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12-The

Daily

Sentinel,

Middleport-Pomeroy,

0.,

Students injured
Forty-one passengers in a
Meigs Count y Local School
bus were trea ted and
released
at
Vet erans
Memorial Hospital Thursday
following .a head-&lt;&gt;n collision
on SR 124 at milepost 10 in
Mei g s Co unty . M os t
examinations were taken as a
precautionary measure.
Officers of the Gallia Meigs Post , Highway Patrol,
who were called to the scene
at 3:35 p.m., repof\ an auto
operated by Dottie Turner,
36, Langsville, traveling east
on 124, slid on a curve striking
the school bus, driven by
William Thornton, 48, Dexter,
head-&lt;&gt;n .
Forty-&lt;&gt;ne

13 to 17, were transported to
Veterans Memorial where
they were examined for injuries and released. Ther e
were no series injuries.
Turner displayed visible
signs of injury and was transportedbySEOEMSto Holzer
Medical Center .
Turner was treated for
mult iple lacerations and
abrasions of the forehead,
nose, chin and left arm, and
contusions of the knees, left
chest and shoulder, and
released.
The Galli a-Meigs Po st
reports the school bus and the
auto were demolished.
The accident is still under
investigation.

Get On A
Hot Team

This Fall!

Friday,

Oct.

27,

1978

~------------------------, .

Meigs •••

1
I

tcontinued from page l )

.Area Deaths
·

NORMA CHAPMAN
Mrs. Norma Chapman, 80,
Pomeroy, died Thursday at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mrs. Chapman was born
Dec.·21, 1897,the daughter of
the late Jacob and Mary
Weber Swatrel. She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Joseph Chapman;
&lt;ine daughter, June Chapman; two brothers and two
sisters.
.
.
Mrs. Chapman is survived
by one son, Eugene,
Columbus; one daughter ,

L&lt;Jrena Davidson, Pomeroy;
one granddaughter, Mrs .
Nancy Pettit, Pomeroy; two
great grandsons ; one sister,
Mrs. Theo Kimes, Pomeroy,
and several ni eces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Sunday at I P• . m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Clyde Henderson officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 7 p.
m. this evening.

Early
(Continued from page I)
purchase of new hand in·struments. Wilhelm spoke at
some length regarding the
need for student control
improvements in the hand

room.
In banking, th at can mean
choosing one which pays
an unusually good rate of
interest, makes a variety of loans, has attractive
banking hours with pleasant people serv ing YQU
with every financial service that human ingenuity
can devise;
Life is easier when you get on the right team . Try
ours!

GOOD LUCK MEIGS AGAINST AlliENS!
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
·bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

fa rm ers.

James Huff, Eastern
librarian, presented information relative to the
school libraries and a
proposed policy statement for
the Eastern District . . The
board will act on the matter
at its Nov. 28 meeting. ·
The possibility of increasing the price of varsity
basketball and football
tickets was 'discussed. Supt.
Lees will check with other
league teams regarding the
matter.
Supt. Lees advised the
board than an increase in
ticket prices is going to be
necessary in the future . He
stated that the area of girls
athletics is. particularly
costly in the administration
of the school system ' s
athletic program.
The board approved a new
policy for the proper administration of the school
activities accounts. All
groups will now be required
to submit a budget to the
school board and tighter
controls will now be placed on
all expenditures from the

various activity accounts.
The board went into
executive session at 9 p.m. to
discuss matters related to
personnel problems. The
regular meeting resumed at

II

FRED H. WHITE
Fred H. White, 52, North
Bloomfield, former Pomeroy
res ident , died Thursday
morn ing at the Veterans
Hosp 1'tal
·
Memorl' al
In
Cleveland.
Mr. White was born in

Pomeroy on March 2, 1926, a

sonofth&lt;ilateFredandEllen
Bradshaw White. He later
lived in several western
states before returning to
Ohio to live six months ago.
He was a veteran of World
War II.
Surviving are his wife,
Merle ; two sons, William
Fred of Phoenix, Ariz., and
Curtis of Pine Bluff, Ark.;
three daughters, Lisa, at
·home; Deborah and Kathy of
Tulsa , Okla .·, a brother,
William, of Mantan, and four
granilchildren. Also surviving are three sisters,
Dorothy Henley, Elyria,·
Mildred McClain, Dallas,
Tex., and Marjorie Dailey,
Huntington.
_
Funeral services will be
heldat2p. m. Sundayatthe
Mallory-DeHaven Funeral
Home in Garrettsville. Burial
· h D k
will be m t e ra esburg ·
Cemetery in Freedom
Township, Ohio. Friends may .
call at the funeral home from
7 to 9 p. m. Saturday.
9:45p.m.
Ralph Wigal was officially
recognized
as
varsity
baseball coach for the school
year.
The board approved substitute teacher contracts for
Donald Salmon, John Lehew,
and Patricia Asbeck. Kathy
Osborne was approved as a
substitute secretary.
Barb Hannum will be
reassigned to the position of
secretary at the Chester
Elementary School beginning
October 31. Debra Rose was
approved as the Secretary to
the Superintendent.
The board passed a
resolution requiring all
Eastern bus drivers to attend
the annual school bus drivers
safety meeting held in the fall
of each 'school year.

EVENT MONDAY
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman today reminded
residents that Trick or Treat
Night will be held in the
community on Monday, Oct.
30, between 6 and 7 p.m.
Residents wishing to treat
the youth are asked to leave
thefr porch lights on.
Motorists should observe
extreme caution while
traveling the streets during
this ·time.

BE IT RESOLVED tha t

du e to the er osion which has
occurred along the Oh io

Ri ver

we

f avo r

a

r e-

ev aluation of this land to

.

more ,s tringen t enforcemen t

ot t re spa ssing laws a nd
Di gg er · penat itl es
for
un a uth or ized
ve hic les
trespass ing
on
pr iva te
property.
BE IT RESOLVED the
Game Protector be requ ired
fo check the hunter's wr itten
permi ss ion from the property
owner while he is checking
hunting license or any other

deter m ine the tru e acreage
and al so how m any acres
have si nce washed away and
al so that th er-e be an

equitable way to reimburse

Racine man Manchin will'
1JIIrticipate
booked fior
will
•
·possesslon

the owner for his loss.
BE IT RESOLVED that we
monitor all foreign la nd in -

A Racine man was arrested
on charges of drug possession

ve s tme n ts in the Un it ed

and

Sta tes and an

weapon early Thursday after
he and a companion were
stopped in Hartford by Mason
County Sheriff's Department
d eputies for a t raffic
violation.
Michael James Brown, 30,
was charged by deputies E.
F. Crump and T. E . Roush
'th
bl ' · t · ti
d
WI
pu IC 10 OXIC&amp; on an
possession of a loaded gun,
ide11tified as a .44 calibre
magnum pistol, after the
deputies allegedly saw him
attempting to conceal the
weapon on the passenger side
of a small foreign car.
Following a personal
search of Brown, a quantity
of an illegal substance known
in the street vernacular as
" speed' r was confiscated ,
Crump and Roush stated.
Brown's companion, Lester
Orion Gibbs, 44, Hartford,
was arrested on a charge of
public intoxication.
Assisting the deputies with
the arrests were Hartford
Police Chief Dean Stevens
and New Haven Patrolmen C.
R. Allensworth and Larry
Duncan.

s tud y

to

immediate

de te rmin e

an

equitable limit as lo whallh is
Investment should be.
BE IT RE SOLVED that we

-routine work in wh ich !hey
might be Involved.
fa vor stringent laws on · litBE IT RESOLVED the
Meigs County Comm isSioners tering a(ld the e nforcement
thereof. and al so urge tha t a
and
County
Engineer deposit
be compulsory on all
establ ish priorit ies for repair glass conta iners .
Jo improve roads on a more
BE IT RESOLVED that
permanent basis.
o Ullllli es be allowed to
BE IT RESOLVED the Ohi
burn Ohio coal until such lime
seriousness of th e drug a~ r esearch produces a
situat ion in Meigs County be method to eliminate sulphur
fully realized and ap- fro m the coal.
propriate actioQ be -taken .
BE IT RESOLVED day
care pre-school facilities be
est ablished with qualified
professiona lly trained personnel.
BE IT RESOLVED we
fav or encouraging people of
the medical profession to
locale in Meigs County.
Home League Sunday,
BE IT RESOLVED we which is being observed by all
favor stringent laws on 111tering and the enforcement Salvation Army Corps around
thereof , and also urge that a the world, will be observed
deposi I be compulsory on all locally here at 115 Butternut
glass containers .
BE IT RESOLVED we Ave., Pomeroy, Sunday.
Mrs . Ray Wining will
favor a no charg~ on refuse
d"l'osited at the County ta_~d - deliver the morning message
fill dump which should en·
courage less littering and at 10 a. m. and Mrs. Caryl
also that the hours be ex- Cook the message at 7:30
tended later in the even ing to p.m. The public Is invited and
encourage use of the land-fill all ladies and 11\0thers
fa cili ties.
especially are urged to atSTATE
tend.
BE IT RESOLVED we urge
Sunday the local corps
more stringent enforcement
of trespassing laws and
marks the end of a very
bigger
penalties
for successful Sunday School
unauthorized
vehicles campaign.
trespass ing , on private
Pomeroy has doubled its
proper-ty.
BE IT RESOLVED the attendance and hopes to
Game Protector be required triple it this Sunday. This is

Oh ServaJlce
set Srmday

to check the hunter's writ ten
permission from the property
owner while he is checking
their hunt ing license or any
other routine work in wh ich

they might be Involved.
BE IT RESOLVED that we
very thorou~hly study all
proposed legtslation relat ive
to land use as it would pertain
to farmers .

BE IT RESOLVED that our

government not spend more
money than the incoming
revenues just ify .

BE IT RESOLVED that

State and Ft:-.&gt;ral money be
made
avallto.,le
for
restoration of off. ~'de strip
mining not presently ~overed
by restoration progran:s .

ca rr ying

a

deadly

under the direction of Eloise
Adams. Children are urged to
attend .
The campaign song will be
played by the newly formed
hand, "All of God's Chiddren
Are Going".

West Virginia Secretary of
State A. James Manchin
· be at Mason Grade School
Saturday, Oct. 28 to pal"ticipate in the school parade
beginning at 10 a.m.
Participating in the parade
along with Manchin will be
Jobnny Pearson, chief of
police ; Fred Taylor, mayor
of Mason; fire department
units from different areas,
the Wahama High Band
floats, and the Mason County
fair King and Queen.
In conjlinction with the
parade, soup, sandwiches,
baked goods , pie and
beverages will be sold. They
will also offer carry-out

~.~

.... -..,

.. ... . ....

•

service.
Veleraos Memorial Hospital
Francis
. Admitted
Morris, Racine; William
Reitmire, Sr., Pomeroy; Lisa
Jett, Pomeroy.
·
Discharged Sandra
Ohlinger, Deetrah Sanders,
e.dna Richmond , Elija
Powell, Arminta Hill, Emma
Ryan.
APPEARANCE OFF
The appearance of the
Newsmen
Quartet . of
Charleston, at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene
Sunday has been cancelled
due to illness. They will
appear at a later date.
FREE CLINIC
The 'Blood Pressure Clinic
Day to be held at the
Harrisonville Senior Citizen
Center Tuesday beginning at
10 a. m. is free of charge. The
clinic will be held once a
month.

+

unba

ELBERFELD$
VOL. 13 NO. 29

FREE
(JUSTSOC POSTAGE AND HANDLING)

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1978

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

Bill Miller, 41, killed in airplane crash

BE IT RESOLVED that we

support the enactment of a

BY LARRY EWING
GALLIPOLIS - William C. Miller , 41,
Gallipolis, general manager of WJEH
radlo and vice president of the Wagner
Broadcasting Co ., was killed and four
.other )lersons injured Friday night at

State Severance Tax In Ohio

on · . extracted
natural
resources with the revenue
returned to the County of
origin.

BE IT RESOLVED that
any able-bodied recipient of
welfare be required to work

approximately 7:40p.m ., when two single

engine airplanes landing at the GalliaMeigs Regional Airport accidentally flew
into each other's blind spots and collided.
One plane, piloted by Daniel Maynard ,
22. Bidwell, was on its final alll'roach to the
airport when the second a~rplane. with
Dan D. Riffee, 38, Given, W. Va., at the

at some designated job and
all recipien ts be investigated

before bein9 approved. We
also

bel1eve

welfa r e

recipients should be allowed
to work to supplement their
income.

·

BE IT RESOLVEO!halthe
Utilities
be
Public
reorganized

controls, came down on top of it' and both
crashed just short of the runway .
- Officials said the accident occurred in
what aviaition experts say is a typical
"blind spot" mishap.
One of the planes was a low-wing
aircraft and tbe other a high-wing
airplane . The comblnation of those
configurations apparently prevented each
pilot from seeing the other aircraft,
resulting in the collision at the
WICOntrolled airport on the northern edge
of Gallipolis.
Maynard and Riffee were both injured

-

so that .the

Meigs sheriff checking
• •
mzsszng
person reports

utilities can be controlled lo

receive a fair rate of return
on the ir Investments but still
give the consumer a more
equitable uti litl rate.

and admitted to Holzer Medical Center,
wbere they were stable in good condition
early Saturday.
Maynard suftered a possible fracture of
the right a rm and sever e facial
lacerations, while Riffee wa s being treated
for'fractured right "Tist bones , a hospital
spokeswoman said .

Also injured were Riffee's wi fe ,
Judith, 38, and Christi L. Chambers, 21,
Ravenswood, W. Va. , a pasSenger in the

first plane .
The two women were admitted at
Holzer.
Mrs. Riffee was listed as stable in fair
condition with lacerations of the fore head,
contusions of the left eye and a possible

dards and consideration be
given to establishment ot an

ex port facility for this purpose which would be owned
and controlled by farmers .

BE IT RESOLVED that
Ohio Utilities be allowed to
burn Ohio Coal until such

WILLIAM C. Miller Is pictured
li'ere during July 26, 1977 dedication
~~remooles of WYPC. Event was held

method to eliminate sulphur
from t he coa I.

at Buckeye Hills Career Center, Rio

time as research produces a

SERVING
BREAKFAST, LUNCH, DINNER
AND ALL LEGAL BEVERAGES
Specializing In Choice Steaks
And Fine Seafoods
Ente~~ment

Nightly

MOST EXOTIC DANCE FLOOR IN
ALL WEST VIRGINIA

For Reservations Call 675-5807

POINT PLEASANT . INN
RT. 62 NORTH

Grande. Miller served as master of
ceremooies."

BE IT RESOLVED thai we

monitor all foreign land in ves tments.

BE IT RESOLVED that

before any nuclear energy
plants be located in our area
that a detailed environmental

Rt. 554

plan on the plahl and its
waste and Its products be
presented and approved by

MIDDLEPO RT - An all points Friday morning told hls wife that he woult1
Qulletin was issued Sa turday morning by not be ~one for long because he had tu
Police Chief J . J. Cremeans for two prepare materia l for the evening ser vice.
Middlepor t me n who were reported
Mrs. Little said that Saturday morning
missing.
she lea rned that a member of the
The two are Tony UtUe, who is pastor congregation had seeri the two men on Uw
of the Middleport House of Prayer and cycle traveling on Route 33 towards
Praise on Locust St. , and Dwight M. Athens. She said that never had Mr . U ttl ~
McDaniel, 24.
left the house and stayed away for long
Police said that the two men left periods of time such as in this instance .
Middleport between 11 and 11 :30 a.m.
Uttle was wearing a red plaid flan nel
Friday on a motorcycle. They were go ing shirt , a leather jacket, jeans ami a
to visit some of the church members in Ule spa ltered grey heimel. McDaniel wore a
county , police said. However, at almost blue checked shirt , leather jacket, jeo ns
noon Saturday no word had been received and a blue splattered hetmel.
from the two men. Mr . Uttle was to ha ve
The police department checl.&lt;cd six
delivered the sermon a t services in his area hospita ls Saturday morning tu
church Friday evening and when he left determine if perhaps, the two men had
been injured and hospitalized.
Anyone with a ny information is asked

BE
IT
RESOLVED
to support the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation In their
researCh of gasohol.
BE IT RESOLVED that we

NATIPNAL
BE IT RESOLVED that we
very thoroughly study all
proposed legislation relative

to land use as It would pertain
to farmers .
BE IT RESOLVED that our
government not spend more
money than the incoming
revenues justify and reduce

the national debt 1 percent
· ·
per year.
BE IT RESOLVED that
any able-Dodied reclpleot of
welfare be required to work

at some designated lob and
all recipients be Investigated
before being approved . We
also

believe

that

welfare

recipients should be allowed
to work to supplement their
Income.
·

BE IT RESOLVED that we
oppooe the legalization of
marl luana .
BE IT RESOLVED that we
urge !hal Grain Purity
Standards for sales overseas
meet pre-determined standards and consideration be
given to establishment of an
export facility tor this purpose which would be owned
and controlled b\'_ farmers .
BE IT RESOLVED that we
support a supply and demand
concept and orpose lftl ·
porlallons of bee and other
farm
P,roducts to
the
detriments of American

to phone the department at 992-3145 or
Mrs. Little at 992&lt;i336.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday, fair

tree

favor stringent laws ori littering and the enforcement
glass containers.

.M iddleport men
reported missing

VERSAILLES, Ind. !SPECIAL ) - A school to 25 years of age.
human skull found here late Friday
Sher iff Proffitt 's department is
afternoon may have a Meigs County checking missing person 's reports filed in
connection.
th~ past four years to see if there is any
Indi ana State Police Friday evening pOssible connection.
notified Meigs County Sheriff James J .
The sheriff requests tllat if anyone has
Proffitt of the find. Indiana authorities any information regarding any mi"'ting
report a small skull, some vertebrae and persons from this area in the last four
smaller bones were found . A I.-shirt laying years to contact his department.
nearby had a Meigs High Marching Band
In other departmen t activity,
emblem printed on it. The shirt was approximately 40 homes were affected by
trimmed in purple.
acts of vandalism Friday night from the
Deputies checking with Dwight Goins, Gallia County line to Hobson in Meigs
Meigs Local administrative assistant, County .
found that those types of shirts were used
Sheriff James J . Proffitt reported mail
four years ago at Meigs High School.
boxes were torn down at all homes, a
, The remains have been taken to a number of tires slashed and at one
path ologist for examination. It is believed residence the telephone lines were cut. The
the bones are those of a person of high vandalism is under investigation.

the people in the immediate
area .
,

thereof , and .also urge that a
deposit be compulsory on all

station, WOUR , and was later employed by
WATH. Athens. He was station manager at
WMPO , Middleport·Pomeroy , for several
a prelimina r y investiga tion of the mid-air yea rs.
collision early Saturday afternoo n. The
ln 1968, Mi\ler was employed at WJ F:JI
accident area ha s been cordoned off for in Galli polis . to serve as production
further investi gation ~ ·by Ute National manage r.
Transportation Safety Board.
He became station manage r in 19/ ?.,
William Miller was born in Avonmo re, and in 1974 Miller was promoted to the
Pa ., and moved at an early age with his position of gent!ra l manager and \"i tt'
family to Hinckley, 0 . He was a graduate president of Wagner Broadcast ing.
Miller was preceded in death last ~'f'&lt; tl'
of Ohio University whe re he majored in
by his mother, Margaret.
·
Radio Communications .
Miller worked at the university radio
Conti nued on pa~e A-2
concussion, while Ms. Chambers suffered

scalp lacerations.
Leo Wonderly, of the FAA, conducted

•

BE IT RESOLVED that we

NOW OPEN

PRICE 25 CEN TS

Four persons injured

urge tha t Grain Purity
Standards for sales overseas
meet pre-determined stan-

LOUNGE

....... ...

tntintl

tmts

marijuana .

RESTAURANT AND

... ·-

• WILLIAM C. Miller 41
Gallipolis, was killed Frfday
evemng at approximately
1:40 p.m. when two single
engine airplanes collided
while attempting to land at
the Gallia-Meigs Regional
Airpo~t.. Four other persons
were InJUred and are listed
as s~ole , in satisfactory
condttlon, at Holzer Medical
Center. Miller's death in
what aviation experts call a
"blind spot" accident1.is the
first air traffic fataLity to
have occurred in the 11-year
hist&lt;?ry of the Gallia-Meigs
Reg10nal Airport. Officers
of the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department the
Gallipolis City Police, the
Ohio State Highway Patrol,
as well as units of area
emergency squads, were
present at the scene. The
crash site has been cordoned off in preparation for investigations to be conducted
by the FAA and the National
Transportation
Safety
Board.

BE IT RESO VED thai we
oppose the legalization of

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~

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Just mail us your dated sales receipt and a label with size and
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.
Hurry! Offer expires December 31, 1978.
Don't miss this fpbulous offer to try this fabul~s bra!

Monday, with showers Tuesday and

MARlETTA - Ohio Department of
Transportation District Deputy Director,
Glenn A. Smith, announced Saturday that
the district has received approval for the
improvement of a section of State Route
,554, west of the community of Kyger,. in
Gallia county. The program has been
approved ftr construction in Fiscal Year
. 1980.
~ The project will begin approximately
me-fourth mile east of the intersection of
Siate Route 5M and Gallla Omnty Road
No. 32 (Africa Road) and continued
easterly ltr approximately three-fourths
mile. The improvement will include a new
asphaltic concrete pavement on new alignment and grade . The grade of the highway
will be at a higher level than the ·present
road 80 as to be above the high waters of
Kyger Creek.
· Mr. Smith stated that this location is
cioaed several times esch year due to high
water over the present road. This has
created a harardous condition particularly
during the winter months when water has
~n over the present road .
The , district Is beginning the
preliminary development phase of the
project at the present time • with
anticipation of letting~ . contract for
cmatruction In the Spring of 19110.

activity center al Gallipolis State

~he dedica~ilMI

"Than.,• Pla•dear'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

approved

SPEAKER FOR DEDICATION Dr. Timothy B. Moritz, of the Ohio
Department of Mental Health and
Mental Retardation, spoke Friday at

,.

cerell)onies of the new

Institute.

then fair again ou Wednesday. Highs
will be in the . lower or middle 60s

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:::::

Monday and In the 50s both Tuesdav

and Wednesday. Overnight lows will b~
in the 40s early Monday and in the lower

DID VOU DO IT?
WASHINGTON tUPl i - When you
set yuur ala rm d ock last night." did you
turn it back an hour'! Daylight savings

or middle 30s early Wednesday.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

time officially ended at 2 a.m. today.

"Spring forward. fall back" Is the
catf'h· phra se som e people us e to
remember the right "-'BY to r eset their
clocks durin g the annual April and
October time changes.
That means if you went to bed at

New center called
'tremendous advance'
I

HT HOMECOMING QUEEN - Miss Teri Belville, right, Is . the 1978
homecoming queen at Hannan Trace High School. She was crQwned by last year 's
queen sOndra Wells during ceremonies Friday night. The new q,oeen was escorted
by Kerry Ours, a member of the Wildcat football team. Hannan Trace defeated
Southwestern 12.0 in the annual homecoming game. ( ~ c ::;tory on Pa~e A·2 1.

BY SAU.Y HOLTZ
GALLIPOLIS - Mental retardation
officials called the Gallipolis State
Institute's new activity center " a
tremendous advance " during ceremonies
held there Friday afternoon.
·The $2.4 million ce nter will house
offices, a game room , a n art room , a
gymnasium , among se veral other
facilities designed to benefit ·the residents
of the institution.
The center is part of the building
project now taking place at the institution,
which has been focusing on getting
residents care in ti1eir home l!ommunities.
There are now several cottages Wider
con struction which will provide 160
additional beds for residents .

Dr.

Timothy. M~rilz ,

director of the

midnight Saturday you should have sft
your clock ,ha&lt;"k to ll p.m.

Ohio Menta l Health and Mental
Retardation said, "GSI is one of the most
rapidly improving instit utions in the
nation. ln the last few years we have had a
tr emendous in crease in suppor t for
services for the mentally ill and retarded.
"This has been hacked up with
appro priations for physical fac ilities,
bett~r staffi ng, and equipment and
supplies to meet human needs," he added.
Since January 1975, Moritz stated, the
legislature has enacted 30 bills to improve
the conditions of the retarded . He said this
iS a part of the ~~ gr assr oots concern" of
Ohio for its mimtally retarded citizens .
John Beattie, superintendent, said GSI
has doubled the ratin of staff to resident.s
since 1975. "We can more effectively meet
Contin ued on page A·2

::::::::::;:::::::::::: :: :::::::::::::::::::: :::::::~~~:: :!;r.:=~ ::::::: : ::::::::::;:;::: ::::::::::::

Vinton clerk steps
down after 12 years
VINTON - Phyllis Mi\lholand, clerk
of the Vinton Village for the psst 12 years,
has submitte&lt;l. her resignation effective
Oct. 31. The Mulholand family is moving
from Vinton to the Wilkesville area .
Named to replace her .until the next
village election was Ruth Evans, lorm'er
clerk of il1e old North Gallia Board of
Education. Any inquiries directed to the
village clerk after Oct. 31 should be sent to
Mrs. Evans .

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PREPAffi Gl SUITS
COLUMBUS I UPI )
Federal lawsuits are being
prepared against hundreds of
Ohioans
to
collect
overpayments for educational assistance made to
veterans under the GI bill, an
assistant U.S. attorney said
Friday .

~1

sal$54,95
save20o/o
your class ring

custom made
foryou

JAMIE Mills; (67),senior Blue Devil guard, introduces his Field. Other Blue Devil gridders pictured with parents are
parents duting Friday's Parents' Night activities on Memorial Andy Mills (51), Matt Willis (12) and &amp;:ott Morrison (31 ).
INTERESTED SPECTATORS watched Friday 's
dedication and ribbon-cutting ceremonies for the new

Miss Belville
crowned queen
MERCERVILLE ~ Terri
Bel ville, 17 , daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. J ohn L. Belville, Rt.
1, Crown City, is the 1978
homec oming queen at
Hannan Trace High School.
She was crowned during pregame ce remonies F r iday
ni ght before th e Hannan
Trace-Southwestern football
ga me.
Miss Belville is president of
the Beta Club, student council
member, active member of
the Drama Club, Pep and
Library Clubs and the 1977-78
FF A Sweetheart. She was
escorted by Kerry Ours, a
member of the Wildcat football squad .
The new queen was
crowned by Sandra Wells, the
1977 qu een. She was
presented flowers by Principal Paul Dillon and a trophy
by Paul Shaffer, Beta Club
president.
Attendants were Debbie
Black, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Black; Lori
Stapleton, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Stapleton;
Amy Fulks, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Fulks and
Karen Stitt, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William Stitt.
Sunday Times-sentinel
Pul&gt;lisht'&lt;l evt•ry Su nu,.~· Uy· 11w
Olu• V&lt;c~ ll cy Pubh s l11ng (', _.
l\1ultunetlia , l nc .
GAI .LII'Ol.IS

DAII.Y TRIBUNE
82:l Thrrt.l 1\ Vt•. , G;J ilipoli s, Oh10
' -l~i:H .

P ull hsllet.l 'e n · r·y wetktiay evcnirt l(
t·X l't!pl S.:. tu l'llay . til:l'UI\d Chl.Sli
P us la ~ t·

l'wd at Gtrllrpulh;, Ohio

~56: ll .

THE DAILV St: NTINEL

lll Cou rt St.. P t!llleru&gt;·, 0 .

~:i769

Pu UI 1sltt'd e\'cr y W! !Ck tiily e\'ct lllt~

t•xcepl ,'\iiturtla y. EnlercUali

~ct·und

dass mHrlmg muth•r u l Ponwroy,
Olllu l'ust Offil't!.
By t '&lt;!.tTte r thdly ami Sumla y 7at:
p;.•r wct•k . Mulur TuLJie SJ.25 ller
lll' lritll

MAIL
SUBSCR IPTI ON HATf.S
Till' Gull ipulis D11lly Tril.lUlll' 111
Ohw amJ Wt•s t Vir ginia one yt•ar
$!.!.00 : six m untl1s $11 .50: t hrc~ mon·
111.-. S7.00_ Ebt •w h c r ~ $26.00 pel' ,Yt!al'·:
s1x rntlnlhs SJ :\.50 : Lhr cc rnontt~'i
F all ; JTllllor rvut c $3.25 munthly.
The. Daily Sc rll hlt'l. one yea1
S:!V M1: Six moutl1s $11.!)(! : lhn!t'muu·
ths $7.00. Elst•wl ucre $:!6:t'k1 : S IX mon·
lh ~ $13. 50: t hr~t· mu11lhs Si. W.
T h~ Umtcd Pr ess lntcrntiono l is
I'Xt'IUSI\'CIV cntlllt•tl to tltt• Ul-il' fur

activity center at GSLThe new facility will house a pool,
gym, classrooms, workshop, and other facilities to benefit
the residents of the institute.

Several Gallia
residents spot
another
UFO Friday

New center•••

GA LLIPOLIS - Dozens, maybe hun·
dreds, of people saw a UFO Friday night in
the vicinity of Bidwell.
It was a bout 7:15 to J :30 p.m. that Mrs.
Jack Mount was' driving her pickup tr·uck
lu ta ke home he r neighbor, Jean Justice,
who lives on the Frederick Rd . just off the

Bidwell MI. Oli ve Rd.
With her were her son, Gary, 15, and
.si.slcr·in.)aw, Janet Rt!y nolds, in a ddition

to Mrs. Justice.
They were on the Bidwell-MI. Olive Rd.,
a gn.:IVel road, at a point between Dave

Continued from page A-1
the needs of our clients," · he stated .
"At the same time, by developing our
community alternatives , we have
experienced at 45 percent reduction in the
number of people we serve, from 1,600 to
982," he continued.
Alter the ribbon -cutting by GSI
residents and state officials, Rudy
Magnone, deputy commissioner for
Southern Ohio said, "deinstitutionalization
is required by Federal law. ,
" Beefing up the federal law certainly
has moved the system along . We're finally
getting the types of legislation we've been
asktng for for 20 years,'' Magnone stated,
An open house followed ribbon cutting

ceremonies.

St"xlun 's house a nd the ho use uf his

daughter, Sandy Mills.
Gary looked up and sa id, "Mum!
There's a UFO !"

Bill Miller. . .

··You 're crazy," his mother r esponded,

Continued from page A-1
He is survived by his father , Charles
H. Miller, Wadsworth, 0.; a sister; Mrs.
Shirley Ann Mooney, Hinckley ; and two
brothers, Air Force Captain Milton J .
Miller, Tucson, Ariz ., and Charles H.
Miller, Jr., Wadsworth.
Funeral services will be held at Willis
Funeral Home, Galllpolls Tuesday at 10
a .m ., with graveside services scheduled
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at Eastlawn
Memorial Gardens , Brunswick, 0.
Friends may call at the Willis Funeral
Home, Gallipolis, from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m.
'
and 7.p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday .
In lieu of flowers, the family requests
that donations be sent to the Gallipolis
Rotary Club Scholarship Fund. Miller was
a member of the board of directors of the
Rotary Club.

" they're truck lights." However, the
lights, extremel y bright, were almost
stra ight up, at at least a 90-&lt;Jegree angle
from them.
" Mom, trucks don' t drive in tl1e sky,"
the youth said. J ean, Gary, and J anel yelled for Mrs. Mount to stop. She slopped the
truck in the middle of the road , and all four
got out and turned out the trucks lights:
they stood outside to watdr.
Mrs. Mount , whose husband wor·ks on
the river and was not a witness said that
the thing was big with two large'lights and
a smaller red li ght nearby. The UFO was
stationary for two-three minutes,

e~nd

then

took off abruptly at an angle probably over
Bidwell - cer'tainly over her fHther-inlaw's fann (he is Clyde Mounl i.
Severai other folk saw lh&lt;' phenomenon
at tl1e Mount meat house: her sister ,
Avenell Mount ; a neighbor, Maur·ice
Toler ; her brother·-in-law, Richanl Mount ,
all of whom had been called outside by her
two young nephews, Randy a nd Steve
Reynolds .
Bill and Sophia Phillips and son Chuck
over at the concession stand at the football
fi eld sa w a "great big" thing in tho d ear
night sky - like " headlights, " he said. Joking, Chuck said that "it wants to land on
the field, but we're using it. " Eastern beat
North Gallra 42-20, the gridders doubtless
ignoring the UFO, but the Phillips
witnesses thought the crowd near the con- ·
cessron stand all saw it , JUdgmg by the
craned necks and pointing fingers.
Mrs. Mount said that she once lived ne(:lr

Rickcnbacker Air Force Base, Culwnbus,
a nd she has se~n scores of night-Oying
air planes.
" J ne ver ·did see a nyt hing like thi s

thing," she said, and she conscientiously.
bdieves it was a space traveler from
elsewhere in space. "The universe is big
tJnuUg h fo r more than just us," she com·

rncrrled.
'
Executive Editor Hobart Wilson Jr. said
that some people at the Gallipolis football
~a mc saw the bright li ghts of a slowly
moving object in the ni ght sky. ·

puhiLcatioiJ of ::all 1\Ctvs tlisp&lt;~h'hcs
l'l'l'l li letllu the ncWSIJil j.ll'r a mi alstJ
tilt• )l)(_'&lt;!lut•ws plLhli sh..d lwn·in.

A Gallipolis Diary

Peeps. • •
Ill./ . .~ 11H 1·.' /.I'U·.'I'."'

GA LLI POLIS - From Orlando, Fla ., there cometh a corr·ectiorr of the'Oct. 15 column on the Yellow Feve r· Epi&lt;lemic which
struck Ga llipolis a hundred years ago. The eagle-cyc'll correspondent from the peninsular South is 1\ . Dun Pope, whose
grcmdparenls, three undes, and two a unts c ame through
Hrunzc ,John unscathed.
It W&lt;l:-i e1 geographical error whi c.:li Peeps conu nitted Od .' 15.
Mrs. Ira W. Pope took her children and stepchi fdren to Vinton
fur safety - not to Rodney. as we erroneou;.;ly wrote . They were
Minnie, age nearly 13; .James W., 10; Rowena V., 8 ; Chauncey
H.. 4; and Orland Howson , not quite 2. And Ma Pope was ei~ ht
and a half months pregnant with Ira W., Jr.
Ira W. Pope relates, quoth A. Don, that the str. Boone removed the families uf Jim McClurg, Ralph Hamilton, Font Surnlllcrs, the Cornstocks, and others. " Drs. Rathburn , Mills, and
Cromley were near exhaustion. It is a sharne that the medical
a uthorities were nut a~arc of mosquito lnmsmissiun of yellow
fever and mala ria until Hopkins ' theory. Smudge pots did
help."
'
A.. Don Pope quotes his grandfather as naming among the
"first few victims, by name, a Brothers, a Morton , and a Mrs .
Allen. Mr . Pope sent his family to his father-in-law 's at Vinton
until safe to ret urn to Gallipoli s." The Oct. 15 eolurnn. with

JOHN ADAM GREEN , 2, Rio Grande , was
pronounced dead at theo scene of this residential fire
Saturday at 10;30 a.m . The boy's body was discovered in
his bedroom by members of the Rio Grande Volunteer
Fire Department, who remained at the scene throughout
the afternoon battling periodic outbreaks of fire.

munes fu rni s hed by the late John W. Unrue, g ives three vic·
tims named Brothers Llut none named Murton or Allen . The re

rs , huv.·cvcr , a .Joseph M~:~rtin .

wrote about in French City Vi'-4rwlles was owned l.ly a Clcn mtn
" Jli:Uned Weihe, fath er of .John Weihe, who ran the shop fur

WF. HAD SUCH a long cohunn on t11e subject of Ga llipolis'
Yellow Fever Epidemic a hutH.Ired yea rs ago 1 the followup col·
wnn of Oct. 221 , that we had to omit a couple of references to
James Sands and Tom Sa unders by F. ldre Dickey, Rt . I, I.ake
City, Pa. 1642J.
· Sands had an article on the California. gold rush, and Dickey
wondered if Sands would be rnteresled in the Alaska gold rush
nea rly a half century later, in 1898. Dickey wrote : ·
"George and Earl McCall 'brothers of my molht!r 1 went
fi rst and they hit gold. Tiley sent back for their younges t
IJruthcr Grover, and he went.
" When they returned to the slates, (;nrver sl&lt;•ppcd 111 llr&lt;·
state uf W&lt;:~ shingtun ur Orcgur1 - I'm nut :-;urc wl1ieh - and gut
work wi th Hn clcctr·ie cmnpan) . ) .o-tter Ill' t:allll' cftst t11
Blu efi eld, W. VeL, where he WH S the supt•nrrtcmlcut of lint• I"Oil·
s tr·uction and mHintenarwc. f1w tlw Appalaehian Powc1; Co .. un·
til hi s death.
"George and Earl located in Califomia ir nd bolil arl' IJuned
1!H'I'l:. ''

WJ NNIF. WETHERHOI.T's grandmotlwr. r.Jeopatra l.iun·
RlaZI?I' . the second Wlt't• (l f .Jus( ~j)h J.. Rl&lt; tZl'l'. WitS or 1e ttf the peo·
ph' wh11 tlied ill! he iR78 Ydh 1w fprcr Epitle mlt'. Her two step·
St.Hl S, Wdliuglon Bli-I Zt.'l' ;md P.whard Rlazcr . t.rl so died in tltt'
s~Hill' epidcJnH ·
:'\1 1(S. A . W WCH.FE . Iii. \ i&lt;. :\1HIIl .• Bt·il,·; u( . f )hl! l ·HHi l .
wn t · ·~·: " l d tl l'lijH~· tlw ~l l'\1':-; fJHll Snu t hl•J'II OhJil. We do h ct \ 't'
Hlli.·l't·."i l HW "'l id t •.
di.d :-;o m nl'llL· 'lj f·\' l't•adiug til l' n ,Jillllfl

••n
! 1\

Oickt•y sa4 d tn tell Tom ~~a u mlt-rs t htt t I ht• hal'tll'SS shop ilt ·

.

many years."
nic.: kev -said tha( he lws ··sat and walt' IJed him lncnd harness
mt-tny liines. a nd .Johnny's sister ma rned my fa ther 's cousin.
A. 0 . Dickey. A. 0 . was an attorney who left Gallipolis in the
early 1920s or late teens and wt·nt to Cleveland, wl]ere lw
Uet•umc pro~~c uting ctUorncy. Ht• hcu.J Iwu sons : Carl. dcccas·
ed , mul Paul. wlln I, believe is in Virg ini&lt;:~ , cmd Louise, who lives
in Cleveland.··

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GAHS observes Parents' Night
GALUPOUS - Parents'
Night was observed by Gallia
Academy High School during
Friday's Gallipolis-Ironton
football game on Memorial
Field.
P.rior to the Southeastern
Ohio League contest, parents
or guardians of Blue Devil
football players, trainers and
cheerlead,ers and senior band
members were introduced
along the GAHS sidelines.
The halftime band show
recognized 28 Blue Devil
se nior musicians playin g
before the home fans for the
final time in their high school
careers.
·
Assistant Director Brian
Oglesbee read the following
over the publi c address
system during the show :
"Tonight the
Gallia
Academy High School Band
will present its annual senior
show recognizing the senior
members marching in their
last home halftime show.
Tonight's music was selected
by the seniors and represents
favorite selections from past
halftime shows.
"We now feature our flags
·
·
·
and majorettes tn routmes to
'She's Not There.' "
"The seniors have selected
the feature number from the
1977 competition show, 'Eli's
Comin'."
"We close tonight 's show
with another senior selection
from the past, 'Overturn to
Tommy.' "
"The band will graduate 28
seniors this year, the largest
class in the school's history.
'

Boy, 2,
dies in
blaze

GALLIPOUS - Two year
old John Adam Green was
killed Saturday morning
when a fire of undetermined
origin swept through the twoyear old modular home in Rio
Grande of his . parents,
Richard and Brittina Green.
The boy's body was
discovered lying under his
bed by members of the Rio
Grande Volunte er Fire
Departm ent.
He
was
pronounced dead at the scene
by Acting Coroner Dr. Edward Berkich at 10 :30 a.m.
The
Volunteer
Fire
Department bad been called
to the scene of the blaze at
approximately 9 a.m ., and
remained at the home
throughout the afternoon
extinguishing occasional
outbreaks of fire.
The boy's father , Richard
Green, who had been injured
during the fire, was transported by SEOEMS to
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
where · he was treated for
first , second and third degree
bums, aQd released.
The boy's !llOtber, Brittina,
and a brother, Allen, escaped
the blaze uninjured. A sister,
Amy, had spent the night with
friends.
John Adam Green would
have been three years old if
he had lived until Monday,
He was born Oct. 30, 1975, in
Gallipolis · to Richard and
Briltina Napier Green, who
survive along with a brother,
Allen; a sister, Amy ; all four
grandparents and· three
maternal
greatgrandparents:
The grandparents are Lark
and Lola Nayier, Sr., and
Virgil and Mildred Green,
Gallipolis.
The surviving greatgrandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. 1\. G. Napier, Ceredo,
W. Va ., and Mrs. Sula Mae
Fry, Scottown.
Services will be held at 1
p.m. Mondat at the Waugh •
Halley- Wood Funeral Home,
the Rev , Charles Lusher
officiating, and burial will be
in- Rio Grande's Calvary
Cemetery.
Friends of the family may
caD 7·9 p.m. Sunday at the
funeral home.

At this time we would ·Iike to
recognize the senior band
members. The seniors are as
follows :
Debbie Rieser, Dixie
Martin, Teresa Sheets, Renee
Oesch, Kenni Horton, Juanita
Arrington •.Lori Kelton, Cindy
Brown, Beth Layne, Kelli
Thomas, Teresa Stowers,
Elizabeth Simms, Martin
Dean, Charlie Corbin, Sherry
Wade, Michelle Vallee, Kim
Niday, Saralyn Mason , Kem
Hemphlll, Patti Ni ehm ,
Marianne Welsh , Jean
France, Mae Kemp, Allen
Rutz, Janet Groves, Todd
Osborne, Lori Withee and
Mark Cornell.
"The
seniors
would
especially like to thank Mr.
Tolliver for · the time and
effort he has put into the band
in the past four years."
"During the past four years
the Gallia Academy High
School Band has received
many honors. They have
placed first in class A large
band division at Marshall
Contest in 1975 and 1976
winning the grand championship trophy at that
test'1976Thb dh
con
lR
.
e an as
also placed first in' class B at
the 1975 Lexington Festival of
Champions. In 1977, third
place honors were received at
the Lexington and Miamisburg Contests. This year,
first place trophies were
awarded to the band for both
parade and field competition
at the Marietta Band-aRama .
"The Gailia Academy
Symphonic
Band
has
received superior ratings at
OMEA district contest for the
past four years and received
superior ratings at state
contest for the past three
years.
" The majorettes ha ve
competed extensively in the
past four years and have
received numerous first
place trophies.
"The directors and band
members wish to express
their deep appreciation to the

school administration,
faculty , community and
especially the band boosters
and paren ts for
the
tremendous support they
have given this organization.
Your support is greatly appreciated."
Parents or gua rdians of
football
playe rs
and
cheerleaders honored were:
Scott · Betz, Mr . and Mrs.
Robert S. . Betz; Doug
Bloomer , Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Bl oomer ; Mark
Bostic , Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Bostic : Dan Brown. Mr. and
Mrs. w. R. Brown ; Mike
Burger, Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Burger ; Chip Caldwell . Mr .
and Mrs. Carroll Caldwell;
Ja n Collins, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Collins ; Greg Eustler, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Eustier; Allen
Evans , · Mr . and Mrs . Jim
Evans; Bob Foster, Mr . and
Mrs . PhiL Pope; Todd
Fowler, Mr .' and Mrs .
Clarence Fowler ; Rob Goble,
Mr . and Mrs. Gordon Goble;
Jell Golden , Mr . and Mrs.
Gene Golden ; Baron Haner.
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Haner;
Greg Harrington , Mr . and
Mrs. Mike Harrington ; Mike
Hemphil l, Mr . and Mrs. Lee
Hemphill; Chip Henderson,
Mr. and Mrs. George . Henderson : Kev in Hoffman, Mr.
and Mrs . Bill Holtman ;
Stuart Lentz. Dr . and Mrs.
Malcolm Lentz; Bob Marchi,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marchi ;
Andy Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Mills ; Jamie Mills, Mr . and
Mrs. Jim Mills ; John M itche tl, Mr s. Altha Hogan ;
Chris Moore, Mr . and Mrs.

Loren
Moor e;
Scott
MOrrison , Reli . and Mrs. 0 .
c.T~~r~1'b;,·r t. Mr . and Mrs.
Pete Nibert ; Cl int Patterson,
Dr. and Mrs. Ri chard Pat.
terson ; Jeff Phillips. Mrs.
Jane
Mark Phillips,
Mrs. Phillips;
Jane Phillips;
Kent .•
Price, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde ~
Price; Mark Pyles. Mr. and :
Mrs. Woodrow Pyles; Gary ••
Roach , Mr . and Mrs. Dick :
Roach , Charlie Roberts, Mrs . •
Eleanor
Dailey ;
Nick :
Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Earl .
Robinson; Mike Rowan, Mr .:
and Mrs. Harold Rowan;
Marcus Sheets, Mr. and Mrs.
James Warren; Mark Sheets, :
Mr . and Mrs. Warren Sheets;
Duane Skidmore, Mr. and :
Mrs. Elmer Sk idmore ; Dan
Staggs , Mr. arid Mrs. Dona ld
Staggs; Mike Stowers, Mr . ~
and Mrs. Ed Stowers; Randy •
Wagoner, Mrs. Juanita :
Wagoner : David Wandling, •
Mr. and Mrs . Landis Wan -:
dling ; Chuck Wickline , Mr .•
and Mrs. David Wick line; :
Matt Willis, Mr . and Mrs. •
Cieeland Willis ; Chris •
Withee, Mr. and Mrs. Allison ;
Scott ; Terrr Wonn, Mr. and •
Mrs. Ear Wonn ; Jack :
Yeagl~j· Mr . and Mrs. Ralph·
Bennet ; Joe Yeagley , Mr .:
and Mrs . Ralph Benneft .
•
Varsity Cheerleaders
•
Lori Naskey. Mr. a~d Mrs .:
Frank Naskey ; Bridgett
Hennessey. Mr . andMrs . Tim .·
Hennessey ; Rob m
'
Bur.nett ,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Burnett; :
Annette Snowden, Mr . and··
Mrs. Carroll Snowden ; Amy
Scarberry, Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Scarberry ; Robin ·•
Bowers, Dr. and Mrs. Wilson"
Bowers.

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t GRAND OPENING SOON

1 ,~

!rI
Lin-Dee's Crafts Boutique
1
r
II complete line of homemade crafts. large II
1 selection of Christmas gifts &amp; decoratrons "
1 and much more. Located on St . Rt. 124 in 1..
Ohio by the old post office
\"..
II Syracuse,
building ,
"
I
.
"
... _.._.._..__._.._.._._.._.._._...._~_.._.._._.._...-J. ..

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.;.} if'"'''"""''•"'' ' '·'·'·\. .

Spring (Valley
529 JACKSON PIKE

~'~~,; -;~~CijJ

PHONE 446-4554

HOURS: MON.·SAT. 9 AM TO 8 PM

SUNDAY 1-6PM

25-YEAR MEMBERS ~ Shown above an the 25 year members who received pins at the
annual Meigs Farm Bureau Federation annual meeting 'Thursday night ; in couples, from
the left, Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frank, and Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Hollon.
·

inSilADIUM

"

MEN HONORED - Male representatives of new
Farm Bureau Federation members honored Thursday
night are front, l tor, Tony Koblentz, Richard Koblentz ;

Gary Michael, Boyd Ruth and Bill Quickel; back, 1-r ,
Roy Grueser, Bill Downie and son, Bill Downie, Frank
Colwell and son, Bryan, and James J . Proffitt .

Adult classes ·being offered
GALLIPOLIS - Rog ' r
Brumfield, supervisor for
Adult Basic Education at
GaUia Academy High School
announced Saturday that
classes are continuing.
These classes are for those
people who had to leave
school before graduation .
Students can enroll any time
during the year. The program
is individualized to fit the

AMONG HONOREES - These were among the new members honored by the Meigs
County Farm Bureau Federation Thursday night. Front, I to r, Angela Koblentz, Mrs.
Richard Koblentz, Mrs. Opal Grueser, l\lrs, Diana Eberts; back, I to r, Mrs. Frank Colwell,
Mrs. James Proffitt and Mrs. Willtam Downie.

VMH pharmacy receives
' reVIew
•
exceIIent .0 0c_BP
1

POMEROY - Since its
grand opening almost one
·year ago, Veterans Memorial
Hospital Pharmacy has· been
an integral part of the
hospital's operation. The
pharmacy
and
its
professional staff provide a
modern drug distribution
system to the hospital
patients. The unit dose, unit
of. use, and intravenous ad·
mixture programs provide
better medication controls
and more accurate drug
dfspensing. This system,
ulually available only in
ldtger bospitals, allows for
clllser monitoring of the
~ JM!tlent's medication while
allowing the nurse more time
to: spend with the patient.
'Pn a recent visit by an
inspector of the Ohio State
Board of Pharmacy, Chester
Shotwell, the foUowtng report
·was filed. This report was
then presented to the
V~erans Memorial Hospital
Beard of Trustees by Scott
LUcas, Administrator. The
report is as follows: "I am
please to report the quality of
Pbarmacy services currently
being rendered Is excellent. It
J.S: a type and quality of servl'ce to which the citizens of
tills community are entitled
to: e:rpect. It Is a pleasure to
n!!le the old and obsolete
sYstem formerly used is now
hl'story. This new system now
atfords greater patient
safely, better control and

UI!:NIES NEED
"'PAINESVILLE, Ohio
(tiP!) · The Painesville
l'ltwnship·Board of Education
Friday filed a motion in Lake
COunty Commoo Pleas Court
w1dch contended It was not
btliD!d ID attend court-ordered
centract negotlalions with
Bliild!tg teachers.
. Coolrllry ID expectations,
tlle
board dld not file
1
cootempt of court charges
aialnst 142 teachers of tl_le
fiB!DesvWe ·
TownshiP
Education Association for
dtfYing Judge John Parks'
court Cl'der sendlrtg !hem
bBck ID work. But James
Woodring, the board's
COWIIei, sald Friday there is
a · "ROod chance" cmtempt
ciharces wMl be flied Mooday.

-r-

accountability of .dangerous
drugs and conserves the
nurse's time for nursing
activity .. I am please to note
the pharmacy is also handling the IV admixture
program. This will also · afford increased patient safety
and conservation of nursing
time . The drug delivery
system
is
unit-of-use
packaging on 24 hour delivery
basis."

The Pharmacy Depart·
menl was made possible
through the efforts of the
VMH Board of Trustees and
Lucas, Administrator, The
pharmacy services are
provided by HPI Hospital
Phann&amp;cies, Inc., a division
of Daylln, of Los Angeles,
California . The Director of
Pharmacy Services is
Michael Bendinelll, R.Pb.; he
is aided in providing pharmacy services by Miss Lillie
B. Ledlie, R.N. and Mrs.
Sally Gloeckner, R.N. ..

Nurses meeting

R:;~A~~r:'~~:!!ms.
entered a pleii"Qf not guilty to
charges of trafficking in
drugs in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court Thursday. Bond was set at $10,000.
Trial date was set for
November 8.

CELESTE ENDORSED
DAYTON (UPI) - The
Dayton Journal Herald today
endorsed Lt. Gov. Richard F .
Celeste for governor because
he "does seem to have real
leadership potential" and
"has proposed sensible plans
for Ohio 's business and
industry .''
" He has shown an aptitude
for innovative proposals
· which would have some
chance of dealing effectively
with
the
growing
of
state
complexities
administration into the
1980s,"
the
mornin g
newspaper also said.
· "We have always been
turned off by (Gov. James
A.) Rhodes' bluster and a
slapdash approach both to his
party and state government
respoosibilities," the paper
added.

mO:I'fl'•

~\S·n·f!JAr

'\

SALE

Specimen Plants up to 5 ft. Ferns, Croton (yellow, red
&amp; green variegated) , oracanas, Corn Plant, Dragon
Trees, Rubber Plant, Weeping Fit and many oth~rs .
Some in attractive pots.

2FORTHE PRICE OF ONE
FRUIT PICKS 2- 2Sc
HANGING POTS 6'12 ln.l-$2.15,11fz 2- $2.50

needs of all who want to followed. Students may also
improve themselves through arrange a later than 5:30 p.m.
more education . There is no starting time. Studies include
charge and all books are readin g, math , En glish,
furnished by the school.
social studies and science.
Classes meet each Monday, These are the live areas of
Tuesday, and Wednesday testing that are covered on
evenings at 5:30p.m. in room the Graduate Equivalency
212 of the high school. Development Test tG.E.D.).
Although students are enEntering students are first
couraged to attend at least given
placement test to
two classes per week, no determine what levels of
att~dance requirements are materlais In which they will
begin. After two to three
weeks of class work, students
NEWSOME HELD
are again tested using the
DAYTON (UPI) - Richard California Test of Adult Basic
Edward Newsome, 19, Education. The purpose of
Dayton, was held in the this test is to determine in
Montgomery County today oo what areas of the five classes
charges resulting from the •iudents need the most work.
Wednesday kidnap;ape of . An individual course of
Evelyn Erwin, 22, Dayton, study is then written for the
who escaped her abductor in student based upon t he
Kentucky.
results of this test. After the
Newsome was specifically
student completes this course
charged with kidnapping, of study, he is again tested to
rape, one count grand theft determine if this program of
auto and unauthorized use of studies has been effe ctive.
a motor vehicle.

a

NCM;

ONLY

In addition , students also
take the Iowa Test of
Ed ucational Achi evement
and' a practice G.E.D. test.
The purpose of all these tests
are (1 ) to measure student
progress and (21 to give
future G.E.D. candidates an
opportuility to develop good
test taking habits. If students,
however, do not want to take
advantage of the tests, they
are not asked to ta ke them.
The Adult Basic Education
Class at Gallia Academy
High School is non-graded.
There are no attendance
requirements, no grades and
tests are not timed. Students
progress at their own rate of
speed and decide for themse lves when they have
achieved their goal.
More information abo ut
Adult Basic Education can be
secured by calling Roger ·
Brumfield, supervisor, 4463250, or after 4 p.m. at 4464033.

•

your
can work·
ever

G A LLI A
ACADEMY
&amp;
BUCKEYE
HILLS

Bring in this ad and get
any of these custom
features at no ex~ra
charge when you order a

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Siladium class ring!

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"""'
.,,.,

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Jawe/-

404 Second Avenue
446-t647
Gallipolis, Ohio

"'

funds
than

New Shipment

flickering candle light, scenes come to life .and
Staplewood plaques, colorful mushroom and animal
life plaques.
Fireside Baskets, Wicker items, Boxwood &amp; tea
pic:ks, assortment of plant pots. Unusual items, ginger
jars, liquid silver itwelry dolls &amp; toaster covers made
by Cherokee Indians . Antique bromo iars. Hex signs &amp;

decals .

Sl gal. wooden barrels U$ed 1 ttme. Flags, American

State of Ohio. Shaktee distributor.
Store Hrs:: Thurs. , Fri., S.l. &amp; Sun. 1:30-5:30 P.M.
Will open any time home orca II for appt. 367·7709.
MARY DARNELL, OWNER
2 mi. west of Cheshire on Stale Rt. 554, while house, red
&amp;

barn.

will be held Nov. 22 in the
Lafayette Mall in Gallipolis
from 10 a.m. until everything
la sold. The Country Pantry
will have · many different
types of baked goods. Money
from the Country Pantry will
be used to provide Christmas
for our "special family"
Christmas project.
·
Please make reservaliollll
for' the Nov. I meeting by
caUing the Holzer Medical
Center Nursing office, ,4465311 by noon Tuesday; October 31: Please plan to come,
join and enjoy.

REVIVAL

.,.,,~•.JI""-a
· n(iMrs.

Thrasher

Hear The Rev. and Mrs. Thrasher
Sund,.
10: 30 and 7 P•M.
Ml
Mon., Wed. &amp; Fri. 9:30 A.M. and 7:00 P.M.

Our
Individual
Retirement Accounts are now paying the
highest, tax-sheltered interest ever.
If you are self-employed o r a salarie d employee not covered by a retire ment plan , an
Individual Retirement Account (IRA) has
always been a great idea. Now, with th e increased interest rate of 7 . 75% (8. 17% a nnual
yield) , it's even better. What's more, yo ur
interest is tax sheltered, compounded daily,

and is paid from day of deposit to day of
withdrawal. You work hard for you r n.1oney.
At Ohio Valley Bank , we're seeing to it that
yo ur money works hard for you. Fo r funher
detai ls about the IR A. or about any of our
savings plans. just stop by any o f our fo ur
co nvenient locations .

Tues. &amp; Sal 7 p.M. On'" .
'1

Sunday, Nov. 5, 10:30 and 7 P.M.

LIGHT HOUSE TABERNACLE
Rll60

ASSEMBLY OF GOD
2 miles from Holzer Medical

OhioValley Bank
Gallipolis. Oh io

Mem ber FDI C

Federal regulations require a substant ia l penalt y for pre mature wit hdrawal.

' &lt;H •II

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Fireball Candle &amp; Crystal Candle Holders, animated,

SUNDAY
OCTOBER 29
thru
SUNDAY
NOVEMBER 5

s........

o1lt • '""'

liRT((4R~Q

scheduled Nov. 1
. GALLIPOLIS
The
Regional Nurses Association
will meet Nov . I; at the
Holiday Inn in Kanauga. The
social' hour will begin at 6;30
p.m. Dinner will be served at
7 p.m. The menu will consist
of roast sirloin of beef,
potatoes, vegetable, salad,
rolls. This will be couples
night . and · the special entertairunent wW have the
men in mtnd.
.
During the· business meet-,
ing·, a . discusion will
be held on the Coun-try
Pantry.
The
Country Pantry, this year,

,.

�.,

......

...

.

..

•1

•

.......

~

. •

••

A-4- Ttle Sundav Times-8entinel, Sunday, Ocl. 29, 1978

Beat•••

,

....

••••

~.,

~

••

Retirement frmds hack to nonnal
administrator said today.
"I think we're back to
normal now," said Stephen
Caulfield, assistant'"&lt;lirector
for regional operations.
He said a contract affectinR

WASHINGTON (UP) ) The United Mine Workers
Health and Retirement
Funds are back to normal in
the wake or a 22-&lt;lay strike
that ended Tuesday, a funds

Ofthe ·Bend

360 employees at nine
was
ratified
locations
Monday and picket lines
came down the following day.
"I doo't have the exact
count but I understand It was

overwhelmin g, " Caulfield including
retired
and
said of the contract vote.
disabled miners and families
The previous contract of deceased miners.
expired at inidnight on Sept.
Funds headquarters are
30, a Saturday nigbt, and the located in Washington, D.C.,
strike began on Oct. 2, ·with field offices at
Caulfield said.
Johnstown, Pa.; Wheeling,
The UMW funds serve Morgantown , Logan and
230,000 b e n e ficiaries. Beckley, W.Va .; Allen , Ky.:

Big Stone Gap, ya., :inoi
Ev81l$Ville, Ind.
Caulfield said managerial
and supervisory pel'IOIIIIel
were able to proceaa all
pension and survivor checks
and a large number of
medical bills were paid
during the walkout.

graduate of Gallia Academy
in Gallipolis.
Membership in one of the 42
literary societies is open to
iJte more than 5,700 students
who attend Bob Jones

University, which is often
called tbe " World's Most
unusual Universi t y." The
literary s ocieties spon sor
intramural competition in
debating, sports, etc.

Bob J ones University is a
co.roucational, liberal arts,
Christian institution standing
without apology for the "oldtime religion" and the a b-

A nice gesture on the part of the Meigs Jaycees who c!id a.
fabulous job - the best ever done locally - on their haunted
house feature in the former Pomeroy Senior High School.
Thursday afternoon , th e Jaycees beld a special showing of
the haunted house activities for 31 students - including those
of bot h Gallia and Meigs - at the Guiding Hand School in
Dleshire . The Jaycees helped some of the youngsters to play
the roles of Halloween season characters for a time .
The Jaycees hope to get behind a tax levy at the Nov . 7- a
1.25 mill levy-for the operation of a local school for the
mentally retarded. There.'s money to build the facility but no
funds provided for the operation of a local facility.
Members of the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical
Society are really hoping ali familie s of Meigs County will get
into the history book being planned.
Representatives of the society are holding workshops at 1
p.m. on Fridays a t the Meigs Museum and at 1 p.m. on
Mondays at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center to give residents
a helping han.d on how to go about writing their histories for the
upcoming publicatioo. Each family is also invited to submit
one photo with their 500or less words history.
You're invited to attend a workshop in either location to
get some help on what you would like to do.

NOWIHRU
SAIUBAY
NOV•n-••4

Mrs. Dana Peacocks, the former Alice Smith of Chesler, is
seriously ill at the Walter Reed Arn)y Medical Center in
Washington, D. C. Allee, the daughter of Cleo Smith Detrey
and the late Lawrence A. Smith has undergone major surgery.
Incidentally, her home is in Marquette , Mich. Meigs friends
can send cards to the center, Ward I, room lP. The
Washington , D. C. zip code is 20012.
You might just say that Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Turner out
Rutland way just don't like to make "big" trips. However, they
did get to Albany, Ga., recently for a week's visit with their
son-in-law and daughter, Col. and Mrs. Richard Palmer. Mrs.
Palmer is the former Osa Marie Turner. Col. Palmer is with
the U. S. Marines at Albany. Of course, being so close to
Plains, the Turners took in the sights of the President's
hometown. Incidentally, the last big trip of Mr. and Mrs .
Turner was in 1930 when they ventured to California .

Find out why people all
(
over~ switching to AllstatE
auto tnsurance.
Why are so many drivers swit.Chinll'
their insurance to Allstate ?
We'll give you lots of reasons.
Allstate offers lots of special
rates and discou nts. Good Driver.
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Mileage. Young Married. And more.
· And Alls tate offers today's most
advanced claim handling. Coast
to co'!,St . Fast. Conveni ent.
We t~nk you 'll find a
difference with Allstate.
So compare companies. Find out,
why the owners of over nine
million cars are no~ in "good
hands." Call or come in.

Make beautiful c•ocheted or hand
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3V:~ ounce pull skeins. Many colorsl

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MASON -The family of Mrs. Elizabeth Jeffers held an
early Thanksgiving this year at a time when they could be
together .
On Saturdsy, those gathering at the Elizabeth Jeffers
home for a turkey dinner included Mrs. Diaries Ingels of
Bloomington, Ind., Mrs. Mildred Castle, Mrs. Grace
Kisamore, aU of Newark, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan
Russell, Sr., Mason; Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright, Mason ; Mr.
and Mrs. Brian Ingels, Terre Haute , Ind .; Mrs . Kenneth
Turley and two children, Racine, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Hall and children, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan Russell, Jr.
and children, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Brewer and son,
Mike, Mason; Mrs. Jerry Coleman, and Jeremy, Rutland,
Ohio and Mrs. Clara Ellis, Rutland, Ohio.

area.

FORAGES

I
I Lll hnlus®
I
'--~....!L&lt;l TILSTAR RANGIRTM I LHrnl.. AI•

MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Christoph Illhrdt of Fulda,
Germany have returned home alter visiting a month with ber
sister and brother~n~aw, Mr . and Mrs. Eugene J ohnson .
While here the Johnsons took them to Tu-Endie-Wei Park
In Pt . Pleasant; Springfield, Ohio, Smokey Mountains and
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Johnson's son and family, Mr . and
Mrs. Howard 0. Johnson at Knoxville, Tennessee. They also
visited Daniel Boone Park and many, many other interesting
places. They came back over the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Mr. and Mrs. Illhrdt remarked that the people in the
United Stales are the friendliest people, and th ey plan to
return .

LETART, W. Va. - On Sunday, October 8, a family get;ogetherwasheld at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Wolle and
Nmmy (Lawrence and Peggy) in Letart, W. Va.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs . Burton Webb, Mansfield,
)ltio, who has·been visitmg her brother and family for a week .
Others attending were John and Debbie Hoffman, Robert
md Elsie Roach and sons, Larry and Roger, Mason ; Paul and
\lice Randolph, Stella and Stacie Krebs, Pauletta King and
r.J ., Terry and Patty Huff, and Ricky Wolfe .
All of the immediate family were present except Bernard
Vebb, Tina and Kesa and Tom King .
Mason and area personals
Mrs. Clara WiUiams returned home on Sunday evening
lfter spending several days visiting her son and family, Mr.
md Mrs. Tom Williams at Indian Head, Md . While there she
:&gt;eard her granddaughter, Cindy Williams sing with the State
:hair at Baltimore.
Mr. Clarence Adkins, Letart, W. Va . is a surgical patient
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Helen Williams of Clifton returned home after
visiting her sister, Mrs. Leona Dudding at Nitro, W. Va. The
latter returned with Mrs. Williams for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Forshee of Barberton, Ohio visited a
week with Mrs. Mollie Fox.
Ray Robinson , husband of Jo (Gibbs ) Robinson , is slightly
improved, and off the critical list in a Dlarleston hospital. Mrs.
Robinson, now of Charleston, was a former resident of t he

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Barbara Knight, Diester, Planning
in
Madison,
was elected to serve on the Wisconsin , was the guest
board of trustees of the Area speaker. Dr. Kimmey adSix Health Systems Agency, dressed the history of health
Inc . at the Oct. 24 meeting. planning, the National Health
J oseph P. Vanity, Athens Planning and Resources
Co unty, was elected as the Development Act and its
new ASHSA President and · effect on the future of Health
W i II ia m VanGie s on, Systems Agencies and health
Muskingum County, was planning.
elected as the new vice
Dr. Kimmey stressed the
president of ASHSA. Merritt importance of the Trustees
B. Neil, Belmont Co unty, was and
Committees '
parre-elected to serve as licipation in the establishtreasurer. Mrs. Knight was ment of the area's Health
also selected to serve on the Systems Plan and Annual
Implementation Plan as they
Executive Committee.
Robert Filby , ASHSA's will guide ASHSA's activities.
President for the past 16 Following his address, Dr.
e ntertained
mon ths , and Executi ve Kimmey
Director Thomas Lindstrom questions from the audience.
congratulated the Board of
Tru stees a nd Committee
mem bers for their atVeterans Memorial Hospital
tendance and active parAdmitted - Edna Wiggins,
ticipation during ASHSA's Minersville; Carl Loucks,
first yea r of operation.
GaUipolis.
Dr . J a m es
Kimmey,
Discharged - Bertha Rife,
Executive Director of the_ Naomi Bentley, Maggie
Midwest Center lor Health Gilmore.

Blue ·
Denim Jeans

~3-

Super-low-priced curling iron with o
ful l swivel cord, indicator light, ready
dot and cool safety tip . Convenient
safety stand is included . Save now!

Dr. N. M. Camdsrdese of Norwalk, Ohio, sends out letters
with the envelopes inscribed :
"The same government responsible for Amtrak and the
Postal Service cannot be entrusted with your health."
Keep smiling now ...

Otester woman named member

I

Boys'

THIKWIK KUB WONDIR BAll

I

MASON - Mr . and Mrs. Stanley Harbour , Mr . and Mrs.
Earl Eiving returned recently from a month's vacation which
took tl\em to Calif&lt;rnia. The vacationers took their leisure
time sightseeing, and camping enroute to the Pacific .
They took the Navaho Trail, visited the Grand Canyon , Las
Vegas and Disney World, and had a wonderful time.
While in Oklahoma they visited the Harbours' son, Mike,
daughter-in-law and grandson, Jeff, at Atoka. They came ba ck
through Texas, and from there to Nashville where they
attended the Grand Ole Opry.

. •yJAa:t

MODEL WI-lT

I

LETART, W. Va. - The Reverend Robert Fulton, pastor
of Oak Grove United Methodist Dlurch , has aMounced that a
revival will start at the church on October 29, and will extend
Nov. 4, at 7:30p.m.
There will be special singing, and the speaker will be
Charles Roush of the Bellemead Church.
Everyone is welccme to attend .
The Vernon ~arter is scheduled to sing on Sunday,
Wednesday, and Saturday evenings . Mr . and Mrs. Orval
,\fitcheU will sing on Monday and Fr iday evenings. Linda
Jewell will participate on Tuesday and Saturday evenings and
a trio from Bellemead wiU sing on Thursday .

l 'fl
.....

Supe r co mfor t in
b eou t ifu l fos hi o n
c o lo rs . Wo me n's
sil.e5 S, M,L, a nd XL.

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

I

.....
NOW IHRU
SA1U-AY
NOVII'B-4

Lt. Col. Bruce Bradford, stationed at Fort Ord, Calif., has
been on special assignment at Fort Knox, Ky., and so was able
to get a weekend here with his folks, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace
Bradford. A gre;it get.Wgether for them all, no doubt.

4522nd Avr

I

PIU

· If you hear that Lois ana Paul Pauley and their children
are living in the Rock Springs area in a log cabin, waste not
your sympathy .
.Their spacious " today " lo~ house is fabulous and is nestled
in a beautiful. location . They only moved into it the last part of
Se ptember after having don e much, much, much of the work
themselves . There's more to be done , but the weather hasn't
been conducive in permitting the placement of a !().foot wide
patio from the sl iding glass doors in the huge liviog roomdining room and that type thing, but Lois and Paul will get it all
together, you can he sure.
At any rate , their home is just beautiful. Furthermore ,
they all just love it. Both Pa ul and Lois were reared on farms
and while they dearly love neighbors, they also appreciate
having some space around them. And whO doesn 't?

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE _
Phone 446-1761

: Mason County

con

. By Bob Hoeflich

I

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

solute authority of the Bible.
Its student body comes from
every state in the Union and
about 30 foreign countries
and territories.

riEG.l143
~
12 d ifferent des ig n s .
Eochsheet:

2 '6 " ~~t1 ' 8 ".

All - w ood with maple f ini sh . Co lonial -sty le
tabl e , 2 choi rs . Round .l eg s. Ea sy Ia a~semble .

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

15W'IALL
MUSICAL lEAl

I'HGULAil496
~

25'7

Ill CAll AWY11 I ARIEl lAME
'

Supo•f un l RoaHo nc ,lfle
uses safe beam of light to
knock O'tler cons. Botterlel
e~~tlra . for ages 8 and up.

OUILOW
PIICI

STARTING OCT. 30, 1978
Classes being offered can be applied
toward your diploma. G.B.C. is a
college with you in mind. We can
give you the training .t hat you need
to qualify for the job of your future.
We have more calls from employers
in the area for our graduates, than
· we have graduates.
Join the employables, take the first
step. Enroll at G.B.C., receive your
marketable skills and then the jobs
will come to you.

CALL TODAY AT
446-4367
OR STOP IN AND
VISIT US AT THE
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
Reg. No. 75.{)2-04728

.

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�. -

. ...

'

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. ...

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. . . . . ....

······ ·

...
--

~

·

-

··

•~r•o

A-6-The Sunday Time&gt;.S.lltillel, Su11day, Oct. 29. !978

POMEROY - Parents of
football team members and
cheerleaders
were
of
recognized at the Athens Meigs game Friday night.
Parents or representatives
introduced included :
Randy Arnold. Mr . and
M rs. St a cie Arnold ; Bob
Ashley , Robert and Sharon
Ashley ; Richard and Tim
Basham, Mr . a_nd Mrs .
Sherman Basham ; Greg
Becker , Mr . and Mrs. Don
Becker ; Rick Blaettnar , Mr .
and Mrs. John Blaeltna"r ;
Da vi d Bl.a ke, .Mr . and Mrs.
John Blake ; Brent Bolin, Mr.
and Mr&lt;f?. Joe Bolin ; Mark

Boyd , Mrs . Annette Boy d ;

Greg Bus h, Mr . and Mrs.
Cha r les Bush ; Larr y Byer ,

Mr . and Mrs. BoQ. Byer ; Bob
Chappelear . Mr s.
Patti
Hoff ma n ; Larry Co tterill ,
Mr . ~ nd M r _
s . Raymond
Cotten II ; Dave Da vis~ M r.
and . Mrs . Bruce Dav i s ;
Richard Dea n Jr ., Mr . and
Mrs. Richard Dean Sr . i M ike
Drehel, Mr . and Mrs. James
Drehel ; Dan Ed war ds, Mr .
and Mrs. Larry Edwards ;
Tim Fau l k, Mr . and Mrs.
Clinton Fau lk ; Jerry Fields,
Mr. and Mrs. Je rry Fields;
Ter ry Gardner , Mr . and Mrs .
Ca r l Gardner ; T r oy Griffith ,
Mr . and Mrs. M ike Griffi th ;
Robert Harmon , Mrs. Pat
Harm on ; Brent Houda shell ,
Mr .
a nd
Mr s .
Bob
Houdas hel t ; Ri ck Hovatter,
Mr . and Mrs.
R i char d
Hovatter ; Da ve Hysell. Mr .
and Mrs. Milford Hysell ·
Da vid Ta marelli. Mrs. SandY
Miller ; Joh11 Ingels, M r. and
Mrs . Don Ma y; Chris Judge,
Mrs . Jan JudQe ; Brian King ,
Mr . and Mrs. Lloy d King ;
Roger Koval chik , Mr . and ·
Mrs. Roger Kovalchik ; Paul

Matson , Mr . and Mrs . K. E .

M.atson .
Henry

McCoy,

Mr.

and

.,

....

···~•-'•

H'"

forthcoming Meigs
oey
book. The posters on "'splay
at this time are the final 50,
from which one grand prize
winner and a first and second
place will be chosen. AU 50 of
the posters will then be
diBtributed throughout the
county.
The response by the
children was tremendous and
the
workmanship
outstanding, it is reported.

A-7- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

r--A~~~-n;;~iiis-1

Seelig and Mrs . Sue Rous h:
Brent Sisson , Mr . and Mrs.
George Sisson ; Todd Smith,
M r . and Mrs. Tom Smi th;
Todd Snowden. Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Snow den ;
Larry .
Stewart, Mr . and Mrs. Tom
Stewart ; Seal! Stout , Mr . and
Mr s . Bi l lie Stout ; Brian
Sw an n,
Mrs .
Gwenda
Ferguson ; Chr is Tay lor, M r.
H erman
Tay lor;
Tim
Tackett. Mr . a nd Mrs .
Randall
Tackett ;
Dan
Th omas and Greg Th oma s,

Mr .

and

Mrs.

... ·
•

BEFORE YOU BUY

Donald

Thomas ; Den ni s T hor nton,
Mr . and Mr s.
Wil l iam
Thornton ; Jeff Waylan d, Mr .

ANY OTHER CHAIN SAW

and Mrs. Ga ry Wayland:
Da v id Wi lkes. Mr . and Mrs.
Ju li us
McGhee ;
Va n

Willford , Mr . and Mrs . Bill
Wi llford ; Rick William so n,
Mr . a nd Mr s. Fred Williams ;
Tim Wya nl , Mrs . Kennet h
Wyant and brot her, K. C..
Varsity Cheerleaders
Terr i Yeauger , Ruth Ann
Yeouger; Robin Sout hern,
Mr .
and
Mr s.
Robert
Sou th ern ; T i na Randolph ,
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin Ran .,
dolph ; Ti na Connor, Mr . an d
Mrs . Charl es Connor ; M aria
Legar, Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Legar , Dee Sim ms, Mary
Donna Simms, and Sandy
H ami l ton, Mr . and Mr s.
Charles Hamil ton .
Junior Varsity
Cheerleaders
Lor i ·Rupe, Mr . and Mrs.
R i cha rd
Rupe ;
T a mmy

MONSTER DAY - Friday was a day for monsters
and " things" at Meigs High School as many members of
the student body were dressed for the Ha lloween season.
The student council awarded prizes to front row, left to

Blake, Ph yll is Bla ke ; Beth
Perrin , Mr . and Mrs. Bi ll
Perri.n ; Unrecka JohnSo n,
Mart1n L. Johnson ; Lir1da
Kovalchik , M r. and Mrs.
Roqer K ova lchi k · Ke- n&lt;ia

right, Andrea Riggs, honorable mention ; Kenda Braun ,second place $15; Lynn Oliver, third place $10 ; back row,
left to right, James Gheen, first place, $25; Bob Seelig,
honor able mention.

'

Brauh , Mr. and Mrs. Ken~et h
Brau n ; Penn y Miller , Mr .
and Mrs. Bi l l Mill er , and
Kelly Yree, Mr. and Mrs.
John Tyr ee.

150 . Power at a price. • 2.6 cub•c inch
hemi-head loop sc aveng e engine. • 16"

~--i.-ciiicriiATmwS,-l
D.D.S.
i Announces the opening of his

Power Tip • guide bar and chain • Vmyl
coated handle ba r for a solid gnp.
• Autom at ic cha in· oi ling . • Simple
rug ged cons tru c tion and easy

serv•ceab •l ity . • La rge capac•ty luel a nd
oil ta nk. • Big saw performan ce with out a
big

~,

l:r:~~~~:e.::~~---~:~~~~J

Orillicothe set as site of session

were r ecognized Friday riight prior to the Athens-Meigs
ga me. Following the pre-game program , fans wa tched a
rugged de fen sive struggle as At hens edged the
Maraude rs, 2-0 on a bad snap on a punt attempt which
went as a safety.

Worker.
Ms . Fiel is a field instructor
at Case Western Reserve
University, School of Applied
Sciences. Her other a ctivities
include group therapist at the
Montefiore Home for the
Aged , Cleveland, Ohio, and
Sensitivity
Trainer
throughout the state 6f Ohio.
Ms. Fie! has published in
"Gerontology" magazine and
"A
Guide
to
Intergenerational
Programmin g." She has a lso
rece ived the CINE award for
writing severa l films on
aging and is listed in
" Outstanding Professionals
in Human Services" and
Who' s Who of American
Women.
For further information oo
the Gerontology Training
Session, contact Barbara
Stee le, ·Area Agency on
Aging, District 7, P. 0 . Box
978, Rio Grande College and
Community College, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674, or call
245-0303, ext. 226.

'

HOMELITE.
CHAINSAWS .

~

RECOGNIZED - Parents of football players and
cheerleaders for the 1978 Mejgs Marauder football squad

Ridenour Supply
985-3308

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INTEREST ALLOWED BY
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* Substantial Interest Penally For Early Withdrawal .

We Also Pay

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Aut omatic Sens i-Dry'M
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Poly knits cycle.

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to Date of Withdrawal
Model DLB6850

Recognized State- wide as a Le gislator w ith
record of accomlishment for
Rural Ohio - and a man with the know -how
to safeguard our future!
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SOUTHERN OHIO CANNOT
AFFORD INEXPERIENCE

0

Richard E- Jones, Manager
216 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, O. ·

992-6655

PHONE 992-)181

- -

.

All Depo_sits lnsurea to $40,000 by The

STORE HOURS , 8 :30 to s,so - MILL CLOSES AT S·OO
P.M. - SERVING MF.lGS, GALL'A a; . MASON
COUNTIES
'

appear on

ChannelB

Federal Savings &amp; Loan Insurance.
"

23 cases
terminated
POMEROY - Thirteen
defendants were fined and 10
ot hers forfeited bonds in
Midgs CoWlty Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E .
Buck were Harold Lee Pettit,
VieMa, W. Va., and Steve
Blackwei!, Pomeroy, $12 and
costs each, speed; Edward
Young , Pomeroy , $9 and
costs, speed; H. Michael
Adams, Athens, $11 and
costs, speed; Thomas . G.
Edwards, Mason, $50 and
costs, spotlighting; Robert
W. ~ails, Pomeroy; $15 and
costs, speed; Mikell Collins,
Fairborn, and Carlos Ritchie,
Fairborn, $150 and costs
each, illegal deer ; John T.
Warner, Pl. Pleasant, $36 and
costs, speed ; Harold Hysell,
Rutland , . $17 and costs ,
speed ;
Harry
Barton,
Racine , $150 and costs, five
days confinement, one year
probation , DWI ; Melva
. Eblin, Rutland , $14 and costs,
Kevin Stewart,
speed;
Pomeroy , $15 and costs ,
reckless operation.
Forfeiting bonds were
Anthony Burdick, Gallipolis,
$49, speed; Alfred Conard,
Mason, Larry Queen, Belpre,
Richard Smith, Coolville, and
Gregory Binkley , Cleveland,
$30.50 each, speed; Steven
Cremeans, Coolville, $30.50,
unsafe vehicle; Harold
Lemar, Cambridge , $30.15, .
speed; P a ul Wolfe, Syracuse,
$353, DWI , $153, driving
under s uspension ; Harold
Dobbins, Coolville, $360,
DWI; Douglas Smith, Crown .
City, $30.55, speed.

Meigs deputies
joining search
POMEROY
Meigs
Couti'ty sheriff's deputies
have joined Gallia County
Jaw officers in the search for
a 1970 Ford Maverick owned
by Patricia Shane, Rt. 1,
Cheshire. The car was stolen
sometime Thursday night or
early Friday morning. It is a
two-door, turquoise Ford with
Ohio tags 297977.
Friday evening, sheriff's
deputies investigated an a uto
fire at 4:30 p.m. on Happy

Hollow Rd . According to the
report , a 1973 Ford Torino
owned by Walter A. Ellis, 17,
Rutland, was destroyed by
fire. A backfire through the
ca rburetor wa s blamed .
Rutland's Fire Department
res ponded. Friday_morning,
a deer accident was reported
to the sheriff's department.
Robert Fetty said the animal
ran into the path of his car
Thursday night on SR 124
near Langsville.

TAKEN TO RUSSIA
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The 10 survivors of the crash
of a Navy patrol plane in the
icy North Pacific will be
taken to Russia for medical
treatment , the Coast Guard
said Friday night. ·
file men were picked up
Friday by the Soviet fishing
trawle r MYS Senyavina Jess
than 300 miles from Siberia.
A spokesman at the Coast
Guard rescue coordination
center ill San Francisco said
the men would be transferred
to another Russian vessel. He
said the destination of the
second vessel was not known.

Durin~ the past four years, we have gone through a
very drastic change In our tax structure. In 1972 the Ohio
Supreme Court ruled all property in the slate must be
valued at 100% of its current market value. When this
caused property taxes to raise significantly; the Ohio
Legislature passed H.B. 920 which required an update of
values three years after the last reappraisal based on a
sales study conducted by the Department of Tax Equalization in Columbus.
In JQne, I received my order from the Department of
Tax Equalization for the three year update, which percentages have been made public. I worked up a sales study of
my own and went to Columbus for a meeting with the Tax
Commission. At tht time, I received a decrease in
agricultural land frurn 50% to 23% and in residential land
from 45% to 24% . These per-centages apply to valuations
and not tax dollars. When I started applying these pen·entages to present values, I still felt it was too high and talked with the Tax Commissioner again. During thi s conversation, he informed me he woul~ not lower the percentage ,
so I submitted my abstract showmg property values witlm
no increase. There is such strong opposition to our present
tax structure that as of this date only 17 of the 88 Counties
have submitted their· abstracts.
If I were not so opposed to these continued increases in
valuatio,ns, I would not be urging you, the people of Gallia
County, to voice your opinions to your representatives in
regard to H.B. 920. I could have withheld all the infonnation that I have published but since I feel forced taxa tiori is
so wrong, I wanted you the people to know what is happening. The problem facing us in the continued raise in our
pruerty valuations every three years as mandated by law.
High property values, not your present tax rates are the
cause of higher taxes.
. ·
I have been in contact with our legislators and other
County Auditor·s and have received support for a cha nge in
the current tax str ucture. If re-elected , I will co11tinue to
work for voted, not forced taxation.

Dorothy L Condee
County Auditor
P.S. IF THE DEPARTMENT OF TAX EQUILIZATION
IN COLUMBUS WILL NOT GRANT ME A LOWER
PERCENTAGE AND I DO HAVE TO ABIDE RY H.B. 920,
THERE IS NO WAY THE PERCENTAr.ES CAN REINCREASED BEYOND THE 24% FOR RESIDENTIAL
LAND AND 23% FOR AGRICULTURAL LAND, WHICH J
WORKED SOH .\RD TO ORTAJN.
'

.

Pd. Pol. Adv.
J

.

'

(

.

'

.

Martin A. McAngus,
Syracuse, wa s clte d for
reckless operation following
a traffic accident Thur.day
on SR. 12~ .
According to the report,
McAngus was eastbound on
SR 124 in Syracuse t raveling
at a high rate of speed during
a rain storm when his vehicle
ran off the roadway striking a
culvert and tore out a section
of guardrail. His vehicle then
whirled around and struck a
telephone company pole.
There were no injuries. The
vehicle had severe damage.
When Lhe · fr osl is on the
pumpkin , it' s ti1ne Lo biJkc t he
pie and l'le.an uu~ freezer .

Rapist gets 200

}fears
was convicted Sept. 20 in the
rape of a Vilano Beach, Fla.,
woman and her 18-year-&lt;Jid
daughter, then robbing them
of $7 at gunpoint .
The family was unidentified to protect the rape
victims.
Surratt said during the trial
that the owner of the Vilano
Beach home in vited JJim to
have sex with his wife and
step-daughter wh ile he
watched.
Watson &gt;entenced him to
two life terms for sexual
battery of the mother and the
da ughter while threatenin ~
them with a rifle.

ST. AUGUSTINE , Fla .
(UPI ) - Edward Surratt, 37,
Aliquippa, Pa., a Marine
combat veteran suspected of
murder in four states, Friday
was sentenced to more than
200 years imprisonment on
rape and robbery charges.
Su rr att remained silent
during sentencing by Circuit
Judge Richard 0. Watson .
Security·· conscious marshals
guided him into the court room wearing leg chains,
handcuff• and a leather strap
binding his arms.
The unemployed truck
driver , who once served as a
military chapla in 's assistant,

REBATE PROGRAM: Join wilh us and Ze nith in this ex ci ling doubl e c elebration by laking
lull advant ag e of the big Zenith 60 th Annive rsa ry Customer Rebate Program. You'll save
sig nif ican t dollars on se l8cted Zenith SYST EM 3 TV models ... up to 560.00 depend ing on
the se t purch ased. Here ·s how th e program works. Just buy any on e o f the qualifyin g
models, fill oul the money-bac k coupon from yo ur Zen ith dealer and send the co upon
ba c k to Zenith with your owne r's reg istration card as your proof o f pur chase. You II get a
ch eck di rec t from Ze nith . Program slart s Sept . 4 and ends Nov. 1, 1978.

AN OPEN lffiER TO THE PEOPLE
OF GALLIA COUNTY

Sincere~,

Enough to Setve You-Small Enougll to Know You"

JACK W. CARSEY , MGR .

..

ELIZA FOREMAN
PORTLAND - Eliza A.
Foreman, 81, Rt 1, .Portland
died Friday at her residence:
She was preceded in death by
her parents and her husband,
John E. Foreman. She was a
member of the Morse Chapel
Church . .
.
Mrs. F oreman is survived
by two sons, Edward it
Foreman, Langsville , and
Joseph R, Foreman, Portland, two daughters, Bertha :
J. Proffitt, Columbus, and
James
(Anna)
Mrs.
McHaffie, Portland, eight
grandchildren and one greatgranddaughter.
Funeral services will be
beld Monday at 10 :30 a.m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Freeland Norris officiating. ·
Burial will be in Great Bend
WCHS- TV, Channel 8, last
Methodist Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home nigl1l featured four l.all.ia
today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Cuunti ans in a filmt...-'&lt;1stor·y on
the Vial of Life campaign.
p.m.
They were Homemakers
Cun ni e Ha lley and Gai l
Hamilton from the Gallia
BILL RICE
County
Senior Citizen• Center
••~T. PETERSBURG, Fla. at
the
home
of John and Sadie
Relatives in Meigs County
Casey,
84P
Third
Ave.
have been informed of the
As pcu-t of a news program,
death of Bill Ike Rice, 55, who
was killed on Friday, October the video &gt;tation • howed the
13, in a. traffic accident near homemakers filling oul the
fact sheet fur the clients who
St. Petersburg , Fla.
The deceased served in the then placed the pl astic bottle
U. S. Army for 15 years and in the refri gerator door as
was wounded in Korea. He described in . an Oct. 18
was preceded in death by his feature a rticle in the
mother, Edith Rice, one t ;111/ifmli.,. Ouily Tr ii11W1 •,
The voice of each of the
brother, Frank, and a sister,
quartet
was hear~ duri ng the
Margaret Stockton.
brief
segment
of 0:1 news
Survivors include three
teleca&gt;t
and
a
closeup
of the
children, William E., serving
Vial
itself
shuwn.
in the U.S. Army in Arizona;
Sue Rice of Syracuse and
Harry A., Beverly, 0. He is
EVENT MONDAY
also survived by a grandson .
VINTON - Trick or treat
Funeral services were held
Barracus
National night will be held in Vinton
in
Cemetery in the St. Peters- Village Monday, Oct. 30 from
6 to 7 p.m .
burg area.

Savings &amp; Loan

POMEROY LANDMARK
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

'-ANDMARK . '

wood, W. Va., one granQson,
Jamie Roush and two grancldaughters, Keri Ann Roush
and Brook Ellen Roush, all of
Belpre.
Last rites will be held at 1
p.m . Monday from the Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev .
Wilbur Perrin officiating .
Burial will be in Greenwood
Cemetery at Racine.
Calling hours will be held at
the funeral home after 2 p.m .
Sunday.

The Athens Cowtty

A Lot ofAppiUince for Your Money ,

an outs tanding

LEAH V. ROUSH
POMEROY
Leah
Virginia Roush, 60, Belpre,
died Friday night at CamdenClark Hospital in· Parkersburg. She was born Aprjl 17,
1918, daughter of the late Bert
Maud e
Vickers
a nd
Bridgette. She was preceded
in death by two brothers,
Paul and Earl Bridgette, a
sister, Helen Loti and an
infant daughter.
Surviving are her husband,
Howard, a son, Bennett Dale
Roush of Belpre ; a daughter,
Melody Roush of Columbus ;
a sister,l!ah Bare of'Ravens-

. Meigs Bnmch,

I lui point-

EXPERIENCED AND PROVEN

HERBERT CROSS
POMEROY - Herbert
Paul Cross, 72, Deming, New
Mexico, a former Pomeroy
resident , died Thursday
evening at an E l Paso, Tex.,
hpspital.
Before moving west, Mr.
Cross lived in both Pomeroy
and Harrisonville. He is
survived by two sisters , Mrs.
Mabel Pauley, Dexter and
Mrs. Mary Frances McCJure,
St. Albans , W. V0 .; his wife,
Pearl, a son, Paul Gene of
Sante Fe, New Mexico .
Funeral arrangements
were incompl~te Friday .

Gallians

I· office for the practice of I
l
general dentistry.
l ·205 North Second Street .~
I
I Middleport, Ohio 45760
I Office hours
Telephone I

RIO GRANDE -The Area
Agency on Aging District 7 is
presenting a one-day training
session entitled " Sensitivity
Training in Gerontology,"
Thursday, Nov. 9. Site of the
one-day training session is
the Holiday Inn, Chillicothe.
Topics discussed at the
workshop
include
the
physiology of aging, skills
and
techniqu es
in
communicating with the
disoriented patient, obstacles
to genuine communication
and creative li stening .
Instruc tion will include
lectures, role playing and the
viewing of various films.
The workshop is open to the
public with emphasis for
people working with the
elderly in nursing homes. The
course has been approved for
six hours of credit in Home
Administration by the Board
of Examiners.
The workshop will be
conducted .by Ms. Naomi'
Feil, who holds a masters
degr~e in social work and is
an Academ Certified Social

•~

SPECIAL EXHIBIT
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Museum will have a
special exhibit open to the
public on Sunday (today)
from 1 to 3 p.m. The exhibit
will consist of posters
designed by sixth grade
students of Meigs County
schools .
These
poste rs
were
designed to remind people to
write their histQry for . the

Parents honored
Mrs . Archie McCoy ' Mi ke
McGu i re , M r . and Mrs .
Dallas
M cG uire ,·
John
Morr~ s, Mr . and . Mrs . Carl
M orr is; Randy Murray , Mr .
and Mrs . Delber t Murray ;
Craig Nicins ky , Mrs. John
Ni cinsk y and Pam Vaughan ;
Robert Pa rker, Mr . Robert
Parker ; Joe Powell and Bill
Powe ll , Mr . and Mrs . William
Powe l l ; Tom Sc h oonove r ,
Mr . and Mrs . Thomas
Schoonover ; Bob Seel ig , Jack

•

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The RO SSINI • K2548E
Medit E:m anca n Styl ed
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wo od veneers on top ar1d
end s. Front and ba se of
simul ated wood . An tiqu e
Oak co lor lini sh. Casters

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and base of sim ulated
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Th e MOZART • K2522E
Tra ns1 t10f1al Styled Con so lo .
Ant1quc OAk wo od-gromcd
fi n1 sh appli ed to dura ble wood
produ ct&lt;;; on lop and end s.
Front and ba ::.e of Simula ted
wood. c~ s t e r s.

The LISZT • K2542E
Tran sitional Styled
Con sol e. Genuine Oak
wood vene ers on lop and
ends. Front and ba se of
simulated wood. Fir1i shed

__

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sen c 11•zns reno rts

B-1-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

A-3- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday , Oct. 29, 1978
PAPERSFILED
Articles of inco.rporation
have been filed m Columbus
with Secretary of state Ted
W. Brown by the Tru Stone
Company.
Serving as agent for the
Bidwell based firm was attorney D. Dean Evans .
Incorporators are J . J .
McGuire, Russell Bailey, C.
R. Mason and Roger Burke.

NEW
PICKUP TRUCK

CAPS
SHIELDS- FLAIRS
at

Codner's Campers
Rainbow Ridge

C. R. 211 '" Bashan

0

•

COLUMBUS - This is the
third article by State Senator
Oakley C. Collins (R-Ironton)
in .the series on the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio, ·
and will deal with the most
method
of
effective
registering a utility com·
plaint.
All utility and transportation
com panies
regulated by the PUCO must
operate under rate and
service schedules approved
by the commission. Safety
and service standards are
also mandated by the commission and must be maintained by each utility. No rate
changes · or elimination or
expansion of services can
take place without PUCO

r

approval. Areas not under
PUCO regulation include :
ancillary utility services such
as the teiephone yellow
pages, defects in telephone
receivers, or natural gas
lines from a street tap to the
customer's home.
Municipally • owned gas,
electric, · water and . sewer
operations or rural electric
systems are also out of
PUCO's jurisdiction.
In the transportation area,
inner city bus and taxi· service are eliOempt from PUCO
regulation.
· The first step in handiing
any utility problem should be
to contact the Public Interest
Center. Most minor complaints can be handled by the

DISOOUNT
PRICES
ON AU
MODELS

Poet's Corner

.

center within 3 to 5 days when
either an informal compromise is reached between
the utility and the consumer,
or the consumer is en·
couraged to file a formal
complairit. The one page
formal complaint form is
available from the Public
Interest Center, and Its
completion serves to start the
formal complaint process.
A formal complaint nor·
mally takes 5 to 6 months
before final action is taken,
including a mandatory
hearing on each case. In
preparing
the
written
complaint, it is helpful if the
following information is

included: consumet's name,
addre811, telephone number;
full name of the utility in
question; copies of bills,
contracts, shipping receipts,
correspondence between 'the
company and the consumer;
a detailed description of the
nature of the complaint;
information about the current
status of the problem, i,e.,
has any attempt been made
by the consumer to resolve
the problem with the utility.
All formal complaints
should be sent to:
Docketing, Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, 180 E.
Broad St., Columbus, Ohio
43215.
In most cases, the Public
Interest Center will be able to

resolve

the

consumer's

problem. If they are unable to
do so, they will recommend
future action to the con-

sumer.

POMEROY LANDMARK
Jack-W. Carsey, Mgr.
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30

Mill Closes at 5:00p.m.

A golfing friend grumps
thllt the tourney he recently
played in reminds him of going to grandma 's in a sleigh
at Thanksgiving - it was a
one-horse open.

We Take th'e Fear Out of Buying A Used Car. Our Cars Are Better Because:
1. Mostly one owner new car trades ..
2. No auction cars.
3. 100% Warranty on late models.
4. Backed by Modern Service Department.

1977 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

This Sport Model has the two tone
paint finished In Brentwood
brown and
Desert
Sand.
Equipment Includes air. conditioning , automatic tran-

. Finished In canary yellow with ' ·

buckskin landau topana matching bucket seals. This G.P. has
it all .. Alr conditioning, lilt
wheel, AM radio with S-track
stereo, and rally wheels. We sold

sm·lsSion, cruise control, tilt

wheel and radial
22,100 miles.

tires. Only

it new.

'5295
1976 FORD
ELITE
Intermediate

A sL1per

from Ford.

Finished In Ivory white with gold
vinyl 60-40 seating and a gold
landau top. Equipped with AMFM track, air condlllonlna. tilt
wheel, cruise control, wire wheel
covers.

Accent stripes,

1976 BUICK
LeSABRE 4 dr.
This 79 Buick trade Is sure to be
first on your list. Finished In
Bamboo creem wlth a full gold
vinyl roof and matching 60~
Velour Seating, Equipment In·
eludes air conditioning, cruise
control, tilt wheel and AM Raiiio
with S-track stereo. This lOCal
senior citizens trade has only
17,776 low low miles.

'5495

SAVE$$$

1977 BUICK REGAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP

1977 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO .

F ire thorn w ith m a tchi ng la nda u
top , AM· FM tape, c rui se control
and dr ive n only 21,354 miles. E x ·

pee t the bes t.

much

Stunning Midnight Blue Finish
with Blue cloth Interior, cruise
control, tilt wheel rally wheels
and much more. If you are
looking for a sharp one, see this
one . Now .

PRICED ACCORDINGLY

more. Driven only 23,419 miles.
New limited trade .

'4695

'-5 495

'4995

1977 PLYMOUTH

1978 CHEVROLET
CAMARO

1977 CHEVROLET
VEGA, Hatchback

This sports model Is sure to catch

Chestnut brown exterior, gold
vinyl bucket seats. Equipment
Includes an econQmlcal 4 cyl.
eng. 5-speed transmission, radio,
new premium white side wall
tires and special sport accent
stripes, It you're looking for
economy this Is it. Specially
priced at

VOLARE PREMIER
Station Wagon Artie white .exterior with wood
grain applique and 60-40 tan
vinyl interior enhance the Beauty
of this compact wagon. Equip-

your attention . Carmine exterior

and black bucket saats with air
conditioning, automatic transmlssloh, AM-FM radio and sport
styled wheels. .
Priced to sell

ment Includes the economical
slant six engine, automatic
transmission, cruise control, Air

conditioning, luggage rack, and
rear gate defroster.

'5995

SAVE$$$

1978 CHEVROLET
MONZA 2+2

NEW 78 PONTIACS
LEFT OVER
1 LeMANS

6 GRAND PRIX
GMAC AND BANK

FINANCING

-

Flrethorn e•terlor with
white Interior.
This Sports Model has the
economical 4-cyllnder engine,
automatic transmission, power
steering, AM radio, bucket seats
and styled wheel covers. Only
5,911 miles on this Beauty.

SAVE$$$

'2695
NEW 78 BUICKS
LEFT OVER
2 SKYlARKS
3 REGAL CPES.
2 LeSABRE CPES.
2 UMITED SEDS.

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
TO CHOOSE FROM Come In &amp; Browse Around

BUICK
PONTIAC
1911 la1tern Ava.

He wants us to use,
First the worldly things
created by man
Go about doing evil whenever
you can.
Don't go about doing a lot of
good deeds
Don't be kind and loving to
one who needs,
Just go about doing anything
you can
To make life miserable for
your fellowman.
But many times as the devil
is served
W~ receive not the things we
thought we deserved,
All the promises that be had
made
In heartbreak and sorrow
we're always paid.
Finally the days of man's life
get to be few
Who bad served the devil all&gt;
the way through,
He begins to see the mistake'
he has made
A!l life on earth begins to
fade .

Is

filled with
The devil then
glee
As tile man passes on into
eteni1ty,
He had refused salvation and
went to bell
On to the bottomless pit he
fell.
Some fathers and mothers
will he there
And the greatest torture for
them to hear,
WUI be to see some of their
children cast in
Who hadn't been warned of
the cost of sin.
Now it's too late, the chlldren
to warn
. Too late to be sorry, too late

to mou,n,
Always in hell through
eternity
Lall\enting in grief and
agony.

DOC SMITH SAYS •••

1977 GMC
SPRINT

. THECOSTOF
REFUSING SALVATION
If for our Master, the devil
we choose
He'll give us the things,

Phone 446·2212

Oalllpoa.

Japan trip described

Columbus,
during
an
argument in the apartment.

MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. country in February. Mrs.
Betty Fultz told of her recent Fultz accented her talk with
LEGAL NOTICE
trip to Hong Kong and Tokyo photographs taken along the
The Public Utilities Com·
wher; she spoke Friday way on the trip.
She
describeq
Seoul,
mission of Ohio has set for
·
evening at a meeting of the
public hearing Case No .
Korea,
as
being
much
like
Middleport - Pomeroy Rotary
Hong
Kong.
Mrs.
Fultz
was
78-627-EL
-FAC to review
Club.
introduced
by
program
the
fuel
procurement
prac·
1
Mrs. Fultz des.c ribed
chairman,
Vernon
Weber.
tices
and
policies
of
the
conditions in Hong Kong
Jolm
Rice,
president,
was
.
eo·
t
umbus
&amp;
Southern
stressing the bigh amount of
Ohio Electric Company,
construction which is · now in charge of the meeting and
the operation of it• Fuel
underway there. She told of John Koebel of the Columbia
Cost Adjustment Clause,
visiting the family of Fumiko Gas Co., and a resident of
and related matters. This
Iwasaki near Tokyo, a sub- Gallipolis, was a guest.
Dinner
was
served
by
women
hearing is scheduled to be·
ject of interest to Rotarians
of
Heath
United
Methodist
gin
at 10:00 a.m. on Octo·
since ·Miss Iwasaki _was a
Church
where
the
weeky
club
her
30, 1g78 at the Comresident of MeigS County for
meetings
are
traditionally
mission's
Offices, 180 Eut
a year as an exchange
held.
Broad
Street,
Columbus,
student under the sponOhio.
All
interested
peisorship of the local Rotary
sons
will
be
given
an
Club and made her home with WOMAN CHARGED
opportunity
to
ba
heard
.
Rotary families during her
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Further
information
may
stay here. She attended Teresa
Barnett,
23,
be obtained by contacting
Meigs High School and made Columbus, was charged
Commission.
the
numerous
public
ap- Thursday by police with
pearances while here to tell of murder in the stabbing death
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
her homeland.
of her neighbor in an east side
CO~I\11SSIO.N OF OHIO
Mrs. F&amp;iltz reported Miss apartment house.
Bv :
Richard L. Smith,
Iwasaki will graduate from
Secretary
Police said Miss Barnett
high school in her native stabbed Melvin · Brown, 30,

~·.The

haunting
.:. of Our House
...
tar lllg .

The big bc:tllroum was empty: The hall was empty . Tlw
two small er rm~m s wt.:n.• emp· ,
ty. She shivered, but tlwn it
was 1nidwinter , and une l'ould
cxpct'l to s hiver in the danl·
my chill of this old house .

Mary Allison
s tood
unbelieving . The f o.utst~ps
echoed now only in her
memory . but they had been
so real that she feared that
s um cu n e - tJr
something! - had gotlcrl into
the place .
This feeling was nutlhl! exclusive prope&amp;1y of Mary
Aliisun , however . Let the
scen e now change to sum-

'·

COMING, NOVEMBER 11th

1 DAY ONLY
RUTLAND FURNITURE IS REPEATING
THEIR 1 DAY STOREWIDE SALE
FEATURING "HOOVER"
A FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE WIU BE
IN OUR STORE ALL DAY. NOVEMBER 11th
TO DEMONSTRATE THE BEST HOOVER
COMPANY HAS EVER MADE.

of her own : "Have yuu ever

BAR OF OUR HOUSENo strong spirits are
served at Our House, but
Ibis ,gbost imbibes a
French wine of the Ughtest
character. The ghost likes
to think of herself as the
Spirit of '78.

1'/ruiiiJJt";IJIJ,,~ '"'
I . 111/ll /·." II ) \r;

It was broa d daylight, but
Mary Allison was alone in
· Our House, where she is
cUI·atm· of the state museum.
It was midwinter, and the !59year-old building was closed
for the season .
Footsteps drummed
upstairs, not•just for one person ; but for two or three or
more persons . And yet, Mary
Allison was alone.
The floqr creaked , as ancitlrt flouts are wont to do
.. when weight of people
. depresses planks. The audi·
ble footfalls were slow,
deliberate, menacing. And
Mary Allison was alone.
Though terror was in her
throat, she went upstairs.
She's a little woman . Friendly ,
s weet,
a f fab l e,
hospitable - perfect hostess
for Henry Cushi ng's inn on
Fir;t Avenue midway up the
block above the Public
Square.
She was alone . She ,..,,,.,,.
that she was alone, fur Our
House is locked up ti ghtly
during the off-season . The
curator occasionally visits
Our House in the off-season to
brush off the dust, tu ascertain how the chairs and tables
and other memorabilia are

An old, old man salvation
forgot
Oh, how terrible will be his
lot;
He was so kind and to the
Lord did give
Now with the vilest of men
he,! eternally live.
Screams, sobs, shrieks,
sa(jness and pain
.
No way to get out, nothing to
gain,
No babies down there for
mothers to love
Jesus said, "They will he in

heaven above."
A bottomle811 pit, filled with
smoke and fire
Always · burning hour after

hour,
Having always the torture of
thirst
Throat dry and burning,
ready to burst.
Forever falling, an eternal
nightmare
Praying for death but no
death down there,
Eternally doomed in this
place to stay
A thousand years is but as a
day.

mertime, when Our House is
open tu the public daily except Mondays and Tuesdays .
Three visitors are in the
cuurtya&amp;•d, but one of them
came into the house to usc the
tel ephone. When the othe1·
twu came 111 , t he first
visitor - all three were
women - \'·N.Js lei:;inin g agHihsl
the bar, and she was pale.
The pallor was so pronounce-d
th~l one of her companions
asked, " Are you all right ?"
" Yes." But she turned to
Mary Allislin with a question

seen anythi1,1g unusual in this
..;, ,..liuilding ?..
Only half joktngly, Mary
Allison answered, "Yes, the
ghost of Ou1· House.··
The pallid woman said that
when s he came in, she was
wandering about the place.
She heard someone back of
her, turned to look and saw a
man with a long coat and high
boots - "he looked like the
ttlan in the picture upstairs''
1Lafayette;. One of the other
women urged this one to go
home and rest.·
Others have seen this
strangely dressed man muvlllg down the alley below Our
House. But nut Mary.
There two weird instcmc~s
in which Mary's son' Arthur
Ray Allison, 17, has seen ur
heard things of an unusual
character. He read in the
t;.,ffi,,uli .~ ./m1r11&lt;~l of the early
1850s that Jenny Lind had
sung years ago in the
ballroom of Our House. The
youth was startled tu hear
that golden voice himself un
one oecusion. But not Mary.
On another occasion, Ar·
~hur Ray ,_then 16, saw ltis
mother at the punch bar
dowf)stairs . Her . attention
was absorbed by some
literature on the counter, and
he saw a person there, facin g
thecurator .
When Mary Allison extended an ann as if to give dire t:·
ti uns, no one was lhere . ..except her.
Finally, there's evidenc-e of
something not normally a
part of this musewn . In the
atti c, not open to the public
because of her inability tu
" police ' · all three floors,
there's a rocking chair. When
Mary Allison went tu that
area to inspect its contents,
the chair had been moved to a

ANCIENT WOOD CUT - This wood cut of Our House
is in Our House. Artist unknown, the engraving represents

~.

,:

.

?;·· · ~,•·._ •...... ·_ "·.\

.~,~
~

the eerie atmosphere one feels upon visiting Our House in
Gallipolis.

.

··.'

'',

-

. '""'1!1': -

. AI'

"'

COOL GHOUL - lt 'sa chilling thing to haunt a house, especially Our House . The Ghost
of Our House flits from room to room in a clammy kind of way so that even the phantom of
the ~useum mus~ pause at the fireside . Larry Ewing said, "The spirit moved me; so !took
the picture." And he took all the pictures in this special Halloween visit to Henrv Cushing's
old tavern .
·

GHOST UGHTS GASUGHTS in ball!'oom at Our
House. Larry Ewing 's special photography caught the
spirit preparing for a night of haunting .
hearth - as if someone had
sat there to warm himself ,
though no fi1·e has been lit
there for years, perhaps
decades.
Mrs. Allison askc"&lt;i the
cle:oming woman if' she'd muv·
ed that chair. No, she hadP'!.
Mary hadn't. Arthur Ray
hadn 't.
The ghost uf Our House !

Docs old Henry Cushing
cnrnc ba l'k from hls gnwe ,
wht•rever il is, cmd keep taiJ
un hi s Utvern ? Dues he
~umelilllt:"!:i lmng guosu y
friend s, whu walk or w"llz in
the ~a ll room ? Did Lafay ette
enjuy hiutself .su mueh as a
guest there in 1825 that he

returns tu the t.Hvern in the
Old F'rench City ?

For serving Satan this is the
cost
A place in hell, forever lost,

0, man, dear man, while God
still calls
Avoid this place of burning
walls!
Ottie T. Roach, Rt. I Box
134, Letart, W. Va.

SQUAD RUNS
MIDDLEPORT - The
emergency WJit of the Middleport fire department was
called to the Route 7 bypass
at 7:19 p .m. Friday for
Hebert Templeton who bad
been injured in a traHic
accident. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and
released.
At 9:12p.m., the !quad was
called to Third Ave. for Sally
· Lambert who was al80 taken
to Veterans · Memorial
Hospital.

FREE SWEEPER GIVEN AWAY

OTHER REPRESENTATNES Will BE PRESENT!
FOR ONE DAY ONLY I
*ZENITH REPRESENTATIVE FOR TV'S, STEREOS
&amp; CONSOLE STEREOS.
*BEAR CAT SCANNER REP. PRESENr
*COBRA REP. PRESENT
EACH REPRESENTATIVE WILL HAVE
SPECIAL PRICES ON THEIR PRODUCTS

DON'T MISS THIS ONE DAY
I

PLAN NEW BANK
CLEVELAND . (UPI)
CleveTI'UII, parent of the
Cleveland Trust Co., baa !Ued
an appllcaUon to start a bank
In Clnelnnatl as part of an
eftcrt to npand statewide.
The new bank would be
known as the Cincinnati Trust
Co. 81111 would be capitaliled
with $&amp; mllllonJ Just over a
year ago, CleveTruit set up a
Columbus 'l'rwll Co. in the
state capital with the same
capitalization and that bank
now bas capital plua depoeita
of ,18 lo f20 million.
.
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RUTLAND
FURNITURE
..
ARNOLD GRATE

742·2211

' SPIRITUALLY, Mary Allison,
.
curator of Our
House, is triplets. The two who never materialized were
photographed by Lerry Ewing at the bead of the stairs.

f!l

TilE SPIRIT HAS MOVED the Our House ghost to
ascend the stairs. Perhaps she's lookin~ for Lafayette?

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GHOST IN WINDOW of Our House looks down upon Times..S.ntinel photographer as he
prepares Ill enter Henry Cushing's old tavern.

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judy Owen takes part in
- ··business program at college . ~

Charles Whites entertain

· Mr. ;om! Mrx. Cllitrles Whitt• ~1rs. Wtutt• llo,o.;h•tl a h1rtl ulay
i. 'HIPrtairwd Tm·Miay t•vt•nin~-: dJJIIIl'r fur Mrs. Ht'll iah WhJtt•
with a dinner J•t-u1y in omd ti 1P ,..,.1/I H' g Ut'l't s ath •auln •lt.'IJnttiou nf tin· hirthc.lay!' t'd.
of tlll'i r dcwghh·r. 'I'L•xamKA
MARIETTA · _ Marieita
.While Wl'll. !loris Snuwdt•n.
S
College •enior Judy Owen of
H•·rlx·rt Gilk&lt;'Y .
.
.
Middleport is participating in
(;ifts ami l'artls we n•
New
books
released
Oct, 26 the small Business Institute
pn•st•ntt'tl to the houm·t.-tl
by the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard a program which offer~
glu.•sts . Olht.•rs HtlcndinJ.,: MemQnal Library are:
... · .
were Huwarll Well anll
. Fletloo
1la ughtcr , Amber. Terl')' The Smile of the Stranger, Insects, Jiri Zahradnik; Love.
Snuwdcn . Mrs. Beulah Whitt•,
Joan Aiken ; In the Name of Mfair with a Cougar, Lyn
Mr·s. ·Fiun.•m·t• Hammy, Mrs. the Father, Tony Ardizzone; Hancock; Farmer 's
&amp;
IMiy r.ilkt•y. Killy and J~ ff The. Blue Man , Tho!"as Housekeeper's Cyclopaedia
flar~l and sun, Keilh, and
Atkms; The Excahbur of 1888; Flowers When You
Mrs. Pearl Huffman .
DisaSte~, Jack M. Bic~a':"; . Want Them, John James;
F.arlicr this month. Mr . anll Buck,.Btll Borchardt; VtdiiD Fatrn Journal's House Plants
· of Lo~e, Lee Canaday; Mtxed for Gift Giving , Virginia
Ble:tSmgs, Marl~!\ Cockrell; Elbert; A Field Guide in
Second Generation. Howard, Color .to Dogs, J . Novotny,
The first six weeks grading Fa~t; Ten Days, Mtster People ; Bill Hayward;
period honor roll for Southern Cam?, Brtan Freeborn; Successful Home Repair ,
High School has been an- Broken Promise, Kent When not to Call the
nounced. Making a grade of Hayes, Thursday the Rabbi Coritractor , Gary Paulsen;
Out,
· Harry Co Hire Yourself an
"8" or above in all their' Walked
Kemelman;
The
Empty Employer, Richard Irish;
subjects (those in aU capital
Copper
Sea,
John
D. The Illustrated Guide to the
letters made all A's) to .be
Collectibles of Coca-Cola ,
MacDonald;
Chorale,
Barry
named to the roll were :
N
.
.
Malzberg;
Wait
For
What
CecilMimsey; Coca-Cola: An
Seniors - Rick Ables,
Will
Come,
Barbara
Illustrated History, Pat
Kathy Adkins, Tom Allen,
Michaels;
Bef&lt;re
the
Wind,
Watters;
. Collector's.
PAM BRAUER, Chris Circle,
Uoyd
M.
Moxon;
Strike
from
Illustrated
Price Guide
Teresa
Ervin,
Naomi
Sea,
Douglas
Reeman;
A
Pocket
Knives;
· How to
the
Foreman, Brice Hart, Don
Sleeping Life, Ruth Rendell; Design &amp; Build Your Own
Hendricks, SETH WILL,
Money,
Frank . House, Lupe DiDonna ;
Loyal Holman, Tim Imboden, Easy
Successful Small Farms:
Roderus;
Agatha,
Kathleen
Bunni McGraw, Annette
Tynan; Dai-8an, · .Eric Van Building Plans and Methods,
·
'II f t
Mills, ·Carol Morris, Brent
War
and Herbert Leavy; Outdoor
"WATERCOWR WORLD"- Marian Murphy, noted Huntington art~t, wt ea ure
Patterson, Curtis Price, · Lustbader,
Remembrance,
Herman
Structures, Time-Ufe Books;
her excellent exhibit of watercolors at Riverby during November· .There wtll be 45 of her
Danielle . Smith, TAMMY
Wouk;
The
Courts
of
Chaos,
flow to Build Greenhouses,
SMITH Ch · 1 Teaford
outstanding paintings oo display,
Roger Zelazny·
. Garden Shelters, &amp; Sheds,
Dennis
Zirkle:
Nun-Fiction
Thomas H. Jones; Brother
1979 Songwriter's Market, Ray: Ray Charles' Own
Ray Deem, JACK DUFFY, William Brobaugh; The Ann Story, Ray Charles; The
z..
~
AMY
FISHER,
Dave Landers Encyclopedia, A to Grease Album, Michael
Z, Al1n Landers; For the Love Sollars; Magic Moments
Foreman, Steve Frederick, of Children, Edward Ford; A from the Movies, Elwy Yost;
Richard Furbee,
Pam
New Kind of Country, Movie Stars, Real People,
Harden,
Toni
Hudson,
GALLIPOLIS The Murphy studied. at the Cin- work on display during the
MELISSA IHLE, BRIAN Dorothy Gilman~ ,You Are and Me, Joshua Logan; Don't
recognized and popular cinnati Ari Academy and the River Recreation Festival in
JOHNSON, Cindy Lee, Somebody Special, Charlie Hit Him, He's Dead, John
Huntington, W. Va. artist, John Herron School of Ari in the City Park in downtown
Carmen Manuel, James . Shedd; Archaeology of the McConough; o. J. Simpson's
Marian R. Murphy, ' Will be . Indianapolis, Ind. She worked Gallipolis.
Bible, Magnus Magnusson; Most Memorable Games, Jim
Meadows, Steve Norton,
exhibiting 45 of her out- as a commercial artist for a
Mrs. Murphy works in aU
Good
News is for Sharing, Baker; Orange Madness;
Jonathan Rees, Donna Rice,
standing watercolors, number of years IUld has media, but is probably best
Leighton
Ford;
The The Incredible Qdysses of the
AMY
SOUDER,
Troy
referred to as "Watercolor participated in . various known for her watercolors.
Illustrated Golden Bough, Denver Broncos, Woodrow
Manuel.
World," as the November regional workshops with such She has exhibited nationally
James Frazer; People of the Paige; The Perfed Game;
Sophomores - BONNIE
el&lt;hibit in both Galleries at artists as Hilton Leech, Marc and won many regional
BOSO, PEGGY BUSH, PAUL Lake , Richard Leakey; the World of Bowling,
Riverby, home of the French Moon, Arne Lindmark, Henry shows. Her paintings are CARDONE , Steve Circle, Heiress, the Rich Life of Herman
Weiskopf ;
Keeimg and Arthur Barbour. found in private collections in
Marjorie
Merriweather
Post,
Art Colony in Gallipolis.
Armwrestling:
How to
Eddie Duffy, Jody Grueser,
She ha,s tutored private Te&lt;as,
Wright;
The Become a Champion, Ernie
A reception for' members
Indiana,
West . Eric Harris, Sonja Hill, William
Ohio,
South Teresa Holstein, Bob Lee, Assassination of Robert F. Jeffrey; Twenty One-Act
and guests of the French Art students, taught watercolor Virginia;
Colony to meet Mrs. Murphy at the University of Kentucky Carolina, Virginia, Illinois Terrie Manuel, Janet Mid· Kennedy, William Turner; Plays; The Buchwald Stops
and view the el&lt;hibit will be Community College in and Kentucky.
dleswart, CARL MORRIS, Common Sense and the Here, Art Buchwald; Congo
Sunday afternoon, November Ashland, and also conducted
Members of the French Art Mary Obitz, Charlotte Curriculum, Robin Barrow; Diary, Joseph Conrad; In
c. Bruce
5, from 2 o'clock until 4 watercolor classes at the Colony are urged to attend Pickens, Mark Simpson , Mind over Math; Dr. Stanley Patagonia,
o'clock at Riverby. In- Huntington Galleries in the Sunday
afternoon Mary Slavin, Tammy. Smith, Kogehnan; Trees of North Chatwin; The Battle for
·
reception and meet Marian Danny Taloott, Dale Teaford, America and Europe, Roger North Africa, John Shawson;
vitations should be received Huntington.
Each July 4th, area Murphy on November 5 from
early in the week.
Jackie Wolfe, Paula Wolfe, Phillip; The Illustrated Indiana, A Bicentennial
Born in Cincinnati, Mrs. residents look forward to 2"p.m. until4 p.m. at Rlverby. Melissa Yonker.
Encyclopedia of Butterfilies History,
Howard . H.
·
seeing Marian Murphy's
Freshmen VICKIE ~i.;t~~i~~ ~~ S~.:fo~; t! Peckham . .
ARNOLD, Brian Ash, Sherry
Beegle, Cindy Cross, Beverly
Crouch, Melodi Cundiff,
DENISE DEEM, Vicky
Deem, Tammy Ervin, Julie
Flagg, Kim Follrod, Becky
RIO GRANDE-Attention Grande College-Community
Gheen, Michael Gray, Ralph
aU area high school students: . College (RGC-CC) is spanHarden, Joe Bob Hemsley,
the Grande Chorale of Rio soring a Disco Sock Hop on
Eugene Jeffers, Susan Jett,
KRISTA JOHNSON, Teresa
Johnson, Philip Kincaid,
Tracy McGraw, · Jenny
Manuel, Mindy .Morris,
Raeleen Oliver,
Kelly

New ·book

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Southern honor roll .

exh4b4ts
. M uf:"llh,11
M anan
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at

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T~'Te
J ;Jt·n~ a
V.V j UUj
6
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Chain
Simplicity
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Pickens,

Tina

Uli F

Nov. 3 -Beginning couples' bridge, 7:30p.m.; Jackson
Pike office of the Ohio Valley Bank, 446-1973. RSVP.
Nov. 6- Board meeting, 7:30p.m., Chris Mitchell's.
Nov. 9 - Crafts; Christmas decorations, 1:30 p.m. at
Teresa Bihl's, call SUsie Bailey 446-7765.
Nov.15 -Get acquainted coffee; 10 a.m.; Pam Terrizzi's,
Car pools will meet at Ohio Valley Bank, main branch, 9:45
a.m .
.
Nov. 16 - Ladies' evening bridge, 7:30p.m.; Fran Shaw's,
446-7593.
Nov . 17- Beginning couples' bridge, 7:30p.m.; Jackson
Pike office of the Ohio Valley Bank.
Welcome Wagon is open to any interested party in the
area. For more information call Chris Mitchell, 446-7739 or
Mary How.eU, 446-4479.

Mill
FROM

ALE

DIRIFIELD JEWELR
"

" Second Ave.
417
•
Gallipolis
•
"Across from the
theater"

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100 Pet. Pol·ves·
No Stretch
. $3.98 yd.

Reg . $4.99 yd .

:~:..~.~............... ~2~.
.

$249yd.
With Stretch
$4.49-$4.99

FOR THE BOLTS
WITH PIN TICKETS'
AND

Reg . From $1.98

'

JERSEY SOLIDS ...........99~d.
JERSEY PRINTS......... 99 Yd.

Reg. frorn $2.98

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BURLAP...................... 79

Reg. 98c to $1.19

Arranged
or

Reg. to 1Sc in.

~

Yd.

RIBBING,.................. ~.. 7~ln .

Boxed
RoSes · Daisies

$329 yd.

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FLORAL FASHIONS
Operated By Smelbeis

1 Group 60"

WHITE

~~L~~~.. gg~d.
LUXURY PILE AND

.

FAKE FURS ........... ~ ............~ ...

DISCO .
SATIN........
45"

%

25oFF

25%OFF

Phone

Available at:

4~81

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@' 197&amp;, KINO~~GARO CORP ,

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58 Court

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Gallipolis, 0 .

Tues.- Wed.· Thurs.- Sat. 9: JO • S:

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2995

Black
Brown
Wine
Gray

(Regularly '35)

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oo p.m .

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holiday en·

jack 0 'Shea, WKEE D]
KANAUGA - Roo and
'Lynne Brinker, 121 River
street, Kanauga, announce
the birth of a daughter,
Jessamy LyMe at home on
01.'1 . 22. The infant weighed
six pounds and 12 ounces.
Paternal grandparents ·are
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Brinker,
Racine , maternal grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Baker, Syracuse, maternal
great-grandmother, Mrs .
Davis But cher , Austm,
Texas.
Sorry lD hear that Mrs. George (Genevieve) Schneider,
Syracuse, Is a patient at Holzer Medical Center.
For those who wish to remember her with cards, her room
number is 413.
We certainly wish her a speedy recovery.

Katie's

Korner
By Katie Crow

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mossbarger

Mossbargers wed
fifty years ago
PATRIOT - Mr. and Mrs .
Thomas R. Mossbarger of Rt.
2, Patriot, will celebrate their
50th wedding annivers ary
November 5 with a family
dinner at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis, hosted by their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Merrill R. Mossbarger
of Canton. A reception in
their "'honor will follow at

Members of the Salvation Army, Pomeroy, extend sincere
thanks to the many people who helped make their recent bymn
sing a huge success.
.
Members extended special thanks. to the senior citizens
chorus as well as all other singers, and to Robert Estep who led
the hymn sing.

c.a-...\U.qtu...;- c.ud ... • llGMf• Nu 1..,

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dit.iE"' 1 ~,1. 9

Members of Chester United Methodist Church are very
busy these days preparing for a bazaar to be held on Nov. 7 and .
6 in the church social rooms.
·
.
On Nov. 7, in addition to the bazaar , an election day dinner
will be served. On Wednesday, Nov: 6, a bake sale will be held
in conjunction with the bazaar .,
On sale at the bazaar for the two days will be quilts, candy,
woodcrafts, doll clothes, holiday gifts and decorations . The
bazaar on the twodavs will be held from 10a.m. to6 p,m .

31li:t

HOMEMADE OXYGEN
RESPIRATORY SUPPORT SYSTEM

ltll(f..J!ff SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

11

~ fJI!f'fJE.Jt/, ..,.. d.!A;

WDo tio.J . ~IA.w,o~lo-

J..r ,ift4J-GwLk-p,.f l~t.tlu... -~,..,

"'N7£.tJ .....~-7otu"'~l

t1otm., b.~!.

~t.d.lfLt.., 9a.tJ.u. ~ 1itM£.a....d.. 'n1ol&lt;.t. !

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Norma Hawthorne has been named chairman of the
Mental HetiJth Association of Ohio for Chester Township.
Mrs. Hawthorne reports that eight bellringer workers will
be going from house to house collecting for Mental Health
beginning Monday through Nov. 15.
_
Wcrkers are Sheila Taylor, Karla Chevalier, Mary
Parker, Pam Hoffman, Jackie Frost, Charlotte Haning,
Shirley Gibbs and Myrna carpenter.

HAVE A NICE WEEK .

!J,.,-8e.fA,

-b.&lt;k Ji,~
spi.t.£., d.is'i · + lta.11.pc•' pu.. Jtui.Q.,

An arts and crafts fair 'will be held Tuesday, Nov. 7, from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Masonic Hall in Chester sponsored by
the Useful Friends Organization of the Silver Ridge
Community .
•
Tables for the fair are $3 each. Anyone wishing to have a
display is asked to contact Evelyn Well at 965-3866 or Norma
Hawthorne at 965-4133. Registration is not required. · A
rununage sale will be held in conjunction with the fair.

Mr. and Mrs. George Hackett, Sr., Middleport, now have
nine great;!r81)dchildren with the recent arrival of Patrick
Jason Mullen, son of Pat and Penny Mullen. They also have 20
grandchildren.
Must be a "grand" feeling to have so many .

w.i.u.

·3~ ~..i.~.t

"Happy Birthday" wishes go to Eleanor Robson , county
recorder, who celebrated her birthday on Saturday, Oct. 28.
MAY YOU HAVE MANY MORE ... '

The Cathoiic Church Bazaar will be staged Thursday, Nov.
2with creamed baked chicken and ham dinners to be served at
4:30.
Featured will be a country store, fancy stands and fun and
games for everyone. Mark it on your calendar to attend .

Nebo churcn from 3 to 5 p.m.
for their friends and neigh·
bors.
They
were
marri ed
November 10, 1928, at Oak
Hill by the Rev. R. L.
Williams, and are lifetime
residents .of Gallia County.
They have live grandchildren
and fi ve great-grandchildren.

SUNDAY
HOURS

1:00 til 6:00
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

CLOSE-OUT
SPECIAL
WE ARE DISCONTINUING
SOME STYLES OF. OUR
·. FAMOUS FOUNDATIONS LINE
1HIS MEANS ASAVINGS
TO YOU OF ....

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OFF

·•,.

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t' /
/ /

A. .

ON SALE AT JUST

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Mon.:Fri. '1:JO- 8:00p.m.

~ 0 111. ,, , TX 75.. • ·

It's fashion.
It's designed for super fit
with smart side zipper
and elastic gore .
And it's ON SALE.
You can bet your boots
it's a beaut of a bargain.

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Singer Approved Dealer

All LOCAnONS

On Sale,
toBoot!

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:~~:~i~;, your

No doubt he would appreciate hearing from his friends .

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goods.
This year, a new feature is
a "Dip 'N Mix" table where
one can stock up on rare taste

1071.

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OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8:00P.M.

GALLIPOLIS - A fun
place to look for unusual gifts
is the fall Christmas Bazaar
at the
First
United
Presbyterian Church, 51
State St., . Gallipolis. All gift
item.s are hand-made. Home
decorations for Thanksgiving
table and Christmas trees are
available. There are creative
toys for infants through
adults. There are tasty baked
good, home-made candles,
and garden fresh canned

Larry M. Smith, Pomeroy, has been moved from the
intensive care unit at University Hospital, Columbus, to room

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POLYESTER $288'
KNITS.............. 'fd .

Handmade
gifts at
bazaar

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FRUTH PHARMACIES .

"A Real Good Selection of Gift Items"

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Many Models to Choose from. Stop by Today and Savel

i

Gallipolis, Ohio
PH . 446-4466

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:French City Fabric Shoppe

helps keep tots out .. . letl ldultl in.

505 Second Ave .

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NEW, USED, DEMOI\ISTRATORS PRICED TO SEW

AM BLESI DE

PATCHWORK

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SEWING MACHINES

kin.tJer!flliYL LATCH'F.S

Register for Free AFGHAN to be given
away Saturday ' Nov. 10. No purchase
necessary, need not be present to win.
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OCTOBER 30th thru
. NOV. 10

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Carnations
Pompons • Asters
lris-M ini Carnations
Sweetheart Roses

OPEN HOUSE

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SAVEl

available from any member
of the Jaycee Wives or by
contacting dance chairman
Debbie Tipple 446-lBSl or
ticket chairman Karen
Gilliam 446-7456 .

:a-~~~

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traMplant technique, was m
"critical but improving
GALUPOUS - Mr. and
condition" today at Colorado
Mrs.
George
Larson, Medical Center.
Gallipolis, are announcing
Dr . David Clarke, a
the upcoming marriage of medical center spokesman,
their daughter, Sharon Lynn, Fridaysaidtheoperation was
to Jeffrey Slavens, son of Mr. performed on a patient
and Mrs. Homer Slavens of identified as Bernard Me·
Beavercreek, 0 .
Nulty of Wheatrldge, Colo.,
.Miss Larson is a 1976 late Wednesday. He said the
graduate of Gallia Academy donor was a woman in her
High School. Jeff is a 1976 20s,whodiedofaheadinjury.
graduate of Beavercreek
"He's in critical but 1mHigh School and is now proving condition," Clarke
said. "But under the cir·
serving in the U. S. Navy.
The couple is planning a cumstances, th~t is con·
Nov. 4 open house wedding at sidered to be doing fine."
the Wright View Church of
RUMMAGE SALE
the Nazarene, Fairborn.
Episcopal Churchwomen
lmmediately following the
ceremony, the co~ple will be (ECW) will hold a rummage
honored by an open reception . sale Friday, November 3, at
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. St. Peter's Parish Hall, 541
Darwin Peck, Dayton. They Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Time of the sale is from 9 a.
will be residing in Illinois.
m. until 3 p.m.

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Reg. $3.98 to $4.99

mess maker is in your jewelry box or
cosmetics making a big mess . ·. . then you
need ltlnt/t!rglll'l , the child protection iatch
for cabinets and drawers. It keeps tots oul .
of the cabinets and drawers you wam them
kept out of. Yet, adults can get in quickly.
And it locks automatically when you close
the cabinet or drawer. Put an end to the big
messes, install Jdntfugmd

plans maUlJe !:~t:~m·~st~g

..'

~~t..
1~d.
~~~~~~~.............5 2~d.

If the minute you turn your head your little

The slenderest little
~:holn at the neck
tnakes a beautiful
fashion statement. An
CJncluttered. totally
~legant look destined to dazzle
softly. In sterling si lver
or 12-karat gold filled.
J:rom $4.25.

· Selection ·

....................5

CUT FLOWERS

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Ohio's .Largest

Reg . $2.99 yd.

Mill

Fantastic

REDUCTION

Southeastern

.

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STOCK

TRIMS

Pierce,'

1

453 Jackson Pike

" by

purchase tickets as early as
possibl e.
Tickets
are

PATIENT CRmCAL
DENVER (UPI) - A 45- .
year-old attorney, the
recipient of the. heart of a

Sharon Lyn_n Larson

"

~~~~--------------~--··French City Fabric Shoppe's

Richard Randolph,
MEUNDA SALMONS, RITA
SWTER, ELAINE SMITH,
. RENEE SMITH, RANDY
TUCKER, Ann Williams,
Kent Wolfe, LAURA WOLFE,
Jackie Zirkle.

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7\ T

25!

GALUPOLIS- Guest disc of tickets being sold and those
jockey for. tl!e "Harvest interested are urged to
Dlaco" being sponsored by
The Gallipolis Area Jaycee
Wives, will be Jack O'Shea of
WltEE radio in Hlintington,
W. Va.
O'Shea stated recently that
he is very much looking
forward to his evening in .
Gallipolis and expects it to be
'great · fun for everyone
present.
Along with O'Shea, a
special highlighi of the
evening will be the appearance of Mikki Casto,
local dance instructor, who,
along with several of her
students, will be demon·
strating the vartou,s dances
making up "Disco."
This annual charity event is
to be held Saturday, Nov. 11
from 9 p.m. tU \ a.m. at the
Gallipolis Elks Hall at a cost
of $8 per couple.
·There area limited number

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'wolfe~r~erri
C~~~~T- ~~~~~~~~:

High school students invited to
dance at Rio .Grande in November

Harvest disco to feature jack 0 'Shea

assistance
to
local school newspaper and a ;::
busmesses. Students are · ~e.mber of t~e Sigma Slgllla :::
allowed to participate bv Stgma soronty. She IS the . ..,
taking
the
course daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R• .;:::
"Management 450."
Owen of 212 N. 3rd. Ave., in ,:
Students are getting first Middleport.
·1
liand experience in working
~...
with small business and its
~
problems. They are working
.;;
with small businesses around
CAROUSEL
Marietta and giving them
CONFECTIONERY
free advice. The students try
cak e &amp; Candy Craft Shoppe t;:'
to identify the particular
Opening Saturday,
~
problems of the business and
October .28th
':
try to propose solutions and
Comein and register tor .,.
cake decorating or candy
give recommendations to the
classes.
business they are helping.
317 North Second Ave.
A 1975 graduate of Meigs
Middleport, o .
High School, Judy is a
Phone 992 ·'2SB3 or 985·4134
journalism major and is also
a Marcolian editor on. the

Riverby in 1 "ovemver
1

B-3-TheSUnday Times..S.Otinel, Sunday, 01.'1. 29, 1978

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or.

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SEVERAL STYLES OF

BRAS AND ..All·IN.ONE" FOUNDATION GARMENTS•
NICE SELECTION OF SIZES.
AU. SALES FINAL
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B-4-The Sunday Times.Senlinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

Beavers celebrate
golden anniversary

r-s~-a~iz~;· l · Rep. Ron james.discusses women 's legislation
i . Ca/e- ..J_

I

· L\•gi:-~ la1 11111

11 f

mlt•n ·~l

Hf

~~·a :-. 4hs 1 · 11 ... ~t· d

nu·n l 111 \'IPw 11f till' tiuw t'X·

Hoom. or"tht• Ml'igs

t f l l.' tun

l ht·

O~fil'~

pf

Hnu a· h legisla tion &lt;'UHunit-

dw.:t cd.

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--·
·
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,
I Sr. Citizens I
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:\tlwns C'uunt) S~t v lng:-; tL·~·.
.
Mrs . Dorothy Wooda rd,
POMEROY
Meigs br ltt.• p. Hun .l;uut.•s. J.:.tu•sl
, lh-p . .Jet~ lit's pl't'St'llll'd tiM• .: md ·1.o.an Co. for ust• at l'OIIlflu..• hus ult'ss mcct111g pr esident, r·cport ed on
Senior Citizens Center ac· .o.;jlt'&lt; tkt.•r at 11 mt•t.• ting nf l tw ,\ !-i!'tlt'iat u'n with wt ( Hmt ttlu Jiil y mt·t'tings . •
ftlllttWL'&lt;I a dessert t·uursc uf mcdin1:1;s she hHU attended al
tivities located at the Mool&lt;lio•tll&gt;rt-P&lt;Illl&lt;' ruy Ap•:o Stult· rtu~ whit'11 loud fl,wn
I·: rno•'t Wingdl '"·" a r&lt;'fo·eshment s by • Jeanne Urbana Coll.,ge, Salt Fork
Pomeroy Junior High School Bm m·h uf till' Auwril'illl ' .,,.,.,. lh&lt;' o'lljlll:ol. Till' rl«g will guo·st. Mrs . M:JXlll&lt;' W11ogetl ~owen , lMs} Horky, Rusalte Stale Park f.od ge, and as a
CHESHIR F:-Mr. and Mrs. G(:illw ('numy 1 tht•y hHVt' two
is open 8;30 a.rn.-4 :30 p.m.. i\ssodali~lll uf Unin• r i1, ht· dtspla \'t·• l intht• Bin·rhn:tl st•l'\'t.•!l as t ·• H'hairniml ••f tlw s t.••ry. and .Jca nclt c _ThoJnus. guest uf the- Gallipolis Branch ~..
Jesse A. Bl'avt•r, North St.·- surLs, .lt•sst•
At•;ncr .
cu ntl St . , Cht•sllirt• . rtwsllin• : cu ut .Jcttnl's PauJ
Monday through Friday.
Wuuwn . hl'ld Ill till' Mt•h:s 11j1
KILty Cassell was greeted as at the Menllll Health Center
cdelJraled their 50th \\'t'&lt;ldin~ .,.. Bcavt•r, fiporgt• 's Cnt• k
Monday, Oct . 30 - .l&gt;hysical Tut•stlllyJoighl.
" !'ew member. Prugram · when Dr. James. Duvi~ of
annive i'SH I'Y Saturday with HtiHd, Crallipolis : t hn•t•
Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.; Square
Jntn•lm·•·d h,· Mrs. Miortl"' ·
l~••klcts wen• ohstroiJuted IJy Ohio University spoke on the
Hll open huust•.
dilll ghiL•r s, Mrs . LtH'llH Dance, -12:30-3. p.m.; Meigs Hush•d , ll clt ,Jillll&lt;" talkt•d on
.
Vi
. Fay Sa uer , prugram chair- dfc&lt;'lS of censorship in
M&lt;:irried on Oct. 28. l!l2fl)n Tuekt•r . Raltimon• , Md . :
History Book Workshop, I 1ho· notiril'ation oif the F. I! A.
nuuo. Tht· aud1L of the sehools.
.
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Vinlcl Jmll's, Springfil'ld,
p.m. ·
i\Jnt•rnthncnt in Ohiu in 1!174
trl'asurcr ·' books was con·
Next. meeting will be . on
Tuesday., Oct . 31
aud other Cerll'ml AsS&lt;!I nloh·
Celiler Activities
Age." She will discuss health
. N"v. 28 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Let. ; ~11\d JuAnn Jlucw h,
BOOK CARAVAN
Halloween Party, II a.m.-! hills whieh hav&lt;· gi'vcn · 11011 -;.
POMEROY - Tomorrow problems in America, the
Ri verboat RO&lt;,Jm . This will be .•
' Gt•urgc's Crct•k I\ d .,
FALL-WINTER N0.2
p.m. ; Chorus, 12:30-2 p.m.; r·ighls to w011 ,.. 11 as hcaol.&lt; of afternoon , beginning '·at I causes of death for ~if(erent
public meeting with. Dr.
Ga llip"lis. Tht•y l•ovt 15
MONDAY
Stain Glass Art, I p.m.
families. in o·n 1lit hrw. for p.m., a workshop will Iii! lield age groups from 1900-1976
Mrchelle Wlllaro,l of Manetta
~r~u,nkhildrcn and fuur grcatSept. 18; Oct. 2, 16, 30; Nov. gnuult·hildrcii.
Wednesday, Nov. I work.,rs' compensatimo . mod at the center for ali persons and we will all be shown how talk to you.
College speaking on " Women
13, 27 ; Dec. 11 ; Jan . a, 22 ;
·a gainst. interested ln writing their to estimate our medical age
LucUleLoyKuek
F.ffcdingChange :' '
Social Security Represen- proto•&lt;'lion
Feb. 5; March 5, 19 ; April 2, - - - - - - - - - - tative, 9:30 a .m.-12:30 p.m.; diserimination bysex.
family's history for the in comparison with our birth
Ohioiao Award
16 ·X, 30; May 14, 28--x.
lje ntltt'&lt;l (hut whil e pro- edition of the Meigs County certificate.
The Lucille Loy Kuck
Ave ., 5:45-6: 0 . J. White Jan Northup, 11 a .m.;
School - C'heshire-Kyger Road, 6~ : 40.
Physical
Fitness,
11:30
a.m.;
lllcms
yet
facing
Wtlrneri
arc
History
Book.
Mr.
c
..
E.
Let's
have
a
good
turnout
to
Ohioian
Award.for excellence .
.
Elementary, 9 a.m.·! p.m.;
d
Games,
1·2:30
p.m.
.
ma
ny
ar
vari
ed
,
the
Blakeslee
and
Mrs.
Margaret
hear
Jan's
presentation.
in
literary
expression is
1
THURSDAY
Guiding Hand School, I: 15·
Thursday
,
Nov
.
2
Geru·r·al
Assembly
is
working
Parker
of
the
Meigs·
County
This
Friday,
Nov.
3,
the
announcing
the
1979 theme
Sept. 21; Oct. 5, 19; Nov. 2, ·
2:30.
Physical
Fitness,
11
:30
a.m.
tow~nl iO&lt;sues for iminpruve- Pioneer . and
Histori
ca
l
center
is
sponsoring
a
yard
for
manuscripts.
The theme
16, 30 ; Dec. 14, 28--x; Jan. 11,
COMMUNITY
Friday,
Nov.
3Yard
Sale
ment
areas·
uf
displal·ed
Society
will
.be
available
to
sale
from
10
a.m.
until3
p.m.
for
this
year's
award
.Is Ohio
Ewington, 2:30-2:45 p.m.; . 25; Feb. 8, 22; .March 8; 22; &amp; Bake Sale, 10 -a.m.-3 p.m.; hoont•makcr·s, services of answer any questions you Many nice items have been Yesterday and Today.
Ad ney Road , 2:55-3:20; April 5, 19; May 3, 17, 31-x. Art Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon ; health and educHtion , .in- may have.
donated for this sale, so be
-Those eligible for this
School
Addaville
Vinton, 3:30-4; Porter, 4:45Physical
Fitness,
11
:30
a.m.;
surance
and
real
estate
and
.
The
workshops
will
be
held
sure
to
tell
all
your
family
award
must be legal
5:15; Bidwell, 5:25·5: 45 ; Elementary, 9 a .m .-2 p.m. Bowling, 1·3 p.m.
"hild
support
l•ws.
each
Monday
afternoon
at
the
members
and
acquaintances
residents
of
Ohio, age 60 and
COMMUNITY .
Harrisburg ,· 5:55·6: 10 ;
Senior
Nutrition
Program,
H&lt;•p.
Jamc!&lt;
commented
un
Center
through
November.
to
come
in
and
shop.
over
and
have
not received
Mabeline Drive, 4-4:20
Grange, 6 : 15~ : 30 ; Kerr, 6: 45·
12
noon-12:45
p.m.,
Monday
the
extcnlio11
of
time
to
ralify
Workshops
will
be
held
at
the
The
Senior
Citizens
Chorus
cash
remunerations
within
p.m.; Bulaville Subdv., 4:307.
ERA
Amembnent
by
tlu', Meigs County Museum on
is
having
a
bake
sale
·
i
n
the
last
five
years
for
literary
through
Friday.
the
4:50; Plantz , 4:55-5:25;
TUESDAY
Monday- Beari soup with remaining states noihing that Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy, conjunction with this project. works.
Sept. l9; Oct. 3, 17, 31 ; Nov. Bulaville Tr. ·Park, 5:41Hi; ham bits, spinach with hard· it favoll's the fi5 percent of each Friday beginning at I The sale will be held on the
Essays must not exceed
14, 28 ; Dec. 12, 26-x; Jan. 9, Addaville Subdv., 6 : 15~:30 ; cooked egg slice, orange and women who work and th• 57 p.m. starting November 3, second floor of the center.
1,000
words, or a poem, 30
23 ; Feb. 6, 20; March 6, 20; Tara Apts., 6:45-7 ; Georges grapefruit sections, percent of wm·king women 1978.
Adult
Community
lines.
The Best
Apnl 3, 17-x; Mav I, 15. 29. Creek, 7;10-7 :30; Mill Creek, pineapple upside down cake, who earn less than men. Dur··
Help preserve yesterday,
Training
Your entry must be
7:45-,,
Cleaning
Your
School- - Bidwell Eleing the discussrmr it was today and tomorww for all
The Gallia-Jaekson · Meigs received by December 31,
cornbread, butter, milk.
x - School holiday.·
Carpet
Ever
Had
mentary, 9 a .m.-3 p.m.
Tuesday - Baked pork brought out that working Meigs Countians.
Community Mental Health 1978 for submission.
COMMUNITY
chop, baked sweet potato, winncn paid less than men is
Jan Shoots Northup, Senior Center will be begiinning a
Entries will be judged on
ANY
Eno, 2:30-3 p.m.; Eno II,
brussel sprouts (sprinkled seen more in industr·y than in Friends Coordinator, will be new service , Adult Com· their originality, creativity
3:05-3 :20; A!rica Road, 3:30with cheese), apple sauce, pubhc work . The speaker at the center this Wednesday munityTraining (ACT) at the and literary merit. For
LIVING ROOM &amp; niiU.I
3:45 ; Kyger I, 3:50-4:10 ;
hstetl as " hopeful " the to speak on the subject "How new Mental Health Center in further information, caD 992Don 't worry a bout losin~ bread, butter, milk.
Offer includes living room
Kyger II, 4:15-4 :35 ; Cheshire, your figure in middle age -it
Wednesday Johnny pa ssa~e of the ERA Amend· to Stay Young to An Old Gallipolis. Participants on 7884 or 992-7886.
and hall only up to 300 sq.
4:45-5; Cheshire II, 5:05-5 :20; just moves a couple plal'es Marzetti (beef, tomatoes and
the ACT Program wiU be
Leafy Chasteen, I &amp; R
ft.
Roush Road, 6~ : 15 ; Oavis farther to the left of the macaroni), buttered grean ·
offered a variety oi classes, Coordinator and Femdora
Drive (Venz road ), 6 : 25~ : 45 . decimal point.
such as cooking, grooming, Story, n .N. will . visit the
beans, cottage cheese salad,
WEDNESDAY
chilled peaches with whipped
· crafts, sewing, physical Harrisonville Senior Citizens
ONLY
MARIETTA - Mr. and grandparents are Mr. and h
t · d t h 1
Sept. 20; Oct. 4, 18; Nov. I,
cream, roll, butter, milk.
.
S
f M
w·lr
p S 'th f t erapy, e e., tn or er o e p Club Tuesday, October 31. A
0
15. 29 ; Dec. 13, 27-x; Jan. 10,
Thursday - Hamburger Mrs. Roger W. mith • 0
rs. 1 ram · mr
them adjust to community blood pressure clinic will be
'Furnit~re StanleY S~tmtl
"deluxe"
on
bun
(lettuce
and
Marietta
are
announcing
the
Gallipolis.
Maternal
great·
living.
held.
24; Feb. 7, 21 ; March 7, 21;
Since
Meigs County
Halloween Party
· s~
tomato), pickled. beets, birth of a daughter, Melissa grandparents are Leo
April 4, 18 ; May 2, 16, 30.
Marie
bo'
r
n
Oct.
17
at
Shaver,
Gallipolis
and
Mrs.
'd
t
'II
be
rt
f
J ~~-,
School - Green Elemen·
cheese slice, buttered peas,
•
· res1 en s WI
a pa o
Everyone is. invited to the
PROTECTION
ilatliff
of
Vinton.
D'
f
h
Marietta
Memorial
Hospital.
Gypsy
wry, 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
sherbet, milk.
ACT, the rrector o t e Center's Halloween Party
The infant weighed 8 ibs., 9 Paternal great-grandparents
L · w ·uiams
COMMUNITY
Fri da y- Ba ked turkey and
are Mr . and Mrs. Gilbert W. prog ram, ygra '
• Tuesday from 11 a.m. until!
Gallia, Meigs
Johnson's Tr. Ct., 3·3:20
gravy, whipped potatoes, ozs.
contacted RSVP and has p.m. There will be games,
She
is
welcomed
home
by
a
Becker,
Whipple,
and
Mrs.
k...,
f
1
t
t
h
1
p.m.; Eastern Ave., 3:30- .
&amp; Vinton Co.
broccoli with cheese sauce,
as "" or vo un eers o e P prizes and refreshments.
.
b d sister, Lori Leigh.
Earl W. Smith of Marietta.
'th th
Vnl t
3:50 ; Chatham, 4-4 :15;
614-446-4108
dd
lemon pu mg,
rea •
Maternal great • great • wr
e program. v un eers Have a nke week.
butter, mill&lt;.
Maternal grandparents are
are needed for transportation
Kanatiga, 4:25-4:45; Watts
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Shaver grandparent is Mrs. Bertha for the participants in the
~tation , 5-5 :15; Kanauga, 5th
of
· Gallipolis. Paternal Sl)aver, St. Albans, W. Va. program and also to stay
Menu for the Satellite Site
during the day and a.ssist •
. at the Reorganized Church of
Send one ... take one home.
COMPARE
staff members with the
, Jesus Christ of Latter Day
PRICES
Our FTD
different aspects of the daily
Saints, Old Town Flats, is
routine .
similar to the above menu.
Transportation mileage
Please call in your reser·
wlll be paid to any volunteer
vation at: Portland 843-3364.
who will drive participant~ .in
the program in their own
vehicle to Gallipolis.
YOUTH CONVENTION
Sessions in the ACT
The first meeting of the
Program
will be held Monday
newly
organized
Youth
Wright
We deliver specially
through Thursday from 10
Convention of the Providence
selected FTD Green
a.m . until 3 p.m. RSVP is
District Missionary Baptist
Ribbon ~ Plants everylooking for - volunteers who
Association will be held at the
day. Perfect for an ni·
would be ,interested in this
Triedstone Baptist Church,
versa ries. birthdays, any
assignment , either one day a
GaUipolis on Oct. 28 at 5 p.m.
gi ft occasion - We send
CROWN CITY - Joey The District President is Miss
week or .au four days.
them
almoSt :mywhere by
Wright , son of Mr. and Mrs. Gail Taylor and the vice
Trial sessions for the new
wire, the FTD way.
Edmond L. Wright, Rt. 2 president is Miss Theresa
program will be held in early ·
To order, call
Crown City, celebrated his Ragland. The Sub-district
November. If you would be
or come in.
birthday on Oct. 3 with a advisors are Miss ·Yvonne
interested in volunteering for
party at his residence on Preston, Hocking, and Mrs.
this new, exciting program,
Davis Rd. A "Yogi Bear" Barbara Scott, Gallla, Mr. W.
contact RSVP at 992·7884 for
cake (baked by his mother),- J . Bacon, Ironton, Mrs. Mary
. more information. If you feel
punch, ice cream, nuts, and Ragland, Piketon.
~ Colum bia 's " Masterpiece Se·
you would like to go visit this
rics" ell;clu sive styles are you rs
party favors were served to
program
once
before
The purpose of this meeting .
to see. to try on. to love. Each
school friendS', · Carla and is to formulate plans for the
deciding
about
a
volunteer
a spec ia l ex pr ession of your
· Kristy James, Sean Call, and new year. We are asking all
assignment, arrangements
love. Your c hoice of a · marSherry Queen.
will be made to take a group
QU ise. oval, pear shape or Irayouth of our sub-districts to
, di tional round diamond .
Also attending were his be present. Gallia sub-district
to Gallipolis.
sister, Mrs. Patrice Johnson, is host for this first meeting.
If you are not enrolled in
aunt and uncle Bill' and Alma
the Retired Senior Volunteer
Rowley, cousins, Trena and prizes were given to the
Program and are interested
424 Second Ave.
Billy Rowley. Sending a gift winners.. Each guest was
in
becoming a member, call
Gallipolis. Ohio
was Mrs. Denise Broyles, given a fortune balloon upon
the RSVP office at 992-7884 or
alTiving. A nice time was had
Joey 's older sister.
Gall!polis •
stop in at the center and the 0 2a Cedar St.
A&gt; .•d,.. ,.,d '",\'f'IPO/('f'O
Games were played and by all!!!
RSVP staff will be happy to

i

·t

TJ,U(J,T

wullll'llllll)luu

1

Sentor.
' Ct'tz'zenS ' C'Cenes

a

lJ'aU:ghter .bom

,

STATE OFFICERS IN MlDDI.EPOHT Thursday fm'
the fall conference .ai'e.pictur·ed here with Mrs. Virgil Parsons, the conference chairman, left, and Mrs. Arnold
Richards, right, district president nominee. Left of Mrs.

Legion state
officers attend
~·· · . · ocal conference

'29~5

•

Green Ribbon®
Plants.

1

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1

TAWNEY JEWELERS

The Rev. and Mrs. Mark McClung

Sunday thru Saturday
Oct. 29 thru Nov. 4 .-

FREE

MEDIUM
7-UP
.
· -With Purchase
of StuflSilrrt

STUFTSHIRTS ·
% lb., 100% ground beef,

.15

tomato,.cheese, lettuce,
··-··

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•
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SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY.
OCTOBER 29 THRU NOVEMBER 4

CHICKEN
DINNER BOX
No.
· Substitutes

•3 Pc. CHICKEN •ROLL ·

'•'

••••ua
..,..,
Aal• ilil lilt' I

~~

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9 to 9:30
VINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

•MASHED POTATOES &amp; GRAVY
•ORDER OF COLE SLAW

m· rt'DT\
.

roGo'

fl

FREE MEDIUM
7-liP WITH
CHICKEN DINNER

ALL WHITE OR
All DARK MEAT
ADDITIONAL CttARGE

&amp;~altt .~4nppr·.
2nd &amp; OUVE ST.

)~ ~

BULK
BOLOGNA

JOWEL BACON .......... ..... .....1~:. 89~ BRAUNSCHWEIGER ...1~·. 69~
Superiors
lb
POLISH SAUSAGE.. .........: .... !~:. 99~ WIENERS .............. :.. 89$
Superiors
BACON ................ ,g .~~:. P.~~: .1.29 PICK OF CHICKEN...... 79$

Freshest Produce In Town
GOLDEN RIPE

SOLID

CABBAGE

BANANAS

4

13~ LB.

LBS.

$1 ()()

RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS

YELLOW

APPLES

ONIONS

3

3

69¢

LB.

BANQUET

49¢

2%
MILK

4 oz.

I

LB.

BROUGHTO~

•

POT
PIES

I

8
PKGS.

Gallon Plastic

99¢

$}39

VALLEY BELL COTIAGE CHEESE:. ............... ......... J .lb· ctn.

69C

oz. can 89c
ARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGE ....... ....... ....... ..... ... 2 t~· 89C
PRINCELLA CUT YAMS ..... , ................ .. .......... 40

PURINA MOIST CHUNK DOG FOOD ..... ................ 5 lb. bag '149

orange, grape, punch

_

46 oz.

HI.C DRINKS ......................... ; .................... 2 cans 89
Seneca
AP.PLE BARREL APPLE JUICE. .................... ... ... 48 oz. btl.

c

79c

PEPSI or
DIET
PEPSI
8-16 oz. Btl.

you can

count on.

snLE CENTER

PHONE 446-9593 ..

"We reserve the
right to lim it
quantities"

Community!
.
.
I
Comer I
By

p.m.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, OCT. 29 THRU SATURDAY. NOV. i

COu.EGETOWN
A name

.15

piclde, onion, mayonnaise.

GALIJPOLIS - Activities
at tbe Senior Citizens Center
for this week are as foUows:
Monday, Oct. 30 - Sewing
Claso, 1-2:30 p.m.; Chorus,
I: llh'l p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 31
S.T.O.P.,
10 :30
a.m,;
Physical Fitness, 11 :15 a.m. ;
Birthday Party,. 1!30 p.m.;
Halloween Party, 4 p.m.
Wednesday ,• Nov. 1 Humanities Program, I p.m.;
Card Games, 1-3.
: Thursday, Nov. 2 - Bible
Study,12:45·1 :45 a.m.; Blood ,
Pressure Check, 1:15·1:45
p.m.
Friday, Nov. 3-Advisorv
Councii; l:30' p.m.; Art Class,
1-3; Social Hour, 7.
The Senior Nutrition
Program · wlll serve · the
following menus:
Monday - Macaroni and
cheese with ham bits,spinach with hard cooked
egg, orange and grapefruit
slices, cornbread, butter,
apricot upside down cake,
milk.
Tuesday baked pork
chop, baked sweet potato,
brussel sprouts, bread,
butter, baked apple crisp,
milk.
Wednesday
Fried
chicken with gravy, ltalianne
green
beans,
mashed
potatoes, roll, butter, chilled
peaches with whipped cream,
milk.
Thursday - Hamburger on
bun, relishes, peas, butter,
sherbet, milk.
Friday - Baked fish ,
baked potato, broccoli with
cheese sauce, bread, butter,
lemon meringue pie, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
uServices rendered on a
non-discriminatory basi s.''

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH at Junction City and the
MIDDLEPORT- The fall Department of Ohio junior
conference of the Eighth conference will be held in ColDistrict, American Legion wnbus .
Auxiliary, held 'in Middleport
Mrs. Kilgore stressed home
Thursday afternoon featured base work for all units,
a llllk on Americanism by a special olympks for the hanDepartment of Ohio officer, a dicapped, eyes for the neey
review of the Auxiliary's role programs, and urged· scrapof service to veterans , and book participation on all acthe recommendation for a tivities. The slllte president
• new district president.
told of the hospital needs and
Present for the conference announced her special prowere four state officers, Mrs. ject is a large television for
Lyell Roush of Beverly, presi- the Chillicothe Veteran s
dent; Mrs: John Kilgore , se- Hospillll. She said thai ditty Revival tonight
cond vice president , Mrs. bags are needed in all of the
FALL CONFERENCE-Mrs. Arnold Richards of MidMe lvin .• Wainwright, hospilllls.
RACINE - A revival will
dleport, left, received the endor.sement of the Eighth
secretary; and Mrs. Marjorie
Parties for the Athens Men- l"l held at the Racine First
District, American Legion Auxiliary , for district presiGoett, junior activities chair· tal Health Center were Baptist Church at 7:30 each
dent . Here to conduct the fall conference was Mrs. Lyell . man.
. reported on by Mrs. Cooley evening beginning tonight
!loush, president of the Department of Ohio, American
In her address, Mrs. who asked that units unable and running through Nov. 5.
Kilgore rev.iewed the pream· to hold a party send funds in
Legion Auxiliary.
This evening through
ble to the constitution of the so that one can be held each Wednesday, the Rev. Don
American Legion Auxiliary, month .
Walker, pastor, wiD speak
stressed the purpose and role
A report on the national and from Thursday through
of the -Auxiliary, and em· convention held in New Sunday, the Rev. Charles
phasized the necessity for Orleans was given by the Stewart, Ashland, Ky ., will be
combating wrong thinking ;tate president who noted speaker. The Rev . ·Mr.
through the promotion of that Mary Martin of the Stewart will be accompanied
Americanism pariicularly Pomeroy unit had received by singers who will present
with youth.
an honorable mention on her the special music. On Thurs·
Mrs. Roush presided at the energy • conserva lion pro- day evening, the Gerald
meeting after her introduc- , gram.
Dorsey family of Ripley, W.
Charlene Hoeflich
lion by Mrs. Virgil Parsons, a
In the roll call of Ul)its, it Va., will present the vocal
.
I past district president, in the was
noted that dues have music.
It's not too late to get your "spook insurance" poli cy .
Policies are available from members of the junior class at absenc-e of the district presi· been collected from 1,160
A nursery will be provided
Meigs High School for 50 cents, and if you get soapc'll or spat- dent. Due to the inactivity of members in the district and and the public is invited to
the district president, the that the goal is 2,060. Mrs. attend the services.
tered with something, they 'll dean it up .
wnference delegates voted Julia Norris gave the
Now that 's a good deal!
for appropriate dismissal ac· registration report and others
li
on by the executive commit- serving on that committee for
We didn 't know tee
and recommended Mrs. the day wer~ Mrs. Ernest
Thai Tom Bowen has retired. A teacher at Athens High
Arnold
Richards of Mid· Bowles and Mrs. Alma
School in industrial arts and andx aviation for• more than 30
dleport,
the
immediate past Newton. Mrs. Brown, Mrs.
years, Tom retired this summer.
district
president,
for · the Cooley, and Mrs. Wilfred Parsons, Middleport; Mrs.
That Kathy and Don Erwin and their two, Amy , now a sixth
Mildred Fowler, Middleport,
grader, and Malt, a first grader , are back in town. The family . position to serve until June, Grant served on the resolu• Mr s . Mab e l Brown,
lions committee with Mrs.
returned in late August when Don was transferred from the 1979.
Gallipolis; Mrs. Arree MorDi
strict
chairmen
ap·
Brown giving tbe report.
Ames to the Mounlllineer Plant and are o·esiding on South
shall,
Lancaster; and Mrs.
were
Mrs.
Jean
Carr,
·pointed
Mrs. Grace Pratt reporting
Fourth in Middleport.
Richards,
Middleport
Athens,
children
and
youth;
for the placement committee
That Eileen Bowers is one Meigs Countian doing all sorts of
Titt!
pre-winter
convention
Brown, announced a leadership trin·
homemade items for the new craft shop in Gallipolis. Eileen's Mrs. Mabel
was
announced
for
Nov . 30
things are just beimtiful, so if y~u 're looking for the unusual in Gallipolis , Americanism; ing program at Gallipolis, the and Dec. I. It was reported
Mrs. Hazel Grant, Wellston , Chillicothe birthday party in
gifts, perhaps you might fin d somthing ther~.
eommunity servil-e; Mrs. early Det:ember, the girl that Ohio's Miriam Junge has
Grace Pratt, Pomeroy , junior state tea to be hosted by the been elec ted nati onal
And it seems "Christmas, Christmas, Everywhere."
secretary of the American
At Syracuse United Methodist Church on Friday and Satur· activities ; Mr s. Lorene Pomeroy unit in early June, Legion Auxiliary .
Snyder, Lancaster, veterans and the swnmer convention
day there will be a Christmas bazaar from 9 a .m. to 6 p.m.
At the conclusion of the
It is sponsored by the Young Adult Class whose members affairs and rehabilitaion; and to be held at Wellston.
meeting,
the Meigs County
Mrs.Helen
Billings
and
Mrs.
Past district officers
huve come up with all sorts of attractive items for gift-giving
units
hoslt'll
a tea.
Nellie
Cooley,
deputies
at
the
recognized included Mrs .
and decorating. And you know how hard it is sometimes to find
Athens Menllll Health Center.
stocking stulfers• They 'l,l have a whole table of these. And
Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins was
then there will be jellies and canned goods , a candy store, and
pianist for the conference
fresh baked goods on both days. To make it a real " come and
with Mrs. Etlll Will as
browse" sort of time, the class will also be serving sloppy joes,
sergeant at arms, and Mrs.
hot dogs, and pop.
.
The Middleport Garden Club is also looking ahead to the hap- Enna Hendricks and Usa
Roush as the color bearers.
PY holidays and have scheduled a workshop on Christmas arMrs. Homer Winebrenner
rangements and decorations for Saturday, 10 to 2, at the Midgave
the invocation, and Mrs.
dleport fire house. Thi s is an annual get-together for the club
Allen Hampton led in the
members who swap ideas and materials and go home with .
pledge . of· allegiance. Mrs .
beautiful things .
Olan Knapp gave the pre•m·
ble to the c'Onstitution and
Marcia Karr, retired school teacher, observed her 88th.bir"Poor" Little Rich Gi rl!
Mrs.
Albert Roush extended
thday Friday but the celebration went on all week.
the welcome with Mrs. Harry ·
Monday she was the dinner guest of Eleanor Crow and on
So soft, so f eminine,
Davis giving tbe response. All
Tuesday was honored by the Eagles Class of the Asbury United
so
good looking , you'll
are of the Meigs County units,
Methodist Church at a potluck dinner. Both dinners were
wear
if everywhere!
Pomeroy 39, Racine 602 , Mid·
followed with decorated cakes, the one at the Eagles Class be· dleport 128, and Middleport
Here we have our om ·
ihg baked by Vera Van Meter. Miss Karr has taught the cla:;s
bred plaid skirt which
263.
for .15 or more years and was pre&gt;"nted with a gift certificate
fea tures a new look
A school of instruction was
from tbe members.
·
with th e soft bias cut
given with Mrs. Roush hand!·
Wednesday a tray of fruit came from the Fred Morrow fami· ing Ainericanism, veterans
and new longer
ly and Thursday several neighbors came in with cards and
length. Th e c oor affairs and rehabilitation,
gifts. Friday there was a dozen red roSebuds from Edison and Mrs. Kilgore, children and
dinating long sleeve
Marcia Hoh'!tetler and an arrangement of carnations from youth and community ser·
soli sweater has
Vera and Millard Van Meter. Edison, incidentally, was an vice, and Mrs. Goett, junior
round collar detail ·
eighth grade 'student of Miss Karl- when she taught at the old
ing . 'All in sizes 5/ 6 ·
activities. Mrs. Cooley gave a
Rose Hill School. Then there were many cards from area
13/ 4.
report on activities for
friends making it all quite a week for Miss Karr. May there be
veterans at the At~ns Men·
many more!
tal Health Center, and Mrs.
Wainwright talked on repor·
HAVE A NICE WEEK !
ling.
HANES
Mrs. Kilgore noted that the
HOSE
narne of the Xenia Home has
SALE
president, will instaU new been changed to the Ohio
Meetjng planned
officers and speaker will be Veterans Children Home. She
Boyd
Ruth, Meigs Sou and urged the units to adopt a cot·
RUTLAND - Mrs. Roy
Water
Conservationist. lllge, and to assist with the
Snowden and Mrs. Robert
"Ideas
for
November" will be Christmas and Easter funds.
Canaday will be hoste.ues
presented
by Mrs. Chris Mrs. Goetl stressed organiza·
when ihe October meeting of
the Rutland Garden Club is-· Diehl and "FaD's Blaze of tion of junior units and par140 IIICOND AYINUI
held at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Color" wUI be the theme for ticipalion iii the cootests. She
arrangements of club . announced thut the district
OAUI'O'Ji• OHIO
the Snowden home.
· · jtllior conference will he he IIi
Miss. /Ruby Diehl, past members.

II

$00.00

of the Rev . and Mrs. Don
Walker of Racine, moved into
the Baptist parsonage on
South Third Ave. this week.
Ordained in 1973 after at·
tending West Virginia Oniver-,
sily, the Rev. Mr. McClung
has pastured churches at
Lansing, W. Va ., Ansted, W.
Va . and Andalusia, Alabama.

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Turns nine

MIDDLEPO-l1T--New
pastor of the Middleport First
Baptist Church is the Rev.
Mark McCloing.
The Rev. Mr. McClung,
who has pastured the Baptist
Church at Leon, W. Va .. for
the past two years, began his
ministry here last Sunday..
He and his wife, the fonper
Mary Ann .Walker, daughter

I

.r---..a.._._.._ ____ . -

Joey

The Rev. McClung
becomes pastor

Parsons· are the s state officers, Mrs. Marjorie Goelt
junior activities diainnan ; Mrs. Lyell Roush, Depart:
ment of Ohio presrdent; Mrs. John Kilgore, secqnd vit'e
president; Mrs. Melvin Wainwri~hl, secretary.

Ca/etukzr

GRADE A
LARGE

EGGS
DOZ.

99¢

69¢
59 c.

MARDI GRAS

.
DECORATOR TOWELS .............................. Jum bo Roll.
MOUNTAIN MAN
·
10 oz.
FlAKY BISCUITS...................................... Cans
JOAN OF ARC
. ·
\5.5 oz.

99c
KIDNEY BEANS ...................................... 4 ~:ans 99c
CAMPFIRE MARSHMAU.OWS ..................... 3 ~~b:- 89c
5

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1 DISHWASHINGLIQUID I

~-----·Coupon _____
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·CHEER DETERGENT
49 oz.

I

Box

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$129
.

Exp. Nov. 4, '78 .

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32 oz.

$} 09

Exr. Nov. 4, '78

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Homebuilders hold annual banquet

GALUPOUS - Exhibit foc the month of October, 1978Vessels and Two Other Things, Ceramics by Jamea Huelsman
and Sally Carter. Special handcrafted items also exhibited, on
loan QY friends of tlle French Art Colony.
Exhibit for the month of November, 1978 - Watercolor
World . 45 watercolors by popular HunUngton, West Virginia
artist, Marian Murphy .
Gallery hours - Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m . until 5
p.m.
.
November 5, 2 p.m.-4 p.m . - Reception for members of
the French Art Colony to meet Marian Murphy and view her
November exhibit at Riverby, Watercolor World, Riverby.
November 28, 7:30 p.m. - . F .A.C. Interdepartmental
Meeting ; 9 p.m . - F.A .C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby. ·
December I, 7 p.m . - Decorating Party at River by by the
adult members of the French Art Colooy. Everyone bring
snacks to sllare after the Christmas · decorations are
completed, Riverby .

COLO\) f'l

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Tonight thru
Thursday, Nov , 2
,..~---------,

MIDDI.EPORT-The :19th SI'J'\'c'l "n . tile d&lt;••·urating
ammal banquet uf Lh c l'Uifllniltt'O with Mr·s. Shirlc\'
Humcbuildcrs Class of the flumganlneJ· and Mrs. Peggy
Middleport Church of Clll'ist Bm ·klcs.
•"'"' held rc&lt;·cntly at the r Inl'ludcd in the deeoratiuns
l'hUrl' h.
was a table display of antique
Wallace Bradford was kitchen and canning utensils
master of ceremmues for the along with a coa l bucket of
banquet with Mack Stewa1t · fall floweJ'S. Squash and pwn!(iviug " the welcome and pkins were also !JSetl ·tp comQcorge Glaze, the prayer. plete the! all decor . . .
There was g1·oup smgmg of
' The Philathea women sei'Vctl
the baked steak di nner to the ' several songs including
mcmbei'S who were scaled at " Happy Birthday" and "God
ta ules decorated in a fall Bless You " to 'Prey Glaze and
motif. Favors were tablets, Tum Bowen. Mrs. Edna
pens and key chains pi'Ovided F.vans gave the secretary 's
by Mrs. William Grueser who report along with a class

Clowns."

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OTHER SIDE
OFTHE

MQUjltAIN'

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Plus

. ~ UNIVlRSALPICTURE~
llCHNICOLOR® PANAVI~OO® 0
... MAYBE TaO !!!.!§l FUR fiiUNGER CHILOIIEN
, Cl·,,.,

j' "' ·~~~ Cl! • ~ ·•onori~ · ~ r

•H ••c~•5 •nf ~&gt;lD

Cartoon

American
Graffiti
Drive-In closes
Oct. 3o-Monday
For Season

Mrs . Culleen Van Meter,
president: Mrs. Margaret
KiiwHitl , vice president; Mrs.
Rril'kles, sc&gt;cretary: Mrs.
Farie Cole, assistant
st.&gt;cretary, and Mrs. Nura

..

Tammy Hart

MJDDI.F.PORT -Miss Mar·
tha Jo Krawsczyn and
Charles Ray Ferguson exchanKed wedding vows in a
double ring eeremony &lt;It 6:30
p.m. on Aug. 19 at the Heath
United Methodist Church.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. John
Krawsczyn, Sr., Middleport,
and the groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs . James Stewart
of West Colwnuia, W. Va'
Music was presented by
M1·s . Paul Powell, organist,
whose selections included "0
Pe1·fect Love", "CI01;e to
You", and "A Time for Us " , .
and Miss Paula . Eichinger
who sang "You Light Up My
Life" and " The Wedding

Announced Engagement So;~~··church
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Hart of New
Haven announce the engagement and approaching
marriage of their ' daughter, Tanuny_ Lynn, · to Charles
William Lane, son of John William Lane, Gallipolis, and
the late Stella Lane. Miss Hart is a 1975 graduate of
Wahama High School and is employed by tbe Gallipolis
State Institute. Her fiance is a 1976 graduate of Gailia
Academy High SCilool and is employed at tbe Gallipolis
State Institute. The wedding will be an event of Dec . 16,
2:30p.m, at the New Haven United Methodist Church. The
Rev. John Campbell wtll officiate the double ring
ceremony with a reception following. The gracious
Cllstom of open church will be observed.

RECLI ERS
at pre-Christmos Sauings
You'll be sitting pretty at holiday
time in one of our super
comfy easy chairs.

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was decorated
with two seven tiered
candleabra flanked by arrangements of peach and
white mums. On the altar
taule were two candles and a
cross. The ceremony was
candlelight.
Given in marriage by her
lather the bride. wore a while
eyelet embroidered batio1e
!(own with empire waist,
scooped neckline, and bell
sleeves, with ruffles_ ar~und
the bottom of the skirt and the
neekline. She wore a chapel
length mantilla and carried a
bouque(. Jif peach and white
mums with a peach rose
center.
.
Mrs. Mary Priee was
matron of honor for her sister
and she was in a peach eyelet
gown with a scooped
neckline, empire waist., bell
sleeves arid ruffle ai'Ound the
bottom of the skirt. She carried a single peach ruse with
baby's breath.
Tom Roush of Middleport
was best man, and the ushers
were Mark Van Meter,
Pomt!roy, and Tom Varian,
Point Pleasant , W.Va.
For her daughter 's wedding, Mrs. Krawstozyn wore a

POMEROY--Church
Women United in Meigs
County will eonsider the issue .
of hwnan·rights at home and
abroad at its World Com ·
munity Day celebration to be
held Friday at the Chester
United Methodist Church,
I: 30 p.m. Theme of the worship service will be
'·Touchstones
fur
Discipleship." Mrs. Mary
Skinner of the Personal Advocacy Program in Meigs
Ctlunty will be the speaker.
Every year since 1941,
Church Women Uniletl has
celebrated World ConunWJity
Day with a service emphasiz- ·
ing responsible corporate action for justice and peace.
Two national Hwnan Rights
Consultations, one in New

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street length aqua flowered
dress with white carnations
tipped in aqua . Mrs. Stewart
was in a street length lilac
dress with white ·carnations
tipped in lilac .
A reception honoring the
eouple was held in the church
social room immediately
following the wedding. The
three tier·ed cake featured
dusters of peach roses.
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Rhoda Stewart, sister of
the groom, and Miss Angie.
Houchins, cousin of the uride.
The couple reside at Route
I, Middleport . The bride is a
1978 graduate or Meigs High
School and is employed at the
Pomeroy National Bank. The
groom is a .1975 graduate of
Wahama and is employed
with Hagner and Benson Pro. ject 1301.
Out-&lt;Jf-tuwn guests at. tbe
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Powell, New Haven , W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Varian, Darla Kelly, and
Malea Duncan, Point Plea- ·
sant, W.
Toni Turner,
Terry Albright, West Colwn·
bia; Mr. and Mrs . Calvin
Hall, Abby, Jane , John,
Nathan, and Rhodanna Hall,
David Van Tassal, St. Albans,
W.Va.; Olive Casto, Vinton;
Mr. and Mrs. David Price,
Mr. and· Mrs. Jay Stewart,
Syracuse ; Mr . and Mrs. Sam·
'my Little, Columbus; Connie
Burton, Mason, W.Va., B. J .
and Sally Ervin, Racine.
Tim Oney, Huntington , W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Van
Meter, Mrs. Allen Eichinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger,
Paula Eichinger, Mr. and
Mrs. John Krawsczyn, Jr.
and Adam, Mr. and Mrs.
George Hobstetter, Miss
Milisa Rizer, Jane Sisson,
Bonnie Morris, Terry
Walker, Cheryl Lefebre, Mr.
and Mrs. Chuek Hannahs,
Pomeroy; and Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Kelly and Scott,
Hollywood, Fla.

Lisa Smith and jimmy Isaacs .

Announce engagement
BIDWELL - Mrs . Velma
Wi,lllams and J. D. Smith,
Bidwell, are announcing the
engagement
of
their
daughter, Lisa Smith, to
Jinuny Isaacs, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Isaacs. Vintnn .

va.;

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·ISHOP .EARLY AT

•I . . 2G-%DOWN

The Old Kyger Youth
· Group held a youth fall party '
24 at 6:30 p.m.
A supper of hotdogs, sauce, - ~
potato chips, donuts, apple
cider, hot chocolate and a
decorated pumpkin cake by
Mrs.
enjoyed.
Games were played by the
following: Bob and· Theresa
Price, Becky and Frankie
Price, Mark, Tim, Don Price,
, Mark Trout, Debbie HoDand,
Becky Thomas, Randy
Thomas, Cheryl Uttle,-Vickie
Little, Chenna Harrison,
Sharon, Charlene Hively, Bob
and Slllle Sigman, Chad,
Branden Sigman.

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I WILL HOLD IN OUR, lAYAWAY
I FOR DECEMBER 23 DELIVERY

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1

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CHRISTMAS PORTRAITS
PORTRAITS FOR CHRISTMAS
MUST IE TAKEN BY NOV. 11
CALL NOW I APPOINTMENT
nMES ARE LIMITED!

44674M

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
SPRING VAU.EY PWA
GALLIPOLIS
CLOSED ·MONDAYS

PLENlY of FREE PARKING AT THE REAR,OF OUR SlORE

· DIAMONDS
The Round , or Brilliant Cut, currently th~
most popular:
The Square Shape, and related
Emerald Cut
The romantic Heart and the Pear Shape
And the aristocratiC Marquise, pointed
at each end.
Each of our stones Is of the same brilliant
beauty and fine quality. The choice Is determined by your Individual preferences and
taste. We'll be piii8Sed to show you our
entire collection.

~

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We honor

and MasterOiarge.

Petite, Small, Medium, Large

I've been busy for the last
few days, and, during tha~
time, I've decided (once
a gail!) that undoubtedly the
most unrewarding, boring activity one can engage in bas
to be housework! Therefore,
in desperation, I've
developed a few games which
I hope will help to alleviate
the drudgery of my most
hated chore.
me first game I call,
"Least Likely Place to Find
the Mate to My Roommate's
Favorite Pair of Knee Socks
When It's 7:4lj a.m. and She
Has to be at Work by 8:00." It
really doesn't matter, according to my rules, ho\f the
sock may have gotten In this
unlikely spot • it can have
been dragged off by the dog
or carried off by the kids just so the location is unusual.
The point value fqr . finding
. the sock is as follows: 5 points
for under the dresser; 10
points for still in the dryer ; 15
points for "Oops! Thought it
was mine."; 2fl points for in
the refrigerator; and 25
points for in the casserole
dish on the top shelf of a kitchen cupboard . Unusual
places may be added as need
be. Whoever gets the most
points for found socks in a
week gets to eat ihe only slice
of bread in the wrapper
without any mold growing on
it.
Another game I dreamed
up is one I call, "Haber·
dashery Hopscotch". In this
game, the players start at the
front entrance of the house

and try to hop to the back en~ance without once stepping
on any of the numerous articles of clothing strewn·
about on the floor. If'a player
steps on a major item of apparel (dress, coat, the cat
· hiding under your good
blouse), be loses a turn;
however, if he only steps on a
minor article of clothing
(sock, brassiere, jock strap),
he merely loses a point.
One of my favorite games
is one I call, " Refrigerator
Follies: : To play this, the
players, while cleaning out
the refrigerator, lay bets on
the approxbnate age of each
item of food found there.
(Hint: if yol! find a round
mass, dark brown in color
that smells as if, yes, you
once again forgot to change
the baking soda, it's probably
lettuce that has been there "
long time! And if the carton
of eggs is making mysterious
peeping noises, it's probably
l!een thete a long, long time .)
The winner.is the player who
gets the most items correct,
based on the freslmess dates.
One final activity I came up
with is called, "Guess What
the Butter Dish is Doing in
the Clothes Hamper.'' 11le
convenient thing about this
game is that it's so versatile:
.it can be . easily changed to
suit the occasion. For instance: "Guess How the Good
Crystal Got in the Sandbox";
"Guess How the pantyhose
Pantyhose Got in the Litter
Box"; "Guess How .. . "

· Master Charge
or Visa Welcome
.- 366 Second Avenue\1,-. - - -..-:-----Gallipolis, Ol!io
1.

'To uchstones

for

Discipleship," wtll consider
human rights at home and
· abroad. Believing that
human rights is the foremost
' peace Issue lor our time,
-Church Women United
sponsored two National
Human Rights Consultations
this year, one in New York
and one in California.

The theme J!ses the lm'ge
of a touchstone as a test of
quality - in this case the
quality
of
Christian
Discipleship.
Money for gift certificates
will be received by Mrs.
Dorothy Hartley, treasurer.
Gift certificate money will be
sent to the National
Organization of Church
Women United to be used ln
times of disaster to provide
blankets, food and medicine.
It is also used for child
development ,
health
programs and for training
programs for women.

MIDDLEPORT--Cost ume
prizes were awarded at the
conunWJity Halloween party
held Thursday night at the
Bradbury Church of Christ
basement.
Rita Bailey, Cathy Hess,
and Hank Johnson judged the
costwnes in two categories.
Receiving prizes irfthe group
of first grade and below were
Missy Nelson, prettiest ; Matt
Finlaw, the ugliest; Catena
Wolfe and Kim Hanning, the
. funniest ; and Nikki Meier,
most original. In the category
Who Among American High of grade two and above the
School Students."
prizes went to Elise Meier,
Denise was chosen for the prettiest ; Scutt Hanning,
Bostic Scholarship to Capital ugliest; Allen Shuler, funUniversity, which she is now niest, and Kristi Haynes,
attending.
most original.

Denise Denney

Chosen for Who '.s Who
BIDWELL
Denise
Denney, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Denney, Bidwell, was chosen for the
Second year lor the "Who's

celebrated

Appearing on the program
Mrs. Jack Knight,
president of the Gallia County
Council of Church Women
United, Mrs. Wade Evans,
Mrs. Morris Elliott, Mrs.
Joseph Cain, Mrs . VIola
Carter, Mrs. Nolan Carter,
Mrs. Gary Treleaven , Mrs.

will be

Kenneth Billings, Mrs. Eldon
Wuerch,
Mrs .
Mary
Warehime and Mrs. Stanley
Folden.
Mrs. W. J . Brown will
assist with the offering.
Refreshments )fill be ser.v.ed
by the United Methoihst
Women.

Larkin earns medal

Meritorious services at Larkin of 8864 Blacklick
Wurtsmith AFB, Mich., has Road, Pic~ington .
Sergeant Larkin, an Inearned the U. S. Air Force
Commendation Medal for ventory management
Staff Sergeant Samuel L. supervisor, was present&lt;:&lt;!
Larkin , son of Mrs. Mary the medal at Ramstein AB,
Germany, where he now
serves with a unit of the U. S.
Air Forces in Europe ,
The sergeant is a 1967
graduate of Rutland High
Donuts, cupcakes, cider Mitch, Jeff and Missy Nelson, School. His fath er, John
·and eandy were served with Sandy Hanning, &amp;ott and Larkins, resides on Rt. 1.
treats being given to all the . Kim, Hank and Kathy Middleport.
Sergeant Larkin's wile,
children . Kevin King had Johnson, Kevin King, Cathy
grace. The children enjoyed Hess, Sherrie Barnhart, Sandra, is the daughter of
bobbing fur apples, a fish Rodney Bailey, Rita Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clonch
and Ruth Carsey.
of Middleport.
pond and a variety of games.
Attending were Scott, Todd
and Lee'a Johnson, Anna
1·:
Shuler, · Allen . and Brian,
Paula Haynes, Kristi and
Matt, Debbie Finlaw ,
Heather and Matt. Bill and
Noami King, Marilyn Poulin
and Lisa, Marilyn Meier,
Elise, Nikki and Rebecca ,
Judy Mowery, Melissa and
Mandy Hubbard, Mrytle St.
Clair, Jeoff and Trecia
Cogar, Betty Carsey, J. T.
and Scott, Brenda Wolfe,
Katrina and Jimmy, Amy

Halloween party
'

Day~

held~

prizes given

........._______,
N-0·T·I·C·E

DR. CONDE ANNOUNCES HIS RETURN
TO PREVIOUS OFFICE HOURS.
EFFECTIVE THIS DATE APPOINTMENTS
ARE BEING ACCEPTED AS BEFORE.

Vows exchanged
GALLIPOLIS
On
Saturday, October 14, at 10
a.m., the Reverend Allred
Holley united in holy
matrimony Freddie Fillinger
and Gloria Sue Graham, both
of Gallipolis.
The wedding ceremony was
held at the Elizabeth Qlapel
ln Gallipolis with James Neal

as best man and Ms. Betty
Janey as matron of honor.
A reception followed at the
new Mr. and Mrs . Fillinger's
.
place of employment.
The couple plans to reSide
in Gallipolis and will be at
home to their friends and
relatives on Upper River
Road.

MIDDLEPORT,...Pians fur
attending the fall ceremonial
to be held Nov. 11 at the new
Mosque, Stelzer Road, Columbus, were made when the
Twin City Shrinettes met
recently at the home of Mrs.
Mary Hughes, Middleport .
Mrs. Cora Beegle presided
at the meeting with the group
repealing the Lord ·s rrayer
in unison. Several communications and thank you
notes were read by the president. NeKt meeting will be on
Nov. 30 at the home of Mrs.
Mary
Stewart.
The
Christmas party .will be held
at the Meigs Inn, Dec. 13 at
6:30 p.m. with husband invited . Mrs. Hughes served
refreshments.
Attending

Charles Lemley
POMEROY··Charles H.
Lemley, sori of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Will, Pomeroy, is a
patient at the U. S. Public
Health Service Hospital, 3100
Wyman · Park Drive,
Baltimore, Md., . 21211, for
consultation and possible
surgery.
He flew from Charleston ,
W. Va . to Baltimore Wednesday. He and his wife, Betty,
teside in Point Pleasant, W.
va. Lemley is a former
Meigs County resident and i&gt;
employed by lhe Ohio Rivet
Barge Lines, Cincinnati.

were Mrs. Emma Clatworthy, Mrs. Cora Beegle,
Mr s. Gertrude Mitchell ,
. Shirley Beegle, Mrs . Mary
Bowen, Mrs. Lora Byers,
Mrs . Jean Moore, Mrs. Edna
Slusher, the hostess and a
guest , Miss Kathryn Hysell.

POWELL'S
STORE HOURS:
MON-SAT. 8 AM • 10 PM
SUNDAY 10 AM-10 PM

Rellublican
r
women met
1 .~ .
POMEROY
Republican Women's Club
met Wednesday at Meigs Inn
with 35 women ln attendance.
Richard E. Jones, chairman of the Meigs County
Republican
Executive
Committee, was the guest
speaker. · Jones gave a
resume of all state and
county candidates and urged
everyone to work on the upcoming election.
Everyone was also lnvited
to the Republican rally on
Saturday, Oct. 28 by Jones.

PYTHIAN SISTERS

WILKESVILLE - The
Wilkesville Pythlan Sisters
will stage a public dinner
from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday at
the hall in Wilkesville.
Turkey, ham, neatloaf,
vegetables, salad, rolls, pie
and a beverage are included
in the $2.50 adult and $1.25
chlldren admission price.

WHOLE

2

$}

HAMS .....~~ .:~:~.!~~..........L~; •••r.

FLAVORITE

FlAVORITE

.

MARGARINE. ......•.....•...~-.
FlAVORITE

p·
13 oz.
.
rozen
1zza
........•...
.
........
F
$109

R.C.1 DIET RITE or
DAD'S ROOT BEEF•••.••!.~~·.~~.~~...
.

..

90Z.

49~,.

I
I
I
I
I

II
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

OFF ROAD

ILEA H

SUGAR
- 5 LB.

89~

Lim ill Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
res

PH.

I
I
I
I
I

Macaroni &amp;Cheese.~.??:S/$11

ON AND

BETZ HONDA
SALES
'

OCTOBER 31 WILL BE DONATED
TO THE'MEIGS JAYCEES

BOB FOR APPLES
FOR PRIZES.

PEACHES...................~ ..•..•

AVAILABLE AT ••••

5% OF OUR GROSS SAl;ES ON

PRIZES aEJo~:ME

Elf

MACHINES NOW

PUBLIC I
rn
POWELL'S SUPERVALU - MEIGS
JAYCEES ANNUAL HALLOWEEN PARTY
OCTOBER 31 TUESDAY, OCIOBER 31.
Ry ill folOLD MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
hallowe&amp;l
AUDITORIUM.
•CIDER
STARTS 6:30 P.M.
•DONUTS

•TREATS FOR THE KIDDIES
•SAMPLE OF R.C.

SEMI BONEIISS

From 18.00

~udolph Valentino's real

name was Rodolfo Pietro
Raffaello ~uglielml.

Something

Shrinettes m.et recently

Brushed Nylon or Cotton Flannel. ·
Solids or Prints

NOW YOU KNOW

••

- ---------------------~.

York and the other in Northern California, were sponsored last spring by Church
Women United in an effort to
plan for such corporate action . The impetus for these
Consultations and for this
year's World Ctlmmunity
Day service is the assertion
by CWU's constituency lhat
the question of human rights
is the foremilst peace issue
for our time.
At the service the $5 dues
for 1979 will be accepted. Gift
·certificates in the denominati9ns ol $3, $5, and $10 will be
available.

The wedding wtll be an
event of November 11, 2:30
p.m., at the Vinton Baptist
Church. The gracious custom
of open church will be ol;
served.

LAY
CLAR~~
l342 SECOND AVE. GALLIPOLIS
AWAY
VISA
NOW
FOR
CHRISTMAS 0/d ·Kyger
STARTING AS .Youth met 1 WARM
! WONDERFUL
LOW AS
· Oct.
1
WINTER
$
1 GOWNS
Thorn• were

'11

GALUPOUS- The Gallia
County Council of Church
Women United will celebrate
World Community Day on
Friday, Nov. 3 at 7:30p.m. at
Grace United Methodist
Church. The
program,
1

•World Community Day ' schedulid

w

'World Community

Rite. tr·easorer .
, · Attending were Mr. and
Mrs . F.d Evans, Mr. anti Mrs.
Ma&lt;·k Stewart, Mrs .
Rwngar&lt;lner, Mrs. Brickles,
Mr. a11d Mrs. Tom Bowen,
Mr.' and Mrs . Bradford, Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Boyer,
Thelma Boyer, Dorothy
Ruach , Nora Rice, .Mr. and
Mrs. Richart! Baiiey, Mr.' and
Mrs. George Glaze, .Trey and
Clinton, Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Van Meter, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Grueser, Mr. and
Mrs. But! Wilson, Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Heihnan, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Graves, Mr. and
Mrs . Raymond Cole,
Margaret Kincaid, anti Mrs.
Pauline Morarity.

Wedding vows spoke

'THE .

MARILY:"ool HASSETT
TIMOTHY BOTTOMS
.,., . . .
.... .

.

Gifl.s were presentetl to
Stewart, outgoing president,
and to F.tl Evans, teacher ..
Nt•W officers wlerted were

VISITORS
SYRACUSE--Mrs. Estil
Moore ond Mrs. Dilford Ferrell left Friday morning for
Flint, 'Mich. where they will
visit Mrs. Lou Walker and
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Fe\Tell
and family ,

PART;G

history and a list or post
pr·l·:-oidt'nls. Members attcn· ·
ding the first Homebuildt•rs
Clcrs..,. f)itnquet ret·t~nizt.'tl
w&lt;•re Mr. aiKt Mrs. Wallace
RJ·ad!o11l, Mr. and Mrs,
RaiJ•h Graves, Mr. and Mrs ..
Ct•l'il Heilman, and Mrs.
Pauline Morarity .
For the program planned
uy Mrs. Hazel Wilson and
·Mrs. Nora Rice, Mrs. Becky
Gla~e led the group in singing
thr "Smile Song". There
were two Bible quizes and
pil'lures of early class
meetings were shown. Mrs.
Brickles a~d- Mrs. Bwngard. m•r. attired in cluwn cll!o1umillg , sang " You Light Up My
We" and "Send in the

B-7- 'lbeSunday 'l'imes&amp;rtlnei,Sunday, Oct. 29,1978

W/C

GAL

4~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 4

wic.

39~
~

79

�C.I- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

. 1rimea- ientiuel

~unbav

SPORTS

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI ) Sophomore tailback Calvin
Murray raced 55 yards for a
first-period touc hdown to
';IM;I_:H:I~----Di:H:I_ _ _ _ _ _:H:I04:Hi:-c::te:H:I04:M:i-~ ignite Ohio State to 63-20 Big
'41
"' Ten rout of Northwestern
Saturday.
The touchdown run . by
Murray , who led Ohio State 's
awesome ground attack with
103 yards in 10 cartjes,
capped a llghtnlng~ike fourplay 80-yard drive by the
Buckeyes the first time they
had the ball .

SUNDAY
REVIVAL to begin at Lecta
Ohio Church of God Holin~
Sunday night with Rev.
Orville Carrico of Kitts Hill,
• evangelist. Service begins
eacb evening at 7:30 with
• special singing. Everyone
. invited to attend.
.
FELLOWSHIP supper, Little
Kyger Chu.r ch , 6 p.m . Ruth
• and Lillian Thomas will show
slides on Holy Land trip.
FIFTH Sunday Charge
• Meeting of lbe Cheshire
Charge United Methodist
Cbarcb will be held at
Kaaauga, Suaday, Oct. 29,
7:30 p.m. Spedal sing lug by
Gallla Couaty Senior Cltlze08
Cbol'llll. Public Is welcome.
HOMECOMING,
Baptist
Church in Vinton. Morning
worship I) our, ·dedication
service for children. Special
guest speaker, Rev. Dan
Walker for afternoon service,
7:30 p.m. baptismal seryice.
TRIE DSTONE
Baptist
Church, Missionary Day,
guest speaker , Brother
Gilbert Craig, Jr., 6:45 p.m.
Pastor, John King .
HOMECOMING , Vinton
Baptist Churcb, 9:30 . p.m.,
potluck at noon ; afternoon,
special singing, 1 p.m. The
Rev. Alfred Holley, speaker.
FIFTH Sunday combined
church meeting of the North
Gallia and Porter Methodist
_Churches. 11 a .m.
nJESDAY
PEMBROKE Club, with Mrs.
Jack Knight, at 8 p.m.
F:RIDAY .
CHURCH Women United will
meet at Grace United
· Methodist Church at 7:30
p.m .

--,
.1 ·Social 1
SUNDAY
-MEETING at I &lt;30 p.m.
Sunday at the Meigs Museum
organize
a
local
to
genealogical society. Paul
Morton, Athens district
representative and James E.
'Wolle, state organizational
chairman, will be present to
assist.
NEWSMEN
QUARTET,
Charleston, W. Va., will be at
the Pomeroy Church · of the
Nazarene Sunday for both the
·sunday school and morning
worship services starting at
9:30 a.m. The Rev. Clyde
Henderson, pastor, lnvites
the public.

POLAROID PRONTO I

INSTANT CAME

least expensive way ·to get
beautiful, long-lasting SX·70 pic·
lures .
Lightweight, compact.
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Pictures from 3' to
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Automatic
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e Cover / handle protects and helps to hold

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1/500 second ahutler
speed stop&amp; action. e Flipflash pictures up
IO 34 lee! wilh Kodacolor 400 film .
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matching flapa allow uae of one compartment at a time. The center

overlay atrap opena automatically when either companment Ia
uood. An lmportallt t..turo ol thlo con to th•t It will hold oil
Step

$9488

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10 meer tne wide

P~aroid SX·70 carnerl8, all Polaroid Pronto! and One·

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thoo1111 who preler pump 1hotaun1. Fhlled
COmb IIOCk end ll~ger - grOO'tld 1011 •1/ld Ill
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mptybdenum 11111 with hercfened lock treu

C.merat and Kodak lnatant Cameras, the Co·

lorburot and EK-4 ond EK·~ .

HICK'S RIG.

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The " -.rrow
ll'lnQ~II i on In durable, tighh11119hllar9el e. ll
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ellernltillft\1 llylfl ot l .. l·h . .tlng Fiber Fte• m.etenet. hblirmet , ~ nd
litllrbOifd . Et ch llyll workl to IIOW 1/ld "CitCh" lh~ IOOW, permlr UAij
rnuimurn terget etllcieftcy with minimum ll rg~t we1!!"1 tftd depth. -~
tpecielly reinforced cenllr further etrlnQihl\1 the Auow Cllcher
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2aus59C

77••ox

"DURHAM, N. C. (UPI ) Rllnning back Steve Atkins
.scored three touchdowns
Saturday in leadirig fifth·
rii'nked
and
unbeaten
Maryland to a 27-11 rout of
l),ike in an Atlantic Coast
Conference game.
-Atkins, who came into the
game with seven straight IOIJ..
yard-plus rushing per·
fo!'lllances, gained 72 yards
on 24 carries to lead the
Terrapins' offensive attack.
He scored on a 3-yard rim and
two !-yard goal line plunges
before sitting out much of the
second half.
The victory gave Maryland
its 13th consecutive victory
and an 11-0 overall record this
season, Including 4-11 in the

$299
GAL.

couunc

'"'·

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
POMEROY Planned
tiarenthood clinic will be held
·Thursday, Nov. 2. An appointment Is . necessary.
Please call 992-6912.

32.~!$100

GOOD IEWS RAZORS

4toCAit

HICK'S RIO.
77• PKQ.

PLEASE SWW DOWN
POMEROY - Pomeroy
pollee
report
parents
delivering and picking up
children
at
Pomeroy
llementary school are
driving too fast for conditions. Parents are urged to
slow down.

,,

.,

~I
I

lr/

••

in the first quarter by driving
66 yards in 10 plays. A 21J..yard
run by Ogilvie and a 26-yard
run by Rutledge set up Neal's
five-yard scoring ru~.
The Crimson Tide came
back late in the second
quarter when Rutledge hit
Pugh , who · was doublecovered all afternoon, for the
45-yard touchdown p~ss.
In the third qua r ter
Alabama - with Shealy in at
quarterback - moved 67
yards in eight plays for
another touchdown. Ogilvie's
one-yard scoring run was set
up by a 30-yard Shealy to
Pugh pass to the Virginia
Tech one.
In the fourth quarter
Rutledge hit Bolton for his 27·
yard score. The touchdown
was set up by 19-yard pass to
Pugh a nd a nine-yard pass to
halfback Joe J ones. Late in
the fourth quarter Jacobs,
making a rare appearance
this season, ran to the right
and broke free for his 33-yard
scoring run.
Rutledge completed seven
of nine passes for 160 yards
and two touchdowns. He was
intercepted once.

'

PRIME
GAS DRYER

I PACK
OILLITTI
HICK 'IlliG.

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UP! 1 downs came on a 5-yard end·
- Jeff Rutledge passed for around by tight end Rick Neal
two touchdowns, one for 45 and a 33-yard run by third
yards to Keith Pugh, and .string quarterback Don
another for 27 yards to Bruce Jacobs. Alabama scored one
. , Bolton to spark third-ranked touchdown in 'each of the first
, · Alabama to a 35-11 victory three quarters and twice in
'~ over Virginia Tech Saturday. the final quarter to boost its
Pugh, playing before a season's record to 7-1.
s e II o u t
A 1a b a m a
Virginia Tech , under first
hOmecomlng crowd , caught · year co ach Bill Dooley, fell to
fiye passes for 148 yards 3-5. . . .
before being shaken up and
V1rgm1B Tech had only hvo
leaving t~e game early In the· serwus scormg threats. On 1ts
fourth quarter.
first possession the Gobblers
One of Pugh's catches, a 3().. moved the bali'" to the
yarder from reserve quar· Alabam~ 34 where Paul
terback Steadman Shealy, Engle tned . a 51-yard f1eld
gave Alabama a first down at goa l whlch htt th e crossbar to
the Virginia Tech one late in fall short. Tech moved the
the third period. Running . ~II to the Alabama 11 yard
back Major Ogilvie scored on !me late m the th1rd quarter
the next play.
but was unable to score.
Aiabama's other touchAlabama began its scoring

Duke, 27 to 0

.

PRESTONE
ANTI-FREEZE

COTTON SWABS
IOIY Ill SOAP

.. ' ''

ONP. 01? THOSE NIGHTS - As a result. of st.•edv rein.. all day Thursdav . area hi~h
school football teams romped in the mud Friday night. Picture above was taken by Greg
Bailey at Marauder Stadium during the Meigs-Athens grid contest, won by Athens, 2-0.
Running with the ball is Athens' MUle Kranyik (24) . Ready to make tackle is Meigs' Tim
. Faulk (55).

Maryland blanks

l!OOCOUNT
HICK'SaRAND

CARISS

'

. .CK'IIIIQ, 884.88

s1101rs "''·

I

IIOUSIWUE .

THURSDAY
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER
172, O.E.S., 7 :30p.m . Thurs·
day at the Masonic Temple ,
Middleport. Officers to wear
gowns .
SATIJRDAY
· MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
CLUB, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2
p.m . workshop on Christmas
arrangements and decora·
lions. Members to take a sack
lunch, materials and ideas.
Some materials will be
available for purchase .

.'-:' '

COMPOUND BOW

SAil FLUSH

TOILU IOWL CLEAIEI

' ''

I '

·Tide rolls, 35-0

HICK'IIIIG.

tion .

HICK'S RIG.

llrtiLIF lin.

give Ohio a IIJ.-7. upset victory
over Western MiChigan in the
Mid-American Conference.
Ohi o, in winning only its
second MAC game ln live
tries , held star Bron co
tailback Jerome Persell to 88
yards on 24 carries while

hurting the title chances of
West ern , now 5-2 in the
league .
Following Givens' return to
th e West ern 16, Scim eca
capped the short drive with
his scoring toss to Swnmers.
T he
en suin g
rl PfPns ive

to uchdown pass, a razzledazzle play which completed
fooled the Ohio Sta te defense .
The Buckeyes, however,
put lour mor e touchdowns on
th e boa rd befoce \he ha lf and
led 35--7 a t intermission.
Nocthwestern other scores
came on a 63-yard drive early
in the thir d quarter with
St rasser hitting split end
Steve Boga n with a !:&gt;-yard
scoring toss a nd on the fina l
play of the game, after pass
interfe rence was ca lled on

Ohio State, with Jo Jo Webb
going in from the one.
Ohio State rolled up 505
yards on the ground , led by
Mur r ay, s tar tin g tailback
Ron Springs, who had 92
yards in 14 carries, aud
number three tailback Rick
Johnson, who had 85 yards in
13earries .
·
Ohio State safety Vince
Skillin gs picke d off two
Str a sser p~sses, both of
which resulted in touchdowns
for Ohio State.

U, 10-7
struggle fina lly gave way to
the Green fi eld goa l in the
third period.
Bobby Howard go t the
Broncos on the boa rd with
10: llleft in the game on an Bya rd touchdown run. But two
late Western chances ended

with an incoqlpete ruurlh
down pass on the Bobcat 27
and a fumbled punt wit h I :Il l
left.
Ohio is now 2-5 overal l.
whil e Western is 6·2 un the
yea r.

Michigan runs over Gophers

e

e

e

Doug Donley, a 7-yard run by
rese r ve fullback Riccardo
Volley , !-yard run by reserve
qu a r te rb ac k G r eg
Castignola, and a 29-yard run
by fourth-team ta ilback
Tyrone Hicks .
Northwester n, now 0-7-1
overa ll and 0-5-1 in the Big
Te n, came back after
Murray's touchdown ~print ,
driving 71 yards in 10 plays
with fullb ack Lou Tiber i
hitting quarterback Kev in
Strasse r wi th a n It-y ard

e The

.I :no wottW45051T\i'ht: 1«'o WOIW3410 ITU'hr. 120 YOit, 60 HI . .........at «WW·
lratled, MMor·f'nlit, 'Color:. lttdukift with Jlock trjm.

MONDAY
BEND 0' The River
Garden Club, 7:30 p.ul. MOn·
day at the home of Mrs .. Bert
Grimm. Program on the club
project of planting bulbs at
the Letart Falls Cemetery.
"Autumn Fantasy" will be
the arrangement theme.
HALLOWEEN
PARTY
Monday 6:30 to 7 : 30 in
basement of Long Bottom
Methodist Church. Just for
children of Long Bottom
area.
TUESDAY
BLOOD PRESSURE clinic
day Tuesday sponsored by
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club at club house beginning
at 10 a.m. The clinic will be
held once a month and is free
of charge.
MEIGS LOCAL Athletic
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at Meigs
High Scbool with films of the
Athens game to be shown ; all
'. interested persons lnvited.
REGULAR
MEETING
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the post home;
·refreshments.

KALAMAZOO,
Mich .
(UP! ) - A 56-yard Jim
Givens punt return set up
Mike Scimeca's 2-yard touch·
down pass to John Summers
Saturday and Steve Green
added a 22-yard field goal to

HICII'IIIIG.
• 114.81

cord

••••••••••••
-I.ASEB.OARD ELECTR.IC HEATER

The 63 poin ts by Ohio State,
now 4·2·1 overall and J.l in
conference play, was the
most by a Buckeye team
since a n 83-21 wln over Iowa
in 1950 a nd the highest total
ever in Coach Woody Hayes'
28 years.
Fullback Pa ul· Campbe ll
scored three touchdowns, all
on short runs, while the other
Ohio state scores came on a
32-ya rd run by quarterback
Art Schlichter, a 15-yard pass
from Schlichter to split end

Bobcats edge

tntroduclng the world'l first double
lated bench grinder. Exclusive fea tures include cog belt drive. Superstructure to increase durability, dynamic· brake for faat stope, break
resistant housing. 6' two ·conductor

-,-~---- ..

1 Calendar I

Bucks rout Wildcats

·•"

•
• COACH HONORED
!X)LLEGE SI'ATION, Tex.
(VPI) Texas A&amp;M
u~V.rSity's Association of
Former Students Saturday
voted to install resigned head
coach Emory Bellard as an
honorary lifetime member of
the !l'g&amp;nization .
Bellard, 51, who did not
aqend the T~xas A&amp;M-Rice
~e Saturday afternoon,
coacbed· the Aggles for 6'h
yiars. Hls team had a 4-2
retard f!l' 1978 when he
'lll!ldenly resigned Tuesday
under pressure after learning
Wthe IIChOOI's plan to remove
hliil as head coach after the

-~-/

ACC. The loss dropped Duke
to a 3-4 overall and 1·2 in the
league.
Duke' s hapless offens e
aided the Terrapin effort
from the outset. A fumble by
quarterback Stanley Driscoll
on his own 15-yard line on
Duke's second possession set
up a 26-yard Maryland field
goal by Ed Loncar to open the
scoring.
The Terrapins went ahead
17~ before the first quarter
ended when Atklns scored
twice on !-yard plunges. The
first touchdown came after a
56-yard punt return by
defensive back Lloyd Burruss
and the second came after
Driscoll fumbled on his own

26.
The Terrapins made it 20-0
at the half when Burruss
intercepted
Driscoll pass
and Loncar kicked a 47-yard
field goal seven plays later.
Duke was able to cross
midfield only once in the first
half, driving to Maryland's
Ill-yard line where a pass
play failed on fourth-and-five
situation.
Atkips scored again from
three yards out with S: Olleft
in the third quarter after
Maryland recovered a Greg
Rhett fumble on his own 31J..
yard line. After that, Mary·
land substituted freely .
In the fourth quarter, Duke
was able to push to the Mary·
land 9-yard line but ihe drive
ended when a Driscoll pass
fell incomplete on a fourth:
and-five.

a

CWR drops
35-0 tilt
CLEVELAND' ( UPI) . Freshman halfback Ron
Leuchen
sc ore d
four
touchdowns in amassing 170
yards in 18 attempts ·
Saturday to lead Thiel
College to a 3:HJ, President's
Athletic Conference victory
over Case Western Reserve
University.
Leuchen, whose longest run
of the a fternoon was for 54
yards on the first play of the
game, scored TDs on runs of 2 .
and 10 yards in the first
quarter and on runs of 4 and 2
yards in the second quarter.
The Tomcats' other touch·
down came on a 51-yard pass
interception return by
sophomore linebacker Jeff
McDowell.
Thiel now Is &lt;h'l-1 overall
and 3-2-1 in the PAC, while
the Spartans are 2-6 for the
season and IJ.-6 in conference
action .

CMU TRIUMPJIS
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UPI) - Central Michigan,
sparked by Gary Hogeboom ,
scored the first three times it
had the ball, all on short runs,
and rolled on to a 38·7 Mid
American Conference win
over Bowling·Green Saturday
by gettlng on the board in
every
period
while
capitalizing on big plays.

''

By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPI Sports Writer
ANN ARBOR, Mich . (UP!)
- "can't pass" quarterback
Rick Leach threw three
touchdown passes to set
school and Big Ten records
and scored two more times oo
rushes Saturday , leading
ninth..-ated Michigan to a 4210 win over Minnesota .
Minnesota, which was the
only team to blot Michigan 's
regular season record a year
ago, could manage just a 26- ·
yard field goal by Paul
Rogind with 6:53 left in the
first half and a meaningless
fourth quarter touchdown .
The Wolverine defense
gave up just two first downs
in the first half and kept the
Gophers
bottled
up
throu ghout most of the
contest for the Little Brown
Jug .
The five
touchdowns
involving Leach, a master at

running the option whose
chief deficiency is supposedly
~m throwing the ball, left him
just three short of the NCAA
record of 73.
He hit senior tight end Gene
Johnson with a 14-yard pass
Michigan's
second
on
possession, giving hiin 201
completions for his fourseason career, a s chool
record.
His three scoring tosses,
two of them •o wingback
Ralph· Clayton, pushed his
Big Ten total to 39 and
surpassed the old mark of 37
by Mike Phipps of Purdue .
Leach hit Clayton with a 26yard pass in Uie first period
and went to him again on
fourth down from the Minnesota I yard line to boost the
Wolverlne lead to 35-J with
I :37 left in the third quarter.
In between, Leach ran for
touchdowns covering 8 and 2
yards and threw a Jellhanded strike of 3 yards to

junior tight end Doug Marsh .
The Flint native ended the
game with nine completions
in 13 attempts for 144 yards,
a nd his career pa ssing
yardage went to 3,606 yards .
Freslunan Butch Woolfolk
made his lirst start and only
his second appearance of the
year at tailback to replace
injured senior
Harlan
Huckleby and gained 132
yards in 23 rushes a nd his
first touchdown oo a 49-yard
sprint with just 77 seconds
lt lt ill the game.
Rogind's field goal was set
up by a 45-yard run by
c " Jhomore tailback Marion
&amp;irbet , giving Milmesota its
initial first down of the game.
The score gave Rogind a
sc hool r ecord lor care er
points with 139, which he later
upped by one with the extra
point after junior fullback
Kent Kitzman scored on a 2yard run with 6:45 to play .

Lions wallop
West Virginia
By DAN HOSE
MORGANTOWN, W. Va.
(UPI) - Penn State fell 14
points behind West Virginia
in the first lour minutes
Saturday but the secondranked Nittany Lions roared
back to capture a 49-21 vic·
tory over the Mountaineers .
Penn State, 11~ . used a
blocked punt by Joe Salley,
an 85-yard punt return by
Mike Guman and a pass
interception return by Pete
Harris to take the lead, 21·14,
by the middle of the second
quarter. ,
West Virginia, t-7, surged
to a 14~ lead on an 11-yard
pass from Dutch Hoffman to
Rich Duggan and a 13-yard
run by Dane Conwell, but
became the first team in
school history to lose seven
straight games. It was also
the Mountaineers' 20th

consec utive loss to P enn
State.
Salley's blocked punt at the
West Virginia 36 set up Penn
State's first touchdown on a
one-yard plunge by Matt
-Suhey.
The Lions immediately
forced a punt and Guman
returned it 85 yards for a
touchdown to pull the Lions
even with 20 seconds left in
the first quarter.
Quarterback Chuck Fusina
plunged one yard for the
visitors' go-ahead touchdown
after Harris interc-epted a
pass by Hoffman an d
returned it 27 yards to the

one .
Buoyed by their 21-14
halftime lead, (he Lion s
stopped West Virginia cold on
its first four possessions in
the second half. Penn State
put the game out ol reach
with touchdown marches of

83 and 67 yards and a 37-yard
touchdown pass by Fusina to
Scott Fitzkee .
Suhey plunged one yard for
his second touchdown early in
the third quarter to ra ise the
P enn State margin to 28-14.
Bob Torrey r ammed three
yards through the middle to
produce a 41-14 bulge with 22
seconds left in the third
period.
Hoffman fired a 12-ya rd
pass to Steve Lewis for West
Virginia's final touchdown,
and substitute fullba ck An·
thony Auguero sprinted 17
ya rds for .Penn State's last
touchdown, which wa s set up
by Gene Gla dys ' fumbl e
recovery.
Fusina completed 9 ol 13
pa sses for 161 yard s in
leading the Lions to their 36th

victory against seven losses
and two t ies with West
Virginia.

Notre Dame blanks foe
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!)

Waymer, also returning
punts, set up Male's second
field goal with a 29-yard
return to the Miami 24 .
Notre Dame made only one
turnover, on Rick Valerio's
interception of one of Joe
Montana's passes on the
Miami I, preventing a n
almost certain Notre Djiiile

completion of the game went
for a IIJ..yard loss and he
never could pile up much
yardage on later completions.
McMillian also was sacked
twice for 19 yards lost and
quarterback Mark Rich! once
for II yards. Montana was
sacked on·ce foc six yards.
The win gave Not re Dame a
f&gt;-2 season recor d and Miami
a 3-4 mark. It was the ninth
straight win for Notre Dame
over the Hurricanes .

- Vagas Ferguson rushed for
90 yards and two touchdowns
and Charles Male hit two field
goals Saturday to lead No. 19
Notre Dame to its fifth
straight win , 20-0 over Miami
of Florida .
Ferguson ran four yards
for Notre Dame's first
'
touchdown and three yards score.
Montana completed 12 of 20
for the second score while
passes for 175 yards and
Male, after missing his first
McMiliian
completed five of
field goal attempt of 45 yards,
nine
for
only
12 yards gained .
succeeded from 47 yards and
McMi.llian
's
second
37 yards.
Miami turnovers helped the
Irish. Starting quarterback
Ken McMillian fumbled three Cook comeback earns position
times and the Irish recovered
two of them, one leading to
MARTINSVILLE , Va. the 33rd starting spot in the
Ferguson's first touchdown
(UP!)
- Defending NASCAR 41k:ar field.
and the second setting up ·
modified
champion J erry
Male's first field goal.
Cook
had
to
charge back from
Defensive back Brtan East·
13th
place
Saturday
to claim
burn committed Miami's
250-lap TESTS CHALLENGED
a
starting
spot
in
the
fourth fumble of the game,
modified
portion
of
Sunday's
DAYTON (UPI) - The
which also was recovered by
Cardinal 500 at Martinsville Dayton Fraternal Order of
the Irish .
Police Friday filed a $20
Miami 's No. 2 quarterback, Speedway.
Cook, of Rome, N. Y., who million laws uit in U.S.
Mike Rodrique, playing only
in the- closing minutes, trails home town rival Richie District Cq urt aCGusing city
Evans by 86 points in the race . offic ials of civil service
completed only one pass for
to
defend his title, linished t es tin g irr'egul a rities
six yard ; and Dave Waymer
the
first 25-lap qualifying designed to get more blacks
lntercepted one of his throws
pace
in fifth place lu claim .&gt;nto the force .
on th e Nolre- D;( me 5.
n

.Redskins top
Rockets 28-7
TOLEDO , Ohio (UP! ) Tailba ck Mark Hunte r
rushed for 156 yards in 21
carries whUe scoring one
tou chdown as he and
quarterback Larry Fortner
led Miami to a 28-7 Mid
American Conference victor y
over Toledo Saturday.
Fortner scored twice on
runs of II and 18 yards.
Hunter raced 30 yards in the
lirst qua rter for the first
half 's only touchdown.
Defensiv e back Alvin Hall
picked off a pass by Toledo
quarterback Mo Hall and
returned the ball 57 yards for
Miami's final touchdown in
the last period.
The Rockets' touchdown
came on a three-yard run by
Mo Hall in the third quarter
as Toledo cut the Redskins '
lea d to 14·7 before the two
fourth quarter touchdowns by

Miami put the· ga me away .
The Rockets ha d a chance
w tie the game in the third
quarter when they recovered
a Miami fumbl e at the
Re dskins
26.
Mi a mi,
however, threw thr Rockets
for losses of 9 a nd II yards on
the ne xt two plays .
In the first half Toledo
domina ted the sta tistics, outgaining the Redskins 140 to 61
yards . However , fwnbles on
their f irst two possessions
kept Toledo from doi ng any
damage.
.
Tole d o had eig ht first
downs to four for Miami,
outrushed the Redskins 86 to
40 yards and had a 54-21
a dva ntage
in
passing
yardage .
Miami now is f&gt;-2-1 overall
and 3-2 in the MAC, while
Toledo fe ll to 1-7 overa ll anrl
1·5 in the loop.

Middies make
•
•
It
seven m
row
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI ) Navy, sparked by the natJon 's
leading defensive unit, held
Pitts burgh witho ut a first
down on the ground unt il the
third quarter and stymi ed the
Panthers twice near the goal
line to de feat the 15th-ranked
Panthers, 21·11, for their
seventh stra ight tri'!ffiph .

The 18th-rank ed Mi dshipm en pleased a stadiumrecor d crowd of 32,909 a s Phil
McCo nk ey r ecovered a
fwnble for one touchdo 'Wlt,
Bob Lescznski passed 4 yards
to Curt Gainer for a no ther
and fullback Larry Kla winski
sm ashed over from the 3 for
the third .
The Pa nthers scored on
Mark Sch ubert's 28-yard field
goal in the second qua rt er
and Fred Jacobs' 3-y ard rn n
with 6: 41 to playc
Navy for ce d Pitts burg h
sophomore qua rterba ck Hic k
Trocano to the air 51 timrs
a nd t he n se nt its t ough
de fensive line a fter him .
Saturday's College
Th e Middies, led by A. IJ.
Football Results
Millet
, Stev e Chambers ,
United Pre ~s International
Terr
y
Hux el a nd John
East
Me rri ll, sac ked Trocano .
Alfred 40, Plattsburgh 13
se ven times for 65 yards.
Army 28, Colgate 3
Bost on .St . 14 , Ma ine Trocano com pleted 25 of 51
passes for 275 yards.
Maritime 6
Navy led 7·3 at ha lf as the
Brown 31, Holy Cross 25
defense stopped Pitt, fon •( ug
Dartmouth 14, Cornell 7
Massachu sett s 17, Co n· a pa ir of missed fi eld goals in
the first quarter.
necticut 10
Navy capitalized on a 27Middlebury 19, Hamilt on 0
yard punt by Pitt's J oe
Navy 21, Pittsburgh 11
New Hampshir e 29, North· Gaspa rovic and m oved 48
yards in eight plays wi th
eastern 21
Klawinski going the fina l 3.
Pa ce 59, Ma ris! 19
A t hird-down de fen siv e
Rhode Isla nd 7, Boston U. 6
holding ca ll again s t the
Rutger s 69, Columbia 0
St. Lawrence 38, Norwich 7 Panther s when Dave Diciccio
tackled a Navy blocker kept
Wesleyan 24, Bowdoin 14
the drive alive.
Williams II , Union 8
Chamb er s r ec overe d a
WPI 28, RPI 15
Trocano fumble at the P itt 31
and five plays later , LeszcSouth
zynski passed to Gaine r. Bob
Auburn 21, Wake Forest 7
E. Tenn . St. 35, Appalachian Tata 's third conversion made
it 21-3 with 3: 15 left in the
St. 34
third
qua rter .
Maryland 27, Duke 0
Jacobs'
scoring run wa s et
No rth Carolina 24, So ut h
up by Trocano's 25-yard pass
Carolina 22
No rth Carolina A&amp;T 25, to tight end Steve Gaustad fur
a first -down at the Navy 3.
Morgan St. 0
The Citadel 2i , Delawa re 14 Jacobs scored on third down.
Na vy moved to its first
to uchdo wn on the fir st
Midwest
C. Michi gan 38, Bowling possession of the second
quarter. Leszczynski passed
Green 0
16 yards to Mike Chapon and
Dayton 28, Central St. 7
11 ya rds to Mike Sherlock for
Iowa St. 13, Kansas 0
a
first down at the Pitt 7.
Miami ( 0 .) 28, Toledo 7
Sherlock,
who picked up 14
Mount Union 22, Denison 21 ·
Ohio St. 63, Northwestern 20 yards in the 66-yard drive.
'rammed the final 7 yards but
Purdue 34 , Iowa 7
Theil (Pa .) 35, Case Western fumbled at. the , goal line .
McConkey recovered, the ball
0
Westmar 7, Neb. Wesleyan 0 in the end zone with 12 :35 left
. Wittenber g 34, Muskingum 10 in the half .

Saturday's
results

..

l .J

•

�C-3-The ·Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

C-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

Wellston inflicts 28-14 grid loss on Jackson

I

Local Bowling .
Tuesday morning standings for Oct. 24, 1978:
Peoples Bank
56 8
Holiday lun
· 47 17
(City Ic~ &amp; Fuel
38 26
Wayside Furniture
38 26
Evelyn's Beauty Shop 38 26
Jaymar's
30 34
thompson's Appl. ~Rep.
30 34
Charlie's Angels
28 36
Citizens National Bank 28 36 ·
Moose Hearts
25 39
Gillingham Drug
22 42
Individual standings :
Peoples, 193 D. Dawson 492.
P. Ferguson; Holiday 177, H.
Spradling 48t S. Edwards;
City Ice &amp; Fuel, 179, S. T.
Spears, 456 E. Thompson;
Wayside, 194-499 Mary Ward:

Evelyn's, 173~, L. Henry
(sub); Jaymsr's, 191-489, L.
Swisher, Thompson's, 159426, C. Fulks ; Charlie's
Angels, 165, R. Niceswonger,
423 B. Allen; Citizens, 189-495,
B. Bernard; Moose, 191-613,
D. Nibert; Gillingham, 192468 S. Beverly.
Splits converted : 3-10, S.
Wright, S. Edwards, 0.
Casto; 5-10 B. Copley, B.
Bernard, L. Wilson; 4-5, C.
Roush ; 5-7, S. Edwards; 5-6,
L. Henry, V. Pyles; 4-7, S. T.
Spears, ~10, P; Ferguson,
B. Gennan; 9-10 and 3-9-10,
R. Stump; 2-7, B. Allen; 5-310, C. Fulks; 5-8-10, R.
Wallace.

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?
CALL CRISIS LINE.
GALLIA 446-5554
MEIGS 992-5554
JACKSON 286-5554

WELLSTON - Tailback
Curtis Jayjobn scored four
touchdowns Friday night in
pacing the Wellston Golden
Rockets to a 28-14 SEOAL
'

Fullback Brian Landrum
victory over the Jackson · Jackson "ls now 1-3 and 1-7.
smashing
the final two yards
Jackson surprised the large
Ironmen.
to
score
with Doby Wyant
. The triumph evened the crowd at Wellston by taking
kicking
the
extra point to give
Rockets' league record at 2-2 the opening kickoff and
the
lronrnen
a quick 7.0 lead.
driving
for
a
touchdown
with
and 6-2 in all games while
This score stood until the
third period when Wellston
exploded Jayjobn all over the
Irorunen as the swift halfback
scored on the first play of the
Centerville 24 Xef"!ia 20.
dale 0
Champion 19 Mathews 2
Day Belmont 19 Day. llbur
Cin Moeller 23 Cin Elder. 19 Wright o
Cln Princeton 24 Middletown
Day Carroll 21 Day Cham -Jul Indian Lake 0
10
.
6
Solon AO Chardor 0
Cin St Xavier 25 Cln Purcell a· Day
Dunbar
14
Day South
Central 22 Norwalk Sl
Cln Western Hills 21 Cin Fairview 0
Paul
0
Aiken 20
Day Wayne 25 Springfield S South Range 8 Columbiana 7
Cin Withrow 14 Walnut Hills 8 14
Southern Local 35 Stonton 0
Cin Woodard 22 Cin Hughes 0 DiKie 0 Tlpp City 0 (lie)
Sprlngfle~ N 18 Beavercreek
Claymont 28 Minerva 15
Dover 3 Ashland 0
8
.
.
.
Cte Heights 20 Lakewood 7 Dublin 27 Bexley 6
Springfield Cath 14 Versailles
• Cte South 20 Cle Lincoln West Eastlake North 21 Mentor 7 6
3
Eaton 13 New Miami 8
51 Marys 28 Wapakoneta 0
Clear Fork 29 Ashland Cresi- .Edgerton 34 Ottawa Hills 0 St Paris Graham 13 Miami E
view 0
Edon 24 Antwerp 0.
7
Col
Brookhaven
18 Elyria 20 Findlay 14
Teays Valley 13 Greenfield
Cambridge 6 ·
Elyria Calh 10 Bedford McClain 8
Col DeSaies 10 Col Watterson Chanel 0
Tiffin Columbian 34 Norwalk
7
Euclid 14 ·Mayfield 10 ·
22
Col Westland 10 Worthington Fairbanks 26 Riverside 8
Tinora .14 Ayersvllle 7
0
Fairborn Park Hills 12 Trot · Tol Whitmer 49 Bedford.
Coldwater 36 Minster 14
wood o
!Michl 30
Colerain 25 Norwood 0
Fairfield 20 Hamilton Taft 7
Woodward 22 Tol
Colonel
Crawford
20 Forest Park 47 Anderson 0 Tol
DeVIlbiss
12
Ridgedale 9
Fort Frye 9 Hannibal Rive r 0 Trenton Edgewood JS Lemon
Columbia 21 Lorain Catholic 8 Fostoria St Wendelin . 21 51 Morroe 8
Conneaut 37 Ashtabula 14
. Marys 14
Trimble 28 Minford 14
Cory-Rawson 29 Arcadia 14 Fredericktown 14 Gallon Troy 19 O.y Stebbins 7
Coventry 10 Medina Highland Northmor 13
Tuslaw 14 Trlway 12
.
6
Geneva 20 Madison 0
Twinsburg
.
1
5
Kenston
7
Covington 43 St Henry 0
Genoa 28 otsego 7
Sandusky 7 Bellevue 3
Cuyahoga
His
20 Girard 7 Warren Kennedy 6 Upper
Urbana 35 Kenton Ridge 0
Independence 12
Grandview 16 Col Academy 9 Van Wert 42 Defiance 6
Day Aller 22 Day MeadQw·. Granville ,7 Licking Valley 0 Vandalia Buller 14 Tecumseh
Green 14 Copley 6
6
Greenhills 27 Lockland 0
Wadsworth 42 Strongsville 6

Friday's high school scores.
Friday's

Ohio !figh School
Fotitball Scores
United Press lntern•tiona'

Akron Buchtel 6 Akron Hoban
0
Akron Firestone 19 Akron
North 7
Akron

Kenmore

20

Akron

South )
Ansonia 3 National Trail 0
Ashland ( Ky) 34 Portsmouth
12

Avon Lake 27 Fairview Park

26
Barbarlon 33 Toledo Scott 0
Bay Village 26 Rocky River B
Beallsville 27 Caldwell 6
Bellbrook 20 Northr idge 8
Bellefonta ine 15 Spring
Northeastern 0
Belpre 26 Vln.ton County 6
Berea 7 Shaker Heights 0
Berkshire 21 Newbury 3
Bethel 56 Preble Shawnee 0
Blanchester 38 Kings 0
Bloom Carroll 15 Fairfield
Union 0
Bradford 14 Twin Valley S 8
Brookville 18 Valley View 6
Bryan 28 Holgate o
Cardington
21
Sparta
Highland 7
.
Carey 15 Marion Elgin 12
Celina 9 Delphos St . John 0

Groveport 27 Westerville

South 0
Heath 16 Utica 12
Hemlock Miller 33 Southern
Meigs 0
·
Hilliard 32 Mount Vernon 6
Hubbard 35 Warren Howland
0

.

Huron 7 Sandusky Perkms 0

indian Valley N 20 Jewltl ·
Sclo 7

Warren Local20 Alexa rider 14
Wauseon 35 Swanton 0

Wayne Trace 21 Hicksville 8
Waynedale 28 Hillsdale 6
West Geauga 29 Aurora 0
West Jefferson 42 Oientangy 0
West Liberty Salem 28
Mechanicsburg 7
Westerville
North

14

Whitehall 0
Wickliffe 28 University
Kent Roosevelt 33 Lora in School 14
Southview 6
. Willoughby South 14 Bedford
Kel Fairmont E 40 Kel 0
Fairmont W 20
Woodridge 20 Streetsboro 8
Keystone 21 South Amherst 7 Wynford 12 Marion Pleasant
Kirtland 7 Beachwood 0
12 (lie)
Kyger Creek 22 Symmes Wyoming 28 Finnertown 15
Valley 8
Youngs. Mooney 7 Boardman
Lake 7 Maumee 0
3
44 Licking Heights
Youngs Rayen 14 Youngs
7Lakewood
..
East 7
Lakewood St Edward 40 Youngs Ur~uline 29 Campbell
Walsh Jewell 12
Memorial 0
.
Lakota 29 Madison Butler 0 Zanesville 35 Grove City 0
Lancaster 7 Upper Arlington

7 &lt;tiel

. Leavittsburg

LaBrae

on the second play of the
third periqd on a 60 yard dash
fourth
quarter _when
with J elf Montgomery
quarterback Mark Jenkins
kicking the point alter to knot hit Rick Milburn with a 4 yard
the score at 7-7.
touchdown pass and Wyant
Three minutes later kicked the point alter.
Jayjobn burst over tackle and
Midway in the fourth
raced 41 yards for another
quarter Jayjobn scored on a
score with Montgomery ·
tl"o yard run and Mont·
making it 14-7.
gomery tied the placement.
The ~rorunen tied the score
With
four
minutes
remaining Jayjobn raced 15
yards for his fourth TD·of the
contest
and Montgoinery's
Local Bowling
kick made it 28-14.
The big wiri erased a
Wellston
losing streak that
Bowling BeUes
extended
back to 11161 wben
Bowling League
the
Rockets
posted a 28-6 win
Od. 20,1978
over
the
Ironmen
with an 8-8
SWullllgs
w.
L
.
tie
in
1973
sandwiched
in beTeam
38 18 tween.
Jack's Awning Sales
Jayjobn was the dominant
38 18
Bob's C..B Radio •
38 18 factor for Wellston as l)e
Derifield Jewelry
Wood's Truck Service 37 19 carried the ball 19 times for
32 34 195 yards as the Rockets
Federal Mogul No.I
29 27 rolled up 12 first downs, had
Federal Mogul No.2
28 28 250 yards rushing, and
Enchanted Mirror
26.30 completed one of three passes_
Ace High Music
20
36 for two yards.
•
Baird &amp; FuUer Realty
18
38
Jackson's
offense
sho-.yed
:
Blue Tartan
'to first downs, 160 yards rush, •
Smith &amp; Halley
Ashland ·
18 38 and hit on six of 11 passes for:
••
74 yards.
High bowlers this week:
Fullback Brian Landrum :
Jack's Awning Sales, Cathy
was the workhorse as he:
Van Winkle 426-152.
Enchanted Mirror, carried the ball 28 times for •
Delphine Starling, 480-164. 107 yards in the losing effort. :
Next week
Wellston :
Baird and FuUer Realty,
journeys to Waverly while :
Linda Kubn, 412-152.
Federal Mogul No. 2, Kay Jackson entertains Ironton. :
· Gabritsch, 446-165.
•
Score by quarters:
Smith and Halley, Nellie Jackson
7 0 0 7-14 :
Jackson, 356-123.
Wellston
0· 0 14 14-28 ;
Wood's Truck, Sandy
:
Courtney, 425-171.
:
Derifield Jewelry, J u d y . . . - - - - - - - - - - , •
Isaacs, 532; Ruth Broivn 188.
PUBLIC. SALE
:
Blue Tartan, Ruth Sheley
:
415; Violet Cox 163.
"'OV 4
:
Federal Mogul No . 1,
SAT., 11 • •
•
Peggie Combs 409; PoUy
10:00 A.M .
:•
Swisher 162.
•
Bob's C-B Radio, Virginia
On Premises of
:
Grover 488-157.
GLADYS
MILLER
•
Aee High, Jennifer Harris,
·
:
458-160.
·
ESTATE
:
Splits picked up : Ola Roach
:
the 5·7; Shirley Sergent the 4- At Water1oo, Ohio, Rt. 141. .:
10.
Rototiller, lawn mower, •
tools, smaU hand tools.
:
•

3'
Llsboo 13

Crestvi~w

Logan Elm
Winchester 0
London 20
SHa~nee

14

6

Canal

Springfield

6

Loudonville 42 Plymouth 0

Louisville 18 N Canton 16
Loveland 22 Glen Esle 6
Lyndhurst Brush 2l Maple
Heights 12
Madison Plains 7 Hillsboro 6
Mansfield
Mad iso n 31
Wooster o
Mansfield
Malabar
14
Hamilton Twp 6
Marietta 17 Newark 14
Marion 27 Fremont 0
Mar ion Harding 27 Fremont

Glenwood
• Two- toned embossed
su r1ace
• w asha ble
• 12" x 12" tile

• 12" " 12" l llfl
, Embossed
, Acoustical

29~

35'
aq. ll

All prices shown are
regular retail onces.
TheJ will be
discounted 10% with
· coupon below.

sq. II.

Ross 0
Marion Local 25 Parkway 13
· Marlington 6 Glen Oak 0
Marlins Ferry 12 Bellaire St
Johns 10
Mason 26 Spr ingboro 16
Massillon Jackson 14 Canton
Tlmken 0
,
Massillon Perry 41 Cln Tall 0
Massillon 7 Warren Harding 7
(lie)
Maysfield 21 Tri Valley 0
McComb 20 Arlington 18 ...
Meadowbrook 32 Shenandoah

~lami

By Gng BaOey
VINTON- Eastern aU but
sewed up the Southern VaUey
Athletic Conference cham·
pionship . here Friday night
with a convincing 42-20
victory · over North Gallia.
The win gave the Eagles of
Coach Joe Mitchem a 4-0
conference record with just
winless Southern left in
league play.
Eastern's offense rolled up
391 total yards paced by
senior tailback Randy
Browning's three touchdowns
and 97 yards on the ground.
FuUback Dan S~ncer also
had a good evening gaining 93
yards on 19 carries and adding two six points.
North ·Gallia's Stacey
Winston put on a one man
show as he scored all three
Pirate touchdowns and
collected 90 yards on just five

carries.
extra point pass to push the
The speedster scored on a Eagles ahead, t4-6. Neither
32-yard fumble recovery run, team could reach the end
a 52-yard pass from quar- zone in the second period.
terback Sam Smith, and a 53Eastern came out of the
yard run latt in the game.
locker room " fired up" for
Ruuning back Tim Howell the second half and soon put
also had a fine night , the game under wraps .
.
collecting 91 yards on 21 tries .
Wit!l 5:43 to go in the third
Winston also caught all three period, Hayman caught a 20Pirate passes for 82 yards, yard scoring strike from
Eastern mounted a 65-yard Eagle quarterback Brian
drive in the first quarter and Bissell. Mark Norton caught
drew first blood at the 8:06 the extra point pass to make
mark when
Browning it 22-6. But two minutes later,
crashed over from the one. Browning scored on a fourBut two minutes !:iter,
Winston recovered an
Eastern fumble and ran the
pigskin all the way back to
knot the score, 6-6.
Spencer gave th~ Eagles
the lead for good when he
MILLER - Uru :,itreet
rounded out the first quarter scored four touchdowns and
with a 20-yard run to paydirt. ru,shed for 148 yards as host
Mike Hayman caught the Miller beat an improved
Southern Tornado club
Friday, 33.0. Miller scored 20
first quarter points and
coasted to the victory.
Street scored all three first
quarter touchdowns on runs
of 48 yards, 22 yards, and 7
yards. In the second period
Matt Sanford scored on a 14For all conditions
yard run with Mike Lanning
kicking the extras. Then in ·
SACRO·l LIAC
the third period Street scored

z

.

2

SACRO·LUMBAR

0

u

z

POST-OPERATIVE
Des igned to fit all ligure types-Made to last - comfQrtable to
wear. Desig ner collection
available . Trained fitters to

seNe you.

ASTA Certified Facility
Medicare - Compensation UMW, and all
other third party payee.

Rilne
llnap»f:)e
Phone 446-2206
Spring Vaney Plaza

--

WITH COUPON

z

~ON ALL 1978 MODEL DATSUN$

Trace·40 Circleville 0

Milford 25 Deer Park 6
MI~--Radn.._ Southern 0
Millersport 16 Amanda

Clearcreek 7

Millon Union 17 O.kwood 0
Mineral Ridge 7 Springfield
Local 6

Grenoble
12" "12" tile
Embossed

23

Mogadore 20 Youngs North 6
Mohawk 30 Riverdale 28
Monroeville 16 Sullivan Black

4

12 "1l2A" tile

sq. 11 .

214

Montpelier 41 Archbold 27
Mount Gilead 43 Centerburg 7
Napoleon 14 Port Clinton 13
Nelsonville York 23 Federal
Hocking 8
New Albany 29 Jonathan
Alder 21

sq. II

New

London

19

Collins

Western Rsv 0

New
Philadelphia
Coshocton 0
Newark Cath 14 Walkins
Memorial 0

Wlndstone
• Tex tu red-plaste r design
• Washable viny l surface

$216
2' x 4' panel

MONEY· SAVING COUPON!

}Q% mscoum

• Two-toned eltect

• Acoustical

$ S6

2

THIS COUPON ENTITLES YOU TO A 10%
SAVINGS ON ANY ARMSTRONG CEILING IN
STOCK GOOD
THRU 11/4

2 I 4' P8ntl
1

Nor don ia 14 Slow 0
North College Hill 6 Taylor 0
North Olmsted 24 Medina 10
North Royalton 3 Brunswick 3
(lie)
North Union 12 Big Walnut 7
North mont 20 Miamisburg 12
Northwest Ha.mII ton 20 Ml
Healthy o
Northwestern Wayne 15
Smithville 14 ·'
Northwood 54 Deerfield
(Michl 8
Oak Hills 10 Cln Turpin 0
Olmsted Falls 20 Westlake 7
Orange 34 ChaQrin Falls 27
Oregon Clay 23 Fostoria 9
Orrville 15 West Holmes 0
Painesville Harvey 21
0

675-1160

Point Ple1s1nl

5 p.m: Monday-Friday - 8 a.m.-12 noon Saturllay

** 810
B 210

.

Reading 40 Harrison 0
Ridgewood 24 Garawav 7
Salem 37 Youngs Wilson 8
Sandusky 16 Mansfield Sr 0
Shelby 9 Willard 6
Sheridan 13 River View 8
Sherwood Fairview 20 Hilltop

0

.

Sidney 41 Piqua 0
Sidney ~e hma!' Cath, 13

1

' R io

vs. Ashland

"WHILE
THEY
LAST!!!

NEW YORK iUPli - The
New York Yankees and the
Association For a Better
New York have launched a
campaign featuring a theme
"The Yankees Root for New
York" and the participation
of some of the world champions' World Series heroes .
The prog ram was con·
ceived by George Stein·
• brenner, principal owner of
the · Yankees, and Lewis
Rudin, chairman of th e
Association For a Better New
York. The latter is composed
of prominent New Yorkers .
The creative work for the
ad and poster campaign is
being donated free of charge
by a prominent New York
advertising agency.

HOME Of QUALITY
USED CARS &amp;

TIUUS
;u.Nr The Atlte WlfW S..."

2Stli St•• W,in. Avt.
Ashland, Ky.

.

Pa ssi ng
121
82
Total Yards
391
167
Pa ss. Cmp . !cp . 12 · 7- 1 JJ .J .J
Penalty yds
7·65 9 -85

Fumbles-Lost
0-0
1·0
Scoring: (E) Browning , I
yara run. run ta iled, 8: 06 ( 1) ;

( NG I

Win ston ,

tumble,

32

yd s, r un 'lailed , 6: 20 ( 1) ; (E (

20

TAKES 2-11 LEAD
BOGOTA, Colombia (UP!)
- Colombia took a 2-11 lead
over Venezuela Saturday in
their Davis Cup Elimination
Series when Jairo Velazco
defeated Humphrey Hose 63, 5-7, 6-4, 6-4 in the continuation of a singles match
suspended the previous night.
The match was tied at two
sets apiece with Velazco
leading 2-0 in the fifth and
Hose suffering from le g
cramps when time was called
Friday.

44
0

fa iled .

l oll

(3);

faile d. 3 011Jl ; f El Spencer,
I yard run . Hayman Pass,
9 :2 7 (4) ; ( El Brown ing , 12 yd
run , pass failed . 5:1 9 (4) ;
(NG) Winston , 52 yd . ru n .

FOR
MEN"

M
18
289
77

J.o

RJRockport

1.0

5·35 10-102

WHA Standin.,gs
By United Press Internationa l
W. L. T. Pts .
5

2 1

4
A

2 1

11
9

3 0

8

3
3
2
1

3
3
4
5

7
6
5
2

1
0
1
0

Quebe c
Indianapolis
Friday 's Results
Winnip eg 6, New England 4
Birmingham 4 , Indianapolis 2

Sunday's Games
Quebec at Edmonton
Cin ci nn ari at New England
Indi anap ol is at Wi nni peg

N HL Standings
Bv United Press International
campbell conference
Patrick Division

foot to spread out and i-etax .
It bend s where vou ben d and not
where fash ion dictate s.

1 3
2, 2
3 2

3
2
1

'J D r·., m c d . blu e, 6 cy l engin e, pow er
stoC' r inq rtn&lt;l t&gt;r o kcs, ilU i omCl t ic tr~ln s , .'1i r
conditi on inct, A M r .leli o, 1ntcr10r neco r
qroup , lrnlf'd qiFlSS, co mpff'IC' du;'l b ri9hl
1111rr ors, p1vo tr nq· · Ir an i ve nt wrndows,
ct r 1ux0 w t1cf'l covers, wt 11I C sictc w ,1 11 t ires .

51 . Louis

1
4 2
6 1

~ ~4bll

NOW

Montrea l
Detro it
Los Ange les

.1

3
3

2 1
2. 3
J 0

9
9
6

1 a 2

washington

a

P ittsburgh
1 4 2
4
Adams Oi\'ision
VJI· L. f , Pts.
Bos ton
5 1 2
12
Toront o
4 4 1
9
Buffalo
2 4 1
5

Minnesota
1 .3 2
Friday's Results
Atlanta 8, N . Y. Island er s 5
Detroit .5 , Co lor ado 2

A

NOW

United Press lnternationa I

Pori Huron

')S YLY

'5240

•

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

t Dr . Meet. blue. 6 cy l. engine. ilU torn n ti c
Iron s., p ower st eeri ng nn e~ ~r.lk es ,. clc tu.xe
)) Uil1PPr qroup , .trr co n clrlr oncr. rnlc rr or
rlecor qroup, ;1i r conclit ion L•r . i nh~ r io r
rtr co r p r oup, t i nt ed 91c1 ss , ctuill tJr Httlt mrr
ror~ . p iVo t in{l fr on t vent 'mndows. c!cl uxr

Dr . Scdn rl , M e t . Blue, o c yl

enqine,
s tee r ing &lt;lfl d brake s, .1 ut om o t ic
t r r111~., ilir co nclition i n ~L in tc r1 or df'cor cx
tcr10r ctccor grou p, AM radi o , push bu tt on
ctu{11 m.rror s, whit e sr de wall fires, r c ilr
ve nt s, pivoti ng ven t wi n dows . Stk . No. 766
-1

pawN

cover s Stk . No. LSS

w.u
)~ 4b8 .

NOW

00

NOW

'4830

NOW

'5190

1979 FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON

'J Dr Scd,ln , m c d hlu t• , o c yl . cnctr nc,
power s teenn g .1nd . brilk cs, au tom ,llrc
tr,1 ns .• air conclilionmq , 1\M FM r ndro,
tinted q lil SS bum per QUM CIS, PiVO IIIlg fr ont
vf' rl l w·i nclow s, r e~ r del ro ster , rnlrr rM n ncl

ctr ou p, ex 1er 1or ctrcor group, nir condit ion
rn9 , rnt c r ior decor Qroup . tint ed gla ss.

t' xt r ri or cll' cor qroup s. St k . No. l HI

prvo t inq fr o n l v en1 win dow s. Stk . No. 111

o cy l . en9in c, power stcer ir1q rm d b r ake s,
.Jutom ii t ic t rans., speed ce ntro! , nir co ndi
t ro n1ng , tug gagc rrtck , d f' IU XC' bumper

North
W L T P GF GA

2 2. I 5 28 24

Kalamazoo2

2 o tt

18

16

Saginaw 1 3 0 2 20 26
Fl ini ·
1 3 0 2 15 25
Muskegon o 4 o o l 28
Fort Wayne

wa s

'4880

1979 FORD FAIRMONT

INTERNATIONAL
HOCKEY LEAGUE

6 c·,.l c n cune, power stce r inq nnct br nkf'S,
iHJinrn,l li c trc1n s.. Ai r c ondllr OnlllCJ , Iron !
.1n c1 rea r bumpe r ctu J rcts , ~CCI'n l p a i n t
'i lrlpP s, r Nlr w1n ctow de frost e r , !miNI
ql,l SS. ctu.ll IJr rcH1t mrrrors. fJrv o t inq tr ont
V(•nt w rndows. v rn yl lf"'Sr rt !)Oct ¥ si de
nl o l dr n ~jS. interior .1nct rx l crr or ncn:nl
nroup Stk . N o. 66 1

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

w i1Cr"' l

'5100

NOW

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

sUnday's Games
P ittsburgh at N .Y Rangers
vancouv er at Ph ilad elphi a
Montreal at Chicago

6 c,-1. cnqinf', power stcc r inq rlnd b r ak es,
t r ~n S ., lll!f'rrOr c111cf e x ter iOr
clccor qroup , pivo t inn wrndows , trim r ing5
cln cl ti UtJCr'q J5 , vin yl IJocly SldC' mldg L ug
&lt;!MI C r r1 Ck, rli r conctii iOninu Stk . No . 49 0

rlUIOITI&lt;l f ic

'4830

'!Dr StodrJn , ru sse t metallic. 6 cy l. Pnctme ,
pawN s teer inq, p O'.Ner !J r ,l k es, rlUIOm.ltic
tr ,lnS .• canvcnif'ncc qro up , .1ir co nd i l ronrr ,.
/\M r.1ctia w itn s te reo t.lp&lt;', trnt cd ql ,l SS,
li9IH w oup, wire wh c&lt;'l covers, lJody si d c
m o ld inq . Stk . N o. 40

6
3

Norris Division
W. L. T. Pts.

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

7

Wales Conference

l

)

Slk . No . L~ ~
Wcl S

9
8
8

a

____

-~-

1978 FORD FAIRMONT

~ot'\ · p

GF GA

4 0 0 B 22
Toledo
3 0 1 7 22
Grand Rapids
3 1
7 18
Milwaukee I 2 1 3 17
Friday•s Results
Pori Huron 13 Muskegon
Toledo 8 Saginaw 5

10
12
12
20
0

Grand Rapids 6 Kalamazoo 1

Fort Wayne 7 Milwaukee s
Sunday's Games

Fort Wayne at Port Huron
Saginaw at Flint
M ifwa ukee at Ka la mzoo
Grd nd Rapids at Toledo

NOW 1

5590

NOW

'5960

SALESPERSONS
TOM SPRAGUE, MELVIN LITTLE, DEB HAMMACK,
GARRY RUDOLPH, PETE SOMERVILLE , NANCY FOWLER
SALES MANAGERS : BOB ROSS AND JACK ROUSH

.ORD SALES
Hr . wrecker Service
Phone:

~4

44C·lS.7S Ony
.Q4 td6 ~0

Niqht

361 Jackson Plke- Rt. 160 &amp; 35
Across from' Holzer Medical Center
Gallipolis, Ohio

-

J

I

CAFE

smce i ntroduc ti on

L. T. Pts .
J 0 J
9

Co lorado

SHOE
Lif:cslll Mil

•

I

:1

Ptove n sales leader in 1978. 1

w.

Va ncouver

THE

•Bated on sales of new nameplates

Smythe Division

Ch icago

If you th ink shoes sho uld be
com fortable. try th ese.
h's a g"rea t fee ling .

W. L. T. Pts .
6 0 2
14
3
3
3

Rockport's unique fl exible
Squash Com truction allows your

I•

Pro standings

Atlanta
NY Rangers
NY Islanders
Philadelphia

t NG)

Winston , 52 yd pass, extras

"IrS

SOVIETS WIN
STRASSBOURG. France
(UPI) - The Soviet Union' s.
Elena Noukhin a won the
Women's Combined Exercises Title at the 19th World
Gymnastics Championships
Saturday with 78.725 points.
The silver medalist was the
Soviet Union's Nelli Kim with
78.575 points and third was
another Russian competitor,
Nathalia Shaposhnikova with
77.875 .

·;

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Cincinnati Reds' utility infielder
Mike Lum has put himself on
the free agent list with Pete
Rose.
Lum, who turned 33 Friday,
batted .267 in 96 games last
seaso n. He ·played three
years with the Reds, and was
with Atlanta nine years
before that.
Both Lum and Rose plan to
participate in the free agent
draft Nov. 3.
LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (UP!) True Miss moved out three
horses wide in the stretch
Friday night to grab a neck
victory in the featured ninth
race at Lebanon Raceway.
Jacinth finished second and
Ms. Pebble came in third.
The winner, driven by Ray
Paver, covered the mile in
2:06 and returned $7.20, $3
and $2.80.

Edmonton

I E)

Howell extras, 4: 32 ( 41 .

0 0 0 o- 0
10 7 6 D-3l

Sou thern

Miller

LUM FREE AGENT

Bir mingh am
Ci ncinnati

(l) ;

Hayman from Bissell. 20 yd
pass. Norton pass, 5: 43 (3 ) ;
( E ) Browning , d yd run , e:.:tra

8- ?0

0

S
6.

Pena lty yards
By Quarters :

J.3 p.m .. Open Swim
7 -9 p .m .-Open Swim

New England
Winnipeg

run .

yar d

to 0 1&lt;1 1&lt;1- &lt;12

Fumbles-Lost

Close d

7.9 p.m .- Open Rec.

I Harold E . Thompson, Vice President and Cashier of the above-named bank, do
hereby declare that this Repurt of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge - - - - and belief.
Harold E. Thompson
October 24. 1978

',

6

East ern

Redmen vs . Wilmington

We the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabiliti~s. We delare that it has been examined by us, and to the best ol our knowledge and
beliei is true and correct.
·
John E. Halliday . ' ·
E. E . Null- Directors
Russell Wood

Phone
325 ..7703

185

Cl osed

Nov. S 1-3 p.m .- Open Rec.

Fed. funds sold and securities
purchased under agreements to resell . . : . ..... ......................... . 1,976,000.00
Total loans ........... .. .. .. . ......... . . . .. .. ...... .. . . ..... · · · · · · · · · 14,501,000.00
Total deposits .. . . .. ....... .. , . . . . .... ..... ..... .... . . ... .. .. . . . .. ..... 24,133,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ........ . ................. .. ... ..... .. . .......... . . . ... 26,939,000.00

· ----'--

Closed

R io vs. Wllmtngton &amp; Ohio Northern
1 p.m. Cross.- Country
Mid.Qhio Conference Championships
2 p.m . Basketba ll Scrimmage .

c

0
IIU
I

Closed

Nov . 4 Closed

..---...
.-.

•

Closed

&amp; Urbana

. Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps . . ....... . ..... . ..... . . $5,261,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individual s,
prtnshps., and corps ................ ... ... ....... ...... . ... .. . .. .. . . . . 15,570,000.00
lit
Deposits of United states Government . ... . ..... ... . . . .. ........ . . .... . ..... 396,000.00
IU
Deposits of States and political subdivisions .....•...... . .•.• ••••.••••. . . . .. 2,850,000.00
Deposits of commercial banks .... . ... . ..... .. . •. .. . ... .. •.• . ... ..... .... .... 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ... . ......... . ... .. . . .. .... ... .. .. ... . ......... 388,000.00
TOTALDOMESTfC DEPOSITS ..................... • ........ . ...... . . . . 24 ,470,000.00
ID
Total demand deposits .. . ............... . ....... ..... ......... 8,897,000.00
Total time and savings deposits .................. . .......... . . 15,573,000.00
Total Deposits·in Domestic and Foreign Offices ................... ....... . . 24 ,470,000.00
Other liabilities .. .. .. . . .. .. ... ... . ..... . .... ........ .. ... . .. . . .......... . . 30,000.00 --~TOTALLIABIIJTIES
:1·---1--- (excluding subordinated notes and debentures; . . ..... .. ....... . ..... .. .. $24,500,000.00
Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 1,000
b. No. shares outstanding 1,000
(par value I . ....... . ... ...... . ... . . .... 100,000.00
Surplus ............ : : . .............. .. .. . ... . .... . .. , . .. , . .......... . .. 2,250,000.00
· Undivided profits ... ... .. .. ............ . . ..... ... . . .. .. ... ..... ....... .... 317,000.00
Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves .... .. .. .. ................ . . 29,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL . .. . ....... . ............ . ........ . .. 1 .... .. . .. 2,696,000.00
TOTAL UABIIJTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ............ . ... . .. . ....... $27,196,000.00 - - - -

zIll(

Closed

Nov . 3 7 p.m. Volleyball

11·--~~-+-- A~::~:~~r::~~~tn~~s endi~g with ~~port. d~te .... .. ...... . .......... $3,S94,000.00

Parma Valley Forge 32 E Cie
Shaw 6
Patrick Henry 20 Delta 8
' Paulding
48
Convoy
CrFslview 0
Perry Stark 41 Cln Taft 0
Perrysburg 24 Rossford 0
Pickerington AO Berne Union
7
.
Portsmouth W 7 Portsmouth
town 0

* 510
** 280Z
Lil Hustler

SALE ENDS OCT. 31, 1978

.

E6

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY COMPANY

* 200SX

Gilmour 0
·
Parma Norm13ndy 23 Parma

Ravenna Southeast 3 Roots·

312 Sixth Street
Store Hours: 8 a.m. To

*F~10

River 7

270

Spencer ,

Hayman pass. 2o 40

connected on 4 of 9 passes for
77 yards. The team was
assessed 102 yards in
penalties.
Southern plays at Hannan
Trace this week.

NATATORIUM

Oct . 31 Closed . Athletic Practices
Nov , 1 Closed . lntramural s
Nov . 2 Closed . Intra murals

ASSETS
Cash andtlu.,from banks . . .... . .. . ....... . ............. . .. . .... •. .. . .... . $4,244,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ........ ................ .... . . .. .... . .. . ........ . .. 878,000.00
Obligations of other U.S. Gov 't. agencies and corps ...... . .. ... . . . . . . . .... . 1,800,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions . ... ............... ........... 3,579,000.00·
Other bonds, notes, and debentures ........ . ...... ... . .. , . .... ......... .. .... 99,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stoc-k ............... .... , . ... ......... : . . 71,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ... . . , .. .. .. . .... .... . . . .. . .............. .. . . 1,600,000.00
Loons, Total (excluding unearned income l . ... .. . ••.... . .. . .. .. 14,720,000.00
Less: Reserve for possible Joan losses . .. .. .. . .. . . . . .. .. .. . . . ..... t08,000.00
Loons Net . . ... . ....... . . ... . ........................ . .... .. . . -'· .. . . 14,612,000. 00
Direct l~ase financing .................. . ..... .. ..... ... .. ..... ............. 37,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures , and
other assets representing bank premises ..... . ........ . .. .. ................ 268,000.00
Real estate owned other than bank premises . .... .. ..... . ......... . ... . ........ 8,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS .... .. . . ...... .. .............. ... ..... . ... . ........... $27,196,000.00 - - - -

8 COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON

Rushing

Total yards
44 366
Pass. -Cmp .- lcp. 10·10-1 9·4-0

DATE-GYMNASIUM
Oct. 30 Closed Alhletlc Practices

of Gallipolis In the slate of Ohio, at the dose of husiness on September 30. l978 published in
rcsp&lt;msc to eall madt• b)' Comptroller of tht• Curm11y, under lith• 12. Umtt•d Slates Codt·.
Sel'finn 161. .
Charter numher 136
National Bank Region Number 4

.

8

?1

. ~Y Quarters:

No. Ga lll a

Passi ng

Rio Grande College
Week of Oct. 30 , 1978

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

:::)

NG

E

Fir st Downs

'

PAUL R. LYNE CENTER

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

8
z
2
8

After four straight shutouts
t urn ed in by the Eagle
defense, the Pirates were the
first team to score on them in
the last five games.
Coach Mitchem -attributed
the win to good teamwork and
pride.

First Downs
Rushing

REPORT OF CONDITION

~s
· .

interceptions. Norton did well
as he gained 47 yards in ten
tries .

minutes to go in the game, he
raced 52 yards for another
score. This lime Howell
added the extras, and the
game ended 42-20.
Eastern now sports a 7-1
record while North Gallia is
'H. Eastern was ranked 12th
in last week 's computer
ratings in the region.
Eagle quart erback Bissell
had a fine night with 7 or 12
completions. He also intercepted a Pirate aerial
while Browning had two more

10 a.m. Volleyball

launch campaign

ABDOMINAL

Minerva 16 Black River 7

@ matrong
Washable While

New Yorkers

DORSAL· LUMBAR

529 Jackson Pike

when with four

excitment

the last TD on a 29-yara · were 0 for 10 passing with one
scamper.
interception .
Southern was held to a net
Miller had 18 first downs
44 yards, none passing. They and 366 total yards . Starting
were assessed 35 yards in quarterback John Fauchs did
penahies and lost .none of not play because of an injury.
their three fumbles . They The reserve quarterba ck

Surgical Support Garments

_UPON8

REBATE I

:::)

yard scamper and the Eagles
had the game, ·2&amp;-6.
But th e Pirates didn't
surrender! Winston snagged
a 52-yard aerial with 3:021eft
in the third quarter to make
the score 28-12·after the ex'
tras failed.
At the 9 :27 mark of the last
period, Spencer crashed over
from the one and Hayman
caught a pass for the extras.
Then four minutes after that ,
Browning raced 12 yards to
put the icing on the cake .
Winston · provided mor e

So.u thern drops 33-0 decision

MEN AND WOMEN.!S

..

20

Lakeview 6

Lebanon 26 Franklin 6
Liberty Benton 40 Vanlue 0
Liberty Center 27 Evergreen

Eastern all but clinches SVAC grid title

.

..

�-- .
~

C-4- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel , Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

Athens wins
By Greg Bailey
POMEROY
After
gaining 456 yards against
Gallipolis last week, the
Athens offense came to a
screeching halt Friday night
when they met the Meigs
Marauders in Pomeroy.
But the Bulldogs didn't
need any yards at aU because
a fourth period safety gave
them a 2-{) win over the host
Marauders of Coach Charlie
Chancey. That win gives
Athens sole possession of
second pla ce in the. SEOAL
with Meigs close behind.
On paper, Meigs clearly
dominated the ball game. The
Marauders outgained Athens
210 yards to just 84 and had 14
first downs compared to just
· seven for the Bulldogs.
The tenacious Meigs
defense gave up just four first
downs in the first half and
three in the second. While
holding the SEOAL's leading
rusher, Jack Smathers. to
just 59 yards in 19 carriers,
they let Smathers get just 19
in the first half. Meigs also

SALES &amp;
ACCESSORIES
Large Selection Of

TRUCK TOPPERS
NOW IN STOCK

LOWMAN
TRAVEL TRAILERS

2~0

on safety

held the leading pa ss with three seconds left on the
With 2:30 left in the contest
receiver, John Schan· dock when Ashley's punt was once again Meigs' back was
zenbach, to just one reception blocked and the pigskin was against the wall on their own
returned by an Athens player three-yard line. But they ·
for 10 yards.
Meigs kicked off to Athens, to the Meigs 20 yard line. weren't dead. Ashley took to
. and the Bulldogs gained only With three seconds left the air and hit Larry Stewart·
two yards in three tries. The Schanzenoach 's field goal try for 21 yards out to the 24. Bob
ensuing punt came to rest on was wide to the right.
Seelig caught another aerial
The third quarter started for 6 to the 30 and Stout got
the Meigs 42-yard line.
Meigs did little bett er, similar to the first half. An one to the 37. A fumble,
losing one yard in three at· exchange of punts found penalty, and· an incomplete
tempts, and they were forced Meigs with the ball on their pass gave Meigs.a third down
own 40. Stout got 10 yards, and 16 on the 31. Stout caught
to punt.
On the next series, Athens then Fields picke(l up 15. Five an aerial for 12, but with 50
got the first first down of by Becker and an inoportant seconds left a pass to Stewart
the game when Smathers 15 by Van Willford placed the fell incomplete 11nd Athens
chocked up nine yards . With ball on the Athens 15 and a ran out the dock.
the ball on the Meigs 46, first down. On two carries
Ashley, still leading the
Athens was forced to punt. Willford got live. Ashley got
in passing, completed
league
The' teams excha nged three to the seven. With 4:51
12
of
24
attempts for 115
·
remaining
in
the
third
period,
downs and Meigs got the ball
yards.
Fields
was Meigs'
got
just
one
Greg
Becker
back after a punt on their oWn
leading
rusher
with
59 white
32-ya rd line. Marauder fresh· yard when he needed three,
stripes
in
13
tries.
Greg
man quarterback Bob Ashley and the Meigs drive was
Becker
had
23
and
Van
then hit John Stout for 12 stalled .
Willford
22:
The Meigs defense came
yards and a first down.
Seelig caught 5 passes lor
Sophom ore fullback Jerry through again , and on three
46
yards, and Stout caught 3
Fields then took charge on carries Athens got zero, two,
for
29. Becker had 3 for 16.
three straight plays. lie got and zero . yards and had to
Smathers
led Athens with
12, 12, and I to give Meigs the punt. But a good punt by Scott
his
59
yards
and closest to
ball on the Athens 31 yard Adams gave Meigs the llall at
him
was
iobnson
with 11.
line . But two passes fell in· midfield.
Quite
a
testinoony
to the
With five minutes left in the
complete and M~ igs punted it
Meigs
defense
!
Ross
com·
game,
an
Adams
punt
put
into the end zone.
pleted
just
I
of
7
attempts.
Meigs
on
their
own
four-yard
Athens took over on the 20
Meigs is 5·3, 3·2 in the
and two penalties and three line. Becker got nine and
league.
Athens is 6·2, 4-1 in
plays later found them on the Fields two for a first down on
the
lea
gue . Next Friday
16, a loss of 4 yards. Middle the 15. But Athens got stingy,
Meigs
entertains
Galllpolis
guard Tino .Faulk sacked · and at the 4:30 mark Meigs
.
while
Athens
travels
to
Athens quarterback Fred lined up to punt. The snap
Wellston
for
a
hot
contest.
Ross for a 12-yard loss for the from center sailed over
Ashley's head and out of the · After next week the two
big play .
The clock showed 9: 12 left end zone and suddenly Athens teams could again be tied for
in the second quarter. Nine found themselves ahead 2-{). second place.
minutes of that tinoe was
spent exchanging punts,
But Athens got a chance

Athens in 6-6 tie

...

•

-.
-

Meigs Aln
First Downs

1&lt;4

7

Yards rush ing
95 74
Pass .-Aip ..Cm p. 24-12 7-1
Pass lncp
2
1
PassYards
115 10
Total yards
210 84
Scrimmage plays
57 SO
Fumbles -Lost
2 -~ 2·1·
Pena ll y yards
5 ~'3s "4-40
Punts . 7-204·2'1.1 9-289-32.1

s .
Use
e
hiS
Fo
'f . necJ Kn"lt
Purltal1C ..,f0 rlII "ll1FaShiO
.
0 11 c Fu _, .
h
Soft "fiou

1'\1 J

n

GALLIPOLIS - Coach Bob
Lutz's Ironton Tigers took
another step toward the 1978
Southeastern Ohio League
football championship by
defeatin g a determined
Gallipolis Blue Devil squad,
36-8, on Memoria l Field
Friday niglit.
It was Parents' Night for
the home team. More than
2,000 fans witnessed the
cont est, play ed in a sea of
mud.
,' 'Our boy~ nf've r gave up.

•

Bv Quuters :

Meigs
0 0 0 1)4)
Athens
.
0 o o 2-2
INOIVIDUAL STATISTICS
~ushing
Alt. Yds Avg
Fields
13 59 4.5
Becker
10 23 . 2.3
Willford
4 22 5.5
Stout
2 10 5.0
Blake
:1 3 1.5
Ashley
2 ·3 · 1.5
Totals
33 95 2.9
ATHENS
Smathers
19 59 3.1
Johnson·
8 11 1.4
Wilham
4 9 2.3
Kranyik
2 6 3.0
Ross
9 -1 2 -1.3
Totals
40 74 1. 9
PASSING
Ash ley
Ross

Meigs
A

C

P

24 12 115
Athens
7
1 10
RECEIVING
P y

SeeliQ

ALL GAMES
TEAM
w L T P
Ironton
e 0 0 253
Coal Grove 7 2 0 284
Well st on
6 2 0 165
Athens
6 2 0 94
Me i ~s
5 3 0 120

'

I

Pt.

2

leasant

Wa ver ly

.

A

5 46 9.2

Rock Hill

Belpre
Ja ck son

'
GALLIA'SN'
·
in Frida
,
tckR0 b'UJSOn(24 ) caughtfivepassesfrom
QB Greg Harrington for 75' yards
Y s SEOAL contest . G1vtng cbase on right is Ironton's Darwin Conwell (60). ·

29 9.6
1 24 24.0
3 16 5.3
Becker
Totals
12 115 9.6
Athens
Schanzenbach
1 10 10.0
Stout

We played much better this
week," · remarked Coach Bill
Trent following the hard·
fought contest.
Ironton's speedy backfield
picked up 364 net yards
rushing in 45 attempts.
The Tigers displayed a
well-balanced attack, led by
Terry Roya l's 195 yards in 12
trips .
After GAHS marched 50
yards to Iront on's 21
following the opening kickoff,

Grid standings.

3

Stewart

Holter shines
. 30£
.
m
-u wm

The boss s~ys we have
ideas just like those new
.razors •• compl e te ly
disposable.

. ONE.QN.QNE IN MUD- Athens' John Riggs (45 ) brings down Meigs' Bob Seelig ( frl)
on this play during Fl iday's Meigs-Athens SEOAL contest at Marauder Stadium. Athens
won, 2-0.

EAST . MEIGS - Mark
Holter rusbed for 1(() yards,
Hartford. W. Va .
Rl. 33
two touchdowns, and two
Phone882·2127
.. extra ~ints as the Eastern
Juni 0r High football team
trounced Hannan Trace 3~
Thursday night. That win
gave Eastern a perfect 64l
WELLINGTON .
season
for 1978.
In
the
hard-fought
contest
MIDDLEPORT
Dave
Gaul led the defense
that
was
played
in
rain
and
Thursday night the Meigs
with
10
tackles. Holter also
mud,
both
defenses
shone
.
SAFETY TOE
Eighth Grade football team
played
defense
well with nine
Meigs
defense
was
led
by
battled visiting Athens to a &amp;,
tackles,
Brian
Well and
Mike
Jackson,
Eddie
Blount,
6 tie after scoring ·on their
Oeron
Jewett
had
eight
Brill
King,
Fife
and
Pickens.
first possession.
tackles
eacti,
Gerald
Watson
The
tie
gives
the
Eight
Grade
Meigs bad its only points
scored when on their first team a season record of 2-2·1 had six, and Jimmy Carter
·
possession they drove the with their final game at had five .
David
Durst
also
had
a
fine
Gallipolis
on
Thursday.
field. The drive was led by the
night
as
he
rushed
for
80
In
the
second
game
of
the
Mon. &amp; Fri.
blocking of Mike Hawk, Bill
yards
ani!
also
two
touch·
junior
high
doubleheader,
tiiBp.m.
Holcomb, Brian Spencer ,
Tues., Wed., Sal. filS.
Seventh
Grade downs and two extra points.
Craig Bolin, and Tim Justis. Meigs
Thurs, til
defeated Chauncy ·Dover ~ . Well and Holter each were
End
Scott
Pickens
collected
a
12 noon
Rick Chancey pass on a Jon Perrin again led the· responsible for one safety.
B-D· EE
crucial third down to set up a winners with - 180 yards Well and Billy McClure each
first and goal situation. Two rushing and two touchdowns. recovered a fwnble .
8 8 6 8-30
plays later, fullback Todd Fullback Chris Burdette was Eastern
. _WOLVERINE 10" ·
HT
0006-6
very
sure-handed
in
the
Fife moved the ball within
WESTERN BRAZOS
muddy
field
conditions
and
one foot of the goal line and
Rick Chancey's quarterback collected a touchdown and
BOOT
sneak gave Meigs the lead, (). extra point.
Merritt paces
Tan, tough oil-tanned
Quarterback Nick Riggs
cowhide ,
0. The try for the extras
scored the final TO for Meigs
Welt construction
failed.
Oil proof sole and hee I
The visitors scored in the on an end run. Eddie Bishop Tigers victory
Full c:ushion insole
third quarter after a long also scored a PAT on an endSteel shank arch suDDOrt
march but failed on the PAT. around. Fine performances
NEW CONCORD, Ohio
Meigs threatened with just were also turned in bv Andv (UPI) - Senior tailback
Iannarelli,
Shawn
Eads,
· :20 showing on the clock with
Dave Merritt rushed for 143 ·
a fourth and goal on the nine· Dave Follrnd, Jay Evans, yards and one touchdown
Randy
Carl,
Bryan
Zirkle,
yatd line. Chancey 's pass to
Powell,
Vaughn Saturday to l~d Wittenberg
Pickens was complete, but a John
to a ~~0 . Ohio C~nference
procedure penalty nullfied Spencer, Jino Farley, Dave Blue. Dtvtston wt~ over
Barr, Dave Roush and Bobby
the winning score.
Muskingum, ass~mg the
Southern.
:r;gers
a sixth strmght berth
The win upped the squad's
mthe
OC
champtonshtp game
record to 3-1 with the only loss
at
Berea
Nov. 11.
coming at the hands of
Quarterback .Chuck
Belpre . A rematch of the Delaney passed for two
Meigs-Belprecontestwillbe touchdowns to Cliff Davis of
ol tne the fmal season game on
22 and 55 yards to break open
0111
are some lee\ October 30 at Belpre.
9
3-{) first quarter lead.
a
e lit. Tnes
nits .\nev
Muskingum answered the
custo!!1·\i\&lt;.d salt \oUCn \&lt;. cry\iC SO
SOONERS ROMP
first Da~ touchdown with a
o~ement . . I lasn•one
Orion® a
31J..yard held goal by Jamte
.
. easY m j puritan'S IUid are \&lt;.nit I rom n and d f· r
• na
NORMAN, Okla. (UP!) - M&lt;rckel to cut the deficit to
enaPe retentlo:ct~antages o casn mere an·re (!1acnine v-~as
H~1sm~n trophy prospect 10-!l at halftime, but the
"
111\e
tneY
,.,.,....
B1lly Suns rushed for 202 second Delaney to Davis' TD
yards and two touchdowns early in the third quarter sent
Saturday a nd reserve the undefeated Tigers to their
quarterback J · C. Watts also seventh straight vict&lt;ry this
scored twtce to pace top· sea
ranked. Oklahoma to an easy T~;· Joss dropped the
56-19 Btg 8Conference victory Muskies to 1-3 in the division
over Kansas State.
and 2-4-l overall.

Meigs eighth grade,

Ironton remains Unbeaten

•

Marauder

SACRED HEART CHURCH
BAZAAR

gals upset

SEE WHY
RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE

..

COMMUNITY
COUEGE
IS THE
BEST

POMEROY , OHIO

NOVEMBER 2, 1978

Ironton

Games &amp; Fancy Stands
Cream ed Baked Chicken and Ham Dinner .

ROCK SPRINGS - Good
teamwork and excellent
serving helped the Meigs
STARTS AT 4:30 P.f?1.
Girls' Volleyball team upset
Ironton easily on Thursday.
Adults $3.00- Children $1.50
With the team serving 92
percent, Meigs took the . . ...-M....M ..+..-M++~M..+H,..,..
match in two games. 15·7 and
15·9. That · r aised Meigs'
league record to 4·2 and their
overall record to 14-0. The FREE FLOW - THE _E:LM-FREE FLOWloss knocked Ironton out of ~ Quality Wood &amp; Cool Heaters
~
the championship picture.
That Warm Your Home
,.: .
Beth Bar(rum, Dodie
Chapman, and Tonia Ash all · x
Not Your Pocketbook.
~ ·served 100 percent. Terri m
o ·
0 '
Wilson served 15 ol17, Cherie ~
Lightfoot 6 of 7, and Sonia Ash
~
I:
7 of 8, All members of the x
n
,
Marauders' spiked well with m
~
Dodie Chapman leading with
.
~
10 for 10 and Wilson 7 for 7. ~
Wood
Model
C-60
••••••••.
$350
:;;
Meigs. enteres its tour·
-&lt;
nament
Tuesday · at Wood &amp; Coat Model 7150 $360
Nelsonville-York against
1 Blowers ••..••.• ••••• •••• SSO
·
Alexander. Game tinoe is a G'l Economy Hf.2S •••••••••••••••••.•••••••••• $185
o'clock, the third game of the ;(!
evening.
The reserves fell to Ironton
in three games, losing 15·7 in -t~
the first and third games, and ~~~ ~
WORTH 125.00 OFF WITH COUPON
m•
wining 15 to 9 in the second.
..-;
ON ANY ASHLEY
Their overall record is 3·3 and mi
(')
the league record is 2·3.

g

Redmen swamp Wilmington
RIO
GRANDE
Sophomore Ben Junk 's
course record and an overall
solid team performance
powered the Rio Grande
Cross Country team to a win
over Wilmington College.
Taking six of the first eight
places, Rio Grande defeated
Wilmington 17-41.
Rio Grande, in the process
of rebuilding a youthful group
of runners back to the
strength of a tearri which
competed in last year's
national championships, ran
four sophomores, one fresh·
man and one senior in th e

C. K. SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, o.

Phone 446-4290

"See me for a State Farm Homeowners
Policy with Inflation Coverage.''
Like. good neighbor,
Slate Fann is there.

Sllllll= hrrn ft&lt;r
•I!Citfil.wlttr ~r

.

~t~me

O!fa· !lloomononn. 1111 r~~~~~

nnuu,,.u

p 711ll

Wilmington meet.
Rio Coach Bob Willey,
commenting on the victory,
said, " With a group as young
as we a re, you work all year
trying to get them to run as a
team, to push each other.
This was just a super effort ."
Tinoe and pl;~ees for the Rio
runners were 1st, Ben Junk,
26:58 ; 2nd and 3rd (tie) , Sam
Mohler and Mark Fox, 28:20;
5th, Jeff Elick, 30 : 10; 6th,
Tab Huff, 31 :27; and Bth, Tim
Willis, 33: 12.
THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPI) - Jockey Mike Moran
guided Auburn Corners to
victory in Friday 's featured
eighth race at Thistledown.
The winner covered the six
furlongs in 1:14 ~ over an off
track to pay $7 .20, $4 and
$3.60. Key Reason placed and
Native Highness showed.
Erisa and Dainty Banquet
rettirned $66 on the 10.1 daily
double, and there were 182
winning tickets on the 9-U
grouping of J . Pop, Old Cy
and Harbour Boss in the ninth
race trifecta - each worth
$261.90.
Attendance was 3,148 and
_U!e handle totaled $413,592.

Gallipolis
Lo8an

5

0
4 4 0
3 5 0
3 5 0
2 7 0
2 7 0
0 7 1
4

OP
61
100
119
)07
92

125 124
104 92
135 120
109 109
58 . 155
71 233

ct . 27 resu Its :
Ironton 36 Gallipo l is 0

SEOALONLY
TEAM
w L T p OP
Ironton
s 0 0 144 35
Athens
4 1 0 70 63
Meigs
3 2 0 88
Well ston
3 2 0 l'l ~l
Jackson
2 3 0 50 77
2 3 0 so 66
Waver ! ~
Ga lli po IS 1 4 0 52 117
Loga n
0 5 0
0 10
Totals
20 20 0 526 526
Nov. J Games :

Ga l li polis at M eig s
Ironton at Jackson
67 Logan at Athens
1 Well ston at Waverly
Belpre at Alexander

6

Athens 2 Meigs 0
Well ston 28 Ja ckson 14

Oak Hil at Rock Hil l

Fairland at Coa l Grove
Waverly 2 Logan o (forfeit) Sissonv ille at Pt. Pleasa nt
Ra venswood 23 PI. Pleasant o

Coa l Grove 39 Rock Hill 0
Bel pre 26 Vi nton County 6

Colorado nips
Missouri, 28-27
COLUMBUA, Mo. (UPI ) Quarterback Bill Solomon
passed 147 yards in the
second half and third-string
fullback Eddie Ford scored
two touchdowns to lift
Co lorado to a 26·27 upset
victory Saturday over 16thranked Missouri.
Solomon was a disastrous 3
of 8 passin g for 24 ya rds in the
first half as his Buffaloes fell
behind 14·7. Th e favored
Tigers ad\fed two more
touchdowns before seven
minutes had expired into the
third period on a 60.yard pass
from Phil Bradley to James
Wilder and a 2-yard run by
Ferry Ellis to take a 27·71ead.
Then · the junior quar·
terback took over.
Solomon drove the Buf·
!aloes 80 yards in eight plays ,
completing 3 of 4 passes for 56
yards, with F&lt;rd scooting in
for his first touchdown from 7
yards out.

Solomon directed the Buffs
80 ya rds in nine pla ys to pull
within six points as he took it
in himself from the 12 with
8:22 . left in the game. He
completed three passes on
consecutive plays to tight end
Greg Howard for 48 yards to
keep the drive alive.
Mike Davis then returned a
Jeff Brockhaus punt 22 yards
to the Missouri 44 to set up the
go-a head t o uchdow n.
Solomon hit Kazell Pugh with
a 16-yard pass on the firsl
play , Jeff Horn berger swept
left' end for 12 yards on the
second play and Ford went
the final16 yards on the third
·
play for the lead.
Solomon finished the day 12
of 22 lor 171 yards, hitting his
fin al fiye passes in a row to
help the Buffs snap a twogame losing streak and end
Missouri 's three - game
winning streak. Colorado is
now 6-2 and Missouri 5·3.

Ironton drove 67 yards in 11
plays to move in front, 6-{).
Fu llba ck
Rod
Boy kin
slammed over from the two
witfi 2:16 left in the period.
Jan Collins blocked J oe
Fletcher's
kick
fr om
placement.
Ironton moved 53 yards in
eight plays for its second
score. Again Boykin punched
it over, this tinoe from the five
with 2:30 left in the half.
Terry Royal ran the two-point
conversion to give IHS a 14-{)
halftinoe lead.
The Fighting Tigers mar·
ched 61 yards in five plays for
their next score in the third
stanza. Royal raced the final
29 with 9:45 left on the clock.
Dan Staggs and Nick
Robinson stopped Boykin 's
run for the extra points.
Royal exploded with an 80yard run wiih 6:47 left in the
third perio d. Gabe Lewis ran
the two point conversion to
make it 28-{).
Final Ironton score came
with 5:40 left to play. Boykin
plowed over from the two .
Royal added the extra points.
Gallipoli s ma rched 80
yards in nine lays for its lone
score . QB Greg Harrington
raced in from the 14 with I :52
left to play. Mike Hemphill
ran the two-point conversion.
Scott Morrison pac~d the
Blue Devils attack with 36
yards in 12 trips. Harrington
hit on six of 10 passes for 86
yards.
Ga llia:s !'l ick Robinson
caught five passes good fo r 75
yards. Greg Eutsler had one
aerial good for II yards.
Ironton is now 8.() on the
year and 5·0 insi de the
SEOAL.

GI\HS dropped to 2·7
overall and 1-4 in league play.
The Blue Devils play at
Meigs Nov . 3. Ironton plays at
Jackson.
are
Friday 's
Here
statistics :
INDIVIDUAL NET
YAROS RUSHING
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER
TCB YG AVG.
Sheets
7 31 4.4
Hemphil l
9 28 3. 1
Will is
TOTALS

PLAYER
Royal

36
33

3.0
2.1

I ·3 ·3
45 125 2.7

( Ironton )

TCB YG AVG .
12 195 i6.2

Lewis
Wi ll iams

11 104 9.4
1 6 6.0

Boykin

15 65 4.3

Bryant
Th om as
Wil coxen

2
1
1

Ainswor th
TOTALS

4 2.0
2 2.0
1 1.0

2 ·13 ·6.5
45 364 8.1

PASSING
(Gallipolis)
PLAYER
C-A I YG T·O
Harr ington

TOTALS

6- 10 0 86

run ); Rod

Ga lli pol is

NEXT GAHS GAME

0 .1

0

TEAM STATISTICS
Department
G 1
First downs

10

Yardsrushi ng

1-8 hp Rider
W/ 30 bushel Bag -n wagon.
List $1226

NOW 11,000
1-8 hp Rider
WI 6 bushel grass catch er .
List $ L 114 .00

NOW '900.00

17

156 377

31
13
125 364
10
3
6
2

Lost rushing
Net rushing
Pass attempts

Completi ons
Intercepted by
Yards passi ng

Total ya rds
Pl ays

0

0

87

-1

63
3
o

13
1
1

211 363
55 48

Return yards
Fumbles
Lost fumb les

Penalties

3 25 5·25
5-163 2-74

Punts

Recovered enemy fumbl es:

Buy now and sa ve, for
lea f pickup this fall
and mowin g n eK t
s umm er.

OUTDOOR
EQUIPMENT SAL~
4YO Upper Ri ve r Rd .
Jet. Rf s . 7 &amp; 35

GAHS - Dan Staggs.

Scorinq- Ironton : Rod
Boyk in, 2-y d . r un , 2: 15 first

(Kick

blocked

by

Gall •po! is, Ohio
446 - ~670

Jan

KEEP

STATE
REPRESENTATIVE

RON JAMES
lNG. FOR YOU I
Pd. by Committee to Elect R. James , C. Allen , Chairman .

NOW UNDER
NEW
OWNERSHIP!

C-'0

-i

GIVEN GREEN LIGHT
PHILADELPHIA ( UPI ) St .
Louis
Cardinals'
quarterback Jino Hart, who
suffered a separated shoulder
two week~ · ago, has been
given the green light to play
today
against
the
Philadelphia Eag les.
Hart worked out with the
first unit during Friday's
practice and felt no pain
Saturday morning. He was
examined by the team
physician
before
the
Cardinals
left
for
Philadelphia and given the
go-ahead to play.

AT REGULAR PRICE.

The _A ppalachian Stove Company
In Middleport from the middle of town go down Mill St.
to Tony's Carryout and turn down the alley or turn
down Jrd Ave. and make the lsi left, a smell alley next

&lt;

Saturday 10 A.M. to 4 P. M .
Sunday 12 Noon to 3 P.M.

m

c' ·

0. ·

~~!!....tiWII.-------------18:t:
(')

r&gt;

s:

CJ'be APPA.LAGHIAN
SWVE GOMPANY

....
m CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT 698-7191
-&lt;
[ .EMLEY - INDEPENDENCE, bV CEMI -

l&gt;
-i

(')

:I:

m

l&gt;

• "Eieclr~

. . . . LLIA MOTOR
CENTER
YMOUTH

11

I
-~

45 Pistol

-

CHRYSLER~_.,PL
.

-- ·

t978 Catalogue
Price
.

7995
TENNIS

SQUASH HOCKEY MOVING PRACTIC E
TARGET
Bea l the Christ m as ru s hl Buy now - give later . Play
te nnrs, hockey, s keet. squash , mov rng ta rge t. practr ce·.
Features 4 remote co nt ro ls including prstol wit h rill e
attac hment. On -sc reen dig rta l scorin g, au the ntic game
sounds. For 2·4 pla ye rs . ll's a g reat buy for kids of a ll
ages! 60-3057

AC Adap1er for Video
Games . U L. Li sted.

We also would like to remind you that we have the finest
selection of pre-owned cars in the Tri-County and here

HOME VIDEO GAME
FUN BY THE HOURS

are just a few.

1977 CHEVROLET CAMARO. ................... ?.c.v.1 :·.~~?:':'~:. 1.~·??~.':': ::: .~~~;~; ..13995
1977 PLYMOUTH VOLAR E... ~~.'.1 ?!':' .: 1.a.1!?~.':":~~~·;; ~!~·.~ ~:?~--~; ~~·.1~.9.~~?~ !.~~~ ... 13795
1976 CHEVROLET CAPRICE ClASSIC.: .~~~~·.~?:':~~ ~;~.~~':":';!:.5.;.~i;~:-:~~: 1:.~;'; '3795

AIR COMPRESSOR

REG. 1174.95 .. ....... ......................... Now

'129.95

0 0 0 0 I

100 CUP COFFEE MAKER -REG. 159.95 ............................... Now '49.95
ARVIN ELECTRIC HEATERS-REG. 120.95 ........ ~ ...................... Now '1 §_~

I 0 0 0 0 0 0 I

"Your

9-6 M/SAT., ·12-6 SUN.

MEIGS PlAZA

I

0 0 0 0 0 0 I

I

I I

0 0 0 0 0 0

I 0 0 1 o 0 I 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 o 0 0 0

GALLIA MOTOR CENTER

2.00 OFfON ANY CASE KNIFE IN STOCK TIU NOV. 1

ACE HARDWARE

0 I

A gift th e wh ole fam ily wi ll
HOCKEY PRACTICE HANDBALL enjoy! 4 games - 1ennis. hand ·
ba ll. hockey. practice. 2 remote.
CHARGE IT
con tr o ls. o n -scree n scori ng ,
(MOST STORES)
game sounds . 60-3056

0

See Mike Northup or Ed Kirby For The Best Deal Around!

1

Silver Bridge Plm

TV SCOREBOARD
by Radio Shack

1976 TOYOTA CELICA G.T.•.. •.•.••••••• •••_._.~r·~·-~L·i!~~-~:~~- ~~s.~::~ ·.~~:~~. ~"!.~':r.- •• s3895
ift ''"'"' PS AMwi lhflP' ' 39000
1975 CHEVROLET CHEVELU lAGUN AS SOW s. locol o~~er , """ &lt;;, rr',1cr~ m., 13095
1975 FORD MUSTANG II GHIA ...... 7.': 1 ~?:-':.~ 1-~':~ ::~;; •1 ?~: .'.~~==~~::::~~-~·~.'.~. 12295
1974 AMC GREMLIN ........................................ ~.u;~~~~.- ~~::~~i~-~5•·• s1495
3•.000 mil es. 1 Ton f'rcku p, air. Shar p. $AVE I
1969 CHEVROLEt

TRY THESE ON FOR SiZE

1637 Eastem Ave.

Chrysler-P~mouth

WANT YOUR BUSINE'SS

Phone·446-3503

.992-3662
,,

Dealer"

l

l'lAY IT S MAR T: RA0/0 SHACN HAS OVER 57 ~EAR S EXPERIE fjCE IN ElfCTRONICSI

Most Stores Open Sunday Afternoons til ChristmaS
...

·

0

2-3 0 -1 0

2-3

At Meigs .

SNAPPER MOWE::~
ONLY 2 1978
MODELS LEFT

6-10 0 86 o

TOTALS

6 8 14 8- 36

Nov . 3 -

C·A I YG TO

Ainsworth

0 0 0 8- 8

Iron ton

(Ironton)

PLAYER

Boykin, 2-yard

run , 5: 40 fourth ( Royal. run).
GAHS - Greg Harr ington ,
14 -yard run , 1: 52 fourth
(M ike Hemphi! !, r un ).
Score by quarters :

r

The new owners of Gallia Motor Center Chrysler-Plymouth ·
at 1639 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio-fonnerly Gallipolis
Chrysler-Plymouth, would like to invite you to stop in and
look over the 1979 line of Chrysler &amp; Plymouth automobiles.

Depllflment Store

12
16

Morrison
Harr,ingtan

Colli ns) . Rod Boykln, 5-yara
run , '1 : 30 , second (Terr y
Royal , run ); Terry Royal. 29yard run, 9: 45 third (run
fa il ) ; Terry Roya l, 80 -yard
run . 6: 47 . third (Gabe Lewis ,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
• OIVISION OF TANOY

M os t

1tems

also ava ilable at
Radio Shack
Oealars .
Look for this
sign in your
ne•~hborhood .

CO~R~P~O~R~A~T~IOii·N·······P·R·I·C·ESiiiMIAiiYIViiAiiiRV AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

"

..

�C-6-The Sunday Timrs,~t " .lin I. Sun•iav . 0.1 . 29, 1978

r

'
•

1978 F-150 SUPER CAB 155" W.B. ~-~~ .. $AVE
Lots of extras . \Jses regu lar gas.

·

1978 COURIERS .............................. $AVE
XL T -Packages, 4 speed trans .• saYe when you buy __.:_
save when you dr ive ... Only 2 left.

1978 PINTO CRUISING VAN ........ ~~~... $AVE
.-4 cyl. , 4 speed , AM-8 tra~ k stereo, cru isi ng wgn. opt.,
sharp. Sporty &amp; economicaL

1977 GRANADA 2 DR ....................... '4795

1978 MONTE CARLO LANDAU.••• '6695
f fl/I".P, til l S l . Wh(!CI , fd(llcll W ~lrl pt • 1m •&lt;;, rli f LOll(! ,,

H!l &lt;;O f 01hcr C'&gt;e. tr,lS. Den l or D r t~o .

SAVE

1977 PINTO 2 DR .••••••••• ~ ••• s2995

Lots of extras, V-8, auto . trans., A.C., more.

1976 CHRYSLER CORDOBA 2 DR ........... 13995

1976 MUSTANG II CPE. .••••••••s2795

Loaded . Power seats, power windows , more.

4

1975 PINTO WAGON ......... ............... '2295

cyL. automatic, good tir es. blUe finiSh, radio, goad

economy ·&amp; r eal sporty . ·

Acy l. , auto. trans ., p.s., air cond ., luggage rack .

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON ••••• !2295

1975 GRAN TORINO 2 DR .................. '2795

Ac yl. , automatic trans., good tires, good economy &amp; a
loc al 1 owner c ar. Radio, ·c ol or white.

351 V-8, auto. trans .. p.s., air corid ., viiwl roof, wi re
wheel covers, new tires, sharp .

1975 MAVERICK 4 DR ..................... '2695
250 6 cy l. , auto . tran s., p.s., radio, good t i res~ more .

1974 CHEV. "OVA HATCHBACK .••••••.••.•• '2395
350 V -8, auto. tr ans .. p.s.• radio, nice, local owned . ·.

1974 DODGE DART 4 DR CUSTOM ........ 'l995
225. 6 cyl.. auto. trans., p.s., radio , vinyl roof, el!!r.a.
clean . one careful local owner.

1

1974 MAVERICK 2 DR ..................... 2495
302 V-8. auto. tran s., p.s., air cond ., am-fm 8 tra ck ,
Gr abber Package, sharp.

1976 MUSTANG II 2 DR ...... ~ ............. '2895
4 cyl., 4 speed trans., Rallye appeara nce package,
more. Local owned.

1978 F-150 4X4 ..................

u

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

New, customized. Winter i s Com ing Soon!

1973 FORD TORINO WAGON ••••••sg95
1976 CHEVROLET.•••••••••••••• s3495

Interior, 350 V-8,

automatic, P.S ., P.B., radio.

1976 CHEV. T.E.C. MINI HOME
See Us, We Have New
Blazers, Suburbans, Vans,
El Camino Pickups 4-Wheel
Drive &amp; Reg. In Stock

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON................. '1495

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126

1974 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME WAGOM ..'2995

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til 8:00p.m.

Auto ., P .S., P.B., air . ""
1

1975 MALIBU ClASSIC WAGON ............ 2195
Aula .• P.S .. P . B .• A IR .

1974 MUSTANG 11..:..... ,................. '1395
Auto ., 4 c yl , Hatchback , sporl w~1ee l s, AM ·FM .

A leader Any Way
You l.ook At If. • ~~

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO ................. '1495
Au to ., P.S., P.B .. air .

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES
Located on W. Va. Side of Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge (304) 773-5777

78 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE .......... $AVE

1977 Eldorado. ••••.••$9700
1

Warriors wallop
defending champs
Lucas had 12 points as they
took a 34-12lead at the end of
the first quarter.
The trend continued early
in the second period, Golden
State scoring the first 10
points for a 4+12lead and the
Warriors built the lead til 34
points: 4&amp;-14, midway through
· ·the second quarter.
Smith topped all scorers
with :z:; points, while Elvin
Hayes was high for ' the
Bullets with 15.
·
" The big thing was the way
Robert (Parish) played in
first half ," said Lucas.
" When be plays well, were in
good shape . When he's in foul
trouble, we're in trouble ."
" We showed a lot of
character out there," said
Golden State coach AI Attles.
" We had just flown 3,000
miles after losing two tough
ones on the road and we came
back to play a great game. I
don't know if we are capable
of playing much ~etter than
we did in the first half. The
defense was the key. I was
concerned how we would
match up with Elvin Hayes,
but (6-3 rookie) Purvis Short
did a great job."
Elsewhere, New Jersey
ripped Cleveland 123-108, De·
trait tripped Kansas City 107·
102, Phoenix clipped Chicago
115-110 in overtime, Indiana
whipped Denver 112·99,
Seattle nipped Milwaukee 8().
19 and Los Angeles beat San
Diego 113-101.
'
Nets 1%3, Cavs 108
Bernard King,
after
scoring jlllt 4 points In the

~?a~ ~~~!!~~~......... $6495
1 3
De~~~~!~.~.........$1795

!!e

Drive Home A Winner

See one of the courteous Salesmen :
Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris .

Pete Burris,

Ka rr &amp; Va nz·a nd t
"You'll Uke Ou~ Quality Way of
· B ·
" GMC F'
·
Dotng
usmess
mancmg
992-S342-0pen Evenings Untii6 :00

1------T•i•I•S.P•.M• .•s.at•. -Po•m•e•r.,oy-----.1

first quarter , finished with 34
and Jolm Williamson had 28
as the Nets increased their
record to 5-4 with their third
straight victory. Jim Chones
led Cleveland with 28 points,
followed by Campy Russell
with T/,
Pistons 107, Kings 102
Rickey Green made two
foul shots In the final seconds
and M.L. Carr hit a basket at
the buzzer to give Detroit its
second victory in a row after
five losses . The Pistons
played without Coach Dick
Vitale , who received a onegame
suspension
for
misconduct in the previous.
SuDS 115, Bulls 110
Paul Westphal scored six of
his game-blgh 38 points in
overtinie to hand the 'Bulls
their fifth straight Joss .
Walter Davis of the Suns
scorecl37 points while Wilbur
Holland and Mickey Johnson
paced the Bulls with 30 points
each .
Pacers 112, Nuggets 99
Johnny Davis scored 21
points and had 11 assists and
Ricky Sobers added 20 points ·
to lead Indiana . The Pacers

led from start to finish Wld ·
were outscored only in the ·
final period - after piling up
a 20-point lead .
Lakers 113, CUppers 101
Los Angeles broke open. a
light
game
with
15
consecutlve points In the
fourth period. Kareem AbdulJabber scored is points
despite sitting outl5 minutes
when he was in foul trouble.
Guard Norman Nixon had 20
points and 10 assists for the
!.akers. Guard Lloyd Free
lopped San Diego with 26
points but was scoreless In
the fourth period. It was the
first time in the last four
games that he scored under .
35 points.
Sonlcs 80, Back&amp; 79
.Lonnie Sheltm's free throw
with 48 seconds left In the
game gave unbeaten Seattle
the victory . Milwaukee Iuld a
chance to win It with three
seconds left, but Quinn Buck·
ner's jumper from 18 feet
bounce4 away . Milwaukee 's
Marques Johnson, the NBA's
leading scorer, hit a game·
hi!!h 32 points.
·

Galipolis, Ohio

Third &amp; Court

May declare Pete
"historic property

Kyger Creek trips
Vikings, 22 -. to 8

Grand Fury Wagon

'1195

Diplomat Coupe
Medalllon-2DR.

CHES!flRE ~ Coach Jim
Sprague's Kyger Creek
Bobcats scored two fourth
period touchdowns here
Friday for a 22·8 non·
conference victory over
Symrr. ' Valley before a
parer,ts' night crowd.
Ti•d S-8 going into the final
canto, the Bobcats started
moving on their winning
march after WllOOy Burnett
recovered~ Viking fumble at
the KC 38.
Twelve plays later, junior
tailback Paul Lasseter
capned the drive with a one

We are the Friendly Dealer ·
Closing at 6:00 On Week Days

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

500 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

992-2174

St. Regis 4·DA. Sedan
NFL Standings

American Conference
&amp;1St

New England

Miami
NY Jets
Buffalo

W. L. T .
6

2 0

Pet.
.750

against Cincinnati Sun!lay to
keep them first in line for an
AFC wild car!! playoff spot.
The Bengals? Well, they
just need.a win. Period.
· Houston paired a cllnsistent
running attack with timely
passing to hand Pittsburgh its
first loss of the season
Monday , night, 24-17. The
upset victor.y, which boosted
the Oilers to a a-3 record and
second place in the AFC
Central Division, so buoyed
coach Bum Phillips he could
only say gloW\ngly he was
"proud" of his team',
coaching staff and city.
"We played our best
football game iri the five

years I've been here,"
crowed Phillips, "and against
the best football team at this

tiine."
While Phillips' Oilers were
pe!lking, Cincy coach Homer
Rice and his Bengals watched
on television. What they saw
was not encouraging.
Said General Manager
Paul Brown: "There were a
lot of great efforts on there,
people catching passes
upside down, standing on
their heads. That's what it
takes to win _the big play,
the big catch."
The winless Bengals have
had neither, and as a result
are mired in the worst slump
of the club's HI-year history.

The " Bad News Bengals" installed this season, back to
have scored but three points four down linemen. The move
in their last three games: the has hel_ped stabilize the
offense has scored but .four defensive Une.
Rice has also insisted there
touchdowns in eight games,
none on the growxl; and will be no major overhauiB at
quarterback Ken Andetson, this point in the season.
"We'll do some things new
the heart of the Clncy offense,
is still shaking off the rust this week. But it's hard to do
frmn missing the first four a lot of different things. I stU!
regular season games with a think we have In think of the
broken booe in his throwing future. This Is a young team.
We've had a lot of injuries to
hand.
. Anderson, who lruised his key people. We just have to
right elbow against Buffalo stay .t ogether."
The Oilers are .running on
Sunday but said this week it
didn't bother his throwing, all cylinders. Their only
has thrown one tnuchdown losses are a ~14 opening
Wld 10 interceptions in barely game shock .in Atlanta, a 10-6
more than 13 quarters this , loss to tough Los Angeles, Wld
season. He threw
11
a 21-17 defeat fn Oakland.
interceptions all of last
Led by potenllal rookie of
the year Earl Campbell's 697
season.
As he did before the IHlloss yards l'Wihing, Houston is
to Buffalo, described by· one grinding out an .average 164
Cincinnati sportswriter as yards rushing a game .
one of the worst football Eighth-year quarterback
games ever played, Bengal DWl Past&lt;l'inl has thrown for
coach Hmner Rice refused In six touchdowns and 1,1114
fly the white flag over yards, completing 56 percent
Riverfront Stadium.
of his passes.
Revenge will he added
"We've been down/' said
Rice. "But each week they motivation f&lt;l' the Benga!s,
who recall the 21·16 'Houston
come back and play hard. I
think It's a positive indication
victory in the Astrodome last
year that denied Clncy a
they have not given up, they
playoff spot.
wUl not give up at all."
This year. the tables are
One consolation to Rice has
been the Bengals' defense,
turned . The Oilers are
looking for the win to nurture
which has limited opponents
playoff hopes.
to just one tnuchdown and two
field goals in the past two
And the Bengals, in the
games .
Rookie
Ross
words of coach Rice, are
Browner's . return from an
waiting for when "our time
ann injiu-y prmnpled a shift will come."
from the leaky 3-4 defense

Browns face Bills today
By ROBERT SANGEORGE Sunday by the rather odd·
looking football licore of 5-0.
CLEVELAND ( UPI) Desperately trying to fight
Both clubs have one thing
their way out of a mid«ason in common: neither could
tailspin and remain in score a touchdown lalt week
cmtention for a wildcard" ·a gainst weak opposition. But
playoff birth, the Cleveland that's where the similarity
Browns are looking to move ends.
" fr&lt;llll the outhouse In the
In Joe Ferguson, the Bills
penthouse In just one week" are sporting one of this
when they take on the Buffalo season's hot quarterbaclalln
Bills Sunday.
the
National
Football
The Browns are coming off League. Ferguson has
their
most
dismal , e&lt;mpleted 92 of liM passes lor
performance of the season, a 1,162 yards and has an 114.2
1~ upset at the hands of the efficiency rating.
Kansas City Chiefs last
The , Browns' quarterback
Sunday In which Cleveland situation, however, has
could muster only 161 yards become
Increasingly
pasSing and l'Wihing . "You unsettled In recent weeks.
just can't do that and expect Rutigliano has found hlmlelf
to win in this league," having to defend 111ar11ng .
Cleveland Coach Sam Ruti· aignal-&lt;:aller Brian Slpe, who
has ¢orne In for some
gliano said.
Unlike
the
recently scathing
crltlcilm
as
slumping Browns, Buffalo 11 . Cleveland . . 1011 four ol Ita
a club on the upawinfl. The last five galllel.
young Bills beat the hapleu
"I have a lot of cmfldence
Ginelnnatl Bengals last in Brian," RutlgUano said.
).

Pittsburgh
Houston
Cle-veland
Cincinnati

530.625
5 3 0 .625
3 5 0 .375 Oakland ·
J 5 0 .375 Denver

Oilers need win
to stay in race
five years," need a win

Central

By United Press International

Baltimore

·By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The
Houston Oilers., coming off
their " best football game in

Friday night.
opening kickoff 75 yards for
Junior quarterback Archie the first score. The drive took
Meadows scored one touch· 14 plays and ended on
down and pa ssed for the Meadows' one-yard plunge.
other .
Southwestern mounted an
Hannan Trace took the .early first quarter threat but

-

HARD TO BRING DOWN - Kyger Creek's Junior tailback Paul Lasseter ( 44 ) puts up a ·-·
gllOO ltgh~ before bemg brought down by a host of Symmes Valley Vikings. l.asseter .had hi s
thrrd stratght 100-yard plus nights, getting 101 yards in KC's 22-ll non conference win .

WE HAVE SOME
lATE MODEL CARS ·IN
STOCK, READY FOR
DEUVERY!

1973 CHEVROLET lfz TON ••••••• s199~
8' Fleetside, good tir es, clean

M 1:: It C E R V 1L I.E
Playing an aggressive in·
spired -g ame, Coach i.:.rry
Cremeens' Hannan Tra ce
Wildcats d efe ated So uthwestern , 12·0 before a
home com ing c r owd · here

1973 PLYMOUTH

•795

TON ••••••••••••.s3695

Conversions, Mini Homes,

4 cy l. , 4 sp .

Lemans 4 Dr. ·

1 owner. good t ires.V-8, automatic, P.S., P . B., radio.

STARTING MONDAY, OCT . 30
OPEN TIL6:00 INSTEAD OF 7:00

USED CARS AT
. READY TO GO PRICES!

1972 PONnAC

radio, like new tires, bed rails , orange with white trim.

3f.t

NOW AT
CARROLL
NORRIS DODGE

SPECIALS

Sport Pickup. 350 V-B. automatic .trans .. P.S.. P.B.,

1976 GMC

Wildcats blank Highlanders

Magnum XE

Local 1 owner car, V-8 engine, automatic trans., P.S.,
P. B., radio. Clean Inter ior .

Customized, new , don ' t be left out in the cold!

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodrill or Pat Hill. General
Manager, lor a Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle.
992-2196
Ml DOLE PORT, 0 . .

1977 Plymouth Vol are 11 dr. Sed,$3795
1976 Plymouth Duster 2 Dr ..•. 53195
1975 Pontiac Lemans 4 Dr..... 52995
1975 AMC Pacer ............. $2295
1974 AMC Matador 4 Dr •...... $1795
1975 Chrysler Cordoba 2 Dr ...• $3896
1974 Ford Gran Torino 2 Dr .•.. 52295
1976 GMC Spring ............• $3695
1978 Ford LTO 4 Dr . ... . .... . . $2995
1973 Oldsmobile 98 2 Dr. . ....• $2395

1973 CHEVEUE ••••• ~:~u:::.'::·.•.sl995

1978 BRONCO 4X4 .... ........... .............. ..

DAN THOMPSON FORD .

•

L •u ht blttl' wt ll l w t1 v •nyl lo p , :1:1 1 V 1:1 f' ncun r, lull powt•r
•r1(1 w • nrl ow~ &amp; door lnck.c;. , 1\M FM &lt;;, l ('r ••o r ,)(lio ,

Local o~ner, cleari interior, AM-FM CB rad io, g'ood
tires.

United Press International
He was the man nobody
wanted.
John Lucas spent some
frustrating m&lt;ments before
the season when he didn't
know Where he'd be playing
this year. He had two very
good seasons with Houston,
then was sent In Golden State
as compensation for the
Rockets' signing of Rick
Barry.
The
Warrio rs,
however, weren't very
satisfied with the deal despite
getting some extra money
along with the former NBA
No. 1 draft pick .
Right now, though, the
Warriors must be pretty
happywithLucas,whoisonly
three days shy of his 20th
birthday, nine years younger
than Barry.
Lucas, a talented ath1ete
who was playing mixed
doubles with Renee Richards
·at the U.S. Open tennis
championships while the
compensation was worked
out, scored 18 points and
handed out 13 assists as the
Warriors walloped · the
defending .NBA champion
Washington Bullets 102-&amp; In a
nationally televised game
Friday night.
Lucas scored half of Golden
State's points as they took a
12-() lead at the start of the
game. Washingtoo went 4:17
before scoring its first points,
but Wlll-ll outburst featuring
five points by Phil Smith Wld
four Ill""• by Lucas made it
30-6. The Warriors made •60
percent of their shots Wld

SALE

lt!EW

'79's

SEE THE

Seattle
San Diego
Kansas City

'

W. L. T. Pet.

710 .875
530.625

west

440.500
080.000

W. L. T. Pet.
5 3 0 .625
5 3 0 .625
440
2 6 0
2 6 0

.500
.250
.250

N•tlon•l Conference
Ent

W. L. T. Pet.
6

Washington
Callas
NV Giants

2 0 .750

630.667
5 3 0 .625
•

4 0' .500
0 8 0 .000
Ctntr•l ·
w. I. t. pet.
6 2 0 .750
Green Bay
Minnesota
• • 0 .500
Tampa: Bay
3 5 0 .375
Chicago
2 6 0 .250
Detroit
West
W. L. T. Pet;
LOS Ang ,
. 7 1 0 .875
Atianta
" 4 0 .500
!'\lew Orleans
4 4 0 .500
San Fran.
1 7 · 0 .125
Thundly's RISUit
Minnesota 21, Dallas 10

Philo .

St. LOUIS

5•o .rn

TOCI•v's G•mll

Houston at Cincinnati, 1 p.m .
Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 1 ·

p.m .

Buffalo at Cleveland, 1 p.m .
New York Jets at New
England, 1 p.m.
St. L.DUIS at Philadelphia, 1

p.m.

San Francisco·at washington,

1 p.m .

Tampa Bay at Green Bay, 2

p.m .

Detroit at Chicago, 2 p.m .
New York Giants at New
Orleans. 2 p.m .
Baltimore at Miami, oi p.m.
Denver at seattle, oi p.m .
san Diego at Oakland, oi p.m.
Monday's G•m•
Los Angeles at Atlanta, 9 p.m.
Sund1y, Nov. 5
Oetrolt at Minnesota, 1 r,.m.
Green Bay at Phlladelph a, 1
p.m .
New England at Buffalo, 1
p.m.
New Orleans at Pittsburgh, 1
p.m.
New York Giants at St. Louis,
1 p.m .
San Francisco at A11enta, 1
p.m.
seattle at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Cleveland et Houston, 2 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 2
p.m.
. Tampa Bay at Los Angeles, 4
p.m .
Dallas at Miami, .t p.m .
Cincinnati at San Diego, 4
p.m.
New York Jets at Denver, A

p.m .

~···-

Monday, Nov. 1
washington at Baltimore, 9

p.m .

has no nitrogen, would not
take the place of nitrogen
SCOTI INJURED
fertilizers, but Dr. Ries says
CHICAGO
(UPI)
it "might increase the eff!ciencr. of the use of ferti· Chicago Bears starting wjde
hzers.
Based on the receiver James Scott was
amounts that work .in the · injured in practice and may
bl
1 ·
•
laboratory four milligram s be
of the substance dissolved in
una e to P ay m Sunday s
water would treat an entire football game agamst the
.
acre of crops . His green· Detroit Lions.
A Bears team spokesman
house tests include work
with rice, wheat, corn, said Saturday that Scott, a
\&gt;arley. tomatoes. lettuce. favorite target of quarand cucumbers. Tests in the terhack Bob Avellini on deep
field. ~Yill. tell more of the patterns, pulled a leg muscle
poss1bilitres.
in practice Friday.
Scott was li sted as
questionable for today's
game at Soldier Field. The
team spokesman 8aid Steve
Spring Ave.
Schubert would start at wide
· P\1"'erav . Ohio
receiver if Scott is unable to
,1111111111111111111111111111111111111111 play .

RJLTON-lHOMPSON
TRACIUR SALES

The mos1 carefully engilll'e.-.d

tractor in ihe world.

N BA St..ndlhgs
By ·United Press lntern•tlon•l
Eastern Conference

Philo

Allonllc Division
W. L. Pet. GB
• 1 .800

Washlngtn
oi 3 .571
New Jersev
5 4 .556
New York
3 4 .oi29
Boston
1
.167
Central DIVISIOn
"It's Important not to ·
W. L. Pet.
overreact In a situation." The Houston
5 1 .833
• 2 .667
"situation" to which he Cleveland
San Antonio
oi 3 .571
referred concerna the role ol New Orlens
3 5 .375
2 • .333
rookie backup quarterback Atlanta
2 5 .216
Mark Miller - a local boy Detroltwestern Conference
who grew up In nearby
Midwest Division
w. L. Pet.
Canton Wld played college
Denv"
5 2 .11•
ball at nearby Bowling Indiana
3 2 .600
Kansas City
3 4 .oi29
Green.
·
Mllwauke
3 5 .375
Slpe has a 110lld trio ol Chicago
1 6 . U3
receivers In Resgle Rucker,
PICifiC DIVISIOft
W. L. Pet.
. Dave LogWl and Ozzle NeWB-

s

receiver with three catches
good lor 5o\ yards.
Kyger Creek travels to
Southwestern Friday while
Symmes
Valley
ho st s
Eastern .
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
SV KC
First Downs
9 14
Yards Rushing
142 233
Yards Passing
10 63
Total Yardage
152 296
Passes Attpt:
8
7
Passes Compt.
1
5
1
Interceptions
0
Fumbles
3
2
Fumbles Lost
2
1
9-41 6·36 '
Penalties
By Quarters:
S. Va lley
0 o 8 0- 8
K. Creek
0 8 0 14- ?.? .

GB
1
l iJJ
J
J
3Y:t

GB
1
2
2\1:1
•
GB

FULTON-THOMPSON
TRAClOR SALES
SPRING AVE .
... ( l' H _ ~' ' (' . t)H•O

and now a sports talk show
host with WCKY radio,
pointed out to the conunission
that Japanese baseball
homerun king Sadaharu Oh
has been declared ·a national
treasure .
Rose, incidentally, was in
Japan Friday preparing to
play Oh and the Ymniuri
Giants Saturday and Sunday
in the first games of a
goodwill tour by
the
Cincinnati Reds.

.....
lora! Bowling
Debbie

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES
Early Wed. Mixed

Oct . 23. 1978
40
38

34

No.2

28

Zi de's Sport Shop

27

No. 3

25

Hi gh Team Ser ies -

1971 .

No. 2,

High Team Game - No. 2.
684 .
High Ind . Series - AI. L.
Phelps, Jr . 555, Lar r y Dugan
and Ray Roa ch 532; Carolyn
Bachner 500, Isabelle Couch
497 .

High Ind. Game - Larry
Dugan 215, Bill Por ler 210 ;

Isabe lle Couch lBO. Carolyn
Early Sunday Mixed

oct. n,

194,

Belly

Monday Night

Oct. 18. 1978
Team
Smith -Nelson Motors
Young 's Markel
Long Shots

Bachner 176.

PLAYER FINED
ATLANTA (UPI) - The
National Basketball
Association has fined Denver
forward George McGinnis 250
for confronting a fan after a
game against the Atlanta
Hawks last week.
McGinnis said he ran into
the stands to confront a Hiyear-{)ld boy after the fina l
buzzer because the youth had
allegedly made racial slurs
during the game.

Hawley

Smi th 166.

1978

Team
Tom 's Carr y Out
Jack 's Da iry Bar
3 In One
Gibb' s Grocery
Royal Crown Bottling
Meigs In n
High Team Series -

52

42
.40
32
28
22
3 In

One 2063.
High Team Game -- 3 In
One 723
High Ind . Seri es - Ed Voss

595, Darr e ll Dugan 585;
Debb ie Hawley 523. Belly
Smi th 514.
High Ind . Ga m e - Darr ell
Dugan 215, Ed Voss 205 ;

w.

L.

Roach 's Gun Shop

60

12

Frye's Pennz.oil
SalemSt . Mk t.

50

22

44

28

Powell 's Mkt .

34 38

Heiner 's Baker y

18

Meigs Co . Ad Taker

10 62

54

T eam High Se ries
R oach's Gun Shop 2292 ,
Meig s Co . Ad -Taker 2173,
Fr ye's Pennzoil 2173.
T eam High Game Roach 's G un Sh op 781.
Powell's Mkt . 767 , Meigs Co .

Ad-Ta ker 766 .
M en' s H ioh Ser i es Raym ond Roach 548, David
M cC unn 530 , Larry Hen dri cks 524 .
Men's Hig h Game - David
M cCunn 209, Ra Ymond Roach
199, Dan Bowers 193.
Women 's High Ser ies Na om i Floyd 528, Betty Sm i.th
484 , Lau ra Carpenter 476.
Wom en's High Game Naomi Fl oyd 19 9, Lu cy
Hendricks 191 , Lau ra Car penter 181.

FOUND DEAD

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Ora Symonds, 83. and his 79·
year-old wife Helen were
found dead in the ir hom es
Friday, the apparent victims
carbon
monoxide
of
poisoning.

Meadows to Dennis Green. A
run for the extra points was

st opped.
Coach
Bob
Ash ley 's
Highlanders bega n muving
following the third period
kickuff . S&lt;J uthwestern moved
to the 24 yard line but a clip
nullified the play.
Later in the third quarter,
the Highlanders were inside
the 10 ya rd stripe but a fourth
down pass fell incomplete.
On the fina l play of the
contest . SWHS' Sherma n
Putter bro~e loose for a 60
yard run but was tackled at
the fi ve yard line.
Offensiv ely, Jay Bray led
HaMan Trace with 115 yards
rushing. Potter topped So uth·
western with 93 yards in 12
attempts .
Defensively, Denni's Green
led HaMan Trace with 10 solo
tackles.
The win gave Ha nnan
Trace a

1 ~7-1

season record .

Southwest ern dropped to 3-5.
The Wildcats host S&lt;Juthern
Friday night while Southwestern plays Kyger Creek.
STATISTICS
ST HT
DEPARTMENT
Fir;1 Downs
5 10
Yards Rushin g
196 74
Yards Passing
BO 72
Total Yardage
276 146
Passes Attpt.
18
5
3
2
Passes Compt .
Interception s
0
0
F umbles
2
2
2
2
Fumbles Lost
8-70 4·30
Penalties
By Quarters:
SW
0 000-0
HT
6 6 0 0- 12

CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc,
Galipoli5, Ohio

CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc.,
Galipolis. Ohio

Reds lose
opener

OCTOBER 30th TO NOVEMBER 11th
SPECIALS

to Giants
TOKYO (UPI) ~ Third
baseman Kiyoshi Kahata
blasted a two-run homer in
the eighth inning Saturday;
giving the Yommiuri Giants a
7-6 victory over the Cin·
cinnati Reds in the first game
of a 17-game series in Tokyo.
The Reds took a ~ lead in
the fourth inning on ths
strength of George Foster's
two·run homer and Champ
Sununers' solo blast, but the
Giants tied the score 3·3 in
bottom of the fourth when
home run king Sadaharu Oh
belted a two·run homer and
successive hits by Masahiro
Yanagida
and Shigeru
Takada roughed up starter
Tom Seaver. The Giants
added another run In the fifth
on Kazumasa Kono's RBI
groundout.
The Reds count ered with
three runs in the sixth to take
a IH lead, but Nakabata 's
clout off reliever Mario Soto
came after the Giants scored
a run on bits by !sao
Harirnoto and Oh .
Reds manager Sparky
Anderson said afte r the
game,"! was very impressed
by several Giants players."
He noted the Reds haven't
played since the 1978 season
was over in early October.
An estimated 47 ,000 fans
braved the rain to see the
game played at Tokyo 's
Koreakuen Stadium.
BEULAH RESULTS
_GROVE pTY, Ohio (UPI)
- Petnomoor pushed ahead
-in
the
stretch
Fri·
day
and
won
the
featured eighth race at
1 Beulah Park by one and
three-quarter lengths over
Class Player. Queen's Thrust
twas third .
Pelnomoor was clocked at
1:45for the one mile; 70 yards
and returned $12.00, $5.20 and
$3 .
The 111-4-7 first race trifecta
was worth $2,036 .40 Wld the
11-104 ninth race trifecta
:paid $453.30.
The 3,329 thoroughbred
racing fans bet $420,518.

1
1
2
Jlh

Seattle
7 0 1.1100
ome, and his failure to · Phoenix
6 2 .750 lYa
Gold~ Stat
3 ; .oi29 4
cmnect with them In the last san
Otego
4 6 .400 4Y:t
lew games has brought out aD Portland
2 .. .333 .tlf.;~
2 4 .333 4'12
the old knoclal m Slpe aa an Los Angeles,
flrlday'l RIIUitl
allegedly
weak-armed
New Jersey 123, Cleveland
108
'
pasaer.
· Detroit 107, Kansas City 102 ,
"We're not about to make a
Phoenix 115, Chlcogo 1to (Oil
major decillon in the area ol
Indiana 112, Denver "
Golden State 102, Washington
quarterback," Rutigliano
83
said, 110 the Billa will lace the • Los Angeles 113, San Otego
veteran Slpe at Municipal · 101
Stwllum. "I'm not concerned • Seattle 80, MIIWIUkft 79
·siiiidioy•s Giomoir ..right now beca111e I've found '
Stata at Clovolancl
you can go fnm the oulhoUH . Golden
Houlton It Denver
io ihe pentbouse in IIIII one : Walhlngton at Loa Anaetn
SuHio at Son Diego
week." .
.

,,

t

yard run. A key play during
the march was a 12 yard pass
from senior quarterback
Steve Russell to junior end
Bruce Gilmore. Jack Minor
added the extra point with a
kick.
l.ater that period, Gilmore
intercepted a pass and
returned it 17 yards to the 23
yard stripe. A five-yard pass
from Russell to sophomore
end Ken Coughenour gave the
Bobcats a 21-lllead. Minor's
.kick rounded out the scoring .
Kyger Creek broke the
scoring ice in the second
stanza when Lasseter ended a
long scoring drive with a oneyard run .
Two hig plays during thf
march were pass completions
to Gilmore. l.asseter added
the extra points giving KC an
early 8-0 lead.
Coach Joe Bokovitch's
Plants may .,. wrowmg . Vikings knotted the score at
bigger in the dark. Sc ienti sts S-8 in the third quarter. SVHS
at
Michigan
State tookthethirdquarterkickoff
University have discovered 65 yards in 14 plays. Null ran
a common hut baffling sub- over from the one·yard line
stance. Triacontanol. When then added the extra points.
applied in very· small
The win-was Kyger Creek's
. amounts to greenhouse third straight and gave the
crops , their growth rate Bobcats a 4-3·1 season mark.
increases by 10 · 40%. itals o
allows them to grow in the ~.y1DffieS Valley dropped to 2·
dark. "Such increases would •
Offensively , l.asseter . led
be beneficial to world far·
mers if the chemical can be the Bobcats with 101 yards in
made to work in the field ,"· Tl carries. Victor VanSickle,
says Dr. Stanley K. Ries. He junior fullback, had 80 yards
believes it may occur in 10 carries.
naturally in all plants, ac ·
Giimore was the leading
ling as a regulator. of their
growth. Triacontanol. which

CINCINNATI (UP!) - City
co uncil has some .vital
matters to consider on its
next agenda .
For instance, whether til
declare Pete Rose historic
pr.operty.
The Cincinnati Planning
Commission took the first
step Friday toward keeping
'free agent Rose from leaving
the city , its members voting
unanimously to declare the
former Cincinnati Reds third
baseman
as
" listed
property."
If city council goes along at
its next meeting, it would
mean Rose could not he
"demolished, displaced or
relocated " without city
approval.
Well, in theory he couldn't,
anyway .
With a poster of Rose
mark ed
"E xhibit
A,"
c ommission member s
grinned as testimony was
presented on the tnngue-incheek motion . Bob Trumpy,
formerly a Cincinnati Bengal

it ended on downs ~ A pass
interference aided the drive.
In the seco nd pe riod ,
Hannan Trace rea ched
paydirt again on an 86 yard
march in 13 plays climaxed
by a 53 yard screen pass from

COLLEGE AID
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Dr.
William
A.
Kinni son,
chairman of the Association
of Independent Colleges and
Universities of Ohio, Friday
announced a plan to provide
50 percent public financial
assistanre to Ohio residents
wanUng to attend Ohio
co!!~ ge~ and universities.

CHAMPION SPACE HEATERS
40,000 BTU ... ......... .....'133.00

150,000 BTU .............. '258.00

60,000 BTU ....... .......... '186.00

120,000 BTU AIR SCOOP '320.00

97,000 ...................... '212.00

THERMOSTATS ........... ... '19.95

AUTOMATIC HEAT TAPES
4 fl ... .... ............•4.95

12 FT ....... .......... ... '6.10

6 FT.................. '5.25
8 FT.............. .... '5.45

16 FT ... ........ ......... '6.60
20 FT.... ........ .. .. ... . '7.15

~-~\
. ~ ~

'BIRD FEEDERS
NO. 268 BIRD FEEDER.. .. ,.... ..... '21.95
NO. 655 BIRD FEEDER ...... ..... .... '8.90
NO. 152 BIRD FEEDER ............... '5.60
NO. 252, BIRD FEEDER ...... ......... '6.60
NO. 168 BIRD FEEDER ............. .'12.85

HEAT BULBS
50 WATT FROST... ................... '1.50
250 WATT SPATTERPROOF.......... '3.35
HEAT BULB SHIELD .. :.............. .'3.95

1000 WAn
STOCK TANK HEATER

•19.90

1500WAn

STOCK TANK HEATER

•21.90
YOUR FARM SUPPLY

HEADQUARTERS

CENTRAL SOYA
I

'

GLOVES
501 JERSEY .. ........ .. .79 980 BUCKSKIN ....... '8.15
1196 INS. LEATHER '7.25 5027 LEATHER PALM '1.65
635 FlANNEL ........'1.20 7016 SUEDE DRIVER '3.40

CHEX DEODO_RANT SOAP
3 BARS s1.00
40 LB.
LAUNDRY DETERGENL ..... ~l3.45
TARPS &amp; PLASTICS
16' VINYL W/1'2" DROPS ............. .... ....., '67.50
8X10,12 OZ. CANVAS ...................... ..... ..'18.95
10X12 12 OZ. CANVAS ........................... .'32.95
WITH TOTE BAG
9" TIE OOWNS •.•••••.•••• • -'····· ••••••••• •..•••• .. ...35
15" TlE lXMNS ....................... ............... .43
20" TIE DOWNS .......... ............................50

PEAK ANTIFREEZE
'3C:LON

'315
GAliON

IN .CASE LOTS OF 6

TINGLEY BOOTS
No. 1300
TINGLEY OVERSHOES ........ .'4.70
No. 1400
TINGLEY 10" BOOT......... .. ~.99

WOODCHUCK
WOODBURNER

.

31" TIE DOWN$ ...................................... .611

STOCK UP NOW
AT

4xl00 CLEAR PLASTIC ............. .... .;...... .... '4.95
8x100 4 MIL CLEAR PlASTIC .. .................. '9.90 ·

CENTRAL SOYA

�...

~The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Oct.

22,1976

County agent's corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
Exle!lliOD Agent
Agrlcullure
Meigo County
POMEROY - Compost is
both an organic fertillur and
a 110il conditioner. Compost
results from the decomposition of organic materials.
To produce compost, there
must
be
composting
materials such as leaves.
grass clippings, remains of
Dower and vegetable plants
after harvest, weeds before
going to seed, straw and hay,
vegetable tops and peelings,
nutrients
for
microorganisms of decay - as

suppl!e&lt;l by fertilizers and
moisture and air.
Make compost by building
a compost pile or heap as
follows: First layer - plant
residues 6-12 inches thick,
second layer- garden soil or
sharp sand about I inch thick,
third layer - lliin layer of
fertilizer
to
promote
decomposition. Moisten the
three layers of materials but
do not make them soggy
wet. Repeat the layering
process lintll the heap is
about 5 feet deep and turn
periodically to admit air.
Compost is ready to use
when it turns dark brown in

New type ·insulation
needs closer look

color and is loose when
turned with a spade.
If you are one of the more
fortunate ones who owns a
powered mulcher, your
composting job will be much
easier, particularly where
prunings off trees are ground
up and used: This mulch
should be treated in the same
manner as unmulched
material, as the materials
should go through llie heat
and decomposition stages.
Don 'I get over anxious
about mulching the strawberry plants. Yes, lliey do
need mulching to protect
them during winter when we
have severe cold, But,
mulching too early could
cause a problem later.
Plants need to become
dormant before mulching.
Otherwise,
the
straw
protection may cause lliem to
continue growth into the
early part of the winter. With
this tender growth and a
sudden hard freeze, plants
could be killed.
So, mulch only after your
plants have experienced
several sharp freezes in the
lower 20s. In Ohio, this
usually occurs between
Thanksgiving and Christmas.
When mulching, use only
clean, seed-free wheat or rye
straw. Tree leaves and oat
straw tend to pack and
smother the plants. Coarser
materials
offer
little
protection. Apply mulch 3 to 4
inches deep over the plant
row. A bale of straw cover
about 30 to 40 feet of row.
Now that early frosts have
killed back annual Dowers,
vegetables, plants and the
like, we can take advantage
of pretty days before hard
winter to clean up the debris.
From the vegetable gar·
den, any diseased plants
should be removed along with
weeds that have gone to seed.
other plants that are suitable
for mulch should be placed on
llie mulch pile or tilled into
the garden soil. Leaves, grass
clippings, and the like can be
tilled into the garden soil, too.
Once vegetable and Dower
gardens have been cleaned
up, be sure all shrubs and
trees have plenty of moisture
going into llie winter. Shrubs
near the house may not have
received enough water
during recent rains.

BY DIANA S. EBERTS
Reports from testing
laboratories furnished by the
Extension Agent
company say that UFF does
Home EcoDOmlcs
Meigs County
not burn below 1200 degrees
POMEROY - One of the Fahrenheit, but recently
newest types of home in- signed Federal · Trade
sulation Urea-fo rmal Commission consent orders
dehyde - is forc ed out prohibit llie companies from
of a nozzle into wall cavities advertising that their
under pressure. Under ideal pro ducts
are
non·
conditions, the foam sets in 10 combustible, non-flammable
to 60 seconds, said Golden or non-toxic. To protect
Jackson , home economist, against fires, UFF should be
with Ohio State University's used only in closed spaces
Cooperative
Extension behind a !Ire-resistant lining
Service.
sych as gypsum boa rd,
Compared to other in- Jackson said.
As it cures, UFF gives off a
sulation materials, urea formaldehyde (UFF ) has an disagreeable odor that can
R value about 10 percent cause problems if it collects
more than competing ma- in poorly vented living space.
terials
cellulose fi. Normally the odor disapber
and
glass
fi.
pears after the UFF has
ber, Jackson. said. R factor cured, but in some houses it
is the measure of resistance may persist for several
to heat now - llie higher the months.
R value, the better the perThe company says normal
formance.
shrinkage of UFF Is up to 3
R-values per inch in llie percent. However, NBS
range of 4.4 to 4.8 have been researchers found lliat UFF
claimed by manufacturers of in the walls of their test ho~e
UFF, but a recent report by shrank an average of 6
the National Bureau of percent during the 26·
Standards (NBS ) rates the R month test period, and llie
value at 4.1 per inch in shrink rate had not leveled
laboratory test walls.
off, they said.
UFF may ·be used in UFF is the most expensive
closed
cavities
such insulation , Jackson said,
as
sidewalls
of ex- often costing 50 to 100 percent
isting houses. It is not more than others. She
recommellded for open recommends getting written
spaces above ceilings or in bids from at least two apother open areas. It should plicators who use different
not be installed in places materials. In addition, have
where temperatures reach them write down the amount
120 degrees or above.
of R-value their insulation
At the time of application, will add to the wall. Question
UFF contains about five pints any R-value larger than 16 for
of water per stud wall cavity. a three and one-half inch
The NBS report indicates lliis wall.
Dividing the dollar cost by
water did not dry out from the
walls of llie test house in- the R-value will give llie cost
Julia E. Stewart, Edith E.
sulated in January, 1975, until for each unit of R-value and Stewart Everitt, George
late the following summer. will help you evaluate the Daniel Everitt to Trustees of
bids, she said.
. Church of God, 10.58 sq. rd.,
Rutland Village.
Stanley D. Trout, Marilyn
S. Trout to Reed Jeffers,
Gene Jeffers, parcels, Scipio.
Sammie R. Doering, formerly Sanunie L. Yales,
formerly Sammie L. Rausch
to Salem A. Yates, .234 acre,
Sutton.
Dena F. Hoffman to W.
Robert Bell, Ellen Bell,
parcels, Rutland.
Green Hlll Homes, Inc. to
Salem A. Yates, Carrie L.
Yates, deed of correction,
Sutton.
Calvin B. Simpson, Gladys
Simpson to Carol Tannehill,
John Tannehill, C. Mark
Tannehill, Janice Peterson,
Lot, Middleport.
C.
Mark
Tannehill,
Rebekah Tannehill to Carol
Tannehill, Lot, Middleport.
Janice Peterson, Carl
Peterson to Carol Tannehill,
Lot, Middleport.
John Tannehlll, Arlene
Tannehill to Carol Tannehill,
Lot, Mi4dleport.
Lois G. Kelly to Phillip W.
Kelly, Lot 10, Baum's Subdivision, Chester.
· William H. Cheadle, Ida M.
Cheadle to William H.
Cheadle, Ida M. Cheadle,
Parcels, Co)umbia.
·
Helen F . Baer to Roy T.
Jenkins, Rose Ann Jenkins,
1.01 acres, Sutton.
Dale Murphy , Dorothy V
Murphy to Leon Carol
Pierce, 6 acres, Salem.

. Meigs
Property
Transfers

Execution stay issued by judge

Lay of the land

I.OOAN - Judge James
Stillwell ha.s lsllued a stay of
execution on his .Oct. 23
contempt judgment and ~

Award dinner held
BY JOHN COOPER
Great Kanawha Resource
Soli Cou. Service
Conservation and DevelopPT. PLEASANT - Two ment meeting which was held
meetings last week dominate at Clements Nursery. The
the news from the con- OKRC&amp;D Steering Com·
servation office. The first of mittee meets once a monlli
these was the Western Soil and discusses various
Co nservati on District's projects of benefit to the ten
awards dinner which was counties. This Is the first time
held at llie FF A Camp in that the Steering Committee
Ripley.
.
has met in Mason County for
Mason County people or several months. Following
groups receiving honors at . the meeting the group toured
this meeting were Dale the nursery . Alan Peaslee,
Nibert who was llie Mason superintendent of the nur·
County Conservation Farmer sery, conducted the tour and
for 1978, the Rev. Tally showed the group llie various
Hanna who was the District steps in preparation for tree
Conservation Minister for seedlings, from seed into the
1978 and Donna L. Davis who nursery beds, and then to the
was the
Conservation packing shed for shipment to
Teacher for llie District and the people who buy trees
the Mason County Vocational from the nursery.
Technical FFA Chapter, who
The drainage job at the
won the first place in the Mason County Farm Museum
FF A-SCD Contest in the has been completed. It
district.
consisted of installing 761 feet
It has been announced lliat • of clay tile in a wet area
the Rev. Tally H81U1a was adjacent to the log house,
also chosen as llie third place Walden Roush of the museum
Conservation Minister in · looked
after
local
West Virginia.
arrangements. Designs were
The other meeting was the prepared by technicians of

Ohioans have made it
clear what they want
BY BOYD A. &amp;UTII
!19Z-8647

across the nation. The pur· pose of the meetings was to

POMEROY _ Ohioans
have made it clear what llieir
interests are concerning llie
environment and the con·
servation programs needed
to protect it.
I In recent public meetings
held throughout Ohio, In
response to llie Resources
Conservation Act, soil erosion
was mentioned as a major
concern by people in 77 of 88
. counties. Erosion· was
followed by food and fiber
production. And the third
major area mentioned most
It
o en is the drastic change in
land use occurring across the
Buckeye State.
Robert E. Quilliam, Ohio
state conservationist for the
U. S. Soil Conservation
Service (SCS) said that 21
areas of concern are now
listed for Ohio based on llie
public meetings held in

let the people voice their
opinions on resource conservatlon, express primary
concerns and suggest
solutions.
"The input from local
people will allow us to
develop
an
effective
multiyear program that is
responsive to the needs of the
nation," said Quilliam.
The summary of meetings
held throughout the state was
reviewed at state level by
representatives of 21 state
and federal agencies and
organizations.
The Ohio information will
now be forwarded to
Washington, D. C. to be
placed in Willi responses from
the other 49 states: Then,
using public input, a national
conservation program will be
developed and presented to
Congress in 1979.

scs.

Work is progressing on the
tile drainage job at llie Letart
Recreation Area. The Mason
County Conunlsllion is In·
stalling about 8,000 feet of tile
In that area. Two adjacent
landowners, Myrtle Hoffman
and George Grimm, are also
installing some tile to drain
wet areas on their land.

fine impoaed on 59 teachers
and clauilied school employees.
The Oblo ABIOCiation of
Public School Employees had
aalted for the stay, contending there wu no proof of
a~lationofllieprefunmacy

lowed the Ohio Court of injunction and that a
Clainns' Jan. 31 dismilsal of a promised second court
lruit where the administratrix hearing was no\ held.
of a Cleveland man's estate
Stillwell ordered llie stay
sued llie state following the pending the outcome of an
Sept. 16, 1975, fatal shooting appeal filed by OAPSE,r
of Renunie 0. Leverett.
which
represents
120
He was killed when classified employees, In the
Alfornla Lewis went beserk Fourth District Court of
CAN SUE STATE
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The and llireatened everybody In Appeals.
Franklin County Court of a Cleveland drug store,•.Hiil
Appeals has ruled llie .stste · gun januned after shooting
can be sued for negligently Leverett . Three months
I liD.
releasing from an institution earlier, Lewis had been
released
as
a
patient
at
the
an insane patient who later
Hawthornden State • A Great,. .
causes damage.
The Thursday decision lol- Hospital.
Combination
For Southeastern Ohio

New cooperative
program approved
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Board of Regents has approve.d a new associate
degree
program
in
Agricultural Producton
Technology to serve south·
eastern Ohio. This program
involves a cooperative effort
among Washington Technical
College and five other participating two-year colleges,
including Community r.ollege
at Rio Grande, located in
southeastern Ohio, the
Agricultural Technical In·
stitute at Wooster, the· Ohio
Agricultural Research &amp;
Development ·Center at The
Ohio Stale University, and
the Belle Valley Area Extension Center. Through the
joint efforts of all of these
agencies ; prospective
students in southeastern
Ohio will be able to earn an
associate
degree
in
agriculture.
The plan provides for the
students to enroll in any of the
six cooperating two-year
colleges and take approximately half of their
associate degree courses on ·
the home campus. Most of the
advanced agricultural
courses will be taught at the
Belle Valley Area Extension
Center with faculty furnished
by the Agricultural Technical
Institute under llie direction

of the College of Agriculture Starcraft/QuachHa Boa
at The Ohio State University. Mercury Outboards &amp;
Dr. John Ught, chainnan ·Mercrulaar
of the Southeastern Ohio
DOUG'S
Technical Education Con·
sortium and president of
Hocking Technical College,
Sales &amp; Service
indicated
that
this
arrangement has great
(614)992-5652
potential for expanding
ooucational opportunities for
the residents of soullieastern
NOTICE
Ohio through the addition of
other technical programs.
Tllrough the fall season
Board of Regents' members
1nd winter months we
expressed pleasure willi llie
will be closed on Sunday.
degree of cooperation
exhibited in this project to.
808 W. M~in St.,
deliver specialized programs
f'omoroy. QH •5769
to southeastern Ohio.

MARINE

-....
-c
-....

l l~!!llll!~~~~~~~~~

IUU

Saw up tom
--~~onllolilemmet8
•
ll1IJIHiJIIL'e

c

lf:your home is less than
7 years old, you may save
money. Find out how
I1UlclL call:

z

Q

c1111

0
IIU
I

NO. 39

in Cleveland which has been hanging fire since llie 1961E and willi the so-ealled "equal yield" school subsidy formula when
which isn't finished yet, and pressing for Cleveland harbor it was sent tD him. "I thought it was too much, too soon, too
improvements he promised four years ago.
little," said Rhodes .
The governor complains about Celeste insulting him and
An ironic footnote : Celeste, who originally supported the
conducting a "negative" campaign. At the same time, his concept, now says it has proven to be "neither equal nor
cartl§'g
n headquarters is putting out statements that Celeste yielding."
is "no eUing the truth," and is trying ''hoodwink" llie public.
The other source of amusement was Rhodes' announcement
Altho
Rhodes calls Celeste's education plan full of he would sever communications with Ciuaboga County
" vague pi tjtudes," he has deduced, in a quote dredged up Republican Chairman Robert E. Hughes because Hughes'
from l)is 1974 campaign, that llie Democrat will "tax every- brother may be implicat~d in a budding state lottery scandal.
lliing that walks, crawls or Dies in Ohio."
It was as if brushing off Hughes, like brushiug dandruff off
ooe's lapel, would set him free of llie lottery mess.
Fortunately, some genuine humor invades the campaign
Anyone who has ever been around Rhodes or Hughes, his
from time to lime, providing comic relief.
main political adviser in Cleveland, knows lliat with the
Rhodes was especially prolific in that regard last week.
election this close and Cleveland so crucial, there will be a
Speaking to the Ohio PTA, the governor said he didn't agree communication line, even if Ws a carrier pigeon flying mes-

Common stuck
a. No. shat·es authorized 2,000
b. No. share&gt; outstandings 2,000 Ipa r value 1.......•... . .....••...••..•.. 100,000.00
Surplus ...... . .... , ... .............. , ....... . .......... ... .... . , ... . .... 900,000.00
Undivided profits ..... .. ....... . ... , .. ... . .. . .. .. ... ... : .. .... . . . . . ....... 488,000.00
TOTAl. EQUITY CAPITA l. ....................... .. ............ . .. . ..... 1,488,000.00
TOTAL LIABII.ITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ........ ... . .. ..... .. .. . .... 14,203,000.00

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1978

By IRA R. AlLEN
HARTFORD, Conn. (UP!)
- President Carter revealed
Saturday he had rescued
Egyptian-I srae li peace
efforts
again
while
barnstorming through the
Norllieast, giving Democrats
llie kind of dramatic, highpowered campaign boost only
a president can.
Advertising llie Democrats
as the party of peacemakers,
taxcutters
and
high
employment, he flew in!D
Hartford from Buffalo tD
stump for Connecticut's Gov.
Ella Grasso en route tD Maine
and Massachusetts on his
seventh campaign trip since
Labor Day,
Object of the gruelling, 11hour swing was tD give the
Democratic Senate and statehouse con tenders - most of

them
facing
serious Carter told llie crowd, "I
challenges - llie invaluable contacted President Sadat
stamp of association with an last night and said 'leave
negotiators
in
incumhen t president, and one your
who is enjoying a hot streak Washington.'
"'I'll do what my friend
of his own right now.
The very first stop of the Jinuny Carter asks me to,"'
day, in Buffalo, provided he quoted Sadat as replying.
perhaps the most dramatic "They 're going to stay there
example of the publicity and negotiate ."
The disclosure turned a
impact a presidential visit
routine campaign
can have.
There , delivering
a appearance iniD a front-page
standard airi&gt;ort campaign headline story on the Middle
speech in a drizzling rain, . East peace talks - to the
Carter suddenly revealed he obvious advantage of both
bas just rescued the faltering Carter and the candidate who
Middle East peace talks from stood at his side, New York's
trouble by persuading Gov. Hugh Carey.
Carey is struggling tD hold
Egypt 's President Anwar
Sadat not to . recall his his office against llie reelection
challenge
of
negotia!Drs.
Underscoring the personal Republican Perry Duryea .
At the brief Buffalo airport
influence he has with the
leaders of Egypt and Israel, s!Dpover, where the band

Mediation and Conciliation
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Service during the Nixon
The trucking indU$1ry says it administration , made his
will try to abide by President remarks in a talk with
Carter's anti-Inflation reporters at the National
..-ogramdeopite reoervations Press Club.
about
his
wage-price
He
rejected
as
guidelines.
"balderdash" contentions by
But the head of the Teamsters dissidents in the
industry's bargaining arm _ ?,Udience that union. leade_rs
Trucking Management Inc.
are playmg footsie wllli
- said the truckers are . management.' '
skeptical about the guidelines
."1 lliin~ ~e .Ill'• dealing
even lliough they 're willing tD With sophistication on bolli
go along with them.
sides of the table," Counts
J. Curtis Counts sold said. "They (the Teamsters)
history has shown miliimum are tough.''
wage standards are "not
Counts was
queried
conducive to bargaining.'' He repeatedly by Te~msters
said the minimum levels dissidents about kickbacks
usually wind up . becoming and bribes within the
"the floor and not the ceiling" mdustry as we11 as a
in salary talks.
The truckers and the
Teamsters . Union will
exchange initial bargaining
GALUPOUS - Gallipolis
proposals Dec. 14 for a new
contract.
Counts so ld City Police investigated a
bargaining will begin "in four-vehicle accident Friday
earnest" Jan. 15 in at 2 p.m . on State St., 30 feet
east of Third Ave.
Washington.
Officers report that an aulD
Teamsters President
Frank Fitzsimmons has operated by Robert D.
called for Dexibility in the Collins, 18, Gallipolis, turned
administration's 7 percent lid ooto State St . from Third
on wag&lt;i-benefl! hikes and has Ave ., went left of center, and
taken a "wait and see" at- struck the right front of a
titude on whether the union parked Chevy Blazer oWiled
by Carolyn Barry, Bidwell.
will follow the guidelines.
The Collins auto went back
Counts, who served . as
across
llie street and struck
director of the Federal

belea guered Teamsters
peJ1Sion fund.
.
The dissidents also asked
him about an allegation that
Teamsters are fired daily
because they refuse to drive
unsafe vehicles.
Counts answered the questions calmly,. denying knowledge of any kickbacks and
saying non·e of the pension
trustees have been criminally
indicted for wrongdoing . He
rejected
the
safety
allegation.
The current three-year
Teamsters-industry pact,
which expires March 31, .
provided increases of about
40 percent and a strong costof-living clause.

Police probe 4-car mishap
the rear of a parked pickup
truck owned by Tri -City
Home Medical Supply.
The force of the impact
knocked the pickup Into two
parking meters and the right
rear of a· parked auto owned
by Helen W. Kings, Bidwell.
Collins was cited on
charges of left of center and
operating a motor vehicle
williout a valid license.
Officers report moderate
damage to all vehicles
Involved in the accident.

---~--··

Average for 30 calendar days ending with report date:
Cash and due from banks ....................... . ............ ... . , .... . . 1,388,000.00
Fed. funds sold and secut·iti es purchased
under agreements to resell .. ................... . , . ... .. . . , ............ . 1,605,000.00
Total loans ................. , ..... , ........... .. . : ........ , ......... : ... 7,364 1000.00
Total deposits of $100,000 or more
in domesti c offices .. ................ .. .. . , ... . .. , . ... .... . .... , , ........ 300.000.00
Total deposits .. ..... ... . .. . . ... .. . ....... .. ....... . ... . ..... . ......... 13,380,000.00
TOTi\1. ASSETS ............... . ..... . ..... , ....... .. .. .. ... , ..... , ... , 15,342,000.00
Tnnc e&lt;•t'lifieatcs in denominations of $100,000
.
Ul' ITIOH' I tlUtS t C:IIl din~ i:IS or l'epot1

dale i , , , , , , , . , , .. , , , . , , . , , , .. .. . , , , ... , . . 3()0.()00,()0

--~--

1. Ma nnin g Kl"'''· Vil'e President ~ nd Cashiet· of the above-named bank do hereby
dt•dun• Ural this Ret" "'' of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
bl'iicf.
Manning Kloes
October 19, 1978
We , the rmdt•rsigned directors attest the corr·ectness of this o1atement ol resources and
lii!hilit it•s. Wt· ded arc lh~t it has lx•en exammed by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
hl ' lit ·f 1.1.; II' Ill' ill Ill t '111'1'('{'1 .

Your S&amp;T Store

OLIVE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

sages between the two.
· Campaign finance reports filed last week show Celeste has
received plenty of help from oulside Ohio.
The United Steelworkers Union in Washington sent in $47,000
for his campaign; the Active Ballot Club of Washington, a
political arm of the Retail Clerks Union, $10,000; 811d the
4merican Federation of Labor, United Mine Workers and
Machinists Union sent $5,000 apiece.
·
The American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees believe it's worlli at least $45,000 to have a
,;overnor who won 'I velD a collective bargaining bill for public
employees.
One major contribution to Rhodes was $12,000 from the Oil
and Gas Producers Association, in recognition of his ceaseless
efforts tD get Ohio fuel for Ohio.

.lay H;ill. Jr.
flel'll itl'd V. Fultz Ro"• S. Reynold.'

Dir~dors

PAGE l·D

Peace efforts rescued

By DREW ·voN BERGEN

.,

fl

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Gov. James A. Rhodes has reverted
back tD the same tactics he used in 1974 to pull tbe
gubernatorial election out of the fire .
, It is generally conceded in political circles here that
Democratic challenger Richard F. Celeste is slightly ahead '
bUt could be overhauled in a slambang finale.
· Last week, Rhodes dusted off a four -year old gimmick,
~Wng the Ohio Congress of Parents and Teachers his
education plan will furnish enough money for a $1,100 annual
pay boost for teachers.
, Observers noted the governor offered only $1,000 in 1974.
They guessed lliat inflation was. responsible for the extra
amount.
Rhodes has also kept busy ded icating a state office building

Truckers will abide

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

:tit

- ..

Gov. Rhodes back to 1974 tactics

VOL 13

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••t

oc

.

IBM:E

conjunction
local soU l ..
and
water with
conservation
REPORT OF CONDITION
districts.
·
•
Consolidating
domestic subsidiar·ies of the
In addition to the first
three, the list includes
drainage, prime fannlands,
forestry, water quality and
of Middleport rn the state of Oluo, at the dose of business on September 30, 1978 published in
supply, socio · political
response to ca lr rnade by Comptroller of the Curre1icy, under t•lle 12, United States Code,
concerns, rural development,
Section 161.
land disposal of organic
Charter nwnber 6441
National Bank Region Nwnber 4
wastes, wildlife habitat,
Doodlng, mining, environmental,
fish . habitat, ·
Statement of Reoources and Liabilities
recreation, other, wetlands,
water management and air
----.,-- Cash and due from banks ..... ..... .
............. . . ... . . . . ..... 1,400,000.00
quality.
U.S. Treasury securities .......... ~
............. . ................. 2,551,000. 00
"The priorities as ex·
Obligations of States and politica l
pressed by Ohioans will be
subdivisions .......... . ... .. . ... . .... . . .. .. .. . . ..... . ........ . , . ... ... 2,000,000.00
used to guide activities of the
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock . ... . . ... , ..• , , ... ......... , . ... . .. 21,000.00
SCS in working with districts
~' c'&lt;leral fw1ds sold and securities purchased
and land users in the state,"
under agreements to resell ... . .. .. .... ....... ............... ...... ... .... 750,000.00
said Quilllam. "Soli and
l.uans, Total! excluding uneamed income I .............. . . . .... . 7,380,000.00
water conservation programs
Less : Reserve fur pos.o;i ble luanlo!::ises . . .... .. ... . . .•.. .... ........ 80,000.00
have always had to be acLoans, Net .. . . . . ..... ... . . . ...... .. ... . ....... . ......... ~ ............ 7,300,000.00
cepted to be of value," said
Rank premise&gt;, furn iture and fixtures, and othe1'
Quilliam, "but now we have
assets repreoenting hank pmniscs .... .... ."...... . ....... . ..... ... ..... . . .. 96,000.00
goals expressed by people
Real estate owned other than bank premises .
. .. .. . .... . . ...... .......... 1,000.00
from aU walks of life
Other assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. .. .. . . .. . . . ... . 4,000.00
throughout the state."
---+-TOTAL ASSETS......... ..........
. ....... . ..... .. .. ... ....... 14,203,000.00 _ _ _ __
In February of 1978, the
SCS began laying the ground
Demand deposits of individuals, pl'lnshps ..
work
to
fulfill
the
, and corpo.............. : . ....................... , ....... , . ... .. . . .. ... 3,726,000.00
·requirements
of
the
Time etnd saving~ deposils of imli\•itlui:ilS
Resources Conservation Act
pr.tnshps., and co•-ps . .. .................. . . . . .... . ... .. , ......... , . ... . 8,194,000.00
IU
passed by Congress late . in
Deposits of Umted States Govenunent .. , .. ...... ... , . . .... .. .. .. ..... ... . , .. 46,000.00
1977. The act required lliat
Depos&lt;ts of States and political subdivisions ... . . , ....................... . . ... . 708,000.00
!::
llie SCS appraise soil, water
Dcpos&lt;ls of commercia l banks ........ . ...................... .. .............. 5,000.00
and related resources county
Certiried and offieers' cheeko .. .. .. .... , ... ... .... .. .. .. .. .. ...... ... ... . . .. 32,000.00
II
by county, state by stste,
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS ........... . . . . .. ........ ... ............. 12,711,000.00
Total demand deposits .... ........................ .......... .. 4,190,000.00
Total time and savings deposito .. .. ........ . ........... .. .... .. 8,521,000.00
Total Deposits in Domes tie and Foreign Offices . ~ ~.
. .. ........... ...... 12,711,000.00
Other liabilities . ............. .... .... ................. .. ,. ..... .. .. . ... . ... 4,000.00
---+-TOTAl. LIABII.ITIES 1exdudiirg subordinated
notes and debentures 1 •.•••.• • ..••.•••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 12,715,000.00

....
~~

~

BiG CONTRIBUTORS - Maxine Oyer, left, advisor of llie Hillbillies 4-H Club ; Cressa
Shain seated of llie Ladles Auxillary of the Racine Fire Department, and Opal Dyers, a
~of~ Melg&amp;Cour•IY Junior Leaders 4-H Club, represent their respective groups ao
contributors of subiltanUal donations to the current Meigs County 4-H f.und drive tD raise the
eountv's share on the Canter's Cave improvements . .
'
I
'
,, •t

played "Hail to the Chief"
and Ca rter gave his speech
bareheaded in the rain, the
president also sounded the
other themes he is making all
along the campaign trail .
He said his administration,
working with a Democraticcontrolled Congress, had reduced the unemployment
rate by 25 percent, added 6Y,
million new jobs and cut
PARENTS' NIGHT OBSERVED - Prior to Friday 's non - ball field. Following llie event, parents, coB•cho!s
taxes by $8 billion last year league game at Kyger Creek, parents' night was observed willi watched the Bobcats defeat Symmes Valley for their straight
and "about $20 billion this one or more parents joining their son or daughter on the foot- win .
year."
The tax-eutting issue dominates the 1978 election campaign everywhere and is
especially acute in the
~Buffalo area , home district of
Republican Rep. Jack Kemp ,
RALEIGH, N. C. - A 19- ambush slaying of a
Superior Court , Judge Terry Ann Hamm, 17, and
a leader of GOP tax. year.old Youngsv ille man vacationing West Virginia Robert L. Farmer sentenced Michael Reyes I.Jamas, 22,
reduction campaigns.
Carter also !Did the Buffalo was given three con· school teacher and the Bland Julius Hill Jr . after the both of Wake Forest.
life
sen- kidnapping of the victim's jury that convicted Hill
Miss Hamm and Uamas
crowd he needs llie public's secuti ve
tences
Friday
in
th e two companions.
Thursday of first-degree testified that Hill shot
.support to make . hi s
murder in the slaying of Romine after ordering him
voluntary new wage-price
J
er ry Romine of Point out of the car. Hill, Miss
guidelines· work in reducing
Pleasant
, had recommended Hamm and Llamas each
inflation.
life
imprisonment
instead of were charged willi Romine's
Beating inflation, he said,
the death penalty.
slaying and with kidnapping
"will solve the last major
Farmer also sentenced Hill and robbing Romine, Pickens
domesti c problem
we
tD seven years to life in and Bumgarner.
have,"
In exchange for testimony
another ambush robbery and
The day's travel boosted tD
10 years on two conspiracy against Hill, the prosecution
15 the number of states
charges. These sentences will ¥greed tD let Miss Hamm
Carter has visited on the
run concurrently with the last plead guilty tD one count of
campaign trail since the start
armed robbery and has
of September . Last stop
Cuba to maintain ties with the life sentence .
ByJACKR.PAYTON
dropped the other charges
Romine
was
killed
Aug.
19
Saturday was Camp David,
VATICAN CITY (UP!) - Holy See.
against
her.
after
he
and
two
companions,
Md., for a weekend 's rest.
However,
East
Germany
Pope John Paul II Saturday
Miss . Hamm and
Ric.hard
J
.
Pickens
and
Hill,
had
never
joined
in
the
met privately with East
Uamas
also were charged
Roger
Bumgarner,
both
of
dialogue
between
the
Vatican
German Foreign Minister
with
·
robbing
George
Point
Pleasant
,
were
Oskar Fischer - llie first and communist regimes and ·
Ballentine,
20,
of
Raleigh
at
ambushed
when
they
s!Dpped
meeting between any pope the new pope took advantage
gunpoint
in
a
similar
incident
their
car
tD
help
a
woman
and hi gh East German of a visit by Fischer to Rome
the same night. Ballentine
official and the second be - for talks with Italian foreign who appeared to be in testified that he stopped tD
distress,
according
to
tween the new pope and top minister Arnaldo Forlani to
help a young woman when he
testimony in the case.
hold a private meeting.
Communist in six days.
saw
her waving for help. He
and
Pickens
Bumgarner
No details of the talks were
In his third major Vatican
said
he was robbed and
said
two
armed
masked
men
appoiniment, Pope John Paul announced and no statement
forced
iniD llie trunk of his
came
out
of
llie
bushes
alter
n Saturday reconfinned a was issued afterwards.
• •
•
car
by
two armed men woo
The Vatican also said that th ey stopped. Bumgarner and
leading Italian cardinal tD the
tn]Urtes
appeared
from llie bushes
Pickens
were
forced
intD
the
sensitive post of regulating if weather permits, John Paul
after
he
stopped.
trunk
of
Bumgarner's
car,
the chUfch's global affairs. will travel Sunday to an they said.
The ~ntiff also Cardinal isolated Sanctuary run by
GALLIPOLIS
Two Sebastiano Bagg io was five Polish priests in the
Romine, who had tried tD
persons were treated Friday confirmed in his post as mountains east of Rome.
run away, was brought back
at Holzer Medical Center for
The pope spent four days and then forced by Hill tD
Prefect of the Sacred
Sunny today , with highs in
injuries sustained during two Congregation of Bishops, a meditating at the sanctuary drive Bumgarner's car to a
the
mid or upper 50s.
accidents investigated by the position considered second prior to llie conclave lliat secluded
farmh ous e,
Probability
of precipitation is
Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway ooly to the Vatican secretary elected him.
according tD testimony from
nea
r
zero.
Patrol.
Hill 's alleged accomplices,
state .
Officers were called oo the of Baggio,
65, was considered
scene of a one-aulD crash on one of the front
in the
U.S. 35, in Iron t of the Econo- conclave that runners
·elected the
Travel Motel at 3:05p.m .
former Cardinal Karol
According to the patrol, a Wojtyla pope Oct. 16. He ha s
GALLIPOLIS - A spokes- by Jaycee members donating
vehicle operated by Debra K.
held the prefect's post since man for the Gallipolis Area their time and energy. Those help and donations from
Merrill Evans of Carter and
Bates,
21,
Thurman,
1973.
Jaycees announced Saturday Jaycees donating a great deal Evans.
traveling east, attempted to
His reappointment was the club will hold its first of time included : Rick Tipslow tD make a left turn.
Without Evans' support,
announced following a Annual Open House ·sunday ple, Larry Betz, Mike Neal ,
The brakes on the aulD
Tabor
stated, the majority of
private meeting with the from 2 to 5 p.m. The Jaycees Mel Tabor and AI Harris.
failed and the vehicle went off
this
would
not have been
pope.
Building Co mm ittee possible.
will be celebrating the
the left side of the road and
John Paul's meeting with completion of their new member, Mel Tabor, stated
struck a pole.
Jaycees also announced the
Fischer
wa s the second meeting hall which is located that the dream of many
Bates was thrown from the
structure
is available to in·
private audience he has had on the comer of Burnett Rd. Jaycee members both past
vehicle as it continued off the
divlduals
or
organizations for
with
a
high-ranking and the Rt. 35 by-pass.
and present has finally co me rent. Facilities include a
roadway iniD a ditch .
communist official since
A ribbon cutting ceremony true. Tabor also said the banquet room for 50 people, a.
Bates was transported tD
ta)dng office six days agci.
will take place at 2 p.m. prior building would never have kitchen and off street
Holzer Medical Center by a
The new pope, the first to the opening of the doors. been possible if it were not for
passing motorist.
parking. Anyone interested in
Polish pointiff in history, also
the help of the community. renting the building may
Jaycees
have
been
working
Bates wa s treated for
had met President Henryk
ex pressed
the contact Skip Meadows at 446multiple
con tusi ons , J ablonski of his native on finishin g the inside of the Tabor
gratitude of the Jaycees for 1465, between hours of 9 a.m.·
building for the past year
abrasions and strains, and
Poland
follow ing
his The interior was compl eted the generous and unselfish
released.
5 p.m.
installation Mass Oct . 22.
Officers report moderate
East Germany , as willi
damage to the Bates aulD.
most atheistic communist
The patrol investigated a
nations, does not have official
two-vehicle accident at 9:35 relations with the Vatican.
a.m. on U.S. 35 in front of the
Under the late Pope Paul VI
Western Pancake House.
the Vatican Jaunclitd an
Officers report that an aulD
Ostpolitik policy of detente
operated by Hobart C.
with conununlst regimes and
Tackett;
16,
Bidwell, carried on a dialogue ,
traveling east, attempted to
especially with the governstop to avoid collision with an ments of Poland, Hungaria
unidentified aulD which had and Czechoslovakia.
slowed tD turn left.
Yugoslavia and the Vatican
The Tackett aulD slid to the finally established diplomatic
right striking a parked semi- relations
the only
tractor trailer owned by communist country outside
Franklin B. Young, :!9, Courtland, Va.
Tackett was transported by
CETA BILL SIGNED
SEOEMS to Holzer Medical
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Center where he was treated
for injuries of the neck and As mayors, cabinet members
and other dignitaries filed
knee, and released.
Tackett \Vas cited on from the White House East
charges of assured clear Rooln , wh ere President
distance. Young was cited on Ca rter signed the Humphreycharges of improper parking. Hawkins bill and the $11
The P.,trol reports severe billion CET A em ployment
bill Friday, a pianist in the
JAYCEE HOME - An open house will be held at the new Jaycee Clubhouse located at
dama~e to the ·Tackett aulD,
the intersection of the US 35 By-Pass arid Burnett Rd. Suhdsy afternoon. AU county
slight d&amp;mage tD llie Yount: lobby played mood music:
'' Pennies :F'n,m Heaven ."
residents are invited . Work on the structure was done extensively by Jaycee members.
tractor tr ailer.

Slayer given life sentences

Pope, Fischer
hold meeting

Two persons

treated for

Weather

Open house planned

I~

•'

�D-2- The Sunday Ttmes-Sentlnel, Sunday Ocl 29 1978

TELEVISION
VIEWING
SUNDAY OCTOBER 29 1911
• For You Black Woman
8
American Problems &amp; Challenges 10
6 30-Chrlstopher Closeup 3
Jerry Falwell A
Thinking In BlackS TreehouseCiub 10 This Is The
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MONDAY OCTOBER 30 1978
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15
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2 Twon Beds
$399 95
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3 Pc Walnut Bedroom Suote
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3 Pc Oak Bedroom Suote
4 Pc Bassett Bedroom Suote, hke new
Reg $899 95 Now
$599 95
French Provencoal Bedroom Suote,
hke new
$499 95
Several Complete full &amp; !won soze beds,
PRICED RIGHT
Over 90 chest &amp; dressers on stock startong
at
S29 Hup
2 wooden Desks
S79 95 &amp; S99 95
19" Portable Color TVs
$299 95
Table Lamps
$5 oo up
Round Lamp Table
$49 95
$49 95 up
2 Pc Lovong Room Suote
7 It Lane Chona Cabonets
5499 95
2-3 pc Breakfast Sets
549 95 &amp; 559 95
$39 95 up
5 &amp; 7 pc Breakfast Sets
7 Up Pop Mach one
SlOO
Maytag Automatoc washer
S199 95
Maytag Dryers
$109 95 &amp; 569 95
10 cu It Gold Amana Chest Freezer S249 95
5 cu tt Chest Freezer, like new
$199 95
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NEW-3 pc Ltvmg Room Suote,
5349 95
sofa, chaor &amp; love seat

D-3- TheSundayTunes-Sentmel Sunday Oct 29 1978

Soldier reunion big in· Gallipolis
BY JAMES SANDS
GALLIPOLIS The
decorations and preparallons
for the following day the
f1r1ng of a salute oo the
arriVal of Gov Foraker s
company the electric hghts
and gas hght dtsplays m
beautiful arches across
Second street, the :100 small
tents and grand pavilion for
the addresses and camp-f1re
talks were all now m
readiness for the ope rung of
the Reunwn on the morrow
and our people rellred tD thell'
couches together with a
thousand strangers already
here to catch a few hours of
sleep before the sunr1se
salute of Wednesday morrung
should welcome m the
openmg of the Reuruon Long
before sunr1se the country
population was rolling m on
horseback and m wagoos and
at an early hour the streets of
the City were thronged wtth
people The mornmg was fall'
and cloudless and every
md1catlon of a hot and
oppressive
day
was
afterward verified Everythmg was bustle and
coofus1on all over the c1ty
Special trains were arriVlng
from the Hockmg Valley
Kanawha Valley, and Ohio
Valley while the steamboats
w1th barges were br~ngmg m
thell'
thousands
and
thousands from the country
swellmg the throng '
The above IS a descriptiOn
written by the Galhpohs
Journal about the Soldiers
Reuruon held August 8 and 9
1888 Both Governor Foraker
of Oh1o and Governor Wilson
of West V1rgm18 were present
m Galhpohs for all the
festtvltles that mcluded

speeches, parades music,
playlets and lots of eating Of
the latter Sanns and Kerr
reported that \hell' drug store
fountain sold over 500 gallons
of milk shakes, Henkels'
Brewer sold 425 kegs of beer
Alexander sold four ratlroad
carloads of beer by the
bottle the bakeries sold over
15,000 loaves of bread and
the Park Central Hotel was
feedmg for each meal over
I 200 people
The Soldlen' Reunion
was an aDDual affair for
GaUipolls, since so many
soldlen had been stationed
at Gallipolis during the
CivU War, but the 1888
Reunloo was by far the
biggest In 1888 the toWIII·
folk decided that they
would also celebrate the
IOOth anniversary of the
founding of Marietta and of
Ohio as well
The best bands m Gallla
were chosen to perform and
they got lots of work The
bands were
Gallipolis
Colored Drum Corps, Porter
Band Cora Band Centernlle
Band and the Rw Grande
Band
Gallipolis was no place to
be for the chronically
nervous, not only because of
the large crowds and the
bands but also because of the
rughtly fU"eworks and sa or
seven daily artillery salutes
To start off the second day at
6 30 m the mornmg was a 38
gun salute The fireworks
were lifted mto the all' by hotair balloons and were
advertised as a
grand
pyrotechnic display "
Many of the local town·
folk were fasciDated by an
electric display put there

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4

by, uf all people, the
Galhpulis Gas Company
The Gas Cumpaoy also had
an arch of white and red
hgbts across Secund Street
and an arch which led to
Camp GalUa (gas lights)
The most unpress1ve thing
however, ahout the Reumon
was by far the gigantic
parade
Almost
every
merchant entered a float
dnven by anywhere from
four to etght horses All along
the lme of the march
pennants flags banners
festoons p1ctures and scenes
adorned and beautified every
home from the humblest to
the mansiOn In the greatest
and nchest profus10n
(Journal)
All three of the druggists
had special s1x and seven feet
bottles made for theJI floats
as well as leather decorallon
for their horses wtth the
name of the drug comparues
prmted on the leather Three
of the factones m town
actilally placed part of theU'
operation on floats so that the
people along the parade route
could v1ew a parllcular
operation For mstance Enos
H1ll &amp; Co were making nvets
by steam and hammermg
Into a bmler Kling &amp; Co took
the occas1on of the parade tD
unveil thell' new stove The
New OhiO

Sunaay Oct 29

the Barlow Brothers had a
small wagon pulled by a
pony The Ulsamer float was
a g1gant•c wme cask with a
life like Km~ of Boherrua
sttt~ng on the top Even the
local dentist C E MUes took
the parade as an opportunity
to drum up busmess and on
h1s float were not only
drummers but ftfers as well
James Sands address 1s
Box 3 Barlow 45712

InMemor __ _
IN LOV ING memory o f our dorl ng
Mo the r Jul a Nod ea K by

who passed a way o e yeo ago
Oct 2ij
When I M u!o l eave You
for a I ttl e wh le
Pl ea se do not gneve
And sht;J d w ld tear ~
And hug yo u so u ow
To you th roug h the year5
But s tart ou l bra ve ly
w tho gol lenl sm l e
And fo r my sa k e
and n my nome

A

l ve on an d do
a! I th ngs th e some

Suspended worker kills two
NEW ROCHELLE, N V
A factory worker
suspended for refusmg to
obey a supervlSOr's order to
get to work returned to the
plant with a shotgun Fnday,
ktlled
h1s
boss
and
supervtsor
and
then
senously wounded hunself,
pohce sa1d
Owen Cox 36 of New
Rochelle was reported m
senous condition today after
undergomg surgery
Cox 62-year-old superVISOr
at the Teledyne Hydro
Power Corp atrcraft parts
plant, whose Identity was not
released pending notiftcallon
of relatives and the fll'ffi's
comptroller
Peter
Cantatore 55 of Eastchester
N Y were dead on arnval
Pohce sa1d Cox a father of

(UP[) -

three punched m for work at
5 29 a m and at 5 48 p m he
was sent to Cantatore s off1ce
after refusmg an order by the
supervisor to get tD work
mstead of talking tD a co
worker
Cantatore suspended Dox
a parts mspector for three
days and Cox stormed out of
the factory pohce sa1d He
went to h1s home about a half
mile from the plant and
returned w1th the shotgun
pollee sa1d
As employees fled for
safety, Cox opened fire
hilling the supervisor, pollee
sa1d Cox then crossed
through the factDry tD the
office area where he found

f eed not your lone I ne!&gt;s

o e np y da ys

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bermce Bede Osol

~ ~7~(!Jll

. ,U~lNltl~WlJ

MAN KU.LED
HAMILTON Ohio (UPI) Gary Rtchard 28 Hamilton
was k1lled and three others
were mjured early today In a
one car crash on MtllvilleOxford Road 1n Butler
County

change th at c ould affect your
work o r c areer status may be
thrust upon you today Don t
balk w thout a penod of reflec
tlon It could prove to be a btg
Improvement

LOVING memory of our
, _ dearest M oth er and G on
mother Jul a Nod ean K by
who pO s!.ed away o ne yea r ago
Oct 21:1 th
He ne n b ronce 5 o gold en ch o
' Death l r e!&gt; a bre ak all
'olD
: To hove to love and then to po I
~ Is th e greo tc:;. t so rrow of ones
: ,,.... heart
The years may w pe au n ony
th ngs
Sui th s they w pe out neve r
The lov n g n e ory o f h ose Hap
py Day s
Wh en we were oil toge ther
Sadly m ssed by Daught ers and
Grondch ldren Ca ro lyn li gg s
Po r co Ann MIter Pen y V
d o Jo n e li gg s Shel y A n e
To mmy M ller

e

person who br ngs exciteme nt

be hoghly successtul
GEMINI
(May 21 June 20) Und
22)
Two very valuable thmgs are erstate your case today 1
work ng for you m hnanc1al and sac a l s tuat1ons ra the r than
hand lo could pay off
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov

career matters today You are

try to cal l att e ntiOn to yourself

lolally log cal and you also Loke Ihe bobl cal weddong
have an accurate Sixth sense guest lhe last shall be I rst and

Fmd out more of what 11es
ahead for you by send ng for
your copy or Astra Graph Let

ter by ma1llng 50 cents for each
and a long
self addressed
s tam ped enve lo pe to Astro

Graph P 0 Box 489 Radoo Coly
Staloon N V 10019 Be sure lo
spec fy b trth s tgn

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

23 Dec

21) There san art cle of fore1gn
ongm you ve been wan11ng

Today os the day to check your
sources w lh access 10 those n
the tmport export trade
CAPRICORN ~Dec 22-Jan 19)

II you re lhrealened by any

form of challenge today try to
make 11 look easy no matter

how doff cult t really os Oppos
t10n Wil l wIt

AQUARIUS ~Jan 20 Feb 19)
Tact IS your greatest asset
today If you are ca lled on to
serve an a pubhc reta11 o ns role
you II put everyone at ease and
make them feel hke VIPs

the hrst last
CANCER ~June 21 July 22)
Somethtng you can do today
wtll con tnbute to your mater a t
well be ng
Keep your eyes
open You II want to lake ad
vantage of al l pass1b1l lte s

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Today
you re commandtl")gly asser
live
but no one wtll take
offense Others w II b e nsp1red
and eager to accept your QUI
dance

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl

Here's a "home loan" bank
you may be overlooking.
You don t have to be a farmer to
quahfy for a rural home loan from &lt;he Land Bank
We also make loans to non farmers who hve-or
want to hve-m rural areas A Land Bank loan can
be used to bu}( bwld remodel or refmance a home
It features long terms prepayment pnVIlege wothout
penalty. and reasonable Interest

Card of Thanks
1WOULD Ike to honk al l of those
who so d proyer5 f or e wh le
was n the hasp lol A lso tho se
who v s ted m e sen t cords and
g ft s A spec o thank s to all he
nurses and a des. o lh e 5th
floor and o D Hol zer and D
Wa lker fo th e cor e th ey gave
to me
Mrs Esther (S cotty ) S m pso n

Stop in ... let's talk over
your house plans and our loan plans.

22) A

LENDER

228 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) Be
VISIOnary today but be a prac t1
cal dreamer too Ideas that
may at f1rst seem far out could

prove to be the bellwethers on
the long run

PH. 446.0203

J

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI SE ASSN

-

Avenue

STANDARD

AUTOMATI C VALVE

THREE PO NT
MOUNTED

SHUT OFF

and State Street The

tollowmg Will be otlered to the h•ghest b dder
L rcutatmn desk desk lamp s 2 o ak desks scree n s 9
sol d oak I b r a r y fclbl es one large ot of she t v ng ktcl&lt;
s too l s booken d s some m etal library shetvmg L azy
Su1an book d spl ay children s r ound oak tab l e w1fh .d
mapl e cha 1rs d u pl cator mach.ne 45 wooden book ca r

r•ers steel racks 3 florescent I ghts oa k book case
f old•ng chars &amp; t ab le desk one tot at oak cha•rs 2 sec
t10n s of ant•que she lve s four- 4 dr a w e r f le cabtn ets
day bed 5 drawer and 4 draw er l•le cabt net s 60 drAwer
R em .ngton Rand oak ca rd tab le w1th d rawe r
sec r etary cha •r
dr nK ng founta n
d ouble f I ng
c ab n e t s wooden t n i) te 3 5t ec c hr1 rs 2 wood en a n d
o n e st ee l des k 'J 1y pcwr t c r s tands sma kl natural g a s
s tove 11:100 b tu ) wooden book tr uck fa n ant qu e 45
d rr1wc r card ca tal og wtfh storitg e cab net wooden d es k
c ha r
maple typ ng fdb le
Admtral refrigera t or
tJc hum d f e r 1 sets of ant q u e a nt e •rons 3 a1r cond
h o n e r s 1961 lnternatton a l book mob lew th Ger s fe•n
s ta g er 29 1 body cab over 'JrrJ. 6 c yl 5 speed Fu ller
c rash box transmtss on Onan 5 kw ll~ht pl nnt an d
ot her a nt•ques a nrl mtsc ettaneo us terns
The sale terms are cash however school dtstncts
representatives Wtth purchase orders or good letters of
1ntent w II be permtrted to buy

SALE BY ORDER OF
BOADOF TRUSTEES
GALLI A COUNTY DISTRICT LIBRARY

Auctioneer: Lee Johnson
Crown Clfy, Ohio
256-6740

a nd thanks to our fr end5
ne ghbar !i and re at ves l o
many oct!&gt; of k ndness pray e !.
food flowers and co ds du ng
the in ess and dea th of ou r lev
ng m oll e l' 9 o d no the o d
9 eo! g andmolh er
Hull
Ooug he ty A spec a l thonk 5 to
th e d oc t ors and stall at Pl ea
!&gt; ant Voll ey Has p Ia
Hev
Joseph Godw n and MIt er !&gt;
Fun eral Hone Yo u k ndn ess
w a s gr eatly oppn:~c ol ed
· The Ru h Doughert y ~o m ly

,
The Alamanac
United Press lntern,ttonal
,Today IS Sunday Oct 29
tile 302nd day of 1978 With 83
ld, follow
The moon 1s approachig 1\s
new phase
The mornmg stars are
Jupiter and Saturn
The evenmg stars are Mer
cury, Venus and Mars
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Scorpio
American
statesman
Thomas Bayard was born
Oc\291828
On thls day 1n history
In 1818, Sir Walter Raleigh
was executed 1n London
charged Wlth partiClpatmg m
a treasonable plot to oust
King James I from the
B1:1tish throne
In !IIIli, Leon Or.olgosz was
electro~uted
for
the
assaSSinatloo of American
President William McKinley
In 1929, pandemomum
reigned on the New York
Stock Exchange as collapsmg
prices set the stage for the
Great DepressiOn of the

"LOG·SPLITTEI"
•

Ou heor l s ac he:&gt; w th so d es~o
~ec:re t eo ~ w I few
Why t wm e o lo l o ~&gt;e you
Noo t!wlleve kto w
Whendoy s a ,.~a ko dd eo y
And eve1y lh y ~ t ~ wro g
We seen to h{ o vou w h ~pe
Chee up o f o
l:o ch ne we pe you p Clute
You seen to s lea d ~ ay
Do n I cry I n on ly sleep 9
We I mee t' ago• so ne doy
Words cor no express he k nd
ess a nd help I om au lr end s
o 1d ne ghbors du ng th e loss
o l our de01 one Spec ol thank s
to the McCoy M oo re ~ u ne o l
Ho n e Rev George Croyle
Joa ne a d Lo e Bo ss the Mt
L or Ti e l Youth ~&gt; 1gers
the
pol beare s
lhe e nployees
and es de nts o f I e G S
the
~ h e r tf s Dept and those who
sen t load flo wer s and money
Th e lam ly ol Sheryl Yvetle
Ja co b s)
Joh nso
Sons
Step• er and Br on M othe r
Yvo 1ne M Do n u" ll fatl er
James ~ Jaco bs Jr Grand
nothe
t:l za b e th Don e tt
Brothers Cha es o d M choel
S ste s Mou eene o d Yv onn e

OA

CYl NOEA

\
HEAVY DUTY
PUSH 8LOCIC

1930s

In 1974, former President

CATEGORY I or 11 3 PI

Richard N1xon went mto
shock after surgery to
CCJmbat a potentially lethal
clot
and
was
blood
pronounced m cnhcal
condition

Mountmg

Powerful 4" double &lt;!ding" cylinder (25,000
lbs force at 2000 PS\l to split the many
vane1tes of woods used for heat energy and
f1replace burnmg !Speed and Force Depends
on Tr'!lctor Hydraulic System l

•

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.
992-2176

POMEIIOY,

•

l'

-,•'

..•

IWAIN

M IDDLE AGI:::O CHRISTIAN LADY !:lRIAHPATlH Kenne s Boo I q
or couple lo stoy w th n dd e
C. oo n ng AKC Go do ~t
aged lady on 14 ac e form 2
~ I: gl !&gt;h Loc k e
~ pn e
n out-. de the PI fllposo t
t ..14(:14 141
w v c y n ts Call 675 691.J'/
l~ N 1 1: NAIH
WOOD S PI:T
&gt;OR &gt;Ull OR PART liM[ [M 0 l 0Y
GROOMI NC. FACilllll: ~ P o
M~N1
CAL L 675 60M FCR IN
le!-.!i o ol Sor" ces oft e e&gt;rl oil
H:IWI ~W
b eed!o all sty e!&gt; 1-'h 4Jb 0:131

PAHT TIME O Pt;NING l or RN o lJH AGO N WV ND
CAJHRV
LPN w th Pharmacol ogy on 3 to
KI:NNt:L
A KC Chow Chow
11 sh ft Contact Nancy Vo
do gs
CFA
S a nP'&gt;e o d
M e er
RN
P nacre~ Core
H n ol oy on cat s N noloya !o
Ce n e r 446 71 12
co n lg No" I S 440 :38 4-4
Comm un ty
wor k e
po I m e Rl ~ NG ~TAR KENNH Boa d g
work ng w l h develope m ent al
a d g oo n g
A I b P- d ~
ly d sab led adults Co o t Jo 1
Chesh e
Co I :..167 O'Jr.rJ o
M I k en Ph 446 16·41 ex t ~31
Jtd UJ4/
or se ld res um e t o P 0 Hex
HI
LLCIUST
KI:NNEL S boo d g
900 Gall po l s Oh o 4Sb3 A
A so AKl Reg Dobe rn o s red
equal oppo r un ty e nptoy e
and blo c k~&gt; Ca ll 44b "/7 4 'j

HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES
17 to 31 year olds nO ex·
pertence Earn good pay
vtth top benefl1s while
earmng one of 60 trades tn

lhe U 5 Navy Ctll or stop
on
221 Columbus R~.~
Athen
Ph
S93 3566
!Collect) .
.

WA N lEO boby s tier n my hone
Mofl ~r 11om to Spm Must
hove f onspor tat on tve g een
o eo
Good w ages If
n
le es ted co li 446 0820 befo e
11 om
SWH P~R and sew ng mach ne
r e po r pa I s and suppl es P ck
ACCOUNT CLI:HK Ab I ty to wo k
up and del very Dov s Vacuum
rap dly and o ccu alely w h
Lleoner
m le up Georges
slo st co l deto Is
AH u o e
L eek Rd Ph 446 0~94
typ sl H nte ested co oct
THURMAN HO USt: ant que !&gt; ~ u r
Gal o Ja ck son Me g s Lorn
n l ure s r pp ng
repo r and
mun ty M e nto Heo th L et e
e f shed lou ty Rd 1:1 off ~ 5
on equa l opportun ty emp loyer
-446 551 1
Le te v lie
V I loge
Closed
M onday &amp; Tue!&gt;doy Even ngs
by oppo ntm ent :.!4 5 94 79
~O H

DEAD

ST OCK

REMOVA L

CAll 245 SSI4
CIT Y CAli
"I OAYS 6 to l'J
Loll 446 045 1

w II

GEl YOU ~ fA~ S PIE~cm &gt;RH
WIT H 1Hl PURCHASl O&gt; Sb 9S
I:: A HHING S
JEWI:: LI::N S

TAWNI::Y S

8UY ING AI Un ed Stoles s l~o~ e r
co 1 s Top pr c~s H ghe pr ces
for !. lver de ll a s and early
com M TS Co n Shop Ca ll
446 Hl 42 or 4-40 0690 Pay cosh

.

GalhpoltS Chapter

No. 79

R.A.M.
Monday, Ocl 30

7 00 P.M.
ME M DEGREE
EHP Rtchard cart er II
Sec

APPLICATIONS
be

recetved

at

the

Robert McCully

G UN SH001 Roc ne G un Club
l:.ver y Su nday I p n ~o c t o y
ch ok e gu s on ly
G UN SHOOT Roc ne Volu nt eer
~ e lJ ep t l::ve y Sotu day b JU
p n 0 1 th e bu ld ng n li as han
fa c to y choke gun s only
ARI: YOU tr oubl ed w th w ld
a n mal s? ~ 0)( m nk racoon
opossu n bea ve r e tc? Call the
tro ppm 91:15 ~ 9 E:I 4 W II con ocl
n pe rson for s gned perm• s

son
HA C1 NE G UN Club s hov ng a par
ty at Hoyo l Oak Park Sot n te
N ov 4 l :.iU 1 I M dn e A I
ncmbets and w ves n\1 ted

Help Wanted
WOHK
OVt:RSI:AS
Au stra l o
Air co Sou h Ame co l:u o pe
e tc
Co Hol ru cl on
Sole s
Eng nee rs ll er cal etc SBOOO
to 550 000 pu s t)(penses pad
~ o r o nployme nt
nlormol on
w r te Ove r se a ~ Employmen
Bo x 1011 8os on Mo 02102
PART TIM~ open ng tor RN o LPN
w th Pharmacology 3 11 sh fl
Contoc Nancy Van Meier RN
P n ee es
Care
Ce n t e r
6 14 446 7112
WOULD LIK E a fe n o le Ia I ~o~e n
a nd help core l o r 2 g rls age s 6

&amp;Bon nee

PAHT TIME Cl n c Recap on sl
Cl erk App ox 32 hour s per
m on t h Requ rements nclud e
res dence n M e 1gs Co ab l1ty
to mee peopl e eos tly ac curacy
w th f gures and sre ll ng clear
hond wr t 9 l oco ref e ences
Equa l oppo rlun ty empl o ye,r
Fo r mo e nf ormatl on contact
Plan ed
t'ar en ho o d
of
Sc u heas t Oh o Off ce n Cou r
th&lt;. use ph on e 992 sq12

Servtce Officer to ftll the
vacancy of the late Wallace
Amberger All 8pp l cants
must be a veteran
All
appl cattons
must
be
subm1tted by Nov 1st

thiOf&gt;
n o r th ol d ch ld o d do I ghl
hou sewotk
n y honE'
Gall pol !. M o day 11 u ~ r doy
Co I 446 l:lbO ! olt t&gt; 4 lO
._

H OH~ ~

8 0 JC.Hl
tA ll 1'/4 :1 J

Storm
W1ndows,
Storm
Doors,
Replacement
Wm
dows. Pat._, tovers,
Alummum S1dtng and
Accessories Call

Bill'S
446-264L
&lt;HH I ~ 1 MA~
OfH) l- fi:S
AK EN ~a y pay e

AIRlJALE te e ~&gt; ok c eg lo ge
type 'Jt.6 1357

H OU~~
Jill &amp;

AK C BH Tl ANY SPAN H S C1 o
p o bl oodl es !&gt;I a ll&gt; wo n
c d vet checked Good pel'&gt;
exce len t on g ou:.e and quo I
Lo ti 61S 37 4
AK C H[G SHH Tlf S(m notu e co l
I es) '1 m o les 1 l ema e '&gt; Ob e
o d w h l e b w k s o ld ~ I ot ;.
a d wo med Coi l J67 02Y'l
RI SING STAR Kenn e l s !:lao d g
and groom n g
al l b ceds
Lhesh re 367 0 292

MAN TO WORK IN SlRVICE STA
TION A ND
446 J/:121:1

GROLI:RY

CALl

~I

La
4J!J 0D40

SNOW
TIRE SALE

HELP WANTED
BUS BOYS
Morn•ng
and
Evemng
Sh1ft Apply •n Person at

' "'

YSS Seco dA ve

Co l

3 /9 211 5 of e

n

l 4lb KAWASAKI KZ 400 Deluxe
App ox 1500 n !e.'o exc co d
Call :l4~ ~01 I

Pomeroy Landmark

ti£'.1
.........

1..!

'J

~~ !&gt;I~

Cc II

Mgr

MOBILE DE

14~

Awnings,

Covers.

14 ~ ~4 / 1 b

P•t1o

C.rJort~

S.t4p

and R•ltvellng Call.

4'12!:1

P~N U L I: 10N

RUW T I::!A Tf CRY
S !:1 OU plu ':o o• o d C:.' I o ge
Guo o ee l Nte w o " SJ3 ()(
w~._ epa c o ~c~ Loll JI:W B54b

ANTI-FREEZE
PERMANENT
ANTI FREEZE
Why pay $3 99

()1)\.o'fl o'fl

b

OAI~ U N

a

tJtii.J o d topj
J~ :J~l.~f of B ~p

America's No.1
Firewood
Splitters,

C&amp;J Power
Equipment
Rt 3

LUMI HO USE .roo l S:l
de l ve ed 44'1 "11 Lb

•Echo Cham Saws

Galhpohs

Ph. 446-9442

pe

19"/0 fORO I Ia .'o lok c bod
S'JOUO J'J:.! 7SU:J ott e b

1C

IIAN UI':! IOR ole Ho u q o "'
S ~0 o H S I om ~d (J (W
B lJ o
ol 4 0 t o
G o f
o d t o s~ o '1
u~ n
of LJo ..,
o Go d fl: dg U
'l l rJ o oy
c
ab o

API-'A LAL HI AN S T OV~ CO La 91.2
~e lec t o
of wou I a
cool
I eo er5 low e~ I p e5 l eo u
nq A :;hley Ope ~o
0
I
4p
Sun
'} oo
J n
M ddl e po
betw&lt;"e
J I o d
-4tl S
dow
he ol {'y I a
To ny:;
Co you
1-'~ o t
tl 4b9H ll9 1

uck

Generato~

•AIIeco Power

14"1~

CAMA IW lha
nu h 997 nos

1 k AP I-' NG SUflPlll:S

Ma ~ o

LUMP OR takP
f 4'l 21HJ

Anctlorlng, Sklrtl,.,
Roof P•lnt,

Pt

Odds
M d
44201"/J o
H

41

HAY l-OR SALI: '19'1 245:.1

SERVICE

I

HH~ WOO O

PHONf-

H~MI'JANT ~

CAH PI:

N B ow

Phone 992 2181

~Al ~

MAY1AI.J CO II-'f~ lON~ Po u
Po
wast c o d d yc
Vt r
good cond I on !. PII O!&gt; se t L o I
a t er Sp n ~Y'l L44S

HOI:iYN OG :JO
obI(' C~ ad o
A le
o
lu Ito&lt; ~ q4'1 7630

b 4 f"/3 5:.!1!0

!:l
HONOA
GO t D WI NG
G l O&lt;J(J I :100
lc b ock t ke
cw Lo I 146 l:J/0 a l c 6p n

HAY FOR

!:iU S
o p
pO s!&gt;e ger w
Load co d I o
Co oc
Mo k o "'t.rl nut

U

MOVING SALE

Phon(' 997·7181

~Op

~l H OO L

de
a o
Ml
t,
,.(;
1 at
Ml I I J) d
l
o
to e 4JO SID l oc o
o d ij(:IO qo 1 octo MI-'JOU 1
Ow
Ofl f
~~
\
O&lt;
~c e
leo WI :304 4 H OJO

f/JI Nn

Ftr st
T•m c
baby
fur
n11ure
sto ve &amp; r etr g
drap es cloth nq and m1 sc
S~4 Jack son P ke
turn at
Spnng Vall ey G reen Apt
9T III 7
Tu es day Oct J

Jack W. Car~ey,
Mqr.

l

GO lJl N ~ed Oc; c ou::.
&amp; Golden De c ous oppl o .. 11
po &lt;k
0 ~o I
Sk
tl84
614 669 3"/l:l~

dlepo t
Oho
4'1'1 b LOb

Sale Procr's

MIN I HIKt

GR IMI:. ~

a d tnds Shop

'I

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNOMARK
SERVICE STATION

~~ N S I MA 1 c
a
au
g
noc h c1-'ho
'IY'J :tl)b ti c LJaly ~e t ~_I
I
L o u t ~ eP.I Po p o y
01 0

HURROUGH ~

Sole

U~t:O ~ UHN lUR tWH IRlPOOL
IU~R DGUIA TO H
L LI VING HM ~ U H ON E
g ee SIOO Co ll446 JS60
LO V ~ S~A 1
ON I- 1:\00KCASt:
USE D fA HM E Q U I PM~N T
BW
ON~ C OT H~ ~ H AMPER
M., LM 1J ese l roc o
R U: S N!:W ANLJ U ~l:. lJ ~ Ufl:
M~ b~ 0 ese l oc o
Nil UR E 1:1~4 SEcOND 440 '1~23
M ~ I I ::I~ D e~el I octo
Lo~e 4:JO gas !roc or
f o rd tlbU gas octo
Mf '100 1 ow d o ppe
S HINN ~ TRACT OR SAlf S
4JI:l 1030
L ~O N WV

om

For Sa le

LOAL liMI:.~lON~ ~ o d g Ovc
a c u n ch o de l e 1 2c doq
food and all yp
o l at I"'
cE'Is o Soh Wo k.. Inc l M
~ I Pomeroy 'N'J 31:1(/

147 4 lJA1 !)UN fJ CKUP
44'1 6142

For All Your
GE T.V. s &amp;
Hotpoont Appl.

o d gold co s
et o co llec o
op loll 440 Hl4:/or

USI: D TRAC TOR S
Mf 1J S D e!&gt;el
Mf LJU D e~e l
M ~ 1SO 0 ese l
M~ :lJ!:i D c~c
~~lJ I Ufi:NllUHl:
M ~ I 05 0 esel
Mf 2H~ D C'5C
J~ t:O U)l OH TV US~D RE Cl N[fl:
M ~ 1 3S D ese l
Cob o o d
lOH BlN AND ~ NV lJ l:R ~ UH
Heo er
N IIUf/:1:: q~~ ~ I:L O NIJ AVI:
Nl:W &amp; USI:J) MPLEMEN TS
GI\L LIP O l S
Mf9 Bo le
M~I O Hal e r
MH'JU
Bol er Mollh ews lole ta y Scy the t1 N HOUND lA B l: 10 spd
MF800 Sem Mounted 6 be o
boy ~
b ke
cob ct
ode l
Mf 5'10 12 d sc Mf'} 'l
p l ow
eco d ployl! ~ gle bowl k I
o w chopper
M ~J4 2 row
I ~
s k L ol 446 "/Ll:l o
plant e s
me chon c ol
4&lt;10 \/:JOb
on~plan t e
SHINN S
fiAC
~OU ND oaK WOOD or coal
lOR SA l tS
-. tove 46 Oodge p ch up
n
Ph on e 45H I bJO
1-'ly Qu h C k e l Co li 446 fJ5bl:l
l~ON W VA
f'VC
gs

bed fold s
dea l fa
A I s ZE''&gt;
d S yde

I

POMEROY
LANDMARK

ANO

9.J~ck W Carsey

AIH Bt:D S f or an e)( tto
I at for !&gt; l orage
ecreo an al use
0\1 0 loble Co b n a

'1

~

M0N 1Lr0M H10Y WA RD A rl e
~ o eo AM ~M ste reo !:1
ado.
tope 1 oye w th eco d but on
I
l ob e
'/_ ~&gt;peak e ~&gt;
Cu i
440 :l'J46

DO l LAR ~

Mf~

AKC Rt:G ISHHt:D Block lob ado
Wo ed
re tr eve r pupp es
Sho s bc ell e t w lh ct d e
P o e 614 Ml ]039 Eve
g~
o wee k e 1ds

l H MN~Y
BLOCKS
bu ld g
ma er ols Gal po l s Bl ock Lo
dAb '1183

Jbf

MAYTAG po able dye 2 cu
r1 u n s~o call 2as 500"1

LOAL W II o L ee k Hd
M lao! I c Ph '1~6 1561 o

ve~&gt;

II JO Ia 6pm

M ilK LOW lo gc blo c ~ Je ~ey
goo I p oduce
$400
Co il

A ND lL AHK p o o p oc
r aly ew
u~&gt; seJ I Sl:/00
Lo ll 446 I J 1 bclore oo or
ol o ~P M

Sch ouz e

l H~ BE ~ T IN ~UHN 1 U fl:~
t.JPHOLSTEH ING ~ r ee b mo es
P ck up and de ver y se v e
ca ll Mo w ey ., Uph o ls e y P
Pleasa nt W Vo 6 15 4154

Ot c

~ O~Y

AK( Hl::G ISHRED Beag e tl no
tl ~&gt; old Mol e $"1 5 Jb"l OL'n

Al lYI-'ES o f bu ld ng n ol e ci s
bock br ck '&gt;e we r p p e~ w
de ws
I nt eb
et c
Claude
W l er s R o V ro de 0 Ph o e
:l4S Sl :l oil er 5

y

H l l lJ lRA I-1 1;1"1~ J"/7~

Sll Vt: H
Fo

URNITUfl~

I

Adrl a Oh o
Jbl (JbJ!
0 go~&gt; heo e
4 elect c C&gt;Oie ~
M ytog w ge
WO!&gt;I e
'}
t hf's ., of d owe :;, lomp!o po

'l b IIJ4

LrO NV O UT o f Su s nc s ~o c
Pood les Pek nge se Pone o
on Teacup T es $J ) to
S ::.!5 Pho eb 14 b 9b 174 f

For Sale

RAY~ U~W

Bl:ING
po

WOR lO HOOK

LOVABlt W HITt sno w d It g eo l
P't'HENI:::t: S Pu pp es
Ph , e
I b 14 b67 3H3H

AKC Ht G
German
pupp es 991 70AO

~01 U

ANU

tmME
IMPROVEMENTS

t

i\ ., "ill

For Sale

PilOG RAM SPt CIAL STS 0 rect
pro gra m nplem entol on w th
mentally
re tard ed odul s
Hes den t ol pr ogram I ve n no t
equ red Bo t helo degree n
speCial educa t on o re lated
f eld w th one yQO exper ence
n work ng
w th me ntally
etorded P efe r expe enc e t
~ DINU LA\o\ N MOW~fl: S~U L oll
A ct v I es o f Do ly L v ng
. - - - - - - - -- - - ,
Jb J l2 b
Solo y ange $ 7500
S9b00
WlQUIT
w th b en et t s Send w r I en
PA
HSON
1-Uf{N!lUH !:: LO
esume l o Box K A hen s Oh o
OWN YOUR OWN
14 :, l:as c A ve
4S/OI
RETAIL
N ew bd su e S 2'j 4 d owe
KlT C H~N HHP ~u l l and po t me
APPAREL SHOP
ches t S'1~ 4~ 4 I( 'l r ug~ 5 0
No p ofess o 10
ex per ence
J p
ta ble se t
ColJch S ~
Off e r the lat es t 111 tca n s
necessary
Ho memak er e•
S~U
L che f
oc k ers
S~U
d entms and spo rts w ear
pe r ence w II quolty you W e
h k b e d :. co p e tc
Sl S
$ 14 850 00 ncludes b eg mn
w II Iran HOLIDAY INN NO
We go ..- t ee l hed ;. boo k cm.e
tng nv e ntory t1 xt ures and
PHON!: CALLS
5211 liS
I c odboa d
tramtng Open'" as ltffl e as
l: VHYTH NG MU~T GO
1 we eks anywhere m u sA
WAITR!:SSES full a nd pa I I me
tAiso
cwallable
mtant s
D n ng roo m and lounge HOL
S OU V\ HIH VH VH COUL H
children s
and
pr e tee n
DAY INN NO PHON!: CA LL S
o cs coo l a l cl o
e~c
o d
shop ) Call JoAnn TOLL
No !:.0 l ed W II ell l o SHOO
N GHT AUDITO!It fu ll or psrt t me
FREEl tiOO ti74 47ti0
Old up gi l p o o 5100 Ca ll
HOLIDAY
NN
NO PHON~
441J 4 14~
LA LL S

,&lt;-"" $347

HO N EY

HAWKIN S THOMPSON
7 e
load ng r I e
AI
cesse r e~ 742 27SO

Ph o o

LOMH

e b~ 000 Hl U
UOO liTU :.!U OOU HTU fl l o 0
"19'} 260'}

1HH E~ GAS heo
~U

Saturday Oct Z8

Thoughtful defense wins
NORTH

ut ·
oc·

OL D AN D YOU NG tro ned beagle
dogs mo le o d l ema e 0 w II
1 ode fa gu s of and desc r p I o
74'115'1 1

o o d er co

C APH I ~ ,l::

or co d oI co s der
992 :IS 4

CLARK 4000 lb I a k I I n good
ope ot ng
cond I o n
Da y~
YHS 330 1 Eve
gs 98S 4140

9n GMC 1 po sse l ge va

14"11
VW f p os~e ge von So ld Ia
I ghesl b ddet ow 1er ese ves
g hl o e tect ol b ds loll
9 '/ ~ ?81:16
Sen o r C I r.e s
Ce er to nake a ra ng e nen l '&gt;
to ~ee B d~ nus I b e
by t: ·irloy Nove nbe r ]
Pay nenl
n u.'o l be mode by ce I f ed
chec k

l 9o7 ~OHD
on I ud. !I a bed
5100 Good shape 997 ?:JJO

1£1.28

+ AQ4
• J2

• Q9764
• Q62

WEST
EAST
+9762
+S
•A84
•109 753
t KS
t A 10 8 3 2
• 10 9 8 3
• A4
SOUTH
+ K J 10 8 3
• K Q6
• J
• KJ 7S

Vulnerable No one
Dealer South
West North East South
Pass
Pass
Pass

2t
3+
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

••

2+

3 NT

~ N Day old o .'o tor ed legho n
p ul le ts both floo
or cage
g rown avo tabl e Po ultry Hous
g and Aula no t o
Mode n
Pou lt y 399 W Man Po co y
Ph one 99'J 21M

plays had been made fatrly
quickly The speedball play
ended r1ght here
West looked at that SIX of
hearts very carefully Then
he started to reconstruct the
club su1t The four spot re
turn by his partner would be
e1ther from ace four or ace
jack seven four but woth
that latter holding East
would have played the jack
not the ace at trtck one
Hence South had four
clubs He also had reb1d
spades and surely held three
hearts
West was through analyz
ong He rose w1th h1s ace of
hearts led the kmg of d1a
mends to drop South s jack
He contonued d1amonds and
gave h1s partner two dta
mond tr1cks to set declarer

Opemng lead •10

19i'] H CAMIN O cr us e co lrol .
P 5 P !:l au om ot r lock Al ~o
a llo way bed SJ5 /-42 '1609 ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
H

IlL~~·~

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

N ~W

CH~ V R O L I: 1
le ~
S~:/00 or w

cd

ype

HH HARli::Y Oov d !&gt;on S'lSOU
I
Y 3 O ld., Del o I:Hl
Royo e
Low
leoge
JO.t CIEJ'l 1514

c 21100 n

£!

BRIDGE

1~/ J

YU
La ss
a
lrode

co l

YUS JSS5

81U.'S
446-2642
:10 CU Fl S g ol u e c h e~
deep fr eeze ~ 42 '1]9~

N

co

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

A Moch1gan reader asks 1f
you ever open a 15 pomt
notrump when playmg the
standard 16 18
The answe r IS a dectded

yes

Tens and

mn es

are

Souto m1ght well have unportant cards m notrump
BOB EVANS
T
elected
to btd four spades and 1f we hold four of those
STEAK HOUSE
44b m o
&amp; Country
but he did b1d three notrump high spot cards we tend to
l~M ~l A R Y LOTS
Beech Grove
and
West made h1s normal add one poont to our notrump
APPALACH IAN STOVE CO
pomeroy La ndmark
g o~o~es S &amp; b Ol 4S $ 5()
count
l owe&gt; I p ces 9 e ol e5 •e lec t 0
opemng
of the club 10
0 1431 ~3 ~'
HI:
!lo ev
NEWSPAPER ENTEHPHISF. ASSN
qual y woo d o cool 5 ave s
!:lack
W
Carsey Mgr
East took h1s ace and led
Mo e ll a Oh a
qu e u C ly
Wanted to Buy
New outl e t 1 M dd leporf a ll
Hall Porne oy
back the four He hoped that
M I St be h d Tony ~ Co y
Phone 992 2181
JUNK au to and sc rap metal Ph
hts
partner had led from
Ou t ~ ve ry Su n 11 noon l o ~';;.
"_•••_•_,.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
f OU R 15x7 s ott ed Crager omgs
you have a quest on for
~l:lti 67!6
somethmg hke K 10 9 ax and the(Doexperts?
3p m Callh9B 71 91
noun ed on M ahowh Su pe
Wn te Ask th e
GOOD USI:D ~UH NITUR I:
not
fHil:ZE H
el ec c sl ave
gas
M ag
res
W II I t
ton would have a reentry
Experts care of lh1s newspa
l
AYNE
S
NEW
AND
USlQ
I
U~
upho l ste ed and appl onc es
ove
fu e l o I heot e
Coli
South could see e1ght easy per lnd1 v dual quest1ons w 11
Cl evro le o VMC p ck up o r
NtTURt:
Ph 446 0 ~22
JbO 4b90
Iorge GM co r Phone 992 'JI'.fl:l"l
tncks The heart su1t was be answered 1f accomp.... n ed
NEW
the place to gather m a mnth by stamped self addressed
GOOO
USEP
RlG~IGfWA TO R
Hoby bed s Stl5 Sofa bed o d
AND &gt;~El Z ER UPRIGH T 0~
THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME so South rose Wllh the kmg of envelopes Tfre most mterest
ch a
$ 50
so l o
o
CHt:ST Ph 446 0.322
D
.,
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee
and led hos SIX of ng questtons wt/1 be used n
ol kC
o t o na n
3
o bi s
/
he,arts.
S~OO
Hedr
oom
su
es
th s column and wr/1 recerve
TtMSl::R Top pn ce for top qual ty
Unscramble these four Jumbles
Up to th1s pomt m tune all copes of JACOBY M ODERN 1
S 1 b~ S'l5U $300 SSOU ~ a
An
Pone oy Fore st P odu cls Coli
14 '/l HO NDA Ul ~50 K ex ell e t
co nd I on
51300
HNM Call

&lt;qq.. gaJ

\,..:

.own

JJ JY~M

492

546~

lAHGl:: quon 1 e~ of F r owood
Phone 6i'5 4410

\

USlD

WOOD

STOV[

co il

446 3BfJS
CHIP
WOOD
Pol es
ma)(
d•om eter 10 on lar gest end
Sl:l SO per ton Bundl ed slob
Sb SO per ton Del vered to
Oh1o Pollet Co Rt l Po neroy

992 2689
T MBI:R POMEROY ~ o re s! Pro
duct s To p p r ce lor stand ng
sow t mber Coli "192 5965 or
Ken Hanby I 4-46 !:IS l O

Ol 0 FURNITURE 1ce bo.:es bra ss
beds 1ron beds desk s e tc
complet e ho useholds
Wn c
M 0 M1ll e r Rt 4 flam e oy or
call 992 7760
OLD COINS
pocket wat ches
cla ss ungs wedd ng bo n d ~
d omo d s Gold o s lve r Co li
Roge r Wom siP.y 7-4'1 2331

LIV t N COUNSHOR to wo rk n
WI: PICK up tunk
I r on s I anal
p roq rom
fo
ng 1unk cors
deve ope nertolly d ~o bl e d
lo es o d
l al Jo M II ke 446 164 2 ex t
Sol11oge
SR
J3'J o mo I r es ume lo Jaq 1
902 S4b8
M II k e
P
0
Ho )( 9Ub
Gall poll s Oh o A e ., a l op
po unity emp loy er
REUA~LE LADY to co e fo

(II ~.14

AKC
~N G LI ~ H
SP fi:IN Gl:R
SPA N IHS 3 m ol e 'l l e no e
I Vi! r a d wh te
Avo lob c
week o! No~o~ 'lU Dow n pay ne
w I ho d pup Eocl pu1 ~H~
Lo ll 6'/S '14b l

~0 ~

Veterans Office Pomeroy,
0 to employ a Veteran

ANT IQU ES bought a d !&gt;old
W h te s Ant ques
HI
3~
Rod ney Cal 'J4S SOSO

I

Pels for Sale

WISH lo express au s ncere RI:U:PTIONIST Typ ng equ ed
grot tude and thanks to ou
Sole s e)( p he lpful Sto t 53 75
f r 1e nds
ne 1g h bo s
and
pe hou plu s &lt;Omm ss on No
re la vas for 1h e1r many acts o f
phone call!&gt; Apply n person
k ndn ess prayer s v s Is cords
T1
Cou ty M o b le Homes
lor-cl o d fl owers d r ng the e•
tos e rn A ve
tended llness and tleo lh of a u
DIESH AND AUTO M~CHANIC
hu sbo d and fath e r
Apply
ol Lounty Com n s
Th e fom ly of R cho d (D ck)
s oner s Off ce
Co house
N eu tzl ng
l oc ust St Golf polls Oh a
WI SH to thank all o l th ose that
em embered m e o n my 90th MIDDLE AGfD LADY Ia I ve n
w th e ld e ly coup le Cook n9
b rthdoy Thank s for o il t he
and
ght hou sekeep ng Col
ove ly fl owp s g f s and co rd s
4-46 -428b o r 36 ! 7 6()
Vou lhoughfu l ess wm g eotly
opp rec a ed May God Ble ss DISPATCH
CARRifH NHDtO
eac h one
urg ently La I -446 32-4 aft er
!:d na Summer! e d
5 30pm

WANTED A UTO me chomc for
n ow co deolersh p W r le 8oM
'/ d3 Pomeroy Oh o o r 1 he e
Cl9") 2174

Reinforced Wedge construction that allows for
a 'smooth and controllable split

Help "'!anted

W~

N O HUN TING o r tres pas s ng on
rpy propc ly w thoul perms
s on Judy M cGraw

At the Old Gallla County Otstnct L.tbrary

at the corner of Thu·d

Card of Thanks

W e w sh to e.:p ess. o u gat tud e

lit

c lose assoc ate or p erhaps a
family member want s to do
some thmg for you but doesn t
qu te know how to tell you
Shou ld you sense 1t you cou ld
make a tactfu l reque st

The New Kelley ...

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1978
11:00 A.M.

r c a Ann M ll e r

~

ARIES ~March 21 Aprll19) Try to
spend today w lh lhat specoal

art s t1c nature IS very much m
evtdence today Work ng on
th ng s req u1nn g m an ual dexter
tt y and a es theti C ba lanc e Will

a gg s and Po

We l ove o d n ss yo u ve ry much
Mother•
IN LO VING memory of ou dear
doug hi er a d s s le r Ju l e No
dea n K1rby who pas sed away
one year ago O ct 2H
do not go alone
If Death should b eckon me w th
outstret ched ha nd
And
wh spe
so t ly o f {o
unk nown land
I shall no t be afro d a go
f or though th e path I d o not k no w
I tok e death s hand Wllhou o fea r
for He w ho sol e ly brou ght me
J- he e
) W II also oke m e saf ely bock
} And though r many h ng s lock
) He w II not l ei me go a one
' Into the volley that s unknown
~ So I reach o ut and to k e Dea.th 5
Hand
~ And tou rney Ia the Pr om sed
'
Land
, Sad ly m ssed by Mo her ~o her
~ and S1ster Mr and M s Ken
Mil&lt; ne lh B rchf eld Mr s James A
~ Say s ! Sue Ann ) and fam1iy

and glamor nto your life The
assoctatton w I be un usually
sl mulat ng
October 29 1978
TAURUS
(Aprll20 May 20) Your
Thi S commg year yo u w II have

a lot of ron s n th e f re but
you II be able to do a masterful
ob of keep1ng them all hot
Most anythmg you turn your

Uut f1ll each wok g I au
1 u seful ways
Reach out your han d
n com fort and n cheer
And I n turn w 1l l com fo 1 you
and hold you near
And never neve b e afro d Ia d e
f or I om wo I ng
l or you n the sky
Sadly m1s sed by Daug ht ers and
Grondch ldren
Lora yn l ee

Cantatore and hlt him w1th a
smgle blast to the chest,
pollee sa1d
~
Pollee sa1d Cantatore was
stillallve when pollee arrived
and tdentifted Cox as the
gunman before he died
Pohce sa1d Cox was
charged w1th two counts of
second-Oegree murder

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) A

PUBLIC AUCTION
LOCATION

There were clowns The
fire company had a float that
was a house that appeared tD
be on fll'e and the men urged
on by the1r ch1ef who was
dressed as a Cherokee Ind1an
tripped all over themselves
Fuller and Huts~nplllar had a
double float on which s1x men
were blllldmg furmture
Ernst1ng s float boasted of a
g1gantlc clock Not all the
floats were so extra vagant -

C J Shreok was milking
bologna and sausage on his
wagon Another but~her, A
Newlun, had his float
pulled by sll beautiful
white horses He was also
making bologna Two of the
merchants made their
Duals lntu paper-roached
fogures One of the floats
had Mrs Mary Newsom
playmg the first plano
brought tu Ohio

For Best Results Use Sunday lfimes-Sentinel Classifieds

auto bod es buy
strop ran bol
n etol s
H d er s
I 'J~
Pan croy

- Pets
- -for Sale

HOOF HOLLOW Hom'! s 8uy ~e ll
I adt: 0 1 a
New o d u!&gt;ed
::,odd e!l. Ru th Reeveo, Alba y
b l.tt 6ll I .'J'I£;

., ofo and cho
SJOO
node n
so fa cha r loveseo
S:l 5
ee l ne s $100 and up Tab les
S60 eac h S v vel rod.,e s Sl:lO
M op e o p 1 e tab le 4 cho ~
Sn 5
Hut ch
SJUO
7 pc
d c tte S104 5 pc d e tt e
w 1h sw ve cha r s SJOU !:lu k
bed s com ple e S ISO S'JI' ~ S'l 7!:i
n o llresses o box sp ng s f
S!:iO S60 Si'O each
cap to .,
bed sns queen 5C i s. S1/S 5
drawer ches t $49
GOODUSEO
n ght ston d
0 yers
Ch es t
onges coff ee a nd end table!&gt;
bed s tobl e:o amp s a r co d
one
wr ng e wos he wood
table w 4 cho r s
po able
was he r
refr gerolor
o he
lc:&gt;ms l oll d46 0~2'1 M dl"ti:Joy
h u f day 9 to Bpm Solu day
9 1o Spm J n o ul Bu lov le Hd

one letter to each square
four ordtnary words

Ia form

I

TENIL

PUBLIC AUCTION
161 SUMMIT STREET
ROSEVILLE OHIO

I ORXYP

rJ I

I

SATURDAY, NOV. 4 AT 10·30 O'CLOCK A.M.
(ALL OAY SALE I
Take St Rt 22 sou1h of Zanesville toward Somerset turn south on St Rt 93 mto Rosevtlle at 3rd traffic
light go up over humpback bndge to dead end right to 101 Summtt Street

~EUGLEt
Now arrange lhe corcled loners lo

l-OR SALf: OH THAOI: Bus ,.
prope ty
Go11 po l ~ l o l o m
t&gt;Q pm E'
Co li 'l:Sb n03H olt t.:

form

bp

Print answer here

19f!:i KAWASAKI SUO ex c co d
L oll 446 b689

PERHCT SlHPl~ MA l
fRESSES AND &gt;OUN UA IONS

S f~IA

CORBIN AN U
NllUHE 9!1S
VAL LJI-'L IS OH
BUN

SNYOl-k
~RO N D

111' '1/IIII:IONI- o rl
C' rl
o
A o
cel l S/(K

odt.
J4h I b7~

1-UR
AVf

o
l.

the surprise answer as sug

gested by the above cartoon

Yesterdays

I

''(X I I XJ"

(Anawtnl Monda~)
Jlllnbles FLUKE t&gt;NAAL INTENT BEUEF
{"'
Answer Whal he hoped to get from the bikerA BREAK

NEW-JUSTOFF PRESS! JUMBLE 800K111 wnn 110puzzJelltavall
able lor 11 3&amp; pottpald !rom Jumble clo thlt NW~Pf!Pe' P 0 Box :W
Norwood N J 0'184 Include v.our name ad&lt;lretl. ztp cOde aoo msto:e
checkt payable to Newapap.-bOoka

turn

HaYing sold property and mov ing out of s tate w tl sell
Ant que furn iture (curved glass c h i na cupboard love
seat spinn ng whee l roll top d esk and much more)
glass (Northwood baskets c ake stan d s etc ) duna
{ German Austnan Ba v artan Ltmog e etc ) or gmal
Curner &amp; lves print ( F r st Rtd el la r ge statu e (Work
Horse w father and son a rt st s g ned l mtsc o ld I ems
like Oil lamps telephon es cloc k s 7 pc p•ter a nd bow l
set 1ron bank etc Com Co lect o 1 several g o ld p1eces
- 88 sliver dollars - Wal k tn g Liberty M o rgan a nd
Franklin hatv e..s L ber ty qua r ter s
M e r cu r Y &amp;
Roosevelt dtmes
B u f falo and Jefferson N ckels lnd•an h ead and L~n co ln p enn es et c Th• s ts a l arge
n
II
I H / t.
lv 1
l
.., lC
All th e above Item s are ol h gh qual ty and 1n excellent
con dttlon tt wtll be a very good sale to a tten d N oth mg
shown bctot"e d~y of sa le Ter m s - cash or check w
postlrvt: 10 d!ly of sf"te Not res pons be tor ace dents

lunch on

pr~mtses

Owners - Mr and Mrs Ed Mtlter
Auct1om!er
Btl! Jane:. Phone S.S7 3411 or 557 3133

•

�~

0-l . llw Sunday Tuncs-&amp;nlmel , Sunday. Oct. 29, 1978

Lost and Found

f U UN D

lt •ggf'd d oq

w h ot P

Hd

b lo c I..

LAH C.t

l ou1el Cl dl

l' o lnt' r o y I o m Pnr ke r

l O':&gt;l O H ta i.. P" CIHirl r e n ~ pe l
Blod • a n d tan h o u n d Ar +.. o n r1
Ht

Ho i i P y ~

Wn1

1 }4

, t:"•' de ••ce l oo ks l•k '-' good h un
1m q d oq L oii&lt;J'n

AN Y l' l H ~O N ""'ho ho ~ onyt htng to
qt ... &lt;' nw o y ot lrl rlot'~ no t Cl ti E' t C t
o t h •mp l l o {' tlt•r c111y olh~? • IIHIIfl
lo t -. o lro 111 0 y p fO (l' 011 ad 1n tlu ..
co lurnn
lh&lt;'IC' wt11 hl' 11 0
, hot qo' ' " tlw odvc t lt!.('t
I' UPI-'11 ': 1 M o thct ~ ~ lu11l"w • Woll
an d GP • nw n ~h l' ph C' t rl ( t o ~ ~ C'd
t..o fl 'lJ b 6 HI -l ('...£-'lllll9'&gt;
PUPPYAN O L AI Loll i'45

~!:lbl

J ltl ~

1~ / 'J f o trl Vcn
l ~tJGML II

LV":&gt; l
~•noll
Co' ' 'n
l Prr•l"r
h• o wn 111 t he vJC •n ll y o l ) p••n g

Auto Sales

/olll:' y l oll J4 b !Jbb

111 71 ( AMAI(U JU/ auto Otr PS
AM f-M t:1 track att s ho c k ~
qood r o11d tXl 000 mtl e!!o S 1100
( all bi'~ I JLJ

Mise Sales
H l Ll !;l (

I U io!NAU·

::-1 /)
G ood
/"!1, bO ) B

13000(\ BlU

co nd

1

on

l o ll

lop
I 1.1 !() OLD~ U8 e.:c cond
mtleagP all (&gt; XIia!. S&lt;/Y5 Call
bi'S I b:J 4
PO NTIAC V~ N T U~A
&lt;OO
v ti loaded SJU5 frrrn Coil
J~j8 fJ7U

1 ~ 1~

Wanted to Rent
hPdr oo •n

ho me

un l u1ll 1 ~ h e d

I ' ' P" ' •a b l y a l l or1 on e lev e l w 1lh

b m,.(&gt;tP v n t and g 01 o gf' HPod y
lo • Hlllll ('d •at e occ up an cy Ph
'l (,I J ~tl/• 1

( AMfll:H ANll HH:t:.n SJ 9!:1 pe•
gallon Beta Honda Sol&lt;' Rt l
Gc lltpOit ._.
I "'U Ml:IKURY LOUCAH XH I
I' ~

1-' H At. bl oc k wtth r~d tr1
h?not
$54&lt;/5 Call 446 J4t:l&lt;l
ahe r Spm
14 7&lt;1 OA TSU N PICKUP good con d
S1b(JO Col i J88 9bbb oil er 5prn

Gove Away
I B MO OLD pup s f./Y'l I JI b

O N t MAlt blo ck p e t 1 abbll log e
n ncll ood 49'1 ~l (J /
·
I 0 GOOD ho me

fem a le bot deo
lOII oc ~
I lo\J • on on lh!. I 1 ,
yt"Ot ' old ~ pay P d ond all ~ h o t s
9Q'J J l OO
Vt N PA~l
J.J b

\..

COL Lit PU P ~

l oll

l 'IIU

0 l ll ~
~.d lh

Jl b ll b tl

1-' A HI

w _,

lO tlll:

P UPPit ~

Loll

?lii U

1\ ll H N

IU It b ed
/5b l'l1 0

ru 11~

smgl e axle
good Colt

piPt e new Iro n! end tlu rn~ no
Procltcall~ new 11re!&gt; SIS'J::,
Cal l 381:1 BoYS

o.,

I YlU I
ton lnternoltonol liuck
JU 000 actua l mtle!&gt; 7 II • 14ft
Hotbed Ph 440 07b1
ll/!4 CH~VROLH
, T piCkup
I Yl1 Cadtlloc ~I Dorado 1974
Mar l111 Jet Boot Coli 44tl 4071:1
alter J JU

111 74 l HtV V ',

T

truck

14 / J l Ht V Y pt ckup

T

'J ~b

Coli

bbUS

con d

SI7~U

std
Cel l

'J b l US4l
CH~VY

powe r

Otr

CHEVHU 4 dr
Call A4() 13:.1&lt;,1

19bll AMC RI:BH b cy l
l et Coll3bl 01:.16

make o l

4 dr
AC Poc ed reasonable Ca ll

I 'I ll CH~YSLEH N~WPORT
J!lt:l ~ 184

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

good cond
and go!&gt; rm loeoge low mrles
Be:-,1 Offer Call tl/5 'JOn al ter

MOORE'S

"". 992 2848

H. L WHITESEL

All
Type
Industrial
Commercial and Home
Bulldong
Any Type Improvements

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

All Type Concrete Work
No Contr•ct Too Large Or
Too Small
2S Years Experience
All Work Guaranteed

Pomeroy,O
3 15 tfc

1 Dnve

7 Fourth eslale
12 Moxes
17 Church part
21 Emossary
22 Rodong 23 Doctnne
24 Spare
25 Pnnter's
measure

26 Heavenly
body
28 Eng me
30 All
32 Note of scale
33 Soamese cur·
rency
35 On the ocean
37 Scru ffs
39 Tar
40 Large
41 Babylonoan
deoty
43 Follow
45 Repulse
47 Pronoun
48 Cultovale
49 European
capota l
52 Land parcel
54 Canadoan
nver

56 Asoan cou nlry
57 Ogled
59 Poerce
61 Spreads for
dryong
62 Wolhered
63 Beaux64 For example.
Abbr
66 Muso c as
wntten
67 Man's name
68 Escape
69 Thus
71 Stal emat e
72 Map.
74 Bed parts

--~~

-

-

- . ...
~

J. R. Construction
Co.
Carpentry, Electrlca I,
Paonllng

OFFICE 446-7900
BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ROGER HYSELL
'

Construction
Maintenance
Reasonable Prices
References Avatlable
Ploone m 5191

10-22-1 mo .

GARAGE

Service
,..,
. . ......
......
._. .. . .

"'--- ....

·

...

- ~ --

"

...

'

.

OPEN DAILY, EXCEPT SUN . 9·5
MON &amp;FRI. TILLBP.M
OTHE I&gt; H~S . BY APPOINTMEN"

LET T HE GALLERY SELL YOUR PROPERTY
EASY FINANCING AVAILABLE FOR OUR POTEN
TII\L BUYERS - LOW OR NO OOWN PAYMENT
AND UP TO 30 OR 40 YEARS TO PAY oCONVEN
TIONAL, FHA OR VA I MONEY IS NOT AS TIGHT AS
YOU MAY THINK FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE
FOR OUR POTENTIAL SELLERS. GIVE US A CALL
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS"

~

!(/ftl f ord f 150Custom 4 x A !&gt; lep
~ de
P S auto elfc cand
Call 446 i'J40 alter 4
1'1/J PL 't'MOUTH FURY 1&lt;,10&lt;,1 LIN
COL N
CONTINI:::NTA L
Ph
'Jd5 ~~21:1

19 74 PON11AC CATALINA
A( AM ~M rodto auto
mtl e!&gt; ex c cond S'Jb(j5
~een at 10i' Kmeon Or
44b 45~ 5 p1 4db 15&lt;10

PS PB
J! 000
Con be
a t coli

136 Pronoun
137 Adored
139 Blemosh
141 Symbol for
lelluroum
142 Suffix· follower of
143 Abound
145 Has on
147 Short Jacket
149 Equaloty
152 Laton conIUnctoon
153 Mossove
155 Shoulder
wrap
157 Ancoent
Greek dostroct
159 Roman gods
t60 Mother of
Apollo
162 Weord ·
164 Growong out
of
t66 Slurs
168 Deloneate
e g.
169 Vosoon
107 Lottie Abbr
170 Exclude
109 Urge on
171 Calm
110 Strokes
DOWN
111 Taut
1 Entreaty
t13 Pose s
2 Lease
3 Kong of
114 SouthwestBash an
ern lndoan
4 Dance step
115 Note of scale
5 Gorl' s name
116 Haorpieces
6 Fewest
117 Maul
7 Symbol for
119 Auger
phenyl
120 ltaloan rover
8 Male sheep
121 Twor l
9 Black
122 - to riches
10 Hindu guotar
11 Mone excava123 Nombus
loons
124 Check
12
Avenue
·
126 Notched
Abbr.
128 Sprots
13 Golf mound
130 Warbles
14 Hostelries
132 Portuguese
15 Keep
cu rrency· PI
16 Long-legged
134 Clayey earth
bird
135 Damage
17 Beverage

18 Hebrew letter
19 Sarcasm
20 Puzzle
27 Harvest
29 Rote
31 Right (abbr.)
34 Cylindrocal
36 Is ill
36 Cuts
40 Reveal
42 Songs
44 Heaps· Colloq
46 Castor's
mother
48 Golf cry
49 Coat
50 Eagle's nest
51 Compass pt
53 Makes lace
55 0, p, q ,

thropes
95 Snaol
97 Outhts
98 Hurroed
102 Scolds
104 Nocholas.
e.g
t06 Tear
t07 Pogpens
108 Repaors
t10 Ingots
t11 Suet
112 Potcher
1t4 Maontenance
1t6 Heat
117 Bucket
119 Sprawls
121 Hoghlander
122 Unusual
123 Time div
125 Fone
58 Retaon
127 Negatove
58 Floroda coty
prefox
60 Bund le
128 Protect
62 Luge, e g
129 Chatter
65 Needlehsh
130 Seesaw
68 Tolls
131 Installed
69 Waldorf. e g 133 Glut
70 Hebrew
136 Apportooned
measures
138 Hum
72 Level
140 Parts on play
73 Ducats
143 Symbol for
751n musoc,
telluroum
high
144 Somple
76 Strokes out
146 Chunk
77 Turkoc tribes- 148 Afrocan rover
man
150 Araboan
79 Rugged
seaport
crest
151 Ascend
80 Stroboles
153 Base
82 Appoont154 Inlet
ments
t56 Greek letler
83 Rob
t58- Lancelot
84 lmotatong
161 Symbol for
86 Mea sure ol
tantalum
weoght
t63 Printer 's
68 Cover
measure
89 Regoons
t65 Teutonoc
90 Honder
deoty
91 Encomoum
167 Down prefox
93 Lycan-

MORGAN TOWNSHIP - 36

Will do roohng conslruclton
plumb1ng and heotmg No jOb
loa Io rge or too smoll Phone
74113&lt;18
HOWt:Rl'
ANO MARTIN Eo
co vottng
sep tiC
syst em!&gt;
dozer b ack hoe dump tr uck
l1mestone
gro11el
blacktop
povmg Rt l4J PhonP I (b i 4J
oQ!:! i'3J I
BATHROOMS ANI) Kttchen ! o
remodeled ceromrc ftle plum
btng ca rpentry and general
rnotnfenance
13 yeor!i e•
per te nce '19'1 3b85
PULLIN S I:XCAVATING Comp lete
Ser vtce Phone 911'1 '147 8
H~fVI: S

l HAUING Post Poge"Vdle
G rocenes dry goods hard
wo t e teed lock shop Speoal
'JJ lb o l dog food SJ Bl:l

Chester, Ohto

BoX 3

10 ·30-c

.

----~ -

BRAD~Of.ID

- ---- ---

Auctroneer
Com
ple te Servrce Phone &lt;/d~ 24~!
o r 949 1000 Ronn e Ohto Crt II
Btod ford

HWOOO BOWI:.RS HI::PAIR
Sweepers t o o sle r o;, tr Oll!. oil
o;,mo ll oppl10 nces lawn mower
nex t to Sto1e H1ghway G arage
on lo! o ulc 7 Ph one (b i d) 9B5
JBL!&gt;
S~W IN G MA C HIN~

Repolr !. se r
viCe all ma kes '}&lt;/'J 'l'JBd The
j.:ob rt c Shop
Pom e r o y
Authortzed Smger Soles and
~e r v t ce We shorpert Sns$or s

Servo_c_e~ff!!r_e_l!_ __
land

1:\ACK HO I:: DO Z ~R lJITCHER and
dump tr uck Conc rete work
190 MON:ZA S PV O~R 305 engme
Ho1fte ld Back hoe Set Hutlond
Pow e r steertng Power br akes
Oh Ph /d'J 200t:l or 4&lt;1() 17'!Jb
AM rM rodto More extro5 Lo ll
ftJ'l 11:1'lb
LI M~SlON~ gtovel and ~a n d All
stz es At Rt c hord ~ and Son Up
1&lt;/IJ 1-=0~D GRAN fo nno JS1 V t:l
per Ht ver Rd Co lltp o lt ~ Qh ro
A C 4&lt;,1';.1 1458 !
Call 446 7785
1&lt;/i'6 CH~ V R Olt:T MONH Carlo 'l
A
A A CONTHACl O RS 8ockhoe
door P S P 8 A C and m roe
do1er dump tru ck Work done
Ve ry
good
cond t lton
by the haUl or by th e tob ~ o r
JU4 llJ 575!l
lr ec e~ ttmO IC ~ Co li :t50 1';21
1&lt;/14 O lL&gt;:i CUTLASS Supreme Sro
lWI N RI Vl:HS MARINI::: JO! Upp et
lton Wagon Power wtndow!&gt;
Rtv e r Hood Chry sl er Sol e !&gt; &amp;
power o;.eots til t whf:!el re ar
Ser"V tCe Lomp le te Hull Hepou
wtnd ow d efros ter powe r doo r
( u ~to m bud! trader~
Phone
locks 992 1'603
d4b 8b55
I 'If'S DATSUN PICK UP Good con
RH S~
THt N CH IN G SI:RV IU:
drt1on
Good
ltre!&gt;
low
wa ter sewer elec h tC go5 I me
m deog e Step bu mper , Tru ck
0 1 d1tc h e~ I i 11,&lt; hes wtde to S
rn1rrors $2750 9H5 31.//9
ft deep Water ltnc hookups
IYl'l VW TRANSPORHR von
Call aft er 4 p m 'Jbl 15bU
$ 111'5 1965 ford wmdow von
runs. good low mtleoge No HUSS 8. MAX ~ lti OTl
len nox Heatmg nnd 0 11 cc nd tt ton
~ur,doy call !:. "1 411400
1119 RoptO foorn msul o l ton
lYH DOUG~ CHARGfR St Under
&lt;140 t:l5 15 or 44b () 44 5 Coli alter
1U 000 m1l e!!o Loaded Phone
Y&lt;/2 100:.!
HA NUY
SHAMH
Carpe t
19/4 liNCOLN CONTINI: NTAL ~x
Cle ane r Seemy IS bel tcv tng
tro clean AM FM rodto ltlt
when Sta n l ~y S1earrHng Lo ll
whee l powe r se ats and wrn
.Ub 410H
d ow~
Many othe r extras
BOG GS f)( H:MINA liNG CO
941 'J'JJO after 5
( formerly Fmn e ~ g 0 d ell) Oak
14/d PONTIAC Co1olmo 4 door
Htl l Oh Col i co lle ct b81 614&lt;/
A ( 50 000 m1l es Make offer
V 1: fllliNGI:::R wal et d eltvery
99L. 3890
5er v1ce Call 'J/9 1124
C H ~VHTt
HA TCHSACK COA L
PHi'
lump
!&gt; Iok er
and
10 OOU mtles Am wtth fm con
hm e!:.tone deltv eor ed
Dav1d
ver ier 5'1600 Coll44b 4203
Vaughn 'J 4S SJO&lt;/
19i''J OlUS OM~G A SBUO Call bdermllal Term tte li f.les1 Conlrol
446 4570
of Go llt pol1 s Oht o Wrll!om
I h o mos 446 21:101
I l/74 MI:RCU~Y COUGAfl X~ I

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

' ""

9' een
Call

HAV~

'l good hu ~:k!!o l rnu!ot
1r ovel your ptek /0 ford std
b P:i 1J OOU rnt SJ40U
11
Chevy Si d H I i' 000 m•
51 400 Coll145 91 I H

1'1!1 G M C VAN Duro campe r
bed •ce bo• woter tonk !&gt;l n"PS PB Ott cru1 se control t tll
~ t eerrn g wheel I O OUO mtl e!&gt;
Very clean Coll446 Ulb H
1~7tl ~O ~IJ

LTD II ex c cond Call

44b JU45

14b4 fORD ll D good cond
.t.tb 1/UJ or 44b l ~n

Call

0

~

New

hshng

loc

::::0 Dcs 1g n ed lor lrvJflg comfo rt ftnd

START RAISING &amp; GRAZ

con
stru cl ed by one ot th e nrea's most sough I
niter builders T h1 S spe~c1ous home ha s
.:.t. mnny outst cmd rng fea tur es mc ludmg l1fe
BR s, 'l bnlhs, plu s o powder room w
Ill showe r , 'l wb fp 's, equ1pped k1t , 3 c ar
C!M&lt;'jCIC With lOIS Of SIOr.lge T h1 S l1ne home
1- w rll be sold Wtfh the buy ers c hor ce of
nc r cnqe, up l o li' ncres Wt!l be shown to
quoltfted buye r s o nl y Ca ll tod ay for np

0

I NG - 110 A far m on c o un

tv

rd, 1ncl udes 4 BR hom e,
severa l barn s and bldgs ,
mrnera l ngh t s, 2 po nds,

Walnut Twp $55,000
ROOM TO STRETCH OUl
on th1s 15 A baby f arm
Featur s 4 BR home 1 3Qx]Q
barn,
severa l
o ther
bulid1ngs f en ced wrth m ost
of land rn grass and only

&gt;
c
.c

YELLOW BRICK RANCH

" Lovely,
dccor.,tcd 1,1s tefully t h rou ghout 3 bedrooms, lovely
L R , k!l c hcn wrth fo rm a l d .n1ng ar ea, l nrge ut 11!ty, 1

Close to Gallipolis sr lu a l ed on a 11 acre lo t
Two BR could be 3 o r 4 LR , FR Ul Rm ;;o
k1t dnd battl Also ce llar w1th overh e a d ~
s l orctg e Owner 1S nnxtous t o se ll Cnll f or~
an appor n tm ent tod ay Offrce 446 0551 or--+
Trm Wh1te 44() 9557

THIS ONE. Lovely 2 sforV'
10 town, 3 BR's, 3 full baths,
large L R, formal dm1ng
rm, forma l foyer. modern
k.Jtchen, 2 WB frrelaces, full
bas em ent, gas h ea t a nd
ca r por t SHown by appoint
ment only

&lt;..

-

CO NCHI:U ANlJ BLOLK WORK
Done reo o;.onobly by hou r or jOb
hee e s lt~nol e&gt; !. Call Jb l 0295
o r ]bi' 01:11

HOOI-=ING
~ POUTING &amp; SIDING 20 yrs
El)( perte nc e Jijfj 9U 57
mNNI:Y AND GLA SS Cha11, ltnk
fence hee est mot e ~ Co li
:/45 9113 Ken Soles Galltpo lts
~ON
m

S TV S~RVICt SpNmltimg
Zenith House call s Co li
1 :J04 5!0 'J3Yt:l o r Adb 'J4~4

ROBI:~ T

S BROTHI:IolS GARAG~
All type!&gt; of rc porr Uppet HI i'
Col1 446 i 44S

Dl::AN ~ NOO~ I NG HOMl: ~!:.PAIN
Ot .. rou nt fnr semor ~ ~' ttc n5
Ca ll 4&lt;lt&gt; 4~{)1
tom 1o 4pm
1'/l.o11 rh1'1 Ftt

''" '1641

446· 4042
446 1049
440 04S8
lll7 7529

J

Serv oces Offered

Services Offered

IRI Sl AT ~ UPHOLSlfRY SHOP
1163Sec Ave dAb"/838 ~v e n
tngs 44() l tl3J

WA HR WHL dr dln1g Wtl l tom T
Gran t /41 28/9

~O~~RTS

BROl H~H S GARAG~
Uppc 1 Rt 7.. Al l types of repa1r s.
0:!4 hour wrecker servtce Ooys
ph
A4b '1445
N1 ghh p h

1HU SS IN SULATION m sul !iproy
l oo m tnsu lotto n by Bo rde111
New hom es. o ld home s com
merCiol s tr uc lu rc~ 1-=or free
estunal es co li 44 0 I &lt;/71
~M Al l

~OR

YOUR comp le te housmg
remodeli ng constructmn and
ma1ntenonce gtve J ~ a lry
Re f erence
ovorlable
Reo sono ble prtce s
Phon e

99 25 1 ~1 - ~----

4Ab 4"1&lt;/'1

APPLIANCE

rcpotr

Ph

446 0002

fJA INl1N G CON1 HACTOR m te r1or
&amp; e• ter tor
I rae e sltmates
Che r ie!&gt; W Kuhn col i :/ &lt;1 5 SSt!&lt;/
PAINTING
Hestclen!t ol mter1or
a nd ex ten or b orn and mobtl e
home roo h. h ee es. tt mo tes 1~
y r exp
Coli :167 i'/!l 4 or
Jb"l 1100
JIMS
SIDING
CO
I.::STIMA lt:S 440 i'O'l3

~ARM FOR SALE - n
ACRES - All c lean, mo stly
t i llable, pr esen tly 10 grass,
2 ponds, several good barn s
&amp; sh eds, 3 cow m1fk parlow,
fob. base, 12x60 m obile
hom e ts now rented, 650 It
frontage on State Rt 554 at
Eno, Ohto, 2,000 ft frontage
on co unt y rd $75,000 Call
fo r more d eta il s

I

NGS NEEDED
ADVERTISE NA
ALLY - WE BUY LL-TRADE .

---2

DUSTLI::SS FIREPLACE: and ch •mn ey
deomng The Chrmney Sweep
•
Call ou 31'3 oos·r

-

~

-

-'-

ell
C1J Ranch frame w1th natural 9i:lS hea t
.C Situat ed rn a qu te f atmosph ere. You'll en Two f1reptaces , Lg FR , form a l DR, super

C)

u

RESTRICTED BUILDING

:;E

-

..··-..
·-

Small groce ry a n d garnge,
qood Mom ancl Pop oper{1
lion, equ tpm enl a net •nv c n
lory
111C iu d cd , exc e llent
qrass SSS, OOO

Ill

J:!
0

&gt; Bu!ld1ng

:::

-

i3

Proced oo sel l ao $38.900 00

U Bu1ldmg lot, 100x l 50, loca ted 1n the
~ Gnll1pol!s C 1ty Sc hool 01st $5,900 own er
... wrll take Sl 500 00 down d nd t1nance the
"D balan re at 7 Pet Call Tom htte 446 0552 or
::::0 ••• 9557

a:l
...

N ew patnt on the outstde and very clean

on

.C lhe rns 1d e Two BR' s, bath , k1l and LR ,
~ p lu s full basement plumbed for W&amp;D
F or ced a1r fue l 011 f urnace A l so tofs o f
a'l s l orage room 1n tc att1c Call now f or an
C apporntment S15,500 Owner a n x 1ous to

i:

:,: sell

---~

ed

opt

--

. . -

kttchen fu rn rsh
Call before 8 orn

Full basement , carport poli o
wooded oreo 11• mde bock ol
Roc1ne 9.49 2413 Refer ences
and securtly dep os1t reqUt red

.

ADVANCED SEAMLESS

iilCONOORST-.Sf;r~Qe for f~r
• &gt;

"FACTORY.. ON WHIILS;,

_

mture , ontr ques outo supp!tes
hardware, rnsu!o lton
po per
~o~~s e tc I 480 5553

FURNISHED

· •·
•

Al.IIANY, 01:110

~PARTMENT so~&gt;

U!!l!tles paid 1 bdr Adult~
Coli 4-46 .u 1b afte r 6pm

TAKE --;~~~ ~v:;oy the Blue l u stre
gy
fr om
cnrpet!i
and
iuphol sterv Hent elec1m sham
" pooer $2 Central Supply
FURNISHED . APr - J - rm ; with
1 prillaleoboth hrsl floor 845 Se
t cond Ave 440·2::1 15

- ------

Ill
·- Two

home

Call

now

for

c ompl el e detnrl s

g
0
""'

SoS,SOO

"'=:

L an d , Lot s ot Land
50 n c loc ted on R t
35, Rr o Grande elrecl , 1n v c s tors tw lf er- :S
c hC' Ck tht s o ne out

c.a
:1:
lrreplilCe,

Chestnuts Roastrng on an open
l am rly room , 3 bedroom , Cr1 1 rn krt ch cn ...,
b M , r ange and ov en , full b.1 semen t on n
1.1roe tot 1n cou nlv sc11 oo t ct1 s 1 , stor m w tn CJJ
dows and doors. p lu s a worksh op wtlh hc nt

=c:

lor Dad 581.500

Q.

It's a drea m! Fclmly ruom Fr.1nk t111 ~
f1rep1n ce, db I doors to il ~c ree n ed rn pat to
3 lnrq e bedrooms, ktt c h en tS a wo mn n s
&lt;lr cnm, b nr , oven , dr s po sil l , diShW&lt;lSiler
ond mu c h , mu c h mor e Cnll soon for {In .1p
pomtment S59,900

n(j)
:::r
;:g

~ew L1shng
3 BR fret me r{lnch, cnrpcted iO
throughout , ~ crtr allc" c hed 9nracJe, tolal Ill
c le c trrc Cnl l for a n &lt;'!opor tun 1t y now OJ

S31,500
An excellent opportunity to buy a mob1l e
h ome w rth up to thr ee ac r es Call tod ay
T h1 S rnobtle hom e rs 14x70 and tS srtu a t ed
on c on c rete ru nn er s w1 111 11e downs, a new
septt c syst e m
l aerob lc), and county
wftfe r Ow ner Wi ll consrd er sellrng land
separate Owner says sell now

-

'&lt;

;::
...
...

-1

::T

Cl

~

,_.

WE ARE PRESENTL V VERY LOW ON'&lt;
LISTINGS , IF YOU ARE CONSIDERIN G

g

SELLING GIVE ME A CALL I WILL BE
HAPPY TD VISIT YOUR HOME OR-

for

FARM AND GIVE YOU MY OPINION AS~

';:: buoldong 516,500
SlfEPING rooms for rent , Gallto
3 34 acre lot 1n Charofa 1s H tlls ~r 1 ced l o
f
1
Ho te l
:I sell at only £10,000 Call now or an appotn
"
0
ment
5lE~PING ROOMS
AND l·ght

TO THE PROPER SELLING PRICE EACH OF OUR LISTINGS REC:Etve;·
PERSONAL ATTENTION . I WORK-+

For Rent

------------- TWO BEDROOM ell e lec tn c hom e

.

sts t s o l 1 dO acres and t he pnce 1s $7,500
Call now and m ake u s a reasonab le offer

Stt ua t ed near Clay school, th 1s
~home IS pr1 ced to sell Two BR 's, OR , ea t
- 1n k 11 a nd a large LR , on th e main floo r
~ p lus 1r •2 baths all'G a laundry room Part1al
~ basement w 1th pan eled walls and ca rpet
pre~ently u sed as th1rd SR, co uld be a
CU fam 1y room Th•s fin e home has a 1um1num
Q.1 s1d 1ng and 1t ts srf uated on lOOX140 to oT lot

992 2288

·RT. 1.

lot c lose to town , owne r W ill ra ke
small down payment and frnance the
ba lan ce at only 7°o

...

Gene Oesch, Auctioneer

69U205

~~~~ b~onre; ·,~ngec1 ~.~~~e~~: ~ ~g~; ~~~e~~~

'

See th1s one, you will be plea santJ.v surprt s
!I. ed Two WBFP 's, a v er y pleas1n9 ktt, 3
B R 's , and mu ch m o r e Ce~ ll now tor ap
::::0 porntment. $42,500

~

--

&lt;

t:ll

RENTAL

.....

'&lt;

If for som e reason you h.we n ' l founrt th a t ~
1dea1 home at !he r 1g 111 pr1 ce qrvr m e n :S
ca ll n ght now W e ilrf' o tf &lt;&gt;r1ng n new Bt ;IIi"
level 1.0 the Ga llipo liS School D ts t Thr s ltn(.'
home hit s 2200 sq It of l1v1nq spa c e,
lc o turr ng 3 lg BR s, FR dCSIClrlC'&lt;I l or ,1

c

PROFITS Three st ory
bu1ld1ng downtown corner
lo t 1n Pomeroy Has fir st
ttoor s h op and o tf 1ce pl us
two l arge apartmen ts , a ll
OCCUPied $40,000

k rtche n , three Lg B R's, plus mu ch more
tn clu dtng a lovely sw1mm1ng poo l sur
r ounded by a conc rete dec k and n wo od
fen ce Entert a m yo ur guests a round th e
ca lendar 1n fh 1S bea uttful y de Signed hom e
Ca ll lor a n appotntmen t rrgh t n ow $79,500

-1

.c

RING IN THE PROFITS

f RH

CONTINUOUS
NO LEAK GUnERING
'
.'

and LR , thr ee BR s plus Ibis of sto~ age
space tn a co nve r ted garage Owner wr ll
con s1d e r VA or

::::0

I'HIUDY &amp; AS:iOCIAnS
Home
butldtng
remodelmg
!~replace bn ck and mo~onary
work roofrng and spout1ng
b/5 5502
or bi'5 245 I

GUTTER CO.

Or

a:l
•

.

.

tOY solid h ardwood f loors , butlt tn kt1

'0

t--

----TWO BEDROOM

YO lJ f.() El F
Ex cc !I C' nl
I'' lur, L•t L":llrt~"o ar e d ll her e rn
IIPIO.Jt'll \i&lt;CI~nnn'p mqVcl ll c yRan c h
1!1 o., L &lt;:. 11·'1' • l•nPl.., rnri•JCf&lt;'S vr n y1 Std1n q
ln ror lrvtJH I rn,,m OUt ll 111 kllc hen &amp; d1 n
&lt;tHI ')
1)c1111&lt;:. /1. full t_,.l',i'lllCn l \r\ fam il y &amp;
t Pl r OOtll
lr,lr a~ tOl C('n l nrr nat ga s
llo c11 &amp; tlf' (l r lv
,Jt rl ye~rrl

acres

near

Gall1pohs

f

PARK

housekeeprng rooms
CtNTflAl HOTH
TWO BOR MOBIL~ H OM~
440 0 508

call

&gt;

Ideal

OIRECTL y WITH MY SALES STAFF .

-

~

:1:
:;
Ill

M. L. (Bud l McGhee, Broker,
446-0552 Anytime

.:.t.

~

=·

.c

!:"

Tom White, Salesman, 446-9557 Eve
Gene Oesch, Salesman, 446-7440, Eve
~
m~ l~AsE
~
G
·
w ·th s th
·
&gt;
4 bd r 1 ' ba th s utrltty rtn gas (!)
rowtng I
ou eastern Ohto
~
~~~; .~~n~2~,"'~.~~~,~~,J,~:v ''Thank you for listing with 'Bud' McGhee RPr'lltv" "Thank you(j)

OFFI CI: SP AG~ or bustne s ~ space
ot 504 Second Ave
Ca ll
440 0451

t

bonrl and ref req C1fy Schoo l
d •~l rlc t Ph rme only between
HJo m and I 'l A46 l:IW3

MOHIL I: HOME: SPACE:
4.otb 1680

'1

lot (of t

APARTM~NI ln Crown C1t~

Call

1~0 0.4 4~

TWO 8DR APAHTME:Nf Oepmt!
and reference requ•red Cal l
bi'S t 5tl8
MOHill: HOMf J bd ' furnr!!hed
011 Raccoon Rd No ch 1~d ren na
p ets !i 135 per mo p luto secun
ty depastl Coll446 1n'f.

For Rent

Yard Sale

_Cai'J!p~f!Jl_l;_guipment

SMALL FURNISHI:D HOUS~ for I o r
G6 CAMPING AMERICA
1 adults. only Col l-440 OJJ(:I
Wrth Coac hm en RV!&gt; Quality
-• •
bu1lt pr reed nght D019n s ol
· - · - -- - - - - - -- - - -.model s w rth o w1de rang e o l
~i!.f1!.P._t_!1_9_
fom 1ly pleas1ng fl oor plon5 ~ee
Hb~ VY DUTY tn~ u lated Iepper for
them today' Appl e C1ty Ren eo
15omall piCkup lrke new Asktng
ltono l Vehtcle t., Rt 35 I m•
$200 742 'Jb91
wes lt
of
Jack son
Oh
I' . .
'
l i 1428t15i'OO
19 BAIHH 1&lt;,175
MINIHOMI:
Alu m rnu m frame cons truclron
ttl ~1 S... AIICRA~1 C:AMPI::Io! wr th
lnl or mot1on
coli
co ll ec t
12 ft nwlllllQ Cill :.lhll (/q'Jfl .' f
6 14 U4J 70'll
JtlH ttn.o~
'"

_

fH E A I

IOCil l ttll

l

CALL THE WISEMA N AGENCY

fll:

W IL L TAM ca re of the eldcrly . ln
rnyh_ome 992/~ 1 ~

we

All ARO UND FAMILY PLE ASE R E I W
ter m s to l l1e f1\J (11 rl ,ofi h u y 1 r on 111t'-&gt; .l t l r oK
lt\ t' J b ec lr o o m q ut1l 1t y /) t iCk 11o n1r• r tw
O 'l'lt'f'r ~ r1rl:' ,l!l J( tOUS 10 ~l ' 11 I ll!&lt;., r clll l ! I W 1111 d
p r p ll ; 11 r f'I,1C1 ' ttl lt Vtflll roo m 11 l l.rllto,
h url l ttl kil f /1(' 11
h l rtn ill (l!tlt tH I
rw .·.•
c 1r p, ' 111W l ull diV tCh'rl tl.l ':lt' tll ( lll &lt;":. Clrl t ,l ll •
) It I• W(lllf ltol Y•i td IOC rll t; cf 1 Ill I !t orn
H M L

n Mrnta r n ~·c t

FIN A

I ll
ell

WILL TAKE CARE of elderly person
m my ho me Mole or fema le
b1 dbb73402

3 AND 4 RM furnr shed an d u n
furnish ed
o pt s
Ph one
'192 5434

.....

::T

Ill
.C Owner wants hts tot sold nght now It con

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
__! orge lot!i ~~ 199 ~ ~~?_9 ~ __

:E

-

LOT
Corner lot 111 Sprrn g
Vii ll e y Es l il tes lo6 ft Ir on
One o f
tn gc on M ;;1 p lc
Ga ll rr1 Co 's n rces t s ubci1V1
St011 5
All
utrl t l t eS
aVclrlilbll:' S6 ,000

POCKET THE

::I
t,g

-..-&gt;

t:

For Rent

SAL E
D ES IRE D Su p Pr b l y
!h1 &lt;; 3 t;edrocltn d ll b r rc k r a nc h
tS lo( r~IC'rf lfl 1 v• t; r1o , rlltQh bo rhood 1us1
1 m lp&lt;, l r0 '11 tow n 8r&gt;c1 Ut rlu l ha r dwood
! !O(If ~
111 IJe ri i OQ &lt;n o.; kr l c h e n w loi s o l
(11IJIIW1S CIIIWlll t OOtn, \ 11 t)a t h S, f u ll ba se
men t w 1"\ UtH' fa m !ly &amp; rec, roo m U tility
r oo m \'J INdShf'
&amp; ct r yf' r , g nr ng e w
\'lOt k o.,hop /!.. n,ll rJil"- h,.nt w bu dg e t o f
S3 4 00 m u trnn~·li•IT• ' J~I J '&gt;&lt;, t •::o.s i O il ~. l OS

olv

;!;

1-

L&gt;UCTION and tht s 146 A
Opt r a ttan can produce 600
hogs per year
I ncludes
seve r a l bulld1ngs, lots of
f ed s torag e 54 A bottom
fa nd, w rth 1200 tt creek
frontage, and tobacco base
Ntce B ro o m house w tth 4
BR &amp; ce ll ar completes th e
packag e $9 1,000

-

PH . 446-7440 ANYTIME
Complete Modern Servoce
ESTATE SETTLEMENT SERVICE
CCMPLETE FARM DISPERSAL SALES
LIQUIDATION SALES
HOUSEHOLD SALES &amp; ETC.
Go Anywhere To Serve You
"BUD" McGHEE REALTY
GENE OESCH, ASSOCIATE

RELAX &amp; ENJOY
!he be au t tf u l Vt e w ol
1hc Oh!O whil e sn ugg lt n g up to t hf' co : y
frr c pta c e tn ! he lrv1n g r oom ol l ht s 11 • s tar y
bn ck home on R t 7 3 be droom s eq u 1p pn!
kit c hen f orma t rf rn 1. ng , l' 1 1 balll s l u ll 1hlC..t'
rn enl w f am il y r oom &amp; c1no th N l1 rf'p l acr
plus 2 car gar age A l a r ge lnw n gentl y
sloprng 10 I he nver &amp; 11 s on l y ,1 l e w mrl c&lt;;.
f rom town

v,.

tn

Ill

SANOY AND BEAVE~ Insurance
Co hs offered serv rces for frre
NOW IS A GOOD TIM~ to have
tnsuronce coverages tn Goll1a
your ftrepl oce an d ch tmney
(ounty for a lm os t a cen tury
cleaned
Ca ll th e ( htmney
t-:orm home and ,personal pro
Sweep 1 373 6057
perly cove rages are ovo1loble
1o meet md1v1dual needs Con
H~SIO~NT COAL HAULING and
lOCI Fmley Davrs your nerghba r
hgh1 gravel Ca ll Jt:lf! 9J1&lt;/
and agent
.

'l JI ',fl

Ht, t
MOHil t HOM I- ) (111d Home
It ' I • ~ &gt;&lt; ••nil " ' '· I t C't P ... tunote!&gt;

440 0458

BOB LANE
WALT LANE
KENNY RATLIFF

B ACKHOE:
BUltO OH K
t 1,•u•., tonc !&gt;epltc tonk tnsfallo
t1nn
gl?neto!
t o n ~ 1ru c tton
Md-l t&gt;o l Con lrat trng Co
' I '

SITE rn the w ilde rness of
the Wayne Natrona I Fores t
5 to 8 acre trac ts ot
woodland now ava1 1,11&gt;l c
ad101n 1ng
thous an ds of
ac r es of gov ernme n t lanct
Publrc hunt1ng fi shi ng and
ca mptng pe r m 1tte d Pr rces
st art at $2500 w1th lrnan c
1ng nvatlitl&gt; le

VA or FHA buyers 1f you hfiVE' good credr l
an d r1 s t endY tOb Call t o d.=~y boul th rs
Cllmost new three BR home It has a o ne
e M Clftached ga rag e T h rs lov e l y home hil s
cn rp et thr oughou t ond large krt wrth lot s
of n1ce ca bm ets

.c

THE PROOF IS IN PRO

AT HOME

BECKY LANE
VICKIE HAULDREN

:I The pnce has been r educed, owner tS very
0 ('l n x rou s 10 sell L ocated at 153 Ga rf1el d Ae
&gt; Two BR s, LR. bath lg kit , one c.;~r at
::I! taclled garage, scree n ed bac k porc h
C Shown by apporntment only ,

L SHAPED RANCH ~ l BR , 3 bOJths, large d1n1ng rm
&amp; equ1pped kttchen, 22 It LR, 44 ft tamrly rm wt1h WB
fireplac e, r ec. rm , su n deck &amp; garag e Green School
D1stnct

WOODED AREA · ()Or 9 bulldrng lots located rn Pli'\ntz
Su b drvtston SHI.OOO 00

~i: PliL ~Y~l fM

INSTAL LEO &lt;.om
pl e le b y !1uOitlt ed lt cet1!&gt;e ci 1n
!:. la ll er ldl d1rl houlr.&gt;d .. tone
qrovel l"'H AAA Cont t a&lt;. tors
co li ~&gt;t) IC/11

0

130 000 00

(0N1 INUOUS GUTTI:RING no 1ob
1oo Ior ge or !:.moll Gory s Gut
te rrng Co bb'l 0610 Oak Htll
Ohto
MAR C UM

-...

LARGE FARM
Shor t dr s tan cc from Rl 35 and
H M C lb9 ncres wrth lOi s o f ptussc::s T h1s properly ca n
tw pu r c h,, se d seve r n I (l!lf erent ways New ranch home,
r {' model(.•d farm hou se, br~rn &lt;"nd sever al ou t butld 1ng s
LOS of 11mber, af l mrnernl rrght s nnd road frontag e on 2
roM IS Cillltoday

OWN YOUR OWN CAMP

r h 1S IOVI'Iy ') Slory hOI11t' tS bPrlUtr!UII y
dC'(O rdh•d lll')rd&lt;" ,1nd ou t 11 has 3 la r- g e
l)~'fl r oo m :,
,1 '.'{'ry pr e11; I I VIIlY r oo m w
ltr• pt.1 c1' 1' t),1 111S k.t!Ol(' n w br ea k f ast
.~r ed trr rn.11 tht111lq &amp; .1 full l) d Se m enl wr th
&lt;'Ill rd t r&lt;~, 1
tnmtl-,. roorn wilh .1 co zy
Itt ' p icK I ol 11U l!C I ('( t QOJn &amp; WOrk sho p
rnP 111CHltr Ul "r' l , n~,rn ruP·~ f ro m 1t1e ro i'd to
t l1e w ,\l p r c, 1 &lt;ICtl /1 rr1rc clla n ce 10 own one
o f l hf' nr' ''1 "' 11111 11(11lf &lt;., By a p po• n t m ent

Sl5,900

NEW LI STING - N ~w home b e1ng bUilt Split level
wllh over 1,500 sq fl of 11v1 ng spe~ce wr th bn c k f ront
anCl Sldr nq On up pe r leve l wtll b e L R , bud I tn k1t c hen ,
:J brs , nnd t&gt;ath L ower le ve l wtt l hav e F R , ut11!ty
room and gorngc W1ll be a b cou ty and pnc ed a 1 only
SJI./,900 tn c tl y sc h oo l dt s tncl

VACANT LAND - OFF RT 160
'J. 3 acre tr acts S.l 000 en c h Also 'l ncr es of c tertr ed l and --beau tif Ul
1Jurldrr1Q s rl c Sd,OOO
LOWER RT 7 Around Eureka - 'lbuild1ngs 1tes wr th
rrver tr on iCI QC
UPPER RT I
14 bu ild1nQ ChO ICC -pr rme lots $5,000
(' c1Ch
RACCOON CREEK
l burld rng Stte s -- Banker's
Cl CI Ight'
AFRICA RD
Approx 11~ .=~er e trac t w1th some road
rr ontnge Coun t y wa t er tWcl !l .lble A r ea l bargct~n a t

' '

EVERYTHI N G'S SPEC I AL
A bo u T 11 1 1 ~
channtny tr r lev e l Y o u m u ~ T se c 11 to
bel reve rt E n ou gh sp.•ce rnSI (f(' to r you r
tnmtl y plu s w e ll ovN an acre of lc1ncJ
sca pe d y ard oul s tdc :.l oOO ~q I' a t lr vmq
spncc tn l lu d es n larq c Ioye r , 4 l(lr&lt;W
bedr o o m s SP?. CIOU5 I1V1 n y r oom w tl h ,1
ver y pr etl y lrr c pl fl cc l or m .11 rlr nrnq r oom
te,1d1n g onto Fl ll u Qe cl csk Custom !jur lt kt1
ch en
fa mil y r oom &amp; r ec
r oo m w
w ood burner , I a l h s &amp; o ver srz cc1 2 c ar
g ar o:1 g e C• t v Sch ool s

--

BE TH E FIRST TO SEE
PERRY TWP. - 130 acre s,
hay, past ure &amp; to bacco
farm,
mostl y
roll1ng
ground,
extra
n1 ce
r emodeled 2 story hom e, 2
barns,
o ther
bUid1ngs,
Nebo Road

or th e rtght In tn t
l y th1s f.ne Old two s t ory brrc k wrtt1 a l ull
dtVtded bnsement and n full allrc cou ld be
tust l eh tranqu11 atmo spher e yo u nre loo k
mg l o r Call today for &lt;ln nppotn lment

CM c1a rage n nd all new c arpel Pr rced ng htl 1

Bus mess Servoces

Auto Sales

fop

m 1. approx 10 A t rllable,
balance wood ed, beautiful
home si t es,
front s on
J ackson Co . Rd No 48
(blacktop) approx 1 mile
off State Rt 279, 4 mdes
east of Oak Holl $22,000

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

DOnR WO RK excavottng
deo nn g Ph d4 b 00~1

vtny l

LAND - 55 A

Jack Gtnther 985 3806

AUlOMOI:!.ILE INSURANO: been
cance lled? Lost ~our operotor!!o
lt ce n ~e? Phone 992 ]1 dj

.tOO eng

VACANT

Res,den1!al and com mer·
c;ial. Call for est1mate. 24
Hour Servtce. Any dav,
any11me
Phone 985· 3806

d oze • backhoe
and dttcher Charle s R Ho1
ft eld
Bock
Hoe ~erv t c e
Rutland Ohto Phon e /4'1 2008

Ill

on

acres near Me1gs M.nes, 5
acres
l eve L
most of
balan ce could b e pastu re,
small stream , townsht p

"'

·-...

BR brtck ranch. Extras rnclude kttchen wtth all bu11t 1n
appliances , central vacuum system, central a 1r ,
heahlator ftr epta c e tn fam 1IY room , and the t.st goes

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

l:XCAVA11NG dozer loader and
backhoe wo rk dump tru ck~
and lo boy~ l or htre wtll haul
lr ll dtr l to ~otl l1m estor1e and
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jet
fers. day phone Y'J:.I 708&lt;/ ntght
phone 9'12 3525 or 991 5131

PS PB AC
wtlh whtle
4db 4]31

·-..c

IN QUEST OF THE BEST.,.- You'll hnd tt alltn thiS 3

4-30-IIC

Business Services

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

o]

t:ll

r oad, $11,900
19i':l CHA~GtR new t1re !i 'g ood
co nd (all ddb 1541

-1

..

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Auto
--- -Sales
-

YO":

•

I Y"/5 HONDA (IVIC

~pm

"Thank

THE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE--AGENCY

.c

o.

992-2174

Real Estate for Sale

Real E state for Sale

Lg doubl e closet s plu s w;l lktn c losel tn
mnstcr BR, ') bit th s cq u,ppecl krlchen , ce n
lrrtl ntr, '1 00 a mp servtec , sm ok e al r~ rm C
1, 440 SQ tt Of liVIng S P c1 C€' I a cr e lOt C.
Owner want s so ld S30,000

428 Second Ave.

51. Rt. T24 toward Rutland,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Real Estate for Sale

Real E stat e lor Sa l e

CALL 446-3643

'I• mile off Rt. 7 by-pass on

.....
p~

-..-&gt;

TONEY REALTY (o

10 18· 1 mo,

Real Estate for Sale

CONVENTIONAL FINANCING IS NOW AVAILABLE IN THIS ::T
AREA WITH ONLY 5 OR 10% DOWNPAYMENT. CALL BUD~
McGHEE REALTY FOR CONIPLETE DETAILS.
~

::
:

8-20-1 mo. (Pd .)

992-7547

Real Estatelor Sale

Ill

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Phone 992-6144

_Real ES!ii!.e_fo_r ~a le

;Thank you for listing with 'Bud' McGhee Realty "
c
SSSSS•MONEY•MONEYH$$

ROOFING

To Existing Structures

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

SUNDAY CROSSWORD pu-z ZLER
76 Pro found
77 Scot1osh cap
78 Want ad
abbr
79 Vosogoth kong
81 Man 's name
82 Acl
83 Transactoon
84 Island off Ire·
land
85 Temporary
bed
87 Sums
89 Perlume
90 Rely oo
92 Be aware of
94 Memorandum
95 Walks
96 Choice part
97 Sharper
99 Fondle
100 Hond part
101 Potch
102 Insect eggs
103 Rodent
105 Soap opera,

-----·

-·-

Real Es!a.!_efo! ~a_!_e __

Real Estate for S-ale:

Mourning and
Price Builders

~XCAVATING

ACROSS

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

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are
Found in the Sunday Times-Sentj,nel

Business Services

I r.J7',J MG MIOGI:T new top com

IY/1 MONlE CARLO PS PI} o•r
1111 w hee l
c:rutse conl rol
rodJOI!&gt; S4)0() Coli 'J7&lt;/ 'J.'[J4

P~

Co ii J b// / ~1

1\/b'J C H~ VY /JUMP

IY U OLIJS CU T LAS~ SUPR~M~
PS PB A C auto Colt 44b 1324
alter Spm

\ 4 l'J

mo le J rr'IO" o ld Vood
ch dd rPn l oll -I J6 IJJ4 o r

lt uck
1'1/0 f c rd , I lr uck
8ecilu1Pt '&gt; heavy dut y H"! Ot .. t ~p
hu111pl•r
SOMMI:.RSGMC
lfWCKS INC
I:J:J Ptn e St
44b 15:.11
Hou1 !&gt; t:l o m Ia b 30 ptn

WOUlll liKt: TO lRAOt o 147(.)
~otd lTD
fully equrpped l o r
I '.J70 o r / 1 Ma verrc k or Come t
lall4 4b 3315 alt er Opm

9ood
~t

NIWGMl
Jt U( k }i carlquCll I P I !&gt;
JU 7b GMC
1
I LJ U l h f' .,.~ , l
IY / J Che ... cw conrl
t li /J f Cl ,o Vat•
J(ffd
1 ( h£1v PU
I ~ l'J f 100 f a t d bump I ruck
I (/f b Ptn l o
tli! J
I GMC
1~/ d( h e v
T PU

~-

Real Estate for Sale '

Auto Sales

bod•ed

.,. .....

o-5- The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1978

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
I UU N U
lAH G t
b lo c I.
do g
Nu l land 14 1 l btl b a n d •d c nlllr'
"' rl poy h o o 1d bol l

."'

PATIO SALE
of the season Sot O ct :JH
t hr ll Nov I I.J to ' Wmtc r
clothe ~ tor bob1 e!&gt; men a nd
womon an d children Avon ho t
l d P !. l vl'rylhtng dlPOp 'j m1h •!&gt;
" ' ' H1tla . •1 1 ,~ ~rl

l o~ t

;,g_l!ipmen-

II

'IDIJ h o v ~' a ~ Pt v tu to nil• r
voH Jn1 to ht •y 0 1 sell s.ome lhmg
oe loo k ng lot wo t k
or
w l•ateve1 . ypu II get re!&gt;ulls
lo ~tn• w1th o Set1111l&lt;' l Wont Ad
( o il UOJJ! 'JI'l()

We Have Th e Followong Avaolabl e Roght Now
CONVENTIONAL ($25 ,000 Mon Loa n )
DOWN PYMT.
FIXED RATE
TERM MAX LOAN
$75,000
5 Pet .
10 Pet.+ 'Ia PMI
30 Yr.
$60,000
10 Pet .
10 Pct.+ll• PMI
30 Yr
FHA AND VA LOANS AVAILABLE Rates &amp; Poonts s ubject to change)
E TO OWN
It s POSS ib leW tl h &lt;l S Il l TIC
1l S 5 Pc1 down .1nd conv e n11 onal ft n r~n c t nn
up to 30 yers y o u co ul d be th e pt o u d o w ner
Olltl 1S 1mmac uiFite 3 bed r oom r rlrl Cil \ Y ou
won ' t be lt cv e rl s bee n l1ved 1n ) Alum
s1 rltn&lt;L dou bl e d r 1vewa y , large co lo r f ul k1 l
ch en , uftl tty r oom Qarilg c &amp; p r tvntC' l en c
eel b ncky nrd w d ec k Ctl y sc hoo l s M 1d

SJO s
BARGAIN PRICED UNDER $30,000 -

2
ACRES
L oca tecl ncar Cenll'n rl r y t h rs 1' :&gt;
s tory hom e of fe r s J or 4 t&gt;ed r oo m s 1,1roc
IIVtng r oo m , k rt c h cn &amp; d 1n1ng r oo rn l:1rl lt1,
sc r e e necl po r ch &amp; ov e r 2 ac r es on Rt 1 11
Ct f y sc ho ols, G r een G ra d e Schoo l

Ask us a bout VA auto ma1ocs.

DON T M I SS IT
[tlt'&gt; l1um e l1n s ar o used
11'1l ' ' ',I rn 111c pas I f e w
WI f'k'-. If &lt;; I0W f' It' a 1 XCC ! IC0 1 con di }I OI1
m,11&lt;.1 t! vrr 1 lo mpl tnq t o r t he s m ~r l
bu y o•r Tilt"- l,1n~o • ' &lt;;. tory 11ome h~s 3 goo d
&lt;,17ecl hpclr0&lt;1•ns h uql 1,1rn t1 y room , 2 lull
hil l l1s l o t m,ll 0111111(1 /)lHII 1n k rl c hc n
Oc1rr1U( {', prl'lc\lt DK k yn rd Nn l Qa S
buclrw i O:..!olllll ~~ rNl.to-:-cllr11 $3) 000
MAIN TE N A NCE F R EE RANCH
AU S
c; t rel ..,,, I n.u !101 1 ( IOCcl iNl fl('.l r Rodn e y 3
bf'(!r oonv... J.&lt;.t, lwn &amp; dtntnQ cozy lt vt ng
roorn , 11,1H1 ultld¥ r1,orn &amp; qelrnq e Nt ce
YM&lt;I W pn1 r11 ( t 1~ &lt;:. ell ', SJe 900
Then
I F Y O U VE O N LY J U ST BEGU N
tll r&lt;, twr·w S110U I( IJe Ill (' ltr., t o n ,;our lt s f
Ltvtno rn01n w htt'li'l • t' 'I I J t:~ cl room s k tt
c llC'n rlllltnq
b£t1h lu ll b a se men! w
u nl rn t ~ t w&lt;1 l cHH ilf room t rr c pln ce , ul rlrt y
room plu&lt;.. qnr ,1or ~ lo w tow u ttlrty !) il ls
S? 6 000
con~1drrnnlt

WHAT DREAM S ARE MADE OF
Spen d
11,1ppy hou r s tn lil tS s pn c tous b 1 level of
you r dream s A ques t su e Ioyer lc'lrqe &amp;
allrclctrvc I1 V111 g r oom , w•l e .1 ppr ov ed
burl! rn krt chc n fo r ma t d1 n rng w p a f to
doors le ndrng on l o il Cl ee k , 3 becl r o o m s 21 1
bnths, famrly &amp; r ec r oom plu s ? c n 1 OWN E R TRA N SF E R R IN G
NEEDS TO
gar r:1ge Pr oi C? ss ro nat l an d sc ap ed yard
SELL T ODAY
,You .v!ll tus t lov e 111rs
Vt 'l .; otllr d(ltJt h1 l ~\('1 n Jrl'f Dr v e T il tS
00 YOU YEARN FOR THE FARM - Y o u wr; cl('dtl &amp; wlll (!,•uH t1h d t1ornc o ff er s &lt;l
cn n g el aw a v tr orn tt a l l (n lh rs co u n try twwoo 1n&lt;,
rl IO\o.,ly 1 "'net room w rth
hom e wtlh '} acr es ol exc e ll en t lanct 2200( ! 1rP pi A1t IHJ1I11n kll rllC'I1 10 r tn,1 1 ctrnrng ,
lb tob (1cc o base, good SIZ E' ba r n &amp; som , 1 1 )) d1 1' ~ l •n, 1n d ru..,1 c t nni• IY r oo m
f en ces G ood pcJSiu re lor hor ses , a sm oKe wr !11 dil L ( y P' 11,; ltr&lt;plil&lt;C' '1. u u Qr1 r r~Qe
hou se &amp; so m e nt ce lrutf tree s T hf' o ld l1rl l (li'1C. l&gt;t 11 (I 1111 rl "' r &amp; d ll iC(. I.:Jnd
homers rn ve ry qood con d tl tOn 6 r oom s '" ""(r1pcct &gt;' .tr(t Prtl• cl 11 1Pi t ,1sc 111 mr d S50 s
3 NEW LI ST I NG
COUNTRY A IRE
cl udrng a l i'lmrly room w l trep l c1Cf
bedrooms
eq u tp ped k. Hchen &amp; b at h ESTA T E S
Hrrt' ,.., ''" .1 11 bn c k r rm c ll
Loc ated ne~r Rr o Grand e In Ci t Y Sc hool s
loc,l l ('(l rn ~1 1,11111ly or r1 ntpcf n(' tgllbOrh ood
SPEC IAL OPPORTUNtTY
Se ldom IS rlt KyqN (rf' I&lt; )C llOO IC. 3 qoo d s r7ed
th ere a ch a n c e Ia b uy ~1 hom e l rk c th iS IJf'(lroorn s, 1,1rtli' (',11 rn k rl c llt"'ll t p len l y o l
Frr sl II ha s spo c rou o:. g r o u ncts w11 11 a pool. Co1 l)ltlrls t o; pn r rfl(J"o lrv1nn room , a pre tt y
pond &amp; all t he sec lU SIOn you w a n t , y e l tl rs IJ,11h w sllnw l'r (ll r &lt;:Hit. , tilt r m o Wlll&lt;lows,
only m.n u tes fr om (!ownlown Tt Hs super ntu., nl,1r rr, h•l Y••u llll1 p!P,1":. C&lt;f w t1r n y o u
qu a l tty 2 tory off er s •l o r 5 bed r oo m s, h uqc "&gt;~' 11 1r1rtt Vt'll ll1CI• pl~',l '&gt;f' &lt;t .11 t he p r 1cf'
litmrly room w1 'h an unu sun l hre l ce l rVIIlct ':&gt; ; ' ouu
room w ltr e pi&lt;'I CC a nd 21 mn gnt! IC••n l Vl f! W AN X IO U S OW N E R WAN TS AC TION
ofth e O hroR i v e r , l orm a l d tnt ng 2', b r~lh &lt;; t i t' Wi't\1~ ntc, 1 111 (1 rour n IJ I •c k &amp; lr ru ne
&amp; 'l c ar carport Call tor appo rn1 men t
1,1n(1t '.nlcl lml,1"1 Tn1c, o v r o ld tl n s a nr ce
BRAND NEW Bl LEVEL
Nes t led on a "o t! Nll t\ 1nq r oom " o11r co n ct1 Tton kii Ch e n ,
r 7 a c r e woo ded lo t o n MitChe l l fXd Thr s clill lllq r uom w p,1 1r o cloo r "o l ' ~ bn lhs,
love l y brrck &amp; tr am e hom e oil ers 3 lnrgc (!M.1CH x. , onwr lo1r Polr t1 os p fil l S37 900
bedrooms, 11 2 b aths , burlltn k1t c hen , l or COMM E R C I AL BUILDING
A large
mal d1nrng , spacr ou s l1 v tn g room , &amp; f amil y tn(' t ,ll bulldr n o 111 Crown Cr ly o n Rl 7 Ex
r oom w pl ace f o r w ood b ur n er plu s qar aqC' rr ll ent buildrno lor t)OC1Y sho p teed stor e
&amp; wo rk shop
e tc Owner w.1n ls an tm mcc1 ta l e sa le so
RACCOON CREEK
A lov e l Y w ood ed m nk c us nn'o fl cr Sl o 50(1
bu!ldr n g srte l 12 a cr e s wtlll ;roo tr o nt,l 9C'
on Bear Run Rd &amp; enou gh cree k tr o nt Cle1e KYGER CK SCHOOLS - VA APP ROV ·
ED
A VC' ry n lCe 3 b ed r oo m r anc h on a
l or boa t doc k
1
37 789 ACRES - Rece ntly su r vey e d l11r s b lnc kf op r o.1d IllS I ? P1tlc o ff Rl 7 T h iS
wooded won der l an d off er s ex ira n tec 11ornC' h as iltl C'QUt ppect kt t c h en &amp; drnm g
burldrng tot s, large pon d &amp; loi s of w ild lif e cornbr nc&lt; l ton spaC IOUS l rv tn g r oo m , f ulf
Lo ca ted I mtle l rom Rt 160 Rur al w ater b(1scmcn t w r c1.. roo rn qar a g e , ce ntral cur
&amp; Col r pr l I ~l i'O U~lllO UI $44 900
available S'J.-4 ,500

WE NEED LISTINGS
E . M . Wosema n, Brok er , 446 ·3796, Eve.
Jom Cochran , As soco ate, 44 6-78 81. Eve .
E . N . Wiseman , Bro ke r , 4J 6·4 500, E ve
Nancy Smot~, Assocoal e, 44 6· 4910, Eve.
Betty Hairston , Assocoate , 44 6·4240, Eve .

�.

. .. .....

LJ.-1- tne:.unw.y !unes~nunel , ~aay,ucL :a~ . HfiiJ

i).{i - 1 hc Sund•Y Times-Sen t mel Sunduy Od 29 l !l78

R eal E state f o r

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
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-

-~

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R eal E s! a!e for ~a l e_

R eal E state fo r Sal e

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R ea l Est a t e tor Sa l e

R eal E st a t e tor Sale

R eal Estate for Sale

Real Estate tor Sale

Real EstaieiOr s ale

R eal E s tate tor Sa le
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-:-:::---.,.-

--- fo! Sale_

R~a.l Estate

Real Estale for Saie

~ R_e_a_l E_s)_
a le~
too:..r..:S=.
a:..:
le:.,-

- -- -----

BAIRD &amp;
REAlTY

CANADAY REALTY

1218 ~ERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

NEW LI STING
In
Pomeroy nice 2 be~room
12 x 60 mobil e home level
lot pa tio, f en ci ng , off
str eet porkl ng
ON L Y
Nl:W LIST ING wosh and lot I n
location on St Rt 7
potent ial for a part
ob Call for detail s
N THE COUNTRY

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
Lou Lutton, ReaHor Assoc., Eve. 446-3005

OFFICE 446 7013

Small

Business op,portun l1y, car

ANY HOUR

"We Sell Better Livinl('

l

lots,

barn

good
Good
time
-

f e nci ng ,

10
a

storag e building plus a
ni ce 1 f loor plan, 3 bedroom
home with basement \/lew
of Hlo River Garden fruit
trees - all for only $17,70
RANCH E xcellen t
neighborhood, 3 bedroom s,
bunt m kitc hen, basement
2 level lots, se parat e
utility owner will help
II nance $27 300
BEAUTIFUL IIRICK -

$47,900
Hosp1fr1bl e home acc ustom ed to splendrd care 3 BR
t:n rc k Lg l b x t b tr v1nQ r m har dwood rloors centr al
"" il lf ach{'(l QMngc Brrc k stortlge bl dg Bce~ util ul
tr..:e studdC&lt;I lawn 3 m rl es fr om C11V uty school s
Gr een E tcmf'nl ilrY

Ranch, 3 bedroom s,

1'h

baths, nice kitchen dining
roo ~,

co v ered
co:~f1n
cenf r al atr woad burn rn g

fireplace Belll,w market
volu' $31 ,600·
COUNTRY Gr eat 2
bedroom home rn excellent
condit1on must be moved
to new location A steal at

The phone hasn t stopped rmgmg sm ce we put up the
FOR SALE s1gn on th e front lawn of th 1S beaUtifUl

hO me Great tocat ,on 11 1 m iles from c •tv overt ook•ng

$6,000 Also owner will sell
1 15 acres for the house
PRICE REDUCED FOR
This 2
QUICK SALE bed~oom home In good
condi tion with many new
veatur e s
Exc e llen t
neighborhood
In
Middleport Now $9 500
USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING SERVICE
h E NRY E CLEUIND
HENRY E. CLELANO,
JR
Rf'ALTORS
"2 22$9, 992 6191
Leona - Kathy

Debb y Or GraC IOUS 22 ton g li VIng r m w •th P• c ture
w 1ndow Form al d•n•ng nra custom ki tc hen caome ts, 2
cer am1 c f l ied bath s 1 8 ~ full y ca rpt ed cen a•r Fore
ed a1r gas furna ce w1 th a budget '" the S20 s 2 ca r
f• n• shed garage Loncr ete drr ...... Crty school s Thr s
hom e rs a mu st t o see 1

ST ATE L Y HOM E
J bed rooms down 1 bedroom up
l or nil! clrnr nq r oo m tnm ly room I v rn q r oo n ~ n d
nnnv k rtchcn bu 11 .n s HC'Mf'd sw m m rn Q pool wt l h
lnth housr&gt; bc01ut l ui vrcw ot th e Oh to R •ver 7 wood
IJUrtlrnq frr cpt oce&gt;s If yo u r c mov tnQ rn to thr s or(' O or
you w.1 nt to ::. h pu p tel u::. m .1 ke on rl PPOtnl m ent for
yo u tn SP (' l h tS !lOme pr rce hns been r N tu ccrl own r r
~ n xo u s to se ll

$116,000
A hom e so love l y, tt m a tter s not what th e out of doors
does beaut rfut desr gn er frreplaces 1n fa m il y r oom and
lr v rn g r oom Rec reafton r oom 3 B R 3 baths m aster
su1 te 17 ~~: 1 6 wrt h bath and dr essmg area F ormal dm
1ng room ktfchen custom desrg ned b y Chandl er s
Fam tl y r oom and m aster su1 te open onto pool and
bar bec ue pat• o Qualrt y con st r ucte d br 1c k Over an
ac re lawn Rr ver v rew Muc h mu ch more • Call w e II
show you I

N E W LI STING - Good home m t he
w rth
bedrooms ba t h trvrng r oom w1th t rr eplace I
srd ng and arge gar age L oca ted on B laden M&lt;, ce r ~

vd le Rd 120 000
IN TOWN - For convenr ent rn tow n tr v 1ng looK
thrs older br rc k 1"\om e has 4 bed r oom s 1J., ba th s
1ng r oom f arn rty room room for beauty shop $34 900
N E W L IS TIN G - Good T bedroom home w rth bath
rng r oom fu ll basem ent a tt ached garage Nt ce oa,r de'n
space cea l ed on Chlllrcothe Rd m Ga ll poll s
OUT STANDING BUY - 1972 Globema ster 14x64 has 7.
bedroom s bath w rth show er p ar t ra l fu rn rture, block
fou ndai on 1 2 ac r e nrce lan d $ 13 500
GOOD BU Y - A ttrac. t1ve hom a 1n B rdwe ll 3 bed rooms
nr ce ba th w 1rh shower love l y krt chen n1ce car pet
lar ge tot owner wa nts to sel l now
NES S - Good hauli ng bu srness w rth 2 packe r
has con tr ac ts wrth V 1llage and Bustness pl acE: s
I ~ or more 1nfor ma t ron

11 A CR ES - N1 ce ro ll rn g land su1tab le fo r deve lopm en t
c lose to P lants Subd 1vr sron c •t y schOol d• str rct c all t o

day
38 ACRE S -

Lots of po ten t ta l here 38 acr es n1ce l and
along Racc oon Cr eek mostl y tillabl e tobacco ba se,
l arge pond good 10x50 m obil e home $40 000

Evenings Call
Oarvm Bloomer, Assoc. 446-4748
Oscar Batrd, ReaHor 446 4632
John Fuller, ltealtor 446-4327

,L

I r/ r Home tte bO• t 2 'l Bt-l
190ol Boror \ 51 .10 'l B ~

= t970Al1 het ~ l~,o:I'J'lB ~

1

,..

19/0 Lhompron bO• 12 'l BH
190!:&gt; General 60• 12 2 B ~
19oa PMl 5:h 12 '1 1:1 ~
19)) Ptotrlc Sc hooner 28•8 1 BH
llli'O Sy v o b0 1d '1 'l i:IH
1970 V loge 00• 12 '1 BH
1970 Ktrk wood I 'lxbO J 8~
1:1~~ MOBI L ~ HOM!: SAl f S
Pf f'lfA~ AN T W VA

'!•

6 7!&gt; 44'14

mob le home 14 ~
10 J bdr '1 ba t hs new sku
I ~
o chored
~ eo dy
l or
w nt er l oc ated rn Green Ter
race nobile home Court Co
&lt;1 4 b IJ)66 oiler ) p m

Jc,li'() ~ ~HOOM

.'
:·

1'1 x bO 'J. bdr
Coli d46 062(J o f let

MAim01T

1111

t en t ol a
J !Up m

V LLAC. l- PA HK 14 " 70 J
bdt
l , bo th!. 1800 BTU orr
rand oil ele&lt;:tr c unl urn ligh t
panel g rh ou ghtoul 10 " 10
~ t o r oqf' .. hed lo ll '145 5076

J(,IO

11 65 3 bedroom
bo th underp nn ng SI SOO
and a!ts.ume loan 949 'J.08J 01

Jlllb NA SHUA 14
I ,

B4J 3311

1'170 A mherst :iO• I '} 'J E!~
19i'O Cho npron 0011 I '12 B~
196; G eneral b(h: 111. Bf.l
19tKtPMl5'1)(1'1'J.8 ~
19 5~ Pro1 n e Schooner 'J.tlll8 I 8H
I Yi'J Hoyol b n bo ~~ y 68 x 14 J BR
1'1!&gt;9 ~ l or~~~ 10 '1 BR

IYI:.J
IC/68
4fU

f::JJxl 4 21:HI
~ lo r bO• 12 'J. ~ ~
~y f vo ~Jt 1 ') ') 8R
~to r

1461-i V rllo~es 6Ux 1'l 'J BR
l.io 1 Wt 1d~o t ) I,.; 0 ') BH
4YU K tkwood :/11bCJJ BH
I:IM ~

Pl

MOBILl-

Pl~A ~ A N l

I

HO M ~ ~ A U: ~

W VA

ACHE 11 • bO mobde hone
nE'u Oe. ter 9'1'1 5858

\lnhdt·

SAVE$$$$

N E W LI STING

3 bedroom hom e Wit h drn rn g l r.. , tn g

sc hools A tt ac hed gar age some app lr ances wr t h pur
c h ase Pn ce SJ 7 500 00
N E W LI STING Buy these 'l hou ses and a r rve r tron
taqe lo t for S50 000 00 loc ated on Lower Rtver Rd bot h
have centr al na t qas heat One wr t h stor m w rn dows &amp;
door s L rve rn on e and r ent the oth er c onv enrentloca
ft on w rt h nrce rr ver v rew 2 1 H OU SES A ND LO T

sso 000 00

LOOK up a storm tn t ht S conv en re nt ch eerful kitChen
aqurpped w 1th ra nge and refrr g and large enough tor
dr nrng G r acrous ad1 ace nt form al dmlng ar ea 3 BR ,
1' 2 bat h s
1t v 1ng room has sparklr ng crystal
cnandelrer U l tltty r m w1fh Ma y tag w asher and dryer
Full y carpeted 1 c ar f tn rshed gar age Ma•nten ance
tree brr c k ex t err or L e vel lawn conc r ete dr 1ve

COMME RCI A L BUILDING
L oca ted rn Vr nton
spaceous burld tn g can erth er be used tor bu srness or
meet n g r oom Pn ce only S11 000 00
N E W LISTING ll bedroom hom e srt ua t ed on 1 ac re lot
along Georges Creek Rd La r ge pa t •o ga r age and
r ura l wa ter r emodeled modern k tt c hen n• ce s h~ d ed
tr ees Pn ce $3 1 000 00

Old fashr oned c tr cul ar porch IShighlight of th rs country
hom e On 1 acre sloprng tot su rrou nded by trees
SpaciOUS trv1 ng and fam ily r oom s 2 B R, family srze
k1tchen w 1th ra nge and r efn g Ga r age Call for an ap
porntment you llt rke fh1 s on e 1

IN VES T ME NT PRO P E RT Y
I~ sp cl CL t r il rl cr pnrk
I I'J SP:'lCC' S f C' Ol CCI J MS IJIOC k bu tldtnQ i'ln Cil t r ,l li Cr CIOCS
w1 t h pro perl y Bor cl rt tn "' t S30 000 00 l n vC's l mcnt tn

$47,900

$29,500

Brand new br rc k and f rame
over 1500 s.q ft tt v tn g ar ea
3 B R fam tl y rm w 1th
lt r epl ace lg eat rn krt chen
equr pped w rth r ange and
retr r ~
A t t ached ga r age
Shit tt m e to choose your
fcw onte ca r pe t color s

commerc1al bu l ld rng w1tn
good set up tor auto rep ai r

~0°o

LO W E R RI VER RO
'l bed r oom cO !I iJge o ve rlook
m q Oh ro Rtver c rty wa ter fuel o rI he 'll bu y tor only
SrJ OOOOO

IF YOU RE TH I NKING ABOUT SE LLING , GIV E US
A CALL AND WE LL BE HAPPY TO DI SCU SS OUR
LI STING CONTRACT WITH YOU
WE HAVE
BU YE RS BUT WE NE E D LI STING S" LET US SELL

SKYUNt; M081 LE home
'1
YOURHOMEW~ENYOU RE REAOY
bedroom5 natural gos. heat I
acre of levf'l ground porches
ondown ngs 4 cor cemen t .-------------~----------~-------------------- 1
block ga rag e 24 x54
Pru 1
l rees l ocated ot Reedsvrl le
Ohra on SH 12d Close to ~to r e
lo ll onv • me
a ft er Jpm
b 14 :mt b351 for oppt 520 UUU

OPEN LISTING '98,000
Owner Will Finance

-

flhoM 44/:l 3888 O f 446 44 /77

HOMESITES l or so le I
up M•ddleparf neor Hutlond
Loll Y92 i'4fH

STANDA fm
Plumbrng Heoll g
'115 Thtrd A ve .t4b 3782

VA ~ HA 30 yr I noncr ng also
telrnoncr ng Ireland Mon goge
n E State Ath ens phone (bl 4)

sn oo; J

GENE PLANT S &amp; SONS
Pl UM81NG
Heal ng
A t L on
d I on ng 300

~ ou rl h

A ve Ph

4.tO I b:Jl
DEW ITT S PLUMI:IING
A N O H~ A TIN G

Hau te 160 ot I " etgreE'n

Ph one .:1 46 1l35
DflAIN 8 StW EH Cl ~AN I N G S!; li
VIU Open '14 Hr l doy ~ o
week ~ tot cher 8 !:.on 1-'h
2~ 6 I l4 1

-

-- " ~-----

W a n f~ d to Do
Nbi:' O AN

hX Nf.l l fN l~ D

t olrH h

or hondvrncn? &lt;.: oil 2)0

h.ft.i)

HH IAI:H E WOMAN ~e ~' k s p('llllO
o n ! po5 rl1on Jx pe-t r t £' • l
pay roll
clen&lt;ol
0( ro u t no
anti Pt" ' cmrtf't Co li 44b 1 !J.tt

Custom built 1 rm home, s acres of land Sped1cul•r
r•ver v1ew
Owners will pay anv realtor 6 pet 1o sell1 or will deduct
6 pet from pnc@ 1f buyer contacts owner dtrectly
For appomtment c:•ll 446 4257 even1ngs or weekend

GRACIOUS LIVING
IN TOWN

- - -,

Large Vrctorran tlonie wrth 2 tllod baths and 112 ball1, •'
bedrooms library, dln1ng room , living raom with
cherry woodwork, s fireplaces, tully Insulated end
storm windows 2 car gange on 1 Iorge lot overlooking
the Ohro on Island Side A ltne ploce to ralw a family In
~rac1ous comfort Call Manning Wetherholt 446 4313
Days or 446 01,39 Evon1ngs lor oppolnfmeqf

door, garage and 1 acre

INVESTMENT

17, 500
'l gl ass enc losed por ches
for t he .ndoor gar dener
Spac tou s ltvr ng and drn tng
r oom$ 'l BR cl lt !C sur tab le
tor lht rd BR ea t tn k1lc hen
w rth range re f n g and
drshw ash er
Full base
m ent good ge~s f urn ace 1 n
Ctt y F I R ST AD

and bod Y shop Will hold
seven autos Has horst , atr
compressor and good fore
ed a rr furnace Plenty of
park 1n g located tn sm a ll
v tllage on good highway

$40,000
3 BR 111:2 baths frame
ra n ch, nea t as a pr n Cen
tra t heat and a1r cond ,
paneled gara ge f amrt y k•t
chen w rth ran ge
c,t y

tary
LY

Helen L Teaford
G Bruce Teaford
Sue P, Murphy
Associates

Housing
Headquarters

A POl NTM ENT ON
I

HOBSIEIIEft

S60 000

75

acres sut table f or
de ve lopm e nt
E xcellen1
bu tldtng su1tes
G all•a
C ou n ty
R ur a l w a t e r
available

$12,000

Lot s of space at a budget
prr cel over 6 ac r es mostly
pa sture La rg e b arn , other
outbldg 2 B R m ob tl e hom e
w1th 10'x 18' add1t1on C1t y
sc hools m11es from c1ty

M o b il e
H ome
19 7 1
6S x l 2 wrth
Rtchard son
4x l4 fold out 3 BR , 1'1:2
baths, dnll ed well on 1 3
ac r es, 7 mt les from ctt y 1n
Gr een 'f wp

l

acre 3 ot 4 bedrooms Fu ll
basemen t Gas centra l hea t
budget $50 o mon th De ta ched
garage 992 70J6

THRt:E I:IEOROOM frame horne n
Mtddleport Ca ll Y9'J 345 7

fARM FO R sole House 2 barn s
t1 o tl er Lorge pond 10 acres or
ij1 acre s 742 ~5bb

~ HA 8

1-=IVt:

VA HC)Mt: LOANS Mcl i::N
OON MO~TGAG t: COMPA NY
Loa 1 H e pr c~e nt o ll v e
V o le !
lookte V1c rs 4b3 Second
Ave Seconrt floo r Vo ll rpol!s
L1hro 4 ~631 Coll 44b 71 '1L

-

- '

Busmess Opportunrttes
HA V ~ C1 h ghly p1o f tto b l ~
fH O L I fvl )POll ~h o p nf

:'l w

~ c oh 1 1

and
yor f
q the le tt ., , 111

lrp. j lll('l hi• t 011•1'! b1011d J 110
O f ~ l)uru n and Spor bwl!o t
}l " )l.lO
t d
ht•ur 119 11
f"

ul

to y I • lu ••' t1 rl I 01nrng
f/lt
W011 1 ~ (11 ylllllP

~OOM

house and bath
remodeled fully carpeted May
be seen alter 3 pm Phone

YY'J Jc,IJJ

THRH OR 4 bedroom house tor
sole rn
heo t rng
Y~'l 7014

Br1ck

WE CAN GET MOST
PROPERTIES
FINANCED IF IN GOOD
REPAIR CALL 992 3325
FOR THE TEAFORDS

Rela x by th e pr rvate pool
char brotl steaks on t he
Jenn Atr ra nge mdoors r
Tht s home rs des rgned for
th e f amtfy With fun rn
mtnd
M arn t enance fr ee
brtck and ced ar 3 B R 2'h
baths
famtl y rm
W1fh
fi repl ace 2 car garage
hea t pump, cent atr Ctty
schools
Green Elem en

516, 500

s

Schools

.

-

business
location
or
residence with n atural ga s
furnace bath and garage

$79, 500

Conventional. FHA, VA FINANCING A'V AILABLE
acre and R~ M O OH E O O LOI:R ' home on

PJ umbtng and He &lt;!_tmg
CAHrt:H S PlUMBI NG
AND HEAl iNG
Car ~ o ur th H 1-'rn e

lots ot outbuildings Just
$16,000
NEW LISTING - 1 yr old
3 bedroom home with balh,
garage
nlce kitchen,
dining !rl'ea w1th glass

REALTY

$46, 000
Over 13 ac res fl a t to ro 111ng
ontv 1 2 m iles from c tl y
Sever al exce ll ent bu1ldr ng
srtes F r am e hom e w tth
alu m Std rn g Basem ent
ga r ag e 2 ba r ns Lots of
f ru t tr ees H ome and land
n excel lent cond

home with over
of land Natural
woodburning
T P wa1er and

$115,000
ac r e f arm over 60
nc r es trll able
b al an ce
wood and r o llrn ~ pastu re
1 473 tobacco brtse M rner al
n g hts to be sold w rth farm
Com for tab le 2 stor y farm
home rn ver y p rc t ure sque
se tfrng surr ounded by g ran t
tr ees 3 b arns oth er out
buil d ng
283

$34,000

14'2 '1 El2b

l WO BWROOM l urntshed mobrle
home and lo! In Rocrne
949 'l:l4(J

bedroom
an acre
gas,
fireplace

THERE S A KIND OF HUS H Back am ong the tr ees
bei'l ut rful pa r t ra !l y wooded b ac r es d BR ranch home
h as 'l f ull bat hs k ttc hen wr th r ea l wood cab nets range
and re frr g Ut rlr t y r m Full y ca r peted Fu ll b asement
Heat pump over 1b00 sq It l rv1ng ar ea Th ts rs th e one
ever yone s look rng for be tter hurry t

F IN ANCIN G AV A ILABLE

1% 7 HOUSI::: TRAil ER 12 x bO A ll

elec tr c I urn &lt;,hed o r cond
!toned was her and dryer A l ~o
'J.
lots 1n Horrr sonv dl e

parking, and garden space
Only $9 500
30 ACRES - and 6 room
house with city water new
bath , and two outbuildings
In back of Pomeroy just off
Rt 7 $24,500 or will trade
BASHAN
Large 3

$45,000

Few m1nu tes fro m cr ty Beautrf ut coun tr y sur r oun
dtngs Br rc k and tram e ra nch has 3 B R ex tr a lg kt t
chen w d h r ange tr ash camp and di shwasher F ull y
car peted Cent a tr spac rou s lawn for fam11 y stzed
pa t to and c h am l rnK fence tn ba ck 1 ca r att ached 1n
sul ated gar ag e Separ a te stor age bldg VA F H A

PRI CE R E DU CE D ~] 000
Loca ted rn Ga l l rpOII SOn 1 .1
lC r C' lo t Jbedr oorns k 1lc hen drntnQ rm ~ l lr vrnc 1 ro oms
U f y Wel ter ~lncl SNV tC£ !&gt; N CCCid S SOtn (' r C' P illr ~
Bu y
to(' only Sl l 500

3

bedroom home, bath ,
natural
gas
furnace,

$45,900

B E AUTIFUL N E W 2 BE DROOM h ome stf u a ted alon g
Raccoon Creek Appr ox 4 ac res of l and pn va te dnve
Idea l for retr re d coupl e or new l ywed s Pr rce r educed to

e xceed&lt;:.

$27,500
CONDOR STREET -

$134,000

~ n d 1 ba t h rn oder n k rtc hen srfu ated onl y 2 bloc ks from

c otnL

carport, and nlce level tot

On a drrve thr ough th e cou nt r ys rde of Fr ance y ou
mtght see a home li ke th •s Gambrel r oot F r enc h
doors brt dat sta1rcase m ar ble m ante ls Th1 s one h as
been m od ern rzed w th out lostng any of rt s on g1 na l ol d
wor ld c har m P lush carp et harm onr ous wa tt coverr ng
elega nt 11 ghtrng F tve spac10us bedroom s party StZed
t 1 v ng r oom tamr l y room Recr eation room and hobby
room m ba sem ent Cover ed wa lkway l eads to pr v a te
spa w 1th rnd oor hea ted pool ft r eplace snack bar and
dress 1ng r oom t 5 acres SUi t ab le for hor ses Convenr en t
loc al 10n E tegan ce spe r~k s •or rtsetf c om e see

IN VEST ME NT PROPERT Y 4th A ve
Ga ll po tt s
Thr ee r en tals exceed S300 month y buy fo r no mor e
than S2J 000

Hom~ ,. tnr ~.!I t •

FAMILY HOME 4
bedrooms bath, natural
gas heat dishwasher In th e
kitchen, drilled well ,

SAV E THOU SA NDS• Owner mov1ng out of area must
sell r F lawl ess quality bnck r anc h built rn kttchen w•th
ea t.n g area 3 spac ous bedr oom s f ull b asement coul d
be f uture f amrly and r ecrea tr on rooms F ull y carpeted
centr al a r cond gas fur nace budge t $26 00 car port
plu s stor age area In Cit y Com e look tod ay•

$32 900

-

Real Estate
Agency

Willis T. Leadi~gham, Realtor
Ph. Home 446-9539

Pomet oy
Central
Full
ba sement

FOH SALE at Tuppers Plor ns OH
on Rt 7 ~ r oom fram e house
Ah o washroom on d bathroom
w th ex tra Iorge garage attach
,~d 10 house wtth breezeway
At,pr o)l
rocr&amp; of ground
&lt; ''" to !lchool po•t office and
1 ch
ltnmedral e po~sess r on
L he .,.,. l n otlyltme for n
h 1 101 0 11 r oll 304 77J 'i llb
1f { 1 / p 11 weektioy s. onytr rne
\ ('( ~ f" nd ~

•

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr
Broker
Complete Real Estate
serv1c:e. Ca II u5 for what we
have available Listings of
all k1nds wanted Homes,
farm5, commerc111 Your

satisfaction ts our goal
Gtve us 1 try
Cheryl Lemley
Assocrate
NewUma Road
Hutchinson SuJ&gt;.D1v
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742 2003

FOR SALE

3 Bedroom frame home Th1s home features
a large, econom1cat gas furnace, modern,
eat-m kttchen, fuii·Stied basement wtth a
game room, work room or addittonal
bedrooms and a carport It has a large
backyard and play area. It has ctty water,
ctty sewer, c1ty schools Thts residence tS
s ttuated on a qutet, paved, dead end street
rdeal for chtldren Thts bargam home · ~
located on Evans Hetghts, across from
Radio Statton WJEH and pnced at only
523 . ~00. For more mformat1on, call 446· 4153.

BY OWNeR

FOR SAle BY OWNeR

New 3 bd r home on 2 r acre

lU'Jb hrsl A"Venue Rlv&amp;rvrew pro

wooded lot tn country Loca ted
per ty w1th frontage on First and
0 11 Hannon Trace Rd
N1 ce
Second A venues a room s 2',
Home 37m Call 2!;;6 l201
ba ths 2 cor garage Coli week
o h e r 5pm
days 44b 4383 evenrngs and
Sunday 4 A6 0139 Shown by op
PHOPI::HTY ~OR sole Good Investporntmen t only
ment J , acres w1th appro)(
over 200 It of rtver frontage
Anlfl ou s to 1-ell Coli aft er tlpm 1'J. ACRl::S I 1 mt South of ftt o
Grande Col/245 ~ l ij2
I b tfllbb '1027

FOR SALE

BRICK HOME,

HEDGE AGAINST tNFLA·
TION l82 acres of

wilderness, woods, brush,
htllaidts, excellent hunting,

located

In

the

nahonal

forest approx 20 m1 west
of Oalhpohs 5225 per acre,

STROUT

' 446-

REALTY

CENTURY 21

MODERN RANCH
STYLE HOME

room

PL US A RE N TAL

Ca ll for apporn t m ent 1 t1 139

ON E OF
MIDDLEPORT' S
FINE HOMES
3 .400 sq

1t of exqu1 s1te
lt v tng fu lly carpe1ed huge
f l r epla ce
5
st on e
bedroom s 2'12 baths A lso a
fu lly ca rrted 1st f loor
apar tm en rents at $1 50

No 174
TWO

~TOR Y

H\J USE

M od er n bu rl t rn k 1fc hen
ba th House rn good cond r
Iron gara ge good level ex
tra tot w 1th bloc k bldg
Wor th I s money Sd8 00
N 172
Bid we ll Ohto

A BIT OF COUN T R Y

M AK E US AN OFFER ON

BEAUTIFUL RIVER
FRONT HOM E
Beaut rf ul7 r oom home w 1th
a panor amr c vr ew of the
1•ver 21 J A Full basem ent
Wtl h
woo d bur n rng
frr eplace 23 ft x 41 ft room
w 1th k ttchenette excell ent
for entertalntng or dane
rn g Ntce moder n kt tc hen
rn c l ud rn g
dishwas her
r a n ge &amp; refrrg erator t or
mal dmtng r oom fa mtl y
r oo m , formal hvm g room &amp;

3 BR and 2 full baths &amp;
showers Fuel or1 F A fur
n ac e Exce ll ent locatiOn f or
f i shmg nght out your back
door Crty school d1 st Mu st
see to app rec 1at e rts v alue

LOT 85 x208
Beaut rful burldrng s te s
le v el lot on black t op r oa d
w •t h rur al w ater lrne n
front of lot w1 th bea ut•f ut
ro lling green pasturelan d

ON L Y $5 500
GOOD BUSINE SS
OPPORTUNITY
L arge 40'xBO all metal
buil dmg on 1 A of level
land Can be bOught w tth or
w1thout stock Fronts on

COMMERCIAL L AND
BUSIN ESSM E N
BUILDERS
We now h ave appr ox 7 A
ava1 lable
Wes t w tth
c rt y sewer
thn v rng
m untf y

SE LL
COUNTRY STOR E
A ll stock &amp; equ pment goes
located on State Rt N rce
fa mtfy bu sm ess
CA L L

FOR MORE DE TAI LS
8ROCM
CEDAR RANCH
4 B R 2 baths &amp; a very
l arge
f a m ily
room
descnbes thr s nr ce home
lt vr n g
Form al d101ng
room s k1khen Wtth bu rIt rn
rang e
&amp;
c a b1n e t s,
lre fn gera tor F A furnace
&amp; woodburner Has rIs own
wa ter system plus ru r al
w ater av aTFable All t h s on
Jl/7 A o f lev ell and

75ACRE F ARM
3 B R countr y home pl us 75
A of level to r ollr ng land
Some tr mber Love ly v 1ew
of t he Oh ro R1v er and nver
L arge b ar n
f ront age
chtcKen house &amp; corn c r rb
All ) n good condrt 1on Th1 s
fa rm has had ver y good
ca r e

two highways CA LL FOR
MOR E INF OR M AT ION
LARGE STATELY
7ROOMHOME
Large level lot Bath front
and back porches 4 BR of
above aver age stze C1ty
water Parti al ba sem ent

Metal slorage bldg ALL
OF THI S FOR ON LY
$1290000
2LOTS
L OtS Nos 32 &amp; 33 tn Mor
nson Addr tl on tn Btdwe/1
Level land Rural wa ter

av ailable 51,000 OO each
GOOD INVESTMENT
RETURNS
t ht s proper ty coul d pay tor
rt se lf w1thm 4 yr s Lot on
State Rt 7 North , near
Sr lv ~
Bndge Shoppmg
Plaza 3 r ental m ob 1l e

hom es GREAT RETUR N
ON
TOT A L
I NV ES T
M E NT Ca ll tor deta rls
BEAUTIFUL HOME
6 r oom s 3 B R, lots of bu11f
tn stor age spaces t abletop
w a ll
ove n,
r a n ge,
dtshwasher , r ural w a ter,
central arr complet ely f ur
ntshed L arge lot on Rt 160
w ith a beautiful v1ew ON

OPPORTUNITY

tot s Coul d be exce ll en t rn
com e pl us n1ce home
L oca ted on State Hr ghwa y

MOBIL E HOM E
ON ll , ACRES

!USt off Rt 35
a c lose access t o
&amp; w ater &amp; near
bu sm ess com
PR I CED
TO

93 A of ro lling land rn A d
d tson Twp A ll mmera t
n ghts go es Barn &amp; se v eral
bu1ldrn g s11es
27 900 00

C AL L
FOR
DETA I LS

COLON tAL MAN SI ON

system THI S IS A UN I
QUE
H OME
WIT H
CHA RACTER
CARRY OUT
A good bUSiness located on

State Htg hway 160m a m ce
commun rty
Land bncK
buldl ng equ 1pment &amp; all

stoc k
goes
RIG HT

PR ICED

~ 41 0 0000

Super to atr on St Rt 35 1
Thi S cha rm rng old er hom e
rs s rtt rn g on 9 ac r e among
sever al large shade tr ees
Home featur es L R F R
f ormal
d rnr n g
roo m
moder n burIt tn kr tchen
ufrltty roo m 3 bed r oom s,
gas forced a ~r hea t Be th e
frr st to see lh s c h arm ng
horn e Wont last long •
Shown byappt only ' /1 180

MOST ATTRACTIVE
HOME
Beautiful on e of 1ts be st

Mam St Vinton 3 B R
bath large formal D R
del ul(e butlt tn kit che n
l R wtth
k tt chen e tt e
frrep la ~e ba sement FA
fuel otl furnace. larg e well
landsc aped to t 9 7 x 497 ,
garage fron1 porch ())e of
fhe bes t
Much m ore

Extr a nrce and v er y well
kept hom e 3 B R l rv mg
room nea t k 1tc hen w rth
bu1 1t rn cabmets and ra nge
lar ge u t i ty room &amp; ba th
Car port stor age butl drng
char n lr nk fence A l so has
natura l gas hea t &amp; rts ow n
water sys tem Ctt y sc hoo ls

Shown by appoint ment No
207
E &gt;&lt; ECUTIVE ' S RE ST
c ustom bu11t 4 B R on 86
se r e rn Debby Dn ve area
B1g hom e at Reasonable
PriCe
/1192

GOO D BUY
8ACR ES
PRIC E REDU CE D

CALL NOW
TO SETTLE ESTAT E'
MUSTS EL L
7 r oo m s m c 1t y of

CENTURY 21

VACANT LAND
EXCELLENT
BUILDING LOTS
Countv water ava tl abl e
Road frontage 1 to t 175 ft
by 220 11 4 lots 100 t t by 220
ft each Th ey have all been
surv eyed Spr rngf1 el d Tw p

#233
CALL NOW
A2 acr es untou c hed at
$10 900
#213

Gall 1po l rs 4 BR c11y w ater
&amp; sewer Natura l gas hea t
porc h scr eened tn
Un
ftn1 shE:d basemen t Ex1ra
large lot wr th lar ge shade

lrees A LL ONLY $9500 00

5-5 ACRE TRACTS
Va cant
wood
l a nd
overl ooking the OhiO R iver
Lo ve ly
view
Ver y

r easonbl y prlced 1

Ha s
ma n y use s
sto reroom stor age ma:..e
rn t o
ot
nr ce
h ome
showroom
kennel
etc
Burld rng srze 46 It x 30ft
_oca ted on a corner lot con
tarnmg
95 13c r e on a

Barn, sept• c t ank
wa ter avar lable

furn ace Garage P R I CE D
I R e d ur e d( t o
O N LY

ooo Ou
' ACR ES CLE AN
L EVEL LAND

Loca t ed rn Hunt rngto n
Twp Sec 19 Ca ll for ap
pomt m ent
1/227

VACANT LAND
22 ac r es, 10 t1ll abte 12
pas tu r e older ba rn 1300 lb
toba~.:co
b a ~e
p l ent y
wa fer $11 ,500
11 101

CENTURY 21

Shor t dr stancc north of
Gall rpo1t s Ge~ ll a C o R ural
wa ter 1 ne rn fron t of thrs
pr opert y Black top road
All m rn era l n g h t s goes

ALL L EVE LS L O TS OF
US E S
QUIET SETTING
N1ce countr y home w 1th
13'h acres 5 B R and ba th
Nr ce k !chen pl us a p
pl1 ances Onll ed w ell &amp;
r ur a l w a ter ava rl abl e
Hom e has vrnyl Si ding &amp;
for ced atr furnace Ky ger

Creek School 01 sln ct

19'12 ac res of r oll ng land
plus 3 8 R hom e Rur a l
w a t er
&amp; se ver a l o u t
b UII d tn g s
OW N ER

NEEDS TO SE LL
M E DIA T E L Y'

IM

TRANQUILITY
2 09 A mor e or tess Lo ve ly
wooded lot srt ua ted with 2
roC~ d

Thr s rs i'l bc au t1fu l 14 X6b
tJo rYle l h,l t rs tully furnr sll
ec1 rhe I!Inc! 1S clr- M ed &amp; rn
A nr ce loc" t ton PR I L E O

f ro nt age s
J ust
per fect for thai r ust rc typ e
nom e yo u ve been want rng
Pr 1ced so low yo u won t
believe tt $5500 00 CAL L

TO BE AFFORDA Bl E I

SOON

RUSTIC HOM E StT E
Lovel y wooded 2 A Tot 3
m rl es fr om Gall 1polt s &amp; J4
mrl e fr om Ce nt e nary
Rura l wa ter a va tf abl e 1

Good roa ds MU ST SEE
HOME &amp; COTTAGE
ONl A
rtu o.; roo my I r flolll c our1fr y
lln 11 1,,1s f',l t rn k: d c )lt n

B

~

( Ot1l

1
I v nq r oorn t&lt;.. t 111rly
T ht

l 1~~1

Ill

c.r "tn lon

~

l\, I l " coot,,t
J11SI ni l Rt IO(I

1tl l { f) i • h
'liPt t nq

&lt;0 l! &lt;'IC!

LOVELY RANCH
SHOWN BY APPOIN T
MENT
13e the t rrst to see t"'t rs very
W"" ll constructed hom e
F€at ures 3 bedroom s L R
dtntn J ar ea v er y modern
bu ilt 1r ktLhen bath full
ba se m ent f•n• shed s' pP.r
nrce work shop T hts t.ome
rs w ell ke pt and v er y m ce y
decor ated and paper ed
1
L oca ted rn Sy r acu se
186

MODERN HOUSE - POOL
3 300 sq ft over all A B R 2
ba th s shower modern k rt
l arge
antrqu e
c h en
decor ated fam1t y r oom
1100 sq II concrete swrm
mrng pool 18 x35
ve r y
m uch n use p1cn1 c ar ea
lots of I v ng State Rou te
141
Ga lh polts Schoo l
Dr strr ct Prrced be low to

day s market

1974 2 bedroom m obrl c
hom e bath k ttc hen elec

hea t

! 190
SUPER DE AL

Tw o stor y
ho m e
3
bedr ooms bath ea t 1n k 1t
c hen ft r eplace 1n f amrly
r oom lrvrng room base
m ent and l oc a t ed on
bl ac kt op st r ee t
Onl y
$12 000
Be t t er
hu rry'
Won ' t last tong
11230

QUIET RETREAT
14 x70 fu ll y equ ipped
m obrl e home on c r eek front
lot , dP. ep wa ter fron t age
Exce ll en t swrmm m g a-nd.Jl
fts hr ng
112ft •
oi

MINT CDNOtTION
Sec luded doublewrde s t
lt ng on 4.,._acr es located ap
pro x
mi les fr om
Gallt polr s m H an n an T r ace
Sc hool Orst
A pprox 3
ac r es of woods
Hom e
features ltvrng r oom dr n
1ng r oom 3 bedr oom s 2

n

ii

baths, built In k1 tchen 1231
MOBIL E HOME AND LOT
14 x67
..,om
e l ealur
1
tng 2
b3t h

breakf

....

_

R

n ~

D R

... ..) wr th

"l!lf\l~\)oa l'o

anc horGi\.,U\ - , ,rted 1
car ga rcl_ .~ 1 th wor k ar ea
H 140

All perm a st one hom e n Cr own C1ty
fea turmg 3 bedroo ms l rv rn g r oom t am rly
r oom wood bur ner &amp; at I the essent 1al s any
home could need If srts on a beautt f utly
land sc aped lot wh rch ha s se ver al v ery pr o
duct rve f r u tf Ires T h s home IS pr rced well
be low r.epl acem ent cost Ca ll for more
detar ls
539 900
11 173

HALFW AY UP

M oder n 4 bedroom hom e
onl y 4 year s ol d 2 bath s
l ar ge
m odern k rtc hen
patro m as ter bedro om 1S
12 x24 w rth huge wa l k tn
closet 2 car garage stoc k
ed fa rm pond 50 ac r es of
good t ill able gr ound 10 15
ac r es of trmber excellent
ar ea to hllnl ft sh or far m
Some farm equrpment m
el uded farm tr actor w 1fh
front end loader bru sh
plows
d rsc
cor n
hog
p l anter cr op sprayer cor n
P•c ker 2 whee l trarl er an d
v arou s other ttem s H as
som e fr Uit trees T h1s rs a
good general farm w 1th l ots
p f possrb tlttr es Shown by
~pomtm e n t
112 11

219 ACRE FARM

One of Perr y Twp s be~1
al l .around f arm s Modern
house 6 r m bath, 3 Br ,
full basem ent heat pump
Owner says full y tn sulated
2 barn s 50 acr es till able,
157 acres pasture tob acco
base lots of road f rontage,
rural wa t er avat lab l e
bl acktop road E xtra space
all set up for mob1l e hom e
Tht s •s a good one, let us
he lp you m ake a w rse tn
vestm ent
/1 199

LOOKING FOR
A BAR GAIN&gt;

On Chapel Ortve Bu lav tl le
Roa d se ts thrs spac ous
yel low 3 bed r oom br level
Feat ures nrce en tr y 1 v ng
roo m d1 n1ng room and
f am tl y
m odern k ! c hen
r oom w1 t h tree sta nd ng
fi r ep lace 2 car qarage wt th
elec t rr c opener Th rs hom e
has a spec1al fea ture- an
all ftbergl ass under g round
sw•mm ng p oo l w tth com
pt e te f tlterr ng system sur
r ounded by c h ar n trnk
fence Shown by appotn t
N203
m ent Bett er hur ry '

CO ZY BEA UTY
Dt slt n ct rv e h omes ttrng on
2 p lu s ac r es of beaut rt ul
land Con ta rn rng lot s o f th e
ex tra s vou can fhtnl&lt;. about
ever ow nm g 3 bed r oom s
full ba th s famrt y room
wo od burn rn g f rrep tace
k tl c hen a ll appl rances lr Ke
new Bu rtt m acqua num
not m uc h m or e t han 15
d r r ve
l r om
m t nut e
Ga l hpolrs Per ry Tw p If 196

CONVENIENT PLACE
ONne r •s lea vmg state and
need s to m ove fht s a ll br rck

BAR GAIN OF T H E YE AR

home loca ted otf St Rt 35

M odern hom e 7 room s
ba th 1 story hou se on l y 1
yr old also has f ull flnrsh
ed basem ent mode r n K1 t
chen D R
for ma l L R
w rt h f rreplace F R ,. utll•t v
rm
work shop &amp; sfud y
r ose
garde n
P a t ro
beaut tful shrubber y good
garden Appea li ng over all
to anyone over an acre of
grou nd $35 000
# 209

m Pleasant Vall ey Estates
l'h baths modern
but lt m k it c hen
l1 v m g
room gas hea t , centra l a rr
doub le car garage Can be
seen an y hme Check th rs
one ou t 1 $46,000

3 BR

214

1 212

76 89 ACRE FARM

FARMS
PEACEFUL LIVING
A whole l ot of peace ful
ltvtng for onl y $41 000 25

s

acr es on Niber t Road
room s 2 bedroom s d tntng
r oom , k 1fchen l1v tng room
new bath new fuel o tl
fu r na ce
w ood burning
trr ep l ace
Barn
s hed
ch 1cken house House has
been recent l y r emodeled

No 223
5ACRE FARM
L rvrng room utility room , 2
bedroom s. kr t chen, f ron t
porch n ice gar den spot
st orage bldg
ch1 c: k en

house blacktop road Onl y
221
S14 900
89 ACRES
CLAY TOWNSHIP
House 2 barns toba cc o
base ve r y scen te area 2
beautrful taKes
stocked
w rth fish Excellent for
f1shr ng boatr ng or hunltng
Ju st good l rv rnq
N 161

BEEF FARM
11 8 ac re s over 40 ac r es
level t rll able land the res t
rs pas tu r e and woodland
6 room
Tobacco base
house 'QOOd barn other
outbull d rngs Sell rn g below
l od ay s market
N l Oti

EXT RA CL EAN FAR M

Then tooK no furth er th an
tht s 30 acre far m 8 acres
till able, som e stand mg
t•mber the rest ts p ast ure
la nd Good spnng dev elop
m ent for water supply S
r oom house 2 BR hou se
r ecentl y remodeled Fa •r
St ze barn 700 lb s t obacco
base Should sell y est er

da y $25,000
1 198
FARM
EXCE PTIONALLY
CLEAN
41 ac res good fenc es pro
duc trve past ure Appro x 10
Beaut rfu l
t rllabte acres
wooded ar eas A ppro x 1200
lb tobac co base li vestock
and tobacco barn Hou se IS
v ery attr act 1ve we ll taken
ca r e of 3 bedrooms, '12
basement a l most new oll,
F A fu rnac e T h rs 1S a well
ba tanr Prt farm
11204

160ACRE BEE F
CATTLE FARM
Ca ttle pnc:;es are looktng
up Lots of pas t ure pl en t y
wa ter som e good t rm ber
Owner says se ll now
111 48

MOBILE HOMES

LOT AND MOBIL E HOME

l

MINI F AR M

rur al
II 18Q

40 ACRES
MORE OR LES S

blacktop road tao ooo BT U
$19

222

LOT IN THURMAN

NICE BLO CK
BUILDING

RIO GRANDE AREA
Li ke new home w 1t h 6 rooms , bath
showe r luff f1nt shed basement one car
f1n 1shed garage We ll landsca ped shru b
bery
rose garden
pa tt o
destgned
b arbecue gn lf oak wht t e b oard fence a t
trac t rve arch ed brrdge 1n b ac k ya r d to add
to some of the ma ny pleas tn g ex tr as
Owner s m ust sell now Located cl ose t o
VocatiOnal Sc hool You ve wa nted •t
we v e got rt Prr ced to sell
If 216

CENTURY21

WOODED LOT

PR ICE D IN TH E $20 s
NEAT AND
ATTR ACTIV E

Wtthrn 1{) m m d rrv e To
G all t po l rs
do wn t o w n
Gr een Town sh rp
Ct t y
Sch ool System Has hookup
for m obt le hom e Ga llt a
Rural Wa ter elec trr c and
sept rc tank nt ght li gh t on
pol e 200 tt fr on tag e on
Gra h a m
Sch ool
Rd
T1m ber
Burl d rn g
srtes

11197

S fORY AND IJ:z

Nrce com for t.1b le h om e
wrl h nr cc !M ge shnde t rees
concre te fr ont por c h L OS o ~
l r u!l tr ees \c1ppl0 c her r y
plum &amp; peach ) G r pe har
bor GOod qarden l and ~ I I
leve l In Gr eC'n Tw p R ur al
w ~te r 7 car gtlfage f uel or I
F A
tu r n ~u
Basem ent
Barn
r~ p pr ox
1 o x24

M ORE

Grac tous 9 r oom hom e
srtu a ted on approx 17 A o f
r olt rn g land 5 lar ge B R
for mal d m mg r oom Wtth
frretace, lr vrng room and
bath Countr y k tchen w 1th
love ly bur tt rn cabmets s s
smk wa ll oven &amp; cou nte r
top r ange H as alum srd rn g
and ow ner has added ex tr a
rns ulahon 2 barns stor age
bu tf dmg
ch teken house
and lo ts of fr urt trees
Gatl ! pO i ts c tty
sc h oo l

Call tod a y to see t h1 s nr ce
count r y hom e loc a t ed on
1 99 acres of leve l proctuc
11ve land 3 bedr oom s f u Y
cqurp ped k rt chen ut I l y
rm
r ed meta l barn l1k e
new Runn1 ng cr eek on srde
ma kes for plenty o f w a ter
and nrce settr ng Oh to Twp

I ACRE
2 B E D R OOM COT TA GE

Carport Fronl porch back

93 ACRE S
V ACANT LAND

21

Shown by

Buy two for th e pr 1ce of
one 1 Thrs hom e has J large
b edroom s
f ull
ba t h
shower rn basem en1 lo ts of
trees and shrub bery and a
nrce t rr epl ace tn t he lt v mg

IF YOU QUALIFY - CALL FOR DETAILS

A l u mrnu m srd rng wrl h
ch angeable co l ored f r ont 3
B R eat rn k tl chen bath
utllrty r oom gar age lull
ca r peted &amp; c harn li nK fence
aro und a level law n N rce
ne i ghbor hood &amp; surr oun
drngs m et fy school system

~ENTURY

RESIDENTIAL

Tastefully decor a ted and
well taken ca r e o f
3
blrdfooms ltvl n g room
family room modern ea t
rn k•tc hen lar ge level lot
an d st orage b u 1td rng
Loca ted rn c 1ty Sc h ool
Dtstnct Was h1 ngton

BEAUTI FUL
RIV ER Vt EW- S42 000

We Now Have Conventional Loans!
Available As Low As 5% Down and
30 Years To Repay.

2 homes and 2 cx t r a lar ge
Con ven lently located 8S
Stat e Street , Gallipolis,
Ohio Lot 88' 6" fronlage on
State Street 175' deplh
Price
$75 , 000 00
Interested parties, call «61652 for Inspection

SOUTHERN HILLS

Grade School

Financing! Financing! Financing!

LY S27 500 00

A Historical Horne

JNOEPENDENRY. OWNED

appo1 ntmen t
Reasonab l y
pr rced 1 No 220

To Sell

OFFICE 446-7699

EXCLUSIVE

m -3325
216 E Second Street

COMM E RCIAL BUILDING
Mocle r n brr c k one story
nn stepsJ bu tl d tnq Stfua fed n c1fy of uall rpolt s cldt n
cen t to qo ll cours0 15 000 SQ ft 50 ro om s ~ IIM r o us
StH'SJ pork rna tot nccomm odn tes dO ve h cles Ideall y
;u: r nnged l or pr ot ess ron nl olfr ces Cn ll WOO D AGE N
L Y 446 1006 l or rn ore rnf orrna t ron

We Need
Your Hom~
or Farm

Fastest Growing

ROOM RANCH

IN VES TM E NT PROPE RTY
2 n ce tots w 1th 4 re nta l
mob ti C' home pads all arc r ented Each p ad has con
cre te r unners and pa t ro E xce ll ent loca t ron 1n Rod ney
c(1 I l or rn orc rnf or m a t ron

---

Gallia County's

THI S ONE 8 ROOM HOME
E x tr a love ly br 1c k &amp; fra m e rn one of th e
A PPRO X 4 A
ar ea s ntcest locat ron ~ Spnng Va ll ey ) 3
All level a long Sl H wy 55 t a B R
large B R s 2 fu l l b aths &amp; tull y equrppcd
k•t c hen w 1th tot of cabt nets Th rs home hils modern ho m e wr th bur l! n k rl chen FA
furnilcc pa r tr a t base m en t '1 porc hes
full f rn shed basem ent w rth f amtl y r ec r en
I ron room st ud y &amp; ut lr ty a r er~ N atu r a l • Se pnrn te ga r age and sum -ncr ktl c h e&gt;n
ga s F A l uran ce &amp; 'l ft r epl il ces All t h ts &lt;'ll so worksh op &amp; stori'lgc arcn L ots of
butl d1ng spo t s for new home s on th e Gall ro
prr ced to sell C t y Sc hool System
co Rur 11 1 W O!er Sys t A lso 1n tncom f' n
ves tm ent proper ty L ALL NOW F O R
AT T RA CTIV E 6
MORE DE TA I L S

N E W LI STING - Nt ce ra nc h wr th 3 bedroo m s
w tth show er w rfe approved Krtch en carpeted
basement w rth 1 car gara ge Loca ted c lose to town
cr t y school d rstr rct

Mob t l e Hom es tor Sale

Realtor Assocjate
Ph. Hciine 446-2745

Realtor ASSOCIItes

If yo u IrKed thr s home at S39 000 L OOK At th e new
prt ce 1 Ne w pat nlrn Srde (;nan Jew ki tchen linoleum
Hard wood f loor s 3 spa1 ~ ooms cheerful l rv m g
room wr th pt c fure wmd •..u '-d rp or t Low cost gas fur
nace heal Pr rvate bac k yard In one of th e c rt y s
qu etc st nei ghborh oods

CLOSE TO TOWN - Beautr ful new r anch Wtth
bedroom s P4 ba ths cent r al arr cond1tron, f amr ty
room w rt h fr r elace beaut f ul ca r pet radtO rn ter com
syst em large 2 c ar garage Crty school drs t r~e t and rm
med tate possess ton

PhylliS
Loveday
Realtor Associate
Ph. Home

$1 ,500

446-3636

li t II TO ll

A rt h ur A N tb ert , R ea ltor
Bonnr e Stu tes, A s so c - 446-2 885
QFflC~
M e rrtll Ca rte r , A sso c -379-21 84
o..,
Q Jam es Stutes, A sso c - 446 2885
Phtl Saunders, A ssoc .- 388-9700 '----___;==;...:.~:=~
Judv D e Wttt, A ssoc - 388-8155

ElQf

POMEROY, 0 .

25 112 Locust St
Galhpolts , Ohro

IN

Ru sse ll D Wood, Brok e r
K en Morgan , 446 0971
Mose Centerbury , 446 3408

Real Estate tor :&gt;drc

446-6610

-

R eal E s tate for Sale

MAIN...,.......,_.

RUSSELL WOOD REALTOR
446-1066

____B_eal Estate for SaiL

LOCUST STREET

-

Real

siTe-

...

DOUBLE WtDE
MOBILE HOME
8 r oom s 3 bedroom s 2
baths, comlplete ki tc hen,
centra l arr , w ater tap ver y
cozy S1ttrr J on 2 love l y
ac r es l oca ted off f ro m
Bu lav rll e Porter Rd
11 129

SCE NIC VI EW
F rom th rs nice mobrle
hom e sltt.n g on a r iver
fro nt lot located c l ose to
town M ost all the furn rture
r ema rn s wr th th• s hom e
L ar ge den liVIng r oom ,
moder n ea t tn Kr t chen plus
comp lete 2 bedrooms, k m g
r n m as t e r
s 1ze b ed
bedroom l ar ge deck and
dec k furn• ture, concre te
d r rve and park m g area
Thr s home has m any g oad

4 r oom

house
equrpm e nt shed
gr ass all over
spn ng water
Good fen crng

barn and
K nee deep
Plent y of
for st oc k
If 167

Just list ed thrs nrce far m
located tn Morgan Twp
wtt h 4 vr old m tl k 1ng
parlor
18 x 42 barn
138 x60 corn cr rb c hrc k.en
hou se ce ll ar house &amp; loft
ptus oth er b ldgs 3 ponds
Al l mrner al ngh ts go
Modern 8 r oom farm house
Home ha s new stdr ng M ar
tage can be assum ed for
ng ht part y
11205

SMA L L ACREAGE
GOOD STARTER HOME
Approx 7 acre f ar m 4
acr es level Tops for truck
far m 1ng or an y use Sm all
barn, p asture for hor ses or
cattl e
House 1S betn g
remodeled 6 r oom s &amp; ba th ,
level attracft ve
shaded
ar ea
18 m il es fr o m
Ga tt rpolts 10 m 1l es from
Oak H rtt blacK t op r oad

$36 000

1200

10AC DOUBLEWIO E
CITY SCHOOL DIST
Sc en rc area, new double
'wide 24'x52', 8 room s 2
baths, 2 showers L R

F R , D R , 3 bedrooms
delu&gt;ce
kitchen
good
garden area, new tool sh ed

24'x28

Th is 1s wh at you
want and can t usuaH y
f1nd All new , with 10 acr es

to use

as

y ou

please

219

Dwell rng has basement 2
bedroom s drntn g room
k 1chen b ath p lus a 12 x50
m ob rle hom e atta ched
Whi Ch fea tures 2 bedroom s
ll v 1ng room , dtn mg room
and kr tc hen Far m also has

1200 lb

tobacco base

BR EATH OF COUNTRY

hookup
1 1ro
FARMtN COUNTR Y

tar v

U25

JUST A LI TTLE
BIT CO UN TRY'

5 r ms &amp; ba t h 3 bedrooms
F A fuel orI hea t sueened
rn porch nr ce CV" to t
garden lots of f rur 1 rees
v rtt age of Add 1son ~' 900
1/ 181

BA RGAIN HU NTERS
DRE AM
Ran ch 2 bedrooms bath
ea t rn k t1chen u t rltt y room
l rvrng room
gas heat
located at 438 Upper Rt v(; r
Rd Pn cedonly$16900
11

2 29

CENTURY 21

INVESTMENTS
INVESTMENT
Four m obrle home s L rve 1n
one r ent from the other
t hr ee shou ld m ake all
pay ment s Or r ent them
all Good stead y rnc om e
V ery attra ct •ve settmg A ll
re nted Pr rced 1n low thrr
I res
11 171

INV ES TO R' S DRE AM
Put your deflat rng dolla r rn
a nearl y new com mer c1a l
lea se bustness 3 excellent
lon g ter m lea ses Great
return on you r money 11 215

IUJ ilcres, new met al l:la r n

56 x60

m rlk house and
m rlktn g parlor 1400 lb
tobacco b'as:e tobacco bar n
and shed , loaf rng shed silo
bulk tank compressor Th1 s
•s one of Ga lh a Cou nty s
m ost produ ctive da 1r y
fa rm s
A ll of l and rs
flllabte Fr ontage on two
r oads Shown b y appotnt

mont onl y

"We're The Neighborhood Professionals"

INV ESTMENT
PROPERTY
27 acre s
r ural wa ter
bl ac ktop road
close to
Gallrpofl s One of tts jStnd
left Pnced r rght
/11 03

BUSIN ESS
RE CR EAT IONAL
INV ESTM E NT

2

#2 24

H ave a lr ttl e pr1 v acy ltvtng
rn th 1s n1 ce mobi le home
w hrch features 2 bedroom s,
ll vrng room modern ea t m
k tt c hen compl et e, b a th
ut tllt y room 1n good cond1
t1on Storm w indows &amp;
sc r eens conc r ete steps
M a ny o t her fe atures
Located on Farr f1 eld Vanco
Ctty
Road Good area
Gr een E lem en
sc hools

HOU SE HUNTIN G?
6 rooms ba t h ex ten sr vel y
re mode led modern bUilt tn
krtchen for mal o R
2
B R ful ba semen t Can be
purchased wrth 3 ac r es or
22 ac r es Tobacco b ase
so m e ttmb er Fa mtl y mov
ng w I take n1ce m ob ile
home on t ra de rn Good
ne1ahborhood $35 000 Tot al
Pr1ce
# 211

33 ACRES
RACCOON TWP

dnlled we ll s stocked farm
pond ex tr a m obil e home

assets

NEW LI ST IN G
F or a I ttl e br t less you can
b u y a w hole lot more 2
bed room s lt vr ng r oom k rf
che n
burl! n cab rn et s
ba th utdrt y r oom new ce
m ent por ches Gara ge L ot
100 x 155
Ky ger Creek
Sc hoo l s
V rll age
of
L heshr re D on t "m rss thr s
ba r ga m S19 000
I# 23S

AND

9S ACRE FARM
HOM E

$32 000

TWO FOR ON E
For th e prr ce of on e you
ca n have two mob le
hom es 197 3 Home tl e 3
b edroom s
2 ca m p ete
baths
built rn k tch en
d tshwasher to tal electr rL
p ol•o awn rng under prnn
rn g ex t r a r oo f bur tt over
home 1968 New Moon ')
bed r oom s ba t h kr l chen
underprn n tn g pa t 10 awn
m g for ce d a•r f urnace
Bo th ares tu a ted on a nrce
s1ze lot Ea ch has own :;ep
tr c t ank Bu y bot h for the
cos t of one L rve rn one use
o th er l or re n tal
Spr
•ng f reld Tw p
f1 237

1228

R emode led two st ory
house ver y n1ce tn scen tc
L 1v rng room
toca tt on
large eat rn kr tchen , 3
bedroom s, utllty room
ba th
sc r eened rn bac k
po rch front porc h New
c ab1n
Large
m odern
ftshtng lake, loca ted rn a
beau t+ful sec luded wooded
atea Has been operated as
a pay taKe ' Lots ot -for est
area
Hunt m g
squ1rre1
r abb tts, deer abound Some
tob acc o
1rlla ble ac r es
base Located m Harrr son
Twp on a b l ack top road

$500

acre

W234

�w-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, 0&lt;1. 29, 19'~&amp;
. DAMAGES RUN HIGH
MAUBU, Calif. (UP! )~
The
brushfires
that
devastated large areas of
suburban Los Angeles last
week , causing more than &amp;
niillion damage, kitled W"
least one person, but the body
was too badly burned to be

Carter's inflation _gamble

identified.
Sberiff's deput i es
discovered the body Friday in
the Malibu Lake area, part of
the :&gt;.S,OOO-acre zone burned
by the worst of the four fires .
Authorities hoped to be able
to establish its identity
through dental charts.

By HELE!\1 THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter Ia asking
the American people for
patience, self restraint and
time to win the battle against
inflation.
Most of all, be is urging the
. people to withhold their judgment, asserting there are no
overnight 110lutims or instant
miracles to break · the
in!l8tionary spiral.
His new program is
voluntary but packs some
wallop in federal government
purchasing C&lt;lltracts to the
tune of $00 bllllon a year. He
also warned that the
govenunimt might decide to
withhold
the
special
!B'ivileges it extends to the
private sector.in the form of
special francllisa, protected
wages and prices, subsidies
and protection from foreign
competition.
Carter wants to put a 7
percent cap on wage
increases and to hold
economy-wide price boosla to
5'111 percent.
It's a gamble. Carter ls
adamantly against
mandatory wage and price
controls, but he knows be
needs some teeth to reduce

. . . to ~et moving
... to Join the Christmas Club
... to beat Christmas bills
... to enjoy your Christmas.

thl5 year's apercent inflatioo
rate.
He sees the alternative evil
11.'1 a deliberate recessioo
which would throw millions of
people out of work to drive
prlces down.
" I do not have all the
answers," he said in his
natlonwide broadcast.

uNobody does."
But he declared that
fighting inflation would be hl5
"central preoccupation' '
during the moolhs ahead.
RIB biggest lever is to rally
public opinioo behind a program of wage and .price
standards for industry and
labor. Whether he can
mobilize the nat!oo to adhere
to the grand design to
decelerate the inflatioo rate
to ~ or ~.5 percent remains to .
be seen.
Carter has long recognized
inflatlon is the biggest
domestic problem in the
country today . His previous
efforts to win voluntary
support on the part of
business and labor flzzled and
never got off the ground. The
cooperation be asked for was
never there. ·
But this time, the president
seems to think he hllll enough
government clout to win

..· el ·J ':

• • • •• a• • • • • a• • • • \
·~
·

...CREE GIF't---..

~

Q

.

Sta
Today

When you OPEN your Christmas Cl.ubreceiv e a Santa Helper Tree Ornam e nt while the supply last s .

·

Open your Christmas Club before January
1, 1979, make 49 prompt weekly payments,
and the Pomeroy National Bank will make
the 50th payment for you.

8

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

WATQt OOSE STATISTICS

•
•
•
·a

You see the headlines in the median price . figure
the newspaper quite often only gives a rough •dea of
... " Home prices up 6 home prices. The only re~ l
percent" ... "Home prices way to know wha~ s
up 10 percent." The .. available and at what pme
s i t u a t 1o n
1 0 0 k 5 Is to fmd out . Rmemeber

•
• discouraging for potential
e home buyers. But before

pomeroy
nationa
bank

•
•
•
•

you shake your head and

sar. you can'l afford thhose
pr ces, dig a little deeper
and see what's behind
those statistics.
e The prices that · are
• quoted In the papers are
usually MEDIAN prices . .
• The median price Is the
1 middle price. Remember
• this when you read the real
.• estate news. If the headline
e says " Median Price of
e Homes In West Nor-thville
• Reaches $S2.Soo" it simply
means that hail the homes
• sold went for more than
• that figure , and flail went
• for less. Bear in mind that

the bank of
the century
established 1872

that statistics

•

f-A •
· l \,; e

·willis T. I."ucMngnam
Rt•ltor .

Our Christmas Club for 1979 is now open .
Join this week.

•

view the

whole picture, surveying a
group of homes and
arriving at a median
figure. YOU are interested
1n one home! There might
be one out there i ust for you
at the price you want to.
pay. Come In and talk to us
about it. You might be able
to laugh at those statistics
as you move Into your own
home!
If there is anything we'
can do. to help you 1n the
field of real estate please
phone or drop In at
LEADINGHAM
REAL
ESTATE, 512 ·Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. Phone 446 •7699,
We're here to help.
.

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acceptance of the wage-price
standards, that used to be
called guidelines.
The term guidelines apparenUy Ia too reminl5cent of the
Kennedy-Johnson era for
·earter, and he decided to put
a brand new label on an old
Idea.
If ·there 15 one thing I have
learned beyond any doulll,"
Carter said, "it is that there
is no single solution for
inflation."
The president made a big
point of aMouncing that he
was ordering a 20,000
reduction in the federal work
force. But actually he is
requlre&lt;l by law to slash the
federal payroll.
. Carter never calls on the
people to keep a wary eye on
their . pocketbooks
by
boycotting high-priced goods.
But he does say " your
decisions - made every day
at . your service station or
your grocery store, in your
buSiness, in your union
meetings - will determine
the nation 's answer to
inflation as much as decisioos
made here in the White House
or by the Congress on Capitol
Hill."
The president said he could
give no assurances of
success, but declared that he
has set standards that are
fair to all . "if we do follow
them, they will slow prices
down, so that wages will not
have to chlllle prices just to
stay even."
"As far as I am concerned,
every business, every union,
every professional group,
every individual in this
country hllll no excuse not In
adher.e to these standards,"
be said.
"Because this is not a
mandatory control plan, I
carinot s!Dp an irrespmsible ,
corporation 'from raising its .
prices, or a selfish group of
f
.
employees rom using Its
power to demand excessive
wages," he said.

Most of all be contends that
his
Is sh uld be .
e
proposa
o
gtven
e a fair chance to work .
e "If. tomorrow, or next
• week, or next mooth, you
e ridicule them, ign&lt;l'e them,
• pick them apart before they
·e have a chance to work, you
• will have reduced their
• ch
of
ceed' " be
•
ance
sue
mg,
• said.
·•
Time will tell. But If It does
• not do the trick, the next time
d
C t
ha
• aroun even ar ermay ve
e to move toward stronger
.• measures such as cootrols .

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
SALE! OCCASIONAL TABLES
AND ACCESSORIES

Kahn prefers ·mandatory wage, price controls
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Alfred Kahn, President Carter's Blumenthal was the guest on CBS-TV's "Face the Nation."
new inflation fighter , says if it came to a choice, he would
Blumenthal predicted that investors in the falling stock
prefer mandalnry wage and price controls to an economic market eventually would accept the merits of the Carter
recession.
·
program.
But he said he believes the country can walk the tightrope
"I have no doubt that the market will reflect that in coming
between the two, and he's confident the American people can months," he said. "I think these programs take awhile to
be persuaded to hold down wages and prices voluntarily,
analyze and understand. "
"If lam forced to choose between the two of them I just have
Kahn said he's not a miracle worker with a quick cure for
to choose the controls," he said.
America's economic ills: " I'm not a huckster. I'm not
Kahn and Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal took to interested in pretending that I'm going to pull rabbits out of the
the television interview circuit Sunday to defend President .hat or create miracles."
Carter's anti-inflation program against skepticism on Wall
Kahn said he does "not intend to fail and I do eyot think it is
Street and in money markets around the world.
necessary to fail. "
Kahn was interviewed on ABC-TV's "Issues and Answers."
But he lauOlingly conceded he may be crazy fo( thinkin~ be

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT-3RD FLOOR
2-187.50 OAK END TABLES
LEAlHEREITE INLAY

SALE
3pc.

l-s87.50 OAK COFFEE TABLE
LEAlHEREITE INLAY

•••••••

1-1139.00 HEX END BRICK INLAY

1

149.00

1

·1- 139.00 SQUARE END BRICK INLAY

____,

1

1- 139.00 COCKTAIL SHELF
AND .DOOR BRICK INLAY,

3 Pc.

VOL XXIX

2-'66.00 HOSTESS
TABLE-PINE-COMPASS lOP............ SALE 139.00 ea.
1-1198.00 END TABLE,
DRAWER &amp; SHELF HARD ROCK MAPLE ..... SALE 1109.00

keeping out of trouble Halloween
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - The recipe for
finding a witch on Halloween night is
simple, as legend has it .
All you need is one (I) elderberry shrub,
a clear night and a dash of courage.
"It's like LinuS's Great Pumpkin,"'
explains Warren Wells, a naturalist with
the Hamilton County park district. "I think
there are more legends about elderberry
than about any other plants."
"You hide underneath an elderberry,"
says Wells , citing the old legend . "The
elderberry will protect you. And at the
stroke of midnight, you'll see witches and
warlocks filling the sky."
As Halloween approaches, Wells and c&lt;&gt;workers have been compiling some of their
favorite legends and tales about the woods
and the supernatural. Some legendary
suggestions for keeping out of trouble this
Halloween :
-Keep a shovel near your fireplace. If
an owl lands on your chimney and hoots
three times, you must fling the shovel into
the fire . Otherwise, as the legend goes,
someone in the house will soon be leaving
for the next world.
-Beware' of cawing crows. If a crow
caws at you, lake your hat off and bow to
it. Qtherwise, dire consequences await.
--Should you think you' ve been
bewitched , collect some twigs from a
wahoo (small elm tree), found mainly in
the.squlhern United States. Make tea with
the \'Wigs, rub. it on your head and sh'out
"wahoo" seven times. The spell will be
1

2- 218.00 OAK RECTANGULAR COCKTAIL•• SALE 118.00 ea.
1

1

2--s187.00 OAK LAMP TABLES.............. SALE s98.00 ea.
1-1144.00 OAK BUNQIING TABLE ............. SALE s79.00
•

1

1- 221.00 PINE SUGAR BIN .................. SALE 1129.00
2-144.00 WALNUT HQSTESS TABLE ........ SALE 129.00 ea.
1

1- 109.95 WALNUT SQUARE END TABLE....... SALE '69.00
1-s109.95 WALNUT SQUARE END TABLE
1-s119.00 OVAL COCKTAIL SOUD BIROI

SAl£ '69.00
SALE '69.00

1-s89.00 PECAN HEX END TABLE .............. SALE 549.00

LIQUOR VOTE COMING
PENINSULA, Ohio (UP!)
- The voters of this small
village will decide next
month if concertgoers and
sports fans who flock to The
Coliseum and Blosaom Music
Center should be denied one
for the road.
The voters wlll cast ballots
on an 15sue in the Nov. 7
.election which would prohibit
the sale of beer and in·
toxlcatlng liquors . That
would mean the end for the
Penin.sula Nil e Club, the only
bar In town, midway between
Cleveland and Akron.
,,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Here's legendary suggestions for

vy for honors

COMPLETES COURSE
MARION - Barry W.
McCoy, Syracuse, a General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employe, has completed a
course at the company's
technical training school
here.
The two-week course
covered digital logic fun·
damentals used in the
computer-like operation of
electronic telephone switching SYstems.
A switchworker in the
company's Athens District,
McCoy has been with General
for II years.

NO. 138

1-s89.00 MAPLE END TABLE ...................SAl£ 149.00
· 1-~219.95

LANE OAK RECORD &amp;TAPE CABINF.T •••••• SALE 1129.00
1-144.00 TIER CORNER STAND, MAPLE........ SALE 129.00
4-s35.45 PINE PLANT STAND, PINE All WOOD SALE 119.00
1-188.69 FIRE SCREEN w/ANDIRONS
AND FIRESIDE SET. Black &amp;Brass.......... SAL£ 149.00
1-173.15 FIRE SCREEN w/ANDIRONS,
black &amp; brass ••••••• ~ . ••••••••••••••••••••• SAl£ $39.00
1- 46.65 I ARE SCREEN
w/POKER &amp; BROOM, BRASS............... SALE 129.00
1

1-119.95 BRASS ANDIRONS ................... SALE 112.50
3-$22.50 MAPLE SMOKERS................... SALE s12.00
3-137.50 HANGING PLANTERS ••••••••••••••••• SALE 119.00
1-'59.00 MONKEY GLASS .lOP TABLE ••••••••-•• SAL£ $29.00
1-'59.00 MONKEY QULD HAl! TREE •••••••••• SAL£ 129.00
1-145.00 POCKET BEN BAITERY WALL CLOCK•• SAL£ '29.00
1-'55.00 OOMPASS WAll CLOCK, BAITERY ••••• SM.£ '39.00

ELBERFELDS
·IN POMEROY
..
.

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broken (and the neighbors alarmed).
- Beware of owls in general. As Wel15
notes, "According to an Indian legend, if
an owl hoots your name, you're a goner ."
--Oh, and try not to yawn on Halloween.
Your spirit can esca pe through your open
mouth.
"There are all kinds of superstitions
dealing with plants," says Wells. "Take,
for example, vervain (a tall plant with
square stem and tassels). I ran a hiking
trail through a patch of vervain here in the
woods , and within a year it had
disappeared. All the vervain was gone.
People still believe in it."
Vervain, according tn legend , is a
guarantee of protection from witches'
spells and the "evil eye."
Another allegedly enchanted plant ls the
·fern. Or, more specifically, fern seeds. Explains Wells : " If you put three fern seeds
in your shoe, it is said you can make
yourself invisible at will ."
Legend even has a formula for flying a
broomstick.
"Collect some yarrow and rue (common
plants ). They 're necessary for anyone that
want to fly on a besom - that's wha t
witches call ·a broom. You can have the
yarrow and rue in dry powder form or
otherwise. Go into a field and say , 'By
yarrow and rue, and my black hat too, I be
off to (place).'
• "~d. upon completion of the couplet, off
you go."

Bob Leith named to
•
•
steerzng commzttee
Robert (Bob) Leith, Rio
Grande, was one of six
persons named Sunday to
serve on a steering committee made up of customer members of the Buckeye
Rural Electric Cooperative to
meet with CO-&lt;IP officials to
discuss the power provider's
recent rate increase. other
members are Anne Zimmer,
Kitts Hill; Ray Riggs, South
Point; K. E. Kingery, (ac·
countant), Willow Wood ;
John E. Alfrey, Rock Camp
and Wynema Patterilon, Rt.
I, Ironton.
A proposal to create such a
committee was relayed
through Ohio Rep. Ron
James, D-Proctorville, at a
meeting of about 60 customer
- members and a smattering
of politicians Sunday at
Symmes Valley High School.
James said Buckeye Rural
Manager Clyde Ramsay and
co-op attorney, Richard
Roderick,
offered the
proposal for formation of a
committee of five to seven

members, plus an attorney
and accountant. "They said
that we co uld have total
access" to records and books,
Jam es added . And the
committee could. get "answers that we understand
inst ead of those print ed in
last month's County Living,"
a periodical sent to customer
-members.
A report should be made of
the meeting, he said, and the
customer - members co uld
then choose their couse of
action.
He said the customer members could move to
change the board of directors
through a petition drive, or
seek legislation on the state
level calling for regulation of
the 28 CO-&lt;ip5 in Ohio.
But , James said, any
regulatory legislation might
meet with opposition from
customer -members of other
co-&lt;&gt;ps who are satisfied with
their service.
· Inflation and the cost of
meetine air quality standards

j!#f.)"--r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_
Police seek kidnapper
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Police have been warned to be on
-the lookout for a suspected kidnapper: Rita Warren, the 50year-old religious activist from Massachusetts who took up
residence in the Statehouse and carried a coffin around the city
this summer ln a fight for a schoolll"ayer bill.
Mrs. Warren of Brockton, Mass. , ls suspected of snatching
her 3-year-&lt;&gt;ld grandson from her 22-year"'id daughter
Theresa, with whom she has been engaged in a custody batUe.

Plea issued to parents
CHICAGO (UP!) . - The National Safety Council has
issued a plea to parents tn insure Halloween trick-or-treat
activities are sale for their chlldren.
"Parents have a responsibllity 11ot only to prepare their
children for the evening, but also to show their children the
responsible way to go out on their Halloween rounds," Council
President VIncent L. Tofany said.

Jilted woman runs over man
., INDIANAPOUS (UP!) - Awoman jilted by her boyfriend
claimed be waa the lowest thing on earth, then ran over him
three tlmell with a car pollee said. The vlellm, Henry Cantrell,
t3, was ln satlafactory cooilltloo at Methodlst•Hospltal Sunday
suffering from numerous scraJI!ls and bruises.
\f
(Continuedonpage10) ,
!!!

have been cited by Buckeye
Rural Electric officials as the
reasons for the controversial
rate hike that went into effect
Sept. I.
The co-&lt;&gt;p maintains that
the hike averages 13 percent,
including the. fuel adjustment
amount, while James contends that It's much more
than that when only the base
rate for power used is
examined.
Buckeye Electric Inc., a
generating transmission coop that sells electricity to
nearly 30 rural co-&lt;&gt;ps in Ohio,
is facing a more than $40
million expenditure for
pollution
controlling
precipitators on one of its two
units at the Cardinal station
in northeastern Ohio.
While State Sen. Oakley
Collins, R-Ironton, indicated
that the price of one million
BTU had jumped from 19
cents in 1967 to $1.24 today,
James
both he and
challenged Buckeye Rural's
rates, which, according to the
two, are among the highest in
the state.
"I think there 's something
wrong," Collins said, noting
that a number of other rural
CO-&lt;iPS have lower rates but
buy their electricity from the

can succeed at one of the toughest jobs in Ameri ca." It was
once said that whom the gods would destroy they first made
inad,'' he said. ' 1And maybeJ 've been made mad. 1 '
Blumenthal predicted the anti-inflation drive will need more
than six months or a year to succeed. Asked if it would take
four or five years, he replied , " I don't think it's that long ."
Kshn expressed disappointment at the stock market's fall
since Carter unveiled his program, but said tougher measures
would have threatened a depression .
"We are going to have to . rely in large measure on
persuasion, on publicity, on public hearings," he conceded.
But the former head of the Civil Aeronautics Board said
psychology plays a big fa ctor in inflation - " If enough people
think that inflation is going to get worse. it automatically gels

worse."
Kahn predicted that labor and industry would go along with
Carter's voluntary wageprice guidelines because of the·
importance of fighting inflation.
" I'm not accustomed to waving the flag," he said . " That's
not the way ! 'function. But I do really believe ... no one will
want to be the one who is identified even in the tiniest bit
responsible for breaking these guidelines."
He admitted the danger of recession, but sa id the adminis·
!ration's lop economists believe both mandatory controls and a
maj or economic slowdown can be avoided.
He repeatedly endorsed Carter's concept of volunta ry
controls, but said he would support mandalDry ones if the only
alternative were recession.

•

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•••••••• $249.00

Bus drivers
POMEROY
Approxin\ately 50 school bus
drivers
from
Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington Counties will vie
. for honors and trophies by
demonstrating their abillty to
maneuver a school bus over a
prescribed obstacle course.
The event will be held at
Meigs School at Pomeroy. It
will start at 9 a.m. Saturday,
Nov . 4. The public is invited
to attend. Winners of the
event will be eligible to try for
the Regional event to be helrl
in the spring.
These events are cosponsored by the Ohio
Department of Education,
Ohio Association of Public
School Employees, and Ohio
Association
of
Administrators of Pupil Transportation.

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SAl£

1-1139.00 RECTANGULAR
COFFEE TABLE, PERSIMMON................... SAl£ '69.00

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

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range with the speed of a
cquntertop
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...--iiloo______....______

enttne
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•
New dentist arrives
Meigs County has a new
dentist. He is Dr. R. Craig
Mathews, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl F . Mathews, 22 Utah
Place, Athens, who, with his
wife,
Barbara Becker
Mathews, is residing at 412
Lincoln Hill Road, Pomeroy.
Dr. and Mrs. Mathews have
opened offices at 205 N.
Second Ave., in Middleport,
in a str ucture owned by
Walter Crooks. They have
done extensive remodeling
and 're dec orating to th e
bui lding. Two rooms are
tastefully done and feature
the most modern dental
equipment.
Dr. Mathews, a 1971
graduat e of Athens High
School, received his bachelor
of arts in zoology at Ohio
State University in 1975 and
graduated from the Ohio
State School of Dentistry this
year.
.
Mrs. Mathews holds a
bachelor of scien ce in home
economics and will be
assist ing her husband in the
new office.

Crash
probegoes on
A federal safet y investigator probing the cause
of a freak airplane crash
Friday night at the Gallia Meigs Airport said the wing
designs of the two planes
prevented the planes ' pilots
from seeing each other.
Killed in the crash was 41year old William C. Miller,
manager of WJEH radio and
former station manager of
WMPO.
F our persons were injured
when the two planes collided
and fell approximately 100
fe et to the ground just short of
the runway .
Ed McAvoy, an investigator with the Natural
Transportation Safety Board,
said the wing designs of the
two single-engined aircraft
blocked the pilots' vision as
the planes approached the
airport's single

runway .

"The wings blocked both
pilots' view of each other,"

McAvoy said. One craft - the
Cessna - was a high-winged
model while the second plane
- an Ercoupe - had a low
winged design.
McAvoy also said the pilots
were using different radio
frequencies at the time of the
7:40 p.m. accident. The investigator said the two planes
were approaching the airport
with the Cessna piloted by
Daniel Maynard, 22, Bidwell,
flying in front of and below a
craft piloted by Dan Riffee,
same source.
~.of Given, Ja ckson County,
"That's the reason why I W.Va.
cannot accept EPA (Environmental Protection
Riffee's Ercoupe overtook
Agency) regulations as an
the
Cessna and struck the
answer," James added.
plane's rudder, McAvoy said.
This caused the Cessna to
SQU~D RUNS
make a severe right bank, he
The emergency unit of the explained.
Middleport flre department
As the Cessna tilted, Its left
went to Cole St. at 7:05 p.m. horizontal stabilizer bar
Saturday for Evelyn Jewell struck the "leading rightwho was taken to Holzer front edge" of the Ercoupe,
·Medical Center.
MeAwy related
The two planes then "fell
Sunday at 2:12a.m. the unit
went to Broadway St. for side by side and hit the
John .HUIVlell, Sr., a medical ground at practically the
patient who was taken to same time."
McAvoy said the collision
Veterans Memorial Hospital
damage was not sufficient to
where he was admitted.
At 11:18 a.m. Sunday the make the Ercoupe crash
squad went to the intersection unless the collision's Impact
· oi Route 143 and 7 for Penny "pushed the airplane into a
Smith who had burns on one position such 11.'1 a stall from
which the pilot could nut
a~m. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. recover .''

.... f f
I'

'
..·-..... .

'i

NEW DENTIST - Dr. and Mrs. R. Craig Math ews
are new residents of Meigs County. They are living at 412
Lincoln Hill Road, Pomeroy , and have opened denial
offices at 205 N. Second Ave ., in Middleport. Offi ce hours
are !O a.m. to 12 noon, I to 4 p.m. and 6\o 8p.m., Mondays;
8: 30 to 12:30 and 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays through
Fridays and from 9a.m. to 12 noon on Saturdays.
'

MODERN EQUIPMENT - The most modern dental
equipment is featured in ihe offices of Dr. R. Craig
Mathews who has opened offices at 205 N. Second Ave.,
Middleport.

Several arrests
expected soon
Arrests are expected sh ort·
for numerous acts of
vanda lism th at occ urred
ly

Wreck involves
three vehicles
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, investigated
five weekend accidents.
Officers were called to the
scene of a three-vehicle
collision on SR 7 at Uttle
Kyger Rd., at II :33 a.m.
According to the patrol,
autos operated by Charles
Thomas, 18, Cheshire, and
Elsie So utherland, 55,
Rutland, were north bound on
7.

The Thomas vehicle
stopped to turn left , The
Southerland auto failed to
stop and struck the Thomas
auto in the r ear.
The Southerland vehicle
then went left of center and
struck a south bound auto
operated by Wilma Hoschar,
30, Pomeroy, in the left side.
Hoschar claimed injury
and was taken by SEOEMS to
Holzer Medical Center,
where she was treated for a
contusion of the left temple,
and released.
Officers r eport severe
damage to the Ho schar auto,
moderat e damage to the
Thomas :and Southerland
vehicles.
Southerland was cited on
charges of assured clear
dist ance.
The patrol investigated two
other Saturday accidents.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-vehicle mishap
on SR 218, at Mercerville, at
7:16 a.m.

According to the patrol, an
auto operated by Michael
Beaver,
19,
Cheshire,
traveling So uth, went off the
left side of the roadway and
struck a utility pole.
Beaver was cited on
charges
of
reckless
operation. Officers report
moderate damage to the
vehicle.
The patrol was call ed to the
scene of a two-auto mishap on
TR 193, in Meigs County. at
9:15a.m.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Alva Tiemeyer,
53, Pomeroy, pulled onto CR
21 from 193 into the path of a
south bound vehicle driven b)'
Elias Howard, 32, Cheshire.
Officers report moderate
damage to both autos. No
citation was issued.
The Gall ia-Meigs Post
investigated two accidents
Sqnday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-v ehicle
collision at 12 :45 p.m. on SR
583, three-tenths of a mile
east of Mitchell Rd.
The patrol reports that an
auto operated by Ricky
Swain, 19, Gallipolis, pulled
from a private drive into the
path of an east bound vehicl e
driven by Virginia Petrie, 21,
Gallipolis.
Officers report moderate
da mage to both autos . Swain
was cited on charges of
(Continued on page 10)

Friday night al0ng SR 7 bet wee n the Ga ll ia· Meigs
county line and Storys Run
Road according to the Meigs
County Sheriff' s Department .
Sixt y-one

tire s

wer e

slashed, 21 mailbo xes
damaged and other acts of
vandalism occurred.

Sa tu r d a r a ft ernoon,
deputies recovered a 1977
Jeep reported stolen Friday
night from Pomeroy. The
vehicle was recovered over
an embankment on Bunker
Hill. It had been soaked with
gasoline. Deputies theorize
the jeep rolled over the
embankm ent befor e the
gasoline could be ignited.
An eight track tape player
with speakers and a small
tool box were reported taken
from the vehicle. The ignit ion
had been pried out. Some
physical eviden ce was found
at the scene. The incident is
st ill under inv estigation.
Saturday at 8 p.m. on
Co unty Road 28, fiv e miles
north of SR 12!, a deer was
killed when it ran into the
path of a vehicle driven by
Francis L. Ta ylor, Van Meter
Road, Racine. There was
slight damage.
Sunday atl2: 45 a.m. a deer
was killed when it ran into the
path of a vehicle driven by
Mark Parsons. The incident
occurred on Co unty Road 28,
just so uth of McKenzie Ridge
Road . There was heavy
property damage.
Saturday at 4:40 Jackie R.
Lowe , 20, Rt . I, Ewington.
backed into a parked auto
owned by James G. Mould,
Rt. I, Dexter. The accident
occurred on Township Road
15 mSalem township . There
wa s slight damage to both
vehicles.

At 6 p.m. Saturday Don alrl
Sh eets, 43, Rl . &gt;.
Chi lli cuthe. was tuming off
L.

SR 692 and sa w a deto ur sig11 .

While backing his car, it
struck and knocked O\'e l' Ow
stnp sign. There was dmm.~ t-w
to the Sheets vehicle .

Loss set
at $30,000
Losses were set at $30,0110
as the result of a fire in llie
Salem Center area "t 2: 28
a.m. Sunday.
Pom eroy F ire Chic!'
Charl es Legar said a h'-tJ
sto r y fram e hom e owned Uy

Ten ni s F: dmiston w a~;
co mpl etely . engu lfed in
names when the department
arrived. There was no one al
home when t he fire occun t!d.
Chief Legar said a neighloor
heard an explosion and upon
investigating found the house

to be on fire . All po ssession~
were lost . A representative C;Jt
the state fire ma rshal's offi~:e

will look into the cause of the
fire today . 'J1le home wn~
insured .
Meantime, the Middlcpu1t
fire dcp a~1ment was called to
the Hit chin' Post on LoCl"t
St. , at l0:57 p.m. Sat urday. ,\
fir e gutted the stru cture
which ho uses a carry ou t. It
was believ ed that a n
oYerheated extension cord

ca used the fire . l'he
monetary loss was not set
today. The business has ueen
cl osed unt il repairs can lJe
m C:Ide .

Weather
Partly cloudy Tuesday with
high temperatures in the Juw
60s.
Probability
"f
precipitation is near zero

percent today, 10 percent
tonight and 20 percent
Tuesday.

Logan's athletic fund
in financial trouble
No end is in sight in the
Logan school strike, which
began Aug. 29, making it the
longest teacher walkout in
the state's history.
The Logan Board of
Education has withdrawn its
motion in Hocking County
Common Pleas Court asking
for a vote of the mem-'
bership on the board's final
contract offer to the Logan
Education Association
(LEA). LEA membership
rejected the contract by a 1322 vote .'
· Meanwhile, Logan's High
school's athletic fund , with
six football cancellations thus
far, has lost an estimated
$16,000-118,000 du e to the

strike that has forced cancellation of all sports activities.
According to a story
written by Craig Dunn of the
Uigan Daily News, Kelley
Stilwell,
LHS athletic
director, said football supports most of the other LHS
athletic prog rams, while
receipts from basketball
usually take c,a \e of that
program ap~ possibly a
couple of other sports.
Logan must pay the five
schools in the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League that
games have .been cancelled
with - Gallipolis, Wellston,
Ironton,
Jackson
and
Waverly '!' a sum of $500

apiece for failing to play,
while another $1,000 will go to
Athens and Meigs ($500 each )
should th.ese games not be
played .
"A budget is set for each
sport for equipment and .
miscellane ous item s,"
Stilwell said, " while an
athletic director's budget is
set for genera l things such as
phone bills and other things.
In t h.e last two years ;"

Stilw ell reported, " we 've
made in the neighborhood of
$31,000 a year. " That revenue
comes prilJiarily from
footba ll and basketball ticket
sales.
This season, however, it
looks as though ihe athletic
'

departmeni will have to
refund $8 to all season ticket·
holders si nce more than
likely the Chiefs will lose out
on four home games.
Season tickets were priced
at $10 each, but one game was
played Sept. I at the Hilltop
against New Lexingt on
before the strike began.
Asked how long it would
take for the LHS athletic
program to recover from the
huge loss it fac es, Stilwell
said, "I can't even project
how long it would take. I'd
have to get into the books and
figure It out. There are all
kinds of angles to lt."
St ilwell said that a
(Cootin~ed on page 1~

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