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                  <text>'/ul• ·tl•1 11 Ul

1.'1

II ir11m

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Fnday , Oct. 19, 1979

Dallas county o'f ficials want .body exhumed
DALLAS ( AP 1 - Enough doubt
has been cast on the identity of the
body buried in assassm Lee Harvey
Oswald 's grave that the remams
should be dug up to see if P~s1dent
John F . Kennedy was killed by an
impostor , say Dalla s County
medical offtcials
The Dallas Cow1ty offic1al s pomt
to discrepancies found by I heir own
check of records and UJ others
alleged by a Bnt1sh auU10r wh o says
Oswald
may
have
been
unper!!llnated by a S&lt;JVJet agent.

Rut officials m adjaeent Tarrant
C'ow1ty . where Oswald's grave IS
loc ated 1n Rose Hill Cemetery , have
re"sted the proposed exh uma tion .
They say the)· Will do "" only 1f
orderl'&lt;l by a court.
Os wald , nanwd as Kennedy 's lone
a ss assm
by
the
Warr en
CommJ ssiun. was shot to death whlle
m police custody two days after

Comm iss ion
was
wrong
tn
concl udmg that Oswald acted a lone
but saJd 11 had no solid evidence . '
'l'tle assassination spawned many
th eo ries , including so m e that
Oswald was part of a conspiracy,
that CUban Prestdent Fidel Cast ro
or orga nized crime played a role in
the murder or that Oswald himself

Kennedy's assassinatiOn m 1963.

··somebody has ra1sed the
quest ion a s to who is m that grave
The ea'iiest way to find out is to ... rW1
some tests," Dallas County Medical

was a

Ear her

Uws year. Ole House
A s sassmation~ Co mnuttee sa id
there was a posstbthly the Warren

n

Sovi~t

agent.

vc prOd UCzng

Carter feels O_r L
as much oil as possible.
l

President Carter says he llunks
the members of the OrganizatiOn of
Petroleum Exporting Countri es are
producing as much ml "' they can .
He also told delegates tu a national
energy conservation confer enee in
Washington on Thursday that ,
"There ill no way to reduce pri ces . "
Carter's tone was milder than it
has been several times in the past
when he has criticized OPEC sharply
Carter praised S..uw Arabia ,
saying the country .. " producmg
more oil than th ey want. ·· But he
was still critical of [jbya . "They arc
eager to cut back for pol11lcal pur-

HARDY MUMS
61!2'' POT
11.()() each or

6/1500

Large selection of House
Plants
and
Hanging
Baskets .

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse , Ohio

992 -5776

poses, harassment or even blackmali," he said .
Libya , Kuwa1t, Iran and

Venezuela ha ve tncreased the pri ces
of some or all of their oil m the past
two weeks and mdustry sources say
Iraq will boost its prices by about 10
percent on Saturday .
OPEC had set a ceiUng price of
$23 .50 a barrel on oil prices at its last
meeting . Ubya , however, broke the
cei ling , raising its price to about $26
a barrel.
The next OPEC meeting is in
December and analysts say that if
enough of the organization's mem bers increa se prices before the
meeting, the increases probably will
be a pplied to the whole cartel.
Saudt Arabia 's oil minister , Shetk
Ahmed Zakl Yamani, said Thursday
thaI the key to prices could lie with
Iran . Discussing the OPEC meeting
in Venezuela on Dec . 'tl, Yamani
said that if production in Iran is
maintained at current levels , " I
thmk the increase, if any , won't be
what we're afraid of. "
If Irarua n production is c ut,
Yamani said, the United States
should ration gaso line .

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

:

N.

f

l

w. COMPTON. O.D.

I

OPTOMETRIST

:

OFFICE HOURS: 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
ON THURS . ) - EAST COURT ST . , POMEROY .

1

I

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

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
in tht· stalt: of Ohio , at thl' dose of business on September 29, 1979 published to
resJl&lt;m.e to cal l mado· by Comptroller of the Currency, under dUe 12, Uolted
Stales Code, Section 161 .
National Bank Region Number t

Cash and due from depository institutions, . •. .. , , . ... , •.. , , , • , . $2,137,000.00
U.S. Tre as ury securities ......... .... .... , , .. , ....... , ..... 6,402.000 .00
Obl!galtons of States and polillcal
subdivi s ions in t he United States, ......................... , .. 2,335,000 00
All other securities_ . . . ..... . .. .... ... _... , , ,, .. .. .... , , . , .. 5e,OOO.OO
Federal funds sold and secunties purchased
under agreements to resell . -- .- . ... .... - ..... .. .. , .......... 5,475,000.00
Loans , Total~excludmg unearned income),,., .. , 13,742,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses .... , ....... 91.000 .00
Loans , Net ........... ,. . , . , .,. ..... , , ......... .. , ...... 13,651,000.00
Bank prem1ses . fum1tu re and ftxtures, and
other assets representmg bank premtses . . .. ,., .. , .. ,, ......... 'lSJI ,000.00
All other assets .........• , ....•••..••.••.•••••••.••..•.••••••• ?1)1 000 QQ
TOTAl. ASSETS .. _.... . .. . .......... -.- ................... $30 1614 0000.00

lit

---........
Ill

-

....

....&gt;- ........c

-0 ... c
::::»

A.

u

Demand deposits of mdividuals, partnerships, and corps .... . -- . .. 5,632,000.00
Time and savings deposits of indiVIduals ,
partnerships, and corporations . .. .... ... ..... - .. ... .... . .•. 18,512,000.00
Deposits of Uruted Swtes Government. ..... , ,,., .. ........ ,., .... 8,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisiOns
i• the United States· · .. · · · .. · · · · .. · .. · .... · · • · .. • ...... , . , 3,009,000.00
Certified and off1cers' c hecks ........ . . , .... .... ...•• , .... ,,,,, 215,000.00
Total Deposits .. · .. ·····" .. ······· .... , ................... '!7,576,000.00
Total demand depoSits ... . . . ........ ,._ ..... , .. 6,666 ,000 .00
Total time and savmgs deposit.-.- .... .. , ........ 20,910,000 .00
All other liabiUties ....... . ...... . ............ , • . ,,.,. , .. ,, .... 189,000.00
TOTAl , IJABIIJTIES \excl uding s ubordinated notes
debentures\..,, ...... , .. , ........... , ...... , ... , ...... ,. f27J65 1000.00
rA&gt;rrunon stock :
a . No . shares authorized
12,000
b. No. shares outstanding 12,000
1par va lue I,,., •. •. ,., ,., ... S300,000.00
Surplus ............ - . . ... .. ........ .... . . ........... , . .... 1,500,000.00
Unwvided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital res&lt;lrves .. · · ·- · · .. · · · · · · · · .. . . . ... , . . - .... 1.049,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
$2 8491000.00
TOTALIJABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPIT AI., ••.• , .••.•• .• AAt,OOO.OO
Amounts outstanding as of report dale :
Time certificates of deposit in denommatins of $100,000
or more .•.• · • · • · · • · • • · · · · · • · • · · · · · • · · · • . • • . • . . • . . . . . • . . • $1 ,fJ71 ,()(K).OO
Average for 30calendar days (or ca lendar month ) ending with report date :
Total deposits ................................ , ... ,. ,, ..• , $27,120,000.00

I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Conditionis true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
Joon Wolfe
Oct. 11, 1979
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement aC rl!$lurces and liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of
ourknowledge and belief is true and correct .
Edison Hobstetter
Horace Karr - Directors
Philip W. Kelly

'

~~~~d~e~~:!~

and is hur ler! tn

Eddowes says he has ev idence
indicatin g that I A't' HEt rwy Osw11lrl .

• •

Saudi oil is the cheapest in OPEC
and Yamani said- his country is under pressure to raise prices. He
repeated calls for consuming
nations to cut back their use of
petroleum .
In other energy developments :
- Republicans on the Senate
Finance Com.'llittee tried to tie a
Social Security tax freeze to
President Carter's proposed "wind·
fall-profits" tax on the oil industry .
The administration opposes any acl!on now to cut taxes , but Carter
could be forced to accept the freeze
as the price for getting the windfall
tax .
- The Senate approved a $1.2
billion emergency fuel assistance
program , tying it to an Interior
Department appropriation bill. The
House-passed version of the Intenor
bill does not include such a
provision . Sen Jacob Javits, HN Y., the sponsor of the fuel
provision , said: "The important
thing is to get the dough out before
people freeze to death ."
- Rising oil prices have meant
nstng fuel bills for airlmes which
are laying off employees and
boosting far ... Thomas G . Plaskett,
a senior vice president of American
Airlines, said that by the end of this
year, fares will be at least 't7 percent
higher than they were a year earlier.
Wall Street analysts also said the
airlmes were preparing for the
recession which is e,MJeCted to cut
travel.

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of Ute

Charter number 1980

e

E:x.ammer Ll1a rles S . Pt&gt;tty saJd
Thursday .
" We said to Tarrant Coun ty, if you
exh wne him we 'll te~t him . We h£tvc
more capabilit y along that line than
they do, " Petty sa1d. " If there 's a
question and a reaso nable quest1on
that sc1enee can resolve. then that's
our business ."
Petty's offi ce was approached tn
August by an attorney representing
Br1t1sh author Michael Eddowes.
whose book " The Oswald File"
sugges ts a Sov1et agent to ok
Oswald 's place wh1le Oswald was in
Russ1a. came Ul the Umted States,

who defected Ul the Soviet Umon m
1959, was not the man who returned
to the Ulllted States in 1962 with a
Sov iet wife and represented htmself
as Oswald .
Oswa ld's wtft&gt; , Marina , who has
s mce
r~marrie d ,
could not
1mmediate ly be rt:ache d for
c:omment .
F.ddowes satd the 1963 autopsy
records fail to reco rd a scar lwhind
the body's le ft ear from a
ma~toidectomy Oswald underwent .
He cords also mdicat e Oswald's
dental x.,ays were not compared
wiU1 the corpse's t..,u, , he adds .
Petty's offi ce decided Ul compare
1ts auUl psy records with records
from Os wald 's Ma rine Co rps

I ."iC 1:L .\ . /Jam•' 1:$

1/allilnlil '17

f,.,,.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted -- Jerry
Stobart,
Pomeroy: Unda Dye , Lancaster:
Barbara Harris , Chester : Flnyd
Williams , Langsvi lle: Delord
Donohue, P omeroy: Martin l{oush,
Kutland.
Discharged --S haron
Bailey.
l{oberta Dimll, !;Jances Howery,
Mary Gilkey, Randy Arms , Diana
Herdman. Jerry Stobart, Edna
Wayland .

REVIVAL SPEAKER
The associate of the Rev . Lew1s,
Chuck McPherson, will be the guest
speaker this evening and Sunda}
e vening at a revial being held at The
Salval!on Army , 115 Butt&lt;&gt;rnut Ave .
Pcrneroy, at 7:15p .m .
Saturday an Open Air will be held
at the lower parking lot at 6:30 p .m.
followed by the regular service at
the Salvation hall . The Hev . Larry
Lewis will will deliver the mesS&lt;J ge
Saturday everring and Sunday morning at 10 a.m. The public is mvited
to attend .

following and extended illness
Mr . Baker was bom at Reedsville
the son of the late Linley and Addie
H.andolph Raker . He was also
preceded 1n dea th by his wife, one
son, t hree daughters , three brothers,
and two sisters.
Mr . Baker was a carpenter by
trade in the Columbus and Reeds ville area the greater part of his
life .
Survivor~ include one brother,
Michael B. Baker , Coolville one
sL,ter , Mrs . Alwilda Wilson, Point
Arena, Ca lif , and several meces and
nephews.
Funera l serv1ces will be held
S..turday at 2 p .m. at the White
Funeral Home m Coolville, With the
l{ev . Eldon Bla ke officiating . Burial
will be m the Wetherby Cemetery
near Coolville. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime .

unba
VOL. 13

NO. 38

lll(/iun11 .'JO N-we.~tern 0

+

SUNDAY . OCfOBER 21. 1979

FRI., SAT ., SUN .

•

Court Hobert J . Hawley, d1vorce
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Robert J . Hawley , Pomeroy .
filed suit for divorce against Joyce
E. Hawley , Hawarden. Iowa .

TRICK OR TREAT NIGIIT
The Chester Fire Department has
set Tuesday , Oct. 30, for trick or
treat night in the Chester Community . The event will begin at 6 and
end at 7 with the siren to blow
marking the beginning and end.
GOt:;K:'IE:R WINS
NEW YORK I AP I - Lee Goerner
has been selected as the fourth
wmner of th e Tony Gddw1n
Memona l Award
Goerner 1s an assistant editor at
Alfred A. Knopf . Th e award,
est ab~shed tn 1976, 1s presented
annually "to an outstandmg yo un g
edJtor , in alternate y~ars fnml
I::ngland and the Umted States. and
mcludes a stipend lor travel and
li\1ng e:q&gt;enses.

Economy.

• •

!Continued from page 11
Hoadley, chief economist of the
natioo's largest bank, the Rank of
America, say the real decltne ma y
still be ahead .
Hoadley told a gathenng Thursday that , " If the third quarter IS
positive , we 're not in it (a recession )
and haven't been in it but we have
been doing a lot of worrying about
it. "
But pinpointing" the start of a
recession is an academic nicety .
There is litUe debat&lt;&gt; among
analysts that the nation is in for its
seventh recession since World War

II .
Whether it started in March or in
October, analysts 1n and out of
government say that by the end of
the year business activity l'ill ha ve
slowed dramatically .
The Carter
administrat io n
forecasts tha t nearly I million
Americans wiU lose their jobs by the
end of next year.
Data Resources In c., o f
Lexington, Mass ., the •·natioo 's
largest private forecasting linn,
believes the downturn will take an
even worse employment toll ,
especially in the wake of the Federal
Heserve Board 's action Oct. 6 to
sharply tighten credit.
Robert Gough, director of the
firm's forecasting operation, said
Data Resources is predictiflE an
unemployment peak of 7.8 percent
late next year. That's 2 percentage
points - or 2 million people higher than .he current 5.8 percent
· unemployment rate .

•

ln

POMEKOY-A strike by the Me1gs
I .ocal School Olst nct teachers ended
1ts fourth week Fn da y with no sdtlem ent tn sight.
NegotiatiOns were simp ly nonexistent during the week desp1te the
fact that schools were officiall y
closed for the first tinw on Tuesday
morrung .
Parents, teachers and the boa rd
indicated that they felt the closmg of
schools would expedite a settlement.
However, it has not worked out that
way .
There ha ve been no
negotiations during the entire week .
Apparently , the board of
educallon has turned down an offer

Bruce Lee•
spirit lives in ...

Circle
cf Iron
«~[RI I,

from f\ep . Hon James to come into
the d~;tnc t and do what he can to
resolve the differences between the
teachers and the board.
The
tea chers association indicated it
would accept help from Rep . James .
The d1stnct's board of education
has had speCial meetings set for
every mght during the past week but
met only on Monday night, the
regular meeting night, when a
diScussion of the strike situatioo was
held with some !50 parents and
teachers. The board is scheduled to
meet again at 5 p.m. Sunday.
Meantime , Friday afternoon
Continued on Page A-2

t.._....

Avco

. COLO\' · '
•

,

•

,.t,

fJ, •.

f

•

ONE WEEK
Friday -Thursday
Oct . 19 -25

ROSCOE SATfERFIELD
Fuueral services for Roscoe Satterfield, 86, Maple St., Middl eport ,
who died Wednesday night at his
home will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday
at the Haw li ngs-Olats Fw1eral
Home With the l{ev . Ed Fryman orft c Jatmg . l:lur&gt;al will be in Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends
m ay caU at the fw1eral home from 2
t o 4 a nd from 7 to 9 p .m. today .

oom Oeloise
Jerry Reed
Susan Pleshett in

SEVERAL hundred persons were on hand lor Friday's three-hour
celebration of the 50th anniversary of Ute completion of the Ohio Hiver

Navigation System . The event was held along the Gallipolis park front.
See page B-1 feature on the event.- Larry Ewing photos.

HOT STUFF

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of showers Monday
and Tuesday. Fair Wednesday.
Cooling Utrougb the period . Lows
Monday in Ute mid 50s to low tills .
Highs Monday near 80. Lowo
Tuesday and Wedneoday S5 to ts
and hlghli in the 51111 by Wed·
nesday.

PG

GRANTED DIVORCE

In Meigs County Common Pleas

PRICE 35 CENTS

sight,
strike continues

.'

OCT . 19-20 -21

MIDDLEPORT -POMER OY

,.,.- No end

I .N

'

tntint

tnttS

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANl

7

Cfl

Purtllw 14 MSU 7
..,j

se r vice, which it obtained from tlle
Navy Reference Department in St.
Louis under a court of mquest order,
accord mg to Assistant Med 1cal
EKamlner Dr . Linda Nor ton .

f'tints by

Carm/1 -;

17

Area Deaths
RAYMOND R. BAKER
Raymond R. Baker , 83, Ht. 1,
Reedsville, died Thursday evening
at St. Joseph Hospital , Parkersburg,

;!() }.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
CARPET MILL ENDS

Weather

•MOSTlY JUTE BACKS
•BOUND EDGES

Mostly sunny but continu ed breezy
and mild today. High in the upr 7U.
to low 80s . The chance of rain near
zero.

• EXCELLENT QUALITY

9'xl2' ........... s74.00

Meigs planners

12'x12'.- ....... sg4.00

receive grant

12'x15~ .. ..... , 114.00

POMEROY - The Meigs County
'RegiOnal Planning Commission has
received a $10,000 grant - $7,500 in
cash and $2,500 matchmg, in kind ,
from the Farmers Home Admtnistrahon for comprehensive
planning as it relates to economic
development, water supply, waste
disposal and housing .
The commissiOn has signed a contract
with
James Jennings
Associates to be consultant on this
project. The conunission will meet
at 1:45 p .m . Monday with Jennings
to start determination on the exac-t
direction and the work plan. A
regular meellng of the conunission
will start at 3:10p.m .

1

Shop Friday until 8:00 and Saturday
until 5:00 and save on special
weekend sale items throughout the
store.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

e,.,fP CJ'nto Our

~cutKcrs"

'10cuBs

Meigs County Jaycees 2nd Annual
WE'RE OPEN

MON·THURS.

7:30 til 10:00
FRI.·SAT.

7:30 til 11:00
OCT, 19-QCT . 31, 1979

ADMISSION: 11.00 per person
Located In the Old
Pomeroy High School
- GUIDED TOURSCome see: • Dracula
• Wolfman • And More
Refreshment Stand
by Meigs County Jaycettes

GAHS ROYALTY - Gallia Academy High
School's 1979 homecoming queen, Bedt Yoho, center, ts
flanked by Janyellen Wood , left , first runnerup, and

Karen Browning , right, second runmerup , during pregame ceremonies on Memonal Field 1n Galltpol1 s
Fnday night .

Miss Beth Y oho crowned
GAHS homecoming queen
GALUPOLJS - Miss Beth Yoho,
was crowned Gallia Academy High
School's 33rd homecoming queen
during pr"1!ame ceremonies on
Memorial Field before approximately 2,500 Wellston and
Gallipolis fans Friday night .
Miss Yoho, a G AHS senior , is the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs . Allen
Yoho . She was sponsored by the Key
Club.
Greg Harrington, student body
president and one or the Blue Devils
senior co&lt;aptains, crowned Gallia
Academy's lt'19 homecoming queen .
Miss Karen Browning, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Howard Browning ,
was second runnerup. She was sponaored by the Future Homemakers of
America .
Miss Jaynellen Wood, daughter of
RU.'!St!ll Wood, was first runnerup .
She was sponsored by the Thespian
Club

Jay Sexton, vice preside nt of the
student body, prese nted the
honorees fl owers.
Parade Downtown
Prior to the homecomin g
festivities on Memorial Field, the
Gallia Academy High School mar ching band , under the direction of
Hod Tolti ver and Brian Oglesbee.
led a parade through downtown
Gallipolis . It was the band 's second
appearance over town Within three
hours - the GAHS musicia n.s also
performed during the L'elebralion of
the 50th anniversary of the completion of the original navigation
sy!lem of the Ohio Hiver during
park front c-eremonies around 4 p.m .
Prior to the GAl-IS-Wellston game,
the 16 queen candidates were
paraded around Memorial Field in
convertibles donated by Willis
Wilcoxen , Ike Wiseman and Thaler
Ford .

Listed 1n the order of their appearance were : Karen Brow n tn~.
Br~nda Dav1 s, Chn sty Dillon and
Joey Wil coxen, driver; Am1 Eplin ~.
Carol ~' elure, J oy Hen derson and
Randy Orr, dnver: Carolyn John ·
son. Ka ren K1s k1s and J eff Beattie.
driver: Lori Meadows. Cynth1a
Hupe and Phil Massie , dnvcr :
Jayne Simpkins , Beth Thoma s and
Kent Price, dri ver : Patty Slayton ,
Teri Wei her and Greg Atk.tns.
driver : J anyellen Wood , Beth Yuho
and Mike Dyer , dnver .
Gallia Academy 's annua l
homecoming dance Saturday n1ght
concludetl weekend activi ties
Bands Sparkle
l!oth Wellston and Gallipolis ban ds prese nted sparkling shows for the
hvmeeoming cruwd in perfect Ill
degrl'c weather .
l11c two ha nds presented their 1979
Continued on Page A-2

I

DEAN Epling , left , representing the local Propeller Club, accepted a
bronze plaque from the Propeller Clubs of the United States during
Friday 's 50th anniversary of the completion of the Ohio River Navigstion
System. Congratulating Epling during the park front ceremony is
Hichard Mackenzie. president of the ctty corruru.ssion.

Inside today.

••

Area deaths .. ...... , ...... , , .. , ........ , ... .. , , , , .. - A-4
Classified ads .... ......... ... .. .. . . , . , ... , .. . . . , .. D-5-11
Farm news .......... ... ...... . . . .. . ... . ..... .. , , . , . , ~
Lifestyle , .. ..... . ... _............................. 8-1-12

Local . . .. ..... ... ...... .... . . ............... . ... . . A-2-8
Sports , , . , , , .. , .. . . . ... ...... , , .. .......... - ....... C·l-8
State and national ...... . . . . .. . .. .......... . .......... D-1
TV gll.ide ....... .... ..... . .........•..•... . .....••••• D-6

Auditor Condee
issues reminder
GAI .LIPOIJS - Gallia County
Auditor Dorothy I.. Condee issued a
reminder here Saturday that farm
owne rs have until Nov. I to rile application for the two and one-half
percent rollback .
Applications are required for
owners with more than 20 acres who
used 1t for a place of permanent
r~sitlence .

If persons cannot pi ck up applications, contact the auditor's office whi ch will mail farmers an applicatiOn .

AGREEMENT REACHED
ST . LOUIS, Mo . ( AP l - Tentative
agreemen t was reached early
S.. turday on a new cootract in the
mo nth -old stnk e against Ozark
Alrlines, officials said .
Gilbert Kannenberg, a former
fl'&lt;lcral mediator and chairman of
the New Spirit of St. Louis Labor
Management Committee, reported a
maratllon bargaining session that
t.oegan FritLy had resulted In the
'·

' a l t ~l'

p;,w l

NORTH GALLJA HOMECOMING QUEEN - Miss Cindy Sillllon,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sisson, Porter, and a aenior at North
Gallia High School, was crowned 1979 homecoming queen during pregame ceremonies at North Gallia's stadiwn Friday night. Mls8 Silllm
was crowned by Dr. Gary Toothaker, county superintendent II. schooJa,
To make the event a complete success, the Pirates blanked vlsltlni Bin·
nan, W. Va ., 43-41, to remain unbeaten in seven games this fall. -Bruce 1
Gabriel photo.

.,

�A·2- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Oct. 21, 1979
A-3- The Sunday Tunes-&amp;nlinel . Sunday' Oct. 21 1979

Voice of the people
1•

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~

"X BIG

1

Are you optimistic or pessimistic

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TROUBLES

II ,,;--,_ __ _

, ...

',

I I I '

Columbus
man killed
Friday

.1":&gt; -

,.,

!WI
,O,Ll b!

......

about the future

OLENE BURDETI'E

~Five

of the United States economy?

HASTINGS, Neb. I AP I - Gerald
" Green, father
or 3-year-old
le ukemia-vic t im Chad Green
collapsed and was taken to ,;
: hospital Saturday after the boy's
~ funeral .

: Green, 29, was said to be suffering
.• deep abdommal pains. There was no
: immediate word on his condition .
: Green collapsed shortly before he
aod his wife, Diana, 26, were to have
flllide a public statement on the
next step m their legal battle with a
Massachusetts court .
Their attorney, Will ia m I..
Gmsburg , told reporters th e Gre.;ns
had decided to accept an offer or
11sy lum from Ca lifornia Gov .
Edmund G. Brown Jr .
"for the immedJBte future J 'm rathe r
pessimistic. I think m oney i.s gOing "to be lig ht
as hell for the next two to three years
However, over the long run, sinc(l t.he in terest
rate has gone up inflation should stop and
things straighten out...everyone IS going to
have to bite the bulle t for aw hile. that's a II "
Kent Crider ,
Gallipolis .

" I'm not optmustic .. 11 is going to get wor"' There's just not enough to go around. I
could work three job5 and stiU not make it
You just CB,jl 't stay ahead."
Carolyn Smith,
Ga ll ipolis .

Professor blames long term trends
•
for rise in Ohio juvenile crimes
BOWLING GREEN. Ohio I AP t -Seve ral long-term trend s m
American life are being blamed for
tilt• senous nse m j uvenile crime
across the co untr y , accordmg t o an
01110 professor .
The tr aditional institutions which
deal with juveniles are not serving
Ule nel'&lt;JS O( yo uth, accordmg to Dr .
Les li e J . Chamberlin , a professor of
~ du ra t1onal adm in istration and

No end •..
Continued from Page A-1

teachers met in Pomeroy , accordi~

CROWNING CEREMONY - Greg Harrmgton , nght, G AHS student
body president, crowns Beth Yoho 1979 homecoming queen on Memorial
Field Friday ni g ht. On left IS Jay Saxton, vice president who prese nted
the honoree's flow ers.
homecoming VICtor) v\.cr \'J::::.lllllg

Miss Beth.

• •

Continued from Page A-1
competition shows . GAHS perfCll'JJI4!d a revised version of the show
it presented at the Hock HiU game
011 Sept. 7. That show earned the
Galllans second place honors in the
Marietta and Pickerington MarChing Band contesl3 .
The Wellston band presented a
COIItest show it staged Saturday
d,uring the annual Athens Marching
Blind Festival.
" Following the Blue Devils 21-8

Wellston. the GAHS band presented
its first post-ga me show of the 1979
campai~n .

First number featured th e
majorettes periorrrung to John Paul
Young's " Love IS in the Air ..
F ollowing that se le ction, th e
musicians did a drill routine to the
Earth, Wind and fire 's hit. "Sep!.ember."
Next came "Ju&gt;i the Way You
Are," a popu 1 ~r tune by Bill Joel
now at the top of the music world .
final number, from the music of
Chuck Mangione, featured the flag
corps as the band played "Feels So
Good ."

Voinovich resumes campaign SaturdJJy
CLEVELAND ( AP) - Lt. Gov .
George V. Voinovich , a ca ndidate
for mayor of Cleveland, ha s
resumed campaigning for the first
time since his 9-year-old daughter ,
Molly, · was killed in a traffic
accident on Oct . 8.
Volnovich, who is running against
incumbent Mayor Dennis J .
Kucinlch, got back iniD the fray
Friday by speaking to about 50
residents of a high-dse apartment

building for the elderly and the
handicapped .

After th e meeting, Voic1ovich wa s
asked how he felt. He replied, "I reel
a little ragged ." He said he and his
famil y have r ece ived seve ral
thousand carr's and messages and
said they ·,,·ill try to answer them .
" TI~e people have been so good,"
he said. " There are a lot of goorl
oeople out there ."

to reports, and mid-afternoon an inronnational picket line was set up
the Powell's Super Valu Store in
Pomeroy . Store owner, Larry
Powell. IS a member or the district 's
board of education . During the
penod, when the infonnational
picket line was set up , it is reported,
several teachers entered the store
and HUed shopping carl3 to the
" bnm" and left the carl3 setting in
til€ aisles or the establishment.
At one point, it was reported,
Powell asked one of the teachers
talung part in the cart loading to
re turn to the merchandise to the
shelves if s he was not going to purchase It. She did return a part of it to
the shelves bel ore leaving the store
and the remainder or the items in the
ca rt to be returned to the she! ves by
store personnel. it was reported .

supervision at Bowling Green Statt•
University .
"Children are both a product and"
reflection of society," ht' saJd
"Adults can 't take" no-fauli
attitude."
The decline or Iam1il mflu&lt;' n&lt; c.
said Chamberlin, is among t11~._·
trends contributing to nsu1g youlh
crune statistics. He satd othl'r
contributors include ille mcreased
mobility off amilJes; the infl uence "f
television programs that leKituui zt'
illegal acts ID achieve an accept:&lt; hie
goal: incre a s ed empha sis on
schooling and a greater emphasis on
individual civil rights .
The same c runes committed by
young people aren't necessarily
considered crimes when comm1!!L·d

by &lt;tdull"l, f1lambt.·rl..Jn scl.ld
F ur L' xcunple, teacher s s ta~e

.'\tnke!&gt; to l.!t&gt;l answer s to t11e1r
quest IIJTI.'i: studenls. howl::'ver, an~
:-.uhJt 't I to iirr~:-.1 If they huld ;;t s1t-m ,
lu..! sa1d

· p,,JH'e an· mure Wllllng to arrest
and c h &lt;-Jr~t: young people knuwmg
lhc.t th t· O\'l'rworkL--d juvemle courts
u1 111o~t Cd."('S will simply give the
~~

youth s

""v

Sundar

Published rvery
by Tht Obo VaUey
Pub!iAhin( Co • Mu.lttmedi.l , lnc
GAU.IPOU8

DAILY TRIBlJNE
1m Thlrd Ave ., GaWpolia, {)hj(l ~I
Publi.lhed every wedlda)' eveninl actpl
~ turda y . Second 0... Postage Paid at

· ;allipolla. Ohio 4$&amp;31

THE DAD...Y SEN'TtNF.L

Ill Court St .• Ptlm@roy, 0 ~7111 . PuDUatw.&lt;l
e'\l'ery weei. clay even.tna ntepl Saturday

warn1n~ .' ·

sa1d

0 1ambciiin .
There ts a way . ht! suggested, to
redUL'L' nsmg youth r rimt' sta llstics.
·1·:ach group ~ parent,, tllc
'·A:I1ool s. Lhe f'tlurl s -· have to do a
t.l'.·! t•·r ju b In the lung run, that 's the
unly a ppr oa c h tllat will have
unpact." he stressed .
·Jt bdhJoves parents to provide

!TlOrc h'l!Idance, companionship and :
counseling for ch ildren. Spend more"
tuue with them. Learn to ·
eummu nJ('ate . At the be2lnning, it :
will b&lt;· m u&gt;i ly learn mg to listen . ;
Crc.(llt' situa tions to be with them. :
!&lt;il k wi th th &lt;•rn ," he said.
SI:ll·e both parents in today•,_
f«llula· s usually are working, it
requires oddJ tJonal e nergy and
planmng tu make time for their
children . sa id Chamberlin .
" But you have to adj ust you own
life schedule ," he said . " Do those
thmgs that have to t.. done as a
fami ly. Carve out the early evening
together . Go out to dinner together .
It doesn 't have to be any place
expenstve . What 's important is
being together. It 's not an easy
answer . but 11 's one that works ."
Chamberlin also emphasized that
schools must also undergo changes,
noting · that many changes arP
CO!OnctiC rather than substantive .

JOB!

29 yea rs to Othu Burdette , Jr , a nd
U1ey have five daughte rs. Smce they
moved to Gallia County in 1969. she
has been act! ve 1n the Cancer Drive ,
lleart fund, and dal volunteer work
at Holzer Hosp ital Hccently siJc
a."Isted her husband m the design
an d construction of ho mes on Lower
l&lt;Iver ltd
Preston Eisnaugle acquired exl&lt;•nsive experience m dealing with
the public through his training and
management with the Moore Department Store Company Along with
his wife, Gladys, he managed
Moore's store on Second A ve. 111

r;allipolis from l94a through 1977.
Sm c~ then he has workt-d r~ t Holzer
(11mc, Ltd . Mr. and ~1rs . E1snaugle
reside at 6J8 Fourth Ave ., Gallipolis .
Hon Caudill moved tu r;alltpuli s
fro111 lroritnn m 1973 after serv mg
four years in the L' . S. Air Force l-Ie
reside s on Jackson Pike with his
wife, Peggy, and son, James . He
stud ied real estate at the (;alii polis
Business College, where he is
majoring
in business ad·
ministration . fo r three and a half
years Cau dill has been empl oyed as
a salesman fo r F rench City Mobile
Homes, Inc .

~htra th on

l! cJUst• ~ utx ·uwmttl~e tt!lt!gatlun
lli;ll lh t· 1 ornpany l" ng&lt;:~ gt•!-. 1n

;1

ln;n kd tn ,i..!

pult&lt;:IL'S

s qut't&gt; Zt' tndqx·r1Jent

dl'S igfll'd tlJ
rt'Latler s out 11f

tht· lltarkd
· l Jur

lllarkt•tlflg sub~tcllt:~r ~

"/

-............ looking to save money
by adding insulation?
We'll do an expert job

A rep&lt;Jr t prept:~rt'li h y Mr~rk .I

Levine . tn'-'·estlgatur for tlw S111all
Ru stness antltn.161 subcomrmtl et·,
smd · "Marathon has follow ed a
strategj dt•slgn.-d L'J mcreLJse till'
V11l wne uf gasoline sold throug h
refiner own~._'{! and oper&lt;Ht•d ouLieL!-i
111 till' l·o rnpan y·s g eu gr;1phn·
&lt;~ pt·rattn /..! a rt·a s
" Th1 s s tralt'gy appear s t u

Toney Realty associates •..

ndvt•r se ly

affl•ct

The accident occurred at approxunately 1 p.m . Assisting at
tne scene of the mishap were Mason
Count y Sheriff James Hall, Deputies
.I R McCoy an d G. M. Kee,rns, State
Police Trp !\I.S . Smith and Mason
County Prosecuting Attorney W.
Dan RDll

Dedication
•
ceremonies

set Oct. 31

l lld l'Pt' rldent

dealers markt•ting Marat hon .2,a s. · ·
!\'l arathon . headquart ntd Jn
Fmdlay . Oh1o , markt~Lo;; petmleu111
prudut.'1s HI 21 Midwestern and
Southeastern states.

TFF:NAGER FINED
POM£:HOY - Appea nng before
Judge Robert Buck on a traffic ofrense was Kathy Wlutl nt ch, 17, Ht. I,
HeedsviUe. on charges of failure to
yie ld i accident invo lved 1 Sht· wa ~
fined $20 ami &lt;'OSL'.

GAI.I.IPOIJS - Dedication services will be held at Zp.m. Oct. 31 for
the new residential facilities at the
Gallipolis Development Center.
Dr. Timothy B. Moritz, M.D.,
direct or of the Ohio Department of
Mental Health and Mental Retardation, will be the featured speaker.
The ceremony will include entertairunent , refreshments and a
tour of the new, modern 32-bed
res idences which will house the
profound mentaUy retarded clients
or the center .

EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1, 1979

MEN

WOMEN

TUES. &amp; THURS.
5 PM TIL 10 PM

MON., WED., FRI.
8:30 AM Til 7 PM
TUES. &amp; THUR.
8:30 AM TIL 5 PM
SAT.
8:30 AM TIL 12:30 PM

SATURDAY ,.
1 PM TIL 5 PM

THE FITNESS CENTER
417 Second Ave .

Gallipolis, Ohio

WllJ.A DAVIS has joined the
sales staff with Toney Realty,
Gallery of Homes . She attended
Gallipolis Bu siness College for
hn real estatt courses required.
Willa has also attended Rio Grande College and West Virglnta
State. She resides at Centenary
with her hus band, Pete, and son,
Hank .

TOM COMER
Tom Cumrr has join£'11 tht'
sales staff at Toney Really Gallt'ry of Hom~s. Ht' has had tht-'
two courses at Rio Grandr
College, needed to acquire his
Real Estate license. Tom is em·
played at the Goodyear Plant In
Apple Grove, W. Va. as a draftsman. He is active in the Elks
club and the Gallia County Guo
club . He and his wire , Ruth,
reside on Graham Sehool Road in
Gallipo li s. They hav e two
children. Tami and Matt.

Nf' w

r pc .

liv . rm. group which includes

cou cn, ch.1ir. rocker, oMoman, 2 end tables
.and C"uff ee table .

J/
~~;, ?~//'?} 2';- ~
/Jn~ ~ Y'@OtJ ~ bh1.-- tt- ~~
&amp;j~J /l?J~ ~

d

~J?h

~~v_;t"~:mL .

$
$

~0L-

Money Market

$

Ask about our

$

current Mte

~

..
--....

..., ,. ., ..... .;; .:::;

t.
...:..

SONY: HST-48
RECEIVER
CENTREX: MPU-1
RECORD CHANGER
CENTREX: MCL-3
SPEAKER SYSTEM

$

LIST S6 89 .9S

$

THAT 'S A LOT Of MONEY Wf' kn o w that S600 OU 1S
nlol o f m or1f·r . and 11 ,1ou'r!" go 1r H,JIO 1n v es tthal k 1nd

ot money

1Cl it

st ereo ~'(stern . w e want you to get the

mas 1 to r ,,
Qnp o f !h r&gt; mos t rmportanl th ~r1gs a gOOd dea l e r
r nn do,.., to rna k t' &lt;;,.u rr · th e ; ompo nents are perfect!)'
mp l ( hed so that C'CI( h opera res aht s opt1mum while
r omp11mPr111ng fh(' other compone nts Th 1s 1nsures
(Ou ot the q r entPst value a s a t o t al sys tem

Federal Regulations require a substantial interest

at a reasonable price

penalty for early withdrawal of savings certificates

$

on blowing insulation

6 inches depth, installed

ha~

not engaged and ts not l'nga~m g tn
pn'dalury pncmg," smd Mi.Jfi::lltl un
\'tct· f'r l'stdent G .N. Nicholson

coroner.

' L

j_ MORE POWER TO YOU

MAIL
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
l'1w Gallipolis Dolly Trfl&gt;w1e In 'Ohio ..,.
West Vlrcinll one yeer 133.00; lib: monthl

news publistw&lt;l her ein

and Olene Burdette of Lower l{Iver
lld .
Preston Eisnaugle , an employee
of Holzer Clini c, Ltd , and Ron
Ca udJU . a salesman for frenc h C'ity
Mobile Homes , Inc. are the two
part-time people with the Dillon
Agency . Eisnaugle lives on fourth
Ave . In GaUipolis. a nd C&lt;tudil l on
Jackson Pike .
Patricia L. Smith had her form al
education in real estnte from
Gallipolis Business College, but , as
the wife or Charle' Smiill , a bu ilde r .
sh~ has approximately 15 years ' ex perience in the real esta te fi e ld
They
have f o ur c hildr en.
Chri.&lt;:;topher , Brian, Kevin , and
l'nc1a.
NeUa SmJth, who also took her
real esiate classes at Gallipolis
Business CoUege, is the wife of a
builder, Hobert Smith, and has dealt
with buyers and real estate eomparu es. They have two children, who
attend Bidwell-Porter Elementary
School: Robbie and Rodney .
Olene Burdette, who has been
licensed by the Ohio 1\eal Estate
Board of three years, is a member of
the Columbus loca l, sl&lt;ite, a nd
national Kealtors Association . For
one year she was associated wtlh the
Internati ona l Heal ty Co nce pt of
Columbus. She has been marned for

SYSTEM: 599

$J600 square
tor 100
feet,

117.00: U..... munlllo IIO.lO. Eloewbere 131.00
per ye.ar ; si• TTJOI"'lttll t:Xi.OO; UV'ft' montN
111 .00: mo101' ...... 13 . 90~ .
The DeUy Sentinel, one ye.~r $33.110; st. monU.. 117.00; u.r.e monlllo 110.00. Ellewbe,.
138.00: sll montn.IIG.OO; thr&lt;emontlla 111.00.
The Aasoctated PreY ll ndWiively tnUtkd
to lht USf' fOI" pubUcaUon ol alJ news dlapatchet
c redited to the nt. .paper and 1Uo the local

A
(Ill Co_ off1ctal has dented

NEW HOURS

$

THE

Ent.u'ed u .MCOOd eL111 ~ matter at
Pomeroy, OIIJo PootOIIIce.

By e~~rrie r diUy and Sunday llc ptr Wftl .
M!Jlor roote J,1.t0 permanth.

1 AP1

$·

WE'll
00

Sunday Tlmes-Senllllel

a~ ~~---· .-.--d· ­

A/legation denied
WASIII:\t;T()J\

FA mER COlLAPSES

"Right
now
I 'm
very
pessimistic .. everything seems to be going up
but salaries . I support my own household on
my own incom e . aod it is rough ."
J anet Baker.
Gallipolis .

RON CAUD ILL

new associates join Dillon team

GALlJPOIJS ~ Gallipolis' busy
real estate fi eld today has fi ve additional sales fo lk after announcement by the Dillon Heal
Estate Agency of three sales
associates and tw o part -time
salesmen.
Hobart Dillon , realtor, and Bob
· Lane, sales manager, aonounced
:·that their three new sales associates
· are Patricia L. Smith and Nella
: (Campbell) Smith , both of Bidwell ;

" Very pessimistic ... prices are constanU y
gomg up and there seems to be no way to get
them down . Everybody wants higher wages
to meet the higher prices, and that Just add.'
to the inflationary spiral. Once you give a person a raise they aren't going to give it back ."
Maxine Hart ,
Pomeroy .

PRF.STON F.IS~AU(a.E

NELLA SMITH

PATRICIA L. SMITH

PO INT PLEASANT - A tractor
mishap on Crab Creek Road in
Mason County resulted in the death
friday of a Columbus, Ohio man .
The victim, Stanley L. Withers, 64,
was apparently using a small
tractor to pull logs out of the woods
Into an open field when the tractor
reared backwards and overturned,
rr ushing Withers beneath the
steenng wheel and hood, authorities
sai d.
Wither s was transported by the
l'omt Pleasant Rescue Squad to
Pleasant Valley Hospital where he
v:as pronounced dead on arrival by
Dr . J ohn Grubb, Mason CoWJty

$

~

I H E SYSTEM 11 SELF . Ou r 5(/9 ~ystem couple~ tt1e
::.ony H ST 4B receive r . wd h AM FM ste r eo and
llud t tn 8 trark re &lt;ord ptay occ k . Wt1h the new C~&gt;n
Trf•• M P U 1 m u ll• play r ecord r hanQc r These com
ponent~ dr 1ve me- ne w Cen trex MC L 3 111 fl srk dker
~y&lt;,!em . one ol th e hottes t pcr t ormtng speakers 1n
thet r S11e ana pr1c e r anye

WE STAND BEHIND IT . As w ith everything Tom 's
Stereo Cen ter sel ls, our 599 sys tem 1S backed by our
tut l t ime se rvi rl! depa rt me nt And, of course. we 'll
be ha pp y to del vcr and nook up your system for
you

AS LITTLE AS 116 91 ~~n MONTH, You can pay
for your system severS rferent ways . We accept
Mas.ter Charge and VISA . We also have financing
;wadable thro~gh a loca l lending institution . Plus
wf' hnve Tom 's L ay away Program .

WE HAVE E!!P~RIENCE . One of the best th ings
abou t Tom's 1s t a t you deal with know ledgeable
rtnd friendly professional sa les co nsultants . You 'll
get totally objec tive advi ce because we want you as
ou r c us tamer ne)( t t ime, roo

in unfloored attics

VISA'
FDIC

THEISS INSULATION
For Free Estimates Call 446-1971

-

$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

l::===== ;=.til= =2='=3=-l=·l=ll=I\=ll=A=V=E=N=U=E=• GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
\.

Phone : (6141 446-7886

~-~~-------------------'

�j.'

A-4-The Sunday Ttrnes-Sentinel, Sunday . Od . 21, 1979

~--------------------:

I
II
I

I

~t. . .

:

Of the Bend

II

The lonna! dedlcatwn and open
house of Pomeroy's Health Care
Center - certainly a most needed
facility - has now been set for Nov
II from I to 5 p.m . There have been

The Si.mpsons, huw~ver , don 't
cx~ct any trouble with Un~ law
Their ne w Stone Quarry Vmeyards
Wmcry 1s cnllrcly legal, because of a
qUirk m OhiO law that excludes
wmeries from local options .
Tl10mas J. Simpoon, 49, and his
son Tim , 23, are spending weekends
harvesting, crushing, pressing and
barreling th eir first locally prepared

Hl·:v J·: J1J.Y, Ohtu 11'1!''
You
l'(..I JI 't bu} hl•t• r or wluskc} u1 11earby
Wr-llerfurd
Town ship ,
wh1cl1
n!sldt•nts prder to kee-p dr y But
l&lt;lke tlw Waterford bnd.o;t· uu t of
Beverly . dr1ve do wn tht• alit&gt;}' bl'h mU
Uw Mason Hardware Store, and
f't'ek m lht• old woo l shed and vou 'II
ftnd Ttm and Tom S1mp su n
fermt•n tm~ Uwtr l:[ra pes .
.

I

By Bob Hoeflieh

The Meigs County Jaycees are
operating a "bigger and better "
haunted house feature this year at
the.former Pomeroy High Schol .
Some people we've talked to thiS
year say it's great. The Halloween
seasm operation of the Jaycees has
some new attractions. It is open
from 7:30 to 10 a .m . Mondays
through Thursdays and 7:30 to II
p.m . Fidays and Saturda1s and will
be open though Oet . 31 .

Beverly family busy harvesting grapes

I

.

upcoming s li de presenUltwn to com memorate the 75th ann1ver ary uf th,•
bank . So far . the presentati on looks
gr eat so yo u will want to be In on 1t.

baugh Housing, !short film at 6:151,
6-6 :15; BaumAddition , 7: 15-7 :45 .
Thursday, Oct . 25 - Cool ville ·
Post Office rshort fiim at 10), 9:3010 :30 ; Arcadia Nursing Home, 10:3011; Tuppers Plain' - K&amp;G Shake
Shoppe, II :30-1; ClJester- Methodist
Church, I :15-1 :15; Keno ·248and Co.
!wad 28, 2-2:30: Portland - Proffitt's
Store, 3-3 :45 : Racine - Home
National Bank [short filin1 at 4 :30)
4:1&gt;-5: Wagner's Hardware rshort
fUm at 5: 15 1, 5-5 :45; Syracuse - Pool
tshortfilim at 6:30), 6-7:30.

BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE
Monday , Oct. 22 - l'larwin · Dun·
can's Store, 2-2:30; Pagevde , church, 1,1 :30 ; Harnsonvtlle · Sohto
Stauon, 3:45-4 : l~; New Lima Hoad.
4 ;!().,5: Hutland · Pomeroy National
Ban k 1short filim at 5:30 1, 5: 15-6 ;
Depot Street. tshort ftlm at 6:301 ,
6: 15-7; Bradbury - Red Barn, 7: 15·
7:45.
Tuesda y, Oct . 23 - Long Butt um ·
Post Office, r short filim a t 3:45 1, :l-4 ;
HeedsviUe. Reed ·s Store 1short film
at 51. 4 30-5 :30: Tuppers Plams- Ar·

I understand that often such little
thmgs as how ont' rt·muves too th paste frum the tubto ca n l'i.JU.Lit:
111arildl problems . Appc~ ren tly unc
larg:e compa ny ts aware uf th1." tvu
beca use It has pnnt("(j alollg the
tube : " fur best re!-lults . squt.-'l'Ze tu bl•
from the bottom aml flatten 1t as ) 'UU
go up . .. So - for marital bliss JUSt
follow the simple tl trecttom And
yo u'll also have bnghter lt'c th with
whtch to k&lt;•ep smiltng .

batch, which ts expected to reach
le~ al fermentation limits of It
percent to 14 percent by next March .
The Simpsons will have wine to
sell before then , though, since they
helped make wine from five tons of
their own grapes at the Brush Creek
wmery m Peebles last year . That
will be on their shelves within a few
weeks .
The
elder
Simpson
first
discovered he had a knack for
wine(llaking when he started
fermenting grapes several years
ago at home . He worked as a
bookkeeper in the trucking industry
until he and Tun moved to Beverly
la't year to manage the 83-acre
Stone Quarry Vineyard for the
United Dairy Co . of Martins Ferry .
'11lat move, coupled with the
groWing international reputation of
Ohio wines, helped persuade him to
give up his s uit and tie in favor of
jeans and flannel shirts.
The Stmp.&lt;~Dns plan on oflermg six

baSIC types of wine : a dry red and a
dry white from French hybrid
grapes; a semi..,weet red and a
white from Am~rican grape
varieties: a pmk Catawba (and later
maybe a wh1te one 1, and a sweet
blended red wine to be called
" Pioneer Red ."
They'll sell bottles at the winery,
the House of Wines in nearby
Marietta, and through the Cedar Hill
Wine Co . and the AuProvince
Restaurant in Cleveland. The wine
will cost about $2.75 a bottle for
American and $3 for French.
It will he a little while before th•
winery conforms to Ohio laws
enabling visitors to take a sip of the
grape on the premises; restroom
faci lities
and other
health
requirements must first be met. But
like most new businessmen, Tom
Simpson is eager for visitors - or
vo hmteer workers.
" Drop in anytime, " he says.
"Grab a broom ."

several previous dates announced

A-6~The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel , Sunda y. Oct. 21, 1979

Examiners say positive identification easy
DALLAS I APr - County medical
examinerrs say it would be " very
easy" to identify the oody in the
grave of Lee Harvey Oswald and
provide the answer to at least one of
the questions surroundmg the
assassinatioo of President John F
Kennedy .
The questioo was posed by British
author Michael H.B. Eddowes, wh o
cootends in his book, "The Oswald
File," that Oswald never returned
from the Sovtet Union .
Instead , he says , a Russian agent
named Alek James Hiddell came to
the United States , usmg Oswald 's
name, and fatally shot Kennedy on
Nov. 22, 1963.
The
Warren
Commission
identified Oswald as the lone
gunman who shot Kennedy in
Dallas. Oswa ld was shot to death
two days later by Jack Ruby , who
died of cancer while in jail.
This week , Dallas County Mc'&lt;ii cal
Examiner Charles Petty and ht s

ass istan t, Dr . Llllda Nu rton ,
request~d an exhwnation of the body
in Oswald' s grave to com pare w1 th
Os wald's Marine mecilcal records .
ft would he "very easy to make a
100 percen t Id entifica tion " of the
body in the F'DI't Worth grave, Ms
Norton said at a news conference
F'nday .
She said discrepancies between
th e Marine record.'&gt; and the autopsy
report were numerous · "Scars on
the body . .. color of eyes, height. "
Marine records show Oswald wa s
two mches taller than the man
arrested for Kennedy's death . And
the i:lUtopsy failed to show evidene~
of a mastoidectomy behind Oswald 's
left ear, sh e said .
Ms. Norton said the state of the
body alter 16 years would depend on
fa ctors such as embaliming and the
con dition of the casket.
She satd she expected the body 's
soft tissue would he ~one, but added ,
" I thmk there' s a very htgh

J.IUSSJ.billt y the IJ&lt;Jue structure will bt•
liltact. Ass wmng the tt..o.eth an_• mtact
the L'O IIl p&lt;JI'Ison should bt• \'ery

easy w do."
She sa1d tht• Manne rt.'t.:ords show
Oswald had "a great number of
fi llings" U1a t would still !Jt&gt; ev tdent.
"The mastoidectomy and th e teeth
are the key ," Petty added .
Oswald's grave IS U1 Tarrant
Co Wlty , and the exhumation request
mu st be approved by Tarra nt
Co unt y
Med a:a l
Examiner
Nazunuddln Pcerwaru
Petty said F'nda1 he had not yet
hea rd from Peerwam . but co unty
oflictals have said they will not allow
th e exl1umation unless ordered to do
so by a eow1 .
Pcerwam has sa 1d he must ha ve
the approval uf the Wst nl'l t:~ltorney
and Oswald's mother In Fort Worth
!Jt&gt;fore an cxhwnatwn . Mrs. Oswald
has refused to t·omm ent bc ca LL'iC of
pending litigatwn .
But F:ddowe s, who new to Dallas

Fnday . sa1d Maq(uenlc Uswuld
C:l pproacht•d tht&gt; JJ.edJ cal exa nnne r m
uti

1968 tu httve he r son 's body dug up .

" Sht.&gt; sau.l1n ar1 art1de ... Ulat she
had never been told her son had been
shot m 1he an n durmg Marme

Dr. Moritz assails articles
CO LUMBUS, Ohio I AP I - Ohto 's
me nta l health
and
nH:•ntal
retardatiOn ch1ef has assailed two
r ec ently published newspaper
art 1des cntical of his department.
Or . Tunothy B Moritz told a new s
con ference F'nday that one of the
recent articles was " irrespon si ble,
fill ed with lies, false accusatiOns and
mac&lt;· urate mfonnation .''
He heatedly denied a statement
attnbuted to hun in ooe of the
Columbus stones. In it, he was
quoted as saying that compiamts
from count y supe rintend.:nts etre
"stri ctly financial. ''
Moritz told the news con fer ence

.

th e story "seems to be an attempt to
fom ent co nflict " between hun and
count y mental retardation boards .
He also took excepUon to a charge
that the department took $1.8 milhon
m funds mtended for eounty mental
retardation board.c; last yea r and
div e rted 1t to other use .
The d~reclor said the charge
appar ently resulted from the fa ct
that the le gislatur e authortzed
spendin g $1 3.8 million for programs
last year , but wuW1d up actuall y
appropnating only $11 ,965 ,000.
" It IS grossly unfair to blame the
dt-•parlmt&gt;nt for the r es ulttn g
si tui::ltiun." he sa1d .

'

but Ron Zidian, admimstrat or , says,
" this is it. "

Mrs. Hattie Russell, who resided
in the Pomeroy area for many
years, and now happUy ltving 1n
Westminister , Calif., is here for a
few days with friends. Hattie loves
getting back to Meigs County to see
everyone .
By the way, she reports that Mrs .
Evelyn Jones who will he remembered by many Meigs Countians , has
suffered a stroke and IS confmed to a
convalescent center . Cards may he
ent to Mrs. Junes' home address
which is 7fi.J 17th St ., Santa Momca,
Calif.' 90402.
"Old friends are the best fnends ,
after all'·, the song of years ago said .
Well - for the fi fth consecutive
year, friends from high school years
met recently for a day of reunion
and a dinner at the Twin City Shrine
Club quarters 1n Racme.
These folks went to school in
Pomeroy together and some moved
away . Now as their families have
grown. the group looks forward even
more to the October reWJions.
During the reunion, the group
spent the hours in rernimscmg and m
VIewing photos from "back then ."
Attending were Mr . and Mrs . John
Mitch, Mr . and Mr s. Walter
Grueser, Mr . and Mrs . Allen
I Kathryn Mitch ) Reeves of Cin·
cinali; Mr . and Mrs . Peck Jones,
Mr. and Mrs . James Roush, New
Haven: Mr. and Mrs . William
Russell , Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bowen,
Mr. and Mrs . F1oyd Mescher,
Lebanon; Mrs. Marge Reuter. Mrs.
June Sayre, Mrs . Nora H.Jce and
Mrs . Edith Sisson .

IH, IOU. c•o OU1

TOTAl DOWN

SHOP PE NYFARE THIS EEK AND ''TREAT'' YOURSELF
ITH OUR TOTAL DO N PRICESI YOU'LL BE LAD YOU DID!
WELCH 'S

Grape
Juiee

••

D ....... ,

,DIINNERBEU Super Trim &amp; Ertra

LIMIT THREE

U.J.A. liSP. FAMILY PU

.SALAMI

WRAP

25Nt.AA~ .

IOLOGNA........ .............. 'l.n
l•lliiOI!!'IJV'a ' • •' • • • • • • • • • • • • • •' • • • .. SJ.59

THOROFARE

Beverages

.

.

' ~·, ~··':1"·-:Jl'"'~ill"!
~--

12-ol.

""•·

.·.

SLICED
.... BACON

'

IIGUW, flltCI., GULIC

Dl

$J~

'l1lldl

'

ARMOUR ·:.- STAR

FISH FILLETS OR

OLD FASHION LOAF

' ..

'

FISH STICKS, ..... "•·
JIIWI IUTIIIID

FISH FILLETS ......"'•· ea.

.&amp;

SLICED BOLOGNA
or PICKLE LOAF

SLICED BOLOGNA
or SLICED COOKED SALAMI
DUTCH, SPICED or PICKLE LOAF

~~:$J29

JIIWI tU"UII LtGKT Unll

FISH KABOBS •o..• ,.,

$• ~

Pkg.

DINNIRIIILL

SIICID IACOII ••• •••••••••••••••• •••••• •.••• •• ,...... s1.59

ARMOUR , STAR
SLICED COOKED

.P IItiS &amp; STtMs

'

Hb.qqt

. •s••

..._, ........... ....... ... ... ...... . ..... ........ .........
'

Pesehke
Meat
Wieners

HAM PORTIONS

$

- -· ................................... '2.99

99'

NEW! 2 LITER SIZE

• WILD CHERRY

• • • • • • • • • • • 1... ....

, •••• I'&lt; S1'Ait

FUlLY (OC!Im SMOIED
SEMI-ICIIBISS

1,53

IIOfDOGS ..••• ..... ........ . ............ ,,,__,_ 1.09
IIOfDOGS..,.- . . ........•.•............•.. ,....... '1.45
.IUIIW&amp;IIDTDOG5 • .. .•••. • • . .. .•• , •••.•.•. ,,.._,.,. 51.59

THOlOfAIII

.,~

............. ·:.:•1.79

8.•lii.ISSU1

.

SLICED

BACON

'1.63
1 ....-,.,lUNOI MUTS .............. ,....... '1."
4 PACI: ....................... ,...,., '2.1t

"

'·

·.. 49'

•. $J79

••rDIISIII , , • • • , , , , • , , , , , , 16.,... S

. . ,_&amp;
.: -

loiQV ,

PARTS

DELITES

Part. Sta ..... .. • s1.19
Fresh Port. Butt 1-1 .. . .•. ' 1. 19
All Port&lt; C1tJ Cllidcen . . ..• • 5 1.59
Fresh Ground Port ...... • '1.59
Frnh

CAMPfiRE

ARMOUR t.r ST AI

CHICKEN

• -··~·ITO
lliiC!IO C001C10

MUSHROOMS

SJ 69

Oiua

S9"
•ROOT BEER

P..to St..... .

JmtlliAIII Gt!OUMO IUF

HANOI

'

flU .,..,
r;:;;_- CUT
.. Go.-4"' _-"0ty~
.... ,......

SHOULDER ROAST . . • . •• s 1.69 CiiUc1 ROAST MH\IT\ • • • • • • 5 1.89 GROUND CHUCK ....... "' .. • ,
•.o- YtOIIUft
s
STUI .........• 5 1.39 SWISS STEAl . . . . . . . • • • 1.89 -·""
CHUCK STEA II . . . . . . . . . • 5 1•89
_..
2 29 _ ..,
5 2 09
SWISS SHOULDER STEAK .•• 52.29 CUBE
STEAK ••••••.••• • 5 •
STEW BEEF ••••••.••.. • •

32••·68~
Ctlll.

I

lb.

S )39

"'-411 ...... .

COFFEE RICH

etzels

ENGliSH CUT or
7-BONE CHUCK ROAST . . •

Ill.

RICH'S

Shultz's
Thin

qq e

4t~.!~b.

~7"~

"IONUSPACK"

Remember, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Adleta will be at the Fanners Bank
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday to
make copies of your photos for an

Porh Butts
In

5-FLAVORS 8-oz. Ctn.

Tracy Hein, following a kidney
transplant, will be confined t o a
hospital for some time You can send
him a ca rd to 9th floor , transplant
unit. University Hospital, Columbus.
We're adv~ that cards mean a lot
tohim .
'
WillSOn, who was excellent in
appearance at the Meigs
ty Fair, scored his last win of
season at the !Jlncaster Fair on
Oct. II.
There's a lot of local interest 1n El
Townson . The animal is owned by
Paul Sayre, Racine, who has retired
from hilS work in Columbus, and the
animal was broken, trained and
raced by Paul's brother, Brooks
Sayre of Syracuse.
The colt was sired by Townson
who stands at stud service at his
owners, Ed and Waid Humphrey at
Rock Springs, and from a mare
acquired from the late Sidney Spencer and his wife, Pauline.
Paul owns and keeP" the mare at
hilS farm on Fairview Ridge . He now
has a filly colt that Brooks is now
breaking at the Rock Springs
FalrgroWlds for the I~ racing
season, hopefully .
El Townson started 16 times this
past season, winning 14 races with
one second place a nd came in sixth
once. Winnings totaled $10,760.
Brooks is the first to admit that the
non-winning trips were his fault.
Brooks says he tried to rate El
Townson a t a slower speed but the
colt is so com petitive that he broke
stride .
The Rock Springs Fairgrounds are
busy these days as activities for the
1980 .season are underway . Ralph
Calvert is training one animal; Burdell McKeUy. two; Kelly and Don
McKenzie, one each ; Howard Sayre,
one . !Wger Spencer, currently
raising two at The l'deadows in Pennsylvania, Is breaking two with the
help mhis family , Phyllis and Debbie; Ed and Waid Humphrey have
three at this time and Sherry In·
destad ha.s one racer in her bam of
many riding horses.
Brooks says he'd like to thank the
local fair board for making the
racing program here possible and
for allowing the training privilege at
the fairgrounds to the owners .

FRESH WHOLE

Bone

Yogurt

W/CRANBERRIES

..., ..... ,..,.tlit-••.W.M ...... ,..,,.'"'-'"' ... ,,..,........... , ,. . ;' ' · -...

Chuek Roast

-,

/~~Light N' Livel~
Mott's
AppleSauee

,.,....,.,._~, ......

. '"!)t.ftat.. 'THOROFARE QUALITY U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

CENTER
CUT

!-111.
Cello

• PURPLE • WHITE

P~nngfare

ROAILS EFFEaiVE THRU SAT., OCT. 27, 1979

Diamond
Shelled
WaIn uts Bae

~~~~- $J~

.'

•COLA
•ORANGE

PIIIIIDI

'

FRESH &amp; TENDER

FIG BARS / ..

Broeeoli

FANCY
lED DIUCIOUS 01
YOlK IMPEIIAl

.... 99~.

Apples

2...

'

vw.c

DILL PICKLES

•oOSIIn
·I'GtiSII • • • • •

· IMUCIII'I

"
;;:

SJ II

GRAPEJELLYorJAM •... ,.,,. 5

Peter ,._, Alnlond JoJ • ., "" . . .... ·:.~·

1.42
Y..t. Milito"'' "" ....... . .. . ,., ..,.11.49
Wcken,.. ,mun ... . . ... . .. ,.. ""· SJ.I9
1

INdlc.dyCenl .... ''. ' ... . . ...... . ..
lrwch Mellow Crwntei"IJ,.. n ::IS • , ••• , 12... l't1. 49~
lrac:h Mellow Cremu ''" . . . . . . . "•• ..,. 49'

,

TAIIIIWII - IK. O I I f l " ' -

PIZZA SQUARES ..••• ,. .. .,~ •.,.,.

SJ ,

68

1.08 _ --oo-no
--·· ,_.,
59c
UISPY CRACKERS .•••.••• ·. ••·...

wrTM "*ITf.l.lf CD""'&lt;*. LIMA
OMI ,ACI. YAUD TIIV Uf., OCT.

""·''"·

DIAL SOAP FAMILY SIZE

~l~'!.l::~l

::

98 ~

- " S - IIAI.UIIIIImU

WINDSHIELD WASH/ANTI-FREEZE • • •

Mil Alii - "D'' 01 "C"

88c
C

R.ASIILITE lAREilES •••••••• ,.,. . .

RAYOifUl CALIF.

THIS WEEK FROM

Emperor
Grapes ••

LADY
VIOORIA

4
CHAMPAGNE
GLASSES

5!!

$

IIG.

~·"

GREEN ONIONS ••

BUNCH

~-_... 6UC

IUIIIIST

FRUIT GEMS CANDY· • •·

ggc

JOUYTIMI

POPCORN . ••••
fiiSII ROIIDA

AVOCADOES ._Silo

service, but the body had two bullet
wounds," he said at an airport news
con ference.

SOUTM!lll

19c -u-•
.~.. 59c

GOLDEN YAMS • • •·

FlESH

CRANBERRIES

APPLE CIDER •••• IHW. SJ59
ROMAINE LmUCE ~ 49c
GIUTIOIIIAIUIIII8
"C
CARMEL APPLES. • ,:.

We Cordially Redeem V.S. Govt. Food Stamps

In addition, Moritz took to task
another story whtch referred to an
upcoming report from the U.S.
Gen era! Accounting Office on
activities of the Ohio Developmental
DtsabilitiCs Planning Council.
The story satd the report will be .
cntical of the council's activities,
and Will say, among other things,
that it spent more than twice the
allowable $50 ,000 each year for
administrative expe~s.
Moritz said the information was
taken from a leaked rough draft, and
that GAO's report to Cmgress " will
be quit e different '' He said all states
studied by GAO overspent their
administrativ e allowances .
In response to a question, Moritz
expressed optimism that a
threatened strike Sunday midnight
by stale institution employees can
be avoided.
He said negotiations with officials
of the Ohto C1vU Service Employees
As~ciation are con tinuing .
The talks will continue " over night
and through the weekend," he said,
a ddm ~. " I hope and expect that we
won 't have ta strike)"
There are 2,952 department
employees who belong to OC-SEA.
The director also said he thinks
agreements are close at hand in
talks wtth representatives of two
other organizations which represent
department employees. They are
th e American Federation of State,
County. and Municipal Employees,
which represents 3,326 in the
department, and the
Communications
Workers
of
America, 2,539 .
In all , the agency employs 18,000.
Talks with the two latter W1ions
over the past three days have
produced "good progress," Moritz
said
However when asked if he still
planned to invoke the state's
ferguson Act m the event of a strike
by OCSEA, Moritz said "absolutely ,
and no ooe should have any
misundersta ndin g about that."
Under the act, employees who
strike are fired . It is possible for
!hem to be reinstated, but they are
then restricted for a year to the
same wages they were receiving at
the time of the st rike .

Voting bill
vetoed Friday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov .
James A. Rhodes vetoed Friday a
bill under which deputy registrars
would be designated at high schools
throughout Ohio to Sign up newly
elig ible voters.
He said the bill is unfW1ded and
eo uld impose a costly mandate on
boards of education already
overburdened with fmancial and
admmistrative problems.
"The board of education would be
required to provide the deputy
reg tstrar without charge to the
co unty ," the governor said in his
veto mt'ssage .
The bill was spoosored in the
Legislature by Sen. William F .
Bowen, 0-Cincinati, who responded
to claims similar In those of the
govemor when the bill was debated .
He said the deputy registrar co uld
be a teacher or secretary already on
th e board of education 's payroll, and
that the job would not entail large
amounts of time.
However, Rhodes went on to say
that " if the issue which this bill
attempts to address is the lack of
voter participation by high school
and vocational high school students,
it would more properly be addressed
by requiring each school to
assemble eligible students to
register at appropriate times of the
year.
.. A representative of the board of
elec tions then would provide
informaWon and register students to
vote. This would cost the school
nothing , and is a program I would
support."
Ohio's local boards of educatim
"need to get on with the job of
education without any additional
financial
or
administrative
burdens," the governor concluded.
It would take a three-fifths vote of
each house to override the veto. The
mil passed the Senate 19-13 and the ·
House 63-21, meaning the support to
override is not likely to be
forthcomil ,g.

�A·7 - The Sunday Tunes,'it ntmd , Sund;__n . Oct ~ 1. 1 !!7~

A-6- The Sunda y Tunes-&amp;ntmel, Sunda y. Oct. 21, 1979
th 1.s le tter . Th~ re

MARY LEONARD
GALUPOLIS - Mary Venters
Leonard, 61 , a res tdent of Ht. 3.
Gallipolis, !Mud Creek ltd . I died at
6 :45 p.m . Friday in Holzer Medic al
Cen ter . She had heen employed a t
Holzer Medic al Center 17 years .
Mrs . Leonard was born Aug . 21,
1918, in Logan County . W. Va .
daughter of the late .John and Mary
Morvauchik .
She was twice married, rin;t t o
Gerna Venters and then to Arlte
Leonard on Jan 7. 1967. tn
Gallipolis .
The following clu ldren survive :
Mrs . Donald i Ada l Gardner . Wes t
Jefferson, Ohi o: Mrs . Faye Hammond, Gallipolis ; Gema Junio r. IU .
3, Gallipolis; Mrs . Joseph 1Patty '
Frissora , Columbus: William . Ht. :1.
Gallipolis : one sun and one daughter
preceded her in death .
Ei~ht ~ramkhl ldr en survive . One
sister , Mrs . Ann Barth, Middlefield :
Ohio, s urvt ves . Two br others and
one stster pre&lt;Oeded her tn death .
She was a member of the Good
News Baptist Church
Funeral serv1ces will be held 2
p .m. Monda y at Waugh-HalleyWoud Funeral Home with Hev
Hobert Colvin officiating.
Burial will be in Centenary
Cemetery
Frierds may call at the funeral
home afte r 2 p .m . Sunda y .

inc l ude

one

so n

Douglas Steinbauer , New York : on~
daughter , Mrs . Kobert !Carol !
Adams, Colwnbus , seven grand children , three great-grandchildren
one sister, Dorothy Mees, Columbus.
one brother, R C. Mees. Califonua .
Funeral services wtll be held
today at 3 p.m . at the linden
Lutheran Church with the Hev . 1.. H.
Mielke off iciating. Burial and
graveside n tes will be held at Beech
Grove Cemetery Monday a t 1 p.m .
South wick funera l Home, Colum bus , is i.n charge of services .

Wants to !-,rradWlte
Dear Editor.
I am a senior cosmetology studen t
at Meigs Hi~h School, and would like
to express my opinion concerning
the stnke .
f1rst , I would like to explatn that
cosmetology isn 't a course you take
as an easy way to graduate . but
somet hing you have to work hard at .
The longer that we're out of
school. the harder it is going to be for
us to ca tch up lll1 all the work we 're
behmd on .
In order for us to catch up, we'll
hav~ to work tw1ee as hard, and
we'll be concentratmg so m uch on
catching up , tha t we won't be

,- - ------ - - -- --- ------ ----,
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I

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reta ining the work in our brain,
where it cou nts.

Work won't be the only thing we11
have to catch up on . We'll have to
catch up on ou r hours as well .
If we don't get 1,500 hours by the
tun e we are to graduate, we won 'I
get to graduat e. We are already approximately 88"-; hours behind, and
hours aren't a ll that easy t o make
up .
I would like to mak e it clear that
I'm not !along s ides about the strike.
but I do wish it would get settled
soon. because I. as well as other

Rewarding
.
expenence
October 16, 1979

TO WHOM IT MAYCONCEKN :

The No. 1
Best Selling Stove
in the Nation.
:)ee

Triple w a ll ed. 3 speed
thermostatically
c on
tro ll ed fan , guaran teed for
life . Not just a s tove , but a
hea ti ng system .
Also some of the best bra ss
and fireplace e quipm e nt in
lhe slate .

Reduce your heating
bill 60 to soa-:;_

AND BRASS SHOPPE
40S Second Av e .

GalllpOII ~,

Oh .

••• 7027

I recently had one of the most
r~wardmg experiences of my many
years as a Hegistered Nurse. I was a
~ues t at two of the Me1g.s Menta l
Health Center's weekly works hops
fo r the developmentally disabled .
There I observed the results of a
few people g iving freely of thw
time. talents and love. I watched
pa tients very hesitantly attempt
varous projects , hearing them say
tha t they could not ever do that parllc ular task.
I wa tched the voluntee rs 1called
Advocates 1 a nd the paid s taff wo rk
patiently and untiringly with each
patten!.
I saw very unsure people become
QUite productive and self-sufftc1ent
· 1JVJd uals . I watched them dev elop
,ctf-respect with each project the y
completed .
I am writing Uus letter for two
reasons . F1rst, because I feel it is
essential that the public become
aware of the tremendous JOb being
quietl y done by a few individuals .
This leads to the second reason for

No bottles •.•
No returns •..
wifh the

Marx
Home Oxygen

Support System.
r~-... ......

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~ .............. ....'nonOfl!'\ ""14"

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.,. . ,...,.,..,.., r:J ""'"'"'-" "'*"

-

,,,.

gr t'e:ll

need ror more people to gl\'l' JUSt li
few hours a week to he lp with thiS
very worthwhile program .
No s pecial sktU s are needed - only
H d es ire to become In volved wiUl
some wonderful , lova~ people whu
ask su little and give so much .
I'm sure the feeling among the Acl-!
voc·ates and Staff IS s urruned up tn
this statement by one of the volun tee rs , " I get so muc h more from
them than I could e ver hope to
return . " - Sincerely , 1Mrs . 1 Sh1rlev
Cox. H.N.. Hedlands , Calif.
-

LOUISE l&gt;'TEINBA UER
POMEHOY - Louise Mees Stein bau e r, 79. Colu mbus , form e r
resident of Meigs County, died
friday . She was a member of the
!Jnden Lut he r an Church .
Survivors

ts ~ u c h il

.seniors , want to gr a dua te in 1980 , not

1981!- Name withheld on request.

Why no settlement?
Dear E ditor .
The strike in the Meigs Local
School District lingers on. Due to a
new inexperienced superintendent,
negotiations have come to a s tan dst ill .
His stat ement tn the paper Oct 17.
led the publi c to believe teachers dtd
not wa nt to negotiate a new eontr act .
He &gt;'taled he had had no re ply from
associa ti on representativ~ .
I Thi s was not true) .

any

When the re presentative was
asked to name a time to talk he
asked the superinte nden t if their
position on any of the negoti able
items had changed and he sai d they
had not
In other words if the MLT will give
-· up they can return to their
classr ooms. That is not negotiating !
So far the representatives hav e
negotia ted wtth a lawyer for three
months to ftnd out that the lawyer
has no power to give or take on an y
I!ClllS.
Why don't the board members
want to get this settled 0 Why do they
want to break the assoctation?
This is not good faith bargaining .
The next move IS likely to be to try to
hire out of town tea chers or out of
county teachers . Just to prolong the
I teachers· strike
! Thousa nds of Meigs Cou nty
dollars are leaving the county
• weekly due to security guards now.
- Name wi thheld on request.

Maysville policeman first
•
•
VICtim of growing pains. •
MAYSVILLE . Ky . 1 AP t - Thi S
OhiO River town is suffenng from
~ro wing pain s which ha \'e residents
lon gmg for the good old day s.
Frida y, the town of 8.500 felt 1t s
sharpest pains so far when 22-year old Daniel 1.. Hay , Ma ysville 's ftr st
poli ce offi cer killed m the hne uf
duty . was bur1ed .
Tilt' downtown area and many

restaurant, you don't know everyone
sitting at the counter anymore ."

hu s m csscs dosed Llown for St~veral
hours to hon or HCjy, who W!I S shot

ca 11sed most busmesses to give the ir

e"' IY Tuesday morning wh il e
inwsttgahng a break-Ill at a local
J!,rocery .

" ln llleiny ways , th1s 1s't-hP saddt"st
day 1n
Mays vi ll e
h ts lor y,"
c-o nc lu ded the Hev . (' Wayne

h£t ve dwd in a s unda r manner in five
ye a rs .

28 Holzer graduat~s pass state examination
•

Laura Ga llenstem , a lifelong
resident of the town . " This is the
lund of place where you know
everyone on the !police) force, so
you feel it extra hard-"
The Maysville mayor said the
shooting proved that a small town
police officer's life was not an easy
one .
" It shows that these guys have a
dangerous job just Uke everywhere
else," Bogg.s sa id.
It was a job that Hay wanted for
himselr.
Boggs rec a ll ed tha t for 16\2
months before he was old enough to
be a police officer, Hay worked as a
clispatcher.

"Th is to wn has changed m the
pa st five years." said May svtlle
Mayor Btll Bog gs " We' ve gotten
bu ~an e.ss , a power plant, more
people .
" But also when you go tnto a

It was that sma ll town fee ling tha t

employees time off a nd caused
residents to hne the route of the
funeral procession and put black
bands C.l U1eir doors .
" We didn't expect 11 cou ld happen
he re . an;-where but here," satd

Bamett

The shooting bro ught the town
WlWelcome comparison s w 1th muc h

lar ger Cmcmna!i, 60 miles down
r ive r . where seven police offi cers

ISears I

LIST COMPLETED
C'OLUMBUS , Ohio I API - The list

of r ecorrunendations for two new
.p ositions on Southern Ohio U. S.
Distnct Court bench has been
completed , giving U S. Sens. John
Glen n a nd Howard Metzenbaum It
names to choo se from m mak1ng

...'

.,\---~. --

--

being

c uns1dert:d

i11sttlate
•
vour attic

/

their r ecommen dat iOn of two
ca ndidat es to Presidenl Carter .
Thus~

Help r~educe
vonr fuel hills ...
\\ \ ~
let Sears

are

Gerald E. Radcliffe. Ross Count y
Probate and Ju vem le Court Judge :
S Arthur Sp iege l. C tn c tnna t l
attorn ey; Burton Pearlman, U.S.
Ban kruptcy Referee m Cmcmnatl :
John Alton. Columbus attorney:
Alphonse Cin c ion e, Co lumbu s
attorney; Robert Gorman, Hamilton
Co unt y Common Pleas Judge:
Geor ge Palmer . Ohto Court of
Appeals Judge in Cincmnatt : Walter
Porter , Dayton attorney; Walter
Rice, Montgomery Co unty Common
PLeas Judge: Thoma s Spraul,

who graduated 1n the June. 1 9;~
Class frOOI the Holzer Medtca l t ·en ter School of Nursi ng ha ve been an nounced .
Official notification was recet ved
from the State of Ohio Board of Nursing Educatio n and Nur se
He~istration, confirtrung that 28
gradua tes who took tho• twu-&lt;lay
exammat1 on tn Columbus on J uly 10
and 11 successfully passed It and are
now eligible to practice profess tonal
nu rsing as registered nurses in the
State of Ohio and to usc the mittals,
H. N., after their name .
Eleanor Strang , H.N., Dir ector of
Nursing Services at the Holz.-r
Medical Ce nter , and Barbara Be tz
H N., Associate Director of Nursmg
Services, were delighted to rc(' eivc
the officia l list of regiStered nurses
now eligible to a ccept positi ons
within the hospital to pra cti ce
profess ional nurslng.
Mrs Strang has the respons ihthty
of luring a nd placing the registered
nurses who jom the staff of the
Holzer Medical Center , wh1le Mrs .
Betz coordinates and dtre(ts their
orientation and staff development.
Both Mrs . Strang and Mrs . Betz
expressed how pleased they were In
receive this offictalliS! , as a demond
for registered n urses alway~ ex1sts
at the hospital.
To have the hospital's School of
Nursing graduates successfully pass
their State Board Examinations and
be available to accept nu rsing staff

defmi te
plus fur both th.._, SC"h ool &lt;:t nd the

gr" nt full a pprova l to the Holzer
Med1cal Ce nter &amp;·hoot or Nurstn~. to
rema in 1n effel'l un ti l October 1
198l7 . Th_1s ~oti ct_' IIIdic ates that th~
lt, ;.fpt t&lt;~ s Sl'hool of Nu rsmg cont muetl t n 111 eet tlw s tand a rds set for th ~ y that Board
The 28 .Jun e ~ radua t es from the
Hol zer Mcdl nt l Ce nter School of

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Htn 1.... appl1t:d lo t'Vt-'f\

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'

LEA \'I NG TUESDAY
C'OLUMBUS. Ohio (AP I - A
grou p of Ohio bus inessmen and state
offi cials will leave Tuesday on a
second s t ate-sponso r ed trade
mission to the People's Republic of
China .

""' &lt;lf'l ... ....... .

.: -.

·~··""'"'

Tri-County Home Medical Supply

the Carmichael veh icle . Turner was
ctted on a charge of failure to

'lw o persons

wer e tnJ ur ed durm g a three-vehicle

ma intain an assured clear distance .

acn dcn t tnvesligated Friday by the
c;allta-Metgs Post . High wa y Patrol
Callt)d to Ow scene on SR 142, at
mil epost 20. at ; 30 p .m .. officers
repor t a west txJwld auto operated
by Charles Mc Bra yer, 26, Gallipolis,
sidl' swipt•d ~a s l bound Vt!h iclt&gt;s
operated by Johnny McGuire , 21.
PatriOt . and 1\orma McColhstec, 23.
Ironton , m a curvl' .

TEENAGER KILLED
PORTLAND , Ore . ! API A
station wagon ran down six tee n-age
gtrls joggin g after a birthday party ,
lulling one Ja-year-&lt;Jid and injuring
two 13-year-ol ds , Multnomah County
sheriff's officers s aid .
TI1e gir ls. who were joggmg on
Sauvie Is land jus t outside the
Portland city limits , were struck
from behind on a straight stretch of
ro"d at abo ut 5 p.m . Friday , sa id
Sheriff's Deputy Bart Whal e n.
An other police in vestigator said
vr sibiiity was good at the tune .

•'•l l t t · r

In sta llat iOn warranty

,, f

\ t JU I' altll'

w.11· rnl'l 111 \\ 1nter
. roolt ·r
11 1 .. . umn 11•r' ( 'a ll today for H

Fllr:r: ''' '"'"'t'''
PH. 446-2770

\ .. ~ ;1hou 1 ~~ · ltr !i cn•rlil plun !o

fo r qu :dtf tl'd pt ll(!t ..- 1.; .1ppl it&gt;'l lo
1 • r Il l • 1 11 'I r,· .. td {'n, ·t•
w hnr rn ... !;tll··d
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Jfl , l ' l ll l lllll ,,f :!- . IIIII I
1'. 11 1
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l w "' 1'1 ' 111 &lt;HI qu . dd \ 111 :.: l •t"dul'l .. d11nn ~ lht • ' t·. •r

1·.111 ' t t: \

T : t~

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Gua ngzhou , known a~ the Ca nton
Fair, a nd th e cities of Wuhan and

Sears

.'

Wtlf'rf · Anl('r u._. t &lt;:..ht ll , ..
"

'- 11 1• /•lo /1 " 11 ' · '· ""' "1 ' ·· ·1, .•

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SILVER
BRIDGE
PlAZA

iJnd

Then• wa s
darna gt· to the \1c Colltster

dt ' Jil t!l l "h ed .

\1c Rr;_lyt·r wa""' ,·rlt•d on a char ge uf
ldt of Lt_•nt t•r
One dr! \'t' t' H &lt;L" c ited fo\l oww g a
! wO-\'dil c lt• ap·akn t on SH i, a t

$ -1 29

111. &lt;1! :1 20. p 111

r mlepo~ t

MONDAY-FRIDAY
OCTOBER 22-26
McCLURE'S

dairy Tsle

HULLER AT
NOR11iGALLIA
VINTON - The Walnut Huller , annuall y used by the FFA groups of
Gallia County , will be at North
r.a llia High School the week of Oct.
22 through Oct. 26, frcrn 8 a .m . to 3
p.m.
The Walnut Huller wi ll be at Han nan Tracr High School from Oct. 29
to Nov. 2 from 6 a.m . to 3 p.m . other
school dates will be a nnounced later

Offl n 'r." n.· [~Jrt a :-.uuth bound 4l.Ulo
opera tl'd ~~ \ C::rr(J l ) ( ' ::~nn1 c hacl. 15.
1;all!rJ•.I! i". 11.1' ! ~lowc·d u~ traffic o n 7
hound \"t•h wk dnvt.:n by
·tP.. Pmct l1rnl h·. fa 1l ed

·" souU

~ ) a\· y T Hr: ll"l.

lo

st op and st ru ck

l

lw Canu a ·ht'l cl

.l U l U 10 tl l t' 1'\' Cl r

C&lt;tnni d l &lt;JI' I tl i:ill !l t-'d tnJUry, bu t

Locust St .
Middleport , 0 .
992 -5248

was not H ll lr lt'rlttt ! d~ lrt'&lt;itt.· d.

Tht.'fi ' Wd S !!IUdl'r(:llt' Llam o~ gl' lu
lht! ·1 urrwr au tv. s l tg ht damag e t u

I

~r1nstrong

CEILINC PANELS
•n

\Nith a beautiful

Armstrong suspenaea
cetllng, you Sttll nave
easy access to pipes and
Wi ri ng Metal framework

suspends bv wtre from
your 010 cetnng . no

spectal tOOlS needl'&lt;l!

see how little
a 10' x 12 '

II

...

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Director

J&lt;~nws

Duerk sa id Sen .

CLOSEOUT SALE

Vital to econom ic conditions and
needs o f th is community are th e de posito rs' fun ds invested in the region
we serve - in sound loans to the indiuals and businesses of our ba nkmg

1979 MODEL

14x70--Total Electric

1. .. .

.,0.

..

l.ll(Htfil

It IJIIOO M

::-r

""

I'

Woodburning - Fi r epla ce - Western Furn1ture L• v •ng Room
F r.1me Car
Wrap Roof and W al ls - ,Water 5hu l Off Values Ea c n F 1x tur es
~ Ea rl y
Ameri c an Fur nitur e Den Bay Window i n De n
- 2 Door 14 cu ft

RC&gt;yrigera tor - Upgrade Carpeting rnrougnour

'14,995

Was

'15.995

PLAIN WHITE
• washaole

;

residence.

Terry Brainard. 19, was arraig ned
befor e Magistrate Andy Wilson and
ordered held in lieu of S250 bond
following the fil ing of a warrant
against him by Bill Kime s, a fanner
Mason patrolman .
Brainard. who is reported to ha,-e
had a knife. was taken into custody
a ft er being surrounded b) ~a son
County shertlf deputies ond other

law officers in the vic init y of a
Hartfo rd trailer court shortly after
the a lleged assault took pla ce .
He was also charged w1th publi c

• Acous !Jcrtl
• Wash""tt d0

~I

sso4o

• V•n yl &lt;:.Od h' ll

$3720

.I

ROYAL OAK
• Flre·re caroant
• Acousttcat
• Gr1cJ·hldlng CJestgn

• wasnatne

..-----------cOUPON

:,

I

"I

lI

COUPON ------------ -,
I
I
I

Carolina Lumber &amp; Supply Co.

w DISCOUNT OFF
10 ~o

I

ADVESTISED PROUDU CTS'l

:

l

WITH COUPON

I
1

l

I

Exp . 113-79

---- -----------------------------------CAROLINA LUMBER
&amp;
SUPPLY COMPANY

312 Sixth Street

675-1160

Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Mon Frt 8 am . To 5 p m. Sat. 8 a.m. To 12 noon

39!

!

CHOPS
Sl79LB.

CHOPS

$189LB.
COUNTRY STYLE

STORE MADE

Spare Ribs

Pork Sausage

89eLB.

$129LB.

FRESHEST PRODUCE IN TOWN

RED DELICIOUS

YELLOW COOKING

APPLES

ONIONS

3-lb.

bag

79e

two accidents
The Pomeroy Police Departmenl
investigated two accidents Fr iday m
wluch one person was injured .
At 5:05 p . m . a truck , pulling a

llllllt'rll·ii~ -

project , the Jaycees are askmg Joc·al
residents to bring their unused toys
to specified drop boxes wh1ch w1lll.e
established withi n your local culltmunity .
Anyone who cannot drop off the
toys, may contact Victor Gaul 19924329 ) or Pat Clifford. project chairman (~398 1 for pick-up service
The success of any commumtv
project is detenru ned by the participation of the restdents

stalk

bag

U. S. No. 1

White Potatoes

33e

l().lb.

bag

89e

2% MILK

QUEEN
OF SCOT
PURE VEGETABLE

GALLON PLASTIC

SHORTENING

Ali-STAR

3-lb.

8 oz. ctn.

$}79

PET
FROZEN
PUMPKIN PIE

2/99 ,
AB or SPRITE

8 16 oz. Bottles

$1

19

24 oz.

HI P-O-LITE
MARSHMALLOW CREME

DURKEE
IMITATION VANILlA
6 oz.

7 oz.

bottle

jar

SCOT LAD
CHOC-O-CHIPS

BROUGHTON
DAIRY LANE ICE CREAM
half
gallon

12 oz.
BAG

$119

24 oz.
ctn.

99e

14 oz.
bag

99e

16 oz.
bottle

r

-coUPON-

KRAFT
MIRACLE WPIP
SALAD DRESSING.

ft

quart size
SAVE 39:'JI

.,

19

KARO RED LABEL
WHITE SYRUP

KRAFT
ITALIAN DRESSING
16 oz.

99e

SCOT LAD
FLAKED COCONUT

VALLEY BELL
COTTAGE CHEESE

bottle
VJ;;I'ERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions- Emili Boggs . Shade :
Betty Crites, Hartford; Karen
Phalin, Pomeroy ; Kobert canaday,
Rutland ; Sandra Winebrenner,
Syracuse; Aretha Snider, Racine.
Discharges - J oseph Rudolph,
Carl Gheen, Sr ., Williaun Taylor, Ida
Young, Lester Wolfe , Callie
Metheney, Dessie Kulm, Wilbur Hilt,
Martin Johusnn. Catherine Roach,
r.4·r1tnn· l ;: ak e

49e

3-lb.

CELERY

One hurt in

t'Ufll[lillgrt

RIB PORK

LOIN PORK

PASCAL

To ensure successf uJ complet w n
of this conununity involvement

Tile Only

•

Because you do business directly wi!h
a ho met own . home -o wned bank.
th ere· s no problem o f decisions made
from a " home off1ce" somewhere else .
We·re right here to advise and serve
yo u

• F~rt! - r e lardan t

~·

I.'

PARTS

9-11 Chops

intoxication .

CHESTEH - The Shade Htver
Jaycees will cond ut1 a "Toys fur
Tots" program, whereby unused or
repairable toys are donated by local
residents, fixed and readted for
distribution to needy children "''thin
the Shade Ri ver c ommun tues
around ChriStmas lime .

.J I

·.

VERONA

FAIRMONT
• A. v) U 5 I I r

I
I
1

i

•

HARTFORD - A Hartfonn man
has been lodged in the Mason County
jail on an assault charge stemming
from an incident which took place
late Friday night a t a Hartford

To\'

'·•

SPECIAL

...

,·

'

"

----~. ,~ ·-1·
'---.- I

facing charge

trailer, was tra ve ling on Pomeroy 's

fit Into
•81Y"tolnlt8ll metal grtdl

MIXED FRYER

Ja c k son . N eesh a Ann Sm d h, P I
P le asant , w . va , Br enda Kt:t 'l"

East Main Street dnven by Joh11
Pedings, 58, Smithton , Pa . when the
trailer broke loose and stru ck an oncoming car dri ven by Sandra
Winebree ner, 23, Sy ra cuse. headon .
Winebrenner was taken to
Veterans Memonal Hospital by th e
Pomeroy Emergency Squad whe re
she was admitted .
At I a.m. Saturday a c ar dn ven by
Floyd P ullins , 25 , P om eroy, wa s
traveling west on Butternut Ave .
Pullins stru ck a parked c&lt;1r uwned
by Hay Vinmg . There wen• no tnjuri es. There was heavy propert y
da mage .
Pullms " ppeared before May or
Oarence Andrews Saturda y mor ning on charges of drivrng while Intoxicated a nd was fined $35(1 " nd
costs and sentenced to 90 J ay5 c•m·
finement.
The Pomeroy F tre Departm ent
was called Fnday at 6 !6 p m. to
Bailey Hun Road where a c a r was on
fire .

, . rarve 2' •• ...,...

Ohv1ously. independent ba nking is a
v1tal and essential part of the Ameri
can enterpri se system . The officers
and di rec tors o f Ohio Valley Bank
haw a whole -hea rted Interest in the
prosperity and well -bemg of the area

Quarter Sliced
PORK LOIN

Hartford man

Stat e Depiirtrnl'nt of F.ronomic
a n d Commun1t y Deve lo pme n t

~ IJrio I

p"""" 4-1&amp; 3856

56 Slllt Strwt

Cynthia
Kar Ri c h ards ,
A me sville. Cynthia Jane Sheward .

ney ,

costs I

"""' 'Q ' f"lo l

, &lt;'!·, ~

. . . . &lt; .... ,.

HAPPY OCCASION - Charles I. Adkins , r ight , Vice President
Professional Services at the Holzer Medical Center . sha res the pleasure
of the hos pital 's School of Nursing's offi cial nolice of contmumg approval
from the State of Ohio Board of Nursing Educalton and Nu rse
Kegistration \\i th Janet M. Byers, H.N, left, Director of Nurst ng
F.ducation .

A&lt;'cidents leave two persons hu11

mod er~ te

GOLD KIST

SUPERIORS

Of'Oor ah L 'l"n n B o a tr •911 1, Chest e r ,
Debr ,) ~u s t'l n Bobst , Wh ee lersburg ,
PMtH!IFI
R f'ne B r ra n. Gal lipo l ts .
Knthy F or shey Car l•s l e . J ac kson ,
G•ngf'r {l. n n Cullu ms . P orne-roy ;
( o lh( f wv rnn n El lt o tt , T hu rman ,
Pd l r tr, a
A nn
E r v 111,
Ch eSi f' r .
Po meroy .
( ry '-&gt; 1,11 F ar e Gl az f' ,
M ~lr tf' 1\nne!tt• G r IJ"&gt;P . C!w sn1 r e , C1n
( j ·,. K a ,. Harr, :_.o n . Gall t po i •S. M a r y
Ru se ttl' I J om·s , Ponwro y , Sher•
Lynn K ca t my , Iro nt on : Carl e n e
Mar 1P K ohut . W aver ly , Tammy
L ynn e
La w so n . Wh eeler s burg :
Ot1 na F l r11 nl" fo/,c Fa r la n d. Whe el e r
'&gt; bu r g , C l at r r&gt; E l a i ne M e na enhall .
1\lewoort Jul trl Ly·nn Osbo rn e. Rod

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:.J'urs1ng who now H rl' r Pgistered nur·

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PHONE 446 -9593

Prices Effective Sunday, Oct. 21 thru Saturday. Oct 27

Th t' \1c{_; ulrt' and M'cBra yer a utos

CHEESE
&amp; FRIES

Jeun

VINE ST~UT , GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Med1 cal Center for treatmen t.

HAM with

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

ses mel ud e ·

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1\ ul J.t'r ,'\1t_•dll'al ( 't:nter .
J.a n~ l M H ~'t'f' S. H ~ . Dtre ctor of
.\urs1111o! E du cat l llll , Hbo rect'lved of.

fho&gt; {)ln0rt1 ...

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&lt;&lt;Vli "'•&gt;O&lt;Wy"""' ,.., _ _, _,, ,•••••.~ .. _, ' "'-'" '"'""

':,1) \J l! l

Mc Brayer were
InJured and tra nsport ed to Holzer

Webster. Columbus attorney .

Shanghai.
The trip is designed to allow U.S.
unporter s and exporters to transact
business with the Chinese .

Examinations , g ive n to U1e st u dent s

Wh o l ('~ t&lt;.l• · .
,'\ fh ens ;
Debra Rutt1
W d k• nson . Xe n•a.
Cyn t hi a Sue
W •l liS Cr o n . sout h Po• nt , and Sharon
M M •e W oo lum . Galli polis

!,lyl t, r Wa l rr l ou /V. &lt;l r)" F~ ')" € W f·bt ).
Po m t
A ldd Ka')" We'-&gt;l inl l

Pu.':!l ll ur t ~l l lil' l tus p l kt l. IS a

!\kCUire

Ci n ci nnati a ttorn ey and No r ton

Harry Me s hel , D-Youngstown.
majority leader in the sena te, wtll
lead the Oluo delega tton .
Duerk and state mtemattonal
tnd•• Director Fred Sexton will be
the other state offt cia ls on the tnp .
Stops tn Chma will mclude the
mterna twnal
trade
fa ir
In

GAIJJI'OI.IS - Hes ults of tlw
July, 1979 State Board Test l'ool

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A-3-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Oct. 21, 1979

Latest figures show economy rebounds
NEW YORK 1AI' 1

Tht- latest

flgW'e s on t'COnonur uutput tn th e

tturd quarter of the year showed

&lt;I

SW'prismgJy Strong re boWld [rom
declining growth m the previous
penod .
But it appears not to have shaken
the widely held view that the

'

)
CHECK MENU - Gordon Crow , left , Pt. Pleasant, and Edgar Harrop,
Gallipolis, look over menu lor the upcoming Circuit Assembly of
Jehovah's Witnesses in Portsmouth, November 3 and 4. Main purpose of
the gathering is to provide spiritual food . However , for the convenience of
the 1,500 delegates we also provide a cafeteria and refreshment stands for
the tw&lt;Hiay event. Edgar Harrop and Ray Fowler of Middleport will be
cooking and supervising the cafeteria part of the operation . More than 120
from the local area will be attending the bi-annual meet.

ties went to the "Gallipolis Wonder ."
There had been three preliminary
bouts for $10. Thomas Salford and
W. F . Blair fought to a draw . Jotm
Farley beat Ernest Cousins when
the latter committed a foul and A. J .
Muzie beat A. 1.. Canterbu ry in a
bout in which the Tribune
remarked : "Both fighters had arms
like broomsticks and should have
been in bed."
As a whole , boxing was seen by
GaiUIIII.S as degrading : there were
uo women among the too spectaton.
Prize fighting In Gallla was dead
before It had hardly begun . Devotees
of the art look to the back streets and
creek banb. Throul(bout 1892 and

t&gt;eonomy as ~e tting worse .
The prelunmary government
figures rt•leased this past week
sl•owl'&lt;.l the economy gn..'w at an
annual rate of 2.4 percent m the
. July-Septemmber quarter after
faUing at a 2.3 percent rate in the
second quarter .

1893 there were several so caned
"SilDdliy Prize Fights" under
Asylum IIIII. Among the most
frequently beard names In theoe
matches were : Bill Hill, Lorenzo
Lewis, William Belcher, Mac
Broyles, Frank Stewart, Ab Allen,
State Wright, and Walter Arnold.
Irate Galli an citizens had by early
1893 caused a law to be passed in the
county that punished prize fighting
with imprisonment in the state
penitentiary . Boxing was taken over
by the Ga!Upolis Gym Club and as an
amateur sport was quite respectable
for some years. Pnze fighting,
however, had on ly a s hort history in
19th centu ry Gallia.

That has renewed tht- debate over
when the !ong-pra.hcted recession
rnay have started . But it has created
litlle optumsm about the course
ahead

Whether the recession - usually
defined as two co nse cutive quarters
of dt..--c lining real Gross National
Product - actually began in March
or m October may be largely
academic , many analysts argue .
Some experts, including Treasury
Secretary G . William Miller, say the
July-September data is a "false
s1gnal " and that the economy
remalns in "a r~essionary mode."
Says Lief Olsen, chief economist
at Citibank , " Th e jury is still out on
whether we are in a recession or not.
But the probability IS higher now
Ulan It ever has been ."
Lawrt&gt;n c f'
Chimerine, chief
economist at Chase Econometrics,
rcmams convinced that the
recession began in the March-June
quarter and that special situa tions
"distorted" re;ulL&lt; in the !"test
period.

B-1- The Sunda y Tuues..'ientmel . Sunday, Ot·t. 21, 1979

"Eveu with the increase in the
third quarter, it only brings us back
to where we were six months ago,"
he says.
lle and others argue that much of
the lat..t growth was due to
increased sa les, which had been
artificially held back during the
summer when gasoline lines and
fears of shortages kept shoppers
home .
· Then too, there were special auto
rebates and Incentives which helped
boost vehicle sales in the third
qua rter but at the expense of sales
later , he says.
TI1e country's largest forecasting
firm, Data Resources, of Lexington,
Mass., Cites similar catch-up effects
that may have artificially boosted
the third quarter results .
Warns Data Resources economist
Robin Siegel, " The stronger the
economy is now, the more, if
anything, a r e the c han ces of
weakness later .... The worst could
be yet to come ."

B
So vital was the
Ohio River that
the Congress of
the United States
appropriated
$7!i,OOO in 1824 to
maintain the
navigation capability of this 'way to
the west' by
snagging and
dredging at key
points along the
Ohio. This was the
first civil works
appropriation given to the Corp!! of
Enginee,., .

OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30· SUNDAY 1-6

Dempsey-Perdue bout attracts
Gallians to travel by river
ByJameoSaads
GAUJPOLIS- In 1925 a nwnbe r
of Ga.llians boarded the excursion
boat that would take them to
Ashland, Ky ., where they would watch a boxing match sponsored by Armco Steel. The match brought
together the former peavyweight
champion of the world, Jinuny Perdue, and the current (in 1925) champ
-Jack Demp!ley . The match was the
high point lor the history of boxing in
the Ohio Valley.
Boxing or prize fighting had a
rather checkered history in Gallia
County. The sport came fi,.,t to the
attention of Gallians when local
papers carried news of the 1881 match between John L. Sullivan and
John Flood. The Police Gazette, long
a favonte magazine in the county ,
brought lots of boxing news. The
Gazette incidentally had been
outlawed in the county in 187!i as

The be!lit pel'!lion
to see about youl'

LIFE INSURANCE
may be youl' cal',
home and health
agent! See Ol' call:

C. K. SNOWDEN
417 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446 -4290

I iJu-- u gouJ rll'tghhor .
tHU / f' Form is fhf' rt•

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being '100 perniCIOUS. "
The Sullivan-Flood bout ,.,.. beld
on a barge In the Hudllon Rlver off
Yonkers, N. Y., to avoid prooecution
and arreot by either New York or
New Jersey officials. In 1882
Sullivan claimed tbe bare-knuckle
cbamplooshlp of ihe United Stateo
when Ill' defeated Paddy Ryan at
Mississippi City, Miss. Shortly alter
this bout, Sullivan learned that
pollee across America would
tolerate balling done under the rules
of Lord Queens berry. It was then
that SulUvan jolued theatr1cal
troupes and traveled around the
country offenog ,.. much as ~ to
any man who could last four roundJ;
with him.
But perhap!l the gre atest tmpetus
to boxing for Gallia Count y carne
with the first bout with gloves when
"Gentleman Jim " Corbett defeated
John L. Sullivan in New Orleans in
1892.
The first public boxing matc hes in
Gallia were held in 1892 a t the
Aleshire Hall on Court Street . One
such early bout was bUied as the
championship of Gallia and Meigs
Counties. The contestants were Jotm
Edwards, the "Gallipolis Wonder ,"
and Philip Dillon, the " Pomeroy
Cyclone ." Edwards had a 10 pound
advantage on Dillon.
The fight was controvenilal from
the start, as Dillon claimed that the
fighters had agreed to rule out the
pivot blow . Edwards claimed that be
said no such thing . P. T. Wall, the
master of ceremonleo and one of the
organizers of balling In Gallipolis,
spent 38 minutes trying to settle the
dispute before the Impatient 400
SJ&gt;fi'lators started their own row.
Finally the pivot blew was ruled out
and the fight began. There were
frequent cllocheo and, according to
the Tribune reporter covenng the
fight, "the fighters spent m011t of the
rounda bugging eacb other."
In the third round Edwards let
go with what Dillon claimed was the
pivot blow , and he dropped to one
knee to declare a foul . The judges
ruled no foul and sounded the bell for
round four . Edwards came prancing
out of his comer but Dillon declined,
and so the first prize fighting championship of Gallia and Meigs Coun-

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FOR $ f our
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GAJJJPOI.JS - In r ommemora!Jon of the 50th anniversary of the completiOn uf the ongmal Ohio ltlver
navigation system, a notiUa , including boats and exhlbits,
docked at Gallipolis Friday .
Sponsored by the Propeller Club of the UmU,d States, the
event was designed to celebrate the cruise of 1929 in which
President Herbert Hoover was a key figure.
An exhl bit
barge, pushed by a Coflls towboat and ac companied by a U.S.
CoAst Guard bu oy tender, was open for public \OeWlflg at the
Gallipolis waterfront from 4 unt111 p.m.
Opening ceremonies at the event were h1ghlighted by the
presentation of a bronze plaque to the City by Dean ~plmg, of
the U.S. Propeller Club's Port of Htul!Jngt on .
The n ol!l la represent ed a partial reenactment of the
original dedication cruise that took place in 1929 It marked
the completion of the 50 locks and ili!nl.&lt; that LTeated the mne
foot channel and year round capability that en'ts on the 981
· mile length of the Ohio K1ver
The naVJgallon locks and dams on the Oh10 and some
tributaries were built to prov1de a deep enough river to keep
traffi c moving most of th e year~HJ,1o ri cally, severe dry
penods used to close UJC nver du rmg summer and fall months. The old steamboats would ht- lugh and dry for days and
weeks. Dams created pooL&lt; and today the Ohio has a 9 foot
depth by the ope ration of the navigation dams . Locks are
used to ali ow traff1e to pass the artificial barner set up by the
dams.

HISTOHY OF THE COHPS

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Handy ro ll of 50 heavy -duly liner s
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Power Brush Hair Dryer
W1z '' comple te 1000·W system
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"That the president ol the Umt£d States be, and is hereby
authorized to cause the na vigation of the Oluo Kiver to be improved over the followmg sand bars, or either of them a t his
discretion, to wit :
"The sand bar which crosses sa id riv er. one rn1 le and a
quarter below Flint Island;
''The sand bar two mil es above French Island;
'1'he bar just below !lender son:
"The bar below Willow Island in the MiSSISS ippi bend:

" And the bar opposite to lower Srruthland, below Cumberland Isla nd ."
-Act of Congress approved May 24, 1824 .
That's how it '1arted . An appropriation of $75,000 , made in
support of the above quoted Federal Act, represented the fir ·
st major civil works appropriation voted by Congress , and is
generally acknowledged to mark the beginning of the U.S.
Arm y Corps of Engineer's activity in the Ohio River Valley.
President Monroe, in his annual message to Cong ress
December 7. 1824, cited th e Federal Act of the prior session
containing the proposed improvement.s and stated that
" ... the superintendence of them has been asstgned to offi cers
of the Corps of Engineers ."
Bet ween 1879 and 1910, Congress authorized, as an 10vestment In a natural resource, the construction of 54 locks
and dams, the cage to control the unreliable Ohio . By 1929, 50
locks and dams were completed. The Ohi o became a year
round highway .
After 1929 the gr owth in waterborne traffic put an Wlmanageable demand on the system of locks . Ironically, the
same !QCks and dams and the developments of the navigation
industry that brought new life to the river began to cho ke that
life . The Ohio became a monwnental traffJc jam .
In 1954 th e Modernization Program of the Ohio began . It
was a plan to rep lace the ongtnal !iO locks and dams !by that
ililte reduced to 46 struct ures 1to 19 larger and more efhc1ent
stru ctu res .

The modernization is ahnost complete. This October one of
' the last of the modernization structures, the Smithland Locks
and Dam on the lowe r Ohio River near Paducah, Ky ., Wlll be
dedicated.
Over the long history of the Federal policy conrer nmg the
Notion's rivers and harbors Congress has based its decisions
to authorize and fund navigation projects on the grounds ta I
that the benefits of such projects, when economicall y
justified, are widespread in general and !b I improvementof
the nation 's nvers and harbors 1s a h1ghly effect1ve 10 strument for achi evement of major nat ional poli cy ob·
jectives .

A bronze plague, above . was presented to the City of Gallipolis by the
representatives of the U.S . Propeller Club's Port of Huntington in commemoratioo of the 50th anniversary of the cornpletim of the original lock
and dam system 1n 1929. Below, the Chanoine wi cket made a movable
dam possible. At high water levels, the wickets lay nat on their foundation on the nverbed and opened th e channel for na_,gation ; when the
nver level dropped , a crew of men on a special maneuver boat hooked a
"'apple and cable to the top of a wicket a nd raised it.

: Chr/stm11s
lf~, Photo
~~~ firsstlngs

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Engraved Metal Frames

Choose Early Spnng . Rose . L1m e
Lemon. Powder Fresh 6·oz ·

Choose from 5xT or 8x 1o -. Go ld
co lored metal. non-glare glass.

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Sealed Beams
Choice ol h1gh or tow sealed beams
Our 2 . 78 Round Single

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Gallipolu, Oh .

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RIVER ROAD GALLIPOLIS
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Above : With the mcTease in the size of tows the 600 foot
locks could no longer handle the tow in one operation .
The solution was a process called double loclong which
toOk about an hour and a half. Above nght: The first
stage of construction for a new dam begins with the
building of the cofferdam in which the lock structu re
W1ll be built. ltlght : With the development of the diesel
towboa l and the increase m tonnage to almost 160
million tons a year, the Ohio is a busy trade route .

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EJ~;GINEERS I

�B-3- The Sunday T une., -.Sen hne I, Sunday. Od . 21, 1979

B-2- The Sunday Times.S.nttne l, Sunday , Oct. 21, 1979

Old time movie classic
series starts ~aturday
GALIJPOLJS - ~- t ve ex ci un~
movie classics will be fea tured at
Hiverby, the home of the French Art
Colony on five Saturday evenUigs
during the next six months . The first
one will be on Saturday , Oct ober 'J:/,
at 7:30p.m . It is a favonte from 1943
about the terror al the opera,
starring Claud Raines a nd Nelson
Eddy
The seri es of mov tes has been
arranged by the Drama Committee
of the French Art Colony, co-&lt;: hatred
by Eleanor and Da vtd Stra ng, 10
response to num erous requests . All
of the movies to be shown were top
entertairunent dunng the 30s and the
40s , and prormse to provide a most
delightful se n es of enterta1010g
evenings .
Admission to the movie classll'
nighLs at Rt ve rby ts open to the
publi c. Singl e admtsston for one
movte ts S2 or for those who destre to

bA

e vening's premiere of tile series, the
beautiful afgha n, handn¥ide by Ada
Thaler , will be gt ven away. Ttckets
for the afgha n are $1 each , and are
a vailable at Bernadine's, Carl's
Shoe Store , PJ 's and the Unifonn
Center . "The a fg han ts on display al
P J 's for eve ryone to'"" a nd admire .
and look forwa rd to owning tn the tr
own home if they should be the lu cky
person on Saturday ru gh t ," according to th&lt;&gt; Strangs.

;Uj l S!TO JUI \\ t' .

l.aLI.'t'ilt' \l a ll
I .allipuli, , I 1.

LONi.JuN

FOG®
WEEK
Enter Our Lifestyle Sweepstakes and Win A Fabul.&gt;us
Vacation for Two. No Purchase Needed to Register!
A . "Ancrea " - fashion tr e n c h c oat with ZIP out lin ing .
Double breasteit with f ull b e lt and epa c ulet trim o n
shoulders . In natural , ging e r or navy . S izes 8 to 20 and
16 1h t024'h
115.00
B. "Carolyn"-llood e d button front style . Singl e
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95 .00

Di!-&gt;&lt;:o· · l ight shu w from 'llw P1ed

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In ord t• r to pru\·l dl· !'&gt;Uch on efff'ct
of ·· [) Jscu-Marl!d . · · tlw ·· M!J bllt

The Gall! polls .Ja y&lt;· ee..,ttes · Har -

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PHARMACY TO OPEN - Dan Meadows, fonnerly owner of Village
Phannacy of Middleport a nd more recenUy of Fruth Phannacy , is
opening a new c on cept type of drug store - The Medical Shoppe Pha rmacy, a combunatwn of phys tcal therapy by Herman Dillon, L.P.T . and

Sr. Citizen
Calendar
POMEROY Meigs Se ni or
Ci tizens Center a ctivities located at
the P omeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a .m .-4 :30 p .m ., Monday
through Friday .
Monday , Oct 22 - Squa re Dance,
12:30-3 p.m .
Tuesday , Oct . 23 - Bob Bailey on
Emergency Services , 11 a .m .:
Chorus , 12 :30-2 p .m .
Wednesday , Oct. 24
Social
Security Representative, 9:30a .m .12 :30 p.m .: Blood Pressure, 10 a.m.:
12 noon ; Games, l -2c30p.m.
Thursday , Oct. 25- Kitchen Band,
12 :30-2 p.m.
Friday . Oct. 26 - Art Class. 10
~ m .-12 noon : Bowling, 1-Jpm .
Senwr Nulnt ion Program. 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m ., Monda y through

Monday - Fned fish , baked
potato, cole s law , pears, bread , butter , mtlk.
T uesday - Ham loaf, buttered
n ee, buttered pea s, ptneapple ups tde down cake, bread, butter , mill&lt;.
Wednesday - Tuna salad , butter ed
green beans, buttered com , a pplesauce, bread, butter, milk .
Thursday - Baked chi cken, bo~ed
potato m jacket , mixed vegetables,
peach - whipped topping. biscutt ,
butter , milk .
Friday - Wteners - sauerkraut,
mashed potatoes. celery sti ck peanut butter, butterscotch puddmg,
bread, butter , milk .
Coffee , tea. and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served dail y
Menu for the Racine NutritiOn
Satellite Site is s innilar to the above
menu.
Please regist er the da y before you
plan to eat. P ortland, 843-3364 :
P om eroy, 992 -7 886 . Racine Satellite
wlll be closed on Monda y due to no
tra nsportation

GAI.LIPOI.IS
The Sentor
Citizens Center a t ~ Jack.&lt;on P tke
will offer the followll!g "cttvities :
Monday, Oct. 22- Chorus, 1: 15-J
p.m .
Tuesday. Oct. 23- S T 0 P , 10 30

a. m .; Physical Fitness, 11 · 15 a .m .
Wednesday , Oct . 24 - Card
Games, 1-J p.m .; Literature Class . l
p .m.
Thursday , Oct . 25- Bible Study , 12 p.m .: Blood Pressure Check at
Vtnton Siw .
Friday, Oct. 2li - Art Class, 1-J
p .m .; Social Hour, 7 p .m .
The Senior Nutrition Program will'
s erve the following menus :
Monday - Hamburger steak with
g ravy, mashed potatoes, tossed
salad , bread, butwr, mixed fruit,
milk .
Tuesday - Macaroni and cheese,
beets, bnJssel sprouts , bread, butwr, banana cake, milk .
Wednesday - Pork chop, sweet
potatoes, applesauce, bread, butter,
ice cream, milk .
Thursday - Creamed c hicken ,
mashed potatoes , green beans ,
bi scu it, butter , pineapple slice , milk .
Fn day - Tuna-noodle c asserole,
pea s. pea r salad, bread , butter ,
chrn:olate chip cookies , milk .
Chotce of bevera ge se rved Wi th
ea ch meal.
"Servi ces rendered on a nonUi.srriminatory basis."

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.

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the phannacy with Dan Meadows as pharmacist. Meadows is a gaduate
of University of Cinc innati, class of 1963, now residing in Rutland, with
wife, Karen and daughter , Etisha; with Meadows is assistant, Bernice
Stowers .

Gallia County Gardeners to
meet October 25 locally
CHESHIRE - The fall m""ting of
the Garden Club.; of Gallia County
wiU be held Thursday evening , Oct .
25, at 7:30p.m. at the Baptist Church
in Cheshire .
Mrs . Linda Myers , County Contact
Chairperson, will preside over the
meeting and the host "club IS the
Cheshire Garden Club.
The French City Garden Club will
present the program. Mrs . Bertina
Smeltzer will introduce designers

Kincaid's, Ja y Dr Phone 44&amp;-n39.
Thursda y. Nov . 15 - Evenmg
Bridg e, 7: 30p .m ., a t F ran Shaw 's,
Greenbriar Dr. Phone 44&amp;-7593.
Monday, Nov . 19 - General
me eting , 7:30 p m . at the Jackso n
?ike Branch of the Ohio ' Na lley
Bank . Pone 14&amp;-n39.
Welcome Wagon Club is open to all
interested newcomers m Pt .
P leasant and Gallia Count y. For
more infonnation call Chns Mitche ll , 446-7739 .

Dar/fl jean Ward engaged

from the Smeltzer Flower Shop ,
Mrs . Patty Snyder and Miss Carolyn
Smeltzer , who will demonstraw
flower shop designing, sill! and dried
arrangements and
holida y
decorations .
All garden club members are
urged to attend, friends and guests
are welcome .

GALlJPOLIS - Mr . a nd Mrs. Bill
R. Ward of (;allipolis are a nnouncmg the enga gem ent and a pproachin g mar ri age of th e ir
daughter. Da r la Jea n, t o Mark Anthony Merola, S&lt;J n of Mr . and Mrs .
Anthony Merola , a lso of (;allipoli s
Miss Ward is a 1977 graduate of
Gallia Acade my High School a nd a
1978 graduate of Nationwtdc &amp;auty
Academy in Col um bus She i.&lt;
presentl y employed at La nna's
Salon of Beaut y and Holzer Med ica l
Cent er .

REPORT DELAYED
CHI CAGO I AP I - Investigator s
say it co uld take SIX months for a
_report on the cause of the switching
foulup that resulwd in the Oct . 12
Amtrak tra m crash near here .
Two per sons were k~led and 44
ot h e r s wen :- tn jured when th e
Am trak pa ssenger tram c rashed
head-on wtth a parked lllin ots
Centra l Gulf fr etght tn the uburb of
Harvey .
The Amtrak No . 352 was carr ytn~
more than 200 persons , includun~
do zen s of college students boun d for
Oll ca ~o . when it was s wttched on to
th e sa me tra ck as the parked ICG 41}.
car fretght train

'Martha ' reviewed
by Philomathean
GALLIPOIJS - The startling,
behind the scenes story of the most
famous and controversial wum..an in
recent Ameri can politics , Martha
Mttchell, ts the subject of the late
bes t seller by Winzola Mc Lendon e ntitled " Martha ," and was revt ewed
at the most recent meeting of the
Philomathean Cl ub by Vtr gtn ta
Davies .
The author , a journa list , close
!Mend and confidanc e of Ma rtha
Mitchell in her last years, t ells of
what motivated Martha and what
really happened to her after the
Watergate scandal broke . She refe rs
to the legendary rruddle -&lt;JI -the-nt ght
phone caUs
the teleVISIOn appearance when she revea led tha t her
husband, Attorney Gene ral J ohn
Mitchell , satd he'd like to trade some
of the libera ls in this count!')· for
Russian Communists ... the time she
ordered the Arka nsas Gaze tte to
"crucify " Senator J . Wilh a m
Fullbright ... her declara tion the n
calling for Ni.xon 's resogna Uon
before the na t ton was ready to hear
it.
Martha
Mitc he ll 's hus ba nd
labeled her hi s " ung ui ded miss ile ,"
creating the lll!prcssi on that he wa s
an unfortunate but compasswnate
man, saddled with a wife whom he
adored too muc h to s uppress . But
Martha reveals that J ohn . wtth
Whiw House backtng, put her up to
almost aU of her early outbursLs . A
former Ntxon aide confi!1rul that
Martha was deliberately used by the
White House to re present an out spoken view from the rig ht , but one
for whtch the Attorney General and
the White House would not be held
accountable .
~Mrs . Davis r evie wed this sto ry
of Martha Mitc heU. s he pointed out

ToPqi

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.~E?E '&lt;"". ~

Welco me Wa,[;'o n
c/u h aC'lir •itJes
October
Tuesday, Oct. 23 - Crafts - cor·
nhusk wreaths and Christmas gift
tdeas, l.J p .m . at Teresa Bihl's, 301
Brookside Dr H.S V P 446-1937.
November
Monday, Nov . 5 - E xecutiv e
meetmg , 7-8 p.m ., at Mary Hol!'ell 's,
Ja y Dr Phoen 446-44 79 .
Wednesday, Nov . 9 - Weclome
Wagon Club Salad Luncheon , 12
noon,1:30 p .m ., at the Community
Room of the Mental Hea lth Center .
Buffet Lunch, Brid~e and Cards .
Pr12es . Proceeds to Tot Finder
Program . Phone 441'&gt;-1937 for tickets .
Saturday , Nov . 10 - Couples
Bndge, 7:30p.m . at Moffitt' s. Phone
24:NJ:l9.
Wednesday , Nov. 14 - Getacquamted Coffee , 10 a .m . at Debby

27th ANNIVERSARY SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS
SAVINGS IN ALL AREAS
OF HOME FURNISHINGS

Tofa
I~

•Fne fumrtun
•Corpot
•Cusmm Dupery

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

GAlliPOLIS

•lntem O..gn

SWJJIIO AI GII!U' l STJtlHS

.., ov•• o lG I D• •' &gt;
t

440.033?

PROUD TO SUVf
Tit!~ ~~[A FOfl
JYtiiHI' Sl.Y[ JII HAltS

[Xe~~
Hentage

IO I Mon &amp;f "
IE Yet\•"•

mstructor . who \ S the t &lt;)(Jrdinator of
the Poet m tlw S&lt;.:hools prognnn for
the en tlfe Swtc of Uht o fo r the Ohto
Arl'i Cuunf"d CourdinCit ur C~ t .S.outh westem H tgh S&lt;.· hool for grades 7- 12
by .Judy Farney , Engle&lt;h mstructor
and Speech anU Drama Te&lt;:ich e r
Metdt' poss1ble t hrough Uw sup por·t
of thl· Oh.io Arts Cuum·ll and tht•
:\ ctt tona l Endown 1ent for the Ar t.-;
October 23 -! 4 - :'itnt t. Ann ual An·
tJque Sermnct r Wit h Or ;;1 Wttlke r
He tsst·nbutte l fro!!l Wa.'-l hlllgto n, I)
(' Beth Che rnngton, d 1atr111g ;
pho ne Hti~ 1 3 1 7 1w n oon tod&lt;~y $1 5 for
both da ys . tnc ludwg lunc h. $7 .50 fo r
nne day, tnc lud1n g lunch . $4 fur h&lt;Jlf
&lt;illy , nu lunch: $5 for ha lf d:11 . 111 ~
clud111g lw!{'h. l{tv er br
Ot:lobcr Z:l . 7 30 p . 111 - FA I . loh' rdt•pt-J rtm Pntal Mel'ltn l.!. ~ p rrJ F A.C. Trust ees ~ l.:'etin g, H l\·e r b~
()ctlllX&gt;r 27, 1 ::10 p.m - F t r~ t 11f
serle!i uf fJ Vt: uld tllnt' 1l"liJVJes to bt·
s ho wn du nng t he nl' xt s1 x HHJlf,l h!-1 .
Tiu ~ one a 194 :.1 fctvon te ;.~txJU t lhl'
te r r or a t l h t.• ope ra . sta rtJ ng Cl au d
11;lt nes and ~e l son Eddy $2 at th,,
d11o r . $8 for sen e.~ tlf ftvt: ftl.m :-.
Alg h"n. homemadl' by ld&lt;1 Tlld ler .
to be g1ven away Tl ckeL:; &lt;.Jve~ !l abk
a t 11 eac h a t Hernad Jne'.'i. Carl 's .
P.J 's i1nd th•· L'n 1fo nn Cent er . HJ vL·r b\ .
l&gt;&lt; t uber 28, 3::10 p.m ..J p .m . l 'ilr~n t -&lt;.:hild Works hop chatred by
:\ancy !..t'vt."rnte r and V ile! Cc.tnll£1 11,
H1verby .

........

DEALlR

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extra 10% saving.
.
The huge parking area allows easy ·access to our pharmacy located tn
front of the store for faster prescription service, so why not come by, say
hellow and get free a Big Friendly Smile and a warm hello .

that most dramatic of allts the story
of what happened to Martita "fter
Watergate , including the report that
s he was manhandled and sedated to
keep her from talkmg Word was
passed that s he did not know
anything an ywa y, although Ad nmrus tratton tns iders knew that
Martha was a n mc ura ble eavesd ropper who listened in on John's
telephone conversattons and on his
talks with people who came for
pri vate meetings in their Wawrgaw
apartment. They knew, too, Uta! afte r John went to slee p, she rum maged through his bnefcase ,
reading secret papers . That these efforLs to qui et and d iscredit Martha
we re a failure ts evid ent from the
mQSS&amp;ge on a n ora I wre ath sent
anonymously to her funera l : ··Mar ·
tha was r ight ..
"Martha .. reveals for the fi r;t
tune, the fuU unpact that drmkmg
combmed with dru gs had on Martha
Mitc heU 's life, and the poignant
story of her love for her hus band .
Tho ugh she died pennila;s and
almost a lone . Martha never ceased
wa ntmg John Mitc hell to return to
her .
Members of the Phtlomathean
Cl ub noted they enJoyed hearing
Mrs. Davies· reVI ew of this mu ch
public ized book, and felt they kn ew
Martha Mitchell m a much more
personal way . Following the re vie w,
a dessert course was served by the
hostess, Jean Circle .
The next meettng of the
Philomathean will be on Thursday
evening, October 25, at the home of
Alma McConni ck , 144 First Avenue
in Gallipolis, wtth the review be ing
presented by Mildred Bush. The
time of Thursday 's mee ti~ wiU be 8
o'clock .

Alt hough m any peopl e t hink that fa ce powd er •s
d r y 1ng , I dO noT . M Odern pow de r ar e ve r y thi n and
not at a ll h arm f ul t o del icate sk in A li ght veil ot
pow der' o n the nos.e ev e n the dr ypst on e will give t he
make up a lt n •shed look

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Ask about our
Convenient
Layaway!

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8U l 0VA. W .\ I CH liME' "

DOWNTOWN STORE
348 2ND

AV~.

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SUPER BUYS

.'

SUNDAY, OCT. 21 THRU SAT., OCT. 27
OUI OWII Filii QUAUTY II&amp;IID

HEAVYWEIGHT
THERMAL UNDERWEAR
REGULAR
'3.99

Shirt

or Drawers

( / ' , . • • ~• .,, ~·'")·'!

IOO% conaN

'' '"' ' u • , n,' r•nr'\ bud~ 1,..._ 1, '•&gt; • ...,,.. q.-.r ' t.'"!~
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'24.77

2 YEARS
12" DIAtiOIIAL . . . . . . . .

•LACK &amp; WHITI TV
ttEGUl~lt

$88

'6800

Solo d 11ot e po tl obl e te l e .

·~·on

A u to m oroc ·

AUTOMATIC SINGLE CONTROL

ELECTRIC BLANKET

Dual Control
BLANKET
REG. 130.99

$

99

WARRANTY

1200-1500 hal ....
FAII-FOICED HEATII
REGULAR

'26.97

•21 58

ln~ I O 'll · on elemenh

Sofery lip -

o ... e r swrr c h, gn l le ll o to ry diol
rhe rmostot. 12" .. 9" x 19'"

TtNNIS

t+OOU'

t+A..,.AU J&amp;t-ALAI

lollwtlal
tl
IllS JAil ALPIIA 111 IY lAlii

CoLE CO

3 f ;_

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VINYL
RUNNIR

94
~12
~
rRe9l $187
~

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uo"&lt;'\{l •O"otl'" ~ puddle ' ''"
3 • lo!K" or&gt;'' nome 'ou• w:l~ ~ ·o ••t 0'"' b C
·· ..t. ( n-1o p••• l ••'•o\
1 , 1 ., hrl lll • ... e • '''

d •t ploy

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
...11 quollty

"" '""'
VISit 01

lllASTfl CHAJGI

WATCH FOR OUR OPENING

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go • n co n rr ol tor \ t obl e p •r i L•r e V HF and
Ooerore~ o n I&gt; ( o r&gt; I.,

WE OFFER

!

JACKSON 286-5554

UHF on le n l"'oQ!o

•

-Prescription Delivery Service
-complete record of all RX filled for income tax and insurance purposes.
-100% Senior Citizens Discount on top of our low prices.
-charge Accounts, VI SA and Master Charge
-complete prescription stock.
-Physical Therapy - Private Fitting Rooms
-Spacious Treatment Cubicles

•• •

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MEIGS 992-5554

\

MAKEUP FOR DRY SI&lt;IN
Th e idea l to unda t1 on 1S a cr ea my I•Q u•d o r crea m y
co mpact . pa rt ic ul arly fho!.e p ac kag ed w it h t he•r
ow n sponges 11 your sk •n 1S very dr y , ust a found
11on wi t h a n oil separl3t ion . shak i ng th e bottle
thoroughly to m•x t he ec tor se d ime nt w itn tn e added
o il

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GALLIA 446-5554

BERNICE STOWERS

The Medical Shoppe Pharmacy is a rew Pharmacy dedicated to serving the

Dt st·o" wtll be presen ttng 3,000 watLs
of ltghting tncludtng such effects as
100 feet of Snake li te constsllng of
four culurs of sh 1 mmerin~ lites enc trcltng the stage a nd dance rs
Other effects tnclude a mir ror ball
whtrllng crystals of color around th e
room cmd t wu color strobe lighl\
givtng off a soft , pleasa nt pulsating
effect to the en !tre room . E xtra effeets wtll tnclude 100 fee l of Sm oke
I .itt•s, rt Rubb lf• ma chine a nd &lt;-~

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?

Cosmetic Departmen

Pharmacy Technician

or small.
we can offer the people of the area very re.asonable prices as .our o_verhead
allows us to pass this savings on to you and the senior citizens Will enJOY theor

(lu een Shetl o. semur s: Blcnr Wt ndon
an d Hu bert a l .o-Hk in.'"i, :-.t mu r s, an d
Derun J l'we tt Clfll..i Syn tlw-t ~Whi tt' .
freshmt:'n . AI thl' fr ont a re t my
a· tendanl" All J.: Je :v1 urp hy ctnd Aa ron
Wil son

from our"'

Registered Pharmacist
people of southeastern Ohio .
.
.
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we are Professional People doong a professtonal servoce , wtth a full line of
phamaceuticals and a complete staff of highly trained personnel to treat the
patient from the time they reave the hospital till they are fully recovered . Our
Pharmacist, Dan Meadows, has 16 years service to this area and Herman
Dillon. our licensed Physical Therapist, has been practicing in the area for 20
year$ . we can offer more than any drug store in the area. no matter how large

tlw h1 s tory of and ( '&lt;lri D Cil wh cslt•r .
JUil Jur s: T um Jl (jrn s ~Hal ~i11l l"\"
Sa m os , se nwrs: l«ld l l' ll ult n w1th

eauty Tips

t

529 Jackson Pike, Spring Valley Plaza

DAN MEADOWS

One Yt'df aj.!u .\ na stct."i Mt kuyan
ont· 11f th t· 1110~1 prui i\ Jnent men 1r 1

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PHARMACY
Gallipolis, Ohio

Merola is a 1974 g rad uate of Gall ta
Academy Htgh School and a ttencd
Rio Grande College . He a lso
g raduated from l'harles ton Custom
School of Welding and is presentl y
employed with Appala cian Power
Company.
The wedding wtll be an event of
Nov. 16at 7 p.m. in the evening. with
Denny Coburn offi ctatmg a t the
Gallipolis Chrtsllan Churc h, Ht. &gt;88 .
Gall! poli s.
The gracio us custom of open chur ·
ch "111 be observed.

recogmtl'd yuung

Fnx

IW...Jern poet , autl}(lr , leetun.•r and

GAl.I.IPOI.IS - E &lt;htbtt for the
monU1 uf Octuber - AntJQUt' toys,
dolls , fu m tture, etc P eggy E va ns.
chai ring .
GaUery Hours - .S.....turdt:t)S a ml
Sunday s, 1 p .11 1. un t tl 5 p .m .:
Tues da ys antl Thursda ys, 10 " ·'"·
until 3 p .m .
October 21. 2 p m -3 :\D p "' -- F1r·
.st of series uf three l11lldr 12 n 's
Works hops taugh t by Con nm· Lund
Mask ~ma ktng a nd J "c k ~)- I R nt e rn
ca rv ing for chJ! dre n uv~r ag e 5
Heg tst ra twn mus t be 111 d ,h ·arll'i'
Wi th Ja ne t Byers, 446-IOOJ , Htve rby
Ot:t ober 22·26 - F ull week of tlw
Poet tn tht· Schonls program at
Southwes tern H1gh Sdu10l, f L'&lt;:~t u n n g

P.:.:'
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THE MEDICAL SHOPPE

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OPENING
SOON!

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Sat urf ht~'.

t)l:

vest Oisc o" wil l fec-J l un ' l hP "" '\1nh• l('

Menu

~

Nov . 3. the Elks Club wtll
of a disco extrCt vagaro.a

~ · nday .

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On

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buy a season tJ&lt;:ket to tht' five
evemngs planned d unng the next
few months . the cost is $8. Si ngle or
season ticke Ls will be ava ilable at
the door on &amp;aturday evening, or
ma y be purchased in advance by
s toppmg 10 at P J 's in downtown
Gallipolis, or caUtng the Strangs a fte r ft ve 10 the evening at 448-&lt;l726
Future dates will be Novem ber 17,
February 16, March 15, a nd April 19,
1980.
As a specia l feature of Sa turday

'

Gala light show feature of
Harvest Disco, November 3

projector with attachments to
project unages onjhe walls, ceilings
or the dancers t hemselves.
Disc jockey for the evening will be
Mtke M) ers of the " Mobile Dlsoo"
who will delight everyone with his
music and personality .
The dance will begin at 9 p.m . and
will last until I a .m ., with prizes
betng given a wa y at various times
througho ut the evemng.
Tickets are limiwd in quantity and
a re available now fr om any Jayceeetw membe rs. ,
For further information or tickets,
conta ct dance channan Pam HarM.s
446-9625 or ticket chairman Linda
Betz, 44&lt;Hl36:J .
Ttckets a re also available from
Mikki Casto in Pt . Pleasant 67a-4539

Idea l f o r k 11 &lt;: he no; ba seme nt s.

l on g -wearmq, w 1pe .., cle an , con
be c u ' t o f11 . Smart p o fler ns .

G.C. MURPHY CO. • THE FRIENDLY

STO..._•

G.(.. MU1Pi-JY'S DOWNTOWN STOR£- 341 2ND AVENUE

�B-:i - The Sunday Times-SentineL Sundav. Oct . 21 . 1979

Golden anniversary
observed by open house

B-4- The Sunday Times&amp;ntmel. Sunday. Oct. 21, 1979

Regional conference
scheduled for PWP

Forthcoming marriage noted

,i

GALlJPOl.JS
Karen Miller,
Gallipolis, and Donald Miller , Crown
Ctty. would like to announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter , Hhonda,
to Michael!.. George , son of Mr . and
Mrs . Victor L. George, Vinton .
MLSS Miller, a 1976 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School, is
presently employed by the GaUpoli.s
Developmental Center as a hospital
aide. George is a 1975 graduate of
North Gallia High School, and is employed by Bob Evans Sausage Plant
at Bidwell
The wedding w1ll take place on
November 16, 6:30p.m., at the Vinton Methodist Church. Vinton, w1th
the Hev . Stephen S1lvey pertomung
the ceremony.

The gracous custom of open church will be observed with a reception
unmediatel y fo llowing at the Vinton
Town Hall.

Kllrcrl ill iller
t!fld

ivltke Ceu 1;r;e

VISITORS LOCALLY
DARWIN - Spendtng a few days
with William Qwvely, Darwm. were
Mr . and Mrs . Albert Qutvey.
Strasburg. Oh.

COl.UMilUS - A regional conference for 11 Southern Ohio chapters of Parents Without Partners
inte rnational
( PWP!, an
organization for single parents, will
be held November 2-4, 1979 at the
Hamada Inn East, 2100 Brice Road,
Reynoldsburg, near Columbus.
Included among those attending
the conference will be representabves of PWP Chapter 1007 serving
smgle parents in the Gallipolis area .
The main portion of the program
on Saturday, November 3 will include workshops on vital issues conceming single parents. Topics include coping with stress. legal
aspects of divorce and custody , sex
and the single parent, parenting
teenagers, and personal assessment
and goal setting.
Speakers from the Columbus area
include Ivan Podonikar, M.D .;
William Friedman, attorney ; Bernard Weiss, Ph.D., of the Ohio State
Uruversity School of Social Work ;
Floyd Brown, psychologist ; Dick
Fetter, MSW of Families in Tran sition. and Mary Ali re Rri ce. Ph .D.,

POWELL'S
Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. ll am-10 pm

OSU Department of Continuing
Education .
Parents Without Partners. a
voluntary organi:uttlon , serves the
single parent by providing experiences to enhance the quality of
life for the custodial and noncustodial parents afld children , say
PWP officials. Each chapter sponsors discussions, social events. and
family activities. Regional confe rences~re held four times a year
to offer opportunities for chapter
and personal development and
fellowship .
To be eligible for PWP membership a person must be the parent
of one or more living children - and
must be single by reason of death ,
divorce, separation or never
married . Custody of children is not a
factor.
Those interested in PWP membership are invited to a kickoff dance on Friday, November 2, at the
Hamada East from 9 p.m . to 1 a.m.
Admission for prospective members
if $5 per person .

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
OCTOBER 27,
1979
'·

tl
l "-..

• T'

·'

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ElBERFELDS IN POMEROY, 0.

MEDICARE
POMEROY - Just a reminder.
You can lose Medicare payments for
any ser.ices rendered from October
1, 1977to September 30, 19781f you do
not get your claims mailed before
January l. 1980.
We have the claim forms here at
the Center and if you need assistance in filling out the forms we will
help you .
So gel your medical bills together
and get them sent out as soon as
possible.
ENERGY DISCOUNT
The Energy Discount Program
has finally been put into effect and
there is a mad rush to get applications in before the deadline
which is November 30, 1979.
There has been much written
about the program and information
about the program has been wtdely
publimed, but from the questions
that we have received there still
seems to be some areas that are not
quite clear.
For instance "Head of household "
refers to the person that occupies a
household and who is financially
responsible for its other occupants,
or the spouse of such person if both
occupy the same household . Either
one can apply.
Also. you qualify for benefits if

..•*********************************************************t•
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....
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....
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.

•• EARN EXTRA MONEYl
•• A~-----------------••
NOW ACCEPTING
•• R
•N
APPLICATIONS
·••

.

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•• R
•• I
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.• E
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FOR
MIDDLEPORT
AND
POMEROY

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CARRIER

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either the head of the household or
the spouse is 65 years of age or over
and you meet the other

I

PHONE

992-2156
OR

992-2157
BETWEEN

8:30 &amp; 5:00

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

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..
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'ilr'llr*'"'**'lit'*''*************************************~*******

1111d

Mrs. Carl J-/yse/1

qualification~ .

A person that filed a disability certificate last year with their applications does not have to have
another disability certificate signed.
If this is your first year to file and
you are under 65 you will need a
disability certificate signed by your
personal physician or someone from
the Social Security Administration
or Veterans Administration.
Regarding your income, all income including earned income ,
Social Security, SSI, retirement pension, annuity and interests is inc! uded in total income. The only
benefits or income not counted is
disability benefits paid by Veterans
Administration.
Persons that pay their heat bill in
wtth their rent, or share a meter
Wlth another household are eligible
for a one-time payment of $125, as do
the people that heat with coal, wood,
fuel oil or bottie gas.
In order to keep on receiving the
discount if you should move it is
es&gt;~ential that you notify the Tu
Department that you have moved.
Be prepared to give them your
name, Social Security number, former address, new address, your
utility company, and account number at your new address. You can
notify the Tax Department by phone
1-300-282-4310 or by writing to:
Ohio Dell3rtment of Taxation
Energy Qualification Section
P. 0 . Box 2619
Columbus, Ohio 43216
These are not all the rules and
regulations but just some that may
have caused some confusion. If you
have more questions contact the Tax
Department at the above number or
contact us at 992-7311.
EMERGENCY TREATMENT
INFORMATION
On Tuesday, October 23, Bob
Bailey, Director of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service, will be
at the Center to explain in detail the
services offered in each community
by volunteer emergency personnel.
We may all have to u.e this service so come in and learn more
about this very important community ser.ice . Mr . Bailey's presentation will be at 11 :15 a .m .
Have a nice week .

... Announce birth
....
..
..

••. 0
.

Mr

RIO GRANDE - Mr . and Mrs .
Sandy Roberts, Rio Grande, announce the birth of their first child,
Charlotte Beth Roberts, bam Oct. 4.
She weighed seven pounds, nine ounces, and was 20 inches long .
Her maernal grandpaenl8 are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Ramey, Rio Grande ; paternal grandparents are
Virgil 0 . Roberts Sl'., and the late
Mrs . Roberts , Gallipolis .

Tonght thru Thursday

PG

JERRY REED

FLAVORITE

2%

TWIN

$}69

SUNDAY
GALUA County Historical Society,
2 p.m. at St. Louis CathoUc Church :
Board , 1 p.m.
THIEDSTONE Baptist Church ,
Youth Sunday, G:45 p.m. Hev. Ca lvin
Minnis to speak ; &gt;pee tal music .
PEMBROKE Club hosts 50th An niversary Tea for mvited guests,
members , and fanner members at
the home of Mrs. Manning
Wetherholt, 2-4 p.m.

ZESTA CRACKERS
lB.

2/$100

Bruce Lees
spirit lives in

Circle
cf Iron

Limil1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 27,1979

.,_~

HYLAND CHUNK

·-

DOG FOOD
25 LB.
BAG

RUTLAND - Mr . and Mrs. Carl
Hysell, Sr. of Main St .• Rutland, w1ll
observe their 50th wedding anniversary on Sunday, Oct . 28, with
open house at their home from 2 to 5
p.m.
The celebration is being hOO!ted by
their three sons, Carl, Jr ., Kenneth,
and Harold Hysell and his wife,
Twila, all of Rutland. Mr . and Mrs.
Hysell have three grandchildren,
Donald, Gary and David, children of
Mr . and Mrs . Harold Hysell.
Mr . and Mrs. Hysell were married
at the Bethany M. E. parsonage in
Pomeroy on Oct 23, 1929 by the Rev .
GleM TeMell. She was the former
Thelma Ebersbach, daughter of the
late Mr and Mrs. Charles Ebersbach of Prospect Hill, Pomeroy.
Mr. Hysell's parents were the late
Mr . and Mrs Dolph Hysell, Middleport , Route I.
For many years , Hysell worked in
area coal mines and then later took
employment at the former Parkersburg Rig and Reel Co. in Pomeroy .
In more recent years he has been
lll!SOCiated with his son in a used car
lot at Rutland .
Both Mr . and Mrs. Hysell are active members of the Rutland Church
of Christ.
Friends and relatives of the couple
are cordially tnvited to call during
the open house hours .

Remember

MILK~~~~~ ..
COUPON DAYS

rrtntsbyCFl

BUCKEYE SHOE Benders Weight
Pony Pull, Gallia County Coon Club
Kriner Rd ., 12 noon .
'

I

· •vco e ~

SUNDAY
ANNUAL MEETING, Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society, I p.m . Sunday beginning
with a potluck dinner at Meigs
Musewn, Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy
Those attending are to take a
covered dish and their own table service .
('

MISSIONS, noon ; Galli puppets . 6
p.m.; Bus committee, 8 p.m.:
fellowship , 8 p .m . Gallipolis
Christian Church .
THA VELEHS Quartet will sing at

MONDAY
BETIIEL 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, 7:30 Monday
rnght at the Middleport Masonic
Temple .
TIJESDAY
POMEROY PAST MATRONS, Order of the Eastern Star, will meet at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday
AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXIUARY, Drew Webster Post
39, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the hall .
Mrs . Fay Wildermuth to have a
program on education ard scholarship.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club Wednesday at Meigs Inn .
SPECIAL SERVICES Wednesday
through Sunday at the Laurel Free
Methodist Church with the Rev.
James L. Mason, Canton, as guest
speaker, and the special music each
evening.

Clark Chapel Church, 10 a.m .
TRAVELERS Quartet, Crum,W.
Va , will be singing at King 's Chapel
111 Sunday services, 7:30p.m. Pastor
John Jeffrey invites pubtic .
MONDAY
REGISTRATION deadline for scratch tournament sponsored by
Gallipolis Women'·s Bowling
Association.
AMERICAN LEGION Lafayette
Post
27,
Special
meeting
7:30
p.m .; ali
membership,
members urged to attend .
TI;ESDAY
WELCOME WAGON Club Crafts;
demonstration of comhusk craft
Ideas, l.J p.m . at Teresa Bihl's, 301
Brookside Dr. PHone 446-1937.
RIVERSIDE STUDY Club meets at
1 p.m. at home of Mrs . Howard
I.eimann.
THURSDAY
PHIWMATHEAlN CI.UB, 8 p.m. at
the home of Alma McCormick, 114
First Ave., with Mildred Bush doing
a review of the background, history
ard myths of the Outer Banks of
North Carolina .

$329

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Oct. 27 1979

Niday engagement announced

Offers
GALUPOLIS - Wayne Niday,
Gallipolis and Juanita Niday,
Gallipoli.s are proud to announce the
engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Lisa
Kathryn, to Mark Anthony Swain,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Swain
Crown City.
'
Miss Niday is a 1978 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and is
CWTently employed at Usa's Loft in
Point Pleasant, W. Va. Swain is a
1975 gradua"t;e of Hannan Trace High

School and a 1979 grad uate of Rio
Grande College, and IS now employed in management at Bob Evans
Restauran ts in Louisville. Kentucky .
A November wedding IS being
planned .

ASK TOWED

The nway Out" Room

GALLIPOLIS - Two co uple s
applied for marriage license this
week in Gallia County Probate
Court.
MakUJg application were :
Dav1d Curtis Richardson , 22,
Gallipolis, manager, and Teresa
Kay Dupler, 22, Gallipohs, students .
Garry Lee Pratt, 21, Galltpolis,
laborer . and Jacquelyn Lee
Mit chell, 17, Gallipohs. fabri c
servi.ces.

Now stocked with
a complete line of

lingerie and Sleepwear

PAINT CREEK REVIVAL NOTED
GAUJPOLIS - Revival services
will be held nightly at the Paint
Creek Baptist &lt;llurch Sunday, Oct.
21-26 at 7p.m. Guest speake11! will be
heard each night .
The 146th anniversary of the church will be observed Sunday, Oct 28
with services at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m .
Everyone is welcome .

Entry from 2% Alley
Parking Lot
--- &amp;tc.

Lim it 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 27 1979

WEEKEND REVIVAL, Centerpoint
Freewill Baptist Church, Rev. Eddie
Depreist will have message, 7 p.m.
each evening, Oct. 7-10. Special
stnglng. Rev . Danny Boggs invites
public .

TEA OCTOBER %8
GAI.LIPUS - The Gallipoli.s
Business and Professional Women's
tea at the Presbyterian &lt;llurch for
all prospective girls of the month
will be held Sunday, Oct . 28, and not
today as previously announced .

SAVE '64.95 to '298.951
YOU PAY ONLY .

$6495

*312

COIL

TWIN Sill
! ... c ~ ••t CI

Reg. '1Z'J.!IO
full Slxe '19.95
Ree, '179.!10
Queen Slxe 'll4.9S Ree, '449.90 Sets On~
King Slxe '191.95 Ree, '597.90 Sets On~

IN THE GOING RATE

Our ••c:k.t.. ,. ••n• ftnn a-n rn.tt~wu
.-MI bo• ~ " ' ' ; Yourt for .,.. m.

.....'-~1

32 oz_
PKG.

2/$1

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

\

00

a - "-n TWIN . fUll .

OUEIENoriCINGII-fM!Urtng~~YW~ . ~

,.__...from,__.,...
of .-cWon
..... OOU..

loif
And . _ . . . . . t;:U~
""~to,_. of ·-ln.w.tkan topped wkh

allo•uriaut-.ltl__...quAtM

• DAMASK•-- . T'NI'-y-~
,_ ....,.n. a - t 1 ~.

AT HALF PRICE FOR

Earning this kind of interest used to mean tying your
money up from one to even eight years .
No longer . Our 6·month cer tifi ca te of deposif gets you '"·
and out, in ony six month s .

• 312 'COIL TO A FULL SIZE

The new ' ·month CD will really get your money go1ng .
And your interest r~te is guaranteed .
Whatever the 6 month Treasury Bill auction rdle is th(&gt;
week you purchase vour cer tifica te of deposit , that 's the
interest rate you are guaranteed tor its matur ity

11.000
INSTANT
CREDIT

The actual return to investors on Treasury Bills is hightr

It Y141 Have
VISA , AMERICAN
EXPRESS or MASTER
CHARGE C...clit Card.,

BEITER BANKING SERVICE, ntArS ntE CENTRAl TRUST

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY,
SOUTHERN OHIO DIVISION

3DAYSONLY

Bonanza Salel

than the discount rate offered.

MEMBER FDIC

~

~.wo

Federal r£&gt;gulations require a substantial interest penalty
tor premature withdriiwi!l of certificate tunds.

NAVY BEANS

0

LIMITED QUANTITY

GRACE UMW Bazaar Workshop, l.J
p.m. in the God Squad room .

auction discount rate bei-ng pai d on 6 mon th Treasury
B i lls . The f igure is arrived a t through th e weekly money
market auction

$449

Rio Grande, Ohio

Announces

Every week , the U.S. Tr easury announces the averagt&gt;

10 oz_

Manufacturing
Technology
r---"nft Sectnd . . . .

There are big thing s going on in the money market . Now,
w ~ can help you be a par t of them .

MAXWELL HOUSE

RIO GRANDE
COUEGE
COMMUNITY COLlEGE

Uw Nidii_v

GET YOUR MONEY

FLAVORITE
EMANON MEETS
GAUJPOUS - Emanon Club
met at the home of Mrs. Robert
Richards , Jackson Pike, on Thursday, Oct. 18, with three tables of
bridge in play . Mrs . Clyde Ramsay
was a guest of the club .
Mrs. Aven ;,usk won tughand Mrs .
Donald Hohinsm second high .

~~ ~

DOM
SUZANNE
DelUISE PLESHETTE

INSTANT COFFEE
CELEBRATE 95 YEARS
DARWIN - Edson Hart, Darwin,
quietly celebrated his 9r&gt;th birthday
at his home near Dai'Win With a
small £amily gathering. Cake and
coffee were served to his wife, Anna,
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Hart, M111 .
Marine Hart, Mrs . Ruth Francis and
Timothy Herdman .

·~..,.,,...ou. ..... A

..... { Ol _ - . c ; •

Today In Hlllli&gt;ry
By The Associated l'n11
Today is Sunday, Oct. 21, the 294th
day of 1979. There are 71 days left In
the year
Today's highlight in hl8tocy:
On this date in 1879 - 100 years
ago - Thomas Edison invented the
light bulb.
On thts date :
In 1797, the U.S. Navy frigate
"Constitution " - better known as
"Old Ironsi des " - was launched In
Boston Harbor .
In 1805, the British Navy ended
Napoleon's sea power by defeating
French and Spanish fleets near the
entrance to the Mediterranean Sea.
In 1944, the Allies captured their
first large German city of World
War ll - Aachen .
In 1967, the Pentagon was stormed
by
thousands
of anti-war
demonstrators. At least :?!iO of them
were arrested .
In 1973, the United Nations
Security Council passed a SovietAmerican resolutton calling for an
immediate cease-fire in the Mideast.
Also in 1973, four Persian Gulf
states cut off oll shipments to
America to protest aid to !Brae!.

SINGING at Mt. Moriah Church of
God Sunday 7 p.m . The Eternal
\ Youth group of Wellston will be
featured . Other singers invited to
participate.
COUNTY WIDE Prayer Meeting
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Middleport
Church of Christ in Christian Uruon.
Glen BiSBell class leader.
HOMECOMING vf Momio1g Star
United Methodist Church Sunday
beginning with worship at 9:45
followed by Sunday school at 10 :45.
Carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m. Aftemoon service at 2 p.m. Florence
Smith, pastor, invites the public

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Senior Citizens ' Sce;zes.

~- --S;cial Gale~ '

NA

4 CONVENIENT lOCATIONS

�~-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Oct . 21. 1979

Smith, Davidson wed in
evening july vows

'Poet in schools ' set to begin Monday
GAlJJPQ[.J S - The initial week
of a Poet-Author in Residency
program at the Gallia County Htgh
Schools will begin on Monday in
Southwestern High School. according to a joint announcement
made by he French Art Colony and
the administration of the Gallia
County School System .
Hobert H. Fox, a recognized young
modem poet . author, lecturer and
instructor, who presently se rves as
the Coordinator of the Poet in the
Schools program for the enttre State
of Ohio and as [ jterary Grants Coor dinator for the Ohio Arts Co uncil ,
will be spending the week with the
275 students at Suthwestern High
School, grades seven through 12.
This program is made possible
through the financial efforts of the
French Art Colony and the County
School System with the support of
the Ohio Arts Council and the
National EndoMTlent or the Arts.

ver Biggs served"" best man ahd he

wore a blue suit and a white car-

,wr.

and AIr .1 . julm D111 ·idso11

POMEROY - The Victor y Baptist
Church was the settmg lor the open
church wedding of Debbie Ann
Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Harold E. Smith. Middleport , and
John Ray Davidson, son of the late

r

/)

~.,

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_....

~..(\1, (7 .../ I

NECK
NAMES
Personal 1zed Jewelry
you can wear
anywhere
Let us make up a
beau trful Neck Name
wr th the name.
words or letters that
mean the most to you
A var iable tn S'erl lllQ
Stiver . Gold Pla te 1OK
o r 14K Gold

DERIFIELD
JEWELRY
47 Second Ave ., Gallipo lis
Across from
Theater

Ben and Lizzie OaVJdson.
The double ring ceremony was
performed by the Rev ~ames
Keesee on Saturday, July 21 at 7
p. m. Mrs. Virginia Grogan of Middleport presented a half -hour of nuptial music with her selections mcluding "Beca use" , "I l.&lt;Jve You
Truly", and "0 Promise Me. "
Yellow and green daisies
decorated the altar . The bride was
escorted to the altar by her father .
She chose for her wedding·day, a formal gown of white qiana nylon
featurin g a n empire waist. The fitted bodice was overlai d with reembroidered chantilly lace and the
long sheer sleeves were tapered. A
detachable train re-embroidered
chantilly lace fell from the waistline
into ca thedral length. The bride 's
dress and veil were fashioned by
Mrs . Jean Province, Miss Margaret
Province, and Mr.; . Nancy Snyder.
She wore a pearl necklace and
ea rrmgs borrowed from her sisterin-law, Mrs . Ter ri Tobm Smith, and
she carried out in her attire the
traditiOn of ·'something old ,
some th ing
new , some thin g
borrowed and something blue." She
carried a bouquet of white dais ies
and baby 's breath with yellow and
green ribbon tied in lovers knots .
Miss Lisa Thomas was maid of
honor and wore a floor length gown
of yellow with lace accent. She
, carried a &gt;ingle yellow longstemmed carnation w&lt;th green ribbon .
M&lt;Ss Gail P~e r ce was the
bridesmaid and was in a floor length
gown of mint green with matching
lace accent . She camed a stngle
green long-stemmed carnatio,, with
yellow ribbon . The groom was in a
dark green double krut sui t and had
a white carnation boutonmere. Den-

nation boutonniere.
For her daughter 's wedding, Mrs .
Smith was in a street length dress of
tan with maroon, brown and gray
flowers.
Miss Darlene Durm registered the
guests. A reception was held immediately following the C€remony
on the church lawn . The cake was
tiered and decorated with white
swags and green ar.:l yellow roses.
The traditional min iature bride a nd
groom topped the u ke . Bridges connected the tiered coke to side ca kes
mscribed with the n.•me of the bnde
on one and the name of the groom on
the other. Miniature attendants in
the green and yello"• colors of the
wedding party we re featured on the
bndge. The tiers were separated by
columns and white cherubs completed the cake which was made by
Mrs . Wanda Ashley.
Serving at the r eception were Mrs.
Ashley, Mrs . Linda Keesee, Miss
Verenia Keesee, Miss Angela
Keesee, a nd Mrs. Kathy Ball of
Juneau. Alaska.
The new Mrs . Davtdson is a seni or
at Meigs High School. Mr. Davtdson
l5 em ployed at the lmenal Electric
Co. in Middleport . They reside at
Village Manor Aprments in Middleport.

Coordinating the program at
Southwestern is Judy Farney,
English Instructor and Speech and
Drama teacher. According to Mrs .
Farney, Fox will be working at
times throughout the week with all
of the students at Southwestern.
other teachers involved with their
students , having the opportunity to
•: njoy the teaching skills of Fo1 in
their classes will be Lois Sheets,
Semor English teacher, Vicki Burnett , Junior High English teacher,
and Bill Meek , Freshman English
tea cher
Fox is known throughout this area.
He is a resident of Pomeroy, living
"'th his wife Susan and son Joshua
on a 73 acre farm. He was Poet in
Hesidence for the Gallipolis City
Schools for a two week period in
March of 1977. He holds his
bachelor's degree from Brooklyn
College in Brooklyn, New York and a
masters in English from Ohio
University, where he also taught
E ngl ish. He has published many individual short stories and poems,
and in 1977 a collection of short
stories entitled " Destiny News".
Before coming a writer, Fox was a
professional musician. He gave up
music as a vocation becuse he felt

through poetry he ~uld experience more "intense expression". He published the Anual
Poetry Anthology from the schools
in Ohio where the Poet in the Schoo!B
pr011ram has taken place. The
second edition, entitled ''Good Old
Poems-I Love Them.. will be
published in Noven1ber, and will be
available. free on reouest . from the

. that

, BAKE SALE SET
FOREST RUN - The WOOlen of
the Forest Run United Methodist
Church will hold a bake sale Oct. 2e
a t the Dale Warner Insurance Agency. Pomeroy, begmning at 9 a.m. All
&lt;terns will be homemade .

.J1iP,·~

.

.

Revival services begin Wednesday-

Ohio .Art3 Council.
The Poet-Authl&gt;r Residency
pr011ram wUI total four weeks during
the school year in the Gallia County
SchoolB. Following Southwestern's
upcoming week with Fox, will be a
week each, later, in Hannan Trace,
North Gallia and Kyger Creek. The
dates will be announced when final
arrangements have been conflnned .

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

OPALS
THREE TRICK.()R-TREATERS, ready for a week from Tuesday
which will be "Beggars ' Night" from 6 p.m . until 7 p .m . are dressed as
Space Man, Bunny Rabbit and Spider Man. As you can see, Bunny Rabbit
has a Cyalume Lightstick to glow for safety, while the three visit friends
and netghbors to say, ·Trick or Treat."

The

OCTOBER
B~rth stone

beautifully
Set,n14k
Go ld Rings

FUNDS RECEIVED
POMEROY - State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson's office reported the sixth advance distribution of
1979 state motor vehicle registration
fees totaling S5,998,661.09 to Ohio
counties, cities, townships and
vt llages . Meigs County received
$5,652.22 of the total.
GRANTED DIVORCE
POMEROY- On grounds of gross
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty
Debbie Derenberger has been gran:
ted a divorce from Jimmie Lee
Derenberger in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. The maiden
name of the plainUff, Campbell, was
restored .

""'

8-V - Ule ~~d!tyTimes -&amp;nttnel. Sunday, Oct. 21 , 1979

Halloweeners ready
for safe treating

MAKE YOURS HAPPY!
Send the BUNCH-OF-LOVE

On Mother-In-Law's Day
Sunday, October 28, 1979
A remembrance bouquet of garden-fresh
flowers and mother would love and
cherish. And, whether your Mother -in Law's Day flowers are going near or far,
our 30,000 fellow wire florists make
delivery nearly anywhere as simple as a
phone call . Please order early. Stop
bysoon or call us today .

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
MRS. MILLARD VANMETER
Phone 992 -2037
106 Butternut Ave .
992 -5721
Pomeroy, 0 .
We Accept All Mo)or Credit Cord• ond

l__...-.-~---~~~~::..~·~:"!::'

-

""'W

Remember that
s pecial someone

J!

w1th somet h 1ng
spectal on
her day t

CLARK'S
JEWELRY STORE
342 Second Ave .
Gallipolis, OH.

GAIJJPOJ.JS - On "Trick or
Treat" nght or " Beggars' Night," as
it is sometimes called, when aU of
the Uttle "trick or treaters" go out
between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m ., Tuesday
eventng, October 30, in and around
GallipoUs, a Cyalume Lightstick
would be a n ideal safety measure for
children to have. These Ughtsticks
are being promoted by the Gallia
County Unit of the American Cancer
Soctety ( Aai I in their campaign,
"Glow for Safety on Halloween,"
this year .
Chairing this specia l project for
the focal unit ts Sandy Hunter , and
she has pointed out that these Lightst icks are available in the local
grade schools. Ms . Hunter is at
Washington Elementary School,
Judy Warehime at Green Elementary and Doris t.an.ham at Rio Grande Elementary School.
Ms. Hunter said, "These unique

Paul's Steamway Holiday
Carpet Cleaning
Specials
ANY LIVING ROOM Willi CONNECTING HALL
Limit 250 sq ft . All white and light pastel carpet, 25c SQ .
ft .

ANY LIVING AND DINING ROOM Willi HAll

Minimum Charge S24.95 For Any Cleaning.

Short Boots
In Real Leather
by

[!! De luxe mtcro wave Wtl h la rg e 1 3 c u It ca ·
pac, ty [i] 10 Po wer leve ls l'iJ Do uble· Dut y"·' shell
EJ Sol td s late con trols fl!l Cooks fast by ltme 0 1
temperature r; Cooks s lo w wtth a ul oma ltc stm
Coo k and hold fe atu re
Model RE945 Y
mer

auditions .

ra

"" "' il l .. ,, 5 ...

"'fat»r~ •

the

thar the short boot

Regardless of claims, only Steamway is endorsed by all
carpet manufacturers. only Steamway guarantees
resuns or no charge! Steamway is the name to depend
on in carpet care.
For the best in worry -free cleaning, call the Experienc ed Professionals . We have cleaned over 20 million
square feet of carpet .

o;~ ··

Todety "s wom~n on the go

s100 DISCOUNT s25 REBATE

kno~

rep r~nts

a.n

essenti&lt;ll part ot her wcudrobe
Auditions has d complete line ot

----

shon feminine sty1es thAt are
perfect to accessorlze all her
4\tesr fdShlon s You "lllove the At
and feel of Aud itions boots. Com e

~~

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~le&lt;:l your fcw o rite today.

· u•w111·
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PAUL'S STEAMWAY
Satisfaction Guaranted
Phone 614-446-2096
Paul Smelt~er, Owner

TO A

4.1

MISSIONARY TO SPEAK
MIDDLEPORT - Speaking at a
missionary meeting to be held at
7: 30 tonight at the Middleport In dependent Holiness Church will be
Benjamin Salvant, missionary from
Haiti. 1\te Point Pleasant Training
School Choir will provide music .
Pastor O'JDell Manley invites the
public.

UONS TO MEET
POMEROY - The P&lt;IIleroyMiddleport Lions Club will meet
Wednesday, Oct . 24, at the Meigs
Inn . All Lions are requested to at tend.

B

gen tl+; o r rugg ed
lrJ .JrL. f:J V&lt;J r,d t ·' e water 1e vel co n tr ol
tiJ Au ' ,m al iC S. CJ CJk c ycle ~ M atc h1 n'j
d ry e r . ,.,. ,pl up to 10 m1nute tHn ed C} C'P
C)pnc-, 1 - 0 r)ll~
1::. 'l d- 0 1-c ycle Si •ln ;] l

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VERONA
Black Suede with
black leather trim

ON TME PAIR
'50 DISCOUNT '40 REBATE

Rust Leather

S 17 8 Cu. It no lr ost relngeralor l rr. ezc r Ia Rever Sible d oors

a Ad iUSI-

abiC q tass shelves Ill Energy -Save r
sw,tc h 13 See -th1u me at kee per . veg e ~

•able. l ru1 t and da1ry b 1ns II Rol l- out

Ill 7 Cycle bu11t ~ m dr shw asher II Polwas he r wrth P o wer - S c ru b~ cycle II
Ener gy-save r d1 y cy c le II Revers 1ble
co&lt;or' fr o nts Ill Sho rt Wa sh cycle II
Crysla l Cl ear 1M ~r n se d iSpense r • Soft
l oad Olspos er mSound lnsulahon

Model HOA860

whee ls Ill 30 '/z" Wide Model CTF I SGY

'50 DISCOUNT 140 REBATE

'50 DISCOUNT 130 REBATE

llulpotnt

Wine L.eather

·

""POMEROY'i'iNiiARK

Mon . &amp; Fri . 1118 P .M .
Tues .. Wed .. Sat. til
Tnursday 11112 noon

s

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Jack
Carsey, Mgr,
Mlln St
Store Hours: 8 : 30 .to 5:30. Mill Closed at S:OO P.M. servtng Melga, G•llll. Mlso~

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IT'STHE MOST COMFORTABLE
WALKI NG SHOE EVER MADE.
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THE SHOE CAFE
300 Second Ave.

Lafayet1e Mall

Gallipolis, Oh.

'168

Fabulous Fall Prints
Polyester/co_lfon flor~ls
ond geomefr~cs. Mo ch1ne
wo1h and dry, 45" wide .

· ..

YARD .

Reg . $1.99 to $2.49 yd .

~

'248

Quilts Galore
Foil pr inh ond dots , oil
with polyester
Mo c h in ~
1
wo1h ond dr y, _ 44 -45

fill

wide.

Reg . $3.49 yd .

YARD

Corcluroy Classics
C:llltenfpely..ter solids_ MachiM wath, dry, 45" wide.

........, ......
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·2·79

Acetate/nylon; Arnele trl .
acetate fnyton tolida . Machine
wash, dry, 48-50" wide.
-/Nylee

$~~~.

polyester gabard ine solids and interlock kn1h .
Machine wo1h , dry, 60" wide
Reg . 3.99

Decorator Fabrics .

TO BE HELD SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21st
2:00 P.M. AT THE HOLIDAY INN IN
GALLIPOLIS - SPONSORED BY.AAA Of GAUIPOUS, 0.
PRESENTATION BY BETIILEE MARTIN, TOUR ESCOURT.

including in-store
swatch booh .

Felt Square 1

9 11

A

.. .

Tri •toto/Nylee
• • • $3A9 .,.._

•••. ~-49 pd.

$329
YD.

YD.

FREE •••

CRUISE TRAVEL SHOW

LJ Larw· r. npnc1 ty 2 aq il ato r HanC1 -

I'

1}1

$

Gabardine and Interlock Prints .. . I 00 '!.
'J. wJ·, ~&gt;

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1(1'1' ;\ 'uherlu

SUNDAY THRU WEDNESDAY

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED

/.

Flil!ik li 1/

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~wfug..~~n~~mple

ANY OlliER ROOM WHEN CLEANED WITH
LIVING AND DINING ROOM

• •

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MR. Gll.KEY HOSPITAUZED
MIDDLEPORT
Claren ce
Gilkey, Railroad Street, Middlepot\,
is a patient at Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg.
His room nwnber is 303.

Limit 350 SQ . ft .

Limit 180SQ . ft .

Dazzling.

I.ightsticks can he attached to
cloth! ng , placed in pwnpkins oc
other Halloween decorations, or
carried by hand. Rain or shine, calm
or windy, they give off a yellowgreen light that keeps on glowing.
They are completely safe for
c hildren to carry because they are
nontoxic, waterproof, windproof,
flluneless and cool. Simply flex the
plastic tube, the thin vial inside
breaks , shake and you have a ligtt
that lasts for eight to ten hours," she
added .
Parents who want their children to
have these " glow for safety " Lightsticks to assure visibility and safety
for their UtUe ghosts, goblins, witches or good fairies - on Trick or
Treat Night, may ~ any of the
conunlttee members at each of the
schools named, or st&lt;Jp in at Kessel's
Food Market on State Route 35 just
West of the Spring Valley Plaza,
Milstead's Bakery on Third Avenue
in downtown Gallipolis, or call the
local unit's Executive Director, Pat
Boyer. at 446-7479. The Lightsticks
are $175 each or three for SS. All
proceeds from their sale go to the
Gallia County Unlt of the Aai for
public information , research and
service to benefit the residents of
Gallia County.
"Adults find these Ughtsticks are
extremely handy in case of a powej
failure or road emergency. They are
easy to keep in the glove compartment of a car or in a convenient
location in the home." Ms . Hunter
sat d.

MIDDLEPOHT - Hevival services at the Middleport First Baptist
Church will begin Wednesday and
continue through Swulay evening .
Guest speaker tor the servi ces will
be the Hev . Jim Franklin, pastor of
the Highlawn Baptist Church in Huntington , W. Va . In the ministry for
the past 2!i years , he is a graduate of
the Eastern . Baptist 'Theological
Seminary where he receiVed a
master of Divinity Degree . His
bachelor of arts degree was from the
W. Va . Institute of Technology .. He
has pasored churches in Handley ,
W. Va.; Beckly, W.Va.; Memonal
Baptist Church, Beckley, W. Va .;
Broomall, Pa ., and Davenport,
Iowa .
He was chosen in 1966 to lead the
first group study exchange by
Rotary Internatinoal and spent nine
weeks in !Brae!. He has condut1ed
radio ministry over eight different
stations, and spent a year in
missionary broadcasting in Ill!'
Philippines. He is widely travel~
having toured Israel and eight other
nations five times .
The Rev. Mr. FrankUn will be
bringing evanelistic messages on
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
nights at 7:30 p.m. On Wednesday
evening, the Rev. Mark McCl ung,
pastor of the Middleport Church,
wiUspeak.
Special mWiic during the services
will be brought by the Rev . Norberta
Bancolo, director of iloilo Christian
Center in iloilo City, Philippines. An
outstanding vocalist, he will be
singing at all of the services and will
also be preaching at the Sunday
evening ~rvice .
He holds a diploma in theology
from the Convention Baptist Bible
Church in Bacolod City, Philippin es,
a six year bachelor of theol ogy
degree from Central Philippine
University in Doila City, Philippines, did graduate work at the Northem Baptist Theological Seminary
in Dlinois and is now working on Ius
masters degree in pastoral clini cal
educaboo at the University of
Chicago.
'The pubUc is invited to attend all
services which begin at 7:30 ea ch
evening, Wednesday through Sunday, and at 10:15 a.m. on Sunday .
In preparation for the revival a 24hour prayer meeting will begin
Tuesday at 7:30 and cntinue until the
opening service.

510d

yd .

$2~

2 99
YARD

206~F
Reg.

our en tire collecti on ,
and ipeciol o rd er

•1

Price

just in time for holiday craft s!

12 11 squares in brig ht , bold co lors .

6 SQS . FOR

Entir• Stock Acme- Kieencut Sciuon . ..
lo11. $1.39 to $6 .75 pr . . . .
Now 20 % OFF Reg. Price

Ow~ r\1 t nd Qpm ted h "'' bfl

REFRESHMENTS

Cen1ers ot ,.t,mell~a .

-ale

In c

Hours:
10 ttl t

Mondoy lhru Soturdoy
Sunday t til s

SERVED!
GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

ZlftE Plazl

Ch1ll io:otht. Ohia

61-47

Headquar1ers for Draperies,
Slip Covers and UpholsterinG
Matei-ials

Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza-Route 7, Gallipolis, Olio
1St Grand central Mall

Parkersburg 1 W. Va .

'

.

111 6th Ave.
H••ntington, W. Va .

Putnam VIllage
Shopping Center
Hurricane, W. Va.

�B-10- The Sumlay Tun,•s,';t·nlllll' l. Sund"~ . tkl 21. 1979

!lrll- The Sunday Tuncs-&amp; ntlncl . Sunday. Ud 21. 1!179

Homebuilders celebrate 40th anniversary
~aster of ceremomes wa~ Ut•nvt&gt;r
1-{J('l' . Charter mem bers rt't·ogmzt•d

M IDOLEI'OHT
" l)owo
Memory I .ant&gt;· · was the theme of thl'
40th anruverS.&lt;:~r~ banquet of thl'
Homebuilders Class of the M1 Ll ·
dleport Church of Chnst h••ld
Tuesday ni ght at the church w1th 1;5
members and guests ath'rH..llng .
The dinner was prepared and ~t·r·

mill

das.... ami tht!lr work at the ehurl'h .

Mrs. l'urd spoke of her preSi dency
dunng the war years and reei:t lkd a

responses were Mr . and
Wallace Bradford . Mr. and
\1rs CPt:ll Hetl.man, Mrs . Marlt'
Curu . Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Graves,
Mr and Mrs . l;eorge Skmner, Mrs
!'aullne Mora rity , and Mr and Mrs .
I )an Whtle .
Out-&lt;Jf&lt;"ounty guests reeognizcd
were Mr . and Mrs . Wendell Gerlach.
Mrs. EV&lt;:i Nunnally, and Mr . and
Mrs . Mtlton Huutlashelt.
Wallace Bradford was reeo~ntzed
as the ftrst prcstdent of the class
whtch W&lt;:i.S nrgamud 1n October 1939
I" Mrs. Don Ml·Millan, wife of tlw
llllntste~ at that ttme. St&gt;veral spoke
uf Lht• · mfluenee on thei r l1ves
through the Homebuilders Class and
expressed fund memories of the
gJVlllg

\1r~

ved by the Philathea Wornen of lht•

church &gt;nth Mrs . Pe~gy Brwkh•s
and Mr~ . F.ileen Bowers pn•sented a
pi'&lt;'.Jmner slut. Wallace Bradford
gilve the b!es~ung , rtnd Mr:-; Co le...·n
Van Meter. pres1dent , t•xtendt'(l tht•
welcome .

A fall mottf wtth flower~ . apples .
burlap c ontamers cmd brm\"Jt t"&lt;ln ftles
wa~
c&lt;.tJTtt•t..l
uut Ill ttw
decuratJnll.'- by Mrs V:.m t\·1l'ter.
Mrs . Janet Vcnoy. and Mrs ~ora

Juce .

toul'hlng candlelight servJt-e f11r the
bt)ys in serv1cr Hal ph Graves read a
newspaper an:uunt of the bit nquet

held 111 the early l(k; Mr . and Mrs.
Rob Melton were mlroduced along
w1lh Mr and Mr; Frt•d Hanel who
wen.• et&gt; lebratmg tht'!r wedding an niversary .

Theda;;,; hiStory was read by Mrs
Peggy Bn ckle; G1fl' fr om the class
were vrt•seuted to Ed Evans,
teacher, and Mr&gt; . Van Meter.
preSident.
Nt•w nfficers elected were Mrs .

Van Met er. preSiden t ; Mrs . Peggy
Brickles. vice preSident; M,.,; .
Dorothy Hoo ch. secretary: Mrs .
F'arie Cole, assistant secretary; and

NEW!
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'·Hv'O TI I r,&gt;r" IPOlLfi S
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perFormance
TELEV I S I O N

NEW!

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BROADCAST
CONTROLLED
COLOR

5
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100 DISCOUNT

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PRHISJON
HHTROIIIC
TUN ING

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~roup singmg of

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'Golden plus one ' to
be celebrated Sunday
GAI .IJPOI.IS - M. and Mrs. Earl
Hayman of Ga IIi pol is wi II be
honored on Sunday. Oct . 21. w1th an
anniversary dinner, given by their
granddaughter, Nancy Feustel, at
her home in Galli pol is. They were
marned 51 years ago, on October Z.l,

,\/r.

!!!'lB .

They are the parents of three
daughters, Ella Blanch, Middleport ;
EITIITIII, Gallipolis; and Edith Francl.'i, Hemstead, Maryland. They also
have 18 grandchildren, and 16 greatgrandchildren .

Mother-In
Sunday,
/

THIS WEEK

ORDER OUR FTD
CHARM-HER"'
EOUQUET

" '' •·

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Shf' II tx- c harmed be-ro nd words w1!h our FlO O"larm.Her"" BouQuet
Fe &lt;:l fur •ng beaut• lui trest'1 Ilowers 1n our ex clusrve FTD Mrlk. Glass Pedestal

O:&gt;mporto

Esoec•ally c reated lu send 01 talo:e
wnere Ca ll o• v• s•l us nrw..

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Mothers-In-Law

every·

PH. 992·2644 NOW

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100 DISCOUNT

fJi

I . rtAIN • POMEROY, Ot110 ~516

This light dawned
OctoBer 21, 1879.

$)

perFormance

perFormance

TEL F VIS I O N

TELEVI S I O N

5

50 DISCOUNT
25 Otogonol C0l 0 1i1 f\1

25V M 0 8 ~P

i)NI I M P()PAR V STYL IN (,
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'50 DISCOUNT
SPECIAL ON

BLACK &amp; WHITE TV's

As Low As

POMEROY LANDMARK

bu lb. T hrrmas Edison sel o ut t&lt;r de,·c lr&lt; p
an e lectric J~&gt; we r system to tah e the
ell'ct ric li&gt;(ht out of th e la boratory.
Into homl':-i. f;Kt tl rif' ~ and
nnro tlw stf('d S.
\rrw. 100 veal'i later,elec ·
t ricll \' h t lw ener~')' of modem
Amenca and &lt;our hnghtes t
hrrpl' frrr a prrrducti\' e
and rnnrd inf.( fulu rt
1\unninf.( m il lions of
11me sa\' 1111.( electric
appli;mce&gt;o in America's
hu s v home s Opera tin)(
w;ller treatment syste m s
and pol luturn cun lrol equi p·
nwnt. Powerin~~: production in
""'nufactu rinK pl onh . Conlrrr lli n).(

;tnd

(JlllllllUiliCttiH ITb t•quiptll('llt .

l.ittlt· &lt;ilrl l homa s AI\·;, Erl1 ,on know a
n•ntury ill.(&lt;r 1h:1t h" inventirru \\'&lt;rUid 1'\'l'TltUally
t·na ble \\orkrrs 111 prndun · t~l., rl· 111 ;m htiUt" thitn

w. Carsey , Mgr .
Main St.

LANDMARK .

whlllt' rwv.· \'-·ay of life was l)1111 .
\\'1th th1 · , urn·" "f the mc:tnde ,.;cent
;1

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992-2181
Jack

:\nd

Store Hours : 8:30 to S: 30
Mill Closed at 5:00P .M.
Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp; Mason Counties

th e ir p;,re nts and Kra ndparen!&gt; cou ld
in ;1 lll&lt;lllth.
Or. beca use of the conve nience of
modern e lectric a ppliances.
women wou ld have time to
work outs ide the home as
well as in, to he lp produce
the goods and serv ices
that mak e o ur sta ndard of
li ving the highr sl in
the world .
Because we pro·
d uce m o re, we earn
mo re . By earn ing mo r~
we can afford more
education. bener medical
care, more social services.
and make better use of o ur
leisure time.
More jobs. Greater produclivily. A
h1g her s tandard of li ving . A great step for
mankind .
) thl think. it all s larted with·a
linle bulb.

Ohio Power Company
•.

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t~nd

Airs.

jt~mo

I /,;r/utl '

'

(;rate-liarlotu fJnarrJ!
in August 5 ceremony
••

Remember

d•ogono l COIOQ f\1 7'JYMOa6iiP

. :. o..,~,,.~

·.1[ I

TUPI'r: It\ I' I AI ~S
.\-lr J nd
HuS&gt;ell Mullehan w·tll iJ&lt;
llonored by their chi ldren [jnd gr&lt;ind ·
dltldren on tht' lr :&gt;oth wed dmg an 111\·ersary, Oct. 28. With ah open
hou.se from 2 tn 6 p m Tht•
celebraltun w11l takt&gt; plan:• at tht
Molle !Jan home tn Tupp('rs Pl&lt;Hns

The t:IUih &lt;rrl·
mversary of the Heath Ulll lL'()
Methodist Church. Middleport . was
celebrated Sunday t•vemng w1th a
IJt.rul~r and program .
:.Irs . Mary WISe , Sunday Sdwrrl
supenntendent . opened the pro ~ram
following the dinner "1th a welcomt·.
The Hev . Hobert E . Hobmsnn led 1n
~111J!JI.J-:PUHT

VISITING HERE
POMEROY - Mrs Shirley Cox of
Kedlands, Calif. , is here for a vl.'iil
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Logan. She will return to
California next week. Mrs. Cox and
Mrs. Logan visited Ill Sandusky with
relatives this week, Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Griffin , Mrs. Elsie Carson,
and Mrs . Polly Williams , and in
Col umbus with Mr . and Mrs . Bob
HoUey and Carl Holley.

f!i

· ~

Mrs . Clan ce Erwin . treasurer .
Twenty -four of the 28 past
presidents of the class attended the
banq uet . Introduced and presented
corsages or boutonnieres were
Wallace Bradford, Cecil Heilman,
Ralph Graves, Elizabeth Lohse,
Muriel Bradford, Marie Curd , Hazel
Wilson, Flo Grueser, Anna BeU
Houdashell. -Milton Houdashelt, Eva
Bai ley NunnaUy , Bud Wildon , Nelle
Ra hr , Virginia Neutzling Buchanan, ,
Cash Bahr, Nora Hice , Herman Km·
ca id, Wendell Gerlach, Tom Bowen,
Peg Gerlach, Mack stewart , Coleen
Van Meler, Shirley Bwngardner,
and t' arie Cole.
The program carried out the
"Down Memory Lane " theme with
Mrs . Shirley Bawngardner as
narrator . Mrs. Erwin was accompanis t for the program planned
by Mrs. Bwngardner and Mrs .
Brickles .
''Tne Nibble Noles of Scott Joplin ··
was played by Mrs . Erwin ; Mrs.
Brickles sang " Bill Bailey "; Mrs.
Bea Stewart presented. " l Want to
Be Loved by You"and there was a
magic act by Mack Stewart and
Mrs. Van Meter . Wtllard Boyer and
Dorothy Hoach did "How You Go ing
to Keep them Down on the. Farm"
and Bob Melton gave "Hagtime
Cowboy Joe ." There was then a
smgal ong of '39 melodies.
Attending the banquet were Mr .
and Mrs. Wallace Bradford, Mr . and
Mrs . Cec1l Heilman, Mr. and Mrs .
Leonard Van Meter , Mrs . Marie
Curd, Mrs . Shirley Bumgardner .
Mr. and Mrs. Mack Stewart, Mr . and
Mrs. Denver Rice , Mr . and Mrs. Bud
Wtlson , Mr. and Mrs. Herman K.Jncaid, Mr . and Mrs . Haymond Cole,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hysell , Mr. and
Mrs. W1llard Boyer, Mr. and Mrs .
Wendell Gerlach , Mrs. Peggy
Brickles, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bowen ,
Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin , Mrs .
Dorothy Koach, Mrs. Lorraine Neff,
Mrs . Thelma Boyer, Mr . and Mrs.
Bob Melton. Mr . and Mrs . Ralph
Graves .
Mr&gt; . Eva NWlfla Uy, Mrs . Dorothy
Woodard, Mr. and Mrs . Harold
Lohse, Mr . and Mrs. George Skinner , Mrs . Clarice Erwm, Mr a nd
Mrs. William Grueser, Mrs . Art
Gilmore, Mrs . Margaret Butcher.
Mrs. Paulme Morarity , Mr . and
Mrs . Gerald Shuster, Neil Proudfoot, Mr . and Mrs . James Buchanan,
Mr. and Mrs . Milton Houdashelt .
Mr and Mrs . Cash Bahr, Ed Evans ,
Mr and Mrs . Dan Wh1te , Mildred
Long, Mr . a nd Mrs . Fred Hanel,
Mrs. Janel Venoy and Mrs . Elwood
Bowers .

;~'i . ' ~ ')PYf)lJ

perrormance

50th
annzversary
observed

Church
celebrates
annzversary

: HliTLAND - The Rutland Chu rch
Of the Nazarene was the se tting for
f1e Aug . 5 wedding of J eru1ifer Kay
!Jrate and James Lewts Harlow .
• The bnde is the dau~ ht er of Mr.
and Mrs . Wendell Gra te, Hutland,
and the groom IS the son of Mr and
l! rs Beryl Harlow, Ci ncmnat1 The
Qr. David 1.. Cub1c performed the
lfouble nng ce remony at 2:30 p.m .
l!efore the altar decorated "1th
'"'skels of rainbow colored glad10li
whi te pedestals flanking the 29lira nc h candelabra adorned with
!teenery and bows. Famtly pews
fere marked with bow arrangemen·
~of carnati ons and baby's breath 111
!lie rambow colors.
• Kevtn K.J ng played the e lectnc
ptano
and Te resa Fawcett was
'
sOloist for the wedding . Greta Ken·
!V;dy, Hutland, Ill a white and peach
&lt;4-elet fl oor length dress, and Jeff
Q!rson, Holland, 111 a black llUedo,
lll;hted the candles
•Given in marriage by her father .
tl.. hride wore a fl oor length gown of
qkna with a chapd length tram
~eer organza made up the sleeves
ahd shoulder area of the gown wh1ch
t-4ld embroidered nora! moti f ac·
cj!nts. The sleeves were long and
qose ftltmg and the neckline was
ro unded and scooped . The bnde's
-veil fell from a small headpiece and
was tmnmed with the embroidery
which mat ched that on the go1m .
She also wore a blusher veil. The
brtde's jewelry included a sma ll
opal and dtamond necklace g1ve n to
her by the groom. She carried peach
and yellow silk roses w1th baby's
breath al ong W1lh a whtte bnde's
B1ble .
Cheryl HurWitz of Co lumbus was
the ma id uf honor, and the
bndesmaids were K.Jm F1x . Mt. Ver·
non ; Debbie Heeder, Columbus;
Eileen Harlow . Cincinnati; Beverly
Grate, Hutland, and Georgene
Grate, Kutland . They wore floor
length gowns in pmk, yellow. lavender , green . blue and peach, w1lh
floral sheer over the solid covered
polyester .
The gowns were f!l.'lhloned wllh
empire waists, long sleeves and low
round neckUnes. Each g1rl earned a
s ingle candle tn a globe surrounded
by silk roses and baby's breath 111
the color of her dress . Jodi Grate of
Hulland was the flower girl and she
wtre a floor length while eyelet
dress with short buttercup sleeves .
Her dress was truruned 111 blue rib·
• bon and lace and she carried rose
P.,tals and wore an arrangement of
baby's breath in her hatr.
Tony Grate of Chester was the
Mngbearer and he wore a white
tuxedo with a white ruffled shirt
trinuned in blue and had a blue ti pped carnation.
·
Dale Harlow of Cincinnati was the
best man, and the ushers were
Kerry Whelro, Edgarton ; Frank
Galentine, Columbus ; Bob Harlow.
,Cincinnati ; Junior BusU e, Cin·
cinnali ; and Steve McBnde, Ctn ·
cinnati.
" For her daughter 's wedding, Mrs .
C'rate wore a floor length gow n of
J)each polyester and organze aod a
corsallfil¥"hile sill&lt; roses w1th ram bow .-ti!ffl. The groom's mother
was in a blue floor length gown of
polyester with a matching jacket
and she wore a white silk rose c'O r·
sage with rainbow ribbon also.
A reception honoring the couple
was held in the Middleport Masonic
Temple irrunediately foll owi ng the
ceremony. The brid e ·s table

en

featured a fo ur t iered cake
decorated With carnatiOns mcluding
a water foun t ain . Arrangements of
rambo w and white ca rna tions with
candles were used on the table .
Mrs . Hose Car son. Mrs . Haru1ah
Queen. Miss Chomta Brust. MiSs
Susa n Walter. Miss Coll een Lyons,
and Miss Klm Hester pres1ded at U\C
table Miss Hes ter also re~ISte red
the guests
For a tnp to Covmgton. Ky . the
bride changed into" peach sk irt en sem ble. The couple now res1de at
5040 Chatterton Hd . Apl. 5, Colum·
bus. The new Mrs . Harlow IS a
stude nt Ill the School of l\urs1ng at
Cap1tal Uni verSil)'. Mr . Harlow IS a
psychology major ot Ohio Stale
Umverstty a nd 1s the associate
pastor of the 01Urch of the Nazarene
in Wh1tehaU .

~1 "

\1r . ond

hymns and .\1r.s
!\an Moore gave a short histury uf
the church begmmng 111 1901 when
the present butld1ng was cun·
structed . Also relatlllg things the)
remembered through the years were
Mrs . Beulah Hayes. Mrs. Lon·na
Davis. Mrs Grace French . r\cl!u.·
Zerkle, J ack Bechtle . and Ehtabelh
Fis her.
Mrs . Maxme Philson presented a
ce rtificate to Mrs. Beulah Hayes.
th~ member with the most years of
continuous servtce to the church. a pproximately 75 years . Mrs. Zelia
Pu iJin. 9'2. was reco~mzed as the
oldest li vmg member and a potted
n ower was deli \'ered to her .
Vernon Weber and Mr. and Mrs .
Steve Jenkms sang two ~ospel num ·
bers, Mrs J oan Hobmson presented
two se lections on her guttar The
audience sang " Hevive Us Agam ... a
favo rite of the late Frances Kl e1n
The Hev Mr . Hobmson gave lhe
benedic tion.
The din ing room tables were
decorated with floral arrangements
made by Mi ss 'lellie Zerkle The
center table had a n a r ra ngement of
ve Uow and bronze mwns w1th lhc
;,wnberals " 130 ." Commmees for
the dinner were Mrs. WISe. Mrs
Helen Byer, and Mrs. Donna Byer
At the morning serVJce, Mrs
Beu lah McComas and John and Bet·
te Krawsczyn v,-ere welcomed 1nt (,
the church rnembersh1p
Cum mcntartes on the ch urch voen.' g1n~ n
by l .ce McComas. 'The Church of

CIC MEETS
GALJJPOJ.IS - Evelyn HothJleb
was hostess to the CIC Club Nme
members were pre sen t . The
meeting was opened by preSident.
Le na May Ha1ke. The secretary 's
a nd treasu rer 's reports were . read
and approved Games were played
and pnzes wt're won by Elt7__abeth
White and Evelyn Morrow. Dr. Edna
Get ti es' birthday was obS€ rved .
The nert meetin g wi! l be on Nov .
15 with Ethel Steele.
Hefreshments were served u1
kee pmg w1lh Halloween .

,\1rs

\ 1oll ehi:in

were

lllarnrd at Sttn."u n. W Vd on .~u\· 2.
1~!~ They have ft vt duldren, Wan da Wolf. Che s te r . J(u ss uf
Doylestown. Helen M1Uhone. Tup·
pers Plams : I I lerna Sander~ . Heed SYtllt.;. and ('arol Vance . Heyrwl d~ bu rg

I )un;. r f'l.ill ' ;in.. /;,·, ,1
H.ACI\E ~ Plan.-:. f ur ::1 hlllll and
turkey dmner to be held on :\u1· 22 at
the Southern Local H1gh School
ca fet ena With ser\"mg tu bq~ m dt
noon were made wh~n tht:' H.Clttne
PTO met Monda~ n1ght at the
school

MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH OF CHRIST

The Wllt also dectded to haw· a

bake sale dunng the lU. un e fa ll
fest1v al on Oct. 25 at 6 30 p .m w1th
the booth to be located m front of the
Kacme J)epartment Store
It wa~ noted that a magK and pupp&lt;:l show for the studenLs will be held
on Oct 26al 50 cen~' each. and that a
halloween P«rtY has been .&gt;ct for I 30

5th &amp; Main

HOMECOMING

p m on Oct 31 Toboggans an: bt-mg

SUNDAY, OCT. 28, 1979

sold by the school
Shlrl ev C&lt;1rpenter pres1dcd at the
meetm~ w1th ;'-;1rs. Rill \1aynard
gtvtng tht· operun!? prayer followetl
b\ lhl' pledge lu the na~
:v!rs. \-lan Hill's first grade won
the room count. '&gt;ext rneetmg will be
held; p m un '&gt;ov 19

10:30 AM SERVICES
Guest Speaker:
RON MOYER

Yes terda1· ": Juanita Bachtel. The
Church of Today ." and the pa stor.
··The Church oi Tomorrow · ·

COMPLIMENTS OF BAHR ClOTHIERS

A FEW BARE FAas

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(Or, how to save a bundle on Medi·Rest ·Mattress Sets by Bemco.)

BIRTHDAY TOMORROW
HUTLAND
Mrs . Garnet
Williamson of Hutland will obse rve
her 88th birthday tomorrow . VL"ling
here with her for the weekend have
been Mr. and Mrs. Hetzel Folden,
Charlotte, N.C.; Mrs. Helen Saxton.
Logan , and Mr. and Mrs . Bob
Sheets, Gallipolis, aU ni eces and
nephews . Mrs. Williamson received
her first birthday ca rd fr om
President and Mrs . Ca rter .

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�l'-1 - The Sunday Tuue&gt;-SentUJel, Sunday, Oc\.21, 19'19

B-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday , Oc1 . 21 , 1979

Local engagement announced
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and Mrs C.
Ed Humphrey, Reedsville, are an-

held on Dec. 1 at the Reedsville
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. John Douglas, brother of the
prospective bridegroom, officiating,
A reception will be held immediately
following the wedding .

nouncing the engagement and for thcoming marriage of thetr
d aughter , Robin, to Michael
Douglas, son of Mr. and Mrs. GleM
Douglas, Parkersburg, W. Va.
Miss Humphrey is a 1973 graduate
of Eastern High School and a 1977
graduate of Ohio State University in
Allied Medical Professions. She ill
presently employed in the Clirucal
Laboratori&lt;ll at St . Joseph Hospital
in Parkersburg, W. Va.
Her fiance is a 1974 grad uate of
Parkersburg South. He is enrolled at
Ohio University where he is
majoring in elementary education .
He is a semor varsity football player
there .
An open church weddinR will be

l ui .'

11 11

diJpliJ)' til t/;c h .:nciJ 1\rt Colrmv

Deadline
today for
FAC seminar

CliAN~

UP

PAl

d

FIX~

For all your building and hardware needs visit. ...
Mon . Thur s.
7:30 -5 : 0
Fr t .
7. 30 8 . 00
Sat.
7.30 5 . 00

87 Olive St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446 -4464

l'ONSOI.IIJATED REI'ORT OF CONDITION

The Commercial and Savings Bank
nf Galllpnlis in the Sta!A' of Ohio and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close ol
busin~ss on September 29. 1979 .
Sta t&lt;• Bank No . 9S3
Federal Reoerve District No.4

ASSETS
and dut· fn•m dep0!-iltory lrl'i tltUtlOilti . ••. • • ••••• , •.••••• • .•. S2,764,0CKLOO
L' S Trea sur:- 'it.'curitlt.· s . •........ .. ..•.. . •.• ••••• .••• ••.••.•.• • 6,495,()(XLOO
() t)ilgatlorts &lt;~f othe r U.S. Gon•mment
agem·tcs and curporau ons •• •.•. ..••.. •.• •. • •.•••.••..•..•..•• 1,5J5,(KX).00
Ob llv,atHHlS of St.ate.s and pohll cal subd1vtswns
Inlht' Un1 tt-d States . . · ····•·. ·· ········ ...•. . ........•...... . . 6.962,(X)() .OO
h-der"l lund s sold and secu r tties purchased
unde r a~reem e nl.'; Jo resell. .. ... ..... . . . ... . .. .............. 3, 450,000.00
a l.D&lt;lns, Total •excludtng unearned mcom e. , ., .... 20 .387,000.00
u. l.css : allowance for posstble loan losses.,., •.. ,.,, 2611,000 .00
c loans, Net - ......... - .•.•..... ,, .• , .. , ...... ,.,.,,.,.,, .. 20,119,000.00
Hank prermses. fum ttu re and ftx tures,
and other asseL' re presentin g bank prermses., ... , , .• , •..• ,,., 1,034,000.00
All Pther assel&lt; .. - . -- - .. - - - . - - ... - .. - - .. . ... - ...... _. . .. .. _... . • _. 469.000 00
TOT AI. ASSETS. · · · · · - · - · · · · .. '" .. • · • • · .. • · · .. · · · · · · · - - · · $42,828,000 00
t 'a sh

~

~

...

0

st~JiJ!it'l

LIABII.mF.~

the Umled States .. . ... . .. . - .-.- ........ . ...... . , ... ,,. , , 2,958.000.00
Cc rttft ed and offtcers· checks •......... - . .... .••. .. ,, .. • .• , •. 235,000 .00
TPta l f)epostts ........... ... ..... , .. , .... .......... _., .. . ... 37 .840,000.00
a . Tol&lt;ll de mand depoSits .. .. - .. - .. -.- ... __... $ 8,923.000 00
b. Total ttme a nd .av•ng s depostts--.- .... _.. _.. 28,917,000.00
lntcrcsi -beanng dema nd no tes •note balances ! Issued to the
U.S Treasury and other lla b!lttles fn r borrowed mone y._ .•.... _.. ~1,000 . 00
All other ltabiltttes ...... . .... ... .. - .. - .. - .... -, ............. .. 408,000 .00
TOTAl. 11 ABIIJTIES ... .. ..... ... ....... ..... , , . , , ... .... $38,749,000 00
EQI,;ITY C AI' IT AL
t 'onu non Stc)('k
e~ ~ : J s! w-tn·:-. ctutho nz t"d
1.500
b No . .shet rcs out..•H.and1ng l,5(Xl
p.ar va lue ,.
900,000.00
Su rplus ................... .. ..... ..... , ... .. , , .... . . , .. ,, 3, 024,000.00
Und Jvtded prof 1t.&lt;; and rt'serve for ro ntmgcn&lt;"JCS
and othe r ca pt ta l reserves
155,000.00
TOTAl. F:QUITY CA PITAl.-- .... -- .... -._ .. . .. . . ,,., .... _.... 4,079 ,000.00
TOTAL IJAB!JJTIES A:-ID
F:QU!TY CAPITAL.._ . ........ ....... .. , .. . , , ...... . . _. $42.828,000 .00
MEMORANDA
Amounts out.&lt;;tandmg as of re port dale ·
Tune certificats of deposit in denonunauons
of $100,000or more
4,401.000.00
Ave rage for :wca lendar days (or calendar month 1 endmg wi.th report date
Total de post L&lt; .........•........... - ... - .. . ..... _. . . . . . . . $37,209,000 .00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged asset.&lt;; and secun tt es loaned 1book va lue 1
U.S. Govenunent u hliga ti on~. d1re-ct a nd guara nteed.
pledged tn S&lt;'cure deposils and othe r lu.btl tties .... _... . .... , .• $ 850,000 .00
Other assel&lt; pledged to secure depOSits a nd other liabtllti e•
itncludm g not es and btl is rediscounted and
secu rlt ies snld unde r repu rc h&lt;:~se a greeme nt 1
1,548,000 .00
TOTAl.. , ............... .. - .... -----.- ....... ,., .... _.. .. $2,398,000 .00
111

1

I. the unde rs igned offi cer , do hereby declare that this Report of Condttton
I including the supporting schi!du ies 1 IS true to the best of my knowledge and

belief.
Correct - Attest : Wayne!.. Niday

We, the unde rsigned directors , attest the correctnes.• of thts l\eport of Con dition (includi ng the supporting sched ules 1 and declare that it has been
examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared in
comformance with the instructions and is true aod correct.
Alv a G. Shoemaker
Jack J. Blazer - Directors
D . Paul Davies
State of Oho , County of Gallia. ss
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 16th da y of October . I91!l, and I
hereby certify that I am not an officer of this hank.
My commission expires June 16. 1981. KBthy Skaggs, Notary Public .

•

Boneless Fulh Cooked,
lean, No Waste,
Ready to Eat.

59
Yzor
WHOLE

Gallipolis tops Wellston,
jumps to third in 1league
GALLIPOLIS Coach Bill
Trent's Gallipolis Blue Devils made
the
school's
33rd
annual
bomecoming a complete success
with a 21-8 Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League football victory
over visiting Wellston on Memorial
Field Friday night.
GAHS built up a 14-0 halftime lead ,
then held off the speedy visitors in
the second half to post its third vic·
tory against four setbacks. The win ,
second in a row for Gallipolis,
evened the Blue Devils' conference
record at 2-2 and moved GAHS into
undillputed third place .
It was a bitter loss for Coach Paul
Blankenship's lads, who entered the
contest with a sparkling 4-1-1 season
mark and a 1-lleague standing.
Although several outstanding
plays were made by both teams, two
sensational efforts, both in the final
stanza by Gallia Academy, turned
the tide for the Blue Devils .
With GAHS leading 14-8 early in
the fourth quarter, Wellston forced a
Blue Devil punt .
Taking over on its own 42.
Wellston marched 53 yards in nine to
the GAHS five with 7: 19left to play .
Patton Slopped
On fourth and one, Wellston's fin e
halfback , Jerry Patt on , was
smeared for a one-yard loss by Al
Evans, Tim I.anier, Gary Roach and
Rob Goble. That prevented the
visitors from tying the score or
going ahead .
Taking over on the GAHS six , the
Blue DeviLs , aided by two Rocket
penalties , but hurt by three penalties
totaling 35 yards along the way ,
drove 94 yards in 13 plays . Senior
halfback Mark Sheets scampered
the final 48 yards to nail down the
deciston for GAHS. Two key blocks
on that play were thrown by Guard

Todd Fowler at the line of scrimmage and End Nick Robmson
around the 20.
Scott Morrison's ki c k from
placement with 57 seconds left completed the game's scoring .
Nick Robinson's interceptiOn of a
Jeff Montgomery pass with 15 seconds to go made it official.
'
The first half was all Gallipolis .
The Blue Devils took the game 's
opening kickoff and marched 91 yards 10 17 plays , eating up nearly 10
minutes on the clock along the way .
Sheets Scores
Mark Sheets raced in from 12 yards out at the 2: 41 mark to give GAHS
a 6~ lead . Scott Morrison, wtth Bob
Marchi holdtng, split the upnghts .
During the drive, Wellston was
penalized fo ur times for 30 yards,
GAHS once for 15. QB Greg
Harrington hit Nick Hobirc,on with a
five-yard pa,.; and Greg Eutsler a
l~yarder . Mike Hem phi ll kept it
alive with a 10 yard gain .
Gallpolis stopped a Wellst on drive
on the Blue Devil 28 with 4. 29 left in
the half behtnd !me defenstve play of
Dan Staggs, Todd Nibe rt and Hob
Goble .
The vastly -improved Blue Devtls
promptly marched 72 yards in nine
plays for tts second score of the
game .
Alter Harrington hit Eut.&lt;;ler with
a 13ryard strike, he followed it up
with a perlect 2~yard toss to Robin son with 20 seconds left in the half to
make it 1 3~. Morn son 's kick from
placeme nt made it 14~ . Big ground
gainer in the play was a 11 -yard
gallop by Fullback Morrc,on .
Wild Thlrd Period
Third period play was marred by
five penalties and a Wellston fum ble . Wellston was penalized twice for
30 yards, GAHS three times for 45

yards.
Gallta's J an Co llin s
recovered the WH.") fumble on
Gallia's 33 to momenta nly halt a
Wellston touchdown drive .
Four plays late r . Wellston 's J e rry
Patton returnt:d d Ha rnnglon punt
41! vards to the GAHS 16 to set up
Wciblon 's only .'icore . Patton would
have go ne 64 yards on lhe play had
not Ga lha 's Tackle Dan Staggs
caught him from behind on a
bnlliant defenst ve play.
At that, it appeared G AHS had the
Hocket.&lt;; stopped again . On a fourth
down play . Al E va res had a Jeff Mon tgomery pass bounce off his pads i.ntu the wa1 t1ng anr ts of Patton on the
( dtHS one
Patton , the ctr~a·s leachng rus her
a nd scorer . rammed it over wit h
I ~2 on the cl od to ma ke tt 14-&lt;i.
!llonlgornery then hit Dennis Osbornt' with a twoi)mnt conversion pass
and Wellston was back in tlw game .
Wellston forced Gallipolis to punt
ea rl y in the final period , then came
the Rocket drive whi ch fizz led on the
«AHS ftve . The res t IS htstory
Duminate Statistit•s
Onec again GAHS donu nated the
grmw 's st;} tist ics . p ic k i n~ up 20 first
dowm; to Wellston 's eight.
The Blue Devils ran 58 plays from
scrimma ge, Wellston 39 . Total yardage fa vored GAHS. 301 -163.
r.AHS had ~3 yarris rushing in 51
tnps . Mike Hemphill had 80 in 19
tries: Scott Morrison 74 tn 16 : Mark
Sheets 69 in fi ve; Greg Harrmw' 17
in SIX a nd Matt Willis 13 in fiv e. )
Patton , who had been in the tnple
ftgur.,; seve ral times lhe past two
years. was ilrntted to 89 yards tn 16
a ttempts by GAHS defenders . Mike
M~ssie, WHS fullback , had 48 yards
tn e tght tnps. Wel lston had J:W yards
in 29trips .
Harrington hit four of seven

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Indian swnmer is finall y upon us 1 wtsh tt would just pre-&lt;:mpt wmter
altogeU1er' Th1s weather ts just
perfl&gt;&lt;?t as fa r as J'm c"ncerned' If
any of yo u cnn fig ure a way to wrap
it up and give it tom~ roc Christmas,
1' d he ~really apprecta ti ve .
J'd ltke to c"ngratula te CHHIS
HOLTZ. a relative of mine m
Wellsto n, who took top honors in th e
Ohil co festtval ther e last week.
Chns IS a professional photographer
up there. and , tf 1 do say so myself , I
!&lt;lught htm everylhUJg he knows.
r Ah em . sin et: he beHt me out in the
co mpetition , he m tght possibly
arg ue that potnt ~ 1 Also takmg top
honors - thtrd place and Honorable
Mention - was Galltpoils man. Mark
Ellcessor, who Al.SO beat me out tn
th e profess tonal photographers'
rom petition 1 not that I 'm sensitive
or anything, yo u under staUJd ~ J.
Th e OHILCO art show is nothing to
sneer at, e1thcr . There were scads of
entries - good ones- m all categones .
Th e ph otog raph y. my per sonal
f&lt;:~ vunle , had &lt;:1 marvelous showing
agaUJ thts year!
I've been taking quite a few
ptctures myself lately, thanks to Leo
Hill , fulcine . who helped me ftx m y
a ihn g cam era Now if we could just
work on rny atlmg techmque, Mr.
Hill
I' d ltke to apologtze to the Ye Olde
(;arde n Club members . The release,
whtc h 1 rewrute, left out the address
of where to wnte for eoptes of Dot
Gnfhn"s book, " Let 's Hear It For
Herbs ." I sugRest anyone interested
111 obtairlmg a copy. contact a cl ub
member . Th.re ARE copies for
sale .
I'm taking a class at th e French
Art Colony from an OU professor,
Ja ck Matthews I must say, he 's the
first college professor I' ve had m
qutte awhile who actuaUy SOUNDS
like one . (Whatever happened to Dr .
Lawrence Butcher. who used to be at
RGC' Talk about sounding like a
coll e~e prof... 1
No room for a column - Smlething
from Sally • this week, folks . Thank
yo u for asking . 1 think I'll get a head
for days when I have no room and
call it " Nothing from Sally ."
By the wav. thanks . Mike!
Have a warm weekend · and
Monday , and Tut•sda y, and .. .

l""&gt;t&gt;rni-!.nd depo.'iiL'i of mdJvtduals.
portm~r shlps. and curpor.::it Ions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7 ,805 .CKXl.OO
T lll lt.' and ~J ·:Hlgs drpustts of md!\'ld uals,
PiJ rt Jlt'rSillps . and •·orpo rt~ twns ........... . ... . . . .. ... ... .. .. 26,715,000.00
Dt·ptJsiL"lilf Umtf'"d SUites (;overnm ent • •...•.• . .• . , • .. •.•• •..•• ,. 127 ,OCIO.OO
Dt.•posJts uf SUi tes and politi cal su txhvtsJOns

ONATOMEET
POMEROY The monthly
meeting of the Southern Hill District
of the Ohio Nurses Assn. will be held
at 7 :30p.m. Thursday at Park's Hall
on Ohio University's West Green.
The program will be on new resour·
ces for genetic counseling aUJd
studies . All registered nursell are in,; ted . Membership includes nurses
from Hocking , Athens, Meigs aUJd
Gallia Counties .

TAVERN
HAM

-#'_,_ .,A. ..,"""., .... "'t

S rnctllillg

NIGHT SLATED
MIDDlEPORT Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363 will observe past
master's night on Oct. 29 at 7 p.m.
The Master Masons degree will be
conferred and~ year awards will be
presented . All Master Masons are
invited .

chairing this year 's seminar, emphasizes the necessity to have reserva ti ons in by noon today. " C811 me
today at 446-1317, if you have not
already done so," she urges.
This month·s Gallery Exhibit.s at
Hiverby are antique toys aUld dolLs,
most appropriate to the Ninth Annual Anttque Seminar

GAUJPOIJS - Today at noon Is
the deadline to register for the Ninth
AMual Antique Seminar sponsored
by the French Art Colony to be held
on Tuesday and Wednesday at
Riverby . Featured will be noted antique au thority , colwnnist and le&lt;~ c­
ture r , Orva Walker Heissenbuttel
from Was hington, D. C. Each year
the French Art Colony is most fortunate to have Mrs . HetSsenbutl€1
return t o her native county , Gallia,
to handle the two day Seminar.
This year the first day will be
devoted to Antique Toys and DolLs.
The program will open at 9:30 a _m .
on Tuesday morning and continue
until 3:30 p.m . T uesday afternoon
with a half hour break for lunc h,
which will be served at Hivcrby .
Wednesday morning, from 9:30a.m .
until 12 :30 p.m ., Mrs. Heissenbuttel
l'ill lecture on Antique Glass . The
afternoon sesston, ~tarting at 1 p.m .
will feature tnfonnatton on Anttqucs
for the Beginrung Collector , including tips on refinishmg furniture.
facts on sliver, glass, etc. All those
who parttctpate may bring one small
item for personal consultation with
Mrs. Heissenbuttel. The Seminar
will close at 3:30p.m.
Lunch will be ""rved both days.
Registration for the two day
seminar, including lunchron, is $15 .
The daily charge, including lunch ts
$7,50, with hall day session and lunch costing $5, and half day session
wtthout lunch, $4 .
Mary Beth Chernngton, who IS
r~ ~"&lt;I!"_... ........ ~

PAST MASTER'S

c

PEPSI or

. 8

l16oz.

Btls.

diet pepsi

$}19

Deposit

HOLSUM KING SIZE

BREAD

200L$10

3

LOAVES

CRISCO
SHORTEN IN
With

J.LB. CAN

Good

Coupon
at Barr's

Oct. 24, 1979

I•

~
~

'RA'R1~i1•111et:w

BANANAS
Hours :
We
Mon_ ·Thurs .
9 A ..M. -9:30 P .M
FrL &amp; Sat_

9 A.M. -10 P.M
Closed

Sunday

4Las.

•1 oo

reseM the right to limit quantities.

defensive lines 1. Eastern ·s Bnan BL%ell ' l2 i luo ks for
rwming room in th1s .•Ke ne . H.andy Staats (30 1starts to
lead the way . Wildca ts shown arc TIITI Bea ver 166 1,
Greg Maynard 157) and Jon Sau nders ' 89 1.

Hannan Trace moves step
closer toward grid title

Plus

$}89

IN THE TRENCHES - This Tom Beaver ac tion
show taken at Friday's Hannan Trace-Eastern contest
shows the close contact in the trenches. 1offensive and

MEHCEHV1LLE
Hannan
Trace marehed closer to it.s first
SV AC championship ever in football
here Friday night with a convincing,
:&gt;J&gt;-16 victory over the defending
champion Eastern Eagles. · It was
the Wildcats• first win over Eastern
in nearly 211 years_
Coach lArry Cremeens' Wildcat.s
tire 7~1 with two league foes, Southwestern and Southern remaining.
For the third straight week, the
Wildcat defense held its opposition
to low rushing statistics .
In previous outings, Hannan
Trace's defense has stopped both
Kyger Creek aUJd North Gallia .
Friday night , Eastern 's offense
was held to 14&lt;1 total yards , 65
passing and 79 yards on the ground.
• Coach Joe Mitchem's Eagles
broke the game open after
recovering a fumble on the opening
kickoff . Senior quarterbac k Brian
Bissell got the first TD on a one yard
plunge . A pass to Greg Wigal was
good for the extra points .
Hannan Trace got hack into the
game in tbe second stanza when
junior halfback Todd Sibley rambled
10 yards . A run for the tying points
failed .
HaMan Trace took the lead mid·
way through that period when Randy Green returned an intercepted
pass 32 yards. Jay Bray kicked the
enra point for a lU lead .
With just four IM!C(IIIds remaining
In the half, Eastern 's Bissell went
Continued on C-2

passes for 41! yards and one touchdown . Montgomery connected on
ftve of 10 lone intercepted) for 33
yards .
Return yards favored the vtsitors ,
10!-J7, with Patton picking up 76 of
those yards on punt and kickoff

returns .
Nick Robinson's 14-yard return of
a n intercepted pass late in the game
paced GAHS in that department.
Wellston was penalized 10 times
for 100 yards, GAHS eight tunes for
110 yards.
Montgomery punted only once for
Continued on C-2

Ohio
State
romps
By GEORGE STRODE

AP Sports Writer
CO LUMBUS, Ohio i.~P 1 - Art
Sc hli c ht er
figured
tn
four
to u ch down s Satu rday to lead
undefeated and sixth-ranked Ohw
State to a 59~ romp over Wisconsin.

the Badgers' wont deft!al t!ver, in a
Btg Ten Con ference college football
game .

The worst setbacks previously for
Wt sconsm were 56.Q defea ts by Ohw
State Ln 19 7~ and Mtchigan two years
ago .
The vtctory was th~ Buckeyes '
.st·venth over a ll and fourth in the
conference, as they beat th e
Badgers for the 20th stratght time
WJst.:onsin , 2.-5 overall and 1·3 111 lht!
lea gu e, has never won in 57-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Ohio Stadium .
The margin of viclory was Ohio
State's largest in 72 games, dating
ba c k to a 6~0 whtpptng o f
NorU 1western in mid-1973.
A c rowd of 87.~. Ohio State 's 68th
stra tg ht home sellout , wat ched
Schhchter run 4 and 2 yards for
to uchdowns and fire scoring passes
of 14 yards to Chuck Hunter and 20
yards to Gary Williams.
Ohto State, a 20-p&lt;&gt;int fa vorite.
opened with a pair of 14-point
quarters a nd had set tled the
outcome by halftime . The Buc keyes
ran their margin to 38-0 in the third
quarter before Buckeye substitutes
took over .
Ray Eilts , a cornerback, returned
a Steve Partsh pass 'l/ yards a nd No.
2 quarterback Greg Castlg noli:l ran 1
va rd for the other Ohto Sta te
tou c hdowns . Vlade Janakt evs kt
luc ked a 19-y ard fi eld goal to wrap
up the Buckeyes' most decisive
Vl Ctory under first·year Coach Ea rl e
Bruce .
Schli chter, th e Htg Ten' s total
offense leader, played less than
three quarters and totaled 162 yards.
Tht• so phomore
quarterback
completed 11 of 17 pasS&lt;!~ for 1!'&gt;0
yard.s Hnd ran 11 times for 12 more
yards.
WhJie th e Buckeyes were rolhng
up HIOrt' tha n 500 yards. the OhiO
State defense kept the Badgers from
any s ~rt u u s sconng threat s
Wa scu ns1n wa s in Oh10 State
tcrntory on ly three times wtth the
deepest penetration to the 3~yard
line mtdwa y in the first qua rter .
Wtsconsin coach Dave McC:Iatn
stayed wtth Partsh until mtdway 111
the lhtrd quarter when he call ed on
Kevin Mot! wtth no more s uccess
than his !:i tartcr . Parish l·omplcted
SIX of II passes for 87 ya nl' and
threw the ooe intercept ion .

OU downed
by Rockets
TOI.EDO - The T oledo Rockets
k e pt
thetr
Mtd·American
Conference record unblemished
wtth a Z1-J:I Homecommg victory
over th e Oh to Umversity Bobcats

ht•re Saturday afternoon .
11le Roc ket.s , now :HI tn the MAC

SIDE!JNE GLANCES - lArry Cremeens, far right, head football
coach at HaMan Trace . looks a little perplex('(! foll owill!&gt; a play in
Friday's 26-16 victory over Eastern . Also looking on is a ssistant coach
Cody Boothe and Wildcat l.ee Mooney •:14 1.

and ~2 overall. were led by talented
Quarterba ck Maurice Hall .
Stobart, a Mtddleport naltve and
former GAHS gnd mentor . 1s an h1 s
tiHrd yt·ar at the hdm of the
Roc kets.
flh 1o U. failed t o sco re a
touchdown until the (ina! quarter
The hrst stx points by the Bobcats
came on a pair of field goals from
sure-looted Dave Green .
The loss dropped Coach Brian
Burke's Rot&gt;&lt;:·a ts to 3r2 in league
p! ;l \ .

OSBORNE GETS TWO - Wellston 's Dcnrus Osborne (84) leaped
high into the atr deep in the end wne in the third period to catch a twopoint conversion pass from QB Jeff Montgomery . That cut Gallia's lead
to 14-il. Blue Devil defender on left is Bob Marchi.

Ironton humbles
Logan, 42 to 6
IHONTON Fullbac k Tim
Hodges talbed five touchdowns
Friday rught in leading the Ironton
Tigers to a 42-&lt;i romp over the
"st!tng Logan Chieftat ns .
Returning to action fullowmg ct
one~ame layoff due to the Meigs
teacher stnke the Ttgers of Coach
Bob Lutz extended their SEOAI.
streak to 14 consecutive wins dating
back to 1976 by simply crushtng the

Logan in v&lt;:tders.
The tough Tiger defen"" forced six
Logan fumbl es and intercepted one
pass as Coach Lutz p layed substitutes the entire fourth period .
The scoring parade began tn the
first quarter when quarterback
Brent Wilcoxon fired a 15 yard
touchdown pass to end Joe Fletcher
and Fletcher ktcked the first of hiS
stx extra point.&lt;; wtth 610 left.
In the second canto Hodges taUied
the fi rst of h1s f1 ve touchdowns on a
two yard run and ~'letc her toed the
convers ion
On the ens uing ktckoff l ngan fumbled the ball at the five and a Ttger
recovered to set up a f1v e ya rd run
by Hodges for the TD . and Fletcher's kick made tt 21~ .
With ju.sL~l seconds remauung in
the half Hodges ranuned over fr om
the one a nd Fletcher made It 28~ at
halftime
Hodges. the league's leadmg
ru.she r . only ca rnet.J the bal l three
times lil tht.• second hC:tlf. but l"o\·ered

108 yards.
In the thtrd penod he raced 26 yar·
ds to score wtth 4:47 left and
followed this with a 72 yards gallop
for his fifth TD of the contest. Flet·
cher kicked both extra point.s as the
count rose to 42~ wtth 2:29
remaming m the third period .
With subs from both teams
playing in the final stanza Logan's
subs titute tailba c k, John Me·
Clanahan, scored from the one yard
s tnpe with 6 :43left in the contest but
a conversion run failed .
The Tigers rolled up 16 first
downs, had 265 yards rushing , and
completed six of nine passes for 90
yards
Hodges topped all rushers with 156
yards on 14 carries.
Logan managed just nine first
dowm , 142 yards rushing, and did
not complete a pass in four attempts . but saw one mtercepted .
Tailback John Huffman toted the
ball 12 times for 84 yards in a losing
caus~.

The rock-ribbed Ironton defenders
recove red five of six Chieftains fwnbles, four in the first half to go with
the tnlerception .
lrunton and Jac kson are now tied
for the league lead with identical ~
marks while Logan drops into a tie
with Wellston at 1-2.
Score by quarters ·
Logi:irl
0006-6
Ironton
7 21 14 0-42

Waverly scores first

win ever over Athens
WAVERLY - Southeastern Oh10
Athletic Lea gue history was made
Frtday mght at Waverly where
Coach Roc ky Natoli 's Tigers
became the first Waverly team to
ever defeat Athens 10 a football contest asthe host tea m posted a 20-7
victory over the Bulldogs
Waverly had dropped rune consecutive games to Athe ns dating
back to 1970 when the Ttgers
replaced NeLsonville-York as a
member of the SEOA1 ..
In ruMmg up the perlect 9~ mark
against Wa verly the Athens team
oot.&lt;;cored the Tige rs I93-J5, and then
came 197~.
For a time it appeared to be
another routine Athens win as quarterback Fred Ross ran 37 yards for a
touchdown and then kicked the extra
point for a HI le;~d with 7:57
remaining in the first period .
Waverly began the comeback in
the second quarter wben quarterback Onno Steger capped an 80
yard drive 1'1th a stx yard scori ng
run, but a conversion pass failed and
Athens held a 7-6 halftime lead.
The next Tiger TD came suddenly
as the Bulldogs marched to the WHS
six yard Une and had a first and
goal.

Jim Hignite picked up an Athens
fumbl e on the six a nd raced 94 yardll
to paydirt. A two point conversion
run fa t led .
With 5 41! remammg U1 the contest
Mark Rhoades returned an Athens'
punt 34 yards to the Bulldog five
yard line.
Two plays later Rick Conley
smashed over from the four and
Steger hit Joe Preble with a two
potnt conversion pa,.; to make it ~
7.
The stat charts show Waverly with
12 first downs, 172 yards rushing,
and hitting on five of eight passes for
:;4 yards.
Athens earned 10 first downs,
picked up 147 rushing yards, and
completed seven of 13 passes for 63
yards, losing two aerials on in·
terceptions.
Tailback Rick Conley was the
workhorse for the Tigers with 23
carries for 91 yards while Fred IW88
paced Athens with 50 yards on 11

tnes.
Both teams now share the SEOAL
cellar with 1-3marks.
Score by quarters :
7000-'1
Athens
Waverly
0 6 6 8-211

�C-2-The Sunday Times-sentinel . Sunday, Oct. 21, 1979

North Gallia rips Hannan
•
43-0 for sixth grid wzn
VI~TO\

Nur1h Gall1a's final TD came with
four secomls left when Mark Miller
ca ught a 17 yard pass from Brian
Fletcher . A run for the EPs fai led .
Howe ll led the Pirate rusher:;
while Wayne Dalton paced Ha Man
w1th 43 yards in II earries
North Gallla 6-0-1 travels to
Eastern Friday night in another
rrucia l SV AC contes t.
HaM a n 's record s lipped to 3-&lt;i.

North (;Jiji&lt;J Pirates remained un·
beaten ht&gt;re Fnde:ty ngiht with a lopsided 43-0 win over Hannan. W. VCI
In tht· foul-m f~sted contest wh1eh
saw two Hannan playe rs mjured Clnd
one t•jectcd , ~urth Gal!Ja scored in
every
quarter
to give lls
homecoming cr owd sornethmg to
rcmt·mber
Hanna11 lust tw o players due to
seriolL'1 mjunes .
Bruce H.ainey , 6-0, 161 pound
jw1i or end, suffered a fractured arm
m the first period and Mike No wlin ,
&gt;-10, 140 pound sophomore left
because off ractured ribs.
A ttord Wil dcat was tossed out for

stattsltcs
De partment

H

NG

F 1rs t Downs
Yards Ru !&gt;h1ng
Yards Pass1ng
Total Ya rd age

6
87
124
111

24

316

151
16S

12

10

Pnsses Comp t

2

4

lntenepr ions

2

I

Fumbles

4
3

1
I

Passes All pi

Fumble&lt;:. Lost

I I 120 tO 100

P enalt1es
By quarter :.
H annan

0

N Gal l 1n

6 16

0

0

o..

spcanng .
North Gallia opened its sconng
parade mrdway in the f1rs t quarter
when th e Pirates with their backs to
the wall completed a b1g 90 yard
pass play from junior quarterback
Oon Shupe to speedy Tim How ell. A
run for the extra poinls laded .
folluw1ng severa l ill egal

hiid 143 vard.o; rushing rnclu ding a 70 yard TD run.
1nher W~dcaL&lt; are Ardllc Meadows I !OJ, Keith Jayne
, 89 1, Tun Wnght •74 1 and Jay Bra y 131!) . !Tom Beaver
Pht)los 1.

SIBLEY ON THE GO - Ha rma n Trace's Todd
Sibley ( 40) m oves on a sw&lt;•cp agalllst tht• Eiistem
Eagles in Friday 's galllf&gt; rwt11m &lt;lt Ml'IT\'ITdlt' . Slblt·:o·

Hannan Tral'e . ..
ROBINSON HETIJIU'&lt;S PUNT
Ga llia s Nrck
Hobin.son t24 I returned Wellston's only punt of the
night eight yards late in the f1 rs t penod of Friday ·s

Gallipolis wins second in row.
Continued from C-1
33 yards . Harnngton punted four
limes for 129 yards
Athens NeXI
Friday , G AHS tran+'i to Athl'll~ .
Wellston will host unbeaten Iro nton .

Here are Friday's sta tisti cs

STATISTICS

De partm e nt

G W

Ftr st downs
Yards rush trH:;
Los t r us htnq
Net ru~t11ng

20
8
7 )5 145
']
15
15]
130

P it S') allt•mpts
Co rnpleft ons
lnt p r re pf L•d b ·y

7

10

4

5

I

0

Purdue whips MSU, 14 to 7
EAST l..AI'\SING , M1ch . • AP 1 Cornerback Wayne· Srmth p1cked off
tin int e r c eption for a 42-ya r d
touch down drlsh and n•serv t'
tdJlback Jiml!ly Smll h JJn'&lt;l o\·er

for a setoncl scun· S:Jturd a} as
Purdm• rldt&gt;ated Mt chtga n Stat t• 14 ~1

m a BI J.,; TPn fuotbalJ

stru~le

Neither lt-'a rn shOWt.''(l much spark

m

the

tedwu s battlt&gt;, wh1 ch
generated t-x,os from a cap.aclt}
homt-'&lt;·omm g cruwd by halftune
Mich1gan Sta tr averted 1l s first
shut out smt·e 1915 only wher1
tailback Steve Srmll1 plunged over
from the l with :\4 St&gt;cnml-; left m th e
l!arne .

In fn('t, Vw ~.; arne's h1gh!Jght wils

Purd11e

quarterbal'k

Mct rk

Ht•rTmann sdt m~ a ('aret:r Btg Ten
lJ.fl S"i complt•!lOn record Hi " ~ l 1ltt1
( 't~lllplt&gt; IIOil

brokL• tht• rl'curd

St'!

b}

\1ll'higrul SLa! t• s Fddit.' S.mth la st
yec1 r
Hut lht· \Wt o r}· kl·p1 Pw·dut.· JUSt i1
1-:&lt;H ilt' uff lht· Big Tt•n lt•ru.J ;md m tht•
rwlrnng ft 1r &lt;t

Continued frorn r·-1
over! rom the one and also added I he
two point conversion fo r a 16-J:l lead .
The Wildcats took the lead fur
good in the tlurd canto oo a JU yard
pass from Junior quartL• rba •·k Ar·
chie Meadows to se nior end Jonny
Saunders. Bray's ki ck mov ed the·
score to 21).13.
In the fourth quarter, (;reen ~ut

SEOAL ga me a ~a mst the viSllm~ Golden Rockets.
Hocke t defenders are Ric k McManaway 186) and
Shane Cox 144 1 1 Brenda Wilson photos .)

po~1-st'ason

bowl tJ1d

'lh · Ho1 knn akl•rs rue J~l u1 Llw
I'OIIfl'l't' nl'l' and ~-2 IJ \' Cr (;l l l, WI/HllllL;
tht•Jr ftr:-.1 on tht• road tl11s )Tar
II was the fourth straJght loss fur
Midllgan State a ftt.&gt;r thret" vJctont•s
to op•m Lh~ ~a son. The Spartans 8re
now 1-:\ tn the Utg Ten

POMEROY LANDMARK

SPECIALS

• •

YilrdS pa &lt;;S tng
To trtl ynrds
Plays
Re lurn ynrds
F u rnb l es
Lost t umble-s
Pennlttes
PunTs

41:1
301

33
163

the game on ice with a tw o y[lrd run .

58

39
10 1
0
1
0
1
8 110 10 100
4129 1 33

A kick for the EP failed . Si bl ey led
Hannan Trace's offense Wit h 14 :1
yard.o; in 14 carnes. B1ssell lo·d the
Eagle attack .

37

~fensively,

Score by quarters :
W ells Ton
GalltPQII S
Ne)(1 GA H S game
A !hens

0

0

8

7 7 0
Oct

0

Green , Tim Be.1vt•r.

and Gra1g Chapman wer e also
credited for good efforu .
Hannan Trace travd!'l to Southwestern Friday while Ea ster n. :&gt;-3
overalland 1-2 m the SV AC. ho-'L'
North Galha Friday ni ~ ht .

B

7 21
76, at

G~~ NERAI .

:";EW YORK 1 AP 1 - The largest

aud1L'nce in tht&gt; history of World

STATISTICS
Department

Sl'nl's teleVIsiOn. estunat.ed at 80

nlllhun p ~ r sons, Watched ABC-TV's
coverage of the final game of the
19 7~ Senes between the P11tsburgh
!~rate s and the Baltimore Orioles,
O:ICcording to research estunate.s
heS&lt;"d on the A.C . Nie lsen Co.

F•r st Downs
Yards Ru sh •n9
Yards Pa ssi ng
Total Yardag e
Passes Aft pi

1.1

65

'•6

144

J\1
l

II
6
0

Inter cept tons
Fumbles

TEAM

L

P

1

11 1

·II

I
0

l'

(•

(0

'i9

I
0

14C
94

]9

.j

0
I
1

1

16

Lnottn

J

J

~1

104

G,"lll opo l• &lt;,
W,I V" ' I t
AftH·n"
Ror l&lt;. Hill

3

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64

Co.'ll Gro ve
1ron1 on
J,l c ~'I On

Wf-llc;. Ton

J

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[I

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:)

33 1)8
J.? 1~]

0

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48

they can save
with State Farm

insurance!'

.u

Mike Swiger

3
7

0 0
1 0
1 0
2 0
) 0
1 )0
0 0 0
12 11 0

59 ] 1
6 7 36
45 Jl
20 8 I
34 8!
318 )
0
0
35~ JSS

re\u lf s .
Gc~l 'DOll '&gt; I t Wrl1&lt;.1on 8
W twr&gt;rl f 70 /\ I hen-:. l
l r ur1t un 4? Lo9a n6
M• '• CJ.., Jd&lt;k•,on . r ancellf'rl

s 1r1kP

G,lii•POI•5

Wel lS t On
Log an
w .wer l y
1\ ! nenc,
Mf'1CJ &lt;,

TOT ALS

Like a cood

0 16

H . Trace

0 13

6 ]6

o ' o ' or"'

Sra~t:

Fann
islhere .

Ocl 26 gam'-'\
(,.l 1,r;OI•'1 ell A llren-:,
1r 0r11 on &lt;II W el ls t on
-'"'~&lt;,&lt;;on at LO Qan
\&gt;\ ,l vPrl ·r .11 Mf' 1g5
Co al G r ove aT R on:. Hill
RdvenswoocJ at PI Pleasant

QUilfft I &lt;,

I'

neif:hbor,

1

8 8 0

BALTIMORE ( API - Earl Weaver
accepted his latest award with
pride, but he was willing to share the
glorr
·For the third time in seven years,
the feisty leader of the Baltimore
Orioles has been named the
American League Manager of the
Year in a nationwide vote conducted
by The A"1ociated Press .
Weaver polled 186 votes in a
landslide VICtory . Jun frcgo si of the
Caiifcrma Angels was second with 49
votes a nd Gene Mauch of the
MmneS&lt;JLa Twms thrrd with 41.
··What can I say, except that I"m
happy ," s.a1d We~ver . whose team
wun 102 ~ame s after bern~ p1cked to
fm1 sh fourth . and
the
AL
c!Janrpwnshrp before losmg to the
Pittsburgh Plrat.e s m the sevenU1
d eciding game of the World
l:irtes Wednesday .
:~ · But l cou ld never have been
Mlmager of the Year without 25 guys
!lmng their JObs . The last thmg I
WJ)uld warll tu do is take crt'&lt;lit for
l[hat th ey dJd .
~· " W114it thl:' award boils down to ls &lt;1
pi.t on Uoe ba ck to the Baltmwre

Fr•day '~

, If fl.'\ •• ~"'

By
Eastern

of the year

'i91 ·6685
!49 5. Third Sf
Middleport, 0 .

SEOAL ONLY
W l
T P OP
j
0 0 99 )4

'' Tf,.'

., '~ ·

... '
'

I;, I· '.' : IH!
.~ ' .
t .H/.'Jr

EXTRA SPECIAL PRICES
1 WEEK ONLY

oi- gar11zatwn , includin~ 1general
manager 1 Hank Peters, the seouL&gt;.
Oi'e fann dt'partmcnt and my staff m
~lprng Ill sele ct the guys Ill go out
&gt;ll)d do the JOb which makes
~ager of th e Year possible
" It 's a lot of people working
"!iether ... Weave r said ·You c an't
forget the mmor league managers.
who send guy s to the maJOrs ."
Weaver won the AP award m 1!:173.
\ftlen the Orioles won th e Amt!rican
I:.eague East but were beaten by
Q;lkland in U1e playoffs, and m 1977
when the lJnole s finished 21&gt; games
~hrnd the Ne w York Vanke&lt;!s .
-~· Just one year, 1t would be great 1f
I ;.,-, uld win the award when we won
UW. pennant , the World Senes and
everything," he said.
_Weaver, whose 1,101 v1ctones
r!JIIke him the winningest active
manager , has gu rded Baltimore to
si-~ diviswn championships and four
l~gue titles tn 1P"".! yt!e:tr s as

Reg. $14 . 95

COME
TIEMPO

•GLOVES Work -Leather -Cloth -Childr e n
•HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS New &amp; Used
•WOOD BURNER - COAL BURNER HEATERS

.His teams have finished first or
second 10 tunes, and have won 90 or
more games 10 times undt'r hJs
lepdersh1p .
" Mike Flanagan has a chance to
win the Cy Young Award and Ken
Sii.gleton could be the Most Valuable
Play er," Weaver said, "but I still
think we ha ve some underrated
pltiyers on our club.
·.· But it may not be that way next
ye_ar, " he said . " I think a lot of
people will pick us to win next
season. The players will s tart
re&lt;'ei,mg more publicity and gett1n~
the credrt they deserve ...

This Is The Time To Buy•• •
Goodyear's Fastest Selling Radial
Is Now Savings-Priced For You!

00

Perlotmttnce pr o ved .,.. ,In o vet 4
mill10n so ld at the regular D" Ces
r o(!n1p Q IS the 01 1gr na 1 ai i·SeaSOn
1adu11 :1re You ve seen11 on 11e1work
TV and GoOdyea, s compell tors ha\le
111ed Ia co py 11 but !h e on ly t~re JUS!
11 \&lt;.e r,empo 1s Toet"Yl po and sale
pnce s make 11 on even bener buy
th1s week

PIS .
~pnQ

Shots

JB
1h

ZJde's Sport ShOp
He&amp;dqu&amp;rters

The Better Saving Place

SALE ENDS OCT. 27,1979

23
18

16
Zide 's Sport

Shupe passed for two oth er touchdowns and two extra P•JI Ilt:l . Traili ng the
play IS Hannan 's Marty Spurlock 175 i - Bru ce ( ;Ltbnel phutu

Frichy's high school results

Ind. High Series. Men
fer 603 , Bob cove h 534 .

- Bill Por

Ind. High Seri es, Women -

Smith 509. Pat carson

B e tty

~92

' Ind. H i gh Game, Men

-

Tvree 224. Bill Porter 210.
·t nd . HiOt'l Game , Wom en Cerson 193 , Belly Smith 190.

•

TOINTl F1l r h 8
Wavn f&lt;Od l (• 6, N orw.Jy nt" 0
Waynt·Sv1llt"6 f (l,n !on O
w Gcauqa 2'1. (haqr1n Fal l&lt;:. Ja
w Holmes 0. (Mro l lton 0. I e
West ervill e N 46 . Wh1teh~111 0
Westcrvtlte S 22. G r ov epo rT il
westtalo;e A/ . Ot mo:, tpd roi l'&gt; 13
Wlilnrd 78, B ellcvuP .l
W illoughb ·;' sou t11 ')! _Mentor 1.1
WOOS IN ).4, ASt11i1nd 0
Wooster Tr ,wav 11 /\sh t&lt;l nd C r est

Tri'Nf'IY 17. Cres Tv1ew 14
Troy 20 . Dd 'r' Sl ebb 1ns I
Tw1n ValleyS 17 , Beth el 0
Untonfown UtK.e 11. M1 nerva 19
U ppe-r Arl1ng t on 78, Mar1etra IJ
U r banil 25. London 8
..,,.
vandal1a Bufler 14, M 1 d rYl•~bu r q

13
\lf'rrnlillun 20, G r att on M1dVIt:'W 0
versaille s 46 , Parkw ay 10
v.n Ton
County
78 .
FPdPrdl
H ockmg 7
W adswor th 21 . M 1dpark 18
warr en Hardin g 35. Cleve Coli n
w ooo 7
W arren W Reserve J] . •'\ust1n

Vl t' W 14

worth1nglon 21, Col Westl a n d l
Yellow ~ pr, nus 7 Nr&gt;"' M •.1 1n1 6
Zanesvill e 16 , L anra'&gt;ll'r J

'

' ·. ' -

Al&lt;tn P,,.~on'&gt; Pr oJec t
A• •&gt;t J Re c(&gt; td~

REG . .

..... , (. h ,j&lt; ' I J d ' • ,

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

L!O•

I~ · · •

·'

J'

GLORIA GAYNOR

A~r, f ,. ,d &amp; S1mp~on
&gt;'J,.Hne• Bra; Re co •d&gt;

I Have a Right

8 Tracks or

BEFORE YOU BUY

Cassettes

ANY OTHER CHAIN SAW

$637

r ol • · 11,1 G J o' " ' "
f)., /yd l ll j..lf' (_( HIJ &gt;

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J. • " ' J·· , .. ; ·I· •

Powe, T1o " Qt..H de tJr1r

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c oa led hd nd l e t &gt;ar I OJ r

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'I

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btg

ALBUMS

$486

J ohn
Pat

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.___ _ _ _
8_TR_A_CK_S...,or CAS;.;;;S~ETT.;.;E;;..S
&lt;!l UADRO PHENIA
( 11 Po t

,If lAt
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l HE WH(J FILM

See us at

sgs6

42 Court

8 Track or Cassette
$1037

37
_

_...;;;$5_

Album

Zide ' s Sporf

Shop, 725

s:oo

Cheap Trick
Dream Police

SHUPE SCORES - North Galha 's JUmor s1gnakaller Oo n Shupe ~eL&lt;
ready to cross the goal lme In FndCJy's 4:kl romp nn• r HMman . W Va .

23

si'nilh · Nelson Motors
Tony 's Carry Out
SWisher Lohse Drugs
· Team High Series S~op . 1914.
Team High Game -

CASH ONLYI

•

TO

i

• Automati C c. ha 1n ,;1 · d • S1 · 'l o 1e
r,Jggea constru c110n -1:''1 J ea':.,,
se rv lcea o•lily • La rge CC:IP -1 1, ' ;e• a1

E•rly Wednesdav Mixed
October J. 1979

MOUNTING

,.

$45

... , .. 0' M"&amp;... •

"e1T11-nea ~ ;o•CJ 1,

FREE!

I

Sizes 35 to 52

master charge

150

POME I!OY LANES

Jack \Ill . r ar sey, Mgr .
N1.:.in St.
Store Hours: 8:301o 5:30
Store Hours : 8 : 30 to 5:30
Mill Closed at
P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gallia,
&amp; Mason Counties

SPORT COATS

Open Daily 9:30 -8:00
Closed Sunday
Monday &amp; Tuesday SALE

manager .

•GE BLACK &amp; WHITE TV ........... ~~.~.: .. s99 95
•ELECTRIC FURNACE CLOSEOUT - NEW
•SPACE HEATERS ............~~·. ~~~·B·~·~ ...s163 11
•FUEL OIL FURNACE CLOSEOUT - NEW
•HEAT TAPES
•PIPE WRAP INSULATION
•DOOR INSULATION
•WATER PUMPS
•WATER SOFTENER SALT Nuggets - so lb .
•lANDMARK CAT FOOD DINNER .... ~.~.?:...'1 45
•LANDMARK DOG FOOD NUGGETS.. ?.~~~·-· '5 to
•1047 -12- 121/z FENCE ..... ~~~.:'.~?!! '74 47

Long, Regulat, Short
Sizes 36 to 50

..KJ

COLD WEATHER IS JUST
AROUND THE CORNER

•SWEAT SHIRT SPECIAL .......... SPECIAL $9 98
•SUNFLOWER BIRD SEED 251b . &amp; 50 lb . Siz e s
•KEROSENE HEATERS .... -..........~.N.~:. . s32 5 8
•57 LB. ROLL ROOFING ... .... ... ~~~~~-~.~.. s9 73
•NYLON INSULATED JACKET ...~:.E_c, 1 .~.~.s2Q35
SPECIAL
•BLUE DENIM INSULATED JACKET ...... s23 31
•4 &amp; 5 BUCKLE BOOTS (Ameman Mad~~ECIAL

Weaver named

AL manager

I,

Non SEOAL rewl1s ·
PI Pll' ,r 'la n t 16 R1plet 6
Suu fh P o1n 1 1-1 R o( 1o; H ill~
Coni Grovf')) Svmme~ \/ d llt·v 1'1

TEAM
Ir on ton
J ,) c k o:.on

pass during Friday's non~onference game at Vinton

at what

.1 ~

6

6

MC'Itj ~

s

Teammate Scott Lewl.'i ( 211 ctlsu moves in to assist.
North Gallia kept iL&gt; winning streak going with a 43.()
rou t.

GOING FOR BALL - Hannan's Dwight Kinnard
(20) and North Gallia's Keith Payne (28) go up for a

are pleased

OP

n o

I
I l I

1

W
~

I

Fumb les Lost
P enalties

The 36 .9 ratmg for Game Seven
made 11 t he fourth most-watched
'-ports program of all tune , behind
the last three Super Bowl games.

liT

9

homeowners

ALL GAMES

19

Pa sses Compt

ratings

E

"A lot of

SUITS

procedure pena ltie::i on both learns,
North Gallia gut it.s second TO in the
second penod on an II yard ru n b)
Shupe . A pass fr om Shupe to Ke1th
Payne was good for the convers iOn
North Gallia added" lh1rd TD JUS I
before the half ended when Howell
capped a 55 yard drive wrth a 10 yard
run. Scott HoweU ·s extended catch
was good for the extras
W1th 9:20 left 1n th e thi rd period .
Ke ith Payne. JUillnr end . caughl a
shari p&lt;iSS from Shupe, headed down
the Side I u1 cs appeared to be stopped ,
but then cu t to his left, sideste pped
two Hannan tackJers and womed 52
yards for lht score . Howell added
the two point conversion for a :«J..(}
lead .
In the fmalminutes of the sLanza ,
Shupe went 1n fro m one yard out.
Jim Barnes booted the extra point.

Gallipolis, Oh.

0

15 6 .. &lt;1J

�C-6-The Sunday Tunes&amp;ntinel , Sunday . Oct . 21. 1!!79

C-4-The Sunday Tirnes-&amp;ntinei . Sunday, Oct . 21. 1979
Pro Hockey
AI A Gl•nce

Higftlanders homecoming success

By The Auociated Press
National Hockey League

Campbell Conference
Patrick Div is ion
W
3
2
2
2

LT
1
1
J
J
1 J

Philadelph ia
N YRa ngers
Washington
A tl anta

PIS GF GA
o 6 17 16
0 4 15 11

o
o

4 21
4 18

NY Islanders
0 2
Smythe Div ision
Chi c ago
2 l I 5

Van rouver
Winnipeg

14

11

12
17
I7
1'
15
I'

1 1

I 5 17
1 3 0 '
10
Ed monton
I I 1 ' 15
_ I Loui~
I 2 I J 12
Colorado
0 3 I I
B
Wa,le s Conference
Adam s Division
Buffa lo
3 l 0 6 lB
80S1on
J I 0 6 13
Toront o
3 2 0 6 19
Minnesofa
3 2 0 6 18
Quebec
1 3 0 2 12
Norris Oivi ston
Pittsburgh
1 I I 5 IS
Los Angeles
1 2 1 5 23
~ontr eal

1 1 0 4

Detro1 1

1

1

1

4

T o ronto

5,

/

8
16
IS
16

SPECIAL

II
25

8

5
11

1 2 '1 4
Friday 's Games
Ha r tf ord 6. Los
Angeles

H J rtford

BERNIE TILLEY

ARCHIE MUNDA V

16

WaShingT o n

W t nnipeg
J,
M i nn eso ta
Edmonton 6, Quebe c 3

J

Friday 's Sports Transactions

Sunday 's Games

By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American L.eague
TORONTO BLUE JAY S - Named

HARDY MUMS
6lf2'' POT
11.()() each or 6/1500
Large selection of House
Plants
and
Hanging
Baskets.

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Ohio

){10 GRANDE COLLEG E's 1979 Hedmen Cross

Country squad mcludes, left to nght , front row- Dale
Wemhart. Mark Moyer. Brad V&lt;~rney, Ti m Willis. MidGOLF
PENSA CO LA, Fla .

&lt;AI' ,

Morris Hata!sky sank par putt s uf

10, 12 and 14 feet for a :1-undt•ri'"' G9
and a 1-shot lead m1dway thro ugh
th e $200 ,000 Pen sa t·n l&lt;~ ( ~&gt;en .
lla ta lsky IS at 11 -undt'fi &gt;a r 1:1:1 .
ont• shot ahead uf (·u· flr st round
l~adt·r l:hll Krat zt• rt an d .l \1h n
Mahaffey

NOTICE!
MOTOR ROUTE
CARRIER

NEEDED
FOR THE

DAILY SENTINEL
CALL 992-2156

' Billy Smith, director of player
development .
National League
ATLANTA BRAVE S Traded
Jamie Easterly, pit cher , to the Man ·
treal Expos for a player to be named
later or cash Optioned Mike Macha
and Bob Beall. infielders, to Ri ct1
mond of the International League .
Pla ced Tim Cole, p itcher, a nd
Rafael Ram irez , shortstop , on the
ac tiv e roster
SAN D l EGO PADRE S - Placed
Gary Luc as and Fred Kuhaulus. p i t chers , on the ac tive roster . Assigned
Andy Dyes, outfielder , and Tony
Casti llo, c atcher , to Hawaii of the
Pa c ifi c Coast League. Named AI
Heist c oach and outfi e ld instructor

die row - Larry McNickle, Joe Ramey, Ben Junk,
Dave Parlin . Back row - Bob Willey, coach; Jeff Elick,
Dave Me Lister, Neal Ste ibling, manager .

Rio runners to face
toughest foe of year
1()0 GHA.' IDE - Hedmen Cross
Country coach Bob Willey and hi s
1979-&lt;10 charges will face their
toughest competition or the yea r in
an a lwnru squad which boasts three
All-Am erican runners , Saturday,
Oct . 27. 3p.m .
"They are all fairly young and
the y have stayed 10 shape," sa1d
Willey speaking of the alunmi
team 's 1979 Ali ·American Archie
Mundy, 1977 grad and All -America n
Berni e Tilley. and 1973 's .Jack Fi nch
Mundy was a cross&lt;'ountry a nd
track ' 10,000 m eters 1 All Amen can
ju-'1 last season. Now working in
Twms burg, Ohio, Mundy has continued to s tay in s hape by running
every day .
T1lley earned Ali -Amen can s tatus
by nnming 4.03 .5 in the one mile run
He was tht&gt; donlinant runne r on
H10 's cross-country team frum 197 4
t o 1977. competing In the natwnal
th ree straight years .
Ja ckie Finch was }{io 's All American miler and wil l be indu cted
IIllO the college 's Athletic Hall or
Fame a t halftime of the Alumni 197980 ){c&gt;dmen varsity basketball game
later that evening .
F&lt;nch was clocked 10 4:05 .6 at the
tra ck and field national meet in 1973.
Ht• was named }{io ·s Athlete of the
Year in 1973.
'Ill£' season 's cross country team
under Willey has establL•hed iL,elf
as \'Cf)' competitive even though

BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

RETURN ENGAGEMENT AT THE

INN PLACE

NEW
BATTERIES

Transactions

3
1

Va nc ouver at Buffalo
Montreal a t Philadelphia
Pit t sburgh at N ew York. Rang er s
Quebec at Chicago
Mmnesota at Edmonton

992-5776

PATIUOT - Southwestern made
homecoming a happy occasion here
Friday night with a 23-3 win over
Southern . The victory pushed the
Highlllnders ' record to 4-4 overall 12 in the SVAC.
'
Southern dropped to ~I overall
and 0-3 against league roes .
Southwestern broke the game 's

•;)

11

JJ
14

DATE - GYMNAS UM
0( I :J 1 2 4 p m Open Rec
7 9 p m ·Open Rec
0( I 'n 8 10 p .m -Open Rec

On 2J8p m 12M

after 28-8 victory over Southern

25
19

11

L yne Center Schedule
Wee .. of Oct . 21 , 1979

BASKETBALL
Nation• I
Basketball Association
DE NVER NUGGETS Pur ·
c hased George Johnson, from lhe
Milwaukee Bucks. Placed Kim
Hughes, cen ter , on tne injured l ist.
SEATTLE SU PERSONICS
Signed Denn is Johnson , guard , to a
multi -year c ontra ct
FOOTBALL
National Football League
G REEN
BAY PACKER S
Signed Ricky Patfon , running back
Pla ced Steve Atkins , running back
on the in i ured rese rve I i st
SOCCER
Major Indoor
Soccer League
BUFFALO STA LLION S - Sig n e&lt;~
Tony Be tTs , defender .
HARTFORD
HELLIONS
Si g ned Peter Lechermann, defen
der , and Yi lmaz Orhan, f&lt;o, w 21rd .

• 36 month guarantee
• Heavy duty service bat tery
• For most auto . and
trucks.

46.50
1
10.00
1

Less SIO . oo
Trade In

1

36.50

See Sanders Auto Sales for all

your service needs .

SANDERS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

S&lt;even of Jts eleven members are
freshmen .
Thus far, the team has grabbed
second place finishes in the multi team Wittenburg, Glenville, and
West Virginia Wesleyan In·
vitationals while taking first place in
their own four team Rio Grande Invi tatiOnal this past weekend .
Top runners for the squad are
Dave Parlin (Wheelersburg ), Ben
Junk (Frankfort), Larry McNichols
1McA rthur ),
Dale Winehar
1Uri chsvil le I, and Dave Mc!.isler
1Bremen 1.

POMEROY, 0.

S
7

SW
p;

Passing
Total Yardage
Pa3ses A ttpt
Passes Comp t
In ter cep t ions
Fumbles
Fumble-s Lost
P e-nalties
By quarte-r s
Sou the r n

106
IS

Yard~

s w

198
67
165

I) I

9
2
2
2
2
5-SS

0 0 0
I' 0 14

"
7
1
0

0

8 p m 11 M ·lntr arnurals
Oct 25 Clo sed Homec:om mg
Oct 26 Closed Home
Ocr 27 Closed Homecoming
3 P.m . Cross Country vs . Alumni
4 p .m . volleyt&gt;atl vs. Capital
and Ohio Domin ican
7 -JOp m Redmenvs A lumn 1
A l l Stars
Oct 28 Clo!)e-d Hom ecoming
Concert

6/I.J

Closed
Closed
Closed
Closed

Closed

•

8 8
0 · 18

OOM Park District news.

.-.!

entry fee of $1 after the deadline of
Nov. 2 and on the day of the race (a
$5 entry fee after Nov. 2 4 p .m.)
All participant£ should report to
the Rio Grande College Athletic
Field between 11 :30 a .m .-1 p.m. for
nwnber assigrunent and T .shirts.
For additional information contact the 0 . 0. Mcintyre Park
District office at (614 ) 446-4612 ext.
45 Monda y-Friday between the
hours of 8 a.m.-4 p.m.

TIJRKEV TROT FUN RUN
GALIJPOI.IS - On Sunday, Nov .
22, at I :30 p .m. the 0. 0 . Mcintyre
Park District will host the fi rst an nual Turkey Foot Fun }{un for
jogging enthusiasts.
Haces will mclude a seven mile .
five mile race and a two and one half
mi le fun run at Rio Grande College Corrununity College cross count ry
course . Participants will run in the
followmg age groups : 17 and under ;
18 through 2.1; 24 through 29; 30
through 39; and 40 and over.
T .Shirts will be awarded all par ti cipant s
with
Thanksg iv ing
Turk eys to the top male and female
contestants and etwarcb In each age
classification of the five and seven
mile races. Fun Hun participants in
the two and one half rrule run will
receive T.Shirts only .
Entry fee is $4 if received by 4
p.m . Nov . 2. Checks should be ma de
paya bl e to the 0 . 0 . Mci ntyre Park
District. All juggers are encouraged
to pre-regist er. There will be a late

In Time For

Christmas

LATONIA
r'LORENCE, Ky . ( AP)
Fa1nnount Lulu won the $1 ,100
feature mile pace tn 2:03 3-.'i Friday
rught at Latooia, paying $39.80,
114.00 and $7 .20.
M1ni Forsure returned $2.80 and
$2.80 to place . and Sea Monster paid
$7.80 to show .
Ronda Adios and Hasty F1ower
combined for the 3-4 daily double
worth $84 .20.
A crowd of 1,596 wagered $168,626.

HEDWOMAN spiker powers ball past Ohio Wesleyan blocker in
recent ma tch.

Redwomen to host
Capital, Dominican

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF OONDITION

The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company

John Deere Toys

of Pomeroy , Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at tbe close of
business September %9, 1979, a stale banking IDSUtuUon organized and
operating uoder tbe banking laws of this Slate and a member of lbe Federal
Reserve System. Publlsbed In accordance with a caU made by the Stale
Banking Authorities and by the Federal Reserve banil oflhls District.

ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions
U.S. Treasury securities
Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations
Obligations States and political subdivisions
in the United States
All other securities
a . Loans , Total (excluding unearned income !
14,283,000.00
b. Less : allowance for possible loan losses
82,000.00
c. Loans, Net
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures , and
other asset£ representing bank premises
All other assets
TOTAL ASSETS
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships .
and corporations
Time and savings deposits of individuais .
partnerships, and corporations
Deposits of United Stat"" Government
Deposits of States and political subdivisons
in the United States
All other deposits
Certified and officers' checks
Tota I Deposits
a . Total demand deposits
6,288,000.00
b. Total time and savings deposits
15,4.10,000.00
All other liabilities
TOTAL fJABIIJT!ES
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock:
16,000
a No . shares authorized
b. No . shares outstanding 16,000
I par value)
Surplus
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies and
other capital reserves
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
TOTAL I JABIUTIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date :
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of $100 ,000 or more
Average for 30 ca lendar days (or calendar month)
ending with report date
a Total deposits

From peda l-dr~v e n r1d1 ng tra c lors to put -toge lh er k1IS
John Deere ac11on loy s are des&lt;gned 10 ma ke k1ds
happy They keep parenls h a ppy too . w rth th w
long -lasl1ng durab il&lt; ly C hoose Joys from our
rndust r~al . far m and la wn and ga rden l&lt;nes All are
aulheni &lt;C s cale model s o t lhe real ma c h rnes wrth
mary mov 1ng pari s to make playJrme more lun

s 2,163,000 .00
2,631,000.00
1,692,000 .00

SWISHER IMPLEMENT
COMPANY

2,574,000 .00
30,000 .00

14,201,000.00

"Your Authorized John Deere Dealer"

396,000.00
94.000.00
123.781,000.00

UPPER RT . 7

GALLIPOLIS , OHIO

1{10 GHA.NDE - Boastmg a 15-1
record , the Hio Grande women's
volleyball team will prov1de
homecoming day entertairunent
when they Uike on Capital University a nd Ohw Dominican College at 4
p .m ., Saturday , Oct . 'll
Coac h Diane LeWIS, who g uided
most of these same players to a fourth place state tourname nt fini sh 1n
1978-79 believes this team ha., the
ingredient£ to go all the way to the
state championship.

REDS HIKE PRICES
CIN CINNATI 1API - Pr1 ces for
lickets to Nalional League baseball
games in Ri verfront Stadium wtll
chmb 50 cents n~xt ~ason, ~x c tpt
for the most remote seats, Lht•
Cmcinnat1 Heds sa1d f'nday .
Upper-level seats will re main $3.
the middle-level will cost $4 .50 or
$5 .50. and $7.50 will be the top price
for a few seats closest to the f1cl d.
.. Increastng costs Ln every phase
of the operatwn. from salaries t o
suppli es. made tt nec~ssary ," sa td
li cket d&lt;rector Bill Stewart.

. 'So r ar. only brief let downs In our
aggressive style of play have proved
troublesome," said Lewis . " We are
gettin g excellent power play from
K1m Kmght (Wav er ly). Kim
Cl ingman !Springfield 1. Den ise
Ha dcliffe (Athens !. a.nd ou r two
freshmen Janet Groves !Gallipolis 1
a nd Cmdy Bowe rs I Kenton 1." she
a dded .
HID ·s biggest season wins have
c ome over such large schools as
Ohio Uruversity and Marshall and
the University of Charleston and
college teams includmg Wooster,
Muskingum and Otterbein

How they fared
COLUMBUS. Ohi o (AP}
How rne
top ranked Ohio high \chool foo tbal l
tPam s in The Associated P r ess pol l
tared 1n F ri day n1ght act1on
CLASS AAA
1 Cinc 1nna t i Moell er , 7 0, beai
(1ncinna t 1St Xav1er
J5 0
2 Massillon . l 0. beat M ass i llo n
Jarkson ~2 0
3 Youn gstown Mooney, 7 0, wa ':&gt;
1dle
4 sandusKy, 7 1. 1051 t o Etyr1a 17
0

5 W estervill e North , 8 0. heat
Co lumbus Whi te hal l 46 0
6 Ctn c 1nna t 1 Prin ce ton, 6 L bt:'at

:·:

$5,331 ,000.00
15,415,000.00
32,000.00

Fa 1rf , e l d 27 -0

7. Dover , 8 0, beat North Canton
Hoover 36 ·27

a

Pa r ma Padua . 7 1. beat St ow
Wnl&lt;.:, h JP Su i t13 3
9 Elv r1a , 7 o, beat Sa nd usky- 17 0
10 Zan ew dle . 7 l , beat Lan c ast er
I7 6

795,000 .00
3,000 .00
142,000 .00
21,716,000.00

CLASS AA

1 S t Marys , 8-0, beat De1 ranrf' ~ 5
7

7 Wh ee le r sburg , 6 0, w a s 1d le
3
Hami lton Bad1n , 7 0 , beat
Day ton Ca rroll 28 6
4 c ~ rrlevi ll e 7 o, beat W ilm1ngton
4\ IJ
5 Akro n 5 1 VIncent sr Mary, 6 1.
beat C anton Centra l C.=ttholir 38 13
6 warren Ken nedy,} Q, was 1dlf:&gt;
7 Tren ton EdgewOOd . 7 Q, beat
C1 nc 1nn ati Wyorr,.ng 35 0
s canal Fulton Nor thwest , 8 0,
bea t Mass• lion Tuslaw 11 0
9 Columbus Grandv•ew . 7 0 I.
b ea t Plain ( tt y Alder SO 0
\0 _ Navarre Fa •r les3. 6 2. los ! ro
Orrville 2510.
CLASS A
1 Newark CathOli f. 8 0 . beat John
stown N or thridge 33 0
2 Arling ton, 8 0, oeat M fCom o 1.4

236.1n! ,OO
$21,954,000.00

WHILE IHEY LASI
400,000.00
000,000.00

1979 TRUCKS &amp; VANS

627,000.00
1,627,000 .00
123,781.00().00

ONLY 3 LEFT

125,000.00

S2 l,:i42. 000 .00

1includmg the s upporting schedules I has been prepared in confonna nce with
the instructions and is true to the best of my knowledge and betief .
Roger W. Hysell , Cashier
October 9, 1979

THE MEIGS INN

STATISTI CS
DEPARTMENT
F1rstoown s

O S U N ewark Bran fh

Ru ~ n1ng

Yar ds

Volle 'f ball vs

8· \0p.m . ·Open Swim
S· IOp.m , -Open Swim

WOLVERINE .
10 WATERPROOF
WELLINGTON

Stale No. 223X

or

Southwestern With 98 and 96 yards
respectively .
Defensively, Potter, Tcxld Baker
and Dale Newberry played outstanding footba U.
Southwestern hosts league-lea ding
Hannan Trace Friday night.

ln t ramurr~l s

JUST RECEIVED

I , the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condition

TUES.-THURS. 9 TIL 1
FRI. &amp; SAT. 10 TIL 2
THE DOC CAVINESS BAND

scon ril( open in the first period
following the kickoff. The march
was capped by a !~yard scoring
pass from junior quarterback Scott
Hussell to Jay Burleson . A pass for
the extras failed .
A few minutes later, Southwestern
got its second TD after a fumble .
recovery . Four plays later , Hussell
rambled over from 12 yards out. He
a lso ran the conversion for 14~ lead.
Neither team scored in the sec ond
pericxl In the third quarter, Southwestern recovered a rumble
recovery Four plays later, Russell
rambled over from 12 yards out. He
also ran t he conversion for a 1H
lead.
Neither team scored in the second
pericxl . In the third quarter , Southwestern recovered a fwnble on the
kickoff.
Two plays later, Hussell scored on
a 26 yard run . Another big pla y
during the march was a 14 yard run
by Joe Potter . Shennan Potter ad ded the extra points .
Followmg a pass interception,
Southwestern scored its final sixpoints on Russell 's It yard run. A
kick for the EP was blocked.
Southern got on the scoreboard in
the final quarter going 53 yards in
seven plays , Hobin Fortune scored
on a five yard run for Coach John
Dudding 's Tornadoes. Dale Teaford
added the two point conversion.

Or 1 14 6 p m

•••

NATATORiUM
2-4 p.m .·Open Swim
7·9p.m. -Qpen Swim
H p m . - st~ff and
Co llege Students

We . the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Coodltion (including the supporting schedules) and declare that il has been
examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been prepared in
ronfonnance with the instructions and is true and correct.
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
THEREON JOHNSON - Directors
C. WAYNESWISHEH
State of Ohio, County of Meiila. ss :
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 9th day of October 1979 and 1
hereby certify that I am not an officer or director ofthis bank.
'
My cor:unissioo expires July 17, 111&amp;'1.
JoAnn Crisp, NcKary Public .

•·

PLUS

1-000GE
4 WHEEL DRIVE
2- 2-WHEEL DRIVE

ONLY
6 DODGE VANS
REMAINING

to start vour ca r
other
hatter ie .~ won't .

..., h f' n most

•'
/

DL ·UHIH

3

PLUS
'400
REBATE

140()

REBATE

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

GALLI POLlS. OH 10

cardington , 7 0 1. tied w•th
(rP Sfltne 0 0.
4. Mogadore, 8 0, beat W tndham
35 0
5 Berg holz Spnngfie ld . B 0. be a t
Hanoverton United 18 14
6 Portsmouth Notre Dame, 6 1.
was tdle
7 Cedarv •lle, 8 ·0 . bea t Cla rl(svd lc
Cltnton Masste 34 0
8 Crooksvil le , 7 l. beat Zanesv ille
Wes t Musktngum 20 14.
9 St H en rv . 7 I. lost to Mar ta
Ste 1n Marton 17 4
10 Franklin Fur nace Green, 6 1,
wa s idle

Wlule the earth turns, lhto moon IS
Clfchng It more slowly in the same
directiOn . Because of this, a point on
earth does not com e around to face
the mOOn e\'ery 24 hours sin ce it
u.kes 50 minutes longer each day for
the point to catch up with the moon . .
It is calculated that the moon's
journey around the earth takes 24
~ l llr 5 &lt;ind sn mintes.

DieHar·d ' Battery

$4999

With
tradP- in

lfs

Mainlt'nam·e-Frt~e!

.\1 a intenance-free m ea ns water l~ not added
und"r normal operating conditions.
• BaHery prices, installation &amp; shipping area • Prices are cat a lot

pnces e Ask about Sears credit plans .

Silver Brldgt PltUJ
ForServlct

Phone 446-2902
M0111t mu cf1 11ru1 10f swst ti Hblo·
r.. , &lt;1 ... .

fnr pu.·l up "I! hi~ .•

SEARS, ROEBLCK AND CO .

•

�C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday, Oct. 21, 1979

Wahama drops heartbreaker
give Wehama a qlllck 7.0 lead
.lust two minutes later the White
Falcon defense struck again when
they forced a hurried Wayne punt of
only 14 yards. The ktck was picked
up by Shawn Fields and returned 23
yards to the Pioneer 18 yard line.
On the White Falcons second offensive play followmg the kick Rick
Rarntiz found Tim Young in the end
zone for an 18 yard touchdown pass .
Hammarlunds ' boot made it I&lt;Hl
with 2:03 remain in~ in the opentng

BY GARY CLARK

MASON
ALthough betng
decided underdogs, Coach Bill
Jewell's Wahama White Falcons
threw a terrific scare into the Wayne
Pioneers Friday night before bowing
out in the fiflBI minute of play by a
22-21 score.
The contest was played before a
sparse crowd at Bacthel Stadtum as
the White Falcons observed Parents
Night.
An inspired Wahama defensive
eleven highlighl[ed the game by
turnmg back a ~Lllck and talented

Wayne team on numerou s oc·
casions. The locals came within
inches on two crucial fourth down
olays during the winning P10neer
drive but fell just short of pulling off
a major upset
The famed Falcon defense scored
the Rend Area team s first touch·
down and set up the second as
Wahama took a quick 14.0 lead in the
opening quarter
Travis Gray put the bend arer~
team on the board with 4:27 to play
in the period when he scooped up a
blocked PIOneer punt at the Wa vm·
31 yard line and raced mto the ~nd
zone for the first touchdown of his
career. It wa s Larry Gibbs who
broke through to block the kick
which allowed Grav to score . Tord
Hammarlund boot ~d the first of
three straight PAT conversions to

the White Falcon B yard line. On
Wayne' s first scrimmage play
quarterback David Varney scored
on a bootleg play with just :38
seconds remaining in the half.
Varney hit Gary Queen with a three

yard pass for the point after touch·
down to knot the score 14·14 at in·
termission.
After a scoreless third quarter.
Wahama started an offensive drive
at the 50 yard line. It took ten plays

stanza.
During the second quarter. Wayne
kept threatening to score and finally
did on two separate occasions just
before intem1ission. The visiting
Pioneers drove to the Wahama
eleven yard line but couldn't get in
when Vince Weaver batted down an
aerial in the end zone.
On their next possession Wayne
drove 40 yards in eight plays for a
touchdown . David Varney hit David
Clay with a five yard pass for six
points on a thi rd and goal situation.
The extra point attempt was no
good
Wahama fumbled on the ensuing
k1ckoff and Jeff Fry recovered for
Wa)ne at the Falcon 10 vard line.
The bend area defense ·held and
Wahama took over at their own five
yard line .
Howeve r . three plays later the
locals fumbled again with Dannv
Clay recovering for the Pioneers o~

and some slx minutes before Vlnce
Weaver scored from nine yards out
to give the locals a ~14 lead .
Hammarlunds point after !tick was
true to make It 21-14 with just 5:43
remain ing .
Following the ensumg kickoff the
Pioneers started a desparation
se ries to try and reach paydirt. On
their first play David Varney found
Gary Clay for a 40 yard pass play to
give Wayne a first down at the
Waham a 26 yard line .
Five plays later the Pioneers were
faced with a fourth and three
situation at the seven and made it by
inches to give them a first and goal
at the three.
Kent Adkins was stopped at the
line of scrimmage followed by Tony
Thompson one yard gain to the two.
An off stdes penalty on Wlthama
moved the ball to the one but Adkins
was stopped again for no gain to set
up a fourth and goa l at the one with
47 seconds remaining . Thompson got
the call and after seemingly being
stopped slithered into the end zone
for the touchdown . Wayne elected to
go for the win on the PAT and won
the game when Varney hit Clay for
thr two POints and a 22-21 victory.
Wahama will return to action next
Friday night when they entertain St.

Marys in the final home game of the
1979 season. It will also be senior
night and all senior football players,
band members and cheerleaders
will be honored.
STATISTICS
WAYNE
WAHAMA
12
6
First Downs
51-238
31~
Yards Rushing
49
43
Yards Passing
287
108
Total Yards
H
3-l!
Passing
0
I
Interceptions Thrown
1-1
l-2
Fumbles-Lost
:;.45
3-11
Penalties- Yards
3-15
4-30.0
Punts-Avg.
6()
43
Off. Plays

Sunday Times-Se nt tnd,

riday
grid
results

BY JACK ROGER.~

rightly say Point Pleasant took a
giant step Friday night for mankind
(like the moo" astronauts I. But they

did take a poslttve step toward an
unbeaten season and a Class AAA
playoff berth, plus recapturing the
Old Oaken Bucket from the Ripley

11"

CHURNING OUT YA HllAGE - Sen tor Jay :vi in ton 140 1, who scored
one of the !'PHS touchd owns. is shown here pushmg away a would-be
Ripley tackler as the Btg Rlacks marched down field toward paydirt
Friday night.

......

-I-

1:uw....,_....,
• l!llaiMt ..... ..
:1
0

, ..

1

CIUAMIIlUI

0 14 0 8 22
14 0 0 7 21

17

RUNNING HARD - David Sprouse, who raced for 65 yards in II
carries against the Ripley Vikings Friday night. is shown here skirting
the left side for a big gain .

Vikings.
ll all happened before a packed
house, in Indian s ummer weather. at
Sanders Memorial Stadium, with the
Big Blacks turning back the Vikings,
16-&lt;i. for their 8th straight victory in
the 47th renewal of the Rotaryinspire d Ru ckel series.
The wtn left PPHS with a ve ry
diStinct 39-7-1 edge in the gnd
warring for the rustic trophy .
Coac h Frank Marino' s Jackson
Coun ty boys, i:lfter four wins in a
row, ha\' e now lost four in a row.
Rtple y drew first blood in the first
quarter when defens ive end And\·
Robinson scooped up a local fWJlbl~
and shucked out like Snyder's hound
for 51-yards an d a touchdoWn . The
kick failed but the Vikings led 6~
with 2. 36 on the clock .
But the Big Blacks scored in each
of the next three periods. Troy Krebs
intercepted a Mickey Marino pass.
and Brian Stepp cashed it in with a
bruising 10-yd burst off nght tackle.
Bryan Mabe kic ked the first of his
two conversions and it was 7--6 .

l:!efore that period ended, Ripley
marched 67-yds, aided by two 1&gt;-yd
penalties on PPHS, before they were
held on the loca l 6.
Late in the final heat . Tony
Thompson made his second interception a nd ran it 13 yards to the
!'PHS 47 . Riple)' held and Beller
lofted a 42-yd punt to the Viking 7.
Desperate. with time running out.
:v!ickey Marino faded to try for his
16th pass. But he waited too long tn
the end zone. Beller stormed in and
upended Mickey for a two-poin t
safety that brought the cow•ty to 166.
Within the seconds gurgling
down th e sink . the locals again
headed goa lward . Sprouse returned
the kickoff 27 yds to the V ik ~
37.Stepp had an 11-yd ga iner and
McClellan sprinted for 7. Stepp got
one to the 17 when it all ended.
Stepp grabbed McClellan's onlv
completton for 9-yds in the third
period .
Next week it will be the
Ravensw ood Red Devi ls here

Fullba c k
Jay
Minton
into the act in th e third stanza with a
15-yd sco ring spring around left end.
with 9: 13 still to pia; . Mabe thumped
STATISTICS
the conversion pe rfectly and it was
Dept.
PPHS Ripley
14-&lt;i.
I st down s
8
13
Nets Yards rush
Then. with only I: 41 remaimng in
134 100
the gam~. defens ive end Robbie
Passes
1-&lt;i 5-15
Beller sacked Mickey Marmo, who
Intercepted by
4
0
was trying to pas s. for a 7-yd loss in
Yards passing
9
70
Yards from scrimmage
the end zone and a tw&lt;rpoint safety
143 170
that made It 16-6.
Return yardage
93
65
It wa s an odd game in that Ripley
Fumbles
2
I
controlled the ball. with 65 offensive _ Fumbles Lost
2
0
plays to Potnl' s 4H. had t1ve more
Penalties Yds
38
65
first downs, recovered two local
Punt'&gt;
'
·
5-37 2-42
fumbles , and had the most yardage
Offensive Plays
48
65
from scnmmage . But they still pay
off on the important figures that go

on tht• scoreboard .

Point' s fir~ score came after Trov
Krebs' tnterceptwn on the Viking 35.
!lave Sprouse had the big play when
he dashed 17 on a fourth down to the
Viking 13 . Mtnton batted out 3, and
Stepp ran over tacklers for the last
10 Mabe's boot made it H . It stayed
that way as the half closed .
Stepp returned the third quarter
kickoff 25-yds to the Ripley 47 and
the locals covered the distance in six
plays. Sprouse had gains of 12, 10.
an~ 5. Then Mtnton took off like Man
of War and circled left end for the 15
that ended in promised land. Mabe
swung his foot and it was !Hi.

the road ...
HONDA XR250

Score by quarters:
Ripley
Big Blacks

6 0 0 0-6
n 7 7 2 -16

7
Cleve land Hts . 22, LakewOOd 14
Columbiana 28, South Range 0
Col Centennial 21 , Col Linden
McKinley 8
Col . De Sales 14 . Col . wanerson 9
Col Eastmoor 27 . Col South 6
Col . Hartley 43, Col St ChMies 13
Col Independenc e J l , Col Cen tral
0
Col Marron Franklrn 10, Col Wesl

• Enduro-ready
• Capac •tor-Otscharge lgn •tton
• Honda 's new enduro l1re s

Was
$1950

HONDA XR185
• l mprP'i&lt;;lvP m -t rlf1tJver atJrlt Ty

Col . Whelsran e 22 . Col Fast 13
Columbus Grove .36 , Upper Scrot a
Vdlley 20
conneaut 21, Ashtabula Harbor 14
Copl e y 26 , Akron Covenfry o
Cory Rawson 20. Ar cad ra 7
Covino ton 28. Graham 8
Crooksv i lle 20 , W . Musk rngum ' "
Dalton 14, Nortl"lwe!:&gt;tern 6
D&lt;tv Dunbar 12, Day Krser 0
Day Jefferson 36, Eaton 15
Day . Meadowdal e 11 , Dd "{ Ros!. J
Day . Oakwood , 34, Be ll brook 0
Di)l re l , Brookvil le 6
D&lt;&gt;ver 36, N . Canton Hoover 27
Dublin 12 . Buckeye Valley 7
EdgewOOd 35, Wyoming 0
Elyria 17 . Sandusky 0
Euc lid 10 . Lyndh u rst Brush 0
Fa1rborn Baker 8. Farrborn Park
H1lls 2
Fairfield UniCJn 32 . Canal W rn
chester 0
Fairmont E . 14, Farrmonl W 6
Findlay 36, Manst1eld 13
Fort Frye 26. Warren Local 6
Fredericktown 6. Marion Cath 0
Gatlanna 35 . Chill rc OThe l
Galion 11 , Upper Sandusll. ·,. . 10
Grand Valley 30 . Ledg emont 0
Grandv1ew 50 . Alder 0
Greenon \6 , Bellef onlarne 8
GreensburgGreen 21, Ma ar M an
c hester ?0
Greenville 10 , T1pp C1fy 9
Hamil1on Badin 28,Day Ca r ro ll 6
Huntington . W
Va
19 . Par
tsmoutn 18
tnaependence 12 , Cuyanoga Ht s 0
Kens ron 12 , Aurora 6
Leavittsburg Labrae 1~ , , oL. ·:f::
· Liberty 0
Leba non 32. Mason 7
Leetonia l4, 5ebr ing 8
Lima Bath 30, De lphos St John 1
L ittlt&gt; Mil'lm r
11 . Mtddl etown
Madison 8
Logan Elm 39, Liberty Union 19
Lorain 18, Fremont Ross. 16
L orain Clearview 28 , Well rngton 11
Mansfield Madison 3-'1, Coshocton 0
Marion Harding 21, Lor am K1 ng 6
Marion Local27 , St . Henry 4
Martins Ferr y 41. Buckeye S 6
Massillon 42 , Mass rllon Jack!WJn 0
Massillon Perry 36. Canton 5 . 14
Medina 14, North Olmsled B
Medina Highland 23. Hudson 10
Miami East 21. Lehman Cllth . 20
Miller 20, Rosecrans 0
Milton -Union 34, Valley View 8
Morgan 29, MaysvilleO
Mt . Vernon 13. Hill iardO
Nelsonville · York 20, Belpre lJ
New Albany 28, W . Jefferson 21
New Concord Glenn 23. Tri Valley

Your Favorite Dance Band

STEVE YATES
and SPECTRUM
STARTS TUESDAY, OCT. 23
FIVE NIGHTS A WEEK

9:00 PM - 2:00 AM

FRENCH QUARTER
KANAUGA, OHIO

WE HAVE 27
1979 TRUCKS

• Pr1mary k 1L k -s t.lrt1 11Q

Was $129S

HONDA

Lay -Away for Christmas Now

COIHC STRONG!

BETZ HONDA SALES
RT. 7

WHILE THEY LASTI

• S1x -s pecd !rfl n s rrrss1on

No Interest Charges

DUTCH
LOAF

PH. 446-2240

HONDA.

$}79
LB.

Mi~e~te Steaks LB~ 1 s;;aded Cod
99

~~~--~------~----------------~
PRICES GOOD ALL WEEK

0

Thaler Ford Sales, Inc.

•

orrville 25, Fairless 20
Pandora ·Gilboa 42 . Hardin Nor
thern 12
Paulding 9, Allen East 8
Pen insula Woodridge 28. Wat erloo
7
Pic kerington 27. Miller spor t 0
Portsmouth E . 26, M cDer mott NW
0
Portsmouth W . 34 , Lucasvill e

Valley 20

Ravenna«), T~llmadge 7
R!ynoldsburo 27 , Del~ware 20
Rittman U, Doylestown 0
_
St . Marys 55. Dt&gt;f iance 7
Salem U. Girard 6
She lby 3.4, Norwalk l
SOlon«. Twinsburo 0
Southeastern 22, Greeneview 7
springbOro~. Blanchester 6
Spring . Catholic~. Ind ian Lak e 10
Spri ng . North 28, Beaver Creek 11
Spring . South 14, Day . wav_ne 7
Steubenville 3A, Warrensv •ll e Hts

JOHN HOUCK
Sales Manager
Nancy Fowler
Rick knight
Howard Plantz

24 Hr . Wrecker Service
Phone : 446-3575
446-3650

ZESTA
CRACKERS
LB.
KEEBLER
Fudge Marshmallow

KEEBLER
FUDGE STICK

COOKIES
9 oz. pkg.

aox6~

8

Stow 27 Kent Roosevelt 2A
Teays Valley 28. Madison Plains 0
Tiffin Columbian 19, Bucvrus 7
Trimble 41 , AlexanderO

,

COOKIES

79~

2 Liter Bottle

9 oz. pkg.

HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS

NYQUIL

PRODUCE

Fresh Solid Heads
Nightime Colds Medicine

6 Ol. Bottle

CABBAGE

"

$169

15e

LB.
Flaming Red Tokay

Rightguard Deodorant
5 oz. Can

GRAPES

$166

EFFERDENT
20% Free
72 Tablet Box

;127
Denture
Cleaner

$159

•

69e

CREST TOOTHPASTE
L4rge 7 oz. Tube

,

LB.
First of the Season

17

SEE

Tommy Sprague
Bob Swain
Rod Ferguson

New Lexington 21, Sheridan 8
New London 20 . Black River 14
Newark 14. Grove City l
Newark Ca th . JJ, Northridge 0
Newton Falls 7, Mathews 6
Northmont 43 , Piqua 6
Oak Hill12, Ironton St . Joseph 6
Ober l in 19, N . Ridgeville 7
Oberlin F i reland s 15. S Amner!:.t

LB~ }69

KEEBLER

n

- '

$1600

'1750

Store Sliced

Col Mrfflin 26, Col BE.'ec hcroff 12
Col
N orthland
15 .
Col
Brooknaven 7
Col Ready 26 , Col. Wenrle- 8
Col Walnul Rrdge 4'1, Col Br1ggs

TUHNfNG &amp; CHURNING - Sen ior Vince Weaver 114 1 is shown here
struggling to get away from a Wayne defensive player, Roger Thompson
r 251. duri ng Wahama' s hard-fought contest against visiting Wayne
Friday night

79t

LB.

9

LOW I LOW PRICES.

• Four -s t ro ke ~}Ower and re llf!hillly
• Claw -a cr~on Pnduro t1res
• Lead1ng · a)(le fr on t loll•.s

'Was

BOLOGNA

Cin . Forest Park 20, Cin . Oak Hills

Cin Greenhil ls 22, Cin Ti!ylor 12
Cin . Landmark
Chr1stian
1.4 ,
Lockland 8
Cin . LaSalle 7, Cin . Purcell6
Ci n . Mar ie mont .43 . Milford 6
Cin . McN icholas 28 , Col. Ham11ton
Twp . 0
Cin . Moeller 34, Cin St Xavrer 0
Cin Northwest 14, Cin Turpin 7
Cin . Princeton 27 . Fairfie ld 0
Cin Reading 34, Cin N College
Hil l 14
(in Sycamore 14, Loveland 6
Cin Withrow 12, C rn Walnut Hills

DISCOUNTED. TO
HONDA XRSOO

Tastee Treat
CHUNK

0

110

• , 'seA tor

TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY

Akron Garfield 29, Akron North 0
Akron Kenmore 14, Ak ron Ell et n
Akron Springfield 10. Cuyahoga
Falls 8
Arlington l.t , McCom b 7
Ashtabula St . John 21. Madison o
Avon 30. Columbia 0
Avon Lake 21. Fa 1rv 1ewo
Bedford 13. Mi)l)le Hls 11
Berea 41, North Royal ton B
Bexley 16, Big Walnut 13
Bloom Carroll31. Berne Un•on 0
Bluffton 25, Crestview 6
Bradford 26, Twi n Valley N 6
Bridgeport 28 , Mingo 0
Buckeye .47, Keystone 0
Cad iz 20, Wellsvill e 6
Ca ldwe ll 38. Fro nti er 8
Cardina i Jl. Painesville Harvey 6
Carlisle 12, Northr idge 0
Centerville 14, Xenia 0
Cin . Bacon 13, Cin E lder 6
Cin . Colerain 4-4 , Ci n Anderson o
Cin . Deer Park 26, Maderra 7
Cin Finneytown 40, Cin . Harrison

•
Big Blacks capture eighth win zn
row
PT. PLEASANT - You couldn 1

PRICES IN EFFECT
MON., OCT. 22
THRU
SAT.,
OCT. 27
----------------

Ohio High School
Football
By The Asociated Pre~ ~
Friday 's Results
Ada 27, Delphos Jefferson 6
Akron Bu chtel 16, Akron F1re stone

lodlvidual Statlslles
RUSHING : Wahama • Vince
Weaver 15-39; Travis Gray 13-24;
Rick Barntiz 3·2: Totals 31~ .
Wayne . Tony Thompson 24-133;
Kent Adkins 9-38 ; David Varney 1134; Gary Queen 3-19; Roger
Thompson 2-11: Jeff Clark 2-3;
Totals 5! -238.
pASSING : Wahama - Rick Barntiz
HH3 yards; I TD ·I lnt; WayneDavid Varney 4-&lt;i-49 yds. 1 ID.
RECEIVING : Wah am a · Tim
Young 3-43; Wayne- Gary Clay 3-46:
Gary Queen 1-3; Total 4-51.
Wayne
Wahama

·.Oct 21,1979

JUICY TANGELOS
'

Each

1Qe

U. S. No. 1

WHITE POTATOES
20 lb. Bag

$179

.

..

�C~TheSunday

Times-Sentinel , Sunday , Oct . 21, 1979

,\liTO KAUNl;
HOC K INGHAM , N.C. l AP I
I lavt' Marcts drow hts Chevrolet
1:19104 mph to lead th e second round
of quailf)·mg for Sunday 's Amencan
500 NASC AR Grard Natwnal Race .
Ma r \' JS was followed by Ttgh e
S&lt;: utt. who drove hts Butc k 13ll .609
rnph around the 1.017-mile tra ck .
Glenn Jarrett placed thtrd In a
Ctw vrolet at 138.0tH m ph .

Celtics remain unbeaten, 130-94
toppt&gt;d the San Otego Clippers 10&amp;98.
76ers 112, Pistons 104
Philadelphta kept pace wtth
Bostoo, raising its record to 4-&lt;l by
defeating Detroit behind 36 points by
Jullus EI'Vll1g . Two free throws by
Henry Btbby put Philadelphia ahead
93-92 with 8 : ~to play and the Sixers
stretched the lead with scoring by
Erving and Steve Mix .
Blazers 99, Lakers 82
Portland remal!led the league's
ooly ether unbeaten team a s seven
of nine players hit double figures,
led by Ron Brewer. who scored 18
points . The Blazers. ·lHJ. put thc·
garnt: away w1th a 23-6 burst m tlw
S&lt;cond haiL
Bucks 95, Sun s 94
Phoerux was knocked from the
unbeaten ranks despite 29 pom ts by
Paul Westpha l.
Milwaukee led 91-lll but th e Suns
reeled off eight pomts in a row
before Harvey Catchings sank a
short
baseline
jumper
fo r
Milwaukee with 1: 47 to play ,
blunting the comeback . Two free
throws by Quinn Buckner wtth 11
seconds left cemented the vtclory
and offset two by Westphal m the

By ALEX SACHARE
AP Sports Writer
The Bostoo Celtic. we enjoying

new succcess with an oR:I fonnula n.lll, rWl and then run some more .
"'file name ofthe game around the
Celtics is run, r.un. run," said
assistant coach K.C. Jooes after
Boston ran rings around the
Washlngtoo Bullets for a 13l&gt;-94
victory Friday night .
It was the unbeaten Celtics' fourth
win of the Natiooal Basketball
Assoiatioo season . "We started out
running as !J)On as we hit training
camp, and we're not going to stop, "
said Jones.
"We're running so well we doo 't
even have to set up on offense,'' sa1d

forward M.L. Carr, one of etght
Bostoo players lo score in double
figures .
In other N BA games, the
' Philadelphia 76ers defeated the
Detroit Pistoos 112-104, the Portland
Trail Blazers downed the Los
Angeles Lakers ~.the Milwaukee
Bucks edged the Phoenix Suns 95-94,
the New York Kni cks beat the New
Jersey Nets lll-106, the Kansas Ctty
Kings clobbered the Denver Nuggets
107~ and tbe Seattle SuperSonics

rlosw g seconds .
Knkks Ill, Nt•ts 1116
Hay Wtlliams scored 31 potnt s a s

National
Basketball A:uoc,ation
At A Glance
Bv The Assocr.ated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W . L. PC f.
Bos ron
4 0 1 000
Phrladelph1a
4 0 1.000
NewYork
J 2 .600
New Jersey
1 3 .250
wa snrngron
1 3 .250
Central Division
Detrort
3 2 600
Atlanta
7 3 400
C lev e l~n d
1 3
400
lnd 1ana
'l 3 400
San An10n10
l 'l
J3J
Houst on
1 3 250
Midwest Divis i on
Mi lwaukE't'
4 1
800
K ansas City
2 1 6.&lt; 7
Ch 1cago
1 3 15C
Utah
o l 000
Denver
0 5 000
Pacific Division
Port land
5 o 1 000
Phoeni x
J 1 750
Golden State
'l 2 SOO
Los Angeles
2 2 500
Seattle
2 2 500
San Diego
2 3 .400

W

~nand

3

11 7

] I 1

3
4

I''

1' '

D- 1- The Sunday Times.S.ntinel, Sunday, Oct. 21, 1979

"'

Voters must decide how to cope with litter

BUYING U. S. SilVER DOllARS
PAYING
'10 90 FOR
EACH SILVER DOLLAR

I

COLUMBUS. Ohto 1AP ' - The t;sue fac mg Ottio voters Nov . 6 ts how to
cope with the estimate d 160 nHil tun throwawa y containers that litter Olu Q·s
roadways each year.
But supporters and opponenl' 11f Ballot ls., ue 1. whi c h seeks a 10-cent
deposit on most beer and pop conlaHJers , differ 011 how the problem should be
approached .
The Otuo Alliance for Heturnables wants consumers t o pay the deposit
when they buy any beverage tn glass . metal or plas!Jc containers , with the
hope that the refundable din1e will kee p containers becomtng roadstde tras h.
The group obl&lt;!inc'&lt;l about 225,000 signatllfes state"ode , first in an attempt
to get fav orable le gislative a ctton o n thetr proposal, then to a ctually place Jt
on the ballot followmg the House 's refusal to act. To support its cause . the
alliance has raised more than $78,000.
Ohioans for a Practical Utter l.aw maintains a deposit law would be too
expensive and would only clean up a small port ton of the litter.
Leaders of the organizati on , whi ch plans to spend $1.5 mtlhun to defeat
Issue 1, say a measure pendmg in the Senate wtll result in more litter being
picked up and at the same time he lp finance Jts recyclmg .
The bill, introduced by Hep . Thoma s J Carney . D-Boardman, six weeks

elm or Betorel

BUYING SilVER U. S. COINS
(Dimes, Quarters, Hal\lesdated 1964 or Before)

FOR EACH '1.00

PAYING

FACE VALUE.

BUYING U. S. GOlD COINS
QUOTES DAILY

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

404 SECOND AVE.

21 1
1' '

Boston 130, Wash1ngton 93
New York 111. New Jersey 106
Phladelphia 112, DetroiT 104
Mi lwaukee 95, Phoenix 94
K an.sas Cit y 107. Denver 84
Por t land 99, Los Angele s 82

Where Your Dollar
Means More

Seat t le 106. San Diego 98
Sunday's Gam es

VOL 13

Ch ir ago at Milwaukee
Phoen 1x at Kansas City
Se al! If:' a t Los Angeles
Go ld e n State at Portlan d
Monday's Game

heanl

advertll'ling about
Allstate Homeowners rn ~r r r a nt·t•
And now , it'~ avadable llf'n ', at our
agency But, drd you knrrw that rf

BOSTON 1 AP '
PreSid e nt
l..arter evoked thl' ml'mory of John
F . Kennedy, usmg thc· late
prestdent's owr words Saturday to
tell his brother. Sen F:dward M

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio 1API Jockey DaVId Placke rode Royal
Bunch to her second victory m three
starts this season as the six.year..,ld
mare won the featured eig hth race
at Thistledown Racetrack Friday.
She covered the six furlongs in
I : 12 4--.'i .
The Winner paid $7 .80, $4.60 and
$J .j0, whtle second-p lace Pretty
Cathenne returned $5 .80 and S4 and
thtrd-pJace Marlin Dnve paid $3.20
The lnfecl&lt;l of !1-7-1 paid $951.60 on
:&gt;4 winnmg tickets .
A crowd of 3.92.1 wagered a total of
$519 .605 .

your hou.'le 1s;; year~ old or IP ~~. vo u
may qualify fnr Allst.au_.'._ "' N,.,w .
House 10 Perct:'nt Or scounl " on vour
basic premium '!
.
AlistaiR has fnund It cosL"' less
to insurl:' newer home!', and they 're
paRsing Lhis s&lt;:rv1ngs on to you
G 1ve U!' a call and g••t 1n o n t h('
!iH vi ngs~
II

Now Available Through The --- ·

McGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY INC.
I

Nick Johnson , Accountant E•ecutive
452 2nd Ave.
Phone 446-1761
Gallipoli s

SUNDAY. OCIOBtR 21. 1979

NO. 38

Kennedy ·

-

Don' t

seek

t he

presidency, ··a t lea.;1 for a whtle ."
Polit1ral
under c urrent s c ut
through the b r eeze off Bos t on
Harbor at the dedicatior of the .John
F . Kennedy presJdenllalllbrar y. ;md

See a!l the color of your tall spons
and rhe new shows ~ colors
come ali\le . black-and-white's sharper 1

Gent&gt;ra l A.s.sernbly 's rece nt passa ge

@hio Valley Bank
save

1288

5.25=5.46
ANNUAli!ATE

\

ALSO I

Upgra de yo ur re co rd c hanger

T~ rns tamps ~r wake to the

now -

yo u re awaY n c oHee perkt n gl
smell of tres

stylus damage your reco rds•

?

Automatic Phone Directory

ONLY

~~

6-Month Certificate

695

$10,000 MINIMUM

by Archer

27°/o

Locales any of 390 names.
numbers in forward o r
reverse Batter1es ext ra

Reg . 14.95

Po r1a.blel Remote can stgnal

.·
:·
·.

mas ter even when sys tem 15
extra 43 -221

of1

Save

THRU WED.,

OCT. 24

25. Long 1Ta ke yo u r pho ne
o utSide' Mo d u lar pl ug

:::
·,
:•.

279 -363

·.·.·.·

~ Save

Silenc es ph one·s belt
when you want prrvacy

:-.

..·

43-125

CompactA~Ia~nn~S~y:s:te~m~~~!;~~~
A

~V
13ss
Reg . 16 .95

. built -1n pro -

G 1ves yo u r fa mily t1me to

8.25 -- 8.72

m sta l la t1 0 n hard ware Battenes
extra 49---'tM

49...C54

Assorted Magnets

ONLY

ANNUAL YIELD

15¢
Each

Paying an interest rate related to tt'1e averaoe four year y1eld of

For h o bb1es e ~C.pen men t ~

treasury securities . Minimum deposit \1 ,000 .00 . Interest musr re
main on deposit a full -;ear to e~rn annual yield . Substantial m
terest penalty upon early w i thdrawal.

gam es . refn gerato r
ons 64 -1875t 80 t B5

WH ~ Rf VHI rO U

Helping Hands

'

rJ\I' SS agt•

·nt e su11 a sk.s the rv urt tu proh tbt t
s tatt·
Co mmt ss toncr of
Tax
1-:quali zatton Hobert H Kmne y and
Cu ya hoga Count y AudJtor Vmccnt
Campenella from tmplemenung th e
ro ll ba ck . wht c h JS schedule-d to be
n.'n ectt·d 1n ho meowners' tax bills
nex t year .

by R.d1o

CLOSED WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Farmers Home
Administration office in Pomeroy
will be closed Wednesday due to an
out of town meeting . Regular office
hour.; Will be held in McArt hur from
10a .m unt1l 12noon Wednesday .

~.

I
PRESENTATION MADE - Paul Pauley, left.
local Nationwide Insurance Co., representative,
presented co pies of "Ohio's Natural Heritage" Fnday

to, I to r, Bobby Ord, superintendent of the Sou them
Local School District; Richard Roberts, Eastern Local
District superintende nt, and Ellen Bell, PomeroyMiddleport Libra nan .

Complimentary copies given
POMEROY Complimentary
copies of a new book, ··otuo 's
Na tural Heritage" were distributed
to public libraries and schools of
Metgs County Fnday by the Nationwide [nsurance Companies .
The 320-page book was com missioned by the Otu o Academy of
Science to describe accurately and
1n detail the natural forces and
resources that helped shape the la nd
and the people of the Buckeye State .
The result JS a book filled wrth useful
and Jnterestmg facts about Ohto's
resources.
It
features
numerou s
photographs, drawings, and maps many in full color ~ and is very
readable .
Twenty-six writers and specialiSts
contribute to the narrative portiOn of
the book, which lS beUeved to be the
first comprehensive s tudy of an mdividual state's natural hentagc .
The book tells about Ohto 's
geology and geography, its native
animals . plants and minerals, how
thetr interrelationstups affected the
people who settled in the sta te. and
what man's IIllpact has been on the
land and on nature 's endowments .
The Columbus-based Battelle
Foundation and Nattonwtde In s urance Companies underwrote the
inttial printing of 15,000 hard-backed
copies of "Otuo's Natural Heritage .··
NatJOnwtde is giving 5,000 coptes of
the book to the public librar&lt;es and
the school systems in Ohio a~ a

public service . Nationwide 's field
managers and agents are making
the distnbutwn .
School administrators m the
various conununities will distribute
the books in their respective school
systems .
"Ohw 's Natural Heritage" also ts
being offered to ahe public by the
Ohio Academy of Science t hrough
commerc ial
rommeri cal
and
museum bookstores. Coptes retail
for$17 .95
The finished volume was 10 years
m the makmg . Dr. Charles C. King
of the Oh10 Biological Surve y e on -

All tgalo r- type sprmg clamps Sol•d
c ast -1ron base s.t-2013

strc ~ ­

U V( W O RK O R PI •r THER F S A RAD IO S HA C K .ST O RE NEAR YO U '

VISA

( HAU (.,/IT JM 0S 1 S TO RE S!

Mo s t

• te m ~o

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

l ook lo1 th••

••g,

•n your

n e,ghbofhood

•

•

CERTIFIED - Dr . F: . S . Vtllanueva, M.D., who practtces in the
Meigs Medical Building on Mulberry Hetghl•, Pomeroy. has been cer·
tified as a Diplomate of the Anneri can Board of Family Practice. Dr.
Villanueva successfully completed the Annerican Board of Family Practice certifying examination in July and was recenUy notified of the honor.
Dr. Villanueva completed his residency and intemship in ob.•tetrics and
gynocolo!B' in the United States and has been prac1icing in Meigs County
more than four years . He recently completed observance training on
minilaparotory at Nashville , Tenn .. and is now able to perform that service without hospitalization . Dr . and Mrs . Villanueva reside at Tara Sul&gt;dlvision , Addison .

A
WASHINGTON I AP I
disappomted President Carter IS
vowmg a fight to toughen hts
proposed 011 mdustry ·wmdfallproftl' " tax , which was chopped tn
half by the Senat e Fman e e
Committee .
To Carter's sattsfactton, the btll
eam1arks billions of dollars to help
lower -mcome Americans cope with
ristn!-\ fuel prices over t~ next
several years, and would bring in
billions more to Lmprovc tht· nation's
transportation system and finance
development of new fuels
But after the committee approved
the btll Friday on an 11 ·1 vote .
Carte r
issued a
s tatement
quest ion ing some of its decisions .
Some of the exempt tons written by
the panel " would ensure little
additional crude OJ! productiOn wht1c
lostng btllions of dollars of revenue
for the public," the president said .
He promised to work for
elunm atJon of tllose exemptions
when the bill is considered by the full
Senate early next month and later
by conferees from the Senate and
the House .
The tax passed by the Senate

would cost the orl mdustry an
estunated $142 btlhon fr om 1980
through
1990.
The
plan
reco mmended by Carter ~arlier Llns
year would have produet'&lt;l $292
bilhon The House-passed 1·er ston
would generate $273 bdhon .
The Finance Comn ut tet' slashed
the tax take by loosemng Its effect on
some categortes of 011 and by
exempting other types of 011
produc tion . Committee members,
ntne of whom represent oil producm g states , say the tax should
leaw the oil 1ndust.ry w1th as muc h
mooey as possible to use for oil
exploration and dnlling .
Carter proposed the tax earlier
thiS year after he announeed plan s to
phase out federal controls, whtc h
have held down the price of crude oil
produced tn the Umted Stales . 'flle
tax would soak up :;o percent to 75
percent of each dollar oJl pnces nse
above eurrent levels.
The president wants revenues
from the tax to finance his own 10year energy plan, which is built
around developing synthetic fu el s to
replace oil giving lower·mcome
Amen r:H~~ SOfll &lt;! relief from highl·r

cetved is general format in 1969. His
tdea led to the planning and
dc evelopmentof
text
and
tllustratwns by the Ohio Academy of
Science .
The rnaterial was edited by
Mtchael l.affertv, staff member of
hte Columbus' bureau of the
A.ssoctated Press news service .
" Oiuo's Natural Heritage" is
dedtcated to the late Trent D.
St ckles . Until his death in 1976,
Stckles was a Columbus community
leader ard a potent force m the envJromnental and co nservative
ftelds .

Violations uncovered
FI.ORDiCE. Ky . 1 AP 1
An
tn\' L'StJgatiOn of Co matr In c .
followtng the Oct. 8 crash rn which
e 1 ~hl person s were killed uncovered
" some \10latton s
but nothmg
senous enough to put Comair out uf
bu sme ss. " a Federal Avtat1 on
Admm1strat1on spokesman satd .
"Comatr IS a s afe alrl ml' an d wtll
be a sa fe operation ." Jack Barker
i:L"is ured Fnday . " We are 1::01ng to
St't' thttt tiwy remain saft• "
Co mau· IS a C w c lnne~tl-ba s t&gt;d
co mmu te r l:! Jrltne that St'rve s
Co lumbu s , Dayton, C1 l'Ve land .
Toledo . DetrOit and Nashville A
twm~n g me Comatr plane en r uutc
to ~ashville nashed on takeoff at
the Greater Cincinnati Airport ,

Disappointed Carter vows to fight

Frees hands for solder1ng . faste nmg
glue1n g . repa1nng or assembling

R•diO Sha&lt;;k

I

lan LI. homesteads of pt..'(]p]e 65 and
older and homesteads belungtng to
dis ablt'&lt;l per!llns .
All property m Oluo , wtth th e
l'X c eptJOn of the three classe s
t'Xempted. lllust be asseSSt.-d at an
L'qual ri:ltt' of 35 p~r&lt;: ent of 1ts
apprai sed value .
When the rollba ck was approved.
~ \' t•r al county audJtor s as well a s
some lh'pubh can legislator s labeil'&lt;l
11 HS o dea r vwlallOn of Lht· state
('Uf JSlltul lon Some flatly .s.t ated the
w x relit'f vr ugrarn couldn ' t
wt ths tand a legal c ha llenge .
Swetland sa1d m the su1t that swce
t.he 1ss ue h&lt;is ht-'t'n before the h1gh
c ou r t
on
St'\' l'ral
pr e vwu s
oc c a sstuns, " lt wuuld appe&lt;H that
Ulere ore stlll those who huve not ye t
receJvl'd -~r understood tile s tm~_le

795

l f\ o ,.,. • • l.ble .,

nual yield .

ret\L'S
Sweti&lt;HJLi, the plamt1ff m tht.' su1t
fl lt-"&lt;..1 F n day . potnted u ut Lh~rc an·
only tilret&gt; const ttuuonal exceptions
to th e un tforrn rule : a gn c ultural

Carry one lor your
safety' Small
enough to f1t '"
a purse . loud
enough to be
heard half a mile

=~-1 ''"''"" fo r d o ors and

escape safely Respond s
to a tI types of I~re s u L
11s1ed . Wnh

1ml! \'!dual cuWlty auditors had th t•
opUun of lJnpostn~ ii vanety of tax

tmght never want to be prestdent
"Wo uld you run again for the
presidency, "nd would
you
recommend it to anyone else?"
Kennedy was asked 17 year ago.
Carter recalled the Kennedy
response: " I do not rec'Ommend it to
others, at least for a while ," and he
added, "Presi dent Kennedy's wi t
and also his wisdom is certai nly as
relevant today as Jt was then .··
That was Carter 's on ly open
reference to the battle shaping up
between hunself and Sen . Kennedy
for the Democratic Party 's 1980
presidential nomination.
His l~nmute speech drew a wave
of lau.mter from the senator and
others who gathered tD honor John
Kennedy. but the senatDr did not
res lfld , not e\'en indU"ectly, and no
0\h:· ; speaker made any reference to
tlle potent tal Kennedy challenge of
Cart er' s r~lectJon btd
ln tht&gt; ft:w secoods between the
Carter and Kennedy speeches, the
presidential seal was unobtrustvely
removed so that Jt did not decorate
the lecturn while Kennedy spoke.
With his voice ri.sing to a shout and
echoing over and over aga lnst a
Unt verstty
o f Massachusetts
butldmg nearby, the senator - hts
New E ng land accent provmg " an
aural reminder of h i.s brother rec alled the days of Camelot.
·· The thousand days" of the J ohn
F . Kennedy admmtstratJOn. " arc
!1ke an evening gone . But they are
not fcrgotten ," tile senator satd .
"The JOlll'rleY never ends . The
dream shall never che ."
Kennedy 's spec'Ch was filled wtth
per sona l reminis c enses of h1s
brother ard his admtntstratwn .
·· He taught me to nde a btcyc1e ,
ti1row a forward pas.111 and sail
agamst the wmd," he recalled . And
lookmg back at John Kennedy' s
domesttr and foreign pohcy dee-ds .
the senator sa td. "He could make
hghtnmg stnke on the thtngs he
cared about. He was Lhe 1rresisttble
fo rce that could
move an
umr1oveable object .''

Shlcktt

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ter es t penaltv for premature withdrawal of ce rt it1 cate funds .

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ANNUAL YIELD•

11.716

a 2lr.r: pt:'rCI:'nt pr(Jpert y tax
rollbac k.
Park Investment Co ., u Cle veland
company w1th e xt~n s i \"L' busmess
and commercial prop~rty ~ntere sts.
filed the legal a\'tion chargtng th e
$30 rn tllt o n -a ~y &lt;•ar tax r e lief
program fo r h o me o wnt·r ~ l.'i
un co nst it uti on al
The tax brt'ak t•nact.ed in JuJ y lJy
the Legtslature exte nds to all owner ·
oc c upied
ho mt' s
a nd
farm
homesteads; f.:~nnL·r s ma y cl i t\111
thetr home and ont• iH.Te of lm1 d
The rollbac k, howe vl.'r , doe!-i not
apply to other real pro pt•rty s uc h a s
commercial , tndu stn a l and utd 1 t~
land .
DaVId W Swetland of Park
Investment argues 111 th l' sw t thilt
the rollback vtolatt·s tt dt&gt;r · 1 ~ um
handed dov-.11 by the court st.•\·erc-t!
years ago requtnng t-111 prupt.: rt j \(J
be taxed at untforrn ratt:!'i .
Tht' d~cts ton -- a result of ;1 suJI
filed m th e 1960s a lso by Park
forc ed
s tat t•
Investment
lawmakt'r s to pass a l(:l w rL'QUlfln g
all cl asses of propert: tu bt· &lt;tSSl' SSt:d
at a umform ratt' th ro ughout tl lt'
state .
Before th e Pa r k Invt·s trn e nt
dec!SIO!l in the early sc vent 1es.
of

14°/o

at th e very outset of hiS spo: ech,
Pre s ldL•nt Carter brou~ht the
sub je ct of hts mtraparty c hallenge
from Sen. Kennedy lntu the upen
Prestdent Kennedy , Carter satd,
W&lt;ls rermnded at a March 1962 news
conf~r e nce. that younger brother
Te-fl ~ now the cand1date-tn -waJtmg
- ha d obser vl"&lt;&lt; lhe ravages of th e
pr e.s 1dency sh ov.1Jlg on tus elder
hroth er and commented that ht•

Lawsuit challenging
latest tax rollback
ml ' ) ~!fl U S . Uluo I AI' I
A
law sull ha s been ftlt'&lt;l with tlw Ohto
S upr e me Co urt c hallen g 1n ~ th e

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

PAGE 1·0

Kennedy library dedicated

Price Cuts on Antennas, CBs,
Home Alarm Systems &amp; Much More!

you 'vf'

PLUS!

meas ures go hand in hand, .. Smith told the college audience of about :lOOpersons . "But no, they've come out against the measure
·· Why' Because they are for a single issue, and they aren't concerned
about but one ttung They are going to get that one thing and to hell with
everything else. Well, the litter problem IS a lot more than bottles and cans."
Supporters of Issue I point to Vermont which ftrst had an anti-litter law
smular to the one proposed in the Carne y bill . But the state repealed that
statute and passed a deposit bill like Iss ue 1 which reportedly works better,
Ms . James satd .
OpponenL• claim a case of beer . for example, ~ill cost $1 more if Issue 1
passes, m addition lo the $2.40 depustt cons umers would have to pay .
Kinds vatter said beverages in returnable containers are cheaper now, but
nonreturnable cans and bottles are substdiztng the returnable bottles.
Bewrage makers are under pressure from retailerS to provide products in
returnables, he sa 1d.
··They want the traffic flow, .. sa1d Kincl.s vatter , executive secretary of tbe
Ohio Wholesale Beer Association . ··They want you to come back with that
relumable and buy other products ."

i~ntintl

::::;:::;.,.,:·=·=·=·=·:::·:

Sa n D1 ego at Utah

NOW I

after the deposit measure was introduced Jan . 23 by irutiat tve petition, was
approved by the House JUSt before the recess 1n September . It proposes a tax
paid by beverage wholesalers and retailers that would generate about $15
million for litter pickup program-' and grants fur recycling efforts
Members of the alhance oppose the carney bill because they say it was
passed by the House simply to confuse voters and wUI never become law
And the tax )\'ill eventually be passed along to consumers anyway. Issue 1
supporters say .
"They propose , very simply, that mstead of putting a deposit on the con tamers wtuch would put the burden on the private sector to do something
about it t htterl. that we should all cooperate and agree to pay a tax to the
state ," said Cleveland attorrey Arthur V.N Brooks , a fanner state
representative and an Issue 1 supporter.
Brooks and Lynda James , executive director of the alliance, debated two
representatives of Otuoans for a Practical Utter I.aw last week at the
College of Wooster . They were Warren J . Smith , the group 's charrman, and
Christian K. K.indsvatter, secretary-treasurer .
" I thought the opposition would embrase the bill because these twu

3

Ql,

o;.,,., 1&gt;1" ' ""'

D

classified

Fridav's Games

Allstate can save you lOX
on ttGood Hands" insurance
for your new home.

r~.

~ ~~

J

Western Conference

Here in Gallia County

For yea.

GB

New York beat N~w Jersey in a
~ame that had a wild finish .
With the Nets trailing by 2, The
Nets' Ed Jordan missed a shot wtth
two seconds left, Toby Knight got the
rebound for New York and was
fouled . Nets Coach Kevin Loughery
stormed onto the court after officials
Bob Rake! and Jack Ntes and
received his second technical fouL
Williams made the technical and
Kmg ht sank his two free throws to
tcc the victory in the metropolitan
New York rivalry .
Kings 107, Nuggets IW
()Its Birdsong scored 23 poinls and
Phll Ford added 20 as Kansa s City,
lcadmg from start to fintsh , handc~l
wmle ss Oenver its fifth stratght loss .
Sonks· 106, Clippers 98
Ja ck Sikma scored 10 of hts 27
pOint s m the fourth quarter as the
Som&lt;·s pulled away from the
Cilpper s. Sikma , rookie James
Bailey and veteran Paul Silas
dommated the boards in the fourth
quarter for the Sanies, who made 16
of 22 shots m the period . Uoyd Free
led San Diego with 41 points .

PHOENIX , Ariz . l AP) - BobbY
Unser narrowly outclocked his
brother AI to take the pole position in ,
Saturday ' s Bobby Ball 150 at
Phoenix International Raceway.
Bobby' s average 147 .965 miles per
hour was trailed by Al's 147.813.
Thtrd-p lace
qualifier
Wally
Dalle nbach was tuned in 142.925
mph .

fuel
costs.
and
1mproving
transportatJon .
In a related development, the
Senate Labor and Hwnan Resow-ces
Committee
gave
unanimous
approval Fnday to a three-year
program w rltstribute billions of
dollars
to
help th e
poor,
handicapped and elderly pay for
home energy btlls
The money - $1.6 billion this
wmter, $3 btllion next year and S4
btllton the following year - would go
through sta t e governments and
could be made available as dtrect
grants to eligible families or as
payments to home energy suppl iers,
such as oil distributors.
Persons already eligible for
welfare and food stamps would
qualify for energy aid under the
('()ntmit tee bilL
In additton, it would provide help
for those wtth mcomes not more
than 25 percent above the
KOvernment 's official poverty level.
~-or a family of four In an urban
"'""· tlJat is about $8,375 . For 1981
and 1982, the income limitation
would rise to slightly over $11,500 for
the same family .

the

pilot

and

seven

pa ~St!nger s

t\Jrlme officials said Friday they
would stgn a ·~etter of agreement"
wt th the FAA that speUed out terms
of uperatJOil .
Comatr agreed to retest its pilots,
c heck the we tght of Its airplanes and
up g radl:' 1ts record k eepmg .
The a1rlme was given seven days
to retest 17 of its 18 pUots. Two pilots
alreadv had been retested under
fAll. s ~per v1s1on : one failed but will
b L· gn 'l'n an o ther c hance for
c l'rt thea uo n .
Dte FAA satd Comair had passed
il routme inspection this summer
and was due for another inspection
soon. but that was moved up because
of th e crash .
The mvestigalwn by the federal
agency Js continuin g, but apart from
lax record keeping the probe " has
turned up nothing serious enough to
put Comatr out of business," Barker
said .
·· You can tell the flying public that
people can safely and confidently fly
thts atrlme, " satd James Purcell,
chtef of flight standarcl.s for the
FAA' s southern region .
The FAA said some violations had
been found m inspections of 20
commuter airltnes, but only three
have
warranted
letters
of
a~reement to upgrade operational
proced ur es .
" Our basic conclusion is that
C:omair ts typical of all airlines in
the &lt;t&gt;mmuter industry," Barker
said . "They are growing fast, faster·
than they can keep up with.
" To a degree, they outstripped
their ability to keep up (recorda of
comp lianc e
with
safety
regulations)," and that's what
prompted criticism of Comalr's
record keepmg, he said.
"T he
FAA
plans
tighter
surveillance of conunuter airlines.
We recognize tlJe growth that Is
taking place, and we are going to
jump in and make sure they are

sa!e."

�Il-2- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, SWJday, Oct. 21, 1!179

r-------------------------1
Letters of opinion are welcomed . They should be less
than 300 words long 1or subject to r educ tion by the editor 1
and must be signed with the signee 's address . Names may
be withheld upon publil-atiob. However , on request,
IIBmes will be disc losed . Letlers should be in good taste,
addressing issues , not persona lities.

Teacher concen1ed
Dear Editor ,
A recent editorial tn '"Today ·s
Education" revealed a condition
which ill reachif18 epidemic propor·
llon among today 's teachers. It 's
called '"Teacher Burnout '". What
brings about this problem' What are
the results' What car be done about
it?
Several reasons for this problem
are violence, vandalism, disru ptive
students, inadequate salaries, invohmtary transfers, interfernng
parents, oversized classes. exc.s.sive paperwork. students who
won 't do their work. parents who say
they can't control their children 's
home study habits . superv1sors who
say ' live with it '" when teachers try
to get special help for a disrupll ve
student, and a multitude of other

reasons.
Even the best teachers carnol
solve aU these problems. And these
problems carnot all be solved at
school , but very often follow the
teac her home.
Teachers are eager to work w1th
the total community on these
problems becaU.!Ie they realize that
solving the problem will req uire the
cooperation of the full community .
Teachers need support from paren·
ts, school administrators, school
boards, and civic, buslneS'I, labor .
religious. and professional societies .
U tea chen don 't get that support,
the price may be more than societ y
can afford to pay .
The result is - teachers are
leaving the profession . A recent poll
showed that o ne-third of those
teaching would not go into teaching
if the y could go back to college and
do it again. Drily six out of 10 sa1d
they plar to remain in teaching until
retirement, and the number of
teachers with 20 or more years of
teachlng experience has dropped
.over one~l1 .
A noted psycho-analyst has srud.
'Tile moot deadly of all s ins is the
mutilation of a child's s pirit. But
perhap11 even worse - because a
teacher teaches a child - is the
mutilation of a teacher 's spirit.
Meig:. is faced with a large number of these same problems. including the mutilation of the
teacher's spiMt. These have been the
problems of the past ; now the
present . and will be the future
problems unless WE aU recognize
and work together to solve them
today .
Dale E. Harrison .
Instructor
Me1gs High School

Prowl sophomores
Dear E ditor :
Last week was homecoming for
Southern High school. Each day was

des1gn.ated a spec1a l day. hat day.
scrounge day, sign day, purple and
gold day and a pep rally , the class
having the most kids participating
won that day .
The sophomore class won them all
but one. sign day which went to the
sercors. So that made them the
overall
competi tion winners
CONGRATULATION. KJ DS. And a
big thanks to the teac hers for g01ng
a long with all this .
Oh. yes. aimost forgot the biggest
event. the fl oats . They won that too .
And last year as freslunen they won .
It's been sa1d that they have the
largest c lass. I don't know, but even
so. if they didn't have a whole lot of
kids with spirit. school pride and
downright "get up and go" it
wouldn't make one b1t of difference
how large the class was.
Friday night the kids all left their
floats on the school grounds. We
went in Saturday morning early to
ge t the sophomore float and 1t was
all over the ~chool grounds .
That wind Friday night had torn
that float to pi eces, even tore the
wire loose from the wagon and unlled the boxing gloves, and would
you believe the stuffed ball play er.
wel l. it blew the stuffing right out of
the s uit without blowing the s uit
away. The mess was cleaned up, it
took awhile but every piece
belonglfl8 to that float was p icked
up .
I'm sure glad that wind didn't tear
up the other floats . I believe it di d
blow down the seniors· box the y had'
on theirs but no real damage . Oh,
well, that's the way the wind bloWs
sometimes . - Name withheld upon
request.

Dhided familv.

Dear Mr . Edi tor:
My family is divided .
F'or as long as l can remember all
the m e mbers of my family have
gathered at this house for Sunday
dinner - sometimes as high as 25 or
30 people . I don't mind the crowd
becaue they're my famil y and I love
them .
Now we are divided because of the
school stMkes. I More than one
school IS in volved J. Each has their
grievan ces and both a re too
bullheaded to back down even an in ·
ch. Tempers nare. so half of us are
slaying home rather than ris k the
wrath of the other .
I miss those Sunda y sounds laughter a round the ki tc he n table.
our football heroes· proud re ports,
the youngest's corny jokes. two or
three roclong chatrs squeakmg at
the same time, and m usic from the
porch. My great-ruece took her fir.1
step last Sunday, but only hal1 of us
saw her .
I think the strike has dragged out
long enough . Since both sides seem
quite content to let things run their

OUT THEY GO!

Admiral

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crea ture has mtrigued ard perplexed him so much as a cat.
'"He is attracted by her comPOMEROY - While in Michigan
rruss you
posure. flattered when she rubs
recently on vacation I read a book
against his leg, irked when she
The people mvolved know who
entitled '"The Complete Book of
yawns in hiS face and ignores his
they are. so plea•e withhold my
Cats·· by Adie Suehsdorj' ~
name .
commands.
Inasmuch as we are long overd ue
Smcercly . -Name Withheld upon
on an article completely about cats,
'"He envi es her ability to rei"",
request
likes her softness to the touch, en·
I thought yo u might enjoy a segment
joys hearing her purr. He is wary of
of that book and so I shall betln my
her claws , dislikes being fixed by
article this week by quoting this
her unwavering stare and hates her
au thor in part .
I think you11 get a kick uut of it.
caterwauling on the back fence at
Dear Editor and Me1gs Local Parnight. He is grati.(ied when she kills
" In the long span of man 's
ents.
rodents. outraged when she lolls
residence
on
earth.
perhaps
no
Truth IS an illusive quantity at
else, particularly birds
anything
times and especially where Me1gs
!that
privilege
he reserves for himLocal's Superintendent is conself - and his bird dog ).
cerned. Look a t some of Mr .
'"At times in his walk through
Gleason's press releases
history he has found reason to wor·
Item I. TI1e Daily Sentinel.
Carl Dennison was the speaker at
ship her, and at times to persecute
Friday. Oct. 13. p . I. "Superinthe regular meeting of the
her almost to extinction . His always
tendent G leason reported a major
M1dieport -Pomeroy Rotary Friday
active imagination has attributed to
breakthrough in attendance at one
night.
her. wrongly and unfairly, many of
school in the district F'riday morDennison spoke on one of his inhis own worst character trai ts, while
rung . Several parents initiated a
terests related to chemicals . The
begrudging her possessiOn of that
telephone campaig n on Thursday
cherrucal he spoke on was D.{;on . He
inalienable right he has always
which produced astounding resu lts .
explained how 0-Con wa discovered
sought for himself personal
Gleason reports . As a result ove r 50
and what its uses a re.
freedom .
addi ti onal stude nts were bused
He stated that many colleges
Fnday to school."
" All in a U. it IS an odd relationship
genera te ideas from a 'think tank'"
that
man has established with calThe truth las 20 or more parents
where an exchange of ideas are
toward
no other domestic animal
and teachers witnessed 1 was that 14
made from people of dever sified
does he show such split feelings of
students were bused to the Harrison1deas and talents that benefit all . He
admiration and resentment - which
ville School that day . Fifty s tud ents
also commented that one of the
is some kind of a comment on man ,
were m attendance , an increase of 17
materials used in ~on is used in
for the cat is constant. She has
over Thursday .
surgical patients .
always been cat."
Yet Mr . Gleason reports '"50 adThe meeting was held at the Heath
Because people are befuddled by
di tional students ." The most
United Methodist Church, Midthe unpredictable action of the cat
'" astounding" thing about this whole
dleport . The dinner was prepared
they are too often qui ck to an unaffair is that the teacher and bus
and served by the ladies of the c hurdeserving hate of these really
driver who accompanied Mr .
ch
beautiful, graceful. inte lligent. very
Gleason on this trip would be party
independent
c reatures.
to such a n attempt to deceive the
Sonne
ol
this
feeling I understand
people of this district.
Iober 17. 1!179, due to technical prmbecause
for
years
I had a bit of fear
ting difficulties, that I was able to
Item 1. The Daily Sentinel,
rinish reading the letter written to of cats and always tried to s tay at arTuesday, Oct. 16, p. I. Re The
ms length from them .
Whalen-Bibler letter discussion at
you by Mr . Rod Karr. Counc ilman
Then two years ago l acquired a
Village of Pomeroy .
·
the board meeting Monda y, Oct. 15.
At this time I would like to make Meigs County orphan - a gray kit" A letter wntten to Bibler and acten - I have been hooked ever since.
cepting this plar was read . The letclear to you and your news public
the following points :
I lost her one night - and so, long
ter was written by Dennis Whalen.
before I read articles by experts that
an attorney for the board , and was
Ill Mr . Karr, the headline of my
written only after the entire board
letter was not chosen by myself. 1t you should never let cats out at night
- I started making mine stay m.
had been polled and agreed to the
was chosen by the newspaper . Also I
When I tried to change my second
plan, Mrs. Sheets said . The letter
did sign my lener Sincerely Yours.
eat's lifestyle and make her stay in
not sincerely or as it appeared in
was written June 25 and Dr. Riggs
at night! only had trouble for a little
print,
"Sincerely
ours
."
offered the letter to the pubhc at any
while . She still will give a good try
time so tha t patrons could see what
12 I Mr . Karr can believe that I
by meowing really loud at the door
checked my infonnation before I
the understanding of the board was
at dark - but when I say NO real fir·
wrote my article, because I do not
1n the negotiations s1tuallon."
mly . she gives a cute little
make a habit of telling WJtruths .
Mrs . Sheets said the board had
" Buurrret'", leaps in the air a nd
been polled before the le tter was
131 Mr. Karr is right about one
run5 through the house scattering
thing, I am trying in this election to
wntten on June 25, ye t Mr . Gleason
Boston Terriers 111 her path and setget voter s upport on political issues,
stood before the tea chers, pnnUes down .
but by no means using the tax issue
cipals. a nd others at the staff
According to the author named
as a "CRUTCH ." 111is as far as I
meeting at Meigs High School on
above and aU cat owners will l'Onhave ever known is what is called
September 4 and told them that the
firm this. unlike most other
'"Politics," and It's been around for
board had acted that morning to aca long time.
domestic animals, cats cannot be
cept the plan . Whom do you choose
trained. Everything they learn like
to believe'
14 I l personally do not think at this
hunting rruce and rats and other
time it would be a good practice for
Item 3. The Daily Sentme l.
rodents - is sell taught. They learn
me to attend council meetings,
Tuesday. Oct . 16, page 8.
how
to open doors , but they do not,
because I am neither the mayor, nor
"Supt. Gleason said he notifi ed the
wiU not, herd sheep. carry messages
a council member. If elected, you
association that schools would be
or run hack to the ranc h seeking help
ca n be certain I will be attending, to
closed today and that he is available
for jammed up cowboys. There are
to negotiate . ..
gain as much knowledge as possible
no police cats, no watch cats , and no
before January, 19110.
The truth is Mr . Gleason had amsled cats.
151 As far as bemg a political
ple opportum ty to notify the
The cat world has its commoners
" mud slinger" against Mayor
association but he didn't do it. He
arutocrats the same as we do .
and
Clarence
Andrews
,
l
grew
up
next
called a member of the negotiating
With
probably 98 percent heing the
door
to
his
Honor
,
and
I
believe
I
team after the board meeting on
American
domestic short hairs . I We
know him better than Mr . Karr ever
Monday but made no mention of the
1
use
the term Alley Cat any
don
\\1ll . I'm also glad that he stands up
school clos1ng. Wh y did he report to
more
.)
111is
is a breed in itself, not a
for the Mayor who made it possible
the P'!P"r that he had notified the
and
has won ribbons in cat
nothing
...
association?
for Mr. Karr to be appointed .counshows. The other 25 percent are the
Is this the kind of leadership you
ci lman to serve out another co un ·
delUlle breeds to include the Perc1lman's term .
want in your schools: Do you wonsians ardlor Angoras. the shor16 1 As a matter of publi c record 1t
der that teachers arc concerned
thaired Siamese . Burm ese.
abo ut a fair dismissal policy "
will show very plainly in the Meigs
AbyS'Iinian (the first cat known) and
Co unty Board of Elections Office
No wonder Mr . Gleason and the
the Marut. There are also in between
that I did not file my petition befor~
board's negotiating team refused
groupings such as Blues and TorMayor Andrews deci ded not to seek
Judge Robert Buck ·s offer to s it in
toise shells - the Blues include
a second term. Further. the petition
on negotiations as an impartial par·
Maltese , RUS'Iiar Blue , British Blue,
ty. It would be difficult to perpetrate
tha t I filed will also show that his
etc.
Honor . Mayor Andrews. was the
t he big lie with a judge present. The American Shorthairs are the
very first person to sign my petition
Ca rol Ohlinger, parent and teacher.
preferred
breed to most people
Me1gs Loca l
to m ake it possible to seek the
position as Mayor of the Village of
Pomeroy .
r71 So,before any m ore so called
Dear Editor:
"mud slinging " takes place, I
On Tuesday, October 16. 1979, a
suggest as Mr . Karr suggested to
letter, or sha ll I say part of a letter.
me . CHECK THE FAcrS FIRST !
was written to you as a rebuttal
Thank you. Sincerely yours. regarding the letter I had written to
Roger M. Davidson, Jjncoln Hill
yo u, Sunday. October 14. 1979.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
·
It was not until Wednesday , O&lt;·-

By Marion C. Crawford
Melgs Co. Humaue Society

D-con Rotary topic

if you are thinking of acquiring a kit- :
ten or cat as a new pet in your home. :
There are two statements I hear :
quite often and both turn me inside ;
out. One is by "iU advised" people •
who state that the only good cat ill a ;
dead cat, and that cats are strong :
and that ill the reason for the myth ;
about them having nine lives. Not so .:
Cats and kittens are very delicate :
animals and without constant care •
and the righ t diet they live a very
short, pain-riddled life . So, make
sure your kittens and cats get ai1
their shots. that they eat a good com-.
merciaUy sold cat food, and that
they have shelter and lots of love they are sweet loving animals an(!.
anyone who has ever owned one can
attest to that fact.
Now then, we have some cats and .
lottens available for adoption that.
are really cute and need good homes.
bad. There are five black ones, one
white, one tiger. one tabby and
tig er adult.
We also have s ix really ni ce puP:.'
p1es and dogs that are waiting for·
you to give them the love and at.·.
tention they are so in need of at this .
time . They are : two Dobennan- ,
Collies that are about 2 or 3 months
old, one make and one female , both
brindle in color; one Shepherd:
Collie puppy that is six weeks old
and must have been the runt of the
litter cause she looks as though she
will always be small. We have 4
gray male Poodle, medium size,
abo ut a year old who is a sweet guy
and loves people. He was a t.18tted
mess when we got him but is "bald"
now and needs to go to a home where
people wiU have him groomed
periodically - not ignore his needs.
We also have a Border Collie about a
year old who is a doll and is so smart
and gentle ... would make a great pet,
Lastly, we have a small chocolate
colored Chihuahua and this little g irl
needs a special home, too. Anyone
mterested m ary of these animals;
please ca ll 992~260.

on.:

CLASS A
AUDIO SYST£M

8 OTHER MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM

DIAMOND
STUD
EARRINGS

MEN ' S
HORSE
SHOE
RING

TAWNEY JEWELERS
" Fine Jewelry for
over 40 yers"

424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis , 0 .

...
for nu;fil' /w(W/!J, comfort
and du mlnlil !l

Rust1c Enterprises
RR #1 , Box 208
Crown City, Ohio 45623
J614)25R·1946

~ Bet/.elt. ~U.t4H9,
./.":,.,_

, , ,, '"'"'' s

Cl•tlf'lc "

• •

FENCING, ~IRE &amp; POSTS

A Gallipolis Diary
GALUPOIJ.S - Hus band of "
native Gallia Count1an1S Bobby Ha)
W~ •. nationally renowned as a
musJclan and composer. Hts wife is
Janice Saunders Wood . She is the
daughter of Woodrow and Marjorie
Saunders, Cheshire .
Bobby and Janice Wood frequen Uy visit her parents m 1eshire and
they never fail to smg in the Ba.ptist
Church across the street from the
SaWJders home Last week they
went to the b1g awards mee!J ng of
BMI !Broadcast Music Inc. i m the
Grand 01' Opry House 1n 'I ashville .
Bobby's friend aod colleague.
Roger Cook . who came to this country. frmJ England four years ago,
praised Bobby Wood on Page 10 of
the Nashville Banner : "Nashville is

o

Janice Wood and her husband ,
composer Bobby Wood. as they
prepare to enter Grand 01' Opry
In Naab\11le.

THE place for songwriters to live.
It's the only place. if you ask rne . I
was fortWJate to team up with Bobby
Wood, who in my op1nion, is the most
talented pianist in this ci ty ...
The Nashville Tennessean had a
front-page headline about '"Talkin·
m Your Sleep" wmning the top
awa rd, the Robert J . Burton trophy.
111is trophy goes to the composer of
cou ntry nmsic whose song is sung
most. Burton's life span was 1914 to
1965. He understood U1e broad
cultural value of country music, and
the program booklet pointed his
talents as an attorne y.
It was the Country Mus ic
Association's 13th annual awards
presentation, and the program
booklet said that '"Talkin' in Your
Sleep .. was Written by Roger Cook
and Bobby Wood , published by
Chriswood Mus1c and Roger Cook
Music, "The music came first ,"
Roger Cook sa id , '"and the words
later. " Crystal Gayle achieved the
greater part of her fam e by sin ging
"Talkin' in Your Sleep."
Bobby Wood named his musi c
publishing company for his older
son. Christ; it's Chnswood Music .
GRANDMA GWOOD'S diary:
Aug. 10, 1894 - Ma is very sick . I
brought he r from Crown City to
Gallipolis on the F'avorlte . A littl e
low-wate r boat , so she can have better car e IMa Short died Sept. 161.
Jan. 4. 1895 - W1ll went to Crown
Gty in his buggy because the nver is
full of ice. March I, 1895 - The ice
gorge broke the 28th of February . It
had been frozen across since th e
19th . The boats are running aga1n .
Nov . 24, 1895 - Ed Gwood's horse
locked G r andpa Gwood and broke
his collar bone . Dec. 22, 1895- Will
leased out farm at Big Creek to Mr .
F'aun Blake for oil exploration .
There is a great ml excitement a ll
over the county .

12 112 ga. Ruthless Barb Wire ............. $31.00
12 112 ga . Forbes Barb Wire ............. . $26. 50
13112 ga . Savage Barb Wire .. .. _......... $25.00
13112 ~a. Armco Barb Wire .............. $23. 00
15 112 ga . Gaucho Barb Wir e .............. $22. 50
5ft . Steel Post _........... __ _.. _ . ..... .. $2 .05
5h ft . Steel Post ...................... ,. $2.25
6ft. Steel Post .......................... $2.40
61n ft . Steel Post ....... ... ...... _....... $2.60
5112-6-6112 ft . Polypos t .................... $1.50
1047 -6-1 1 Fence .... ...... ............. $102.00
1047 -9-10 Fence ........................ $92.00
948 -9-11 Fence ......... . ............. _ . $82.00

10 ft.
12 ft.
14 ft.
16 ft.

5 Panel
5 Panel
5 Panel
5 Panel

Gate ............... '30.00
Gate ............... '34.00
Gate ...............•39.00
Gate ••••••••••••••• '42.50

100 _gal. Stock Tank •••••••••••••••• '38.30
180 gal. Stock Tank ................ '57.65
320 gal. Stock Tank ................ '79.35

8 ft. Slant Bar
Hay Feeder
'105.00
8 ft. Regular
Hay Feeder

STOCK
TANKS

•ao.oo

Truck contributions
now at $11~000 mark

~ haiM'19"'!

992-3307

Peeps.

to bt• Found.

TAWNEY JEWELERS
STICK PINS

home sweet
log home

"'L.H~

The Sunday Time, ,' nunel. Sund"y. Oct 21. 1979

For thf' RPIII
Prir~·lf

THIS YEAR'S HAPPIEST
FAMILY SPECIAL!

·sEND S3 oo FOR cDMPlFTE
LOG H O M E PORT FOLIO

[).3 -

-"•·•· I • f'intl

Candidate responds

ALTA IND USTRIES LTD

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

to:

means they are more expensive
have as a pet . Keep this fact in mind :

CONTROL

BAKER FURNITURE

M·S 9 til 5

Hoofs and Paws

because they take less time and ex-'
pense to keep looking and feeli~
their best . The deluxe breed.! take •
much time and grooming which :

COLOR MASTER

All sets have 90 day FREE service,
1 year warranty on parts.
FREE DELIVERY.

Open

tourses, perhaps we nt&gt;t"d some new
people tu mt."(_h ate . Perhaps we
should lock up everyone mvolved
and forget where the key is until
everythilll( is settled ... Nothmg 1s
ever setUed by burymg our heads in
the sand .
Until then . my farruly IS d1v1ded . I

presented by WORLD VISION INTERNATIONAL

MIDDLEPORT - A public fund
dri ve for the purchase of a heavy
duty rescue van by the Middleport
Fire Department has r eached
Ill ,&lt;KMJ with 12,1100 more needed to
wrap up the project.
ll!test contributions have rome
from the Dave Diles Golf ClasSic,
Mr . and Mrs . Earl Davenport, SewRlte Sewing Club. Emest Van lnwagen. Sr., Ronnie Hawley, Wilmetla Burton Leifheit . Sanford Thomas.
Velma Rue, Losha Mitchell , Charles
Gerard, Ka thleen Ervm . Yolanda
Root, Gail Thompson, Pete Brooks.
· Mt. Mortah Baptist Church. John
Dill, Eloise Stiles, Wi lliam F'red
Srruth , Sr .. Lettie and Edward
Young, Mr . and Mrs Thomas Anderson, Terri Byer. Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Teaford. Ethel Hughes . Dr.
and Mrs . J . J . Davis Business contributions came from the Quality

Training session

held recently
HUNTING TON - The Tha 1-{;ooZyo Lodge No . 457 of the Tn.Stale
Area Council. Boy Scouts of
America, recently held an aU-day
lrBJnifl8 session for the newly elected Lodge officers.
The Thai-Coo-Zyo Lodge IS a service organization of the Tri.State
Area Council and encompasses a ten
county area in Ohio. West Virginia
$1ld Kentucky . Officers elected wiU
take office m January and serve for
the calendar year 19110 Main purpose is to promote Scout camping.
During the day long session held 1n
Huntington . the boys and adults
discussed top1cs such as cmmunications. progrluruning, camp
promotion . ceremonies . lodge and
chapter managennent . and the adult
role .
Participatilll( in the traming were
Robby Swann . Lesage' John
Edelmann, Gallipolili; Chuck Hen son, Pt. Pleasant; John Norris,
Chesapeake ; Bob Kelly , Hun Ungton ; Ed Moon . Ashland ; and
Earle Painter, Gallipo lis .
A spec1al thanks went to the members af the training staff which in clude Bob Weiler , Lodge Chie l. Hun tington ; Robert Wilson. Ona; Jeff
Sawyers, Kenova ; and Craig Pain ter, Gallipolis .
The Order of the Arrow 1s a '"boy
run " organization with the help of
adult advilior.o. With the completion
of this training , the officers will start
working on the programs for the
coming year.

Print Shop, Spencer's Market. Cross
Hardware, Vil lag e Pharmacy,
Foreman and Abbott. King Builders .
Dutton Drugs, Middl eport Book
Store, Mark V. Headquarters Bar ,
WesU,rn Auto. Rail's Ben Franklin ,
Hentage House. Ingels Furniture,
City !.units Bar, Dr. James Conde ,
Jimmie 's Pastry . Firestone Store.
Gateway, Valley Lumber, Pratt
Beauty Shop, Werner Had1o. Martin
F'urmture. Bahr Clothiers. DowningChilds Insurance. Ace Hardwa re.
Wilkinson Engines , Sewing Center .
Middleport Departme nt Store,
Citizens Natonal Bank. French's
Sunoco. Jerry 's Bea uty Salon and
the Blue Tartan . T he Meigs Tire
Center. Pomeroy. has contributed as
weU as the Big Bend C. B. Club and
the IJJyal Men's and Women's Class
of the Middleport Church of Chn st

State officials
may view road
TUPPERS PLAINS - Meigs
County Comrruss ioners have agreed
to invite state offi cials to investigate
any improvements m County Road
46 .
The action was taken during a
community meeting Wednesay night
at Tuppers Plains Elementary
School. Count y Engineer Wesley
Buehl agreed to place guardrails
where needed along the road and to
repair potholes and clean culverts .
Another road discussed was Sand
HiU Cemetery whic h is used as a
nooct escape roadwa y .
Attending the session along w1th
Buehl were county commissioners,
Rlchard Jones, Henry Wells and
Chester Wells

'Quake· jolts Tah&gt; an
TAIPEI. Toiwan rAP r - An
earthqu ake measun ng 5.1 on the
Ric hter sca le jolted northern
Taiwan Saturday but there were no
immediate reports of casualties or
damage . the national weath er
bureau reported.
•
A spokesman said the quake was
centered at sea about 25 m1les off the
northeast coast of Taiwao .
The RichU,r seale is a measure of
ground m011on as re&lt;urded on
se1smographs . Every mcrease of
one numb~r me:ans a tenfold.
increase m magnitud e. Thus a
reading of 7.5 reflects an earthquake ·
10 times stronger than one of 6.:..
An earthquake measurmg 5 on the
sca le IS capa ble of causm~
con siderablt' dama ge .

CC-150
CC-100
CC-200

'177.15
'211.60
'297.60

1614 14" Deluxe Chain Saw ........................... 1124.79
1616 16" Deluxe Chain Saw ........................... 1132.59
1613 14" Standard Chain Saw .......................... '101.39
·
Tools at
· Prices.

We also have over 100 other products reduced
for the month of October.

Bo x nog rtn g !.
36" ch1cken feeders
48" cht cken feeders
60" cht cken feeders
B 114 oil foun t hea ters
I 145 u hol e nes t
4 Portable gratn motsture te'.ifE'r '.i

900
91
41
20

s 1. 23
S4 . 24

S5 . 19

S8 . 1&lt;1
s ll 19
S5 1 19
U2 00

.71
S2.9l
SJ.JO
16.00
S9.00

us.oo

S69.00

FENC IN G
ANIMAL H EALT H

124
33

7
9
20S
21 I
47
75
Ill
Ill
60

4
1
)I
9
10
49
JIO
110
so
I 14
8
11
141
100
48
140
96

4
10)
14
l OS
110
116

Regular shu t eve patc hes
Calf shut eye patches

Sugg Pn ce Spt&gt;ctcJI
H .9B
SJ .9 1

SO's 15 gm anesot bolus

S7 .98
\86 .00

lOO's 2.5 gm anesol bolu s

Sll.96

20 mtlepfocon vacc tn e

s 1. 20

16oz . fly spray concen f rate

S4 . 35

Gal. fl y s pra y concenta tc
Gal. lly spra v
12 1 J• Rabon0u st
Gal. Bee t &amp; Da• rv sp ray
Gal. Be ef &amp; O .;u ry concenfrah•
TBZ sheep dren ch bu cket
TBZ ca t11edrenc tl buck et
TBZ ca ttl e dr e n c h 41: 1)0 gm .

Compet1t or du st bag k 1t
Oustmaster dust b.ag
8oz . cyg on
4 11.5°-'o cy th1on du st
Dog flea collar
160Z . I&lt; orlan l1vestock spray
4 N She ll hOrse con d1t1 oner
Qt . Ravap
Qt . Stable s p ray co ne.
Shoo fly ear tag s
4 's aldrfur bolu s
Gal Oa try man 's c hotce aCid
Tea t dtp cups
Gal Dyne
2511 Manual datry cleaner
Gal Su pena n
Gal Uddenan
4 oz. Headsrarf poultry
4 Ol Head s tar t tu rkey
IDol . P1peral1ne AM

~2 . 95

SJ 9 I

BSOO
SlO.OO
.8S

u . 75
Sll

){I

\8 .61

ss .oo

SB .OO

\6 00

U . ~J

S4 7S

\26 .00

S21 00

\160.47
\188 .00
SS.0 .67
114. 10

SlSOOO

\12 .00
S2 95
I 1.65

Sl7S .OO

S30 00
Sll 00
\) .00
\1 10

\1 95

I I lO
, 1 1S

Sl . 5Cl

, 1.1S
\4 .75

s1.75
\8 . so

sa .9s
ss.95
\2 .00

I 5.15

\6 .00

S6 .50
\) 91
II 00
S4 15
\1.7 ~

\2 . 15
, 19 .00

,, 50

s 10 75

1750

no.oo

\9 .00

, 10. 50
\I 10

\7 .00

\1 86

\1 10
S1 'H

\J IJO

11

CLOTH IN G &amp; T ARPS

89
)

s
190

s

1
I
J

•I
•4
)

s
7
II

12

Pr . Eillon overshoe"&gt;
Pr . Insula led coveralls
In sulated JiiCk eiS
Pr Buck'&gt;ktn gloves
Roll s 12x 100 ' 2 mil pla st1c
21oz . 11 · 18 " drops v1ny1 tarp
22 Ol 14 ' 18 " drops vtnyl tarp
22 Ol 16 ' 18 " drop s vtnyl tarp
18 01 16 ' 12" drop') v1nyl tarp
22 Ol . 8JC10 ' vtnvt tarp
21 Ol . 8x 11' viny l tarp
14 Ol 10 11.14' can vets tarp
14 oz ' 10 11. 16 ' canvas tarp
10 Ol 10 11.14 ' canva~ tarp
10x14 ' heavy poly tarp
12x 16 ' heavy polv rarp
I.Sx2C' h eavy poly tarp

\7 85

S4 9 ~

Ill 00

115 00

00

\16 .00

, 14

\11 S7

s 19

S6 50

~8

s 14 50

Sl4S 00
5.181 00

\80 .00

120 I 00

S 1OO.OCl
s 110 .00

s 140 00
SH 00
S62 00
S7 1.00

\40 .00
\49 .00
S4 5. 00

S81 00

160.00

S6!i .OO

\47 .00
\36 .00

uo.oo

sse .oo

S40. 00

U4 .00

SS8 .00

\403 .60
S49 .00

S1H .OO
t39 .00

S79 .SO

sss . oo

S111.00
\ 3 00

$79 .00
SJ4 .00

\ 1S.OO

LIVESTOCK EQUIPMENT
J
)

4

•

J
I
J
86

7248 Double calf cr~ep feed ers teeders
140G All purpo se hog feeder'&gt;
I -door hog leeders
EB12 1 door c lec t r •c hog fount s
625 2S gal . pig waterers
7J0 ·8G Nelson bowl
160 8G Ne lson bowl
Hog ringer pli ers

1108 .00

\158 .00
\4 .70

10 ' 6 panel gates
l 12 ' 6 panel gates
4 14 ' 6 panel gates
s 16 ' 6 panel gates
9 S8A elec tr jc fencer
40 Farnum fence ltgh h
1 Rolls 13 1 l 9 a .armco barb
s Rolls 1047 ·6·9 h el d fence
Roll s 1047 ·9 10 fie ld fence
1100 s 1 :~ · 6 · 6 11 po ly posts
9 Roll s 66() 11 1 17 nefttng

S85 .00

s 118 .00

SJ.OO

446-2463

S48 .00

SS4 .00
161.00

SS7.90
Sl9 .9S
S16. l0

l1S8 .4S
S109 .10

"

141
11

12.25

\64 . 7S

LAWN &amp; GARDEN
10 oz dus t ers
11o z fly&amp;mo squttoaerosol

14 oz . 1nsect s pra v ae,.osol
16 oz . lawn 1 pat.o aerosol
u oz . lindane cone .
8 oz . ltn dan e cone.
32 oz . roactl &amp; ant &lt;;pray
12 O l . ro'ioe spra y
10 oz . rose spray
•o 12 oz. s lug &amp; sna•l meal
104 Sh ell no pe&lt;;t stnp&lt;;
81 19 oz . Super 0 foam weeder
20 Hose s pra y
102 Ph cra bgra ss killer
IJ Qts . cra bgra ss k1ller
Ill 1 lb . garden weeder
9 lb garden weeder
121 1 lb . s pec tra c1de du st
S8 4 lb . spec tra c1de du st
116 15 oz. s pectrac td e insect s pra v
80 Pts . spectracide concentrate
15oz. spec tra c •d e roac h &amp; ant bomb
)0 Hand culttvators
90 14 oz. hammers
17 Action hoes
11 18-076 weed hooks
58 18·826 rak es
I J Level h ead rakes
19 Grass s hear s
18 Pruning s hears
10 19·416 Oande l• on weeder
1 12 ga l.electrtc s pra y~r
2 gals . &lt;; lainl ess sprayers
6
41 7658 S/ SX SO' garden hose
)0 48.58 .S / 8xSO' garden ho se
47 51811. SO ' garden h ose

I S6
119
SJ
38
116
116
16

••

12 .97
12 .82

"'Sl .Bl"'
54 .80
l2.78

ll3 .00
S37 .00
S41.00
146.00
S37 .00
l9.9S
S2J .OO
SIJO.OO
l9l .OO
51.SO
Ul .OO
l2 .00
sus
11.7S
sus
Sl .OO
s 1.90

$] . 10

SI .H

Sl .OS

Sl.2l
Sl.SO
sus
ll.SO
suo
S2.7l
Sl 75
ll.2S
Sl.OO
S3 .9S
ll.SO

'\2' .08
.40
'1.98
S2 .SO

l4 .SO
l2 .9S
14 .98

51. 9S
S5 .9S
Sl.69
ss.so
S5 .95
16 .19

$2 .74
l1 . 79
$3 . 00
18. 00
14 .95
l7 .90
l9 .70
58 .00

S6.90
SJ .97
\29 .95
71.10
l13 .S4

u .oo

sus
14 .00
su s

.99

'I.

95
1495
u . 1o
Sl. SO
$6 .1{1

$5.00
14 .50
u .so
12 1. 00
14S .OO

19.71

S10 .24
'1 3. .56

l1.7l
l9. 7S

Sl85 .00
Sl25 .00
Sl9l .OO
s 1]5.00
ua .oo

SllO.OO
l7S.OO
S1ll. OO
585.00
120.00
S22.00

SEEDING EQUIPMENT

l bu . MlB e le ctric seeders
1 bu . M 1 electric seeders
l bu . Sl B PTO seeder
I bu . S I PTO seeder
5 Sl ·MI e)( tension hopper
4 SJ ·Mlextension hopper
l
J
l
s

U0.60

MIS CELLA NEOUS

Ill
11
lO
)2

97
42
9

l 01 . WD 40

Gal. WO 40
11 7 Fibr e
18" garage broom w/handte
Indiana maid broom s
Special corn broom
Hay hooks

CENTRAL SOYA OF OHIO, INC.
3rd &amp; Sycamore.

$43.00

6

EXCESS INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE

Gallipolis, OH.

l1.2S
S20.00
15.70
16.67
u.97
$4.76
$4.00

.7S
lUO
s-uo
$4.9S

$2.50
u .1s
$3.00

These special prices are
in effett until

October 31' 1979.

�. --·-··-

0-5- The Sunda) Tune&gt;,\&lt;•ntmel . Sunday. 0..-t 21. 1~ 79

[)..4- The-SundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday , Oct . 21 , 1979

County agent's corner
POMEROY - There will be a
graded Feeder Calf Sale at Athens
on October 30.
Storing pesticides properly is im portant. Pesticide safety is im portant the year around . Howeve r,
at this time of year when the use of
most pesticides has ended, home
owners should be checking the left
overs and storing them . This is what
makes the follow-up so important.
Pesticides left unattended are a
hazard to children, peta and others .
Before storing pesticides, decide if
the batch is good for another year .
Then, if the original container is in
good condition, store pesticides in
that container, which is well
marked . If the container is tom or
otherwise in no condition to store

always be rinsed out with several
portions of water. Keep all container
tops and lids in place when
pesticides are not in use . To dispose
of pesticide containers, wrap in
seve ral thicknesses of newspaper
and tie securely . Notily your garbage pickup service that the conta iner.J are in the materia!l! to be
dis posed of and he will inform you if
the service can or carmot handle the
containers .
Farm Tax Workshop for Tax coos ultants will be held on November 15
a nd 16 at Chillicothe at the Ohio
Uruversity Branch Campus . They
will be using a much expanded and
unproved Tax School Workbook as a
reference. They need registrations
by Friday , November 9. See me for
details

pesticides , place contents m another
container and label 11 Willi the
proper information.
A good way to keep pesticides dry
and usable another year is t o place
the packages in a plastic bag, seal
and put under lock and key in a dry
place in the garage or basement
away from where children may get
to them . If chemicals are locked up ,
danger of children getting into them
is small .
Pesticides that sho uld be
destroyed may present a problem
for the home gardener. Inillally, the
home gardener should purchase
only those he thinks he will use up
during the year . Then, only the
amount needed at each s praylllg
shouid be prepared and all the spray
shculd be used . Containers should

I MM E D IATE open mg tor
tw o ful l t 1me salespeopl e.r
No expe r •ence necessarr .
on the job t r it1n1ng M u'&gt;t
have
completed
Real
Est at e co u r ses For r on
f i de nt ia l interviews ( a ll
~

completing the advanced sales school from Dick
Weisenstein, Landmark vice president for local
operations.

Milliron, Buckley complete course
GAI.JJPOLIS - Gib Milliron and
Eugene Buckley recently completed
an intensive three4ty training
session for experienced sales perSOMe! sponsored by Landmark, Inc .
Milliron is sales representative for
Landmark, Inc ., a Columbus- based

Homemakers'
Circle
.\I

IWTT1t

~

or

Clint Brandon of Roswell, Georgia.
The course was divided into six main
study areas: sales management,
motivation, advertising-merchandi sing,
self-analysis,
selling
techniques and salesmanship.
The course was conducted at
Nationwide Insurance Company 's
training center location just north of
Columbus. All members of the class
were previous graduates of Landmark's basic sales training course.

LA U

FOOTWEAR LASTS LONGER
wmf PROPER CARE
GA!lJPOLIS - Like all other
parts of the wardrobe, footwear
benefits from good care . If shoes,
play shoes, lelllure slippers and
sneakers are kept in good
cleanhness condition , they will last
longer , hold their shape better. be
more eomfortable - and are less
likely to develop a clinging odor of
perspiration .
For good results, note these practical suggestions for washing shoes :
'Try to alternate wearing shoes,
so each pair has a chance to air at
least one day after use. Occasionally
dip a sponge or cloth into thick soap
or detergent suds, squeeze it so there
is no excess moisture, and use it to
·'mop" out the interior of each shoe.
nus helps to wash perspiration
away before it soaks into the fabric
of each shoe. This helps to wash perspiration away before 1t soaks into
the fabric shoe lining . Allow plenty
of time for the liining to air-dry
before subsequent wear .
'Remove white shoe laces often
and wash in hot soap or detergent
suds. This not only removes ordinary soil , but also soil or polsh
marks caused when the laces rub
against the eyelets of dark shoes . Alter rinsing, stretch the laces taut,
and hang them to dry.
'Don 1 let a thick layer of polish
builct up on white leather shoes . Instead, occasionally use a sponge dipped in thick soap or detergent suds
to wash white leather . Repeat WJth
fresh suds until no more polish
, cm~es off, then rinse with a clean
sponge wrung out of clear water and
allow to dry thoroughly before applying anew coat of white polish. It is
wise to stuff shoes bel ore washng,
either with tissue or clean rags, lo
catch drips which may occur even
though you squeeze out the sponge
before use.
'Never dry leather in bright sunshine, or near source heat.
'Shoes made of fabric, straw, or
plastic are also suds-&lt;lpongeable .
For these, whip up dense suds in a
small bowl or sink and use a sponge
or soft brush to skim the "dry" suds
offthetop; avoid drippy water. Then
use the "dry" suds to sponge the entire surface of each shoe until clean .
Quickly wipe with a sponge or cloth
wrung out of dear water, and then
allow to dry.
•sneakers were traditionally
made of cotton canvas or duck, but
abrasion now many are made
Te!listant nylon cord in a rainbow o.
color choices. All of these are easy to
scrub clean with a stiff brush and
thick soap or detergent suds. In case
of stubborn dirt - especially at the
ankle bones - dip the lathered brush
Into scouring powder before scrubbing. After this pr&lt;Hreabnent, the
sneakers can be washed either by
hand or in a wasber. After thorough
rinsing, pull them into 9hape and
hang them to dry. If necessary, add
'a little household bleach to the wash
water for white sneakers.
•slippers made of fake "fur" usually fluffy Orion pile - may be
Immersed in suds and washed
almost like a sweater, UD!ess the
sol&amp; ill made of hard leather.- Mter
rinsing, blot each slipper in a towel,
shake it vigorously to fluff the pile,
and hang it to dry in a breezy spot.

or

regional marketing and fann supply
cooperative at the cooperative's
French City Meats plant located in
Gallipollll
Buckley is a sales representative
at Me1gs County Fann Bureau
Cooperative Association, which IS a
farmer-owned cooperative. Meigs
FBCA is a member-owner of Ll\ndrnark, lnc .
The advanced sales school was
taught by nationally known
agribusiness training specialist

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

WINTHEFOOO
SHOPPING GAME
POMEI\OY - Getting the mQ.'lt
for your food dollar is no small task
these days . " But just comparing
food prices for the best buy isn 't
enough defense to make thQ.'le
dollars really stretch," says Jan
Thompson, Wapakoneta Area Ex tension Home Economics Agent for
the Cooperative Extension Service
of the Ohio State University .
Supermarkets and groceries must
make a profit to stay in business. So
they use many kinds of marketing
strategies to make consumers want
to spend more money . Some of these
gunmicks are obvious -like weekly
"specials" that entice people to
come to the store .
But other appeals are more subtle .
For instance, the floor plan of many
grocery stores is arranged so the
essential items, like bread, milk and
meat are on the outer perimeter of
the store . So, you must walk through
the entire store to get those
necessities . And along the way
you're likely to put a few more 1tems
in your grocery basket.
''This type of floor plan also encourages you to spend more time in
the store - and that may help sales , ..
says the home economist . This was a

point made by a recent survey conducted by the Point-of -Purchase Advertising Institute and DuPont Corporation. The survey claims that
shoppers spend an average of 90 cents for every minute they browse in
the store aisles 1
How stores stock their shelves
may also be a sales lactic. It's easier
for the shopper to reach items at eye
level. So expensive foods may be
placed at easy reach while the less
expensive items may be on higher or
lower shelves. A similar practice is
to use "tie-ins." For instance,
placmg salad dressings next to the
lettuce may stimulate sales .
So what can you do to help you .
stay within your food budget and
still get the best buys" "Arming
yourse If with a shopping list and
then sticking to it is still the best
defense ," advises the home
economist .
She says a shopping list made up
from the menus you've plBMed for
the week will help curtail impulse
buying . However, don't be so strict
with your list that you pass up an
unadvertised special . If that food is
one your family enjoys and can be
worked into the week's menu or substituted for a more costly food- take
advantage of the special .

By lloyd A. Ruth
OilitMct CoOllervationist
POMEROY - The follo,.ing article was written by Neal Springer,
from near Mt. Vernon, and
published in a recent ''Soil and
Water Conservation District News"
publication. I thought a voice of experience might be more informative
than a lot of statistical data regarding no-till . I've noticed in Meigs
County that n&lt;Kill com fields are
helping to keep harvesting equipment from getting stuck in contrast
to conventiooal seeded fields that
are still muddy.
Five years ago I had about
exhausted my knowledge on con servation and tillage methods in conventional farming . With the
cooperation ar. j the knowledge of
the S.C.S . we had established "strip
fanning, sod waterways, crop
rotation, grBS!I strips, less tillage,
and I still was not satisfied with the
response I was getting from these
practices. Hay Adamski. district
conservationist assigned to the Knox
Soil and Water Conservation
District, then reconunended I try notill on a limited basis. In the spring
of 1975, with the help of Ray Adamski, we decided to plant 60 acres to
no-till corn.
In 1976, Mr. Adamski , Bill Haddah
(local ssles repr*ntative from Or·
tho Chevron Chemical Co.) and I !let
up a fann program in which we
planted aU the com on our farm notill .

In 1977, again, Ray Adamski, Bill
Raddah and I set up a different fann
program. This time we planted
everything including no-till corn,
wheat, oats, full season soybeans,
double crop soybearlll, new meadow
seeding , and pasture renovation.
In 1978, Ray , Bill and I used a
similar prOf!ram as in 1977 only with
a Uttle poUsh to it, and the addition
of no-till barley, rye, sunflowers,
and buckwheat.
In 1979 I planted all of the crops n~
till. This makes three yea~1 I have
been I 00 percent no-till 1 I have been
increasing my seed drop and fertiUty gradually over the past few
years and our yield has been increasing also.
In 1960 f look for another good year
of no-till fanning. Each year that I
have no-tilled in any field on our far ms, we have had excellent results .
The yield of every crop has increased every year . We have had no
erosioo problerrlll either. We have
been able to !ann more of the
marginal land than before and at a
profit. It has also enabled me to
double drop (two crops in one year)
with great success. Our children like
no-till because we are not constanUy
turning up stones and rocks which
they normally had to pick up. I have
been able to harvest the crops
without getting stuck. N&lt;Kill has
been money in our pockets.
I have doubled my yields per acre
over the last five years, and that 's
money in my pocket'

Administration reverses decision
By DON KENDALL
AP Fann Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Spurred
by rising world demand for U.S.
grain, the Carter administration has
dec1ded not to reqwre fanners to
idle part of their land in return for
federal price supports on 1980 crops
of corn and other feedgrains .
Agriculture
Secretary
Bob
Bergland announced the decision
Friday at a meeting of the American
Society of Agricultural Consultants
and asked that it be "off the record ."
However, it was widely circulated
among commodity traders within
hcurs.
For the past two years, wheat and
feedgrams producers have been
required to idle a portion of their
cropland to be eligible for federal
price supports, target price
payments and other benefits.
Bergland BMOunced Aug. 1 that
wheat farmers would not have to set
aside any acreage to qualify for
supports oo their 1980 crop .
Thus , so far as federal farm
programs are concerned, grain
producers have a clear Signal to go
all-out on productioo next year.
Earlier Friday, Bergland's office
issued a notice that he would hold a
news conference Monday "to
announce provisions of the 1980 feed
grain program."
For some time, Bergland has been
indicating the possibility that only a
small acreage set-aside program
might be in effect for feed grains
producers next year.
In 1979, corn farmers, for
eumple, had to take one acre of
cropland from production for each
10 acres they planted for this fall's
harvest. Wheat producers had to idle
one acre for every five acres.
Farmers signed up to idle 22.1
million acres this year under the setaside programs for wheat, corn and
sorghum. The final participation,
he wever, has not been armounced.
Last year , for the 1978 crops,
farmers signed up to 1dle about 2-1
million acres but ended up with only
18 .7 mi Ilion acres taken from
production .
Despite this year's acreage
programs, farmers are producing
bumper gram harvests, including a
record corn crop now being
harvested 7.39 billion bushels, up 4

or

percent from last year' s, which also
was a record.
The United States has a huge
supply of grain, including stocks
leftover from pre-1ous crops, grain
held by farm ers 1n a government
three-year program and the fall
harvests now Wlder way .
But demands also are huge,
including record exports prOJected
for the comin g year . Those orders
also include polentially record
purchases by Ule Soviet Unilln .
Thus. according to on e source who
asked not to be identified , Bergland
and other policymakers "did not
want to take a chance" having even
a small set-aside restriction on
plantings when domestic and foreign
demand for grain is so great
In 1972, the year the Soviet Union
and other foreign buyers kicked off
record buying of U.S. grain , farmers
idled 56.7 million acres under the
federal set-aside program .
Those were reduced in 1973 and
removed entirely after that until
reimposed for the 1978 and 1979
crops .
WASHINGTON 1AP l
The
government plans lo hold a senes of
worksh1ps lo talk about the 1mpact
of agneultural land loss on food
supplies .
Agriculture
Sec r e tar y Bob
Ber gland , who announced the
meetin ~ s Frida y, said , " We are
seeking information from indi vidual
citizens . public interest groups and
state and local govemmenl• on the
availability of a~ricultural lands ."
The workshops will be sponsored
by a federal interagency National
Agricultural Lands Study Group,
which includes the Ag ri c ulture
Department and a number of other
federal agencies .
Bergland and Gu s Speth .
chairman of the Preside nt 's Council
oo Environmental QuaU ty, will rn,
l'O-Chairmen of the meetings.
The workshops are sc heduled to he
held between Oct. 31 and Dec . 19.
Locations and dales include :
Phoenix, Anz .. Nov. ~30.
sacramento , Calif ., Dec . -1-0.
':lenver, Colo., Nov . 14-15
Tallahassee , Fla ., l:),c_ 5-7.
Lrt Wayne, Ind ., De c. :h'i .
Dubuque, Iowa , Nov . 7-9 .
A.tlland, Maine, Nov . 19-20
Moorhead, Minn ., Nov . lJ-15.

Kansa s City , Mo , Dec. 1!&gt;-12.
Burlington, N.C ., Nov. 12-14.
West Lebanon , N.H:, Nov. lf&gt;-16 .
PhUhpsburg, N.J ., Nov. 8-9.
Carlisle, Pa , Dec. -1-0
Memphis , Tenn ., Oct . 31-Nov. 2.
Dallas . Texas, Nov. 7-9.
saa Lak e City, Utah, Nov . 19-~ .
Vancouver. Wash .. Nov . 'n-28 .

Ag weather
By The Associated Press
Here IS Ule agricultural advisory
for Ohio as prepared saturaay by
Ule Agricultural Weather Center at
West Lafayette , Indiana :
High pressure still dominates Ule
eastern third of the nation and
souUJerly surface winds are moving
moist air from the Gulf of Melico
mto Ulc nation 's midsection .
A slow moving cool front in Ule
Central Plains has been washing out
and another , more intense frontal'
zone ha s devefoped to the west .
However , it shouid be another 48
hours befor e this new storm system
can move into the Ohio Valley .
Exten s 1ve cl oud cover was
~xpect ed to linger over more
northerly sectiOns of Oh1o today, but
some fall sunshmc was IJkely .
Southern Oh10 was expected to
rece 1ve a moderate dose of fall
SWl shine
Strong surface wmds with Wlfld
speeds 15 to 25 m ph were expected
along with fa st dry!Dg rates and
ample Oppj)rtumt y for gro wers to
brmg in a lar ge a mount of Ule

P A R lTIME
PIE CE
WOR K
W e b s 1er .
Am er 1ca 's for emos t d •c
t iona ry
compctn y nPeds
hom e w orkers t o updatcI1Sts
All
loc al m ad1ng
i! ges ,
ell( pe r •ence
un
nece ssar y Sena name . ad
d re~s . phon e number 10
Webste r , 1755th . Ave Su1 te
110 l 7476 , N ew Yo r k, NY

10010.
Tea c h e r
needed
at
Gu il ding H and
S( hOOI
T e a c h ing
Ce r t l! . c a t e
r equir ed . M ust be W•ll 1ng t o
meet Dept of Ed M SPR
c ertif ica t ion
standards

614 ·36 1 0102.

•

International · '
720and 830
I
Forage
&amp;
Harvesters

100 .

GU N SHOOT ever y Sund ay
l l 00 Factor y choke on ly
Co rn Ho llow Gun Cl ub ,
Rutland . Pro cee ds dona ted
to B oy Seoul T roo p / 49

Of'S
SPRING VAllEY
PLAZA
446-2134
FREE CANDY
CLASSES
CAll FOR
REGISTRATION

NO HUNTING on the Gene
Humphrey pr oper t y o n Rt .
143 or the A ndy G r ov er
pro per ty on Ba iley Run Rd
A NYO N E WHO ha s had
an y pr oblem s wrfh spr ay or
t ow e le tf e
typ e
1n sec t
r epe llent , send
al l
m
for m a tion t o Box
475,
Raci ne . OH

• 720 fo r t rac to rs u~ t to 130 PTO

~~P

830 to • t rac to rs up to

175 PT O lop
• Dual plectfi C CI~A t r hp&lt;, r()rn o te co n t roll ed for sta r! sto p .
revpr ~ e u l ~~~p rJ "iVS IPPl

.

""-~

• L;Hge d tame tcr tr r rl roth ilutoma t tc alty ad tu &lt;i l to cro p
volu mP
•
•

•

Rem o te e lec tr tca: , n ntrol ()I d1c;;chrtr g f' del!ec tor an d
sp ou t d1rect1Dn
Hydra -Sha r p knilf&gt; c:,hr-Jrpf·nPr bPvP i s as 11 sh a r pe n s tor
n1JXHT1um CU !I In CJ P fii (IC O( y

.~
l

See us tor details .
Eas y fmance plans at~aUable.

,-

ANTIQU ES bough! and
sold _ White's Antiques , Rt
35. Rodney . Call 245 5050 .
FOR THE BEST bUY in
diamonds, go to Tawney
Jewelers,
422
Se cond
Av enue, Gallipolis. Com
pare pri ce!&gt; anywhere.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT
3RD ST.

POMEROY, 0.

Purchase by 10-31-79 and Finance Thro.u gh IHCC and
get FREE FINANCING Til 8-1-80
WE HAVE ONE 720 FORGE HARVESTER IN STOCK WHICH HAS TO MOVE ntiS :
MONnt. WE ARE OFFERING ntiS UN IT AT $
W/2 Row Com Head

73 2 5

Wanted

FOR LEASE R~ t a ur ant
f aci lity , Eas tern Ave. 446

!~ Buy

JU N K
Aut o and Hrctp
me tal Call 388 8776.

250 1
OR SA LE . offi ce spa•e ,
Sp nng Va lley arett , 16 50 sq
f ee t , ca ll 446 023Y

D IAM Q hi DS . o!d
C01ns.
go l d
ba n ds ,
es t a l e
te welery , etc
TA WN EY
JE WELER S, 421 Second

CHIP WOOD Poles max
di am eter 10" on lar gest
en d . $12 p ·er ton Bun dl ed
st ab . SIO p er ton . De li ve r ed
to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt 2,
P ome r oy 992 2689
OLD FURNIT U R E . ice
bo xes. bra ss bed s. iron
beds, de~k s, etr , compl e te
house hold s
Wnt e M .D
Miller . Rt 4 , Pom eroy or
call '192 7760.
ROOFING, c arpen t ry &amp;
general maintenan ce work .
General
maintenan c e
work . Cal l -446 Jill.

wanted to Buy

A N T IQ U E S.
FUR ·
ct1in a
N lT UR E, glas s,
any th ;ng See or call RUth
Gos ney, an tiques. 26 N .
Jno, M i ddleport , OH . 992

OLD COl NS, pocket wl ·
ches, class rings , wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
si lver . Call J . A . Wamsley ,

]16 1

A N T I QU E P OC KET Waf ·
c hes W ill 1ng t o pay to p
dolla r
Call
I 59 2 2973

Ave

Wanted to Buy

Wanted to Buy

VA R IOU S TYPE S OF OLD
Fu r nl1u r e.
dressers ,
cao•ne ts. 1ce bOxes, com
ptel e household s Ca ll 446

even•ng~

WAN T ED : JUNK . B at
ter ies . radiator s, m otors,
auto tra ns . No Sunday
ca ll s 949 /563

187]

WAN TED
Bu yi ng S1lber
uS co ins Wil t pa y $. 95 for
d ime~ . $2.37 for q ua r ter s.
i-4.15 tor ha lv es. s 11 SO t or
si lver dol lar s, $l .75 tor cl a d
hill ves, ( 1965
1969 ) . al so
Sl90 . per pound t or sterl in g
sil ver . Treasure C h e~ t Coin
Shop, top ot hil l, Rt 33 .
South , ( Pom er o y Rd ) ,
Am ens, OH . Pr ices good
t ill M onday _

BU Y I N G SI L VER
US
COIN S WI LL PAY 95c
FOR Dl ME S, S2 .37 FOR
QUART E RS. $4 75 FOR
HALVE S.
$11 . 50 FOR
SILVER DOL L AR S. SUS
FOR CLAD HALVE S 11965
1969 )
AL SO $190 PER
POUND FOR STERLIN G
SIL VER
AL SO WAN T
GOLD CL AS S RIN GS,
WEDDING BANDS, DEN
T A L GOLD . PLAT I N UM
T RE AS URE CHE ST CO IN
SHOP. TOP OF H I LL . RT .
33 SOU TH ( P O MER O Y
RD . l.
AT HE N S.
OH .
PR I CE S GOO D
TI L L
MONDAY .

F R0 NT Lett t e nder t or
1970, 71. Jl , or 73 Ford
p 1c k up truck . Ca ll 4.46 ·09 46 .

USED TR A ILER st eps,
concr e te pr ef erred . 388

Bi ll

142·2331.
WANTED : SAW
logs.
Payment upon delivery to
our yard , 7 : 30to 3 :30week·
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339. Barlow. OH . 678·
2980 .
LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Noti ce is hereby given
that sealed bids will be
rec eived by
the City .
Manager of the City of
Gallipolis, Ohio at thiS Of ·
f1ce in the Municipal
Bu i lding for the Maple
St1ade
Payement
and
Storm
Sewer
ProJect
IH . U D .
Grant).
The
pro.iect i nYolves resvr f ae~ ng
of streets with
asphalt
and the con ·
stru ction of appro)(imately
500 feet of storm sewer on
Cruzet Avenue .
Bids will be received at
the above named office un lit 11 .00 Noon, Friday,
November 2.
1979 and
publi cly opened and read at
lhaf time and place. Bid
forms may be obtained in
the Offi ce of the City
Manager .

Oct. 21 , 28

1977 BUICK REGAL 4 DR.

ESTATE AUCTION

'3795
1977 FORD LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON
au to, P S, PB , Cruise co ntrol , luggage ra ck, t inted
gl ass, f ac t or y a1r, supe r sharp
• 3995
1974 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL MARK IV
Full powr&lt; eq ui pped supe' Sharp
Reduced To •3595
1975 DODGE DART SPECIAL EDITION
V B Auf o. P S. PB . V R
'2295
1975 FORD MUSTANG GHIA
•2295
v

8aut o, PS . PB . VR , Ai r , redu ce d to

WED., OCT. 24, 1979
10:00 A.M.

V 8

The following items of the late Albert Heitman wil!
be sold on Wolfe Pen Rd . (Co. Rd . 14) approx . 3
miles off State Route 14l. Watch for Sale Signs .
" ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR"
Wood ice box, Ansom i a mantel clock , pi c ture
frames , R .C.A . battery radio , love seat , gla~s door
cabinets, buffet, wOOd beds , oak dresser , oak bed,
oak stands , platform rocker . stuffed chair , wall
telephone, oil lights , vi ctrola, salt c rock s, mel,:,!
comb case, high wood wheel wagon w -rack s, drop teat table, 5 gal. milk can and mise . dishes .
"GUNS"
20gauge double barrel Modei2A shotgun, 22 rifle , l it
tte crack, Patent 1913 16 gauge Riverside tirearm ,
H&amp;R Model 929 - 22 pistol .
"MISC . "
Good double set of work harness. hillside plow. hor
se disk , mowing m~chine, lumber, horse collar &amp;
bridle , misc . hand tools, gas stove and refr igerator ,
radio . and Moore ' s neatrola .
WalteT Heilman- Administrator
case No. 22846
cash
Lunch
Positive 1.0 .
Dan Smith
Jim Carnahan
~·9-2033
949·2708
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of property."

1 DR . auto , P S, a i r . v1ny l r oo f . ra dio

1975 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE

•2995

P . B , P S , fMtory air . pow er sea ts and windows, c ruise, power an tenn a, silve r with vin yl rot, r ed le ath er mt er ior , super sharp

'2895
1976
FORD GRANADA
2 dr , 302 a u 1o., P S, VR , fac tory air , radi o, viny l s ide m old1ng . baby
blue wi th w h i te roof , b lue leather

interi o r

1979 HORIZON TC-3

SAVE

7 d r . hat c hbct ck . 4 speed. AM FM rad io . ral ly wh eel s, el ectri c rear
w indow defro st er . sports spoil er . less tha n 6 .000 miles .

•3695

OR 6 cyl, au to , v 1nyl r oot , PS &amp; PB air , cus to m inter ior a nd

350

v ·8 eng .,

15,000 lb , 2 S !-J ~.! d , 11ke new , 8'15 tires, 108" cab to axle.

1977 CHEVY %

1975 CHRYSLER NEWPORT

'1895

2 OR. hardt op , v 8 au to , PB &amp; BS. pow er w mdows &amp; se als. c r uise .
roa d w heels . vi ny l r oof. showr oom cond i t 1on in si de a nd out

•3895

1977 CHEVY LUV PICKUP

4 speed. r r.d 1o. de luxe c a m per top . 18.000 mdes Su per Sharp •

3995

B' Fleetsid e, 350 eng , aut o , P S, P .B , sl iding R . glass, local owner
and low m i tes

1976 CHEVY 20' TEC
M1ni Home, air on c hassis and bod y, tes s than 15.000 miles, full eQuip·
m ent

1976 CHEVY C60 •••••••••••••••••••••••• '4895
292 eng i ne , 2 speed axle, 825 fires, 102 " cab to axle .

1

1975 CHEVY VAN........................ 2295
6 c yl. , std trans., R&amp;M , partial conversion, int carpet , beq, skvroot,a i r v ent.

1972 'IW •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $2295

1976 CHEVEU! MALIBU CLASSIC 4 DR .. ~2295
v s. automatic, power s.t and brak es, factory air , tint . glass, AM -FM
.st e r eo r ad i o, c lean interior .

1973 CHEV. IMPAlA .............................11?95
( pe _, a i r , V ·8, auto ., P .S , P B . , c lean 1 owner _

'

u.s.

urn

a•r. stereo, power tuck
tots
MUSTANG 3 DR SEDAN
MUSTANG PACE CAR LOADED
Sphl ben ch ' eats w-recltn ers ,
radia ls, air cond .. stereo. remote control
m1rron . tot :&lt;&gt; more !
LTD 2 DR.
grp ., rea r window defroster ,

more

w -w

1. 1 v1nyt roof . deluxe seiltt., auto . trans .• P. ~ottering , P . brakes, air CGtld .,
stereo, cout alum . wheeh, lois more.

GRANADA 2 DR

6 q l.,

GRANADA 2 DR

Gtua Model . 6 cyl ., 1-1 vinyt root, auto. trans .. w-s-w racliats , P. steertng, P
brakes, rear window defroster , a•r cond., du.at s.port mirrors, tots more .

FlOO 133" WB STYLESIDE

J02 V·l , P .

~teenng ,

R . step bumper .

JOl V-1, sl iding rur wi!Miow, auto. trans., P. steering, wut...-n bright mirrors,
radio , con v . grp ., Dt• . wheet covers, R. step bumper , w-t·wtires.
J01 V_., VI, deluu tutooe, knitted 11inyl sut, 9ill.t9fl , sliding r . window. auto.
trans ., P. siHrine, SPOrt wht'fl, bright western mirrors, stereo, &lt;:lb tights, ciglr
ltghter , styled sleet wheeh, AwL tlr•s

FlSO 133" WB STYLESIDE
351 \1 I , 01k . tutone , Clpfillln• Chlin , IUIO . frlnl ., tractloo toe• Ji!R ,n;te, 5· 10XU
RWL t•re• . Bright wntern mirrars, 11r cond ., rear 1tal, ster.o, Hnted gteu,
cnrome tKJmpen. clgillr tignter.

BRONCO 4X4
F250 155" WB STYLES IDE 4X4 ••••muo..•••• ••••"•••
fl50 117" WB STYLESIDE 4X4 Looded w&lt;rplions

MORE '79's IN STOCK. ALL ARE PRICED BELOW INVOICE
OPEN EVENINGS TIL 6100- OPEN TIL 5100 THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY

While Kenton has been stationed
there, President Carter visited in
Korea, and Kenton was one of the
men to participate in a SO gun salute
for him; he was also one of three servicemen that had the honor of
shaking the president's hand and to
have breakfast with the president.
This was only the beginning for
Kenton. David Janssen is making a
movie, "lnchoo" in Korea . Kenton 's
outfit, B Battery, Second Infantry,
was chosen to take part in the movie .
The scene that Kenton is in is a war
scene.
Kenton believes in keeping busy
and he has taken up karate . He has
received his green belt and the next
step is the brown belt, after that the
black one .
We are looking forward to his
return home in June of next year . All
the thnigs that have happened
couldn't happen to a nicer young
man.
Faithful Bill Hubbard will be
honored Nov. 3 by The Modem
Woodmen of America .
The honor is for successfully
directing the Kyger Creek and
Syracuse Little League baseball
tournaments over the past 21 years.
He will be honored at a dinner that
will be held at the Meigs Inn .
Mrs. Sid Duckworth Bartles, Huntington, former Meigs County
resident , will mark her IOOth birthday on Oct. 31. Mrs. Bartles has
serveral relatives and friends in the
bend area .
heartie s t
We send our
congratulations . What an ac compli!hment !
Hennan Carson, near Bashan, has
passed aloog a bit of information
regarding the picture a street car
that appeared in U1e Oct. 10 edition
of The Daily Sentinel.
The street car is shown stopped in
Racine and the article stated that
the date was 1927.
According to Mr . Carter where the
street car as located in the picture
shows in he background the
Hayward Hotel which Mr . Carson
said burned down in 1921 . According
to this infonnation the picture is
much older.
Just thought we would pass this bit
of information on to you readers.

or

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
992-2196

NOW ON DISPLAY
1980'5 CHEVROLET$

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

992-2126

POMEROY

1979

1979 DELTA 88 ROYAL CPE. Beige-Tan
28920.1~
Now 17000.00
1979 DELTA 88 ROYAL£ CPE. Dk . Brown &amp; Tan
ilOS.l5
Now 17175.00
1979 CUJ. SUP. CPE. Dk . Brown Tan
..27891.64Now 16400.00
1979 98 REGENCY SED. DEMO Dl&lt; Red
1

&amp;

.!ll,924.15

1979 98 Regency Sed

sgzoo.oo

Red&amp;White

Now 18950.00
1979 CADILLAC DEVIU£ CPE. BurnlshedGotd
'14,550.00"
Now 112,000.00
BIG SAVINGS
ALL CARS HAVE AIR CONQITIONING, READY FOR
UNDERCOATING AND WAf
DEUVERY
1

11,552.1~

some think they save money buying out of town - AC·
TUALL Y you save MORE buying at home, with service
after the sale. We ServicP What We Sell.

HURRY IN TODA Yl

~~~, -~- ~a~,:-J .

F01 AFIIDIDU ,.._ ~ ....!"!~~ 01
461 S. 3RD AYE.

5

Good tires, 8' alum . toper , 350 V ·8, auto ., P .S., P. B , Cheyenne cab.
Runs good

By Katie Crow
Being in the service doesn' have
to be dull - as Kenton Holman well
knows.
Kenton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Holman, Syracuse, enlisted
Anny in
and is
n the
presently stationed in Korea.

Fl50 133" WB STYLESIDE
FlSO 133" WB STYLESIDE

T........................

1971 CHEVY CIO ••••••••••••••• ~·········'l295

Katie's
Korner

e• ter1or p a ckage. new car trade 1n. l ess th an 10 .000 m i l es

4 cy!

1977 CHEVY C60•••••••••••••••••••••••••'5695

Fold down seat , ic e t&gt;ox , c lean inter ior , table , gOOd tires .

1978 DODGE ASPEN
A

'

ElOO 138" WB CARGO VAN

.... ·..

INTERNAnONAL
AGRICULTURAL
EQUIPMENT

SWEEPER
and
!&gt;eW ing
mach i ne r e pa i r , parts , and
supplies
Pick up and
delivery , Davi s v acuum
Cl eaner , one half m ile up
Georges Creek Rd . Cal l
446·0294 ..

For Lease

All
Unit e d
CARPET a nd Upholstery 1 B U YING!
States silver co i ns . Top
clean .ng . Dav1s, phone 446
prices for silver dollars and
0294 . Quality WORK at
early coins . MTS Co i n
REASONABLE
PR I CES
Shop. Call 446 · 18A2 or 446
51NCE 1970.
0690 . Pay cash

Cobra Pa c k ..

Htgll c r1oa c ty ~ tnP -r ul o t•rf rJ rmrtnr t· StmpiP easy co ntro l
Al l t1etp nrake ~·o ur hQrvnst rnurc pr o rJu c t rve more p ro ht able ln te r c hang(!arJte (.1ur r k rt 11 ,10' d r rve rn c ro p un1 t s to r
ro w c ro p s o r r-13y ptLkUIJ Ruw c rop 2-ro w ad jus ta ble lor
w rd r o r narr o w r o·N &lt;:, I ll &lt;., 720 ;md 830 3 -row nar ro w fo r 830
Qrl ly Sam~&gt; 6 ll tny l)r C I-. up I ll "- bot"' H rgh speed hr g hhplr)( 12-knr f e c utr, t~.· ,H l ', t,JI J 16 rn lengths wr th o ut
rn c u i ! Pr ",( I P Pn F ~rlc_;Prlrp l •lf'f. ll t( c.o ntr (JIS l o r feedtng an d

.

GE T MARKET VA L U E fo,
yo ur go ld an o s il ve r co •ns
Wr 11e or
co nt a c t E d
Burket! B arber Shop , M 1d
d leport

1979 LEFTOVERS. THEY MUST GO I I I

dt:-,c llarqf&gt;

\

box

Chesh ir e, Oh . 45610

SH OO T
Rar1ne
Volun t eer
F 1r e
Dep t
Every Sat urday 6 30 p m
A I l he1 r bud d• ng1 n Bash an
Factor y c hok e gu ns on 1 y

GU N

ED BURKET T Bar ber
Shop now open fu ll f1me 1n
M •dd lepor t

OM • MEW CAR.~

Get all-crop versatility, plus electrically
·~;..~ controlled feeding and discharge

·\'

SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ON LY RACI N E
GU N CLUB

Fohag e was e&lt;pe&lt;:lt'd to be dry
shortl y afwr s unrise permitting
combm es to roll from s unnse to
sunset .
Humidity levels were expected to
Jrop durwg the afternoon to about:;:;
percent w1th surface winds strong
enough to allow fast a1r exchange m
tobacco barn s.
With
warm
te mpe r atur es, c onditions should
were expected to be excellent for
cunng or stripping .
Four mc h bare soil temperatures
were to wa m1 well into the 00s again
durmg Ul e afternoon hours WJth Ule
warmm g trend cmtinuing through
Ule weekend
Anhydrous appllcatioo s already in
pla ce should become qwte unstable
and losses through leaching are

TILL 8-1-80

•

HU N T lN G,
no
l rt ·sposs mg w1 l h no t•:w
r Ppt 1ons on m y proper t y
Judr McG r aw Se lt
NO

rema uun g corn and bean crop _

INA

\

MEIG S
COU NlY
HUMANE. SOC I ET Y 9'12
b/ 60
PP I !&gt; rlVrllii!blc for
.-ldOpli Qn and •nfor mnt•on
~ f'r v 1 r· l'

USED CARS

SAVE UP TO '400 INTEREST

Why no till?

Notices

GU N

420'1

Notices

Notic e s

Help Wa!i l_ed

On fann scene
COMPLETE SALES SCHOOL - Gib Milliron,left,
and Eugene Buckley, right, receive congratulations for

~···

in West Germany's 20-year history .
Five years ago : The president of
Mellico, Luis Echeverria, confirmed
that his nation had struck oil and
would soor. put petroleum on the
world mdr kct.

"You'll Like Our Quality way of Doing Business"
GMC Financing

992-534 2
Pomeroy
See Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris

�-, -.

r
r&gt;J\-TheSundavTtmes-&amp;nttnel Sw1day,O&lt;l 21 1979

().7 - The Sunday Tunes-Senttnel Sundav Oct 21 1979

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memor:t

Card of Thanks
THE FAMILY of RoberT H

Myers would like to thank
the•r

ne1gtlbors

tr1ends

relat1ves tor the•r ac ts of
sympathy

Your k•ndness
W i ll never be forgotten

WE WISH TO THANK our

fr•ends

ne•ohbors

m•n•sters and co work.ers
for the1r prayers and words

of encouragement dunng
the Illness of our daughter
Barbara and also thanks

tor the flowers food c alls
and

man-;

ex

other

press•ons ot sympa thy and

Commun+ty Collete
Pa,-t t1me mstructors '"
e1ectron1cs technology
Wmte,- QuaJ"ter Nov 26 ,

FARM COUPLE t or part
f1me work on farm and
hom estead near Coo lv•ll e
OH M obile home and at
trac t1ve se tt.ng and all
ut 11tu::os e~tc-epf te l ephone
tur n1shed
Farm
ex
pPnence necessary ttnd
mec han, col and c arpe ntr y
co n stru clion
exper1ence
helpful For furth e r wr1tlen
dea Is wr1te PO Bo)( 30
Coolville O H 45723

Help Wanted

tam.ry

Rto Grande College

1979 lo Feb

background 1n
electncal
engmeenng
or
electron•cs
technologv tor teactung
courses and electrontc
appl•cahon to T V &amp;
radio pnnctpals or pulse
&amp;
swttchtng courses
For •nformatton contact
Coordmator Personnel
Rto Grande College
Commun1tv
College
Box 969 Rto Grande,
OH 4S674
Requ~res

MACHINIST

THE FAM IL Y of Mtnn1 e
Forth would l•k e to thank
the 1r fr•ends reta11ves for

flowers food acts at k •nd

Aucttons
Bl G AUCTIO N every Wed
7 pm Hartford Com mun•ty
Center Hartford W V 4
miles above Po m eroy
Mason Bndge

DIRECT SALES
Salary Commm•SS.IOO, and

e

MEDICAL TEC HNOLDGI
S T male or fema le Ac

Permanent postlton lor tndtvtdual wtth
1ob shop e•penence Must be able to do
own set up on convenltonal and honzon
tal mills , lathes , and gnnders
Respond to Personnel Department, Ap
pa lachtan Power Co , Mountatneer Plant
Operahons , Post Offtce Bo• 398, New
Haven . w va 25265 Area Code 304 882
21 1
We are an Equal OpportuntiY Employer

ne ss Your thoughtfulnesc
w ill not be for gotten

22 , 1980

with anc;j keep house for
elderly person Easy 1ob
w1Th gOOd pay but con
f•n ng Ph U619l7

cepr1ng appl ,ca t•on s for
full f1me
perman ent
rec hnologJst MT H~I • Q•bl e

ASCP I

MLT

I HEW J

Sal ary commensurate w•tn
exoer e-n ce Res ume ca n be

ma11ed

e

p e n s
MR SIMS
60• 846 8701

EXT

HELP WANTED

.4

HOME

OFFICE

Ser

--

Prefer
recent
htgh
sc hool graduate who
types Full t1me wort.
Downtown
bus•ness
G1ve reference
E•
penence not necessary
Wrtte Box lS7 c o Dati~
Tnbune

446 •209

PERMANENT
PART-TIME

&amp; TypiSt

Need penon to take
polaro•d color photos &amp;
make m•nor 1nsurance
repor1s 1n Gallla Co
Call Manager Hooper
Holmes Columbus 614 ·

891 4400 E 0 E

Op

Bachelor 's degree required.
master's preferred Must have practical expenence
1n correcttons, work expenence Wtftl adult of
fenders espectally tlelpful (2) POLICE SCIEN
CE ! PHOTOGRAPHY
Bachelors
degree
preferred Must have law enforcement upenence,
tncludtng knowledger of pho1ography related to law
enforcement Salary commensurate w•th educahon
and expenence, fnnge benef1ts •nclude a parflallv
subsldtzed, on campus, MSEd program
Send
resume to Personnel Offtce , Hoclung Tectlntcat
College, Nelsonvtlle Ohto 45764 by November 15,
197'9 For .ntervtew appotn1men1 call Mrs WtUCin
son at 614 753 3591 extens1on 260 An Equal Op
porfuntty Employer

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

- - - --

Anti-discovery deception
NORTH

V.llh hi &lt;., J&lt;

I fl.. 'I!

• J 96
• Q !0 8
• Q 10 7 4 2
EAST
+A 64

•

•

~

KJ6 2

• "K!J'ID4'

10 n f Sp&lt;JdC'S
t nlt•s:-, h('

• 74

an t'&lt; C'entnc
gt' nlu ' South \.Ioiii li t thf' 10
n dc J. &lt;Jst h;p, md iL&lt;J!f' d pu~
' t' S ~ I Oil qf tht
J( t k1ng
of
dubs f{(' has a lso sh() \\ll up
"'1th
thC'
k 1ng J H k
of

r ·as t West

Dealer East
North

fast
Pass

South

t•

Pass

I "T

Pa~s

2+

Pass

2 NT

Pass

4¥

Pass

Pass

Pass

dtamonds

JS

~\!:d)~~).

Sonta~

M

today s hand
West leads the ace o f dta
monds and continues wath tht&gt;
three af te r f&lt;.... ast Signals With
the s1x East wms w1th the
JOCk over North s 10 and has

._., ~ , ·~ PI-

AC RO SS
1 Intole rant
person

VALAN

6 Walk on
11 Mean•ng

L

WHAT NOT T O ?0

NHEN 5.-!E WAt&gt;;~S
TO LEARN HOW -o

__1_

He knows that he ran walt

DRIVE

~H E

:::: AR'

Now arrange the wc led ener s 10
1orrn the surpt 1se C~ns .... er as sug
gested by the aoove cartoon

Answer
(Answers Monday)
Jumbles SC OUR LATCH BAFFLE EULOGY
A swer W 'l &lt;~ l Th e dr ugnnu l 1y coon wa s

HOLE

SALER

!Jumble Book No 12 cont1m1ng 110 puules 1s n• l•ble for S 1 75 po11p1ld
j lrom Jumble c/o lt'l1s 118WIP1per Bo ll4 Norwood N J 076-44 ln clude., o ur
~~~dru ~ liP code 1nd m1ke che&lt;:h p1y1ble to Newap1perbooh

Problem s &amp; Challenges 10
Act•on Newsmal&lt;er 13 Between
the L•nes 17
3()-.-(hns topher Closeup 3 Be tt er
Way 8 Treeho use Club 10 K ds
Ar e People Too 13
oo- Th1s I s The Life 3 J erry
Falwell B Urban League 10
Jt mmy Swaggart 17
3()-.- TV Chape l 3 E dd1 e SaundPrs
6 J erry Falwel l 10 The 8 1bl e
Answers 13, J1mmy Swaggart
15 Chnst for the W o r ld 17
OQ--Mormon Choir 3
Day o l
D1sco ve ry 8 Grace C.=~the dral 6
Chr~st ta r the World 13
Three
Stooges &amp; Friend s 17 Sesame St

20 33

8 JO--Oral Rober I "&gt; 3
Repa ss

Robison

B

10

R~;&gt;v

Leonard
Contac T 6
Jam es

Open

Brble

15

Lower Lighthouse 13
9 oo-Gospel S1 ng1ng Ju bilee 3 Oral
Roberts 10 Chr~ sl an Cen ter 8
Ernest Angley 15
R ev
J1 m
Frankltn 13 Lost •n Spac e 17
M1ster Rogers 20 33
9 30-Roberl Schul ler B E lee Co

33
It I s Wn t len 10 Gospe l
Outreach 13 Sesame St 10
10 oo-Human D•mens10n 3 K ds
are Peop l e Too 6
M ov1e
Halan
10 Jtmmy Svvaggart

13 Gospel Stngtng Jubi lee 15
Hazel 17 StudiO See 33
10 30- ReK Humbard 3

Ernest

Angley 8 Zoom 20 Movie The
Solid Gold Cadi llac " 17 Brg Blue
Marble 33
11 oo-R ex Hum bard 15
R ev
Henry Mahan 13 E lee Co 20
F""l rngs 33

11 J(}-Atlssue 3 Face the Nat 1on 6
Rev R A Wesl 13 Over Easy
20 Wi ld , Wild World ol An imals
33
12 GO-Meet lhe Press 3 15 Issues &amp;
Answers 6 13 Ohio Journal 20
Movie Home on !he ~ange 33
12 JO-Sonny Randle Fuotball 3
Ohio

Un• versl ty

c: oofbn II

Hlghllghls 6. NFL Today B
Evangellsttc Outreach 1J, Mov1e
'From the Terrace" 17
All
Creatures Great &amp; Small 20
00-NFL Footbal l 3, 15 Ame rrca s
Black Forum 6 NFL F oot ball B
Face the Natlon 10
Frank
Clgnetll
Football 13
Movr e
' Three Sisters • )3
1 »-College Football '79 6 13 Th e
Issue 10, Here lo Make M usic 20
1 55-N F \:, Funnies 10

') DO-Com m un1qu e6 NF L F oot btt l l
10 M ario &amp; the Mag1 c M ov1e
Mach1ne lJ
7 3o--- Mov•e
The Last Child
6
Battle of the Planet s lJ Hoc k ng
Valley Bluegras s 20
3 00~ Tn Stat e Today &amp; Tomorrow
13 Poldark 20 Pa ul Robeson 33
J 30 ~ Mo vte The Slender Thread
13
Mov 1e
Mdn ~ Fc v or 1te
Sport? 17
-l 00
NFL Footba ll 3 15
Mov1 f:
Th1 ef of Sogh da d 6 On e to
O ne 8 Con!umer Sur v 1v a l K 1! 10
&lt;1 .)(}-..- Wall St ree t W eek ?0
S oo--C B5 L1 brary B Vo yage to th e
Bottom of the Sea 10 E Icc Co
70 N ova JJ
5 JO---- In Search Of 6
61 s1 o f

at Sy mphony 33
3()-...- New Kmd ot F dmily 6 13
O nce Upon A Cld S!. IC 20
8 00-TV Gu1de th e l•r st 25 Year s
J 15 Mork &amp; M •ndy 6 I J Ar ch1e
Bunk er s Pla c e 8 10
Con
n ee li on s JO 33
Thoma s A

Ed rson 17
Assoc1a tes 6 13 One Day At A
T me, 8 10 Mov•e
Stop Look 1
and Laugh• 17
9 OO--Mov1e MMc 1ano 6 13 Al1ce
B 10, Master p• ece Theatre 2'0 33
9 3o- Jetfersons 8 10
10 00-Pnme T1me 3 15
Trapper
J ohn 8 10 Comeback 17 Mo vie
8 30

Mrs

W rggs ol

I he

Cabbage

catch 20 F1nng L 1ne JJ
10 JO- Ruff House 17 11 OQ- NPWS
3 6 8 10 13 15 Open Up 17 Wall

Street Week 33
11 15---ABC New s 6
PMA Pu lse 15

CB~

News 10

11 2o-Brlan Burke
Football 10
11 3~Mmne The Horn Blow s

al Mtdn1ghl' 3 Mov1e

The Ra1n

P eopl e
15 My Partner the
Ghost 6
Beatles F or ev er 8
Mo vn~
Ed•son the Man
10

PTL Club 13

Money

News &amp;

V1ews 33
12 30- Comeback 8 1 00 - Mov •e
Boy on a Dolphin
17
3oABC News 13 NP ws 15
J 05- Mo v u~ ' Hn r ,.. v Al ~ r lo: &amp; •h e

32 Ou tf I
33 Fon clle

34 Roma n road
35 Small rug s
38
40
4l
42
43

Ruler
Knog ht
C hou "¥01Ce

Danng
H1gh moun
ta 1n

45 Less cooked
46 Army abbr
4 7 Saucy

T•ger 1/ 5 Jo-Love Amer ca n
St yi P I 7

MONDAY OCTOBER 22,1979
5 45-- Farm Report 13 5 S(}-PTL
Club 13
6 00- 7110 Club 6 PTL Cl ub IS 700
Cl ub 8 Ht:-allh F1eld 10 L15len
17 6 l.s-Athletes 17
6 Jo-For Our T1mes 10 News 17
6 4.&gt;-----Mornmg Report J 6 50Good Mornt ng We st V~rg1n1a 13
6 55-- News I 3
7 lXI- Today 3 15
Good Mor n mg
A m ertca 6 13 Monday Morntng
8 Batman 10 Three Stooges
Ld tl e Ras cal s 17

Weather 33
7 30Fam lly Affa1r lO Sesame St 33

15 - A M

Groucho 20
6 00 ABC News 6

New 'S 8 10 The
Long Se ar ch 33 Fran Cur c 1
Foo tball 13
Wr es 11 ng 1'
Sesllme St 20
6 JQ--A BC Nevw s 13 New s 6 Devil &amp;
Dan 1el Mouse 8 C 8 1) N ews 10
OO - D1 sn ey s W o nd e rf u l Wor l d
J 15 Ou1 of lhe B lue tJ 13 60
Minutes 8 10 Bes t of Donny &amp;
Marte 17 F eellnq s /0 E ven1 nQ

1abbr 1
29 Poker
st akes

36 Waterw ays

Sunday and Monday"s TV Log
SUNDAY , OCTOBER 21 1979
5 3()-.- A G USA 17 6 DO-Amer can

18 Boredom
19 Pa ss ag eway
20 Wtthout end
2 1 Legume
23 Holes
24 Encoun
1ered
26 Deterg en t
27 RupePs

30 Pter
3 1 As an nver

A

Route 160
Terms of sale are 10 per
ce nt of the purchase pr .ce
tn C6Sh or cert1fled check at
the t1me of sa l£1 balanc e
w1thm three bus1ness days
followtng the sa le and pr.or
to possess1on Proper ty ts
bemg sold as •s
For 1nformat1on call Bill
Oxley 614 446 0603

OCI 19 21 22 26
Profess1onal Serv1ces

Home Servtces Worker to work wtth de-welop
mentally d1sabled persons through placement 1n
worker s home Home serv1ces work en Will be
resc5onstble tor provldtng tratntng, soctal serv1ces,
and home care for adults or chtldren Room and
Board Rate and Salary wtll be pa1d
Room •nd BOCIIrd tS SS SO per d~Y'
Salary Ranges from 13,01610$8,000

HILLCREST

48 Nerve ne t
w o rk

49 Slink
51 Average
52 Spanr sh
art1cle

de11y
65 French art 1

127 CubiC

c te
66 Engrossed

129
131
t 32
133
134
136
137
138
139
140

67 S ub stan ce
69 FaC ti On S
7 1 Th e sun
73 An swer
7 4 Km d of
ch eese

76 Choose
79 G~r I s n ame
81 We•ght ot
lnd 1a

82 -

a nd pop

84 Btnd aga1n
85
87
90
92
93
95
97

Mod els
Promontory

Threves
Cargo unit
M ore and
Endu red
Opera by
Ve rd
98 Negat1ve
pref1x

99 Patd (a bbr 1
101 St ngmg
VOICe

t03
104
10 5
108
110

K1nd
Key
Loc k of ha~r
Edge
Became so l
emn
t1 2Carry
113 Also

.

114 Tellunum
symbol

meter s

\0

Nul lify
R1pped
Unruly cn 1ld
Moray

23 -

Hurned

28 St r1 c ter

Blood

30 Spar

and pan s

25 G u1d 0 s h1g h
no1e

27 Lel go

Pret ense
Encom1u m

3 1 Ivy Leag ue

Clencal deg

33 Thrck soup
35 Brand
36 Prgeon

S tate flower

o f Utah
t4 1 Gtrl

142
143
I 44
146
148
149

22 G1ve a ng ht

s name

Lean·to
Sk1ps over

Declared
Fact
Get up
Foretell

150 Growmg o ut
of
15 1Turl
DOWN
1 K1tchen
utens11
2 Internal
3 Afncan

un1ve r s1t y

name

44 Peels
4 7 S tu dy
4 8 Renova te s
49 S •de d 1s h
50 Mtl1t a r y

caps
54 Oc cur
55 Ouote

man

96 Sta mp o l
ap proval

98 Metal
99 Ir on ed

109 G1rl s name
111 Turnc oat

112 Neap or ebb
113 M o u n ta.n
Lake
116 ConJunct•on
118 Partner

11 9 Heat up

59 Unrted

125 Peeper

60 Free t 1cke1

5 Sca le nate

6 1 Compass

126 Wears away
128 W1se o nes

pt

7 Ceremony

63 Erase

8 Worm

66 Sca lP note
67 D r

9 Man s n tc k
name
10 Reqwe

68 Thra sh
S lang

l 1 Querulou s

70 Colonm~
7 1 C apuch1n

11 5 Ve r ve

12 Gu1do s low

55 Pur ve yo r

118 Ouarryo

m onkey
7 2 Anc tent

5 7 Compa ss
pi
58 Lo ng l or
60 Ago

119 Alerl

note
13 Rema1nder
14 Co nf1rma
t 1on

15 W1ld ass o f

77 Unto n org

6 1 Yellow

123 Metal

oc he r
62 Warm

124 CushiOns
125 Frwt cake

64 Teutonr c

126 T1me penod

lnd•a

16 Knock
17 Thalltum
symbol
2 1 Shawl

73 Depend s on
75 Movable
78 Number
80 Dray

83 Ancte nt Per
s1an

86 Span1sh t1tle

130 De1ty
131 Su b)ect
132 Happmess
135 G1r l

s name

t 37C tose
138 Lambs pen
name
14 0 S teamer
(abbr 1
14 2 A 5 wr1t1en

Mu &gt;
14 3 Sm
144 Ab ove
14 5 For exam

pte Abbr

CENTENARY WOOOS Pet
Groomt ng
Fa c tllt es
Profess1onal servtces of
fered All breeds, all styles
Cal l 4.46 0231

HIL LCREST

KENNEL

Boardmg an breeds clea n
1ndoor outdoor
fa cd111eS

Also

AKC

Reg

Dober

USED FURNITURE
ELECTRIC rang e wood
d1nnette &amp; hutch m ef a l
dmnetre cha•r color T V
couch Corb tn &amp; Snyde r
Furn.rure 446 1171
TRU CK TOP f o r I arge Wide
bed P• Ckup W ell •nsulated
&amp; pane ll ed Ca ll 388 9909

ONE

HOSPITA L

Bed

2

months Old Call 446 4594
VAR I ETY of Appl es and
Ke nnebec potatoes Call
256 6683
WH EEL CHAIR
Lik e
new ad1ustabl e l egs John
Ve •th Cheshire Cal l 367
7433

2

REGISTERED

POlled

He r ford calves, 6 mos old
B o ttl e gas heater 1•11 yrs
Old Sea rs Auto washer
exc cond , Show saddle
silver plated, sta1n 1ess st t
chmg ei(C c ond call 367

7727

mans Ca l1.4.46 7795

MUST SELL
AKC Br ttany Span1els
Champ1on b loodline shots
wormed
dew
c 1aws
removed $60 Call675 1379

GREG
TRAINING

YOUNG
STABLES

steel

Now all

c lear span budd1ng

.ulx72x 14

F0 B

$5 995

Large door tn c luded Also
.ulx48x 14 $4 595
F0 B

Call Ooc , collect a! 6U 237
2677
2 repossessed
va cc um
c leaner w1th new guaran
tee substant16l savmg and
low monthly payments

Horses boarded
broke
framed &amp; cond1f1oned A c
cessab le 1ocat1on Junclton
ot 7 &amp; St Rt 35 Gallrpolls
OH Call JO• 67 5 2575 A•k
tor G reg or Martlyn or
leave me!lsage will return
c al l

ca l 1675 6066

BLA C K POOOLE puppy
Call 675 2296

FOR SALE Gravely Trac
tor wtth 30 1n mower Runs

HOOF HOLLOW

"i

and W es tern Saddles and
harness
Horses
a nd
pon1es Ruth Reeves 614
698 3290
Sordtng and
R 1d1ng Lessons and Horse
Care products
Western

bools
Children s
Adults $29 00

S15 50

EAR co rn at Carl W•nters
RIO Grande 245 5115

Cond $475 Cal\44&lt;1 0515

BE

SOLD

FOR SA LE
Furn ture
d1shes and etc Anttque
bed 153 Garf•eld A'¥e Sun
day Mon Tues Call 446

2'126
FOR SA L E

Brand new

Capta tns bed

wh•te

call

&amp;

CHINA TO

BE

SOLD

BOTH

bol

CARNIVAL ITEMS TO BE SOLD ON SUNDAY

2

merry go round horses (1 w glass eyes) , fancy
wOOden hand pamted oame wheels , penny strength
testtng machmes asst game &amp; Novelfles used •n
carn1va1s

ANT COIN OPERATED MACHINES TO BE SOLD
ON SUNDAY
3 extra n1 ce woden cased slot
machlnes (all tn worktng cond ) a rare l1nd (over
20 ptnball &amp; console model elec coin operated game
machns around 1930 penod some were made by J

Square-s 3 1S

Andy

H Kenney &amp; Co ond Bally Mfg Co
MlSC OLD tTEMS ETC TO BE SOLD BOTH
DAYS Asst oil lamps, some stemmed &amp; some

Gr1fftth 6 Whew 8 10
10 55-CBS News 8 House Ca ll 10
11 oo-H1gh Roller s 3 l.S Lave rne &amp;

ftnoer , m•n•ature oil lamps sthterwllre several
woven baskets Coke trays brass bu ckets &amp; sp•t
toons, beet s1gns elec tra•n coffee onnders a lot
stone 1ars. 1ugs crocks etc (s.ome s1gned 10 blue )
model T Ford lamps lot hand hllmmered copper
Items
R R
1tems ,
stoneware p1t c hen
sponoeware old store oil lamp w pa1nted fount &amp;
milk glass shade unusua l te~ble tamp w molded
glass base &amp; shade both hand patnted, slag glass
tamps 10 asst brass 11ems lot p1tcher bowl sets
quad s•lver plate lo pOrcelatn leopard &amp; other
f gur lnes b1sque statues &amp; t1gunnes table tam ps
s~ereosc~ w ce rds a ndmany other m•sc 1tem~
not listed ThiS 1S only a part1al hs1mg of tt11 sla rge 2
day sale of extra htQh qualify merchandise Plan
now to attend Sale hel d u11n or sh1ne •n the new
large auction house at the Btl I Janes Farms tn Pen
ns-wllle, OhiO

Shrrley 6 13 Prrce Is R1gh t 8 10
Elec Co 20
1 1 JO- Wheel of Fortune 3 15
Family Feud 6 13 Sesame St

11 55--News 17

n

00- Newscenter
3
N e ws
6 8 10 13 Mmdreaders 1S Love
American Stvle 17
12 30----Ryan 's Hope 6 13 Search for

Tomorrow 8 10 Health Field 15
Movie The Hoodlum Priest' 17
E lec Co 33
lXI- Days of Our L1ves 3 15 All My
Children 6 13
Young &amp; the
Restless 8.10
3()-As The World Turns 6 10.
2 00-Doctors 3, 15, One Life to
Live 6,1 3 2 2&gt;-News 17
2 3()-Anolher World 3 15 Guiding
L1ghl B. 10, G1gglesnorl Hoiet 17
3 00-General Hospital 6 13 I Love
L ucy 17 Prisoner 20 Music 33

CARS 1977 Dodge Van w air 1977 Ford LTO ,
loaded 1975 Cadrll•c • dr 5edan TO BE SOL D
SUNDAY
Self contarned camper spa ce ava il abl e Lunch on
prem1ses Plenty park•ng
Terms-&lt;•sh or Check w-9Qsltlve ID each day of
pie Not responSible for acc•dents
81ll J•nes 1n charge ot .ale
Aucttoneers - Blll Janes Randy Newsom
&amp; Anoci1tn - Phone I 61~ SS 7 3411

3 30--()ne Day At A T1me 8 ' Jokers
Wdd 10 Fllntstones 17 Foot
steps J3

'

I

Spl.t

seasoned oak &amp;. h•c kory
c ross t 1e ends Ca l l 446 4534
or 446 2329

EMERGENCY POWER
ALTERNATORS Why no!
own

the

best

WIN

POWER Cal \ 5!3 7882589
BEAUTY

EQUIPMENT
Van1ty &amp; bowl 2

tor sa le
hydral1 r cha1rs
dryer 1 P1bbs
lig ht new 40 gal
water tank
1
"¥an.ty &amp;. bowl
m rror
10 IT
garage door Ca ll

1 ha1r
1ntra red
elec hot
bathroom
san 1f1 zer
wooden
446 7476

- - - -- - - 40 LB Box ot west V~rg1n1a
Chunks low ash low sulfur
Foster coal co 446 2783

ALL TYPE S of bu ld 1ng
maferlal s
block
br 1ck
se wer p1pes. w 1ndows. lm
tel s etc Claude W1nters
Rto Grande 0 Phone 245
5121 afler 5pm

PENO L ETON REBUILT
BATTERY $20 plus lax
and old baftery We buy old
battenes Repa1r baner~es

Ca \1388 8596
GOOO

USED

AP

PLIANCES
Washe rs
dryers
r efr1dg er at o r s
range"&gt;
Skagg"&gt;
Ap
pl•ance s 191 8 Eastern Av
ce 446 7398
SUZUK I of Ja ckson has a
new suz uk 1 for you So m e
78 s stilt a"¥ a li abl e Clean
trade s wanted Pa r t s ser
v•ce acces sones
378 E Mamt St J&lt;tckson

OH

t&lt;ACH AL L
VERA HEALTH
COSMETICS
&amp;

Products
All organ1 c
prot
v1t
herbs
Aloe
(f rom healmg burn cac tus
plant J Full line cometKs
medKmes ( Ftrst a1d ar
fhr1t 1s lot on &amp; 1u1 ce) Call
Ruth Allison Call «6 4336

GAS

HEATER

Large

enough
to heaf house
trailer $50 Call 367 710 1

rn
WESTINGHOU SE
E lectr1 c rangR
Harvest
gold S200 Call 245 5832

MF 40 TRACTOR Ford 5
ft bush hog and 6 ft
scraper blade 750 boom
pole Sub so ll er Cal 256

FRANKLIN

WOOD

bur

nrng stove good cond S100
Also lounge c ha~r &amp; bar
stools 256 6413

2
FRIGIDAIRE
e le c
dry ers one elec range 30
all wh1te Call -446 4919

CAR AM FM rad10 and
tape player Reg S99 50
Our pr1 ce S59 50 Only 5
left Tawney Jewelers 4A6

197 3 NEW IDEA 2 row
ptcker sheller w th husk•ng
bed un1t 91 lnlernattonal
co mb•ne w•th 10 ft gra•n
bed Both 1n good cond
Oav d Graham 446 742A or

446 1148

Lost and Found
FOUND Old male d09 ap
parently Hound &amp; Beagle
cross Ca ll 2-tS 5094
LOST
Whlfe cu rly ha•r
part Pood le 6 to 6 months
old Lost In area of Th1rd
and Locust Call 446 0320 or

WASHER

8.

dryer

nafural gas stove $75

SISO

PORTABLE

BLDG All s•zes 6x10 to
12x40 See at 123 1 1 P•ne St
446 2783 or 3 houses below
Bowl •ng Alley on Rt 7 446

1279
L UMP stok er &amp; egg coal
446 l.ul8

ECHO

CHAIN

79

HONDA

MOTOR

CYCLE 6 cyl 2 000 miles
excelle nt
co nd1t 1o n
Jackson 286 6689 after 4

44&lt;19.uJ

LEAVING

TOWN

LOST
Oct
16
1n
Burlingham aJ"ea, German
Poltce dog, black and 1tan
wtth flea collar, male, an
swers to Poncho Humane

SOCtety, 992 6260
........,,001.21

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bermce Bede Osol

S25, 2 to 300 paperback

v,

books. exc con d
pn ce
electrtc grass tnmmers
lono handle, works good
$20 gasoline weed tnm
mer, works good $120
rear end rota till er for 816
Rtd1ng
Graveley
rear
PTO exc cond $.490 rab
b1ts c ages $J 00 $4 00 call

367 7217

s

,33 $60 S70

Oct-Z1,tm
Thll comllliJ year shows more
promlte than you may have had
for some lime In offonng ways to
better your financial statui Sev
eral lucky brBHkl will CQmtl yoor
WO)

LIBRA ( \lopl 23-0el :D) Some
thmg quite fortunate that would
retate to your m&amp;l~trlal atafus
could be t'lappenlng for you
today unbeknown to you II
mtght have to do wtth your
car~~er Fmd out mOfa ol what
lieS ahead for you 1n tt\8 year 101
IOWinQ your birthday by sendmg
for .,.our copy of Aatro-Graph
lette• Ua11 S I lor 88CtJ to Astra
Grapn Box 489 Rad1o City
Statton N Y 100 19 Be sure 1o
specify btrth date
SCOIIPIO (0.1 :14-No• 22)
.u.Jme a more active rote and
exerCise the neoeuary Initiative
when dealing wtth others You
cou l d pull otr aomethmg
extremely rtiWardlng Now 11 !he
hme 10 pusn

SA Om AIUUI (Ito'&lt; 23-0.C 21 I
Your lnatlncta should be leUlng
you today just how you can gen
!ly guide things so ttwJ acales are
lipped sllghll\' In your favor
Don't Ignore them
CURlCOIIH (Doc 22.Jen It)
tnnuences that have an effect

upon moetlno and making

new

trlenda are presently under Ideal
aspec1a Mutual beneflla wtll
resul1
•OUARIUI (Jon. »-Fill&gt; It)
You are held In h!Qh esteem by
others today becllute ol some
thmg you are doing Your behav
tor wilt bnng about reward1ng
events

PISCES (Fill&gt; 20-MMch 20)
Conduct all your affairs 10 eccord
wtth your hiOhM1 Ideals and
you 11 halfe everybody Jumping
on your bllrldwagon In lull support today
ARII!I (llhrch 21-Aprilll) Jo1nt
lnter"tt are your area ot great
est prorniM today Concentrate
on 11tuallona where you and
another share aqually tn a co11ec
11\le ettort
T AURU8

IAJWtl

20-MeJ

20)

Har

monloua conditions should pr&amp;vatl today In your over all r~a
11011ahtps wrtt'l others Fnencts will

and

S\50, $160

S175 . and S225

L,amps from S18 to $50 5
pc d1nettes f rom $69 to

S325

Wood table and 4
c ha~rs
S23S Table two

leaves
6 cha1rs
(h igh
S400
Hutc hes
ba cked)
S300 and $350 maple or
p1ne
fln• sh
Bedroom

2183

and S50 Desks S38
USED
Ranges
refr1dgeraton
dressers
TV s
stereo
headboards and beds
3 miles out Bula\ldl e Rd
Open 9am to 8pm Man
thru Fn 9am to 5pm Sat

..00322
HEAT A LA TOR Un1t w•th
screen , grate XI degree of

lsel used 3 yrs
4.46 7828 after S

$175 Cal l

load Ca ll 388 8246
FIREWOOD for sale

Cal l

""6 1437

GOOD

YELLOW

corn

ANTIQUE

VICTORIAN

s1de cha1r
case bed
blue tweed
rubber pad

marble book
full s•ze 9x 12
rug w fh new
redwood p•cn. c

table Ca ll985 3605

BOBCAT Loade-r
0 C
$3500 Jotln Deer Dozer
S6500 D•tch W1tc h tren
che r $1200 Call 614 457

F IREW OOO 247 3661
HlOE A BED
needs
upholstf&gt;rmg S20 992 2683
130 8 Powell
51
M•d
dteport

U SED

T O PPER

$40

at 400 L a51ey 51
Pomeroy OH

MAVTAG

H &amp; N Day old or started
leg horn ou I lets both floor
or cage grown available
Poul try
Houstng
and
Automat on
Modern
Poultry
3CXI W
M a •n
Pomeroy Phone 992 2164

BEMCO
SPECIAL BUY
Queen S1ze
8eddmg Sets

HALF PRICE
Reg Pnce '-499 00

SALE
PRICE

'249.00

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
FURNITURE
'9H Second A venue
Galhpolts, Oh•o
4S631
Phone414 4461111

SOCially Membllra ot the oppoSite HM wtt1 find yoo etPKially
charming lnCI appealing

LEO (Julr 11-A~~g. 12) You•
tnsttncll to cheflah other I wnll be
Wiry evtdent today You 11 be at
.,.our beat 1f you ha...e ~ 10
love tuu over and IPO'I a little
YIIIQO (A.. D-lepl U) Tl&gt;e
answers or solutions w1 1i be
dumped k'IIO your lap reo•rdlnQ
somethk\g you ve t-een ponoet
•no Slid! to toda'j s dects1ons
tt'le'y 11 bml!J yeu tuck
I H(W Sf' U •fA f .. HJU&gt;AISf

~ 55 "1

CID ER

HONE Y
F 1f zp atn ck Or
c hard
Stdl e Route 68q
Phone Wilkesvil le
669

wh1te and ye llow Rt 2
RaCine R W Lew1s 84J

2432
APPL ES
ROME Beauty
apples ar $4 per bu B es t tor
appl e butter Call 669 J78'i
F•tzpatn c k Or ct1ard
SR

689

HAMMOND BODY SHOP,
Sand
and
Reasonabl e rates

Pa•nt
Ph 245

HOTPOINT

STR UCT tON CO All types
of s d1ng r emode l1 ng con
c rete
roofing
gutter
p1umb1ng
you nam e •t
F ree est1mates to local
area Call 4.46 7613

no

leak

JOHN SO N Water Del 1very
Call 4.46 100.4 any lime

F d1 d1rt top so ! co mplete
dmer and backhoe work
tooter and b lock tay1ng

POMEROY
LANDMARK
GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS

Call

446 753 4

$15000

S125 00
$100 ()()
Remington 34
150 Auto
$125 00
Homeltte
XK 12 Homehte $115 00
KL400 Homehte noo oo
Remmgton
Yardmaster
$75 00
Remtn9fon
Super 754
Sears

SIOO 00
$10000

)(L Homeh1e

'7S 00

tt
coppenone
Refnger1tor, hke new
~250
1 New Electnc Furnace
c1e1rance prtcecl
1 new Fuel Ott Furnace,
clear1nce priced
Coldspot
Retngerato,-

9

n _

~

Ph

Fa1nes

0 dell) Oak Hill

and

OH Call

collect 446 7569

AND

GLASS

Cha1n lmk fence
Free
es t •mates Call 245 9113
Ken Soles, Gallipoli S

sui master foam tnsulatton
New homes old homes
stru ctures
co m mere 1al
For t ree est •mates c all «6

1971
PAINTING ReSidenttal •n
ter1or and extenor barn
and mob1le home roofs
F ree est•mates 15 yr ex p
Call367 778.4or 367 7160
JIM MARCUM rooftng
spout1 ng and s• d •ng 30
years
e:JCpenence
Free
est 1mates
Rem o deling
Call 386 9657

------·--

LIMESTONE
gravel
mason sand top so I Ph

388 9877

1163
Second
Ave
Galllpol•s 4.467833 or 446

1833
ROBERTS

BROTHERS

GARAGE 24 hr wrecker
serv1ce All types of repa1r

Upper Rl

7 Call .UO 2.W5

days and 446 4792 n1ghts

REESE

TRENCH I NG

D•tc hes 8 1nches w•de to 5
ft
deep
sept•c
tanks
dramage lmes
conc rete

work Ca\1367 7560

JIM S

Call 256

MURREL

FOLDEN Dozer work 446

9835

c rete and gen home ma1n
tenance Call 675 5774 and
e vemngs 675 1298

HA LLEY S

MOBILE

Weld1ng Servtce 15 years
expenence Call 446 2.459

LIMESTONE

Lump &amp;

stoker coal sand, gravel
Galllpol15 Pt Pleasant 25
mile radiUS Call 367 7101
I NG Pamttng s1de
pat1o eve spout1ng
e st mates
Oav•d
&amp; Robert M c Gu~re

ca t!
AAA

Sephc tank
res 1dent1al &amp;
c•al e•ectnc
v 1ce. chemaul

serv1ce.
commer
eel ser
to1leh

HOME
IMPROVEMEfm
Storm
Wt ndo ws.
Storm
Doors .
Replacemenl
Wtndows.
PallO
Covers,

Alum1num

Sidtn.!J
Acce.sones

and

EXCAVATORS

256 19'21
In

BEST

Ct ea n•ng
Steamway

Call

Cal l

Carpet
Pauls

C &amp; W CONTRACTORS
All types nome 1m provements - Roofmg
gutters- spouts - con.
cre1e work Ph 367 0427
367 0194 367 o141 Free
esflmares

Call

Bill'S
44&amp;2642

379 2581

Bac khoe
dozer ,
dump
tru ck Licensed to 1nstalt
sept1 c systems No 10b too
b19 or too small For •n
tormat1on ca ll 446 8565 or

FOR

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE

Frank Rose con;t Co ~
Remodeling ,
repatr,
alt
new constructton
tv pes Free eshmates.
work
f u II Y'
a II
~uaranteed
Res1den
rat , commerc1al
tn
dustnat &amp; mantn~ elec
tncal work MSH Cert
446-4627

367-t527

M c CORMICK
B.
STILLMAN
for
remodeling Rootmg con

ROOF
walk
tree
Boggs

surance clatm repa1rs. &amp;
electncal wtnng
Free Est1mates

446 3407 or 367 -1!389

DEPENDABLE

ELMER

D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
All types home om
provements and room
Also
tn
addtt1ons

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We sell 11r1yfhtng for
anybody •f our Auctton
Barn or tn your home For
tnlorma11on and ptckup
servtce call 1St 19117
iile Every Silfuni•y
NIQhtat 7p m

REESE
TRENCHIPfG &amp;
BACKHOE SERVICE
Butld1ng
Contracftng
concrete Floors
Footers, 01fches
8" w , S' Deep
Septtc Tanks &amp;

Leach Bed
Installed
Tel 367 7560

614446

2096

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Ktnne1h Swa1n Auct
COf"ne-r Thtrd &amp; Olt.Jf

C &amp; R PAINT CENTER a!
41
court St
Ben1am1n
Moore pamts profeSSIOnal
pa.nt ers c ustom tram1ng ,
glass serv•ce expert saw
sharpen ng
o ver
100
wallc ove rtnQ
sem pl e
books
STUCCO
plaster~ng
plaster repa•r
te)(ture
cedmgs
lree est tmates

Call 256 1182

KOTAL\C
LANDSCAPING
Res•dent1al &amp;
Com
merctal Tree &amp; stlrubs
tnstalled, des•gn.ng &amp;
p1an1tng
shrubbery
tnmmmg, lawn need
control programs
446 3100

MOBIL£ HOME
SERVICE
Anchonng. Sktrttng,
Awntngs,
Pa tio
Covers.
Carports,
Roof Pa1n1. Set·up
and Re-levehng Call

BILl'S
446-2642

41 State 51
GallipOliS Oh•o

STOVE furnace and ch•m
ney nsulat•on Call 446

3407
KEN MANNON MOBI L E
WELD ING Serv1ce
Cut
11ng braZing ar c we ld1ng
Ca ll 256 9302olter 5 30

• ONI PftCI

• NO LIAK

SE WING

MACHINE

vacuum sweeper repa1rs
Part !. 1n stock 2-t hour ser
v1ce
Al l
work
un
cond1t1onaly guaranteed
Reasonable pn ce New and
used sewmg mac hmes for

sate Call ""6 1488 Ask for

CONTINUOUS

OuniiiNO

Oty n
SIS 00

MAIN ST
Jick W C11rsey

.-.....

BOGGS
EXTERMINATING CO

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

388 8797 or 388 81100

McCulloch Pro

Mac ss
McCulloch
MaslO

0445 Call after 4 30

LUCAS S waler

E 8. R Tr ee Serv ce Pan
!1ng and e)l( cavat ng
Cal

Jack W Carsey
Mgr

Lennox Heat1ng and air
cond t1omng Rapco Foam
.nsu1at1on 446 8515 or 446

THEISS INSULATION In
HOUSE AND ROOF Pa1n
f ng Free esf1mates Ca l l
446 1562 aft er 6pm

373 6057

POMEROY
LANDMARK

2642

DENNEY

CHIMNE YS cleaned and
repa,red Stoves 1nsatalled
Ca ll the Ch1mney Sw eep

HeadQuarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Servtce

BI L LS MOBILE HOMES
and Home Improvements
Free est 1mates Call 446

gut

Rl I Albany69B 8205

JERRY

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

7785

(formerly
Cont1nuous
renng

gravel and

RUSS AND MAX
ELL IOTT

JIM S SIDING AND CO N

delivery
anyt1me

and

LIMESTONE

sand All s•zes At R• chards
and Son, Uppe,- R1ver Rd ,
Gall1poi1S Oh10 Call «6

9371 or 379 2306

MCNEAL
CO NTRACTIN G
379 2258

WATER WE L L Ordlmg
and c le anmg Pumps sold
dnd 1nstalled Call W T
G rant 4-46 8508

M"r

.J. 2111

a tource ol r"l pteuure
D E - (MoJ 21__,_ 201 TUkl

CAHCI~ ( , _ 2f.Joly 22) Thot
IS your day to sparkle and thine

Insulated ow1nvl
s1dmg
a1um 1num gutters and
spout s storm doors and
wmdows Free est1mates
Ph 367 0209 day or n•ght

ADVANCED SEA M LESS
GUT T E R CO

WRINGER

w asher for sa le Good con
dtt1on $50 Phone 992 51 47

be

HOME SALE

day

APPLES

water delivery
9368 anyt1me

1 Good

.,.ou set your ha~ 1o wil1turn ou1
to be labors of lOve and work out
qu«e u.Utlactonty Be pwduc
trve and you n have a wonnWfllle

al terna for s own th e best

buy WINPOWER Ca ll 513
788 2589

GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT

1 excellent Umco ,, cu

FIREWOOD
haul your
own S20 to $25 P1 c k up

3139

POWER

serv1ces Offered

surles $175 $275 (Whrle)
$325 ( pecan ) $350 lo•kl
Bassett Oak $5S&lt;l Bassett
Cherry \.625
Bunk. bed
com plete w1th mattresses
S175 S2.50 $275 Capta1n s
beds $250 co mplete Baby
beds S75 Mattresses or
box spnnos full or twtn
SSO
f1rm , S60 and S70
Queen sets, s 17 s 4 dr
chest S-42 5 dr chests $.19
Bed frames , S20
En
terta1nment ce nters $.40

EME RGE NCY

sale
Will

~· Phone "2 2111

S85

SOfabed and chatr S150
Htde a bed
S225
queen
Stle $325 Recliners $125

FIREWOOD FOR
N ow ta~1ng orders
del ve r 742 2056

Serv1ces Offered

Serv1ces Offered

HOU SE COAL
lump or
stoke r will deliver 742

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sola
cha1r
r ocker
of
tom an 3 tables, $500 Sot a
cha ir and loveseat S275
Sofas and c ho~r s prt c ed
from S275 to $550 Tables

POT ATOES

Proff 11f farm Por
tland O H S8 a hundred and
S5 a hundred

One

Kenmore
wash1ng
mach•ne less than a month
o ld S200
1 cha1 n saw
P1oneer used very l 1ttl e
125 1 lawn mower used
one sum m er $50 1 des~
SO IIdWOOd $200 117 Star
rra ft alum1num canoe
SJOO Ca ll 992 5301

lnq u~re

WIZARD Roto f 1ller exc
con d SUS Sear s Power
Chat n Saw needs rep a r

W I NTER

c w

SAWS

hydraUl iC wood sp litters
sa w cha1n, bars and al l
wood c utling supp lies
Charles M c Kean Fa1rf1eld
Centenary Road 4-46 9442

256

1598

sand
g r ave l
ca lc 1um
c h lonoe
tertd•zer
dog
food and al l types of salt
E• cels1or Salt work s 1nc
E M a1n Sf Pom eroy 992
3891

SWEET POTA TOE S red

FIREWOOO Call 446 7380
ALOA
CARE

For Sale
COAL
LIMESTONE,

3765

286 4956

$2 50 bu 742 2359

16 15

BOTH

FIREWOOD

1443

446 9563
RISING STAR
Kennel
Boardmg Call 367 0292

FIREWOOD
see~soned
oak. ash and h1 ckory Ph
446 9442

40

Englrsh

DAYS LQ sef Ba"¥a rta n ch tna w blue flowers ban
ded 1n a nt gold . lo asst Haviland chtna part• a ! set
Norltake, set Crooksvtlle china caster sets glass
baske-s m1lk sat1n, ruby black amethyst pressed
&amp; cut, c arn1val depreSSIOn Br stol cran berrv old
Fenton . and other glass covered honeY' d•sh , c ake
stands soapstone lot stemmed glss He•sey &amp;.
He1sey btrds , mustac he c ups, sha11mg mugs ,
Weller pottery lot Cambr•dge ast hand blown
water p1tchers (some pam ted) , teq I eat, copper
lustre German Austrum Bavanan &amp; English
Moss Rose lot otd glass shades sta1ues &amp; t1gurnes
salt peppe,- collect1on ruby hand blown epergne!
w glass prtsms a QOOd ast ot c olorfu l T1ttany type
hang1ng shades etc

147 Art1 c le
14 8 S11ver sym -

17

20 33

S1amese H •malayan and
Per s•a n c ats One bla c k
femdle
Chow
p uppy
Hlm11ayans
one each
flame mate flame femal e
&amp; Blue female Red Chow
pupptes, com 1ng Oct 22nc1
Call 4-'6 384-' atfer 6 p m

FURNITURE TO

GLASSWARE

Beat the Clock 6 10

13

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow Chow dogs CFA

DAYS
Cherry Emptre chest w curly maple
drawers, cherry chest w lg gtass pulls , walnut
c:h~st w glove boxes walnut Emptre chest walnut
highboy , oak hall mirror w tlat rack round oaJ(,
table w _. turned legs, walnut marble top back bar
w mirror , V•cfortan night stand, plank bottom
ctllld s rocker , round oak table , oak hat box w 2
drawers , unusual oak cash regtster stl!nd w lots
drawers. • curvect glass ch1na cu pbOards (1 w
leaded top) , walnut wardrobe w drawers wicker
tea cart w glass top &amp; spoke wheels oak serpentne
dresser w mtrrors 2 bookcase secretanes P•ano
w stool, wa lnut V•ctonan love seat w matching
rocker &lt;oreen velvet) walnut V•ctonan love seat
(gold flowered velvet )
2 shaker rocke r s w
stenctled ba cks pressed back rockers se t 6 mat
ch •ung V•c t onan cha 1r s 3 mapl e shaker 5t c ha 1r s
.t tree standng what not she l ves J kll chen ca btnet s
w flour bms foot "&gt; fool s oak h 1gh boy are ";;e r w
m•rror, smok•ng stand
18 wooden ce cream
c ha~rs
metal tce cream cha~rs r ound oa k stand
told• no desk ceda ches ts knee h ole dc'3k dress1ng
tables odd st cha•rs walnut 'SI Ck. bed •ron beds
(some w brass ) lg asst small stands oak c ha• rs
wmg back c ha 1r w claw leet walnut love sea l
Mlsston oak rocker &amp; c ha1r M•S SJOn oak love sea 1
w cha•r V•ctonan marble top fabl e Duncan Phyft&gt;
coffee tabl e o ctogen a nd tab le
4 pc b londe
bedroom su1 te Emp~re Sideboard V r tor1 CW r or
ner cupboard glass top &amp; bO tt om so l1 d mahogany
h1gh boy chest desk w c law fee t
mahogany
StdebOard ove rstuff ed cha•r mahogany dropteat
tab le walnut platform rocker 3 pc bedroom su1te
walnut Side table
room
sect1ona1 book c a~
d1V1ders buffet V1 ctor1an rocker &amp; s1d e cha1r
mahogany bookcase hand carved Ch •ne s,.e c hest
ant English baby buggy be longed to Royalty
ctlerry corner cupbOard w g lass pane led top ere

bodtes

antelope s
4 Away
6 Scuts

ANTIQUE

use

56 Those bor ne

7220

For Sale

For Sale

GROOMING

Cal l Judy T ay 1or af 367

S1turday. Oct 27 &amp; Sunday Oct 28 starlmg each
d•v Jt 11 o 'clock AM on St Rt J77 , Pensv111e Otlto
tn Morgan County
Antique Furntture Glassware, Ctltna
T1ffany
Shades, Carn1val Items Manual &amp; Elec Slot &amp;
Game Milchmes Old Items Cars &amp; Efc
Take St Rt 60 south out of Zanes'ltlle to Me
Connelsvtlle - or take St R:t 60 nor1tl our ot Maner
ta to McConnelsvtlle, across rtver through Malta on
Sf Rt 78 west for 1 miles s1.ay lefdt al top of htll on
to St Rt 377 to Pennsville at the Btll Janes Farms
lC mtles norttleast of Athens , Ohto

04 M echan•ca l

122 Cyhn drtca l
124 Pr o cess 1o n

11 7 Flowe rs

shoe

Roa d 1abbr 1
Sur god

107 Lawmakmg

POODLE

For Sale

2DAYSALE

Re t atled

39 Batter
41 L•ma e g

NEL S
Board1ng and
groomtng
AKC Gordon
Se tters
E ngt, sh Cocker
Spa n.e l s Ca ll LU 41ql

PUBLIC AUCTION

Prgpens

home
37 Weath er
w o rd

53 Shade tree
54 AI t hiS place

120 Prepos1 t1on
121 W ooden

88
89
90
9I

10 0 Expanded
102 Etem •
10 4 Electr1 f1ed
partic les
105 C1vtl1n1ury
106 Warenouse

42 Man s n1 c k

2336

TWO BLUE lrck coon 9ogs
Alter 5 call992 5705

Mornmg Magazme 13
Mov1e
Gentlem en Marry Brunettes

Pyarm d

KE NNELS

Board1ng all breeds Clea n
1ndoor outdoor ta ctl•t•es
Also
AKC
reg st ered
Oobermans 614 -'.46 77q5

7~2

_..:_
P~
ets for Sa~l~e~­
BRIARPATCH
KEN

your

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Taylor 61&lt; 367 7220

H 30 Romper Room 17 9 00-Bob
Bra u n 3 B•g Valley 6 One Day
Af A T 1me 10
Porky Ptg &amp;
Fnends 8 Phil Donahue 13
L ucy Show 17
q 31)--.-Bob Newhart 8 Love of L1fe
10 G reen Acres 17
10 00-Card Sharks 3 15 Edge of

S20 000

for

Pets tor Sale

Wh1te Reports 10
8 00 - Cdp t
Kangaroo 8 10
Leave It To Beaver 17

10 30- Holl ywood

US

photographiC needs
Por
tra•t, commer c1a l and wed
dmg photooraphv Tawney
StudtOS _.2_. Second Ave

55 ~ Chuck

Nrgh ! 6

Oc
th e

prem1ses of Carter and
Evans, located on Sta t e

byHenri Arnoldand BobLee

rx:r:::r

R t 1\ rt· R I HJ Sf&lt; AS.&lt;; N

(Do you ha ve a quesl10n fat
th e exper ts 7 Wnte AsK the
Experts care o f rhrs newspa
per tnd1v1dual questrons w11/
be answered If acco mpamed
by s tamped
self addressed
envelopes The most m le res t
mg questions w111 be used m
th1s column ana w !l rece1ve
cop1es o f J A COBY M ODERN)

to try to fmd tY.O m ore tricks
He can assume tha t Sou th
holds f1v e spa de ~ s1x hea rts
a nd no m ort:- minoT sm t 'ards

8

1 30 PM , Saturday
1979
at
Iober 27

[ _WI LLTJc___.,-.....,

whe n hold rng t hrr~ ares
YPs but not often Wn h 4 3
~ 3 dtstnbuliOn and no 10
spot an ope ntng b1d IS ll kelv
to produce a loss

Wt are Jnde bted to Tert&gt;nC('
Rffse and VI( tor Mollo for

7

Max1dynee 300 eng1ne
12 000 pound front suspen
StOn, ~4,000 pound rear
suspenston, eng.ne brake
ftfth wheel wet l•ne k t
and
ell
sta ndard st
ta chme nt s
and
ar
cessor1es
at public auc tton sale at

SUNDAY PUZZLER

+-1

wrth

CHAMPION SIREO AK C

lou1or d1nary wo ds

ITJ
Ask tiM l!xperts
bi:TALl~~N
D
_ : . . ~",. '.",fJ,~"l

By Oswald Jacob•

7

R686ST 18927

regtsfered
German
Shepherd pupp1 es 5 weeks
old ready n 1 week $115

U'l!-&gt;t.:r ttmble lhese lour Jumble!';

A K"nsas r eader asks tf we
w ould e\\'r pass as deal er

6

secretary , In
Insurance
and Real Estate office
Pos•t•on open
Insurance
expenence helpful Apply
1n
person
onlv,
Leadmgham Agencv 512
second Ave Gall•pol!s, OH

367 · 0102

or&gt; e leT1 er 10 each squ a•e 10 lorm

Ht' hao,; pa ,sed as

d('a]N How l an he J.lso hold
th e a(e of ;,pa d('s'

Opentn~ le ad • A

aot:1 Alan

WANTED

frJt\l~ft ~'if ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

r

+K J~6!

West

HELP

WANTED:

NOilOlOS

TNrn&lt; t'
Hf t st. rPCo m
mt: nds Yo ha t ht. ca lls a n antt
d iSC OV('f\ pl.:n
.a-a It&gt; ads t h ~ kmg of clu bs
So u1h ruff , lf'a d'i d tru mp
to dumnn s n 1ne and lrads the

SOt;TH

Vulnerablt_•

SHEET
METAL
men
needed Good benet lis and
salary .u6 o4066or .446 2716

Contact MARIE HOBBS

What l an hl' do to help
S&lt;Ju th go wrong m casr Ywcst
holds th(' queen of sp.:Jdes as
wr ra n srt. he dot•s

+K 9 8 3

•

.uo 7026 before 8 p m

CALL

doo mt d

WEST
+ &lt;.172

+

Of SpddC :) lf1 J bO

f'

:-, u •' tha i 1f \\ {'s1 hold" th('
}ung ' f " P&lt;Hl t&gt;s South 1s

• 10,

A9 53
+A l 6 5

Call

(ll CORRECTIONS

Saturday, &lt;kt 10

+

sem• .nval•d
husband
Wed &amp; Sun Good s,alary

The center Dtrector •s the chtef employee of the
center Board and responsible tor the dav to dilly
operat1ons of the Center Fnnge benef1t package IS
comprehens.ve and compet1t1ve Salary negotiable
An eeo Afftrmattve Actton employer
send
resume to Juan1ta Atha, Personnel Adm1mstrator,
G J M commumty Mental Health Center Inc. 412
VInton Ptke , Galllpolts, OhiO 4S63f

INSTRUCTORS NEEDED BY JANUARY 2. 1980

83

to
help w•fe to take care of

1n the fields of psychology soc•al work psyChiatry,
or rel.ated mental health dtsetpllne, or eQuivalent
educat1on and u :penence , for a comprehenstve
mental health center funded under the mandates of
P L 94-63

Ht s

614 992 2104
Equal
portun ty Emp loye r

NOTICE OF SALE

WeStinghouse Cred1t Cor
porat1on will se ll
A F1at Al l iS mOde l 21C
crawler trac tor w1th en
closed POPS c ab he at er
And defJ"oster
sem1 u
blade tilt cylmder cou nter
werght, and al l standard a t
tacnmen1s
and
ac
cessorles, Ser tal Number
71A21186 mcludmg all ad
d•f•ons replacements and
subsrtuttons
1978 Ma ck truck tractor
model R686S T , Manufac
turer s Ser1al
Number

WOMAN

CENTER DIRECTOR Menial health profenlonal

Pomeroy OH 45769 Phone

s

RELIABLE

GALLIA·JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTli CENTER, INC.

veterans
Hosp•fal
Bo )(

Mulberry

needed

IMMEDIAT E Of)entng for
two full t1me sa lespeople
No expenence necesMry
on the 10b tre~mmg Must
have
completed
Real
Estate courses For con
f•denttal Interviews call

0102

Sales Clerk

HELP

part t1me and full ftme
general offtce work Must
be able to type and te~ke
shorthand Send referen
ces
t ra101ng
and ex
per 1ence to Bol( 729 L c o
t he
De~lly
Sent•ne l
Pomeroy OH ~5769

v•ces wo,-ker to work w 1th
oevtHopmentally disabled
persons through pla cement
1n worker s home Home
servt c es workers wil l be
respons•ble for provtdtng
tra tn 1ng soctal serv •c es
andhome care tor adults or
children Room and bOard
ra te and salary w 1ll be
pa•d Room and board 1S
1SS 50 per day
Sal My
ranges from $3016 to $8 000
Conta c t Mane Hobbs 367

to

Memor~a l

749

x

WANTED

Help Wanted

Help wanted

Help wan._,_,
ted
=--

LADY TO SHARE home

SHE E I
ME TA L
men
neea ed Good benet .rs and
~ alary 4.d6 406i:lor 446 2716

IN MEMORY of our won
aerful Dad
Dad 1 w • ~h '' were poss1ble
to te ll you how m uch we
love you t1 ow sad we were
when you went away but
tust know ng you arE' w th
our
Heavenly
Father
means more than we c an
say An a now rnat M om 1s
w th vou makes Hea ven
worth more today
M ildred
Ja c obs
Oma
Nelson Ctyda B•ng Freaa
Van lnwagen and R1 chard
Beach

c anng at the t•me of her
death God bles s you all
Robert and Dor s Snedegar

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Movmg! Everythmg must go: k1tchen
table &amp; cha1rs, anhque dmtng room table,
cha1rs &amp; 2 corner cabmets, anhque desk,
ltvtng room couch, chairs, tables, anttque
dtshes, vases, old trunk, men's SUits &amp;

more!
Herbert C Stanley ·Owner
Ohto R 1ver Rd .
· Pomt Pleasant , W . va.
SATURDAY, OCT . 27- 9:00- ?

CONTRACT or work by
hOt.Jr Do anyfh 1ng from ad
dtt•ons
c omplete
remodeling or
simple

reparrs
44&lt;17761

Call

388 9349 or

FOR A FAST, tnendly
reliable bOokkeeptng
VICE' gtve us a ca ll M
BookkeeptnQ Serv1ce

and
ser
&amp;S
«6

1537
SANDY AND BEAVER ln
surance Co has offered
ser'llces tor fire tnsurance
coverage in Gall1a County
for almost a
century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
avatlable to meet tn
dPildual needs
Contact
Emmett Church,
your
ne1ghbor and aoent ))

691-4205 ALBANY, OHIO

J&amp;L Blown Insulation
NOW'S nfE TIME TO
INSULATE!
Cut the cost of heating and cooling with

cellulose insulat100. Meets Federal
specification HH-1-515-C
Free Estimate

CALL 992-2772

I

I
l

�~-The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Sunday, Oct. 21 , 1979

Fo~ Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Business ServicE's

Business Services
Roger Hysell

ROOtiNG
REMOUtunu
"".JM nUOI~w ·; s
HOUSES BUIU

Garage
mil e off Rt 7 b y -pa ss
on St Rt
114 t oward
Rutland .
11

RUTLA"'D
742 -2328
'- 14

REAL ESTATE
F ' NANCING

m,

.f

Roo ting.

gutters.

and

do .... nspo ut !..

Free

work ,

::;- u, lates.

work

driveways .

All

Gerald

walks

and

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavd lt ng ,
septi c
sys t ems, dozer , ba c khoe
Rf 143 Phon e I (61 4) 698
7J3 1 or 7&lt;11593

RACINE, 0 .
941§1 -2748 or

! 97 -27 45 .

9 28 I mo P d

9 7 I mo

J&amp;L BLOWN

MONTGOMERY

INSULAIIUN

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

VlfHL AN()

ALUMINUM !:iiUING

TRAILER SAlES

elnsulation
e Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Repl•cement
Windows

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

)1110Mo n fg omf'r'f 5l!t
I •"q "' ol l f'

Oho o

I Mtln f,nl o l

Wrl~ t''&gt;\lol lt&gt;

ms .
Call for appt. or walk in.

Down Spouts

Free Estimates

\•I PEij'

~TQ( I(

(. OOSE

1 ~A IL [ ~ N OW A\IAILABLE

JAMES KEESEE
Phone '19l -l77l
8 · 17 I m o

992 -2367
Main St .

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION

~

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

(

"'~-_, ~~~

ANN'S

• Storm Doors
e Storm Wi ndows

Wtn

507 1

05oborn
Rd
R~sville, OH , 4S772 .
For information Call
6·7 -648S . Will be OPen
Lite
if
vou
need
somethi':'9 ·
9 14 - 1 mo

dows

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992 ·2772
10 19 1 mo

Real Estate for Sale

Pomeroy , 0 .
10 19 -Jmo .
TUN IN G .

Lane

Dani el s. New phone num
ber 742 2951 Servi ce Ia
schools a nd homes s1 nre

·-kJJi- CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

elnsulation

PIANO

1965
B EA T

fH E

l11 gh COS! ol

heating you r home ttli s
w1nt er b '; insutattng now
Ca ll J1m Johnson. w ho 15
exoer1 en c ed
1n
blow 111
sulatton ser vtces . For tree
home evalua ti on . c all and
make an appotn fm enf now
273 106 4,
Ravenswood
Rc f eren res available upon
request

Real Estate for Sale

AUTOMOBI L E
IN
SU RANCE
been
c an
r e li ed?
Los t
·your
ope rator 's li re nse? Phone
992 2143
,_

IN ST OCK t or imm ed 1ate
delivery various sites of
pool k 1t s Do it ¥O ur se lf or
let · us ins t a ll lor you 0
Bumga rd ner Sa les,
nc
991 5714 .
1

Featuring · men ' s &amp;
women ·s styling, per -

b ' l " ' HH E ~e nonq ~

eGu"ers and

• Replacem e nt

EXCAV ATING .
dozer ,
loader and ba c Khoe work
dump trucks and to boy s
for h ire, wi ll haul fill d tr1,
top sotl, l i m est one and
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeff ers. d ay phone 997. 708 9,
ntght phone 992 3525 or 992
5131 .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Clark

.·97 46 S7 or Tom Hoskin s

C.&lt;.LL 992 -7544

Auto Sales

Real Estate for Sale

REY NOLD 'S ELEC TRI C
Motors, rewin d and re p ai r .
992 2356, 56 1 Beec h St ,
Midd leport , Ohio .
A &amp;H upnoiS fN 1ng, o cross
fr om thp Texaco Statton in
Syrau cse 992 37 43 or 997
3751
BRADFORD . Au c t to nee r ,
Comolete Service Phone
949 '1 487 or 949 1000 ra ci ne .
O h to . Cri tt Bradio r d
ELWOOD
BOWER S
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toas fer s. tr ans , all sma ll
app i, An r es Lawn mowe r .
N ext t o St ate H i ghway
Gar age on RouTe 7, ~85
3825

Real Estate for Sale

Auto Sales

19 76 MONTE CARLO, 350
engine , tow mtl~ayeo $(600
992 7.656.

1976 FORD 1h ton pickup,
301 V8. A -T , PS . P . B .,
SHAR P , «0 0515 atfer 5:00 .

,_13 MER CUR Y MON
TEGO MX . 56.000 mt les,
gOOd condillon . Drop leal
table Also, firewood for
sa le Hic kory and oak Wi ll
de i!VN 84 3 2703.

1978 Ford F 250, 4 speed , 4
new tires and rims , 2 gas
tanks , low m ileage , good
c ondition Call after 6 PM .
446 3237 .

195/ CH EVROLET one ton

1971
C HEVROLET
CHEYENNE 112 ton . Call
256 6270 .

flat bed tr ucK .30 ga llon
elec tri c ho t water he itter ,
SI S V -&lt;1 cy l1nder W•s consi n
mo t or . 8.:13 1.701
1917 THUND E RBIRD , AM
FM , AC. ra dials. $.4 ,000
Must sell 74! 3594 befo r e ]
P m.

EXCE LLEN T Dodge Dar I ,
ittr, good t ires, good lxldy,
snow ltres wtth ex tr a r im s.
Ac tu al mileage, iusf ove r ·
JO.OOO . Uses reg ular gas,
grea t mileage co mb gold
blark , power
s t eeri ng
\1 400 Bob H oe fli c h , 997
5192
1957 FORD T RUCK , l 1 1
ton, new motor . new tire s,
11 11 lldl bed . S750 . 991
7876
1978

P LYMOUTH
VOLARE
JJ,OOO mile s,
P _S. P B .. 4·dr
sedan
New ti res , sell for balance
owed Exc cond Call 245
9188 after 5 p .m
1971 DA TSU N
Pi ck up
New paint , good shape .
S900 . Cal l 367 710 1
19 77 DATSUN 200XX
Good co nd ., loaded, must
se ll $4400 . Ca ll 446 172 1
NOVA for sat e
trade . C all 367 0258
1971

or

1976 CHE VROLET Mom a
$2300 . or b es t off er . Very
good co nd .. _.. spd , sian
dard , Exc. gas m i leage ,
ca n be see n a t Log Hous e
bes rde Shr i n f" Cl ub on
Bu lavd le Rd . Ca l l 367 -032 5
or
446 0978
for
ap
poi ntm en t .

Real Estate for Sale

--

1966 MUSTANG 4 sp . trans.
GOOd c ond ., candv apple
red . $700_245 -5593 .

Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anoything to give away and
doe!t not offer or attempt to
offer any other th i ng tor
sa le mav place an ad in this
column . There will be no
c harge to the advertiser .
GIVEAWAY
Pups, pari
Norwegian Husky . Ca l l379·
2254.
FEMALE LARGE DOG .
Call «6-3525 after 4 p .m .

1968 AMC REBEL 770
Eco nomi ca l
fran ·
sportation . Uses regular
gas, exc . cond ., ready for
winter . $800 . or
best
reasonable offer . Call U.S ·
9174 .

6 WK . OLD KiTtens . Call
«6-o946 .
SMALL PUP · J mos . old .
Call 446 2326 .

1973
CHEVROLET
CA PRICE · lots o1 e)(fras,
gd . gas
m ileage,
best
reasonable offer . Call 24S
9174 .

POODLE · To a good hom e
in the country . Call 388
9984.
SILV e R POODLE. ma)e,
housebroken , good w ith
c hildren , shots, wormed
Humane 5oc i et~ . 992 ·6260 .

1979 VW Delu xe a .c., am
fm stereo, other e)(tras. 10
months
warranty
remainino . 1600 mi le!. _ Ca ll
446 -3911 .

KITTENS , KITTEN S, 5
bla ck., 1 white, tiger, tabby ,
tiger
kitten .
Humane
SOCiety. 992 -6260 .

1977 DODGE VAN
24.000
mi les. Very
rea sonably
pr iced . Call .W. 9259.
1969 CHEVY Pi ckup
sate . Call 367 ·0S41.

--~----

1970 CORONA . 1900cc a .t ..
a .c., 40. ex ce ll. c ond . 446 ·
7195 _$1.000.

1976 DATSUN L I TTLE
HUSTLER
Pi c k up Gd
cond .. 31,000 miles . $3200.
Ca ll .W. -0088

1973 CAMERO . body good,
ru ns exce ll ent Can be seen
107 L ocus t St , Pom eroy
(Monk ey Run J

SLEE P I N G ROOM S
r ent, Gallia Hotel .

lor

1112 .

MDVI NG
Must sell . 1974
G M C Gre mlin X
30.engine . 32,000 miles. $800.
CaH 367 7176 .

197B OLDS . 4 door , 16.000
miles, air a nd power , V 6
eng1ne
Good
mil eage
~895 . Ca ll 997 73 19

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found

HOU SE BROKEN
female
c hihuahua ,
c ho c olate
brown, to special home .
Hvmane Society, 992 ·6260 .

for

- - ---

-~-

GERMAN
SHEPHERD
co ll ie, [Tlale , bla c k and tan .
wormed, shots . Mal e and
female part Doberman and
part collie. brindle co lor ,
good with children , wor ·
med ,
shots
Hum ane
SOCiely . 992 ·6260.

19 75 CHEVY LUV AM -FM
rddio,
a -track,
4 -spd .,
$2,000. Call -'46 1135.
1974
PLYMOUTH
DUSTER
with a i r cond .,
c all 388 · 969~
1979 MERCURY CAPRI - 4cy /. , am fm , S-track . 6.000
actual miles . 26 miles per
gallon . Exc cond . Must
sell , S-&lt;,800. Ca ll 245 9182 .

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
FOR SALE or rent . N ice 3
bedroom , mOdular loca t ed
in Portland area Set up on
lot or ca n be moved . Call
aller 4: 30 . 304 273 5271.

1979 FORD FIESTA 5,000
miles . a .c. , like new, sell
for less . Call 446 · 0..9~

Real Estate for Sale

4 ROOM UPSTAIRS Marl .
loc ated In Oak Hill . Com
pletel~ remodeled , has gas
heat . Single persons or
young mllrried . Cllll 682·
6010

con

Hm .
AGE
fur nished, 7"19 SKond Ave .
Adulls only , no pets . People
over 11. Ca ll.u6·09S7 .
FOR RENT 5 rm _ Muse
with bath i n Thurman .
Mason , west Virginia . Call
773 -5253 .

~~~~~~

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

we have home financing available . As
Low AsS% Down - 30 Year Term .

EUREKA
1 bdr . trailer ,
ref . &amp; deP . required . $90
mo . water furnished . Call
643 - 2~.

J A ND 4 RM furnished ao
ts Phone 992 ·543-C .

ROCK SPRINGS - Near M eigs H igh Schoo l - A
nice little starter home , 2 bedroom s. li ving room ,
d ining rm ., kitchen , full~ equtpped, bath, basement.
furniture ooes, too . Just $25,000 .00 .

A PT .. $125, $50 deposil .
Furnished . No children , no
pets . 'JJ7 Spring Ave .

1
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CALLIA COUNTY'~ LARGE~T
HEAL ESTATE AGENCY
CAU 446-3643

REDUCED TO $49,900 - An a tlractive
&amp; well kept 2 st ory 2 or J bedroom home
in one of the finest ne ighborhoods in
town . L arge living &amp; dining room ,
screened in porch that is perfect for
thos en tce fa ll s da';'S , l ' '1 baths , full
basement , f amily room w ·firep l ace,
garage, new nat . ga s furna ce &amp; new
roof . ( tty conveniences, an easy home
to en l arge

THIS IS NO TURKEY - But il you
hurry ~ou can buy a bargain &amp; enjoy
Thanksgivin g dinner in th is
im ·
mac ulat e Jbedroom br ic k . Lo cated just
off Rt . 35 . t his ho m e offe-r s built -i n kit
c hen . large l i ving room , Plu$h carpel,
ltovel y bath , utility rm ., garage &amp; Jl/2
acreyMd Only$.49 ,900

Yard Sales

-.

HILL IN POMEROY - Real ni ce 3
bedroom , 1 b~th fr13me home Convenient location .
Large living room with fi re pl ace. dining room, eat ·
in k i tchen , f ull basement , new gas furna ce.
S25,000 00

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83 ACRES - HORSE HAVEN - One of
the msot scenic spors i n t he area . T his
heav il y wooded area consist s of large
meadows . r 1d 1ng tra1 15 th rough ta ll
ptnes , you ng walnuts &amp;. streams and
plenty ot wildlife . A beautiful spot to
buila your dream on . Loc ated 2 mi les
north of Rio Grande Fronting on 1
road s S35 .000

1101 ACRES
Appr o)( 35 ac tillab le.
Div i ded Oy co unty road leavtng sev eral
hundred f ee t at tr ontage on eac h side
11 12 mite oft Rl. 554 nea r Par er ~40 , 000 .

I

BUILDING LOT IN TOWN - Very nice
loca tion on 5th Ave .
LAST LOT IN SUBDIVISION - 'fJ acre
buildtng Stte tn Ja~ Dn11e .
WOODEO BUILDING LOT - Approx
' 2 a cre on M1l chetl Rd .

li'LI~TOM BUlL
l4J, only2m i lesfrom t 1.
..b'edrO&lt;&gt;m .
bath , l i ving room with f irepl ace. d ln• ng room.
kt l chen and laundry r oom Cen tra l heat and a 1r con
dition . Garage and workshop plus a pony ba.r n Over
3 acres with sp11 t rail fence . Call tor appotnlrn £&gt;nt .
SJ9 ,900 .00
~SINESS OPPORTUNITY MIOOLE _PORT 'E:.:cellent loca tion on the " T " W ell es tabl ish ed .
ing good bus1 ne ss Owner r et1ring . lf'.s The Sewmg
center . Ca ll B il l Chi lds t odiscussdetatls

?a

a spacious home wi!htn

But her e tS

Nine room neuse , '1
baths, full basement .
gas steam hear , good
condition . Loc ation, 400
block 2nd A 'lie . , ce nter of
town Poss ibiliti es - 2
nice m o d er n apart
ments, offi ce spa ce. et c.
Look ing for inco me plu s
home ?
Conta c t
us
today . Pri ce d in t he
S30's . Qui ck possession

393

HOME + S ACRES
QUIET
RELAXED
setting surrounds th tS
two story remodeled
country home located on
black.top
road
Com pletely furnished, SOU lb .
tobacco base , oood
barn, n ice workshop for
the man of t,he hous.e ,
garage, plenty of water
SeHer see This one .
ONLY SJ9 ,900 .
137S
PRETTY AS
A PICTURE
Enjoy the sec urity of
this small but attra cti\/e
bungalow located on St .
Rt .
7.
T wo
fin e
bedrooms. li'lling room ,
k.ltchen and dining com bined ,
bath ,
fu l l
basem ent, and also a
very nice garden space .
Better act last on thi s
one . pr iced in t he mid
SlO's .
1394
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
one story , six rooms ,
bath, basement. ga rage,
drilled well . cou nl y
water , heat pump, cen tral
air
c onditioner ,
good clocati6n . Kerr
Harrisburg Rd . Pri ced
for Immediate sale . /1.196

7

11370

CLOSE BY
M odern house , 6 rooms .
ba th , low u t tl 1t y b1II S t or
today 's ltving Gas heat .
c ity water. smal l bun.
over 4 acres ground .600 '
road fro ntage 5o hdn d y
t o tow n
lmmed tate
posses~ion .
"239
AN UNEXPECTEO
SURPRISED
Awaits you when you
discover th is cha rm i ng
and spacious J bedroom
home w i th l ivi ng r oom .
famil y room . 2 ful l
ba th s, 2 n ice pat•os,
24'x32'x 17 ' garage Al l
of fh is and more located
on over ~ an acre of
ground with a spring , on
il b lacktop road , and
only
3 m i tes
from
Gallipol is . 5c nedule an
appointment today . lll99
LCJW MAINTENANCE
LOW UTIL&gt;TIES
LOWPR&gt;CE
LOW MA INTE N ANCE
and LOW UT&gt;LI T IE S
are what one can e)(pect
to f ind In this attra c tive
home . Th r ee bedroo m s,
2 ba ths, famil)l room ,
dining room , kitch en .
OVer I ac re of grou nd .
Woodburner ,
county
wal er . LOW PRICE .
'

FIN)SH IT
Summer c ottaQ e and 3
ar r ('s m ' I w i th front age
on Ret~ c oon Creek . D ue
to the owner's hea lth f1 e
rou ld no t rom p le t e
Owner
wtll co nsider
land ron Tra cl
flll7
LOll E.
Ll 11.4r8LE -LARGE
Stone and stucco. 3
bedroom s. p,. ba rn r an
ch Formdl d in ing room.
1g
r neerful
k1t c hen,
pan tr.,. 2 f1r ep lares. full
basemen t
'1
ac r es
Hom e only J yrs . old
Older seven room home
tnrl uded witf1 sa te Nt re
home at an aflord ab lepr tre
11 363
PRICED FOR
QUICK SALE
Family moving c l oser to
wor~ If will be hard tor
th e m to move fr om t f1t s
tove t.,. two ";ear o ld ra n
en 6 rooms and bath .
dec k mg . garage . Th 1s 1\
better than new Fenced
in one aue 101, tleautifut
c ount ry
$e tfin g
Has
barn , c hi c k en ho u se and
garage . Large prOdu c
tive garden _ N ew wood
burner sto ve _ Bu y now
Possession c.an be given
soon . Pr iced S-40 ,000
,

3

3

3

1

OWNERS WANTS
TO TALK TURKEY
Bring your offer on this
11/:;z story ·· t)ome . A
bedrooms, "'tl; ... living
room, l~r c~
kil
cnen , .'\:
iJ"' , om .
Natu· I( '
'\'\: . Base mea;,
~\. / ground
WI~,,
\&lt;;) • e ot c'IY
l i miT .. ~
.-.nt:; meets
your nL Vs. we rec om
m end qu1 ck action . 11366

- _,-c.

'

OWNER LEAVING STATE
Owner leavtng nrea a nd · ~ unab le t o
ftnisf1 the 24 'x 3J' addi t ion he has ndded
to t hi s com fortable 3 bed room home .
All appltan ces go Wt l h property F ully
tnsu l ated. 2 ca r garage , low heo t i ng
bi ll s. 3 acres, rolling t o flat . M inutes
trorr. Holzer M edtcal Cen l e-r Pr1 ced in
~40 ' s Call f or m ore del ails
# 391

baths . ltv 1ngroom . kll c hen and d 1n• n9
co mbtnalt On w• th ,; beau t iful br•n. ar
r hway and 40 1nch firepl ace E n c losea
su n porch on ba[ k a nd a rock tn g r hatr
tr on t oo rr h
Ba sem ent . ga r age
Sl tua t(&gt;a on l arg e tr ee shaded lo t Pod
and hook up lor mobile home Prt ced at

~~~·341'4~ '1"1:~SJI'7I·"s'ro o

reduced for quic k sale

,

1~ thi~

•

n

CIRCLE THIS ONE
Idea l loca tion for ron
venie n ce, h•ghways and
shopping,
this
3
bedroom br ic k is in ex
ce lt e nt
c ondition .
F ea tur es living room .
dining r oom wi 1h Sltding
g lass doors . Vl' ry 111&lt; l
!1 n1She d tumtl y roorn ~~~
tJd sc rne n t , 11. 2 b a lhs , '1
c:a r ga rage If h t~s it per
sonalirv a ll its own!
CALL NOW!
W380

INV
PROPERTY
H igh pr 1or 1ty . 7 acres on
SR 35, Spr i ngf ie ld &amp;
Green Twp L andsca ped
and read"; to se ll , plenty
water taps a11ailable
Don ' t wa i l This shoulj
sell _
1 350
BUILOING LOTS
One hall
acre
tot s
locrt led nt Kerr H ttr
r isbur g Road, co unty
wat e r avalable
, J31
INVESTMENT L A ND
Ideal loco t• on , 9 ac res .
more or les~ . Lots Of
road frontage, one mile
from Rio Grande, St Rf
35 past Abi e 's Auto
Par t s Int er es t ed? Bet
te r c a l lnow!
#372
I&lt;INGTHE
BARGAIN BELL
Two tots . 90 x 120 ea ch .
100% flal County water
ttvailable . Minutes trom
town . Pr •ce d to sell
rapidly .
; 320
PRICE REDUCTION
$16,000
Spe nd
a l ittle ana
rec eive a lot from fht s 30
ac r~s Road f ro nt age on
bla c ktop ro&amp;d
Some
timber , spring , sma ll
pond Ci t y schol sys tem .

w

37 1

BUILOING LOT S
nice buildtng tots ,
within minutes of town .
Water ~vai l a bl e Pr iced
right
ns1
4

ONLY

ON Cl:
IN t&lt;
LIFETIME
Ve-r y we ll ~ . ,.1 r cJn- h
one b loc K from schO•Jl,
l i'l rg e lot , .mm ediat e
possE~ssion
Call r ight
now to beat the li ne. ~ ~2

un

GREAT LANO BUY .
This one is you r s now . it
you ca ll now! 70 acres.
• or -- Som e sa w tim ·
ber . mos tly wooded , line
fences fa•r , county roa d .
All m in ra l ri gh t s in
rluded
La n d
never
fl oods Sl5.000
P lease
don't etsk f or a less
pnce
II 378
VACANT LAND

U acres H a1r ~~ "'n T..,_,p _

well fenc:Pd , l arge jX)r
ti or. has new woven w 1re
wdh
sf ee l
poc;ts .
'.:~ t i mated 10 acrps
!!l iable . som e timber,

t argeroad fr v.ltag~ . E:.: ·

cellen t

buy$~1.000 .

13•7

3 ACR
ES I
.J
I
acres
t 1and,
d. I ·do 11acan
It"
d
un r a1 w " coa an
agric ultural
lime
W ld
k
d .
out
ma
e goo
•n
t
t
pr op er y . C a )I
Ive~ men
I
t.
d
•on an
more
,
1
dor1 -oca
e a1 s10 AC nE s
11 ' '
ACA "'T" LANO
~ ood "'"
10 Il
ac r es10 we re .s,l evel
,.._,me
I
to
b
•mII er · C a n l
ater
ro •ng
.ld 1
.ng
for Ybu w
1I b l ou
1
ava
• 3"9
t a$1 4e (){)()
4

" es

·

•

•

~I NAN

NO PROBLEM
on litis f a rm nouse and
lOA 51 acres , more or
tes::., ot good crop land.
toe:: a ted in Meigs Coun ty , Sa lem Twp. Sever.:tl
acres of level r oad fron
tage _ House has l iving
room, dining room , 4
bedrooms , kitchen . Also
o double crib and
machinery shed . Owner
w i l l help finance a good
qua l i fied bu ye r . Land
contrac t or second mor t ag --:. Ca ll tor m ore
Uef t~ ils .
1244
FARM HIGH AND ORY
Ideal f or part time
farmer . f)1 acres, 30
acres tillable , large
pa s tured wOOd lot, small
stream runs through
land . 6 room hOuseo, · '
barns, 1 almost new,
2600 lb . tObacco ba._, _
Tobacco looks gOOd. In c tuded in price - 6 head
c attle , all
terming
equi pment .
M i neral
rights included . Family
reti ring _ Reasonably
priced . SJ5.000 .
fJ77

LAND
A "HONEY "
T hat is exacTly what thi s home is with a pr ice that 's r ight . tn mo11e in
condition ! J bedroom s, fam ily room ,
living room , bath and kit ch en -dining
co mb i nation . Elec tri c heat ana wood burner . City scnool distri c t . Pri ced in
lhe $30 's.
1400

HERE IT IS
For
your
farming
pleasure . 188 acres of
real farm land . 1700 lb
tobac co base . several
acres of tillable land
5e~Veral acres of wood s
and pasture . Excellent
barn. Shed . Adequate
water supply . If you ' re
looking for an income
prOducing farm , cal l
today
1403
ATTENTION! FARM
Read Cllrefully! f1J .91
ac res . Nice two s tor y
home . 4 or 5 bedroom 5 .
large livng room , for mal dining , family
room , balh , enclosed
back ,.._,
l"''rV"ch and full
bas.ement . Lo . dlllry
barn , garage , sheds and
silo. Pond and timber
Just off St . Rt . 5S4. An
un~atable price. Catl
for more detells .
1401
SO NICI! TO COME
HOME TOI
Owner k•s
'"' r~uc~
~
_, the
price on this 53 u•ere
farm! N---·ty
remodel ·
vn
ed, 3 bedroom home,
barn, tobacco base,
pond , plenty Of water,
30.42 now metal
building with concrete
floor . Tekea lOOk, YOU ' ll
like it . Reduced to sell

CHOICE LOTS
GREEN TWP .
Tf1i nk.ing of building?
LIKE THE COUNTRY?
We have 3 Rac coon
Small farm you can ca ll
Wi:l t erfront l oh Close t o·
your own, modern six
NOW! $.(2,500.
Norlhup Town . 2 ac.
rooms , both, basement ,
NEW FARM
each , rural water , w ill
well buill barn, 1200 lbs .
LiniNG
be survey~d . Take your
lob. blse,l5acrestotal ,
So much to Ofllt' wflb .
I :149
ne:MJ twN• 3 b8d~
c hOice now .
10 llllablllw...!._.....,.• _
LAND!
Pastur•. """"' nn. ·
.fll!lttlfoniwry sctlte.'"r"
80 arres more or less
fencM . Pftnty ~rlno
ereol!l, fUll basemfnt,
toca !Pd
in
Lawrenre
water tor
livestock .
heat pumo. Wildlife
Cot:• 11 A ppr oxi mat ely
Resu rfaced state route .
abundant, 62 acrM + or
1:, dcres of good bot tom
Lots of clean road fron 25 ac res t ila lble,some
tttnd, 40xSO barn , 1400 lb
tage School bus and
tobacco a ~ reaoe . II!')( ·
tob.tro basf' 'J dug we ! ! ~.
mail route . GOOd buy
cellent farmfor
part
Pri ced at 011 1y SJ9 ,500 ff
$lS,OOO.
1317
time farmtr
Owners
1
6
• ----------------'a:.n.cx;.;.lot.=sc:t.::o.:se=ll~
- _ _._1

ms

_.m _

Mobile home, located on
ten acres ot WOOded
area . Drilled well , county rd . Pond and extra
outside buildings. Good
garden areft . Borders
w itn Wayne ...,lltional
Forest . $16.000.
1374
WANT PRIVACY?
New oo the market is
this
14 'x 64' electric
mobile home, 2 BR , on
SOWards Ridge, near
Crown City . Situated on
1 acre surrounded by
WOOds . Large 10'x30'
por c h.
drilled well ,
underplnned,$17,500..
EXCELLENT IIUY
mobile homes and 1;,
JSCre. Both homH are
completely
furnished .
Natural oasheat, coun ·
ty water . Close to town .
G
reen
Elementary .
L ive In one, rent the
other .
1316
PRICE REDUCTION
Stop, look , and listen ot
lhe price of this 1976,
1111 ')( 70' mobile home end
1 118 acre Of ground . 3'
~rooms, 2 full baths,
IO . living room . oak
cabinets In kllchen .
Total
oloclrlc .
Fur niture Included . SI~,SOO.
North Gallla School
Olstric1 .
I 117
MOBILE HOME
2 ACRES
197~ Freeman , 3
b~(II19"1S, - 1 all lur ·
nlllw• ·lm:IIJ'IIe&lt;l , un
. derpi nnlng . new septi c
tank , 700 new concre te
blocks , rural w ater
a\lallable . Stat@ Route
325, one mile north of
11111 . Clean and we-ll ian dsca p ed . Immediate
pos""'ion $13,000 . I 311

114 ACRES FARM NEAR MINES acre i nc ludtng all mtnerals

$6 25 .00 per

l4ACRES LAND - On Rt I By Pass,$ 15,000.

DOWNING CHILDS
•

RODNEY, BROKER
BILL, BR. MGR.
Phone 992-2342
Eve. 992-2449

ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1979
10:00 A.M.
Due to death of Brvan Harr is will sell nis personal
property Located on th e Success Rd . {Co. Rd . 46)
!rom State Route 7 South Of Tuppers Plaens, go ap prox . 4 miles to farm . Watch tor sale signs .
" BEEF CATTLE "
11. Cows and 8 Ca lves
" TRACTOR "
135 M . F gas Live P T 0 700 wheel ho r se r•ding
lawn mow er
"F ARM MACHINERY "
Ol iver manure spreader . fl a t bed wa gon, N . H .
Hayl i ne r 173 ba l er , Snowco 28 1! . ba le el eva ! or _on
wheels , 3 pt fertilizer spreader , 1x l4 p l ow, h•.llstde
plow, g ra in drills . whee l r ak~ . ha y condlltoner ,
br ush hog , and norse drawn eq utpm ent
" HOUSEOLD "
Desk , c hairs, vases, dishes. new bed, c hes t of
drawers, and mise other 1tems
" ANT&gt;QUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS "
Bra ss bed, c. uf glass d iShes . glass baskets ,
str awberry sugar bowl. Ham i lfo'l &amp; Jones st one
jars , wi cker baske t ,. w oOd f able, c ane bottom
ch ai rs , oil la mp, smok..ng st and , 1ewel ry box. good
organ stool. Oresd in st.one ch tna , wa sh bowl &amp; .Ptt
cher , stone jars and a ftne bollle collert •on . sf ra•gh t
c hai r 'io and large mirror .
" MISC ."
67 GMC P i ckup , 9 new fa rm gates, portable ca trl e
loading shut e. ben ch grinder. v 1ce, lo t s of t ools . log
chains, sadd le, fen ce cf1arger, ex t ension ladder ,
horse co l lars . set of tap &amp; dyes . and oth er m1sc
ifems
Betty Harris - Executrtz , Case No . 22814
Cash : Positive I. D .
~unch by Tupper s Pla1n s E m erge n~y Squad
Dan Smith
Jem Carnahan
949 -1033
949 -1701
" Not r espon5oible for accid ents or to ss of property ."

Gallia County's F aste.~t Growin!( Real E~tlliP A~''"''Y

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

l/lus Sallll is ~ur 1/lAIUl

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ALL THE SIGNS SAY ' BUY NOW ' _
TOday is the time to invest in a q ua li ty
home you ' ll enjoy tor many year s t o
come . Make an appointment to see this
attractive 3 bedroom home in a quality
neighborhood at th e edge of town .
5unke n fam ily room with woodburner ,
firepla ce in l iving room , 2 bath s, eq ui p
ped kit chen , dining room , nat _gas heat ,
cent . air . Nea rly •12 ac yard with cour ·
t";ard 50 's

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61' 4TH AVE . - Quality in ·town ne igh borhood . Remodeled 2 story 4 bedroom
home . Includes fam i ly room w ·
firepla ce, dining rm , 2 baths , full
basement . nat . gas heat , ce nt . air , 2 ca r
garage plus a large flat shady lot .

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OVER v, MILE HIGH WAY FRONTAGE - 25 ac li&gt;alble
{most bottoms tiled &amp; l ined) , approx .
ac pasture , balan ce tn woods . 30x60
barn, c attle Shed, c hi cken house,
workshop. cellar &amp; smke house . Ap ·
prox . 200 bu . c orn per acre pi us
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t obacco base . Also inc ludes a ve ry ni ce
re m odele d home
2 bedrooms . 2
t rep l ac es, eat in_ k it chen , di ning room
and garage Compl ete /'( installed A
real farm bargatn Loca ted on Rt 218 .
92 AC . FARM -

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of
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$43.500.
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Eve .
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Ha.r~ton
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I SOOSECONDAVE .
GALLIPOLIS
A BEAUTY IN THE
NEW
HAVEN - Outstand ing design
off
th is IO\Iel.,. 3 bedroo m natural wood
ho m e . Inc ludes a most unusual l iv ing
1h
room w•th
c ath ed ral cei ling
firepla ce, formal dining room, 3
bedrooms (private master su ite ). 2 full
ba th s, equipped k i tche n , washer
dryer , 2 car ga rage 1 2 dec k . Overl ooks
th e valley fr o m 6wooded acres S54 .900 .

wal~ing d•s ta nce of th e post Off lrr and
gr(}(ery Off er 1ng 3 bf&gt;drooms . I '}

• Phyllis Loveday, Realtor
Associate
Ph, Home 446-2230

PRESERVE IT ... ENJOY IT ... JNVEST IN IT ...

NEW HOUS
1624 SQ . FT _
Br 1ck &amp; fr ame . c 1t y school system .
B R , 11., baths. central ai r . appr o:w:
14'x17 ' l lv tn g room , dining room. n 1re
k it c hen . laundry room, Ulil it'l room &amp; n
gorage . Thermopane w 1ndows If vou
hurr y you can c hoose you r own r ar
peting Rur a l w ater You ' ll ltke Th 1o.,
br and new home . COME IN NOW

J ust
A LASTING IMPRESSION 11sted th•s 1 yr old ran ch on a pretty
rura l se tting near Thu r man . A lovely
home ve r y tas t efull y dec orated pl us an
1deat floor plan 3 large bedrooms, 3 full
ba ths , fd mi ly r oom , '1 fir eplces, formal
diing, equipped eat in ~it c hen , full
basemen! , d ec k , pati o, 1 c i3r garage &amp;.
m ore si tuat ed on 1 acr e

Ike Wisemin, Broker, U6·3794,
E . N . Wiseman , Broker. 446-4SOO Eve.
Jim Cochran , Auocilte , «6 ·7U1, Eve .

\15,000

wh tl t&gt; d urn
IIIOiudPS 7 8 R ,
7 b tl t 1n por ches I orge
I1V1ng room eat tn k"
( hen. mode rn oa t h . '}
map le
shade
rr ePS,
la r iJe
gardP r1
nrf' n
Natura l qus fl oor tur
nace. r ily Wdter &lt;;Pwer
Storag e bld q Level I.J nd
loc ated
1n
Jar k son
Oh1o
A n1 re r lean
hOme A GREAT REN
TAL OR INVE ST MENT
P ROEPRTY
CALL
NOW .

5101ny

NEE.D

ELBOW

BEAUTIFUL BARGAIN - Lovely 1
story home styled w ith a touc f1 of Ou t
c f1 . Includes a huge liYing room w•fh
w .b fireplace, Frenc h doors opening
f ormal dining room , ea t inkit cf"'en , l'h
baths, 3 extra large bedrooms, lots ot
c to se t space and basement, 1/ 2 ac re
yar d with c reek frontage . Th is nome
has been ' Bab1ed ' by its owner . L ow

Can help finance _
Call 446 -2573
or
446 -1171

Camping Equipment

REDUCED TO
A well kepi 3
bedroom nome ner the edge of town . tn
eludes family room , 7 f i rep laces, dining
room, 1 baths, full basement , ga ra ge,
nat. gas heat , palio &amp; gas gr i II . A totally
m a i n t ena nee fre e ex ferior
CLEAR &amp; NEAT Immaculate
bedroom home in K . C sc hools just
miles from fawn . Livi ng room . large
ea t in kit ch en , utility area &amp; large
c ov ered pat10
Detached garage &amp;
J1,. 1acre- lawn _ This nearly new home
could beeas i ld '; en larg ed $-43 .500

Dan Evans, As.soci•te, 388·8111
8.
AssOCiate , 446 ... 240, Eve
N•ncy Sm1th, Associate , •46--c910, Eve .

OFF LIMITS ...
IF YOU'RE
ALL THUMBS
House is located by O.alc
Hill. Take Hwy . 279,
west to CR 4. turn lett
and follow to Hickory
Grove
Church .
Driveway is about JO '
past chur ch. Financing
is available .
Here ' s a 3 BR house that
needs finishing . We ' ll
supply matertals to
complete with tittle
down
and
monthly
payments . Put your
spare time ad talent to
use . Contact Properties,
loll free 800 -3ll-+4,l,
4SOO Lvndale Avenue
North ,
Minneapolis .
Minnesota SS412 .

19
CAMPER .
se ll
contained . Steeps 6 . $850.
991 78 10

Mobllt Homes - Slle
BEAU T IFUL MAT CHED
rig .
1975
Plymoufh
Voyage r 11a n . 2A ' Terr.,.
T rav e l
tra i l er .
Self
con t ained . Equalizer hitch
Bo th loaded . S7900 . 992
7680 .
19FT CAMPE R . self ron
t a•ned Sle('ps 6 ssso 9{n
7!10

Camping Equipment
GO CAMPIN G AMERICA
With
coachman
RV S
Quality built, pri ed right .
Dozens o f mope ls with a
wide
ranoe ) ~ fa mil';'
pleasing floorplans .
See
them today! Apple City
Re-C r eational Vetli c le 's, Rt .
35. 1 mi Wes t of Jac kson .'·
Oh . 614186 5700 .

Sorl\~

ROOVI?

A TOUCH OF OLD - A TOUCH 0~
NEW - One
the area ' s oldest homes
completely remode led . l 1h story J
bedroom home . 1nc tvdes large eat ·in
kitche n , firepla ce in l iving room , fam i l y
room, basement , nat. gas heat , circ ul ar
concrete drive
2 ac r es just oufside
ci t y limits .

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
F o ur
apartments . 4
rooms each apartment .
2 BR , k tl chen w 1Th built
in
c a b1nets .
st ove.
r efr igera t or ,
dtn1ng
room , plu" brtth . ultl1tv
room Ha s good rental
income . c ou ld pay f o r
th e buil dtng w •t h1n a few
yenr s A rett1vety new
a pa rt ment home Enrh
apartment ha s own gas
f ur nace Do you r•eed d
good 1ncome property ?
DON ' T WA I T TO SE E
T H IS

1975 12x60 FREEDOM Par
furn .. inc
wasf1er ,
d r yer. air con d ., gd. cond .
Call 1·682 ·718'1 .

FOR SALE
1976 TRAILER
l.Cx70 , ill carpeted, one
&amp; •; 2 bafh , lbedroom ex ·
cellent condition .
Will Help Finance
446· 1806

ho"Jr"l"l' ()"'

TWO ACRES HALF

1972 L YNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 V i ndal e 12x63 w 1th ex
pando, 1 bedr .
1970 New Moon 17'X60 3 bdr .
1913
Skylin e
11x55
2
bedroom
1972 Bononza 12x52, 2 bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE H OME
SA LES . PT PLEASANT .
wv . 304 675 4424

$39 ,900 .00
'11 ACRES MOR E OR

LE SS
N1re rcmooe trd 1 .-~rrn
house
3 BR
forrr.-11
livtng ~"OOm anu r1 fl1 rhl
room Country iu 'r 'to·1 1
w tt f1 built 1n ( flbtnef'l
CALL
N OW
FOR
MORE
IN
FORMAT I ON

B&gt; G SE LECTION of pre
owned 10, 11, and u · w 1de
mob i le homes
Ka ndug a
Mobil e H ome Sales . .u6
91162
1975 WINDSOR M OBILE
home . $18.000 new . Spec ia l
ordered Doub le insu la!ed
Bf'st panel ing t hrougHout
trailer . 2x~ ·s instead of
"lx1 's 2 bed r oom . Kitchen ,
hand painted Dutc h sty l e.
Fully c arpeted . Total elec
tr ic , A .C. Asking ·111.SOO
Must se-e t o apprec iat e 992
3618

ttv

FOR SA LE ~ TRADE
For c i ty pro~rty
1978
Mobile hOme . 1Ax70, total
elect , 2 bdr .. 2 ful l baths .
Ce ntral air . 2 storage
b ldgs . Walk. and patio , dec k
o ... erlooklng Ra c oon Creek .
100 ft . frontage . 11; , ac res,
1ust off S. R. 218 on I ngalls
Rd. Call 446-4579

LOT IN EWING TON
t-1 /!,. "·lO.,l r,nlt of
LO T N Ci .J) (.If) '-,&lt;' TO Post
Q lh re Or 'It"ll N1•l 1 w •th
!.'ler lr tr pump N . P 1 f•r on
pole tor mob1lf? nomr
~ep t1 r
ta nk. ro nrre te
dr 1vPwa f
wtl h wood
bldQ a• to., "nn con
r r1•lr· o ,.,.. ., to '&gt;1 1 rnobtle
L OI N O

MILE OFF ROUTE JS
2 B R ro tt aqe, &lt;:. Toraqe
bu1ldtng . one ~pple tre('
garden SPd &lt;e &amp; part 1a 1
bdS€tnl'fiT
AL L
FOR
ON LY S5900 00

Mobile Homes - Sale

SALE
4 bdr . house, lg . living
rm . , fireplace , dining
rm ., carpeted , 11 '2 bath ,
hardwood tloor, gas for ced air furnace, full
basement, ~rage at tached . atl
newly
decorated. nice l eve l lot .
Located 46 Vine St .. J
bl ocks from City Park .

HOME
2ACRES IN
TH E COUNTRY
roo m nome w1th 3 or
pos s1b l·; 4 BR . k1lc-hen
w ttf1 butlt rn cnbinPfs.
sTorm w 1naow s 8. doors .
La r ge
b .=tr n
r hi&lt; ken
nouc,e , s t o nge b loq 2
wel l&lt;.&gt; rlu s r ura l water
All
lh 1S
for
only
1.4 5,000 00 Cnll tor you r
appotntment now

JUST BUILT
Thi s hom e deliver s the
kind a t 11v ing dem anded
b y tod a y 's tast es in a
very handsome destgn .
Larg e lovely kil chen
ha s all th e mod ern con
yeniences a wile would
want plus r\ l arge din tng
ar ea . eat a1 bar , tamt1y
r oom . ) large B R a. 7
ful l
bath s .
Very
ta st eful! dec orated .

1
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EXCLUSIVE \4 7,q00 00
RusttC" Sl'(le (E'llM rar.r h . '&gt;I'Vd led on
iH re&lt;, ot land mr pr- bedroonl':. , I ba t f1s,
IMQ&lt;' k.tl rhen. W1lh lo·s of 'ovel'f buil t in
rnb1ne t s. diShwasher , rangP, garbage
d1sposal. and d 1n1ng area Call tor eve n
mor(' det.Jtls

6 roo m •,

I

NEW LISTING - A qualily 3 bedroom
bri c k home on SR 160 . Eat in k i tcnen,
woodburne r , hardwood floors . carpet , 2
c ar garage plus 6.9 acr es w ith a
beautiful v iew . County sc hools .

RIVERVIEW HOME
ONE YOU CAN AFFORD!
The owners are ret i r i ng or tf wou ld
n ever oe fo r sale 4 bedr ooms . 1. bathS
w i th showers. c omp lete ki t che n . all ao
pliances like new inc luding ce ram tr top
r ange, mi c rowa 11e ov en, etc LR . Den ,
DR , pa t io , 2 ca r garage Dr il led well
M any more extra s on th e 100'x320 lot
Fruit tree s, garden . tt is beau tiful 10
m inute dr ive from Ga lltpol ts . pr 1ce

Real Estate for Sale

II ESTATE AGENCY II

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LARGE HOUSE f or r ent in
eastern part of county For
informat ion, ca ll Fred W .
Crow , Il L da'( , 992 ·2692 or
night 992 -75 11.

P ORC H
SALE . Sti!lrt !.
Wed .. run s t i ll all sol d , Out
side
Chr 1stmas
deco rat ion s. brown velvet
pi c tu res and m isc. items .
Karl K toes , Co llege 51 .
Syracuse, OH . 992 3014 .

~~~~~~

Real Estate for Sale

1

SMALL
EFFECIENCY
apartment suitab le tor one
working or re t i red per
son .Call 992 -5738 af te r 6
pm

ORCHARD HILL YARD
SALE . First f im e, •fam ily
yard sale . T . V., sweeper ,
b icyCle, household artlcltts ,
ch 1l drens
and
adult
clothing . Tues . Oc t . 23, r,
a m . to 3 p .m . Turn on to
Oak.wOOd Or . from 58tl and
f ollow signs up hill .

Real Estate lor Sal!'

r--------------------,
ITHE WISEMAN REALI

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE

FOR RENT · Small 2 bdr _
home just outside ci t y
limits . After 1 p .m . caii.W. 3097 and evenings .u.6 ·04.58

CO UNTRY MOBILE Home ··
Park , Route 33, north of ..
Pomeroy Laroe lots .Call
99 2 7479 .

Willis T. Leadingham, ·
Realtor Ph. Home 446-9539

in the Sunday Times-Sentinel

Real Estate for Sale

CHEE
exceptional brick home . Three
bedrooms, equipped kitchen , 1lf2 baths,
2 firep la ces, patio doors leading onto
ntce sized pati o. Full finished basemen t
with tmpressive family room , 2 ca r
g ara ge with work ben ch, c oncrete
d r iveway.
•;:~
ace , 12:.:16 storage
b ui ld i ng Natural gas heat with un ·
oeatable low heating bi lls . Quiet with
un bea tabl e tow heating bills Quiet
neighborhOOd . Owner is l eaving state
needs im med ia te action . Minutes

*

For Rent

1971 HONDA EXPRES S
S250. Like new , ca ll 256

1974 OLDS OMEGA - 6-q l ,
Sid , air cond .. $1495 . CaH
446 1842 or 576-2009 .

!FREE ESTIMATE)

e r 1 nee . Call Athens ,
ol l 1·ct.

m en f .
17 Svcamore · Re.rH)
Pomeroy , 0 .

If

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete

' IUa r .-n t eed 10 years ex·

Yl . W ., r: .
by appo1nt ·

,

SE WING
MA C HINE
Repairs
scrv•re,
all
ma k es
992 118·1
Tf1e
Fabr1c
Shop . Pomeroy
Autnortzeo S• nger Sa l es
a nd Serv1ce We sharp,,n
Sc 1Ssors

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

ROOFING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVIC£S, INC.
0 •1er

'

OHIO VALLEY

r- de · ill ~Ol •&lt;- in g &amp;
\'der . IS A.:tm1n . Lo.ans .

"tOt s 9

1 Pd

DOZER , END Loade r .
b r u sh
hog
Wi l l
do
basem('nts . oonds. bru sh ,
t1mber . la nd
c leartng
Charles But cher. 741 794()

N·l 'w, repair ,
gutters and
down spouts .
Window cl eaning
Guttl'r cl!'aning
Frl'e EstimatE's
949 -2862 - 949 -2160

OON~T.

30 ft (

d

PAINTING /\NO
sand
blrts ltng Free es ltmates
Ca ll 949 'lbHt!

H. L Writesel
Roofing

At TROMM

Auto &amp; Truck
R l'pair
Also Transmission
R l'pair
Phon!' 992 -5682

Auto Sales
--~-

WILL HAU L l1mestorf" and
grave l Also . l tme naultng
and spreadtng Leo Morr ts
T ru r k ing Ph one 742 :/455

[)-9- The Sunday Times-Sent mel , Sunday. Oet 21, 1979

197&lt; MOBIL E HOME
12x52. 2 bdr ., $4600 . Call
367 7101 .
1976 1.otx70 Mobile H ome . J
bdr . se t up in park Ca ll 2A5 ·
9177 anyti me, ~ - ~914 after'
7p m
-'

BIG SELECT ION ol pre owned 10 to 12 and 14 wide
mobi le homes . Kanauga
Mobi le Home SJSies . Ca ll
446-9662
NEW
HOME , 3 bdr ,
Gallipolis School Di stri ct
cw will build to suit on vour
own lot at cr- ntrac t pri"-t-,
256 6816.

TRADITIONAL
RANCH
3 BR br tC k ran c h
s• t ua t ed on a large
pr va t e lot c lose t o town
Step saver ktl chen with
dining 3 r ea Be th e ftr s1
10 see th iS love ly home
Pr tced i n the low \40 ' s

HOME &amp;STORE
BUILDING
On StAle H 1ghway
r oom a net bath fr a me
horne Gar age I h own
water sys tem 4 apple
tr ees, 1 pear l\ Large
stor e room lsllloor, has
an upstairs Ba se ment .
Lol 'l of possibility, like
feed st or e, f1a r dware,
antique
slore ,
etc.
Phone tor deta11 s.

1

S7SOO .OO
arres va c ant land
Morgan Twp . off Wh i t e
Oak
Rd
Leve l
to
sl •ghlly ro11 1ng , at one
me
had a tra ile r
hookup. 2 wells , some
fen c es ,
some
out
buildings.
9

COMMERCIAL LAND
BUSINESS
BUILOERS
We now hav e approx 14
A . available, just of f Rt .
35 West. with a close ac
cess to ci t y se w er &amp;
wate r , &amp; near thriving
busine ss co m mu nity .
PRICED TO SELL . Can
se H in 7 A . P&gt;ot.

�D-10- The Sunday Tunes&amp;ntmel , SWlday . Oct. 21, 1979

D-11 - The SWlday Tun es,Se ntme l. Sunday, Oct 21. 1979

•
Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found m
the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate for Sale

•

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found zn th·e Sunday Times-Sentinel

Real Estate for Sale
Real E5tale lor Sale

~eal

Estate for S'ale

Rea I Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Eslate for Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

----

CANADAY REALTY

rn

~636
ANY HOUR

Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

RAMBLIN ' BRICK RANCH - w;fh
range , refrig and l o ts of cabinets in kit ·
baths, tully carpeted . Formal dini.ng
area , 2 car finished garage w•th
overhead storage . co ncre te drive City
schools _$56,000 .

RUSSEU
WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

26 1/z Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

•

n

..
COUNTRY HAVEN - Brick stu cco and
cedar t udor , 3 BR , 2 ba ths , f amily rm .
w fireplace , re n dir , $57 ,900.

A FRAME NE ~ TI c:,... I N THE PINES '
J rnilt:"' tr urn ~ Tdlt' Rout •
PE.NO\MG ~CASE teaatng to J o r 4 bedr oom5 , 70

SAL£

&lt;)(f'""Ot 'N OOrllondo lu'&gt; , •

_ . ....

'"'t'::,a r e avadnbl e

IN THE COU NTRY WOODLANDS WILL GLOW
SCARL ET AND GOLD THROUG H THE OCTOBER HAZE
t .. nn uu r· 'lt' W l,')•ng • lose to 1..-f Oile r Hosp1 ta l 15 ir a po51l10n to observe th e
tw,• u t. 111 · 1 .-1 11 1~11 t&gt;r11 ~ w th 4 hf'drooms Fu ll basem ent , t 1r ep1a ce 1n t amd·y
10on• / ,)• '.; d'i'1QP dll a&lt; hed AlSO o workshop nnd o b.=trn S1 t ua ted on np
Dr •J ~ m r1! r- ~ ~ 'i nrrr-&lt;; Th 1&lt;:. home r(• fl ects tencer . IOV •ng ca r e and tru£&gt; value
QUALITY PLUS BEAUTY
New L '&gt;t1cll)··d bfl( k home If'&lt;..-:, 111rln ,l
vear &lt;~ld ot · '&gt;' RT JS J ·~o,'tr iO US
bedr oom•,

138,000
AT A TH I NK lNG MAN ' S PRICE
Here •s opport urll ly to Qet the SOMe you
nt•t&gt;ci rll tnp pr 1 P vou want J bPd r oom'&gt;.

3 ~ ( rl",
143 .000
OWN ER TRANSFERR ED
An c .,;Pry an)(10us to sell n• &lt; t' iM'lliy
hOmf' C1 f 'l srhool'&gt; , acre ot qround.
tamdy room. I. w b f1r epli1 r f'S , kd r hen
nnd d1n1nq Men Full bdement , we1 11n
&lt;&gt;ulated Pr •r ed 1n the t40 's Ca ll today

BLUE POOL RINGED B Y AN ACRE
Of ground MOdf•rn rr~n1 ~l 180 S QUMl'
ff' et Un ana r rlE'd g,1rag{· Sta r dqe barn
wdh lott off Stnlf' Rout1• 5813 (1Ty
&lt;.. r hOOTS
ATTENT ION CO UN T RY
GENfLEMEN
Cnu ntr ·.,. IIV·'lQ il l •T&lt;;. bP\ t
10 59 a r rc ~
rnorf' or 1,,.,., anu d n,r e rn nch J
ht •r Jr ou n.P,

ENCHANTI NG COLONIAL
') &lt;,1(11 r h OrTl P ,.. ,th P•ll,lry POSI':. J
b•·rJ~!HIIr-l '&gt; druJ tJ&lt;1'&gt;1'f'~f'nt .-til s£&gt; tt 1ng on
Jn• rt", Br d~po. n f rrl'nl

t

111
••••

....

MOST ADMIRED - Builder ' s own cos
tie on a full acre ro lling lawn, 4 BR ,
parent ' s suits has ful l bath , dres i ng rm .
Eff icient kitchen with snack bar , range
Formal dining, oversized l ivi ng rm . 3
full baths, family rm . with fireplace
plus recreation room . Attached garage .
New fenced pool with patio . S79,500

BRICK - 3 Br , 1 1 1 Oath s, f a mily rm .,
f ir epla ce, basem e nt , S54 .900

FRESH , AFFORDABLE - 4 yr . Old
brick and cedar ranch on a gent lv
sloping tot Mature trees, b lac ktop
d r ive, 3 BR . b ri ght li vi ng room, ki t chen
has ran ge, ca bi ne t s, di ni ng area witn
sl iding glass doo r s leading to patio .
Well insu lated . Atta ched g arage . Just
Iis ted! $43.000
PERFECT FOR
LONG
WINTER
MONTHS F 1repla ce for popping
corn , hill tor sleigh riding , l arge kitchen
for
pr epa r ing
Chris tma s
and
Th an1&lt;.sgi v1ng least , J BR , 2 st ory hom e
will remind you of the good o ld davs !
Large garage All in ex ce ll ent (On d .
S37 . .500
TRAILER PARK IN CITY - 12 tr ailer
pads and hook up W1th all utl1i t 1es . Ca ll
lor m orP de l ni l s S35. 000

BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF THE VA LLEY
a no Bob Evans FM ms ~ 6 ac r es
RODNEY CORA RD .
58 Acre, mobile home runners tor a
17 •60 tra1IPr . septr c tan k. , r u r al wat er
avadab!e VC'ry r easonable

RAGGEDY ANN - 4 rm frame w1th
a lum . sid 1ng 40 ' x 1Jl ' lo1. Gas hea t I n
city Pr esently rente d tor $ 70 per mo

11.500

ALL OUT GLAMOUR
Stone
fireplace , til e entry , cov ered wood
dec k , barbe cue area , 3 BR , 1 baths,
velvet lawn . $59,600 .

WHY RENT? You ca n afford a ho me Of
your own at this pri ce! J BR . large
newly c a rpe ted kit c hen , la undry room ,
new vinyl siding, gas heat Le11e1 fenced
l awn . tn ci ty . S17,000 .

SMALL FARM
Gooa tlU 1I,J1n g stle . t ;nqf' fOba((O
b arn , 30 rn re&lt;::,, ro111ng ilnd w ooded ndd 1t1onal 70
a cre s W1ll1 n•(P lJ.. frame i! Vild able
110522
"'4EW LISTING - Beautdully roll 1ng far m of 65
1cres L Ove l y nome w .th J be o rooms, P .. oatns. tu l
y car oeted . the ,...1te will love th 1S one Al!;o. '1 car
~ ar age, toba cc o base . J barns , pri ced t o sell fast
Call today
11115
NEW LISTING - N 1ce frame and brick ran ch, 3
be drms, w b t1r eplace 1n I1Y1n g rm , full basemen t , 2
: ar garage , also 1 beoroom b10Ck. house , 1 76 acres ,
~ los e to h osp1tal
NOOSI
~000

1ome

BUY - N1ce 1968 Belmont 12•.55 mobile
Frank lin wo&lt;&gt;dburner , new furna ce, on ly

1111 s

111.500

"'ORTER - N 1ce l 2x50 mobi l e home w ith add itiOn
on ba c k , fu rni sh€'d and a1r con d , large garage and
1arge lot , S16,, 900 .
10961
CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - Sma ll farm with 3
~droom home , new f ull basement , large barn , 30
acres ot ro lli ng ground , city sc hool d istr1c t
NOJIO
93 ACRES -- Vacant la nd . good investmen t proper
ty , some 11 mber. all m1neral r1ght s, loc at ed 1n Ad dison Twp
w H)32
139 ACRES - Good 4 bedroom home with fu rn itu re,
bath , fu l ly ca rpeted , full basement , large barn, all
mineral r igh t-s and some coal and limestone . 11170
NICE LOT - GOOd building site loca ted in Rio
Grande, gas, sewer and water avl!i labl e
#OOSO

Eveninii!S Call
Oarvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599

Oscar Baird, Reanor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

~ INANCING VA FHA LO
ANS . L OW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PUR,HAS E
OR
REFINAN CE .
IRELAND MO RTGAGE ,
77 E STATE , ATHENS .

614·51&gt;2-3051.

THREE
~FD ROOM
HOU SE, 6aet tt~ . in Chester
Township .
Alu m i num
sid ing,
storm
windows,
c arpe ted, insul ated . 70 pet.
baement . C layton Shar ·
t iger $35 .000 . 985 3563.

QUICK OCCUPANCY

$ 15 .(){)()

TONEY REALTY

RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE
va cation setting few miles from ci tv 3
BR , rear sundeck overl ooks Raccoon
Creek . All
mode rn convenien ces
$37,.500 .

OHIO RIVER VIEW
Th1 &lt;; 3 BR br 1c k. rancf1 I'&gt; an
p.~~ r ellent cond1!10n &amp; otters 2 ' ' b~llh s. den w!lh F P ,
d1 n 1ng rm , toye r . H W f loor s. glassed 1n po r r h .
Pilt1o, p)(fra n1 ce landscap1ng, double ga ra ge plus a
dP i d(hed 12x24 or 1ck &amp; conc rpll• garaye Lots at

to

pr . v~lC(

E DGE OF TOWN - VA APPROVED - Lovely 2
BR cottag e is si t uated on a 100x750 l ot on Sta te
Rou te 141 &amp; fea ture -;. a cl1n1'lg rm , laundry , full
basement &amp; na tura l gas heat Ask1ng SJ1 ,900

Ill ld ' 0 11 \

446-3087
~4

STATE STREET
GALliPOLIS, OHIO

RIO GRANDE AREA - Ap p rox 45 acres vacant
land , cou nty waTe r , pond . some l •mber , nice
building si1es. c1 1y sc hools, $18.000

WE: DO OUR HOMEWORK!
~

HARRIS~~

LOOKING FOR THAT PLACE IN THE COUN ·
TRY ? Older 3 BR home located on dea d end twp. rd
Just a few minutes from downtown . Approx '1
ac res . Buy now for $20,000.00 .

116 E Second StrHI.

$33 .500
NEW
HOME

..

. ill

1 Y R .OLD Ranc h
ty pe hOme ot qua11ty . 3
bedroom s.
2 ba th s,
wbfp , builtin ex
cel ten t condition , l arge
garage .
many other
fedt ures , must be seen
to
be
apprecia t ed

144.1100
30 ACRES VACANT
LAND - Bu i lding s1tes ,
7 Td l abte ac res, te nc1 ng
Close to m 1nes
A s1eal
df$ 13, 350 00
64 ACRES OF NICE
LAYING FARM LAND
All c lea red and 1n
pasturE'
and ldl ab le
ground , barns a nd othe r
buildings, fenci ng and
ponds, p 1 u~ a newer
lr~rge ranch type home
wi tl'l f u ll
basement ,
w .b f.p .. many fea tures
Pri ce d
for
sale

s

S/6,325.00
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK - Good
home. good 1oc at1on ,
good lot , f u ll basement ,
equipped kit c hen , air
condit ioning , Forced air
heat .
A
Ste-al

$19,900 .00

.~

1

~

10 A . MI L, 6 rm . brick, 3 BR, at!. garage,
11 11 bath on 1sllloor, lf2 bath in basement.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING
P rice S11 ,000.oo .

Hardwood floors carpeted. Marble win·
dow sills , birch cabinets. House only 11
years old. Close toRt. 35 and Centerville
on county Road 8. 5 minutes from Rio
Grande, 20 minutes from Gallipolis .

2 HOMES LOCATED In Bidwell , one smoll one,
st ory , the or her a large two -story, lev~llob, central ·
ly loco ted . Buv both for only S2S,OOO.OO.

BIG FOUR
REALTY CO.
Branch Office, Rt ., Piketon, Ohio
289 ·423-o . c . Nance Jr.
H OUSE ON
large
R ~c 1 ne . 949 '13~0

lot .

Plumbing 1 Heating
CARTER 'S P L UMBIN G
AND HEAT I NG
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 4.46 3888 or 446 -«77
STANDARD
Plumb ing -Heat ing
215 Th ir d Ave .. 4..66 -3782
DEWITT'S PLUMBIN G
A ND HE AT IN G
Route 160 at Evergree-n
Phone 446 ·2735.

#

Housmg
Headquarters .

GE NE PLANTS
AND SON S
Plumbing
H ea ting
Air
condi ti oni ng . JOO Fourth
Ave . Ph . «6 1637.

Mobile Homes · Rent
FOR SALE · In Chester ,
OH . 6 room hOuse w ith
ba th . Big beau t iful lot .
$11 ,500 . Call M 7 3067

FURNISHED 2 bdr . Mobi le
home. Ci t y water and gas.
Extra ni ce · 1 Centenary .
Call 388 ·9788

BEAUTIFUL WOODED
lot, 1. 18 acres . Ci ty water
Close to sc noo ts, near Rock
Springs . After 5. c all 304
l73 22 76 .

------MODERN FIVE year old 3
or 4 bedroom home on 21,1
a c res
ot
l an d ,
full
ba!E'me nt, d rilled w ell , car ·
peted , storm windows ,
fully insu la1ed . Also , l6x32
bui ldino . w o ul d consider
VA or FHA loan $.33 ,500
141 ·3074 .

Wanted to Do
WILL KEEP Children in
my hOme, d~ y or night .
Ca ll 388-9659 .
TEACHER woul d Ike lo
babysit In her home Cll ll
388·9'173 fter 6pm
WOULD LIKE
to do
bookkeepino in my home .
Will give referen ces . Call

,w..q.oss.

loco ted

in

--· ..

\l i nton .

:x''

- Love l y
h ome on a super si 2ed lot Th is h ome ha s. had ex
cel lent ( are Rea50nnbly pr1ced . loc ated 1n KC
sc hoo l d1 str 1c t

PLATTED AND READY TO BUILD ON
Bui!d 1ny
lot-:, 120')(1()()' located 1n sub d1v•son 1n KC sr hoo1
dist r ict

Call 245 -9221 After S: 30 P .M.
Charles W. Lupton ·Executor

so\.0

TWO HOMES - In Bidwell for the po-lce of one . Two
story , 3 be-droom, kit chen, dining end living rm , also
small one ·storv home .... Both for S25,000.00 .

16 ACRES - Addi SOn -

IF YOU ' RE THINKING ABOUT SELLING, GIVE
US A CALL AND WE 'LL BE HAPPY TO DISCUSS
OUR LISTING CONTRACT WITH YOU . WE HAI/I;
BUYERS BUT WE NEED LISTINGS!! LET US
SELL YOUR HOME WHEN YOU'RE READY.

..

PAT CH AND PAINT
0 1·'
2 story home w1th 10
room s If has po tent ld •
S pa1nt and f 1xed UP
co uld be used tor co m n ..... c1 al p u r poses

11 ACRE BUILDING L.OT ~ Lovely b u 1ld1ng s11e
loca ted off Bu lavJ IIe Road (1 t y wa ter and sewage

NEW LISTING- Stately , Older horne situated ap·
1 m i le from citv limit~ on 1 acre ot
land, 3 oeorooms, 1 oown, 2 vp, 21fl baths t•mH-;
d i ning r~ , living rm w / flreplace, sun ' porcn,
modern ktt chen . This Is a home w tm a lot of
c haracter.. .must see to appreciate . Also, ~
building lots adjllcent to propertv, one fronts on Rt.
141 Call for more Information .

Bula v ill e Rd .

AFTER HOURS PHONE
BFCKY LANE
.'&lt;IE HAULDREN
\ L T LANE

rn..

OW NER WILL sell 40 ac res
or ore w ith 1979 Hollypark
mobile home 14 x70 w ith ex
panda, plus 14)1(36 fam ily
room aHached , lully car
pe-ted , rura l waer, some
pastur e, fence, standing
t imber, some walnut , sun
dec k front
and back .
Located on New L..lma Rd .
Call James Inge l s 614·7..2 ·
2182
FIVE ROOM house, all
carpeted , modern k itchen
and bath , ga ta ge and car port . In Bradbury Ca ll992

5310

HOUSE FOR SALE · 17.300
11J 1cre on Texas Rd . In
Golllpollo. 1150. • month
Cell 67S·11J3

RESTRICTED BUILD! ·
NG LOTS
D•bby
· Drive all utilities
avatlable .
STROUT
REALTY , 446 ·0008 .

APPROXIMATELY
39' ,
acr es of vacant lano with
road frontage . All mineral
r ig hts . ca : t 379 21 15

REAL ESTATE LOAN S
SPECIALIZING IN FHA
A NDV .A IN SUR EDMOR
TGAGES
MILLDN S TO
LEND FAVORABLE IN
TERE ST RATE . LOW OR
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
FOR VET ER AN S. LONG
TERM FINANCING A ND
NO
PREP A YMENT
PENALTIE S
TH IS I S
fH E WAY TO DO IT . IF
YOU CAN QUALIFY
REFINANCING
ALSO
AVAILA BLE .
CALL
TODAY
F OR
M ORE
DETAIL S LI N C'A LA NE
446 1517

WORK HAS ALREADY BEEN DONE - Two stor y
home has been com plc-tel v rem odel ed , t her e a r e 3
bed r-oom s. bath , d1 n1 ng room . fa mily room . den , k it
chen wllh ran ge Oil heat , new 1nsu1ation , c ar
pe 11ng , J f 1repta ces Loca ted on sta te road i n
Nat 1on a1 F or e-:, 1 17 miles to town , 2 mi les to grade
&lt;;chool A lo t of home here tor $33 .000
OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE i n tne wilderness of
th e Wayne Nat1 onal For es t 5 to 8 acre t rac t s ot
wood l clnd now i'\Valll"bl e, ad1o in1ng ttlousa~ds_ ot
arres of govern m ent land . Publ1 c hunting, f1 Sh1 .ng
and cam ping permitted Pn ce s start at S2500 w1th
f inanc1ng avai lat'lle

(.1!; GH ££
"R,~

446-0552
428 SECOND AVE.

M. L. (Bud)
McGhee,
Broker
446·0552

OFFICE HOURS
9 oo s 00 Monday fhru
saturday
Other hOurs by appointment

m
QEA L!OR

'V1fMBlRU~

J"'

,r::-~-Rh-OCA~-:r.....Tkl&gt;
I

~''J[RYICE

~--_...--.
......,,.·~,

wi th

tee t of Rd frontage Most wooded
BUIL01NG LOT 7Sx2S.B restri cted fo1 your protec
t 1on
VA OR FHA FINANCING avai l able for the buyer
pur r hr1S1n9 most of our l1sted property If ~au ha"Ye
quest 1ons conce rn•ng fman c 1ng please g1ve us a
call . we are alwa ys read y to asstst you
s.JJ , SOO . T wo storv home in V 1nton Mostly carpeted.
Qc('p lo t w1th garden space
ONE OF GALL1A County 's f inest homes. Cedar
s 1ding , w i th 1500 sq . It ot I1 V1ng space p lus
base ment . Ca l l f or compl ete details
GREAT PLACE TO raise a fam 1ly V~ry nice 3 BR
home wi th more than thirt y acres at hJ11 l and to en ·
joy $48 ,500

IN GALLIPOLIS near the gol f cou r se _ Two storv
fra me hom e w it h four BR 's. Pr iced to sell. S29,900.

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
;n
downtown
Gall ipOl iS, i nc ludes three stor y build i ng w1th apart ·
men ! . Call now tor dela i l s.
CARRYOUT WITH C-2 l icense plus grocery s_tore.
Good neig hbo rhood business. Located on bUSiness
route Cal l tc r de f ails.

FHA VA convent ia1 Home
Loans . Col umbus F irs t
Mort g age
Co ,
loan
reor ese ntaf1 ve,
Violet
(Cookie) V1ers, 463 Sero nd
Ave , Ga ii•POII !), Oh. 4-46

R 10 GRANDE - OIOer home in very good condition
pl us three ex tra lots, good 1nvestment property .

SEE THIS ONE SOON , pr;ced at Sol2,.500 . Full
basement . This is a very ni ce frame ranch 10 the KC
sc hool distri ct .

7 172 1

L OG HOM ES
3ea1 the
ene r gy
c run c h
Cozy.
nostafg,e, all s1zes YoU
bu ild, or we cont ruc t _ Se-e
our model 1n Jack son coun
t y Lanes Log Homes, 614
766 Z910 afte r 5 30 p .m .
weekdays dnd all dav
we€-kC'nds

WHAT DRAMS ARE MADE OF - Matur e l an
dscao•nq &amp; r• r h green lawn h1gh l1gh t t nis en
r lldnt mg nverv 1ew home OwnPr has been tran
ste,. r ed &amp; muc;t se ll th 1&lt;; r usrom built 3 BR nome ,
LR dHl1 nl.l rm . eQUIPPed k 1l chen . later w i th open
sta1rw ay larndf rrr~ w1th FP , basement &amp; 2 c ar
gnrgP are on 1v d t ew of the s.p ec 1a l teafu res Located
on Route 7 '&gt;Ou th of town w1111 frontage on the Ohio
R 1ver

VA OR FHA FINANCING avai l able tor this very
clean 3 BR h ome . N 1ce tl at l ot . C1t y schools .

46 04 S8
446 ·4042
44 6·04 S8

'

NINE CHOICE Buildi ng
lots for ~le by owner . ·
Location Is
H i deawav
Acres . 1114 acres to Jl4
acres. Beautiful country
seHing, level lots, City
schOOl dist ., rural water ,
approved
SIJbdlvlslon ,
rntrlcted . Come have a
look . 'II. mile to Rl . 1~1. 3
mi . to Rt . 35 &amp; Mllchell Rd .
Owner will hf&gt;lp finance .
Cell
379 ·2196 for
In
formation .

RACCOON CREE K FARM - 50 acri:-'S, 31! A bot ·
t om 11 A pasture, lovely modern bri ck home witn 3
BR s. 1. bat hs, c athedral ce il ings, firep l ace , large
sun deck and lo t s of other ex t ras. new mefal pol e
ba rn , cr1b , 1oad1ng chu te, a ppro x 1700 ft . creek
front age, loca ted 4 mil fr om M e 1gs M i ne N o . 3.

10 ACRES MORE OR LESS on Clork Churc h Rd . .500

The l ovely ol der home ot th e la t e Mr . and Mrs .
H arry H . Lupton Situated at the corner of First
Av e and V 1ne Sf. Lot 10:, J1 If . w1d e and 110ft . long ,
p l u ~ larg e nver bank . Hom e co nststs ot large l iving
room , forma l d 11l1ng room , large parl o r- , with sli ding
door\ l arg e k1lch en w 1th 1 1 bath room . 3 large
b edroOm s ancl 1 small bedroom upstairs . Formal
en tril nce hall and 2 s1 a~rway o:, I storag e bulld1ng
p lus 1 c.Jr garage .
H o m e Shown By Appou1fment

20 ACRES on Bulaville Ra Good develoment land

oro x1 m~tely

TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 588
Rt'rnode led ho m e 1n rludes 5 rms . and bath, ca rport ,
stove, r eir 1g, d1snwa she r . almost 2 acres of land
pr1 0~d for q u1r1&lt;. sa le

30:w:40 METAL BUILDING 1n Crown Ci ty
sl•d1ng door S.tuated on tw o lots $16 ,500

·'' ,
...........
"Jl";_
.,
~~

Small olt lce space on Second Ave ..

Gl\f)
100 aCie ~ m I, vac 3nt l and near
BJiavdle. rH.'Oro;w: 40 acres wcoaed. balan ce rol l in ~
pa c;tur .~ 1and , ~ome f1lT'DN reprJrfed , 7 m i le "&gt;·•Uf ,
SIS. ){)()

NEW LISTING
Owner amctous to sell Four BR 's,
tormal d1 n1ng , lovely lu tchen w1fh all the ex t ras
Green Elementary, Gaii1POI1S H 1gh School

..... -

ACREAGE - .46 ac rells toca tea on Liddy HolloW Rd
!Gra ham Sc hool Rd 1. off Rt. W Pri ce S28,000.

t-OR RENT Gallipolis.

I...

Ij I
I

PRICE REDUCED - 3 bdrm home in Kanauga,
hardwood floors, nat. gas heat , driven well , 1 ca r
garage . Buy now for $19,500.

f ~EE

·~wf

I

TRUE ELEGANCE - is the word tor t~i~ spa ciou s
older home . 3 bedrooms , 2 fu l l ba1hs . l1v 1ng room ,
f amil y room , 2 marbl e tire. aLes, tor mal d in ing w i th
a beauti fu l c handelier. kit chen , ~ar . basem ent , a t
tic, 3 car garage and a fe nced in back yard w i1h a
beauti f ul pool You must see this lovelv home

t-ARM - ACREAQE : 33 aues loca ted on White
Oak Rd 2 bedroom , c rpeted home . Si tuated in an
area that is pleasan tl y su rr ou nded with tree-s . Buy
ar 139. .500 .

POCKET THE RENTAL PROFITS - Three slory
bulid1ng downtown c orner lol m P omeroy . Has f irst
11oor shop and oth ce plus tw o la rge apartmen1s, all
occup1ed \40 ,000

rr · o~tly h il1s &amp;
poor co rd tiiOn .

FOR SAlE

COMMERCIAL BUILDING located ;n dOwnrowll
:.ani polis . Can be us.ed for restaurant, or any type
1egal bu si ness. Two apartments upstair. ; property
extends to service alley in rear , storage build ing if1
rear . Pr ice $.4.5,000.00 .

3

bed ro oms,
ceram1(
bath. copper plumb1ng ,
c arpet1 ng, 0n1o P ower ,
'1 car garages and 1 n 1ce
acre of la nd
7 TRAILER LOTS One tra i ler InClUded 1n
sa le
Leading
Cree k
wate r , over 4 acres on
Rt 174 Wes t Want only
lll ..500
COUNTRY
A
rea sona ble
o l der
3
bedroom home w1th ea t
m k.ll c. he n, m odt:&gt;rn bl! 1h ,
central
heat .ng , lull
b.=tsempnt, and ldrge lot
Just S2 5,CXXl .
POMEROY L inCO ln
Ht has 3 bedroom s,
bath wlfh showf'r , bi rc h
kitc hen , fu ll b asem ent
a nd larg e lot Going for
s 18.500
NEW LISTING
Fur
n1shed
1972 M 1d1and
mobile hom e 1n the
co untry
Ha s.
3
bedrooms and 2 ba th s
Land has rur a1 wa ter
a nd f e-e na1u ra l gas
1b,500
NEW LISTING
Hun
ti ng I and near F or k.ed
Run Lake Over 27 ac r es
of wildland Good pla ce
t or cab10 or
trav el
trailer Want $1 5,000
NEW LISTING
acres in Deer countrv on
gOOd sc hool bus and
mail routes _Only S.5.500
WE
ADVERTISE
EVEY
DAY .
LIST
WITH US , CALL 992JJ2S or 991 ·3876 .

1n

NEW LISTING - Ni ce 19'71· mobile hom e, situated
on 82 oi an acre. Extra room add ed on M eta l
storag e bui lding enc tuded Lo ca ted on Gra nam
Schoo l Roao , o tt Rf 141

17 UNIT MOTEL - Located along Eastern Avenue .
Property inc ludes commercial frontage on St . Rt . 7.
Corner lo t w ith exist in~ reataurant busl nHs .. Plen ty of parking area . US!e as is or modify to your
needs
NEW LISTING : 3 beoroom home w ith 91 'x 200 ' ft .
lot , w it hin the village at Vi nton , along Sf R t. 160.
This 1S a ve r y n1ce home and you can Pur c hase with
or without furn1ture

REDUCED -- N 1ce ]
beOroom nome 1n good
location Tota l e lec tr ic
with drilled well H as
fu l l basement and 2 1 1
acres
N •ce
ou t
buil dings. too Now only

69 A

INQUIRE ABOUT OUR
FREE REFERRAL SERVICE

tcACCOON CREEK : Fall is a oeautiful time along
the c reek We have . 78 acre property adjacent to
Bear Run Rd . A select spot for $7 ,800.00.

... 1 · 332~

TUW~SHIP

woOds, o ld house &amp; CP11ar
j.)OSSibllily '1f C0 -'1 (, $29 . 500

J BEDROOM . CARPETED HOME : Situoted on
shaded corner lot at intersection of Rt . 160 and 325 in
Vinton 11·] baths, LR . OR. Kif and 5ummer kit . fn
etudes adjacent stor e b!dQ A l l for $31,000 .

BABY FARM
13 5 acr es near Vi ton, comforlable
5 rm &amp; ba th home. barn, ce llar house, pond, t ab
base, lana 1S most ly till ab le , $27 ,500

HARRISON TWP .
l-4 7 acres , app r o:w: 60 A w()(){j
ed (co mmerc1al f1mbe r reporled ), 40 A t i llable . 50
A pasture , l rm h ome . barn. pond , sp r i n9s , 2 wt"lls .
tab ba5e, lots of rd f r ontage. ask 1n9 ~5 . 000 .

J BEDROOM HOME in Country Air Subdivision
Loca ted off Georoe's Cre-ek Rd . Naf . gas heat , ar
ta ched garage, sv.'l deck . price Sl5.000.00

158 .900 00 .

2183 .

SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP
A.ppr o'X 6 ac r es
level &amp; gentl ·( ro ll ing land . county wa1er . nicP
buil ding slfes. loca ted on th e Fl oyd Cl ark Rd ap
pro• 11 m i off R out e 160 near P orter Ask i ng

Sharp 3 bedrm ra nc h, w 2 fu11 baths . de1igt'ltfu l c ar
pet and drapes. 27 ' bu i lt 1n k i tc hen . br ea kfa st bar,
1nter com system . Owner mus f sel l beca use of Iran
ster ·
388·8464

Seco nd Av e ., 'l Br frame and
reat lex at 100

WE HAllE MORE FARMS , HOME &amp; BUSINESS PROPERTY A\IAILA.LE

NEW LISTING - Han
dy Man 's Spec1a1, good
1oc at1on 1n M1ddl epon .
large l1v1ng room . 3
bedrooms . l.=tm 1ly room,
levrl lot , 117 sto r y
ON LY 18.000 00
LARGE
STATELY
BRICM: HOME - A !rue
land mark 1n Pom ero y,
home has the cha rac ter
and charm of t he early
1900's and was built by
one ot our most respec
IPd
businessmen
Pr 1ced Far Below Fa1 r
Mark e t
Valu e
at

HOU SE COAL , lump or
stoker , wilt de liver . 7A1

VIRGINIA L SMITH REAl ESTATE

NEAll TYCOON l.AKE - Completel y
sur rounded by trees on I ~.. acres , a
yea r around ho me . Has alum . sidi no . 3
BR , 1 117 baths, full basement, with for e
ed a .:- furnace . Better see now . Won ' t
rast at Sol3.000

FINA"CI'\G A\ AILABLE Conventional, FHA, VA

119 ,.500 [)()

OVER
60
PROPER ·
TIES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
Res . 742-2474
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr .
Res . 992-25&lt;18
Henry E . Cleland , Jr .
Res. 992-6191

FINANCING AVA ILABLE
0 1dcr 2 stOr'( fMm
~ lO fT1l' w11t1 6 rm &lt;:.
and ba l t1, rp ll ar house , sheos.
large shade trees on approx 4 ar r es Loc at ed 4 m1
so uth oi R10 Grande $19.900

NEW LISTING : 3 bedroom home situated on 'h
acre lot, 2 miles lrom Gallipolis City Limits. City
, water and sewer , AC , na' . oas, I.a . heat. Yard, com
plete-lv fenced . vou 'llllke- the convenience ot uvmg
here! ·

HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a hunting lodge ,
va crH10n "lome et c Rusi1 C lOg ho rn e is built from
hand t1ewn b..: ams &amp; has a slee ping loft, mOdern
oa tt1. la r qt• ston e f1r.2 o1ace &amp;. approx 27 acres of
woods 1'1 the Wayn e Nnt1 o na l Forest Ex1r a l and
tlVa 11ablf'

GRAN~E

lr~nd .

CHES HIRE - $26,000
Remode!ed I ' ~ sto r y, 1 BR ,
ba t h, L R , d1n1nq rm , k 1tc hen, oa r! besemen L
douOI£' ra rport stora ge budd1ng and a large co rn er
I o!

UNDER CONSTRUCTION - 3 BR . p ;, baths, heot
pump, insulated . built -in range, cedar cl oset. cop \
per plumb ing, undergr-ound uti lit ies, public water
and sewer BOy now and YOU PIC I( OUT the car
pet;ng $39 ,000 00

NEW LISTING ·- Cl ose
to n atur e on a 6 ac re
m1n1
farm
Garden
spa c e .
2
s t o rage
bu il dings . secl uoed , but
close to P omeroy, ni ce
17
stor v
remodeled
home 1nclud1ng a new
equ1pped kd chen , a1r
co nd it1 0n1ng , 3 or 4
bedroom s.
ONL Y

lJ800. on n 1c e bl tpv el W1l tl 3
PRICE REDUCED
Br modern lul cnt&gt;n , lctm dv room , 'J t ull baths , 2
f1 rep tr~re~ on 7 rH r ps
I I 05~

AREA
Ap ~r ox .t5 a cr es vacan t
county wate r . pond. som£' t 1mber. n 1ce
budding si tt"s, C1 fy scnoo1s, $18 ,000

RIO

NEW LISTING- 7 or J bedroom home. LR. DR,
utility rm , cellar -'nd outbuilding ; Includes aoorox .
7 ac r es on Liddy HoiiOVol Rd . (Graham 5chool Rd . ) .
Here ' s a comfortable. home In the country, w ith
a creage ... but now tor $.3..t ,OOO .OO.

MAIN ......~....,
POMEROY, 0 .
PH . 992 2259

RIO GRANDE
Cheap .nves tml"nt hous.e w•tn I
r£&gt;nlet l un1ts , plu&lt;&gt; mot, liP homf' , only \75.DOO

EASY TERMS on th 15. br1 Ck &amp;. fra me bi lev el A
sm al l ctown payment wil l let you hC!ve q u 1c ~
possessi9n 4 B R's , I ': bath s. LR w11h hea talator
fi r epla ce, large l am1ly rm 1J A . 2 r ar I.JCi ragP

NEW LISTING - 4 bedroomhome In Eno . Buy one
acre of 2'0 i!Cres . Located on Rt . Ss.i, llv . rn:- ., d i n .
rm ., kit . downstai rs • .clg . bedrooms up . 2 clst.,-ns, 1
well , rural water ava i lable . Barn and pond
avai l able with the 20 acres . Buy it all for S5J,.SOO.OO
or the hou!.e and 1 acre for $43 ,500.00.

FIFTY -SEVEN ACRES - A ppro x . 25 tillable meadow , several oine g r oves.
wooded areas, large s toc~ed pond , rura l wat er ava tlabl e . $25,700

bOB E . '

JUST LISTED - E)( f ra n1ce ranc h . 3 bedrooms,
oa tr witt"! shower , den. central air , carport , loca ted
clo~e to Qodn('y .r c1 tv school d1s t . Ou tsl and 1ng buy
Ca!l todity
,t1"l

1~2 5 acre s M L, mostly h i llS &amp;
wood s. exr ellent hun t 1ng. ad (01n1ng na tional forest ,
old house . 6 rm s &amp;. Oath , ex r e!len r in fl a t io n hedge .

\190 PER ACRE

ASSUME LOAN - Ha vC' qu,rk pos&lt;..-. &lt;..I On of th1s n• ce
2 BR home En1o ·r th e ~;ronomy &amp;. ro m f ort of gas
heat, l u l l basement &amp; larqp lot nt lhp .-.flqP of Town
SJ 1. 900

SQLD ;

COZY COTTAGE 7 BR fram e,
beau t if ul ro l lin g tawn , utili t y bldg ,
Front por c n overl ook1ng Oh1 o R1ve r
and dam
Walk1n g r1; -: tan ce tram
groc er y $77 ,500

-

Yes, it is pos sible to buy d new hou ~e (not a mob1le hom e), placed
on your tot for as little as $33,000. That 1ncludes 3 bedrooms, 1 11
b~ th s , carpeting, insu lati on , thermopane win dows and mor-e . W al ·
ch tht s space for deta tl s. However, if you ' r e e~ec 1ted b y thi s new s,
and you just c.an't wait, vi"iit Kingsbury Hom e Sales , 1100 East
Main Street . Pom eroy , orcalt992 -7034 . KINGSBURY . Now anew
home you can afford .

o"'iNG

RESTING ON BEAUT I FUL
ELEV ATE D GROUNDS
W1tn n panoram1 ( Vlf'W of St R t ]5 and
:,u rr Dund1ng nrf'n 1\ •t11s srat(•iy ran r h
Of'SI:.)ned wdh a ldr ge f ,1mily Hl m1nd 4
IN VESTMENT PROPERTY
to 6 bedroom&lt;, , huge for mal l1v 1nq Unl1m1 ted opportunities 25 5 acres
roo m
3Q)()LJ. '&gt;P&lt;HIOUS d1n 1n q roam·.
mlie tr omcttyllml fSonSt Rt 7
'
modern c ompiC'te Dud! 1n k_ 1fc hen . ')
w D 1.r epi&lt;H f'S J b&lt;tths . luH basemen t
STATE ROUTE 588
') 1 ( dr garaqf' Can buy w1th 1 arre&lt;; o r
1 1 1 miles from
town , 5 9 acr es
rnore l etn{1 A must To &lt;;pe 1
woodland

OFFICE 446-7013

RODNEY BIDWELL ROAD
76 Ac r e farm , ap·
pro)( SO A 111 1d b le , ba l .=tnce pa!; t ure &amp;. woods , 4 BR
se&lt; 11ona1 hom e, 5 ·r rs old , 28x30 con cre te block
budd1ng . co w.=.ter . pond, cree k . 135 Massey
FNguson uan or &amp; equ•pment 1ncl uded in pri ce .

APARTMENT BUILDING in c ity 5
apartments, 3 t r;~~ i , ....
rm . hom e
su;tabl SALE PEN
. . •vestment
proper1 r .JuSt listed!

UINVESTMENT PROPERTY - Oup!P'"' gar age apt on F 1r st Ave , Oh1 a R 1ver f rc

HO USE &amp; ANNUAL INCOME
Ott St Rt l
1n c1 ty l1m1t s. Thi s
package net s you '1 mobi le homes
14~&lt; 70's, garage , apt 35x45 under con
&lt;::, lruct1on
N 1ce ~ story hom e, 3
b€'drooms

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

446-0008

PERRY TWP . - 60 ac res, a bou1 12 A ti llabl e,
ba lance in timber , sty l ish older 7 rm home with lot
of possibilit ies , barn , outbuild ings, m1nera1 r1 g hfs,
fronts on State Rd Call for mo r e 1n tor ma t 1on

CHA MP AGNE TASTE!
You 11 bubble w 1th exc1tem£&gt;n f when
vou S1P the features lh1S lux ury home
otters Foyer , new teak t loor 1ng , formal
I1V1n Q room , w b fireplace. ce dar man
fie tra ck light 1ng. n('w plush c arpet ing ,
f ormal d1 n 1nQ room . new t ea k floor .ng.
beau t iful fdm ily room w i th large
&lt;;l1 d1ng door lead1ng to beautiful pool
ci i H.l Pd iiO a r ea . terraced g round w 1th
lo ts of snrubbery, gas grill, 1dea1 tor en
tf'rla111menl , 3 bedrooms. 2 baths , large
k •khen with unusual breakfast bar .
c herry , w.=tlnut wood , lull ba!;emen t .
r en tral a.r, garage and openers Thi s
home is beautifully decorated Al1 new
c u stom draper1es Looks l1ke it ju st
c t'lme r1ght out of
an
Interior
Decor ator 's maga2ine
O ne ot the
lines! I ' m su r e If will be love at fir st
s1g hT

Real Estate for Sale

. I

Rl!ll Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636

N EW USTING ! N ew modular hOme 4 mos old , 3 bedrooms . 2 o ath s, family
room lt v •nQ room ond dmtng room . modern bud I tn k itc hen Woodburner . Take
a look ctT th•'&gt; rt'it l n •&lt; E' home All ~e ttlll Q on one and h a lf acres m t he ci l y school
d ts f r,. 1 Pr r Nl n lh£' JO s.

~_
e_
a I~ E_s_t a..:.l=e -"
fo::..:r...:S::..:a:.:l-"-e

Spacious ranch stvle home , located just outside city
limits 3 bedrooms, faniily room, nat. gas, w .b.
fire plac e, 2111 baths, fyll basement, il beautiful hom_e
and lhe price ha s been reduced to 60,010 .00. ThiS
hom e has many amenities nol mentioned . Call
today tor a a ppoi ntm ~ nt .
.
RUSSELL WOOD, REALTOR , 446·1066

1971 DOLPHIN MOBILE HOME sltuoted on 1'12
acres of land . $15,500 . Call for details.

TOm iNhllo
Salol AIIOC .
446 -US7

Dona McGhee
SalesAS$0&lt;

446-tS$2

�Checks received for toy projects
GAJ.IJPOI.!S - Loca l support has
agam been g1ven tu tht' ll ulll' r
Medical Cente r Pcd1atm Telc1'"l&lt;l"
and Pediatric To} Ftwds to provrdt ·
free televis ion as well as toy s &lt;Jild
games for the children who ar1·
hospitalized un the h us p1 w I· s
Pediatric Umt Junng lht• rnunlh of
October , ttu-ough tht' l·ontu rurng ~·f­
loris of Earl Neff
For the seventh consecutlvtt yt•ar· .
the Gallipolis Lodge 'io . 107 of till'

F t:rlll
Thi s )'t:ar 's
!&lt;xalll'd Hukr , Osror ll .'::ikphl'nson
prest•utt·d tlw L· ht·ck for tht' Octobt•r
fund to :-ll'ff
A lll'W sptmsur hH· thl' Pt•dwtnc
T11\ F und was wd L'Oillt'd lo ttM.·
gn .IW\IIg gruup u( trl le resteJ l ll d i \ ' idU&lt;iJ S,
lJU !)I lll'SS
amJ CIV Il'
Hf'l..!i1ll tZ&lt;IllnllS Stw IS Dtanna Bog~s.
Tt · ll'\ 1:11\lfl

the tlw ner

,,f

Dt 's Candy, Cak e a nd

l'r&lt;tfb Suppl1·. loca t"l Ill the Spnng
Valky Plena Sht• has just n'n•nll~

addl'd a nafl"i sect!lln .so that
ruJtt•na ls are easr ly availa l'le for
the numt.'rt iUS arts and crafts clas.se!l

now bemg sc hed u led at he r shop
.Oc:tube r marks the begtnnm~s of
Lht• e 1gh th year of the Pl'Cilatnc
Television Fund, Initia ted by Neff as
a spe&lt;·1al proJeCt m October, 1972.
The To' Fund began. also under Ius
thrediUn, 111lktober, 1!176 . Both funds have been extremelv su&lt;"cessful

(U SPS 145 960)

meantn~ful to th e chlldre n
who are hos pitalized All ercdtt fur
th1 s ongo mg proJeCt belo11gs to f'a rl
Neff . The hosp1ta l. the patients and
their famili es are most grateful to
tum for his constant dedication to
tlu s program .
Anymw tn lere ~1eU m partll'l pattng
1n e1ther fund should contact Neff at
111 2 Teudora Avenue , (;allipolis,
Otu u 4563 1

and very

VOL XXVIII

1

B.P .O. Elk..s has made tht·rr i:irl/IU.ctl
to tilt' P1 •d ratrH

co ntribut ron

Court news
GAl. JJPOl.IS

(lilt '

l· a:-. l'

\Lt ~

eon t.m ut.-d tn l;al!1po!ls l\1un1 r 1pa l
Cou rt Fnda)
Charged w1th phy 'i[( a l h.ann \to
pro pe r1y . t tw ~'&lt;iSl' ag&lt;:~msl

\1 ur rl'

.J.

Bl azer Jr , C&lt;JIIIf)lllt s. plt•;!th'(! r11 •t

~

gu1l.1 .

·~

Four otht'r

m Judgl'
J a lllL':-.

ra:-.t· ~

.1&lt;-JJm·~

wert' h"rllllll&lt;lkd

A Ht·nnt'll ·, t·u ur1

P HatilllluiHi . . .
~ullt\

hs tl'd, plc;-Hkd
1·a rr ylllg

&lt;:1

was fmt&gt;tl

r1·J

addrl",:-,

\()a dla !"l!t' 11 f

COrlll'd]t'lj \\\'etp~ll l
$:10

plu :-

~~

..., 1:o.

;1!1•1

riH•fll 1 l

susp t•rJ dt'&lt;l q -•rJ!t.•nt't'
Vnt ~·rUII-! &lt;J

p;, .,l uf fl (t nHl ll' S~ tu "
uf DWI Bdl~ .J llarn n~h•r :_
27. H1d wdl . wa.-. fuurnl g udt~ ;md
fmetl $..100 plu .~o, ;.~ SIX rnunlh s..·ntt·n· ·,..
a il but }() di::tyS SIL')pl'IHkd
Art hur W lkow n. ~\. ( ~ ~dhp,]l.,_
fu rfe1tt•d $:lO on &lt;i l'han~ , , t•f fa li un· I t •
)lt: ld
char~t·

SEVENTH CONTIUBUTIONI - Oscar G. Stephenson , Exalted Ruler
of the (; ollipolis Elks Lodge No . 107, presents their seventh annual contnbulloll to the P edJatric Tele,ision Fund tu Earl Neff , right

F (lrfi'IT.tnl.! $:\n dl. ;t dwn:t· , •I
iL&lt;.;sun·d l lt· &lt;•r Ji....,Ltlll , ..... .~_-. 1\_,,I M rt

J.

l .t: r nlt·~

~:.!.

,\ \t·: W S I ~ J \SUH for tht• lwsp1tal's Pe&lt;ilatnc Toy
I· und. Plarllli-1 H1•1-!F!~. left. uwne r of Dt's Ca ndy . Cake

flillttt•r••\

SU.TESSF\'1. YEAH
NEW YOI(K. \ Y
Chm~ ·, iiil
Indu~tne ~. Inc Sa turday .o~nrw tHWi'l.l
resu lts of the most suen•s.sful ~ l '; Jr 111
Its hiStory (.IS t ht' ('Olll p&lt;HI! rll'hlt'\'' •d
n·co rd rev('nu~::s £tnd rlt't tl!t "t!I IH' fm
IL5 fiscal .n •;rr t'!Hlt'il Augu :-.1 :ll
U~rat1ng n·vt'llllt'-" qf $1115.:4;_ r-•l

wt rr up 22 pt.·r-vent

fn tll l

l;r .-, f 't·;rr ·-.

$86 ,395,000 and rw l tll + '+lr~w , t
$i.932,1XM1 wa.-. up J~· f!l' rt't•r:' f r ~·,
las t yeor 's $t).ljj;)tl.I M~ l \\ hid t:,, ·'· :~·d
i:l n t•x:t ra nrd!ri&lt;Jr~ .~. u . ,,. :$.' 111 . · •~ ·
Net mcrm w pPr shan· rt '-"' ' .J • p+ ·r .
cent to $2J}J f ron 1 la.c;t _\ t '.t r " $1 ~~~

whJ ch uwludcd tilt' ntr·;r••rdirl.:r 1
~a tn uf 16ct'nb
Per share earn1n~ ~ 111 197~~ u1
c r eHsed d!sproportwn;Jitly to rwt Ill·
come dut· to a dt'~'Tt ' a s t· 1n till'
aver age nurnlxor uf lPI!Ull un st10:1 re~
outstan dtn~ . Roth years· pt.'r slwn·
amounts refle...t.-; thP :1 f}{'fl'l'nt r·nm mon s toek dJ\'Jdend pa)ali k +II•
No,ember 26, 1979

and Crafts Supply in Spnng Valley Plaza. g1ves he r
dona llon to Carl Neff for the month of October.

Administrative pay hikes approved
FA!;T 'vH·~ fr;s - Pas tern 's Local
Honnl of Education at its October
lllL't'llllg last wee k approved adJIIIllJStral!n· nn·ws for ~upe rtn ­
lt •n dt·nt Hw h;rrd Hobe r ts, ht s
' ' 't.TPl; tr~ .
board ciPrk-treas urt•r
and II H· itS ~ I st:wt trl· ~tsurcr .
l rt 11tlwr rn&lt;llhT \_ sevt·ral pt•rsutl\
\ \ l'["t' l'! l i]ll+ l_\ ('tl
(~.lit· I ~ 11: th tt t ~· a:-- named choral

d

1 t' + t,•t

. Suv Thornpsu n.

~t· ntor

t'l,L'i:"-1 &lt;td\'t.'&gt;~tr . \1r\

\1 &lt;-i rth cl Durst.
.'-I :IJs t tu tf' :-; f'•Tt't.:t r ·~. cook. study
l!t i J!lllor. Mrs . .Judy Buckl ey.
sub.'1t ttU!l' :-;t,.'ITt't.ary ; ~rs _ G rac('

h;dl

( 'h t•\·a\ J('r. su h:~ t 1tutt·
c ustodian :
\1rs . Y1:onne S1ssun, substitute
sc'{.: r el&lt;.lry; Mr s. Darlene Casstdy.
-,ubsti tu tr bus drrver, Mrs _ Luul.S
Tyson . Wilham Huhmette . substitute

til&lt; d1str1ct W1lll&gt;e a!Jie to 1s.s ue con duet grades .
The Jayr~s were g1ven per rm.ss lon tu hold a square dance at the
Cheste r build ing on Nov. 24. Per nussiorJ was gi ve n for placement of
L'uUed 1on boxes Ill the sc hoo l-; for
('hnstrnas donation.s of toys fur the
needy .
The board app roved a contract
w1th the Ja ckson Oty Board of
Edu ta tl on for renewal of tran s portatJO n for a student to a special

Little Chad Green buried Saturd11Y
HASTI'\GS, Nt·b . 1 AP 1 - Chad
Gr ee n 's p a r e nt s. wh o flt&gt;d the
country to seek treatm ent for tllt.'lr

tt•acht:r

.-\ number of tnd.t\lduals commented on laktng ;Htlon on conduct
gr·c-lf lt·~ hetng tssu ed by bus dnv ers.
It "a.-. '&gt;l l'l'.'-·' ''d th;t! rw b us dn\·er m

J&gt;oli('e ('ife driver
followinM ;wcident

HAM &amp; SWISS
on RYE

1

tlt •d

filll l'" lilt.;

d

IW (J- n'h l c l t•

&lt;HTtdt•nl F rtdi--1~ on tht.· 400 block of
'll11rd t\\t·nut·

with

."&gt;&gt;:' t'lll' t-it 8 2J d . JTl . ,
Jl4dlcl' rt'p&lt;&gt;rt ~north
tJ"t i!J · ' &lt;ILl+• opn81l'd
by EIIP
, J.- Jr]~ l! dl . 1tl (; ;dlipolt s . :-;tnwk tJw
··1 1 tt •!ll! ,,f ;1 \ t'lttcll' Lirt\"L'Il h~
_...,,ti t' I' \ I I+ l'fJh(lwt·r. :ln. Le!art.

{ 'nllt'd

FRIES

)II

!ht•

Call!pOli~ ( 'll~

''I

I

J....."""':~~-~~w~w..-..---.-.-J

MONDAY-FRIDAY
OCTOBER 22-26

McCLURE'S

JS4E . Malll
Pom eroy, 0
992 ·6 292

II \ "
Tl tt' r t· v.-;1 :-; rwt dt ·r-rile d;-Htl;j~l' tu
L" •t h ' ··ttw lt·s t;idtllll~m wa s citt'd on
;, ··h; l!'l.!t' •1f ldt of CL'rttt•r
In furtht ·r i-H'!ltln . SI X ptT Suns wt•rt·
•·tt t·d l:rldti~ on 'hcrrgl's u f
P- ISSi 'S-"'illn ,,f opt•n fvnWJnt• rS In

public ll.st' art&gt; &lt;-J~
1 '1 tt-d Wt·re
Phll I . lliilrti . 20.
L;-tllip+dt ....
C'iirl H Dray. 20,
· .. :lq,,!:~ \Ltll~· r I WaL"iUn II. 22.
· ,;d!q:"l.'
,I&lt;Jiiil l ).,1dlltk. 24.
\ ;;dltpol:....
.lt'rr} Stg!llon . .14,
C;illip11l1~. and, Sl.&lt;infor d ()
C'ox,
(;; tlllpult.~

school.
The tractor pulling club was given
perrniss1on to have a banquet at the
Chest er bu ildJng on Nov . 3 and
F:astern F' uture Farmers were given
pem11SSion to attend a s ta te con ~
ferenre 111 Colum bu s, 0&lt;1 . 31. Nnv . I
a nd 2.
The boa r d pur chased spa c&lt;·
heat ers for the bus garage a11d h&lt;ard
three grievanct•s hrought by mem bers of the Eas tern Loca l Teache rs
Assoc1atton .

JOI~S

STAFF - J&lt;•ff Slatter)

ha.'i juined tht· HudLing Tt&gt;chnieal
Collt·~t·

sl&lt;lff as a health educator
in tht· Community Health
Edu&lt;·a tion Centt-r's hyperten.~ion
program , annuunC'ed CHEC eoor dit~ator Kath y Dansky . Slattery
"'as previously employed by the
Suutht-"ast Ohio Emergency
M edit'al St· rvkt•s , serving as
•·hie! of tile Coolville EMS
station . An f' ml'fgenry medical
tt•dmir-ian - paramedic. Slattery
is
Hl!w a &lt;'t•rtiUed
rardiopulmllll.l;lry n·susdtation in·
strudor-lrain e r and has taught
first aid d.usst·s throughout thr
n·~ion .

NOW IN STOCK
4-1979 Buicks
Factory Officials Automobiles
3-ElECTRA 4 DR PARK AVENUES
1-ElECTRA 225, 4 DR SEDAN
BIG SAVINGS ON THESE 4 MODELS NOW

leukem ia-stric ken son . buri t"d th e
bu y Saturday Ul th e to wn where he
w as bor n just three years ago .

H1s mother , D1ana l;reen, 26, left
th e graves1te c lutch mg a f uzzy whJte
tc'Cidy bear. She was jmned by her
hus band , Gerald . 29, and a sma ll
g r o up of fam1 ly fnend s and
reporter s
TI1e Rev . Nalhan Wood, a Bapt iSt
minister fr om Sc ituat e, Ma ss ..
when~ th e &lt;;r ee ns had lrved for 18
month s, offu.' tatt·d lit tht• b uriiil He
said . "Chad was not a sy mbol. Chad
was not a ca uSt.'. he wa s a umque
ere&lt;:~ lion of God ."
Se rvices were conducted undt•r a
s wm y a utumn sky. A bnsk fall
breeze r ustled U1rough the trees,
pounng leaves over th e site where
Uu~ small wh1te casket wa s lowered
mto tL'i grave .
A small ston e bca nng Chad 's
n a m e, an e ngravmg of Chn s t
holdwg a lam b am.l the words
"From beg mnln g to be~inmng "
bt·neath thl' elate s of h1s b trth and
Je(tth , will mark tlle tmy g ra ve.
It was the cl use uf anoth er cha pter
1.11 tht• saga that thrust the ]-yea r..Qid
buy to natiO na l attentiOn after his
parents took h un to Mt&gt;x 1ro so th a t
his &lt;.'a nt:e r cuulU Ue treatl'l1 w1 th
Laetr ile . The parenLc; say the1 r legal
battles ove r Uw tr eatment involved
not just Lae tnl e but tht· prm rl plt• of
freedom of chorce .

NO. 133

•

•

e

D-12- The Sund ay Tune:-. ....'\Pnlllll'l. S u nda~ . O('t 11, 197fl

at

enttne

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONUAY. OC lOBER 22. 1~19

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

0DNR outlines Meigs reclamation project
By Carol A. Krotj e
Ohio Department of
Natural Resources
Since strip rUining began on a
large scale in OhiO tn 1914, there
has been Lhe quest1on • is it good
or bad for Ohio ' Are we ruming
the land for profit : Yet , can we
survive econorrucally without
s urface mining ';I
It is ne ve r an easy task to bring
two opposing viewpoints a little
closer together, but the Ohio
Department of Natural Reso urces tODNR) owns a relati ve ly
small piece of land m southeast
Oluo where it is be1ng done
The 81\.acre area in northwest
Meigs County 1s a part of an ex periment in land reclamation.
The lush green fie lds and gently
rolling hills have become a model
of what can be done With land
badly damaged from surface
mining • land that had no use but
to remain idle
" People come to us and want to
know il returning the land to ' ~'

natural &gt;tate a fter strip mimng
for coal can really be acco mplished." satd
Dave
Buchanan, geologist with ODNK 's Division of Reclamation,
the ofltce res ponsibl e for
managmg the Me1gs County
Heclama tion Area. "We s how
them Lhe Meigs area and they 're
gene rally convinced ."
The picturesque. long, na r row
strip of land provides a sharp
contrast to the surr ounding
barren hills which were heavily
mined for coal in the 1941f; and
'50s.
Suriac'€ miners' large shovels
foil owed the natural contour of
the land , stnpping 1ts vegetation
and soil to remove the coal. When
the coal was gone, so were the
shovels .
" At that tune , there were not
Lhe strict laws there are today
requiring coal mine operators to
recl aim the land afte r the

mineral

IS

removed,"

said

Buchanan . "Coal mine operators

were i.n the bustness of minmg
coal. It was not economically
fea sible for them to put the top~
soil back and re-esl&lt;lbl ish the
vegetation ."
He exp lained that early efforts
towa rds reclaiming the land
mostly failed because of im proper methods and po or
management. There was not the
total commitment U1at was made
with the Meigs project.
According to
Buc hanan ,
ca reful planning and continual
management have resulted in the
success ul the Meigs County
Reclam ation Area .
It is the first project of its lund,
funded totally by the state and
authorized under Otuo 's Mined
l.and Reclamation Program
Funding came from a severance
tax paid by Ohio's coal rrune
operators and addJtionall&lt;lxcs on

damag e the accumulation of
eroded sedJment was dotng to the
plain of the Shade Ri ver .
The flood plalll was no longer
working because 11 had filled With
sediment washed down from the

other

area .

natural

resources

ex·

tracted 1n the state .
Ironi cally , il it were not for the
continual mining for coal. the re

would not be the funds for til&lt;
reclamation of abandoned surface mined lands.
'The ar ea had no grass, nu
tr ees and no fe rtil e sot!,"
Buchanan sa1d . " It was one of the
best examples uf sevt:re eroswn
we could find .''
Accordin g to Bu chanan , the

erosion problems are wor st tn
this part of Ohio beca use of the
easi ly weath e red sands tone
above the coal.
" In fa ct , the erosion was so
bad , the area had gullles mor e
than 2tJ feet deep ," he added .
The Divis ion of Heclamati on 's

main concern was the severe

nooct

The actual reclamation was
completed during the s urrune r of
1!178 by a pnvate contractor,

a lthough ODNR funded and
designed the project and super vised the work .
Buchanan descnbe'CI the stepby,'l!ep process of reclaunmg the
a r ea . Fir-it the uneven ground
a nd deep gulli es we re leve led by
buUdollng. Topsoil fr om a nearby
area was ha ul ed in and spread
uver Lhe area to a depth of eight
tu 10 inches.
" We borrowed topsOil from one
acre of offs ite la nd for eve r y
e1ght tu 10 acres ul m111ed land
r ecl aimed ,·· Buchanan said.
The next step involved plantmg
new vegeta.tton which would
prevent further erosion a nd once
again restore the YJability of the
a rea and unprov e the sol i
ca pabil ity . " The type uf
vegetati on planted was a very
trnportant cons iderat10n because
11 had to be hardy enough to grow
in Lhe soil wluch was still
somewhat toxic as a result of th e
mining ," Buchanan sa1d .
He expla ined the toXIcitY wa s

the result of sandstone and low
quallty coal fr om the upper and
lowe r fe w inches of the coal seam
left on the ground s urface alter
numng . Coal seams usually are
about two to four feet thick in this

area .
The Meigs area was planted
l'ith several kinds of clover and
grasses wluch grow well in such
a dv erse cond itions.
To further prevent sediment
runoff into the Shade River, two
tel11(JOrary ponds were built adjacent to the mined area. They
hold excess water from the area
and provide a place for the
sed1me nts to settle . Water in the
pond 1s slowl y released tnt&lt;&gt; the
nver .
The Youth Conservation Corps
uf Ohio, a swruner conservatlon
work program for tugh school
s tude n~&gt;. also helped with the
project Th ey constructed small

slick darr15 on the areas where
&lt;Contmued on page 101

Second annual show Nov. 6
CHESTER-The second annual arts and crafts s how of th€ Useful

F nends Organization of the Silver
ll1dge Cornmumty has been set for
Nov . 6 beginning at 10 a .m.
The
show will be held on the Conunons
ac ross from the Chester F'1 rc
Stat ion . weather permitting. In case
uf Inc le m e nt weather , the event will
be he ld a t til&lt; Masonic Hal l. behind

KEX r;crr THE WORD
I.CHBIJCK, Te xas 1 AP 1 - Hea d
fi-1\ IJ;ll\ ('(J(H"h Ht•x Oot·kt•ry of Tt•xa s
Tt ·ch laughs wtwn he reca ll s h1 s
tll'hul as ~~ coach tn September of
1~1/8 Hts ll'Clln journeyed to Los
:\n)..(t'les t11 pltjy Southern Cah fo rm a
rmd chl'cke d tnt o the I. .A. Culis.eum
f+ll' d workout tlw day befOrt' tht.&gt;
~ arm•.

" Wt: we r en 't s upposed to be too

the post office .
Hegistratrion IS requested but not
required . However , in case of rain,
those registered will be given first
conside ration .
Hobbyists wislung to !Bke part are
to write I.Ha Van Meter, Box 26,
Chester . 45720, or call her at 98:i.J951
or Jane Coa tes a t 965-4327 .

0'
·'

~ood

and en~ryon e knows about ti'le
trad1t1on of the Trojans."
O.&lt;ker y S&lt;tld . ·' There was an eldt•rly
~uar d statwned at the ramp which
it'ltn Lhe hel d and our players went
by hun w1th the coaches bnnging up
tht• n.:iir . As we passed him. he
shrugged and muttered • ·Js that a ll
you'vt• goP'"
Southern cal won the game Lhe
nt•x:t day, 17..(1 _
~r ea l

BEFORE - Dave Buchanan, geologist with lhe
Oluo Department of Natural Hesources !ODNR I, s~r­
veys the badly eroded soil at an abandoned strip mine
area in northwest Meigs County . The dark sub61&lt;1nce

on the ground surface is tox1 c, low quality coal which
prevents vegel&lt;ltion ·from growing . (Photo by Herb
Hott, Otuo Department of Natural Resources . 1

AFTER - Less than two years ago, this gently
rolling field had no grass and no fertile soil. This is the
Meigs Co Wlty Reclamation Area , a model of what can
be done with land badly damaged from surface mirung .
It is the f1rst project of il• kind , funded tota lly by the

Ohio Department of Natural Resources !OONR) and
authorized under Ohi o's Mined Land Reclamation
~ram . 1Photo by Herb Hott, Otuo Department of
Jli!l~ al Hesources . 1

Vow to stay until settlement

News
briefs.

••
Bishop executed
CARSON CITY , !'&lt;ev . 1AP 1 J esse Bi shop, tht• tou g h-t a lkm g
murderer who sn eer ed ~t attempL'l
to save him from the Nevadn ga!i
chamber , wa s executed ea rl y toda y,
Lhe t h1rd man put to d eath '" Lhe
Umted States tn the past 12 years .
Bishop shook his head and sa1d
nolhl!lg . Cyan1de pellets fe ll 111to an
act d bat h . unlcashm g de ad ly ga s.
B1shop marle what appeared to b&lt; a
thwnbs-down sign, wrink led h1s
nose , seemed to se arch Lh e room and
br eathed deeply several times.

ELBERFELD IN POMEROY

SAVE 30%

CUSTOM MADE
DRAPERY
SALE
DECORATOR INDUSTRIES
AND CORnEY
Choose from our big se le c t io n of
pattern s and c ol o r s and Sa ve 30%
now d u ring this sa le . You 'll like
the way these d rap e ri es ' a re made
and the way they' ll improve any
r oom in your hom e. Ex ce llent ,
too , tor your office , for c hur c hes .
Bring in \K)Ur measurements le t us quote you our sale pr ice o n
what you selec t .

Save 30%, too , during this sale

on custom made bedspreads .

SALE ENDS OOOBER 27th

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Dayan resigns
JER USA l EM 1AP I Prime
Menach e m
Hcgin 's
government was reeling today Wlder
two surpnse blows - the resignatlon
of Foreign Minister Moshe Da yan
and a Supreme Co urt order Lhat
Jews must g1ve up a controversia l
West Bank settlement.
Dayan had cited h1s opposi tiOn to
the Elon Moreh settlement as one of
reasons for his resignatlo n Sunda y.
But his c htef grtpc was his lack of
influe nce over Lh e four&lt;nonlh.old
negotiation s wi th Egypt and Lhe
United States on autonomy for
Palestm1ans on t he occupied Wes!
Bank of Lhe J ordan River a nd in Lhe
Gaza Strip .
Mim s t e r

Body located
BELLEFONTAINE . OhiO I AP ) The body of 56-year-&lt;&gt;ld Arthur
Snuth , a Rink' s Departnwnl Stor e
manager who had been m tssmg for
nine day s, was found at abo ut 5 p.m .
Sunday in weeds off a township road
in Logan Ca Wlty . The ca use of dealh
was not immediately dJsclosed .
County Sheriff M1lt Watts sa1d Lhat
tile area where Lhe body was foWld
had ~n combed by authorities last
Tuesday and the body was not there
at that time. The area IS the slle of
an old bulk oil plant.

t

Administrative offices hit by teacher 'sit-in"
Approximately 50 strilung Meigs
Local Sc hool Distnct teachers
~a thered
at the district's administrative offices in the Me1gs
Junior High School Ia~ Monday
morning apparently to push for a
settlement of the strike which
moved Into 1ts 21st clay .
The teachers apparently on a s it

down strike action in occupying the
offi ces of Supt. David Gleason and
adrnmlStrallve olftces of Dwight
Goins and Dan E. Morris were also
in an ullice occupied by the
sec retaries of U1e dJstri ct. They
vowed to stay m the offices until the
stdke is settled
The new action came at a time

Deputies recover
stolen vehicle
Meigs County sheriff's d eputies
th1s weekend recovered a stolen
vetucle which had been taken from
Hilton Wolfe's Body Shop in Hacine .
She riff James Profitt reports Sgt.
Handy Forbes and Special Deputy
Sam Shain wtule on a routine patrol
recovered the vehlcle
AccordJng to Sgt . Forbes· report, a
1!174 vehicle owned by Nancy Griffith , lincoln Heights, Pomeroy , was
located at the Kingsbury Mobile
Home Accessory Sales Shop at
Minersville at !.51! a.m . Sunday .
The vehicle 's dd'er was apparently
traveling west on Route 124 when he
ran off the road and struck a stone
wall near some storage tanks . The
right front fen&lt;'er of the car was
damaged along with a tire.
According to the report when of ficers arrived at the scene the
vetucle was on a jack but no one was
around. The owner said the vehicle
was to ha ve undergone body work ar
the shop and was not supposed to be
in operati on .
M1ke K Harrison. 22, Haute I.
l(uu te I, Middleport, has been cited
to Meigs County Court on a hitskip
charge folloWing an accident on
County Hoad 3 approximately 1.5
miles off State Route 7 at 3:30a.m.
Saturday . According to the report,
Harrison was traveling west on the
road in his pickup truck which ran
off the road strilung and breaking off
a Columbus and South&lt;rn Ohi.Q..Eiec-

•

tric pol e.
Lines carrying some 7500 volts
were knocked down and se nous InJUry could have resulted . Harrison.
according to the report, got a tractor
and pulled the vetucle to hi&gt; residen ·
ce about one-half mile away.
The truck was heavil y dama~ed
but he was not injured
Richard caruthers. Jr .. 20. Ht. 2.
Pomeroy , was cited to CoWltY Co urt
on a reckless operation charge
folloWing an accident at 12•27a.m.
SWlday on Route 33, .1 of a mile north
of Pomeroy .
AccordJng to the report , caruthers
was northbound on Route 33 when he
lost control c4 Ius car . The vetucle
went left of center and of[ the left
Side of the roadway going up an embankment and overturning onto its
top 10 the southbound lane. The
ve hicle was demoli s hed but
Caruthers escaped injury .
Deputies are also attempting to
!Continued on page 10 )

FIRE RUNS
The Middleport Fire Deparlnnent
was called to the junction of Routes
124 and 7 at II a .m. SWiday morning
to s!Bnd by while two old houses ,
owned by Handy McDaniel, were
burned . The department returned to
the location at 2: 27 p .m . when the
burning spread into brush near the
homes.

when Supt Gleason is in Nelsonville
where he IS meeting with Bill Lew 1s,
federal mediator in the strik e, and
representatives of the tea chers
asso ci ation in an attempt to reach a
settlement 1n the strike .
Schools were officially closed in
the di''tnct last Tuesday and
remained officially dosed today .
Mrs . Bonme Fisher , president uf
the Me ig s Loc a l Teachers
Association . issued the followtng
statement Lh lS morning •
" The Meigs Local Teac her s
Association feels that a s the strike
agaii"1 the Meigs Loc al School
system e nters into its 21st day , very
little effort has been made on the
part of the Me1gs l,ocal Board uf
Education
lo
r eso l ve
the

negotiation s.

"Statem e nts have been mad e that
the tea chers assoc1atto n
1s
unavailable for negotiations &lt;:tnd
tha t you have nut been contacted for
negollations .
" To dem onstra~ our ava 1l a bihty
for negoti a tion~t , we a re go tng to
remain m yo ur offi ce until the st nke
IS resolved. We fee l Lhat our conttn ual negotiations can and w1ll
resolve our difference~ "
Sunday ni ght, the dJstnct's board
of education met at the JWll or h1gh
bwldmg with seve ral pomts being
brought mto the open as the board
discussed the strike Wllh some 30
parenLS on hand .
Ourm g the rn eehng It was repor ·
ted tha t ne~ottatwns betwee n thl'

teachers a nd the board wtth the
federal med 1ator . Le wis, have been
talung place. The report was given
by Gleason who said that the
t ea chers association had asked that
t he negotiations remai n secret.
&lt;Con tmued on page 10 I

Weather
Partly cloudy. very warm and
breezy today w1th the rugh lil til&lt; low
to mid !lOs. Cloudy and breezy
to~ht With a chance of showers and
thunder&gt;torms, the low in the lower
60s . Showers and thunderstonns
l1kel) Tuesday, the hig h in the lower
70s . Chance uf raii1 10 percent today,
40 percent tonight and 70 percent
Tuesday

West Columbia man shooting victim
A West Columbia man is dead th1s
m ornin g foll o wing &lt;::trl in c ident

Sunda1· evenmg, 6 •08 p.m outside of
the .Jone s· Place private clu b on
Route 62 nca r West f'o lum b1a
Dead 1s Johnny Ray Hoschar . 25
Rt 1. West Col umbia, who riled th "
mornmg from a t 2~guage s hotgun
wou nd of the lower nght r hest. and
multiple internal injurie~
According to the Ma son Co unt y
Shenff's Department, detalis of the
Incident are sketchy. When t he law
enfo rce m ent a ge ncies arrived at the
sce ne. Hosr·ha r had a lready been
tran s port e d t o Pl easant Va lley
fl osp11&lt;1 1 by the Ma son Rescue
Squad , where he unde rw ent
eme rgenc y s urger y. accordtn g to
Or. John Gru bb.
He d ied at approximatel y 7•45
a .m . this morning from th e injuries.
Also injured at the scene wa s
Charles Samuel Wheeler, 54 . West
Columbia . Wheeler was treated at
Vet e ran s Me morial Hospital.
Pomeroy. Ohio, for an eye injury,
according to hospital authorities .
No arrests have been made, and
the in cide nt is still under the investigation of the Mason County
Sheiff' s Depa rtment and the P oint

P le asant Detachment of the State
Pnlu:c

At the sl'f· ne were .\1 ason Poil c('

PUBLIC MEETING
A publtc meetmg to discuss the upcoming incom e tax to be voted upon
10 Pomero y in the November elec·
ti un has been set for 7 · 30 p.m . Wednesday at the Pomeroy Fire Station .
All mtercsted people are invited to
attend
OHIOAN Kn.LED
PLAITSMOUTH, Neb . I AP I
Plattsmou th pollee sa1d E th el
Trego, 13, of Circleville, Ohio, was
lulled Saturday when Lhe rnotor ycle
on whi ch she was a passenger was in
coll ision with a p1ckup truck.
Police Sgt. Robert Vencil said
Mrs. Trego was on a motorcycle
driven by her son, Harold Haddox,
22, of Offutt Air Force Base . Haddox
was take n to Ehrling Bergquist
Hospital.
Vencil said the acctdent occured
on the east edge of Plattsmouth .
He said the driver of the pickup
truck was Pe~r S. Swihart of
Pacific Junction, Iowa .

•

Ch1ef John Pearson. P oint Pleasant
P oli ce S~t. J D Sallaz. Mason
CoWl!\ Sheriff's Deputies J M .
W 1 th c~ s. J . R. McCoy, and G. M.
K&lt;·a rn s. and State Police Troopers
"'' s Sm1th and F . A. Ba ckus.
Funeral
arrangements
for
Hoschar will be announced by the
Foglesong Funeral Hom e in Mason.

EXTENDED FORECAST

By The Asssoclated Press
Wednesday through Friday
Partly clo udy Wednesday . A chance
of showers Thursday and Friday.
Highs in th e !lOs. Lows at night in the
upper 30s to mid 40s early
Wednesday and in the 40s Thursday
and Fr iday.

SQUAD CAU.ED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad

ans_.ed a call to Unloo Ave., at
8:45 a .m . Sunday for Mrs. Edna
Hart. Mrs. Hart was dead upon the
squad's arrival. At .9:44a.m. Monday the unit took Victor Leifheit to
Veterans Memorial Hn&lt;~pltal.
·

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      <name>leonard</name>
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    <tag tagId="130">
      <name>mees</name>
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    <tag tagId="7793">
      <name>steinbauer</name>
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    <tag tagId="1695">
      <name>venters</name>
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