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No final educational
conclusions reached
'

•

By ROBERT E:: MILLER
Associate~! Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Republican Gov. James A.
Rhodes and legislative
leaders have held the fourth
in their series of "'lucation
swmnit meetings.
But they emergoo again
Thursday with the same word
as before - no final conclusions drawn and no con·
census reached.
Senate President Oliver
Ocasek, !)..Akron, the group's
spok esman, said various
issues relating to school
funding were discussoo , and
that there . was a "healthy
exchange of ideas ."
The sen a tor said the
conferees also looked at
"some data " supplied by the
Department
of
state
Education and the office of
budget and management,
with regard to possible salary
hikes for teachers. He said
they talkoo about raises, but
didn 't agree on a figure.
Despite lack of evidence
that the meetings are
a ccomplishing anything,
Ocasek said he . expects the
closed, once-a-week sessions
to continue for several more
weeks as the Legislature
grapples with scHool money
and relate~! problems.
"I am again pleased with

__,...,..,. .

these meetings." he said,
adding that " It is good for the
state of Ohio when the
governor and the leadership,
and tl)e superintendent, sit
down to talk about these
problems."
The governor declined to
comment as he left the meeting , which lasted nearly two
hours.
In floor action Thursday,
before the two houses
adjow-ned for the week, the
House approved a pair of bills
without dissent and sent them
to the Senate.
Rep . Clifford Skeen, !)..
. Akron, won House approval
of a bill exempting from
taxation the estates of
missing servicemen recently
declared dead by the U.S.
Defense Department.
The families of 34 deceased
Ohio veterans would benefit
from the bill by escaping
state and local estate taxes
totaling about $82,000, Skeen
said.
Ohio still has 24 armed
forces members listoo as
missing in action by the
Defense Department.
Also sent to the Senate was
a bookkeeping bill allowing
the state Personnel Board of
Review to record its
proceedings on sound tape.
The House received a

Ohio River Valley may
have flood conditions
By The Associated Pres•·
Severe winter weather
threatenoo portions of the
upper Midwest early today,
as snow feU in the California
mountains and flooding was
possible in the Ohio River
Valley.
Winter storm warnings
were posted ealy today in

North ·Dakota, northeastern
South Dakota, Minnesota,
northern Wisconsin, and
western parts of Michi&amp;.an 's
Upper Peninsula .
There was a chance of up to
4 inches of new snow falling
on eastern North Dakuta and
northeastern South Dakota·.
Three to 6 inches of snow was
forecast for northern Minnesota.
OnThul-sday,rainandice
knocked out power and
by~
stalled hundreds of cars in
GOLD FILLED
'MI_/
the Minneapolis area. Water
seeped into an underground
' AND
STERLING SILVER f,
Utility conduit at Fairview
3455 Hospital, causing a power
'~
interruption . The hospital
,. ,
immediately switched to
~ ·
emergency power.
~ 3456 Travel advisories were
posted for snow and drifting
snow continue overthe
California mountains into the
Tahoe valley of Nevada.
Portions of West Virginia
were under flash flood warn·
ings today, and flash flood
watches .were in effect from
southwestern Pennsylvania
across West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois.
Late Thursday , strong
winds and hail as large as
baseballs caused damage
from northeastern Texas,
across eastern Oklahoma,
northwestern Arkansas and
southwestern Missouri.
Temperatures around the
nation at 2 a.m., EST today
ranged from 14 below zero in
Cut Bank and Great Falls Air
Force Base, Mont ., to 76 in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

STICK PINS

l

fltKA
,,,• .
They go well together
Your two deposit accou nts,

Savings and Checking, belong together
here at our modern, ful l-service bank.
You benefit by greater conven ience,

second bill to help Cleveland,
and possibly other cities at
some future time, straighten
out their financial affairs.
Rep. Vernon F. Cook, !)..
Cuyahoga Falls, said his proposal would permit the state
auditor to oversee a defaulted
city 's fiscal management, as
opposed to a nine-member
commission that would be
established in an earlier bill
by Rep. Harry J . Lehman;!)..
Shaker Heights.
Cook's bill contains the rec·
ommendations of Cleveland
Mayor Dennis J . Kucini~h,
who opposes the lehman
approach on grounds it would
amount to a state takeover.
Lehman' s bill has the
backing of the governor.
Sen. Charles L. Butts, !)..
Cle.veland , introduced a
Senate proposal _that ,would
require the state to
aside
20 percent of its contracts for
small business and_minority
contractors.
Under his bill, small busi·
nesses are defined primarily
as those with 50 or fewer
employe es.
Minorities
affected would be blacks,
Hispanics, Orientals, and
American Indians.

set

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday: A chance of snow
or rain Sunday. Fair
Monday. Rain possible
Tuesday. Highs from t~e
upper 20s to the 30s Sunday
and Monday and from the
upper 30s to the 40s
Tuesday. Lows from the
teens to the low 20s Sunday
and Monday and in the 20s
Tuesday.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Missiles
(Continued from page 1)
otherwise reinforce Lang
Son.
However, a Yugoslav
correspondent in Peking said
East European diplomats
there believe the Chinese
have nm into rougher terrain
and heavier Vietnamese
gunfire than they expected,
and that Peking's declared
aim of punishing Hanoi for
border provocations and
getting out quickly has now
become a rather elastic
concept.
The Bangkok sources said
Vietnamese soldiers in
northern Laos have been
ordered into Hoang Uen Son
province to help counter the
Chinese invasion, and that
30,000 Vietnamese troops
have been ordered to return
to Vietnam from positions in
northwestern Cambodia.
The Vietnamese lnvaded
Cambodia Dec. 25 and ousted
the pro-Peking government
of Pol Pot two weeks later,
but the Pol Pot forces
regrouped for guerrilla
warfare. They claimed today
they regained control of the
entire west bank of the
Mekong River opposite
Kratie, 100 miles north of
Phnom Penh.
At U.N. headquarters in
New York, the United States,
backed by Britain, Norway,
Portugal and Japan, asked
for an urgent Security
Council session to discuss the
crisis in Southeast Asia .
Private discussions were
being held among the council
members prior to calling a
meeting, But no council
action was .expected since
both China and the Soviet
Union, Vietnam's backer,
have veto power.
the
Carter
Despite
administration 's declared
opposition to t~e Chinese
invasion , Treasury Secretary,
W. Michael Blumenthal was
leaving today for Peking with
expansion of U.S.-Chinese
trade as his goal. State
Department officials said
canceling or postponing the
trip was not even considered.

SEEK LICENSE
Marriage licenses were
issued to Ralph Larry Durst,
35, St. Paris, Ohio and Shirley
Ann Wolfe, 27, · Syracuse;
Clifford Raymond Griffith,
32, Middleport, and Brenda
Tawney Davenport, 21,
Middleport.

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported the
February distribution of
$7,302,312.93 in local. government fund money to Ohio's 88
counties and 408 cities and
villages levying local income
taxes.
Meigs County's portion was
$,!_p00.

SQUAD RUNS
The Racine emergency
squad ·was called for Penny
Wilson, Racine, Thursday.
She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was. admittoo. Mnday the
squad took Mike O'Connor,
Racine,
to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

pomeroy
rutl'!nd

tuppers~lams

pomeroy
nationa
bank
.,.the bonk of
the century
established 1872

R. ·CRAIG MATHEWS, D.O. S.
205 N. Second Ave ,
Middleport, Ohio

Is announcing new 'office hours,
Mon. 12:00 ~ 7:00
Tues.-Fri. 8:30-12:30, 1:3().4:30
'

Saturday morning appointments available.

FDIC

HOURS BY APPOI"TMENT ONLY
TELEPHONE 992-6658
,.

I •

EGG PRICES
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Eggs - Prices paid to
country packing plants for
eggs delivered to major Ohio
cities
cases
included
consumer grades including
U.S. grades, minimum 50
case lots.
Carton Large A .65-.69, Me·
dium A .61-.66, Small A .43.52.
Sales to retailers in major
Ohio
cities,
cartons '
delivered : Large A white .74·
.83, mostly .74--.76, medium
.7()..79, mostly .7o-.72.
Poultry prices at Ohio
farms, hens light .12-.1212.
Truck lot prices of ready to
cook broilers and fryers : Cincinnati .49'h-.52 i Cleveland
.5()..52.

Weather
A flash flood watch IS m
effect lor today. Lows tonight
in mid 30s. Highs Saturday
from mid 40s to near 50.
Chance of rain 70 percent
tonight, 90 percent Saturday.
CENTER TO CLOSE
All facilities at Lyne Center
(gym, pool, handball court
and weight room) will be
closed to the public from Feb.
24 through March 6 for the
annual' spring break. A ·new
schedule will be published on
Sunday, March 4.
SOLE OWNER
Mrs. Mary Christy is now
sole owner of the Riverfront
Restaurant In Pomeroy, the
former Blue and Grey, and
Joe Christy is serving as
manager. David Chase,
formerly a part owner, is no
longer with the restaurant.

SQUAD CALLED
The POmeroy emergency
squad was called to Peacock
Ave . at 9:59 p.m. Thursday
for Mrs. Rosa Ohlinger who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial HoSpital.
·
At 7:56p.m ., the squad was
called to Union Ave. for Mrs.
Edna Smith. No treatment
was required .

. TIME CHANGED
A meeting of the Racine
emergency squad scheduled.
for Monday evening at the
fire station will be.held at 6:30
p.m. instead of 7:30 p.m . at
originally planned.

.

Indicted were:
- Bruce A. Richards, Jackson, on
charges of kidnappiJ\1!, . felonious
aSsault and gross sexual imposition.
- Rick Williams, Gallipolis, on
charges of forgery_and theft.
- Clinton Murphy, Gatlipolis, on a
charge of aggravaied robbery.

- John Paul Jones, Gallipolis, on a
charge of aggravated robbery.
- Eight secret indictments · were
also presented by the ·Grand Jury .
-The Grand Jury. inspected the
Gallia County Jail on Friday afternoon.
The following is a report of its findings :
- The physical needs of the
prisoners are being met .

- The physical c-ondition of !he jail
and the offices i_s good , although some
items need additional attention .
- Cell lighting is inadequate for
reading purposes.
- The cell level locking system
appeared to be unreliable and not
working correctly.
Th e Kit r hP.n vPn ti1ati on is

inadequate.
- Smoke and-or heat detectors
have not been installed.
In making the report, the Grand
Jury commended Sheriff J ames M.
Montgomery and his staff on the
operation of the facility, "considering
the physical and fin ancial constra in ts ."
The jury members were : Lawrence

•

tmts
. GAlliPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT ·

.

VOL 14 NO.4

. :I~f
:m
· .:':·
}
WHO WON -THIS ONE? - Without seeing the ball it is hard to tell who got the rebound .
or who is shooting in this action shot taken during Thursday's Class A Sectional Tow-n~ment
game at Meigs High School. Kyger Creek 's Victor VanSickle ,and Southwestern's C;ene
Layton ( 12) were both off their feet in this scene. Kyger Creek advanced to Saturday's finals
with a 49-39 win . The B.obcats will play the defending champion Southern Tornadoes.

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

&lt;:·: .

Iran.

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

• •

::~

::::

if~i

By Cella Roush
PT. PLEASANT - You'd never
know by looking ·at _James Lyle
Tatterson that he'd been through a
harrowing experience only two days

=~ple~~ill t~~~~uld

:;::

have most

fi:
;:;:
:;!·

T

may be forced · to take ·inanda tory steps to make sure
there is enough heating oil for
next winter - meaning a
reduction in " gasoline
availability ."
"There will be a gasoline
problem - in all likelihood this summer," he said,
Testifying before the House
Budget
Committee,
Schlesinger said there still
has heen no word from the
new Iranian revolutionary
government on when exports
may he resumed.
Later in Tehran , Deputy
Prime Minister Ebrahim
Yazdi said Iran will resume
oil exports very soon. But he

did not say precisely when ternational commitments
that would come or how mucn that might require the United
oil would be sold to · which States to share fuel with other
countries.
consuming nations.
· The new government in
The extent of any gasoline
Iran has promised to resume shortage will depend on the
sales to the United States, but length of the Iranian
officials here have raised the shutdown as well · as the
possibility that it could be in degree to which these foreign
curtailoo amounts.
commitments must be
Before the cutoff in Decem- honored, an issue which the
ber, Iran had suppiied about 5 International Energy Agency
percent of total U.S. oil con- must decide when It meets
sumption, or close to 1 million next month.
barrels a day. However, the
Schlesinger predicted .
net effect of the shutdown is a gasoline prices by midreduction of around 500,000 sununer would be "three or
barrels
because other foi,U' cents higher" than at
producing nations have present. "But they could be
increased their exports considerably more" if
somewhat to help offset the producing nations decide to
Iranian cutoff.
raise their prices beyond the
Schlesinger
suggested
that
14 percent increase
recent
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)on
the
total
negative
impact
already
voted by the OrOne of the defendants in the
so--called .22-caliber slaying U.S. crude oil supplies could ganization for Petroleum Excase has been allowed to reach 8 percent because of in- porting Countries, he said.
change his plea from not
guilty to guilty by reason of
insanity.
Gary James Lewing don ·
Svmething New At Our Drive-Thru Window
• changed his plea Thursday in
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court. He is charged
with killing six persons in
Franklin · County. Judge
George B. Marshall then
continued the trial until April
23. The trial originally was
scheduled "to start Monday .
Defense attorneys said that
Lewingdon attempted to
enter a guilty plea Feb. 15 in
Licking County where he is
charged with three murders. ·
They said the attempt was
evidence of his deteriorating
mental condition.
Lewingdon, 39, is being
held in the infirmary of the
Franklin County Jail as a
high suicide risk , his'
attorneys said.
Thaddeus
Charles
Lewlr]gdon, Gary's brother,
was found guilty of three
·o ur Roast Beef and Roast Ham Sandwiches start with
counts of aggravated murder
specially selected USDA inspected meats. The meat is
Monday In Ucking County
sliced thin and STACKED HIGH on a sesame seed bun .
Common Pleas Court in the
There is plenty of lean meat nutrition that the entire
family needs daily ,
·
deaths of three county
residents. The series of 10
killings took place in FrankTry Our Drive--Thru lnotJmt_Service/
lin, Fairfield and Licking
counties.
He was sentenced to three
consecutive -life terms in
prison and will go on trial
alone Monday in Franklin
Pomeroy, Ohio
County in the slayings of five
persons in the county.

:1l

.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PcliM.

.

.I

Special Sale Price$ this weekend on Women's Jeans
2nd Roor - Boys' Jeans 1st Floor - Men's $12.95 Jeans
For sg,88 - Wintuk Yarn for .$1.19 - Bed Sheets on
Sale - And Many other items of interest.
OPEN SATURDAY TIL 5 f'.M.

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy

.

II, Wett dlty,

tax .

forms due

April 30

t

i

?

!'Businesses, professions, other

activities, enterprises or undertakings
conducted, operated, engaged ln,
PERSIAN COFFEE URN - James Tatterson managed to bring back thla .\:; prosecuted or carrioo on by residents o!
Persian coffee urn from Iran, one of several prlzoo souvenirs from that tilmuU- :::: lbe city, there is imposed an annual .tax
'ridden nation.
of I percent on the net profits earned ..

§!

crammed with passengers, was the
nelli to the last plane in the
emergency airlift to depart Tehran
Airport.
The days . prior to Tatterson's
departure were touch and go. "The
crowds were disorganized and out of

refreshments were · Marlene Harrison , Sharon Welker , June Eichinger and

Carolyn Bartels. Ruth was also presented a planter from Mary Bowen, flowers
from June Eichinger and DQIIy Hayes, a necklace from Lettie Spencer , and a
Hummel bird from Nona and Bill Nelson. For her birthday, which is today , she
. was given candle holders by employes of the clerk of courts .

"In case of a non-resident

control," Tatterson statoo. "My x· Individual, partnership, association,
fiduciary or other entity, other than ~
house was located a mile from the
CGr)lOI'atlon, engaged in the conduct,
school and it was risky to go between
:t-: operation or prosecution of any trade,
the house and the school."
business, profession, enterprise ,
He noted that he was stopped by
undertaking
or other activity, there is
Khomeinl's supporters and he and
imposed a tax of I percent of the net
Continuoo on Page A-2
profits of business conducted in or
derived from activity in the city.
"Corporations doing business in
Gallipolis, whether domestic or foreigri ,
IIIII whether domiciled in Gallipolis, or
elsewhere, there is imposed an annual
t.u of 1 percent on that part of the
corporations, which is earned by such
corporations as a result of work done or
1ervices performed br rendered and
business or other activities conducted
In the city.
"City residents having· rental
property inside or outside city limits
must file on their net profits. Nonresident property owners who have
property wi_thin the city limits must file
Gil their net profits also .
"Forms lor any of the
aforementioned filings are available at
your city income tax office, 518 Second
Ave.," Crosier concluded.

position with

~~!
~

Iranian issues complicated

result of rain

Deputy Prime Minister Ibrahim
government armed forces .
Yazdi told the newspaper Kayhan
There are reports of revolutionary
Saturday that former Prime Minister
committees controlling personnel and
Amir Abbas Hoveida, who faces
operational decisjons at Iranian
corruption charges , would be tried in
factories , military institutions and
·
public.
public corporations , including the
''Revolutionary committees'' with
National Iranian Oil Co. and the naties to Khomeini have taken over many
tional airline, Iran Air.
municipal functions and are only slowly
It is unclear whether these
being merged into the regular govcommittees will be dissolved or remain
ernment machinery.
as a second chain of command linking
Diplomats working on the evacuation
all · levels of society to Khomeini 's
of foreigners from Tehran say that
religiou5-based hierarchy.
.
despite arrangements for the
departures made through the
Faii-land teachers
government 's Foreign Ministry,
revolutionary
committee reject board's offer
representatives at the airport impose
their own controls once the evacuees
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio . (AP)
show up for their flights .
Teachers in the Proctorville • Fairland
There have been no reports of serious
school district in Lawrence County
clashes between the governments but
Saturday rejected the school board's
the Khomeini organization appears
offer of a 4.6 percent wage hike.
extremely strong and well-armed and
T~ chers said they were satisfied
able to ·do anything normally done by
with·the·dollar amount but couldn't go
governments.
along with a stipulation the school
Last week, for instance, • the l board included that called for no pay
formation of a national guard to be
increases during 1979-1980 school year.
known as the . "Guardians of the
A total of 96 teachers in the 2,00().
Revolution" was announced, not by
pupil district 'a re represented by -the
Bazargan or his military authorities
Fairland Association of Concerned
but by the Khomeinl committee.
Teachers. Nearly 70 percent of the
The Bazargan government Is · teachers have agree.d to a strike .
rllOI'ganizing the ·country's regular
deadline of 5 a.m . Monday .
army, ·and the guard may provide a
Negotiations were continuing
Khomeini-controlled check on the
Saturday afternoon in an effQ,rt to head
off the threatened job action.

••

Walker accepts

~

Streams up as
By THOMAS KENT
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Mehdi
Bazargan b«!came provisional prime
minister three weeks ago, but he still
shares power with Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini in a complex system of "two
governments" that could complicate
Iran's return to normalcy.
Bazargan's .government, appointed
by Khomeini, Is based at the sumptuous
prime minister's building in downtown
Tehran. Khomeini's "Islamic Revo-lutiooary Council," with Its secret
membership, operates from the
rundown Refah school complex two
mlles away on the city's poor s6uth
side.
,
Bazargan, 70, receives foreign
ambassadors and presides over many
government functions, but he admits
Khomeinl's council outranks him.
Bazargan's deputy, Amir Entezilm,
told reporters the Islamic Council is
"the highest authority in the country."
A secret "Islamic Revolutionary
Court" set up by Khomeini, a 711-yearold Moslem religious leader, has
executed eight generals of Shah
· Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's toppled
regime In · recent days with llttle
evidence of coordination with
Bazargan's government. Bazargan has
expressed hope that the co(lrt will be
supplanted by a new judicial system,
preswnably under his contrpl.

HONORED - Ruth Moore was honored Friday by employes of the Meigs
County Courthouse on her retirement. Ruth was title clerk in the title office of
the Clerk of Courts having worked at the courthouse for 28 years . The employes
presented her a lar ge attra ctive lamp. In charge of the event and providing

:l:

SANDWICHES

,
'

, tile •

i_i.:.i

ROAST BEEF OR ROAST HAM

_C row's Family Restaurant

PRICE 25 CENTS

.

i

:-~ =:e~e~:~':ct~lo~~

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

:_: _:
G.ALUPOUS - Edith Crosier,
:::: Gallipolis tax examiner, Saturday
;:;: reminded city taxpayers that it is time
'::: "to file your 1978 final return on
:;:: Gallipolis city income taxes and your
:::; declaration of estimatoo Gallipolis
:::: income tax for 1979. These forms must
be flied on or before April 30."
Crosier said , "TI)ose required to
·.;.
·:·: file are as follows: Residents - a one
'•'·
...·•·. percent (I percent) tax is imposed on
:;:: aU earned income. (2) Non..-esidents j~j:
.,,'•'• one percent ( I percent ) tax on all
:;:: earned income earned within the city
'•'•
limits.
:·:·
"You are not required to file a
•'·' return If your entire. income Is derived
from wages \llhere your employer has
::-i deducted the 1 percent city income tax
IIIII has filed the refiort with the tax
:::: department. Vacation pay received lor
lfl8 is not taxable.

'_,._i_.-::_.,:_

and
.;:;
"There had been 100 teachers
;::: •airlltted out of Iran three weeks
:::: blfare the evacuation," Tatter8on
? llllld. "I was one of five left behind to
( pack up personal belongings."
;_:_:.:
He estimatoo there were at least
...... 20,000 Americans living In Iran, aU
•.'!_'.
:
of which, it is believed, have
managed to leave the country.
:;:.;.
Tattenon's plane, a Jumbo 747
·.·:;:..

r

EXTI!:NDED FORECASI'
Monday tllroap Wedaesday:
Clearing Monday. Showers or rain
Tuesday and Wedaesday. Highs in
the 30s Monday, warming to the 40t!t
lllld lower SO. by Wednesday. Lows
lathe lower 20s Monday, warmlllg to

1}c1·ty

::::
Sitting on a colnfortable chair in
:;:: · the home of hla mother, Mrs. W.H.
Tatteraon, Point Pleasant, talking
:._:: and laughing with his brother
..... Richard, he seems quite happy and
':'~ content.
!:
The scene was different only a few
days earlier, however, as he and
hundreds of others were alrliftoo on
,., emergency- flights out of the bedlam
~::: that has earmarkoo Iran.
·:·:
Verbally harrassed, searched
~_:,___:: repeatedly and threatened
physically by gl:Jn..tottng, professed
~ =~: supporters of the 78·year·old
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, ·
Tatteraon Ironically claims to have
::::
:·:· felt in no imminent danger during
::: his ordeal.
:': . "Although, the situation was very
\ .teJIBll and uncomfortable, and I had
:j~ niany unpleasant experiences," he
·:· said.
Tatterson, a native of Fairmont;
::: had been in Iran since August as a
:;: te.cher at the American School of
( lafahan In Isfa.h an. There were
::: 8rouDd 2,000 ,students, mostly \!le

tnfint

SWiDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1979

. ::~:

' :;~i

Beebe, foreman ; Noah Daniel Greene,
Beulah Nevoiene North , Robert Copley,
John Wade Milh oan, Mary Elizabeth
Kyger , Gloria S. Graham Fillinger,
Kathleen C. Durst , Lester Waugh , Anna
B. Hawkins (alternate ), Kristy L.
Blazer (alternate ), and Betty McDa niel
Wallace (alternate) .

- -- ~

r;:~~';:::'""''"Wm.AAH~~·'='-~"'"'"""'"'~~-"-~~

Plea changed

time saved , better bank standing. We'll
be happy to open one or both types of
account for you . Please come in.

GALUPOUS - The Gallla County
Grand Jury presented 12 true bills of
indictment, Including eight secret
indictments, late Friday.
During the four day jury session reportedly the longest in Gallia
County's history - 30 witnesses
covering 12 cases were examinoo.

_Gasoline shortages expected

CORRECTION
Due to .a typographical
error, the total amount of a
check written by a Wellston
man held on a bad check
charge was incorrect in
Thursday's paper.
,)'he check totaled $333.68
and not $33.68 as stated.
Harry E. Moshier, Jr., 33,
Wellston, as been returned to
Pomeroy to face a bad check
charge.

...

•
Twelve iildictments ·returned by Gallia JUry

•'"!

WILLIAM G. HEAL
GERTRUDE BAILEY
WIJiiam G. (Billy) Beal, 86,
Gertrude Bailey of 1000
Williams Road, Columbus, II Oak St. , Pomeroy, died
formerly of Pomeri!.Y died Thursday.
He was a son of the late C.
Feb. 17. She was born March
C.
and Maggie Elliott Beal
25, 1893 the daughter of Ellsand
was also preceded in
worth and Vicky Diehl
death by his wile, Roma
Bailey.
Survivors include one ·Stanley Beal and a son,
brother,
Carl
Bailey, William Earl.
Surviving are two sons,
Pomeroy; three sisters, Mrs.
Leona 'Wise, Pomeroy; Mrs. Wayne of Pomeroy and
Nar,cy Hysell and Mrs. tida Stanley of Cleveland; three
Goodwin, Columbus. Funeral daughters, Evelyn Hicks,
services were held Tuesday Bristol, Tenn.; Leona Young,
Dayton,- and Leota Swart,
in Columbus.
Reynoldsburg , 3 . grandchildren and several greatgrandchildren.
Hospital News
Mr. Beal was a veteran of
World War I and belonged to
Veterans Memorial Hospital Drew Webster Post 39,
Admittoo - Linda Stewart, American Legion.
'
Proctorville; Eva Shaffer,
Funeral services will be
Racine ; Augusta Potts, held at 1 p.m. Saturday at the
Syracuse ; Paul Whaley , Carleton · Church with the
Shade;
P enny
Wilson , Rev. Jay Stiles officiating.
Racine; Richard ' Qualls, Burial will be in the Carleton
Middleport; Don Betzing, Cemetery. Friends may call
Pomeroy; Harry Smith, at the Ewing Funeral Home
Middleport.
any time.
Discharged - Sampson
Hall, Karen Probert, Joseph
Rudolph , Ruth Mulford,
SOCIAL TEA
Patrick O'Connor.
The · Jaycee-ettes will
sponsor a social tea at the
Meigs Inn Saturday from 2 to
Holzer Medleal Center
4
p.m. State and district
Discharges, Feb. 22 ·
regional
representatives wiJI
Mary Austin, Carl Barnett,
be
present.
The meeting is
Amy Brothers, Larry Clark,
to
all
women
between
open
Charles Colley, Oary Con18
and
35.
the
ages
of
grove, Christal Cornell, John '
Foster, Mrs. Manuel Gheen
and son, Christopher Gillenwater, Travis Gillespie,
Joshua Harris, Ronald Hill,
Sahnnon Hunt, MAyland
Isaac, Mrs. Steve James and
By TOM RAUM
daughter, PAtricia James,
Associated
Press Writer
Louise Jones, Robert Jones, •
WASHINGTON
(AP) Jr., Patricia Logan, Jerod
The
Carter
administration
is
Moore, Roy Pierce, Jr., Unpredicting
.
motorists
could
da Priddy, Jack Rose, Mrs.
Johnny Ross and son, Pauline find gasoline in short supply
Runyon, Wanda Scarbrough, this sununer due to the .
Scott Wells, Jack Wheatley, Iranian revolution and that it
Mrs. James Zornes and will cost at least three to four
cents more a gallon than now.
daughter.
Energy Secretary James
Births, Feb. 22
R.
Schlesinger told a House
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dodcommittee
Thursday that
son, daughter, Pomeroy.
unless
Iranian
production is
Mr. and Mrs. William
speedily,
there will
restored
Barnett, daughter, Crown Ci- ,
of
he
a
gasoline
shortage
ty.
"noticeable
but
not
.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Williams,
crippling"
severity
during
daughter, Gallipolis.
the summer driving season.
He said the administration

...

\
i

GALLI POUS- As a result of rain
the past two days and melting of last
week's seVen-inch plus sr:aow, some
area streams climbed out of their banks
Saturday.
The Gallia-Meigs Post, State
Highway Patrol reportoo Rt. 141 at
Cadmus was covered by high water
Saturday afternoon . Rt. 681, at Darwin
in Meigs County, was .also inundated.
A spokesman at the Gatlipolls
Locl&lt;s and Dam in Eureka said the Ohio
River reading on the dam's lower
gauge was 38.2 feet at 3:30 p.m.
Saturday. The big stream was rising
three-tenths of a loot an hour. AU
rollers were ont.
Initial reports indicate the Ohio will
crest at 50.5 feet at the Gallipolis Dam
on Tuesday. This figure could be
revised, depending upoo the weather.
Meanwhile, Associated Press
reported Saturday an earthen dike
along· the Sandusky River ruptured
early Saturday, flooding a one-mile
portion of a county road just south of
Fremont.
The rising water for crrl several
motorists to climb to the roofs of their
automobiles for safety.
Six persons, including a Sandusky
County sheriff's deputy, were treated
for exposw-e after they were rescued by
helicopter when boats were unable to
reach them .
Authorities said no repairs could be
made -until the water started to reced ~.

Buckeye firm

CLYDE B. WALKER

Expect decision
Feb. 28 on rates
COL UMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Customers of Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co. will have to wait a
little longer to Jearn how much more
their monthly electric service is going
to cost them .
Th~Public Utilities Comtnission of
Ohio . has decided to wa1t until
Wednesda y to ann ounce wheth er
Columbus and Southern will get the
rate' jncrease .
The commission Fr iday deferred
action at the requ est of commissioner
C. Luther Heckman , who wanted more
time to examine the request.
Originally, the utility had asked for
a $63 million emergency hike . Later it
scaled down the request to $53 million .
The commission staff has said the
company can get by on $30.6 million .
Officials of C&amp;SOE have tesllfied
that they consider the company in a
financial emergency.
. ·=··::..:::.:~.

Weather

·:·.
...

;

,.
SATURDAY VISITOR
GALLIPOLIS - Presi dent Oncita
Dease of the National Executive
Housekeepers Association wa s a Satur- ·
day visitor in Gallipolis. She, a resident
of Winston-Salem, N. C. , and Exucutive
Secy . Elaine Rees conferred on NEH1\
business. National office or NF:I-!A is Oil
the second floo1· of the Business and
Professional Building on Second Ave_.

GA LLIPOLIS- Clyde B. Walker of
Centerv ill e (Thurman postoffice 1 has
accepted a posilion as S&lt;Jlcs represen. !ali ve for Bu ckeye Harvester ,
Washington Court House.
For the past 23 years he has been
associated with the Fa rm Credit
system and recently took early retirement from the Federal Land Bank
Association of Galli pol is.
Prior to Farm Credit employment he
\\'Orked four years as ag ricultural
engineer for Ohio Power Co., Pot;lsmouth, and four years as sales
representa tive for Ne w York Farm
Sa les, Columb us.
Buckeye Harvestore System s, lne., is
the franchised dealer for A. 0 . Smith
Harvestore Prod ucts, Inc., Arlington
Heights, Ill ., serving 33 southern Ohio
counties. The products sold incl ude feed
storage
s truct ures, a ut omated
livestock feeding equipment, and Slurrystore liquid 111anure management
systems.
Walker will a lso be selling irr igation
equipment.

Retired teachers will
mret Thursday at Ri(.
GALLIPOLIS - The Ga llia County
Retired Tea chers Association will hold
its first ·1979 luncheon meeting at 12:30
p.m. Thursday in the Rio Grande College dining hall, according to announcement of Secretary Beulah J ohnson.
Principal speaker will be Kathryn
McCall, Portsmouth, an office r of the
NatJOnal Retired Teachers Association.
A choral group df Southwestern High
School, under direction of Thomas
Moore, will sing.
D. Lester Davis, president, will conduct the meeting.

METERHEADSREMOVED ·
POME ROY - Pomeroy police
began taking heads from parking lot
meters along the Ohio River Saturday
morning in anticipation of high water
moving onto the lots.
At 8:20 a.m. Saturday the river stood
at 36 feet and 36.1 fe et at 11 :20 a.m.
Flood stage is 46.5 in Pomeroy.

�•

'.
'
A-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sundav. Feb. 25, 1979

Former- drug addict
to speak· in Mason

Peeps.

Coniinued from Page A-1
vehicle searched " Every
time l left the house · and
I
ev.ery time I came back," He
MASON - Th e Rev . meetings will begin on Feb.
said his antagonlzers apChester Tennant of the Mason 27 through March 4 with the
peared to revel in their miwAssembly ol God invites the Rev . Angel Perez speaking
found authority and enjoyed
,
public to attend a series ol ·each night.
making him empty his
Rev . Perez was born in
meetings beginning nex t
pockets and dunip out his
'
1
week. The first service to be Puerto Rico and was ra ised in
belongings on the ground.
the
Bronx
in
New
York
City.
announced is being presented
Although there were
by the Women's Ministries He ~a s a drug addict who
reports of widespread
Depa rtment ol the church is was converted ·through the
stealing, Tatterson said the
in accorda nce with the Brooklyn Teen Challenge
only
things taken from him
R I" j. .~AMI IF,/. PI-: f."/~
National WM Day ol the Center. He completed the
were
a plastic bucket and a
GAILIPOUS- Edwin Thomas knows how to get things
Assemblies of God . This Teen Challenge Program in
soccer
ball.
service will be Feb. 25, at 1': 30 Rehrersburg , Pa. and done. He's a member of the Galli&amp; County Council on the AgWbat
were the ·searchers
p.m. The theme will be "Open graduated from the Trinity Ing, Inc. , and at the January meeting he proposed that the looking lor? Tatterson said,
Bible Instructor ln the Teen Council get somebody to come in from the Internal Revenue "They were afraid we were
Doors."
Guests attending will be the Chall enge Program at Service to help senior citizens prepare their federal income tax stealing their (the Iranian
returns.
Rev. Irvin Steiding, District Rehrersburg.
President Forrest S. Borden told him to write the letter, and pecple's) things and taking
Superintendent ol the Apthem out and selling them.
the
Center would take it from there.
pa lachlan District of the
'
They were very nervous
Now
it's
done
:
the
IRS
called
from
Cincinnati
after
the
CounAssemblies ol God, and his
MEETING PLANNED
cil sent off Edwin's letter. The IRS will send someone March 8 about this. They also were
wife, Maxine Steiding, who Is
RACINE
The
Western
to
the Gallia County Senior Citizens Center to assist senior afraid we might be
president of th e WM
fRANIAN ART- James·Tatterson displays a miniature painting, done on Ivory, of a
Boot
CB
Club
will meet at the citizens to complete their tax forms, starting at 11 a.m.
smuggling anns to pecple
Depaljment ol th e ·Ap- Racine Grange Hall March 3,
scene
from the life of Omar Kbayyam. The work Is an original, painted by popular Iranian
If you want to avail yourself of this free Service, please call opposed to the movement or
palachian District.
artist
Be)'Ulvi,
and Is exquisitely framed in Inlaid gold. Draped on the couch behind Tat44&amp;-'ltnl and let 'em know approximately when you11 be at the that we might have
A series of reviv al at 7 p.m.
Is
another
painting showing Iranian women attired In full-length veils (chsdors ), a
terson
senior citizens center to see the IRIS person.
documents which could be
sign
of
modesty.
This
formerly traditional attire has again been assumed since the rise to
uaed to convict supporters of
power of the conservative and fundamentalist KhomeinL
.
HORACE DeWITT, who retired a couple of years ago as the Shah."
farm manager of the Gallipolis State Institute after seven ot
He pointed out tjlat his
.,
eight years - he worked for the state a total of 32 years- has borne and Its contents were
,,
,.
llu·tr(l!
Tatterson has several Iranian people hate you. .' •
turned in an interesting bit of reminiscence on covered the property of the Iranian Iranian, apparently for
small
Items which will serve Down with Imperialism.· ~
questioning. During his
bridges. Look elsewhere in today 's paper.
Published every Sunday by The
government.
Tonight thru
to
remind
him of his time in Down with Zionism. Down ~
Oho Vall ey Publi shing Co .absence, the men, whom
Multimedia, Inc.
With
the
arrival
of
Thursday
Iran.
and
his
narrow escape. with Communism. Viva -·"
Talterson said were "very
KENNETH (BUSTER J SHEETS of Crown City operated a
GAU-II'OUS
...
There's the leather rope Islam.1'
DAILY TRIBUNE
horsedrawn sleigh ·through the streets ol our southern-most Kbomelnl In Iran and the young", armed and wearing
advancement
of
the
825 Third .ftve., GaUlpoUs, Ohi o·
strung
with
"worry
beads",
bandannas, tlraded the
conununity back before the snow melted. Matter of fact, he
45631.
made by an American
and his wife. who operate an antique there, have two sleighs. revqlutlon, the.attitude of the frightened Americans.
PubiLslled every weekday evening
on
the
street
average
man
tixL'~ pt Saturday . Second Class
woman and given to many of
'It 's Betys's Ideals, located on the left as you drive down the
"They accused us of killing
Po.stage Paid at Gallipolis, Ohio
toward
Americans
had
the evacuees, a stick~ r
highway, whirl) they started last June.
Iranians and smuggling
456.'11 .
changed, Tatterson said. ''I arms to opponents of the
.'·'
TIIEDAILVSP'NnNEL
bearing the picture of
111 Court St., Pomeroy , 0 . 45769.
felt
more
antagonism
toward
FORREST
S,
BORDEN,
president
of
the
Gallta
County
Kbomelnl which was to be
Revolution . They kept
Published every week d¥y el':en in ~
. threatening to make us get
ext-ept Saturday. Enlered 1:1s second
Senior Citizens Center, showed slides of the Rose Parade out at the last," he stated.
worn constantly to show
t.'lass ~lUng matter at Pomeroy,
The phrase, "Yankee, go off the bus and search us.''
Pasadena. A dozen oldsters crowded into the music
one's support of the leader
Ohio Post OffiCe.
room - first on the left as you enter the Center, and watched home", was often yelled at
By carrier dally a~ Sunday 75c
"The bus was januned
and a card, tossed In the .
per week. Motor route ~ . 25 'per
some
of the most beauliful pictures on the ~creen, the color be- Americans. :·I could not with
people
in the
schoolyard in Isfahan by
month.
ing terrific in the bright sunshine. Borden's voice described walk on the street without it aisles ... babies were crying,"
MAIL
Kbomelni supporters, which
Contracting in
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
each float as it appeared, and yet Borden's lips didn't move; happening," Tatterson said. he said.
stated:
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune in
Pole Buildings
the voice was tape-recorded, and he knew the cues calling for a "Some of the sliops would
Ohio and We&amp;t Vltginla one year
" 0, Cursed Yonky.
Finally, the bus driver was
S27 .50; six' months $14.50; three monslide change.
refuse to serve you," he returned and the bus was
Concrete Floors
Although you know well
ths S8.50. Elsewhere t:J2.00 per ye8t :
·
continued.
allowed
to
proceed
on
its
And
Footers, Ditches
six months an.OO; three months
about Shaw's Monarklsm
SB.50; motor route $3.2$ monthly.
MARTHA S. FOSTER of Gallipolis wrote a delightful
He believes that the way. Once In Tehran, Tatand his general masacre but
6'' wide to 5' deep
The D~ ily Sentinel, one year
children's novel which Bobbs-Merrill published in ·1959 with original movement is out of terson and the others were
r!CHHICOLOR •
J27.50; Snt months tH.50; three
while all liberal people
pen
and
ink
illustrations
by
Charles
Geer.
It's
r;;"ll'"'
n,,
only
control.
"It
Kbomelnl
does
'e · ,e :;~sed b ~ BUENA VISTA OISTR IBUTION CO . 1
rnon1hs $8.50. Else where $32.00; six
taken to · the Hllton Hotel
Free Es.t imates
condemne this executioner,
munlhs $17.00; three monttls $9.00.
)27 pages which Peeps recommends to you old folk , too.
gain
control,
.he
will change which had been besieged
ALS O
The Associ ~ ted Press is exclusiveyou and your domned
Phone 367-7560
In these few pages you lead the life of a Quaker family. things. The outcome Is not earlier by gunmen who fired
ly ent itled to the use for publication
president support him. This
of all n e w~; dispa tches credited to lhe
Herman
Reese
"Quakers go to meeting, and people who are not Quakers go to clear," Tatterson said.
through. the doors and
newspaper and ulso the local news
Is .the reason that all the
Cheshire,
Ohio
church"
Is
the
way
this
gem
of
a
book
starts
out.
Brings
to
.
Some
of
these
changes,
as
pLII.Jlished herein.
windows. Tatterson noted
mind the day a few years ago when Prof. Vail Palmer con- if a forewam!,ng, ar~ already thafevery lock on._every door
dueled - no, that's not the word - organized a Quaker apparent. Women 1n Iran bad been broken open w!Jere .
meeting at Rio Grande College.
·
have resumed the wearing of the rooms had been searched
This
is
the
story
of
eight-year-old
Penelope
Grayson,
Penny
the
chador, or the night before.
'
~
_ ... FOR THOSE throughout these few pages, and "her red, tin ginger can" veil traditional
of ,modesty. While
The evacuees were
she couldn't find among her toys. A newspaper reporter women have been seen at processed and searched ·
DEEPLY PERSONAt •· which
would have written simply that Penny looked for it and found it demonatratlons, they are not before leaving the hotel.
'
in the parlor. But Martha Foster clothes those bare belles with· aaswnlng an active role In They were searched again as
,,
MOMENTS life:
the movement,
according to they reboarded the bua and
•'
Penny looked behind the parlor door, but her bolt Wll!l not there. It wu not in the
·
searched twice more after ·
bookcase, either. She decide~~ Carl h•rl taken it. She wu a_bout to calll.o him again Tattefson. This . would 8~
whensbeoawlheclnl!erbox 011 theclocl&lt;aheU.
pear to herald a return to the arriving at the airport;
Father or M - an.n put oacl&lt;s ol candy.., \Ills shollwben they thought Penny old traditional role ol ..Omen
.
ABOUT THIS 92~ SQ. FT. HOME
There was a frightening,
had eaten all she sh&lt;Mild. Noone ..., Penny knew •be could ...... the clock shelf : It takJna a back seat In Iranian
" '• .
last·mlnute delay after the
wasoneofhersecrels.
e
by.
Festival
Homes
Martha Foster took a couple more paragraphs to tell just culture and the rekbidllng of Ametl,cans had boarded the
how Penny utilized a chair and window ledge to reach the funcWIIental Islamic beliefs. plane that was to Oy them to
shelf, got the ginger box, couldn't get the lid off, and dropped it
~ the evacuation of
safety. Apparently, .there
· into her playbox. Twenty pages further on there's a grownup Americans gathered force, was one mt ' person on the
quarrel resulting from that simple act of a litUe girl. You must Tatterson prepared io leave. plane than the Iranians had
..,...
borrow this ·book from the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
"We were only allowed one processed. The plane was
Library of Gallia County, for, until you read it, you would suitcase and a handbag," detained whUe the Iranians
• 2 Full Baths ·
'"
never believe you'd have such interest in a ginger box. A grlpp- Tatterson Sllld Because of went back over the passports
• Buill-in Hutth
...
ing, fascinating tale!
.
this limitation, Tatterson In a unsuccesaful attempt to
• Fiberglass Tub &amp; Shower
• Residential Furnishings
Do you remember how your mind uaed to wander when y&lt;iu forsOok most of his clothing determine who the in• Sub-basement Floor System
went to church as an eight-year-old? An example in this book: and houaehold belongings, dividual was.
' el nsulated For Energy Conservation
.'
?.nny leaned d...,, with her head between her k.,..., soJaoper could'! ,.. her. packing Instead valuable
Despite
the
extra
• Home Slider Windows w/ Storm Windows
&gt;
'
The,., under lhe bencheo. wu a whole r""" ul feet In block shoes. She began w SOUVenirs he had collected paasenger, the plane was
We design special funeral sprays
pUDie out which shoe! went with which ~Je.
This Display Home is Reduced in Price.
finally allowed to take off.
Then Martha lias Penny attach various names to various during hill stay In Iran.
and floral pieces for those occasThe
Americans
were
Down
feet. ThiS and other clever devices, while aimed at the child
Among his treasu,es are
reader, serve to carry the grownup reader back to his three expensive Persian to Germany and, following
sr ons when only flowers can
childhood. If you've read this far, your opinion may be: "That rugs, a. lamp, a Penian an overnight stay, Tatterson
~ .&lt; II'..:. v ·~~ o..- · A Responsible Co •.
ol' fool Peeps is in hissecond 1!bildhood;anyway 1" ·
coffee um and an original left for the United States the
express your rnnerf!Jost feelings .
o1Y :'I ' · ~ • ~
Since 1959
nest
day.
painting by popular Iranian
"When words are not enough Send"
i:.o1..
(,I&gt;
Upper
Rt. 7
,
following
a
rest,
Tatterson,
art1at Beyzavi, executed on
~
~.,.t\J
#'~
~
7
Gallipolis,
o
..
apparenUy
plans
io
resume
Flash flooding .alerts posted
Ivory and fratned in Inlaid
'"
his teaching career as an.
.gold.
,
mounds of snow deposited by
By the Associated Press
The bus trip to the airport employee of International
'Ji '
28 Cedar St.
Ph. 446-9721.
Heavy rains and sunshine winter storms earlier in the at Tehran was a nerve- Schools Servic~s, Princeton,
Galli olis
446-3547
week,
leaving
much
of
the
nacombined to wear down
racking experience. . _
tion . under the threat of
,,.
He e~plalned, "There were
OoodlngSaturday.
checkpoints every two
Flash flood watches were blocks with sandbags and
issued for paris of Texas, pecple on buildings with
Louisiana,
Mississippi, guna.u
,.
Alabama, Georgia, Ten'
.,_,
At one point, be said, men
nessee, Indiana, Maryland,
claiming
to represent the
West Virginia, Virginia, the
Islamic
Revolutionary
Carolinas, New York and
Committee bocrded the bus
New Jersey.
and
took away the driver, an
· The rain provided a change
from the bitter, wintry
weather of recent weeks in
An appeal made by the
some areas, but In the United Nations Relief and
• Midwest, winter conditions Works Agency brought more
persisted. A winter' storm than f2 rnilllon in aid for some
1\ ;·,
Sunday thru Saturday
moving into the area Satur- 67 ,OliO refugees · by Israeli
SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY
, day was not expected to be as militruy.ac:tilllllast year. VirFebruary 25 thru March 3
FE.RUARY 25 THRU MARCH 3
severe as those in recent tually all ol them bave been ·
weeks, but forecasters said returned to their homes,. ac,o
gusty winds and icy cording to U. N. officials.
1
temperatures would combine
for harse conditions.
Temperatures were ex-· plains and the upper
peeled to be mild from the .- Missi.ssippi Valley. Readings
· eastern half of the Gulf Coast m the rest of the nation were
region through the Lower to be reasonably cool.
Great Lakes and eastward
Temperatures around the
across the Atlantic Coast. 'nation at 2 a.m. EST ranged
Seasonably
cold from -20 at Bismarck, N.D., i
• 2 Pieces Chicken
·
Store Houli
temperatUres were predicted to 76 at Fort Lauderdale and
for Montana the northel1) Key West, Fla.
• Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Sunday thru Thursday
' .
• Roll
-'
All White Meat Additional Charge Claud
10
'

·D~puties check two accidents

Exit

• •

POMEROY
Me igs
County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt report s deputies
investigated two accidents
Friday . The first accident
occurred at 5:50a.m. onSR 7,
SIX tenths mtle east of SR 143:·Leslie M. Rayburn , 51 ,
Gallipolis, was traveling east
on SR 7 tn a 1976 Ford when
he str uc~ and ktlled a deer.
The vehicle sustamed heavy
da.magc to the front end. The
driver was not Injured.
A second accident occurred
at 3 p.m. on M!"ersville Hill
Road, a pproxtmat ely onehall mtle of! CR 30. Five
char ges have be.en fil ed
agamst one of the dnvers as a
result. .
According to the sheriff's
report, Wesley David Clark,
24, Rt . 1, Racin e, was
tr ~vc lln.g north on . th e
Mtn~rsvtlle Htll Road m a
. vehtcle own ed by Monty

A Gallipolis Diary

COLO\' ·

REESE

TRENCHING &amp;

·BACKHOE
SERVICE

See the

~"(

Housing Consultant at

~

.

Johnson's Mobile Ho111es, Inc.

'-'"

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o

.41•\~~~~q,~

r:..,f

q,(l

FLOWERS by GEORGE

Johnson's

·~~" ~~

CHICKEN
SNACK BOX

~

!J~r

FOOTERS

•

ro
.39.-No Substitutes

at

Phone 446-2682
G_allipoli.s Store Only

p.m.

Fri. &amp; Sal .Open til
_11 p.in.

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED To TALK
IT OUT1 . &gt;
.
CALL CRISIS LINE.

NOW OPENING AT 10

A.!t'.

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IOD.l

P&amp;llLOI
2ND AVE. &amp;.OLIVE ST., GAlUPOUS, OHIO

IOD&amp;
PUL91

GALLIA 446 5554
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MEIGS 992-5554 .
JACKSON. 286-5554
"

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RT. 35~ WEST
ACROSS
. . FROM.HOSPITAL==

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CAR
- There's not much left of a 1963
Oldsmobile owned by Chester Hutton, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
which was struck early Saturday by a vehicle owned by
Jimmy Garnes, Pomeroy . It Is not known who was
driving the Garnes vehicle. The accident occurred at
Enterprise according to Meigs County Sherif!_ Ja~~~ J.

Beat•••

Of the Bend
By Bob Hoeflich
· ·. As Mr , Nixon said, and probably too often, "Let me make
one thmg per!ecUy clear."
. ·
The Meigs Local School District Board of Education has
not taken any action on extending the sc.hool year to make up
days trussed due to bad weather. All plans at this point are still
tentative.
The Community Wives Club , which was known for several
years as the Young Wives Club of Chester, has taken on a new
project - helping Tracy Hein, Eastern High School freshman
who will eventually undergo two kidney transplant operations:
At the present .time, Tra cy is traveling to Columbus for
kidney dialysis which costs $200 a trip, not to mention the
travel expense.
The club is hoping to come up with some financial aid lor
the family through its project.
. Cannisters will he placed in business houses of Pomeroy,
Middleport and Chester Monday to receive contributions or
donations may be sent to Lila Van Meter, Box 26, Chester, Ohio
45720. Tracy is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hein Eagle
Ridge Road.
'
April Smith, genial secretary at the Pomeroy Elementary
School, left Thursday morning for Tampa , Fla., because of the
illness of her father, Walter R. .Shasteen, former Pomeroy
resident.
'
Walter began having ,some health problems before
Thanksgiving and it seems that one thing has followed another.
The news April received Wednesday was not good and so she
took off for Tampa.
'
Meigs friends may send cards to Walter R. Shasteen
University Community Hospital, 3100 East Fletcher Ave.;
Room 557, Tamps, Florida , 33612.
More and more there Is a crackdown on students who do
not have the required innoculations so I did want to remind you
that the Meigs County Health Department has special hours
from 9 a.m. to 12 noon , on the fir st Saturday of each month, to
provide these immunizations.
By the way, the health deparlment, which has been located
on Mechanic St., will be occupying new quarters in the Meigs
County Community Mental Health Center, formerly Meigs
General Hospital.
The department will move Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday but will be able to provide those inununizations on
the first Saturday of March.

Ha rt, Racine. He drove left of
center and struck a southbou nd vehicle dri ven by
Harry E. "V
, ya tt , "' 7. Rt , 3,
Pomeroy.
Clark. ha s hecn char ~ed
with opera ting a vehicle
without a va lid Ohio's
operator's license: failin g to
keep upon the right half of the
roadwa y; dri ving whil e
under the influence ; assault :
and disorderly conduct.
Th e last two charges
resulted !rom Clark' s conduct while being placed in
jail.
Clark was scheduled to
appear in Meigs County Court
late Satu rday morning.
Sheriff Proffitt advises that
Joe Kirby, West Main Street.
Pomeroy, reported to th e
sheriff's office · Friday
evening he had pa rked his
vehicle in the parking lot at
the Silver Run Ch11rrh at

around 4 p.m. Upon returning
at 6: 15 p.m. he discovered
someone had poured Several
buckt1s of water on the seats
and floor boards of his 1978
Gran Prix .

Deputies ob ta in ed a
statem ent from· a subject
admitt ing to having poured
water in the car.

According to the statement ,
t he person was upset becou.se

the vehicle was parked on the
church pa rking lot.

reports; and the courtesy and
excellent relations in dealing
with the public and fellow
employees . Sgt . For bes
gra duated in 1974 from
Southern High ·s chool and
worked several years for Carl
Gr ueser Plumbing.
Sheriff Proffitt appointed
him as a dispatcher - jailer in
April 1977, and went on the
road as a fi eld deputy in .Ju ly
1978.
Sgt. Forbes has completed

An turest is pending if the 280 hour BASIC POLICE
Kirb.v fl ies charges.
· OF F ICER TRA I NI NG
~..
vhile, Sheriff Proffitt COURSE a s requi red by
has annvunced the promotion reg ulations of the Ohio Peace
of Deputy Randy Forbes, Rt. Officer Training Council and
I, Mincrs\'ille, to sergeant. is currently enrolled ·in the
Sheriff Proffitt commended Police Science Progr am at
Serg ea nt Fo rbes for his Hocking Technical College at
in it iati ~e and interest ; his Nelsonville.
reliability; ability to make
decisions and plan his work;
neat ness and accurac y in his

We Salute. . .
l.esa Harder

Otildren's bodies found
Meigs historical news

PONTIAC, Ill. (APJ - The
bodies of two young brothers
were fo und shot to death, less
than a week alter their
mother was charged In the
slaying of a lawyer who
unsuccessfully represented
her in an attempt to gain
custody of the children , police
say.
Th e · Livingston County
sherif!' s departm ent id entified the victims as E ric
Munter, 11 , and his brother,
Derrek, 9. ·
A farmer fo und the bodi es
in sleeping bags in a thawe.t
snow bank along a country
road near' Pontiac late
Frida y, authoriti es .sa id .
They had apparently been
dead for several days , a
coroner ruled.
Their mot her, Judith Marie
Munter, 37, is in the Cook
County Jail, charged in the
F,eb. 14 shooting ol her

. BY MARGARET PARKER
Meigs Historical Society Coordinator
POMEROY - Have you written yoiu- story for the Meigs
County History Book, yet • II not there is still time to write it
The publishers have .granted an extension to April 5, s~
that those workmg on thel!" stortes can get them finished This
will be the final deadline. If you want to order a book ·these
orders accompanied by payment, must be in by this d~adline
also.
· To ad~ise you of how the townships of the county are being
represented with family histories for the book we will be
publishing a liSf of those family names submitted from each
township. If you want your area to be well represented, then it
ts up to you to see that your story is included.
Rutland Township - Steel, Will, Nicholson, Plummer,
Wells, Prall, Patterson, King, Humphrey, Ervin, Dailey,
Dantels, Adams, Atkins, Chapman, Halliday, Kennedy ,
Rathburn, Dewhurst . Salem Township - Strong, Thompson ,
Halliday, Houdasheldt, Colwell, Wilcox Shaw Painter
Mutchler, Holliday, Gr~ham, Bowles, 'Ander.;,n. Scipi~
Township - Campbell, Hilt, Young, Howard, Diehl, Arnold ,
Dye, IrWID, Welsh , Stanley, Hayman, Dowdy, Combs, Collins.
Because hIs sometimes hard to determine which township
or area a story is from , some from these may not be listed. n
you have. not submitted your story and your family 's ruime is
not ?n thts llst, then 1t probably will not be In the book. Some
stories cover several generations and include a lot of relatives
but unless you write it yourself, you may be left out.
'
We ·also need topical history. This can be on schools
Villages, entertainment, by .gone hobbies, activities, and othe;
remembrances. Anything that may have contributed to the
history of Meigs County. These will be used on
spa ce
available basis.

a

Emotions enter
Maroin·'s trial
By LINDA DEUTSCH
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) Michelle Triola Marvin broke
down in loud sobbing Friday
and had to be helped from the
courtroom alter a witness
used the word .. hooker" in

he would marry you. " '
Then, Mahoney said, the
former showg1rl mentioned
that she would be traveling to
.lap~ With MarVIn , fo;, the
premtere of . h•~. movte, Hell
m,!he Pacif~c . , ,
She satd , We 11 be
meelt,ng the royal famtly and
I don t want the emperor to
thmk I'm a hooker,"'
Mahoney quoted her as
saying.
At that point, Miss Marvin
let out a loud gasp, shook her
head and laughed.
" I distinctly rememb er
· that," Mahoney added for
emphasis.
. Miss Marvin sat quietly for
a few moments. Then,
suddenly, she dropped her
head into her hands and gave
a lo11d wail. She began
sobbing uncontrollably, and
Sujlerior Court Judge Arthur
Marshall asked that she be
taken out of the room.
Attorney Penny Mercurio
helped Miss Marvin from her
chair and escorted her to a
nearby jury room .
As Mahoney continued
te~tifying, Miss Marvin's
loud sobs could be heard in
the courtroom. She remained
outside for 15 minutes, then
returned , composed and
smiling weakly.
It was the first time she had
interrupted a session o! the
trial.
Marvin's
lawyers
conlinued to call the actor 's
fri ends
and
business
BSSI&gt;Ciates to the witness
stand to sypport his claim
th'at he owes Miss Marvin
riothing. She is suing for $1.8
million - half of his assets
dtir'tng the six ye~rs they
lived together. '

referring to her relationship
with Lee Marvin. '
Jim Mahoney, Marvin 's
press agent, recalled a
Neighbors of J oe Bolin in Rutland want to give him a big discussion he had with Miss
Marvin · in 1968 about
vote of thanks for his role as a good samaritan.
changing
her name to the
Without a word to anyone during th ~ past winter - which
actor's.
hasn 'I been easy - Joe has gotten out his garden tractor and
" Sile said, 1 want to
cleaned and scraped the driveways of neighbors like crazy.
change
.my name to Marvin'
Neighbors comment that it really made the winter a lot easier ·
... I said, ' Michelle, if Lee
and are they ever grateful? I'll say!
wanted to change your name,
Gayle Price, our Portland historian and friend , sends the
follolj'ing historical note o! interest. It reads:
·
"John Baptiste Regnier, M.D., about 22, fled his native
land during the French Revolution and came to Marietta. In
f'eb., 1792, while traveling up the Ohio River with companions
in a perogue, they capsized near the head of Buffington Island.
They were trying to pass around a fallen tree.
Regnier lost a curiously fashioned marble cylinder· about
eight inches long and one inch in diameter.
Years later, the cylinder was found on a sandbar below the
WASffiNGTON (AP) -OfIsland and was deposited in an Eastern museum. The party ficials of the two countries
~as forced to walk to Pittsburgh, suffering much from hunger.
are giving conflicting reasons
They were made sick from eating pawpaw seeds."
for Crown Prince Fahd · of
Saudi Arabia canceling talks
And how many times have I told you that it's a small world. here with President Carter.
Perhaps, you read or heard on the news recently of twins
U. S. officials say Fahd has
who are now 39 and were just reunited after having been health problems and might
placed out for adoption when they. were babies.
have to be hospitalized for
The unusual part o! the story was the similarities in their tests. The Saudi embassy
two lives as to lik~s and dislikes, children's names, etc.
says he Is In perfect health.
Well - as it turns out, one o! the twins, James Lewis
In any event, the cancelarented a home belonging to Mrs. Sara Lee Yoakam •who Is tion results in a lost opcurrenUy Jiving in Pomeroy.
portunity for Carter to appeal
Mrs. Yoakam Is a daughter of Mrs. Katrine Millikan, again for Saudi support in
Butternut Ave ., and Is here caring lor her mother who is ill.
Egyptian - Israeli peace
talks.
There's nothing like living in our small conununlties. Bob
The lack of Saudi backing
McElhinny, S. Third Ave., will vouch for it. Recently, Bob had may be one reason President
a heart attack and is now rec.uperating at his home. Bob says Anwar Sadat hardened his'
the cards, Dowers and get well messages were just negotiating position after a
tremendous and 'he's quite thankful.
summit meeting in
September with Carter and '
Middleport friends sent along a clipping from the Daily Israeli Prime Minister
Herald News in the Port Charlotte, Fla., area.
Menachem Begin.
The clipping shows two photos of Ura Swisher, well known Secretary of State Cyrus R.
in the Meigs-Gallia area. One of the pictures shows one of Vance is at Camp David, Md.,
Swisher's 1917 Case tractors taken to Punta Garda where
this weekend, trying to
Swisher is living. The newspaper quotes· Swisher as saying
mediate the differences betabout the tractor h~ving power steering: "They provide the
ween Egypt and Israel.
steering and you provide the power."
There Is no word on
whether he Is making any
Bill Slater pho~ed to say most encouragingly .th~t he . headway, or on whether
spotted a robin at 8:30a.m. Wednesday alld of course, robins
Carter will join the talks~
are supposed to be the harbingers of spring.
Saudi • U. S. relations have
On the other hand, there are some folks who say that
generally been good, ·
robins are around all winter anyway.
· although Sta\f Department
Personally, I wouldn'tknow. Maybe in the next life....
spokesman ·Thomas Reston
noted , Friday that "difSomeoiie said that Pomeroy's Main St. is for the birds.
ferences may occur from
Well, I think most of us will go alon~ with that.lt's 1' cinch it's · · time to time, as they do' in any
nottoo greatfor cars. You keep smiling now.
·
.. relationship."
·
1

wnflicting

I

di vorce l aw yer, Norm an

Mill er. 55.
Miller was shot nine times
at his ollice in the Chicago
suburb of Midlothian. His
secreta ry escaped unharmed
after hiding under a desk.
Aday earlier, a judge ruled
Mrs. Munter could not have
custody of the children.
She and the children then
disappea red and Mrs.
Munter, a former security
guard, was arrested Feb.,17
in Quincy, Ill., after · a
struggle with a policeman
who stopped her for a traffic
violation . Police said the
o£ficer was slightly injured
when Mrs. Munter !ired a
pistol.
Coroner Keith Von Qualen
.,,said the boys apparently died
from gunshot wounds. They
had been the object ol a
multi-state search since their
disappearance.
Mrs. Munter brought the
I

children from Santa Maria, Ca li fornia after all eged ly
Calif.. in October, shortly shooting a neighbor in a
before a court ruling gave dispute over a broken g :~ rage
custody to her husband, Ca rl, door.
a television repairman .
She was in a mental
Circuit Court Judge Robert hospital lor 60 days after the
E. Cusack reportedly was incident and moved to Illinois
placed under special police upon release. des pite a
proletiion at his Harvey, IlL . Califo rni a court rulin g
murtroom and at home after gran ting cu stody of th e
Mrs . Munter ca ll ed him children to her husband.
repeatedly to protest his
Ca lifornia a uthorities say
ruling .
she also was questioned after
Her husband is reportedly sending a threatening Jetter
in hiding.
to President Richard M.
The Los Angeles County Nixon in 1971.
sheriff" s office sa id Mr s.
Her divorce suit still is
Munter was· arrested in 1972 , pending in Santa Barbara
ll!hen she was li ving in •1 Superior Court.

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Lesa is a student in

Se creta r ia l Course.
A 1978 gra dua te o f North
Gall ia H igh School and the
salu!ator ian of h ~r cla ss,
she rs the daug hter of M r .
an d Mrs. Bra dl ey . Harder ,

Route 1. JEwi ngton.

L~ s a ·reco mm ends , " I
decrd ed befor e graduat ing

year
colleg e .
Af ter
con sider ing two sc hool s 1
chose Sou th er n Hills tor its

~ ua l i l y , si ncer ity, and most

BEAUTIFUL

rmpor tant th e success of its
grad uat es."
If yo u are interes t ed in
!he short est r oute to a good
JOb, enrol l at South ern
H i ll s. Ca ll now ( 446·2739)
f or in forma t ion . Spri ng
Oua r1 er start s March 20 .

WURLITZER PIANO
(SINCE 1856)

·YOU CAN HEAR THE

DIFFERENCE IT SOUNDS GRAND l
11

WARD'S KEYBOARD
"Southe a•tern Ohio's Newest Most
Mod ern Mu s ic &amp; Sound Center"
446 -43 72

412 Second Ave.

"f

fr om high sc hool that 1 did
not want to att end a four

GIVE YOUR FAMILY
WHAT THEY WANT! I

11

;;
iii

Southern Hills
School of
Business
Thomas C. Breec:!l, o;r.
Gallipolis

q 1q 2nd Aw e .
PH , 446· 2239

Gallipolis

RNO SSS B

DEPT. STORE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

OPEN SUNDAY
1 TIL 6

Dike ruptures

FREMONT, Ohio (AP)An earthen dike along the
Sandusky River ruptured
Saturday morning, ·nooding a
one-mile portion o! a county
road just south of Fremont.
The rising water · forced
several motorists to climb to
the roofs of their automobiles
for safety.
Six persons, including a
Sandusky County sheriff's
deputy, were treated for exposure after they were
rescued by helicopter when
boats were unable to reach
them.
,
Authorities said no repairs .
could be made until the water
started to recede.

e

.

®

.T... Premium Non-Stick Surface

PASSAGE URGED
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
cha irman of Cleveland's
largest bank urged voters
Saturday to pass a 50 percent ,,
payroll tax hike as "a basic
building block In restoring
the city's economic sound-

ness."
But Brock Weir, chairman
of The Cleveland Trust Co.,.
said even with new tax
revenue, the city would still
face a significant cash shortage, and he declined to commit his bank to lifting troubled Cleveland oul of default.

(t1·97)

Setlncludel:
I IT:,cMat UIIC'iPalil

2 17, .COVEMO SAUCEPAi

I QT; DUTCH OVEII
II" SKILLET ISHMIS
lltTCH OVEN COlli!_

· ..1111" IIOAST. lUll

CMS TRAVEL
CLOSm SATURDAY
GONE FLYING
BACK 'MONDAY

.,

!fiTS 10" Slll.ll1 Ofl
IUTCH OYDII

• .J f pur'cneHd ••.. ritetv

'Complete lflt only

• Heavy oeuae elumlnum
oonllructlon lnturet repld, even· heet
dlitrlbutlon lor t..t. efficient cooking

~ Eeay•to-cleen, non·IIICk SilverStone
Interiors resiat chipping end peeling
• Heat-resistent Phenolic hendlea and
cover knobs ere oven-111e to 3SO•F
• H..ndy routing reck keepa meet or
pouJtry'out ot juice• during c~klno .
• Attractive porceleln·-on-•Iumlnum
exteriors htve contempor~ry
brown 6 gold t,lrlplng

.
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�A-5- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 25, 1979

A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 25. 1979

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14-yeaN&gt;ld
freed on bond

By TERRY GOGGIN
Associated Press Writer
I
BROOKHAVEN,
Miss.
lAP) _ Fourteen-year-old
~ Robert Earl May Jr., serving
1 a prison sentence that would .
have kept him behind bars for
almost 50 years with no
chance of parole, has been
freed on bond and granted a
trial.
May was whlsked out of the
Lincoln County Courthouse
,j, Friday, minutes after the
.'· $20,000 bond ordered by
' . Circuit Judge Joe Piggott
', was posted.
,
He left the courthouse in ,
t
pouring rain for an un~ disclosed location.
Piggott granted a defense
motion to throw out the
youth's guilty pleas on four
. armed robbery charges, but
.: said, " The court does not find
' that any of your rights had
1
been violated."
May then entered four
innocent pleas, and was
granted a jury trial,
scheduled to begin on Sept. 6.
·•
The 4-foot-7, 75-pound May,
1
and three other black youths
ranging in age fro!11 17 to 24,
had pleaded guilty in January
to robbing three firecracker
stands and a Brookhaven
'' convenience store during the
Christmas bolidays.
POMEROY - Jane Brown,
Two of the other youths also
R.N., Meigs Co. Tuberculosis
' received 48-year, no-parole
sentences, and one was nurse, is announcing a school
skin testing program will
sentenced to a 36-year term,
begin soon In the Meigs Local
c also without parole'.
Schools.
' May was indicted by a Pomeroy Elementary
grand jury on armed robbery
School's students will be
charges, which
under
tested
on Wednesday, Feb.
Mississippi law, left no
28,
where
both sixth grades,
1,
possibility for parole or the
morning and afternoon
1
transfer of his case to kindergarten classes, and all
' juvenile court jurisdiction. school personnel, and others
with permission slips will be
given skin tests.
All students at the Bradbury Elementary school and
all personnel will receive
their skin tests the same day.
On Monday, March 5, Mrs.
Brown wUI be at Meigs High
School where the 12th grade,
the Cosmetology classes and
aU school personnel will be
tested.
AU senior students are
particul~rly urged to have
the test as this will be the last
opportunity to receive it
before graduating from high
school.
On Tuesday, March 6, the
eighth grade and personnel at
the Meigs Junior High School
No bett er gift to give so nneone 1 will be done.
Since the skin testing
you love . th an the gift of lOVEl-l
program
and any foliowup
a dist in ctive Columbia
work is a free service of the
14 K gold wedding ring
local tuberculosis clinic, Mrs.
See therh exclusively at:
Brown urges ali parents to
sign and return the consent
slips which children will be '
bringing home.
424 Second Ave.
other schools in the district
Gallipolis, Ohio
will be aMounced as they are
A• odwu..d ;,
scheduled.

'I

cident.
Gallipolis City Police
report an auto operated by
Christian , traveling north
behind 1708 Eastern Ave .,
struck a utility pole.
A passenger in the vehicle,
John A. Clonch, 18, Gallipolis,
displayed visible signs of
injury and .was transported
by the Gallia Volunteer
Squad to Holzer Medical
Center, where he was treated
and released.
Clonch was later arrested
on a bench warrant on a
charge of failure to appear in
Municipal Court to answer
charges of operating a motor
vehicle without a license.
In other developments
Gallipolis City Police investigated an incident of
unauthorized use of a motor
vehicle Saturday.
The auto., owned by
Ga llipolis Motors, Second
Ave.,
was
discovered
abandoned on Wiiiow Drive,
just outside the city limits.
Officers report that ·tne
license plates on the vehicles
had been removed from a
wrecked vehicle parked at
Gallipolis Motors.
The case is stili under investigation .

in Meigs County on U.s. ;s;s,
106 feet south ·of SH 681 , at
8:50p.m.
Officers report that a south
bound auto operated by
James Bing, 21l, Long Bottom , ran off the right side of
the roadway, through a
guardrail and into a creek.
Bing displayed visible signs
of Injury and was transported
by the Pomeroy Volunteer
Squad to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
There was severe damage
to the vehicle.
Harry Justice, 47, Vinton,
was cited on a charge of DWI
following a one-vehicle accident on SR 160, three-tenths
of a mile north of . the
GaUipolis Corporation Limit,
at 4 p.m.
Officers report Justice's
north bound auto went out of
control, ran off the right side
of the roadway and struck a
ditch , There w~s slight
damage to .the yeh1ele.
Me.anwhlle Russell F.
~ristian, 18, Gallipolis, was
Cited on a charge of reckless
operahon early .Fnday
foliowmg a one-vehicle ac-

TB skin

Rotarian Yowtg

•

testtng
slate'd

TAWNEY JEWELERS

seventeen

guest speaker ·
MIDDLEPORT
Rotarian Joe Young was
speaker Friday night when
the Middleport - Pomeroy
Rotary Club met at Heath
United Methodist Church.
Young told of a trail ride for
horses and riders held in the
Black Hills and the type of
experiences of the 1,400
participants to the various
national parks in the area .
His talk was enhanced by
slides of the Black Hills
countryside. ·
John Rice, president, was
in charge of the meeting. A
discussion was held on the
club's role in the Easter Seal
campaign. A guest for the
meeting was Lou Osborne of
Pomeroy.
Women of the church
served dinner.

·Traffic victims
By The Associated Press
At least two persons were
killed in traffic accidents on
Ohio roadways Friday night,
the state Highway Patrol
said.
The patrol counts traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday
until midnight Sunday.
The dead:
FRIDAY NIGHT
. CLEVELAND - Charles
N. Bauer, 30, of Mentor, in a
two-car accident on Interstate 90 in Cleveland.
FREMONT - Cathryn
Batesole, 80, of Fremont, a
passenger in one or the
vehicles involved in a two-ear
accident on U.S. 6 in San.
dusky County.

DAFFODILS ARE PEAKING OUT
NOW SHOULDN'T
YOU?!

1h OFF SALE
CONTINUES
SAVE ON

•selected housewares

•tire chains
•trash cans

P.S.- AND DON'T FORGET
GEORGE'S GARAGE SALE

'

·Initial claims
down last·week

Long Bottom man hurt
GALLIPOLIS
The
GaUia-Meigs Post. Highway
Patrol , investigated two
accidents Friday.
One person was injured
during a one-vehicle accident

.

SHOWS PLAQUE-Dorothy Jones, student of Buckeye Hills Career Center, shows off
her plaque she won for her Voice of Democracy speech at Veterans of t'ore1gn Wars
Conference iri Colll!llbUS. She was sponsored by Post 4464. Commander Jess Maione is on the
left and Dovel Myers, Post Quartermaster, presents her with a check from the post.
Dorothy will compete for the National prize in Washington March 6.

Reminiscence of covered bridges
BY HORACE DeWITI
GA LLIPOLIS - I went to
work in the year of 1945 for
the Gallia County Highway
Department with the bridge
crew. The late James Boggs
was bridge foreman at that
time. There were five of us
and Boggs made six, but I
think aU of these men have
left this world.
My first work with the
· crew wa s out at Vinton on
Coal Valley on Little Raccoon
Creek. They had started to
build a new briage. The
concrete was poured and the
eye-beams on the concrete.
These beams were 24 inches
high , but I don 't remember
how long they were. There
were seven or ei~ht of them.
We started spacing and ·
bolting them in place.
But one morning on
reporting to the county
garage for work, we were told
that the floor had fallen out of
a covered bridge farther up
Coal VaUey on Little Raccoon
Creek. We were to go there
and repair that bridge. It was
said a man with a truckload
of limestone of about six or
seven tons had crossed the
bridge and about half of the
floor feU out behind him , but
he made it across the bridge 1
I remember the wooden
trusses that were down in the
water that helped to support
the bridge. ·we bolted them
together again and with the
help of some new timber,
they were placed under the
bridge again. I remember the
other men worked on the floor
of the bridge, and I was a boy
to the men, so they would tie a
rope around me and swing
me under the bridge to put
the nuts on the bolts, which
were 18 to 24 inches long.
I very well remember the
Blessing bridge, which I lhlok
was the same type as the one
on Coal Valley. I remember
Waller Plantz falling through
the Blessing Bridge. Earl
Carter, who happens to be my
father-In-law, at that time
lived three to four miles from
the bridge. Virgil Carter lived

300 or tOO yards from the
bridge. Possibly that is where
Plantz got dry . Several years
later, my wife and .I lived in
the same house Virgil Carter
lived in. We went to Sunday
School . and church nt a little
church about 100 yards from
the Blessing Bridge.
The picture of the covered
bridge thai was pictured in
the Sunday Times-Sentinel on
February II, 1979 I thlok is
the bridge over Little Raccoon Creek that I helped
repair, I could be wrong. The
bridge In the picture looks too
small for it to be the Blessing
Bridge.
As to the new bridge we
were building (which we
completed), while working on
this, a fine gentleman came
to work with us. He is stili
living and going strong! His
name is Clarence Fulks, SR
141 , Patriot Star Rt.,
GaUlpolis. I called Fulks, and
had a long talk with him
about bridges that he and I
worked on in Gallia County.
When the new bridge over
Little Raccoon Creek was
completed, we moved to the
Northup Bridge. Before I
start to teli you about
repairing Northup Bridge, I
would like to tell you I
remember the old covered
bridge at Northup and
crossing many'times with my
father as a small boy. I
remember the old Mill and a
small building that was a
store or post office - or
'maybe both. They were on
the side of the creek toward
SR 141.
When we moved to repair
Northup bridge, it was in
1945. There sure was a steel
bridge there then. But some
steel beams bad rusted out
and the Highway Department
bad ordered them from the
same bridge company. A
gentleman was sent from the
company to help replace the
steel. Fulks and I helped
along with Boggs and the men ·
repair that bridge.
J will tell you about one

11' e

clu1 rgcs of

MWYler trial
slated Monday

total of 18,429 .
Continued claims of those
unempioyed one or more
weeks were estimated at
!49,498last week, inclqding a
137,000 under the regular
Ohio Law, a 1.6 percent
decrease from the 151,978
total for the week ending Feb.
10.
· Jobless Ohi~ans filing
claims under all programs
last week, federal and state,
were estimated at 165,511,
down 2.9 percent from the
previous week's total of
170,407.
Administrator Giles said
that 1,036jobless Ohioans had
exhausted their benefits
under ali programs for the
week ending Feb. 10.

STEAK
INSTRUCTOR HEADS CLASS-Led by instructor Mrs. Mills, another portion of U1e
classes involves exercising, Including up to 30 minutes of brisk walking or jogging.

PLANS DELAYED
.CINCINN ATl I AP) - · The
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co.
has again postponed plans to
cut off service to some 2,000
customers who are behind on
their payments.
The utility confirmed it
plaruied the c.utoffs last week ,
then postponed them when a
new cold spell swept into the

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Georgia Smith,
Reedsville; .Ross Kent ,
Addison.
Discharged
Janet
Russell, Leona Hubbard,
Mary Archer, Harley Koenig.

POINT PLEASANT - The
SQUAD CALLED
murder
trial of Rocky Lynn
more bridge of the same type
POMEROY
The
as Northup, and it was rusted Hall, Ewington, is one of two
Pomeroy
emergency
squad
out the same. It was on trials scheduled for Monday
Gravel Hili Cemetery Rd . , in- Mason· County Circuit was called to Mulberry
Heights at 9;53 p.m. Friday
over Kyger Creek. We did the Court.
for
Mrs. June Eichinger who
Hall is charged in the
same repair work on that
was
taken to Holzer Medical
shooting
death
on
May
19,
bridge. We also built new
Center.
1978
of
Bertha
Jean
Roush,
guard rails on the approach.
At 7:44 a.m. Saturday the
By that time, I had learned to 19, of Meigs County, a (ormer
squad
went to laurel St. for
New
Haven
resident.
do some buming, and I was
Charles
Knapp who was
·
Also
slated
for
trial
is
tbe
the one that burned the rails.
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial
case
of
Chapman
vs.
which were of old railroad
Hospital.
Fairchild.
iron, on the approach. (By
this time it was in 1946). I
sure will admit they didn't
look too good, but served the
purpose for many years'
Now, about the bridge that
was thought to be on the
Taylor Rd . My wife nad two
great uncles who at one time
If your home is less
lived on ·the Taylor Rd. (If
than 7 years old,
living, they would be over 100
years old) . I remember
you may save with
talking to both of them many
State Farm. Find
times about the ford at the
out how much.
Taylor Rd. They would tell of
Call me today .
riding horseback, or horse
Like a good neighbor,
and buggy, to GaUipolis and'it
State Farm is there.
would come up a rain and
ltAll ••••
they would have to swim the
horses across the creek. I
also can remember the ford.
Therefore, I don't think there
ever was a bridge at that
POint
As !like history, I hope this
will give a little light on some
417 Second Ave ,
of the bridges in Galiia
Gallipolis. o.
County.
Phone 446-4290
(Horace DeWitt's address
Stote Farm Fire andCrumalty CompanY• ~lome Office: Uloomington, lll inoi !l
· is Box . II , Rodney, Ohio
p 78808
45676) .

area .

WIN
50 Gallons of Gas

from Chuck's

Pennzoil at
1010 1st Ave.
Register

Introducing State RJrm
Newer Home Discount

C. K. SNOWDEN

lwith $5 minimum ga
purchase . Drawing
1\.viil be held Saturdal
at6 P .M.

FALL &amp; WINTER

SALE SHOES
I

$897

nn·

20% O.FF

SHOES

steel-belted radials
'
when you buy 2 or more

SILVER dRIDGE PLAZA

1

$75 ~air

Two 165-13
whitewalls
were $91.52
Plus $3.4a'_Federal Excise Tax each tire

Phone .

.

446 -2 770

Isears I .
,

decide upon a safe, efficient
educational fields.
Since obesity is one of the weight control program
nation' s major he.a lth tailored to his or her own
problems, the first formal situation, and based upon his
program oUered through the present weight, weight loss
clinic's patient education goal , and weight maindepartment is a series of tenance .
Two weight control classes
"Weight Control Through
Behavior
Modification " have already been completed
at the Clini c and enrollment
classes.
The results of behavior is now open for two new
modification for obesity have classes which are scheduled
been relatively consistent to begin on Tu~sday, March 6,
and positive; when compared with an afternoon class from
with contemporary treat- 1 to 3 p.m., and another in the •
m e nt alternatives, evening from 7 to 9 p.m.
behavioral techniques appear Additional information on
to offer the most promismg either of these classes can be
and practical approach to obtained by contacting the
clinic at 446-5411.
weight control.
It is the intention of the.
For a prepaid fee and
referral by a Clinic clinic to develop additional
physician ,
each class patient education proj ec ts
member will receive 24 hours designed to meet the needs of
of formal classroom 'in- our patient~. Tliese activities
struction, comprised of six · will take the form of class·
weekly two-hour sess ions room instruction, film s, prewith monthly follow-up printed handouts and other
sessions for a period of six method s of providing
ineducational
and
months. ·
formational
material.
The general class format
involves 25 minutes of weighins and general discussion; 30
minutes of health. nutrition,
and exercise counseling; 25
minutes
of
cog nitiv e
through
restructuring
relaxation - concentration; Story hour set
and 30 minutes of cardiovascular - respiratory
MASON - On March 7, at
exercise in the form of brisk 1:JO p.m. story hour will
walking.
begin at the Mason City
In the classes, each student Ubrary.
is taught how to analyze his
Conducting the fir st
or her own habits to find out session will be Dwan
which ones contribute to Huckabee, director of
overweight and how these children services for th e
habits can be changed.
Huntington District
It is stressed that habits Libraries.
which have contributed to
Any four or five year old
obesity must be replaced with who wants to hear good
habits suitabl'e to the stories is invited to attend.
student's goal of weight loss · Please stop by any time at the
and eventual weight main- Mason City Library in Mason
tenance .
to register.
Each student is helped to

BECOME
A
FOSTER PARENT

Satisfaction Guaranieed or Your Money Back

Most. merchandise available

program

~

Two steel belts help counter impacts.
Two radial plies help keep tread flat ,
on road. Whitewall s available in
sizes to fit most cars.

!Wiii'il-1 for pick-up Wlt.hrn a few days

Education

GIVE THIS CHILD A REASON TO .HAVE FAITH

• Shipping, installation extra
• Sears has a credit plan to Muit most every need
• Price is catalog price • Now on sale in our .. L" catalog supplement

were Rhonda K. Hager
Cheshire, $22, and, Frederick
W. Atkins, 26, Madison
Mich., $23.
'

GALLIPO LIS - Holzer
Clinic 'Ltd. is announcing a
major effort in providing
formalized health education
programs for its patients.
The Clinic feels the new
patient education program
represents a major advance
in improving patient care
through the creation of a
formal learning environment
for patients and their families
to compliment the comprehensive health services
provided by the Clinic.
To devel0p this effort, Mrs.
Sandra Mills of GaUipolis has
been recently employed by
the Clinic as Coordinator of
Patient Education. •
A graduate of Northwestern University with a
Ma sters Degree
from
MarshaU University, Mrs.
Mills comes to the Clinic with
· several years experience in

ALL REMAINING WOMEN'S

I

Pi\HT OF THE Weight Control class involves formal instruction by Mrs. Mills at left
on reason foc overeating, goal setting, good eating habits and positive thinking .
'
'

Weight control class
sponsored by clinic

VA LUES TO •25.00

Municipal Court
Three cases were continued
in Gallipolis Municipal Court
Friday.
Entering a plea of not guilty to a charge of DWI, bond
for Harry N. Justice, 47, Vinton: wassetat$1,1100.
Harry M. Ashworth, 24,
Gallipolis, pleaded not guilty
to a charge of driving while
under court suspension. Case
continued.
Entering a plea of not guil. ty to a charge of taking a deer
out of season, ·the case
against Stanley McGuire, 22,
Crown City, was continued.
Bond was set at $500.
Seven other cases were terminated in Judge James A.
Bennett's court Friday.
Carl E. Cali, 21l, Crown City, and Marvin M. Moss, 22,
Crown City, each forfeited 500 •
on charges of taking a deer
out of season.
Fprfeiting $500·on a charge
of possession of a deer illegally taken out o! season was
Marvin McGuire, 57, Crown
City. ·.
. Paul M. Sisson, pt. Pleasant, entered a plea of guilty
to a charge of possession of
an open flask in a public
area and was fined $20.
Fined $15 on a charge of
failure to yield to a
j)edestrian was Donald L.
Swisher, 41,-Vinton.
Fined or{!&gt;_rfeiting bo"'l on

COLUMBUS - . Initial
claims lor benefits under the
Ohio Development Compensation Law filed by newly
unemployed persons declined
16.5 percent for the week
ending February 17 compared to the previ~us week,
Administrator . Albert G.
Giles of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Service,s
lOBES) announced.
Giles reported that 14,769
claimants filed for initial
claims under the regular
Ohio Law compared to 17,698
for the week ending Feb. 10.
Initial claims filed !or
benefits under all other
programs last week numbered 1,244, accounting for an
overall initial claims total of
16,013, a drop of 13.1 percent
from the previous week's

Silver Bridg~ Plaza
For Service
Phone 446-2902

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND co.

ALLISON'S
GRADE A
SMALL

on agenda

EGGS

·-

RUEL CHEATHAM

Kaiser names
•
•
engmeenng
superintendent
RA VENSWOOD - Rue!
Cheatham bas been named
engineering superintendent
for the fabrication · plant of
the Ravenswood Works of
Kaiser
Aluminum
&amp;
Chemi ca l Corporation. He
had
been
m anager,
packaging division, technical
and engineering, at Kall;er's
San Leandro, Calif. location.
Cheatham joined Kaiser at
the Ravenswood Works as
staff engineer for hot and cold
rolling departments in 1966.
In 1968, he became plant
engineer at the Pennanente,
California, location. He was
named plant manager in 1971
lor the Belpre, Ohio, plant. In
1973, he became manager,
packaging engineering, San
Lea ndro , California. He
served as Oakland operations
manager for· Kaiser S can
plant fa cilities during 1975,
before returning to San
Leandro in 1976 to his most
recent position.

GAL LI PIOLIS
"Education for Conformity or
Freedom" is the title of the
program which will be
presented by Dr. Edgar
Wban, professor of English,
Ohio University , next
Wednesday at Oscar's
Restaurant, Gallipolis.
Sponsored by th e Gallipolis
Kiwanis Club, the program is
open free to the public and is
made possible in part by the
Ohi'o Program in th e
Humanit ies, a state-based
agency of the ' National Endowment for the Humanities,
which makes grants to nonprofit organizations in Ohio
fo r public programs in the
humanities.
The program is one of a
series being given throughout
southeast Ohio by humanities
scholars associated with the
"Forum on Human Values"
established by the Extension
Division of Ohio University.
This will be a lecture .discuSsion "based on the
often unstated assumption
underlying our educational
system, for instance, the
degree to which we unconsdously

3 dozen

VALLEY BELL

1%
MILK
GAL PLASTIC JUG

indoctrinate

rather than educate: how, in
other words, we have taught
and do teach seXism, racism,
com petition,
and
militarism, " according to th e
announcement.
"We will try to discover to
what degree our grading and
classroom practices actually
inhibit rather than encourage
learning and the growth of
independent citizens. We will
engage in wild speculations
about how we could design a
better system."
Further information on the
program may be obtained by
contacting Albert Durose,
secretary of the Gallipolis
Kiwanis Club and Feb. :ul
RETURNS HOMES
BANGKOK, Thailand lAP) program chairman. Durose is
- Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman a former superintendent of
returned from Vietnam the Gallipolis city schools.
Saturday after going to the
front lines of the VietnamChina war.
"! saw a large nwnber of
refugees . ..a hospital with
wounded soldiers. . .I heard
JANE RUNYAN
artillery, we were within
Navy Data
Systems
range of artillery, ... the New Technician 2nd Class Jane ·
York Democrat said on ar- J . Runyan, da ught er of
rival at Bangkok airport.
Evelyn B. Thomas of Route I,
Telling of her trip to embat- Box 217, Middleport, has
tled Lang Son province, she reenlisted for three years
said, ''Some shells had while serving at the U. S.
recently exploded in the area Fleet Weather Center, Guam,
not far from where we were, Mariana Islands. She joined
just about an hour before we the Navy in October, 1973.
got there."

BWE BONNET

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1979 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DR.

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1

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•Deluxe Wheel

Covers
•Floor Mats
• Tinted Glass
12 mo./12,000 Mile .
Warranty

. Why are so many drivers switching ·
their insurance to Allstate?
We'll give you lots of reasons.
Allstate offers lots of special
rates and discounts . Good Driver.
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Mileage. Young Married . And more:
· And Allstate offers today's most
advanced claim handling. Coast
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We tlpnk yo _·n find a
difference with Allstate.
So compare companies. Find out,
why the owners of over nine
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GALLIA COUNTY CHILDREN'S
.SERVICES

'5584

423 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH 10
446-4963

BOX 468

SPONSORS: O'Dell Lumber Co.
Thaler Ford Co.
Fruth Pharmacies
Mills Insurance
First N,ational Bank
Ohio Valley Bank ·
Commercial &amp; Savings Bank

................................................................................~[~

('X t't ~ssi\'•' spl't~.

.

_:. 1

' .

ft

'

'

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
• THE

· McGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY: .
INC.
NICK JOHNSON
ACCOUNT EXECUTIIIE

452 2 nd Aw

·Pho.n e 446-1761

~~~~~~~~.~~~

Qallipolis :

MAGIC BLEACH
GALLON 49~
JUG
Wlnf
COUPON
Expires Wednesday,
Feb.
1979

" We reserve t he righ t to limit qua

�A-'-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday , Feb. 25, I 979

r-------------------------,1

I

1
I
I
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Letters of opinion are weleomed . TheY should be less

;

than 300 woi-ds long 1or subject to reduction by the editor) 1
aud must be signed with the signee's address. Names may 1
be withheld upon publication. However, on request, 1
names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste, 1
I addressing issues, not peuooalities.
I

I

I

'··

, RAMP--Do you qwilify?

.I
l

I

iJau. .,

I

! ···~-~:

I

Commends Dr. Boice, others
Feb. l9, 1979
Dear Mr . Editor :
Since January 17, 1979, I have been on the move, preaching
· down south and having ministerial meetings in California and
Hawaii. Early today we returned to La Jolla, California, and
am0ng the mail that was waiting for me was a letter from
Elmora Boice.
As soon as I saw the return address, I flit the great
sadness of what I was about to read.
All my lif~ I have known Raymond E. Boice.
Raymct..J his brother, Robert, his late sister, Eloise, my
brothers (the late Art "Pappy," the late Harold "Tuff." and
Lawrence ( "Goat" 1 and my sisters (Ka therine, Dorothy ,
Margaret, Wld Betty-my youngest sister , Norma, was born
after we left Hobson-all lived in Hobson where Raymond 's
father had a store and where my father was one of the coal
miners.
· Raymond and Robert went on to become outstanding
Doctors of Medicine .
Robert went elsew here and served with distinction.
Br other Art coached several teams in college and professional
football. ,
Other na tive sons of Meigs County made notable
achievements in various fields of endeavor, and your good
paper told our home county about those accomplishments by
Meigs County native sons a nd daughters.
While I am sure that all of us who have been listed as
having made worthy contributions to life in other
areas
after
gettin~
our
educational
and
inspirational starts in Meigs are grateful for
your generous coverage and printed praise, I know
that tnere are tnose wno were corn m .,,eigs County, got their
educational and character starts in our home county, and then
STAYED IN MEIGS COUNTY the rest of their lives to serve
with devotion and effec tiveness, to give leadership in their
chosen fields and in other ways so that the people of our county
might have richer, fuller lives.
,
It is a matter of written and spoken record that for years I
have felt that among all the wonderful people of Meigs the two
whom I consider most worthy of being chosen MEIGS
· COUNTY MEN OF DISTINCT ION were - are Raymond
Boice and Fred Crow ! I can see Raymond now in my mind's
eye and in my life's gratitude as I look back to January 1978
when gracious leaders of Meigs County, headed by Attorney
Crow, and other noble men and women gathered to honor those
who served well in Meigs County in 1977 (and more ) and 'to
honor me.
Just ten feet from the speaker's podium sat Raymond, I
thought.he should not have come .out in the sn ow of that time,
but it was just like Raymond to want to encourage others.
I thought about the time that he saved my tongue from
being lost in an accident (what would I have done in life if I had
had no tongue ') in Hobson when he was just an intern.
I think of all the intervening years when Raymond Boice
was helping thousands of Meigs County people regain their
health and retain their health . Not many men in the history of
our ·beloved Meigs County have given themselves to help
people the way Dr. Raymond Boice did.
The message from his beloved wife tells me that Dr.
Raymond Boice is dead, dead in his seventh-fifth year.
I accept that , for in God's world every person must die in
the body, but Dr. Raymond Boice, the noted physician, the
wonderful healer, the marvelous friend, the noble citizen still
lives in countless lives he has helped and now he is eternally
with the Greai Phjsician. And he will continue to live forever!
Then, too, I would thank you and your good paper for all of
us native sons and daughters, in Meigs County an!l outside, for
your generosity in writing about us.
As my son, Mark, said, " You can take Ed Lewis out of
Meigs County, but you can't take Meigs County out of Ed
Lewis." Even if it were possible, I would not want it. I am
proud of Meigs County because Raymond Boice, Fred Crow;
and others have tnade it !row in knowledge, Wisdom and love .
And I am grateful everlastingly to Meigs County people for my
training and encouragement. - Dr. Edward W. W. Lewis,
Henniker, New Hampshire.

Wants ,questions answered
There are a few questions I would like someone in business
in or around Meigs, Gallia, or Athens Counties or surrounding
areas to answer. Can any of you people tell me what young
people are supposed to do to get experience for a job they are
educated for ? Most of th e kids (young adults) I know are really
good people, lived good cle~n lives and are in no trouble with
the law except parking tickets, who among us doesn't get
those ? They go to church, have been in National Honor Society,
Band, 4-H, on the honor roll and graduated from high school,
and some from college. Why do you business people give them
the run around between th e ~mployment .office and your
business? When you do let them fill out a job application when
it comes to exoerience thev have none. Then that is the end of
it. You don 't even bother to talk to them any longer.
Whlit good is all the education and diplomas and all the
things they get they are supposed to, except a lair chance for
some one ·to g1ve them the expenence they need. What
happened to the old fa shioned secretary who used to stay
awhile after a new one was hired and show the new one how
everything is done? -Name withheld on request.
.

.

Indict teacher
TOMS RIVER, N. J. (AP)
- A teacher has been indicted by an Ocean County
gra nd jury on charges of
murdering an austisti c
teenager left in his care.
.Jeffrey Clark, 32, of Dov~r
Township, was accused 9f
killing William B. Graham,
15, of Columbus, Ohio, last
July 12.
The handicapped youth 's
partially decomposed body
was found by authorities five
months later, wrapped in
plastic bags and bedclothes
and left on Clark's apartment
balcony.
An autopsy showed the
youth died of coch e&lt;i~, an
e ma ciated condition
assoc iated with chronic
illness.
Clark had first told police
that the boy had jumped out
of his car and fled on Sept. 27,
1978, while they were driv ing
in Pennsylvania on their way
to visit th e teenager 's

parents. State police called.
off their search after three
days of looking . fa iled to
locate the youth .
In a later statement, Clark
said be was wrestling with
the Graham youth when the
teenager hit his head on the
floor .
Clark r emain s fr ee on
$50,000 bail.

SEEK LICE NSES
G!II.LIPOLIS - Making
a pplicat ion for marriage
license in Ga llia County
Probate Court Wednesday
were Gregory Allen Shelton,
22, Gallipolis, auto salesman,
and Deborah Ruth Burdette,,
20, Gallipolis, aerating room
technician.
Makjng application Thursday were Kenneth Leiand
Ours, 24, Crown 'City, truck
driver, and f!ebccca Lynn
Rankin , 22, Crown City,
receptionist. ·
·
·'

'

STUDENT CHOSEN - Trey Glaze, Middleport
Elementary School tlnra graaer, oecause or ms artiStiC
talent was selected to create this. poster containing the
names of students of the school who achieved the
completion of a word study during _Right to Read Week.
Names of other students will be added as they complete
the requirement for listing. Trey, pictured with his poster,
selected the popular Battle Star Galactica for the theme.

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

l'OM EHUY - '!be U. S. contract for at least three
Soil Conservation Service additional years to be sure
(SCS) office at the Farmers vegetation is established and
Ba nk building in Pomeroy is maintained.
prepared to help landowners
Th e landowner will help
determine If they have tracts determinethe cost-share rate
eligible lor federal assistance for his property. The first
under the Rural Abandoned co11sideration for a higher
Mine Program (RAMP).
rate will be whether the main
· Signu'p under the new 'reclamation benefits will
program lor unreclaimed;
abanqon~d coal mine lands
will run through March I.
Lands ·and ·waters are
eligible for , reclamation if
they were mined for coal or
were affected by coal mining
processed and were left ·
abandoned or inadequately
reclaimed before Aug. 3, 1977 . .
Three
fa ctors
will
disqualify coal mined land
from the program. No land is
eligible that is federally
owned or controlled.
· RAMP won't accept lands
for which the state or coal
company
still
has
reclamation responsibilities.
The land may not be under an
existing easement or lease to
be remined.
. ROTARY SPEAKER If the land is eligible, SCS
Ray Mason, past Dislrlct
will help landowners prepare
Governor of District 619 of
reclamation plans. It will be
Rotary lntematlonal, was
financed at a rate of from 25
the guest speaker at the
to 100 percent of the total
weekly dinner meeting of
cost.
the Gallipolis Rotary Club.
Surface owners do not have
Mason toured ·South
to own or have control of
Korea in May 1978, as a
mineral rights to participate
guest of Rotary IniD the program. This is based ternational and General
on the fact that mineral
Jack Vessey, . Co111mander
rights owners, if qiflerent · · of combioed forct:Sin South
from surface owners, must
Korea.
obtain the permission of the
He said that the middle
surface owners for surface
class people of South Korea
mining activities.
are devoted to rebuilding
No more than 320 acres of
this ' country after It was
eligible lands and waters
leveled durhig the war. In a
may be offered for contract
short period of time, they
under one ownership in the
have done an unbelievable
new program. The rule apjob ol rebuilding the inplieSlo individual and family
dustry aod transportation
oWnerships, as well as a
system of this small
corporate ownership.
country.
A landowner taking adSince South Korea will
vantage of RAMP will sign a
have
(he
Industrial
5 to 10 year contract.
capacity and tbe necessary
Reclamation work will Start
manpower to produce, they
within 12 months after
will become a major exsigning. The Involved land
porter of manufactured
mu st stay under RAMP
·
·
goods.

accrue to the public off the
site. Then, the landoWner
may get a higher rate if
paying part of the costs would
create a financial burden for
him - that is, if he could not
recover those costs as a
result of the land uses after
reclamation.
The maximum federal costshare, 100 percent, would

apply only to the first 120
acres. A c!l!ninlshing rate of
.cost-share will be used for
larger tracts.
Lands and water reclaimed
under RAMP may be used for
growing crops, hay, or
woodland; for wildlife
habitat; as natural areas, or
for . non -c ommerc ial
recreation.

UpJate heirlooms into
NEW GIFT
TREASURES
.ii ;

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~ -~

:-;

-~J. '!lin~

~

. BONELESS

JOSEPH DRAKE
POINT PLEASANT ...
_Joseph Rfa ke,, 67, 2110
Monroe Ave., Point Pleasant,
died this morning at Pleasant
Valley Hospital after a long
illness.
He was born Jan. 14, 1912, in
Stoutsville, Ohio.
He was a retired furniture
inspector for Lazarus in
Coliunbus, Ohio. He was a
member of the Masonic Lodge
476, Cohunbus.
Survivors are his wife, Jean
Drake, Point Pleasant; a
daughter , Mrs. Joyce E .
Hinton, Columbus; a son,
Donald M. Drake, Columbus;
two . step sons, Thomas E ..
Huddleston and David Huddleston, both of Point
Pleasant; four step daughters,
Mrs. Cl!oria Adler and ~rs.
Ruth Wilson, both of Canton,
Ohio; Mrs. Bonnie Huddleston, Columbus, and Dottie
Johnson, Point Pleasant;
three brothers, Carl, Harry
and Donald Drake, all of
Columbus; and three grand:!
children.
The funeral will be Monday
at 10:30 a.m. at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home with the Rev.
.Charles Roger and Rev.
Wllllam L. Snider offic!ating.
Burial will be in the Stoutsville
Cemetery, Stoutsville, Ohio.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 4 p.m.
Sunday.
CORA M. MORGAN
POINT PLEASANT
Mrs. Cora Mae Morgan, 87,
91 Burd.ette Add ., Point
Pleasant, died Friday at 2:45
p.m. at the Holzer Medical
Center.
' She was a member of the
Morning
Star
Ad vent
Christian Church.
She was born April 12, 1891,
in Mason County to the late
James and Amanda Meadows
Edwards.
Preceding her in cjeath was
her husband, Harvey W.
. Morgan, who died April 23,
1965, also three son preceded
her in death.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs. Beverly Sayre, Mason; a
son, D.K. Morgan, Belle; a
sister, Mrs. Ocle Riffle, Point
Pleasant; and eight grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren.
The funeral will .be held at
the Crow-Russell Funeral
Home Monday at 11 a.m. with
Rev. Herman Jordan officiating. Burial will be in the
Suncrest Cemetery:
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 3 p.m.
Sunday.
TED NffiERT
POINT PLEASANT
Theodore "Ted" Nibert 46
Gallipolis Ferry, died on
arrival to Holzer Medical
Center at 10:-ao p.m. Friday.
He was born July 8, 1932 at
Gallipolis Ferry to the late
Harry and Frona Nibert. He
was employed at the Point
Pleasant Marine Company as
a spray painter.
Survivors include his wife,
Violet Clonch Nibert, a
daughter, Mrs. Regina
Thomas, Gallipolis Ferry; a
brother, Harry Nibert Jr.,
Columbus, Ohio; six sisters,

I

Mrs. Stella Carlyle and Mrs.
Betty Jordan, both of
Columbus, Mrs. Archie
(Petie ) Austin and Mrs. Anna
Henry, both ol ·cailipohs
Ferry; Mrs. Lyda Roush,
South Gate, Mich.; and Mrs.
Audrey Lee, Point Pleasant; a
grandson, . David Clayton
Thomas, Gallipolis Ferry.
'l'h• fnnerill will be Monday
at 2 p.m. at the Wyoma
.Penecoastai Church ,
Gallipolis Ferry with the Rev.
Noah Callicoat and Rev. Ira
Wellman officiating. Burial
will be in the Wyoma
Cemetery.
. Friends may call at the
Stevens Funeral Home after 4
p.m. Sunday.
HAYDEN WOOD
GAll.IPOUS - Hayden
Wood, 79, Rio Grande, died at
9 p.m. Fri\fay at the home of
Odna Montgomery, 76, Court
St. He had been in failing
health one year.
. Mr. Wood was a retired
far!fler. He was born Feb. 26,
1899, in Perry Twp. son of the
late John J. and Laura E .
Hunt Wood.
He married Anna Mary
Jones on April 12, 1923, in
Gallipolis. She preceded him
in death on July 2, 1976.
For several · years, the
Woods operated a farm near
Cora in Perry Twp.
He is survived by thr"\!
brothers: Clifford, Gallipolis;
Willard, Gallipolis; henilan,
Patriot Rt. 2. Mr. Wood was
preceded in death by four
brothers arid two sisters.
Mr. Wood was a member of
the Rio Grande United
Methodist Church, and was a
charter member of the Cora
Grange.
Funeral services will be
held I p. m. Monday at the
Waugh - Halley - Wood.
Funeral Home with Rev.
Charles Lusher and Rev.
Robert Damschroder officiating . Burial will be in
Calvary Cemetery, Rio
Grande.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Sunday.
Pallbearers will be
Lawrence Lee Wood , Carlos
Wood, Junior Wood, Robert
Wood, Johnny Wood, Uoyd
Wood, Gene Wood and Allen
Wood.

BEEF

~~~~.~~.~..........~.~=.~.1 49 :5~~s . . . . . . . . . ~~: 59¢

.

~~
~

MAINE
POTA

99¢
DISH LIQUID •••••••..•• ~ ••••••••• :::z~. 79¢

.•"

KRAFT STAK PAK

Lb.

AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES.~~!-.~1

oz.$}39

8

oz. $}39

SOLE WILEMON BUTTER•• ~~~-...

PALMOLIVE

Gallipolis

14

MRS. PAUL'S

DEODORANT SOAP ~.~~e:.~.~h.~•••4.~~~

We ';e a gift for pkasing eVenuOrii

.

FROZEN FISH FILLETS••••••••••••

DIAL

CLARK'S ·JEWELE

.

MRS. PAUL'S FROZEN

LUNCHEON MEAT. ••••••••• !~.~:.':."..!l 19
"

LB.gg¢

..

1\1"111,~ CARROTS ..... 4.BAGS

ARMOUR TREET

){I
.

FRESHCRISP

GROCERY SPECIALS

Bring. in your heritage jewelry . We'll
beg lad to advise you as to what we can
make of it. Perhaps turn a Victorian tie
tack into a contemporary stickpin . Or
an outmoded ring into a new pendan t.
The possibilities are endless .
Comesee ..
·

(jd'ntH.. II.\
( l ~;l h\
pom~ ·r

s

STAR-KIST

~

1; 2

7
9¢
•.

oz.

TUNA IN SPRING WATER••~~~

69

.

CARROLL NORRIS

WHITE HAT

- -

1 _ C~U P C N

..

HEINZ

ON

NO. 105

MACHO
POWER
WAGON .

32

oz. Bn.

FLOUR

89~

·w;c
'

Limit one please with this couDon
coupon Expires March 3, 1979'
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

c

COUPC'\1

NO; 205
5 LB. BAG
·-- ·-

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59~

.

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NO. 155.

-

WLC

25

SOFT-WEVE .

w;c·

NO. 355

THANK YOU

-~

CHERRY .PI.E FILLING
.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

•

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i

Limn 2 Cans
21 OZ. CAN .

99~ W/C

Limit one pl~ase With thiS COUDOn
·Coupon Expires March li 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

..

iW/C

100 CT. BOX

PKGs.·
-

ROLL gg~

l

Limft one please with this coupon

l

J ·•'

JN

I ~~~;;;~~ L

·NO, 105

·LB; BOX

W/C

Lb.

Limit one pl11ase with this coupon
. C01Jpon Expires March 3, 1979
TWIN ,ClTY

49 OZ. BOX

'

'

I

('

W/C

.

'

~UPON

COJP(~ I'i

CTN.

49~

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires March 3, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•

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$}29

••

BANQUET DiNNERS .

'"

Turkey, Chicken, Salisbuiy, Meat Loat.
LIMil 4

W/C

11 OZ. PKG:

49

¢

.·
W/C

Limit one please wnn Thts coupon
Coupon Exp ire s March 3, 1979
. TWIN CITY GAiL .VA 'I
•

...

,,

.. ,., -

MARGARINE

59~ W/C

j

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Coupon Expires March 3, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

BLUE BONNET

ZESTA CRACKERS

COUPON

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Exp!resMarch 3, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

FAB

NO. 205
100 FT.

· _ w;c

$}79

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Coupon Expires March 3, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

SARAN WRAP

32RO~ .gg~
'

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TEA BAGS

COUPON

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Coupon Expires March 3,-1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

YOUR DODGE DEALERS ARE
THE --HIGH COST OF DRIVING.
SHOP AND SAVE AT CARROLL NORRIS DODGE, THE HOME OF THE
WHITE HAT SPECIALS, . .

69¢
4
60Z.
PKGS.

I

LB. BAG

TENDERLEAF .

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BATHROOM -TISSUE

schedule

COUPQN

ASSORTED MIXES

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

BURGERBITS

SPORt

L COUPON J
ROBIN HOOD

J

ROBIN HOOD

TOMATO KETCHUP

,T RUCKS.

Bookmobile
Monday, Feb. 26 - Wolf
Pen, 2:30-3 p.m.; Carpenter,
3:15-3:45; Dexter, 4-4:30;
Lan ·gsville, 4:45·5 : 15;
Rutland - Pomeroy Natl.
Bank, 5:30-6 : 15 ; Rutland,
Depot Street, 6:30-7 :15.
Tuesday, Feb. 27 - Long
'Bottom, 3-3:30; Reedsville,
Reed's Store, 4,-5 ; Tuppers
Plains, Arbaugh Housing ,
5:30-' ~ 30 ; Chester, Methodist
Church, 6:45:7:45; Baum
Addition, 8-11:30. .
. ·Thursday, March 1 - Headstart, Racine, 2-2: 30; Portland, Post Office, 3-3 :30;
·Racine, Home Natl. Bank, 45; Racine, Wagner's Hardware,
5-6; · Sy,racuse,
Swimming Pool, 6:la-li:I5.

.
1

$
69
ROAST~.~: ..

~ONELESS

ROUNDBONE

DODGE
D-50

Meigs

$

CHUCK ROAST.. .. ~.~•..169 ENGLISH

! Area Deaths I
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• B-1-'TheSunday Times-Sentinei;Sunday, Feb. 25,1979
A.a- TheSunday·Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 25, 1979

.

By BRENDA MOONEY

Associated Press · Writer
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga.
( AP ) - Nearly_a year after
the shooting of Hustler
magazine owner Larry Flynt,
residents and authorities of
this northeast Georgia city
remain stymied about the
whos, whats, wh~res and
whys of the ambush .
On March 6, 1978, Flynt
chatted with other patrons of
the V &amp; J Cafeteria as he
'!

FFA aims,
purposes

finished his lunch of gelatin Columbus, Ohio. Reeves still shnt up the street. Everybody
and grapefruit juice.
is haunted by telephone thought he was kidding.
Reeves, who described
· A few minutes after he and c a I I e r s c I a i m i n g
the ~· lynt as " a marvelous
his loca l atlorney, Gene responsibility for
person,'' sa id he would have a
Reeves, left to return to the shooting.
difficult
_time purging the
Gwinnett County Courthouse
"While the trial was going
shooting
incident from his
where F1ynt WBB being tried on down here, he (Flynt)
thoughts.
on charges of distributing came in every day.
~~rve had a munber of'
obscene material, gunshots Everything was fine" until
j a r r e d d o w n t o w n the shooti.ng, Jeff Britt, the kooks call me," he said . "And
Lawrenceville.
22-year-old co-owner of the V a prisoner in jail carne up to
me (at the courthouse) and
Flynt was le(t partially &amp; J Cafeteria, recalled.
paralyzed and is undergoing
"We
(the
cafeteria said he did it.
"I don't fear anyone here in
therapy in Calilornia, where workers) were in the back
LawrencevilltH"
said the
he moved his publishing--- --When-a friend of the cook's
attorney,
who
was
headqua rter,11 from came in and said Flynt got
~

•
hospitalized ' several weeks
with stomach injuries.
District Attorney Bryant
Huff said the shooting was
"professionally plarmed and
executed.
''The citizens of Lawrenceville and Gwinnett realize
that whoever shot Mr. Reeves
and Mr . Flynt did not come
from this area, but came for
that express purpose and saw
it as an ideal position .to
attempt to assassinate
Flynt,'' he said.
·
Huff said that there "is evi·

dence available to the police
department now that could
·result in an arrest in the
case," although he insisted·
poli&lt;;e do not have a specific
person in mind .

The county police generally
have remained closemouthed
about the case, saying only
that they are not focusing on

one area.
~· we

can 't have .tunnel vi-

B,y Larry Ewing

sion," said detective Capt.

don't think a shooting could
happen here again, even
indication if the perpetrator thougl) Flynt may visit the
is local, na tiona! or Atlanta area in March.
international.''
Reeves said he would be
A spokeswoman for Flynt, · serving as ~otlll'lel when
Jan Rogers, said neither the F1ynt attends a hearing oo
publisher nor his wife, obscenity charges in Fulton
Althea, has been impressed County. The charges in
with
the
way
the Gwinnett County were
investigation has gone.
dropped soon after the
Gwinnett County residents. shooting.
Rlchard Keen . "'Fhere's ·no

GALLIPOLIS- Flrst..::lass travel at -a cost that compares
favorably with airline fares will become available in
Southeastern Ohio with this week~s launching of CMS Travel's
Air Taxi and Charter !ietvice.
The Charter Service, which will officially begin operations
on Monday, will, according !D CMS managers Gary Koerten
and Vic Mullins, offer a degree of air travel flexibility in
Southeast Ohio never before known to the area .
"The major key is flexibility ," Koerten says in explaining
the service, "It will allow business persons and private
individuals to fly on their own schedule:"
Vic Mullins adds that the establishment, of air taxi and
charter service in the area will offer the following advantages
for local travelers:
.,.
-The service will be available 24-hours a day, seven days
a week.
-It can turn ovenJght trips into one day trips.
· -Provide quick access from Southeastern Ohio to major
airports.
- Reduce travel time by .eliminating unnecessary stop·, overs, ba~gage handling and rerouting.
Offered through Appalachian Aviation Inc. , lieensed by
the FAA as an air taxi commercial operator, the charter
service features six seat, twin·&lt;mgine Piper Aztecs.
With a perfect safety record, Appalachian Aviation pilots
are colllll)ercially licensed and are checked and retrained
every six months by the FAA. The chief pilot has ten years
experience, with over 4,000 hours of logged flight time.
Th.e Piper Aztecs are fully equipped for all-weather, dsy.or
night flights into all major airports.
Highway speed limits, curtailed airline service and rising
travel costs have stimulated management in many tYpes of
business to consider charter service as a solution tD travel
problems.
Air travel experts point to the following ways by which
. companies are using charter service to their advantage:
• - Reducing travel time and expense by tW"Oing overnight
· trips into one day trips, weeklong junkets into two or three
days out of the office.
- Establishing scheduled routes to frequent buslneu
_ &lt;!estinations and jobsites.
- Improving, management of branch operatiolll, field
- personnel and distribution outlets with more face-to4aee
-· contact.
- Increasing th-a speed of service and frequency of
. personal visits to important out-of-town customers.
- Providing immediate, on-call air transportation to
company executives, technical personnel, sales and service
representatives to handle emergency situations or fast
~ breaking new business opportunities.
- Opening u(l' new sales territories and serving as
temporary branch offices in new market areas.
- Taking prospects to product demonstrations at actual
jobsitesand bringing them on location to see products that are
impractical to move.
Travel authorities agree that charter airlines are a part of
a large and growing segment of this nation's transportation
system.
Aviation experts point tQ the fact that general and chsrter
service is the only air transportation available to more than
11,500 (95.0 per cent) of America's 12,000 airports.
As the basis of the nation 's business aviation fleet, general
and charter flights are the only air link with more than 19,000
,., incorpll'ated communities and over 375 cities with populations
between 25,000 and 100,000.
The airplane today is ranked, by thousands of executives
throughout the United States, with the ~omputer and other
modern management tools.
It increases the momentum of business activities and
~Ips accomplish a \eve! of flexibility, moblllty and time
utilization efficiency not otherwise possible.
Charter service can take travelers everywhere the airlines
go, plus thousands of destinations the airlines don't serve . .
No charter airplane is as fast as a comniercial. But often
charter service is quicker.
Total time from the point of departure to the destination
and return ean be quicker , experts say, because: you leave
when you're ready; there is no 30 minute check before
departure; many times lilnding is at an airport closer to your
destination; there is no wait on baggage; and, you return when

explained
BY RANDY SMITH
Racine F .F .A. Chapter
RACINE - The primary
aim of the F.F.A. is the
·'development of agricultural
leadership, cooperation, and
citizenship.''
·
· Every community and
organization needs leaders.
They also need individuals
who are good workers and
cooperate in getting a job
done. Good citizens are those
who carry their share of the
load.
Through the use of
Vocational Agricultural and
F.F.A. leaders are made.
Vocational Agriculture
offers
wood
working,
welding, and mechanics
along with leadership
training, animal science and
plant science. With the new
shop we have acquired
students who have the Ol&gt;'
portunity to do almost
anything, such as ouUding a
· red barn, constructing a farm
wagon or overhauling a
tractor.
Our advisor, Aaron Sayre,
instructs his students with
great pride and gives them
the con£idence that they can
be wirmers. From the advice
of Mr. Sayre, the Racine
Chapter of the F .F .A. has
do ubled in potential and
pride.
Some most recent acco mpli shments include
Superior Chapter, Gold ·in
Public Speaking, second
place District Beef and
sec on d place District
Vegetables.

Stress class
..
set March 5
POMEROY - A stress
reduction and a relaxation
class will be held from 6 to 8
p.m. Monday, March 5, at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
conference room.
Speaker will be Dr: Nan
Mykel, P.H.D., supervisor
psychologist, and the class is
being sponsored by the Meigs
County Department of Health
Hypertension Control
Program.
The class is for persons who
have high blood pressure of
all ages, family members and
interested persons. Residents
int erested in attending the
class are asked to contact, by
March 2, the Meigs County
Hea lth Department at 992·
3723 or 992-7160.

Airman honored
GRAND FORKS, N.D. Merit9rious service at Grand
Forks AFB, N.D., has earned
the U.S. Air Force Commendation Medal for Senior
Airman James P. Riso, son of
Mr . and Mrs. Francis J . Riso
of 51 White Terrace, Ramsey,
N.J .
Airman Riso, a personnel

specialist, was presented the
medal at Grand Forks, where
he serves with a unit of the
Strategic Air Command .
The airman is a 1~74
graduate of Ramsey High
School. His wife, Debra, is the
daughter of Mr. and MrS.
))a le Priddy of Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.

With the Purchase of Any
Bedroom Suite of '599.95 or
More _You'll Receive A Sealy Box Springs,
and Mattress - Queen or Full Size Selected By Our Salesman.
BARN PROJECT - Under the direction of Aaron
Sayre, instrucllll', Randy Smith, left, and Albert Holman,
work on a "ilttlered barn," a Racine F.F.A. project.

ABSOLUTELY FREE

SAWS WOOD - Donna Hubbard, Racine F.F.A.
student, saws wood as other students look on.

Lack of funds hurt prisons
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) An increasing number of

report.
Figures range from $3,639
at Ohio State Reformatory in
Mansfield to $6,864 at the
Ohio Reformatory for Women
in Marysville.

inmates and insufficient
funds have left Ohio's prisons
with too few employees · and
inadequate basic services,
according to a summary of a
soon-lo-be released
GONE TO !JOGS
legislative repOrt.
AUCKLAND, New Zealand
The Correctional In· (AP) - It is an offense in
stitution Inspection Com· New Zealand'for a dog owner
mittee of the General not to take his pet for a walk
Assembly · specifically at least once every 24 hours.
mentioned understaffing and
Recently an Auckland man
meal service' problems as was fined $35 under the littlecontributing to inadequacies used law.
at the state's penal in·
stitutions. Food budgets,
according to the summary,
range from 49 cents to $1.50 a
day
per inmate.
CLASSROOM - Bob Bill Lee receives instruction on
The 19-page summary,
RACE CAR DRIVERS
classroom work which is also a part of work in the Racine
which has not yet been of·
F.F.A. Chapte'r, from instructor Aaron Sayre, left.
Owners meeting 2: 00 P.M.
flclally released, doesn't
Looking on, right, is Randy Smith.
Sunday, Feb. 25th, Holiday
blame anyone for the con·
Inn, Rl. 50 &amp; 11.
dillon of Ohio prisons, but
Parkersburg, W. Va. 26101
indicates ·that a major
downfall lies with budgetary
SMEDLEY'S SPEEDWAY
difficulties.
'(Formerly Ohio Valley
kids
out
'
to
welcome
him
The annual cost of housing
LANSDALE, Pa. (AP) Race way &amp; Hilltop Speedhome
from
a
week
ln
an
Ira·
inmates
varies
among
Marine Sgt. Kenneth Kraus
way.)
.
grinned at the rain-drenched · nian prison, then brushed facilities, according to the
past reporters, saying he
wanted to see his family "and
hug them all night long."
Kraus, the wounded U. S.
Embassy guard held by Ira·
Ttw ENTERTAINMENT NAISEME"Nf CO
nian revolutionaries, arrived
aduh~
""f!IEN1S
here Friday night after a
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A ceremonial welcome earlier
judge has ordered a 16-year- at Andrews Air Force Base
old girl to stand trial BB an near Washington, where he
adult for a sniper assault on was greeted by 80 Marines, a
an elementary school that left military band, two U. S.
two dead and nine Injured. senators, his family an!! his
Superior Court Judge fiance.
William F. Todd Jr. an·
Marine Corps Cormnan·
nounced the ruling Friday dant Gen. Louis H. Wilson
and ordered Brenda Spencer praised him for his "inspirto appear In Municipal Court ing" actioos in Iran and
Tuesday to enter pleas on two awarded him a Purple Heart
counts of murder and nine of for injuries he suffered when
assault.
revolutionaries stormed the
Reporters were barred U. S. Embassy in Tehran on
from the 90-minute " fitness Feb. 14. Navy Secretary W.
hearing" at the request of a Graham Calylor Jr.
SATURDAY,MARCH17,8PM
defense attorney who alleged presented him the Navy Com·
TfCKETS : $9.00, $11 .00 ALL SEATS RESEA'YEO
ON Ul£: CIVIC CENTER &amp; All ENT~ OUTLETS
irresponsible reporting by a mendation Medal.
lUlL ON)ERI: VANN Hll , CJ0 CHARLESTON CIVIC CENTER , REYNOlDS
ST .. CHARLESTON. WV 25301 . CERTIFIED CHECKS OR MONEY ORDERS
television station.
Kraus was imprisoned
ONLY. CALL ~70 FOR INFOf!MATION.
"The judge ordered us not after the embassy takeover,
to say anything," defense accused of shooting three lraCHARLESTON CIVIC CENTER
attorney Michael McGlinn niall!l during the melee and of
said, adding that he called being a CIA agent, he told a
only one witness. .
news conference.
Aday earlier, McGlinn said
he plarmed to present reports
fro\)! two psychiatrists who
had studied the defendant.
unmistakably
As an adult, she ·could
receive a life sentence if
convicted on all counts. If
You think this is an ordinary huarache? Well,
tried as a juvenlle, she could
tor crying out loud! Look at the teardrop
be jailed until she is 21.
cut
from its cork wedge,.the sharp rain·
The burst of gunfire sbortly
bow striping $nd the comfy padded
before class time at
Cleveland-Elementary School
insole . N9w, that's something to
on Jan. 29 killed 53-year-&lt;Jid
shout about! In coppertone
principal Burton Wragg and
leather uppers .
custodian Mike Suchar, 56.
Eight students and a police
officer were wounded.

· ATTENTION

Sgt. Kraus welcomed

Sniper farw.s

afar cry from
the humdrum huarache

QVER 30
SUITES IN
.STOCK TO
.._••CHOC:ISE FROM

EXCEPTIONAL VALUES
TRADITIONAL
3 PIECE
LIVING
ROOM
SUITES

you're ready.
Chartered flights cannot match the coast to coast flight
time of jet airliner - they were not designed to. They are
designed to save travel time on:
-Trips to over 11,000 destination s that have airports, but
no airline service.
·
- Trips that have no scheduled service at the times you
need to depart and return.
- Multiple destination flights and flights requiring
interline connecti~s.
Most business trips involve "legs" of 100 to 500 miles. The
average trip in a business airplane is made with three
passeng~(S oo board.
A straight line is still the shortest distance between two
points. High speed, straight lilie charter travel, authorities
agree, can save thousauds of manhours each year.

• ,

utilization efficiency not otherwise possible. Charte~ service can !ake trave lers everywhere
the airlinesgo, plus thousands of destinations airline s don't serve.

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A
· line is still the shortest distance be·
·. · tween two points. Olarter ·travel, authorities agree, can
save thousands .of rnanhours each year. Even Icarus
would be impressed.

Athens patients guests
MIDDLEPORT-Forty-two
)ll!tients at the Athens Mental
Health Center were guests for
a community service · party
Thursday afternoon hosted
by the American Legion Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post
• 128, Middleport.
The AuXiliary members us·
ed a Valentine's Day and St.
Patrick's Day theme for the
party. Games were played
with prizes going to all of the
patients. Refreshments 1"ere

conn1e~

THE PIPER AZTECS are fully equipped . for . aUweather, day or night flights into all major airports.
Appalachian Aviation, Inc., pilots are commercially
license() and are checked and retrained every six months
· by the FAA. The chief pilot bas 10 years experience, with
over 4,000 liours of logged flight time. .
.

For A_Grate Deal on Purniiure o.r
Appliance See the Grate Family
at Rutland Furniture.·

-.

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se..Ved. Going to Athens 'o
assist with the party were
Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Enna
Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. Clif·
ford Christy, Sonia Parsons,
and Geraldine Parsons. Next
party will be held on May 16
for the veterans at the
Center.
Junior members of the aux·
iliary made valentines for the
patients and also assisted
with the refreshments.
.

Woman 's ·World

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1-

Qpen
Friday Til ·

BP.M.-

OF SHOES
N. 2nd Ave.

THE AIRPLANE today is ranked by thousands of executives throughout the Unlled
states With the computer and other modern management tools. It increases the momentum
. of business activities and helps accomplish a level of flexibility, mobility and time

R-LOVESEAT

DAVE, HERB, ARNOLD, WENDALL GRATE
OR GENE SMITH

heritage

in .Gallipolis

CMS Travel takesI

Flynt's ·shooting.leaves residents stymied

Middleport, 0.'

I.

\
i

t-

.·satlyanne F1otii

Charlene Hoeflich

446-2342

992-2.156

Pomeroy-Middlep(Jrl
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
..
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.~····································-·····
)

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MANAGERS, Vic Mullins, right, ~d Gary Koerten
are pictured in the map room of CMS Travel, 529 Jackson
Pike. Most business trips involve "le~s " of 100 to 500

miles. The average trip in a business airplane is made
with three passengers on board.

MELVIN FREEMAN

The Seniors Say.
skilled player to join in,
Center Activities
·POMEROY - Several beginners are welcome !
persons have reported seeing Those of you who are in·
robins in their yards, perhaps tcrested in playing canasta,
old man winter is about to say dominoes, bridge or other
games, let us know. We will
goodby.e for another year.
The Center is preparing for set up times for these ac·
a busy spring. The armual tivities and hopefully ,
!;:aster Bazaar will be held lessons.
T1.• film for this week is
April 5 and 6'featuring Easter
·called
"Quilting Women ."
candies and wood toys in·
This
film
traces the entire
eluding rocking horses, doll
process
of
quiltin g from
cradles and rocking chairs.
piecing
to
the
finale of a
&lt;;andymaking is scheduled
for March 12, 15, 19 and 22 and • quilting bee and conveys the
help is needed everyday sense of comm unity and
throughout the month of satisfaction derived by the
March to prepare craft it ctns women from their work .
Quilling Women will be
for th e bazaar,
B-eginning · Wednesday, shown Tuesday and Wed·
_March. 7, progressive ·euchre nesday mornings at 11 a.m.
Many ladies carry out this
will be scheduled from 1 until
fine
art at the Center each
3 p.m. The game progressive
week
day. If you would like to
euchre is played !JlUCh like
join
in th e quiltin g and
regular euchre but with a
different partner each game. conversations around the
You do not have to be a quilt.or would he interested in

.

• • •

Marine Corps Private
Melvin B. Freeman. Jr ., son
learning how to quilt, come of Linda .Freeman of P. 0.
into the Center. The ladies Box 120, Cheshir e, has
would welcome new fac es completed recruit training at
the Marine Corps Recruit
and skill.
Depot,
Parris Island, S. C.
Center personnel and
During
th e ' nine -wee k
senior citizens are very proud
training
cycle,
oe learn ed the
to be associated with Eleanor
basics
of
battlefield
survival.
Thomas, who was recently
named "Me igs County's He was introduced to the
Outstanding Woman of the typical daily---routine that lje
Year." Eleanor is a guiding will experience during his
enlistment and studied the
star for all of us .
Site Visit
perso nal and professional
Alice Wolfe · and Marty stand ard s tr a ditionally
Geyer will conduct a blood • e&lt;hibited _by Marines. _ .
He p_art1c1pated m.a~ actove
press ure clinic at the
Harrisonville Senior Citizen phy s ica l condt\lonmg
Club on Tuesday, February prog ram
and
gain ed
27 from 11 a.m. ·to 1 p.m.
proficiency in a variety of
Have a nice week.
military skills, including first
aid, rl~le marksmanship and
close o~der drill. Teamwork
and se\f·discipline were . ·
In 19~. the United States emphasized throughout the
pr esidential inauguration training cycle .
He joined the Marine Corps
was held in January instead
of Mar ch for the first time. in October, 1976.
J

�B-2- The Sundoy Times-Senti nel , Sunday , Fd&gt;. 25, 1979

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Retired teacher goes 'Down Under'
-·

"BEAR HUG" - Mrs . Jolley receives a hug from a
genuine, died~n-the-wool (or hear fur !) Australia native .

THE REV. CECIL TODD
(EDITOR'S NOTE: Mrs.
Evelyn
Jolley,
Point
Pleasant, a re tired Mason
.County teacher, made a trip
to Australia a few months
ago. Her story follows .) '
My trip to the continent
" &lt;!own under" reall y started
a week earlier than intended .
On August 24th. I left point
Pleasant about 6 a. m. and
was driven by my son-in-law
and da ughter. Cleo and
Wa nda Holley, to Columbus ,
Ohio. from Port Columbus, I
ooarded a TWA plane for St.
Louis where 1 ch anged to the
Ozark Llne and went on to
Joplin,.Mi.souri . ln. Joplin, I
was met by Larry Shead of
Revival Fires - a ministry
fo unded an d dir ect ed by
F:van gelist Cecil Todd . Mr.
Todd preaches on national
television and in .June vtsi ted
thr ee of th e commu nist controll ed cou ntr ies 1n
Europe for aoout 10 or 12
days. tHe was instrumental
in the delivery of 50,000 Bibles
to t he Christians over there.)
On the followin g night, a
Saturday , 1 m et with my·
friends who a year ago were
with me on a tour to the Holy
'La nd . Not all of the group
were there, but many did
co me, some from Virginia,
Kentucky and other states
oordering on Missouri. We
enjoyed reminiscing aoout
the trip and looked at slides,
movies and pictures of things
we had seen and forgotten;
we refreshed our m emories
of important places.
l was given the red carpet
treatment in Joplin . (I stayed
one week before leaving for
Australia .) Kathy Shaw, the
tour guide's wife, picked me
up'at the motel and took me to
church oervices on Sunday
m oming, after which I was
guest of the family for dinn er
at a restaurant. Another
friend, a minister' s wife,

called for me on Sunday
evening and drove me to her
The
ministe r
churc h.
escorted me home to the
mote l aft er the servic e
closed.
On Monday. Linda Sm ith
and Donna Ra nd , both
Sf'creta ries at Revival Fires,
to ok me to a swanky
resta urant for lunch ; on
WPdnesday evening Linda
cha uffeured me to her
ch urch !Ba pt ist ) for the midweek ser\'i ce. The church
building was very bea utiful:
waterfall in the foyer, large
rustic looking rafters in the
main -sanctuary with braces
to match ; a nd spacious
rooms und other attractions
were there to meet the eye.

On another evening Linda
and her hu ; band. Forrest,
ca lied for me to ~o out to
dinner with them. 1 enjoyed
everything .
On Friday, Sept. I , I started
the second part of my t rip.
Mr Todd . the evangelist,
drove me from my motel to ·,
t he J opli n a irport where
togethel' we boarded a
Fronller plane for ·Denver,
Colorado. We changed in
Denver to a United Airline
which landed us safely in Los
Angeles aoout noon Pacific
time. We rode a bus to the
PanAm section where we met
10 oth er members of the tour
group. Our departure from
Los Angeles was delayed for
about I"' hours due to a
defective wing on our plane.
In due time we arrived in
Honolulu . I had had my first
long nap on a plane. The High
Regency Hotel personnel met
us - putting on each of us a
lei and giving each woman a
kiss on the cheek - and took
us on a 20 minute tour before
unloading us at our hotel . It
was a 40 story structure, and
we were on the 15th floor . It
wa s a · beauti ful place :

sce nery was gorgeous ,
num erous esca l ators ,
stairways and elevators. The
most spectacular thing was
the noisy waterfall which was
across from the lobby . Trees
were growing tall in the
waterfall area. All of this was
a part of the hotel in the
center of a circular corridor
aro und the scenery and next
to some of the rooms in the
hotel.
The third floor -dining room
was spa cious with one side
opening onto a porch (tables
out there, too), from which
we could view th e beach. The
atmosp here
was
com·
forta ble,
but
unusua l,
because numerous doves
. walked continuously between
the tables sea r ching for
crumbs.
Breakfast was costly, but
sumptuous. Two eggs, coffee
(all you wanted ), hash
browns, 4 slices or bacon,
toast, jams and jellies and
other sweet breads galore.
The cost was $5 .22. That was
too much food for me. I or- .
dered that combination only
once.
On Saturday, Sept. 2nd, we
took a 3 hour tour of the city
and surroundin g territory.
We saw the gravesite of Ernie
Pyle, news r eporter killed
durin g World War II. We saw
the famous rainoow trees, the
ca pitol building, famous
churches and the grass sliack
of Robert Louis Stevenson.
We learned that Stevenson
never actually Jived in the hut
where it is now located but
had done so when it was
standing on the beach. We
saw an outdoor wedding
about to be performed. Our
bus· stopped a nd some of our
group got off to take pictures
of the bride and groom.
The houses and scenery are
difficult for me to describe
s ince there was such a
diversity oi ea:ch. There were
ma ny different sizes and
colors. I did not try to
remember the many unfamiliar nam es of flowers
and trees . It seemed we were
riding through a fantasy la nd
of green foliage and exotic
flower s and quaint houses,
· but some dwellings were very
modern. Luckily, one of our
gro up wa s very knowledgeable about the names of
about all of the plants and
trees. We heard many unf am ili a ~ names which I
cannot nica!l. I do remember
that Hkwaii ha s .two
pronunci ations
both
correct Hawaii and
Havair!
On Sunday morning, Mr.
Todd had arranged for us to
attend a church service at the
Kaimuki Christian Church.
The church bus ca lled for us
to a ttend the 11 o'clock service. The service was very~
informal. Most of the people

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"4 4.:16 1i.S6

.

l Social
1 {4tlendar

hMos_pitaE ~ttahypew~:~:~~
etgs . 0 un sypeak on 'blood
nurse, WI11
oressure.
MONDAY
BETHEL 62, International
AMERICA,N LEG ION
Order of Job's Daughters, AUXILIARY, Both junior
7: 30 Monday night at the 1\fid· a nd . senior units, Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,_
dleport Masonic Temple.
·
7:30 Tuesday night at , the
PUBUC MEETING 7 p.m.
Monday at Racine Village hall. Miss Erma · Smith,
Hall to complete details for Americanism chairman, and
a nnexation plan. ~eans of Mrs. Don Hunnel, legislative
financing water lines and chairman, will have the pro.
· streets for aniiexation to be gram.
SHROVE
Tuesday
pancake
discussed. Representatives
6
p.m
.
at
Episcopal
supper,
from Buckeye Hills, Hocking
Parish Hoilse, Pomeroy, open
Vall~y Regional Develop·
to
public.
ment Commission . to be
FREE
. BLOOD pressure
present. ·
clinic,
11 a .m. to. 2 p.m .
MEETING OF . Racine
Tuesday at Harrtsonvllle
Emergency Squad scheduled Town Hall sponsored by
for 7:30 p.m . Monday moved
Senior Citizens Club; public
to 6:30 p.m. at the fire station. welcome.
- TUESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING ,
WEERDONYESDAY MID·
POM
Middleport Masonic Lodge ·
363, F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. T~esday at DLEPORT LIONS Club ·
temple with work in the regular meeting , noon,
Fellowcra:ft degree; All Wednesday at the Meigs Inn ;
master masons welcome.
aU menibers urged to attend.
PAST
MATRONS
of
LONG BOTTOM Com·
Pomeroy
Chapter
186 munity ·Association meeting,
Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the 7: 30 p.m: Wednesday at
home of Mrs. Ella Smith.
· conununity building.

.....

Suggested

.

EYELET IN ABUNOI'7E f~r sleepy tim '
gals! Size x·smaii , srr ~'large.

---Etc. o

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'385.00 '303.00
'420.00 '309.00
'490.00 '366.00
'120.00 '616.00
1 1300.00 1977

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'400.00 '214.00
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1
'430.00 320.00
1490.00 1365.00
'520.00 1389.00
_1940.00 '721.00
'560.00 '411.00
'550.00 '404.00
'620.00 '455.00
'640.00 '466.00 .

152 THIRD AVE.

.

sorn.·etbing
..
s

11 nf

•,

.·,.

GALUPOUS .- Now, this
is my kind of weather ! ! ! I
suppose it's only temporary,
though ; there is an old wives'
tale (or maybe old husbands'
tale ; we . don't want to
discriminate!) that says it
will snow three times after
the forcynthia blooms. If this
warm weather kee)l6 up,
they'll be in bloom before
long. I'd J'ei:Onunend not putting away the .snow shoVels
yet!
·
·
There's going to · he a
celebration of 'Statehood dey'
in honor of Ohio's I 76th annivel'Sllry · taking place in

..

* 182 DAy CERTIFICATE

••
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,,
,.

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*.25% OVER THE ·WEEKLY
•

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_
AVERAGE YIELD ON TREAS"'RER
BILLs -INTEREST PAl., ON
MATURITY .

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Substantial Interest Penalty for Early Withdrawal ~

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GAwPOUS

7

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Mews Branch

8 YEAR CERTIFICATE. ,..
(f

DEPOSIT

$1,000

MINIM~M

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ft.tli_e118-totiniy-$a!1ngs ·&amp; Lo~
"Large enough to serve you. vet small enough to kn,ow you
RICHARD E. JONES. MANAGER

--· ..•

216 W. Main St.
All

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-

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HIGH 'YIELD
CERTIFICATES .·

@
fill
&gt;~~
*

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$10.000 MINIMUM

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400.00 '325.00
~400.00 '325.00
'400.00 '325.00
'680.00 '477.85
'325.00 1230.00.
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435-.00 '315.00

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fH-4655
Pomeroy, 0 .
to MO,OOOby The F...-rel S.vlngo &amp; Loan

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,.~--

·r

Chillicothe this week.
On Feb. 28, there will be a
recognition banquet at Holiday Inn, 6:30p.m. The event
will celebrate 50 years of high
school band music. Russell N.
Squire, founder, will be the
guestspeaker.
On March ' I, a prayer
breakfast will be held at 8
a .m . at the Trinity United
Methodist Church. The Hon.
William Brown will speak.
At JO a .m . the same day,
the Mouod City Group ·Nationa! ~onument Open House
will he. held, and continue until6 p.m.
·
At I p.m. - 5 p.m. again on
the first , · The Ross Co.
Historical Society wiU have
an Open House, with aU three
museums open and the
McKell Library will display
early state papers. Gala
celebration goes on · with a
turkey dinn e r at the
Chillicothe . High School
cafeteria, 4:30p.m. -7:30p.m.
The celebrations of March I
will
topped off wiih a
Statehood Day Concert, 8
p.m., in the ChillicOthe H. S.
Auditorium. The Chillicothe
H. S. Band will be featured.
On March 3 and 41 a
Loading Shoot will be held 011
the Primitive Weapons Club
Grounds, 10 a.m. to 4 p,m.
each .day. A Novelty Match is
scheduled lor Sunday, March

CIJFTON-Miss Susan Ann. and rust.
Fox became the bride of
Bridesmaids were Mrs.
William Robert Barnitz on Cathy Zerkle, New Haven, W.
Nov. 18 at 2:30p.m. during a . Va ., aunt of the bride,' Mt·s . .
candlelight seniice at the Sharon Cough, Manassas,
Clifton United Methodist Va ., and Miss Barbara Clark,
. Church. ·.
Lewisburg, W. Va. Their
· The bride is tile daughter of gowns ·were of identical
Mr. and Mrs. Sack Fox, Clif- design as the one worn by
ton.' The groom is the son of Mrs. Woodall but in peach.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnitz, All of the aUendants carried a
Mason. The Rev. 0 . B. Hat- small booquet similar to that
cher performed the double of the'bride.
ring ceremony. Jeff Bamitz,
The flower girl, Heather
brother of the groom, and Roush, Mason, W.Va ., cousin
Robby Gibbs, cousin of the of the bride, wore a gown
bride, were the candle sirnHar to that of the other at·
bearers. Carrie Hatcher and tendants in a floral print of 1
Jennifer .Weaver were the peach and rust and she carorganists and their selections ried a brown wicker basket ,
included "Theme from trinurted withautwrut ribbon.
·Romeo and Juliet", "Brian's
Serving as . best man
Song", "Sunslljne on My Ri€k Barnitz, Mason' brother
Shoulder", "Never My . of the ·groom, with Scott BarLove ", " Annie's Song" , nitz, Mason, also a brot~er,
"Dream of Love", "Color My Bill McMillion, Middleport, a
World", and the -" Wedding coilsln, · 'and Phil Hobbs,
Song."
Albany, as the lllbers.
· The bride was given in
For his wedding the groom .
. marriage by her parents and was .attired in ait all-white
escorted to the altar by her tuxedo and wore a peach rose
father. She wore a formal _ houtonniers . The best man
·gown of lace and organza wore a rust tuxedo with a rust
fashioned with a sweetheart shirt and the ushers wore rust
neckline, long sheer sleeves tuxedoswithpeachsbirts.
cuffed a! the wrist with chan·
Joluitty Barnitz, Mason, W..

.•,.

.."'; ...
:: ~

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was

tilly lace. The lace covered
the lxldice of the gown a nd ex.
tended. into. a cap effect over
the sheer sleeves compllinen· ling the lace skirt.
She chose a fingertip veil of
silk illusion attached to the
Juliet cap adorned with cban. tilly lace. Her only jewelry
was diamond heart earrings,
gift of the groom, a pearl
necklace, borrowed from the
groom'smother.
Her bouquet was an
autumn cascade consisting of
peach sweetheart roses,
yellow and peach pompons,
and baby's breath tied with
-long trailing ribbons of -mat.c h.mg co1ors.
Serving as matron of honor
was M~s. Mary Woodall,
sister of the bride. She wore a
ntst satin gown fashioned
with lone sleeves;an empire
waist and a righ neckline
with floral inserts In peach

.

4.

Va., brotherofthegroomwas
the ring hearer and he wore a
rusf tuxedo with a rust shirt.
He carried a white pillow of
satin covered with lace.
The altar was decorated
with brass candleabra and
flowers of · autuinn colors.
Bows'in autumn colors mark· ed tbe family ·pews. A unity
candle was lighted during the
ceremony and before the
ceremony a silk peach rose
was presented to each mother
by the bride.
Mrs. Fox wore a toast
qiana gown and corsage of
peach sweetheart roses ..The ·
groom's mother wore an
emera ld g reen po1yes t er
gown and a corsage of yellow
sweetheart roses.
· A reception honoring the
couple was held in the church
social roolll inunediately
following the ceremony. The
bride's table was covered

Mr. and Mr.r. Robett Bamitz
with white lace and featured

....

and Mrs. Lottie Roush, all

flowing lighted fountain. The
cake was topped with the
traditional miniature bride
and groom.
Mrs. Debbie Johnson and
Miss Sandy Engle registered
.the guests. Serving at the
reception were Mrs. Lela
Thomas, great-aunt of the
groom, Gloria Haroour, Mrs.
Judy Gibbs, Mrs. Mary
Roush, · Mrs .
Roush,

honeymoon in the Smokey
Mountains in Tennessee, the
bride changed into a · tan
jumpsuit with a multi~olored
blouse.
On the night before the
wedding, the groom's parents
hosted a 'dinner for the wedding party at the Point Pleasant Inn. The couple reside at
Clifton, W. Va.

•

&lt;" '

speak February vows

Randy Patter.ron

performed by the groom's
· father, Rev. James Pat·
terson. The bride's ·wedding
dress was long with sheer
sleeves ·trinuned with lace.
The 'groom was attired in a
brown crushed velvet suit.
·The bride's mother, Mrs.
Betty Mooney, wqre a tan
street 'length dress. The
groom's mother, Mrs. Peggy
Sue Patterson, wore a light
blue pastel street length
dress.
· The · wedding cake was
bakecl by the groom's
grandmother and decorated
by the groom's mother,
Peggy Pa"erson, topped with
a bride and groom. Serving at'
the table with nuts, mints,
cake and punch was the
groom's mother .
Taking pictures of the
evening was the groom's
aunt, Mrs. Phyllis Mason.
Also attending the wedding
were the bride's step-father,
Leroy Mooney, sisters,
Debbie and Bonnie, -the
groom's brothers, Todd and
Chris Patterson and grand. mother, Ella Mason.

Debbie Smith
·.·

Betrothal announced
MIDDLEPORT-Mr. and planned.
Mrs. Harold E . Smith, Route
I, Middleport, .are announc·
ing the ·engagement of their
daughter, Debbie Anr\, to
John Ray davidson, son of
the late Elizabeth and Be~
Davidson.
The bride-&lt;!lect is a junior
a t Meigs . High School. Her
fiance is a 1977 graduate of
Meigs High School and is .
employed at the Imperial
Electric Co .
'A swmner wedding is being

I just now received a call
from a very nice lady who
KERR - Florence Smith
was bemoaning the fact that
someone had . dropped a wed Randy Patterson on
large, male tiger cat on her February 5, .9 p.m . at the
doorstep. She said she'd like residence of the Rev. James
to- keep the cat, but she Patterson at Kerr . The
already has five ! I'd love to ' double ring cer•mony was
help her out, but my landlord
would help me out - right into
the street! The lady 's ntimber ,
is ~200 . If any of you
animal lovers would be
humane enough to help her
out, we 'd both he very appreciative ! .C'mon, people what'sone more???
I suddenly feel like donning
my cheerleading togs and going out into the middle of Se·
cond Ave. and cheering,
"C'mon, spring!" Why don't
you join me??
,.
Have a lovely, WARM
Striped Bandau Bni wiih
weekend!
adjustable sides . Bikini
swinl'pants. ·85 pet. nylon
with 13 pet. Spandex.

Dotty
Mann
BASS
BRINGS
SPRING

2.PIECE MMSUIT

GARDEN CLUB
TO MEET
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club wt,U meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the home of
Mrs. Margaret Parsons with
Mrs. Carl Denison as e»- ·
.hostess.
Mrs. Denison will conduct
the program using for her
topic, "You Call 'em 'Weeds
- We CaU 'Em Houseplats."
Timely reDJinders
for
March ·ww be given by Mrs.
Albert Woodard aod Mrs.
Jack Robson will exhibit ·
plant food.

....

a three tiered· cake atop a aunts of the bride. For a

-Smith, Pattersf!n

te

New! "Money Market"·Certificates

•'

....

NIIJ.a,&amp;&lt;~
f"
· .

·

9.620%

.
..

,I

.

HAVE A GOOD WEEK!

,.

1

..

PHONE 446-4066

Th~ neig~borsof Larry Ebersbach, Syracuse, extend their
thanks to him for cleaning their walks and driveway during the
~eavy snowfall.

THIS WEEI&lt;'S RATE

•.

GALLIA REFRIGERATION 'CO.
.

I'd just'lilre to caution.}'ilU drivers out there to be very
careful and if you come.up on a pool of water _ watch our-,- it
could be disastrous.
·
·
·

EARN THE, Hl(;iHEST
INTEREST· ALLOWED BY
'•

Sale

'

.

ace:

LA Will

CROSLEY WHITE GOODS SALE

2 C.N T18H5 Almond......................... ~ ............. ....-L.•••••
1 CNT18H5 AvoCado ......... ~ ...... •.• ..........•..•...•...•....•.

MEDICAL SUPPLY

----·
I

•

Mfg.

1 RT1474 White ....................................................... . '315.00 '329.00
1 , C~T1_8H6 White ................................................ .. . . '550.00 1378.00
1 CNT1 ~H5 White .................................................... . '490.00 1345.00

56 Sla te 5tret!1

•

.....

All ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE
DISHWASHERS:
1 DWU44B
Under Counter White .......................... .
- - ---1 DWM-441$ Portable .White ....•....•... .......................
RANGES:
1 RE36 White 30''..•..................................................
1 REG38C
.
. Terra Cotta 30"....... , .............................. .'
1 REG639cV White 30" Top Oven .............•..••.......•
REFRIGERATORS:
1 D12 White
..• ~ ....................•.........•.•..............•......•.
' -1 FD12T White ......................................................... .

COMPLETE
INVENTO!JY OF
RESPI!JA TO!JY
THE!JAPY
EQUIPMENT
&amp;SUPPliES

Home
Delivery

Have you been down the "dodge-em" trail lately?
The "dodge-em trail" starts upriver on SR 124 and goes all
.
the way down river to Pomeroy U.S: 33. .
Now I am sure. most drivers' have experience9 problems
· traveling in the ar!iil.
•
Last Tuesday our grandson, Robby, was admitted to
Holzer Medical Center. Driving back late that night, my oldest
son,father of Robby, was with me and we managed to have oo
' .
problems until we reaclted Minersville.
There was a car Coming down river and we were going up.
Just as I passed the·oncoming car my right tires struck a large
hole in Ute highway.
We traveled·a few feet and the right rear tire :went flat. I
pulled off the highway and called over channel nine on the CB
and.a lady answer.ed immediately . I don't know who the lady
was bui I certainly extend my thanks and cqngratulate those
ENGAGED-Mr. and Mrs.
, Route 3,
who are monitoring the emergency channels for an excellent
Pomeroy. are announcing the engagement · of his
.
.
.
job.
daughter, Debra Denise, to. Richard Woodrow Mora, son
While my 8on was attempting to .change the tire ·along
of Mr. and Mrs. ·Norman Woodrow Mora, R01Jte 3,
came Tommy, Goett, who was kind enough to drive us h!JIII" .
Pomeroy. The wedding will he an event of June 2 at I :30
Tom
Is Ute type of person who would offer assistance to anyone
p.m. The Rev. Carl Hicks will officiate at the Chester
in need and go out of his way to help someone. ·
·
United MethodiSt Church. A reception will he held ImWell
Ute
incident
cost
me
a
new
wheel,
not
to
mention
mediately following the open church wedding. The bridetwo hubcaps. I am sure many persona have had similar
elect is a 1978 graduate of Orange Park High School,
experiences
and probably worse.
·
Florida. Her fiance is a 1977 graduate rl. Eastern High
.
Like
to
p6int
out
that
the
124
and
33
maintenance
is the
School.
responsibility of the Slate 'Depar1ment of Highways .
.
TUESDAY
Pomeroy. Village has taken ste)l6 to see that paving of 33
'S
AUXIUt.RY,
from
.. Nye_ Ave. to. Sycam.ore and from. Butternut to the
WOMEN
p
M
B d
ill he
ed thi
Veterans Memorial· Hospital, · omeroy- ason rt ge w
~v
s ,sprmg.
·
Tuesday, l :~ p.m •. at_ th_e
~~~ethe re)l6ir of I~ up r.tVer 1 don t know what wtll

1 0LDE TYME" CEILING
PADDLE FAN 52" 2 SPEED W/LIGHT

RESPIIWORY SUPPORT SYSTEM

TIIJ.COUNTY HOME

l

Celebrating Our 1st Year With
FRIGIDAIRE &amp; CROSLEY

FRIGIDAIRE WHITE GOODS. SALE

·"· ~

I'

·J By Katie Crow

from •11.50

Second Awenue

-·•

I. . .

'

clapped their hands or held
served than 1 had an appetite beach towns a man carried a
On a Saturday, the ate Sunday dinner as the
them high in praise during
for .
yellow·toppedcockatooonhis following day, we browsed guest of our own evangelist.
the singing of hymns. The
The next day we left aoout shoulder for us to see. He was around in the stores until
On. the next d~y , following
soloi::t from Texas in uur 8:40 a . m. for a tour of the gentle, but when he was put noon, when the stores closed:
Continued on B-(
group played and sang for
Gold Coast towns .
down on the sidewalk, · he In the afternoon we did not
them one or two songs. The
A young man, Peter Tur- startedpeckingthechildren's get to go on another tour
service was dismissed and we ncr , a collector of fares, rode toes.
because of rain.
came out onto a second floor with us to the- downtown · ofOn the way up the inoWltain
The next day being Sunday
porch . Some ol the members fi ce. Because he was so we saw many· horses and we attended the Church of
ca nle to us with a lei - just handsome and a gQod talker, ·large numbers of cattle in the Christ on Ann Street in .
one - and believe it or not , I decided to snap his picture fields . At one place race Brisbane. Bruce Roberts,
put it around my neck. The for a souvenir. When I asked horses were being trained. On superintendent of missions of
minister's naine was Harold him if he knew about Ted the top of t)le mountain we Queensland, was the speaker
Gallagher frorn the mainland Kennedy, he replied, "1 sure could view the valley on the of the hour. As we entered the
USA . After dinner at the hotel do! ' ' •He seemed please and one side and the ocean on the building several people were
most of us rested, preparing thanked me when 1 told him other - also the high rise at the door to geet us. One
for the long flight to Sydney he reminded me of th e buildings in the city. There . man kissed the back of my
which started at aoout 1 a . m. senator from Massachusetts. were many cows, mostly hand and my companion as
lVfonday morning ( Labor
On our way to the Gold Frescians (Holsteins in we entered. Afterwards some
Day ). But the time we Coast towns,' we crossed the USA) . High up in the of our group said that didn't
arrived in Australia it was · Coomer a River! went out into mountains we saw a famous happen to them. My friend
Tuesday. We actually missed the co untry and up the lighthouse - Captain Cook said quickly, "He chose only
Laoor Day since we crossed mountains to Jaola National Memorial and Lighthouse. the good looking ones! "
the International Date Line Park aoout 2600 feet above Captain Cook discovered the
After the service, Margaret
somewhere during the flight. sea level. ·we rode on · the east coast of Australia· in · Stilwell of Illinois and I rode
404 Stc011d AW!Iut
We fl ew on a Qantas plane Pacific Highway to the sub- 1770. He discovered th e back to the motel with Mr .
446-1647
o.mpon••01111
weighing 345 tons when fully tropical wonders of Mt. ·. Hawaiian Islands , too.
Roberts and Mr. Todd. We
lo aded. The plane stands 6 · Tamborine with its Jungle
sto ri es high at the tail. Walks. waterfalls and scenic
During the flight 1 noticed lookouts before descending
that we passed through an the mountain to the highway
electrical storm. After aoout at Oxenford; then . to the
10 hours or more of flying and world famous Gold Coast.
crossing the equator , we There we strolled through
arrived in Sydney where we "Cosmopolitan " the ·surfer's
warded a . smaller aircraft paradise shopping area .and
for Brisbane, Australia. This the beaches. Next we went
was north of Sydney and took thro ugh the islands and ·
us about a nother hour to get beaches of the " Riviera of the
there.
Pacific", Tweed Head and
The,Gateway Motel was to Currumbin Bird Sanctuary
be our home for the next 11 • where tho.usands of brightly
days. Most of us went to bed colored birds £9me from the
and slept until Wednesday bush each evening to be fed .
moming. ·w e were ready for . There were cockatoos,
the good breakfast which was ·guineas, various small birds,
served in the restaurant on ducks , geese, swan and the
the second floor. The beautiful peacocks strutting
American type breakfast was to show their pretty colors.
included in our tour price.
The female has a darker
We were well treated at the plununage than the male.
motel. Besides the usual Her tail is not so long, but she
conveniences of a phone and str uts,
too .
Pelicans,
TV, we received daily a free numerous in number, with
\
newspaper, we had a small their long beaks, long necks
SIZE 4-20
refrigerator in our room and and wise looking heads were
facilities for coffee making of many ilifferent sizes. They
also. One bus tour was free, were plentiful on .the beaches
too . Our first trip was to a as wen as in the sanctuary.
AT
juice factory, where pure Some wer e extremely large.
pineapple juice is made In the sanctuary we
other fruit juices, too - a nd it snapped pictures. I to~k one
was delicious( (In Australia · of a kangaroo. He allowed me
cars travel on the left side of to rub him, too . In one of the
the road and the steering
wheel is located on the right
side of the cars. Sometimes
we felt our life was fn
j.!opardy when we met oncoming traffic.)
One item of interest we saw
while touring was th e
Southern Cross, a plane used ·
to cross the Pacific Ocean by
two pr:ominent flyers. The
peopl e there gaze upon it as
we in this country look upon
" The Spirit of St. Louis". On
Thursday we did a , little
152 3RD
GALLIPOLIS
shopping, mostly window
shopping, in Brisbane. We did
11
not take· a scheduled at--·
ternoon tour because of rain.
That evening we ate dinner in
the fashipna ble Gateway
Drawing To Be Held March Sth
dining room. More food was
No Purchase Necessary. Do Not Have To Be Present To Win

HOMEMADE OXYGEN

AND IINDIJI ·sui'POIIT SYSTEMS PIIFOAM W~HOUT LIQUIDS,
CHI.YICAU, MICHANICAL C~IS, GA$ FIWNG~. o• HIOH
N!SSUU 1'ANIC$ AND THI! HIGH COST op; HAUUNO HIAVY ,
CYUNDIU 15 IUMINATID 1'011 'IIIOSE PAT~NTS •10\JIMNG
CONTJNUOUS OXYOfN ot NtECU!NT SI!IYICE..

·IJ(a#~~:;----;-r Susan Fox w_e~
JRt:~bert _Bamttz z_n
-1Korner
1candkkght servtce

'

TO THE CITY,
'' 8" b fer Ute beautiful BulB's.
A great collection ol fUrty
st)'IHarw:!Jeathertcotae
you fnm~ee tnak to
dlnnetdale. Wben ltCGGiel

Colors:···Biitck com b:
Royal comb.
Sizes: 30-36 ·

top.tlh..U ..... fl:r~'l
breely I!Jrinlloob, f t 1f t
liCit yolr nwnber. 8aa200'1 .

'16.00

'

~I

STYLE CENTER

... .. The·
.,.;

-~

Shoe Cafe

. Gallipoli ~

•

�.
.
1f': __
__.. __________
....

_l ·

Community'
I
Cor11er I

.1

11-5-The ~unda_yTimes.&amp;;ntinel, Sunday, Feb. 25, 1979

'

March ceremony ·set

Homemakers'
Circle

POMEROY.:Mr. and Mt·'· llm·hanan of R~edsville .
The bride-&lt;!lect i• a grand·
J ,oiig Bottom , are annuunl'ing dau~hter of Mr. and Mrs.
the engagement of their Charles Bi:;.,cll of Bashan and
11
tlauJ,!htcr, Pamela Jcanncnc, Mrs: Lela Rirne Robinson of
tlt Grcg,,ry Edwin But·h.a~an 1 Jackson, formerly of Racine.
sun of Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Miss Riffle is a 1978 graduate
of Eastern High School and is
:1
By Charlene Hoeflich
11
employed
at the Heritage
1.
j
House in Middleport.
CAROLYN NORMAN
Her fiance is a 1977.
Last Sunday we mentioned that Mary Diehl, 102 today, must
Carolyn A. Norman of graduate of Eastern High
surely be Meigs County's oldest resident. She's .not. Della Car- Pomeroy has enlisted in the
nahan who lives near Chester will be 104 on May 10. She was u. s. Army through the School and a 1978 graduate of
.Jackson Manpower . School
. born in 1875. Anyone older] ·
·
assistance of Hu.ntington for Welding. He is employed
Army recruiter SSG Dave
For many years the women of Trinity Church have hosted an Lawson . Norman, the as a welder with Hartman
Ash Wednesday Lenten breakfast Anq invited women and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and Hartman Mining Co.
An open church wedding is
ministers from all other churches in the area to attend. .
Leland Norman, is a 1977 being planned for March 24 at
The tradition continues at 7:45a.m. We9Jlesday. It w1ll con- graduate of Meigs High 1:30 p.m. at the Chester
. sist ofa breakfast, quiet hour, and a short pr':gra"!·
SchooL
Church of the Nazarene. Miss
After training she will be Ri!ne's uncle, the Rev. Curtis
When Jim LohSe died the family 1'\'(lU«:Sted that in lieu of assigned to Europe as a
Randolph, Urbana, will perflowers contributions be made to the Meigs Band Boosters Military Police.
form
the ceremony.
Associ;tion. Jim was certainly a man of music, as well as coauthor of the Meigs Alma M~ter, and that organizalion seemed
most appropriate.
.
Today that figure stands just under $900 and the family extends appreciation to you who have contributed so generous!Y·
We understand that sometime later there will be a memonal
tribute to Jim:
1

I

I

Na11Cy Tonkin·

Announce_epgagement
CLARKSBURG - ·Mr. arid
Mrs. John Barnett Tonkin of
'101 Milford Street, Clarks·
burg,
announce · the
engagement of their only
daughter, Nancy Stuart, toP.
Scott Icard, ·son of Alice
Marie Icard, 2000 Jefferson
Blvd., Point Pleasant, and
Paul Icard of New Lebanon,
Ohio.
Miss Tonkin il a graduate
of West Virginia University

and Is einployed as a .Ocial
worker by the . Kanawha
Youth Services Council in

R.uv F. Rifflt\ Rasha n Rd~ ,

I

And speaking of the Meigs Band, that trip to Tennessee Tech
University at Cookville, Tennessee last weekend by several
students for a composer's clinic was certainly not all work and
noplay.
·
The group attended a live radio show in Nashville and due to
the heavy snow, got to spend another day in Tennessee doing
fun things.
.
Making the trip besides the .vocal and insii')UTlental mstruc.
iors, Paige and Randy Hunt, . and Alan HUfi\, were the ·
chaperone,· Ann Radford, .and students, _Lynetta Whlttmgton,
Eric Scites and Camille Swindell of the vocal department; and
Kevin King, Mandy Sisson, Stephanie Radford, Jana Burson,
and Linda Eason of the instrumental department.

Charleston.
· Icard is a graduate of West
VIrginia University College
of Law and is an attorney for
the Office of Legislative
Services of the West Virginia
Legislature in Charleston.
.
An Augus.t wedding is

Uttle Charles Alh&lt;irt Tyree is still at Ul_liversity,Hospital and
probably will be lor another cou~le ~ w~ks. ':le s leammg to
take nourishment now and his weight IS slowly mcreasmg. The
baby first son of Becky and Lanny Tyree, weighed only four
pounds, three ounces. Becky is home, doing'fin~' and she and
her husband this weekend are in Columbus trymg to still the
unhappiness of not being able to bring their baby home yet.

planned. :

And from Margaret Lee Runbeck- "Happiness is not a station you arrive at, but a manner of traveling."

0

week, the weather was extremely cold and windy. Most
of us stayed in to keep warm.
The day was typical of some
'
of
our days In . March. The
Continued from B-2
wind was so strong t.hat the
Sunday, Sept. ,· lOth, we force of it made some of the
started another bus tour to outside doors to the motel
Lone Pine, a reservation lor stand open. Some of the
koala bears, kangaroos, birds buildings in town had parts
and other creatures. Many of blown off.
us had our picture taken
On Saturday, Sept. 16th, we
holding the cute, cuddly left our motel early to fly to
koala . On our way back to the 1 Sydney, there to transfer to
city we passed Queensland the International Airport. We
University; it has an had hours to wait before
cnroll111ent of between takeoff to Honolulu. We ate,
seventy and eighty. thousand visited the gift shop, while
students. Near the motel we some of us watched on TV the
crossed the William Jolly · Mohammed Ali fight in the
bridge. Someone asked me if United States. At last we
Mr. Jolly was a ·relative of were on the plane and most of
mine to which I jokingly us slept; however, we
replied, "Oh, yes, he was one stopped at Fiji Islands, but I
of my famous ancestors!"
did not deplane because 11
· On Thursday of the same was night. It was still
Saturday - we had two when we reached Hawaii.
After luggage and passport
inspection, we were at last
headed toward the USA
mainland.
In Los Angeles we
'Large Selection Of
parted each one heading for
TRUCK TOPPERS
home.
, NOW IN STOCK
I like to think back on this
trip because 1 had such a
good time: the pleasant visit .
with my Holy Land friends in
Missouri; next Hawaii, the
vacationer's
paradise; and
Rl. 33
Hartford, W.Va.
last the wonderful fellowship
Pnone 882 -2127
in Australia.

Retired ..

--

.

llomel!'.c···
•

LIMITED QUANTITIES

Converti
Upright

'P ortapower!

• All-stee.l agitator
• Big disposable bag
• 4-on·the-floor carpet shift

Full Time
Edge
Cleaning!

T

$64

GALLIPOLIS - If your
garden produced a good
harvest last summer and you
worked hard to put some of it
in jars for future use - .now is
that future. You'll want to use
it up before another gardening season co111es around .
Canned food is best If used
···· within a year's time.
When you're ready to use
home canned food, inspect
the container carefully before
. you open lt. If a can or jar lid
shows any sign of swelling or
leakage, the U. S. Depart·
ment of Agriculture advises
you not to open the container.
If a jar lid ls loose or the
contents of a jar are foamy or
ttl!erwise visibly abnormal
do not open. If you notice any .
of these defects; · place the
whole container in a heavy
plaStic bag and tie the top
securely. Place this In double
paper bags with· a heavy
packing of newspapers. Tape
or tle the top securely_and
place in a garbage can with a
lid. Then wash your hands
thoroughly. Of course, not aU
spoiled or leaking ·home
canned
foods
contain
botulism toxin, but some do,
so take' extreme caution in
disposing of the spoiled ,food.
If you find .a defective con·
tainer of food, inspect all the ·
cans or jars of that batch of
canning. Never taste the
contents of a suspect product.
Not even lf you're dying for a
taste.
If you.failed to process your
jelly in a boiling wat~r bath
after sealing and the telly 1s
moldy - discard It! Yes,
even moldy jelly is a potential
carier of botuUsm. It's better
1D be safe than sorry!
Even if your home canned

foods look great, remember
all non-acid home canned
foods should be boiled for ten
minutes before tasting, except greens and com, and
they should be boiled fifteen
minutes, covered.
We had a question recently
about what to do about home
linda Kenny
canned foods that have been
frozen. According to the U. S.
Department of Agricuhure,
freezing does not cause the
food to spoil unless the seal is
damaged or the jar broken.lf
the jar is no longer sealed, the
food may still be safe to eat if - POiNT PLEASANT - Mr. from DeSales High School
the jar is not broken and food and Mrs. William T. 'Kenny, and is employed by Nationis still frozen, and has not 321 Delaware Dr., Columbus, wide Insurance Co. Her
been subjected to thawing announce the engagement of fiance graduated from Point
and refreezing. Remove the their daughter, Linda Marie, Pleasant High School .in 1976
frozen canned food from the to Scott Alan Burris, son of and is a junior at Ohio State
jars as carefully as possible, Mr. and Mrs. Worthy Burris, University.
ln as large blocks as you can Jr'., Rt. I, !'oint Pleasant.
A late spring wedding is
remove through the jar
The bride·to·be graduated being pla~ed.
opening. Examine jars for
breaks and hairline cracks. If
you find any, toss out the
Coin show planned First Step Club met
food. If there are no cracks,
GALLIPIOLIS - The First
transfer the food into freezer
POMEROY- Plans for the step Mothers Club held its
bags or containers and store 16th annual coin show to be
in the freezer, or keep It in the held on Sunday, March II, at monthly meeting Tuesday,
refrigerator and use up the Holiday Inn in Kanauga , Feb. 13 at the Holzer Medical
within a day or two. Home will be made when the OH· Center fifth floor classroom.
Plans were discussed
canned foods which have KAN Coin Club meets
concerning
the T.G.LS.
been frozen may not taste and Monday evening in the
(Thank
Goodness
It's Spring)
look as good as ordinary Riverboat Room, Meigs
Dance
which
is
Saturday,
canned foods due to changes Branch, Athens County
March
24,
at
the
Elks
Hail
in texture. Do not recan Savings and Loan, W. Main
with
Jack
O'Shay
as
disc
home-canned foods which st.; Pomeroy.
jockey.
have been frozen . If your
Out-of-town coin dealers
Cathy Wray, president,
area is having a cold snap, will be present to buy, '*'II or
introduced
Dr. Gene Abels as
and your foods are iltored trade ·collector items during
guest
spea
ker for the
where they will freeze, wrap the social hour, preceding the
evening.
He
spoke on the
the jars ln paper or ~over 8 p.m. meeting, Following the
subject
of
"Your
Heart."
them with blankets. But 1f the meeting a coin auction wlll be
Those
attending
were
storage area temperature is held. Refreshments will· be
.
Cathy
Wray
,'
Barb
Sheets,
expected to be below freezing served. Anyone interested in
for more than a day or two, coin collecting is invited to Cheryl Basil, Patty Hut·
move the food to a warmer attend Mond~y evening's chinson, Sharon Hutchins,
Carol Thompson and Sheila
place.
social event.
Ferguson .

Kenny, Burris plan
late spring wedding

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plus...
of the ClrS Bank

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a savings account or a checking

account. of $300 or more, or if you add
$300 Or more to an eKisflng Savings
~ccount. The gift is a sef of 4 harrdsome
sfeak knives or a handy 3 bladed
pocket knife . The supply is limited so
make your deposits and gel your
knives from the Spring Valley Branch
of the C&amp;S Bank.

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CHOICE

USDA
CHOICE

USDA
CHOICE

BONELESS
cHUCK STEAK

BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST

BONELESS
POT ROAST

$15!.

$15!

$}69

LB.

VINE RIPE

TOMATOES

GOLDEN
DELICIOUS

YELLOW

U. S. NO. 1

·APPLES
3LB. BAG

ONIONS

POTATOES

3 LB. BAG

20 LB. BAG

49~B. 99~

49~

oz.
HOLSUM WHITE BREAD •••• ~~~~ •••
20

COOK-N-BAGS

. ·.

·MlllfOLIS
BUSINESS
COllEGE
p,. o.

Box 749

R

• No. 75-02 0472 8

PEPSI.
DIET PEPSI
8,160Z.
BOTTLES

GALLON PLASTIC

Plus Deposit

STOKELY

FRENCH
GRE~N

BEANS
15 oz. can

3~ go~•
VIVA
NAPKINS
140 Ct.PKG.

KRAFT

VAN CAMP

MACARONI

PORK

&amp;

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CHEESE

BEANS

7.2 5 o-z. Box

160Z. CAN

3g 89~

3~

WHIPPED
MARGARINE
6 Stick

16oz. Pkg.

180Z. BOX

3g~gg~
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STOKELY

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CHOCOLATE
DRINK

APPLE
SAUCE
.

PINK
SALMON

17 oz. can

IS.s Oz. Can

59~
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MIRACLE
MAIZE

ALL STAR .

Gallon Plastic

of ·

information, Contad

3i89¢

99¢

2% MILK

UCENSE?

complllo In only 12 wee~&lt;~
enroll now I Classes .wil
begin April 2. For more

SOZ. PKG.

17 OZ. CAN

3 .~

come .

We oHer the accredited
P!!\'ram of clals work
you re required to complete before taking the Ohio
Stato Board ExamlnaHon.

3

STOKELY
WHOLE KERNEL

WEDNESDAY
PYTHIAN SISTERS, K of P
Hall, 7:30 p.m. Regular·
meeting; all nietnbers please·

tt'• so ..,y to be a member
a
fast
growlna
profession. Stei't now,· by
dudying at GBC, 2 or 3
evenings a week.

CHUCK STEAK- .

CHUCK ROAST

WHOLE$}79
OR
HALF
LB.

SUNDAY
TOMMY SPENCER to speak
at Young People's Service,
Paint Creek Baptist Church, 7
p.m.
MONDAY
OLDTIMERS' NIGHT, Elks,
BPOE 107, dinner 6:30 p.m.,
eeting 8 p.m. Dinner free for
all Oldtimers and Past
Exalted Rulers.
VOLUNTEER SERVICE
Assoc., 7:30 p.m., in Dining
Pavilion at GSL Anyone
interested in volunteer work
is welcome.
.
JUNIOR WOMEN'S Club wil
meet 7 p.m. in the home of
Pam Terrizzi, Crouse-Beck
Rd. Plans for the dance
discussed .
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club, I
p.m., at home of Mrs. Jenny
Elliott.
OPEN GATE Garden Club,
hostess
Mrs.
Audrey
Wickline, 7:30 p.m.

·' 446 4367

•

USDA
CHOICE

CORN

..... s......

Peak h.p.

USDA
CHOICE

SUPERIOR
BONELESS

butter, milk.
Tuesday - Baked ham,
creamed corn , esca lloped
potatoes, applesauce, bread,
butter, milk.
Wednesday - Hot turkey
sandwich · gravy, whipped .
potatoes, buttered broccoli,
peaches, peanut butter
cookies, milk.
Thursday - Pot roast of
beef, whipped potatoes ·
gravy, green beans, apricots,
bread , butter, milk.
Friday - Baked fish , green
peas, fruit cocktail salad,
oatmeal cake, bread, butter,
milk.
Please register the day
before you plan to eat.
Pomeroy, 992-7886. Portland,
843-3364.
Menu for the Satellite Site
at the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter·Day
Saints, Old Town Flats, is
similar to the above menu,

Spring ValltY Plaia

Silver Bridge Plaza

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY FEB. 25 thru SATURDAY MAR. 3

WANT A
REAL ESTATE

2 pound $100

PHONE U6 9593 .

·VINE STREET,
GALLIPOLIS,' OHIO
.
.

orange juice, cornbread,

ORANGE SLICES
JOLLY JELLS
SPICE JELLS

The Commercial lr Savings Bank
25 Court Street

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

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Broad, bright beam of
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The Spring Valley Branch of thii C&amp;S
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POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High Scilool
is open 8:30 a.m.-4 :30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
Monday, Feb. 26 Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.;
Square Dance, 12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 27 - Movie
"Quilting Women," 11 a.m.;
Basic Sewing, 10:30 a.m.;
Physical Fitness, 11:.30 a.m .;
Chorus, 12 :30-2 p.m.
Wednesday , Feb. 28_ Social Security Represen·
tative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.:
Movie "Q uilting Women ," 11
a.m.; Physical Fitness, II: 30
a.m.; Games, 1·2:30 p.m.
Thursday, March I Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.;
Kitchen Band, I p.m.
Friday, March 2 - Art
Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon; ·
Physical Fitness, II :30 a.m. ;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program,
12 noon to 12 :45 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
COAD Senior nutrition
program menu for Feb. 26
through March 2.
Monday - Chili con came,
cottage cheese pear salad,
rice pudding with raisins,

88

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1
Calendar 1

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$}59

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Half Gallon

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18 Oz. Jar

·sg~

$}19
89~
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I
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'
B-7- TheSunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Feb. i5,1979

Nita Wisniski battles 'silent killer '

8-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 25, 1979

'The Wondetful World of
-weddings' theme offashion
show to b~ held in ~elpre

Miss Pkkens .honored by shower
POMF.ROY- Mrs. Tairuny
Pickens and Mrs. Dreama
· pickens entertained recently
with a bridal shower honoring
Vicky Pickens, whose marriage to Greg Smith will be a.n
event of March 3, at the Bradford Church of Christ.
· A· red imd white color
scheme was earned out in the
decorations: Games , were

Diana and . ·Randy Bing,
Madeline Painter, Calista
Searles, . Myrna Custer,
Eileen Searle~, Catherine
Russell, Doris Swanson, Bonnie Pickens, Tamela Jill
Pickens, arid the hostesses.
Sending gifts were Mr. &lt;!nd ·
Mrs. Tholi18S Garten, Edith
Forrest Halli~. Charles and .
Sheila Willard, Sam and Eini· .
ly Pickens, Mildred and
Dwight Hysell, Clara JefferS,
E!nma Roush, Debbie, Vivian and Jason Pierce, Bonnie Ughtfoot, Pat and Linda
Noel, Sam and Elaine
Willard, Tressie and Harry
Hendricks, Cherie and Susie
Lightfoot, the Bradford
Church Missionary Circle,
VISITORS
Rhcnda Hoover, Bradford
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs.· Church Young Adult Class,
DeWayne
Beckfield , Bud Bartrum, · Jim and
daughter, . Peggy and son, Jackie Reed, Hildr!!d and
Brett; of. Fonda, Iowa, left Kenneth Clark, Helen Miller,
· .FriQlly !DOming after a · Frances Hysell, Cindy Davis,
several days' visit with their .. Wilb~ and Tillie !lawley,
son-in-J~w and daughter,. Marcella and Maurice Durst;
Paige and RandyHunt.
Jean Ann and Alan Durst.
played with prizes going to
Sylvia Blake, Becky Painter,
and Nancy Morris. · Doris ·
Swanson won the door prize.
Refreshments were served.
Attending the showef were
Marge Wilt, Marilyn Wilt,
Phil Mullen, Drema Smith,
Tracy Smith, Nancy Morris,
Janice Haggy, Laura·. Oliver, ·
Ele!lnor HQover, · Sylvia
rBlake, Gerry Lightfoot, Norma Russell 1:'19ra Cambro~,
Ruth. · UnderWood, Virginia
Underwood, Judy Sargent,.
Fonda Wood, Becky Painter,

Dy Charlene Hndlkh
POMEROY-High ·blood pressure, sometimes called th&lt;•
"silent killer" due to a lack of symptoms, need not he viewed
with a grim outlook if it is detected early and steps are taken to
control the condition .
Nita Wisniski, R. N. has been in Meigs County for the pilst.
two years conducting a hypertension control program and dur-

.·:...~

married March 4, 1929, at ·

~

r l'

~-- ~

NITA WlSNISKI, R.N. heads the hypertension control
program in Meigs County. Funded through the State
Department of Health, Mrs. Wisniski works .out of the
Meigs County Health Department which this week will
move into new quarters in the former Meigs General
Hospital building on Second St.. Pomeroy.

. Arllhia Spring .

june wedding planned
by Kennedy-Brown

·Don't. Miss It! ·
.

GALLIPOLIS Mrs. School, Gallipolis Busine~s
Thomas Kessel, Jackson College, .and attended Rto
Pike, Gallipolis, announces Grande College. She is ·~
the engagement of her sister, accountant with Columbia
Barbara Ann Kennedy, Gas of Ohio Inc. in Columbus.
daughter of the late John Her fiance graduated from
(Dick) a·nd Mary Kennedy of Linden McKinley High School
Porter to H. Robert Brown. and Bliss College. He also is
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E . an accountant with Columbia
Brown, Columbus.
Gas of Ohio:
.
The· wedding will be an
The bride-elect graduated
from North Gallia High event of June 2 in Columbus.

&gt;tl

•: J

.)·

.,

.

'

HANG ON 10 YOUR.
'

CHRISTY
KAREN
MERRI
RITA ·
BEVER,LY
MARY

..

We're oiferlng you alanlastlc 30 pel. savings on Arabi'
- the classtcally stmpte .- simply beautiful tableware
from Fonland lor a llm.iled time only -

PAULA
PAUL

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Comfortable "hi!ih· · resiliency"
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Miss Carry engaged

seating comfort.

GALLIPOLIS - SFC and
Mrs. H. J. Carry of Schoiield
Barracks, Hawaii, . formerly
o.f Point Pleasant, are
pleased to announce the
engagement
of
their
daughter, Carmen Elain, to
Dale Edward Lear, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Garland Lear of
Rodney, 0.
Miss Carry is a graduate of
Moanal~a
High School,
Honolulu, Hawaii. She is
presently employed at the

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Archie

Pierce, Middleport, Ohio :
Mrs. Harold Cunningham 1
Letart; Violet Jividen, Buffalo ; Ann Thacker, Ashton ;
.Garland Buckley, Gallipolis;
Beulah Glover., Henderson;
John Mayes, New Haven;
Robert Davis, Syracuse, Ohio;
Herbert Amick, New Haven;
Beverly Wedge, Michael
Duncan, James Black, Tina
Parks, Geneva Stahl, William
Gygax, James Plants II. Mrs.
Edward Cheesebrew, all Point
·Pleasant.

.

B!DWE~L- Barbara J 011n ·
McMillin, daughter of. Mr . .
and Mrs. Homer McMillin,
Jr., of Bidwell, celebrated
her first birthday Friday,
February 23 with a party at .
her home.
Attending· ,were : : .Nora,
McMilli!J, Homer Mcl\WU!I,
Norma M~r,fillin, :;. 1 k~h
McMillin, Bob' McMillin; ke,
IIJcMillln, Jarlice McMWin,
·B~rbara Riggs, Kevlq Riggs,
Kim , Riggs, John Harr~n.
·Tammy Harrison: .:' i:.tz
'Donna lly, and Billia and
· St ~nley Jones. · '· .

NEW! FOREARM

and

407 PEARL ST.

:Solid hardwood frame .(predominately oak). Double-doweled,

Turns r:,;e-·":·=, :·.

ADJUSTABlE CRUTCHES

lnsjde, eu&amp;hlon!
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RADIO SHACK

SUPERIOR IN EVERY DETAIL

Summers," Mrs.. Robert '
Mullins and · Mrs . . Gary
·
. WELLSTON - .. The . Mrs. Bernard McKinnlss is Cheat wood . ·.
Mrs. Einon Plummer and
· Wellstop JlllliOr St:udy 1 Club tbe d~!nce . chairwoman.
wtU !Jo'jld .iia Alinual .Charity Alsiating 'in otbei- dance plans Mrs. William Kimbel are·
Ball .. on . Mardi 17 at · the fte Mrs. .Glen Chev~Uer as Charity ' BaU ticket· . chairFairgreem Coupiry Cia,b ·D;ecoration&amp; .. Chairwoman . . women. G9st of.a!lmissiori is.
Other' members of the · · $12.50.
,
..
!rom ~ p.m. ·untU.L~.m. ·
. r;&gt;ecorating Committee are · Tickets may be pu~Cbaaed
. M[s. Don King, Mr~: Homer from any of the Club mem- •
bers, ai Souders Hardware or
the WellstOI! TeiegriiJll. .. ·
.....
' ,.
., .;.' ,,
.._,

- .

,.

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&gt;

SEE ONE TODAY

· FINE UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE

..

WATCH FOR LOCATION
.
..
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•

• 3.5 cubic inch loop scavenge engine
• Caries bars from i6" ·through 24"
• Both automatic and manual chain oiling

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'

and son, Henderson ;

HOMELITE'S SUPER XL

Slate &amp; Third .- - - - - - - - - Gallipolis. Ollio

ACROSS
T;.IE
~·r· D. P·r ·t ·'
v "-~ '.

l ilt!~ Iff ¥1(dW!d

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - William
Browning, Gallipolis, Ohio; .
Mrs. Carl Hood, Mason; Ellis
Morcle, Burlington, Ohio ; ·
Mrs. Roger Brown, Ravenswood; Willy See, Gal!ipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Robert Clonch

CHAlN SAWS

STRAIGHT SHOOTIN' SAVINGS AT
POMEROY LANDMARK DURING THEIR

Whereelse-

Peddler's
Pantry
..

FORMERLY OF
YOUR FATHER'S MUSTACHE
HAVE GONE

.

Hype rtension is not a nervous disease, but one which the

nerves can affect, Mrs. Wisniski e&lt;plained , with 90 percent being essential hypertension, or that -kind which ca nnot be cured , courage regular medication .
only controlled, while 10 percent is secondary hypertension , · Some cases of borderline hypertension can be handled effecbrought on by another condition such as hirth control pills, tively without medicine through a change of diet to cut down
intake of calories and/or sodium , the most common form of
kidney and heart disease.
The complications of high blood pressure are many. He- · which is table salt. Mrs. Wisniski, when doing education procording to Mrs. Wisniski who cited heart, kidney and brain as grams, distributes a leaflet on sodi um which contains a listing
of foods which should be avoided by high blood pressure vict he organs most susceptible to damage.
With normal blood pressure for an adult being in the range of tims.
Hypertension is a disease difficult to detect due to the lack of
120/80, persons with' an elevation of either the systolic (upper ).
or diastoli c (lower) pressures should have regular medica I symptoms; one which can be controlled, not cyred; and one for
checkups. In Meigs County residents can call Mrs. Wisniski at which help is available at no cost to any Meigs Countian
the County Health Department and get an appointment for a through Mrs. Wisniski's state-funded hypertension control problood pressure reading. There is no charge since the hyperten- gra m.
sion control program is slate funded.
Describ&lt;..&gt;d as being in the "high risk category" for hypertension are persons who are obese, those with a history of high

30%.
SAVINGS
.
. .

..

,.

pressurt! quiz.

public aware of the dangers of hypertension and the routine
screening clinics Mrs. Wisniski carries a follow-up caseload of
between 30 and 50 patients. She sees them regularly eitber at
her offi ce or in their home to check their pressure· between
visits to the doctor, to assist with dtet problems, and to en-

ing that time has screen!!&lt;~ about 2,000 residents and has found
many who are in need of medical treatment for high blood
pressure.
.
Mrs. Wisniski 1S role is not one of diagnosing and prescribing
meditation for hypertensive patients, put rather one of detecting the coridition, and t hen after the patient has received
medical attention, carrying out a follow-up program.
Hypertensipn is a health problem of the first magnitude and
probably the commonest of the diseases affecting the heart
and blood vessels. Estimates of the numtler of hypertensive
adults in this country rang from 20 to 25 million people.
· During· her two years in Meigs County , Mrs. Wisniski has
emphasized not only detection of the disease, but education
about it. She has had teaching sessions for emergency medical
technicians, has wor~ed with several weight reduction' groups , _blood pressure in t he family, smoker s, diabetics a nd persons
and has spoken at numerous civic clubs. In addition she has with kidney and heart diseases.
conducted detection clinics in eve ry township in the county, at
For women on birth control pills, Mrs. Wisniski reconunends
the Senior Citizens Center on several occasions, ~t several frequent blood pressure checks. She also advises that stress
schools and at the Meigs County Healthi:&gt;eps oimenl.
situations can be a factor in high blood pressure.
Mrs. Wisniski says she has found some general
Besides . h~r cducHtional program geared to I)laki ng the

It's Going To Be An .
LETART, W. Va. - ·Mr. Parkersburg; W. Va., with
·and Mrs. Lester Adkins, the late Rev. Davie Sayre,
Letart, W. Va., will .observe broth""'"ln-law of the bride,
their fiftieth wedding ljn-,, o((i~. ,
niversary Sunday, March 4,
1 MrS~ .iA$:1i)i.. ia the fornler
with an open house. at the~ • ~l&gt;lllt.tt~~i' l!8v~ I!~~
home from 2-4 p.m. .
. , ,on the. .
.:qt·ir.~ed
An invitation~ extend!!&lt;~ to life. Adltt.s la;~eiifai:tlve'!i
all.their relatives and friends ali f8,9n .lli;f~. i!Jtb·
to join in the celebration.
~ · nl'lllll~rs :. ef i th~ Oak
Mr. and Mrs. Adkins were,' Grove&lt;("'"mb
r--, 1 i't t'U·r ,. ,1,.. ,'
.

misundcrstamling aL)Out hypertension so wl1en speetking to
groups sh~ uses &lt;:harts and diagram.., ahm~ with a high blood

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lha·t;.. ,., c~tcll · ·

Phone 446-2206

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Your assurance ·9f quality. From
inside, out :- only . the 'finO&amp;!
materialS are usa~.
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Holly Hobbie"
J~lry
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DERIAELD JEWELRY
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Across from Theater
oG.I

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~t,I(JIICIINQAfl T,I NGSCORP o,o(:ULUII

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DALE KNIGHT
Marine Private Dale W.
Knight .. son of Venedia
Knight of Star Route 124,
Portland, bas completed
recruit (raining at the Marine
Corps Recruit Depot, Parris
Island, S. C.
.,
During the nine-week
training cycle, he le,m!!d the
basics of hattlefield survival.
He was Introduced to the
typical daily routine that he
. will experience during his
enlistment and studl!!d the
personal and professional
! standards traditionally
exhibited by Marines.
He psrticipatoo In an active
physical condit1oning
program
and
gained
proficiency in a variety of
mUitary skills, including first
aid, rifle marksmanship and
close order drill. Teamwork
and - self-discipline were
emphasized throughout the
training cycle.
He joined the Marine Corps
in November. 1978.

Holiday Inn at Gallipolis.
Mr. Lear iS a graduate of
Gallia Academy High SchooL
He is the owner of Lear
Photography
in
both
Gallipolis and Jackson, 0 .
Wedding plans are incomplete .

•

IF YOU'RE LOOKING
FOR A REAL

Bridal
shower held
POMEROY --A bridal
shower honoring Mrs. Beverly Faulkner Voss, recent
bride of Paul Voss, was held
in the Riverboat Room of the
Meigs Office of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.
Games were played and
refreshments were served.
Attending were Mrs. Hope
Harper, Mrs. Ethel Hossler.
Mrs. Margaret Eskew, Mrs.
Jo Ann Wears, Mrs. Myrna_
Swearinger, Crystal, Chrissy
and Tracie Richmond, Patty
Dyer, Mrs. Agnes Mowery,
Mrs. Norma Wilson, Mrs.
Alice Jones, Lori Fa ul~ner ,
and Mrs. Mary Voss.
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Voss were Mrs. Mary
Rwnfield, MrS. J o Ann Ward,
Mrs., Margaret Andrews,
Mrs. Frances Eskew, Mrs .
Evelyn Smith, Mrs . Jeri Matson, Mrs. Barbara Fields,
Miss Barbara Amold, Mrs.
Drema Roach, Mrs. Betty
Wilson , Mrs. Mildred Withee,
Mrs. Tina Brown. Ellnra
Faulkner, and the Traev
'
.
Whaleys.

BARGAIN

WASHERS
&amp;
DRYERS

FREEZERS
BOTH CHEST
AND UPRIGHT

.

FURNACES
OIL OR ELECTRIC
FUEL OIL OR WOOD

POME.ROY LANDMARK
. .

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

.

1

Drive A Uttle and Save A Lot-Free Delivery within 75 Miles-Yes! We ·Service
At Your Local Hotpoint Dea·ler.
Store Hours: 8:·30 to 5: 30--Mi!l Closes at s:oo P.M.-Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp;
Mason Counties.
RI!!III~I!WIIPP!

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C·l- 'l'he Sunday 'l'imes-:&gt;entineo, :sun~a y, ~ eo . z,, 1~,.

·Iowa stuns OSU, ·83-68
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Exhibit lor the month of February 1979 - "Tomb of .
Tut.ankhamun .": A traveling exhibition organized by the
Ca~on Art Institute. A cc.nprehensive photographic study
telling the story ollhe dl.scovery of the Tomb. More than 100
photographs moilnled oo 22 paneL,.
Gl!ilery - Saturdays and Sundays, 1 p.!li. until s p:m.;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a .m. until 3 p.m.
February 25; 2 p.m. - Special slide program on "Tomb of
King Tut,".Riverby. Open to both members and non-members.,
No adJJllSSion charge.
March 1, 6:30p:rn. -Social How. 7 p.m.- Annual Dinner
French Art Colony, Oscar's Restaurant. Reservations due by ·
February 26. Cost $.6. Program: Robert R. Fox, Young modern
poet and. author. .
March 1·17 - Annual Membership Dri~ .
. March 25, 2 .p.m. • 4 p.m. - Reception for members
Roverby.
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COOLER

I'JVANSTON, Ill. (AP) Claude Gre gory's basket
· from midcourt at the buzzer
Saturday lifii!\I.Wisconsin to a
· 72· 70
victory · over
Northwestern in a Big Ten
basketball game.
Northwestern had tied the
game at 70-all on a layup by
Mike Campbell· with ·one
second left, but Wiscoosin
called time out and then took
it out with a 19Dg pass to
Gregory, who fired in·. tbe
winning sho[
Wesley Matthews of
, W'osconSin led all' scorers with
23 points and Gregory added
, .18 'Thile .Jet ry ~rifke
: •. lot;IPed Northwestern with 13
. and Brian Jimg had 12.
. The·victoty IJllve WiscOI)Sin
a-4-12'Big Ten ,reCord and to:
. IS overidl. Northwestern !ell
.to ~-15 In the conferenee 1111d
0.20
.
. \: .
Northwestern' held sixwin! ·leads four limes in uie
• ·· 'second half, the last at .62-58,
before the Badgers rallied
ana finaUy went ahead 67~

HECK'.S REG. $32.9'1
SPORTS DEPT.

...

lEo.
SPO"TS OIPT.

Wekome Wagon
club activities

Reseroations due for 1meting
GALLIPOLIS - Members , the Stale of Ohio.
non-m embers and anyone , Amouncement of the start
interested in the French Art of the Annual Membership
· Colony should make their Campaign for the French Art
reservations for the Annual Colony, to Continue through
Meeting and Dinoer to be March 17, will be madeat the
held at Oscar's ori Thursday Annual Meeting, as well as a
evening, March 1, no later presentation of a· memorial
than S p.m. tomorrow by gift of a painting for the
calling 446-1819.
permanent collection at
The cost of the dinoer is $6 Riverby .
per person. The Social Hour ·
will be at 6:30 p.m. with the Tir;a Smwart
dinner to follow 81'7 p.m in
the Crest Room of Oscar' s ent£rfoins
Restaurant on Court Street in
Gallipolis. Payment for
res~rvations may be made at
POMEROY --Mrs
Tina
the door.
St ewa rt
·e ntertained
Featured on the evening's members of the Chatter Club
program will be Robert R.' at her home Thursday night.
Fox, young modern poet and Mrs. Elaine Spires was coauthor who is also a lecturer hostess for ihe meeting.
Brenda Spires was a guest
and instructor, and serves as
!he coordinator .of the Poet in and the meeting was conthe Schools program for the ducted by Mrs. Dorothy
Ohio Arts·CounCil throughout Roach, president. Games

March· 1 - Crafts, macrame at Teresa Bihl's, 7 p.m.,
RSVP, 446-1973.
.
. .
March 6- Board meeliqg, 7:30p.m., OlrisMitchell's.
March 7 - Ladies' bridge, 12 noon-3 p.m., at Mariano
Jamison 's; bring salad. RSVP.
March 9 - Couples' bridge, 7:30 p.m., at Mariann
Ellcessor's.-383-9914. RSVP.
·
March 14 - Get-acquainted coffee, 10 a.m.,- at Fran
Shaw's, 446-7593. RSVP.
March 15 - Ladies' evening bridge, 7:30 p.m., at Garren
· Snyder's, 367-0067.
March 16·- ·Couples' bowlirig 9 p.m., call Mary Howell at
4464479.
March 19- General meeting, Jackson Pike office of Ohio
, Valley Bank, 7:30p.m., speaker, Julie Ormsby, on "Personal
Advocacy Program" of Mental Health Center.
Welcome Wagon is open to any interested party in the
area. For more inf&lt;l'mation call Chris Mitchell, 44&amp;-7·7~9 or
Mary Howell 446-4479.
·

ACADIMY

"GI" TYPE

.

NATIONAL 5'x6'6"
PONY PUP TENT
" ·tllcK'I RIG.
. ...44 .

,,,,.,,.

15.99
SPORTS DEPT.

•

VINYL
SHOPPING BAG ·

LYSOL
DEODORIZING
CLEANER

•

0

IIO"x111 11 x4"

oz.

$ og·.

....

PACKAG.OP7

NOW OFFERING MAXI· M~UM
INTEREST RATES
3-MONTH
CERTIFICATE

6·m

. 5.75'£

5.25%

Annual Rate

Annual Rate

4-YEAR
CERTIFICATES
. .

6-YEAR
CERTIFICATES

7.75%

8%

Annual Rate

2-YEAR
CERTIFICATES

l ·YEAR
CERTIFICATES

7'
.

Annual· Rate

,\
Rate

,.l

DEF.L.ECTO!I$
·' ,. .
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66~

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tiiCit'IIIIC{
7 .. II'KGo

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f)

.' :.N. Ali.-·POLISH-REMOVER
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HTRUSTED SAVINGS SINCE 1896"
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$.·.

on time deposits regulatiOns requi; e that,-...;; be an interest pen•lh; if thl princii)al isWiihdr.-.wn

before maturity . Holder w-ill be paid interest at the annuai r~ te of ~ . 25"_p~ . less than three 'l'onths for .
the time the principal was on deposit.
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BUCKEYE BUILDING &amp;LOAN CO.

~

HECK1~EG~

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57'
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Jlrllllf ""'· .

"This report .suggests that
the casualties may have
rear.hed unacceptably high
levels," Califano said ito a
statemept .
'
The estimates in the longdel ayed, $24 0. 000 report ,
Which was ordered by

CoSMETic DEPT.

ALL ACCOUNtS GUARANTEED IN FULL ·

500 Thfrd Ave"n ue

Phone 446-03T5

Gallipolis

Dayton loses, 66-63
PHILADELPHIA ( AP) Sophomore Neil Robinson
and senior Walt Montford
combined for 37. points in
leading 15th ranked Temple
to a 66-63 comeback victory
ov"" Dayton Saturday , in a
regionally . t e lev is e d
basketball game at the Pa·Iestra.
, The OWls, 22-3, trailed 44-33
with 16: 02 left in the game
when Robinson sparked a 19-2·
burst. After Dayton's Jim
Paxson scored on a layup , the
Owls' Ricky Reed and Bruce
Harrold . tallied to give

ITALY BLANKS HOLLAND

Temple a 5648 edge with -5: 41 added 18. Reed had 11 assists,
remaining.

gi ving him 128 for the season,

The Flyers, 111-3, closed to breaking the Temple ail-time
wiUiin 64.£1 on a layup by. recor d for one season set by
Willie John son with 35 Guy Rodgers in 1956-57.
seconds· remaining, but
Paxson led the Dayton
Robinson 's driving two· scoring with 20 points, while
pointer with 32 seconds left Jack Zimmerman added 18.
sealed the victory..
Montford had 19 points to
lead Temple, while Robinson

lndiaiJ.a

POSTS VICTORY
MARQUETTE, Mich. (AP)
- l''re$hrnan forward Da ve

Ziegler did most of th e
damage Saturday as Youngstown wrecked Northern
Michigan 's last hope for a
slice of the Mid.Continent
Conference .basket ball
championship with a· 58-48
Victory over the Wildcats.
Ziegler scored 15 of his 17
points in the second half,

MILAN, Italy (AP) - Italy
blanked Holland 3-0 in an
exhibition soccer match
Saturday and took a measure
· of revenge for the loss to the when tile Penguins carne
Dutch in the semifinals of the back from a 23-20 defiCit to
World Cup last year.
take the lead.

injuries could be prevented

-A CT40Z.
·'

. . PRE-SEASON CONDITIONING.maneuvers for Gallia Academy High School's baseball
prospects are underway in the Old French City. Some 30 camtidales are piCtured above
gomg through t unning drills outside the high school building on Fourth Ave. Baseball drills
will begin on March 1 for area teams,

Survey reveiJls many athletic

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IIA.IWUI Din;

.8.25%

Annual Rate

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HICK'IIIIGo 11.1111

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CERTIFICATES
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PASSBOOK
SAVINGS

CELLULOSE SPONGES·

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Ball State

meclal

HOUSEWAR( DEPT.

HEAt'.

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carptu,res

a

1.69

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82 to 75

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Foreman, major sports·m an

HECK'S REG.

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HANOVER WINS
DEFIANCE, Ohio· (AP) ~riior forward Bill French
poured in 46' . points ·and
grabbed 1~ rebounds to lead
Hanover to the Hoosief.
Buckeye Conference· college
.basketball title Saturday- with
a.92-77 tbrilshing of Defiance.
· f'renchhit ,20of301ieidgoal
att!!IIipts . IJild .was six for
eight f~om · the free throw
line , Defiance; which entered
the ·contest with a chance to
lie for the championShip, fell
to 17-3 oo lhe·season and n.,;
· in the league. Hanover
finishes league play at l:hl,
with a 22-5 season mark.

Kent tops

NICK'IIIIQ

co.·

on a jum~r by Matthews
with 3: S:i . remammg .
Matthews thi;n made il 69~
but Rob RoberSon cut it to 69'
68. Gregocy. hit the first of a
.ooe..,nd ooe for a 70.£8 lead
before Campbell tied the
game.

. .
RACINE - 'Ibe Federal
Southern officials thanked
· Hocking sevent!J grade won· everyone who came out to
the battle for third place support their teams and help
Thursday night in the Soilth- make the tournament a
ern Junior High cage tour- success.
by
defeating
nament
THREE Gallipolis Blue Devil track team candidates are pictured here going through
Waterloo 45-40. Federal
pre-&lt;leasoo conditlqning drills outsldethe GAHS. gym Friday evening. Track practice will
·Hocking led 25-22 at halftime,
begin on March s for area squads.
but Waterloo came back in
the third quarter to tie it up;
33-33 . But in .the ·fourth
Qij@rter the Lancers took
eharge to go home with third
place.
the United Soccer Ieai!ue. He
Bemy ·Bemett and Larry
· By ·RALPH BERNs:rEIN He admits -it's an ego trip:
"Everybody
is
on
an
ego
owned
the
Wilshington
Whips.
.
Oeeter
both had 16 points for
AP Sports Writer
trip,"
said
Foreman,
who
,
Later,
the
UI.S
merged
with
Federal
.Hocking while
PlULADELPHIA (AP) Earl Foreman is a man for all lives with .his wife. and ttiree the North American Soccer ·McClain was high for
children in the nation 's League and retaihed the Waterloo with 18 points.
spo~ts.
·
NASI: name .
The fans saw a · great
KENT,Ohio (AP) - Junior
capital.
His
rates!
\s
as
·Foreman
tarted
his
sports
championship
game
.as
the
forward
Trent Grooms pulled
3
commissioner of the Major
.
saga
in·
the
early
1960s,
when
.
·Shlide
Panthers
defeated
the
in
a
career
high 18 rebounds
Indoor Soccer League.
he
joined
Maryland
buil~er
·
Southern
Tornadoes
34-33
in
and
high-scoring
Burrell
"We're going to be the third
Jerry
Wol:ma!lln
,purchasing
overtime.
Southern
got
off
to
tdcGhee
tossed
in
31
points
in0 jor
indoor · sp(}rt ,"
the
PhiladOlphia
Eagles
of
·
a
slow
start
but
only
'trailed
Saturday
to
lead
Kent
State
to
promise\~
Foreman, .. ..
Shade 15-13 at the hall. In the ari · 82' 75 Mid American
Washington attorney when be the NFL. Foreman owned 48
·
percent
of
the
stock.
He
,
,
third quarter Southern went Conference basketball
isn't dabbling in sportS. ·
making
a
ptofit
of
ice cold as they only got four victory over Ball st. at Kent.
admits
.to
The 54-year..,ld Foreman
several
million
dollars
when
.points
·to Shade's ten.
.
Ball state, which led 40-37
has been an owner In the
Wolman
went
bankrupt
and
·
SoUthern.
came
bn
in
the
at
the 'half, fell behind eight
National FootbaU League,
Eagles
·
we~e
sold
to
MIDDLEPORT
~rie
fourth
quarter
and
went
up
points
after a Kent State
the
National Basketb.all
•present
owner
Leonard
Tose.
Chambers,
Middleport;
190
30-28
with
only
:07
to
go
In
.surge
at
the start of the third
Asso ~iation,
'Ameri·can
·
He
has'
a
lso
owned
a
third
of
pounds,
was
the
second
place
.
regulation.
Sinclair
then
took
period~
·
BasketbaU League, ·Unit&lt;:d
the
NBA's
Washington
silver
medal
winner
in
Ohio
the
ball
the
length
of
the
court
·
The
Cardinals
rallied to go
Soccer I.:eague and North
.Ballets
and
helped
brihg
Earl
Universit'y'
s
Collegiate
to
tie
the
gam~&gt;
at
30-30
at
the
ahead
of
Kent
State
64.£3 with
Amed.ca'n Socc.er League. '
"The
l'earl"
Mohroe
and
Wes
.I!Qxlng
'l'oijmey
held
'Thurs•
.
buzzer.
.
7:22
re!l!alnlng,
and the
.• ,·As a lawyer he repr~ted ·
Pnseld
to
the
team.
Foreman
·
day
nig!Jt
at
the
Athens
ArIn
the
overtime
Southern's
conteSt
was
tied
three
times
. Cablevisioil· ·in •.an action .
Teaford scored three points in tile closing moments of the
mory.
al
so
became
a
righthand
man
the NBA 's New .
to Walter· .Kennedy, then . Following a ·nwnber of · while Shade'~ _Sturbois and · regionally televised ~arne.
preliminarY
savage each got 2 p&lt;iints to
But McGhee tossed m ·stx
met
pound
lead the Panthers to victory. ··.free throws in the final
the ." S!JIClalr bad·12 and Sturbois , minute. and a half to secure
cliartl-' .' ll; pc~lntl. (or 'Sl\ade. TeafoEd the victory.
nlglot. ·, · ',. ·wa8hlfl!- for Southern.with 19
Ball ·State dropped to 15-10,
at9hio points.
The
Shade with an 11-3 MAC record, wliile
he is 'oloing . cheer!*ders also. received Kent State improved its permaster's dtctee. the t.rophy f~r t~e ~~st formanee to 11-14 over-aU,
,;;C.!b;;iiJBI jUstice, ,Ch8n!-'. chee~leadlilg S&lt;jUad. . ·
and 0.9 m conference play.
bers had only · the highest
praise for Dr. Maung Gyj,
Ohio University boxing
coach, and , Ohio University
trainers who took excellent
care of · tlie fighterS ill the
tourney , Chambers said .
· Proceeds from the tourney
are used to support the Ohio
University boxing team.
Chambers. ha s the silver.·
medal around his neck.
.

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game the 6-foot-1 junior
guard had reached doubiP
rigures.. Ransey fouled uut
with almost fotii' illln\ltes to
play.
.
Iowa 's various defenses
limited · Herb Williams, Ohio
Sta te's 6-10 sophomore
center, to 16 points.

Shade ·captures
Racine tourney ·

Attr active sunflower yellow 6. 16 oz . drill is flam!;!'
r etardant. Ideal pup tent for ''make -be l ieve,' ' -camping.
Complete with sturdy steel stakes, poles' .and guy lines.

Refreshments were served
to those named and Betty
Biggs; Silsan Cleland, Alice
Jacobs, and Esther Harden. ·

BUCKEYE. BUILDING &amp;LOAN

·-··

BAG

I~ Harrislm.

were played with prizes going
to Dia11e Harrison, Linda Van
Meter, Mrs. Roach, Ruth
Young, Opal Biggs, Lee
Enoch, Mary Starcher, arid

.

D"FFLE

HECK'S REG.

iluckeyes' 12-4 ·rec'Ord. Each
'1M' Hawkeyes. never perleader has two rema ining . mitted Oh io S~te to get
conference games.
closer than 12 ' points
Iowa sank six of its fi rst therea fter in boosting their
nine shots starting the second overall record to 19-li. Ohio
half and outscored the Slate is 17-3 for all games.
. Buckeyes 12·2 in the first four
The Buckeyes were paced
minutes to assume a 47-33 .· by ~elvin Ransey's.22 points,
lead.
marking the 57th consecutive

whips

'

48 QUART

Plans April w~ing

Sat urd"y,
lifting
th e
Hawkeyes ihto a tie for the
Big Ten Conference basketball lead with Jhe Buckeyes.
· Iowa; beaten at home by
OhiQState 72~7. matched the

.

iGloo .

Pam Di!Jqn

lly GEORGE STRODE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Ronnie Lester's 31 . points
powered 12th-ranked Iowa to
a regipnaUy televised 83-68
beating of No. 14 Ohio State

Wisconsin
.

.MONDAY FEB. 25 • 26 ·

'22..
GALIJPOIJS - Mr. and Sibley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs . Harold D. Dillon , Carl Sibley, Rt. 2, Crown
Gallipolis, are happy to . City.
An April 6 wedding is .
amounce the engagement of
their daughter, Pam, to Rick planned.

.

!;RIC CHAMBERS
1.~

humbles
Gophers
BLOOMINGTON , Ind .
(AP) - Fo rwa r ~ Mike
Woodson scored 22 points and
guard Butch Carter added a
career-high 20 Saturday as
onatana nJastea Mmnesota 71·
46 in · a regiomilly televised
Big Ten basketball game.
The game was close
through the first half, and a
turn-around basket by Kevin
McH"le gave the Gophers
their only lead at 23-27 at the
start of the final period.
But Indiana went back
ahead to stay on a basket by
Woodson, and the Hoosiers
steadily widened the lead the
rest of the game . Indiana
raised its Big Ten record to fl.:
7 and its overall mar~ to 17·

Congress in 1974, were b8sed playing tackle football, tbe that kept a student from 11.Minnesota , led by ~ Hale's
on a survey of 2,500 high sport accounted for 326,000 of either athletic practke or 18 points, fell to 5·1 in the
schools and 1,300 colleges.
the estimated 1.06 million .from classes for one to 20 conference and 10-15 for aU
There were 14 alhletlcs-re· injuries. The injury 'rate was days was conSidered minor i ·garrtes .
The Hoosiers led by as
lated deaths In those schools · 280 per 1,000 participants. At an absence of th(ee weeks or
many as five points during
in 1'970.76. Four were from four-year colleges, the rate more was major.
By the survey's terms, said the first half, bUt McHale,
tackle football,- four from was 929 per 1,000.
other contact sports, three
The injl)ry rates in other Calvert, "A football player who had 10 in ·the opening
from non-contact sportS aniF ·coiiwct sports were 74 per could sprain his back and be period, pulled the Gophers
three
from
physical I,OOOfor men and 54 per 1,000 perfectly able to carry hts within one, 27-26, at the
.education programs. The for women, and in non- girlfriend'S books to class, •intermission.
They still trailed by just
only female victim was a girl conla.ct sports 38 for men and and he'd still be injured." .
The report said 96 percent · one 31-30 on a basket by Ga ry
killed in her high school 32 for. women.
physical education class.
But Robert Calvert Jr. , a of high schools and colleges Hol~es earl y in the second
Thesurveydidnoteslimate National
Center
for have someone responsible fot . half but Jndia'na then
Stati s ti cs immediate health care · of outs~ored the Gophers 2H3to
the total number of athletics Educ· a~ ion
deaths in 1975,76, which researcher who wrote the athletic injuries. Only about take command for good.
carter, who had seven
· was higher. A surveyrun by HEW report, says better 20 percent of the injuries
researchers ·at Penn State equipment and rules changes happened when no health points in the first half, had
recorded 13 high school and have made football"safer. In care person was avatlable . ·nine points during that sptii'\.
But on .most cases the Minnesota tben scored three
college foot)&gt;all deaths that 1968 there were 31 deaths on
person
responsible was a straight baskets-one , by
year. .
high school and college grid·
coach,
and
the survey satd Holmes a n~ two by McHale:.:
F
o
o
tb
a
11
r.e
rna
i·n
s
irons
;
in
1977therewere
ninei
·
America's most dangerouS
The HEW survey defined n1any .of them "are nol but the lioo&lt;iers reeled off 14 ·
major spOrt.
major and minor . injuries adequately trainetl for hea lth unanswered poihts a nd
coasted the rest of the WilY.
With 1.1 million men somewhatloosely.'Any injury · care responsibilities."

•I

,,

1

�.
l;...,-'l'ne SI!JIWIP'tmeso~&gt;entlllel , ::..wlua~ , t ~o._z;,, IllI~

C·2- -TheSunday Times-Sentin~l, Stinday, Feb. 25, 1979

•

Martin rn
jovial mood
FORT LAUDERDALE ,
Fla. ( AP) - Will the New
York Yankees be as friendly
to Billy Martin next year as
they are now ?
Martin, the Yankees'
former manager who has
been verbally assured by
owner George Steinbrenner
of being the team's field boss
for 1980 and 1981, was in a
jovial mood - as were, the
players - when he visited the
Yankees ' training camp
Thursday.

Cage ·taurney starts Monday
.

'

I

Steinbrermer was not available for comment Thursday,
although he has said
repeatedly that Martin would
be back as manager in 1980,
"if be lives up to certain
conditions."
Those conditions, presum·
ably, refer to Martin's public
beha~ior and remarks.

~

those 'legs,"

61

'

6 p.m. in fourth and fifth March ti at ij::l(J for the right
.grade action. At 7:00, to go on to the finalS.
Pomeroy · Green tackles
March I ls fourth and fifth
Bradbury (Nelson) and those grade night. At 6:30 Brad·
two winners will meet at 7:30 bury (Wise) . battles the
on March 5 lor the right to winner of the Blue-Gray
play In the finals. Finals will game~ At 7:30, Harrisonville
be March 8 at 6:30.
plays Salisbury, and those
At.8 p.m. on Tuesday, sixth two winners clash on March 5
grade action finds Bradbury at 6:30 to earn the right to
(Cassell) against Salisbury. play in the finals on March 8;
That w.lnner plays Rutland on

Sports

'The . first game Tuesday
,{QCK SPRINGS - The
Girls Class A Sectional cage finds Southwestern (5-5 )
toumament to be held at going against North Gallia (7Meigs High School begins 6) . The winner of that contest
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Teams plays Hannan Trace (0..9) on
· Involved this yea r are Kyger · March I at 7 p.m.
The· second game Tuesday
Creek (top sec'&lt;i); Southwestern (second seed) ; matches Kyger Creek (6-4)
Hannan Trace, :,outhern, and against Southern (4-7 ). Tfiat
North Gallia . Eastern plays winner will be in the cham·
in the Nelsonville-York . pionship contest on March 3
at 7:30 against the winner of
Sectional.
the Hannan Trace game.

..

walleye, channel calflsli,.and
SOUl'HEASTERN OHIO
ft ·~·-· ••.~··
. I. '
perch C9IJ1lng from 15-18 feet · lAKE SOWDEN - Ice 10of water. Use Rapala ice jigs 12 inches. !.argemouth bass,
' ,.
) ~ ....., ...... .' i't .,. '
, ~or white bass, waUeye and walleye, and northernpike
.
l.l' ' ...
' . . . .. .
channel catfish and smaU ice bluegills are coming from 6-8 ·
of water. Outlook good.
jigs tippped with moilsies or feet of water near the boat
wigglers .for perch. Early ramp . . Large minnows for
Building Contracting: Custom built
1\.QUILLA LAKE (Geauga moming fishing is best. everything except bluegills
County) -Ice 20 Inches. Ell· Outlook good.
garages.
barns. storage buildings.
which are hitting meal or wax
cellent bluegill fishing
LAKE LA COMPTE (Fos- worms. Outlopk good.
·Ditches: 6'' wide to 5' deep, water. gas and
throogbout the lake.' Use toria) _Excellent reports on
LAKE
RUPERT
electric.
Insect larvae and fish just off nice sized bluegllls and . (Wellston) - Ice 10 inches.
T Footers: Dug and poured.
the bottom. OuUook g~. .
perch. .Use Ice lUes · tipped . Excellent
reports
on
Floors: Leveled and ,poured. .
··
PUNDERSON
LAKE
ith ·any insect Ia rvae. F Ish largemouth . bass
arid
Geauga
County)
Ice
20
.
.
w
Septic
Tanks:
Dug
and
installed.
(
11-10 feet of water with the northern pike. Use large min. FREE ESTIMATES
incbes. Golde~~ trout being best areas being mld~ake nows and fish the straits. ·
caught at the east end of the and northeaSt side. Outlook Very. Ugbt p-essure. Oullook Cheshire. Ohio Herman Reese
614-367-756.0
lake. Outlook good.
exceUent.
··
excellent.
'SOUTIIWEsTERN OHIO
CLARK LAKE--Ice 12
Inches. The west epd of the
lake is producing bluegllls on
wax worms. Fish just .off the
bottom. ·Try near the
spillway. OuUook good.
GRAND
LAKE
ST.
MARYS - Ice 10.12 Inches,
some open water. Try the
open water areas In~ feet of
water and use tniMows for
crappie. Try off the camping
area, lagoon area, Harmon's
church and camp. OuUook
good.
RUSH RUN - Ice 10
inChes. Bluegllls hitting wu
worms throughout the day.
Fish ~feet of water. OuUook
good.
NORTHWESTERN
OHIO
RESTHAVEN PoNDS No.
7 &amp; No. 10 - Ice 13-15 incbd.
Good reports on northern·
pike from this area. Use large .
m1Mows and tip-ups. fish~·
feet of water. Bluegills from
same depth, but use Ice flies
tipped with n\ousles. Outlook
good.
FERGUSON . RESER·
VOIR (Lima) - .Ice 1416 inches. White bass,

':...
R
ee,se
TRENQfiNG &amp;_BACKHOE SERVICE .

Fishing report I

By The Associated Pres&amp; '
Here are the latest Ice
Martin quipped upon spotting
fishing
conditions around
slender Ron Guidry, the 1978
Ohio
as
reporle\f
Wednesday
American League Cy Young
by
the
state
Divi!lon
of ·
Award winner. "Are they
Wildlife:
skinny !"
LAKE ERIE
Llke yours," replied
Ice.
from
12 to 30 Inches.
Guidry. "You're not fooling
Perch
are
hitting
shiners in .
anybody with those bell
26.25'
feet
of
water.
Try .·
bottoms."
Catawba
Marblebead,
Mouse
·
"Hey Meat," current Man- Trimble hosts
and
Bliss
islands,
Bono
and
ager Bob Lemon greeted ·
Locust POint areas. Walleye
Martin , using a familiar
fishing
Is best between
cage
tourney
nickname.
.
RatUesnake
and Middle Bass
"I'll buy you a beer later
TRIMBLE- AJunior High islands. Fish 111-25 feet of
on, and maybe you'll break a
streak and buy one , too," Girls Basketball tournament water and use sonars, Rapala
Martin said to pitcher Dick is now in progress at Trimble. · lee jigs or large minnows.
·
Saturdsy four games were on OuUook good.
Tidrow.
_
.
CENTRAL
OHIO
· .
While the talk was light, tap.
Federal Hocking played BUcKEYE LAKE- Ice 15
Martin had come on serious
Nelsonville-York, Southern inches. Perch are being
.
business.
Athens Middle School, caught on mousie$ and· wax
battled
He
wanted
written
worms off Lieb's Island. Fish
Albany
w~t against Eastern,
assurance - in the form of a
W
feet of water fer perch.
and
Waterloo
tackled
two-year contract - from
OuUook
fer perch good.
Trimble
.
. Steinbrenner that he would
KNOX LAKE - Ice 15
The first two winners meet
retllrn as manager next year.
"I want to firm up that con- on Feb. 26 at 5 p.m. and the Inches. Good reports on bluetract so everybody will know last two winners battle at gills. Fish the old flooded timI'm coming back, and if not, 6:30. The two remaining ber in the upper end of tbe
let's find out," Martin said teams will clash for the lake and use mousles er wax
championship on March I at worms. Fish in the day and
seriously.
look for deeper water, 8-12
6:30p.m.
There has been speculation
feet.
OuUook good.
·
that Martin, whose contract
ALUM
CREEK
LAKE
with the club expires this
Ice
12
to
14
Inches.
B.
l
uegills
year, never would manage
still hitting., Fish 8-12 feet
the Yankees again .
Scientists believe wUd .dogs deep and use moulses or wax ·
However, Martin said he
saw
no
reason
for were the firl!l animals to be worms. Try Williams Lake
Steinbrenner to back down on tamed by people, some 12,000 (west side,In lower basin) or ·
. his 'verbal promise. "I don't years ago, according to the Big Run . Cover (above
see how he can after National Geographic Society. Cheillre R6ad). Crappies
from same areas . on·
minnows. Outlook good.
NORTHEASTERN OHIO
PYMATUNING
RESER·
GET IN
VOIR - Ice 15 inches. Some
walleye on sonars In 8-15 feet
ulet's

· : ~, ~ ·~~ .

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'Co nf erence Tournament .
It 's generally been a sour
The victory saved the Wild- Also. Alcorn Stale continued
;eason for Joe Hall and his cats from 'finishing at .500 in its brilliant undefeated
Kentucky
Wildcats - a far the league, an embarrassing season with an 88-76 victory
By Will Grimsley
cry
from
·last
year's stylish mark cooslderlng Kentucky's over Mississippi Valley and
AP Correspondent
N C A A b a s k e I b a 11 bright basketbaD history. As Southern defeated Prairie
it was, the 10-8 record was View 87-l!2in the semifinals of
NEW YORK (AP) ..:. The thing about being an ''old maft:ia. . champions.
But Friday night's victory among its worst in history in the southwestern Athletic
lady ," says 22-y.ear-old Nancy Lopez, is you worry more a !:!out
hamburgers and bologna than you do a~ut your putting over Vanderbilt made it a the SEC, a league which the · Conference tournament.
Wildcats have dominated
Dwight Anderson scored 19
little ~weeter.
stroke.
"Hopefully
this
will
build
over
the
seasons.
points
to pace Kentucky's
"It's nice ~lng married, but it's tougher," said the
some
confidence
in
this
Elsewhere
in
college
balanced
attack. Four other
vivacious starlet of the ladies' pro golf tour . "You just
naturally worry about your husband. I'm not too concerned team," said U!e Kentucky basketball Friday night, Kentucky players scored in
North • Carolina -Charlotte double figure,s _ Fred Cowan
~bout Tim getting enough sleep - he works 'til midnight. I coach aft~r the Wildcats
, ended thew regular-reason defeated Georgia Sl;lte 71~7 with 15 points . Kyle Macy
worry about' his getting eriough to eat.
"He eats too much bologna. He'S' always·going to those last Soutbeastern Conference and Jacksonville whipped with 14 Jay Shidler with 13
·
'
food places and gorging himself on junk. He's big on schedule with ll 96-70 rout of . New Orleans 5&amp;-47 in firstMcDonald's ..,. loves hamburgers and French fries. I'm not
much of a cook, but I'm learning. When I'm !II home, ! ,see he
gets steak and meat loaf - something that will stick to his
ribs."
Lopez, a bride of six weeks, was in New York Wednesday to
add to ber bulging bank account and cache of trophies and 'She
· talked effusively about her dual role as housewife and sports
By GARY MYERS
coach in the National despite Young's denial, that
, cpmpetilor.
AP Sports Writer
Football" League. He will played a part in his selection.
Serisation of the 1978 Ladies Professional Golf Association,
EAST RUTHERFORD, team with Young, the team's They feel they can work
· Winner of nine tourmiments and a record $189,813, she ended a 'N.J. (AP)...:.Ray Perkins and new 48-yeart&gt;ld general together and there is ~ lot of
whirlwind t:OUrtship on Jan;. 6 by marrying Tiln Melton, a George Young haw known manager, and try to turn the . wock to be done . The Giants
were 6-10 in -1978 and haven't
Harrisburg, Pa., TV commentator, whom she had first set only success in their football Giants around.
eyes oo six months before.
. . I have the authority on all made the playoffs in 15 years.
careers. Uitless they can
Perkins' first chore will be
They met at the Lady Keystone .Classic in Hershey, Pa., quickly turn things around trades and draft choices,"
the tournament that snapped Nancy's five-tournament win- with lbe New York Giants, Young said, "but everything putting together a staff of asning streak.
they will be ln for a rude will be discussed with the sis.tants. He has already
They were mlirrl~d In a log cabin church in Medford Lak~s, shock .
bead coach. Tim and Well made preliminary telephone
N.J., the home of the bridegroom's parents, and then they
"I know how to win," said will be made aware" of calls and has until March 1 to
hire current NFL assistants.
whisked off for a week's honeymoon In Hawaii.
Perkins, the Giants new head everything, too.
"I'm certain I'll have some
"We 're going to work ·
. "We played only six holes of golf;" Lopez said. "It rained coach. "I've gooe through
• one losing season in my life together on this thing. This Is input,'' Young said. ''I have a
most of the time we were there."
not a medieval papacy. We lot of experience and Ray
Although Melton is a trim athletic specimen - 6-foot-3.and and I don't like to lose." _
210pounds - Nancy has to spot him strokes on the golf course.
Perkins, 37, IS the youngest can't departmentalize, this
He is a 2().handicap, and that's fudging a bit.
· has to be a cooperative," be ·
Lopez was in New York to receive the Seagram Seven
added.
Growns of Sports Trophy and an accompanying $10,000 cbeck.
Young has never been a
general manager before.
The golf award is based oit computer rankings. Lopez beat out
RACING RESULTS
Jane Blalock and JoAnne Camer.
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Ditto Perkins as a head
She says She's put on eight pounds, but weight isn'i the main Thoroughbred racing was coach. But' Young has been
problem for tbe.young golfing whiz from Roswell, N.M., who in cancelled for the weekend at associated with Don Shula
Includes:
ber first iwo starts of the new season lost in the first round of · ·Latonia because rain and most of the last decade while
the Triple Crown Match Play ChampionShip in Palm Springs, thawing conditions have Perkins has learned under
calif., and finished in a tie for ninth last week in a tournament turned part of the track into a respected coaches
Don
•Tinted Glass
McCafferty, Chuck Fairin Miami.
quagmire.
"My right arm bothers me -it's a strained muscle or someA track spokesman said banks, Don Coryell as eU as
•Automatic
thing. The doctors ar~ looking at it," she said. "But my trouble' racing will resume Monday Shula.
at Miami was my putting. I missed two-foot putts. That's night.
Young and Perkins rre old
Transmission
something I never do. Putting is my game ."
friends from their days in
Nancy said she plans to cut down on her tournament schedBaltimore together _ and
• Body Side Mldg.
ule, playing no more than 20 events compared with 2.'i last
year, in order to spend more time with her husband and avoid
WILBERFORCE LOSES
•Air Conditioner
• competitive fatique.
(AP)
DETROIT
"I put too much pressure on myself last year," she said. "I Wilberfbrce center Robert
• 301 V-8 Engine
tried to do too much after I got going on that winning streak. Martin's 31
t()Jiped all
By the time I got to Hershey·I was dead \ired . I don't want that scorers but the Ohio school
LEBANON RESULTS
•Midg. 'Group ·
U)' happen again.
·
bowed to Shaw 67~2 Friday
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)
"!don't want to be away from rUn too long at a stretch. Only night in college basketbaii.- HoneS\ Marge won by a
once during the year do I play three tournaments in a row.
Shaw guards Michael Fox length in the f~tured mile
Also , it's important ll)at I keep myself mentally sharp."
with 11 points and Charles pace Friday night at Lebanon
Lanier with 10 led the Saints, Raceway and paid $4.60 and
9-16.
$3. Imago was second and ·
paid $3.20. There was no show
betting because of the fourSPILMAN SIGNS
horse field.
CINCINNATI (AP)
·The H daily double of
Harry Spilman, a rookie third Arrlva Tom ·and Bumblebee
and first baseman, bas signed Shane paid $21 as a crowd of
a one-year contract with the $2,145 wagered $223,666.
Cincinnati Reds.
Spiiman, 24, Albany, Ga.,
meeting openf\1 Dec. 26. "A hit .295 for the Indianapolis
ARCADIA, Calif. (.AP) Hoping new surroundings and man sometimes gets an offer lndjans of the American
better horses will help him to go to a better job. I think I Association last year. He has
been in the Reds farm sy5\em
find his old form, jockey got a better offer.
"It's
always
tough
when
since
1974. Spilman had one
steve Cauthen is leaving the
you're
struggling,
but
I
feel!
bit
in
four tries playing in
United States to race in
have
a
clear
mind.
This
is
a
four
games
for the Redlllast
Europe.
"It's going to be different, good chance io get good ex- season.
but !.think I can adjust," said perience and see the world."
Whether he returns to
Cauthen Friday, when be announced finalization of a con- American tracks later this
tract to rlde foc England's year depends on his success practice of rewarding his
Robert
Sangster,
an in Europe, he said .
jockeys with breeding shares
international owner and
" If llike it, I won't return. I to top horses in his stable. He
breeder.
have the option to stay."
recently syndicated two of his
Two years ago, the boy
He declined .to disclose retired stallions, Alleged and
wonder from Kentucky set specifics of the contract, but The Minstrel.
Cauthen said the decision
the horse racing world afire a statement released by
with 487 winners and· $6.1 Sangster said Couthen would was based on "money and
recieve "a retainer and a prestige . I got a very good
million in winnings.
But his luck has soured great many incentives, which offer fr6m a man who has a
since riding Affinned to the over a period of time could super stable. Anybody would
Triple Crown of thoroughbred' mean as much as $1 million to · take this offer. I see a great
racing last spring. During a Steve."
future if things work out over
Sangster has made a there."
110-race losing streak earlier
1 this year, he changed agents
and was removed from
Affirmed by trainer Laz
Barrera.
·

and LaVorr Williams with I I.

Chad Kinch scored 15
points to lead North CarolinaCharotte over Georgia State.
.Jacksonville · defeated New
Orleans behind a 20-point
performance by James Ray .
North Carolina .charlotte
earned a berth in tonight 's
Sun Belt ,semifinals against
Soufh
Florida,
while
.Jacksonville will play South
Alabama, the regular season
champion.
Ronnie Smith scored 20
pomts to lead Alcorn State to
its 26th straight victory this

recognizes
that.
The
chemistry between us is
right . As far as I'm
concerned, to Ray Perkins
I'm a resource book."

.Perkins, San Diego's offensive coordinator last year ,
was given much of the credit
for the Chargers' turn~round ·
in the second half of the
season. They won seven of
their last eight . games ,
averaging 26.5 points a game .
He said he plans on calling
all of the Giants plays, will
probably be his own quarter-

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..
·ZEPHYR Z7'5
•
(5

back coach, and work longer
hours as a head coach than he
did as an assistant .
At San Diego, Perkins
opened the offices at 6:30
a. m. and said he left
somewhere "between 6 p.m.
and 2 a.rp ."
He favor s a wide open offense, lik•s to throw on first
down and doesn 't mind a little
razzle dazzle.
"I wouldn't call myself a
gambler, I'd rather call it ·
calculated risks based oo
data/' he said.

•Custom Seat Bells

Points

.

•AM-AM Radio
•Vinyl Side
Moulding

Or .

San Diego State 79-66 and
Kevin Tucker scored three
season. Alcorn earned a berth · straight baskets In the second
in tonight's SWAC playoff overtimetolead stetsonloan
fin als aga inst Southern , 1!&amp;,'12 decision over South
whi l'h beat Prairie View Carolina.
behinu a 17-point, 23-rebound
Also, Don Fleming hit a 1;.
performance by Lionel foot jumper with two seconds
Garrett.
left , lifting Harvard Brown
In other ga mes , Penn 61-60;
Columbia
beat
nailed down its second Princeton 64-52 behind Alton
straight
Ivy
League Byrd 's 21 points; Tim
.championship with an 85-72 Oaatman and Frank Maturo
vi ctory over Cornell behind , teamed for 37 pol'nts to pace
Tony Price's 21 points ; San Yale over Dartmouth 64~2;
Fra·ncisco clinched at least a Phil Abney . poured in 27
tie for the West Coa.st Athletic points to spark New Mexico
Conference champaonshtp by over Nevada-Las Vegas 110beating· Pepperdine 7U9 as 100; James Bailey scored 24
·points as Rutgers beat Pittsburgh 76-68 and Kevin
Singleton scored 30 points.as
California snapped an eight·
game losing streak with a 7462 decision over Oregon.

ll!

SEE OUR
. LARG.E SELECTION OF NEW CARS .
.REDUCED FOR BIG SAVINGS TO ·YOU!

J

Doc
·Smith's

1

Cauthen seeks
better horses

By The Associated Press
organizing committee. said
CINCINNATI (AP)- Dick · Friday.
Wlnstock said nearly 800
Modzelewski, who· was
defensive coordinator of the · participants are expected for
New York Giants last season, the games, mainly · from
bas been named defensive Argentina&gt; Canada and the.
line coach of the Cincinnati United states. The games
Bengals by General Manager Include competition in track
· and field, . basketball,
Paul Brown.
Modzelewski replaces swimming, volleyball, socOmck studley, wlio resigned . cer, tennis, fencing, golf and
to become defensive coor- judo. .
dinator of the San Franclaco
49ers.
.
ROCHESTER, ·N. Y. (AP)
Modzelewski began his - The Professional Golfers
coaching career In 1968 with Association plans an annual
the Cleveland Browns staff, serifs of one-day, 18-hole
where be served for 10 years, toumaments pitting the
including defeasive coor· winners of the wotld's four
dinator In 1976. He resigned in · most prestigious toUr·
1977 after serving as Interim naments in a fund-raising
coach
following
the event, according to a
resignation of Forrest Gregg. Rochester newspaper.
From 1956-63, be played
The first tournament of the
with the New York Giants as · series is reportedly scheduled
a member of the ·famous · Aug. 7at the Oak Hnl Country
"Fearsome F·o ursome" Club here.
defensive front with Andy
The
Democrat
and
Robustelll, Jtm KatciiVIIge Chronicle said Saturday the
and Rosey . Grier. Mod- PGA·ptllllll to bring toilet!rer
zelewskl finished his pro the previous year's winners
career with the Browns In of the Masters, PGA, U. ·S.
1964.
Open and British Open
. .__,
tournaments In a PGA Grand
MEXICO CITY (AP) stam Golf Championship. It
The fourth . Pao Americari said Gary Player, Andy
Maccabean Games ·will be North, Jack Nicklaus and
held July 21·29, Molses John Mahaffey would
Wlnstock, chairman of tbe compete In the flrit event.

~~~::~~iEn;~~!:

· Wildcats. defeat. VandPrbilt
Y

1979 BUICK LESABRE 4 DOOR

Sports ·shorts

~----------~--------~~~~-.
JI()UN_DUP

ld

Bill Cartwright . seared 26

..

Successful men.· now·handling Giants

SHAPE &amp;

STAY IN SHAPE

.

Today's
•

"

' 7:00 wjth
By Greg Bailey"
'· action follows at
POMEROY - The Meigs Bradbury !Childs) playing
Local Elementary cage Pomeroy Cyclones. Next
toumament begins Monday comes the Harrlsopvillc sixth
at 6 p.m. The fourth and fifth grade against Pomeroy
promising me all those things grades of ·each school, com· Devils. 1bose two sixth grade
in three days of meetings prise one team and each sixth winners will mett o.n March
before Old Timers Day (last grade bas II! own squad.
6, 7:30 p.m., for the right to
year)."
Monday at 6 p.m. In fourth play in the championship
Under Steinbrenner's pla!!.__._and fifth grade · action, game on March 8 at 7:30.
Lemon is scheduled to Pomeroy Blue goes against
On 'l:uesday, Bradbury
become general manager in . . Pomeroy Gray. Sixth grade (Kitchl'iiH•k""onRutiAndnt
1980, with Martin resuming
the managerial job he
resigned from last August,
shortly
after
calling
Steinbreliller "a convicted · ·
liar' II

Meigs to host girls toumameni

,

.,

Four loc&amp;lio ns to serve you better.
Member: FDIC ·

.
I'

.'

.,

,,

�C~-The Sunday Times-&amp;nttnel, Sunday, Feb. 25. 1979

C.f-The Sunday Tlmes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Feb. 25, Urn!

final two games of the season.
Ohio State Coach Eldoo
Miller, asked if the Buckeyes
were in the driver's seat, sal~
"No. I don't know what tbe
rest of the teams are going to
at Indiana and )Visconsin was do , so I don't know what we'll
at Northwestern.
have to do. But if we win the
If the Hawkeyes, who have rest of them, we'U be in first
lost only two of eight Big Ten place."
games on the road this
That would · mean Ohio
season, can upset Ohio State, State would earn an
there could be a three-way tie automatic bid to the NCAA
among Ohio State, Iowa and tournament, wl!h ·Michigan
Michigan Stale going into th!' . State most likely setting what

·Big Ten ba$ketball race, exciting, unpredictable
By JOE !llOOSHIL
AP Sports Writer
Unpredictable and exciting
ill the best way to describe the
Big Ten basketball race this
season, and indicatioos are,
with only three games to go
for.each team, that's the way
it ill going to end.
.. Unexpected fast starts,
first by Illinois and then Ohio
State, Michigan State's
sudden
faltering
and ·
complete turnaround, arid ·
challenges by · Iowa and '
Purdue turned the race into
the tightest in more than two
decades.
Now Ohio Sta~ is on top,

and the Buckeyes could win it
aU by sweeping tbeir final
three games, beginning with
Iowa today .and finishing on
the road next week at
Wisconsin and Purdue.
The
Buckeyes,
who
shocked the basketbaU world
by winning their first eight

Big Ten games, regained sole

doomed
Purdue 's
possession of the league lead championship hopes with a
Thursday night with a 73-55 73-87triumph as the seventh·
victory over !Qinois while ranked Spartans won their
Iowa was tripped up by a 67· eighth stuight game.
65 score at Indiana.
While Iowa was at Ohio
The loss dropped Iowa into _ State today. Illinois was at
a second-place tie with Michigan State, Purdue was
Michigan State, which at Michigan, Minnesota was

i$ expected to be a conference
"I told our guys if we had to
at-large berth.
lose on this trip, it was
But if there ill a three-way against Indiana," ""id Iowa
or two-way tie involving .,· C&lt;Jach Lute Olson. "Because
Mtchlgan State, the Spartans at Ohio State, a loss fpr us Is a
would get the automatic bid win for tiJem."
.
because they have defeated
The season ends following
Iowa an~ Ohio State twice games Thursday night and
•
next Saturday. Iowa will be at
each.
Despite its crippling loss at borne against Michigan and
Indiana in the middle of a Northwestern next week,
three-game road trip wltich while Michigan State goes to
opened with a victory at Minnesota and Wisconsin and
Dlinoia and winds up at Ohio Ohio State winds up at
stale, Iowa 1t111 bu hopes. WIBcciniiD and l'urdlu!..

~·or
~ason

Phils-Cuhs co:Dtplete major ·s-player trade
By RALPH BERNSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
Pllli.ADELPHIA (AP) The PhUadelphla PhUiles and
Chicago
Cubs
have
c..npleted an eight-player
deal featuring Chicago
second baseman !~lanny
Trillo and Plilladelphia outfleldlr Jerry Martla IDd re-

serve catcher Barry ~'oote.
The Phillies sent Martin,
Foote, secood baseman Ted
Sizemcre and young right·
banders Henry Mack and
Derek BoteUto to the CUbs
Friday for Trillo, outfielder
Greg Gross and reserve
catcher Dave Rader.
Mack, 20, had a 15-4 record

and a 2.79 ERA at Peninsula · piicher named ~·erguson .ten·
last year and led the carolina !tins to the Cubs, and he
League in strikeouts. He was turned out to be one of the
the holdup in comsummating best pitchers in · baseball.
the trade, which actually was Thus, they hesitated at
initiated last December at the throwing Mack into the trade.
winter baseball meetings in · Botelho , 22, was the
Orlando, Fla.
Phillies' No.2 selection in the
The Phillies recaUed that January 1976 draft: Last
they once sent a young rookie season with Reading in Class

M, he posted a 15-7 record who will be 34 In · April, hit
with a 3.54 ~; RA, with 10:1 .219.
·
strikeouts.
Trillo, 29, considered one of
The Phillies, however , the best second basemen in
wanted Trillo because they · the National League , hit .261,
lost conlidence in Sizemore, · and in the eyes of Phlllies'
who suffered a triple fracture brass has the potential to join
of the glove hand last shortstop Larry Bowa as an
summer and had problems A 1 I · S t a r k e y s t o n e
swinging the bat. Sizemore, combination.

the fourth straight
Trillo led all second
· basemen in a•sists, and the
second straight season in '
total chances.
Phiiiies personnel director
Paul Owens and Manager
Danny Ozark drool at the
thought of an infield of third
baseman Mike Schmidt,
· Bowa, Trillo and first
baseman Pete Rose.
·
And OZark is excited about
'going into the season with a
bench consisting of Richie

•
•11••0\.00 otto'"'"

TOTAL DOWN

. ~nngTar~

Lo«;al Bowling _
Sunday Miners

January 28, 1979

WL
Country Bumpkins
28 4
Sunday Duds
22 10
· Alley Cats
18 14
·[ HotShots
14 18
Pinbusters
14 18
Team No. 6
0 32
Men's High Game - Rick
Martin 192, Rick Martin 185,
Jeff Martin 181.
·
Men's Hlgh Series - Rick
Martin 553, Jell Martin 471,

'

·stol&amp;el, .
sweet

Roland Morris 406.
Women's High ·Game -

Luette Martin 15~ . Ann
Morris 158, Ann Morris 149.
Women's High Series Ann Morr is 435, Luelle
Marlin 417, Sheryl Gibbs 398.
Team High Game - Hot
Shots 320, Alley Cats 318,
Sunday Duds 315.
Team High Series - Hot
Shots 927, Sunday Duds 888,
Alley Cat. 841 .

TOTAL DOWN PRICES PLUS OUR ·
GOOD REASONS FOR SH'O PPING .
1·1b. Can

1·1b. Can

Metulowdale
Tomatoes

·co~"
N\ ST'IL£

,CANNED GOODS SALE ARE TWO
PENNYFARE THIS WEEK
;;

COLLEGE INN

THOROFARE

Vel-All Mi•ed
Ve1eta bles ·

SUPER MARKETS

.

.

"

'

nngfar~

THOROFARE

Chte•en
.Broth

Slleed
.Beets

.loo"oiA

SPRUCE

Tonailto
Sauee

LIGHT

15.5-o~

\.O%• con

Sunday Miners
February 4, 1979 .

STOKELY

WL
Country Bumpkins
34 6
Alley Cat.
26 14
Sunday Duds
24 16
Pinbusters
20 20
Hot Shot.
16 24
Team No.6
0 40
Men's High Game- Ralph
Gibbs 202, Jell Martin 187,
Rick Martin 177. '
Men's High Series- Ralph
Gibbs 507, Roland Morris 470,
Jeff Marlin 464.
Women's High Game Sheryl Gibbs 131. Ann Morrl• ·
127. Sheryl Gibbs 126.
Women's · High Series Sheryl Gibbs 383, Ann Morris
360, Gwen Marlin 348.
Team High Game Plnbusters 302, Alley Cats
291. Hot Shots 288.
Team High Series Pinbuslers 838, Alley Cats
830, Hot Shots 804.

FRANCO AMERICAN

Fruit
Coelltail

~itt II

Spalhetti·Os

THOROFARE

DELGROSSO

Sauerkraut

Pizza
Sauee

27-oz.~n

TEXSUN

Camp bel
Poria N' .Beans

Oran1e .Julee

Crapefru
.Juiee
'

Drin.MI*

Sunday Miners
February 11, 1979

3-lb.
Can

program
dealt blow
·-

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
University of Cincinnati
basketball program was
ilealt another blow Friday
when the National Collegiate
Mhletic Association ruled
Nit a top college prospect
::annot compete in any post·
ltllson tournaments if he
ligns with the Bearcats.
Cincinnati, already under a
two-year probation, lost two
players early this season
when they were implicated in
• burglary at a St. Louis
bote!.
Friday, the Beare a ls'
chances of signing LaSalle
Thompson, a 6-foot-11 center
at top-rated Withrow High
School here, were dinubed
because of the NCAA penalty.
UC officials said the action
"has to do with the purchase
of clothing" by Thompson ,
for which a person identified
the
as • representing
university 1s aililetic interests
arranged an extended
payment.
"This was construed to be a
1
llhort-tenn loan and therefore
an extra benefit to a student
· athlete and a violation of re·
cruiting regulations," the
university said in a prepared
statement.
"This ... has been appealed
by the university. The univer.
sity lost this appeal, and no
further appeal to the NCAA is
provided for in
the
administrative process of the
National Collegiate Athletic
Association,"
the
UC
lllatement said.
However,
university
efficais said they are still ·
recruiting Thompson, and
that Thompson and his
mother have hired an
1ttorney to fight the ruling.
Thompson's Withr ow
finished the regular season ~s
lbe top-rated Class AAA team
In The Associated Press Ohio
haskethall poll.

• an

PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH

Mushrooms

Ar10Cut
Green .Beans

Hills .Brothers
Coffee

e $

re

PIECES &amp; STEMS

REG. or DRIP

1

WL
Country Bumpkins
38 10
Alley Cat. ·
30 18
Plnbusters
26 22
Sunday Duds
26 22
Hot Shots
24 24
Team 6
0 48
Men 's High Game ~ Rltk
Martin 207, Ralph Gibbs 182,
Les Gibbs 177.
Men's High Series - Rick
Merlin 538, Ralph Gibbs 487,
Los Gibbs 450.
Women's High Game Ann Morris 170, Ann Morris
159, Luelle Martin 157.

•IGIIT&amp;EAILY ~IMITATION

UC's cage

K11111~
Beo,.s
c

Mandarin
Oran1es

wttOL£ or CR£J.

,.,b.

ArlO

SweetPeas
1·1 b. 1-oz. Can

1·1b. Can .

98

'

RETAILS EFFEaiVETHRU SAT., MARCH 3, 1979

,);,

LENTEN
MEALS

Women's High Series -

$

Ann Morris 438, Luette
Martin 405, Gwen Martin 383.
Team High Game - Hot
Shots 355, Country Bumpkins
321, Alley cats 29'1.
Team High Series - Hot
Shots 921 , Alley Cots 814,
Pinbusters 810.

S8

• CHUNK
• SLICED
• CRUSHED

15.5-oz.
Cell

Friday Night Lldles
February 16, 1979

.

Empress
Pineapple

Prelate Pin•
Salmon

fOR YOUit

or 4 89c SWEET
DEL MONTE
.
PEAS. • • • • • • • • • • • •
-~
STEWED
TOMATOES •••••••• ..• ... 389c~~
SPINAOI ,_•••••••••••••
DEL MONTE
3 98c SLICED
DEL MONTE YELLOW CLING
FRUIT COCKTAIL •••••••••
c.
PEACHES ••••••••

20-oz.

THOROFARE CUT GREEN BEANS
WHOLE KERNEL CORN
• • • • • ..... c.

for

u..L c.

Lc.

to.

7.25 .... c.

to.

1.7s•L~......

ul'ol.

Cells

4 99c
to.

499c~
for

·3 ••c
for

'

OLD,FASiiiONED NOODLES~ •. ~•. 58c
STOKELY CATSUP ........... 32c
WAISAW
POLISH DILLS •
AIM

Pll
Kenny's Angels ·
22
Bill's Quality Body Sp
21
Mine No. 3
20
Parker's AI Service
14
Honaker CB
14
Dan's Upholstering
S
Ind. High Game - Dottle
Nelson 256; Ettamay Norton
212 ; Betty Whitlatch 182.
Ind. High Series - Dottle
Nelson 553, Ellamay Norton
527, Pearl Russell ASO.
Team High Game -

lot.

....... •.• aac

...........,. uc

Kenny's Angels 578, Bill's

Quality Body Shop 511, Mine
No . 3 soe.
Team High Series Kenny's Angels 1502, 1'1.ine
No.3 1409, Bill's Quality Body
Shop 1371.
POMEROY LANES
Tri County
February 20, 1979

..........

AIMDIM~T

Pts

Eagles Club
~
Columbia National Life
34
Roach Gun Shop
30"
H&amp;R Firestone
30
Bill 's Body Shop
22
Pomeroy Cement Block
16
High Ind. Game- Ed Voss
257, A. L. Phelps 226. Dewey
Smith 212.
High Ind. Series - Dewey
Smith 571. Ed Voss 570, Keith
Phaiin 567.
High Team Game - Eagles
Ciub 955, Columbia National
Life 934, Columbia National
Life 878.
High' Team Series Columbia National Life 2639,
Eagles Club 2498, H&amp;R
Firestone 2435.

'
Trl County
February ll, 1979
Pis

·Eagles Club
30
Columbia National Life
28 '
H&amp;R Firestone
28
·Roach Gun Shop ,
22
Bill's Body Shop
20
Pomeroy Cement Block
"
High Ind. Game - Dave
Peterson 266, Ron Toler 222, '
Jerry Vanlnwagen 216.
High Ind. Series. - Dave
Peterson 631, Ron Toler 574,
John Tyree 566. ·
High Team Game •Columbia National Life 901,
Columbia National .Life 900,
Pomeroy Cement Block 896. '
High Team Series Columbia National Life 2674,
Pomeroy Cement Block 2618;
EAgles Club 2477. '

TOMATO JUICE. • • • • • •
· 1IIGIOIAII
IRISH POTATOES •WHOUe i •
I'UIIIIA
TUNA
CAT FOOD • • • • • •
SWIUMISS
COCOA MIX W/~111

'

CJa•••·
·
•,
......
•
.
Sltt.
·
&amp;..
.
.....
...... ...

Round

.
.

'

n .... a..

aPound

f48
Roastlnl
CJale•e••s

•••

...........
$1 39
Skinless Wieners ••••••• ·• ........ .-

•
-RUIIp ._.,. • • • • • _..,..
- •·• • •. $1"
hnom Round Rout •••••. s2.09
- Round Roast
' • • • • • • • •. $229
Top
•
i:fiom Round Steak ••••••. $2~ 19 Top
Round Steak '• • • • • • • •. $2:
•
-Mw•n.
$2
-·maru
Top
Round St"* • • • • • • • •. $2
· •69 ii:1n np Steak •••••••••. s2.39 Cube Steaks .• • • • • • • • • • •. •
$2"
Ro...tStlllk •••.••••• ·~ ·· •
-·mlf

WITIIICOIIOMICAI.

T ASTE•O•SEA

?i•r•

PERCH
5
........
FILLms-w •••
BAnaDIP
.FISH mCIS n
14L ,...

Semi-Boneless ·

Hams

.....

......

•••

!.ll!

or

Pertiool

AVAILABLE AT MOST PENNYFARlS
BY WEDNESDAY OF EACH WEEK

s4•49

.... ._

U.S. NO. 1 FLORIDA

1 J9
$1 ·49
59

Celery~

Total Down Prices Save You Mone~ Ever~da~ of Ever~ Week
"

.,

two rounds

•
By JACK STEVENSON
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) ruzzy Zoeller plays golf for
both mooey and enjoyment,
chats with members of the
..
Uery and sometimes keeps
-lb.
Ills playing partners loose,
Bag
The latest fellow pro
•Joying the outgoing Fuzzy
:~~~ppens also to be Lon
lBnkle,
theonlymanahead of
'FRESH CRISP
111m in the $250,000 Glen
Clampbeli-Los Angeles Open
10lf tournament.
"Fuzzy is a character and
be keeps everybody loose and
U.S. IMCT WTIIII
JOU have more fun," said
Hinkle, who played the first
two rounds of the LA Open in
IIDTIIOUSI
1 threesome with his friend
ZoeUer.
And after 36 holes of the 72-CIIISI'
llole event, Hinkle leads with
1 6-under-par 136 and right
l'llll'fJ ntr
C
behind him at 137 comes
fuzzy. It should. also be
Um
o • • o • • • 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 ••
pointed out that ZoeUer and
UJ.IIO. 1
.
I
Rlnkle are 1·2 oo the PGA
49 money-winning list fer !9'i9
0
IIi
llld each has captured an
UJ,IIO, I . . . .
eYent this year .
Zoeller, . the 27-year:.old
W
Oftlo
o o o o o o• o • o• o
...
cbampion of the Andy
L,...,;_:,;.,;,,;_;;.,:.:.;.:_:,.:..;...:;.~.;_;~_;,..:;.~.;_;;_;;_;;,...;:;..;;.;;:.:::...;::;.....J.J Williams-san Diego Open,
has won $83,045 this year and
Hinkle, winner of the Big
Crosby In a playoff, stands at
S69,538 .

Julee Oranges

Mcintosh Apples • •••••.••••• 3~89c
. ' - - Q lll!w •::.·=-:.:"':!..--------- -----i
Rhullarlt ••••••• ...........•.69c
NIYll VAN DE KAMP ~
IA1TII DIPPIO
Endive or Esca. ole. ...........•.59c
FRENCH FRIED
$
·29
FLOUNDER • • • lw•. "•·
•
T i ps •
$J
FISH
·
_.,
FILLRS • • • • • •12..~. ,.,. •
Ieiah Russet Potatoes • • • • .• •1 .
FISH .
$~
·
...
Y
5
llo
Onl
e
KABOBS..... .........
•

1.59·
99c
20' ..
-=-=~-20' n~ s1.49

L

' I

',(

..-uss PIIH
WHITING FILLmLeu~ ....~ . • • • • • • • • • • • :·

$lOCI TOUI flUID

ndBeef .
Patties
•

.

,

SEAFOOD TREATS for GREAT LENTEN MENUS

"Quarter Pounders"

Baeon

$

FRESH PRODUCE

•••

~~5

FRESH FISH &amp; OYSTERS

. AIMOUI-trSTAI

Slleed

.

.,'".....
Sliced Bacon •••••••••••• ,... .... 51•79

·

SMITHPIILD SMOKEHOUSE

• KAL'IB

5

GOLD lEAF • U.S.D.A. INSPEaED
Sto7...
Young~ .
Awg.

-·ll••n- .
$2 19
Slrtoln np Roast • • • • ·• • • • •. •

..
..,• !I•

•

•SliCB

c
4 ......
c...

By The Piece
Only

Steak.
~ ~· ~

.'

• •

YOIUMII ONLY

..,ep

Boneless

.Per,•

· ~·-'
··-

SESAME STREET
LIBRARY

''lllorofwe Delio" UJ.D.A. OIOICE BEEF

JIIOM

.

THE

HUIIT'S

lllwt • • • •

Hebner, Gross, Rader, Tim .
McCarver and minor league
prospect Lonnie Smith, a
fleet out!ielder.
Gross, 26, bas a lifetime.
batting average of .295 ,
hitting .322 In 1977 and .265
last season.
While the Cubs g~ Martin,
a good fielder and .271 hitter
last season, they were more
interested in Foote . The CUbs .
made 1\o secret they weren't
happy with their defensive
catching. ·
"Yes, I'd say Foote Is the
key guy In the deal but, ·hey,
this guy Martin can play too.
We got ourselves three regu·
Jars ," said Cubs' Manag~r
Herman
Franks .
He
predicted Martin would start
In center field and Sizemore
· at second base.
Foote actually playM third
string at Philadelphia,
playing only 39 games and
hitting .158. But Chicago
believes he has potential.
Rader replaces Foote in the
Phillies' scheme, and Gross
becomes a reserve outfielder
and pinchbltter, a role he
played in Chicago. Rader
· averaged .203 in 116 games.

"

..

�~-The Sunday 1'1mes-Sentinel. Sunday, Feb. 25. 1979

.;Blue Ang~ls draw
bye in tournament
.
' IRONTON - Coach Jacki~
Knight' s Ga llipolis Blue
Angels drew a first round bye
Friday In the 1979 Class AA
~lonal Basketball Tournament, to be held In the
ltonton
Sports Are na .
·lieginnlng March I.
:: Defending tournam ent
:~ampion South Point (12-2)
'Was top seeded. GAHS (10-4 )
1!'as seed.e d second. Six teams
~e entered m_ the tourMment .
: First game in upper
~acket play on March 1 a t 6

p.m . pits Portsmouth. (!HI\
aga inst Chesapeake (0-101 .
In lower bricket play on
Mar ch 1 at 7:30 p.m. Rock
Hill (9-Sl t akes Qn Fairland
tS-8 ).
South Point will take on the
Por t smouth - Chesapeake
winner on Marcil 5 at 6 p.m.
Gallipolis will battle the Rock
Hill - Fairland winner at
7:30 p.m. on March s.
The championship game is
slated on March 8, at .7 p:m.
This year's winner will ad- ·
vance to the Athens district.

Area boat owners can register
craft for .'79 after March 1 ..
..

'

.

'

.

"

.

Friday's college scores

\ Tournament scores J
Ohio High School
Boys a.rskelball
By The Assoclolecl Press
Friday's Aesulls
Class AAA Tourqments

Akron ·centrai-Hower 54,
Ak ron Fi restone 48

Creston Nor wa y ne.
Wooster Triway 57

Friday's College
.
Basketball Scores
.By The Assoc: iated P ress

Gree nfi e ld Mc Cl ai n. 57 ,

M cArthur Vinton 55 . ot

Ha nnibal Ri ver 94 , St .

A writinil lee of 50 cents, In
COLUMBUS - Ohio boat anticipate. more than 200 ,000 the office of their local waterAlliance 68: Louisville 53 · Clairsville 61
Harr ison 59, Ci nc i nnati
owners can regis,ter their boats wUl be registered In ·cr aft agent. Those renewing addition to the regular lee, is
Barberton 67, Akron East
. Greenhill s so
registratiOns In 1980 will have charged by the licensing 52
craft lor 1979 at any of the · Ohio this year. " ·
Hea th
57,
Colu mb us
Chesterland West Geauga
approdmately 300 · boat
Hall noted tblli is the last the option of doing it by maD agents lor 'each registration
Watterson 37
81 , Ashtabula 59
or
In
person.
·
issued.
registration agencies In the year boat owners will be
London Madi son Plains 59,
Columbu s
Ea st
72 ,
Temporar y
21 - day Westerville
Currently, annual lee~ lor
·Columbus Independence 52
state, Including Mrs. Ralph required to register their
North 58
Lora.ln Ca tholic 80. Avon 68
watercraft and ·outboard ·registrations lor both boats
Columbu s
L i nden Zinn's site, 431 Pike St. , 'in ·craft on an annual basis.
. Marion -Elgin so. Co lumbus
M
c
K
inl
ey
84
,
We
st
erv
ille
motor
registrations
are
:
and
outboard
motors
are
Kanauga,
alter
1978
Beginning Jan. I , 1980, boat
DeSales 34
Sputh SO
,
.
registrations expire March I. registrations will have to be outlloard bulls, rowboats, available lor boaters wanting · Columbu s Wh iteha ll 50,
Mount · Orab
Western
Brown 78, Cinclnilati Deer
'·'Boaters shouid try to renewed only once every canoes, barges or rafts, $1 ; to use ·their craft im· · Worthington 411
Park 69
East Cleveland Shaw 85,
register their craft as early three years. Registration .~ ·sailboats and outboard mediately, but experiencing
Nav~rre'
Fairless SB ,
inboard difficulty In obtaining a title. Cleve land South 57
as possible this year in order outboard motors will be motors, · $3 ;
Canton Central Catholic 55
Fairborn
Park
Hills
68,
Boaters ·registering boats
lor us to · process the eliminated , although out- powercraft and sailboats with
North Lima Soutlt- Range
Cla yton Northmont 56
registration form and record board motors over 10 horse- auxiliary inboard engines 14 feet or longer and motors
Geneva 65 . Willoughby 74, East Palestine 73
Oberlin . 81 ,
Medina
the Information," said Norv power must still have a title. · less than 100 horsepower , of 10 horsepower and more; South 58
Buckeye 71
·
Hamilton
Garfield
68,
$7
.50;
inboard
powercraft
must
present
their
title
to
get
Hall, Chief of the Division of
Under the new system.
"Pickerington 56, Lancaster
Cincinnati lndian Hill SO
sailboats
With
auxiliary
a
registration.
Watercraft
and
Watercraft of the Ohio boatersregisteringnew'boats
.
Kettering Alter 66, Center - Fairfield Union 46
Stewart Federal Hockln9
Department of Natural or transferring a registration inboard engines 100 horse- . titles are stamped annually ville 39
FOOTBALL
at the time of registration·..
Friday's
Lora in 53, Nort~ Olmsted SO 5'1, Belpre 53
Resources (ODNR \. "We will be encouraged to go to power or more, $10.
National Football League
Vincent Warren 63, Albany
Sports Transactions
Those individuals ·who
Massillon
Perry
62 ,
Ba lt imore Colts - Named
Alexander 60
By The Associated Press
acquired boats or outboard Greensburg Green 41
Erni e Zwahlen offensi ve line ,
Wellsville 74, Richmond
BASEBALL
Medina 74. Avon Lake 47 ··
motqrs before Jan. I, 1964,
coach .
Jefferson Union 58
Natlona I League
Oxford
Talawanda
7.1,
when the state's watercraft Monroe Lemon-Monroe 67
· Ci nci nnat i Bengal s
Wheelersburg 80. Me·
: •Atlanta Braves - Sold t he
Dermott Northwest SO
titling law became effective,
c0n1 r act of Mik e Da ve y, Named Dick Modzelew ski
Sidney 66. Dayton Stebbins
.
Youngstown Liberty 45 .
pi:t cher , to th e Se att le defensi ve line coach . .
are not required to present a 64
HOCKEY
Andover Pymatuning Valley
¥ariners for an undisclosed
Solon
58,
Bedford
51
title when registering the
National Hockey League
amount of cash.
Springfield Greenan 87 , ,40
craft or inotor.
St . Louis Blues - An·
YoungStown Rayen 81,
' ,Chicago Cubs - Traded
New Carlisle Tecumseh 70
Campbell Memorlal 34
Boat registration lees do.
~nny
Trillo ,
sec ond nounced the suspension of
Trotwood
11,
Dayton
·
Class A Tournaments
ba seman ,. o·a ve Ra d er, Steve Durbano, defenseman ,
·
not decrease throughout the Colonel White 40
by the NHL for five games.
Ashland Mapleton 67; Hills~tcher , and Greg Gross,
Upper
Arlington
52,
year
as
do
auto
registration
COLLEGE .
dale 59
·
oj.ttfell d er ,
to
th e
Delaware Hayes 50
fees.
Auburn - Named S . E.
Beaver
Eastern
59,
South
~~ l l ad c'p hi a Phi ll i es fo r
Xenia
73.
Dayton
Dunbar
49
Machir led the visitors and 16 turnovers.
GALUPOUS - Coach BUl
Sull i ns assistant football
~r r y - !Cit t. cafcher . Ted
HaD encourages all boaters
Xenia Beavercreek 46, . Webster 42
BoX score:
coach.
attack
with 10 points.
Leedy's Gallipolis yearlings
. Botkins
88,
Sout h
S.~lem or e , second baseman ,
In
a
boating
.
safety
Miamisburg
34
to
enroll
PT. PLEASANT FROSH.
Charleston Southeastern 35
Jbrry Martin , outfielder ,· and
Gallia was 14 ol34 from the
Youngstown
Austintown
ended their 1978-79 basketball
course
offered
by
C27l - Por ter 0·3-3; Barnelf
Bristolville Bristol 65 ,
Der ek Botelho and Henr y
Fitch 6$, Conneaut 47
campaign with a 42-27 victory field for 41 percent and 14 of 2-0-.4 ; Bowser 1·0-2 ; Machir 4- organizations such as ODKins,an Badger 56
Mack, pitchers.
Youngstown
South
S2
,
over visiting Pl. Pleasant In a 27 at the foul line lor 53 2-10 ; J . Wamsley 0-0-0 ; NR's Division of Watercraft,
Cleveland
He i ghts
·.
BASKETBALL
Salem.SO
·
.
makeup
game · Friday percent. GAHS had · 16 Burris 2-0-4; W. Wamsley 1-0- the Power Squadron or the U.
Luther.a n East 48, Middlefield
• N•tional
Class
AA
Tournaments
A bird thought to have been ·
Cardinal 44
.
'
Basketball Association
rebounds, lour each ly Marty 2; Hammacl&lt; ·1-0-2. TOTALS S. Coast . Guard Auxiliary.
evening.
Cha~rln Falls 54. Cleveland
Franklir'l Furnace Green
Chicago Bulls - Activated extinct loc 100 years - the
eenedrctlne
40
Glerin, Randy Dailey and Tim 11-5-27.
win
left
GAHS
with
a
The
GALLIPOLIS FROSH (421 The courses are designed lor
T ~te Armstrong , gu ard .
white-winged guan - was
Chagrlri Falls Kenslon 49, 61 , lrontqn St. Joseph 34
14-2 season record . Pt . Lanier. The winners 'had 14 - Glenn . 1,0-2 ; King 2-0-4; beginner and experienced
Frederi cktown 64, Center ·
Placed Charle s Dudl ey, spotted last year in Peru.
Kirtland 42
Dailey 5·3· 13; Duncan 0-3-3; boaters and offer instruction
gonrd,
on the ln.jured list .
Pleasant dropped to 9.,4 on the tumovers.
Chesapeake so. Coal Grove burg 34
.,
Hamilton New Miami 88,
Pl. ·Pleasant hit 11 of 30, Lanier 4-4-12 ; Thqmpson 0-4· on safety skWs, requited 47
year.
4; Allen 0-0-0; Harrington 1-0·
Williamsburg
·sa
Cincinnati
Nor!~
College
field
goal
attempts
lor
36
GaUipolis led 12-2, 24-7 and
2; Miller 1-0-2; Runyon 0·0-0 ; equipment and navigation
· Lorain Clearview 64, South
Hl1167,
Cincinnati
Mariemont
percent.
The
visitors
were
29-17 at the quartermarks.
Warren 0-0-0; Bergdoll 0-0-0. techniques .
Amherst 55
57
,·
·
Randy Dailey led the five ol11 attbe foul line lor 46 TOTALS 14-14-42.
McDonald 52, Lords town 49
Circleville 'Loqan Elm 54,
Score by quarters:
Millersporl61 , Ohio Deaf 39
Ohioans with 13 points. Tim percent. Pl. Pleasant had 12
The location of Meigs Pataskala Watkins N.emorlal
Point frosh
7 5 10 1Q-27
New Albany 79. Cardington
52
reboundS, live by Machir, GAHS
Lanier added 12.
frosh 12 17 5 13- 42 County registration agencies
66
Columbus
Beechcroft
59,
are Doyle Smales, Forked Dublin 54
Newbury . 77, Thompson
·: We Are Offering Special Prices to the
Ledgemont 24
Run state Park, P.O. Box 127,
Columbus Cent&amp;nnlal 57,
·• Customer Who is Ready to l!uy &amp; Build
Parma Heights Holy Name
Reedsville, and WUUam C. Columbus St . Charles 55
NOW.
74. Sullivan Black River 64
Cortland Lakeview 71,
Quickel, 114 Court St.,
..
Newton Fails 40
30X45X9' POLE BUILDING
Pomeroy.

.

New Mex ico 110. Nevada -Las
V egas 100

Hami lton 75, Tufts 71
Har va rd 6 1, Brown 6()
Peno 85, Cornell 72
Ru tgers 76, Pittsburgh 68
St. Lawrence 80, RPI 57
Ya le 64, Dartmouth 62

Te xas E l Paso 79 , San Diego

St. 66

Nor thri dge St . 57, Cal Poly -

SPECIAL SALE PIIICE

'4950

00

;Erected on your prepared site. Price good
:thru March 10, 1979.
Call Us for Other Special Prices.

A

WICKES BUILDING·

Division of the
Wickes Corporation

Wickes Buildings
P.O. Box 523
Circleville, Ohio 43113
Phone:
1-614-474-8732
1-614-47·4-8734 '

COMPLETE UNE OF.
AMES lAWN &amp;GARDEN TOOLS
'.

Boardman 2-0-4; Hammack

2-0-4; Albright 1·0-2; Barnette
0-0-0; Mullins 4-2-10; Smith 0·
1-1; Shinn 0·1 -1; Willet 1-0-2;
.Simpkins 1-0-2. TOTALS 11·6·

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel. GB

wins opener, 40 to 24
two

earlier

Alter

games were

tliat had won seven of its last
eight games . Gallipolis is now
1-f. Point's record dropped to
7-5. ·.
The Uttle Devils will play
aga~ Monday at 4:45 p.m.
agamst Lancaster Sherman
In the Athens seventh grade
invitational tournament . . ·
B
·

cancelled by bad weather,
COach Charles Bradbury's
Gallipolis seventh grade
Little Devils finally got to
play a basketball game
Friday evening and . came
away with an Impressive 4024 · victory over the pt.
ox _score:
.
Pleasan\'·seventh grade.
Galha 7th (40)- Wolle 8-0·
Steve Wolle paced the 16, Carter J-0.6; Dunc•n 1-2·
Ohioans With 16 points. Brad 4; Ellcessor 2-0-4; Smith 4-0B; Parnler 0-0-0 ; Bostic 0-0-0 ;
Smith added 8, Kevin Carter ;Mullen 0-0-0; Candee 0-0-0;
6, Chris Ellcessor 4 and ·Meek 0-0-0. TOTALS 19-2-40.
PT . PLEASANT 7TH (24)Tommy Duncan bad 4.
N. Harden led the Little Jones 2·1-5; Mlntqn o.J. J;
Gerlach 0-0-0; Whalen 2·0-4;
· Redskins With eight points. D. Harden 4-0-B; Perry 1-0·2;
Jones had live, and C. Whalen Stampero 0-0-0; Thompson 10-2; Matthews 0-0-0; Kauffer
·
lour.
Impressive was the sticky t-0-2 ; Willet 0·0-0; Blessing o.
0-0. Tolals . ll -2-24. .
·
man - to - man def e nse
Score by quarters :·
displayed by the Gallians Gallrpolls
12 8 10 lQ-40
.4 6 8 6-24
against an experienced team P . Pleasant

,Spencer
Sharpie~
89,
Maummee Valley 62
Wapakoneta 69, Coldwater

winner, at Paint .va·Uey

Western Conference

THE WORLD FAMOUS HARLEM ALL STARS featuring.Tricky Dicky are scheduled to
play th~ Hannan Trace Faculty on Thursday, March 1, a t 8 p.m . The game will be preceded
by a ch1h supper at 5:30sponsored by the Athletic Boosters Club . At 6:30, there will be an
alumni game as a preliminary to the All Stars. The alumQI game will feature former
Hann~ Trace playe rs with the odd years taking on the even years. Any former player who
would like to participate should contact Pa ul Dillon, Hanna n Trace High School.

Portsmouth vs. · Chesapeake
at Ironton .

GALUPOLIS. Nationwide In s urance r emained
undefeated Thursday night in
the
0 . Mcintyre Park
District's Men's Winter
Basketball Program with a
60-55 win over the Bruins,
which is their only loss of the
· year. L. Dillon and W. Hesson
led Nationwide Insurance
with 12 points a piece. R.
F erguson pasted a high of is
for the Bruins.
In the second g ame,
Skyline Lanes defeated tlle
Buckeyes, 53 to 46. J. Ftlete's
18 points and J... Harris' 14
points paced the way lor the
winners. D. Holter and J .
McPeek's 14 and 13 point~ put
on a fine showing for the

* FREES WORKING CAPITAL
* POSSIBLE TAX ADVANTAGES .
* SIMPUAED RECORD KEEPING
* PERSONAliZED SERVICE
* COMPETin"E RATES .
* All MAKf.S AND MODElS

Buckeyes.
Kyger Creek High School
action saw Century 21 , led by
T. Strout's 26 points, beat the
Warriors 75 to 68.
Pearl Beer won a forfeit
from Newberry's Sporting
Goods by the score of 2 to 0.

r &amp; Evans I
"Your S&amp;T Store"
87 OUVE

'

116 4464·

GALLIPOLIS

By Tbe Associated Press
The top seeds lp the Ohio
Conference
basketball
tournament breathed a sigh
of relief.
Their chances of grabbing
a berth In the NCAA Division
III post-season playofls
Improved lnunensely Friday
night wh~n Heidelberg
shocked Baldll'ID - Wallace,
79-78, handing · the Student
Princes · thelr first loss
against a league opponent
this season.
Otherwise; "second . round
tournament action went as
expected, with Wooster
whipping MoWlt Union 94-79
in the-other Northern Divison
game, while in the Soutbern
Division, Wittenberg downed
Muskingum 51-42 and Capital
defeated Otterbein 76-62. .
. Baldwin-Wallace, I~ in
the cmlerence during the
regular season 'and now -19-6
overa ll , gOt into trouble early
and trailed 43-31 at ha lftime.
B-W closed the gap alter
inter m ission but , couldn 't
keep the momentum.

ooringthe~lar~sonand
now are 21~. handled Mount

Union with ease .behind the
21-point performance of
Randy Backus.
In the Southern Division,
favored Wittenberg {20-5)
displayed a balanced attack, '
led by Tyrone Curtis with 12
- poi~ts,
to •'Yeep past .
Muskingum and set up ·
tonight's showdown wil h
.
Capital. . :
Capital , seeded second In
tlle division, had little trouble
with Otterbein a s Ricky Lee
popped·in 22 points to lead the
Cru saders to their 16th
victory in 23 &lt;Mllings.

Hannan TraCe 1 16 931 1344

FINAL SVAC ONLY
Team
W L P OP
• -Southern
9 1 724 540
Southwester n 7 3 685 601
Eastern
1 3 638 595
North Gallia 5 5 643 644
Kyger Creek 1 9 554 634
Hannan Trace · 1 9 538 768

x-Ciinched Championship .

Kyge r Creek 62 North Gallla
61: · so ut ~ ern 95 Hann a n

~

•12 mo./12,000 Mile
Wananty

Golden St.

28 34 .452 10

You know about
the economical
speed. But do
you know about our economical deal? We can put price trade
andtermswithin
ne'slimits.
'
1979 FORD LTD 2 DR

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

1979 FORD lTD 4 DR

302 engine, po wer steering , power
brakes, air condi ti oner , til t wheel,
speed control, AM -FM stereo ra d io,
tin ted gla s~, fr ont and rear bum per
guard s, bumper hub str ips, rea r
defroster, air conditioner, ex teri or
a(:cent. Stk . No. 40
·'

Maroon with silver roof., 302 engine,
powe·r st eeri ng and br akes,
automatic trans., all vinyl sea t tr im ,
FR 7B x 14 w-s-w ti res . con ve ni ence
Qroup, elec. clpck , fr ont and rea r
bumper JJUCHdS, bumper rub st rip s,
AM- FM ster eo rad io, exte n or
accent . Stk. No. 448

302 engine, power steering and
brake s, auto mati c tra ns. , air
conditioner, fro nt and rear bumper
guards, all vinyl sea t trim , ful vi nyl
roo f. r ear electr ic window defroster,
AM. FM ster eo radio, dual note
horns, tinted glass . Stk. No. 405

29 30 .492 7 1;~

Portland

Friday' s Games
New Jersey 110, Portland

'1'1

Washington 132, Seattle 110
New Orleans 1tl , Ch icago

102

.

Kansa s City 121. PhOenix

112
San biegp 117, Philadelphia
116
Indiana 96, Golden State 94
Los Angeles 113, Boston
·
Sunday' s Games
Cleveland at Chicago
Philadelphi a at Denver
New York at NeW Jersey
Houston at San Antonio
Golden State at Washing ton

Portland at Detroit

Was
$7775

Campbell Conlerence
Patrick Division

wl"tptsgfga
N. Y . Islanders

37 10 10 84 262 153

N. Y . Ranger s

..

32 19 6 70 241 198
32 22 6 70 239 204
26 19 13 65 190 180
23 25 10 56 178 203

33
24
23
23

16
23
23
26

10 76 234 185
11 59 lBB 183
11 57 184 186
9 55 193 191

Norris Division

Montreal
Los Ang .
Pitts.
Wash .
Detroit

4'x8'x% ..
CD PLYWOOD

SHEETING

•a••

Gallipolis, 0.

Prices Effective 2/26/79 T'hru 3tl"r19

4'x8'x%

·PARTICLE BD•
UNDER LAYMENT
•
•
'
••

-

Transmission

•

•Much M011••

•

ACI'UAL PHOTO

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

BRAND NEWI

'509
·carolina.
Lumber
.
&amp; Supply Company
312 Sixth Street

675-1160

Point Pleasant
Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. · 5 p.m., Sat: 8 a.m. - 12 noon

•

i

10
26
25
32
13 31

8 88 249 139
8 58 210 212
8 56 197 212
9 45 200 251
14 40 183 223

Friday' s Games
Minnesota 2, Atlanta 2, tie

Philadelphia 5, Colorado 3
Sunday's Games
Colorado at Detroit

NY

ls lsnders · at

NV '

Rangers
Montreal at Washington

PlltsburP.h at
Chicag o
(Mondays Games)
Toronto at Buffalo
Vancouver at ~os Angeles

Local Bowling
Bowling Belles
Team s'andings as of 2-1679 are:

NOW

'6750

engi ne, power steer ing and
brakes , auto mat ic t r ans., a ir
condit ioni ng, spli t bench sea t with
rec li 11ers. optiona l rat io FR 78x 14 ws-w tires. t i lt wheeL speed control,
front and r ear bu mpe r guards. rear
elec . defroster , ex terior accen t
pro tection group, t in ted g lass,
r emote mir ror s, .wire wheel i;fver; .

Pol ar wh ite, dark red roof, red vi ny l
interi or, V-8 engine, power steering
an d brakes, automat ic trans., air
conditioning, speed con trol, ti nted
gl ass, dua l rerriote m ir rors: whi te
si de-wall tires . Stk . No. 383

Was
17449

NOW

'6449

Was S80S6

'6Y50

302 eng .. pow. steer . &amp; bra kes, auto.

302 engine, split bench seats. deluxe '
sound pkg ., con venience group, t ilt
wh eel. speed control. front and r ear
bumper gua rds, air condit ioning,
e·xterior accent group, protec ti on
group. tin ted glass . Stk. No. 334

NOW

NOW

Trans.; atr cond., spli t bench sea ts,
elec. clock, tilt steer . wheeL luggage
compart..
tr im bumper guards,
·front &amp; rear elec. rear window
defroster , r adio, am ·fm stereo with
tape, 8 troJ ck , ex terior acen1 prot .
group, t inted glass, left remote mir·
ror , liglll group, power side win
dows . Stk . No. 222

was
18209

'6600

•7095
and pinion steering, steel belted
r adia l tires. front bumper guards,
fu ll wheel covers, mini console, f li pper rear side windows, high back
bucket sca ts, co lor keyed 10 oz . cut
pil e c ar peti ng , br ig ht front and rea r
bumper . Stk . No. 436

Was

1

NOW

'3766

1979 MERCURY COUGAR XR7
Dark r ed with white half viny l r oo f,
302 engine. conv. group, cornering
lamps, day -date cl ock. til t wheel.
speed control, t wi n com fort power
seats, rear window defroster, air
condi tioning, AM-FM stereo tape, T.
glass, HD batte r y, power side
windows. 1Stk. No. -.lSO
'Wa s

. White wi th red half vinyl roof , 302
engine, w-s-w tires, ·. con venience
group, speed cont rol, twin comfort
seats, a ir co ndit ion ing , AM -F M
stereo tape, protecti on group, tinted
glass. Stk. No. 437

,NOW

7340

Enchanted

18916

NOW

'7864

engine, power stee r ing and
brakes, automat ic tran s., traction
lock, rea r wi ndow ' d ef ros t ~r.
protection group . Stk. No. ~26 .
351

Wa s

111 .61 2' .

;

....

''"

'6650

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR .

~

engine, power stee r ing, air
cond iti oning, all vinyl s·eat trim ,
speed co n troL f ront a nd rear .
bumper guards , elec tr'ic rear
window def roster, protection group,
tinled glass, dual remote mirrors .

5tk. No. J85
Wa s
&gt;77 13

NO W .

\

."...' .

'6753

'6572

1979 PINTO PONY
2 dr ., si lver, 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed

trars., ra ck &amp; pinion steering , fu ll ·
wheel cover s, brig ht front
rear
bumpers . St k . N o. 432

Was
$3557

NOW

'9999

'3380

NOW

1979 MERCURY COUGAR XR7
Black 351 engi ne, power steer ing ,
automatic trans., tilt wheel, speed
contro L power seat. tw in comfort,
electric rear win dow defroster , ai r
condit ion in g. am-fm stereo tape,
~e c or group, pro tection group,
tmted glass, power side wind ows,
power lock s, wire wheel covers. Stk .
No. 324
·

Was
$8982

NOW

..
..
' .·•
••
..,. .

...

•7940

1979 FORD T·BIRD
Bl ack. 302 engine, power steer ing
and brakes. automatic trans .• tilt
steering wheel, power seat. am-fri'l
stereo w ith 8 tr ack tape, dua l sport
mirrors , speed
cont ro lr a ir
cond ltonlng , tinted glass, wi re wheel
covers. Stk . No. 427 •

' WAS
18066

NOW

'7250

. '"""
.....
...
.,..
..".
·.~

'

~

;

· :~

.....

I 'I •"" '

..'. ."'... .

Thaler Ford Sales, Inc.

....

~

.•

-••••
.......

. ....'
~

Slii-LESPER SON S
Tom Sprague, Melvin Little, Deb Hammack . Gary Rudl)lph,
Pete Somerville."lraricy Fowler .
Sales Managers, Bob Ross and Jack Roush
,
24 Hr. Wrecker Service . Phone: 446-3575 Day - 446-3650 Night .
.

PH. 446-3575

Mirror : .

takes aminute to

Delphine St•rllng 405; Maria

Hanson 151.

NOW

302

1979 FORD T-BIRD HERITAGE

Federal Mogul No. 2: Kay
Gabrllsch 499: Mary Allie
177.
Jack's Awning Sales: Jan
Howell 517-175.
.
Blue Tartan: 1/lolet Cox
484-179.
Smith &amp; Halley's Ashland
Svc.: Nellie Jackson 348·141.
Der llleld Jewelry : J udy
Isaacs 478 ; Ruth Brown 17).
Wood"s Truck Svc.: Sandy
Courtney 4115· 195.
. Bob's C-B Radio.: . Lui a
Kitchen (sub) 476 ; Rulh
Miller 178.
Baird &amp; Fuller Really :
Karen Noll 456-117.

..

4 cvl. engine, 4 speed trans .• ra ck

'3466

1979 MERCURY COUGAR XR7

VVas

Was
17696

Wil s S7 S7 'l

2 Dr ., med . chestnut met., 4 cy l.
eng ine. 4 speed tr ans.. rack &amp; pi nion '
steering, AM ·r adio, rear window
def roster , full whee l covers, white
side·walt tires, bri ght front and rear
bu mper guards . Stk . No. 434

sam

1979 FORD LTD 2 DR

1979 PINTO PONY STA. WGN.

1979 PINTD PONY

NOW

'6800

302 engine, power stee ring anU
brakes, au toma ti c tra ns.• finger tip
speed co n t rol , fron t and rear
bumper guards , air condit ioning ,
tinted glass. dual remote control
minor s. Stk . No. 386

4 Dr., 302 eng ., cornering lam ps,
power steer . and brakes, au to:
trans ., ai r cond., speed cont roL !vg ·
gage cam p.. tr im. front &amp; rea r
bu mper guards, elec . re ar wi ndow
defroster , am-fm stereo with a track
t ape, protec tion group, ti nted glass,
dua l remote mirr or s, Stk . .No. 312 .

Was
SJ645

..

· 1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

1979 FORD LANDAU

Was

NOW

·-

Sli ver with r ed r oof. 302 engi ne.
power steeri ng and brakes , automatic trans ., air conditioning,
spe ed co ntrol . tren t and r ear
bumper guar ds , elec tri c r ear
defroster, pr otection group, tinted
glass. dual r emot e mirror s, wire
wheel cover s. Stk . No. 384

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

Was
$7601

.~::6

1979 FORD LTD 2 DR
J02

156.

.

•

40
25
24
18

Team
W. L.
Jack's Awning Sales 122 62
Derifield Jewelry
120 64
Wood's Truck Servi ce 119 65
Federal Mogul No. 1 117 67
Blue Tartan
102 82
Enchanted Mlrro
98 B6
Bob's C-B Radio
96 88
Ace Hlg~ Music·
92 92
Federal Mooul No. 2 85 99
Baird &amp; Fulfer Realty 63 121
Smith &amp; Halley's
61 122
Ashland Svc.
Individual team - showinghigh average and high game.
Ace High Music: Shirley ·
Sargent 437 ; Cindy Iglehart

11

Was
$781 6

AI A Glance

Boston
Toronto
Buffalo
Minn.

. •Automatic

.. ~

31 31 .500 7

Wales Conference
Adams,Oivision

•Remote Conbol
Sport Mirror

..

San Diego

11:1

Jl/ 2

19 Jl 9 47 174 223
St . Louis 13 39 B 34 175 264
Col o~ ado 12 40 8 32 ·J64 254

•AM.fM Radio
..
•Deluxe Wheel Covets

• Power Steering ·

37 24 .607
36 26 .590

Sl. 57

seconds

Vancou ver

Smith Buick-Pontiac Inc.

Mats

37 23 .617

Los Ang .
Phoeni x

Chicago

AFFILIAnD WITH

Rear Floor

Seatt le

Smythe Division

•

•Front

26 36 .419 1311,
22 38 .367 16'n
Pacific Division

Chi cago

Bv The Associated Press
t4ationa I Hoe key League

Friday Night

446-2282

•Custom Air
Conditioning

26 35 .426 13

Mil w.

Ohio C~mference Tourney
Trace 49 ; Crooksville 40
Northern Division
Wooster 94 , Mount Union 79 , Eastern 39, and ·Kyger Creek
Heidel berg 79, Ba ld w in - 49 Southwestern 39.
Southern and Kyger Creek
Wal lace 78
met in the championship
Southern Division
game of the Class A Sectional
Capital 76. Olterbe in 62
Wittenberg 51, Muskingum 42 at Me igs High School
Saturday night.

Ohio College Basketball

By The As$ociated Press

Fleetco Corporation

•White Sidewall .
Radial Tires

33 29 .532 6,1,

Ind iana

Seattle at Kansas Citv
Boston at San Oiego
Ind iana at L.os Ang eles
Monday's Games
Pro Hockey·

See or Call ·
· Greg Smith or Ge~ Johnson

Price Includes:

Denver

Atlanta
Phila .

1979 PONTIAC LEMAN$ SAFARI

"We were behind ... and
co)lld not alternate defenses
- and that's been our bread
and butter to. offset oor lack
of height," Coach Bob Rupert
,said . "We had to play man-toman to catch up."
Heidelberg, paced by Ron
Unhart With 19 points, now Is
16-11 and meetS Wooster In
the dhlislm finals tonight.
Wooster's Scots , who
finished ~ood behind B-W

SVAC STANDINGS
( FlNAL1
ALL GAMES
Team
W L P OP
Southern
12 5 1193 · 992
Southwestern 9 9 1164 1175
Eastern
9 9 1061 1111
NorthGall ia 8 9 1153 1i78
Kyger Creek 4 14 1030 1138

Midwest Division
Kan . City
J9 22 .639

Games
cancelled
Waterford at Southern and
Wahama at North Gallia .
Tournament scores -

58

B-W upset by Princes

SVAC standings

Nationwide remains

IT COULD BE RIGHT FOR YOU!

,.

23 37 .383 121/2

.590
.559 2
.525 4
.417 10'12

New. Orleans 20 43 .317 17

o:

Ave.

Detroit

25
26
29
35

.-

UNC -Charlotte 71, Georgia

in60

9'17

New York
25 37 .403 161h
Centr.al Division

unbeaten in leagne

1911 Eastern

40 19 . .678
33 24 .579 6

36
33
32
25

47

Sav

AlA Glance
Associated Press

San Ant.
Houston
Atlanta
Cleve la nd

Second Rou nd
Norfolk St. 85. Winston. Sa lem

I

B~· The

24 35 .407 16

S. Utah 78. Adams St. 74
TO URNAMENTS
CIAA TOURNEY

·Driv
at!

National
Basketball Association

30 28 .517

MEAC Tournamen t
Semifina ls ,
Howa rd 61, Delaware St. 51
North Carolina A&amp; T 7]J
Morgan St . 62
,
NCA IAW·Div . 1 Tourney •
First Round
N. Carol ina Cent . 105, A,p.
pal&lt;~chi&lt;~n St. 71
Sun _
B elt Tourl')ey .
F1rst Round
Jack sonv ill e 56, New Orleans

.

S. Colorado 82 . w New
Mexico 69
·
~i Orego.n 98, W. Washington

Virg i nia Union 89, Hampton
lnst. 83

Pro I
I
! stan d"1ngs1I

Boston

'

·SLO 54

I

New Jersey

Santa Clara 48 , Loyola ·cal

46

65

·--~--------,

Washington
Phila .

69

lield St. 84

Sa n Francisco 72, Pepperdine

Wi s .. Whitewa ter 6 3, W is.-

GAME~

28.
GALLlPOLIS
EIGHTH TEAM
W L P OP
(49) - Lentz 0-0-0 ; Adkins 0· Portsmouth 18 0 1212 932
0-0; R. Saunders 0-0-0; Bush Athens
14 4 1202 1016
0-0-0; Hively 0-0·0; Pullins o. Pt. Pleasant 14 3 998 869 ·
0-0; A. Saunders o.o.o; Sheets . Gallipolis
13 5 1101 954
13 5 1071 857
0-0-0; lsaao; 2-3-7; Lane 4·5· Waverly
13 ;
Skidmore
4-6,14 ; Ironton
13 5 1250 964
Edelmann 1-2-4;. Madison 0-2· Was~ . CH
13 5 1034 8&lt;59
2; Clark 1-0-2; Johnston 1-0-2; Rock Hill
11 7 1082 1028
Russeii1 -0-2; Carpenter 0·3·3. Loqan
7 10 1001 1018
Ravenswood 6 12 1102 1118
TOTALS 14-21-49.
Score by quarters:
Wellsto n
5 1J 1086 1331
·Gallipolis
12 t2 14 11- 49 Meigs
4 15 1088 1390
Pl . Pleasant 8 7 7 6-28
Jackson
2· .]5 979 1253
SEOAL VARSITY
,!Finan
TEAM '
W L P OP
Iron ton ·
12 2 1024 729
Richmond
Dale
Waverly
11 3 854 674
Southeastern 54, Chillicothe
Athens
11 J 936 758
Flaget 47
GaUipolls
10 4 876 742
St. Bernard 59, Lees Creek
Loqan
5 9 841 863
Wellston
4 10 849 1058
East Clinton 49
Seaman North Adams 67,
Meigs
2 12 754 1042
Jackson
1 13 790 1058
Manchester 58
TOTALS
_56 56 6924 6924 .
Versailles 56, DeGratf
Riverside 35
SEOAL RESERVES
(Regular Season)
(final)
Ada 82 , Dol a Hardin
Northern 63
TEAM
W L Ji OP
12 2 603 519
Archbold 63, Delph Is St. Ironton
Jo~n 49
Gallipolis
10 4 539 4113
Bratenahl 74. Elyria Lake Athens
9 5 651 547
Ridge 63
Waverly
9 5 ·635 547
6 8 610 572
Cleveland Bapti st Christian Loqan
5 9 612 624
65, Cleveland .Heritage Jackson
Well•ton
4 10 522 641
C~rlstlan 49
Dover 59, Carrollton ·sa
Meigs ··
1 13 4B2 121
Findlay 82, Fremont Ross TOTALS
56 56 4654 4654
56
Feb. 26 ·a ames:
Kidron Chrlsllan 48. New Wellston vs. Unioto, at Paint
Philadelphia Indian HIUs 44 Valley
Le•ington n. Man sfield Jackson vs. Mhiford - PortsMalabar 4A
•mouth WeSt winner at PortsLima Allen East 58, Lima mouth
·Bath 48
Feb. 27 games :
Napoleon 66. Port Clinton . Wahama at Ravenswood
54
Waverly vs. Greenileld at
North
Robinson ·c ot. Paint Valley
Crawford 55 . ()rtario 52
Ironton vs. Wheelersburg at
Ottawa -Glandorf 52
·
SwantOn 51
' Poltsmouth
games:
"f'eli.--28
Sandusky St. ·Mary'• 71 ,
Hurrlcli'ne at Pt. Pleasant
Clyde. 53
Sherwo.od Fairview 61. Washington CH -Hillsboro
winner vs. Wellston · Unloto
P,auldlng 59
·

UC-Sa n

Stoul 48

Cage
standings

CiJge sciJres

Ga11ia seventh grade
PT. PLEASANT -

NOW IN STOCK

38-22 at the quartermarks.
'Steve Skidmore paced the
winners with U points. Jamie
Lane added 13. Mullins led
the visitors With 10 points.
Box score :
PT. PLEASANT EIGHTH
(281 - Rutherford 0-2-2;

105,

84

Gallipolis eighth graders

GALLIPOLIS - Coach
.J ack Payton's Gallipolis
eighth grade basketball team
finished its 1978-79 basketball
campaign With a 49-28 victory
over visiting Pl. Pleasant
Friday evening.
The triumph left Gallipolis
with a 10-7 season marl&lt;. Pt.
Pleasant droppedto 7-&lt;3 on the
year.
Gallipolis led 12-8, 24-15 and

Azusa -Pacific

89
.
St. Xavier 110, Geo: William s

COL.D. WEATHER
SPECIAL.

.ALL

FA R WEST

Catholic 73, Frostburg St. 68
Flagl er 95, Webber 93
Kentucky 96, Vanderbilt 70
.Louisiana Col. 86. Dilla rd 74
S tet~on 86, South Ca rolina 82,
2 OT
'
MIDWEST
Moorhead St. 104, Winona St.

with 42-27 win over Point

top Point·in fi,TUJl, 49-28

Fe 58

SOUTH

GAHS frosh end .season

1-13'193 TRACK END DOOR
1-36 SERVICE DOOR
4-36x48 SKY LITES
BARE ALUMINUM ROOF
COLORED ALUM. SIDING

5'

O.JII as Bapti st 90, Lubbock
Christian 74 __,..
G"r and Ca nyon Col. 63, Santa

Birm ingham - Sou thern 82,
Montevallo 69

Sports transactions

.

68

SOU THW EST

Cortla nd St. 84, Brqckport 51.
80

EAST
Columbia 64, Princeton

.

Boise St. 95 . Idaho 80
California 74, Or'egon 62
Cal Lu theran 80, L.A . Baptt sf
Ca l
Poly - Pomo na
74,
Chapma n 65
Chico St . 91. Stanislaus St. 72
Colo. Mines 80. Mesa 70
Gonz a~a 75, Idaho St . 67
Hawaii 60, Evansville 54
Los Angeles St. 85, Bakers,

71,

Delawa re Ole ntang y 86 .

Gran ville 62

Diego 70

•

Federa l Mogul No. 1: Polly

Sw isher 425.; I&lt; i ta Beattie 183.

..
l

'

'

.I

.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

abetter

..'
.,••.,

~·

·~

·~

�,

.

•

...

l.dr-tllt! I&gt;UllQ8V tlllii!S-I&gt;enunel, ~unoay, ~ - ~o . zo, 1!1/9

Lay of the land

'•

Additional school funding provided in bill

Orchard planted

years ago

60

·34 acres and are steadily
BY JOHN COOPER
SoU ColiS. Servk:e
developing it into an im·
proved grassland farm. They
PT.
PLEASANT
Sometimes as · we visit have done this by clearing
cooperators we run on to some low value trees from
information that may be of land that is suitable to
interest to other people.
pasture and adding lime and
Walter Salamacha of SoU fertilizer to the ground to
Conservation Service visited increase grass production.
Charles J{itchen of Mason to · They are somewhat short of
discuss some · work on an water since this is a ndge
access road to his property. farm . We looked about the
Mr. Kitchen had bought part possibility of improving a
of the Ruttencutter peach spring and also building a
. orchard on the hill behind pond that would help provide
Mason.
water for livestock.
Mr. Kitchen plans to
rejuvenate some of the old
Francis· Stevens owns a.
trees and to plant new trees farm on Flatfoot Creek. We
for a future orchard. He were recently on that farm
signed
a
cooperative looking at some work that he
agreement with the Western had done to improve the land.
Soil Conservation District He has been working on this
and requested additional farm three or four years and
. assistance. It is interesting to has cleared much of it from
' note that this orchard was low quality brush land and
originally planted about the has planted pasture gras8. He
. time of World War I.
has also done some stream
Charlotte Jenks, a· long chaMel work. This consisted
time resident of Mason , of cutting out some badly
supplied us with this in· eroded places and sloping the
formation. She said that it banks and seeding them. This
was originally planted by the is a farm on which some strip
T. H. Gold family and had mining had been done and he
been bought by Lim Rutten· has done some smoothing and
cutter. He also owned an seeding on strip mined areas.
orchard in behind New
Elmer Newberry and Sons
Haven. A. D. Hume, who died of .White Church Community
four or five years ago at the are thinking about enlarging
age of 100, did much of the their operation to include the
technical work on these or· construction of a -barn and an
cbards inciuding erosion .animal waste facility. Okey
control on the land and the King and Walter Salamacha
grafting and planting of of SCS did some preliminary
seedlings. Walt~ reported plaMlng with the Newberry
that the trees had been · family and suggested that
planted on diversion terraces they call on the koowledge of
and that the road even Carl Cook, County Agent, for
though many years ~ld, did additional assistance con·
not need much work now cernlng the barn layout.
except to clear brush from it.
Mrs. Jenks also said that
the T. H. Gold family moved
to the Mason area about 1890
and that his sons, A. F. and
LOVE NEST SOLD
W. A., helped establish frUit ,'
NOTTINGHAM, England
nursery which was expanded
The 90-acre
to include four or five or- (AP) chards · comprising several Bestwood Lodge estate near
Nottingham, where Ki~g
thousand trees.
Charles
received
hts
•
We were on ljbe Paul Sayre mistress, Nell Gwynn, is to be
farm on Pleasant Ridge to .sold by the army to Gedllng
help him and his son Larry borough council for some $1.4
·
plan development. Th~y own million. ·

a

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press .Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- With biPartisan support, a GOP
lawmaker will introduce a bill on Tuesday that would add•
IJI(l'e thanflSOmllllon to Gov. James A. Rhodes' proposed $636
million increase in state schoof fund!nR.
.
Rep. Robert E. Net;ley, R-Laura, said Friday.his proposal
would earmark revenues fr(ll] the Individual and corporate inl cune taxes for education, fulfilling promises made to Ohioans
.r in the past by leaders of both political parties.
His bill, which has 10 co-sponsors, including two Democrats·
· and eight Republicans, will be introduced Tuesday whim lawmakers return from the weekend recess.
'About 3,000 Ohio 4-H members are ·carrying management projects. Through .thes~ pro-.
jects members learn to manage their personal income, apply managemeRt practices m the
hom~ and 'understand how the national economics situation ·affects us all.

County agent's corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture
Meigs County
GOOD FEEDGOOD J;ATTLE GOOD PROFITS
POMEROY - To get good
feed
requires .
good
management. First we need
to define good feed and here
we are going to limit this to
forages . Seventy-five to
eighty percent of the nutrient
requirements of a dairy cow
can be met with' forage. For
the beef cow and brood ewe
almost all the nutrient
requir~ents can be met.
What makes good quality of
hay? The two main things
hay should contain and which
we can lose so easily, Is
digestibility and protein.
Both of these can be lost by
cutting bay late:
Now,
let's
define
digestibility. Digestibility
means of course how easily or
how long It takes for the hay
to be digested by the animal,
or in terms of livestock
definitions, how long it takes ·
to pails through the gut of an
animal.
The amount of protein In
the hay does not change with
maturity. It just becomes
unavailable due to the
cellulose wall turning to
lignin. Ugnln of course 'Is
what wood IIi rna~ up of and
of course is unavailable or
C8Mot be broken down by the
animal.

'
As it takes a late maturing forages Is one thing and
hay 24 hours to pass through quantity Is another. However,
the gut ·you can well on· we can have a little bit of .both
derstand that the animal worlds. With 3 ·to 4 cuttings
caMot in a·24 hour period eat and cut at the proper cutting
as much hay of this type- as dates we can· have near
one that would only take 12 maximum production . and
hours to pass through the gut. near maximum quality.
Some examples of · cutting Forages should not be cut too
dates and digestibility of frequently so that we can
orchardgrass are as follows: maintain tbe stand. A general
orchardgrass hay cut around statement regarding all
May 8 which is In the boot forages Is thatthey should not
stage is 72 percent digestible. l!e cut mcn:e often than 35 to 42
Orcbardgrass cut 'June 6 clays between iruttl!lgs. . :
which is past the bloom stage . Now Iet:s look at. fertilizer
Is only 54 percent digestible. and yield ' goals., ··
•
The protein on this hay · Yields of 4 to 6 to~s of
would run in the neigh- forages can and ilhould be
borhood of 15 to 5 percent economical yfelds to llhoot
respectively. As you can see, for, Data showa !bal. if the
orchardgrass hay cut May 8· field is up ih fertWty and you
compared to June 6 Is worth are raising four tolll! .. of
almost twice &amp;:1 much.
,
forages per . I!Cfe, that. the
One of the frequent sc!dilloo ·of fl5 more of ferstatements made for bay not . tillzer, will stve you one more
being cut early is that it ,is too ton of bay up to 6.tons of hay.
I would say a rule of thiUDb
hard to cure in May. This I
caMot argue, but research is this - with a strail!ht
shows that bay cut between . grliss, four tons of hay. per
May 15th ll!ld 20th and getting acre Ill easily possible. With a
wet twice, is still a lot better good stand of legume-grass
bay than hay cut June 10 that .bay, five IMs is economicaL
does not get wet at aU.
'and wltii 8 good stand of
It is true that you lo8e a alfaHa, anywhere from six to
few nutrients with hay seven tons Ii attainable.
getting wet, but very little.
One other thing· on the
The other aspect we must economics sid....:.lt takes as
watch is baling hay too wet·. much time to IDOw and rake a ·
Hay that beatS and car- 'field of bay that yields two
meUzes loses a lot of Its tons per acre as it does a field
digestibility. Again the that yields four tons per acre.
Forage bas been the long
protein is there but
unavaUable.
forgotten crop. Let's give it
· As you know, qlllllity of Its rightful place.

VOL.

- itntintl

I~

NO. 4

· SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1979

FRANKFORT,Ky. (AP)A special prosecutor hired by
the state. has recommended
that' no further investigations
be conducted into the Bevefly
HUis Supper.. Club fire. · ·
. Lexington attorney Cecil
Dunn, in a 123-page report released today; said it is his
COitcluslon- there is only a
remote chance of convicting
.anyone of criminal acts in
connection with the May 28,
· .,1977
. fire that killed 165

PAGE 1-D

people.
~~ Thus ,

it
is
my
recommendation that you not
proceed to have a second
grand jury impaneled to
consider the case,, Dunn
wrote state Attorney General
.Robert Stephens.
Stephens 'hired DuJ:!n last
August at the direction of
Gov. Julian Carroll to review
the work of a Campbell
County grand jury which
failed . to .return any

indictments after
However, Dun'lt said, "The
investigating the 'fire.
probability of a graild jury
indictments
Carroll requested the returning
review because · the grand against anyone connected
jury's findings were different with the lire on the basis of
from" State Police report on presently known evidence is
very small, in my opinion .
· the fire.
"The probability of a petit
The State Police investiga- jury convicting someone on
lion, released in September the basis of such an
1977 cited many violations of indictmerit (should ·one be
and federal fire safety returned) is even smaller,"
standards and said some of · he said. "I would say that the
them were intentional.
·tatter probability is remote at
·
· ··
· best''
Dlinn said he felt the best
criminal case would be
against the club's principal
owner, Richard Schilling, Sr ..
"However, it falls short of
making out a good case of
criminal liability against

stau;

Energy boss endorses
·_ solar,. p. owe.,. pro_e • am
'
·

·

·

IO'r.
_·

hi~~n~'::ct"':;:';te~~a~

inadequacy of evidence against
·
•
other individuals, the doubt
. . ~y. j9N'ATIIAN WOLMAN several weeks, tne presuwm onetbat caus tor 1ew solar in- about the evidence against
.._'haoelated : Press Writer -wtll dec1de preclsely how f~r centives a'nd no dramatic in- Schilling ·
and
the
;. WASHINGTON. (AP) .- 1 thti goverrun~11t !lhould goJn crease in the amount of improbability of success in
· Erterg~ ., Sec{et11 ty · :James. s t i ·D_l u:l a 1-l n g · s o.l a r energy available from solar further proceedings led him
. Sck'-'""et,·never·Jmown
. for techn_olog1es ..The _.s.ources technolouies.
to a. "most certain belief"
'his' itaunch advocacy of solar declined to be 1dentif1ed •
A.second
.
.,. .option _ the one about th e case.
. ~- ·.- Ia . trilmpeling , the ·-~~~a. meeting with solar lob- advocated-by Schlesinger _
"That belief is that nothing
poiltl~al : ''and . · economic ' hylsts' here F.riday, .Carter ·Calls for Spending $2.5 billion is to be gained from
. ·_&amp;dvliiilaJies of ·spendJn8 $2,5'." declare!! ·_. he is . "as . by .1985 to provide tax in- additional efforts to pursue
bliUI!I'I.' ':ojt ·· technology · .that --.nf!l~allllc as anym~ rn thts centives
and
credit criminal prosecutions in
would enable .the nation· to .room and vowed be d make. assistanCe to solar producers connection with the fire ," he
rilly mare treSvily on the .sun. good on co~tmenta to ._ a . ·and consumers in areas said.
. · •··In •a confidential memO- ,str.ong solar policy, a~rding including solar hot water,
Dunn also supflorted the
· r8nd1Dll 1o ~ ~. to participants In the.session: passive solar design and use method and ~rformance of
, Scbleslnger; a orieUme chajr, ., W.itl!.oll shortages on the . of solat power in industrial . the grand Jury . and t~e
, ~ o(; uie ~~ Energy. · hor~ and·fuel prices riling processes. If implemented, prosecutor who directed 1!,
;~ endlll'll8d a five- &amp;!eadily, Scb'Ieelnger the policy . review predicts, Campbell Commonwealth
·year· 110~.-· tfffll1•,Ill ,. r.emjndedCarter, "There is~ u.s. reliance on solar power Attorney ~u1s Ball. .
· ~ulllle llllal'lldvntei: He' .growing . Interest in · the ·. would nearly double from the
Dunn sa1d he only directed
· -also ' urg,ld .earter:i.t.O. \•gt"" · po!!Sibllltles that.solar·energy: present 5.4 p_ercent rate to his attention to possible felon' ,• S!!!'iDUI 't COl!slderatlon • :10 l)olds for reducing. our 10.6'percent.
ies, since.th~ on~ year statute
'.~. ..'ial'
... ........ ~ a··gGal" ~.onlle,' ·v ulnerabilities f,rom _an
A third option, favored by of
hmltallons
. on
lirnount&gt;
of energy the U.S. overde""" de nee on Imported solar · advocates , would m1'sd emean ors has exp1red ·
...,....~""!!·
cari--tap from the sun. ·
petroleum-ba~ pr~cts." . provide for "significant He ~oted of~en in the
· Despite all the ~lamor
Thus, he sa1d, "lt ' ts my · additional financial techmcally wntten report
. . about dwb)dllng supplies of -. convi_ctionb tbatf there rt.isl a incentives," estimated by thcodat violadti?~sffo~asltanut~~~~e
· ·..foisii fuels, the -nation growmg ase o suppo or Schlesinger at $6 billion in
es. an o IC
·
·. -: ®rrently satisfies only 5.4 your campaign promiSe to 1980alone,risingtoa total $44 duct" in enforcing them are
percent of its energy demand invigocate the development billion . by
1985.
If misdemeanors.
. .
with solar technoloil!es.
of environmentally safe implemented, this would
~~t Dunn was highly
The Schlesinger memo- sources of energy • such as result ip solar power ~rltJCa_l of the fire code
randiDJl, a copy of which was solar."
.. .
- c;ontributlng 23 percent of the . mspec~on and enforcement
obtained bY. .The Associated
Th,e sources ~ld SchleSI- nation's energy . needs. u at the time of the ~~;e. ~ymg
... ~ress, ' wa~. pr~sented to .. nger s memo ls_likely to have spending were boOsted to $113 the system
VIrtually
, ; carter.' 'as ·the president . a cOJ.lSiderable tmpact onthe billion by the year 2000, solar ass~red inadeq?ate pro'CMtlnues his review of U.S. prestdent. •
power could supply up to 25 tection of th~ pu.~hc from the
. )tolar .po\lcy. .
Among the solar policy o"" percent of the energy hazards of fire:
• ,
:· SoiU'ces ' 'said that within lions· prepare&lt;\ for Carter IS demand.
The state F1re Mars~al s
office . has since been_
roorgamzedand moved from
the
state
Insurance
Department to a new
Depa,rtment of Housl_ng,
•
Buddmgs and ConstructiOn.

.·

'¥~-.,.

Meigs ·
Property
Transfers

•

Pomeroy~

EQUIPMENT AND MISCELlANEOUS
5' dbl . door self contained upright freezer ; 10' Hill meat
display· case with trays and storage; 10' Nolin
combination, daii-y and self serve storage cooler; 7'xS'

Brown walk-in cooler and accessories ; U.S. 1 h.p.

Berkel meat saw; U.S. hamburger grinder ; Hobart
Steakmaster ;' U.S. 'I• h.p. meal slicer; Upright
wrapping paper dispenser; tape dispenser ; N.C.R.

cash register with -grocery keys ; 120 unit account box;
Old time coffee grinder; Dayton produce scales; 5

shell,

2

sec. back-to-back

display shelves; Wood

18'

meat block table ; Platform scales; the remaining
lniscellaneous grocery stock from the store; plus many
·
other items too numero!JS to mention.

· Blumenthal has
•
maJor message

Sale starts at 1:00 P.M., piNse register with caahier
before sale time. Not responsible tor accidents or loss
articles.
'Terms: Calli Day of Sate
Mr. ancf Mrs. WIIU.m A. Gl.llbs, Ow~er
Gene OesCh, Auctioneer

Gallipolis, Ohio

Home 1614)446'7440

.

SEE·CENTRAL SOYA FOR
..

SUPPLIES

FUMIGATION
.
. COVERS

"

EN.IDE .-~ DISYSTON •

APPLICATORS

10 miners
killed in

RICJIFIELD, Ohio (AP) PEKING (AP)- Treasury Roy, told reporters at the The Carter administration
. Secretary W. Michael airpor:l that newspapers here should ·consider mandatory
Blumentl\al arrived in have carried " almost controls on wages, prices, InPeking Saturday bearing a nothing'.' ·about -the war, . teres! rates, rents, dividends
message ~rom President. although radio and television "and everything else from
Carter to · China's leaders have given reports on the top to bottom," U. S. Sen.
exprdSing U.S. concerti o-.er fighting.
Howard Metzenbaum said.
the • Cbineae Invasion of . He said attempts by the
"We have inflation that is
VIetnam. ·
mission to learn from the ·just out of control at the preGLACE BAY, Nova Scotia
- ·B lumenthal,
whose Chinese themselves more 9ent time and, in my opinion, (AP) - An explosion rocked
meetings with Chinese about the . progress of the · 'it is time we gave a good hard a coal mine in this Cape
:officials will focus .on fighting
or
Peking's' lookatthis.subject," theOhio 'Breton town early Saturday,
economic reiatlons· between intentions had proved Democrat said in an inter- killing at least 10 miners and
· · view after a speaking engage- injuring six others, the mine
. "the two countries, lsnded at fruitless.
7:40 p.m. ·after a 24Jiour
Iijwnethal, wh011e meetings ment at the Richfield Col- operator reported. It said no
flight from WaShington. His with tfie Chinese begin iseumFriday.
one was trapped in the mine.
The blast occurred while an
:Chinese counterpart, Finance Sunday, is the first top U.S..
"It's not enough just to
7Minlster Chang Cbing-fu, official to. visit China sin~· have· wages and prices con- estimated 150 ·men were
'Willcomed 'him.
, diplomatic relations were trolled," be said. "We have to working the night shift. The
· · : In an interView during the eslablished Jan. 1. He will control dividends Interest ' mine is operated by the Cape
'fligbt, Blumenthal _siid the ,. ·preside · over the · fonnal rent ....e\.erythil)g ~cross th~ Bretori Development Corp., a
·lnvailm of VIetnam should opening Of the U.S. Embassy ' board. ~'
goverrunent corporation that
· hot interfere with ·.the here March 1.
However although Metzen- rubs the coal mir)e~ in I'&lt;ova
.. ilevelopment
of
good
' bawn said he was prepared to Scotia's Cape Breton region .
.relations between the United· A. key topic In · his discuss the matter with
The entrance road to the
~tea and China.
dlscuaslons of trade and Carter and congressional mine was cordoned off and
• "We want to establish economic matters affecting leaders he said he would not unauthorized persons were
. normal relations. . I really Uie two countries ' iriii be suggesi mandatory controls not allowed in. Hundreds of .
"don't think the .two matters settlement of
miUion in be legislated.
' fearful r.elatives crowded
are related," he said.
U.S. claima agalns!: China re"I bave said it is time for along the entrance road
He woUld not diacUBS the 1 suiting from the seizure of. the president to consider pro- awaiting word of the min~rs'
tone of Carter's message, U.S . property · after the vlding leadership along these fate. Names of the v1ctuns
which he will delivel'rally in communust takeover here in Jines," he said. "I don't feel were not tmll)edtately
his ·meetlngs here.
1949.
tbat a cong~:essional in· released.
.
.
There was little ~ul'olard
Washington considers itiative, at this point, would . An ambu1ance dr1,ver sard
· ·
~very ambulance m CaM
si bt .Peklng toda ol public settlement of th~se claima a fly."
~cern about the fighting in necessity before a full- r.tetzenbaum noted that Breton, the n.orthernmost
Vleinam. Few soldiers were fledged trade relationship Carter's voluntary wage and area. of this . Cimadian.
ieen.during the to.mUe drive between the two nation~· can 'price controls have no effect feovtnce, was • preSJied Into
from the airport to the center · be established. Bluinenthal · on the price of food health er.ice to evacuate the
of the city, and no nillltary also will star:t t.alll8 aimed at care or housing. He' pointed .. in}~red to Halifax, the Nova
vehi~les were .In evidence.
reaching a forrilal : trade out that Ute three areas have Scot1an cap1tal. .
The deputy chief of the U.S.· agret!ment with China by the s)lown the greatest price in· The cause of l.he· explosjon
Ualaon Mission, Stapleton end of Ibis year.
cre~ses recently.
w~s not immediately known:

n96

NYLON &amp;COITON
.CANVAS
CENTRAL SOYA
OF OHIO, INC.
GAU.IPOUS, OHIO

now ·mandatory

_explosion

.• I•'

ALL YOUR TOBACCO
DOWFUME

Senator feels

•

•'

US 35,4 miles west of Gallipolis
1614) 446-97)7

Ave.

.

t92·5101

co.

o.

•

.... .

By DAVID TERRY
Associated Press Wriler
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)
Vietnamese
forces
counter-attacked Chinese
troops in · three border
provinces, killing hundreds of
the invaders, a · Hanoi
broadcast said Saturday. But
a Peking official was quoted
as saying the battle will
continue until the border is
drawn to China's satisfaction.
The official Voice of
Vietnam said the counterattacks were launched
Friday, and that In Cao Bang
province north of Hanoi the
Vietnamese hit a Chinese unit
on Highway 4 between Dong
Khe and Cao Bang City.
The Hoang Lien Son
province in the northwest,
Vietnamese armed forces

M~rder
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C.
- Employees of a motel
where pol1'ce ·cornered two
suspects in a crime spree of
murders, robberies and
kidnappings say the men
were polite and friendly
guests.
One of the suspects,
Eugene E. Skaar, 40, shot
himself to death early Friday
as police closed in and began
lobbing tear gas into a motel
room. Ronald R. Woomer, 24,
was arrested
without
resistance and is expected to
( AP)

killed "hundre!Is of enemy
troops, " and destroyed 73
"enemy vehicles including
four tanks, " the broadcast
said.
In Lang Son province,
"hundreds of enemy troops
were wiped out," with one
ba'ttallon " badly trounced" in
a battle southeast of Tra
Linhdistrict 3% miles from
.the Chinese border, the
broadcast ' said.
Japan's Kyodo news service, meanwhile, quoted a
Peking · official as saying
China's "overall pullout
won't cOme today or
!&lt;)morrow" because China
needs to give "a bit more
lessons" to Vietnam.
The official, who was not
identified, also said Chinese
troops ultimately are to with·

draw to ''what China claims the current wa r will be
is tM border line and not the fought here.
border line Vietnam insists , The latest report indicates
upon ."
after days of heavy fighting
Ch in ese troops were the Chinese had defeated
reported besieging the Vietnamese artillery and
strategic city of Lang Son on infantry dug in near Dong
Friday after seizing a third Dag, seven miles north of
provincial capital in Viet· Lang Son on Highway I fro m
nam's northern border Hanoi.
region.
Ky odo al so quoted the
embassy dispatches as
Kyodo quoted dispatches saying the Chinese had seizect
from the Japanese Embassy Ha Giang , capital of Ha
in Hanoi as saying Peking Tuyen province in the central
troops were pounding Lang part of the 450-m il e-long
Son just six days a(ter border .
pouring across the frontier.
The Chinese captured the
The city 80 miles north of provincial capitals of Cao
Hanoi and 12 miles south of Bang, east of Ha Giang, and
the border has guarded the Lao Cai in the key Red River
invasion routes from China, Valley area in the west,
for centuries and analysts earlier in the week.
believe the decisive battle of
On the eastern end of the
border, three Chinese in·
fantry divisions adva nced
behind heavy tanks through
Quang Ninh province to
po sitions overlooking east·
be charged with murder, one (Thursday morning) and west Highway 4, some 50
armed robbery, kidnapping gave me $3 for it."
miles east of Lang Son.
·and crun
· t'nal sexual .assault.
The storming of the motel
Thai intelligence sources
Skaar and Woomer, both brought an end to eight hours said one division of Viet·
from Huntington , W.Va., of violence in which four per- itamese infant ry fou ght
rented a $l().a-&lt;lay room at sons were killed, includin g fiercely , sometim es hand·to·
the Komo Mai Motel here one of two women who were hand , to hold back · th e
Wednesday. Motel employees abducted and raped.
Chinese invaders Friday.
said they claimed l&lt;l be in the
The wave of terror began
The so urces say · the
coastal resort looking for Thursday afternoon when Chinese hope to cut Highway
construction work.
John Turner, 67, was killed at 4, which links Lang Son to the
his home in the Colleton sea, and move inland to sever
One employee .said Skaar County town of Cottageville. High-way 1 to the capital, '
was a "very friendly " man About two hours later Arnie thereby pinning the Viet·
who "would dirty a towel and Lee Richardson, 27, and his namese at Lang Son down on
want to pay for it. He dirtied sister-in-law. Earldean ali sides.
Wright, :J;i; were fatally shot
Teh sources said Chinese
'
near Georgetown.
MIGs bombed stores of Soviet
An hour after that, Louise suppli es · near Haiphong
B. Sellers, 33, and Wanda harbor Thursday night, but a
Summers, 25, both of Peking official denied the
Pawleys Island, were report and the State
~~~~~~n:,liil:t;~r~~g ~~.~ Department said it had no
evidence of the raid.
_dieted for January.
Georgetown County coastal
'ilte sources said Soviet
The January increase, also town.
ships were ~nloading missiles
"marked, by escalating prices
The two d erks were taken and rada r equi pment in ·
for gasoline, cars, medical about 20 nules lust across the Ha1phong harbor when a half·
care
and
public Horry County lme, raped and dozen
M!Gs
bombed
accommoda fions,
would shot,satdGeorgetown County warehouses holding Soviet
amount to an annual inflation Sheriff Woodrow Carter. h
war supplies four miles
rate of 11 .2 percent if
Ms. Sellers d1ed at t e outside the city.
continued for an entire year. Medrcal Umversll~ of South
11te sources said there was
But Barry Bosworth, Carolina
hospital
m a report of 13 secondary
director of President Carter's Char_leston . Ms . Summers explosions when the MIGs
Council on Wage and Price was ltsted m serwus conditwn struck, indicating the bombs
hit arsenals or ammunition
Stability, expressed at MyrUe Beach Ho:p1taL
dumps.
11
confidence Friday that the
Skaar was wanted m Cabe
The, ,Chin ese jets en·
inflation rate can be held to . County, W.Va., on a ~hargeof
countered
anti-aircraft fire
about 7.5 percent this year, attempted m':lfder m an. ~~depending on energy prices. c1dent m wh1ch a shenff s from Vietnamese batteries
The inflation rate last year deputy was fired upon at near the port, but there were
was 9 percent.
Barboursvtlle
Feb.
2, no reports of any of the M!Gs
In a reference to Black Fri- accordm~ to Investigator being hit or shot down, the
day ,thedayofthe stockmar- Dallait Fleids.of the Cabell sourees said.
Haiphong, Vietnam 's main
ket crash of Oct. 29, 1929, Re- County Sheriff s Department.
seaport,
is 75 miles south of
publican National Chairman
A warrant was Issued, for
the
Chinese
border, and a
Bill Brock said that "for Woomer·~ arrest by .Cabell
Chinese
raid
at this depth .
American working people Cou~ty C~cmt Co':lft m conwouk!
have
been
Peking's
and those on 'fixed Incomes, nection w1th a se~tes of burdeepe
st
penetration
of
Uiisday-should be referred to glanes earh~&lt; this year, acVietnam in the week-&lt;lld war.
as Black
II."
cordrng to F1elds .

suspects friendly

'Cost 0 £ Ji"vmg ·r ose
h
d
pure asmg power own

' M ..

SAlURDAY, MARCH 17, 1979
Starting at 1:00 P.M.

'

prngr.1ms :mrl servires. Rut he said if higher taxes are re~otired to finance them,·tney will have to be sold to the people
students on their merit.
in a county can propose 3 county income tax on a countywide
When the state income tax was enacted in 1971 , he said
ballot.
Ohioans were led to believe the revenues would all go to
bilL
·
The state would collec1 the new tax and return revenues to schools. " I! is time the Legislature fulfil ls the promises made
Netzley said the money then would be divided among school the county. Any single ballot proposal would be limited to a .5 to the people by political leaders in both parties," he added.
districts in each l'Ounty under a formula that takes into percent increment to present state income tax rates.
Netzley's bill would push the proposed increase in state aid
account the tax wealth of each district.
to
primary and second ary education in the next bienniun to
He said the JIC~ revenues could be used to increase loca l
"This formula will provide Oie greatest amount of equai• . support
$787
million. Democrats in the Senate, where a school formula
for schools, or to reduce real estate taxes which
ization possible, and will strengthen local control of schools," currently bear the brunt of local school funding .
plan is being considered, have already proposed increasi ng the
the Miami County lawmaker said. ·
Netzley conceded that earmarking all state incom~ taxes for governor 's $636 million w $700 million.
Netzley's bill, which he has had in the )VOrks for the past schools
Democrats joining in support of Netzley 's bill are Reps. Kencould result in money shortages for other state
neth A. Rocco, D-Cleveland, and Arthur Wilkowski, D-Toiedo.
suppl!rt for Sd ~U ul s.
It says a majoc ity of schools enr.~iling..a.. [Il~jority of

..

We .are_goirig out of the grocery business and will offer
186 Mulberry Avenue,

several months. also contains a m..,hani sm to strengthen local

Otinese ·official says
Recommend probe be stopped fighting will coniinue

Farmers will
meet March 4

the following at public auction on the premises to the
highest bidder -

It provid~s that the income tax paid by each individual would
be returned to the county of the lax)&gt;&lt;lyer 's residence.
lt'lilso proposes to allocate revenue• from the corporalc inCOOle tax on an equal, per pupil basis, with funds from both income taxes sent to 88 county school trust funds created by lhe

,.

.. ,

PUBLIC AUCTION
Ohio.

'

I .

1

·o

By ·ROBERT M. ANDREWS
Associaled Press Writer
WASHINGTON (A P) _
Led by the sharpest increase
in food prices in nin'e months,
the cost of living jumped
another 0.9 percent in
January while the average
worker 's purchasing power
declin ed, the government
reported Friday.
The 0_9 percen t boost in the
Labor 'Department's
Consumer Price Index
matched the highest monthly
increases recorded last year
_ 0_9 percent gains in June
and September - but fell
short of the 1percent advance
that many analysts had pre-

'Work stoppages

are announced

EL CENTRO, Calif. (AP)
- In an effort to bring more
pressure on . growers, the
United Farm Workers union
bas announced pjans for a
series of ·one-day . work
stoppages throughout
California in a show of
support for a 37-&lt;lay strike by
union field bands.
"We plan to call mo~e w,ork
stoppage,s and to extend them
to other areas," UFW spokeswoman Vicky Lopez said Fri- ,.
dsy. "Bqt we have not yet de- - " ' "')
cided on the dates or on which
..
. regions will b_e affected."
Three one-day work stop:;
pages have been staged since
J,
the strike began, but all have
been limited to the Imperial
}
'
Valley, the focus of the strike.
•uture walkouts could be
'
'"
extended into Ventura County
' I' .,
and the' Sa~ Joaquin and
-· '
Salinas valleys, Ms. Lopez
said.
Meanwhile, invesligai.Jrs
for the state's Agricultural
Labor Relations B9ard
are 'the . new Sears
promise&lt;) a decision soon on
Authorized Catalogue merchants. Forme,r mercha~t~
Osborne, left, i~ .~hown ~rning
'wbether to seek injunctions
the keys over to Williams. On the right is Mrs. WUiiwtis. Osborn~ was. aff1hated wtt~ !he
further limiting picketing by
store for seven years. Williams for the past eight years has bee~a fmanc1al analyst, div1s1on
the UFW because of violence
of banks, State of Ohiu . 'ilte couple are the pare11ts of three children, Jane AM , Tucker and
in the Imperial and San
Ryan .
.Joaquin valleys.

.

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�•
6-2- TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 2:i, I9'J9

DODGE VANS

LEGAL NOT ICE
TO BIDDERS

•

Not• cc is h c nby given th at
S'Calcd l:)fd S w 111 b e r ec e ived

THE WAY TO .GO•··

STEP
ON
'OUT

b'( the City M a nager, of the
C •t v of Ga ll ip o lis, Oh•o. at h is
O ff ice '" th e Mun •c ipa l

•

Bu tl dmg tor gasoline . mo tor

oil , f iese l tue l. and kero sene

B•ds w ill be rece•ve d a t ltJ e, .
ab ove

na med

Offi ce

untd

12 00 Npa n , local t i m e on
Wednes da y , Mar ch 14, 1979

a nd p ubli c y o p en ed and read
a t t h at hO u r an d pl a4!e Bid s
f o rm s mav be obta ine d '" t he
Q ff, ~e of th e City Man ager ,
5 18 Second Av enue, C •ty of
G all iPOli S, O h1 0

Fe b 25, Ma r

DODGE
MAXIWAGON.

SAVE UP TO

$1500
OFF

t

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
•

THIRD &amp; COURT

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

.

The cars and the deals are beautiful
KARR .&amp; VAN ZANDT

.l

NEW CHIVY CARS &amp; TRUCKS

SAVE HUNDREDS ON
ALL OUR _1978's!

•

ALBERT ZAHl - Februa ry 25, 1978
Si ncere end true m heart and
m md

Beout•ful

STEP
ON

beh1nd

IN

t ~rs

•

BEnER

'"

$4295
$4995

WILL BUY

1977 Chevrolet Impala 4 dr. (gold &amp; buckskin)

WILL BUY

$6895

' BUY
WILL

1977 Pontiac Grand Prix (bronze &amp; white)

$3795

WILL BUY

$3895

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$2595

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$3295

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$2895

WILL BUY

1975 Buick Apollo 4 dr. (burgundy l

$3195

WILL BUY

1975 Ford Elite 2 dr. (cream &amp; buckskin)

$1795

WILL BUY

1977 Buick Electra 225 (blue &amp; white)
1977 Plymouth Fury

1976 Pontiac Grand Lemans Wagon (light blue l
1976 Plymouth Quster

1974 AMC Gremlin

WILL BUY

1973 Chevrolet Caprice 2 dr. (red &amp; while l

$1895

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1973 Buick Century 2 dr. (green &amp; white l

$1195

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1973 Pontiac catalina

$695

WILL.SUY

1973 Chevrolet Impala 2 dr. (green &amp; black)

$695

WILLSUY

1972 Buick LeSabre 2 dr. (gold)

$995

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1973 Buick LeSabre 2 dr. (brown)

$395

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1972Pontiac Leinans2dr. (green&amp;white)

__________ ____

992-5342

"You'll Ltke Our Qua hty Way of Doing Business '
GMC Fma nclng
Open E ven mgs un tl t6 :00- ttl5 .

...:.

S unday , Feb. 2!i

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Fe bruary 2S, 1979
Th1 s com1ng year you s hou ld
fa re ve ry well 1n work or proJe cts that pe rm1t yo u to us e your
c reattve and 1magtnative talen ts Seek ma rkets requt nng
your s kill s
PISCES (Fe b . 20-March 20) A
s ttuatlon may a n se toda y si mi la r to one tha t pre v• o us ly
ca us ed you a problem. Prof;t
from yo ur past ex pe n ence .
Do n ' t re peat the m1s take
Learn moJe ~bout yo urself by
se nd ing fo r yo ur copy of th e allnew As tr o-G raph Le tter Ma 1111
for eac h a nd a lo ng , selfa dd ressd , stamped e nve lope
to Ast ra-Grap h , P.O Box 489 ,
Rad 10 C1ty Stat ion , N Y 10019.
Be s u re to s p ecify birth sign .
ARIES (March 1·Aprll 19) You r
ju dgment may be a t n fle fau lt y
today, so gua rd agamst drawing hasty conc lus io ns Take a
seco nd . or eve n a third look, 1f
nec e ssary .
TA URUS (Aprii21J.Moy 20) Comp~n l on s or associates wil l become easil y ange re d to day 1f
you be hawe dtc tat o na ll y Le ad
b y example, not by press ure
tac tics
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You r
att1 tude co uld make ta s ks you
diSli ke even far more d1fft c ult
toda y Keep a coo l head 1f you
want the prod uc tion line to run
's m oo thly.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
Tre at the p roperly of others
toda y with t he sa me respect
you 'd wis h fo r yo uts. Be ing
carel ess with a nother 's pos sess ions spells seno us trou ble .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
I ma te may be a trifle dl fftc utt to
ge t along wllh toda y, so Jus t to
be safe g1ve h1m or he 1 the ktd
glo we trea lme n t Yo u II be glad
you did.
V«tGO (Aug . 23· Sept. 22) _Be

-

safely -consc ious to day lf
yo u ' re wo rki n g wtlh tools
you ·re no t too fam tha r with.
Read tn st ruct•o ns carefully befo re yo u thro w a n y s wttches
LIBRA (Sept. 23· 0ct 23) Ste er
clea r of Sltu a lto ns today where
a ga mble 's Invol ved You may
be lucky a t f ~rst but 11 doesn 't
a ppea r as tho ug h yo ur good
fo rtu ne will h o ld up
SCORPI O (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
Loved o nes o r th ose in yo u r
c ha rge may put yo ur pat1e nce
to th e test today Hang loo s e If
you do so m e th tng ras h yo u 'll
later re gret it
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Think ca re lully before you
speak tod a y , or you may blurt
som ething o ut tha t wil l · be
ext remely dtfh c uft to re\[lc t,
ca us ing · yours elf ne e dless
em barrass m e nt.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11)
fn hopes o f getting a bargain
today you co uld end up
out!llllarttng yourse lf Recall
th1s 1f you run mto a sharp
ho rs e trader who has something you want
,
AQUARIUS (Jon. 21J.Feb. 1t) Be
wary of being s us ceptible today to th e Influence of some·
one who has gotten you Into a
lig ht spot befo re. Don't be
a fra id to say " no " lf necessary.
!NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
Monday, Feli. 26

As'Ro GRAPH
0

Pomeroy

ge ntle mann e r Li ke to fmd out·
more ab out yo urself? Send for
your copy of As tro-Graph ,lo,etter by ma111ng St for e ac t{ to
As tra-Graph , P 0 Box 489. Rad iO C1ty Statton, N Y 10019 Be
sure to s pec1fy btrth s1g n
ARIES (March 21· Aprll 19)You
have a ten dency to tak e a bac k
se at today when you s ho uld
be calling th e s hots Othe rs will
fall s ho rt 10 leade rship abtll ty
TAURUS !April 21J.Moy 20)Un
fo rt un ate ly, yo u may place your
trust m !bose who are n' t all that
de pendable today Try to handle im portant matters yourself
Yo u can't bank on anyone else
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)To
gether, you and a frie nd may
come up w1th a brilliant 1dea
to day Howewer, "'.orking
'.tandem in order to pull tl
may be diffic ult.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)1n
attempt1ng to do s ome thing
that should make you look
good , you might get a bit
careless-m... y our thinking and
produce the oppos ite effec t
LEO (July Z3·Aug. 2Z)Others
may not be ready to take a
fresh approac h today If your
1deas meet with opposition,
back off immediately.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept.
Z2)There' s a strong pro bability
that a relationship wh1ch has
had questtonable value could
come to an abrupt endtng
tQday . Don ' t try to hghlt t.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)Better
take some second looks before
teemmg up w1th anyone today,
especially If · you're bound
legally, unless you ' re prepared
lo give all and take nothing
SCORPIO (Oct. t4-Nov. 221Be

fore tackling a new project
today , make cer1ain you have
the cooperation you tho u9ht
-IX
you 'd have. Your p rospective
· crew mtght be ptaymg ~ooky .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
t1)You could meet s omeone
February 26, 1979
new toda y, but think twice
The re are several e)(c ttl ng before bringing th fs person
cha nges in sto re for you thts home . Because of domestic
co ming year . Al low past ex pe n· tenston the welcome mat has
ence to gutd e yo u s o t hat the bnn pulled in .
s tumbl ing bl ock th at thre w yo u CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
befo re can 1 tn p yo u up again
1t)You hawe an opdp~drtunlty fo r
PI S CES (F e b
20 · Morch . gal~s today,,provl&lt;e you pan
1
20\ &gt;l!cl, lo wha t yo ur rn ne r your lime wts ety . If not, needfettltng' lt:dl vou 1s ng h t 1f y.;&gt;u less runn1ng around will s teal
IUt'I IIHO an oppos1ng &gt;w-ie w point 1 Your prize .
today , bu t do s o m a q uie t, AQUARIUS (Jon . 20· Feb.

CU.:rlhday

•

••

wall hres, color yellow with spec. sport strlptng .

New E. Camino ................ ,;737

L1ght blue w1th wh. vinyl top, 231 V-8 engine, full power
Incl. windows &amp; door locks. AM-FM stereo rad1o,
cruise, till st. wheel, radial w -strlpe tires, air cond .,
lots of other e xtras Dealer Demo. SAVE .

1978 Impala Coupe •••••••••••• ~
Local I owner &amp; only 11 ,000 mites, AM: FMradlo, power
windows &amp; 0 locks. cruise control, tilt st. whee l, air
cond., digital clock, JOS
P .S., P.B., and sharp car,
si lver w tlh red viny l top.

v.s,

Several ·~&amp;_Company Official
Cars At .Great Savings

Come in or ca II one of the following sales
people:
Bud Wilson, Dallas Blevins,
Kenny Bass . Just nice people to deal

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til 8:00p . m.

11=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::1
_
_
191Hard-earned mOriey could
fly right out the window today
LEGAL NOTICE
over what you thought was a
TO BIDDI!RS
revoluttonary 1dea. Conakler
Notice Is herebv given that
the cost before you leap
seal ed b ids wlfl be received
·
by the cuy Man11 9 er, of the
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1 c 1ty of Gel ipolis, Ohio,
at hlr
Off ic e In the Mu.nlclpal
Build ing tor u sed . j:tick -up
~ trucks.
e great John M
ab~~de' ~~~~:r"o~\~~ ·~~~~
managed the New
urk 12 oo Noon , 1~ca1 tim e on
Giants to nine World Sertes Friday , Ma rch 9, 1979 and
but only won three cham- pu b li cly opened ~nd read at
pt' sht'
th a t hour and place. J Bid
on ps.
forms ma y be o'b ta lned In th e

Th -

AnuJ'alo.., rng vo1ce sotd ' Come"
Althou gh her soul1s now a t res I
And free fro m co re ond pa m
The world would seen li ke
heave n
If I could hove her bock ogo•n
If broke md hea rt to lose he r
But she d1 not go .a lone
For a port ol me went w1th he r
The da y God called her home
In lov mg memo ry of Mr'!&gt; Ge rti e
Dorst by he r dau gh ter Mrs
Kati e Elle n Curfma n

"

-~J
...,...._
.... ,...,..._

Card of Thank s
THAN KS TO a ll my fr \e nds for the
cords, g1h s, flowe rs ond phone
colts to make my 86th bi rthday
o very happy one
~ orga ret (Ma) Cla tworthy

Nelso~.

992-2174

Advert 1sement tor tender
of bids for equipment.
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Village of
Vinton, Ohio. at the office of
the Clerk at Dan Evans In surance, Vinton, Ohio until
three o'clock p.m (Eastern
Standard Tlmel on the Uth
day of March , 1979 for the
following equipment :
1979 Cab end Chassis, 84 to
96 Inch cab to axle, 23,000 lb .
GVW minimum, 17,000 lb.
rear axle, mud and snow tires
on real ~ x le, 350 C. l 0 V-8 or
larger - guo iJ ne, tour speed
transm tSS1on, two speed rear
axle , power steering , power
brakes , windshield washer,
two speed wiper , 80 amp
etectrlca 1 system , full foam
seat-folding, west coast
mirrors - left and right,
front tow hooks , entry assist
handles, red In color. Interior
dome tamp, cab or step
mounted fuel tank . Delivery
date must be specified
Envelopes
shoUld
be
plain ly marked " 81ds for Cab
and Chassis " Each proposal
shal l contain the fu ll name
and address of every person .
f irm or corporation, In
terested in the same, and If a
corporation , the name and
address of the pr esident and
secretary, and shall be accompanied by a bond g iven In
favor of the VIllage of VInton ,
Oh io, for an amount equal to
at least five percent (5 per
centl of the total amount of
the bid , surety or sureties
satisfactory to said VIllage,
or
a surety company
authorized to do business in
Ohio, said bond providing
that said bidder shall, w ithin
thirty (30) days after notice
of acceptence of his proposal ,
enter Into a contract and give
an acceptable bond In the
sum not less than five (5)
percent ot the contract price
to properly secure the per
formance of same within the
contrac t time_, the amount of
such bond to be paid to the
VIllage as stiPlJiated or
liquidated damages In case of
suc h failure or refusal to
enter Into such contract as so
provided , or If said proposal
Is not accompanied br such
bond then It must be ac
companied by a certified
check on the so tvent bank for
an amount equal to at least
five (5 percent) perceht o.f the
total amount of the bid, made
pavable to the order of Ruth
Evans , VIllage Clerk , wh ich
shalt be forfeited to the
VIllage of VInton, If said
bidder falls to enter Into It
contract with said Village of
VInton and furnish the
required bond of five percent
(5 percent) of the contract
price tor the faithful per formance thereof within
thirty (30) days after notice
of acceptance of his proposal.
The bonds of unsuccessful
b idders will be cancelled and
the checks of unsuccessful
b idder s , or the amount
thereof , will be returned ,
The said council of the
VIllage of VInton reserves the
rig~t to relect any or ell bids.
Bids to be op&amp;ned et 8 DO
p .m .• March 14, 1979 at the
Town Hall In the VIllage of
VInton
By Order of Villag e
Council .
Ruth Eva·n s
Clerk of the
'
VIllage of VInton
Feb . 25, March "'

·"

Feb 25 , March 4

1.£11\n.

-·

't&gt;U

~

IK ONQ. OF
~eA~~ CW&gt;!RS •.

.
"

"•

-•
--•

•"•

...•

1978 FORD LTD II 2 DR

.••
•
•
•

'51,5

1977 Oi.DS CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR

.."•

-

V·8, P .S., P . B., radio. Local owner, l~s than 13,000.

'5295

'/MeT~ ...

'85.95
Corbin &amp; Silyder
Furniture

'- .
.

WAin' 1'0

Platform Rockers
Starling
AI

•
•••
•

.

~

~

••

MANY LOW-MILEAGE,
ONE-OWNER TRADE-INS.
SHOP OUR BIG LOT TODAY. .

446·1171

Oswald Jacoby

P .S., P . B.. AM- FM, air, vlr&gt;yl roof, local owner,
~wer windows. Very • .Ice .

1976 FORD
v.e,

8UTE 2 DR

4095

I

P .S, P . B., stereo, radio, luxury Interior, local
owner.

NORTH
2-21-A
+ KQ1085

'1995

•Q

V-8, P .S., P . B .. afr, vinyl top.

• J 10 9 7 2

. . .. ,

1975 FORD F250 RANGER PICKUP

3395

1977 CHEV. C.10 PICKUP

•

'4295

WEST

EAST

• 10 8 3

• J 6 64

+ 984

..

V·8, P.S., P . B., elr, dual gas lenks. Loeat oWner.

t64

tA853
+A

SOUTH
• 3
• AK972
t KQ
KJ973

+

•

u

PAT HILL FORD

.

'

'·

~

Vulnerable: Both •
Dealer: South
West

Soe Rocky Hupp, O.rrotl Dodrill or Pal Hill, GeMral
Ml~agor, fiW a Good O.al on a New or Usell Yelllcltt.
992·2196

+ AJ72

+QI08 5 2

V-8, P .S., P . B., radio, local owner.
OPENTIL6P.M
Except Thursday &amp; Sotu,..y liiS:OO
CloHCI Sunday

·· ~

A

, • I

MIDDLii.'PORT,O.

'

I

Nortb East

Pass
Pass 2~·t
Pass Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead : •

SWAIN
Wt 1111 anythln1 for
anyllody at our AIICIIon
a.morlnyowftOIM.For
lnlermallon and pickup

I

Ke,...n. SWain, Aucl.
CIWMr Third &amp; Ollvt

. 4':

. .....

.cu.._ -.,_., &amp; iltekiWe
1-k by IIOur or 1tr ..._

•••VI

,Transit &amp; U.y ..tll Wlirtl.
!General C.tractiMI all
JIYPU conttncllon,
,houalnt, commar~

'

5

-

,

. - CON~~:C:O. 'I

AUCJION BARN

SWAIN
Aucnoll SERVICE

. ...
-.
...

GAWPOUS

",

~ndullrtal.

Wal~er-arier•~.f9

..

Stwl BulfellltiDia...Phone ·~4441
OHI-lllt\Und·
•
WM!n.·F.fl,.

k

n

.

.. - - - - ---

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

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

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

- "~ ~lp_ ~ar:t led
P ~l ~ tor_? ale_
_ _
liVf IN COU N SHO~ fo, fF nnl'l"
Cf NTE NA RY WOOD S PfT
lio n e l l orillly for H
GROOMING FACiliTil S Pro
deve lo p menta ll y di"&gt;Ob led"• tc&lt;;s•ona l Serv1ces off ered oil
adults 1n Goll •pal1s Cont ac t
h1ecds. oil stvles Ph 446 0731
Joyce M1l liken. P.O Box qo6
HI
L
LCRES T KENN ELS board tng
Galllpohs . Oh• o or cotl
Also AI&lt;C Reg Dobe rma n$ red
4.46 16&lt;1 2 ex I 332 Equal O p
and hlack s Call4 46-7795
po rtun ltv Employer
·
OR
AGONWYND CATTERY - KEN
SECRET AR Y
RECEPTIONIST
NH AKC Chow Chow dogs
NEEDED Postt1 on open soon ,
CFA S1amese an d H1moloya n
- Room AdditionsSend re sume to Box 177 . c- o
cats 2 flo me pamt ma le
Ga lllpoll ll Da•ly Tnbu ne 825
H1molayon ktftens (wh1te Per - Custom RemodelingThi rd Ave Goll1 po lls, Ohto
stans) block Chow-Chow pup
4563 1
ceramic T1te • Formtca
pi@S 4 ~6 3~.d ~ ofl~r ~pm
Counter Tops ~ Ceilings
SElliNG CAN PUT SUNSHINE IN
YOUR LIFE Bored by one grov RISING STAR KENNEL Board ing !Su$pended, Texture) . Tile
and groommg Atl Breeds
. Floats . PanelinQ &amp; Trim.
dov a lte r the nex t? Develop a
367·0292.
s unny
n ew a s pe&lt; t of
Quality Work You Can
_
yourself a s an Avon Represe n BRIARPATCH KENN ELS Boo rdmg
De
ta fl ve Sell qual ity products
groo m1ng AK C Gordon Set
pend On ••..
ear n good money and ho ve
ters English Coc ke r Spon1e ls
fle)(1ble hours loo For de to1l!&gt;
Coll 44o 4191 . _ _
coll 44b-335B
RISING" STAR KENNEL Boo rdmg
-1-12-1 mo.
SAL ESLADY Mus t be 18 or over
L _______:_.:,:..:..::.:..:;;...J
and ~ r~o!"' ~~ ~6~ - ~2q_2
ft..pplv m pe rson 9om to 11 a m.
Mt lr. lead s Bake ry 244 T h ~rd AKC Reg Doberma n pup $ 100 Ph
44b 01 59
Ave
"
----- - -· · - ·
An Eq ua l Opportumty AKC REG COCK ER SPANIElS. 6
wk s old Ca ll 446 0109
Emp!oye~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
COON
DOG , 7 mos
old
FE MALE HELP WANTED for loun ge
Reg1
ste
red
w1th
papers
Ca
ll
and carryout Mus t be 21 App388 9879 _a fte~ 6p~ .
ly m p':rS_?n_a! F.!e!'c ~ &lt;_?u_or ter
lANDSCAPE WORK ER
Full t1 me pe rm a ne nt pos1t1on for •
For Rent
ene rg et 1 ~ per!lon _C~ I I 44 6 - ~ 1';&gt;0
•New Home
BABYSITTER for my home Days SLEEPING rooms lor re nt Gall ic
Hotel
•Add-ons
only Call446 1393
- ---·-•Remolding
SlE EPING ROOMS AND l• ghl
BABYSITTER NEEDED 8&lt;dwe ll
housekee pmg rooms PARI&lt;
Pa rte r School D1stnct Fou r
992-6011
CENTRAL HOTEl
ch• ld1 en ages 9 8.4 -and 9 mon2 11 I m o Pd
·-·ths Mon
Fn Coli 388 8745 TWO 8DR MOBil E HOME Coli
, o l te~ Sp~ ___ .
44b 0508

•

AL TROMM OONST.

PIIJNE 742-2328

'' '

By Oswald Jacoby
aDd Alan Sontag
We are indebted to British
writer Jock Milton and Por.:
ular Brtdge for tqday s
hand. 11 appeared rn an
article entitled "The Little

Folk"

Eaai

C. R.

-

.

Auto Sales
1979 FORO CUSTOM F-150 truck,
302 engm e . 11, ton auto .. P 5 ,
P B , A C 742 2826
··----------1978 FORO PICKUP F 150 Cam pe r
speCial Supe r cob With top
$5800 949-2042
1970 FORO MAVERICK aut o, no
!u~t_on_ b~~ ~A~- 9_49: 2_:4~ ~
1971 PLYMOUTH Fu ry 4 door
v1nyl top P S P B , A C Stro ck lope
62,000 m1l es
742 2798

MASH

VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING

- . -- - - -

FOR lEASE
4 bd r . 1 ' '1 baths utd1ty rm ga r
heat cenl rol a •r ch il~ren yes
Pels no $725 per mo Secun ty
bond and ref req C1ty school
d•s tric t Phone only berwee n
10om a nd 12 446 8603
- - .
- .
TI~AILER FOR RENT CAll 446-1154

TRACTORDRIVEN •
PTOALTERNATORS .
from t5,0001o
75,000 watts.

MontaomiiJ
Trailer Sales

SMALL TRAILER lnqu1re at 121
R1ve! S! _K~n_9 u_gC: ____ _
TWO BDR unfu rnish ed ga ra ge
oportme nt Call 446 2374 or
446-02B4

FURNI SHED EFFICIENCY Ad ults
$120 U!!llfles pd Coll 446 4416
. - - - - - of~e ~ 6J'"':l . ____ . .
1977 FORD LTD II , exc cond lood
ed, one owner Coll.446 1736
SLEEPING
ROOM
Ran ge
- - - - - - - - ·J - - - - - refngerator SbO Ufllt tles pd
1970 CHEVY MALIBU W1ll trade
One person Cd ll ~46 44 16 ofte r
fo r motorcycle Call 4.4b 8660
6p_m__ • _ . _ . _ .
_af~e~.:t p~ ____ _
T&gt;jRE E BEDROOM HOUSE Wolk
1968 CAMARO CAll «6 2098
mg d1stonce ol ci ty sc hool!!
1979 MONTE CARLO, we ll equ1 p
Ve ry desi rable nei ghbor hood
Coli .:146 7783
ped $1 500 Ca ll 446-0761 afte r

27120 MonltOilltrY Rd.
Langsville, Ohio
614-669·4245 Evenings
2 Mites East
of Wilkesvtlle
2-14-1 m o

1

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~p_m_ - - - - - - - -

· ------

--·----------

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

Rebluing &amp; Refinishing
Varmint and
Target Rifles
Accurized

---- ------

-

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- - -- -

- ----

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

--- -

FOUR ROOM FURN HOM E 1n e~ ty
S200 pe r mont h plu s uhhf1es
SlOO dep Sma ll ch•ld occep
ta~l ~ ~a~ I ~ 4 ~-~2!_7 ~ft_e r_5£m_
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Large lots Coll992 7.479 ..._

________ __ _

3 AND 4 RM fu rn is hed and u n

fu r n1 s h e d
992 543-4

op ts .

Phone

Plumbing and Heating .
CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourrh &amp; Pme
Phone 446 3988 or .446 44777

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

STANDARD
Plumbmg He ot1ng
215 Th1rd Ave , 446 3782
----.--GENE PlANTS &amp; SONS
PLUMBING - Heat1 ng -- At r Con;.d• t•on•ng . 300 Fou rth Ave Ph '
446 1637
--- - - -·DEWITT'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Roufe 160 ot Evergreen
Phone 446 2735
-~---r-

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_

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...

lakes his ace of clubs
and leads a low .heart to
dwnmy's queen. A diamond
is led from dummy. East
rises wlth the ace, cashes his
ace of spades and gela' .o ff
lead with .a diam ond whJCh
you Sout h, have to wtn.
No'li you cash ace and king
of heirls and throw East In

AlktiMIXDIPtl
You hold :
+ K Q 106 5
• A92

2-24-B

t A 7 53

+3
You respond one spade to
your partoer's one-heart ,.
opening bid. He rebida three
hearts. An ArkaiUIBB reader
asks how we continue.
The expert bid is a four- .
diamond cue bid. Intending .
to raise hearts next. Otherwise you might go right Into
Blackwood.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD-

ERN , se nd f l to: " Win at ,
Bl1dge, " care of this newspaper, P.o. Box 489, Rodlo C~y

Sfaflon, New York, N Y fOOl g./

SECRETARY and
bookkeeper for Ohio Pallet Co.
9'12·2689

E ~ PERIENCEO

• Auction
AUCTION EVERY Sundav lpm
Eve ry Wed ot 7 pm Lots of new
and used mercho ndtse. Hart·
ford Community Cente r, Hartford WV 4 m•les up fro m
!~mer?Y:~!..o~B_n~g !" _

~

•

,·I":
•••

•

.

ROGER' HYSElL
GARAGE

•
•

--

REYNOLD'S
ElfCTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

-~

¥• mile Oft Rl. 1 9Y-PISI on
St. Rt. t24towa rcl Rutland,
0.

••
•

-..-••
~

••~•

11 Ye1rs EKperience

Auto &amp; Tru'c k
Repair
~lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Will Mike
Ser vice Calls

••

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•

65 1 Beech Street
Middleport, 0 .
992 -2356
l ·A· l mo. (Pd .)

4·

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AN
INSURANCE AGEN

t...

liammond

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ORGANS

----

&amp; Famous Name Braad

, PIANOS

Wash1ngtan 51 , Albany , 0 .
Phone 698-6171
David Coleman
Agenlfor
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANDY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, Lisbon, Ohto.
AUTO. HOMEOWNERS,
FARM ,
LIFE
&amp;
Bt,JSINESS.
l -26 1 mo

•

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PETE SIMPSON

•

Sa les Rep. Fo r
Sundins
1
Hammond Organs
,
T ree Blvd .- Racine, C?liio

~one

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evenings

949-2\18

after s p. m .
after 1'1 noon .

Weekends
2-S 1 mo.

_
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Armsbung Carpeting

Service
._
....

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2!_5. 524 5_!)~2~5 _s~~

_ __ _ _

OWN YOUR OWN
BUSINESS- Sl9S
outstanding opportunity.
for better than average
earnings.
Calling
on
schools and organizations
with a fund ·raising Ptna
Program. Repeat business
will assure a continutng
and increastng income.
You mav s1art full time or
parh1me. For more information phone collect
614-743·2620 before 5 p.m.

PA RT BOXER DOG, 2 to 3 years,
we ll tro1 ned very gen tl e Coli
44 b 4315
- - - - - - -- -- - - FO UR GERMAN SHEPHERD pupp1es Cal l .t46 78 14
TwO PICKUP- LC)A Ds- oF
Wil l g•veowoy for hauh ng
11 38a 969-t
ow oy. Co
·
MAll: g;~; t~ g~r-c~t- Sh;r;kai r~
C!ll l~4_04~ Y&lt;c&gt;:_l~e~d~y- __ L..::6.:;14::-&lt;~::.:1:,:2,::·5:;:S::,S4:..:a:.:f.:;te::,r..;:S~P::·::m::._..J

-cOAL

I'll. H2·2174

I

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DOn't 14f e chlmnt-1 fire put
11 dlmper on rour 1111 -

New, repair ,
gutters and
downspouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862,949-2160

J

.,

lfttl centUry Service
2D,th Century KHw -How.
Sflt:IIIIJ.Iftllft

iloofltove, 011 furRace

&amp;,•lreptece 'lutl
l'hoht : J4MI10
. k lm Wtllte, Proprl...,
·2·5· 1 mo.

2-7-mo
BRADFORD Auct1oneer Com
piete Serv1ce Phone 9A9-248 7
or 949 2000 ReCi ne Oh10 Cn tt
Bradford·:.__

EXCAVATI NG doze r bo&lt;khoe
and d• lc he r Ch'orles R Hatl1e ld
Bock Hoe Ser v1ce ,
Rutland, Oh1o Phone 742-2008

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers taoste r5 ~rons a ll
sma ll oppl1a nces l a wn mower
nex t to Slate H•g hwoy Garage
on Route 7

PULL INS EXCAVATING Complete
Serv1ce Phone 992-247B

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SEWING MA CHINE R e p o ~r s se r·
Vl&lt;e all mak es 992-2284 The
Fabr• &lt; Sh o p . Po m e roy
Authorized Smge r Soles a nd
Serv •ce We sharpen Sc• ssors
EXC AVATING dozer, loade r o nd
backhoe wo rk d ump tru cks
and lo-boys for h1 re. wtll hou l
l11l d ir t to sod , li mestone a nd
gro ve l Coli Sob or Roger Jeffers, do y phone 992 7089 n1 ght
p hone 9~ 3525 or 9!~5..?._3.:_
BATHROOM S AND l&lt;il &lt;he ns
remodeled. cera m1c l1le. plu m
bmg ca rpentry a nd ge ne ra l
mai ntena nce 13 yea rs eM
. _p":_n~n~e- 992·36
=85'-'---

AUTOMOBILE INSURANC E been
&lt;oncel/ed ' Lost vou r operators
l ~eens e' Phone 992-21:::
43::._____
E C ELEC TRI CAL Controctor servmg Oh1o Volley reg•o n Six
days a week 24 hour s service
Eme rge ncy coll5 Coli 882 2952
0' 882 23:::
0_::
S _ _ _-,---_ _

WA LLPAPERING AND pa1 nting
Call742 2328
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex ca vatm g
sept1c sys te ms.
doze r backhoe Rt ~43 Phone
I (61&lt; ) 698-733 1
HOUSE REPAIR ond remodeling
Ca ref ul war~ at reoso nobre
_ ra!es Erny D_ov•es 742-2090
:
Real Estate for Sale

OOWNING - QfllDS
REAL ESTATE ·
BUSINESS OPPORIUNmES

Owner Retirtng Take over established
business 1n Pomeroy . Main Street location . Easy
way to get in business for yOurself. Your eHort
wtll pay oH . Biukhng,land, stock and equipment,
allfor 5100,000. Worth much more.

tllMES

Second and
SOLD odNorthstarter
home.

,.

78.8 Acre on St. Rt. 143 only three ml~s from
Pomeroy $200.00 an acre - $15,750 full price .
18 Acr es in Pomeroy . Beautiful home s1teS
located on Northern Heights .
1 Ac re on Page 5\. in Middleport. $1100.00. ,
18 ACRES - In Pomeroy - Northern Heights.
All ut1lfles . Beautttul hom e sttes 122,000 .
COMMERCIAL - Over an a cre on the busy
cor ner of U S 33 and Rt . 7 - 480' frontage. In
Pomeroy . $15 ,000 .
3.5 ACRE - Peacock Ave., Pomeroy - water,
sewer, eledric . Only $6,000 .
Surround Yourself wtth Success- Deal with Us.

OONNING

CALL 992-2342

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p l~~b~n g 992-5858

Real Estate for Sale

ROONEY, BROKER

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•

MOB ILE HOME repa 1rs Furnaces,
electn cal work . p1pes sowed,

a room wtth two baths On corner of Spring and
Condor. Two car garage. Large lot. Can be one
large home Or two apartments. 520,000.

To tlnd out how you can do all thes e thln~rs
and more, call your local Army recruiter this
week. c ail446-3343.
't

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Store buildtng on Locust St in Mtddleport. lot is
72' front • 100' deep Can be used for manv
busines ses. 510,500

Find yours~lf in a hurry.
Think fast, mo\ e faster.
Tackle mountains.
Defy deserts.
Surprise a lot of people.
Mostly yourself.
And, he proud of it.

Gene Oesch, Auctioneer

•
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LAND

.

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~~~~;:;, .~ ...... .
~·~~ lHE SWEEP
wm.

H. L Writesel .
Roofing

Btt beautiful well built home On Fisher St. )n
Middleport . You must see this one to appreci•te.
SJS,OOO.

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11 ·9· 1 mo.

•

RICH GARDNER
. AUCTIONEER

•
•
_.'

220 E. Mlln Street,
Pomeroy, 0.
Cai19'12·7113
For Free Estimates-

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

-- - --

THREE GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP PIES to o good home Call

••

EWOlT
APPUANCE II

6 room s and bath - l&gt;tamond 1n M1d1
S12,000

5 miles west of Athens'
on R I. 50 every Friday nighl at 7 : 00. All
new
merchandise,
tools of all kinds and
other new merchandise.

PH. 446-7440 ANYTIME
Complete Modern Service
ESTATE SETTLEMENT SERVICE
CCMPLETE FARM DISPERSAL SALES
LIQUIDATION SALES
HOUSEHOLD SALES &amp; ETC . -We Go Anywhere To Serve You
-"BUD" McGHEE -REAL TY
GENE OESCH , ASSOCIATE

Your HeadquarteJS For

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1

Help Wanted

--

TWO BEDROOM , kitche n fu rn1sh
ed opt. Call befo re 8 om
992 2288
- - - - ....... _ - - Business Opportunities
LARG E HOME m Pome roy
992-2205 before 5.
IF YOU can • ~vest $20.000 cash fo r
local invenfory storage of 50
FURNISHED HOUSE 1n M1 ddle port
d•ffe rent cons ume r •te ms. the n
Su1toble for fo ur construc t1on
we wtli send you ali the de ta ils
wor ke rs Coli afte r 6 pm
of
how OUf p1lot , model
304 ·882 2566 or 9'12 5434
war e hou se cleare d o ve r
----------FURNISHED ~OU S E l room a nd
$100 000 during the ftrs l6 mon
fh s
Cali
t q ll
fr ee
_ba_th_ ~d~l ~s~nir~_9!2 ] SJ8__
1-800
821
2280
ex
I
1000
MOBILE HOME Comp letely fur
-- --mshed 3 bed room Burlmgham
CO OWNERSHIP
J r: o_ !9~7~ ?!
of growmg new bus 1ne5s (elec
FURNISHED APT 110 11, Mu lberry
lrol ys1s) \fl Pt Pleo5ont for sole
Portner relocol •ng Must sell
Ave No ch1ldren or pe ts,
Ope ra tor a vaila ble fo r h ~re or
depos1t a nd ren l in adva n&lt;e
e lectrolys1s tra1n1ng arran ged
Refe re nce r equ~r ed . Co li
446 1788
Phone 1 6 14 886 934 0 or
- - - - --- - 1-304 529 1922. Ask fo r Ah clo
- -- - - - - - - - - - -YOUR own Jean$ and Sport'!&gt; wear
Giveaway
Shop! Offe r the latest in 1ea ns
deniums and spo rt swear
ANY PE RSON who has o Myth1ng to
$14 .650 00 mcludes be gtnnlng
gtve awa y and does no I offe r or
In Ventory. fixtures , ahd tra ina ttempt lo offe r a ny oth er thing
Ing Coli ALMA TOLL FREE
for sole may place an ad 1n th is
1 800·874-4780
col umn The re w dl be no
---~--~
cha rge lo th e adve rtiser

PUBUC AUCTION

own.
You were dealt the deuce
of hearts. When the first
lulart was led you could have
pfayed the seven and kept
that little fellow. Then It
wouldn' t have done East any
good to throw the Jack Of
hearts. You could sttU throw
him in with the deuC'! .

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- - - - - - - - - -1978 FORD GRANADA 2 d' ,
HIGLEY S GIFT SHOP Upper Rt 7 ·--- ----:-::-:-c-:----:__c__-::- - - - wh ite w1th red vinyl top PS. PB,
Potte ry glass wood Call ____W
= a,_n
"--"
te
,_d
"'--'1'-'o'-"
D'-'o'--------AC 6 cyl , less than 6 000 oc
I
446·0002
lu al m1f es, $4800
Call
·- - - - - - - - - - - - - INVISIBLE VINYL REPAIR on all
446-71 b 1, if no an s , 446 4ll42
FRE E CANDY MAKING ClASS at
vinyl furn 1ture For mformo·
-----D1s Ca ndy and Cok e Supplies,
t1o n call446 6585
1973 MONTE CARtO moroon
Sp rmg Votl e v Plaza
Ph
- ..:.__-- - - ---- - w1th pm stnpe , new 11res and
446-2134 for re gistration tt's
SS Cregar wheels. $2400 Call
fun and easy · vou'll be amazed ; _ __ ___,Y'--'a~r,d'--'S,_a~le,__ _--'_44_6 ~7?7_of~e~ S_p~ __ _ ~ _
- _ot_what~~ n_d~ __
IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer
1973 CHEVY NOVA, v 8, 2 dr
want to buy or se ll somethmg .
sedan PS. AC, CB rad1o' low
or
ae lookmg fo r work
mdeage. rad ial t1res , vinyl top.
whotever
you II get results
$2 000 Coll446-3237 after 5pm
fo ste r w1th o Sentine l Won t Ad
1974 TOYOTA COROLLA. good
Coii992-21._:S6
:::__ _ - - - - cond ne w t~re s ne't' ba tte ry
$1500 Ph 367·058&lt;
Wanted to Bu.y
1976 Grand Pnx SJ, loaded, all
power , AC, om fm fa pe &amp; CB
CHIP WOOD
Pa tes ma x .
$4695 Ca ll.:t 46-1155 afte r 4 PM
dtam ete r I o· on larges t en9,
$12 per ton Bundled slob, $10 1977 GMC truc k 6500 Senes flat
pe r ton DeliVered to Ohio
bed 27 000 m1les , 20 ft bed Ph
Palle t Co , Rt. 2. Pomeroy.,
245-5652
992 268'1
- ' - -1977 DODGE RAMCHARGER. 4
TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro- , WO, Phone 675-4589
du&lt;ts. Top pnce for stand ing
sa w ttmber. Ca ll 992-5965 or 1978 JEE P RENEGADE many ex
tros , . low mileage Coli
_ !ent Honbv. 1-446-6570
675-66l!f2.
OLD FURNITURE. ice boxes bra5.s
JEEP '56. CJ 5 re bu•ll engin e
beds, Iron beds desks. e t&lt;
UJCBtedin
new l evi top. new point jOb
complete households Wnt e
Wh1te spoke wheels a nd eleve n
Dollar General
M.D Mtl ler. Rt "' · Pomeroy or
Inch tires ond new ro ll ba r
call ~2 - 776/J
Store Basement
Good condtt• on $2500 Coli
Mon.-Fri. 7: ~10
OLD COINS packet watches ,
446-4571
- - - - - - - class rmgs. weddmg bo nds,
Noon lil5 Sat.
·n 4 CORVETTE , T ta p a ufomatiC .
d1omonds Gold c r stl ve r. Coli
Phone 446-4774
Coli675 2065
Roger Wamslev. 742 2331.
.....
-~ --WAN T TO buv old 45 ond 78 1969 VOLKSWAGEN , ru ns good.
$300 Coli 446 7788
phonograph rec ord s
Call
- ·----- ---992 6370 or Con tact Marfm Fur- 1977 SilVERADO PICKUP looded ,
n•ture .
low mileage , exc cond w1 fh
-·-- toppe r. Coli Ron Skidmore
WANTED TO buy o ld jewelry
245 5459 otte r 5pm
Coli 992-5262 or wnte Ka y
- - -~ -'"of - - - - - - - - Cec•l. 87 S 2nd Mtddlepart, 1976 FORO F l 00 Picku p, PS, a uto
OH.
and Alan Sontag
frons., $4400 Coil 367 7187
- - - -- - WANTED TO buy· llm1ted ttme on- 1971 OPEL Best offer Call
ly Junk Botteries. $2 50 eac: h
446 2169 offe r 5pm
- .
-- - -Clea n Copper. S 55 per lb
Rod totors. $.35 lb Short Iron, 1972 MERCUR Y COUGAR XR 7,
s•de pipes , e xcelle nt cond1110n
$2 pe r hu"nd red
Rt der's ,
with the jack. East is forced
$1550 Call 388 8 167
Sal va ge, SR 1:2:4, Pomeroy
to give dununy the rest of
8 _ _ __
Ohio 9'12-54..:6c:.:..
the tricks.
1974 OUSTER. 1974 Mohbu Stohon
AU very pretty, but if East CASH FOR junk cars 24 hour
Wagon , good co nd
Call
367 0432 after 4pm
has been unklna enough to
Fr ye 's ,
wr ec ker se rvice
-----throw his jack of hearts and
Rutland OH 742-208 1
hang on to the five spot, you
JUNK outo and scrop meta l Ph .
do cash five heart triCKS to
Pets for Sale
1
38B-8776
add to the one in diamonds .
• - - - - - - - - - --~ -RISING STAR Ke nnels Boord1og
Now you must play clubs.
GOOD USED FURNITURE, not
ond groom1ng a ll breeds
You can score two club
upholst ered , and opp l1 onces
Ches tllfe , 367-0292
tricka, but that wW sUII
Ph. 446 0322
- - - -- - - --- ----- ~- -~------leave you one short.
LARGE quantlt•es of F~re wo od .
Before congratulating
Auctions ·
Pho'ne 675 4426
East on his magnificent
'
play, you rrught go back and TIMBER AND LOGS. Pome roy For
res t Products. Coll992-5965
do a little tfilnking of your

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Business Services.

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

+a 4

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·- -- · -·-

Anticipating the defense

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1

1974-FORD 'GRAND 'lORlNO 2. DR

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------

BRIDGE

'4595

v.s,

-

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"'altlfiOIIs,

'
V-4, P .S., AM-FM,
atr, vinyl roof, focal owner, 18,000
miles.

1977 FORD LTD 4 DR

-

- ~ ~,!~!S _ _ _
-- -~ -We would hke to express our GUN SHOOT Raci ne Gun Cluh
s•n&lt;ere thanks to all who
Every Sundov I pm Factory
choke guns onl y
holped du ring the death of our
husba nd a nd fot her. Harold E
Thomas To the e mployees of GUN SHOOT, Roc1ne Volu ntee r
Fue Dept Every Soturdov 6 30
Kyge r Creek Power Plan t for :
pm or their buddmg 1n Boshan
the~r ex press•ons of respe&lt; t for
Foctory c hok ~ gun ~ on!)'
o fe llow wor ke r of 20 veers . To
- - - - ou r ne•ghbors and fne nds of FREE CANOY mak ing class ot D• s
th e Cheshi re commun ity a nd
Cand)' and Coke Suppl1es SprCheshire Bo pttst Churc h for
•ng Volle v Ploro 446 ~ 134 lor
food. flowers pra yers a nd
reg•sfraho n It s fun and eo5y
love To the pall bearers fo r
Vou II ~ omo1ed ol what )'OU
th e~r spec1ol he lp A special
con do
. - . .
thanks to me mbe rs of th e Btg
CA NDY WORKSHOP l earn to
Bend CB Club' Rev. W1llla m
make your own Easte r candy
Ube r, and our Marshall Ronnie
Ma ~e w ndv in class and toke it
Lemley. There ore no words to
home with you For 1nformo
ex press the g roh tute we feel
t•o
n, call the Carousel Confec
Moy ou r lord bleu you a ll .
tlone ry 9ll2 6342
W1fe, Clore
··-·----Dau ghte rs Mvrno Bea ver RACI NE FIRE De pt 1s now o&lt;ce ptmg sealed bids on 1961 GMC
a nd Ho roldme 01le r
--pane l truck a s •s We have th e
WE WI SH to thank all our fri ends.
ng ht to re Jec t aU btds Btds wtll
ne1ghbors a nd relolivea fo r the
be occepted dunng th' month
"}._any lovely flowers, the food,
of Feb 1979 Send b1ds t o
th'emony &lt;ards a nd the man y
Rac1ne Volu nteer F1re Dept ,
acts of sympathy shown to us
Box 2A6. RoCi ne F.or mor e in·
du n ng the loss of my mothe r,
lormat1on , colt 949-2050.
.
Edtth Be ttmg A spec1al tha nks
to Rev Rtchord Thomas lor his All SILVER REPLATING reduced
k1nd words end h1s many kmd201 during February only
nesses to my mothe r Also
Teapots, bowls, candl esticks .
tha nks to the othe r netghbors
e tc We also do babv shoe
who were so ktnd to her
bronztn g at redu ced prices
Thanks to the Whtte Fune ral
To wne)' Jewele rs 42A Second
Home for the k1ndn ess and conAve
Side ration shown to me and my
BUYING• All Umted State5 s1lver
la m• I)'
co1 ns Top pnCes hi gher pn ces
There IS on open gate
fo
r sil ver do lla rs and early
At the e nd of the rood
coms MTS Com Shop Coli
Through wh1ch ~a c h must go
4.:16-19.d2 or .t46-0690 Pay cosh
alo ne
And the re IS o hght we c on~ot 5ee
Our Father clo1ms his own
Bevond the ga te our loved one
Fmds hoppmess a nd res t
And the re 1s comfor t m the
fhought
Lost and Found
Thot a lo.J1 ng God knows bes l
lOST
Daughter Be rm ce Hoff man a nd
Femal e Ge rma n Shephe rd , 55
Fa m1ly
lbs . 2 yeors old very hght ton
m color, a ll O\le r Folded down
Notices
ea rs Answers to the nome of
Fraulem REWARD $25 fo r
SWEEPER and se wmg machin e
re turn or mformal1 on leodmg
repo1r ports and suppli es Pick
to her return Coli 245-5430
up and delivery. Davis Vacuum
11
Cl eaner ~ mde up Geo rges -'=::--c----:-----:-T"--:-'~Creek Rd P__h_~_4_6:'J2_'1 4_ _ _ __
Professional Services
THURMAN HOUSE , ont 1 q~ es , Fur·
n1tu re stnppmg, r"/o•r o nd CALL US fo r your photographiC
needs Portra1 t comme rc1ol
re fm1shed Coun ty R B off 35
Cen te rvi lle VJUage
Closed
a nd weddin g photograp hy
Monday &amp; Tuesdav f'olen mgs
lownev Stud1os , 424 Second
_br_ O.f'P_O I~ t ~':_n ~5~ ~479 __ _ Ave
'
ANTIQUES bought a nd sold
Wh1te s Anllques
Rt
35,
Wanted to Rent
_RC:d~e~~l 34~ ~~0 ____ _ WOULD LIKE TO ren t o 3 or 4 room
FOR THE BEST buy 1n d1amonds
un furms hed apar tme nt m _
Go to Ta wney Je we le rs. 422 Se
Gall •palts Ref furni shed Concond Ave , Goll1pohs Compore
tact Pqul Sk•dm ore at Thaler
Ford. 446 3575.
_P~C~s~n_!~her= _ _ _

Professional

•

sed

- ------- ------Ca r d of Thanks

CORDRAY
GUN REPAIRS

,."

Sole Ewery latu.....y
Nlgltt al7 p.m.
Office or 'the City Manager ,
518 second Avenue, City of
Gallipolis, Ohio .

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service all Uf.1N7.

·

TH E FAMI LY of Bud Morga n
w1 shes to tha nk the1r ma ny
frt end s
r e iat1 ve s
and
ne 1gh bors fo r th e fl oral
tnbutes food and wo rds of
comfort durm g the dee th of our
fat her SpeCial tha nks to the
"" Sumner Commun1ty Ew•ng
Fun e ral Home Betty ,Ba rbaro
end Ruby Ma y G od Bless each
a nd all of you
~ 1l dred , Gladys and Fam1hes_ _

POMEROY,O.

PUBLIC NOTICE

We Must Sell These Now
1979 4 Wheel Drive
NEW LUV 7¥z' PICKUP.......... $AVE

992· 2126

-..

You owe it to yourself to check with us before you buy any car, New or Us -

SOO E . MAIN

1978 Monte Carlo landau •••••••~95

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

&lt;coppertonel

•

350 V-8, automatic, P.S., P. B., blk. kn1ghl trim , air with
tint glass, tilt cruise, AM FM radio, radial w-strlpe
tires, body side ralls, loaded and color is black .

See- on e of th ese courteou s salesmen:
Pe t e Burris, Ma rvin Kee ba ugh or George Harris.

4 dr.

.SMITH N.ELSON MOTOR; INC.

4 cyl. , automatic trans., step bumper, AM radio, white

ALL READY FOR DELIVERY

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MOM
I cormot send a b ~r thda y ca rd
Yo ur hands I canno t touch
But God wil l g1 Ye th1s mes sage
To the one I m1ss so mUc h
Dear God plea se toke th1s
me ssage
To our lovin g mothe r up aboYe
Tell he r how muc h we m1ss he r
And g•ve he r oil our love
She b1d no o-ne o los t fa rewel l
She po1d goodbve to none
The hea ven ly ga tes 1usl opened

2 dr. (bronze &amp; brown)

$1295

Ray Douglas or Bill

Custom 2-tone carmine finish , 350 V -8engine, atr cond .,
stereo tape, AM FM radio, P. antenna, deluxe bumper
&amp; guard, power wtndows, door locks, Comfortilt crutse,
undersea!, It's loaded with much more.

OLDS •••••••

2 dr. (red &amp; black)

1975 Pontiac Grand Prix (blue &amp; while)

New Caprice 4 Door.............$7650

Delta 88 Sedans · Oella 88 Royals, both 2 &amp; 4
door mod e ls - 98 Regency Sedans· Cutlass
S uprem e Coupes - Cutlass Salons, 2 &amp; 4 door
. m ode ls .

(White &amp; black!

ed. We can save you money . See or call on•-of These Friendly Salesmen : J . D. Story,

guards!!. rubber strips. F&amp;R mats, delu xe belts, tint.
glass. blue vinyl interior, 2 tone blue fintsh. Undercoat.

Models,

4 dr.

"Your Friendly Dealer"

V-6 engine, automatic, P S., P . B , radio, bumper

C a d illac Sevilles 2 &amp; 4 Door
E ldorado - Seville - Fleetwood .

"

•

New Malibu Classic 4 Dr....... .'5541

CADILLAC ••

And hug your sor row to vou
th rough the vcars
But sta rt out brave ly w1th a
ga lla nt smde
And fo r my sok ft and m my nome
Lwe on ond do a ll thi ngs the so me
Feed not your lonelmess on emp·
ty days
But fdl eac h wok 1ng hour in useful
wovs
Reach out your hand m comfo rt
a nd m cheer
And l1n turn w1ll comfort you an d
ho ld you near
And never, never b e ofro 1d lo d ie
For t om wo• tmg fo r you in the
sky
Sadly m1ssed by mothe r fa ther
brothe r a nd s•sters
.
:=c___

BUYS I

Don't forget

left

who passed o woy three years
ago Fe b. 25, 1976
W hen I M ust l ea .... e You 3 When I'
must leave vou for o httl e
wh1le
Please don t grieve and shed w 1ld

On Our Quality Used Cars
.__.._
_...

SELL-A-BRA TION

he

IN-lOViNG_m_e;;;-0; R~ ~-S;o;5 ,

[_____

DURING A. R. KNIGHI'S 50 YEARS

memortes

A deer f rtend

----;,;~:~;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;~~----,

Buy A New Car NowJ

-

In Memory

TO

.

For Best Results ·Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

&amp;

4

IMMIGRANT
SACRAMENTO,
Calli.
( AP) - Members of the
Sacramento ci!y council
stood and applauded recently
a frail, a.;.year-{))d lmmlgrant
woman who doesn't speak
English.
Shige Tahara, the widow of
a hotel and boarding. house
operator, had ju~t handed the
council a cashier's check for
$60,000 as a gift.
"It's a small token of my
appreciation
to
Sacramento," said the native
of
Japan
through
an
interpreter. Mrs. Tahara ,
who came to the United
States in 192:i, was interned in
a relocation camp with her
husband, Matsutaro, during
World War IT.
City officiala said it was the
first time
in memory
someone had given a
substantial cash gill with no
strings attached.

D-3-The Sunday Times-Sen tinel, Sunday , Feb. :!:i, 1979

- CHILDS

BIU. BR. MGR.
99Z.Z449

••

.

�1).5-TheSundayTimes-SenUnei,Sunday, Feb, 25, 1979

-- ·-- ----··-

~

----

·- -

For Sale
------·-·---·--. -

For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

-

Al l TYPES of building mat erio l~
calcium chloride,·tertilizer, dog
block . bdck. •ewer
w;n . '_'Thank y~u f(lr listing with 'Bud : McGhee Realty" "Thank yo11 for listing with ·, Bud' McGhee Realty"
dows . lintels. etc. Claude
food. and all types of salt. E• ·
Winters , Rio Grande, 0 . Phone ~
·~ • •
celsior Salt Works , Inc .. E. Main
145·5121 alter 5.
· c;
.
. _s':· ~o~~r~v -_9!2.. :. 38_!_!_: _ .
FROSTY'S CB Radio Equipment ,
EDTRACTORS
MF135
Diesel · MF230 Diesel· 11&gt;
Everythinv in two·woy ro~io , US
MF150 Oi.,el · MF235 Diesel · G&gt;
antenna and occenones.
MF16S o;esel - MF 285 o;osol - J:!
Pho"e Portland 8-43-2181 . Open
. MF1135 Diesel, Cob , air ond (,!)
'[)eO
evenings Untll8. Sunday 2 11116.
-- -- ·- - - - ---..- »-.
Heater .
U
~
~
BROWNING MARK IV CB antenna . NEW '&amp; USED IMPLEMENTS:
:!i
tower. 2 rotors , watt meter, MFf~ Boler · MF10 .Boler· · MF120 -iJ
D -1 ~ Tweetle Bird .mic . linear .
Boler - Matthews Rotary Scythe :::)
'Coli Little Bit 9~9 - 2265 .
MF880 Semi ·Mounted b bottom a)
. .. . - - - SEE THIS ONE NOW, English TuDor with
Plow - MF520 12' disc - MF'l 2 ~
HAY FOR sale · Round boles. $20.
AGED ;TO PERFECTED and ready for
Hve BR's, 2 baths, powder room, lots of I1V ·
OPEN
DAILY,
EXCEPT
SUN
,
9-S
row chopper · MF39 7 row .,.
Square boles $1 . 985-3537.
fou. Located in the center of southeast~rn
ing area, 2 fireplaces, 3 car guage . can be
MON. &amp; FRI. TIL 8 P,M,
planters
·
mechani cal 'j
985-4131.
Ohio's growth area . Two story home W1th
purchased with up to 17 acres , BMR 92.
OTHER
HRS,
BY
APPOINTMENT
.
tran splanter . SH INN'S TRAC· 0'1 1
- ·rooms 1o,spare . Call soon , BMR 94.
FIREWOOD FOR sale. 985-3505 or
TOR SAlES
c
985-3537.
Phone 458- 1b30
~
,!e
BUY YOUR 1979 GrOvely_now thru LEON, W.VA .
March 1 and save up to $600.
$100 down holds til April 15th .
Gravely· Tractor Soles and Ser- r-----~~~=------,~
vice, !204 Condor St. , Pomeroy .

COAL, LIMESTONE , !land . gravel.

THE WISEMAN REAL· ESTATE AGENCY

Real Estate for Sale

[B

--'--'-=~=----

p;pe•.

..

.J•
VUU

~ M~GKE£

[8

GALLIA COUNTY'S -LARGEST REAL ESTATE AGENCY
CALL 446-3643

RIAIIO•

'"'

10 ' -

lt.J.L

-- --- - -

446~552

-

-..

9'12-2975.

ROUND . HAY

--

HOME
~
·IMPROVEMENTS
.:
Storm
Windows, ;

1

'

~ -.

boles tor sole.!

B&lt;a- 2S24.~·--

· Storm
Doors,~·
· GaBese Tablets&amp;' E'-Vop " wotet
Replacement
•:
· pills" . Nelson Drug .
Patl·o . ,
WI-ndows,
Mlx'E'o coNolnoNEo ha; -v;r;
Covers,
Aluminum ~
~ good
guallt.y . . ~elivery
available: Phone 992-7201 or
Siding
and :ll
--9'12-330'1.
- - - - - - - - - - -- - ' Accessories.
IX
8EDUCE

SAFE and

fast

with

·&gt;.

can

Bill K'.J

HAY FOR sole. 1st cutting, $.70.
2nd cutting s.ao. 985 -427 1_.
1.

~

and

lot.

&lt;lathes, cor oil

my

~

TWO ACRES MORE or less. Close to
Gallipolis, Price reduced to $10,500. BMR
91,

miles from Gallipolis; has
.. :E&lt;a 5garage.
Call now. BMR 96 ,

2 car attached

UPHOLSTERING . ,

item&amp; . Drop by 760 Laurel St.,

January and February speci al.

Middleport.
"
19b8 GMC HALF t o n pickup . 1~55
Betsy 'Ross Bakery truck , mode
Into camper. Hoover . washer
and dryer . .-.oovar sweeper .
Roll -away bed . 992-5789, 2nd

save on off seaso n prices.
Mowrey 's · Upholste ring , Pt.
·Pleasant . WV Phone: 675-4154
Pt:NDLErON • Rf BiJil T BATTERY
Sl 9.95 plus fox and exchange.
Guaranteed. NeW ones , $33.00
when in stock . We repair cases

"g

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY- Suitable for
off ice

space

with

room

for

r eta il

or

'
'

843-2524 .

sizes. 6 x 8 to 12 x· -40. See oi .2
123 1 'a Pine . Hb-2783 or 3 :::» LESS THAN $40,000, Nice three BR home
In Green school area . Situated on flat lot
~~~s::b~~~~~ Bo~ling ~lley on ~ with fenced back yard . BMR 112A .
. • ,_ . _ . _ _ _
~

USED FURNITURE

Fii,dling .

985-4137 .
GOOD

MIXED

hoy

for

NITURE, 955 Seconc;l
446-11?1 _____ ···

both floor or coge
grown oVOiloble . Poultry Housing and Automation . Modern
Poultry , 399 W. Main , Pomeroy.
Phone 992 -2 164 .
.. __
_
pullets.

CENTURY BAR. Good business,
good equipment, best stock in
town. If Interested, make appointment . If not, don't bother
me. Reason for selli'ng. filled
up. leonard Hess .

)

I
C

f
(
l
•

?,

fl

a
II
F
E
I

-- - - -

~--,.·-~

·--~-

FL EXSTEEl _i }qf'A , B FT ., 3
CUSHIOI'll';..itAN &lt;;9RDUROY,
LAYNE'S NEW AND USED FUR·
S150. ~Ati:'".t:t~q~ ~-,.;.,;,r ..
NITURE
NEW:
•
, , , ~· ..; t,,., oot .el
"'
$165-$250·$300-$500. Ear.

...

will deliver .

1955 Prairie Schooner. ·29 x B.
bdr.
19b5 General, 60 x 12, 2 bdr .
19b9Eicona . 52w 12, 2bdr.
1969 Buddy . 60 x 12, 4 bdr .
19'10 Syl va, 60 • 12, 2 bdr .
1970 Castle , 60 x 12, 2 bdr .
1973 ArlingtOn . 60 x 12 . 2 bdr.
1973 Ridgewood , 70 x 14, 3 bdr.
1973 Kirkwood , 50)( 11, 2 bdr.

-- ---

T
IC
yl

Cl '

Ll
1m

·- Headquarters Fqr
Hotpoinf'and
Genera!. Electric
Appll~nces

.SALE .PRICES
JACK W,
CARSEY
Mgr.

, Phone\992-2181

1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC moo11e
home. fu rnis hed, 3 bedr ..
wosher ond dryer. Air co nditioneq . 1 lot , ?10ft. fr ontage .
$12 .000. Phone742·282b.
. .
, .·
1955 Prairie Sc hooner, 28 X e.
bdr . ·
1965 General , 60 x 12, 2 brl r.
1q68 Elcono , 52)( 12, 2 bdr.
-- 1969 Buddy , bOx 12. 4 bdr ·
1970 Sylva. 60 • 12, 2 bdr,
1q7Q,Costle, 60 x 12, 2 bdr.
1973 .Arlington , 60 • 11, 7 bdr .
1973 Ridgewoorl . 70 x 14 , 3 bdr.
· J973 l&lt;irk Wood. 50)( 11, 2 bdr.

B &amp; SMOBilE HOME SALES
Pl. PLEASANT WV
67\4 414

z

'

SPRING IS COMING- TIME TO ENJOY . In a few weeks
you can relax in the lovely backyard of lhis fine brick
home .. 7 acre tree lined yard with plenty of priva c y . 3
bedrooms, living room w -fireplace, 1'/2 ' baths, ful'l basement and garage, Owner anxious to sell . Just minutes
from town &amp; H ,M ,C,

&lt;:;

bedroom , eat -in kit., large liv. ·room, full
bath full basement home on a large lot, ci·
ty w~ter &amp; sewage . Price is righ.t : Call now
to have Gene show you this one . BMR 115

~

ON KEMPER HOLLOW, 6 mi. from

Gallipolis, so acres with · possibilities
unlimited. Call Gene now for complete

details. BMR 107
NEIGHBORHOOD RD., just off Rl, 7, Q'
"·lovely 2 bdrm . home ideal for newlyweds ""'
or retired couple. Call Gene now for an ap - :

pointmentto see this one, BMR106

. ;,
::s ·

BETWEEN TOWN AND COUNTR ,
WOODED SET·
TING, If you like trees and the peacefulness of wooded sur roundings, then you'll .love this new 3 bedroom bi -level. An
outstanding location on '12 acre this home offers a custom
kichen, formal dining, P/2 baths, huge family room,
garage &amp; workshop. Immediate possession .

JCT. 218 AND 553 a great location for your G '

:e

own business plus living quarters. Call
Gene now for complete details on this pro· ::;

·-a.
~

perty , BMR 112

We have inquiries f~r farms, borh large ~
and small, Contact Bud McGhee Realty If
you are interested in

se~ling

soon.

PA~TY HOME - FAMILY HOME. Perfect for either ,
Really spacious 2 story home with an unsurpassed view of
the Ohio Valley , This stately hom e offers 4 bedrooms , for mal dining, built-in kitchen, most unusual lam i ly room w fireplace, living room w -fireplace, situated on a beautiful
2112 acre green lawn with swimming pool and pond . City

A RARE JEWELL A hard to find home on today's
m arket, This solid masonry brick home was built to last. 3
bedrooms, hardwood floors , 1'12 baths, kitchen &amp; dining
area, full basement with huge rec. room, garage &amp;
workshop plus a very pretty yard. Mid $40's. City schools.

·"'

"'

~

Q

~.

CANADAY REALTY

c
:.
"'
..

;,Thank you for listinq with 'Bud' McGhee Realty"

~-

TOGE-THERNESS- A perfect description of the profes sional landscaping and superb decorating blending
together to make this one of the loveliest homes in the
neighborhood , 3 bedrooms, 2'12 baths, built· in kitchen, for mal dining, family &amp; rec , room plus an oversized 2 car
garage , Near H.M.C. in one of the area's · finest
neighborhoods.

BRAND NEW COUNTRY HOME -Outstanding rusti c
home wifh over 2,000 sq. ft . of living space . 3 larg e
bedrooms, family room w ·fireplace, form a l dining, equip ped kitchen, 2 baths, 2 car garage and 3 acres of lov ely
yard. A r ea l d e light for you to see. Gr ee n School d1st .

RT . NO. 588-.7 ACRE - You'll h;lVe a tough time finding
a better home at this price, $34,900 buys this attractive 3
bedroom ranch with a 24' family room, heatilator
fireplace, eat-in kitchen, good sized living room, 1'12 baths
and low heating bills. Very pretty yard overlooking the
-- countryside,

PRICE REDUCED-oWNER ANXOUS -This is a solid 3
bedroom home located within minutes of hospital and
town, Family room with a huge.firelace , pretty kitchen w dinirig area, spacous living room , hardwood floors and
bath. Owner will sell VA -FHA.or ConventionaL $35 ,900.

MOST DESIRABLE RIVER VIEW - You'll enjoy
beautiful sunrises over the river in this picture perfec t
br ick hom e. 3 large bedrooms, 2'12 baths, equipped kit
chen , 2 w .b . f i r eplaces, full basement , family room a nd 2
car garage _Ov er 112 acre gently slopes to river. Own er a nx ious,

---

T
".&lt;

&gt;;-.

~

446 3636

TONEY REALTY (Q
OFFICE 446 7900.
BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAG~R
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
ATTENTION - SELLERS: LISTIN-GS NEEDED
$20,000 TO $50,000 RANGE . LIST WITH THE PROS AT
THE GALLERY, WE ADVERTISE NATIONALLY ON
TELEVISION, IN MAGAZINES, ETC, WE OFFER A
FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE TO OUR POTENTIAl,
SELLERS AND WE BELONG TO ONE OF THE
LARGEST SALES AND LISTINGS REFERRAL
ORGANIZATIONS IN THE WORLD. CALL TODAY
FOR MORE DETAILS,

.$62,0QO
E:&gt;:ceptional feature s rarely found in the low 60'S.
Outstanding family room with fireplace and warm
1rown toned carpet . Formal living and qining room.
.iuper deluxe kitchen with snack bar, range, .
dishwasher and dining area . 3 bedrooms, Ph baths. Attached finished garage. Electric heal pump, cen. air.
No maintenance br ick exterior. One of the area's most
attractive neighborhoods .

,,n•N-F

FLAIR ...and fundamental quality. Brick, cedar and

$23,700

stucco com bine to give this brand .new home an English
Tud?r flavOr: Double ,door entry into foyer leading to
fam1ly '"':'· Wtth e~uy f1replace, very private fiving rm.,
fully equ1p)&gt;ed k1tchen with formal dining area l:lnd
bedroom wing,_3 spacious bedrooms. 2 full baths, plus
. carpe~, eel'!. a1r, heat pump . Finished 2 car garaQe.
B~a u t1fUI v1ew from any room through diamond paned
WlndQws . J4 acre level lot.

SELL - This one is guaranteed to satisfy
you. The best 4 bedroom home with family room on the
market for the price. Also includes den or office, 2112
ceramic. baths, very pretty entry, If you need a roomy
home this file will pass your inspection,

Ni ce as new! 3 BR fully carpeted frame except kitchen
and bath . New gas furnace and hot water . Carport.
Fenced back yard with room for a garden . In city .
~·

'

'

:;.

~,

'';,&gt;;,

~-

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING UNUSUALLY NICE -One
of the city's nicest 3 bedroom bricks. Includes family room
with fireplace, formal dining, large living room, great for
entertaining, Th is large modern home is in a quiet location
overlooking the city,

'

28 CHILLICOTHE RD.-119,500 - You will enjoy livi ng in town in this
remo de led 3 bedroom hom e. Freshly painted Inside, .new paneling in
bedrooms, eat·in kitchen, living rOom , bath, enclosed back porch, base ment and a 60x200' yard .

bedrooms, 2·baths, family room , formal dining , eat ·ln kitchen &amp; living
room . F!ural water &amp; large b~rn •tso included. Call today to see this one .

NEW LISTING- RIVER VIEW - This lovely mobile
home has everything you could want in one, Family
rm. with bar, nice L.R., kit. w-loads of cabinets, nice
house furniture including king-size bed &amp; washer·

--

'

$40,000

AI this low.price !~Is 3 BR ranch has tq be the best buy
~n the market today! Fully carpeted except kitchen,

l 1/ 2 baths, electric heat pump and central air cond.
Large 12'x21' living rm., eat -in kitchen with lots of
cabinets and range. Attached garge. Level t35'X107'
lawn .

screened -in back porch anr;:l1 car attached garage . On
nice size lot. Natural gas heat and located In the city
.School di st rict.
r oom in this less than a year -old home. Lovely frpi . in
the living room~ butcher block counter tops &amp; pecan
' cabi nets in the wife:approve'd kitchen, 3 brs., 2 car
garage. On a lovely l lh ac . lot.

ENGINEER PLATTED AND READY TO GO -

window, beamed eeiling, pantry . Formal dining room
has chalr .. rail, wallpaper and built-in china cabinet.
Private living room. Cozy ·den. Gracious foyer with
open .stairway leads to second floor with 3 spacious
bedrooms. Full basement has recreation room plus lots
of &lt;6torage. Nice picnic area in back yard. Lo:eated

cedar ranch in exclusive Tara Estates. 3 spaciovs !bedrooms, formal entry equipped kitchen with eating area, formal dining, family room with a
be~utffvl stone flrelace, 2 car garage arid heated drive. Upper $50's. .

$39,000
$16,500
THREE ACRES - 3 br,, 1'12 4 year old mobile hom~:
e)(cellent cond. Blacktop road, rural water . Workshop
with fireplace . Better Hurry!

s-P-A-C-E for family living, 2 full baths, family rm,,
formal dining, 31g . bedrooms, with walk-in closets, kit·
chen has range and ref rig ., snack bar, fully carpeted,
color coordinated drapes, cen. air cond., 2 Gar garage,
1bO'x1BO' level landscaped lawn, partially fenced ,
Centenary Village , JUST LISTED!

' BUILDERS! ' Looking for som~ nice buflding sites pri~- :
reasonably? We have them - 6 or 9 depending on

eo

446-1049
446-0458

·~

$52,000
. 521,900.
WHY RENT? 1975 modular home. 3 BR , spacious living, dining and kitchen area , GOOd cond. On level lot With coom for a garden . Only Smiles from c,lty .

WANT TO SELL? CALL

very nice 3 BR ranch great lor a growing family. 3 BR , .
2 FULL baths. Family room with .fireplace, fully
ccrrpeted .. Fvll basement, cen. air cond ., attached

garage, Only 5 miles from city In Kyger Creek a.rea ,
JUST LISTED!

-

WE NEED

RT. 218-BARGAIN PRICED - This coz y 3 bedroom ranCh could be your
ge t started hom e. A heatilator f ir eplace in th e liv ing _room , formal ~in ! ng ,
eff iCient k i tchen and bath . Situated on J4 acre w•1h stora ge bu tld tng .

$32,900.

NEED A GOOD INVESTMENT? - Thi s2S tory 2aprtment home could be
the money ·maker you need. Each apa r tment has 3 ro~ms and bath and
are presently leased for $160 mo. each. The houSe is in very good condi tion with vinyl siding, new elec t ric boxes, etc. Priced at only $37,900.

CROWN CITY -A lot of hou_se for ;ust$41,000, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, family
room with fireplace, eat-in kitchen and dining room, radiant heat and 2
car garage situated on a lh acre lot 1 block off highway . H.annan Trace

Schools,

BRAND NEW HOME - A rea ll y' attractive 3 bedroom brick &amp; nat. wo od
ranch on J;,. acre . This well built home has over 1500 sq: ft. including a
large fam ily r oom w- fireplace, eat -in kitc hen, ver.y pretty carpet , bot h &amp;
garage . Loca ted within walk !ng d istnce of high school . Mid S40 'S .

OLDER 2 STORY HOME-512, 000 - s;tuated ;n Thur man thi s large home
is in need of some repair but is liveable. 3 bedrooms, fami ly room w ·
fireplace, eat -in ~ itc h e n , bath basement &amp; nice yard .

today tor details,
HOME AND 14 ACRES-$36,SOO - A dandy 4 bedroom farm _home wltll 2
lovely fireplaces, formal dining room, large llvln9 room, buill-In kitchen

u acres Is perfect for horses and includes a small barn and

QUIET (:OUNTR.Y LIVING - The owner is an)(ious to sell this com fortable 2 story hbme on 9 lovely acres. 2200 lb . tobac co base. paSture,
smoke hovse &amp; fruit trees. The older home is in good condit ion with 3
bedrooms, family room w·fireplace and equ ipped kitchen. J.:,oc ated ju s t
·
off Rt. 325 in Rio Grande .

1 ACRE ON .RIVER-3 BEDROOM HOME . A pretty country setting

located on the Ohi o River n ear Eureka. The older ho~e ~eeds sol'!le
minor repairs and could be a nice home. 3 bedroom, eat -1n k1tchen, dm ·
ing, living room &amp; bath, $22,900 .
·

I

WISEM-A N IS A HOUSE SOLD
.

how large you want them ,.Locate"ln city schools- one
lot has sptlc tank . For only $18,000,
·

$29,000.

FIRST TIME ON THE MARKET - A 3 bedroom split-level in an ex

·

summer days, 3 BR country home ~ nearly an acre,
FamilY size kitchen with range and refige.-tor, Fully·
carpeted . except kit~hen . Attached flni stted Q,a rage. S
miles from clly. JU.ST LISTED, ,

TEXAS ROAD-GOOD STARTER. A well kept2bedroom home on a very
nice tot . Large form al dining room , full basement and garage. Only

cellent location at the edge of Centenary . A well built home w ith a .built·in
kitchen and eating area, 2 fvll baths,. fami lY room , Qarage,large deck and
nearly an acre. Upper $40's.
·

$49,900
Year round fun Fii-eplace for now and a pool for hot-

·•

«6·97Sl

52 ACRE FARM-u.s,'RT.l5 -Excellent locati~n - 2S to 30 acres of crop
land large barn and 3 other outbuildings. Very nice 3 bedroom modeular
hom~ valued at $23,000, 14x70 mobile home valued at $3,000 if sold, The
older home could be a real showplace but need~ considerable repa1r. Call

pond, soo' lb. tobacco base. Good location On Lincoln Pike.

BEAUTIFUL - 5 bedroom bi -level in excellent loca-

446·0458
446·4042

CO~MERCIAL BUILDING W·RENTAL - This large building has 2
large business rooms with '12 bath and gas heal, Could be easily remodel
ed to suit yovr business needs . The apartment has 5 rooms and a bilth and
presently rented , Located on Rt. 160,2 miles from town . Upper $40's,

MIDOLEPORT-$20,000 This 2 story ·s tone home has 2 1ar ge bedrooms,
formal d ining, living room, kitch en, bath , basement and a huge yar d with
garage . Located on M ill Street .

mosphere and all the edras th is spacious 3 bedroom home offers. K1tchen
and dining combinaton ; 2 full baths, lovely carpeting, large utility room , 2
car garage &amp; heat pu~p , Green School District. 153,000,

DELIGHTFUL FLOOR PLAN- You will adore this spacious L·shaped

and bath The

tion . This hbme has all the e)(tras. Family room, wb .
fireplace , formal dining, lov~ly kitchen and ·2 car

BECKY LANE
VICKIE HAUL OREN
SUI" ROUSH
BOB LANE
WALT LAN,E

BRAND NEW-OVER AN ACRE - You'll enj oy the qu ;et counl_
ry at-

Here's old fashioned charm with the convenience of to-,

14

. ATHOME

YOUR BEST COMMERCIAL LOCATION -92 II, frontage on Eastern
-Avenue with 4 buildings that could be used for rentals. The lovely
residence could be easily converted into about any kind of retail,

day _Fully equipped kitchen has table nook with bay

bulding lots, sewer line installed. Buy one or all - Conveniently located .

garage, Call.today ,

located in a good neighborhqod . City water &amp; sewage , natura l gas . Owner
·anxious to se ll.

wholesale or warehouse. The land withOut the buldings is worth the asking price of $69,900,

downtown Gallipolis, A house 1hat says "home", Just
listlld .

NEW LISTING -sm'all older home in very 900d condi tion. This home has 2 bedrooms, large living room, nice
big cheery kitchen with lots of cabinets, 1 bath,

Describes every

$62,000

821 2ND AVENUE - An older 2 story 3 bedroom home with a large livi ng
room, gas firepla ce, din ing room, eat·in kitchen , bath, basemen t, and a
very nice yard with garage and storage bi lding. $28 ,900.

MOBILE HOME AND LOT-$6,900 - An older mobil e home and 60x100 lot

A spaC,ous A or 5 bedroom home on Lake Drive . This
in the family room, kitchen &amp; dining room,~ full baths, 'full basement, rec . roorn and over an
acre with a small barn and kennel. Owner transferred, anxious to sell .
RIO GRANDE -

well built home offers a beautiful stone fireplace

.

TASTEFULLY DECORATED -

LOVE AND
ECTI N -All this home
is someone to make it their baby _3 bedroom brick ranch in one
of the area's finest neighborhoods. It's a 'Plain Jane ' but
could be a very nice home , Spacious living room, formal
dining, kitchen, 1'12 baths and carport. Upper $40's.

-

NEAR PORTER- SJO's - This country home is situated on over an acre
with more land available at a low, low price, The house includes 3

c.a,, lovely r .w. deck, Setting on an acre lot

8 ROOM ANTIQUE-BUILT ABOUT 1
, Built 140 years
ago thsi home is a must for antique lovers. 4 large
bedrooms , l'h baths, 2 w .b . fireplaces, formal dining, cen tral air, winding staircases, servants quarter s, garage a nd
nea rly a full city lot on State Street.

$57,750.00

--

--

~ _,

Z
lQ

M. L. (Bud I McGhee, Broker
446·0552 Anytime
Tom ,Wiiite, $alesman,-446·9557. Ev.e..
E
Gene Oesch, Salesman, 446·7440 , ve.

. Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
Lou Lutton, Rea~or Awlc., Eve. 446-3005
2l•/2 LocYif Sf. .

70, 1 owner , exc. shape, need
Ia sell. Extra low price . Phone

-- ·- ----1969 BALTIMORE 10 ' 50. 2 bdr .,

Q

. BMR 108
THIS 80 ACRE farm with plenty of
buildings and two house:s. has wood l~nd,
bottom land, tob base, and good 1ocat1on.
Call Gene now BMR 113
IN CITY SCHOOLS, close to town , this 2

.

EXTRA SHARP- EXCELLENT U)CATION-You must
see how lovely this home is decorated. Every room is so
well planned . There are 3 bedrooms, built-in kitchen fami ly room with fireplace, 1'12 baths, garage; F .A. ga~ heat,
central air, patio &amp; ,gas grill . 'One of the very best built
homes in the area.

.'

------------1977 Festival Mobile Home U x

- -

2 ACRES OF PRIVACY This nearly new country ranch is
situated on over 2 acres on Rt. 141. This fine home offers 3
bedrooms, a· large built-in kitchen and dining area, family
room W·fireplace, 2 full baths, 2 car garage, utility room
and
Southw~stern Schools.

Have Gene show you this lovely hoem now. ~

ANY HOUR

.

.

,

_..

REALTOR'"'

675·4424

HOME, good cond .. Fully fur·
nished , o!r cond .. aluminum
__bu_il~in_g . _c_~~~4~6·!B}7_ ___ _
SPRING SALE on used mobile
homes . TRI STATE MOBILE
HOMES . 44b·7572 .

large lot in Green Ele,, and CIIY schools, ,

THANKS TO YOU WE ARE GROWING ·.
WITH SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
'

50 ACRE FARM, buildings and older
house, tob. base, woods, 12 mil es from
Gallipolis on Bladen -M ercerville Rd . Call
Gene Iosee it, BMR 110

[H

B&amp; SMOBILE HOME SALES
PT . PlEASANT, WV

lc STOKER AND HOUSE COAL-Up

c

10~

gj
ca.

HOME IN CENTENARY, 3 bedroom, full
bath, larg_e tiv. room, eat ·in kit-built-in
appl. , full basement, attach~d garage,

CALL GENE about this 139 acres with tob.

Jr~,

-

W· per River Rd . Ph. 4-46-1408 .
's1 ·-:.... ........_____ _. - · :...· - -

___...;,.,..

J,
!,

fireplaces and family room, nice kit., 3
BR's, fenced lot, BMR 87 .
;

base, crop land, wooded area , pastu.re .wtth
stock pond and water tank, and bu1ld1ngs,
7milesfromtown.

Moifoil!"fmW'es for Sale

. .

__..

___

now for complete details, BMR

~.--~.:_

... ; .'(, /1 .

p . ---- c W.VA . CHUNK COAL Conve·
gun type fu el oil furnace. Coli
y · niently poc"ed in .40 lb. boJr:es ,
245-5205 ,
.. - - - ·b
ready to go. No mess . No fuss.
t(
Low ash, no sulphur. High BTU . 1969 12 • 65 FLEETWOOD m'obile
home, 2 bdr., washer and
G SKIDMORE-FOSTER COAL CO.,
dryer, air cond., dinette,
a ·123 11, ,Pine St. , Gollipolis, Ohio
bedroom suite. living rm .,
d
Phone: 446-2783.
sui te. Ca114-46-6619.

bl

j

L3 ACRES ·and plenty of road fron~age on
Rt. 7, makes this one th~ one vou will want
to have Gene show yOu soon . BMR 114

1nvestment Property
· 1'1 uni I ·
,1pi'lrtment ~ ompl e x .. ~rf's~ntty fully
occupied w•fh a wa1t1ng l ts t ot t_r n·
n(1nts. Owner wilnt s solei soon . Lilli

,·,.., ,. , ' , . I,

~-

446·9442,

_.._.....,..._

.__.;..._.

446·2478
- - -- - -- -- - - - - .
SERTA PERFECT SLEEPER MAT- 1977 MOBILE HOME , i2 x 65, 3
TRESSES AND FOUNDATIONS.
bdr., total electric, furni shed or
CORBIN AND SNYDER FURunfurnished . Call388-9346 .
--- - - - - --- .
NITURE, 446-1171 , 955 SECOND . 1964 10 x 57 TOPPER MOBILE
AVE ., GALLIPLIS, OH.

i SPLIT
' FIREWOOD.
Call367-7705 .

..

___ _

Am .

sofa and choir, $300 .. modern
sofa. choir. loveseo t, $275 :
recliners $100. and up . Tables.
$60 . each. Maple or p ine table,
4 choirs, $225.: Hutch, $300 : 7
pc. dinette , Sl09.; 5 pc. dinette
wi th swivel chairs, $300.; Bunk
beds complete, $I 50-$225-$275.
mattresses or box springs , firm
SS:O·S60·S70 eoch: captain's
b~ . $225 .. queen sets. $175 ., 4
drawer chest , $42.
GOOD USED:
Dressers , chest, nightstond .
Dryers , ranges, coffee and end
tables. beds , tables , lamps , TV,
refrigerator, other items . Coli
4-46·0322 Monday thru Friday. 9
to 8pm, Saturday 9 to Spm. 3
mi . out ~ulovill e Rd.:_ _ _ _ _

j( FIREWOOD SPLITTER! , Ech;;h~~
li
!lOWt , power genera tors, and
ir
firewood. C &amp; J PoWer Equip .

s

-·

fi repla ce in family room, large eat · t~ ktt .,
new bathroom , 3 bedrooms, new 011 furnace outbuildings, and gas lease. Call
Gene now for a look at this on.e. BMR 116

- . - ·- - . - ..... - ---

Approx. 200 bales of good hoy .
__so_( ~e~ b~ ~· -~~11 ?~· ~~ ·- __
BUILDING!!
30' .X 32' X El' New NEW super
quality steel form building with
color roof and wa lls and wolk ·
in door for S2 .885 .00 F.0 .8 . Coli
614 ·294 .A4A9 coJ.I.e.ct9 to 5 P.M .
·

33 ACRE ·FARM, newly remodeled home,

$26,500.

SPECIAL SALE . World Book En·
cyclopedia Save S100. Easy pay·
ment plan . Coli Cookie Or
Henry 6 75.3775

_? : ~0~~ · - --- - - --- SELLOUT

Baby beds , $65., sofa . chair,
rocker , ottoman . 3 tables ,
5500 .:
Bedroom
~ u i te s .

rent both. Either way yoU do It, it's' a good
investment . Both units presently occupied.

~T.hank y.ou for .listing with 'Bud' McGhee Realty" "Thank you for listing with 'Bud'. McGhee Realty"

cond . $50. Call 446 -7028 oher

Bill'S
446-2642
J L-----...,-.,.---1

water and sewage availab.le. This lot con sists of .6.4 of an acre ~nd it ha! an ex cellent view . Buy now and be r:eadv for
early spring construction, $7,500, BMR 062

MIXED HAY , 90} per bole. Coli
4-4b·0322

-

can

.

EASY TO GET -TO.
CALL 245-5211

USED GE REFRIOGERATOR , good

AnchorinJI• Skirting,
Awnings,
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint, Set-up
ihd Re-leveling.

I

or 446 -9557. BMR 89

BEAUTIFUL SETTING just 12mflesfrom
Gallipolis, so acre farm, bottom land,
woods, tob, base. Pri ced to sell, cal l Gene
, ·tor complete 'detalls,

. .

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

I

offer. BMR 101

:R will take $1500 down and finance the
% balanco at 7%. Call Tom White at 446-0552

Av e

1960 DODGE PICKUP ' 318 auto.,
mag wheels. and ro~iol tires .
$450.. b drawer steel desk ,
$50.; Antique mantle . $350.:
Antique toy truck, $50.; Call
_ _44!&gt;·28~6 _8o_m_to_ 5f!~· - -· __ _
FLEXSTEL SOFA , 8 ft ., 3 cushion ,
ton t:orduroy . $150. Also small
Lo-z-boy rocker -re recl iner
brown vinyl , $85. Coll446·7910.
. . -·- - ·- -

CLEAN WHEAT $1row . 985-3846,

(

eonsists of 1.40 acres and the pr ice is
$7,500. Call no¥' and make us a reasonable

..------------------, t
FOR SALE
ij
- ___
11
GOOD CLEAN HAY :!:
HARDWARE, 2 doo"

from Rutfond Post Office.
Phone 7-42-2255 . Due to new
contract , I am able to sell the
KING Circulating cool end
wood heater with blowers
assembly for $2B2 . ~5 . HQ_ve
·other types of wood. cool and
go~ heaters (good prices).
Stove buyers are eligible for 10
per c.,t discount on regular
stovepipe and let·oir stainless
steel triple wal (Ul approved)
pipe.
·

~

OWNER WANTS h;s lot sold ri9hl now, II

&gt;. BUILDING LOT, IOOXSO, located in the
. CORBIN AND SNYDER FUR· !: Gallipolis City School Disl. $5 ;900: Owner

sole.

8&lt;3-2432,
li &amp; N Day old or started leghoro

RUTlAND

C

Tappan built-in e lectric ~
range, Admiral console 23'' col · t-.
or TV , eK tro good , 5 pc. chrome::
breoldost se t with gloss lop . •li ke new . Fu ll size bed' reclinc:r

D ryer .

HAY FOR sale. Carl

about th'e value of our I isting in Port~r
Brook Subdivision, give us a call. Thts
beauty is Priced to. sell. $74,90~. The owner
has given us instructions to fmd a buyer
right now. The only true way for yo~ to ap'preclate this fine home ls to see tt. Call
right now for an appointment. Two
tirelaces, pooL fam ilY room, much, m~ch
more.

Ul wholesale operation . Located on state
• LOCATED IN THE heart of Galli a County .
highway . BMR 97.
on a state route lays in city school dist . Call
f u)OKING FOR A LOT? Give us a call.
Gene for complete details on this 110 acre
~
farm .
0'1 CHECK THIS ONE SOON, On US 35. 3 BR
c home with full baement . S! tuated on more
New listing ...:... Village of · Cheshire.
+= than an acre of land, with nearly new
Priced at 529,900 , Situated on Jlots , Call
,'!!, swi mming pool. Lots of potential. BMR
iorcompletedetails. B-MR 117.

hous~~~~n ~~I ~P~~-R~. .
1200 BAlES MIXED hay. 1976
Coii3B8·B59b.
F·250 Ford truck , Coli '192-2877 KACH-ALL ·PORTABLE BLDG.· Al l -: 112.

_3her 6pm.
_ ·- _ __
1965 JOHN DEERE 1'o10 do:r:er .
Diesel engine. Protective cab
and winch. $5000. 992:?~80_._.
· ROUND HAY bales for sloe .

IF THERE IS ANY doubt in your mind

City schools, city

DUPLEX, LIVE IN ONE, ren·t the other or

furniture , 1---~::::-=:;.::=.....,.,,..!

hou•ehold FURNITURE

with lois of storage . Childrt;'n atfend Gre~n
Elementary. Owner anxious to sell. BMR

74 ,
. BUILDING SITE -

.c THREE BR HOME priced at $35.000, only

446-2642

"EVERYTHING'S GOTTA' GO". ·
House

~-

QUIET couNTRY atmosphere and a like
new three BR home. Check this one out
soon . Pric~d to sell, $59,900. BMR 93.

AT THE. EDGE OF TOWN, frame ranch

VINTON

s:·
-·

,. ,,.,_,-_,..,,,.
~~,.,,: 1 , ~~~k, fe~turing N_,~

E. M. WillMAN, IIIOKIR 446 3796 EVE.
E. N. WISEMAN-, BROKER, 446 4500 EVE• .

500 SECOND AVE.

WO~D
'

JIM COCHRAN, ASSOCIATE, 446·7881 EVE.

B. J, HAIRSTON,
ASSOCIATE,
446-4240 EVil.'
'
...
"'

DAN EVANS, ASSOCIATE, 388-8111 'EVE.

NANCY SMITH, ASSOCIATE, 446-4910 EVE.

•

GALLIPOLIS

�•

().7.-The SUnday Tlrnes.Stntinel, SUnday, ~b

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Estate for Sale

-

Real Estate
-- tor Sale-

Real Estate for Sa_!e_

Real Estate for Sale

f

NEW

Rei) I Estate fpr Sale

LISTING

-

acres
NEW

uhhftes available 2
LISTING

-

OHIO RIVER LOT ~ L ocated 1n Eureka Galli pols Ct
ty School 01 st co water ava1lable 1deal for bu1ld1ng
or mob le home stte Sll 000

Home 3 bedrooms
baths ftre place nice
chen
full
base ment
garage 1 acre (real lv
n1 ce) 546 900 00
NEW LISTING - 24 acres
2 year old bt level t'lome 3
bedrooms (large maste r
bedroom)

famtly

room

more- Lo ci'lff'&lt;i n r:1 r C~ r1mu s S~ &lt;i 000

w tth Wood Burner 6 mtles
from Ractne S38 500 oo
POMEROY 2 story

frame 3 or 4 bedrooms
some carpettng
bath
basement storage bulldmg
and workshop $8 000 00
MIDDLEPORT - 1'12 story

duple)(

nat

gas

heat part basement cor
ner lot need some repatr
$1300000
HAVE
YOU
CON
SIDERED
SELLING
YOUR PROERTY• MAY
WE SUGGEST THAT YOU
CALL ONE OF THE
QUALIFIED PEOPLE AT
OUR OFFICE
REALTORS
HENRY E CLELANDSR
HENRY E CLELAND J R
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992 2259 992 " " "2 256B

GOOD FOR NOTHING except hunting and camping
182 acres of wllderne55 wood5, hills brush cliffs
Located wllhln the boundaries of the Wayne National
Forest between Gallipolis and Oak Hill $225 per acre
RING IN THE PROFITS Small grocery and garage
good Mom and Pop opera
t1on equtpment and lnven
tory 1ncluded
excellent
gross S55 ooo

FARM FOR SALE - "
ACRES - AIIclean mostly
hllable presently tn grass
2 ponds several good barns
&amp; sheds 3 coW milk parlow
tab base 12x60 mob1le
home ts now rented 650 ft
frontage an State Rt 554 at
Eno Oh•o 2 OOOtt frontage
on county r d $75 000 C~ll
for more deta ils
PRICE REDUCEOTOS59 500 ThiSiovelybn
IS ready for your grow ng fam il Y w1th over 1900 sq ft
of 11v1ng area plus a two car garage The family rm s
14x 27 w1th a WB f i replac e The kitchen s complete
w 1th a range d shwasher &amp; dtsp Other features are 3
large BR s 1112 baths large L R &amp; dmmg . .ea heat
pump central vacuum quality ca r pet elec garage
door &amp; a larg e flat lot at Rodney

ROOM TO STRETCH OUT
on th s 15 A b.=.b y fMm
F eiltures 4 B R homf' 30x30
bHn
seve r ill
ot h e r
bu tl rh nos ff' n c.... rt

ol l t~n d n q ros!;
SH 900

w th m os t
i! Od

on l y

REALTY,
INC.
All Across Amereca
16 ACRES 516 500 Rutland
Area on T 175 Tillable 6 8

acres

some woods

dug

well frutt trees One floor
frame house handyman
Spee~al 5 rooms 3 bd
rms bath ktt ltv rm
L P gas heat Bank cellar
Some outbutldtngs septtc
EXTRA
NICE
NEW
HOUSE
U4 900
SECLUDED 3 bd room
built'" k 1tchen w•th plenty

of cabmets carpet no1

10

APARTMENT HOUSE - Located 1n Add son Twp 4
untts presently rented for $600 per month good cond1
1ton good locat1on good mvestment ftnan c1 ng
available $49 500
MOBILE HOME RENTALS .t un1ts located tn ~1 0
~..;;rr a n de all presently rented c1ty water &amp; sewn
llnanc ng avatl ~ b le a good return on S29 500
PASTURE FARM - Walnut Township 160 A clean
htll pasture good fences barn good 2 BR mo'o le
nome $55 000
VACANT LAND - 55 A m I appro• 10 A t li able
balance wooded beautifU l home sttes fronts on
Jack son Co Rd No 48 (blacktop ) approx 1 m le off
StMe Rt 279 .4 m les east of Oak Htll $16 500

yet Seller w1ll g1ve buyer

chotce fuel all forced atr
furnace sun deck wood

L SHAPED RANCH - 3 BR 3 baths large d n ng rm
LR 4ft fami l y rm wtth WB
f.relace rec rm sun deck &amp; garage Green School
D1stnct

&amp; equtpped k1tchen 22ft

burnmg ftreplace cerport
beauftf ul location close to

wall carpet llv room
uttltty room
built 10
kttchen dnlled well large
double garage 2 utrllty
bulldtngs
all electriC
furnace heat $43 000
REEDSVILLE

older

-

2 story

bedroom

N1ce

house

4

parttal

basement 9 rooms shower

room separate bath extra
mce large level lot 241
long 99 deep block garage

43 x40

large room for

extra

garage

body shop a good place lor

a Mom &amp; Pop bustness
Drilled well w1th plenty of

water or you can fte mto
e~ty water forced atr gas
heat House w th modern
kltchen plenty of cabmets
septic 52 gal hot water
tank breakfast room Only
$33 000
C. II Sheila J Whaley
992 6189

NEAL REALTY
444 Second Ave
446 1694
HAVE you ever wanted to
hve tn the country but sttll
have the convemences of
the ctty nearby, Now's
your chance See this 3 BR
(could be 4) on Spruce St
Ext Large spactous llvtng
dtn1ng room Wtth cathedral
cethng and fireplace Wtth
Free Heat Machtne
Also 21/:z baths and a large
bu1lt tn kttchen S1t on your
own wood deck or eat tn the
28'x12 screened m porch
All th1S and more situated
on a 71 acre lot tn the CitY
School Dtst Must be seen
to be apprectated Ca II to
day tor your appomtment
Pnced at $tO ooo
EVENINGS
J MICHAEL NEAL
446 1SOl

'

Real Estate for Sale
FHA &amp; VA HOME LOANS McL EN
DO N MORTGAGE COMPANY
Loon Represen toltVe
V1olct
Cook1e Vters 463 Second
Ave Second floor Goll1pohs
Oh1o 45631 Coll446 7172

-

---FOR SALE BV OWNER

1026 Ftrst Avenue R ve rv ew pro
perty w1th frontage on F r sl ond
Second Aven ues 8 rooms 2 1
baths 2 cor garage Coli week
days 446 &lt;1 383 even ngs ond
Sundo~ .t46 0139 Shown by ap
potntment only

.

Serv1ces Offered

Serv1ces Offered

LIMESTONE gravel and sand All
s z:e s At Rtchords ond Son Up
pe r R1ver Rd Gall polt!. Ohto
WATER AND m1sc houltng Call
Call446 7785
9&lt;12 5858
A A A CONTRACTORS Backhoe
PIANO TUNING for home and
dozer dump truck Work done
school Lane Don els assoctote
by the hour or by the 10b For
of Elberfeld s ond Brun cord
free estimates Colt 256 1921
Mu stc
Co mpany
Phone
-- -- ~
Bill S MOBILE HOMES and Home
9CI2 258'1 or 991 2082
Improvements Free es t motes
Call 446 21&gt;42
WATER WELL drtlhng WI hom T
Grort 7.t2 2879

-----

--

room for barber

shop beauty shop

'

Willis T. Liadi~~ ReaHor
Ph. Home 446-9539

We Need
Your Home
or Farm

OFFICE 446-7699

To Sell·

Gallia County's

Real Estate
Agency

LISTINGS NEEDED
WE ADVERTISE NA
TIONALL Y - WE BUY SELL - TRADE

CHARMING BRICK RANCHER ol3 B
of
fers 17.10 sq ft of 11111n9 area plus the 22x30 attached
garage owell 1ng has kttchen w th range dtshwasher
&amp; d1 sp partly ftmshed baseme-nt stone fireplace
carpet1ng heat pump county water d1n ng rm shade
trees on tt1e level plot w th 107 ft pavement frontage
Few mtles to town
MORGAN TOWNSHIP - 36 acres near M etgs M1nes 5
et cr es level most of balance could be pas tur e sm all
stream town sh1p road $11 900
PERRY TWP - 130 acre s hay pasture 8. tobacco
f arm mostly rolhng ground extra ntce remodeled 2
story hom e 2 barns other bu1ldtngs Nebo Road
... ~ "' ...

.

.

START RAISING &amp; GRAZING 110 A farm on county
rd mcludes 4 BR home se veral barns and bldgs
mmeral ngnts 2 pond s Walnut Twp $55 000

RANNY BlACI&lt;BURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

D &amp; F CONTRACTORS
types
home
im
provements and room add•
ttons
Also
plumb1ng
heahng &amp; electrtcal work
done
Free Estimates
446 3407 or 2~6 6652

All

JAY MARCUM roofmg spout ng
and std ng
30 years ex
per ence Free est mote Coli
388 9857

---

RUSS &amp; MA X ELLIOTT
Len noMHeottng and or condtllon
ng Ropco foam nsulollon
446 8515 or 4.46 0445 Call ctter
4 30

-----

BOGGS EXTEMtNA TING CO
(formerly Fa1nes &amp; 0 dell) Oak
H II Oh Coli collec t 446 7569
DENNEY AND GLASS Cham ltnk
fence Free est mates Call
245 Cl1~ K_!n Soles_Ga ~ p~l s
RON S TV SERVICE Speclollztng
1n Zentth Hou se calls Call
I 304 576 2398 or 4d6 2454

Real Estate for Sale
5 .42 ACRES Located on Graham

School Rd Le$S than ' m off
St Rt 141 approM 5 mtles
from town
Green School
Otstnct 337 ft frontage Ap
proM 1 acre level rest roll ng
land Phone 446 2931 after
2p_m

----

FARM FOR sale House 2 barns
tro ler Large pond 10 acre!. or
82 acres 742 2566

- - - - - - --::-

3 ' cere s tn Pomeroy Secluded
wooded area on top of h1ll
Overlooks rt ver Water elec
Inc OV'Otloble 992 3886
REAL EST ATE Loon s Purchase and
ref nonce ~0 year terms VA
No money down (el gtble
vet ere ns) FHA As low os 3
per cent down ( non veterans J
Ireland Mortgage Co n E
State Athens 61&lt;1 592 305 )

--THREE
BEDROOM

ran ch
Carpeted otr cohd1t oned Pnc
ed very reasonably
In
Syra cuse 992 5348

SEPTIC SYSTEM INSTALL ED Com 79 ACRES 614 698 2705 VInton
plete by quoll1ed I censed 1n
HIGLEY S CHRISTIAN BARBER
Co
stoller fill dirt hauled stone
SHOP and Bookstore G fts 81
grovel etc AAA Contractors SEVEN ROOM hou se 2 y,. acres of
ble tapes B bles Open 6 days
land
garage w th uhltty
coli 256 1921
8 11116 Upper Rt 7 44b 0002
bu1ld ng I m le above Roctn e
THEISS INSULATION lnsulmoster
Dam 247 31:23
INCOME TA X RETURNS Do ne by
foam msu!altor] New homes
nd1v dual w th IRS tro1n ng
old homes commerc al struc SUBURBAN LIVING w th etty
Outel cont.derrt al and per
water One acre wooded lots
tur es For free est mates call
sono l serv1ce Coli J W Thoma s
4d6 1971
for sale near Metgs Htgh
tn_R od_12_e1 2-45 9465 ___ _
School Coll302 273 2276
PAINTING Restdenttal 1ntenor
COMPLETE SUPERMARKET and
and eKfen or born and mob1 le MODE THREE bedroom house full
re staurant equ pment for sale
bcsement
fireplace
fully
home roofs Free est1rnotes 15
loyaut
pnd
mstallat1on
carpeted central a1r enclosed
yr exp
Coli 367 7784 or
avatlable Call388 9963
sun porch located on 6 /1 acres
...367 7160_ ,
on CR 28 opprox 3 m1les from
TRt STATE UPHOLSTRV SHOP JIM S SIDING CO
FREE
Ractna II Interested contact
1163 Second A ve Gall1pol•s
ESTIMATES 446 7623
Lorry Wolle 949 2836 weekends
446 7833 or4&lt;16 1833
"- NOW IS A GOOD TIME to hove
~J nd o!..!_e~S~~!'~-ROBERTS BROTH ERS GARAGE 24
your ftreplace and ch1mney ERA AFFOLTER Realty Broker
hr wrecker ser11ice All types
cleaned Call the Chtmney
Tudor manor opts for lease
of repa ir Upper Rt 1 Coli
Swee ~ 1 373 _605?._
Modern 2 bed oom s nd ude
446 2445 days and 446 4792
carpet
stove
refr gerator
PASQUALE ELECTRIC blo wn
n ghts
water Must stgn 1 year lease
celulose msulat on
Ours
CARPET INSTALLATION Expert
doesn t shr nk and no off ens ve • $195 per month plus $195
carpet nstoll ohon new or use d
secur ty depos f No pets You
odor Phone 4d6 2716
carpet Repotr work
D ck
-.,-- poy electr c lOth and Mo1n tn
Methe ney B1ll Broyles call CUSTOM BACKHOE and dozer
Coolville
Oh1o
Phone
388 9331 or 388 9983
work L1censed septiC tonk 1n
614 985 4197 V rg mto Hay mon
stoller
Grode work
yard
Soles Asso ctate
SEPTIC SYSTEM INSTALL ED New
work dnvewcys and layout
leach bed sewer l1 nes Wa nt
Col i GALLIPOLIS DIVERSIFIED
fr-ee estimates? Ltc ensed n
CONSTRUCTION CO
staller Coli Russell s Plumb ng 446 d-.&amp; .tO
446 4787

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GALLIA RE SI DENTIAl
IMPROVEMENT
Insu lated \11nyl s1d1ng alum num
gutters and spouts storm doors
end w ndows Free eshmoteS'
Phone 36T 02oq_day cr mght

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All TYPES OF MASONARY
WO RK
F repla ces
b loc k
d11mneys stone brtck block
work Free eshmole!l LOGUE
CONTR 388 9939

MULLINS HOME IMPROVEMENTS
SANDV AND BEAVER Insurance
S dtng v nyl alum num -ond
Co has off ered serv1ces for I re
~ tee l gufler s doon w ndowc;
1nsurance covf!-roge 1n Gall o
roo f1 ng w1th opl onol tn sulo
County l or almost a century
t on low cos t Free es timates
Form home and personal pro
Col/ 4&lt;16 1089
perty coverages ore ova loble
to meet 1j:l vtdU al nP.P.rls Co
ta ct
fuge lf' Holloy
your Will CARE for the elderly n our
ne ghbor and agen t
home Phone 997 7~1 4

'

__ Bu11d111_9~phes

m3325

216 E. Second StrHI
LARGE ROOMS
3
bedrooms, suite s1ze, large
upstairs balh and •;, bath
down
Formal d1n10g
foyer and full basement
Natural as central heat
Askmg $25 000
LARGE IN TOWN In
good
cond1t1on
3
bedrooms 2 baths one
enclosed modern k1tchen
full basement and 1 9
acres
RANCH - Nice modern
home with 3 bedrooms
bath
good Size t•mlly
room and large lot Only 7
years old
RENOVATED N1ce 3
bedrooms enclosed bath
new kitchen and oil fur
nace
vtnyl
s1d1ng
carpeting
large
out
building and ntee garden
spol Want only $23 000
RACING BARGAIN 8
rooms and bath natural
gas city water near store
W•lltake Sl2 000
MODERN - Elaborate 10
room colon1al home Has S
bedrooms and 3 baths
Must be seen to be ap
preclaled Just $65 000
NEED MONEY? WE CAN
HELP
LIST
YOUR
HOUSE WITH US FOR A
CHANGE
HELEN L, GORDON B
A~D SUE P MURPHY
"REALTOR ASSOCIATES

.

of
creatiVely d~ned hvtng space Super stze family
room, secluded paho, outstanding landscaptng and out
door ligh11ng, much, much more Safe quiet conve
nlent location IMMEDIATE POSSESSION F1nrm .... n ...
available For more delatls call 440 20 20 or 446 0702 IM
~DIATELY•

t4t ·

Real Estate for Sale
SIX ROOM HOUSE on 75 X ISO lot
Locoted n Crow n C1ty $20 500
Coll256 6244

REAL ESTATE LOANS
COLLINS BUILDING PRODUCTS SPECIALIZING IN F H A AND
151 5 Washm'glon Blvd Belpre
V A INSU~ED MORTG &lt;' ES
Oh1o offerL O new se rvtce to
MILLIONS
TO
LEND
th e Gall polts oreo Ove r 6 000
FAVORABLE INTEREST RATE
_ .b.L.uldmg produc ts del• ered
LOW OR NO DOWN PAYMENT
each week to Belpre ond
FOR VETERANS
LONG TERM
o\lotloble to you each week. at
FINANCING AND NO PREPAY
d scount pnces t Call Collms
MENT PENAL TI I::S THIS IS THE
8utldmg Produ cts or p1ck up a
WAY TO DO IT IF YOU CAN
fro e Pease Catalog today
OUALieV RE FINANCING ALSO
B s ness hours Men thru ~
AVA ILABt F CA LL TODAY ~O R
! am
to
Spm
Ph one
MO RF DH AILS UNDA lANE
b1.t .f):J bflH
440 1517 1

0

_FOR SAL£ BY OWNER

OPFIQ 446 :J013
•

•
NEW LISTING- Beauty m the woods descnbes this
lovely Bl Level With 3 bedrooms 2 lull baths llvmg
room With w b ftreplace fam1ly room with w b
fireplace
kitchen w1th range
disposal and
dish"W'sher uttl!ty room and garage Nice setting on
acres on St Rt 554 Call tOday

RUSSELL

WOOD
446-1066.
BRlrCK JloMES

WliHING WELL
Yes t)11s property has one 1 2 A more or
less of level land located In the mist of one
of the area s most valuable sect1ons of
land Elegant 7 room bnck home wtth 3
B R formal d1n1ng room most modern
kttchen This home can only be descrtbed
as mmaculate Nat gas forced atr fur
nace central air Ctty water &amp; c1ty sewer
Lots of shade trees In yard &amp; nearly
mantcured
OWNER WILL
HELP FINANCE
LOOK OF LUXURY
Excellent design 10 a home
that could be yours Style
plus comfort all comb1ned
Luxunous master BR with
pnvate bath &amp; walk 1n
closet
Equtpped rustiC
style
kttchen
wtth
breakfast nook
Large
recreat1on and famtly
room w1th open stone
fireplace plus formal din
tng room &amp; ltvmg room
Walk out of entrance foyer
to an except 1onal cour
tvard There s just too
much to say you must see
th1s elegance style &amp; com
fort combtned tn thts
beauttful home

CONVENIENT AND
• COMFORTABLE
Extra nice home w1th 3
B R 2 full baths Family
room w1th Franklin wood
burner A ll on State Rt 160
CALL - make your ap
potntment to see thts well
pr ced home tn the 30 s

JUST BUILT
Th1s homedeltvers the k1nd
of I•VIng demanded by to
day's tastes in a very Mnd
some design Large lovely
kitchen has all the modern
conveniences a W1fe would
want plus a large dining
area
eat at bar, fam1ly
room, 3 large B R &amp; 2 lull
bathJ. Very laslelully
decor:eted

7 ACRES NICE 8 ROOM
· HOME
W•th1n 4 m 11es of Gat11potts
on a State Htghwe~y Green
TownshiP GallipoliS City
School System 3 or 4 B R
front &amp; back porches ntce
modern large k 1tchen w1th
lots of b1rch cabtnets Par
ttal basement Fuel 011 FA
furna ce 2 car garage 2
storage bu il dings
one
15 )t 24 paneled other 8 xjl
Has good fences Has cher
nes plum apple trees
Grape
harbor
JUST
LI STED BE TH E FIRST
TO SEE THIS ONE
WOODED
AREA - 4
MILES
FROM GALLIPOLIS
Here is what you tlave been
IOOk1ng for ApprmCimately
4 A of scattered trees Pkk
your own buddmg s1tes
develop as you des.re Anx
1ous to sell now
LOT11'j EWINGTON
Lot No 44 &amp; east Half of Lot
45 Close to Post Office
well wtth electrtc
Meter on pole for
home Septic tank
drtveway w th
at ttS end Con
to set mobtle

Ho11sinq
Headquarters

~-

REALTOR ,

Forked Run Park
6 ACRES
Beaut1ful
woods extra ntce 1 floor
home 3 bedrooms wall to

OOI.D WEATHER - HOT BUY!
ft

OH up r ( S Ill 000

BEEF CATTLE FARM 174 A 90 A highly 1mproved
grassland some bottom land goOd set of bUildings
comfortable 7 rm 8t bath home tob base owners
r et nng $87 500

STROUT

Real Estate for Sale

POCKET THE RENTAL
PROFITS
ThrcP stan
bu I(! nq downtown cornrr
lot n Pom f'rov H ~s I rs r
fl oor shop 11 &lt;.i off• o p lu o;
two l ilr { r lpilrt m f' nl s 1!1

RIO GRANDE AREA- 4 1 acres on the Rio Center
point Rd Like new 1976 12x60 mobile home completelY
lurnlshed extra mobile home pad could be rented for
extra Income city school• Asking $22 400

HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP - 13 acres Raccoon Creek
bottom land approx 1200 ft creek frontage old barn
well approx 1f2 m1 off Route 160 •$13 000

--~~~~~~--~~-Real Esfate for Sale

Two flreplaca surrounded by over 2500 sq

0

Realtor Assrcilte I
Ph. Home ~ltl
Fastest Growing

AlL ROUND FAMILY PLEASER
33 1\ w th I y r
olrl r &lt;'~nch I n o;h N ! hit ~rml"nt &lt;1 RR 7 1 hilfh o; / k I
rhr ns L R D R 1.-.m ly room w t h Fr r. nkl n ftrrnl:lcf' fl.

Real tstate for Sal..

AVE. -.GAWPOUS, OHIO
"We Sell Better Livilig"

Loveday

000 00

$6

frame

-

4LdTS

31, 3~ 33 &amp; 34 In
Rural
water
1 sell 1n ljlllrs
TODAY

CHOICE PROP.ERTY
10 acres of level land on
Route 160 Make lovely
bulldtng sttes
Call for
more details WON T LAST
LONG•

SJI.OOO 00
A LOT OF HOME
A very tmpress1ve home from the ftrst
tem e ypu step Into the door You can see
the ftne matertals used 1n thts home There
are 8 rooms - 3 B R formal dmmg room
with built in buffet Ntce storm doors &amp;
ttlt tn thermopane wmdows Large llvmg
room 16 x20 wtth wood burn1ng stove real
mce stepsaver k1tchen wtth everyth1ng
but It tn C1ty water large front porch &amp;
back covered patto Large 116 x 126 land
scaped lot 2 car garage All of this &amp; more
too YOU CANT BELIEVE THIS HOME
FOR THE LOW LOW PRICE

$15 000 00
2 acres of land plus 2 BR
cottage E x tra ntce rolling
land on blacktop road ap
prox 1 m i le from Holzer
Hospttal
9ROOM
COUNTRY HOME
5 BR N ce front porch n ce
k1tchen
w1th
butlt '"
cabmets double s s stnk
Bath with shower lots of
shade trees &amp; frutt trees
N ce garden spot Th1S
home has blown In msula
tton Located bes de St
H ghway 160 84 acre of
land More can be purc has
ed wtth thts home 2 mobtle
homes that now are br
tngtng In a rental of $175 00
per month plus a total of
3 84 acres of land All
located
bestde
State
H ghway 160 CALL FOR
ALL DETAILS
COZYAMD
COMFORTABLE
Nice large shade tree sets
oft thiS lovely home In
Kyger Creek
school
Dtstnct , Need a home for
yourself or as a renta l 1n
vestmenl YOU CAN BUY
THIS NEAT HOME FOR
$14 000
COMMERCIAL LANO
BUSINESS
BUILDI!RS
We now have approx 14A
ava1 lable 1ust off Rt 35
West w1th a close access to
c1ty sewer &amp; water &amp; near
thr1vtng bus ness com
mumty
PRICED TO
SELL CJn sell1n 7 A plot
42 ACRES
VACANT LAND
Lots of road frontage on
Morgan Lane Some good
line fencmg Some whtte
(oak timber Approx IS A
tillable
All could be
pastured ALL FOR ONLY
$13 900 00

83 35A MORE
OR LESS
Vacant land Approx 65 A
of timber Oug well Creek
&amp; springs
PRICED
RIGHT
1 LOT
Nice Lot 58 In Patriot All
level
Rural
water
available Nice lot, only
$3 750 00
HOME&amp;COTTAGE
ON I A
Th1s roomy 7 room country
home has eat m k1tchen 3
B R living room &amp; famly
room The 2 B R cottage IS
mcely paneled &amp; has some
carpeting Just off Rt 160
near Vtnton
LEVEL LAND&amp; HOME
6 room home w1th 3 BR ~
bath F A furnace &amp; rural
water Appro)( .tJ~ A of ex
tra n1ce level land Caul~
be building lots or used fo~
farmmg Call for mor~
del ails
QUAINT
3 BR brick &amp; frame home
Cozv &amp; comtortale family
room with Franklin wOOd
burner Spac1ous k1tchen,
lois of bult '" cablnels &amp;
large dfning area
You
must see this house to
belteve how charming It ls
CALL FOR YOUR AP
POINTMENTTODAY

•

6 ACRJ;S
$7 500 00
Located on State Route 554
some fen ces and bUJid1ngs

EXCLUSIVE
Extra lovely bnck &amp; frame
In one of the area s ricest
locatiOn (Spring Valley) 3
farge B R •s 2 full baths &amp;
fu lly O!!Ufpped kitchen w1th
lot of cabmets This home
has full ftn1shed basement
with family recreation
room study &amp; ut1llty area
Natural gas F A furance &amp;
2 fireplaces All th1s pnced
o sell City S&lt;hool System

NG S1tuated on L ake Drive •n R10 Grande
You 11 want to see th s un1que new br ck 4 bedroom
home Family r oom w1th patented heatmg system
\(lh iCh heats both the home and hot water ut ltl ng th e
open fireplace 2 bnths'f&lt;l.. 2 half tJa ths VIllage wa ter
eand sewer 2 car garage n ce hom e for fa mMy Pn ce
$63 000

CLOSE
- Good 2 bedroom home
w1th bath living room
wooClburning fireplace
alunftnum sldmg and large garage $20 000

OWNER WILL
HELP FINANCE
FINANCE BEAUTIFUL
BEAUTIFUL
RIVERFRONT HOME
Beaut 1ful 7 room home w1th
a panoramic v1ew of the
r1ver 2'13 A Full basement
w th
woodburntng
!~replace 23 f1 x41 It room
With kitChenette excellent
for entertam1ng or dane
1ng N1ce modern k1tchen
lncludtng
dtshwasher
range &amp; refrigerator for
mal d1n1ng room fam1IY
room formalltvmg room &amp;
3 BR and 2 full baths &amp;
showers Fuel 011 F A fur
nice Excellent 1ocat1on for
flshmg r1ght out vour back
door C1ty school dfst Must
see to apprec 1ate 1ts \ alue
$42.900 00
VA APPROVED
2 A
8 room new home
IUSIImlshed 4 B R frame
home wflh b"ck front car
port n1ce bUilt 1n cabinets
In kttchen Rural water
system
12'x16
storage
bu1ldmg , large garden
spot Woth1n 2'h miles from
Holzer Hosp 2 A of land
scaped yard Lots of shade
trees

CALL TQo).y- Very attractive ~ck &amp; frame ranch
w•th 3 bi!drooms bath w1th shqWI!r fully carpeted
sl1d1ng glass door~with pat1o glrage and a m ce lot
Priced to sell now tor $37 SOO
BRICK RANCH - A lovely 3 bedroom home wtth
'fiOOdburnmg f1replace central atr large bedrooms
fenced in lot large carport excellent locatton close to
Spr1ng Valley Plaza Call for AppOintment
'NEW LISTJNG - "' "
besement,
acr

SALE PENDING

. '1,

fast

•

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bedrooms full
thiS should sell

'
NEEDED
.
WE HAVE PROSPECTIVE BUYERS FOR
1 Home In GalliPOlis area 575,000 to SIOO 000
2. Beef farm of 350 acres or more.

-·

. -;

CHESHIRE

•

~Large

frame home needs some repairs
3 bedrooms bath natural gas lets hear an offer

•

'
I

'•

'h acre

1972 Globemaster 14x64

GOOD BUY $13 500

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 2 bedroom home
wtth bath d 1n 1ng room full ba sement attached
garage locted on Chi llicothe Road name your prtce
INVESTMENT PROPe.lTY - 2 niCe lots With &lt;rental
mob1le home pads all are rented fiach pad has con
crete runners and pat10 located tn Rodney $15 .500

•
•

•
•

••

••
•y

'•
r

GOOD GROWING BUSINESS - Beer and Wme Car
ryout wtth C1 and C2 ltcense All equtpment and tnven
tory tncluded In sale pnce call today

~OBILE HOME -

1/172
storage building $12 ~o

Fr~~dom 12x50 niCe lot

.jl

13 ACRES - Nice bedroom remodeled home, tobacco
base large barn only S16

5001

~

•

Even1nas eau

Dani!l. Bloomer, Assoc. 67~27
oU Baird, Realtor 446 4632

•

John Fuller, RaaHor 446-4327
110 I•CRES
NICii FARM
Beautiful ro lling g"'een
pasture/and or farmtng
land located on a state
hLQhway
I arge 2 1 ~tory
frame f .:: rm home Rural
water sy,.tem 2 ch1cken
hou.,es corn cnb m1lk i
house or tool house large
30 x40 barn w tth 12 )(40 sh
ed metol roof Good ltne
fences 3ood farm, good
locat1on
Re nsonable
Pnce C.ALL NOW
LAND, LAND, LAND
S560 00 per acre
Always dreamed of having
a farm or looking for In
vestment property? We
have 197 acres of the pret
ttest land around LoVely
clean level to rolling land
65 acres tillable &amp; the re
mamder m nice clean
pasture Large dairy barn
&amp; other farm bulld1ngs
LET US SHOW YOU TO
DAY

EXTPA INCOME
PROPERTY CLOSE TO
HOSPITAL
t 5 room s r em odeled nu'm•, ,•
wtth bath 1 OS
land Rural water
2
storage b1dg
12 )(60 hom es fully turn1
ed rent.ng fer $150 00
per month Seyer all ~~~~~~:~I
apple trees ~Ice "
home t o ltve n pl us ex tra
! enters money

Real Estate fer Sale

•

12ft

CORA RODNEY ROAD - Perry Twp very n tce1 2x 70
mobtle home w tth 3 BR &amp; 1 1'2 b ath s 2Sx30 g arage could
be used for body shop Qi"!rag e et c Ask.ng $24 000

Stfe In WildWood SubdiVI

ston

•

.

,

•

MACEDONIA RD -Harrison Twp. 24 acres pa•tur•
end woods small amount tillable, good tobacco barn,
$12 000

eqUipped kitchen drapes
and rods About 7 vrs old 2
large lots $29 100 00
NEW LISTING - BUilding

"

BArRD &amp;

----+ -,

F•ve

..

•

BEEF HQG&amp;GRAINOPERATION
146A farm 54
A n ch Sand Fork bottom land b~ l rmce pasture &amp;
woods nt ce ty r emode led 9 rm homr good set of hog
bulldmg s teed b.ns &amp; auto m nc m111 located 1n Perry
Twp f1nanc tng av iHI Rble

Potnts Area 3 bedrooms
living r oom dtntng fully

•

--~~~~~~~·
~~--• Real \state for Sale •

HARRISON TOWNSHIP
Lillie Bu tt skm Rd 96 A
wooded htlt ground good 1972 12:.: 60 2 BR m ob le home
spnng water $29 SOO

POMEROY, 0 .

Real EState for Sale

,Yo&amp;~r B~t R~l Estate Buys ~e •
~Fountl in tlte Suiilhy Times~Sentinel

D-6-TheSunday Ttrnes-SenuneJ ~unda),Feb 25 1979

Real Estate for Sale

•

:z:;;1m

•

,,•..., ,

•
~I

~~ flmt ~ TIIATSCIWIIL!DWOAOGAMII!
r::J'~ ~~· byHenriAmoktandBobLM
UIIICflllllble taur Jumbloo
ono leiter to eech square 10 1o1m

tx
II I_)
... ..

lout onlnll}' -.D

I SAREE

·~cu..-~ -

I CANYF

10

ITRIMAN

K) I

I

IMORLANj

I Kl

iH&amp;'I'I:(E Fl'i I I Y'
"TO CJ..ICI&lt;.
A"f A eATHIN6
5EAU'TY CON'TE5T.
6U~E

I· I

-

NEED FINANCING. Chec k With us we have access to
VA &amp; FHA loans also convent onalloans for homes or
commerc1al purposes

'

COMMERCIAL BUILDING
Loca l ed n V nlon
spaceou s bulldmg can e th er be used tor bus1n ess or
meet.ng room Pn ceonly 511 000 00

llmlngt "'" elided leltetl 10

1o1m the

ourprioe . - r aa oug

~ew LISTifolt; Appro)( 4 acre s lev el land tdea l for
•;,
f R d
1
development adt acent to villag e o
o ney sever a
hundred ft frontage on St Rt 588 rural water
avatlable Pr ce lltv $37 500 00
.,.,_.
_
ING
comfortable
3
bedroom
carpete d
NE~ LIST
bnc
home located on Falrf1eld Centenary Rd
SitUated on 2 acr e tract of land beautiful countr yside
w b f.repla ce full basement lftntshed ) J1!2 b ath s
ru_ral wate r. 2~garage Prt ce $75 000 00
1

geotod by lhe obove cartoon

PrlntaMwerhere.

KI I I I I I)
(-Monday)

Yo-v
.,.

0

I

Rtver 3 bedroom qua lily br1ck home crty w ater w b
f replace ex cell ent cond1t1on Mu st see 1o apprec iate
Prtce $71 500 00
NEW LISTING Compact 3 bedroom hOme SitUated
alo.ng s and Hollow Rd L v1ng rm din1ng rm and ktt
chen one bath w shower Fenced 10 lot
Prt ce
$20 000 00
NEW LISTING Under con struct on 3 bedroom br ck
home located w1 t h n 3 mtles f r om hosp1tal on K nSfl
Dr 1 p ; 2 baths dm.ng or fc- ;ntly room corner lot w b
ftrelace Buy now tor $62 000 00
•
ENJOY THE COMFORT ot ~IS qua l ty hom e
overtook ng the beaut1fUI Oh o
r Observe t he Stiver Memorial Bndge from you r
groom d ne 1n
the comfort of your forma l d tntng r oom and sw•m n
your own heated pool 2 w oodburntng ftr eplaces one n
the familY room and one tn the ltvtng room 4
bedrooms 3 on the mam floor A qual1ty home 1ust
watttng for you to occupy Call for m or e nformahon

IAn-

Jumb!H ERUPT BEIGE MARMOT GATHER
It 1 sheer oxcellence- lhat placea me
!Irati'- 'MERIT

IF YOU RE
KING ABOUT SELLING GIVE U'
A CALL AND WE LL BE HAPPY TO DISCUS S OI,JR
LISTING CONTRACT WITH YOU
WE HAVE
WE NEED LISTINGS" LET US SELL
J ___2S~~·~~~~~W~KE~~N~YOU RER. E_:_A~D_Y__~~------~
j.

(,

,_ .

'

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17 un 1t motet
wtth excellent occupancy
traff1c count Owner receptive to qualthed buyer
9l ACRE FARM
RIVER VIEW HOME
4 BR hou se bu ild ngs ca t
You II I ke th s 4 bedroom
ches warm sundunng day
ran ch
sty le
hom e
and breeze at n ght Good
Bedroo m s shou l d
ac
pastur e land toba cco base
co mmodate queen or k ng
Can be purc h ased as a
s ze bedroom su t es En 1ov
whol e or 20 ac r es and
your m ea l s look mg at the
bldgs or 60 acr es vacant
s~t c Oh o R v er throug h
a p c ture Window Famtly
l and If you w ant a farm or
JU St acr es don t pa ss thi S
r oom has slate floo r wood
up A ttra ctt ve setttng Han
pane l ed
bu ilt tn boo k
shel ves A lso ha s 2 /z ba t~
nan Trac e sc hool s Please
ca llformor e det a Is /1 266
showe r stall modern ktt
MODERN HOUSE POOL
chen two. car ga r age Gas
3 300 sq ft overall 3 BR 2
for ced atr hea ttn g system
baths shower modern kit
w th zoned hea t ng One of
ch e n
1arge
ant 1q ue
th e better suburban hom es
of Ga lltpol s All ston e con
decorated tam ly roo m
1100 sq ft concrete sw 1m
struc ttOn M ak e appo nt
m.ng pool 18 x35
very
m ent Dnve down today
much tn use p 1cn 1c area
and be charm ed
/1 252
lots of llvmg St Rt 141
LOTS OF POSSIBILITIES '
Gallipol iS School D1str ct
The r e
are a l ot of
Pnced S53 900 Modern new
pass btl t es for lh1 S 1 ~
c~;:~~~:bu1lt la,ome close to
ac r es - our r oom house
Dt
can De purcha sed
needs some re pa r Would
property or sold
m ll k c n ~e r en t al proper ty
separately or moved Total
or a beg nner s home
Packag e $76 000
11212
coun t y wa ter ava lab le
..,r1cr: 1 =&gt;H9 200
# 248
2 ACRES
ITS A BARGAIN'
M ostl y woodland county
11 s a bar ga n on th s 83
wat e r av ail able
good
acres ol v aca nt l and M atn
bull d tng site c1ty school
ly t m ber Dug we ll and
d 1stnct Green .elem en
spnng M ner al n ghts go
t ary reasonably pr ced
~
w th propert y Located on
264
county road and n Ha nna n
Tr ace School D1 st n c t The
PRICE REDUCED 515 OOL
pn cc IS cerla1nl y a bar ga n
219 ac r es- tod ay s ltsftng
lor anyone $33 200
/1 249
pn ce $110 000 Approx SO
$39 900
acres t1llable 160 pa stwe
52 acre farm 6 r oom house
1411 lbs tobacco base
3 bedroom s storm w n
larg~ barn
lots of good
dow s
rur al
wat e r
road frontag e
blacktop
Gallipoli s School 01strt ct
road rural w ater modern
31h mtles from R1o Grande
4 BR house w1th full base
Good
ne l g h borhod
ment Lets deal now spr
Shouldn t last long
11144
mg wtll soon be here
MODERN RANCH
S45 000
STYLE HOME
AT T ENTION
HOG
Tastefully decorated and
F A RMERS 25 ac res of
well taken care of
3
ht ghly pr oduc•1ve level
bedrooms
ltv.ng room
crop l and 27 acres wood
fam•IY room modern eat
land 38 71 acres 1n pas ture
1n k1fchen la rge level lot
hog barn w1th auto feeder
and
stor age bu tld1ng
Ready for bu sm ess M any
Locatd
n c tty school
more deta1 1s Ca ll for them
d1stnct
Wash ngton
loday N
248
Grade School Shown by
4- 1 ACRE LOTS
appotntment Reasonably
County water available
pr ced
11 220
seller w II turntsh a surv ey
MUST SEE THISONE 1 •
Call now
N 259
M oder n house s1x room s
and bath 3 bed room s ut I
S16 000
ty room enc losed back
40 e1cr es of vacant l and
porch and front por ch
m or e or less Per ry Twp
nntural gns c ty w ater
W Ate r 1s on proer ly
Ju st out of c ty I m I s
M ner o'! I r gh t s leased
small betrn for stabl es or
Good Buy Won t l as t tong 1
c.a}tl le .t 12 acres of ground
! l57
6Tr0 ft r oa d fr ontage St R1
EXCELLENT
1d1 Must sel l l mm ecl ate
BUILDING LOTS
po sseSSIOn
t1 239
County water ava lable
SIB
000
Road frontage 1 lot 115 ft
For t~doorsman 30
by 220 It 4 lois 100 It by 220
acres . -vacant land
ft each T hey have all been
Room to hunt farm or
surveyed Spnngf teld Twp
butld Located near No
N233
1 and 2 m mes tn Me1gs
Re treat to secl uded wooded
County
Pr ic ed for
area wt lh a b1 g p ay lake 2
$18 000 00
N247
"&gt;fory r es dence 207 acres
total
N234
CEI\:TURY 21
QUALITY BUILT RANCH
You ll1ustloveth1smodern
3 bedroo{Jl ranch w1th for
mal entry large tormall1v
mg room w1th 10 bow wtn
dow formal dtntng room
modern kitchen w1th lots of
custom bu111t oak c abinets
and bar large fam ly room
w1th wood burner bath and
half double car garage
wtth door opener concrete
driWe n ce large rot lots of
shrubbery some trees &amp;
plants garden space Ex
cellent locatton
Porter
brooke Subd C•tv School
D1st Green Elementary
Shr1o"'n by opt
N2l6
MODERN BRICK HOME
Only 2 years old • ltvmg
room form al d1n ng room
4 spac 1ous bedroom s 1112
baths modern butlt 1n ktt
chen
trash comp ac t or
large famtly r oom and rec
room w th w ood burntng
f r epl ace
al l very well
dJ:&gt;c orat e d
and
1m
m aculately kept f u ll base
ment 9Xl0 cell a r large 21 2
ca r garage hea t ed a lso
has 9 ft doors A ll th1 s si t
t llig on one acr e more or
less on ha rdtop ro ad 11261
TWO BEDROOM HOME
Priced low for lmmedtate
sale Ntee garden space
good location Ci ty water
sewer ba sem ent Owner
will help ftnance qual1f1ed
buy er
1 109
$32 500
Seen c area new double
wi de 24 x52
rooms 2
R
bath s 2 shower s L
F R
D R
3 bedrooms
d el u xe
kit c he n
y uCHt
garden area new t oo I s h ed
24 x28 Th 1s ts what you
w ant and cant usually
flnd All new"'_w th 10 acres
to u s~ l ''&lt;y;ou pl ea~e
'
11 219

a

FINANCING IS
NO PROBLEM
On thi S farm hou se and
104 51 ac r es more or less
of good cr op land loca t ed •Q.
Me1g s Count y Salem Twp
Several acres of level road.
fron tage House has I vmg
room
d n ng ro om
.t
bedroom s kitch en A lso a
double cnb And mach1ner y
shed
Owner Will help
ftnan ce a good qua l f ed
buyer L and con tract or se
cond mortage Ca ll for
more detatl s
~ 244
16 89 ACRE FARM
Modern 4 bedroom home
only .4 years old 2 baths
modern k1tchen
large
patio master bedroom IS
12 x24 with huge walk tn
closet 2 car garage stock
ed fa r m p-::; d 50 acr es of
good t ~~..\.\.:ground 10 15
acres t~be"'r~excell e nt
area to nun• '""'~r farm
Some fi" ..~~~)lfpm en t m
eluded ,-,;..'1, tractor Wi th
front er.d loader brush
hog
plows
dtsc
corn
panter 2 w heel tra ler and
var ous other 1tems Ha s
some frUit trees Th s is a
good general farm w1th lots
of posstbilltles Shown by
appointment
f/217
36 69 ACRES
MoRE OR LESS
Located tn Huntmgton
T wp
ec 18 Reasona bl Y
pr 1ced
,""26
."
NICE &amp; COMFORTABLE'
Nice an d comtoc tabl c IS
thi S 7 stor y hom e Loca ted
n the North va l It a Sc hoot
Do &lt;tr ct
T hree
la r gE!!'
"'
beet rooms k tchen di n ng
room lt v mg room batn
l u·•ot 011 for ced a1r lu r nrKe
For th ...• t ex tr a s pC~ce out of
door s !her r
s a l droe
OMden bnr n nnd ch ck&lt;'t"
hou!&gt;£" Shown by ilPPO n
m en!
d Z4~

s

ratto Manage both from the same seat Supertor
SUPERB
CONSTRUCTION
Any onewould admtre the
qu al1ty ~f th e superb con
stru ct 1on of tht S ta stefull y
des1gned brtck hom e 3 000
sq
ft
I vtng space
3
bedrooms spac tot.~ s I v.ng
r oom lar ge famtly r oom
enchant ng kttchen fo r m al
d•mng r oom pat1o full
f n shed basem en t w th 2
c ar
atta ched
gara ge
Sttu ated on a large level lot
n a qu et netghborhood If
you are l ookmg for con
s!ruct 1on qual ty don t look
any f urther Pnced tq sell
ra p1dly on toda y s marke t
Shown by appomment 11258
NG FOR

Lf~~~GAIN•

Then IDOls no further than
tht s 30 acre farm B acres
t tllabl e
some stand1ng
t mber the rest IS pasture
land Good spnng develop
ment for water supply 5
I OOITI house 2 BR house
recently remodel ed Fa1r
5 ze barn 700 lbs toba cco
Should sell yester
1ase
dav $25 000
If 198

GOOD RENTAL
PROPERTY
Or lU St a good Investment
Mode rn home 1 v ng room
w tth w oodburner
eat n
k1t chen wtfh stove and
b a th
2
r efr ger ator
bedrooms Also a K rkwood
12x 65 mobtle home
3
bedroom s
1112
bath s
mot;tern k 1tchen Tra11 er 1S
part1ally furnished Car
port w 1th storage room
r ural wa ter A ll tht s Sttf ng
on l80x 180 lol Cal l now for
an apt•
11263
40ACRES
MORE OR LESS
Loc ated
n Hunt ngton
'jfwp Sec 19 Call for ap
''potnt ment
/1 227

I NVESTI/IENT
PROPEilTY
27 acr es
ru r al water
bl ac ktop r oad close to
Ga lliPOl iS One of t s ktnd
left Pn ced r1ght II 103
LOTS FOR SALE
We have several ch01 ce lots
n Oh10 Twp Some are
water front lots camp ng
lots s om~ar e seen c lots
on h1gher ~evat1ons Road
f r ontage 100 to 265 Rural
water avatlable Also n1ce
level tot on Rt 1:1:1 Eas ly
landscaped and planned
W1nter weather now but
spr ng w tll soon be here
Make your sel ect1ons ear
IY 1
N261

FARMS
EARLY SPRING
SPECIAL
W•lnut Twp
174 acres
+lor - 6 room house W1t h
basement and bath Rural
water tap pa1d for large
barn well butlt- 1952 Over
SO acres ttl Iable approx
1500 lbs tobacco base
FarM can be dtVtded up In
to smaller farms tf so
des1red Lots of pasture
land wooded area ade
quate water supply for cat
tie
Spring development
and concrete watering
trough 1nstalled under soli
and water conseratlon
supervision If thts meets
your needs we recommend
qurck act1on 1
f12SD
BEEF FARM
118 acr es over 4(J acres
level t l i able l and t he resr
s pas ture and woodland
6 room
Tob acc o ba se
hOuse good barn other
ou tbutld ngs Sel l ng be.Low
l oda'f s market
II )06.
95

ACRE

FARM

AND
f arm
loca t ed tn Morgan Twp
wtfh 4 yr old m i lk ng
parlo r
18 )( 42 barn
138 x 6o corn cnb Chi Cken
house c ellar house &amp; loft
plus other bldg s 3 ponds
A ll m meral r 1ghts go
M odern 8 room farm hou se
Home h as new siding Mor
t :tge ca n be assumed for
"'g M parl v
#20l

Just~H~h~sEnt ce

5&lt;2.000
Three bedr oom s bath IIV
1ng room buil t tn kttchen
stokermaf c heater n1ce
SIZe garage Pretty countr'yl
t
f
setting 2 acre 10 a 11 enc i
d
Altract 1ve whttel
eboar:dtn fence along road
Ou w ell pl enty water All
thli and a stocked n ce s ze
pond for $22 000
N141

1/236
NEW LISTING
If you r e looktng for a
far mwe have lust lst ed91
acres 1n Spr ngf eld Twp
Road f r ontage pl enty of
w ater pl enty of pasture 2
l ar ge barn s plus oth er
sm al er bu ldmgs
Th s
l and could also be used for
development pu r poses So
stop took 1ng today and g ve
u s a ca ll
/1270

THINK SPRING
See tht s delightful new
r anch styl e home 3 B~
bath ea t tn k1tchen all
bu 11t m full basement
deck tn g butlt on west stcte
of house over look ng 2112
acr es of wooded area Th1 s
s prtced 10 our r ange to
da y If th s meet s your
needs
w e r ecommend
q ulck act 1on 1
/f26S
REDUCED
Start the yea r nght Own
your
own home
and
bustness Home has been
totally decorated custom
d rap es
c rystal
chand eliers new pamt fur
nace sh1ng les hot water
tank K 1t chen has new for
m1 ca t op new f xtures
bu It n stove r efngerator
d ishwashe r
Washer &amp;
dryer al so 1ncluded L1v1ng
r oom
famil y room
3
bedrom s 1'12 baths fu ll
ba semen t
Th is proprt y
also has a beauty shop
wh1 c h
ha s
b e en
re decorated Owner w II
help fmance th1s home to
qu a l f1 ed
b u ye r
No
r eason abl e offer r ef usPI1
H166
S- 5 ACRE TRACTS
Vac a n t
wo od
l a nd
overiook.ng the Oh1o R1ver
Love l y
v ew
V er y
If 222
r eason ab l y prt ce d
IMMEDIATE POSSES
StON
2 acre lot +lor - Wtde lot
w r e f enced for sa fet v and
pn v ac y Dnll ed well rur al
wa ter and r uns th rough lot
E lec tn c hookup A lmost
Frutt
new septt c tank
trees All types of bern es
Ve r y prod uc tt ve leve l land
Hurry out now - don t be
d1sappo nted by a sol d
Stgn 1 $1 2 Oj)O
fl 251
MAJESTIC MANSION
Th s st atel y 2 story Col
on1al home w1th 1ts ptllary
post s and formal entry has
charac ter Gra c ous tam1ly
room w1 t h plank f loonng
ha s a w arm co zy fireplace
La rg e
k1t c h en
wtth
sp ac 1ou s
knott y
p1n e
ca btnets
Formal ltvmg
r oom Powder room off the
mam entry Beautiful w1n
d ng open sta r case lead1ng
to 3 bedroom s and bath
Cl oset spa ce abounds
ba sement for stor age Two
enc losed porches Art1 st1 c
p 1a n t 1ngs
o1 sel e ct ed
shrubs and huge trees
fram e th ts hom e s1tt ng on
one acre of gro und Addt
tl onalland can be pur chas
ed Suburban 1 v 1ng c tty
schools yet only
mtles
f r om c 1ty
If you r e a
serous mtnded buyer get
here fast
_!~3
LOVELY TWO STORY
Home that has been totally
remodeled Be the first to
see th s very well kept
home New modern butlt tn
k 1tchen all appliances most have marntenance
warranty
L 1vtng room
d1nmg room 3 bedrooms
bath, ut1hty and play room
comb1ned wood burner low
heat btlls 2 car garage 2
storage bu 1ld1ngs garden
space All th1s and much
more
surrounded
by
sever al large shade tre es
Lots of pnvac y but yet
c lose to store s Reasonably
prt ced Shown by appt on
____,...
ly 1
1126~
SECLUDED BEAUTY
Everyth ing s spectal about
th is truly d1stmct ve bn c k
home sitting on 22 acres
over1ook1ng the Stiver
B rt d ge Oh l o R 1ver and t he
Ctty of Gallrpolts
ThiS
home contam s the many
ex 1ra s you can th tn k a bout
ever ow n ng Look M om 1
Two and a half balhs ' Two
showers Three bedrooms *
A
kl
I I
spar mg IV ng room
With large ston e fireplace
c athedral ce tltng really an
t h 1A
eye ca c er
we 1I P1ann
ed Chandler kttchen din1ng
room two car garage This
home s for the very spec i al
h
pea 1e w o en 1oy pnvac'f'
athnds a vetry rhela xed ldlfe If
mee sdy ourknee s w e
r ecommen qut c act1 on
253
H

EaCh OffiCe JS Independently OWned and operated.

CENT URY 21• Homebuyer sKit • a1 part1Cipa11ng Offices
© 1978 CEN- URY 2 1 REAL ESTATE CORPORATION ' PRINTED IN USA EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

@

l_____:_:_:_~--=-----------------~~~~~~~~~,~~
!!'~s~· c~c~OOOAA~~,~~=-----------------~--~--------..J
'

�D.a- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Feb. 25, 1979
· -···
- ----.----·-- .

SUNDAY PUZZLER

TELEVISION
VIEWiNG

ACROSS

71 Fly larva

72 Spread lor

SUNDAY, FEBRUARYl5, 1979
5:30- AG -USA 17; 6: QO-Amerlcan Probl ems &amp;
Challenges 10; Up Close Wl!h 17,
6:30-Chrlstopher Cl....,up3; For You .. .Biack Woman
· 8; Treehouse Club 10; Th is Is The Life 13;
Dlsco• ery 17 .
7: 01)-This Is The Life 3; Eddie Saunders6; Thinking In
Black 8; Urban League 10; Newsmaker '79 13;
Jimmy Swaggart 17.
7: »--TV ChaP,el 3; Show My People 6; Jerry· Falwell·
88, 10; Amazing Grace Bible Clas~ 131 J immy
Swaggart 15; Christ for the World 17.
·
8:oc&gt;-Mormon Choir 3; Grace Cathedral 6; Chrlsi for
the Wprld 13; Little While Church on the ~Ill 15;
Three Stooges 17; Sesame St. 20,33.
8::10--{)ral Roberts 3; Celebration of Praise 6; Day of
Dlsco•ery 8; James Robison Presents 10; Willard
Wilcox 13; Open Bible 15.
9:oc&gt;-Goscel Slnalna Jubilee 3; Rex Humberd 6; R• .
Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts 10; Re•. Jim'
Franklin 13; ·e rnest Angley 15; Lost In Space 17;
Mister Rogers 20,33.
.
9:30--What Does the Bible Plainly Say.8; Elec. Co.33;
Ills Wrllten .IO; Blue RJdge Quartet 13: Sesame St.
20.
IO : ~Chrlst Is the Answer 3; Kids are People Too 6;
Christian Center 8; Mo•le " Castle Keep" 10;
Jimmy Swaggart 13; Gospel Singing Jubilee 15;
Hazel 17 ; Studio See 33.
10 :30--Rex Humbard 3; Robert Schulh!r 8; This Is The
Life 13; Mo•le "The Adventures of Robin Hood" 17;
Zoom 20; Music 33.
11 :oc&gt;-Ernest Angley B; .Rebop 20,33: Rex Humbard 15;
Re• .Henry Mahan 13.
11 :_:10--{)utdoors With J ulius Boros 3; Animals,
An imals, Animals 6; Rev. R. A. West 13; Elec. Co.
20; Turnabout 33.
12 :oc&gt;-At Issue 3; Face The Nat ion 8; The Issue '10;
This Is The Life 15; Academy Laaders 20; No•a 33.
12 :31&gt;--Directlons 6; Meet The Press 3, 15; VIewpoint 8;
Face The Nation 10; Evangelistic Outreach 13;
Movie " The Flight of the Phoenix" 17.
1:()C)-Basketball 3,15; Communlaue 6; Bill Dance
Outdoors 8; Washln~ton Week In Review 33;
Challenge of the Sexes 10; Wild Kingdom 13; No•a
20.
.
1:30--America's Bla c ~ Forum 6; Gale Catlett 8; Oufdoorsman 13; Black Perspective on the News 33.
1:45-NBA Basketball 8; 2:00-Women Superstars 13;
In Search Of 6.
2:31&gt;--FBI 6; 3:00-College Bas~elball 3,15; '3:JoBoxlng 13; My Partner The Ghost 6; Monet 33; Rat
Patrol 17;
4:oc&gt;-Golf 8, 10; Beethoven Festival 33; Movie "The
Appaloosa" ' '' 4:3D-Wide World of Sports 6,13;
FYI 20.
5:01&gt;--Voyage to ' 1e Bottom of the Sea 3; Sportsworld
15; Footsteps 33.
5 : 30-- ~st of_GrE_ucho 20; Once Upon AClassic 33.
6:00-News 3,10; Pulse 6;; Championship 'F-'Jsn·lna 8i
Advocates 20,j3; ABC News 13; Better Way 15;
Wrestling 17.
6:3!&gt;-NBC News 3,15; News 6; CBS 'News 8,10; Battle
of the Planets 13.
7:01&gt;--Movle "The Sound of Music" 3; Battlestar
Galacllca 6,13; 60-Minutes ·a,10; Star Trek 17;
Beethoven Festival 2o; Chmielewski Family 33.
7: 3Q-Life Around Us 33; 8:00-All In The Family
8, 10;; Paul Jacobs &amp; the Nuclear Gang 20,33; Movie
" The Incredible Mr. Lim pet" 17.
8:30- AII ce 8, 10; 9:0o- Root s: 6.13 ; Celebr ity
Challenge of the Sexes 8,10; Country Matters 20,33.
l O:oc&gt;-Dragnet ·17; Always tor Pleasure 20: - Firing
Line 33.
10 :30--Weekend · 3,15; Rulf House 17; i1:CO-News
3,6,8,10,13,15; Open Up 17; Wall Street Week 33.
11 : 1,S..,... ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; PMA Pulse 15.
11 :3D-Movie "The Great Lie" 3; Movie "Top Secret"
15 ; Eldon Miller : Bas ketball 6; 700 Club 8; Movie
" Dauo~ter of ,he Mind" 10; PTL Club 13; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
1:01&gt;--Movle :'The Tall T" 17; 1:3D-Next Sep Beyond
4; ABC News 13; 2:00-Marcus WEl by MD ·4.
2:4o-Movie "Zarak" 17; 4:4G--12 O'Clock High 17.

1 Whisk-

drying

6 Make

mo t~ e r

daughter

139 Dowel s

29 Po rtuguese

cur"rency ; Pl.

140 Armed
confliol
141 Falsehood
142 Slale: Abbr.

31 Also
36 Baby's word
37 Zoo sight .

82 Terrified

molding
24 Pope's veil
25 Fru it drin k
26 Viscous mud

1.43 ~\bov e.

84 liqu id measure •

40 Rockfis h

144 Prince P-hil-

28 Tra ns-

68 Direc ti on
89 T ri Q o no m~

22 Lowes! poi nt
23 Convex

85 Sagacious
86 Slare ·

gresst;!d

30 Si lly .
32

E~eists

33 Yes: Sp.
34 Wine cup

94 Eye glasses

36 La irs

98 Wolfhou nd

37 Househol d

99 Coin
100 Riv er island

pet
38 Pedal digit
40 Iranian. currency units

42 PacifiC trees
43 Workman
44 Free ticket
45. M an 's nic k-

102 Sca li
103 Pigpen
104 Face part

47 Pariah s

49 Helps
50 Sth k
51 Calm
54 Father

114 Man's name

56 Brook
59 Hindu cym-

116 Fuss

t17 Rue
1l9 Beaks '
120 Peruse

bals

60 Limb

122 Trapped
124 United
125 Maroons

62 Drinks

64 Tome

65 Pertorm

126 Pursue
128 Hen fruit

66 Conjuncti o n
67 Extinct
bi rd

131 Stitches

69 Hails
70 Succor ,

132 Pub
133 Puff up

129 Stop

dishes
8 Poem
9 Nickel
symbol
10 Belore
11 College
bldga.

12 Salutations

13 S!aft
14 Spanish
number

daughters

17 Attempt
18 Sun god
19' Pseudonym

7:15--Weather 33.
7;3()-.,Famlly Affair 10; Sesame St. ·33.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Leave II To Beaver 17• •
8:3Q-Hazel 17; 9:00-Merv Grlflln 3;Phll Donahue 13;
Emergency One6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game
10; Phil Donahue 15; Lucy Show 17.
9:3D-Brady Bunoh 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
10:01&gt;--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 6 ; All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13; Movie "The Roman
Spring of Mrs. Stone" 17.
.
10:30--AII Star Secrets 3, IS; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; ABC News Speclal6, 13; Eiec.
Co. 20.
·
11 :3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;

•

51 iowa, e.g.
52 Arti st's stand

53 Weasel

55 Maintain
~ S ingl e

57 Worsh ip
58 Engine
61 Debatable

nuts

16- and

vestments

113 Smail valley

73 Wattle
· '\, 74 Den
,75 Build
n Pants
78 Spelter
80 Attitude
81 Stili

article

106 Priest' s

115 Arrow polsPn
116 Jason's ship

71 Chewable

15 indeflnile

99 Jargon
·101 Frig ht
105 Ea t

48 Man's nam e
49 Pros

64 Sash

7 Mexican

97 ChurCh
council

4.6 Exist

68 Gastropod
mollu sk
70 Hurries

(abbr.)
· 6 Beast

'

'

study

107 Spool

· 63 Entreaty

4 Bible pt.

95 Whale
96 Musical

Recreati on ·"'"' 11 1 lmprest
area
11 2 Helps

50 Halt

158 Handle
159 Wanls
160 Clayey earth
161'Fourth es tate
DOWN
1 Brag

5 Manuscript s

112 Changed

-~ ·4~

154 Wideawake
156 Get up

fl ower
108 As wrinen :

111 Raveling s

55 Things done

Fundamental

106 Showy
Mus. ·
109 World erg.
110 Ali right

name

1~ 7

2 Wireles s
3 Chemical
suffi x

105 Euro pean

43 Stri ke.s

.

152 Uhive rse

35 lette rs

42 Su rgic;;al saw

~u blicized

function

92 Pr'lysician

41 Skewer

145

trlcai
90 Manse rvant

39 Nobleman

ip ' s ga me

149 Male turkey
150 Later· ·

118 Europea n
119 Tidings

121 Paper money

123 Silver

symbol
125 Fam e

128 Passenger
127 Blouses
129 Hang-out ·
130 Turkish mon~ y unit
131 Yellow oc her

132 Poets
134.Cha, e.g.
138 Wasle silk
llbers
137 Domesticates .

83 Possesses

84 Falsifier
87 Bakes
89 Takes unlawfully
90 Bra'f'ery

91 Similar
92 Depression
93 Ceremony

Remembers JJ.
3:»-Mash 8;" ,rok..-'s -wlld 1ill F.llnlstones 17; Over ·
Usy 20; Footst.ps 33,
·
4:00-Mister Cartoon- 3): Mev Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp;
· Friends 8; SeHm'e St. 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13;
· -sPace :Glen'- 17. . , ·
.
.
· 4:30-Bewllched 3; Gllllgan'r Is. 8; Brady Buncl:! 10, ·
· Petticoat Junction 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
5:~1 Drelim of ,J..,nle 3;
Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers !lftlghborhood 20,33i'Gomer Pyle 10;
, Six Million .Dollar .. Man 13&gt; Brody BUhch 15: I
Dream of Jeannie 17.
.
5:.30-'Carot Burnett &amp; Frtenila ·3; News. •• San.lord &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 2!J; Mey Tyler M9ore 10; Odd
· C_ouple 15; Beverly fltllbltltei 17; OOcfot:·Who ·33.
6:0!&gt;-News3.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News6; Andy Griffith 17;
HodgePodGe Lodge 20. ·
'
·
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC·Newa.13; Carol Burnelt6;
. CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20. ·
·.
,
7:011-CI'OII-WIIs 3; l\lewlywed (;_ame 6,13; l\lewl10;
Love, AliWrlcan · Style , ·15; · Carol ·Burnett 17;
. . Alm•na~ 20; K110w. Your Scllooll 33.
.. 7:30-Tllat ~Mhv!lle Mual~3i Muppet Show 6; f'rtce Is
. . Right 1: Wild Kingdom 10; S1.98 Beauty ShoW 13'1
Nashville On. Tlle-.Roed 15; · Sallfctrd. e. Sof1 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer. R.P..ri 20,33. · •
· ·
8 ~0!&gt;-Little·H01114!0n 'The Pralrle~,15; Salv-16,13; Billy 8,10; "Bill Miltfei'J' Journal. 20,331 Let's Go To
' The R - 17. '
.· .
.
~:=!Q-'Fiatbtlllh 8, 10i. Mark·Russetl33; Last of.thewtid · ·
i
•
'
.

151 Pronoun

153 Digraph
155 Behold!
157 Railroad
(abbr.)

CONFUSING
TUlSA, Okla . (AP ) - At
the nursery at St. John
Medical Center , they 're
trying hard to keep up with
the Jonses.
Jim Jones' wife, Pam, gave
birth to a baby boy at 4:26
p. m. They named him
Jeremy Lynn.
The following day at -4:25

p.m., Tim Jones' wife, Jan,
gave birth to a baby , boy.
They named him Jeremy
Tim.
.
The Joneses hadn't known
each oth er until they met at
the hospital.
And when they did , the
discovered that Pam and Jim
had just moved into. a rental
home vacated by Jan and
Tim.
" Almost im possible to ·
beHeve , 11 said Pam ~

-NOI.L010S

of Life 8,10; Sesame Si. 2U,33; 11 :55-CBS News 8; .
House Call 10; News 17.
12 :00-Newscenler 3; News 6,10; Jeopardy 15; Young
&amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love
American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryari's Hope 6, 13; Password 15; Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co. 33; Movie
"Skullduggery" 17.
1:CO-Hollywood Squares 3 3; All Mv Children 6. ll'
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
·
•
1:30--0ays of Our Lives 3,15; As The World Turns 8, 10;
2:0!&gt;-Dne Life to ~lve 6,13; 2:2.5-News 17.
2:3Q-Ooclors3,15; Guiding' Light 10; I Love Lucy 17.
J:()()..-"Another World 3,15: General
Lilias .
Racer .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

100%

.

POiyt118tlloM
I~ FHI

..
·'
·,

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... .l,.,;.,/ ,i ••

··. ·
•'

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!

Car~':bers

nters

P.M.

'I

Not res ponsible for ac cidents
or propert y after sold .
N ot rc spo nc; ih l' for c h antH' {II If' fo
strik('SCHid &lt;,llip Pin&lt;J ~ Ch CCiUIC'i .

If tax ecemr&gt;t -m!J st show number ,

\

· 1111. It recll"-'·• " when It le ... ciO.
11,11" to a wall. So' you ·

u

can .·enj~y ·. reqllnlng .· comfOrt'·

FLOOR JACKS.·AIR COMPR ESSORS-TABLE SAWS-ROLL AROUNOTOOL BOXES

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

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) ...:. Voters will have to ·
wait until at least November for a chance to react wa
new state school finance formula ·proposed by Ohio's
largest teacher organization . Following a special
meeting Sunday, tile Ohio Education Association
decided against placing the proposal on the June 5
primary ballot.
.
About 70 percent of 700 OEA leaders attending the
meeting voted to go fll"ward with an attempt to have
voters decide the fate of the proposed state
constitutional amendment in June. However, the vote
fell short of an 80 percent target figure set by the
association.

. .. .
' '. . .,.' .'
•• the lnt!Cte ltory:thet.
the Wal~y® _wondlr~ .
'

A ir i mpac t wrenc hes 3/ 8-112-l"-· 1"
Circ le Hand power saws
Tor q ue wr encnes
Drop cords
Saber Saws
Pipe w rec hes '
Ca bl e pow er pulls
Orbita l sander s
F ire Ex ti ngu isher s
Pai nt Bru shes
Be lt t ype sanders
Alle n wr enc hes
1mpact socke ts, 3/ 8- ,,, . J/4
Disk G r inde r s and Bu tt er s
Cam ping Items
Electri c dr ills (a ll sizes)
Ai r po wer chisel. dr ill s &amp; sander s
Benc h vises (la r ge and sm al l)
E\edrical tape
Hyd r aul i c jack s
Tr ucK t arps
Bench gri nders
wor~ G l oves
Large assor t ment Of socket se ts
S izes v.. , 3/ 8, 1h, l.f..
. Hacksaws
Extens ion Cords
Routers
Hacksaw bl ades
Hedge trimmi ng tools
Reciprocal saws
Creepers
Plumbing tools
Adjustabl e wrench
Trouble lights
Tap &amp; Die sets
Un iversa l soc ket se ts
Yar
d ligh-ts
Dri ll b it sets
Battery chargers
Jumper cab les
Tool boxes (a ll SIZE'S)
Channe!ock tool s
Wal l cl ocks
Air hoses
Hand tools (hammer , plier s
Ca
r Cleaning Kits
'
Torch hoses
Sandpaper
Screwdriver se t s
Open and boxed end wrenches
Transistor radios
Glassware
Electric impact wr enches
CarPenter tools
Metr ic socket set s
Licensed &amp; Bonded
CASH : or Approved Check ·
M etr ic wr enches
Organizati~n
'With Proper I. D.
Fra ming Squar es

OEA proposal set this fall

-·

AUCTIONEER: KEN SWAIN PHONE: 256-1967

- M erchandi se GuaranteedBy Factory Warranty

'.

,!nv;flng
rarm
Pt
ers

Sale Item s Can Be Inspected One Hour Before Sal e Time !

We Are The 'La rges t

ADEN, South Yemen (AP ) - Marxist South
Yemen claimed Sunday its focces had captured three
· North Yemen towns in the third day of border fighting
between the rival states. It was reported the Arab
League had agreed to send a fact-finding mission to the
battle zone as a possible prelude to mediation of the
conflict.
-Pro-Western North Yemen and pro-Soviet South
Yemen have accused each other of starting the border
war ,'the latest In a series of clashes over the past 10
years along the rugged mountain frontier .
·

..

.,.
~r

LOCATION: POINT PLEASANT NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY

Aucti on Supply On Wh eel s

Three border towns .taken

.•

Foom SMt Fll .

NAME BRANDS INCLUDE
ROCK WEL L · SKIL L· CHICAGO PNEUMAT IC - RODA C FULL ER · CUMMINGS ·
MILLE R · HER BRA NO · BROW N · MAR FLOW · SHOPMATE · WR IG HT · WEN ·
McG RAW EDISON · DIAMOND LOY · LUF KIN · IN GE RSO LL RANO · WATERLOO
CHANN EL LOC K· RE MINGJO N · FALLS.

.,

OOS'l'ON ( AP) - The shortage of Iranian oil has
forced Massachusetts Gov. Edward J . King to ask
President Jimmy Carter to declare an energy
emergency in the state wallow the burning of co.al and
other high sulfur fuels without violating federal
pollution restrictions.
In a letter w tbe president Saturday, King said the
state Office of Energy Resources has found that
shortages of low sulfur fuel oils are developing rapidly
because of the cutback in Iranian oil production.

C!M!fed8tool ...

Poi,Uroi-

· S!cle pj)cket· f~r ma;azlne etor-·

,' ~e;

~h.-nl,m j: g~.-.fMd.;
aa.ilna~. bni!l~ue or ~-~~ 19"

,.'

'

;

sale·
SAVE 20% NOW ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF .KROEHLER AND BERKLINE
CHAIRS-MANY NEW STYLES, 'FABRICS AND COVERS JUST RECEIVED.
..

RFELDS IN POMEROY

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1979

central areas of the state
resulted in school closings
and icy roads, while rain
further south increased the
threat of flooding along many
rivers and streams.
In northeast Ohio, scores of
school systems, including
Cleveland
public
and
parochial schools, announced
they would be closed today
because of the treacherous
roads.
Roads in the area became

slick as an icy rain fell for
several hours Sunday
afternoon and evening, then
turned to snow. Cleveland's
Memorial Shoreway was
closed for more than an hour
because of a nwnber of
accidents, with cars skidding
out of control and blocking
traffic.
Freeways in the Akron
area also ·-were reported
glazed with ice.
Greyhound Bus Lines

officials said service was
disrupted out of Cleveland
during the evening hours.
The Cleveland Electric Iiluminating Co. and Ohio
Edison reported a number of
power lines brought down by
ice and winds in northeast
Ohio.
A series of accidents involving 10 vehicles on Interstate 75 near Toledo, just
south of the Michigan state
line, tied up traffic in the

15 CENTS

highway's southbound lanes
for about 2'h hours. One
injury was reported in ihe
crashes, which involved eight
cars and two trucks which
overturned.
As much as eight inches of
snow was reported in west
central Ohio, with Shelby and
Miami counties apparently
the hardest hit.
Power 'outages caused by
ice on transmission lines
were reported in several

••

I

.

' ..

·

.

·

The Scioto River at Circleville was at 16.5 feet Sunday
and was expected to reach an
16.2--foot crest early Tuesday.
Flood stage there is 14 feet.
Crests above flood stage
also were forecast on the
SCioto River in Piketon and
the Hocking River in Athens,
and the Ohio River in
Pomeroy .

Sea tiered road closings
were reported in sOutheast
Ohio because of the flooding
and resultjng rock and mud
slides. Portions of Ohio 7 and
Ohio 148 in Beimont CoWJty
~!~~~ :::h!r:/nn~~~ were closed, as wa s a section
stages Sunday and som e of of U.S. 33 in Meigs. County
the rivers were at or near and some state roads in
Scioto County.
flood stage.

'

named banquet speaker
Wayne Woodrow ~~ woody '' college coaches for most
Hayes, who·led the Ohio State victories. Only Paul " Bear"
Buckeyes to 2()5 victories Bryant had won more college
over a 28-year coaching span , games. There are. only three
will be the principal speaker coaches with more victories
at th e annual M-G-M than Hayes in the entire
Leadership Dinner for the history of college football.
Hayes' record at Ohio State
Tri-State Area Council of the
Boy Scouts in Gallipolis, Ohio was a remarkable 205 wins
on Thursday evening, Marc!) and only 60 losses. Since he
coached at Ohio State, the
8.
Hayes will address the Buckeyes led the nation in
dinner that evening at 7 p.m. attentlance per home game
at Oscar's in Gallipoli s, for 22 of the last 28 years, and
according to an an- finished a close second the
nouncement made today by other six seasons.
He was named " College
Richard C. Reab, Council
Coach
of the Year" in 1957
Sustaining Membership
and
1975,
and was .runnerup
Chairman.
for
that
honor
on two other
The dinner is to recognize
outst anding financial" sup· occasions. He has coached
porters in the Meigs, Gallia , three Heisman Award winners and ii5 first team Ali·
and Mason county areas.
The former Buckeye coach, Americans. He is a past
.with 238 wins; ranked second president of the National
Coa c h es '
among all active major Football

was an outfielder in baseball.
Association .
He
has an M.A. degree from
His Ohio State team won
three national championships Ohio State in education and
and 13 Big Ten titles. OSU is administration.
His first coaching job was
the only eastern team in the
history of the Rose Bowl to in 1935 as an assistant at
make four consecutive ap- Mingo Junction, Ohio. His
first head coaching job came
pearances.
Hayes was born February · in 1938 at New Philadelph.ia
14, '1913, in Clifton, Ohio, High , wh ere, in thr ee
alt hough
he
calls seasons, his teams won 19,
Newcomerstown his home. 10$1 10 and tied one.
He is a 1935 graduate of
After a five-year stint in the
Denison University, where he · Navy, Hayes became head
played tackle ory the footbaU footb all coach at Denison in
squad for three years and 1946. Three years at Denison
and two at Miami of Ohio set
the stage for his 1951 debut at
Ohio State.
Woody and his wife , Anne,
Snow fl urries t oni ght,
ending Tuesday . Low 20 to 25. have a married son, Steve,
High Tuesday in th e upper JOs who is an attorney.
to low 40s. The chance of
precipitation is 70 percent
tonight and 30 percent
tomorrow.
GAME NOW THURSDAY
The District Tournament
game between Southern
and Portsmouth Clay has
heeo postponed until 7 p.m.
Thursday at Chillicoth e
High School.
Tickets will be on sale at
Southern High School from
I to 3 p.m. Tuesday.

Weather

Pomeroy man .cited for DWI
The Galli a-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
seven weekend accidents.
Douglas
Burns ,
26 ,
Pomeroy, was cited on
charges of OWl , and
operating a motor vehicle
without a license following a
one-vehicle accident in Meigs
County on SR 7, two-tenths of
mile north o! milepost 2,
Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
. Officers report Burns '
north bound auto went off the
left side of the roadway and
struck an embankme nt.
There was slight damage to
the vehicle.
Frank Shriver, 18, Patriot,

a

was cited on a charge of
failure to yield following a
two-veh icle accident on
Patriot-Gage Rd., five-tenths
of a mile south of SR 141,
Sunday at 6:45 p.m.
The pa trol reports a vehicle
operated by Shriver pulled
from a private drive and was
struck by an east bound aulD
driven by Billy Forshey, 50,
Jackson·. iloth vehicles
incurred moderate damage.
The Galli a-Meigs Post
investigated five other
weekend accide nts during
which the vehicles involved
incurred minor damage ..

Equipment fails

NEW ORLEANS (API - Striking police agreed
Sunday to obey a court order and pull pickets away
from garbage dwnps and Sanitation Department
garages. City officials said they hope to have N~w
Orleans cleaned up by the lime Mardi Gras arrives
Tuesday.
"We just compiled with the court order that the.
Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal gave us - a restraining
' order from' picketing the Sanitation Department," said
Mltdlell Ledet, a representative of the Teamsters
union, bargaining agent for the striking Police
Association of Loulalana.

As a result of equipment
f a ilur e, P o intV ie w
Ca ble television is tern:
porarlly unable to air the
Christi a n Br oa dca sting
Station, which is seen on
Cha!Uiel 3.
According to a company
spokesman , PointView is
working hard to restore the
service but in the meantime ,
Cha!Uiel 17 of Atlanta, Ga.,
which is seen on Channel 5,
will also be seen on Channel 3.

Heating oil may increase
NEW YORK (AP) - The price of oil Used to heat
homes and power factocles may .rise still further
becaUBe of an apparent increase in the price of the fuel
by a key exporter, Venezeula.
.
The w&lt;rld's fourth-largest oil producer decided
over the weekend to raise the price of some of Its oil by
15 per!-'llnl, according w industry sources. There was
no olficlal confirmation of a price Increase.
The oil.affected reportedly 'would be mostly heavy
refined oil used for heating homes and firing factory
boUers. Ga110llne prices probably woold not be affected
by the move, because that fuel is made with ~ lighter
grade of oil. .
_

western counties. Most of the
southern half of Dar ke
County was without power
Sunday.night, while at least a
third of the homes in
Champaign County also had
no electricity.
Power comp~ny officials
said the widespread nature of
those outages meant some
homes would still be without
electricity today.
Meanwhile, minor flooding
wa• ·reported in southern
Ohio as rain continued to

.
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.
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Or

Police will pull pickets

without re-arranging your room.

the 'chlllr •.

clearing elsewhere in the
state.
The low temperatutes will
be In the upper teens 10 low
20s ronight. Highs TueSday ·
will range from the 30s 10 low
40s.
Most . Ohioans
were
inconvenienced by the
precipitation that began over
the weekend and continued
today, but the kinds of
problems they had depended
on where \bey lived.
Snow in the nocthern and

Emergency situation exists

. , . fOIM

_tOO%

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

·

on a famous-for-quality Berkline wauaway· R~cllner ··
•, I

· NO. 220

•.

'.

f ~

VOL NO. XXIX

enttne

4

,· .

AUCTION

DATE: FRIDAY,

Iiy The Associated Press
The storm responsible for
today's precipitation In Ohio
is moving northeast of the
state, with rain changing to
snow In southeastern Ohio
and snow flurries diminishing
In western · sections of the
state.
The National Weather
Service predicts that snow
flurries will persist in central
and eastern Ohio tonigljt and
in the northeast weD· into
Tuesday, but skies will be

A Rare OpportUrlity
To Save $45 · ·. .··
..

at y

For the second time in less than three months, Meigs
County today was coping_ with a flood problem.
Pomeroy businessmen were ,keeping an eye on the rising
Ohio which stood at 47.9 feet at 9:2() a.m. Monday and was
rising aL2 of a foot an hour .
Flood stage in Pomeroy is 46.5.
Some businesses started moving to higher ground Monday
morning and others - which sit a little higher - were waiting
to see what the river will do.
The prediction this morning was a crest of 49 1eet in
Pomeroy by Wednesday evening. However, that prediction
was subject to revision. Some sources feel the river will go
·above the predicted 49 feet.
·
Mea ntime , with the parking lots along the Ohio River and
off Mechanic St. flooded, as well as a part of East Main Sl.,
parking was at a premium for those who had business in
Pomeroy.
Mayor Clarence Andrews declared a state of emergency
with village pali\!e turning away sightseers and motorists who
could not specify any particular business which they had to
conduct.
Some of the courthouse offices in Pomeroy began closing .
at about 10:30 this morning so that employes could return to
their homes.
·
Meantime, Meigs Loca l and Southern Local Schools were
closed due to the flood.
Charles Dowler, superintendent of the Meigs Local
District, said at 4:30 a.m. Monday, it wa s determined that
some 10 buses could not make their runs especially due to
backwa(l::rs and so school was cance lled.
St udenls were dismissed early Fr iday when streams
started rising.
Eastern Local Schools were in classes this morning, but it
was indicated that an early dismissal probably will take place
roday.
Pomeroy merchants on Main St. bore much of the brunt of
(Continued un page 10)

Winter storm begins northeast journey today

,•.

Deaters
Truckers
Contractors
Painters

-

3 Ml· NORTH ON 62
MARDi 2 TI~E: 6:30

(USPS 145-960)

•

•

e

'

'

PUBLIC
TOOL

DOWNTOWN POMEROY morning as the Ohio River continued its rise and threatened to enter Main St. business
houses for the s~ond time in less than three months. In the picture is Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews wbo was overseeing activities in the town and had declared an
emergency situation with police turning back sightseers at entrances into the town.

'·

t39 Harbor
140 Untamed
144 - soup
145 Exist
146 Pigeon pea
147 Insect
146 lick
149 Cravat

.

.

r

138 Peer Gynl's

27 Bu rmese
native

76 Born
77 S!ron g wind
78 Cipher
79 Fundamenlal

21 Kilns

MONDAY , FEBRUARY26, 1979
5:40-World at Large 17; 5:4.5-Farm Report 13; s:SQPTL Club 13; 5:5.5-Sun rise Semester 10.
6:01&gt;--700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15; 6:2.5-Publlc l,lffa irs
10.
6:3D-Romper Room 17 ; 6:4.5-Mornlng Report 3;
6:50--Good Morning , West VIrginia 13; 6:5.5Chuck While Rep&lt;irts 10; News 13.
7:01&gt;--Today 3,15; Good Morn ing America 6,13;
Monday Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three Stooges 17;
~- ·

. 20 Nuisan ces

Poe I.

1• Tantal us'

amends

11 Delied
16 Wh ip

~35 Frequent:

Pomeroy
flooded

UNDER WATER - The upper parking lot in Pomeroy was already taking flood water
Sunday at mid-afternoon. Police department workers had removed parking meter heads
from posts earlier when flood warnings ~ere posted.

. SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was caUed to 121
Locust St. at 5:22 p.m.
Sunday for Art Price who had
fallen . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The unit vias called to East
Main St. at 9:08 a.m. Monday
for Walter Leifheit who had
fallen . He· was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

BUSY Pharmacist, busied .himself Monday morning with
moving processes at the Swisher-Lohse Drug Store .where
he. is employed. The drug store was one of several
businesses moving w "higher grounds" as the flooding
Ohio River continued to rise.

·»

~

\lj

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