factory 20.
11 :3D--Big Blue Marble J ; Animal s, An imals, An ima ls
6, 13; Focus on Columbus 4; Elec. Co. 20
12 QO--At Iss ue 3; News Confer ence 4 ; Issues &amp; An swers 6, 13 ; Face The Nation 8; The Issue 10.
Spiritual Blr1h 15; In Sea r ch of the Rea l America
20
12:3D--Meet The Press 3, 4,1 5, Communique 6 ·
Testi mony Time Today 8; Face The Nation 10:
Eva nge li s t Cal vin Evans 13, Dick Cavett 20 .
'
l :DO-A m erica 's Black Foru m 6; Bob Jones Un l versltv
8; Was hington Week I ~ Review 33 ; Mov1e " The Song
of Bernadelle" 10, Movie " Mr . Smllh Goes fo
Was~lng1 o n " 13; How To 20.
I :3D--Tony Brown ' s Journal 3; Lill ie Rasca ls 4: Tony
. Browns Journa l 6; Tennis 8; Wall Street Week 33;
•, PTL Club 15; Hocking Va lley Bluegrass 20.
1 . 55-- Ftlm . 4; 2:oo-Mov 1e " The Fo ur Poster" 3:
., Movie " Tarzan 's New York Adventure" 4; Awa r e
w 6: Advocales 33 ; Good Morn ln' Blues 20.
2:3D--Church of God 6; Movie " Divorce His" 8· J ·OD-Movle " Tarzan &amp; the Green Goddess"
Great
Perfo r mances 33 ; Rosenberg .Sobell Case
Revisited 20 .
I :JD--Tennis 13; Grealesl Sports Legen ds 6 · Th is Is
The L ite 15.
'
4:oo--Baseball3,4 ; Sporlswor ld 15; Te nnis 6; Golf 8, 10 . •
f3D--Bix Beiderbecke 20: Blue Collar Capita lis m 33 .
&gt;:QO--Amer lcan Sportsman 6,1 3: Old Fri ends . New
: Friends 2() ; Nova 33.
:! :3D--Insight 15 ; Elec. Co. 20: 6:QO--Lel's Deal With 11
~ 6; To Be Announced 8: Honest Al 's Tigers 10;
~ Tow nTop ics 13. Be tter Way IS; Zoom 20. Tur ... nabout 33
1-: JD--News 3,4,6; NBC News 15: Concern 8; Wild
:" Kingdom 10. New~ m ake r '18 13; Nova 20. Mcn1age
.. 33.
t oo--World of Dis ney 3,4. 15 ; Hardy Boys-Nan cy Drew
~ 6.13 ; 60-M inu tes 8, 10; Meeti ng of M inds 33 .
7,:3~ rockett ' s Victory Garden 20.
~oo-- Prolect U. F .O. 3,4, 15: Lucan 6,1 3; Rhoda 8, 10;
, Prevln &amp; the Pittsburgh 20; Keyboard Sonatas 33.
~3()-()n Our Own B, 10.
leo-- Pollee Story 3,4. 15; ABC Theatre 6,13. All 1n T he
: . Family 8,10; Poldark It 20,33 .
9t3D--AIIce B. 10; 10 :QO-Switch 8.1 0; Austi n City Limits
;" 20; Firing Line 33 .
ll :QO--News 3,4,6,8,10. 13, IS ; Janakl 33 .
l 1: 15--ABC News 6; CBS News 8,10; PM A P ulse 15.
11 :3D--Movle " T he Unfaithful " 3; Mo vie " Run A
Crooked Mile" 4; Movie " FI Igh llo Holocaust" 15;
FB I 6; 700 C lub 8: Movie " Come Back. Litt le
Shebba " 10, PTL Club 13
12 :3D--Second CllyT .V 6. 1·3D--Marcus We lby. M.D.
•. 4 ; ABC News 13.
MONDA Y, JUNE 26. 1918
5:45-- Farm Report 13 ; 5:50--PTL Club 13 ; 6:QO-PT L
Club 15 ; Sum me r Semester 10.
6:3D--Cotumb us Today 4; News 6: Su mme r Semester
• 8; Pubtlc Affa ir s 10 , 6:45--Mo rn lng Reporl 3;
6 :50--Good Morning . West Virginia 13 ; 6 :55--News
13 .
7:QO--T oday 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6. 13 ; C BS
News 8; Porky P ig 10 . 7:25--Chuck Wh ite Reports
10.
7: JD--School les 10 ; B:oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. 33 .
1: 00- Merv Griff in 3: Phi l Donahue 4. 13. 15 ;
•· Emergenc y One 6 . Brady Bunch 8: Pass l'he Buck
10
9:3D--Andy Griffith 8. Family Altair 10
IO :QO--Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Nigh I 6; Pass The
. Buck B; Joker 's Wild 10; To Te ll The Trulh 13: Over
Easy 33 .
l0 :3D--Hotlywood Squares 3.4, t5 ; High Hopes 6: Pri ce
' Is Right B. 10: S20,000 Pyramid 13 ; Pain t Along with
Nancy Kaminsky 33 .
I) ·QO--H igh Rollers 3, 4,15; Happy Day s 6, 13;.
1'] :3D--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13 ;
Parlr ldge Family 4; Lo ve of Li fe 8. 10 ; 11:55-C BS
; News 8; Loving Free 10 .
IQ :QO--Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10 ; Sanford &amp; Son IS;
Midday Magazine 13; Watch Your
, Gambit B;

.4 ;;

1978 AMC CON.CORD D/L

• Buckel seals, air cond .
• AM· ~M stereo &amp; tape
• Landau roof &amp; • more

Ford Free Wheeling Courier

1 STATION WAGON AND lHREE SEDANS IN STOCK

Tough new way to go Truckin ' ln style.
-~-

OPEN T ILL 1 P .M.
• •.;;;;a.... , Except Thursday &amp; Saturday tlt5 :
Closed Sundoy

'"""""

DAN THOMPSON FORD

"All ~ars equipped with: Air conditioning, Power '
Steenng~ ~ower Brakes, Individual Reclining Seats in
soft feel vmyl, Automatic Transmission, Radio, Vinyl
Top~ Color:keyed wheel covers, 258 Cl D six cylinder
engme, white wall tires. Light group. Protection group.
FACTORY WARRANTY

See Rocky Hupp, Dorrell Dodrill or Pot Hill, Gontrol
Monager, for a Good Deat on 1 New or Used Vehicle
992-2196
Middleport,

o:
OJI\.AII SAlOH 2-~ OR • -DR.

• AI

r cond., oulo.
• AM-FM radio, p.s ., p.b.
•&amp; more

1977 Chevelle Malibu. 4895
5

&lt;.oupe . While over green . 250, 6 cyl. engine, automot lc
tr ans .. power st . &amp; brakes. power door locks &amp;
windows. co mtort ill. AM-FM rad io, deluxe equipment.

Less than 12,000 m1les. Co. car, never titled .

5

1974 Chevelle .••••• ~7:~·~. 1695
2 Seat Wagon , VS engine, automatic trans ., p. steering ,

THAT

GREAT CUTLASS FEELING

See~· of these COUI'teous salesmen .
.Pete Burris, Marvin Keeb•ugh or George Harris.

CONTINENlAL MARK XIX . 19'1&gt;
ft. tro~e l troilar , sleeps b. fully

equipped . Call6 1 4 · 2~ · 6&lt;0'1 .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
m -SJ42

You'll Uko Our Quoltty Woy of Doing luslneu" GMC Flnonclng
Open EVtnlfttS Unt116 :- n l Sp.m. Sat.
I'II~Mm"

needs some pa int work , rad io, like new tires .

Hotel

1972 Plymouth Fury II 895
1971 Dodge Polara4 DR s759
Polara 4 Dr , V.8, au tomatic, P.S.. radio. Barga in
pr iced

1976 GMC %Ton •••••• 53695

SlEEPING

MAGNUM XE
The Totally Personal Approach
To Driving Excitement.

1974 GMC 1h Ton .••••• 52295
8 fl . wi de bod y. V B, automatic, P .S., P . B., good ti res .
Step bumper .

1974 Dodge Van •••••••• s3995
Con version 318 V·8. automatic, p.S. &amp; P . B., good tires,
sound mechan ically. n ice in1erlor conversion, ice box ,
bed

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

"2-2126

. Pomeroy
Open Evenin9stiiB :OOp.m.

m3 MON TE CARl O landou P I
P.B., A.C. , AM 8•trock stereo.
Ea:cellenJ condit ron
Sl700.
8&lt;3-2b22.
1968 VW BUG. $400. 9'12-5858

--

19 70 CH£VHI E automatic trans
6 cyl $350 Call 9'12·1376
"
1913 PINTO SQUIRE Stollon
wagon w1lh a ir. new tlrtl , mag
whee l' E~ecell ent condltron
Phonfl qq2·1058.

1977 VOLAR£ ROAD Runne r. 318,
black wit h Supe r Poclo. . A.C Jqb7 BUt( I( GS
Runs-good
,s tereo. Alter\ 5:30 or onvtr me
new - oint , ro ily wheel•
weekends, coll 949 2828
9!15 -47:'6 alter 6 S400.

:00.

Truck Headquarter s
1973 Ford Von
1974 1/t T. Chev. PU

, 197-t three· fourth Chev . PU

1971 GMC9500Troctor
1973 F700 Ford Dump Truck
1973 Novo
1q'72 Datsun PU
1974 Chev . 11t T. PU
1977 Ford Pickup
1972 Ford Van

ROOMS .AND

hght
PARK

1974 EL DORAD0 .......................... ~295

2,584 LB. TOBACCO LEASE . Call
256·6038 after bpm .

1973 CADIUAC CPE. DEVILU ........... .'1995

BRADBURY RENTALS
7')(1 Second Ave .
446-0'157

1974 CADILlAC SED. DEVIu.£ .............'3695

housekeeping

rooms ,

CE NTRA LHOlEL

Eff . Apt. Adults only . No pels .

Drive Home A Winner

MOBilE HOME . 3 BR .. lurni•hed
on Raccoon A:d .. no pets , n~
children , $135 plus secu n ty

depo1 il . Phone .. 46·1728
lRAILER. Caii67S..IIB6

I%7Chev . IT Truck
1975GMC ll . Truck
FURN ISHED APT . Upstairs , 3 rms
1976 Ford 11.. T. Truck
and bath . Prefer one adul!
Bedllnen , heavy duty , reor step
Wr ite Bo~e 856, c-a Gallipolis
bump•r .
Dolly Tribune .
SOMMERSGMC
MOBilE HOME LO l In city . Call
lR UCKS, INC
446-1680
133 Pine St .
446·2S32 .
TWO BDR mobllt home in CentHoura: 8 om to 6:30pm
neory No pets. Dap req . Coli
446-4292 .
197B MERCURY COUG AR . $200. FOUR RM . APT .. upsta irs . 1 adults
and takt ovtr payments. 1977
only . Rof . &lt;eq . Coll446·4063.
Ford y, T., • whl dr .. V-8, auto.
CLEAN rug&amp;, like new . 10 easy to
55800. Coll388· '1325.
do wiTh Bl ue Lustre . Rent elec 1974 VEGA HAlCHBACK . good
tr ic shompooer, S2. Cen tral
cond. new e~ehousl system.
Supply.
$700. or trade fo r pickup
THREE RM FURN APT . witn
camper . Coll379-22,.7 .
prlvote bath. second floor . Coli
1977 CHEVY lRUCK . 11.000 miles.
&lt;46-221 s.
S4200. wllh compor top. 1916
Ford truck . 52100. Call COUNlRY MOBILE Homo Park .
•46-304S.
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy.
Largo
lo ts . Call 9'12-7&lt;79.
1,72 MONTE CARLO, auto., PS,
air , AM-FM radio, radials. SENIOR CITIZENS· Ou&lt; new
51250 . Coll2~ · 6011.
renter1 onlatance. you may be
able to live In our apartment
19S3 l '!t T. GMC with flat dump
tor le11 than $50 a mont h. For
bed. Good running cond . Coli
Informat ion , contact
more
2S6·6247.
VIllage Manor Apartments
1976 DODGE CHARGER, P.S..
9'12-11B7.
P .B., AM8 track atereo, a
,
CORNER
LOT for traile r apace an
bucket seats, burgundy whltelon·
riv
erfront.
992-2238
or
dou lop 13500 Pn 446-5111 of tor
9'/HJO.&lt; .
1974 BLAZER , AC , PS , P8. tilt
2:30PM
whul, other e~etras . Prlct : 1970 fORO PICKUP. 5500. Coli lWO BEDROOM unlurnlohed opt.
$4000. Coii446-3J.45.
J88.8SS6.
_;C:::
a::,
ll '1'12
= ·:22
.:: :8:::.·:...._
8
_ _ __
197b GRANADA GHI.t., 6 cyl .. 1973 CHEVY '/, T. PIC~UP , good I CHURCH FOR rontln Syracuse. All
warranty . rod lois . .A.C , tJCtros .
cond . Colt367-0S.Ot.
Furnished. Phone 9'12-5249.
SllOO. or toke 0\18t paymentt .
Mayme Custer Manning.
1969 FORO ECONOLINE VAN.
Caii2S6-9304 , 6pm to 9pm .
ne.d1 work . Runs good . S150 TRAILER SPA.CE for r•nt n.ar
75 CHEV. PICKUP, V~ Ton , A whHI
Call4-16·7398.
·
Chos ttr . 9BS-3979.
dr l•• · Ph. 4-16-4086.
197~ OOOG£ VAN: '14 Cha&lt;gor SMAll BACHElOR aportmont .
1916 OlOS CUlLASS SUPREME .
SE . Call361·1220.
lurnlohed. In Middleport . Coli
Koo lvent awn ings , mobilt
9'12·3173 or 9'/2.5013 .
home roof pooin t . Call 1962 FOI!D FAIRLMIE. lor parts,
446·3918.
S12S .. Top ahell fits Chry. or
Fo&lt;d '1. T . $125. Call367-nB1 .
1977 '16 T. PICKUP, 8500 mi., e MCJ .
cond . SA500. Coll245.9213.
1972 COIIVElTE CONVERTIItlE 2
tops. 3SO, ,. spd., 1967 Chevy'•;,
WILL SELL OR l RADE 1969 Lincoln
T,
pickup: Two 16' tandem open
Contenentin•llor good pickup .
traHera. Fireplace manrle with ' TRADE: TWO loll In Pomero~ . WUI
_ c_a_ll ~~S -~
9S~2:::_
B .,___ _ ,
mirror ond trim Bel t offer on
trode fo r bulldo1er or motor
19b7 FORD PICK UP. b cyi . std . Just
any t o f Ihe above. Call
nome . Colll -304·648·5602. Fort
rebuilt. Call 367-0-412 .
256·6711 .
Gay , WV.

See One of the courteous Salesmen : .,.,e Burris,
Morvin Koebeugh or Gtorat H1rrls

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll Like Our Qu•llty Way of
Doing Business" GMC Financing
99 2·53 42- 0pen Eveni119s Until6: oo
Til5 PM Sat. -Pomerov

SEE IT TODAY AT

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
Corner 3rd &amp; Court

1969 CHEVELLE MALIBU. 4 spd
tron a. Call.u6-16-46
'

"Your Chevy Deoler"

NEWGMC

1976 Pinto
t97S I\ l . GMC

1 owner, good t ires, V-B, automatic , P.S., P.B., rad io.

IN STOCK I NEW CHEVY
VAN CONVERSIONS, MOTOR
HOMES, SPORT PICKUPS,
4 WH. DRIVE PICKUP,
EL CA INO, BLAZERS.

LOW weekly and mon th ly rotes ot
li bby Ho tel. "46-1743

SLEEPING rooms for rent , Goll io

5

V-B. automalic, P .S., good tires Pr iced to go .

A Leader Any Way
You Loolc At It ••

191T'PTNTO wrth radia l tire s and
new shocks . In good condition.
9q2-7285aher &lt;4 pm .
1976 ~- DOOR PINTO. Good t1re s.
rod ro, heater. Good mileage
&lt;4 - c~l . std. shift 1973 Olda s8
Roya le , full vinyl Interior , AM·
FM rad io , A.C. , tilt steeri ng
wheel , flnttd glou , 55 ,000
milea. Contact Joe Struble
...!_9!_-3424 after 5:30pm .
1972 TOYOlA COROLLA 1000 2·
door stohon wagon Motor
recently rebu_i h. Som8 rus t on
bo_?~ 99~3S74 ,

1971 DODGE CHARGER . outo ,
AC .. S995 . Al•o . 19b5 Dodge ,
aut o , $1~5 .
Evenin g•
300 73-5619.

GaiWpolis

!.?.7!u,P~.~~b~ape,

super

stock wheels.

1977 CHRYSLER

c~~w

nice air, p:w ., p.s .•

p.b.

$4295
$5395

1975 INTERNATIONAL

SCOUT II

Auto ., p.s .• p.b., • wheel drive, V-8,
lock In hubs.

1974 OLDS VISTA
CRUISER
9 Passenger, air, low mileage, p.a.,
p.b.

'

\!?~J49Y~ ~~~RtnSfo9.RT$3695
Sharp., automatic on ltoor, bucket
seats .

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

"Loco led on W. Ve . Side Of Pomii'OY·MIIrldgt (1041 m.sm

•• Mouth 33.

b

3D--Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15 ;
Search for To morrow 8, 10 ; French Chef 33.
1; oo--For Richer. For Poorer 3; Al l My Children 6.13;
• News 8; Young &amp; lhe Restless tO; Not tor Women
Only 15; Keyboard Sonatas 33.
I ·3D--Days of Our Llve5 3.4.15; 6ne Life to Live 13,6; ·
Five REd Herrings 33.
2 :3D--Doctors 3,4. 15 ; Guiding Light a.10; 3:QO• Another Worl d 3,4 , IS; General Hospital 6, 13 ; Lltlas
~ Yoga &amp; You 20.33.
3:3D--A tl In The Family 8.10; Pr ime Time 20; Book
Beat 33.
~: oo--Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer , For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 2(),33: Match Game 10; Dinah 13 .
4.3o--My Three Son s 3: Gi ll igan' s Is . 4; Batman 10 ;
Little Rascals 15.
S·QO--Here Come The Brides 3; My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8. Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20.33;
' Voyage to 1he Bollom ollhe Sea 10; Emergency One
13; Pefflcoat Junct ion 15 .
·
$; 3D--Odd Couple 4; News 6; E lec . Co. 20,33; Hogan 's
Heroes IS.
' :oo--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;
Making Things Grow 33.
6:3D--NBC News 3,4,1S; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
' CBS New,s 8, 10: Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
1:0D--Cross-Wits 3.• : Newlywed Game b.l3: Marty
Robbins' Spotl ight B; News 10; Gill igan' s ts . 15;
Daniel Foster, M .D. 20; Shepherd's P ie 33 .
1:3D--Thal Nashvi ll e Music 3; In Search of 4; Moppet
: Show 6; Match Game PM B; Mac Neil-Lehrer
• Report 20,33 ; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13;
; Nashville On the Road IS.
~ : DO-Littl e House on The Pra irie 3,4, 15; Baseball6, 13;
• Jeffersons 8,1 0: Cons umer Surv ival Kit 20,33 .
l :Jo--Good Times 8,10; Turnabout 20,33 .
t :Oo-Movle "The Girl from Petrovka" 3,4,1S; Mash
• 8,10; Canal Zone 20,33 ; 9:3D--One Day At A T ime

:

8, 10.

~ o : oo--Lou

Grant B, 10: 11 :co--News 3.4.6.8.10. 13,15.
l1:3D--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Soap 6,13: Movie
: "Spellbound" 81 Mov ie " The Five Pennies" 19 .
~1 : 4D--To Be Announced 33; 12 :DO-ABC News 33.
~2 : 05--Pollce Story 6,13; 12 :3D--Janakl 33;

•

:1 :0&lt;&gt;-·Tomorrow 3,4; I : 15-- News 13 .

••

For Best Results Use Times-Sentinel
~~.f:tp;t,af ~-

0

;

~.

'

;

~ment

-·----------:.; ::'T"-==-.;::;' ;:::

=-

~- -'-,::-

_·
~~

f;l,'fsified~
-

-·~=-

::-:..-"::'-:;:: ::... ::. .;-

8 8. S MOBilE HOMES, Pt Plea·
In memory of Jame!&gt; H Beaver on JUNK aut o and sc rap metal . Ph 1974 ESCAPADI: 25 ft motor
se nt, W . Vo. bes rdeH ec ~ ' s
3B8.8776.
h•s b1rthdc y.
home rw th extras 5000 mdes AL L WOOO 9 puace bedroo m
suite bed, doub le dress~r and
1973 8roodmare 14 K 64 2
We ore thinl'llng o l you . Son on
$1A ,OOO 614 992-2438 or
Price
GOOD USED FURNITURE : nol
mirror , chest hutc h bachelor
bedroom
your btrthdoy .
304·773 -5707'
upholstered, and app lianCes
ches t. corne r ches t, desk and
1973 Dorion 14 x602bedraom
Thrnktng of the po st. and oil the
Ph . 446·0322
1977 STARCRA FT FOLD down
choir. In gels Furnrture. $499
1972 Victorian I 4 x 67 3. bedroom.
let Pomeroy Landmark
t
nt e mones'
com pe r . sto"e refrrgera tor.
complete 992 2035 . Alte r 5 coli
2 bath
, Just as we sow you lasl
GOOD USED REGR IGERATOR
soften &amp; ·condition your
304 ·882.2038 .
I
972
Coventry 12 K 65 3 bedroom
How could our hearts forget yo u,
AND FREEZER UPR IGHl OR • Opens to 2111 Slee ps 8. Perfect
water with Co-op . water
' cond1t1on 742-2750
1969
Statesman 12 x 60 2
Son.
CHESl , Ph . 441&gt;·0322 .
HA V. TIMOTHY &amp; orch ard grass
.....
--softener, Model UC-SVt,
bedroom .
Whe n eve ryth ing we do. reminds - -· ----- ---.
COONE
R
's
CAMPER
S
on
Rainbow
~egu lor
sq
ua
re
ba
les
l iMBER
Now Only
R1dge . Reueot1onal vehrdes
us.
Available now on wagons Any
COAl, LIM ESTONE , san d, gra vel,
Top pnce!i lor
Of ho ur s spen t with you
and
occessorres
,
rentol
Off
amount
Get
hoy
before
ca lc1 um chloride , fert ilizer, dog
Top
Quality
Let' us test your water Fret;
Our thought s an d lave ore w1lh
Oh1 o Rt 7. south of Tuppers
storage at sow frce . Pau l Sayre
food , ond all t~ p es of salt , h ·
POMEROY
FORREST
PRODUCTS
you .
Pla1ns. Take CR 28 to 8oshan
Great Bend Road , Rt 338 .
ce ls1or Salt Wo rk s. Inc .. E. Mo1n
Cal
l
992.$%5
Althoughwe are aport .
Co li Robert Codn e r, Long Ba t·
Po rt land , 643-4591 .
St., Pomeroy . 992-3891 .
We wi ll a lways hove you d ose to
tom , Oh1o .
9.,.!_ack W. C.rsey , Mgr .
us
S n-o~~~~J;f;;~(ubc~;; ,
BE ST SELE CTION of the best woo d
sta ves in Sour heosrern Ohio
Becau se you are .n o ur heart.
245 -53-48
Phone 992-2181
Mrss tng and loving yo u Mom, 22 FT . REVELL A , self con ta ined
Jo tul Ma rso, Elel Tirolia ,
~oi and Fam ily . _ _
THRE E OR FOUR steel frh ng
~x_c _:_o~d~ ~~!!_.4_~6·2J9~
Tempwood , and Naf huo Zron
cobrnets. Call 446·1015 or 1q FT NOMAD . goad cond , self
Hea t Co , 8 Putnam Dr. (off Mr ll
1976 F.150 FORD pic kup Powe r
con ia tned. Call446-2q95 .
446· 1243'--,-Sf ) A1hen s b 1_. 592-6079 or
steermg b roke ~ . aut o. Irons
614-69b-I IB7 .
BULLDOZER· will trade small · cAM-PER - siee;-6~ · -:ery- Q~-;;d
Nlchorlnt, Sklrtl1'1!1 1
AM-FM ste reo w1th tope
bus tne:u property in Gallipolis .
shape
Coll
245-93q3,
W~ WISH to thank everyo ne
player. 37 ,000 m1les El(cellent
Awnings,
P•tlo
Coli 256-6038 after bpm .
-- - -- eve ryone who helped us when
condr tran $3750 Call days
1 Cover~. Cuports,
our house was burned I also ANTIQUE ROLl TOP DESK and
~92 - 554 5 o r even ~n g s q~9- 2216 ,
Roof P1int, Set-up ' HONDA 125 on -all road mo tor cy·
wooden fr ltn g cabinet . Coli
--=.7- ::_.....:- ,....:=
wish to thank the C8er's a nd
245 5050.
--~-==-=-..:::::the churches .
____
-·=.:::~
and R•levtlint Call.
cle tor sole Excellent co ndi·
The Jumo r Hohoin ger Famdy .
GOO D USE D FREEZER . Coli . All TYPE S of budding mater 1ols.
f1on . Phone 9.119- 22::1~9:.__ _
446-7003or446·07B I
block , b nc k sewer p 1pes. win .
1976 FORO F 350 heavy duty . B x
HEAVY DUTY TRAILER HITCH for• dows. lrn tels, etc Claude
10 bed 6 It cattle rock. 4·
pickup truck. Call 44b-7440
Wmters. Rio Grande . 0 . Phone
speed. P 5 . P.B. All gouges.
17 000 mdes 949-2273.
SWEEPER ond sew mg machine _..,!venrngs:c·- - - - - - - _!4~_
5 1_21 _
af_
te~---- ___ _
repo1r , pa rts and suppli es Prck PORCH FOR MOBI LE HOME . 36 ot LAYNE'S NEW &amp;UIED fURNITURE
APPALOOSA HORSES Stud ser· CO LOR fV Coli 992 2q86 otter 0
up and delive ry. Davis Vacuum
40" high. Co ll446·3023
NEW
pm
vice $50 reg mares. S35
Cleane r. 1;1 mi le up Geo rges
Sola, chair. roc ker olloman J
g
rade
mo
res
Also
breedrng
NEW HOLLAND b6 bole r. I H 3
Creek Rd Ph 446·0294
tab les . $501)' Bedroom su1tes.
TIM BER POMEROY Fores t Pro ·
s tack . Call 245.q369 Ri o
pt , 4 row cu lt ivators I H 203
$tbS.S250 $300-$500 30 e lec
ducts. Top price lor stondmg
PA SQUALE Eleclrico l Ser\IICe .
Grande
comb me wrth gram head Coli
Inc
ranges,
$200
E
or
Am
sofa
so
w
trmber
.
Call
q92
-5965
or
.
.
446-27 16 day or nrght
949 ·2033
8. chai r $300 modern solo FUll SIZE AN D QUEEN SIZE BED
Kent Hanby , 1-446-8570.
THURMAN HOU SE. on ~q-;;es. Fur :
charr , loveseat $275 Rec liner s
DING Captom's bed tab le 1973 DATSUN p1ckup. Phone
n11ur e st rrpp1ng , repair and OLD FURNITURE . ice bo)(es. brass
$100 a nd up· Tables $b0 eac h
la mp, laundry tub baby bed
992 ·3803 O&lt; 992 -6729:.:_·- - - BURROUGHS SENII-MAliC oc·
bed s. iron beds desks e tc ' SwivE! I roch rs $1 25 Ma ple or
re l mi~he d . Co unty Rd 8 off 35
comple
te wrth m ottres~ Carb in
cou n tmg ma ch1ne
Phone
complete
househo
lds
Writ~
1977
ROTO TILL ER . Cotl
Ce nt e r"¥ 1\le Vdlage
Closed
pme tabl e . 4 cho irs $225 Hutch
and Sny der Fu rniture . 955 Se
992 21S6. The Daily Sentrnel ,
M
.D.
M1
lle
r,
RL
4,
Pomeroy
or
Monday &amp; Tuesday . Evenrn gs
$225 &amp; $275 , , 7 pc Ornette.
cond Ave .. 446-1171 .
_l_·b_14_-2!}_:_246:_4:...- - Ill Court Street, Pomeroy ,
co11 992-7760 .
by appointment 245- 9479
$1()9 5 pc D1nette $55 00. 9 pc SALE ON CACl l &amp; SU
lq78
RM 250 Suzuk r. Will trade lor
Oh.a .
:..:
C
:.,
C...,
Ul
:c
EN
-cT
:
:::
S.
I
.. ·----·$160 Bunk bed ~ complete SlSO
WANT TO buy · 5 or 6 h . tr acto r
cor 01 sell S1200 949-2367
FOR DEAD I TOCK REMOVAl
7 pr1c e sole on unusu al porch &amp;
UI ED lRACTORS
$225 matt resses or bo )( spr·
blade
Natha n Van am a n
CALL 245·5514 .
.
patiO
hang
ing
bo
5kets
GE
REFR IG ERA fOR Gas cookmg MF135 Drese l MF230 Diesel
1.1gs . ftrm SbO ea .. ches t ol
742-2101.
Glo s!i h o u s e
Wo rk s
MF150 Dreset MF735 D1esel ·
stove K•tchen cab ine ts Double
CITY CAB
•Irower $38
Greenhouse. Stew a rt , Oh10
WANT TO buy Small blac k Che"y GOOD USED
MFI65 Dresel · MF285 Diesel s1nk 992 729.11 .
1 DAYS bto 12
Open Thursday Sunday . Many
motor . qe5-41 33.
MF 1135 Diesel Cob air &amp;
Co lt -446 0451
D•Hks, Retrrgerotors, Sweepers.
Viole ts , Gmgers Red Begonia HAY FOR more rnt ormol•on call
hea te r
Dryers . ranges . cotfee and end
949.2822.
Oleffenb,chlo 8 Fer ns . Ph
NEW &amp; USEO IMPLEMENTS.
tables TV's, dmell es. beds,
lR EEHA VEN CERAMICS
bb2 -21 42
1970 HONDA CL 350 mot orcycle . MF9 Boler . MFt O Bal er - MF1 20
tables lamp s. chorrs. oth er
Greenwa re and supplies . Day
Bale r . Matthe ws Rotary Scy th e
Go a d ~;ondif1on .
$300
1tems
Call
4.116·0322
Monday
D
GRADER
Ca11367-04b7
ROA
and n1g ht colsses Cus tom f1r ·
. MF880 Semi -moun ted 6 botthru Friday 9 to 8 p m . Satur·
24
7'
2~,.:.7.:.
6 ·:.__ _
mg. 446 2155 . l ocated oT
1974 MARLIN JH BOAT . 455 Olds
tom Plow
MF520 12 ' Disc ·
day
9
to
5
p m 3 m1 ou t
Ka nougo , Oh.
and Berkl ey pump
Coli H &amp; N Ooy old or sta rted leg horn
MF200
2
R
ow
Chopper · MF39 2
Bulavrlle
Rd.
pullets both floor or coge
446-4078.
Row Planters · Mec:hanrcol
WE WI LL BUY you r o ld dromonds
·-------..-·
-grown
ovorl
a
ble
Po
ultry
HouS·
FOR lHE BEST IN FURNilU RE
Transpl anter
and a ntique jewel ry TAWNEY
GO CAMPING AMERICA
rng and Aut omollon Modern
UPHOLSTERING , Fre e Estrmates 1975 PENlON 400: Jq7b Honda XR
IHINN 'S TRACTOR SAL ES
JEWELRY . 422 2nd Ave.
W1th Coachmen RVs Qual ity 75 Coll446 -4078
Poultry
399
W.
Main
St
Pick
up
and
delivery
service,
..
Phone 458-1630
built
.
priced
right
.
Dozen
s
of
Pome roy. Phone 992 -2164
coli Mowrey's Uphols tery Pt.
BUYING . All United States sil ver
SElliNG OUT
leon. W. Vo.
models
wi
th
a
wrde
range
a
l
Pleasant , W. Vo 675-415.. .
corns . top pr1ces. higher prrces
Cors . dump truck Ford bock hoe, KNIGHT TEMPLAR un1l orm com
lam
rly
-pleosing
floor
plon
s
See
lor silver dollon a nd ea rly
Case bull dozer . several dif plete w1 th occessor1es. Size 42.
them today ! Apple Cit y Rec reo· FARM FENCE POSlS. ALL SIZEI .
wins MTS Com Shop Call
fe re nt items . Co li be tween qam
Phone 9'n-3969
over
6
,000
to
choose
from
,
lionel
Vehicle"
s
.
RL
35,
1
mr.
446· 1642 or 446·0690 . Pay cosh
a nd 3pm ~~9 ~=!_2_
2_
SI 99 and up , shingles , S 14 95
wes t of
Jack son ,
Oh
..
---- 12 FOOT SEA loo t olumrnum boot
per
sq
.
And
e
rson
windows.
1976
HARLEY
DA
VIDSON
ELEC.
_
614 - 2Bb · 5c~1..:
00
::c.._ _ ._ __
5 '' h p Johnson moTor with 6
studs. o the r burldrng moter,ol ,
TRAG UD E !u lly dre ssed. 2.000
gal. lank . Also '2 cyl Man
1961 DI VCO MOlOR HOME .
Open d oily 9 7, Frank s Bargo1n
ac tual m1les Must see to op·
tgomery Ward small mo tor and
Sl500
1962
Inte
rnat
ional
NO ITEM TOO large or too small
Cen ter , Rf 160' Porter , Ohio
preciote. $4800 fnm . Col i
Windows .
Sha kespeare 12 volt motor. Storm
school bus camper, S1SOO Co lt
W1ll buy I prece or co mpl e te
882-3332 alter 4pm or see at
good condil ia n All lor $350
REFR
IG
ERA
lORS,
WASHERS
AND
Storm
Ooors ,
245-5178
.
hou~eha l d New , used . or anti·
208 Oak St . New Hoven , WV.
109 Kerr St . Pomer oy. Phone
DRYE RS WRINGER WASHERS
·Replacement
Winque!lo Ma rtin's Fu rni ture , 20 N
IOlH ANNIVERSARY SALE
992 -3&lt;07
RANGES All SOLD WITH ON E ALVAREZ
ACOUITIC
7nd St. Midd leport . Phone We ha"¥e redu ced our prices ogo1n
dows. P•tio~ toYers.
GUARANTEE WE ALSO SER·
lr ke new . Call CROSBY CRUISEREllE 17' bool.
G UIT AR
992 b370
for thrs special e vent . 21' Travel
VICE APPLIANCES SK AGGS ~ _446-4656 alter 5 30pm
Aluminum Sidino 1nd
Ju
s!
the
th
ing
lor
o
shorl
o~er ­
Star SC , SS,-&lt;489 ; Now SA ,37S ..
CHIP WOOD . Poles ma)C ,
APPLIAN CES . ' 1918 EASTERN
nile
or
ski1ng
with
the
b50
MerAccessories. Call
TZ
B
X
Chlo
r~
not
o
r
and
Ch
lorrne
rn
Fold dow ns , $1869 . and up Us·
d1ome 1er 10" on la rges t end , $8
AV E.. Co ll44b-739B.
cur y motor . Make us on alter
Ground ond Abo"e Ground .
ed 20 ft . mini motor. outo o wn·
per ton. Bundled slob, S6 per
Phone 992-2304 May be seen
POOLS HARRISON'S SER VICE
ing , 25 "· oft . We sell se rv ice PEN DEL TON REBUILT BA llER IES
ton . De li .,.e r e~ to Oh1a Palle t
01 Doug's Manne. Pome roy.
$18
with
e)(change
,
new
ones
CENTER
4.11
7
Second
Gallipolis
,
and qua li ty Open 12 to 1
Co .. At. 2, Pomeroy 9q2 2b8q .
$31 guaranteed 388-8596
P~one 446·9'233
--·
weekdays . Sunday I to • · Comp
APPALACHAIN SlOVE . Greatest
COI NS. CURR ENCY . toke ns. old
Con leyStorcroft Sales, Rt. 62 SWIMMING POOLS and supplies. Horses and pany s elsa buy
~elec tion ot wood and coo l
pocket watche• and chams
North of Pt. Pleaaont .
heater'S . Wa rehouse prices .
tng round and abo"¥&amp; gr ou nd .
live
stoc
k,
horses
,
catt
le
hogs
!&gt;river a nd gold We need 19M
Moving to Mrddleparf Coli 1q71 DATSUN 1 1 ton pickup . 4.
HOLIDAY POOlS, Hunting ton.
Ph
388-9303
etc
.
t
91b
24
FT.
TRAVEL
TRAILER
.
and older silve r coins . Buy , sell
speed , new clu t&lt;h muff ler
bl4 -698-71 ql , .
W.Va. Call 304-429 4788
sleeps 6, self con ta ined . Call
or tr ade Call Roger Wamsle~
BOAT, 1971 Broadwater, 30 It
brokes ond pa m! . 25 m.p.g
446-1358
SWIMMING POOLS. In and above
742·2331.
Cobin Cr u i~ e r a nd tra iler . load· TRUCK TO PPER , $150, Frve 16 B S1 300 Ca11991-7539 .
lug rruck tires ond wheels ,
ground Full s, rvtce . Su pplres
ed . best office or trade . Value
1972 MERCURY, P 1 .. P.B., A. C.
$1 00 . 614 ·593.1390
and pools in stack 0 Bumgord·
S12,000. Phone 446 ·.:77
::..:&lt;::.
5__
No 27 1nternotion al ba ler , 2000
ner So les. 3171 1 Nobel Summ rt
1971 INTERNA TIO NA L ' ·, ton
bu. ea r corn . 9S5 -3537 ofler 6
Mood, Mrddlepo rf, Oh. Call 1q73 FORD p1c kup , short bed 6
p1c kup truc k. q92.7413
_:y~ n[_ Phone 24~~ ~
58:.___
pm 985 41 31
992.5724.
lWO
ROW
CO
RN
CU
LT
IVATOR
loc
Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
USED lRACJORS ·
tractor Call 4,.6·43l 4.
one let1 er to each square, to form
MF1 35 0 1esel
MF230 DieseJ·
tour orctlnary words
MF 150 Diesel · MF235 Diesel
ALLIS CHA l MER S H028 Bu lldozer .
MFib5 Dresel- MF 285 Dresel
$7000 Coll 367 ·0&lt;b7 .
MF1135 Diesel , Cob . air ond
15
CU . fl . DEEP FREEZE . chest
Heater
type
21 1 yrs. old Also 6 mob1le
NEW &amp; US ED IMPl EME Nl S
home
t~res
on
r~ms .
MF9 Boler MF10 Boler MF120
Reaso
nable
Coll44b-3013
located at 300 South College Avenue in Rio Grande,
Boler - Mollhews Rotar y Scythe
Ohio . The following will be off1!red :
MFBBO Semi· Mounted 6 bottom LOWERY 44 ORGAN , $1500 Call
plow · MF520 12' drsc · MF2 2
3BB·B772
5 piece breaklasl sel. oval cherry table . 3 e lectr ic
row chopper
MF39 2 row
CHERRIE
S 40¢ per qt Pick your
hea ters , nig ht stand , AM-FM Zenith radio. asserted
planTer s
me c hon rc ol
a wn Coll 44b·0412.
transplanter SHINN S TRAC
appl iances , 12x20green carpet, throw rugs, end fables ,
lORSALES
pole lamps, 2 e lec. tons . Avon bollles, electric blanket.
ADMI RAl DUPLE X srde by s1de
Phone 458 -1630
re friger ator. While good cand
some picture frames. Hotpoi nt washer &amp; dryer ,
LE ON. W VA
C aii446 · &lt;~~8B5
antique d ishes. Norge deep freeze , RC A ste reo, W·AM·
3E5"T10 STAY ' COOl. •
FM rod lo, meta l drums, electric dr ill, 'I•" cable,
1912
PERRY
BASS
BOA
l
,
20
HP
WHE.N CAPTU~ED I!SY
electric boxes . top link , hog walerer . hot shot and fo rm
1q77 HO NDA 360 , good cond l it·
Mercury e ng .. depth l ~nde1 ,
C.ANN16A1.5r, ~0~
equ ipmen t, and ot her col l ectors ite ms and
tie over 3 000 m rles. Call
troll1ng motor. tro1l er $1400.
388 -850
..:..::
4·_ _ _ __
miscel laneous Items.
Coll 446·0081
NO'T "TO DO "THI6.
lunch Avaltoble
TERMS : CASH
CHIMNEY BlOCKS, bu ddin g 1973 HONDA 450. exc. cond Coli'
moteno ls . Gotl rpa lrs Bloc k Co.
388 8794
Now arrenge the cl tclod letters to
&lt;4b-2783 .
1977
2b SKIFF CRAFl wrth tra1le r.
form the.. surprise answer, as sug·
SEALY MAllRESS SALE . NEW IN ·
l oaded sleeps 6, head . galley .
gesled by ihe above cartoon
NERSPRING
MA llRESSES.
monne rodro. AM-FM s. tereo
DOUB l E SIZE. S64 .9S WAS
Boo t h ou~e at Golilpol1s Boa t
S69.95. RICE'S NEW AND UIEO
Cl ub O\l ailoble Call 2.115-92 13
FURN llU RE, 85&lt; IECON D AVE.
1975 INTE RNAII O NAl Cub
446-9523
(....._.Monday)
Cad ette ndrng mower, 10 HP,
USED FUR NITURE
Koehler eng1ne wrth elect.
Yeslerday s I Jumbles DOUBT QUEEN FARINA BEHELD
AUCTIONEER- LEE JOHNSON
I SEl OF QUEEN SIZE SPRINGS
sta rt , 42" mower dec~ snow
.
Answer: WhM hl1 diving equipment bualn. .
Crown City - 2S6-6740
AND MA !TRESS . TWO 5 PC.
blade , l1ke new. Coli _._. 6 4556
ABOUTTO GO UNDER
DIN EllE SElS . 1 LtV . EM . SUi lE,
- ~er 5pm _
----I SET OF SPR INGS AND MATFor Sunday . June 2S
sual opportunities may an se to
1975
FORD
3000
D1esel
tractor
TRESS, I MATlR ESS, 1 SMALL
e nable you to tum a p ro f1t
244 hrs , Anno Pros e
ORGAN 1 HOBBY HOR IE .
446 1871.
Re lax wilh one eye open
RI CE"S NEW AND USED FUR· ...._._Honersville
__..
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov . 22) In
NllURE , 854 SECOND . AVE
197&lt; HARL EY DA VID SO N
soctal selttngs you are . ex ·
446·9523 .
Superspo rl Coli 446·4023 after
tremely magnet iC today A li t lie
Spm .
group wtll qu1c kly cl us ter about STRAWB ER RIES. piC k you r own.
bOC o quart. Bring own con· HA Y FORSAl E Coli 446-0313 .
you . hke mot hs attrac ted to a
--... I01nen. Call245 5121
Ilame
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
!1) Your melh ods may no t be
readily appar ent to oth e rs
7 Used Air Conditioners
toda y but th ey will get resu lts
S49.95 to $269.95
in stock from
June 25, 1978
Their unort hodox nature will
The year ahead will not be one not make th em any less e lfecSevera I Used 1 &amp; 2 pc.
of you r ru n-ol-th e -mtll . rou tine l tve
$50.00 up
Living Room Suites
penods Th ere a re many s ur· CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19)
$229.95
15 cu. ft. Used Chest Freezer
pn ses ahea d M o~t o t th e m will A splendid day lor bra in stor m·
~

~

--

'289.95

Pomeroy Landmark

-·
lliiil!il

MOBIL£ ii»ME
SERVICE

_

BilL'S

446-2642

-

--~------~

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

-

---

------

---

~-

---

-- ---------

-- -----------··

dE

IMPROVEMOOS

-- -

-~---

------

BlU'S
446-2642

--

-

----------

---------

I TANCE

Dl

PUBLIC SALE

I []

SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1978-10:00 A.M.

INJOT

I KJ

IHUHRTSb
III

II

Nmr. GET

DELORES E. FORGEY,
OWNER

crrn A 'TIXIJ"
w•-

ASTRO•GRAPH

-~

Bernice Bede Osol

~Yl~rm

~ lDOllJwillrulJ

DISPERSAL SALE

be pleasa nt

CA NCER (June 21-J uly 221 If
yo u 'l.•e oot something you 'd
lik e 10 push today olfe ts a
p r~ m e oppor1u nl1y 10 do It
You ·..,e got you r act togeth er
and yo ur approach would be
dramaltC Fmd out to whom
you 're roman ttcally s utl ed b y

sendmg tor you r copy of A stroG•ap h Lcll e r Ma 11 50 cen ls lor
eac h and a long , sell ·
addre ss ed , s tamped envelope

ing with con l1dant s In th e
process you will come up wtth
marve lous , wor kable co nce pts .

AQUARIUS (Je n. ZO· Feb. 19) A
commercial idea you 've been
laying with should not be left to

ga1her du sl 11 mlgnt provide
you with that destrable second
source of Income .
PISCES (~eb . 2~Merch !0)
Avail yourself ol any oppo rtu·
nity to go somewhere and meet
new people One yo u' re ln lrO·
duced to could prove very

IO As tro·G•ap h. P 0 Box 48g .
Rad oo City Sta ti o n. N Y. 10019. important to ~our futu re .
ARIES (Milch Z1·Aprll11) Oon'l
Be s ure lo s pec•l y blflh sign .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can · try to assume the mantle of
uno bt rus t'o'ely tak e charge of leadership loday You 'll re alize
situations impoflant to th ose • greate r s hare ol lhe booly by
yo u care lor . and put them tn being a fo llower.
the prope r con te~ l today . Your TAURUS (Aprlt 2~Mow 10) N.ew
ad e pl ha ndling w111 amaze oth- projecls are especially lavore d
lo r you today . They can be
e rs
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl .
One reward ing , and will be more so
ot th e reaso ns you 'll be so If !here 's some lype of un iQue
warmly re cei ved lo.day IS your twls1 Involve d .
.
ll a1r lot mak ing conlem po rarles GEMINI(Itlly !!.June !0) Don 'l
lhlnk lhal the be ue r •deas you be in11mlda1ed today by s ituasupply them wtlh rea lly are tions measared In huge fig ures. Approac h 1h lngs wllh
!heirs
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0 cl. 23 ) AI· logic and for1hrlg hl ness and
though Jh1 s may no t be a you'll come o ut on lop.
! NEW SPAPER ENTEAPfU5E ASSN )
normal work day f01 you. unu ·

m

lHE MT. VERNON FARM DAIRY HERD
HENDERSON, W.VA.
Sale will be held of Jack Cronk Form, 3 miles above
Henderson on Stole Rt. No. 35.

.

The MI. Vernon Form s uffered 1 crippling lire of tour
buildings on Aprlt 15 01 this yur.
•
93 Adult Cows - 36 Bred Heifers
56 cows are now In production, balance of herd In
different stages of pregnancy . This Is an old ,
established herd, good aged . bang tested, milk weig hts
will be announced day of sale. All bred a nimals are
bred Ia • Holstein bull or top qual ity. 49 heard are to
freshen within the ne xt 90 days; 21 head lo freshen
within next 30 days .
Heifers ere posture bred otter Nov . 10, 1977.

SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1978-10:00 A.M.
MT. VERNON FARM, JAft1ES B. SHADLE
HENDERSON, W. VA.
AUCTIONEER - A. Doty Remsburg
SALESMANAGERS - P11t 5ommer6J!-1013
Jock Crlflk 615·2176
Lunch Will Be Served

S50.00 up
550.00 up
$299 .95
Jpc. Living Room Suites (NEW)
529.95 up
Sev . Used Breakfast Sets
$200 .00
19" Portable Color T.V.'s
S38.oo
&amp;
s5a.oo
ea .
4 Orawer Filing Cabinets
51 0.00 ea .
Several Used Lamps
$49 .95
1 Maple Boston Rocker
$188.00
ea .
2 Berkline Like New Recliners
$1
69
.95
5 pc. Glass Top Breaklast Sets
$29.95 up
Sev. Chest &amp; Dressers
$169.95 ea .
2- Bedroom Suites
$199.95
1- 7 pc . Bedroom Suite

4 Used Elec. Dryers
Severa I Gas &amp; Elec. Stoves

Many, Many More Items too Numerous to
List . Drive A Little and Save A Lot.

�.._,~F~7'Be~"tResults Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
.

TWO 80R mobt le homes ol Quad
Creek Cal l 245 5021
1970 SAFEWAY 12 • 60 cen tral

atr , 2 bdr
1972 VICTORIAN 14 x 67, 3 bd r

2 bath s
197 1 OETRIOTER 12 x 60 3 bdr

a"

i 9b7KIRKWOOD 11&lt; bO 3 bdc
1971 SKYliN E 12)(52 2bdr
19b8HOMEUTE 12x60 2bdr

B S SMOB ILE HOMES
PI PLEASANT W VA
WI NDSOR r:nob tle hon1e 14 x 65 2
bdr all elect CA 2 po rches
rl t (e
o utbu il d ing s
w1th
unde r penn 1119 and tnsulo!ton
Coll 446 79 24

1977 NORRI S 70 • 14 w1th 7 11 12
t llpond o J !on central 011 l 1ke
new
to tal
electnc
1974
FREEDOM 70x 14 4 x 11 ttp oul
total electn c 3 BR well token
care ol 1974 FLEETWOOD 70 x

14 3 BR to tal electfiC lu rn. sh
ed 1973 KIRKW OOD 65 )( 14
total electn c 2 BR bay win
dow sharp 1973 ARLINGTON
b4 x 12 wtlh 4 x 1211p0u1 to tal
electnc 3 BR new carpel 1971
A TLANTl( 60 11 12 new gas fur
noce , new corpettng new fur

IF YOU ho ve a sep11Ce to of fe r
wont 10 buy or se ll sornethmg
oe look rng lor war k
or
whatever
you 11 get re s ult ~
faster wtlh o Sentrnel Wonf Ad
Coll 992 2156
HUGE YARD Sole F11 Sol Sun
Toafs , shoaling mat ch gun~
me tal tool bowt!S lor tru d
fi res camera albums books
wooden playpen and th 1s that
and the other Poym ond Prerce
Anl•quily SR 338
YARD SA LE 742 E Mo1n St
Pomeroy Frr June 23rd thrtJ
Man
Junt! 'lb
q 5 Nrce
clothrng onlrqu~ desk lots ol
rnrsc

CENTENARY
WO O D S PEl
GROOMING FACILITIE S Pro
fessrono l Ser \lrces offered all
b reed ~ oil sty les Ph 446 0231
DRAG O NW YND
CAffERY
KENNEL • AKC Cho.,.. Cho w
(FA
Sr omes e end
dogs
Htmo loyon co ts (Al so wh tte
PerS10ns ) Now ovadoble 1
eo 81 Chow tamale pup blue
pi fe male s.omese k rtte n
female Doberma n a nd 1:11 male
sm coo t Chow 4.4b 384.4
FIV E COCKER SPAN IEL PUPPIES 3
mo~
old
$100 eo
Coli
'2 45 5095 or 245 559:?
AK C REG IRISH SE TTER PUPS $b0
each Coli 388 8801
AKC REG G ERMAN SHEPHERD
PUPPIES Good wo!(h dogs S75
1 28b 2939
J

AKC DOBERMAN l emole 8 mas
ho u se b r o k en
e .. c
w rth
ch1ldren $ 175 Call 245 q5 54
l~ Q OF

HOLLOW Horses Buy sel l
tr ade or tror n N ew and used
sadd les Ru th Reeves Albany
(b 14) 698 3290

RI SING STAR l(ennel Soo rd rn g
Indoor and ou tdoor ru ns
G room m g all b1eed!&gt; Cl ea n
son 1tory foc."dt t1es Ches htre
Phone (6 14) Jb7 O'JfJ 2

PORCH SA LE Man June 26 on ly
Ferst teme th• s year on Te)( OS
Rd Women thrng etc

&amp;

VINYL SIDING

&amp;

Truck

Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 9'12 -5682

~ at_r·et..

KEN

Sofht. Room Addiloons
&amp; A Frame Homes
Fbr Free Estimates
CALL
992 6323 or 992-6011
6 19 1 mo pd .

Repatr

Portraits
Weddmgs

h4Ntor to tt..

For The Best
Proce In Town
See
Denver Kapple

At

~

MOORE•s

C..o

Passports

GROVER

PHOTOGRAPHY
9B5 4T55
Chester, Oh10 4S720

EXPERI EN~C::tD

Radiator,.......-,
Service
,,.... the ......

Anniversaries

Muffler

Brakes

Special Occasions

Shocks

To res

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoe fitch)
Pomeroy
T09 High 51.
31 1 mo

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
r~

Battery.
Installation Service

Ph 992 -2848

Pomeroy

992·2174

Pomeroy, 0 .
3 1Stlc

s

CARTER

H. L WRITESEL

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

ROOFING

t~=i
MODERN SUPPLY

New or Repair

Small engene &amp; mower
serv1ce, Massey Ferguson
&amp; Gilson Totters, Lawn Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Serv1ce.

Gutters and

lOO{"ain Sf
Pomeroy, Oh10
Pomerov 992 -6282
or 192-626)
8 A.M . to 4 . 30 P.M

Downspouts

399 W. Maon

Free Est1mates

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
R.estdenteal
and
commercial
Call
for
esttmate, 24 hour serv1ce.
Anyday , anvtome
Phone 985 ·3806
Jack G1nter 985 -lll06

or

St.

Pomeroy , Ohoo

949-2862
949-2160

Phone

SALES Ai'ID SERVICE
Jl .9.tfc

Ph .

992-2164
+ l mo.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Call After 5 : 00 or
Anytime Saturday
992 1119 or 992 5041
4 27 ttc

Bo x:i
Chester , Ohio
L.,__ _ __ 10 30 -c

FOREMAN

m;

ween \ pm and 3pm 446 4703
..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
PARTY PLAN SUPERVISORS Mer
rrMoc toy por ites ha s open rng
l or
supe rv 1so r ~
a nd
demonstrat or s rn your grea
Ouolety merchandtse h1ghes t
cam m•s ~1o n
No uw e ~ tm e nt
del1verrng or collectron Coli
Ann Bo ~~: t e r col le&lt;t31 9 556 8881
or wfl te Merr Mo&lt; Box 1277
Dubuque Iow a 52001

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

hove e~
pen ence 111 mochme ~ h o p
operot rons
Fo r eman e ~
per~en ce prefer red but wil l
trmn nght oppl• con t Ap plr co
lions or re ~ urn es w1ll be ac
cep ted Ju ne 2b !~Hou gh June
30 lmperrol Electri c Co 3~5
Sycamore Mtddleporl Oh1o
•S7b0
EEO·M·F

INDIVIDUAL NEEDED TO WORK
IN MEN'S RETAIL CLOTHING. A
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
POTENTIAL

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
SEND RESUME TO BOX 852
c/o GALLIPOLIS TRIBUNE

BRAOr ORO Aucteoneer
Com
piPt e SPr vtCP Phone 9~9 1 4 87
or 949 7000 Rocme Ohro (n il
Br od lord
H WOOO

BOWERS REPAIR
~weepe e l&gt; toas ters rrons all
~ moll o ppl e on cc ~ La w n mo wer
ne wt to Sla te Heghwo y Goroge
on Roull' 7 Phon£! (b l4 ) Cf85
3621

.

R ~ MOOH I NG

Plun1b•ng heotmg
and oil lypel&gt; of genera l re porr
Wotlo. guaran teed 20 year s ex
p('rtcnce Phone 992 ']40Q

~ ~ WING MACHINE
"'ICC a ll m a ke~

Repatrs ser
'192 228 -4 The
Fob r 1c
Sho p
Pomero y
Aurho1 12ed Srn ger Sole .. and
Servrce We .. horpBn S rr 'lo~o r ~

lXCAV ATINC dorer loader and
bot khoe wo1k dump truck s
and lo boy~ lor hne w dl haul
ftll d•rl to so•l l.mcs tone and
gravel Coli H.ob or Roger Jet
lers do~ ph one 9q'} 708Cf ntghl
phone qrn 3525 or 9'n 5137
f XCAV ATING dozer
ba ckh oe
and d• 1cher Charles R Hot
ft(!ld
Boc k Hoe
Servrce
Rutland Ohro Phon e 741 2008
Wll l

do

roo fmg co ns tr ucleon
plurn hmg and lwohng No ]Ob
too lor gc or too ~m oll Phone
747 7348

HOWERY
A ND MA RTI N E,
~epll&lt;
sy!. term
covo tmg
doHH backh oe durnp truc k
l rmc~ro ne
gro vel
blackt op
povrng Rt 143 Phone I (CIA )
b98 733 1
PUlL INS ~ XC A V ATIN C Comple te
~e r vrce Phono 9Cf7 7478
PUDOL~

Be a

----

BOGGS EX !EMINA liNG CO
(l mmerly Fornes &amp; Odell) Oak
H1ll Oh Call collect682·6249
V E FilliNGER woler deltvery
serv1ce Coll 379 21::
24::.._____

COAl
l ump
st o ker
l1mes tone
delrvered
Vaughn 2 ~5 5J()q

and
Dovrd

STUCCO PLASlER plos tor l" epor r
t ex tured
ceiltngs
Fr ee
esl!motes Ca ll 256 118:;:2c____
Exterm 1tol Term1te &amp; Pes t Control
of Galftpoils Ohro Wrlf1om
Thorno~ 446 2801

covers
Ault s Home
provements Ph -446· 3608

i:J'IYI ·

Area Supervisor and
earn $17,000+ + +

lm

( h1mney Swept by a professional
w1th modern dustless cleontng
- oldl1me workmon&amp;hip Call
BACKHOE DOZER DITCHER ond
I 373 6050 Ron Zortman
dump !ruck Concrete work
Hotf reld Backhoe Ser Rutland
On Ph 742 ·200B oc 446 27Bb
DACK TERMITING SPECIALIST
PEST CONTROL Lt censed IN
!l ur ed
Free
l ns pe ctr on,
Member NPCA and OPCA C
M Holt Wr!k esv• lle, Oh1o Ph
669-491 4

----A A A CONTRACTORS

Bockhoe
dozer dump truc k Work done
by th e hour or by the ]Ob For
lreees t. mo tes Coll250 1921

Pomeroy Landmark
J:lack W. C.rsey, Mgr.

· Phone992-2111
PASQUALE 1nsu latrng 103 Cedar
St Gol lipolrs Ph 446-27 16 or
CUST OM BRUSH HOGGING , by
CON!INUOUS GUffERING no 1ob
~67 0398..::a:.:.":::•:.:.•::
S______
too Iorg e or ~mo l l Gary~ Gut
h our or JOb M1n1mum charge
tenng Co 682 66 1b Oak H1ll SILL S MOBIL E HOMES ond Home
Ca ll 2 4,.S ::'.S~
B4:_:1:.._________,-::
Improvements
Free
esh
motes
Oh ro
WATER DELIVERY Coli
Co li 44b 2647
VAC UUM CLEANER Sa les and Ser
onyltme 256 9368or2 ~- l492
TWIN Rl VEffS MARINE 307 Upper
vtcl;! Only genurne perf s used
R1 11e r Rood Chrys ler Soles &amp;
Shep pard Sole~ und Serv 1ce
Serv1ce Comp lete Hull Rep air
Ftrsl and Oltve Sts
Custom bu1lt trotter s Pnone
MARC UM
ROO FING
446 8655
SPOUTING &amp; SIDING 20 yes
TRI SlATE UPHOLS!ERY SHOP ,
e xpe~en c e 3BB!~S7 _ ___
11b3 Sec Ave , 446 7833 even·
EXPERI ENCED CARPENTER
IO~S _ 4~6~ 3-- _ - - - - Co II rne l or tho se home repatrs
REE SE TRENCHING SER VICE ,
Coll25b 6495 or 256 6077
SPECIAL
waf er sewer elec triC gas I ne
D~N N H AND GLASS Chern link
or d1tches 17 rnc he!&gt; w1de to 5
l ence Free es ttmo tes Co li
I t deep Water/ me hooku ps
245 Cfll3 Ken Soles Galle pol ~
Call oll er ~ ~-367 7560__ _
Any U 5 mode car- par1s
e•fra it neecled E•cludes
PORfABLE WEL DING SERVICE
RUSS &amp; MA X ElliOTT
25 years expe11en ce m o1 f lreld l ennox Heotmg and a1r cond tiiOn
front.wheel drtve cars.
mornlo111en ce and repo rr go~
rng Ropco loom msulotr on
I me r on slrucllon Heavy equ 1p
446 85 15 or 446 0445 Ca ll aft er
weldmg rne ter ru ns elc Call
4 30
Morl1n Thompson , 256 1444
CARPEN TRY ro om addiiiQn s
Appointment
SANDY AN D BE AVE R In sur ance
roo lrng 's 1dmg and general
Co has offered serv1ces tor lrre
repatrs Co ll 379 26J5
- - -rn surance covera ge 111 Gollto
BUL LDOZER backhoe lunes tonFl
Co unt~ l or al most a century
Pomeroy L1ndmarll
seplrc tonk purnp1ng ou t Phone
Form home and pers onal pro
~ck W. Clrsey, Mgr.
day or mght Phone day or
per ty cove rage s ore ovorlab le
n1ght
to rneet 1ndwrduol need~ Con
Phont992·2TII
McNeal Con tr oc tmg Company
ta ct Frnley Oav1s your ne1ghbor
379 22S8
and agent

ac_262_!12~ 1_ _ - - - - - - - - -

- &amp;- B

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

-- ---

S}295

Call Now For

- --- ---

9 ..

~

70 Ocean
71 R1ver 1slan ds
73 Mu s1cal
mstru men ts
75 Fo llo w e • o f
Sh e m
77 Heave nly
bod y
78 Numb ers
game
80 Search tn
lhe dark
81 At l emp t
82 Nattv e
Amen cans
84 Flower
c lu s ter
pracltces
86 EnlhU SI·
massag e
ast1c
28 Chas11se
87 A st ate
29 Hosl e lry
89 Ord1nance
30 Female
92 Tru mpete r
horse
blfd
32 Thealer
95 Eer~e
altendanl
98 M occas m s
33 Conju nc 11on
99 Home ol
34 Femal e rull
Corn e ll U
35 So n o l Adam
101 Pr et e nii DUS
37 Braztl tan

POOLS

All sr1es ond
sh opt'!. ~w m1 poo l ~ 1 year 'lo
cxpcnencc
fr ee e~ lt rn ote s
ony l ht n g
you n ee d lor
under ground ~ w 1m pooh New
chomtca l and supp ly store
Oheo
Pho ne
A lbany
b1 4 b9B 6SS5 ( Alt er 6 prn
61 4 689 5'151 John J e ff e r ~ or
b89 52b 5 Bill V• lle tt e . 1 We or e
NO I all wet on PRIC ES

~P H OY

DRilliNG Wat er wel l
rl r d l tn g
(O rnm e r cr ol an d
dome~ t ee Purnp §ales and ~ er
vtce flq '} 6295 or 304 B9S 3807

NlJGLER BU ILDIN G S uppl~ lor
burld•ng hou!e$ repa1r work
and cob1neh Ca ll Gu'( H
No1glc r 9.49 2508 alt er 5 pm

estuary
39 Seaman
ICOIIOQ I
40 W1td h og
4T ts 111
42 Protec l tng
to ol h
44 Sub stan c e
46 Depart ed
47 Frees ol
48 En c trc le
50 Engravmp by

means o
dot s
52 Fop
53 BuddhiSI

prtest
55

57

58
59

60
62

64

Umt o l
Ita han
currenc y
lpt I
Above
DISpatch
DepOSi tS
French
aru cte
A s tale
(abbr I
LIQU id

home

T03 Float ' "
naor
T04 Perform
T05 Exc h ange
prem 1u m
106 Ro man num ·
ber 101
107 N ote ot
sca le
108 Surlell
110 Bro od ol
pheasanls
111 Not e ol
sc ale
11 2 Re l use lr om
grapes
11 3 Expense
11 5 Preposl·
non

Symbol t or
tanta l um
68 Near
69 Short sleep
IPI I

mounttatn
crest
143 Observes
145 M an ' s niCk·
name
146 Feasts
148 Bo gged
down
150 Ivory
152 S uc~ 1ca t
saw
153 Israel k1ng
154 A ncie n t
d iSifiCI
1n Greece
156 tmpta nled
l lrmly
T57 Scal ier
156 Church
s erv tce
159 Unot ol lo cce
160 Scraggy
(colloq I
DOWN
1 Fundam enlal
2 Places tor
co mbal
3 Alll xlng
one 's name
4 Ooc tr~ ne
5 App ear
6 Phys1c1an
I Ab br )
7 Mate sheep
B Tw o-toed
stolh
9 Error o l
condu c t

11 7 Al 1g hl

10 Moham·

119 Compass
potnl

meda n
noble
1 1 Sou r In
aspect
12 Click beelle
13 Arloc le

120 Heavy
volume
T2T Su 1labte
124 L ease
126 Be s patl ers

measure

66

T33 Ltgh t ram
134 Bea st o l
bu rde n
135 Leak
th ro ugh
137 Fondl es
139 Eggs
T40 Quot e
141 R ugged

127 B ody o l
wat e r
128 Se a nym ph
130 Girl ' s nam e
132 F1sh limbs

t 4 Un r uly
Child
15 French plu ·
ra t art1c te
16 A slraddl e
17 Makes
s trong

--~~~

18 Stav es
20 Break sud·
de nly
23 Scorc h
25 Engl iSh
str eetcar
27 Mus 1ca t
note ( pi I
28 Short talk
31 Pe r~ods o l
time
'J3 Ch in ese
fach o n
35 M e ta l
fa sten er
38 Aleuhan
ts la n d
40 T w1 s t
41 H e lps
43 Gras p
45 First -rat e
(COllOQ I
46 Season
47 Wh eel track s
49 Fall m
drops
51 S mallest
number
52 Rely on
53 Hebrew
d1e ty
54 M !M ture
56 Puzz t1ng
59 C aus t1c
60 S pare
61 Organs ol
heanng
63 Lur e
65 B ibli c al
weed
67 Peer Gynt s
mothe r
69 Sy m bol lor
n~ck e t

70 Post
72 P1 e 1ces
74 Negative

76 Pr o n o un
77 Geometrtc
ratios

79
83
65

HOMESITES for sole l cere and
up Mrddleport near Rutland
Colt 992 7•B l

Soulh Amertca n wo od
sorrel
Conden sed
m01s ture
Fug1t1ve
from Soviet
Au ssta

86

Wine c ups
87 Three·
banded

-~~~

armadillo
86 tntertwm e
89 Note of
scale
90 Harmony ol
sounds
91 Blouse
92 Lokety
93 Covering
lor ankle
!J.4 Man' s
niCkname
96 Beam s
97 Sketched
100 E.clamation
102 Greenland
settlement
105 Old Dutch
measure (pi 1
t09 Wile of
Geramt
112 Crowds
113 Coin
t14 Gaudy
ornamenl
116 UnitS
118 Let latt
120 Bnghtly cot c ried b ird
121 Atlltude
122 Fondled
123 Slalemales
125 Hermit
126 Turn aside
127 F rwl seeds
129 A ct
131 Made
amends
132 Fo rltlied
plac es
133 Attllude
1 3&lt;1 Deser1
dwellers
136 Equal
T38 Shabby
(colloq I
140 An imal's
1oe nail
141 Luzon

savages
142 Slippery
144 W inter
precipitation
147 Simian
148 The urlal
149 No1se
151 Pedal digit
153 Part of
" to be"
155 Compass
point

IF~~~~
- ---- ------- ------

close lo Ru tland Phone
I&lt;BT

992

VA FHA, 30 yr ftnonc• ng, -o~
r•flnonCtng Ireland Mortgage
77 E State Athens. phone (6 14 )
592-30Sl

TWO BEDROOM house rn Hor
nsonvd le w eth panei1ng
corpehng and cr ty wat er Call
otter 5 pm 74 2 2256

----

HOUSE ,, Tuppers Plorns All
eledrrc A C 3 bedrooms 1',
bath Basement Lo rge lot
992 3S85 oc 9'12 219b
HOUSE FIVE rooms and both
close to down town Mtddle porl
Phone 992 3436
HOUSE FOR SALE 2 star)~ vrnyl
Sldtng 3 bedroom downstor rs
2 upslatrs hvmg room dmtng
room botn krlchen wtt nout or
w1th oppl1ances completely
carpeted downstorr s hat water
neat Olr con dttr oned water
softener carport and bock
palm (lots of concre te) 7 ou t
bvrldrngs (I vmyl
s1drng)
Located on s•de stree t 111
Rutland
Qh ,o
Call day
742·22 11 or e11enmg 742 ·2q54
Ask for Herb
FIVE ACRE S of fo nd land on Hysell
Run Rood For deto1ls colt
6T. ·992-2JS4
FIVE ROOM house w• th bo th 19
acres of ground on CR 28 bel
ween Rocrn e and Apple Grove
For more •nl ormotran coil
247 31 b4

Ileal E state (or Sale

REALTY
GeorgeS Hobsletter Jr.
Broker
107•;, Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohoo
Phone 992-6333
Office Hrs.: •
9a. m .-S p.m
Closecl Thursdays &amp;
Saturday at noon
Your Full Ttme
Reo I Estate Broker
NEW
LISTING
3
bedroom Iota I • eleclri c
home ,
located
In
Hutchinson Sub-Otvision,
Rutland, Oh 1o Home has
full basement and garage
Situated on tot 95'x115'
Sell •n9 price, $32,000.00
NEW
LISTING
4
bedroom home, modern
kitchen, rec
room , l u ll
bath with shower, total
electric, low taxes, low
heating bills, situaled tn
the Arbaugh Add1fion ,
Tuppers Plains, Oh1o, on
large lot
oelilng tor
$42,000 00
Nice 3 bedr oom home
located In Syracuse, Ohio,
wet I worth S2B.OOO 00
12 Room, spltt le ve l
Colonial
that
has
everytht n g , located tn
R tggs cres t Manor, on
co rn er l ot
Sell 1ng l or
$65 ,000 bul well worth 1t
The reason thiS ad IS smatt
•s because we are selltng
our ltstrngs fast For a
quick sale of your property ,
see us for fast servtce.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Home Phone 742 -2003
H1llon Wolfe, Assoc .
Home 949 ·2SB9
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
Home Phone 992-S739

M. L (Bud)
428

FHA &amp; VA HOME LOAN S MeL EN
DON MORT G AGE COMPANY
l oon Representotr ve
Vtolet
Cook1e
V11HS 463 Second
A ve , Second floor Go llrpol rs
Oheo 45b31 Call446·7172
IRELAND MORTGAGE CO
G1ve us a ca ll for exper t gu1donce
and OSS I5to nce •n obt011"ng
your FHA or VA home loon
mortgage money
a lways
o var loble w tth our w rnpony
and our rntere~l rote and hnon
ong terms are more lovor oblo
than local fmanCi ng Goll r p o l r~
Ph Hb 1517
FOR SALE BY OWN ER
1026 Frnt Ave nue R•ver'ol lew pr o
ptrty wilh frontage on flf st and
Second A ... enues 8 rooms 2''
baths , 2 (Or garage Coli week
da ys 4"6 4383 evenmgs and
Sunday ~46 0139 Sho wn by ap
po1~m__!_n t only _
THREE BDR HOUSE lrke new
Nt11ghborhood Rd 2 a cres Cell
.U6 161 5 or 446 1143

lHREE BDR HOME rn Mercerv1lle
on Iorge lot Central oer
lireploce lmmedeote pos~e ~
slon
VA oppro\l ed
Call
256 126B
15 acres rn Oh to Twp 10 acres
Ohio fwp
5 acres H011150n
Twp 3 acre! Perry Twp In
quire ot Sheppard s Soles &amp; Ser
vice 1,t and Ohve St See Ro§e
Sheppocd

$4

ACRE FARM 10 Webs ter
Flortda Sump ter Co 35 mtles
from D • ~ney World Wrll sel l or
!rode lor form rn area ol equal
volue A lso tot and mobil e
home for sole tn Holiday
Florrda
lf 1n lere~led
lOll
"b o•58

THREE BDR MOBIL E HOME ond lol
w1th block ullhfy bulldrng on
Madison lwe Call 446 013-4
alter 4pm weekday s

~lo bile
M O BI L ~

• Top Salaries
• Profit Shanng Retirement
• Profit Parttcipation
•Vacation Plan
• Rapod Advancement
• Full Health Insurance
• Di s abt hty Insurance
*Ltfe Insurance
JtStock Option
• Must be 21 yrs . or older

~e\'tUW
FARMS®
RESTAURANTS
Send Resume to :

1528

Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis,

0 . 45631

Wc: nd y's Okl F'ashlunr.d llatnburJ(m ll tm~ of the fu~ ' ' growlnl! lui
folld dta ln~ In ~~ ~ IUi tiUIJ lnd11y! Wt' ha\'t ptu&amp; l11 lrlplt- oor ~:r owlh
within th t' nu :t [uu r ytllts and this wru Is une ul u... ,.,IA' ~ I grurrms
wrta!llll lht 1 •u.tulr) lnr u!i ' Tirll kind uf ~ x.pallllklll mtaru; that nurny
~ uprrv l..wry l!!\ t'l tlppurtullltlu will IN' avalla blt' 111 11 \t'r ) sh•1rl tlmr '
Yttu •ili 11LIIrt uur mauaarmrnl pro"r.11m at ,IJ,iOOapd muvr up W
II&amp;Mb;ta nt rtUULII ~t' r I S9,800 J, f'l»-ffilllll,lt:tr I $11'1 ,~ 00 1 ~IA1re mHilll~r.r
!Sil 000 ; , 1111d artiiii.IPtrYisur 1117,010 +++ 1 f rum h~ rt yoo m~n
lntulll'oiur llUIIIIKt!ment poHitlotn tM•pt" ndlng urr yoor proven abUIUtl
\"uti n1u!ll klllrtiiJMr bu ~ lnc u fr om Uu: !Wiom up 1tld •llut there II ltlr
drfinl:!d llmt' period fur lll'hlt'vlug the!it' prumullun~ WE Wll..l.. EX PECT
YOU TO MOn: INTO AREA SUI'EKVISION AS ij tJ ICKI. Y AS
POSSIRLI.' WE PROMOTE STIUt'TLV FROM WrntiN
Thr11 ill 11 very nt'llln,l! and rlulll t.&gt;l!~l ng buslnf'n , 811 tf )OU arr in 1111
Hthli'Vtr lit searrh uf ~r~m&amp;a l ,11ro"Ut .~~o nd unllmllr:d upporlunlly, ('1111
~klrr nutkl nl( 8 ~olid l' um mltmr•nt l•1 a flnt• nrt-cr In tht• fa~1 I1KJd

Homes for Jl_enl

HOMESLOTS
GRHN TERRACE MO B I L~ COM·
MUN!T Y
l oc oled on Rt l ol l &lt;I f'; water wy
sc hools 5 mm fr om Golhpolio;
and Ho lz er Hos p1ta l

Collect
Ros e Mary Jarrell

304-34S-28S4

MINI FARM - About 25
acres In Ches ter townsh tp ,
f encing . gard en space
barn . nt ce l y remodeled
home w i th
basement ,
pocches, carpe l1ng THI S
YOU
MU ST
SEE
$3085100
OLDER HOME - In Mod
dle porl , 117 baths , 3 4
octrms , 7 sl or tes A SKI N G
120,000 00
REOUCEO TO IS ,900, on
P om eroy . J bdrms , bath ,
garage , cellar
SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
could be your motto
Your own bustness Tratn
mg provrdcd . move tn and
t ake aver CALLfOR I N
FO
Ranch
rn
3 BORM
Pomeroy, nrce k• t cncn,
parl basem en t
OTHER
' FEAT U RES Sl B,OOOOO
MANY OTHER PROPERTIES TO CHOOSE FROM
WE HAllE QUALIFIEO
BUYERS FOR
MElGS
COUNTY PROPERTlES
LIST WITH Ul .
HENRY E. CLELANO
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEO_N A
A SSOCIATES
992l!S9- 99HT9T
992 2S68

[H
llf • t i Oio'

HANDYMAN ' S SPECIAL
- 5 rms .. bath , fireplace,
needs repa1rs , located on
old Route 160 at Evergreen.
ST2,000.
STROUT
REALTY, 446 -0008.

L-----------1
-=-::::- ::::------

-~--==-=

TWO KITTENS lemole 2 week~
o!d 1 snow wh tte 1 whrte and
~t r rped
l oveab l e
and
hou~ebroken to home to be
cored for end lo\led Call
992-2531

SCRAP ME! Al
Crown Cr t }'

Coli

2Sb 1"0

KlfH NI I Ogood h ome Coli

4~6 .UbO

INTERIOR AND EXTE RI OR PAIN·
liNG and roof prmtlng at HMAU HL ON DI:. PUPPY approx
rea&amp;onoble
prlc•• ·
Callr
b mos . old , hou•ebro ken. gen
.u60257 .
II• alert Coll2~5 5058
WANTED TO DO HABY SIT TING
_.,c::o::1:.;
12:.:
56
:..·:..
6005
= '---

446.{)552

JUST LIKE N W - Qual tly but! i ranch ts less than I
yr old &amp; mu st be seen to apprect afe Spec tal f ea tu res
are q ua l rty c arpet throughout w ife appro v ed ktfchen
wtth sto ve &amp; refr rg th ermopane w indows, ma rble
St ll s. garbage &amp; a larg e I tat tot on the Floyd Clar k Rd ,
1 1&lt;~
mt west of Stat e Rt 160 S32,900 Shown by
app oontme nt onl y STROUT REALTY 446 0008

.-.
''

Our prosp ectiv e cust omer file say s " H elp', we
need prop erft es to sell Consult us and we both
becom e w1nner s.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH on 3 c ot y l ot s. level
wr th 17x35 ova l tn gr ound pool The c hil d r en &amp; Mom
wtll love •t Many , many goodtes w•th lhrs 3
bedroom home

K en Morg an
Eventng s
44 6-0911

Ru sse ll 0 wood
Ev en tngs
441&lt;1 46 18

I»

c:

Pt1 story hom e w 1th large rooms 1-; acre lot ,

C. space and cellar Located at th e edge of town

RUSSEU. WOOD

: Whole , Eve 446 95SI

3:

REALTOR

n

C)

:r
II)

10 ACRES OUT - Cleared on front we th sept rc tank
r eady to build on

446-1066

II)

CROWN CITY - 3 bedr oo m home on l ar ge 101 Prtc
ed r 1ght. Sl4 ,900

WE NEED USTINGS

3:

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n

C)

C)
~

home sr tuated on nearly on e ac r e of la nd

lmmedrate

~

.. possesston
EW LISTING
J yea r s
)fd , 3 bd rm r an ch m ex
. elle n! condtlron L evel lo t
n Ru tl and eq urp p ed k 1t
: hen and many f eatu r es
527,700 .00
~EW LISTING 2 s tory
ram e home, ap pro x
2
Jeres of ground, garden
opace, storage bu rldtng Up
to lour bedrms CLO SE TO
PO M EROY $25 000 00
NEW LISTING
In
Pomeroy ,
r e mot;.te l e d
.,arne . p a rt ba5 e ment
·ange &amp; ret 2 or 3
.:&gt;edroo m s, P -; bath s ON
LYSB50000

wu~

For further Inform alton call :

Second Ave. Ph.

'&lt;

~

l OOKING FOR HOME loc 3 kot
lerns '} 1rger. f emale 1 block
mole Coll367 7ACf7

bu.~IJ!I'~Ii

McGhee, B 'roker

':1' Make a rea sonabl e offer and you ca n own a

A nRACTI VE COTTAGE HOME on
3 ctty lots 6 Iorge room~ FREE TO good home b lock female
pon tled , new FA fu1noce 1935
pup W1 l l be medru m fo lotge rn
Chatham A ve Coll,.46 1660
suo
Good home
o nly
8•3-2797
LOTS AND ACREAGE 1 rnr S of
Rlo Grande on 325 Call FRE E KITTENS Very tome Used lo
2•BB15
chrldren Don Nelson 992. 73 13
LARGE FOUR BDR HOME on lg FREE 8 acres of hoy f or cleomn g
fenced lot 16 x 'JO 11.... rm w1 1h
freld 74') 2754
wood burner lormal drn rm ,
new bud! In lut , some dra per. ANY PERSON who has onyrh,ng 10
grve away and does not olftH or
r•fr l g
freer.e r
wcluded
ott em r, t l o offe r any o ther thtng
$3B,500 Call 388 B772
l or sa e may place on ad rn ttm
ONE ACRE RESTRICTED b"'ldmg
column. There wrll be no
lot&amp; , Rodney Hor rl1 burg Hd .
chorge_!o_•he od\l~ lis.!.:_
rural water Caii14S 545~
PART TERRIER. port poodle
BY OWNE R
female 3 yrs old Al so half col
2 bdr home rn coun try Beou tllul
!re half ch1huohuo fen'l'ofe .4
All modern On on,
1 elllng
yrs old Beag le female 2 yrs
acre lot, or od ldlflonal land
old Very good wrl h ch1ldren
a'lotloblt Blo(k top rood Co li
Colt 388 BSB2 .

.....:•::
.00:.;·:3.;~__2· ~-

''

CHECK THIS OFFERING - Extra lar ge com l orl abl e
home. a lso motor cour t &amp; two---2 bedroom co ttages
w1 th pl enty htghway fro n tage to uttlrze tor other
bu stn esses Parktng no pr oblem Heavy const r uctron
w or k to beg tn tn area ma kes tor excell ent busr ness
Owner, beca use of health, un abl e to op erate In st ant tn
come Ma ke us an offer Wrth pur cha se an op f 10 n of
buytn g su ccess ful ca r ry out ad1ornmg Synd rc ator 's
dr ea m

THMH Kt lf~ N~ . I femol@ dog
rned !Mil!' (of! o111146 095:L .

-

'

BE THE ~IRST TO SEE THIS ONE Lovely 2 story'"
town , 3 BR's, 2 full baths , large LR , formaltl1nrng rm ,
formal foyer, modern k1tchen , l WB fireplaces , full
basement. gas heat and carport
Shown by
appointment only STROUT REALTY , 446-0008

.'

..

'&lt;

NEW LISTING I n Add,!r.on 3 b ed r oom . full basem ent
overlooK tng the Oh ro R•vcr some r rv !?'r lr on 1 q P
ava ilabl e S39,500 00

'

A C

'

OVERLOOKING ARE A 9-l acres . no build tnq s
u p ba se m ent , r tver v rew Buy f or $3 5,000 00

aa

SITUATE 0 ON th e beau tiful Oll ro R 1vcr below E urekil
5ccn 1c vr ew, lo t and home wdh actcrlrona l nc ""LacJe
~w atta bl e, some applrances go W1fh house tor O'l t
&gt;T8,SOO

VIRGIL B., SR . .._......-.
992·3325
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ill

P RICE REDUCED 3 bedroom home. locale a on
NetQ hborh OOd Rd, JUSI ou t s 1de crt ( ltmt !S N ew f
r emodeled . conven •ent loca ! •On ct !Y water. na t qa s
Prtce $12,500

'&lt;

3 BEDR OOM ca r peted nome tn Pla nt z SD na ! gas

~

-.

II)

hea t . 2 a dd1t1onal
f ~ ' 900

''

lots mcluded

( 180' xlol0')

Prr c e

THREE BEDROOM, commandtng vtew ol th e Oh tO
R1ver C1 l y wa ter, fa tuel Or I f urnace, loca 1ea or co r
ner of Rt 7 and Rt 218 Also 20 x30 bl oc k burld •nq (.' )
eel len t restden rral or comme r c tal 1oc at1 on Pr ( t
00

s•s.ooo

COMMERC IAL BUILD I NG tn JacKson,O
lease Bu Yboth tor 'S40,000 oo

no,._ unoer

COMME RCIAL BUILDING on Eastern Ave 80 t
tage x 150' deep 2 re ntals ( 1 house . I ap t plus CO"
c talbuildlng ) Pr Jce S75 00000
NEW J BE OROOM, all elec tnc. c arpeted n ome tocn lr&gt;O
NEW LISTING - New 3 bedroom br rc k home N tCe
step s~;~ver k i t chen w 1th large dtntng ar ea Large tamr
ly room wrth heatolat er l 1replac e and nt ce vt ew at the
wood l and through 4 large gtass doors Has tong sun
dec k rn oac k. and tar e front porc h If y ou l tke the co un ty
ff1tS wr ll p lease you
OLD BUT NICE - lf tiS room you wan! th rS ha s rt Wtfh
a ll crly conven1ences This has 3 or 4 bedroom s, d tntpg
room . equtpped kttchen . f urnace, large yar d, 7 c ar
garage wtlh 2 rooms for storage and 2 a t ta ched roo ms
tor small ousrness
BRICK APTS - 4 apar tments , al l rented I n t own
where yo u ca n w a lk to work or shop N tc e srle tot In ex
cellen tl oca tron
4 BEDROOMS - Wood frame house wtth large ea t rn
kttchen . den or study , basement, 3 por ches . gara ge and
two fh trdsof an a cr e
OLDER HOME - 7 rooms , bath aas floor t urna ce,
washer dryer and nt ce terra ced lor 70' x 100 '
3 PROPERTIES IN I ~ Large 9 room o 1oer nome w• tt'
central heat . 5 bedrooms , 2 baths , c1ty w ater , Plus
sma ll bustness bu tld tng wtth 2 baths Also a 4 room
apartment over a lear gar~;~ge All thrs for SIB.OOO
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms , Ci ty water. nalural gas,
bath &amp; nice level lot Want only $7.900
POMEROY OUTSKIRTS - 6 room house, 2 bed rooms
pl us , ci ty water. gas forced air furnace, large lol
$8,500
HELEN L . TEAFORD - SUE P MURPHY
G . BRUCE TEA~ORD
REALTOR ASSOCIATES

----

Business Management Opportunity

a.'

3:

3 BR home locat ed en Colon ial
Subdlv1 sron at 1108 Teoo ra
Ava ga s hea t Coli l or oppt
614 qss.-4111 .. or 614 -992 7639

REALTY

PLANNING TO SELL
Ltst wtth us &amp; 1 promtse 100% of my knowlectge , mv
abtlttv , mv enerqy as well as adverflstnQ &amp; aq gresstve promot.on far each home We are the mat
chmaker for buyer and seller. Advertts.ng produces
prospect s but we do the sell•ng, so deal wtth us My
pledge to you! Personal servtce and fast act ton.

CL OSE TO Fores t Acres Po rk 5
acres lots of ou tb urldrng s 3
bedroom frame , bo th S 15 OOCJ
992 5B• S

WILL MAIN1 AIN Cald orn•a Red
wood Ranch
I 5I f loor
3
bedroom both lt111ng room
Iorge kef chen dmrng roorn
den full me bo~emenl wt l h
large Carpe ted recreoh on room
and both l ocated Mar sch oo ls
ch urches shoppmg and re creo
l 1on Go!i heal new cenlrol otr
co nd rlronmg Lorge lo t Pr rvole
potro l oh o f tre es O~o~er~•led
double garage 24 .. 30 Cu~t o m
drapes and other e.ottros
Owne r berng transferred Sell
lormrd60 $ 304 273 ·26 17

McGHEE

"8" 11"

''

I»

SALES ASSOCIATES
446 ·3B28
EARL WINTERS
2S6 6140
LEE JOH N50N
67S 4167
JOHN CAUDILL
Galltpohs , Oh•o
4Sl·2nd Av e.

FIVE MILE S out of town on Rt 143
Brtek end frame ran ch, 4
bedroo ms fomrly room wilh
l!rttplo(e
two cor garage
work shop and shed fu ll bose·
men! , 2 bal hs S~ 5 000 Coli
992 58~ 5 Over on acre

BU SINE SS FOR ~ole Seer Wrn c
Corry Out ~2 578b between
_ I O &amp;~ o~ly

.ll@al Estate for Sale

I-leal E state lor l'iale

. "Bud" McGhee Realty "Bud" McGhee

HOBSIEIIER

NEW 3 bedroom neuse 2 both~
oil elec 1 acre Mtddleport

TWO STORY fram e hou se 6
room s 011d both cel lar out
bu1ldlngs 4 acres land , a1 edge
of Rutland Complete trorler
hook up al so 2 bonk s appra1 s
ed property at S15,500 Phone
992 7094

LIMESTONE , g;~~el and sand All
s1zes At RIChards ond Son Up·
per R1 11er Rd Goll1polrs o n1o
Ca ll 44b 77B5

ACROSS
1 Fo unda11on
6 M USICal
tn stru menL
10 Egyp t1an
lizard
14 Sale d w1lh
pleas ure
t9 Gets up
21 Htnd u queen
12 Earth s
sa1e1111e s
23 Peaks ol
waves
24 Sect •on
26 One wh o

Wanted

MUSJ

STA NLEY
STE AME~
Carpel
Cleaner Seemg IS bel re11111g
when Stanley Steamtng Call
446 4'108

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;

Jack's ~ptic
Tank ~ce

~N

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentrnel

DOZER WORK excovatrng land WILL CA RE for the elderly tn our
home Pha ne~99
~
2..:7::
3:.:.
1•.::__ ___
cle orr ng Ph 446 005 1
---------- -------- WATER WELL dnl llng W1lhom T
CHAI N LINK FENCING WOODEN
Grant 742·2879
fENCING
AWNINGS
Po t•o

CONCRETE AN D BLOCK WORK
Done reasonably by hour or 1ob
Free est tmotes Call 367 0295

SALE SPER SON
We ore look rng fat expen enced ~tV
oggress •ve so,iesper sons .n rh ~ SW IMMING INSTR UCTOR ot New MA fURE RES PON SIBLE wom an as.
are a who would lrke to earn
Ho\len Pool A pply ot th e pool
boby stlt er hou!.Pkeeper l •~e II'
on overage weekly rn come ol
b etween the hour~ ol 1 l o Spm
po!!rl mn separat e h o u~e1ng
$250 to $400 wo rk ,ng 111 the
304 B82 2634
and excellent bcn e/11 !. No
lreld of energy co nserv ohon
~mo kr n g
M us t
dr t ve
LPN NEEDE D Col i Arc adro N u r ~
Our company and rts re presen
Coll3 04 8~ 6088 alter Spm
1ng
Horn
e
6
14
667
3190
tah lle) work dosely w rth the
publr c to cd nser ve ener gy by CA RRIER S NEEDED I0 0 th e Doil y
helprng th e consu mer make hr s
Ser1 hne l Pom eroy Mrdd lcpo1t
home o ~ energy ef l ece ent o ~
and Syr acuse oreo Ple ase
possrble
Only expe,.ented
p hone W2 2 156 bel ween 8 30
salespe rso ns 'lo hould apply by
o m and 5 00 p m
Must have expen enc:e ih
co llen g col lect 304 485 95 37
mach.ne shop operatton .
e x p e n e n ce
WANTED rnole o r l ernole h1gh
For e man
WANTED
Hhool graduat e to work por t
pre f err ed , bul Will tra u1
Applrca
Fu ll Ti me Bookkeeper CD·
nght appilcanf
lime rn ~e r viC e statron and
CR - AP Payroll , taxes .
h on s or rm~u m es accep t('d
g roc e ry Wnt e to BoK 957 co
severa I states, tn s, S&amp;A .
J une 26·June 30 1m penal
Golhpolts Do rly 1rrb une
Send
Indu stry
Etectr rc Co , 345 Sycamor e
Local
ADO SbO to $75 wee k ly 10 fom•ly
C·O
resume to Bo•
St , Mtdl epor t . Oh . 45760
budget work rng 3 e rme po~1
GallipOliS Daily T ri bune
EEO- M F
! •on OII OIIoble Cor and ph o"l'
ne( e!&gt; ~O • y Coli for deto els bet

FO~EMAN

dothrng of al l
lund s a ll s1zes Men thru Fn
3q le .. a s Rd 10 to 5

0.

·"'

WAITR ESS
No
exp errenc e
necessary Apply m penon or
Slue Tor ton M 1dd leport
RUMMAG E SALE

ALUM.

molt ott Rt. 1 by pass on
St Rt 1'14 toward Rutland,

~-..... ·

SOMEONE TO stay wrt h el derl y
lady ( all44b 0&lt;~ 1 2

Let
us
capture
and
preserve those preCIOUS
moments forever Wecld•ng s
Stiver and
Golden Anntversary
FamtiY Reun1ons
Spec1al Occa sr ons
Pho1qgraphy
ts
our
busmess, not a stde lme

MASH BROTHERS

FIRS ! EVER GARAGE SALE J"ne L - - - - - - - - 4_3_0_-l_fc_,
23 ond 2-4 June 30 and July I
Macrame hangers type wrrter
b1rd ca ge!&gt; 1eor''lo etc F1 ve
mrles south on Rt 7 Watch lor
segns

ntture 2 8R 1970 PARK ESTATE
12 x ~ 7 x 20 E.:pondo fu r
rm hed mcludes washer and
dryer also a porch 19b8 BU D
DY 12 x 50 2 BR very well
kept set up rn local park ready
to mo ve mto 1966 NE W MOON
12 I( 51 2 BR un l urn rs hed wtll
mak e o good summer recreo
tton hom e FOR ~OR E IN
FORMATION ( All JOHNSON S l ET 5 BE HONEST If you we ren I
MOBIL E HOMES 446 3S4 7
looK.ng l or o new career you
wouldn 1 be reodr ng th rs ad
\ 4 ~ 65 Mob de Home set up on
and 1f we weren t loolung lor
pad slm tmg 8 x 10 shed
someone Ia do a rob th •s ad
446 q486 lor oppomtment
wouldn I be her e If you won t
1977 HOLLY PARK MOBILE HOME
the oppor tundy to earn $300 to
14 .ot 65 Central or r under ptnn
$500 a week , col i toll free
mg unl urn opplroncc only
I BOO 3'7 96Cf6 ony trme lo1
SIS (XX) Phone 675 b487 o r see
recorded message
Paul Northup K 8. K Mobol e
lNDlVIDUALS, w 1ll,ng to toke o
Home Pt Pl easant WV
hondrcopped pe1son ov er s•xty
1Q74 GRAN VILLE MOBI LE HOME
mto home Be responsrbl e l or
14 • 65 total elec tnc Call • tro tn rng tn commun rty lr v.ng
367 7 120 ott er 4pm
sk•ll s Salary plu s ben efrt s Call
286 5039 ro wnte Bu ckeye
1974 GOVERNOR MOBILE HOME
Communily Serv•c es Fos ter
14 x 70 w tth ce ntra l otr
Cor e Program 680 E Mo 1n St
S11 500 Call 245 9572 aft er
Jack son Ohro 45004
Spm
PSYCHOLOGIST
14 • 56 Memory tota l electrte
Ne w pos tlr on rn rural satell ite
tr ader .Phone 949 23~8
m ental health clrn •c Oh m
THR EE BEDROOM J ' , bath
ltc e n ~ed p ~ y c h olo g sl or board
9'12 74S3
elr g 1ble
Dut •es
1nclude
drognos t. c evo luol on co m
muntty cons ulot ron ou trea ch
lnd rv eduol and lom rl y co unsc el
rng
l •m• led odrnmt ~ l•otr ve
re !&gt;pon s•brletre s Exp er• enc e rn
BRIARPAT CH Ken nels Boordmg
drug prog romrng dewoble
Groom en g Ato; C Gor don 'loel
Salar y negot1ablc depend•ng
te n Engl rs h Cocker Sponrels
on expe rren ce Se nd resume to
Ph 44 b 4191
Alan 0 leary P H D In Coun
l y Men tal health 28 Strn!&gt;an
RISING ST AR KENNEl
A ve At hen s Oh 45701 Call
8oordmg Indoor Out doo r Ru ns
bl4 S92 3091
Groomrn g All Breeds Cl ean
Sant to ry la oltt tes C he s h ~r e Ph
367 0292

ROGER HYSELl
GARAGE

THREE FAMI Ly Gacage
Pal oo
Sale J""" 24 &lt;S 26 77 &amp; 28
West oBl 1 • mde oil 33 oo
Oorw m Mrs Vernal Well

TEACHERS
Referen ce lurnr shed upm1 re
quest We wrll fur nrsh you w 1lh
the 1,am e addr ess or1d phone
number s o l other tea che- rs who
ho ve wo rKed wrth us 111 the
summer
fo r personal 1nTer
v1ew
col! the local s ole ~
manager at 675 3775 or w n lc
P 0 Bo l( 387 Ch es apeake Oh

The por n! Sh op 1'15 R1 ver Rd
Kanougo Auto body work col
hs ron es t tmo t e~ Ph 440 851 4

L------------------------C-------------1

Auto

•

..

Business Services
:v.

D-5-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntmelo SWTday, JWTe 25, 1978

on Bea r R un Rd , approx J ac r es r 1ghl of wa ~ to
coo n Cr ee k. Buy now for S35 000 00

,

3:
n

c
Q.
••

C)

:r
II)

3:

II)

n
C)
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For Lease

DISTRI BUTORSHIP
MODlRN 3 BPR BRICK RAN CH
Wtll not rnterlere w1th present
1', baths 2 cor go roge bme
employment. No sel lrn g re
men1 nea r town S300 plus
QU1red rwenty. frve yeOr o fd
depos1 t Wnt e to Bo- No 850 c
company See au• ad on rhe
o Golltpo l1s Dorly l r1bune
___!i Ports page today'
A COMPLETE EXERCISING CENTER bm;t and found
i::•t~llng bu srneu
or 1u!o t the
equtpment mcl udrng souno FOUND Do ch!&gt;hund red rno le ln
Vrnton areo Ca1138t! 8321
steam genera tor
ftberglass
!ohower ) etc For i nlormot1o n
colt bl4 592 3001

Pli•;.jlli'ng and Heating

I'IB~Dd.lleatiag-=DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 1bO ol i::\ler green
Phone 4~6 2735

- ---

DRAIN I SEWEH CLlANING SER
VJCE , Open 14 Hr 1 day~ a
week
!)!archer &amp; !)on Ph
LSb 1:141

CAR TER 5 PLUMBING
AND HEAliNG
Cor f ourt h &amp; Prne
Phone 446 3888 or 4ol6 44777
~I AN OARO

fll umbrng Heot mg
215 Thtrd A 11e . 446 J782
G~ Nl PLAN1 S&amp; ION I
Healing
A11 Con
PlUMHlNG
drtromn g :tOO Fourth Ave Ph

oU b I()J 7

PROFESSIONAL BUILDING . 15,000 sq fl loci! leu oO
1acen t ro gol f course , one level no steps rdea l for ol
frees , sc hoo lsJ p ro l ess.ona l a ct rvt lte s For mort n
lor m atton call 446 1066
PRICE REDUCED on t n1s 2 bed room home on L owC' r
R1ver Rd , '1 acr e lot , cr ty water Owner anx rous IO
se l l Prr ced for S13 000 00

II)

Ill

II)
II)

::;
'&lt;
''

..

'&lt;

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3:

I»

cQ.

n

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:r
II)

C)

3:

II)

n

C')

New L1sttng - V tlf ag e ol N ort hup near Ra ccoon
Thr s lo've ty h om e 1s ne MIY new ancl•1 11as had excel lent
; care Thr ee BR 's, with lo ts of st orag e, ba l h wrlh
Cf) showc r 1 m od ern k 11c hen w rll1 lot s of c abinet s, pl us
much rr.ore Call lor an appoi nt men t

:;a
11)
Q.1

:::;

&lt;

"' N ew Ust 1ng
V er y clea n th rel' BR home Si tuat ed on :
an acre 101 to ea ted on Rou t e 588. 1r 1 miles from ~
- downtown F ull ba setn en t, n n l ura l gas hea l , also has C
mob ti e home h ookup on back ol lo t Ca ll now f or an ap Q.
~ po1ntment
t '
C:J Two stor'( frame hom e tn Eu reka , new Sldtng, carpe '
C and tS paneled throughout , has great vtew of the n v er

Z

IJmines! Omrortnnitiu

R r1C

NEW LISTING 2 beo r oo m Beth el Rd , 1 acrC' 1nn : :1
well or ru r al water , tucl 011 furna ce Pn ced for q utc ~
sa le ST 2,000 oo
250 ' xlSO ' B"ILDING LOT nea r
h1g hway , rural w ater . pr tCe S5.900
BUILDING ON UPPER
r ep at r Pr tc e r ed uced

2ND

EvergrC'cn . a lono

AVE , needs

o,~..PH"

BUILDING LOTS 75 xl20 ' . a ll underground ull lr t rcs
ru ral waler. cen t ral sew age collectron , blcl Ck top
stree ts N o mobile homes Prr ce S4 000 00
NEW LISTING · D up lex , Sttua t ed on &lt;il h Av e
rn
Ga ll•pohs Ltve tn one S1de , ren r th e ot her
Pr1cC'd to
se l l sn ooo

oo

IF YOU ' RE THINKING A BO UT SELLING, GIVE U S
A CALL AND WE ' LL BE HAP PY TO DI SCU SS OUR
LISTING CONTRACT WITH YOU
WE H AV E
BUYERS BUT WE NE!OD LISTING S! LET U S SEL L
YOUR HOM E WHEN Y HOU ' RE READY
0

&lt;
~

3:
n

3:

n

m ,900
lt" neat and cl&lt;SALE
and a bath Moo

C)

PEMOING;;,~wn
· -

F ove rooms ;

9

II)

(i) Ltvenear Galhpal ts and st ill en1 0Y the freshness of coo l

:r
~

spring watec
Modern
Appo1n tm ent only

modular

(24X60)

;o

S31.900 II)

~

Realty "Bud" Me Ghee Realty" Bud ~

FARM ~DR SALE Meigs
Co ., LeaG,ng Creek , ap·
prox. 1 m1. oft Rt . 7, 131 ac ,
appro-. . 90 A
flllabt e,
balance woods, modern
ranch style hom e, full base·
ment, lree ga s. SlOO,OOO.
STROUT
REALTY .
446·0008 .

EDGE OF TOWN - 2 BR ,
bath, LR , kitch en , lull
ba sem en t, wo uld
make
good
rentaL
113 , 500
S TROU T
REALT Y ,
4.. OOOB.

GRAB IT FAST. tt won 't last &gt;prawhng 3 BR br ic k
ranch ts pr~ced to sell &amp; otter s 1110 sq . ft. of ltvtng area
w ith 3 baths, formal dinmg rm ., famtiV rm. Wtth srone
f ir ep l ace equ1pped ktfchen &amp; heat pump PLU S a Ia rye
2 car garage &amp; partta l ty frntshed full ba sem en!
Locared on thew, T . Watson Rd n ear Rodn ey Shown
bY appointm ent only . STROUT REALTY 446·0008

�.._,~F~7'Be~"tResults Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
.

TWO 80R mobt le homes ol Quad
Creek Cal l 245 5021
1970 SAFEWAY 12 • 60 cen tral

atr , 2 bdr
1972 VICTORIAN 14 x 67, 3 bd r

2 bath s
197 1 OETRIOTER 12 x 60 3 bdr

a"

i 9b7KIRKWOOD 11&lt; bO 3 bdc
1971 SKYliN E 12)(52 2bdr
19b8HOMEUTE 12x60 2bdr

B S SMOB ILE HOMES
PI PLEASANT W VA
WI NDSOR r:nob tle hon1e 14 x 65 2
bdr all elect CA 2 po rches
rl t (e
o utbu il d ing s
w1th
unde r penn 1119 and tnsulo!ton
Coll 446 79 24

1977 NORRI S 70 • 14 w1th 7 11 12
t llpond o J !on central 011 l 1ke
new
to tal
electnc
1974
FREEDOM 70x 14 4 x 11 ttp oul
total electn c 3 BR well token
care ol 1974 FLEETWOOD 70 x

14 3 BR to tal electfiC lu rn. sh
ed 1973 KIRKW OOD 65 )( 14
total electn c 2 BR bay win
dow sharp 1973 ARLINGTON
b4 x 12 wtlh 4 x 1211p0u1 to tal
electnc 3 BR new carpel 1971
A TLANTl( 60 11 12 new gas fur
noce , new corpettng new fur

IF YOU ho ve a sep11Ce to of fe r
wont 10 buy or se ll sornethmg
oe look rng lor war k
or
whatever
you 11 get re s ult ~
faster wtlh o Sentrnel Wonf Ad
Coll 992 2156
HUGE YARD Sole F11 Sol Sun
Toafs , shoaling mat ch gun~
me tal tool bowt!S lor tru d
fi res camera albums books
wooden playpen and th 1s that
and the other Poym ond Prerce
Anl•quily SR 338
YARD SA LE 742 E Mo1n St
Pomeroy Frr June 23rd thrtJ
Man
Junt! 'lb
q 5 Nrce
clothrng onlrqu~ desk lots ol
rnrsc

CENTENARY
WO O D S PEl
GROOMING FACILITIE S Pro
fessrono l Ser \lrces offered all
b reed ~ oil sty les Ph 446 0231
DRAG O NW YND
CAffERY
KENNEL • AKC Cho.,.. Cho w
(FA
Sr omes e end
dogs
Htmo loyon co ts (Al so wh tte
PerS10ns ) Now ovadoble 1
eo 81 Chow tamale pup blue
pi fe male s.omese k rtte n
female Doberma n a nd 1:11 male
sm coo t Chow 4.4b 384.4
FIV E COCKER SPAN IEL PUPPIES 3
mo~
old
$100 eo
Coli
'2 45 5095 or 245 559:?
AK C REG IRISH SE TTER PUPS $b0
each Coli 388 8801
AKC REG G ERMAN SHEPHERD
PUPPIES Good wo!(h dogs S75
1 28b 2939
J

AKC DOBERMAN l emole 8 mas
ho u se b r o k en
e .. c
w rth
ch1ldren $ 175 Call 245 q5 54
l~ Q OF

HOLLOW Horses Buy sel l
tr ade or tror n N ew and used
sadd les Ru th Reeves Albany
(b 14) 698 3290

RI SING STAR l(ennel Soo rd rn g
Indoor and ou tdoor ru ns
G room m g all b1eed!&gt; Cl ea n
son 1tory foc."dt t1es Ches htre
Phone (6 14) Jb7 O'JfJ 2

PORCH SA LE Man June 26 on ly
Ferst teme th• s year on Te)( OS
Rd Women thrng etc

&amp;

VINYL SIDING

&amp;

Truck

Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 9'12 -5682

~ at_r·et..

KEN

Sofht. Room Addiloons
&amp; A Frame Homes
Fbr Free Estimates
CALL
992 6323 or 992-6011
6 19 1 mo pd .

Repatr

Portraits
Weddmgs

h4Ntor to tt..

For The Best
Proce In Town
See
Denver Kapple

At

~

MOORE•s

C..o

Passports

GROVER

PHOTOGRAPHY
9B5 4T55
Chester, Oh10 4S720

EXPERI EN~C::tD

Radiator,.......-,
Service
,,.... the ......

Anniversaries

Muffler

Brakes

Special Occasions

Shocks

To res

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoe fitch)
Pomeroy
T09 High 51.
31 1 mo

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
r~

Battery.
Installation Service

Ph 992 -2848

Pomeroy

992·2174

Pomeroy, 0 .
3 1Stlc

s

CARTER

H. L WRITESEL

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

ROOFING

t~=i
MODERN SUPPLY

New or Repair

Small engene &amp; mower
serv1ce, Massey Ferguson
&amp; Gilson Totters, Lawn Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Serv1ce.

Gutters and

lOO{"ain Sf
Pomeroy, Oh10
Pomerov 992 -6282
or 192-626)
8 A.M . to 4 . 30 P.M

Downspouts

399 W. Maon

Free Est1mates

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
R.estdenteal
and
commercial
Call
for
esttmate, 24 hour serv1ce.
Anyday , anvtome
Phone 985 ·3806
Jack G1nter 985 -lll06

or

St.

Pomeroy , Ohoo

949-2862
949-2160

Phone

SALES Ai'ID SERVICE
Jl .9.tfc

Ph .

992-2164
+ l mo.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Call After 5 : 00 or
Anytime Saturday
992 1119 or 992 5041
4 27 ttc

Bo x:i
Chester , Ohio
L.,__ _ __ 10 30 -c

FOREMAN

m;

ween \ pm and 3pm 446 4703
..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
PARTY PLAN SUPERVISORS Mer
rrMoc toy por ites ha s open rng
l or
supe rv 1so r ~
a nd
demonstrat or s rn your grea
Ouolety merchandtse h1ghes t
cam m•s ~1o n
No uw e ~ tm e nt
del1verrng or collectron Coli
Ann Bo ~~: t e r col le&lt;t31 9 556 8881
or wfl te Merr Mo&lt; Box 1277
Dubuque Iow a 52001

CAREER OPPORTUNITY

hove e~
pen ence 111 mochme ~ h o p
operot rons
Fo r eman e ~
per~en ce prefer red but wil l
trmn nght oppl• con t Ap plr co
lions or re ~ urn es w1ll be ac
cep ted Ju ne 2b !~Hou gh June
30 lmperrol Electri c Co 3~5
Sycamore Mtddleporl Oh1o
•S7b0
EEO·M·F

INDIVIDUAL NEEDED TO WORK
IN MEN'S RETAIL CLOTHING. A
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
POTENTIAL

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
SEND RESUME TO BOX 852
c/o GALLIPOLIS TRIBUNE

BRAOr ORO Aucteoneer
Com
piPt e SPr vtCP Phone 9~9 1 4 87
or 949 7000 Rocme Ohro (n il
Br od lord
H WOOO

BOWERS REPAIR
~weepe e l&gt; toas ters rrons all
~ moll o ppl e on cc ~ La w n mo wer
ne wt to Sla te Heghwo y Goroge
on Roull' 7 Phon£! (b l4 ) Cf85
3621

.

R ~ MOOH I NG

Plun1b•ng heotmg
and oil lypel&gt; of genera l re porr
Wotlo. guaran teed 20 year s ex
p('rtcnce Phone 992 ']40Q

~ ~ WING MACHINE
"'ICC a ll m a ke~

Repatrs ser
'192 228 -4 The
Fob r 1c
Sho p
Pomero y
Aurho1 12ed Srn ger Sole .. and
Servrce We .. horpBn S rr 'lo~o r ~

lXCAV ATINC dorer loader and
bot khoe wo1k dump truck s
and lo boy~ lor hne w dl haul
ftll d•rl to so•l l.mcs tone and
gravel Coli H.ob or Roger Jet
lers do~ ph one 9q'} 708Cf ntghl
phone qrn 3525 or 9'n 5137
f XCAV ATING dozer
ba ckh oe
and d• 1cher Charles R Hot
ft(!ld
Boc k Hoe
Servrce
Rutland Ohro Phon e 741 2008
Wll l

do

roo fmg co ns tr ucleon
plurn hmg and lwohng No ]Ob
too lor gc or too ~m oll Phone
747 7348

HOWERY
A ND MA RTI N E,
~epll&lt;
sy!. term
covo tmg
doHH backh oe durnp truc k
l rmc~ro ne
gro vel
blackt op
povrng Rt 143 Phone I (CIA )
b98 733 1
PUlL INS ~ XC A V ATIN C Comple te
~e r vrce Phono 9Cf7 7478
PUDOL~

Be a

----

BOGGS EX !EMINA liNG CO
(l mmerly Fornes &amp; Odell) Oak
H1ll Oh Call collect682·6249
V E FilliNGER woler deltvery
serv1ce Coll 379 21::
24::.._____

COAl
l ump
st o ker
l1mes tone
delrvered
Vaughn 2 ~5 5J()q

and
Dovrd

STUCCO PLASlER plos tor l" epor r
t ex tured
ceiltngs
Fr ee
esl!motes Ca ll 256 118:;:2c____
Exterm 1tol Term1te &amp; Pes t Control
of Galftpoils Ohro Wrlf1om
Thorno~ 446 2801

covers
Ault s Home
provements Ph -446· 3608

i:J'IYI ·

Area Supervisor and
earn $17,000+ + +

lm

( h1mney Swept by a professional
w1th modern dustless cleontng
- oldl1me workmon&amp;hip Call
BACKHOE DOZER DITCHER ond
I 373 6050 Ron Zortman
dump !ruck Concrete work
Hotf reld Backhoe Ser Rutland
On Ph 742 ·200B oc 446 27Bb
DACK TERMITING SPECIALIST
PEST CONTROL Lt censed IN
!l ur ed
Free
l ns pe ctr on,
Member NPCA and OPCA C
M Holt Wr!k esv• lle, Oh1o Ph
669-491 4

----A A A CONTRACTORS

Bockhoe
dozer dump truc k Work done
by th e hour or by the ]Ob For
lreees t. mo tes Coll250 1921

Pomeroy Landmark
J:lack W. C.rsey, Mgr.

· Phone992-2111
PASQUALE 1nsu latrng 103 Cedar
St Gol lipolrs Ph 446-27 16 or
CUST OM BRUSH HOGGING , by
CON!INUOUS GUffERING no 1ob
~67 0398..::a:.:.":::•:.:.•::
S______
too Iorg e or ~mo l l Gary~ Gut
h our or JOb M1n1mum charge
tenng Co 682 66 1b Oak H1ll SILL S MOBIL E HOMES ond Home
Ca ll 2 4,.S ::'.S~
B4:_:1:.._________,-::
Improvements
Free
esh
motes
Oh ro
WATER DELIVERY Coli
Co li 44b 2647
VAC UUM CLEANER Sa les and Ser
onyltme 256 9368or2 ~- l492
TWIN Rl VEffS MARINE 307 Upper
vtcl;! Only genurne perf s used
R1 11e r Rood Chrys ler Soles &amp;
Shep pard Sole~ und Serv 1ce
Serv1ce Comp lete Hull Rep air
Ftrsl and Oltve Sts
Custom bu1lt trotter s Pnone
MARC UM
ROO FING
446 8655
SPOUTING &amp; SIDING 20 yes
TRI SlATE UPHOLS!ERY SHOP ,
e xpe~en c e 3BB!~S7 _ ___
11b3 Sec Ave , 446 7833 even·
EXPERI ENCED CARPENTER
IO~S _ 4~6~ 3-- _ - - - - Co II rne l or tho se home repatrs
REE SE TRENCHING SER VICE ,
Coll25b 6495 or 256 6077
SPECIAL
waf er sewer elec triC gas I ne
D~N N H AND GLASS Chern link
or d1tches 17 rnc he!&gt; w1de to 5
l ence Free es ttmo tes Co li
I t deep Water/ me hooku ps
245 Cfll3 Ken Soles Galle pol ~
Call oll er ~ ~-367 7560__ _
Any U 5 mode car- par1s
e•fra it neecled E•cludes
PORfABLE WEL DING SERVICE
RUSS &amp; MA X ElliOTT
25 years expe11en ce m o1 f lreld l ennox Heotmg and a1r cond tiiOn
front.wheel drtve cars.
mornlo111en ce and repo rr go~
rng Ropco loom msulotr on
I me r on slrucllon Heavy equ 1p
446 85 15 or 446 0445 Ca ll aft er
weldmg rne ter ru ns elc Call
4 30
Morl1n Thompson , 256 1444
CARPEN TRY ro om addiiiQn s
Appointment
SANDY AN D BE AVE R In sur ance
roo lrng 's 1dmg and general
Co has offered serv1ces tor lrre
repatrs Co ll 379 26J5
- - -rn surance covera ge 111 Gollto
BUL LDOZER backhoe lunes tonFl
Co unt~ l or al most a century
Pomeroy L1ndmarll
seplrc tonk purnp1ng ou t Phone
Form home and pers onal pro
~ck W. Clrsey, Mgr.
day or mght Phone day or
per ty cove rage s ore ovorlab le
n1ght
to rneet 1ndwrduol need~ Con
Phont992·2TII
McNeal Con tr oc tmg Company
ta ct Frnley Oav1s your ne1ghbor
379 22S8
and agent

ac_262_!12~ 1_ _ - - - - - - - - -

- &amp;- B

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

-- ---

S}295

Call Now For

- --- ---

9 ..

~

70 Ocean
71 R1ver 1slan ds
73 Mu s1cal
mstru men ts
75 Fo llo w e • o f
Sh e m
77 Heave nly
bod y
78 Numb ers
game
80 Search tn
lhe dark
81 At l emp t
82 Nattv e
Amen cans
84 Flower
c lu s ter
pracltces
86 EnlhU SI·
massag e
ast1c
28 Chas11se
87 A st ate
29 Hosl e lry
89 Ord1nance
30 Female
92 Tru mpete r
horse
blfd
32 Thealer
95 Eer~e
altendanl
98 M occas m s
33 Conju nc 11on
99 Home ol
34 Femal e rull
Corn e ll U
35 So n o l Adam
101 Pr et e nii DUS
37 Braztl tan

POOLS

All sr1es ond
sh opt'!. ~w m1 poo l ~ 1 year 'lo
cxpcnencc
fr ee e~ lt rn ote s
ony l ht n g
you n ee d lor
under ground ~ w 1m pooh New
chomtca l and supp ly store
Oheo
Pho ne
A lbany
b1 4 b9B 6SS5 ( Alt er 6 prn
61 4 689 5'151 John J e ff e r ~ or
b89 52b 5 Bill V• lle tt e . 1 We or e
NO I all wet on PRIC ES

~P H OY

DRilliNG Wat er wel l
rl r d l tn g
(O rnm e r cr ol an d
dome~ t ee Purnp §ales and ~ er
vtce flq '} 6295 or 304 B9S 3807

NlJGLER BU ILDIN G S uppl~ lor
burld•ng hou!e$ repa1r work
and cob1neh Ca ll Gu'( H
No1glc r 9.49 2508 alt er 5 pm

estuary
39 Seaman
ICOIIOQ I
40 W1td h og
4T ts 111
42 Protec l tng
to ol h
44 Sub stan c e
46 Depart ed
47 Frees ol
48 En c trc le
50 Engravmp by

means o
dot s
52 Fop
53 BuddhiSI

prtest
55

57

58
59

60
62

64

Umt o l
Ita han
currenc y
lpt I
Above
DISpatch
DepOSi tS
French
aru cte
A s tale
(abbr I
LIQU id

home

T03 Float ' "
naor
T04 Perform
T05 Exc h ange
prem 1u m
106 Ro man num ·
ber 101
107 N ote ot
sca le
108 Surlell
110 Bro od ol
pheasanls
111 Not e ol
sc ale
11 2 Re l use lr om
grapes
11 3 Expense
11 5 Preposl·
non

Symbol t or
tanta l um
68 Near
69 Short sleep
IPI I

mounttatn
crest
143 Observes
145 M an ' s niCk·
name
146 Feasts
148 Bo gged
down
150 Ivory
152 S uc~ 1ca t
saw
153 Israel k1ng
154 A ncie n t
d iSifiCI
1n Greece
156 tmpta nled
l lrmly
T57 Scal ier
156 Church
s erv tce
159 Unot ol lo cce
160 Scraggy
(colloq I
DOWN
1 Fundam enlal
2 Places tor
co mbal
3 Alll xlng
one 's name
4 Ooc tr~ ne
5 App ear
6 Phys1c1an
I Ab br )
7 Mate sheep
B Tw o-toed
stolh
9 Error o l
condu c t

11 7 Al 1g hl

10 Moham·

119 Compass
potnl

meda n
noble
1 1 Sou r In
aspect
12 Click beelle
13 Arloc le

120 Heavy
volume
T2T Su 1labte
124 L ease
126 Be s patl ers

measure

66

T33 Ltgh t ram
134 Bea st o l
bu rde n
135 Leak
th ro ugh
137 Fondl es
139 Eggs
T40 Quot e
141 R ugged

127 B ody o l
wat e r
128 Se a nym ph
130 Girl ' s nam e
132 F1sh limbs

t 4 Un r uly
Child
15 French plu ·
ra t art1c te
16 A slraddl e
17 Makes
s trong

--~~~

18 Stav es
20 Break sud·
de nly
23 Scorc h
25 Engl iSh
str eetcar
27 Mus 1ca t
note ( pi I
28 Short talk
31 Pe r~ods o l
time
'J3 Ch in ese
fach o n
35 M e ta l
fa sten er
38 Aleuhan
ts la n d
40 T w1 s t
41 H e lps
43 Gras p
45 First -rat e
(COllOQ I
46 Season
47 Wh eel track s
49 Fall m
drops
51 S mallest
number
52 Rely on
53 Hebrew
d1e ty
54 M !M ture
56 Puzz t1ng
59 C aus t1c
60 S pare
61 Organs ol
heanng
63 Lur e
65 B ibli c al
weed
67 Peer Gynt s
mothe r
69 Sy m bol lor
n~ck e t

70 Post
72 P1 e 1ces
74 Negative

76 Pr o n o un
77 Geometrtc
ratios

79
83
65

HOMESITES for sole l cere and
up Mrddleport near Rutland
Colt 992 7•B l

Soulh Amertca n wo od
sorrel
Conden sed
m01s ture
Fug1t1ve
from Soviet
Au ssta

86

Wine c ups
87 Three·
banded

-~~~

armadillo
86 tntertwm e
89 Note of
scale
90 Harmony ol
sounds
91 Blouse
92 Lokety
93 Covering
lor ankle
!J.4 Man' s
niCkname
96 Beam s
97 Sketched
100 E.clamation
102 Greenland
settlement
105 Old Dutch
measure (pi 1
t09 Wile of
Geramt
112 Crowds
113 Coin
t14 Gaudy
ornamenl
116 UnitS
118 Let latt
120 Bnghtly cot c ried b ird
121 Atlltude
122 Fondled
123 Slalemales
125 Hermit
126 Turn aside
127 F rwl seeds
129 A ct
131 Made
amends
132 Fo rltlied
plac es
133 Attllude
1 3&lt;1 Deser1
dwellers
136 Equal
T38 Shabby
(colloq I
140 An imal's
1oe nail
141 Luzon

savages
142 Slippery
144 W inter
precipitation
147 Simian
148 The urlal
149 No1se
151 Pedal digit
153 Part of
" to be"
155 Compass
point

IF~~~~
- ---- ------- ------

close lo Ru tland Phone
I&lt;BT

992

VA FHA, 30 yr ftnonc• ng, -o~
r•flnonCtng Ireland Mortgage
77 E State Athens. phone (6 14 )
592-30Sl

TWO BEDROOM house rn Hor
nsonvd le w eth panei1ng
corpehng and cr ty wat er Call
otter 5 pm 74 2 2256

----

HOUSE ,, Tuppers Plorns All
eledrrc A C 3 bedrooms 1',
bath Basement Lo rge lot
992 3S85 oc 9'12 219b
HOUSE FIVE rooms and both
close to down town Mtddle porl
Phone 992 3436
HOUSE FOR SALE 2 star)~ vrnyl
Sldtng 3 bedroom downstor rs
2 upslatrs hvmg room dmtng
room botn krlchen wtt nout or
w1th oppl1ances completely
carpeted downstorr s hat water
neat Olr con dttr oned water
softener carport and bock
palm (lots of concre te) 7 ou t
bvrldrngs (I vmyl
s1drng)
Located on s•de stree t 111
Rutland
Qh ,o
Call day
742·22 11 or e11enmg 742 ·2q54
Ask for Herb
FIVE ACRE S of fo nd land on Hysell
Run Rood For deto1ls colt
6T. ·992-2JS4
FIVE ROOM house w• th bo th 19
acres of ground on CR 28 bel
ween Rocrn e and Apple Grove
For more •nl ormotran coil
247 31 b4

Ileal E state (or Sale

REALTY
GeorgeS Hobsletter Jr.
Broker
107•;, Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohoo
Phone 992-6333
Office Hrs.: •
9a. m .-S p.m
Closecl Thursdays &amp;
Saturday at noon
Your Full Ttme
Reo I Estate Broker
NEW
LISTING
3
bedroom Iota I • eleclri c
home ,
located
In
Hutchinson Sub-Otvision,
Rutland, Oh 1o Home has
full basement and garage
Situated on tot 95'x115'
Sell •n9 price, $32,000.00
NEW
LISTING
4
bedroom home, modern
kitchen, rec
room , l u ll
bath with shower, total
electric, low taxes, low
heating bills, situaled tn
the Arbaugh Add1fion ,
Tuppers Plains, Oh1o, on
large lot
oelilng tor
$42,000 00
Nice 3 bedr oom home
located In Syracuse, Ohio,
wet I worth S2B.OOO 00
12 Room, spltt le ve l
Colonial
that
has
everytht n g , located tn
R tggs cres t Manor, on
co rn er l ot
Sell 1ng l or
$65 ,000 bul well worth 1t
The reason thiS ad IS smatt
•s because we are selltng
our ltstrngs fast For a
quick sale of your property ,
see us for fast servtce.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Home Phone 742 -2003
H1llon Wolfe, Assoc .
Home 949 ·2SB9
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
Home Phone 992-S739

M. L (Bud)
428

FHA &amp; VA HOME LOAN S MeL EN
DON MORT G AGE COMPANY
l oon Representotr ve
Vtolet
Cook1e
V11HS 463 Second
A ve , Second floor Go llrpol rs
Oheo 45b31 Call446·7172
IRELAND MORTGAGE CO
G1ve us a ca ll for exper t gu1donce
and OSS I5to nce •n obt011"ng
your FHA or VA home loon
mortgage money
a lways
o var loble w tth our w rnpony
and our rntere~l rote and hnon
ong terms are more lovor oblo
than local fmanCi ng Goll r p o l r~
Ph Hb 1517
FOR SALE BY OWN ER
1026 Frnt Ave nue R•ver'ol lew pr o
ptrty wilh frontage on flf st and
Second A ... enues 8 rooms 2''
baths , 2 (Or garage Coli week
da ys 4"6 4383 evenmgs and
Sunday ~46 0139 Sho wn by ap
po1~m__!_n t only _
THREE BDR HOUSE lrke new
Nt11ghborhood Rd 2 a cres Cell
.U6 161 5 or 446 1143

lHREE BDR HOME rn Mercerv1lle
on Iorge lot Central oer
lireploce lmmedeote pos~e ~
slon
VA oppro\l ed
Call
256 126B
15 acres rn Oh to Twp 10 acres
Ohio fwp
5 acres H011150n
Twp 3 acre! Perry Twp In
quire ot Sheppard s Soles &amp; Ser
vice 1,t and Ohve St See Ro§e
Sheppocd

$4

ACRE FARM 10 Webs ter
Flortda Sump ter Co 35 mtles
from D • ~ney World Wrll sel l or
!rode lor form rn area ol equal
volue A lso tot and mobil e
home for sole tn Holiday
Florrda
lf 1n lere~led
lOll
"b o•58

THREE BDR MOBIL E HOME ond lol
w1th block ullhfy bulldrng on
Madison lwe Call 446 013-4
alter 4pm weekday s

~lo bile
M O BI L ~

• Top Salaries
• Profit Shanng Retirement
• Profit Parttcipation
•Vacation Plan
• Rapod Advancement
• Full Health Insurance
• Di s abt hty Insurance
*Ltfe Insurance
JtStock Option
• Must be 21 yrs . or older

~e\'tUW
FARMS®
RESTAURANTS
Send Resume to :

1528

Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis,

0 . 45631

Wc: nd y's Okl F'ashlunr.d llatnburJ(m ll tm~ of the fu~ ' ' growlnl! lui
folld dta ln~ In ~~ ~ IUi tiUIJ lnd11y! Wt' ha\'t ptu&amp; l11 lrlplt- oor ~:r owlh
within th t' nu :t [uu r ytllts and this wru Is une ul u... ,.,IA' ~ I grurrms
wrta!llll lht 1 •u.tulr) lnr u!i ' Tirll kind uf ~ x.pallllklll mtaru; that nurny
~ uprrv l..wry l!!\ t'l tlppurtullltlu will IN' avalla blt' 111 11 \t'r ) sh•1rl tlmr '
Yttu •ili 11LIIrt uur mauaarmrnl pro"r.11m at ,IJ,iOOapd muvr up W
II&amp;Mb;ta nt rtUULII ~t' r I S9,800 J, f'l»-ffilllll,lt:tr I $11'1 ,~ 00 1 ~IA1re mHilll~r.r
!Sil 000 ; , 1111d artiiii.IPtrYisur 1117,010 +++ 1 f rum h~ rt yoo m~n
lntulll'oiur llUIIIIKt!ment poHitlotn tM•pt" ndlng urr yoor proven abUIUtl
\"uti n1u!ll klllrtiiJMr bu ~ lnc u fr om Uu: !Wiom up 1tld •llut there II ltlr
drfinl:!d llmt' period fur lll'hlt'vlug the!it' prumullun~ WE Wll..l.. EX PECT
YOU TO MOn: INTO AREA SUI'EKVISION AS ij tJ ICKI. Y AS
POSSIRLI.' WE PROMOTE STIUt'TLV FROM WrntiN
Thr11 ill 11 very nt'llln,l! and rlulll t.&gt;l!~l ng buslnf'n , 811 tf )OU arr in 1111
Hthli'Vtr lit searrh uf ~r~m&amp;a l ,11ro"Ut .~~o nd unllmllr:d upporlunlly, ('1111
~klrr nutkl nl( 8 ~olid l' um mltmr•nt l•1 a flnt• nrt-cr In tht• fa~1 I1KJd

Homes for Jl_enl

HOMESLOTS
GRHN TERRACE MO B I L~ COM·
MUN!T Y
l oc oled on Rt l ol l &lt;I f'; water wy
sc hools 5 mm fr om Golhpolio;
and Ho lz er Hos p1ta l

Collect
Ros e Mary Jarrell

304-34S-28S4

MINI FARM - About 25
acres In Ches ter townsh tp ,
f encing . gard en space
barn . nt ce l y remodeled
home w i th
basement ,
pocches, carpe l1ng THI S
YOU
MU ST
SEE
$3085100
OLDER HOME - In Mod
dle porl , 117 baths , 3 4
octrms , 7 sl or tes A SKI N G
120,000 00
REOUCEO TO IS ,900, on
P om eroy . J bdrms , bath ,
garage , cellar
SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
could be your motto
Your own bustness Tratn
mg provrdcd . move tn and
t ake aver CALLfOR I N
FO
Ranch
rn
3 BORM
Pomeroy, nrce k• t cncn,
parl basem en t
OTHER
' FEAT U RES Sl B,OOOOO
MANY OTHER PROPERTIES TO CHOOSE FROM
WE HAllE QUALIFIEO
BUYERS FOR
MElGS
COUNTY PROPERTlES
LIST WITH Ul .
HENRY E. CLELANO
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEO_N A
A SSOCIATES
992l!S9- 99HT9T
992 2S68

[H
llf • t i Oio'

HANDYMAN ' S SPECIAL
- 5 rms .. bath , fireplace,
needs repa1rs , located on
old Route 160 at Evergreen.
ST2,000.
STROUT
REALTY, 446 -0008.

L-----------1
-=-::::- ::::------

-~--==-=

TWO KITTENS lemole 2 week~
o!d 1 snow wh tte 1 whrte and
~t r rped
l oveab l e
and
hou~ebroken to home to be
cored for end lo\led Call
992-2531

SCRAP ME! Al
Crown Cr t }'

Coli

2Sb 1"0

KlfH NI I Ogood h ome Coli

4~6 .UbO

INTERIOR AND EXTE RI OR PAIN·
liNG and roof prmtlng at HMAU HL ON DI:. PUPPY approx
rea&amp;onoble
prlc•• ·
Callr
b mos . old , hou•ebro ken. gen
.u60257 .
II• alert Coll2~5 5058
WANTED TO DO HABY SIT TING
_.,c::o::1:.;
12:.:
56
:..·:..
6005
= '---

446.{)552

JUST LIKE N W - Qual tly but! i ranch ts less than I
yr old &amp; mu st be seen to apprect afe Spec tal f ea tu res
are q ua l rty c arpet throughout w ife appro v ed ktfchen
wtth sto ve &amp; refr rg th ermopane w indows, ma rble
St ll s. garbage &amp; a larg e I tat tot on the Floyd Clar k Rd ,
1 1&lt;~
mt west of Stat e Rt 160 S32,900 Shown by
app oontme nt onl y STROUT REALTY 446 0008

.-.
''

Our prosp ectiv e cust omer file say s " H elp', we
need prop erft es to sell Consult us and we both
becom e w1nner s.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH on 3 c ot y l ot s. level
wr th 17x35 ova l tn gr ound pool The c hil d r en &amp; Mom
wtll love •t Many , many goodtes w•th lhrs 3
bedroom home

K en Morg an
Eventng s
44 6-0911

Ru sse ll 0 wood
Ev en tngs
441&lt;1 46 18

I»

c:

Pt1 story hom e w 1th large rooms 1-; acre lot ,

C. space and cellar Located at th e edge of town

RUSSEU. WOOD

: Whole , Eve 446 95SI

3:

REALTOR

n

C)

:r
II)

10 ACRES OUT - Cleared on front we th sept rc tank
r eady to build on

446-1066

II)

CROWN CITY - 3 bedr oo m home on l ar ge 101 Prtc
ed r 1ght. Sl4 ,900

WE NEED USTINGS

3:

n

n

C)

C)
~

home sr tuated on nearly on e ac r e of la nd

lmmedrate

~

.. possesston
EW LISTING
J yea r s
)fd , 3 bd rm r an ch m ex
. elle n! condtlron L evel lo t
n Ru tl and eq urp p ed k 1t
: hen and many f eatu r es
527,700 .00
~EW LISTING 2 s tory
ram e home, ap pro x
2
Jeres of ground, garden
opace, storage bu rldtng Up
to lour bedrms CLO SE TO
PO M EROY $25 000 00
NEW LISTING
In
Pomeroy ,
r e mot;.te l e d
.,arne . p a rt ba5 e ment
·ange &amp; ret 2 or 3
.:&gt;edroo m s, P -; bath s ON
LYSB50000

wu~

For further Inform alton call :

Second Ave. Ph.

'&lt;

~

l OOKING FOR HOME loc 3 kot
lerns '} 1rger. f emale 1 block
mole Coll367 7ACf7

bu.~IJ!I'~Ii

McGhee, B 'roker

':1' Make a rea sonabl e offer and you ca n own a

A nRACTI VE COTTAGE HOME on
3 ctty lots 6 Iorge room~ FREE TO good home b lock female
pon tled , new FA fu1noce 1935
pup W1 l l be medru m fo lotge rn
Chatham A ve Coll,.46 1660
suo
Good home
o nly
8•3-2797
LOTS AND ACREAGE 1 rnr S of
Rlo Grande on 325 Call FRE E KITTENS Very tome Used lo
2•BB15
chrldren Don Nelson 992. 73 13
LARGE FOUR BDR HOME on lg FREE 8 acres of hoy f or cleomn g
fenced lot 16 x 'JO 11.... rm w1 1h
freld 74') 2754
wood burner lormal drn rm ,
new bud! In lut , some dra per. ANY PERSON who has onyrh,ng 10
grve away and does not olftH or
r•fr l g
freer.e r
wcluded
ott em r, t l o offe r any o ther thtng
$3B,500 Call 388 B772
l or sa e may place on ad rn ttm
ONE ACRE RESTRICTED b"'ldmg
column. There wrll be no
lot&amp; , Rodney Hor rl1 burg Hd .
chorge_!o_•he od\l~ lis.!.:_
rural water Caii14S 545~
PART TERRIER. port poodle
BY OWNE R
female 3 yrs old Al so half col
2 bdr home rn coun try Beou tllul
!re half ch1huohuo fen'l'ofe .4
All modern On on,
1 elllng
yrs old Beag le female 2 yrs
acre lot, or od ldlflonal land
old Very good wrl h ch1ldren
a'lotloblt Blo(k top rood Co li
Colt 388 BSB2 .

.....:•::
.00:.;·:3.;~__2· ~-

''

CHECK THIS OFFERING - Extra lar ge com l orl abl e
home. a lso motor cour t &amp; two---2 bedroom co ttages
w1 th pl enty htghway fro n tage to uttlrze tor other
bu stn esses Parktng no pr oblem Heavy const r uctron
w or k to beg tn tn area ma kes tor excell ent busr ness
Owner, beca use of health, un abl e to op erate In st ant tn
come Ma ke us an offer Wrth pur cha se an op f 10 n of
buytn g su ccess ful ca r ry out ad1ornmg Synd rc ator 's
dr ea m

THMH Kt lf~ N~ . I femol@ dog
rned !Mil!' (of! o111146 095:L .

-

'

BE THE ~IRST TO SEE THIS ONE Lovely 2 story'"
town , 3 BR's, 2 full baths , large LR , formaltl1nrng rm ,
formal foyer, modern k1tchen , l WB fireplaces , full
basement. gas heat and carport
Shown by
appointment only STROUT REALTY , 446-0008

.'

..

'&lt;

NEW LISTING I n Add,!r.on 3 b ed r oom . full basem ent
overlooK tng the Oh ro R•vcr some r rv !?'r lr on 1 q P
ava ilabl e S39,500 00

'

A C

'

OVERLOOKING ARE A 9-l acres . no build tnq s
u p ba se m ent , r tver v rew Buy f or $3 5,000 00

aa

SITUATE 0 ON th e beau tiful Oll ro R 1vcr below E urekil
5ccn 1c vr ew, lo t and home wdh actcrlrona l nc ""LacJe
~w atta bl e, some applrances go W1fh house tor O'l t
&gt;T8,SOO

VIRGIL B., SR . .._......-.
992·3325
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ill

P RICE REDUCED 3 bedroom home. locale a on
NetQ hborh OOd Rd, JUSI ou t s 1de crt ( ltmt !S N ew f
r emodeled . conven •ent loca ! •On ct !Y water. na t qa s
Prtce $12,500

'&lt;

3 BEDR OOM ca r peted nome tn Pla nt z SD na ! gas

~

-.

II)

hea t . 2 a dd1t1onal
f ~ ' 900

''

lots mcluded

( 180' xlol0')

Prr c e

THREE BEDROOM, commandtng vtew ol th e Oh tO
R1ver C1 l y wa ter, fa tuel Or I f urnace, loca 1ea or co r
ner of Rt 7 and Rt 218 Also 20 x30 bl oc k burld •nq (.' )
eel len t restden rral or comme r c tal 1oc at1 on Pr ( t
00

s•s.ooo

COMMERC IAL BUILD I NG tn JacKson,O
lease Bu Yboth tor 'S40,000 oo

no,._ unoer

COMME RCIAL BUILDING on Eastern Ave 80 t
tage x 150' deep 2 re ntals ( 1 house . I ap t plus CO"
c talbuildlng ) Pr Jce S75 00000
NEW J BE OROOM, all elec tnc. c arpeted n ome tocn lr&gt;O
NEW LISTING - New 3 bedroom br rc k home N tCe
step s~;~ver k i t chen w 1th large dtntng ar ea Large tamr
ly room wrth heatolat er l 1replac e and nt ce vt ew at the
wood l and through 4 large gtass doors Has tong sun
dec k rn oac k. and tar e front porc h If y ou l tke the co un ty
ff1tS wr ll p lease you
OLD BUT NICE - lf tiS room you wan! th rS ha s rt Wtfh
a ll crly conven1ences This has 3 or 4 bedroom s, d tntpg
room . equtpped kttchen . f urnace, large yar d, 7 c ar
garage wtlh 2 rooms for storage and 2 a t ta ched roo ms
tor small ousrness
BRICK APTS - 4 apar tments , al l rented I n t own
where yo u ca n w a lk to work or shop N tc e srle tot In ex
cellen tl oca tron
4 BEDROOMS - Wood frame house wtth large ea t rn
kttchen . den or study , basement, 3 por ches . gara ge and
two fh trdsof an a cr e
OLDER HOME - 7 rooms , bath aas floor t urna ce,
washer dryer and nt ce terra ced lor 70' x 100 '
3 PROPERTIES IN I ~ Large 9 room o 1oer nome w• tt'
central heat . 5 bedrooms , 2 baths , c1ty w ater , Plus
sma ll bustness bu tld tng wtth 2 baths Also a 4 room
apartment over a lear gar~;~ge All thrs for SIB.OOO
SYRACUSE - 3 bedrooms , Ci ty water. nalural gas,
bath &amp; nice level lot Want only $7.900
POMEROY OUTSKIRTS - 6 room house, 2 bed rooms
pl us , ci ty water. gas forced air furnace, large lol
$8,500
HELEN L . TEAFORD - SUE P MURPHY
G . BRUCE TEA~ORD
REALTOR ASSOCIATES

----

Business Management Opportunity

a.'

3:

3 BR home locat ed en Colon ial
Subdlv1 sron at 1108 Teoo ra
Ava ga s hea t Coli l or oppt
614 qss.-4111 .. or 614 -992 7639

REALTY

PLANNING TO SELL
Ltst wtth us &amp; 1 promtse 100% of my knowlectge , mv
abtlttv , mv enerqy as well as adverflstnQ &amp; aq gresstve promot.on far each home We are the mat
chmaker for buyer and seller. Advertts.ng produces
prospect s but we do the sell•ng, so deal wtth us My
pledge to you! Personal servtce and fast act ton.

CL OSE TO Fores t Acres Po rk 5
acres lots of ou tb urldrng s 3
bedroom frame , bo th S 15 OOCJ
992 5B• S

WILL MAIN1 AIN Cald orn•a Red
wood Ranch
I 5I f loor
3
bedroom both lt111ng room
Iorge kef chen dmrng roorn
den full me bo~emenl wt l h
large Carpe ted recreoh on room
and both l ocated Mar sch oo ls
ch urches shoppmg and re creo
l 1on Go!i heal new cenlrol otr
co nd rlronmg Lorge lo t Pr rvole
potro l oh o f tre es O~o~er~•led
double garage 24 .. 30 Cu~t o m
drapes and other e.ottros
Owne r berng transferred Sell
lormrd60 $ 304 273 ·26 17

McGHEE

"8" 11"

''

I»

SALES ASSOCIATES
446 ·3B28
EARL WINTERS
2S6 6140
LEE JOH N50N
67S 4167
JOHN CAUDILL
Galltpohs , Oh•o
4Sl·2nd Av e.

FIVE MILE S out of town on Rt 143
Brtek end frame ran ch, 4
bedroo ms fomrly room wilh
l!rttplo(e
two cor garage
work shop and shed fu ll bose·
men! , 2 bal hs S~ 5 000 Coli
992 58~ 5 Over on acre

BU SINE SS FOR ~ole Seer Wrn c
Corry Out ~2 578b between
_ I O &amp;~ o~ly

.ll@al Estate for Sale

I-leal E state lor l'iale

. "Bud" McGhee Realty "Bud" McGhee

HOBSIEIIER

NEW 3 bedroom neuse 2 both~
oil elec 1 acre Mtddleport

TWO STORY fram e hou se 6
room s 011d both cel lar out
bu1ldlngs 4 acres land , a1 edge
of Rutland Complete trorler
hook up al so 2 bonk s appra1 s
ed property at S15,500 Phone
992 7094

LIMESTONE , g;~~el and sand All
s1zes At RIChards ond Son Up·
per R1 11er Rd Goll1polrs o n1o
Ca ll 44b 77B5

ACROSS
1 Fo unda11on
6 M USICal
tn stru menL
10 Egyp t1an
lizard
14 Sale d w1lh
pleas ure
t9 Gets up
21 Htnd u queen
12 Earth s
sa1e1111e s
23 Peaks ol
waves
24 Sect •on
26 One wh o

Wanted

MUSJ

STA NLEY
STE AME~
Carpel
Cleaner Seemg IS bel re11111g
when Stanley Steamtng Call
446 4'108

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;

Jack's ~ptic
Tank ~ce

~N

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentrnel

DOZER WORK excovatrng land WILL CA RE for the elderly tn our
home Pha ne~99
~
2..:7::
3:.:.
1•.::__ ___
cle orr ng Ph 446 005 1
---------- -------- WATER WELL dnl llng W1lhom T
CHAI N LINK FENCING WOODEN
Grant 742·2879
fENCING
AWNINGS
Po t•o

CONCRETE AN D BLOCK WORK
Done reasonably by hour or 1ob
Free est tmotes Call 367 0295

SALE SPER SON
We ore look rng fat expen enced ~tV
oggress •ve so,iesper sons .n rh ~ SW IMMING INSTR UCTOR ot New MA fURE RES PON SIBLE wom an as.
are a who would lrke to earn
Ho\len Pool A pply ot th e pool
boby stlt er hou!.Pkeeper l •~e II'
on overage weekly rn come ol
b etween the hour~ ol 1 l o Spm
po!!rl mn separat e h o u~e1ng
$250 to $400 wo rk ,ng 111 the
304 B82 2634
and excellent bcn e/11 !. No
lreld of energy co nserv ohon
~mo kr n g
M us t
dr t ve
LPN NEEDE D Col i Arc adro N u r ~
Our company and rts re presen
Coll3 04 8~ 6088 alter Spm
1ng
Horn
e
6
14
667
3190
tah lle) work dosely w rth the
publr c to cd nser ve ener gy by CA RRIER S NEEDED I0 0 th e Doil y
helprng th e consu mer make hr s
Ser1 hne l Pom eroy Mrdd lcpo1t
home o ~ energy ef l ece ent o ~
and Syr acuse oreo Ple ase
possrble
Only expe,.ented
p hone W2 2 156 bel ween 8 30
salespe rso ns 'lo hould apply by
o m and 5 00 p m
Must have expen enc:e ih
co llen g col lect 304 485 95 37
mach.ne shop operatton .
e x p e n e n ce
WANTED rnole o r l ernole h1gh
For e man
WANTED
Hhool graduat e to work por t
pre f err ed , bul Will tra u1
Applrca
Fu ll Ti me Bookkeeper CD·
nght appilcanf
lime rn ~e r viC e statron and
CR - AP Payroll , taxes .
h on s or rm~u m es accep t('d
g roc e ry Wnt e to BoK 957 co
severa I states, tn s, S&amp;A .
J une 26·June 30 1m penal
Golhpolts Do rly 1rrb une
Send
Indu stry
Etectr rc Co , 345 Sycamor e
Local
ADO SbO to $75 wee k ly 10 fom•ly
C·O
resume to Bo•
St , Mtdl epor t . Oh . 45760
budget work rng 3 e rme po~1
GallipOliS Daily T ri bune
EEO- M F
! •on OII OIIoble Cor and ph o"l'
ne( e!&gt; ~O • y Coli for deto els bet

FO~EMAN

dothrng of al l
lund s a ll s1zes Men thru Fn
3q le .. a s Rd 10 to 5

0.

·"'

WAITR ESS
No
exp errenc e
necessary Apply m penon or
Slue Tor ton M 1dd leport
RUMMAG E SALE

ALUM.

molt ott Rt. 1 by pass on
St Rt 1'14 toward Rutland,

~-..... ·

SOMEONE TO stay wrt h el derl y
lady ( all44b 0&lt;~ 1 2

Let
us
capture
and
preserve those preCIOUS
moments forever Wecld•ng s
Stiver and
Golden Anntversary
FamtiY Reun1ons
Spec1al Occa sr ons
Pho1qgraphy
ts
our
busmess, not a stde lme

MASH BROTHERS

FIRS ! EVER GARAGE SALE J"ne L - - - - - - - - 4_3_0_-l_fc_,
23 ond 2-4 June 30 and July I
Macrame hangers type wrrter
b1rd ca ge!&gt; 1eor''lo etc F1 ve
mrles south on Rt 7 Watch lor
segns

ntture 2 8R 1970 PARK ESTATE
12 x ~ 7 x 20 E.:pondo fu r
rm hed mcludes washer and
dryer also a porch 19b8 BU D
DY 12 x 50 2 BR very well
kept set up rn local park ready
to mo ve mto 1966 NE W MOON
12 I( 51 2 BR un l urn rs hed wtll
mak e o good summer recreo
tton hom e FOR ~OR E IN
FORMATION ( All JOHNSON S l ET 5 BE HONEST If you we ren I
MOBIL E HOMES 446 3S4 7
looK.ng l or o new career you
wouldn 1 be reodr ng th rs ad
\ 4 ~ 65 Mob de Home set up on
and 1f we weren t loolung lor
pad slm tmg 8 x 10 shed
someone Ia do a rob th •s ad
446 q486 lor oppomtment
wouldn I be her e If you won t
1977 HOLLY PARK MOBILE HOME
the oppor tundy to earn $300 to
14 .ot 65 Central or r under ptnn
$500 a week , col i toll free
mg unl urn opplroncc only
I BOO 3'7 96Cf6 ony trme lo1
SIS (XX) Phone 675 b487 o r see
recorded message
Paul Northup K 8. K Mobol e
lNDlVIDUALS, w 1ll,ng to toke o
Home Pt Pl easant WV
hondrcopped pe1son ov er s•xty
1Q74 GRAN VILLE MOBI LE HOME
mto home Be responsrbl e l or
14 • 65 total elec tnc Call • tro tn rng tn commun rty lr v.ng
367 7 120 ott er 4pm
sk•ll s Salary plu s ben efrt s Call
286 5039 ro wnte Bu ckeye
1974 GOVERNOR MOBILE HOME
Communily Serv•c es Fos ter
14 x 70 w tth ce ntra l otr
Cor e Program 680 E Mo 1n St
S11 500 Call 245 9572 aft er
Jack son Ohro 45004
Spm
PSYCHOLOGIST
14 • 56 Memory tota l electrte
Ne w pos tlr on rn rural satell ite
tr ader .Phone 949 23~8
m ental health clrn •c Oh m
THR EE BEDROOM J ' , bath
ltc e n ~ed p ~ y c h olo g sl or board
9'12 74S3
elr g 1ble
Dut •es
1nclude
drognos t. c evo luol on co m
muntty cons ulot ron ou trea ch
lnd rv eduol and lom rl y co unsc el
rng
l •m• led odrnmt ~ l•otr ve
re !&gt;pon s•brletre s Exp er• enc e rn
BRIARPAT CH Ken nels Boordmg
drug prog romrng dewoble
Groom en g Ato; C Gor don 'loel
Salar y negot1ablc depend•ng
te n Engl rs h Cocker Sponrels
on expe rren ce Se nd resume to
Ph 44 b 4191
Alan 0 leary P H D In Coun
l y Men tal health 28 Strn!&gt;an
RISING ST AR KENNEl
A ve At hen s Oh 45701 Call
8oordmg Indoor Out doo r Ru ns
bl4 S92 3091
Groomrn g All Breeds Cl ean
Sant to ry la oltt tes C he s h ~r e Ph
367 0292

ROGER HYSELl
GARAGE

THREE FAMI Ly Gacage
Pal oo
Sale J""" 24 &lt;S 26 77 &amp; 28
West oBl 1 • mde oil 33 oo
Oorw m Mrs Vernal Well

TEACHERS
Referen ce lurnr shed upm1 re
quest We wrll fur nrsh you w 1lh
the 1,am e addr ess or1d phone
number s o l other tea che- rs who
ho ve wo rKed wrth us 111 the
summer
fo r personal 1nTer
v1ew
col! the local s ole ~
manager at 675 3775 or w n lc
P 0 Bo l( 387 Ch es apeake Oh

The por n! Sh op 1'15 R1 ver Rd
Kanougo Auto body work col
hs ron es t tmo t e~ Ph 440 851 4

L------------------------C-------------1

Auto

•

..

Business Services
:v.

D-5-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntmelo SWTday, JWTe 25, 1978

on Bea r R un Rd , approx J ac r es r 1ghl of wa ~ to
coo n Cr ee k. Buy now for S35 000 00

,

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For Lease

DISTRI BUTORSHIP
MODlRN 3 BPR BRICK RAN CH
Wtll not rnterlere w1th present
1', baths 2 cor go roge bme
employment. No sel lrn g re
men1 nea r town S300 plus
QU1red rwenty. frve yeOr o fd
depos1 t Wnt e to Bo- No 850 c
company See au• ad on rhe
o Golltpo l1s Dorly l r1bune
___!i Ports page today'
A COMPLETE EXERCISING CENTER bm;t and found
i::•t~llng bu srneu
or 1u!o t the
equtpment mcl udrng souno FOUND Do ch!&gt;hund red rno le ln
Vrnton areo Ca1138t! 8321
steam genera tor
ftberglass
!ohower ) etc For i nlormot1o n
colt bl4 592 3001

Pli•;.jlli'ng and Heating

I'IB~Dd.lleatiag-=DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 1bO ol i::\ler green
Phone 4~6 2735

- ---

DRAIN I SEWEH CLlANING SER
VJCE , Open 14 Hr 1 day~ a
week
!)!archer &amp; !)on Ph
LSb 1:141

CAR TER 5 PLUMBING
AND HEAliNG
Cor f ourt h &amp; Prne
Phone 446 3888 or 4ol6 44777
~I AN OARO

fll umbrng Heot mg
215 Thtrd A 11e . 446 J782
G~ Nl PLAN1 S&amp; ION I
Healing
A11 Con
PlUMHlNG
drtromn g :tOO Fourth Ave Ph

oU b I()J 7

PROFESSIONAL BUILDING . 15,000 sq fl loci! leu oO
1acen t ro gol f course , one level no steps rdea l for ol
frees , sc hoo lsJ p ro l ess.ona l a ct rvt lte s For mort n
lor m atton call 446 1066
PRICE REDUCED on t n1s 2 bed room home on L owC' r
R1ver Rd , '1 acr e lot , cr ty water Owner anx rous IO
se l l Prr ced for S13 000 00

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New L1sttng - V tlf ag e ol N ort hup near Ra ccoon
Thr s lo've ty h om e 1s ne MIY new ancl•1 11as had excel lent
; care Thr ee BR 's, with lo ts of st orag e, ba l h wrlh
Cf) showc r 1 m od ern k 11c hen w rll1 lot s of c abinet s, pl us
much rr.ore Call lor an appoi nt men t

:;a
11)
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"' N ew Ust 1ng
V er y clea n th rel' BR home Si tuat ed on :
an acre 101 to ea ted on Rou t e 588. 1r 1 miles from ~
- downtown F ull ba setn en t, n n l ura l gas hea l , also has C
mob ti e home h ookup on back ol lo t Ca ll now f or an ap Q.
~ po1ntment
t '
C:J Two stor'( frame hom e tn Eu reka , new Sldtng, carpe '
C and tS paneled throughout , has great vtew of the n v er

Z

IJmines! Omrortnnitiu

R r1C

NEW LISTING 2 beo r oo m Beth el Rd , 1 acrC' 1nn : :1
well or ru r al water , tucl 011 furna ce Pn ced for q utc ~
sa le ST 2,000 oo
250 ' xlSO ' B"ILDING LOT nea r
h1g hway , rural w ater . pr tCe S5.900
BUILDING ON UPPER
r ep at r Pr tc e r ed uced

2ND

EvergrC'cn . a lono

AVE , needs

o,~..PH"

BUILDING LOTS 75 xl20 ' . a ll underground ull lr t rcs
ru ral waler. cen t ral sew age collectron , blcl Ck top
stree ts N o mobile homes Prr ce S4 000 00
NEW LISTING · D up lex , Sttua t ed on &lt;il h Av e
rn
Ga ll•pohs Ltve tn one S1de , ren r th e ot her
Pr1cC'd to
se l l sn ooo

oo

IF YOU ' RE THINKING A BO UT SELLING, GIVE U S
A CALL AND WE ' LL BE HAP PY TO DI SCU SS OUR
LISTING CONTRACT WITH YOU
WE H AV E
BUYERS BUT WE NE!OD LISTING S! LET U S SEL L
YOUR HOM E WHEN Y HOU ' RE READY
0

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~

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3:

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m ,900
lt" neat and cl&lt;SALE
and a bath Moo

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PEMOING;;,~wn
· -

F ove rooms ;

9

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(i) Ltvenear Galhpal ts and st ill en1 0Y the freshness of coo l

:r
~

spring watec
Modern
Appo1n tm ent only

modular

(24X60)

;o

S31.900 II)

~

Realty "Bud" Me Ghee Realty" Bud ~

FARM ~DR SALE Meigs
Co ., LeaG,ng Creek , ap·
prox. 1 m1. oft Rt . 7, 131 ac ,
appro-. . 90 A
flllabt e,
balance woods, modern
ranch style hom e, full base·
ment, lree ga s. SlOO,OOO.
STROUT
REALTY .
446·0008 .

EDGE OF TOWN - 2 BR ,
bath, LR , kitch en , lull
ba sem en t, wo uld
make
good
rentaL
113 , 500
S TROU T
REALT Y ,
4.. OOOB.

GRAB IT FAST. tt won 't last &gt;prawhng 3 BR br ic k
ranch ts pr~ced to sell &amp; otter s 1110 sq . ft. of ltvtng area
w ith 3 baths, formal dinmg rm ., famtiV rm. Wtth srone
f ir ep l ace equ1pped ktfchen &amp; heat pump PLU S a Ia rye
2 car garage &amp; partta l ty frntshed full ba sem en!
Locared on thew, T . Watson Rd n ear Rodn ey Shown
bY appointm ent only . STROUT REALTY 446·0008

�[).6- _The Sunday Times~ntinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978
ltml~te 1or ~ ·

IIiii.~.. Jm-Sak

IH- The SundayTimes&gt;Sentlnel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

THE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE AGENCY
GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
REA l TO-R

CALL 446·3643

.CANADAY REAL
.[B' 446-363£

Your Best Real Estate Buys· Are
Fou11.d in the Sunday Times-Sentinel

DON 'T MISS THIS -- Th1S home cou ld be
the one you 've been drea ming of. Walk 1n
and enjo y th e attr act1ve tam tly room with
f1rcp lace . 3 nice stzed bedrooms, 2 baths,
very nice k1tcflen &amp; 2 car garage FA nnt .
gas turna ce &amp; cent rill &lt;11r On ly $47.500

•

PICTURESQUE
Desc nbe s this home and lis set t ing
Spacious fo rmal ltvtng room wl1h built m
book she lves &amp; f irepla ce . Formc'll dH,tng
room &amp; eat tn kit chen. Full basement wilh
fi re place. Formal d1ni ng room 3- eat 1n kit
chen Full basement with firepla ce tn
fam ily room Th1s home holds lots of
pOSSibtiiiiCS for future exp an s.o n.
Unusual ly bea ut1ful grounds surrounds
th is home fo r a perfect setting MU ST
SEE

SU PER FARM - 6B acres 1n all . Inc ludes SEl l NOW! ~ Owner wan ts th• s cnarmtng
some good bollom land, pasture &amp; woods 4 bed r oom nome sold rtght away . Thts w ell
Also a very nice remodeled 2 stor y t an~ kept hom e includes an atrrac l tve l1v ing
home w ith good sized rooms &amp; ca rpel
"'roughout . 5 bedrooms &amp; l 1'1 baths . Rural
water &amp; well water . Pr iced tow . $46,900.

room, eat ·in kd chen w1th plenty of
cabine ts, par ti al basement &amp; garage . NICe
shaded lot 1n c nesh1re . On l y $30,000.

!

. .. 4

SPAC IOU S
BEDROOM HOME Loc ated 1n Crown Ctly tt11s horn e tncludes
a l arg e liv ing room , eat 1n kitchen, bath
w1th shower . ~ car garag e &amp; large lot W1lh
lots ol nf'w ptncs ec t Pri ced very
reasonabi C' at $30 .000
JUST A BE A UTI FU L LOCATION - Lol ol
trees , flower s, &amp; gardens on 8 acre 1n Nor
thup Th1 s dandy home 1nctudcs a lull
basem ent tw tth tamlly room . ilreplace &amp;
garage ! 3 bedrooms &amp; lovely ha rdwood
floor s. S41 ,QOO
GOOD HOME &amp; &gt;', ACRES - Rl 218 near
Mercer vtl le Remodeled II }story ,nctudes
3 bedrooms, large ltiJ tng room , family
room . large k1t cncn &amp; oath plus wood
burner 8. new ga~ stove The land IS
swlabl e for qraztng a few cattl e or horses
and a q ood gtJrden . 2 Neils 11 new well
pumps 500 gal ocr nour )
LIVE IN ONE , RENT THE OTHER
1
houses tn Ew 1nqton One IS a la r ge 7 r oom
nom e w 1th 7 poss tblc rentals . The other 1S a
2 bedr oom nome w1lh eat 1n k tl chen , ba th .
11 v tng roo m . carport 2"1xl 6 outbulldtng ,
plu s som(' furniTur e &amp; stove and
relr tgcr at or Onl y '!.70,500 Call Dan Evans
ai3B8 81 11

SPEC IAL HOME - A very appeal ing
spt 11 level 1n an excellen t ne1ghborno0d
This 4 bedroom home tncludes a large ltv
ing room &amp; dining room, bu ilt tn k1 cnen. ·
711 batn s. tam1ty room , fireple~ ce with
hea tolat or , '} car garage and nea rl y an
ac reol yard $67 ,500
CE NTENARY - Located on Rt. 141 at
Junct1on of Lincoln P1ke th1s 2 bedroom
nome featur es l i~Jing r oom w1th f1r epl ace ,
full basement, eaT in k1tcnen &amp;. oalh . New
linoleum 1n kit chen &amp; carpet throughout
Over 11 acre with a good garden spol.
$25.000 .
MODERN HOME IN RIO GRANDE
Spactous 2 story bnck &amp; frame on Lake
Or 1VE' You cou ld nave as many as 5
oedrooms upstatrs, liv ing room w ith
ftrepl ace , un1que kitchen , basement w1fh
rec room &amp; 2 car garage Many otncr ex
tra s 1n th iS line home \52 ,500
OR CHAR 0 HILL - A modern home 1n
town w1th a rure~l atm osphere Th•s horn e
nas 3 bed r ooms, la rg e 11v1ng room . buill in
k tlcnen &amp; part ial basement. Tne wooded
and lo~Je ly 1 1 ac r e yard plus a wonderful
v1ew ot th e CJ I V make!llhis nome an e)(CCP
I tonal ouy at SJ9 .500

COMMERCIAL BU I LDI NG
Need a
pl ace for your oody shop, garge et c Ap
pr ox 28' x4 7 m(' tal budd1ng SIIUaled on 2
lot s tn Cr own Ct ty 100 11 fr onta gf&gt; on SR 7
Water &amp; t&gt;lf&gt; cT clV~ d ab l e On ly Sl6 ,500

KYGER CREEK SC H. OIST
L uxurtOUS
3 bedr oo m onc k on Bulavllle Road I 8
acr e') ol lovely ya rd Tn 1s t1n e t1ome •n
cludrs fa mil .,. room wl! n I ~r e place . 'J br~ths.
ful l nHse menl w re l room B. J cu carpor1 .
( .:&gt;
, oppotnt mf&gt;n1

GRACIOUS CONTEMPORARY -- Th•S
!abutous nome w111 g1ve you th e thrt ll ot a
l tfettme Wal~ 1nto th ts un tQue nouse &amp;. see
tt1e "1 cozy f 1r el aces. 3 oaths , l arge family
room and even a cr ows nest plus all lhe
oth er reve ry amentttes th 1s home has toot
ter St luated on 18 wooded acres 1n the Ctly
Sctl Dtst By appt only
EXCE LLENT LOCATION IN TOWN
La r ge 2 story nome a1 736 2nd Ave Could
be used as 2 apan ments or re nt t he
upsta tr S &amp; use dow nstairS for off tce , beau
ty snap efc Only $.3.1,900

WE NEED LIS'fiNGS
E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3796, EVE.
JIM COCHRAN, SALESMAN 446-7881, EVE.
E. N. WISEMAN. BROKER, 446-4500, EVE.
NANCY SMITH, SALESPERSON, 446-4910, EVE.
500 2ND A Vf.

~ ,

N EAL REALTY
PHONE "6 1694
See th •s c•cept tonally well
kep t hom e w1 lh J BR , 1t 1
bath. lull ba sement. formal
dtntng room , rcc. room , cur
conditioned, nr~tural gas
S•tua t ed
on
a
h eat.
beautifully landsca ped lot
, in Sprtng Valley Sub·
O•v•sion . Th1 s home .. s pnc ·
ed •n th e \60's . Call today
fo r app1.
446 ·1 546
Charles M . Neal
446· 1S03
J . Michael Neal
446-/lSS
Sa m Neal

COMMERCIAL
LAND
FOR SALE - front s on US
35 at Rodn ey, On•o: For
mor e 1ntormat1on call
STROUT
REALTY ,
406 000 8.

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
Wf' H ll any th i nq lo r
.lnvbody ;~I our Auc t ion
BtHn or in vuo r nom e For
1nlor mat1on an d Plttlup
scr vtce call 256· 1967
Sale Ever v Saturda~
Nig ht at 1 p .m .

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE
K e nneth Sw.1tn , .Auct .

corner Th•rd &amp; Ohv e

GALLIPOLIS

FOR SALE
3 yr . old brick home, 3

12 story older home

J •
Declroom . family room .;,ilh
ft.r~place, liv1ng room,
d1n1ng room , carpeted
throughout , kitchen
complolely oqulppod
Ia undry room wilh woslte;
and dryer, 2 baths, out.
burld1ng with eledrlc for
slorago, alum . •ld i ng ,
storm windows, new roof
on double lot . Asking
Sli,OOO.
804 W. Mo ln
Pomeroy
992 _7298
Aller Hours
C11i 992-7133
CONTACT :
Lois Pauloy
Branc h Muaver

i'OR SALE
Modern two stor v ranch m
Rio Grande overlooking
vt.lla~e.
co llege. va lley .
F11Je bedrooms, two bafhs ,
large fam ily room with
w .b. fireplac e, game room
laun d ry ut tlll y
room ~
Stl u ~ted
on la ndscaped
e~cre wtth barn , kennels,
rental tratler and garden
plot .
GallipOliS
City
School s. By appo1ntment
u nl y . 24 ~ · 9J'16 .

acres, 2V2 miles from '
Holzer Hospital. In City
School Distrtct , 4,000 sq .
ff .. SllO per monlh
1ncome
properTy
rncluded.
Substantial
down
payment required.
Will assist in financing .
Write to Box BSL C·O
Gallipolis
Da i ly
Tribune, 82S Third Ave .,
Gallipolis, Oltio 4S631 ,
giving name &amp; phon e.

4 BR HOM E
1 yr . otd, w1th ldd i t iona l lot
in New Haven. U9 ,000 .
Edelman &amp; Kin cai d Rea lly
Ph . 30072-4881 or
l04 ·27Hll3

LOVELY COUNTRY
ATMOSPHERE
Beautiful new 3 B R. br ic k front home wtlh
~ t r e ~la ce , formal d1n10g room &amp; large ea t
1n kll chen With lots ot built in ca bin ets
range 8. dishwasher . "1 ful l baths &amp; a utilit~
room Plus 2 car gargage Th1s home 1S
Si tuated on a woo ded lot
approx 1 acr e
Soon to be com ple ted DON ' T LET THIS
ONE SLIP BY
CALL TODAY
EXQUISITE HOME
CHAROLAIS HILLS
Beautiful 3.16 A. roll1ng
clean land 1s th e setting l or
th1s unusually gracious
bri ck home . 3 spacious
B.R.' s, 21'1 ba ths and large
utility room . Large foy er
leading to forma l liv ing
room , formal dining room
&amp; large family room with
open fi repla ce Charm ing
kitchen with snack bar
Corning counter .tap range,
wa ll
oven .
disposaL
d ishwasher and lovely
Shenandaan cabmets . Th1s
spa cious home has a 2 car
g arage with automat1c
opener and central atr .
These are 1ust a few of the
ex tra s. P1cfures or wordccannot describe this home
YOU MU,ST SEE IT
MODERN HOM E
ON RT. 588
Atfract1ve brick &amp; frame
home w1tl1 3 or pos.sibly 4
BR . ltving room wilh
fir elace, exTra n1ce kitchen
with built 1n ca b1nets, ea t
at bar &amp; dintng area . Full
~asement &amp; garage Lovel y
1n ground pool &amp; deck
Gallipolis School Dtstr 1ct
4.61ACRES2M IL ES
OF GALLIPOLIS
Beauliful bulfd 1ng s1tes
Bea ut iful
v1ew
of
surrounding area . Rural
water on 2 Sides ot property
- 1 tap pa id tor Cor ner o l
Neighborhood
Rd
&amp;
Klicher . WO N ' T LA ST
LON G
LARGE STATELY
7 ROOM HOME
Large level lot Bath, front
and back porches , B R of
above average size. Ci t y
water . Partial basement
Melal storage bldg ALL
OF TH IS FOR ONLY
$1 2.900 00
HOU SE &amp; I A.
IN COUNTR Y
7 r o6m hom e S.I Tuatetl on 1
A. ot ni ce land on rl
bla cktop rand 4 B R . b tttrl
&amp; countr y kil ctwn w11t'
All
bUtiT in Ci'b 1nc 1s.
crpeled MAKE YO U R AP
POINTM ENT TODAY
93 ACRE S
VACAN7 LAND
93 A of roll1ng l &lt;"nd tn Ad
dtson Twp Al l m1nerl1f
r 1gn ts goes Barn &amp; ~('vera !
building Sl l es $'17 , ~ 00 00
CALL
FOR
M O RE
DE TAIL &gt;.

CARRY OU1
A qood t)USiness lor ,J!NI on
Stal e H1 ghway 1!!0 tn .1 n1c(•
commundv Lcu'l{l Ur tt k
buil d1ng , equ 1pmen 1 &amp; il ll
QOC , ,
PR IC ED
&gt;lOck
RIGHT
COUNTRY LIVING
If you like frP.sh country
air , lh 1S 1S the one 6 room
house &amp; 1 A. lol l B R
home with extra nice coun
try ki tchen w1th w all ov en
&amp; counter top rdnge. Ex tra
nice bu111 in cab1nets Ntce
lrge front pe~tto Hom(' has
had real qood car e Also
hi;~ S cl horse She d LOctlled
on blacktop road . CALL
NOW .

NEAT AND ATTRACTIVE
Extra ni ce &amp; ver y we ll kept home. 3 B R ,
living room. nea t ki tchen wi th buil t in
cn b1nets &amp; ra nge , large ut111ty room &amp;
batt1 Carport. storage buil di ng &amp; chai n
l1nk fence Also has natur al ga~ hea t &amp; i ts
own water system City schoo l s GOOD
BUY
OllER 7 ACRES - NICE HOME
GREAT LOCATION
Just off Rt 35 across from Spring Valley
Shopping Plaza 7.32 A. Stocked pond .
roll ing land , beautiful 6 rooms. 3 BR hom e
in an elegan t se tting wi th l ots of beau tiful
shru bbery &amp; trees, also lots of fruit trees .
Natu ral gas heat Hardwood floors wtth
som e car pe ting - large living r oom and
porch. MUST SEE T HI S PROPERTY TO
APPRECIATE ITS VA LU E
COLONIAL MANSION
Gracious 9 room home stl uated on approx
17 A of ro lli ng la nd 5 large BR , formal
dming room with f irep lace, li ving room
an d bath . Count ry kitchen wlf h l ovely
bu! lt m ca bmets, s.s. sink , wall oven &amp;
counte!' top range. Ha s alum . sid1ng and
owner has added e)C f ra insulation . 7 barns,
storage building . chicken house . and l ot s of
fruit trees . Ga ll ipol is ci ty school system .
THI S IS A UN IQUE HOM E WITH
CHARACTE R

Ot&lt; c Y m.ooo
Ntce 3 bedrooms, bath . liv
.nq room , modern ea t m
k1t cnc n
Wtfn
buil t 1n
catJ trlCfs Full basement
nlmost new oas for ced a1;
turnn ce c1nd hot waf er
hC'r1Tcr Loca tecl Wtlh1n Th e
C1ly l•n111s Lookm g for a
nt cf' clt&gt;nn home. ci0'5f' to
shOpp 1nQ area? A Buy Call
Now
SP ACIOUS
BI -LEVEL
Lovely 3 B.R. brick &amp;
frame bi level . Ex tra nice
kitchen
wi th
lots o f
cabinets ,
dishwasher.
range &amp; d1n ing area with
pat1o doors lead ing to lrtrge
deck . Lower hall thclf adds
lots of possibility lor future
family
or
recreation
rooms . 2 ca r garage with
automatic doo r opener .
Th1s hom e is built wrth
s ystem
i ntercom
Gall 1polis city
school
sysl em . CALL NOW
6 ACRES WITH
LARGE PINE TREES
Ideal butldtng spot nestled
tn r:~n Mea at large p1ne
trees 200 It fr ontage . 2 out
S1dC s10rage bui ldi ng s
GMden spot , apple &amp; peach
tree s Ttmber. well Wttn
ele c tr i c pump
ONLY
$6 .900 .00 TOTAL .
MAKE U S AN OFFER
ON THI S ONE 8 ROOM
HOME, APPROX 4 A
Al l ll vel. along St Hw y
'i5-l d B R moder n home
wdh buil t 1n ktlchcn , F A
tur nacc, partlc11 basemenT ,
7 por c hc~ ~ e paratc garage
dnd summer ki tchen , also
work shop &amp; !ltora gc ar c,,
Lots of build1ng spots for
new "ames on t11c Ga lltc1
Co Ru r al WaiN Sy st Al so
nn ,n_c omc 1nvcstrn ent pro
rn·rl; CAL L NOW FOR
MORE DETAIL S
NICE 41 ACR E FARM
&amp; LOVELY HOME
Spa c•Ou!l r cmoct elcd 8 room
home wilh stcr t s1ding plus
.1 BR , ba th . formal 11v1 nQ
room &amp; 1arqc coun tr y k1 t
ctwn W1ln buill 1n c. ablnP ts
&amp; 'l l c11nless ~ I C'el s1nk. Th• S
homr hilS a F A furnc£' &amp; d
woodbu r ner
J!l A
at
bec'lU I IfUI roll1nlj land , dp
pro I( 30 A . l tl labl r , appro!(
15 A timber . Cxtra largr
bar n, worksnop, cr ll cH &amp;
totM cc o oase Some trutt
tr ee!l If you 're tnteres tNI
.n a nice IMm . CA L L
AB OUT THI 5 0 NE
QUICK IN VESTMENT
RETURNS
Ttw, pr operty Could pay for
1to.,t&gt;lf wilh1n 4 yr s Lo t on
5 t nt ~" Rt
7. North , nea r
St iV L'r Br iog c Sl1oppmg
3 r£&gt;nlal mobilePlcllrl
homo• GR EAT RE TURN
ON
TOTAL
I N VEST
ME NT Cillllor detail s.

BEAUTIFUL RIVER
FRONT HOME
Beautiful? room home wi th
a panore~mic v1ew of t he
river . 21 J A. Fu ll basemen t
wtfh
woodb urn i ng
f1r eplace . 23 If )(A I If room
wtth ki tchenette, e)(Ce ll enf '
tor entertatning or da ne '
tng . N 1ce modern ki tchen'
1ncluding dishasher , ra ng e ~
&amp; refri gera tor , formal din
ing room. 1am11y room , tor
mat llvtng r oom &amp; 3 BRand
1 full baths&amp; showers. F uel
otl FA . furna ce. Excellent
location for fi shing, r i ght
ouT your bac k door . City
school disf. Must see to ap
prec1arc t1S value .
11.7 ACRES
WITH LOTS OF
SHADE TREES
2 BR mobile home nest led
tn lo1s at snade trees . Lots
of r oad fr ontage Outside
buildi ngs
All
fu r nitu re
goes, includ ing washer and
dryer some ftmber CALL

4 room house plus 2 m obi l e
homes that are now ren ted.
Barn .
Good
1ncome
producing proper t y wi th in
7 m.tes ot Gall•polis . O NL y
120.000 .00 .

8 ACRES
PRICE REDUCED
W1fh1n 10 min
drive to '
dowrHown Ga ll ipolis , Green
Tow n ship,
City
Schoo f
Sys tem
Has hookup for 1
mob1le home Ga llta Rural
Waler, electric and septi c
tank , n1gt1t fig ht on pole. 100
It
frontage on Graham
s.chool Rd. Timber . Building
''les CA LL NOW.
NICE BLOC I&lt;
BUILDING
H as many us es
stor er oo m. storage, make
tnto a n1ce home ,
showroom. kennel , et c.
Building size 46ft . x 30 ft.
Located on a co rner lot con ·
taining .95 acre on a
blacktop road . 180,000 BTU
fu rn ace. Garage . PRICED
ONLY 173,900.00

·'BAIRD &amp;
REALTY

NOW .

COMFORTABLE HOM E
PLU S EXTRA
INCOME PROPERTY
Well K e pT ~ room house just
olf Rt 160 dt Ev ergreen
LOT 81' •10H '
Step s a~Jer kil {hcn wi th
l3l (l UTtfUi f)Ud0Hl9 Sties,
n1ce bu111 1n cabinets,
trvr l lot on bldcktop· rM d rang e &amp; r etr lg . Ha s a front
w1th rural water l1nc tn porch &amp; carport. Real nice
front of lot , wt tn beau tiful
carpet throughout &amp; a
r oll 1nq g r een p~ s tureland . Franklin wood burner .
ONL Y S5,500 00
. Ptus as a poss1ble ex tra 10
carne
12 '1(65' mobile
9ACRES
9 A mo r e or le !t.~ of nice home t ha t hd~ 3 B.R. &amp; 1'11
land . barn, tool House. 2 ba lh . lind ~as liS own
wr&gt;lls All mineral n gnt s pr iva te drive. CALL FO R
PR IC ED AT ONLY YOUR APPO IN TME N T
TO DAY

Wel l k ept 2 story 3 BR bri ck and fram e Fami ly room
Franklm f 1r eplace Off er s lots of priva cy . Kyger
·
S&lt;;hoo ls. Rural wa ter .

SOUTHERN HILLS

TONEY REALTY (0

will be

changing
dally.

EACH OFFICE
INDEPENDENTlY OWNED

OFFICE 446-7900

"We Sell Better Living"

OFFICE 446 7013
Arthur A. Nibert
Senior MembP.r
Am en can Society
Of Appra 1sers

ONEOFMIODLEPORT~

FINER HOMES
3400 SQ. It of exquisite ti ving , fully
ca rpeted , huge stone f i r epla ce, 5
bedrooms, 211'1 baths . Also a tu lly car peted
1st floor apartment rents at$150 .00. 1114

CLOSE TO TOWN - PRICED RIGHT - Love ly bric k
and f r ame ~o m e on a large lot. This home has 3
~drooms, kitchen and dining com bination, farge liV·
tng roof'!' , ~ bath an~ carport Natural gas heat .
Loca ted tn cttv sc hool d1str1ct . Priced in the thirties
NEW LISTING - UNDER THE PINES - Provides
peace and t ra~q ui l! tv This home is located on Rt . 160
on a very scen1c , pmed 6 acr es with a pond . The home
~as very large r ooms . Tne liv 1ng r oom has a stone
hreplace. There are 3 bdrs .. a &lt;tfh r oom could be used
for a den or sewing r oom, lar ge biult ·in ~i t c h en and a
huge bath . Th e hardw ood fl oors in !h is nome glisten
Call us today .
·

$52,000
J·year old br ick ra nch in Ga lli poliS Ci ty School Distric t,
G.r t?en E lementary . 3 8R , 117 baths. Full y ca rpeted,
b1rch d.oors and ..yoodwork, mar ble sills, crvsta l
chandelier , 2 car fln1shed garag e ~" nly begins th e list of
extras avai lable in thi s beautiful home .

$59,900
Except ional qualit y! Brick re~n c h , 3 BR , extra lg
closets, bath has ce ramt c til e with bu11t 1n pollen f1 lter
Hardwood floors , marb te SillS, car port w1tn separa te
storage roo~ . Level law n with bea utiful tr ees and
shru bs now 1n bloom Loca ted in one of the ci ty 's most
dest r ed areas . Low ga s and electn c budget make th is
hom e affordable .

$48,500
Immac ulate and charm ing , 3 BR bri ck ranch 1n
beau l tfu l res1den tia t area near Holzer Hospital All
cl.ec1nc , tully ~a rpcr cd . Well planned kift'len has rang e,
di Shwash er , diSPOSa l . Snack bar separa1es work area
from form al d intng area . Utiltly rm . w1tn Hotpomt
washer and dryer K1ng sized garage for 2 ca rs Ne ar ly
111 acre level l awn .

$50,000
Over 13 acres fl at to roll ing onty 1• 7 mites from c tl'f .
Several . e.xcell ent building sites Frame home with
alum . Stdtng , Basement. garge, ~barns . Lots of truit
trees . Home and land in excellent cond

$42,900
Co.untry atmosphere, frt endly netghborflood . 3 BR
b r~ ck. e~ nd fram e on wel t landscaped 1 acre tot.
Fireplace, f ull y carpeted , f amily s1zed kitchen.
garage , pat to .

O.J . WHITE RD . - This lovel y bnck and lra m e home
has J be~rt?Oms , complete wife approved k 1tchen, patio
O~f the dtntng ar ea, 1117 ba th and overhead cen tral air
S1 tuat edon a l arge lot.
·
story J bedroom f rame has a
formal d1n1ng room , large liv1ng room, n1ce k1fchen, 2
large pantnes, 2 wa lk in close ts, upstairs could be
another large bedroom , g lassed •n back porch, ele&lt;:tr 1c
~at,. separa te garage &amp; 1 storage bui ldings on 13 acr es
1n Vtnton
SECLUS~~N - This 1'

:1

FA~ M - 56 acres ~ I 5 to 20 acres are till able). T h1 S has
a 1 h sl?ry , 4 bedroom home in very good cond1 f ion .

Th er e IS also an old barn and smoke house a
strawberry patch and f ruit frees Some t imber .
'

R! . 160 - Th is hpme can have 2 or J bedrooms tt has a
w1fe approved ktt chen , lar ge wa lk in closets, ca rpeted
mroug~out and elec tric hea t . It is situated on 5 acr es of
land w1th a large storage building, about 5 miles t rom
Holzer Med1ca l Cen ter .
COUNTRY LIIIING - Almost new 3 bedroom wilh full
d1V1ded basement, 1 drilled wells, new 30'x40' barn &amp;
lg. metal garage with 10 acresofl Rt . 2 18.
FOR FAST ACTION ON YOUR PRDERTY LIST
WITH US. WE OFFER FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE
FOR OUR POTENTIAL SELLERS . EASY FINANC·
lNG AVAILABLE FOR OUR POTENTIAL BUYERS .
AT HOME

446· 1049
446-0458
446·4042
446-0458
446·0002
367-7529

BOB LANE
BECKY LANE
1/tCKIE HAU L DR EN
WALT LANE
DENIIER HIGLEY
KENNY RATLIFF

$39,500

GOOD BUY - Good ol der home, 3 bedrooms, bath,
for ced a1r furna ce, located on a ni ce lot in Bidwell,
needs a I if ti e work but only $12,800.
12 MILL CREEK - Good home w ith 3 bedrooms, ba th,
dining roo m, '!1 basement, good renta l property, only
$10,500.

tN TOWN - Good 2 bedroom home. batn , natural gas
heat , fenced in yard, located on White Ave. Good buy
l or $10,500 .
NEW LISTING - Good nauli ng business with 2 packer
trucks, has conrrac ts w i th Vi ll age &amp; Business places,
ca lf for more in forma tion
NICE LOT - GOOd mob1le home or build ing site, over
112 acre land, loca ted close to town OQ Rt . 141 . Price

r educed to $4,200.
34 ACRES - Good roll ing land for hunt ing or camping
with old house, located on Thompson Rd . off Rt 160.
$14,500.
MIODLEPORT - . M~·t\ 1 to thi s area ? You ' ll be glad
au inspec ted fhis ',;.(\\&gt;'-·ne. Has 3 bedrooms, dining
room, liV' Ing roo '":r"'Nith fireplace, full"( carpeTed.
ga rage, $36,500 .

Matntenance free, qua lity bu i lt brtck . Spacious k if
chen, Wtfh plenty of space lor f amtlv dintng . 3 BR con ·
cr ete drive .
·

NEW LISTING - Lots of potenTial here , 38 acres nice

$37,000

land along Ra ccoon Creek , mostl y ti llable, tobacco
base, large pond, good 10x50 two bedroom mobile
home. call todaY .

The pr1ce is r 1gnt on lh1S tw o story, 3 BR , suburban pro
per t y that . boasts over five ~'t e r es and low
Ga llipolis Ctty School Distr ic t.

GOOD BUY - Look t~ 'fo. wer, l4x70 mobi le home with
12&lt;20 fam ily roor &lt;'(\\,)&gt; Has 3 bedrooms, 2 ba l hs,
cen tral ai r , nice f~J ~"'re . All this located on 1111 acres
close t o Ewington .

$22,900
4 BR fram e ~orne , dining rm ., ut iltty rm, gas turn.,c• r
carpor t ln c1ty . 1.4 acres with r i ver fronfage
fie li xln' ThiS could be a showplace .
'

$133,000

LOG CABIN - Large stone firepl ace, modern bofh ,
loft , log• are hand hewn. 14 wooded acres, grea l place
lo gel away .

NEW LISTING - 1/ery ni ce larm with a modern home,
has 4 bedrooms, bath, modern l&lt;itchen , dini ng area,
forced air fu rnace. Has 86 acres of beautiful roll ing
la nd, tobacco base, .pond , bl ock bui lding, la rge barn .
Localed on Clork Church Rd . $74.500.

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE In lhe wllderneso of th e
Wayne Nallonal Forest . Sic 8 aore tracts of woodland
now available adlolnlng thousands of acres of
government land. Public hunting , f ishing and camping
permitted. Pr ices start at $2500 wlfh ll nancing
available.

105 ACRES - Good farm w ith a modern 2 bedroom
nome, fully ca rpeted, nice ki tchen. Would be a good
beef farm , has a large barn, ..Ox250. w ith equipment for
ra isi ng poultry , nice pond, Ferguson.3S w llh all equip·
ment . Le t us $hOW you this fine far m, located in
Morgan Township, good buy for $55,000.

MORGAN TOWNSHl P - 36 acres near Meigs Mines, S
acres level , mosl of balon ce could be pasture, small
stream. town•h lp road, $11,900 .

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE HAllE A WAITING LIST OF QUALIFIED
BUYERS. LIST WITH US FOR FA\T ACTION ON
YOUR PROPERTY .

1 ~.5

Acre f arm , 60 acres t ill able res t pasture
f 1mber . 1,200 lb toba cco base. E)(ce lfent budding
along state route . Ga ll ia County rural water &lt;n·-~··.;
barn , tool shed and implement shed . Buildings. in
cond . 3 BR . 2 bath home wilh full basemenr 1
·
garage .

$150,000
117 acre da iry f arm, ncar Ri o Grande. Beau l 1fu l new
BR home, 2 fu ll baths, full'f ca rpeted, fam . rm ., 2 c
ga~a~e , plus older home suitable for tenant or'"''"' r
Thts IS tru ly a showpl ace . Would be ideal for h,,.;,",;" l
ven fu re, gol f course, country club easy access
Rl. 3S
'

RACCOON CREEK - 13 acres of fla1 land wllh
appro&lt; . 1500 fl . of creek fronlage , sandy soli . barn ,
located In Northern Gallla Co. $13,000.
INCOME PROPERTY - 22.000 sq . ft. bui lding loco ted
In Mlddleporl. rent potential of over $30,000 per yeor.
Call for more Information .

Evenings Call
Oscar Baird, Reahor ~32
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE - 4 acres on
Glassbur n Rd . In Springfield Twp. S4,UOO.

$50,000
Mo bi l ~

home cou rt nea r Rio Grande . 6 plus
alreadv has 4 mobile home si t es. Off ice bldg with 1
bath . Other b~lldings , ca l l or stop by for com.plele 1
torm at1 on . ThiS 1S a great loca t ion tor IQ. cour t.

$12,800
G~eat star ter nome on 2.5 acres . Large eaT·in k if,chenl
w1th r.ange .and ret;lgerator, din ing room, 2 BR ,
electn c wlnng and 1nsulat ion. North Gaflia Schools .

$18,000
B.idwell V illage, 1 stor y,. BR ~ome in good cond .
k1fch en has nearly new cabi nets, new hot water
S1orm doors and windows . New roof . Garage. 1
lever lo1. If yhou' r e budger minded better take a look!

446-3636
ANY KOUR
OR BETTER YET ... STOP BY AND SEE US AT
LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS, 0 .

RON CANADAY, REALTOR
Lou Lutton
Realtor Assoctate

m

L.J::!

EIGHT THOUSAND DOLLARS - 4 rms ., bofh, pari
ba$ement, needs some repa irs, wood-burning stove,
almost 2 acres on the Barcus Hollow Rd ., Clay
Townsh ip, Gallipolis City School Dl•t.
FARM FOR SALE - 99 ACRES - All clean, mostlY
llllable, presenlly In gran. 2 ponds. •ever a I good barns
&amp; sheds. 3 cow m ilk parlow. tob. base. 12&lt;60 mobile
home Is now rented , 650ft. fronloge on Sta te Rl. SS4 at
Eno, Otllo, 2,000 ft . fronfage on county rd . $75,000. Call
for more details.
RESTRICTED BUILDING LOT - Corner lot In Spr ing
\/alley Eslafos . 166ft. frontage on Maple. One of Galllo
Co.'s nicest subdivision• . All ullllllu available. $6,000.
A SOUND INIIESTMENT describe• th l• 47 A. tract of
land. Located appro~ . 311&gt; mi. lrom Holzer Hospital
near Kerr. Rolling lracl Is mostly clean grassland &amp;
priced a! $-40,000.
BABY FARM - Tycoon Lake area. 10 acres mostly
cl.. n granland, nlce lv remodeled 2 story home. 4
BR'a, balh, 111odern klfchen. lorrr&gt;a l dlnlng rm .., n~w
shag carpet, Co . water, J •mall outbuildings.
lmmtdlale occupancy. Galllpoll• Ci ty School Dlsl.
LISTINGS

NEEDED

-

WE

ADVERTISE

NaTIONALLY ~ WE IUY - SELL- TRADE.

Merri II Carter
Evenings
379-1184

COUNTRY MANOR - FIVE MILES OUT -;- lllacrts.
appro•. $0 • .,.. tillable, bat1nce posture, lob. base,
lots of fruit trees, springs, 2 wells, 2 ponds, rur1t water,
large barn, milk parlor. se.erat •neds . Elegant col·
onial home nos DHn completely remodeled I futures
new vinyl Jldlng, new gutters, new plumbing, modern
kitchen, w·w carpel, cont. air. 3 or 4 BR ' s. Clll
STROUT REAL TV for an appointment to see. 446-0001.

GRACIOUS LIVING
IN TOWN
l.arlt \llc!orlan Home with 2111ed bitlis and 1h bath, 4
bedrooms, library, dlnlnt I'IIOm, llvlnt room wltlt
ClltrrY ~-k, 5 llre•IK•, fully IMull!td and
storm windows. z.car tara" on a .. ,., 1o1 ovll'looking
tltl Ohio Oft lllallllslde. A ftnl 'lace t. reiN a family In
gracious comfort. Cell Mlnnlnt w.t!MrheH 4&lt;M-C31)
Dlya or 444·0119 Evonlftlt fOr eppolfttment&gt;

HOME &amp; BUSINESS
This home has been totally
r efiniShed and decorat ed
Features L R., FR ., din 1ng
rm ., built in kitchen This
home has a beauty shop
wtrh all equ ipment Ready
lo start a business Owner
is anxious to sell, will help
finance or v A.. F .H.A .
ftnancing is available . N166

CENTURY 21

Jim Stutes
Evenings
446 2885

CENTURY 21
4 BEDROOM
VERY REASONABLE
This one has :• all fireplace. ~(\\S) , fully
carpeted , ~ ... a~r , huge
.l car ga1 dge . Park Lane
Subdi vision .
1/ 162

CENTURY 21
CITY PROPERTY
1 story fr ame . 4 bedrooms,
open st at r case Also a utili
ty bldg . and a garage All
thi s located on a large lot
with a new cha 1n link fence
LOOKTH IS OVER !
•127

CENTURY 21
PRICE REDUCED
TO S46,000
81 te~Jel , almost new . J
bedrooms. very apeating
home, baseboard neat and
Jotul wood burner . House
and 4 lots al l selling . AP·
prox 2 miles from Holzer
Medica l Center . Sell1ng
below toda y's market. NI SO

VACANT LAND'

MODERN BR I CK
ThiS lovely home and 2 to J
acres .s located sou th of
Rio Gr ande on St Rt . 325
Fea tures 3 bedrooms, liv ·
1ng room, fa mily room,
w .b
f ireplace , mode rn
complete bu1 1t-1n k1tchen, 2
baths, full basement , and
garage . City Schools
Shown by appo1n tment on
ly
~ lSI

CEDAR A FRAM E
One acre wooded loT
loca ted approx . 12 miles
from GallipoltS on Brum
lield Rd 3 bedrooms, open
fireplace and open stai r ·
way . Th 1S ty pe of home is in
~Jery m iJC/1 demand!
~ l \3

CENTUI&lt;!Y 21
COUNTRY HOME
&amp; 5 ACRE S
Loca ted on State Rt 141.
n1 ce home, J bedrooms .
Owner wil l sell w1tn smal l
down payment &amp; land con
, tra ct to any qualil1ed
buyer . N 143

CENTURY 21
CITY PROPERTY, EX ·
CELLENT CONDITION
Owner anxious to sell th 1S
br ick home Sttuated on a
spacious wooded lot within
c1 ty lim i ts
Cozy w .b.
fireplace, 3 bed rooms, 2
car garage . A good qual 1ty
built home . Look. th 1s o~Jer
andmakeusanof fer! N1l6

CENTURY 21
LARGE HOME tN CITY
Larg e 2 story house , 9
rooms . House tS modern
and 1n good con.dttion Prtc
ed r easo nab le . Owner
needs to move this proper
ty immed ia tely . Please call
for morl intorm a110n . It \ 35

CENTURY 21
RANCH 4 BEDROOMS
Space abOunds in this
roomy home
2 w b.
t ~rc plac s ,
ful l 11ntshed
basement. double ca r
gorag C'
with
e l ectr i c
opC'ner s.rtong on a good
s•zc lot located all from St
Rt 160 . ( i fV SC hOOl Otsl
St1own by apPOintment
Calt for more deta ils! 11 32

CENTURY 21
WITHIN WALKING
DISTANCE OF SCHOOLS
City properr.,. , 2 story, '4
bedrooms, gas heat Ver y
r e ason ably
pr iced!
1'149

CENTURY 21
SOUTHERN HILLS
SPECIAL PRICED LOW
6 rooms, full basement. lg .
garden area , good storage
bldg . Rt. 141, just out of city
lim its - should sell fast.
Worth
every
penny- $25,000.
1 128

CENTURY 21
OWNER SAYS SELL
No reasonable off er retus
ed ! n us n.ome setting 1s
serene and peaceful . enjoy
rne even 1ngs 1n a cozy coun
try atmosphere . bu l yet
loca ted only one m1te ano a
half of STate Rr 35 2
bedrooms . modern butlt 1n
ktt chen, dlntng room witn
hardwood floor s., ti~Jing
room and nice oatn New
ga ra ge 24'x30' has pane led
wa lls and textured ceil1ng .
A REAL BA RGAI N ! I tl6

RENTA·b INVESTMENT
Recen tly renovated, fully
rented thre e unit. 1n town ,
loce~led c lose to schOO lS.
Excellent return on your
Money .
N 154

CENTURY21
EXTRA CLEAN FARM
4 room house , barn and

...

eQuipment shed . Knee deep
grass all o~Jer Plenty of
spring water for stocK .
Good l encing .
11 67

GOOD INIIESTMENT OR
RENTAL PR OPERTY
owner will help l inance
this 12 acres, more or tess ,
of vacant land . Possible
hookup for 2 mobile homes .
Close to mines
N119

CENTURY 21
BUILDING LOTS
INVESTMENT
Almost f our green acres,
loca ted on St . Rl . 77S . over
600 ft . road frontage. Rural
N 142
water available.

II ACRES
MUST SELL
IMMEDlATEL Y
Bui lt in kitchen, 0 R.. L. R.•
4 or 5 B R 0-Nner says
totally insulated . Alum .
sid ing , 2 nice fi rep laces.
Iorge yar d. barn , BOO lb.
tobacco base . stacKed
pond. good wood lot . Ide~ I
for kee p in g horses or
cat l le .
Mu ch
more
Black fop rd. Harrison Twp.
$40,000.
No. lSI

CENTURY 21

SMALL FARM SITE
27 acres , toba cco base,
rural water, crty schools, 4
mites from Gall ipolis on
bl ack top road, super loca ·
!ton and buy - won ' t last
long ,
N 103

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

GALLI POLIS SCHOOLS
12 ACRE LOT
Coun ty wa t er, welt fenced,
creek runs tnrough the
land ,
tnree excelle nt
building sites All at a very
resonable price .
N ISS

WANTED : NEW
OWN E R- S1l,OOO
Lei's sel l lh ls outstanding
fa rm . Top condition and
production Is here. Ready
lo make you money and a
lorm to be proud of . Level
t illable land, clean pasture
fields , tobacco
bue ,
moder n remodeled house,
barn and machinery shed .
It ' s all here. You ca n belhe
ne)( t owner . 92 acres . II 108

SPRING SPECIAL
15 acres, smal! pond and a
strong spring tor water, ap·
pro&lt; . 970 lOs. toba cco. 2 ·
bldgs. Pri ced l o sell. 1 118

CENTURY 11
ACREAGE
55 acres of roll ing ground
suitable for bldg . Lot s of·
pa sture. Line fences r e1
9000.
I 136

ASPRINGGARDEN
1S eager to bloom around
this lo~Jely home which of ·
ters 3 B. R .• bath, full base ·
ment , 2 car garage and den
for Dad. 2+ acres, rural
water , much more . Don 't
missthisone .
, 164

CENTURY 21
IMMACULATELY KEPT
HOME
N tee home features 3
bedrooms ,
c oni ca l
ltrep:i\ce , si tting on good
size lvt, ver y tastefully
decorated . Has an above
th e ground swimm 1ng pool.
Buy th 1s home and you 'll be
readY for tne hot summer '
days! CALL NOW FOR
MORE
I NFORMATO N
AND AN APPOI NTMENT!
Nl37

CENTURY 21
EXQUISITE HOME
Beautiful 5.73 acres, some
woodland Is the selling for
this grac1ous br ick home, 3
or 4 bedrooms, l1J2 bath,
modern bu i\ t .i n kitchen
with several nice cabinets,
family room with w.b.f.,
full basement wdh a
canning kitchen . Thts
spacious home has a 2 car
garage with automat i c
opener . Central air , large
nice back patio, concrele
drive . Also a shop or ex tra
garage !1. an alum . bldg.
w1fh shed . This is a qual ity
bu il t &amp; immacu lately kep t
home . Lovely fl owers &amp;
landscaping . Many, many
extras . Pictures or words
cannot describe th is home .
You must see it! No. 168

CENTUR'I' 21
RIVER VIEW
Located 3 miles below
Gall ipolis on St. R1. 7, story
' and half . tr ame , 3
bed roo ms, double car
gar age . Also hs ren tal pro
perry with it C1fY school
aisl . GOOD INVEST ·
MENT! N139

CENTURY 21
GOOD BUY

33ACRE FARM
4 rm . house, 12' x 50' mobile
nome , 2 drilled wells ,
stocked larm pond . Most ol
the land lays wel l, could be
used many ways. Extra
mobil e home hook"p and
septic tank on another good.
location. Raccoon Two. No. 110

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

MOBILE HOMES

~

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

ftODNEY AREA - 160 acres. 100 acres pasture &amp;
tropland, coal &amp; llmnfone reported. near proposed
U.S. JS, good lnve•lment property. $100 ,000.

TWO STORY HOUSE
Modern built in kitchen ,
ba th . Hous e in good
condition . garage , good
level eKira lot wifh block .
bldg . Worth its mo ney
$18.000. Bidwel l, Oh io. No. 112

CENTURY 21

BUY - 1/ery ni ce 1972 Globemasl er
home, has 2 bedrooms, bath with shower,
· re, block foundat ion , •!7 acr e level land ,
ioc:al &lt;&gt;&lt; on Clark Chur ch Rd . close to Porter, $13,500.
HOME WITH RENTAL - Buy thi s 3 bedroom home
w1 t h bath, dining roo m, enclosed back porch and let t he
rent fr om a 2 bedroom garage apartment help make
vour payment . Good loca tion m town, $3-4,000.

•

CENTURY 21

Bonnie Stutes
Evenings
'4 6-288S

LIVING - This nice brick home has 3
be,dro•om,s. w ife approved kitchen , lar ge family room
W.B. fireplace, patio, 1 ca r garage , good barn ,
loca ted on 4 acres of nice rollin g land (10 add . acres
available) close to Thurman . Let us show you t his fine
home tod ay. Good buy lor $69.000 .
EW LISTING - Good 2 story home with 3 bedrooms.
th and la rge l 1ving room . Property has a barn and
outbuild ings. Has 6 acres with n1ce ga rden space
ted on St. Rt . 160. House needs repa ir , but Is a steal
$15,500 .

BEAUTIFUL RIVER VIEW
ThiS 3 bedr oom mobi le home si ts high and
l.i"V on 1.523 ac r es and overlooks the OhiO
River . Spend evenings f1sh1ng or just en ·
joying th e scenery fro m the front porch .
Th1s property won ' t last tong as $\1 ,500!
Ca ll for an appoi nt ment today 1
17tt

RESIDENTIAL

FUL BI·LEIIEL - Priced to sell , this lovely
home has 3 bedrooms, 1 fu ll bath and two 'h baths, fu lly
ca rpeted , wife approved Kitchen, large family room
with lovely brick firepla ce, located on Jf• acre nice level
Al l th is for $4S,OOO. Better hurrv.

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associate
PASTURE FARM FOR
RENT
Located
Morgan Town sh1p ,
acr es. pond , STROUT
REALTY , 4460b08.

446-661 0

1218 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

2 ACRESCLEAN
LEVELLA ND
Shor t diste~nce north of
Gall1polt~ Gi!llia Co. Rural
Water tm e in fron t of th is pro·
perry . Blackrop road . Al l
m1ne ra l ri ghts goes. ALL
LEVELS. LOTS OF USES .
8 ACPES
LEIIEL LAND
Beauti ful land w1th lots .or
pme!» and two road tron tge.
411 miles from Meigs Coun ·
ty M ine No
I · Good
build tng si tes and rura l
water l ap pa id for . CALL

This ad

A. Nibert. Realtor-446·4672
Bonnie Stutes, Assoc.-446· 2885
Merrill Carter, Assoc. -379·21 84
James Stutes, Assoc.-446·2885

~

NOW .

1.2 ACRES ON 188

WLTOR

23 LOCUST STREET

.r.rthur

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLI POLIS, OHIO ,

LOVE LY SPLIT LEVEL - Localed in an
excel len ! ne1ghbornood lhts line home 1n
eludes an a11rac11ve famtiy room , 3
bl~dr ooms, J1 2 baths &amp; WIIC appr oved kit
Chl.'n There 1S also cen tral a1r , a large 2
cat gclri'HIC and n1ce Jay Dr1ve yard.
552.100

IB

-

PhyUis
Willis T.
Loveday
Leadingham
Realtor Associate ·
Realtor
Ph. Home 245-91
Ph. Home 446-9539
GalliR County's Fastest Growing Real EstBte Agenc)

We N.eed Your Home or Farm To Sell

~.ii::&amp;Jf.ii;iig-g;F :;:::- ~- -·-

CENTURY 71
BEEF FARM
118 ac: res, over 40 acres
level ti ll able land . the rest
is pasture and woodland .
Tobacco base, 6 room
~ouse, good barn. other
outbufldings. Selling below
• 1o·~
today's market.

160 ACRE BEEF
CATTLE FARM
Cattle prices are took ing
up. Lo1s of past ure , ptenh
water , some good timber .
Owner.savs sell no~ . fl 14S

CENTURY 21
GENERAL FARM
Loca t ed off Stat e Rl . 325,
Perry Twp , 52 acres .
Ti l lable land , pasture and
some wooded a r ea . Modern
6 room house and barn
Over eoo lbs. tobacco base .
PRICEDTOSELL!
N144

CENTURY 21

100 acres, Harrison Twp.
Pasture land , to bacc o
base, coal rights, 1imber
and ni ce wooded area tor
lOIS . 1972 12'x60' mobile
nome already in place . Can
be purchased with
or
without mobile home . Sell ·
ing price on l y $30,000 . N 175

CENTURY 21
MOBILE HOME COURT
4 Hom ette mobile homes,

11'KS2 ' . 2 B.R., total elec·
!ric , all f urnished, all
ren ted , located on Old 160
at Evergreen . GOOd condi ·
Tion , very aflracti ve set·
ling, profitable investment .
$32,000.
N171

A LOVELY COUNTRY

HOME ANDBACRE S
Story and a halt completely
remode led tnside and out .
Lot t&gt;arn , garage, hay shed,
cmd coal utility b ldg 1t's
rust raps lor the money!
Call for more det6 ils TO
DAY ! $28.900
1122

19ACRE5
CLAY TOWNSHIP
House, 2 barns, lobacco
base , very scenic area, 2
be•utiful lakes, stocked
with f iSh. Excellent for
fishing, boating or hunting .
Jusl good living .
i 161

MOBILE HOME yAI\AGf
.BB acres, more or less, 2
bedrooms, living room ,
modern bullt·in kitchen ,
large 2 car garage &amp; tool
shed . very nice setting, lots
of
nic e
la ndscap i ng ,
located al Kerr .
# 169

. .

CENTURY 21
SPECIAL SECLUSION
130 acres wooded se tt ing
tor th is new fully equipped
home - has farm build ings
Includ ing second home all
an
drive from Ga~Jir

.

CENTURY '2 1
.

1973 MOBILE HOME
Located in Rappsburg . 5
rooms. 3 B.R., un~er ·
sk.irted . LOOks very n•ce!
Pnced reasonable .
W l 11

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

. .

CENTURY 21

69 acres on
Rt . 32S and
Cora Mill Rd .. 8 roorns.
Form well fenced . Good
outbuild ings, 3S acres level'.
tlllble land Much more.

1134

"We're The Neighborhood Professi9nals"

CENTURY 21
MOBILE HOME COUR 1
Three good mobile home5
located close to ci t y. Owner
will sell with smal l down
payment &amp; land contrac t to
any qu al ified buyer . CALL
TODAY!
.
1133

I'

CENTUR Y .'1
'
DOUBLE
WIDE
MOBILE HOME
rooms, J bedrooms. 2
baths, complete kllchen,
cen1ral air, water tap, very
cozy . Si tting on 2 lov•IY
acres located o11 from
Bulavllle Porter Rd.o I 129

e

�[).6- _The Sunday Times~ntinel, Sunday, June 25, 1978
ltml~te 1or ~ ·

IIiii.~.. Jm-Sak

IH- The SundayTimes&gt;Sentlnel, Sunday, June 25, 1978

THE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE AGENCY
GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
REA l TO-R

CALL 446·3643

.CANADAY REAL
.[B' 446-363£

Your Best Real Estate Buys· Are
Fou11.d in the Sunday Times-Sentinel

DON 'T MISS THIS -- Th1S home cou ld be
the one you 've been drea ming of. Walk 1n
and enjo y th e attr act1ve tam tly room with
f1rcp lace . 3 nice stzed bedrooms, 2 baths,
very nice k1tcflen &amp; 2 car garage FA nnt .
gas turna ce &amp; cent rill &lt;11r On ly $47.500

•

PICTURESQUE
Desc nbe s this home and lis set t ing
Spacious fo rmal ltvtng room wl1h built m
book she lves &amp; f irepla ce . Formc'll dH,tng
room &amp; eat tn kit chen. Full basement wilh
fi re place. Formal d1ni ng room 3- eat 1n kit
chen Full basement with firepla ce tn
fam ily room Th1s home holds lots of
pOSSibtiiiiCS for future exp an s.o n.
Unusual ly bea ut1ful grounds surrounds
th is home fo r a perfect setting MU ST
SEE

SU PER FARM - 6B acres 1n all . Inc ludes SEl l NOW! ~ Owner wan ts th• s cnarmtng
some good bollom land, pasture &amp; woods 4 bed r oom nome sold rtght away . Thts w ell
Also a very nice remodeled 2 stor y t an~ kept hom e includes an atrrac l tve l1v ing
home w ith good sized rooms &amp; ca rpel
"'roughout . 5 bedrooms &amp; l 1'1 baths . Rural
water &amp; well water . Pr iced tow . $46,900.

room, eat ·in kd chen w1th plenty of
cabine ts, par ti al basement &amp; garage . NICe
shaded lot 1n c nesh1re . On l y $30,000.

!

. .. 4

SPAC IOU S
BEDROOM HOME Loc ated 1n Crown Ctly tt11s horn e tncludes
a l arg e liv ing room , eat 1n kitchen, bath
w1th shower . ~ car garag e &amp; large lot W1lh
lots ol nf'w ptncs ec t Pri ced very
reasonabi C' at $30 .000
JUST A BE A UTI FU L LOCATION - Lol ol
trees , flower s, &amp; gardens on 8 acre 1n Nor
thup Th1 s dandy home 1nctudcs a lull
basem ent tw tth tamlly room . ilreplace &amp;
garage ! 3 bedrooms &amp; lovely ha rdwood
floor s. S41 ,QOO
GOOD HOME &amp; &gt;', ACRES - Rl 218 near
Mercer vtl le Remodeled II }story ,nctudes
3 bedrooms, large ltiJ tng room , family
room . large k1t cncn &amp; oath plus wood
burner 8. new ga~ stove The land IS
swlabl e for qraztng a few cattl e or horses
and a q ood gtJrden . 2 Neils 11 new well
pumps 500 gal ocr nour )
LIVE IN ONE , RENT THE OTHER
1
houses tn Ew 1nqton One IS a la r ge 7 r oom
nom e w 1th 7 poss tblc rentals . The other 1S a
2 bedr oom nome w1lh eat 1n k tl chen , ba th .
11 v tng roo m . carport 2"1xl 6 outbulldtng ,
plu s som(' furniTur e &amp; stove and
relr tgcr at or Onl y '!.70,500 Call Dan Evans
ai3B8 81 11

SPEC IAL HOME - A very appeal ing
spt 11 level 1n an excellen t ne1ghborno0d
This 4 bedroom home tncludes a large ltv
ing room &amp; dining room, bu ilt tn k1 cnen. ·
711 batn s. tam1ty room , fireple~ ce with
hea tolat or , '} car garage and nea rl y an
ac reol yard $67 ,500
CE NTENARY - Located on Rt. 141 at
Junct1on of Lincoln P1ke th1s 2 bedroom
nome featur es l i~Jing r oom w1th f1r epl ace ,
full basement, eaT in k1tcnen &amp;. oalh . New
linoleum 1n kit chen &amp; carpet throughout
Over 11 acre with a good garden spol.
$25.000 .
MODERN HOME IN RIO GRANDE
Spactous 2 story bnck &amp; frame on Lake
Or 1VE' You cou ld nave as many as 5
oedrooms upstatrs, liv ing room w ith
ftrepl ace , un1que kitchen , basement w1fh
rec room &amp; 2 car garage Many otncr ex
tra s 1n th iS line home \52 ,500
OR CHAR 0 HILL - A modern home 1n
town w1th a rure~l atm osphere Th•s horn e
nas 3 bed r ooms, la rg e 11v1ng room . buill in
k tlcnen &amp; part ial basement. Tne wooded
and lo~Je ly 1 1 ac r e yard plus a wonderful
v1ew ot th e CJ I V make!llhis nome an e)(CCP
I tonal ouy at SJ9 .500

COMMERCIAL BU I LDI NG
Need a
pl ace for your oody shop, garge et c Ap
pr ox 28' x4 7 m(' tal budd1ng SIIUaled on 2
lot s tn Cr own Ct ty 100 11 fr onta gf&gt; on SR 7
Water &amp; t&gt;lf&gt; cT clV~ d ab l e On ly Sl6 ,500

KYGER CREEK SC H. OIST
L uxurtOUS
3 bedr oo m onc k on Bulavllle Road I 8
acr e') ol lovely ya rd Tn 1s t1n e t1ome •n
cludrs fa mil .,. room wl! n I ~r e place . 'J br~ths.
ful l nHse menl w re l room B. J cu carpor1 .
( .:&gt;
, oppotnt mf&gt;n1

GRACIOUS CONTEMPORARY -- Th•S
!abutous nome w111 g1ve you th e thrt ll ot a
l tfettme Wal~ 1nto th ts un tQue nouse &amp;. see
tt1e "1 cozy f 1r el aces. 3 oaths , l arge family
room and even a cr ows nest plus all lhe
oth er reve ry amentttes th 1s home has toot
ter St luated on 18 wooded acres 1n the Ctly
Sctl Dtst By appt only
EXCE LLENT LOCATION IN TOWN
La r ge 2 story nome a1 736 2nd Ave Could
be used as 2 apan ments or re nt t he
upsta tr S &amp; use dow nstairS for off tce , beau
ty snap efc Only $.3.1,900

WE NEED LIS'fiNGS
E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-3796, EVE.
JIM COCHRAN, SALESMAN 446-7881, EVE.
E. N. WISEMAN. BROKER, 446-4500, EVE.
NANCY SMITH, SALESPERSON, 446-4910, EVE.
500 2ND A Vf.

~ ,

N EAL REALTY
PHONE "6 1694
See th •s c•cept tonally well
kep t hom e w1 lh J BR , 1t 1
bath. lull ba sement. formal
dtntng room , rcc. room , cur
conditioned, nr~tural gas
S•tua t ed
on
a
h eat.
beautifully landsca ped lot
, in Sprtng Valley Sub·
O•v•sion . Th1 s home .. s pnc ·
ed •n th e \60's . Call today
fo r app1.
446 ·1 546
Charles M . Neal
446· 1S03
J . Michael Neal
446-/lSS
Sa m Neal

COMMERCIAL
LAND
FOR SALE - front s on US
35 at Rodn ey, On•o: For
mor e 1ntormat1on call
STROUT
REALTY ,
406 000 8.

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
Wf' H ll any th i nq lo r
.lnvbody ;~I our Auc t ion
BtHn or in vuo r nom e For
1nlor mat1on an d Plttlup
scr vtce call 256· 1967
Sale Ever v Saturda~
Nig ht at 1 p .m .

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE
K e nneth Sw.1tn , .Auct .

corner Th•rd &amp; Ohv e

GALLIPOLIS

FOR SALE
3 yr . old brick home, 3

12 story older home

J •
Declroom . family room .;,ilh
ft.r~place, liv1ng room,
d1n1ng room , carpeted
throughout , kitchen
complolely oqulppod
Ia undry room wilh woslte;
and dryer, 2 baths, out.
burld1ng with eledrlc for
slorago, alum . •ld i ng ,
storm windows, new roof
on double lot . Asking
Sli,OOO.
804 W. Mo ln
Pomeroy
992 _7298
Aller Hours
C11i 992-7133
CONTACT :
Lois Pauloy
Branc h Muaver

i'OR SALE
Modern two stor v ranch m
Rio Grande overlooking
vt.lla~e.
co llege. va lley .
F11Je bedrooms, two bafhs ,
large fam ily room with
w .b. fireplac e, game room
laun d ry ut tlll y
room ~
Stl u ~ted
on la ndscaped
e~cre wtth barn , kennels,
rental tratler and garden
plot .
GallipOliS
City
School s. By appo1ntment
u nl y . 24 ~ · 9J'16 .

acres, 2V2 miles from '
Holzer Hospital. In City
School Distrtct , 4,000 sq .
ff .. SllO per monlh
1ncome
properTy
rncluded.
Substantial
down
payment required.
Will assist in financing .
Write to Box BSL C·O
Gallipolis
Da i ly
Tribune, 82S Third Ave .,
Gallipolis, Oltio 4S631 ,
giving name &amp; phon e.

4 BR HOM E
1 yr . otd, w1th ldd i t iona l lot
in New Haven. U9 ,000 .
Edelman &amp; Kin cai d Rea lly
Ph . 30072-4881 or
l04 ·27Hll3

LOVELY COUNTRY
ATMOSPHERE
Beautiful new 3 B R. br ic k front home wtlh
~ t r e ~la ce , formal d1n10g room &amp; large ea t
1n kll chen With lots ot built in ca bin ets
range 8. dishwasher . "1 ful l baths &amp; a utilit~
room Plus 2 car gargage Th1s home 1S
Si tuated on a woo ded lot
approx 1 acr e
Soon to be com ple ted DON ' T LET THIS
ONE SLIP BY
CALL TODAY
EXQUISITE HOME
CHAROLAIS HILLS
Beautiful 3.16 A. roll1ng
clean land 1s th e setting l or
th1s unusually gracious
bri ck home . 3 spacious
B.R.' s, 21'1 ba ths and large
utility room . Large foy er
leading to forma l liv ing
room , formal dining room
&amp; large family room with
open fi repla ce Charm ing
kitchen with snack bar
Corning counter .tap range,
wa ll
oven .
disposaL
d ishwasher and lovely
Shenandaan cabmets . Th1s
spa cious home has a 2 car
g arage with automat1c
opener and central atr .
These are 1ust a few of the
ex tra s. P1cfures or wordccannot describe this home
YOU MU,ST SEE IT
MODERN HOM E
ON RT. 588
Atfract1ve brick &amp; frame
home w1tl1 3 or pos.sibly 4
BR . ltving room wilh
fir elace, exTra n1ce kitchen
with built 1n ca b1nets, ea t
at bar &amp; dintng area . Full
~asement &amp; garage Lovel y
1n ground pool &amp; deck
Gallipolis School Dtstr 1ct
4.61ACRES2M IL ES
OF GALLIPOLIS
Beauliful bulfd 1ng s1tes
Bea ut iful
v1ew
of
surrounding area . Rural
water on 2 Sides ot property
- 1 tap pa id tor Cor ner o l
Neighborhood
Rd
&amp;
Klicher . WO N ' T LA ST
LON G
LARGE STATELY
7 ROOM HOME
Large level lot Bath, front
and back porches , B R of
above average size. Ci t y
water . Partial basement
Melal storage bldg ALL
OF TH IS FOR ONLY
$1 2.900 00
HOU SE &amp; I A.
IN COUNTR Y
7 r o6m hom e S.I Tuatetl on 1
A. ot ni ce land on rl
bla cktop rand 4 B R . b tttrl
&amp; countr y kil ctwn w11t'
All
bUtiT in Ci'b 1nc 1s.
crpeled MAKE YO U R AP
POINTM ENT TODAY
93 ACRE S
VACAN7 LAND
93 A of roll1ng l &lt;"nd tn Ad
dtson Twp Al l m1nerl1f
r 1gn ts goes Barn &amp; ~('vera !
building Sl l es $'17 , ~ 00 00
CALL
FOR
M O RE
DE TAIL &gt;.

CARRY OU1
A qood t)USiness lor ,J!NI on
Stal e H1 ghway 1!!0 tn .1 n1c(•
commundv Lcu'l{l Ur tt k
buil d1ng , equ 1pmen 1 &amp; il ll
QOC , ,
PR IC ED
&gt;lOck
RIGHT
COUNTRY LIVING
If you like frP.sh country
air , lh 1S 1S the one 6 room
house &amp; 1 A. lol l B R
home with extra nice coun
try ki tchen w1th w all ov en
&amp; counter top rdnge. Ex tra
nice bu111 in cab1nets Ntce
lrge front pe~tto Hom(' has
had real qood car e Also
hi;~ S cl horse She d LOctlled
on blacktop road . CALL
NOW .

NEAT AND ATTRACTIVE
Extra ni ce &amp; ver y we ll kept home. 3 B R ,
living room. nea t ki tchen wi th buil t in
cn b1nets &amp; ra nge , large ut111ty room &amp;
batt1 Carport. storage buil di ng &amp; chai n
l1nk fence Also has natur al ga~ hea t &amp; i ts
own water system City schoo l s GOOD
BUY
OllER 7 ACRES - NICE HOME
GREAT LOCATION
Just off Rt 35 across from Spring Valley
Shopping Plaza 7.32 A. Stocked pond .
roll ing land , beautiful 6 rooms. 3 BR hom e
in an elegan t se tting wi th l ots of beau tiful
shru bbery &amp; trees, also lots of fruit trees .
Natu ral gas heat Hardwood floors wtth
som e car pe ting - large living r oom and
porch. MUST SEE T HI S PROPERTY TO
APPRECIATE ITS VA LU E
COLONIAL MANSION
Gracious 9 room home stl uated on approx
17 A of ro lli ng la nd 5 large BR , formal
dming room with f irep lace, li ving room
an d bath . Count ry kitchen wlf h l ovely
bu! lt m ca bmets, s.s. sink , wall oven &amp;
counte!' top range. Ha s alum . sid1ng and
owner has added e)C f ra insulation . 7 barns,
storage building . chicken house . and l ot s of
fruit trees . Ga ll ipol is ci ty school system .
THI S IS A UN IQUE HOM E WITH
CHARACTE R

Ot&lt; c Y m.ooo
Ntce 3 bedrooms, bath . liv
.nq room , modern ea t m
k1t cnc n
Wtfn
buil t 1n
catJ trlCfs Full basement
nlmost new oas for ced a1;
turnn ce c1nd hot waf er
hC'r1Tcr Loca tecl Wtlh1n Th e
C1ly l•n111s Lookm g for a
nt cf' clt&gt;nn home. ci0'5f' to
shOpp 1nQ area? A Buy Call
Now
SP ACIOUS
BI -LEVEL
Lovely 3 B.R. brick &amp;
frame bi level . Ex tra nice
kitchen
wi th
lots o f
cabinets ,
dishwasher.
range &amp; d1n ing area with
pat1o doors lead ing to lrtrge
deck . Lower hall thclf adds
lots of possibility lor future
family
or
recreation
rooms . 2 ca r garage with
automatic doo r opener .
Th1s hom e is built wrth
s ystem
i ntercom
Gall 1polis city
school
sysl em . CALL NOW
6 ACRES WITH
LARGE PINE TREES
Ideal butldtng spot nestled
tn r:~n Mea at large p1ne
trees 200 It fr ontage . 2 out
S1dC s10rage bui ldi ng s
GMden spot , apple &amp; peach
tree s Ttmber. well Wttn
ele c tr i c pump
ONLY
$6 .900 .00 TOTAL .
MAKE U S AN OFFER
ON THI S ONE 8 ROOM
HOME, APPROX 4 A
Al l ll vel. along St Hw y
'i5-l d B R moder n home
wdh buil t 1n ktlchcn , F A
tur nacc, partlc11 basemenT ,
7 por c hc~ ~ e paratc garage
dnd summer ki tchen , also
work shop &amp; !ltora gc ar c,,
Lots of build1ng spots for
new "ames on t11c Ga lltc1
Co Ru r al WaiN Sy st Al so
nn ,n_c omc 1nvcstrn ent pro
rn·rl; CAL L NOW FOR
MORE DETAIL S
NICE 41 ACR E FARM
&amp; LOVELY HOME
Spa c•Ou!l r cmoct elcd 8 room
home wilh stcr t s1ding plus
.1 BR , ba th . formal 11v1 nQ
room &amp; 1arqc coun tr y k1 t
ctwn W1ln buill 1n c. ablnP ts
&amp; 'l l c11nless ~ I C'el s1nk. Th• S
homr hilS a F A furnc£' &amp; d
woodbu r ner
J!l A
at
bec'lU I IfUI roll1nlj land , dp
pro I( 30 A . l tl labl r , appro!(
15 A timber . Cxtra largr
bar n, worksnop, cr ll cH &amp;
totM cc o oase Some trutt
tr ee!l If you 're tnteres tNI
.n a nice IMm . CA L L
AB OUT THI 5 0 NE
QUICK IN VESTMENT
RETURNS
Ttw, pr operty Could pay for
1to.,t&gt;lf wilh1n 4 yr s Lo t on
5 t nt ~" Rt
7. North , nea r
St iV L'r Br iog c Sl1oppmg
3 r£&gt;nlal mobilePlcllrl
homo• GR EAT RE TURN
ON
TOTAL
I N VEST
ME NT Cillllor detail s.

BEAUTIFUL RIVER
FRONT HOME
Beautiful? room home wi th
a panore~mic v1ew of t he
river . 21 J A. Fu ll basemen t
wtfh
woodb urn i ng
f1r eplace . 23 If )(A I If room
wtth ki tchenette, e)(Ce ll enf '
tor entertatning or da ne '
tng . N 1ce modern ki tchen'
1ncluding dishasher , ra ng e ~
&amp; refri gera tor , formal din
ing room. 1am11y room , tor
mat llvtng r oom &amp; 3 BRand
1 full baths&amp; showers. F uel
otl FA . furna ce. Excellent
location for fi shing, r i ght
ouT your bac k door . City
school disf. Must see to ap
prec1arc t1S value .
11.7 ACRES
WITH LOTS OF
SHADE TREES
2 BR mobile home nest led
tn lo1s at snade trees . Lots
of r oad fr ontage Outside
buildi ngs
All
fu r nitu re
goes, includ ing washer and
dryer some ftmber CALL

4 room house plus 2 m obi l e
homes that are now ren ted.
Barn .
Good
1ncome
producing proper t y wi th in
7 m.tes ot Gall•polis . O NL y
120.000 .00 .

8 ACRES
PRICE REDUCED
W1fh1n 10 min
drive to '
dowrHown Ga ll ipolis , Green
Tow n ship,
City
Schoo f
Sys tem
Has hookup for 1
mob1le home Ga llta Rural
Waler, electric and septi c
tank , n1gt1t fig ht on pole. 100
It
frontage on Graham
s.chool Rd. Timber . Building
''les CA LL NOW.
NICE BLOC I&lt;
BUILDING
H as many us es
stor er oo m. storage, make
tnto a n1ce home ,
showroom. kennel , et c.
Building size 46ft . x 30 ft.
Located on a co rner lot con ·
taining .95 acre on a
blacktop road . 180,000 BTU
fu rn ace. Garage . PRICED
ONLY 173,900.00

·'BAIRD &amp;
REALTY

NOW .

COMFORTABLE HOM E
PLU S EXTRA
INCOME PROPERTY
Well K e pT ~ room house just
olf Rt 160 dt Ev ergreen
LOT 81' •10H '
Step s a~Jer kil {hcn wi th
l3l (l UTtfUi f)Ud0Hl9 Sties,
n1ce bu111 1n cabinets,
trvr l lot on bldcktop· rM d rang e &amp; r etr lg . Ha s a front
w1th rural water l1nc tn porch &amp; carport. Real nice
front of lot , wt tn beau tiful
carpet throughout &amp; a
r oll 1nq g r een p~ s tureland . Franklin wood burner .
ONL Y S5,500 00
. Ptus as a poss1ble ex tra 10
carne
12 '1(65' mobile
9ACRES
9 A mo r e or le !t.~ of nice home t ha t hd~ 3 B.R. &amp; 1'11
land . barn, tool House. 2 ba lh . lind ~as liS own
wr&gt;lls All mineral n gnt s pr iva te drive. CALL FO R
PR IC ED AT ONLY YOUR APPO IN TME N T
TO DAY

Wel l k ept 2 story 3 BR bri ck and fram e Fami ly room
Franklm f 1r eplace Off er s lots of priva cy . Kyger
·
S&lt;;hoo ls. Rural wa ter .

SOUTHERN HILLS

TONEY REALTY (0

will be

changing
dally.

EACH OFFICE
INDEPENDENTlY OWNED

OFFICE 446-7900

"We Sell Better Living"

OFFICE 446 7013
Arthur A. Nibert
Senior MembP.r
Am en can Society
Of Appra 1sers

ONEOFMIODLEPORT~

FINER HOMES
3400 SQ. It of exquisite ti ving , fully
ca rpeted , huge stone f i r epla ce, 5
bedrooms, 211'1 baths . Also a tu lly car peted
1st floor apartment rents at$150 .00. 1114

CLOSE TO TOWN - PRICED RIGHT - Love ly bric k
and f r ame ~o m e on a large lot. This home has 3
~drooms, kitchen and dining com bination, farge liV·
tng roof'!' , ~ bath an~ carport Natural gas heat .
Loca ted tn cttv sc hool d1str1ct . Priced in the thirties
NEW LISTING - UNDER THE PINES - Provides
peace and t ra~q ui l! tv This home is located on Rt . 160
on a very scen1c , pmed 6 acr es with a pond . The home
~as very large r ooms . Tne liv 1ng r oom has a stone
hreplace. There are 3 bdrs .. a &lt;tfh r oom could be used
for a den or sewing r oom, lar ge biult ·in ~i t c h en and a
huge bath . Th e hardw ood fl oors in !h is nome glisten
Call us today .
·

$52,000
J·year old br ick ra nch in Ga lli poliS Ci ty School Distric t,
G.r t?en E lementary . 3 8R , 117 baths. Full y ca rpeted,
b1rch d.oors and ..yoodwork, mar ble sills, crvsta l
chandelier , 2 car fln1shed garag e ~" nly begins th e list of
extras avai lable in thi s beautiful home .

$59,900
Except ional qualit y! Brick re~n c h , 3 BR , extra lg
closets, bath has ce ramt c til e with bu11t 1n pollen f1 lter
Hardwood floors , marb te SillS, car port w1tn separa te
storage roo~ . Level law n with bea utiful tr ees and
shru bs now 1n bloom Loca ted in one of the ci ty 's most
dest r ed areas . Low ga s and electn c budget make th is
hom e affordable .

$48,500
Immac ulate and charm ing , 3 BR bri ck ranch 1n
beau l tfu l res1den tia t area near Holzer Hospital All
cl.ec1nc , tully ~a rpcr cd . Well planned kift'len has rang e,
di Shwash er , diSPOSa l . Snack bar separa1es work area
from form al d intng area . Utiltly rm . w1tn Hotpomt
washer and dryer K1ng sized garage for 2 ca rs Ne ar ly
111 acre level l awn .

$50,000
Over 13 acres fl at to roll ing onty 1• 7 mites from c tl'f .
Several . e.xcell ent building sites Frame home with
alum . Stdtng , Basement. garge, ~barns . Lots of truit
trees . Home and land in excellent cond

$42,900
Co.untry atmosphere, frt endly netghborflood . 3 BR
b r~ ck. e~ nd fram e on wel t landscaped 1 acre tot.
Fireplace, f ull y carpeted , f amily s1zed kitchen.
garage , pat to .

O.J . WHITE RD . - This lovel y bnck and lra m e home
has J be~rt?Oms , complete wife approved k 1tchen, patio
O~f the dtntng ar ea, 1117 ba th and overhead cen tral air
S1 tuat edon a l arge lot.
·
story J bedroom f rame has a
formal d1n1ng room , large liv1ng room, n1ce k1fchen, 2
large pantnes, 2 wa lk in close ts, upstairs could be
another large bedroom , g lassed •n back porch, ele&lt;:tr 1c
~at,. separa te garage &amp; 1 storage bui ldings on 13 acr es
1n Vtnton
SECLUS~~N - This 1'

:1

FA~ M - 56 acres ~ I 5 to 20 acres are till able). T h1 S has
a 1 h sl?ry , 4 bedroom home in very good cond1 f ion .

Th er e IS also an old barn and smoke house a
strawberry patch and f ruit frees Some t imber .
'

R! . 160 - Th is hpme can have 2 or J bedrooms tt has a
w1fe approved ktt chen , lar ge wa lk in closets, ca rpeted
mroug~out and elec tric hea t . It is situated on 5 acr es of
land w1th a large storage building, about 5 miles t rom
Holzer Med1ca l Cen ter .
COUNTRY LIIIING - Almost new 3 bedroom wilh full
d1V1ded basement, 1 drilled wells, new 30'x40' barn &amp;
lg. metal garage with 10 acresofl Rt . 2 18.
FOR FAST ACTION ON YOUR PRDERTY LIST
WITH US. WE OFFER FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE
FOR OUR POTENTIAL SELLERS . EASY FINANC·
lNG AVAILABLE FOR OUR POTENTIAL BUYERS .
AT HOME

446· 1049
446-0458
446·4042
446-0458
446·0002
367-7529

BOB LANE
BECKY LANE
1/tCKIE HAU L DR EN
WALT LANE
DENIIER HIGLEY
KENNY RATLIFF

$39,500

GOOD BUY - Good ol der home, 3 bedrooms, bath,
for ced a1r furna ce, located on a ni ce lot in Bidwell,
needs a I if ti e work but only $12,800.
12 MILL CREEK - Good home w ith 3 bedrooms, ba th,
dining roo m, '!1 basement, good renta l property, only
$10,500.

tN TOWN - Good 2 bedroom home. batn , natural gas
heat , fenced in yard, located on White Ave. Good buy
l or $10,500 .
NEW LISTING - Good nauli ng business with 2 packer
trucks, has conrrac ts w i th Vi ll age &amp; Business places,
ca lf for more in forma tion
NICE LOT - GOOd mob1le home or build ing site, over
112 acre land, loca ted close to town OQ Rt . 141 . Price

r educed to $4,200.
34 ACRES - Good roll ing land for hunt ing or camping
with old house, located on Thompson Rd . off Rt 160.
$14,500.
MIODLEPORT - . M~·t\ 1 to thi s area ? You ' ll be glad
au inspec ted fhis ',;.(\\&gt;'-·ne. Has 3 bedrooms, dining
room, liV' Ing roo '":r"'Nith fireplace, full"( carpeTed.
ga rage, $36,500 .

Matntenance free, qua lity bu i lt brtck . Spacious k if
chen, Wtfh plenty of space lor f amtlv dintng . 3 BR con ·
cr ete drive .
·

NEW LISTING - Lots of potenTial here , 38 acres nice

$37,000

land along Ra ccoon Creek , mostl y ti llable, tobacco
base, large pond, good 10x50 two bedroom mobile
home. call todaY .

The pr1ce is r 1gnt on lh1S tw o story, 3 BR , suburban pro
per t y that . boasts over five ~'t e r es and low
Ga llipolis Ctty School Distr ic t.

GOOD BUY - Look t~ 'fo. wer, l4x70 mobi le home with
12&lt;20 fam ily roor &lt;'(\\,)&gt; Has 3 bedrooms, 2 ba l hs,
cen tral ai r , nice f~J ~"'re . All this located on 1111 acres
close t o Ewington .

$22,900
4 BR fram e ~orne , dining rm ., ut iltty rm, gas turn.,c• r
carpor t ln c1ty . 1.4 acres with r i ver fronfage
fie li xln' ThiS could be a showplace .
'

$133,000

LOG CABIN - Large stone firepl ace, modern bofh ,
loft , log• are hand hewn. 14 wooded acres, grea l place
lo gel away .

NEW LISTING - 1/ery ni ce larm with a modern home,
has 4 bedrooms, bath, modern l&lt;itchen , dini ng area,
forced air fu rnace. Has 86 acres of beautiful roll ing
la nd, tobacco base, .pond , bl ock bui lding, la rge barn .
Localed on Clork Church Rd . $74.500.

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE In lhe wllderneso of th e
Wayne Nallonal Forest . Sic 8 aore tracts of woodland
now available adlolnlng thousands of acres of
government land. Public hunting , f ishing and camping
permitted. Pr ices start at $2500 wlfh ll nancing
available.

105 ACRES - Good farm w ith a modern 2 bedroom
nome, fully ca rpeted, nice ki tchen. Would be a good
beef farm , has a large barn, ..Ox250. w ith equipment for
ra isi ng poultry , nice pond, Ferguson.3S w llh all equip·
ment . Le t us $hOW you this fine far m, located in
Morgan Township, good buy for $55,000.

MORGAN TOWNSHl P - 36 acres near Meigs Mines, S
acres level , mosl of balon ce could be pasture, small
stream. town•h lp road, $11,900 .

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE HAllE A WAITING LIST OF QUALIFIED
BUYERS. LIST WITH US FOR FA\T ACTION ON
YOUR PROPERTY .

1 ~.5

Acre f arm , 60 acres t ill able res t pasture
f 1mber . 1,200 lb toba cco base. E)(ce lfent budding
along state route . Ga ll ia County rural water &lt;n·-~··.;
barn , tool shed and implement shed . Buildings. in
cond . 3 BR . 2 bath home wilh full basemenr 1
·
garage .

$150,000
117 acre da iry f arm, ncar Ri o Grande. Beau l 1fu l new
BR home, 2 fu ll baths, full'f ca rpeted, fam . rm ., 2 c
ga~a~e , plus older home suitable for tenant or'"''"' r
Thts IS tru ly a showpl ace . Would be ideal for h,,.;,",;" l
ven fu re, gol f course, country club easy access
Rl. 3S
'

RACCOON CREEK - 13 acres of fla1 land wllh
appro&lt; . 1500 fl . of creek fronlage , sandy soli . barn ,
located In Northern Gallla Co. $13,000.
INCOME PROPERTY - 22.000 sq . ft. bui lding loco ted
In Mlddleporl. rent potential of over $30,000 per yeor.
Call for more Information .

Evenings Call
Oscar Baird, Reahor ~32
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE - 4 acres on
Glassbur n Rd . In Springfield Twp. S4,UOO.

$50,000
Mo bi l ~

home cou rt nea r Rio Grande . 6 plus
alreadv has 4 mobile home si t es. Off ice bldg with 1
bath . Other b~lldings , ca l l or stop by for com.plele 1
torm at1 on . ThiS 1S a great loca t ion tor IQ. cour t.

$12,800
G~eat star ter nome on 2.5 acres . Large eaT·in k if,chenl
w1th r.ange .and ret;lgerator, din ing room, 2 BR ,
electn c wlnng and 1nsulat ion. North Gaflia Schools .

$18,000
B.idwell V illage, 1 stor y,. BR ~ome in good cond .
k1fch en has nearly new cabi nets, new hot water
S1orm doors and windows . New roof . Garage. 1
lever lo1. If yhou' r e budger minded better take a look!

446-3636
ANY KOUR
OR BETTER YET ... STOP BY AND SEE US AT
LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS, 0 .

RON CANADAY, REALTOR
Lou Lutton
Realtor Assoctate

m

L.J::!

EIGHT THOUSAND DOLLARS - 4 rms ., bofh, pari
ba$ement, needs some repa irs, wood-burning stove,
almost 2 acres on the Barcus Hollow Rd ., Clay
Townsh ip, Gallipolis City School Dl•t.
FARM FOR SALE - 99 ACRES - All clean, mostlY
llllable, presenlly In gran. 2 ponds. •ever a I good barns
&amp; sheds. 3 cow m ilk parlow. tob. base. 12&lt;60 mobile
home Is now rented , 650ft. fronloge on Sta te Rl. SS4 at
Eno, Otllo, 2,000 ft . fronfage on county rd . $75,000. Call
for more details.
RESTRICTED BUILDING LOT - Corner lot In Spr ing
\/alley Eslafos . 166ft. frontage on Maple. One of Galllo
Co.'s nicest subdivision• . All ullllllu available. $6,000.
A SOUND INIIESTMENT describe• th l• 47 A. tract of
land. Located appro~ . 311&gt; mi. lrom Holzer Hospital
near Kerr. Rolling lracl Is mostly clean grassland &amp;
priced a! $-40,000.
BABY FARM - Tycoon Lake area. 10 acres mostly
cl.. n granland, nlce lv remodeled 2 story home. 4
BR'a, balh, 111odern klfchen. lorrr&gt;a l dlnlng rm .., n~w
shag carpet, Co . water, J •mall outbuildings.
lmmtdlale occupancy. Galllpoll• Ci ty School Dlsl.
LISTINGS

NEEDED

-

WE

ADVERTISE

NaTIONALLY ~ WE IUY - SELL- TRADE.

Merri II Carter
Evenings
379-1184

COUNTRY MANOR - FIVE MILES OUT -;- lllacrts.
appro•. $0 • .,.. tillable, bat1nce posture, lob. base,
lots of fruit trees, springs, 2 wells, 2 ponds, rur1t water,
large barn, milk parlor. se.erat •neds . Elegant col·
onial home nos DHn completely remodeled I futures
new vinyl Jldlng, new gutters, new plumbing, modern
kitchen, w·w carpel, cont. air. 3 or 4 BR ' s. Clll
STROUT REAL TV for an appointment to see. 446-0001.

GRACIOUS LIVING
IN TOWN
l.arlt \llc!orlan Home with 2111ed bitlis and 1h bath, 4
bedrooms, library, dlnlnt I'IIOm, llvlnt room wltlt
ClltrrY ~-k, 5 llre•IK•, fully IMull!td and
storm windows. z.car tara" on a .. ,., 1o1 ovll'looking
tltl Ohio Oft lllallllslde. A ftnl 'lace t. reiN a family In
gracious comfort. Cell Mlnnlnt w.t!MrheH 4&lt;M-C31)
Dlya or 444·0119 Evonlftlt fOr eppolfttment&gt;

HOME &amp; BUSINESS
This home has been totally
r efiniShed and decorat ed
Features L R., FR ., din 1ng
rm ., built in kitchen This
home has a beauty shop
wtrh all equ ipment Ready
lo start a business Owner
is anxious to sell, will help
finance or v A.. F .H.A .
ftnancing is available . N166

CENTURY 21

Jim Stutes
Evenings
446 2885

CENTURY 21
4 BEDROOM
VERY REASONABLE
This one has :• all fireplace. ~(\\S) , fully
carpeted , ~ ... a~r , huge
.l car ga1 dge . Park Lane
Subdi vision .
1/ 162

CENTURY 21
CITY PROPERTY
1 story fr ame . 4 bedrooms,
open st at r case Also a utili
ty bldg . and a garage All
thi s located on a large lot
with a new cha 1n link fence
LOOKTH IS OVER !
•127

CENTURY 21
PRICE REDUCED
TO S46,000
81 te~Jel , almost new . J
bedrooms. very apeating
home, baseboard neat and
Jotul wood burner . House
and 4 lots al l selling . AP·
prox 2 miles from Holzer
Medica l Center . Sell1ng
below toda y's market. NI SO

VACANT LAND'

MODERN BR I CK
ThiS lovely home and 2 to J
acres .s located sou th of
Rio Gr ande on St Rt . 325
Fea tures 3 bedrooms, liv ·
1ng room, fa mily room,
w .b
f ireplace , mode rn
complete bu1 1t-1n k1tchen, 2
baths, full basement , and
garage . City Schools
Shown by appo1n tment on
ly
~ lSI

CEDAR A FRAM E
One acre wooded loT
loca ted approx . 12 miles
from GallipoltS on Brum
lield Rd 3 bedrooms, open
fireplace and open stai r ·
way . Th 1S ty pe of home is in
~Jery m iJC/1 demand!
~ l \3

CENTUI&lt;!Y 21
COUNTRY HOME
&amp; 5 ACRE S
Loca ted on State Rt 141.
n1 ce home, J bedrooms .
Owner wil l sell w1tn smal l
down payment &amp; land con
, tra ct to any qualil1ed
buyer . N 143

CENTURY 21
CITY PROPERTY, EX ·
CELLENT CONDITION
Owner anxious to sell th 1S
br ick home Sttuated on a
spacious wooded lot within
c1 ty lim i ts
Cozy w .b.
fireplace, 3 bed rooms, 2
car garage . A good qual 1ty
built home . Look. th 1s o~Jer
andmakeusanof fer! N1l6

CENTURY 21
LARGE HOME tN CITY
Larg e 2 story house , 9
rooms . House tS modern
and 1n good con.dttion Prtc
ed r easo nab le . Owner
needs to move this proper
ty immed ia tely . Please call
for morl intorm a110n . It \ 35

CENTURY 21
RANCH 4 BEDROOMS
Space abOunds in this
roomy home
2 w b.
t ~rc plac s ,
ful l 11ntshed
basement. double ca r
gorag C'
with
e l ectr i c
opC'ner s.rtong on a good
s•zc lot located all from St
Rt 160 . ( i fV SC hOOl Otsl
St1own by apPOintment
Calt for more deta ils! 11 32

CENTURY 21
WITHIN WALKING
DISTANCE OF SCHOOLS
City properr.,. , 2 story, '4
bedrooms, gas heat Ver y
r e ason ably
pr iced!
1'149

CENTURY 21
SOUTHERN HILLS
SPECIAL PRICED LOW
6 rooms, full basement. lg .
garden area , good storage
bldg . Rt. 141, just out of city
lim its - should sell fast.
Worth
every
penny- $25,000.
1 128

CENTURY 21
OWNER SAYS SELL
No reasonable off er retus
ed ! n us n.ome setting 1s
serene and peaceful . enjoy
rne even 1ngs 1n a cozy coun
try atmosphere . bu l yet
loca ted only one m1te ano a
half of STate Rr 35 2
bedrooms . modern butlt 1n
ktt chen, dlntng room witn
hardwood floor s., ti~Jing
room and nice oatn New
ga ra ge 24'x30' has pane led
wa lls and textured ceil1ng .
A REAL BA RGAI N ! I tl6

RENTA·b INVESTMENT
Recen tly renovated, fully
rented thre e unit. 1n town ,
loce~led c lose to schOO lS.
Excellent return on your
Money .
N 154

CENTURY21
EXTRA CLEAN FARM
4 room house , barn and

...

eQuipment shed . Knee deep
grass all o~Jer Plenty of
spring water for stocK .
Good l encing .
11 67

GOOD INIIESTMENT OR
RENTAL PR OPERTY
owner will help l inance
this 12 acres, more or tess ,
of vacant land . Possible
hookup for 2 mobile homes .
Close to mines
N119

CENTURY 21
BUILDING LOTS
INVESTMENT
Almost f our green acres,
loca ted on St . Rl . 77S . over
600 ft . road frontage. Rural
N 142
water available.

II ACRES
MUST SELL
IMMEDlATEL Y
Bui lt in kitchen, 0 R.. L. R.•
4 or 5 B R 0-Nner says
totally insulated . Alum .
sid ing , 2 nice fi rep laces.
Iorge yar d. barn , BOO lb.
tobacco base . stacKed
pond. good wood lot . Ide~ I
for kee p in g horses or
cat l le .
Mu ch
more
Black fop rd. Harrison Twp.
$40,000.
No. lSI

CENTURY 21

SMALL FARM SITE
27 acres , toba cco base,
rural water, crty schools, 4
mites from Gall ipolis on
bl ack top road, super loca ·
!ton and buy - won ' t last
long ,
N 103

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

GALLI POLIS SCHOOLS
12 ACRE LOT
Coun ty wa t er, welt fenced,
creek runs tnrough the
land ,
tnree excelle nt
building sites All at a very
resonable price .
N ISS

WANTED : NEW
OWN E R- S1l,OOO
Lei's sel l lh ls outstanding
fa rm . Top condition and
production Is here. Ready
lo make you money and a
lorm to be proud of . Level
t illable land, clean pasture
fields , tobacco
bue ,
moder n remodeled house,
barn and machinery shed .
It ' s all here. You ca n belhe
ne)( t owner . 92 acres . II 108

SPRING SPECIAL
15 acres, smal! pond and a
strong spring tor water, ap·
pro&lt; . 970 lOs. toba cco. 2 ·
bldgs. Pri ced l o sell. 1 118

CENTURY 11
ACREAGE
55 acres of roll ing ground
suitable for bldg . Lot s of·
pa sture. Line fences r e1
9000.
I 136

ASPRINGGARDEN
1S eager to bloom around
this lo~Jely home which of ·
ters 3 B. R .• bath, full base ·
ment , 2 car garage and den
for Dad. 2+ acres, rural
water , much more . Don 't
missthisone .
, 164

CENTURY 21
IMMACULATELY KEPT
HOME
N tee home features 3
bedrooms ,
c oni ca l
ltrep:i\ce , si tting on good
size lvt, ver y tastefully
decorated . Has an above
th e ground swimm 1ng pool.
Buy th 1s home and you 'll be
readY for tne hot summer '
days! CALL NOW FOR
MORE
I NFORMATO N
AND AN APPOI NTMENT!
Nl37

CENTURY 21
EXQUISITE HOME
Beautiful 5.73 acres, some
woodland Is the selling for
this grac1ous br ick home, 3
or 4 bedrooms, l1J2 bath,
modern bu i\ t .i n kitchen
with several nice cabinets,
family room with w.b.f.,
full basement wdh a
canning kitchen . Thts
spacious home has a 2 car
garage with automat i c
opener . Central air , large
nice back patio, concrele
drive . Also a shop or ex tra
garage !1. an alum . bldg.
w1fh shed . This is a qual ity
bu il t &amp; immacu lately kep t
home . Lovely fl owers &amp;
landscaping . Many, many
extras . Pictures or words
cannot describe th is home .
You must see it! No. 168

CENTUR'I' 21
RIVER VIEW
Located 3 miles below
Gall ipolis on St. R1. 7, story
' and half . tr ame , 3
bed roo ms, double car
gar age . Also hs ren tal pro
perry with it C1fY school
aisl . GOOD INVEST ·
MENT! N139

CENTURY 21
GOOD BUY

33ACRE FARM
4 rm . house, 12' x 50' mobile
nome , 2 drilled wells ,
stocked larm pond . Most ol
the land lays wel l, could be
used many ways. Extra
mobil e home hook"p and
septic tank on another good.
location. Raccoon Two. No. 110

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

MOBILE HOMES

~

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

ftODNEY AREA - 160 acres. 100 acres pasture &amp;
tropland, coal &amp; llmnfone reported. near proposed
U.S. JS, good lnve•lment property. $100 ,000.

TWO STORY HOUSE
Modern built in kitchen ,
ba th . Hous e in good
condition . garage , good
level eKira lot wifh block .
bldg . Worth its mo ney
$18.000. Bidwel l, Oh io. No. 112

CENTURY 21

BUY - 1/ery ni ce 1972 Globemasl er
home, has 2 bedrooms, bath with shower,
· re, block foundat ion , •!7 acr e level land ,
ioc:al &lt;&gt;&lt; on Clark Chur ch Rd . close to Porter, $13,500.
HOME WITH RENTAL - Buy thi s 3 bedroom home
w1 t h bath, dining roo m, enclosed back porch and let t he
rent fr om a 2 bedroom garage apartment help make
vour payment . Good loca tion m town, $3-4,000.

•

CENTURY 21

Bonnie Stutes
Evenings
'4 6-288S

LIVING - This nice brick home has 3
be,dro•om,s. w ife approved kitchen , lar ge family room
W.B. fireplace, patio, 1 ca r garage , good barn ,
loca ted on 4 acres of nice rollin g land (10 add . acres
available) close to Thurman . Let us show you t his fine
home tod ay. Good buy lor $69.000 .
EW LISTING - Good 2 story home with 3 bedrooms.
th and la rge l 1ving room . Property has a barn and
outbuild ings. Has 6 acres with n1ce ga rden space
ted on St. Rt . 160. House needs repa ir , but Is a steal
$15,500 .

BEAUTIFUL RIVER VIEW
ThiS 3 bedr oom mobi le home si ts high and
l.i"V on 1.523 ac r es and overlooks the OhiO
River . Spend evenings f1sh1ng or just en ·
joying th e scenery fro m the front porch .
Th1s property won ' t last tong as $\1 ,500!
Ca ll for an appoi nt ment today 1
17tt

RESIDENTIAL

FUL BI·LEIIEL - Priced to sell , this lovely
home has 3 bedrooms, 1 fu ll bath and two 'h baths, fu lly
ca rpeted , wife approved Kitchen, large family room
with lovely brick firepla ce, located on Jf• acre nice level
Al l th is for $4S,OOO. Better hurrv.

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associate
PASTURE FARM FOR
RENT
Located
Morgan Town sh1p ,
acr es. pond , STROUT
REALTY , 4460b08.

446-661 0

1218 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

2 ACRESCLEAN
LEVELLA ND
Shor t diste~nce north of
Gall1polt~ Gi!llia Co. Rural
Water tm e in fron t of th is pro·
perry . Blackrop road . Al l
m1ne ra l ri ghts goes. ALL
LEVELS. LOTS OF USES .
8 ACPES
LEIIEL LAND
Beauti ful land w1th lots .or
pme!» and two road tron tge.
411 miles from Meigs Coun ·
ty M ine No
I · Good
build tng si tes and rura l
water l ap pa id for . CALL

This ad

A. Nibert. Realtor-446·4672
Bonnie Stutes, Assoc.-446· 2885
Merrill Carter, Assoc. -379·21 84
James Stutes, Assoc.-446·2885

~

NOW .

1.2 ACRES ON 188

WLTOR

23 LOCUST STREET

.r.rthur

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
855 SECOND AVENUE
GALLI POLIS, OHIO ,

LOVE LY SPLIT LEVEL - Localed in an
excel len ! ne1ghbornood lhts line home 1n
eludes an a11rac11ve famtiy room , 3
bl~dr ooms, J1 2 baths &amp; WIIC appr oved kit
Chl.'n There 1S also cen tral a1r , a large 2
cat gclri'HIC and n1ce Jay Dr1ve yard.
552.100

IB

-

PhyUis
Willis T.
Loveday
Leadingham
Realtor Associate ·
Realtor
Ph. Home 245-91
Ph. Home 446-9539
GalliR County's Fastest Growing Real EstBte Agenc)

We N.eed Your Home or Farm To Sell

~.ii::&amp;Jf.ii;iig-g;F :;:::- ~- -·-

CENTURY 71
BEEF FARM
118 ac: res, over 40 acres
level ti ll able land . the rest
is pasture and woodland .
Tobacco base, 6 room
~ouse, good barn. other
outbufldings. Selling below
• 1o·~
today's market.

160 ACRE BEEF
CATTLE FARM
Cattle prices are took ing
up. Lo1s of past ure , ptenh
water , some good timber .
Owner.savs sell no~ . fl 14S

CENTURY 21
GENERAL FARM
Loca t ed off Stat e Rl . 325,
Perry Twp , 52 acres .
Ti l lable land , pasture and
some wooded a r ea . Modern
6 room house and barn
Over eoo lbs. tobacco base .
PRICEDTOSELL!
N144

CENTURY 21

100 acres, Harrison Twp.
Pasture land , to bacc o
base, coal rights, 1imber
and ni ce wooded area tor
lOIS . 1972 12'x60' mobile
nome already in place . Can
be purchased with
or
without mobile home . Sell ·
ing price on l y $30,000 . N 175

CENTURY 21
MOBILE HOME COURT
4 Hom ette mobile homes,

11'KS2 ' . 2 B.R., total elec·
!ric , all f urnished, all
ren ted , located on Old 160
at Evergreen . GOOd condi ·
Tion , very aflracti ve set·
ling, profitable investment .
$32,000.
N171

A LOVELY COUNTRY

HOME ANDBACRE S
Story and a halt completely
remode led tnside and out .
Lot t&gt;arn , garage, hay shed,
cmd coal utility b ldg 1t's
rust raps lor the money!
Call for more det6 ils TO
DAY ! $28.900
1122

19ACRE5
CLAY TOWNSHIP
House, 2 barns, lobacco
base , very scenic area, 2
be•utiful lakes, stocked
with f iSh. Excellent for
fishing, boating or hunting .
Jusl good living .
i 161

MOBILE HOME yAI\AGf
.BB acres, more or less, 2
bedrooms, living room ,
modern bullt·in kitchen ,
large 2 car garage &amp; tool
shed . very nice setting, lots
of
nic e
la ndscap i ng ,
located al Kerr .
# 169

. .

CENTURY 21
SPECIAL SECLUSION
130 acres wooded se tt ing
tor th is new fully equipped
home - has farm build ings
Includ ing second home all
an
drive from Ga~Jir

.

CENTURY '2 1
.

1973 MOBILE HOME
Located in Rappsburg . 5
rooms. 3 B.R., un~er ·
sk.irted . LOOks very n•ce!
Pnced reasonable .
W l 11

CENTURY 21

CENTURY 21

. .

CENTURY 21

69 acres on
Rt . 32S and
Cora Mill Rd .. 8 roorns.
Form well fenced . Good
outbuild ings, 3S acres level'.
tlllble land Much more.

1134

"We're The Neighborhood Professi9nals"

CENTURY 21
MOBILE HOME COUR 1
Three good mobile home5
located close to ci t y. Owner
will sell with smal l down
payment &amp; land contrac t to
any qu al ified buyer . CALL
TODAY!
.
1133

I'

CENTUR Y .'1
'
DOUBLE
WIDE
MOBILE HOME
rooms, J bedrooms. 2
baths, complete kllchen,
cen1ral air, water tap, very
cozy . Si tting on 2 lov•IY
acres located o11 from
Bulavllle Porter Rd.o I 129

e

�D-8- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, Sunday, June 25. 1978

le aders
and
Council
President George Forbes has
fou ght
tl)e
mayor's
legislative efforts.
" Dur ing Wat e r gate .
Americ a witnessed the
tyrann y of the executive
branch," Kucini ch sa1 d.
''Now , locally. we have the
tyranny of the legislative
CLE VELAND ( UPI ) - branch. "
Mayor Dennis Kucini ch
The 31-year-o ld ma yor and
bega n cam paigning ha rd his sta ff said they are
Saturday to keep the office he co nfident the vote rs will
won in November. billing decide to retain Kucinich.
himself as "The People 's
"Recalls have a way of
Mayor."
boomeranging ," sa id the
Having decided to abandon mavor 's executive secretary ,
his court challenges of the Robert Weissman. "I've seen
recall campaign mounted no evidence of any of our
aga inst him, Kucinich has support eroding.
laken the offensive. He said
"The people who voted for
he will campaign against big us in November will vote for
business, city council and the us again. And a substantial
leader s of the recall percentage of those who
movement.
voted against us will
The Ohio Supreme Court understand the outrageous
declined to hear the mayor's nature of the recall and will
ret'all appeal last week. In vote for us this time."
t•ffect , the state's top court
Weissman, accused of
upheld a 2-1 decision that being arrogant, tactl ess and
went against him in the Ohio ruthless in his role as hatchet
8th District Court of Appeals. man. for the mayor, was a
Cit v council will meet major reason for the recall
ThW.sday to set the date for campaign. The other major
th e recall vote, probably reason was the mayor's firin g
some time ea rly in August. of Ri chard Hongisto, th e
City council appears to be former sheriff of San
one of the mayor 's main
Francisco County , Calif. , as
targets. Councilman William police chief after only three
Sullivan was one of the reca II months .

Mayor, 31,
asks vote
in recall

~al ~

CEstate:•

BRIDGE

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Diamond defeats diamonds
NOR Til

+ Q10!l 7
¥ J \09 7'
• 84

He -won that firs t di a mond

and proceeded lo lead a

EAST
+ II .J :!

+ KB65 4

4
t II \0

K5

¥

• 8ij

• 9 5::!
+ KQ6

+ 1UfJ 7 5 ~
SOUTH

• 2
¥A Q :!
t K Q .I i (; :1
• AA ~

Vu lnerable : Ne ither
Dea ler : South
Ntlrth

Eas t

So.uth

I+

Pass

t•

It
H

P tt ~s

Pass

Pass

An

+4

Swiss team events.

ai1d Alm1 Sontag ·

lkn: is a nu.:c probl em for

1·uu n·"dc rs. llftc1· Wes t
ieods th(• four of s pudes
ag ;nnst Snul.h "s three dia :
rnorH.Is t'&lt;lrl yo u find a w ::ry to
dde~r t lh t· l'lllltract 'I
)~ 1 \' l'

you a hint Au.s-

t rali&lt;rrl lllle nu-tt lona lisl T im
St_•rt'S dul at tlw t ablt.• and
dt•c l;lrL·r h; 1d no c h ~llll ' l'

aJ,,UHnsl Tnn ·s pla y.
'l 1111 I\ on the f1rs t t r ick
w1tll the Jih'k of sp ad r s .
lil&lt;'n he i&lt;' d ba ck Ius ll1 " f
trumps

As long as they aren't used
f&lt;w ma jor national and world
championships we just love
them. They arc good fun fo r
ex pert to the veriest beginner a nd at the same time
arc a good test of everyone's

abilit y.
\; EW SI'A I' I: H E ~ H: Ili'H I SE ASSN

be answe1ed d acco mpamed
lJ ~
stampect self-addressed
('nvelopt:.~s
lf1e most mte restlflQ qu c s/1011!&gt; w1ll /Je used m
tll/ ll t'."

wr/1 rPce 1ve

oi .JACOBt MODERN )

SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1978 - 2:00 P.M.
Location : From Gatlipotis fotlow Route 7 to Junction
218 follow 21B for 16 miles and turn left on Hannan
Tr~ce Road and go 2 miles turn \ell on Sowards Ridge .
The fotlowing witt be offered :
HOUSEHOLD : 1 beds, 3 dressers , coffee table. l erd
tabl es. sewi ng machi ne, 2 kitchen ta bles, 9xl2 wool
r ug, washi ng machine (wringer type ), wood cook
stove, kdc hcn ca b1nct, hcar,ng sTove, trui1 ia rs, and
omer odd s and en ds.

MACHINERY : Ford Ferguson tra ctor , 3 pt. disc. HD
disc

smal l manure spreader , 2 wheel tra iler ,
Dea~born sc raper , 2- 14" plows, H O mowing mach ine.
HO wagon, 1 horse sled. HD hay rake. HD corn planter ,
smal l tabl e saw , toba cco press. hillside plow and oth er
plows r~nd numerous hand tools and miscellaneous
items .

TERMS : CASH

GILBERT JOHNSON,
OWNER
AUCTIONEER- LEE JOHNSON
CROWN CITY - 256-6740

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

Crow~s

Family
Restaurant
Pomeroy, Ohio

A 64 oz. bottle of RC and a
frisbee with the purchase of
any bucket, barrel or family

·c,eto

\(S 1-''~~...rtt a

se?'P'--

TRY OUR ALL NEW
DRIVE THRU WINDOW

I

1Do 1 ou f1a ve a Qllf'SI10n fo r
tfl(' e 1. oerts ' Wute
Ask the
E ~ tJCIIS
.;are o f nus ne wsoapel lndmrJual QueS ftOnS wJif

PUBLIC SALE

GREAT SERVICE! GREAT CHICKEN!

KHOEHLER
LIVING ROOM SUITES

ever yone from the greatest

lfi1S t·oi umn t1 11d

Afl f'r th1s frrw lr ad .':oiouth

valu pale

were Gordon Downard, first;
Tim Toth, second, and Glen
Jeffers, third. in ,the Mod-50
heat ; Mike Combs, first; Bill
Brown, second, and Kenneth
Au, third, in the s-J class;
and Downard, first; Au,
second , and Combs, third, in
the Mod-100 and Mod·U
division . Downard also
placed first in all three
classes in the 10 lap race with
Browne taking first in the S·J
class and Zi!U(y Klemens
placing .second. Jeffers
placed second. in the Mod-50
division in that race.
A new twist· was added to
the power boat show this year

when canoe races were held
between heals.
Steve Peters of Mason
rowed to a first place finish in
that race, with Kevin Wolfe
and Perk Aull bringing their
canoe in for second. Rowing
with Peters was Lewis
Peters. Trophies were
awarded to those winners.
Officials for this year's
races were Bill Grueser and
Bill Quickie, co-chairmen ;
Walter Hayden , Ferndale,
Mi. , referee ; Max Beerman,
Springfield, inspector; and
Rosealene Au, Mansfield ,
Chief Scorer.
Quickie, who presented the

1700 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR AND OTIOMAN ........................... SALE *1278
1729 SOFA, TRADITIONAL OFF WHITE .......................................... SALE *566
11080 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRADITIONAL ........................................... SALE •877
sg98 SOFA &amp; CHAIR FLORAL, EARLY AMERICAN ......................... SALE *749
1750 SOFA &amp; CHAIR' EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID ............................ SALE '588
sg79 SOFA &amp; CHAIR: EARLY AMERICAN, VELVET FLORAL.. ............ SALE *666
1739 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, GREEN TWEED ............... SALE *533
1864 SOFA &amp;CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PlAID ........................... SALE *599
1815 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, VELVET FLORAL............... SALE *599
1749 SOFA AND CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, GREEN TWEED ............ SALE '549
11296 2 PC. SECTIONAL W/CORNER TABLE .............................. SALE •888
1767 LOVESEAT AND CHAIR, VINTYL PATCH ................................ SALE '444
1849 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL .......................... SALE *599
1779 SOFA AND CHAIR EARLY AM. PLAID .................................... SALE *588
11049 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, QUILTED VELVET ........... SALE '699
1779 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL ......................... SALE '588
'940 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TUXEDO STRIPE NYLON .............................. SALE •666
11098 SOFA &amp; ROCKER, FLORAL, EARLY AMERICAN .............. :...... SALE *177
1579 SOFA, TRADITIONAL ........................................................... SALE *444
'669 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN FLORAL .......'..................... SALE *511
1789 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN FLORAL ........................... SALE '599
1489 SOFA, TRADITIONAL, MATALASSL ....................................... SALE '369
1878 SOFA AND LOVESEAT, TRADITIONAL ..................... ;.............. SALE '599
11300 SOFA AND LOVESEAT, EARLY AM., GOLD TWEED ................. SALE '899
11203 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR, BROWN NAUGAHYDE .................... SALE '799
'947 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID ............................ SALE •747
SS95 SOFA, TRADITIONAL MATAiASSE .........................................SALE '499
1549 SOFA AND ROCKER, EARLY AM·, TWEED (McAfee) ................ SALE '422
1779 SOFA AND CHAIR EARLY AMERICAN TWEED ........................ SALE '479
'595 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN PLAID ............................. SALE '399
1879 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRADITIONAL VELVET FLORAL ....................... SALE *599
SS24 SOFA, TRADITIONAL, GOLD VELVET....................................... SALE •449
SS29 SOFA, TRADITIONAL, VELVET ............................................... SALE •449
1354 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL ........................... SALE '599
1898 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL .......................... SALE '699
11636 SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AM., PRINT. .............. SALE '1199
'961 SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT, MODERN, FLAME STITCH ....................... SALE •599
1549 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID (McAfee) ............... SALE '422
1774 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID ............................. SALE '599
11073 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR, TRAD. MATALASSE ........................ SALE '777
s2068 16-PC. PIT GROUP, RUST VELVET... ................................. SALE *1499
'982 SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT, TRAD~, VELVET ....................................... SALE '699
'684 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRAD., MATAI.ASSE.. ....................................SALE •499
11089 SECTIONAL3 PC. W/SLEEPER, MODERN ........................... SALE '666
SS98 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRAD·, MATALASSE ..................................... SALE '499
11087 SOFA &amp; 2 SWIVEL ROCKERS, OFF WHITE Trad.................... SALE '799

VOL XXIX NO. 50

OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

.;. ..........

SWEEPS THE RACE - Gordon Downard, in boat No.
4, took first place honors in the Mod SO, Mod 100 and Mod-

•

enttne

MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1978

U heats at Sunday afternoon's boat races . Here Downard
circles in front of the levee after winning the Mod-U race .

Central Ohio
man murdered
with a . 22~aliber Stoeger
Lu ger, the gun of Nazi
offic ers.
Police have had few clues
in their search for the killer,
although composite pictures
of three men seen near one
murder site have been made .
11le men are in Uleir 20's,
skinny and have long
strangly hai r. But poli ce
aren 't convinced they have
had anything to do with the
killings.
The cases began De e. 10,
when two women were found
shot to death outside Forker 's
Cafe in Newark. Karen P.
Dodnll , 33, and waitr ess
Joyce L. Vermill ion, 38, both
had their pocket books taken
before they were murdered.
Other victims incl ude :
Jerry ;., Martin . 47. and his
51-year-&lt;Jid wife Martha, of
north Columbus: Jenkin T.
Jones Sr., a 77-year-old man
known to keep large sums of
money in his back&lt;ountry
Li cking County home; the
Rev. Gerald Fields , 35, a
Baptist minister. killed while
working part time as a
securi ty guard at a private
club ; bar-owner Robert
McCann, his mother Dorothy,
and hi s go -go dancer
g irlfr iend Chr isti ne
Herdma n, 26 , kill ed in
MeCann's westside Columbus
home.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONTAUK, L.l. (UP)) Somewhere in the dark, cold
waters of the AUantic Ocean
the monster lurks - wounded
but powerful and deadly as
ever.
Today is the fourth day
fishermen will hunt and try to
kill the Great White shark
spotted last week off Montauk
oo the tip of Long Island.
SUnday, a fishennan said
he spotted a Great While
shark with a fresh wound
behind the dorsal fin . But, as
in two previous days of
hunting, the shark slipped
into the depths and out of
range of harpooners.
"All the boats came back
without capturing the fish ,"

dockmaster Tom Edwards "Cookie Two" that was
said at the Montauk Marine searching the waters nearby .
Basin, which is coordinating Murray's crew tried to bail
the shark hunt. "But they 'II the shark with chum, but had
be out again Monday (today ). no luck in keeping it nearby.
"Most of those going out ...
The crew of the "Cookie
are professional fishennen Two," a 42-foot, deep-sea
and I know more of them are boat, tried to track the shark
planning to have harpoons with sonar equipment, but the
with them," he said.
fish was quickly out of range.
K.en Grimshaw , pilot of a The huge sharks can swim at
special "fish-spotting" plane ' speeds up to 40 mph .
that has been assisting scores
During the brief time the
of shark hunt ers in the mammoth shark lurked in the
search, spotted a shark 30 sun-glinted waters off s\armiles south off Montauk board, the crew spotted a
Polnt Sunday .
gash in his right side by the
"She's 500 yards to star- dorsal fin.
board, " Grimshaw shouted
Murray said the wound
over his radio to Edward appeared fresh, leading him
Murray. skipper of the and other fishermen to
believe the shark was the
same Great White that had
eluded hunters and their
harpoons since Friday.
Fishermen and touri•ts
poured during the weekend
into Montauk, a resort on the
tip of Long Island, hoping for
even a glimpse of the fish that
KINSHASA, Zaire (UP!) - Zaire is seeking military help is estimated to be 30 feet long
from China and has ma~ a first move toward liberalizing its and weigh 5,000 pounds.
govenunent by proposing an amnesty for an estimated half a
"There hasn 't been this
mlllinn refugee~ living abroad.
much excitement out here
Ol!oeae Deputy Defenae Minister Gen. Chi Hoa-Tien and
his 11-man delegation, which arrived Saturday night, started a since that New Jersey folia
caught that giant shark last
week rJ. talks with Zairean government officials Sunday.
year," one commercial
fishennan said as the flotilla
of boats headed out Sunday.

i~)_r_he_w_o_rl_d_To_cl_a_y_
Zaire seeks Chinese help

1J. S. dollar continues fall

LONOON (UP! )- The U. S. dollar fell to another postwar
low in Tokyo today and slipped on most European markets. ·
Gold also dropped, going from $185.875 an ounce in Zurich
at Friday's close to $1114.875 at today's opening. In London the
metal fell from $186.125 to $1114.75.
In Tokyo lhe dollar ended the day at 206 .5 yen, down from
209.85 and the lowest postwar closing rate.

Fire resulls in

I

THIS Dimensional first place frog art entry in the Grand Croakers Division , done by
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja , was presented to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crow Sunday afternoon for use in
the Frog Room of their Syracuse residence. Making the presentation was Mrs. Pat Holter,
r.n-chalrman oi the annual Frog Art Contest of the Big Bend Regatta .

Deputies
probing
complaints

Tornadoes hit Midwest
United Press International
Tornadoes, torrential rains
and flash floods have
pounded the upper Midwest,
inflicting heavy damage from
the Dakotas through Indiana .
At least one person was
killed and more than a dozen
injured in the violent weather
Sunday.
A tornado tore through the
Nebraska Panhandle town of
Gordon, injuring at least six
persons
and
causing
hundreds of thousands
dollars in damage lo
buildings and homes.
High winds swept through
Indianapolis' northwest side,
heavily damaging three
apartment co mplex es and
causing some minor injW"ies .
South Dakota Gov. Richard
Kneip is sued disaster
decla rati ons
for
fo ur

Meigs Cou nty Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reported his
department is investigating
the theft of saddles and tack
HARRISONVILLE - The taken between Tuesday and 4
modular home of Bessie p.m. Sunday.
SOUTHGATE, Ky. (UP!) - A new chief heads the Graham located east of here
John Cline, Rl. I, ReedsvoiWlteer fire departrpent that one year ago fought the Beverly oo Route 143, was heavily ville, told deputies his 1969
Rills Supper Club fire .
damaged when it was struck Del Ray Camper had been
Assistant Chief Simon Jewell , a 11)-year veteran of the by fir e at 1:46 p.m. Sunday. ente red. Trophies, bell
department , was elected fire chief Friday night. He succeeds
The
Rutland
Fire buckle, coolest saddle, and
Richard Riesenberg, who vacated the post earlier this month . Department reported the show saddle and other items
Riesenberg, fire chief when tbe May 28, 1977, Supper Club interior of the heme was were
m1ssmg .
Cline
fire raged, said he was quitting wiUtoul animosity, "but I've engulfed in flames when the estiamted the loss at $1,258.
had my fill of eating smoke."
department arrived. There
Sunday afternoon deputies
was no one at home at tbe were called to Chester after a
time of the fire and cause has Chester resident caught two
not been determined . The juveniles attempting to steal
SAGAMORE HILLS, Ohio (UP I) - Dr. Timothy Moritz, Pomeroy Fire Department a motorcycle.
·
Upon in ves tigation,
director of the state Department of Mental Health and Mental assisted.
deputies
found that the 12
Retardation, says lhe stale wants to drop plans to build a
year-old
and 13 year-old
ho!!pital for the criminally insane in Sagamore Hills.
SPEAKS TIJESDA Y
youths
were
walkaways from
Moritz says the state would rather place two or more
Matthew Palmer of the
!.akin
State
Hospital. They
Bmaller maximum security centers in northeastern Ohio .
Public Utilities Commission
Moritz told a group Saturday in Sagamore Hills that the of Columbus, will be the guest were return ed to Lakin.
state wUl have to ask the Fedetal Court in Akron for speaker at the Middleport Saturday afternoon, deputies
United Press lnterualioaal
perrnissioo to drop the Sagamore Hills building proposal Chamber of Commerce took a theft report from
At least 14 people were
James
Rohrbaugh,
Rt.
3,
because It would be up to the court to change its order lhatthe meeting Tuesday at6:30 p.m.
killed in traffic accidents
(Continued
on
page
10)
state must Improve its mental health facilities .
at the Meigs Inn .
around Ohio during th e
weekend, including tw o
victims who lost their lives in
mishaps on private roadways.
One person died Friday
night, seven Saturday and
four Sunday, according to the
Ohio Highway Patrol, which
counts fatalities from 6 p.m.
Friday until midnight Sunday
each nooholiday weekend.
Not included in the patrol
count was a motorcycle accident on the Ohio State

heavy damage

Southgate has new chief

Hospital plans dropped

counties , three hit by
tornadoes Saturday night and
one lashed by winds up to 110
mph Sunday. Damage was
estintated at $2 .5 to $3
million. Several farm
building complexes were
destroyed by ttie twisters, but
there were no ser ious
injuries. A honte wa s
destroyed by the high winds
in Springfield .
In north-ce ntral Illinois,
pounding rains, lightning and
severe winds combined to
cause an estimated $1.25
million in damages in
Livingston County. At least
seven funnel clouds were
sighted , four of them in the
Chatsworth area . The high
winds destroyed one home
and ripped the roofs from the
post office and a plumbing
company . There were no

reports of inju ries .
In l.ee Coun ty , IlL , an 1Myea r-old woman whose
daughter 's car stalled on a
rain-slick road and veered
into a draina ge ditch,
drowned while trying to swim
to safety.
A spokesman for the Lee
County Sheriff"s Department
said numero us roads and
br idges were closed because
of heavy rain s and some
power outages had been
reported.
"It would be too numerous
to name all the roads cl osed,"
deputy Randy Jordan sa id.
~~ Ju st
say it's rain in ~
buckets."
In Gordon , Neb., a mobile
home was overturned and its
occupant slightly inj ured.
Auth orities sa id another
house trailer - staked with
teleph one poles driven four

14 die on Ohio highways

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

-'

. ..

.

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• ' \1

FREE ORIVERY

•
-A GRUDGE RACE - One of the derby events was a

8J'ud&amp;e race bit- Blmplq,e,llld Whirl-A-Way. Bimplne
II owned b)' 87bll Ebenbach and Whlri·A·Way II owned

.

b)' Georp Holllt.tter al Hoblletter Realty . Jocldes

feet into the ground - was
lifted and thrown 100 yards
down th e road .
About
150
ch ildren
evacua ted th e munici pal pool
moments before the twister
Uluched down.
Ben Sanders , who lived in
the trailer, li terally had to
cl ing for his life.
Sande rs said his daughter
woke him up when she saw
the twister a half mile away .
She ran out of the trailer, but
by the time Sanders could
leave, the tornad o was too
close . He said he put his arms
aroWld a tree while winds
from the twister stretched his
200-po und frame at a 9().
degree angle.
Winds up to 45 mph caused
a large plastic canopy over a
stage to collapse at a rock
concert ea rl y Sunday at the
Iron Horse Racewa ys 2 miles
north of Kearney, Neb.
Authorities said the group
performing at the time, The
Bachman Turner Overdrive,

dashed Off th e stage seconds
before the 8,500 square foot
cover and lighting equipment
came crashfng down in front
of 4,500 fa ns .

Fairgrounds, which loo k the
life of a Pennsylvania man,
and a one-tar crash near
Norwalk that killed a
Monroeville man.
Mark D. Huston, 20, Unionto\m, Pa., died Saturday
when the mot orcycle he was
operatin g crashed into
another motorcycle at the
intersection of two unnamed
btreets on state fairgrounds.
Two other peopl e were
injured in that accident.
Paul B. Smith, 64, of
Monroeville, died Saturday In
a one-&lt;:ar mishap on private
property north of Norwa lk.

There were two double
fatality accidents during the
weekend , both of which occurred on public roadways.
A van went out of control
and rolled over several times
on Interstate 270 north of
Columbus Saturday, killing
two Cleveland residents and
injuring seven other people in
the vehicle.
Quincy Cancelsllor, 26, died
after being thrown out of the
van and striking a guardrail
about )(I fe el from where the
vehicle came to rest on its
side on the median. Maggie
A very successful tourHulbert, 66, died Sunday in nament wa s held at the
University Hos pital from Pomeroy Golf Course Sun·
injuries suffered in lhe same day . Other s are planned
accident.
through out the summer .
Two Cincinnati residents lnfonnation can be obtained
lost their lives Sunday when by calling or contacting John
their ca r crashed on Thoma s, manager, or John
Interstate 74 west of Teaford, course professional.
Cincinnati .
Uonel Boggs won low gross
touch their entries during the
honors by scoring a 70. First
(Continued on page li))
race, but they are allowed to
place low net was captured
prod them with a yardstick .
by Clyde Wright and Bernard
ln the distance event, Fritz
ISS'JE WARNING
Fultz had second place low
was named Ohio Stale
Syracuse Mayor Eber net.
Champion after he jumped 15 Pickens warned residents
Mik e Nesselroad won the
reel, 3'h inches. He was raced that people representing the longest drive and George
by John Weese of Racine, Church of Unirication, Harris won the longest putt.
Ohio.
seeking donations , have not Don Mills and Roy Long each
The frog contests, which been given perSillisslon by won a new ~utter .
attracted 140 entries from village officials to solicit the
Fred Crow, Pomeroy at·
four states this year, are village.
torney. recently scored a hole
annual events sponsored by
Residents are asked, if in one at Pomeroy's fourth
the Ohio Society for approached , to contact hole. It wa s 152 yards and
Promotion of Bull Frogs, Mayor Pickens or any council witnessed by his partner,
Inc., Pomeroy .
members.
Dale Dutton,

Successful

tournament
concluded

Goodie's Goofer
wins frog crown

ASK ABOUT OUR CREDIT PLAN .

ELBERFELDS -IN POMEROY

-

Highs today and Tuesday in
the upper 80s or lower 90s and
.lows tonight between 70 and
75.
Probability
of
precipitation Is 60 percent
today and 30 percent tonight
and Tuesday.

Shark hunt continues

1

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 8

Weather

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,,

awards, extended his thanks
on behalf of the Chamber to
local media personel, · the
Lorraine Boat Club·, the
Akron Boating Association,
and various other commun.ity
members who helped to make
the '78 races a success.

•

e

Americetn Contract

Bridge League offi cial has
asked us what we think of

·- - - - - - - - - - - '
lh• Oswald .la r ob\'

We' ll

made the proper shift to the
lU of clubs. Declarer ducked.
But it was no problem at all
for Roelof Smilde, sittmg
West. to take his queen and
lead ba ck .the king to
smother dummy 's jack so
that Tim 's nine of clubs and·
Roc Iof' s king of hea rts were
good for the last two decisive
tricks.
liood play looks easy. but

Over loo persons turned out
to cheer on members of the
Lorraine, Ohio, Power Boat
Oub, hosts for the annual
Regatta Power Boat Races
Sunday afternoon at the
Pomeroy levee.
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce awarded cash
prizes to winners in each of
the four heats and the ten lap
race for boats in all divisions.
First pla ce .finishers
received ~ . second place
$25, and third place · $15.
Winners In the len lap race
received $50 for first place
and $40 for second place.
Taking home the money

it sure pays off.

Wt•s t

Oprning lead :

hi ~h

diamond back . Now Tim
was in with the a cr a nd

• J :!
WEST

••

\ee\

SUMME" FURNITURE SALE

had to lose two clubs and one
trick in each other suit.
He madC a valiant effort.

DoWnard.capt:ures .h.o. at race

Saturday were, left 1o right, Hobstetter and Fred Crow .
Hobltetter's Whiri·A-Way won easily over Bimpine,
ending a dl1p11te over a three year period.

A Licking County man
prodded his frog with a
yardstick to win the National
Frog Derby at an annual
c'Ontest during the weekend.
Goodie's Gooier, owned
and jockeyed by John Goodin
of Granville, leaped around a
20-foot circular track In 24
~onds to win the crown .
A native Meigs County
frog , Delight Dame, came in
second.
The derby is the onl y timed
frog race in the co untry.
Jockeys arc nul permil!cd tu

•I

J

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