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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Fridav. Sent. 14 1!1'1!1

Gasoline tax talks continue
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Talk
matching funds .
Deering's bill appropriate• $1.18
continues in Ohio ' s Legislatur e
Heportedly, only about a dozen of bill ion for the transportation
about 'a proposed gasoline tax boost
the 33 state senators are willing to department , with most of the money
to finance road and bridg e projects.
support the tax, while the holdouts going for res_urfacing , patch work,
The House approved by an 86-9
are conce rned about political bridge
repair
and
other
vote on Thursday and sent to the
reprisals in 1980, an election year. maintenance.
Senate a bill appropriating $1.37
It provides for only one new
billion for the st;lte transportation
construction
project - part of an
and highway safety departments
interstate
highway
in the Mount
over the next two years . The bill did
Adamssectlon
of
Cincinnati
- in the
not mdude the tax boost.
1979-1981
period.
After they approved the measure,
The blll extends until Jan. I, 1981, .
some House members claimed that
the
deadline for local governments
Middleport
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
!he public is ''losing patience"
to
claim
about $28 !Jlillion held in
Grate
reports
balance
In
the
various
because of deteriorating roads and
escrow
for
them as residue from a
village
council
expendable
funds
as
called on the Senate to insert the tax
1968 bond issue.
of
Aug.
31.
increase in !he bill .
Deering said the money has gone
Receipts and expenditures during
Across the Statehouse. senators
unclaimed
for several reasons,
August
and
the
balance
of
each
fll!lli
approved by a 31-0 margin a House
including
the
stipulation that the
include:
general,
$4,412.71,
$7,441.1!';
blll tightening statutes that ban job
allocations would require local as
$2,04Ul;
cemetery,
$775,85;
$896.22,
discrimination based on pregnancy.
$2,442.86; fire equipment, $1,965.12, well as state expenditures. The bond
Sen . Marigene Valiquette , D$923.69, $1,548.87; swimming pool, issue was to have lapsed on Jan. 1,
Toledo. was fl oo r sponsor of the bill ,
$2,497.41), $3,961.70, $5,645; fire truck, 1980.
which is designed to include small
In other business, the House voted
no receipts, no disbtm~ements,
employers . The present law
by
a 92-3 margin to approve a Senate
$4,412.33; planning commission, no
exempts employers o('fewer than 15
bill
setting up a demonstration
receipts, $18.10, $205.14; street mainpersons from the pregnancy rule.
project
encouraging welfare
tenance, $1,405.20, $3,290.32,
j The
new measure reduces. that
recipients
to seek jobs. That
$6,450.35; feden!l revenue sharing,
number to four.
measure,
which
was returned to the
no receipts, $649.45, $6,102.39; antiThe House has adjourne&lt;:l until
Senate
with
amendments,
allows
recession, no receipts, $34.63,
Tuesday, but the Senate returns
to
work
in
public
welfare
recipients
$400.93. Receipts for the month
today for a vote on a home heating
service
jobs
for
up
to
20
hours
a
week
totaled $11,006.28 while disburcredits bill.
without
having
their
g~ants reduced.
sements from the expendable funds
House leaders decided to take the
totaled $17,215.99.
tu boost out of the budget bill until
Obligated funds of council stood at
they have "assurances from the
$22,062.66
as of Aug. 31 with no
governor and Senate that they will
receipts
and
no disbursements
support addi tiona I revenues,"
during
the
month.
according to the measure's sponsor,
The balance of the obligated funds
Rep. Ftederick H. Deering, Dof
the board of public affairs as of
Monroeville.
Aug.
31 totaled $231,705.62.
' Gov. James A. Rhodes has refused
Receipts
and disbursements,
to endorse the tax increase because
respectively,
of each fund and the
of a 1978 campaign promise to hold
balance
making
up the obligated .
the line on state taxes. However, he
Katerine Millikan, dec. to Jennie
moneys Include: sanitary sewer,
le t his transportation director,
Sue
Tarowsky, Sara Lee Joakam,
$5,202.31,
$4,261.88,
$19,457.59;
David L. Weir, back it publicly.
Hugh
C. Rousey, Rlta (Dollie)
sanitary
sewer
escrow,
$100,
no
Deering has proposed a 4 percent
Rousey, Nonnan S. Rousey, redisbursements, $100,821.09; water,
levy on wholsesale gas purchases,
record Cert. of trans., Lebanon .
which would mean an increase of . $6,869.75, $7,636.50, $23,1101.94; water
Norman Woodrow Mora, Kathryn
trustS,
$350,
$211.09,
$7,625.
meter
two to three cents in the price of
Mora to George Mora, 1.005 acres,
Receipts for the month totaled
gasoline. He said the new t;lx could
Chester.
raise $300 million, and· trigger $14,527.06 and disbursements
Joann T. Coliins, Lowell Thomas
amounted
to
$12,109.47.
another $546 million in federal
Collins, Jesse E . Brinker, Naomi T.
Brinker to Village of Syracuse, Lots,
Syracuse Village.
Citizens National Bank to Richard
S. Owen, Sara H. Owen, Lot 7,
Goeglein 's Sub., Salisbury.
Granvll V. Wamsley, Juanita
Wamsley to Thomas W. George,
Meter Slte Agree., Rutland.
Leo H. Wllllams, dec. to Bertha F.
Williams, Cert. for trans., Bedford.
Bertha F . Williams, dec. to Ralph
B. Williams, Charles D. Williams,
Peark K. Haning, Cert. of Trans.,
....
Bedford.
Lawrence M. Wilcoxen, aka Martin Wilcoxen to Debra Hill, Roger
Hill, 1U3,acres, Lebanon.
·
Lawrence Martin WIIC'OXen, Adm.,
Edna Faye WilCOJ:on, dec. to Debra
Hill, Roger Hill, 14.13 acres,
Lebanon.
Oscar P. Klein to Peter F. Klein,
Jr., Richard H. Klein, Sub. 9 and 10
ci Lot 65, Middleport.
Larry M. Well, Judy A. Well to
Ricky Allen Stobart, Melba Stobart,
Lot, Middleport.
Robert G. Davis, Kathern Ann
Davis to Ronald E. Zidtan, Helene
Zldlan, Lot6, Baum'sSub., Chester.
POMEROY, 0.
Richard I. Haggerty to Richard s.
Owen, Sara H. Owen, Lot 8,

Financial report
released by clerk

. Meigs
Property
Transfers

TRY OUR

KFC

BAR-B-QUE
·CHICKEN

tt~~r:~~

It's

Farmers get boost

Area Deaths
BRYAN UARRIS
Bryan Harris . Jr., 53, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, died unexpe ctedly
Thursday morning at his residence:
Mr. Harris was born in Portland,
Ohio the son of Helen Proffitt Harris
of Portland and the late Dexter
jlryan Harris, Sr.
He was a member of the Great
Bend United Methodist Church,
Racine American Legion , Post 602,
and oversees Veteran of W. W. II,
was and employe of the Ashland Oil
Co. and was a farmer the greater
part of his Ute.
He is survived by his wife, Betty
Pickens Harris, one daughter, Mrs.
Randy (Patricia) Hand, Veto Lake,
Ohio ; one sister , Mrs. Howard
(Emogene) Allen, New Knoxville,
Ohi ; five brothers, Mayford A., R\l,
Long Bottom; James E., Rt. I ,
Yellow Springs, Ohio ; Charles R.,
Rt. 1, Portland; Dale D., Grove Hill,
Alabama; Paul E., Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
one grandson, Bryan Oladwell, Veto
Lake.
F"neral services will be held
Sunday! at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville. Burial
will be in Success Olurch of Olrist
Cemetery. Military graveside rites
jl'ill be conducted by Racine
j~meri can Legion Post 602. Friends
may call at the funeral home after
noon Saturday.

PERAMELIA HOFFMAN
Peramelia Hoffman, 82 , Hartford,
died Thursday evening at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Born April 20, 1897. at Letart , she
Goeglein's Sub., Salisbury.
Jaymar Coal Cmpany to Columbia
Gas Transmission Corp., Right of
Way, RuUand.
·
•
Ell Dennison Post 467 of Americah
Legion to Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., Right of Way,
Rutland.
Beatrice E . HoweU to Keith Kennaw Howell , Virginia Arlene Howell
Lots · 38 and 39, Merrill 's Add. :
·
Rutland Village.
Joann Oark to Richard A. Finlaw,
Gertrude F1nlaw, Parcel, Salisb~ry.
Ellis McMillan, Phyllis McMillan
to John M. Wells, 1.002 acres
Chester.
'
Michael T. Johnson,, Ann Y. Johnson to Estil Johnson, Reva Johnson,
-~acre, Salem.
Edith E. Sauer to Terry S. Whitlatch, Rita J. WHitlatch, Lot, Middleport.
Carl E. Knight, Kathryn W.
Knight to Paul Hoffman, Maxine
Hoffman, 9acres ; Chester.
Paul Edward Voss, Beverly Voss
to Jack E. Curry, Darlene A. Curry,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Jimmy W. Alexander, Janet T.
Alexander to Columbia Gas Trans.
Corp., Right of Way, Rutland .

was the daughter of the late Lewts
and Lydia Roush and was a member
of the Hartford Baptist Church.
Her husband, Earl H. Hoffman,
died Sept. 13, 1972.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs . Ethel Hall , Nitro, Mrs.
Ernestine MacKnight, Huntington,
Mrs . Eliza beth Grinstead, New
Haen, and Miss Edna Hoffman,
Clifton; and five grandchildren and
six great-grandchildren.
Services wiill be conducted
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home at Mason
by the Rev. William "Bud" Hatfield.
Burial will be in the Hoffman
Cemetery.
Friends are being received at the
funeral home Saturday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 pro.

divorces granted
One decree of divorce arid two of
dissolution of marriage were filed in
Gallia County Common Pleas Court
Wednesday .
Granted divorce was Louise White
from Jessie C. White.
Granted dissolution of marriage
were :
Regina Oary and Clarence E.
Oary.
Sharon Morris and Lester S.
Morris Jr.

WASHINGTON (..\P) + Dairy
fanners will get a boost of about 6.8
percent in government price
supports for milk beginning Oct. 1,
Agriculture Secret.ilry Bob Bergland
announced Thursday.
Although the exact support price
will not be determined until later,
officials said it appears the new rate
will be $11.22 per 100 pounds, up
from the present support of $10.51.
The 71-cent increase is equal to
about 6.1 cents a gallon. But the
increase "will have lltUe effect on
consumer prices" because market
prices of milk are expected to ~
above the new support level by the
end of this month , the announcement
said.

..
l\
•
•.

I

Ninth annual farm
festival Oct. 12-14

'

.·

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Alice Brauer, Racine ;;'
Roger Athey, Cheshire; Robert
Flanagan ,
Gallipolis ;
John
Landaker, Pomeroy; Mary Kiser,
Racine .
..
Discharged-Bessie Sellers, Paul
Van Cooney, William E. Morriis;
Bernard Diddle, Mary Tyler, Robert
Fife, Harry Erwin.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

LOG HEWING, an old-time method of shaping and
notching logs for building use, will be among over 100
heritage crafts demonstrated at the ninth Annual Bob

Evans Farm Festival on Oct. 12, 13, and U at tbe Bob
Evans Farm near Rlo Grande.

EXTENDED OU'n.OOK

•

Fair Sandlly tllreuP 'l'llelday.
Lon bt the appel' ... to low • •
Hllb iD lbe mid to upper 'lll.

tmts

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

ELBERFELD$

VOL. 13 NO. 33

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SPRING

GARDEN JUST
ARRIVED FROM
Ch0ose fro m q ur qre ~11 somct iO fl.
CJf ,tyres and colur&gt;. rney' re "St•r&lt;Ho- Bioorn .
and ea :... y tl pld' l l

SURE-TO-BLOOM

where there is a savings plan for everyone
with higiTer interest rates, made possible
by new Federal regulations

Tulips.

Hyacinths C.rocus

ELDS IN POMEROY
THIS Ia a front view of the new recreation facility at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center, fonnerly known as tbe Gallipolis State Institute.

.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS coMPUTED DAILY, COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY 5%%
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT
Minimum Deposit of SI ,OOO

90 Day Certificate ................•...••..•......•...•.•.•• 5~%
1 Year Certificate............................................ 6%
3 Year Certificate .. ~ ..............................•••••......61/z%
4 Year Certificate .....................•.••.•......••..••..•.7%%
6 Year Certificate ........................................... 7~%
8 Year Certificate .......••.....••••~························7%- %
Substantial interest penalty is required lor early withdrawal

26-WEEK MONEY MARKET
CERTIFICATE
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
10.294% ANNUAL-INTEREST RATE 7.95 ANNUAL INTEREST RATE
Rates effective one week starting Septe!"~r 13 through September 19, 1979.
Mint mum deposit of Slo,ooo.
Fede:ral r egula t ions pr oh 1b 1f th e compounding
the 1n1e~es~ dunng the term of t he deposit.

Substantta l mterest penalty

withdrawal .

IS

req uired for early

Ren~e

Gallipolis
State Institute

FAMOUS NAME
BEDD_ING!

GALUPOLIS ~ Supt. Jom A.
Beattie &amp;MOWlced Saturday the
Gallipolis State Institute (GSI) has a
new~

It 's now the Gallipolis Develop-

Just received a load of
Sealy box springs and
mattresses. 75 pieces .
(Factory Mis-match sale).

men(!~! Center.

AccordJ.n&amp; to Supt. Beattie, this 8C'

lion was taken 88 a result of an administrative rule Issued by the Ohio

FULL, QUEEN AND
KING SIZE
REG. S99.9S
STARTING
AT

$7995

8 PC.
SUITE

INCLUDES
ROCKER, CHAIR,
SOFA,
FOOT
STOOL AND 3
TABLES.

$49995

(LOVES EAT
NOT PICTURED)

'169.95 LOVE SfAT

fREE

WITH THE PUR·
CHASE
OF
OTHER 7 PIECES

~

.

Weather
Zoning board to
meet Sept. 20

found almost one of five American
workers is worried about losing his
job in the near future .
Taken altogether, the poll found
GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
the public perplexed and worried by
City
Board of Zoning Appeals will
the twin demons of inflation and
on Thursday, Sept. 20, at 10
meet
recession and suspicious of the
a.m. in the City Building.
"cures" that have been offered for
Purpose of the meeting will be to
the nation's economic woes.
review
an application for a building
Half of those questioned Monday
permit
to construct a two-.story
and Tuesday opposed " strict ·
building.
The first story will be
economic policies to control inflation
divided to house four automobiles
and the second story will be divided
Continued on A-2
to accorrunodate two, tw~oom
apartments. This is adjacent.to 1057
Fourth Avenue. The application was
submitted by D. Kenneth Morgan.
Area deaths ••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••.••.•.•• • • A-3 Also, the board of zoning appeals
aa.lflecl ada ••••••••• ••• ••.••••••• ~ ••••.•..•.•.••• D-&amp;-11 will be reviewing an application for
Ilfestyle ~ •••••••.•......•..... o • • • • • • • • • • • o • • • • o • o B·l·lZ a bulldng permit received from
Farm news ••••••..•.•........•. ; •.•.• o • • • • o • • o • • • • • D-!J-1 Ronald L. Saunders who ·wishes to
Sports •••••••••••• o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • o • • • • • • • • o • • o • • • • o C-1-8 collStruct a one family dwelling and
ac~ory garage at 15 Belmont
State and naUo1181 ••• o • o o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • D-1 Drive
.
. ,,

Inside Today...

Substantial interest ·penalty is required
lor early withdrawal.

GALI,IPOUS - One person was
killed and another illjured during a
one-vehicle accident early Saturday
on Butaville - Addison Rd., Metenths d. a mile west of SR 7.
Killed was Ronald E.J&lt;ingery Jr .,
IS, E;ureka Star Route . Injured was
Jonathan A. McWhorter, t6, Eureka
Star Route.
caned to the scene at 12:511 a.m .,
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol. reports that i' west bound
auto operated by Kingery slid
through a sharp right curve on
Bulaville-Addison and struck a large
. tree .
Kingery was pronounced dead at
the scene by Gallia County Coroner
Dr. Donald R. Warehime.
Passenger McWhorter displayed
incapacitating signs of injury and
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center for treatment.
The accident remains under
investiga tion .
Three per~ms were injured during
three accidents investigated Friday
by the Gallia-Meigs Post.
Marri Ann Darst, 16, Gallipolis,
was injured during a one-vehicle
accident on SR 51&gt;4, just off SR 160, at
9:40p.m .
Office rs report the accelerator of
an auto operated by Darst stuck .
The vehicle passed off the right side
of the roadway , rec rosse d the
pavement, went off the left side 'and
struck a tree .
Darst displ ayed incapacitatin g
signs of injury and was transported
to Holzer Medical Center for
Continued on A-2

Sunny today, with highs in the mid
70s. The chance of rain is near zero
percent.

BYEVANSWIIT .
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Despite the
continuing ravages of inflation,
Americans are not ready for tough
economic measures that might stop
the upward price spiral at the cost of
throwing millions out of work , an
Associated Press-NBC News poll
says.
The fear of unemployment is a
very present threat to some
segments of the public, as the poll

Rates effective one month starting
September 1 through September 30, 1979.
Minimum deposit of Sl,OOO.

(

Department ol Mental Health and
Mental RetardaUon. In order to
econcmi2e, the name will not be
changed on stationery and fonns WI·
til the prcMmt supply Ia exhausted.
The change iD li8Dlf! reflects the
shift in purpose, goals and
phlloeophy of the Center, Once the
Institution served more than 2,000 individuals who had been placed there
due to epilepsy and« mental retardation. Utue more than basic
custodial care could be given to

the!e clients.
The Ohio General Assembly , In
August of i890, reconunended that
land in Gallipolis be set aside for an
Institution. The area chosen had
previously been used as a general
and field hospital by the Union forces dur!ni the Civil War.
The name "The Asylum for
Epileptic Insane " was chosen,
probably because many falsely
thought retardation caused epilepsy.
Buildings were erected in 1892, only
a few years after the first institutions for the mentally retarded
were founded in the United States.
The first d. three name changes
took place in 1894, wpen it became
"The Ohio Hospital for Epileptics."
A:l a facility housing epileptics, it
became the largest as well as the
Continued on A-2

Inflation seen better
than unemployment

Member F edera I Deposit 1nsurance Corporation
(

MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

Gallian
dies in
crash -

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

pomeroy
nationa
bank -

entint

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

Delicious

pomeroy
. - rutland
tuppers plains

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1979

. ces and will he on hand slngin' and
pickin' toe Iappin' tunes.
Clogging, a dance In which a
distinct rhytlun is beat 011t by foot,
will be perfonned by the Southern
Appalacblan Cloggen. The Alan
Freeman Trio will fill the air with
dulcimer lllllBic, and songwritersinger Roger Bryant will play
autoharp and guitar 88 well 88
dulcimer as he perfonna original
compositiollS.
Three times each day there will be
field demonatratlons rl sheep and
duck herding, sheep shearing, bor·
seshoeing, chicken flying and harnessed hog driving. Tobact;O spitting
contests will be held daily, and
Festival visitors are invited to try
logrolling.
There is a $1 per car admlllslon
fee, and camping is available on the
Continued on A-2

EXTENDED OU'n.OOK
Mooday through WedDesday Fair Mooday thrOIIgb Wed~y. Hllb ID the upper 70s
Mooday Wlll'llliDil lo lbe low lo
mid . . Tuelday aud WedDesday.
Lon Ill. the upper 4411 Mooday
mOI'IIIug lied !tom the mid 5811 lo
low . . Tuesday aitd w..Jiletday.

HOLLAND
DaJfodils

RIO GRANDE - The Bob Evans lifestyles were I~ hun-led.
The Festivallsset on the 1,100-acre
Farm Festival, a three-day tribute
to America's rural heritage, will lie Bob Evans Fann which is at its best
held Oct. 12, 13 and 14 at the Bob as the l~ves begin to tilm and the
Evans Farm, just east rl Rio Gran- southeastern Ohio hills come alive
with color. The sprawling Festival
de on State Route 35;
Bob Evana is best known for his grounds provide ample roqm for
coWttry..fresh sausage produt!ts and wheat threshing, log hewing, shingle
family restaurants. Because of his splitting, blacksmithing and colonial
rural background, be has a deep ap- coopering, which are among the
preciation and respect for the older, traditional craft!! demonstrated.
!!Qmetlmes slower, yet highly skilled Also to be seen are flax llCUtchlng
way of doing things which results in and spinning, butter and cheese
quality products. It was this attitude making, quilting, wood carving,
that led to the first Bob Evans Fann dulcimer making, tinsmithlng,
Festival beld in 1971, giving modern- wheat weaving and glass blowing.
Coll!ltry entertainment iB conday Americans a glimpse of how
tinuous during the Festival. The
things used to be.
Today, the Festival is. still a WBT Briarhoppers, fonned in 1934
nostalgic journey back in time, with . at radio station WBT In Charlotte,
over 100 craftsmen who demollStrate North carolina and later reigning as
18th, 19th and early roth century the South's m011t popular group for
sltllls once commonplace when 16 years, are still dellghllng audien-

.

•'

.I

REPAIRS to the main lock at Gallipolis are expected to be completed· today if river stages to not interfere. When the repairs are coinpleted, It will require
about five dsys iooelimlnate the traffic backup caused
by the main lock closure. t:hlrtY~our towboats were
waiting to lock at 7 a.m. Saturday morning and the
average delay for the ~ven boats which locked
throUgh since Frtday was 79 hotmi each. The backup of

traffic Is being caused by the necessity for all tows to
use the small auxiliary chamber which cannot handle
the normal project traffic. The work being done consists d. repairs to damages caused by accidents, which
the towing companies pay for, and rehabilltatlon of
worn water seals wblch require periodic ~cement.
-Larry Ewing Photo.

Annexation proposal tabled
RACINE- Racine Village Coun- '"" the village guaranteeing payment of
cU, in accordance with regulatiOII!I,
the loan in the event of default..by the
has tabled for 60 days the proposed
annexation of property to Racine
Village and will accept or reject the
annexation after the GO day waiting
period.
Council, meeting In regular
session, passed a resolution to
borrow $17,500 at six percent In·
teres! for a five year period payable
at $3,500 a year to pay for part of the
construction d. an emergency
building adjacent to the present
structure.
The vlilage committed Itself to
such a loan on the conditions that a
mortgage securing loan be granted
on property where the building will
be erected. Another condition has

ADEQUATE SUPPLIES
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Heating oil supplies in Ohio this.·
winter should be adequaie ,
according to a Jetter from the state
Department of Energy to Gov.
James A. Rhodes . However, the
department warns that a number of
factor s- could cause problems for
heating oil users.
·
Any interruption in foreign
supplies could lead to a serious
shortage of oil in. Ohio and other
states , said. Robert S. Ryan,
department director.
Ryan said any major refinery
· problems or severe weather
conditions which disrupt distribution
could also ·esult in a serious
shortage.

BRANCH MANAGER Dully Crow bu beell 118med
b11111eb maii8Jer of lhe Pomeroy
Offiee ol the Albellll COUDiy
Sa\'lbgs aud Lou Co. Crow will
.be responsible for tile operaUon
'elUte office aud will be uslsled
by two loag-teuured employes,
Gerl Waltou aud CODDle Waruer.
Craw, sou of Mr. aud· Mrs.
TboDl81 D. Cro,., Pomeroy, II a
veteran olthe U. S. Navy, amem·
ber of lhe Melp COUDty Jaycees
aud lhe Pomeroy Gua Club. He II
a graduate of Pomeroy H11b
School aDd Oblo UDlvently willa a ,
degree In &amp;CCOWIIID&amp;. Crow aud
blowife, Carol, aud two eblldn!u,
DaDielle aud Clayteu 1bomao,
·•
reside ID Middleport.

,.

l

Racine Volunteer Emergency
Squad.
Council also pasaed a resolutim88
the grantee iD a deed of conveyance
fr&lt;m Roger L. Adams and Nancy
Adams conveying a strip of land for
the planned emergency bul,lding.
Under emergency action, council
passed an ordinance lo vacate in
alley from Third to Fourth St.

SCHOOLS lilt TOO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
financial problems of Youngstown's
steel industry are also bitting area
schools in the pocketbook, according
to state Auditor Thomas E. • ·
Ferguson.
Ferguson said Campbell City
School District has lost $717,421 In
tax dollars because of a series of
reductions in the tangible personal
property of Jones and Laughlin Co.,
formerly . Youngstown Sheet and
Tube Co.
Details of the tax reductions were
included In a financial analysis of
the Mahoning County school district
released Friday. The analysis
projects a year-end deficit of nealy
$800,000 for Campbell schools.
IMMUNIZATIONS MANDATORY
. COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) Thousands of Oltio students could be •
excluded from llchool if they bave
not complied with the state's
immunization schedule by the 15th
day of the school year, according to
· state Health Director John H.
· school
Ackerman
and
Superintendent FJanklln B. Walter.·
'!

�A-3- The Sunday Tlmes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979
A·2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

·Peeps.

• •

.....

RONNIE IUNGERV, JR.
qALUI'OUS - Ronnie Eugene
Kingery, Jr ., 19, a resident of
Eureka Star Route ( MercerviUe
con\munity) was killed In an auto
accident at 12:50 a.m. Saturday on
Addlson-BulaviUe Rd.
K.lngery was an employee of the
Charleston Construction Co.,
ll!! was born Aug. 4, 1960, in Gallia
County, son of Ronnie Kingery and
CaPolyo Beaver Kingery.
Slirviving besides his parents are :
ona' sister, Regina Lynn, at home;
Mr11. Edna Kingery, Gallipolis, a
grandmother; Mr. and Mrs. Rudy
Bea_ver, grandparents, Eureka Star

A Gallipolis Diary

HERE'S one of the new resident homes at the Gallipolis Developmental Center, formerly known as the Gallipolis State Institute. .

Ninth •••
continued from A-1
grounds for a $5 service charge.
Groups planning to attend the
Festival are encouraged to do so on
Friday, October 12, when buses can
be best accommodated.
Hours are !Oa.m. to 6p.m. Friday,
9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m.
to5p.m. Sunday.

THE administration building shown above first served as. h~dquar­
ters for the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics (OHE), then the Gallipolis State
Institute (GSI) and now Gallipolis Developmental Center (GDC ).

Renante •••
Continued from A-1
oldest of Its kind in the Western
Hemisphere.
· The secOnd name change occurred
in 1960, then becoming ' 'The
Gallipolis State Institute." Since
epilepsy was becoming a controlled
medical disorder, the newly named
"GSI" began to take in all types of
mentally retarded persons.
Throughout these years, the emphasis was on "Custodial Care," the
idea that the main task was to take
care of residents; just keep them
alive. Residents were called
"patients" because many felt they
were "mentally sick." In recent
years this view of the retarded has
changed. A more human un·
derstandlng of mentally retarded
persons has come into being.
Instead of ''patients" to be taken
care of, the mentally retarded are
understood to be persons who are
able to learn and achieve. Through
the use of behavioral learning and
speclallnstruction, many are able to
fit Into ''normal life."
1
The new name change is mearit to
emphasize the philosophy and goal
that residents (not ''patients")
should receive education and

is rapidly moving to a plan In which
all residents receive training. Staff
train residenl:j so that they can have
as much freedom and Independence
as is possible,
Most of the training provided to
residents consists of self-llelp skills,
such as use of the bathroom,
dressing, bathing and so on, and
·social skills needed In the com·
munity. The G.D.C. also provides
physical therapy, occupational
therapy, speech therapy and special
education. Programs for residents
range from simple skills (walking,
brushing teeth, bathing, etc.) to
complex s~ (cooking, laundry,
shopping In the conununity).

training so that they can develop to
theirmaximwn abilities.
Currently the 750 residents of the
Gallipolis Develo~ental Center
receive a wide range of services,
training and education. An enlarged
professional staff, employee
training, new buildings,' and in·
te'nsive progrwruning have enabled
the Center to work for certification
under the Federal Medicaid
program. One unit bas already met
the certification requirements; a
second unit expects certification in
the very near future.
Gallipolis Developmental Center

Gallia•••
Continued from A·I
treatment.
Darst was cited on a charge of
operating a vehicle without a
license, The auto was demolished.
One person was injured dur,ing a
two,.vehicle accident on SR 7, four•
tenths of a mile south of Roush Lane,
at 6:30am.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Ernest Tuckett, 26,
Salyersville, Ky., went out of control
after passing through a spot of water
on the roadway.
.
The Tuckett vehicle went left of
center and struck a north bound auto
driven by Paul Porter, «. Crown
City. Following impact, the Porter
vehiclecootinued off the right side of
Ute roadway and struck a tree.
Tuckett displayed Incapacitating
ugns of injury and was transported
)y Ute Pomeroy Emergency Squad
:o Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Beth vehicles incurred severe
iamage. No citation was issued.
One person was injured during a
.wo-vehicle mishap on SR 7, eight·
tenths of a mile north of U.S. 3:i.
Called to the scene at 8:40 p.m.,
the patrol reports an auto operated
by Linda L. Johnson, 28, Crown City~
had stopped in traffic oo 7.
A vehicle driven by Robert
McClaskey, 31, Vinton, failed to stop
and struck the Johnson auto in the
rear.
A passenger in the Johnson
vehicle, Louvinia Vaughn, 43,
Gallipolis Ferry, claimed injury and
was transported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital for treatment.
McClaskey was cited on a charge
of failure to maintain an assured
clear distance.

Inflation •••
Continued from A-1
if that meant many Americans

Sunday Tbnes-Sentlnel
-~

Sli m~ ......._.._...,.... , ~.,. ,-

~~

Published every Swlday by 1be Oho Valley
Publishing C..· Multimedia, Inc.
GAUJPOLIS
DAILY11\mUNE

825 Third Ave., GaWpolia, Ohio 45631.
Published every weekday evening actpt

s.turoa¥. Second Clas! Pootage Paid at
GalllpoU., Ohio 45631.

THE "BALE RUSTLER" pictured above will be demonstrated
during the 1979 Jackson Extension Area Dairy Day Sept. 25 at Valley
View Dairy farm, Rt. 2, Bidwell. Blaine and Va~ Taylor say they can
load five large round bales in two and one-half nunutes and unload them
in 3() seconds.
·

t11E DAR.Y SENTINEL

111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . ~769 . Published
every week day evening e1cept Saturday.
Entered as second cla!ll malling matter at

Pomeroy, Ohio Pest Office.
By carrier daily and Sunday !lie per week.

Motor route a.uo per month.
MAIL
SUBSCRIPTION RATFS

The GolliJioU. Dally TribWI&lt; In Ohio and
West Vlrginla one year p:t.OO ; si:J: monlha
•17.50; three months $10.50. Elsewhere 138.00
per year; ail months ~.00 ; three montbl
111.00 ; mot« route 13.110 monthly.
The Dally Sentinel, one year 133.00; 51.1 moo·
U.. 117.1Cl ; three mootl'o 110.50. Ebewhere
pe 00 · sis months $2).00; threemooths 111.00.
The'AMoctated Pres! ill o:clusiyely enliUed
to \he uae for _publicaUon of aU news dispatcllea
credited to the newspaper and abo the local
news publi.!hed herein.

PERFECTION
GUARANTE.ED·

All set for Dairy
Field Day Sept. 25
JACKSON
The 1979
Southeastern Ohio Dairy.. Field Day
will be hosted by Valley View Dairy
Farm, from 12 :30 to 2:45 p.m.,
Tuesday, Sept. 25. This ll(kow Gallia
County farm is operated by Blaine
and Vaughn Taylor and their paren-·
ts, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Taylor. The
farm is just east of Rio Grande and
north of U. S. Route 3:i on the Kerr. Harrisburg Road (Gallia County
Road 4). Signs will be posted along
roads In the vicinity to direct persons to the Taylor farm.
Visitors will observe several innovative techniques used by theile
young dairymen, including :
Challenge feeding of top producing
cows with extra concentrate using a
transponder, portable calf hutches
for raising baby calves, and the harvesting of all hay from 130 acres of
either pure alfalfa or alfalfa-

orchardgrass in large 1,500-pound
round bales. A bale handler that can
load five large bales hydnlulically In
21'.! minutes and, after transport,
unload them in 30 seconds will be
demonstrated.
Other features of the tour will in·
elude productive strip-grazed
pastures managed by electric fencing, free-stall housing, liquid
manure storll'ge, and 18 acres of notiUage corn for silage.
Light refreshments will conclude
the tour.
State Extension dairy specialists,
area and county Extension agents,
and U.S.D.A. Soil Conservation Service personnel will be present. This
dairy field day Is a public education
program sponsored by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service In
the nine counties of the Jackson Ex·
tension Area.

would lose their jobs, at least
temporarily."
·
Thirty-eeven gercent favored such
policies. Thirteen percent of the
1 599 adults interviewed by
~lephone across the country were
not sure.
The fear of losing one 's job, the
spectre of unemployment that has
chracterized a recession, is real lor
millions of Americans.
Seven percent of the Americans
who work outside the home said they
are very worried that they might
lose their job in the next six months.
Twelve percent said they were
somewhat worried about their job
security. The remaining 81 percent

KNEE,AHRLE
WRIST &amp; ELBOW

C hose n

to

p e rman e nt ly regis t e re d .

CLARK'S
Jewelry Store
342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis ~ Ohio

AND
,. II I

'" '

. COLO\' ·
•

f/,,1111.

"

TONIGHTTHRU
THURSDAY
AWE 'IOlJ R£AIJ'( RlR

11·1[ SUMMEA?

fu

-\HI: 'IOlJ READYRlR
A G()()O TIME?
I tnm tl ~ Co-PHxiucn of
~ '4111t nnal

l....l11fJ"&gt;Ofl,,

,_.
ANI~\Al UOUSE~

UIU.MURRAY

....._ ,.

-----------CARTOON

....

...
••111••1111••••
..,

SPRING VALLEY
SHO ~PING PLAZA '
Phone 446·2206

I

.....

How to feel

the spring

rt

1172 Donaldson

made a tour of Ohio. On April22, he
was unable to deflate his bllloon and
was draCged over the countryside
surrounding Chillicothe. The half.
empty balloon acted as a sail as
Donaldson was pulled through
streams of mud and water. .
In Donaldson's second Cltlllicothe
flight he struck a building and tore
oft IS layers of brick and was hurled
against a second chimney. tearing
bricU off it. In his landing, aC·
cording to Tom Crouch in "The
Giant Leap, " "the aeronaut struck a

=~~u:;:r~~~~

SaK&gt;uptom

about
a lot
better
•
mcometaxes
next April 15th.

00~
~
tf your home is less than
';years old, you may save
money. Find out how
much , c~ ll :

C. K. SNOWDEN
~17

Second Ave.
GAllipolis., 0 .

Phone •46· 4290

If you filed :1 fed e r.~l Lncome tu
reiUrn lhis ~a r wnh taxable incomr
of Sl8,000 to S1 4,000 or more as an
individual, or a joi nt return on
$24,000 to $28,000 or more, wt!'d like
IO invi te you to attend an excl usive
seminar th at could save yo u a lm of
money, lt 'uthoruugh ,cnm prehcn ·
sive review of tax·cx.c mpt municipal
bond s, and what they might mean to .
you. For example, you' ll learn ;

• Can you bu y th~m to mature :n
d01 1es l'orivenient to you , long term or

~::'-:=:'1

Merrill Lynch

I
I
I
I

and Casualty Company

• Are !hey easy to sell befort matu·
rity? How would you go abou t it ?
How big is the market ?
• Shou ld you buy ind ivid ual bond ~
or invesl in a bond fund Or tru st ?
• What ar~ the eig ht dlffer'cnt kind s
of municipal bonds? How do they
differ ?
• How can Merrill lynch, as one of
the largest underwritcn and diu ribu-

Home Office:
Bloomington. Ill inoi s

I

~

I

~ Merr1·11 L
J\'u:rnlll r n..:h l'kl\.~ J\!tllk.'l

I
I

I
1

! ncb II
.,\:Snuth

L-~------------~--~-J
'
1 •P&gt; \\,.,&gt;II

ComfortabJe seating and sleeping for holiday
guests ... for apartment dwellers ... for
summer cottages ... for anyplace you need
double duty from your sofa
WITH A NORWALK

NAMED TO BOARD
GALUPOLIS - Robert S. Wood,
executive vice president and general
manager of Bob Evans Farm Foods,
Inc. , has been elected to the Board of
Trustees of the Methodis.t
Theological School in Ohio.
Wood is a resident and school
board member of Canal Winchester,
Ohio. He is also a trustee of Rio
Grande College, and on the board of
trustees of the Ohio Slate
Restaurant Association.

CONVERTA COUCH

YQUGET!
•

Fu ii-S i~e

Comfort

Sob, Beauty and

·

• An Easy-Open, Non-Wobble
Sletper Mechanism
• A Revusible, Solid-Foam
Mattress
• Your Choice of Twin, Full. or
Queen Sizes
~
• Your Chuice uf 26 S l~per Styles
• Your Choie~ or 601 Durahle,

Cleanable, Wear· t~st~ Fabrics
• 30 Day, No Extra. Charge

Cu&amp;tom Order Service

MEDICAL PATIENT
POMEROY--Mrs . Herman
(Betty) Martin of Pomeroy Is a
medical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center. Cards may be sent
to room 423.

In June Donaldson made another
Gallipolis flight traveling over 100
miles.
Later in 1~2 at Cincinnati Donald·
son carried a number of reporters
with him on his flight into Butler
Hed Lucas, a pitcher for the
County. In 1~3 and 1874 Donaldson Cincinnati
Reds, made 114 hits as a
continued to tour Ohio with his aerial pinch-hitter to rank in the Top 10 in
antics, substituting when-by himself that department.
the trapeze bar for the basket.
.
Galllpolll: 1&amp;52
Tbe first balloon ascent in Ohio
had been in 1834 by Thomas Kirkby
and the first balloon ascent in
Gallpolis was made in 1852 by John
Wise, who perfonned with the John
Kinney Show.
In an earlier ascent from Por·
tsmouth, Wise had been caught in a
stonn and carried by the stonn over
Gallla County. finally landing in
Point Pleasant. By a miracle, Wise
was able to remain aloft by throwing
out his ballast. Wise 's air career in
Ohio came to an end in 1852 when be
tried to find a jet stream which
would take him across the Atlantic.
He and a companion took rtf from
St. Louis and made it across Lake
Erie but were forced to land in New
York. A heated argument ensued
between Wise and his sponsors, and
the plan was scratched. Wise was
later chief balloonist for the Union
army.
He died in 1879 when his balloon
was lost .Vel" Lake Michigan .
Washington Donaldson was al8o
lost over Lake Michigan (In 1~5 )
when he ascended from Chicago
with a journalist from the Chicago
Evening Journal. While the body of
the journalist was recovered, the
remains' of Donaldson were never
found.

Ful\-Si&lt;~:e Colonial O:onverta Co uch bl'

Norwalk. Choose nmong J.eVe ral colors of
stripe and s ~ i d fa bries. Other features
li sted are standard .

$28800

SAVE
'11CJGI'

90 DA YS
SAME AS CA SH

OPEN MONDAY
TIL 8 PM

We have never offered LOWREY ORGANS at these ~rices

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY OR PUT IN LAYAWAY

for rustic beauty, comfort ,
and durabilit !I
Rustic Enterprises
RR #1, Box 208 .
Crown City, Ohio 45623
(614)256·1946

Q

RL.TR

Betlc4 .£Wbuf,
N~!

ALTA INDUSTRIES LTD.

!L t.

Abreed apart.

1

SLEEPER SPECIAL

LOWREY ORGAN

LOWREY ORGAN

LOWREY ORGAN

. LOWREY ORGAN

LOWREY ORGAN

LOWREY ORGAN

PRE OWNED $10,00000 HAMMOND ORGAN, PERFECT CONDITION $4995ao
SEVEN. OTHER PRE-OWNED
ORGANS TO CHOOSE FROM
.

Sale starts Monday, Sept. 17th and runs tor one weeli·

Zop

.VarmLI Lync~ r u t tomotf'l. pltt\t •'"" n•m&lt;' tm.J ll&lt;ldrcuuf A.:wu ft1 l in '&lt;"UI I' "t'

, 1 " 1'1 o wt~

PARTICIPATION URGEI)
GALUPOUS - The Ohio Board
of Regents is ~. authorlzinl!
students who attend Gallipolis
Business College to paiticlpate In
the Ohio Instruclional Grant
Program, if they qualifY, toiiiQtln
the payment of their tuition.
.
This means that people, wbo In the
past, thought that tb!y could not af·
ford to further thetr education now
cando so.
For further infonnatlon contact
the business college.

The Woodstock

Pleau: rtserve _ _ seat(l)

I

Jerrell McKenzie, director of
G.B.C., said the Fall Quarter staff
will comprise the following pecple :
Steve Elsnaugle, Director of

custodian.

For fr« reSf:rvations- without

an end you r Seminar on Tu -

Bond, furTax -Freelncome

446-4367.

l!:ducatlon; Marcia Maher, Jack
Payton, Sharon Drain, !!:Iaine
Rouse, James L. RoM!, Helen Long,
instructors; Lee E. Tyler, director
of admissions; Rusa Stiverson and
Harold White, admllllonl npn!114!11tatives . Jo Ann Slllnn. office
manag~r, and Bessie Rippey,

obli gation on your part-simply call
or mail th e coupon below.

~--------~---=---s...
I1

..

potluck at the Parish of the Templed
Hills to honor the area's volunteers,
singling out Ethel Robinson's Old
Tyme Chorus. AU four counties have
applied for new vans.
Pearl Bcwman, Vinton County
coordinator for RSVP, is serving as
special RSVP representative on that
county 's minillterial board.
Next meeting of the areawide
·RSVP advisory conunittee will be
held at 1 p.m. Nov. 8 at· the First
United Presbyterian Church,
Jackaon.

JACKSON- GaUia County had
the largest delegation Thursday
when the areawide RSVP advisory
cmmlttee ll)et in Jacks.on 's First
United Presbyterian Church. The
committee's new preSident, the Rev.
Robert Gray, .host pastor, presided
for the first time and gave the In·
vocation.
RSVP (Retired Senior Volunteer
Program) in this area has four counties, Gallia, JaCkson, Vinton, and
Pike, and director is Kathern
Smalley of Jackson, who made these
announcements: ·
·
Cwnulative hours for July and
August were:
Jackson, 2,705; Gallia, 2,043 ; Pike,
1,760; Vinton, 1,556.
Gallla County has hired a new van
driver, Sandra McCoy. Jackaon
County volunteers are making cider
to sell by the cup at the Jackaon A!)ple Festival, using an old.fasbioned
hand mill m loan for the occasion,
lor 40 bushels of apples from
Jacksoo County orchardists.
All county coordinators, including
GaUia County's Arlene Tracy, repor·
ted enthusiasm for the recognitiOII

·
and loans by the Department of
Health, Education and Welfare, ~
well as lor student loans by the Ohio
Student Loan Commlasion and was
recently approved by the Ohio Board
of Regents to participate in the Ohio
Instructional Grant Program for
qualifying students.
It is al8o approved for veteran
training by offering the Associate
Degree in Business Administration
or Executive Secretarial by the Ohio
State Approval Agency, the
Veterans Administration and the
Ohio State .Board of School and
College Registration.
Those interested in en~ the
Fall Quarter may visit at the office
in the Spring Valley Plaza located on
Jackaon Pike (Rt. 35 West) or phone

CO ffit' .

"'o.,::::.,,:=.,,c;;,.,c::~:::-,- - - - - -- -..
\I,C:m::"i,,.,;:;~::,--------

I "Investing m MumctPII

Gallia luJd largest RSVP delegation

trusts help you?
Find out how you may increase
yo ur spenda ble in co me by thousands
of dollars 1 yea r for many years to

0 YES, I wou ld like HI

1 for me at the Seminar
1 ~~~~:~::~~e
~ ~opy
of th~ 16·rase booklet,

~euor Doaaldloa made I IUC•
ceuful uce•loa ou WedDesday af.
een- lui. 1be day wu beautlfal
IJid lbe blllooa wu Ia •l&amp;bt uutll cut
oft from view by lbe West Vlrghlia
blill. He desceaded oa lbe · fmn ol
Mr. Polfeuberger about seven miles
up tbe Kauwba ud returued to
GalllpoiiJ tile u.me evealae."

Gallipolis Business College is ac·
,Tedited by the Association of In·
dependent Colle(!es and Schools, an
accrediting agency recognized by
the U. S. Office d Education.
It 1s approved for student grants

GALUPOLIS
Gallipolis
Business College will open its 1979
Fall Quarter, Octllber 1, With :m
students eipi!Cte!l.
Leo C. Blackburn, president,
stated new enroUments will be ac·
cepted until Monday, October 15.

p 78806

~-----------------1
AJJtr\1

Exempt Municipal Bomh,

open field before coming to rest. "
Comes back by 1raiD ·
On May 11 Donaldson went up at
Portsmouth and landed in Zaleski,
although he ripped his bag In ian·
ding. He rode the train to Ironton,
however, in order to continue his
tour.
He made two ascents at Ironton.
On the first he gained altitude too
fast and the l)ydrogen expanded at
such a rate as to cause the netting
around the balloon to be ripped . Tbe
second Ironton flight was cut short
by high winds .
.
On May 27, 1872, Donaldson
arrived in Gallipolis, set for his
flight d the following day. We read
in the Gallipolis JQurnal of the
flight :

tors of municipal bondli and bond

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

C&gt;l\"

Stale f arm f'u·e

shnr! term?

MAI L TODAY- OR Ci\LI.-FOR FREE RESERVAT ION

Or call : (304) 522·9JU

ALL
PRICES
CASH &amp; CARRY

·-

FREE SEMINAR:

1

FRI. &amp; SAT.
SEPT. ~1 - &amp; 22

Donaldson was the original "man
· oo the Dying trapeze " In the Barnum
Clrcua, 111 well as perfonning as an
acr.obat, ventriloquist, and
magldan. He made his first public
ucent In a balloon In Philadelphia in
1871 . On his ftrst trip In Ohio he substltlited the trapeze bar for the
bastel He rose 75 feet when his
balloon · struck a smokestack,
knotking off a nwnber of bricks and
ripping the gasbag, after which he
"dropped rapidly into an adjoining
yard.''
Mad ud water

~

Similarly, 23 percent of those
workers under age 3:i are worried
about their jobs, while 12 percent of
those from 50 to 64 have similar
fears.
This is not to say that inflation has
faded from the public coosciousness.
Americans agree that inflation is a
more serious economic problem
than· joblessness. Sixty-seven
percent named rising prices as the
top problem, versus 21 percent who
chose unemployment. Ten percent
named both and 2 percent were not
sure.
As with every sample survey, Ute
results of the AP-NBC News poll can
vary from Ute opinions of all those
with telephones across the country
because of ch3nce variations in Ute
sample .

I

Every support for the pa ·
tlent that must remain ac ·
tive. Trained fitters . to
serve you.

CUI ,

REDEAMER

work~rs .

Box 1679
1 P.O.
HuntinJ1on, N.Y. 55701

WATCH
THURSDAY
PAPER
FO DETAILS

WINTER NIGHT

,-------------------,

fo r a lifet ime ... and mo re
... yo ur perfect Keepsake

e ngagem en t diam o nd ...
gua rant eed in writing lind

SCREAMS OF A

Time: 7JO p.m.
Day &amp; Date: Tuesday, September 25th
Piau : G;LIIi po lis Holidlly In n
"/'\' Warf Room, Ga ll ipolis OH

cherished

BY JAME'i SANDS
GAlJ.IPOUS - This past summe In Colwnbus a couple were
mqrted In a hot air balloon. Tbe fiT·
st aerial wedding in the history of
the world was perfonned In a
bllloon that belmged to a man who
wt111 a frequent performer In
Gallipolis - Washington Harrison
Donaldson. That first balloon wed·
ding wu performed In Cincinnati in
1874 - the gro&lt;m being Charles
Colton and the bride being Elizabetll
Walsh. Both were periormers witb
Barnum's Rlman Hippodrome Cir·

TONIGHT THRU SUNDAY .....
,.......

• What are municipal bonds? Who
issues them? What is the money used
for?
• Who should own municipal
bond s? HOYo· much can you save in
your tax bracket?
• Why d o some bonds pay hi gher
rates than othcn ?
• How safe are they? Arc they suit able for comcrvatiYe investing? For
capital gains? How art they rated?

Diamond Rinll!o

be

•

not worried.
The fear about losing one's job Is
not evenly distributed among the
workers. A substantial 'El percent of
Ute blue collar workers contacted in
Ute poll said they were at least
somewhat worried about their jobs.
Sixteen percent of the white collar
workers are worried and p percent
of Ute professional and managerial

DAYS C
~-4.~

Rrv.i~tt'l'l."'t.l

is a collection rt little Items bv the
· Continued on Page A-7

wer~

SUPPORTS

o'o~~'"''

Balloonist perforated
in Gallipolis

"COLUMBUS CALUNG" In the
Columbus dtizen..Journal rt Aug. 'El

lME

TWO BIG .

Keepsake®

and the ~d were .the · records~ ..
with year listed i 6 Sepl 92-98 (1954)
7 Sept. 91-100 (19311), 8 Sept. 91·1Gt'.. '
(1939) 9 Sept. !lr&gt;-101 (1939), and the
next date was just ooe degree shy of" ·
the record: 10 Sept. 94-85 (1!155), 1!"
Sept. !J0.96 (1936)' 12 Sept. 89;117" ·::
(1952), 13 Sept. !13-101 (1939), and It :..:
Sept. 86-104 (1939).
.
... .::
Did you notice that in 1939 SIX September dates had readings rt 100 or
better - the better including the
maximwn twice of 104 degrees.

BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - You11 not forget
last weekend when the temperature
skidded down below 60 and you
shivered though it was and is still
swnmer. Autumn doesn't come till
Friday rt this week.
,
Maybe also you '11 not forget September a year ago, though this particular weekend In 1978 was
relatively cool - no, make It "cool"
in quotation marks, because on Sept.
15 It was ~ degrees, on Sept. 16 it
was 114 degrees, and Sept. 17 the high
was 90 degrees .
Then it got hot In 1978. Sept. 18 the
mercury reached 93, and the next
two days thermometers ~t a new
record: Sept. 19 the high was 95
degrees which was one degree warmer than the old record In 1955, and
Sept. 20 the high was 99 degrees!
That trOpical reading bettered the
old record of 94 set In 1940.
The year 1936 had the record
reading for each of the next three
days: 96 on Sept. 21, 99 on Sept. 22,
and 98 on Sept. 23.
While the early September
readings in 1978 were plenty warm,
they did not attain the equatorial
marks of earlier years. The first
temperatures were the highs in 1978

Route ; a g ro~t grandmother, Mrs •
Nellie McGuire , Mercerville. ·
He attended Macedonia Church.
Kingery was a !978 graduate of
Hannan Trace High School. He was
formerly employed by Ute C &amp; L
Coal Co., and Ute Empire Coal Co.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Monday at the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home with Rev .
Clarice Dillon officiating. Burial wiU
be in Old MercerviUe Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 p.m. on Sunday.
Pallbearers will be Don KinRery.
Larry Kingery, Darrell Canaday,
Paul Kmgery, Denver Kingery and
Mike Kingery .

GBC hegins faD quarter Oct. 1

I , ,,h . l 'lt o., I , ""'' ,\ ' " " ' h h h " ' 1''' ·"' ,J 11, ml•, &gt; '• • '" "' ' • l »o• "'' " ' ' • • ·'•' ' • '•'•

'SEND $3.00 FOR COMPLETE
LOG HOME PORTFO LIO

~

l(l&lt;i &gt;tQMt !'i (;0\ INCH

OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS TILL 8:00 PM

BRUNICARDI MUSIC INC.

CORNER 3RD &amp; COURT STS.

..

'·
DIAL 446-0617

�. . .
'

'

' '

'

Four persons hurt in wreck
Morgan's car; and Irene Church, 36,
PT. PLEASANT - Four penons
Marion , N.C., a passenger in the
were injured in a two-vehicle
·
Church
stationwagon.
smashup at 7 p.m. Friday on Route 2
William
Church's condition is
at Steenbergen Hill.
listed
by
hospital
attendants as fair
Admitted· to Pleasant Valley
whUe
the
condition
of the other three
Hospital were the drivers, Brian K.
victims
is
s,aid
to
be
satisfactory. All
Morgan, 17, Ravenswood, and
were
transported
by the Point
William Edward Church, 38,
Pleasant
Rescue
Squad.
Marion, N.C.; Larry Keefer, 18,
Ravenswood. a passen~er in
ENGINEERS TO MEET
GALUPOUS - The Tri:state
Section of the American Institute of
Chemical Engineers will have its
POMEROY - Meigs County
first
meeting of the season Monday,
Sheriff's deputies completed two
Sept
.
24, starting with a plant tour of
accident Investigations Thursday.
the
H-Coal
Pilot Plant at the
At 3 a .m. Thursday, Robert
Catlettsburg
refinery
of Ashland Oil.
Scarberry, 30, Rt. 2, Racine, told
Dinner
will
follow
in
the Ashland
deputies he was traveling south on
Petroleum Engineering Building .a t
the Bedford Township Road 82 when
8 p.m ., with discussion of the
·a deer jumped onto the hood of his
synthetic coal program and business
19.70 Chevy Vega.
meeting. Dinner reservations should
There was moderate damage.
be made with Fred Hill at Ashland
Later Thursday,
deputies
Oil. On October 16, Mr. Donald
completed the investigatiOII of an
DeClerck, of the Plandler Co., will
accident tha.t occurred at f a.m .
speak m glass lined reactors.
Wednesday on CR I approximately
one and half miles north of Salem
Center.
Byron Arbaugh, 37, Rt. I, Albany,
told deputies he was traveling north
011 CR D1 in a 1978 Ford Pickup
truck and . went off the road and
through a fence owned by Robert
Molden, Rt. 1, Dexter.

Accidents checked

FOUR WERE INJURED in this two-vehicle accident on Steenbergen Hill yesterday evening. One of the
drivers. Brian Morgan, 17, Ravenswood, had to be freed from the wreckage with the "Jaws of Life" by Point
Pleasant firemen . (Photo courtesy of the Mason County Sheriff's Department) .

Rep. Applegate pessimistic
Edison will have to cancel its
White House after asking President
contracts
and go to outside (out-&lt;&gt;f·
Carter for help at his town meeting
state)
coal,
which will affect
in Steubenville on Wednesday, said
employment.
''
she hasn't given up.
Concerning the EPA, Mrs.
"I have done an awful lot of
Downend
said, " The only thing they
praying since we started the c'Oal
can
say
is
they are going to put more
business," she told reporters outside
people
on
it and they wit! see if
the White House.
anything
can
be done, but they -don't
"This thing that happened to me
an extension ," the Ohio Democrat
leave
us
with
much hope."
complained. " I was a little could not have happened unless God
Rogers,
executive vice
Justin
had a plan. I hope when I go to bed
disappointed ."
president of the Ohio Edison Co., an
tonight
and
ask
for
additional
help,
·
Applegate cont ended that the .
Akron-based utility, agrei!d that
he won't say, 'Sondra, I have done
Environmental Protection Agency
without
a time extension , "we will
enough for you."'
"makes decisions that affect the
be
put
in
the position of having to
Mrs.
Downend
and
her
husband,
lives of millions of people and I have
cancel
our
orders with the Ohio coal
Art,
own
Rodeo
Inc.
,
a
small
coal
the gut feeling of insensitivity."
operators
with
whom we have been
The EPA clean air standards, strip .mining business.
doing
business."
The
White
House
meeting
was
which prohtbit the burning of highApplegate said 90 percent of
scheduled before Mrs. Downend
sulfur coal such as that mined in
Ohio's electricity comes from coal,
asked
the
president
on
Wednesday
Ohio, go into effect on Oct. 19.
making the state more directly
why the EPA would not permit
Applegate and other Ohioans
affected than other states by rules
utilities and others to burn highasked the EPA to delay
on coal use.
sulfur
coal.
implementation of the standards for
He said many of the state's 35,000
Afterward,
she
said
the
plant
about four months so Ohio officials
coal
miners cou ld become
which buys coal from her business
can have time to .review their plan
unemployed
if the agency allows
for complying with the ,regulations . does not know whether it can
proposed
coal
restrictions to take
Sondra Downend also was not continue to do so after Oct. 19.
effect.
·
Without an extension of present
optimistic, saying she still was not
But
he
contended
that Carter
sure she will be in the coal business rules, she contended, "many of the
could
resolve
the
situation.
. mines that are presently able to ship
after the standards take effect.
"The president could pick up the
Mrs. Downend, an "Orrville, Ohio, coal will not be able to ship and Ohio
phone and get an extension," he
resident w·ho found herself at the
said. "We are not trying to
jeopardize anybody's health."

WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
Douglas Applegate emerged
pessimistic Friday from a White
House meeting about chances that
the federal government will delay
implementation of clean air
standards for Ohto.
"They don't want to g1ve the state

Donations acknowledged
POMEROY ...,. Donations of two
pairs of crutches and an oxygen
gauge were acknowledged during a
meeting of the Laurel Cliff Better
Health Club meeting Thursday night
at the home of Mrs. Doris Shook.
Mr. and Mrs. Trell Schoenleb
donated the oxygen gauge, while the
crutches were donated by Mrs. Ann
Mash. Money donations were also

Presentation
slated Sunday
POMEROY - The Eagle Award,
the highest award in scouting, will
be presented to Terry Snowden at 2
p.m. Sunday, Sept. 23, at the First
Baptist Church in Middleport.
Terry is a sophomore at Eastern
High School and a member of
Pomeroy Troop 249. He has been
assistant patrol leader, patrol
leader, scribe, senior patrol leader,
leadership corps, and a member of
the Order of Arrow dance team of
Troop 249.
He is the son of Doris Snowden,
Pomeroy, and Jerry Snowden,
Doarville, Ga. There will be a
reception foUowing the ceremony.
SESSION SLATED
CHESTER-Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, will meet at 8
p.m. Tuesday at the hall. Q.larterly
birthdays will be observed and
potluck refreshments will be served.

.

1 n this age of rapidly rising
hospital and nursing home

costs~

more and more peo-

ple are cari ng for a sick,

disabled or elderly family
me_mbe'r at home .

If you are carl no for
someone In tne home,
we can help you . We
carry a complete line Of

home health needs.
Feel free to ask any of
our professional sTaff
for assistance in selec·

ting tne aids which will

benefit you and your pa·

•24 SKond Ave.

Golllpolis, Ohio

Here in Gallia County
Allstate can save you 10%
on "Good Hands" insurance
for your new home. •

W

F'or .vva n.;,you've
Sl'en a nd heard
H d verti~i ng

about

Allsta te Homeowners ins urance .
And now, ifs uva ilable hen'. at our
age-ncy . But . d1d you know that if'
your house 11:. .1) .vea rs nld or le!"!s, vou
may QU &lt;Ji i(v fc, r All s l ;1lt.&gt;'~ "New ·
Hou!"e JO Pc rn!nt Dist·ount " un your
bas ic pre miu m'!
·
All shtte ha ~ fou nd it cos ts lei-!'
to in sure new{lr homt•!', and th ey' r(&gt;
passing this sav 1ng14 nn to _you ,
Give u ~ a call 11nd l! d in on tht'
.
sa vings
.I

i1itlna

Dee Dillon, R.N.
Manager

lleaJh:;al lla•llll•
Spring Valley Plaza, Gallipolis

446·2206

All" •~ 111&gt;11!001 ' '

'-

'"'I" om

"'M~'"·~ I!

Nir ~Johnson , Acc ountant l;xecutive
4)1 !nd f '~ Phone 446·1761
Gallipolis

I·r1 ~
'::1.

p

+++

Judy Eichinger is the new
secretary of the Eastern Local Band
Boosters. Judy is such an excellent
worker and such a publlc sp!iited
individuaL Somehow, Judy's name
was OOJitted from the group of new
officers and we can 't have that. We
have to keep those good ind ians

I

going - heaven knows we've got a
shortage of them now.

++ ++

So sorry to hear of the serious
illness of Phyllis Mullen, confined to
the Holzer Medical Center . " Phil"
ha s always been a mighty agreeable
and pleasant person to have around .

+++
The search Is on for Mrs. America
of Ohio to represent the State of Ohio
at the national event at Las Vegas in
1980.
The state 'winner receives a
number of prizes and judging is
predominantly on personality, poise
and beauty competition with careful
consideration given to family life
and participation in community
affairs.
Those interested may write to
Mrs. America Ohio Pageant, c-&lt;&gt;
Ted J . Stepien, President;
Nationwide Models, The Penthouse,
Clevelafld
Plaza
Towers ,
Cleveland, Ohio 44115.

+++
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hobstetter

quietly observed their 50th wedding
anniversary on Aug. 24 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital where Mrs.
Hobstetter was confined at the time.
They had not planned a big
observance . Mrs. Hobsietter has
since been returned· to her home on
Lincoln Hill Road. Just after she
awakened Thursday, she sang the
Happy Birthday Song to Edioon and in view of her illness, that took a
lot of energy. Thursday's birthday
was also a quiet observance.

+++

if you're getting your birthday

See bear

NEW HAVEN- A bear In New
Haven?
TWo residents of that community
b4!1ieve there well may be.
Reba Vance and Betty Belcher,
residents of Fourth Street In New
Haven, both claim to have seen an
animal resembling a bear on
separate occasions.
Mrs. Vance satd she saw It about
three weeks ago around 3 a.m. in the
morning. "I saw 'It plalnly... the
street light was shining. It stood at
my gate lor a few seconds." She said
~he called her husband leo to look at
it and he also agreed It looked like a
bear. "It dellnltely W!IS not a dog,"
she said.
Mrs. Vance said she told Mrs.
Belcher about It and she had thought
it was funny until a week later when
she aiJo saw the animal. According
to Mrs. Belcher, "It was dark and
about 5 a.m. I bad gollen up and
looked out the kitchen window,like I
always do every morning, when I
saw it." She said It did not walk like
a dog, but rather waddled, and when
It seemed to be headed toward the
riverhanJ&lt; at the end of Fourth

I

l~Ji~

no problem when Jim Walter builds!
.

R'e gardless of what you've heard or read in the news, if you own
property, mortgage financing is no problem when Jim Walter
builds for you . Jim Walter has PLENTY of readily available dollars
to build new homes for his customers. In add~ion, to help keep the
cost of owning a new home as low as possible, Jim Walter does
NOT add "points" or "closing costs" that others charge to furthe r
inflate the price you pay.
Jim Walter offers more than 20 LOW COST homes that can be
built on your property to almost any stage of finish, from the shell
home to one Ihat is 90% complete. This means that you'll have an
opportunity to cut an already_low price even more , simply by
dotng some of the ;nstde fmtshtng work yourself. Do the electrical
work, install the plumbing, finish the wallboard. You tell us how
much you would like to do . The more you do, the more money
you'll save. And , with today's high-spiraling costs, everyone
wants to save money.

Three car accident

j I

checked Saturday
I

You can count on Jim Walter

WE DO IT RIGHT

Gel complete information and cost ol build in~ on yol!r property .
Gel the facts about our INSTANT mortgage ftnancing that lakes
only a day or two instead of the usual weeks or somelimes
months for credit approval. Let us tell you about Jim Wa~er
custom construction methods. We want you to see the homes we
build and lell you about all of the money-saving options offered to
you. We want you to know your cost first hand and what yollr
monthly mortgage payment would be to build any one of the more
than 20 models on your property to the stage of completion you
choose. We want you to have ALL the facts about building the Jim
Watter way. Call, stop by or send the coupon to our nearest
display park. WE DO IT RIGHT!

•••••••••••••••
I
1
Jim~la/lsrHDMEB 1I
I
I
II
CHESAPEAKE, OHIO .45619
GOOSE CREEK, S. C. 29445
I
FREE FULL-COLOR CATALOG!
Fill out and mail. No obligation.
JIM WALTER HOMES

P. 0. Box 277
U. S. Hwy. 52 North
Ph. 553-6710

I
I

"We know people are laughing at
us, but we know what we saw," Mrs.

Vance said.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted - Miles Puckett,
Salyersvitle, Ky .; Eunice Nutter,
Reedsville;
Clarence
Hili,
Syracuse;
James Meadows,
Portland.
Discharged - Billy Runion,
Stella Kloes, Harold Stobart,
Dorothy Demosky, Loia Gibbs.

+++

.......
---- ---1 ~~::ph•• I•• ........., STATI __
I

~C;,~

Zlr _,_·-

1

1 own

pre~rty

in

POMEROY
A 90-hour
emergency v1ctim care training
program will be held in Coolville at
th e fire station with registration to
be held Tuesday night.
Those attending will meet each
Tuesday and Thursday from 7 to 10 ,
p.m. and the training program will
include 78 hours of classroom work,
10 in hospital work and two hours of
squad observation .
The fee will be detennined by the
number taking the course. Those
taking the course mllllt have a high
school education including G. E. D.
and must hold an Ohio driver's
license.
The course is sponsored by
Southeastern Ohio Emergency
Medical Service and the Tri-County
Vocational School.

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?

NAMI _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____

- - -Ceunty.

••••••••••••••'J

~~

~~~~\.·
.

are foUoWed nrm tJureau will

In-

form ibl member&amp; d. the alternate
Utter legialatioo · and the depoelt
legislation.
"U nothing bappenaln the General
AJeembly, we will forget about supporting any type ol altenulte plan
and give full support to the bottle
bill,'' he concluded.

GALLIA 446·5554
MEIGS 992-5554
JACKSON. 2!6~5554

foreground ta the,.back are the Reed, Riggs, Adleta,
Massar, Gloeckner and Elberfeld homes, all ol which
look almost lclentical today.

Car demolished in Friday mishap

Peeps. • •
Continued from Page A-2
Ohio Scrtppe-Howard Bureau. On
that date it was on page 10, and the
last paragraph was a Gallipolis local
item, and here it ill:
"Fawcett called bargain.
"Novice G. Fawcett, retired
·president ol Ohio State University,
bas landed an1. .,500 con.Sultant contract with the Ohio Board of Regents
to help trace the careers d recent
college graduates. 'You can't get a
better bargain than that,' says
Regent Bob Evans, the sausage king
from Rio Grande."

vehicle driven by Chauncy K.
Johnson, 59, Gallipolis.
The Nolan auto was demolished.
There was slight damage to the
Johnson vehicle.
In further action, four citations
were issued Friday by city pollee.
Richard L . Chapman, 32, Crown
City, was cited on a charge of DWI.
Cited on charges of shoplifting
were Charles A. Morrioon, 41,
Vinton, and Mavine Roark, M ,,
Gallipolis.
him in the "slab!" while working at
Mary P. Myers, 47, Patriot, was .
Double Creek. Dl'. Fred Cromley at- · cited on a charge of assured clear
tended him and said some ribs were
distance .
broken.

GALUPOUS - One auto was
demolished during a two-vehicle
accident investigated Friday by
Gallipolis City Police.
Called to the BCent, on Pirie St.,
just east of Second Ave ., at 9:55
a.m., officer&lt;~ report . an auto
operated by Anthony W. Nolan, 19,
Patriot, pulled from a private lot
into the path of a an east bound

GRANDMA GWOOD'S diary:
Before we pick up some more of the
bard work Cou.sin A. Don Pope did
on hill grandmother's diary, let 's
straighten out a misconception Grandma Gwood is not an alias for
Grandma Emma Gatewood, who 20
yean ago walked the Appalachian
Trall twice and also walked across
the continent to the ·Pacific coast.
Tile two grandmothers were of two
entirely diHerent generations. The
one who8e diary we bring you
serially was Mary, and her husband
was Will. Here's Grandma Mary
Gwoocl's diary :
Aug. 17, 1885 - The rainstonns
were terrible this summer. Jan . 10,
1816 - It ill 22 degrees below zero,
windy, and there IB eight inches of
snow on the ground. July 21,111116 Uncle Wayne Kerns was elected
auditor at GalllpoiiB. Aug. 2, 111116 Sister and her children carne up
from Cincinnati on the Boone. Aug.
19, 1886- Jim Gwood's horse kicked

SEALY

"'

COMFORTABLE SHOES.
COMFORTABLE PRICE.

ssggs

'

'

Treat youraall to eon. flexible t.laure footwear
from Florthelm. Premium material• teamed ·
..vllh Florahelmcraltllmanahlp make thue
tlghtwelghta comfortable favorites.

MATTRESS SALE

$4995

TWIN
SIZE
SETS ONLY

........

10.294%

'.•

81N FRANKLIN CO.

WAS '59.95

90-hour training
session announced

llo\o iiiO ntottll tfliu l

I would lilo:e to hove more informcllion ond the c:ott
of ·bulldinta on my praperty . I underJtond there would
be no obligation to buy end that you would giYe me
the1e fatll frttlt al tharge .

If rvrel ,.,.,. pleaw 1ive direction• _

WE'LL BUILD ON YOUR PROPERTY TO ANY STAGE
OF FINISH FROM THE SH~LL UP TO 90% COMPLETE.

MIDDLEPORT - 111ree cars
were damaged in an accident. on S.
Sec011d Ave ., at 4:32a.m. Saturday.
Police said an auto driven by Andy
Stewart, Middleport, hit a parked
car which was shoved by the impact
into another parked car.
Stewart was taken to Ve terans
Memorial Hospital by th e
Middleport Emergency Squad. His
car was heavily damaged while
damaged to the two parked vehicles
wer lighter.
Several charges are expected to
be filed against Stewart, police said.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the office of Dr. James
Conde at 10:18 a .m. Friday for Edith
Spencer, Middleport , who had a
hand injury. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

NC!f MUCH CHANGE- This section of Mulberry
Ave., m Pomeroy has changed very little since 1909
when this picture postcard was circulated. From the

street.

cards to Mrs. Grace Colwell - who
celebrated her 89th 011 Sept. 6 .::... _
FUNDS OISTIUBVTED
returned in the mail, let me advise
POMEROY
- State Auditor's
you that the address is Route I,
·E
.
Ferguson's
·office
Thomas
Vinto n, and not Pomeroy. Just
reported
that
a
iota!
of
readdress them and put them back
$1t,1149,877.1Xi.
in
public
assistance
_in the-mail . She'll be happy to hear
and special activities payments
from you .
were made in July to Ohio's 88
+++
counties.
Feel absolutely friendless ? Well,
Meigs County did not receive any
th en, it must be a little encouraging
public
assistance funds received
that at least the rabbits aren't after
S7
,833
.56
in special activities
you . Keep smiling, now .
payments.

COLUMBUS -,- Unless the mers are plagued with all types u
General A.Ssembly takes action to Utter on their fanns and would like
approve an alternate plan to control to see the litter problem solved. ·
Utter in the state, the Ohio t'ann However, the botues create an
Bureau Federation (OFBF ) will en- economic problem while other litter
courage a yes vote on Issue One in ,is a nuisance and creates esthetic
problems.
the November election.
"The plan needs to Include
During a meeting of the OFBF
Board of Trustees recently , the recycling which would save energy
board expr eased its disappointment and help clean up the envirorunent
with the progress of the committee for fanners and city folks alike," he
called Ohioans For A Practical Lit- said.
Farm Bureau recommends that as
ter Law which has failed to get ac ·
tion on a plan to control litter passed an alternative to the bottle bill which
calls for a deposit on bottles and
in the General Assembly.
" U legislators fail to enact a com- cans, .the General A.!sembly enact
prehensive Utter bill bY the end of legislation which would generate at
September, Farm Bureau will en- least $10 .million annually for a concourage a yes vote on the bottle bill trol program which covers aU litter.
Also, the plan must subsidize a
which is slated to appear on the
November ballot. There is no logical recycling program so that botues
reason why a Utter bill could not and cans be of sufficient value that
have been passed 10 years ago, five the containers will be disposed of at
yean ago, last year or even this recycling centers.
" Farm Bureau would like to see
year," said Wallace Hirschfeld,
Prealdent of OFBF, an organization the following action before the end ol
September : that a bill be passed by
of 78,000 farm famllies in Ohlo.
Farm Bureau recognizes the need one house d. the General Assembly
for a comprehensive litter program with the leaders of the other house
which includes all types of Utter and corrunitted to the passage of the
legislation and indication the Goveris not one restricted to just bottles
and cans. Hirschfeld. said that far- nor will give his signature ·io the
measure," said Hirschfeld.
According to him, if such actions

1'--~

·-

Now Av•ilable Through The

McGINNES5-STANLEY AGENCY I INC.

1

Fantt Bureau may support vote

- - ·- - - - - ~~~~
,___ - ·

Old Highway 52
P. 0. Box 250
Ph. 867-3153

BEAT OFTJIE BEND
Meigs High School vocal students
no doubt'will he missing Paige Hunt
this school year.
Mrs. Hunt is on a year's leave of
absence caring for her new baby - a
bouncing ~Joy , I'm told. Thus she
won't be at her vocal music post this
school year . Paige seemed to have
something going for students every
minute and especially those in
Broadway musicals the past two
years. The young people put in long,
long hours - as did Mrs. Hunt - in
preparing for the musicals, but they
seemed to love every minute of the
work involved.

Haven

j residents

By Bob Hoeflich

++ ++

Where words are not en ough ,

IAWNEY JEWELERS

rI
~h~ Bend
II

~---------- --·,New

for senior citizens.

tlent .

acknowledged from Mrs. Neva
Grim, the Easter$y and Casto
families.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs presided at
the meeting during which time plans
were made for the annual anniversary party on Oct. .ll with
members to take a covered dish and
their own table service.
Officers elected for the year were
Mrs. Jac~resident; Mrs. Iva
Powell, vice president; Mrs. Ann
Mash, secretary; and Mrs. Bertha
Parker, treasurer. A get-well card
was sentto Carman Evans, and Mrs. ·
Jacobs acknowledged flowers
received during her hospital.i7.ation.
The Lord's Prayer in linison
opened the meeting. Mrs. Mash had
the secretary's report, and Mrs.
Bertha Parker, the treasurer's
report.
Mrs. Jacobs and Mrs, Freda Van
Inwagen served refreshments with
Mrs. Donna Gilmore giving grace.
others attending were Mrs. Ruby
Frick, Mrs. Jean Wright and Mrs.
Della Curtis.

STRANGE CARGO
LONDON (AP) - The ground
manager of the animal hostel at
Heathrow Airport recently opened
three unmarked sacks he found on
board a jumbo jet.
Out came two spitting cobras, six
E~yptia n puff adders and seven
other snakes. They were claimed by
heir owner three days later.

-

A mini "yesteryear" observance
will be held on Friday, Oct . 5, at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
11
Yesteryear"'
th e annual
observance just got to be too much of
a hassei and so is being reduced in
SC'Ope and is called a fall festival .
During the event, apple butter will
be made over an open fire and it will
be sold to the public at $2.50 a quart .
if you want apple )lutter - and
many, many do buy from the center
each year - you are required to
provide your own clean jar. Soup
beans will also be cooked over an
open fire and there will be scads of
entertainment throughout the
observance which is 11 a.m. to Bp.m:
There will be games and a cake
decorating contest . The latter event
is supposed to be a real highlight
since a nwnber of Meigs County
women are involved in cake
decorating right now.
The festival is, of course , open to
the public and is certainly not just

ARE YOU
CARING FOR
SOMEONE
AT HOME?

the PRESIDENT -4 Bedroom• -2 B•lh•
sar "I lo~e you" .._,.ith a spa rkling C olumb ia Diamond Ring.
No other symbo l speaks ol
lOve with so much eloquence.

Masor. County Deputy Sheriff G.D.
Kaylor is investigating the mishap.
While details are still sketchy, It is
believed the Morgan car went left of
center and struck the Church
vehicle.
Morgan was pinned in the
wreckage foUowing the collision and
was freed by member of the Point
Pleasant Fire Department em·
ploying their "Jaws of Life". ·
Both vehicles were demolished.
Point Pleasant' s Burdette
Addition was the scene of a minor
accident Friday morning Involving a
· - - parked car.
Deputy Harry Rhodes said
Gregory S. Lane, 22, Ansted, W.Va.,
was backing his van out of a
driveway in heavy rain when he ·
struck a car belonging to Lydia L.
Sanders which was parked off the .
pavement in front of her home at 100
Burdette Addn.
Damage to the Sanders car was
estimated at 1200. There was no
damage to ihe van.

A-7- The Sunday Tlmes~ntinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 19711

"The Home of Good Shoe•

422 Main Street

175·2010

Sine~

1903"

Point Pluunt

p
•

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-~

••
f

t

•••
•
•

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•r
~

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OhioValley Bank
Every Tuesday, the U. S. Treasury announces th"
current auclion discount rate to be paid on six-month
Treasury Bills. The following Thursday, Ohio Valley
Bank brings it l)ame ... a six-month, $10,000 minimum
CD directly related to the six-month Treasury Bill .

thru Wed., Sept. 19

••
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lllleresl rale . Long-term interest rat"e for a short-terin
guaranleed investment. And at maturity, you can renew
yuur CD at lhe prevailing rate. All accounts insured op
lo $40,000 by the FDIC ..

••

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"••
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Federal regulations require a substantial Interest penalty for
premature withdrawal of certificate funds nd prohibit compounding of
Interest durJng !he term of this deposit cateoory.
*The actual return to Investors on Treasury Bills Is higher than the
discount rate offered.

�B-1 -The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 18, 11171

B
The l'!!l'e&amp;tly com·
pleted lllel~rbou­
ae at Raccooa
Creek Coooty
PUll ltaudl On a

VISIT OUR 29TH ANNIVERSARY SALE TODAY. ITEMS MARKED DOWN THROUGHOUT OUR STORE
TO SHOW OUR APPRECIATION FOR YOUR .FINE PAT~ONAGE THROUGH THE YEARS.
IT'S OUR DESIRE TO SERVE YOU IN THE FUTURE~
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PURCHASE ANY LIVING ROOM SUITE
IN STOCK AND RECEIVE A $100
TRADE-IN FOR YOUR OLD SUITE, PWS
OUR ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

rate
urn1ture

FOR ONLY 29~ YOU WILL
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A SET OF TABLE LAMPS VAWED FROM

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bordered by the

waterway from
which the part
derives 1&amp;'1 aame.
Opening tbls
sprtnc, Pbaae I
facWUea IDclllde
picnic areas,
playing Heidi aDd
recreaUollllllacD·
Illes.

WHEN YOU PURCHASE ANY BEDROOM SUITE
STARTING AT $499.95 AND UP, YOU WILL
RECEIVE A NEW MATTRESS AND BOX
SPRINGS FOR THE AMAZING PRICE OF

29~

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A BEDDING VALUE OF $159.90.
Name Brands such as 8aclsett, Singer,

Find something special for every room in your home ...
for every mood, and every decor! We have a
full range of quality crafted furniture groupings and components value-priced to your budget!

$fi0 TO $120 A PAIR.

•

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Webb, Tell City and Kemp &amp; Pulaski.

At Raccoon Creek

Phase I to open in Spring

**

RARE VALUES 01 LAMPS

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29TH ANNIVERSARY

'A people 'spark '

TV SPECIAL

DINETTE SPECIALS

25'~

GET .THIS
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FOR ONLY

DIAG ONA L

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NOW ON SALE AT

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With the purchase of a 2S"
Zenith Color TV set, during our
"Anniversary Sale", you can
purchase a 9" Zenith Black &amp;
White TV for only 29c.

95

Choose this set today for your home. This set is a 42"
round ext~ns!on table, stain resistant top that will ex ·
tend to 6~ w1th two leaves .... The top is 1'!4'' thick! The
Side cha•rs are constructed of all wood, no plastic'
Available in four finishes: Maple, Honey Pine Dark
Pine, or Antique Black. .
'
Other Sets to choose from starting at $229.95.

OI A GQ f~A L

SAVINGS FOR .EVERY ROOM

1980's NOW IN STOCK
ASK ABOUT OUR PLUS 9 POLICY

IN YOUR HOMEI

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Power .fin o\t;toiiiOI

GALLIPOUS - Construction on Pbaoe I Park Site at the Raccoon
Creek County Park Is expecte4,_to be completed by the end of October,
with a projected opening date of'lipring IIIIKI.
JOlette Balter, 0 .0. Mclnl)n Park Director, said recently the com·
pletlon r1 Phue I would pennlt such park activities aa picnidd.ng,
reunlOO., organized b&amp;II gaines, hiking, and youth day campe. '
''By ned spring the park will be available for outdoor edqcatioo and
!ICOIItlniJ activities," Baker said. "Even Ulough the park will not be
ccmpletely developed, the potential will be there for a great nwnber of
activities."
Pbaoe I recreation facUlties currently under construction incl~e a
group picnic shelter and picnic areas, hiking trails, basketball courts,
ballflelda and totlot equipment.
In IIIIKithe Park District plans to offer a Swruner Youth Day Camp,
Junior Naturalist Prpgram and provide opportunities for an outdoor
lldence learning laboratory to be utilized by school clllll8es, youth
organizations,scouu and '-H clubs.
·
Pbaoe I facilities are located on a 66 acre penlnBula surrounded by
Raccoon Creek, which flows for several thouaand feet through the
perk site.
"A lot of people seem to feel we are just developing a county
faclllty, •• Baker said, •'I see the park district getting involved with the
Cllllllllunlty to develop recreational and civic prograrns-ilnd, as
money becomes available, developing satellite perks throughout
Gallla County."
"We want to get peQple in area clubs involved in the actual development of the park; to realize that the perk belong.~ to tbem-113 a ·
people's park," Baker continued.
The Park EJ!strlct wu created In Apri11978, under the authority of
the Gallla County Probate Court, following four years rl study and survey by a CcmmunltY Development Study Conunlttee formed in 1974.
In January 1976 the name of the Park Oi!trlct was changed from the
Gallla County Metropolitan Park District to the 0 .0. Mclnl)n Park
Olstrlct u a 1aatlng memorial to the noted columnist, whose boyhood
home was Gallipolis.
On November 15, 1976, the Park Board selected a design, representative of both the park and Its honoree, submitted by Ellen Wetherholt
to serve aa the official logo of the Park Oi!trlct. The logo is a top hat •.
cane, and glove superimposed on a buckeye leaf segment.
A Oealgner's Forum conducted a random survey of Gauta County
residents in 1976 to detennine recreational needa, desires, preferences
and attitudes. At the same time, two public meetingll were held to
gather additional cltlzen input. From the survey, the Designer's
Forum prepared a comprehenalve park and recreation master plan.
.In the spring 111977, the Park Board, comprised of Or. Clyde Ev81l8,
Or. WU!lam B. Jooes and Thomas E. Jones, imdthe Designer's Forum
held a serle11 of infonnational meetings around the county to present •
the master plan to residents.

In the winter and spring months of 19'18, the Park District conducted
a series rl recreational progi'IIIIIS throughout Gallla. Those programs
were men's basketball, women 's volleyball and coed golf cllnlcs.

In 1980 the Park District plans to
offer a Junior Naturalist J&gt;rogram,
Summer Youth Camp and provide
opportunities lor an outdoor science
leamiag laboratory to be utilized by
school classes, youth organizations,
scouts and 4·H clubs.

Raccoon Creek flows lor several
thousand feel through tbe park site.
A canoe Uvery Is Included in future
development plans, along wltb
various forms of water actlvltlea.

onaM /TAG
big load dryer

• 89 C -CIIY Ia "-ndM yout bit ~- •
low teiTII). Stre1m.qi-He11 drying • Fnt
erl!trQy tlllc~tnl op.tatiOI'I • Dura~
dryer drum finish

BIG LIVING ROOM TAILI SALE. MANY liROUPS TO CHOOSE
FROM. NEW SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED.

Photos and copy by Larry Ewing

Other

Park Director Josette Baker
addresses 0.0. Mdntyre Park
Commission members, from left,
Dr. Clyde Evans, Dr. wnuam B.
-.,,. 'f1tumas, and Thomas E. Jooes.

'

"

,.

�B-2- The Sunday Times-5entinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 19'19

50th ·

. :..-:·.·.·.··

•

anntversa.ry
Sunday
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and Mrs.
Leland Kirby, Third Street, New
Haven, will celebrate their SOth
wedding anniversary, Sunday,
Sept. 23, with an open house at their
home.
Leland Kirby and Alice Brown
were united in marriage Sept. 28,
1929, by the Rev. L. G. Crew at
Union.
Hosting the event will be their
daughters, Mrs. William (Erma)
Folmer and Mrs. Marion (Leota)
- Dingey .
The Kirbys will be at the home to
receive friends and relatives from 2
to 5 p.m.

PTO meets
Heverly Wi/cox

Miss Wilcox is engaged
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs. Ray. mood L. Wllcox, Middleport, are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Beverly Ann, to Robert B.
Fittro, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
RObert B.. Fittro, Parkersburg.
Miss Wilcox, a 1977 graduate of
Meigs High School, is currently a
junior at Marshall University. Her
fiance is a 1975 graduate ol

Bridgewater Raritan East High
School in New Jersey, and is
presently the manager of Wendy 's,
Third Ave., Huntington, W. Va.
The wedding will be an event of
Dec. 29 at the Bradbury Church of
Christ. Maid of honor will be Miss
Sara Graham, Hurricane, W. Va.
and the best man will be Peter
Regan, Martinsville, N.J.

Tuppers Plains Boosters meet
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Dailey and Anna Rice; fourth grade,
Tuppers Plains Boosters met Gay Ann Burke, Carolyn Tripp and
Thursday in the school cafeteria.
Carolyn Ritchie; fifth grade, 'Karen
Norma Arbaugh, president,. Baker, Libby Sayre, Carol Barnett,
introduced Tom Gumph who Ann Collins and Marjorie Wolfe;
discussed the new school year and sixth grade, . Sally Caldwell, Anna
who in turn introduced the new
Rice, Nancy Schul and Dorothy
Eastern Local School District Stout.
Superintendent, Richard Roberts.
Refreshments were served by the
Roberts
express~d
his officers.
appreciation for the opportunity to
meet parents and stressed that his
office is more than willing to assist
the boosters and parents in
whatever way it could. ·
The committees for the upcoming
NEW HAVEN - Whitney D~wn
school carnival to be held Oct. 6,
Roush was honored on her second
gave their reports. Sally Caldwell
birthday recently at the home of her
and Carolyn
Ritchie are coparents, Mr. and Mrs.Harry Roush,
chairman for the caarnival and
New Haven.
Joyce Ritchie is chairman of the
Helping celebrate the occasion
kitchen committees.
·were her two sisters,Kristin, and
A combined meeting for room
Marla Dee, grandparents, Mr. and
mothers and other interested
Mrs. William Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
persons will be held Monday at 1
Joe Roush and Minday and Stacey
p.m . at the school for finalization of
Hester, all of New Haven; Mrs.
the October event.
Bonnie Freeman, Gary, Michael and
The attendance award was won by
Deanna all of Minersville and
the sixth grade class of David
grandmother, Esther Scotty
Weber. Projects for the year were
Simpson, Pomeroy.
discussed and several suggestions
A "Bugs Bunny" cake was mad'e
were made and will be voted on at
and served by her grandmother
the October meeting.
Simpson . In addition to the cake, ice
Open house at the school is
cream and Kool Aid were served.
scheduled for November and plans
Whitney was presented many
gifts.
for this event will also be discussed
at the October meeting.
Homeroom mothers for the school
year, first name chairmen, are: first
grade, Linda Wilson, Roberta
BOOSTERS TO MEET
Murphy, Mary Robinson, Shirley
RACINE--The
Southern Local
Harris and Florence Goff; second
Band
Boosters
will
meet at 7:30p.m.
grade, wis Deem, Linda Fitch, Sina
Tuesday
at
the
high
school music
Murphy, Lois Wilson, Anna
All
interested
persons
as well
room.
Blackwood, and Norma Araugh;
as
band
st
udents
are
invited.
third grade , Joyce Ritchie, Mary

Birthday noted

C 0 M I N G...... One Day Only
THURSDAY, SEPT. 20
TIME: 12 til 5 p.m.
BABY LAND ..... 430 2nd Ave.
in ...• Gallipolis

-Southern Photo's-

LIFE SIZE
LIVING COLOR
PACKAGE SPECIAL

REEDSVILLE - Riverview PTO
held its first meeting of the new
school year with new officials,
Marlene Putnam, president;
Yvonne Sisson , secretary, and
Geraldine Holsinger, treasurer, in
charge.
Plans were completed and
committees named for the school
carnival to be held at the school
Saturday, October 13. The meeting
was opened by Trent Upton, a fourth
grade student, who led the group in
the flag pledge followed by the
Lord's Prayer.
·
The room banner and a cash prize
were awarded to grade one for
having the highest percentage of
parents in attendance. A special
welcome was extended to all in
attendance, especially new parents
of children at the schooL
Refreslunents were served.

B.J- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4::!0 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday - Movie, 11 a.m., "Night
the Ghost Got In"; Square Dance,

Hamburgers, hotdogs , cake, ice
ved to Wend! Collins, Diane, Donald,
Trina and Kandi Bachtel, Ann,
Jeremy and Philip Phalln, Colena
Mowery, Torn, Debbie, Clu'is and
Amy Willlams.

BOARD TO MEET
GALUPOLIS - ' The regular .
meeting ol the Gallia County
District Ubrary Board of Trustees
will be held Tuesday, Sept. 18 at 5
p.m. in the Rare Book Room of the
Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
Ubrary, 641 Second Ave.

Sending gifts were her grandparents, May Mayle, Mr. and Mrs.
E&lt;rtil Collins, Gerri Mowery, Debbie
and Kenny White, Leo Young, and
Rllger Mowery.

Christi Stanley

POMEROY -Announcement is
made of the engagement and approaching marriage of Christi Sue
Stanley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Stanley, Albany, to Glen Alan
Grega, ·son of Mr. and Mrs .
Frederick Grega , Coraopolis, Pa.
Miss Stanley, a 1973 graduate of
Meigs High School, is employed at
Murphy Mart in the Athens Mall.
Grega, a 1973 graduate of Montour
High School in PP.IUIS)'Ivania , is
employed by the G. C. Murphy Co.
Distribution Center in McKeesport,
Pa.
The wedding will be an event of
Sept. 22 at 2:30 p.m. in the Helen
Mauck Galbreath Memorial Chapel
on the campus of Ohio University
with the Rev. Fr. Charles Calabrese

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GALUPOLIS
.Gallipolis
resident Brant Adams has been
tapped for membership in the Pi
Chapter of the Society of Pi Kappa
Lambda, the National music honor
society. Induction ceremonies
were held on May 7th at the
University of Cincinnati where
Adams will complete his Master of
Music degree in music theory at the
College Cooservatory of Music· this
coming spring.
The society of Pi Kappa Lambda
Is the only college honor society in
music, and Is so ret-ognized by its
membership in the Assoc iation of
College Honor Societies. Since Its
establishment over 60 years ago, Pi
Kappa Lambda has consistent!)'
adhered to the prin ci ples of its
founders in honoring scholarship ,
musi cl.anship
and
personal
character. Chapters of the Society
annually ex-tend invitations to
membership to the highest ranking
students Irom junior, senior and
graduate classes. The elections are
the responsibility of a fa culty
committee representing aU of the
active members of the chapter .
Adams, son of Mrs. George Adams
of Lower River Road, holds a
graduate teaching assistantship,
and most recently was employed by
Kings Productions of Cincinnati as a
keyboard player at the Carowinds
theme park in Charlotte, N.C.

Rio Gran de, Ohio

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in Art Education this December.
Her fiance will be attending Ohio
Slate University and is presently
employed by Riverside Hospital,
Columbus.
The wedding will be an event of
December ·29 at the St. . Louis
Catholic Church in · Gallipolis.

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HOMECOMING SUNDAY
POMEROY - Homecoming at the
Wesley Chapel Methodist Church
will be held on Sunday, Sept. 23. Sunday school will be at 10 a.m.; basket
dinner at noon, and the afternoon
program to begin at I :30 p.m.
Special singing will be by the
Lemley family . The public is invited.

Unisonic
readout,

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KEMPER CABINETS

--675-2318-

1

.,..,.,. ,

Our Reg. S18.97

Hotd •em

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.

FREE ESTIMATES

Portable
6 /W solid slale
set has quali ly
t't., ~onal

Calculator

Photo Album

2 - 517 .,

tO ·- Wallet s

OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30
SUNDAY 1-'

joins music society

GATEWAY CUPP.EB. FLEET

DIANA ASH
RACINE 9494-2320

GALUPOUS - Mr. and Mrs .
James Coonen, of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Manreen LOuise , to Carl
Albert Cox , son of Major and Mrs.
Jimmy Cox , of Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas.
The bride-elect will graduate from
Ohio State University wilh a decree

SUN., MON.,
TUES •. SALE

j

Maureen Coonen engaged

...... "" ............................... ..

ANNOUNCING

NQW AT B-A-BEAUTY

Maureen Coonen

officiating.
A reception at the Sportsman Inn
will follow the ceremony.

Tracy Coliins

HURRY. •• MORE SAVINGS FOR
~'DOLLAR DAYS''

I

·Engagement announced

enlighten and educate those who
fear cancer in Meigs County and
possibly throughout Ohio if chosen
Miss Hope of Ohio," Sharon Michael
stated.
The final selection for Ohio's nurse
of Hope will be held Nov. I through
Nov. 3, at the Nell House Motel,
Columbus. Miss CUUums will speak
for two minutes on cancer; During
the coming year, Miss Cullurns will
be speaking to health professionals
and to the general public.
Michael explains the meaning of
"hope." H represents the need for
help; 0 ill for open-ness; P represents the need for planning; E ts for encouragement. Tho!re who have any
questions or are In need of help in
any way may call992-753L

Sharon Michael of the Meigs County Cancer Unit announced that
Ginger CUUums has accepted the
challenge to be Miss Hope of Meigs
County.
Mills CUUums is a graduate of
Holzer School of Nursing and
presently working at the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis. She
resides on Rock Springs Road,
Pomeroy.
The Miss Hope program Is an annual county program which Is a part
of the statewide effort being conducted by the American Cancer
Society to select Miss Hope ri Ohio.
This makes the second year for the
Meigs County Unit to participate in
the program.
"This Is an opportunity for Miss
Cullums to spread hope and to

cream, chips and Kool-Aid were ser-

12 : ~p.m.

Tuesday - Blood Pressure Clinic,
10 a.m.-12 noon; Movie, II a.m.;
Chorus, 12 ::!0 p:m.
Wednesday - Social Security
Representative, 9:30 a.m. -12:30
p.m.; Games !·2:30p.m.
Thursday - Nutrition Education,
II a.m., Diane Eberts; Kitchen
Band, 12:3().2p.m.
Friday- Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Menu .
Monday - Hamburger steak,
mashed potatoes - gravy, tossed
salad, fruit cocktail, bread, butter,
milk.
Tuesday -Macaroni and cheese,
buttered beets, 3-bean salad, oatmealcake, bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Pork chop, sweet
potatoes, applesauce, ice cream,
cornbread, butter, milk.
Thursday - Creamed chicken,
mashed potatoes, green beans,
pineapple, biscuit, butter, milk.
Friday - Tuna noodle casserole,
buttered peas, pear salad, chocolate
chip cookies, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttennilk served dally.
Please register the day before you
plan to eat. Register when you are at
the Center or call : 992-7886.

Meigs Miss Hope selected

POMEROY -A cookout was held
recently honoring Tracy Collins on
her fourth birthday. She Is the
daughter r:l Robert and Tina Colllns
r:l Pomeroy, and the cookout was
held at their home.

only

PHOTOGRAPHED

Turns jour years

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

3 Days Only

Our Reg . 9.88

SAVE!
Warm-Up Suits
R.eg .
Nvlnn

With

It Sizes.

~fr· in&lt;•~

m

Silex · Dry Iron
au tomtttiC
T emp -0 · G11 1de~

W1t l1

f a/J rt c

cha r t .

SAVE!
Auto Body Aid
Protective undercoating, prevents
rust,
deadens
sound.

riJ

Sale Price

SAVE $3.88
1'/z Ton Jach

Carpet Deodorizer
Freshens carpets as
you vacuum . 20-oz.'

�B~- TheSundayTimes-&amp;ntinei,Sunday, Sept.l6, 1979
H-I - Tht• Sunday Times.S.ntinel, Sunday. Sept. 16, 1979

Neville family ·reunion held at Point Pleasant

FA C Charity dance in October
.

· 'C"

..... ...

GALLIPOIJS - The RIYERBY
ROUND-UP will be held on Saturday
evening, October 6, at the Bob Evans
Shelter House in Rio Grande, Ohio.
This .will be the annual fund raising
event for the French Art Colony ,
chaired by Gwen carter and Jewel
Evans, ably assisted by Bill Carter
and Bob Evans.
According to Mrs. carter, an
e&lt;citing evening is in store for the
members and their guests who plan
to attend this unique affair , with
typical western style food and lots of
it, a talented square dance caller
who makes square dancing easy.
and some grea t entertainment
provided by an outstanding young
musician.

Elclon Pittenger from Chillicothe,
a recognized square dance caller
and instructor throughout this area
with 20 years of experience in both
ca llin g and tea ching, will be
featured at the Riverby Roundup.
He has taught 34 begiriner classes
and has called for one local club on a

.I

CAlLER - Eldon Plt1enger
from Cbllllcothe will be the caller
for the Rlverby Round~p, the a•
nual fund raising event for the
French Art Colony to be held on
Saturday evenllig, October 6, at
the Bob Eva118 Shelter HOUBe.

weekly basis for the past 19 yrars.
H~ is in demand by square dance
clubs all over Ohio and surrounding
states. ·
Recognized nationally, Pittenger
has been on the calling staff for II ol
the past 19 National Square Dance
Conventions, where dancers come
from each of the 50 states plus
foreign countries. He has called at
the last 19 state conventions in Ohio
and the last 5 in Michigan.
His
full-time job is in the
Engineering Department of the
Mead Corporatio n' s Research
Department, where he has been
employed for the past 24 years.
Details of availabillty of tickets
ard working committees will be
announced by Mrs. carter and Mrs.
Evans in the next few days. In the
meantime, members of the French
Art Colony are urged to mark thell
calendars for the Riverby Round-Up
on Saturday evening, October 6,
from 8 p.m. untU 12 midnight at. the
Bob Evans Shelter House in Rio
Grande.

TOTAL DOWN

SUNDAY
DEEM FAMI!..Y reunion Sll:lldaY
at Royal Oak Park; relatives and
friends invited.
COUNTY-WIDE prayer meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday at RuUand Community Omrch with Glen Bissell,
class leader.

wocid, Jerry, Lavona, and Michael Racine; Mr. and Mrs. John Flake,
Eberts, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Fulie, Adam and Andy, Colwnbus;
Mr. Mrs. Terry Harmon, Mid·
Edgar B. Neville, Eva and JOIM,
Chlc;kamanga, Ga.; Mr. and Mn. dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Glad·
William Perry, Teresa, BIBy, S!leila, din and family, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Wright,
Tangle and VIckie McDade, Leon;
Keith and Delores Aelker, Pat and &lt;llarl.es and Warren, Jr., Anita
Cindy, Penny, Lorin and Patsy, Mr. Wright and Kelly Renea, Columbus;
Marrlan Gladden, Ravenswood;
· and Mrs. Olarles Aelker; Pcmeroy;
Jean Andel'IIOII, OUver Neville and James Darrell, Aahton; Nedra
family, Veronica Northup and Napier, South Point; Betty Wycoff,
Nancy Scctt and David, AUlance;
family, Esther and Trudy Nott, Mr.
Grace
Neville, Parkersburg; Mr.
and Mrs. Garland Nott, Jake Nott,
and
Mrs.
Earl Styer, Mary Ann and
Anna Coon, Carrie HeBer, Newark;
John,
Betty
Martin, Robert Neville,
Mayme Harmon, Collmbwl; Mr.
Robert,
Jr.,
Pltt&amp;burgh, P!l.; Susan
and Mrs. Harold Hannon and
Hoehar,
Mlaty,
and ChastitY, Ravendaughter, BrideWater, Pa.; Judy
swood;
Mrs.
Bellllie
Rowe, 'Treilton,
Paraons, Inez, Ky.; Virginia Athey,
Midi.;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harold Barnett
Middleport; Edith Barnett and Kenand
Matbew,
WilmlngtGn.
ny, ~; Cbrts and Bette
Mr. and Mrs. George Rice,
Berge, Jodi and Bryan, Sparta,
Leisage,
W. Va.; Gordon and Coanle
Neva.; Dino and Juanita Levra,
Aelker,
Todd, SheW and Laura,
~o, Nev.; Edith Redmm, Adeline .
Cheslre;
Odell and Kelthann
Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Williams,
Donlta,
Sho!lda, Odell, Jr.,
Crawford, grandchlldrm, Sbane and
G•lllpolis;
James
and Helen JobnMichael, Point PleBIII!IIt. · .
son,
Mildred
Jobnlon,
Debbie CIOII·
WUey and Audrey Ours, Mayla
cb,
Mn.
RaDdlll
CJorJCI',
Otlllpolh;
Yoacllam and Naomi NevWe,

Jim and Betty Jenny, Jim, Jr., and
Wilma Jean, Katherine Terry, Bar·
bara Anthon)', Point Pleuant; Scot·\
tie, Barbara, Tara Gall and Troy
ADen Jlill; Donny and Donna Planta,
GalllpoUa Ferry; Rlcbard and Ann
Barnett and Jeffry Sayre, Bidwell;
Charles, Barbara and Coonie
Makeiomeone happy ...
Neville, Radnor; Roger Wallis,
Meigs Junloc High School student
Soutbtlde; B~ and Mary Darst,
Billy Anderson -wxlerwent spinal
Leon; Chuckle and Ailsa Chapman,
surgery Wednesday at E!latem TenGamet1e, Jobnand JOyce Wright,
neaaee Children's Hospital in KnoxRuth Fowler, Ruth Marie Wright
ville, Tenn.
.
and family, Colllllibu8; Kelthann
He's p~lng nicely but It'~
Whitlatch, Kathy, Kelly and Mike,
going to be a long time before he's ·
Reedsville.
, back into the swing of things. Billy ~
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Neville, Patwill be hospitalized for at least
tie, Unda and Mary, Ellen and Nor- · 'another eotlple ol weeks, and then
ma Jean Perry, Point Pleasant; Mr. when be returns home will be bed·
and Mrs. Jobn W. Neville, Jr.,
fast for three months. So It's not
Galllpolill; Mr. and Mn. Francis
going to l!e easy.
Poling, Mr. and Mrll. James Bard,
Both Bill and Jennifer were there
Sherry Lynn, Mary Ann and Billy'
with their 110n for the surgery and a
Marysville; Mr. and Mrs. John
couple ol days afterwards , and JenLoveday, Dan and Billy, Bidwell.
nifer will remain for the entire
period ol hospitalization. The other
Sir Francis Drake attacked the
children are with their grand·
Spanisb Annada in IS88.
parenta.

At Pennyfare we've been very busy keeping our promise made last September
17th. Tha.t promise was to make a genuine effort to keep your total food bill
down . That's when we introduced TOTAL DOWN PRICES. TOTAL DOWN PRICES
are designed to save our customers money as consistently as possible on their
weekly food bills. Since lost year this list has grown even larger; offering our
customers a wide variety of merchandise at consistently low prices. Look for
the black on yellow TOTAL DOWN signs in every aisle-they are your guide to
savings. So if you 're concerned with the rising cost of food, you should be shopping at Pennyfore where TOTAL DOWN PRICES are your guide to a lower food
bill, all year round.

SUPER MARKETS

RETAILS EmCTIVE THIU SAT., SEPr. 22, 1979
;'' ·-.

...................................... ,..'!'-·..................:...,...... __ ,,?,

au.PittUIMUSTMilDIIMID.YIATWDAYPOUGIIII .... MONOAYIV...... 'SOAMI

MORRIS CHAPEL UNITED
Methodist Church homecoming Sunday. School School at 10 a.m. Af.
temoon program 1:30 to 4. Everyone
welcome to attend and take part.
MINERSVILLE UNITED
METHODIST Church homecoming
Sunday. Simday School and worship
service at regular hours. Basket din·
ner 12 noon to I :30. p.m. Afternoon
service 2 p.m ..Singers lrom Rockbridge.
DINNER Sunday for Legion members who worked parking cars at the
Fair at Drew Webster Post Home at
!p.m.
LANGSVILLE Christian Church
annual homecoming Sunday with a
basket dinner at 12:00 p.m. ; af.
temoon service, 2 p.m., special
singing. Public invited.
THOSE WISHING to stop smoking
may attend tbe five-&lt;lay plan to
''kick .the . habit" at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy, beginning Sunday evening and continuing
through Sept. 20. The clinic begins at
7:00p.m. AU persons are welcome to
atlend.
·
ANNUAL HOMECOMING, Miner·
sville United Methodist Church Sunday with Sunday school, 9 a.m. and
morning service, 10, followed by
basket dinner at noon and program
at2p.m.
REV. EDDIE B\)FFINGTON guest
speaker at Forest Run United
Methodist Church Sunday at 9 a.m.
MONDAY
CANDYSTRIPERS of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will resume
meetings at 7 p.m. Monday at the
hospital. Girls interested in
becoming members are invited.
REYIVAL at SUver Run ko'reewill
Baptist Church, Monday through
Sept. 22, at 7:30 each evening with
Bill Price as the evangelist and .
special singing each evening; public_
invited.
MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES
holding work sessions on haunted
house Monday, Wednesday and
Thursday 7 p.m. at former Pomeroy
Senior High Building.
MIDDLEPORT Business and
Professional Women's Club Monday
at Columbia Gas Office in Mid·
dleport. The legislation committee
will be in charge. Mrs. Becky
Moehler is chainnan. Sheriff James
Proffitt will be the guest speaker.
Members urged to a!lend.

"~"THOROFARE

THOROFARE
SWISS STYLE

Boneless

(

1-lb.

Loaf

OLDaPMO

TACO SHELLS
k._....

58•

48'

··~a:;;i;~;~·w;:;;j;CHOICE

$

Bottom Round

:~:.

CUT FREE INTO: STUIS, ROAm or GROUND "Aity Way You Plefer''

19'

:
'

JIC
SUCCESS RICE •••~ ••••••••••
14-ox.loa

88(

VLAIIC-POLISH or KOSHIR

DILL PICKLES ••••••••••

TO MEET THURSDAY
• POMEROY - A meeting of the
Me1gs CoWJty Tuberculosis Board of
Trustees has been set for 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Inn .

JOHNSON'S

32.... ,.,

LEMON PLEDGE •••••••• ,.....c..

HI AD &amp; SHOULDIIS

LOTION SHAMPOO ••••

'I

I '

We're told that the Eaglea paid for
the cleanup wort around the IIJIIll
home next to the dry cleaners In
Pomeroy. It needed that!
At the senior cltlzena center, )lllnl
are moving right along for the fall
festival scheduled for Oct. 5.
11le plans Include a country 1tcn
with crafts, produce, canned goodl
and baked ltema, a·full day ol eotertalnment, game booths, and · a
cake decorating cohtest, along with
a speaker from the Ohio c.nmiiJBion on Aging. Apple butter will
be made that day and soup Ileana
will be cooked over an open fire and .
IO!d along with ccmbread. Mark
your calendar ...

POMEROY - Committees for tbe
19'19-1980 year of the Pcmeroy Pl'A
at the Ptmeroy Elementary School .
lave been announced by_Mn. Dina
Gryaka, president.
They are membership, Swde
Soulaby and Dorothy Roaeb;
playground, Hank Cleland, Geqe
1torn and Mike Wright; nya and
means, Barbara Fields, Rita Field,
and Cathy Cleland; and telepbme,
Nonna Baker, Sharon Mattoa and
Delores Hawk.
11le officers are Debbie Buck, flnt
vice president; Joan AndetiNI,
MCOIId vice president; Judy Wen'J,
secretary;
Darla Hawley,
treaaurer; Martha Gravel, ·
c:orr:e•ponding secretary, and
Delores Hawk, blltorian. ·
Delegates to the Meigl County
Council ol PI'A are Nonna Ba1r.er
and Jean Powell, Altematel are
Rita Field, Sharon Mattm and Jeu
Downie.
The first meeting will be beld MOllday at 7:30 p.m_. 1bere wiD be a
dlaeuaslon on planning tbe
Halloween carnival and allo 011
wbetbei- the PTA should conlidllr
c:hanglng to PI'O. Rev. Robert
Graves ol the Epilcopai Clarcb wiD
be the mlnlater having part 011 the,
program. Refreshmenta wiD be aerm by'the executive board.

1'1111 . .

..

Scouts, Pat lboma deserved a Utile
recognition.
She recently presented a
miniature of a bust ol Juliet Lon,
founder of girl scouts, ID. IP"
preciation for her volunteer wan.
11le bust iB hand rubbed durUtone
and is a copy of the me created by
noted sculptor l!;leanor Platt for the ·
Georgia Hall ol Fame.
And speaking ol scouting Activities are - moving into fall
swing. Becky Manldn and Martha
Graves are the new service aalt
directors and have already begun fl.
forts to get new troops organlled.
Leaders are needed in seveflll anu
110 If you are intere8ted In ieUlnc Involved, just call one ol them.

PTA committee ,;ned

COFFEE

• '

After six years aa service unit
director for the Blg Bend Girl

•••

DICAiftiNA11D

J

And Billy loves to get mall. Hil
day will be brighter If you 'lli'SIMIIJ.'
ber him with a card ... addreu, Bill
Anderson, Eas\ern Te11neuee
Children's Hospital, KnoltVIlle,
Tenn.

We're happy to report that Emma
Kay Clatworthy is recuperating
trom the hlp IIUI'gery wblc:h 111e ...
derwent on Tueaday at st. Mary's
Hospital in Hunttncton, W. Va. Sbe
espects to be IDipltaliled for
~ three weeb. Her bushend;
Jim, and daughter, Twila, are In
Huntington with her.

NftCAfl

...
• ••

By CharJene Hoeflich

Seems a few of the grancl and
reserve champions in showmanlblp
at the Meigl County junior fl1r
dldn 't make our puNiajwl lllta.
1bey were Jimmy Scbaekel, grand
cbalppion, and Kevin Napier, ._-.
ve champion, In duc:b and g-;
and Kevin Napier and Den11e
Stegall, botb with grand cbampl0111
and reserve champions in poullry.
Now that wrapa that up!

Bottom Round%" Thlekl•.
-~~~~
$199 httom Round Roast .. S1!!
'Rump
I~:;:.....
.
.
. $409
ij,..of Round Roast... sr- Stew
Beef • • • • • • •. · Jl.--.

STATE FARE-SLICED

..,.,
POPCORN
.......

$

wissStealc

5-FLAVORS-8-oz. Ctn.

White
Bread

BEEF

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Yo1urt

TUESDAY
LAFAYETIE White Shrine, 7:30
p.m., Leah Schoonover and Aile.!n
Carter , hostesses.
SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH
Athletic Boosters, for all sports and
cheerleaders, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
the junior high in Racin·e. All
ooosters urged to attend .

SMORGASBORD SLATED
POMEROY - The Pythian S1sters
Lodge at Wilkesvi lle will stage a
smorgasoord from 5 to 8 p.m.
Saturday at the hall to help raise
funds to pay for their building. Cost
of the dinner is $:1 for adults and $1 .25
for clli ldren .

mer presentation to be performed as a regular show m
September 21 and 28, curtain ap.m. , tickets $4 at the
door. D!Mer Theatre presentation September 22 and
29; for reservat10111 phone M8-9763, days, or 446-7aD,
malap. .

YFARE TOTAL DO
IYERSARY SALE

UD YOUI CMO.DUT

r---Social Cale~

•

"IT DEPENDS on what you pay," says El Gallo
(John Ecker) to the parents R08e811!1 Hughes and Andy
Ondera, three of the principals of the long running
muSical "l'he Fantasticka," Theatre's 35's third sum-

POMEROY - Tbe Neville family
reunlm waa held recently at Krodel
Parkin Point Ple.esant, W.Va.
Millie and ainglng was provided
by Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Neville, Mr.
and Mn. Jllinea Bard, Estber and
'l'nldy Nott, Dino and Juanita Levra.
It wu decided that the !tal reunion
wiD be held·on the ~ Saturday in
July atthe881De ·place.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Olarles Neville, Bob and Carl Ann
Keeton, Jimmie , Ruth and Chuckle,
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Sisson, Sheri
Mullen, Eureka star Route; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Neville, Springfield;
Charles · Neville, Kathleen Neville,
Mr. ·and Mrs. Uoyd Neville, Apple
Grove, W. Va.; Helen Roush, Mr.
and Mn. R~ld Rou.sh and Kim·
berly, Mason; Benjamin Rou.sh,
Letart, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Chllrles Roberts , Scottie and
O'yltal, Gallipolis.
Perry, Raymond, David and
Melds Anderson, Newarlt; ~eggy,
Jimmy and Crystal, Mhtm; Nancy
""~~"""· Jean, Brian and Jlllllflll

Community
Comer

.

$158
-

s1"

n........ -

PUIIN&amp;- YAIIOY MINU

CAT FOOD I·V•. . . . . . . . . . . . . .s.... c.
PDOCHOCOUfiPLAVOII

DRINK MIX ••••••••••••• '·!;'·

MUSSILMAN

24

(

.C

APPLE SAUCE •••••••••• "'"'·"" 63

(

U.S. FANCY CRISP JONATHAN

·A pples ............ .

VuWNCIA 0UNGES.:, 5 ~ 98c
·ciLERY HEARTS • • • • • • • ,.,. 59c
29C
•

98c

IIIMIIPI

110M NIAIIY IAIMS

!"Tc:':lOR SQUASH •••• .• ~ ••.

GREEN ONIONS ••••• 3 . . . 69c
SOMOIIING DlfliiiiiT

SUGARSUBSTITUTE ••••••••

4

7

·MINI CARROTS ........... ...

39 C

BANANAS • • • •
CIISP CIUNCIIY
RED RADISHES. • • • • • •
u.s. 110. lllUISII'
.
..
•'JOES
.
PO'lA .
•
&amp;

I

'I

lo:ll.

$

'139
-

. . . . . . . . ...

CLA&amp;'l OFFERED
RIO GRANDE - September 18
wiD be the beginning date for a lixty ,
hour Baale Electricity c:oune In
Adult Educatim to be held at
Buckeye Hills Career Center In Rio
Grande. James EYBIII of SdCJto
COUnty will be the inltructor ol tbll
c:oune. The clau wiD be beld each
Tueaday and 111unday tveQingl
from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. The coune
content 'Includes; the .....tlan,
tranamiBalon, dlltrlbutlcm and llGIIIl"
111011 methods ol Ule In bodl dlred
and alternating current. For acldltiCI181 lnfonnation call ,2MIIISM,

ext. 252.
TO END MARRIAGE
GALUPOLIS- Filing f~ divorce
In GaWa lihunly Common PiaU .
·. Court Friday was Brenda Kay
Unroe from PhlU s,eveniU1r0e.

,)

\'

�II" - n,.. Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

B-7- Tbe Sunday l'lmes&amp;ntine!, Sunday, Sept. 16,1979

White, Circle exchange vows in early
june ceremony in .Pomeroy church .
dants and the father of the bride
· wore brown tuxedos trinuned in
brown velvet and ivory shirts with
brown trimmed ruffles and sleeves,
and wore Ivory carnatiOJI bouton' nieres. Ring bearers wore tan suits
and ivory carnation boutonnieres
and carried heart shaped cushions.
Tammy Pitzer . registered the
guests. Wedding music was provided by Becky Windon. A half-llqur of
music preceded the ceremony and
the selections included "Feelings",
"I Love You Truly" and "The Impossible Dream." The church WBl!
decorated with vases of gladioli,
chrysanthemwns and greenery set
in white wrought iron sla!lds to
match the two seven btanch
candelabra. Large ivory satin bows
trinuned the candelabra and the
marked the family pews.
Immediately following the
ceremony, the wedding party went
to the hall at Royal Oak Park for the
reception. The five-tiered fountain
cake was decorated with ivory
roses, lilies li the valley, and topped
with the traditional miniature bride
and groom. The table was decorated
with the flowers of the wedding party along with a wicker basket of matching silk flowers.
Ruth Perkins and Laura Starr,
aunts of the bride, sel'Ved the cake.
Food was served by Synthia White,
Brenda Ballard, Deana Perkins,
Kathy Baker, Avis Jackson, KBl!
Bissell, and Mary Rose.
The couple took a honeymoon trip
to Niagara Falls. The groom is a
1975 graduate . of Southern High
School and is employed with Jones
Construction. The bride is a 1978
graduate of Eastern High School.
The couple reside at Route 1, Long
Bottom.

••
'•
•

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle
POMEROY-&amp;nia Ruth White blue", thebride'sgarter.
and Jeffrey Wayne Circle exchang·
The bride's attendants were Sheila
ed wedding vows on June 2 at 1:30 WhiteandSynthiaWhite. Theywere
p.m. at the Red Brush Church of in long ivory goWIIS with sheer floral
Ou'ist. The Rev. Roger Rush per· ove~lays of fall colors. They wore
formed the double ring ceremony.
peach wide brimmed hats and car·
Escorted to the altar by her ried long stemmed silk flowers with
• · father, the bride was given in mar· ivory and brown bows.
riage by l'er parents, Mr. and Mrs.
The flower girl was Serena White
Grover C. White, Jr., Long Bottom.
and she wore a gown of peach with
Parents of the groom are Mr. and an ivory witle-brlnuned hat and carMrs. Harold Circle, Racine.
ried a small brown wicker basket
The bride wore a chapel length
with ivory and brown satin bows. All
gown of ivory qiana jersey. Pearl
of the attendants were sisters of the
beaded venise lace accented the
bride.
keyhole neckiine and fitted sleeves,
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
and the train extended from the em- White wore a street length dress of
pire waist. Sheer v~iling and floral
beige with sheer floral overlay of fall
appliques were gathered onto a
colors and beige accessories.
pearl beaded cap for her headpiece.
Mrs. Circle was in qiana street
The bride carried a bouquet of ivory
length dress with white accessories
silk roses, chrysanthemums, . and both mothers wore double ivory
daisies, and baby's breath in fall col- - • carnations with fern, ivory ribbons,
ors, with brown satin streamers tied
brown velvet leaves and net.
in lover's knots.
The best man WBl! Howard Ervin,
Sheworeapearlanddiamondring
Jr., Racine, and the ushers were
and necklace given to her by her / ;Keith Circle, St. Albans, W. Va.;
parents, and pearl earrings, a gift of · · Chris Circle and Steve Circle,
the groom. The traditional
Racine. The ushers are brothers li
"something old" was the bride's
the groom.
necklace and ring, the "something
The ring bearers were Jarrod and
new", her attire, the "something
Jason Circle, sons of Carl and Nancy
borrowed", the silver cake knife
Circle, Racine, and cousins of the
from an aunt, and the "something
groom. The groom and his atten-

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OPEN 10:30 to 5 MONDAY THRU SATU.RDAY
CLOSED THURSDAY &amp; SUNDAY

auty Tips
" from our

Cosmetic Depart
Wben you makeup for spOrts!
*Don't use a moisturizer before playing. II can clog
pores wben you penplre and It keepo makeup from
staying on.

· * Do wear a sunscreen lD addition to any wllicb may
be In your'makeap if you plan to be In the suo for aa estended period of Ume.
•Try waterproof mascara; It won't smudge when
you perspire.
When you're laD!
it Pick bright colors-tbey are more flattering tban
dusky colon, whlcb teod to make your skin tone look
muddy .

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
.. .1• quality

·•
·:-:
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:::

GALUPOUS - Activities at the
Senior Citizens Center for this week
are as follows: '
Monday, Sept. 17- Blood Pressure
Check,1:Ir.-1:45 p.m.; Olorus, 1:1r.3; F1orida Deposit due.
Tuesday,Sept.18 -S.T.O.P.,I0:30
a.m.; Physical Fitness, 11:15 a.in.;
Bible Study ,1-2 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 19 - Card
Games, 1-3 p.m.; Uteralure Class,!
p.m,
Thursday, Sept. 00 - Council
Meeting, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 21 - Art Class, 1-3
p.m.; Craft Workshop, 1-3; Social
Hour, 7p.m.
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following menus:
Monday ..John Manetti, green
beans, collage cheese salad, bread,
butter, peaches, milk.
. Tuesday - New England boiled
dinner, cornbread, butter, yellow
cake and·lemon sauce, milk.
Wednesday - Uver and onions,
baked potato, buttered kale, bread,
butter, fruited gelatin, milk.
Thursday - Fried fish, escalloped
potatoes, sliced tomatoes, bread,
butter, ice cream, milk.
Friday - Fried chicken, mashed
potatoes, buttered peas, bread, butter, apple cobbler, milk.
Choice of beverage served with
each meal.

GALLIPOlJS - On May Uat 6:30
p.m., Miss Jane Ellse Morgan
became the bride ri Garrett J . Koerten, at the First Presbyterian' Church, GallipoUs.
The bride Is the daughter ol Mr.
and Mrs. D. Kenneth Morgan, 1
Edgemont Drive, Gallipolis. Tbe
groom is the son of Mrs. Alice Koerten, Wausau, Wisconsin, and the late
Jacob Koerten.
The doublHing ceremony wBl!
performed by Rev. Hughey L. Jones,
a cloee fri!!lld of the family, who was
formerly pastor of Grace United
Methodist and is now the Administrative Assistant to the Bishop
of the Ohio West Area.
Two seven-branch candelabru
and baskets of spring flowers,
arranged by Mrs. Cathy Rapp,
decorated the altar. Mrs. Rapp also
designed and arranged the bride's
bouquet and theattendants'flowers.
Music was prOvided by John and
Connie Morgan, Jane's brother and
sister-in-blw, who sang, "The Wedding Song," and several other songs
written by John Morgan. Edle Rolls,
organist, accompanied her lwsband,
Merlyn Rolls, who sang "The Lord's
Prayer" while the couple was
kneeling.

"Services rendered on a non-

Miller, Morrow
visit New York

..

Mr. and Mrs: GatTel K oerlen

.Jenior Citizens Scerzes...
POMEROY - James F. (Jim)

open fire, a country store, good food,

Ale:wtder, who was appointed
AsslstJO "I Director, Ohio Commi.asic
Aging, in July 197$ by
Direclo1 . ~rtin A. Janlll, will be
preeent at the Mei(J County Senior

country western-bluegrass music,
games, a cake decorating contest,
apple butter making and square
This Fall Festival will be held at
the Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy, on Friday, October &amp;from
11 a.m. until8p.m. There is plenty of
free parking and the public is urged
to join Meigls County's Senior
Citizens in this · fun.mled , ri'ioney·
making project.

a~~zena Center Friday, Odober 5,tn
take part in the · Center's Fall
Fetltlval.
Mr. Aleunder attended Ventura
Junior Ccilege in california, and
U.C.L.A. He worked as a publlc
relatiClllll ......,,...nt for Dllvid
Blackmer and Auociates, wu a
sports CGIIIIIIelltator and play-bYplay man for radio stations KOXR
Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of
and KNJO. He alao was ..U editor
the Ulristian Science movement,
of the CHRONICLE, ~
was born in ·1821.
Oaks, C8llfornla.
.
A1eunder returned to Columbus
In 1962 and became a staff writer for
U.P.I., a1ao covering the Ohio
General Aaembly.
1n 1986, Aleunder joined the staff
of the Department of Mental
Hygiene and Correctioo under Mar·
tin A. Jlllia. He was the first staff
pei'Silll ·Uligned to the Ohio Admini.atration on Aging, which was
rel!pOIISible for all !"nlor citizen
prClgJ'aiJIIJIInc in Ohio. He wu
promoCed to News Director for the
department, and then to Department Communications Coordinator.
He serves u the A.ssiltant Director of the Special Programs
Division, Ohio Cornmlaion on
Aging. 1n 1976 he was named director of Ohio's unique Golden Buckeye
Card Program, whicb currently Ia
the only statewide discount program
for senior citizens in the United
States.
His other supervisory respon·
sibWties include Cooununlcations, J
Seniors Against Crime, Senior Community Service Employment, Senior
Citizen Ua1aon · Network, Special
Events, and the OCoA's "Prime
Time" ..,eekly television show.
The Center's Fall Fetltlval will
feature soup beans cooked over an

~·

'

\

1,

THE UNIFORM CENTER

·-366 Second Ave....--·-·--·- - - - - Gallipolis, Ohio

Tbe bride was · escorted by her
and given in marriage by her
parents. She chose for a wedding
dress a formal gown ri white qiana
' and
with a ''V" neckline, cap' sleeves
a natural waistline with an accordion pleated skirt. The gown was
made of imported, I'Hillbroidered,
Alencon lace and .seed pearls on
bodice, waistline and sleeves. The
bride carried a white handkerchief
that belonged to her great-aunt,
Leona Beck, which she had carried
for her wedding. Tbe bride also wore
an antique pin which had belonged to
her great;vandmother, Jennie
Lewis, and presently owned by the
bride's grandmother, Mrs. John E.
Morgan.
Matron ol honor was Mrs. Constance Morgan, Akron, Ohio, slaterin-blw of the bride. Bridesmaids

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348 2ND AVE.
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Invitation extendid
POMEROY - Fourth, fifth and
sixth graders are invited to attend a
meeting ol the Pomeroy Junior Girl
Scout Troop 1276 to be held In the
Riverboat Room of the Athens County Saving5 and Loan Co. Tuesday

$591· $7W
Regular
W.4H10."

evening, 7p.m.
Tbe registration fee of f3 iB to be
paid at that time. Troop plans will be
discussed. Mrs. Peggy Crane and
Mrs. Linda Mayer are leaders of the
troop.

FURIIITURI SIWIIGSGALOIIIIIOUR

[l]mlf [fM]~[I] ~~[W
DON'T

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SAVINGS•••
THROUGHOUT
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OPEN:
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TILL 8 PM

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homeowners
are pleased

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eBASSm
eHICKORY MANOR
-.JACKSON OF DANVILLE

at What
they can save
with State Farm
insurance!'
Come see me . You may
be pleased. lao .

Mike Swiger

'21

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Single clrop-llcle wt1h . . . . loaklng

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2 YEARS

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BY:
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·Ukealood

t:si O •JIIlii-IJ L~ •·

dancing.

FAU. MATERNITY DRESSES

.

f~ther

discriminatory basis."

Horne Of11r.P

Robert H. Safford, SarBIIOta,. Fla.;
Mr. and Mrs. David H. Hlll[hel,
Athens; and ·Mrs. Margaret M.
Out-of-town guests:
Denny Rapp, Athens, Ohio; Mr. Davts, Oak Hill.
Also attending from out-of-town
and Mrs. Mike Arnold, Mrs. Hughey
Jones, SbelJy Jones, Mr. and Mrs. · were: Mr. and Mrs. John Koerten,
Mike Colles, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Mllwaukee, Wis.; Mr. and Mrs.
lrion, Mr. and Mrs. Steve McCIBry, Henry. Koerten and Mr. and Mrs.
were, Mrs. Wilma Mullins, Mrs. ' all from ColumbuB; Mr. and Mrs. Donald deJong and son, Perry,
Cathy Rapp and Miss Lynn Moore, . Paw Walker, Atlanla, Georgia; Dr. WIIIIBU, Wis., and Rev. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Robert Morgan, Cin- Harry Pittman, Wheaton, m.
friends of the bride. All wore idencinnati; Mr. and Mrs. CecU K. Irion,
Tbe COIIPie now ree1c1e at 8663 Hartical qiani knit goWIIS of lavender
St. Petenburg, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. perpoint Dr., Clnclnnatl, 45~.
and apricot floral print.
.Sally Morgan, Cincinnati, cousin
of the bride, registered t1$: guests.
Renee Coonen distributed scrolls li
tl!e couple's wedding dedication
poem to all guests as they
~- '
registered.
·.,-.·· ,l
Best man was Vic Mullins,
Gallipolis.
High tunnel waistline makes this
Ushers were Tom Morgan, Toledo,
Ohio, brother of the bride, Mike
a Before and After Outfit for the
Murphy, Grand Rapids, Michigan
and Bruce Winatanley, Grande
lady in waiting. Size 4-18.
Lodge, Mich. Ali were attired in
black tuxedos identical to the
groom. Each wore a single car•
"""'
Brown and Cream Polyester.
\1,'
nation.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
•· . i
Morgan wore an apricot floor-length
LAYAWAY, MASTER CHARGE
gown of qiana and chiffon with an
empire waist and chiffon cape. Mrs.
- AN~ VISA WELCOME·
Koerten wore a floor length gown li
blue and white floral print.
AT
Immediately following the
'I \ I
ceremony a reception was held in
the dining hall ci Grace United
Methodist Church.
·
The four tier wedding cake, baked
by Mrs. Faye Rees, was decorated
in keeping with the bride's colors
and topped with wedding bells.

]ane .Elsie Morgan ma:rries Garret Ko.erten
in ~ows at First Presbyterian Church in Ma.:v

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

GALLIPOLIS - L. Claude Miller,
of Miller's Home for FWierals, and
Evelyn Morrow, of Evelyn 's Salon of
Beauty, spent a week in New York
as the guest of Miller's daughter,
Claudia Miller Babcock and her
daughter, Gamble.
While in New York, Miller ·and
Miller
and Morrow and Mrs.
SUNDAY
Babcock
attended Radio City Music
REVJVAL, begin at Okey Chapel
Hall,
"
A
New York Summer
Church near Lecta Sept. 16. Revs .
musical"
,
the "New York
Hinkle and Saunders will preach;
Experience",
a
New York history.
special singing each night at 7:30
They
ate
at
the
"Top of the Park",
p.m. Everyone welcome.
43
stories
above
Central Park.
HOMECOMING, BulBville Christian
Mrs.
Babcock,
Mrs.
Morrow and
Church, 9:30a.m.; Rev. Miles Trout
.
'
Miller
attended
Riverside
Church,
monung message; dinner at noon;
so
Mrs.
Morrow
wouldn
't
break
her
special singing throughout day.
attendance
record
of
33
years.
Public invited.
•
Last year, when Mrs. Morrow and
REVIVAL, Bob Stacey, evangelist;
Miller were ln New York, they met
Gallipolis Christian Church; 16-21; 7 · Tro~ Snyder of the "Tomorrow"
p.m. each evening. .
show, Yul Brenner, David Reiner,
and several stars.
SIMPSON Chapel UM .Cburcb will
Upon ret~rning to Gallipolis,
· bold ita fourth aooual celebraUoo.
Miller
brought his granddaughter,
beginning at 9:30 a.m.; wonhlp;
Gamble,
home for a visit. Miller and
10:30 a.m. Dr. Sam Smilb lo speak.
Morrow
also
visited Mr. and Mrs.
Carry-In noon meal.
Fred
Miller
and
sons, in Columbus,
HENRY "DOC" CremeeDII famOy
where
Miss
Babcock
stayed f(J' two
. reunion, Kyger Creek Shelter
days.
House; potluck dllmer,1 p.m.
GALLIA. COUNTY Historical
Society, in basement of St. Louis
NAME OMITTED
Catholic Church, 2 p.m. Board, 1
The name of Albert Durose WBl!
p.m. Program: Josette Baker.
mtitted from the list of GalllB Countians who attended last week's
CENTENNIAL Homecoming,
meeting of District Seven of the Ohio
Guyan Valley Missionary Baptist
Retired . Teachers Association in
Church, Platform, Ohio, 10 a.m,
Marietta .
. BELL CHAPEL Community
Church, Taylor Quartet, singers;
everyone welcome, 7;30 p.m.
REV. Don Pullins will be the guest
speaker at Northup Baptist Church
on Sunday, September 16, Services
begin at 7:30p.m. Public invited.
MONDAY
SILVER Run Freewill Baptist
Church will be starting a ~val
Sept. 17-22. The Rev. Bill Price
evangelist; Rev. Marvin Marcum',
pastor, welcomes public. 7:30 p.m.
each evening. Special singers invited.
WELCOME Wagon Club General
meeting, 7:30p.m. Jackson Pike Office of the Ohio Valley Bank. Phone
446-T739.
THURSDAY
. WELCOME Wagon Club evening
bridge, 7:30 p.m. 623 Jackson Pike.
Phone 446-2153.
LADIES MISSIONARY Fellowship,
of the First Baptist church, 7:30p.m.
in fellowship room.
WEDNESDAY
·lJ'ITLE KYGER Ladies Aid, 10'
a.m. at Mrs. John Nibert's.
REGULAR meeting of United
Methodist Women of Grace Church.
Film entitled "Out of the Mouths of
Babe," will be shown.

-

119.99

1

'9900

I

1·
1

I'AnEINI

I
I
I
I

AVAILABLE AT G. C. MURPHY'S

SIORE. 348 2ND AVE.

�•
~ -111!! Sunday Tlrnes&amp;ntinel, SWlday, Sept. 16, 19'19

B-9 -The Sunday Times&amp;ntlnel, SUnday. Sept. 16, 19'19

·Pamela Neff weds Mr. Michael Hern
The ·mamage of Mtss Pamela
Jean Neff, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Zane Neff of Edinburg, Va. to
Micheal Lee Hern, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth L. Hcrn of Gallipolis,
Ohio, took place on August 25th at
2:00p.m. at the Woodstock Christian
Church in Woodstock, Virginia.
Reverand William H. Whitehurst,
Jr. officiated at the double ring
ceremony. A program of wedding
music was presented by Mrs.
William Lee Page, organist, and
Miss Mary Danley and Mrs. F.
Douglas French, soloists.
The bride, escorted by her father
and given in marriage by her
parents, wore an original Priscilla of
Boston gown made of ivory sheer
organdy and lace. The French
soldiers bodice featured epaulet
shoulders and a high Victorian
neckline to lend an Alencon lace bib
effect. Long traditional sleeves of
English net were delicately appliqued with Swiss val lace flowers
on Alencon lace. A deep lace
hemline trimmed the A-lined skirt
and the full sweeping chapel length
train. A cathedral length veil fell
from a juliet cap covered with Swiss
val lace flowers and !'rimmed with a
satin bow. The bride carried a
cascading bouquet of Phalaenopsis
orchids, stephanotis, and ivy.
Mrs. Thomas Snarr of Woodstock,
Virginia served as Matron of Honor
and was attired in a burgundy
quiana gown with an accordian
pleated skirt and a cape of burl!llndy
chiffon. She carried a cascading

•
,.

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1

POMEROY - The family of
Cbarles E. and Statira (Rinehart)
Lamb gathered at &amp;yal Oak Park,
Sunday, Sept. ·2 f..- their annual
reunion.
·Mr. and Mrs. Lamb came to Meigs
County in 1913 from &amp;ane County,
W. Va. and purclwsed a farm near
Tuppers Plains. They were the
parents of seven children, Olen,
Edna , Brooks, Georgie, Carl,
Garland and Opal. Of the above
seven , the three daughters are still
living .

Marriage
announced
Mr.s. Michael Hem

JEWELRY
BY .

-~~ ''TRIFARI''
•BRACELETS 3.50 to 5.50
•NECK QIAINS 5.00.22.50
•Pearls to 24.50 ~
•EARRINGS

•

J

b::;;:.;•~A~ct~u~a~l~Je;w;e~lry~ls;;si;m;ila;r;t;o;;;;:;~=::;=~ wedding
Martz both
Fairfax,
The
cakeofwas
served va.
by Mrs.

Shoemakers to America
They're called Ambidexters. Wear them
with your suit. Or wear them with your
jeans Traditional slyiing, natural
l~athPr, Goodyear welt construc tion and genuine rubber soles.
Their lai d-back good looks
add slyie to whatever
yo u're wearing.
Ambidexters.
The shoes that
go both ways.

$3]00
Mon. &amp; Fri. till
Tues., WEd. , Sat. til s

Stanley Getz, aunt of the Bride, and
Mrs. Steve Crawford of Harrisonburg, Va.
The bride graudated Magna cum
Laude with a B.A. in English from
·James Madison University. WhUe
attending JMU, the bride was a
member of Alpha Sigma Alpha
Sorority. The bride plans to return to
JMU in the fall for teacher certification.
The groom graduated Sununa
cum Laude with a B.A. in Political
Science from James M'adison
University. WhlleattendingJMU, he
was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon
Fraternity. He is presently employed by the law firm of Conrad
Litten, Sipe, and Miller i~
Harrisonburg, Va.
Pre-nupital events included a
cook-out given by Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon D. Bowman, II, a luncheon
given by Mrs. Homer Long, Mrs.
John Irvin , and Mrs. Douglas
Wisman, a cocktail party given by
Mr. and Mrs. John Lee, a household
shower given by Miss Judith Jones
and Mrs. Thomas Snarr, a shower
given by Mrs. Stanley Kamm, Mrs.
James Ellis, Mrs. Gerald Canady,
Mrs. Vernon Heishman, and Mrs.
Richard Patterson, and a buffet
dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. John
llrady.. The rehersal dinner was
hosted by the groom's parents at the
Sheraton Inn In Harrisonburg,
Virginia.

Tllurs. 11112 Noon

&lt;Carl's
snoe

slort

... • ,._ OMo ••u"''

1 ... .. '""".

o-oc

........ ..
~·

'

MEETING SET SEPT. 29
ATHENS - The Eleventh Annual
Meeting of the Ohio VaUey Health
Services Foundation, Inc ., Ath'ens,
will be held on Thursday, Sept. 20, at
7 p.m. at the Ohio University IM in
Athens. A social will precede the
gathering at 6 p.m .

,.

CX&gt;VINGTON, Va. - Miss Diana .
L. Spires, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Rodney E. Spires, Kyger, and Mr .
Daryl Wears, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Wears, Georges Creek Rd.,
were united in marriage, August 14,
at the First Presbyterian Church in
Covington, Virginia. The doublering ceremony was performed by
Rev . KU21'.
· The new Mrs. Wears is a 1978
graduate of Kyger Creek Hlgh
School. Mr. Wears also graduated
from Kyger Creek High School in
1975, and is employed at FederalMogud.
The newlyweds honeymooned in
Virginia and are now residing in
Kyger .

RIO GRANDE - Parenthood is
skilled labor, and like ·other skilled
labor positions, some training is
most helpful .
For this reason the office of
cootinuing education 111 Rio &lt;;rande
College and Community College is
offering lbe nationally known Dr.
Parent
Thomas
Gordon's
Effectiveness Training Program.
Taught by Dr. John and Lydia
Groth, certified and licensed
instructors, the course will meet
eight
Thursday
evenings,
September 20 through November 8
from 7 to 10 p.m . Class sessions will
be held in Lyne Center, room 203,
located on the Rio Grande College
and Community College campus.
Dr. Gordon's methods Instruct
parents on how best to deal with lack
of communication between you and
your child, parent-children cooflicts,
tantrums and scenes, and
underachievement in school.
Gordon's methods have already
been taught to over a quarter million
parents in all 50 states.
· Cost of training is $25 per person
or $45 per couple. All texts are
included. Interested persons can
register for the program by calllng
Bernie Murphy , director of
continuing education at 245-S353, ext.
255.
MEETS TUF..SDAY
GALWPOUS - The Gallipolis
City Commission will meet in
special session Tuesday-at 8 p.m. in.
the Municipal Court Room.

A.I.M. (ADVENTURES

Mayor Andrews signed the proclamatic.i
are, 1-r, Mn. Clyde Ingels, Vice-Regent; Mn. G4!fle
Yost, Regent, and Miss Eleanor Smith, CooltltUtlon
Week Chalnnan, aD ri Return Jonathan Meip O!apter.

Mrs. Joyce Davis, general at·
tendance secretary of Paint Creek
Baptist Sunday achoo~ gave ber
report on September·2.
Having perfect attendance were
Mn. Lenora Howard, nine years and
Mn. Dorothy Gordon, five years.

Mrs. Earl Summerfield and &amp;ger
from Murrysville, Pa. Mr. and Mrs.
Sherman Summerfield, Little
H~cking, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Parker, Syracuse; Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Parker, Bobby and
Kelly, Marietta; Mr. Burl
Summerfield, Charleston ; Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Sununerfield, Sharon,
Melissa and Patricia, Buffalo, W.
Va.; Mr . and Mrs. Cecil Caldwell;
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Caldwell and
Kenny , Tuppers Plains, Cbarles
Summerfield, Savannah, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. Rex Summerfield,
Cbester, Ohio; Mr . and Mrs. &amp;bert
Murphy, Amy and Tracey, Tuppers ·
Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Lee
Summerfield, Amber and Michael,
Torch, Ohio .
Mrs . Sharon Swartz, Rexal,
Roger, Tena and Rena ; Mr. and
Mrs . Ronnie Russell , Coolville;
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sununerfield,
Candi Wendy and Crystal, Medina,
Ohio; Mrs. R. Brooks Lamb; Mr.
and Mrs. WiiUam Lee, Columbus;
Mrs. Edward (Georgie) Clifford,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald

Faithful attendance was noted by
Mrs. Lucille Saunders, Mr. John
Rippey and Rev. Grover G. Turner.
Gilbert Craig, Jr. presented the
faithful attendance, certificate, and
Rev. GroVer G. Turner presented
the perfect attendance awards.

NOTICE
GAU.IA COUNTY
FAIR HOUSING CENTER
WOMEN, MINORITIES, and HAN·
DICAPS, YOU are protected by the Federal
and State laws to seek and aHain .the house
or apartment of your choice, without being
denied because of your sex, color, or
physical disabilities.
If' you feel that you have been denied
your housing rights, or if you just want to
know more concerning your rights, contact
the Gallla County Fair Housing Center,
Room 204, 414 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, or
contact Nlkita Justice at 446·7016.

Paul's Steamway Announces Our
Introductory Carpet Cleaning

Mrs·

l.anbard Tonkin,
sister-In-law of the bride, wsa
matron of honor, attired in a green
anchrhite printed voile gown, styled
with strapped bodice, softly
gathe~ wrajHU'OIInd skirt and a
ruffled scarf. She carried a white
garden buket of gerbera, white and
yellow daisies, baby's breath and
sprengeri.
f'
Bridesmaids, attired Identically to
the matron ri honor, were Mrs.
David Andrew Grislo of Clarksburg,
Ms. Lea Elizabeth Anderson of
Olarleston and Ms. Sue EUen Lincbay of Wellsburg.
Dr. Robert Alien Kayser of
Charleston wu· best man. Loring
· Lombart Tonkin and Johp Barnell
Tonktii, Jr., of Horner, brothers of
the bride, and Paul Stephen Perfeater of Charleston, were ushers.
111!! mother ri the bride wore a

Special
ANY LIVING ROOM WITH CONNECTING HAU

$}995

Limit 250 sq. ft. All white and light pastel carpet, 25c sq.
ft.

$3795

ANY LIVING AND DINING ROOM WITH HAU

Tonkin-leard marry
·in afternoon ceremony·
CLARKSBURG, W~ Va . - Nancy
Stuart Tookln, daughter of Mr. and
Mn. John Barnell Tonkin d
Clarbbllll!, W. Va., became the
bride ri P. Scott Icard, S&lt;lll of Mrs.
Alice Marie Icard of Point Pleasant
and Paud Icard of Ohio, in a
- ceremony perfonned at 4:30 p.m.,
August 18, at Cllrbt Episcopal Chur·
chin ClarDburg, W.Va.
The Rev. Wilburn camrock eamp.
beU, retired Bishop of the Diocese of
West Virginia, and the Rev. David
Conner Bane of Clarksbllll! performed the ceremony.
Mra. W. Paud McWhorter ,
organbt, provided wedding music.
The pride, given in marriage by
her' parent. and escorted to the altar
by her father, wore li gown d lnl·
ported white SwiM eyelet. 111!!
sleeveless bodice wu designed with
a deep Bertha neckline, lace banded
empire wailtllne and a wide ruffled
skirt which formed a sweeping train.
· Her barr wu adorned witli roses and
baby '1 breath, and she carried a
bouquet ri yellow Sonia roses with
Queen Anne'slace.

Limit 350 sq. ft.

ANY OlliER ROOM WHEN CLEANED WITH
LIVING AND DINING ROOM
Limit 180 sq. ft .
Minimum Charge $19. 95 For Any Cleaning.
These prices good until October 15, 1979
Regardless of claims, only Steamway Is endorsed by all
carpet manufacturers, only Steamway ,g uarantees
results or no charge! Steamway Is the name to depend
on in carpet care.

Loring

PAUL'S STEAMWAY
Satisfaction Guaranted
Phone 614-446·2096
Paul Smeltzer, Owner

calf-length, pale yellow dress of
crepe georgette with matching accessories and a purse corsage of
Belinda roses and baby's breth. The
bridegroom's mother wore a calf1
'
length dress of mauve silesta
polyester with a strapped bodice and
matching jacket and a purse corsage of pink cymbidium orchids.
The reception was held at the
Clarlatburg Country Club where the
Belcastro Trio provided music for
dancing . M&gt;listing at the reception
were Mrs. David Swartz, Mrs.
Samuel Kramer, Miss Jessica
Davis, Miss Anne Davis and Mrs.
Frederick Vogelsang of Troy, Ohio.
The mother of the groom hooted
members of the wedding party at a
rehearsal dinner at the Clarksburg
Country Club.
The bride attended Clarksburg
schools and was graduated from
'
West Virginia University with a
Bachelor's degree In soc.lal WDl'k.
She has been employed as coor.
dinator of the Kanawha Youth SerTerry Johnson and Verona Cox
vices Council in Charleston.
Mr. Icard is a graduate of West
Virginia University College of Law
and is an attorney for the Legislative
Services ri. the West Virginia
Legislature in Charleston.
GALWPOUS - Mr. · and Mrs.
Kay Cox, to Terry Lee Joonson, son
FoUowing a wedding trip to Louis Cox wish to announce the
of Alfonz and Blanch Joonson.
Jamaica, the couple will be at home engageme nt and approaching
The wedding will be September 22
at 21~ Kanawha Boulevard East, marriage of their daughter , Verona
at Bell Chapel Cburch with Rev .
Charleston.
Delaney officiating.
Thooe from Point Pleasant attending the wedding were Mr. and
Bethel Ladies Aid meets
Mrs. William Gygax, Ms. Kay
giving a Bible verse. There were 24
Bethel Ladles Aid niet on SepGygax , Mr. and Mrs. George Ingels,
sick
calls reported.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Hyer, Mr. and tember 5 with Ruby Saunders and
Readings
included : "Human
Mrs. Rodney Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Marianna Jeffers.
Frailty,"
by
Virginia
Fisher; ''The
Eva Gilmore, president, presided
George 0 . Fisher, Mr. and Mrs.
Greatest
is
Love,"
by
Mellsaa Caldover the meeting which opened with
Doug Long.
.well;
"Heaven,"
by
Gladys
Church;
Mrs. Milford Icard., Chauncey, group singing of "Blessed M&gt;!uranand
questions
on
Flowers
by
Ruby
Ohio; Mrs. Jolin Dunlavy , Vandalia , ce."
Saunders.
Arlene Tracey read the scripture
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
For closing, tile group 58111!.
Dunlavy, John Dunlavy and Mrs. from the 13th chapter of Ronlans.
"Amazing
Grace" and recited "!be
Mantha Jackson; Chris Icard, Point
Goldia Caldwell wW read the
Lord's
Prayer."
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Michael · scripture at the next meeting.
The next meeting will be with
Virglnla Fisher offered prayer.
Fenderbosch, GaiUpolls.
Mellsaa
Caldwell.
The minutes of the last meeting
Refreslunenl.!
were served to
were read.
seven
members
and
three guests.
&amp;II call was answered by each

"·\

Verona Cox becomes engaged

Street Cars® for women. Tiley come on
classic and come out casual, at work or play.
And your feet keep thanking you for Street
Cars comfort, because great
looking shoes never felt so
good till now.

H

PRESENT

From
Na8hville

GRAND OLE OPRY SHOW

Two Gigantic 3 Hour Sp~ctacularslll
_,
Saturday,
October
27th 3:00 p.m. &amp; 8 p.m. · Order Now
--

Tickets Available At

Ba~ers

Sound Shop • Point Pleasant

FEATURING

*Minnie Pearl *The Kendalls

*

·VINE ITRIIT, GAUIPOUS, OHIO

PHONE 446·9593

Prices Effective 9/16/79 to 9/22179
'We Reserw the Right to

lim~

USDA

·Boneless Chuck
Steak or lroast

Qli1ntity"

GOLD .KIST

MIXED FRYER
PARTS

69
'15~.
TASTEE

SUPERIORS
POLISH SAUSAGE

BOLOGNA

9

9

~
LB.

~B.

FRESHEST PRODUCE IN TOWN

ICEBERG
HEAD LETTUCE

RED OR GOLDEN
DWCIOUS APPLES
3-LB.
BAG

89~

CRISP TENDER
CARROTS
16 oz. .
BAG

HEAD

49~

YEU.OW
COOKING ONIONS

25~

3-LB.
BAG

VALLEY BELL

59~

2% MILK

BROUGHTON'S
ICE MILK

Gallon Plastic

Half Gallon

98~

lAYS
TOSTITOS
7.5 oz. bag

73~

HI-DRI

Paper Towels
Jumbo Roll

*Connie Casto

*Red Sovine * Del Woods

~

Moll Ordors to
Memorlol
Field.
.House Po . Box
5455 Hunt.
a.
25307 in a stlf
addressed
·
stamped
envelope.

·w.v

T.. G. Sheppard *Jeanne Pruett· *Gene .Watson
* Ray Pillow *Stu Phillips *Joe. Webber

AND GRAND OLE OPRY ANNOUNCER • HAIRL HENSLEY

'II

'

v.,

WHOLE KERNAL CORN

K99~

20 oz.
loaf
GOLD M

. CUT GREEN BEANS

L

ALL PURPOSE FLOUR
~

~b.

bag

89~

MONAGENERIANS were honored by a party recently at the GaJUa
Senior Cltlzena' Center. 'l'bo8e bono~ were, shown, not in order, Maude
Niday t2 Uona Lehman, IM, Elizabeth Allbright, 92, Orpha Wooten, 90,
and Mn~ Hoon, 92. Entertainment was provided by Hlta Fowler of
EUzabeth Olapel Church, who played and 58111! for the group; the Rev.
Alfred Holley wu the speaker, with Lester McGuffy giving selected
readlnga. Refreshment. were served to the 41 present.

lAUNDRY DETERGENT

--

•

WINTER IS COMING
READY OR NOT!
BE PREPA~ED - AND SAVE 20%
ON All COATS

SREET01RS~

THE SHOES 1UURFEETGOOFF ON:

•
;ft_

(SEPT. 12th THRU 22nd ONLY)

Memt&gt; rial Field House . 5th Ave . At 26th St. - Huntington, W

GREEN GIANT

GREEN GIANT

IN MOVEMENT) FOR THE HANDICAPPED
Direct

•a.

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

PORK STEAK

1

COUNTRY MUSIC PROMOTIONS

'7. &amp;

JOHn~on~

For the best In worry.free cleaning, call the Experienced Profe$Sionals. We have cleaned over 20 million
square feet of carpet.

T

All Seats
Reserved

Ohio.
Guests present were: Mr. and
Mrs. Clay Tuttle, Middleport; John
Jenkins and
Chris
Stone,
Parkersburg, W. Va .

LB.

AND

E

Lamb, Cbarleston; Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn (Opal ) Powell; Mr. and Mrs.
Wi!Uam Northup and Jeffrey ,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Smith
and Michael
New London ,

Mrs. P. Scott Icard

Perfect attendance noted

P.E. T offered

The oldest person present was
Mrs. Dan (Edna) Sununerfield, who
is 90 year~ld and the youngest
. present was Michael Aaron Smith,
great grandson of Mrs. GleM
(Opal) Powell. Coming from the
longest distance to be with his
family was Cbarles SUmmerfield,
Savannah, Ga.
Those present were : Harold
Lamb, Charleston, W. Va., son of
Olen. Mrs.
Dan (Edna)
Swrunerfield, whose family had the
greatest representation. Mr, and

~ on u

CX&gt;NSTITUTlON WEEK - In cooperation with
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters d. the
American Revolution, Pomeroy Mayor C1areDce Andrews Friday afternoon signed a proclamation for the
observance of National Constitution Week, Sept. 17·2:1.

....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , bouquet ol red roses, pink roses,
white spider mums, . baby's l:lreath
and burgundy streamers.
Bridesmaids were Miss Bonnie
"The good
Hern, sister of the groom, of
Gallipolis, Ohio, Miss Judith Jones
· place to
of Woodstock, Va., Miss Ellen
shop ....
Phoebus of Salisbury, Maryland,
and Miss Ann Sonnet! of McLean,
·for nice
Va. They carried bouquets and wore
dresses identical to that of the
things to wear!" Matron of Honor.
Miss Carmah Davts, of Gallipolis,
IN THE
Ohio, served as flower girl. She was
SILVER BRIDGE
attired in a ros~ dotted swiss gown
lrirruned in white lace and carried a
PLAZA
white basket filled with red roses,
pink roses, baby's .breath and
trirruned with burgundy streamers.
FASHION
Paud Thompson of Virginia Be~ch,
Va. served as Best Man. The ushers
were Zane Neff, brother.of the bride,
of Edinburg, Va., Randy Rite of
Alexandria, Va., Dave Mallory of
Galax, Va., and Steve Dogharty of
Albany, New York, Master Gordon
D. Bowman, III of Mt. Jackso 0, Va.. ,.,_e:~
served as ring hearer.
The mother of the bride was at~' ~
tired in a powder blue formal gown
with matching full length coat and
wore an orchid corsage. The mother
of the groom was attired in a creamcolored formal gown with a mat"So Fashionable - Yet So Affordable"
ching jacket and wore an orchid
corsage.
The wedding was co-ordinated by
Mrs. Gordon D. Bowman, II of MI.
. Jackson, Va.
The reception was held at Bryce
Resort, Basye, Virginia. Miss Linda
Deacon of Richmond, Virginia
presided over the guest book. Satin
rice roses were handed out by Miss
Sue Sims of Virginia Beach, Va. and
Miss Kim Miller of Woodstock , Va.
7-~10.00
The gift table was attended by Mrs.
Charles French of Woodstock, Va.
and Miss Melissa Hay ot
Blacksburg. Punch was served by
Miss Kathy Dornich and Miss Joyce

.

An'J!uallilmb reunion held September 2 in Meigs ·

~~-etc.

·'o

c•

=)10'"~

The Shoe Cafe
300 second Ave.
Latave«e Mall
Gallipolis, Oioio

-·----:-----------

gallon

'499

�•

11-10 - Thr Sumlay Times..SCntinel. Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

Couple to be married
! ;AI. LIPOI.IS · Mr. ;md Mrs.
ll; uT) l.cr Fellurc and Mr. and Mrs.
1-'r.mk ~hil s. Jr .. or l'rown C'itr art

'l11c custtnn of open church will be
llb~ rv ed .

prn ud to announ ce tlu• cng a~e-mcnt

aJI(J fu rth('omm g marriage of thc1r
d uldren. L1sa Lnu f'cllun• ~md
llil\'ld Allen Mi lls.
Mill s 1s a 1971 b'faduatr or GAHS
and a 1979 gradua te or Agricultural
Tt'chn wa llnst itutt• . a brand1 of Ohio
Um\' erSJ1Y. in Wooster. 0 . He is setrrlllpluy,·cl on the family dairy farm .
M1 ss F'ell w·t:· is a 1979 graLluate of

GAl lS.
A rHI I Wl'dding is planned for
Ul'lob(•l'

;,

at

E li ~abe th

Clmrch at 2:30 o.m.

Chapel
·

'ffiEATDAYTODAY
GALUPOUS- Evelyn Morrow,
President of Volunteer Services
Assn. of GSI, annoWlced today that
"Treat Day" will take place today at
2:30 p.m. at the Activities Building
on GSI grounds. Entertainment will
be provided for the residents by Tex
Harrison and the Valley Boys. The
Mistress of ceremonies will be
"Chatterbox" of WJEH·WYPC. The
public is cordially invited to attend.

t•ifNGt~rrtsitroic~RPs••!
NOW ACCEPTING
t
+
NEW MEMBERS
t
•
*
•t
•
J,~
NO PREVIOUS
.~yf': .

:

.! "~~

:

i ;..

i
+
:

t

AGES: 3-16 YEARS

:·

j~;;R~;

i

Enroll Now:

+
+

CHESTER

• .
:

TRAINING REQUIRED

985-3595

:

MEIG5-MASON·ATHENS-GALLIA

PINECREST CARE
CENTER NEWS
BY JUANITA WORKMAN
GALUPOUS - One monthly birthday celebration honored fifteen of
our residents who had birthdays in
September. The party was held in
the second floor dining area. The
serving table held a centerpiece
arangement of fall flowers . The
lovely birthday cake was white with
rose trirrunings adorned with rifteen
multi-colored candles . Paula
Thacker of the. Dietary Department
made the luscious cake, which was
served with pWlch and apples to approximately 120 residents, relatives,
and employees.
We are most fortWtate to have
Everett Callicoat back home with
us, after spending several days in
Holzer Medical Center.
Rosetta Minnis has come to mak~
her home with us . We all welcome
you to your new abode, and may you
find contentment and happiness as
you become a part of our big family.
Pam Jarrell, a nurse 's aide, will
be seeing her two weeks vacation
come to a screaming halt Tuesday.
Pam visited several places of
historical interest and enjoyed one
week of quiet and seclusion, just
swimming and basking in the sun.
Mr. and Mrs. William E. McMahon, Zanesville, visited Thursday
with their mother, Charlotte Evans.
Ruble Sizemore is a new employee
in the laWldry department.
Mr. and Mrs. Willii! Bennett have
been discharged from the Care Center. They entered a Care Center in
Chesapeake so they could be near
their daughter, Dena Baise.
Kathy Boggess, a nurse's. aide on
second floor, is spending this week
visiting relatives in Chicago,
Illinois .

+.

•••••••••••••••••••••

POMEROY LANDMARK ·

TV DISCOUNT
VIR TI COLOR N / 25" diagonal
• VIR II Broadcast Con tro lled
Co lor Television
• Keyboard Quartz Precisio n
Electronic Tuning

•
•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•
•

Dual Mode Remote Contro l
Room lighl Sensor
10~ Solid State Chassis
Modular Ctlassis Design
GE ln·line Picture
Tube System
Bla c k Matrix Picture Tube
ACC (Automatic
Color Control)
Stlarpness Control
DC Restorolion
line Vonage Regulator
Dignal Channel Numbers
Cable-Ready ·

.Alltenna Connector
• Pop-Ouf Concealed Contro ls

e •·

perFormance

TELEVISION '

25 " diogonot COlOR TV/ 25VM0876L
EARtV AMERICAN SM ING . .. c a b ine t construc ted

of o combination of genuine hardwood solids.
veneers and s•mu loled wood

N.o~ GE br i ~gs you the conv enience of ~and · held remote con tr ol tuning plus sharp,
v rvrd color prctur~s that are automat.i cally adjusted tor you ... all from the comfort
of your easy charr. The. GE programmable dua l mode remote control lets you
ser~c t channels at randam or scan through your favorite channels ... instantly,
whrle the remarkable VIR I I color system automatically adjusts the picture for
you 60 t imes a second, channel to channel, progt:am tq program . These and other
great fea tures make 1his the most advance'd, automatic set in GE historY . see it to·
day . THIS IS GE PERFORMANCE TELEVISION .

s75 DISCOUNT
PORTA COLOR® N /1 0" diagonal
• I 0~ Solid State Chassis
• GE In-line Picture
Tube Sys tem
• AFC (Auto matic
f requency Conlrol)
• ACC (Automatic
Color Control)

-

perFormance
TELEVISION

• DC Reslo1at1on

• VHF "Pre-5et"
Fine Tuning
• 70 Position "Click -In"
UHF Tun1ng

• Molded-In Carrying
Handle

10" diagonal COtOIIIV/ 10Aao.02V/I
10AROA02V in vanilla finish and
10A80402T in terTo cotta "nlsh.

GE Porta Calor · N . . .The pert eel portable tor the
bedroo.m. kitc hen o r den. Br~ght. sharp color p ic tures
p roduced b y a 100% solid state c hassis. plus AFC
c ~r cu • try tha t keeps lhe calo r signal lacke d in on
every c ha nnel. THIS IS GE PERFORMANCE lH~SION .

sso DISCOUNT

Hurl Westfall 's son, Jot!, spent one
day last week with his lather and
took him out for dinner. Joe and his
lovely wife, Gracie, live in Coldwater, Michigan.
Several residents attended our
Tuesday afternoon worship service.
Rev. Colvin was Wtable to be with
us, but we hurriedly stirred up all
the essential ingredients to IT1llke a
most Wlusual service. The atmosphere was a liflle like tbe first
week of school and it seemed a good
time for a qui2 pertaining to the ten
commandments. All residents participated eagerly. The adrenalin
started to flow when our residents
saw a talented musician , Carol
Coleman, at the piano. Carol sang
several soul-stirring songs and
residents joined in by singing their
favorite old-time hymns.
A cheery get-well message goes to
Sarah Drummond who is a patient in
Holzer Medical Center.
Dorothy Northup, Townsend,
Washington, visited Aldean Miller
and Rita Truesdale recently.
We miss the appealing manner
and winning ways of our telephone
operator and receptionist, Janet
Hamilton. May your unique ability
of communicating with others be an
asset to you in your new position.
Pat Moore has filled this vacancy.
Hattie Canterbury is a very fortWtate mother. Her son, Billy Joe,
from Waterford, Michigan spends
every weekend at her bedside. What
could make a mother happier?
"Hats off" to Billy ~oe for making
this sacrifice!
A "Lucky You" party was held
Thursday for Nancy VanMeter, R.
N. P\necrest presented her with a
plaque. Cake and punch were served
to the nursing staff. Nancy has been
named.director of nursing at the new
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Vivian Titus was honored Thursday of last week on her 64th birthday. The beautifully decorated
birthday cake was shared with
second floor employees. An innovation of interest was a doll cake
decorated in aquamarine and white
by eleven year old Julie Durst. This
unique cake is on display in Mrs.
Titus ' room . These friends and
relatives from Meigs and Gallia
CoWlties were on hand to help with
the celebration : Mrs. Lera Jones,
Mrs. Nola Swisher, Thelma Shaver,
Mary Miller, Nathan Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Durst and daughters,
and her son, Robert. Another son,
Frank, drove home from Colwnbus
on SWlday to wish her belated
greetings.
Irene Sayre, Elsie Beatty, Watson
Beatty, and Grace Gloeckner have
rturned home from Holzer Medical
Center and are now receiving our
"velvet glove" treatment.
·
We are making plans for projects
that could brighten your tomorrow.
Our aggressive tactics call for
another "lively social whirl " along
about Halloween time.
Thought for the week: "We cannot
avoid growing physically old. but we
can avoid growing spiritually cold !"

MEETS TUESDAY
POMEROY-The Salisbury PTO
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
school. There will be an introduction
or teachers as well as parents whose
children are attending the school for
the first time . ·Refreshments will be
served.

Parents without
partners calendar
Tuesday, -Sept. 18, 7:30 p.m.
Family FWI - Enjoy ice cream and
cake at Eileen Houck's home, and
join in the lively chatter ' Turn left
on Rt. 160 at Bulaville-PQrter Rd.
Turn right on Georges Creek Rd.
about one-fourth mile. Watch for
PWP sign. Call44&amp;-4474.
Ffiday, Sept. 21, 7:30p.m. -Adult
- Coffee and Conversation at Fran
Thomas' home. Dave Michael will
lead a discussion on "Getting back
into the mainstream of life after
divorce or death." Directions Follow Rt. 2 south from Silver
Bridge to Crab Creek Rd., turn left,
go four miles, brick house on left.
For information call675-1709.
" Sunday, Sept. 23, I p.m. -Family
Potluck Picnic at Mental Health
Center, Gallipolis. Bring own meat
plus dish to share. Bring tbe kids and
join in the games, etc.
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 6:30p.m. Adult - Let's meet and eat at
Oscar's on Court St., Gallipolis (between 2nd and 3rd Avenues ), before
getting out the news.
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 7:30p.m. Newsletter Mailing Party at Mental
Health Center. Help us get out the
news.

POMER9Y LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr,
Main St.
Store Hours: 8: 30 to 5:30
Mill Closed at 5:00P.M.
serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties.

Wednesday, Sept. 26, 8 p.m. Board Meeting - All officers are
requested to be at this meeting and.
ba ve reports ready. This is a very
important meeting at Mental Health
Center.
Friday, Sept. 28, 8:3&lt;ia.m.-l p.m.Adult Dance at K.E.R.A. at Ravenswood, W. Va. on Rt. 2. Ladies, bring
snacks - men, bring soft drinks.
BYOB donation $1 With snacks or
soft drainks - $2 without. Watch for
sign "Pop Ellington House" on right
- going toY&lt;ard Ravenswood from
Pt. Pleasant or Pomeroy.

'

- Tbe Sunday Tirnea&amp;ntinel,SWiday, Sepi,JG,l9'19

Fairview-Spring Valley picnic set Sept. 20

POWELL'S

RIO GRANDE - A family picnic
is being planned ror all members of
me Spring Valley and Fairview

Store Hours:

Riverside !Jtudy
Club meets recently

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
.SEPTEMBER.
22, 1979

CUSTOMER DIVIDEND
DAYS

RDAYS

&lt;;u mmuJJitie s at 6 .30 p.m . on

Thursday evening, September 20, at
the l:lob Evans Shelter House at Rio
Grande.

GALUPOUS ,.. Members of the · 1066, and he and his sons played an
important part in the changes of
Riverside Study Club met in the
England for a number of years. As
· Conference room at the CoL and
the people demanded more
Southern Building on SecOnd Ave.,
freedoms, the first charter of Rights
Tuesday p.m. witll Mrs. John Allen,
and Privileges was giveq them and
hostess. Following a lovely dessert
in 1215, JOhn was forced to sign the
" course, the meeting was called to
Magna Carta. The Age of Chaucer
order by Mrs. Douglas Mullineaux,
also saw the 100 years. War with
president. After roll call and ·the
France and names like T. A.
Club Prayer, led ·by Mrs. Herbert
Beckett, Richard the Lion Hearted,
Cardwell, Chaplain several business
items were discussed by the group. Matilda, JOhn Wycliff and others are
remembered in history. Edward I
Program chairperson, Mrs. John
Allen, then introduced the speaker instituted the title " Prince of
Wales" for his infant son after Wales
for the P.M., Mrs. L. H. Wickline.
had been conquered.
She gave a most interesting and
Learning was highly prized in
informative talk on the subject,
England
by now and Oxford,
"Chaucer 's
England" .
Cambridge
and later, Eton and
Summarizing her discussion, we
Rugby
·became
well known schools.
find the following facts: At first
Chaucer
was
called
the Father of
Angleland was a loosely bound
Mr. and Mrs. hldie Dickey
Modern
English
and
his
federation of some eight or nine
"
Canterbury
Tales"
are
still
quoted
petty klngdoms, but aroWld 800,
Egbert King of Essex, subjected the and used in our schools, for they are
others to his rule and was known as his masterpiece, although tbey were
· never finished, as planned. Rich and
King of England.
Through the years, others became poor alike shared in the journey to
rulers as the crown changed hands Canterbury and as they travel, the
•
until the Battle of Hastings, which story of each is unfurled making
was a very crucial battle in history. these among the best narrative
Now WUiiam of Normandy became poems ever written in the English
King of England on Christmas Day, languages.
LAKE CITY, Pa. -Mr. and Mrs. 22 years and retired from tbe A. 0 .
Eldie Dickey, R. D. no. I Hawthorne Smith Cocpor alion after 15 years
"
Dr., Lake City, Pa., who were service.
married September 16, 1929, will
Sunday, September 16th, at 8p.m.,
celebrate the occasion at an open they will be remarried in the
holi3C to be held in The Fellowship Salvation Army Citadel, ·1022
Hall of The First Free Methodist Uberty St., Erie, Pa. Their brotherGALLIPOLIS - The Gallia in afternoon at option of committee.
Church, 17$1 West 26th street, Erie, in law, retired Brigadier James ·
Betty Clark, extension agent, read
County
Homemakers Extension
Pa. on Saturday, September 15, Dihle, will officiate .
minutes of recent meeting held in
Council
mel
September
12
at
from I p.m. WI 6 p.m.
The
Dickeys
have
17
Columbus and Southern Ohio Jackson Area Center . There will be
Their four 11011s and two daughters grandchildren and three great
a meetin~ in Jackson, September 26
Electric Building for its regular
will be the hosts and hostesses.
grandchildren.
which will be interesting to
monthly
meeting
with
several
ladies
~ . Dickey,thelorrnerMargaret
One of their grandsons, wife and
if you are interested, call .
everyone,
in attendance.
Wittenbel'g of Erie , Pa., is well· son, recently returned !'rom
extension
office. Betty also
Mary Jo Shaver, president, was in
known in GallipoUs and Gallia Co., German. Their soo, three-year:Hlld,
announced
there
would be a style
charge of meeting . Roberta Fisher
as tbe Dickeys are frequent visitors speaks German and English and
show
at
Buckeye
Hills Center,
had devotions, she read "ls Anybody
here. She retired from the General when excited speaks both.
September
29
at
7:00.
Happier ?", and the group repeated
Electric Co. In Erie.
The Dickeys say, "Friends are
Mrs. Clark also had the rcogram
the
Lord's Prayer and pledge to the
Dickey. a native of Gallipolis,
much more precious than gifts."
for
the day, "Listening to Hear",
fla g. Secretary's report was read by
worked for the General Electric Co. ·
which
was very interesting and
Gladys Amsbary and treasurer's
informative.'
The
ten
report by Helen Wood. It was
Commandments
for
good
listeining
announced
that
the
Past
were: I. Stop Talking, 2. Put the
President 's Luncheon would be
talker
at ease , 3. Show that you want
October 6 at Pinecrest Nursing
to
listen;
4. Remove distractions ; 5.
POMEROY - The goldeq wed- Ralpb Welker, Aaron Keltoo, Mrs. Center and alSJ the Fall Tour will
Empathize
with the talker; 6. Be
Maye Cu!ninga. Mn. Margaret be in October at Wellston at Banquet
ding annivenary of Mr. and Mrs.
patient
;
7.
Hold
vour temoer: 8. Go
Foods and perhaps some pia~ else
Elkew. Mrs. Durward CUmings.
Tracy Whaley wa celebnted witb
easy on argwnent; 8. Criticism
Mn. Dean Damitz, Mr. and Mrs.
an open ~on at the Riverboat
which will put the other person on
Fred
Blaettnar, Mn. Guy Morris,
Roim ol the A1bena Coonty Saving~
th e defensive ; 9. Ask questions and
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goeglein, Mn.
Robert White lind children, Robbie 10. Stop Talking.
and Loan Co. Sundly.
Gladys CUckler, Miss RosaUe Story,
and Bobby, Coolville; Mr. and Mrs.
The reception wu bolted by their
A potluck IWlch was served at
aarence Story, Mr. and Mn. Jim Gordon, G~polis; Mr. and noon
daughter, Jane, her lublnd, Har·
by Dora Adkins, Betty Jean
Roland Eastman, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Mrs. Fred Crow, Syracuse; Don Lamphier, Janet Pettus, Jackie
ve; '.'an Vnnken, and their family.
Karr, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Don Collins,
Mullen, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Graham and Bernice Wood . The
Guests were regiltered by Sharon
Mr. and Mn. Fred Goeglein, Mr. Tewksbary, Middleport; Mr. and meeting
Werry, and Mn. lfalel Wl1lon and
was closed by the group
and Mrs. Lennie Jewell, Mrs. Lucille
Mrs. B: L. Montgomery, Ostrander; repeating the Club Collect.
Mrs. Colee~~ Ohlinger pl'lllided at the
Lellbelt, Mn. Vena Whaley, Mrs.
Dr. and Mrs. Uoyd More, Magnetic
serving table.
Clarice
Krautter, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Springs; Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
The five-tiered cake baked by
Mora ,Mr.andMn. Pearl Mara, Mr.
Wingett, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. DenMrs. Peggy Taylor wu dec:onted in
and Mrs. Leo L. Vaughan, Mrs.
ver Rice, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
gold and white and featured a gold
WELCOME WAGON
Dorothy Will, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Terry Ohlinger anH children, Jay,
crosa and bell on top. An
CLUB ACl'IVITIES
Blackwood,
Mrs.
Richard
Rupe,
Jon and J06hua, Duncan FaUs; Mr.
arrangement of yellow daWes and
SEPTEMBER
Mrs.
Patty
Pickens
and
daughter,
lind
Mrs.
Emerson
·
Jones,
Midroses and yellow t8pen completed
Monday,
Sept. 17 - General
NoeUe,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jim
Diehl,
dleport; Miss Eleanor Robson,
the table dec:or. For the occasion,
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the Jackson
Mrs.
Janet
Lee
Russell,
Mr.
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
L.
W.
McMinersville;
Mrs. Wlwley wore an orchic! corPike Office of the Ohio Valley Bank.
Mrs. Kermit Walton, Sean Walton.
Comas, Middleport; Mrs. Karl
sage, and Mr. Whaley, a red rOL!e
Installation of officers.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
A.
R.
Knight,
Dr.
Mrs.
Leota
Young,
MinerGrueser,
boutoonlere.
Thursday , Sept. . :Ill - Evening
and Mrs. Rahken R. Pickens, Gerald sville; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Struth,
The couple who reside at 120 Un·
Bridge, 7:30p.m. at Nora Troike's,
PoweU,
Mr.
and
Mn.
Patrick
Middleport;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mel
coin HW Road, Pomeroy, were
Lochary, Mr. and Mn. VIrgil King, Clark, Colwnbia, W. Va .; Mr. and 623 Jackson Pike, Phone 446-2153.
married on Sept. 7, 19211 by the Rev.
Thursday, Sept. 27 - Crafts, paper
Mr. and Mn. Robert Hoemch, Mr. . Mn. Ike Neal, Middleport; Mr. and
W. S. Glbbonlat o.nrtn.
tole by Country Creations. Phone
and
Mrs.
Avery
Goeglein,
William
Mrs.
Beniard
Connolly,
Point
Guests at the celebration were
«6-1937forlocation and time.
McKelvey, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Mn. Brenda HW, Mrs. Pew
OCI'OBER
Van Vranken, and Matt Van Bryce Smith and children, Wendy,
Taylor, Mr. and Mrl. Bud WIL!on,
Monday,
Oct. I - Executive
Vranken, all of Pomeroy.
Meredith and Ryan, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Chlrlel E. YClllt, Mrs.
meeting,
7
p.m.
at Mary Howell's,
Mllte Hwnphreys and Mr. and Marjorie K. SaWlders, Gallipolis.
Virglnla Edw.nll, Mn. Faye
Mrs. RusseU Hodlles and son,
Mr.and Mrs. Aldo Jeffers, Gahan- 578 Jay Drive. Phone 446-4479. ·
WUdennuth, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Wednesday, Oct. 3 - Luncheon
Olarleston,
W.
Va.;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
na;
Jinn SaWlders, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Moore, Mn. Polly Elcblnger, Mr.
·Bridge,
12 noon-3 p.m. Phone 446Fred McKibben, Mrs. Evelyn PuHh, Evelyn Smith, Syrac\13C; Mr. and
and Mrs. Ralpll cart, Mrs. Cleon
The Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Mrs. Jtm Adams and children, Todd 2649.
Pratt, Jr., Ml8l Ellora Faulkner,
Wedneday, Oct. 10 - Get·
Sidle,
Hanover;
Charles
Gaul,
and
Kim, Syracuse; Mrs. Thelma
Ted Reed, Jr., Dana Rowen, Mrs.
acquainted Coffee, 10 a.m. Phone
Grove
City;
Mr.
and
Mn.
Dale
Bar·
Dill,
Mrs.
Evelyn
Lucke,
Syracuse,
Faye Pratt, Mr. and Mn. Cllarles E.
nhart, Middleport; Mr. and Mn. and Mrs. Sharon Werry, Herulock 446-7139.
Riffle, ]ttr. and Mrs. Mllton Roush,
Saturday, Oct. 13 - Gouples
Grove.
Bridge,
7:30p.m. at Troike's, Phorie
During the afternoon music was
446·2153.
presented by Kenny Sidle and ·Mike
Welcome Wagon Club is open to all
Hwnphrey,
fiddles;
Robert
White,
340 SECOND AVE•
Interested
newcomers to Pt.
mandolin; Denver Rice, guitar;
Pleasant
and
Gallia County. For
Berilard Connolly and Jim Gordon,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
more
infonnation,
call Chris Mit·
banjos, and Tracy Whaley, bass.
chell, 446-7739.

The ~·atrv iew-Spring Vall ey
Homemakers Club is sponsoring this
event as an opportWlity for all those
in the community to get together for
a tinne of fun and fellowship with
the ir neighbors, and so that
newcomers to the community may
get acquainted . The club strongly
reels that the need to ·gel together
with neighbors more often and hopes

all the iamilies in the community
will attend.
Those attending are asked to bring
a covered dish and dessert and their
own table service. The club will
furnish the meat and drinks.
Anyone having questions may
contact the club president , Mrs.
Mildred Welker (446-4267) , or any
member of. the club.

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES.
FEATURING

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'he Etdie Dickeys to

remarry on anntversary

.

•

Superior Sliced

BACON .......~~89~

Extension Council meets

"

,.

Anniversary celebrated

6
9
C
APPLES •••••••~! ..
D

GOLDEN

DELICIOUS ·

J

w.

COUPON DAYS
BANQUET

FRIED CHICKEN
32

oz.

.....

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$200

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Onlv at Powell
Offer Expires Sept. 22, 1979

' ~·

,,
..
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·"

CHICKEN Of THE SEA

CHUNK TUNA
6.5 OL

3j$ 200

limit 1 Per Customer
Goii~Fenly at Powell
Offer Expires Sept. 22, 1979

COUPON DAYS
BRAWNY

DESIGNER TOWELS
JUMBO
ROLL

2/$1

Limit 1 Per Cus!omer
Good Only at Powell
Offer Ex
22,1979

NDAY

CORONET

TOILET TISSUE
8 ROLL
$}19
PACK
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell

BOILED
HAM

·~

'"

.-.

l\ j. l

'•
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•••
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•
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•

COAT
SALE

••
•••

•
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:•'

•

!!~~~~~~~~~~~~19~7!9~~~~~!1 ~

"LEAN NO
WASTE"

SEVERAL TIMES DAILY

GROUND BEEF

!139

VALLEY BELL

2%

$

69

MILK .
PLA.sTIC
GALLON

Vienna Sausage

:

39~
RC or
DIET RITE
COLA

8 16 oz.
Btls.

19

In

Some Circles
Were a tradition

SAVE20%0FF

I••

SLICED THE WAY
YOU LIKE IT

It'sthe sale you've been waiting for!
Those lovely new coats of the season
are at "buy now" price tags ...In a
selection that's not to be inlssed!
You 'U. save on the latest-look shape!!
and styles ...colors and fabrics!
Tweed texture reefers, slimmershaRed... fleecy wraps in smoky
shailes ... flattering belteds with
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and more! Come select yours. .

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Mon. -Thurs.

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9A. M.-9:30 P .M .. ·

Fri. &amp; Sat.
9 A.M.-10 P.IVI

Closed
sunday

·

�..
-·

B-12- The Sunday Times-Senllnel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

C-1- The Sunday Times-sentinel, ~unday, Sept. 16, 1979

Miller family holds recent reunion locally
POMEROY - Descendants of
George W. Miller (1869-1936) and
Nancy A. Miller ( 1870-!9S7)
gathered recently at the Forest
Acres Park near RuUimd· (or a
reunion .
Recognized and presented gifts
were Helen Miller , the oldes t
"Miller" attending; and Ruby
Rubel, the yoWJgest daughter of the
late Millers. Also recognized and
presented gifts were the two with
birthdays closest together - twin
aattgnl~rs of Mrs. Helen Miller and

•

the late Herb Miller - Mrs. June
Glaze and Mrs. .!Pan Mi rhel ~; the
newest bride and groom, Mr. and
Mrs . Micha el Ohlinger; the
youngest, Jacob , son of Gene and
Terri Davis, and the longest
married, Eileen and Elwood
Bowers. Their prize, a decorated
cake, was taken to Ronald Miller
who was ill and unable to attend.
Attending the reunion were Helen
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad
Ohlinger, Naomi and Kathryn

Ohlinger, Mr. and MrK Elwood
Bowers, June Glaze and children,
Brenda, Patty and Scott, Mr. and
Mrs. James Reed, Mr. and Mrs.
Olarles Rubel, Mr. and Mrs. John
Michels, Laura Michels and
Olristine Hanrahan, Mr. and Mrs .
Ed Venoy with Craig and Kevin,
Shirley Bumgardner, Terry Davis,
Bridget and Jacob, Mr. and Mrs.
Dan Bowers, Arty, Tracee and
Daryl, Michael Ohlinger, Mike,
Julie and Angie, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Brickles, Peter arid Paul, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Acord, Nancy Beaver, Joy
Fridley, Michael, Jyl and Jeff
Zerkle, Ivy Miller, E. Joyce Miler,
Mr . and Mrs. David Reed, Tad and
Elizabeth, and Ed, Ruth, Tim and
Jim Durst.
George W. and Nancy A. MUJer!s
residence was on Hysell Run Road

c
Meigs cops
26-6 victory

and Is presently named "Athena
Acres." 'llley have nine children ,
Herb , Tom, Ivy and Janie,
deceased;
and Ronald
of
Middleport, Marshal of Beverly,
Ruby Rubel of HIJisdale, Mich .. and
Liley Glem of Pataskla.
Mr. Miller was a mine official,
fanned his land, was a Mason .and
active in many_ community
Ol'ganizatloos. He was a member of
the Rutland Township; the Board of
Edllcation, fer many years· and he
and Ilia wife were members of the
Bradford Church of Olrlllt. Mra.
Miller was a multi-talented woman,
with needlepoint and vegetable and
flower gardens as her epecialty. She
was a member of Poclihontaa and an
avid reader. Mr. illiUer wiiS the first
In Meigs CoWJ!y to own a coal dwnp
truck.
· AT

.BAKER FURNITURE
IN

Mr. and t\11rs. A ttgelo Hickman

MIDDLIPOIIT, 0.

Golden anniversary to
be celebrated S'unday
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Angelo
Hickman will be celebrating their
50th wedding anniversary on
Sunday, Sept. 23rd with a recepllon
from 3 to 5 p.m . at their home in
Bidwell.
Mr . and Mrs. Hickman were

AT TMIIIIlOHT I'ICT\1111 AND
COIIPAIII I'IATUIIU THAT liT "

married Sept. 23rd, 1929, in Bidwell.
All relatives and !Mends are
cordially invited to attend.
They are the parents of five
children : Delores, Clarence,
Meryle, and Lewis, all deceased and
Mrs. David (Connie) Evans of
Bidwell.

BEAR HUG - Greg Lynch (81) defensive end for Pt. Pleasant, appears to have a "bear hug" on Gallia Fullback Scott Morrison (31 ) during
this action shot of Friday 's GAHS-Pl. Pleasant game. Morrison led all
, Gallia NShers with 60 yards, including a 27-yarder in the first period. Big

L. Saunders

Open house announced
GALIJPOIJS - Mr. and Mr-s.
William L. SaWJders will celebrate
their Golden Wedding anniversary
on Sunday, September 30, with an
open house reception at their home .
The reception will be hosted by
their children, all friends and

relatives are invited to call during
the appointed hours of 2 - 4 p.m.
Mr . and Mrs. Saunders were
married by Rev. Ira Sheets on Sept.
28, 1929, at the minister's home near
Mercerville.
Both are retired employees of
G.S.I.

Admiral
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When you comPire the te1~
turn and benefit• Ot an Ad-miral TV to 111 the rnt, you'll
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besll Why? BecauM Admiral
enginee~ were teamed with
Rockwell International eeroapace scientists and top furniture det,igners you get the

latest ta&lt;:hnology f&lt;&gt;&lt; bringing the finest quality picture,
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Spec'-1
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Pt. Pleasant scores early,
edges Gallia Academy, 7-0
'578
:

.

•&lt;

In the "Year Of the Child"

Let the light-of
Christmas shine
on all children.
Berwyn Davies

Welsh program to be
presented at Tyn Rhos
RIO GRANDE - Tyn Rhos Welsh
Congregational .Church nea r Rio
Grande, IS sponsorin g a Heritage Celebration with an informal dinner
in the Ty Chapel at 6 p.m .,
September 29,"fo llowed with a short
concert by Berwyn Da vi es of
Aberaeron, Wales, at 7 p.m. After
this concert , the opening service of
the !07th Annual Welsh Gymanfa of
the Central Southeast Association of
the United Church of Christ will
start at 7:30 pm.
Berwyn Davi es is a very
distinguished bass si nger. having
won !he National Eis ted dfod
competition three

time~. rJ$

Black defender on left is Anthony Lee (23). Gallia 's Mark Sheets (~)and
Greg Harrington (10) trail the play. PPHS edged Gallipolis, 7.{), to remain
unbeaten in three starts

being the winner of the famous Blue
Hibbon Competition at the National
Eisteddfod in Cardigan where he
competed against all winners ,' male
and female, in each category.
Davies was one of the soloists who
sang at the Oak Tree Planting
ceremony held at Aberaeron on May
25, 1979, which honored those who
emigrated
from that area of
Cardiganshire to Southern Ohio in
the years 18111-1848. Most of the early
Welsh settlers in the Tyn Rhos
nei ghborhood and the organizers of
the ch urch were from that general
area of Cardigansh ire.

.

PT. PLEASANT - Quarterback
Glen McClellan lofted a six-yard
touchdown pass to Tailback Dave ·
Sprouse with 4: 216 left in the first
peMod and Bryan Mabe split the
uprights from placement to give
Coach Steve Safford's Pt. Pleasant
Big Black! a hard-fought 7~ victory
over Coach Bill Trent 's visiting
Gallipolls Blue Dev1is on Sanden
Memorial Field here Friday nigh&amp;.
An estimated ~.000 fans were on
hand for the 50th grid renewal between the two schools. It wu the Big
Blacks home opener and third conleCiltive victory of the 1979 cam·
palgn. The Joss lef't GAHS with a 1·1
le&amp;30II record.
Wealller Perfect
GaWpolls threatened twice during
the 48 minute contest, played in perfect weather despite threat of rain
from Hun1cane Frederic earlier in
lheday.
In the Initial stanza, GABS marched 60 yards in 10 plays only to have
the drive bog down on the Big Blacks
two yard line when Henry (Bo)
Elliott, 210-pound senior tackle and a
host rJ 'teammates stopped GABS
Fullback Scott Morrison one,yard
abort of a first down and tw&amp;oyards
ahy of paydirt as the first period
born soWlded.
Gallipolls took the third period
kickoff on lts own 42, following a 21·
rard return by Bob Marchi, and
marched 34 yards in eight plays only
to lose the pigskin on a fwnble at the
PPHS 24. Greg Lynch recovered
with 8:04lett in the period to end the
threat.
The Blue Devils had Pl. Pleasant
bottled up deep In Its own territory
early in the fourth period following a
boomlnl! 4&amp;-yard punt by Greg
Harrington.

TuralDg PoiDI

On a third down play, QB McClellan was trappe&lt;!" behind the line
of scMmmage and brought down, but
the Blue Devils were called fur un-

necessary roughness on the play.
That gave Pt. Pleasant a first
down on it.s own 40. It was the tur·
ning point as far as Blue Devil fans
were concerned. PPHS controlled
the ball the , remaining eight
minutes, running IS plays to the
Gallians si.J:, using up valuable time
ln the process.
Earlier in the contest, Bob Beller,
Big Black punter, saw the ·ball sail
high over his head back to the PPHS
five or six yard line. The alert Beller
raced back, managed to recover and
kicked the hometeamoutof danger.
Had Opportwlltles
"We had several opportunities to
defeat a real good football team
tonight," said Coach Trent. "We
failed to capitalize on their
mistakes,' ' he added.
Pt. Pleasant's winning drive in the
first period covered 37 yards in si.J:
plays.
The Big Blacks advanced to
GaWa 's 216 near the end of the third
period, but lost the ball on downs.
Midway in the final peMod, PPHS
moved to the GABS 19, but a ![&gt;.yard
clipping penalty ended that threat.
"We tried to give it away,"
remarked Big Black Coach Steve
Safford in the Pt. Pleasant dressing
room after his team had ·taken the
series lead. 23-22. datllll( back to the
1922 season. Five games have ended
in ties. •
Safford Impressed
"We were impressed with that big
Gallipolis tine . They did a good job,"
Safford added. He agreed with
Gaillpolls Coach Bill Trent mistakes

(penalties, the one fumble and pass
lnterception ). lurt the Blue Devil-'!
chances in a bld for an upset victory
over the home team.
Until GABS was hit with three 13yard penalties in the final peMod, the
Blue Devils had just about
dominated everyt/iing except where
it counts -on the scoreboard.
In the final stanza, PPHll ran "15
plays to the Gallians 10, gained oi8
total yards to the Devils 17, and
racked up six first downs to the
visitors' two.
Final statistics showed PPHS with
13 first downs to Gallia 's 11. GAHS
picked up 113 yards rushing in 34 at- ·
tempts while Pl. Pleasant finished
with 150 yards In 42 trips.
McClellan had three pass completions (one intercepted by Nick
Robinson ) out of eight attempts for
34 yards and one touchdown.
Harrington, Gallia 's southpaw
signal caller, cOIUiected on five of12
(one intercepted and returned :ID
yards by Troy Krebs) for 42 yards.
Both quarterbacks were bottled up
all night - McClellan had a minus
eight yards in seven trips .
Harrington had a min u.s 19 in seven
attempts.
Leadllll! Rushen
Big gWJ for the winners was Brian
Stepp, 190-pound senior wingback
who collected 81 yards in IS attempts. Dave Sprouse added 66 in 14
tries and Jay Minton 11 yards in six
trips.
For GAHS, Scott Morrison picked
up 60 yards ln 10 attempts. Mark
Sheets had 47 yards in eight carries,
Matt Willis 19 yards in five attempts
and Willie Wood added six yards in
four carries. 1
The Big Blacks ran 50 plays from
scMmmage, GABS 46. Penalties saw

Gallipolls with four for 50 yards
while PPHS had five for 38.
Harrington punted five times for
190 yards (38.0 ). Beller punted four
times for 130 yards (32.S). Anthony
Lee had a seven yard return for the
winners .
Nick Robinson caught three
passes for 'E1 yards and Greg Eutsler
two for 15 for GAHS. Troy Krebs had
one for 15,

o.-.. 'noomaa one for u

and Dave Sprouse the all-Important
si.J: in one attempt for the game's
winning score.
Defensively for GABS, Rob Goble,
Dan Staggs, Nick Robinson, Greg
Eutsler and Bob Foster were ln on
several tackles.
Bo Eliott, Gilbert Rogers, Troy
Krebs, Keith Doss and Todd
Pridemore had a good share of hits.
for the winnets.
Coal Grove Next
FMday, GAllS will host Coal
Grove in its final non-eonference
game of the year. PPHS will host
Hurricane.
Here are Friday's slatlstlcs :
STATISTICS

Department

First downs
Yards rushing

Lost rushing
Net rushing

Pass attempts

Complellons
Intercepted by
Yards passing

Total yards
Plays

Return yards

Fumbles

G

11

141
28
113

12

5
1

42
155
46

29

Score by Quarters :

169

19
150
8
3
1

34
184

50

.2

58
0

1

0

Lost fumbles
PenalTies
Punts

PP
tl

4·50 5·38
5·190 4·130

Gallipolis
o 0 o 0··0
Pt. Pleasant
7 o o o--7
NEXT GAHS GAME - Sept. 21 ,
Coal Grove, Home .

Grid standings
ALL GAMES
W L T POP
TEAM
3 0 0 45 13
Pt. Pleasant
2 0 0 51 12
Coal Grove
2 0 0 28 18
Ironton
1013620
Wellston
1 1 0 21
7
Gallipolis
1 1 ri 22 14
Logan
1 1 0 10 18
Jack son
1102256
Waverly
1204844
Meios
0 2 0 12 43
Rock Hill
0 2 0 2 47
Athens

came to a close. Meigs started on
BYGARYCWK
POMEROY -Dan Thomas and their own 17 yard stripe and moved
!Wger Kovalchik were cast into the to the Wahama one loot line with the
big play being a 62 yard pass from
limelight Friday night after injuries
Thomas
to Wayland. After a five
forced two Meigs Marauders to the
yard
penalty
Meigs found themsidelines early in the first quarter a.s
selves
with
a
fourth
and goal at the
the Meigs' eleven of Coach Charley
White
Falcon
one
when
Kovalchik
Chancey won a ~ triwnph over the
went
over
after
being
momentarily
villiting Wahama White Falcons.
stopped for the flnal touchdown of
The victory was the first of the
the
game. The conversion pass fell
young season for the Marauders
incomplete
and Meigs held a ~
after opening with back to back
advantage
with
11: 19 to play.
losses to Belpre and Pt. Pleasant.
Following
the
ensuing kickoff
Wahama dropped its second conW
ahana
went
into
the "quail" and ·'
secutive outing after emerging
be~an
picking
up
huge chunks of
victoriou.s over Southern in its
yardage
but
a
fwnble
at the Meigs 23
season opener.
and
an
incomplete
pass
on the next
Thomas , a 5'10" 160 pound
also
ended
a drive
Falcon
possession
wingback took over the quarterbacking duties following the at the Marauder 23 yardline as time
expired with Meigs in control at
Marauders first touchdown when a
their own 31.
knee injury sent highly touted
Team statistics show the Meigs
Meigs' sophomore·Bob Ashley to the
bench. The senior signal caller Countians with a whopping 233 yards
guided his team to three more touch- · rushing and 115 more through the air
downs while completing 6 of 9 passes for a total of 348 net yards gained.
Wahama managed just 36 yards on
for 115 yards and rushing for71 more
the ground but picked up a total of
on just 9 carries.
226
yards passlng for a total of 262
Kovalchik. although only a
yards.
•
sophomore, took over for Blaettnar
Defensive
·
standouts
for
the
on the Marauders opening series of
.
winning
Meigs
eleven
were
Tim
downs and went on to grind out 83
yards rushing in 24 carries to take Faulk, Richard Dean, Robin Slater
game high honors. The 5'10" 170 and Robert Parker. Wahama was
led in defense by Larry Hesson,
pound tailback scored three of his
Fred Smith, Shawn Fields, Travis
teams four touchdowns in the
Gray
and David Burton.
contest.
The White Falcons journey to
Despite the lopsided score,
Wahama had its heroes also with an Belpre next Friday night to take on a
adept aerial attack behind a pair of team that beat Meigs by a 24-22
senior passers. Rick Barnitz com- score some three weeks ago. Meigs,
pleted seven o( 18 tosses for 114 meanwhile, is idie next week. 1be
yards and a touchdown before giving Marauders enter their SEOAL
way to .Vin ce Weaver midway season with Logan September 28 at
through the fourth stanza.
home.
Weaver led the Mason CoWJtians
when they went into their famed
"quail" offense by completing nine
of 16 aerials for 112 yards. The senior
running back also did an outstanding
STATISTICS
job carrying the b~ against the
WAH ... ... MEIGS
tough Meigs defense although he
netted but 33 yards in ten attempts.
10
u
F\n~tDowna
Meigs got on the scoreboard
Yds Hushing
15-36 52-233
following their first possession of the
Yds Passing
226
115
game when they drove 61 yards ln 13
262
348
Tot. Yds
plays for the touchdown. Kovalchik
16-34
6-9
Pass.-Comp
ca pped the drive with a nine yard
1
I
Interceptions
rWl with 4; 54 remaining in the initial
2·1
5-J
Fwnbles-Lost
. period. The point after attempt
7·75 6-50
Penalties
failed when Barnitz intercepted Punts-Avg.
4-30.5 1-28.0
Ashley's pass at the one.
53
62
Off. Plays
The· Marauders stopped Wahama
1234Tot.
Score by Quarters:
cold and quickly instituted another
0600 6
Wah.
sustained drive that resulted in
668626
Meigs
another score on the first play of the
SCORING:
second quarter. The White Falcons
Meigs- Roger Kovalchik nine yd nm
seemingly had the Marauders
(pass failed)
stopped on a fourth and seven
Meigs-Jeff Wayland 10 yd pass from
situation at the Wahama ten yard
Dan
Thomas (run failed)
line but Thomas found Jeff Wayland
Wah.-Fred Smith 16 yd pass from
in the end zone to make it 12.{). Once
Rick Barntiz (kick wide(
again the PAT attempt has halted
Meigs-Roger Kovalchik ~yd nm
short of the goal.
(Rick Williamson pass from Dan
The bend area Falcons got the
Thomas)
board as the half neared its comMeigs-Roger Kovalchik 1-yd run
pletion when Barnitz hit Tim Young
(pass failed)
foi: a 51 yard gain. Seconds later the
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
senior quarterback took to the air
RUSHING:
again and found wingback Fred
Wah-Vince Weaver 10·33 ; Rick
Smith for a 16 yard touchdown strike
Barntiz 2.ol ; Fred Smith 1.{); Travis
to close the gap to 12-&lt;i. The White
Gray 2-( -1); Totals 15-36.
Falcons point after attempt was also
Meigs-Roger Kovalchik24-83; Dan
no good when Tord Harnmerlund's
Thomas 9·71; Rick Blaettnilr 7-49;
kick sailed just wide to the right.
Jerry Feilds [&gt;..14; Tim Basham 3-11;
Wahama mounted a mild threat as
Bob Ashley 1-4; Greg Bush 2-4; Rick
the half came to a close when
Williamson!·(·!); Totals 52-233.
Barnitz intercepted a 'lllomas pass
PASSING:
and the ensuing drive carried the
Wah.·Rick Barnitz 7-UI-114 yds • 1
Falcons to the Marauder 13 yard line
TO - 1 int.; VInce Weaver • 9-16-112
before a 15 yard holding penalty
yds ; Meigs - Dan Thomas - 6+115
killed the Wa ham a hopes.
yds - .1 int.
As the second half got Wlderway
RECEIVING:
Mei~s picked up right where they
Wah .. - Tim Young 2-72; Fred
left off with a 4S yard drive in eleven
Smith
H9; Tim Roush - 5-47; Shawn ·
plays with Kovalchik going the final
ields - 3-41 ; Vince Weaver -2-Hil;
three yards for the score. Thomas
Totals 16-226.
hit Rick Williamson for the two point
Meigs - Jeff Wayland 2-72; Dave
conversion to make it 2~ with 6:39
Hyselll-12;
Brian Swann 1-12 ; Kevin
to play in the third quarter.
Smith
1·10
;
Roger Kovalchik HI;
The final Marauder touchdown
Totals 6·11S.
drive started as the third period

Friday's Results:

Pt. Pleasant 7 Gallipolis o
Minford 22 Rock Hill12

well as

Coal Grove 22 Portsmouth West 6

Meigs &amp; Gallia Cnty. F.O.P. Lodge #95
IHN II/rlj p1 rt;t11f':

LIVE NASHVILLE SHOW ON STAGE
i:J
imlutlil~
if

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You through Dress-A-DollrM and

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Join ha.nds with millions whose

concern this year is for the welfare. happiness of a deserving
child. Dress-A-Doll'• and DesignA - Toy'~ will put you in tou ch with
th ose from our very owil oommunit~/ who ne~d your help . By
dress ing a. doll, assembling and
decorating a toy. you will brighten
the Chri stma.\Or a c hild ror wh om
the light or Christmas may no t
otherw ise shine. We have dolls and
truck s for imm'ediate pic kup in

our lobby . These are free for you to
ta.ke and dress or assemble &amp;1'\d
return f'&gt;r distri bution to children
who need them . Choose from a
blonde, brunette, or black doll, or
fire engine , log or dump truck.
Com plete instructions for tr uck
decorating and doll costuming are
a. pa.rt of each package . P lenty of
. time to do yo ur handiwork. dolls
and toys are to be returned by midNovember when they will flrst be

put on display in our lobby for the

DATE: Wed ., Sept. 19, 1979

Middlepoll Jr . High School
South 3rd Ave.

TIME: 6:00P.M . &amp; 9.00 P.M .

Midd leport , Ot110

TICKETS: $5.00

help.
public to aee. Please Join uein our

i

..

Ironton a1 Washington CH

effort to light up the Cbrislmuola
needy child, children who neocl

Jackson at Greenfield
Logan at Nelsonville-York
Meigs ·- Open
Unioto at Waverly
Vinton County at Wellston
Ceredo-Kenova at Rock Hill

our combined ooncem arid eup-

port. Your own Cbriolmu will
tho brighter lor it.

be

Hurricane at Pt. Pleasant.

Fo

.

Farmers

Bank
POMEROY, 0.

•
J

c~

Teafs valley 12 Athenso
Ironton 22 Portsmouth 18
Wheelersburg 18 Jackson 7
Lovan 16 Columbus Central 0
Meigs 26 Wahama 6
Wellston 22 Nelsonville-York 6
Sept. 21 games:
Coal Grove at Gall ipolis
Athens at Circleville

"

•

FUMBLE OUT-OF-BOUNDS - Pl. Pleasant's
Keith Doss (44) knocked the ball loose from Gallia's
GAHS-Pt. Pleasant football game. The Blue Devils,
however, got a break when it rolled out of bounds.

Willis was 'credited with a three-yard gain. Mark
Sheet:l (44) left, looks on. Backing up Doss on the play
are Greg Lynch (81 ) and Bo Elliott (50). - Brenda
Wilson photos.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
MERCERVIlLE - The Hannan
Trace Athletic Boosters will meet at
7:30p.m. Me 1day at the high school.
All members are urged to attend.

BIG GAINER - Wahama's Rick Barnitz (~)rushes downfleld on a
Wahama drive for yardage. Although Bamltz's effort to score fOI' the
White Falcons failed liere, he did find Fred Smith In the end zone aa the
first half of Friday night's game neared completion. Going after Bamltz
is Marauder Greg Bush (30) . (Photo by Judy Owen).

'

•

�C-3-TheSWidayTimes-&amp;ntinel,Swulay, Sept. 16,1979

-·-

C-2- The Sunday Tlmes-5entinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

Spartans,, Bobcats in ~ Eagles humble Miller
0-0 grid tie Friday
By Greg Bailey

CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek had
trouble with its old nemesis again
Friday night as the Bobcats battled
to a O-Otie with visiting Alexander.
Coach Jim Sprague's Bobcats had

Sports
briefs. ..

ON THE MOVE - Kyger Creek's senior fullback
Victor VanSickle (35) picks up good yardsge in this
scene Friday night at Cheshire. VanSickle had 58 yards

l

I

Southern
RACINE - After a spirited
showing in the first half, the host
Southern Tornadoes defense slipped,
allowing the Parkersburg Catholic
Crusaders to go home with a 13-0
win.
Coach John Dudding's Tornadoes
looked strong in the first half with
the offense making it to the four
yard line before the Crusaders could
stop them and the Tornado defense
equally strong by holding Parkersburgtoonly 34 yanls at the half.
When both lelllllS reiW11ed to the
field in the second half, however,
both sides began playing contrary to
the evening's earlier performance.
The Crusaders carried the ball
.dowri to the one yard line and then
lost it to Southern on a fumble.
. Southern, Wl8ble to gain much
· giaound in that series, kicked a
short punt and left the Crusaders
with good field position . .
The Crusaders scored on a short
run by Chuck Wegmann. The extra
point kick was good making the
score, 7-&lt;1.

rushing but that wasn't enough as his Bobcats and

Alexander battled to a 0-G tie (Peg Thomas photo.)

drop~

13-0 battle
The Tornadoes host Caldwell
Friday night while Parkersburg
Catholic will host the Eastern
Eagles.

Once again rUnning back Chuck
Wegmann turned this to Parkersburg's favor after receiving the ball
by scoring on anothershort run
placing the Crusaders ahead to what
would be the final score, 13-0.
Leading rusher for the Tornadoes
was Robin Fortune with 79 yards
and close behind was Danny Tablott
with 34. Leading rushersfor the
Crusaders was Wegmann with 91
yards and Todd McCay with 46.

DEPARTMENT

FD

12
139
3
142

YardsRush

Yards Pass

Total Yards

PC

15
174
0
174

Fumbles-lost
5·3 3-2
Int. thrown
0
1
Pass·comp.
3-1· 4-0
Parkersburg rushing -- Wegmann
19 for 91 yards. McCoy 14 tor 46.
Southern leading rushe rs ·· Robin
F.ortune 10 f(Jr 79 yards . Danny
Talbott Hor 34 yaras .
Score by quarters :
Parkersburg
0 0 7 6·-13
Southern
0 0 0 0- - 0

Jackson
suffers
18-7loss
JACKSON - Halfback Todd
Perkins scored all three touchdowns
Friday night in leading the Wheelersburg Pirates to an 18-7 victory over
the host Jackson Ironmen.
The triumph upped the Pirates'
season mark to 3-0 as Perkins scored
on a one yanl run in the first period,
a 49 yard punt return in the second,
and followed with a two yard scoring
blast in the third quarter. Two conversion runs and a two-point pass
failed for the Pirates.
Randy Dunn put Jackson on the
·board with a one yard run in the
second period and Dobie Wyant
kicked the extra point.
All three of the Pirate touchdowns
were set up by passes as they completed four of nine for 57 yards and
added 225 yards on the ground.
Halfback Jon Dever carried nine
tlnoes for 117 yards to pace the win-

ners.
Jackson 's offense generated nine
first downs, 00 yards rushing, and
completed three of 11 passes for 28
yards.
Brian Landrwn accow1ted for 67
yards on 17 trips for the lrorunen,.
who are now 1-1 on the season.
Score by quarters:
Wheelersburg
6 6 6 ~18
Jackson
0 7 0 ~7
NEW AITENDANCEMARK
NEW YORK (AP) - With 58,710
watching American League games
Thw-sday night, the league set an
all-time sports league attendance
record wit h total paid cro wds
totalin g 20,53 1,405. A league
spokesman said Friday that the
figw-e surpassed the 1978 A.L.
record of 20,529,965.
With 108 playing dates still
definitely scheduled, but excluding
ten tali vc makeup games involving
contenders that will not be
determined for a few days, the
Ameri can League anticipates a final
league mark in excess of 21 million,
and possi bly as high as 21,500,000.

A roentgen 1s a

do~g~

Ulllt of

radiation exposure produced by Xrays.

Later, the Bobcats had the 6all at
the one following a Lasseter run,
By The Associated Press
however, a clip put the Bobcats back
TENNIS
to the 18 where a pass fell short.
MEMPHIS, TeM. (AP) - Jotn
The Bobcats can feel some con·
McEnroe, the ro-year-old U.S. Open solation in the fact that Alexander
champion, beat Guilenno Vilas 6-2,
romped 41-G last year.
6-3 , 6-2 and Vilas Gerulaitas
The Spartans had two scoring
defeated Jose-Luis Clerc S-1, 7-5, 6-1
chances. Late in the second period, a
til give the United States a 2-0 lead
pass interception run placed the ball
over Argentina in the American zone at the 38. Seven plays later, Ale:ranfinal of the Davis Cup.
der wu at the eight xard line but a
TOKYO (AP) - Billie Jean King stingy Bobcat defense held on a fourrallied to defeat Wendy Turnbull of . th down play.
Later, the Spartans took over at
Australia 4-6, 7-5, S-1 to advance to
the semifinals of the $150,1100 Tory
the Bobcat 19 following a .bad punt.
Sillook tournament.

STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT

~

7
120

Total Yardage

15
135
7
I

Yards Passing
Passes Attpt.

Passes Com pt.
Interceptions
Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalties
Bv Quarters :

Alexander
Kyger Creek

GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP)Dave Eich~lberger fired a 2-underpar 70 to grab the second-round lead
at 6-under 138 in the $150,1100 Buick
Open at Warwick Hills Country
Club.
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)- Sandra
Palmer birdied the rmal four holes
and teamed with Pat Bradley for a
record 12-under-par 61 and the firstround lead of the $110,000 LPGA
team cHampionships at the Portland
Golf Club.
The Palmer-Bradley duo took a
three-shot advantage over Joyce
Kazmierski and Sandra Spuzich,
who fired nines of 31-33 for a 64.
SWIMMING
DOVER, England (AP)- James
" Doc" Counsilman, the 58-year old
Indiana University swimming
coach, became the oldest person
ever to swim the English Channel
when he reached shoce in · France
after a 13\'z-hour swim from
England.
TRACK AND FIELD
LONDON (AP) - Edwin Moses
ran the 400-meter hurdles in a
winning time of 48.28 secoods at an
international meet at Crystal
Palace.
in other action, Houston McTear
won the 100-meter dash in 10.21 ; AI
Feuerbach won with a shot put with
64 feet, 5'&gt;•' inches; Britain's Steve
Ovett
took the mile in 3: ~ -3 and
Steve Binns of England set a world
junior record of 13:Z7.1 in the 5,000
meters in finishing third behind
front-running countryman Mike
McLeod, 13:25.5.
HOCKEY
HElSINKI, Finland (AP ) - The
Jokerit team of Finland whipped the
U.S. Olympic squad 4-1 in an
ex hi bit ion match with Boston
University defenseman Jack
O'Callahan scoring the only U.S.
goal.
SAIUNG
ROCHESTER , N.Y. (AP) Cathy Foster of Great Britain
retained her International 420 Class
world title · despite losing her first
race in five starts, and two Swedish
women, Marit Soderstrom and
Gunilla Borg, were 1-2 going into
toQay's final day of competition for
the Laser Class crown in the World
Women's Salling Championships.

.u I

A

First Downs
Yards Rushing

2
2
2
5·.00

SEE

.

us

'

0 0 0 0··00•
0 0 0 0··0:

Earvin "~gic" Johnson played :
two years of varsity basketball at :
Michigan State and averaged 1.8 '
assists per contest.

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POMEROY

failing.

With Z:29 to go in the half, quarterback Brian Bissell broke loose
11round the left end for a seven-yllnl
· score to put the game out of re11ch,
1~. This Ume Bissell passed to
Mltrk Norton for the extras.
Miller had only one I!1IStained
drive, and that was in the waning
minutes of the first half. But 11 clipping penalty nullified a fine run and
the half ended with the ball on the
Eagle35.
Wigal scored again in the third
period, and Dennis Durst tallied In
the fourth on a flve-yanl jaunt. Mike
HarUey fumlshed the offensive punch for the Falcons as he gained 4.5
yanll on the night In eleven tries.
The Eastern offense was . unstoppable as the Green and White
rolled up '!Jjj yard,s on the ground
and 4.5 in the air Friday night. They
gained 15 first dOWns COOipared to
JI!St!wofor the visitors.
Eastern had one fwnble but kept
the ball while Miller loot both of their
fumbles. Mltrk Norton bad 44 yards
in seven carries for the winners
while Durst added 35 yards on just
three carries. Durst had runs of
12,12, and 11 yards, Biae1l had 24
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Flrstdowns
Rush yds.
Pass yds.
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Passes Comp.
·Had inter .
Fumbles -lost

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GALLIPOLIS - .The 0. 0. Mclnlyl'1l Park District is hosting once
again another ezdtlng fall season of
women's volleyball. Team J'06Iers
for any interested participants are
due Sept. 18in the office 11 the 0 . 0 .
Mcintyre Park District, Probate
Court office, Gallia Coultty Cour·
!house, by 4 p.m.
The starting date is slated for
Sept. 20 at the Gallipolis State Institute beginning at 6::11 p.m:
An instrwnental clinic of general
volleyball fundamentals will kick off
the season led by members of the
Rio Grande College Varsity
Volleyball Team to teach up-to-date
sldlls and tactics .
For further information contact
the 0. 0. Mclnlyl'1l Park District
located in the Proliate Court office
by calling 446-4612 ext. 4S, Gwen Carter.

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The Cominerclal &amp; Savings Bank,
25 Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

Spring Valley
;II

gathered in a 29 yanl pasa from
Mike ~wart and Mark Ruggles
kicked the extra point.
Just over six minutes later John
Huffman scored on a two yard run
with the kick blocked.
The clock showed no time left
when Ruggles booted a 20 yanl field
goal to give Logan a 16-0 lead and
conclude the scoring.

Bulldogs
upset
by .Teays Valley
ATHENS - A tough Teays Valley
defense limited the Athens Bulldogs
to justeight first downs and 101 total
yards Friday night in posting a 12-0
victory over the host team.
Teays Valley eptered the contest

Sports shorts •••
MONROE ABSENT
WEST LONG BRANCH, N.J. (AP)
- Guard Earl Monroe, a veteran of
12 National Basketball Association
seasons, was absent Friday when
the New York Knicks opened their
preseason training camp,
Monroe, 35, was also involved in a
contract dispute last year and .
missed the first 14 games of the
regular season be£ore signing
following bitter negotiations. His
agent, Larry Fleisher, says he does
not anticipate the same problems
this time.
" I would expect we would reach
agreement shorUy," Fleisher said
Friday. " It's a money thing. They
made an offer that was less than
Earl wanted, so we're negotiating .
But it 's not a situation like last year,
when I believe there was a feeling
the Knicks didn't really want Earl. "

Costello, former coach of the
Milwaukee Bucks and Chicago Bulls
of the National Basketball
Association, said Friday he may
coach the Milwaukee Does of the
Women's Professional Basketball
League.
"It would depend on whether they
can get their financial problems
straightened out," Costello said of
the Does, who still have several
debts from their inaugural season of
1978-79.
, Costello coached the f3ucks from
their inception in 1!168 until he
resigned under pressure in
November, 1976. He coached the
Bulls the first half of last season,
then was fired.
.
The B'ucks won the NBA title in
197f and lost to Boston in the seventh
game of the 1974 championship

Logan

The Vikings scored in the first
quarter when Rusty Sturgell fired a
~to

0180~18

::n

with a pair of 8-8 ties to show for
their first two games while Athens
was coming off a 35-2 loss to Lancaster 1881 week.

z yard.

The Chi~, now 1-1, rolled for
14 first dOW!lll, had 23:J yarda
rushing, and connected m three of
eight pasaes for 61 yd.
Central remained winless In two · '
· outings as they ·showed 10 flnt
downs, 128 rushing yards, and hit m
two of eight passes for 23 yards.
John Huffman carried 19 times for
103 yanla for Logan while Kevin
Dulaney had 133 yards in 211 attempts for the Pirateli.
Score by quarters:
Cols. Central
0 0 0 ~0

Mike Panona on a

fourth down play. A point after kick
was blocked.
Teays Valley got on the board in
the .third period when John Sanders
galloped 42 yards to score, and again
the kick was blocked.

~·~~~
FINAl IY
2 SIZES
FOR MOBIL£ HOMES

AND DOUBt£ WIDES

The Vikings registered 10 first
downs, had 152 rushing yards , and
completed three of eight pasaes for
92more.
Athens netted 64 yards rushing
and completed just four of 15 passes
for 37yards, with three intercepted.
Matt Miller topped the rushers
with 14 crries and 72 yanla for the
winners while Steve Abdella got 31
yards in 10triesfor Athens.

Score by quarters:
Teays Valley
6 0 6 ~12
Athens
000~0
The St. Louis Cardinals won more
than 100 games in three consecutive

years, 1942~, playing a Hit-game
season.

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-

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310 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ·

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THE PRICE INCREASE. SO WHY NOT BUY A NEW CAR NOW?

LOGAN - Coach Dave Snipes'
registered his first victory as coach
of the Logan Chi~ Friday night
in a 16-0 shutout of visiting CoiUJDbus
Central at Logan.
The Chiefs posted their first win
since the 19'17 championship year by
scoring all 16 points in the second
period.
With 8:55 left Kelly . Adams

MAY COACH WOMEN
MILWAUKEE ( AP) - Larry

A savings account
at ClrS Bank .is

Soutbkn IQit, 13-0.

Logan blanks Central, 16·0

SMIIH 0..1141
Open Dilly 1r-7; Sundoy H

Phone ~-9210

are identifiable iri this action photo.

· MASSIVE PILEUP - Only Parkersburg
Catl)olic's Todd McCay (88)and Mark Dearman (39 )

Alexander I, king of Yugoslavia,
was assassinated in 1934.

..

NOTICE I

1·0· 2·2

2·36 '5·28

.••

.

5-0
0

rosters due Sept. 18

-..

•
•

7·5
o

0

68

Women's volleyball

'80
: HON'*A .
GALLIPOLIS

AS
312

M

6-70 5·&lt;5
Scoring : First quarter : 9 :18, Greg
Wigal , 3 yd . run, kick failed. 3:17,
. Wigal , 27 yd. ru11, pass failed.
second quarter: 2:29, Bria_n Bissell,
7 yd. run, Bissell to Mark Norton
pass. Third quarter : 4:33, Wigal, 3
yd. run, pass fail'ed . Fourth quarter :
9: 24, Dennis Durst, 5 Yd. run, kick
If ailed .
· Score by quarters :
Eastern
12 8 6 6··32
Miller
0 0 0 0·· 0

SLICK!

---

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--

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500 ~.Main

Riebel had 19 yards, and Mike
Billsell had 14 yards.
Eastern iw now 2·1 on the year,
and Friday EHS will travel to
Parkersburg Catholic.

----.
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----

BACK TO SCHOOl. SPECIAl.$ •·
BISSELL ON THE GO - Eastern's Brian Bissell (12) picks up a big
gain in this photo action of Friday's big vicctory over Miller.

St.

-

GOLF

After a series of fumbles and other
bad breaks, Southern again found itself to deep within the Crusaders
territory in the closing minutes of
the fourth quarter.

S

rose."

a frustrating ritght to say the least, Agal!l, Kyger Creek's defense
to the occasion stopping anothef~
scoring one TO and moving the ball
Spartan
threat.
••.•
to the one yanl line another Ume
Ljtsseter was the top rushet for Kc;:" '
only to see both drives killed by
penalties.
with 72 yards. Victor VanSickle lllllf.~ .
In the first quarter, Kyger Creek Greg Smith gained 58 yards !!Bel\-.""
faked a field goal attempt at the 10 Chris Elliott and Lasseter were •
and scored when senior quarterback credited Wlth good games defen:"·:
'
• --·;
Paul Lasseter rambled in from 10 · sively.
yards out, but the play \1l8ll nullified
Kyger Creek, 2~1 goes to Oak Hill' "'
Friday.
".''
on a motion penalty .

EAST MEIGS - Greg Wigal ran
for three touchdowns and the
Eastern Eagle defense limited their
opponents to ju.st 28 offensive plays
u the boat Eagles rolled to a 32-0
whltewaahlng of the Mlller Falcons
Fr!,&lt;lay night. Wigal rushed for 118
Yarda in 25 carries while the fired up
Eaille defense held the vislton to
just Ill total yards on the night.
The opening ldctoff llhould have
tol~ the Falcms how the night was
go\pg to go. On the ldckoff, brpthers
~e and Brian Bl.uellt.med up as
Mike hit the FalCC)II .rilnner and
brother Brian pounced m the
resulting fumble. With 9:18
remaining in the opening canto
Wigal romped for hb flnt TD on a
t1u;ee-yard plunge. The kick falled to
make the uprights,
i!th3:171tlll to go in that opening
pe~od, Wigal broke off tackle for a

•

Member FDIC

JOHNSON FAILS TO REPORT
WAUKESHA, Wis. (AP) - AllStar forward Marques Johnson
failed to report at the start of the
Milwaukee Bucks' training '- camp
Friday in what was seen as an
attempt to renegotiate his contract.
Johnson , third-leading scorer in
the National Basketball Association
last season with a per game average
of 25.6 points, has four years
remaining on a contract he signed as
a rookie two years ago.
The contract is worth an
estimated $2110,000 a year, compared
with the average 'of about $110,000
for NBA players. Johnson, formerly
represented by Donald Dell, last
spring retained Los Angeles
attorney Ted Steinberg , who · had
said two months ago he expected the
Bucks to renegotiate Johnson 's
~o nlract

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�C-5 -The Sunday Tirnes..llentinel, SWKiay, Sept. 16, 19?9

NL series begins October 2

Friday's high school
football results. • •

MARAUDER TOUCHDOWN - Meigs sophomore Roger Kovalchik (42) lunges over the goal line for the fifSt
touchdown of the game in' last night's Wahama at Meigs gridiron clash. Koval~hlk's touchdo~ came aft~r the
Marauder's first possession of the ball and a 61 yard drive in 13 plays. Kovalchik took g~e h1~h hon~rs w1th 83
yards rushing in 24 carries.. The 5'10",170 pound tailback also scored three of the four Me1gs TD s. Wh1te Falcons
pictured are Larry Gibbs (75), Shawn Fields (10), Jeff Fields (52) and Fred Smith (40). (Photo by Judy Owen)
ROTARY TROPHY RETIRED - By defeating
Gallipolis for the third consecutive year Friday night,
Pt. Pleasant High School retired the Rotsry Sportsmanship Trophy sponsored by the Gallipolis and Pt.
Pleasant Rotary Clubs. Pictlired left to right in this

Brenda Wilson photo are Harold Brown, president of
the Gallipolis Rotary Club; PPHS tri&lt;aptalns . Rob
Beller (66); Jay Minton (40); Greg Thomas (M) and
Mario Liberatore, president of the Pt. Pleasant Rotary •
Club.

-.

By The Assoclottd Press
Friday's Result
Ada 7, Crestvlewo
AkrQil Garfield 20, Akron HOban 7
Akron Cimtrat ·Hower 18, Avon 0
Akron Manchester U, Ctearfork 0
Akron North 14, Tat madge 6
Akron St. Vincent -St . Mary 28,
Aqulnesa
Amherst Steele 29, Oberl in
FlrelandsO
Archbold 26, Patrick Henry i
Arlington 25, Cory ·Rawson 0
Ashland Mapleton U , Hl.llsdate 14,
lie
Ashtabula Harbor 3. Warren
Champion 0
Ayersville42, EdonO
Barberton 28, Wadsworth 0
Bath 21, Celina 14
Bay Village 12, Lakewood 7
Bellefontaine 20. Beniamlne
Logan 12
·
Berea 21 , Wesllake13
Black River 3-4, South Amherst 6
Blanchester 36, Middletown
Madison 12
Bradford 0, Covington O, tie
Brooklyn 40, Columbia Station 6
16

Hannan Trace. That first period lJCOre held up unW
midway through the third quarter. (Tom Beaver
photo).

TWO YARD LOSS - Gallia's Dan Staggs (74) and
Greg Eutsler (a:l) along with Mike Hemphill (40)
snagged pt, Pleasant quarterback Glen McClellan (14)
for a tw&lt;&gt;-yard loss on this play. Not to be denied, Me-

Clellan came back on the next play with what proved to
be the game's winning play, a six -yard touchdown
strike to hal!b8ck Dave Sprouse, Looking on is Pl.
Plcasant 'sRayGandee (72) .

Late Ironton score gives

IRONTON - With just 59 seconds
remaining in the contest quarterback Steve Sutton hit Joe Fletcher with a nine yard touchdown
pass that carried Ironton to a hard
fought 22-18 victory over the winless
Portsmouth Trojans Friday night.
The Trojans, who have lost 13
straight games over two seasons,
grabbed the lead at 18-14 with just
2:59 remaining in the game wh'n
Floyd Cook raced 17 yards to

Boston ace
honored Friday

paydirt.
This threw a scare into the Tiger
fans and players, who last tasted
defeat in 1977 when Logan scored a
~14 enroute to an SEOAL championship season.
The Tigers broke open a scoreless
contest with 14 second quarter points
as quarterback Steve Sutton scored
on a one yard run with Joe Fletcher
kicking the extra point.
Midway in the second period Tim
Hodges raced 82 yards to score with
Fletcher again toeing the extra point
for a 14-(J halltime lead.
Portsmouth's Jim Richardson
blasted one yard in the third period

Early in the final period Richardson ran 14 yards to paydirt, but a
conversion pass failed and Ironton
led 14-12.
This set the stage for the touchdown run by Cook tb8t gave the underdog Trojans the lead inside the
final three minutes, and then the exciting comeback by the Tigers who
are now 2-(J.
Statistics show Ironton with 11 first downs, 230 rushing yards, and
completing three of eight passes for
40yards wit\! one picked off.
Portsmouth had eight first downs,
159 yards rushing, and connected on
seven of 14 passes for 73 yards .
Tim Hodges had a good night for
the winners with 138 yards on 14 tries
while Cook led the Trojans with 65
yards on 14 attempts.
Score by quarters:
Portsmouth
0 0 6 12-18
Ironton
0 14 0 8-22

Cochoclon o. Cambri dge 0, tie
Crooksville 40, Tr i·Valley 6
Day . Ctlam l nade ·J utlenne· 6, M t.
Healthy 6, tie
Day . North mont 13. Trotwood
Madison o
Day , Oakwood 35, Vallty View u
Day . ~oth27 , Day . Belmont 14
Delphos Jefferson 30, Sper&gt;eervllle

NATATORIUM
Np.m,,Open Sw im
7·9 p.m . ·Open Swim
8·10 p.m .,Open Swim
8,10 p.m . ,Open Swim
810 p.m . ·Open Swim
8·10 p.m .·Open Swim
7,9p .m ,,Fami ly Night
2,4 p.m . Open Swim
2,4 p.m .·Open Swim
7·9 p.m .-Open Swim

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;-:- . . '. !;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;: .:_:;::·.·.-:-: .:::'.. . . .·.·

22

fltuosc Vo11r OwH

·.·

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· =.=..·.=.&lt;.·.·.=..=:==·=:'.=:=.:.'.':'·: =,.=,'.=,' .:,: :.,' ·.·,=.=,=.=,=.:,=:.

Edgerton 2'1, Antwerp 0
E lida 35, Delianco 12
E lmwood 8. Parkway 7

Write for booklet!. showing
memorials in full color with $1 Zes

Elyria 1, N . R idgevi l le 0

Eastwood 8. Rossford 8. tie
Eaton 24, Twin Valley N. 14

and prices stated .

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Dover 34, Claymont 7
E . Cleveland Shaw 21 , Cleve . E .
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Eastlake North 27, Wickliffe 15
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~.::'·

"'""'"'
""'"" ......
,· .. ,' '
.
':;:., .---;-,;.c

K irtland 34, Perry 13
Leetonia O, Columbiana19
Liberty Benton t8, Leipsic o
Lima Perry 14, Upper Scioto
Valley 6
Lima Shawnee 35, Greenan 13
Logan 16, Coi .Central 0
Lor~in
Catholic 6,
Lorain
Brookside 12
Lucasville Valley 12, Piketon 6
ManSfield 7, Malabar 3
Mansfield Madison 26, MI. Vernon

Marion Elgin 6, Wynford o
Marion ~ocal7, Lima Catholic 0
Martins Ferry 7, Toronto 6
Massillon Jackson 10, Louisville 0
Massillon Perry 6, Marllngt&lt;&gt;n 0

ROGERS HONORED - Jack Rogers, center, journalist for almost
hall a century, was honored during pi'e-game ceremonies Friday night at
Sanders Memorial Stadiwn, Pl. Pleasant. Sam Williams, left, executive
secretary of the West Virginia Secondary Schools Activities Commission,
and Ralph Sayre, right, Pt. Pleasant High School principal, presented the
~year-old Rogers a plaque " Commemorating the meritorious service
Mr. Rogers has donated to interscholastic athletics in West Virginia." Often referred to as "Mr. Baseball" Rogers coached that ~rt at PPHS for
24 years. He also coached football and basketball during his teaching
career which spanned 32 years before his retirement. An estimated 5,000
persons viewed the pre-game event.

Massillon Wasnlngton .t.a, Alliance

Maumoe 7, TaL Catholic o
Mayfield 20. Garfield Hts. 0
Maysville 33, New Lexington 12
M ccomb 37, vanlue o
McDonald 39, Matthews 16o
Mechanicsburg
18,
Spring .
Southeastern 7
Medina 10. Orr'.' file 7
Medina H ighland 12, Medina
Buckeye 9
Mentor Lake Catho lic 21, Young .
Ursuline u
M lam ·i Trace 16." Lebanon 0
M iamisburg 15, Tec~mseh 17
M i ~dlefield Cardinal 31 , Garretsville Garfield 0
Midpark 22. Cleve . w. Teen o
M ilton Union 41, Northridge 12
M inerva 19, Sandy Valley 18
M inford 22. Rock Hlll12

Ohio, and West Virgini a.

tn

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JamesO . Bush , Mgr.

.

Not to b&lt;i outdone, a few of the
repu-ters present to record the event
for history asked Yastrzemski for
autographs.

New London 8, Wellington 0
New Ph iladelphia 30, Cleve.
Collinwood 6
NewcomerstOW"n 22. Malvern o
Newton Falls u . Jackson ·MIIIon 6
N. Olmsted 27, Parma 0
N . Royalton 10. Olmstead Falls6
~orthmor 33 . East Knox o
Oak Hllll2 . VInton County 0
Oberlin 28, Lagrange Keystone 6
Ottawa ·Giandorf 7, Van Wert 6
Painesv ille Har"Vey 6, Chardon 0
Pandora ·Gilboa 28, Van Buren 0
P~rma Hts. Valley
Forge U,
Padua9
Parma Holy Name 20, Ashtabu la
St . JohnO
Pen insula Woodridge 6, Ravenna
Southeast 0
Perrysburg 1-4 , Tol. Macomber 8
Pert Clinton 6, Northview 0
Ravenna 27. Salem 0
Ri chmond Hts . 7, Cuyahoga Hts . o
ROotstown 7, WaterlooO
Ft, Marys 41 , Delphos St . John 14
Sandusky 15. Toledo St. Francis 8
Sebring 27, Berlin Western Reser·
ve20
Shelby 21, AShland 8
Shenandoah 44, Waterford 0
Scion 12, Bedford 7
South Point 40, Wheelwright, Ky .
28
Soutn Range 12, Columbi ana
CrestviewO
Southington Chalker 2'1. Mineral
Ridgo 0
Sparta Highland 20, Big Walnut o

ROBINSON INTERCEPI'S - Gallia's Nick Robinson (24) intercepted this Glen .McClellan pass early in the second period ,Friday
night. He was downed irrunediately. Looking on at nght lS Gallia s Mike
Hemphill (40).

Dodgers blank Reds, 2 to 0
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Rookie
Rick Sutcliffe fired a Ulree-hitter in

mixes

(Auxiliary will meet at 2 p.m.
at the Meigs Inn}

to the (;uJr n.~ ast tu ul."if)ct'l ll:UII&lt;:.I~ t·
cau se tl by llu rnr:aru; Frt •ll t•f JI ·
Offit·Ja Is swd the Wh1tc llllu ...~· Vl'&gt; ll
would I&gt;&lt; res.·hetlulcd

1

v

.

I

Sutcliffe also scored the Dodgers'
first run off loser Bill Bonham, 8-8.
Sutcliffe walked after two were out
in the second and scored on
successive singles· by Dave Lopes
and Bill Russell .

Jim Bakken or the St. Louis football
Cardinals kicked seven field goals in
one game against tbe Pittsburgh
Steelers in 1967.

It's so easy to

U1e memher s uf th e Ma s.':;achusetls

'A plannl'd VJ ~ J t tu tht: Whitl' IIIJUSI'
to rncct Prt.! Siden t f'urtcr wo1 s
scratthed whl'n Ce:~ rt e r d!•t J tlcd tu fly

Sutcliffe, 15-9, won his fourth
straight decision and his seventh in
the last eight. He struck out one and
walked four while pitching his first
major league shutout.

be

a

member of a fasf growing profession. Start
now, by studying at
GBC, 2 or 3 evenings a
week.

ALL NEW MEMBERS WILL TAKE INITIATION AT 2 P.M.

tle legt~tJ&lt;m m Cong ress .

The first hit off the 23-ycar-old
Sutcliffe was a on e-out single in the
seventh by George Foster, a clean
shot to center. Then Dave Collins Jed
off the Reds ninth witll a single to
center and Dave Concepcion singled
with two out.

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Ya strz ern sk 1, atto rnp~nJ cd by

pitching the Los Angeles Dodgers to
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. O'Ne ill prese nte d Yastrzemski
with a n American flag he sa id was
flying over U1e Capitol at the
moment of the 3,000th hit. Only 14
other pla)•ers in major league
history have hit safely 3,000 tim es.

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"We think you 're a great guy,''
House, Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill,
D-M ass. tol d th e 40-year-old
Yastrzemski , a 19-year baseball
vetera n who collected his 3,000th
base hit WeJriesday night against
th e New York Yankees.

ClYDE B. WALKER

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Pomeroy, Ohio

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDAU.., Ohio (AP) All Star, riden by John Brinkley,
coveted the mile and a quarter in
2:06 1-.'i on an off track for an easy
victory Friday in the Starter
Allowance at Thistledown, paying
$13.60 , $4.40 and $3.81),

CUT COSTS

6

6

AL city with 8:30 games Oct. 8 and 9.
to the NL site for an 8:30
game Oct 12, a I p.m. game Oct. 13
and, if necessary , a 4:30.game Oct.
14. With a day off for travel and If Ule
Series IS still alive, it will return to .
the AL city for 8:30 games Oct. 16
and 17,
It moves

ATTENTION FARMERS

LOGAN

POMEROY EAGLES
WILL HOST DISTRICT MEETING

Somewhat like school children
meeting their congressmen , about a
dozen members or Congress lined up
to shake the hand of the 4~year-old
Boston Red Sox star and pose for
pictures.

that ~nl'lutleU tunc f or m eeting 1A&lt;ilh
fall.'i whu lmctl Lhe l'orritlor uulsn.Je
O'Neli l's uff1 ce and for lunch wll h

22

Findlay 43. Cleve. Adams40
Fort Frye 21, TIHin Columbian o
Frankford Adena 32, GreeneviewO
Fredericktown t6, Loudonville 8
Fremont Ross 21. Tot CatholiC 0
Jefferson 18, Lowellville 8
Kansas Lakota 16, St. Wendelin 3
Kens!cn 12, Madison 0
Kent Roosevelt 15, Canton Tim ken

-

WASHINGTON ( AP ) - Carl
Yastrzemski traveled to Washington
Friday, where members of Congress
basked in the .reflected glory of his
3,000th base hit.

Bos ton Monager Don Zimm er
outfielder l!w1 ~ ht Evans and bul lpo;
coach Walt Hnmak, had a schedu le

Clay 27, To t. While 8
Cleve . Bened ictine 35. Chagrin
Falls 0
Cleve. Hay 22 . Ashtabula 0
Cleve. orange 28, Cleve . Un i ver ·
stryo
Cleve . St . Jooeph 28 . Eucl id 20
Coal Grove 12 . Portsmouth West 6
Col . Academy 60 , Col . St . Char les 0
Col . Centennial
22 ,
Cot.
Brookha\len 0
Cot. Hartley 3-4 , Box ley t4
Col. Mifflin 18, Col. East 12
Col. West 41, Col. Ready o
Col . Westland 13, Whltehall9
Col . Whetstone 13, Col. Northland
Colum~us Grove 7, Pauldino 6
Conneaut 26, Cortland Lakev iew

DATE - GYMNASIUM
Sep1 . 162 ·4 p.m ., Dpen Rec .
1-9 p .m .,Open Ret .
Sept. 17 8,10p.m .·Open Rec.
Sept. 188, t0p .m .·Open Rec .
Sept. 19 8·10 p .m .-Open Rec .
Sept. 20 6 p.m .-Cheerleader Tryouts
8·10p.m. -Open Rec .
Sept. 21 7·9 p .m .· Fam ily Night
Sept . 22 2·4 p .m . ,Open Rec .
Sept. 23 2·4 p .m. ·Open Rec .
7·9 p .m .,Open Rec .

but a conversion run faileQ..

Tigers 22-18 grid victory

.

0
LYNECENTERSCHEDULE
Woek of September 16

0

0

Campbelt ,Memorial14, Young .
East 6
Canal Winchester 21. Clearcreek 7
Canfield 23, Struthers 6
Canton McKinney 7. Warren Har·
·dingJ
li:anton South21 , Akron EastO
Carlisle 20, Dixie 20, tie
Centerburg 6, ·Lucas 0
Centervi lle 17. Fairmont East 7
Cln. Aiken 20. Cln . Sycamore 9
Cln. Bacon 37. Cln . Wilhrow·o
Cln. Colerain U, Middletown 10
, Cin. Greenhills 63. Lockland 0
Cln . Elder lol. Cln. WoodWard 14,
tie
Cln. Indian Hill21, Finneytown 1~
Cln . LaSalle 27, Oak HillsO
Cin. McNicholas 21. Loveland 7
Cln. Moeller 3-4. Cln . Princeton 7
Cln. Reading 41 , Madelrao
Cln. St . Xavier 20 , Cin, Taft 0
Cln. Wyoming 26. Dayton Carroll 7
Circleville 20. Col. Ham ilton Twp.

I&lt;· • •

Fairview Park 1-4, Strongsville 12

Bryar\ U , Liberty Center 12
Buckeye SOuth 7, Jefferson Union

0

SOORING PLAY - Bruce Pierce (40) , senlor
fullback for Huntington of Ross scored his team 's only
points following this bandoff in Friday 's lW loss to

Brunswick 48, Cle'i . Lincoln west

Elyria Catholc l 19, M.i dview 0
Erie Mason U, Tol . NorthwOOd 0
Fairbanks 12. Marysville 0
Fairborn Baker 14, Piqua a
Fairmont West 21. Day. Wayne 1•
Fairview 35, Holgate 12

NEW YORK (AP)-The National
League Championship Series will
begin at 8:30p.m, EDT , Oct. 2, and
Ul e American League's pennant
playoff will Start at the same time
· one day later, the base ball
Commissioner's office announced
Friday.
The NL series, which begins with
two games in the city or its We st
Division winner, will play a day
game at 3:15 on Oct. 3. .The series
Ulen moves to the East Division city
for a 3:15 game Oct. 4 and , if
necessary, an 6:30 game Oct. 6 and a
1:15 game Oct. 7.
The AL series starts Oct. 3 in the
AL East champion 's city at 8:30
p.m. and 3:15 the next day. The
playoffs move to the AL West city
for an 8:30 game Oct. 5 and, if
necessary, 8:30 games Oct. 6 and 7.
The World Series will begin in the

Point Plmant

8 a.m . - 12 noon

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE
446-4367
Reg. No. 7S -02-0472B

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

MEMBER FDIC

�/
C~- The SundBy Times-Sentinel, SWJday, Sept.

16, 1979

C-?- The Sanday Times-&amp;ntinei, SundBy, Sept. 16, 1979

Shupe leads North Gallia
past Southeastern; 20-14
VINTON - Quarterba ck Donald
Shupe scored two touchdowns and
passed for another to lead the host
North Gallia Pirates to a 20-14 victory over Southeastern of · Ross
County.
FoDowing a scoreless first period,
NorUt Gallia reached paydi rt on a 34
yard Scoring strike fr om Shupe to
junior end Keith Payne. A run for
the conversion was stopped.
Southeastern came back with 6:02
left in the first half when bard running Mike Dozer buUed over from

the one. A kick for the EP sailed
wide.
Coach John Blake 's Pirates took a
14~ lead at the half when Shupe
carried it over from . the one. Jeff
Cisneros ran the two point conversion.
Again, both teams failed to score
in the third period. The Panthers
tied the game 14-14 early in the fourth stanza. Dozer's one-yard pl\mge
made it 14-12 and a pass from Harris
to Hine was good for the tying points.

Wildcats make it
three in row, 14-6

Later that period, North Gallia its SVAC Opener Friday night.
won the contest as Shupe again Southeastern is now 2-1.
scored on a one-yard run. A pass for
STATISTICS
SE
NG
PEPARTMENT
the extras failed.
First Downs
8
13
Offensively, Charles Luckadoo
Yards Rushing
102
190
was the Pirates' leading rusher with . Yards Passing
60 122
162 312
92 yards in 21 tries. Mike Moore led · Total Yardage
Passes Aflpt.
7
9
Southeastern with 42 yards in 13 at4
Passes Compt.
6
tempts.
·ln1erceptlons
1
2
Defensively, Jim Barnes led
1
1
Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
0
0
NGHS while Paul Sharett was the
6·40 3·10
Penalties
top player for Southeastern. North
By Quarters :
Gallia, 2~. will host Southwestern in
0 6 0 8-- 14
southeastern
0 14 0 8-- 20

North Gallla

Highlanders inflict 36--12
defeat on Hannan Wildcats
l

By Roger Samples
FRAZIER'S BOTTOM - Hannan
went down to defeat at the bends of
Southwestern Friday ngiht by a
score of 36-12. Yet the score was not
indicative of the true game.
S&lt;luthwestern jumped out to an
early lead in the first quarter as they
put eight points on the board. Both
teams then went into a . defensive
battle until !,ate in the second
quarter when Southwestern scored
again. Hannan came right back with
a score of their own when Doodles
Tolliver went in from the three yard
line on a quarterback sneak, making
the halftime score 16~ .
Hannan came out with fire in their
eyes in the second half and controlled the ball in the third quarter,
yet penalties . due to over eagerness
presented any scoring opportunities
according to head Coach Pa ul
Maynard.
The Wildcats displayed their best
defense of tile seaSon by stopping

Southwestern cold in the third
quarter.
Southwestern scored three times
in the last quarter, two or those
coming off Hannan offensive turnovers. Their first score came on a .
blocked punt, recovered on the
Hannan third yard line, which
resulted in a touchdown two plays
later.
Hannan's final score came when

Luther Young uncovered a fumble
and ran the ball in for a 31 yard
touchdown.
Southwestern's other touchdowns
came late in the final quarter with
the final tally coming ori an in·
terception with 30 seconds on the
clock.
Outstanding defensive olavers
Wildcats included Jimmy Dye who
was involved in 14 tackles : Tommy
Templeton, 13 tackles; Wayne
Dalton and Loyd Brumfield with 10 a
piece. other outstanding defensive

PUSHES THROUGH - Wildcat Wayne Dalton (44 ) pushes through
the Southwestern defensive line to gain yardage in Friday night's
gridiron match at Hannan. Although the Wildcats lost 36-12, Coach Paul
Maynard feels that ' 'we're really starting to look like a team." (Photo by
Roger Samples )

players Included Greg Johnston,
Luther Young, .Doodles ToUiver,
John Kinney, Rick Doss, Dion
Brumfield and Marty Spurlock.
Hannan played exceptionally weD
despite several injuries to key
personnel and lack of depth. On a
positive note, the Wildcats offense
began to fell. Wayne Dalton headed
the offense as he rushed for 70 yards
on . 12 carries. Doodles Tolliver,
along with Wayne Dalton passed for
90 yards completing seven out 10,
with one interception.
The Wildcats are at home again
next Friday night when they go
against Fort Gay.
SCORE BY QUARTERS :
Hannan
0 6 0 6
sw
88020

Flag football rosters
due by September 20
GAU.JPOLIS - All interested
participants must heve team rosters
submitted to the 0. 0 . Mcintyre
Park District office at the Gallia
County Courthouse by Sept. 20, 4
p.m.
The 0. 0. Mcintyre Par!IJ District
is again anticipating another successful season of Men's Flag FootbaD. Competition is slated to begin·
at II a.m. Saturday morning, Sept.
22, at Rio Grande College Athletic
field.
·
The park district hopes this year's
program will prove to he a beneficial
recreation experience for all competitors.
For further information contact
the 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Park District
located in the Probate Court Office
of the Gallia CoWJty Courthouse,
Gallipolis, Ohio by caUing 441H612
e:d. 45, Gwen Carter.

SAVES TD - Huntington Cletis Strausb!lugh (85)
came up with a touchdown saving play with an end
zone tnterceptioo ln Friday 's1H lOM to Hannan Trace

ru~'iiNG.IJ!Nt- Hannan's Bruce Rainey
a group
of Southwestern gridders closing in in an attempt to stop the six foot, 161
pound jWJior. The Wildcats lost to Southwestern by a score of 36-1~ last
night at Hannan. (Photo by Roger Samples)

Penalties: Hannan 55; S.W. 40.
Pass Interception: Hannan 1-48 yd
return; SW HIO yd return from TD.

Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
National Le;ogue
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
Signed Dave Bristol, manager,
through the 1981 season .
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CHICAGO BLACK HAWKS ··
Signed Stan Mlkllo. center; Keith
Brown and Lowell Loveday, defen·
semen ; Louis Begin and Tim Trim ·
per. wingers; Warren S~orOdensk l ,
goalie. ·
BASKETBALL
National
Baskel!laiiAssoclatlon
NEW JERSEY NETS - Signed
Louie Dampier, guard; Phil Jackson
and Tim Basse", forwards.
SOCCER
North American
soccer League
TULSA ROUGHNECKS - SOld

the cofitract of Terry Darracott,

defenseman, to Wre•ham Of the
English Second Division.
Fooiboll
National Football League
NEW YORK GIANTS - Placed
Ron Mikolaiczyk, offensive tackle,
on the Injured reserve list. Signed
Bob Torrey, fullback.

HOUSTON ( AP) - Houston
Astros pitching coach Mel Wright
will undergo surgery Monday for
removal of a ·tumor on his lung.
Team doctocs found the growth
during the annual team physical
examination Sundsy and admitted
Wright to the hospital.
Wright has been the team's
pitching coach for the past four
seasons. The Astros' coordinator of
minor league fie ld operations, Bob
Cluck, will work with the Houston
pitchers in Wright's absence.

Giants give Bristol 2-year contract
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Dave
Bristol, after less then a month as
interim manager of the San
Fran cisco Giants, was named
Friday as manager of the National
League team for the 1900 and 1981
basebaD seasons.
In the club 's rumouncernent , terms
of the two-year pact were not
disclosed. ·

Owner Bob Lurie fired Manager
Joe AltobeUi Sept . 6, claiming he
was not satisfied with AltobeUi 's
performance. Lurie then named
Bristol, 46, as interim manager .

Last season, when tbe Giants
fmished in third place with an 89-73
record - the team's best since 1973
- and Altobelli, 47 , was named the
National League Manager of the
Year by The Associated Press.
When Lurie fired Altobelli, the
Giants were· in fourth place in the
National League West and several
players were openly criticizing the
manager.

The parents ol catcher Rick DemJll!eY of the Baltimore Orioles per-

fanned on the va~eville stage.

Rockets

p~st

WEWTON - Jeff Montgcmery
and Jerry Patton accounted for all ol
Welllton'a points Friday night as the
Rockets poeted a 2:U victory over
vtsllin8 Nelaonvtlli!'York.
The Rockets scored all 22 points in
the first half as they rolled up 221

at Mercerville. Keith Jayne (89) wu the Wlldcall' Intended receiver. - Tcm Beaver pbotc.

22-6 grid win

yards on offense before the
Buckeyes shut them down In the
second half and held them to just 12
total yards ,
With 46 seconds left in the first
period Montgomery drilled a 32 yard •
fi eld goal for a 3-G lead.

Early Bird

• Storm Windows
• Storm Doors
• Replacement Windows

However, ~York took
over and dcm!Mted the leCOI1d ball
defeDSively but could not IICOI'IlUlW
TID! Pritchard 1'11115 yarda to ICOre
with 8: 11 remaining.
Each team netted nine finlt dowl1l
with Welbton c:burnlni up 128 yardll
rushing, and bitting four ~ eight
pa.ea for 107 men.

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Patton carries 10 timM for 5I yar·
ds to lead the Rocbla wblle O.ve
Boeton tOpped the Buckeyes with 51
yards on 20 carriee.
Score by quarters :
Nels.-Yorlt
0 0 0 6- I
Wellltoo
s 18 o 6-22

h~ O.~~~~ . .

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Friday 's Games

For Easr Pickup

Detroit at New York, ppd ., rain
Cal ifornia 8, Milwaukee 7
Oak tei nd 8, Chi cago 3

Seattle 7. Kansas City 5
Texas 5, Minnesota 3
Sunday's Games
Cleveland .at Toronto
Boston at Balt imore
Detroit at New York
Oakland at Chicago
Ca li forn ia at M ilwaukee

Call 446-2682
TO GO OR EAT HERE

No Sub!.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L . Pet. GB

Montrea l

Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Chicago
Philadelph i a
New York

85 55 .607

87 57 .604
76 66 .535 10
74 71 .410 13'h
74 72 .507 14
55 88 385 31'h
WEST
Cincinnati
83 64 .565
Houston
82 64 .562
lf2
Los Angeles
71 76 .483 12
San Francisco
64 84 .432 19'h
san Die,go
62 86 .4.19 21 '12
Atlanta
58 88 .397 24'h
Friday 's Games

St . Louis at Montreal , 2, ppd ., rain

Toronto 4, Cleveland 3

Baltimore 5, Boston 3

.$129

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Minnesota at Te)(as

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Chi cago 2, Phllodelphla
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Atlanta 10, San Diego 7

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Houston 7,

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Sunday's Games

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BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L . Pet.
Baltimore
96 49 .662
M i lwaukee
85 62 .578
Boston
81 63 .563
New York
79 64 .552
Detroit
78 68 .534
Cleveland
74 72 .51J7
Toronto
47 99 .322
WEST
Ca l ifornia
81 66 .551
Kansas Ci ty
77 70 .524
Minnesota
75 72 .510
Texas
74 74 .500
. 63 83 .432
Chicago

by ~£ALtsn c..

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••••• • •
Baseball At A Glance

Floor Speakers
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SEPT. 15

Tri-County Home Medical Supply

By The Associated Press

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The NBIIonwide Supermarket of Sound~

Nelaonville-Yorlt fin1llbed with I~
yards rushing and cunpleted three

erty value
•

163 197
back TOdd Sibley raced ~ yardl up Total Yardage
Attpt.
9
9
the middle putting the game out ~ Posses
Passes Compt .
4
2
reach. Bray again added the eKtra Interceptions
1
2
point.
Fumbles
2
2
2
2
Coach Jim Woods ' Huntsmen took · Fumbles Lost
Penalties
4-15
4· 45
an early lead on a four yard run by
By Quarters:
Bruce Pierce. Another Hun~ Huntington
6 o o o.. 6
took an early lead on a four yard nm H. Trace _ _ _ _ _o::.._:0:__ 7 7-- 14
by Bruce Pierce. Another HlUllamen
PIAYS FOR MARIETI'A
drive ended on a fumble at the eight
MARIETTA - Marietta College
yard One.
senior Ron Durst, Jr. of Pt.
Bray led the Wildcat rushel's with
Pleasant, W. Va. ls a member of the
57 yards. Randy Green and Sibley
1979 Marietta CoDege Football team.
had 52 yards each. DefeDSively,
Ours! will he playing defensive
Craig Chepman again paced Hanguard for Coach Joe McDaniels'
nan Trace.
Pioneers that went 6-4 In the 1979
Also scoring defe1111lve polnla were
season.
Jon Saunders, Tim Wright and
Ron Is the son ci Mr. and Mrs.
Kerry Ours. Hannan. Trace plays at
Ronald Durst, Sr. of Rt. 2, Point
Southeastern of Rosa County next
Pleilaant, and is a 11176 graduate of
Saturdsy afternoon.
Pt. Pleasant High School where he
STATISTICS
lettered in footbaU and baseball and
DEPARTMENT
H HT
was chosen All-state and AllFirst Downs
9
5
Southern West Virginia and was coYards ~ushlng
127
175
Yards Passing
36
22
captain~ the football team.

Just over one minute into the
second canto ~ Lcnrel1
Settles !Ired a 5I yard pua to Patton, but a coovenlon Jriekfalled,
FoUowtnc the recovery ~ a
Buckeye fwnble just cme minute
later Settles hit Montgomery with a
rr yard IICOI'ing BVike and Mon~
tgomery's klci; lllllde It l&amp;.o.
With 5:30 J""DAinlrlll In the ball
Patton ocampered 2ll yardl to IICOl'e
to give the Rocteta a 22-0 lead and It
looked Uke a runaway for Weillton.

·E nergy Saver

MERCERVIlLE - Host Hannan
Trace BCored two l!eCOIId half touchdowns bere Friday night to upend
. visiting HlUltirll!ton ~ Rosa County,
1H In a non-(:Oilference game.
'The win, the Wildcats ' third
straight, tied a IIChool record for the
JDCllt victories by a Hannan Trace
grid teaJn.
Tralllng &amp;.o midway through the
third stanza, Coach Ljlrry
Cremeens' Wildcats started tbeit
belt drive ol the night foDowllng a
fwnble recovery.
Jay Bray capped a 60 yard match
with a two yard fllll. His kick made it
7-a. That one point lead, stood until
ibe four minute mark in the final
quarter.
Huntington was fon:ed to go to the
air once ton citen. On a crucial fourth down and long situatioo, a Jeff
Vlckera aerial was pci;ed off inside
the 35 yard line.
TWO plays later, junior running

...,.

•

ltadiO
/haek
DBALi!flt

PHONE 446-4554

·-.,....

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fiA DIVISION '1 F T AI:IDY f:O RPORA TION

PRICE S MAY VARY AT .INDIVIDUAL STORES .

•.

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•

D·l- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 18, 1979

C-8- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Swulay, Sept . 16, 1979

Buckeyes slip past Gophers

Clip c~stly for
Kentucky 'Cats

..

b

By SCOTT J&gt;AJ'JLLON
AP Spons Writer
MINNEAPOLIS
( AP )

drawing within 14-7 when Hauck
passed 39 ya rds to Don Treadwell
\Oith eight minutes left in the third
quarter. That sc~re was set up when
Miami recovered a Shawn Donigan
fumble at the Kentucky 24.
Kentucky's defense managed to
hold Hauck at bay much of the
fourth period, but the junior from
Silver Springs. Md., got untracked in
the final five minutes. Hauck kept an
Bll-yard drive alive with completions
of 27 and 26 yards, and Kentucky 's
Greg Motley was penali.zed for pass
interference on a crucial third-down
play . Hauck set up Hunter's TD run
with a pass to tight end Tom Parrott
to th e Kentucky one. Hunter swept
left end oo the neld play and went
into the end zone untouched.

By CHARLES WOLFE
Associated Press Writer
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - A
clipping penalty cps! Kentucky an
apparent winning touchdown with
five seconds left, and Tommy Griggs
then missed a 34-yard field goal
attempt as Miami. of Otuo held on for
a 15-14 college football vict.ory
Saturday ,
Freshman tailback Chris Jon es
fell onto the end zone flag to cap a
desperate Kentucky drive in the
fadin g seconds after Mi ami had
gone ahead on Mark Hunter's oneyard run and quarterback Chuck
Hauck's two-point conversion run
with 59 seconds left.
The clipping penalty moved
Kentucky back to its 17, but the
chance of victory in the Wildcats '
season opener flittered away a
second and final time when Griggs'
field goal try sailed off to the left.
Miami, 2.0, was soundly outplayed
in the first half, falling behind 14-0
when Kentucky quarterback Mike
Shutt scored on a pair of one-yard
runs in 11\e first period.
But the Redskins rallied in the
second half behind Hauck's passing.

TIGERS STOP YANKEES
NEW YORK (AP) - Alan
Trammell singled home the tiebreaking run in the fi.fth inning and
Jack Morris combined with two
relief pitchers on a six-hitter as the
Detroit Tigers defeated the New
York Yankees 4-31n the first game of ·
a Saturday doubleheader.

STANDINGS
Ohio High School
Football

By The Associated Press
Friday 's Result
Ada 7, Crestviewo
Akron Garfield 20, Akron Hoban 7
Akron 'Centrai ·Hower 18, Avon 0
Akron Manchester 14, Clearlork 0
Akron North 14, Talma"dge6
Akron St. Vincent ·St. Mary 28,
Aquinas
Amh e rst St eele 29, · Oberli ~l
Firelands o

a

Archbold 26, Patrick H enr y 7

Springbor o 27, Wilmington 0
Spring. South 40, Spring . North 20
Stanton 22. Buckeye west 0
Steubenvil le Catholic 16, Brooke,

w. va . 8

Stow 7, Greensburg Green 7, t ie
Streetsboro 7, Aurora 0
Stritch 28, Tol. Devi lbi ss 6
Swanton 13, Holland Springfie ld 6
Taylor 20, Deer Park 8
Tinora 14, Hilltop 8
To I. Bowsher 27, To I . Woodward 9
Tal. Whitmer 15, Newar k 8

Trenton Edgewood 2-4, Hamilton
Rosso
Tusca rawas Cathol ic 29, Ind ian
ValleyS, 0
Uniontown Lake 21, Doylestown o
Upper Arlington 8, Gahanna 7
Upper Sandusky 27 , Ontar io 6

INDIANS WSE, 5-2
TORONTO (AP) - Bob Bailor
tripled home two runs to back the
pitching of Baler Moore and reliever
Tom Buskey as the Toronto Blue
Jaysllefeated the Cleveland Indians
5-2 Saturday.
Moore, 4-li, scattered seven hits,
striking out three and walking lour
over the fi.rst seven inni.ngs. Buskey
pitched the last two inni.ngs, giving
up a run on three hits.

LIONS ROMP
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP ) Curt Warn er scored three
touchdowns and accounted for 292
total yards in the best performance
by a fresliman in Penn State's 92year football history as the seventhranked Nittany Lions opened thclr
season with a 45-10 vicl.ory over
Rutgers Saturday.

Sophomore quarterback Art
Schlichter ran 32 yards for a
touchdown ea rly in the fourth
quarter and then passed for a twopoint conversion to rally. 15th·
ranked Ohio State to a 21-17 Big Ten
Conference college football victory
over upse t-minded Minnesota
Saturday .
Minnesota jumped to a 14.0 firstquarter lead and led 17-7 at halftime.
But the Buckeyes dominated the
second half.
Junior fullback Garry White, who
led all rushers with 213 yards, ran 29
yards for a touchdown and also
scored on a 16-yard pass from Mark
Carlson as Minnesota assumed its
surprising 14-point lead.
But Schlichter, who completed 8 of
12 pass attempts and rushed for 86
yards, fired a 311-yard scoring pass to
Tyrone Hicks in the second quarter
to cut the margin to seven points .
Minnesota 's Paul Rogind booted a
44-yard field goal with six seconds
left in the first half to make the score
17-7.
Calvin Murray scored on a one-

yard run with 7: 24left in the game to
complete a 37-yard drive which was
set up by a 32-yard punt return by
Mike Guess. However ,' the
conversion attempt was missed,
leaving Ohio Stale with a 17-13
deficit. Sch lichter put the Buckeyes
in the lead on their next series of
dovw.
The 6-foot-2, 200-pound field
K UBBS SHINES
GAMBIER, Ohio (AP ) - Ohio
Northern fullbac k Chri s Kubbs
scored the fi.rst 22 points of the game
Saturday, including touchdown runs
of 18, 9 and 16 yards, i.n leading the
Polar Bears to a 36.() non-conference
foo tball victory over Oberlin
College.
Kubbs also kick...d a field goal and
an eld ra point and ran 16 times for
116 yards for the Polar Bears, who
won their opening game of the

season. in impressive fashion .

Oberlin, 0-2, had the ball insidt!
Ohio Northern's 30.yard line four
limes without scor ing a touchdown .

general moved his team 73 yards in
seven plays. The drive was
highlighted by a 29-yard pass to
Chuck Hunter, which gave OhiO
State a first down at the Minnesota
32-yard line.
On the next play, 'Schlichter
skirted left end, cut back against the
grain and raced untouched Into the
end zone for the winning touchdown .
His two-j)Oint conversion pass to
tight end Bill J aco then gave the
Buckeyes a four-point cushion.

Dr. Hedges, Chiropractor
H RS: Tues. 11 til 5
at 187 N 2nd St.
Middleport

Hedges Chriropractic
Fami~

Practice

Midd. 992·6141. If no
a11swer 593·6886

Wapakoneta 41. Kenton 14

Wauseon 21. Delta 0
Wayne Trace 57, Hicksvi lle 6
Waynesville28, Minster 6
Waynesvill e 13, New Miam i 0

Weirton,

w.

Va . Madonna

42,

Buckeye Trail 0
West carrollton 39, Sidney 15
west Chester Lakota 24, Mason 0
West Geauga 7, Lyndhurst Brush 0
Westerville South 8, Col. East -

LIVJNG
ROOM
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Wil l ard 13, Huron 0
Willoughby South 38, Painesvil le
Riverside 0
Xenja 13, Day . Stebbins a
Yellow Springs 20 , Spring . Nor ·
the astern 6

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POM.-EROY LANDMARK
LAWDMARK .

The more than 1,000 persons jammed into a Steubenville high school
auditorium applauded Carter frequently .Ven as they questioned him about
what they see as their biggest prohlems.
That mainly boiled down to jobs. The fourth person chosen frcm 100 or
more to question Carter - less than a dozen had the chance- was an out-ofwork coal miner who chided the president's suggestion that the use of
American coal be tripled over a IS-year period.
. ·
·"All your plans seem fine for the future, but us coal miners, we want to
work now, not 10 yeal'll from now,'~ said Larry Vucelich of Powhattan Point.
Carter had mentioned a task force that improved jobs and profits in the
steel indll8try and Vilcelich suggested that he name a coal task force ''to
solve our problems, because we want to work." "We are proud people down
here," the miner told the president.
Carter said he would like to see all minel'll working. "It can't be done instantaneoUaly,'' be added, "But I guarantee it will not take 10 yeal'll to do i.t if
we all work together."
Outside the auditonun, Mike Bianconi of Bridgeport handed one protest
poster to a woman and picked up another.
"I've been laid off from the coal mines since Janll8ry and I was laid off
from a steel mill two weeks ago," he said. "We 're sitting on the know-how to
make use of coal. Our technology today should alleviate the problem, but
we're not ll8i.ng it.''
Carter's caliUal style gained favor with the audience. He drew applause
when he slipped off his suit coat and let it fall to the floor, and more applause
when, his shirtd8rk with perspiration, he turned up his shirt cuffs.
Another roar of approval carne when he invited Sondra Downend of Orr·
ville to Wa.shington to talk with U.S. Enviromnental Protection Agency and
White House staff about EPA air quality rules. Sbe had uked him why the
EPA woo 'I allow utilities to bum high sulfur Ohio coal.
Mrs. Downend, secretary-treasurer for her husband's coal c001pany, told

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Main St.
Store Hours: 8:30to 5:30
Mill Closed at 4:00P.M.
Serving Meigs, Galli~ &amp; Mason counties.

box springs and mattress a night stand

and a 21 pc. socket set. All for the
OVER 50 SUITES IN STOCK!

price of the bedroom suite.

•

him Ohio offi.cials claim federal air pollution rules were too restrictiVe. Car·
ter stuck by the federal rules, referring to them u "federal law which the
Congress is highly unlikely to change."
·
l.Bter, after a private reception, 'several coal mine and labor unioo
executives said they felt Carter left many questions unanswered.
Dennis Cancelli, who has 40 coal minel'll working at his mine near l.ogan,
said afterward that bureaucrats and thei.r handling ol air quality laws are
destroying small coal miners.
Did the president address that point?
"No," he replied "J think he has some basic beliefs that are not in tune
with burning Ohio coal. He's in kind of a shell when it comes to something
like that."
Richard James Jr., of James Brothers Coal Co. at Magnolia, said Carter
offered no quick solutions to pressing problems. "He said a lot that will belp
us in 1990 If we are still In bll8iness then," James said. "Within the
framework of what be is allowed to do, he could help 118 now and it is now that
we need the help.
"The EPA has already done some things we are aslting. We are asking the
right for utilities to monitor sulfur dioxide emissions on a :.klay average
rather than the present 24-flour period. He could grant utilities that, and he
has done that in other states, but instead the EPA choses to give Ohi081111
only a 2f.hour monitoring tenn."
President John Guzek of District 6, United Mine Workel'll of America, rode
with the president to the auditoriwn and had a front row seat at the
auditorium. He said Carter seemed more knowledgeable on foreign policy
than oo what's needed back home.
He suggested the president eall Congress 'into special seaaion "and keep
them there until they solve some ol these problems...
"He ought to take the bull by the horns and quit fooling around with
Congress and do what he knows is right."

junbau ~imts - jtnfintl Democratic leaders
fav0 r gas tax boost
~

_VO_L._13_NO_
. 3_3_ _ _S_UN_DA_Y._SE_PTE_MB_ER_l_6,_197_9_ _ _P_AG_E _1
D

General Motors wanted to
give nation 'shot in a:rm'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (A P) - New
life has been breathed i.nto a
politically-6ensitive proposal to hike
Ohio's gasoline tax to finance badly
needed highway and bridg e
improvements.·
·
There also could be an increase in
fees for motor vehicle license plates.
Both top leaders of the
Democratic majority are now in
favor of the gas tax boost, despite
their inability to get a formal
endorsement from GOP Gov. James
A. Rhodes.
Rhodes has not come forward

would guide a Chrysler Corp .
percent and 9.3 percent.
DETROIT (AP) - General
settlement,
but this year financially
Other
deiails
Wef'e
withheld
but
it
Motors Corp. says it tried to give the
foundering
Chrysler may get
appeared
the
.uni.on
had
to
accept
the
nation a small "shtt of confidence"
concessions.
tradi.tional
wage
formula
that
it
by agreeing to a new contr act with
The Big Three companies employ
wanted tooimprove. The UAW won
the United Auto Workers uni.on
780,000
UAW members, 460,000 at
more
pai.d
lime
off
and,
one
report
without a strike.
GM
.
said;
automati.c
recognition
In
new
The two sides, meeting in a
The contract will be reviewed by
plants.
marathon bargaining session that
the
UAW GM Council - o(ficers of
Noting
a
''general
malaise
and
began at 6 p.m . Thursda y,
the
151 GM locals - in Detroit on
becauae of his no-new-taxes pledge
tremendous consciousness or
announced tentative agreement on a
Tuesday,
when more details will be
inflation,"
GM
Vice
President
new pact less than three hours
George B. Morris Jr., the company's available. Local ratificatioo hegins
before the Friday midnight strike
chief negotiator , sai.d, "The co untry after next Saturday.
deadline.
No price tag on the total
needed a shot of confide nee ."
.
U ratified, i.t would be the fi.rst
settlement
was available , but
"
I
don
't
know
if
this
is
of
that
lime in 15 years there has been no
magnitude ," he said, "but In our Morris said, "We can live with it."
strike against the union's target
UAW President Douglas A. Fraser
cmtpany in national negotiations . own little way it should serve to
said,
"We feel .we have kept faith
encourage people, despite all the
The agreement provides large
with
the
retirees of the UAW."
predi.ctions by people who didn't
CIN CINNATI ( AP) - Two suits
pension increases, the make-()r·
An
autoworker
rettri.ng next
know
anything
about
the
situation
,
were
filed Friday seeking $38 mlllion
lreak issue since talks began July
month , who under the old contract
that
there
would
be
a
strike
and
it
in
damages
in connectioo with the
16. Autoworker pensions have been
would be of predictable duration ." would have gotten $700 ·a month
July 31 fi.re at a Holiday Inn In
fixed by contract. The new
The agreement will serve as a before Social Security began, now
Cambridge, in which 10 persons died
agreement i.s the fi.rst to provide
·
pattern
fer Ford Motor Co. and wUl get $800 a moo th i.f the contract
and 82 were In jured.
increases in the life of a contract .
union officials said they foresaw no is ratified. Increases in the three
The suits were filed in U.S.
No immediate average increase
problems there. Normally . it also years of the contract will bring his
District Court by attorney Stanley
was available, but two examples
pension to $915 a month, for an
M. Chesley of Cincinnati on behalf of
worked out to annual Increases of 8.5
· average 9.3 percent per year.
Dr . E . Dale Habegger of
An autoworker who retired at 65 in
Indianapolis for the death of hi.s
i974, who now gets $390 a month plus
wife , Jacqueline , and Stephen
Social Security,
get $498.50 a
Anderson and hi.s wife, Merribeth of
month in the fma quarter of the new
Salt Lake City. Mrs. Anderson and
contract, or an increase averaging
her daughter , Heather, were
8.5 percent a year .
injured.
Fraser and Morris said they did
Named as defendants were
not know if the settlement met the
HoBday Inns Inc. of Memphi.s,
But a private economist, Michael
wage and benefi.t gui.delines of the
WASHINGTON ( AP) - Many
Tenn ., and Winegardner and
Evans
,
of
Evans
Eco
nomics
,
Carter administration. "If I did I
economists say plunging industrial
Hammons Operations Inc. of
cautioned : "This is tangible proof wouldn't teU you," Fraser said. Said
output in August guarantees new
Cincinnati, identified as operator
layoffs, but Treasury Secretary G. we can't sugarcoat the recession . Morris: "That's not my problem,
and manger of the CarnbJ:idge ,
It's going to be worse than many
thank God."
WUiiam MUler i.s suggesting the
Holiday Inn.
people think ."
recession ls already hall over.
Unemployment stood at 6 percent
Miller said Friday the recession ,
of
the labor force in August . The
which he thinks began in the second
administration
previously had said
quarter of this year, will last only a
it
would
rise
no
higher than 6.9
few more months.
percent
by
the
end
of next year .
But he added that unemployment
While
the
difference
between 6.9
will exceed 7 percent next year,
percent
and
7
percent
tsn
't great higher
than
the
Carter
about
100,000
jobs
Miller 's
administration's previous publi.c
estimate
shows
the
administration
forecast.
has started to retreat from Its more
A private administration memo
optimistic
projection . He said he
bas suggested the unemployment
didn 't know how much above 7
rate will go above 8 percent by next
percent the jobless rate would go.
year, a figure accepted by many
·
private economists.
The likelihood that unemployment
wUl keep rising was underlined by
news ~riday that the nation 's
industrial production in August
slumped 1.1 percent, the fi.rst decline
By The Associated Press
since April. It had risen slightly in
Four persons were killed
July .
overnight in traffic accidents in
When factories lower their
Ohio, the Highway Patrol reported.
production, they normally lay off
Two of the accidents, resulting in
unneeded workers . ·
•,
three deaths, occurred in Delaware
Production declined in most
County.
Industries during August, including
The patrol counts highway
household goods and autos, where
fatali.ties in the state from 6 p.m.
output was down 15 percent to an
Friday until midnight Sunday.
annual rate of 7.5 million vehicles.
The dead :
UI!g-lasting consumer goods fell
SATIJRDAY
5.4 percent, continuing a threeGALLIPOLIS - Ronald E. Kingery
month slide that
reflects
Jr., 19, of Gallipolis, In a one-car
particularly beavy i.nventories in
acddent on a Gallia County road.
this sector and very sluggish retail
FRIDAY NIGHT
sales.
DELAWARE -"- Thomas Curry, 29,
Some economists perceived a
and Carla Curry, 23, both of
DOCI'OR WELCOMED - Dr. James Witherell, left, is welcomed to
possible silver lining In the decline.
Delaware, in a train-car t'Ollision at
Meigs County where he will begin practice on Sept. 00, by Scott Lucas, ad"Acting now . to avert an
a railroad crossing on Delaware
ministrator of Veterans Memorial Hospital. Dr. and Mrs. Witherell and
unmanageable buildup of goods on
County 7.
sons,
Jason and JOIIhua, are residing in Pomeroy and Dr. Witherell will
the shell will avoid the need for even
DELAWARE - Roy M. Russel
do
family
practice at the Memorial Hospital. The family has moved to
larger production cutbacks and
Jr., 34, of Columbus in a one-car
from
Tacoma, Wash., where Dr. Witherel: served on the family
Pomeroy
layoffs later," said Commerce
accident on U.S. 23 in Delaware
practice
staff
at
Madigan Anny Medical Center for the past two years.
De!lflrt'!!.enteconomlst William Cox.
County .

U. S. recession
at halfway point

C1 De \J \( 1' ·:uge cap,1Ctl\

Ttrn.;&gt;d cycle up to 50

STEUBENVIILE,OHIO (AP) - President Carter's plea for belp in enacting hia energy program still reverberated thia weekend among his supJ)Ortera and critics up and down the Ohio River Valley.
Poaters critical ol federal restrict!OIIB on burning Ohio coal stuck out like
I!Ore thwnbs in the enthll8iastic crowd which welcomed the president to thia
coal and steel city Wedriesday.
He altempted to meet some a! the criticism head-on, saying Ohio is the
mly state that has not submitted acceptable air quality standards to the U.S.
Envlroomental Protection Agency.
lrmlcally, Ohio wa.s ~e of the first stales to obtain federal approval of ills
clean air plan, including sulfur dioxide regulations, in 1972. But it was
thrown out oo what is considered a technicality, and since then subsequent
plana bave been turned down.
The state's latest proposed standards went to the regional EPA office in
Chicaco earlier this mooth. But it appeared there would not be enough time
to review them bef&lt;re new federal air standards take effect on Oct. 19.
Without an atenslon of that date or some speed in reviewing Ohio's submi.!lllons, official!! say some coal miner$ may be put out of work. The strict
federal standards that would lake effect, they say, would deny alllllrket for
the state's high sulfur coaL
·
There obviously were many in the crowd Wednesday who were proud to
IMive a president in Ohio, but his critics appeared more visible and vocal.
There were friends like ~year-old Sarah Barbetta, daughter d. Sicilian
Immigrants, who wa.s "so excited I get goose bumps (from ) the physical
prmnce ola man who speaks for 220 million Americans."
Peggy Wilt ol the Cleveland suburb ol Bratenahl was ''thrilled and
pleased" thatllhe could stand up in public and ask the president about I'Wl·
niog out ol uranium. He assured her there's plenty to last many years but
that he is withholding nuclear power decisions until all reports are in on the
'I1Iree MUe Island mishap.

in last year's r~lection campaign.
But he would not veto the hike, he
reportedly has· said.
The Senate Finance Committee
begins hearings Monday night on a
House-approved Transportation
Department budget, which could
become a vehicle for new taxes.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron, said at week's end he
favors not only a two-cents-a-gallon
boost in tbe gasoline tax, but also a
SIO hike in the present $10 auto tag
fee.
The Senate leader said he polled

present, a gas tax boost doesn't have
the 17 votes needed in the 33member Senate. However, he said a
majority of senators favors the auto
tag boost .
Ocasek declined to provide hi.s
nose count numbers, but he said
earlier reports that only 12 senators
favored the gas tax were
conservative.
Sentiment for the auto tag ·boost
has been groWing rapidly In recent
days. It is more politically palatable
because its revenues are returned to
local goverrunents, which also are

eena\ol'a of both parUes, Bnd that at

faced .w\lb a critical need 101' road

.

filed in motel fire

+hrt.p.&lt;ri.nJ:'

solf('ner dtSpo::&gt;n&lt;; (l! ~

President tried tO meet criticism headon

$38 million actions

CASH FAtTORY
REBATE FOR
THE PAIR!

D

classified

•

Jwill

Ohio traffic
deaths at 4

I '

\

The suit alleged the motel lacked
adequate exists, fire walls ,
automati.c sprinkler systems, fi.re
warning devices, fi.re extinguishers
and trained firefighting personnel.
The suit contends dangerous
material was used in the motel's
construction and that personnel
failed to alert guests and fi.re
au·thori.Ues until the blaze was out of
control. It also claimed failure to
comply with federal, state and local
fi.re codes.
The Anderson suit seeks $7.5
million in puniti.ve damages and $4
million compensatory dainages for
Mrs. Anderson. It also askes $15
million punitive and $1.05 million
compensatory for Anderson in the
injuries to both his daughter and his
wife.
· The Habegger suit seeks $7.5
million puni.tive and p million
compensatory damages.

Substitute teacher
fired for incident
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP )- An
elderly substitute teacher has been
fi.red for kicking a 16-year-()ld boy in
the shin during a math class, school
officials said.
Substitute Marianne Mandy, who
gave her age as "ovef' 70," said
Ke(lneth Moore "was. stopping
everyone else from learning."
"He was just interrupting and
joking," she said. "l really didn 't
plan to kick him. 1 walked up to him
and then instinct just took over."
The incident occured during the
sixth day of a teachers' strike.
Classes for Anchorage's 38,000
students were conducted by
substitutes until Friday when
negotiations resumed and 1,450
teachers went back to class.
Ms. Mandy, who has a masters
degree in education from City
University of New York, said it was
the first time she had taught i.n a
public- school. She said she had
taught for four years in a Catholic
high school prior fo her move to
Alaska in 1~. ·
The boy's mother, Ruby Moore ,
has filed a complaint about the
Wednesday incident with the
Anchorage Pollee Department.
"1 was upset that no one at the
sehoul bothered to contact me about
1t," Mrs. Moore said. "You don't
kick dogs. You shouldn't kick people
eith~r."

and bridge repairs.
House Speaker Vernal · G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, said earlier lbat
there are enough votes in the lower
chamber for the gas hike, although
he favors a version different from
the flat two-cents-a-gallon backed by
Ocasek.
The speaker supports a proposal
for a 4 percent sales tax on
wholesale gasoline purchases. It
would translate .into 2.4~ts-a­
gallon lor motorists the first year, go
to 2.8 cents the second, and eontinue
tO grow thereafter as gasoline prices
rose.
At one point, that proposal was In
a House subcommittee's version of
the transportation budget, tiut was
taken out when Riffe was unable to
elicit from Ocasek assurances that it
could pass the Senate.
With elections coming up next
year, the speaker obviolLSly didn't
want to put members on record lor a
tax increase that wasn't going to
pass, giving challengers a chance to
point to what the incumbents
"tried" to do.
Last week, when the House
approved the lean transportation
budget, virtually devoid of
improvement funds, several House
members called on the Senate to bite
the bullet. Some said they were
catching flak back in their home
districts.

".12 peri$h
•

zn crash
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (AP) A four-..ngine DC-7 plane used to
fight forest fi.res crashed on a
southern
Oregon mountain,
apparently kUling all 12 people
aboard, authorities said today.
Sue Hughes of the U.S. Forest
Service said the plane crashed
Friday night on 6,500-foot Surveyor
Peak near Lake of the Woods, about
20 mlles northwest o! Klamath Falls.
She said no survivors had .been
found .
The plane had been used earlier
Friday to drop fire-retardant
chemicals on a small forest fire near
Roseburg, northwest of Klamath
Falls, but was not engaged in fi.refightlng when it crashed.
·
The 12 people aboard were pilots
and mechanics for Buller Aircraft
Co. of Redmond and were en route to
a party in Medford , an employee of
the company said.
~eve McCoy, a mechanic for
Buller Aircraft, said he was told by
members o! the-Klamath Search and
Rescue Unit that there were no
survivors.
f

•

J

�..~

D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Sept. 16. 1979

New marketing plan
announced at meeting

Hoofs and Paws
By Marioa C. C111wford
Metgs County
Humane Society
· POM~ROY - It isn't only mixed
breeds, Heinz, or Mutts that are
treated badly in this world as the
picture with this article sbows. This
male Pekingese was picked up by
Joyce Miller and Mary Ann
Smallwood and brought home to me.
It was too late to tak_e to a vet , so I
fixed a place for the animal, tried to
get it to eat and drink -but it would
only eat from my hand and very lit·
tie at that. It was old, badly matted,
and appeared to have bad eyes. Next
morning I took it straight to a vet
and with the conditions I'd noticed,
'plus having teeth that were falling
out and a terrible skin problem as a
result of lice and fleas eating it alive,
it was determined to be in such bad
shape it should be put at peace.
We always bate to do this, but
because someone neglected this on·
ce beautiful animal, at about eight
years of age it had to be let go while
it had some dignity left. And then
some folks who don't know me that
well wonder why I appear to be
grump in my columns.
If I did like too many and buried
my head in the sand so that I didn't
see the misery that some poor
animals are forced to endure, I too
could go around like I used to while
in the Army - smiling most of the
· time. The indifference of some
people and the cruelty that is
tolerated is enough - as the old
saying goes - to make a preacher
swear.
Along the same line - remember
last week I told you about the Poodle
and the Spaniel that someone aban·
doned when they were too old and
sick to last much longer ?
Everything happens in "threes" it
seems- I hope that is all. On the way
to the vet this past week I did pass a
cute little Pomeranian lying dead
along the road.
Did someone throw it out to lend
for il3elf too? If anyone reading this
article right now is thinking of doing
just'this -please do the right thing
instead and take that animal to a vet
and have it hwnanely euthanized. It
costs $5 and if you don't have the
money, call the Humane Society at
992-6260, and let's discuss it. Don't
let your trusting pet down when he
..or she needs you most - and don't
pass oo your responsibility to
someone else by dropping the poor
defenseless animal.

Meigs Chapter will be at the first
meeting t~ advise and assist.
Until your commissioners can get
that new pound built - the soon to be
society will need lots of help with the
animals, so do call and find out
about what you can do.
We have three animals that need
homes badly that were abandoned
by their owners- two were half star·
ved when we got them. A small
miniature Lassie type Collie, maie,
about a year old and a younger,
about six months old Collie-Terrier,
male, both real cute, nice, gentle,
loving animals.
We also have a . beautiful
Shepherd-Beagle, female, who
needs some kids to play with her.
She is lull of spit and vinegar, let me
tell you. Nelli. we need to find homes
for another Collie-Terrier type,
female, pup about four months old, a
black and white, beautiful, long
'haired, well, itlooks like a "Sandy. "
You know,like the animal in Annie
- only black and white. She is an
unusual, nice animal.
Those of you who like kittens -we
have a matched set, black and white
and cute as the dickens, also three
black ones, a tiger, a yellow calico,
gray and gray and white . We must
find homes for these pretty things
within the next few days.
Anyone in Gallipolis want a real
nice, small Terrier? If so, you can
even have a little bonus if you '11 give
jler a good home - a little week old
puppy. (We will help you place it
when it is old enough if you will take
the MolJI!ll8). If interested please
call 446-1316. All animals listed
above may be seen by calling our answering service at 992-li:!liO.
In closing I would like to remind
those of you who have not yet spayed
or neutered your animals - you have
one of the biggest responsibilities of
any pet owner to take care of yet. We
were made to wear the "black hat"
this past week because of one of you.
A very pregnant Beagle mixed
with a few other breeds - nice,
young dog, was necessarily taken to
the vet to have her life cut short as
well as her puppies before they were
able to be born. Do you want this to
happen to your pet? If you cannot af·
lord the spay bill, all of you female
owners, there is a pill and there is a
shot you can get for it. There is no
excuse for what happened to this
Beagle -nor is there any excuse for
all the puppies about to be born with
no homes to go to.

Hey, people ol Meigs CQWity -

good news - a new young vet is
thinking very seriously of opening
an office in Pomeroy and will be
available to you at least two or three
evenins a week SOON. Alii can say
is IT'S ABO \IT TIME SOMEONE IS
THINKING ABOUT US POOR OR·
PHANS IN MEIGS. !Ught? I shall
keep you posted.
Other good news - there may be a
Humane Society soon in Gallia Coun·
ty and that can't come soon enough
either. If you haven't heard about it
and are interested, do call 446-1316
after 3 p.m. Some of us from the

BOMB EXPLODES
TELAVIV, Israel (AP) - A bomb
exploded in the Tel Aviv suburb of
Bat Yam , injuring a policeman who
was trying to move it, police said
Saturday.
A spokeswoman said the bomb
was found Friday night near an
apartment building by , one of the
building's residents, who alerted
police. An officer was trying to move
the bomb when it went off , wounding
him in the legs.

i

POOR DOG - This picture was taken shortly after this Pekingese
was rescued from a creek near Pomeroy ... not a very happy looking .
animal, is it?

Rescue van fund
reaches $9,700
MIDDLEPORT-The Middleport
Fire Department and Emergency
Squad now has a total of $9700 in its
current public fund drive to collect
funds - for the purchase of a new
heavy duty rescue van .
Fund drive goal is $13,000 and so
far, $9700 have been collected.
Latest contributors include Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Ricbards, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs.
Willie Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
L. Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. Robert

Tewksbary, Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Karr, Jr ., Jllr. and Mrs. RichardS.
Owen, Mr. and Jllrs. James E . Hall,
Mr. and Jllrs. B. F . Turner, Jllrs.
Gladys Wines, Jllrs. Violet Bayles,
Jllrs. Beulah Roush, Mrs. Frieda M.
Smith, Jllrs. Mildred Long, Jllrs.
Cora Pullen, Jerry's Beauty Shop,
Jllr. and Mrs. Roger Spencer, Rail's
Ben Franklin Store, Royal Crown
Bottling Co., and the Edwards
Auction of baked goods and workers
for the auction.

GALLIPOLIS - The highlight of
the Gallery of Homes seml-annual
conventin held August 11·15 in St.
Louis, Missouri, was the announcement of a dynamic new
marketing-growth plan, according
to William D. Toney, president of
Toney Realty Co. Gallery of Homes
in Gallipolis.
Toney reports that Gallery's new
marketing plan will result in growth
and increased member services,
which will enable Gallery of Homes
brokers to better serve the real elate
public. ''Gallery of Homes will con·
tinue to recruit only quality
brokers," says Toney. "We do not
want to play the numbers game, and
we are not interested in becoming
the largest real estate franchise iri
terms of numbers of licensees."
Douglas Edwards, a noted CBS
news correspondent for over three
deeades, addressed delegates at the
opening session of the convention on
"What's Rlght With America. "
Edwards said that, despite the im·
pression Americans may get lrom
SU rr DROPPED
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Donna
Niehaus has dropped her $4 million
lawsuit alleging that Owens-Illinois
Inc. did not do enough in trying to
free her husband from Venezuelan
kidnappers.
William F. Niehaus, an OwensDiinois executive, spent 40 months

LegislatiQn at-a-glance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Following is the status of major
legislation pending in the !13th Ohio
General Assembly:
APPROPRIATIONS
Appropriates $1.3 billion for the
remainder of the 1979·1981 biennium
for the Transportation and Highway
Safety departments. Passed House,
pending in Senate Finance
Committee.
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS Provides in excess of $500 million to
finance public improvements in
Ohio over next two years. To be
introduced this week on behalf of the
Rhodes administration.
PRODUCT
LIABILITY
Restricts negligence lawsuits
against makers and sellers of
products. In Senate Rules
Committee, awaiting assigrunent to
a floor vote. ·
·
ENERGY CREDITS- Expands
and makes permanent a program
under which the elderly, needy , and
disabled receive state subsidies
against winter heating bills. Passed
by both chambers, awaiting House
action on Senate amendments.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT Restores the Ohio death penalty,
which was struck down July 3, 1978
by the U.S. Supreme Court. Passed
by House, hearing Wednesday in
Senate Judiciary Committee.
SCHOOL MANAGEMENT
Increa ses
management

requirements for school districts
and makes it unlawfUl for them to
close for lack of funds . Passed by
House , hearing Wednesday in
Senate Education and Health
Committee.

as a captive of the guerrillas .
At the same time the dropping of
the suit was announced Friday,
Owens-Illinois said Niehaus wUI
return to work at the company
Monday as a vice president and
director of administration for
corporate technology .

[),3- The Sunday Times-b '.ntinel, Sunday. Seot.16. 1979

•

watching the news, there are Indeed
many things tight with America things that often don't make the
news.
One of the more inspiring convention sessions was the installation
of the John T. Nothnagle Knights of
the Round Table. Awards 1ft!n!
presented to some 170 G8llery of
Homes sales counselors earning in
excess of $25,000 in residential real
estate sales conunissions. Presiding
over the ceremonies were Raymond
A. Nothnsgle, chairman of the
Board, and Thomas J. Jenldns,
president.
Guest speakers for the flv~H~ay
convention included Dave Yoho,
world-renowned lecturer in sales
and motivational psychology; Dr.
Milton R. Rubin, expert in
motivational and organizational
development; Don Edwards, codeveloper of "The Time Bank
System;; ' and Dr. Amold G.
Abrams, noted lecturer on body
language and interpersonal communication. Donald I. Hovde,
president of THE NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS, ad·
dressed the delegates brieOy oo
Monday evening, August 13.
In addition to the general sesaions,
delegates participated in workllhope
and panel discussions, and vl!lted
exhibit, videotape viewing, and con·
sultation aras.
Attending the convention from
Toney Realty, Gallipolis Gallery ol
Homes were: Sales Assoclatee
Vicky Hauldren and Becky Lane.
The gathering in St.l.ouis was one
of two semi-aMual conventions held
each year by Gallery of Homes, Inc.,
the nation 's oldest residential real
estate franchise organization.

DALLAS (AP) -A young college
student
who
disappeared
myster-iously a month ago and was
feared an accidental victim of an
Intellectual fantasy game was
reunited with his tearful parents
Friday, a private investigator said.
The family went into seclusion and
offered no explanation about the
boy's disappearance .

Building a new home, or remodeling an older home?
Call Superior to install your plumbing, heating or air
conditioning.
Superior has trained service )lersonnei to install water,
g~s, sewer lines and septic tanks , as well as repair ser·
VICe.

Call (614) 286·SS311or free est imates.
Ser11ing Soufhf!astern Ohio, and West Virgin ia .
Commercial, Residential , Industria l
17.5 Taft Road, P .O. sox 9()9
Jaekosn, Oh io 4564()

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•

ONLY FROI\II CHRYSLER .~
Now Chrysler Corporallon announces the $400 Cash Rebate! See your Dodge dealer toda M k
your best daal on one of these "Be_st Deal" ~ehlcles :.. and Chrysler will top it with a S4oJ·ch:c:
sent directly to you! Bank it. Spend ot. Or use iltoward the down payment.

LET'S MAKE ·A DEAL!

Dodge
Durlqc
l1111 h•,

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
COURT &amp; THIRD
(

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

Agriculture and
.
our community

"~nlf "n·~~

By Bryson R.jBudl Carte-r
Gallia County Extension Ag«·ut

1n· lltTT! t n ••uu.

t:ewu•"•'•'•

11•-•:t ..- n
PR~ERVINGOUR

PRODUCE
Add Zeot With
Plcklei and Reilsheo
Pickles and relishes add color , zip
and zest to mea ls, snacks and party .
refreshments. And now is the time
to pickle those cucumbers, green
peppers, beets, peaches, zucchini,
onions, orka, green bean. pears • in
fact, any vegetable or fruit for which
you _can find a tested recipe.
A current, reliable recipe is quite
important. Too little of an
ingredient, like vinegar, may result
in a pickle that is unsafe to eat.
Picklef can take from a few hours
to several weeks to make. Brine&lt;!
pickles mil!ht take three weeks or
longer. Sauerkraut, dilled cucumbers and green tomatoes are
prepared this way.
Freshpack, or quick process,
pickles are easy when time is
limited. Some of these are dilled
green beans, sweet gherkins and
crosscut cucumber slices.
Fruit pickles, such as crabapple
and watermelon rind, usually
require a day or two to make.
Relbhes, on the other hand, can be
made in a lew hours. They can be
sweet, sour, spicy or hot, depending
on the recipe. Corn relish , chiU
sauce, piccalilly, chow-chow and
chutney are popular.
Wbatever type of pickle or relish
you decide to make, be sure to weigh
and measure ingredients accurately. And be sure to process all
pickles and relishes in a boiling
water beth for the reconunended
Two important ingredients for
pickles and relishes are the salt and
the vinegar used. If you want a clear
brine and bright colored pickles,
don't use iodlzed salt. It contains anti-caking materials that may yield a
grayish colored pickle and make the
brine cloudy '
Use pure granulated salt that's
sold as "pickling salt," "Barrel "
salt or "kOilher" salt. Never use ice
cream salt or rOCk salt, because
those types contain impurities:
Vinegar lor pickjing should have
an acidity level between four to six
percent. Either cider or white
vinegar can 'be used. Read the label.
If the acidity Lsn 't listed, don't use
that vinegar for "pickl ing .
Homemade vinegar shouldn't be
used since you can't be sure of the
acidity.
Add Zat With Pickleo
andRelllbes
Although cider vinegar is used in
most recipes because of its good
flavor and aroma, you may want to
1181! white vinegar for certain foods .
Pears, cauliOower and onions may
be di.scolored by elder vinegar. And
if you want a less sour pickle, use a
recipe that contains more sugar.
Don't use less vinegar than called
for.
Of the three types of refrigerator
. pickles, only one type is really sale
to make at home . This type calls for
additiooallemon julce or vinegar to
be added alter :he vegetables have
been fermented in a brine. The other
types ol refrigerator pickles may be
unsafe because their acidity level is
variable and might not be high
enough.
Q: Why must I process pickles'
A: Processing lor 5 minutes, or
more, in a boiling water bath has
been found necessary because there
is 30 much spoilage. Much of this has
been due to bacteria, yeasts and
molds, which occur In the air and
therefore easilY contamirlate food in
transfer from Tettle to jar. Tbe
reheating, after sealing, combined
with preservaUves in pickles, is sufficient to control the organisms.
· Q: Why did my pickles turn dark ?
. A: Dark pickles could be caused
by a number of thingy. Too much
spice, or ground spices, rather than
whole ones, can cause pickles to
darken. Iodized salt could be· to
blame.
Overcooking Is another cause. If
your water is hard, minerals in the
water could cause pickles to darken.
U you used iron utensils at any stage
in pickling the iron may have reacted with the vinegar and discolored
the pickles.
Q: What caUses pickles to become

SEPTEMBER RATE

I

,....1"'""

time.

AIR CONDITIONING

student located

Homemakers'
Circle

soft?
A: There are many possible
causes. Be sure to remove the
biOSS«n end of cucumber, as it
produces enzymes which soften the
pickles. Molds, yeasts, ioo little acid
or salt, poor Sj!llling or processing
are causes.
Q: Wbat causes pickles to shrivel?
A: Too strong a mixture (too much
vinegar, sugar or salt). Hver- ·
procesaing can also shrivel pickles.
Q: What causes pickles to become
hollow?
A: Pickles which are allowed to
stand too long before pickling may
- become hollow, or if cucumbers-are
poorly developed, or if they fennent
ton fast- at high temperatures - or
if the brine is too weak or too strong.
,.

GALLIPOI.JS - Each autumn a
small but significant number of silos
that have been recently filled with
green-chopped com produce yellow·
orange gas. These gases are seen
falling down the silo chute or spur·
ling out an opening in the silo or to
nearby plan13 coloring them gold. If
these gases are inhaled, they can
cause serious injury or death of bir·
ds,livestock or people.
These gases are formed duting the
firSt 24 to 48 hours after ensiling. Tbe
gases are nitrogen dioxide, nitrogen
tetroxide, and nitric oaide. Nitrogen
dioxide is reddish~rown in color and
has a sharp irritating smell like
l!ypochlorite laundry bleach .
Nitrogen tetroxide is yellow and
smells like nitrogen dioxide . Nittic
oxide is colorless and odorless. Tbe
sight or smell of any of these gases
should be considered a danger
signal.
Com is the crop most Ukely to
create the problem and droUght in·
creases the probability. Small grain
(oats, wheat and rye ) silages OC·
casionally produce gaseous oaides of
nitrogen . Grass-legume mixtures
are the least likely to produce such
gases.
Silage frpm silos that have
produced such gases may be fed to
livestock. The fact that the gases
were produced indicates that the
nitrate content of the ensiled
material has been reduced and it is
safer feed than before. Ensiling is
considered a safety factor in preventing nitrate poisoning in dairy cattle.
Do not feed silage that has been
discolored bY gas.
Carbon dioxide is another
colorless-odorless gas that is fanned
during the ensiling process. It accumulates in oxygen limiting stlos
and increases the efficiency with
which silage is preserved in such
struJ:tures. The gas.{illed space
therefore contains primarily carbon
dloaide and nitrogen but no oxygen.
Therefore , it is a good atmosphere in
which to preserve silage but an atmosphere in which human-beings
can not survive. To make matters
worse, carbon dioxide is an
:·e!'thetir People entering an at·

mosphere high in carbon dioxide are
likely to lose consciousness and
become helpless iJi 30 seconds. Do
not enter partially filled gas-tight
silos.
RECO~ATlONS

I -Operate the silage blower 15 to
2() minutes before entering a par·
tially filled silo. Continue to operate
the blower as long as anyone ill in·
side the silo.
2- Tbe silo gases.are heavier than
air. If silo doors are inserted above
the level of settled silage, a poeket of
gas may eollect and remain for a
considerable petiod of time. Do not
step into what might be such a
pocket.
3 - Allow fresh silage to ferment
for two weeks if possible. Do not enter a silo alone during the one to two
week danger period.
4 - Be alert for yellow-orange
gases or initating tumes. Seek
medical assistance immediately if
exposed. Even slight exposures may
be dangerous.
5 - Prevent children from entering
recently filled silos or playing near
the base of recently filled silos.
6 - Do not house livestock in
buildings connected to recentiy
filled silos. Provide maximum ven·
tilation by opening doors and win·
dows during the danger period.

Today In lllatory
By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Sept. 16, the
259th day of 1979. There are 106 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On this date in 1945, Japan
surrendered Hong Kong to the
British after World War II .
On this date :
In 1630, the village of Shawmut,
Mass., changed its name to Boston.
In 1638, the future French king,
Louis XN, was born.
In 1850, slave trading was
for bidden in the District of
Columbia.
In 1!162, the Civil War Batt!• of
Antietam began in Maryland. It
ended in Gen . Robert E. Lee's
abandonment of his first invasion of

County agent's corner

the North .
Thought for today : If you don't
leam from your mistakes, there's no
sense making them - anonymous.

starts at 7:45p.m.
Area graded feeder calf sales are
scheduled for Gallipolis on Sept. rT
and Oct. 2. At the Sept. rT sale they
only want yearlings. Athens is
having two sales, Oct. 11 and Oct. 30.
All sales start at 8 p.m. The last
three sales will take all breeds and
yearlings.
With the gardens winding down
and fall just around tbe eorner, .
you '11 bave a lot.ol goodies to go in
the compost pile. Corn huskings,
lima bean hulls and such make good
compost.
Compost helps supply the organic
matter needed in your garden· soil
year after year. Of course, you can
use animal manures, but if you have
to buy them, they are expensive.
Throughout the year, debrts ac·
c\Jmulations handled properly in the
compost pile keep the average home
gardener a source of organic mat·
ter. Practically all plant refuse can
go into the compost pile. Leaves
during the fall and frosted down
plants from the garden, all make
good compost. Avoid using diseased
or insect infested materials.
The ideal compost is made by
selecting a soil of medium drainage
in tbe back corner of the lot near the
garden and out of view from the
street and visitors to your lan·
dscape. Begin with a 6 to 12 inch
layer of refuse and add on top about
one inch of soil, then another layer of
refuse, then soil, and so on as high as

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

1974 FORD LTD 4 DR

BY JOHN C. RICE
Eiteuloa Agent
Agrleulture

MelpCounty
POMEROY - Groundbreaking
ceremonies will be held on Sund:iy,
Sept. 23, at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp.
The ceremony will commence at 2
p.m. A new swimming pool has
already become a reality and a new
lodge is in the planning stage.
Everyone is welcome .
Farm Science Review gets un·
derway' next Tuesday, Wednesday,
and Thursday, Sept. 18, 19 and 20.
Remember, tickets purchased prior
to the Review are $1.50. At the gate a
ticket will cost $2.50. Tickets will be
on sale at our office until Monday,
Sept. 17, at 4 p.m. If you have never
attendeda Farm Science Review,
you should do so.
Want to hear an excellent
speaker? Want to eat some good
steak? Then come _to the Beef
Outlook Meeting on Tuesday
evening, Sept. 25 at the Jackson
Area Center. Wally Barr, a well·
known eeonomist, will give an
ouUook picture for the beef ind!JBtry.
A steak dinner will be served at 6:30
p.rn. for $4 per person (reservations
are needed) or you may want to only
attend the ouUook meeting which

Dua.l accent paint stripes, 302
engme, PS, PB , Automatic

302 Engine, Power steering and
brakes, all vinyl 'seat trim , FR
78)(14 WSW tires, convenience

trans., all vinyl split seat trim
front and rear guards, electriC

rear defroster, AM· FM ·Stereo -8Track., dual remote mirrors

WAS
$1 209

Stk. No.

'6700

768

WAS

302 Engine, power steering and
brakes, automatic trns, air condi .
tioner, all vinyl seat trim, front
and rear ouards, rear defroster,
protection oroup tinted glass,
dual remote mirrors.

'61 20

Slk No. ~7

$7421

1979 FORD 4 DR LANDAU

::s!
Color while top

a.

blue body, 350 V-8, ~

trans ., power steering &amp; brakes,
fold i ng R . seat, m lrrors, L78x 15 on &amp; off
Ti r es, AM rad io, H . D. baTtery .
Sticker Price $1698.40 Our Special
s~d

7793

5

NEW CAR &amp; TRUCK
CLEARANCE SALE
1978 IMPALA 4 DR.............................. s5495
11 ,000 miles, V a, auto., P .S .• P . B., air condi tioned, vinyl trim , white
over ca mel f inish, trul-.. a creme puff .

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC ........... s2295
4 door , 76,950 miles, V·8 engine, automatic, P .S., P .B., factory air, tint.
glass, am ·fm stereo radio, clean interior. dark blue tlnish.

1976 MUSTANG II ................................ s2795
4 door, auto. trans., good tires , radio, viny l inferior , good economy.

1975 CHEVY G-10 VAN ............. ;........... '2499
6 cv l. . std . trans .• radio, speakers, partial conversion with carpeted In ·
terior, bed , air vent &amp; skyroot .
.
·

1976 CHEVY C-60................................. ~4995
Cab chass is, .292 en gine, 2 speed rear axle, 82Sx20 t ires, solid cab &amp;
goOd mechantca lly . 102 " to ax Ie.

1972 VOLKSWAGON BUS .......... .-........... ..'2495
Travel or recreation, told ·down seat, ice bo)(, good tires . clean in·
terlor .

1971 CHEV. C10 PICKUP .........................'1295
Cheyenne cab , V6 engine, autom r1 fic , PS , radio, aiUIIl+num cov er on
bed

VISIT OUR LOT, CHECK OUR NEW (;JIR &amp; TRUCK

DISCOUNT PRICES
WE WANT

Slk. No. l85

'6370

FM, Stereo, Tape, Prot: group,
Light group .
WAS

59609

1979 FORD THUNDERBIRD

Slk No. :zoo

1

8090

1979 FORD THUNDERBIRD
302 engine, PS, PB , Auto. Iran. ,

302 Engine, PS, PB , Automatic
trans, air conditioner, conv .
group, full width, power seat,
speed control, t inted glass, wire
wheel covers.

air, power seat, interior decor,
tinted glass, power lock group,
lower tutone paint, speed control ,
elec. rear defroster, AM FM
Stereo 8 Track, power side w in·
dows.

WAS

WAS

'6700

Slk. No. 141

$7961

1979 MERCURY MARQUIS
2 DR BROUGHAM
351 engine, twin comfort seats,
power steering and brakes, auto.
trans., air con d., Am , Fm ,
Stereo, Tape, front and rear
bumper guards, tilt wheel, speed

ALL MUST GOI

$7753

302 engine, PS , PB, Air, auto.
trans., speed control, t ilt wheel,
power seat, front and rear
guards, HD batterv. power lock
group, elec . rear defroster, AM,

'7330

Slk No. 629

WAS

1979 FORD LTD LANDAU

351 eng jne, PS , PB , Automatic
trans, air cond; spl it seat with
recliner, speed control , elec . rear
defroster, front and r~ar bumper
guards, protection group , t inted
olass. dual remote mirrors.

control. power seat. left and right
hand

recliners,

visibility group.
WAS

$9348

tinted

Slk. No. 362

glass,

1979 BRONCO RANGER XLT
T!Jtone paint. green and white,
351 engine, PS , PB, guaged trac ·
tion, lock rear, speed control ,
auto. tran~ .• tinted glass, fl ip fold
rear seat, dual bright mirrors,
air cond ., Am, Fm, Mono, radio,
tow hooks, air .
WAS
$11,168.45

Stk No. 734

'9270

st04 7

Slk NO. 852

'7580

Slk No. 900

'6840

1979 FORD LTD 2 DR
351 Engine, power steering and
brakes, automatic trans, air

cond ., split bench seats, power
antenna, AM FM stereo radio, ex·

terior accent group, protection

grQup, speed control, digital
clock, li II wheel and dual remote

-.

mirrors.
WAS

Stk. No. 27

'7120

1979 FORD THUNDERBIRD

302 Engine, PS AND PB, Auto.
trans., air cond ., speed control,
Interior decor, tinted glass,

power lock group, all vinyl seot, .

tnt wheel,

poWer

se:at,

elec.

defroster, AM, FM, Stereo, pro·

tection group, power side win·

dows.
: :9

!'

Slk. No: 617 S7370

1979 THUNDERBIRD
HER.ITAGE
351 engine, PS, PB, Automatic
trans, air, traction lbck rear axle,

AM, FM, stereo, uIter soft leather

trim, rear defroster, rust proofing, power windows, power locks.

WAS

$11, 954

Stk, No. 704

'9780

1979 MERCURY MARQUIS
BROUGHAM 4 DR

1979 MERCURY MARQUIS
4 DR BROUGHAM

351 Engine, power steering and
brakes, auto . trans., air cond.,
conv . · group, tilt wheel , speed
control. front and rear guard,
elec. defroster, visibility light
group, wire wheel covers, power
antenna, cornering lamp, tinted
glass, lock conv . group.

302 engine, PS, PB, air cond .,

WAS
$10,025

'7600

302 engine, power steering and

WAS
$1187

1979 FORD LTD 2 DR
302 engine, power steering and
brakes, automatic trans. speed
control , rear bumper guard,
tinted glass. vinyl seats, tron·t
bumper guards, air, dual remote
mirrors, white sidewall tires.

1979 FORD LTD 2 DR

radio, e&gt;Cterior decor group . Dual

'6490
1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

'8200

front and rear .guards, Am, Fm,

..

'7350

sam

1979 FORD BRONCO

lock, swing away spare tire, vinyl

'•.

air cond., dual mirrors, All
around tinted gloss, tow hooks,
max. fuel tank guoges, traction

spare tire, pkg,, speed.

body side mtdg., flip fold r&amp;'ar
seot, clg. lighter, mog. type

WAS
$11,041

WAS

wheel covers .
$10,067

'·

'•'

.,

Stk. No. 776

'8420

'

..
. ,.
·'

BIG CAR SAVINGS

"

WHILE THEY LAST

INVENTORY CLEARANCE
ON ALL NEW CARS. &amp; TRUCKS.

'•

''•
,.

GET YOUR BEST DEAL AND BRING IT
TO THALER FORD FOR A BEnER DEAL.

,•'

"
,
(

FOR A GOOD DEAL SEE
Tom Sprague, Nancy Fowler·, Rod Ferguson,
Bob Ross, Jim Thaler, Bob Swain, Howard Plantz.

POMEROY· MOTOR CO.

•
r

WAS

Thaler Ford Sales, Inc.

YOUR 9U&lt;;INESS

•';•

i

bright mirrors, max. fuel tank

'9180

•
•

Stereo, tinted glass conv. group,

351 engine, PS~ PB, auto. trans.,

Slk No. 700

'
•'

front and rear bumper, rub
strips, protection grou·p, wire
wheel covers.

Tutone paint, green and wh ite,

cap, tilt steering, swing away

•

auto . trans .. lilt wheel, speed con·
trol, power flight, bench · $Cal,

1979 BRONCO RANGER XLT
351 engine, power steering and
brakes, auto . trans., air cond.,
traction lock rear axle, dual

•

tP

horns, tinted glass, wire wheel
cover.
WAS
Slk No, 448
$7961

group, elec . clock, front and rear

tinted gloss. FR , 78XU wsw
tires.

•

you want to go to about 4 or 5 feet.
Over each layer, sprinkle a little
limestone (dust or granules),
needed only if you want the product
to be nonacidic. Water the pile to
keep it moderately moist - not
soggy. Over each layer, sprinkle a
little fel'tillzer that contains nitrogen
and phosphorus. After about three
months, the pile should be turned
over with a garden fork occasl!Hially
to provide a good mix and
keep
tbe compost from overheating.
Turing also aerates the materials
and aids in decomposition.
During the summer, usable com·
post can be made in four to five mon·
ths. Compost made in the fall takes
longer. The nature of the materials
affects the time of deeomposltion.
Soft, green plant material decom·
poses rapidly. Dry leaves take
longer.
Upcoming Events - Fann Science
Review, Sept. 18,19, 2ll
Canter's Cave 4-H Ground·
breaking, Sept. 23, 2 p.m.
4-H Committee Meeting, Sept. 24
at 7:30p.m.
·
Beef Outiook Meeting at Jackson,
Sept. 25at6:30p.m.
State Feeder Calf Round-i!p, Sept.
'¥1·29.
Feeder Calf Sales, Gallipolis,
Sept. '!I at 8 p.m., yearlings.
Gallipolis, Oct. 2 at 8 p.m., all
breeds and yearlings
·
Athens, Oct. II at 8 p.m., all
breeds and yearlings.

brakes, automatic trans, air con·
venience group, bumper ouards,
electric rear de:roster, AM FM
Stereo, exterior decor group.
Tinted gtess, w ire wheel covers.

bumpers, etec. defroster, AM Fm

speed control, air conditioner'

.

'.'•
·i
' )

'•,.

24 Hr. Wrecker Service
Phone: 446·3575 Day, 446·3650 Night

PH. 446-3575

"hour Chet•y Vmder"

'

••l

"

~

i,

;.&lt;

..-'.
It only takes aminute to gat abatter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~--------------------------~----~ r '~
992-2126

Open Evenings&amp; P.M.

"

Pomeroy

~

�·1).6- The Sunday Times-8entinel, SWlday, Sept. 16, 1979

I\-4 - Tht• SIII)(IHY Times.&amp;lnlinel, Sunday , Sept. !6, 1979

Cooperalive Exte""n!$ion Service
nie Ohio State Un iversity

(;over crop should be planted after·haroest
that is left to hold Ule topsoil in place
is widely scattered stock stubble.

Hy Slfphro D. Hlbloger

lllstrtrt Collllervatlolllst
Soli Collll. Servlct&gt;

Gallla County
t;AJJ .IPOIJS - The fruits-&lt;&gt;f!Mbor Mfl' showing now as crop har·
vesting is in full swing.
Tobacco is nearly aU in the barn.
rom is beginning to be picked or
sl11.&gt; lled. Silage corn is presently in
mid-harvest status and lhe few of
you that have soybeans are probably
getting the combines oiled and
greased .

Harvesting is the only means that
the expenses of production can be
recovered, but the post-harvest
period is a critical time for soil
erosion from some of the sloping
cropfields.
Tobacco, silage and soybean are
crops that are particularly hard on
crop fields. With tobacco and silage,
aU the vegetation is removed and all

Even though the vegetation from
soybeans is left on the field, usua lly
only 2-3000 pounds of residue is left
per acre. Corn that is picked or
shelled can give 4-aJOO pounds of surface litter per acre .
As a result of little or no surface
litter or crop residue to act as il
mulch, some cropfields show con·
siderable signs of erosion between
the time that the crop is removed
and when the surface soil is frozen
solid. The spring thawing period is
also a time when erosion is a serious
problem.
The best means to combat erosion
(other than no-tiD production) is to
plant a cover crop soon after har·
vest.
Rye, ryegrass and wheat aU give
quick growth in cool faU temperatures. Spell is another gOod

cover crop, though not as familiar to
most of us. Seed these species at 2-3
bushels per acre rates.
The above ground vegetation on
cover crops tends to break the impact .force of rain drops that strike
the ground and break sou particles
into smaller, more easily-eroded
sizes.
The roots of the cover crops help
anchor the top«&gt;U. All these cover
crops have a net-type root system
that spread and wrap soil particles
together.
In the spring when it's time to
plow again, the cover crop is a good
source of nutrient! that decay and
become available for crop uptake.
Not only does the decaying
vegetation add nutrients to the soil,
but it also improves the tilth of the
surface textur.e and increases
organic matter content.
Slightly more expei'L9ive to use as
cover crops are red clover or sweet-

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
IN MEMORY of Rachel

The Quality King of Corn Cribs
A Bl!hlen Com Crib kHpi lb hilh rftale vtlue )'l!'at after year .. , because 1t'1 bu1lt for a
liretirnr or ro a erd .e" ice. Enl'}' Behlen Crib i1 tlot-Dip Galvaniud an.er weldil'lll ...
completely e'"erinc all .urfleti ~ i~l11din1 weld ipObf wil.h up l.o 6 time. th e amount of
zinc foul\!1 on ordinary cribr.. Th!'. Rehlen Crib n!fen :' flho icf of No. 2-(l•up or No. "-l•_u ge
Bar M6h Steel. Weaiher·ti&amp;h t "Sleep PilCh" roof t 1ll• to Lhe pt:ak without hand levelrn~ .
Es:tn widt crib doon, l n . •it~ from 619 to 2,1!i6 00.1\ell.

BEHLEN MANUFACTURING COMPANY, COLUMBUS, NEBRASKA 68601

CENTRAL SOYA
of OH\0, \NC.
3rd &amp; Sycamore, Gallipolis, OH. 446-2463

minister, pianist,

you

goes

deep,

prec i ous

m emor-Ies

can come to us, unless our

hearts find rest In today.
You took courage then, to
claim It, The gloom of the
world Is but a shadow. You

clover. They are not so hardy in cool
temperatures, but if seeded in the
early faU (no Later than September
20 ) they can give good growth. In the
spring, the plowdown material is

higher in nitrogen content than the
rye and wheat seediAAs since these

removed the covering, and
you found beneath It, a
living splendour, woyen of
lov.e, by wisdom, with
power; you welcomed it .
You grasped it, and you

touched the angel's nand
that brought It to you.
Everything we call a trial,
a sorrow, or a duty, the

clovers are legumes and manufac.
lure their own nitrogen.

angel 's hand Is there ; the

gift Is there, and the won ·

~

there . Courage you had,

r and the knowledge that we

! are pilgrims together, won ~

dering through an unknown

• country home. Your last
•,' words were •Jesus help
1 me' . He rea ched down and
' oave you the wings, as a

butterfly you softly, and

sweetly went home. Love to
.. you tor ever Mom ; from
1 your sons, daughters, a.nd

grandchildren .

•

to store food where it's so cool that it
might freeze . Freezing could make
the foods expand and break the seal.
Then the canned food would not be
safe to eat. So basementa may be the
best place to store foods in summer -but not in winter if there's a chance
of freezing.
The storage spot should also be
dark. Ught can change the food 's
color and nutrient content. Also, be
sure the storage spot is dry and
clean. This cuts down the chance of
rust and molds developing on the
containers and eventually con·
laminating the food.
So after taking your time and
trouble to can the sununer's barvest, be sure to find a cool, dark, dry
pLace for storing · those canned
goods. Good storage means safer,
more nutritious, better tasting food.
If you store canned foods properly
and follow recorrunended canning
procedures, home canned f~
should be good eating for at least a
year.

Contact us now for a demo.

"' thanks to Rev. Dewey King
~ and si ngers. also nurses at
the hospital and the Ewing
Fun~ral Home .
of

Keep up with

we're way ahead

'G "RO
TEDDlNG
I
I
TI-ll

j

MAY MACMINI WITH THI

LAIIIOIIT

WOIIU, O

I

'"' ""'

ol40 ·029~ ..

Sall ie Bias.

ON ANY NEW CAR OR TRUCK
EXCEPT OMNI'S, HORIZON'S &amp; IMPORTS

WO"""

HAV 11\10'-11 .... (.

WICI

bedroom.

1970 Vindalo

" RC!Inee' :· Apple Grove area , pando. 2 bodr.

SALI. QIIIOWTH

12~

with ox-

FACTORY
REBATE
FROM
·CHRYSLER

$400
REBATE

POM EROY;l)HJO

3rd

,

Sallie

•who helped In any way dur·
· lng the death of our mother
and grandmother . Thanks
7for the cards, flowers, food
. and kind words, especially

MEIGS EQUIPMENT

J

of

) Bias wishes to e)(press
~ their appreciation to those

The family

supplies.
Pick up and
delivery. Davis vacuum
Cleaner, one ha lf mile up
Georges Creek Rd, Call

1

mole Walker, 3 year• old, all
white, tan head and blodt
apot left side. Tattooed
S.W.M. left ear~ Anawers to

IF WE DON'T HAVE
IT IN STOCK
WE WILL LOCATE

Sallabur/, Housing, 7: 1~7 :45.
Wedneaday, Sept. 1i- Torch, Post
Office, 3:45-4:30 (Short film at 4);
Hockingport, Cmummlty Bldg., 55:45 (Short film at 5:15); Coolvllle,
School Lilt, 6:15-7:15 (Short fUm at
6:30); RJu'sAddltion, 7:45-4 : 1~.
Thunday, Sept. II - Sr. Citizens
Center, 12:45-1:15; Mulberry Hta.
Inflnnary, 1:364; Racine, 6th .
Street, 2:»-1; Letart Falla, Shuler's
Restaurant, 3:11&gt;-4 (Sbort fihn at

Monday, Sept 17- Laura's Store

(near Carpenter), 2:30-3:15 p.m.;
Oe:rter, Church, 3 :45-4: U;
l..angiiYIIJe, SmaU'a Grocery, 4:»6;
Rutland, Pomeroy Nall.ooal Bank,
5:15-4, (Short fUm at 5:30); ~
Street, S: 1$-7 (Short fUm at 6:30);
Middleport, Aah St. FreewW Baptist
C2ulrch, 7:3Q..8:15, (Short flhn at
7:45).
Tuelday, Sept. 18 -~Road,
near 3ll080, 3:30-4:15; Reedavllle,
Reed'a Store, 4:504:30 (Short fUm at
5); Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh
Howling, &amp;-e:45 (Short film at 1:15);

IT FOR YOU

3:46); Racine, HcJme Nau.allla'*,
4:1r.-6 (Sbort film at 4:30); Wagner's

Hardware, r.-6 :45 (Short fUm at
5:15) ; SyraCWJe, Pool, 6-7 :30 (Short
!Uma\6:30).

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

SPECIALS OF THE WEEK

Intriguing deceptive bid

1974 DODGE D-200 CLUB CAB
3,4

With a name like Poulan. getting
people to ·say the name rigtit may
bti .asking a lot.
On the other hand . people ask an
awful lot of our saws. Quick start·
ing. Extra cutting power. Quiet
operation . Beautiful styling . Our.ability. Affordability. And we deli ·
ver all that plu&amp; a lot of other stan·
dard features. no · matter which
Poulan saw they buy. From the
POulan Micro XXV right on up to
our Pro models.

ON MASSEY-FERGUSON'S
NEW 2 AND 4·WHEEL~DRIVE

COMPACT TRACTORS.

Cut. your own firewood
and save money!

~

NORTH

+ KQJ

+ A8

auto., p.s., radio

......

.,tomltte;

• KQJ94
• Q 10
+A 10 9 2

$4495

Vulnerable : Both
Deale~: South
Weal I North Eaal

IU1Dmi11C

At Populan. we ligure the more
we put Into our saws , the less
people have to put into cutting .
Maybe that's why more and more
people keep asking for our saws.
And aa .long as tl'ley keep doing
that. ~'Y can say, \tle name any
way they like.

Otl ~~

Pass

Joulan

"'"SN

IUtomlllc

Oili"'

II ·, :\ tt iltll Ti1ne '79 at our deale r s hip. That

CHECK OUT THESE MODELS:

IJ !t·;,n, 111u get nothing -short of th e be;;t
d. ·:tl1n 11111 non compac t tractors. ··
Y11u'll gl'! dic~el power and economy in a
\11' lli -:!1) !'TO horse power tractor. J!tilrl
fu..J c11,h 111" mmimum . ye t ge t the luggin g
i'''"' ' ·r \toll lll'l'd around farm yards, sm;tll
'" Jt ·.t;.;&lt;·, "11d :11 construction site s.
11·,.-,.,. 1,.., 11 g ivt·n a factory allowance &lt;If
~~ :, 11 •dl :til' tol!l p&lt;t\'ltrar tor s which means

2-Wh-Drives
MV 205
:"11F 210
:vi F 220

PTO HP
16
21
26

4-Wh-Drives
MF 205-4
MF 210-4
MF 220-4

·-..

aiMI

IUfOmltiC

oillno

,1.¥

I '1 /'1

P.ului

11Qfloi6"SN

.

'

SN models areOQYiDI&gt;td
Wt1h sprocket nOse ban,

'

'79 F-100, V-8
'79 F-100, V-8

AIIIIIM . .•ols

$4750
$4895

Step bumper, std . trans., sliver.

UtOft'llhC

FREE ·.:OFFEE. DOUGHNUTS ~t SQF T OHINI&lt;S

Step bumper, std . trans., PS, bsw tires, maroon met .

You hold:
• 74

• 964

I

'79 F-100, V-8

.. $4975

Step bumper, std. trans.; PS, Ail. rad io, S-F78&lt;15 tires, :.Vhlle.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE and WILCOX SERVICE

SHINN'S TRACTOR SALES

.

'79 f·100, 6 cyl.

ssaso

Auto trans., PS, AM radio, Ranger pack, air cond., tinted glass, step bumper, plus more. Black.

To Ba Held At:

PAT HILL FORD, -INC.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
210 Condor St.
H2·2975

For A Friendly Oeat See: Rocky Hupp, Dorrel Doddrll, or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.

~1 $.

lrdAVE.

992-21"

.MIDDLEPORT,O.

CAR CLEARANCE
CARNIVAL II

NOW GET YOUR BEST DEAL AT NORRIS
OODG~ AND CHRYSLER WILL SEND YOU
s400 FACTORY REBATE. YOU CAN APPLY
lHIS ON YOUR DOWN PAYMENT IF YOU
WISH.
OFFER GOOD ON ST, REGIS, MAGNUM,

DIPLOMAT ASPEN, PICKUPS, VANS AND
4 WHEEL DRIVE . VEHICLES

ALSO

Discounts up to s1300
·in addition to your
$400 Rebate
CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE

Gallipolis, 0.

Third &amp; Court,

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
1979 CLOSE OUT SALE
FACTORY DISCOUNTS GOOD lHROUGH 9/17/79

(3) OLDS. 98 REGENCY SEDANS
1-Red·White vinyl roof, red cloth
1-White-white vinyl roof, blue cloth. Demo.
1-Red·Red vinyl roof, red cloth. Demo.

(2) 88 ROYALE

•

CP~

· - 1-Dk. Brown-black ·Landau roof,ta!l cloth.
1-Beige, tan cloth.

(3) CUTlASS
1-cut. Sup. Cpe. Dk. brow,., Beige Landau.
1-cut. Cruiser Wagon, green, green vinyl.
1-cut. Salon Brougham Sed. Med. brown, brown vinyl
(Drivers Ed.)

(2) CADIUACS
1-DeVille Cpe. Lt. Blue, blue. Leather seating.
1-Eidorado Colonnlal yellow leather seating (mr.
Karr's Demo.)

tAK10~2

+A 108
With no one vulnerable
your right-hand opponent
opens one heart. A California
reader asks if we consider
bidding two diamonds.
Yes, but not seriously. This
is the sort of band with which
you don't want to stick your
neck in the noose.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

$4895

Step bumper, std. Irons., PS, candy apple red.

Massey Ferguson

Sponsored by:

240 UPPER RIVER ROAD (STATE RT. 7)
PH. 446-1044 GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'79 f.l(JO, V-8

C.U•Stlt4il
.,.,.,...

Soatag

SEE OUR BIG
atoiCE OF SURE
SAVINGS FORD TRUCKS

OUT FRONT
IN TRUCKS

'

I •Jnlllll" fl rl tJII'
1

Pass
Pass

'

! ·;&gt;.l t ;t -..; t\JI I_l!&lt;.., f11f" )'fi lL

""~• "! '' ' ~r du

IN

5•
Pass

-

IIIMK"SN

TE"M

Pass
Pass

Pass

By ~~~d Jaroby

·Poulan

PoUL»t

2+
4•

Pass

Pass

Confident that he had
stopped a diamond lead, South
went on to the slam in spite of
North's sign-off and West
dutifully opened his fourthbest club whereupon South
had no trouble making all 13
tricks.
That ·diamond bid by South
was a bit of deceptive bidding
that was popular in the early
days of contract and is still in
use today although this particular five-diamond call should
have acted like a red rag to a
bull and produced a diamond
lead from West even if he did
not hold the ace. We will discuss various fancy attacking
bids next week.

..IOMittt
O!l'"f

I

SEE

Tbe bidding in the box is
taken direct from the
Sommervllle book. The tw&lt;&gt;spade response was reason·
ably correct 50 years ago.
South's three hearts and
North's four hearts were also
normal. Tben came the fireworks!
·
South decided that he would
be sure to mate the heart
slam _provided be could stop a
diamond lead. So he bid hve
diamonds! North just bid five
hearts. He bad run out of con·
structive bids when he jumped
to two spades.

+ K J5
WEST
EAST
• 97 6 43
• 10 5
•102
•as
• A4
t KII7Sl!
+Q164
+73
SOUTH

1978 DODGE OMNI

Mll40"

0.15-A
2

• A 7 53
• J 6

Ton , V-8, auto. , p.s., p.b.

$1195

.....

Mobile Homes- Sale
1978 BAYVIEW M.H.·
Hx70
Woodburnfnll
fireplace. Cent. air. Like
new. Caii367-G524.

Mobile Homes - Sale
Mobile Homes Sale's
1975
12x60 FREEDOM
SALE ON USED MOBILE '
HOMES .
TRI ·STATE Partly furn., Inc. washer,
MOBILE HOMES. ~ · dryer, air cond. Price
reduced. Call 1-682·7289.
7572.

SPRING VAllEY PLAZA
446-2134

Card of Thanks

10NLYINSTOCKI
SALE PRICEDTOGOI!II

•nd

Mobile Homes Sale's
197~ 14 x 70 mobile homo.
Good condltlOij. 992-5858.
1972 LYNN HAVEN Ux65 3

Dl's

: THE FAMILY

Thousands of "these unusual spidery machines are ap·
pea ring on farms all over the country . Proved as the
fastest hay conditioning system ever they produce high
nutrient value hay with negligible leaf losses. This
machine will also handle wet windrows from sw'ather
type .m achines to speed drying .

machine repair, parts,

Lost and Found
LOST. Pr-med st•l.,.,

The Seniors Stzy...

... der, and love of an over·
' shadowing presence is

WEIRD AND
WONDERFUL

and

Funeral Home . To those
who brought food. sent

with

lingering on. No heaven

Almost 2,000 Ohio 4-H members a re carry~ng a 4-H fishing project this year. Members
learn about fi sh found in Ohio, fishing methods and fish ing equ ipment. They participate in 4·H
club field a nd stream activities and practice good conservation rules .

casket
Millers

Notices
SWEEPER and sewing

FOR SALE - 12 by 60 2 bdr. 12 x 50 KIRKWOOD Mob.
2 bdr Mobile Home, par·
Monday night. Call 992-3023 · 1970 NowMooil12x603 bodr. tlally turn, call 245·5039, 1973 Fairmont · mobile Home. On v; acre lot on
home. Carpeted thru-®t. McCully Rd. Call ~ ·4736.
or 7~2- 221~. All Information 1973 Sltylln~~ 12xS5 2 bedroom. 2-4H69S.
flowers, gave books In her ANTIQUES bought and confidential .
Set up on tg, rented lot In
1972Bononzo
12x52,
2bodr.
Rodney at Quail Creek. 1973. 2 bdr. mobile homa.
memory and sent the com - sold. While's Antiques, Rl.
I &amp; S MOBILE HOM£ SALES,
Exc . for young married Verv
forting cords. To all who 3S. Rodnev . Call245·5050.
1976
REGENT
1-4x70
mob.
nice. Pressed to sell.
PT . PLEASANT . WV .
clasp our hand, shed i tear,
home. 3 bdr., L.R ., Kit· couple. Coli 245·9188 after Call ~-«193 or -M6-93.10.
3().1-675-«2~.
Business Opp'ty
5:00p._
m.
said a prayer or In any
chen, Ph both, new carpet
other way helped us in our FOR THE BEST buy In
In 3 rms. Range ,
1972' 12x65 Hotly Pk. M.H.,
sorrow we are most diamonds, go to Tawney
1975 KIRKWOOO 14 x 70, totol relrldgeralor &amp; drapes 1974 SCHULTZ Mobile 8XI2
slide-out welk·a·bay
grateful. The Fred Thom· Jewelers, 422 Second
stay.
A
must
to
see.
Call
electric, 3 bedroom. ExceiJ.,t
Home
.
12x65
with
porch
&amp;
OPPORTUNITY
window, porch, awning,
Avenue, Gallipolis. com pson Fam ily.
U5-9177
anytime
and
oi40 - awning. Furnished. Call
condition. a.. t offer, mutt
TO
cent. air. Extra nice. Coli
pare prices anywhere.
&lt;19Uafler7 :30 p.m.
soli. Phano 985-355-l .
ol46·9478.
TRAVEL
ol40·&lt;1265.
Notices
TO SAY goodbye: We could
'MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE not gel around to calling
better get your name 1111 the lllll The
seeing so many of our
SOCIETY , 9'12·6260. P,to and
Out of store ond
dear friends ln Meigs Coun·
Michigan and Cenada trip wu very
available for adoption ond inoverseos.
Monv·
skllltd
ly. so we would like to soy
formation service.
intereatlog. Everyone, 1 •led to at·
ond unskilled jobs
"Good·bye" lhls way and
month
are
expected to plan the
ovolloble.
No
ex
·
BYRU1BMq.LER
joy
everything including the
GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY I
thank you all for vour
perlence requlrtd. Will
program for thi.s month's birthday
PM . FACTORY CHOKE ONlY.
trl&amp;ndshlp mru the past 45
The
adviaory
council
met
on
Sepboatrides
and tbe train ride tilrougb
troln. Hlth school
RACINE·CUN CLUB.
years. You nove all enrich·
people. We need a general chairtember
7.
The
meet1ns
wu
called
to
the
Canadian
wllderne..
trlduoln 17-25. Full
ed our lives In someway, In
personfor
these
parties.
CAR PET, and Upholstery our
poy
ond
benefits.
order
by
Ethel
RobiMon;
minutes
of
This
ill
only
a few of the Center's
hours of happiness and
cleaning . Davis, phone ol40CALL !
Our nutrition program is growing
in
our
hours
of
sorrow.
last
meetillg
were
read
by
Marie
actlvill.es.
029~ . Qual !tv WORK at
also. Two thouslind and forty.five
Please drap by and see us
Meal.
REASONABLE PRICES at
The new multi1MII'IJCIIIe room
Box
68,
Lot
37,
Rl.
1.
meals were served last month inSINCE 1970.
Approximately
11
members
were
seems
to be more a reallty eacb day.
Kentwood Mobile Home
1-800·282· i 384
Park, Quinton, VA 231~1 .
present. Actlviti1!8 for this month cluding hOme deiv~ed meals and at
There wlll also he more Jl'rldng
LARGE Selection of an· Aaron and Irls Kelton.
TOLL FREE
are craft workshopa with volunteers the Vinton site; A new site in Crown spaces available 80011. They are
tlques &amp; u·sed furniture ·
9AM·2PM
City wlll be opened soon. Come (lilt
making 8l1d col!ecting·lmldmade arreally needed and wiD be apShawn 's. 855 Sec. Ave.,
NO HUNTING on George
MON
.
THRU
and help make thi.s lunch program a
Gall.
Freeland's property.
preciated.
ticles foe Bob EvMa Farm Festival
WED.
The articles are aold to help match succeaa.
If 11001e of our retired people would
The regular activities at the Cenfunds needed to .keep the Center
like to give ol ~lVIII, tbey may
ter are being weD attended. We have
growing. We need new Ideas 8l1d any
volunteel' a few hours each week at
many new faces but we have milllled
materials IUdJ 11 yams 8l1d scraps
the Center or 1111e hour a week to
of mateNI al8o plecea ol ribbon or some of the old ones.
dellv~ home meall. For more lnMobile Homes· Sale
Monday ls tbe deadline for the . formation on any of tbe JII'OII'UIII
anything
you
wilh
to
donate
to
help
1972 Lynn Haven 1~x65 3
Florida trip. So if you plan on going
Classes have been scheduled in
witb thele workahcpe.
call MG-7000.
bdr .
1970
Vlndole
12&gt;&lt;63
with
exMacrame, Silk Flowers, Tole Painting,
You are also invited to atteDd any
panda. 2 bdr.
and Beginner's Cake Decorating. Call for
1970 New Moon 12&gt;&lt;60, 3 of tbe8e sessions. Liliten to your
registration.
radio foe day and date. We also need
bdr.
1973 Skyline 12XS.5, 2 bdr.
SALE
volunteers to lflll'k at Bob EY8llll
1972 Bonanza 12&gt;&lt;52, 2 bdr.
Prices have been reduced up to 30% on all
Festival beginning with tbe setting
B &amp; s Mobile Home Sales
Macrame Cord. Hr.s Mon .-Fri. 10 to 8,
bp on Thursday, Oct. 11, through
Pt. Pleasontw.v .
675·442~ .
Sunday, Oct. 14. Work scbedules are
Sat. 10 to 4.
in tbe I and R office.
Our lllrthday parties need volunteers to belp wltb the progrBIIII and
bake cakes. &amp;metlmes we only
bave two people having btrtbdays
which makes It difficult foe them to
plan a prqJl'8lll and refreahmenta.
The people wbo bad birthdays last
bearers,

children, and our love tor

GVROTEDDER
KEEPING

In our heart breaking loss
of Pollyanna. To the

Stover. who passed away

•

POMEROY - There's a lot of emphasis on proper canning techniques
- and using the correct techniques
for the food you're canning is important. But where you store those
jars of home-omned food ls also important. Here are some guidelines :
First, before you even put those
jars on the storage shelf, make a
quality control and safety check just as a conunercial canner would.
Examine the jar lids. If the center ol
the lid is not depresaed or ls loose,
you mlist reprocess the food using a
clean jar and a new lid. Go through
the entire canning process again.
Or, you can refrigerate the produce
immediately and use it within the
next couple of days.
If the canned food p8SSell in·
spection with a good seal, you're
ready to store in a cool place. 1bis
rules out cupboards above ranges
and shelves or closets near a heat
source, such as a furnace or hot
water heater. Studies show that
when caimed g~ are stored at 46
degrees F. for a year, nutrient loss is
insignificant. But at 85 degrees F.,
the lpss rl. some nutrients is 30 per·
cent or greater.
On the other hand, you don't want

. for their love and concern

Sept. 16, 1978. Dear Mom.
we salute you, we are your

BY:
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

STORE CANNED GOODS
RIGHT FOR SAFE

Card of Thanks
WE Wish to thank everyone

In Memory

..

'~.~~~------------------~.~.---.--------------------

'\

(Do you have a que~t/on for
the experts? Write "Ask the
Exptlrts, " care of rhls newspspar. Individual qwst/ons will
be answered II accompanied
by stamped, self·addressed
enve/optls. ThR most Interesting que:, :":-~ ., will bG used In
this column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

All CARS HAVE AIR CONDITIONING; READY FOR
DELIVERY
UNDERCOATING AND WAX •
Some think they save money buying out of town - AC
TUALL Y you save MORE buying at home, with service
after the sale.
.

HURRY IN TODA Yl

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll like our Quality Way of Doing Business"
·GMC Financing
992·5342
See Pete Bur;1.

Pomeroy
.... ~ ...... or

�D-7- Tbe Sunday 'l'imes-Sentlnel, Sunday: Sept. 16, 1979

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

Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
an yth ing to g ive away and
does not offer or attempt to

offer •nv other th•no for
~le may place an ad an this
column There w i II be no
char ge to the advertlser

For Sale

TRAILER 14x70--1 976
E•cellent cond one and
1!2 bath, 3 bedroom . All
carpeted .

EX C ELLENT
CON ·
Dl TION · 1976 Honda 750 .
Call 4-46·7229 or 4-46 2302 .

COAL .

1978 YAMAHA 250 Enduro.
E•c . cond . Call 379·2536

992 3891.
WINTER POTATOES C.W Pro·
ffitt farm Portland, OH $8 a
hundred and SS a hundred

Phone 446 1806
2 FEMA LE KITTENS · L1 t
ter lraine&lt;l . Call 4-46 ·94111
2 LARGE T REES · To
llnyone

wil l cut &amp;

who

remove from yard

Call

4-46·4752 .
1 MALE
Bla ck 8. Whitt'
k1tten. Call 4-46·3897
PUPS
Part Norwegian
Elk Hound Call 388 9820.
o40 INCH Electric range,

fai r cond Call 4-46·0335

HOTPOINT

YOUNG MALE lull grown
mole St. Bernard . To gOOd

home
Good natured,
healthy IF no answer, call

aga1n , 742 2651
FOUR GRAY k1ttens and
mother cat . 742·2321

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

or cage grawn avatlable
Poultry
Housing
and
Automat 1on ,
Modern
Poultry, 399 w Ma1n ,

S~les &amp; Servtce

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Small SA per 100 lb J m11es
west of Darwm between

Gold R1dge and CR 14 on
TR 145 CeCil Toban.
ttres on Oaytons( $385. 1972

BIG BLUE manure spreader
Zip !.&amp;edar Woods pull typa
brush hog, S ft Ford scraper
All l1ka new cond•hon

Appliances

POTATOES. Red Pont1aC ,
Kennebec, S8 per 100 lb

9925266

Jack W, Carsey
Mgr
LMDIIUl .

(3) DOZERS, 300 M F .,
new, 500 In!, 76 m&lt;ldel, 1200

(2) rubber tired loader
hoes, C50 M. F .• 73 model. 9
77 CAT track loader, 300

ft

M F

Even1ngs

$60

track loader, 78 m ,

700 hrs , 2 Dump trucks,
Mack Dtesel w . ramps, J ·

COLLIE , FEMALE. med•um to

21 FOOT of wrought tron

axle tra11er, call 304·736·

Iorge ,

railing . Beige carpet 8xl0.
Pull down cetlmg 11ght.
Mov1e
projector
and

and

wh1te

Amencon dome$hcs, 8 k1t
ten1 , 3 black , 1 t1ger , 1 yellow ,
1 coltco. l grey , 1 grey and
wh1te 1 mm•atureloss•e type
mole young ton and white
Collie terner
black and
whtte , young , mole , short
hcur, shots Humone SOciety

9926260

screen .
742 2020.

BEAUTIFUL black and whit&amp;
female med•um s1ze dog 'Long
ho~red face Humane Soc•ety

992 6260 .
Lost and Found
FOUND:

Butternut

Avenue area POOdle Ter·
ner, strawberry blond,
male
Humane Soc 1ety

992 6260

GOOD
USED
AP·
PLIANCES .
Washers,
dryers, refridgerators.
ranges
Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern Av·

ce., 4-46·7398.
SUZUKI of Jackson has a
new Suzuki for you . Some

'78's still available. Clean
trades wanted Parts, ser
'Vice, accessories
37e E . Maint St , Jackson ,

OH
286 A956
KACH ALL PORTABLE
BLDG. All SIZes, 6X10 to
12•40 See al123'h P1ne St,
4-46 2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling Alley on Rt 7, 4-46·
1279

condition

SISO

992 31&gt;10
ALL TYPES of building

LUMP, stoker 8. egg coal ,
4-46 1408
ECHO

CHAIN

SAWS ,

hydraulic wood spliners,
saw cham, bars, and al l
wood cutt1ng supplies
Charles McKean, Fairf1eld

Centenary Road, 4-46·94&lt;12.
FIREWOOD ,

seasoned

oak , ash and hickory , Ph

446 94&lt;12

BURBESE Pressure can
ner GOOd cond , $25. Call
4-46 1418 after 12 30 p m

TAPPAN

electnc

motors .

742 2785

Cook1ng
779~

Bottle

gas

cooki ng stove G E. mat·
cht ng auto
washer &amp;
dryer. G . E refriderator.
Fridgidatre refridgerator .

IZ ALUMINUM BOAT , Mercury motor, trader, hfe1acket
and oan 667 3025 .
EARlY AMERICAN couch and
velvet chair bcellent condt·
t1011 Contact Bob Ashley,
Cheshtre, OH . 367-0&lt;480

FIM:EWOOD for sole Now tok
mg orders Will daltver. Phone
742-2056

SOLID MAPLE

bunk

beds ,
bookcase headboards with 5

992-5969

MF1135 Otesel , cab, atr and
heater

OLD FASHIONED fooled
bathtub 8. wall hung
lavatory
Also
Early
Amencan sofa Call 446·

1977 KAWASAKI 400. Only

0719
YAMAHA 175 Enduro LOW

truck
campPr, stove,
icebox &amp; sink. Sleeps .tt

Upright

8 ft . slide in
deep · freeze,

mer, 1971 Dodge p~ek · up,
goOd cond . Call 4-46·9782 af
ter 5
HOT POl NT Elec . range.
call 446·1021

other Items, Call «6 0322

conditioner

S24S

Massie

TRUCKLOAD OF 15m. 18
1n, 24 in bell tile, 2 ft . long
Chimney block . 6 sheets 24
guage, 8ft long oalvan1zed

roofing Gallipolis Block
Co. , 123 I 2 P1ne St. 4-46·
2783 .

CORBIN and SNYDEI

FURNITURE

955

S ~C OND

AVENU E

GAL L IP OL IS

OHIO

~ 56 3 1

Services Offered
CERTIFIED
MOBILE
WELDING , 2561550
JIM'S

DEPEN.DABLE

ELMER
MURREL
FOLDEN , Dozer work, 4-46·
9835.

· Substanttal savtngs,

new warranty

Low mon

lhly payments. For free
demonstration call 675·
6066
1973 G M C

Astro 95 318

Detroit dsesel, has been

measured 13 spd 38,000
rears. Exc cond ., $11,000 .
Call 4-46 7795.
APPLES. Now p•cklng Gnmes
Golden Other vanet•es to
follow F1 tzpotrick Orchards
SR 689 Phone Wllkesv1lle

669-3785

FOR

Cal l 256·

REMODELING ,

Roofing, concrete wor k ,
home ma1n
and gen
tenan ce Call Sam M e

Corm1ck 675·1298

and cha 1rs , chest and
van1t y
dresser ,
refndg erator Corbtn and
Snyder F urn , 955 Second
Ave , Gall 1po1t s, 446 1171

F IREWOOD

Spilt ,

seasoned oak &amp; h1 ckory,
cross t1e ends Call 4.40 .-534

or 446 2329
17 ft
1972 BOAT
fiberg lass T r~ hu ll, 4 eye 1
o, 120 h.p , 2 lops, ''" tr l
S2SOO call 4-46 7438
FIREWOOD
load ,

$30

del1vered

p1ckup
and

stac ked 245 56«

FOR SALE
Miller 310 amp welder. Industrial rated AC DC
straight or reverse with high frequency panel.'sa5o;

~PHCI•!r air com presser, l ho~se power, 60 gal tank,
mdustnal ra1ed $1000.; Rockwell Delta Drill press

tloor model No. 2 type variable speed, 350 to 4250:
Like new uoo.; 1 ton Loadstar electric hoist industrial rated, runs off II 0 electric, $4751Baldwin ;v4
hp ondust,al grinder, 1 fn. by 8 in. wheels S175; Rim
Line tool boK, 6 drawers plus top shell filled with

CON TRACT or work by
hour . Do anyths ng from ad
ditions,
complete
remodeling or simp l e

repairs. Call 388 ·9349
HALLEY ' S

MOBILE

••perlence Call 446·2459
LIMESTONE

Lump &amp;

stoKer coal , sand, gravel

Gallipolis, Pt. Pleasant, 25
m1le rad ius. Call 367 7101
ROOFING · Pamling, s ide
walk, patio, eve·spouttng,
free estimates
Dav1d
Boggs 8. Robert McGuire .

Call

379 2587

truc k Licensed to install
septic systems No job too
big or too small For 1n
formation , call 4-46 8565 or

tools of all kinds; Farm Crest Roto Tiller, S40; 1 Jot

FOR BEST ln -. Carpet
Cleaning
Coli Paul 's
Steamway. Call 614·446
2096

brakes. Rebuilt trans. Good cond. 54200. Phone

ATTENTION GUITARI ST

REFRIGERATION

work

675·2608 or alter 6, 367·7742 .

hardshell c ase Ph 446 1886
Chns Craft Ca valier, 1968,
27 ft cab1n cr.Utser all ac ·
cesson es, 446 ·1692

1977 550 HONDA MOTOR
CYCLE , equ ipped with
k 1ng and queen seat . win
dsh teld and farnng , crash
bars , l uggage r acks, 367

Pomeroy Landmark
1 EXCELLENT UNICO 16 CU. FT.
COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR
LIKE NEW

•250

7755

1979 IT 400 Yamaha, 182
miles, Ph 367 7755
HEAT A LA TOR firepl ace
complete, fu l ly tnsulated,
zero clearance, used one

1 USED FREEZER $7500
1 NEW ELECTRIC FURNACE
CLEARANCE PRICED

winter, ph 379 2326

-------------------· FORD TRACTO R, ha y

1 NEW FUEL OIL FURNACE

rake, end loader, d tsc , good

___
C~~A_R_At,jCE PRI_CED _

'

·COnd. Ph 256·1348
·REG
TENN ES S E E
WALKING mare, 3 la rge
ponies, 2ol5·13oi8

'

I

esl1males . Call 245 9113,
Ken Soles, GallipoliS.

OHered
All Masonary Work

Housing &amp;
Vete.r dns Admin. LOillns.

THEISS INSULATION, In ·

Foundation,

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
E. Slate, Athens

Hours9· 1 M ., W., F .
Other ttmes by 11ppo1nt·
ment.

592-3051

CALL 992 -7544

Chain

link

fence

Free

sui master foam Insulation
New homes, old homes.
commerctal structures
For free esttmates call 446·

MAIN ST.
JACK W . CARSEY, MGft.
PHONE 9~2-2181

Brick laying,
Concrete Finishing.

1971.
terior and extenor barn
and mobile home roofs
Free estimates 15 yr e)(~

Free Estimates
992-5304, 992-2238
8 21 1 mo

77

COAL HAULING from 31o
51ons, call 388 9329.
ANTIQUES
FurOI!ure
refinished with hand
rubbed finishes Call «6·
9201 after 6 p .m. for
estimates.

WOODS REMODELING
CO . 10' years experie~&lt;e
Call 245·9555
CARPENTRY · ReSiden
fiat &amp; Commercial Com
plete remodeltng, &amp;

general repair. Call 245
9555 .

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
servtces for fire 1nsurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century
Farm , home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet tn

dividual

F ~ deral

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
107 Sycomore IRnr)
Pomeroy, 0 .

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

JIM MARCUM rooting,
spoutmg and s1dmg. 30
years e)(persence. Free
estimates. Remodeling .
!=r om

Bul ldozer
~ m &lt;' l le d

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163
Second
Ave .,
Gallipolis. «6·7833 or 4-46·
1833

R'•d ••tor

f-4eattr C.ne

Motors, Inc.
Ph 992-2174

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST
Featunng , mtn S &amp;
women's
styling ,
perm5
Call for 1ppt. or walk in.

7 12

Pomeroy

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
.. 1ntroduces' -

1

wNew Home
wAdd ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992-6011

Smith Nelson

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr . wrecker
service. All types of repa1r.

lugest

th r

Upper Rl 7 Call 4&lt;16-24&lt;15

ADP ONS &amp;

SEPTIC SYSTEM IN ·
STALLED New leach bed,

REMODELING

sewer lines. Want free
esttmates? Licensed 1n

staller
Call Russell's
Plumbing, «6·4782
GALL lA RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT
Insulated vtnyl Sld tng,
alum mum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
Windows Free estimates

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

Gutter

work,

down

spouts. some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways.

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
e Storm W1ndows
• Replacement
Windows
eGunersJnd

(FREE ESTIMATE)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE,O,

992-2367
Pomeroy, 0 .
~----------8~·~
26~ 1mo

949·2748 or

Ph 367·0209 day or night

needs

Contact

Charles · Neal , vour neigh
bar and agen!

REMO'DELING
ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

Al TROMM

CON ST.
RUTLAND
742-2328

Free Estimates

JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992·2772
8·17·1 mo.

9 7 I mo

SWIMMING POOLS

R~ING

Down Spouts

9 14 (Pd .)

Installation,
repatr ,
openmg and clostng pools,

add Slides or any pool
equipment We sell all kin
ds of pool equtpment

!.o;t11 ~~~s

Services Offered

t~nd

chemicals Puddle Pools,
Inc ., Albany, 698 5265

HOUSE AND ROOF Pa in
ting

Free esttmates

Call

£

HAMMOND BODY SHOP,
Sand
and
Patnt .
Reasonable rates. Ph 245·

9371 or 379·2306
JIM) S SIDING AND CON
STRUCTION CO . All types
of siding, remodeling , con
crete , roofing, gutt er,
plumbing, you name 1t
Free est1mates to local

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Fill dirt, top soil , complete
dozer and backhoe work,
tooter and block lay1ng

MCNEAL
CONTRACT ING
379 22.511
JERRY

5071

LUCA S' S water

de l ivery
anytime

Ca l l

Osborn

Rd . •

A:Hdsvllle, OH , 4S771.
For tnformatton Clll
Ul-6485 . Will be OPen
late
tf you
ne ed
somethtng .

4.46\ 75 3-4

9· 14· 1 mo

Announc ing opefting of

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

Road

The

James Riggs running west

8 rods thence North 6 rods
thence East 6 rods thence
with the road bearing east
to the place of beginning
contalnu)g 49 rods more or
less being a part Of the lot
No. 1247 Sect1or No. 34,
Township 2, and Range u
with the appurtenances
and all the estate title and
interest of the said parties
of the lfrst part
There Is the following
cove11ant: The parties of
the second Part covenant
and agree with the parties
of the first port that the
house that now stands on
said premises or any hou5e
that mav be sub~uenlly
buill on said premises shall
be open on the Sabbath Day
for public worship for all
orthodox denomlnat,ons
and the said parties of the
lhe said party of the Second
Part that at the lime of the
delivery hereof, the parties
of the First Part -re the
lawful owners of the

premises

above

granted

and seized lhereor In fee
slm'{'le and absolute and
lha they wll I warrant and
deiend the above granted
prem ises In the quiet and
peaceful POS5esslon of the
said parties of the second
part
Recorded In Volume 27,
page 221 PI the Deed Recor ds of Go ilia County, Ohio
Terms of Sole : No bids
will be considered uniHS it
is for at least two thirds of
the appraised value of the
properfV (appraised value
So\,000) . Successful bidder
will be required to deposit a
check or cash In the sum of
l1,000 and belance to be
pa id upon delivery of deed
The Board of Clay Town·
Ship Trustees reserves the
r~ght to re)ect any and all
bids.
By order of the Board of
Township Trustees of Clay
Township, Gallio County,
Ohio
Basil Evans,
Clerk
Clay TOWnSh ip
Sept. 9, 16, 23
Help Wanted
WANTED · Qualified OH58
and UH1H Heii&lt;Optor
Piloto for the West Virginia
Army National Guard Coli
(~) 46H530

CHIMNEY 'S cleaned a nd
CABINETS ,

repaired . Stoves 1nsatall ed

vanity, picniC tables, lawn
chairs, QUtl1mg frames , or
anything made of wood

Call the Chimney Swee p,
373 I/J57.

Wood Shop, 101 Court St.,
«6 2572. Open sam to 4pm,

E &amp; R Tree Serv1ce Patn
t1nQ and excavat1ng
Cal

Bo~llet

Top &amp; Jan
Ages-4 1nd up
Shtrley Car~nter
Instructor·
ChoreogriPher
LontiPd 1n Rillclne, 0 .
( formerly
Weavers
S'ctff Bu l ldtng I

Ph. 9 ~ 9 2710 or Uf 2150
8 29 1 mo

388 8797 or 388 ·8860

SWIMLAND POOLS and
accessories Pool supplies
and service. Chemicals,
opening of pools tn spr1ng
Free estimates
Free
del1very on chem tcals

Call «6·7887
ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER CO.
Continuous no leak
tering

gut

STUCCO ,
plaster
ce1ltngs

Call 256·1182.
LIMESTONE ,
grav el ,
mason sand, top SOli , Ph

PAINTING AN D Jondb lostmg
Free est imates Col i 9.4 9 2b86

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR --

WILL DO h o ~Jse cl eontng
Hou rs to call 9 orn to 6 pm
304 773-54 22 or 304 773 506q

388·9877

ALLEN 'S CAB
GOOD
SERVICE Phone 4-46·2141

GALLIPOLIS
DIVERSIFIED
CONSTRUCTION CO.

TRENCHIN G

Dttches, 8 tnches w ide to 5

II.

deep,

dratnage

septiC
lines,

tanks,
concret e

Custom Do z er
&amp;
Back hoe work by hour
or by iob Tr ans1t &amp; Lay out work General Con ·

SEPTIC TANKS

Reese Trenching

BRADFORD Auctton" r Com·
ple te Serv1ce Phone 949 2487
or 9t 9 2000 Aoci ne , Ohio.
Critt Bradford

992 5770

work Call 367·7560

'

NOW HAULING li mestone ,,
M1ddleport-Poemr oy oreo
Coli for free est •mot e

TO dnve tractor
tr oller f ree lor 2 ~ J months tn
e•cha nge for expenence on
the rood I w•ll pay my own
pers ona l e:.penses
Coli

repatr, te x1ure
Free est1mates

REESE

Installed and
Leach Beds In; tailed
Gallla County Cerlllied

Business Services

WilL ING

pia s t e nn g ,

Rl I Albany698 8205
JOHNSON Water Delivery
Call 4-46 1004anytlme.

Services Offered

367 7101

trac t10g , all types , cor ·
stru cti on , housing , com ·
m er eta I. tndustna I
Walker Parker sburg
S f P~ I Buldlng Dealer
Phone 446· 4440
Off1 ce 1160 if., 2nd

Remodeling, Concrete
work, ~oofing, spouting,
plumb1ng, new home

cons!. Ph. 367-0141,
3'7.0427, 367.0194

8 ~ 5M o n . · F n

367·7560

HOUSE WORK DONE '"

even1ngs and

Saturdays

Call 742 ·3119.

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We sell anything for
1nybody at our Auction
B1rn or In your tlome. For
Information and pickup
service c1ll 256 1967.
S..le Every Sa1urdly

Nlghtat7 p m.

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swain, Auct.
Corner Thtrd &amp; Ollle

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE
Anchoring, Sk1rt1ng,
Awnings ,
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint, Set-up
and Re-leveling .' Call

BILL'S .
lL _ 446-.!642
_ _

DEPENDABLE

BABY

01llor

Mondov thru Fndoy
2
children Call Den1 se Wolfe
949 2377 afte r 6 p m.

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

MASSEY
SANITARY sERVICE
Septic tank service,
residen1ial &amp; commerctal. Electric eel service~ chemical toilets.

Slorm
Windows,
Slorm
Doo'rs,
Replacement
Windows,
Patio
Covers,
Aluminum
Sidino~,
a ·nd
Ac&lt;essories. Call

367·0527
D&amp;F CONtRACTORS
All types home improvements and room
additions.
Also 1n -

~r_~lu.'S ·

surance claim repatrs &amp;
electrical wiring.

446-2642

Free Estimates
446-3407 or 367.0389

EXC AV A TI NG .
dozer ,
bock hoe and ditc her. Chari"
A Hoti leid Block Hoe Servke,
Rutland Oh1o Pon e 742·2008

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete Serv1ce Phone 992-2478.

INSURANCE

been conc•lled? lott your
operator!. l•cenH? Phone

992-210
E C ELECTRICAl Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region.
Sut days o w"k 24 houn aer·
vtee Emergency calla CoU

882-2952 or 882-3454
HOWERY AND MARTIN h·
ca vahng, sephc
dozer, backhoe .

system•.
Rt. 1..3.

Phone I (614) 698·7331 or
742-2593
IN STOCK for tmmedlate
delivery vartous siles of pool
kits. Do-1t yourself or let us '
tnstall for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles Inc 992-572..
WILL HAUL limelfon• and
gravel. Also, lime hauling and
spreading. leo Morris Truck·

ing, Phone 742-2455.
ANN'S CAKE

Decorotln~

pl1e1 , 50716
Reedsville, OH
formation call ,
be open late
something.

Sur

Osborn R ,
45n2 For In667-6485 . Will
If you need

S &amp; G Cor"" I Cloonln~ . Stoom
cleaned
Free e1tlmate .
Reasonable rot••
Scot·
chguard
992· 6309
or

742-2348

.-':---- - - -

Plumbing 1 Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 4&lt;16·4&lt;177

types. Free estimates,

446-4627

992-3525 o• 992 5232

REYNOLDS

Frank Rose Const. Co . l
Remodeling, repa.r
new construction, all

all
work
fully
guaranteed . Restden 1ial, commerctal, industrial &amp; mining, etec1rtcal work. MSHA Cert.

Sweepers toasters 1ron1 , oil
small appliances Lawn moer.
next to Sta te Htghwav Go roe•
on Rou t a 7 qec,s:..J
. :-:8:.:2c:5:_..___
SEW ING MACHINE Repairs,
servtc e. al l makes m 2:liU.
The Fobri&lt;. Shop Pom•roy
Au thonzed Singer Solet and
Serv1ce We s hor~n Sc1non
EXCAVATING, dour, looder
and bockhoe work , dump
trucks and lo- boyt for hire,
wt ll haul f1ll dirt. top acMI,
limes tone and grovel Call Bob
or Roger Jeffan day phone
992 708q
n1gh1
phone

· AUTOMOBILE

I

STANDARD
Plumbing Heatmg
215 Third Ave ., 4&lt;16·3782

throughoutGalila County
Requ irements H1gh Sc toool diploma (some college

or

real estate courses

a

plus) ,

a

dependable car,

neat appearance and the ab il 1ty to work with peo·
pie.
Investigate

a

rn
., , " ..

ANY HOUR

Canaday, Realtor, 441&gt; 36!6
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
25 '12 Locust Sf.

..
If . - ,. Hfl
,.

(No agency calls please

--

S L Bonard Library

prefer someone on Social

security, call -146·0042
COCKTAIL WAITRESS
Must be21 or over . Apply In
person at Skyline Lanes, no
phone calls

TWO P.art·tlme employee
poslllors to be tilled ot the
Alcove
42 court St .,
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis,
OH , Please apply Sept. 13
U between 9.30 a .m . and 8
p.m
WANTED
Part ·llme
janitorial help, apply In
person orly . contact Chris
Baldwin, Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Ser·
vice Vlntor Pike Gall .
HELP WANTED · RN or
LPN with pharmacology
Full lime, 3 to 11 shift. Shift
differential.
Pinecrest
Care Center, call Judy Bar·
cus, -146 7112.

to 8QJC 743. Pomeroy OH
.45769
No experience
nM"sary.

446-3087

AFFORDABLE AND NICE 3 BR Hard·
wood floors, cabinets, attached garage,

fenced back yard, c1ty schools . $38,900

24 STATE STREET
GALLIPOUS, OHIO
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

LIVE· IN HOUSEKEEPER wonoed
'" exchange for home and
security. 985...392 or write box
no. 46899 Long Bottom, OH.

ELECTRIC.
St.,

For Rent
SLEEPING ROOMS
rent, Gollla Hotel .

lor

Plumbing [Heating
DEWITT'S PLUMBING '
AND HEATING
Route160 at Evergree~~t
Phone 446·27l5.
~

FOR RENT OR LEASE
Office space, Spring Valley
area. 1650 sq. ft. Call 4-46·
0239,

- !- - - - -- -

'

cellent rental property . $18,000
ADDISON -- All the comforts ot nome
at a ' price you can afford. Nearly 2
acres, 3 BR frame home has Franklin
fireplace, walk·ln closets, storm c:toors

and windows Kyger Creek Schools
$35,900.
RIVER FRONTAGE FOR GARDEN
dock, over an acre, nice 2 BR hmoe, 3

COUNTRY COTTAGE, old fashiOned
but nice. 2 BR, eat in kit chen, nice I1V
lng room . vme covered front porch
Cellar house, garage, other out
buld1nos Over ~ acres, several nice
butlding sites, rest suitable for pasture

:,..,..

car garage. A steal al$25,700.
FIFTY ·SEVEN ACRES-- Appro• 25

,..,..
,..

til lable meadow. several p1ne groves,
wooded areas. Iaroe Stocked pond, rural
water available. S2S,700.

:~

City schools $26,00

1HE
... RIGHT LOCATION
'NEW LISTING-- Lovely brick and frame home or

a super Sited lot.

This home has had

e~:cellent

...

care

Reasonably prl&lt;ed, located In K.C. schOOl d1strlct

· ' ...? '

...RIGHT HOUSE
.. JUGBTPRICE
INVITING COLONIAL
styling, 3 BR, 2 lull
baths, plush carpet,
stone fireplace, country
k.itchen with pantry,
dishwasher, range and
oak cabinets . 2 car

finished garage. Brand
new $.45,000.
...READY
~room home, Iaroe living room , kitchen, ma in
bath, nat gas heat and ntce si re lawn

LIKE NCW RANCH In

Green Acres Subdlvi ·
s1on only l 'h m sles from
city , 3 BR, 1'12 baths,

\

cen.

comb.

kit

family rm , range ,
dl shwasher
Attached

DRAMA COMES In b1g doses In this stunning bric•
and cedar ranch, nearly 2800 sq ft living area plus

garage. Owner has mov·

2 car garage 4 BR , 31ull baths, he.. gonal sunken

ed, 1mmed1ate posses
sion. $«,900.

living rm , family rm ., pl us basement recreatton

and hobby rooms, lorg long rear deck.

atr,

very

desirable locat1on.

PRIVATE WORLD -We have just listed the most

NEW LISTING- 70 ACRE FARM -

Beautiful

farm land Appro)(. JS acr es t tllable, fence lines,

1o400 lb tobacco base . 25 acre bottom , barn, hog pen ,
ch1cken coop , stoc ked pond 1n Gall1 polies C1ty
School Distr ict
FARM - SO acr es w ith nt ce ho m e , 1 roo m cottage,
outbul ldtngs, 900 l b tob base, lots of t1mber , priced

In the lOIN 40 'S.
timber, all mtneral rights and lots of r oa d frontage .

COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE- 3 bedroom ranch, l'h
baths, IO\'ely k.tfchen, ltv. room , full basemen t, car·
port with Ph ac r es .

AFTER HOURS PHONE
VICKIE HAULDREN . . . . . .
. 446--4042
BECKY LANE .. . . . . , .. . , .. . . , . . . , , · · 446-0451
WALT LANE
. . ... . .... ... , . .. ,
. . · 446-0451

rn
L' f

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33, north of Pomero&gt;t
large lots . Coli 992-74?!..__._
3 AND o4 AM furniShed ond un
furnished
opts
Phone

992-5434.
ONE BEDROOM opts Contact
Vtllog•Manor, '99'1-7787

LARGE Block building A0x60 ,
tor goroge or storage Corner
Pomeroy • ' 2nd St , Mason

Phono :JCU-882 2'171
SlEEPING ROOMS lor rent m

Rae'"• 949-2591

HOUSE, Four rooms and
both. Ail carpeted except
kitchen Oeposlt requ~red
992 ·3090.

wanted to Buy
JUNK . Auto and scrap
metal. Call 388 ·8776.

Wanted to Buy
OLD FURNITURE, leo bo•es ,
broas beda, iron ~~ . detkJ .

DIAMONDS, gold bands,

etc , complete households
Write MD Mi llar Rt .tt
Pomeroy or call992· 7760

esta1e

jewelery,

etc

TAWNEY JEWELERS,
422 Second Ave
HELP WANTED · Full
time custodian to work late
afternoons and eventngs,
st)( days a week for local
busuness . Wri1e c ·o

Gallipolis Do1ly Tribune,
P 0 . Box 148. 825 Third

WANTED TO BUY various
types of old turn, dressers,
stand tables, cabinets, so
on, 446·7872
Yard Sale

BUYING!

All

States silver

YARD SALE . Monday,
Tuesday , Wednesday. 770
Sycamore St. , Middleporl

Un1ted

coins

Top

prices, higher prices for

YARD SALE Vic Brown's,
CHIP WOOD Polas max
dtameter 10" on largest end

men's c loth ing--gOOd con

$12 por lon Bundled slab llO

dltion, furn iture,
knacks,
mise
cancels .

992-268'1

knick ·
Rain

per ton Del lvared to Ohio
Pollet Co. Rt. 2 , Pomeroy.

ANNUAL CHAROLAIS

(Charolals Cross)
FEEDER CALF SALES
ONEPENSELECTCLUBCALV~S
AND
SEVERAL PENS OF FINE
CHOICE CALVES
Commercially Graded
Traditionally the finest group of calves In ttte coun·

try These calves will be Fresh trom Farm Sale Day

7:30P.M.
IN CHESHIRE, 2 bdr
mobile home, furn , $160 per
mo, with dep, coil 379·
2341 c
5 ROOM HOUSE · In Crown

Cfty Call 256 6664.

J

SM FURN EFF . . or 2
adults only Call «6-()338.

NOTICE TO
Ill DOERS
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Hunlingtor
Township Trustees, Vlnt011,
Ohio at the office of the

Clerk,

Dan

Evans,

(telephone 614·388·8111) until 7·00 P.M. September 28,

OlD COINS pocket watches, 1979 for a new Dump
class rtngs, weddmg bonds, Truck. Spej:lllcallons may
diamonds Gold or silver Call be secured from the Clerk •s
office, Envelopes should be
J A. Wamsley. 742·2331.
plainly marked "Bids for
WANTED SAW log a. Payment dump truck. 11 The said
upon delivery to our yard 7·30 truslees of Huntington
to 3 30 WHkdays BJoney Township reserves the
Hordwood1 , SR 339, Barlow, r~ght to reject any or all

bids Bids will be opened at
OH 678-2'180.
7.30 P.M. September 28,
ANTIQUES, FURNITURE, glo55. 1979 (regular meeting) at
ch1no, anything See or coli the office of the Clerk.
By order of Huntington
Ruth Gosney antiques 26 N
2nd ,
Middleport ,
OH . Twp. Trustees.
Daniel M. Evans
992-3161
CLERK
Sept. 16

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, AT 10:00 AM
LOCATION : IS miles South Ol Gallipolis on Route
218 at Mercerville.

silver dollars and early

coins. MTS Coin Shop Call
4-46·18-'12 or 4&lt;16·0690 Pay
cash

Mtnersvtlle. Monday 9 5.
Boat, swing set, baby,
teenage, women ' s and

TRAILER PARK IN Cl ·
TY .12 trailer pads and
ooOk up with all utilities.
Call tor more details.
$35,000

FINANCING AVAILABLE Conventional, l HA, VA

Ave , Galltpolis , OH,
stating
experience ,
references ,
salary
requ i rements.

A \ l Q~

For Rent

beautiful butldlng sttes tn the area . You choose the
site and the size. All are surrounded ))y ptnes,
pOplar . walnut, persimmon and flowenrig shrubs,
n~ ~ r city

OCTOBER 10, 1979
OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Auclioner: Tommy J, Stewart
Sponsored by Ohio State Charolais Assn. T. E
Hogsett, DVM. Sale Chairman, HillsbOro, Ohto

"45133, Ph (513)393-1723

,,L . - - - - - - - - - J'

IN·TOWN LOCATIO!I -- BACK LAWN ADJOINS
GOLF COURSE --All brick construcllor and a lull Jt
basement Is e&gt;&lt;tremely hard to find In town. we Jt
hove It here plus mahy more extras such as natural
gas forced air with central all';' carpeted porch and It
~ patio, all draperies and appliances, a lovely land· It
,.. scaped front and bock yard and a workshop in the It
basement G 1ve us a call today and take a look!

*

*

It JUST LISTED - 35 WEST AREA --MITCHELL

&gt;t
&gt;t

RD. -- Excepliorally clean 1974 Vlndale mobile
home Very conven,e•'.&gt;n' 1n just off Rl. 35, close
It to Spring Valley Pia ;)V~ ... ral a~r , beautiful kit·
:ot chen cabinets, carpeted and situated on '12 acre lot.
:ot Excellent buy at $19,500. Gallipolis schools.

D

!&gt;t

... WHEN YOU
•.•AR.E

NEW LISTING-- City School District -- A neat 3

CITY
LIMITS
Bartender
wonted. Evening shift. Muat

be 21. Apply In prton.

""!lill$~

w.'h
w.
~~
J..tJ'Jjj,; ,_,..

trailer hook-up. Nice place to I ive or ex·

RIAL tOR\

experience

CAR SALESMAN Send resuma

...,... "'

Unusual quality at $66,900.
BIDWELL -- 2 BR, frame with alum .
siding FullY furnished Lorge lot has

TONEY REALTY (0

FARM COUPLE for part
opts . for rnet
Rental
lime work or farm and
onlsto n ce a._-ailable
homestead near Coolville,
'l'l'i-n21
OH . Mobile home, attrac·
live setting, all utilities ••· .
cept telephone furniShed,
TRAILER SPACE . Soo Mro
farm OKperlence essential,
Wolt•r Hayes , 635 Mtll St
Mlddloporl
mechanics and carpentry ·
helpful For further written
details, write, P .0 Box 30,
Coolvffle, OH 45723.

liSTINGS NEEDED-PARTICULARLt IN THE
$25,000 TO $55,000 RANGt. - QUALIFIED
BUYERS WAI fiNG - LET THE DILLON

, . _. . . , _

"'~

TREES -- PRIVACY -- Expansive
MOST ADMIRED-- Builder's own cas·
ranch, 1700sq. tt .l iv1ng area, oversl:ze&lt;t
lie on a full acre rolling lawn, 4 BR,
living rm . with stone fireplace and
parent's suits has full bath, dreslng rm .
sliding
gloss doors leading onto high
Efficient kitchen with snack bar, range.
10'•40' deck . 3 BR, 2 full baths, fully
Formal dining, oversized living rm . 3
equipped "country style" kitchen .
full baths, family rm . with fireplace
Plush carpet All the extras you expect
pius recreallor room. Attached garage. .: to f tnd in a custom home Separate
New fenced pool wit~ patio $79,500.
24'x30' garage. Beautiful lawn. City

I

SENIOR CITIZENS , I bedroom

construction

~ ~ifH%'

s•

view, an expanse of lawn, trees, shrubs
(l'h acres). 2 story, 3 BR, l'h baths.

FARM -- 116 acres, large home , ba rn, lots of
JANITOR , 3 hours per day ,

I I

,;-i'

'l'i81

It

L-oWER RIVER ROAD -- Limitless

condlllors Write to bo•~
208, Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

dulles Male an female ap
plicanl1 -lcome. Call 4-46
7323 for appointment, Dr .

...

1

schools. $68,900

SalK Mus1 h•ve had some
experience GOOd working

one ton truck with
automattc trans Do light
ma intenance and cler•cal

•

f

LADY To work In Retail

DRIVER · CLERk
for
library truck to drive 22 It

Phone 446-7900

'

'
446-4612

Court House, Gallipolis, Oh. 4S631
an equ .. t opportunity employer mtf

BOB LANE,
MANAGER

~ALES

w ft r eplace, cen air/ $57,900

Spring valley Plaza

Call

,1 ' _,

COUNTRY HAVEN -- Brl ~ k stucco and
cedar tudor, 3 BR , 2 baths, fam1ly rm

Gallipolis, Ollio

career wsth the nat ton 's larges mass

COLE- LAYER -TRUMBLE COMPANY

HOBAifr DILLON,
BROKER

Klllo

appraisal f irm

Bonus, FREE College
Tuition and Fees, plus
MOI&gt;thly Income . Call your
Army National Guard
Recruiter ol (304) 675 ·3950

Motors, rewind and repl!llr .

992·2356. 651 Beech
M iddleport, OH

Cole· Laver· Trumble, a leacter 1n the mass appraisal
f ield for &lt;'ver 40 years, is seektng career ·mtnded
men and women tnterested in a rewarding profes
slon - real esta1e appraisal Our traini ng program
provides an excellent background to begin data col
lect1on on both r eslden1ial and farm propert1es

Real

CANADAY REALTY

Graduates , Seniors &amp;
Juniors S1500 Enlistment

area . Call 446·7623
KITCHEN

REAL ESTATE _ _ _~--1
APPRAISAL TRAINEE

Real Estate for Sale

WANTED · High School

OPENING SEPT . IIIIo
Cluse1 :

Vellowtown

property Is more par ticularly described as
follows :
Beginning at a stake at
the edge of tile road where
the road cropes the line bet
ween John Gibson and

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

First Part do ~reby
covenant and agree with

4 23 1 m o

Call 367·7711-'1 or 367·7160

&amp; Backhoe Service

Point Pleasant Appliance,
S! F1ne Span1sh gut tar for
sale, excellent cond1tion,

Real Estate Loans

'

AAA EXCAVATORS
Backhoe, dozer, dump·

256·1921.

367-G4101 Gerald Freeman, Story's Run Road
Cheshtre.
'

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Purch ase
a nd
Reftnance
30 Y ear Term s
A- No money down
(ehgtble veterans)
FHA - AS low as 3 %
down (non -veterans )

GLASS

Welding Service, lS years

tools. 52~0; Victor acetylene autof1t w1th cuttsng
and braz1ng 1orches and Cart No. tank S150; Misc.
of auto repa1rs and flat rate manuals SlOO, 1975
GMC 4X4 ¥• ton Pickup truck~ power steering and

GO OSE
ST OC k
NOW AVA ILA BL E

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also TransmiSSion
Repair
Phone 992 - 5682
4 30 lie

Services

AND

Mon . thru Fn .

USED FURNITURE
Used sofas, cha1rs, table

TRA i lER

446·1562 after 6pm

Low
350 ENG INE
m1leage $300. , Complete 3
spd. Irons., $65 , While
spoke wheel. 9 1n , S100
Call 446 0820
ELECTROLUX CLEANE ·

Guaran

SUlfiNG_JO!IIJOtlT

water delivery
9368 anytl me

R

and exkhange

Till UlTIMA Tf Ill

Ferguson 35 tractor $1600.
Call 4-46 0867 or 4-46·1700.

to 8pm, Saturday 9am to
5pm . 3 mi out Bulavdle
Rd

S UP E R

4 ) 1h

and

stove . Call «6·2436

Monday thru Fnday, 9am

PENDLETON REBUI LT
BATTERY $18 00 plus lax

SERTA
PERF.E CT SLEEI'&amp;R

PHONE 614 -446- 1171

LIKE NEW 18,000 BTU air

chest, n1ghtstand, drvers,
ranges, beds, tables, lam ·
ps, TVS, refngerator, desk,

"PILLOW SOFT"

K1ng -O·Wood Coal or wood

$325 , bunk beds complete,
$150·$225-$275 mattresses
$6© . $70. each . captain's
S2SO , queen sets,
$175 , 4 drawer chest, S42 5
drawer chest $.49. Sofa bed
Wllh chair $150. GOOD
USED FURN Dressers,

992-5421

Harvest Gold . Gd. cond .,

dmette w tth sw1vel chatrs,

bed,

Faines

2 M •les East ol W • l k e~v ,tl e

Rutl a nd.

days and 446·4792 nights

1000 mtles, blue in color Ltke
new . Coli after 5 p m

refrldgerator, 14ft counter
tn one unst, s burner coffee
maker, 5-burner elec war·

36 INCH gas range Car
radio, table lop hair dryer.
See ol631 3rd. Ave.

7 pc dinette, $129, 5 pc .

1979 HON'DA XL SOO. Low
mileage Excellent condthon

TRY. THt! NEW

2 row planters · mechantcal
transplanter

each Maple or pine table,
4 chairs, $235 , hutc h, $300 ,

(formerly

17J1D Mllntgom ery R d
Lan g ~Y IIIe Oh•o
~~ ~~ 669 414S f' vell!ng s

949-2862--949 -2160

742-2233

0646

SCAMPER

$9© . and up. Tables, S60

drawer dresser , hutch. 1963
Vo-Ka·shun -ette camper .
sleeps six Beorcot Ill smnner.
stze 16
woman' s coot

mtleage, ltke new Call 446

plOY/ MF250 12 in . diSC
MF2 2 row chopper MF39

sofa, chatr, rocker , at·
taman , 3 tables, $500,
bedroom su11es. $l15 . $275 .
$340 SSOO Early amer~can
sofa and cha1r, $340 ,
modern sofa,
chatr,
loveseat, $275., recliners,

BOGGS
EXTERMINATING CO.

Call 388 9857.

Day bed. Call 446·1932

112 ton flat bed ptck up Low

LAYNE'S NEW AND
USED
FURNITURE
NEW baby beds, $65.,

0«5. Call after 4:30

TRAILER SALES

Call 614·593-73'10.

m1leage Call 379·2115 alter
5

SHINN'S
TRACTOR SALES
PH 485 1630, Leon , WV

Lenno)( Heating and a1r
condtt ton lng . Rapco Foam
Insulation . «6 8515 or .u6

mt le off Rt 7 by-pan
on 51 Rt 124 toward
J,

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT

PAINTING . Residential in
REGISTERED Appaloosa colts .
3 weonhngs 1 17 mos old
Good bloodlmes , good conformation , and good blanket.

USED TRACTORS
MF13S Diesel · MFZlO
Diesel · MF150 Diesel ·
MF23S Diesel - MF165
Diesel · MF 285 D1esel ·

teed. We buy Old ballenas.
Phone 388 8596.

HUFFY
3 spd b1cyc1e
GOOd cond , S50 Call 4-46·
1578 after 5 p.m

HOTPOINT

tires .

2 BUTCHER HOGS · 8. 1950

bottom

Free est1mates. Call «6
2642.

DENNEY

5121 after 5pm

6

and Home Improvements

Roger Hysell
Garage

MONTGOMERY

H. L Writesel
RoOfing

BILL'S MOBILE HOMES

ELECTRIC LAWNMOWER , 14 .

TRUMPET
Bantone
horn, stereo Call 675·2288

NEW AND USED
IMPLEMENTS
MF9 baler · MF10 baler
MF120 baler · Matthews
rotary scythe
MF880

Gallipolis, Oh10 Call «6
7785.

9115-4104

materta,ls, block , brick,
sewer pi pes, windows, ltn·
tels, etc . Claude Wmters,
R10 Grande, 0 Phone 245

or box springs, firm $50.·

1978 CHRYSLER BOAT
FOR SALE 'II 16'/ 2 FT. 105
HP outboard $4900. Call
4-46 0175

7896 or 736 0407 even1ngs.
Huntington W.VA
range Call-"6

sem1 ·mounted

For Sale

call

ITHACA SHOTGUN , 16
ga ., feather light pump ac
lion. Modified barrel. Ex
cellent

BLACK AND while
shepard, male dog . 3 years
old Very gentle Excellent
watch dog . 992 5992

5,

Aller

sand. All siles At Richards
and Son, Upper Rtver Rd ,

O'dell ) Oak Hill. OH Call
collect 446 7569

w WinCh, ,

hrs., 4.50 CASE

742 3093

red

PIGS seven weeks old, $20
each
Strow, $1.25 bole

Business Services

Services Oflered
LIME STONE, grovel and

Phone 992·2181

Dodge pickup 1 ton offer 1
Army Winch, $1'10. Oil field
swab unit, $.495. 2 ea . 8.25 x
20 ltke new mud grtp in·
e ludes tube and flap, S8S
300 ft Wild Cherry lx6 821J
tong,

gravel , cole&amp;um chloride far11hzer. dog food, and oil types
of soh El(celstor Solt Works .
Inc , E Main St ., Pomeroy,

1977 IMPALA Camper
$5,000 Call 446·3002

Headquarters

Pome roy Phone 992 2164

oond

PIGS , SEVEN weeks old, $20
eoch Strow , $1 25 o bole.

and

H&amp;N day old or sta rted
leghorn pullets, both floo r

FIVE 10x20 General Nygen

For Sale
LIMESTONE

NOTICE OF THE
SALE OF BOARD
OWNED PROPERTY
Notice Is hereby gfven by
the Board Of Township
Trustees of Clay Township
that said board on the 29th
day of September, 197~. at
11.00 o.m will offer at
public sale, a building and
land belonging to said
Board of Clay Township
situated In Clay Township,
Gallla County, Ohlol
located on Clay Chape

LISTING. In part, 1 TV, 3 Foot Stools. Couch, Floor
Lamps, Platform Rocker, Carpet. Books, Porch
Glider, Sweeper, Iron Stand., Bed Spreads, 2 lror
Beds Complete, 2 Electric Heaters, end table,
drapes, 2 chairs, pillows, elec. skillet, pots and
pans, stainless flatware, Amana ref -freezer comb.,

,._ ,fronteve on State Ro. ~ \s attractive home has
Jt to be the best buy or _ ... drket today Well con-

!*
Jt

FRAME RANCH --Very neal 3 bedroom with lull
basement In town. SuOP•
yard enclosed
with redwood len
PE
trees will add to

SAL[ "N''o" I.NG'

your picnicking 1 __

M ...

'"

uns summer. Can't beat

&gt;t of beautiful
:ot along with

chers, flour chest, 4 horse drawn plows, large corn

Auctioneer Note • This Is an old estate with fur

nlture In excellent condition .

FTERMS: Cash
.
LUNCH WILL BE SERVED
The Estate of Susan D. Lusher, Case No. 16574
SWAIN AUCTION SERVICE

Kennett Swain~ Aucttoneer, Gallipolis, Ohio '
Eleanor Shafer, Adm.
,

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

*

*&gt;t

lawn and large pine trees can be yours :
a very nice 4 bedroom ranch home
located on a state highway. Call today for more :
details!

*

:SELDOM DO YOU SEE an older home of this quail ·
,.. ty on the market. Completely and tastefully
remodeled, there Is Sjlmethlng here tor everyone In
the lamily, A lovely brand new kitchen for Mom, an
&gt;t acre of lawn for the kids to play In and nearby
*fishing lor Dad . All appliances and draperies In ·
eluded A home you would be proud to own! Priced
1n the 50's
It IN TOWN-- SECOND AVE. -- Very nice and neat
describes th~s well carerl ....... ~ .U.(j'" Second Ave.
&gt;t Front and back ...,
flo, chain link
Jt fence, seven larg,;&gt;n\.: _ .......... rwo baths make this a
It very comfortable home to live ln. Dor'l miss this

**
**
*

**
*&gt;t
*
Jt.

E PEt'Dn'

one'
RACCOON AREA mobile home or modu

SQ\l) e

could be used for

Jt.
:

~

*
..-

It
:

*It
**
..*Jt
*
..Jt
Jt.

*

LOOKING FOR BUILDING LOTS OR ACREAGE?
: -- we have several In different locations. Call for
details.
It

*

-

: WE HAVE MANY OTHER usn NGS
~
CAll FOR INFORMATION.

!

EVENINGS

~

446-9753 ;,t·
446·1049 ~

Jt. SUE ROUSH
:

1.
i

BOB LANE

****************************
LIVESTOCK SALE
THE OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
Gallipolis, Ohio

All sales start at 8:00p.m.

sheller, pot belly stove, 2 complete fireplace
mantles w1th grate and front, seed 5eparater,
scales, grindstone, sycle grinder, oak safety box,
copper kettle with stand .

:&gt;t

~

lt&gt;t the pr~ce. $32,000 00.
It
:OWNER WILLING TO SACRIFICE -- Over 5 acres It

Jt

doors, lawn mower.
Antiques and Collectors Items: Oak wash stand

nlval glass, salt cellars, depression glass, silver·
ware, crocks, oak kitchen cabinet, beveled mirror .
Wllh oak frame, wicker rocker, 2 tall stools, pie
sole, Home Comfort coal and wood cook stove fn eK·
cellent condition, qulilln~~e frames , curtain stret·

*
~
**

Jt structed and well kept-- Won'llasllong I $27,900.00 It

1979 FALL FEEDER CALF CONSIGNMENT
SALES -STATE GRADED

ears, large level, stone Jars, Ironstone china, car·

Jt
Jt
Jt
Jt

JUST LISTED-LOOKING FOR A HOME IN THE
TWENTIES? - ,,Situated on a double lot wfth 160 II . •

Westinghouse elec . range, knife set, TupperWare
set, can opener. coflee pol, ml•er, table ctoths,
towels, Seigler Fuel oil heater--large, 275 fuel oil
tank, wall cabinets, hand tools, 500 tobacco slicks, 2
w1th towel bar, round oak tabl• with 6 m~tchlng
cha~rs, s v, II china cabinet, walnut wash stand with
towel bar, oak letter bo•, 2 small wash stands, 4 oak
rockers, ~ large pictures, bullors, sad Irons, hall
tree with rTJirror and seat, 2 braided rugs, 6 matching oak spihdle back choirs, oak dresser with fan ·
cy carvings, 3 stand stablef w1th claw and ball feet,
milk glass lamp, large trunk, oil lamp, 2 high head·
board beds With fancy carvings, Sessions mantle
clock, quills, 2 piece cherry bedroom suite wllh fan ·
cy drop carvings, wicker chair, bowl and pitcher, 2
large oak dressers, double drop leaf table, treadle
sewing machine, double barrel shot gun with rabbit

*
*
,Jt.

Thursday, Sept. 27 - Yearlings
Only
Tuesday, Oct. 2- Calf
Wednesday, Oct. 10- Charolais
and Charolais Cross Only
Thursday, Oct. 25 '-- Calf
&amp; Yearling
CaHie will be received after 3p. m. the
day before and untll3 p , m. the day of the
sale. Bull calves will be accepted, calves
will be graded into uniform lots. The Ocl.
10 Sale will be sponsored by the Ohio
State Charolais Association T, E.
Hogsett
'II .M. Sale Chairman - All
other sales sponsored by The Ohio Valley
Feeder Calf Committee- Denver Yoho,
President; Dick Neal, Secretary I Ph. ,
388-8387).

o.

AUCTIONEERS :
Merlin Woodrufl- Tommy JO. Stewart
614-446-9760 '
Home 446-3941
Consignments can be made by colllng any of tile ·
!boYt listed numbers.

�[).ll- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sw11lay, Sept.

16, 1979

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

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

D-9 -The Swlday Tim-'lentlnel, Sunday, Sept. 1~. 1979

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

Real Estate for Sale

HE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE AGENCY

m

James R. Stutes Realtor Assoc.

RUSSELL

~

446·2885

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

.~.

:4.6-3400

""

BRAND NEW RANCH - Very new 3
bedroom brick and nat. wood home
located Off Bulavllle Rd . In Kyger
Creek school district. Includes a large
kitchen, dining area, bath with shower,
ullllty area, carpet, deck and garage.
Nearly 112 acre lawn. $.41,500.

NEW LISTING- GREAT LOCATION
- This • year old home is located In a
very good neighborhood approx. 6 m iles
from town . Well kept and spotless this 2
bedroom home could be easily expanded. Includes a large kitchen with Jots of

cabinets, utility room, large covered

3A acre manicured lawn . S43.SOO. K. C.

'I'

NEW LISTING : 3 bedroom home situoted on
ac re lot, 2 miles from Gallipolis City Limits. City
· water and sewer, AC , nat. gas, f .a . heat. Yard, com pl etedly fenced . You 'll like the convenience of living
here!
QUALITY PLUS BEAUTY
New L·shaped brick home less than a
year old, off St. Rl. 35 The quality
workmanship In this home speaks for
itself . Plush formal living room and
w .b. fireplace, cozy family room , 3
spacious bedrooms,
baths,· modern
buill in kitchen and dining area. Wel l
decorated, plush carpeting, fin ished
garage with opener . Nice well land ·
scaped yard . One of the best on the
market!
BLUE POOL·RINGED
By an acre of ground. Modern ranch
1800 square feet. 3 spacious bedrooms
l'h baths, family room with sliding
doors leading to pool area . Foyer and
formal dining room. Large kitchen and
dining area unattached garage. Storage
barn with loll located on State Route
588. CIT-Y SCHOOLS.

3 BEDROOM HOME in Country Air SUbdiVISIOn.

Loc ated off George's Creek Rd . Nat. gas heat, attached garage, svn deck . pri ce $35,000.00.

RACCOON CREEK: Fall is a beautiful l ime along
the creek . We have .78 acre property adjacent to
Bear Run Rd . A select spot fo r $7,800.00.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING located in oowntow ~r
'3allipolis. Can be used for restaurant, or any type
1egal business . Two apartments upstairs ; property
extends to service alley in rear, storage building in
rear Price S45,000.00.

AT A THINKING MAN'S
PRICE I
Here is opportunity to get the space you
need at the price you want. 3 bedrooms,
bath, living room, large eat-in kitchen,
utility room. The big plus Is this home is
setting on 3 acres more or less in city
school diStrict. EXCELLENT BUYI
Act now. This home will move.
IN THE COUNTRY WOODLANDS
WILL GLOW SCARLET AND GOLD
THROUGH THE OCTOBER HAZE
And our new listing close to Holzer
Hospital Is In a position to observe the
beauty of it all . This is a family home,
all brick with~ bedrooms and a spark l·
ing fu ll bath up. Large kitchen lined
with pretty cabinets. Large foyer and
forma l living room and dining_ Full
basement-fireplace in family room, 2
car garage attached, also a workshop
and a barn . Situated on appro•imately
5.9 acres. This home reflects tender.
loving care and true value.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Unlimited opportunities. 25.5 acres,
water, septic, gas well, 2 trailer pads,
building, 1 mile from city limits on St.
Rt. 7. Excel lent development area !

5.9ACRES~WOODED

E xcellent building site, l 1J2 miles from
town on St. Rt. 588. Circular drive, rural
water, septic . Land is ready for
development!

BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF THE VALLEY
and Bob Evans Farms. 2.6 acre more or
less, located in village of Rio Grande.
Citv water and sewage Access to all
Rio Grande facil ities.

'f'lMMEACIAL BUILDING
r • o\.v

HOUSE &amp; ANNUAL INCOME
Off St. Rl. 7 - In city limits. This
package nets you - 2 mobile homes
14x70's, garage. apt. 3Sx45, under con ·
struc tion . Nice 2 story home, 3
bedroom s, 2 baths, basement. Large
-na t lot. Use all th1s for rental or you can
live In the nome. Rentals will make
your payments.
ATTENTION
COUNTRY GENTLEMAN
Country living at its best- 10.59 acre
more or less and a nice ranch, 3
bedrooms, large country kitchen, living
room, full basement, new barn, unat·
tached garage! This home Is sure to
please I
ENCHANTING COLONIAL
This stately 2 story home with pillary
post · formal entry. Large open winding
staircase, powder room - from main entry, f ormal living room, huge faml1y
r?Dm with plank flOOring and w.b.
'"•place. Spacious eat-in kitchen with
lots of knotty pine cabinets. 3 bedrooms
&amp; bath on second floor. Basement, all
setting on 3 acres. city schools. Shown
by Appointment Only!
OWNER TRANSFERRED
And very anxious to sell nice frame
home. City schools. ,..,-ro::o of ground llv ·
i~g room.
om, 2 'w.b.
fireplaces,
" .. ....ten &amp; dinlna
area. Full basement, well Insulated.
Priced In the $-40 'S. Call today .

REOUCEO

2 HOMES LOCATED in Bidwell, one smal l onestory, the other a large two·stor y . level lots, central ·
ly located Buy both for only$25,000.00.

sa ACRES - With 3-bedroom mobile home. Located
S rn'inutes f r om Holzer Hospital. Some timber, buy
now for SlS,OOO.OO.
ACREAGE - 46 acr es located on L iddy Hollow Rd.
(Graham School Rd.), off Rl. 141 . Price $28,000.
NEW LISTING - 3 bdrm . home in Kanauga, hard wood floors, nat. gas heat, driven well, 1 c ar garage.
Buy now for 522,500.
FOR RENT Gall ipolis.

Sma ll off 1ce space on Second A ve

·•

NEW LISTING- . Stalely , older home situated ap croxl matel y 1 m 11e from city limits on 1 acre of
~~~d, 3 bedrOC?n:s. 1 down, _2 up, 2'h be1hsj family
dmmg rm , l •v tng ~m w/ fireplace, sun porch,
mOdern k ttch en . Tht s IS a home with a lot of
ch~ r ~ c te r .. mu st see to appreciate . Also, two
bu1ld1ng lots ad 1acent to property, one fronts on Rt.
141. Call tor m ore inform at ion .
.78 ACRE - Situ~ted along Ra c coon Creek, off Bear
Run Rd . Boat r amp, barbeque and picnic shelter
alread y inst a lled.... Just w.a iting for you I!!
·

TWO HOMES - l n_Bidwell for the price of one. TWo
story, J bedroom , k1t chen, di ning and living rm, also
small one·st or y home . Both for $25,000 .00 .
IF YOU 'RE THINKING ABOUT SELLING, GIVE
US A CALL ANO WE ' LL BE HAPPY TO DISCUSS
OUR LISTING CONTRACT WITH YOU. WE HAVE
BUYERS BUT WE NEED LISTINGS!! LET US
SELL YOUR HOME WHEN YOU ' RE READY .

Auto Sales
197A VEGA HATCHBACK &lt;oil
303- 67 5 · 1 ~1 or 305·675·2488
0&lt; JOA-675- 1553
197A DODGE CORONET • -doo'
Custom. 992·5858
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE . Ex
cellent cond i t1on
29 ,000
mit... $2400 992-3198
1969 FORO BRONCO A-wheel
drive. Wh1te spoke whee ls , 3
sp••d
Iron s
Ca l l
610- ~At&gt;-9595 .

1973 CHEVROL ET Came r o
Type L T, 350, 8 cy l Phone
992·6093.
1977 THUNDERBIRD, e•·
cellent condition. Rad•als,
AM · FM , air, PS , PB ,
reclining seals, 2 new studdN radial snow tir es _
2~7 - 359A after 5

Auto Sales

located in Vinton .

j ll ,OOO.QO.

Auto Sales
'79 TOYOTA Cellica, 5spd, air cond ., sunroof,
GT liltback , 11,000
miles. S7,000.
And 15 inch color G E
portable TV SISO. Call
446·2568

1978 CAMARO, 12,000 miles ,
305 eng1ne, A.C., rear defog·
ge r, e»ecellenl condition . Take
over poymenh. 2,.7-3863.

1973 DODGE pickup, 318
eng1ne, A. C. , white spoke
wheels , sliding bock gloss .
good condition . 2,.7·3863.
1963 FORO PICKUP. Ex·
cellent cond l tion. IWIII
trade for good-r-unDing cor
or cash. A lso, freezer, 13 tn.
tires with wheels. 9A9 -2319
1968 PONTIAC · $100.,
Fold·out hard top camper
&amp; utility trailer. Call 675·
2288.
1970 FORD XL · 2-dr. H.T.,
S17S. Runs good . Call 4464002 .
CADILLA C
Coupe
DeVille. Wh ite with black
interior, 60,000 miles. Call
367·7216
1975 GRAND PRIX
Loaded. While with blue,
S2,800. Call 446-2542 or 4463918.
FOR SALE · Single axle
dump truck, good cond .,
gd. tires, rebuilt eng1ne.
$1800. Call446-7101.

1967 FORO BRONCO · 4WI. ·dr., good cond ., Call

388 8194.
1970 T BIRD , 2 door coupe,
ne w 429 eng m e , .. barrel , new
e)(ha ust , leu then 3000 m1les
on engtne P S., P.B , crutstt
control . e lect ric b1ck at seats
wtth console, rea r defogger,
now !Ires , new ex haust .
$1800. 7• 2·2•04 beforo 2 pm
or after 5pm.

1977 FORD F-150. 6 cyi. 4speed. hcellen1 condttlon.
992-5529

1975. CHEVROLET IM·
F&gt;ALA, 2 dr ., hardtop, PS,
F&gt;B, air, cruise control , t inted glass, 350 V -8 eng. , only
40,000miles. Dark meta lliC
blue, one owner. Like new
with 5 new tires. $2800.
Call AA6·4223.

1969 T·Bird - Wrecked
cond., good engine &amp; In·
l erlor Call 379-2114 .
1970 Chevrolet pick -up .
Auto . 350 V -8. 8ft . bed. $500.
Cai i24S ·S559.

1975 CHE VROLET NOVA 6
cyl , 1td shift, -4 new rodi~ls

$995 ,

.:J-4(/6,

.

1967 NOVA S. S.
350
eng ine. 4-spd., new battery
&amp; tires. 5750. Call 256·9302
after 5:30.
1971 NOVA · For sale or
trade. Call 367·0258 after
5:30.

1976
THUNDERBIRD ,
white, all power, new
radial t i res .
Prl ce o
wholesale. Call446-0008.
1974 VEGA Hatchback .
Call 675-2588 or 675·1501 or
675·1553.
1977 4 whl . dr . Van . auto ,
PS. Call 388 ·9061 .

74 JEEP, 6 cyl, metal top,
45,000 miles, 446·4211 .
1979 GMC Die5el pickup,
see 1o
appre c iate ,
reasonable, ec onom ic al
446·9471 .
1977 FORD GRANANDA,
excellent cond .. 34,000
m lies, Ph 446·A347 after 5.
NEW 1979 FORD Fiesta,
AC, 3&lt;XIO miles, save $500
cut $5,495, real savings, Ph
446·0494.
.

1973 Plymouth · Scamp, 6
cyl, auto. ps, pb, air, 22 mi
1971
IN T ERNATIONA L per gal , very good cond .,
. 256-6867.
SCOUT - Call446 - ~236 .

1977 JEE_P CJS · Exc.
cond ., 22,000 miles, mu5t
see. Caii675 ·38U Mon lhru
Fri between s &amp; 7 p .m . or
Sat. &amp; Sun .

•

• '

.w

"i-1

BRAND NEW -OVER AN ACRE owner Is anxious to sell this spa c1 ou s
and attractive 3 bedroom ranch located
in city school dist. (Green Elem ). In cludes a very nice kitchen, d ining room .
patio doors leading to patio, 2 baths,
utility room, 2 car garage,
air
and over 1 acre of flat orc.,nd . "'J,IJ•Ju.

78 CHEVROLET PICKUP,
4 wheel dr, V8, outo, CB ,
am ·fm 8 track, big wheel s
and tires, like new, 256·

1969 CHEVELLE 4·dr., 307
auto .• make offer, cal l 256·
6580.
19A8

CHEVY
CLUB
· 6-cyl , standard,
restorable, drive it home.
S47S . Call 614-797 -3360,
even ings .

cou F&gt;E

1974 CHEVY MALIBU ·

54.000 miles . A ir , am ·fm tilt
wheel . $2,000. or best offer.
'4 mile out Georges Creek
from Rt.7, two trailers on
r ight after 7:00p.m.
1964 G.M .C. Bus. 60 pass.
Needs repair. S400. Call
675-2520 or 446·Al13 after 5.

Pets for Sale
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL , AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CF A
Siamese, Himalayan and
Persian cats. Black Chow
Chow puppies Ready to go
now. And SM coat, red,
male adults, Call 446·3844
afler6 p.m.
A.K .c . .
L:abrador
Retriever, 21f2 years old,
tra ined. $75. Call675-1133.

6867.

1978 TBIRO, beige, brown
interior, ps, pb, am -fm
radio, Ph 367·7345.

AKC
REG . German
Shepherd pups. Exc . blood
lines. Black and tan, black
and red . $75. each. · Call
446·8617 .

1979 PONTIAC . BON ·
NEVILLE · Black with
black Landau top. Two
door 301 V·8 eng ine. Under
warra nty . Loaded Wi th ex ·
lras . Call 446-7161 or 446
4942 .

CEN TENARY WOODS Pet
Groom i ng
Facilities .
Professional services of·
fered . All breeds, all styles.
Call 446·0231.

1917 DODGE Power wagon
pickup, 20.000 mi les . S4100.
Caii4A6·86A9.

HILLCR EST KENNEL .
Boarding all breeds, clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC .leg. Dober·
mans . Caii446-779S.

I

ASSUME LOAN &amp; have
quick possession of this
nice 2 BR home . Enjoy
the economy &amp; comfort
of gas heat, full ba5ement &amp; large lot at the
edge of town. 531 .900.

RIO GRANDE AREA Approx . "5 acres vacant
land , county water ,
pond. some timber , nice
building sites , ci ty
schools, 518,000.
BABY FARM - 13 S
acres near V inton, com ·
tortable 5 rm ,1!. bath
home , barn , cellar
house. pond, lob . ba5e,
land i!i mostly til lable,
$27,500

'

FARM - ACREAGE : 33 acres located on While
Oak Rd. 2 bedroom, carpt}ted home. Sit!Jated in an
area that is pleasctntl y surrounded with trees ~ Buy
f or $39.500.00.
·

Auto Sales

JUST WHAT THE FAMILY
ORDERED- NEW LISTING- Treat
yourself to an attractive 6 year old
home on Bulavllle Rd. In the city school
dlst. 3 bedroom, eat-In kitchen, fam ily
room with woodburner, F.A. nat. gas
heat, detached and heated 2 car garage
(Dad will love It), a super 18x36 pool ,
over 'h acre landscaped yard with a
super garden spot. You 'd e•pect to pay
a lot more for a nome like this.

GREENFIELD
TOWNSHIP - o40 Acres.
hi l is ides, rockcl i fh ,
brush, good hunting,
$12,000.

Who am I?
I am thl' basis of n!J wealth. 1he heritage of the wise, the
thn fty and ' he prudrnl.
I am the poor man's JOY and comfort. tht rrch m an's prize.
tilt richr ltand of captwl, th! silent portlier of many thousands
of suuts:fu! mrn. '
I am the solace of 1l1e widow, thP comfort cj o.'J age, r.he
t ornt rrronc of saunry o1;mntt mi\!Orlrmeand M ant . 1a,n ha•1a(d
Pawn 10 cluldrc!ll through grner;,:;ons, Dj a thmg of great 'l'liorth .
1 am lht rhoicrsr fru it a/t oil, Credit respecr.s me. Yt t I nm
humble. I Han d beiorf' l'l'r! t)' man btddmg lum to kr:o w me
.for ~·IJil' I aw. and ."o ~ tfl u ''I"
I g-row unrt mcrras e u; 1ul:' c thrO!Jf: ll rounrlrss days. Tho1!_gh
I seem dormant . my wonh mcrPc JCs . fi t 1 t'r fat hng_. m·~·cr ceasmg.
Time is '''Y a.d and f'Opufauo.1 l:e aps up my gmn 1 ue and rhr
tlemenrs I dc/y, for they ca:mor dc!. troy me.
My possessors Jearn to kl'lh 1 c in lilt': inrart~b!y.thcy bf'COm!:
tm•ltd. 1Vh1!e elf tlllnJ; S' '.'ltJ:c r rnd Cecay, I sun'll'e. 'fl:c cc,Hunes
find me ynu11~cr, incrrastng in my stre,tgth .
I am the foundarton of Er.nf.s, t 1·c prod;;cc r of food and the
baJis of a/1 !'.'Mlth throvghout lite world.
Yt t I am so cJmmon th(l l rhcnJSonds, un t hinking and
Wlknowing Jlo.rs rne by.

1 AC. NEAR TOWN - This 1'12 story
nome located just 'h mile from city
Rt. 588 Includes 3 bedrooms, equipped
eat-In kitchen, living room with
fireplace, family room, full basement,
hardwood floors carpeted, 2 furnaces (
1 nat. gas and 1 wood or coal), new rOOf,
vinyl siding and more. SA3,500. Hou5e
and 5 acres. s.ss,ooo.

on

FINISH IT YOURSELF
K.C.
SCHOOLS- Ranch style home situated
on 1.10 acres off Rt. 554. This 3 bedroom
home Is 90% complete lA perfect
chance to step In and finish to suit your
tastes) . Includes large kitchen with lots
of cabinets, bath with shower, carpet,
full basement, elec . neat, Anderson
windows and o large flat yard with
garden space. $29,900.

RT. 141 - Large 2 story trame home
located just l'h miles from town. In·
eludes 3 bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, fam l·
ly room, dining room , full basement,
natural gas heat and garage. Property
fenced completely . Only $29,900.
WOODED HIDE·A·WAY - RT . SU- 11
you enjoy privacy you 'll love this 6 yr.
old Dutch bl -level situa ted on 1.3 ac . of
woods In the city school dis! . This f1ne
home offers over 2100 sq . ft . of l iving in·
eluding 3 bedrooms, 2V&gt; baths, equip·
peel kltcnen, formal di nmg, large tam i ·
l'f room, cent. air and ventil ation
system, Anderson windows, 2 car
garage. deck and more.

REDUCED - REDUCED· REOUCED 1mmediate possession on t h1s well kept
3 bedroom home at the edge of town. 2
SUN VALLEY - Just listed this nice 2 fireplaces , large fam ily room , 'l full
or 3 bedroom home near H.M .C. in baths, forma l din ing, ea! ·in kitchen, full
eludes kitchen with ranoe and basement, gas heat, and garage . Nic e
refrigerator, dining room, Iaroe living yard w i th patio &amp; ga s gr ill Priced in
room, nat. gas heat, carport, hardwood low $405 . Owner des~r es an offer
f loors, some furniture and nearly 1h
SUPER BUY - PRICE REOUCED,
acre yard : City schools . 13~.900.
5A2,JOO - A qua lity 3 bed room briCk
~EW LISTING- Beaullfullocatlon at
ranch In one of the area ·s t tnest
&gt;dge of town . Mo•t attractive 3 neighbOrhoods. Laroe 11 v1no room.
&gt;edroom ranch In a very desirable lovely hardwOOd floor s, t orm al dl n i n~,
•elghborhood. Older children can walk l'h baths, built in ki tchen , full base ·
J school . Includes 2 baths built-In kit·
ment, nat. gas heat, patio &amp; carpor t Ci ·
hen, Iaroe family room. Woodburnlng ly schl. (Washington E Iem )
replace plus a Franklin wood burning
stove. Extra large well landscaped lot.
:You will seldom find a modern home In BEAUTIFUL NEW HOME - You ' ll en ·
lOY over 2100 sq II. of li v ing space in
this good a location .
this rust ic ranch home w it h a terr if ic
JUST LISTED - NEW HOME &amp; • floor pl an Includes a fully equi pped k1 f·
ACA ES - Very pretty cedar a~d vinyl chen your w ife w ill adore j form al di nsided 3 bedroom ranch, Includes large Ing room , family room w ith f ir epl ace, 3
eat·ln kitchen, woodburner In llv. rm., or~ bedrooms (1 could be used as den).
utility rm ., pretty carpet throughout, large walk -In closets, 2 baths, 2 patio
bath with shower &amp; 7 car garage. The 8 doors opening to pat io from d ining and
acres Includes ~ ac. woods, 2 large family room , 2 car garage plus J acres
garden spol$, 2 outbui ldings and an old of beautiful llat land in the ci ty school
2 story home. Priced to see I at $35,000.
district .
JUST LIKE NEW - OWNER ANX·
IOUS TO SELL: - This 3 bedroom
ranch nome Is Immaculate, Includes an
attractive ~at-I n klthcen, 3 bedrooms,
nice living room and bath , 2 car garage,
large sloping yard and a good location
off Rt. 160 lust ~ miles from H MC
$39,000.

MEIGS CO. FARM - 37 ACRES Greol location with lots of good Ir on·
tage on Rl 12A just2 miles fro m Rt . 7
Most of land in pasture w ith some
tillable land, barn, shed. good fence and
some timber reported . The 1'1&gt; stor y
home includes vinyl siding , equ ipped
eat·in kitchen, Iaroe liv ing r oom , ,.
bedrooms, free gas heat, 2 car carport
OWNER WANTS OFFER- REOUC · and workshop. Priced to sell
~D - Price reduced to $26,500 on th is
Neil kept 3 or A bedroom home in Thur- POMEROY - 6 ACRES PLUS man. Includes equipped eat-In kitchen, Located lust 1 mile from downtown,
1ormal dining room, full basement, low this l'h story ho':'e ! ncludes . A
heating bills plus 2 Qllrages. workshop bedrooms, large eat ~1 n ktt chen ~1th
&amp; storage bldg.
range &amp; refrlg ., utility room , l lv•ng
..
. room &amp; bath. Patio, storage bldgs and
K.C. SCHOOLS - $34,000 - A very over 6 acres of sloping to hill y land.
nice, beautifully remode led ~ bedroom $27,500.
home appro•. 'h mile off Rt. 5S4. This
DVTCH 2 STORY - VINTON - A
home offers vinyl siding, fireplace In beautiful
and well kept 3 bedroom home
living room, equipped kitchen with lots on Front St. This fine home Includes an
of cabinets, new bathroom, new wiring,
furnace, water heater and fully In- equipped eat-In kitchen, large living
sulated. A real bargain for the young room with a very pretty fireplace, for c-ouple wanting some elbOW room . mal dining, 1'1&gt; baths, full basement,
hardwood floors, garage plus near ly an
Situated on 1.23 acres of flatland .
acre of manicured lawn S41 ,SOO

WISEMAN IS A HOUSE ~ WORD
Ike Wlsem1n, Broker, 446·3796, Eve .
E. N. Wiseman, Broker, 446-4500 Eve.
Jim &lt;;qcllran, Associate, 4-i6-7111, Eve.

Dan Evans, As.soclate, 111-1111 Eve
B. J . Hairston, Associate, 446-&lt;1240,
Nancy Smith, Associate, 446-4910, Eve.

Eve

Pets t.or Sale
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds, clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Call446 ·7795.
BRIARPATCH
KEN NELS.
Boarding and
grooming.
AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call 446·4191.

IS THERE A COLD NOSE
IN
YOUR
FUTURE?,
Adopt a nice pet. Huma11e
Society, 992·6260 ._
BEAGLE PUPS, well bred.
Trained
and
started
beagles. Reasonably prlc·
ed. Trade for gun of equal
value. 742-2521 .

RISING STAR Kennol . Boor·
ding. Coll367-0292 .
GROOMING. Judy
Taylor. 6U -367-7220.
POODlE

Building Supplies

COLLIN S BUILrDING
PRODUCTS ,
1515
Washington Blvd ., Belpre,
HOOF HOLLOW, English and Ohio, offers a new 5ervlce
POODLE GROOMING.
Western .
Saddles
und to the Gallipolis area. Over
Call Judy Taylor at 367· horne... Horses and ponies . 6,000 building products
7220.
Ru!h Reev.. . 61A-6q8-3290 delivered each week to
lording &amp; Riding leuons and Belpre and available to you
Horse Care products.Western each week at discount
Call collins
boots, Children's $15 50 pri c esl
HILLCREST KENNELS. Board- Aduhs $2'1.00.
· ' Building PrOducts or pick
Ing, all breed•. Clean Indoor·
up a free Pease Catalog
o!Jldoor foc llltloo. Also AKC '
today , Business hours:
registered
Oobermans . REGISTERED BEAGLES, $2S. 7 Mon lhru Fri , 8 a.m . to 5
61· - ·~6-7795 .
p.m. Phone 614·423·6881 .
old. JOA-882-3242.

wr•k•

H' A

A R

I

S 0

N

TOWNSHIP 69 A.
mostly hill s &amp; wood s,
old hou5e &amp; cellar In
poor condit ion, possi bili ·
ty of coal . S29.SOO.

----v--_,
I am Land !
(~'i

./

-----

RIO GRANDE AREA acres on the Rio
Centerpoint Rd. Like
new 12x60 mobile home
furnished ,
completely
extra mobile home pad,
could be rented for ex ·
tra income, city school s.
Asking $22,-400 .

COMMERCIAL LOT This lot fronts on two
wei I traveled road s.
Owner Is anx ious to sell
and will listen to an of ·
fer . Call now and ask
about BMR 136.

HOMEstEAD HERE
or use as a hunting
lodge, vacation home,
etc . Rustic log home IS
bu i ld from nand hewn
beams and hos sleeping
loft, modern bath, large
stoneo f ireplace and ap ·
prox. 27 acres of woods
In the Wayne National
Forest . E•tra land
available .

IN TOWN and In good condition . This two story
home has 3 BR's up, FR, LR, DR , kit. and bath
down, plus utility room off back porch. Priced for
quick sale. BMR 139
12x60
KIRKWOOD
NEAR TYCOON LAKE MOilLE HOME on '12
- 1 BR home with nice acre lot. BR 's 12•12 and
kitchen, bath &amp; LR . Par· 9&gt;&lt;12, one bath, 12x14
t lal hookup for mobile LR, 8x12 equipped kit.
. home. S16,500 .•BMR 1~1
BMR 1~2
12X70 MOBILE HOME
with all appliances,
large metal building
with concrete floor .
Si tua1ed on .65 of an
acre BMR U.c

SPRINGFIELD
TOWNSHIP - Approx .
6 acres level &amp; gently
rol li ng land, county
wa ter, n ice build ing
~ i tes .
located on th e
Floyd Clark Rd . approx.
f;, m i. off Route 160 near
Porter . Ask1ng $15,000.

]].

•:'

NEW LISTING - Just
right for the small I amity. Two bedrooms, bath,
kitchen, living and full
basement. Kyger Creek
schools. BMR 160.

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS IN
DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS.
BUILDING ' AND CONTENTS
NOW AVAILABLE . CALL NOW.
ASK ABOUT C360.

A TRULY GRACIOUS HOME - Belter Hornes
Gardens would be taken by the
spacious home set on a beautifu l
lot
abundant with shrubber y &amp; frontage on the OHIO
RIVER . words cannot describe the quality of this
brick &amp; frame 2 story nome. 3 BR ·s. 2V:z baths, extra
lar ge LR &amp; family rm ., f ireplace, cent . air, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH MORE . Shown
by appointment.

PORTERBROOK - If neotness counts! You can
count on this one. The first floor features family
room with w .b.f .p , flanked by built·in bookshelves,
3 bedrooms, living room, 1'1&gt; bath, combination kit chen, dining area separated by bar. Full ba5ement .
BMR 137A
.
BUILDING LOTS - 2
Acres, 7.738 acres and
11 110 acres. Recently
surveyed. These are
wooded lots within 6
miles of Gallipolis. Also
a 2 acre lot on blacktop
road. BMR 135

Sunday and Monday's TV Log

12 :oo-Meet the Press 3, 15; Issues &amp;
Answers 6,13; Time E•posure
20: National Geographic 33.
12.30-Sonny Randle : Football 3;
College Football '79 6 : NFL
Today 8:
The
Issue 10:
Evangelistic Outreach 13; This
Is The Life 15; Issues In Worl~
Communications 20 .
12:55--NFL Funnies 10; 1:oo-NFL
Football 3,8,10; Ohio University
Football Highlights 6; Frank
Cignettl 13; Wrestling 15; Movie
"Destination Tokyo" 17; Dreams
of Manhood 20 ; ' Washington
Week In Review 33 .
1:30-.Amerlco's Black Forum 6;

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1979
5·25--World at Large 17; 5:45-Farm Reporl1 3; 5:50--PTL Club
13.
6:0G-700 Cl ub 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Summer Se mester 10.
\'

THE BUILDER BUILT this one for his own use ano
now has decided to 5ell . Cedar siding, 8•30 deck off
dining room, 8x30 patio out of exposed base ment,
basemenlis partially finished with 14x38 F.R. plus a
9x15 den . This lovely home also features a fully
equipped kitchen with breakfast bar. There is
much, much more. call for an appointment . City
schools. $68,000. BMR 156.

~. 1

OHIO RIVER LOT - Located In Eu r eka. Gal l• pol is
Ci ty School Oist , co. w at er avai lable, idea l for
bU ilding or mobile home site. $11.000.

.4·0Q-NFL Football 3,15 : U.S. Open
Tennis 8, 10; Film s of Ol in Sewall
Pett ingill 33
~ : 30-Meellng of M i nds 20. S:ooRacers6: Trl Stale 13; Keyboard•.
Sonatas 33.
5:30-ln Search Of 6: 1979 College
Bowl Champlorshlps 13: Best ol
Groucho 20.
'6:0G-ABC News 6; Fran Curci ·
Football 13: Wrestling 17; Elec .
Co. 20, F&gt;revln &amp; the Pittsburgh
33 .
6 : 30- ABC New s I] ; News 6 ;
Sesame St. 20.
7: 00- Disney's Wondertul World
3,15; Oul of the Blue 6.13: Best of
Donny &amp; Marte 17 ; James
Michener's World 33 .
7: 36-M Isler Rogers' Neighborhood
20.
8:0G-Movle " The Ghost of Fllghl
AOl" ],IS; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13;
Evening at Pops 20,33 .
8:30--Emmy Awards 6,13; 9·0Q-60.
Minutes 8, 10;
Masterpiece
Thea tre 20,33.
lO :oo-Prlme Time Sunday 3,15: All
In The Family 8. 10; Between The
Wars 11 ; Movie " Poppy" 20;
Firing Line 33 .
10 :30--0ne Day AI A Time 8,10; Ruff
House 17.
11 ·oo-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Open Up
17; Wall Street Week 33 .
11 : 15--ABC News 6; CBS News 10;
PMA Pulse 15.
11 :3D-Movie " Deception" 3; Movie
" A Fine Pair" 15; Tennis 6:
Shopsmlfh Therapy 8; Face the
Nation 10; PTL Club 13; Money
News &amp; Views 33 .
12 ·oo-Movle "Sudden 'Terror" 8;
Movie " The Boss" 10
12 :30-NFL Game of the Week 6;
1 :00- Movle
' 'Company
of
.
Killers " 17; 1: 3D-ABC News 13.

Sa t•:

NEW LISTING - Lovely two story home with a full
basement,. Aluminum sid ing, storm wind ow s and
doors. With this family type home you will also en·
joy more than 30 acres of htll land t o en joy in your
leisure time. BMR 157
·
-

RIO GRANDE E•ceptional house with 5
bedrooms, large living room , 2112 baths. spacious
family room . equipped kitchen. oversized 2 car
garaoe. plus loads of extras. This lovely home is
si tuated on one acre of beautiful landscaped land.
Gall ipolis Ci ty Schools. BMR 92A

WOWK Commun liy Oay Parade
13: Another Voice 33.
2·oo- 1nslght IS: On Work•ng 20 ;
Dam len 33.
2·30- ; In Search Of 6, Beller Way
IS; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20.
l :OQ-Racers 6: Little Ra scals 15:
Wall Street Week 20 .
3:30-Golf 6,1]; NFL ' 7915; Poldark
20, Spolelo Fes! l v al 33.

for

CHESHIRE - Loc&gt;kirl_O
condition. Th is
the century with quality material and since has
been properly maintained. You must see i t to ap·
preclate Its true values. Cal l now tor an appo int·
men!. BMR 9~

HARRISON TWP. - 1~7
acres, approx . 60 A.
wooded (commercial
timber reported) , o40 A.
tillable, 50 A. pasture, 7
rm. home, barn, pond,
springs, 2 wells, fob.
base, lots of rd . fran·
tage, asking $65,000.

sss.ooo.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1979
S.lO--AG-USA 17; 6·0Q-Amer lc.an
Prob lems &amp; Chall enges 10 :
Action New smaker 13: It's Your
Business 17.
6:30--Chrlsl".f'her Closeup 3: Kids
are People Too 13; Between the
Lines 17: Treehouse Club 10.
1·oo-This Is The Life 3: Public
· Affairs 10; Jimmy Swagger! 17
7·30-TV Chapel 3: Eddie Saunders
· 6, Jerry Falwell 8,10; The Bible
Answers 13 : JimmY Swaggarl
IS ; Chr ist lor the World 17 .
8 oo- Mormon Choir 3: Grace
Cathedral6: Christ for the Worlc
13 , Three Stooges &amp; Friends 17.
Sesame ~1. 29.33.
8:31&gt;-&lt;lral Roberls 3; ~ontact 6:
James Robison Pre sents 10;
Lower
Lighthouse 13: Open
Bible 15.
9:oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Oral
Roberts 10: Rex Humbard 6:
Rev . Jim Franklin 13; Ernest
Angley 15: Lost In Space 17;
Mister Rogers 20.33 .
9: 30-Chrlstlon Center 8; Elec. Co.
33: It Is Written 10: Gospel
Outreach 13: Sesame ST. 20.
10.oo-Human Dimension 3; Kids
are People Too 6 : Robert
Schuller 8; Movie " Samson &amp;
Delilah" 10: Jimmy Swaggart
13; Gospel Singing Ju~llee 15;
Hazel 17: Studio See 33.
10 : 30--Rex Humbard 3: Movie
"Samson &amp; Delilah" 17: Zoom
20; Big Blue Marble 33 .
11 : 00- Ernest Angley 8; Rex
Humbard 15; Rev. Henry Mahan
13 ; Que
Paso
USA 20 ;
Photography 33.
11 : 30- AI
Issue 3; . Animals ,
Animals, Animals 6; Rev. R. A.
West 13; Elec. Co. 20: Turnabout

R eal E .tate

'lEAL TOR

soon. Owner Is out of state
otter. Great location with
1.19 acres of prime
plus an 18K36 In ground pool.
Property Is ideal for commercial purposes. For
moredelallscall! BMR 112B

FREE GAS - 100 acr es m ·l, vacan t land n ~ar
Bulavl lle. approx. oiO acr es wood ed, bal ance rolitng
pastureland. some timber reported , 7 mi les out,

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE In the w ilderness of
U'te wayne Nationa l Forest. 5 to e acre t r acts of
woodl and now ava ilable\ adjoining t housands of
acres of ~vernment land Public hunt ing, fishi.ng
and c t~mpi ng permitted. Pr ices start at $3500 w 1t h
financing available.

!:=_stale for Sale

IB

Other

CENTENARY - 7 . ~1 ACRES , nice 7 room and bath ,
natural gas heat, good b t~ rn and other build ings,
ideal for development or just a nice bt~bY fllrm near
town. own ers retir ing and pri ced to sell at $.47,500.
Don't linger on this one

POCKET THE RENTAL PROFITS - Three story
build ing downtown corner lot in Pomero y . Has f irs!
floor shop and off ice plus two l ar ge apar t ments, a ll
occupied . S40.000.
·

McGhee,
Broker
446.0552

OFFICE HOURS
9:00·5:00 Mond•y thru
Saturd•Y

patio, detached garage and situated on
Schools .

M . L. !Bud)

446--{1552
428 SECOND AVE.

OHIO RIVER VIEW - This 3 BA brick ranch is an
excellent condition &amp; offers 2 '12 baths, den w ith FP,
din 1ng rm ., foyer, HW floors, glassed in porch,
pat10j extra nice landscaping, double garage plus a
detached 22 x 2~ brick &amp; concrete garage. Lots of
pri vacy .
EDGE OF TOWN- VA APPROVED - Lovely 2
BR co"age i s situllted on a 100x250 lot on State
Route 141 &amp; features a dining rm., laundry, full
basement &amp; natural gas heal. Ask ing 531,900.

EASY TERMS on ' this brick &amp; frame beauty . A
small down payment will let you have quick possession, 3 BR's, 2 baths, LR, modern kitchen, large
family rm. with WB fireplace, laundry rm ., gas
heat, cent. air , covered patio, 18 fl . above ground
pool &amp; a nicely landscape lot near town .

~!!al

"R,eal**

LOW DOWN PAYMENT- SUPER BUY - FHA·
VA · CONVENTIONAL - This 3 yr. Old b l-level is
like new &amp; must be sold this month . 3 or 4 BR' s, 21/a
baths, family rm ., heatalator f ireplace, low heat
b ill s, Clay grade school, Gallia Academy High
School. Ca ll for Appointment.

Mose Canterbury

17 UNIT MOTEL- Located along Eastern Avenue.
Property lncludes commercle \ frontage on St. Rt . 7.
Corner lot with existing reataurant business ... Pien ty of parking area . Use as is or modify to your
needs.
NEW LISTING : 3 bedroom home W1lh 91 'x200 ' fl .
log, within the village of V inton, along St . Rt. 160.
F .A fuel oil furnace . This is a very nice home and
you can purchase with or without turn1ture .

.ftt~GK££

446.0008

REALTOR

2 or 3 bedroom home, LR. DR.
rm,
I and outbuilding ; includes approx .
7 acre son Liddy Hol low Rd. (Gra ham School Rd ).
Here 's a comfortable nome In the country, with
acreage .. . but now for 534,000.00.

'~ud·

All~'

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL EST ATE AGENCY

WOOD
446-1066

_!eal Estate for Sale

STROUT REALTV, Inc.

"" l JQ I.I

t

Real Estate for Sale

CROWN CITY- Frame
rllnch on .52 of an acre. 3
BR 's, LR, equipped kit·
chen, bath and utility
ar,a, attached garage
with heat. Protected by
home warranty , BMR
146

6: 30-For Our T imes 10; Dragnet
17: 6.45--Mornlng Report 3;
Morning
West
6 ' 50- Good
Virg inia 13; 6: 5S---News 13.
7 oo-Today 3,15; Good Morning
Ameri ca 6,13; Mondoy Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLi ttle Rascals 17.
7: 15- A .M . Weather 33 ; 7: 30Famlly Affair 10; Sesame St 33 .
7: 55- Chu c k While Reports 10;
8: 00- Capt . Kangaroo 8. 10:
leave It To Beaver 17.
8.30--Romper Room 17; 9 : ~Bob
FRAME RANCH with full basement. This home is
Br aun]; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Big
In great shape . Fully carpted, on ••ceptlonally
Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
clean . Equipped kitchen w ith lots of cabinets. BaseLove of L.lfe 10; Lucy Show 17.
ment Is divided with family room , utility room and
9·30-Bob Newhart 8; Running for
large storage and shop area. Will consider FHA or
· Body &amp; Mind 10; Green Acres 17.
VA financing . BMR 129
10 OD-Card Sharks 3,15. Edge of
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8,10;
Morning Mogozlne 13; Movie
Wanted to Do
Mobile Homes· Rent
" Carmen Jones" 17.
1o: 30- Hollywood Squares 3,15;
FOR RENT - Space for
Mobile Home. 1f:z acre lot .
Andy Griffith 6; Whew! 8,10;
Call446·1680.
$20,000 Pyramid 13.
. 10 :55---CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 ·0Q-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Elec . Co. 20.
11 : 30- Wheet of Fortune 3, 15; Unscramble these four Jumbles.
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame St. onolottor to each squara, lo form
20,33: 11 :55--News 17
fourordlnarywords.
'-'--= &lt;

t

I

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I

ZEBAL I

12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10.13; Mlndreaders 15: Love
American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow
8, 10;
Mov ie
- " Bachelor F lat" 17; Elec. Co. 33.
c:z;.rr,:.:-"' - - ·l.~DaysofOur Llves3,1S; All My
Children 6,13; Young 1!. the L.-.:;:;:~:..:.._:.;;~1--.:....,
Restless 8,10.
'\j
1 :30-As The World Turns 8,1 0;
~ _A
~ _A
~
2 : ~Doctors 3,15; One Life to
Live 6,13; 2:25--News 17.
1"~~=---.,
2 :30--Another World 3,15 ; Guiding-,
Light 8,10; Glgglesnort Hotel 17. 1-..:...;,;...:;:r,...:,rr- +-..,.--, ,,...,.,..... ~..
3:oo-General Hospita l 6,. 13: Lilias
[
WHA\ ~He NE.Ve.;
Yoga &amp; You 20; I Love Lucy 17. l. -_....,_......,_""--'Ll"-...J.- .L.-.J
"
l ·l o-Dne Day AI A T ime 8; Joker's
EAFeNED HOW TO

I I I

V

P' '\)

J

P"\1

RYLAI F

I

'l

t
I I I X)

ITEQGUN

HIGH AND DRY featuring a beautiful
view of Galli a County's
hill count ry . This f•ne all
brick ranch features 2
fireplaces w i th a full
divided basement. All
this and more, on 1.6.4
acre1 BMR 138
- Two story
home and it's priced to
sell. Carpeted. Drapes
.and curtains stay . Call
today!
VI~ITON

I

(I l I

CROWN CITY - 30x40
meta l building w i th 2 ci·
l y lots. BMR 147

30 ACRES more or less
on Cla rk Chapel Road .
Mostly wooded with
pine. BMR 149
BUILDING LOT - in
town, restrict ed for your
protection . 75x258 . BMR
150

NEW LISTING- Flat lot with very nice 3 BR home
n Gallipolis City Schools District . This one won 't
lasllong . Call for_complete details BMR 158

'

'1

I

•

'

!

•

•
'i
'·

\

''
'

EUREKA - Another quality nome priced 1n the
mid $AO's. Neat In apperance. 3 BR 's featuring FR
with woodburner VA financing. BMR 134

RUTLAND - Two acres with lovely ran ch style
home. Modern kitchen features built-ins, eye-level
oven, island range, bar and dining area. Family
room w ith stone fireplt~ce. For more detail s Call!!
BMR 123

EXTRA NICE LOT Including 3 BR ranch style
nome In Gallipolis City School D lst. priced in the
'530's. Call for an appointment. BMR 154
Tam White
SolosAuoc.
44HSS7

Dana McGhee
Sales Assoc.
446·0SS2

\

~

Richard E . Carter
Sales Assoc.

·m~

Virgin /a J.,~

lSn I.IL l~'

l EAliOO '

FILA /, f:SII\TE:.
388·8464

AN AMAZING VALUE
Little cash needed, take over payments
on a one year old, 3 bdr, 2 full baths, love·
ly carpetry, large LR, 1=ountry kitchen
w/eating bar, Intercom, air cond.', attach·
eel garage w/storage. 1 mile from GSI on
Mill Creek Road, 50·50 co·op with any
broker.

EVERYBODYO
Shops the
WANT AD WAY
wanted to Rent

Wild 10; Fllnlslones 17; Over
Easy 20; Big Blue Marble 33.
GARAGE SPACE for car &amp;
4 ·oo-Misler Cartoon 3; Tom &amp;
Now arrange the circled letters to • utility trailer. In Gal l ipolis
lonn the surprise answer, as sugarea . call256-1339.
J erry 13 : Passwor d 15: Me rv
gested by the abo
rt
Griffin 6; Bever ly Hillbillies 8;
veca ooo
Sesame St. 20,33 : Six Million
WANTED TO LEASE ·
40
Dollar Man 10; Spectreman 17. Prfntanswerhere:
'l" Coal for deep m ine
operation in Gal II a or
4 : 30- B ew II c ~ed
3:
F&gt;ettl co at
-~-~-'-:I&gt;.."'-""-J"
"'
Junction 8; Bionic Woman 13;
.
(Answeral\londay) Lawrence counti es . Seam
thickness ~ foot. call 367 ·
Lillie Ra scals IS; Gi ll igan's Is. Yaslerday's Jumbles SWOOP WHOSE KENNEL ABOUND
7593 or 367 ·0A35.
17.
Answer Wha t a wi se man never does5 . ~ 1 Dream of Jeann ie 3; Sanford
BLOWS HIS " KNOWS"
WANfED TO Lease: Cool pro1!. Son 81 Mister Rogers' Neigh perty fo1 deep mine Opera·
borhood 20 ,33 ; Mary Tyl er
Jumblt Book No. 1:' conltlnlne 110puzrlll1flntlllbleforS1 .75poltpeld
tlon . MUst be .48" in thickness .
trom Jumble,ctott'lls newtplptr, Bo~t34, Norwood, N.J .07M8. lnc:lude,our
Moore 10: l\bboll &amp; Costello IS.
367-7593.
ntme, eclch~ • · zip code 1nd mtkt cntckt paytbltlo Newlplptrboo ...
My Th roe Sons 17.
1

rx I) D

NEW LISTfNG - Two
story home on Fourth
Ave. In Gal lipolis. 4 BR .
li v ing roam, dining
room, f amily room . in
good condition and it's
priced to sel : ! Beat to·
day 's inflated pri ces.
BMR 159

.'

'

4

Sale, Rent or Trade ·-:
FOR SALE or trade : 2 ·'
bedroom home with extra
lot, garage, fruit trees,
cellar, garden etc. $5000
equity cash or trade.
Assume an 8lper c~nlloan .
Call R. H. 'Harrison ,
904·789·4286 after 6 p. m.

Camping Equipment
GO CAMPING AMERICA .,
With Coachman RVS. ~
Quality built, pried right . .,,
Dozens of models with a '
wide range of family - , ;
pleasing floorplans. See
them today I Apple City
Recreational Vehicle's, Rt '
35, 1 ml West of Jockson.
Oh, 614-286·5700.

,- - -- - - - - - ,

�D-10

-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept . 16, l!rl9

1&gt;-11-1110

•

Your-Best Real Estate Buys Are Found zn the Sunday Times-Sentinel/'

SWiday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,Sept. I6, 1979

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

-

Rea l Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Rea I Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

REALEST ATE
FOR SALE
3 BR , full basemer;-t,
wood bUrning stove,

downtown .

Real Estate for Sale

10 ACRES, nice 4 bedroom,
2 lull bath home on 10

Gallipolis. Home priced for
quick sale, asking $39,900.
Call Don Kelly collect 687 ·

acres,

FOR SALE
Business

family room, (entral
air, brick, aluminum,

Real Estate for Sale

just

north

of

Real Estate for Sale

•

Bldg .

Ca II

for

details. Bud McGhee
Realty, 4&lt;16-DSS2.

blocktop drive, siding,
4&lt;16-1310. '

Willis T. Leadingham,
Ph. Home

Pomeroy,
DIESHOPPE" .
qetalls .
NEW LISTING -

acres,

vacant

30

township road. 7 acres
tillable,
balance
woodlond. Has many
uses. ONLY $13,350.00.
NEW LISTING - Appro•lmately 25 acres of
building sites, 4 lots
already
surveyed.

water,

ONLY ONCE IN A LIFETIME
very we ll kept home i n town . 3 BR , liv ·
1ng room wifh fi replace, 1 car garage.
Pr ice reduced to $58,000.
#352
NEW LISTING
INCOME! INCOME!
WHAT A BUY!
INCOME I
Three bedroom home, ·
1nco me producing gas
bath wit h shower , fuel
s tation and grocery
od FA furnace , window
store. Now in operation.
ai r conditioner , attic
Three tenant houses, all
well insulated, stor m
rented . Plus very nice
door s and windows,
two story older home .
cou nt y wa ter, u1ility
Apartment in back of
bui ld ing, new lO 'x ll " log
store . 6 acres o1 land.
cabin. 6 mites fr om
A ll this plus more.
Gn l lipolis . Ci t y School
Located
on
State
system $21 .000 List ing
H ighway . Call for more
Pr ice.
# 368
info rmation ,_ Op ·
portunit i es like this
A HOME DESIGNED
do
n ' t c ome every
WITHGOOO
day .
#l82
LIVING IN MIN OJ
Nea r new 3 bedroom,
P~ bat hs, entry hall.
TRIUMPH IN BEAUTY
(la rge living room wi t h
Gorgeous brick ranch
beautiful f ir eplace), kif home located on State
chen wi t h plenty of oak
Route 35. Featur ing 3
cabinets, formal dini ng .
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
Mas fer bedroom has ex ·
central air, full baSe·
t r a large wa lk -in closet.
ment, and 2 car garage,
Full baseme nt with
Beautifully decorated
fire pl ace . Tufor and
too ! See it first!
N380
stone design , 2 ac res of
ground .
IJ 363
PRICED FOR
NEW LISTING
QUICK SALE
Family moving closer to
ROOM TO GROW
This charming st ory
work . It will be hard for
them to move from this
and one ·half offer s 3
bedr ooms. kifchen and
lovely lwo year old
ra nch. 6 rooms and
dining area wifh br ick
arcl1way
and
.40 "
bath . decking, garage .
This is better than new .
fireplace, large front
por ch which could be usFenced in one aCre lot,
beautiful country set ·
ed for a fam.ily room .
ting , Has barn, chicken
Basement and super siz ·
house
and garage .
ed yard . Mobile home
pad and hooK up for th at
L arge
product i ve
ex fr a i nc ome . Th is
garden . New wood ·
home is in tip top shape.
burner stove . Buy now.
Possession can be Qiven
Don'l delay. S39,900. #370
soon. Pri ced $40,000.
PRIVACY I S

PROBLEM SOLVER
LOW BUDGET?
Has your searc·h for the right home
And need 2 bedrooms , 1 bath . This
been hopeless? You don't want to spend
ran ch ca n be yours at an unbeatable
lots ot " fi)(lng ' . What a pleasant sur pr ice. Has a 30&gt;&lt;30 garage only 4 years
prise in store for you. This 3 BR
old . Ci ty sc hool di str ict. l acr e.
RAMBLER has had, TENDER .LOV ·
$33,000.
#365
lNG CARE ! Fam ily room, f ireplace.
atta c h~d garage. Own~r will sell with l /4
acre or more. Only 1 year o.ld . c.a ll f~r
an appointment todav - Pnced 1n m1d
forties.
~ 358
GETA HORSE
EYE CATCHER
FARMPerha ps you already
HIGH ANDORY
TAX SHELTER
have one, two or three ?
113 acres Greenfield
1dea l tor
part time
With or without a horse,
Twp. , well Kept and
farmer. 67 acres, 30
this is th e place for
scenic country home, 2
acres t illable, large
children or guests. 7
barns, 2 car ga rage,
pastur ed wood lot, sma ll
room hou se, fu ll base·
other outbu ildings, 30 '
stream runs through
ment with bath , large
acres tillable land. wood
land . 6 room house, 2
barn, good cond it ion
lots , stream run s
barns, 1 almost new,
wi th hay mow. Garage,
through farm. Plenty
2600 lb. tobacco base.
coal or wood house com ·
water for livestock . You
Tobacco looks gOOd . Inbina ti on, leVel ya rd,
must see these pretty
cluded in price - 6 head
lcirge productive garden
green treated field s to
catt le, all farmii1Q
area, fair fences . Some
appreciate the v alue,
equipment .
Mine~al
t illabl e acres, tobacco
beauty
and
liv ing
rights inc luded . Family
base. 38 acres . $27,000.
satisfaction in the area .
retiring . Reasonab lY·
#]06
priced . $35,000.
# 377
~~~

OWNER WANTS
TO TALK TURKEY
Bring your offer on this
1112 story horne . .4
bedrooms, 1
11 vi ng
room , fe;;;_
,.~ . Kit·
~'"'. om .
c heo \.-~
N• c;j)' o..\.0\.or . Basemel
~~~~of ground.
Wilh~ ·h m ile of cily
limits. If this meets
your needs, we recom ·
mend qui~:k acfion . N366

PRICELESS
In the summer time
na lure comes to life in
it s fullness. We are of ·
ferin g her e for the fi rst
firne 41 acres and a
12" xb5' mobi le home in a
sc enic settin g t hat wi ll
open you r eyes. Has a
spring, dril l ed we ll ,
24")(60' barn . All for the
low price $37 ,500. II JS7

VACANT LAND

CENTURY 21
NEW LISTING
3 ACRES
Three acres. Nearly all
cleared . Drilled well.
Electric and telephone
service available. Close
to Wildcat Hollow, Vin ton County. Nice spot
for mobile or house.
Priced right!
Nl79
NEW LISTING
LANO
9 112 acres . Lots of
t imber . Several older
bui ldings. Dug well .
Located
in
Perry
Township. Mineral
rights are with proper ·
ty , Directly on Rl . 233.
$14,900.
#381
VACANTLANO
71 acres, more or less,
Harrison ·Twp. some
saw t imber . Pri ced low
for today•s market.
S18,900.
Nm
LANDI
80 acres more or I ess
located in Lawrence
County . Approximately
15 acres of good botlom
land, 40x5() barn . 1400 lb.
tobacco base, 2 dug
wells. Priced at only
$39,500.
N364

NEW LISTING
VACANT LAND
66 acres Harrison Twp .,
well fenced , large por ·
tion has new woven wire ..
with
steel
po sts .
Estimated 10 acre s
t illpble, some t imber,
large road frontage. Ex ·
ce ll en! buy $25,000. N 367
DON'T MISS
THIS BAR GAl N!
37 acres of va c ant la nd .
This joins w ith th e 0 . 0.
M c intyre Park Di str ict .
Can be used for hunt ing ,
camping, or development . owner will help
finan ce qualif ied buyer .
S2 1,50Q.
N 287
FARMER JOHN
Has the wanderlu st .
Says "se ll my land".
Located on a state
tiighwav thi s 39 acres,
more or less, has 17
acres t illable, 1200 lb .
toba cco base, barn and
rural water ava i lable.
For further intorm a·
tion , please call.
N 339

--

MINT CON DillON
Elegant and charming
best describes thi s all
brick r anch on well
landscaped lot in Srping
Va lley . 2 or 3 bedrooms,
LR , FRM, for mal O R,
fireplace, . cherry stepsaver ki tchen. Bes t of
material s, workm an ship. Full deluxe base ·
ment, 2 car garage,
efec tr jc eye, much
more . Reason for sell ing
- re tirem ent . One of our
better homes . Good
- 307
Loca tion.

CENTURY 21

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
Hig h priorit y . 7 acr es on
SR 35, Spr ingl ie ld 8.
Green Twp . La ndsca ped
and ready to se ll , plenty
wa ter t aps ava il able.
Don 't wait. Thi s should
sell.
n so
BUILDING LOTS
one -half
acre
lots
located at Kerr Har ·
ri sburg Road, county
water ava l able.
"N332
INVESTMENT LANO
Ideal location , 9 acres.
more or less. L ots of
road front age , one mil e
f rom Rio Grande, St . Rt .
35 past Abie 's Au to
Part s. I nterest cd? Bet
ter callnow!
NJ72
RING THE
BARGAIN BELL
Two lots, 90 x 220 each .
100 % flat. County water
availabl e. M inutes from
town. Priced to sell
rapidly .
1320

CALL NOW
42 acres, untouched at
$10.900.

..

NEW LISTING- SITTING PRETTY
Sitting very pretty, nestled In a grove Of
trees, you will find th is friendl y brick
home . 2400 sq . ft . of living space . ..
bedrooms, built in kitchen with lots of
cabi net room . Large living room , din·
ing with slidi ng glass doors, 1lf2 baths.
full basement, 2 car garage with doors
on f ront and back . Heated by natural
gas. Situated on f ive acres. ma l nlv
wooded . Close to m ines . Addi1ionalland · ··~' .
can be purchased . Ca ll now , busy lik.e
th is are hard to f ind .
llll
LONERS OR LOVERS
WANT PRIVACY?
Mobile hom e, loca ted on
New on the market Is
ten acres of wooded
this 14 ' )1(64 ' electr ic
area . Dr ill ed well , coun·
mobile nom~. '1 BR . on
tv rd . Pond and ex tra
~owards Rtd_
ge, near
ou tside bu ild ings. Good
Crown Ci t y . S1tuated on
ga rd en area . Bord~rs
1 acre surrovnded, b~
o
wiTt\ way ne National
woods . Lar9e 10 &gt;&lt;~
Forest . $16,000.
#374
porch , drdled we •
PERHAPS THE
underpinn ed, ~17 , ~. Ul
ULTIMATE
NEW LISTING
HAS ARRIVED
EXCELLENT BUY
First offering on th is
2 mob ile homes and 'h
39'h acr e farm located
acre . Both hOmes are
on blacktop road. 17
completely furnished .
acres tillable , com ·
Natural gas heat, cou,.
tort able 2 or J bedroom
ty water . Clo$e to tOYin.
home w it h storm win ·
Green
E lem ef"!tarv .
dows &amp;
aluminum
Live in one, rent the
siding, good barn, 1200
other .
flU
lb . tob acco base, county
RIVER VIEW HOME
wa ter available . We
ONE YOU CAN
haveit - don' tm isssee ·
AFFORD!
ing i t , S~9.900 .
11313
The owners are retir ing
IFYOUTHINK
or itwouldneverbefor
OF YOUR FAMILY ...
sale . .c bfdrooms, 2
Picture them in this J
baths w i th sh owers.
bedroom nom e. Just
complete ki tchen, all
listed ·first offering on
appliances li ke new In the market. Your fam ily
el ud ing ce ram ic top
will have enough elbow
ranoe . m icrowave oven .
room to spare! L iving
etc. LR . Den , D R, patio,
room . d ini ng room ,
'1 car garage . Drilled
f am llv room w i th
well. Many more extras
fireplaCe . central hea t
on th is 100'xl20' lot .
and air , huge pat io, 2
Frui t trees, garden . It is
car garage. All we need
bea ut iful. 10 m !nute
is one call · one showing
dr ive from Gall ipolis.
and you will say " th is is ...
Pr ice reduced for Quick
it! "
.4' 3SJ
u l &amp;~
1 J44
- SO NICE TO COME
LOW MAINTENANCE
HOME TO !
LOW UTILITIES
Owner has reduced the
LOW PRICE
price on t hi s 53 ac re
LOW MAINTENANCE
and LOW UTIL I TIES
farm! Newly remode 1·
ed 3 bedroom home
are what one can expect
10 f ind in this attrac ti ve
ba'r n , tobacco base:
pond , plenty of water ,
home. Three ~edrooms,
JOxA'1 n ew metal
2 . ~attls , famlly . room,
build ing wi t h co ncrete
d1n1r'1 9 room. k1fchen .
••
f loor . Take a look, you ' ll
Over 1 acre of ground,
like it . Reduced to sell
Woodburner . cou nt y
NOW! $ 42,500 .
Nl9l
water . LO W PRICE . 1

HOME+ SAC RES
QUIET ... RELAXED setti ng sur
r ounds th is two stor y remodeled coun·
rry home localed on blacktop r oad .
Completel y furn ished, 500 lb. tob acco
base , good ba rn, nice workshop for t he
man of the house, ga rag e, pl en t y of
water . Better See Th is One. ONLY
$39,900.
N l7S

N2IJ

VACANT LAND
36 acres, + or -. Pro·
d 1
·t bl
e
spect
Rd . ing
Lan lots
su a of
for buld
acreage of your own en joyment
Close
to
Bidwell , Porter or St .
Rt. 160. Only a few
m inutes tr om Galli pol iS,
$21.000.

N 376

GREAT LAND BUY !
This one is yours now, if
you call now! 70 acres.
+ or -. some saw
timber , mostly wooded ,
line finec es tair, county
road . All m ineral r ights
inci \.ld ed . Land never
floods. S15.000. Please
don 't ask f or a less
pr ice.
fl 376
'
ROOM TO ROAM
There is pl enty of room
to roam on thi s 30 acres .
Road frontage on
blacKtop road . Some
timber , spring, smal l
po nd . County water I
availabl e. ' 19 •500 · If 371
BUILDINGLOT S
nice bui lding lots .
With in rrn ntues of town.
Water avail abl e. Priced
right ..
NJSI
4

'

Auctions

Professional Services

BIG AUCTION every W&amp;d .. 7
pm . Hortlord
Comm un ity
Center Hartford , WV , 4 miles

OH IO RIVER AUCTION,
every Tues . ~nd Fri., "7pm,
537 N1 High St ., Midd leport , OH . For assign ·
men1s. call992-7460 .

CALL
US for
your
photograph ic needs. Por trait. Commercial and wed ·
ding photography . Tawney
STudios. 42.4 Second Ave .

Po meroy · Ma~on

above +
B~1?gc

1 YR . OLD J bdr house.
fireplace &amp; garage, utility
barn, extra trailer pad. 10
acres. Call379·2115.

.40 ACRES LAN D on Boi!ey Run
Rood . Good hunting, timber

all mineral ri ghts. $12,000 .
141-2442 .

THREE bed roo m .
Totol elec tr ic h'ome on o Iorge
lot i n Hutch ison Sub -Di vision ,
742-1047.

MODERN

LO T FOR SALE - Por1er
Brook Sub·divi sion . F ai r field
centenary
Rd .
Rest ricted. Caii446-B62B .

SEVEN ROOMS and ba th. 2

SUNDAY PUZZLER

REAL ESTA TE loans . Purchase
and refinance . 30 year te rms.

VA. No money down [eligible

IIX

/"ll f;USC.,
' fl ••Li. IH '

74
76

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65 St llt: Abbr

122 Cilck bt:'ell r&gt;
l_ ll Wr11mo fl111e!
125 Wt11p

66 E· &gt;~
6 ~ Srr1all chil d
69 Sal ur n s
ch ild

70 Rave
71 Speck
72 Fu ll o l Sui·

126 G.;~ll l r~ ,

12 8 SmJ!I rtHJ
129 Egypl•an ·
131 Toll
132 Ca llie genu s

!

29- man
3 1 Possessive
pronoun

36 D i ary. e g
37 Nobleman
39 Mine en-

1ill Li ke · Su ffi x

79 EqLnl ab le
142 lnterjeclion
82 Cylnldr'IC&lt;ll
143 Co llege deg .
84 Va lleys
144 Food !ish
85 Ob 1a1ns
145 C hairs
86 Og le
147 W1nged one
88· Nevada c oly 149 Ice 89 AI IIIUde
150 Once more
90 A1cls
152 Rips
92 L•sl ed
154 Follow
94 More direc 1 156 M an·s name
88 Ddlseed
158 River bank
99 Latv1an na159 Ant
t ive
160 Lassoed
100 Sailor
161 LIQUid
102 M 1xes
measure : PI
103 M ans nam e DOWN
104 Ell1t0p1an
1 E x tra
t 1118
2 lrnf)l1 erJ
105 Cron1es
3 Swmesc
106 Wall palllt·
cu rrency
4 Sca le nol e
1119
5 Dawn
108 Nal100r
Stlt::!€p
goddess
100 Pronoun
6 F1xed
11 0 Lu tu1 conam ount
llHlChon
7 Slud•o
111 lnctecen t
8 Race ollel 11? Al l rtr screen
tuce
11 I Soulhwesl 9 Pnn ter"s

111 Wo fid -119 Co llege oiii-

I

Jd 1ng

133 Pierces
Marsh bnds 135 An c1ent
Pu l on
138 Pee1 Gyni' s
Races a momo 111cr
lor
139 Sod
An c1en t Per - 140 Ocean

measure

10 -- Momes
11 Lad le
12 D'VIIlQ bird
13 R1ver tslan d
1-: College deg
15 Hun tmg dog
16 O ec l~red
17 F v1•ryone
l H Pr1 1f1 0 wl
19 A1 no 111n1
20 Ret tnue
21 A dherent o l .
Sullix

tr ~mce

40 Sow
4 1 Shellfi sh
42 Coun1ed
calories
43 Hammer
44
46
48
49

92 Retained
93 Challenge
94 Japanese

96 Evade
97 S l air pari
99 Ordinances
101 Arjll bo ne
105 Sly look
106 Flesh
107 Land par cels
111 Fu zz

Fuel
E&lt; ists
Man 's nam e
Possess1ve ·

11 2
113
11 5
11 6
11 8
119

127 Wa ndered
129 Consporacy
130 Midwes tern
Indi an
13 1 Play on
word s
132 An1ma1
134 ln secl
136 Lawl ul
137 Frock
139 Melody
140 Wil h€H!d
144 Cra \al
14 5 Unc le -146 Weig h I olin ·
d1 D
1·1i Snake
14 8 L1mb
149 Be •l l
151 S t

u

,, ,.,H llt; ! ldCf..

1 5 ~1 P1111 ICt:;

,qq

r; u CGII H? ~I

9 1 G t ow1 nn ·Jt .t
of

,.
•

11

Ac lual
Depos11 s
Shade lrees
Man 's name
Matu re
Hard o l
hearin g
12 1 Train
123 Cooled lava
125 Chasti se
126 Pro l ec 1ive

50 Sen sed
5 1 Grape -52 Pee Wee 53 Surg1ca1
threildS
55 Sl1arper
56 Camera pan
57 L ync poem
58 Eva lua l es
61 G1r! "s name
63 Jog
64 Keep
68 Wr ilmg pod s
70 R ep ii ~S
71 Si nke oul
71 ~ 1 ng ol
b1rds. PI
74 Drunkards
75 Wea H1er
word
77 Leases
78 Pulvenze
80 Clan
81 Lamp t P)
83 Thlll qS. Ill
18W
8d Can111PS

&lt;:Ju r•atJb1 1·

REAL ESTATE : I acre lot in Rig·
gscrest Ma nor. between Tup·
pers Pla ins and Chester ,
Phone 985· 3929 and 985-.41 29.

abori gine

par i

pronoun

ve1erons) . FHA · A s low os 3
per C'iml down {non. veterans) .
Ira land Mortgage Co ., 77 E.
Slate, Athens. 61-4-592·3051 .

NEW

LISITNG

'

'
I

refrigerator,

dish
washer ,
3
bedrooms, hardwoOd
tloors and carpellng .
Also washer and dryer,
self -propelled mower
aM
many
other
features .
All
for
SA0.380.00.
LOVELY · 2· STORY
FRAME - • bedrooms,
e~ulped
kllchen, 2
bathS, loiS of carpellng
and panellnv. N .G. forc ed air heat, full base·

ment, garage, carPOf't,

becll'ooms,

1112

·-........
=-......

216,E. S.-d Str"t
POMEROY Nearly
maintenance free . 2
bedroom home with full
basemen! and extra lot.
Walk to lhe store.

...

m.ooo.

and
electricity
available . Good home
sites for A -Frames.

"'

..

",,

...

"'

NEW LISTING- Clean
60 acre farm al Alfred.
Lots of buildings, gOod
fences, minerals and
farm house. A real !rae tor farm.
BUILDING LOTS - In
Baum Subdl~lslon, will
offer. Others

,.n t u r~ Synrlleat~ .

lne

LISTING - Nice frame &amp; brick ronch, 3
w .b. fireplace in liv ing r m .• full basement,
garage, also, 2 bedroom block house, 1.76
close ro hospital .
N0051

, •I• H.J

LISTING - Attractive 3 bedroom home, balh,
room, storage bu ilding, nice level lot , only
, 1572

o~·~•c~Y RIVERVIEW HOME - This charming
has 4 bedrooms, formal dining room , kitchen
i built·ins, librarv or family room , 5 fireplaces,
2112 baths, lerge 2 car garage, beautiful lot with tron·
tage on lsi &amp; 2nd Avenues, call today for an appointment _
N0115
CUSTOM IUILT
Rt. U3, only 2 miles
1'12 bath, living room
kllcllen and laundry room .
heal and air con dillon . Garage and workshop plus a pony barn. over
3 acres with spill roll fence . Call for appointment .
$39,1100.00.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY -MIDDLEPORTExcellent location on lhe " T" . Well established, do ·
lno good business. Owner refiring . It's The Sewing
Center. Call Bill Childs todlscussdetolls.
.

LAND
$625.00 per

24 ACRES LAND- On Rt . 1 By -Pass, $15,000.

GOOD BUY - Nice 1968 Belmont 12x55 mobile
home, Frankl in wood burner, new furnace, only
S11 ,500.
# 1115
PORTER - Nice 12xSO mObile home with addition
on back. , furnished and air condition. Iaroe garage
andlargelot, S16,900.
#0961
CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - Small farm w ith 3
bedroom home, new full basement, large bat'fl 30
acres of rolling ground, city school district.
f1 OOeo
30 ACRES - Bea utiful building site, nice rolling
land, large barn , located on Rodney -Cora Rd., pric·
ed to sell now.
•
N0522

139 ACRES - GOOd 4 bedroom home with furn iture,
bath, fully carpeted, full basement, large barn, all
mineral rights and some coal and limestone. 11 1170

-

NICE LOT - Good building site located in Ri&lt;
Grande, oas, sewer &amp; water avala lble.
f/0054..

Evenings Call
~rvin Bllomet~t ~. 67~27

DOWNING • CHILDS
RODNEY, BROKER

BILL, BR, MGR.

Oscar Baird~ ReaHor 446-463?
John Fuller1 ReaHor 446-4327

Phone 992-2342

Eve, 992·2449

HOUSE FOR SALE

.

Jrge lot, large

~drrno _,

9 ACRE LAND ON Rl. 143, SIO,OOO.

"'' ' II
.. .. '-!

.,

' uG' home with 3

STING - G&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;"SO"; n 1room cottage in town.
sell laot .
\.U
,¥'1400

liM ACRES FARM NEAR MINES acre Including all m lnerols.

. . . "' '
''I""••
··.:

......

r~-

, ..tV\) .

NEW LISTING 27
acres near Forked Run
Lake. Wafer a~d elec .
available. $15,000.

REAL ES TATE LOAN S
SPECIALIZING IN F .H .A .
AN O V.A . I NSUREOMOR ·
TGAGES - MILLONS TO
LE NO . FAVORABLE IN - • .- •:
TE RE ST RATE , LOW OR
'
NO DOWN PAYMENT
FOR VETERANS. LONG
.,
TERM FINANCING AND
NO
PREPAYMENT
PENAL Tl ES .
THIS IS
.,
THE WAY TO DO IT, IF
YO U CAN QUALIFY .
REFINANCING
ALSO
AVAILABLE ,
CALL • •
TODAY
FOR MORE
t"'!
DETAILS. LINDA LANE · 7 ,.
446-1517.
\"• ..

OVER 35 Acres of 'h lo 5
Acre lots, 4 ml from
Hospital, '~• mile from rt
160. In sausage plant area
pn Evergreen lolng Bidwell
Rodney Rd ., priced $200010
$4000 per acre, some
wOOded . -1-46 -7708.

OING BUY -

~~~aO:,;';,~
nice bi S!'l( p[ft0\"
Is·
ldtng, c . ....

RENOVATED
2
bedroom home, nat. gas
furnace, carpeting, din·
lng area, 2 car garage
and e•tralol . $25.000.
70 ACRES- Will sell al
a llnle over $200.00 per
acre.

STONE Nice one
bedroom home with
bath, nat. 011 F.A. fur ·
nace with clly wafer and
2'12 acres. Reduced to
$20,000.
NEW LISTING 2
level acres wllh large
shode trees. 3 bedroom
home, ceramic bath.
na1. oas F. A. furnace.
Garage wllh fool room.
Ideal for family .

CLOSE TO TOWN - Nice frame home, 3 bedrooms,
cellar house, garage with large storage room , 2
small buildings, 2.2 acres priced to sell qvick,
S38,900.

EW LISTING - Ver y well kept cedar ranch home
one of Gall ia {:;;~tSO\.D' 'inest subdivisons,· 3
lb&lt;•drooorns, 2 ful l bath
_ square feel of livi ng
repla ce. free pool and clubhouse .
11 tl598

22 ACRES - Wllh water

..

NEW LISTING - Beauty in the wOOds describes
this lovely BHevel with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths liv i ~g room with w.b. fireplace, fam il y room w ith ~ . b .
f•replace, kitchen with range, dispoSal and
dishwasher, utili ty room and oarQaQe. Nice setting
on 2 acres on 51 . Rl. 55&lt;1. Callloday . •
.1'0598

NEW LISTING - Beautiful! ~ rolling farm of 45
acreS. Lovely home with 3 bedrooms, l :IA baths . ful ·
ly carpeted , t he w ife w ill love this one. Also, 2 car
garage, toba cco -base, 3 barns, pr iced to sell fast.
call tOday .
# 1175

suio.

FOR SALE BY OWNER ,
jus! 4 ml from Cliy limits,
lovely 2 bdr house .on one
acre ,
pallo,
partial
basement. carpet, drapes,
county· water and cistern, 1
lh car garage, like new,
gOOd storage building, lois
of schubery, shade trees.
excellent garden wllh fruit ,
priced lo sell co li 446·3-«14
for appointment.

l , . • br urut• rt

RODNEY - Four year old three bedroom home
with aHached oaraoe and large fenced lot, pri ce in clu des some appliances, available immediately.
# 083

COUNTRY Lilli NO WithoUt a lot of ground
lake
care of . ~~ acre lot - 11h stat:Y hOme just five miles
from !own on Hysell Run. l bedrooms, bath, living
rOom. d lnlno room, family room with large wood burning flrelace . Peaceful. $25.000.

. ......; f '

mea sure

CHESHIRE - Nice ranth w ith 4 bedrooms, l'li
baths, full baseme~t. hardwood floors, corport ,
beoulifu llarge lot.
N 1579

-..

BR, 2 blths, FR, LR,
Suitt In kttcfttn, DR. 31ft
ground. .
446·2157

SALE OR TRADE · 75
98. Gd. conH., call
• p .m .• oiA6·8553.

8 ROOMS · New paint, out- FOR SALE : l bedroom
len and storm_doors. Lg. house. Well water. In Brad·
kitchen, gold carpel. Tree . bury . 992·5871.·
shaded corner lol. 4th. &amp;
Rl. 554, Cheshire. 2 ad ·
lolnlng lots, $3,900. 614·367· NINE CHOICE Building
lots for sale by owner .
7639 or 813-638-1722.
Location is Hldeawa ·f
Acres. l lJ-4 acres to J34
HOUSE FOR SALE - By acres. Beautiful country
owner. 3 bdr ., lg. L.R.
selling, level lots, city
foyer , complete kllche~. school dlsl., rural wafer, .
O.R ., U.R., &amp; bath. All approved
subdivision,
electric . City Dlslrlcl wllh · restricted. Come have a
nice level fenced -In yard. . look. &gt;4 mile to Rt. w. 3
FHA approved. Call ol40· mi . to Rl. 35 &amp; Mitchell Rd .
7161 or o140·4942.
Owner will help finance .
Call 379· 2196 for in HOUSE FOA tale on Brownell formallon .
Ave. 992·5204.

PLEASANT ATMOSPHERE
$42,900.00
Lovely home, 3 BR, bath and utility
room . Large living room &amp; dining
room. Fully equipped kitchen with
side by side refrigerator. Large
level landscaped lot. Be the first to
see this nice home conveniently
located in town . Owner will FHA or
VA. Ci ty schools.
LAND-LAND
-42 acres more or less
with large frontage on
Rt. 160. Excel lent for
residential or commer·
cia I development.

baths,

--

medSUH?

..

carport, patio, fenced
yard. This you must see.
559,500.00.
REALTORS
H_,ry E . Cleland, Sr.
H_,ry E . Cleland, Jr.
m ·2U9
t9H191

FHA ·VA -Convenl ial Home
Loans , Columbus First
Mortga ge
Co . ,
loan
representative ,
VIoleT
(Cook ie ) Viers, 463 Second ~ '- ·
Ave .. Ga llipol is, Oh ., 4C6· .. ' "·
71721
•• .

l !:i:i Ne ~Fll ivr
1')I Ch1PPS1.J

10 ACRESroad,
PLUSc a~·~~~:a~~~:~~m~~i.
blacktop
garage, pond , barn, close to
church,
P'.O., and Rl. 35. What else could anyone want. # 1082

polio. •A low 121.500.00.
NICE
!·FLOOR
FRAME - ·3 bedrooms,
batft, N.G. heat, storms,
glass enciOied porch,
part basement, garage,
about lacres, frults .and
grapes and others.
$15,000 .00 .
MIDDLEPORT- Love·
ly hOme located In e•cellent neighborhood,
br ic k and frame . 5

"

FOR SALE - Land, 10
acres, Centerpoint Rd .
Hardtop road, rural water.
Call614·262 ·5916.

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

..

electric

..:.t

di t Ch

OFFICE 446 7013

available, on a raod ad·
jacenl lo OOOd subdlvl ·
sion. Call for financing
available . $27,500.00.

range,

.'

OWNER MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY
F .H.A. OR V.A. SHOULD BE
. AVAILABLE
You wi l l not f ind a better buy for the m ... .1ey on to·
da y's market . The owners want th is house sold to·
day and have r educed the price far below Its true
value. It inc ludes l bedrooms. 11h ba ths, large
roomy built -in ki tchen and din ing area , huge fa m ily
room , ga rage and unusually large sundeck. . E)( ·
cellent loca t ion on large lot, 2 mile from town In
Green Grade SchoOl Distric t . This is your chance to
buy good clean modern home at tess than market
va lue. Call the Wiseman Avency , 44,·3643 .

Ph. Home 446-2230

ranch lype, full basement wl!h rec . r90m, 2
,Iaroe woork benches,
lully equipped kllchen,

..

TWO BLOCKS !rom bus1neu
district in Middleport , ou t of
high w oler , 3 bedroom, eat· in
kitchen . pant ry, dini ng roo m ,
living room and bo1h . Nolurol
gos fu rnace . fu ll bosemenl .
and Ol1 iC , en closed bock yard .
washer .
dry er ,
ronge ,
refr igerator. curtains Or"Jd
corpetir'lg included in purchas ing pr ice . Call992·32 43 afte r 6
p. m . for appoin tment .

acres . 992·2523.

RUTLAND - 2 bedroom and bath frame home on
large lol. Recenlly remodeled, new roof, central
heal. Jus! $16,000.

Syracuse, 1 year old

~--------------------------------------~--------------------------~=--------------------------------L--~J
Auctions

*' PhyHisAssociate
·Loveday, Realtor

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

land,
sec.luded, on a OOOd

OJ.a or 687-0130. McCall &amp;
Groza Reo! Estote Co.

110ACRES
NICE FARM
Beautiful rolling green
pasture land or farm ing
land located on a state
highway . Large 2 story
frame farm
horne.
Rural water system, 2
~hicken
houses, corn
crib, milk house or tool
house. large 30 'x40 '
barn w ith 12' x40' shed,
meta l roof . Good line
fences . Good farm, good
locat ion . Reasonable
Price. CALL NOW.
INCOME PRODUCING
PROPERTY
8 rooms · 4 B.R. home . .4
rooms downst airs plus
bath · rents for $108.00
mo. 4 rooms plus bath
upsta i rs
rents
tor
$118.00 mo . Live in one,
rent the other. Lar:ge
yard. garden space,
storage bldg ., wa sh
room , carport. Front &amp;
rear porches. SEE THIS
ONE .
$ETTING BY THE
LAKE
A lovely log home with
large beams, natural
wood, beautiful loca ·
tlon, basement, garage,
2 acres, over 1600 SQ. ft.
of living area . And do
you like fishing , if you
do, then you wi ll love
this
quality
home
overlook ing the lake.
ALL THIS FOR ONLY
$75,000.00 .
PDMPE11
Excellent design in a
home that could be
yours. Style plus com tort all combined . LU)( ·
urious master'B.R . with
private bath &amp; walk -in
closets. Equipped rustic
style
kitchen
with
breakfast nook . Large
recreation &amp; family
rOQm with open stone
fireplace plus formal
dining room &amp; living
room . Walk out of en trance foyer to an ex: ·
cept fona I courtvard.
This home was built
wilh living in mind . Just
the home you 've a lways
wanted.
NICE COMFORTABLE
BROOM HOME
Brick, 3 or 4 BR , with
walk -i n closets, full
basement,
built -in
backporch, nice~. large
Iron! porch . Carpeiing
mooern kitchen, cnY
water, 3/-4 acre of good
garden land . VVoodburn ing firelace. Garage.
Lots of shrubbery.
Beautiful home at a low
price.
• 6 ROOM FRAME
ON 2.84 ACRES
In Mecervitle . 2 or 3
B.R., rural water, 2 car
garage . Wood-burning
f ireplace, barn, smoke
house with cellar. Large
shade tree, also peach &amp;
apple frees . All mineral
rights goes.
·
LOVELY 5 ROOM
COTTAGE ON
22ACRESPLUS
2 or 3 B.R .• full base·
ment, bath, Franklin
woodburner. Has its
own water system . 1162
lb. tobacco base, gOOd
line fences . Appro• . 10
A. tllloble . Approx _
10'x12' storage bldg .
Also 18'•35' metal barn .
Lovely mini farm In lhe
country . CALL NOW.

A view that can'! be beal is offered In !his 2 yr.
brick home located near Cherolals HIHs Lake.
Features s bedrooms, liv. room, kitchen w1th ~II!·
Ins 21f2 baths g1me room, family room~ office, utih·
IV ~nd laundry room. Over 3100 &amp;q . ft. Carpeted
throughout wllh Intercom, buill in vac. and heal
pump,_2 fireplaces . 3 lo 58 acres avalloble. Finane·
ing available.

446-2359-388-84'70

------~

In country . Over
sq. ft. of living
space. Large living room, 16' x18', far:ni ·
ly room 17')(12' w ith wood -burnmg
fireplace. Rural water, central air. ap ·
prox. 112 A. of clean land. Large con ·
c(ete patio, carport, 3 mulberry trees,.
A beautiful modern country home.
You must see this home to appreciate
its beauty . PR ICED IN THE 30's.

42 ACRES &amp;
UNFINISHED
TRI · LEVEL
Loca te d
on
Slate
H ighway w ilh lots of
road frontage_ Approx·
imately 42 A. of level to
e)(tra nice rolling land in
Kyger Creek School
Distric t. Unfini5hed tri ·
level with 3 or pos;ibiY 4
B.R. A chance to own
your own lafld &amp; home if
you ac t now .

WOODED AREA
4MILES
FROM GALLIPOLIS
Here is what you have
been looking for . Ap·
proximately 4 A. of scat·
tered trees. Pick your
own building sites,
develop as you desire .
An xi ous to sell now .
$15,000.00
2 acres of land plus 2 BR
cottage . Ex:tra nice roll ing land on blacktop
road approx . 1 mile ·
from Holzer Hospital.
HOME &amp; INCOME
PRODUCING
PROPERTY
6 rooms, 3 B.R. home
located on Old Rl . 160 in
Porter with 1974 14'x72'
mobile home. l B. R.
wi t h complete kitchen,
electric stove &amp; refrig.
F.A . furnace , central
air. Home has a stoker
coal stove . Live In one,
r ent the other. Gallia
Rural Wafer Sysl. 11!2
lot. All for only $29,000.
CALL NOW .
NEW BRICK HOME
IN THE COUNTRY
Spacious 3 B.R. home,
wife approved kitchen
with plenty of built-in
cab-i nets ,
range ,
refrigerator &amp; trash
compactor. Full base·
ment ' with !ireptace,
pool tabl e, pmg pong
fable &amp; uti I ily area with
washer &amp; dryer . This
home is priced to sell -·
MAKE
YOUR
AP POINTMENT TODAY
DUTCH COLONIAL
Style, beauty, charm,
comfort - all describes
this home. 4 B. R.1 2112
b•ths, equipped eat-in
kitchen , fam ily room
w ith fireplace, formal
liv ing room 8. dining
room . You won 't believe
this home unless you see
it for yourself . Make
your appointment today
to walk Into the entrance of one of the most
lovely homes In the
area . PRICED IN THE

S60's.

- ·- -- .

1.7At:RI:&gt;Un588 Nice 5 room home, living room 16 II. • 20 ft.,
e~ulpped kitchen &amp; for ·
mal
dining
area .
Beautiful landscaped 1.7
A. of lawn &amp; garden
area . Lots of young
maple trees, - 2 gr~pe
vines, apple trees. N•c.e
2 car garage wllh attic
storage space. 14 fl. x 85
fl. concrete driveway .
Make your appointment
today to see this well
kept lawn and home .
IN CITY SCHOOLS
3 B.R .• brick alum ., 2
car garage, bath with
shower, car-pel &amp; hard ·
wood floors, solid oa!J
kitchen cabinets, range,
refrlg ,, washer &amp; dryer •
attached
10 ' •16 '
workshop . Has private
patio, 2 exira lOis
available if desired .
TWDHOUSES
One 5 rooms - one 2
rooms, also storage
bldg. Located on Main
St. In Crown Clly. Large
level lol. Front porch.
All lor only $11,900.00.

57 ACRES
·
. S11,9C!!J.OO
'Level to rolling, large
barn in excellent condl ·
lion, tool shed and
storage building, deep
well, rural water, ap prox. 3!) A . pasture and
some small timber.
A VERY
LOVELY SETTING
12 1tx~51t . Mobilehome
situated on 1.4 A. 1.. ft. x
22 ft . family room, 1 1h
baths 8. 14ft. "oil fl . car·
port. Drilled well with
electric pump. Lovely
blue spruce trees line
the drive to this very
neal &amp; well kepi home.
CALL TO SEE THIS
ONE TODAY .
75 ACRES
Lots of road frontage on
Mo"rgan Lane. Sorne
good line fencing. Some
white oak limber. Ap·
prox . 15 A. tillable. All
could be paslured . ALL
FOR ONLY $22,500.00.
SETTING BY
THE LAKE
CHAROLAIS
HILLS ESTATE
,
A lovely log home with
large beams. natural
wOOd, beautiful loca t ion, basement, garage,
2 ac.res, over 1600 SQ. ft.
of living area. And do
you like fishing , if you
do, then you will love
this
quality
home
overlooking the lake.
ALL THIS FOR ONLY
$15,000 .00.
DUTCH COLO~! tAL '
Style, beauty, charm .
comfort - all describes
th is home. 4 B.R .. 2'12
baths, e~ulpped eal -ln
Kitchen, family room
with fireplace. formal
living room &amp; dlnino
room . You won't believe
this home unless you see
it . for yourself. Make
your applontmcnt today
to walk into the en·
trance of one of lhe most
lovely homes in the
area . »RICED IN THE
$60' S.
31.,500.00
10ACRES
MORE OR LESS
LeveL gent! y rolll no
land with rural water
tap paid tor. Lovely
building sites with
enough
rooms
for
pri~acy. City Schools.
CALL NOW.
NEW LISTING
3 B.R. brick &amp; frame
home . Nice kitchen with
·· lots of built-in -cabinets,
range and dining area.
Large level yard. Owner
will FHA or VA this
home. CALL NOW.
1 LOT
Nice Lot 58 in Patriot
All level. Rural
available. Nlc e lol, Molv 1•
$3,750.00 .

w•••••••

1.34 ACRES AND
MOBILE HOME
14'x70', 3 B R :nobile
home &amp; land close lo
Ho~zer Medical Center,
9'x10' block sloraoe
building &amp; ce&lt;llar . This
mobile home is lust like
new . Must see to
bellelle.
42,900.00
VA A1'PROIIEO
An 8 room home, i ust
finished 4 B .R. frame
hOme with brick front .
carport, nice bulll·ln
cabinets In kllchen.
Rural wafer system.
12'x16' storage building,
large garden spot.
Within 2'12 miles frOm
Holzer Hosp. 2 A. of
landscaped yard. Lois
of shade trees.

�·- ...
'

••
1r-------------------------

D-12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

l ,..t lo· n•~ " I"'"'"'••·· ••I•""'"U II•·• "'"w~ll" I••"
I lhlm :-. ,..,,d~ lo•lll '"' , ,..,.,.,,. trdii• II••• ·~ ~~·· ••till•" •

f

Country festival announced
PT. PLEASANT - The Mason
County Farm Museum will hold an
old-fashioned Country Festival
Saturday and Sunday. Sept. 22 and
23.
Everyone is welcome and ad·
mission is free. according to Waldon
Roush, president of the museum .
Hours of the event are 10 a.m. to 9
p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6
p.m. on Sunday.
Roush says some interesti ng
activities have been planned by
Hazel Smith and her committees.
Visitors will be entertained both
days with country music, a nd
everyone will have a chance to
square dance on Saturday from 3 to 9
p.m.
There will be wheat threshing
Saturday with an old steam engine
powering
antique threshing
machine. The grist mill, also steam
engine powered, will be in operation
both days.
Corn meal , both yellow and white,
will be on sale throughout the
festival.
Some of the crafts planned for
each day include spinning, rug
weaving and whittling.
Cecil Smith and his committee will
be making apple cider to be offered
John E. Greene of Milton will have
a yoke of oxen and a span of mules
on the grounds. Rides will be offered
on a sled pulled by the oxen or in a
wagon drawn by the mules.
Across-cut saw contest, sponsored
by Keefer's service center. will be

includes rom

Heath United Methodist Church,
Middleport.
Mr s. Thomas explained the
operation of t.he senior citizen
program and how it it funded. She
also distributed leaflets explaining
the program.
There were three guests in
attendance and Jack Walker ,
president, presided.
Dinner was prepared and served
by the ladies of the church.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

GALUPOLIS - Four couples
applied for marriage license in
Ga!lia County Probate Court this
week.
Making application were :
Michael E. Dressel, 20, Gallipolis,
foreman, and Denee M. Oesch, ·18,
POMEROY - A 16-year-old youth
Gallipolis, sales ,clerk.
been committed to the Ohio
has
Timothy E. Gillespie, 19,
Youth
Commission for violation of
Gallipolis, electrician, and Carla D.
probation.
The youth has appeared
Rocchi , 17. Gallipolis, receptionist.
four
times
in Juvenile Court on
Donald R. Mount, 19, Bidwell,
·
delinquency
charges since April,
deck han d. and Tamara J. Theiss,
1979.
17, Bidwell, farmer .
In July, he was given a suspended
Earl E. Stover, 26, Gallipolis,
commitment
to the Ohio Youth
Mason County School's employee,
Commission.
and Electa L. Martin, 24, Gallipolis,
On September 16th, the youth was
hospital attendant.
found in violation of probation by the
Juvenile Officer, Carl Hysell, while
on the Pomeroy parkirig lot. The
commitment was made by Judge
Robert Buck. The youth will be
taken to a Direct Community
Placement within the state
sometime within the next two weeks
by Hysell.
The following traffic cases were
terminated by Judge Buck:
Brian Bowling, 17, Racine on
~
charges
of speeding. Bowling was
e
Willis T. Leadingham
•
fined
$19
and costs.
e
Reahr
e
Teresa Fetty, 16, Rt. 1, Langsville,
on charges of Left of center.
(accident involved). Fetty was fined
~.
$20 and costs.
e
It's nor unusual to find t hat the amount of money needed to finance e
Ray Patterson, 17, Rutland, on
e the l?urchase of a hom e and th e ~.~mount of cash in the bank account are • charges
of passing at an
too close tor comfort. When does it mak.e sense to pul l back your horns •
•
• and when would propriety say - "Go the limit." ?. .
intersection. Patterson was fined $15
•
It's better not to spend ev ery last cent avai lable for a home if you •
and costs.
customar i l y buy big ti cket items, such as cars and appli ances on tirTl e; •
•
Mary Ann Tripp, 16, Mason, W.
if the local property ta xes ar e likely to go higher ; or if you have any e
•
e unusual financ ial obligations , such as med ica l care for a member of e Va . on charges of failure to yield.
e !he family .
•
(accident iiwol ved). Tripp was fined
On th e other hand, you might just ify going the limit if you can make •
•
$20.00
and costs.
• a big, down. pay men! ; if th e home is unlikely to need mai.ntenance or •
Cline, 26, Rt. 3, P.omeroy,
Richard
•
repa1rswh1ch are aOove and beyond your personal capability ; if your
· outlook for finan cial advance m en t is bright, and if your famiy has pro· •
on charges of passing at an
41 ven that it c an tigh ten belts if yo u really have to.
e intersection. Cline, who has had two
traffic offenses was fined $15. and
e It ther e is anvt~ing we can do to help you 1n the fi eld of real estate
costs and his operator 's licenses
e please phon e or drop on al LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE , 512 Second e suspended for 30 days.
• 4ve., Gallipol•s . Phone 446 ·7699. We'r e here to help.
•
This disposition will he suspended,
~
all except for seven days operator·~

16-year old youth
committed to state

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~al

:
CEstate ~

.:

Today

•

.
:

i:~
.... ?Jtt. · :&amp;

GOING TliE LIMIT

.:

.
•

:

••

••

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

•.

Wants action ...

hrNtd and

MIDDLEPORT
Eleanor
Tbomas, executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging, was
the guest speaker at the regular
meeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club Friday night held at the

~lldrr""' "k ,, .....,, _,.,.1 po·r ..,.•l•t• r •

I

Rotarians given program review

an

:
~

I

beans. hot dogs, baked goods, ·pit
rodsted ham, ice cream, and cold
pop.
"Everyone should bring their
families both days and enjoy the old
fashioned fun and food," Roush
concluded.

held at 3 p.m. Saturday.
There will be goods for sale such
as clothing, plants. potting soil,
garden vegetables, books, furniture,
records, tapes, bird seed. jewelry'
corn meal and miscellaneous items.
Food also will be available. The
nwnu

I '"'" m~•• t ... "l"I"Ot ••lh '"" "k',... '111\oh ...,~ '• IIIII~' 11111•
I 1... ••lhho1d w"'oN lfllbl"·•lf•lll 11"'"' "''"1 . '"' ''"ifl""'l ,
I 1111/n'~ •Ill tiO" dlloO"h"'l'il l f"l \i'f! -~hllill l ... Ill K'""' '-'"" ·

DR.RATANSHAH

Radiologist
joins clinic
GALLIPOUS- Holzer Clinic Ud.
Administrator, Robert E. Daniel,
has announced the recent arrival af
another physician to the Holzer
Clinic Ltd. staff, Dr. Ratan S. Shah,
a Board Certified Radiologist.
Dr. Shah joins Dr. John Markley
and Dr. Tony Sola, who comprise the
Radiology Staff at Holzer Medical
Center.
A native of Ahmedabad, India , Dr.
Shah attended St. Xavier's Science
College and received his M.B.B.S.
degree from the Municipal Medical
College In Ahmedabad In 1974. His
postgradll8te education in India in·
eluded an internship at V.S. General
Hospital from 1972·73 and as House
Officer at Nagari Ophthalmic In·
stitute, V.S. General Hosplial and B.
General Hospital from January 1974
to March 1975.
Dr. Shah completed his internship
in the United States from July 1975 to
June 1976 at Mercy CathoUc Medical
Center of Southeastern fen·
nsylvania in Philadelphia, and en·
tered Radiology Residency in July
1976 at Gennantown Hospital In
Philadelphia. . He completed his
Residency there In 1!179 before
coming to Gallipolis.
Dr. Shah is tioard certiiied In
Diagnostic Radiology, holds state
licenses from Ohio, Maine and Pen·
nsylvania, and is a member ol the
American College af Radiology. Dr.
Shah resides in Spring Valley Green
Apartments in Gallipolis.
license suspension, providing that
"Cline attend a driving school in
Athens, which he agreed.
Cindy Haggy , 17, Rt. I,
Middleport, on charges of failing to
stop at a stop sign. Miss Haggy was
fined $10. and costs.

DEAR SIR :
On October 4, 1978, an Adv.ioory
Jury awarded judgment in favor of
my wife and I amount of $1,050 plus
costs of the action, with interest at
lhe rate of 6 percent.
It was ordered by journal entry
executed by Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun, that we recover from the
defendant Robert Meade the sum of
$1,050 compensatory ·damages, with
the costs of this action with interests
at the rate of 6 percent.
Precipe fa- Execution, dated April
14, 1979, has been fUed with the
.Gallia County Clerk of Ccurts.
Sheriif James Montgomery, upon
pressure from me and my attorney,
made a feeble attt~~~pt to collect
this judgment from Robert Meade
and reported lhat Meade had no
property or money to be used in
settling this judgment. This report
made o.n August 29, 1979. Only 11
months after judgment was
awarded.
In reality, Mr. Meade has 1 1963
Rambler a utomobile, a 1968
Chevrolet automobile, and a 1974
Chevrolet automobile, aU with clear
tiUes at Jhe time.
It is now September 15, 1979, and
still no action has been taken to
protect my legal rights:
Why does chief law officer of the
county not do his duty? Is it because
Robert Meade is a deputy sherilf? Is
it because this case is lost in a duel
between Judge Calhoun and Sherilf
Montgomery?
Something has to he done about
the deplorable condition of the
judicial system in Gallia County. I
invite replies from other citizens and
my many friends of Gallla County.
Sincerely
Mr. and Mrs. WUJiam Lee
SNIPERS KILL TWO
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) - Snipers, firing from~e roof
of a police building, traded shots
with leftist demonstrators, leaving
at least two persons dead and more
than 30 wounded on the eve of
independence &lt;Jay in this tiny
Central American nation. ·
·President Carlos Humberto
Romero's military-backed
government canceled today's
scheduled celelration marking the
I38th aMiversary of the nation's
independence from Spanish rule.
Security forces girded for more
violence as three major left-wing
anti-government groups called for
independence day demonstrations,
including a funeral procession for
those killed in Friday's shootout.

Court News ·

••

"

•

",,

GALLIPOLIS - Eleven ca- ~
were wntinued in Gallipolis;
Municipal Court Friday.
:
Charged with DWI, assault,\;
physical harm and no operator's •
license, the cases against Samuel ~
Meade, 18, Bidwell were continued. ~
Denver Wallace, Gallipolis,"
pleaded not guilty to a charge of: •
domestic violence. Bond was set at; .
$500.
:
Charged with grand theft aiM,~
David M, Harmon, Athens, pleadedM. :
guilty to the reduced charge o •.
unauthorized UBe of a motor vehicle!
The case was continued foC::
.
. ~~entencmg.
"
Tmy Slooe, 24, Gallipolis, pleaded::
not guilty to a charge &lt;i DWI. Bond~:
was set at $500.
•
Charged with . DWI, Dennl~
Fraley, 26, .Galllpolls, pleaded no(
guilty. Bond was set at 1319.
~
The case against Paul G. Cclllns,~
52, Ironton, charged with OWl, was·
continued.
;:
Charged with driving while under,
suspension · and no operator's.
llceru~e, the cases against David E.:
Stroud, 21, Galllpolis, wert!
continued.
.
Jerry Colley; 33, Gallipolla,•
pleaded not guilty to a charge ofifailure to control a motor vehicle; ·
Entering a plea ol not guilty to a·
charge of failure to display valid:
registration, the case against
Kamron Rezal, %1, Rio Grande, was,
continued.
:
Ten other cases were tennlnated"
In Judge James A. Bennett's court'
Friday.
:
Orin D. Wheeler, 21, Gallipolis;
pleaded guilty to charges ol Dwt
and failure to obey a lawful order~
and was fined ~ plus a six mcnt~~:
sentence, all but 10 days suspended:
A charge of failure 10 lltop after Ill!
accident wu clisnlaaed at the
request &lt;i Ule proaecutlon.
~
Charged with physical barm, the:
case against Doug Wheeler:
Gallipolis, was dhnt•w at the
request &lt;i lhe prosecution.
Dickkie VIars, Lawrence Co1111ty, ·
was found not guilty to a charge of
trespallling.
Forfeiting $25 on a charge o(
operating a vehicle with a defe!:tlve
exhaUBt was Bertie Browning, 23,
Galllpolla.
Francis Burdell, 70, Bidwell,
waived $30 on a charge of failure to
yield.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of ezcesaive apeed were
Samuel L. Morrill, 39, Gallipolis,
$29; Beverly Bums, 19, IUo Grande,
$32; and, John Thomas, 31,
Gallipolis, f;ll.

..

MEETING SET
NEBO- There will be,a meeting
of Ule officers and members of the
Nebo Cemetery Asioclatlon at Nebo
Church on Saturday, Sept. 29 at 1:15
p.m. Reports of put activities IinCe
last meeting and any new twlnesB
will be considered.

Stewart facing murder charge

Middleportyouthdiesfrom gunshot wound
Keith Landers, 17, a 1979 graduate
of Meigs High School, was killed
early Sunday morning by a .38
calilre •revolver allegedly fired by
his stepfather , Tom Matthew
Stewart, 31, at the Stewart residence
In Middleport.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reported Stewart. Is belnj(

held in the Mel£11 County jaU.
Stewart was to he arraigned In the
Meigs County Court tOday on a
murder charge, Prosecuting
Attorney Rick Crow said.
According to the report of Sherilf
Proffitt, the shooting occurred at the
Stewart residence at 235 S. Fourth
Ave., Middleport, about 12:30 a.m.

Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart are
!II!Parated and in the process of
getting a divorce, the sheriff
reported.
It was reported that Mrs. Stewart
had left the house about 15 minutes
before the shooting occurred. Young
Landers was lying on ~ bed watching
television when the shooting.

Street brawl ends with .stabbings
TWo Point Pleasant men received.
stab wounds in an apparent brawl
Sunday evening al 11 :30 p.m. on
Kanawha Street at the entrance to
W.Va. Malleable Iron Co., according
to the Point Pleasant Police
Department.
Wounded were Anthony E .
Blessing, 19, 2003 North Main Street,
and Roy Lee Mills, 21 , 211 Main
Street. Blessin~ was admitted to

Pleasant Valley Hospiial with a stab
wound in the left side, and is listed in
satisfactory condition. Mills, taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital by the
Point Pleasant Rescue Squad, was
treated for a stab wound to the ann
but refused to be admitted.
Details are sketchy, according to
Patrolman Jerry Higginbottom, who
investigated the incident.
The Police Department were

turnipg the rePOrt In to Prosecuting
Attorney Dan RoD this morning for
further investigation and possible
future charges.
There wer~ nunors of a third
person Involved in the stabbing
incident, but according to the Police
Department, there have been no
reports of such person. However,
there wece no witneSses at the scene.

•

VOL XXVIII NO. 108

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Attorney Crow, BCI Agent Hennan
Henry, and Capt. Robert Beegle,
Gar Wolfe, investigator, and Deputy
David Ohlinger of the sheriif's
department.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to the scene but
Landers was dead upon the unit's
arrival.
Middleport officers took Stewart
into custody outside the residence.
Stewart was reportedly not at the
residence when Mrs. Stewart left the
house a Short time before the
shooting.
.
0. Keilh Landers was preceded in
death by his fa Iller, Orville Landers.
He is survived by his mother , Judy
Landers Stewart ; three lrothers,
Robbie Eugene Landers, Charles
Andrew Landers and Thomas
Mathew Stewart, Jr., and a sister,
Tammy Jo Landers, all at home,
and several aunts and uncles.
(Continued on page 8)

KErniLANDERS

•

enttne

at

e

occw-red. He was hit in lhe face and
it was reported that he was knocked
from the bed by the impact. A
younger brother, Robbie, telephoned
for help after the shooting.
Young Landers was employed by
lhe village and he was held in high
regard by some of the neighbors for
whom he occasionally worked
during his time off from his regular
job. Nelghborl said he was per·
sonable and ambiUous · and had
secured another job in a trade which
he was to begin when he became 18.
Middleport Police requested lhe
assistance of the sheriff's
department following the shooting.
Answering the request wer.e Sherilf
Proffitt, Deputy Lou Oslxrne and
Sgt. Randy Forbes. Middleport
officers on the scene were Capt. Sid
little, Lt. Bill Miller, Sgt. Dave
Woolard and Sgt. Joon King. They
were joined by Dr. Joon Ridgway,
assistant coroner; Prosecuting

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1979

Kennedy pushing tax cut, tough guidelines
WASHINGTON ( AP ) - Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, at the brink of
a 1980 challenge to President Carter,
qgests It may take a tax cut soon
10 cope Wllh rising unemployment,
and tougher wage1Z"ice guidelines
to cope with inflation.
Insisting that he hasn 't decided
whelher to run , Kennedy silid he has
been "heartened and encouraged"
by the support generated in lhe 10
days since be said he'd consider it.
The MassachUBetts senator said
he had decided by Lalxr Day "that I
at least would not preclude the
possibility of candidacy ."
Always before, KeMedy had said
he upected Carter 10 run and
Intended to support him . But he said
he reconsidered during the swruner
at the urging af congressional
colleagues and other suppocters.
He said his family approved, and
he also concluded that a challenge to
tile incumbent president would not
divide the Democratic Party more
Ulan It ·already is divided .
" I became convinced that the
divisions that existed In the
Democratic Party and in the
country existed today ... and were
very deep-.;eated, and they would be

there whether l was .a candidate or
not," he said in an interview with
The Associated Press on Friday.
While Carter suppocters coo tend a
Kennedy challenge could be so
divisive as to make the Democratic
nominee vulnerable 10 a Republican
in lhe general election, the !.enator
said past Contests have seemed to
" energize the party. bring new
people in ."
He said those factors and, most
important, "my own deep concerns
about the di.i-ection oflhe nation, our
ability to deai with many of the
problems that we're facing here in
this country, about the mood of the
nation ," led him to consider
running .
' KeMedy said his decision is not
made yet, and he dDesll 't koow when
it will be . But he also said that if he
runs, he expects to lUIIpete in the
Iowa Democratic caucuses. They
will open . the delegate selection
process on Jan . 21 , and to run there ,
he would need some time 10 organize
and campaign.
He said economic problems, and
the way Carter is addressing them ,
are one of his principal concerns,
and will weigh heavily in his

decision about 1980.
Kennedy offered no specific
alternatives to carter economic
policies, but questioned whelher the
president's leadership can inspire
confidence thai such problems as
inflation •and recession will he
handled.
"It's back 10 whether lhe people
have a sense of confidence Ulat he
can deal with these issues, I think
'that's the matter of deepening and
increasing concern to people as we
ctme to lhe 1980s," he said.
On Thursday, an AP-NBC News
poll showed only 19 percent of those
questioned rated Carter's work
excellent or good . It. was the lowest
overall job rating for an American
president in 30 years.
Asked what he would do
differently, Kennedy said "the way
we ame to grips" with rising prices
and unemployment will set a course
for tile early 1980s.
"I today dm't call for a tax cut,
but I think we are going to have to he
sensitive to the need for that over,
potentially, the latter part of this

year and the first part of next," he
said. "How that is shaped,
formulated, is going to be a very
imporlllnt choice and decision by the
administration .. .. "
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller said Friday that " at the
moment, it would be inappropriate
to consider a tax cut." Carter said on
July 16 that "ii unemployment starts
getting too high, then I will take
action," probably to lower lhe
payroll taxes that finance Social
Security.
But nine days later, he spoke out
against Republican tax-cutting
proposals. And administration
economic officials have been
playing down the possibility of
payroll tax cuts.
Kennedy also said he thinks pe~Je
are confused about the Carter
administration's commitment to
wage-price guidelines. He said
Americans don't know how sincere
thepresident is about his own
program.
He said voluntary guidelines
worked in the early 1960s. "As a

technique; it has merit." liut he said
it sometimes seems the guidelines
are not really the president's, but
only a project of inflation adviser
Alfred E. Kahn. He said tbat "leaves
some confusion on this ."
Again , Kennedy did not offer
specifics as to how he would make
the guidelines more forceful. Like
Carter, he opposes mandatory wage
and price controls.
Carter announced the current
guidelines last Oct. 24, to be
effective for one year. A revised
program is due soon.
The current standards call for
wage increases to be held to a
maximum of 7 percent, and for price
increases to be held onH1alf of one
percent below the average increases
of the last two years.
Despite that program , consumer
prices this year bave increased at an
annual rate of more than 13 percent.
The administration is trying now
to fashion a compromise that will
enlist lhe support of organized labor
for revised guidelines . .

On oth~r points, ~ennedy: -Said
he anticipates "a heavily-contested
battle" for the homination ii he runs,
and does not believe that Carter
would withdraw as a candidate no .
· matter what happens in the primary
elections.
-Sad it is "clearly a possibility"
that Chappaquiddick, the accident in
which Mary Jo K~echne drowned
in Kennedy's car 10 years ago, will
be raised during the campaign. "I'd
respond to questions about it, as I
have," he said.
-Said he has considered his
personal safety during a national
campaign: Two of his brothers were
assassinated, Robert as he
campaigned for the 1968 nomination,
John in 1963 as he prepared to seek
r~Jectlon to the presidency.
Edward Kennedy said it would be
foolhardy to ignore the risk, but that
to O'l'erstre88 it would IIJril.t hll
effectiveness. "But it's something
that I'm very much aware of, taking
lhe kinds of precautions that I think
are necessary."

Fire season hits

Brush fires blacken California skies
By The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Stubborn
!rush f1res roared out of control
today in Southern California ,
bla"ckening thousands of acres and
destroying more than a score of
fashionable homes as firefighters
called in reserves from as far away
as Maine and Rhode Island.
Residents of Hollywood Hills'
Laurel Canyon area were stUMed
when a fire pushed by 25 mph winds
burned its way through 19 expensive
homes in the wooded area
overlooking Los Angeles.
Among the homes destroyed were
lhose of blues musician John Mayall
and actress Mackenzie PhUIIps, a
regular on the CBS television series,
"One Day At A Time ."
"My home, my beautiful home,"
said George Hunt as he walked near
his home on Grandview Drive,
where houses are valued at as much
as $500,000. " It was so beautiful, so
lush here. "
Three hundred firefighters
stopped the flames after water drops

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12 killed on highways

Air meta l l ic si lver, one of t he nices1 around .

By The Associated Press
At ieast 12 people were killed in
weekend traffic accidents in Ohio,
the Highway Patrol said Sunday
night. Two of the accidents,
resulting in lhree deaths, occurred
in Delaware County.
The patrol counts highway
fatalities in the state from 6 p.m.
Friday until midnight Sunday.
The dead:

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were made by helic~ters and two
"super scooper " airplanes that
skinuned the Pacific Ocean to fill
lheir water tanks.
The Forest Service asked for 800
firefighters to help the 2,473 men
and women battling the blazes which
had consumed more than 55,000
acres.
"We've gone about as far as we
can wilh what we have, so now we 're
drawing on our flreflghtln!l
resources nationally," U.S. Forest
Service spokesman Lee Redding
said Sunday.
The crews called in to help were
from stations in Indiana, Ohio,
Maryland, Pennsylvania, Maine ,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island,
Connecticut, Michigan , Minnesota
and Wisconsin.
Meanwhile, orders closing !lie
Angeles, Los Padres, Cleveland and
San Bernardino National Forests
were issued during the weekend
because of extreme fire hazard.
Only one of the major fires, the
Pinecrest blaze which at one time

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Ollar ends December 31 1979

· · · ·Erb·eaeras In .Pome·

PRI!Jf'~ FOR WINTER -

Dr. Jack Hart, Bunker Hill, was at

work SatUrday prejlaring for the upcoming wlnte.r m;:. The chalnnan
rl. the dlpertment of conununicaUve arts at Rio Gr
College, Hart's
wood-a~ttlllg efforl$ were motivated by having j~ , d $200 for a firllt
shipment of home heating fuel. Larry Ewing Photo{

l ;.

SUNDAY
MENTOR- Michael P. Fischer,
29, of . Mentor, in a motorcycle
accident on Ohio 306 in Lake County.
ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Debbie
Greenlee, 18, of Malaga, in a one-car
accident on Ohio 800 in Behnont
County.
FREMONT - Virgil W. Shobe II,
26, of Warren, Mich. , in a one-car
accident on Ohio 510 in Sandusky
County.
MARYSVILLE - Larry E. Ring,
38, of ~lain Clty, in a two-car
/ accident on n Union County road.

,,

SATIJRDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Ronald E.
Kingery Jr., 19, of Gallipolis, in a
one-car accident on a Gallia County
road.
AKRON - Lou J . Jackson, 54, of
Akron, in a two-vehicle accident on
Interstate 77 in Sun\mit County.
LISBON - Kevin D. Strabley, 21,
of Salineville, in a one-car accident
on Ohio 164 in Colwnbiana County.
CHARDON - Marylou Allyn, 50,
of Burton, in a two-car accident on
Ohio 87 in Geauga County.
CANFIELD - Robert A. Shaulis,
18, of Newton Falls, in a tw&lt;Kar
accident on Ohio 534 in Mahoning
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
DELAWARE - Thomas Curry,
29, and Carla Curry, 23, both of
Delaware, in a train-car collision at
a railroad crossing on a belaware
County road.
DELAWARE - Roy M. Russel
Jr ., 34, of Colwnbus in a one-car
accident on J .S. 23 in Delaware
County.

threatened lhe radio and television
tr ansmi tiers serving Southern
Calif&lt;rnia at~ mile-high Mount
Wilson, was expected. to be under
control today . After charring nearly
5,000 acres of valuable watershed
since Tuesday, it was contained
Sunday night.
Farther south, San Diego County's
most destructive brush fire In
decades was liought under control
after seven bours Saturday, but
ocean breezes caused flare-ups
Sunday that kept more than 100
firefighters busy. Seven homes were
destroyed and the fire was halted .a
half mile from Torrey Pines High
School.

Some 9,800 acres were charred
from the blaze that started at Black
Mountain and swept through the
Rancho Penasquitos area . Damage
was estimated at more than $2
million, according to fire
authorities.
Six other brush fires in lhe San
Diego area left up to 50,000 homes
and businesses without electricity
Sunday.
Meanwhile, Oregon firefighters
controlled three forest fires in the
southern part of the state after the
·blazes had charred I ,600 acres. ~e
largest fire, In the Winema Nationai
Forest about 30 miles north of
Klamath FaDs, burned 1,150 acres.

Jailed teachers ·
reach agreement '.
By The Associated Press '
Negotiators for Paterson, N.J.,
teachers, bused from jail to contract
talks, reached a tentative se\tlemll(lt
with their school board, but ' across
the country more than 30,000
teachers in 10 states were walking
picket lines today.
In San Francisco, Mayor Dianne
Feinstein met Sunday in maralhon
negotiating
sessions
with
representatives of some 3 600
teachers, but 60,000 students ~ere
kept away from !!Chool today as the
strike · continued into" its second
week .
in
western
Teachers
PeMsylvania's New Castle district
ratified a new two-year cdntract
·Sunday, said lhe state Education
Association, whi\~ teachers In
Ringgold and Union City walked out.
And tentative agreements were
reached in three Dlinois school

Weather

Sunny and warmer Monday. Highs
near 80. Partly cloudy Monday night
and Tuesday. Lows Monday night in
the upper 518. Highs Tuesday near
80. The chance of rain is near zero
Monday and 10 percent Monday
nip;ht. .

districts - East Maine Elementary,
McHenry Coooty and Springfield,
but teachers were manning picket
lines in seven districts.
The strikes have disrupted classes
for more nearly 750,000 students
nationwide, ahnost half ·of them in
Michigan.
In Indianapolis, where a judge
ordered teachers to return to class
and lhe school board to find the
money to give them a 7 percent
raise, school board officials satd
Sunday they had not found the
money and teachers srud they were
not going to work without a contract.
Some 21 teachers ln. Woodlrldge, ' .
N.J., ~re to . go to court Tuesday
follo'Ymg lhelr arrest last week for
refusmg to obey a court order to
return t~ work.
. Negotiators for the 1,700 ~eachers
m Pater!lln were jaDed Fr1day for
refusing to obey a back to work
order.
· Buses took them from detenUon
centers to the negotiations before
the settlement was reached Sunday.
There was no word on the detaUs
of the settlement. Samuel Ranhand,
a state-appointed mediator, satd
"money was the Issue," ·and a
ratification vote was to be taken
today.

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