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12- The

Daily

Scntind , Middlcpo1·t-Punwroy,

~· ndiiy,

0 ..

Sept.

14.

Teams working in a steady
rai.n found the bodv of a ;,.
yea r-o ld boy' among tall
weeks on the bank . of fl ood·

Soaking
rains
and
curiosity - seekers cornpound ed

miseries

prone Rock Cr eek in so uth-

for

central Arkansas flood
victims and thWJderstorms
threatened more flooding in
Texas and t he desert
Southwest today .
Officials searching lor vicu;;-,s of akiller flash flood in
cent ra l Ar ka nsas said
Thursday their efforts were
hampered by hundreds of
sightseers gawking at the
devastation.
"It 's almost unbelievable
the number of people out
here,' ' said police Lt. Ed
Eth ridge . "The s ightseer s
are just clogging things up.
We're hav ing to threaten
them with arrest to get them
to lea\•e."
At least 10 people were
killed near Little Rock . One
weather-related death was
reported in Texas and one in
Ind iana .
Damage
in
Arkansas and Texas was
estimated in the millions of
dollars.

west Little Rock. Eight of the
victims. five of them age 10 or
below, drowned in the Rock
Cree k area. Two others.
brothers, 4 and 7, drowned in
Benton. about 20 miles from
Little Rock . Little Rock
police said there were four
persons still missing.
•
Wre c k e r s · pulled
submerged cars out of the
creek . ~uba divers reported
no people were inside 15
submerged ca rs that had
been swept from a bridge into
the creek.
Up to 13 inches of rain was
officially recorded in parts of
sou thw es t Little Rock,
triggering the mas sive
flooding Wednesda y that
required police to take to ·
boats to evacua te many
residential ar eas .

Car l Lan ders of the
Nationa l Weather Serv ice.
who has lived in Little Roc k
since 1945, called it the most

destructive central Arkansas
flood in decades.
" It 's the worst l can
remember," Landers said.
" For one thing, there used
not to be so many houses out
there (in the Rock O'eek
area ). Nowthereareso many
people living out in that flood

By DANIEL F. GILMORE

WASHINGTON (UP!) House investigators today
had a new mystery in their
in vestigation of · John F.
Kennedy 's assassination identity of the writers of a
Russian phrase and other
notations on the back of a
photograph . or Lee Harvey
Oswald flaunti,ng his rifle and
pistol.
The photograph, with a
dedication by Oswald in English
to
George
de
· Mohrenschildt and the
never ~en by the Warren
CommisSion, which concluded in 1964 that Oswald
alone had killed the president
on Nov. 22, 1963.
Now , 15 years later, the
strangely inscribed picture is
being analyzed by experts
commissioned by the House
Assassinations Committee.
The l'icture was brought up
after Oswald's widow ended
two days of testimony under
oath, concluding that she

.

r-~-----Our Interest is
Greater' For You

5.75%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit .
$500.00
Min imum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.

pomeroy

A substantial penalty is

invoked on all certificate

nationa
bank

accounts withdrawn prior
to the date of maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch

the bank of
the century
established 1872

~)

'--o/

The

Athens County

SavinGS &amp; loan Co.

w. Main St .

Pomeroy. Ohio

FSIJC

---~-

FUTURA STONE

COMES TO MEIGS-GALLIA-MASON AREA
It 's th e newest dimension in outdoor su rfa ce coveri ng w it h national
and Interna t io nal accep tance.

BEAUTIFY ANY RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL AREA

Ideal For:
•LOBBIES
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•WALKWAYS
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It Eliminates:
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•STANDING WATER

•MILDEW

UTU
STONE

REG.

T~ADE

•DISCOLORATION
AND UNSIGHTLY
SURFACES

MARK

II

II

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

! Area Deaths !
I

I

LENA PICKENS
Pickens, Mason; two half·
Lena Franklin Pickens, 89, sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Rust,
Mason, died this morning at Charleston ; Mrs. Evelyn
· the Wellston Nursing Home, Williams, Miami, Fla.; one
Wellston . She was born Oct. half-brother, William Rust,
24, 1889, Nitro, w. Va . to the Charleston;
II
grand·
late Albert and Carrie Frank· c hildren;
35 _ great·
lin Rust .
grandchildren and 13 great •
She was preceded in death great · grandchildren.
by her husband, Todd M. . Funeral services will be
Pickens in 1946. She attended held Sunday 2 p.m. at the
the Mason United Methodist Foglesong Funeral Home
Church and was a member of with the Rev . John Wildman
the SFR Class.
officiating. Burial will be in
. Survivors include one son the Robinson C~metery al
Samuel
G.
Pick.ens: Chester, 0.
Pomeroy ; one daughter, Mrs.
Friends may call Saturday
Ruth Musser, Athens ; one 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
daughter-in-law , Mrs. Mabel funeral home .

Diabetes forum set
The American Diabetes
Ass oc iation , Southeastern
Ohio Chapter, is sponsoring a
public forum on diabetes on
September 21 at the First
Christian Church at 3000
Dresden Rd ., · Zanesville.
Registration will be held
from 6 to 6:30 p.m.
Guest speaker will be Dr.
Robert Dorff.
Dr. Dorff graduated from
medical school from George
Washington University and
completed his residency at
Ohio State Uni versity

MILK RECALLED
CANTON, Ohio (UP! )
The Superior Dairy Co .,
Canton, announced today it is
recallin g all of its milk
products which carry an
expiration date of Sept. 23.
Officials of the Canton
Health, Department said the
milk carryi.ng that expiration
date has a high bacterial
level.
The milk was processed
Sept. II and Superior officials
said 85 percent of the milk
never reached the market.
Anybody having the milk in
question is urged to return it
to the store where the pur·
chase was made and a refund
or replacement will be
provided.

Hospital. He is currently
doing post-graduate work in
endocrinology at Ohio State
University Hospital. He will
conduct a mini-workshop on
juvenile diabetes and speak
on Diabetes Mellitus , an
overview .

Other

They also agreed that as
many as four other different
people could have Wlitten the
remarks.
These
other
i.ncluded the Russian phrase,
a notation in English,
"copyright G. de M., " and
initials and a date reading
"JJM 4-1-77."
None of the writings could
be ascribed to either Oswald,
Marina &lt;r De M~renschildt,
all of whom could write ·
Russian, he said.
Scientific analysis,
McNally said, showed !hat
the Russian Inscription
appeared to have been
painstakingly written over an
earlier pencilled version !hat
had either been partially
erased or had faded .
It was impossible to isolate
&lt;r identify the underlying
writing in cyrillic letters, he
said, but whoever traced over
it "did not know Russi•.n."
McNally said as many as
four different people may
have composed the various
writings on the back of the
photograph -Oswald for the
English inscription and the
date ; two unidentified
persons (&lt;riginal and tracer)
for the R,ussian language
phrase, and a different Wliter
for the 11Copyright" notation .
The experts' dismissed the
"JJM 4-1·77" notation, the
fifth on the back of ,the
picture, as the probable work
of a classifier, probably at the
Natiooal Archives.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Ross Kent,
Addison ; Nellie Price,
Middleport ; Jay Mitchell,
Mason.
·
Discharged - Thomas
Gibbs, Ottis Boston, Gayle
Olivet, Herbert Gilkey, Paul
Burton, Fanny Aleshire,
Jesse Swan, Denise QuaDs,
Darla White, Mary Davis,
Daisy Glassburn.

mtnl -

workshops to be conducted
are eating away £rom home,

skin care, uril:le testing, over
the counter drugs, and the
treatment of high and low
blood sugar.
A panel discussion will be
held. Participants on the
panel will be the workshop
leaders , Dr . Dorff and
diabetics from . our com·
munity . Displays will be set
up by various companies
producing products for
diabetic use, teaching
prog rams
from
Good
Samaritan Medical Center
and Bethesda Hospital, and
the Southeastern Ohio
Diabetic Chapter.
Urine testing will be
available . for non-diabetics
that are interested. There
will be no admission charged.

SERIOUSLY ILL
Word has been received
that Mrs. Peter Kracjovic,
mother of the Rev. Father
Bernard Kracjovic, formerly
pastor of Sacred Heart
Church In Pomeroy, is
seriously IU in Zanesville.
Cards may be sent to Mrs.
Kracjovic at St. John Medical
Center,
Rooin
612-S,
Steubenville, Ohio 43593.

A

••

Columbuo,
Oblo, • and
damaged 10111e homee near
Buckeye Lake.
M&lt;re !hap 2 inches of rain
feU in areas of soulhem
Indiana, producing some
flash flooding in low-lying

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday, fair lhrOUJih lhe
period, with highs in the 'Its
and early moraine low
temperatures
ranging
from the middle COs to lbe
middle Sk.

Tornado
damages
4 homes
United Press lnleriiiiUooal
A tornado touched down
near the Licking-Perry
county bocder in central Ohio
Thursday night, heavily
damaging at least four
homes, one restaurant and
two mobile homes, but no
injuries were rep&lt;rted.
The twister first blt the
Hillt.opper restaurant on Ohio
13 just south of Interstate 70,
according to Capt. Olaries
Pinney of the Ucklng County
Sheriff's Department.
The roof of the restaurant
was torn off, and a tractortrailer and a storage trailer
parked nearby were turned
over.
The tornado · then moved
north and heavily damaged
three homes at Dogwood
Lake Estates m U.S. 40 just
east of · Jacksontown. The
storm mov.ed northeast and
turned over two mobile
homes near Pleasant Olapel
Road and Davia Road in
Licking CoiUity.
Pinney said the tornado
apparently developed in
Perry County and moved
along Ohio 13 Into Licking
County acr01111 Buckeye Lake
and through th~ Avoodale
area.
Storms also dumped more
than an inch of rain at
StiUwell in !IDUthem Holmes
County, acccrdlng to a report
received by the NaUooal
Weather Service office at .
Cleveland.
An advancing cold front .
that triggered thursday 's
storms wa~ eJ:peeted to bring
clearing skies and slightly
cooler temperatures u it .
moved across !he state today.

MEMBER NAMED
Maxine Goegleln has been
appointed as a member of the
Meigs County Retardation
&amp;ard by Judge Manning D.
Webster, chairman. Mrs.
Goeglein fills the expired
term of Richard Chambers,
Webster reported.

.

MIDOLEPORT. QHIO 45760

NAME ...••.• ..•.•...•...........•..... ••...••.••••.••• ..•..•••••.••.••.••..

I

were sighted, but none :
touched down.
Behind the eastward •
II)Ovlng Midwest 1torma wu ·
a huge mau of cooler, drier
air that promiaed to bring
sunshine for the weekend.

(Continued from page I)
and the Ohio Department of
Economic · and Community
Development in ,Columbus,
This team Included: Davia
Garwood, Technical
AM!stance C&lt;Hlrdinator, Don
Phlillps, Program Planning
Specialist, Tom Mallery and
Chris Richards, Bureau of
Planning and Research.
Mike McMillan, Research
Associate· with the Com·
munity Research Forum of
the University of illinois also
addressed the group on
alternatives to secure
detention and planning
procedures.

(Continued from page I)
plane to Mrianna, Ark .,
where they landed on a dirt
road. They left Romine ·and
cammandeered a car driven
by a third hostage, Richard
Rutledge, 19, of Moro, Ark.,
aild drove away.
Police said the convicts
spent Wednesday night i.n the
home of John King In
Woodlawn, 40 miles northeast
of Little Rock, where they left
Rutledge tied to a bed the
next morning.
Police said Chism and
ip'ons fled ln the Kings' car,
tilklng them as hostages.
Bonds and Brewer drove
away in the Kings' pickup
truck and were captured at
Hoxie.

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

·-----------------------------------

market va lue, Condee's study confirmed
the state's eva luation figures.

Int ervie wed Friday Mrs. Condee
stated she then approached Tax Com·
missioner Robert Kinney, and negotiated a
"sizeable" decrease. in the ~1ate ordered
reappraisal percentages.

In applying those negotiated per·
centages to ,present property values,
Condee round that for real estate between

the range of $24,000 and $70,000 the tax
Increase would be between $20 and $40 per
year.
" I felt that such an increase in taxes
without the vote of the people was improper," Condee stated Friday, "so I
submitted my abstract showing no in·
!Continued on A-2 1

VOL 13
'

Jean Cooper
appomted to
commission
..
'&lt;I -~ · •

'

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•

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'.

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·~· \ "'

- ~ '

·,

.

.

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.

..

[,_,. ..

'

•

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'

THIS IRKSOME DETOUR on Route 33 near Burlingham
Is about to become a part of th~ past. The detour was put in

BY DALE ROTHGEB
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County's
Budget Commission, compooed of Auditor,
Mrs. Dorothy Condee; Treasurer, Frank
Mflls, Jr., and Prosecuting Attorney
Joseph L. Cain have ·approved budget
requests and set tax rateo for the various
taxing subdivisions In Gauta County.
According to a &amp;pdl.esman for the
budget commission, the county's
evaluation has been set at $402,1165,6111.
That includes $6!1,644,320 In real estate;
$16,474,640 In reevaluation .of properties;
$280,046,920 in public utiillies; another
$10,000,000 addition from the Gavin Plant
and t27 ,700,000 in personal property.
Based upon the rate of 3.40 ·mflls,
Gallla County's budget for the coming
year wao · set at ,1,389,743, The budget
requelled submitted totaled f! ,400,000.
AU
major budlleto,
tUJ.e
oubmilted by ... Gllllia Leeai, Galllpolil
City SciMoll ud Gailipolio Cltyllllewed •

TEXAS
INSTRUMENTS
INCORPORATED ,

Tl-30 STUDENT MATH KIT. ••••••••••••• '2115
,

deftdl
~~~·····
On tile
rate ot three tenths of. 1. mill,

GaiUa County'a 0.-al Hlllth D!Jirlct
wiU receive '1tltl,fl7 ond the 841 Mental
Healtb Board
two lentlto mill levy wiU

eldeal for students and professionals
• Does 52 calculator functions

• For children 5 years anq up.
•Eiectrofllc learning and a fun new way to learn.
• Plus AC· DC adapters and rtdlarttalllt llattwy kit a.

-

'\,; ... . .!
. ·.

which was to be replaced . The bridge Is completed and
sorfaced with only the stde protection remaining before it is
opened to traffic .
"

·Gallia 's evaluation
~· set at $402,865,880

FROM

set fl'l m.

Ill.

Gallaa County Locai'o Boar4 of
Education, upon the.tax rale oi1UO mUll,

ITUII ITOLEN

GAWPOUS- R. H. Wade, of the M.
T. Spline Co.,l'l» BullrD Ave., fiPOI'Iad
tht theft of toollllll a .-nor, nlaed at
.... lrom thl eompeny prvperty.
Aecordial 10 lbl nport, tht thtft
oecumd aomllllllt aft• t p.m. Prldily.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

. .

'

. . ' ,. ..

JUST RECEIVED

'

:

0

.

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wedoe~day, lair
Monday, with ·sho"·ers developing 1ate
Tuesday a_nd continuing Wednesday.
Highs will be moslly In th e 70s, wilh
lows in the 50S.

TO END MARRIAGE
Filing fo.r dissolution of a
marriage ln Meigs County
Common Pleas Court were
Argyle lloyd Deeter, Ri. 3,
Racine and Florence Eloise
Deeter, same address.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~·~

ROBERT CLARK, Ellamore, We st Virginia , will demonstrate the centuriesold tTaft of wooden farm tool making at the eighth Annual Bob Evans Farm
Festival Oct. 13, J4 and 15. He will be one of more than 100 early American craftsmen demonstrating their skills throughout the three.Qay Festival.

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

LICENSE ISSUED
A marriage license was
issued to David Alan Fife, 24 ,
Middleport, and Rosemarie
Dalene Colburn, 20, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy.

PTO MEETING
"Meet your teacher nillht"
will be observed at the
regular meeting of Cheater
PTO ~onday; Sept. 18, at
7:30p.m. at the grade school.

'

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1978

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 33

... . .".-h_.,.,.'

tntinti

tmts
:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

II

J

order.
Based upon the state requirement to
appraise property at 100 per cent of

+

several mmths ago to keep traffic from traveling a bridge

SERVICES CHANGED
Hysell Run Free Methodist
Church, Hysell Run Road,
mid-week services have been
changed from Thursday to
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.

citizen and tour RI'OIIIll to attend on
Friday, Oct.. 13. BU8CS ·can be best
accommodated m that date.
Festival hours are Friday 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and
Sunday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission
parking and entertainment are free. Th~
Bob Evans Farm Festival is the largest
free event of its kind in the country.
OVernight camping on the grounds wiU
be available with ·a one-lime $S service lee.
The Bob Evans Farm Is located in southeastern Ohio oo U. S. 35 between Jackson
and Gallipolis.

Auditor defies state order

Convicts

THE umE PROFESSOR ................ s1415

ADDRESS •... ..•. .......•.•......••... .......••••••.••....•....•. .. .. •.... . I
·
·
I
••••••••••••
•••••.
ZIP....................
1
CITY
I
! PHONE •••• •••••••••••.••.•••••••••• •.•.•.••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••

hoe.Qown.
RIO GRANDE , _ Fall brlnp not only 1970. He has always collected early- coun~y
Field
demma~atloos will feature
American farm topls and was "falclnated
crilp bree&amp;ea and gold-tinged leaves, but
Bradford's
border collies herding sheep;
acres of crops ready lor harvest . with the art ol making them." Through an horseshoeing ; sheep shearing; and trick
· America 'a first fanners and their lanJ.Ilies apprenticeship !piiiii!Ored by !he Smith·
The Olampionship Reno family
made preparatlms for the !oog winter sonian Metropolitan Museum , Clark mules.
wUI
pitch
horseshoes and· everyone Is
season each October . Crops were learned how to make .the .tools under· the invited to try their hand at lO(!rolllng.
harvested using horses and wooden farm museum's strict guidelines to assure
There is plenty of hearty farm cooking
tools, while wool was l!pUD and woven, and coo~ol of the quality and authenticity of at· the
Festival,' so every appetite can be
food enough to last during the cold weather the craft.
satisfied
whether it's a taste lor apple
Real coun~y entertainment Is oftered
was pre.-rved.
·
and
sausage
or cornbread and kettle·
cider
The country traditions of fall continue cootlnuoualy throuihout the three-day Bob cooked beans.
at the eighth Annual Bob Evans Farm Evans Farm Festival. Banjos, fiddles and
Festival officials urge school, senior
Festival Oct. 13, 14 and 1~ oo the Bob dulcimers bring back the soWJds of an old ·
Ewns Fann in Rio Grande.
Autwnn col&lt;rsln !he hillB and valleys oo
the 1,100&lt;lcre farm are at their best at
Festival llme. Tbe featured attractioo will
be over 100 early American craftomen
demmstrating pioneer skills. Festival·
goers will ace wooden.Wy makers and
BY LARRY EWING
the legisla(ure froze all voted millage and
candlemakers, .Uversmilha and blacl!·
GALLIPOLiS - County Auditor · ordered an update of evaluaiions .three
smiths, glass blowers arid logroUers.
Dorothy L. Condee has defied the order of years after reappraisaL
Accordi ng to Mrs. Co ndee,
A woodw&lt;rker by trade, Robert Clark the State Department of Tax Equaliz.ation
oiEUamore, West Virginia, will he making by submitting an evaluation of Gallia representatives from the Department of
wooden hand tools at the Festival. County property showing no percentage of Tax Equalization have been in the County
According to Clark, "The tools are the klnd increase in value for 1979.
Auditor's office about once a month for the
Mrs. Condee had bOen ordered, earlier · · past three years checking sales records,
early plooeers would h&amp;ve uaed, auch as
pltchf&lt;rks, rakes and shovels. They 're this year, to Increase the county's property and comparing those records with the
reproductioos of actual tools made and . value by an overall average of 39 percent, auditor's property record co rds.
used from the time of the Pilgrims to the as a result of the county's fir st three-year
Earlier this year , Con dee was ordered
1830s."
update for tax purposes.
to raise property evaluations throughout
During the Festival, visitors can
In 1972, the Ohio legislature enacted a tbe coWlty by the fo llowing p&lt;rcentages :
watch him start with a solid white oak 10(1 law calling for aU real estate to be ap- 50 per cent, agricultural land ; 20 per cent,
and eventually turn out the finished tool . praised at 100 per cent of market value, farm buildings ; 21 per cent, commercial
The mly aids Clerk uses in his tool and taxed at 35 per cent ofthat value.
and industrial property ; 45 per cent ,
making are a "shaving horse" to steady
When counties began their reappraisals residential.
the wood while he shapes and carves with there was such a drastic increase in taxes
At that time,- she )Yas directed to
a "draw knife,"
,
that the state decided to do an update conduct' A separate sa les ratio study to be
A wood furniture maker for years, every three years to offset the Impact of used as the basis for a confirmation, or dis·
Clark did not learn hand took making until' the legislation. In passing H.B, 920, in 1976, confirmation, of the state's evaluatiOn

Committee •••

1

l

Eighth annual Bob Evans Farm
Festival slated October ·1 3-15

..... Sev•al funnel cloudl

ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR •••••••••••••• '3000

BILL HACKETT · GEORGE HACKETT · DENNIS HACKETT
-------------·DR MAIL COUPON-------------,
93 7TH AVE.

to him that he was
"responsible" for
" inspiring" Oswald. The
coounittee was never able to
clarify what he meant.
Joseph P. McNally , commanding officer of the police
laboratory and a handwriting
expert in the district
attorney's office of New York
County, New Y&lt;rk, testified
that he and iwo other experts
analyzed the Russian and
English inscriptions oo the
picture of Oswald.
McNally said the experts
agreed unanl!nously that a
notation in English, reading
"To my friend Geor~e from
Lee Oswald" and the date
" 5-IV-63," was definitely
Wlitten by Oswald.

states..

SLIMLINE Tl-25 POCKET·

CALL 992-3886

FUTURA STONE OF MIDDLEPORT

believed the ex-Marine,
acting alone, killed Kennedy
because he was mentally
sick.
"I believe the man was
capable of doing such a
thing ," Mrs. Marina Oswald
Porter, now rerriarried and
living in Texas, told the
committee.
A murky figure with
reputed CIA ties, de
Mohrenschildt apparently
killed himself at the home of
a wealthy friend in Palm
Beach, Fla., in March of last
year as the House panel was
trying to trace him for "very
important testimony ."
A Dutch journalist friend
had told the committee De
Mohrenschildt had confided

• Carrying Case

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION AND FREE ESTIMATES.

I

-

southeastern

IA:Imatlo touched down eut of

• Ideal for High School . College and Career.

It is a be au tif u l wash srn oolh r ive r g r a ve l bon ded in a c lea r dur a bl e
,uperhard e xpos y . YO U MU ST SEE IT TO APPRECIATE IT'

I

were pnsted in parts of
Arizona, Utah and Nevada as
heavy thWlderstorms moved
!hr0ygl).
More
storms
were
scattered over a large area
from the lower Great Lakes
through the Ohio and
Tennessee Valleys ,and the

• Contains Tl -30 Calculator and owner's manual
• 224 page calculator book .

WHAT IS FUTURA STONE

I

Less serious flooding hit
South Texas, but . the NWS
posted flash.flQOd watches ln
several areas inundated by
rains in recent weeks. CUero,
about 100 miles southeast ol
San Antoolo, reccrded 41'.!

inches dnrlng a twn-bou,r
period Thursday. Flood
warnings were issued for the
Guadalupe River , which
fiows near CUero, and the San
Antonio River . But there
were no new reports ·of fiood
damage .
Flaah.flood watches also

'

Russian phrase " Hunter of·

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

plain, it was bound to
happen.u

Mystery photo was never
seen by Warren Commission

Fascists Ha Ha Ha! !!" was

Want some fina ncial help')
And good advice?
C om e to the p lace w here you're the bosf
We like doing thin gs your way.

j

1978

Rains, people compound Arkansas problem
United Press International

..

the same aslasl year, wtll receive ~,553 mills and all classified taxes.
less than the amount requested. Gallla's ·''
Gallia-Jackson-VInton Vocational
instde rate of 4.30 mills brlngs in f3,~,66! Board - 1.70 operating, .30 perinanent
and the voted rate olll.lO mills provides improvements. Same as last year.
$3,538,116lfor a total budgetoU5,933 447. In
Cheshire Twp. General rate .20; .40
addition, five tenths of a mill or fl62,417 inside. That is a slight Increase over last
will go toward claasroom facilities.
year.
Other township rates were as follows :
Originally, the board had requested
P,lfl2,000.
Addison Twp. - .80 General and .10
Gallipolis City Schools' Board of Rd. and Bridge and .10 Fire Levy.
Clay Twp. - 2.00 Fire Levy and .90
Education budget request was for
11,77~;000. However, the district's millage General.
of 3.10 inside and 22.48 voted will brlng in
Gallipolis Twp . .40 inside.
$1,727,231 or $47,769less than the request.
Green Twp.-.70 General and 1.00
The bond has .50 mills lor bond.
Fire Levy .
On a va!•Jatlon of $211,0'12,400, and a
Greenfield Twp. - 1.20 inside.
Guyan Twp. - .70 inside.
rate of 1.110 mills, the City of Gallipolis will
receive $53,336 that is an Increase of the
Harri son Twp. - .70.
city's requeat because of additional
Huntington Twp. - .90 inside.
Morgan Twp. - 1.10 inside.
.valuation added when the 413 acres was
aMexed.Sept. 14.
Ohio Twp.- .70 Inside a~d 1.00 lor the
Other budget rates were set as fire levy .
follows :
Perry Twp. 0 .70 mills inside.
Raccoon Twp. - .90 mills inside.
Gailia County Dlltrlct Library, .20
Walnut Twp. - .80 lnalde.
Rio Graode CommunitY College - 1.00
Fire fighters make
mills.
Rio Grande Village - .10 mills inside.
run early Saturday
Centervflle VIllage - .10 mills Inside.
Crown City Village - .40 mil".
GALUPOL!S - 11ie Galltjloiis City
Cheshire Villaae - .30 miUs . It was
Fin Department wao called to the scene of also detennined that the .30 llhown for the
1 crude oil fire Saturday, atl:ll a.m., on
toWIIIhlp in the road 'and bridp fund for
Pole Cat Rd., three-fourths of a mile west the current yeer lhoultl be removed from
of SR 7.
the vlllaprale.
According to the report, the fire beaan
Vinton VIUase - .10 miU.lnslde. Levy
when wind carried aas I~ to a hoi l'lllllinl in November for 2.50 mflls. No
11110ke . .ck.
action takt1t ptndlng outcome of election.
There waa no ~ of lpu ~urred
Gallla CoWlty - ,,48 mills.
durtna· thl llrt, 'lllklll OOCtll'n4 at • oU
Sprih&amp;field Twp. - .80, the same as
ooldlna tllllk OWIIIItl .., a.e Alll8r eo., tut year.
Cornfnl, 0 ..

t

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RIO GRANDE - The Governor's
Commission on Employ ment of the
Handicapped will have a loca l higher
education representative due to a recent
appointment.
Jean L. Cooper, coordinator of personnel
at Rio Grande College and Community
College, has been given a five·year
commission appointment by. Governor
Jam es A. Rhodes.
Ms. Cooper recently attended the first
orientation meeting of this 75 member
commission. The commission's primary
charge is to explore new avenues in
securing equal employment opportunities
for the handicapped citizens of Ohio.
111e state wide commission is divided
into twelve districts. Members respon·
slbiliUes include attendance at local
commission meetings and identiflcation or
activities designed to meet the overall
charge of the Governor .
A 1967 graduate of Rio Grande College,
Ms. Cooper received a bachelors of science
degree . In addition, she has received a
masters in interpersonal corrununications
from Ohio University. In 1975 Ms. Cooper
was honored wfth an honorary doctorate of
public service from Rio Grande.
,.[ I '

Voters to decide
issues Noven1ber 7
PUMEHOY -

Meigs Co unty vo ter s

In Syracuse, the millage on the levy
. renewal is being reduced from two miUs to
one mill and the renewa l would be for a
five year period.
.In Bedford To\\11Ship, voters will
decidt! whether malt beverages, wine and
mixed bevera~es will be sold for off
premise consl,lmption.
In Rutland Township, a .3 of one mill ,

Middleport Vi)lage voters will be faced
with a new one mill , five year levy , which,
if approved, would be used to provide
fund s for the purchase of a new fi re truck.
In Pomeroy VIllage a one mill, five
year levy for fire protection . is up for
renewal and in Syravuse Village a levy is

five ')'ear levy is up for renewal and that is
for fire protection . In Salisbury Township,
voters will be fa ced with a new one mill,
five year levy for maintenance and
operation of cemeteries and a new two
mill , five year levy fot dust control.
In Olive Township, electors will vote
on a new three mill, five year levy which
would also provide funds for dust control.

UTILITY BILLS COSTS UP
WASHINGTON 1UPI1- TI1e electric
and gas bills of Ameri can Cons umers shot
up a record $13.4 billion in 1977, according
to a survey released .Sa turday by Sens.
John Glenn. D-Ohio, and Edmund Muskie.
0-Maine.

The st udy said $il billion wa s added
automatically to the nation 's utilit y bills
through fuel adjustment clauses.
The survey found the 113 .4 billion
increase over 1976 was more than double
the total rise in utility bills from l94B to
1973.
The study was made by subcommittees chaired by the two senators
and by the Congressional Res.a rch Ser·
vice of the Library of Congress.

Stolen engine found ,
youth held in custody
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff
J ames J. Proffitt reports a nine and one·
half horsepower engine stolen from an oil
well in Gallia County, just across the
co unty line, has been recovered in Meigs
Co unty . A 16 year-&lt;Jld Rt. I Reedsville
youth has been taken into custody as a
resu lt of the investigation. The engine was
va lued under 11.000.
Carl Howell, county juvenile· officer
and deputies picked up the youth late
Friday night . Th~ youth was lodged in the
Meigs County Jail pending hearing.

"'' .A

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• •

OONS'I'Rut'l'ION work bepn Friday on the new
sanctuary aiGriCe United Metboct* Olurdl, GaUipolla. The ·
chw-ch llllllcre&amp;atlon app~ in Aucuat a ,1,1110,000 building

.,

up for renewal for fire protection.

will dccidt! the fate of one tax levy while
voters tn six subdivisions will vote on
issues within their areas at the Nov. 7
election.
All Meigs County voters wiH vote ~n a
new 1.25 mill, rive year tax levy whi ch
would provide money for a training center
and workshop for the menta lly retarded of
the co unty.

project, replacing an older sectim &lt;i the building destroyed
by llr~ m June 20, 1!177.

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4.04••

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-A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 17, 1978

Increase noted in
cutting of cables .

UONS - UGHTBULB SALE POSTER CONTEST WINNERS Winners of the 1978 Gallipolis Uons Club's aMual "Light.for.slght"
poster contest were announced Friday afternoon by James N. M. Davis,
em test chairman. They are, left to right, Kim Koby, 9, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Hennan Koby, 502 Oak Drive, Gallipolis, first place; Patricia
Camden, 10, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Camden, 284 State St.,
Gallipolis, second place; Jonetta Gilm9re, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John Gilmore, 558 Third Ave., Gallipolis, third place; Tina Hennesy, 9,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hennesy, 32 Evans Heights, Gallipolis,
fourth place and Brenda King, II, daughter of Atty. and Mrs. Hamlin

King, Gallipolis, fifth place. This year's winning JlOIIIer by Miss Koby

reads: "Uons, You Light Up My Ufe; You Give Me Hope ," and shows the
cartoon character "Snoopy" in tbe background almg with a pair of Uons
eyeglasses. Miss Koby is a fourth grade pupU In Mrs. Jean Bryan's
homeroom at Waohington Grade School. The winner and four runners-up
each received silver. dollars lot their efforts. The winning posters, along
with others wW be placed in windows cf several local business
establlsbments. advertising the Uons' 2'nd annual llghtbulb sale,
scheduled r.,onday through Thursday this week. Proceeda go toward the
purchase of eyeglasses lot needy school children In both the city and
county districts.

PLAN PUBLIC MEETINGS
PIKETON, Ohio (UP! ) .:. The federal
Energy Department will conduct public
meetings on the draft report of the
socioeconomic impact of construction and
operation of the centrifuge enrichment
plant here.
Both meetings will be in Wa~erly, one
this Thursday and the second Sept. 28.

Auditor•••
(Continued from A~! )
crease in value."
With her refusal to raise property
values at the county level, Condee places
the Department of Tax Equalization In the
position of having to Lssue an order

demanding that the auditor use the percentages it orders.
If a county auditor fails to comply with
an order of the Department of Tax
Equalization, Section 5715.24 of the Ohio
Revised Code, allows the state auditor to
withhold from the county 50 per cent of its
share in the distribution of state revenues.
"I will not institute these increases
until I'm directed to do so by a court order ," Condee said, "What happens next is
up to Columbus," she concluded.

GALUPOUS· - Bust ling actlvit Y
during this year's construction. season has
caused an upsurge in cuttmg of unde~ground telephone cable, according to
Ohio Bell.
h
. As a result, the company asks t at
m~ivlduals and companies doing major or
mmor e&lt;cavatlon work first call Its tollfr~
hotline number for the location of
boned phone lmes
"Scores of buiiding contractors every
·
·
year inadvertent!~ cut ~brough boned
telephone cable wh1le diggmg. As a result,
phone circuits linking hospitals, schools,
businesses and homes on occasion have .
been put out of serylce," said Ohio Bell's
B'll
·
1 Quickie
"A call t~ our toll-free number_ 1-800:162-2764 _ could make the difference between a wocking_ or non-wotklng
telephone," Quickie said.
Quickie said accidentally cut cable is
one of the thorniest problems Ohio Bell
faces in maintaining telephone service.
Since last April the 614 calling area,.
which includes Gallipolis and 13 other
towns, has averaged between 60 to 80
iacerated cables per month.
"Even though restoral efforts begin
immediately, and continue non-stop until
completion, it still takes our force
anywhere from several hours to a few
days, depending on the cable size,"
Quickie explained .
A cut cable exposes between 25 and

A.,'!-:-!~ .~~X Times-Sentinel, Sunday Sept. 17 1978
• &amp;.::~·:-&gt;:-:o:o:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~:·:·:·:·:·:·X·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-~;::::::::!;:::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::::~::::::::::::::::::~~
;:;;

;:f

2,700 telephone wlrell. Ellcb pllr nnut be !
lli.ted before the '
damaged cable can be put blldl Into '
rvl
· ~
se Sla:ing 8 telephme cable abo can cut
into ·your pocketbook, since the coat to ·
make repairs will be charged to the cutter.
"Ali people have to do is call us,"
Q ickl
id .. d ur crews will mark the
ti
e
sa
lacWties
1oca ons o ~~ri!t tel....,;.fte
.,.._,
with!~ range of their activities at no
charge "
Th u;u.free phone number is used by . '
e
.
Ohi~ ·.Bell in cooperation with the Ohio .
Uuhues Protection Service to receive .:
reports of all excavation affecting un.
derground utility ladllties.
Besides Ohio Bell, the service In this ..
state. Includes Cleveland Electric
mummating Com~ny, East Ohio Gas ·
Company, Amer1can , Telephone and
Telegraph Company s Long Lines
Department, Western Reserve Telephone .
Coolpany, Columbia Gu oi .Obio, Lorain
Telephone Company, SOHIO Pipe Line
and the sewer and waler departments of
Cleveland, Akron and Canton.
CaUed-ln reports are. sent to tJ!ese
comparues by t~letypewnter so that onderground facilities can be. located and ·
marked. ·
. "~~ would llke .~o have two days
not1ce, QUickie satd, but w~ usuaUy can
get someone to the location m just a few
hours if we have to."
apllced by band and

°

i

James introduces joint resolution
GALLIPOLIS - State a l)alanced federal budget.
The measure, H.J .R. 91,
Representative Ron James
( D-Proctorville ) ha s in- would, if passed, be Ohio's
troduced a joint resolution petition for a constitutional
petitioning Congress to call a convention. Twenty-three
constitutional convention lor states have already passed
the purpose of proposing an similar measures, and if two
amendment to the United thirds of the states (34) pass
States Constitution requlrinli such a resolution. ConRress

must call the convention.
"The resolution will tell
Congress that the Ohio
General Assembly is very
much concerned about inflation, and that we feel

. unrestrained federal spen- government just as the Ohio
ding is the real problem," Legislature must do for state
Representative James said. government.
"Spending more than you
James said he believes
take
In in is totally
Congress should balance the
Irresponsible,"
James embudget lor the federal
phasized.

...
CB SAID STOLEN
GALLIPOLIS - Dorothy Davis.
Gallipolis, reported the theft of a CB radio
from her vehicle to the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department Friday.
Aecording to the report the theft occurred on Texas Rd., between 6 p.m.
Thursday and 4 p.m. Friday.

HOW TO .RECOGNIZE A VALUE IN BEDDING ..•

,,

Bob Bergland and two White
House advisors today to urge
the administration
to
announce an early set-aside
program lot next year.
Also scheduled to attend
the meeting are Farm
Bureau presidents from
Iowa , Indiana , Illinois,
Missouri , Minnesota and
Nebraska.

I

"We wW be meeting with
these men to voice our
concern about the anticipated
6.8 billion bushel corn crop
which is predicted this fall, "
said Hirschfeld. "With such a
large crop, cotn farmers in
Ohio and throughOut the ,
nation are definitely facing
poorer prices."
Hirschfeld said the Fann
Bureau presideM would urge
the White House advisors of
the necessity to announce a
set-aside and land diversilll)
program .foc the 1979 crop
year as soon as possible. Also
that such a program must be
attractive
enough
to
e nc ourage adequate
participation and reduction of
feed grain acreage .
"We wW recommend that
the cotn crop for 1979 should
be cut by one billion bushels,"
said Hirachfeld . "For this to
happen, the govenment is
going to have to announce a ·
set-aside and land diversion
program which will be '
beneficial to tbe fanner as ·
well as to the government."
Unless the federal program
is announced early enough
for farmers to make a
decison about participatioo,
the over supply situation may
be complicated and the farm
lnc001e problem will bee&lt;me
even m&lt;re depressed, be
said.
Hirschfeld sa1d that
farmers in Ohio and
throughout the natioo will
start to prepare lor the 1979
crop as soon as ha..Vest is
completed this fall.
"Farmers begin to plow .
their fields and decide on how
many acres of eotn .they will
have for nezt spring," said
Hirschfeld . " Also many
purchase fertilizer and sign
em tracts I ot seed. "

All first-quality matenal. Dramatic, c~lorfu l patlerns
... tough . easy-to -c lean viny l for lasting beauty.
All yours . th 1s week . at an amaz ing budget price.

'

______

Do it you rself and
save! Comes in
t 2' width for
seamless
installation In most
rooms . No cement
needed.

Carolina,Lumber &amp; Supply Co
312 Sixth Street

675-1160

Point Pltlllllt

SMtt Houri: Mon .• fr l. I o ,,., , · 5 p.m. Sat. I a .m . . 12

I.

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Pusl.til(~

45631.

PACKAGE
TOILET TISSUE•••$1
WE WILL BE UNABLE TO SUPPLY THIS
ITEM IN TIME FOR ntE SALE!

• LUSTRALON
The "IHI-;ood" Fiber

We are sorry for any inconvenience this
may have caused our customers.

• 'I•" PUFF QUILTING.
• LUXURIOUS FOAM
CONSTRUCTION.

• 8- TURN UNIT.

• FLEX·O·PEDIC
FOUNDATION

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

FULLIIZE-'t2t .~ .._ pc:.
AftM Salt Pnct...'14i.i&amp;tL pc .

$

OUIIH IIIZE--.116..,
AftltS.Ie Pnee...' &amp;.ZMt

KING IIZE-'41._.MI
After Salt Price ..."WW.Q&amp; 141
(3pltct.-!)

804.0 IN KTI ONLYI

AFTEFIIALE I'IIICE...'11t.lli oa. pc.

REGISTER NOW

First Time Ever On Our Best GlamourPedic Number!

New Quarter Begins

FIRM·~ *312COIL

Sept. 18, 1978

Sale Price...

Choose a Career in.

$

t!Vt! r y w ~ ckdu y tVtlllllg

· SM tur de~y .

Paid .11\
.

St.•t"urid

Cl&lt;lsK

Glilhpu h ~ .

Oluu

Size

Each Piece

THE DAILY SENTINEL
Ill Court St., P umcruy, 0 . 45769.
,fu bli!!ht~d t'\'~ry wetk dw y tY~Illlllrl
tlu.•cpt &amp;ttrt.lay . Enkrcd ws lih:und
dw s~ mt~ili n !! rn.ilttt'r M
l PIJfn~ruy
Otuu Pus! Office.
,
• By Cilrti~ r tl.!iily ;~nd S11- 7~
~I' w~k . Motor rou~ tJ ,2"S per

'FULL SIZE-t 71.15 ea. pc.IReg. S 1111.815 18. pe.
QUEEN IIZ£-UIUI Mil Reg.l248.116 HI
KING IIZ£-1271.116 Mil Reg. 1348.116 eat
(3 piece aet)
IOUI ., ~m~ _ ..

MAll .
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

11~t: Gt~ llqKJIU! Dllil)l Trrbut'lt' ii1
CM11 u .lind Well(. Vir~t inUI urw )'tll r

J7.50: motor· route S3 . ~momhly .

TIM! Dt~ily St!ntinel. tll'lt! yc••
fl.,!.IJG ; Six mt~nlhs 111 .30; lhr~t.'lnt.m·
~.._ $7.00. /·: J~~t•WI'It'r• · l2:il.00 ; Sill mull•
th~ $1 3.$0; lhrt:t&lt; rnurrUus fl . ~.
Tire Umtl ·l Pru.o; lnl erTL\liJUal ill
t.-a:t'luswt· .' ~ ntllltd tn Uw Uit! fur '
pt.rtJir t'.!ilLUfl uf iiU Jlt'WII tJiKIJ!IIlclk!!L
t1't.othled !11 Ult! r~WHpM~ r · .!illd al!ii.1
tlw loi(.'IIJ rlt'Wii puiJli."hl.'d htrt•in

,

llegule"!;o-'71.15 ea. pc.

ITll~rU1 .

W .OO; »Ill munlh» $1 1.!10; thr~ mun·
Uui 17.00. F:Jstowhere $26.110 pt!r Yt!llr :
liix months $13.50; lhn!e munth~

part of Meigs County and its
history , therefore it is used as
a part of the logo of the Meigs
history book.
The 1876 in the center of the
seal stands for when the
Historical Society was formed. The society is
ce lebrating 102 years of
continuous organization.
Around the seal is the title
of the society - Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical
Society, Inc. This is sell
explanatory as the Historical
Society is the organization
publishing the book.
This seal will appear on all
letters, envelopes, publicity
and any other items connected with the new history.
We hope the public will
become familiar with it, so
that they wiD recognize at
sight that any item displaying
this seal bas something to do
with the new history, of which
all· Meigs Counti.ans will play
a vital part.
.&lt;F'f!~""-

~\C.S C

FREE P-ING
AT 111 REAR
Of 1HE SIORE

•

•

transfer to another facility
will also be given.
The instructor will be
Eleanor Strang , Clini cal
Spec ialist - Burns and
Director of Nursing Service
at Holzer Medical Center.
Strang earned her M.S.N. and
worked as a clinical burn
specialist at the University of
Michigan f!um Center from
1972 to 1975.
A registration fee of $10 for
the workshop does not include
lunch. Enrollment will be
limited to 25 participants.
The
cour se
meets
specifications of ONA lor
granting of CEU units.
The workshop is sponsored
by the Consortium for Health
Education in Appa lach ia
Ohio (CHEAO) .
CHEAO is a private, non-

BY JAMES SANDS .. 19%4: "The Negro Ia DOl a
GALUPOUS - Many Ohio menace to Americaolsm in
historians claim that Cin- · lbe seuse that lbe Jew or
cinnali was through much of the Roman Catholic is a
its history as much a menace.''
The pheriomenal growth of
Southern town as a Northern
the
Klan in the 1920s is attown . The same can be said of
tributed
to the world events
Gallipolis. Gallipolis' surfollowing
World War I. - the
vival as a town depended
Communist
takeover in
largely on her trade with the
Russia,
the
financial
power of
8&lt;1utb. We find, therefore,
Jews
in
the
world
economy,
before and afler the Civil War
much Southern sympathy in and in the .massive im·
migration from Eureope to
Gallipolis.
After the Civil War , America.
In 1925 the Klan assembled
Southerners, In order to slow
down integration, began the in Washington and asked
Ku Klux Klan . The Klan was President Coolidge to address
org~niied in Gallipolis In 1868 the group. In Indiana the
and existed there lor just a Klan gained control of the
few years. NationaUy the State House.
The Klan was recognized in
Klan faded from the scene
Gallipolis in 1924 and 1925.
before 1900.
In 191~ the KKK was Kiavems were also fonned at
reorganized
on
Stone Crown City and at Vinton. J.
Mountain, Georgia. Prior to M. Mecklin in his book "The
1920 the Klan numbered only Ku Klux Klan: a Study of the
a lew thousand members. In American Mind" wrote:
" The rank and file (of the
1920 the Klan hired two
KKK)
were just average
professional publicity agents
Americans
who would join
and the Klan grew to five
any
organization
whatever
million strong by 1925.
that
professed
vaguely
The newer Klau was
patriotic
aims
and
promised
recogulzed not ouly lor its
a social good time."
opposition to blacu but
In the years 1925, 1926, and
aloo by its oppolition to
1927
the Klan aeems to have
CallloUco aod Jewa. Tbe
been
fairly strong in Gallia as
Imperial Wizard wrote In
well as in Jackson and Meigs
Counties. Bi-monthly social
meetings were held (in good
weather) at the Cambrian
Hotel in Jackson. In addition
the Klan made trips to
Camden Park in Huntington,
where each year the Klan
rented tbe facilities.
In 1925 a Klan rally was
held on the Public Square in
Gallipolis and 1,5011 persons
showed up for the feStivities,
which included a march
through
Gallipolis
In
costume, and a concert by

offers health educatiOn
programs to health practitioners and the public. It
serves 21 Ohio Appalachian
counties unger funding from
the Appalachian Regi on al

n.

ONLY

$2995

CALL TODAY F~R
FREE INFORMATION
.:
'146 4367
~--~~----------------

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PltOTECTIOIII

Ga lila. Meigs
&amp; Vlnten Co •
614-446-4201

COWMBIA

Commission.

Additional informati on
con ce rnin g the workshop
may be obtained by contacting Mik e Pletcher,
CHEAO coo rdinator for
co nti nuing ed uc a tion
programs, in Athens at 5935526.

•

Colum bi" d i.1momJ.. hom SI SO.

TAWNEY'S
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Birthday Party®
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Burt Dean says

We
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ano the r pr~1hkm
Nuw ~· ou l'im send
~ h11\t: hirthda y purt y

yD u ~

~~

IU

Burt Dean , author of
historical novels who lives on
LeGrande Dri ve, offers a cornumerous Klan quartets. Dr. r.,.,tion to ihe "Now You
F. P. George was the Know " item of Sept. 14, which
organizer of the Klan in read that Thomas Jefferson
Gallia County .
had a library of 6,000 books.
The most dramatic a!)- ·
Dean said 'that Jefferson
pearance of ·the Klan a!)- had three libraries, two of
peared in the M. E. Church in whieh were destroyed by fire .
Crown City where the Rev. 0 . The first was in his mother 's
E. Hall was conducting his home aeross the valley from
first service. In the middle of Montieelio. The second went
the sermon 38 fully dressed ilp in smoke when the British
Klansmen marched into the burned the. Capitol and the
church carrying a burning White House during War of
cross. They stood for awhile 1812, but Jefferson presented
around the altar while one of his library to reestablish the
the ir members prayed. Library of Congress.
Meanwhile the Rev. Mr. Hall
The third Jefferson willed
was continuing with his to the University of Virginia,
sermon. Directly, the Klans- whieh, unfortunately , sold
man sat down.
·
parts of the library separateAt tbe eud of the service
ly .
the Klaa preseated to
school principal Maurice
Thomas an American flag
and a Bible. They handed
the preacher a f2t bill. At
.. the end of thlo ceremony
the KlausmeD and the
congregation sang "Onward Chriotlau Soldiers."
(Ed. Note - Maurice
Thomas, 81 years old in 1978,
remembers this 11 dr&amp;matic"
incident at Crown City. He
now lives in the house in
which he was born, on White
Oak Rd. He still does some
substitute teaching ).
The Klan lost much of its
popularity in Gallia for the
same reason that it lost
popularity nationwide. In
Indiana the Klan machine
that had captured the Indiana
state house fell apart. The
leader was convicted 'of
kidnaping a youns girl and
terrifying her into suicide.
The governor, members of
the Indianapolis city government, and a state judge (all
Klansmen) were convicted of
election fraud, bribery, and
...
lntimldation.

•

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PHONE 446-9721

• 28 CEDAR ST.

GALLIPOLIS, 0. •

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Decembe'r, 1978 thru April,
1979 to those persons who
purchase their energy from a
metered utility.company . For
those persons who purchaSe
their energy from a retail"
dealer, the program provides
a payment of $87.~0 to the
applicant provided that at
least that much has been
spent for the heating period.
Applications are available
at Your local senior citizens
office or contact the Area
Agency on Aging District 7,
P. 0. Box 978, Rio Grande
College, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674, phone (614) 2~.

RU5'GRANDE -All senior
citizens and dtsabled in ~
dividuals who have nol yet
applied for the Energy
Discount on this winter's
heating bills should do so at
once. The Area Agency on
Aging District 7 bas announced the deadline has
been extended to Oct. I to file
lor
Energy
Discount
Benefits.
In order to he eligible for
this r cogram, a perS.n must
meet the tbree following
requirements:
- The applicant must be
head of household.
- The applicant must have
reached the age of 6S by
December 31, 1978, or be
I totally pennanently disabled
at any age .
- The applicant must have
a total annual income of no
more than $7,420 in 1977 or an
expected total income of no
more than $7,420 in 1978.
The program provides for a
25 percent reduction on utility
bills for the billing months of

Jefferson sel up

0., 388-3446.

Fown1111raltMiey Sle&lt;tmtlll i' l

STOP AT···
SHOP AT···
SAVE AT···

A one-day workshop on the
principles of basic burn
nursing will be offered for
nurses and other interested
people on Thursday, October
12, at the Ross County
Medical Center in Chillicothe.
The program will begin at
8:30a.m. and conclude at 4:30
p.m.
The course is appropriate
for community hospital staff
as well as school, public
health, occupational, health
and general office nurse
personnel.
The workshop will consider
the basic principles of
caring lor patients with bum
injuries, the development of
kn owledge and skills applicable in community
hospitals without bum units,
and burn care and treatment
at various stages. Guidelines
for recognizing need for

• •

ST. NO. 75.02-G4721

PLENTY Of

Workshop planned

Energy discount
deadline Oct. 1

Gallipbtis, Crown City, and Vinton in 1920s

~ROLL

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te•turea:

GAt.UPfU.. IS

t!tt'cpl

on the Ohio River." It is a

man, Point Pleasant; Ethel
PLEASANTVAIJ.EY
Disc~arges .:
Tammy Pyles, GaUipolis Ferry; Carla
Langdon, Glenwood; Mrs, Wagoner, Rodney ; Robert
Leon Putz, Point Pleasant; Wears, Gallipolis; Okey
Mrs. Herbert Whittington, VanMeter, Mason ; Ernest
Robertsburg; Mrs. Richard Hudnall, Burnwell, W.Va .;
Sydensiricker, Southaide ; Mrs. CecU Bailes, Leon; John
Mrs. William Harbour and Mash, Redhouse ; Mrs. Paul
daughter, Point Pleasant ; Lewis, Parkersburg; Robert
Mrs. Gary Smith, Mt. Alto; Cra wford, Apple Grove;
Ramona Brady, Mason; John Robert Morgan, Leon; Frank
Mayes, New Haven; Julia Morrow , Leon ; Mildred
Lanier, Soljtbside; Lodema Sturgeon, Point Pleasant ;
Gearhart, Point Pleasant ; Mrs. Robert Goldsberry, New
Pamela Rayburn, Point Haven.
Pleasant; Christopher Neece, Births : A son to Mr and Mrs.
Middleport ; Terry Fife, Oscar Click, Leon; and a son
Pomeroy; Tina Bates, Hen- to Dr. and Mrs. John Wade,
derson; Sonia Williams, Point Pleasant.
· Patriot, 0 . ; Mrs. Earles
Craddock, West Columbia;
Zilpha Roush, Point Pleasant; Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mrs. Charles Dunn, HenAdmitted - Terry Brown,
derson ; Kimberly Hughes , Pomeroy; Jenny Bearhs ,
Point Pleasant; Harold Odell, Pomeroy.
New Haven; Betty Ross,
Discharged
Flora
Racine ; Mrs. Clinton Stover, Donahue,, Barbara Smith,
Gallipolis; Daniel Marr, West Carl Staats, Essie Burkirk,
Columbia; Robert Lyon, Point Maynard Johnson , Larry
Pleas.ant; Mrs. Harold Poeh- Ssyre.

•
rn

ON PAGE 1

DAILVTRIRUNE
Tlunl Avt&gt;., Galhpuhs, Ohm

456:11.
PD.bhshal

i~il

Canal. The river has played a
vital part in the growth and
development of Meigs
County, from the time the
early settlers made their way
to the county by flatboat, up
through the years when the
river carried coal, salt, and
agricultural products to other
towns and cities lor sale and
export.
The river still plays a vital
part in the lives of Meigs
Countians, as a means of
transportation for products,
recreation,
and
identification.
Although we may take the
river for granted, when we
are away we use it to tell
wh: re we live. " Meigs
County , Southeastern Ohio,

IN TODAY'S NEWSPAPER

Pu!Jllb:hed t!Yt!t'}' Sl.lnday b.. Tht
Ohu V1:11J cy Publi.s hiu l( Co .·
Multum:t.lia. liK·.
~

POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Historical Society is in·
::::.
,., trodudng a logo which It will
be using with aU information
1lli and publicity concerning the
'•'•
.,.,
.
:·:· Meigs County History which
BY TOM, SAUNDERS
Miss Liza's house; where he the society Is plaMing to
Andre LeClerq came from died ten days later. Miss Liza pablish.
France the year of the yellow never went to the funeral, nor
This logo was approved by
lever epid!!lllic. He settled was she ever aeen except by members as a recognition
back home in the Rance old Hannibal and Dr. factor lor the history. which
property overlooking the Cromllsh, the family doctor, would make it recognizable
from any other. The elements
levee on Front Street. He was after ihat.
a great student and had the
of
the logo are relative to
" It was a strange love
finest library in town. ·He affair," they say back home. Meigs County.
The
first
element
always wore a shawl and a
Editor Simeon .Giles settled
plug hat and had spells of back· home the year Hepry represents Government. The
gout. He never spoke to his Cl~y was seeking the Whig society agreed on a picture of
aon, Ollie LeClerq, after Ollie · nomination for President. He the Meigs County courthouse,
married !he Marsh's hired bought The Leader lor $300 as this serves all the people of
·
girl.
and moved it from over the the county. Also it is believed
Andre Le Clerq's wile died feed store to the northeast this courthouse is the only one
in the U. S. that opens on ·
before be came to America. side of the public square.
three
ground levels, and is
For forty-live years he called
Sim Giles was a stem man.
also
the
oldest in use in the
regularly on Tuesday and He wore a wide-brimmed hat
state
of
Ohio.
S.turday on Miss Liza Rance. and a long,
drooping ·
The cow
represents
Miss Liga was a blu~blood, a . mustache and boiled shirts
Agriculture
.
This
is the
branch of the Kentucky and white cuffs. He had an
number
one
industry
in
Meigs
Ranees. She lived in a fine old anchor stickpin that fastened
colonial house on Court In his shirt and was attached County and is carried on in aU
Street.
to a gold chain around his areas of the county.
The coal barge on the river
She wore a big cameo neck. Rain or shine he had old
breastpinthat had been in the Alexander come to his room represents Commerce. The
Washington family, it was up over The Leader office and Ohio River carries more
said, lind a net over her hair. polish his shoes every day in tonnage each year than
passes through the Panama
Mlsa Liza had a carriage, and the week.
in the summer evenings her
On Sunday mornings Sim
driver, Harmibal, would drive Giles, General George House,
her around the public square Henry Cruezet, Captain Jack never would print adwhile the band played.
Sheppard and Banker Hens- vertisements from Banker
The only time Andre Le hawk used to occupy the Hensha wk or aUow his name
Clerq and Liza Rance were bench near the pump In the to be published In The
ever seen together in public public square. Oite Sunday Leader. He carried a deep
was at the dedication of they were debating •the scar to his grave.
Sim ·Giles made the great
Gallla Academy , when question "Is British Tyrarmy
trip
from Louisville to Pittstolerable
than
Governor BushneU spoke. A more
burgh
on the fast steamboat,
good ma~y people wondered · American slavery?" There
of
the West, and the
Belle
why they were never were hot words, and someone
article
he
wrote about it was
mamed. Sqme thought it was saw Henry Cruezet rush over
reprinted
by the New York
on account of Ollie Le Clerq's Court Street after Dr .
Weekly
Tribune.
Sim Giles
.
marriage. Others said It was Cromlish.
ran
for
county
treasurer
and
Sim Giles was stretched out
because Miss Liza was a year
was
defeated.
He
sold
The
on a bench with a long gash
plder.
Leader
to
Colonel
Sam
: During the blizzard of '86 across his cheek and looking
when the Ohio froze over, very white. People were Harper and left town, and no
:Andre was on his way to the going home from church. one back home heard of ·him
alter that.
~nee home on Christmas They carried him over into
These . two character
.Day with a copy of Long- General House's old Reliable
sketches
were written by
fellow's "Po!!ms." He fell in Insurance Agency office
O.O.M.
and
taken from his
lrmt cf the tannery and lroke across the street. The affair
hook
Twenty-five
Selected
~ hip . He was carried into was bushed up, but Sim Giles
Stories published in 1929. T. S., Rt. I, Box 335, Bidwell,
·:·:

NOTICE
Murphy's Mart Circular

Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel

ImperialA.ccotone ~

French City
•
VIgllettes. • •

Society approves logo · HOSPITAL NEWS

.,__

Nationwide. com crop cut sought
WASHINGtoN (UP! ) Ohio
Farm
Bureau
Federation president Wallace
Hirschfeld Friday recom- ·
mended that the nationwide corn crop for 1979'should
be cut by one billion bushels
through the use of an
increa-ed set-aside program .
Hirschfeld was to meet
with Agriculture Serretary

•'•'
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A-4- The Sunday TUnes-Sentinel, Sw1day , Sept. 17, 1978

Peeps . ..

Bill Hoffman, veteran
•
typesetter, retires

A Gallipolis Diary

"wiLuAM (Bill) Hoffman, after cro~pleting 30 years
aorvice as a typesetter and c&lt;mputer operator with the
GampoUs Daily Tribune and &amp;mday Times-sentinel,
rSred three weeka ago. Hoffman joined the local newspapers In February, 1918, and worked under four owners
-the late Harold Wetherholt, Dear Publications, Richard
S. Owen and Multi-Media. Photo above was taken in new
ol!oet plant in 1968. The Linotype machine has since been
replaced by C(JJiputers.

R I j. HMI H

l'f:f."/',;

GAUJPOUS - Thirty years ago Bill Huffman used to set the
Peeps column, Those were lhe days that a typesetter sat at a
huge machine with a key bolt rd. Every time he hit a key a brass
matrU dropped into a slot about eye-high to the sealed
operator and a little to his left. As those matrices filled the
space, Hoffman (or another operator I would punch the har to
drop what was caUed a space band; matter of fact , he dropped
a space band at the end of each word . The spat'e hand was
mildly cone shaped so that two or three of them would fill up
the line, ''justifying" it. A squirt of hut metal quickly congeal·

ing made the line o' type .
Then Huffman pushed down on a lever which lifted tha t line
of matrices tu the highest pqint where a whirling spiral took
hold of them and distributed them into sluls where they were
ready to L'Ome out upon the appropriate key-punch again . A
fast typesetter like Huffman hung his elevator. " Hung
elevator" meant thai the type was being set too fast for tht·
distribution system to take care of it.
Now the linotype machine has been 1-elegated to the
museums . Your 'l'iull'll ·.~,.,a;,lf'l tod.a y is ihe result of offset '
printing. Peeps is not qualified lo describe the process to you .
However, we can tell you this much : there's no hut metal. The
operator sill; at a machirre nol much larger than a typewriter,
but its keyboard has more keys than a typewriter. What it produces is a perforated tape ; someone else runs the wpe through
another machine to get a galley of "type" , and the galley is attached to the page from which a metal sheet is made. Bill Hoff.
111&lt;1n has "set" type on this kind of typesetter, too.
·
One of the finest typesetters in this neck of the woods , says
Editor Hohart Wilson , Jr., Hoffman understands the complex·
ities of this modern system of typography . Eustace Wilson is
about the only survivor in tl1c hack shop of that cia of hotmetal
composition, but Eustac-e works only a couple of days a week .
Eustaee hasn~t been sick for 50 years, and he cmt.'l even
remember a headache in that period.
But Huffman's health is such !hat he has to wke it easy from
now on. Readers of the T;,, ......"'i,.,,;,,., never see any idtmlifiea~
lion Of these silent partners in our journalistic enterprise.

Fund drive
underway

Without Holfnwn ami other typ&lt;&gt;Kraphers, however, you "d play
hob reading what the repo11ei'S w1itc and the editors edit.
.Hoffman set the type for atlvtiltiwlKand the special articles
in the 0. 0 . Mcintyre edition, the special Frontier eilition, the
m th anniversary edition, the annual junior fa ir tabloids, and
Rivc1· Rcaeation Festival wbloids.
It says in your Bible llast verse of the 13th chapter til First
Corinthians 1 something to the c£fect tlwl faith, hope, and
charity are human assets, but charity is the greatest. Convert
tha t to a printer: top characteristics are skill , palien&lt;'e, ami
IU!rd work, but the greatest of these Bill Hoffman has shown all
his life : hard work ,
IT WAS LIKE a "Who's Who in Gallipolis" a half'century
when some newspaper ran CJ regular feature· entitled
"Men of Affairs in Gallipolis." Mrs. E. Ross Wallaee'.s old
scrapbook t'Ontains many ul these biographies, and Peeps lUI~
run Readers Digest type .condensations ih this space in earlier

~:tgo,

FUNDS TRANSFERRED
COLUMBUS IUPI I-State
Auditor Thomas ferguson
said $560,680 has been trans·
!erred from the Ohio Lottery
Rotary Fund to the state's
general fund from the Aug. 24
drawing .
·
F'ergusun said gross ticket
sa les deposited into the
general fund since the fiscal
year began July 1 is $5.79
million .
·
He said since the Ohio
Lottery began in AuguSt of
1974, $186.5 million has been
deposited into the state's
general lund.

MONDAY IS•• •
LAST DAY OF
OUR 5th
ANNIVERSARY SALE

TUPPERS PLAINS Members of Orange Township
Volunteer . Fire
Department will be holding a
fund drive to pay off the
balance due on its fire truck.
The house-to-house drive will
be held Saturday, Sept. 23,
beginning at 9 a.m.
Anyone, who is not contacted
by department
members and wishes to make
a donation, are to call Robert
Tripp at 667-3941 , Charles
Weber at 667-6~ or Terry
Deem at 667-3933 or they may
send donations to Orange
Township Fire Department.
Box 208, Tuppers Plains,
45783.
The department members
extend their thanks for the
generosity and service given
to them.

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•WALKWAYS
•DRIVEWAYS
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NAME •••••.•.....•.••.•...•...••. .••.•.•.••••..• ~ .....••.••.•••..••••••••••

I
I

ADDRESS ..•.••..••.•..•.•.••.••••. •.•••.•.•••.•.• •••••••••.••.•..••.. :···· I

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PHONE ..................................................................... ..JI

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-----------------------------------SEPT. 17 THRU SAT., SEPT. 23
DOWNTOWN STORE .
348 2ND AVE.

POINT PLEASANT
Mason County Public Health
Nurses will begin the annual
vision screening program in
the Mason County schools on
Monday , September 25. All
children in Early Childhood
Education, third, sixth and
ninth grades will be screened.
If there are any questions
con ce rning the screening
procedures or a parent does
not want their child to parti cipate in the sc reening
prog ram , please contact
Mary Morrison, PHN, Mason
County Health Department,
prior to September 25. Phone
675-3050 or 3554.

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Gallipolis

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ROUTE 2 - lOX 41
OAK HILL, OHIO 45656
I'H. (614)612..909 OR (614)612-7617
LOCARD ON ln. I I JUST 2 MILII NORTH Of OAK HILL, OHIO

pruach to the Mill Creek bl"idge, a nd broke his left arm. As a the Park Central Hotel for four years, and became manager of
result of that accident, he learn&lt;~ to use his right a nn and the Ohio Valley La undry Company. A Democrat, he was
bet'ame ambic..lextrous." He was a ce~ bi n ct mc.ker. His hubby eleded clerk of the board of puliliv service and secretary of the
wa s rai~ in~ ginseng - whatever that was - a nd he raisell lJlood- waterworks.
• Ea rl IA!ander McCormicl&lt;, born Jan . 2; ·1876, in Green
L'!i Bdg1an hares fur eight yea rs. ·· He docs a good many things
Twp.,
served in his youth as a traveling sa lesman, but had
differently from the usual ," the dipping reads, ··and can
years as manager of the C. B. Hanson Company in Ga llipolis.
repeat the alphabet backwa rd faster tha n he can forward ."
• ,J. Ed~ar Harrison was born Feb. 2, 1870, in Morgan Twp. He w&lt;Js 30 yee:trs older t han Peeps, a nd when Pt:~ps came to
He worked a year at the 0. H. E. , ·· where he assisted Clint know him as a close friend Ea rll.. McCon nick was Gallipolis
Deeter in building the great stone smok'eslack which ill ad· city auditor. His biography reads that "two children have
mired so mueh by 1:t l1 visitors." For u dozen years he was bag· resulted from the marriage of Earl I.. and Ruth Fuller McCor·
ga~e master and freight clerk fur the Kanawha and Michigan mick: Thomas Fuller and Alice Margaret ."
• 0 . P. Callahan was born June 8, 1666, 111 Jackson County ,
Railroad Co., resigning in February, 1906, to enter the
but his grandmother and her fa ther were both bu ried in Gallia
wholesale and retail coal business.
• Charles F. Stockhoff, born May 10, 1652, at Cincinnati , had County , the biography reads. He was a member of the fi nn ,
been president uf the First Natiullal Bank since 1904, . but Callahan Bros., dea lers in marble and gra nite, with trade in
neither lhis dipping nor any other biographical sketch has a three states . In 1908 the Democrats nominated him fur cou nty
date attached to it ; therefore, this clipping doesn't tell us how tr·easurer " and made a stirring ra ~ fur the 'election.·· Ap- ·
lung Stockhoff was president al the time the ·clipping ap· parently , in the a bsence of a victory statement, Ca llahan
peared. Stockhuff also was pres ident of the Gallipolis Gas and didn 't stir quite enuugh.
• H. J. Ward, bornApril 24, 1676, in Morga n Twp ., fmished a
Cuke Company and of l11e Gallip&lt;&gt;lis Telephone Company . He
headed the City Tax Commission and the Board of Sinking law course at Ohio N urtlu~rn in 1904 but bct:ame an insuran ct
Fund Trustees. Fur· several years he was a member of the agent and school teacher. He was principal of the Crown City
schools 1697-8, Kyger 1698-9, and Vinton 1699-1902, and it was at
bolird of education.
• Waid Harvey Mil es was born Aug . 2, 1881 , in Catlettsburg, Vinton that "he orga nized their graded schools. He began
Ky. He beecnne a traveling sa lesman, and was u pu st councilor teaching at 16."
There are no more biographi es in this particular scrapbook
of the United Commercial Travelers . An Elk, a Mason , a
Methodist, he was also a member of lhe Gallipolis Board of kept by Mrs. E. Ross Wallace, but , leafing t hrough it' once ·
comes upon a sequel fur 0 . P. Callahan . An oval pictu re of him
Trade.
• Judge J . C. Ingels, born Ma rch 21 , 1655, m Ha rrison Twp. , is printed under a two-&lt;:ulwnn headline; the articl e reads that
taught school for " :;6 tenns, mostly in the lower end of the he was killed in an automobile-train i:H.:cident in Colwn bus at
county." In 1890, as a Republican, he was elected county the lridianula cross ing. He had been gone from Gallipolis only
recorder, serving two tenns before lhe people elected him pro· a few months. His age is listed as &gt;6, which makes the year of
hate judge fur another two tenns, "making 12 yea rs in the his death as 1922. He was buried in Mound Hill Cemetery.
court house ." He was vke-president of the First National
Bank, later cashier . He was president of the board of trustees
of the Public Library and president of the board of cilv examiners . He was vice-president of the Buckeye Building and
Loan Company . Ingels was famed 111 southern Ohio as a
hasehall player.
• E. Wayne. Sanns was born Sept. 27, 1679, in Gallipolis,
where he operated the Sanns drug store for two years. He then
worked for a Nashville wholesale drug house. He was clerk of

USED

WE WANT YOUR SAW LOGS!

INDUSTRIAL TIMBER AND LAND CO.

CAA employment
policy outlined.

in crash

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BIU HACKETT - GEORGE HACKETT - DENNIS HACKETT
OR MAIL COUPON---~---------,
FUTURA STONE OF MIDDLEPORT
93 7TH AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO 45760
I

Continued from page A-4
Moore, a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University, was a ~2nd
degree Scottillh Rite Mason and an F,lk .
• E. P. Mullineaux, born Ma rch 21, 1673, in Gallipolis, was
left-handed at birth. ""In 1888 he was thrown from one of the
early high front bicycles," the dipping reads, ··on the aiJ-

Five die

•

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begins Sept. 25

OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:00-4:00

STONE

•SLIPPAGE LIABILITY
•STANDING WATER
•MILDEW
•DISCOLORATION
AND UNSIGHTLY
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· REG. TRADE MARK

1

LOGGERS ARE NOW RECEIVING' THE HIGHEST PRia5
EVER FOR ALL SPECIES OF SAW LOGS 10" IN DIAMETER
AND LARGER

UTU

Peeps. •••

· She is survived · by two ,
daughters, a son, 13 grandchildren, and 25 greatgrandchildren .
The
daughters are Mrs. Hazel
CHESffiRE - The Gallia - power Director, will have the
Shoemaker, Hamden, and
Meigs C.A.A. is committed to overall responsibility of
Mrs . Daisy Barnett ,
equal employment op- administering the program.
Hometown, W. Va. The sun is
portunities for aU applicants, If a program participant or
the Rev . W. E. Curfman,
participants and employees applicant feels he-she has
Cheshire, A son preceded her
in all facets of its operations; been discriminated against in
in death .
and where deficiencies are employment , seeking emAlso surviving is a brother,
noted to take affirmative ployment and-or training
W. C. Knotts, S;lrasuta, Fla . a
action to correct such with this agency , he·she
should immediately contact
half-sister and three halldeficiencies.
brothers · preceded her in
In addition, it is a policy to Letha Proffitt, EEO Comdeath.
recruit, llire and pr0111ote in plaint Officer, at 367-7341 or
Funeral services will be
all job classifications without 992·7000 to pursue the proper
held at 2 p.m. Monday at the
regard to race, color , discrimination complaint
Vinton Baptist Church, the
national origin, sex I except procedure.
Rev. John Price and the Rev .
where sex is a bona fide
Cernie ·Persinger officiating.
occupational classification I,
Burial will be in Vinton
age , political affiliation,
Memorial Park.
ancestry, handicap (provided
Friends are calling today
physical limitation does not
RACHEL STOVER
(Sunday) · at the McCoyprevent
job performance I or
G Al.Ll POLIS - WaughMoore Funeral Home, Vin· Halley-Wood Funeral Home beliefs.
ton, 2-4 and 7-9p.m.
It is the policy to take afMonday will announce final
firmative
action , to insure
WASHINGTON TOWNrites fur 69-year-&lt;old Rachel
I
raining
programs
that
all
SHIP,
N. J . (UP[I - A
Stove1', 1701 Chestnut St.,
'JAES FOX
and
all
personnel
actions
private
airplane crashed
GALLIPOLIS - James Gallipohs, who died at 2 p.m. such as a rate of col"- af\er takeoff from the
Fox, 87, a resident of Rt. 3, SaiUI·day al Holzc1· Medical pensation , benefits, trans- Trenton - Robbinsville airCenter. She llad been in fail ;
GaUipolis (Rt. 688) died at
fers, and promotions, layoff port early today, killing five
ing health for several years.
7:3!1 a.m. Saturday at the
Her parents were Brodie F. and terminations be ad- persons and critically inhome of his daughter, Mrs.
ministered without regard to juring another.
Charles (Rex) Lelia Barkley. am.l Ruxie Mae Comell race, color, national origin,
The victims were not imHalley. She married Russell
He was a former resident of
sex,
age,
political
affiliation,
mediately
identified.
F.. Slover Dec. 31, 19"26, and
Beaver Falls, Pa. Mr. Fox he died Aug . 20, 1966.
ancestry, handicap or beliefs.
Police in Washington
was a retired employee of
David Gloeckner, Man - Township said the small
Surviving sun s a nJ
Babcock &amp; Wilcox Tube Plant daughters arc :
aircraft, believed to have
in Beaver Falls.
bee11 headed for North
Mrs. Arthur ( Bern~:~ dine '
Mr. Fox was horn Jan. 1891, Hill , Gallipolis ; Mr·s. Loren
Carolina, crashed about"5:45
in Blantyre, Scotland, sun of IDixie i Thompson, Colwna. m. in heavy fog in a wooded
the late Frank and Anne bus; Mrs. Wade !Wilma 1
area just east of the airport.
Gemmell Fox.
Police said the pilot of lhe.
Wheaton , Culwnbus ; Tracy,
He is survived by his wife, Harland
airplane ' i.s in critical cOn, and Ga1·Iand Stuver,
.
Lele Eadie Fox, . whom tie Gallipolis : Mrs . Dann y
dition at Hamilton Hospit'll in
married May 27, 1917, in
Trenton.
1Nirla1 Malum, Kanau~a :
Cambuslang, Scotland . anti Mrs . Charles I Geneva&gt; SC
His wife, daughter , son·in·
Another daughter, Mrs. Fowler, Plilll', W. Va . Therl'
law, sun and son's girlfriend
Catherine Marshall, Pitts- arc also 12 grandchildren .
were killed in the crash,
UDlted PresalnternatiOIIlll
burgh, survives. One son,
A daughter and two sons
More negotiations were police said.
Frank Fox, Beaver Falls, . preceded her in death .
Officials described the
·
scheduled between
survives." Six grand and three · Two brothers mul a sister representatives of Jbe Board small Cherokee aircraft as a
great-grandchildren survive. .!iUrvive : Mrs. Fern Kimc of Education and striking "twisted ball of metal."
Three brothers and four Huntington ; Clarence Halley; school
at
employees
sisters preceded him in Gallipolis ; and John Ray- Cleveland and Dayton
death.
mond Halley , St. AI hans, W. Saturday and striking
He
attended
United Va. An infant Ili·uther preced- teachers In the Tallmadge
Presbyterian Church in ed her in dc(.llh .
School District are to return
Beaver FaDs. He was a
Burial 'will be in Mina to work Monday after
lifetime member of the Chapel Cemetery .
ratifying a new contract
Masonlc Lodge In his native
Friday.
hometown.
Cuyahoga County Commoo
MARY WAMSLEY
He was a sergeant - major
Pleas
Court Judge Harry A.
GALLIPOLIS - Mary
in the Gordon Highlanders
Hanna
ordered the two sides
Regiment during World War Elizabeth Wamsley, 60, a to resume talks at the end of
resident of 403 Pike Street,
I.
Kanauga
, died in Holzer Friday's negotiations. Hanna
Funeral services will be
also rejected a request by the
held Monday afternoon at the Medical Center around 9:15 Board of Education to order
A. D. Campbell Funeral a . m. Friday."
She had been in failing 10,000 striking employees
Home in Beaver Falls, Pa.
back to work. The Cleveland
Local arrangements are health the past year.
system
has bout 100,000
She was born June 23, 1918,
under the direction of Waugh
students.
; Helley - Wood Funeral in Callia County, daughter of
Negotiators for the Dayton
John F. and Hannah Sullivan
Home.
system's
2,:m teachers ·and
Vickers.
the
Board
of Education met
She married Clarence E.
with
a
federal
mediator in an
Wamsley on Aug . 30, 1942, in
attempt
to
reach
agreement
ELEANOR NEAL
Gallipolis. He survive , al. .. ·J
GALUPOUS - Eleanor with four children : Mrs. m a new cmtract to end the
Jean Neal, 63, a resident of Larry (Jacqueline) Miller, strike. Plcketiw! cmtinued
145 Second Ave., died at 4:45 Rodney;
Clarence R. m a limited bull in Dayton,
a. m. Saturday In Holzer Wamsley, Martinsburg, W. whlch has 37,1100 students,
Medical Center. She had been Va.; William E. Wamsley, despite a court order banning
in failing health several Gallipolis, and Vickie Lynn picketing.
In the 3,ii00-stlldent Tallyears.
Wamsley, at home.
madge
School district in
She was born Dec. 15, 1914,
Three brothers and one
Swrunlt
County
where about
sister survive: Homer and
••••••••••••••••••••
130
of
the
system's
180
0
•
Vickers, Pt.
• Clarence
teachers
had
been
on
strike
Pleasant ;
William
A.
Vickers, Follansbee, W.Va. ; since Sept. 5, teachers
•
0
Mrs. Clifford (Helen) BOye, accepted a new contract
:how
much
:
Col urn bus. Five grand· calling for an annuual salaty
•
.0
of $9,500 retroactive to last
survive.
$10,200
: life Insurance : children
Sbe attended Fair Haven Feburary and
retroactive
to
Sept.
I.
It also
•
• Methodist
:you need
: Kanauga. Church in gives teachers a~ per year
•
• Funeral services will be raise Sept. I, 1979.
Teaching personnel in
: Chancea are , you don't
held 2 p. m. Monday at Willis
Lot!an,
who have been m
• know either. Butt can help
Funeral Home with Rev.
strike
since
Aug. 29, met with
•• you find the answer.
Joseph Godwin officiating.
the
Board
of
Education and
•• How7 My contrlbutlO'I ~to Burial will foUow in Ohio a federal mediator
twice this
VaUey Memory Gardens.
: c:u1tom·tallor a program of
past
week
but
reached
rio
Friends may call at the
protecllon at a coat you
agreement.
. can reasonably afford. And •0 funeral home on Sunday
to uae every available tool • between 6 and 9 p. m.
to do tha Job .
:
0
Jan'l thla what you'd o•pect o

It Eliminates:

Ideal For:

on Lower River Rd .,
Gallipolis, daughter of the
late Charles H. Northup, who
preceded her in death In 1946,
and Della Eblin Northup, who
survives and resides on
Jackson Pike.
Two daughters survive :
Mrs. Darwin 1Pat 1 Petrie,
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Daniel
(Debra) Polcyn, Gallipolis.
Seven grandchildren survive.
Two brothers and one sister
survive : Lowell Northup and
Frances Northup, bOth of
Gallipolis; Miss Eva Northup, GaUipolis. One sister, .
Rosalie Woolen, and one
brother, Frederick Northup,
preceded her in death.
She spent all her life in
GaUia County. She attended
Providence Church in her
earlier years. Funeral services will be held 2 p. m.
Monday at the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home with
Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.
Burial will be in Pine Street
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 6
until 9 p. m. Sunday.

1948.

&amp; COMMERCIAL AREA

BEAUTIFY A~Y "'""'"'

A Gallipolis Diary

I

EMMA CURFMAN
GAUJPOLIS- Mrs. Emma E. Curfman, 84, Cheshire,
llll!d at 11 :45 p.m. Friday at
Holzer Medical Center.
The daughter of WiU and
Anna Knott, she was born
Oct. 24, 1893, at Sandy Wills,
W. Va., where she manied
William Curfman Feb. 14,
191~. l:ler husband died in

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A-li-The Sunday Tlln~s.&amp;ntinel, Swtday, Sept. 17.1978

Sundays.
The one scrapbook from which we've lifted these items is
now about wind up with these :
.
• J . H. Franz: born Nov . 29, 1879,at Pomeroy, went toge\her
with J . W. Brosius to buy the Alexander Boys grO&lt;.oery and real
estate bu~iness, in 1907. When Brosius retired, Fraf1Z became
the youn gest business proprietor in Gallj~lis that same year.
• H. F . Brothers was born Od. 21.1870, m Clay Twp. He Willi"
a carptmler and member of the bolird of ti1L!o1t!es of the ,
Presbyterian Church.
•
• Will N, Hayward, born Nov . 8, 1862, was a funeral director. His three. children, Helen, Catherine, and Gardner were ,
musically talented. He was a charter member and fonner ex• •
ailed rul er of the Gallipolis lodge of Elks.
.
· • Sherwood A. Moore was born Oct. 23, 1871, at Swan Creek.
Hill grandfather, Ansel!JI T. Blake, was one of the first settler~
of Marietta in 1788 but came to Swan Creek m 1818. Sherwood
Continued on page A-li

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........

A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel , Sw1W.y, Sept. l7, !fiB

Patrol probes six wrecks Friday
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
· Meig s f'os t, Highway
Patrol, investigated s ix
accidents Friday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-vehicle
collision on Bob McConnick
Rd., three-tenths of a mile
north of SR 588, at 5:05p.m.
The patrol reports that an
Qperated by Brenda
18, Gallipolis, was north
boWld on Bob McConnick.
Hall took her eyes from the
roadway to get something
from · her purse. The vehicle
drifted to the center of the
road as a vehicle driven by
Sh.irley J;:ngle, 31, Gallipolis,
came around a curve.
Engle swerved her auto to
avoid collision, but was
struck by the Hall vehicle.
The Engle auto then went into
a ditch.
Officers report slight
damage to the Hall auto,
moderate dama ge to the
Engle vehicle.

Engle claimed injury, but jun~Uon .of Third Ave., HaUey, II, Crown City.
was not immediatel,y treated. Kanauga .
The Halley auto •opped in
Hall was cited on charges
Olllcers report that a traffic. The Brown vehicle
of left of center.
vehicle operated by Michael was unable to stop and struck
The patrol investigated a Mllllins , 24, Gallipolis, the Halley auto in the rear.
one-auto accident on SR 681, traveling east on Second,
-Olllcers report slight
at milepost 16, In Meigs turned onto Third, and struck damage to both vehicles.
CoWliY, at 11 :20 a.m.
an auto driven by Barbara · Brown was cited on
Office rs report that a Curry,
29,
Kanauga, charges of · assured clear
vehi cle operated by James traveling south on Third. ·
distance.
Harden, 34, CenterviUe, WO!II
The
patrol
reports
At 9:111 a.m., thli patrol
out of control ina-curve while----moderate- damage to the- invesligaled-a- tw&lt;H~uto actraveling west on 681.
Mullins auto, sUght damage cident on TR 26, at the june·
The auto went off the right to the Curry vehicle.
lion ol TR 4115.
side of the road, recrossed
Mullins wu cited on
According to the patrol, a
and passed off the left side of charges of improper t11111inC. vehicle driven by Mark
the roadway, and went over Curry was cited on charges of Moore, 31, Albany, turned
an embankment through a operating an unsafe motor right from to6 onto 26, and
fence, owned by WUliam H. . vehicle.
·slid into an auto operated by ·
Swartz, Coolville.
Officers were called to the · Tammy W. Byron, 44,
Harden displayed vls!ble scene of a two-auto accident Albany .
Officers report moderate
signs of injury, but was not on U.S. 3$, 0ne and live-tenths
immediately treated.
of a mile west of U.S. 160, at da11111ge to both vehicles. No
Officers report moderate 2:45 p.m.
citation was issued.
The patrol reports that an
The patrol was called to the
damage to the vehicle. No
citation was issued.
auto operated by Beverly scene ol a two-auto collision
At 3:10 p.m., the patrol Brown, 17, Gallipolis, was at 3:15p.m., on SR 160, 300
investigated a two·auto east bound on 3$, behind a feet north of U.S. 35.
mishap on Second St ., at the vehicle driven by Carol
Officers report that a

~

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

..... ... t

~

... ...... .. _ ... _

In fwtber lldlon, the City
Pollee '-led line dtatlonl

City police probe two~

vehicle operatedby Mary
Madob, 19, Gallipolla,
wailing to pull onto 160, was
motioned to proceed by
anotller driver.
The Madoii auto pulled into
t11e path of a vehicle driven
by Tawna R. Borden, 17,
Bidwell.
There was moderate
damage to -the Madoix auto,
slight damage to the Borden
vehicle. No citation was
issued.

Friday.
Edwanl R. Haycraft, 18,
Galllpolla, waa cited on
charae• of po11e11ton of
lllllri)llllll '
Mlcblel M. McNutt, 20,
Blue Rocu, 0., wu cited on
cblrauof DWI.
Cited on chilr111 of
reckleu operation was
n-lcirul G. Hadlarll,

accident on State Route 7
'l'be
GALLIPOLIS
Galllpolla City Pollee In·
ve1111aled a two-vehicle
accident Friday at 4:13p.m.,
on SR 7 II the SUver Bi'idce
Shopplnl Plua.
Olficera report that •
aoulhbound auto opented by

Gary D. Cloney,17, Kana1131.
llruc:k a vdllcle drlv., by
Mary L. Haymu, "·
G•llipolll, In the rear;
Both • iitol Incurred
moderate damlae. ctoney
wu died 00 cbii'PI of
Brooklyn, N. Y.
auured clear dlllance.

BONANZA

Doc
Smith's

·'5 97 ·
8
.

.OOM Park District seeks help through
.

•''

;, GALLIPOLIS - Seeking a
: \leclaratory judgment, the 0 .
0 . Mcintyre Park District
t'med su1t against Oscar
il!astiani, Vine St., Gallipiolis,
'ilnd Patricia Bastian! , State
.St., Gallipoli s, in Gallia
:.CoWlty Common Pleas Court
·Thursdav.
:· The action claims that the
'J&gt;ark District entered into an
:wtion agreement with the
·llastianis on July 5, 1977, for
:.the purchase of ap·

.

proximately 553 acres of real under the option agreement,
in light of the provision&amp; of
estate.
The suit states that sub- the divorce &lt;lecree.
The 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Parlt
sequent to the execution of
the option agreement, tbe DiBirict claims that II llanda
defendants in the ca.se were resdy to give immediate
divorced, and a decree en· payment to the parties for
their respective Interests,
tered 'on Oct. 17, 1977.
According to the action but, becaue of the dispute of
filed Thursday, there is now a ownership of the 6.06 acres,
dispute as to the ownership of deeda cannot be executed.
The Park District asks the
approximately 6.06 acres of
real estate which was
court toanddetermine
constructiontbe
of
retained by the Bastianis meanilu!

•Automatic Trans.

•Sport Minors

and resisting arrest . Johnson
was fined $75, plus a 180 day

suspended sentence.
Fc&lt; eiting $22 on charges of
assured clear distance was
Virgil W. Freeman, 24, Rich·
mond, Va .
James H. Clark, 42,
Gallipolis, waived $22 on
charges of operating an
· unsafe motor vehicle .
Wa iving $27 on charges of
operating a motor vehicle

with an invalid registration
was Deborah L. Brwnfleld,
24, HW1tington.
lenora Kanniard, 38, Oak
Hill, was fined $15 on charges
of operating a motor vehicle
without a valid license . .
Forfeiting $22 on charges of
operating a true~ without
mud flaps was Fred A:
Houck, 31 , Gallipolis.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of excessive speed
were Randy W. Tysor, ~.
Mayodan , N.. C., $23;
Raymond Saunders , 52,
Franklin, 0 ., $26; MalJ' J.
Kelly, 20, Minford, 0 ., $28;
Joseph W. Draughon, 31,
Mount Airy, N. C., $21;
Norman R. Penton, 27,
Gallipolis, $22; Alice S.
Adams, 23, Eureka, $22;
Arlen R. Owens, 46, Rio

• Tinted Glass

• Radio Accom. Pltg.

GALLIPOLIS

PHONE &lt;146 72B2

r---------------------------------------~---------,

Thompson announces

fall night schedule
GALLIPOLIS - Clarence
Thompson. Superintendent of
Buckeye Hills Career Center
announced today the Adult
Educa tio n Fall evening
schedule. E!asses will nor·
mally mee t one or tw o
evenings per week, starting
'the first week of October.
Mr . Thomoson submitted
the following schedule : Adult
Basic Education. Acco WJting
· Bookkeeping I, Amateur
Rad io
Code,
Assault
Preventi on, Auto Body
Repair . Dog Obedien ce,
Energy Sav ing Techniques
Semin ar , Forkli ft Truck
Dri ving Tra inin g Se minar

(OSHA !. Horse Footcare and
Trimm ing,

In come

Tax

Pr e par ation.
Karate
(Beginninl( ), Karate (In·
t er med i ate- l , Me di c al
Records, Nurses Aide · Or·
derty, Shorthand I, Slim·
na sti cs , Small

Business

New spap er Ad ve rti sin g
Seminar, Speak Up (Public
Speakin g). Typing and
Welding.
Adult Ed uc atiOn Super·
vi sor, Sco tt Coddington

Fall quarter to
begin Sept. 18
GALLIPOLIS-The Gal·
lipolls . Business College,
which is now located in new
facilities al529 Jackson Pike,
Spring Valley Plaza , an·
noWJced Friday thai their fall
quarter begina Monday , Sept,
18.
'
Applications · lor
registration will be arcepted
through Oct. 2 for u10 fall
quarter.

staled that registration wiU
be held in the Adult
Education Office between 8 a.
m. and 4 p. m. the week of
Sept. 2!&gt;.
It will also be held on
Monday
and
Tuesday
evenings Sept. 2!&gt; and Sept.
26, 19781rom 6:30to 8:30p. m.
For additional Information
contact the Adult Education
Office at (614 ) 2~.

FIGURES RELEASED
GALLIPOLIS - August
1978 sales of Series E &amp; H
United States Savings Bonds
in Ohio were p&amp;.7 mUlion. At
the end of August, the state
attained 63.8 percent .of its
1978 sales goal.
C. Leon Saunders, Gallia
County Volunteer Savings
Bonds Chairman, report·
ed August sales of savings
bonds in the coWlty were
$211,883. The coWJtY achieved
56.3. percent of its amual
sales goal Aug. 31.

proposed

'

"£51 Vf•l "•F'·I I"I '• \' 00 tl t.,M lD :. Q•JA~l CE
P , , ·. 1 · ,r f-''tiU u 1:.n!_,!
(;II Lf' ,'f "l'. :.,, II ~ TNVI liCf tTO.rt l.

ORDER BY MAIL NOW
DD081 E 8 1~05 C 0 CIVIC CENTH
REY~ I OLOS 51 CH ARLESTON WV 25301

CERTI FIE D Ct-t£ CKS DR MONE Y QPO£H::i

ON ~"

CAlL J48 6070 FOR INFORMA liON

Sweet Dreams Can ·
Comeltue...

uto Financing?

FOR HER ... FOR YOU

That's right. The Ohio Valley Bank
is known throughout Gallia County
as auto loan experts. Why not call
or stop in and learn all about OW'
attractive r11tes and terms. We
will process yoW' application

promptly ... usually within an hoW'.
So when you are considering a new
car, remember a valuable accessory
1s Ohio Valley Bank financing. It's
what you would expect from
· Willing Bankers.

cw~
Will!

OhioValley Bank
Gall ipolis . Ohio

Member FDIC

Hey! I'd like you to
meet our new
fish sandwich!

..

WIFE BEATING
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Houae refused to concur
Friday In Senate changes to
lt~~lalalm to

inGaUia
County Court

.

TICKETS ON SALE NOW

Two Cars
-Collide

Suit filed

PAPERS FILED
GALLIPOLIS - Special . GALLIPOLIS - CllimiDC
articles of incorporation have that tlle terms and condlllons
been filed in ColumbUB with of a security agreeme.t bave
SecretalJ' of State Ted W. been violated, the Mack
Brown by toe Greene Way Financial Corporation,
Sport Parachute Center of KnoliVIlle, Tenn., filed suit
Gallipolis, Inc.
Friday in Galtia County
David T. Evans served as Common P!eu Court aplnll
attorr,ey for the incorporator, the Burke &amp; McGuire Coal
David A. Spurlock.
'eo., Inc., Bidwell.
In the action, the plaintiff
HI·LOW TEMPS
uks an order lor ibe
NEW YORK (UPI) - The recovery of two pieces of off·
highest temperature reported hl&amp;hw ay equipment, and
Thursday to the National damag.. in the 11110unl of
Weather Service, excluding $30110.
Alaska and Hawaii, was 102
Thes1 ;, ,jaimsthstthere is
degrees at Wichita FaU.., now clue, on each piece of
Tex. Today's low wu M equipment, the sum of
degrees at Du Boia, Pa.
$120,1211 •• •.

SUNDAY, OCT. 8, 8 PM

SUparSale

GALLIPOLIS- Durtnc the
last lew years an industlJ'
group hilS been conducting an
experiment to ascertain the
feasibility of marketing
untied burley tobacco.
The CoWICU for Burley
Tobacco Inc., representing
all segments of the burley
tobacco
Industry, has
evaluated the results of lhia
experiment and bu proposed
lor 19'78-'19 11111rketing year an
untied marketing program
lor educations~ and researcb
purposes. The program In·
eludes marketing a Umlled
quantity of untied baled
burley tobacco with the
availability of price· support.
Farmers wbo plan to
market burley in bales must
file a request at the County
ASCS Office located at ~29
J acksoll Pllte by September
29, 1978. The balea must be
l 'x2'x3' in stu and leaves
must be untied and packed
straight. Butt ends of leaves
must be oriented to ends of
the bales with tips to the
center.
Price support will be
available only live sale days
at each warehoiule. Exact
dates wUI be announced later
by tbe Burley Sales Com·
mission. We know there will
be three sale datu before
Christmu and two lllle dltea
alter the ChrllltmU recess.

I

'

about

make little of it and opted hot
was accepted as an authentic three times during the past vestigators that alter Oswald. contact with him. "
to
.refer to it in its report. "
"In addition to periodic
WASHINGTON (UPI) - defe ctor and not a Soviet two years .by ·committee cut his wrists, Soviet psychia·
Blakey
said after the CIA
agent investigators and appeared trlsts reported he was physical surveillance in
Russian spies kept Lee " disinformation"
finall
y
cleared
Nosenko in
which
Oswald
was
followed
Harvey Oswald under whose job was to deny any at two executive aesalons of "mentally unstable" and tbe
1968
he
was
given
a new
by
KGB
agents,
his
phone
survelllance during his time Soviet co nnection with the commltiee ·with new KGB "wasbed Its hands" of
identity,
"a
substantial
sum
Oswald
.
was
tapped,
his
mail
inlonnation, officials said. him.
in the Soviet Union
of
money
and
hired
as
a
CIA
the
report
said.
intercepted,"
Nosenko was interviewed
"A decision came down to
Noskeno told committee in·
and two Soviet psy·
co
nsultant,
a
position
he
explained
that
the
"Nosenko
allow Oswald to remain in
chiatrlsts
wh o exam·
holda
to
this
day
."
Russia, though he wasn't surveillance, which was to
ined him after a suicide
He'said Nosenko could not
granted
citizenship, 11 conlinuethroughout Oswald's
attempt decided he wa s
appear
at the open hearing
Nosenko said in the report. stay in Russia, was not
"mentally unstable, " a
because
the CIA and the FBI
A significant factor , unusual and was to insure
House , committee revealed
felt
to
compromise his
According
to
Richard
Concern over another
Nosenko claimed, was lear Oswald was not a western
Friday.
"could
put him in
identity
Flless,
manager
of
the
Cheule
that Oswald would kill agent."
G. Robert Blakey, chief . possible train derailment in
grave
personal
danger
."
RaUroad's
Grafton
dlvl$on
The Warren Commission
himself "and the KGB would
counsel lor the House the Bend Area was relieved
The report revealed that
Assassination Committee Saturday morning when the oHice, two wheels of a train be acCIISed of murdering an considered Soviet complicity the CIA kept Nosenko in
investlga~g the · death of
" derailment" turned out to car came off the track during American tourist at ·a time in the assassination and "spartan conditions" for 31&gt;
the proceaa of switching to . a tile Kremlin was trying to concluded there was no
President John F, Kennedy, be a minor incident.
side track around 7:30 a.m. reduce Eaai-West tensions." evidence of it 14 years ago. years while he was un·
gave previously classified
Blakey said the Warren dergoing qu es ti oning .
The car, believed to be Oswald's KGB me was sent
details of Oswald's time in
Commission
was aware of Nosenko claimed he wa s kept
to
Minsk
where
Oswald
·
was
carrying lleel I-beams, was
the SOviet Union.
early
and in a room with an iron cot
on the side track and not in· living, Nosenko said, and the Nosenko 's
The delalls were contained
informatlon
on bolted to the floor and a light
erroneous
KGB
autlloritles
there
were
terferlng with use of the main
in a report on Yuri Nosenko, a
bUlb as its only furnishings .
track, Flieas aald. He noted asked "to keep Oswald under Oswald " but it was able to
Soviet cillu.n who identified
himself as an officer of the
that he expected the car to be surveillance but to have oo
Sovjet spy agency KGB when
back on the lfaCk in a sbort
he defected to the · United
GALLIPOLIS
Two period of time.
stales in February 1964.
outstanding band shows were
The rwort, given in an presented during · Friday's
open hearing, said Nosenko halftime program of the
failed two CIA administered Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant loot·
SCHOOL BUS
lie-&lt;letector tests in Apr. 1964 ball game before ap·
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Two cars were involved in a
and October 1966 in which he proximately 4,000 fans at Ohio House Friday passed
collialon
at 4: 3S p.m. Friday
sought
to
convince Memorial Field .
WJanimously and referred to
during
the
exodus of afternoon
investigators the KGB had
After Gerald Stewart's tile Senate a bill allowing
not been interested in Oswald visiting Big Black musicians school bus drivers to pick up tn.Hic from the Phllip Sporn
while he was in Russia from perf ormance, Rodney and drop off pupils at places Plant on Route 33, near New
late 1959 to 1962.
Tolliver's band, which in· other than their regular Haven.
In August 1968, the eludes 136 members, plu~ six stops.
James L. Barnette, 62, Point
report said, Nosenko passed a majorettes and a new 16Rep . William E. Hinig, D- Pleasant Route 2, was eldting
lie-detector test and finally member
Illig ,
corps, New Philadelphia, said the the plant's parking lot via
presented its nalftime Show. measure is needed because Gate 3 when he collided with a
The GAHS majorettes and working parents sometimes car driven by James N.
flag corps were featured in want their children to. be left Roush, 55, New Haven, ac·
Start a high interest savings
routines while the band . with a sitter when school is cording to Mason County
account now, and be sure
out.
played in the backgroWld.
Sheriff's Deputy Harry
The measure cleared alter Rhodes.
those dreams will be fiOn all 78 Models In
lawmakers were assured
Damage was estimated at
local bOards of education $450 to the Barnette car· and
Stock .... We also have
nancially covered when
l..AND
REGISTRATION
would
have to approve any $500 to the Roush vehicle.
a large selection of
she's older. See us!
COLUMBUS iUPI) - The irregular dropolls and that a
used Travel Trailers . Ohio
Senate unanimously pupil's safety would not be
passed Friday and sent to the endangered.
House a bill requiring non·
Baker presents
resident aliens who own land
and certain mineral rights to
Rotary program
register with the secretary of
JOBS AVAILABLE
state .
MIDDLEPORT
The bill applies to owners of · POMEROY- Anyone over Rotarian Edison Baker,
more than three acres of the age of 55 with a low in· furniture store operator, was
land, or who own real estate come Interested in 20 hours a speaker Friday evening when
with a market value greater · week doing odd jobs lor the the Middleport • Pomeroy
Vlllage of Pomeroy are asked Rl)tary Club met at Heath
LOWMAN
than $100,000.
The measure is aimed to contact Mayor Clarence United Methodist Church
mainly at identifying foreign Andrews Monday morning." with John Rice, president, in
TRAVEL TRAILERS
corporations which acquire Jobs will pay the minimum charge.
Rt . JJ
Hartford, w . va .
wage.
Ohio lannland.
Baker reviewed the types
Phone 882 ·2127
of construction used in fur·
niture and the grades of
materials
used
in
upholstering.
"ThroUBh the material
ratings one can anticipate the
amount of time the fabrics
will wear," Baker said. He
also spoke on veneering and
wooda used in making fur·
niture.
Vernon Weber led group
singing and Gene Riggs
announced a plan lor make
up sessions lor club mem·
bers. Women of the church
served dinner.

Bands stage
halftime shows
at grid tilt

11011 give you
taight Tal

Program

Cleveland alone, and that it ·
rider attached.
As sent to Rhodes, the bill was similar to assistance lor
l'Oplains a requirement that debt-ridden New York City.
city council pass a resolution
" That's nonsense," said
acknowledging an impaired Tablack. "New York City
credit rating to qualify for the was $2 billion in debt.
special bond provisions.
Cleveland 's deficit is $40
CoWlcil must also approve million.
any
negotiat ed
bond
"New York City's $2 billion
agreemenf.S:"-C.......--,w"'a~s~a:.-1~
o n~e~tune f4Uitillli0n,"
The legislation will expire warn ed House Minority
Dec. 31, 1979, and if the Leader Charles F . Kurfess,
procedure is to continue, the R-Perr ysburg, who spon·
Legislature must re-enact it. sored the legislative over·
House membersvoted ~ 3-32 •ight amendment and ended
to set up a special legislative up voting for the bill.
committee to monitor the
Supporters pointed out that
law.
if Cleveland were allowed to
Tablack had to fight off go into default, the bad credit
opposition from leg islators rating could rub off on other
who believed the bill was an Ohio cities and eventually the
unwarranted bailout of st ate.

Minor Derailment

SMITH BUICI&lt; PONTIAC

Grande,85; Roger A. Wataon,
28, Gallipolis, $16 (su..,en·
ded); Ronald L. Trout, 39,
Patriot, $25; Lloyd E.
Ferguaon, 23, Crown City,
$22; Ricblrd A. Pblllips, 415,
Chesapeake, S2li; and Carson
E. Deskins, 38, Porter, 0.,
$22

bon~ out of the Investment carrried the measure on the
grade .
House fl oor.
The bill, authored by Sen.
Oppon ents . said
the
Kenneth R. Cyx, D· proposal would only Ioree
Barberton, allows any city Cleveland deeper into debt,
. with · an impaired credit and that future
ad·
rating to negotiate the sale of ministrations would be forced
its bonds rather than submit to take it out of the taxpayers
to competitive bidding,
later on.
They may ,extend "th~e~= ''Thl.S 1s a rusnto juagment
borrowing period from eight which is ilkonceived," said
to 10 years and offer 10 Rep. William G. Batchelder,
percent interest instead of the. R-Medina. "The next mayor
existing maximum of 8 will face a debt which has
increased by 33 percent."
percent.
.
"There comes a time when
The measure eventually
we have to give these cities a cleared the House, 62·32,
little help," said Rep. George after two unsuccessful at·
D. Tablack, D·Campbell, who tempts to get the emergency

By DANIEL F. GILMORE

•Deluxe Wheel
Covets

~ Charge against Cheshire
GALLIPOLIS - The case
against Chester Ray Sutehin,
Cheshire , charged with
ph ysical
harm,
was
dismissed in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday.
Eighteen other cases were
tenninated in Judge James
A. Bennett's court.
Edsel Jordan , Oak Hill.
entered a plea of guilty to
charges of obstructing justice

By LEE LEONARD
procedures and negotiate the to bonda before US mlUion law.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
sale of bonds with more worth of nOtes come due Dec.
Sen. Anthony J. Celebrel:ze.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The liberal payback provisions. 15 - in .V1 days.
Jr., D·Cieveland, a co·
Though they pushed the
city of Cleveland, deeply in
Cleveland Finance sponsor, said that if an
debt. apparently has been measure through the Senate Director Joseph Tegreene, emergency clause had been
given ·an llth·hour reprieve and House In near·record who lobbied vigorously lor Insisted upon, the bill
by the Ohio General time last week, supporters the flexible bond bUI all week, wouldn't have passed at all.
Assembly in Its efforts to were unable to muster the seemed aatisfled with getting
"This is better than
convert short·tenn notes to ne c essary two -thirds -~ meuure !lawn to the· nothing," he said.
- -lllllg·term
lionds 8iiil--m8jorify m the House lor an governor despite thli lack of · Supporters
of
the
stralghteq out its financial emergency clause .
legislation, cleared by the
emergency priorty.
mess over the next lew years.
This means the bill will not
Tegi-eene indicated tl1e city Senate only Thursday, told
The legislature, prior to take effect for 90 days after will be able to lind a way to House members that failure
adjourning Friday until after Signature by Gov. James A. forestall default on tbe $15 to enact the biU would place
the November ele ction, Rhodes .
million in notea by notifying Cleveland's credit rating in
adopted and sent to Gov.
·Cleveland fiscal officers the investinent community even greater jeopardy than it
James A... Rhodes a bill were hopeful of convincing that a flexible method · of is already.
allowing c1t1es with an im· Rhodes to sign the measure marketing bonds Is on the
New York financial rating
pilred credit rating to bypass today so they can convert way in the form of a new state services have. dropped city
competitive biddin g someoltheirshort·tenndebt

Oswald kept under surveillance

•WhitewaH Radials

the option, with respect to the
acreage In question, and
declare the rights and dulles
of the parties in Ughl of the
divorce judgment enllJI.
The plaintiff further seeks
that the court order appropriate deeds be made by
the parties, and all other .
relief necessalJI to carry out
the tenns of the option.
1911 EASTEBN AVE:.

man·dismissed in court

Assembly gives Cleveland ! 1th hour.reprieve

• Air Conditionin1

•301 V-8 Engine

• Power Brakes

court

Includes
. The FolloWing
Equipment

·

• Power Steering

•

Price

A·7- TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 17, 1978

9 9.,

The newest addition to our IIIIIIUI
A ttnder filet of Icelandic
cod with crispy colt slaw
on a Grecitn hun • . .

"

require local ·

pollee departments to train
officers In dealing with
domestic violence.
The bUI was sent · to a
conference committee, which
will work out diHerencea
between tile two cllambera'
veniCIIII of the btU.
Under tbe meuure, each
local law enforcement
qeacy WMid bave to train
offlc:en on how to deal with
domtalc: violence lltaatlona.
In addition, a atatllllcal
=IIIJIIIDICII ........k:
wuuJd be .. el.lle.d .
In 11M
of Q1mlnal
Indtntlflc:atlon and

a-

•
:-

lnvtllllllkll.

Four Locations To Better Serve You

\

PIZZA &amp; SPAGHETTI HOUSE
TIONS

I

,

I

II .

•

'·

Mother told 111 there would
be dloya like tbla, but lllw
never revealed they'd
ll:bedule them 1 whole week
MIM time .

,ASSIIWOK SAVINGS ·
Eam 514% from
date of deposit to
date of Withdrawal.

All Deposits Insured
to $40,000 by The Federal

Savings &amp; Loan Insurance Corporation.

Meigs Branch,

The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan
· "larp .Enough to Serve You-Small Enough to Know You"
Richard 'E. Jones •.fit\anager
216 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .

,.

992-6655 .

�Refuse request

)

CHICAGO t UPI I -' A and Airline Oerks.
The union has been on
federal judge Friday refused
to grant an injunction strike against tile railway
preventing the nation's since early July in a dispute
railroads from filing suits over work rules and job
against a clerks' union on . protection clauses in a new
strike against tile Norfolk &amp; contract .
Because members of the
Western Railway Co.
" Merely to sta te the As sociation or American
plaintiff 's motion is to rea lize Railroads have been conlts over-reaching nature," U. tributing abo ut $800 ,000 daily
S Dist[kt Judge Alfred V. to the No rfolk line since t he
Kirkland said in rejecting a strike bega n, union -memliers
request for the injunction by have picketed other railways .
The union sought to have
the Brotherhood of Railway
Kirkland
keep
th e
a ssociation ' s 72 members
from filin g suits around lhe
country to stop the picketing .
DEPARTMENTs CALLED
MIDDLEPORT The
JUNK FOODS
Middleport emergency squad
CO LUMBUS ( UPI ) - The
was called to Poplar Sl .. Ohio Legislature sent to Gov .
Cheshire, at 8:40p.m. Friday James A. Rhodes Friday a
fo r Harold Thomas. He was bill to require local boards of
treated on the scene and then education to ado pt rul es
taken to Holze r Medi ca l governing the sale of " junk
Center by SEOEMS.
foo d" on scho ol ground s
At 8:40 p .m. the fire during regular school hours.
department was called to the
As introdu ce d, the b11l
home of Clifford Thomas, would have prohibited
1085 Vine St. , for a minor sc hools fr om selling soft
wiring fire .
drinks , ra ndy and other highsuga r ron tent foods : but local
education officials objected
MEET TUESDAY
to the prohibitions and sucPOMEROY
The cessfully fought for a btll
Women's
Auxiliary
of r equirin g onl y t hat loca l
Veterans Memorial Hospital boards decide the matt er for
will meet a t 7:30 p.m. themselves.
Tuesday in the hos pi tal
The bill. as amended, was
ca fet eria . There will be an endorse\~ by the Ohio PTA
election and installa tion of and the Ohio Dental
new orfice(s. ·:

By RICK VANSANT
onslaught this winter.
United Press Internalional
A random UPI survey of
Two straight severe win- the state indicates unusually
ters have prompted many high and early sales of
Ohioans · to already begin snowblow ers ,
increased
preparing for a possible third concern
about
the
consecutive ice a nd snow ' availability of firewood and
even now interest in expensive wintertime toys snowmobiles.
"We sold out of some lines
of snowblowers back in
Jul y," says a Cleveland
Sears, Roebuck &amp; Co. hard·
ware salesman.
"We've had inquiries all
summer long about the
availability of firewood this
winter, " notes a Cinci nnati
wood dealer.
"O ur snowmobile start at
$1,600 and go up to $2,700, but
we've got· peo ple who want
delivery as soon as possible,"
says a snowmobile dealer.
Many Ohioans weren't
ready fnr the blizzard that
buried Ohio last January.
It was just a few months
ago, it might be reca lled , that
the snow was so deep around
Mansfield that a truck
driver's giganti c rig was
rompletely covered by snow
for nearly a week. The driver
managed to survive by eating
snow until , rescuers found
him by pushing a po le d0\\11 .
through the snow and hitting
the top of his cab.
Now , t here is growing
concern that the 1978-79
winter might be just as bad, if
·not worse, than last year's.
" There 's a Jut of talk up
here already about what
might happen this winter,"
says Dan Nemeth , assistant
manager of the hardware
lfPII.AI
department
at Sears' Car·
-lUll!
negie Store in Cleveland.
And talk ha s spawned
action - buying action .
" I've been in this business
21 years and I've never seen
such ea rly demand for snow
removal equipment ," says
Nemeth . "Some of our lines
of snowblowers were sold out
in July and we've been told by
the manufacturer that
models won't be available to
us the rest of the season."
Nemeth said the big sellers
ha ve been self-propell ed
snowblowers selling for
between $449 and 1999.
" For the most part, these
are not companies coming in
and buying them up, but
individuals," he said . ''In
some cases, we've had 10 or
12 neighbors pitch in and buy
one tO share for the winter.
" I think they're a good
investment. I remember last
winter when tile snow was
piled up over my 42-inch
high fence. These last two
winters are not too hard to
remember .' '
If "Wild Winter III " comes
to Ohio, then more and more
fireplaces figure to be used
out of necessity rather than
for Show.
''We've had inquiries about
the availability of firewood

Sunday thru Saturday

September 17 thru September 23

STUFTSHIRTS
lb. 100% Ground Beef,

Tomato, Cheese, Lettuce,
Pickle, Onion, Mayonnaise.

UTILITY BILI.S
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Public utilities will be limited
In the amount they can " back
bill" their customers under
'terms of a bill sent to the
governor Friday by the Ohio
General Assembly .
' The bill will prohibit
utilities from charging
customers for errors in their
utility meters more than one
year old, and require that
utilities give their customers
at least one year to reim·
burse the rompany.

CHICKEN LEGS •••••••••••••••••·•••••••••~~·.

PAUU

........

2nd &amp;OM

G

79~

- LB;. 69~
CHICKEN THIGHS •••••••••••••••••••••••
L

. GS. .............. , ........
LB.. 55~
CHICKEN WIN
FAMILY PACK
·
LB 79~

CHICKEN

r • • • • • • • • .• . • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • •

~•

SUPERIORS WIENERS ••••••••• }.2.~~!.~~:
Freshest Produce In Town

YELLOW ONIONS

3

LB.

LB.1s~
GOLDEN RIPE

RED OR GOLDEN DEUCIOUS
•

BANANAS

APPLES

3

LB.

89~

FRESH CABBAGE

49~

79~

LB.19~

1%
MILK

4

50l
PKG.

Gallon Plastic

99~

8

3 LB. JAR

CARRIER
MILLS
THIN

$199

SPAGHIDI
2 lb. Pkg.

SCOT
TOWELS
JUMBO ROLL

TOILET
TISSUE
4 ROU PKG.

'19~

SCOT lAD WHOLE KERNEL or CREAM STYLE CORN ...... 3b~~z. 89•
SCOT LAD CUT GREEN BEANS............................. 4 ~~A~.Zs 99•
SCOT LAD PEASJ............................................ 3~,A~~ 89•

-lA tiii

lp II I Q.

-·

SCOT lAD
SCOT lAD
SCOT ••
LII,D

992-21_56

Pomeroy-Middleport

························~··· ·

.........

,

TOMATOES. ••••••• ••••••. ·••• ••• •................ 3 ~'A0N1S C)9t
SAUD DRESSING ..............................1!.~~:.~~~.
J
. AG HETTl Mll\r
IL'&amp;IU'E
PLAINORMEAT
l20Z JAR
SP
••••••••••••••••••
~

83

I . . . . . . . . . . . . . I ••

I ••••

~:

h
.
Dona ue ,..nunzon
H z'll
t
tificatt.On
a ror. t

Judie Carmel Rardin and
Terry R. Sheets were wlited
tn·marrtage on August 19, at
Second Baptist Church,
Ravenowood, West Virginia.
The
Reverend
Ken
Derrington officiated the
double ring cerem911y.
Music waa provided' by
Mrs. Curtis Atkinson and
Brenda Epling sang "It's A
Beautiful Thing"
and
"Wedding Song - There Is

PEANUT
BUTTER

$109

446-23·42

Miss Paula Sue Walker and "something borrowed," pearl
Dennis Ray Salisbury ex- earrings belonging to her
~hanged wedding vows in an sister , and a blue ga rter for
aftern oo n ceremony on "something blue."
August 6, at the First Baptist
Miss Letty Walker, sister of
Church, Gallipolis. The bride the bride, :~rve~ ."" maid o!
~ --rstneoaughler of Mr. ana- honor, -affil the 6ndesma1ds
Mrs.
Harold
Walk er , were Miss Becky Call, cousin
Gallipolis,
and
the of the bride ; Miss Tanuny
bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Kiesling and Miss .. Becky
Dorothy Eve lyn Rainey, Rupe, all of Ga!hpohs. They
Gallipolis, and Warren wore identi ca l floor-length A·
Salisbury, Gallipiolis.
hne gowns of yellow Q1ana
Reverend Joseph Godwin damask with a Bertha collar
officiated at the double ring_ flow ing into a cape at the
2:30 p.m . ceremony. Pre· back. Each wore a gold heart·
nuptial music was presented shaped necklace With an opal
by Mrs . Barbara Stewart, center , a gift of the bride. All
'
'.J
organist whose selections the attendants earned a
included 'theme from "Love nosegay of yellow daisies ,
Story " " Magic Moments " white sweetheart roses ,
"l m~ssible Dream," "The miniature blue carnations
Way We Were " "Morning and baby's breath and wore a
Has Broken," •.. , Believe{ " single yello.w flower in their
"Because" and " Oh Promi
ha1r .
.
In a double-ring ceremony colored pink , yellow and
Me." Vocal selections y
Flower g1rl was the bride's
at the Central Christian aqua.
Miss Lisa Stewart were cousin , Mi ss Wendy J o
Church of Ironton, Peggy Sue
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis R. Salisbu ry
"Whither Thou Gocst," A Bradbury ,' Gallipolis . He r
Robbin McKee was the
Hennen, daughter of Mr. and flower girl; she carried a
Time For Us," "Sunrise, lo ng yell ow dress had
Mrs. Ray A. Hennen, Jr. , Rt. white basket of red rose
Sunset'' and "Saviour Like A scooped, wide sheer la ce on was attired in an apricot Shi r ley Sa li sb ury, all of
I, Scottown, and Richard petals.
Shepherd Lead Us," as the the bodiCe with a · pointed floor-len gth go wn with Ga llipolis : and Mrs . Lynn
Stanley McKee, son of Mr ..
couple knelt in prayer.
skirt overlay , short puffed matching jacket and a Brumme, cousin of the bride,
Michael McKee was the
ami Mrs. Francis A. McKee ringbearer. Ethel Mae Leith
The a ltar was graced with sleeves and a bow !ted m the shoulder corsage of white of Killbuck.
of 1412 So. 7th St., Ironton, registered the guests and
two gold-based, nine branch • back. She wore a gold heart ca rnations. The groom's stepFor their wedding trip to
were united in marriage .
spiral candelabra entwined necklace, a g1ft of the_brtde ; mother wore a blue fl oor- Orlando, Florida, the bride
Tomas McKee of Ironton was
The wedding was an event the best man, and he wore a
wjth greenery and gold · sllk rose buds 1n her ha1r a~d length gown with chiffon cha nged to a street-length ,
of August 12, all :30 p.m . with blue tuxedo. Johnnie Ray
, ba'se . stand ing fan-shaped ca med a large white pnn- sleeves and a yellow ca r- mint green dress with
the Rev. Phil Lemaster of Hennen· of Lecta was the
baskets oC white gladiolas, cess basket tnmmed wtlh nation shoulder corsage .
matching jacket and wore a
Ironton officiating.
yellow pompons and blue yellow bow and streamer s
usher and wore a blue tuxedo.
Regis tering the "guests shoulder corsage of ye llow
Music was presented by Their carnation boutonnieres
carnations . Yellow and blue with yellow rose petals.
were Mr s. Vicki Grim, daisies .
Mr. Paul Roach, who sang, were tipped in the color of
carnations in white vases
For his wedding, the groom Gallpolis , and Mrs. Susan
On the night before the
"We've Only Just Begun," their lu•edos.
decorated the sanctuary )tlore a powder blue tuxedo Dunn, Wa•hington Court weddin g Mr. and Mrs .
"Vou Light Up My Life," " I
windows. White satin bows accented with darker blue House .
For her daughter's wedWarren Salisbury hosted a
Honestly Love You," and the ding, Mrs. Hennen wore a
marked the family pews. trim on the lapels; a_ light
A reception was held in the rehearsa l dinne r for the
" Lord's Prayer,"
ac- blue floor-length gown with
During the ceremony , the blue ruffled shirt and lle and Fellowship Room following wedding party.
companied by Joyce Boggs. matching cape. Mrs. McKee
couple lit th e sym bolic a yellow carnatiOn bouton- the ceremony . The bride's
The newlyweds are at home
wedding candle.
mere With white sweetheart table was covered with a to friend s at 114 State Street,
Featured at the altar, the wore a blue floor-length gown
decorations were one fifteen with a long cape and both
Escorted to the altar by her rose in the center. Steven white linen and lace cloth and Ga llipolis. The new Mrs.
father and given in marriage Salisbury, Gallipolis , served feat ured the three tiered Salisbury is a 1~76 graduate
branch candelabra, and one moth e rs wore white cartw~branch candelabra which nation corsages .
by her parents, the bride was as best man for h1s brother. wed ding ca ke with four of Ga llia Aca demy High
Mr and Mrs. Richard McKee
attired in a formal gown of Ushers were Roger May, Tm1 surrounding heart- shaped School and is employed by
were flanked by four basKets
A reception honoring the
of lerns and an ivy-covered couple was held in the lounge
white organza fashioned with Godwm and T1m Chevalier, cakes holding ku;sing a ngels. Th e Oh io Valley Bank .
arch.
an empire bodice , accented all of Galltpohs. The jackets The cake was topped with a Sa lisbury is a 1977 graduate
of the ch urch. The
Given in marriage by her room
with lace motifs, open por- and shirts of lhe1r tuxedos pewter bowl of yellow sweet- of Ga llia Academy High
bride's table feat ured a three.
I c;,..
·
father, the bride wore a gown tiered cake with a water
trait neckline and tapered were identical to the groom's heart roses, blue net and School and Buckeye Hills
of chantilly lace and silk fountain at the base of the ·
organza
s leeves,
bot h with d~rker blue vests, pants baby's breath with the bride Career Center. He is emD
organza, fashioned with a cake. The bride's table was
trimmed with silk Venice and ties. All wore )ellow and g room's nam e a nd ployed by Robbins &amp; Myers,
cameo-neckline and
a set up by Fay Sutton .
'lace . Highlighting the con· ca_rna,tion boutonnieres . The wedding date engraved on the Inc .
mandarin collar with tiny
The couple now reside at
Out-of-town g u es ts
. (; ,\ I.LI PO I. IS --D esce n· Carrie E lizobdli Miller , anti tours of the full A-line skirt bnde s father wore the same bowl. Blue and yellow ribbons
seed-pearls scattered over 1507 So. 4th St.. Ironton .
dants of George W. Donahue Shannon Hope Fallon, new and [he attached chapel train attire . Master Barry Call, and t iny yellow flow ers reg istering were : Mr. and
tile bodice. The gown had
was Venice lace . She wore a Galhpohs, rousm of the bnde, completed the decor of the Mrs. Bruce Brumme, Becky
These were guests at the and Augusti:l Raul f Donahue
long chantilly lace sleeves wedding : Mr . and Mrs. gathered at Fortification Hill , babie:i, and Sheryl Fraser, lace and seed pearl trinuned was the ringbearer. He wore cake baked by Mrs. Marge and Tim of Killbuck; Mr. and
and the cuffs were accented Francis A. McKee, Mr. and Ga llipolis. last Sunday fur rrwrTicd tu l .&lt;:i rry Fet lluJJ .
bridal bonnet from which fell a tuxedo Identical to the
Arlfltt
Dunet h.ue w&lt;Js a fingertip · veil edged with ushers, a small yellow car· Walker , Bidwell. Blue tapers Mrs. Ervin Walker. Dayton ;
with crystal pleats. The A· Mrs. Ray A. Hennen , Mr. and tl lL• lr·cight a unu(Jl reunion .
recognized as the oldest fami- silk Venire lace and a blusher natlon boutonmere and In silver candelabra ; the Reverend and Mrs. Harry
Une skirt was accented with Mrs . William H. Bartee,
bride's silver compote with Cole; Cedarville : Mr. Larry
Oinner was served al noun
more chantilly lace with a Michael McKee, Brian with I~wr~ ncc Pt!gg!; giving ly m~mbcr prc.st!nt. Peggs of silk illusion. Her jewelry ca rried ~ white (ace_-cov~red mints of white wedding bells, Belnap, Youngstown ; Mrs.
noted
lila!
40
years
ago
to
the
lcii)g chapel train.
was a single strand of pearls, pillow w1th the weddmg rmgs blue and 'yellow flowers and Merrill Brucker, Mt. Gilead;
McKee, Johnnie R. Hennen, grace. Peggs presided at a
The bandeau had a tw&lt;&gt;- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Austin, short business mcetjn~ i:ltHI day, Sept. 10, 1938, her hus- a gift of the groom. The bride attached for the brtde and green leaves ; silver nut dish Mrs. Winnie Rhodes, Sandy
liered fingertip veil edged . Mrs. Betty McKee, Mr. and wa s r~-e lcdcd IJI"Csidcnt fur uand died. Next )'car's rcu- carried a cascade of white groom.
and the silver punch bowl ville, W. Va . ; Mr . Jim
with chantilly lace . She Mrs. William Fudge, Charlie the 1979 reunion with Mrs, niun will ile held d a l For· Marguerite daisies, yellow
For her daughter's wed- Oanked the cake.
Starnes, Warren. Michigani
carried a rolonial bouquet of' Ray Fudge, Randy King , M e~ ri e Hawkius bei n~ re- tifit:otiun Hill tilt' second Sun- sweetheart roses, baby 's ding, Mrs. Walker wore a
Assisting with the reception Mr . Jim Berry, Miss Barbara
day
in
Scptemiler.
breath
and ivy . F or seafoam, fl oor-length gown
white daisies with white Sherry and Beckey Pai'S&lt;lns, elected set:rclarylr easurer.
1\ltcmling were Mr . and "something old" she carried accented with a chiffon cape serving were members of the !son and Mr. Da ve Thomas,
streamers.
Etna Dean, Mr . and Mrs. Ray Mrs. Hawk ins lll'ese nted
Ladies Fell owship of th e all of Columbus: Mr. and
Debbie McKee was the Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Tom rmnulcs from let.sl yca r'.s reu- Mrs. I.c.wr·c ncc Pcgg;-; , Mrs. a linen applique handkerchief trimmed with lace. She wore church along with three Mrs. Gary Dunn , Mr. and
Ann a P eggs, Charle s be longing to her mother , for a wristlet corsage of white
maid of honor : she wore an McKee and Teresa, Lynn niutl.
sisters-in-law of the groom: Mrs. Frank Berry and Mrs.
Coc
hran, Mr . attd Mrs.
aqua A-line gown of Witt , Billy J . Davis, Mr. and
Pidures were t...i:tken for the MdiJum Tm·keU. Mrs. I.eslie ·'somet hi ng new, " her carnation s lipped with Mrs. Brenda Salisbury, Mrs. Mae Page, all of Washington
polyester. She carried a Mrs . J ohn Minard, Mr. and fwnily a lbum. The children
attire,
for yellow. The groom's mother Gloria Salisbury , Mrs. Court House .
weddin g
nosegay of daisies, multi· Mrs. Russell Notter, Mrs. pll:lyetl ga m~s ami Mr~. I ..ewis Bec k am.l da ughter. Lisa.
colored pink, yellow and Mae Belle Pope, Mr . and Miller conducted a Bible qu1z. Hunald Coch rmr, Mr . and
Mrs. Buell Burnett, Mrs. Ann
aqua.
Mrs. Jerry Leith, Mr. and ,, poem wl::ls rcHd in memory
t\dkins, 'Mr. anti Mrs. Lewis
Crlstal Leith was the Mrs. Clinton Leith, Mrs. of decease'&lt;! family members.
bridesmaid; she wore a Richard McKee, Ryan II was nutt'll that fouo· new au· Miller and da ughter, Beth,
Mrs·. Gary Fa llon, children.
yellow A·llne gown of McKee, Stacie McKee, Mr.
ditium; have been tn&lt;:it.le tu llll' J ustin oml Slumnutt Hope,
polyester and carried a and Mrs. Paul Roach, Brent fwnily this past yea r. Tiley
a nd Mrs. Murit• Hawkin!).
nosegay of daisies, multi· and Trlcia Roach .
are Jennifer Lynn Queett ,

Rardin, Sheets united in marriage

99~

16 Ol
BllS.

Charlene Hoeflich

Dennis Salisbury
exchange vows

Contact Elsie Neal for
Oktober-Fest reservations

24 Ol CTN.

R.C. or
DIET RITE

Sallyanne Holtz

Peggy Sue Hennen
weds in double-ring,
August 12 ceremony

LB

~

Woman's World

•......

COUNTRY PRIDE .
.
59~
CUT UP CHICKENS•••••••••••••••••••••• :.

59~

TRY OUR HOMEMADE
CHILl!

lUI

all summer long, " says
. Beulah Martin of Cincinnati's
Martin Tree Service. "The
calls really haven't stopped
from last winter.
"It's an indication that a lot
of people are remeJ]lbering
the last two · winters and
thinking ahead to this winter ."
Although cold winters
crea te a hot firewood
business, Mrs. Martin would
rather sec milder winters.
"Who likes all that ice and
slickness?" she asks. " No
one."
Some sa lesmen are even
offering cures for the " Cabin
Fever" that depressed many
snowbound Ohioans the past
two winters.
" How about a nice
snowmobile?" suggests Gary
Settles, who helps his father
run Gentleman Jim Settles'
snowmobile sales in Cin·
cinnati.
" We've got about 75
snowmobiles on order and
anticipate selling them all
before the first big snow," he
says. "We 've got 10 people
right now just wailing for our
shipment to arrive."
The prices range from
$1,600 to $2,700, but Settles
points out that an entire
family can use ·a snowmobile.
''You can get four or five
people on one and you can
actually have some of the
best times of your life during
the bad winters," he says,
putting forth his best sales
pitch. ·
But gigantic piles of ice and
snow are anything but fun for
public highway officia ls
charged
with clearing
road ways.
.
Cincinnati earlier this year
hosted the "North American
Snow Confere nce , " where
snow removal experts got
together to prepare for this
winter and moan about last
winter.
One official said trying to
clear the snow from the
" Arctic blizzard" that hit his
state was like " fighting an
inforno with · a bucket
brigade."
That official wasn 't from
Minnesota or Michigan , but
from Kentucky, which of
course, and unfortunately, Is
· south of Ohio.

~

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

MIXED -.

Winter preparations begin

PHONE 446-1611

~

COUNTRY
PRIDE

PROCLAIMS CONSTITUTION WEEK - Friday Pomeroy Mayor 'Clarence Andrews
si ed a roclamatioo proclaiming Sept. 17 tllrough tile 23 as ron&amp;itutlon week for Return
J.fn'atlla.i Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. Shown w1tll Mayor
Andrews is Lucille Smith, chainnan of tile ronslltution week .co":Imlttee .. Grace ~1ch IS
regent . This is tile 191st anniversary of the adoption of the ronslltullon . Durmg constitutiOn
week residents are asked to ny the1r flags.

59

REG . '1.95

''We reserve the
rjght to lim~
quantities"

COUNTRY
PRIDE

_J

Hot Roast Beef Sandwich

COLE SLAW

PHONE U6 9593

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, SEPT. 18 THRU SEPT. 23

I

Sept. 17-23

GRAVY

_
·VINE STitln, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

r

Saturday

SMOTHERED IN

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

/ -'

Sunday thru

WITH MASHED POTATOES

................ ............................................. ....... .... Paula Sue Walker,

B-l ~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swtday, Sept. 17, 1978

.A-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday, Sept. 17. 1978

The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenna L.
Rardin, Kerlanding, Mill·
wood, West Virginia, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Sheets,
Gallipolis.
Given in marriage by her
parents and esc01:ted to the
altar by her father, the bride
wore an ivory gown of wind·
song poly satin and sheer
illusion featuring a bodice,
neckline and full sleeves

of Chantilly lace with matching scalloped lace deep
ruffle on the long skirt. The
gown and elbow-length veil
were fashi oned by the bride's
mother. She carried a white
Bible covered with lace,
pastel sununer flowers and
ivory ribbon streamers tied
with lover's knots and blue
baby's breath . At her
neckline she wore a n
heirloom cameo brooc h
belonging to her late
maternal
grea t grandmother, Mary Stein·
beck Lear, and late grandIIJillher, Garnett Lear Sallaz,
and a watch belonging to her
late paternal grandmother,
Marie Staats Rardin .
Matron of hon or was
Lucinda Zimmerman,
Huntington, West Virginia,
sis ter of the bride , and
bridesmaid was Diana
Neptune, Chillicothe, Ohio.
They wore pastel floral print
dresses and carried wicker
baskets of matching pastel
summer flowers and rainbow
ribbon streamers.
Best man was David Clay
and groomsman was John
Rumley, both of Gallipolis.
Cathy Wall, Galllpolls,
registered guests and Samuel
. Zimmerman, Huntington,
served as usher.
The mother of the bride
wore a yellow crepe dress
and corsage of yellow
rosebuds and white baby
pompons. The mother of the
bridegroom wore a natural
beige jacket dre•s and_ cor·
sag~ of yellow rosebuds and
white baby pompon!.
A reception followed the
ceremony, In the church
fellowship hall. The bride's
lace~vered table featured
an arrangement of pastel

'

suumu!r flowers and ferns
encircling a three-tier
wedding cake. Assisting were
Mrs. Ruth Holland, aunt of
lhe bride; Diana Lynn
Holland, cousin, Gallipolis
rerry, West Virginia , and
Mrs. Wilma Wood, aunt of the
bride, Point Pleasant, West
Virginia.
Out of town guests at·
tending the wedding were Mr.
and Mrs. John D. Sallaz,
Pontiac , Michigan ; Tina
Marie Sallaz, Columbus; Mr.
aand Mrs. Michael Blaine
and Mikey, Mr. and Mrs.
Emil Cor bin , Mrs . Lee
Burcham, Mr. L. S. " Bud"
Soisson , Mrs . Garner Wall,
Shirley Clay, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. James Crace ,
Addison; Mr . and Mrs .
Greely Neal,
London;
Teresa Matheny, New
Marshfield, Ohio; . Mrs. Ken
Derrington, West Madison ,
W. Va.; Mr. artd Mrs . Roy
Zimmennan, Mr . and Mrs.
Samuel Zimmerman, Aaron
and Amy, Huntington, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Wood, Mrs. Lona Harris,
Point Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen R. Holland , Big
Stone Gap, VIrginia, and Mrs.
Ron Reynolda and Heather,
Ripley, W.'Va .
The bride Is a 1975 graduate
of Raven1woocl High School
and graduated In June from
Holzer Medical Center School
of Nurs(ng, Gallipolis, Ohio.
She is employed as a
regi$(ered nurse at Pinecrest
Care Center, Gallipolis. The
bridegroom is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and
is employed at Kyser Creek
Power Plant, Cheshire, Ohio.
Alter a weddillfl trip the
couple returned to their
residence in Cheshire.

Members of lhe French Art
Colony may now make
rese rvations for the up·
coming Oktober-Fest for
themselves and their guests,
by contacting Elsie Neal,
Reservations Chairwoman,
at 446-1707. A delightf ul
evening of fun, food and great
music for dancing is in store
for all wh o attend on
Saturday evening, October 7,
1978 from 8:30 p.m. until
·
midnight.
Mary Lucas and Friends
will be providing the music,
and if the October weather

prope rly cooperates, thi s
ga la affair will be held on the
spacious lawn at Riverby,
with the music and .dancing
on the outdoor patio.
Ear ly rese rvations are
advised. The cost is $5 per
couple or $2.50 for single
member or guest.
Oktober-Fest at Riverby
should be one of the
highlights of the fall season
planned by the French Art
Colony , with Bess Grace and
Marianne Campbell coor·
dinatlng the a rrangements
with their committee.

'

~·

j

.

Debra Ann Norris

Debra Ann Norris
becomes engaged

Mrs. Ehie Neal, Reservation chairwoman

POMEROY-The Rev. ""d
Mrs. Charles S. Norris, South
Point, are announcing the
engageme nt of th e ir
daughter, Debra Ann, to
Keith McKnight, son of M1-.
and Mrs. Ebner McKnight,
also of South Point. The Norri s famil y are former
residents of Meigs r;:uunty .
Tlte open chureh wedding
will be an event uf Oct. 14 at
2: 30p.m. at the First Baptist
Church, Old U. S. 52 and
Solida R011d, South Point.
Music will begin at 2 p.m.
with Mi~ Burinic Da vis,

piani st; Mrs . D~ vi d Buckles, ·
organist, and Mrs . Samuel
Le i ghty , solo is t. Re v.
Freeland Norris, Racine,
grantllalher of the bride, will
officiate.
Miss Norris is a graduate of
South Point Higll School and
is employed at the First Na·
tiunal Bank in Ironton .
Mr. McKnight is a graduate
of Sou th Point Hi~h School
and isemt&gt;loyc'tl by Tri-State
Testing. He is also an active
member of the Anny National Guard.

I

'1

,

•

·'

�•

B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept, 17, 1978

Marriage announced
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Terry,
Rt. 4, Oak Hill, are happy to
announce the marriage of
their daughter, Diana Lynn,
to Larry Keith Frasher.

HOMECOMING
The annual homecoming of
the Mt. Hermon Uni ted
Brethren Church will be held

lIr-5-;,-ci~t;;;l' Senior Citizens ' Scenes

Something

Patriot. on Sept. 2.
The bride is employed at
Buckeye Rural Electric. and
the groom is a heavy
equipment operator at
Conrich of Ohio in Addison.
The couple Is now· residing
at 132&gt;.., Portsmouth Road,
Gallipolis.

I

. ally

SallyaiiDe Holt&gt;:
END
MARRIAGE
·
I
was
driving leisurely
__Sumlay~AfteL.the-.morning
"
P"'O"
M"'EROY
The
home
from
school the other
services a carry·in dinner
marriage
of
Mitziann
Mcevening
when
a most unusual
will be served. The afternoon
Clintock
and
John
Finley
thing
occurred
: one moment
services will begin at 1:30
I
was
on
top
of
the road, but
McClint
ock
has
been
p.m. with the Rev. James
dissolved
in
the
Meigs
County
the
next
moment,
I was part
Morrison of Point Pleasant
spea king. There will be Common Pleas Court . The of the road! As soon as I
special vocal numbers. The name of Mitziann Lewis was · oriented mysel! to the change
restored.
of scene, I realized what had
public is inv ited .
happened : I had fallen into a
pot hole! It could have been a
terrible accident , but I was
lucky; I landed on top of a
Volkswagen!! I
I realize it is an inconvenience driving jerkily
around and through all those
gigantic pits that have
suddenly appeared in our
county 's roads, and it .does
get rather expensive, having
to replace aU those tires and
use all that extra Dentu.Crip,
but perhaps we're looking at
CiALUPOUS - Exhibil for the month of September, 1978 the situation with the wrong
-Coverlet and Quilts. A display prepared by the Smithsonian attitude.
and on loan to the Ohio Foundation on the Arts, plus 10
Now, I know what you're
coverlets and 20 quilts on loan by local owners to exemplify the going .to say. You're going to
information in the Smithsonian display.
say it 's very distressing
Gallery Hours - Salllrdays and Sundays, 1 p.m. until 5 watching all those sweet little
p.m.; Tuesdays and Thursdays, !Oa.m. until3p.m.
birds drowning in the pot
September 26, 7: 30 p.m. - F .A.C. Interdepartmental holes in the front of your
Meeting: 9 p.m . - F.A.C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby .
home, but, maybe if we make
September 27-28- Eighth Annual Antique Seminar with a group effort, we can tum
Orva Walker Heissenbuttel from Washington, D. C., Riverby . the whole bad situation into
Call 446-1819 for reservations or stop at PJ's.
September 30, 5 p.m.-9 p.m., October I, I p.m.-5 p.m. "Bright and Breezy at Riverby." Flower show by the
Gallipolis Garden Club, Nancy Smith President; Karen
Berkich, Chairwoman. Open to the public .
Ocwber 7, 8:30 p.m.-12 Midnight - "Oktober-Fest,"
Riverby . Dance music provided by Mary Lucas and Friends.
German food and lots of. fun, $5 a couple, $2.50 single for
members and guests. Elsie Neal, Reservations Chairwoman,
446-1707 . Dress casual.
POM EROY-Friends and
nei
ghbors o[ Brenda Bishop.
October 8 and October 15, 3 p.m. - Mini-Recital series
from Ohio University, River by. Barbara Epling, Ticket brideelect of Glen Kennedy,
Chairwoman, 446-1516. $5 for ticket which covers both hosted a bridal shower lor her
performances. October 8 - Athenian Trio with piano, violin t·cccntly at the Harrisionvillc
and cello. October 15 - OU Vocal Trio, 2 vocalists, one piano. Presbyteriait Church.
A medley of piano se lecBenefit for the French Art Colony and the Ohio University
, tfons by Jane Wise e:tnd a
Music Scholarship Fund. Tick~ts also available at PJ's.

anNow
asset.
take that huge hole in
the front of your house - youknow, the one the neighbor's
Saint Bernard disappeared In
last week? Well, haven't you
always wanted a swimming
pool nearby ? Now's your
chance. ,
And you know that cavern
that appeared in Aunt Allee's
aUeyway a few days ago?
well, why not charter an
, .on to explore it ?
exped ttl
After aU, you've been com.
..
pIamtng al1 wmter about
being bored!
For those of you who 've
alwayswantedtolakeupskln
diving, here 's your golden
opportunity! All you have to
do is don a snorkel and
flippers and walk out your
front door to the road!
·
And I've got a great way to
raise money for all those
things we've been wanting to
bu ild here In town, but have
lacked the funds. All we have
to do is sell the pot boles!
That 's right ! Can you
imagine how many donut
holes a bakery could get out
of just one pot bole? ?? Why,
We 'd aU be rich!

Brenda Bishop honored
with bridal shower

(;hips, min~ . nul,.s, pum:h, k ..
t!ll teet ami coffee were serv-

ed.
Attending were Ardis Waggonet·, Mitmie Neal. Mildred
Alkire ,

WE MAKE
YOUR DIAMOND
AN EASY DECISION
Style is one reason . Our JEWELS OF
BEAUTY diamond engagement and
wedd ing rings can match your taste
a t the right price. What's more. every
diamond is guaranteed tor color.
proportion . and brilliancy ...
now and to revert

CaJJaday,

ic e

DERIFIELD JEWELRY ·
"Across From Theater"

c r eam.

c

K
nd
1 be · aren
1 eel
awi h Pam
wU
u
f th mvo
Ce vt
t a phases
n er
d oill bee isitin
prograllll!ian inw th 1 v.
hom g
many
sen
ors
e
r
·w
ll 1 k' f
des.
1
. e are a oo mg orwar o
working with theae students.
co
EVENTS
On T MING
esda Sept be 19
u
y,berg em Trr . ,
Ma
rgaret Am
er' anstlon coo rdlnator, ws'II
po•-1rt ath
Lo Bo
Se ·
v.. t e ng !tom ruor
Citizen Club. Mrs. Amberger
'II
1 · th E
wt exp am
e nergy
Discount Program and will
demonstrate the votomatlc
SUNDAY
AMERICAN Legion Distriel8
Conference, Lafayette Post
No. 27 Legion Hall, Bob
McCormick Rd ., 10 a.!ll.
ANNUAL Homecoming of
BulavlUe Christian Church,
.
singing and preachsng.
Basket dinner at 12.
Everyone welcome.
TRIEDSTONE, Baptist
Church, Youth Day, guest
speaker Clarence McCabe,
6:45 p.m., pastor, John D. ·
King .
LEONARD Preston and
Gospel Express at Nease
Settlement Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, Sunday, Sept. 17.
BAsket dinner at noon. Bring
covered dish. Pastor: Rev.
Don
Karr.
Everyone

SUNDAY
WESLEY
Chapel
Homecoming, dinner on
grounds at I p.m.; service at
2.
HOMECOMING, Rodney
United Methodist · Church;
begins at 10 a.m. , basket
lunch at 12:30. Guest singers,

B-3-The Sunday Times,&lt;;cntq~el, SUitday, Sei&gt;L 17, 1978

GALUPOUS - "The Look

p.m.
All proceeds from this
~ec~7d Annual Benefit delightful event will be
pas on ..Sh.ow and -Card---&lt;lonated to-the Gallia GountyGa~f being planned by the Unit of the American Cancer
a a • Pt . Pleasant Society in their continuing
~elbcome Wa.gon-Newcomers ef(ort to fight and wipe out
u on the ftrst Thursday in cancer.
~ober. The event will ,take
The look of fall on the
Pace oq October 5, 1978, in fashiop scene will be exthe Elks Lodge on Second cilingly presented with
Avenue in Gallipolis at 7:30 clothes provided by PJ's and

Business and Professional
'Jr.
TJTomen
to meet Mondar1J
VV
I

',)'

·
MIDDLEPORT
District 17 director, Mrs.
Loretta .Jones, Jackson, will
be spectal guest at Monday
night's meeting of the
Business and Professional
Women's Club of Middleport.
:Mrs. Jones has bene · a
)nember of the Jackson club
for eight years, and serves on
lhe board of directors of the
:State Federation of Business
) nd Professional Women's
'Clubs. She has been president
~or two years, vice president
.and has served on most
:Z:Ommlttees, and was district
,-RAP chairman in 1975.
•Mrs. jones is the wife
ef Jack R. Jones , and
lhey have three chil·
)!ren: John , a Naval
(leierve insiructor in Johns••

appointments for Senior Portraits.
Call early for most convenient
appointment time. If you didn't
receive our mailer be sure to ask

: ByGLADYSAMSBARY
• The Gallia County Exlension Homemakers Council
Jnet Sept. 13 at Columbus and
&gt;flouthern Ohio Electric
:'meeting room. The meeting
:was opened by Mary Jo
J;haver, president. Devotions
;rere by Bernice Wood on God
:1s Love from I John 4 and a
&gt;f'eading on God Is Love.
'ackle Graham gave ·a
:reading
and
prayer.
•Secretary's report was given
~Y Gladys Amsbary and
"treasurer's report by Helen
Wood. Maude Persinger led
.. · In Pledge to Flag. Mary Jo
Shaver gave a report on stale
held in
In

discount coupons.

Lear
Photography

Everyone welcome.
HOMECOMING; Centerpoint
Freewill Baptist Church
Sunday, Sept. 17, beginning at
10 a.m ., the Rev. Jake Frye,
speaker. Pete Swartz family ,
singers. Public invited.
CREMEENS REUNION,
Kyger Creek shelter house,
basket dinner, I p.m., Sunday, Sept. 17.
GAI.I.IA COUNTY Historical
Society 2 p.m. St. Peter 's
-Episcopa l Chureh.
McCARLEY famUy plcn,ic
noon, 4-H building, junior
fairground .

-·
·r

Tonight thru
Thursday, Sept. 28

.•

SAVE

OFF REC. PRICE.

c upc a kes,

1£ the minute you tum your head your little
mess maker is in your jewelry box or·
cosmetics making a big mess ... then you
need llbwl. I)GI J , the child protection latch
for cabinets and drawers. It keeps tots out
f)f the cabinets and drawers you want them
kept out of. Yet , adult~ can get in quickly.
And it locks automatically when you close
the cabinet or drawer. Put an end to the big

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MACHINE. The world's most advanced s~ina machine is also the
world's easiest to use. Only Singer

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Just push a bull on to sew any of 2S
different stitches, from
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blind hem to flowers
With
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ASTA stands for Th"e Ameritan Surgical Tr•de Assocl•tion - but also for m!,lch ,
m~ch more! Those fa cilltl es certi f ied by ASTA have met r igid standards to gain th is
recogni tion. In order to meet ASTA approval , the fa"cillty must have proper fitting
rooms , large inventories, property tra ined, certified personnel and fitters and remain
current in their fie ld of expertise. The ASTA insignia denotes a mark of excellence

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and high standa rds . The Medical Shoppe is proud of the ASTA participation and will ,..
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the med ical profession by alert, Informed
and well -stocked distributor .

botsed on adoquat• Inventory anllclpatln,
consumer
requirements In
class
cooperation with tne manufacturer.

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many manufacturers' lines.

•

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for scwlnt hard-to-Jeach placts. With built-in zia·
zat, stretch, blind hcmllitches and more. Carry ina
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GALLIPOLIS

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For lnlormatlon and
llulletln ol
cali4462Ut or vlllit our olllct.

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FRUIH PHMKIES
AU. LOCAliOfl:.
@ 11171. KINDEAGAM COAPOA.*.1 IC..Ifll ~.

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Men.· F'rl. f : M . 1:11 ' ·"' ·
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'A Trodtmlrk oiTH! SINGERCOMrANY

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graduates.

drop-in bobbin 1~1t' s usy to ICC and repla(c .
Carrylna case or cobinet e•tra. Modcl247 .

French City Fabric Shoppe

'•
I

COllEGE LEVEL
IN AYEAR

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This machint has ,a wide zi&amp;·UJ stitth and 1 front

100 MILLION PEOPLE SEW EASIER WITH SINGER

keeping the
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paramount at all times.

The family of the late

AT THE

'

SERVICE

Lamb reunion held

OOURSES

.' .

""

,,

SOUTHERN tiiUS
satOOl OF BUSINESS

1

sem t·

SUitT, treasu rer : Toni Pope,

annual inspedion vf Rctht.'l
62. Intcmatiomtl OrtJcr of
Jo!J's Daughter's, was held
l'l't'cntly etl the Pomcruy
M&lt;Jsonk Tcrnph,• with Jen- -niifcr Wi se. honored queen ,
prc.sidirJJ.{ .
.Julin Kirst of Nor th
Olm.steod , ct!;SOCie:~te gram.!
guo rtJian . WO:JS tht: in~ pcl'ting
uffiecr. (iucsts and members
were registered Uy Kathlet'll
Scutt, Ann Watson, a11d Ilet
Detrnc ll. Pinono were white
duvctluvc replka s.
Ot her uf!tcers of Bethel H2.
prcsi din~ with Miss Wise
were Ruth Bli:tke, sc11ior
prr nL"ess: Doll ie Rousey ,
junior priw.:css; Suset /IJJei
Wise, gUJtJe: Kathy Blake,
m&lt;:trslw ll ;
Julie
Bycr,

musician ; .Jcanna Pauley,
first mL•sscngcr ; Zandra
Vaugllilll. sl•cumJ messenger.
Au gie Houehlns,
thit•d
messenger: Jea nn ie Welsh,
fou rth l!ll'SS~ flgl.rr·: Br·entla
Chetppelc.ar, fifth messenger ;
Mi:t nd ySisson.li iJI'~I'iHll ; Bctsy Herald, senior c ustodie:~n;
Cindy Parker, junior cuslodiH n: Kim Pi:iuley, Inner
gui:l r d, i:lrH.l Barbi:lra Chap·

Committee members are busily at work planning "The Look of Fall, " the Second
Annual Cancer Benefit Fashion Show and Card Party, sponsored by the Gallia. Pt. Pleasant
Welcome Wagon· Newcomers Club. (L tor) Karen Moffitt, General Co-Chairperson; Joy
Atwood , Food Chairperson; Mary Ann J!llllison , General Co-Chairperson, and Pam
Terrlzzi, Decorations Chairperson.

Charles and Statlra Lamb
met Sunday, Sept. 3 at the
Roadside Park Route 33,
north of Pomeroy.
After the grace was given,
the following family and
friends enjoyed the dinner :
Mrs. Edna Sununerfleld,
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Summer·
field, Long Bottom ; Mrs.
Georgie Clifford, Mrs. Edith
Lamb, Mr. and Mrs.
WilHam
L.
Lee.
Columbua; Mr. and Mri.
Glenn Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
Wllllam Northup llltl Jeffrey,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs .
Gel'ald Lamb, Harold Lamb,
Iiuel Summerfield,
Cllarltllon, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. .Stanley Suinmerlleld,
Sharon, Melilla llltl Patricia.
Hurricane, W. Va.
Mr. llltl Mn. Cecil Cald·
nil, Mr. 8lld fotra. Kenneth
Caldwell and ICean7. Tuppen
Plalal; Mr.•and Mn. H.-bert
l'lllt.-, SyraCUM; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Parker, Bobby

chaplai n :

pelt'i..!l', IHikJ' gue~ rd

Jntruduccc.J and prese nted
were Susan Hw111a , honored
queen of Bethel lO, Marietl&lt;l,
Fifth tJistnd representa tive,
amJ Rcthd r~presente:ttivc to
Ji:ip&lt;:m ; .Jan Swciney, petst
honored queen uf Bethel 40;
Meni Ault . 1\ngic Sisson and
Lon
· · . p&lt;.~st · honored

Ste phanie

quee ns

Houchins, recorder ; Thcr·est:t
, -.. - ·.- -,·- ··- ·- - ·,

tj Sr.' Citizens t,.

Ca 1....... J _

of

Be th e l

62,

Pomeroy : . Da n Venham,
jlmior prirr...:ess of Bethel 30,
Marictto : Dunnct Bauman,

past grand guartlian ; Naomi
finuH.I

Arms lro11g.

firth

I POMER'tf{tUU.r Meig: messenger, and Bethel guar-

·Women 's Club to hold luncheon
At Christian Women's Club
luncheon Tuesday, 12: 15 p.m.
at the Holiday Inn. the theme
will be "September Sung."
Mr s. Richard Filch will
present the special Feature,
Best Face Forward for Fall,
a demonstration with Mary
Kay Cosmetics.
Mrs. Richard Patterson
will be the vocalist with Mrs.

Willis,
acRaymond
companist.
A young mot her from
Fredericktown, Ohio will be
inspirational speaker, Mrs.
Allen McQuigg (Sa ndy). Two
of her three children are presecond grade. Her topic will
be "Before and Alter." Her

merchandising .
Babysitt ing is provided
free. Call Ann Saunders 4461421. The nursery is located
at the Grace United
Methodist Chu rch. open at
twelve o'clock.
Invite a friend and call
Miss Keeler, 446-4629 or Mrs.
Nuce, 44 6-7374. for reser-

education

vations .

schoo lers : one
is

is in the
in

fashion

CARAVAN SCHEDULE
BOOK CARAVAN
Fall-Winter No. I
Monday
Sept. 11, 25 ; Oct. 23; Nov. 6,
20 ; Dec. 4, 18; Jan. 29; Feb.
12, 26 ; March 12, 26; April 9,
23 ; May 7, 21.
School ..:.. Hannan Trace
Elementary
Community

'lbomas received honorable
mention on her painting.
Dorothy Toler told about the
health meeting to be held in
Jackson Oct .· 4. Jackie
Grabam reported on Day
Camp where 1.25 children
attended. Evelyn Davis had
Pinecrest, 2 ;30-2: 45;
morning program on dried Winters Station. 2:50-3:05;
flower pictures and showed Rio Grande (Valley View
several pictures ~he had Apts.) . 3:30-3:55; Rodney II,
made and framed which were 4:11H:30; Rodney II , 4:35·
very pretty . Mrs . Davis 4:55; Quail Creek, 5:05-5 :20;
belongs to French City Rodney I, 5:25-5:40.
Garden Club. Potluck lunch
Fairview, 6:20-':35 ; Spring
was served at noon by Route Valley, 6:40-7; 35 W. Apts.,
35 Club.
7:05-7 :30; Pleasant Valley,
It was decided by club to 7:35-8.
have an at•~ndance contest
Tuesday
and Blanche Mlller and
Sept. 12. 26; Oct. 10. 24 ;
Bernice Wood would keep a Nov . 7, 21; Dec. 5, 19; Jan. 2,
list of ladies bringing most 16, 30; Feb. 13127; March 13,
guests or new members 27 ; April 10, 24; May 8, 22.
during year and receive a
School
Vinton
prize at the end of the year. Elementary, 9:45-3 ;
The October meeting will be a Christian School. 9-9 :45;
tour of Gallipolis' new library
Community
and Pt. Pleasant library and
Crousebeck Road, 4-4 :30;
museum. The group wlll meet Porter Brook, 4:45-5:15;
at Gallipolis' new library at Fairfield Acres. 5:20-5 :40;
10:30 Oct. 11 . The meeting Cente11ary, 5:5rH! :l5 ; Green
place of Nov. 8 meeting may Acres , 6:25-7 ; McG uire
be changed to Mental Health Subdv., 7:05-7:25 ; If, 7:30Center where Dr. Harry 7:45 .
Amsbary will have program
Wednesday
and slides on Care of the
Sept. 13, 27; Oct. 11, 25;
Eyes.
Nov.~. 22; Dec. 6, 20; Jan. 3,
Prof. Don Pollltt and wife 17, 31; Feb. 14, 28; March 14,
had the afternoon program on 28; April 11, 25; May 9, 23.
McGuffey Readers and gave
School - Clay Elementary,
a very Interesting talk and 9-2 ; Adelaide Drive, 4-4 :25;
both read several selections Neighborhood
Road
from Readers and em- (Cremeans), 4: 45-5 : 15 ;
phasized the fact that each Eureka, 5: 25 -5:45 ; Crown
selection had some good City, 1Hi:30; Shaffer's, 7:10moral to It such as honesty, 7:25; Smith's, 7:40-&amp;.
truth, religion, against inThursday
toilcants, love of neighbors
Sept. 14, 28 ; Oct. 12, 26;
and Love of God. Prof. Pollitt Nov. 9; Dec. 7, 21 ; Jan. 4, 18;
Is a personal friend of some of Feb. I, 15; March I, 15, 29;
the family of William Holmes April 12, 26; May 10, 24.
of
McGuffey,
writer
School
Cadmus
McGuffey Readers. The Elementary, 9-2.
program was very much
Community
enjoyed by all. The afternoon
Northup (Niday's), 2: 1Sprog&gt;am was closed by each 2:25; Northup (new homes ),
lady telling ol the first school 2:30-2:55; Patriot P.O.. 3:20the)' had attended and 3:40; Cadmus, 3:50-4:10 ;
favorite teacher.
Waterloo, 4:30-4 :50;
GaUia, IHI:20; Centerpoint,
6:40-a:55;' Centerville, Town
HaU, 7:10-7:40; Banks, 7:45-8.

BUSINESS
CAREER

Fri .• Sat., Sun.
Sept' 15-16-17

WE'RE PROUD •••

make every effort to ma lntaln the confidence that has been shown .

town, Pennsylvania; Jeffrey,
a graduate of Hlo State
University, ,and Judith , a
graduate of Jackson High.
There are two grandchildren.
Mrs. Jones is a clerk-typist a(
the Jack..On County Welfare
Department and a member of
the United Methodist Church
and active in several local
clubs.
The meeting of the Mid·
dleportB&amp;PWClubisat7:30
p.m. at the Columbia Gas
offices, with president Louise
Davis . to preside . The
program committee, Donna
Davidson , chairman , will
have the evening program
with a fun style show
natTated by Mrs. Janet Korn .
All members are urged to
attend.

POMF.lWY --The

m~!~~~~ing.

this second
annual benefit for the Cancer
Society are Karen Moffitt and
Mary Ann Jamison. The
theme, "The Look of Fall,"
wlll be obvious both by the
decorations and al the
refreshment table, aU under
the direction of Pam Terrizzi
and Joy Atwood, respeclively. Publicity plans are
being coordinated by Teresa
Bihl.
October 5 promises to be an
entertaining and fun-filled
evening witJ:t both the fashion
show and card party. Ad·
mission Is $3.50 per individual
or $12 for a group of four .
Tickets are now available at
PJ's, Carl's Shoe Store or •
from any Welcome Wagon
Club member. Interested
persons may also call Karen
· Moffitt at 245-5359 or Mary
Ann Jamison at 446-2649.

Homemakers
'Council met
•

about our special limited time

Lordsmen .

Joyfinders,

Job's Daughters
!:?old inspection

footwear from Carl's Family
Shoe Store, both located in
the middle of the main block
ln-downtown-Galllpolis-. - A delicious array of
refreshments and a card
party wiU follow the fashion
show, so that those attending
will enjoy a ·lull evening of,
entertainment. Door prizes
for this annual event are
being furnished by area ,

of FaU" Is the theme for the

lear Photography is now accepting

HOMECOMING, Gallipolis
Church of Christ In Christlan
Union, the Rev . Bud Combs,
evangelist. Climax,
Homecoming Day, Sunday,
Sept. 17. The Rev . James
Erwin, speaker, Sunday a.m.
and p.m. Haddocks · Trio
.
smgers.
Basket dinner at'
noon . Everyone welcome.
HOMECOMING , Simpson
United Methodist Church,
covered dish at noon, Rio
Grande. College Grande
Chorale; Virginia Fadely
Helms wiU speak on experiences in Africa for four
years. Everyone welcome.

(

Cancer Benefit fashion
show planned for October

'125

bananas, candy, potato chips
and koola id were served. Going over fur the pat1y were
Mack Stewart. Ed Evans,
Coleen Van Meter, and Peggy
Brickles.

o.

JI!X:lll II!:I'YA&amp;.@Rillll:Y~
Wh'l
h
t
l e at t e en er'

~~n:t at t~e p~.e·~

machine.
til 7 p.m. Chill and
vegetable soup, sandwiches
Mrs. Rosalie Sayre, Home and bomemade d~ will ,
Maintenance Supervisor, will be offered for sale to the :
be at the Ractn~ Nutrition public
,.
.
,
Site on Tuesday, September_ APPLE BVTI'ER TIME
19. Mrs. Sayre wIU discuss
It's tlnie a•aln for the
h
H
M · t a ce
e
I e
ornend am en n
Center's annual " apple
Program a
answer any butter making" project. Last •
questions you may have.
year the demand for apple ' · On Tuesday and Thursday butter exceeded the supply,
.,_ week , eraft classes will so plans are made for two
of t...,
be held at the Center. Kay "malting&amp;" while the kettJes~
Sayre and Allee Wolfe, craft are clean and
lo go. ,
instructors,
attended
several
'l'heflrst~~~~:O~~~~-'-~
__,. 1
t Ri G ande
.rn!!&gt;..
a
o dr.th
lor W--'--sday,
Coli c asses
thl
=~
ege
s
summer
an
ey
additional
orders warrant a ••
'II be sh ·
lth
·hat
Wl
anng
w
you
w
second
making,
11 will be ·,
th ha 1 ed
ey
ve
earn
·
scheduled
for
tater
1n the ·
Th
r
th t h e
ose
o
you
a
av
month.
We
need
hel.P
on '
ed
f th La
reserv
seats
or
e
.
nTuesday,
October
3
to
help
'
st Tr' th' Wedn sda
ca er sp ts
e . Y• with the peeling and coring.'.'
don 't forget that the buses Please bnn
' g your own knlfe,
·11 1
th
c t
wt
en er container and apple peelers.
1eave 30 e
prompt
y
at
9:
a.m.
If you have· any large -u.~-. •Ph · 1fit
1
ystca ness c asses are less steel kettl..., or enamel
h Id
h day of th e week canners In good-condition, w•
· bee · eac
·
1 30
.....
· gtnntng at ' a.m . ...ese would appreciate the use of.:
classes are conducted by them overm·••t.
.
If
be 0 f the c t
"''
sta mem rs
en er
To order apple butter, you
a'nd Nutrition Site Personnel. may caU 992·'1816 or 992-7884.
Come in and join the fun!
ish
SOUPANDSANDWICH
You must fum
your own
SUPPER
containers for the apple
Prior to the home football · butter. Cost ls$2.50 per quart .
game September· 29, a Soup _ Have a nice week.

basis.'' welcome.

.Johnson .

Helen

MIDDLEPORT-A party
fut· patients in the geriatri c
ward at the Athens Mental
Health Center was held Tuesda y eve ni ng b y th e
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport CllU rch of Christ .
Gifts were presented 111
ee:tch one and refreshments of

Gallipolis.

non-discriminatory

class hosts party

.~;
.~/
,..

.R ice,

Gulden- Age Party (Party to~
honor all those persons 90
years and over), 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 20
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 21
Co
unci! Meeting, I :30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 22 - 0 rder is
due for JAM fresh roods; Art
. 1Hour, 1
CJ ass, l-3p.m.; Soc ta
p.m.
The ·senior
• Nutr llion
..
Program will serve these
menus :
Monday - Macaroni and
.
cheese with ham btts, spinach
with hard cooked egg slice,
orange and grapefruit sec·
lions on lettuce, cornbread,
butter, chilled peaches with
whipped cream, milk.
Tuesday __;, Baked pork
Chop, baked sweet potato,
brussel sprouts, bread,
butter, apple crisp, mill&lt;.
Wednesday Johnny
Marzetti, ltalienne green
beans, cottage cheese salad,
roll, butter, pineapple upside
down cake, milk.
Thursday - Hamburger
"deluxe" on bun, relishes,
peas, butter, sherbet, milk.
Friday - Baked fish,
baked potato, broccoli with
cheese saue, bread, butter,
lemon meringue pie, milk.
Choice of beverage served
With eadt meal.
"Services rendered on a

Homebuilders

From 175

417 Second Ave.

Marjorie

Fra nces Young, Janie
Stewart. Cathy Murris, Barbara Kennedy , Sharon
Jewell. Lola Clark, Ruby
Halliday . Pa uline Atkins. Sally KeJmedy, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Doug
Bishop and Tim, Wilda )'&lt;lac
Wiseman , Sue Gibson etnd
family, Esther Kenn edy,
Stella Atkins, Jean and Danny Kenn edy. Sue Kennedy.
Ruth Erlewine, Allegra Will,
Jane Wise, Frances Alkire,
Julia Ghe-en, Carol Gheen,
Bunnie Napper, and Nonna
Lee.
Sending gifts were Virginia
Gibson, Ruby Diehl, Ellen
Brooker, Rosemary Burson,
Leah and Dale Wi ll iams,
Ta na Burbridge, Pearle

CONTRIBUTIONS
Contribullous are being
asked lor purchase of a
remote control TV for Rene
Broyleo, cancer victim,
formerly active com·
miiDity leiMier. Rene bas
bad can..,r ol the spine lor
15 monllla and Is aow
bedfast and paralyzed
from the waist dowo. Prior
to ber illness, Rene was
active with Sealor Citlzeus,
Ladles Auxiliary V.F.W.,
French Art Colony, CivU
Defense and l~al politics,
(being tbe first woman to
run for County Com·
missioner). Contributions '
can be mailed to Mary's
Market, zt Central Avenue,
Gallipolis, Oblo or Mickey
Smltb, Route 3, Bor 419,
Gallipolis, Oblo. All
donaUoas will be greatly
appreciated.
·

I

GALIJPOUS - Actlv.ities
for this week at the Senior
Citlze.ns Center are as
follows:
Monday, Sept. 18 - Sewing
Class, 1-3 p.m.; Chorus, 1' IS3; Blood Pressure Check,
1 45
l : S-l : ·
19 _
Tuesday, Sept.
S.T.O.P.,
I0 :30II :15 aa.m.;
.m.;
Physical Fitness,

Lana Gibson, Dena Welsh,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Donahue, Mr. and Mrs.' Dan·
11 y Stanley , Mary Ellen
Stricklin. and Erma Cleland .

game were enjoyed by the

group before Miss Bishop
opened her gift,. Ca ke. pluatu

Calendar

OHIO UNIVERS~
•• •
snJDENTS
POMEROY
Karen
McCormick and Pam Garret·
aon, seniors enrolled In Ohio
University's Social Serv (ces
b
1
Program wll1 e serv ng
their social work field
practlcum at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center
du
rtng the nen few mqnths ·
The field practlcum is a
volunteer Internship that all
students
· l mUll
,,_ _serve with a

and Sandwich Supper will be

Senior Citizens Center activities located at t he
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday , Sept . 18
Physical Fitness, II :30 a.m. :
Square Dance, 12 :30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 19 - Crafts
"Friggie" Making, 10 a.m.-12
noon ; Physical Fitness, 11:30
a .m.; Chorus, 12:30..2 p.m .
Wednesday, Sept. 20 -

tlia n u! Bethel

74, New
M&lt;:ttwnuros : Ruse Kirst, 11ast

bet hel guartlian, Bethel :14,
North Olmstead:
Emma
Clatwot1hy, past bethel guardian of Bethel 62 ; Pa ul
Darnell antl Tom F:dwa rds,
past associate guardians u!
Bethel62 ; .James Cla twurthy,
distmt deputy Gra nd Master
of the 12th Ma sonic Oistriel;
Ruby and Richard Vaughan.
worthy matrun ctnd. worthy

Social Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.-12 :30 p.m.;

patron of tile Order of
!':astern Star l&amp;i, Pomeroy.
Refres hments of punch and

Lancaster Trip, Leave Center

cuukics were scrvetJ fulluw-

at 9:30 a,m.; Physical Fit·

111 g

the meeting. A green and

ness, 11 :30 a .m .; Games, 1-2 yellow ...:olor scheme wets cctrp.m.
ried out in the U-..! ble del'UJ·a.

Thursday, Sept. 21 -

liuns. Preceding the inspec·

Crochet Rug Making, 10 a.m.·
12 noon ; Nutrition Education,
11 a .m.; Physical Fitness,

t ilt· Uinin g room . Money from

tiun ,

c.J inner w;Js servcU in

0

the coin man:h we nt to the

11:30 a.m.
Grand r.uartlians project of
Friday, Sept. 22 - Art scholarships.
Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon ;
Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a. m.;
Bowling, 1·3 p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program,
12 noon to 12:45 a.m. Monday
through Friday.
Monday - Bean soup with
ham bits, spinach • hard
cooked egg slice, orange and
grapefruit sections,
pineapple upside down cake
cornbread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Baked pork
chop, baked sweet potato,
brussel ' sprouts · cheese
sauce, apple sauce, bread,

butter, q1tlk.
Wednesday - Johnny
Marzetta, (beef, tomatoes,
macaroni ), green beans,

ShoWn are Mrs. M. T. Epling, Sr., Martha Hay Evans, Attorney-at-Law, speaker: Mrs.
James L. Clark, Regent; and Mrs. Paul Haskins, Chairman of Constitution Week, at the
annual fall Daughters of the American Revolution luncheon. - Sally Holtz photo.

D.A.R. met for annual fall luncheon

cottage cheese salad, chilled
peaches • whipped cream,
roll, butter, milk.
Thursday - Hamburger
"Deluxe" on bun, pickled
beets, buttered peas, sherbet,
milk.
Friday - Baked fish ,
baked potato, broccoli with

Pure and simply
stunning
DIAMOND
STUD
EARRINGS
in every shape
and size at

cheese sauce, lemon pudding,

GALLIPOLIS
The
French Colony Daughters of
the American Revolution met
at the Holiday Inn for their
annual fall lunch~on meeting.
Grace was given by Mrs.
Ernest Wiseman.
Mrs. Beatrice Clark,
regent , called the meeting io
order.
The
chapter's
devotions were given by Mrs.
Wiseman . Mrs . Hortense
Epling, program chairman,
then Introduced the guest
speaker, Atty. Martha Hay
Evans, who spoke on the
Amendments to the Con·
stltution.
Mrs. Evans is an assistant
to the, Prosecuting Attorney
in Gailla County. She told her

and Ke!U, Marietta ; Mrs.
Roger Adams, Lori, Nicholas
and Ryan, Racine ; Mr s.
Vernon Swartz, Tena, Rena,
Robin and Roger, Coolville;
Mrs. Robert Murphy , Amy
Joe and Tracey, Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Lee Summerfield, Amber and
Michael, Torch; Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Summerfield and
Roger, Murrysville, Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Sherman Summerfield, Belpre; Mr. and
Mrs. Clay Tuttle, Middleport;
Homer P ~ rker, Rutland ;
Mike and Donnie Russell ,
·Coolville.

listeners that there are seven

art id es to the Constitution
and at the present time there
are twenty-six Amendments.
Article fiv e deals with how to
ha ve new Amendments. The
first ten were ratified in 1791.
The equal rights Amendment
will be the twenty-seventh if
passed. It will have to lle

Chad Carson
Chad Garson, son uf Mr.

The fourth . fifth and sixth
Amendments give us the
most trouble. These deal with
crimes and capital offenses .
The Miranda warnings deal

with the rights of criminals,
and must be read to each
person before they are
quest ioned by the police or
authorities. ·
Mrs. Evans said thai in
Gallia County there are many
cases of people who have
been convicted but had not
been sentenced. She told of
e&lt; per iences during her
co llege years, and as a
lawye r which were most
interest ing to her audience. A
question and answer period
followed.
The week of Sept. 17th to .1
23rd has been proclaimed by
President Carter as Con·
stitution
Week.
The
Daughters of the American
Revol ution urge citizens lo
display their flags and read
their Constitution.

bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, lea , juice and
buttermilk served daily.
Please registered the day
before you plan to eat.
Menu lor the Sateliite Site
at the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of the Latter·
Day Saints, Old Town Flats,
is similar to the above menu.
Please call In your reservation at Portland, 843-3364.
Blood pressure will be
taken Sept. 20.

CLARK'S
JEWELRY SlORE
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, 0 .

by

auditions .
Drffll~tnct ,d
'N

'•

'

Eope nt/let tilt'

c.;.., ,

In l &lt;'&gt;d -

tl)o f,.._,. , ~ COUKtiDII

of .o..od ltll:l'\1 foo?wtlr Jly l" for 111 1. YOII ' II
lind Iooft tor cltHI CM:catloru t r'ICI ctl.,.l
o.. tlnf$. n...,. ·r• t il •trt.O ot ,.nutno
IH 111or Tl&gt; ~cm p l"""'ont t~ t t -IOf\'1
,..,.,lon cl lrKIIont . M el wtltfl lt cory,tt t(l II!

' "' eam ton.

Auiii!IOrlt

dolt It btlt

and Mt·s. Gene Ca rson. Hyseil
Run Rd ., Pomeroy, oi.J::;ervt.."£1
his St•vcn th birthday on Aug .

29. He received gifts from Mr.
and Mrs. Charl es Cat·sun and
M(;lxine Owens, grantJ parenL,, freda Casto, gt·eat·
gra"'bnolher : Mt·. and Mrs.
Jae k Sigman. Andy and Kris,
and Mr and Mrs. Larry
Salser.

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?
CALL CRISIS LINE.
GALLIA 446-5554

MIIGS M2-5554
JACKSON 216-5554
\I

ratified within seven years.

LINDA SKAGGS
ANNOUNCES
FALL DANCE PROGRAM
Located at her new studio

Ok. Brown
Wine

11 Lyne Center, Rio Grande
Collete. ·
Fill
Semester
1nd
Reglstrallon will begin
Stpttmber 18 at Lyne
C'filltr.
The Studio offers Begin.
nlng and Advanced Banet,
Tap. Modern , and Jazz
Clas- for ages~ to adults,
For further infor;na~lon
call 245-~51 afftr s ,oo.

Black

-

. .. llri. tlll

'"""'*" 11111 '

Tltt.• Wwll .. .. t. llU

•

�B-7- The Sunday Times-&amp;!ntinei,SwJday ,Scpt.l7, 1978

Phihmn. ('uunly t·uokw di&lt;:~ll' ·
11\Hn : Mt·r·ll' .luhnson . t·atlt'tt.t.'

etntl :-r.t..•niui· _t•unstlllcmt cwd
fir:-,1 aid d iJ•Cdur : Hlu~a Jean

B-'-;The Sw1day Times,'&gt;entinel, Sunday. Sept. 17. 1978

Norris, StL'it,aining nu:mbcr··

Officers installed at
Tuesday meeting
POMEROY -New

ofln·ers Wright , prt.•s ic.lt;nt :

~hl'

Tut.·sl hty
night Ifil't-tlng uf till' Wunwn·s
Missionary Society of the
were installed at

Shook . vin•

pn~~mlcnt

ship

and '

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M.-10 P.M.

slt·wanls hip clwinna11 : Ol lll·
na r. ihtH)rt', tn.·a:lurt·r : h 'i'l

til~ tnstalllltg officer with tht·
ecr e1mmy l'CJtlt• r irr~ aruuJtd

IJrcad and water pl aced on
napkins un tlw altar . Tilt.·
gr oup sa ng " Take My Life
ami Le t It Bt•" IJcfun.• tl tt.•

nunis.tcr commented Ull how
God pnwide:; fur hi ti l'hildren
th rough the bread and water
which are n ccc.s~ry fur survivttl. He scmg ··Nothing
Satisf ies But Jes us" ami Tuw

JaL·oUs c.: unl'iudc d
prayl' r.
I nsUdlt-' d wPrt •

with
.ll' ;rn

her ttSSIS IWit : l.imht Foster
a nd Sharon Folm er. junior
missionary tlirt~d u rs . Otht•r

Sunday 10 A.M. - 10 P.M.

officl't'S not J·Jrescut were 1\IHI
M&lt;:i-"lh, ~ci't'l'tetry : a nd Amlwr

298 SECOND ST.
POMERoY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SEPT. 23, 1978 .

Luhn , tiJt• st•r ond \' H 'l' p!TS i·
dent.
Phms Wl'l"l' m~ule fur work·
i.ng on quilt s at the churd1. It
was dccitll'{l to hend $25 to llw
(farv Fn.·t• Methodist Honw
in r.·arv N. Y. Mrs. I .uhr1 wt\1
host tlic Oct. :1 tl lt'l'li ng t1f tht:'
Sucil'ly . Pra yt• r by Iva
Powell th;st•d lhe rnect 111g.

~atty.

continue to serve as leader uf

.;

formation about this meeting,

contact Mrs. Sharon J ohnson
416-1488.
The meeting will start the
50th anniv ers ary year of
Gallipolis as a branch in the
Ohio Divisi on -and the
Association .
The officers lor the coming
year are Sharon Johnson.
president; Cindy De Veny,

Big Bend scouts appoint
~ officers, propose projects

the membership or treasurer

USDA CHOICE

women in order that their
effectiveness may be felt
throughout the state in the
solution of social a nd civic
problems, secure broader
opportunities for women and
promote, encourage and coordinate the work of the
branches throughout the
state.
The branch this yea r will
study three basic topics as a

USD~CHOICE

trip to the West.
They visited the Air Force
Aca demy
and
Roc ky
Mountai ns in Colorado,
Yellowstone National Park,

•••

$ 99

.

T-BONE STEAK •••••••~~ ••

POMEROY-New officers
:. were appointed and pl'ojects
· and programs lor the 1978-79
: year were outlined at the fall
: organizational meeting ul the
. Big Bend Scout.&lt;; of the Black
: Diamond Girl Scout Council

SEE WHY

RIO GRANDE

•

USDA .CH()ICE

source for their programs.

COLLEGE

$ 79

COMMUNITY

COllEGE ·
IS THE
BEST

STEAK ••••••••••••'-!~ ••

USDA CHOICE

ARM
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

held Thursday at the Meigs
Jnn .
Mrs. Dee Lawrence, field
director for the Council, was
l1ere to meet witlL]&gt;Irs. Pat

$ 29

,, '·

girls interested in

the cOurse fur brownie i:md

Attending ll1e 1neetiug were

MI'S. Johnson, junior consul·
taut and first aid diredur ;
Pat Hysell. Hutland junior
leader ; Bcc~y Mankin,
Chester ju111ors: Mrs. Cog~r.
jumor and caclctte leader at
Syracu"" ; Mr . and Mrs. Nor·
ri:;, c u-le~n..l~rs uf the Har·
ri sonvi1le juniors Hntl catlettes ; Pal Philson. Syracuse
Brownie&gt;&lt; ; Sandi Hudman,
SaliSbury Brownies ; Joy
Clark and Cherry Cadle , Mid· di e port brownies; Pat
Schaekel , Carolyn King, and
Shirley GibUs , Chest er
brownie tr oo ps; Patty
Woodard, Chester eadettc
lea der ; Shirley Wilson ,
Hutland IJrownie leader ;
Margaret Parker. Salisuury
juniors; Mrs . l .(;lwrent:e , Mrs .
·Thoma , Judy Whry, and
Mrs. Hoeflich.

mothers from conducting any

money·raising projects. Pro- ·
test.&lt;; to the new regulation ·
were expressed uy some o[
the Brownie leaders atte nding, and Mrs. Lawrence, on ·
IJehall of Council , urged attcndanc.e a t the area
meetings where tile I'Uics and
rc~ulations are made. The
,11 11 t
disc ussed sending
delega tes to the annual Council meeting to IJe held later
this fall . Representatives will
, also attend a meeting at
Parkersuurg on 0&lt;.1 . 18.
Methods of improv ing participation in the Mei~s County
Fair were discussed and pro· pasals induding the a war·
ding of ·trophies to the
outstanding girl in each truop
and some revisions in the
judgingsystem .
Officers named for the year

CHUeK STEAK.•••••••• ~~.

HEAD
. . n

t(J

belonging to a troop.
Bask leadersltip trami1ig
prog1·ams were discussed a11d

were Pat Philson , secrct&lt;:try:

All

The good
wools for
·tall in
shades of
grey mist
and claret. .

BONE
$ 29 ·KRAFT AMERICAN
STEW BEEF. ••••••••••• ~! ..
CHEESE SINGLES~~.~

Roy Newell
to .speak

MONDAY
CLAY P.T .O., first meeting,
7:30 p.m., Open House at · 7.
Interested parents please
Mr. Roy Newell, Ad·
come.
minlstrative Ass istant to
METHODIST Men will have Thomas E.
Ferguson,
a dinner meeting Monday, Auditor of State, will be the
sept. 18, 6:30 p. m. at the featured speaker at the open
Grace United Methodist . meeting sponsored by the
Church. Jim Northup, lire Fairview - Spring Valley
chief, wUI be the speaker.
Homemakers Club on Thursday, sept. 21, at 7:30p.m.
WELCOME WAGON
Mr. Newell, who has spent
Gen.ral" meeting and in- 35 years in public and perstallalion of new officers, 7:30 S&lt;Jnnel relations, will speak
p.m ., Jackson Pike Office of on "Distribution of Taxes to
Ohio Valley Bank. Gwest Subdivisions . "
Area
speaker from Community residents of subdivisions, as
Concert and tentatively from well as others, are invited to
French Art Colony.
attend this interesting and
TIJESDAY
inlonnative talk. Mr. Newell
ADDAVILLE
Elementary will be available lor a
P.T.O. meeting, 7:30 p.m .. question and ans~er session
Meet the Teachers Night.
afterwards.
LAFAYETTE White Shrine,
The meeting will be held in
meeting 7:30. Tuesday, lor the 4-H BuUdlng of the Gallia
ceremoliial, ofEicers to wear CoW!ty Junior FairgroWids.
lonna!.
Prior to the meeting ,
PATRIOT Grange, 8 p.m., members and guests of the
Please bring potluck.
Homermakers' Club will
enjoy their annual picnic with
TODDLERS to Tassels their families at 6 p.m.
Mothers League, Tuesday, 8
For further information,
p.m., at Mimi Slone's.
contact Mrs. Darlene Brown,
WEDNESDAY
.
club president, at 446-9320.
&lt;WIDING Hand School,
organizational

WRETTA JONES
Mrs . Lo retta
Jones,
Jackson, director of District
17, will be present when the
Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club
meets at 7:30p.m. Mo:ula y at
the olllcll'l of Columbia Gas of
Ofllo in Middleport .

SQUARE DANCE
POMEROY - There will
be a Western square da nee at
8 p.m. Thursday at the Royal
Oak
Park
re creat ion
building . Dewey Hart,
Columbus, will be caller. All
Western square dancers are
invited . '

CDUf'ON

that's

new and exciting for toll

INSTANT COFFEE
10 OL $379
YV/G
l.:imit 1 t'er Lustomeo
Good Only at Powell's

':''fer Expires Sept. 23, 1978

~~

CREAM.~.~ ...

!

,d! H!

DOG FOOD
25LB. $299

i

BAG

W/C ..

840Z.
BOX

WIC-'

S f &lt;t.L ,

IJ...Idi!J

d"" _,. h11~&lt;9&lt;11t f-. ~ulGJ

~J!t

A.r

I P£f'PE.." .,.. (

w., dW

fl~

ull-•"(~

,Cfta. · ~wLi4 - ,.t ~ .. - llfUl.&amp;J
~.:u -.-/.4.. - ltt(~/ ~ "loM l •! J.w/..,
CJ·a.d.~.d... valft.L. ~-

o..ul ~ ·'

.,.M.L -

Newell,
Ad·
mllnisllrat:fve Assistant to
Thomas E. Ferguson,
Auditor of State.

·~A)) 1
lfJ/)

IHtHtGHIO
CCM~OI

Roger Dale Adkins

Has birthday

6-18

age

Get yovr new
wardrobe off the
-ground, with sh6es
you can really live
m. Bass 1
ore comfortable . And put together to
last. Boss 1
Just what you
need to get up in the world .

oo·s

The first birthday of Roger
Dale Adkins, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Adkins,
Racine, was celebrated with
a f8mily party at their home
recently.

----·--

oo·s.

A down cHke was servec..l
Tammy

'-

New Deelll Fall Sleepwear Styles
GOMIS FIIOII 113.GO'---I*S FROM '17.50

N/C.

The

with ice c1·eam and koolaid to

'

SUGAR
SLB.
BAG

W JoU..

&gt;.J.l.VL :f.uvt..l. ' bJ. /,/.J..,

\

tLAVORITE

TIDE DETERGENT

~ur ~~~,.a~

.

l

-

HYlAND atUNK

i....,, ..,

'78

·~

'

'lu.ct.......J - t vc.l. '

d~ll.IJ '

•

I

MAXW([L HOUSE ·

t ...

meeting,

Sizes

ICE

Sept. !8 - General m~ting and installation of new
officers, 7:30pm . at Ohio Valley Bank, Jackson Pike offic-e .
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs. Zeig ler IS the son of the late Guest speaker from Community Concert and tentatively from
Lowell H. 1Brownie i Ziegler Mr. and Mrs. George H. French Art Colony.
Sept . 21 - Bridge at Nora Troike's, 7:30 p.m ., 41&amp;-2153.
of Lakeland, Fla . will Ziegler.
Tl1e
eelebratior.
l
is
being
ccleiJJ·ate tlieir 50th wedding
RSVP.
Sept. 22- Couples bowling, 9 p.m. meet at Skyline Lanes.
an niversary with an open hos ted by the co uple's
house [rum 2 to 4 p.m. at the childi'ell, Bob Ziegler , CamOct. 5 _ "The Look of Fall," benefit card party.,style
Ohio University Inn , Presi· IJridge; Mrs. Kermit 1Eva
dent's Roum , 331 Richland Ma e J Ruo(, and Mrs. Elmo show, Elks Lodge, 7:30p.m .
I Grace i Coen. They have 10
Oct.II - Get Acquainted Coffee, Pam Terrizzi , 10:30 a.m .,
Ave ., Athens, on Sept. 24.
The couple were mO:Jrricd gram.lchildren and seven ~Oct. 12 - Craft group at Country Creations will be making
on &lt;XL 6, 1928 at the Pomeroy great-gra ndcliildren.
The couple requests that silk flowers for cost of materials only. No charge lor lesson .
Court House, Pomeroy .
Mrs. Zeigler !Lola J is the gifts not be presented tu Reservations must be made. Susie Beuley at 44&amp;-7765.
daughter of the Me Mr. and them .
Welcome Wagon is open to any interested party m the
Mrs. Eber A. Miller . Mr.
area. For more information call Chris Mitchell, 44&amp;-7739 or Ann
Rauh JSS.9804 .

THE 5E6T OfCALifOQNlA

POTATOES.... !~.~~ ..

CUBE STEAKS ••••••••~~.. .

Zieglers celebrate
50th anniversary

chain~ . Pat . ·

events

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

MS. ROSEMARY GAGNON
of Cadillac ,
Mich., is announcing the engagement and forth coming
marriage of her daughte r, Mary Rose, to AlC Robert Bennett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Bennett of Reedsville.
Mary Rose is also the ste(Hlaughter of Maurice Gagnon,
Mason , W. Va . The bride-&lt;&gt;lect is a 1978 graduate of
Cadi llac Senior Hi gh School, Mich. Her fiance is a 1977
graduate of Eastern High School and is now in the U. S.
Air Force stationed in Ita ly. The couple plan an D&lt;:tober
wedding in Italy.

Mr. and Mrs. Lowell (Brownie) Ziegler

Shirley Cogiu· and Becky Wednesday, · 7
p.m.,
Mankin, jw1ior c'tmsultants ; Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Sandi Rodman, Brownie con- Electric building. Anyone
sultan! ; Betty Lan e, special · inter..ted, please C1lme.

LETTUCE ..........

••

Rurnic, supreme wo rt hy high

with the service unit to meet

Thoma , ser'Vit"e unit dirertor, . JUn ior leaders was scheduled
and 19 other volunteer lor Sept. 26, 'll and 28from 10
leaders, assi stant leaders and a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Meigs
officers involved in pro- fairgrounds with a nosebag
moting girl scouting in the lunch at noon. The cadette
training prog ram witll emcounty .
In prepa1·ation for troop phasis on challenge and
organization in the schools badge work was set [or &lt;kt.
this monlh, regi stration ~?from 7 p.m. to9 :30 p.m. at
packets were distributed to the Chester courthouse.
Mrs. Thoma reported !bat
· the leaders. Several changes
sdwols
in the county have
were noted, 011e l&gt;eing that
IJeen
contacted
and that notes
medkal histories signed by
alxml
scouting
progrmns
will
the parent.&lt;; will IJe required
be
·
distriiJuted
to
girls
of
for all registered girl scout.&lt;;.
scouting
age
.
,
Mrs. Thoma repo11ed that
Mrs.
Merle
Jolmson,
scout
·
forms will IJe available to
first
a
id
instructor,
iHmOuncleaders who are to send them
ed a cou rse fur scout leaders
on (kt. 17 and 181rom 9 am.
to 1 p.m. at the EMS headqua11ers in Rutland .
Again tltis fall, the junior
and cadette scouts will be
selling girl scout calenda J"'
and pocket planners. It was
noted during the meeting that
new Council regulations pro- ,
lubit broWines or brownie

USDA CHOICE

Grant Teton National Park,
Buffalo Bill
Mu se um ,
Wyoming State Fair. all 1n
Wyoming, the Black Hills,
Mt. Rushmore , Crazy Horse
Mountain and the Badlands in
So uth Dakota.
They also visited a girl·
fri end of Miss Hager's in
Douglas, Wyomin g and a
cousin of Miss Bowman's in
Denver, Colorado.

home

.

Th e dour r&gt;l'izc was won IJv
F.rncl:it Wingett . Osl'.;u· an~
Ne llie Casto a nd Kay Logt.tll
were prel:icnted flowers fur
th ic r
a n n i ve r s (:l ri es .
Rcfrcs.tuncnt:; were served in
the dining r :.wm du ri ng e~ coll·
duding sodctll~our .

on tl1e ""cond Thursday. Next
meeting will IJe Oct . 12 at the
Me.igs Inn from 9 tun . to
11 :30a.m.
·

suggests-

CHUCK ROAST•••••••••L!·•••

Return from vacation trip

enjoya ble two week vacation

$ 59

.

SIRLOIN STEAK ••••••L~

fellowship among university

The topics a¢e: Politics of
Food , Women As Agents of
Change and Redefining the
Goals of Educa tion . The
Gallipolis branch will also
first vice president (program ' study and take part in
cha innan ); Suzanne De Rita, community. educational,
second
vice
presi dent cultural and legislative
(membership · chairman 1; policies in the division.
The October meeting will
Becky Nolt, treasurer.
The Ga llipolis branch will be Monday, October 2, at 7:30
meet on the fir st Monday of · p.m. at the Mental Health
each month (excep t lor cent er on Rt . 35. For inSeptember and January ). formation on memb ersh ip
Membership is bpen to any contact Mrs. Suzanne De
Rita, 44tHI05~ or Mrs. Sharon
woman graduat e of an accredited co llege or university Johnson, 446-1488.
· {from a list obtainable from

POMEROY - Rena Ha ger,
Columbus, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Hager. Sr.,
Coolville, and friend. Vina
Bowman , Co lumbu s, have
just retumed from a very

. .

the Southcm Cadettes .
Service team meetings
were set for th~ se&lt;..'Ond
Wednesday tlf ead1 month

~{Jt!d iOn .

at the templ e with all ~fficer s
asked tu attend . The mspeetHI ~ offi cer will be Velma Joy

~

Potlu ck

(:It 6 IJ .IIl . to prepare for in ·

ttl lhc meeting. A practice
was set lm· Sept. 24 at :1 ~ . m .

oth er at Harrisonville with

P urtlclfld ,

refn.':;lunents will be served
foll uwmg inspection .
Ar r;,jngements were m&lt;:~ dt·
for the eh:aniu g currunitt ~e tu
meet e:tt the tc rnplt! on Sept. 28

Tl101nas Edwanls, presided

Casto as lea ders, and the

uf

Oreg o n .

of the While Sln·inc of
Jerusa lem 1nel rcc~ntl y,
Mrs. Jacque F'owler . worth y hi gh pricsle:-.i:-.i, and

Woud;;:H·d mu.l Gertrude

Rhea .Jean and Harold Nm'l'i~
as lcade1·s. Shirley Cogar will

pri cstrs.s,

POMF.ROY-PI" ns lor ins~cction to IJe lll'ld Sept. 29 at
7::!0 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Masunit· Temple were tnHdc
when Mt~ry Shrine :17, Orl.ICr

• Mrs. Thoma amtounced tht!
furmGition uf two new c;.ulelk
ti'Oops, one at Chester witli

BIG BEND GIRL SCOtrr OFFICERS-Serving on the oflkers councillor the Meigs
scouting program are from thl! left, Mrs. Dee Lawrence field diredor from the Black Diamond Girl Scout COuncil, Mrs. Pat Thoma, service Wlit director, and Mrs. Merle Johnson,
cadelle and junior consultant and first aid trainer. ""ated ; and Becky Mankin, day camp
dlredol'; Rhea Jean Norris, chainnan lor·the snstaining membership enrollment, Shirley
Cogar, junior consultant; Sandi Rodman , Brownie consultant, and Pal Philson, Wlit
secretary and coW!ty cookie chainnan, standing, left to right. Also serving on the offkers
C1luncil but unable to attend was Betty Lane, special activities chail1TU!n.

of the branch. I
The purpose of this
organization is to further the
policies and programs of the
Association, foste r the
development a nd maintenance of high standards of
ed ucation , strengt hen the

Reeky

1 this month.

AA UWtomeet
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Branch of the
Ameri can Assoc iation of
University Women beg ins the
197Prl979 year on Monday
evening, September 18 at the
Gun Club . This a nnual
potluck supper will begin at
6:30 p.m. and all members
are welcome to attend and
encouraged to bring guests.
Each member is asked to
bring table service and a
cove red dish 1vege table,
salad or dessert ). Meat, rolls
and beve ra ges will be
provided. For further in·

t'h.ainnan ;

mankin , d~y l'amp· dir·cc:tor;
rm·mbcrsh i p
t: ha inn an ;
Reeky Mankin , day cam1•
diredo1·; and Charlene
Hudlieh, puulie relations. .
Arrangements wcl'l' rriadc
for the Girl Stout Diary
which appears weekly in The
Daily Sentinel to lx• reswned

Doris

I-'Jurel Cliff Free MciiH&gt;dJst Puwl'll , Jllis.sion educa tion
\liurcli .
ehainn,; m, wit h Wam.ltt EIJ\in, .
Tht• Rev . F'luyd Slmuk was

Plans for inspection
made by Mary Shrine 3 7

•

P011I, lUll, IIIIUII.

~

Adkins ,

Eu&amp;e11e

Adkins, Jr ., Becky Adkins,
Missy Ritchie, Shelly Wolfe,
Tara Wolfe, Cindy Foley,
Ross Foley , Denise Rk.hanls,
Jerry Sue Richards, Robe1t
He1idrteks Pele Hendricks
Ronnie Jean Alle11, Lisa
Allen, aOHJ I -'JUr8 Allen.
•

t

•

Shoe Cafe
Lafayette Mall

I

Gallipolis, Ohio

fiuMer was also honon.-d on

·•

Limit 1 l"er Customer
Good Only at Powell's
23, 1978
Offer E;xpires

•

.

•

~

THE UlllpqiJ CEIIERCoii[Iolo, tllllo

.... ....

.'

Sw1day witl1 • party at the
humt' or i:tlt HUnt in Metl'it•lta.

,,

'I

•

�0

B-ll- The Sunday Times-Sentirwl, Sunday, Sept. 17, 1978

C-1-Tlle Swrday Times-Sentinel, Sunduy,Sept.l7, 1978

.

·------~·--------~----·---------,

Community I Homemakers'
I
·comer I
Circle

•

Ohio· State blanked 19-0 In opener
j

I

By Charlene Hoeflich I
I

le~tw-ing

Annir An ybo.ly

MiddlepOrt 's Mrs. Horner Rite marked up a birthday this
week (her BOth !) and it did11 't pass without rrotree .

BY BETI'IE fLARK

Denver ami Nora Rice a nti their sun, B11l, and Clu~ster and
Sylvia Rice, visiting here from Atlanta . ·Ga . hos~ed a dinner

party Monday evening. There was a decorate&lt;! brrthd~y cake
and homemade it'e cream following the dmncr alung "11th g1fts
and cards . Then during Utl' evening Mrs . Hil'c. l.alked tu her

son. Harold. and Ins wife of Las Vegas,

~rs Edith Williamson of Rutland is rea lly into rnacrmnc. At

th~ent Rutland Garden Club flower .show she had un

display flbout 20 macrame hangers, some plain . .some with
beads, several eolors. and all bea utiful.
That chicken noodle dinner whi eh the Auxi li ary of the Mid·
dleport United Pentecostal Church will be having on ~l. .Sis
not the " sit d01m and eat'' type but rat ht·r the " Uike out k111d .
111e time will be frum 11 a.m . tu fi p.m. ami tht.• mcm!Jcrs aro
encouraging advanl'e ord~ rs. They al~u S&lt;:j)" they 'II deliver in
tlw Middleport area .
Response to the nuwcring ana nginf:.( t:ou rst·lx~ing offered by
the Meigs County Getrden Club Association was almost ~ve r·
whe~ning, li terally, what with the limited spaee of the Rrver:
buat ROOm of th~ Pomeroy Brctnl'h of thl' Athe11s County &amp;tv ·
ings Branch and Loan where the first class was held.
Sixty-six showed up with the requested two foot com sta lks,
eontainers and a vHriety of other essenlwls ready to lean1 the
basics of becmtiful bouquets.
·
Crowded ? And how!
SO, the location has been changed.
. .
Monday night's dass will tx~ hcl ~l in tlw art'hery bmldmg a t
Royal Oak Park. 7:30 p.m . and th1s week yuu ~rc to take the
same things requested fur last week . There wrll be plenty of
table spat'e for every()ne.
If you're interested rn fall fashrons. you 'll want to attend the
fall fashion revue being pla nned by the ExterJSron Scrvree. ·
The revue will be held at Meigs Hig h School on Sept. 28 at
7:30p.m. and will t:onsist of 42 outfi ts fc~t ur ing dcs i ~nsfrum &lt;t
major pattern company . Models are strll needc'!l . grrls. boys,
men and women , so if you would like to Wke part JUSt call
992·3895.

And did you know tlutt. working mothers &lt;.:an now have
babysitting services provided for them if their income fall s
within a certain range '?
According to t he Meigs Hwnan Resource Council's
September ne wsletter , this new service is a vailable thruugh
the Meigs County Wel fare Department.
HAVE A NI CE WEEK !

•

.......

I
I

--·- ---··-·-I·

Social
·
II
I Calendar I
I
~
I

SUNDAY
CO UNTY WIDE pra yer
meeting , 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Rutland Community Church
with Glen Bisoe ll, class
leader.
HOMECOMING, Wesley
Cha pel Ch urch, Sunda y,
basket lunch. 12:30 p.m.
ANN UAL pi c11il' of tilt · Htg
Bent! Citizen~ Bclfld Had1 u
Club will be held Sund«.l ill
Uw Forest A&lt;.: rcs Pe~ r k ncar
Rutland. Sltelter ~ . al 12::10
p.rn ,
LEONARD Pre ston and
Gospel Expr ess, Nease
Settlement Baptist Ch urch.

Pomeroy, Sun .. Sept. 17 .
Basket dinner at noon . Bring
covered dish . Pastor is the
Rev. Don Karr . Everyone
welcome.
MONDAY
RACINE E'lementary PTO
will meet Monday, SerL 18 at
1: 30 p. rrr. at the elementary
school. Parents are urged to

attend to discuss the fa ll
ca rnival. Babysitting will be
provided ,
CANDYSTRIPERS
Vet·
eran s Mem orial Hospita l
Monday in hospital cafeteria
at i p.m.
MEIGS CO UNTY Church
of Christ Men's Fell owship
Monda y 7:30 p.m. at Dexter
Church
of
Chri st.
Representative Ron James
will be guest speaker.
MEET YOUR TEA CHER
night at Chester PTO Monday
7:30 p.m. at grade school.

WIRE FAILURE
A ~Y~Iem·wlde !allure of
Ualted Preoo lntemaUonal
wire service, orlgl1111t1ng In ·
the New York olflce

Home F..coaom.Ja.

TEACHING CHILDREN
MONEY MANAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS - Many
American parents never get
aro und to teaching their
children money management

out" .of fear, ignorance,. or
botH:-The numbers of peopl~
turning up in credit coun·
selling offices and bank·
ruptcy co urts would certainly
be reduced if more parents
would take on this vital
responsibility.
.
There is a way, but it
should be started early and
be systematic to be most
effective.
A very young child can be
taught that money is a
medium of exchange. And, at
the same time he can learn
that va lue judgements and
choices are required in using
it wisely .
Begin wtth t he traditional
American a llowa n ce.
Establish some rules and
stick to them . The amount of
money , and the time the child
receives it, should be set m uch as a paycheck, In this
way he will learn to plim
ahead - the first step in
budgeting.
Once a week is recom·
mended for elementary
school students, every other
week for junior high and once
a month fo r high school. Start
with lun ch ·money a nd
perhaps transportation for
fixed expenses .. and some
fre e cash for friv olo us
spending. Work up to in· '
crements to co ver larger
periodic payments for sports
uniforms or the school year·
boo k.
Don 't use the allowance to
puni sh, If he never knows
when it might be taken away,

TUESDAY
SAJ.JSBURY PTO, i :30
Tuesde~y night £tt the S(.'houl ;
lc~dn:rs and vcrsunnc l tu l.&gt;t:
U1troduced.
MEETING
SPEC IAL
Racine Masonic U&gt;dge 46!,
F&amp;AM with work in the
Master Mason degree ; all
Master Masons invited.
XI (;AMMA MU Clw pter.
Bew Stg ma Pili Sorority, 7:30
Tuestlct y night .:~ t the Culwn~
bl ct Cia.-, C'tJ . l'lfft Le. Mrs. Annie
Cha pm;m to hc.\"t.' the t:ultura l
progn un, cmd Mrs. Ot~bi
Buck &lt;HHI Mrs . Linda King to
b( • hostesses.

WEDNESDAY
LADIES AUXILI ARY of

your child can't budget.
Worse, he'll learn to equate
money with love.
Do take your child into the
bank wben you go. Help him
to become familiar with the
interior of the bank and its
terms, forms and procedures,
as he is able to grasp them.
You may open a savings
account for him as soon as he
can sign his name legibly. It
wiU teach him about interest
earnings and the self·
discipline of
pleasure
deferment if it is tied to
something specific within a
time frame he can grasp.
A few teenagers have their
own checking accounts, but
most don 't need them unlil
tbey are working on their own
or have entere d college.
Whenever your child does
open his first account, sit
down and explain the proper
way to make out a check,
what happens if one bounces,
and how to balance the
monthly statement.
Since we aU, live to some
deg ree in a buy now - pay
later - economy, your child
should also be taught how
credit works, what its pitfalls
are and how to use it to his
advantage.
Ex plain that it is a
privilege, not a right , and
may not be acquired until he
reaches the age of majority,
which allows him to enter into .
contracts. Show him how the
cost of credit is figured on
your own mont hly bills . And,
stress th e Import a nce of
maintaining a good credit
'
rating.
A little time and effort now
could keep him from serious
financial hot water in the
future.

FISHING REELS

OOfo

ALL FISHING
TACKLE

OFF
HECK'S Ri:G. PRICE

OOFF

OHLINGER AWAITS HARRINGTON- Pt. Pleasant's Ted Ohlinger (42) stands his
groWKI and waits foc GAHS quarterback Greg Harrington ( 10) on keeper play. In
backgroum is Big Black junior end Danny Jones ( 85). PPHS downed GAHS Friday, m to
remain unbeaten in three starts.
·

HECK' SfiEG. PRICE

ALL
!

l

~ ..

FISHING
RODS

~

MITAi...
~~~~=~~ 20 GALLO

GARBAGE
CAN
$399
HECK'S lEG.
$5.77

. OFF

HAIIIWAIIIIEI'T.

HECK'S REG. PRICE

20POUND

!IO .COUNT
80UNCI

BRUSH COAT
· BASFMENT

CEMENT PAINT

FOAM CUPS .

HECK ' S REG .

$5.88

HAIIDWAIE
DEPT.

HICK'S RIG. [!!!!!!!
- ~~~'"'"'."'"
71 • PKG.
L1 _
~J : •. ~ .

50c;'.:s-.J

IIOUSEWAIE

""'·

:,

RAINLIQUID
DANCE

'

)

OR
PASTE WAX

I

c_r:.\'1'~
, \~~~~~:::::::::,~

CHOICI

- -· /;:.:=~""'=~==-----~- ------"--

..__,__
/ ---:-.=
- ~

$299

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EACH

~- :1~~~

4.7101.
GINTL• TOUCH

BATH SOAP

4

BARS

$1 OO

HICK'• RIG. 31• UR

IIOISEWAII-T.

""=-·

Steelers favored .today
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
resurgent and unbeaten
Pittsburgh Steelers, with
quarterback 'terry Bradshaw
off to the best start of his
career, ue favored to notch
their third straight victory
Sunday over the winless and
quarterback
troubled
Cincinnati Bengala.
Bradshaw comes into the I
p.m. (EDT) Riverfront
Stadium game as the ·
American Conference's toprated passer so far in the
YOWig season .
The veteran Bradshaw has
bounced back from a broken
nose suffered In the
eilhlbltlon season to lead the
Steelers to a ~ record by
hitting 31 of 52 passes foc 430
yards and four touchdowns.
He's been Intercepted only
once.
"I think he ;s bavlng an

· By GORDON 8AXAMOTO

UP! Sporta Writer
SAN FRANCISOO (UPI)As the tight Natlooal League
West race narrows down to a
precloua few games, the San
Francilco Giants' pemant
hopes hinges - precariously
at the moment - oo reliever
Gary lAvelle.
UntO a recent ankle injury
sidelined him, the quiet leftbander was In the midst of
returning to Dr. Jekyll form
after a Mr. Hyde . start.
IAvelleadmltted that prior to
tbe All.Star break, he was
awful.
Over the Hrot half of the
season, he had a 6-7 recocd
with 13 saves and a 3.51
earned run average. Since
the Ali.Star break, however,
lAvelle has picked up five
victories and an equ~l

Today's
hurlers
Sunday's Probible Pitchers
United Press lnternltional

C8rS offers fast
drive In service
at all three offices.

:)

~

•

C&amp;S . Bank
The Commercial &amp; Sav:~.ngs . Bank
25 Court Street

Silver Brid ge Plaza

Spring Valley

Member FDIC

GILLITTI 3 IN 1

SUPER CURL

• · Stea m styler wit~ attachment~ e .r:wo
roller sizes plus s uper s tyler e Morstumrng
steam locks in curls .

HICK'S RIG.
122.e&amp;

JfWfLIIY ""'·

•••••••
HOT DOG SftAIIIR

number of saves to go with an
ERA well under the 2.00

mart , dropping that key
mark to an area near 2.90.
His strikeout-walk ratio
also improved drama tlcaUy,
going from a near 1·1 ratio to
a morellke~t 3-1.
"It actually began in spring
training,"
he
said.
" Statistically, I had an
outstanding spring (16
lnninp, two victories, four
saves, six hits, one run, 14
strikeouts and I walk ), but I
knew I wasn 'I throwing the
ball the way I could. There
was no zip tn the ball.
"When the season began, I
got ofl to a slow start am I
began to doubt my own
ability. I dldlil koow what
was wrong . I had lost weight
In spring training, but, still, I
wasn't throwing right.

Cards clip
Cubs, 4-1

NEW. YORK (UP!) ThUrma n Munson's - sacri. fic e
fly
with
one
out in lhe ninth inn·
in g
Saiurday
scored
Mickey Rivers from third
base with the winning run to
lift New York to a 3·2 victory
over the Boston Red Sox and
move the Yankees 3 1·2
games in front in the
American League Eastern
Division race.
Jim "Catfish" Hunter, 10·5,
edged ex-Yankee Mike
Torrez, 15-ll, as the Yankees
won their sixth in a row from
the Red S.ox.
After Rivers tripled over
Ca rl Yastrzemski's head in
left field to open the ninth, the

Red Sox played the infield in game.
and kept Rivers on third
The Yankees came back
when · Willie Randolph with one run in the bottom
grounded to shortstop Rick half of the ijrst on singles by
Burleson. With one strike, Randolph , Munson and
Munson attempted to squeeze Reggie Jackson, Jackson tied
Rivers home, but fouled off the score with two out in the
the pitch. On the very next fifth when he lined his 23rd
pitch, Munson lined to J im home run into the lower right
Rice in right field, who made field seats. It was also his
a running stab but fell down 336t h ca reer homer, tying for
after the catch and was 32nd place with Joe Adcock
unable to make a play at the on the a ll·lime home run list.
plate.
The victory was the first of
Rice hit his 41st home r un the year fur Hunter over the
in the first inning after Jerry Red Sox and wa s his sevent h
Remy singled to give the Red in his last eight decisions.
Sox a 2.CJ lead. It was the first Hunter allowed only six hils,
lime in the two back·to-back struck out eight and wa lked
weekend series between the three en route to hi s fourth
dubs that the Sox led in a complete game.

the powerhouse Stee!ers of
old - but with a new cast.
Twenty members of Pitts·
burgh'si975Super Bowl team
have been replaced and last
year's problems of laWsuits,
holdouts and serious injuries
have oot recurred.
PITTSBURGH (UP! ) - homer by Tony Perez and a inning. He led off the third
Although Noll refuses to go
completely out on a limb this Dave Parker smacked three solo shot by Wa rren with a double and sco red on
early in the season, he doubles and drove in four Cromartie, before giving way one of Stargell's three RBI
already is saying, "!think we runs and Frank Taveras went to Ed Whitson. Ross Grims· singles and his bases-loaded
have a fine football team . I 4·for·5 in a season·high l9·hit ley. 16-10, gave up eight hits double capped a four-run
Saturday
that in 2 1·3 innings and took t ~ ~ seventh.
thought that {rom the start ." attack
Pittsburgh's wins have propelled the Pittsburgh defeat.
Taveras had three sing les
been 28-!7 over Buffalo and Pirates to their fi fth straight
Willie Stargell had three and a triple and scored t hree
win , a 12-5 triumph over the hits and drove in two runs. runs, marking the third time
2HO over Seattle.
·
Montrea
l Expos.
Parker, who now has a career this season he has had four
H the Steelers win again
Rookie
Don Robtnson, t3.;;, high of 104 RBI, knocked in hits in a game. The Pirates
Sunday it wUI give them a
three-~ame ed~e over AFC went 8 1·3 innings and allowed one run with his first doubl e scored three of their runs un
Central Divisi on
ri va l eight hits, including a two·run in the Pirates' two run first Montrea l errors.
Cincinnati in the standings.
The scores in Cincinnati's
24-23 loss lo Kansas City and
13-10 defeat at Clevelam are
deceiving.
,
The Bengals trailed KC 24-9
until the final Hve minutes
when some wild scrambling
and rlnusual plays produced
the rmal margin . Against
Cleveland, the Bengals
grabbed a 1tJ.O lead, but
couldn't add 1o It, alloWlld the
Browns to tie it at 10.10 and
lost it in overtime.
HWe can't look back,'' Ben·
gals Coach Bill Johnson said
this week. "Now it's Pitts·
burgh. They're a talented
team. Our games with them
are alwa,Yll hard fought. "
The Steelers have won II of
the 16 games the tea~ have
played. However, eight of
those wina have CCIIle in
Pittsburgh and the Steelers
have wm only three of tbe
eight played in Cincinnati.
But, based on what's hap·
pened 10 far this season,
Cincy's slight home Held
advantage appears to be the
GOLF WINNERS - Pictured ue three of the four winners in a recent championship
only department In which
Cm!petltlon at the P&lt;meroy Golf Club. Seated is Don Hunnel, club champion. On the left is
the Bengals currently have
Bernard Fultz; second flight winner whUe J . R. Wamsley, right, was third flight winner ,
an edge on the Steelers.
First flight winner, Russell Brown, was absent.

•

Pirates win .5th zn row

Cowboys battle Rams today
in top pro grid encounter

CHICAGO (UPI) - Mike BY JOE CARNICEW
Phillips' bases·loaded two· UPI Executive Sports Editor
O&amp;troit ( YOUr).Q 6·5) a t
run single Saturday lifted the
It 's time for the Dallas
Cleveland t Hood 5·51, 2 p.m.
St. Louis Cardinals to a 4·1 Cowuoys to stop fooling
Toronto (Moore 6·7) a t
victory over the Chicago around and get down to
Baltimore { Flanagan 17·13),
Cubs and enabled John business.
2p.m.
·
Boston CEckersley 16·81 at · Denny to win his 12th game of
The Cowboys have toyed
New York (Beanie 5-71. 2 the Ieason.
·
with
their flrsl two opponents
p.m .
basehlt
in
the
sixth
this
season, blasting the
Phillips'
California ( Tanana 17· 10)
Inning scored Ted Simmons punchless Bahlmore Colts 38at Kansas City &lt;Leonard
t7· t7), 2:30p.m.
and Keit6 Hernandez to put 0 in the opener and then going
Minnesota (Serum 8-8) at . the Cardinals ahead 2·1. through the motions in a 34·24
Milwaukee ( R9mback O·OJ.
Simmons and Hernandez triumph over the New York
2:30p.m.
Oak land (Langford 7·11 1 at both singled o!f starter and Giants.
Texas (Matlack 12·1JJ, 3:05 loser Dennis lAmp, 7-14, to
But today things get
p .m .
lead off and then pulled a serloua. The Cowboys are ln
Chicago ( Kucek 1·2) at
Sea ttle (McLa ughl in 2 7y), double steal as Ken Reitz Los Angeles to face the Karns
struck out. Terry Kemedy in a duel between two of only
•:JSp. m,
was intentionally walked and eight remaining unbeaten
NltiORII LIIIUt
New York 1Bruhert J -9• at
Phillips singled up the clubo in the National Football
Phil adelphia (C hristenson
middle.
League.
Jt ·1JJ. t :35p.m.
Philllpo
and
Garry
Tem·
There are !hOM who speak
Montreat (May HI at Pifl·
pleton each doubled in the In awe of the Cowboys and
sburgh (Bi y le ven 13·9) , 1:35
p.m.
eighth for the Carda' third today's matchup before a
St. Louis Pluckovich 12· t 11 run and George Hendrick led national television audience
at cnfcogo IB urrisS·t21 , 2: 15
off the ninth with his 20th and a sellout crowd of over
p.m .
71,000 at the Coll~eum will go
homer for the linal run.
Arlanta (Niekro 18-15) at
Los Angeles I Hooton 18·8), •
Denny
gave
up
a
runa
long way In detenninlng
p.m. .
scoring
Single
to
Tim
Black·
just how good Dallas Is. Are
Houston c Lemongello ?· lJI
at San Diego tJone. lt ·t•l . • well in the aecond and was the Super Bowl champloQS
p.m.
reUeved Ia the ellhth by .truly a great team?. This Is
Cin,lnnotl CMolkau 6·'1 at , Buddy Schultz. Mark Uttell their flrltl real test this year,
San ~ ranclsco (Knepper
relieved In the ninth to flnlah coming against a Rama club
15·10) , 4:05 p,m,
up.
·
'
that baa done llttle
(All Times eDT!
Amerlc.11n Lugue

We're convenient.

outstanding start,'' Steelers
Coach Chuck Noll said of
Bradshaw. "In· fact , it's
probably his best start ever."
By
contrast,
quarterbacking is a big
reason why the Bengals ue
off to a disappointing 0.2
start. '
With regular quarterback
Ken Anderson sidellned the
firSt six weeks of the season
with a broken booe in his
passing ham, . backup John
Reaves
has
yet
to
successfully step in for
Anderson .
Reaves is 25-loc-50 passing,
has been intercepted three
times and has mis8ed several
times on. crucial plays.
Despite Reaves' confidence·
that he can do betrer, fans are
growing Impatient for Andersoo 's return.
As foc the Steelers, they are
showing signs of returning to

Lavelle surge
helps Giants

39c. .

FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
POMEROY
State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
r e p~rte d the Septem ber
di&gt;tribution of $6,446,421.04 In
local government money to
Ohio's 88 counties and 388
cities and villages levying
local income taxes. Meigs
County received $12,500.

. '

SPORTS
.Y anks triumph

ALL

,. '
the Rutland Fire Department
Wed nesday at 7:30 p.m.
Election of officers.
THllRSDAY
ROCK SPR INGS BETTER
Health Cluu. I: 15 p.m. Thurs·
tiay at the hmn~ uf Mrs. Sus'it·
Pu llins. Mrs. Na nt:y Morris tu
hHvc tht· prugr·am, and Mr.s.
I .ottic f.eu rwrd, thl' contest.

iunbav 1rintts • ittttintl

18

.. ,. ,\ ~~k. "c
\'' t" · . .

~:~\·

available and only a few
baseball stories made It
throu gh the . romputer
before the breakdown.

El.tftllloD Alt:Dl,

DUPONT

-~'' ' '

Saturday afternoon, Idled
the Tl mu·Sealloel UPI
macblae. AI of preao lime,
none of the maJor roUege
football results were

offensively but which has
been as efficient as ever on

de{ense.
DaUas leads the NFL in
scoring with 72 points and
second-year back Tony
Dorsett has eclipsed the lOllyard mark in both games and
leads the league In rushing
with U8 yards. Roger
Staubach has thrown .for six
TDs In two games.
The Cowboys' !!COring tna·
chine goes 'against a defense
that has allowed just 14 points
.- the lowest fllure in the
NFL - In two ;victories. Last
Week Loa Angeles , allowed
Atlanta )lilt 73 yards total
oflense
and
sacked
quarterback June Jones four
limes.
Dallas Coach Tom Landry
Is the first to recognl.te the
potential of h1a oflenae, espe·
clally with the Insertion of
secom-year man Tony HIU at
wide receiver .
"I think the eXplotdveness
in our offenJe has to do with ·
·rony Hill and Tony Dorsett,"
lAndry said. "HIU Is a very.
explosive pla~r. He can tum
a slrort play Into a big play in ·

a hurry because he has
excellent running ability and
great speed. From the HiUDorse tt standpoint, we ' re
more explosive."
Landry feels Hill's addition
makes All·Pro Drew Pearson
more effective at the other
wide receiver.
''The defenses we meet are ,
going to have to respect both
sides very strongly," he ex·
plained. "If that happens,
then some of the pressure will
c&lt;me off Drew. And if there 's
a better quarterback than
Roger in the league, ! haven't
'!fCn him. I've felt Roger was
the top quarterback tbe last
two yeats. He's throwing the
ball well, he has c&lt;mmam of
the team. I don 't think you
can expect much more than
that."
Ray Malavasi, unbeaten
since taking over for the fired
Geor&amp;e Allen two weeb Into
the exhllriton aea11011, ujlects .
to have lila banda ftlled with
the Col'boys.
"I think this will be a tough,
weU-played game ," said
Malavasl. "l think we can do

something offensively and
I'm s ure Dallas feels the
sa me way."
Dallas was a four-point

favorite.
Elsewhere today, Buffa lo is
at Miami, San Diego at
Denver, Oakland at Green
Bay, Cleveland a t Atlanta,
Pittsburgh at Ci ncinnati ,
Chicago at Detroit, Sea ttle at
the
New York
J ets,
Wa shington a t St. Louis,
Kansas City at the New York
Giants. San Francisco at
Houston, Tampa Bay at Min·
nesota and Philadelphia at
New Orleans. Baltimore is at
New England Mooday night.
The San Diego-Denver
game figures to be a close
one, with both clubs coming
off tough losses. Denver,
which has oot surrendered a
touchdown yet , has beaten
the Chargers six straight
times.
Oakland tries to put its act
together against unbeaten
Green Bay. The Raiders
needed a controversial
fwnble recovery TO as time
elapsed to beat San Diego last
week.

RON CALCAGN I, newplrew of Dr. and Mrs, Gordon
Amsbary, Bob McCormick Rd ., appears on the cover of
the Sept. 11 issue of Sports Illustrated, a nationally
recognized sports magazine . Calcagni has led the
Arkansas Razorbacks as quarterback since his
sopbomore year at the University of Arkansas. Last year
he led them to a 11·1 record. This year the Razorbacks are
ranked No, I in the nation. Calcagni starred in the Orange
Bowl upset of Oklahoma earlier this year. Razorback
Coach Lou Holtz describes Calcagni's performance on the
gridiron with two words, Hawareness" and "leadership ."
Calcagni, a native of Youngstown, 0., follows in his
brother 's footsteps as an outstanding college athlele. His
brother, Jim , played for Adion College in Ann Arbor,
Mich ., as a first string linebacker for four years.

Tigers rout
Indians 10-4
CLEVE LAND IUPfJ Lance Parrish had four hits
and drove in three runs
Saturday to spark a !6·hit
attack which carri ed the
Detroit Tigers to a 104 rout of
the Cleveland Indians .
Milt Wilcox, 13-10, went 8 1·
3 innings to ga in credit for the
victory but needed relief help
from John Hiller in the ninth
when Clevela nd scored three

to Rusty Sta ub and singles by
Steve Kemp and Parrish.
A bases· loaded sacrifice fly
by
Lefl ore and Lou
Whitaker 's run-scoring single
added a pair of runs in the
sixth and Detroit scored fiv e
times in the ninth on two-run
doubles by Parrish and
Aurelio Rodriguez and an
RBI double by Stegman.
A sacrifice fly by Gary
runs.
Alexander got the Indians a
The Tigers gra bbed a I.CJ run in the sixth and they
lead in the second on three added three in the ninth on a
sing les and rookie Dave homer by Ron Pruitt, an RBI
Stegman ·s sacrtfice fly . They single by Duane Kuiper and a
chased Rick Waits in the run-scoring double by Tom
third on a single by Ron Veryzer.
Lenore, a stolen base. a waJk

Army turns back .
Lafayette 24-14
WEST POINT, N.Y . (UP! r
- Sophomore quarterba ck
Earl Mu lrane passed for 214
yards and one touchdown and
ran for the deciding score in
the thi rd quaner Saturday to
guide Army to a season·
opening 24·14 victory over
Lafayette.
Leading 3.CJ on a IO.yard
fiel d goal by Corky Messner,
Army increased its first·
peri od lead to 10·0 on
Mulrane's B-yard TD pass to
tight end Glennie Brundidge.
The J().play scoring drive was
set up by Ktrk Thomas'
recovery of a fumble by
Lafayette's Karl Sivek.
Lafayette, J.I, look ad·
vantage of an Anny fwnble to

score on a 12·yard touchdown
pass from Gary Uzelac to
Tom Dolphin in the second
period.
Mulrane scored the clin·
ching touchdown on a !·yard
sneak late in the third quarter
to ca p a 14-play , 63-yard
drive. Four plays after Glen
Vereb ret urned the ensuing
kickoff 57 ya rds to the Army
28, Uzelac dived across from
the 2to cut the Cadets' lead to
11·14.
Army added an insurance
score in the final period when
Jimmy Hill carried eight
times in a 9-play drive that
covered 58 yards, capped by
his own :l-yard TD plunge.

Friday's grid scores
F l'ida v ' s
Ohio H ig h Sc hool
Football Res u lh
United Preu International
Aleron Springfield JO Ak ron

Ettet a

Akron 51 V -SI M 16 Lo u iS \Iil 'te

Aquinas 10

Allen East 24 Bluffton o
Alexander 41 Kyger Creek 0
Amherst 27 Firelands 6
Ar l ington 25 Vanlue 7
Ashla nd 7 Sh e lby 6
Ash land Crestview 20 Lucas 6
Asht a bula
E dgewo o d
6
G i rard 6 ( t i e)

At he ns 7 Teays V.llley 6
Avon Lake 7 Lo r&amp; in Adm iral
King o
Barberton 22 Wadswonh 0

Bay Village 9 Lakewood 0

Bedford Chane! 20 Warr ens .
"I li e 0
Bellevu e
24
Sandu sky
Perkins 18
Bellefonta i ne lo4 Mad ison
P la ins 0
·
Berea Midpark SO Ashtabula
0
Berkshire 14 Grand Valley 0
Bexley 7_ Col Hartley 6
Black River lo4 S Amherst 7
Boy d County (Ky l 26 coa l

Grove 18

Brecksville 7 Cle Cen t Cath 6
Brooke (W Va ) 33 Steuben ville Cath 7
~rooklyn 20 Co lu m bia 19
Bryan 20 Liber ty Cen t er 0
Buckeve W 28 Stanton Local 0

-

Bu c yrus 13 Cly de 10
Cad iz 13 Bella ire SJ John 6
Cambridge 21 Coshocton 6
Campbe l l
Me mori al
32
Sharon ( Pal 0
Cana l Win ch ester 13 Amanda
Clearcreek 0
Canf ie ld o45 East Palest ine 6
Canton Glen Oak 25 N Canton
Hoo ... er 20
Cant on McKin l ey 20 Warren
Hard ing 0
Ca nt on S 24 Akron E 11
c;a rdington 18 Danv i lle 0
Carey 24 R iver Valley 6
Celi na 28 llmll Bath 7
Centerv ille 10 Sprinqf ield N 7
Cham.D ion
20
Ashtabula
Harbor o
Ch ill icot he 26 washington CH

"

Cin Aiken 8 Sycamore 7
Cln Greenhi ll s HI Co l Wehr le 0
Cin LaSalle 21 ·oak Hill 7
Cin Mariem ont 41 Cin An ·
derson 21
,
Cin Roger Buon 20 Cl n
Withrow 7
Cln St x:a..,ie r 39 Cln Taft 8
Cl n Western Hills 7 Mt
Healthy o
Cle Benedictine 26 Chag r in
F i'I II S 0

Cle St Joseph 27 Eucli d 7
Clear Fork 23 Akron Man chester o
·
Col
B eachcrof t
21 Cay
Cham lnacte 8
Col
Brookhav~n
2 1 Col
Centennia l 0

�C-2- The Sund•y Till1t!S-Senlmel, Sunday, Sept. 17, 1978

Friday's high ·school scores .
Fa irv iew 35 AntweriJ 0
F ield 20 Coventry 6
Forest Park 1 F&amp;irt i e!d 0
Fort Frye 27 Caldwell S
Fo~torLa 27 T iff in Columb ian

14

Frankl in HIS 7 Urbana 0
Fre-m ont 46 ToledO ce-ntrlll 14
Fre mon t ·st Joe 15 Gibson
burg 6
Gahann a 27 L ima sr I?
Ga 1ion 27 Lexington 0
GiiiiOw a y
WESt l and
60

Whitehall 0
Gar rettsv 'l B M i dd l ef i eld
Card inal 7
Green f ield McCla in u Spring
Sh awr,ee 6
Greenville 28 Dilt.ie 24
Grove City 26 W i lm ington 6
Groveport 14 La n c aster 7
Hamilton TaH 21 Oxtord
T atawanda 0
Hamilton Garrield 6 Monroe 0
HamlltOn Tw p 27 Circlev ille 7
H ighland 11 Buckeye 0
H il l iard .49 Logan 0
H ill sd al e 8 Mapleton 0
H l!l top 20 Ayersv lt le 0
Hudson 12 N orton 10
H uro n 7 W il l ard 7 ( t i e l
Independence 33 W indham 0
Ind ian Va l ley N 14 Tusky
vall ey 6
Iront on 29 Port smouth 0
Ironton St . Joe 12 Green 6

Jackson Millon 46 Newton
F a ll !i o
J~fferso n Union 24 Bu ckey e S

21

Jewell Sc io JJ Garawa y 1
Joh nstown 25 Gran v ille 14
K·enston 10 Mad ison 0
Ketter ing F a i rmont E 6 Troyo

o

KeHer ing Fairmont W 1!
Spri ng S 6
Lalr..e 6 Genoa 0
Lakewood St Edward J8 C!e
sr Ignatius 9
Lakota 19 Mason 13
Leav lttsburg
labrae
6
Warren Kenn ed y 0
L i berty Bent on
Hard in
Northern 6
Lima Perry 72 Upper Scioto
V a ll ey 8
lima Shawnee 15 Greenan 11
Lorain Cath JJ Brookside 0
Lorein Sr 35 Lorain ~uth view 0
Lo u isvill e l.f J ackson o
Mansf i eld_ Mad ison 12 Mt
Vernon 1
Mansf i el d Malabar 21 Mans field Sr 0
Margarena 7 Oak H arbor 7

n

{ff e

J

Mar ietta 21 Parkersburg ( W
Va ) 0
Marion 50 De l aware Hayes 0
Mar ion Elg in 28 Buclr..eve

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP!) - JQCII:ey Tommy
Meyen IUided fuoretl
Brtnt'a DaDcet to 'VIctory Ill
Friday'• featured tllblh
race, coverlnl tbe alz
lurloqa In 1:12 U over a
alow track to pay P.to, p and.
IUO. La Americana _placed '
and Martha My t.oYe lbo'f811.
'lbe 7·1 comb!Miton of .

Central 10
Marion Local 22 R ldgem·ont 9
Martins Ftrr'tl 42 Toronto 0
MaS!i i llon 37 All iance- 2
Maume-e 21 Tol St John 0
McComb l2 Pandora -G ilboa 6
Mechanicsburg
t 1 Clark
S'eastern 0
Mentor · 6 Warren Ho wl•nd 3
M iamisburg 33 Tecu mseh o
Middletown Madison 13 New
M iam i 0
M iller 36 Ross S' ustern 2-t
M illersport 14 Logan Elm 12
M ilton -Un ion 33 Ca(lisle o
M inerva 9 Sandy Vl!l ll ey 7
Mohllwk 7 Wyntord 6
Montpelier 23 Evergrel!n 8
Morra II
R: i dgeda t e
19
R: i..,. eraale 7
N College H i ll 23 Ind ian Hilt 7
N Un ion 26 Mt G i lead 14
N ' wes t ern 7 YellOw Springs 6
N&amp;poleon 18 Bowling Green 7
New Albany J6 Cen ter burg 0
New Bremen 33 R i11ers lde 0
New ark 7 Tol Wh itmer 0
Newbury -40 leclgemont 6
Nordan ia 36 Maple Helohts 6
Normandy 27 Brunswick 14
Nort h mor 27 East Kno:.. 1-4
Norlhr ielge 0 Lakewoocl 0
( tie l
Northwest 20 Carrollton 17
Northwood 26 McDonald 20
NorwcJik 36 Vermll lon 6
Oakwood 15 T ipp City 0
Oberlin 2 1 keystone 6
Ol msted F alls 14 N Roya lton

Lines cores

Major Le.gue lilesulfs
By United Press International
National League
(12 inn ings)
St . lOUiS
010 000 000 005 - 6 12 I
Chicago
·
000 000 100 001 - 2 9 0
Dressier , Bruno ( 6), Sc hulfz
18), Lope z (9), Litte-ll (11) and
Si mmons . Ken nedy
( 9) ,
Kruk.ow , Sutter (1 0) , Holtzman Der
000 001 000- 1 8 o
( 12 ) and Blac kwell. W- Li tt ell Cleve
000 000 000- a 4 1
( 3-81. L - Sutter {8-8). HR s- St .
Rozema and May ; Reuschej ,
L ~uis , Ph illi ps ( 1J: Ch icago , M onge
(9 1 and Diaz . w K1ngman (2 6l
RoJema ( 8 10 ). L - Reuschel (2·
Jl
110 innings)
NY
111100000 1·- 5 1.:11 Tor
JOO 000 000 - 3 5 0
Pni 1a
100 000 021 a----: .:1 a 2 Ba tt
000 100 70)1; - s 11 o
Koosman . Murray (8) and
Cla ncy , Cruz (7), Moore (7l .
Kaal ,
P ina
(3), Bu skey ( 7) ana Ashby ; Pa lmer
Stear ns ;
Eastwick (4) , Brusst ar (6), and Dempsey . w - Palmer (1 9.
Mc Gr aw (9) and Boone . Foote. 12 l.
L ~ Cruz
(7 .2). HAsW- Murray (9-51 . L - McGtaw Toronto, Horton
(11 );
Bal (8-61. HRs- New York , Norma n timore , t~~ay (23) .
2 ( 4 ).
Sos
000 000 000- o 2 2
Mtl
ooo ooo 010- 1 9 o N .Y
000 400 00K - 4 7 1
Ptsbgh
dO ? 000 OOx - 6 8 2
T iant , Hassler (4) and Fisk ·
F ryman , T w i I c he II (2) , Guidr v anti Hearn . W- Guid,:y
P aIm e r ( 51. Jam es (7L (2l -2l. L - Tian t (1Q . 8) . HRsKnowles (8J and Ca rter . Kison . New York . Ch ambliss (11) ,
Wh itson (8L Tekutve (9) and Nellles (261.
Oy er
W- Kison
( 6 51
L·Fryman
(7 11 ).
HRs- Pi lls - Cal if
000 001 001 - 2 8 1
burgh , Garner 19 1. B Robinson
K .C.
000000111 - 3 91
( 12 ).
R van and· Downing ; Gale ,
M cGil berr v 19), Hrabosky (9)
-Hous
020 005 010- B 10 2 and Porfer W- Hrabosky (7 .7).
San Dg o
]00 OQO Oi l - 4 7 1
L - Ryan (7 -131 . 'HRs - Call for Rich ard and BoChy , Rasmus nia
, Lan sford {5) : Kansas Ci t y ,
sen , Lee (6). Lotich (8), ML'ra Otis (22 1.
(9) and Roberts . Tenace ( 8J w
- Richard (1711 l. L - R.!smUss M inn
3-40 120 000- 10 18 0
en fl4 -131 . HR s- Houston, Wa lt M
ilw
10 1 000 1oo-- 3 a o
1ng 131
Erickson _ and
Borgmann :
A.t la
000 000 000- 0 6 1 Tra ver s, Stem {2) , Mueller (2 ).
LA
100 100 20"' - 5 6 1 M cClure (5), Bomback (8J.
Solomon.
Camp
{8) and August ine (9) and Mart ineL
Nolan ; Sutton and FergusM w Haney l 8l. W - E r ickson (1.d
- Sutlon ( 15 -10 1. L - Solomon (d · 11) L - Travers (1 0· 10 ). HR s6) . HR~ - Los Angeles , Lacv Mi lwauk ee , Cooper (11 ).
{11 1
{ 10 i nni ngS} •
203 000 100-6 12 '1 Ch i
Cin ci
000 000 003 5- 8 14 0
San Fran
000 100 ooo--1 2 0 Se a
100 001 001 o- 3 7 2
t . Sea11er aM Bench , Blue .
Wortham anti Col bern ; Col ,
Corn ufl l .d l , Bar r ( 7), Natt u IBJ bor n , Romo (9). Rawley ( IO J
and Sadek , Tamargo (91 w and Pa sley _ W - Wortham (3 -2&gt; .
Seaver 14 -14. L - Blue (~6 - 9 ). L - Romo 111 -71. HR - Seatfle .
HR s - San Franc isco Evans Robertson ( 7) .
( 19)

'

Perry 31 K irtla nd 14
P i cker i ng t on
18
Bloom
carro l l J
Plymouth
1.t
Hopewell Loudon 7
Poin t Plea sant &lt;W Va) JO
Ga ll ipol is 6
•
Port Cli n ton 21 Sy l va n ia
Northview 0
Portsmout h W 20 Waverly 6
Pr i nceton 13 Cin Moeller 12
Pymatu n i ng
Valley
16
Fa irport 0
Ravenna 14 Salem 6
Read ing 17 Madeira 0
Revere 8 Copley o
R idgev ilre 41 Avon 0
R idoewood 14 Stras bul'"g 7
Ross -46 To l Central Cath 14
San dusky 42 Tot St Francis 12
Seb r i ng 18 Western Res erve 8
Sherwood Fairv ie w J5 A n t werp 0
·
Si dne y 14 w Carrollton 14
( t ie 1
Solon 28 Bedford 0
South Range 8 Cr est•.liew 0
Sou thea sl J Woodridge 0
Sou th ern Loca l 19 Mathews 19
Southweste rn
Galtia
34
So uthern M eigs 0
Spr ing Cen t Cath 44 Ke n ton
R idge 0
Spring bor o 26 Waynesv i ll e 7
Springfieta 8 Swanto n 7
St Clairsv i lle 20 ShadySide 1.5
Sl Mary s 56 De lphos St John 6
St ark Nort h west 20 Carroll
to n 17
St ark P erry 35 Martington 6
Str ee t sb or o 15 Aurora 14
Slro ngsv i ll e 28 Fairview
Park 8
Stru thers 6 You ng s Wilson o
T iff in Calvert 42 Norwalk St
Paul 0
Tino ra 20 H icksv il le 0
Tal Wa ite 10 Tol Woodward 7
Trimble 25 Be l pre 8
Turp in 50 Fl nneytown 0
Tw in Va lley N 7 Eaton 6
Twin V alley S 75 Na t ional

lo.6IJ'Outul of Rlck'1 SuJlr, ..,
MaJ•y•a Ace and BUilt :
Klnlln lbe ninth race trlfecta ·. ':;
- eacll wortb fto6.10.
. ::
Attendance wu f,054 and ~
the handle totaled t512,186. -·:
•

"Sports Tranuctlon1
Friday

,

· -~

aaatball

' St. Louis -

,~

Association .

STEPP ADDS TWO POINTS- Pt. Pleasant's Brian
Stepp (in middle below .GaWa's Mike Stowers (65) and
-Jan-Collins (62) smashed up the middle for two points

T rail 6
Twinsburg 13 Rittman 7
Un iontown Lako 1l Doyl es ·
toWn 6
Un ited Local14 East Canton 0
Upper Arlington 28 Wor t h ington 0
Upper Sandusky 21 On tario 0
Van Butler 20 Fairborn Park
HillS 6
Van wert 28 Ottawa . Gtandorf
l4
W Bran ch 35 Bea ver Local 14
w Gea uoa 6 Lyndhur st Brush
W

Wooster 14 Cloverlear 12
Xenia 6 Beavercreek 0 Youngs Chaney 14 Boa rdma n

•

Zanesvill~

Youngs E 45 Conneaut 27
Youngs S 33 Austintown 6

12

Wlntersv l ll~

Zanesville R:osecrans
North Gallla 20

0
2,.

lasll:ttball
Boston Announced . the
retirement of backcourtman
Ernie 01Gre9()rlo .

CHRIS Mahan (80) brings down unidentified G·AHS
player .in Friday's GAHS-Pt. Pleasant grid game on
MemocJal Fteld. Nearly 4,000 shlrt&lt;!leeved fans were on
hand for the batUe,_won by the Big Blacks, ~- In

.,

L iberty -Sa lem 6 Ind ian
Lake 0
W Muskingum 20 R iver View

,

Wapakoneta 20 KentOn 11
wash CH Miami Trace 10
Lebanon 8
wauseon J• Delta 6
Wayne Trace 53 Edon 0
Wellston 28 Nelsonvil le York

,

Wells v ille 41 L ISbon 12
Westerv i lle s 13 Cot wat
terson 9
Wheelersburg 27 Jackso n 8
Wiclelitfe 14 Easnake Nort h 0
Wil l ard 7 Huron 7 (f ie )
W i ll i a ms t own ( W Val .51
Warren Local 12
Wi t!oughbv S 28 Pa inesvi l le
Riverside 0
Woodsfield 30 Frontie r 12

Meigs volleyball team 2-0
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High Girls volleyball
team opened its season on
Sept. 5 by downing Federal
Hocking in a three-game
match.
Meigs fell 17-15 in the first
game, came back to take a
lhrllllng second game t6-14,
and then coasted to a 1&gt;-:i win
in the rubber match.
It was abnost the same
thing on Thursday night as
the locals came back to win a
match over Jackson in three
games to remain unbeaten.
Jackson took ihe first game
16-14, and then the Meigs gals

I'! Timt&gt; For Nt&gt;w Filii Shows,. Sports (ilnd (leilnt&gt;r F/lf, tooJ!
GOLDEN, Colo. (UPI) An arrest warrant has been
issued
lor
Denver
heavyweight bozer Ron Lyle,
accusing him of thlrd-&lt;iegree
assault against his commonlaw wife, Jefferson County
authorities said Friday.
County Judge Joseph E.
Maker signed the warrant
after Pattye Jean Lyle said
her 36-year-old husband
assaulted her at their home in
suburban Lakewood, west of
Denver, last Sunday.

RECEIVES INVITATION
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Boxer
Leon Spinks, whose only
public appearances in his
hometown as heavyweight
champion were in court·
rooms, Saturday received an
invitation 1o visit with Mayor
James F .' Conway at City
Hall.
.
Aller he upset Muhanunad
Ali .in February, Spinks
declined an official welcome
in St. Loula, where he grew up
in a public housing project.

as
seen on
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20-GAUGE ROTATOR CAlLE
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RADIO SHACK OWNS AND OPERATES
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2279.

at Eastern
at Southern

North Gall Ia
Oct. 19 .
Oct. 21

xx -Gall lpolls
at Trimble

I Quad Nlatch)
Oct. 26

xx-at Ironton
xx - lndicates league match .

THALER'S $100 CASH REBATE
ON 1978 COURIER- FAIRMONT AND FIESTA

"FORD'S FALL ECONOMY
LEADERS"
,

who finishes the particular 22, can do so for a $2
race in which he or she registration fee. As of Sept.
participates, even if they are 23, the fee to register will he
the very last person to cross . $2.50. Participants may also
the finish line, will receive a register the day of the run for
specially designed Tee shirt. $2.50, by stopping at the
These Tee-shirts that Will Registration Desk at the
be given to every runner who Main
Stage
on
the
finishes the race he or she has fairgrounds, starting at 9
registered for, will be navy a .m. Saturday.
blue trinuned in light blue,
Ron Saunders, Director of
bearing the inscription : Respiratory Therapy at the
"Holzer Medical Center Fun Holzer Medical Center is the
Run, J.o, 3.0, 6.0" and in chainnan for the fun run.
addition the colorful Holzer Walt Saunders, Storeroom
seal.
Manager at the hospital,
The awards will be president of the Employee's
presented at the Main Stage Recreation Committee. urges
on the Gallia County Fair employees, their families and
Grounds immediately the general public to come
following the completion of out and take part in this local
the six mile race. The course Fun Run.
for the run wm cover the
Registration should be sent
blacktop, gravel roads and to Ms. Beverly Jackson ,
grass paths at the Fair Treasurer , Recreation
Grounds , and be clearly Committee. Holzer Medical
marked.
Center, P .O. Box 2!0,
Entrants must come Gallipulis, Ohio 45631. Anyone
dressed to run, as shower and entering who is under age 18
dressing facilities are not must have the signature of a
available at the fairgrounds. parent. An official entry
Anyone who plans to par- blank must be used. The
ticipate and registers be- blank will appear in Mon·
tween now and Friday, Sept. day's paper.

•

1978 FORD COURIER

1978 FORD COURIER
2300 cc engine, 5 speed manuel
overdrive trans., ·rear step bumper,

7 fool

bed . .

Stk. No. 833
Was
$S740

1978 FORD COURIER ,
2300 cc engine, 5 speed overdrive
trans ., AM push button radio, tinted
glass , air conditioning , western
swingback mirrors . rear step
bumper, slidi ng rear window .

2300 cc engine, 5 speed overdrive
trans .• AM radio, push button, tinted
glass, low mount, bright western
mirrors, rear step bumper, w -s-w
tires.

Stk. No. 836
Was
$$662.75

Slk. No. 834

NOW

'5240

w..

'4840

NOW

1978 FORD COURIER

1978 FORD COURIER

2300 cc engine, 5 speed manual
trans ., AM push button radio,
western swing lock mirrors, w -s-w
tires .

2300 cc engine, 5 speed overdrive
trans ., soft ride option, AM push
button radio , western swing lock
mirrors, real step bumper .

Stk. No. 838
Was
$5250

Slk. No. 837

Was

NOW 1

SSJ70

4670

1978 FORD AESTA
4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans., heavy
d~.,~t&gt;,· handling pkg . SSW rad ial tires .

Slk. No. 839
Was
$4507

'4250

NOW

1978 FORD AESTA

1978 FORD AESTA
4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans ., sports
group. flip -up open air roof , heavy

4 cyl. eng ine, 4 speed trans ., interior
decor group, heavy duty pkg. V-iny I
insert body side mldg ., complete

duty pkg., AM rad io, llnted glass,
vent windows. body side
mldgs. Load floor carpet .

moveable

Slk. No. 807
Was
$5291

stripe pi&lt;g .

·

Stk. No. 668
Was

'4980

NOW

4650

NOW 1

NOW

S4644

'4320

1978 FORD FIESTA

1978 FORD RESTA

•
•

4 cyl. engine. 4 speed trans. , heavy

1 dr . Hatchback Ghia group , 4 cyl.
~ngine , 4 speed t rans .• AM rad io,
whi te.si d e-wall t i res , moveable vent

••
••

duty handling pkg .. AM radio. llnted
glass . trim stripe pkg.

Stk. No.

wi ndows .

Stk. No. 325
was
$5166

731

Was •
S4484

NOW

1

4220

••
&lt;
•••

decor . heavy duty pi&lt;g ., tinted glass

"•
•

Slk. No. 710
Was
14192

•

•

RON SAUNDERS happily displays the Fun Run Teeshirt that will be given to each of the parlldpants on Sept.
30 who llnllbes his or her run In the competition, even if
Ute last to Cl'OI8the finish line. Bev Jackson,left, and Walt
Saunders, rllbt, look on with approval .

~'
•
"••

••
•

-..•
•

•

~

"'·••
•

•••

....
.•

-.

NOW

'3890

2 Bunon Si,.lt

DAVE &amp; SUGAR

Br•••~

Ticket Prices
TICKETS NOW ON SALEi....,l lilt Clvi~ Cenier Bo•
Olticl •nd ell lll•ttonoi Record IMrts .
Plenty of Good SMII 51111 AvtUablel

Tickets on Sate at Ctvlc C.nler lox Office Throutfl

Sllaw Timet

For M..ter Ch•r.. Rnernttons,
Call (J041 ' " · -

•

'I

Slk. No. 768

'5030
FORD FAIRMONT ·
STATION WAGON

body side moulding .

NOW

I483Q

w..

NOW

$5449

lldo!woll tires .

:;;,

Saturday, September 23 -8:00 p.m.
HUNTINGTON CIVIC CENTER
$7.50, $6.50, $5.50 (tax ineluded)

2 Bonom Straight Fl.., Pock1t1
..... W.!t Pocket
318 LinM with 2 lnlidt Pocket•
SIMdltM V -Neck SwNIW
tHo . 30 includelnwtchlng ICirf)
JOII"l ...tll
12" Cent• Vent

W11

6 cyt. engine, poyver steering,
automatic trans .• air condit ioning,
exterior and Interior decor ' group,
front 11ent Windows, vinyl Insert,

ft~rn

and the PRIDESMEN

4" NottMd Lapel

'4290

2 dr . sedan . A cyl. engine, A speed
trans., whi-te side wall tires , body
side moulding .

trans ., power steering , Interior
decor group, tinted glass , air
conditioning, dual bright mirrors,
plv~lng front v~nt windows,- deluxe
wheel covers .

engine, automatic trans .,
pow·er steering, power Drakes,
eKterlor accent group, white

6 cyl.

cOLLECTION

NOW

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

Slk. No. 255

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON
TRACY

was
S4551

2 dr. sedan, 6 cyl. engine, automatic
4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans., power
steering, Interior accent group, trim
rings, hub caps, vinyl Insert body
side mouldings .

S41t6

..

..•

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

w••

AMERICAN FASHION

AM rc3dio .

4650

Stk. No. 506

..•"•
....••
....••..
•

•••
••

NOW 1

4700

1

4 cyl. engine, -4 spee d t ra nsmission.
w -s -w rad ial tires , heavy duty pkg .,

moveable front vent windows, vinyl
insert body side mldgs .

•
•

NOW

1978 FORD FIESTA
·3 DOOR HATCHBACK

4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans., Interior

~

....••
•

'5220

NOW

•

••

300·0HIII VHF/UHF liiiTEIIIIIIA CAlLE

Fits almost any roof
s 1o p e . P r·e a s •
sembled for quick
installation. 15·118

medalist . who was fighting beaten mari. There were tears
only his ninth professional rolling down Rossman's face
bout, All rucked jabs and as he saluted his fans among
~omblnatlons to the head tlje crowd of nearly 80,000 in
relentlessly . Nearly every the Superdome.
time Spinks mounted one of In earlier championship
his cflarges, Ali lied him up preliminaries
to
the
ezpertly.
Muhammad Ali·Leon sptnks
Lightly regarded Mike heavyweight tltle boul at the
Rossman, the sell-proclaimed Superdome, Danny " Little
"Je,.ish homber," .Cored one Red" Lopez bounced back
of the major upsets in recent from a first-round knockdown
boxing history Friday night to KO Juan Malvarez of
when he stopped Victor Argentla at 45 seconds of the
Galindex with a 13th-round second round and retain the
TKO to capture the WBA li~hl· WBC featherweight title.
heavyweight championship. Jorge Lugan of Panama kept
The end came at o5 seconds his WBA bantamwei~b.t crown
CAST REMOVED
of the 13th round when with a workman like 15MIAMI (UPI) - All-pro Rossman rocked Galindez round decision over Albert
quarterback Bob Griese had with a left-right combination Davila, a scrappy Texan.
the cast removed from his and Panamanian referee Lopez, shocked by the
injured left knee Saturdsy
but he indicated it probably Barrocal stepped in to stop the aggressiveness of Malvarez in
the opening round, shook off
'will he a month before he is action.
Rossman,
·a
Turnersville,
the effects of a knockdown and
ready to play for the Mianil
N.J
.,
native
who
fights
out
of
the
steady stream of punches
Dolphins.
New
York,,leaped
into
the
air
to
come
back in the second
"It seemed to tighten up the
and
Galindez
nodded
his
head
round
for
a one-punch
way we had hoped it would,
in
approval
that
he
was
a
knockout.
and now I'm going to start on
a rehabUitalion program. But
it will be three to four weeks
before I can even think about
Paul R. Lyne Center
playing," he said.
Rio Grande College
WHk of September 18, 1978
TO SPONSOR TOURNEY
DATE - GYMNASIUM
NATATORIUM
B-10 p.m .- Open
RUTLAND - Rutland Sept . 18--8-10 p.m .-Open
. 19--8·10 p.m .-College
Closed
American Legion is spon- Sept
Sept . 20--8-10p.m .-Open
B·10 p.m .-Open
soring a softball tournament Sept . 21--8-10 p.m .-College
8-10 p . m .~ College
at Syracuse Sept . 23 and 24. Sept . 22- Family Rec . Nighl
Fam. Rec . Night
1-3 p.m .-Open
Individual trophies will he Sept . 23- 1-3 p.m .-Open
-3 p.m .-Open
1-3 p.m. -Open
presented as well as in· Sept . 24-1
7-9p .m .-Open •
7-9 p.m. -Open
dividual trophies. For additional information call 742·

Joubert for holding Spinks on
the neck.
A Mardi Gras-type crowd of
over _70,000 in the Louisiana
Superdome, which paid an
estimated $6 million to more
than double the previous live
gate record, changed ."All,
Ali,'-' as it saw him win
possibly the last fight of his
legendary career.
Circling the 25-year-old
Spinks, the fonrier Olympic
light heavyweight
gold

1978 FORD FIESTA

LOW AS

Also Accessories for: •
Cats, riSh and Birds ·

)()(-at Logan
at Jackson
xx -Athens
Sou thern -Eastern
)(X -Wellston

'•
•

HEAVY-DUTY ANTEIIINA IIIASTIIII(i

5-Ft.lllut
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•
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GALUPOUS - With so
much emphasis now placed
on the healthy advantages of
running, the Employee
R"l!reation Committee at the
Holzer Medical Center is
planning a fun run to be held
on the Gama County Fair
Grounds on Saturday, Sept.
30, starting at 10 a.m.
Three races will be held,
and parliclpants may
register for any orie of the
three. They will be 1.5 miles,
3.0 miles and 6.0 miles. For
each of the three races, a
trophy will be awarded, both
to the winner and to the
runner-up, a total of six
trophies. However. everyone

•
•

••

Sept. 26
Sept . 2B
Oct.J
Oct. s
Oct. 9
Oct. 12
Oct . 16
Oct . 18

BELPRE - Thursday at
the_ Oxbow Golf Course,
Metgs High School fell to the
host WatTen linksters 182·194.
Meigs is now 2-5 overall and
1-3 in the SEOAL.
&amp;b Davis led Meigs with a
46 while Chuck Kennedy had
a 47. Scott McKinney had 50,
David Kennedy had 51, JR.
Wamsley had 56, and Fred .
Young carded a 71. ·
For the victors, Mark Abel,
Scott Wynn, and Dave Lane
each l!!!d !L ii__ll'hile Mark .
King had a 50. Nate Proctor
and Matt Proctor carded a 55
and 63, respectively.
Meigs goes to Logan on
Monday evening.

Plan 'fun run' Sept. 30

•

AUTOMATIC ANTENNA ROTATOR

minute

came on strong to win the 9 against Eastern wUl be
second game 15-6 and the played in front of the Meigs
third 15-3.
student body. and the Oct. 16
Long volleys characterized· clash will be played in front of
the Jackson match, and the Eastern student hody.)
spiking by Doble Chapman
and Terri Wilson led Meigs to
its victory. Next match is
Monday at Fort Frye, and the
ME tel'S HfGH SCHOOL
next league match is ThursVOLLEYBALL
day at Waverly.
SCHEDULE 1978
Following is a season Sept. 18
at Fort Frye
schedule. (The game on Oct. SePt.21
xx -atWaverly

"

Signal· spl iner
included with
antenna pur ·
chase .

foreground Ia Gallla's Greg Harrington (10). On left is
Blue DevU tailback Baron Haner (21) 'who led GAllS
rushers with 58 yards In II trips. Point's Matt Blankenship
( 82) looks in oo play.
'

Factory-Direct
TV Antenna

0

team defeated

Football
-"-•
GrHn . Bay - _Pieced Lvnn ;~
OlckeV on the lnlur-.::1 rnerve "'
liSt .
Denver Signed backup
quarterback Norrlt WHM, lfnt- ~
backtr Joe R r~zo lnd dtftnllve ""'
back Bernard J1cklon to multi veer contracts .

alter racing 31 yards for Pt. Pleasant's aecond touchdown
with 6:51 left In the first hall Friday night. Pt. Pleasant
woo,~. Ori right Ia Pt. Pleasant's Gary Newsome (63).

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)-

'.

Marauder golf

Aulgnld Hal
Lanier to manege Sprlngfltld •
Red Birds of tht Amtrlcen

Reg.
3" Value

I

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Muhammad All turned back
the clock and made Leon
S~lnks look Uke an ama~ur
Friday night to take a lopsided
15-round unanbnous decision
and become tbe only threelime world heavyweight
champion in boxing history.
Ali, dancing and jabblP·8
better at the age ol311 than he
has In three years, appeared
to win every round except the
fifth, which was taken away
from him by referee Lucien

By United Prill lftttrnltiOnll

he cares for youl

..

A

- "1

. ~~
''!'-

Care for your pet

J

Leon Spinks dethroned

Fneclom Beat ud Perfect :::
Putner returned • ·• on !
lbe daUy double. Tbere were .':",;:
W wlnnlnl tlcketl. on the 2- .; J:

,

Oregon Clay 7 Tol Rogers 3
Amtriun LUiUe
Oreg }?fl
Str i t c h
28
Tol
1Jt game
'
Oe~ il biSS 0
oa•
000 100 ~o Orrv
ille 28 Medina 0
Te"'
000 000 ooo--o 4 o
W ir th and Rob inson ; AteK - Otsego 26 North Bal timore 0
Ottawa H ills 7 Tot Macomber
ander and E lli s. HRs - Oaldand,
0
Alsto!' ( 1l .
Pa int Valle·y 6 E:ut Clint on 2
Parkway 21 Elmwood 12
(2nd 9ime)
Parma Normandy 27 Bruns o••
000000000- 0 42
w ic k 14
Texas
00000302!1; - 5 80 Puma Padua 28 Parma
B ~ o berg , Sosa (7) and
Valley Forge 15
=~Sian ; Comer and Sundberg , W Pa trick Henry 32 Arch,bold 2
12 ro mer (9 -.t l. L - Broberg (IO Pa7utding 21 Columbus Grove

C3-The Sunday Times-Senti;,.,!, Sunday •Sept. 17'

Thistledown

ft~ill

:;;,

NOW

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

'53

NOW

$3931

'3750

FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON

6 c:y l. engine, power steering and
brakes , automatic trans .. air
condlton lng, exterior and interior

group, tinted glass. dual

bright

mirrors, pivoting vent wlndQ,ws .

Yilos
$5929

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'54 40

RD SALES

362 JACKSON PIKE-RT. 160 &amp;'35
M:ROSS FROM HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
'

For a good deal see Tom Sprague, Melvin uttle, Gany
Rudolph, Pete SomeiVille, Nancv Fowler, Sandy Gatewood•
JERRY HQ1MOND. 24 hr; Wrecker Service Phone 446-3.560
,,

\,

~

�~The

Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sw1day, Sept. 17. I978
_C..S_- The Sunday 1'imes.,.,.ntinel, Sunday. Sept. I7. 1978

Highlanders roUt Southern
·
By GREG BAILEY
RACINE - Visiting South·
western built up a 28-0
haliiime lead enroute to a 34-il
shutout over holt Southern
here Friday night. The
Higlllanders' Joe Potter ran
for 117 yards, two touch·
downs, and two extra points
oo the night. The Highlander
roUed up 290 rushing yards
total,mostoflhosemlhefirst
half.
It was a tight first quarter
after the Highlanders of
Coach ·Bob Ashley scored six
points on a 7()-yard run by
Pot!
th
d 1 0f
er on e secon Pay
the game. Southern's Ed
Smith had eight solo tackles
and eight assists lor _a good
defensive night.
Tw enty-two secon d quarter

points proved ·the demise of
the Tornadoes.
Potter scored on a S-yard
run.
After a series of downs. a
Southern punt was blocked
and two plays later Sherman
Potter scored from three

•
past GIants, 6 -1
,

HOMEMADE OXYGEN
RESPIRATORY SUPPORT SYSTEM

COMPIITE

INYEKTMY"
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-TliERAir~

yards out. Shortly before the were not available, but
half, Keith Sizemore hauled Southern had a total of 139
in aS-yard aerial for si&lt; more yards, none in the air. South·
points.- Gene Leyton scored western com pleted- S of 10
the other six points in the passes for 52 yards to make a
third quarter on a two yard total of 342 yards on the
gallop.
-evening.
First down statistics
Each team had two passes

seave·r h urIs R ed s

SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) Tom Seaver, the .guy
Cincinnati got to pitch them
into first place, at least

-

EWIIIIfNT

&amp;SIJPMS

hurled them Into the runnerupHe
spot Thursday night.
tossed 1 h'tle
d
a wo- 1 r he
an
f
amed nine as the Reds at
San Francisco 6·1 to put
Cincinnati a half-€ame up on
the Giants, but still 81'.. big
games back of red-hot Los
Angeles in the once-tight
National League West race .
"I had · good stuff, good
location and we got nins
early . There really isn't
much else you need, " said
Seaver, who evened his
season 's record at 14-14 and
oolched his 217th National
League VIctory.
Seave• has said he has had
good sluff this season but that
lack of "good location " has
accounted for his lackluster
record.
Seaver
wa s
asked
if he thought the Giants, who
now have dropped seven
straight and I 0oltheir last ll .
had collapsed completely as a
team. He ducked any answer
to that one, just commenting

slim, but said "the one thing

is that we have six more
. ..
• games agamst the Dodgers.
It Jllay not mean much, but at
least we have a chance.''
Bill Madlock who got one
ofthe twoSanFranciscohits,
said of t'- Giants that "we
a~e;
just quit hitting after the
Dodger series. We have kind
of fallen apart. If the season
ended tomorrow, I wouldn 't
mind. Usually, we have a
gradual fade - but this year
it was all at once."
The Giants' other hit was a
homer by Darrell Evans in
the fourth Inning.
·The Reds jumped on San
Francisco starter and loser
Vida Blue for fi ve runs oo
seven hits before he left the
game for a pinch hitte r after
three innings. Blue, who has
not won since August 4 and
has failed to win in his last
eight starts. gave up two runs
in the first iming and then
three more in .the third.
Dave Concepcion drove in

"I'm more worried about

two runs with a pair of si'ngles

what I do."
"Well , I'd rather be in
second than third ," said
Reds'
skipper
Sparky
Anderson . He admitted tha'f
his team's chances of
catching Los Angeles are

and Johmy Bench also drove
in two with a single and a
sacrifice fly.

•••••••••••-•••••••••••••••••••1

Got Hom·e Repair
Needs?

Major Leag ue Leaders

For AU Your Building or
Home Repair Materials.

Carter &amp; Evans Inc.

87 OLIVE ST.

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

..;

I

GROUP MEN'S

WORK BOOTS·
VALUES TO '35.00
.

.

POTTER SCOOTS - Southwestern's Joe Potter (I5) picks up yardage ngainst Southern
In SV AC game at Racine friday night. Closing in on play from rear is Southern's Terry
Clark (70). (Greg Bailey photo).

by foe, 20-18
SYMMES VALLEY Symmes Valley behind th e
runnin g of Jon Bokovit z
dow ned Ma nchester he re
Friday night, 20-18.
Bokovitz opened th e
game's scoring with a IO-yard
touchdown scamper in the
first quarter. Larry Pollit of
Manchester intercepted t~o
pa sses for touchdowns in the
first hall for scores of 60 and
:;o yarders giving Manchester

West

Los Ang

W. L. Pet .
90 58 .608

GB

Cint:i nati
8 1 611 .55 1 8'1-.
San Fran
81 67 .547 9
Sa n Di ego
76 73 .510 ~ 14 1h
Hous ton
09 79 .463 21' .,.
65 83 .439 15
All ant a
New York 5, Phila 4, 10· inns .
Pilfsburgh 6. Mon tr eat 1
Hous ton 8, San Diego 4
l.o5 Anoe l e~ ~ . Atl,:o,n t .:. n
Ci n ci nnati 6 , San Fra ncisco 1

a brief 12-8 advantage.
Symmes Valley went ahead
again on a 15-yard pass from
Brent Miller to Allen Burcham for a I4-12 halftime
lead.
Mancbester regained the
lead in the third period, when
Jack Collins went 10 yards to
make the score 18-14.
Score by quarters :
Manchester
6 6 6 0-I8
S. VaUey
8 6 0 6-20

SAFETY TOE

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

New Yo rk
Bo ston
Mllwauke
Ball i mre
Detro it
Cle velnd
Toronto
Kan City
Cati t
Texas
Oakland
Mines.ota
Chicago
Sea tile

as

63 .574
82 65 .558

Mon. &amp; Fri .

til8p .m.
Tues .. Wed .. Sat. II I!
Thurs. til
11

$46!19

noon

II-D-EE

West
W. l · Pel.
82 64 .562
79
73
67
65
64
54

70
13
82
81
83
90

.530
.500
.450
,445
4]5
.375

BOOJ

Tan, tough oil -tanned
c::owhide ,

Welt construction .
Oil proof sole and heel

'78 NOVA SEDAN

Full cushion insole
Steel shJnk arch support

Color red &amp; white, 2SO cu . ln . 6
cr,l .. automatic trans .• power
s eerlng . body side mldg .. 14"
wt'lltl! wall t i res, radio, rally

VISA'

wheels, undersea! .

LIST PRICE

'7995°

GB
41h'
9
Wh
17
18 1/ 7
27

National L eagu e : Perr y, SD
18-6 ; Hooton , LA 18·8 ; Gr im
sley , Mtl 18 9; N iekro , All 18
. UPSET VICTORY
15 ; R ichard . HCHL11 · 1l.
Amer ican LeaQ_ue : Gui dr y .
DONCASTER,
England
NY 22 ·2; Caldwell, Mi l 19 -9;
Palm er . Ball 19 -12 ; Figueroa . (UP! ) - Julio Mariner , a 28-I
NY 1~ 9; Tanana , Ca l and longshot ridden by Eddie
So ren ~en , Mil 17 10 ; Splittorff.
KC 17 12; Flanagan , Ball 17 13 ; llide, powered through from
Leonard , KC 17 · 17 .
the back of the field over the
Earned Run A ve rage
final two furlongs Saturday to
[ Based on 1:15 Inning$ pit c hed )
National league : Rogers , Mtl score an upset victory In the
2.47 ; Swan , NY 2.49 ; Vuck - $IOI ,280 St. Leger Horse·
ov ic h, St L 2.54; Hooton . LA
racing aassic.
2.6-4 ; Kne~pe r , SF 2.72.
Aft)erican League : Guid r y ,
NY 1.7 1; Ca ldwell , Mil 2.31 ; -~-------­
Matla c k , Tex 2.41; Goltz . Minn
StrUceouh
2 .51: Pa lmer . Bat t 2.55.
Nation.-1 Lngue : R ic hard ,
Hou 219 ; N iekro , Atl '1'16 ;
Seav er , Cin 197 ; Bl yleven , Pitt
165; Montef usco, SF 160.
Americ.Jn Leatue : Ryan. Ca l
231 ; Gu idry , NY 225 ; Leo nard ,
KC 166 ; Flanagi!ln, BaH 145 ;
Kravec , Chi 143.

.

THIS SALE PRICE INCLUDES:

1 H. DUTY % TON PICKUP 350 V-8

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Automatic transmission
Power steering
Power brakes
H78x15 mud and snow tires
12 day-night rearview mirror
21.5 gallon fuel tank
Front and rear bench seats

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Air conditioning
Tinted glass
Radio
Rust proofing
Full guage package
Hubcaps
Bucket seats at no extra charge

All Dealer P'rep and Transportation Charges :re Included
in This Sale Price.

SEPT. 15 THRU 23

ALL '78 MODELS WILL GO
O~R '79's WILL ALSO BE READY FOR DEUVERY

t

I

(USE REG. GAS)
With 350 V-8 engine, automatic engine.

Automatic, power steering, use reg. gas.

DISCOUNTS ON ABOVE TRUCKS · TRADE-INS
ACCEPTED AT MARKETVALU

·'78 CHEVY LUV
Red color , 4 speed
trans .. AM radio. rear
step bumper, 5-E78xl4
tires, • cyl. engine. ·
LIST PRICE UOJJ.JD

CHEVY WEEK
SPECIAL

1

SEE JOHN LLOYD, HOMER WAUGH,
ROGER WALKER, MORRIS SHEDS,
ROGER DILLARD
~ NAME$ YOU~ CM TR~sr··

t

t

I

j

$4633

00

GREAT YEAR-END DEALS ON '78s IN STOCK!
Cometowherethevaluela .•. rtghtnowl UMITED STOCK!

Passes Com pt.
Interceptions

Fumbles
Fumbles lost
Penalties

By Quarters:
Zanesville

12 6 0 6- 24

N. Ga llla

0 B 6 6-20

follo wing both to uchdowns.
·Pdnce ton running back
Ken Roundtree led the Viking
offense :ovith a game-high 126
yards rushing.
Moeller last year wa s
considered one of the best
high school football teams in
the co untry, after the
Crusaders defeated defen·
ding New York State
ch8mpion Monsignor Farrell
in Cincinnati in what was
touted as the " Prep Super
Bowl." .
Moeller last year crushed
Princeton, 35-7, for its 25th
straight victory .

FRUSTRATED - Kyger Creek defensive players spent a frustrating night Friday
trying to stop the Alexander Spartans. Alexander rolled to an easy 41.() victory. In the photo
above taken by Peg Thomas, it appears the ball is loose on the ground .

Spartans blank KC
Bobcats by 41-0 count
injury-riddled Bobcats did
not sco re. Five KC starters
halfback Bo b Wessels and the were out with injuries.
Ale•ander too k the opening
pin -point
passing · of
sophomore quarterback Sam kickoff and reached paydirt
Be nn ett , the Alexander 10 plays later on a 29 ya rd
Sp;utims romped to an easy aeria l from . Benne tt to
41.() triumph over visiting William s. Williams' ki ck
Kyger Creek here Friday pushed the sco re to 7.().
Two pl ays later, the
night.
Wesse ls scored three Spartans pounced on a KC
Sparta n touchdowns while fumble at the nine yard line.
Bennett co nn ected with Wesse ls' three ya rd ru n
senio r end Roger Williams on pushed the score to 13.().
a scoring bomb of 2\1 yards Agai n, Will iams hit th e
and a second pass which set uprights fu r a 14-{) count.
With 10 :25left in the second
up the final six-pointer of th e
stanza, Alexander dented the
first half.
The win avenged KC's non- scoreboa rd once again on a 28
conference victory over the yard run by Wessels .
Spartans last year . Coach Williams' boot made it 21.().
Following a timeout with
Dave Sn ip es apparently
wanted the win very badly just second s left in the first
since he had scouted Kyger ha lf , Alexand er's Ben nett
connected with Willia ms for a
Creek at lea st four times.
Later, in the contest after 37 ya rd pass comple tion
the Bobcats recovered a placi ng the ball at the seven
fumbl e at seven yard stripe, ya rd stripe. On the next play,
Snipes who had replaced his Wessels rambled in fo r a 28.()
first unit with his second halftime lead .
Al exander , following Jay
team , brought . ba ck his
regullt·rSfi make sure the Theiss's interception in the
third period march to the
Bobcat 20 before bei ng forced
NORTHFIELD RESULTS
NORTHFIELD,
Ohi o to make a field goal attempt.
(UP! ) - The fea tured $4,000 Williams' k1ck was short.
With 1: 31 left in the third
Jane Brewer Mares In·
period,
Hershel LeMaster,
vitational at Northfield Park
junior
ha
llback, scored on a
Friday night ended in a dead
five
ya
rd
end sweep. Later
heat, with the favored Candy
that
period.
a Spa rtan tackle
Striper and lnngshot Baby
literally
took
the ba ll from
Allison crossing the wire nose ,
Bobca
t
q
uarterback
Steve
· to nose .
Russell
then
outraced
KC
on
The two horses covered the
a
34
yardplay.
Williams'
kick
mile in .2:02 1·5, with Baby
Allison kicking back $7 .80, was good fo r a final score of
$5.40 and $4.20 and Candy 41.().
Kyger Creek had a short·
Striper paying $2.80, $3 and
lived
drive underway in the
$2.40. Adora Adios finished
opening
of the fourth period.
third and paid $3.60.
The
IJ&lt;&gt;bcats
drove from their
In the lOth race, Miss Witty
34
to
the
Spartan
13 yard
Bret started a 7-5-4 big triple
stripe
before
being
held on
combination that was worth
downs.
$643.80. Mr. Bozo was second.
A big play during the drive
and Cindy Giggles finished
was
a 3I yard pass com·
third.
pletion
from Russell to Bruce
A crowd of 4,408 wagered
Gilmore
. Later, Chris Elliott
$394,428.
Led by the

running

of

se nior

C. K. SNOWDEN
427 Second Ave.
Galiipolis, Oh io
Phone 446 -.11290

pounced on a fumble by the
Spa rtan seco nd offensive
unit. However, Alexa nd er 's
fi rst team defense halted any
hopes of a score.
F:riday night, Kyger Creek,
1-2. travels to Hannan Trace
in an SV AC contest. The win
pushed Alexander's record to
2.jj . · The Sparta ns host
Eastern Friday night.
STATISTICS

Oepc. rment

F irs t L&gt;owns
Yards Rushing
Yards Passing

Tota l Ya rdage
Pa sses Attpt.
Pa sses Com pt .

KC

A

5

9
210

56
32
58
5

A

276
3

2

ON&gt;U I IOH

2

In te r ception s

1

1

1

2

Fumbles Los t
Penalt ies
By Quarters:

1

Kyger Creek

. .. u .....

66

Fumbles

r·

"For Mobilehome
Insurance that's
economical and
comprehensive,
call me!'

Like agood neighbor,
State Farm is !here.

1
6-50 6-80

0 0 0

I,

Sl,11• r~·m I "e ~"i11 l.o&gt;"' 1o f;._,,.,.,,..
&gt;IQI&lt;&gt;e Ot1ooi' Blt&gt;QI\"lo"(jlori lllor()•i

o- 0

14 14 13 D-41

·ander

P7111l9

SALE!
Save on Dynaglassbelted "28'' tires
SAVE 20%

$4156
Plus $1 .71 Federal Excise Tax
-I I J

DENVER (UP!) - Only
one Denver Btonco remains
unsigned for the 1978 season
. and he is on the injured list ,..The Broncos Friday announced the signin g of
backup quarterback Norris
Weese, linebacker Joe Rizzo
and defensive back Bernanrd
Jackson to multi-year
contracts, terms of which
were not diwlged. That left
only defensive hack Chris
Pane, who was injured in the
pre-season, unsigned by the
Broncos.

Bl ac kw all s

BE12 HONDA SALES
Rt. 7
Gallipolis

and

whitewalls available
in sizes to fi t m ost
cars. On sale now!

Will Be Closed
Sept. 18 thru Sept. 23

45000 '

Will Reopen
Monday, Sept 25

STOP IN · · · VISit Our Service Dept

A

.
1 Gallipolis Motor Company t

.t

SPECIAL ·

3 BIG • 10 DUTY 1h TON PICKUPS

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

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)
Kool King won the co·
featured fourth ra ce at
~ Toledo Ra ceway Friday
night, covering the mile in
2:05 I-5 lor driver Jim
Mayes.
The winner led all the way
to grab a one-length victory
over Miss Highley and
returned $UO , $3 .20 and
·
$2 .60. R E Brewer finished
third .
George Bowman guided B J
Baron to victory in the cofeatured eighth race In 2:03,
paying $14.80, $4.20 and $4.20.
Keystone Profit finished
iecond, one length beck, and
Wen Her Sue took third.
Mike John.oton finished on
top in the fifth race, kicking
off a 2-1-8 trlfecta com·
blnation that waa worth
S716.40. Grand Topeka Boy.
placed and Can Bye Win
showed .
A crowd of %,067 wagered
$I53,620.

CHM WEEK

* Riverside Je~p Sale Price. Manufacturer 's Suggested Retail
Price is much higher.

Totedo results

t

147N.JO

CHEVY WEEK
SPECIAL

0*

71!'.1

.5.4 1 10
64 82 .438 25
57 90 .388 32 V2
79 67

13
6

ALBANY -

2 1h

s

Passes Attp .

hard

1979 JEEP CHEROKEE

W. L. Pet . GB

99 57 6 10
B7 6o .592

174
i9
5
2
2
2
3
2
1
9-85 6-30
348

Total yardar.

Moeller beaten

FOUR WHEEL DRIVE
SPECIAL OF THE YEAR

American Leagu e

Eut

SHOES

run for l)le two-point con· back to Zanesville. Howell led
version failed.
· N0rth Gallia's offense with 73
With 3:28 left in the first yards in 16 attempts.
half, Rosecrans quarterback
North Ga llia 0-2 goes to
Mike Nue scored on a one- Southwestern Friday night.
yard run. A kick for the EP
STATISTICS
sailed wide .
Department
z NG
14
14
North Gallia reached First downs
rUshing
269 122
paydirt in the first half when Yards
7Q
Yards pass'ino
&lt;?
sen ior Perry Livingston
rambled 23 yards following a
fumble recovery. Tim Howell
added the extra points to cut
the margin to 111-11 at the hall.
CINCINNATI I UP! ) Midway In the third period, Ohio Cla ss AAA football
NGHS signal caller Sam champion Cinci nnati Moeller
Smith scored on a four yard had its 37-game winning
run . A run for the EPS was streak snapped Friday night
stopped. Zanesville still held when Princeton's Ken Weber
an 18-I4 lead going into the kicked a 37-yard field goal
final period .
with 13 seconds remaining for
At · the 7:23 mark in the a stunning 13-12 win .
fourth period, Hardwick • Weber's kick, which barely '
scored what proved to he the made it over the crossbar,
winning points lor Zanesville capped a dramatic 42-yard
on a seven yard run. Zanes· drive by Princeton from its
ville's winning Cllarch own 37-yard line with 1:55
covered SO yards as the Rose- remaining in the ga me.
crans had stopped North
Princeton too k a 10.() lead
Gallia on a fo urth down play. into the halftime, on the
On · the ensuing kickoff, strength of 131 total ya rds
speedy Tim ·Howell outraced offense to just 78 for Moeller ,
the Rosecrans on a 74 yard which has won three con·
play. A pass for the EPS wa s sec utive Class AAA state
incomplete.
foot ball championships.
With 4:48 left North Gallia
But Moeller put scoring
recovered a Zanesville drives of 80 and 69 yards back
fumble at the 20 yard line. to back at the start of the
Two plays later , Howe ll second half, missing tWO·
raced to the four yard line point conve rsion attempt s
where the ball was fumbled

WOLVERINE 10"
WESTERN BRAZOS

Friday's Results
Oakland 1, Texas 0, 1st
Tex as s. Oaklan d o. 2nd
De t roi t 1, Cleveland 0
Bal timor e 8, Toronto 3
New York .4, Boston 0
Kansas City 3, Califor nia 2
Minn esot a 10, Milwaukee 3
Ch i 8, Seattle 3, 10 Inn s.
Surldly's Games
Ch ic ago a t seattle
Oakland at Texa s
Cal iforn ia at Ka nsas City
Minnesota at Milwauk ee
Oet r oil at Cleveland
T oronto at Balt imor e
B!)ston al New Yor k

Sunday's Games
New Yor"- at Ph iladel phia
Montr eal at Pittsburgh
St . Louis al Chicago
Atlan t a at Los Angeles
Houston at, San Diego
Cinci at San Franc isco

.

ITn·

WELLINGTON

STANDINGS
Major L eag ue S1andings
By United Press 'nternational
National League
Eut
W L. Pet. GB
Phila
81 66 .55 1
Pi tt sbrgh
78 69 .53 1 3
Chicago
73 14 .497
8
Montrea l
70 79 .470 12
St . Louis
63 ~6 .-423 19
New Yor k
61 87 ..4 12 20 1; -.

Ill-0 lead before Coach John
Blake 's Pirates got untracked.
The visitors dented the
score board
with
9:.25
remaining in the first period
o~ a 64 yard gallop by HardWICk . A pass for the ex tra
points was incomplete.
The talented Hardwick
capped another first period
drive with a five yard run. A

SUNDAY SPECIAL

6 22 6 (}-34

Victories

SEE US•••

I

VINTON - It was the Jeff
Hardwick show here Friday
night as the Zanesville
Rosecrans defeated North
Gallla, 24-20 In a hard fought
non-league contest. Hardwick
~shed for 146 yards in 16
ca rrles while scoring three
touchdowns. Teammate Tom
Fara!To had 113 yards in 15
cracks.
Zanesville jumped into. an

Vikings~lip

.

Ame ric an L eag ue : Ri ce , Bos
40 : Bay lor . Ca l 32 ; Hisle and
Thoma s, Mil 31. Thornton , Clev
30.
Run s Baned 1n
' National League : Foster , Cin
105 ; Gar vey , LA 104 , Parker ,
Pilt 100 ; Cl ark , SF 94 ; W inf ield ,
so 93.
American Lug ue · Rice, Bos
125 : s tal 'b , Oe t 109 ; H isle , Mil
106 ; Thornton , Cl ev 96 ; Carty,
Oak 92.
Stolen Ba ses
Nat i onal League : Moreno ,
Pitt 63 ; Lopes , LA &lt;~2; l ave ras,
Pi ll 39 ; Smit h , SD 38 ; D eJesus.
Chi and Richard s, SO 35 .
Am eric oln Le.gue : LeF lore,
Oet 64 ; Cruz , Se a 51 ; Wills . Tex
50 ; Dllon e. Oak 44 ; Wi lson , KC
39.
.
Pitching

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

sw~

South.
(}- o
0 0 0
S&lt;oring: Joe Potter. 70 yd.
run . extras short: Joe Potter.
5 yd . run . extras Russell ;
Sherman Potter, 3 yrd . run.
ext ra s J . Potier : Ke'lth
Sizemore, 5 yd. pass, extras
failed ; Leytoo , 2 yd. run. kick
failed .

By United Press Inter national
Bolttlng
( Ba sed on 40 0 olt bah I
National league
G AB . H. Pet .
1)4 528 167 .3 16
Park er Pi t
Burr oghs All
140 -449 141 .314
Madlock SF
11 24 18 131 .313
Cru z Hou
141 525 162 . 309
Garvev LA
1-48 589 181 .307
Win f ield SO
145 538 16-4 .305
Clark sF
142 539 164 .304
Cqnrtie Mtl
146 561 170 .303
Smith LA
123 4)-4 130 .300
Rose Cin
145 601 180 .199
Carew M in
138 517 177 .3 36
Rice Bos
147 606 19-4 .320
Oliver Te ,;
119 468 148 .316
Pin iella NY
115 414 13 1 .316
Yount M il
114 445 136 .306
Roberts Sea
119 417 126 .302
Munson NY
137 ~5 0 163 ' ]90
Ogliv ic M il
116 427 1?5 .79 6
Bostoc k Cal
\41 546 16 1 .295
LeF lore Del
\42 61 3 180 .294
Singl tn Bat
135 456 \34 .29 4 ·
Otis KC
127 d36 128 .294
Home R:uns
N at ional league : Foster . Cin
32 ; L U11nSk i, P"h i l 30 ; Smith . LA
'19 ; Ki ngma n. Chi and Par ker ,

Pitt 26 .

Pirates. lose 24-20 thriller

intercepted, and Southern
lost aU five of its fumbles
while Southwestern lost its
only one.
Dale Teaford led Tornado
ruimers with 99 yards. Southern travels to. Caldwett next
Friday night to battle the
Redskins who beat Eastern
last week 14-8.
Sherman Potter cottected
105 yards in 21 carries for
SWHS.
Southwestern, 2·1, will host
North Gallia Friday. The loss
left Southern at ().1-1.
Dept.
South SW
Yds. Rush
139 290
Yards Pass.
0
52
Total yards
139 342
Passes-comp.
s.o t0-5
Intercepted
2
2
Fumbles-lost
5·5 1-1
Penalties
50 45
•·ore by quar1ers ·.

Make

J

your appointment tv get your car or truck wlnterlzod aiHI yearly season tune-up.
4309

Optional Cherokee •s• Package is shown here .

LIMITED. TIME ONLY
. AVAII.ABL£ FOR ORDER 9/15/78-9/30/78
These vehicles must be ordered by 1011178 and we are limited to the
number we can receive .
PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW!

RIVERSIDE

·n

JeeP.

GMQUAUTY.

SALE!

SEINICE/PARTS

•6 OFF maintenance-

78 BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS
IN STOCK
READY TO GO

free Sears ""36" battery

Battery price include&amp; installation;

• Prices are catalo1 prlcea
• Sean ha• a credit plat~ to suit moet every need

• Now on Jale in our "P'' and "Y" catalog eupp1ement.s

195 Upper River Rd.
Gelllpolls, Ohio

446-9100

$3}99

Maintenance -free me ans
water is not added under
normal operating conditions.

·f8==l

Sliver lrjclgo Ptaite

~For s:;:.'~"'-•

Mo.:\ rnert'h1ndiae awa i l ~tb le
for pk\l·up with in 7 day•

.-

'B AM.

ROBBVCK
I.

ANDtfO·

�..
'

.

~-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Sept.

\

17, 19'18

Logan streak
snapped, 49-0

!Jig Blacksiroll over
•

(;allipolis
team,
.

30~6

Alfred

Social Note~~

-

Jay Minton 's four-yard attempts. Greg Harrington
HIUJARD - A 17-garne returned an intercepted pau
burst put Pt. Pleasant on top added 31 yards In 10 carriei,
Wllleaten
streak of the Lotlan · 57 yards, wltb Fruler addlnl
with five seconds left in the and completed I wo of six
ChJefta
three klcb in the sec:ood
first period. Glenn McCleUan aerials (both to Nick
Ins dating back to IJ/6 period to put the home team
tossed a two-point conversion Robinson 1 for 38 yan!1.
wu halted Friday niflht at on top of 8 ... halftime lead.
Hilliard llhere the holt Wild..,...
pass to Ron Newell to make it Harrington had one In·
call llll8lhed the defendlnl!
Ia tile Wrd qaarler Jdf
8-0.
terceptlont.by Dave Nott on
SEOAL champlona 4&amp;-f,
, _ laDled DB a tllree
In the second quarter, the lut pllly of the pme.
wu
tile
wont
defeat
ylll'd rna aad Beb Ove""
It
Brian Stepp rambled 31 yards
McClellan connected on
planed "" a ...... team
.......
ru over fi'OIII lbe
with 6:51 left In the hall to tw0 of four passed &amp;ood for 66
aiDce Middleport poaled a
ellflt Ill tbe filial perlad
make it 14-0. Stepp buUed yards.
·
5W vldory back .111 iJ31.
wltb Fruler ktckllll tbe
over for the two-point con·
Greg Harrington punted six
The . Wildcats scored pofallaller le cloae oat tile
version . The visitors were in times for 162 yards. Robbie
quickly and often as Mark scorfD&amp;.
•
command , HHl.
' Beller punled once lor 46
HuU hit DaUu Sharp wl!h a
The .Wildcat defenae
QB McCiellaa saeaked
yards.
28. yard pass in the firlll limited Logan to just flve lint
'
over from the oae with 2:41
The Big Blacks were
period and Tim Frazier downs, 'rl yards rushing, and
left Ia the baH to ctvt PPHS
penalized aeven times for 7~
AND
klck!JI
the first of his seven picked off live of seven Lotlan
a %2-G advantage. A nm for
yards. GAllS was penalized
tSERVICE
utra
points
of the contest. passes to Umlt Lotlan to 8 net
I
the extra polats failed . .
live limj!S for 67 yards.
Kevin
Durban
scored on 8 of 'r1 yards defenae.
: A Grear .
GAHS struck paydirt for
Friday, GaWpolll will
four
yard
run
and
Frazier's
HiUiard finished with · 16
1 Combination
the first time this faD with 43
coaclude aoo:leape acll011
kick
made
it
14-4
after
one
·
first
downs, had 256 yards
seconds left in the first hall.
at C.l Grove. Pt. Pleualll
!For Southeastern Ohio
rushing, and connected on
quarter.
Baron Haner crashed over
wUI journey lo Hurrleaae.
!
0.
Durban scored 011 a five three -of seven passes for
from the four. A pass lor the
Here
are
Friday's
run, Glen Anderson another 53 yards. .
yard
extra points failed.
statistics :
'
fired
a
10 yard pus to Bob Ron Stl'aim led Lopn with
The game's final score
MiNToN SCORES- Jay MinJoo, ( 40) Pt. Pleasant's 175-poWid junior taUba~, cruhes
II
lliDWIDUAL NET
Howard,
and Dallas Sharp 32 yards In seven ruabes
came on a lour-yard run by
YARDS RUSHING
over !rpm four yards out with five seconds left in the first period to give PPHS • 8-0 qe
while J eft J~es topped the
,. J
(G.olllpolisl .
over G81lipolla. On left t. Briim Stepp ( 43) who led aU rushers Friday night with 99 yarda 1ft
Minton with 4:37 left in the
winners with ~I yards on 12
'
Player
TCI YG AYg.
$tarcralt/Quachita
Boat third stanza. McClellan ran H!ner
14 trlpa. PPHS won; 30-6, to even the river rival series at 22-all with five ties.
11 S8 5.:!
carries.
Mercury Outboards &amp;
the exira points.
'
Harrington
10 31 3.1
Score by quarters:
~rcrutser
Coach Steve Safford played Yeagley
3 3 1.0
Logan
0 0 0 ()- 0
Lebanon resull8
2 2 1.0
his second and third units the Hemphill
''
Hilliard
14
21 7 7-49
DOUG'S
Sheels
2 7 1.0
entire fourth period.
Morr
ison
1
1
1.0
" MARINE
LEBANON, Oblo (UPI) Pt . Pleasant dominated the Mit chell
S 7 .4
Couraaeous Lady became
game's statistics, picking up TOTALS
J4 "
2.9
Sales &amp; Service
!Pl. Pleaunll
18 first downs to Gallia 's
Rockets, now 2~ on the close behind with .one TD and Ohio's cbamplon three-year·
NELSONVILLE
Player
TCB YG AYg. ·
old paclag fl1ly Friday niChl
seven.
netted 103 yards on II carries,
season.
On. Sprouse
I 31 31.0 Tailback Curtis Jayjohn
(614)992 -5652
with an eaay victory In the
The Big Blacks, in 60 plays Newell
6 60 10.0 scored two touchdowns and
Nelsonvlll~York's scores plus setting up the final
14 99 7.1 rushed lor 114 yards Friday came in the fourth quarter on Rocket TD with a 72 yard ~.ooo Carnation Pace at
from scrimmage, rolled up Stepp
2 9 4.5
Lebanon Raceway.
369 total yards. GaUipolis Jackson
kick.ofl return.
Minton
14
56 4.0 night in leading Wellston to a a 21 yard pass from Dave
The winner, owned by Ruth
NOTICE
picked up 135 yards in 40 Dv. Sprouse
Wellston rushed for 2M ·
8 32 4.0 28·13 victory over host Boston to Pat McQuade, a
Cohen,
Maylleld Helgbts,
plays from scrimmage.
McClellan
2 6 3.0 Nelsonvlll~York.
three yard run by Boston, and yards and II first downs with
: Through the fall season
look.
the
lead out of the
For the winners, Stepp
Thom p!l)ll
4 4 1.0
Jayjohn scored on a 68 yard a Cliff Dearth extra point no pass completions In three
• and winter months we
Alley
2 -5 -2.5
urting
gate
and stayed in
gained 99 yards Ia It trips
attempts
while
N-Y
ha~
14
Wood
I ·I
-8 run in the first period and put kick .
· will be closed on Sunday .
front
the
rut
of
the way for a
while Ron Newell added &amp;0
Boston was the workhorse first downs, 178 on the
TOTALS
i4 :191 5.3 the game out of reach with an
two-length
win
In the Ohio onlloliietJtmmj
y8rds1n six carries. Mlaloa
11 yard run in the fourth for the Buckeyes as he ground, and hit six of 10
BOB W. Main St..
Slra
Stali:ea
event.
IND. PASSING
had 58 yards ' Ia 14 trips.
aerials
for
43
·yards.
carried 25 times lor 106
quarter.
PomE'roy. OH 45769
Courageoua l..ad,y earned
Score by quarters:
Baron Haner led GaUia's Player I G.o llipolisl
yards.
The
other
Wellston
scores
C-A I YG TD
t3Q,CIOO
for the victory, upping If your home is less than
Wellston
·
0
14
1
7-28
attack with 58 yards in 11 Harrington
Jayjohn enjoyed a great
7-6 I 36 0 came on a one yard run by
her
season
winnlnsa to 7 years'bid, you may save
0 0 0 ls--13
TOTALS
2-6 I J6 0 Don Osborne in the second night but Jerry Patton was Nei.·York
I Pt. Pleas. nil
f121,000.
money. Find out how
Player
C-A I YG TD quarter and Jerry Patton's 13
Driven by Ted Wing, the much. call:
yard
dsh
in
the
third
stanza.
McClellan
7-4 0 60 0
winner covered the mlle Ill
Thompoon
1-1 0 17 0
Jell Montgomery was
2:01
H and returned $2.110,
Wood
0-1 0 0 .0 perfect on placements as he
TOTALS
3-6 0 II 0 toed four through the
$2.20
and $2.20.
HOMELITE'S SUPER XL
Silent
Sally finished
uprights lor the Golden
TEAM STATISTICS
second,
paying
~. and $2.20,
Deparlmant
G PP
• 3.5 cubic inch loop scavenge engine
while Most Happy F:leet, the
First
downs
7
18
• Caries bars from 16" through 24"
Yards ru5hing
11• 313
point lea~ alter five
Both automatic and manual chain oillfll
Lost rushing
15 77
..-ellminary raca leadinl up
Net rushing
99 291
to
Friday night's OSS finale,
Pass attompts
6 6
WAVERLY - Fullback
In the third quarter Scott
was third and returned $2.20.
Com pletlons
2
3
Brian Evans-- rushed for 197 Coleman uaed a quarterback
Intercepted by
0
1
Ubby'a Oali: \11011 the flrll
Sff ONI TODAY
Yards passIng
36 78
yards and one touchdown sneak for a two yard scoriJ18
race and P T Clara captured
992-7US
Total yards
135 369
Friday night in leading run and Evans rWIIIinl the
the aecoad to provide • 2-2
Plays
40 60
149
S. Third St.
Portsmouth West past the two point conversion.
daUy double combination that
Return yardage
78 59
Middleport,
0.
Waverly Tisets by a sur·
Evans tallied the final
Fumbles
4 1
waa worth ~.40.
.
Lost fumbles
1 0
prising 2().jj score.
points of the contest on a flve
A crowd of 2,101 waaerid ·~-. .- , - Slate Farm Fire
ALL GAMES
Penalties
5-67 7-75
A and Cuualty Cornp&lt;nyj
The
visitors
drew
first
yard
run
In
the
fourth
W L T P OP
fl67,716.
Punls
6-167 1-46 Teim
Pt . Pleas.
3 0 0 57 ·14 blood when Scott Coleman quarter.
Home Ollice:
Bloomifll\00,
Rock Hill
2 0 0 63 6 passed 37 yards to Ted
The Tigers led in first
Recovered enemy fumbles:
Ironton
7
0
o
63
7
Pl . Pleasant - Bill R01ch.
downs !a-U, but the Senators
Wellston
2 0 0 63 21 Coleman for a TD .
Individual scoring : GAHS Coal
Just over two minutes later outrushed the SEOAL team
Grove
2
1
0
114
61
- Haner, • -yard run, :43
Athens
1 1 0 21 4A Fullback John Knight 240-171 .
second (pan Iaiii . Pt . Waverly
1 1 0 34 20 slarruned his 270 pounds· into
West hit on two of lilt
Plea_~t - Jay Minton . 4·
Logan
0
1 1 6· SS the end zone from one yard passes for 48 yards while
yar~ r~ :OS tlrst (Glenn
Meigs
o 1 o 8 14
McClellan pass to Ron Jackson
0 2 0 8 39 out to knot lhe score at 6-6. Waverly connected on three
Newell ); Brian Slepp, 31 - Gallipolis
0 7 0 6 73
of II for ~ yards.
yard run, 6: 5'1 second (Stepp.
Sept. 15 results:
Evans carried the ball 23
run) ; McClellan, 1-yard run,
2:41 second (run fall) ; Pf . Pleasant 30 Gall ipolis 6
·
times
for 197 yards to leld
Minton, .4-yard run, -4: 37 third Ra&lt;:k Hill 20 Minford 6
both
lea1118
while Jerry Alt··
Athens
7
Teays
Valley
6
(McClellan, run) .
Ironton
29
Portsmouth
0
•
house
topped
the Waverly
Score by quarters:
77 Jackson 8
t Vlcl()ry
rushers with 91 yards in 12
Gallipolis
0 6 0 o- 6 Wheelersburg
P1 . Pleas .
8 14 8 o-30 Hill lard 49 Logan 0
tries:
Ports. West 20 Waverly 6
TEAYS VALLEY - The
NEXT GAHS GAME Score by quarters:
Wells
ion
28
Nels-York
13
Sept. 27 - At Coal Grove.
Boyd County 26 Coai .Grove 1B Athens Bulldogs scored early Ports. West
S 0 I 6-20
in the fourth quarter Friday Waverly
Meigs-Wahama- Piayed
6 0 0 ()- 8
Saturday night .
night and then snuffed out
S.pl. 22 games :
two threats by Teays Valley
Gallipolis at Coal Grove
to posl a 7&lt;; victory.
Pt. Pleasant ot Hurricane
John Sanders opened the
Rock Hill al Ceredo-Kenova
Circleville at Athens
scoring for the Vikings with a
.,
Wa•hington CH at Ironton
10 yard scoring dash in the
Greenfield at Jackson
second period for the IHl lead.
Nels-York at Logan
This stood until early in the
Belpre
ot
Meigs
No muss · no fuss . no
Waverly at Unioto
fourth quarter when Athens'
need to tear off your
Wellston at VInton County
Jack Smathers smashed over
roof to renew &amp; insulAte
from the three yard line and
slate, metal. shingle or
CLEVELAND (UPI) - . John •Schanzenhach kicked
built-up roofs. Make it
WHEELERSBURG- Jolin
The Cleveland Indians have what proved to be lhe game
Leak· Proof.
terminated their working winning point with 10:03 left Dever ind Mark Woodrum
each scored a pair of touch·
qreement with P&lt;rlland oi in the contest.
Midway in the final quarter downs Friday night In leltflnc
the Claaa AAA Paclllc Coast
League, effective Dec. 1~. Teays Valley missed a 32 Wheelersburg to a 27-1 vicand will oolllider several yard lield 'goal attempt, snd tory over the vlaltlni _Jackson
sites for the location oi their then saw another scoring lronmen.
The Pirates rolled up their
Triple·A minor league threat die with three minutes
REG.
Apphc a!oon of P1onet:~r ,. 1 008 mas he
affiliate for the 19'/t season, remaining when Schan- %1 points lint u Dever talled
the club amounced Friday. zenbach Intercepted a pass at on a two yard run In the firtl
'5.49
period, followed by a thrilling
Reason for the switch wu the Athens 28 yard line.
The Bulldogs led In first 75 yard pass interception ,.
not revealed.
downs 14·11, but were return by Woodrwn and a
oulrushed 174-154 by the conversion run by Dever to
WS ANGElES (UPI)
hosts.
make 1114-0 at the end of the
PRODUCT DATA
The Lee Angeles Ralll8 rank
Athens completed three of firlll quarter.
No. I In the NFL In ell!hl 11 passes for 33 yards while
PRODUCT :
In the second period
statistical
departments after the Vikings hit three of live Woodrum took a N yard
P1oneer ii 1008 tS a mon olllh1C c oal 1ng thai pr otec ts roofs against induStrial
two games as they prepare for 14 yards.
atmosphenc corroSion , sunligh t iVld e)(lreme weathef vMiN!ces This special
scorlns pass from Tom
or &amp;lnday's same apinlll
f_
Wltile SIJIIIIIIn
Fullback Jack SmaUters Evana to make ·It 20-0 at
cold process system can be used with or with out the vanous cofOfed ceramic
the
delendlni
&amp;lper
Bowl
gained
104
yards
in
19
carries
granules wh1ch are spray appliecl to rhe mastic ptlOf to drymg.
halftime.
All-purpose lawfl rake features 24 steel tinea that
champion DaUas Cowboys. for Athens while Sanders led
Dever raced :u yaru to
·clear a 24-lnch path. Ram's horn apring helps to
The Rams lead in total the losers with 12:i yards on 26 &amp;core In the third period with
diatribute load eaailv end prevents digging into
playa with a 77.5 averase and tries.
Quia Benlley klckiDs the ,
lawn. 54·1nch hardwood handle.
CDR-24
the Rams' defe1111e leads the
Score by quarters:
,.
utra
point and a 27-4 lelld.
U ROOF U SIDEWAU U PATIO U DRIVEWAY U POOL DECK
league in playsaUowed with a Teays Valley
060~
OUANmiES UWI EJl
nie Ironmen, under new
41.5 average.
Alhena
0 0 0 7- 7 &lt;oach ':'crry Adsit, got on the .
U SIDEWALKS
;board in the fourtb period
when Don Yea1er IICGI'ed on a
NAME
three yard run and thell took ·
a pass from Mark Jenklllllor
ADDRESS
,the two point conversion.
.
The Ironmen, now ..z, led
CITY ·
STATE _ _
In flnt downa IU Ulll Ia
paulo&amp; I00-7t, but &amp;lie
PHONE
.
I
Plralal ruahed lor 133 7ardl
1o take · the ed&amp;e Ia total
yardap 212-117.
Ken Nouel ~the,.......
with 53 yards In ellbt carrlll
923 3rd Ave.
Middleport,
for the Piralal willie Y._
992-2709
or
992-6611
ran nine times !of 11 Jack•
Open: 7:101oS:OO Min. thru Fri.
PHONE H2-2U4
yards.
7:00to3:00 Saturday
Sc:cn b)' quart.~:
Jacbon
10
•
1•
IIIDOI.EPOIT,
OHIO
93 7TH AVE.
Wheel.-..
14 I 7 1-1'1
-G AUJPOLLS - Visiting
!l. Pleasant rolled to its
eighth consecutive grid
-.ictory in two years here
lt-iday night as Coach Steve
~fiord's Big Blacks handed
doac h Bill Trent 's Blue
~vils a 3().ji defeat.
tPlaying before one of the
l'rgest crowds at Memorial
~eld In nearly eight years.
t' e West Virginians upped
tlleir 197_8 record to 3-ll.
Qallipolis dropped to ~2 on
tie season .

iflll:f

''
'

Wellston romps, 28-13

''

Saw up tom

intlmant'e ,

CHAIN SAWS

West surprises
Waverly, 20-6

e

Grid
standings

Mille

Bulldogs cop
firs ,

4.,.. -

FIX THAT ROOF

Jackson

drops tilt

of the Month

27-8 tally-

•OOMMERCIAL

•INDUSIRIAL
•RESIDENnAL

PIO-NEER 1008

24-lnch
LAWN

naw

RAKE

uat

299

r----~~~;;M~;oRMAno;:-MA~-~~cou;G;-----1

I

I
I

VALLEY
WMBER &amp;"
.

,
1

SUPPLY

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

HACK En GRANULATED ·ROOFING

s.

..

I

•I

,CORPORATION

o.

1

.'
A Leader Any Way
You Look At If.. ~~

Sunday· School attendance ,
on Sept. 3 was 50,the·olferlnl!
was $29.20.
The worship service was
attended by 3D with Rev.
Richard Thomu speakln&amp;
from John 17:1_. on the
subject "Love's I.abor En·
~
ded," a communion subject
and communion served by
Rev. Thomas.
Sedan DeVille
Alfred's h_omecoming Ia on
Sept. 17 with the usual
morning services, Sunday
V-8, auto., P.S.. P.B ..
School
at 9:30, wor!ihlp alii,
stereo tope. Super Sharp.
basket dinner at 12:15. Af·
ternoon program at I : 30
· Coupe DeVille
featuring "The United
Harmonizers." All are
V-8, auto., P.S., P.B., AM-FM, rally wheels, super
Drive Home A Winner
welcome to attend.
sharp.
The nominating committee
Stt ~ne of_ lite courteous Saltsmen : Pete Burris.
Marvon Kttbaugh or George Harris.
met on Friday evenln&amp; h~re
and nominated the 1979 of·
fleers, also the ofllcial board
held a meeting.
The U.M.W. will meet on
Tuesday evening, Sept. 19, at
"You'll Uke Our Quality Way of
the home of Emma Finch.
Domg Business" GMC Financing
John Taylor of _the U.S.
'ltl-5342-0pen Evenings Untii6:00
Air Force and his son have
Til! P.M. sat.- Pomoroy
·been visiiing his parents, Mr. ••----.,.;;;;.;.;;,;,;;;.;.:~;;;;;;:;,:,._ _ _ _
and Mrs. Ernelll Taylor and
other relatives here and
attended
church here Sunday
V -8, auto ., P.S., P. B., v inyl roof , low, low mileage.
morning. He wiD be stationed
in the state of Alabama for
some time. It was good to see
them!
Larry Atherton of the
service has ~n visiting his
grandparenll, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Atherton here while
his parents are on vacation.
Mrs. EUa Yost is spending
2 door , hardtop V-8, auto .. P.S., P.B., vinyl roof . Air.
some time here with
Genevieve Guthrie, while
the Yosts are moving.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode visited her brother
, P.S., P.B.
and wife, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Hayes near Keno, 0 .,
last Thursday afternoon.
Mrs. Michael, mother of
Nellie Parker, is quite ill and
confined to the Holzer
Medical Center.
Rodney and Susan Pullins
became the proud parents of
Front wheel drive , 4 dr .• auto., p.s, air, AM -FM radl.o,
a son, Jason Thomas on Sept.
6.000 miles.
. 4 (Labor Day! at the St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkers- ·
. burg. Mother and baby are
reported doing fine. Maternal
Cutla5s Supreme, 2 dr., hardtop. V-8, auto., P.S.• P.B.•
grandparents are Harold and
2
4
DRIVE
vinyl roof, console, 43,000 miles .
Wilma Henderson ; great •
grandparents, Lee and Osle
· Henderson. Paternal grand·
parents are Okey Pullins and
Mattie Pullins. (Mr. Pullins
was recently deceased) . Our
COURT &amp; THIRD
GAUIPOLIS, OHIO
congratulations to the young
couple.
Sunday school attendance
'
on Sept. 10 was 42, the of·
ferlng f20.65.
with birthdays m October.
C o m m 1t t e e s
f o r Several cakes \were presented
homecoming on Sept. 17 were · and made ·up part of the noon
named as foUows: Setting up "' end evening meals. Birthday
tables, Ernest Taylor and cards were presented to those
Garner Griffin; for arr~~n~~lng whose birthdays came this
By Mrs. Francis Morris
food on tables, Florence month.
The
Heiney reunion was
Spencer and Janet Moore and
Present were Mrs. Frank
held
at
Marietta with 55
other volunteers.
(Fern) Cheesebrew.
present.
Spending the
Meeting at the Woode Shawnee, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
weekend
with
Mr. and Mrs.
Grove here on Sunday, Sept. Gresory Hayes, Middleport,
Floyd
Farra
and
attending
10, were the Barton Hayes 0.; Mr. and Mrs. Steve
were
Mr.
Joe
Farra
of Rome,
famllyandthelrdescendants Roumellote (Hilah) ,
·
N.
Y.
and
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ed
and famlllles . A potluck Columbus; Beulah Pratt,
Hendershot
of
Hartwell,
dinner was enjoyed at I p.m. Columbus, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
·
The following birthdays Russell Balnum (Mary), Georgia.
Mrs.
Mabel
Brace
and Mr.
were observed: Mrs. Fern Columbus, 0.; Bob and Dottle
and
Mrs.
Dale
Hart
and
Chj!esebrew (Frankl whose Waugh, Jeff, Craig, Geoffrey
Leglna
were
in
Charleston
for
birthday falls on Sept. 10; Ellene, all of Columbus, 0 .;
lhe
boat
races
and
rode
on
the
Mrs. Bernice Warner Stolar Bernice and John Stolar,
on Aug. 3; Mrs. Mary Bainum Lorain, Ohio; Mr. ·and Mrs. boat "Robert E." which won
on Sept. 19; Mrs. Thelma Clifford R. Hayes, Long first place with James Brace,
Hayes and Mrs. HUah Hayes Bottom, 0.; and Charles and captain.
Weekend guests of Rev.
Helen Woode, CoolvUie, Ohio.
and Mrs. Don Walker were
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Fitz·
n.le Taylor. Mr. Taylor was
water and two sons, of
1 Fire lnspector and known
Glenville,
W. Va. ; Mr. and
throuab tllla area.
Mrs.
Delbert
Walker of
Mr. andMra. Harold Vorya,
Summersvllle,
W.
Va.; Mr.
Columbua, were gueat1 al her
and
Mrs.
Harry
Walker
of
Attendance
at
the
Sunday
brotller4nlaw and lllalar, Mr.
Uzemore,
W.
Va.;
Rev.
and
morninc
services
Sept.
10
and Mn. 0. M. Rife In Dye•
vllle and vlalted her niece and waa 101 . Choir members Mrs. Mark McClung of Leon, W. Va.
famlly, Mr. and Mn. Donald preaent wu !&amp;.
Over Labor Day weekend
Mrs.
Etta
Wise,
Columbua,
Wooten and lamUy.
guests
of Mrs. Margaret
Ia
~pending
the
week
with
Goldie Gillocly, Albany,
friend&amp;
and
attended
Sunday
Houdashelt
were Mr. and
. . a &amp;lnday din.- pit of
services
at
the
local
church.
Mrs.
Claude
Bowers
and Mr.
her 1011-ln-ln and clauabter,
Mr.
Ralph
Swan
Is
a
and
Mrs.
Melvin
Bolin
of
Mr. and Mra. Arthur
medical patient at Holzer Urbana. They apent Sunday
Q-ablree.
with Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith
Rev.-end and Mrl. David Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick, Ms. and Monday with Mr. and
\VIMmon and lamUy, Lima,
IUtltl of
his Della Curtis, Mrs. Ruby Mrs. Otto Lohn, Pomeroy.
were
Frick and Mrs. Bertha
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
~Mr. and Mra.
Parker
visited
Mn.
Nellie
Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Sayre,
Eirl Staray.
Tracy
recenlly
at
the
Kimes
Sayre
and
Mrs. Helen SimpHarley PJdrelt and IIIII,
Convaleacent
Home,
Athens.
son
spent
Saturday and
Buddy Pickett, aloal wltll a
The
Laurel
CUff
Health
Club
Sunday
with
Mr. and Mrs.
friend, Barbara Hunter,
of
which
Mrs.
Tracy
Is
a
Norman
Styer
at Waterford.
came by plane frlm their
member,
presented
Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Blll
homeala Mleml, Jl1orlda, and
Tracy
with
a
robe
for
her
McKenzie,
Phil
and
.Jell, of
aponl MV8'al da)'l here wltll
birthday.
Galllpolt.
spent
Labor
Day
Harley'a mother~ Laura
Mr. ana Mrs. Jerome t;ook with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Kreba.
attended church Sunday at
Mr. Steve Badsley and
Etlltl Shell, Columbul, W81 the
local church.
daushter,
Amy Jo of
a lkanday Bunt at tile heme ol
Columbua
spent
a week with
and
Jeremy,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mr.
andMra.
Mendal
Jordan.
Pitu Baker end friend,
Attendance at Sunday
his
parents,
Mr.
and Mrs.
Dwaine
Jordan,
Bryan,
Keith
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
morning service Sept. 3 at the
Decatur, IncUana, vlalted his
Ralph
Badsley.
Mrs.
Steve
and
Sarah
Faye
and
Ida
Hunaiclttr,
Akron,
were
Free
Metbodllt
Church
was
oou&amp;in, Martha Mays.
local;
Lucy weekend 1111111 of Mr. and til.
Mr1. Dana Bailey who Denison,
: Badsley and KeW apent the
Mrs. Ruth Felger and week In Florida and other
underwent 1ur1ery at Thcmaa, Pl!mbroke Pines, · Mra. Dorsey Jordan and
Unlveralty
Hoepllal, F1orlda and Amy Caldwell, famUy and attended the dau1hter, Mlas Evelyn places. Her par11111, Mr. and
'nlrner reunt.x~at Fort Melp Felcer, Cleveland, were Mra. George Slmpaon of
Columbua, Ia reportedly Columbus.
Annabell
Thomas
and
Park. ·
guilts Sunday ~~ the locll Clarlelton broupt them to
· cmvaleKlnc Ntlafactorlly.
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mn. Charles Freda Whetatone, Columbwr, . Mr. and Mn. Eddie Jordan church.
visited
their
aunt,
Ida
Dew
to
Ohlofrlm
OncCII
and
Mr. Wyatt Schaefer, Mt. Ralph Badlle1 Labor Day.
David, Mlddlepcjrt, Lucy
Mr. and Mn. Crill Brad·
Tbamu, I'WmbroM Pinel, Denison and theY took her vlalteid her mother, Mrl. On Vernon, epent the weet•d
ford,
Jr. of Worlhlllltoit apent
Florida, and NDy Caldwell, . with them and ~pent a day CGttrUI and atblr relathw wltb hla parents, Mr. and
Friday
and Saturday lrith
with
Mr.
and
Mra.
Murl
and
attended
tbe
Wlllllnvtlle
!t!rL
Norman
llcbaeler.
i::olumbua, were recent
Davis,
Rutland
.
Bean
Dlaaer
Mr.
and
~- Crltt Bl'lldlonl,
Mr.
Vern
Story,
Collllllbua,'
fllllll,l al Mr. and Mr1. G. R.
atne.
. "Mrs. Ava GrHnleu, Galdlll~ wbo had ljlent the weall:•d lrith his Sr.
.
Brice Hart apent· a week
sranddauchter, Rllla spentlllllletlmelDWtanblll family hare.
~ attenclinl a blrthda)'
Rhoads
llid
1011.lJI.In
and
wilb
ber
children
bu
Mr.
Ulll
Mn.
I'IIU
Wise,
aupper honorln1 Walter
ban. Beverly, attended church
' Jardan ..-tly at tbe heme dauahter, Mr. and Mra . retumec1 to 111r
atfton
Fraley,
Jr.
were
In
'
1
1M
cut
r-Id
hal 1trv1ee1 Sundar at the local IIJ"andaon, i~ ltory, vlllted
ol
perenll, Mr. and Mn.
rectntly wlti( Mr. and MrL
Mlndll Jardan, . . . Mr. and ~etta becauae ollhe deatll her brollln arm IIIII put · church.
Wllllam
Peary, Athens. •
Mrs. Edna Sch ..ter,
Mn. Walter Jordan, Jollhua of Mn. Green..,' brother, w.ik.

SMITH NELSON ·MOTORS :
POMEROY, OHIO

500 E. MAIN

PH• 992-2174
"YOUR fRIENDLY DEALERSHIP"
"WE CARE ABOUT YOU"

J

1973 AND OLDER

1976 Cadillac
1973 Cadillac

1976

WAGON

Karr &amp; VanZandt

J

'78 CLOSE-OUT
SAVE NOW ON
•COLTS

sg95

1973

--~-:o:'6f:f95~~-1978 DODGE

WHEEL

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

llctmi

'*

,,

'

Dr. H.T.

1973 MAZDA RX 2 .........7~: .. '850 1972 FORb GRAN TORINO ... ... '850 •
1973 FORD GAL 500 ......... '1095 1972 BUICK SKYLARK ....... .. ~l200 .
7 Dr . H.T.

1973 BUICK CENTURY. ........ '1995 1972 FORD GAL 500 .............'850 :!
2

Dr. H.T.

1973 BUICK CENTURY WAGON'l995 1972 CHEV. MALIBU ... :.?.'...... '850 ·,
1973 OLDS 98 2 DR ........... '2195 1972 CHEV. IMP. 2 DR HT.... '1050 . ;
H.T.. Nke.
.,

1973 FORD CUSTOM 500 ..... '1600 1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR .. 'll50 ·
4 Dr .. H.T.
1973
PLYMOUTH GRAN FURY 11450 1971 BUICK SKYLARK WAGON.S700 :
7 Dr. H.T.
1
1973
CHEV.
IMP.
4
DR
........
1600 1971 OODGE POLARA WAGON ..4500
Extra clean .
1972
PONTIAC CATALINA .•••• 11300 1970 BUICK LESABRE 4.DR .... '600
2 Dr. H
Don't forget you owe it to yourself to check with us before you buy
any car, New or· Used. We can save you money. We are The Friendly
Dealership. See or call one of these Friendly Salesmen: J. D. Story,
Ray Douglas or Bill Nelson.
·

with Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart
in Columbus. His mother,

Cozart and son, Tommy, of

Racine
Events

Carpenter Personals

4

•MONACO

CARROU NORRIS DoDGE

WE HAVE A REAL
GOOD SELECTION
OF 1978 DODGE W·150
4 WHEEL DRIVE PICK UP'S.
1979 MODELS ON DISPLAY
~-~- AND FOR SALE.
1 • 1978 PLYMOUTH TRAIL
DUSTER, 1 • 1978 DODGE
W-400 CHASSIE CAB,
1978 DODGE D-100 LJnLE
RED EXPRESS CUSTOMIZED
PICK UP, 1_· 1978 DODGE
W-150 DIESEL PICK UP.

1973 BUICK ELEC. 225.. ..... 11595 1972 CHEV. CAPRICE WAGON ...'950 · :·

•MAGNUM

&amp;

'3295

Now you can buy some real good transportation real cheap. We need
to clean our lot for the New 79 Model Trade- Ins.

Mrs. Robert Hart and Beth
Ann spent the weekend and
atlended the State Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell

VANS &amp; 'TRUCKS

1

,I

'·

MONTE CARLO

Flat Rock, Mich. visited Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Brace
recently.
Mrs. Pearl Adams o( Letart
Falls visited Mr. and Mrs.
Douglass Johnson Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart
spent Labor Day weekend in
their camper with Mr. and
Mrs. !Wnaid Hart on Hocking
River .

Mr. and Mrs. Roderick
Grimm spent Friday and
Saturday in their camper on
Hocking J.liver and went
Sunday
afternoon
to '
Westerville and spent over
night and Labor Day with
their son, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Grimm and family.
Mrs. Patsy Willis and Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Willis of
Columbus spent the weekend
with Mr. Earl Hart and other
relatives.
Marty Wilson of Raleigh,
N. C. visited August 13
through 19 with his brother,
Rev . Steve Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Warns·
worth and Diane of
Philadelphia, Pa. spent a
week with her grandmother,
Mrs. Edna Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs. Wald Foster
and children of Columbus
spent a few days with their
parents, Mrs. Edna Foster
and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hlll.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Ervine Sunday were
Mrs. Maxine Shain, Mrs.
Terry Shain and son, Jason,
and Mrs. Mildred Spencer.

DAN THOMPSON FORD

1978 THUNDERBIRD ..............:.... '6595
V-8, auto. tran s., power steering, power brakes, air
cond ., electric .clock, radio , vlnyl roof . Sha rp.

1978 FAIRMONl2 DR ................ $AVE
4 cyl., auto . trans ., p.s., radio, vinyl .roof. Ni ce fam i ly
or work car that 's econom ical to run .

1977 PINTO 3 DR RUNABOUT .... s3495
4 cy l. , atJto . trans ., appearance decor grp., full glass ,
3rd foor, styled steel road wheels w- trim rings, radio.

1977 GRANADA 2 DR..................14795
250 6 cy l., A.T., P.S .. A.C., til t wheel. 112 'w' i nyl root ,
white. fu l l l uxury wheel covers , w-s-w tires . f:Aore.

1976 LTD 2 DR ......................... 53795
V-8, A.T ., P .S., P. B.• A.C. , radio, viny l root , one careful
local owner . Extra ni ce.

1975 MUSTANG II 2 DR ............. 52795
4 cyl., A.T.. P.S.• AM-FM radio . elec!. rear defrost ,
console, more .

1974 MUSTANG II 2 DR GHIA ...... $AVE
V-6, A.T., P.S.. vlnvl roof . lots more.

1974 MUSTANG 2 DR .................11695
1974 CHEV. IMPALA ...................52695
2 Dr. Custom , v.a, A.T ., P.S., A C., tilt wheel. vinyl

roof . AM-FM stereo tape. bumper guards. local owner .

Nice.
When you were 20, you
knew all the answers. After
.W, you find someone has swit·
ched the list of questions.

1974 MAVERICK GRABBER........... $AVE
307 V-8, grabber pock., A.T. , P.S., A.C., AM-FM tape .

1973 MAVERICK GRABBER .......... $AVE
302

Apple Grove
News Notes
A picnic was held at the
Portland Park Monday
evening by the Apple Grove
United Methodist Sunday
School. Prayer was given by
Mrs. Dolly Wolle.
·
A evening of a social get·
together and a baseball game
was enjoyed by the group.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Chuck Mugrage, Tyson and
Travis, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Ables, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Roush and Kimberly, Mr. and
Mrs . Darrell Norris and
Tracy, Mrs. Max Hill, Justin
and Aimee, Eric Milliron,
Brian, Teresa and Brenda
Hunt, Mrs. Anna Wheeler,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert RouSh,
Mr . . and Mrs. Dallas Hill,
Joey Roush, Rev. and Mrs.
Dave Harrla and Nalhen, Mr.
and Mrs. Russell ~oush,
Cindy and Eddie; Chuckle
and Becky MICh!lelll, Mrs.
Bob Rhodes ani! Mike, Mr.
and Mrs.. Bill Davidson,
Sharon James, Dolly HUI,
Mn. Dolly WoHe, Amanda
and Michael ·lluaaell, Early
Roush, Eileen !kick, Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsey Paraons.

V-8,

Grabber Pa ck .. A. T.. P.S., •m rad io.

1977 F·150................................. $AVE
1975 F-150 ........ ....................... 12795
1974 C-10 ..................................$AVE .
1973 F250 CAMPER SPECIAL ..... 12495 ~
Cream puff of the week . low m ileage &amp; lots of extra~ .

OPEN TIL 1 P.M.
E•ctpt Thursday &amp; Saturday TIIS :Oil
Close&lt;t Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD
See Rocky HuPt&gt;, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill, Gtntral
, for a Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle.
Ml DDLE PORT, 0.

,,

Wolfpen News Notes ."
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sum·
merfleld and daughters of
Dlinols were visitors of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
RU!IIell and other relatives.
Gina, Tahnee and Brady
Johnson. SJ?ent a lew days
with the1r aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Ray,
Joh'nson and family of
Columbus.
Kail Knapp is visiting his
I

grandmother, Mrs. Lena '
Knapp of ·Langsville.
..
Gerieva Shumate spent two~
weeks with Mr. and Mrs."
Leon Shumate and IlOna ot: .
Bandytown, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Toni Hawk '
are aMounclns the birth ol a !.
baby boy named James:•
Richard weighing 7lba., 9 oa. :~
horn Aus. 31, 1m at Wood-::
stock, Illinois. Mrs. Mae ~
Hawk is grandmother.
1

'.

•
(

�••

C-8- The Sunday Tunes.Sentmel Sundal. Sept 17 1978

HQnor 300
4-H members

\griculture and
our community
By Bryson R. &lt;Bud) Carter
Gallia County E11:tension Agent
GALI.JPOI.JS - ThiS IS the season for our F.;;r;r
Sales and there 15 plenty of aciiYJty herem our local area, as
well as over the state
Fll'st of all we have the new Galha f'.mmtv Club Calf Sale
oomm~ up on Saturday evening, September 23, 8 p m here at
the Galha Count) Juruor Fmrground. ThiS IS a new venture
here m Gallia County and the sponsors are me.mbers of
the Gallta County Beef Corruruttee and we In Exlenston Servtce
are asststmg them A small select group of steer calves, sired
by beef bulls and produced on local farms wtll be offered for
sale The calves will sell by the head and they are bemg preselected by a Selection C'.omm1tt,...
The sale 15 real!&gt; destgned for 4-H and FFA members
lookmg for steer feeding proJects and we encourage you to
c&lt;IIle out Saturday eve rung September 23 for the sale Tommy
Joe Stewart will be the auctioneer
Don 'I forget the Ohw Feeder Calf Round-up commg up
September 28, 29 and 30 wtth the sale bemg held on Saturda)
afternoon September 30 nus Will be held at the Ohio Slllte
Fall'grounds m Columbus Ohto
Also m our area will be the two local Ohto approved Feeder
eau Sales conducted at th e Ohto Valley Livestock yards on
October 3 and October 26, 1978
A new comrruttee of local farmers has been formed to
ad&gt;!Se the stockyards on the operation of the Feeder Calf
Sales Comrruttee members here m Gallla County mclude
Denver Yoho, Roger Dee! Gary Fallon , Dtck Neal, Jack
Pickens and Alden Wedeme1 er George Fuller from
Lawren~e County and Billy Halley Robert Newberry and
Mike Slllnley m Mason County are also servmg on the
comnmttee Letters cootllmmg rules and regulatwns for the
eau Sales and consignme nt blanks have gone out to producers
who have been bnngmg calves to the sales last year If you are
mterested m recetvmg this mformation please call us at the
ExtensiOn Off•ce the conumttee members, as "ell as the
stock\ ards also have cop1es of Ute rules and regulations and
con&lt;tgnment blanks

Red tape cut for
emergency loans
POMEROY - Secretar} of
Agnculture Bob Berg land
ha s g1ven Fanners Home
AdmtniS\ra! IOn (FrnHAI
state directors authority to
make emergency loans to
fanner s as soon as loss from
natu ral disaster IS confirmed

The secretary abolished a
tm1e

consummg system m

effect for severa l } ears that
required County governments

a nd stat e go vernors

to

request disaster loan serv1ce

then for the Secretary to
desagnate co unt1es where
FmHA emergenc} loans
could be made This course
was followed "hen damage
assessment reports mdicated
the need for 2!i or more farm

emergency loans m a county
Undor the new less

llme~

consurmng procedure State
D~r ec tor Gene R Aber·
cromb1e w1ll authonze the
agency s

~.: ount}

Ohto to

make emergency

offices

m

loans to an) number of far
mers showmg a need fo r
emergency credtt to offset
substant aal loss caused by
st orm fl ood drought or other
nat ural di saster

The state

director w1ll act on the baSis
of available mformat1on and

dama ge reports re cetved

from FmHA count) offices
DeSignatiOns of ehg1b1bty by
the Secretar) of Agnculture
w1ll no longer be reqmred
FmHA eme rgency loan
serv 1ces

also

are

automatically
avail a ble
where a major disaster or
emergency has been declared
by the Prestdent
Abercrombie
satd
Bergland's act ton to cut red
tape from emergency loan
procedure was tak en und er a
proviSion ol the A~ncultural
Credtl Act ol 1978, stgned by
Prestdent Carter Aug 4
FmHA emergency loans
are made to farmers lackmg
other sources of crcdtl for
recove r~
fr om natura l
diSaster Begtnnmg Oct 1
amounts offsetmg actual loss
associated w1th productiOn
wtll be made at an Interest
rate of ftv e percent and
addtttonal amounts at htgher
rates 1..()" rat e loans also ar e
made t o rest or e farm
dwellings a nd house hold
effects lost or damaged du e to
natural disaster Loans are
made through FmHA county
olf1ces

Area beef producers
plan Sept. 25 meeting
BY BILL SMITH
JACKSON - An outlook
meetmg for beef cat tle
producers w1ll he held at the
Ja ckso n Ar ea Extens 10 n
Center Monday Sept 2!i

begmmng wtlh a tour of the
Ja ckson Research Farm at 5
p m The research farm IS
adjacent to the Area Ex
tension Center along State
Route 93 two mt les south of
Jackson
Dr Wallace Barr. Ex
:: '1 111 11111111111111111111111111111! Ill tensiOn economast from The
Ohto State Umverstty , wtll
di SC USS pnce out look [or
feeder cattle. feed grams and
fed cattle He w11l st1mulate
your thtnkmg on short and
long run prof1t prospects for
beef producers
Many '\I; !II be headmg for the
Wa gon tours to observe
national fore~t s to relax va n ous research projects m
awh1le but be fore you pack beef, forage and frmt at the
the camper there are so me
Jackson Research Farm and
statiStiCS you should know
abou t
There are
154 a steak fry w11l be conducted
Na t1onal
F ores t s pnor to the beef outlook
representmg 187 m 1li JO n sesston Tours wtll start from
acres under US DA the Area Center at 5 p m and
manage ment
t he r e are wtll be compl eted by 6 30
83 000 miles of Natwnal pm
f a r est st r eams
the
The ~teak barbecue dmner
equivalen t m length of 22 wtll be served at 6 30 p m
M1sS iss1pp1 M1sso un Rivers
I 8 mlllJOn acre&gt;s of natural followed by the beef outlook
lakes and another 880 000 sessiOn Cost of the dmner
acres m ortlflcJal reservOirs will be $3 75 per person
79 200 deve loped family There IS no charge for those
camps1tes and 22 200 p1c who wiSh to attend only Dr
mcmg s1tes rh ere w er e 52 6 Barr's presentation at 7 45
milli On VI SI LOrS tO the pm
NatiOnal Forests m 1977 16
Thts extensi on service
million f1shermen 14 5 sponsored program.wtll be of
rrulbon hunter s 10 2 million
spectal mterest to feeder calf
h1 ker s 59 m1l ho n boaters
the hst goes on And 1f producers. cattle feeders and
you r eally want to rou g h 1t thetr wtves, as well as folk s
wtth
beef
t here are 16 6 m11!1on arres In volved
m a total wJ!dcrness s, 1item 1'11arketmg feed and farm
That mean s no roads no supply
serv tces
and
outhouses not hmg
I he agricultural credtt
total Wllderne~s Js fur people
Those plaruung to attend
who reall} want to gel are asked to make reseraway from 11 all
vallons wtth the Jackson
Area ExtensiOn Center, P 0
Box 32, Jackson, OhiO 45640
'
(phone 614·286·2177 ) by
Wednesday, September 20
Spr1119 Ave
Your County ExtensiOn
Pi)mtrav OhtO
Office w1ll have more m
1
formation about the mee\lng
1liiiiiiiii11IIII' 11111111111111111 II Ill

agrl-

lacts

FULlDN·OOMPSOrf
WCTOR SALES

County agent's corner

GALLIPOLIS
Approxunately 300 4·H mem·
hers parents, adv1sors, and
lnends of 4·H attended the
thtrd Annual GaU1a County 4·
H Achievement Ntaht. whtch
was held Thursday at the
Gallta
Co unty
JUniOr
Fairgrounds
Throughout the year many
4 H members earn honors
and awards for "htch they
deserve recogmtwn In many
cases th1s recognitiOn ts not
gtven at that tune Thts IS the
purpose ol the 1978 4 H
Achievement Ntght Four-H
members who wm awards at
the Galha County Jumor Fall'
are honored durmg the fatr ,
thus the Achievement Ntght
1S meant to honor members
for awards and honors earned
throughout the rest of the

year
One

area where 4 H
members were honored IS the
"mners and alternates m the
State A\\ards program ThiS
ts where 4-H members
complete National Report
Forms 1n d1fferent projeCt
areas and compete agamst
members throughout the
sta t e ThiS year Gallta
Co unt) had three alternates
m thiS program mcludmg
Pauline Wh1te from the
Cheshire Cats and Kittens 4-H
dub who was an alternate m
the Da~ry Foods dtviSton
MISS) deLamerens of the K-9
Korps 4-H Club who was an
alternate m Dog Care and
Charlene Whtte member ol
the Chesh1re Cats and K1tlens
4 H Club who was an alter
nate m Food ConservatiOn
and Safet) dtvtston Pauline
Wh1te wa s also Ohto s
representative to Founder s
Camp wh1ch was held m
M1 cht gan dunn g Augu st
1978
Out standmg ol the Day
wmners m the State Fa1r
competitiOn
\\Cre al so
honored Th ese Included
Shan flo" ard Rto Stiver
Thimbles 4 H Club m TaslJ
Meals dl\ lSI on Am y Roush ,
Ches h~re Ca ts &amp; Kittens 4 H
Clu b Ftshmg diVISIOn MISS)
drLamerens, K 9 Korps m
Dog Obedten ce
Lesh e
Puppy
Lov e
Gordon
Tratntng Corps In Dog
Obedten ce and B11ly J o
Grusv on er Puppy Loves
Tra 1nmg Corps 1n Dog
Obed1ence Jeff Roach of the
Hw Wr anglers wa s the
\.\tn ne r or the
horse
sho"mansh1p class an which
he partt ctpated dunng the
Stat e Fatr
Area Level A\\ard wmners
11 ere also honored These
members com pleted National
Report F orm s and were
selected as wmners m the
vanous project areas These
wm ners mcluded
Lynn
Smtlh 1 emperatures Rtsmg
4 ri Club Pam • Mtller,
Ca dmus Redsklns Teen 4 H
Club Gene Walker Cadmus
Red skms Teen Club , Gary
Roach Rw Wranglers 4-H
Club
Charlene While,
Chesh1re Cats &amp; Ktttens 4-H
Club Ctndy Stsson, Galha
County Fronllersmen Becky
Crouse Mountaineers 4 H
Club Jane Ellen Wood. K 9
Korp s 4 H Cl ub , Pauline
Wh1t e Chesh1re Cats &amp;
K1tt ens
and
Mtss y
deLamerens K 9 Korps 4 H
Club
The 1978 Gallla County 4 H
Safe!) Speakmg Con test
\\lnners recognazed w~re
Ctnd) Stsso n Gallla Co
FIUntlersmen, in the Semor
DIVISion Vtckte Coffee , Busy
Beave rs In the Senaor
D1vlswn and Julie Durst
U F 0 4 H &lt;:;Jub m the Juntor
DtvlSton AIT three of these
tnd111duals competed m the
Ja ckso n
Area
Safety
Speakmg Contest
Gallla County also had
several 4-H members who
se rved as delegates to
vartous state 4-H actiVI\tes
durmg 1978 One of these
actt vtlle s was Ctllzenshtp
Short course
trtp
to
Washmgton, DC for one
11eek where 4-H members
part1c1pate m leadership,
cit izenship trammg and also
have the opportunity to ex.
change Ideas and skills wnh
other 4-H members from
other states

Representmg

Galha County thts year were
Pam M1ller Cadmus Red
sktns Teen Lynn Smith
Temperatures
Rtsmg ,
Charlene Whtte. Cheshtre
Cats &amp; Kttlens and Becky
Crouse, Mountamcers 4-H
Clu~

Another actiVIty ts Ohto 4-H
Club Congress whtch IS held
at the Ohto State Umverll!Y
m Columbus, Ohto Four-H
members from Galha County
had the opportunity to Join

•

together wtth 4 H members
from every other count) tn
the State of OhiO to learn
more about the 4·H program
m Oh10 While there they also
had the opportunity to par
llc•pate m acttvtties whtch
would provtde lea rntng ex·
pertences
about
the
Ieglslattve process and about
career opportumlles Gallla
County's delegates for 1978
were Jane Ellen Wood K 9
Korps M1ssy deLamerens,
K-9 Korps. Cmdy Stsson,
Galha Co Fronltersmen
Ktm Ntday Tnangle 4 H
Club, Teresa Stowers Rto
Stiver Thtmbles , R1ta
George Marga n Ratders
and Chrts Nelson Cadmus
Redskms Teen Club
The 1978 Gallla County 4 H
Jumor LeadershiP officers
\\ere also mtroduced and
recognized durmg the
even1ng 1 s
act 1vtt1e s
president Sk1p McGo\ ern
Th1vener Pton ee rs vtcc
president, Lisa Fellure ,
Th1vener
Ptoneers,
secretary Ktm J1v1den
Tht vener
Ptoneers,
treasurer Beth Yoho 4 H
Lass1es news reporter,
Sandy Petne 4-H Lasstes,
and chaplam, K1m Ntday,
Tnangle 4·H Club
The wmner of the Best
Secretar) 's Book contest was
Jayne S1mpkms of the 4 H
Lasstes 4·fl Club Jayne
rcce1ved a $5 award from the
4-H Advisors Assoc , as dtd
her 4 H Club
Another award program m
wht ch 4 H members are
ellg1ble IS the Co unt y
Award Pm Medals Members
ma) be nommated by thetr
adv isors for these a\\ards ror
the outstanding work that
they have done throughout
the yea r on lhetr projec ts and
m the1r cJub work From all

of the nominations the advtsors make, the Galha
County ExtensiOn :;taff
selects the oounty w!Mers
Thts year's wmners tn each
area mcluded
~chfevement-

Jane Ellen

Wood K 9 Korps Charlene

Wh•te Cheshire Cats i'iln~
Kittens . Gary Roach Rio
wranglers
Missy
delamerens, K 9 Korps and
Dav•d Mills Rebels
Anrlr"H itur.:.l -

Trtan~ l e

Jav

lnP. FndPr

~urleson ,

Cen te'rv•lle Young Farmers
John Sw•sher Gal lta County
Front iersmen Steve Forgey
Centerville Young Farmers

Automotive

~

Wayne

Lew1s Rock H1ll Ranchers

Jack Hannan -

BY JOHN C RICE
Exteosloa Agent
Agrlcullu"'
Meta• County
POMEROY
Farm
Science Review Tickets are
sltll available Monday,
September 18, is the last day
to purchase Farm Sctence
Review tickets at a savmgs
The tickets purchased here tn
the county are $1 50 At the
gate they are $2 The
following places have Farm
Sctence Review tickets- The
Cooperative Extension
Servtce, ASCS Office, Sugar
Run Mill, Landmark, Meigs

~ock

Hill

'"Ranchers
Bicycle - Mark Evans
The Countrvmen
Terrv
Ol1ver The Country Bump
k•ns 1 Tamm1e McG u tre,

Tnangle Bnan Oliver
Fnendsh•P

Rto

Bread Cmdy S1sson
Gal l1a County Front1ersmen
Jenn e Sca rberry Shln1n
On Roberta Hamilton Rto
Stiver Th•mbles
Jenny
Louden Rio Frtendshlp
Cd•zensh tp _ ... Char l ene
Wht te Cheshire Cats and
K1ttens Jayne S1mpkms 4 H
Carne Walker
L ass1es
Centerv tlle Young Farmers
Joy Burleson Center vil le
Young Farmers

Clothing - April Graham

r .- ,a ngle Ann~e Cook Sh.n1n
On
Dtan a Forgey Cen
terv1lle Young Farm ers
Armanda 8run 1cardt 4 H
Lass1es
Commod1 ty Market tng Shari Oav ts Shln.n On
/W:Jry Wood Ga lll a County
fronttersmen Tracy Lew1s
Centervtlle Electrons Lynn
LewiS Rock H1ll Ranchers
Conservat1on of Natural
Reso urces Amy Rovsh
Cheshtre Cat s and K1ttens
Ttm N'lerry Rto Fnendsh 1p
Russell Saunders Cadmus
Redsktns Matt Hoover Rock
Hill Ranchers
Co nsumer Edu catton Randy Caldwell Tnangle,
Kns Cook
R•o
Si lver
Th tmbl es Julie Hal l Cen
ler v 1lle Electrons
Da lry - Melante N1day

Water is easy to

Tr1ang le
Kelly Stowers
Da1ry Club Andy Howard
Rio Fr1endsh1p
Annette
Moore Rto Rascals
Datry Foods - Gu:aa Rutan

Mapte Shade Kids

Stacy

Arrowood
Centerville
Electrons Ellen Eggelton

Eno Sa1l On

Dog Care and Tra1n1ng Kev1n W1thee R1o Fnend
ship Gary Roach R1o
Wrangers Leslie Gordon Puppy Love Tratnlng Corps

Shawn Hanby K 9 Korps

Electnc Energy - Allen
Evans Countrymen Dav td
Garber Rto Fnendsh1p
Food
Conservation
&amp;

Safety

-

Lynn

N1da y

Triangle
Karen
Rose
Centerv llle
E l ectrons

Melody Tate, Rock Hil l

Ranchers Tammy Pa tnck
Yellowtown Buckeyes
Food and Nutnt1on Jackie Corw1n Tnangle
Sandy Pa lnck Patnot Merry
Makers Shan Howard Rto

S1lver Thimbles

Eltzabeth

Stmms 4 H Lass1es
Food Preservaft on - Cindy
Spears
Pat r 1ot
Merry
Makers Teresa Stowers
Datry Club Demse WOC'Ium
Gall1a Cloverettes Dedra
Wa lker Cadmus Redsk 1ns
Forest ry - Lola Wnghl
Chesht re Cats and K ttens
Mat t Rodgers
Morgans
Ra1ders
Rlfa
George
Morgans Ratders
David
Ra1ney Centerville Ele c
frons
Garden1ng
Nan cy
Evans Rto Stiver Thtmbles
Amy Louden R1o Fnend

sh1p

Sonya Call

Rebels

Turley Clagg, M ounlatneers
Health - Ke1th McGu1re
Tr 1angle Teresa Haffelt
Th 1vener Pioneers Kelly
Arrowood
Centerv II I e
E lec trons
Kelly Rou sh
Cheshire Ca ts and Ktttens
Home Env ironment - Lon
Ftsher Northup laddies
Beth Salisbury
Patrt ot
Merry Maker s
Jert Me
Mannts 4 H Lass 1es Rose

McNeal Gallla Cloverettes

take for granted
BY DIANA s EBERTS
cost of energy for heating
Extension Agent
water IS contmually nsmg
Home Ecooomlcs
Use garbage dtsposers
Meigs County
spanngly or not at all, smce
POMEROY - Water ts they require water and m·
easy to take for granted Mast crease the waste load on
of us enjoy the many beneftts sewage treatment systems It
of water under pressure m IS better to compost food
our homes any ttme we need wastes and recycle them
1\ In recent years, however through the soli tn your
the cost of deve lopmg, garden
treatmg and diSt nbutmg
You can now get a va rtety
water
ha s
In creased or water conservation devices
stgmhcantly
There ts for your home Smce the flush
growmg Interest tn water tmlet 1s the greatest user of
conservatiOn, or w1se use of "ater start With It A one
"ater
ga Uon plastic JUg !tiled With
Water u se m homes "ater or stones and placed m
averages about 50 gaUons per the tot let tank, wtll reduce
person per day Some homes, tOilet water use about 16
parttcularely those wtth percent Place the jug tn a
young chtldren, may have locatton where 1\ won t m·
dally water use of 75 gallons terfere &gt;&lt;ith the flush
per person or more, Older mecharusm Av01d bncks,
persons, and others who pay smce they may crack the
high costs of water , may use tank tf dropped It 1s usually
only 25 gallons per day
not desll'able to bend the
WHERE IS THE MOST
fl oat arm below the
WATER USED AT HOME• recommended water level 1n
Studies of home water use the tank smce thts may not
have shown that the bath· permit good bowl flushmg
room takes the most water Devices that reduce tOilet
amountmg to about 74 per· water use from 20 to 50
cent of total In-home use The percent can be purchased, at
convenhonal flush lode\ uses modest cost, for mstalla\ion
more than half of all water m on extsttng toilets These
the bathroom The home include plasttc dams, un·
laundry takes about 14 proved ballcocks, and dual
percent, the kttchen water flush mecharusms (one cycle
use accounts for about 12 for hqutd wastes and another
percent of the total
for sohd wastes) For new
HOW TO CONSERVE
mstallallons, a vartety of
WATER
water-savmg toilets are
Your ftrst step 1n a home available Some ofthese uruts
water conservatiOn program use as httle as one-half gaUon
should be to eliminate leaks ol water per flush
A faucet leak of only 1-32 mch • Numerous sunple devices
dtameter wastes more than are available to reduce water
100 gallons of water per day! flow from faucets, shower
New faucet washers are heads and other water
mexpenstve and easy to m outlets Faucet aerators, for
stall Tmlet leaks are very exampl&amp;, provide a more
common, but easily corrected even flow and reduce splash·
by stmple adjustments or a mg Flow control devices
few new parts Leaks from provtde umform fl ows at
water ptpes and fittings may varymg pressures Pressure
requtre a plumber, but you reducmg valves reduce h1gh
can often correct these flow s that occur when
problems by us1ng plumbmg pressure IS excesstve
atd.avatlablefrom hardware
OTHER WATER·SAVING
stores
SUGGESTIONS
Your water-usmg habits
Keep a pt\cher of drinking
have a lot to do wtlh water water In the refrigerator to
consumption m your home avotd letting a faucet run
For example, flushing the until the water becomes cold
toilet to dtspose of a facta!
Insulate hot water pipes,
ttssue uses about 6 gallons of and locate the water heater
water Letting the water run as close to the bathroom,
whtle shavmg may use about laundry , and kttchen as
20 gallons of water A five possible
minute shower could use »
When buying a new
gallons of water, but a bath washing machine or dllh·
wtth the tub one-&lt;Iuarter lull washer, select one that uves
would use about half as much water and energy WUh only
water Excess1ve usc of hot full loads
water IS wasteful. and the

Leadersh ip
Teresa
Stowers Datry Club Sktp
McGo vern
Tht vener
Pioneers
Ktm
Jtvtden
Tht ven er Ptoneers
Ltsa
Fellure Thtvener P1oneer s
Matt Saunders Rebels
Petroleum Power - Scott
Lew1s Rock Hill Ranchers
Jeff
Wetherholt
Rto
Fnendsh1p
Photography Fauna
Donah ue R1o Wranglers Joy
Henderso n 4 H Lasstes
Chns Howa rd R1o Fr end
shtp
Ang1e Mtller Cen
ter v1 lle Young Farmers
Publte Speaktng - Gordon
Splete Country Bumpk ms
Ross Sw1s her Gallta County
Fron• •ersmen Jul1a Durst

UFO

Debb1e Haysl1p

R1o

Stiver Thtmbles

Safety -

K1m N1day

Trtar'lgle
Mtssy Oltver ,
Country Bumpkins
Lort
Copley Rto Stiver Thtmbles
Brenda Hoover Rock Htll
Rancher s
Veterinary Sc1ence - Lynn
Sm1th Temepratures RtstnQ
Matthew
Wtfhee
R1o
Friendsh ip Sandy Peine 4

H Lass ies Scott Ell1ott Rock
Hill Ranchers
Wood

Sctence

-

Randy

Ohio politics

Celeste "has seven weeks to dethrone Rhodes

seriously depleted, and next
year's hay crop greatly
reduced. 2 Heavmg w!U
usuaUy be more prevalent
where a late harvest has been
taken Lack of plant growth,
which serves as mulch during
the wmter and spring
seasons, may greatly in·
crease the amount of legume
heaving
Heaving
is
frequently the major hazard
resultmg froin takmg a late
harvest Gf established
meadows
Recommendations for late
harvestmg are as follows
(l) Make the last regular
harvest by the calendar southern Ohto, Sept 3 to 15,
(2) Permit the meadow to
grow unttl late October
Legumes store food reserves
m thetr root system dunng
late September and October.
Harvestmg by grazing or
mowmg dunng thts reserve •
buildmg pertod will reduce
next year's hay crop and may
result m almost complete
wtnler killing of the legumes.
Food reserves m legume
roots are lower followmg a
wet season than after a dry
season
(3) Make the late harvest
dunng the la st week of Oe·
Iober or the fll'st week of
November Any growth
followm g thts harvest will
lower the food reserves m the
Ham tlton Centervtlle Young legume roots and wtll
Farmers
Brian
Eads
mean
some
Tr~angte
Ray
Clagg probably
reduction
m
next
year's
hay
Mo un tameer ~
Earl Mayo
Our Gant
crop However. by making
Each year each 4 H Cl ub 1s
thiS harvest late, there wtll
allowed to select one m ember
hkely be httle regrowth and
who they feel has been the
little reductiOn of root
outstanding member In their
Equipment, Brown's Tractor
Sales and Tulton • Thompson.
The Farm Science Review
has one of the best equtpment
exhibits ever assembled It
also ts one place you can see
the yields on varieties of com
and soybeans and see some of
the machinery harvesting
crops Programs are also
avatlable for the ladies
Remember not to cut
legumes (alfalfa and clover)
dunng late september and
early October Many farmers
want to harvest the late fall
~rowth of meadows
Late
harvest should only be at·
tempted with esta bUshed
meadows, not new seedings
If such a harvest ts properly
timed and followed by '
mulchmg
for
wmter
protection, there may be httle
or no damage to next year's
hay crop Harvesting at the
wrong tli'De or neglectmg to
apply a mulch can result m
severe loss of legume stands
Two real hazards ex1st
from makmg a late harvest
1 Late harvest may be
followed by a mild Novem·
ber during which the
legumes make constderable
regrowth If thts occurs, the
legume root reserves wtll be

own 4 H club during the past
4 H year These members
were presented a pin by the
Gallta County -4 H Advtsors
Assoctahon
Th1s years
outstandmg club members
were
Ly nne Lew is Rock H11i
Ranchers Belh Yoho 4 H
Lass •e s
Angel
Nelson
Cadmus Redskms
Ray
Cl8gg Mountaineers
Ktm
Nott er R o Wranglers Troy
Oantels Centervil l e Elec
trans Rita George Morgans
Ra tders
Teresa Miller
Gatlta Cloverettes B1ll te Jo
Grosvonor
Puppy Love
Tralntng Corps
Natalie
Shang Rio Sti ver Thtmbles
Barb Hall Rto Rascals
Sandy Lakin Patnot Merry
Mak ers Oav d Garber Rto
Fnendshtp Allen Evans
Countrymen Laurel Henson

Maple Shade Kids

Teresa

Barcus Th tvener Ptoneers
Paultne Whtfe Cheshire Cats
and Ktttens Sandra Halley
Centerville Young Farmers
J u l1 e Durst UFO Shart
Davt s Sh 1n 1n On
Gary
Caldwell Tria ngl e Ang1e

Holt Rodney Rargers

K1m

Hemphill Northup Lasstes
Cmdy Sisson Gallla County
Fronttersmen
Debbie
Caldwell Our Gang , Santa
Call Rebels Kevin Knapp
Temperatures
Rtslng
Tammy
Knox
Country
Bumpkms Amy Pennmgton
Eno Satl On Pam Miller,
Cadmus Redsk1ns Teen
M1ssy delamerens, K 9
Korps
Mark Newberry
Ht ll foppers Kenny Patnck
Yellowtown Buckeyes and
Teresa Stowers Da1ry Club
Members who are com
plettng the•r last eligible year
tn 4 H club work were
re cog n1zed
dunng
lhe
evenmg's activ ities
These
1ncl uded Lenon! Spurlock,
Cadmus Redsklns Teen
Marvin Stanley, Cadmus

Redskms Teen

Jeff

Co~

Centervil l e
Electrons
Pau lt ne White Cheshire Cats

and

Kittens.
Connie
Continued on 0-8

I

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Lt Gov. Richard F Celeste IS a man
oo the attack He has seven weeks to dethrone Gov James A
1Utode1 and he Is going after the governor as if there 's only a
Week left until the electioo
,Last week, the DemocratiC nomtnee for governor addressed
a statewide meeting of the Ohto Muructpal League, and he
liOWided Uke anything but the Plu Belli Kappa and Oxford
ICholar he Is
•
Using incCllllplele sentences, Incorrect grammar at times,
and with a delivery not unlike Rhodes himself, Celeste spun a
lengthy jolte revolving around horse manure
Before the laughter from the punch line had subsided, and so
qUickly that the transition was unmistakable, Celeste bran·
dislled a newspaper and hegan talkmg about Rhodes' latest
campaign speech
The speech was about unfunded mandates on local govern·
ment and had been made the day before to the same audtence

VOL. 13

NO 33

PAGE 1-D

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1978

Postal employees
granted increase
.

GREGORY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -A
spectal mediator Frtday
awarded 500,000 postal
workers unlirmled cost of
Uvmg raiSes, a key jobsecurity clause for current
employees and slightly
h1gher
salartes
than
preVIously negotiated wtth
the POstal SerVIce
Although medtalor James
Healy S81d hts arbttrated
settlement was "fmal and
binding," the two largest
'postal unions affected by hiS
decision satd they wtll submit
the new three-year contract
for a ratification vote
President Carter had
By

pushed for an
antlinflallonary settlement, and
Postmaster General Wtlham
Bolger took a hardlme stance
tn negotiations to achieve hiS
goal of no postal rate
mcreases for 2\2 to 3 years
The negotiated contract
was rejected by the postal
workers and the ftve-month
dispute was submitted to a
novel 15-day medta\ton
process under whtch Healy
turned arbttrator and ISSUed
a binding decision when he
was unable to bnng about a
negotiated settlement
In his declSton, Healy htked
the first-year pay mcrease by

cost of hvtng mcreases
Healy also ruled that
current employees may not
be latd off, a key issue for the
umon but ~atd employees
hired after Frtday will have
to work for the Postal Servtce
for s1x contmuous years
before achtevmg such JOb
secur1ty
Emmet Andrews prestdent
of the 280,000-member
Amencan Postal Workers
Umon, S31d he thinks umon
members wtll approve the
agreement after they analyze
It
' It looks like the long hot
swruner 1s over / 1 he sa1d
"We got some of the things
we wanted m the pay package
and lifetune securtty "
Joseph Vacca preSident of
the 180,QOO.member National
Association of
Letter
Camers, S31d his unton also
will vOte on the contract If tt
IS reJected he SBid, there
Israeh helicopters were probably will be an illegal
ferrymg men and matenal to strike
the lsaelt-occupied Golan
Loome Johnson, prestdent
Hetghts while all' Ioree jets of the 140,000-member
flew overhead
National Post Offtce Mail
Handlers Umon , sa~d he ts
very unhappy wtth the
The reported border moves
came arrud mtenslfted but deCISion but will not subrrut 1t
still mconcltLStve bargauung for a vote
"He (Healy) spht 1t down
at the Camp DaVId, Md •
the
rruddle . but It was a little
peace summtt, where the
explosive crtsts m Lebanon bit toward the management,"
was bemg discussed along JolulSon sa1d
wtth the larger tssues of a
The
50,000-member
Middle East peace
Na\tonal Rural Letter
Carriers• Association ratlfted
has
alr eady the ortginal contract
Israel
threatened several times to
Intervene m Lebanon to save
Its Chrtsttan militia alltes
from bemg defeated by
THREE KILLED
Synan •peace-keepmg troops
CLEVELAND (UPI)
trymg to tmpose thetr
Three brothers were kllled
authonty over tbe country
Saturday morntog and
still dmded nearly two years
their sister was erlltcally
after the end of Its bttter CIVIl
Injured In a lire which
war
destroyed their home on
the city's east side
Officials said Timothy
The reported border
Jackson,
8, was dead upon
moves, along wtth fears that
arrival
at
a hospltlll while
the Camp Da YJd surrurut
his
brothers
lvorv. 13 and
would fail, sparked renewed
Carmeo,
1,
were
dead at
concern In Beirut that Israel
the
scene
rrught be getting ready to
Tbelr sister, Patricia, 17,
make good Its threats
found outside the burning
home when lireftghters
arrived, was listed in
guarded condition in the
Intensive care unit of Mt
Sinal Hospital
nearly $300 above the lirst·
year offer m the total 19 5
percent wage and oost of
hvmg mcrease negottated
ear her
'The 'msurance' ts m the
unluruted cost of livmg mcrease,"
sa1d
James
La Penta, secretary of the
un1on bargammg corruruttee
Based on a 6 :; percent
inflation rate, LaPenta sa1d,
the contract would provide a
21 33 percent pay ratse over
three years The package
would go even htgher tl
mflatton surpasses 6 5
percent
The prevtously negotiated
contract had llmtts on the

Guerrillas alerted

•

By NORA BOUST ANY
BEIRUT
(UPI)
Palestinian guerrtllas m
south Lebanon have been put
0:1 standby alert against a
posstble lsraeh a ttack,
guerrilla sources m the south
said Saturday
111e sources linked the alert
order to reports by villagers
of lntellSlve Israeli troop,
armor and air activity along
the border wtth Lebanon and
the occupted Golan Heights of
Syria
"Tile
Palestmtan
resistance has recetved
orders to stand by agamst a
possible Israeli attack," the
sources said
In Beirut, Palestintan
sources said Palestlman and
Syrian forces In Lebanoo
have been on alert smce
before the start of the Camp
o.vld MldcDe East summli,
when flghtinll between Syrian
peace-keeping troops and
Olrtstian militias In north
Lebanon triggered Israeli
threata of lnterventioo oo the
side of the Otrtstians,
The right-wing Phalangiat
Dauly AI Amal said today the
Palestinians were relnforclJ•g
posltloos north of both U N

peace-keepmg troops and
Israeli-armed, nght-wmg
niihtias m the south
The newspaper suggested
the deployment of Israeli
forces along the Lebanese
frontier was to counter
posstble guerrllla attacks In
the event the Camp David
llllks fail
We are aware of these
Israeli troop movements,"
commented an offtctalm the
Palestine
Ltberatton
Organtzallon's foreign
information offtce In Betrut
There are two poSSible
explanattons - etlher 11 IS a
move tn anticipation of
whatever happens after
Camp Davtd or tt IS thell'

usual autumn maneuvers "
(In Tel Aviv, lsraeh
milttary spokesmen refused
to comment on the reports
But privately, the sources
satd they were not true
Restdents of fronller
villages said dozens of Israeli
supply trucks and armored
cars were seen approaching
the Syrian frontier while
Israelt tanks took up battle
positions along the Lebanese
border
The restdents said that

I

.'
$406 million
is collected

COLUMBUS (UPI )- State
Treasurer Gertrude W
Donahey reported Fnday
that
million m state
taxes were collected last
month, bnngmg the twomonth total for the fiSCal year
to $682 mtlhon
That figure ts $56 mtlll0n,
or 8 9 percent above the
ftgure for the correspondmg
figure of 1977, the treasurer
said However, tax collec·
lions in June were runnJne
15 5 percent of the prtor year,
according to treasurer's

'406

Come in and see us about Roundup®herbicide
by Monsanto and find out how you
can get to the root of your weed problems.

..........
c-,

reports

CUI1Ul. SOYA

.&lt;

1\l..W!t."'S READ ~CAREFUlLV FOli.CN/THE l..J'8EL IM$1RUC'T10NSFOM: lt0r.r100P HEH~I~
Rw oodup• 11 4 oegolitefedtr ... lll .... ol ~Mnt: oCort~Pt'rly 5I Louis

THE D "!'R FREIIHMAJII ntniDC clal ~ lhown parlldpatlne In the trlldtllonal
''WIIkll'llllld U.)lolpltal,'' wiKh . . . piRe the llrll .... ol till ......-.The fnlhmen
tC'd 11J U. _... clal. TrldiiiGn dictlllllhatlf a Cllldle buml out, the .tudent
· - ' t IJf*•lil,llld If lbllllrinl by which 1111 the ntneaare allached brew, lite clau will
• fiiiiPIR- a-U. Willi tool! pillee on a wiiiCI,y mn~. the nur~~~are hoping 11'1 merely •

•

•CliD
/1\)

any way we can but not JUst handmg them money " Sam
smaller muntctpaltttes rrught not want the state to ass~
Cleveland
Then came another hardball about the stale Envli'Onmen~
Protection Agency - anathema to city governments wtth 1\
red tllpe Celeste hlt thiS ooe mto the bleachers
'Can I leU you somethmg?" he asked 'You mtght not
believe this, but I voted agamst the EPA Sure enough, when
he was in the Ohio House, Celeste voted "no" on the bill setting
up the agency because he was afratd 1t would pre-empt local
'
control in certain arellS
He satd he probably wouldn 't abOUsh It if elected, but that he
would change the way 1t operates
Celeste thinks he's gmng to wm the electton In fa ct, he
thinks he's ahead rtldtt now He may not be but he's
presentmg anythmg but a stiff, defensive tllrget for Rhodes to
shoot at

itntintl

reserves
(4) Mulch followmg the late
harvest Dunng some Win·
ters, ftelgs whtch are
mulched wtll have no heaving
while those not mulched wtll
have 90 to 100 percent loss of
stand Use up to 4 tons per
acre of strawy manure, up to
2 tons per acre of old hay or
straw, or stmtlar matenals at
a rate whtch will gtve wmter
protection and reduce
heavmg
Harvesttng New Seedmgs
- Harvest new seedmgs
whtch have made con·
siderable summer growth (10
mches or more) as hay or
pasture dunng late August or
early September Stock fteld.
to be pastured wtth enough
livestock to consume the
avatlable forage durmg a
penod of a week to 10 days
Grazmg for a longer period
may result m some loss of
legume stands
When red clover blooms
dunng the fall of the seeding
year, many plants dte dunng
the wmter Bloommg causes
a physiologiCal change m the
red cover plant, whtch makes
It less winter hardy In addition, excess summer and
fall growth which ts not
removed from the fteld will
lodge and create condittons
favorable for the developmen1 of crown and root rots
These diseases can damag~
new seedtngs Harvest new
seedings of red clover which
have reached a hetght of 8 to
10 inches by mid-August, not
later than September I,
regardless of the presence or
absence of bloom

" I want to talk about unfunded prorruses," satd Celeste
allow local governments to help themselves
Celeste's campmgn manager, his brother Ted, satd the
"I've honestly been so ~reoc~pled wtth education fmancmg
Democrallc nommee's ebullient delivery IS "a product of hiS that I haven't even thought about Utat," he satd
havmg been on the stump and ptckmg up so many good
Then he had to Sidestep the question as to whether a tllx
VIbrations '
mcrease would be necessary to fmance hiS upcommg
'He feels comfortable before his audtences," satd brotber education program He asked for two more weeks to fmtsh
Ted "He senses that people want a change and he articulates formulating that plan Rhodes had hiS education platform out
that change He gets miD a rhythm It feed. on Itself He smells before the end of August
VICtory ''
The Democratic nominee also may have squinned when
Celeste told the local government offlctals that !hell' prob- confronted head~n wtth a questiOn about collective bargalDUlg
lems are not eaSily solved, that Rhodes has tried to for pubUc employees - which makes many muructpal offtclSls
overstmpUfy things
see red
Then he stepped tnlo dangerous temtory, domg something
He satd he was for collective bargammg and commended the
Rhodes dtd not do the prevwus day He mvtted questtons from Mumctpal League for eventually hackmg a verston passed by
the audtence
the General Assembly last year It was vetoed by Rhodes and
There were some uneasy moments Celeste had to concede m&amp;jortty Democrats were unable to override
he has not thought about how to reform the tax structure to
He defended helpmg Cleveland out of Its fmanctal woes "m

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

Sales tax collections
contmued to show a gain over
the prevloua year of 14 5
percent, or $34 7 mtllion, the
latest report showed But
llate income 181 collections
for the month of August were
only ~.5 million, compared
with $'14 e millton fn June
Collections for the year are
running virtually even with
1m Hgures

~\
I,

I

FRESHMEN CMSS members at the Holzer School of
Nursmg mclude Front Row (I to r) , Richetta Kanouse
Shoemaker. Chillicothe, Lmda Barnett, POrtsmouth .
Karen Wnght. South Pomt Velvet SwtSher, Mtddleport,
Lort Young, Tuppers Plams Ramona Gtbson, Pedro and
leresa Palmer Ironton Seoond Row (I tor) , Jennifer
Dayhoff, Little Hocking Ellen Waugh, Galltpohs, Patty
Burke Wellston. Debt Walke Jackson, Teresa Meadows

• •

j

POrtlaild, Kim Lambert, Rio Grande, Sue Blarr,
Belleville and Rhonda Dudutt Portsmouth Thll'd Row (I
to r ), Dame! Malone, West Port•mouth, Cheryl Jones,
New Boston, Jane Saunders, R10 Grande Robm Barton,
CoolYJlle, Patty Schroeder. McArthur, Melissa Hudson ,
Pomt Pleasant , Marsha Garrett Ravenswood and
Jacquelme Young, New Marshfield

Orientation program begins
GALUPOLIS - The Class
of 1981 at the Holzer Medtcal
Center School of Nursmg tn
Gallipolis began thetr
onentat10n prog ram on
Wednesday, Sept 6 Twenty
two young women and one
) oung man were accepted as
freshman students
These students spent three
days Wednesday through
Frtday becoming acquamted
w1th the School, the com
muntty and the area
surroundmg Gallipolis, and of
course, the hospttal, all m
prepa rat10n for the openmg of
Fall Quarter classes on
Monday, Sept 11
Although the Freshman

Class seemmgly recetved the
greatest amount of attention,
on Monday afternoon Sept
II the traditional Stnpmg
and Chevron • Ceremony wa s
conducted 1n the Mam
Lounge of Davts Hall The
Slgmhcance of thiS annual
event ts to recogmze student
entry tnlo the Jumor and
Sentor Classes at the Holzer
Medtcal Center School of
Nursing Women students
recetve a navy blue band for
the~r nursmg cap and men
students a blue chevron for
the sleeve ol the~r nursmg
umlorm each of these years
A spec1al party for the
Freshman Class was hosted

on Tuesday evemng Sept 12
b) the JUm ors as a special
welcome held at 6 o clock m
the Recreation Room at
Davts Hall, the home of the
School of Nursmg on F1rst
Avenue 1n
downtown
Galhpolls
One of the h1ghhghts of the
opemng of the faU quarter ts
another annual trad1t1on the
Walk Around the Hospital,"
when the Juruors who are the
Btg Ststers • and Btg
Brothers of the Freshman
Class walk around the Holzer
Medtca l Center, makmg a
complete ctrcle, carrymg
hghted candles Members of
these two classes m thetr

untforms walk smgle hie
co mpletely around the
hospital, hopmg that thetr
candle flames wtll contmue to
bum predicting the sue
cessful completiOn of thetr
nursmg educatiOn
Followmg thiS uupresSive
event on Thursdav evemng,
Sept 14, all students returned
to DaviS hall for refresh
ments m the Mam Lounge
After a full 11 eek of
onentatton
and
tn
doctrmatlon, the Freshman
Classls sure to feel very
much a part of the total
School ol NurSing and the
senous part ol study to
become re gistered nurses
gets underwa)
In the Class of 1981
students come from three
counties 1n West Vtrgtma and
nme counties 1n the State of
Ohto One of the students
was reported to have a wound rece1ved her baste htgh
m the left Shoulder and a sc hool educatwn m New
wound to the nght mdex Gumea at Ukarumpa Htgh
fmger He was last seen School wtth a statement
wearmg blue Jeans and a T f~om the Ohto Department of
Shirt
Ed ucatwn wdtcatmg her
education was stmtlar to that
she would have recetved 1n
Thunderstorms
Oh10
The Holzer Medtcal Center
spread outward
School of Nursmiflias a total
Stubborn
thunderstorm s of 77 students, w1th 30 m the
spread outward
from Class of 1979 24 m the Class of
Lomstana
and
Texas 1980 and 23 IUS! entermg
Saturday ,
leaving school m the Class of 1981
floodwaters m the two stales
but none as damagmg as the
lethal flasb floods from the
Showers and thund er
same storm system that
showers
today, then clearmg
struck Arkansas Wednesday
H1ghs today wtll
late
today
A ftve·hour downpour
be
m
the
mtd
or upper 70s
drenched Monroe, La , With
Pmbabll1ty
of
prectpttatton
10 mcbes of ram Water rose
50
percent
today
several feet deep m streets
and made travel by car or
small truck unposstble
HAZARDOUS WASTF.'!
No deaths were reported
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohto,
but several m)unes occurred
Sen 1\rry Meshel, ()A state pollee helicopter satd
Youngstown, ts one of the top
crashed mto a tree as 11 took five producers of hazardous,
off to make a survey of the mdustnal waste tn the United
floodmg The ptlot was not States
hurt serwusly
Meshel's arguments
The Ouachtta Pansh
convmced the Ohto Senate to
oommunity of Welt Monroe send to the House his
was nearly ISOlated for a time legtslatton to gtve the Ohio
by floods that washed out EPA powers to draft and
bridges and lapped mto
enforce rules and regulations
homes and businesses More governing the disposal of
than 100 elderly residenta of
wastes
Guest House nursmg home hazardous
Under the rules, a special
were evacuated in Nauonal
permit would have to be
Guard trucks, boats and obtllmed
before a landfW
ambulances and taken to a
operator
or other waste
church haU Water flooded disposal company
would be
the first ftoor of the state
allowed
to
dispose
of toxic
pollee office
Industrial waste products

Escapee still sought
By TOMMY YATES
I ITTl.E ROCK (UPii
An elderly couple held
hosta ge by one of four
escaped Tennessee convtl1s
were freed unharmed tn
Kentucky and returned to
thetr rural Arkansas home
today "pretty llred from the
ordeal," the FBI satd
However the whereabouts
of the convict, Ronald Lyons
32, rematned a mystery and
FBI agents were centermg
the search in the Covmgton
Ky , and Cmcinnatt, OhtQ,
areas Lyons' hometown ts
near Cmcmnatt
FBI agent John Kenney of
the Ltttle Rock office satd Mr
and Mrs John Kmg were
freed by Lyons on Interstate
70 near Covington Frtday
morning and made a twommute telephone call to thetr
son In West Memphts, saymg
that they were headmg home
The FBI later cast
susptcton on the caU, saymg 11
d1d not make sense for the
Kings to he freed With their
car and for Lyons to go oo
alone t'he Kings• son also
said hiS mother sounded as tf
she were sttll "under duress"
and was evasive m their
whereabouts
The FBI said the call may
have been a ploy to "mislead
law
enforcement
authortttes "
But Kennedy satd the caU
proved to be legitimate and
the Kings arrived at their
Woodlawn, Ark. horne between 3 a m and 4 am
Saturday They submitted to
tlbort intehtews wtlh the FBI

and the Arkansas Stat•
Pollee before gomg to sleep
Kenney satd tt had not been
determmed why Lyons freed
the Kmgs and allowed them
to take thetr car
"We had to keep the in
tervtew sort of short so we
didn't go mto every detail,"
Kennedy satd
We stuck
pnmanly to what happened
and who was wtth them
These people have had very
httle sleep and they were
pretty tll'ed from the ordeal "
The Kmgs could not be
reached tmmedtately for
comment
Meanwhtle, dozens of law
enforcement officers
tromped through a heavtly
wooded and htlly terram m
north Arkansas Saturday,
hopmg to flush out another of
the four Tennessee convicts.
Larry Chtsm, 29, the rtng·
leader of the escape effort,
fled mto the wood. Thursday
after c. ashmg a stolen ptckup
•ruck and allowmg three
other hostages to escape
••As far as we know, he's
sitU m the woods," Arkansas
state trooper Charles Harper
said today " We have
resurnl!d the search with doP.
and roving unita and art
mamtaining our roadblocks "
Harper said three-man
umts unsuccessfully sear·
ched door-for-door for Chism
Frtday at about 60 houses
bordering Lake Norfolk
Chiam, a VIetnam veteran
who was a student at
Memphis State Unlverslty
Law School when he was
arrested for armed robbery,

-

Weather

•

.-

�I ·•

Sundlly, Sept. J7, 1971
. D-2-T he Sundllv Thnes"lentinel.
-

TELEVISION
VIEWING
SUNDAY , SEPTEMBER 17, 1t71
6:DO-AG-USA 4; For You ... Biac k Woman 8; This Is
The Life 10.
.
6: 30-Chr lstopher Closeup 3; Jerr y F a lwell 4;
In Black 8; American Problem s &amp; Cha llenges 10;
Agriculture: Food For Thought 13.
7:DO-Thl s Is The Life 3; Eddie Saunders 6; Dr. Thea
Jones 8; Treehouse Club 10; Newsmaker ' 78 13.
7:30-TV Chapel l ; Your Health 4; Show My Peopte 6;
Jerry Fal well 8; Urban League 10; J immy
Swaggarf 15.
8:oo-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery o; Grace
Cathedral 6; Chu rch Service 10; Christ for the
World 13; Little Wh ite Church on lhe Hill 15;
Sesame St . 20.
8:3D-Oral Roberts 3; Jimmy Swaggart 4: Celebration
of Praise 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Pre5ents 10; Wil lard Wilcox 13; ()pen Bible 15.
9:oo-Gospel Singing J ubilee 3; Robert Schuller 4; Rex
Humbard 6; Rev . Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts
10; Truth tha t Marches On 13; Ernest Angley 15;
Mister R99ers 20.

9:3D-What Does The Bible Plainly Say ? 8; 11 Is
Wri tten 10; Let The Bible Speak 13.
10 :01&gt;--&lt;:hrlsf Is The Answer 3; Church Service 4;
Glgglesnort Hotel 6; Chr isti an Center 8; Sesame St.
20; Movie " Do Not Disturb" 10; J immy Swaggort
13; Gospel Singing Jubilee 15
10 :3D-Rex Humbard 3; Yours For The A5klng 4;
Enest Angley 8; World Tomorrow 13.
11 ~ DO-Doctors on all 4; College Football 6; Rex
Humbard IS; Rev . Henry Mahan 13; Infinity Factory 20.
11 :30-At Issue 3; Fcx:us on Columbus 4; Face the
Nation 8; Fabulous Storybook Lady 9; Wild
Kingdom 13; E lec . Co. 20.
12 :DO-Meet t he Press 3,4,15; Issues &amp; Answers 6;
WVU Foo tb ~ll Highlights 8; Rebop 20; The Issue
10; Rev. R.A. West 13.
12 :3D-Marshalt Football HighlightS 3; News Conference 4;

1 :3D-Amer ica's Bla ck Forum 6 ; NFL lodav 8; Kids
Are People Too 13; Consumer Survival Kit 20;

1975 CHEVY IMPALA ...............'3195
2 Dr., P.S., P .B... AM-FM tape.

1977 CAMERO 6 CYL ...............'4695
6 cyl. , P.S .. P.B., low m ileage.

1978 MONTE CARLO ................'5955
P.S. , P.B., air, c rui se, one owner , n ic:e, lO,OQO
mi les.

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES
Located on

w:Va. Side of Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge (3041 77J.S777

a ct .

Black Perspective on the News 33.
2:DO-Aware6; NFL Foolblllll; Dick Cavett 20; To Be
Announced 33.
2:30-Anlmals, Anlnwds, Animals 6; Communitv Dav
Para.de 13; Child Abuse : A Time To Speak 20.
3:DO-Do-ll-Yourself Wllh Homer Formby 6; GrMt
Performances 20,33.
4;00 Movle" We. Were Straft9ers" 3; Movie "How
Sweet Ills" 4; Movie "Kiu Tomorrow Goodbye:• 6;
NFL Football 10; This Is The Lite 15.
4:30-NFL Football I ; In Search Of 13; lnsloht 15:
French Chef 20; We Can Save The Eagle 33.
5:01&gt;--&lt;:onversallon Wllh Robert N. Billah 15; Ironside
13; Forgive U• Our Debts 20 ; Movie " Antonia : A
Portrait of the Woman" 33.
5:30-Eiec. Co. 20; 6:oo-News 3.• : Andy Griffith 6;
One Person Too Late 13; Belter Way 15; Zoom 20;
Long Search 33.
6 :30-NBC News 3,4,15; ; New• 6; Fran Curci : Football 13; Movie ' ' Antonio :" 20.
7:DO-World of Disney 3,• •15; Movie "Lassie : The N&amp;w
Beginning" 6, 13; NFL Today 8,10; Chmielewski
Family 33.
7:~ - Minutes 1,10; Crcx:kelt's Victory Garden 20;
Life Around Us 33.
8:DO-Battlestar Galacllca 6,13; Evening at Poos 20.33;
8:30-Emmy Awards 8,10; 9:DO-Movle "King
Kong " _3,4,15; 10 :DO-Rostropovlch .'' ' the White
House 20;. F Iring Line 33.
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; Wall Street Week 33.
11 : 15--ABC News6; CBS News8,10; PMA Pulse 15.
11 :3o-Movle " A Kiss In The Dlitk" 3; Next Step
Beyond 4; Class of '65 15; My Partner the Ghost 6;
700 Club 8; Movie " Crawlspace" 10; PTL Club 13;
Janak! 33.
12 :DO-Movle " Jane Eyre" 4; 12 :30-Thls Is The NFL
6.
1:3D-ABC News 13; 2:DO-Marcus Welby, M.D. 4.
Movie Channel 4 · ·
5 &amp; 7 P .M. -One-On-One (PGl
9&amp; 1l P.M. - Exorclsfll : TheHerell c iRl
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,1971
5: 45-Farm Report 13; 5:5o-PTL Club 13 ; 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:25-Publlc Aflolrs 10; 6 :30-Columbus Today 4;
News 6; Sunrise Semester 8.
·
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:5o-Good Morning, West
. Virginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck White Reports 10; News
13.
.
7:DO-Todoy 3,4, 15; Good Morning Amer leo 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10.
7:3D-Schoo11es 10; Sesame St. 33; B:Do-Capt.
Kangaroo 8,10.
8:45-Thls Week In Kanawha County 33; 9:00--Merv
Grlfllri3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15; Emergency One 6:
Hogan's Heroes .8; Match Game 10.
9:30-Brady Bunch 8; Famlly Affair 10.
lO :oo-My Three Sons 4; Edge of Night 6 ; All In The
Family 8.10 ; Dating Game 13.
10 :3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :DO-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13 ; Elec.
Co.20.
11 :3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13 ;
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33;
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12 :DO-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; America All vel 15;
Young S. the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :3o-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Bob Braun 4; Search for
r.
·
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33.
1:DO-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:00-Qne Life to Live 6,13.
2.3o-Doctors 3.o, 15; Guiding Light 8, 10; ] :DOAnother World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6;13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Faces of Communism 33.
3:3D-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; EconomicallY Speaklno
20.
4:DO-Battle of the Planets 4; For Richer , For Poorer
15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame
St . 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13.

Nolit'cs

Auto Sa l~•-

:'&lt;iutin·•

.

ot1d :.cwmg tnachinr
te-pou polio, and ~uppl1e1o . f-'t( k
yp m•d dl'llve1y Oawi~ Vou:~uru
(lf'O"~' .
mtle up George!.

3W • t-1-'I::R

IUf.l mAU 310CK
(" All :/ol~ - ~::, 14

l'l

Coll44b-04!tl
ANI'IQU~~

bought and sold.
Anl;que&gt; . HI . J),
f.ladney Coli '14!1· !MJ~

WI,Je &gt;

Plt:RCI:O 1--Rt:l:
WI lH lH~ PUHCHASf OF Sb. YS
I: A Nft l NC.~

GRAI\IDOPENING
Sept. 18thru Sept. 21

lo Pet . Ottonattgre~rl w are
poured . DraW ing s lor G ift
Ccrt"it icates.
Classes. firings, · r etail a nd
whol esale.
9: 00A .M . - 3 : 30P. M .
E ve ning Hour s
7 P .M.· lO P .M.

TAWNI:V ' ~

Mon .·Wed .-Thur .
Clused Fri. &amp; S un~ay

J&amp;J CERAMICS
41 cour' St ree t

19i'S PtNrO RUN .A80Ui 4 cvL
44 000 ;,lies. $1500. 9Q1 -3b II

B~ONC.:O 4 -wheel
Y'n7054 .

drive .

Sl~SO .

llil70 CHI::VY IMPALA JSO . $4~ .
99'1 · 7704 after 4 pm ,

~ H I:: l L TN~AS U Nt:

a diamond hom
l awne~
Jeweler s
lor
a
l ifetime . Whe th er
it' s on
engagemen t , weddin g set or
dinner rin g . sh e 'll wE'~ll II with
pride . From $99.50, kush Ia 424
Se&lt;ond Ave. U 0 -1015 .

~OMME RS GMC
TR UCK S. INC.
133 Pine St .

!971 (HfV~OL H IMPALA. Good
condilion . Will toke trades.
1977 MONZA
SPYIJEH
JUS
engine . l i}le brand new w1th

fO HSALE O H THAO E
Ford
Van . co mple tel y
customized . extra sharp, best
o ff er. Or will al so con stder
tr ade l or Cor ve tt e . Coli

IY78

·cvervt hing . 742-2tt2o .

l or the orr e .. t and convic t ion o~
pe r son Ot person s w ho br oke

1n lo t h~prope rt y on Storys Run
f.ld . tind ~.to l e , 'J lVs , 2' guitar \ ,
100 ft . ol h ose. Ple a se notif y
the Sher tlf's Uepl . o l Gallio
I· aun t,.

Suprem~ .

(!)ood shope. 992-70ft:/ . fl . 3 ..
P.H.. om AM tope . air .

44b -43b0.

197!1 CAD ILLAC Et L&gt;ORAOO. fu ll
powe• . ai r . A,M -FM radio .
Clean P h one992-74b1

1%b THUNUt:HBtNIJ,

seo;s ,
window, a nd d oor locks . MW!t
con d i tio n. $1~ 95 . Ca ll 381:1-841:18.
or 38 8-8!&gt;83 after 5 :30p m .

I f.J7S PONTIAC A STNE h9 tchback .

d, ,

buc ket se als . aut o ma tic. New
rodiol s a nd betler y. 30 m p .g .
949- 228:J .
11175 COUGAN X N 7 . $3800 . tvenings 992 -7843,

4:30-Little Rascals 3,15; Gilligan's Is . ,8; Brady
Bunch 10.
5:Go-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Sor Trek 4: ;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers 20,33; GOmer
Pyle USMC 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat
Junction 15.
5:3o-News 6; Sanford S. Son 8; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogon's Heroes 15.
6 :OD-News 3,4,8,10, 13,151 ABC New• 6; Zoom 20.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett s.
Friends 6; CBS New• 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7: oo-cross-WIIs 3; PM Maqozlne 4; Newlvwed Game
6,13 ; · Marty Robbins' · Spotl ight · 8; ·News 10 ·
Gilligan's Is. 15; Almanac 20; Know Your School~
t

1975 OA l' SUN PICK UP. Good cond ifion . $2795 . 98 5-3979 .
1'173 VOLKSWA G~ N

TLI: .

1

SUPH! BI:E ·

J97'J. FOHU GALAZY 500. Call
4 4b - l 'l03 Or 446 - 1577 .

I YTl GMC THAClOR, Cummt n s
eng ine , 13 11o p d . Also 191]
l' rL,Je heuf tr ailer. J O h ., good
shape. Wil l sal e one or bO th
Cali 3 8H-Ei o4bY.
1973 FORO Xl l" ', T. P3 . PB . au l a .
good t ires. radio . Shar p . $ 1900

7:3o-Thot Nashville Mu•lc 3; Dating Game 4; Muppet
Show6; Match Game PM8; Wild Kingdom 10; $1 .98
Beauty Contest 13; Nashville On The Road 15;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:DO-Little House On The Prairie 3,4,15; Welcome
Back: Kotter 13; Unknown War 6; WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Person to
Person : Selected Interviews 33.
8 : 3~allon Petticoat 13; People 8.10; Turnabout
20 ..
9:DO-Movle " Audrey Rose" 3,4, 15; NFL Football6, 13;
MASH 8,10; A Good Dissonance Like A M&amp;n.20;
Opera Theater 33.
9:JO.....{)ne Day At A Time 8,10; 10 :oo-Lou Grant 8,10;
News 20; In Performance at Wolf Trap 33.
10 :311-()ver Easy 20; 11 :DO-News 8, 10; Dick Cavett
20; Over Esy 33.
11 : 15-News 3.4,15; 11 :Jo-Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "The Band Wagon" 10.
11 :45-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; 12:Go-News 6,13 ; Janak I
33.
12:3G-FBI6; Ironside 13; 1:15-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:3oNews 13.

Coll4 46 -1:1 5l 2 .

446 -0940.

197 4 C H~ V V CAPRI CE : 197l Chevy
' • T. pic k up. Co ll-446-7133.
197-t PLYMOU TH SC AMP . b cyl.
a uto . Co ll-4&lt;46 -4977 .
1979 FOfW TNUCK . SbOOO . a nd
197tl f ord car , $bOtXJ . Coli

44 6 &lt;:104S.

JCff7 BUICK Nt:GAl . PS. PB, til t
w heel , AM -FM ste r eo-Ce ss .,
Michelin ra d ials . 1b .OOO mi ..
v inyl top , road w hee l m ags .
l ik e new . Ru st p roof app lic a tio n . Co li 4-46 -3865.
1~ 71 FORO lTD . exc . cond

1974 PON TIAC CA TALINA , 400 cu.
in .. exc. con d : Co ll Jbl - 7 ~98 .
IYT! MU STANG II , . 13 .000 mtl es .
e•c. cond . Colt 44b -Ob4!:1 ail e•

6pm .

new

ti re s. Ca ll 367 -0541 .

OLO S CUTL ASS S UP~ tM~
HRO UGHAM. cru•se c.onlr al.
A C. f-' S. f-'8 . A M -FM stereo top e
vel ou r in terio r . 40-60 sea l . (oil

t976

1453147~ .

.

V ~G A .

goad

cond it ion . Pt-1'

446-2793

cJ

·v.a;

1975 JI:: £P NI::.N £GA0E
5,
AM -EM tope , mOg w heels, new
tires . new top . exc. con d . c•Ot'
446 -3731

.. '

t9b8 VO LKSWAGEN BHTLI: . $300 ' '
Call-4 46 · 2721 o r 44 b&lt;JJJJ.
• ,

1 9~S CHI: V ~ OL H

1 ~7~ Toya~a :

Coi i 4 46 -BS I9.

1977 JI:H J 10 fliCKU P l ovof
rn ileogo , eJCc , cond .. Ouodro ,
!roc . auto matic . low rangeselecto r . bed cop. SbOOO. f irm :
Col i 1£:16-4000 o tte r 5 :30. call
4'B6 -4095.

CUN SHOOl . Ra cine Gun Club.
l:very Sunday 1 pm. fac tory
chok e guns o nly .
A V AI LA IU ~

QHI VIi R

to

bus

!9'17 VOLK~WAG t:N , good cond:
Coi l o ·t~ · n/:18 o h er .4pm .

~

•

19/ 6 MAZDA PICKUP, -4 cy- 1. 1 4
spd .. Oi r cond ., Pioneer 8 !ro c'
stereo. low m il eage
Co•l
446 - 43~7 .

1973 M~ RC UR.V CAP HICE . b.cyl. , ~
'&gt;pd., good gas mileage , l ine
spor ts car . Co ii4 46-.43S/ ,
'

~~w

PH . 446·4145
Greenwar ~ .

fi r ing

and

Duncan Prod .

HclpWankd

• A 82

"A 74

• Q92
• K Q J 10

· Vulnerable : North-south
Dealer : South
Weot

Nortb East

Pass

3 NT

-Pass

Pass

'·

• • • •

By Oawald Jacoby
aad Alaa Sootag
Most bridge players would
open their fourth-~st diamond against South s threenolrwnp contract.
Today's West believed In
leading a major suit and
~lected a heart on the the·OI'Y that his partner was
:more likely to be long In the
suit that West was shortest

!1-1&amp;-B

• K7

• AQ
tK1053
• AJ976
A reader wants to know if
we violate the rule that an
opening notrwnp must be
either 4-3-3-3 ; 4-4, 3-2 or 5-3-32 distribution and bid one
notrwnp.
Our answer Is a resoundIng perhaps. We do with
some partners under some

circumstances, but in most
Instances would open one
club.
!NE WSPAPE R E NTERPRISE ASSN . I

:ohance to go wrong and
'Sbuth responded nobly .
·-·He covered the 10 of hearts
:.With dununy's jack and
:-of hen East played the queen,
·South could not wait to win
' the trick with his ace . .
·- SOIIth went right alter

-

ART CRAFT

CHEMICAL PROCESSING INDUSTRY
PR(ICESS/PROJECT ENGINEERS
CHICAGO AREA

Ste..-n Chem iullwn ll lll ... prOCiucr d lvenit iutiGII, c ot_.ar~le 5flll il_itv,
v rowltiPiftet'tl ltiCI receptivity kl ne w tde~~· Due to I IIPint ton I~
promtliONII ld'l'l ft Ciment, we' re sHitlnt lmb•ltou s, cr ta llvt Procns
,.reject Eftl lti H rl .
ovrr 1 ptc~trowth hi.,..lithtld by th• doullln~ol ot.tr ul~t vot~o~Me o'l'er 11M
"'''tour v11 n 41 rtct our currenl ll lens i'l' e ll ,.ndltun In p.,.nt e• p~•ulon
..-o lects hli created a nMd tor exJIIorleMid P rDteu-Pro jecl Ent'" " "
.., challent lnt. h lth villlllliiV JIIMitlo"•· These pnlf ~Ofll comb l"t ,ocus
1M IM'Oiect rftltOI'IIillillllll to ti"~• yDU klla t ruponttblllly tor 1M ~o l ed.
YOtot will 1110 cttve lopprocen tmproYemtnls ln bottlllaiChlrMI COflhnuoul
_.,.,tofts In our c:Mmk al p.-octu inl 11n1. You witt need • ISChE
*trH•IMI ~· IC! yer1 procen-Drtitct eaPtritnct .

IN OUR PARKING LOT

cl\allentlnt !MIIniOfll ort acc:omptllittl 11:1y outsflnd lnt cornlnctuct int bonus 1nd prollt sltlrint Pflnt, dtntal ln·
wrance, etc . F04"1mm_.Nite cent •ratlon. tend vour retum• wutr 11t1rr
ftitlory 1fld eJ ptct4tt ions, ln confidence , Or CALL COI.LECT ·

The

kt

,-n:tlon'~•cltltlt

\312) 446-7500

pion ~ pfl tl fl ( Cnllj lll UIIIQ o•dti( CI
tt o n
p•ogtotn "
o ••
M~
hPhVOI Q I OI
lop .c ._,
&lt;d ! •!ltdy
jll n1t aud10
VI'-UO I l110ti•r •nl '(• rc f 01 M~ f o etit ry 1,0, (11 1(''. f o r
&lt;on t tnu•ng c d urnl•on fo1 lu •&lt;•ltll
lk1 1 h( •lu t ~
" f&lt;O '( &lt;rt l
t (• lor,-.d
h (•lrl
('llrOII C'\,.''.
Ill
lf'lri t&lt;· d
M a~ l e • ~o r d oc to ral p• og • o•n ~
ptd f' l tcd . M u., t ht- w oiiHHJ to
" ' 1 0(0 1~• Ill o •tlo t•l ( omh• &lt;d qo • n •
Colltpo lt '&gt; N u1p tn on rh fll l'.&lt;
11on w ~ olmy Ot ~4 OUO lor HO " ..
tun e
ll •ng e bcnd,to, ~wnrl
ll~., um e by ~e pt e .. &lt;bPr
IU I t&lt;
I' 0 Or ow er 84'~ Ath e r~ ~ l)lu o
4 ~7{)1
An C'&lt;tuol o pp or tun• ty

AU10 body and
p•epetu h o r~ 111011 . Apply m pP •
!&gt;on at H1ll 11o Ouolity bocly ~hop
M·ddlcpo•l

l:S A IW~ IT HH in

my ho me, Bidwell
ar ea , 'J yr . o ld Wi ll prov ide
l ron spor to tton . Call 388 971~ .
OV~ M ~~ A S .
Au!&gt; l rolia .
Alr ico . 3out h A ttler tCO ~urope .
e t r . Con str ucti on
S o les.
~ ngi n ee • s . C lericol. e tc. Sl:IUOU
to $50 ,000 pl us . hpense,. po•d .
For employment inf_o11norioh
wri te Ove•seo!&gt; tmploy m ent .
Bo• 101 1, Bosto n , Mo. 01 104' .

WONK

WANHO

!:IAbY~liiUI

~ dov ~

a

weroh. f to b Wtll pay S1 J
weeh.ly n t my h ome 0 1 W1lllo~ o
~ OI Il l!Q II O l 01 1001 11 , b001d {)lid
wage!&gt; . '-11./'J b'll8oft et 6pm
30Ml:.ON~

10 do hou!&gt;ywork . a

worn on Ot o

g~t

I 9'4'1. :l fU4 .

!&gt; lOt!

dr•/t ep ll.'qiJIIPd
Ill
&lt;•du&lt;alion o• h eul th

c· •npl oye•

M lN l ALIY JH: lAH:OlU adult~ o•L'
111 n('ed ol fa"&gt; I&lt;' • (Q t e home!&gt; A
!:-Oio•v ond bcnefil ":&gt; wt l l be
po&lt;d lho., ,., 011 111 homP tab !ho t
wil l h t, ru •l 11 tt ... Ide ( h o11&lt; ell. o f o
WP &lt;I tOIIy r Ptorded . f-01 m ore tn
fa • tnet!i nn wr1_te 01 coli
l o., te r Cote

OUU ~ Ma in St
Jo r k o,on O H 4~640
o t4 :m~ /161 (Logon )
o t bl4 ~ ~1 6bUH (A th en!&gt; I
f q110I Opper Iundy l-. mpl oye r
C. ~Nl~AL

LAI:!O~

wr oh. . Co li
'-N / :J:.J /'j hPtwf'f'n 4 orn to J 30
pm

A FUTURE TO COUNT ON
17 to 3 1 year olds.
Tra i ning with full pay and

Immedi at e opening for eJt per ien ced strippe r and -or
c a m e ra
p e rs o n .
E x-

to

p er i e n ce

benefits PLUS tra vel and
adventur e in th e· u .s.
Navy . Call or stop in : 22 1
Columbu s Rd •• Athens . Ph .
S9J-3S66 &lt;Colleen

WANTED
Dental Chairside
Assistant

Call 446-7474

RN
The Chillicothe Medical Center Hospital has
immediate opening lor registered nurses on
either lixed or rotating shift assignments .
we offer c .. mpetiti ve salaries, excellent lr ·
inge benefits and shift differential , in cluding the opportunity for continuing
educ'a tion and tuition reimbursement . We
also offer a refresher course in phar·
macology to interested R N as a part of our
tofal nursing program .

i nclud e

on e

of

Ohio 's larg es t
printers . Salary comm en sura te

with Pxper ience.
E xce ll ent fri nqe be n efits.
Send r esume of pr ev i ous
CMper ien ce and salary
hi story to : BOMholder , Bo x
2.,5, Hin c kl e ~ , OH . 44233 .
All r epli es confid ential.

Medical center Hospital is a modern 230
bed hospital with excellent faclities and
working environment . For more Informa tion contact the Director ot Nursing or app ·
ly in person to Medical Center Hospital,
Chillicothe, Ohio 45601. Ph . 614-774· 331 I.
An equal opportunity employer .

The Good year Tire &amp; Rubber Company's POint
Pleasant Plant located at Apple Grove in Mason
County is seeking,qualified applicants for the following
position :

MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR
Seeking a career oriented i ndividual with a
background in all phases of industrial maintenance.
Applicants should have pr evious supervisory of fi rstline management experience. Current opening is a
salaried po sition

(Rotating Shift)

with excellent

benefits.

Please send resume or contact:
Personnel Department

The Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
P.O. Box 9 Point Pleasant. W. Va . 25550
Phone (3041 576-2041 E&lt;t . 280

GOOD/iEAR
An Equal Opportunity Employer

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
ACROSS
t More compe·
le nt
6 Wing s
10 Sle nder
14 Thi c ke t
19 Charg es
21 - dan ce
22 Yearni ngs
23 Em pty
24 Gerem o nies
26 Pou rs
28 Co mpe te
29 Cy prin o id
iis h
30 S pec ks
32 Appo rtio n
33 Vessel
34 Pedal di g it
35 Gr e a se
37 Do mes ti ca te
39 An cie nt
40 Te nn is
stro kes
41 Floc k
42 Deposi te d
44 S l upe ly
46 C hu rc h ser-

e red
75 Bib lical
dancer

77 Da nish island
78 Table t
80 S ta ge whi s·
pe r .
8t Ab s tr act
being
82 S tigma tized
84 ~dit
86 Expert
87 Rene w
89 The kava
92 Sh o wy
llo we r
95 C hoose
98, Kiln
991Spell
101 Squa nders
103 Bro the r ol
J a cob
104 Pe rl o rm ed
105 Telegra m
106 No le of sca le
1Q7 Ye s : Sp .
108 Tak e out
110 Tra nsg ress
vice
111 Span ish arli·
47 Basins
c le
48 C o ndu ct
50 Kin d o l go b· 11 2 Rock y hill s
113 Mass iv e
le t
p5 Sun g od
52 Pee l
11 1-Gi.(l's na me
53 Pa id no tice
J-1'9 c ompas s
55 Colorl ess
poin t
57 Arm y o lii cer:
120 Ire land
AbbL.
12 1 Gluin g
58 Lug s
124 Hall quart
59 Tie
' 60 Not e ol scale 126 Winter ve h i·
cte
62 Cover
127 Counlry
64 Drall ox
1
bumpkin
66 Hawaiia n
128 Pow e rful
hawk
pers ons
68 Gre ek le tl er
130 Do ve c ries
69 Aff ec ti on
132 The sweel·
70 Tear
sop
71 Maul s
73 Bu gle COV· • 133 Spec k

MO~Il~ Horn e Po1k
JJ north ol Pomero y .
I 01 g e lo ts . Co lt IJ'fi 74 79 ,
~ou t e

The

J ANO 4 RM

Canc.e r

A m enc an

'-i9')

se-l ec ted Will be d tr echn g
the mult i -ph ase progra ms
of the societ y . Mu s I have
som e ofl ice elC p erie nce .
Prefer som eon e wi t h ex penence tn commun ity ac t• v• t, es 1nvotv rng c ommtf tees . A pp r ox. l 4 h r . per
week . Sa l ar y open . t Equa l
o pp or tun ity
E mpl oyer) .
Send res um e to Bo x 111. c-o
Gall rpol is Daily Tnbune .

134 Young in sec t 17 Spanish m e n 92 Fool
93 En th us iasm
18 F1n 1s hed
135 S ic
94 Symbol lor
20 - machine
137 Dil lseed
tellurium
23
Neck
p1eces
139 J ack o r
96 Son ol Adam
25 Pierce
k n ave
97 Melody
27 Asser t
140 St rokes
100 No te ol sca le
28 Ma le swans
14 1 Di sease
102 Swi ll
· stra i n
31 Merganser
105 Pari of s peech
33 Foreman
143 Levan line
36 Expired
109 Man 's name
ketch
· 38 Man 's name 112 S la lema les
145 Le tler
40 Yo un g gi rl
113 Goddess of 146 Ready
you th
41 Workma n
148- wa ll s
114 All
150 Sea nymphs 43 Be au ty
(s lang )
116 Collec tions
152 Gi rl' s na me
, of facts
45 Op ened
153 Sheel of
118 Ox o l
46 Ma1d glass
Celebes
47 Yearn
·154 So la r dis k
120 Ingred ien t
49 Be s pa tter
156 Seal
12 1 Severs
51 Interval
157 Chemical
122 In name o nly
co m pouncl
52 Streams
53 Sw• ss moun - 123 Africa n an 158 War god
lel'o pes
tain s
159 Rage
125 Form ol In 54 Walc h lace
160 Sou lh Ain ·
surance
56 Slad 1um
can Dutch ·
126 Ogles
men
seats
127 Repetition
59 Assaulted
129Pe ru se
60 Co nllagraDO WN
131 Sowe r
tion
1 - shower s
Fruit
132
61
Footless
2- pa11y
133 Femal e
63 Stun ted
3 Textua l
horse
65 Final
4 Old Fr e nch
13 4 Baseball
67 Poem
coin
te am s
69 Behold'
5 P e ru se
136
Has tens
70
Correct
6 Hebrew
138 Tr ials
72 Stri c t
mon th
74 Roma n gods 140 Yo ung
7 Yo un g boy
sa lmon
76 Place o r lhe
8 Re gion
14 1 Wea t her indt ·
sea l: Abbr .
9 Enve lop
ca tor
77 Anoin 1
10 Church
142 Br islle
79 Du tc h lawn
cou ncil
144 Ba b y's bed
83 Devoured
11 Native of
147 Edga r A.85
Hope
Lalv ia
t48 Eq ua lily
86 Repai r
12 OffiCe
149 Lair
87
Was
bo
rne
holde rs
151 The sell
13 M1ss or Mrs . 88 Bad
153 Pa rent: Col 89 Th ree-toed
14 Ja rg o n
loq .
s lo th
15 Wo rt hless
155 Sy mbol for
90 Tome
leavi ng
nit on
91 Prove rb
16 Sham

~434

1WO !UIJI-IOOM
on ly 94'1 JJ'l4

trader

Adults

Yard Sak
G ARAGt 3A L~ . lhu• !. ~ f-11 '-1 ? _
', rm l e h om Ho lz'" r H o~pt tol a n
kt lbO
IJ

YOU hove o !&gt; e•v•( e l o o fl er .
wont to buy o r "'ell .. orn e thmg ,

oe loo k•ng f o r work
. or
whatever
you II g e t te sull!&gt;
lo !&gt; ler w1lh a ~en!inel W on I Ad .

t'o r lh·n l
~l~ ~P I N G

furno:; h cd ond u n ·
opts
Ph one

lur n t"&gt; hed

Soc 1ety need s a partti m e
eMecu t ive d irector tor
Ga ll ra
County , Pe r son

CAMERA/STRIPPER

h a lftone, lin e work , spot
a nd &lt;1 color stripping , Join

for

(OUNT~Y

EXECUTIVE
DIRECTOR

100m!&gt; for 1ent

Golloa

Co ll992 21J6
GAI-IAGt ~AL L lh u • ~

Ho te l
~ L HP I N G

WOOM~

h ou~u k ee pi' n g

AN[)

l1gh t
f'A h' l&lt;

•corn s .

nNlloiALH01H
~UW:NI~HW '1 bedroom
Adul t!&gt; only
lease req
tnqutre at 3heppord 3a l e5 ond
~ e tv• c c hr st and Olive

NICH Y
opt

IH&lt;AUI:!UWY
H~NlAL J
Apart mf'nh Adult s on ly No pet ~
446 - 0'~ ~7
~UR

and hi . 9
to 4 . ~ogy sueo, l Man o r off CR 'JB
or 1op o l to ~ t err'l H ig h Schoo l
hd!

3UI-'H1 YARD ~ole Ue pr es~ion
and pre!&gt;~ed gl o !.~ O d lamps .
M cCoy ond Hull art . Clo thes.
rug~ cu r lo in":&gt; . odd!&gt; ond ends .
~e pt I~ 1~ I/ 1--t rs t hou se on
1 tght on Un 1on le11oce o ff o l
Un10 11 Ave 94:J:J8UJ

Monday and lue sday
I(J 4 41 J )prtng Ave .
Porneroy (ool 31o -, e . s.ln ks ,
boby c l o t h \9~ school clot hes
lo t!. ol !lli '&gt;C 1.!92 62U8 .

YAI-IU ) AH

MOB I L~

HOM~

Coli

440 - U 'J(J~

IMMl:DIA 1l: P033l:~ S I 0N n•ce 'I
bd1 home m Golltpoli s. N eo•
hu ~llle'&gt;~
section
no pel s
t cn tc1 must k e ep home cleon 11.
nea l Mu!&gt; l ~ upply re f etences
1 en I!&gt; f o, $11~ per mont h W ( d e
bo~ I Utl ~o lribun e

3MAl l l:f- HCI~NCV . centra l au
and hco t One ge ntleman onlv
Coli 446 -UJ:JH .

._ut tl •o, hed Apor tment . J rooms &amp;
b&lt;ith SIC!) uti li Ires po•d . odult ~

YA~O

)Ali: 770 ~ycomo re St. ,
Mod dlepo rl Mon lues .. Wed .

Plwnhing and H e ating
C A~H~ ~ PLUMHING

ANO HtA 11NG
Cor . f-- our th 8 Pr ne
Phone 44 1J.JI:Hni o r 446 -44/' T/
~1 ~NUA H U

near HM C Ph 446 -441 6 ohe1 6
p m.
H OU~ L

5 11 n11o and bath . lowted
a t )8 Mill (ree k . Call 440 :J8'10
0 1 440 - I J-40 .

l'WO MO BI L~ HOMt L OT~ ', rntl e
h om ~~ 'I on Add•'&gt; O,, l:!ulo vdl e
Hd Call 446 -J'"I/)a olter .1 :JU o r

o••ytune :,oturdoy 0 1 ~undoy
HOU~I::

b room~

Adu l t\
Opm

Coli

SIJ~

HI-

f-UI-'N

un l urn 5:.000
44() 44 1b a lt £•J

lm

~u• tobl e

Uti l tti e~

pd
Coli

I

p er 11oon
446 4416ofte r bpm

Plurnb&lt;ng - Heol •ng
'I!~

37~1

G t-Nl PlAN 138 ~ON3
1-'LUMI:!ING
Healing
A rr Con -

d•ttonll)g 300 f-ou rth A ve . Ph .
440 I 6J 7
OtW11 1 3 PLUMBING

AND H~AIING
floute lOU at !:vergreen
f-'hone 4Jb 2'"/J~
IJfiAIN &amp; ) !:WI:fl CLI::ANI N G :,HI V I(t O pen /4 Hr 7 day s a
week
~ lo r&lt; het
&amp; ~on
Ph
1)6 1391

lWO ROOM~ •n o co untry hom e
I tJ tm fr om C.allrpol&lt;s Ptele •
!etued couple 0 1 tw o rJ;" tu ed
lod• es· ~h01e ut&lt;lil&lt; es Coo lung
pnvledges . Call 1)6 1146 even
1119 ~

Thi rd A ve . 440

FARM AUCTION
Sat. , Sept . 23, 10 :30 A.M.
Torch, Oh . Tak e Rt . 7 NEW

M08 1 l ~

HOM~

~~

on

Col

141

a f Pom e r oy .

J/9 24b9

Partial Listing

Fl..tkNI~ H W

APAIHM~ N \'

JJ ',

Co urt ) I Idea l lor bachelo r at
l Ouple S1b0 . Coli 440- 101~ or
440 114]

Uf-'31 AIR~ APr . 4 t m !&gt; . ov edook
rng the po r k . Adu l t onlv In qui re o t JS8 ~econd A ve .
l'WO 8DH T~Ai l ~R in Che~ hir e
A du ll s only Coil 307 -7J29 .
ON~ !:10~ APA R 1'M~N1 ,

Sl2) . per
mo . S~O . deposit . Co ll446 · 1~n .

~AVt-

big [) o you r ow n run an d
upho lstery clean.ng w tlh lilu e
Lu":&gt;lie
Hen! elec lr •c shom ·
1

pooe• S1. Cent1ol 3upply
HlV~R~IIJi:

AI-'ARiMtNI'~

bedro.o m opt. S 11 J mo . plu s
e lt&gt; cll ic Monthly lea se-,. l::quol
Opportunity
H ou!&gt;tng . (all
992 7721 for appoi ntment .
ON~

tU:OH OOM
992 -25'1 !1 .

m o bole

horn e

l"WO !:IH&gt;HOOM trade r . 992 -:lSJ(J

Mr . Elli s i s selling his larm
&amp; will sell : va rous fa r m
machinery &amp; farm too l s.
Ga r den

ti ll er ,

ridi n g

mowe r , good push power
mower , household goods in c lude Ph il co fros t -free re f ..
E ar tv Am . q ueen size sof a
bed , Lane ceda r ches t .
beds, chests, ai r cond .,
Mayt ag wri nger ws her ,
dr yer, Wa r m Morn i n9 coa l
stove, dishes. etc . An t iq ues
Vic t or i a n
&amp; chair w ·ca ne
backs, nice wicker desk. &amp;
chair,
p ain t ed
oak
secre t ary
desk,
'1 oak
t ab les w -Ig . legs, di nn er
bell , o l d came r as &amp; e qu i p .,
sm . scales in box, cher r y
c hest: A laddin la mps,
f inger lamp , 31 pes . swi rl
Fostoria . unusual stone,
jug dated . " 8'1", m u ch
mor e .
&amp;

Collec t ib les ·

settee

o fter ) pm
HOU~~

l-OR rent. Country home
4 bedroom 2 b ath s f-lee ga s ,
~ f./124 . Port land 843-21 11 .

Eats . Not r es p . fo r
cid ents.

Term s:

ac·
or

Ca s h

ck . w · ID .

ROOM S. fUllY equippE.&gt;d kitrhen ,

rooms . bo th ond
linen scrvt(C
newl '( dec ma ted and carpeted

";

l &lt;v ing

~ hewers

~en

wee~..lv

R o be rt C. Elli s, Own e r

C. E . SH.ERlDAN, AUCT .

'13b7

Ph . 61 4-448· 4263

'·

.4at .

.

Corporate EmpliiVmlllll Representative .

, Stepan· S

'

·-

0 1'V( 1 10p Ill '&gt;f'I VI(,I• tf\•. r &lt;t UIIOIIUI

pt o l £'!&gt;:&gt; &lt;011

bXP UHt:NUU

I O W ~Ul/l A

l iU NAl
D! VH 0 1-'M LN I wdl
oo •por t to p•Otr&gt;(t d, ,, ., lu• l n r
IIHHI IOI l e to1d nt1011 p&lt;O(jlfll ll

MR. ART ARENS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19th, 10 A.M. TIL 8 P.M.
.'NO

lOO ~IJINAI O ~ :,

l'W O

I.A .
The lead gave South a

HOLD YOUR

'J

(o il

South
I NT
Pass

•to

HOUSI:: KHI-'t- R1 wonted fo r b pn
ho use . 'J adul ts nn chdclren .
Coll4 4() &lt;140'1, for rn t N v i ew .

pictures . Cost will be S15.
Call Frank Hill 446-2970.

cluos. w~s( took hts a ce and
led a sec~d heart to give
East four heart tri.c ks , South
a headache and North a case
of the screaming meemies
North wanted to know why
South didn't lei East hold the
first heart trick . He explained in no uncertain
terrrui that there was no
special bonus for winning
the (irst trick . South should
have known that West had
led the top of a short suit. If
East had been allowed to
hold that trick, South would .
have had all the time In the
world to knock out the club
ace and make at least three
notrump.

You hold :

Opening lead :

I HtHAf'I:U IIC Dll-liCIAN H D '. o1
£• hg oh iE.&gt; . (o n-..,1! wi th 1npahenl
and outpolt ent!&gt; an llU I1 1tiotl !&gt; .
(on r o ~ l :
~ep.o n nQ I
Dept .,
Ho l zm Med •c ol (C'nlm P 0 .
BoJC 100. Go llt pa l t., Oh 01 roll

concerning nearly SO years
of research with . many

A.. too costly tirst' trick
NORTH
!1-16-A
• K75
• J 92
+A KB
• 97 4 2
EAST
WEST
• QJ 94
• 106 3
, 10 3
• KQ865
• J7
tl06543
• 63
• AU
SOUTH

lJfUAMING 0 ~ o whtlc- Ch!i!&gt;lrno !&gt;
with ;. no brlb'' Wondeflul to
!honk a bout. h u t •I cou lcl lOin(.•
tr ue. Son t ov Ladic~ h o .. IO!&gt;"'
In you• hornl' o• by ordet!&gt; fr om
you• If temb to1n l oy~ a net gdt..,
l ree .
Nornf'
brand l o y.,
1('o sa n ob l v
pr i{ cd
with
quo ton tf'C . C dt ~ l or the whq iP
lmmly
f o • m fotmO fiO!l t a ll
'f4 'J ·nn or (/Y'J 7036

10 WOHK i n •lt y 1 lt.-on
lou nd•y CtO"nt('J Apply in pt!non
at ~catch Clean Coni fi r

Are you Interested In lhe
history of Gallipolis . I shall
soon offer 5 - 1'h hour·
ledures and ~·2 field triPs

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Hdp W al'lcd

HdpW a ntcd

4 4 6 - ~10~ .

BRIDGE

rt

, ,, ,,

...

Classes Begin Oct. 2
Days &amp; Eve nings

Saturday, Sept. lf

truck . 19b7. Lam brett a mo tor
scoo ter . Ca ii 446 -7TJb.

INVITES YOU TO

PROMOLlA CERAMIC
&amp; ECT .

'"'

"

'

_ l AOit-~

to a nd f rom Ga ll io ·
Ch r is tian School . Vin ton . Ohio . R.N . 1-0H IN ~ UR A N n PHY~ I C A L ~ .
'" hove l New Limo Hd .. to Har po rt t ime . se t your own hau• ~ ­
risonvi lle. 143 to Ill. 7 to HL 174
lu Go llio Co . 3en d r e!&gt;umes to
ond 37S in to Vinton . 7.42-1008.
Po n omed tc Jim Ki11ik , 1-' .0 . ~o•
1'1'13! . Colu mbus . OH 4J'J:I'I
EltH CLOTHING
W h o do you
know
th o! likes beautiful
clothes th at co n·! pay todoy's MA N ~X I-'~ H ii:NCI:u'" in cot1Ht' l e
pr ices? Gr eat d eals now being
and ronoete b lo c k wo rk to
', offered. "'1 49-7718 . 9'n -:Jq41 or
re p air
l a u ndo t io n .
Call
097 -2327
440 -047J alter 4pm .
• . c h il dren

• •

lc.l'l 4 G.C _
VAN . 195 1 Dod ge

Channel Cable s 7:00 P .M. - Paul Gaudino
7:30 - PPHS at GAHS Football
10 :00 - 700 Clyb .

SH OO Tt'NG M Al CH . t- ork~d Run
Sportsman Club. Sept 3 ond
- -e"e ' y Sunday there alt er . foe -

_; .

I Y7b G RA NO .PRI X SJ . p .s.. p .6 ., •
p .w ., cruise c:o n ., tilt wheel.
om -lm rop e .s tereo . o jr cornt:-.
new rodial ·tlres. elCC. cond . Col(
&lt;4 46-0391 alt er Sp .m .

T1

1973 NOV A HA TC HBA CK . !&gt;mo ll
V-. auto ., PB. PS . good t i r e~ .
mech an ica ll y so und . SHOO. Ca ll
446 -85 12'.

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Hollywood Oldie ( G l
9 &amp; 11 P.M. - I Never Promised You A Rose Garden

JY7b OLOS CUTl.ASS S, 4
seda n . 3SO V - ~ - d isc brakes . PS.
oir
cond.,
"Yifiyl
i n terior .
b uck ski n co lor in and our ,
tinted glos$, gouge$, clack .
ra dio, spor t wheels. fu lly rus l
proo fed . 38,000 m iles . S392§.
or will consider !rode l or eq_uol
value. pick up
tru ck . Coli

cond . ·s i SOO. Coli

145-9158 al ter 7p m .

33.

CRl

exc.

po~er

Help Want~d

Notitt•

NO HUNTING or trespassin g on
m y proper t)' wi lhou l per m i s·
!&gt;ion , Judy McGr_o w ..

Hours: 8 om to b:lO pm

19"14 OLDS CUTLA SS

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
tory choke gu ns only .

4-46· 2S:i2.

949-2703

S300

D-3- The Sundlly Times-Sentinel , Sunday, Sept. 17, 1978

.

or 'c~ri- '171 II .

)1,171

NO HUNl'ING on W illard Sheet!&gt;
proper ty on Midge Rd .

~~WA RD

lruck Headquarters
1976 GMC ', T.
1YTJ Chevy 1 • T.
1Y7) (hev., air cond .
JY7:J ford Vdn
1Y74 ', T. Chev. PU
197J HOO ford O~mp Truck
IY76 f-'tn l o
1Y7~ ', T. GMC
1Y7t Chev . '' T. ~U
JYTJ Ford Von
197SGMC I T. Truck
1fol7b Ford '• L Truck
Bedliners, heavy du ty , rea r st~p
bump er .

tros . $1'100 . 992 - 7~9 . oher 5.

JI::WHt:R3

'

NEWGMC

J.lhone

IY7S MONTl CAHLO. loh ol v)( ·

t A N~

' YOUf.l

I-IICKUP

9'1'1-b 191 after ~P-"'·

7UAV~blo

G~l

OAl'~UN

1974 VW B U~ . "I pO$Senger . lf!J7)
~ord
Granada .
Freemon
W•lliams
Minersvil le , Ohio .
f.JVJ . 7b91 after 5 p"l ..- ,

(II Y CAD

(n•ck kef . Ph . .44b 0294 ,
l HUNMAN HOU\l , ant iqu es , f-'ur ·
nil urc st • tpping . repair ond
1clini~hed . County Nd .1:1 off J:)
Center ... tll~ Vi ll age . ClosOO
Monday " I ue10doy . ~ v~ n i ng11o
by oppomhnent . 14!1- '1.479

1'1'14

IH:MO VAL

Auw Sall't

Steoan Chemical ,Co.
EdeM &amp; wtnnetu
NGrthflekl, Ill. 60tf3

COMMERCIAL OR PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS PERMinED.
•
•

HECK'S FLEA MARKET SALE IS FOR NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY.

Here's a "home loan" bank
you may be overlooking.

PUBLIC AUCTION

LOCATIONS AVAILABLE AT HECK'S PT. PLEASANT STORE ON A

You don't have to be a farmer to
qualify for a 'rural home loan from the Land Bank .
We also make loans to non-farmers who live -or
want to live- in rural areas. A Land Bank loan can
be used to bu)( build. remodel or refinance a home.
It features long tenns. prepayment privilege without
penalf)( and reasonable interest.

SATUitOAY, SEPT. 30, 1978
1:30 P.M.

'

FIRST-COME BASIS TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 19th FROM 10 A.M. TIL
8 P.M.
'

.
,,
..

'

•

IAcaltd acre11 11'11111 the Rodney M. E. Church an
stole Route SSI In Redney, Ohio
A 7 room 2 1 tory House will be oHered •t 1'\rbllc
Auction The HouM haa 7 rooms and bath. storm
wlndowi. aluminum siding , garbage disposal. Fuel
otl furnace . Schelrlch birch kllchllll cabinets. The
first floor 11 ..-actlcolly all car. .led while the
u stairs hM hardwood floors . -The R•l Eatote
(fJX1701 will sella! 1:30. The auction ot. Household
lt....,l and Antiques· will stort at 10:30. Any one
wllhlng to view the PI operty before Mle day shOuld
-tact !he owner.

Stop in ..• let's talk over
your house plans and o~ lcian plans.

T ma : Cash
· Lunch Available
er
AMI bell Failure, Owner
416-2341

Auctloneen LH Johnson
I

•·

.

. .

•
'1.!•
....

Crown City, Ohio
2566740

-;~'UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOUS. OHIO

~.

'\

PH. 4464203 "

.

,

�D-4- 1 he Sunday Tunes-Sentmel Sunda) Sept 17 !978

[)-5- Th41 Sun&lt;l;ty Tunes-Sentmel Sunda). Sept 17. 1978

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Business Services

~ ~

~

M O HIH H 0 Mt ~ Pt PI Po
' ant W Vo b t&lt;~ d 1-fe~::k s
ll,li'J
ood m o ~
ld I( ()4 'I

a

bud roo n
I~ I"J

t&gt;o o 1 14 _.~~ bO 'l bC'dr oom
l.il"J V flor 01 14). b l J bf'd oom
I bo H

'~ /l l o.-e

11 y ll
~t ot .,
o

t %~

hf' I

11

~~J

bPd o o m

17

:-

bO

J

k•od o d oi l ' YI-1£'!:. a t &lt;.. ot t I •
( ll ~o ~ o Wo h s I c t M o r
"'
Po r Pra y 9CJ ') J!Wl
l U f.?h' OU G H ~

~ l:N ~I

MAl It
or
ac h e
Pho ('
'f&lt;~J :Il!&gt;o
l hE' lJoly ~f'll ~ ~
l lou 1 ~ tr pe t
Po ,~ o y
010

J

q

r

1

tl by 1b
~ 'I
w heeh P
!:.:J!&gt; 00 J I UO • I b W m te-1 I f' .,
pr S!&gt;U UO Coli f./~'/ l h'l'l
l.&lt;t:JI U: H V Y ~ O H' po t ~ CJ7J V e ga
10 10
Hoy fo
~ni P
S H' o
ho ~ 0 t ~ J' &lt;l lJ o r 949 '1 8:1 0

... UN) AND a Hn o l ar ge d '&gt; COu 11
~ h o t ~ ~ e lls
'l2 l h' '}") M a g
l i C A ll k d ~ o l t&gt;w or d u sed
~ hot gu '&gt;
f ie!&gt; hand gur 5
~a e l
e ., you don t eve 1 n eed

r o 1ey We tra de lor o l m o~ t
o yrh 1g ~ f e- s ~ :Jro M d
d c por r 992 / 494

I N S T~UM tNl ~

ho 1!&gt;

gu ilor !&gt; I lute !. {l01 nel !i Iran
b n nf' ~ etc
1o !&gt;PI I o• II orll.'
I lr ~ ~ l •d M ddlepo I

IYt tW HIIIII' ~ PO R 1A Bll: ~ e lec:
I •c go • g to ~ell o I ode them
to o h i f' ~ ~ Jrd M ddlepo • r
W L l ll&lt;lto

UAbUN
ol9:J oltc

l t,l / -1

o l') 1

lJ Al liM ~ ~! O N ~ :.ad g o v( l
cok 1.,1 ch lo d "' le I I I f:' doq

Ol

MU~I l Al

&lt;14')

lOV~

Pho• e

PICKUP
~p n

and nol&lt;"h ng
r ho
o 1d ollon on Bed o o
u rc A I Ike ew
"',. eel It r
0 rl t 0
C/4Q 'Jlb

f' lA IU

Sf'OI

N ~LALL I o 1~ w th l trpe
loy ou! Co ple re w 1'h o tl sw
~ h us h ou~e &lt;bur ch laci er e5
t!oou r l ui ~ &lt;&gt;I I o r ~ wop for
r o 11peo ol e qual "'clue ~ec·
Hn .... e y l ea n o 1d PO l:lo .. 6:J
Hoc ne Ohm by Wa gne Ho rl
w o e ~t o ('&gt;
W!N l l:H P01A10 l ~ grade I and

'} ( W Pro H II Portio 1d Oh o
~ WH; l

P OIA 1 0 ~~

Red wtl te
Phon e EJ &lt;I :J l&lt;~J;J
Roher t W I e w •s fH 'J Roc £&gt;
&lt;, f.! 1'1.1

o 1d yellow

Hf!'d lJf!'l c ous
&amp; G o ldF' De IC ous oppl es J: tz
~
Or chard
~H
btN
po l
b 14 bi)Q :J 7 ~~

G RIMl- ~ GOl lJ~N

~AI{

CO RN $2 pel' bu Co 1
I ~:; li e SJSO J L&gt; ~o ~ rnow g
ocl •ne $700 ln t Bole r $1400
Alr er tJ pm col QijJ41JI or

'1 6~ J~J7

lY / 4 ~ lHUlll to tal ele ctrr &lt; ;;
beo d oo m wa sher o 1d dr yer
l u rPl ~ h ed
u nderp nned
or
t t.c oi l eplo cf!' e111celler ! co1
d ho
SIO 000 or b e!&gt; l ail e•
ti L') ~ 7r d A yl:.' M•ddlepo t I ~
cu lr depp lreea• $200 1969
Cheo" y n po lo SL~O
ro• ll e vr o et p do.yp J
~p eeo d J~O ong ne J t 1ch Heese
h tel
t ,. celle , ,
cond 1 on
Phor e Y9'l ~J.4tl

Y 7b

ON~ OO U I:U~ boWl
6 nk cob € t un tl

po cle n tap
Ik e new
$1 t.O 0 e ga s dryer LV lb
cnpor ly go ld I I. e new $ 150
:J pr opo e g o ~ heo re ~ good
&lt;and r o 1 One SJOO one $700
747 Jl 17 ah cr ~ pm

ODD &amp; ENDS

SHOP

111

Gtgant1c Storew1de Sale up

to

50

Pel

Oft

on

merchandiSe
Lay away
now for Chrrstmas

ODD &amp; ENOS

SHOP
Rl 1 Moddleporl
992-6173

-

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

SPECIAL

$129!1

Any U S made car -parts
extra 1f needed Excludes
front wheel dnve cars

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

$~OFF
SPECIAL

PR I CE
Ex p•r e s
5( pi 30 978

Ca ll now for appomtment

Pomeroy Landmark
~"" J!ck W Carsey Mgr

-·

~

Phone992 2181

191/ VOL AJ.I t PfUMIH~ 4 door .... 18
en g ne OU IO P ~ P B 8000
oct uo m les SJbOO W I J No .... a
7 dr auto b cellent co d t on
P ~ P li S I HOU 1'/i' 4 Apa r he
e n t p r lo ld d ow
I "e glm:.
JJO• el s S N:l ~ qcn :Jbll
PILK YOUH O WN
H!- D ~K I N
Pl:Al HtJ S 1:1 lb Me
1ue ~
I h, &gt; ~
tf fo b Wed ~or
Jun I o b t!r 1g co r to 1e s f
you wo t ro u ~ £&gt; step ladders
h
g you o wn You p el&lt;. op
p e ~ co l1 ng soon Wog ne J: r u I
~or n toy no 1 01 o '}
11l e..,
o ff
Rt
)~0
On
0' 0
0 14 14 4 :JJ I]
CO M~ INt- All ! ~ ( helme r ~

l w th
J h (&gt;o d ~ ~ dra g type d sc fr o t
end lo ader l or a Mf- J ~ ~{J I
c l c .... ot o r
bru s h
h o~
cui po d &lt;. ('r
A ndrew
Lr o ~ s
lf'larl~all s '1 47 /'HS'l

R t L t~ ~RW

AMU!IlAN ~ ad d l e
bre-d
Geld ng
Aulo n o ! (
wmhP b 4 b 9H :.JLqU

111 /J HRR Y l R A i l U~ ;n It A C
all nu l ow Hr g powe • cor
\O o
l:!&lt; ce lle n
&lt;ond I or
~4 "00 I , 4 Goodyear l 18 1~
C!:. and whe els oppr Oll 700
le-. S. :JOO Lo 1 I u npe t w•tl
case f&gt; J&lt; cc lle n cond t on S1UO
/ 4'} lba l

No rlte go a t b
old lo I Y9 1 ~ 90/

~ 0 ~ ~ Al~

190 HONU A C ~ ~{){)
~ pr
119'} Jl:l li'
Cl l AN

tor~l&lt;

tor :;ale

tor ~ale

~A I?L ~

no rth ~

lo I ail e•

~cc d

l or &lt;O&gt;' e
c op o Iced Pa ul ) Oyr('
f c r ria 1rl O h o H4 J 4~'11
Y

A VO N YO U &lt;an go to wor~ whe n
the t. d s go to H hool bell
A .... on You o;e l you r o wn hour ..,
"0 you ca n be ho Tle whe 1 the
t. d s
home And he horde
you w ork th e n o re you c orn
lo ll todor Ann Thoma s A von
U s ll c t Manager '/ 42 'JJ54

9"'

tN l l RNA 1 ONAl ~00 do1er 6 way
b ad f' W 1rh &lt;; l e e r ob Co n
p PtPiy
l wo lo. ed
l ke ew
W !I tot. I ud e ~ ~ 4 q 'lU;j

~ ARMAll

B llr!Jirl node l l ook,.
ond un'&gt; l1k e 1 c w Wtl l tolo. c
t ode!&gt; ~4'1 UbJ
8 and n ~w
H£&gt;ovy duty JU It hov olcNo lor
I.J 49 UbJ

~ ~~ ~ D~lNOIT OI~ SH w 1h du tch

o,dgcor bolf $1SOO 10401r 4
~ lru c turol p pc
Vood Plo '
e d S\OOo loo t l oi 'J.JUIIJ

H II: N L&gt;oy old or stall ed legho n
pull e t ~ ovatlobl o .,ou llry H ou ~
1 ~ ond Aut o 110! o n Moder n
Poult r J1.J'I W Mot Po 11eroy

All lVPH ol bu tdrng motenal !!.
h ock bnck sewer prpe!&gt; wm
dews
I nl eols
e tc
Uoudt:.
W nters Wm Gronde 0 Phon•
lHI:

IN 1-UHNII UIH·
h ee ht mol e!.
I 1 k up and delwcr y !let VICe
cal l M ow rey s Uphols ter y Pt
1-' c aso n! W Va b l~ 41~4
H~ ~1

WHAI 1Ht: INUtP~NU~ N l~ HAV~
;wtMM IN G POOl S and suppltes
I HA 1 1H~ II SHH~ OO~!:,N 1
t grou 1d and abo ve groun d
l)O~~N 1
I A f O RU O AIR
HtJlfllA Y POOL &amp; Hun trn gton
~Y; I~M
Heal tubes r h r a u~f
w Vo Co li J04 429 4188
,..
l J. '}
e .... en ng~
I eo r t o f ~ rove a d on opt ronol
I
blower
~ W I MMING P OOL~ lrl ond obo"'e
Muffler
Brakes
9 c unei fu ll se r"' ce Supp lres
blowe r
Shocks
T1res
and poo l:. n stock U Bv mgord
I' tNl~RNAl HA Hl~
lr on sfer s
• ('r Sole:; :.11 i' 11 Nobel ~um ntt
hea l to the slo"'e :surlore
ol
Battery
p th e ch 1 ney Moe hea t
Hood
Mtddlepor!
Oh
Co li
II
Installation Servoce
4Y'l sn4
I o 1
len
wood and les!o
&lt;resole too
Pomeroy, 0
Ph "2 2141
U~W lRACIORS
J lOCAl L~ nAR GUA H ~ N lt~
3-15-tfc
M!-1 J~ U ese l
M FIJO 0 escl
Mode n A!&gt;hlo nd Ohio
Mfl 5U 0 esel Mf LJ~ O•esifirl
.J lOWER I'R IU 100 SJHO op
Mfl 6~ I) ese l
MF 18~ Ot ese l
I anal blower $ 1.5
MF I I J~ L&gt; ese l Cob a r and
OUAUlY WOOD H~ A 1 L H~A P In
Heater
Mtddleporr ~rom th ~ rn ddle o f N~W ~ UHU IMPU:M ~ Nl~
low 1 go down M 11 St to l ony !. M I Y Bo ler MflO Ba ler M l'l:/0
DURING OUR
Lorryout and turn down the
SEASONAL
~o l e 1
Matthe-ws J.lo tory Sc y-the
otl ey or turn do wn :Jrd A "'e and
CLOSEOUT
MFB6U ~em • Mour1te d 6 bottom
make th e 1st let t a smol all e-y
plow MfS lO 1L drsc Mf'l 2
ne • t to State ~o Ill Sunday 1L
row cho pper
MFJ9 'J r ow
oo 1 to :J pm Soru rday 10 om
plo t e r s
me cho n1 c ol
to 4 p n A PI-'AlACHIAN S 10 V~
t onsp lanter S HINN ~ 1RA C
LO
•RED
lOR ~ALI:S
ROOF PAINT
Pho e 45tl I b30
ij WHK OlU p g ~ 949 'l(J40
L ~ O N W VA
I
19i' I YAM AHA X~ 650 A l ~ h ope
99'1 50 1/ alt e r ~ p n
CHIMNEY 8t0 C K ~
b u ldrng
19/6 I~ ;J!JU Surukr motorcyrle I
mo 1e11a ls Gall poll s Bl ock Co
mor e hor se
Coli 985 337:.1
44b '118J
\
weekd ays f.J am to :J p m
84 J J4q l
eve n ng~
and AIH B~ I.)S lor an ex tra bed f olds
wee~ end s
tlat lor 5to rag""e \ rdeol fo r
l RUU( PA IH ~ Atr bog CUll' I 01y
recreo r onol use
All ~ le~
Olf e smglc 'I speed OliiP and
av
o
lob
e
lor
b
n
and
~nvder
lO
R
3AH
OJ.!
l
kA
L&gt;t
Bu
r
1as
!&gt;
Ira ne ~speed gear bo x front
1-urn 9~~ ~econd A ~ e
property n Goll rpo lr!&gt; for for m
o• P 20,. 10 I u ?s d esel no lo•
cqu •p nenf lo I L~b W3B after 111 77 HO NUA CB 550 Kl e"c el le nf
po ts All fr om 196Q ln!crna
bpm
ReStdenttal and commer·
to 101 Model 1 8~0 l:&gt;'en ng ~
co1d I on $1300
HHM L o ll
ctal
Call tor estimate '24
7 41 J093
440
'1"13
1
47~ KAWA!:,A KI ~00 exc ra nd
Hour Sen11ce
Any day,
l o 440 6689
Jb E&gt; lec lr c stove J/0 ~ s he ~
APPA l ACHIA N STOV1 ~0
anyttme
M ddle port
Lo we st pr ce s greates t se lect on
~!: Hl A P~ Hl-t: l l
S l ~ ~ PU! MA 1
Phone 985 3806
quo ty wood or co 9l sl o .... es
H~~ S f S ANLJ ~ O UNP A l i ON~
J:O UR IJ ~S Crager ~ '1 wh e le
Jock Gonther 985 3106
New outle 11 M ddleporl o il
CO!tBIN AND !:,NYD!: H ~ UR
te1e d
trr e!.
I:Jrond
1ew
Mtll St beh nd lony s Cor ry
NITUJ.lt:
r,t~~ ~ !:C O NO A V ~
742 '182b
Out her y Sun I '"J 10011 to
GAL li PLI~ OH
JIAN) BARGAIN LAND Where
:Jpm Col i t,98 i'l91
e"'er yone ge ts o lair deal Open New Ideo lorn Ptck e SJUO Ph
LA Y N~ S Nt:W AND U ~I:D FUR
44b 44 /j 4
q to 5 d orly e)(cept ~ u day I]
N lURl:
Chester, Ohto
BoX3
to 6 Mo n ~tr e e ! Hutland
SIOU liMO!: IN AUOWANU fOR NlW
10-30-c
Ohro
I
YOUR Oll.) )UIIl: WH[N YOU ~obr bed s Sb5 So fa 1bed and
BUY WA NY N ~W liVI NG J.IOOM
1HJ.l~~ WHH lUi
~ran d
new
chn•
SIS()
solo
cho r
~U t H
PHilH !:11 AJ./1 A; lOW
motor
Good I r e!&gt;
SJ5U
o&lt;k ll!t
olio non
J tab le!&gt;
A ~ 51 99
Wll H 1kAOI:: f.! H:;.
99'1 7HJ2
tamping Equipment
;~ 0 0
l:! ed r oom
s utt e ~
S'lYY Ri l l- ~ N~ W A NI) U~~l.)
Sl6~ S'"J50 SJOO $500 ~ar Am
14 INLH (JUPi ~ AH port abl e co o•
~UJ.INIIUH!:
8~4
~ ~ lO NO
so fa and cho 1 $JOO modern !HAVEl lHAil i:R .for sale 1912
telev• sron Sl '/~ loU 99/ l ~] ]
&lt;1 46 9~2:.1
Mark 1worn 19 ft 142 2Sbb
so lo cho r loveseo t su~
t ~ r-:001 FI B~ R V LA~~ boa t J~
reel n e s 5100 and up lobles 1q 74
PROWLER
2E! h
Self
Jc.l 7t HONDA '1~ d r t and rood
h p John son no tor and Ira ler
SW £-Od ~w t ,.e l rocke r !&gt; $80
b ke loll J8B 8470
co n tamed Sleeps b 742 1517
SJOO El4J 4ll94
Maple or pu e able 4 chnrr ~
JQn lro,. e l t ro ler U H Ac I ully
SnS
Hutch
SJOO
I pc c.n Ht:AOY ne11 t season w th
tN l ~ RNA ltONAL
~A~MAll
H
Care f ree owmng~ orr condt
!. e l f
co1 to ' e d
carpe t
d
11e
tt
e
$
()9
~
pc
drnette
cu lt vo ters
~em mo un t ed
I oners H Y
orn t l ree2e of
thr oughout like new s~ ~ ()()
~~~~
~ pc dtnelle wt~h "'w ve l
1 o wP •
E:l d sr 8 cu lllporker
1:JU l:lo!. lton 0
CO ON ER S CMAPfR S Ro nbow
rh
or
s
S300
Bu
1!..
b~d!i r on
8 b us h ho g pull type wago 1
J.1 dge CH 28 lo Bo!&gt;hM
pleru
SISO 5275 5 215
mot
HH ~l L Alf- Mil K COW $400 Coli
and plow B dr og Phon e e"e \;
tl eBes or box s prr n g ~ ftrrn
Jl:ltl 8tl44
g s 74] ']tj /1
S ~O SbU S70
ea ch
&lt;op to m ~
l (j i' 6 HONDA JW :l 400 actu al ~~N HlANKUN I-IR~PLA U S i'~
bed sn ~ queen se ts $ 1 1~ ~
Call l4' ~]26
n les
Orn 1g room suit e
drawer chest 549
9Y2 :.«J il:l
LitJOO USI::O
l&lt;l 7b KAWASAKI KZ 400 load e d
UOZfR WOf.I:K e .. covo hn g land
Lhe ~ 1
ntg hrs tand
L&gt; r ye1 s
~ IJOO tr m 19 // Hor e y Oo,. td
cleo • g Ph 44b 0051
r onges freezers co ffee and
so n ~p o r s le r XI 1000 low
CHA
IN liNK f ENCING WOODEN
end tabl es TV s beds tab le!&gt;
l1 leoge lo h ol d11 ome S3400
n
:NCING
AWNIN G~
!-'o li o
Ia
1ps
sew
ng
mochme
o
ther
Ca ll 44b 1025
t Qver s
Ault s Hom e lm
t cm~
Coli 446 OJLL Monday
~C H OOL liMl: AGAIN
provement s Ph 446 Jb(JI;I
Let Pomeroy Landmark
thru h day 9 to 8p n ) o1urdoy
Help
your
ch ldren
h e lp
soften &amp; (ond 1t1 on vour
~ to ~ pm 3 mr out Bu lo vtll e Rd
~A
C KHO~ DOZ~Il L&gt;llCHUI and
themse&gt;l,.e!. Wo rld Book an d
water w1th Coop water
dump !ruck Conc rel e work
Ch
ld
Croft
loll
b7~
Jll~
softener Model UC SV I
"anted lo&amp;v
Harl eld Ba ckh oe ~e r Rvtlond
~ ~ V ~N PC BH f AKfA ~l ~ ~1 10 It
O h JJh l 4] 200E:I or 4Ab 2786
Now Only
CH
P
WOOO
Poe!&gt;
lllO )(
c h e ~ r lype f ee1er Borh n "'er y
d•o ne ter 10 on l or ge ~r end $8 liM ~S l ONE gra .... el ond sand All
good cond Loll446 4414
Let u s test your water
pe r len ~undled slab 56 per
s 1es A t Hr chord s ond Son Up
FreP
J&lt;Ufj HONDA HAWK 400 auto
on l.le lr ve red to Oh 10 Poll et
per H1ve r Rd Gall polls Oh o
0
1:100 m le s (,ke new under
lo Jolt '1 Pomeroy- 'l'n 2689
Co ll446 n l:I S
wo r ro 1! r lall2)6 ~~ I
IIMB~
H
POM~IlOY
f
are
s!
Pro
A
A A l0 NHIA C 1 0N~ Backhoe
~... Jock W Carsey. Mgr
OHII: Nl A l BAMI:IOO dwo1f ond
du e l ~
lop prr ce l or ~ la n d ng
doter dump tr u ck Work done
g ant grows n or outdoor!&gt;
Phone 992 2111
~ ow t mber
Coli 992 ~&lt;lbS or
br the hour o• by th e JOb f or
I mtled supply We e r edomg
Ken Hor by I 4146 8570
fr ee est mo tes Co11156 1921
o v r gar d en Co I 44b 44 16 a l te r
OlU f-UHNITURE ce bo .. e~ brass lW IN IHVUt~ MA RINf 30i' Upper
I X 10 M~1A l BUill&gt;ING Co I
Oprn
bed:&lt;. ron beds d esk s e tc
Wv4:! r fo! oad Ch r y~ l er So l e~ 8,
~4b 44 i' 4
I OW H~ 1 AKI:OJ:f G ~Hl ~O~ A Gf:
co mplete household~
Wnte
~e r vtCe Comp le te Hull Repa r
l:K7HI f-1 corne r ba r 4 ~ wr ,.e l
!HOWER
w 1h prpe
Cal
M L&gt; M Iter Ht 4 Pomeroy or
Custom bu th trot lers Phon e
sto o ~ S7~ Coll 440 6~6 1
44 0 '1 41'1
co li 992 1"160
44b &amp;6 5~
Hl: AlW A Vt: wood heotng s1ove
MO I O H ~
OLO COI NS pocket wa tche s
HHS~
1fll:N CHING SEH:VICE
a e year o ld Lorge lue o I fur Ore 10 HP 3 phose 3 4~0 llPM
c a s~ r tng s weddrn g bond s
water !.ewer e lectrrc ga s ( ne
nou! good co 1d t 011 ~ no I
o 1e 'I HP J pho!.e 1i'!:iO llPM
d om ond s Gold o r stlv er Clol l
or d1lches 11 tnche:&lt;. wtde to S
fue l o f ur• or u '11-:J go fuel o I
Coli J79 '1404
Hoge Wams ley 14 2 1331
ft d eep Waterltn e hookups
ro k or d a von u ry rro er
Col i al ter 4 p m J6i' 7560
POOL
lAI:lU:
Cal
44
b
JJ46
oh
er
W
~
PI
C
I(
up
1unk
aut
o
b
odres
bvy
c all Jb 7 t
' pm
mg unk c or ~ scrap on bot
tWSS &amp; MAX ~LLIOTl
lW IN CYU NDtf.i HYI.) HAUI C
terre!&gt; 011 d
Tletol s
R ~d e r ~
l ennox Heal pg and o r condtt on
H OI ~ l
sub I on e pump hoses
)al vog e
!)R 114
Pamer Oy
rng Ropco foa m n sulot on
u ,,.e !&gt;o l a d ~ h oi! ~~ ~V Call
99'} 54b8
44b BS 15 or .446 0445 Coli ott er
J 46 U J ~~
&lt;J()
WANI 10 buy fuel o
t onk
LA [) ~ ~ W IN I U~ C 'IA1 ~ 01d h ~
949 '1796
~l ANlH
STE AMH
Corp et
and her 1o c ket ~ _. 11 JH8 6 /90
Cleaner See ng
s bel ev ng
WANl 10 buy wmdow "' on / 4
when Sta nle y ~te omtng Coli
NUBIAN
MA L ~
G O Al
Coli
"/ ':, o• 7b ford or Che,.y l: .... en
44b
4'10H
Ji:l i;I I:H1 :J~
gs 991 l84J
BOGGS
!:XTEMINA l iNG CO
!:,il V ~ft L&gt;O l LA H ~ and gold co n ~
JUN K au to ond scrop metal Ph
S.lurdoy, S.pl 23, I 00
(former ly J:arnes &amp; 0 dell) Oak
f. or weslrnenl or col e( 1 on
388 ~7/ b
PM
H1ll Oh Ca ll coll ectb82 6249
Ml)Con~h o p l all44b lij4J or
GALLI
A
COUNTY
GOOD
U ~W f URNIT UH~
na t V ~
446 Ob90
FilLINGER water delt .... ery
JR FAIRGROUNDS
up h q l ~ t ered
and opp l on&lt;;es
se r .... rce Co li J 79 7 174
HI H
~ ~A RAY BOA1
8~ HP
SELLING
Ph 44b U31L
John son mo to lo de 'Tl wh eel
A smoll Hloot group of
CO AL
lump
st oke r
ond
GOOD US~D RfGRIG~RATOR
!r o e
~k
equp
li e
steer c•lves
I mes ton e
delr vered
0o¥td
AND FREEZER UPRIGHT OR I Vaug hn '14S 5J09
p e!&gt;£&gt; ....c·r~
~~ ~u o
Co li
ThiS ulo Is designed
C H~ S T Ph 44b UJ72
Jtl8 HE:I 74 ol t:n ~p •
espectallv for 4 Hand FFA
bc termttol Termtt e &amp; Pest Con trol
members looking for steer
TIM Bl:R Top p r ce lor top quol ty
I
ol Golllpohs Ohto Wtll lom
feedong proJects
Pomeroy ~ores t Products Ca ll
Thoma!&gt; 44b 2001
Auctioneer
FOR SALE
997 ~96~
LA I 06 hyd ouhc do 1e1 Needs
ollor s M odel 71-l Po d S~t.OO
" "'II S30(X} Will d(:" l &gt;'£&gt; l r'ce

-

Discount
Prices

...
.............
.,..
Service
.._
_.

_..

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•289.95

omeroy Landmark

~

n

-

2 Yr

Old

Reg

Polled

H e reford
Bu 11
\6SO
Amertcan sa ddl e breed
mare w saddle S4S&lt;' 2 yr
hlly \300 I y ea r stallion
$100 Spectal pnce on all 3
horses

446 1!08
Rutland Furnoture Just
Shopments of 85 Chests These Regularly Sale
S149 95 Now Sale Proced
Centeo:. For Only

CHEAP!

Receoved Two
3 &amp; 4 Drawers
For $99.95 &amp;
At the Bargain

lAIH..iot: qua l ttlt es o f f r e wood
Phone b75 442b
BU YING
Vur fors bon1os f dd t ~
1d o theor
~ !r nged m ~ trurn e nt s A nr co n
d! on l oll99'1 75 10
liK E 10
~UY
l&gt;lHUMIOIHH Coi i 6"/!J 1709

WOUlD

f

A

Ut: !;.,.....,

CONCH~

ll AND BLOCK WORK

Oone rea so nably by hout 0 1 tob
Free es.lt mo tes Call 367 0295
or 367 02:.11
CONTtNUOUS GUTTEJ.IING no tab
too Iorge or small Gory s Gut
tertng Co b82 b616 Oak Hrll
Otuo
J

MARCUM

HOOFING

SPOUTING &amp; SIDING
e 111perience J86 9857

20 yrs

U~NNI::Y

4,000·6,000 Sq Ft
Busoness Bldg
- For Lease-

$59.95 &amp; '69.95

Nearly n ew butldrng ex ·
cellenf locatton over am
pie p arkmg Ideal for you prof essronal offtces retail
"' wholesale outlet
anfi :
que • tore You name 1t ~nd
the own er wtll remodel to
sutt vour needs

Used Br ea kfast SetS ······--- • • •••• $39 95up
Elec Hot Water Healer •• ·---_ ••••••• $99.95
Bu ill on Double Oven (green) •••••••• $199.95
2 Hoover Sweepers •• - ••••• • • •• $39 95 &amp; $49 95

N1te Stands •••• ••• •••••••••••••• •• •••• $14.95 up
Zenoth Console Stereo. AM-FM, Tape
Player plus tape recorder (only 3 months

CALL THE
WISEMAN AGENCY .

old) •••• •••••••••• •• ••••• •••••.• •.••••••• $299.95

446 )643

2 Desk Unots w chaors ••••••••••••••• 549.95 ea
Several Odd Cha1rs (Rockers &amp;

- --~--

hners) ••••••••••••••••••••••• $10.00 up

CUnping~

Box Sprongs&amp; Mattress ...... U8.00ea
~=~R~ockers ................ $29.95&amp; $49.95 ,

POMEROY
LANDMARK
JACK W CARSEY, Mgr
PHON Em 2111

GO CAMPING AMEHICA
Wtlh Coachmen HVs Qualllv
bu It pr~ced r1ght Dozens of
model s wrth o w1de ra nge of
lomtly pleosrng floorplon s "e
lhem today Apple L ty Hecrea
!tonal Vehr cle ; Ht JS I "1
w e111
ol
Jock~on
Oh
b 14 2ll6 5700
l'i/H ~ IA . .RAf l STAifMAS JEN tl
t nii4 .S ()&gt;. "//Jb

AND GLASS Cho n lmk
fence
free est tmal es Call
1/45 91 13 Ken Soles Golhpohs

I

-

ff9N S TV S ~RVICE Sp&amp;Cialrzrng
111 Zenrth House call s Call
I ~04 57b 2J98 Of 44b 1&lt;15&lt;1
lit~ INSUlATION Ceramte Slate
Quarry I !:i years e~tpe r ence

Phone 992 3085

'
HOBEHT S BROTHERS GARAGE
·All tvpes of repotr Upp1u Rt 7
Coll.4&lt;1b 2445
~ EPTIC

SYSTEM INSTAllED Com

~ l e te by quohfted I umsed m
!. fall er 1111 dtrt hauled stone
grovel etc AAA Contractors
coll25b 19:21

THEIS~ ~lU

MAX FOAM INSUlA

l'ION Free esllmofet
New
hpm• old homes and mobtle
homes Coii440 197l

'

-

DEANS ROOFING HOME REPAIR

l&gt;• scount for semor cttn:ens
Coli 4AtJl 9501
lom to 4pm
Mon thru Fo

BUllDOZER

HI'.CKHOE

I rne slone septic tonk nstolfa
!ton
general
canstruclton
McNeal Controctlng Co

'1" n!.ll

'

'\)

In Middleport betwoon
Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
Mill Street ~~ behond

east of Oak Holl n2 ooo
STROUT
REALTY
446 0008

Open S.turdoy 10 4 p m
Sundoy 12 noon to J p m
8 311 mo.

TONEY REALTY (0

Pclo fur Sale

~

HO O ~

HOllOW Horse!&gt; Huy sell
I ode or tr a n Ne-w ond u!oed
~a dd le!&gt; Ruth Hee ve!&gt; A bo 1y

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLI POLIS. OHIO

l b14 ) bli'~J'l~

~~ ~ lN G 51 AR Ken els

Hoard ng
and groommg
all breeds
L hesh re Jb 7 0'19'1 o r 36/0106

8, 20-1mo (Pd)

GALLIA COUNTY'S lJRGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

44~7900

OFFICE

~

Free Est1lnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949 2160

t

Tony's C11rry

CALL 446-3643

lOV ABl~ WHI1 E ~ no w dr It great
PY H~NH !:,
Pupp e!&gt;
Phone

I 6 14 bb l JI;IJ8

J&amp;L

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

Blown Insulation

SERVICE

Cellulosic (wood f1berl
Thermal insulation

All IJf)eS of root1ng , gutfers

S.ve 30 pc;l lo 50
on hootlng cos
Exporltnco ond
fully Insured
FrH Est
Call 992 2772
B 10 1mo (Pd)

&amp;

downspouts,

r'

20 years

Estimates

911 mo

Wayne National Fore~t 5 to 8 tracts of woodl~no now

available adJoining thousands of acres of government
land Public hunting fishing and camping perm itted
Prices start &amp;t S2 500 wltl'1 flnancmg a\ allable

MORGAN TOWNSH 1P- 36 acres near Me1gs M1nes 5
acres l@vel , most of balan ce could be pasture small

.

The Photo Place
1Bob Hoefhch)
109 H1gh Sl

BHAOfORD
Au clroneer
Com
plele Scrv•ce Phone 919 1di7
01 949 2000 ffacrn e Ohro Cr t
B odfo d

RH V ~~ lWAOINC. Post Poge ..... lleo

Vrocene~

dry good s ho d
wa re Iced tack sh op ~pee ol
25 lb of dog l oad S3 88

HWOOD

AU10MO BIL~

IN SU RANU been
can ce ll ed' l os t you r operator s
ltcense? Phone 992 2 14J

8 0 W~RS

HEPAIR -

~ w ee p e r ~

too s te1s rons ol
small oppl on ces l awr'l mow er
nell ! to Stol e Htghwoy Garage
o Route l Phone (!:11 4) 9l!.5
Jtl25

Wl DO pa ntrng gutter ce I ng
t le
pan eling
roo f opot r
plumb ng end cannete wo rk
J: re e eslut o tes Co li 992 /7/j t.
ask lor Wallace Morr s

~ ~W I N G

MACHINf R qpo tr~ ~e r
"' ce all makes 992 1284 Th e
~obrrc
Sho p
Pomer oy
Authom ed ~ I nge r Sales and
~e r .... rcc We ~ho rpen SCI!t!tOrlo

C HIMN ~ Y

ll f.if S or e no lu n Hove
you rs cleaned the du~t le ~s way
lhc
{httnn e y
~weep
bl4 3~J WS 7

~XCAVAfiNG

loader and
bo&lt;" kho e work dump tru ck 5
and lo boy s l or h re wtll haul
1.11 d r t to so I It nestone an d
gr ovel loll Bob or Koger Je!
fers day phone ~2 106q n rght
phon e 997 3525 o r 991 52J2

W Itt om I

FARM FOR SALE - Me ~s Co Leading Creek
approx 1 m I off Rf 7 232 ac appro&lt; 90 A tillable
balance woods modern ranch style home full
basem ent free gas $100 000
Glassburn Rd

Busrneso Scnitt&amp;

Bu&amp;mcss ~ rna=s

rn Mtddlepart re nt p otent ta l of ov er SJO 000 per year
Call for more tnformatron

BUILDIItGOR MOBILE HOME SITE

4-30-IIC

8-21 mo

barn

INCOME PROPERTY - 22 000 sq II building located

Aute &amp; Truck
Repaif
Also TransmiSSIOn
Repa1r
Phooe 992 5682

Call Us Today

13 acres of flat land w1th

located lr&gt; Northern Gall Ia Co Sl3 000

¥• mile oft Mt 7 by-poss on
51 Rt T14 toward Rutlond,
0

dozer

m Sprt ngf

e td Twp S4

ooo

-

4

ac res on

COMMERCIAL SITE - Located on Sta le Rou te 7 at
Kanauga Cor ner lot has approx 170 ff frontage on 7
Ideal for almost any type b us.rness

SAL E Ho rder coll re pupp cs
Phone 992 5106

AK C HI::GI!:, HRI:O S be non Hu5ky
9 mont hs old be ng s co il
44'1

n.n

Bfo!IAHPATC H Kennels Boord ng
Groomr ng AKC Gordon se t
ters Englr sh Cock er Span els
Ph 44b 41ql

NEW LISTING-

V ELLOW SR
BEAUTY - Thos
tmm ac u l ate h ome has 3 b r s beautiful but It 1n k rt chen
wtth formal dtnrng area 1 hug e bath l a rg e L R and
uttltty room that ts large enough for a 4th br All n ew
carpetmg Thts hom e tS very tastefuly dec orated

WOO US
PH
fACilllti:S Pro
less an al ~er,.r&lt;es o ff ered oil
b•eeds all styles Ph 446 0'131

RISING Sl All K~NNH Board ng
ond gr oom ng
A I br eds
Che shtr e
Call J6 7 0292 or
:Jb7 0106

KENNH ~

board rng
Al so AKC fo!eg Uobermans red
and bl o ck !&gt; Ca l 44b ~ i'95

R"'g

FARM FOR SALE - 99 ACRES - All clean mostly
t i llable presenfly tn grass 2 ponds severa l good barn s

AKC BOXt H beaut ful femal e
la wn w th bl ock rnosk Por t ol! v
abed e ced
r a ne d
Lo ll
44b 2JIU

&amp; sheds 3 c ow mtlk parlow tab base 12&gt;&lt;60 mobil e
hom e 1s now rented 650 It frontage on State Rt 554 at
Eno Oh o 2 000 ft frontage on county r d $75 000 Call
for more d eta rls

RESTRICTED BUI LOING LCT - Corner lot 1n 5pnng
Volley Eotates 166 fl froda~e on Maple One of Gall Ia
Co • nlceslsubdlvlslons All ut11ihes available $6,000

~

mo old M altese Puppy Ph
0 1 J'/9 21~8

Jl q'}l ')J

DO~

lema e 15 rn o o ld Obed
Qnd pr otec t on tro n ng Coli
JOi' 00'12

1-'UPPIE S
C.ermor Sheph erd
Oober mon P nsc her
Col
44 6 1 ISJ

wtde features lar ge LR ve ry l ar ge k1t c hen wtfh F R
area on one e nd 3 brs another room large enough lo r
a 4th 2 full bath s new cent ral a r ba c k porch plus 2117
ac r es of land loc ated m e tlher c rty or Southwes t ern
sc hool d s t rrc t s
CLASSIC BEAUTY - T h e d1strnct c u ~t om frnt sh both
Inside and outsrde th is home sets tt apart from the or
dmary nouse t As V'Ou step tns rde the, famll y room you
tmm ed ratetv f ee l the warmth and .c harm w tfh tfs full
wall frp l t h e L R has gracrou s ltvtng tn mtn d modern
k1f c hen w th a Corn rng top ran ge and gr !I surrounded
by a ba r 3 b ea ut fu l br s one wrth rt s own pr.va fe
dress tng a rea and bath another bath &amp; 1 7 In bac k - a
bea ut ful swtmmrng pool and deck Th rs home rs
somethrng to admrre And were presentrng tf to you at
a v er y r easonable prtce

Three Slory

bu tld tng downtown co rner lot 1n Pom erov H as lrrst
floor shop and offtce plus two large apartments al l oc
cup~ed

$40 000

LOVELY HOME - Bnck an d fr a m e r a nc h wtth 3 brs
bath eat tn k t c hen lov.e l y F R wrth Fr ankltn tr p l
wrth a but If u p brtek hea rth and wall and sl d rn g doors
lea dr ng t o a pat tO 2 car gara ge On 1 7 ac lot c lose t o
K C schools Low $40 s

1
\\

anl"d tu Vo

NEW LISTING - SPLIT LEVEL - ThtS elegant home
wa s butlt wr th you rn mrn d lt s bra nd spa nkrn new
featunng L R 3 brs lovely krt c hen w 1th c usto m bu II
cabr nets 0 R wtth shd1ng doors to a deck and a l arge
bath on upper leVe l Lowe r le ve l has a huge F R ut I
ty room w th sec ond b ath ga ra ge &amp; works hop On a
wood ed lot

BAiiY SI111NG n my home !:,pr ng
Vol le y Area Ph 44b 4J9 /
WIL l 00
horn e

8AB V31111NV n 'fl Y
b p c r eonced
Coli

4 46:J l~i'

HA !tOOWN
bu ldtngs
44b b5 61

OlU HOU ~ ~ ~ o d
lor lum ber
Co li

OWNER TRANSFERREO - l ove ly b leve on Rt 160

SQ\.0

- Pr tced n g hl 3 brs
2 baths lg I r
formal
drnrn g c omp le t e ktt c
wtth frpl
r ed wood
deck 1 ca r garge On "ac to t $45 000

W l l do roofmg constru ctron
p lumbm g and heoltng No jOb
loo Iorge or too small Phon e
74') 2J41;1

W ill DO mobrle home repatr Call
241 J494 or 24i' 3521 ofrer 4

SOMET HIN G
sewn?
yq2 7806 ltppers S 1 50 Hem s HOWl:WY AND MAIHIN
ca .... atrng
sep 11c t. ystem s
$] Pont lio SJ 50 Uress $4 50
do1er
backhoe
dump tru ck
Skrrt SJ 50
It nc stone
gra .... e l
bla ck top
r pav ng Rt 143 Phone 1 (614 )
~l UL CO PLA Sn R pla ster repa r - 69 li IJ 3 l
ce tlrn gs
f-r ee
l etC tur e d
es ttm o tes Co1117Sb lllf1
BA 1 HHOOMS
ANO Krtch ens
remode led cer amrc ttle plum
Bil l S MOBIL E t OMtS and H ome
b ng carpentry a nd general
improvement!. free est motes
rnornl enonce
13 yeors e)l
Call446 2642
perrence 992 3085
_:.
PAINTI NG
PUlliNS ~XCAVA TING Compl8fe
Res•den tt ol nlerr or and e• ter o r
Serv cc Phone 992 24IS
...
bo n an d nobtle home roofs
free estln1tes 15 yrs ex p Coli
Jbl 7784

NEW LISTING - N ew ho me be1ng bu I Spirt leve l
wtth over 1 500 sq ft of lt vrng sp ace wrth br c k fro nt
and stdtng On upper leve l wrll beL R burtt 111 krt c h en
3 br s and bath Lower level wrll h ave F R u ftltty
room and garage W II b e a bea ut y a n d on ced at only
S39 900 I n c1tv school dist r iCt

NHD

CU~IOM

BU SH HOGGING

hour or 10b Mlnrm vm ch g
245 5841

---

~y Bu~~uoii~~
Ph

~AHN SID SI S 000 per year refill

'"9 ye 1dmg equ•pment Local

800KKHPING
for
small
busmcsses Coll44b i'935
SANDY AND !SEA VER Insuran ce
Co has oHered ser vrces lor f rre
nsuronce co .... eroge 1n Golho
Cou n ty l or almos t a centurv
Farm home and personal pr o
perly coverages ore a .... otloble
to mee t rn dt,.tduol needs Con
ta ct
Frn leJ
OAvr s
your
nerghbor on agent

ly No 1u perrence ne&lt;essory
We tram Inves tment requtred
Phone 949 27bJ

-

ALL ROUND FAMILY
PLEASER- J3A Wilh 1 yr
old

Loll

TOll

AT HOME

STROUT

REALTY

formal lov er modern k tchen 2 W B f rr eplaces full
basemen t gas heat an~ort Shown by appoint
m ent only

LISTINGS NEEDED
WE ADVERTISE
NATIONALLY- WE IUY- SELL- TRADE.
Russell D Wood Broker

446-4618
Ken 11/'organ
446 0971
Mose Canterburv &lt;46 3408
NEW
LISTING
Gallipol is,
bn ck

=-..

In
2

bedroom
full basement
new carpet central a c ,
attached garage
Here's
one you won t have to do

anyth ing before moving In
Call for an appo~nfment

Profitable Buaineaa OpportunityLimited Investment.

2 STORY
SYRACUSE

Gallipolis

If y ou are wlllon~ to acce]&gt;l rcsponsobt hty on return
for a future m your own busmess, we"d hke to talk about
your

personal

quuhfJcat10ns

a nd

giVe yo u more

about our plan&lt; Wro te toduy to

E. A. f:lm1 th
Montgomery

1000

s.

nat

ESTATE AUCTION
SAtURDAY, SEPT. 23 AT 12:30 P.M.
LoaJtion: 264 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
Listing In Part 3 pieces of luggage, books,
Electrolux sweeper, electnc heater, wheel
barrow, chase lounge, 2 radtos, utoltty table,
step stools, sythe, hoes, hand tools of all
konds, large tool box, grass seed sowers,
step ladders, 2 oron beds, comlete, push
garden plow, posthole dogger, stone 1ars,
jacks, sunray gas range, small gas heater,
Kenmore washer &amp; dryer, Sears Coldspot
ref freezer comb •• utollty cabinet, portable
T
with stand, living room suite, several
lamps, T
night stand, throw rugs
Collector Items &amp; Antiques: Pocket knives,
3 legged stand, R Iverslde 12 gauge shotgun.
several boxes of glassware will be
displayed day of sale, trunk, 6 matchi ng oak
chairs, ak llbrarv tabl e with chair, oak bed
&amp; dresser, night stand, dresser, secretary
with lar;. claw feet, Old Man of the Moun
talns oak hlghback rocker and lots of small
Items.
OWner, Estate of Charles
ward
Exec., Chatles W Lusher
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE
i,
Kenneth Swain, Gallipolis, O.j ,
I
Accidents

v

'liard

Monroe

details

st.
21232

446 4041

446 1049
446 0458
367 1521

BE THE FIRST
THIS ONE Lovely 2 story on
town 3 BR s 2 full b aths large LR' formal dmlng rm

Fllt'E

M ontgomery Ward os lookong for Sales Agenls- amblbous husband / wofe teams w1th an urge to break out un
theor own And, we may have the opportunoty you"re
lookong for A s a Montgomery Ward Sales Agent, you
Will work for yourself and be your own boss Your talents
and hard work wil l p,ty off for you and omprove your
hfe 1 Wards umque Sales Agency Store program gM&gt;S
you the chance to own your own busoness w1th only a
small m vest ment

446 04!8

BECKY LANE
VICKIE HAULOREN
BOB LANE
WALT LANE
KENNY RATLIFF

446 0008

O:Wn

I 800 8 / 4 llb"/

finished base

chens
LR
DR
famtly
room
w1th
Frankltn
ftrelace &amp; more Located
near
Cadmus
$64 000

~our own Lod1e1 Fosh1on
r
Jean and Co,;uol WtKJr Sti§"p •
Over 130 Natrona! known
brands Open In '] week1•
heryth ng pro-. ded Your cost

S17 900

ranch

ment 4 BR 21z baths 2 ktt

-~

THE AMEHICAN DREAM

v,

v

edge of town A very c lean Jlh story home
for $26 000 Inc ludes an attracttve l tv tng
room w rth frreplace 2 bedrooms and
pes srbiV 2 more upsta trs dtnrng room full
basem ent 1nctudes unftmshed famtly room
w th ltr eptace &amp; ut1lrtv room Large
garage wrtn storage alumtnum Stdmg plu s
n at gas heat wtth budget of 523 mo

SELL. NOW - Th e own er had thr s all brr c k
ranc h c u stom b urtt by one of the areas
m ost ret able co n tractor s because he was
gong to I ve ther e for ever H 5 5 tuat on
has c hanged and he rs for ced to sell tm
m ed rately T h s handsome 3 bedroom
home m cludes as n1 ce a krtc hen as you
c ould ever wan t dtnr n g ar ea bow w 1ndow
rn a large 1 vrng room 2 bath s ove r stzed 2
ca r ga ra ge and full ba sem en t central at r
on e acre lot We have r ed u c ed t he pnce
a nd wtll grve tmm ed ate oe&lt;:ur&gt;ar1cy

HOME IN
4 bedrooms.

gas r t a

QUALITY HOME ov erlookrng th e OhtO Rver Va lley A
panor a m1 c vtew ex t endtng from GcJ IItpolrs to the Stiver
M emortal Bnd ge 4 bedroom c arpet ed home 2' 2
ba ths cen tr al a c nat gas 2 w b frr elaces f amriV
room bea uttfUI yard wr th sw rmmrn g pool and bath
house Thts tS one a! th e ltnest hom es •n Ga lltpo lts Twp
and 1S srtua t ed on 2 7 a cres of land Shown by appo nt
ment only

COMMERCIAL
BU'LDING, 1n Jackson 0
now under lease Buy both

furnace

village water (S3 00 mo )
lor 540 000
storm doors &amp; windows •
price Includes 2 addlllonal
lois Locatecl on Water 51
COMMERCIAL
Price 116.000
BUILDING on El!lern
A\tle , 10' front•ge K 150

THREE
BEDROOM,
tommlndlng_ view of the
Ohio River City water f a
fuel oil tumoce located on
corner of Rt 7 and Rt 218
Afso 20 x:JO' block building ,
excellent rtlldentlal or
tommerclallocaflon Price
145.000
3'11 ACRES SITUATEO on
the beautiful Ohro R1ver
below Eureka Scenic view
Jot and nome with addt
ttonal acreage available
some appliance~ go wtttt

deep 2 rontols ( 1 house, 1
apt

plus

commercial

building) Price $75,000
PROFESSIONAL
BUILDING 15 000 sq ft
located adjacent to golf
course one level no steps

Ideal for offices schools
professional acllyllles For
more lnformotloo call 4.46
1066

NEW LISTING S1 tuated
on Rt 218 3 bedroom
carpeled home, lnsulaled
all electn c wltl'1 ftrepla ce

located on 100 xJOO
Also

14 x16

bu1 id1ng

lot

storage

Buy for $35 000

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY 41h Ave
Gallopotls Thr ee renta ls
exceed S300 monthly , buy
for no more than S23 000
BEAUTIFUL NEW 2
BEDROOM home sr tu a t ed
dlong R accoon Cr eek Ap
p r ox
4 acres at land
prtv a t e drive
Ideal lor
re t r e d
c o upl e
or
newlyweds Prrce reduced

to SJ1 9f/O
P.UILDING ON UPPER
2ND AYE, needs some
repa ir Price reduced

PRICE REDUeED on lh ls

NEW LISTING

2 bedroom home on Lower

on

Sth

Ave

Located
Ka nauga

house, for only 519 SOO

River Rd , o;, acre lot clfy
water Owner anxious to
sell Priced for $13 000

.10 xllO

OVERLOOKING
IUR IKA1 90 acres, no
building&amp; ,
laid up
baaement river view Buy
for $35.000

250'KI50' BUILDING LOT

$30 000

near

IF YOU' RE THINKING
ABOUT SELLING, GIVE
US A CALL ANO WE'LL
BE HAPPY TO DISCUSS
OUR
LISTING
CON
TRACT WITH YOU WE
HAVE BUYERS BUT WE
NEED ~ISTINGSII LET
US SEL'to YOUR HOME
-wHEN YOU'RE DF.ADY

Evergreen

highway, rural
prlc:e S$900

along

water

NEW LISTING Located on
Gallipolis on

1•

.-cr~ lot

3

bedrooms kitchen dlnong

and hvlng rooms
C1ty
water &amp; sen' Ices Needs

some r~olrs
ly $24,500 00

Buy lor on

A FIREPLACE It VIEW AND YOU Wiltch your tam ti V Stf tn front of the
t replace or gaze out the large p1 c t u r e wtn
dow over look ng the beaut 1ful Ohro R rve r
and you II be amazed a t t he charm thr s
hom e has to offer Attr act tvely decorated
t h roug hout th rs h ome rncludes 3 bedrooms
21 2 bat" s equtpped kttche n d tntng r oom
full basement w rth tamtly roo m and
lrrepta ce 2 car garage a nd over 11/., ac r e
yard gently sloprng to the nver Loc ated 1n
th e crty schools &amp; pr rced to se ll
I

OWNERS HAVE MOVED TO &amp;:•
- A nd want a n at
fer made on thr s b rt c k an r~\l) r anch w th 3 brs
cozy k rt c h en tg L R b ath~ ... po rt On 2 lot s nc r
t y schools

EDGE OF TOWN - 2 BR bath LR ktlchen l ull base
m ent wou ld mak e good r ental $13 500

PC'CKET THE RENTAL PROFITS -

PRICE REDUCED -

LOOK WHAT S29 900 WILL BUY - ThiS lovely double

HI:V ~NGLI ~ H ~~11 ~ H P UI-'P I I: ~
goo d h unter s and pe l s lo ll
44(J f:ISQJ alter bpm
HILLCH~ ~ 1

YEAR
OWNER MUST

HERE SA HOT ONE' B1g barga 1n at lhe

L&gt; HAGONWYNll
lA Tl i:RY
KI:. NNH
AK C Cho w Chow
dog s
l f A S omese and
Hrrnalayo 1
&lt;ah
Now
avatlab l e
J:la rne
Po rn!
H moloyon
mol e
ki ll en
44b J844

RODNEY AREA 160 acres 100 ac r es pastur e &amp;
cropland coal ltmeston e r eported near pr oposed U S
35 good rnvestment pr oper ty SIOO 000

l: XC A VAfiNG
dozer backho e
and d tcher Ch arl es R Hot
I eld
Bo ck
Hoe Servic e
Rutla nd Oh• o Phone "14'1 '1008

Will 00 baby '5o tt ng tn my hone
n
Rocrne or eo
1:1
to 4
Weekday s
Oo nno Wolfe
949 2158

~0~

V~OOM IN V

approx 1 SOD ft of creek frontage sandy soil

GARAGE

I:ILA (K LA ISRAOOR re tne ,.er pup
pes AKl regt ster ed Chon
p on
blo od I ne
Whe lp ed
8 4 78
Phone b 14 bb7 JOJ9
evemng s or weeken d s

L~N1 ~ NARY

stream, township road $11 900

ROGER HYSELL

We are currently mak.ng
appotntments lor semor
poJ'tnuts We use tradt
ttonal settings and also
por
outdoor
feature
tratture

WA H H Wl:ll dr llm g
Gra nt 74'1 2879

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE In the wilderness of the

RACCOON CREEK -

High School
SENIORS

Pomeroy,

A LOT FOR THE MONEY - That s what you get Wilh
thts J yr old brtck rancher J BR s 11 , baths 1611122
tamely room w1th heaftlator fireplace tully equtpped
k1tchen double garage central AC central vacuum
woodburner and much more

JIM KEESEE

exptroence
All work
guoranteed
Coli Tom
Hoskons 949 2160 Free

•

Tommy Joo Steworl
(614) 446 7122 (614) 446
9760
Sponsors Golllo County
Beef Commlffoo ond tho
Golllo County '-•rotlvo
Exton11on Sorvoce, (614)
446 4612 ext )2

balance wooded beauhlul
hom e sttes
fronts on
J ack son Co Rd No 48
tblacktop) approx 1 m1l e
off State Roue 179 4 mtles

-

New or Repai
Gutters and
Downspouts

WOOD HEAT

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

CLUB CALF SALE

e

QUALITY

MOORE'S

m:.t

GALLIA COUNTY

3- pc Lovmg Room Suotes.- .. .. - $69 96 up
3 New Tables
1 Coffee 2 End •• -······ · - ••••• $199 95
New 7 pc B redkfast Sets • • • --· - ·· · ·· $118 00
T w on &amp; Full Soze Beds
"PRICED RIGHT"
18 Gas Ranges • -···-·····-·--· •••• 550 00 up
12 Elec Ranges - -- - -·-··· __ •••• 550 OOup
3pc BedroomSuotes. -·. • •
_. 519995

VACANT LAND - b5 A
m I approx 10 A trllabte

H. L WRilESEL
ROOFING ;.:.
- I ·~

:n,~

For The Best
Proce In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

THE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE AGENCY

•

I

UI-'HOl~HH I N G

Pho e9Y] 1'104

lteal &amp;laic (or Sale

I

'1 4 ~ ~ 1 2 1 offer~
~011'

Real Estate Buys .Found in the Times-Sentinel

.

tor :;ale

3CH00l
KU~
comp e
bU
passeng er w lh new llr c~
C.ood cond I an lonloct l orn
Monkrn o t 94/ l'lUI

~ ~00 1 bru!i;h hog

•

BUILOING
LOTS
75'x120', all underground
ulllllle&amp;
rural water ,
.-nlrll aewage collection,
blacktop atreet1 t,Jo mobile
homts Price S4;lbl

lot

2 bedroom

c arpete d home nat gas
hea t
e l ec
l tr e plac e
c netral a c thi s nom e rs rn
excellen t cond1t on Pn ce

HE WHO HESITATES - rs too late T l'1ts
s p raw lrng 3 bedroom L shaped ra nc h 1n
Spr ng Va ll ey Subd1v son ~~ sure to sell
last Thts home tn cludes bu tl t tn k t c hen
large l tvmg room 2'h battts fu ll ba semen t
wr th famtly &amp; r ec room ce ntral atr
su ndeck 2 ca r garage &amp; a huge landsca ped
yard Pr ced 10 the S50 s

NEW Ll STtNG - Remodeled 5 r oo m 2
bedroo m home rn Chesh1re 12x24 l tvtng
room dtnmg room ktfchen ba th &amp; cellar

60•1 50 yard on Rt 7 $20 000
37 789 ACRES - Good wooded b u tldrng
srtes nea r Porter Large pond and good
trm ber $24 500

EWINGTON - Reduced $24 900 Owner

IS

a n x rous to se ll h tS 2 homes One tS a large 2
st ory home n n eed o t some reparr The
o ther rs a n ce 2 bed room home w t han eat
tn ktl chen wtth appliance s &amp; ca rport
) t ua1ed on 1112 lots on Rt 7 Call Dan
Evans at 388 8111

OWNER MUST SELL NOW - 2 Bedroom

OWNER
VERY
ANXIOUS
TRANSFERRED - MUST SELL -

7

acre woode d yard on a q u et str eet bet
ween hos prt al and to w n T ht s qualrt y brr ck.
ranch n c tu des a l rv1 ng roo m w th a ver y
pretty
lt r eplace
3 bedrooms wrf e
approved equ pped k t c hen Jl 2 oathS new
carpet 8. I not eum full basemen t and
ga r age Owner ha s a r ea dy found a home
n Colu mbu s and 1s w llmg to talk tu rkey
If you re loo k ng l or a gr ea t pace to r a rse
your l aml y
have low
uttl tty and
mainten ance o l iS tht S tS th e one tor you

ASK FOR MORE• - A
mu ch admrred home nea r the edge of town
on Rt 7 Thts very attra c tr ve 3 bedroom
home offer s a mo st com fortabl e I vr n g
room wrth f1 r epla ce 1 1 bath s ea l tn k tt
chen form a dm tng an d br eaKfa st nook
full basem ent w th tam I ~ r oom lrrepla ce
rec roo m &amp; work shop
There a re 3
beau tif u l porches
garage and
a
m et c ulou sl y la nd sc aped ya rd w t h 132
frontage on Rt 7 a nd 40 a long the wi'!ter s
e dge By appo rntment only
RIO GRANDE ' -Very c lean J1 1 st ory
home tn good condrtton
Inc lude s 4
b ed rooms l arg e ltvtng room hu ge t amrly
r oom dtn rng r oom k rt chen bath oversrz
ed garage and ata r gc shaded va rd Across
from college Low $40 s

home located at the edge of Cen te nary In
el udes a ltvtng room wrth f replace k tt
che n bath &amp; full basement pius ov er 1 2 L SHAPED RANCH ~ L oca t e d tn a br a nd
acre yard T hr s hom e ts pnced at S25 000 new deve lopmenl th• s 3 bedroom hOme rn
but owner W1 ll c onsrder r easonable offer
e ludes a huge coun try krtchen l am ty
room co mbtn a tro n attrac t ve I v ng room
NEE OS REPAIR - Large 2 story home n wtth frrepla ce 2 baths 2 c ar garage &amp;
town 7 rooms lncludmg 3 bedrooms large sto r age b uJid rng Over 1 2 acre yard
lt v ng room &amp; dtntng room Eat tn kttchen $49 500
basem en t &amp; garage Large shaded yard
plu s a very nr ce lront por c h S28 BOO
MOVE RIGHT 1N - I mmedrate po sses
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - A quality 2 stOn Th1 s a tt rac t1v e 2 story lak e dr ve
story 3 bedroom home tn town Btr c h tr m home o ff er s a mos t beaut lui ston e
w w carp et bUilt'" k1tcnen large fam rty f t rep lace rn the l arge fam rly room 3 4 or 5
r oom d1ntng room 2 bath s plus ga ra ge &amp; bedroom s 2 baths full basement w tth rec
prrvat e yard Prt ced to se ll fa st at SJ5 000
room plu s over an acre ya rd wr l h mobrle
home dog k enne l &amp; small barn Owner
Fli'IISH IT YOURSELF AND $AVE - 2 nee ds to sell rmm ed atel y
yr old b rtck frame b t leve l on a nt ce srzed
yard on van Buren Rd Inc ludes a large
l1vrng r oom 3 bedrooms 2 bath s ( unl tn tsh
EXCELLENT LOCATION ON RT 35 - A6
ed) k !chen 8. drn ng room plus an un
yr old brt Ck and fram e 3 b edroom home
trnt shed f a mily &amp; rec roo m T hts h ome ts conven e nll y l oc ated c lo se to hospttal &amp;
tn v ery good co ndtton and pn ced to se ll at
shopprn g ce nter T ht S ran c h tncl ude s a
S36 000
co zy lr vrng r oom dJing room 1 ' bath s
kttchen 8. gar age pl u s a n ce corn er lot
REDUCED SJS SOD
OWner wants
S37 900
reasonable offer Thts tS a very clean well
k ept J bedroom hom e near Rodn ey Only 3
yrs old thts home tncl udes a c ozy lrv tng 148 ACRES IN MEIGS CO - Approx 20
room bea utrfu l k1tcnen wtfh new linoleum acres t lia b le
prls ture baa lan ce rn good
uttltty room garge double drrvewa v plu s ttmber &amp; woodland 40'1&lt; 60 barn tn good
c h an ltnk l ence &amp; prtva c y fence around a shape plu s lo t s o f other good outbutld ngs
large deck
Also an o ld 2 story 4 bedroom home that
needs some modermzatron Loca ted m an
LAKESIDE PARADISE --over 600 lake area whe r e coa l tS r epor ted to be abundant
f r ontage plus pl ent'JI of prtvac v descrt b es and all mtnera ls go wt th proper t y
thrs spa cious" h"l'lrrvu'"\ "'"'P'r\" "'Charotars

ao

Holls Appro LISTED 9·2·78 fl of lu&gt;
unous llv1ng SOLD 9· 12·78 ge lamoly NEW LISTING - BEST LOCATION
room wtth w D t p Complete krtchen for OWNER TRANSFERRED - MUST SELL
mal dtntng 2 baths 2 car garag e 2 heat IMMEDIATELY - One of the finest bU II
pumps plu s 2 acres of excellent land

Spnng Va lley homes Is now on the market
ThtS home demand s your e~tte ntton tl quah
ONE OF A KINO - Very attractove bo ty construc tton loca tton a nd eye appea l
level tn love ly Tara Estates 3 bedrooms ( 1 mean anythtng to you Formal entrance
are huge an LISTED 8-25 78's &amp; dres s and d 1ntng plu s a large l tvrng room wrth
lng area )
O
om large w b II replac e 3 or 4 large bedrooms den
fam ilY roonS LD9-12-78 d kotchen or
library 2 full ceramtc baths Large ktt
ot&gt;er s1ted 2 ~ar garage &amp; dec k overlook tn g c hen (bu It tn
ra nge
double oven
a sma ll fak e Also use of swlmmtng pool
dtshwasher) w rth breakfas' area Large
ftn1shefit famrlv room plu s a bar 2 car
FHA VA APPROVED - Nicely decorated garage and large storage room Basement
3 bedroom ranch 1n A 1 condttton Tht s ha s quts tde entrance 2 natural gas fur
nome has u s Steel siding l tvtng room naces offers Ioned heattng eff rc1e ncy plu s
d tntng room eat tn kitchen, ut11tty room centra l atr cond Owner s levtng t own and
bath &amp; garage 70x120 yard Includes pat to Otstres an earl y sa le
C tl y school s M id 530 s

WE NEED LIS fiNGS
•

E. M. Woseman, Broker, 446·3~96, Eve.
J1m Cochran, Associate, 446-7\81, Eve.
E. N . Wiseman, Broker, 446 4500, Eve
Nancy Smoth, ASSOCiltl!, 446·4910, Eve
Betty Hairston, Associate, 446 4240, Eve

'

�Hral Estate for Sale

Hral &amp;tatr for Sale
~-The Sund"y Tunes&amp;ntmel, Sunda) , Sept 17, 1978

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the S~nday Times-Sentinet
&amp;al ~late for Sale

Heal t:stat~ for Sal.,
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~ . ;' Thank

REALTY
1218 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

"We Sell Better Living"

OFFICE 446-7013

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Jt..aJ uta&amp; IWSa'lti ,;

&amp;al J::statr fo.- Sale

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428 Second Ave

CENTURY 71

m

OPEN DAILY , EXCEPT SUN 9 5
MON &amp;FRI TILL8PM
OTHER HRS BY APPOINT/&gt;IENT

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town and •s ver y
anx1ous to sell l h ts 2.:tx60 Modular h om e
C'D Sdud l ed on a one acre l ot 11 me tudes a ll of
,.. the ex tras you cou ld ask for Pn ce re duced
"" 10

Ooug Enoch ._lllliiiiiiiiiliiiii=Realtor Associate
Ph. Home 446-274!1

Loveday
Realtor Associate
Ph. Home l4!1·li.HIIii l

Gallia County's

We Need
Your Home
or Farm
To· Sell

Fastest Growing

C1tv School s, elem entilry c
fy attend Green T h ts fra me ra
,
eludes 3 BR's, butlt tn k1t, DR Natural -+
hea t $39
lak e a took we w tlt listen'&lt;,_

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Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor
Ph. Home 446-9539

Real Estate

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Agency

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OFFICE 446-7699

ell
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CLOSE TO TOWN - Beauf1fUI new ranch With 3
bedroom s P.- baths, centra! ar r condrt•on, fam•IY
room wrth hrelace, beautiful car pet , r ad ro rntercom
system large 2 ca r garage C1ty schoo l d1Sfnct and 1m
m edra fe pOS SeSS tOn
SECOND AVE - For co nven• ent m town l 1vmg, took
ov er th 1s older b r rc k home ha s 4 bedroo m P~ baths
d•ntn g room . tam ll y room . room for beauty shop, large
storage bv!ldr n g A I for $34,900
NICE SE TTl NG - Attract•ve ranc h 1n th e woods , h a~ 3
bedrooms
1' 7 ba th s, lull basement w •th brtc k
f• replace , l arge ca rport, located on 1 1 .o~ acres of n1 ce
wooded land

GOOD

BUY

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Artracttve home 10 Btdwel l, 3
bedrooms, n tce bath wt th shower, love ly kt fchen, ntce
carpet large lot Owner wa nts to sell now , Wtll con
stder offer s

At the edge of town and less I han $30,000
Take a look at fht s 1' 1 stOry home and you
w 1ll f.nd a well kept tr ame home wtth 2 "'
BR 's, FR , LR , k tt, bath and uttl!ty room ,
a ll on the ma•n floo r plus two unft nished :I
rooms on the sec ond fl oor Ou t stde you will tO
ft nd a ce llar wtth ove r head stora ge and a. ~
Ia
rd en space Eve call Tom Whtte -·

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EXCLUS
Extra love ly brtck &amp; fram e 10 one of the
area ' s nTCest locatiOn ( Spnng valley ) 3
large B R s, 2 full Daths &amp; tully equipped
kitchen w1fh lot of cabtnets Th1s home ha s
full f•n •shed basement w1th famil y recrea
ttan room, study &amp; ut11tty area Natural
gas F A furance &amp; 2 f~reptaces All this
pri ced to sell (Tty School System

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2 ACRES
8 ROOM NEW HOME
Just ftn tshed 4 B R fram e
home wtfh brtck front Car
port , n 1ce bu dt 1n ca bmets
1n k• t chen Rural wate r
system
12 x16' Storage
butl d tng , l arge garden
spot W1th1n 2'11 m 11es from
Hetzer Hasp 2 A of land
scaped yard Lots at shade
tr ees

wtll help f1nanc.e our lt strng on

tD

, two mt les south of Rt 7 Thts pr operty

e:

tudes two houses, a two ca r ga rage,
storage butld rng , rural wafer and a ce llar
Prr ced to sell at S27 500

C

HOME WITH RENTAL - Buy tht s J bed r oom home
wtth bath d tn,ng room enc losed back porch and let the
rent from a 2 bedr oom garage apart ment hel p m ake
your paymenT Good tocat•on tn town , $34,000
OUTSTANDING BUY - 1972 Globemsler 14x64. ha s i
bedrooms b ath wt th shower , partt a l turnt tu re , bl ock
foun dat•on , 1 1 acre nt ce leve ll and $13,500
IN TOWN - New M oon. 12x57, 1 bedroom s. has had ex
ce llent .care atr cond •f•o n, good otock s torage bull dtn g
good buy f or Sl1,100

LOT 8S'x 208'
Bea utiful bu dd1ng st i es,
leve l tol on bl act\_Top ro ad
Wit h rural wat er l 1ne tn
front ol l ot , w!lh bea uttl ul
roltrng g r een pas ture land
ONLY $5 ,500

Neat tns•de and out We are talkmg about
: our l tsft ng rn Northup Tht s lovely fr ame
-1 has 3 B R s double en tr y ba t h, Lg eat rn
'::t kit chen, L R and att ached
$36.900
Ill
:I

GOOD BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
Large 40' x80' all m efa l
butldtng on 1 A of level
land Can be bou ght w1th or
wtthaut stock Fro nts on
IWO hi ghways CALL FOR
MORE INFORMA TION

BUSINESS - Good na ut1ng bustness wtth 2 pac ker
tr ucks, has contrac ts Wit h Vtllage and bust ness laces,
cal l for more tnfor mat,on

11 ACRES -

NICe r ot t 1ng l and sut t abte for develop
ment close to Plants Subdtvtston. c1 ty school dts tn ct,
call today
35 ACRES
Good ro t ltng land tor hunt• ng or campmg
WITh old house on Thompson Rd off Rt 160 $14,500
38 ACRES - Lots of potenttal here 38 acres ntce lan d
along Ra ccoon Creek mostly ttllabl c, tob acco base ,
large pond , good l Ox 50 mobt le home $40,000

Evenings Call
Darvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-4748
Oscar Band, Realtor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

..•

••
Bnck Ran ch wt t h a l ul l b asem ent loca ted
l.ct tn Mercervi ll e St tua tcd on a large fla t tal
th ts lovely hom e hrt s lots of 1ne featu res tn
clud1ng one of the n1ce st ktt chens tn t he
:.; area M~lk e an apporntmerT'I to sec th ts one
::r soon $44 ,000

:E

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Rtve r . aporoxtm ate ly 5
acr es N 1ce ttsh•ng ca btn
furn tshed ,
7
slorage
butl d1ng several fru1t and
nut
tr ees
Excellen t
r ctreaT 1 N O W !.7.700 oo
2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
C losP to stores, small
yard part bnsement, new
carpct1ng , 10 good condt
t 1on As km g Sll.OO&lt;. }0
SECLUDED but close to
to wn
Ortg 1nal Rdnc h
Type home 3 bedrooms
bu tt! H') lo. ttchcn. large ltv
mg r oom wdh w b t p
r ec r ea t ton r oom l 4 acre
Covered c ar port
Many
fealures Prt ced to sell at
$i0 ,500 00
NEWER
RANCH , good
locat ton eQu tpped kt fchen.
small level lot w tth storage
bu tldtng
Fdt r Market
Value $27 700 00
70 1\CR ES , FARM - Nea r
Long Bon om , ranch type , 3
bedroom home IS un f ln 1sh
ed
Barn
rtnd
oth er
bu il dtngs Oh 10 R1ver fran
tag e A steal at S33 ,500 oo
LARGE OLDER remodeld
home 1n town , good paten
ttal Close to everythtng
$i9,000 00
SUPER NICE - A lr ame,
close to Pomeroy, 2' 1
acr es storage butld tng l 111
baths, 3 bedrooms, k1 tcnen ,
11v1ng room and rec r eafton
room wtth cont empor ar y
ftrep lace . loft ar ea , deck .
many featur es S37 ,500
OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD AND WE NEED
LISTINGS OF ALL KINDS
FOR OUR QUALIFIED
BUYERS . CALL TODAY .
' HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank , Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland
(Realtor Assoctates)
992· 2259 - 992-6191

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G Bruce Teaford
Sue P Murphy
ASSO(Iates

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$42 500

E state lor Si'll e
14xlt0 Shultz Tratf er , 1 yr,
old on 1 acre of land, drilled
well, sephc system School
bus &amp; ma11 to the door on
dead ~nd road Pnced on
Tn spectiOfl only .

Call446·0641 after 6 p m .

Ill

&lt;
c:

14x70 Mob1le Home Situated on a three 0
acre tot Th 1s lot ott er s several very good
ou1ldt ng s1tes L oca red on Woods Mill ~d ..._
JUSt 2 !THi es fr om Btdwell Pn ced at ~
Sl6 500 Owner wtll con stder selh ng land
separate

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NEAT AND
ATTRACTIVE
Extra n1ce &amp; verv well kept
hom e 3 B R , lt vtng room ,
nea t kitchen w1th bu ilt 1n
cabtnets &amp; range , large
uttllty room &amp; bath Car
port , storage butldtng &amp;
chai n link fence Also has
natural gas heat &amp; tts own
water sys tem . C1ty schools.
GOOD BUY

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SE~VI c TO THE PEOPLE OF THIS AREA IT IS OUR PLEASURE TO
COME TO YOUR HOME ANO GIVE YOU OUR PROFESSIONAL OPINION AS TO
THE VALUE OF Y OU~ P~OPE~TY FEEL FREE TO CALL ANYTIME
·

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1 LOTS
Lots Nos 40 &amp; 41 •n Mor
n son Addtfton 1n Btdwetl
Level land Rural water
available Sl.OOO OOeach

;o:'

"&lt; AS A

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M. L. {Bud) McGhee, Broker,
446·0552 Anytime
Tom White, Salesman, 446·9557 Eve
Gene Oesch. Salesman, 446·7440, Eve

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Growtng W1th Southeastern Oh10

n

:::S::

COUfjTRY STORE
All stock &amp; equtpment goes
located on State Rt Ntce
family bus1ness
CALL
FOR MORE DETAILS

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GOOD ffjVESTMENT
RETURNS
Th1s property cou ld pay for
1tself Wtfhtn 4 vrs Lot on
State Rt 7 North, near
S•lver Brtdge Shopp,ng
Plaza . 3 rental mobile
homes GREAT RETURN
TO T AL
INVEST·
T Call for details.

"Thank you for listing with' Bud' McGhee Realty" "Thank voullfl~1.\£t

fii)ll

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD OAME

~ ~ ~~ ..

DyHenr~AmoldandllobLee

JHOME:SITI:::!) for sole 1 acre and

up Mt ddlepo rl ne01 Hutlond
Coli qQ2 1481

Unscramble these tour Jumbles
one tener to each square, to form
four ordinary words

VA FHA

THRH ~l:OH OOM l rom e home tn
Mtddlopon Coli Q92 345/

I BICClJ

IN )Y HA(U:,I: 2 bedroom house
New SlOt m wi nd ow~ N('w
olum tnum buddtng 2 porches

IGAOUTHI

0
[j

Y91 J&lt;l 9

ACHt; LOf on fH I Ntee butldmg
stte 997 757 .4

SEEMS "TO SEA
""TRIC::K " 10
FAS"TENINer I'T.

1HRH ~UJ R OOM hou!.e J acres
fond Close to school, pn cod
rvosonobl'( q92 5126

Prlnl answer here:

Now l rrange the etrcted tenera to
form the surpriH answer, as sug·
geoled Dy the above cartoon

____ A
A ''[IIIT'~"
(Ano...,. Monday)

Yesterdays

I

BROOM
,
CEDAR RANCH
4 B R , 2 baths &amp; a very
la rge
family
room
descrtbes fh1S nrce· home
Formal dmlng
ltvrng
rooms, k 1tchen w1th bu il t tn
ca btn efs,
rang e
&amp;
•refnger.!!l tor F A furnace
&amp; woodburner . Has tfs own
water system plus rural
water available All tl'lts on
l'h A of leve l land
75 ACRE FARM
3 8 R country home plus 75
A of level to rolling land
some t1mber Lovely v 1ew
of the Oh10 R1ver and nver
frontage
Large barn,
chteken house &amp; corn cnb
All ,JO good condttTon Tht s
farm has l'lad very good
ca re

NICE BLOCK
BUILDING
Has many uses
storeroom , storage, mak,_e
tnt o a
n ice home ,
showroom, kennel, etc
BUTidtnQ SIZe 46ft X 30ft ,
Locatf.d on a corner lot con
ta•n,ng
95 acre on a
blacktop road . 180,000 BTU
furnoce Garage PRICED
ONLY 523,900 00.

93 ACRES
VACANT LAND
93 A of rollmg land 1n Ad
d1son Twp All mmerat
nghts goes Barn &amp; severa l
buildtng Sites 27,900 00
CALL
FOR
MORE
DETAILS

lAC RES CLEAN
LE\IEL LAND
Short d ts t ance north of
Ga ll! pol ts, Gallla Co Rural
Wat er 11 ne 1n front of th1S
property
Blacktop road
All mtneral r tghts goes
ALL LEVELS , LOTS OF
U SES

COLONIAL MANSION
Grac1ous 9 room home
sotuated on appro~ 11 A of
rolling land 5 large BR .
for ma l d1n1ng room w1th
f ire lace, l tv Tng room and
bath Country kttchen w1th
lovely bu il t in cabinets, s s
s1nk , wall oven &amp; counter
top range HaS alum STdmg
and owner has added extra
msulat1on 2 barns, storage
bu1ldtng , ch : ken h ouse ,
and lots of tru 1t trees
GallipOliS Ctfy
SChOOl
system . THIS IS A UNI
QUE
HOME
WITH
CHARACTER

FINE HOME CLOSE
TO GALLIPOLIS
6 rooms looks l tke new In
stde &amp; out , 3 B R Nice kit
chen wtlh built in cabT nets,
s s dDI
s.nk , garbage
dtsposal , pantry , Irving
room appro x li fl . x 15ft
Each room TndlvTdually
heated You must see this
home to apprec1ate Its well
constru ct1on
well kept
home

CARRY OUT
A good bus1ness located on
Stat e Highway 160 1n a n1ce
commun tfY . Land, bnck
buldmg, equ 1pment &amp; all
stock
goes
PRICED
RIGHT

SPACIOUS Bf·LEVEL
Lovely 3 B R brick &amp;
frame b t level Extra n1ce
k1lchen
with
lots of
cabmets ,
d1shwasher,
range &amp; dtn l ng area wtth
patio doors leadmg to large
deck Lower hall lhat adds
lots of possibility fOf' future
famlly
or
recr~ation
rooms . 2 car garage with
automat1c doo,. opener.
This home IS built with m ·
tercom system Gallipolis
coty school system . CALL
NOW,

RUSTIC HOME SITE
L ovely wooded 2 A lol 3
m11es from Gallipolis &amp; JA
mile from Centenary
Rural water ava1lable
Good roads MUST SEE
8ACRES
PRICE REDUCED
Wllh.n 10 min drive to
downtown
Galtipolts,
Green Township. City
School System . Has hookup
for mob1le home, Gallta
Rural Water, electric and
septic tank . night light on
pole. 200 ft . frontage on
Graham
School
Rd
Timber
Building sites
CALL NOW.

Jumbles OCCUR ELOPE TINKLE OFFSET
Answer What he satd he would do when his workers
demanded a raise- REFLECT ON IT

NEW- JUST OFF I'RESSI JUMBlE BOOK Itt wltn 110 puuoooll lVIII
able fOf 113!5 posiJ)IId from Jumble, c/o this newtpltpef, PO loJ: :W,
NorwOOd, N J ~~ Jnctudl your nwnt, ~,..,, zip code .-nc1 meke '
chec:kt paylbteto_r •w•DIPirbookl
.

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f U N sole House 2 barns
trotl er Lorge pond 10 one~ or

B1 ocres 'l42 2Sbb

1HNH Hl:ONOOM carpeted home

full'( m~ulotcd wt th I ' l bolh s
Pomeroy ~eoso n o bly pnced
f.lhone9q:l :Jt!/2

HOM!: ::J bedroom , 1 1 ,
baths Fully cotpeted vmyl
s1d1ng wi th stngle cor garage
lorge lot tn Nutlond on New
ltmo Mood Ui' 000 742 25b2

NEW

hou!.e and both
remodeled fully carpe ted May
.
be see n alter J pm Phone 1WO I:XTRA ntce loh m Rocrn e
99&gt; 89J8
with I 2 x bO Hollypark trotter
f-'ortlolly furn l,hed 18 1e 40 ce
.- AHM 34 ocres hmber Onlled
ment block butldmg with shtid .
wf" ll block bulld 1ng older
ln tgt' ~ o rd e n !t ra ce wtlh fru1t
11 odf"t Old Rt l Ches l er
li Ce;, 4o.~tJ / &lt;J 'l r'
Oh to {J!Jj 3897 bAtw een 4 and b
pt1l
I
HOOM

OW Nt:R I RANSH:JHH:O Mu!.t sell
J bedtoom All elec: lr tc home tn
Morn ln g~olor
Subd lv tStOn

RESIDENTIAL

.

1-'or&amp;lr. Reoi arT~ ;

1977 Rttz Croft l4 ~e70 , 2 bdr
1Y73 Royal Embassy 14)(70 3 bdr
1971 Coventry 12xb0 2 bdr
1971 Buddv . 12)(60 2bdr
1970 Amherst l2x50 2 bdr
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMES
,
PT PLEASANT W VA

THREE FNH k1tt•ns lon9 haired
lllo ck and wh •te mole
7•2 23&lt;8
CRABAPPlES
Pom erowo

101 Keu

StrMI

.

CATS2

-;;;le,

~···288S

uAilEM i2 ·, Mi .i.u

:::::::.f
-"T4f",;;

BEAUTIFUL SETTING
Lots of shrubbery , flowers
and shade trees surrou nd
th1S very well Kept home
Features L R, fam1 1y
room wtth w b It r eplace,
dtn 1ng
area ,
mode rn
kttchen, all b!fch ca bmets
Has a l arge front porch , 2
c ar garage, good garden
ar ea All th1s S1tt1ng on 11h
acr es m a serene and
peaceful area Ctty School
DIS!
~195

Come fall 1n love w1th thl$ 1mmacu1ate 3 BR bnck
ra nch Fully equ,pped kTtchen has Amana stde by s1de
r etn gerator wtth TCe maker, dtshwasher, range and
d 1sposal UtTITty rm has Hotpo1nt washer and dryer
Sn ack bar Formal dmmg area 2 car ga rag e Pat1o .
Beautt lullOO'x200' lawn Fnendly n etghborhood

Merrill Carter
Evenings
37•·2114

On a dr1ve
of France you
m1ght see a home l tke tht s Ga mbrel roof, French.
doors. bndal stat r c ase, marb le mantels This one has
been mode,.nTzed Without last ng any of 1ts ortg1nal old
world charm Ptusn carpet , h armonious wan covenng ,
elegant ITghtlng F1ve spac tous beQrooms, party SIZed
l tvTng room , fam Tty r oom Recreat1on room and hobby
room tn b asem ent Covered walkway leads to prtvat,e
spa WTth Indoor hea ted pool. flfeplace, snack bar and
dress, no room 15 acres suttable tor horses Conven1ent
tocaflon Elegance speaks for ttself , come see

$53,500

106 plus acres . .a acres bot
tom, remamder in pasture
and t1mber Approx 1, 100
tb
tobacco base
Two
Darns. 36•60 &amp; 36x4B Corn
cnb and utollty shod. Lots
of frontage on L1ttle Rae
coon C,.eek North Gallta
Schools

$44,So0
Th e lawn ts be tnQ landsc~d and seeded, just a few
more days and th ts bea utthJI colon tal wtll bt r eady for
(OU 1 3 BR . ltvmg rm hes p tcture w tndow and
ftreplace K tt chen equtpped w1th range , hood, dTSP and
dtsl'lwasher Formal d1n1ng area, 2 ca r tnsulated
garage Heat pump, cent atr Plush ca rpet throughout

$21,500

$115,000

Country home near Kyger
Creek H 19h Sr hool , l 1h
story fr ,. ~
e With.
alum1nur ~· 3 BR,
familY rn _, front porch
perfect for summer even
ings Natural gas forced a i r
furnace . Rural water
Beauttfullg . rolling laWn

283 acre farm, ~)Ver 60 acres tillable, balance wood and
rolling pasture l4731b tobacco base. M1n erat nghts to
be sold w1th farm comfort.-ble 2 story farm hom e 1n
very ptcturesque setting surrounded ~Y g1ant tre es, 3
barns. oth er outbldg

n

$16,500
$17,000
J beaut1fut acres, late
model mObile home-, fur ·
mshed h: 10 storage b ldg
Country sett•no tust 7 mtles
from c1 ty Kyger Creek
Sc hools
W•th 6 acres

Lots of space at a budge t
pnce! Over 6 acres mostly
pasture. Large barn, other
outbldg 2 BR mobile t:lome
w1th lO'x 18' addtt,on Ctty
schools 5 miles from CTty

m,ooo

$22,500

.;;,an •

$32,000
If you ' ve been took tng for 1 really nice home you can
afford to talre ~ '""'" 1 • ... ,.. " ......NG~11 Kyger Creek
scnoot 01st Nt~AI ~ n'P£NDI
'1 . s1dmg, 3 BR.
family rm a nt~ .iE .. • _ , -· rpeted Nea r ly
~ .acre w1th n1ce garden spot Less than 6 m1 from Cl
ly

$52,000

557,750.00

You'll feel like '(Ou' r e tn tfTe
" Lap of Luxury " when you
lOOk at this bnck ranch 3
BR, 1'1&gt; baths Elegantly
decora t ed
wtth
plush
ca rpetin g,
c rystal
chandelier 10 the lg L
shaped L.R KTtchen has
real wOOd ca btnets, Hot
potnt rang e, G1bson refflg
UT11 1ty complete WTth
Maytag Washer and Dryer ·
Lg 2 car garage Beau t•ful
level tr~ studded lawn.
Concrete dnve and walks

L1Ke to see your home be
lng bu!lt? M ak e an appOmt
m ent to see th ts bnck and
cedar L shaped ranch For
mat entry hall, 3 BR , famr
ly rm wtfh fireplace, for
m al d 1mng, kttchen wtll
have snack bar , range,
dtShwasher , and disposal 2
full baths , 2 ca r garage,
heat pump, cent a 1r 3 ~
acre tevel lilt Cent loca
11on

$28,000

Th1S one nas everything!
FullY furnished mobile
home m mint condition
Tastefully
dec orated
Qua li fY furntt 'Jre plus
carpet
dining
and h ~ .. Double
vanitv •• oath Cent air
cond Concrete drive, block
utility Oldg 2 carports,
fnver rentage l ac re l ot
w1fh room for add ' l mob1le
hi&gt;'!'• WalkinQ diStance
grocery

Don 't mtss thiS opportun1
tv! Two famtly rental o4
rm and bath on ftrst floor
3 rm and bath on second
W1fh1n walking dtstance
downtown
shopp t ng
Perfec t for owner
occ u
pant or as mvestment

'

$26,900

" NEW 41f0AILY"

acres
Appr ox
35
ttmber, rest tillabl e 1242
lb
tobacco base, "" barn, '
olher outbldg
Hannan
Trace Schools

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446·3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446·3636
Any Hour
Lou Lutton, Realtor Assoc., Eve. 446·3005

•s

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

8Jl«&lt;lt

Hollltetfer Jr.,
lrHer
............, ' Oltlo

GeorgeS.

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

3 BEDROOMS Older
home, oome remodeling,
beautiful v iew of the river,
must see to appreciate.
Price 112,500.

Olflce Hl'l.

h.m.-s p.m.

Closed Thul'llltYI &amp;

Your Full Tltnt

RHIIIIttt. lroktr
RUTLAND - 3 btclroom
frame home wltll neturtl
gas htolt. Sltu.twd on nice
lire lot on fMin Street.
Asking 113,500.
Ml4ltllltlert - Nice 5 room
homtt wflh btlh end
gtr~~ge.

Sllueltd

RACINE- Thft betulfful 3
bedroom home htt dining
"-"· ltmlly room Md 1un
porch. Plenty of lfwll•
IP.!!CII, Gtr~~g~ and polio
with o clnopy, Sltuot.d an
alm01t 1 tcre on St.tt
Rout. 331. Selll tor GJ,OOO.
RIGGS CRIST MANORIIHutltul 12 room lf'lll
ltvel colonltf. htl 5
IMidl oom1. 3 lull bot.. tnd
much. much morel Coli
ladty lor mort Info tnd

an offer.
we 1111vo ....., 111t11t1s ..

cllllele ..... ,.... ..., ..
WCII ...

MUCH POR 50 LITTLE- Nice
2 BR
home on olll Route 160, opprox . 6 mi. north of HMC .
Gtrtge, bltrn, shop, and sriloft oppte orchard included
on thlsgentty rotting S. A . S39.SOO. STROUT REALTY .
446-ooal.
FHA &amp; VA HOME LOANS MclENDON MOR,TGAGE COMI'ANY
loon Reptewntolive, V1olet
Cooloe' \/..,. , 4b3 Sec:ond
Ave. Second floor GallipoliS
Oh•o 45631 Col"4b 7112

- -FOM
- SALE IV OWNER
-

-· ~-

-~--

-

lARGE A FRAME OR CHAleT
located on Georges Creek.
tlutlt·rn k1tchen . 3 bdr 2 full
boths pttted ftreploce red·
wood deck '" front redwood
bolcony off mdster bedroom,
potro full bo"Sement total
elect Call-&lt;44t:t ;nCJQ for oppomt·

11 ACRES - Moreor less, •
bedrooms. modern beth,
largt kitchen &amp; dining
room. fireplace. ttvertl
out buildings. Owner being
tran1terred
Price

$35,000.00.

MOST
ATTRACTIVE HOME
Beauttful, one of 1ts best
Ma1n St , Vmton, 3 B R ,
bath , large forma l 0 R ,
deluxe but lt '" k1 tchen, k tt
Che nette ,
L R
wt t h
f1repla ce, ba sem en t, FA
fuel all furn ace, large wel l
landsca ped lot 97'x 497'
garage, front porch One of
the bes t
M uch more
Shown by appomtment
N 207

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
104W. tM1n

m.:me
Coli m.n:IJ

Pom-y

Altar Houri

CONTACT:

Loll Pauley
lra~ch tMntgtr

men I

- --· - . . .

102b First Avenue Rwerv1ew pro·
ptrty wlth frontoge on First and lb 1 , ACMES lAND rolling and
Second Avenu.. 8 rooms 2 1 ,
flat 'r bo!i em e nt Iorge othc,
botht, :l car -goroge. Cofl week
' ' both for ced otr , luef oil fur
doys, ....Ct-4383 evemng1 and
noce Iorge outbu1ldtngs ond
Sundoy A40-0139 Shown by op·
garage located on Turkey Nun
pointment onlr
,
Rd obout 1 m1l ~ from Grovel
~ Htlt Cemetery Coli 'Jb7 7S27 or
BYOWNEA
JO.I 51&gt;7 91160
2 bdr home '" country. &amp;.outiful
settrng . All MOdern . On one THR~E BON HOME , ', m1 W of
ocr• lot, or ollfdltlonal land
HMC on Rt 35 I ' l acre lot 'filth
ovotloble . . .top rood Call
pool High S50 ·, Coll•4~&gt;-•138
.
.
44b 3'197 or 2. .f213

-- ----

-- ----

--

........... 742-ltN
........... Attic.
.............. 1...

......

ROOM TO 5TRETCH OUT
on thos U A . bit by firm .
Fe•tures 4 BR home, JOxlO
blrn,
a&amp;ver•l
other
buoldlft91· fenced, with
moot If ftnd In grtn and
only UJ,fOO. STROUT

RBAI,TY. 146 DDDI.

GIACIOUI LIVING

IN TOWN

................7..

Ul'll Vlc:torltn Henft wlffll Hlttl ..tlls tnd V. bltth, l
btdrooml, library, dining room, llvlll!l room wllll
tllln'Y wnttwork, t fll'l!lltcn, holly lnsuloltd aftll

IIOii onoblfo homo with built

on parch. outbuilcllftp. an lot 2
mllfl

w

of luckoye HMis c•

ihrtn wlndtWI. J-ctr 10r01ton a ""' lalt-lookllll
tlleOitlo on IIIIIIIW4It. A fllllllltcl It relit t fomlty Ill
. .ocleW

-llrl. CIH

DIIY• • ...,.,,.

1111 a1._11111 446-4113

a;; I hnlllt.

2•!1-!071

~-

NEW LISTING
RIO GRANDE AREA
Ltke new hom e w1th o
rooms , bath , shower , full
finished basement, one car
f101shed garage Well land
scaped, shru bbery , rose
garden , patto, destgned
barbecue gnll , oak wh1fe
board fence, att rac ttve ar
ched brtdge tn back yard to
add to some ot the many
pteastng e)( tr as owners
m u st sen now Loca ted
c lose to Voca tTonal Sc hool
You ' ve w anted 11. we 've got
1t Pn ced to se ll $49,900
n16
COZY BEAUTY
Ots tt ncttve home S1 ft1 ng on
1 plu s acres at beaut1fut
land Conf atntng lot s of \be
~xt r as you can thtnk about
eve r owntng 'l bedroom~.
full b ath s. tamll y room
wo od burntn g firep lace
kTi chen, all appltit nce s li ke
new Built tn acquarwm,
not m uch more tn an 15
m 1nut e drtve
from
Go tllpohs Perr y Twp II 19&amp;

'

LARGE HOME IN CITY
Large 2 story house, 9
rooms House •s modern
and 1n good cond itton Pn c
ed r easonabl e
Owner
needs to move th1 s proper
ty tm med tat ely Please ca l l
for more 1nformat•on N 135
GOOD INVESTMENT
ORRENTALP~OPERTY

L R , 2 bedrooms, modern
ea t 1n ktt chen, hardwood
floors , full oasement and
uttl tt y room Loca te d nght
out of town Prtced very
r easonably - $&lt;4,500 00
1 191
BEAUTIFUL
RIVER
\/lEW
Buy two for th e pn ce of
one' Thts home has 3 lar ge
bedroo m s,
full
bath ,
shower 1n ba semen t , lot s of
trees and shrubbery and a
ntCe ftre place m the l!vmg '
room PLUS A RENTAL
Call for appoontment• 1 ill

-

CENTURY 21
76.89 ACRE FARM
Modern 4 bedroom home
only 4 vears old 2 ba ths,
modern kTfc~en. Iaroe
pat1o, master bedroom TS
12 'x2 4' w1fh huge walk In
closet 2 Cl!tr garage , stock
od farm pond, 50 acres of
good tillable ground. 10 15
acres of t1mber , exce llent
area to hunt , ftSh or farm
Some farm equ1pment tn ·
eluded farm tra c tor w 1th
front end loader , brush
hog , plows , d 1sc, corn
planter , crop sprayer , corn
PICker, 2 wheel tra•ler, and
varous other 1tems. Has
some fru1t trees T his IS a
good general farm wtth lots
Of poSSib ilities. Shown by
appointment
N211
160ACRE BEEF
CATTLE FARM
Cattle pr•ces are look tng
up Lots of pasture, Plenty
water, some good t1mber
Owner savs s-:" 11 now . M'""

CENl Uf.?Y 71
MOBILE HOMES
MOBILE HOME COURT
12•52, 2 B R , total eleclnc ,
all furniShed , all rented ,
located on Old 160 at
Evergreen
GOOd cond t
fTon , very attractive set
t•ng, profitable 1nvestment

sn.noo

-m

MOBILE HOME AND LOr
U•67' mobile home featur
Jng 2 B.R., L.R ., D .R,
bath,
kitchen
with
breakfasl bar . Front pajjo,
anchored &amp; undersklrted. 1
car garage with work area .
I
140
QUIET RETREAT
'
New U 'x70'' fully equ1pped
mobile home on creek front
101. deep water frontage
E•cellent swimming and
I 201
fish1ng
LOl AND MUtiiLt: "UM~
1974 &lt; bedroom moDilc
hOme, ba1h, kitchen , elec
heat
190
MOIIILI! HOME COUN 1
Three good mobile homes
located close to city , owner
will sell w•th small down
payment &amp; land contracl to
any qualified buyer Calf

*

a .... A.III~IItlter,' Jt.,

TWO

J1m Stutes
Even1ngs
446 2885

4 Homette mob1le hom es,

Cllti'YIIAmltr. ANte.

f(ttrENs.- litte7

1'167 HOUSE
~ A li 1 4'J4 ,
electric furnished. air condl· COMMIIICIAL AND POfiTIAIT
.Sl V~ N NOOM HOU~~ In Pt Plea
PHOTOGIIAI'HY · ,
' H~H OK lour hcdrootn hous e in
sont J'ork Or $35 500 R~nt 1 fioned Wosher and Dryer 1
cident oncl-lol
\911 In Horrl•onviU• 7.. 2 2826
Pom~.,~rN both and '1 Cen tral
s:as per mo Mel rt q Call
CoN !loy or nlth(
hPot111~ 49'1 l(J/ 4
b1~ 3123
1974_!110i1LE HOM-E ·m-7•~
- ~~12•• . ,~.,......

JUST A LITTLE
BIT COUNTRY!
5 rms &amp; bath , J bedroom s
FA fuel 011 heat, sc r eened
rn porc h, n1 ce lev el lot
gardr-n, lots of frUtt tr ees
Vtl taqe of Addtso n 530,900
1 181

$134,000
through me countrys1de

rntl&lt;t

ANVPERSON who hos anyth!nv 10
gt'le away and doe. not offer or
onemr,t to after ony other thine
1973 COMMUNITY mobile home,
lor s;o • moy pktc:e on od ~ this
2 bdr Coli '256 l .667 after
column lh.te wdl be no' ·
5 :Wpm
charge to the oc~v.,u..,
71 NEW YONKER 12 x b2, gas
od-;;lt lo....,i;,,,
&amp;
~om~!•!.v ~ur.nllh_!d: ~7! 2~
wkd old Col"4b-7525
19"/1 lancer Mabile Home e)(c
trai.;d(~u
cond $S 1200 Ph ~7 057~
0
7d 5146 .
19 7b NASHUA " , bS 3 bedroom
1' 1 both underpinning, SISOO
and assume loon . 9.. 9.26ti3 01"
Y.. :J 3:J 11

. .

WI
SCI.!OC)L DIST.
Scem c area , new double wtde 24'X52', 8
rooms, 2 baths. 2 sho wer s, L R , F R.,
D R , 3 bedrooms, deluxe kitchen, g()(Xt
garden area , new t oot shed 24'x28' Th1s TS
what you want and can't usuall y f tnd All
new, wtth 10 acres to use as you please
$32,000
N219

"aonnot Stutes
Evenings

S.turcleys tt MINt FARM
19 1!:~ acres of rolling land
plus 3 B R home . Ruret
water &amp; seve,.al out
bUildings
OWNER
NEEDS TO SELL IM·
MEDIATELY I

Arthur A. N•llert
Senror M~:~rnl}er
Amertcan Soc•e•
Of Appra' sers

3 .-

onan•thlrdoflntcre. Will

~ARM

1

3 m1les from c1ty, one of the area's most des~rabl e
ne•ghborhoods Gall •• Academy H1gh Schoql, Green
E lementary School , B~SQ\l) famrly kttchen, dmmg
area, knotty p1ne pan
1n counte,. top rang e
dishwasher and d1S~
_... , ye ITv1ng room w1th
f treplace Good 34 x61J earn , 3 car garage FIFTY
SEVEN ACRES w•th g?"d fenced pasture, pond ,
timber, some walnut, m1nera l nghts go w1th fa rm
Shown by appointment only

•II .t GJ,OOO.

HOUSE IN Mrnersville O'lerlook
tng rtver o4 bedroom liv1ng
room , kitchen both uf!t.ty
room and basement lorry
ftel d ~ 992 5823

,.m

$67,000

dtltchtd

111

\TUAUNEI

BEAUTIFUL
RIVERFRONT HOME
BeautTfUI7 room home wtth
a panoramic v tew of the
nver 2'1J A Full basement
w i th
woodburn1no
fireplace , 23ft X41 ft room
w1th k itchenette, e•cellent
for entertatn tng or dane
tng N tee modern kitchen
1n c ludTng
diShwasher,
range &amp; refngerator, for
m al d1ning room , fl!tmiiV
room , formaiiPJtnQ roorr &amp;
3 BR and 2 full baths &amp;
showers Fuel oil F A fur
nace E•cellent location for
ft sh1ng , nght out your back
door Coty school dlst Must
see to apprectate Its value

}9

I I

(J I

MAKE US AN OFFER ON
THIS ONE 8 ROOM HOME
APPROX. 4 A
All level, along 51 HWY 554 • B R.
modern home w1th built m .k•tchen , F .A
furna ce, parttal basery1ent , 2 porches
Separate garage and summer k1tchen,
also workshop &amp; storage area Lots of
bu1ldmg spots for new homes on the Gall Ia
Co Ru ra l Water Syst Also an 1ncome in ·
vestment property CALL NOW FOR
MORE DETAIL S

yr ftnOn&lt;lng al so
ref1 nonj rng Ire land Mortgage
rt 1: ~ t ote A th em phone (b1 4)
591 305 1

I VANE~

Housing
Headquartf!rs
R e ~l

..
&lt;

NEW LISTING - In th e Vtll age of Vrnt on
sttua h ·d on a well landscaped fenced lol
..
1 ht S charmtng old er brrck fea tur es 2 -t
tD 2 Story w1th Ca,.pel throughout See lh1 S wo I p s, a ver y prett y k ttc hen w1 th d1n ':Z
tng room p l us several other excellent 01
Q.T on e soon S21.900
qualtttes Ca ll for comp lete tn format 1on :S

;o:'

216 E Second Street
BUILDING LOTS - We
ha\le a number of goOd
loca ted Sttes for
your
trailer or new home Some
on Water and Sewer lmes
RETIREM E NT
Id eal
spot on Rt
124 wher e
you ' ll enjoy lhe besl of
ftshtng a nd boatmg Relilx
tn thts atmosphere and
l tVe 3 acres ptu 5 and 3
bedroom mob1le hOme
BUSINESS
BUILDING
- Out of htgh wa ter Wi l l
se l l for tess than re pl ace
ment cos t Better check on
th•s for storage
NEW
LISTING
- 3
bedroom frame home new
ly patnted tnStde, new
alumtnum Std 1ng Lo ts of
cupboards ' " the ktt chen
and large ful l basement
Vtewof R1Yer
SEE THIS - An e:.: lra nt ce
3 bedroom mabtle home,
70' x14'. central atr condt
t toned, on J'• acre of land
Sta te Route riear town Bet
ter not w aif on lhts one
NEW LISTING - 5 room
fr am e nome on corner lot
nex t to school .n Rutland
Natural gas heat garage,
garden. ano a ll turn1tur e
Ou t Ol fl OOd
LIST
WITH
THE
LEADER STARTED IN
REAL ESTATE IN 1958.
CALL 992 lllS TO SELL. 4
SALESPEOPLE
TO
SER.VE YOU
Helen L . Teaford

HOUSE &amp; I A
IN COUNTRY
7 room home s•tua ted on
A of n1ce l and on a
blackl op road 4 B R bath
&amp; country kitchen wtth
buTif · Tn
cab 1n e ts
All
carpe ted MAK E YOUR
APPO IN TM E N T TODAY

'
...'

::r

NEW Ll STING - On Shade

P r~c ed

to se ll at $7 500

: Tw o story bnck hom e wtlh c1 d!vtded base
.. 11enl seven I out butldtngs and near l y one
..:j ac r e of ground rl1tS only part Ja lly
desc nbes our I1St 1nq on Mtll Creek Rd For
Q.l your l nfon n&lt;l l tonyt vt..• us cl ca ll lf ou w tll be
~ glad you dt a

992-3325

0

Two tot s m CharolaTs Htlls, 2 98 acres and :r
3 34 ac r es Both lot s re stn c ted for your tO
pro tec t ton
tO

area s ftnest homes Coun ty water

'&lt;

POMEROY. 0 .

Country home with J. S4 acres of land w 1th ::seve r a l cho tce bUTi dt ng s•tes Eve ca ll:..
Tom Wh tfe 446 9557
n

I 40 acre bUi l ding Stt e JUSt Oil 0 J Wh tTC iiO
fl)
Rd Tn1s tot IS sur r ounded by som e of the

.-..

608 E.
MAIN

LARGE STATELY
7 ROOM HOME
Large level lot Bath front
and back porches 4 BR of
above avera ge size C1ty
water Part ia l basement
Metal stor age bldg ALL
OF THI S FOR ONLY
$12,900 00

Curvtng dn~e to dasstc t110h Pill ar ed entry g 1ves thTS
nearly new home a '' SOUtt)ern Ptantat1on " a1r
GraciOUS foyer with open stairway, ITv tng
has shut
ters , bea m ed c ell tng Country k1t chen w1th wood burn
1ng flfeplace, dark wood cabinets, fully equ tpped WTth
GE a pp11ances Beamed ce..,ng , l ots of light'" study
Formal dtnmg r oom w1th cd\tom china cab tn et , plank
floor s 3 lg bedrooms RKreatlon rm tn basement
Wtfh ftreplace . 2 car flntstltd garage. Cover ed pat10
35x45 garage and workshop'tlas concrete floor, pillars
matc htng home Nearly 2 beautifully lan dscaped
acres C1 ty sc hools . Green ~lementary Only 4 miles
from Ct ty 1n a great commun1ty

Few minutes from c1ty Bea ut tfut country surround
1ngs Brick and frame ranch has J BR , ex tra lg k1t chen
w1th range , trash comp and diShwasher Fully
carpeted Cent a~r , spac1ous lawn has famTIY SIZed
patio and cham hnk fence tn back 1 car attached In
SUiatod garage Separate slorage bldg VA FHA
FINANCING AVAILABLE

I

0

chanvln-g
dally.

CENTURY 21

$125,000
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME - A
Grande area Is now available 117
farm tn t he R1o
t1ve dairy farm equtpped to sell G~~~~ ~ghl~tfroduc
yr old~ B R ranch home 2 car
m, Hc1s 3
tenant house p,.ime locc1t,a
garage, fam11y rm Also
0 0
,ust off R t 35 with frontage "a~ ~ ~ ~f·~~ d ~;etopment ,
of R1o Grande . SHOWN BY APPOINTMENf O~Ls~uth

...

&lt; .

Thts home needs a new owner. Two B R at
rached ga r age, sc r eened back porch
natural gas hea l Pn ced at $17 ,900 Take a
look and ma ke us a reasonable offer ( tt y
SChOOl
I

EACH OFFICE

Phyllis

See th• s one soon . One of the area' s f tnest
homes tnc ludes a hilltop vtew and 1t 1s sur ...
round ed by nea r ly 35 acr es Lots ol fron
!a ge on state ht ghway New owner could C
se ll Sf've r MI bull dtn g tots $100,000 plus
a.

446-{)552

will be

INDEPENDENnY OWNED

~

';I

&lt;

...,o,

;

'R~

This ad

[B 446-6610

446-3636

~

•

i M~GHEE
.,~
"'

JUAllQII

you for listing with : sud ' McGhee Realty "Thank you

.1¢ud"

~

[B

23 LOCUST STREET

CANADAY REALTY

nowl

1133

FARrv!:.,

MODERN HOUSE -POOL
3,300 sq ft overall, 3 BR 2 ba ths, shower
modern k1 tchen, large anttque decorated
family room. 1100 sq ft , conc r ete swtmm
tng pool 18' x35 , very m uc h 1n use p1cntc
ar ea, loi s of lt vtng St Rt 141, Gal!t pohs
Sc hool 0 1stn ct Pn ced $53,900 Modern
new cus tom built home close to property
can be purchased W1th property or sol d
separately or moved
Tota l Package
$76,000
I ll~

HOUSE HUNTING&gt;
6 rooms, bath , ex tens tv el y
remodeled , modern bu t if tn
k1tchen. fo rma l 0 R , 2
B R , lull basement Ca n be
purchased wtth J acres or
22 ac res Toba cco ba se,
some t tmber Fam rly mov
mg, Wt ll take ntee mob tle
home on trade 1n Good
net ghborhood $35,000 T otal
Prrce
~ 21 1
CONVENIENT PLACE
Owner IS teavtng star e and
needs 1o move thts all brt CI&lt;.
home loc at ed oil St R t 35
tn Pleasan t Valley E st ates
3 BR, l lf2 baths, modNn
bu il t n kt fche n
IIVt ng
room , gas ht:-a f centr a l a lf ,
double car garage Can be
seen anyht•me ChecK fh1 S
neout 1
H214
EXECUTIVE'S REST
Custom b utll 4 B R on 86
acres tn Debb '( Dr tve ar ea
B tg home at Rea sonab le
Pn cc
!1 192

Bl LE\IELIN
WOODED AREA
Th 1s lovely brtc k and
fr ame bt leve l 1S se tttn g tn
1112 acr es of beau t1 fut
woodland Onl y 41f2 yrs old
f eatu nn g foyer,
L R
modern
ktfchen, d tntn g
area. 3 bedrooms full b ase
m ent area A ll fh1 s and
more tn KYGER CREEK
SCHOOL
DI STRICT
Shown b y appom tm ent
N
194
I N\IESTO~ ' S DREAM
Put you r del la ttn g dollar 1n
a near ly new comm er c tal
tease bustness 3 excel lent
long term teases G r eaT
ret urn on your money !I 215
BARGAIN OF THE YEAR
Modern home, 7 roo m s,
bath , 1 story house only 1
yr old , also has full f 1n1 sh
ed basem ent, modern Ktt
chen. 0 R , form al L R
wtth fireplac e. F R , u flltt y
rm . workshop, &amp; stu dy
Pat1o ,
ro se
gard en,
bea ut•ful shrubbery, good
garden Appealtng over all
to anyone Over an acre of
ground $35,000
N209

CENTURY 21

GOOD BUY
100 acres, Ha,.nson Twp
Pasture land , toba cco
base, coal r1ghts, t1mber
and nice wooded area for
lots 1972 12:x60' mob ile
home alrr.-ady in place Can
be purchased w1th or
w1thout mobile home Sell ·
tn g prtee only $30,000 N 17S
FARM
EXCEPTIONALLY
CLEAN
41 acres, good fences, pro
ducttve pasture Approx 10
t1tlable acres
Beauttful
wooded areas Appro• 1200
lb tobacco base, l tvestock
and tobacc o barn House 1S
very attractive, well taken
care of, 3 bedrooms , 112
basement, almost new 011
F A furna ce Tht s tS a w ell
balanced farm
1204
EXTRA CLEAN FARM
4 room house, barn and
equipment shed Knee deep
-~rass all over Plenty of
spring water for stock
Good fencing
1 167
219 ACRE; FARM
One of Perry Twp 's best
all around farms Modern
house, 6 rm , bath, 3 Br ,
full basement, heat pump
Owner savs fully insulated
2 barns. so acres tillable,
157 acres pasture, tobacco
base, lots of road frontage,
rural water available ,
blacktop road E•tra space
all set up for mobole home
This TS a good one, let us
help you make a wise in·
vestment.
11"
LOOKING FOR
A BARGAIN?
Then lool&lt; no further than
ttiTS 30 acre farm 8 acres 1
tillable, some standing
tomber . the rest Is pasture
land Good spring develop ·
ment for water suppty 5
room house 2 BR house
recently remodeled . Fair
size psrn, 700 lbs. tobacco
base. Should sell yester·
day $25.000
I ttl
PLANTATION

Ill acres on St Rl 125 and
COf'a ,Mill rd ., B rooms
Farm welt fenced Good
outbuilding&amp;, 35 acres level
t i llable land. Much more
11~

89 ACRES
CLAY TOWNSHIP
House, 2 barns, tobac co
base, very scen tc area , 2
beautifUl takes, stocked
Wtfh fish
Excell ent for
ft sh1ng , boat.ng or hun tmg
Just good ITvmg
"161
BEEF FARM
11 8 ac r es. over 40 acres
te\el t1ll ab te land , th e r es t
IS pas tur e and woodland
Tobacco base
6 room
house. 1:100d b .:~ rn . oTher
oul&amp;utld tngs Se 1t1ng below
fi{day 's m arke t
• 106 ~
Sl ACRES S39, SOO
Localed ofl Sl Rl 325,
Perry Twp , 52 acr es
Tillabl e land , pasture and
som e wooded ar ea Moder n
6 room house and barn
over BOO lbs tobac co base
Ga llipOli S Ctty School 01st
PRICED TO SELL '
N 144
95 ACRE FARM
ANOHOME
Just ltsted th1s n1ce farm
located tn M orga n Twp
w1th 4 yr old m1lktng
parlor,
18' x42 '
b a rn ,
138' x60 ' corn crtb, ch tc ken
house, ce llar house &amp; loft ,
plus other bldgs 3 ponds
All mmeral nghts go
Modern 8 room farm h ouse
Home has new Std 1ng M or
tgage ca n be assumed for
nght party
nos

33 ACRE FARM
4 rm nouse, 12'x50' mobile
home, 2 dnlled w ells,
stocked farm pond Most of
the land lays we ll, could be
used many ways Extra
mobile home hookup and
septt c tank on another gOOd
locat1on Racc oon Twp
N 110
SMALLACREAGI:
GOOD STARTER HOME
Approx 7 ac r e farm , 4
acres le\lel Tops for truck
farm1ng, or any use Sma l l
barn, pasture for ho,.ses or
cattle
House tS be1ng
remodeled, 6 rooms &amp; bathi
shaded , level, attract1ve
area .
HI miles from
Gallipolis, 10 miles from
Otk Hill , blacktop ro~d

$36,000.

12011

ONE OF
MIDDLEPORT'S
FINE HOMES
3400 sq 11 of exq ut stte l tv
1ng fu ll .,. carpe ted, huge
stone ttreplce , 5 bedrooms,
11 1 ba lh s Al so a fu lly
carpeted 1st fl oor ap r!
ment renl sa T\5000
H 174
RANCH4BEOROOMS
Space abounds 1n tht S
ro o m y horr. e
2 w b
!treplacs, full ! tntsh ed
b t=~se ment
douhle c ar
QcH agr
wdh
c l ec tr 'c
opener Stttong on a good
SILe lOt IOCFI!t• t 1 Off tram 51
Rt 160 Ctty Sc hool Ot sl
Sl1own by aQpomlment
Calli er m ore dct ati SIIt 132
UNIQUELY BUILT
Drt ve by th 1s un usua ll y
des•gned 3 bedroom 01
leve l
Located on J ay
Ort ve ( tty Schools, llv rng
room wtth w b ftrepl ace
rnoctern k itc hen Jl," ba t hs,
large famt l y room Destgn
ed f or fa mtly ltvt ng Pn ced
tn upper S40's Shown by
appotntment
!I 201
STARTING OR
RETIRING
Cozy 7 bedroom nea r Metgs
Mtne N o 1 Th ts very neat
fr ame hom e 1s surr ounded
buy tots ot n1 ce trees,
s t rawberrte s
grape
v• n eyard s
ras pbe r rtes,
fq.Jtt t rees and f lowers A ll
thts on 91 ac r es Also 2
st orage bl dgs and a metal
ol pg All th •s and m uch
more for only $20,000 11202
HALFWAY UP
On Chape l o n ve Bul avtl le
Road sets tht s spa c1ous
yellow 3 bedroom b l level
Fea tur es ntce en tr y, llvtng
r oom, dtmng room and
moder n. k. tt chen . f amilY
room wtth free sta ndtng
I t replace . 2 car garage wtlh
e tec tn c opener Thts home
has a spec•al fea ture---an
all ! bergta ss underground
swt mmtng pool w tth com
plete t1l tenn g sys tem sur
rounded by cha 1n ltnk
fence Sh own by appo•nt
m ent Be tt er hurr y 1 li 203
LOVELY RANCH
SHOWN BY
APPOINTMENT
Be the t •rs t to see th 1S very
well construc ted
home
Fe atures 3 bedrooms, L R ,
dtnt ng ar ea . very modern
butl1tn k tfc hen , bath , full
basem ent ftn1shed , su per
n1 ce work shop Thts home
tS well kep t and ver y n tcely
decora 1ed and papered
Loca ted tn Syrac use /1 186
SPACIOUS BI ·LEVEL
Be th e ftr st to see th ts tm
macu tat e l y ke pt hom e
fea tur.ng a lovel y form at
L R w tth a w B fTrela ce,
d tntng area, m oder n bu tlt
tn k1t chen, a B R , 21 17
baths, a very rust '' F R
w1th a w b ftretace , utlf 1ty
rm doub le car garge, gas
f or ced atr 1urnace &amp; cen
tral atr T h ts hom e ts a
ver y well decor ated and
qual1ly bu ilt home sett mg
on a love l y w ell landscaped
lo1 1n an tdeal locatton
Shown by appt on l y ' Call
now'
11 147
A BIT OF COUNTRY
Ca ll tOday TO see thiS n1CC
count ry home loca ted on
1 99 acres of level produc
t1v e land 3 bedrooms fully
equt pped ktf chen utdtty
rm red m el al barn ltk e
new Run nang cree k on Stde
make~ tor plenty of water
and nt ce setttn g, Oh to Twp
S41 noo oo
"1 97
TWO BEDROOM HOME
Pnced tow tor tmmedtate
sale NICe garden space .
good loca t1on, c 1ty w a ter,
sewer, basement Owner
wilt help f.n ance qual!f ted
Duyer
# 109

CENTURY 21
ACAN T LANL
VACANT LAND
22 acres, 10 tillable, 12
pasture, old er btun, 1300 l b
toba cco base , ple nty
water $11 ,500
# 101
LOT IN THURMAN
Barn, sep t1 c Tank, rural
water avatlable
1/1 89
ACREAGE
S1x acr es on blacktop road
Half of area or more IS
wood lot Hannan T,.ace
School Dlst Ca ll now N 111
INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
27 acres, rural water .
blacktop road, c lose to
Gallipolis. One of its l&lt;ind
left Pr iced rloht
1103

'We're The Neighborhood Profession•lr'
'

•

�D-8- The Sllil~l*'Y +hm~:!ih._'\cutmcl . Sumlav. Scut . 17. 1978

Beat•••

18 fined, nine
forfeit .bonds

-...~

Of the Bend ·

POMEROY -

By Bob Hoeflich

Eighteen linemen!. 29 days suspended.

defendants were fined and · one year probation , resisting,

ni ne ot hers forfeited bonds in "'10sts only, disorderly conMei ~s Co unty Court Friday. duct ; Tim Ruth, . Rt . 3,
Fined by Judge Robert E. Albany, $200 and costs, 90

BEAT OF THE BEND
So successful was the first bicycle rodeo of Boy Power,
Inc., held at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds in August that
another event will be held on SUnday, Oct . I. The Rock Springs
Fairgrounds will be the )ocation. Registration wi ll be at 12
noon with events to begin at I.
Participants must wear any kind of hard hat or helmet
which fits securely and must wear long trousers, lo11g sleeved
shirts, gloves and shoes.
Events range from l)Se of big wheels to the use of three,
five and !Ospeed bikes. Jumps and hairpin turns are in 5ome of

Looking a little further ahead the Meigs Jay~s are
planning a haunled house feature for late October, probably
opening on Oct. 20 and running through Halloween with some
"break" days in between.
The Pomeroy Senior Hi~h building will be used for the
location and the Jaycees have all sorts of plans upfolding for
giving the youngsters a seasonable thrilling evening. We 'll
keep you advised as the plans are nailed down.
·

on ly.

six

months

co nfin ement

1, Racine, $153, fl eeing an

offi cer, $153, driving under
suspensio n, $353 , OW l ;
Dannie C. Bissell, Rt. 1. Long
Bo tt om, $30 .55, improper
sta rting .

three

day s

Curriculum
update set

Realtor

••
•
•
•

E very

year , tw ice as

many Amer ic an fam ilies
bu y oiOPr (or pre vio usly

•
•

occupied homes) than they
do new houSes Depend ing
e upon the age of the home ,
e natura ll y, there may be

e
1

•
•

•

•
I
•
•
•
•

4

e

•
•
•

so me unk nown ris ks in th e
area of
c onStr uc t ion .
p lumbing . or
w iring
However , these can be
ob vi ated by a professional
inspec tion

But th ere are also some
ma jo r
ad v antages
to
bu y 1ng an older home . II
norma lly con ta 1ns fa r more
space than a new home in
the same pr ice r ang e. and
ther e are a g r eat many
mor eolderhomesthannew
homes for sale wh1ch g1ves
yo u a wider oppo rt uni ty to
ma ke a goo d buy . A lso ,

C-8

Bec ky
ta inee rs ,
Rive r
Bowman ,

Cro use.

M oun .

Jeff Halley . Oh io
Ranchers ;
Sue
Ohi o River Ran
Ter es a
James .
cher s ;
Rebe l s ; Kathy McCoy, Ri o

Wranglers ;

Camp ing
season We re retoq niled lot
t11ei r contr i buli oil to ou r
successf ul camping ,progr a m
held a t Can ter 's Cave 4- H
Camp . Thes e co un se l ors

we r e :
Beginner 's Camp Coun selors - Mike Shoemaker,
Bob Wa ugh , Mar ta Alderi gi,
Tammy Knox and.. Br ian

l ynn

l ewis ,
Rock Hi~l Ranc hers ; Gary
Ni berl , Triangle ; Gene Duke .

Wild Bulfalos ; Davi d Mill s.
Rebels and Rob Massie .
Four H m embers
w ho
ser ved as Ca mp Cou ns el or s

w.1 rd. Te resa Stower s, Kelly
Clark , Debbie Dillon . R1ta
George . Beth Y oho. David
Russe l l, Gary Roac h, Dale
Newberr y, Jon Th ompson ,
Da vi d
Wandli ng,
Marc
Hardw ay and u~a Fellure

Team Camp Co un selo r s Lyn n ita Newberry . M a tt
Sau nders, L ynn Lew is .::tnd

Da vi d M i ll s.
All a. H Clubs a·r e el lgi bt'e to

compe t e for

Hono r

Club

Awards, which is bclsed upon
the ac tivities tha t tha t c ltJb

has part icipated in during the and ot hers we r e
pasl ye'ar. Thi s year Ga ll ia
. Cou n'ty had l ive Gold Honor
Clubs and three Si lver Honor
Cluq:.; , The Gold Honor Clubs
incl uded · Thivener Pioneers,
Centervil le Young Farmer s,
Tri angl e, .:~ . H lassi es, Rio
Sil ver Th im bles . ·silver Club
Award s
we r e :
Morgan
Rai der s, Ga ll ia Co. Fran ·
tien.men and Pat rio t Merry
Makers.

In
a dd it io n
to
recognilio n o t th es e

the
4· H

membe r s for !hei r oul ·
:-. l&lt;•ndmg effort s, t hose in
att enda nce wer e infor med of
the Canter 's Cave Perma nent
Improvemen t Program and
Fund Raisin g Dr ive which is
now underway . Recogni t ion
was gi ven l o those 4 H Club ~
who hcwe th us far contributed
to fhp Fund Raisi ng progra m

encoura~eo

to do th e sa me . The , 1m·
parlance of this pro ject w~s
stressed, as were the benefi ts
that i t would add to the 4- H
oroqr~m ~nc1 all youth in the

;MPl:~~ENlS

Storm
Windows.
Storm
Doors. ·
Replacement • Windows. Pati..o Covers.
Aluminum Siding and
Accessories. Call

BILL'S

446-2642

area . A,fter the recognit ion
act iv it ies were over . those In
a tte ndan ce were served
refreshmenls provided by the
4-H Advisors Association and
those clubs In attendanCe .

SWAIR
w.

AUCTIORsell

•nytllilllf· .C•r

,a•Wtody ' •• eur &amp;•cttett
18¥ft or tft tuer -..., • . ~.,

inlerm•tt•n 1nt1 plrlr'v'

.servin Clll U6· 1ft7 .

S•le lktrY S1turt11"
Nl91tt It 7 p .m

SWAIN
AUCnOII SERVICl

SPECIAL SALEI

in a workshop sponsored by
Ohio University on Oc1ober 7,
November 4 and December 2.
Among the topics to be

REGULAR '749 TO '18"

Non-Slip

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 18, 1978

"I

•

Linguistics .

Southeastern Ohio Council of

:
•

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•

The shah ordered 56 tons of
grains, rice, sugar, oil and
lea flown to the remote region
in air force planes.
The conservative Moslem
clergymen who chaD""'!ed ·
his regime In recent months
also sent dozens of truekloads
of food, blankets and
medicines In a pjlrallel effort
thai appeared to have
political overtones.
A spokesman for the Red
Lion and Sun Society - Iran's
equivalent of the Red Crosssaid doctors and nurses were
besieging Its offices In
Tehran to volunteer help.
An airborne hospital was
Oown to a narrow airstrip in
the desert outside the town,
he aald, and some 2,400 tenU,
11,500 blankets, 1,700 stoves
and five tankers carrying
water were sent to the
devastated regioo .
"Five thousand bodies
have been found and buried
but we fear the final figure
Will be m11ch higher, " he
said.

•
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•
•

•

e
i n at e
REALe

MOBILE tQME

SERVICE
Anchoring. Sklrtlfll,
Awnings.
Pttlo
Covers.
Carports.
Roof Ptlnt, S.t·up
and R•llvtllng Call.

•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

BIU.'S

446-2642

J :~

'1. ,; J.· '+fl

&amp;&gt;UTHERN HIGH SENIOR Band members are 1-r,
hack, Suey Scarberry, Teresa Ervin, Julie Nance, Yasu
Shimizu, Japanese exchange stUdent, Peay Neigler,

Syria, PLO reject agreements
United Pres• lnternaliooal
Syria and the Palestine
Liberation Organization
rejected the Camp David
agreements today. The
guerrillas promised "anned
resistance" and said there
can be no Middle East peaoo
without the PLO.
In Israel, a parliamentary
dehate loomed . over what
Foreign Mlnlater Moshe
Dayan called the "crucial
decision" - whether peace

was more Important than
Jewilb settlements in
occupied territorjes. ,1
"Israeli ultranationalists
said an agreement to halt
Jewish settlements in oc·
cupled territories would be

Hnational

suicide."

Moacow, relegated to an
outsider's role during the
record tw~week swnmlt, did
not even report l!lf dranuillc
developments announced
jdnlly by Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat, Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin
and President Carter.
"The Middle East will
remain tense and a Oashpolnt
and this agreement will not
contribute to any just
settlement in the Mlddle·
East," PLO spokesman

Four persons were injured
in an auto accidenl in·
vestlgated Saturday b~ the
Gallia·Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Officers report that atil :30
p.m., on TR 7, one and threetenths of a mile south of TR
12, a north bound vehicle
operated by Julia Pasquale,
16, Gallipolis, went off the
right aide of the roadway,
overturned, and came to rest
"OLD HOCKIN' chair's got me" could have been the theme foc members of the RuUand
against
a tree .
Freewill U.ptlst Olureh Saturday. With llpOIUIOrB paying money for those laking to rocking
Pasquale,
and three
chairs from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. members rocked to raise money for their churcb. Three of the
passengers, Greg C. Steinerockers are pictured.
brunner, 16, Gallipolis,
Randy
VanSickle,
13,
Gallipolis, and Connie R.
Jones,
16,
Gallipolis,
FACU.ITY CLOSED
displayed visible signs of
Middleport Mayor Fred · injury and were transported
HoRmu said luday lbal,
to Holzer Medical Center.
dae to vaadaliam aad
Pasquale was trtated for
exceuive llllerial, tbe
laceration• of the foreann
boat laDDrbiDI facility OD and released.
CAIRO, Egypt (UPi) -At leut 29 people were killed and
Rallread Street will be
Stelnebrenner was treated
dozenl more Injured Sunday In a train colllalon aouth ~Cairo, clooed lbl1 week ualil lor abraaloos and laceraUons
pollee ald. They aalclasouthbound train rammed the rear car
Friday.
of the knee and foreann and
Tbe ...,_. waned lbal
~a second train tt El Wuta, a rllilway junctloo 20 miles from
released.
peneu apprelleaded for
the captttl, kno&lt;Sing It over oo Ita aide.
VanSicll:le ,... tnated for
ll'lrll nporta aalcl 29 paosengen were klUed and 50 others
ada of va...U.m or Ul- right frontal contuaiOM and a
terlq will be pl'tHftlted le
probable concuuion, and
inllndlbe hlllnledeat ollbt law,
n~leased.
Jones wa1 treated for a
mild
frontal contlllion and
LO~ (UPI) - 1118 U.S. dcU'ar clpened tqher on the
'
n~leased.
li:unlpeln money
!Gdlly and cl~ lllw'ply
Officers report severe
ill Tat;o ..... dlalen ~ fll'l«abl)' to the
dllmage to the Puquale auto.
outeallll of 1111 Cnlp DaWIIIIIIIIIIit. Gald prices tleellned.
t'artly cloudy tonight, low~ No citation waa luued.
Word of 1111 Unmlt 11n11111111 Mil tbe doU. up qalnlt
In
mid or upper 6011 • . Mostly
The Gallla-Melga Poat
tlleJ~ yen where It cl...t!Gdlly at 111.40 yen c:ompared
sunny,
.contlhued warm, lnveatiJated four other aclrilll 'J'IIIndiJ'I clola of !. .... Tbere WU no trading In Tokyo
hwnld Tueaclay. Hl&amp;ha In mid cldenta Satunlay.
, . . ....... "' • holiday.
or upper •· Probability of
Offtcen wen! caUed to the
precipitation 30 percent _ . of I one-IIUto cruh at
•• ptlitellt tonltlht. 10 7:40p.m. on SR 7, flve-tefttha
JRAIIWEU., W. Va. IUPI) - All Ohio trudt driwr today
percent Tueaclay.
of a mile north off!\ 211.
''
(ConUnuedonpageiO)
..., .

Sept. I, as well as a $500 pay
increase next Sept. 1. The
acceptance allowed 3,500
students to begin their fall
studies, which had been
disrupted since the strike
st.arled Sept. 5.
In Logan, where teachers
and non-academic personnel
have been on strike sinc-e
Aug. 29, the U&gt;gan Board of
Educa lion said Sunday its
latest offer ID the Logan
Educa lion Associ a lion has
been rejected and schools will
remain closed lor the
system's 4,300 studenL~.
Both sides have bee n
meeting with a federal
mediator in Columbus, but no
new negotiations have been
set.
Lawrence
Myers,
a
member of the U&gt;gan Board
of Education, said the board
"reluctantly agreed" to offer
the ~cbers two major points
of their demands.
Those items were an agreement by the board to binding
arbitration and federal
mediation
in
future
negotiating sessions.
"The negotia!Drs refused to
consider the board's offer and
also refused to lake the offer
-back to the teachers," Myers
said.

Thunderstorms
hit Midwest

Four hurt in one of
eight weekend wrecks

,:""

Fifteen Cents
Vol 29, No . 107

United Presslnternallooal
' A strike by teachers ended
in Tallmadge today, but work .
stoppages
by
school
. employees in Cleveland,
Dayton and Logan continued
with 62 bus drivers in Dayton
joining the strike against that
school system.
However , 138 bus drivers
remained on the job in
Dayton and school continued
to be open on a staggered
basis fiX' the district's 37,000
\ .~
t
.
'
students.
The Dayton Board of
Education is scheduled to
meet tonight to see if the
school budget can be cut in
enough areas to come up with
-...JfJ "' .
f.
pay increases . for the
Becky Crew, Marie Pickens, Terri Zirkle. L-r front, Carol
system's 2,200 teachers and
Morris, Jearmie Johnson, Lori Chapman, Lisa Warner,
500 non-academic employees.
Pemy Smith. Photo by Brent Patterson.
Negotiations are to resume
'
today in attempts to resolve
the
Cleveland
school
employees strike, whi~h has
idled 10,000 workers and kept
more than 100,000 students
occupied
territories
,
and
out of classrooms.
Mahmoud Lahady said in
Sadat doesn't speak for the
While negotiation s
Beirut.
cmtinue, Cuyahoga jcounty
'Ibe twin Egyptian-Israeli Palestinians," he said.
Hard-line Iraq, which Common Pleas Court Judge
accords carter annoureed
opposes
any negotiated Harry A. Hama refused to
outlined plans for an interim
agreement
with Israel , order the 10,000 strikers hack
govenunent on the occupied
ignored
tbe
summit
in Its to their jobs.
West Bank of the Jordan,
official
broadcasts.
Some 130 of the Tallmadge
with Israel, Jordan and the
Jordan,
a
key
to
the
West
School
District's 180 teachers
Palestinians sharing power.
Bank
agreement,
reported
accepted
a contract Friday,
The agreements made no
the
agreements
without
calling
for
an amual salary
specific menUon of any PLO
role in the future of the West comment on Airunan radio. of $9,500 retroactive to
Bank and Gaza, and Labady Arab diplomats said King February and $10,200 since
of the PLO hammered on this Hussein, vacationing in
Spain, is expected to fly to
omission.
"There wW be no peace in Rabat, Morocco, in tbe next
the region without the PLO," few days for talks with Sadat.
Syria !Dok exception to tbe
he said and dismissed the
second
accord between Egypt
propoaal for an Interim West
and
Israel
to agree on a peace
Bank solution as "legalized
treaty
within
three months,
occupation.''
calling
it
a
unilateral
deal
"'The PLO will carry on its
and
not
a
comprehehsl
ve
armed resistance inside the
settlement.

.

the

MACHINE '-"
WASHABLE '('
•
NO IRONING
NEEDED
•
FRINGED
ALL AROUND
•
PROTECTS YOUR
FURNITURE

enttne

Logan schools
remain closed

...

TABAS, Iran (UPI) Rescue workers said today
they had already buried 5,000
corpo!s and ellpeCted to find
many more In the rubble of a
powerful earthquake that
flattened Tabas and 40
villages In eastern Iran.
Health officials said the death
toll would exceed 15,000.
Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlevl ordered a massive
reUef operaUon to airlift food ,
water, blanketa, ~ta .and
medical help to the ourvivors
of the jOlt that smashed the
farming town and nearby
vlllase• 480 miles from
Tehran aci'OI!IIl Iran's remote
eastern salt flats.
1be quMe D*IUred 7.7 oo
the opeiWIIdeci Ricbler ICaie
- the ltrGJ)Ceat In the world
this yflllr.
Health officials estimated
more than 15,000 pe"'le died.
Ten~ of tboulands mort were
left homeless and the
Empress Fara flew to
Ferdows, the nearest town, to
direct relief "'eratlons.

Muhanuned Kamel, Egypt's defense minister, and several
other of Sadat's advisers, had resigned in protest over the
agreement.
The first accord, Carter said, spells out the general
prlndples by whic!l Israel eventually may cooclude peace
treaties with Lebanoo, Syria and Jordan.
It also provides for a five-year transitional status for the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and sets the stage for future
negotiations on a Palestinian homeland . Jerusalem is not
menllooed.
Carter himself said that although the framework
agreement settles many of the problems between Egypt and
Israel, it does not resolve the controversial question of Israeli
settlements in occupied Arab lands.
Egypt stated that withdrawal of these settlements was a
requisite to concluding the peace treaty , while Israel said the
issue should be resolved during the forthcoming negotiations .
The oottlements issue must now be debated by the Israeli
parliament, the Knesset, during the next two weeks.

•

at y

wo rk shop . The registration

e
• deadline for obtaining cr ed it
f i s Oct.. 7.
1 r----~-----,
1

•

•

Thousands
killed by ~·,!l' ~f,
earthquake J

URATHANE
FOAM BACK

Univers it y cam pus in Athens.
Three nr five hours of
college cr ed it will be offered

participa ti on in

e

MULTI-USE

Mari etta. Ohio. Subsequent
sessions will be on the OHio

for

.

The r~ctlon to the historic agreements was swift and
overwhelmingly favorable. Leaders of Congress from both
partie~ praised it unstintingly and heaped honors on Carter's
shoulders. And Begin and Sadat laviahly declared it could not
have been accomplished without him.
Sadat noted " the cha llenge was great and the risks were
high, but so was your detennlnatlon." AM, calling .Carter
"dear friend," he declared, "the continuation of your active
role is lndlapensible."
Begin said: "The president of the Unlled States won the
day, and peace now celebrates the great victory for the nations
of Egypt and Israel and for all mankind.
Recalling that the summit began 13 days ago with all three
leaders beseeching the world to pray for success, Carter said
"thooe pi" ayers were answered far beyond any expectatiof1 ."
Although optimism abounded, it was generally conceded
hard days lay ahead before centuries of distrust and enmity
could be dispelled cm~pletely.
ABC-TV's Barhara Walters reported SUnday night that

t&lt;e•neth Swlift, Awcf.
Corntr Thittl &amp;-Oil••

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

curriculum by participat ing

ESTATE , 512 Second Ave .• •
Gallipolis . Phone 446-7699 . •

We 're here to help .

1978

The first sesswn of the
a workshop will be held in
a connection with the Fall1978
a Confe rence
of
the

ch arm ,

phone or drop
LEADINGHAM

the

Motorists are running into a dangerous situation at the Hobson railroad crossing where
work was recently completed to supposedly improve the crossing. However , motorists
crossing the tracks at a speed greater than 20 miles an hour are finding wheels of their
vehicles leav ing the road . Middleport Police Chief J . J. Cremeans has indicated that he
would like to see a warning sign of the condition placed at the!.Tossing but no plans have
been made for U1at. The front wheels of a motorist going over the crossing are shown in the
Dorsel Thomas photo leaving the ground .

challenged Sadat to help him beat the three-month deadline.
'The Egyptllln president beamed and bobbed hla head r•pldly
in agreement. The packed room exploded In cheers.
'The agreem~ts. called " a framework agreement for
peace In the Middle East " and "a framework agreement for
the coocluslon of a peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, "
outlined plans for an Interim government on the occupied West
Bank of the Jordan River - one of the thorniest hurdles.
Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian refugees wiD share power
lor at least five years.
U.S. officials said Israel would begin major withdrawals
from the occupied Sinal Desert between three and nine months
alter ratification oflthe peace treaty .
Israel will pull the last of Its troops from the Sinal between
two and three years after the signing of the treaty, whlcb ends
30 years of war that has existed since formation of the Jewish
state.
·
However,lsrael will maintain a llmlted mllliary presence
at·key points to protect Itself from terrorist attacks.

8

••

m an y older homes have a
loca t ion . and
· grac1o usness tha t can 't be
found in a new home .
True . a new home will
gi ve
you
fewer
main tena nce problem s and
more m odern
bu i l t . in
applian ces. however , 1here
is mu ch to be sa id tor the
older home too . The best
approach Is to took at both
and weig h the m e r its . We' ll
be ha pp't Ia show you a fine
sele&lt;tlon of both older a nd
new homes fa choose from .
11 there 1s anylntng we
can do to help you in the
field of rea l estate please

during

Sand y Petr ie, Tandi Wood

a Tea chers of Englfsh at

ON OLDER HOMES

'

Snapp .
Junior Camp Co un se lor s -

Burleson, Hil lbill ies ; Mark
Newberry , Hillt oppers :

ATHENS
English
in Southea s t e rn
Oh io will have th e opportunity to update their

•.••ea
••• ••.•

By
Willi s T. Leadinaham

300. • •
Cont inued from

tea ~.: hers

. Getting through Pomeroy on Friday was a bit irksome, but
think of the potholes that must have been taken care of during presentl'd arc "' La nguage
the resurfa cing processes on Butternut Ave. By the way , Upda te : Se nt ence Co m·
" Tests
and
speaking of potholes, yo u want to. watch those on the parking b1n in g."
Testing
From
the
College
lots along the river. You could lose a car. As the whee ls drop
End." "Technical Writing :
down into those holes, just keep smiling.
Real World Com posi tio n"
and " The Linguistics of
Heading."
Speakers will include Dr.
• David Bergdahl, Dr. Arthur
~ ·~•
~1•
Woolley and Dr . Frank
a Cronin. all from the Ohio
.
: University English Depart·
ment. and Dr . .fames Coady,
from the O.U. Department of

T 0 day

mobster .

r egistration ;

already served , DWI; Nancy
Corn ell. Kt. I. Rutland . $25
and costs, left of center;
Mi cha el W. Kelly, Mid·
dlep ort, $18 and costs,
Clayton Tipp le, who is confined ID the Arcadia Nursing speeding; Dale M. Jacobs,
Home, will be celebrating. his 92nd birthday this Saturday. Middleport , $5 and costs, two
~pt . 2.1 You can send. a ca rd by addressng it to the Arcadia
li ghts displayed; Jeffrey
1 •.11 smg Home. Coolville, Ohio.
·
Tillis. Rutia nd, $100 and
cos ts. $75 suspended, no
I
.
JanetKorn says the fun style show for the Middleport mot or c yde end or se ment ;
Business and Professiona I Women 's Club mefti ng Monday will Ke vin D. Jewell. Rt. I ,
be a nice addition so members wii1 want to turn out.
Rutland , $100 and costs, $75
Speaking of nice additions, Lila Mitch is such a good one to suspended . no cycle endorsethe staff of Swisher-Lohse Drug Store. Lila has always had an ment ; Keit h M. Kelley ,
interest in helping others and a friendl y attitude not ID mention Athens, costs only, speeding;
that she has been a dandy worker on all sorts of community .~ Ja n T. Lowery, Hutland, $15
projects through the years.
and cost s. speeding ; Bonney
Shaffer. Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $100
Allen HUI, former Beach St , Pomeroy, resident, suffered an d costs , 30 days con·
his second stroke on Sept. 8 and 1s confined to the Hamilton ·
Hughes Hospital in Hamilton 4501 3. He has a phone in his room
513-867-2!&gt;34 and LS able to converse some.
Allen is a reti red bailiff of the Meigs Cou nty Commqn
Pleas Co urt ; a former fair board secretary and was secretary
of Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164 fur some 12 years or so. Allen
and wife , Molly. moved to Hamill on several years ago.

:
.
State

accused of lying about t akin~
pa)•nffs from a New'" York

con-

pr obation , c oncealed Lawrence R. Yeauger, Rt. 2.
weapon: Floyd Barringer, Cheshire, $30 .50, left of
Heedsville. $!50 and costs, center; Thomas McKay, Rt.

Mrs. Edna Roush, Racine, will observe her 92nd birthday
Tuesday , Sept. 19. Mrs. Roush has four sons and two daugh ters
and a family celebration will be held to mark the anniversary .
In spite of some hea lth problems, John Mohler, Route I,
Middleport , just has to be the first resident to get his Christmas cards in the ma il. They were de livered Saturday. J ohn
·said that it's la te for him .

history of the FBI, an active

tr.ai Jer

Uptun. Reedsville. $50 and
costs, hunting out of season:

I

By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI) - With President Carter's
"!neatlmable" al8iatllnce; historical enemies Anwar Sadal
and Menachem Begin Sunday night signed agreements they
aald finally would bring peace to the Middle East. Then they
embraced In joy and cimradeshlp.
Alllhreemendeclaredlt a great victory for mankind.
Carter, not even trying to conceal his elation, said he
would address a joint session of Congress ton!ght to detail the
propooed peace that cynics had said could never happen and
dreamer~ could only pray for.
Amid an air of festive accm~pllshment, In a ceremony
televlled from the East Room of White House, Begin and
Sadal ratified the dr~tlc conclusion of the !:klay Camp
David summit that pledged Israel ~nd Egypt to negolillte a fuU
Middle East peace treaty In three months. Carter signed as
witni!IS.
·
Begin, the llraell prime minister, said the Camp David
summit should be renamed the Jinuny Carter talks, and

a gent has been indicted -

eost s

costs each, speed ; Benjamin

the races. Prizes are awarded and young people from tile ages

NEW YOHK tUPl i ;_ For

Robert R. McLaughlin,
Williamstown, $15 and costs,
speed;
Robe rt Salser,
Racine , $10 and costs, speed;
William Brpwer, Pomeroy, $,9 ·
and costs, speed ; Timothy
Thomas, Pomeroy, $25 and
cos ts. litteri ng; Te rr ance
Lee, no address recorded,

Reedsville
and
Brent
Mathew&gt;. Athens, $17 and

confinement.

Sadat, Begin sign historical peace agreements

the fir st -time Ln the 54·ycur

Special agent Jose ph
Stabile, 50, of Commack, N.
linemen\ suspended, one year Y.. was charged with two
counts of perjury Friday by a
probation, contributing.
Forfei tin g bonds were federal grand jury in
Keith Pinkerman, Hun· Brooklyn.
Stabile, assigned to the
ting.ton, and Roger M. Mock ,
Akron. $30.50 each, speeding ; FBI's office in the New York
Mikel P. Milhoan, Rt. I, Long City Bor~ ugh of Queens, is
Bottom, $25 .50, defective alleged to have accepted
brakes; Carl A. Eskew. $10,000 of a $15,000 payoff
Langsville, $30.50, left of from .John Caputo, a gam~
center ; Hodney Neigler, Rt. bling fi gure involved with the
1. Racine, $30.5!1, stop sign ; late Joseph Colombo's mob
Stephen 0 . Jenk ins, Racine, family, Justice Department
$4ll.50: failure to show boat sources in Washington sa id .

Buck wereGeorgeJ. Ratcliff, day-s

of five through 18 may take part.
All releaSe and entry forms must be signed by the legal
parent or guardian and will be available at the registration
area op Oct. I.

FBI agent
indicted

The patrol reports that a
vehicle operated by Nonnan
Mitchell, 18, Gallipolis,
traveling north on 7, went out
of control on the wet
pavement, passed off the
right side of the roadway, and
struck a utility pole.
Mitchell displayed visible
signs of injury, but was not
immediately treated.
The Mitchell auto Incurred
severe damage. No citallon
was Issued.
At ll :lS a.m., on TR 7, ninetenths o'ta mile north of Cit 2,
the patrol investig"ated a two-

vehicle accident.
Officers report that an auto
opera ted
by
Bea trice
Perkins, 63, Gallipolis, turned
aro und in a driveway, and

pulled into the path of a
vehicle driven by Barbara
Riggs, 35, Gallipolis.
A passenger in the Perkins
auto , Verna Bunce, 84,
Gallipolis, claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated.
Both autos incurred
moderate damage . Perkin s
was cited on charges of
(Continued on page 10)

United Press lateroatlonal
Violent · thunderstorm s
crashed through Kansas and
Misso uri., spawning hail and
at least two tornadoes, and
heavy snows threatened
mountainous
a reas
in
western states today .
Tornadoes were reported in
Butler County, Kan ., east of
Wichita, but no damages
were immediately reported.
About I\'.! inches of rain
pelted Wichita during a one·
hour span and winds ·were
clocked at 52 mph.
Golf ball-size hail hattered
Hutchinson, Kan., and more
than 2'h inches of rain doused
nearby McPherson. At Clay
Ce nter in north ce ntral
Kansas, lightning ignited a
fire in a downtown business,
causing an estimated 1400,000
in damage.
A flash-flood watch was

issued for parts of south·
western

Nebra ska ,

n or-

theastern Ka nsas, northern

Missouri and Iowa, where at
least six people were killed
and numerous others injured
by a tornado Saturday night.
In the West, a heavy-snow
warning was posted over the
mountains of northeastern
Nevada .

Stockmen's and travelers'
advisories were issued for the

, hi ghe r elevations in the
northw est er n part of the
state, as well as in western
Montana , northern Utah and
the Cascades and Siskiyou
Mountains of Oregon.
Showers
and
thun dershowers stretched from
north Texas to eastern North
Dakota, across the upper half
of the Mississippi Valley and
over the northern parts of the
Ohio Valley and the lower
Great Lakes.

j,.)_r_he_w_o_rf_d_To_d_a_y_

Train collision kills 29

STOCK NO. 887
Price includes : Body side mldgs ..
custom air conditioning, white
side wall radials . soli ray glass.
front and r e ar floor mats. remote
.-ont1rc I mirror .

AVAILABLE IN

Automatic transmission, power
steering, AM- FM radio, deluxe
wheel covers. power brakes,
custom ex terior group. 12 month 12,000 mile warranty.

4

SIZES

Size 10 II 70 For Most Chain
&amp;Ia 70 1110 For Llfll Chlin
T

~-

a O.Wenoa

&amp;Ia 70 11 120 For Most D~
Sia 7011 140 For Extra LMgt Div.,l

SIZE 60 BY 70 INCHES .••••••••••••••••••
SIZE 70 BY 90 INCHES...................
SIZE 70 BY 120 INCHES ••••••••••••••••• sg,99
SIZE· 70 BY 140 INCHES ................ 110.99
•

I

ELBERFELDS
IN
·POMEROY
·--------------------------------~~~
(

Dollar opens, doses higher

=

•chlas•

Trucker escapes d..._ todav

Weather

THE Rutitnd IDIIIIIIIIIIID may becCIIIlll the Rutltnd
Vlllqe HaD and Cammunlty ~ntll'. Tile Melp Local
Board ol Educallcn .. looli3DI Into the lepl aapecll of
tUming the ll)'lllll8slum over to the towto.of. Rutland. It

would be uaed not ooly u a village haD but u a facWty fer

senior cilllena and a Ilea~ for the emersency unit
of the town and aa a location In which c&lt;m111unlty eventl

can be stalled. •

,.,

"'

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