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."he Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday. Nov . 23. 1971l

'Thanksgiving 1979, a mixed emotional bag
a •

ITIII
DEER SLUGS
12 &amp; 20 GAUGE
s pk. '1.92
16 GAUGE
s pk. '2.12

Some senior ci tizen~ in Atlantic
Qly, N.J ., had turkey on some high
rollers, while New York kids
screeched approval of li:Hoot Un derdog . In Dallas, the Cowboys may
have wished they were in New York,
and somewhere in the Pacific, Jack
Marbut ate in a ship 's mess .
It was Thanksgiving 1979, a mixed
emotional bag spiked by dressing
and deviled eggs, bearded tyrants,
blizzards and captured Americans
far from home .
Thirteen Americans released
from the U.S. Embassy in Iran enjoyed Thanksgiving with their

families, but President Carter's
hollday message reminded the
nation of the 49 still held .
The mood was upbeat in the B1g
Apple, where millions tw-ned out to
be cheered by clowns, stirred by
bands and wowed by the largerthan-tile floats and balloons as the
!i.'!rd Macy 's Thanksgiving Day
parade moved down Broadway .
"This is a very greasy parade ,"
said John " Bowzer" Bauman of the
·~-..tyl e rock . group Sha Na Na .
"That's the highest compliment 1
~an give ."
' Many of the estimated 110 million

410 Gauge
S pks. '2.02

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985 -3301

Chester, OH .

Don'tGIY

1974 F-250 FORD PICKUP
4 sp tran o:,
V o P S , rad tO , he-avy duty . step
bumper 2 to c hoose f rom

1975 F-100 PICKUP

Area deaths
PAULM . JONF.S
Paul M. Jones, 64, Swlbury , Oflio
died at his residence Wednesday
morning .
Mr . Jones was born in Pomeroy
the son of the late Will J . and
Josephine Spencer Jones. He was
also preceded in death by two
brothers, Billy Jones and Spencer
Jones .
He is surv1ved by his wife , Nora
Jones, one son , Paul William Jones
Greensboro, N. C.; two daughters :
Sarah Ann Leclerc , U. S. Army ,
South Carolina, and Mona Jean Cordell , Portland, Oregon; two grandchildren; two aunts , Ann Coe and
Maxine Wingett both of Racine, and
several cousins who live in Meigs
County .
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 11 a.m . at the Rutherford Funeral Home , North High
Street, Colwnbus. Burial will be in
Union Cemetery, Colwnbus .

V 8, std trans . P S.. bumper

1975 F-250 SUPER CAB
V 8, P S . P B . ldc.e new pa tnt, rP~r se at

. COLO''
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1/..-ult •

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1977 CHEV. C-10 STEPSIDE
v 8, au to tranc;, . white spoke wheels .

7- NEW 1979 TRUCKS IN STOCK,
4 - 1979 CARS IN STOCK.
ALL REDUCED PRICES.

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
For a Friend~ Deal See Rocky Hupp, Darrel Doddrill
or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.
S. 3RD AVE.
992-2196

The Middleport Pentecostal Cl!urch will observe homecoming and
evangelism Swlday at the church on
S. Third Ave , this Swlday .
Evangelism services will be held
from 10 a .m . Wltil noon with the Rev .
Ralph Priddy from Circleville, W.
Va ., ministering to the adult class
and Mrs . Shirley Priddy speaking to
the nine to 18 year old group . Their
son, Jerry, and friend will be
teaching the three to eight year old
group through a ventriloquism act .
There will be also a puppet show
conducted by Teresa Shaffer and
Amanda Eastman with a giant
papier mache elephant to be used as
a prop in the young people's group.
At noon classes will be dismised
and a homecoming dinner and
fellowship hour will be held WJW 2
GARDEN CLUB MEETING
Mrs . Harvey Erlewine and Mrs .
James Nicholson will entertam the
Rutland Garden Club at the
Erlewine home Monday evening .
The roll call will be "a feathered
friend' ' which mits the home .
Mrs . Olarles Lewis will present
OAGC slides on birds in Ohio. Ideas
for December will be presented by •
Mrs . Russell Little . The meeting
will start at 7:30p.m .

.,.. .

CiP

DAMAGFS SOUGIIT
A suit in the amoW!t of $83 ,705 .56
was !Ued in Meigs CoWlty Common
Pleas by Patsy J . Laudermilt and
Walter Laudermilt, R1 . 2, Racine ,
against Don l. Walker, Racine .
The suit is lor injuries sustained in
an automobile accident on Dec . 21 ,
1978, on SR 338 in Racine.

. . . to I..!Cl ll10\'lll l!

. . . to ]oin the Christmas Club
... t(l heat Christmas hills
.. . t,, en_ioy your C hristmas.
PICK YOUR CLUB NOW .. .
Deposit Each
Receive Ne•t
week For
Year For
49 Weeks
Christmas

SOc .... .. ... . . . .. . . .. . ... . .. . . ... S2S.OO

s1.00 ... .. ... . . .. . .. . . .. ... .. ..... sso.oo
$2 .00 . . . . .
. .. . . . ....... $100. 00
S3 ..00 . . ... ..•.. . ... ... • ....... .. S1SO.OO
ss.oo . . . . . . . . .
. ... .. .... . $250.00
$10.00 . .... . .. . .. . . . . . .. . .... .... ssoo.oo
$20 .00 .... .. ................... s1.000.00
Open your Christmas Club before January 1, 1980, make
49 prompt weekly payments , and the Pomeroy National
Bank will make the 50th payment tor you .
You will also receive a FREE Christmas corsage when
you open your club .

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

SPECIAl SPEAKER
The Middleport United Pen tecostal Cl!urch will have as special
speaker for its Friday evening youth
service a yoWJg evangelist, Curtis
Ward , from Nelsonville . There will
be special singing at the public is invited to the service which starts at
7:30p.m .
SEEKUCENSE
A marriage license was issued to
Larry l.Urtis &amp;ruth, 29, R1 . 1.Racine
and lisa Dawn Warner . 18, R1 2:
Rac;,.e .

p.m. when the afternoon worship
service begins . The Rev . Mr . Priddy
will also speak at that service .
The serviCf will dismiss at 4 p.m .
but the evening evangelistic sesrvi ce wimll begin at the usual time of
7:30.
The pastor, the Rev. Wtlliwn Knittel, extends an invitation to the
public to attend the Sunday ob-

servance .
CAGE MEETING
A meeting to organize a church
basketball league will be held at 4
p.m . SIUiday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Olurch . All churches
wishing to lake part in the league
are asked to have a representative
at the meeting .
MINOR MISHAP
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol investigated a two
car accident at 12:50 p.m . Thlll'8day
on SR 2-48 near Long Bottom. Officers said cars driven by Penny
Voss, 30, Colwnbus, and Steve
Barber , 18, Reedsvile , collided on a
c urve . There was moderate
damage . Barber was charged with
drivmg left of the center .
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday Admissions-Harry
Arter , Mason; Larry Bailey , Middleport ; Robert Jeffers, Syracuse.
Wednesday Discharges-Leona
Keck, Clara Conroy, Harold Walker,
Lor a McCoy , Sallie Cadle, George
Nesselroad, Bessie Stitt, Brian Rit chart , John Dean, Malvera Wheeler .
Thursday Admissions-Kim Armstrong,
Middleport ;
Mary
Pickens, Racine; Mary Newlun,
Long Bottom ; Mae Holter, Minersville; Edna Roush, Racine.
Thursday Discharges--Eloise
Eblin, Lucille Lewis, Harry Arter ,
Kaaron Hatfield , Brynda Black .

SQUADS BUSY
The Middleport Emergency Unit
answered a call to Sixth and Palmer
Sta., Friday moming for Roy San sbury who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center .
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to the Victor Young home
at 9:35 pm . Thursday for l.ouise
Hawkins who was taken to Veterans
MemoMal Hospital .

+

unba

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VOL. 13

NO 4:J

ttntS

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANl

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OPEN FRIDAY
NIGHT TIL 8

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GALIJPOUS - Final plans are
being made for the annual Gallia
CoWlty area Cluistmas parade in
downtown Gallipolis on Saturday,
Dec . 1.
Theme this year is : "Quistmas
Through the Eye of a Child ."
Members of the 1979 parade com mittee a re Carolyn Roth , Jan
Thaler, James Mullins, Thelma
Elliott, Farrell Houc k. Dave
Tawney. Jim Thaler , Dr . Don
Thale r , A. K . ( Red ) Suiter and Vic
Mullins, representing the downtown
merchants association and Mike
Thompson, Gallipolis Developmental Center representative.
This year 's parade will start for ming at Ohio Avenue and continue
through the Gallipolis Developmental Center groWJds . Fioat en tries are asked to travel via Mill
Creek Rd. to line up for the parade .
Horses and antique cars will enter
the parade at Spruce St . and Fourth
Ave . !The Cut) and children 's marching WJits will start at the mtersection or Spruce St . and Second
Ave

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MANY SPECIAL VALUES

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During our Pre-Christmas Sale this Friday
u and Saturday . Visit every department - shop
~ every floor and our warehouse on Mechanic
~ Street for many items . Sale priced now in time
~ for Christmas giving.

u
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SHOPSATURDAY9 : 30A.M.TOSP .M .

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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WE'RE DEALING ON NEW
'79 CHEVY CARS &amp; TRUCKS.
SAVE NOW!

NEW '79 CHEVY 4 WHEEL DRIVE
WITH LR.P. CONVERSION
-

STAR STRUCK -

A 1r condit ion in g , locking difl _, 350 eng ine. aut om at ic trans., speed con
trot, t ill st . wheel. aux . f uel tank , c hrome gril le &amp; grille guard , H . Duty
batfery, specia l wheels . t ires. roll bar, lights. CB, AM F M stereo ,
tape . Spec tal Interior T r im .

RETAIL $13,738.00
CLOSEOUTDISCOUNTS 2,238.00
YOUR

SAVINGS

PRICE

'11,500

NEW '79 BLAZER 4 WH. DRIVE CHEYENNE

5 10 15 ~h i r e lettered _ t i r es. Ral ly wheels, fold down R . sea t.
au tomatr c. p~wer ~teerrng &amp; brakes, air , lr nt glass, comforfilt , cruise
control , lockrng drfferential, 1 tone char coa l &amp; white raa ·o
&amp; R
1
•
speakers . A sharp unit
'

'9782
NEW '79 CHEVY
8' FLEETSIDE
Retail S5811.7S C Jose Out Price
'5149

.... :.:.:-:-:-:-·-:-· .
GIANT earth movers have been busy the past
week m East Gallipolis , site of the city's new $7 million
James A. Northup Water Treatment Plant . Ground
was broken for the facility last Tuesday . ConstructiOn

is expected to be completed within two years. The new
plant will replace Gallipolis · outdated plant at the in tersection of MIU Creek Rd . and Eastern Ave . !Steve
Wtlson photo /.

Public meeting set Nov. 27
COLUMBUS - State Represen tative Ron James ([}.Proctorville 1
annoWJced to the citizens of Ga llia
County Saturday that a public
meeting on the need for basic legal
services for the poor in Gallia CoWlty will be held soon .
The Legal Services Corporation is
holding a public meetmg at Marietta
on Tuesday, Nov . 27, at 7 p.m . at the
Manetta Holiday Inn. located at the
intersection of Route 7 and 1-77. AI
the public meeting , citizens and
organizations can make comments
on the need lor legal services for the
poor in Gall!a Co Wlt y . The va n ous

proposals to provide basic legal services will also be discussed .
These meetings are being held
beea use of an application submitted
by the Southeastern Oflio Legal Services Program to the Legal Services
Commission to begm to provide ser vices to the Gallia County area in
1900. The Southeastern Oflio Legal
Services
Pr og r a m c urr ently
prov ides basic legal services for the
poor in So utheastern Ohio , but
Gallia CoWJt y is not one of the co un ·
ties it serves The Southeastern Ohi o
Legal Services program is applying
for funds to serve several counties in
Southeastern Oh1o which c urrent!\'

have no program .
II th e application of the
Southeastern Oflio Legal Services
program is approved , funds based
on the nwnber of poor people in
Gallia CoWJty would be awa rded to
th e legal servtces program to
pro\ide a minimum access to legal
resources for the poor .
"I am very much aware of th e
need for bas1c leg al serv1ces for the
poor to be available in my distnct, "
Representative James said . " !
wo uld encourage anyone who can
help to express the need of Gallla
Co unty for this service to attend the
public meeting .··

Khomeini insists Iran has
right to bring shah to trial
TE H RAN, Ira n
1 AP 1
Revol uti onary leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khome ini msisted on
Sat urday that Iran had the "absolute nght" to bring the deposed
shah to tnal , and the deadlock over
the fa te of 49 American hostages at
the U.S. Embassy headed into a
fourth week wi th no resolution in
sight.
Presid ent Carter summoned the
Joint Chiefs of Staff to Camp Dav id ,
Md White House Press Secrr-. ary

Jody Powe ll said the meeting was
sc heduled some time ago for 1980
budget discussions, but said he could
not rule out the possibility the
situatiOn in Iran would be part of the
agenda .
Khomeini also accused the United
States and Israel of plotting agamst
holy Mos lem shrines in Mecca,
Saudi Arabia , a nd said Carter's " bi g
mistak e" was his !allure to undersland the " depth of fee ling ol the
Islamic movement ." He appealed to

Mos i e~ to " nse up ~~d de fend
Islam agamst ·mf&lt; dels .
.
"Peace can only be attamed If the
crurun~l hands of the oppressors are
cut off . Kh ome m•saulm a m essage
to Mos lem natiOnal liberatiOn
movements
There was no further word abo ut
the condillon of the hostages, who
have nthot rbcendseen fbtyh any o u;s,~er
Since e •rst ay so el r cap ~vi Y·
An InternatiOnal Red Cr oss
tCo niLn uerl on page A-2 1

6 cyl engrne . s1d trans .• AM radio , 5 rad ral fires , m irrors , p _steering .

Syracuse , Oh .
Open Friday , Nov. 24th For The

... L

IN STOCK NEW
LU V 4 WHEEL DRIVE TRUCKS

ALSO NEW '79 CAPRICE,
IMPALA IN 2 AND 4 DOOR MODELS.

Over 10.000 Poinsettas to choose from, Priced
Sl.OO to $10.00. Also hanging basket, foliage,
house plants, African violet &amp; rubber trees.
Watch for our annual Christmas Open House
Saturday and Sunday, Dec . 1 &amp; 2.
OPEN DAILY 9-S

SUNDAY 1-5

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Open

Event11gs

Ill 8 p.n..

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Note little

POMEROY - A strike by the
Meigs Local Teachers Association IS
nearing a length record in the State
of Oflio .
Monday will mark the beginning
of the lOCh week of the strike which
began on Sept . 24. Schools or the
Me1gs Local Distnct were officially
closed on Oct . 16.
Secrecy still shrouded the status of
any settlement Saturday morning
with neither the Meigs Local Board
of Education nor the Meigs Local
Teachers Association issuing any
statements. Neither side has issued
a statement for several days.
Negotiations have been under way
in Col wnbus under the sponsorship
of the Ohio Department of
Education . However , apparently a
settlement has not resulted at thi.s
point .
Negotiations in the Colwnbus
location began on Friday, Nov . 16,
and a goal of a settlement by 6 p.m .

on Sunday, Nov . 18 was set .
However , that goal was not met and
the negotiations, wrapped in
secrecy. continued for several days
durmg the past week . However, as
near as can be detennined there
have been no negotiations since
Thanksgiving .
At the time of the movement of
negotiations to Columbus, Eugene
Brw1d!ge, president of the Ohio
Education Association, indicated
that if a settlement did not
materialize in ColurnbWI that the
problem would be brought back to
the local level. He mentioned the
name of Judge Robert E . Buck u a
m eans of settlement . There is a suit
pendlng in the Meigs Probate Court
of Judge Buck requesting that the
court take over the fWJCtions of the
Meigs Local Board of Education .
Meantime, the strike drags on and
some 2800 students are still out of the
classrooms or the district.

change after

Inside today. • •
Meigs recount I
Area deaths ...... . ....... .... .............. ... .....• A-3
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Board of ElectiOns Friday con dueled a reco unt on votes cast for
the board of educa tion 10 the district
at the Nov . 6 election .
There was littl e change tn the
ballots most of which had to be hand
co unted by the board because or the
nwnber or write-in candidates in vo lved in the voting .
Elected in the district were J im my C. Caldwell who was the only
candidate on the ball ot , and Roger
Gaul and Bernard Shri vers . both
Y.Tite..w candidates .
Slrivers was elected with 328
wnt e ~

Classified ads ..................................... D-6-11
Farm news ..... .. . ..... . . ........... . . . ...... .. .. ... D-5
Local news ......... . ...... .............. . ..... . ... . A·2-S
Ufestyle .... ..... .... . . ........ . .......... ........ 8·1·12
Sport~ . ...... .. . ........ ............. ........ . . .. .. C-1-8
TV guide .. ....... ... ... . ............................ D-8

votes and the recoun t was

brought about by Hugh &gt;,!artin who
rece1ved 31 8 votes, 10 less than
Shrivers .
Several candidates observed the
reco Wlt , it is reported .
. .-:.·. :- ·-:-·-·

POMEROY'

CHRISTMAS IS COMIN(;
Now that Thanksgiving
is past. it 's ft~l steam ahead !rr CJ&gt;ris-trnas . Gina Scarberry , nine year old daugh! n of Mr and \1" Hob&lt;-rt

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"You. ~hevy Dealer"

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Meigs teacher strike
nearing state record

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POMEROY MOTOR CO.

992-2126

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Theme : Most Original Entry ; Best
Youth Entry; Best Walking Unit and
participating plaques for bands.
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Wagner will
serve a.s parade marshals this year .
Parade judges are Mrs . Marianne
Campbell , Dale Lear and Mrs . Arthur Lund .
Parade participants will begin forming at 9.30 a .m. in the GDC area,
and will start downtown at II a .m .
The parade should be in downtown
Gallipolis at 11 :JO a .m. Saturday.

ln creasmg cloudmess today With a
chance of rain by afternoon . The
chance of rain is 40 percent.
''

SAVINGS TIM[
IS NOWI

CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY SEASON

JOINS MOVEMENT
POMEROY--Cbureb bello
throughout Mel go County may be
chlmlng eaeh day In coojuneUoo
with a national program relating to
tbe hostages In Iran. A Dlltlooal
movemeot relaiiDg to tbe bootoges t.
a.oking that church bella be nmg
from 12 to 12:15 p.m. eaeb day until
the bostages are freed .

Ann Rieser 's GAHS home
economics class will provide two exIra costumes th is year . The
eostwnes will be worn by the Key
Oub and members will distribute
candy along the parade route. Candy
will be furnished by the Gallipolis
Merchants Association .
Five trophies have been donated
by the Antique Car Club - Oldest
Car ; Most Original Car and Judges
Olo1ce .
Other trophies to be presented
are : The Best Retig10us Float : Re't

Weather

FUll WARRANTY - GOOD SELECTION

992 -S776

PRICE 35 CENTS

OIUO FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday, a
chance of rain through the
period . Highs in the :;(E Monday ,
cooling to the 4lkl by Wednesday .
Lows in the 305

'

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY

Gallia's annual Yule
parade slated Dec. 1

~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~,

ELBERFELDS

entine

Final plans being made

•

More Entertaining
Than Humanly Possible!

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SUNDAY . NOVEMBER 25. 1979

ALSO MONTE CARLOS

FDIC

- - - - . . - .•...,.w...,.,- - ·

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(See details on C-1 ~

\.

wednesday thru
Thursday, Nov . 29

~

v rl , P s . P B . wh tte spok e wheels

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

to the high rollers in Atlantic aty,
where more than 1,000 seruor
citizens feasted .
Caesars Boardwalk Regency
Hotel provided and prepared a complete turkey dinner while county
volunteers delivered and served the
meals at seven of Atlantic County's
lO nubition sites .
Caesars got busy when it learned
the nutrition centers were to be
closed for Thanskglving .

omecoming will he observed~

1977 F-150 PICKUP
I

RILEY PIOOIT
Riley Pigott, 89, Route I, Long
Bottom , died Wednesday night at the
Arcadia Nursing Home following an

extended illness .
Mr . Pigott was born in Dodridge
County, W. Va ., a son of the late Dexter L. and Sina May Morrison Pigott.
He was a member of the Long Bottom United Methodist Olurch,
Shade River Lodge 453, F x AM, and
was a properous poultry farmer
most of his life.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs . Daile
Pigott ; a son, Donald , at home ; five
daughters, Mrs . Rexal ( Ann ) Swnmerfield, Reedsville; Mrs . Henry
1Eileen J Bahr . Long Bottom ; Mrs .
Royal (Lucille ) Wilson , Roseville ;
Mrs . Rex (Sins) Bailey, Olester,
and Mrs . Lorene Woll, Cleveland; 27
grandchildren, 38
greatgrandchildren and one great-greatgrand-daughter.
Preceding him in death were a
son, Willard , in 1977; a grandchild
and a great-grandson.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Saturday at the White FWleral
Home in Coolville with the Rev .
Richard Thomas officiating. Burial
will be in Sand Hill Cemetery, Long
Bottom . Friends may call a\ the
fWleral home alter 3p.m. today .

wllo watched the parade on TV abo
kicked off along weekend of football
games as they saw Dallas lose to
Houston and Olicago drubbed by
Detroit.
But Petty Officer 2nd a ass Jack
.Marut was not in any of the crowds
Thursday . He was aboard the USS
Midway as it steamed for the Persian Gulf, part of a show of strength
prompted by the crisis in Iran .
The prospect of Marut missing yet
another Thanksgiving at home in
Orange, N.J., was upsetting to his
twin sister, Jill, but not as much as
the near-certainty that he would
miss the birth of his second child in
Ykusuka , Japan, probably next
month .
1n Sterling, Kan ., cloudy , rainy
skies and chilling temperatures
threatened to put a damper on
Darlene Walsh 's annual spread for
folks in this central Kansas community - but sometimes even the
weather cooperates .
"It was just fantastic . The
weather had really been bad," said
Mrs . Walsh . "Then about 10 minutes
before we began serving, the sun
came out. It 's been just great all
day."
About 2,000 persons had been expected but Mrs. Walsh said far more
actually showed up . "We ran out of
some things and they had to open a
little store downtown to get some
more food ."
The Thanksgiving spirit even ~ot

Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks eliminated Saturday

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Scarber y of Pomeroy . eyes one of the many dolls on
display at a loc·al toyland .

~nyn

'til
Qlqrtntntan

HO - HO - Hold it 1 Can that be 77 ? Yes, it is! Santa Oaus made hill
first appearance in the old French City Friday as he greeted little ClJrl.st.
mas shoppers a t the Silver Bridge Plaza . Santa , sponsored by some of the
Silver Bridge merchants, was handlng out candy canes to the kiddles
when this Times-Sentinel photo was taken .

�A-2-TheSunday Times-sentinel , SWJday, Nov . 2!i, \979

Military options exclude
~
Entebbe type rescue in Iran

Hijacker
subdued

WASHIN GTON
tAP&gt;
America's military options m lrarl
are not el&lt;J)eCted to include a ilght ning Entebbe-&lt;~tyle rescue of the
hostages - no airborne assault
behind a cry of " Remember the
Mayaquez ."
Military experts agree that any
such effort to free the 49 Amencans
held by students at the U.S . F.rn bassy in Tehran would result m
many casualties and be doomed lo
failure Most likely the hosl&lt;~ges
would be killed, they say .
Some analysts believe the closest
precedent to the Umted States·
current Iranian dilemma IS the 1968
capture of the USS Pueblo by North
Korea . In that incident , the Umted
States was forced to stand by
helplessly as the Pueblo crew mem bers were imprisoned on the Korean
mainland .
Sources both inside and outside
government say there are few com-

By BILL GREER
AIIBOCialed Press Writer
EL PASO , Texas lAP )- Armed
police officers boarded a grounded
American Airlines jet Saturday and
subdued a hijacker about 3 ,, hours
after he commandeered the plane
with 71 people aboard at El Paso In ternational Airport .
The hijacker, armed wtth a kmfe
..nd possibly with dynamite, was
nolding 20 passengers hostage at the
time, demanding to be taken to Iran ,
the FBI said .
lbe suspect, identified as GenJd
Hill Jr., 18, of Chester, Mass ., was
taken into custody after police boarded the Jet. the FBI SaJd .
No shots were- fired and no mjunes
were reported .
Earlier , the hijacker had allowed
all women and children to leave the
Boeing 7'n jet shortly after it landed
at the airport , said John Raymond ,
an airline spokesman 1n Dallas

p.ansons tx•t ween tht! lraman cris1s

and the dramatic Israeli raid which
freed \14 hostages at the Entebbe airport in Uganda three years ago .
Even the 1975 American rescue of
the crewmen of the merchant ship
Ma ya guez from the hands of Cam bodian troops cannot be repeated in
the Iranian situation. In the
Mayaquez operation, the 39 mer chant seamen were resc ued, but 41
U.S . servtcemen were killed and 50
wounded .
··1 don 1 think you can make any
comparison between the Mayaguez
and this case: the two situations are
so different," saJd retired Maj . Gen .
Daniel 0 . Graham, head of the
Defense Intelligence Agency a t the
tune of the Mayaguez rescue .
And Israeli officials, although
reluctant to discuss the Iranian mat ter publicly , shy away from making
a companson of the Entebbe rescue
and a possible airborne assault on
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran to save

the American hostages held there .
President Carter, after earlier
discounting armed intervention . hloted this week that military actl(in
might be necessary after the
Ayatollah Ruhollah Kbomeini said
the American hostages would be
tried as spies. Carter immediately
dispatched the carrier Kitty Hawk ,
with 85 warplanea, from the Soulh
Olina Sea toward the Persian Gulf.
Rather than preparing for a
rescue mission, U.S. military warnings were intended "to lay out a
believable threat" of retaliation in
the event the hostages are hanned,
sources agree .
The
Carter administration
avoided public conunent on ita
military options . High~anking Pentagon officials say privately that any
resc ue attempt would inevitably
result m heavy casualties and
probably death to the hostages .
" It 's not a viable option," said one
Pentagon source.

R ('(urns from Clr inlf.(O

Khomeini ...
1Continued from page A-l l

representative, Andre Teshilly , conferred for two hours with militants
holding the Americans in the embassy compound, but he was not
allowed to see them
Congressman George Hansen, Rldaho, making a personal bid to end
the standoff, was still waiting m
Tehran 1n hopes of seeing the
Americans 1n the embassy . On
Friday he v1sited three senior envoys being held separate ly at the
Foreign MiniStry .
Iran insists deposed Shah Mohammad Reza PahiaVJ , who is being
treated for cancer in New York. be
returned to Iran to face tnal before
the hostages, held since Nov . 4, are
released
The Uruted States h•s refu.sed to
comply and warned of "extremely
grave" consequences 1f any of the
hostages are harmed . Khomeini has
S&amp;d the militants would blow up the
embassy and kiU the bostages if the
United States tried to rescue them
by force.
A spokeswoman for the shah said
Saturday that the shah has completed radiation therapy and that
doctors would try "over the next
week or two" to remove an additional gall stone blocking his blle
duct.
"After that , as he has said before.
he would like to leave," sa1d
spokeswoman Chns Godek . The
shah was living in exile in Me:&lt;ico
before commg to New York for
treatment. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has invited him to live in
that country

SITF.£ BEING STUDIED
COLUMBUS, Ohio I API - Sites
for a new state prison would be
studied under the proposed capital
improvements budget pendin ~ in the
Senate Finance Committee .
As adopted by the House, the
budget sel• aside $5 million to begin
site studies fo r a 1,000-cell prison
that could cost at least $40 million to
build .
One s uch location specified in a
House committee heanng on the bill
would be the Cllilhcothe Co rrectional
l nslltut e . Rep .
Myrl
~oemaker ,
D-Bourneville, contends there is adequa te land at the
Qlillicothe location for a larger
prison.
Ohio is facing ever more cramped
prisons after agreemg in an out-of court settlement to a civil suit to
close down the old Ohio Penetentiary in downtown Columbus .
Work is underway to convert the
Fairfield School for Boys near !.an caster into a medium..,..curity
prlsson for adults.

READY F'OR STEPS - Work is progressing on the Blue Devil
Boosters' new $5(),000 all -purpose building on the 500 block of F'ourth Ave .
Workers are ready to pour concrete for the steps leading from the new
structure to Memorial Field below . Water and heating units were being
instaUed Saturday, along with a huge exhaust fan . The structure will
house the Blue Devils' locker rooms for football , baseball, track and tenrus Too. the building will mclude weight Ufting areas, coaches quarters
and storage space for athietic equlpment. Construction is expected to be
completed by the end of the year .

Oriwr claims injury
foUowing auto wreck

Court news
GAI.I.IPUI.lS - Garry Lee
Church . Vmton, was bound over to
th r Grand Jury on a charge of
breaking and entenng Wednesday in
Gall ipolis MuniC'lpal Court . Bond
was set at $2,5 00
Three cases were continued in
Judge .James A Rennett's rourt
Wednesda) .
Charged w1til Dl'.l . the cases
agamst Leon D . George. 55. Bidwell:
John (' Alack , 21. Gallipol is: and .
Michael [. George. 32. Columbus,
were continued .
Nine other cases were tennina ted
in Muructpal Court .
Jack A. Husc h. 32. Columbus. and
Steven D. Kocher . 30. Stroll, Ind ..
each pleaded guilt; to ch arges of
OWl and were fined $300 plus SIX
month se ntences , aU but 10 days
suo;pended.
Charged w1th petty theft. the case
a~a tn.st Torn Gasper , Reedsville,
was dismissed at tl1e request of tile
proseru llon .
A charge of domestic Violence
brought agamst Pa ul Reynolds,
Gallipolis. was disrmssed at tile
request of the prosec ution .
Harriet I. Karase k, 41, ColumbuS
pleaded guilty to a char ge of dr ivmg

GALLIPOLIS - One driv e r
claimed injury followin g a twovehicle accident F'riday on SH 160. a t
til e jWJc tion of CR 32.
ca lled to tile scene at 10 :50 p.m,
th e GaUia-Me~gs Pos t , Highway
Patrol, reports a vehicle operated by
Margaret Crabtree, 42, Bidwell ,
pulled mto the path of a south bow1d
auto operated by Joseph Peck, 18,
BidweU
Peck claimed injury, but was not
unmediately treated . There was
heavy damage to the Peck auto,
moderate damage to the Crabtree

PORTRAITS
NEW ORLEANS t AP ! - The
" l..atter-&amp;hlesinger Collection of
English and C.ontinental Portrait
Minia tures" has been permanently
mstalled 1n a specially designed
gallery at the New Orleans Museum
of Art

~1 ~~~ · ~ c3·Publishl!d I! very Swtday b(, The
_
Oho Valll!!y
Publishing Co .• Multimedl.l, nc
GALLIPOLIS
DAH.Y11UBUNE

SZ$'n'lird Ave.,Galllpolll, Ohio tse.'Jl
PubU.ahed !very weekday evening e:J.C'efi
SICW:Ji Second Clus POI!It.KIP P1.kt at
Galli
, Ohto 45&amp;31.
111E DAR. Y SENTINEL

Ill Cow1 Sl., l'ome!'oy , 0 . 4&amp;769. Pubtiahed
every week day evening tacept Sat!U"d.y.
Fzltered u second cla.sa maUirqJ n11tter at
Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.
By carrier daily and Sunday ~ per w~lt .

published hen!in

-.

PERM SPECIAL

GIVEN PROBATION
ATIIENS, Ohio ( AP I - The former administrator of Mount St .
Mary Hospital in Nelsonville has
been placed on four yea rs' probation
after pleading no contest to a charge
of grand theft.
James Seymour was acc used of
stealing hospital funds .
In addition to probati on , Athens
County Common Pleas Judge Lowell
Howard ordered Seymour to pay a
$1,000 fine and make restitution to
the hospital. Howard also gave
Seymour a suspended pnson sen tence .

NOV. 26th thru DEC. 9
ALL 125.00 PERMS

ONLY $2000
Call for an appointment
Cathy Young, Etta Richardson, Mary Gress, OperatM;
Carol Lyons, owner, operator.
773-5352

SANTA'S

60c Piece lor War Nickel s
S188 lb for Sterling
S1.7S ea for Half Dated 196S to
1969 .
Also Gold wedding band~ . cia!.~
nngs, dental gold, plafinum , gold
tilled jewelry .
S•lver pla1e s l.ll lb

TREASURE CHEST
COIN SHOP

a lift for
Nst sa~s
for mstic lwrwtu.romfo rt
and du mf11'1 it !I
Rustic Enterprises
RR #1, Box 208
Crown City, Ohio 45623
(614)256-1946

B~.fUJbuf,
RLTR

.Naiwta/41

SAVE

1/3

that
~1 1.oee Y.." •••

ON

EvRoco

WALL PLAQUES

OFF ALL
PICTUres

Including Some Reprints
By Normal Rockwell

'399

-~-

ATHENS LIIIESTOCK SALES
Nov . 17 , 19'79
~ CATTLE PRICES :
_ Feeder Steers (Good and Choice)
••JOO 500 lbs 59 S. ; 500 700 lbs . 65 77 .
"" Feeder Heifers (Good and Choice)
~300

STEREOS

COLOR TVS
19" DE LUXE COLOR SET
w / touch tuning
25" CONSOLE MODELS

1/3

CHANNEL MASTER

ADMIRAL

PMEROY Meigs County
· sheriff's deputies are investigating
.7.vandalism at the Conrail office at
·~ Hobson . Deputies said a window in
· front of the crew scheduling board
· was shattered.
: In other action, a 1975 Ford pickup
··owned by Charles Estep, Rt. 4,
:·. Pomeroy , was destroyed by fire
" around 9 :30 p m . at his home in
:': Harrisonville . Rutland volunteer
.·.. firefighters responded but the
::vehicle was destroyed upon their
,.arrival .

Value Combined

W1lh
performance, to -notch
stereo entertainment at an easily
affordable price .
Free Stands with All Stereos

500 lbs . 50 76.50; .100 700 lbs . 50

,:.., I .

·....

Feeder Bull s ~Good a nd Choice J
67 75; 500 700 lbs . 55·

"300 500 lbs

~)6

so

· · Sla ughter Bulls (Over 1,000 lbs J
:;.s
Canners and Cutters :W .7S·

ss.so ,

-..o 25

'

,:: spri nger cows CbV rne head) cwr .
....9 51.50 .
·· c ow and Ca lf Pairs (by the unit l

::....5-620

Veals (Choice and pr-ime) 48 . .50 85
: :llabv Calves (by lhe head l 41 11 0.

.,

~ ... OG

PRICES

~; JJog ~ £No

rof~ 1 tJr.~l','

LOG HOIVU POHTf- U t tU

1, Barrows and Gd tsJ

-130 lbs JS 70 3&lt;180

ALTA INDUSTRIES LTD.
•st:NO SJOO

E11fEL L. BUCKNER
: NlTRO - -Mrs . Ethel Louise
Bllckner, 58, of 2603 26th St ., Nitro ,
died Friday in Thomas Memorilll
Hospital in South Charleston
following a brief illness.
', A nat1ve of Charleston, Mr s.
~rkrer was an employee of the
Nitro Drug Co . and a form er emplo)·ee of Nitro Floral Co.
Survivin~ are a son . Roderick
-A&lt;ldia of Charl eston : thr ee
:'daughters. Mrs David Colb, North
'llrunswick , N.J ., Mrs. Paul Wood,
:;&gt;oint Pleasa nt, and Mrs. James
·:,Hentho rn , Re eder, W.Va .: two
-sisters. Mrs. Robert Moore and Mr s.
:·claude Frischett. both of Ne w
:smyrna Beach. F'la .: and nine
:+(randchildren .
·. : Funeral serv ices wii' tw&gt; held
.Monday at 11 a .m . in the Cooke and
__ Pauley Funeral Home, :"-11tro, with
th e Rev. Paul E . Daggett officiatmg .
Cremation will follow .
:~ Vis itors may call Sunday from 2-4
-.p m and 7-9 p.m .

~:

Athen s , Ohio
Top of hill , 14S Pom eroy Rd .

The Woodstock

MARY K. NOLAN
,POMEROY - Mrs . Mary B. Kirkbride Nolan, 98, formerly of StockP.Orl, died Friday afternoon at the
Mark Rest Center in McCormellsville.
She was born Aug . 6, 1881, a
daughter of Absalom and Hannah
P8nl0ns Kirkbride. She was a member of the Mountville Methodist
p!urch and a golden sheaf member
:o( Westland Grange . She was
married Aug . 11, 1900to Daniel Web~r Nolan who preceded her in
-- death .
·- Survivmg are two sons, Howard
Nolan , Syracuse, and F.rank W.
•__ttp[an. Chesterhill; a daughter, Mrs.
. Jlfrnice Tate . Columbus, several
,:randchildren and great'i!fandchlldren, and a sister, Mrs .
Alice Earls, Porterville .
.' -Fwleral services will be held at 1
'lfm . Monday at the Slone-Matheney
· Fllneral Home in Chesterhill with
t.l)e Rev . John Harra officiating .
. :~a! will be in the Mountville
· Oemetery . Friends may caU at the
fUneral home from 12 noon unW 1
'pm . Monday .

~ investigated here

592 -6462

W1111arn Sydnr1 Port er. better
known as short story wntcr 0
Henry. was burn in 1862.

IVAOU&amp;'T
' " LEON - W. Va .- Mrs. Iva Durst,
.Rbutei, Leon , W. Va ., diedSaturday
);normng at Jackson General
,,,iospital , !Upley, West Virginia .
. She was born Sept. 8, 1898 to the
)ate George and Mary Beattie See .
Her husband, Sidney Durst ,
· j\teceded her in death in 1968.
""~Survivors include two sons , Paul
..DUrst of Cllarleston, W. Va ., and
.!Jill ph Durst of Gallipolis: one sister,
)cyel Sines of Leon, W. Va . Pour
, ~andchlldren s urvive, Paula Durst
o~ Cllarleston , W. Va ., and Mary ,
JUlie and Judy Durst of Gallipolis .
Fwleral services will be announced by the Casto Funeral Home
J.I.\Evans, W. Va .

" Vandalism, fire

Prices Good thru Monday
1- 5 P .M. Daily

PXC€SSi \"t' Sp eed

40 acres of woodland destroyed Friday

ALBERT MOSSBARGER
GALLIPOLIS
Albert
·: Mossbarger, 78, a resident of Rt . 2,
~ Patriot, died Saturday morning in
:: Holzer Medical Center.
·.~ He was a retired miner.
• Mr . Mossbarger is survived by
~·. two sons , James Albert, Valdosta,
;.: Ga., and George Madison, ri

S2 .40 for Quarter!&gt; ;
S4 .80 for Halt Dollar s;
Sll SO for Silver Dollar s

Charles H&gt;edel , 22 . Ri dw c ll .
wa1n&gt;d UO on a ch(;jf_i:;!t' ur 1rnpruper
ha cktng
Hick) D \1artm 18. c;a!hpohs,
forfeited $62 on a charge of

"Mle GIWpoli.t Daily TrlbUM ln Ohio and
West VIrginia one year $33.00; 11.1. monthl!J
$17. Mt ; three months $1UO. Ebe"here PJ.OO

1~.'1

Announcing A New
Operator, Lisa Davis

We pay 9k for dimes ;

prnst&gt;f'Ut!On'

MAIL
. SIJBBCIUPI'!ON RATES

credite.-t to tr.r ne-w.!lpsptr and al.'lo the local

Mason, W. Va.

1964 and Older

Motor route auo per month.

per year; stx monthl P l OO : thrft month'
111 .00; motor route IJ.90monthly .
The Daily Sentinel, one year S.13700; Sii moo·
lhl $17.50; three month!! $2().00. ElJewhere
$38.00 ; su: months po.oo ; threemoothl $ii .OO
The Assnciated Press t.. exclusive ly entiUed
to the 119e for publication of all news di~~p.~tches

BEAUTY SHOP

BUYING U. S.
SILVER COINS

When Don Buse, a skillful guard
joined the Phoenix Suns, 1t was tile
first time in h1s basketball l'areer
that he had played for a ny kind of
team outside th e state of Indiana .

Sunday Tlmes-&amp;nU,.,l

CAROL'S
COIFFURES

auto .

while under suspens1on and was

fined $100 plus a s&gt;x month
SU5pendt'&lt;l ~nte n ce.
/\ charge uf dnving o,,vhJle under
Sll'lpen swn bro~ht agam~1 Urlas
Polly . 22, Vtnwn . was d1sm1ssed a t
tile request uf the prosec ution .
Charged w1th d1stur bmg the peace
m motor veh Jclr. thr case against
Tunothl D. Howell. 18, Bidwell, wa s
d!SJmssed at the request of U1c

PORTSMOUTH
Frank
Balmer! , enterprise development
director for the Ohio Valley
Regional Development Commission
(OVRDC ), has returned from a twoday seminar in Qlicago.
The seminar on " Financ ing Commercia! Development ," a ttracted an
attendance of 400. It was sponsored
by the National Conference for Ur ban Development.
OVRDC, with headquarters in
Portsmouth, serves Adams, Brown,
Clermont,
Gallia ,
H1gh land,
Jackson , Lawrence, Pike , Hnss.
Scioto and Vinton counties .

A-3- The SWJday Tin1es-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov . 2!i. 1979

. . . ~ ut c h er Sows2S·J2 .1S

rF
'

" ' ...u \ • ' ,, ... ,

L---~~-------------.---~

:; ~vtcher Boars 11 SO 15 50 .
"~eeder Pigs (bytnetleadl 7 40
-:;~EEP FRlCES ;

·-~C'de' La rrt:Js H 55

--·

.

Merrillville , Ind . One daughter ,
Mrs . Bill (June ) Mann , Germantown, Ohio, also survives along
with seven grandchildren .
One sister. Mrs. Lucy carpenter .
Rt . 2, Patriot, survives.
Funeral services will be announced by the Waugh-Halley-Wood
F'uneral Home .

1.wfon · brmging it under cuntml
Tom W1throw. forest ranKn w1th

PT . PLEA.&gt;ANT - A forest fire
destroyed around 50 acres of
woodland Friday afternoon in the
area of Cornstalk Hunting Grounds .
Membt&gt;r s of three fire depanment s and vo luntee r firefighter.'
fought the blaze, which wa s reported
aroWld 2 p .m .. for seven hours

thl' W.Va . Dcpartnlt:nt of

At the sr-l:'ne wt' re members of the
Pl~a s&lt;Jn t.
Valley and
l'i!lnl
(;allipolis F1n • Departments. the
\1 "son t'ounty l'B Hadio Club the
\1"son Coun-ty Shenff's De~art­
tnPnt. Mason f'o llilt~· HF.ACT and
othl:' r l"lt tzen volunteers.
In "dd1twn. "n alfplane piloted by

Natur~\

Heso urces, said the men used flr L"
ra kes und shovels to construct ::~ fi re
!me. creating a break 1n th e firt.: 's
fuf'l a nd resulting in the fire burnmg
1tself out when it reached this poml.

Monthly dinner meeting announced

Ttw populatlo!ls of the black
rhmoceros. Kenya's only na ll ve
rhinoceros. has dropped from 15,000
111 1%9 to an estimated 1,500 today .
Most have died at the hands of
poachers. who covet tile animal 's
horm In the past few years
thousands of rhinos in K enya have
been killed so their horns could be
expo rted . although it is illegal.

Speaker for the occasion ..,;ll be
Mr. Oliver J . Zandora of Ashland
Petroleum. He will speak on the
timely subject of " World Crude Oil
Supply ."
Reservations for the dinner should
be made with Fred HiU of Ashland
Oil by Thursday. Nov. 29.

GALUPOUS - The Tri-State
Section of the Ameri can Institute of
Chenucal Engineers will hold its
monthly dinner meeting on Monday,
Dec . 3, at the Ashland Oil E&lt;ecutive
Headquarters, Russell, Kentucky .
Social hour will be at 6:30 with dinner at 7:30 p .m.

Civil Air Patrol member Lou Wiley
fl ew over the area "spotting" the
fire and areas of approach .
The cause of the fire has not been
determined.

Withrow sa id there were no injur&gt;es incurred during the fire which
covered a portion of Cornstalk and
possibly some privately-owned land.
Point P leasa nt firemen als o
responded to two other brush fires
Friday .
During the first at 9 a.m., they
offered asststan ce to the Leon Fire

Department in putting out a fire in a
field on !.eon-Baden Hoad.
At 3:25 p.m., local firemen were
called to extinguish a sma ll brush
fire in a field at the Roseberry farm
m Point Pleasant. This fire , firemen
said , was a lready out by the time
they arrived at the scene .

/

JUNIOR

DENIM JEANS
AUI'OGRAPH SESSION - Dave
Dileo, formerly of Middleport,
ABC aporl8 commentator and
author, will be atlbe Middleport
Book Store from I to 8 p.m . Monday to autograph copies of hb
new boot, "Terry Bradshaw :
Mao of Steel." Bradshaw lB tbe
only triple Super Bowl winner
and tbe boot takes tbe reader on
a journey of peMIOoal anguish aod
professional glory wttb tbe champion Pittsburgh Steelers.

FAMOUS MWKER 1st Quality
Reg. 114.95

SALE$799

LADIES'

MENS &amp; BOYS'

WATCH CAP

VELVET BLAZER
Regular 150.00
Sizes 14 to 22 SALE $

ONE SIZE FITS ALL

2995

JR. LONG SLEEVE

BOYS'

SWEATER

\ 1.._,

100% Acrylic 11 U!lo~
Make a Good Jean Top ,
Values to 18.00 SA LE

---r .

'. ,

OPAQUE

'-

KNEE SOX

'- ..:II' ~ ..

-- '

WESTERN SHIRTS

~A~.~ 1-------------ti
'5"
,f''
GIRLS TOPS
w

299

•' •

Size 4/ Gx
Reg. '6.37

GIRLS &amp; LADIES

SANTA'S
MOON-

LIGHT
SALE
Select Group 60" Fabric

'12 PRICE
T -Shirt Knits

'100yd ,

45" Plaid F !anne! and

60" Denim
Register

tificate

SLOO 011

for S10.00 Gift Cer ·
each Saturday til

Christmas .

On I he 1
Middle po rt . 0

3PAIRsaa~
MENS

THERMAL SOX

3

SLIGHT IRREGULARS
PAIRS $100

GIRLS.'

Famous Maker

DENIM JEANS
SIZE 7/14
Reg. 18.95

77 e

Asst. U!lo~

•:J-1
MEN'S
19" TUBE sox

~

SALE

~':r SMART

li'J

~·,

1.50 IF PERFECT

1

SHOP

~

~. · ' ~"ii&lt;
" ~ ...
•

\. ~ - ~~
;,

-

I
il
I
~

2 .PAIR $ 1 OO

~

HOODED SWEATSHIRTS j

. 7/.....,.., r..' .
.

W

(Slight Irreg.)

SANTAS

J

~

·\\

I

ASST. COLORS

:

'799

i

�A-5 - TheSunda v Times ,.,, t 1 S
'
&lt;&gt;&lt; n lne " Wlda y, .'IJov . 2!i, 1979

A-4- The SWlday Times..'&gt;entinel , Sunday, Nov . 2!i, 1979

"""' """ """'"""' fjll'""~&lt;~&lt;~&lt;~~ I

·· Banks setting aside more

' 71

"-./:: - \~
-

profits, tightening credit
c ustome r s
Joseph M . Garber, president of the
Credit Rureau of Ci ncmnat1 . said
requests for credit checks on the
background of
prosp ec tive•
borrowers are down .
" Hetailmg and banking are
holding pretty steady, " Garber sa id.
He sa1d credit checks by mone y len ders and automobile dealers are
well below last year's levels . "The
only place we are seeing c dramatic
difference ism mortgage loans ,·· he
said, noting that thes e were down :lO
percent tills October from October
1978
Daniel K . Chabek , spokesman for
the Ford Motor Co.. said ap -

--LADIES '

MEN ' S HEAVYWEIGHT

salaried empl oyees in the area a re
off the job . The General Motors
A'&lt;'lembly Divison plant m Norwood .
Ohio, said 3,900 will be let gu Jan . 3.
Some 450 are out at Ann co ·s Mid dletown steel plant and nearly 7,000
Cincinnati teachers and schO&lt;Ji
workers are w1employed because
fmanrial deficits closed schools for
three weeks .
Hankers wondert'&lt;i if the are&lt;:t 's
~tronger
sedurs can withs kmd
a nother row1d of interest rate hikes
" Husmess 1s still good . but 1f you
clip them with 16 perL·e nl or 17 per -

w
ll

\

• •

SOLf i'H C;An:.

~---- ~

,)

proximately 2, 300 of its huurly and

~

Hotel-con vention complex under study

CORDUROY PANTS

.·•

PANT SUITS

Reg . S17 .95toS18.95

A Gallipolis Diary

Sale '22.75 to '77.00 ~

Sale '13.88
MEN ' S

FLANNEL SHIRTS

LADIES' DRESSES

~

MISSY AND HALF SIZES

71
'11

Reduced 20%
71
--------71
71
LADIES BLOUSES
'11

Reduced 20%

cent m terest rates, there 's g,o ing to

71

'ii
'll
1 RAC K
'ii
BLOUSES, SKIRTS, ETC.~
1/2 PRICE
W

be a problem ." said Hail e

,1

('Omp!t.•,;: , sunilar t(f the •mt.·

p lrlll l lnl

aga1 11.

Southga te 'vl ayor K&lt;'n l'"ul
Paul , however . n:fU.'it·O

W

Reg. SJ2 . 5U To S110.00

'AI ',

1' 1·11 11· 1

now in th e wor k~

ill
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hut c l ·n;&gt;st.c~ urant ..('Oit\'ellt J(ln

by the Beverly H!l b Suppt·r 1 'lu!J
befon · the dJsastrnu_.., 1977 ftr t• I'

MONDAY

5 : 001o8: 00 P.M .
CINCINNATI •AP I - Banks u1
.outhwestem Ohio ami northem
Kentuc ky arc setting as ide• more
profits as reserves agamst loan
losses and are tightening up on loan
and LTedit card apptications because
of the cooling economy .
Banks wnte off a certam number
cf bad loans eveen 1n the best of
times, but ~xperi enee shows the
number tends to grow at roughly the
same rates as hnes at the unem ployment offi ce. banking offi c1 als
said .
Statistics complled by the O n cmnali branch of the Federal Reser ve Bank of Oeveland mdicate that
those lines are getting longer . The
average weekly nwnber of first-time
Wlempioyment benefit claimanto; m
the Ohw Valley is rlUlntng 25 .2 per cent hlghcr this year ln October than
tn the same month m 1978.
First Na tiOnal Bank of Cincinnati
reported 1t is keeptng $135m rese r ve for every $1 on loan . However , offic1als satd the bank must do so
because of its large number of loans
compared with other area banks .
Bankers saJd normally II is held m
reserve for each $100 loaned
Oement f._ Ruenger . executive
v1ce president of F1fth-Thlrd Bank of
Cincmnati , sa1d Ius loan committee
checks its Joss e xpener,ces and :;;,to;

Peeps.

~

BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALI.!POIJS- Peeps was one of
the 37 old folk on tour of the South
Nov 9-17 . In our a bse nce from this
desk a photostat of the " Who 's
News·· sect ion of the Nov 12 (A1 1umbus Citizen -Ju um al whirh headlined
Norwood Johnstm. J r . and a couple
of other gu ys promoted at the ~' tshe r
Body plant in C&lt;&gt;lwnbus crune in
The item read that J ohnston was
named superintendent of industrial
engineering . A red -penciled note
reads that Johnston ts a product of
RJo r.rande Hlgh School and C&lt;&gt;llege . he is the son of [..{)[.S Evans

see the " Two Merry Tramps" at the
Opera Hou"" last night
1903- lt turned cold on the
we are a lmost out of co al.
sc "rce a~am on accow1t

Feb . 18,
16th and
wh1ch L&lt;
of hl~h

tiJ

rn t.·a t

~Z 1 :1 l ~ij)
'hc~.r . ~r ·~

"'"llid

c~t:: r t · t · !••

Lt~!

L' l1 r(Jl'l

The s1le stil l IS owned by the
Schli i uJ~ fam1iy The Sch•lltngs, un-

(jfdtfl d/ 1( , .

dl•r lcrms of &lt;1 settleme nt with the
t•st&lt;Jtes of tilt' ft re vJetun.'i . have Wltll
rnrd -l)l'cember to put $1 2 mtll lOn into Cl t r ust fund to (:over the1 r !Jabllr t y
f~,r th t· fire or surrt&gt;nder tht: land

d : lo~

! r1

t'\ 1'1 Ul'

v..;nt...,

I Ju rldJJr ~~:-.

't" t ,tlrd IH.jUui ~c:.~ h·:-.

family , owner of tht llnerlr JIJib
cl ub, was tnvolved
Tbe supper rlub , j w.; t sllu t h of ( ' Ill ·
e mnati , burned Ma y 2.8 , 1077. taKJn~

• ' 1\Htl' il W t·•lflP &lt;..,I I.!)

t. ,

ta !lt·r
~J(j 111

the lives of 165 and InJUri ng H.flllttlt·r

;Jlti•JI\1 ·, '•

L.-~1!··-.:t ;wr •it ll:PI•I •·r r •r: 1 r·nt
l&lt; m ·,!,·rL ./f lur.r•! ..,;.,).•-.. ...,! :t rt Jr.
l '~t uJ r.,••J k thr· LH·r ,,)(,.-.ol t,, , ,t \
.I

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:,pt,• ',J! !_;.• f " ' tlw t.i' •; Jr•L·
li J(l \ [!l,Jr l \ )Jot
I rrc .. ' .'
Jlr , · ".' · . -. .! ! .'i
;.~. ,.. 1 .• ,
r

buil d a 700-roorn hotel.&lt;md ~.;)00--.t o[
shoY.TOOm , he sa id
" I can't eonun r nt on wh r1 tht ·
deVt' loper Is," Pi..!ul S;.JHl !· nd;.n
" But thl'Y ha ve ctUUHtr1Zt•d !!lt ' ,lfll!
the ci ty attorn ey to rHU'SU t · t/1!' I /lit\ ·
ter and get lhr rna d w lt'r;. ~·. r rliH',
Paul snirllhe dP\ ' t&gt;!IJ(WI ~lctlll.o. ; t"r1
conditions. Ht.... s;;n d h• · L&gt;(•IJi· '; l· d u.~·
city. which lost its m; q ur :-.il un·, · of

•!f[ J II

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LADIES'
SWEATERS
Reduce 20%

a
71

~

CHRISTMAS lliFT HEADQUARTERS

I ~~'{?

its reserves according to its "gut
feeling" about the future . No change
IS anticipated, Buenger sa1d .
Fifth -Third IS keeping $1 W re,.,r ved for each $1 loaned.
Charles E . Seeley , in charge of the
BanL·Oh1 o National Bank ofh ce m
Loveland . srud credit card applications are being mo re carefull y
scrutinized because of the economy
and berause of new bankruptcy laws
which shJPid more ~rsonal asset.s
fnn credltors . He said Baneotuo IS
hirmg m or e l'Oilec tors in an t1c1pat10n uf m ore delinquent ac counts
Halph V ILule , president of
People 's Liberty Bank x Trust C&lt;&gt;
of Covmgton , Ky . sa1d his bank is
also "doing a little closer screening"
of appticants . Speculative loans a re
out, and the bank is trymg to hold a
prime ra te ceiling of about 14 percent for its small buslnP~~

~

.

'

LADIES'
CAR COATS
Reduced 20%

Sale '44 to '60

-

71

~

w

!LOT

SANTA'S

71
71
71

71

71
71

71
71

71
FREE GIFT WRAP

WHEN IN
DOUBT GIVE A

71

lO'l'o DISCOUNT TO

GIFT
CERTIFICATE

GOLDEN BUCKEYE
CARD MEMBERS

'll

71
71

71

dJ ~tncb f o lJ u wm ~ rkdUI'&lt;ill• •Jl.-, f,,r
retir ement in('lu dt·
J·n ...,'nrr.
$82.73:11 6 'vl r1~ s I rwal, $144 :n; 24

and Southern I))cal. $8.:1 .:un. )!J lr1
addition , th L• MeJf::." r· ounty &amp;'I&lt;Hd 11f
Educat10n recei ve d &lt;~ dl r t."&lt;' l illlnt
ment of $18.640.4 7

Out-o! -court settlements with
relatives of the victims now t*l
a bout $15 million .
The first civil trial related t.) the
fire is scheduled in U.S. District
C&lt;&gt;urt at C&lt;&gt;vington Dec. 3. The 28 .
defendants involve the a1wninum
. '
'
wmng and electrical device In·
dustry

IN TODAY'S MURPHY MART
CIRCULAR ON PAGE 7 mE
AM/FM/STEREO WITH AM/FM/STEREO
AND 8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER AND PHONO,
DID NOT ARRI VE.
RAIN CHECKS WILL BE ISSUED!

I' 1.&gt;&lt;' ..,..,I I,]., ··&gt;&lt;• .. ;

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POM E HU Y
.\kt._: . ., 1 ·Jr :,J il \ ...,
thret: ~w hooi d.1stnr b rt 'l'l'J':•·d· a
total of $:J1 0.~ d). 9'J for tilt.&gt;Jf :0 •1\'ctll
ber subs idy raym e nt from the otatc
School Found.-1tion prngrrtm
Amowll &lt;i rrct•J vt·J fc, r t'dr i1 ,,f tth·

An t·arlJt •r attempt by fanuly
a suppe r du b 111 a n

I!Jt'll l ber ~ t1 1 hutld

ped by public protests .

ll!. !r'.•

71
EDDI F:
PF:PPEHS, form e r
Gallipolitan , sent a copy of the Obsi dian. a Bowl111g Green St;Jte Univer Sity tabloid fo r "rPflections of
peoples uf color " whi ch had at least
three references to Naomi E . Peppers . 9.17 State St _ Fo.;1oria, as
managing editor . She "
the
daughter of the Rev . Edward J .
Peppers -our own Eddi e -who has
adu eved .some prominence in
Masonic circles.
A5 of Oct. 8, the Rev . Mr . Peppers
had been appointed to the r.rand
Lodge :-.lecrology Standing C&lt;&gt;rruni t tee and filhn : HlKht Worshipful
Associate Grand Chaplain of Ohio .
Thi s GallipoiJs bom..and-reared
p11'acher tells of two of hiS children :
Naomi has had a ~ - 0 standmg or bet ter all al ong in college : "-' a jun10r ,
she has one year to go before she
gruns that baccalaureate degree . E.
J . II IS an honor roll student m juniOr
high
Some othrr cl tpptngs and
document&gt;; show that the Rev . Mr
Peppers 1s act1ve '" comm unit y
work . " I'm not liked too well ," he
writes , " but the fact is that they tm y
enemies 1 know I'm right." He said,
too, that he is proud to be a grand
state officer of the Most Worshipful
Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Ohio F I
AM . He also pastor s the First Baptist Ou~rch in Paul din~, Ohio, 65
miles west of Fostoria , where he
preaches twice a month

Ohio suLurb o! L'lnclllll8tl was stop-

Wt:t'k.'l

,rp to

rtw r tl.\ 1111\\ ha.'&gt; &lt;t .!J ..f,.,,t 111111'
L"- ' 1 'hU.'ot ' th;t!' tlw l•t·r ght ,if 11 lil t'

as mtennt'dJar y on th•· dt•cJ I '11 t•·
developer wanl'5 t u hll\' thf' Jar11t and

now residing in Marion .

Ill·' t 'df'h

'1 1a: dt·\

th,ur ;t;,

IJI'L'.

!Jflljl't't !'IJLJ Jd J!JI'illl

trw k-..

P:..~ul swd he has Lwen i1ppJ t,; wlv·d

water in the river Son futrry 1s hun tu•g a hauler tu bring "-' a load . It is
four degrees below zero. and our
bathroom pipes f rozc .

!lit·

11 1

l"lw

lllt' ll l

the identit }' of the developer 11f th t·
proposed l:"30 miliHHI pruJec. f!, .
refu.•·wd d lso tu say tf lhl' S... · htllin~

JO

JohiJston , fanner resident of H.Jo
(~rand€

'-.~\ ~

Ill! Ill!/!

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ON PAG£ 8 COMPACT STEREO PHONO
DID NOT ARRIVE.
RAI 1i CH ECKS WILL BE ISSUED.

ON PAGE q 13 Ol CAN OF SPRAY SNOW
Will NOT BE AVAILABLE DUE TO MFG.
UNABLE TO SHIP. SORRY NO RAINCHECKS

'

I ';.' . •

\1r · ('l d•,i··~,,•t•·~ ,, • \ ~ •t'nJllh .'-

/knn • :... 1:,,i tJ1 •' "i d1·d :rr tl11 JIJ• ; ,r I \,.\ t'f&lt;.,•r. ;;:o''-.lr :t·nt
, ,.
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.... ., ,~. , .

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

FRANK HlLL sent a reminiscent
piece On fireS Ill (;aJ~poli s, and
Chink Haskins relayed a couple of
Tom Bell's co lumns from the Pensacvlo newspaper . These we 11 brmg
to you next Sunda)' ... or soon
GRANDMA G WOCD'Sdiary Oct .
1902-1 was glad to hear that the
Rev . Mr . Magee will be our mimster
fur another year Arthur E . Johnson
will be the presiding elde r for the
Gallipolts distriel. Fonner presiding
elder l\1r . Trlbbles now goes to New
Lexmgton . Dec . 30, HKJ2 - My sun,
Harry Gwood, returned to Gallipolis
to help in rebwlding the electnc
light pl an t
Feb 15, 1903-Will a nd 1 went to
~-

CONAl If'
PISTOL PoWER

1200

-----1

-~

1

Polaro•d's OneStep
The world 's Simplest came1a

'

31.95

8 DIGIT READOUT
AUTOMATIC SHUT OFF

20%

TWO BATIERIES 1.000 HOURS
COMPLETE WI TH CRED IT

SG.29

CHRISTMAS WRAPPING
PAPER

: ~:· ,· - ~ 4 · 88 -.....lsii'PEilill'

SWIRL-A-CURL BY CONAIR

THeRMOSTATICALLY CON IROLL ED. XYLA~
COATIN G AND BUILT IN COUNTER Rl ST
AUTOMATI C MI ST RELEASE FOR LA STIN G
rURL S. ONE YEAR WARRANlY

•,

'

.. ...

PI~

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~

SG.29
RACCOON
&amp; KOAlA
CUP ON&gt;

LARGE
FAMILY lllBLE

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

s.99:·

..,. .

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6.88 ::-v

5

_iO \c LArE
COVERED PEA~ . 'r
CLUSTERS

....

.. .

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M l

·~ 0 M

0

0

.. . ,.,L_.., -, . , , , "1•••11

MI:JDLEPORT, 0.

271 N. 2ND AVE.

MYtANTA ANTACID
LIQUID TAB LETS

Y92-5759

VILLAGE PHARMACY

NEW ASSOCIATE -

Hobe

Dillon and Bob Lane announced
Saturday thai Cheryl Cunningham has recenlly joined
their s laff _ Chery l graduated
from Gallla Academy High
School In 1975. She acquired her
real eslal e tra~&gt;.itlj( a l tbe
Gallipolis Buolueos College .
Cberylls the daughte r of Jim and
Ann Mlok, owoen of Jim~ -.
Auto Sales on Eastern Avenue In
Galllpoll.• . Sbe Is married w
Michael Cuoolngham who l!i employed with Jim Mlok's Auto
Saleo . Cheryl bas 8 SOD, Craig,
wbo goes lo Cbesblre-Kyger
School. Chery l and ber famlly
reside at Bulavllle-Porter Road.

$8.99

Polaroid SX- 70 Land F1lm

15% OFF

f•od•t.

ON ANY
nMEX.,WATCH

EYEftY SHAPE ANO SIZE

I CHAIRS
I

FOR EVER Y DECOR

STYLE-LEADING fABRICS

~

=
Our!
Z·BOY®i

TO BE GIVEN
AWAY
DECEMBER 23.

''

'-•'

I

STOP IN AND
REG ISTIR
FOR mE
rnRISTMAS
SN(MMEN (3)

I SHOWI:H MASSAGE

WATER

40%
OFF

You ' ll find Contemporary , Col on• a:, Provrn c•ol

BE SURE TO

8 ROLL PACKAGE 70 -SQ FT ROLLS

$1.65

o s.mart ~ontol Choost o frne qual,ty cho . r os th ~
dod o r lo r th e hom e An y woy
you ri9ure 11, yo~.~ ' li dtlight the whole fom dy 1 ( 'lme
Me our lo.,ish array of oift cho• r5
'"'''Y ll'f l t , s i ze,
shapt rou'd rm09""'
~f every purse and p urpose .

ronal , "'"dttt rroneon dts•gns
. ol! e ~ pll!r tl / cro hrd
and carefully to.l or,. d 1n UQl!t s rte de corator f o~,, c~

ASSORTED TRADITIONAL PRINTS

KOD AK F1l m \ 110-SIZe\

a.

p~fecl gift fo r mom or

OFF

1200 WAITS FOR FAST DRYIN G
TWO SPE FDSAND TWO TEMPERATURE SEn iN GS
COMPACT AND LIGHT WEIGHT

$32.49

AND WE'VE GO T THEM ALL

CARD CASE.

\~

1

CREDIT CARD CALCULATOR

TOBECWSED
LANGSVILLE - State Houte 124
at I.Angsville will be closed Monday
heginning at 7 p m at which time
Olnrail wtl repair the railroad . ·.:ars
wiU be rerouted .

(NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY.)

Luxurious Reclining Chair
••• the Gift of Lifetime Comfort
Sit lown, loan bod&lt;, ., ~·• th o !09 ... o-lot'a , ...,
roloa in tho "ffootint coml.rt" of thick cwahlontnt 10

••li•••

tirtd muacl•s .,d r•ttor• •IP'Ic-rgy

Co•..-N In

loathor-liko, woahobl• •iayl in lo.oritt color choice .

INGELS
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

h:tisCmas!

SALE
SAVE now on
a LA-Z-BOY .chai[
It's the ideal gift!
~

'

PRKlD

~

�A-7- The Sunday Timcs-Se nt mel, Stmday, Nov . 25, 1979

Vinton firefighters have new tanker
VP•frON - Willi am Simms, fo rest
manager at rlean State Forest , Oh10
Department of Natura l Resources,
has announced approva l of a $4 ,000
matching gr ant for improveme nt of
the Vinton Fire Deparimen t .
As a r esult , the depa rime nt has
been a ble to purchase protective
clothing, an a ir pack and extra tanks

tended special thanks to Carter and
Evans, Inc. for its donation of equi!&gt;"
rnent and assistance in cha nging the
tanker body from the old truc k to the
new unit , a nd lo those who donated
lime and money toward the velucle.

old unit was a 196!i Chevrolet that
had been purchasei! as a used
velilcle .
Wlule it served the purpose, it has
worn ou t. With out s ta n di ng
cooper atiOn between th e ODNR,
Vinton Village Council , Mayor
Harold Brown , and the depa rtment 's
vo lunteer firemen, the new truck
was purchased .
The fi re men donated $1 ,000 toward
the unit's cost and several hundred
dolla r s to eqwp it . Simms presented
the $4 ,000 check to Fire Otief Harry
Smathers at a recent meeting .
A depa rtment spokesman also ex-

and a new alert si ren system .

However, most important , the gr ant
has provided the base for a new cab
and chassis lor the tan ker truc k. The
children whom Knecht ha d v1s1ted,
in times when more was expected
from Santa , "Oh , nuts, ..

Bill• \ ietim

The de partment is still in need of
funds to complete the equipping and
fin a l pay m ent on the truc k .
Donations may be sent to the Vinton
Volunteer Firemen , Bo x 117, Vinton ,

NEW HAVEN - Amer ican Legion
Post 140 of New Haven
tn
cooperation with 14 churches
the
Upper Mason Parish of the United
Methodist Church . once again will
be supplying food baskets to needy
families for Christmas .
Last year 48 basket s werr
dlstribiuted to needy families . Help
also was given man y people w1 th
fuel bills, clothin g, toys, etc.
Elmer McFarla nd . child welfare
offi cer for Post 140. not es. " Help is
needed if this is to be a successful

Oltio 4~

an insect bite or bee sting, was
rushed to the Holzer Medical Center.
At 8: 4{) p m. Friday , the squad was
called for Roy Boggs who was
believed to have had a heart attack .
He was taken to Veterans Memonal
Hospital.

Thirty years ago Santa Claus

Nikita Khrushchev, !ex- mer So'iet
premier and party chief, died at the
age of 77 in 1970.

fell into river at Gallipolis

•

was just floating ther e as un concenled as you please when a
coupl e of fe llows in a motorboat
came a long and pulled tum out. "
Potte r 's article went out over the
ne wswires and was seen all across
Amer ica and even Ul Europe . In
Bra unschweig, G.ennany , the story
I in translation ) came out : .. 1000
children of the city of Gallipolis in
the state of Oluo wanted to see
Knecht Ruprecht a rriv e by
parac hute from an ai'1llane. Knecht
Ruprecht. however, did not come
down softly in the marketplace but
he fell into the ice cold waters of the
Oluo Ri ver ."
No mentton was made of Santa 's
fate . Wttbln a lew days a letter
arrived at the GallipoUs poRI office
to German and addressed to tbe
Oberbaupt die Stadtverwaltung. Af.
ter some leg work pootmuter Elmer
Caldwell got a translation from Mr.
Peepo, alias Jim Porter. who bad
studied f.ennan at Kentucky .
The letter was from a Maria Hackhart who had r ead of Santa's !all .
She told of how her children Ieight in
num ber an d ranging from age fi ve to
14 ) had become concerned as to
whether or not Santa had been
resc ued . Her husband was sti ll a
prisoner in Russia and her cluldren
did not need any more had news.
Then city manag er Roy Bartlett
was quick to get off a reply lo Mrs .
Hac kbart assuring her children that
Santa had been rescured . Bartlett
wrote : " Yes, indeed , Santa Claus
was resc ued , and I'm sorry that
your ne wspaper didn \tell you about
it. Our newspaper, the Galli a Times ,
gave the ole story and our children
sa w him and received small gifts
from tum . J hope that you children ,
too. can have a happy au-tstmas .
"Santa wtll never dle as long a•
tbe heart of aUttle cblld can reach
over tbt ocean lo tbe heart of a UtUe
Amerl cao cblld - even though their
fatben once were eoem.Jes - and
speak sympathy that our Santa
Clauslellln the rlver. "
Inc identally , Knecht Ruprecht
was E ast Gennany ·s versi on of San ta . Knecht was a hobgoblm who gav e
beatings to bad children and nuts lo
good boys and girls . One wonders if
the famous expression came fr olll

II

NO RETURNS - NO REFUNDS

:i

BROKEN SIZES

:&amp;

~~

;~

:&amp;

1250WATTS
WINDMERE
STYLER-DRYER

35 MUL Tl·
COLORED
CHRISTMAS
LIGHT SET

111

12.59

.88

REG. '19.20

1Ladies'
GROUP
Dress Shoe s

:.

lGROUP
Lildies' Dress Boots

: &amp; HUSH PUPPIES
~I

~I
:1

1 GROUP
Men's Dress Shoes

~ I HUSH PUPPIES

30-FT.
GARLAND
TINSEL

!I
:1

:I

EI

lSTYLES

Men'sWarmLined
Low Shoe Boots

1.09

REG. '1.95

HUSH PUPPIES

!~1

GROUP

: 1 BOYS SHOES

$1 OO

: I L------...J
:I
·, II!
I(

~

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:1
: .fi
~ I

;:;;~~S

$}OO

WHITE SHOES

JH E SH0E BQX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~~~ -~-

22, 99

1

~-

5

REG. '14.38

2.88

F or

.'o't'ilr~.

yrnl

another new sales associate .
Faye Manley will be working in
the capacity of Branch Manager in
its newly formed Meigs County office . She will be working under the
guidance of Hobart Dillon, broker,
and Bob Ullle, sales manager of the
Gallipolis office . Mr . Dillon is very
well-lcnown in the Meigs County area
for lili sales a eli vity in the past .
Mrs. Manley ts the owner and
operator of a small gift shop in the
Middleport area. She also drives a
Meigs Local School bus and has done
tlili for the past 20 years . She
acquired the real estate education at
Rio Grande College and the Ohio
School on Real Estate in Columbus.
Mrs . Manley is the wtfe of Clifford
E . Manley, now retired past owner
of Cliff's Shoe Repair . Mr . and Mrs .
Manley reside at 493 Broadway in
Middleport. They have two chlldren,
Brent Manley and Vicki Manley
Barnes who graduated from Meigs
High School in 1975 and 1976 respectively .

\t'

!-it't'n a nd h'·;tnl
*' Hd v t· rt rsrng cd Jur rl
Hnrn t."(J Wn P r s 1n s ur an n ·

Allst.ai.J!
And now , 1t ''"' av ali uhl•· h,,r,·. at rtur
ag en cy Bu t . drd yo u know ttw t rf
your house 1!-i .'1 yt.•a r!' (J ld nr l••s.-.. _\' rHJ
m ay qua ltfy for AI\!'Ut lJ ··l'&gt; '' N•·w

./

.
CREDIT CARD
SIZE
CALCULATOR

AMITY LADIES'
BILLFOLDS

55 88
· Rep.

REG . '5.95

1

up to ' 12.00

H o u ~ 10 PE&gt;rce ntf) rs cr,unt '" rtrr \·r•ur
baH JC premt u m ?

11 .99

All state h as fnu nd rl cos t." ], .... "'
new E-r hom es , a n d t h t· v'n•

REG. '117~

lil ln!'! U rt•

C l\' e us a ca ll a nd ~4 ' t

WOODEN 2 TIER
SPICE RACK
WITH t2 BOTTLES

13.33

"T-

. .I

REG . '4.90

~.,

.

................ "
Now Available Throuah The - · · ·

3LARGE
ROLLS
GIFT
~~~t""J1 WRAPPING
PAPER

1

_ _.._ _ _ _ _ ___,

6.33

McGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nick Johnson , Accountant Ex e cutive
Gallipolis
4522nd Ave .
Phone446 -1761

.,_,......_... 12 . 66

LORA FOODS
HAM&amp;CHEESE

STICK -ON
GIFT BOWS 25 ' s

REG. '8.95

REG. 'US

66'

Sf) • 19

REG. '1.00

4.44

1

REG. '16.68

3.77

L

I

23.00

-"'

\

~

I

-----

CAPRICE
AM/FM
CLOCK RADIO

23 .88

1

REG. '39.99

!

~-I

MENNEN
MtLUONAIRE
2-PC . GIFT SET
18 . 44

1-PINT
BRASS
TANKARD

'3 ·99

REG. '39 . 9~

1

~ ~ \~!~

" 8 58

w
w

3-PfECE
BELLS OF NOEL
CHRISTMAS
DECORATION

18-INCH BRITE STAR
CHRISTMAS
WREATH

~

Rl~-

AMITY
MEN'S
BILLFOLDS

'4.66
Reg. up lo
'12.00

OFF ou~o~G.

3-FT .
STUFFED DOG

'8.99

'1.35

REG . '16.67

REG. '2.77

w

~

~ r-~~-~

WEDNESDAY

PLUS!
\

ALSO!

1· ,

.I . .
I

,

'1 .25

PLUS!

REG. '1.99

19.44

ALSO!

REG. '16.5B

'7.99

!

~ J

TOY FILLED STOCKING

~

'5.55

~ •W
u i

(NO PURCHASE NECESSARY)

II!

~

RADIOCONTROLLED
FERRARI
RACING CAR

REG . '15.59

THE WORLD'S LARGEST

1 ABSOLUTELY FREE TO THE LUCKY WINNER YOU

~ ~
~ I

ro

BE PRESENT

ro

00 NOT HAVE

WIN' TEU ALL lOUR FRIENDS

DRAWING DECEMBER 20. 1919

W
I

;

f

$10,000 MINIMUM

THRU WED..

NOV. 28

7-PIECE
WOVEN WOOD
SALAD SET

'2.88 REG. 'US

6
I

A NEW 4-YEAR CERTIFICATE
NOVEMBER RATE

10.30= 11.01

5

'

13~!16. 97

REG. '12.49

r

•IMPORTED FROM BLACK FOREST,
WEST GERMANY
• RICHLY COLORED, BEAUTIFULLY
DESIGNED DECORATOR PIECE
•FANTASTIC ACCURACY

KLEER VU
AMERICAN
FAMILY PHOTO
ALBUM

'7.88

,7

Each Account Insured Up To
• 540,000 By The FDIC, An
Agency of the Fed. Gov't.

ANNUALRATE

IW

_-_- .., ..................... oc ........... ...1
11 1 .........................
.

REG. '8. 3~

6-Month Certificate

ANNUAL RATE

CRAYOLA
COLORUBS

18.88

!

~

Bank Safety and Security
For Your Savings

12.035

~
~.f~
1 ~ '---~ ~

PRE- SCHOOLER TOY
SIT N ' DRIVE

OLD FASHIONED
BRASS
CUSPIDOR

ANNUAL YIELD*

fhe aoual retu r n to m ve~ tor s on Treasu r y Bills is h1ghcr lhJn th e
F ederal reg ul at 10ns re q u ir e a substnrllal 1n
IL•r es t pe na l t y tor prematu r e Wi t hdr a w al of certihcate f unds

GALOOB
M .V .P .
PINBALL GAME

. ---w."N"i"""") ........,

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS
ANNUAL RATE

PRICES

,a

~

He deserves the best this Christmas . You'll find many
jewelry and gilt items in Paul Davies Jewelers - Gilts
that are sure to tell him how much you care .

.

+'-

SYLVANIA
FLIP FLASH

FOR HIM

clt~(oun t rate ofter ed

~i?c::at...let:: \

10 FLASHES

Gen . George Washington was
defea ted in the Ba ttle of Bra ndywine
by a British for ce under Sir William
Howe in 1777.

5.25=5.46

f,(

~
~

A REMINDER : November 30,
1979, iB tbe deadlloe 1o apply lor
Oblo's Energy Credits Program.
The program allow• elderly or
dlBa bled bomeowoen and reo-

NOW!

ALARM CLOC S

REG. '6.6S

Beyond tlus, the guide includes
detailed , but easy, fonns wluch
enable you to compute the costsavings of each energy-flllving
method lo help you save dollars and
cents in home energy expenditures .
Adopting an energy conserving
llfe-style can save you money, help
lo conserve our nation 's precious
energy supplies, and costs nothing .

beating bUlB . Eligible persons
whose fuel charges are In rent
payments or wbo use fuel oil, bot·
tied propane, coal, wood or
kerosene, quallfy for 8 one-time
payment ol$1.25.
by
Applications are availab,
calling the Ohio Tax Com missioner 's toll-free telephone nwnber: 1~282-1310, or write : The
Ohio Department of TIWition ,
Energy Credits Program, P . 0 . Box
2619, Columbus , Ohio 43216.

@hio Valley Bank

QUALITY QUARTZ

'36.4S

MUSICAL
HEARTS &amp; FLOWERS
DOLL
*1 0 . 99 REG. '72.9~

I

REG. '12.50

THE SAVING PLACE

0/
/0

sonalized energy audit of yo ur mdividual home with ils partic ular
dimensiOns .
After tbe questionnaire is r eturned
lo the Oluo Department of Energy
a nd analyzed by the ir computer,
they will send you a report . This
report characterizes the heat loss in
your home and estimates cost and
potential dollar savings for various
conservation activities, including
caulking and weather stripping, installing storm windows and insulating your ceiling , walls and
floors . It takes a few weeks lo compute tlili energy report that is personalized to your individual home
and its particular dimension.
An energy analysis of !Ius type,
however, only approximates actual
heat loss because of the many factors that vary with each individual
home . For example , the amount of
cold air that leaks into your home,
your furnace efficiency , weather ,
local utility cost variances , and individual !lie style are a few of the obvious factors that can affect the accuracy of your Home Energy
Analysis. Moreover, the Home
Energy Analysis report does nd
take into account all of your energy
usage. Specifically, it does not in clude hot water, appliances, or air
conditioning .
If viewed as an estimate , the
Home Energy Analysis Report can
be a very useful guide for further in vestigating the specific conservation
measures that appear on each
report .
A 14-1 page instruction guide to
residential conservation entitled ,
" The Complete Energy Saving
Home Improvement Guide, " will
also be sent lo those people. at no
charge, who complete the Home
Energy Analysis . The manual contains a full range of home energy
tips including an explanation of
home heat loss , guidelines for
weatherproofing yow- home, and
reconunendations for installing
solar heating systems .
This Home Improvement Gwde is
a "how to" and a "how much " guide
1o energy conservation investments .
For eilllllple, the booklet describes
step-by -step installation instructions
for insulating your home , along with
information on the types of in sulation, moisture and ventilation
requirements, corrosion aspect•.
and fire ratings .

SUNDAY
THRU

.#fCi:!n c:::. .--.-

20

120.88

·r

W

REG. "1.89

7-FOOT
SCOTCH
PINE
CHRISTMAS
TREE

5

W

OPEN DAllY
9:30-9:30
SUNDAYS
1.6

BASKET

CRAYOLA CRAFT
JR . ART
WORKSHOP
KIT

REG.
'7./S

111 1on 1 ht·

sav 1n~s '

'

8-DIGIT
POCKET
CALCULATOR

u •

MANY MORE BARGAINS
ON SALE TABLE

J

GALLIPOLIS - The Dillon Agen cy has annmmced the addition of

pasJ; rng thr s savrngs on to _
v r,rr

0 ~
20~ FF ~

/ll

W

~

TORTOISE SHELL
3-WAY
MIRROR

ELECTRONIC
ELECTRO
FOOTBALL GAME

5

v
20~ OFF ~

Ill

Allstate can save you 10 ~;
on "Good Hands" insu~nce
for your new home.

REG. '7.5()

REG . 49' E.A.

~
1-

20~ OFF ~

20%QFF

:&amp;

IN GIFT TIN

5.22

3 ••• 1

REG. '1.00

Here in Gallia County

1

1

REG. '4.39

2-LBS. HILLS
FRUITCAKE RING

(~()

W

v

18- CH
1000 STRANDS
SILVER
ICICLES

14.22

I' ~-

Ji
~

It\

LORA FOODS
CHEESE
BLOCK

~

w

: I HUSH PUPPIES
:_ :

-.

Dillon Agency
opens branch
in Meigs County

FAYE MANLEY

!r-MOONLiGHT~SALt~~J:~ 1 ....___..__...~
~~

solicited We look forwarrl to a
meaningful Christmas again th is
yea r (;jS we sha re these gifts ..,. ;th
others."
Donati ons may he brought to
Amer ican Legion Post HO on Mill
Street tn New Haven or ma iled to the
Post at P .O. Box 267, New Haven,
W V" 25265 If pickup is needed, ca lt
882-3101 Checks should be ma de
payable to Post 140. All do nations
should be In by Dec. 9

American forces under Gen . W. H.
Harr ison defe ated a combtned
British and In d ian fo r ce near
MoravianU&gt;wn, Ont ., in 1813 during
the War of 1812. The British
commander , Col. Henry A Proctor ,
esc aped , but th e lndtan c hie f
Tecumseh was killed .

NEW FIRE TRUCK - Harry Smathe rs, left , chief of the Vinton
Volunteer Fire rlepariment . gels the gla d handshake from William Sunms , Oluo Department of Na tural Resources, after viewing the depa rt ment 's new tan ker tr uc k. It was purchased by dona twn.o; and a $-4 ,000 ODNR gr ant and $4 .000 from the VIllage of Vmton

By JAMto:S SANDS
GALLIPOUS - Gallipolis IS
famous as a French settlement and
as the home of Odd Me Intyre, but in
late November , 1949, Gallipolis was
. known around the world as the place
• where Santa Claus fell into the Oluo
: River .
The whole thing began when on
November 25, 1949, the mer chants of
Gallipolis sponsored the amval of
. Santa Oaus fo kick off the Christ ; mas shopping season . Wayne Karr
- of Jackson (a paratrooper in WWJJ 1
: was hired to jump out of an airplane,
· dressed as Santa , and land (after a
fall of 11lXl feet 1 mto the city park.
: There he was to hand out cracker
~ jacks .
• All ft happened, It was windy that
• Nov~mber day , and a crowd of over
' 2008 Imany of wbom were children 1
guped 8S old "Salol N1ck " began to
drift out over tbe rlver and later
IIJIIUb down In the " Beautiful Oblo " .
Fortunately , Joe Miller and Plul
Hecker were prepared for 1ust such
an occurence and within minutes the
jolly old man was rolled on board a
. boat and taken lo the Gallipolis Boat
aub to dry out. It was later learned
that Santa could not swim and that
~ he was saved from drowning by the
Mae WEst vest that he had inflated
upon lili descent.
All . soon as the boat carrying the
- first Santa had turned into the
Otickamauga, another Santa Jum ped out from the panel of a truck
' parked near the Public Square and
; began to hand out treats . Tlus Santa .
; Cllarles Nuckles , was as dr y as a
: bone .
The GalU.a Times , In reporting the
story, gave two venlons - one for
· chJidren and one for adults. The lead
.. llDe read : " Unwilllog to destroy
• IDYOIIe 's faltb In anytblog I tbere iB
: too Uttl~ faltb In tbe world u tbtngs
• stand, anyway I Bill Potter bas
prepared two stores cooeerolag Santa Clau' parachute leap Into
GalllpoU. Friday afternoon to signal
local merchants' gala Christmas
- opeolog - tbe parachute leap In
wblcb Santa accidentally landed In
: tbe Oblo River.
:
In the children ·s version, Potter
., wrote : "Take heart , kiddies , Santa
, Qaus didn 1 drown , no sir , Old Santa

By State Representative
RoaJame•
(0-Proctorville,
(92nd House Distric-t)
The Ohio Department of Energy is
offering a free " Home Energy
Analysis" to help you cut the cost of
heating your home. In order to
receive the analysis , a simple
questionnaire must first be completed and returned lo the Ohio
Department of Energy .
Thi s ' Free Home Ener gy
Analysis ' questionnaire can be
requested by calling the 'Energy
Hotline ' toll-free , anywhere m Oluo,
at HI00-282-!l234 ; or by writing : The
Ohio Department of Energy, 30 East
Broad Street, 34th F1oor, Colwnbus ,
Ohio 4321&gt;.
The first 24 questions in tlili
questiormaire ask you to profile your
house in regard 1o type, size, and
fuel use . If you choose to answer
only these questions , you will
receive a 'mini-audit ' or an energy
analysis of a house similar to yours
in size and heat loss .
To receive a~ detailed energy
analysis of your nome, you must
complete questions 2S and-{)r 26,
depending on your particular type of
residence. These questions pertain
lo the specific dimensions of your
home and require a minimwn
amount of measurement . Although
tlili more complete analysis, or
'maxi-audit ,' takes a littie more effort , the information provided 1o the
computer will result in a per-

effort . Donatwn s of nonperishable
food and·or c a sh a r e bein!;{

dt

Ieos !ban $9,000, lo receive eltber
25 percent or 30 percent of tbelr

View from the Statehouse

'

~ P riou ~

MIDDI.EPORT - The Middleport
Emergeny Squad was called to the
office of Dr . James Conde at 1: 22
p m . Friday for Don Manuel,
Racin e.
Manuel, in serious condition from

ters over the age of 65, who earn

Post 140 supplying
food for needy people

A~-TheSunday Times-sentinel, Sunday , Nov. 25, !979

I

Pav• n«J an in ter es-t r ate r elated to the ave rage tour -y e ar yi eld ot
tr easur y se cur i ties . M i nimum deposit $1,000.00 . In t er es t must r e ·
m ai n on deposit a full year to earn ann ual yiel d. Substan tia l in·
leres t pe nalty upon early withdrawa l .

• BATTERY. OPERATED, NEVER NEEDS
WINDING
• CONVENIENT SUE FOR BEDROOM,
DESK OR TRAVEL
• MADE BY FAMOUS WATCHMAKERS

• SATISFACTION ALWAYS!

REG. ,'20.00

ANNUALYIELD

-·-

•Minimum deposit$5.00. lh icfest mus1

I

retain on deposit a full year 1o earn an nual vield .

•

�.·

.~

.·

.•

.·

. . .

.

...

.• ..

•

•

r

-

.-

.

.. ..

.

B·l - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunda y, Nov . ~. 19,_

A-6--The Sw1&lt;lay Times-Sentinel . Sunday. Nov . 2:;, 1979

Increase noted in health services offered
GAUJPOUS - More people h&gt;ive
used the Gallia.Jackson·Meigs Community Mental Health Center's services in the past year than in the
previow year s tates a report put out
by the Center. There was a 6.3 per·
cent increase in the u.se of all services in the three coun ties .
The Annual EvaluatiOn Report.
which is put togethe r by the Resear ·
ch and Evaluation Unit. was approved by the Center Board in their

Novemb.!r meetmg.
In the past year . 2,078 cases were
adnutted to Center services. the
report swtes . Besides direct ad·
missions. over 3,000 service ralls
were handled through CRJSISUNE.
the Center 's 24 hour telephone counseling service .
The report also states th&gt;it the
Center's new Inpatient Unit . a 10 !Jt,d
facility that opened in January, adlru tted 72 people m Its first flv e man·

ths of ope ralton . Before thl unit

opened this year , clients h.ad to be
admitted to sta le mslltut1 ons .
The report is a usefu l tool. feels
Steven Giles , Ph .D.. the Direct or of
Resea rch and Eva lua tion " It shows
us how broadly we a re servin~ the
community . It a lso gives us some
idea what barrie rs to ca re the re
might be . The studies incl uded in
this report are useful for plannmg
and development ··

Recession not seen on Friday
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
A recession ? Not so yo u'd nottct&gt;
on the traditional opening day of the
Christmas shopping rush as mollf')' ·
waving consumers crowded stores
and shopping centers to buy elt'&lt;'·
tronic games, sportswear , jewelry
and other popular gilts .
Retailers . apprehensive about

Christmas business beeall')(' uf tn .
nation and sl wnpmg sales earht•r
this fall , reported bn s k sales across
the nation Friday as the cow1tdown
toward the Chrtslma' O.v close of
business began .
·
At John Wanamaker ·s department
store in Philadelphia. spokesrndn
Reeves Wetherill saJd , .. We're
h.aving trouble on the street floor
getting people mto the elevators.
there are so man v · ·

See The No. 1
Best Selling Stove
in the Nation.
Tr iple w all ed , 3 speed
thermost a ti cal l y
con
tro lled f a n, guara nteed fo r
life . Not just a s tove , bu t a
heating s ys t em

Also some of the best brass
and fireplace equtpm e nt in

the state .

Reduce your heating

bill 60 to 80%.

E:'
ANU BRASS SHOP PE
405 Second Ave .
Gatl1 p ··c.., Oh.
446 7021

Shoppers were llned up outside
Filen(' 's department store in Boston
Friday morning, waiting for the
bargam basem ent to open at 8:30.
When 1! did, spokeswoman Babs
Gorman said. "The place h.as been
mobbed . It 's a madhouse .··
This year 's s hopping lists are
much lt ke last years, say sales

before Christmas .
Despite the strong start for the
sea son, many experts worry that
Cllristmas sales will falter this year .
Retail sales figures reported by the
n ... , , .... _,n"IPnf fnr fW nhpr fell ) . 7 [)ef -

A llllljor focus of the report IS on
acce pta bility. accessibility a nd
availability of services . Mu ch of the
information was gathered from a
Community Needs Ass essment
project that was conducted last
yea r. "The project is rapidly
becoming an important piece of
rural mental hea lth resea rch," sa id
Dr . Giles .
The report also cover s the Center 's financia l status . Total excent from

penditures las t yea r we re $2.2
million . Federal grants provided
$1.6 nllllion of th.at Fede ral Title
XlX and XX 1Federa l fee for service
programs !, provided $568,000. State
and local sources provided $82, 000
Client fees and other sources con·
tributed $58,000 for the budget for

HAVE APROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?

the previous month 's

level. Citibank. the nation 's second
largest commercial bank , estimates
that clothing sales for the month fell
4 percent
The bank projects vibrant sales in
some parts of the country . notably
Ne w York and the West Coast, but
concludes that the picture is dimmer
for the nation as a whole .

The Rev. Roberf
Robinson of Mid-

GALLIA 446-5554
MEIGS 992-5554

'I

JACKSON 286-5554

,II

~~

K mart's Adve rtited
Mer c h and ise Poh cv

cle r ks a nd store e xec uti ves .

" Shoppers a r e buying quality
mer cha ndise. something they can
make an investment m ," said Jack
Curtis, pres1dent of the Catn.sloan
depa rtmc nt -etor e chaln in Nash Ville. Tenn . " They are not afratd to
spend money "
In C1eveland . pracltcal apparel is
popular + "The kind of mer chandise that keeps people warm 1n
winter. Sweaters, coal&lt;! , scan"es,
things that may be of necessity if the
ener gy crunch comes to pass ... satd
Stephen Thorpe. seni o r v1ce
president of the May Co ., which has
10 depa runent stor es in and around
the cit y
Thorpe added that adult electronic
games a re selling well. speculating
that higher gasoline pri ces are
prompting mor e people to entertain
thernse Ives at home .
Electronic toys and games that
have a sports theme are parti cularly
popula r . said John 0 'Donnell ,
executive vtce president of Milton
Bradl ey . the game produc er . But
traditional toys like dolls, electric
trams a nd bloc ks seem to be holdin~
thet r own. retailers report .
The crush began early Friday at
two of Atlanta 's largest shopping
malls. Their parking lots were Jam med by JOa.m
Macy 's in Ne w York , wluch bUls
itself as the world 's lar gest store.
was full of shoppers jostling each
other . Clerks on the toy floor said
they were too bus y to talk . Children
waited more than hall an hour to sit
on Santa 's la p . A woman dressed as
an elf said Macy 's expects 250,000 to
300,000 to be inlefVIewed by St . Nick

B

the fiscal year .
Co pt es of the fu ll Annual
Evalualton H.eport are avathlble
thro ugh public li branes a nd m ental
health cente rs in Ga llia, Jackson
and Meigs Counties. Dr. Giles
requests questions and comments on
the re port

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

0...· ,,_ ,_,.,,, ........ " ' ~ . .. ..... ' ·~-·-

"'
'" " "'" . "" .... "''''" " ..,_ ,....,
• • - •• ·~ • • · • ~••" •c• ,...,c., OM .... ·~ '" '

,

'

~

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0 ' !ftO 0010 P' ' " .,.,..,., , , , ,. .1&gt;10

" ' - ·· . . .

, ..... .

··--· ...........

-···
-

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&lt;•...~·- '"""''- "' "'"'' o ... ~~ , " ••
,
""'

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the food out.
Many of tbe
ministers par·
tlclpate In the
project.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Colorful Fireplace Logs

POMEROY-To provide families
hard lut by innation with quality
food at near-wholesale prices ill the
goal of the Food Co-op in operation
here by the United Methodist
Ministries Cooperative Parish Pro-

P1ne M ounta1n logs g1ve you an
evenmg f1r e w1th color 1

gram .
The program has actually been in

79~

operation for the past year , starting
In a small way, and gradually ex·
panding to meet the needs of many .
In fact, the Methodists just this week
purchased a new one-hall ton van for
use in transporting the food from tbe
distribution center in Jackson to
Pomeroy .
While emphasis is on low and mid·
die income families, along with
senior citizens, no one is excluded
from participating . To purchase
fruit and vegetables, bread and
eggs, or something from the long list
of bulk items such as sugar, nour.
beans, rice, dry milk , etc . orders
have to be. placed a week in advance .
Arrangements are made through
the Senior Citizens Center or the
United Methodist Ministries office in
Middleport who have forms to be

Our
Reg 9. 96

Fashion Cardigans
A gif t of warmth '
Fash 1on c ardiga ns in
popul a r co lo rs a n d s ti es .
Ac ryli c kn it s in s iz es s
ML .

TIL 8 PM

3 44

Our Reg 1 48

Women 's Slippers

Decorative Wrapping Paper

$2

26 Chr1s tma s wrapp1ng has total

ol 1 5 sq II · Hohday colors

Cho,ce of 3 co lors .
SAVE
Ou r REg 3.57

Big Dump Truck

completed Wlth payment being
made in advance . Harold Sauer is
secretary-treasurer for the program
and handles the financial part along
with mailing in the orders . Orders
can be placed by telephone, but a
check must be sent in immediately
since there are no credit arden accepted .
The food is brought into the Senior
Otizens Center in Pomeroy every
other Thursday in bulk form . Once
unloaded from the van by the
Methodist ministers participating in
the program, and some senior
citizens, it is weighed, counted,
sorted, and sacked for delivery by
Retired Senior Volunteers at the
~nter .

The Food Co-()p begar m Meigs
CoWlty as the special seminary project by the Rev . James Corbitt,
pastor of the Enterprise and Rock
Springs United Methodist Churches .
A student at the Dayton Theological
Seminary , the Rev . Mr . Corb1t1 in itialed the program here with the
assistance of the Rev . Harve y Koch .
several other ministers, and the
United Methodist Conference .

It is, of course, a non-profit ven·
lure . Those participating do pay
nembership dues - ~ a year for
those 62 and over, and $4 for those
under 62. The money is used to help
cover the cost of the operation . All of
the work is carried out with
volunteer help and several
Methodist ministen1 are always Ol'l
hand when the food is brought in for
distribution from the Center.
The emphasi8 1s on wholeaome
foods' grain products' high qlllllity
fruits and vegetables . The orders
are $5 for a bag of fruits and
vegetables which varies from time
to time in content and $2.75 for
cheese , eggs and bread .
In last week's delivery the $5 bag
included 3 powlds bananas, 2
grapefruit , 3 pounds apples , 4
tangerines, 4 pears, 3 poWlds
potatoes , one head each of lettuce,
broccoli , and cabbage , and a stalk of
celery . The $2.75 bag included two
loav es of bread , 8 ounces ol
American cheese , and a dozen of
larg e eggs .

Plasti c with r e al like
fea tur es Sho p an d 5a ve
at K m a rt .

'

5!~eg

6667 23

10" Aluminum Frying Pans
Almond or

Sll·. . . erStone·

~- -'&gt;24!!g
38 96

pok. . he (1 e x! erto r
n o n ~ t r c ~ mterr or

Room Size Rugs

$2

O u•

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6' Orion Acrylic Scarf
L o nq v.. 1 1l'r :-.C dr' l or w rdp
aroun(j w~trmt 'l VrbrJnt color&lt;:.,

Boxes, boxes BJid more boxea ... alJ filled wltb blgb
quallty fruit and vegetable• ready to be sad:ed 1...U.tribotlon to the many famlUes wbo participate In the
Food C&lt;Hlp program as a way of saving dollan on their

food budget. Below, EBta David, Vernon Nease and AD·
oa JaDe Kincade, leh to rtgbt, were only a few of the
many senior cllhens who assisted In welgiiJn« and
counting the fruli!J and vegetables.

100°'o Herc ulon Olefin
Potyropylen e pile , solid
or pattern , 8 111' x ll'h'.

LEVI S " 0"9'na l
blue den1ms -

gu&lt;HJn t pPrl tn
s tl 11 nV

., .. r ,nr.lf'

.Hlrl l.1de No

la rls - Just tru e ·
b lue LEVIs ·
,..! (&gt;.1nS Wtth lh.ll

~~~eg!4a

rlll SSIC look

H'1llt' S never o u1

o l style Look
lor t he t ab

Dry Roasted Peanuts
Co tt on 5lre tch nylon
CUShiOn fOO l F1l 1Q-t3

- .--.- ........·"'-•'I·

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po c ket to be
s u re they re
a ut henti C

L EVIs · J e·"" ·

t'iaf1
"A Shop-A-R~ma
Store"

9!."! JO

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oevelopmq

Men '1

Sit es

2 4 7 Pr
Our 3 33

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Crockery Kettle

Focal' or Kodak ·
Color Print

Warm 14-in. Boot Socks

Cook s wh•l e you re out !
Almond . w1th brown stflpes

Beautiful. borderless sdk
pr1 n1 s Save at K mart

Made w1th s pec•al wool/ cali on /
rayon/nylon blend Save'

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'CO-OP-erating' for lower prices

OPEN MONDAY

il

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Beating inflation

$6

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Mlolstriea, ud Ia
band lbunday
after Thursday to
a.oslat In gettlag

I

r

Case of 6 Logs .......... 4.66

I

OD

~-·~

C kO&lt; O ,..

' "" ft 0 -

, .,.. ... . . b ........ ... ,

dleport's Heath
United Methodist
Church Ia tbe
Cbrlsdan Social
Concel'llll chalrlll8D for the Meigs

Food Co-op delivery Ume ... Melvin driver of lbe UDlted Melbodllt vu,
Lovoey, a redred ~enlor voiDDteer at 'Wtft IIIIIODg ~event llllldlten ud
the Senior Citizens' Center, ~ealor cltluu who pltdled Ill to

Pomeroy, Jell, alld Paul Smith, uniOIId the food.

�B-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel , Sunday, Nov . 25, 1979

Layette shower honors Linda Broderick
POMEROY -A layette shower was

eluded a cake decorated with pmk
and blue bout1es , sandwiches, potato
chips, nuts, mints and punch . Game'
were played wilhprizes going lu
Ulvema Kaufl and Debra Spencer.
Kelli Lane won the door prize .

held recently hononng Lmda
Broderick at the home of Fern Morris . Other hostesses were Becky
Broderick and Cyntlua Russell .
A pink and blue color scheme was
carried out with refre~hmPnt!'i in ·

BAZAAR PLANNED

RACINE - Women of the Racine
United Methodist OIUrch will stage
a Christmasbazaarlrom 10a .m. to 7
p.m. Friday and 10 a.m . to 3 p.m.
Saturday at the church annex. Hand-

made items such as decorations,
quilts , rugs, macrame, crocheted
items, stuffed toys, candy and baked
goods will be sold Lunch will be
available . Mrs. Frances Roberts is
chairman of the event.

Attending the shower were Betty
Weyersmille, Ardath Lane, O.eryl
Ulne, Gwinnle Wlute, Ulverna
Kaufl, Emma Broderick, Nancy
Gru.,;er , Barbara Grueser, Susan
and Mary Ann, Sue Metzger, Amy
and Michelle, Phyllis Spencer, Kitty
Darst, Audrey Holley, Nancy
Broderick, Lynn Gardner, Betty
Lane and Kelli, Debra Spencer ,
Scherry Lane, Flo Snowden, Kris
Snowden, Gina Snowden, Donna
Pullins, Catherine Grueser, Sheila

Campbell, Marie Snyder, Bonnie
Scott, LouiSe Bearhs, Mary
Showalter, Christine Grueser, and
Jamie Broderick.
Sending gifts
were
Betty
McKinley, Marg Robinette, Nancy
and Carol Morris , Beuna Grueser.
Marlene Wllson , Mary Grueser,
Florence Grueser, Addie Brown,
Katheryn Metzger, Betty Gilkey,
June Mays, Dinaa Johnson, Susie
French , Betty Spencer, and Oara
Grueser.

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

ATTENTION

CARRIER
NEEDED IN

7UTH ANNIVERSARY - On Sunday , November 11, Elmer and
Almeda Coler celebrated thetr 7oth wedding anniversary. The immedite
lamidly joined them for a family dinner and reviewed a shower of cards
received . The couple and family wish to thank the many friends who sent
cards and gifts. "Each card brought fond memories and joy, " said Mrs .
Cofer .

DINNER HELD

PORTER - A Thanksiving dinner
was served at the home of Maurice,
Patty and Matthew Toler in Porter .
Attending guests were as folloWll :
Ray and Mary Beaver, Porter: Don,
Peg, Jeff, Jerry, and Jaso n Call , Rio
Grande : Bill, Beth, Paige, and

David Large, Fort Wayne, lnd .;
Mra. Mary Call, Eureka; Andy and
[)Jrothy Toler, Bidwell : Mike Gee,
Bidwell : Donald, Janet, Rochelle
and Ryan Browning, Bidwell : and
Maurice and Marie Thomas ,
Bidwell .
Everyone reported having a good

l
.t'vans
revzews
'Dateline
America'
/Finnicum, Humphrey united locally (;AI.IJI~JI.JS
'
I

MIDDLEPORT -Miss Diane Finnicum became the bride of Gene
Humpllrey, Jr. on Friday , June 22 at
6 :30pm. at the Hope Baptist Olapel
In Middleport .
The bride is the daughter of Frank
Finnicum and the late F1orene Finrucwn, Mason, W. Va., and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr . and
MPomers. Gene Humphrey , Sr . ,
roy .
The Rev. Don mack performed
the double-ling ceremony following
a program of pre-fluptial music
presented by Mrs. Nancy Black on
the guitar. She also sang "The Wed ding Song" and "Annie's Song "The
bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a light blue polyester
gown with matclung lace cape.
Joyce Riley, Clifton, W. Va . was
the bride's maid of honor, and Jack
Well , Darwin served as best man for

'

*

/h, •,Jitt

America ··

G1ving her report in the first per·
.w n , jusl as Kuralt would have done
had he bern there. Mrs Evans
reflected a fr.,;h and heartwarming
cr&gt; lebri::tlwn of Ameri ca by the ta len ted and w1tty C1lS News correspon denl who wntcs about small towns
and orduw.ry people in a way that

make!'! us
nl'Weyes.

A·I r. und Airs. (,,,,( lllll!ljlll} t' l'

Dave Diles will be In the store
from } pm til

Between 8:30 a.m.
and 5:00p.m.

8

pm to autograph

(

/

.

' "
,... =---

the groom.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at the home of the groom·,
parents . A three-tiered wedding
cake was provided by Sharon
Stewart, Syracuse, and Louise
Bartels of Pomeroy made mints for
the reception.
For their honeymoon, the couple
spent a week at Myrtle Beach, S. C.
They reside at the Riverview Trailer

"MAN OF STEEL".
A GREAT CHRISTMAS Gl FT

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

1-614-992-2156

eauty Tips

99 MILL ST.

from our

Cosmetic Departme

PRICES EFFECTIVE
MONDAY, NOV. 26TH

Be Subtle.

THRU

'"' subtle, too . Put in empty sce-nt bottles in
draw•rs or closeh to gently scent clothes .

Yfin~ntM

BACON ENDS
AND PIECES

FRESH LEAN

79

GROUND BEEF.......
STORE MADE

SEE RC
COLA DISPLAY

FOR DETAILS

LB.

$199

111

MONDAY ONLY

THIS COUPON WORTH 50' OFF ON

FRESH GROUND BEEF

8 PAK 16 OL BTI. CTN.

2% MILK

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RC or DIET RITE COLA

BROUGHTON

MINUTE STEAKS

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

CRACKERS....~~:.~~-99¢
·------------------·
GATEWAY
BREAD

FRESH LEAN

$}49
8
..L. ~ ••

GALLON CARTON

89e

1nd Arpege '

TOWN HOUSE OR CLUB

HUFFY
BIKE

GROUND CHUCK .........~~·.. ~l

P~rtlge ,

..•/1 quollty

Kinu

89e

TOPS MEETS
RUTI.AND - Behavior modrfication was the top1c at the Wednesday
morning meeting of the Rutland
Olapter 1466 of TOPS rtake off
pounds sensibly 1
Eight members weighed in w1U1
four being TOPS or loser.&lt;, and four
gainers. Linda Adluns was queen of
the with with Connie Cleland as her
runner-i.Jp. The quern wa.s pres~nted
a dollar, a r ibbon and a song wa s
sw1g in her honor . The robe and
croWil lor AID we re displayed ()f .
fleers ' reports were given and 1t wa s
decided to taken in redempti on
coupons.

Try our newest ide• In fr~grance ... Gucci, My

Sin, Uvin,

KEEBLER

3 LB. BOX

Co urt in Hartford. W Va .
Attending the wedding were Mr
and Mrs . Bill Gibb.' and George , Mr
and Mrs . Mike F'innicum . Mr and
Mrs, Gene Riley, Jan Riley, Mr and
Mrs . Ulrry Bailey and Kristin. Cin·
dy HeS80n, Mr . and Mrs. Butch
Grover and Brandi , Loraine Venoy
and Robyn, Mr. and Mrs . Andy
Grover, Karen and Genia. Mr and
Mrs . Roger E blin , Regina. Amber
and Matthew. the Rev. and Mrs . Don
Black, Marcia Houdashelt and
Bnan, Lori Rupe , Mr . and Mrs
Greg Grover and UIDeana , Clara
Humphrey, Hortense Humphrey ,
Louise Bartels, Mr . and Mr s
Wheeler Drake, Floyd Finmcum .
Velvet Swisher, Tony Venoy, Joyce
Riley, Jack Well, Mr . and Mrs
Carlos Chavarna, Joe Humphre y,
Janel Humphrey, Myrtle (irover,
Wtlma Davidson. J oyce Grover and
Terri, Mr . and Mrs . Gene Humphrey , Sr., and Mr. and Mrs . Gl'ne
Humphrey, Jr .

The usuid wAy with lragr1nce is a dab behind
your •• r or on your wrist . TtlAf's fine, but try be·

SATURDAY, DEC. 1ST

$119

89~
3
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7-UP

EVERYDAY
LOW
PRICE

BROUGHTON

COTTAGE CHEESE
79c
'1.49

take it with you
••• anywhere •••
the new

2 LITER BOTTLE

•1

19

players of East Texas to th e s kipJack.&gt; uf the Chesapeake Ba y: from
thl• wild water of the Salmon River
to the breakfasts of l':ast Tennessee
KuraJt's inimitable stori es are tall '
lyri ca l, funny, histoncal , se n:
ument.al, revealing the wonderful
vanety of life he has found on the
roods throughout America.
He travel s 30,00040,000 mile s eac h
year for l11s "On the Road " and
'Dateline America " senes for CBS
He has been with CBS Ne~&lt;s since
1951 and has won two Errunys and
two Peabody Awards for his reportmg . 'flle many mdiv1dual seleclinns
appearmg in this ullique book were
written at a rattling desk on the bus
m wh~rh he trarels . or under 6() watt
bulbs m mote ls, or " WJUy-rully " at
l&lt;l&lt;'alions of the stones . As he says,
· ·f.Jterature i~ not ro1nposed or tran ~
smJtted in tlus manner. ..
WritUl~ for rad10 ts eas1er than
y,Titmg for telev.s1on. he noted . His
'[l&lt;Jteline America" program began
on CBS radio in 1972. While he was
traveling fortelev1sion. visitmg such
pl&lt;~ ces as Granny's Neck and HeUfor.O.•rtam, and s1nce he had
notlung else to do .. . according to his
employer ... he might as well tum m
c1 ft·w radlo esseiys on wet&gt;kends He
liked the idea because it gave him
the opportunity to "get off h1s chest "
the small mspiratwns as well as af .
lerthoughts and lrrit.;,tion.&lt; that
come to &lt;:my traveler .
Kuralt frc&gt;quently felt grumpy
aho ut televisiOn and murmured.
"One good word IS worth a thousand
ptcture:i ." But 1t 1s always necessary
when you hear words and do noo
read them, to supply your own
hackground sounds .. like the gabble of the gceese at Tule Ulke, the
dl p·dap of the horse that pulls the
carriage uph 1ll on Mackinac island,
the mWlllur of tht' breeze m St. Martmsville Oaks .
Must of his wr1tmgs are about

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Proless1ona l
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Restores color and
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carpet' C leans.
Rmses . and Vacuums
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your carpet as
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e

e

moments of our past , or small towns
and ordinary people of the present.
But if you leave such moments,
people and places out of the jigsaw
of An1erica, then you cannot see the
co un try whole .
Among th•• 'stops" that Mrs
~~&lt;uJs read fur tl1e Philomathean
members were Angels Camp,
lAilorodu : Jack Rabbitt , Anzona ;
Boone. North Carolina With the
mountain su perstitions and herb
doctor: Arcadia , Nebraska nght aflt.'f a tomHdo where. instead of a

OFF

·~

BAKE SALE,
BAZAAR SLATED
HLITIA'I/D - A bazaar will be
hPid Frrdoy. :'&gt;lov . 30 and Salurday,
Dec 1, •n the emergency squad
bwldm~, Kulland . The event will
IJ&lt;&gt;gm at 9 am . On Saturday a bake
sale will be held tn conjunctiOn WJth
the bazaar The event L&gt; bemg sponsort'il by the Hulland Emergency
&amp;Juad There •.nll be homemade
tTdfts, tu\·s and 01r1stm a s

HLITIAN[) - A re v1va l Wi ll begm
\otonday at the Rutland Free,.1ll
l&gt;aptist Church with th e&amp;\' Darrel
~ c Phcrsun of Pomeroy s peaktng .
nu~ nlt'f'tmgs wtll be held ett 7 each
t· v~ rung LelanU Hctley . pa."'tor . in\' l lc.li thtl publH_·

The first electric razor to combine solid
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• shaves with or wrlhout cord
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IGW IYiillblt II:

,,'

.,

REV1\'AL TO BH&gt;1N

LOAVES

QUART~

hostess, Nellie Scarberry .
The November 29 meeting, to have
been at the home of Anne Bowers,
has been cancelled, so that the members may participate in the meeting
scheduled that same evening at 8
p rn . in the Presbyterian l ll'eh,
when the architects' plan for the
lustoric renovation of downtown
Gallipolis will be presented.
Philomathean members are urged
to attend this special meeting that
will be of interest to the total commwlity.
The next meeting of Pllilomathean
will be the Annual Ou-istmas Party
on Thursday evening, Dec . 13, at the
home of Joyce Thaler,

dt.•t 'll f&lt;JliUO S

norelco

16 OZ.

2

our country through

weathervane , you look to see how
the barn is leaning: Ellis Island,
1\ew York, pointing out that
everyone came from somewhere
else, and too many people have
r.,rgotten th1&gt; . " People from
somewhere else made tlus country
lor us, " Kuralt said. One stop was m
Jonesboro, Tennessee , m East Tennessee where "country ham is a gift
of God to Tennessee and where they
I.Jelieve in and practice breakfast .''
The Philomathean members were
fascinated by Mrs . Evans mind
lmgling review of KuraJt 's travels in
his inunitable style .
A delight! ul dessert course was
served to the members by the

rners of Kansa s, from the durrunu

More Entertaining
Than Humanly Possible!

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1979

Sf'P

F'rom lhc mountain people of
J)o(mc, 'lorth Carolina. to the far-

•

-AUTOGRAPH PARTY-

the mo;t

Club, Pe~gy Evans took the mem .
Oe rs attendin~ on u tour through the
ryes and pen of L~harles Y..uralt wlus
outstanding
book
··Dateline

Wednesday thru
Thursday, Nov. 29

CALL THE
DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT

AI

n·l·cnt ruct.•lmg uf the Philumathean

' COLO\' · .

.CLIFTON, W. Va.

time.

B.J- The Sunday Times-Sent mel, Sunday, Nov . 25, 1979

our fine selection of
pre-owned homes.

r
l4x70

1976 COVE~

),4~~ ~

,Q/~~.

\.. ' ·

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ONLY
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\,

_ ,~ellen!

cond.

1968 COMMUNITY
12x60, 2 BDR.
Fuel orl, new carpet
1n llv. rm .

~

.,

~

OPEN MONDAY TIL 8 PM

.•
•

I

�.

. ,. ~
les""nttnel . Sunday' Nov . 2f&gt;, 1979
am . Bowling 1-J p.m .
SeJlior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 pm ., Monday through Fri day .
Menu for Nov . 26 through Nov . 30 :
Monday Meat balls in
mushroom gravy, buttered carrots,
cole slaw, lemon pudding -cinnamon
POMEROY - Meigs Senior
crumb topping, bread , butter , milk .
Qtizens Center activities located at
Tuesday - Ham and pinto beans,
the Pomeroy JWiior High Schol is
pickled beets, buttered spinach coropen 8:30 am .-1 :30 p.m . Monday
nbread, ice cream, butter millt.'
through Friday .
Wednesday - Olicken and rice
Monday, Nov . 26 - Square Dance
casserole, buttered pea.•, tossed
12 :30-Jp.m .
•
salad with french dressing ,
Tuesday , Nov 27 - Craft Making
chocolate cake with white icing ,
!0:30am . Olrous 12:30-2pm .
bread, butter, milk .
Wednesday, Nov . 28 - Social
Thursday - Salmon loaf, buttered
Security Representative 9 :30
potatoes, stewed tomatoes, fruit
a.m .-12 :30 pm Candy Making 1
cocktail, butterscotch cookie, bread ,
pm . Games !-2 :30pm.
butter, milk.
Thursday . Nov . 29 - Craft Making
Friday - Baked stea, mashed
10 :_ 30 am . Jan Northup, Senior
potatoes with gravy, green beans,
Friends Program II : 15a.m . Kitchen
fruited gelatin, bread, buter, milk .
Band 12 :30-2p.m .
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
Friday, Nov. 30 - Art Class 1().!2
milk or buttennilk served daily .
noon. Movie "Garden of God.. II
Menu for the ftacme Nutrition

.

.

...

~

B.,';- The Sunday Tm

B+-The SWlday Thnes&amp;ntinel, SWiday, Nov . 2f&gt;. 1979

Shelley Wright; Donley
~LLE - On Saturday
Cktober 1'3, at 2:30p.m ., Sbelley
Wright , daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
Edward E. Wright , Gallipolis ,
becarnr the bride of Donley Eugene
Sl;ong, son of Mrs . Althea R. Strong,
Wllkeavtlle, and the late Harley E .
11rong .
The double-ring ceremony took
at the Wilkesville United
~ Methodist Olurch with Reverend
P. Lew officiating.
Preceding the ceremony, a halfof taped musical selecti0118

,w;

•

-

/vir. und AIrs.

·- -

~·trong

wed

chosen by the bnde and groom were
played . Selections included :
"Bridge OVer Troubled Water,"
" Photographs and Memories, "
"Seasons," " Upon the Roof,"
"Songbtrd," "Time in a Bottle." and
"Sounda of Silence."
The bride was adorned in a long
ivory gown featuring a scoop
neckline, fitted bodice, and long
sheer sleeves. Old-lashiooed lace
trlrmned the neckline , bodice, and
sleeves . A ruffled floWice of oldfashioned lace decorated the edge of

the gown . A sheer bow accented the
natural waistline . Sbe carried a
cascade of golden yellow silk tiger
lilies, deep orange silk baby mlllll8
and brown silk baby 's breath on a
lrown laced background with Ivory
streamers. Two combe In ber hair
were decorated with deep orange
silk baby's breath .
The traditional ''something old"
was a pair of ivory rosebud earrings,
the "something new " was ber gown ,
the "something borrowed " was a
blue Iinde star ring from the bride's
maid of honor, and the bride 's garter
was the "something blue."
Miss Diane strong , Wilkesville,
close friend of the bride and sister of
the groom, waa maid of bonor . Sbe
was attired in a long orange gown
accented with old-lasbiooed lace .
Sbe carried deep orange silk Uger
lilies and golden yellow silk baby
mums tied with an orange ribbon.
Two combs in her hair were accented with light orange silk baby 's
breath .
The groom was attired in a deep
lrown jacket with tan slacks . He
carried a ~een EIHis boutonniere
was a deep orange silk carnation
with brown silk baby's breath . Bill
Strong , Wilkesville, served as best
man for his brother . He wore a dark
brown suit with a light orange silk
carnation. Lanny Saunders, Cincinnati, served as an usher.
After the couple exchanged their
own vows, they lighted a unity candle symbolizing their separate lives
becoming one life together. While
the bride and groom knelt at the
altar, their wedding guests joined
them in reciting the Lord's Prayer .
Following the wedding ceremony ,
a reception was held In the church .
The bride's table featured a three
tiered wedding cake with dried
yellow and orange flowers on each
tier . A vase of silk flowers was the
centerpiece on top. The cake was
created by Mrs. Wanda Beaver,
Don le t• .\trong
Gallipolis , and Mrs . Donna Shato,
Gallipolis, cousin of the groom . PWl-------- · - - . ch, coffee, candy com, mints , and
nuts also were served by Miss Kathy
Stebbins, Gallipolis, Miss Diana
Pratt, Jackson , and Miss Mary Jane
Ross , Jackson, all frienda of the
bride .
Guests were registered by Miss
Cathie Roseberry, Jackson , who
also distributed wedding programs
and rice tied in white netting with
orange, yellow, and brown ribbon.
Photographs were taken by Danny
SaWiders, Olillicothe .
For a short wedding trip to Clncinnati, the bride changed into a
flowered wine dress with matching
sandals .
The new Mrs . Strong is a 1975
graduate of Gallia Academy High
" • """ ' V "-"vr•·J'cn .._.1-'1,.,.,
..,,......-.:)~..,,.....
'"" '""" c,1 ""'''*" 'O"QU''&lt;f'&lt;l"' ....,,.....,. o•r;,e-! School, and a 1978 graduate of
&lt;:Y'o ·•"""''"' .....,..o)O,..,..,.. __ , fho .: &gt;ft.,_
"''r&gt; """~' .._, ...tl ~ .. .
Holzer School of Nursing. She is
'""""'""""'' ""'""~' P't&gt;&lt; ..... "01'"""
ptc-1v&lt;• .....,.
presenUy employed as a staff nurse
0" ~(]! ..., l:n'f .. Phi&gt; IWY1 L - T ~ ,..,.. " "'"""*'
,.,.. -........., &lt;J oooon-"J •oo .,.,111 &lt;T&lt;:I ,.,... '"C&gt;Oofi"'U
at Holzer Medical Center. Mr .
•v "'-"'-..O-~-~ &lt;&gt; • rC,O
!1-,p ""'n nlfV9"'&lt;' • .p;:;oo ,.,.... ,., ,,
Strong is an accountant with Dewitt,
ont.--•• ..\.'I!''UI'•
Oo"lo'-"'&lt;X&gt;&gt;CIIQ- ,......,., ' 'o ' 0 'P" •Y.:l t , ., tol'.-;1
Bock, and Anderson in Columbus .
...... ~~·~"""""""""~ c:-....
He will receive a B.S. degree from
Franklin University in accoWiting
this December.
Wedding guests Included : Mr. and
Mrs . Doug Adkins and Jennifer, Mr .
and Mrs . David Grimm, Mrs . Deb-

No bottles •••
No returns •••
with the
Marx
Home Oxygen

Support System.

', yyf'•r

.... 'C){1f""''''(j

New books released
The Dr. L. Bosaard Memorial
library announces the following
new books are now available :
Fiction - The Unlimited Dream
Company, J . G. Ballard; Backfire Is
Hostile, James Barnett; The
Whirligig of Time, Uoyd Biggle ;
Unholy Child, Catherine Breslin;
lbe Misadventures of Bethany
Price, Marian Cockrell ; Vision
Quest, Terry Davis ; Darkness
Visible, William Golding; Shadows
2, Olarles L . Grant ; The Murders at
Impasse
Louvain, Richard
Grayson; Glad To Be Here, Arthur
Herzog; Simon the Coldheart,
Georgette Heyer; Kill Claudio, P . M.

CALENDAR
GALLIPOUS - Emibit for the
month of November, "Fire and
Earth". Bill Meadows of Huntington , W. Va ., The Urban Potter .
Gallery Hours: Saturdays and
~days I p.m. until 5 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays lOam . un·
W3pm .
Nov . 26- 8 p m ., Piano Concert
with David Ehrman , Professor of
Piano and Artists in Residence at
Liverby Baptist College, Lynchburg,
Va . , Rlverby .
Nov . 30 - 8 pm ., Deck the Halls
Party to decorate Riverby Adult
F.A.C.
members ;
bring
refreshments to share after
decorating complete, Riverby .
Dec . 4 - 7:30pm., F.A.C. fnterdepartmental Meeting; 9 p.m .,
F .A.C. Trustees Meeting , Riverby .
Dec. 9- ~ pm ., F .A.C. Annual
Family Ouistmas Party. Envertairunent by Debbie Walker, ventrtloquest from Thunnan, Riverby .
Dec. 16 - 2--1 :30 pm ., Third
Oilldren 's Workshop with Corinne
Lund for children over age 5.
Register in advance . This workshop
on Tree Trimmings . Call 446-1900
Riverby.
'
Dec. 20 - 3 p.m ., Riverby will
close for the holidays , reopening at
IOa.m. on Thursday, Jan . 3,1980.

(""'-...,..,..WY

Wicker House
"A Great Place
to Find A Unique

~~

FISHER STOVES
Now In Stock

ITS TIME TO

Choose From 5 Models

SMiles Out 141
Daily 3 : 30 til 7
Sat. 11 til7
Sun . 11il 6

Gallipolis, Ohoo
&gt;

•

Are Your Drawers Falling!

1

1

bie Beegle, Ronald Saunders , Mrs .
Barbara Sims, Mr . and Mrs . Jim
Shato and Kristin, and Mrs. Wanda
Beaver and Vincent, Gallipolis; Sandy Games, Mrs. Jewell Strong, Nancy Steele, Mrs . Evelyn Devault, Cin dy Strausbaugh, Mrs . Shirley
Spires, and Mrs . Doris Wood,
Wilkesville; Mr . and Mrs . Henry
Reibel , Mr . and Mrs . Donley Reibel
and Fae, Pomeroy; Mrs. Barbara
Farrar, Steve Gregory , and Rick
Bowman. Jackson ; Mrs . Mae
Pridemore, Radcliff ; Mr . and Mrs .
T. J Ferrell, Rutland ; Mrs . Jan
Nice, McArthur ; and Mr . and Mrs.
Keith Houck, Columbus .

MISSIONARY SOCIETY MEETS

i

SCHMIDT CUSTOM CABINETS
STRONG, STURDY CONSTRUCTION
-ALL WOODThese cabinets are almost child -proof. 1 sav almost we know nothing is .that strong - but with Schmidt
cabinets when the little one climbs up on the drawers at
least he won't go thru the bottom .
Stop in and see our display- Bring a child and put
them to the test.

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING
......'

749 Third Ave.

AND BUILDING SUPPLY
Gallipolis

MIDDLEPORT - Oloruses of
"Family of God " and "Tbey That
Wait Upon the Lord" were sung at
the Wednesday night meeting of the
Middleport Nazarene Church missionary meeting .
Mrs . Marjorie Taylor , missionary
president, read Romans 12 and the
Rev . and Mrs . James Bromle
presented a skit entiUed " Professor
Higgins" relating to church growth
in Asia . Mrs . Taylor read "Tbe Potter " and the congregation sang
''l'ake Time to Be Holy ."
A boxwork chart rnBde by Mrs .
Mary Walburn to be used for items
to be sent to the missinary hospital
staff in New Guinea was introduced
to the congregatioo and help
solicited . An altar of prayer closed
the service .

Please regiSter the day before you
plan to eat : Portland 843-3364 ,
Pomeroy 992-7886 .
Racine Satelite Site will be closed
oo Monday, due to no transportation .
r--------------~

I

Social Calendar

MONDAY
PERSONS interested in joining
GAA at Southern High School meet
Monday at 7 :30 p.m . at the high
school.
TIIESDAY
HARRISONVILLE Senior Otirens
Tuesday 7 p.m . at town hall .
Refreshments of cookies, coffee and

tea.
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY
Branch, American Association of
University Women , 7: 30 Tuesday
rught at the Riverboar Riverboat
Room of the Meigs office, Athe!IB
CoWity Savings and Loan Co . Program focus will be "Managing
Resources for Tomorrow " under the
direction of Mrs . Dorothy Qliver.

omo ETA PHI Sorority Tuesday
7:30 p.m. at Columbia Gas office
Middleport . Denise Wolfe in charge
of cultural program . Hostesses are
Jill Lizon and Kay Walker.

THE FITNESS CENTER
Galiipolis , OH .
Across from the Theater"

PAST MATRONS of Pomeroy
OES Tuesday 7:30p.m . at the home
of Mrs . J. W. McMurray, Mason.

GET YOUR MONEY
IN THE GOING RATE

Hrs .: 9 :30-S:OODaily
Open Mon . 1Fri.
Evenings Til8 :00

Visa / M.C . or Lay -a way
42 Court St.
Gallipolis

mone.,. up from one to even etght years .

'

The new ~ - month CO w•ll rea ll y get you r money going .
And your 1nter est rate 11 guaranteed .
Whatever the 6 m onth Trea su ry B ill dUCt ion rate ;5 th e
~eek you purchase "YOur cert ifica te ot aeposit, fhat 's the
tnterest rate you a re guaranttoed t or i ts maturity _
Federal regula tion s re quire a substantial interest penalty
tor premature withdrawal of cert ifica te funds .

The actua l return to investors on Treasury Bills is higher
than the d•s&lt;ount rate offered

BETIER BANKING SERVICE, THAT'S THE CENTRAL TRUST

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY, NA
C
. .... ..
SOUTHERN OHIO OIVISION
4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
il;"'

Cnor•
,

S. Sgt . and Mrs . Raymond Norns
of Ft. Knox , Ky. are announcing the
birth of a daughter on Tuesda y, Oct .
23 at the Anny Hosital there. The six
pound, five OWICe infant was 20 in ·
ches long and has been named Rhea
Maria. S.Sgt. and Mrs . Morris have
a son, Mark, two years old.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Harold Norris, Albany , and Mr. and
Mrs. Dear! Porter , Pomeroy, Route
4. Ethel Clark is a great grandmother.

MIDDLEPORT - Mr . and Mrs .
James Wildermuth , Galloway. announce the birth of their second
child, a daughter , Casey Michelle ,
born Nov. 5. The infant weighed
seven pounds and four OWlces and
measured 20 and one-half inches in
length .
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Millard Wildermuth . Middleport, and the maternal grandparents were the late Red Phillips
and Hazel (Casey) Phillips of
Pomeroy.
The couple are also the parents of
a son, Ryan, age two.

Carmel N~ws,
By the Day

Earn1ng this kind of interest used to mean t yi ng your

llnCOI'Oit'llllfll

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mr,
Rodney t'recker, Middleport, are
annoWicing the birth of their first
child, a son, Jason Bradley, born on
Nov . 10 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed eight
polUids, two OWices and measured 21
inches long .
Maternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs. Uoyd King , Pomeroy, and
paternal grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs . Earl Frecker, Pomeroy .
Maternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl , Pomeroy,
and Mary King, Shade . Paternal
great-grandfather is Denver Carman, Pomeroy, and Clyde R. Harrison, Middleport, R. D., is the
maternal great-great-grandfather .

The 16,410,030 shares traded at the
New York Stock Exchange on Black
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1929, set a volume
record that lasted until April 1, 19611.

BUYING U. S. SILVER DOLLARS
PAYING

'1145

FOR

n,, .. ..,.,..,

EACH SILVER DOLLAR

BUYING SILVER U. S. COINS
(Buying
Before)

Halves,

Quarters,

Dimes,

Dated

1964

or

FOR EACH 50' ••• WE PAY '3.95
FOR EACH 25' •••WE PAY '1.95
FOR EACH 1O• •••WE PAY 75•

PAUL DAVIES JEWELRY
Gallipolis, 0.

404 Second Ave .

EARLY WEEK
SUPERIORS

BOILED HAM

$21!

Lean No Waste
Fully Cooked

SAVE 20c

MEMBER FD IC

WIENERS

89e

Mr . and Mrs. Larry Gibson and
daughter, Helen, spent from Sunday
WItil Wednesday with Mrs . Mary
Orcle and Mrs . Helen Perry spent
Saturday and SWiday with Mrs . Circle . They were all from Holland,
Ohio.
Mr . and Mrs . James Orcle of New
Haven, W. Va. spent Sunday at the
Orclehome .
Betty Van Meter, ~ryl Leann
Johnson and Eunie Brinker called at
the home of Mr. and Mrs . William
Carelton and daughter of Racine,
Angela Dawn on Friday evening .
Angela Dawn Carelton of Racme
spent Saturday with ber grandmother, Betty Van Meter and
Patrick and Sberyl Johnson.
Dawn Roberts of Racine was guest
of Sheryl Johnson oo Monday
evening.
There were 43 present for SWiday
school Nov. 18.

12

oz.

PKG.
ARMOUR STAR

VIENNA SAUSAGE
5 Ol

CAN
SAVE 2Dc
VALLEY BELL

2% MILK
GALLON
PLASTIC
JUG

$}79
SAVE 36c
COTTONELLE

SPECIAL
PRICED

$9995

OPEN

TOILET TISSUE

$} ~!.~6

VALUE
PACK

EACH

SUNDAY
NOV. 25th

SAVE 70c

PEPSI OR
DIET PEPSI

1 til 6
8 - 16 oz.
Bottles

You May Qualitv For

THIS GROUP

'8995
EACH

$1,000
INSTANT
CREDIT
If You Have
VISA . AMERICAN
EXPRESS or MASTER
CHARGE Credit Cards

'1

19
Plus Deposit

THIS GROUP

'8995
EACH

SHOP EARLY
SHOP..•

DINNER MEETING HELD
Hemlock Grange :1149 enjoyed a
Thanksgiving dinner prior to the
regular meeting on Nov . 9. First and
second degree waa conferred on one
candidate. The lecturer 's program
was a skit by Ray and Dorothy
Whaley . It was decided to prepare
Olristmas fruit baskets for Grange
shutins.

TOY SALE
CHESTER - The Community
Wives Club of Olester will have a
used toy sale Friday at the Masonic
-· Hall, behind the post office in.
Olester, from IOa.m . to3p .m .

TO END MARRIAGES
Filing for divorce were Vonderine
Williams , Pomeroy,
against
Freeman Williams, Pomeroy; Jo
Lynn Wiles , Pomeroy, against John
Wiieo , Pomeroy .
Judy A.Stewart was granted a
divorce from Thomas M. Stewart .
Marriages dissolved were Cecil
Blackwood and Madge J . Black·
wood ; Margaret Faye Hamilton and
Olarles D. Hamilton , Jr.; Lucy
Geneva Swain and Joseph Henry
SWain .

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

There are big thing s go1ng on in the money mark et_ Now
we can help you be a part at them
'
Every week . the U .S. Tr_
e asury. announces th e ave rage
auc t1 on d1sco unt rate be•ng paid on 6 month Tre as
B1lls The figure is arr1ved a? t hrough the weekly mo~;v
market auct,on
y

No longe_r . Our 6 month c ertt f ira te of deposit ge t s you in

New arrivals

menu

hall:

A Complete Health Center

~(~"'"' 'Y' e&lt;:&amp;v 'O-...-.xl

Tri·CoUnty Home Medical Supply

similar to the above

AMERICAN LEGION AUX IUARY, Drew Webster Post 39
Pomeroy, 7:30 Tuesday at the
Initiation for all new members for
the past three years, both senior and
junior members.

SLIM UP-TRIM UP

417SecondAve,-,

IS

LADIES AUXIUARYof Veterans
Hospital Tuesday in east-west dining
room at 7:30p.m.

COUNTRY HEARlH
&amp; STOVE SHOP

Satellite Si te

Christmas Gift.

) o y,.... -.&lt;V~

&lt;"~"•,.,....,

n

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

and out . •n onv s• :w month s

'C)()("

(Ill ! I")

Hubbard; Dance Time, Beverly
Jablo!IB ; Dutch Treat, Tristan
Jones ; I Came To Love You Late,
Joyce Landor! ; The Mozart Score,
Edwin leather ; Shikda, Doris
Lessing; Abigail, Malcolm MacDonald; The Fence, Bruce McGinnis ; Nobody Wants My Resume,
Donald I. Mancha; The Deadly
Frost, Terrence Moan; The Pope of
Greenwich
Village,
Vincent
Patrick; Memorie~~ of Another Day,
Harold Robbins; Old Love, Isaac
Singer; First Strike, Douglas Terman; The 13 Crimes of Science Fie·
tion; Problems and Other Stories,
John Updike ; The Life I Really
Lived, Jessamyn West ; Celebration
For Murder, Ruth Wissman .
Non-Fiction - Man watching; A
Field Guide to Human Behavior,
Desmond Morris ; Death, The Final
Stage of Growth, Elizabeth Kubler·
Ross; How to Win OVer Loneliness,
John Haggai; The Falcon and the
Snowman, Robert Lindsey ; The Ms
Guide to a Woman's Health,.(;ynthia
Cooke ; Vitamin C Against Cancer,
H. L. Newbold ; Solar FWI Book,
John Barling ; The Dog in Your Life,
Matthew Margolis; Farm Journal's
Complete Home Baking Book, Elsie
Manning ; Welcome to the Real
World, Annie Noldafsky ; How to Be
a Top Model, Naomi Sims; Alien,
Richard Anobile ; Play As You

Learn Bridge, Charles Goren; n.
Modern Encyclopedia of Basketball,
Zander Hollander ; Trapped!,
Robert K. Murray ; Ski Almanac,
Peter Miller; Walk Easy on the Ear th, James Kavanaugh; The
Americans, Alistair Cooke; Tales of
the Ohio Land, Jack Matthews;
Royal Charles: Olarles
and the
Restoration , Antonia Fraser;
Clementine
Ch urchill,
the
Biography of a Marriage, Mary
Soames; Death at Olappaquiddick,
Richard I. Tedrow; Sara Teasdale;
Woman and Post, William Drake.

Delivery

In Time
For Christmas

SMALL DEPOSIT

HOLDS IN LAYAWAY

Hours :
Mon .- Thurs .
9 A.M .-9 : 30P .M .
Fri. &amp; Sat.
9A.M .· 10 P .M
Closed
Sunday

We reserve the right to limit quantities.

�--- . . .

.

a time for families

Thanksgiving
1' 0 ~1 F.HO Y ··· w e

were rewuted .

Mr . and Mrs . Morton Barnes and
small son. Ryan , of Brazil . Ind .
came for the weekend with their
parents , Mrs. Dorothy Woodard and
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Manley . Irene
Barnes who ts at the University of
Tennessee in Knoxville also came in

for the weekend wtth her fami ly.
Spending the hohday weekend
with her parents . Mr . and Mrs . I.es
Damewood ot Syracuse were Mr .

and Mrs . Kay Benschoter and four
children !If Cygnet .
Mr . and Mr s. Bernard Ledhe join ·
ed Mr . and Mrs . John Merrill and
son, Otris. in Col umbus , for the
weekend.

Church organization responding to need.
In an attempt to help alle\~ate the
human tragedy of Cambodia, the
Seventh-day Adventist Church is

i\1 rs. ; \ ndn·u· ;\·Iiiia

Farley, Miller wed
Sept. 21, 7:30 p.m .. at the r;ospel
Lighthouse Church on 1\eal Road .
The bride is the dau~hter of \1 r.
and Mrs. Paul Farley , Sand Hill
Road. and the groom " the son of
Robert Miller. Point Pleasant. and
Janet Miller. Sout hSid e.
The do ubl e-ri n ~=: eeremo n ~· wa s
performed b;- the Hev . Tall.' Hanna
Music was pruv 1ded by \.1 r . and \1 rs

Paul Jones. Jr. '1-lr Jones san g
several selrctton s. mcl udmg " If '
Given in marnHg e by her parent:-:;

and escorted to the altar bv her
fa the r , the brJd{' wore an i\·ory whitt'

len~h

trrtdescent crystal beeds and pearl s.
The hodt rc featured a V·neckline
w1th princess styling. a s li~htl y
~ atherea woJstllne. now mg tnto a
full skirt with &lt;-J s werp train.
gathered or gcmdy sleeves attac hed

to an eigh t-in ch topped cuff Her
wat st length vc 1l was atta ched to a

SUNDAY
NORTIIUP Bapllst Ch urch, Rev.
Kenneth Saunders will be guest
speaker , 7:30pm . Public is mv1ted .
MONDAY
BULA VILLE Cub Pack No . 201 will
sell Christmas trees at Gall ipohs
Terminal , startmg Monday . Hours
will be M-F , 6-9 p.m and weekends ,
12noon-9p.m .
VOLUNTEERS of GDC will hold a
meeting 7:30pm . Activilles center .
nJF.SDAY
AMERICAN LEGION Auxiliary ,
7:30pm . at Legion Post on B. McConnick Rd .
PEMBROKE Club, WJth Mrs . Bob
Jenkins on First Ave .. 8 p.m .

23.

Through an underwnllng grant
from Honeywell Inc of Minneapolis,
WQED-Plttsburgh is presentmg U1e
ho ur~ong
program that traces
Bach 's career and the contmwng ap·
preciation his musical geni us enjoys

today .

of printed dotl Pd SV&gt;T'i~
scoop nr cklirH' and
ernptre wat st. She ea r ned s tlk
carnations with li ght hlue .streamt-rs
a nd a mateh in g spr&lt;J y of n o wt-r ~ Hl
her hatr .
An ~ie Wood wa s the flower gtrl.
She won· a light blUt' noor length
go wn of pnnted do ttt.' ll ~ w1 ss.
fcatunng :1 gathered \\·at stl mr. t)('ll
.s let' \'t's. and scoop neckltnl' Shr
I'&lt;Jr n ell &lt;J whi! P li:!ct• ba"ket nf nL&lt;.;e
pt•tals and worl' a blue &lt;mel whi tt'
t.; pny nf fl owl·rs m her hatr
Sean Hu ghe " w;1-.: th t• r1n~ bf'nrer
;md l' arn ed ;1 s &lt;:~tln hea rt ~ hapt·d
p1\loY. t r immed m tw~ull'd ventf'l'
lrtr e.
The condil' llghlt·r&gt; ~T re \1 a tt
:\111\er ~~nct 1\brk \1l llt'f, brutht•ro.; C/1
thl' groom Th{'\ aLso ~ t· n· ~d as
usher"
The l!,rnutll wurt · ;1 hKhl blue
tuxt·do tnmn wd tn rl &lt;i\ ~ bltir ll ~s
boutom11rrl' wa ..., a whitt · ~' arna tJ n n

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WALK -INS WELCOME

APHV CO.- THE

Olristmas cheese ball , and Jo WUes,
Pomeroy, for a program on candy
making for the holidays .
This program Is open to everyone,
not just extension members, and Ia
one of those things where you can
come for what you want to see, and
leave whenever you like.

Things are moving right along
with the holiday season and always
one of the things which homemakers
look forward to is the ·'happening "
planned by the Meigs Extension
agent.
This year it is called Hints for the
Holidays and will be held Wednesday at St . Paul Lutheran Cllurch
fellowship hall . There's a registration fee of 75 cents and a poUuck dinner with those attending being asked
to take their favorite holiday recipe
and their own table service.
Besides the ali-day and into-theevening demonstrations there will
be nwnerous displays of Cllristmas
decorations and gifts .
Marianna Mitchell will be doing
Ouistmas dough ornaments at 10
a.m. , Betty Reese of A1hens County
will be presenting •'Getting Ready
for the Holidays .... Time Wise",
Sharon Stewart will demostra
demonstrate
holiday
cookie
decorating, from 10 to II :30 when
lunch will be served.
Then beginning at 12:30 Judy
Burgess of Lawrence County Exten ·
sion Service will be demonstrating
microwave cooking for the holidays,
Iris Balter of Syracuse will show how
to make jute flowers and wreaths ,
Barbara Hackett will present
homemade gift ideas , and the Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club
members will demonstrate making
holiday creme mints.
Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Hackett and
Mrs. Baker will be back for the evening program which begins at 7 p.m.
and will be joined for demonslations
by Patty Asbeck of Pomeroy ,

The t:l1rlstmas Dower show of the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
Association isn't just for garden clulb
members . Anyone can exhibit and
the show chainnan, Margaret Ella
Lewis, encourages parti!'ipation.
The show will be held next Saturday and Sunday ...... and the location
is still a little uncertain. U the
teachers' strike is settled in Meigs
Local, then the show will be held at
Pomeroy Elementary School; if not,
then it will be in the Chester Elemen tary School auditorium.
Most of the classes in the show are
open for public exhibit. There are
some in which most anyone would or
could have an exhibit.. .....
Otristrnas craft ilemi (only one
please ); a wrapped package
decorated with some plant material ;
Ouistmas corsages of dried or
treated plant material, to mention a
few .
To clarify how one enters
something in the show, let me say
that all you do ill take your entry to
the show location before noon on
Saturday, and there will be someone
there to help you .
The public is invited to view "I'm
Dreaming of a White Otristrnas ",
between I and 8 p.m . on Saturday,
and I and 4 p.m. on Sunday. Dulcie
Reibel, a long.time active garden
club member and a past regional
director, to wbcm this show Is
dedicated, will be on hand to meet
and greet the visitors .
Marcia Karr has received a commendation from the Ohio Senate
along with a letter from Sen . Oakley
C. Collins and is just delighted with
the recognition . Marcia recently
celebrated her 89th birthday and it
was in connection with this that she
received the certificate .

~

colo r s

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PtnonaJ

lemon juice, cinnamon and nutmeg .
Toss apples with soup mixture .
Pour into buttered !l-inch square or
10-inch roond baking dish.
Combine ~. cup sugar with remaining ingredients. Sprink over apples.
Bake at 375 degrees for 45 minutes
or until done . Let stand 15 minutes or
more before serving.
Serve with whipped topping or ice
cream if desired. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes ahout5 t,t, runs
SALISBURY STEAKS
I "'z cup minced bread crumbs
..., cup minced onion
1/3 cup ketchup
I egg, beaten
I teaspoon salt
"• teaspoon ground black pepper
1,., pounds ground beef
In large mixing bowl, combine
bread crumbs, onion, ketchup. egg,
salt and black pepper. Blend well.
Add meat. Mix well , but do not

(briJfDiiiJ
(ilrdJ
Tht&gt; year. send personalllLil
Chnstmas cards. We'll

THE ALCOVE

Shape into 6 oval patties .,., mch
Uuck . Broil under preheated hot
broiler until done as desired, about 4
to 5 minutes on each side.
Thia kitchen-tested reCipe makes 6

42 Court
GalliPOlis, Ohio

portions.

FAMOUS MAKE WATCHES
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REG.

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The

Shoe Cafe's
Christmas Menu
- Handbags, Over 150 to choose from
- Shearling leather Slippers

-Sox
- 8oot Toppers
-Boots
-Shoes,

I. Fashion
2. snow

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Powerful hghr beam Weolher re11,tant W1 th 6 . ~olt
botlery For compong or emergenc res

2888

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Af •y •&lt;- ~ 'loT\ •n many
f ·· •Hern~

By Charlene Hoeflich

1
aft•!rrntlOn at 2:30 p.m . the
new Allen organ will be dedicated at
the Middleport First Baptist Cburch
with a half-hour concert by Eugene
Wickstrom, Ohio University music
professor .
The organ has been given to the
church by the Paul &amp;nart family in
his memory and also in honor of
Mrs. Frances Smart. It's a great
tribute to Mr . and Mrs . &amp;!!art whose
lives have been so much a part of
that church and whose influence will
always be felt there.
The family will host a reception in
the church social room inunediately
following the concert .

over mix.

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Corner

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FESnYE HOLIDAY WREATHS

TINT RETOUCH

s., .. 1/J - Ie

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CHRISTMAS BOUQUETS

446 · 3353

91

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Silver Bridg e
Plaza

$15 . Value . Highlight any hai,.tyle with Aair.

hnonq Mo n rno d"'
We ll m.ode ""'''~ \lolt hed (, on l vec~e 0 ,d
co ,..t o•loble pull 0" -'«&lt;&lt;llbond ~lod ~o lon

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SAVE f3

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17 91

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WOMEII'S PGI.YESTR

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$22 .50 Value . Curls will. cullom conditione".

GOWN ho~ V-ne ck . gathered

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VEST AND SHIRT SET

1\fter a honl'ymoon trtp. tht· t·ouplt•
IS rcs1dmg at t hr1r honw un I .rn ('o \n

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Mrs . S&lt;'ena Hussell s e rn ·d ;1t thl·
bndr' s lablr with ~1rs J ane V a r l e~·
a nd Miss Karl'n Fllwlt' r assJSttn t.: at

FASIIM ILOUSES

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bri&lt;k 's &lt;.~ unL I .d ura Hol lin o..,
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Many plotd t 1n StZe5 S, M, t , XL.

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$6.50 Value . Conditions .

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Now Thru Saturday, December 1

2"

I teaspoon lemon juice
I teaspoon ground cinnamon
11 teaspoon ground nutmeg
8 cups very thinly sliced apples
&lt;about 8 apples J
o/, cup quick-cooking oats, uncook·
ed
111 cup chopped walnuts
2 tablespoons milk
I tablespoon butter or margarine ,
softened
Combine soup, y, cup sugar ,

LOlli LOUHER OR IOWN

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\lith o.; trt'a n wrs uf daiS It'" rJllll lln l' t1t
tht' llil'l' t'-la' r c akP tn thP n• ntt&gt;r Ttw

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Mildred
Hudson,
Pomeroy ; Almll Young . Pomeroy ;
Eunice Nutter, Reedsville ; Roy
Boggs, Middleport ; Richard
DeMoss , Pomeroy .
Discharged-None.

I
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MDI'S COROII fl Allllll

~~~~

I cup brown sugar

liVE ... A II.AMOIOUS, CAIEFIEE

I

CANDY FILlED
GLASS TREE

APPL&amp;CDNNAMONCR~P

I (ll-ounce can condensed Ched·
dar cheese soup

/

I

-----

By AJleeo Claire
NEA Food Editor
Apple desserts made with fresh
apples of the fall season go well with
all festive meals . An applecinnamon crisp will remind many of
Grandma's homemade apple pies
andpple bettys of years ago .

Apple crisp recallll days gone by

I

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2ggWhltes
.... cup sugar. divided
~ teaspoon almond extract
~ teaspoon vanilla
2~ cups unsifted Dour, divideo
~cup com oll
211 leaspooll8 baking powder
I teaspoon ground cinnamon.
divided
~ cup finely chopped blanched
almonds
With mixer at high speed, beat
egg, egg whites and ~ cup sugar in
large bowl untn lemon colored
about5minutes.
'
Stir in almond extract and vanilla.
Add I cup Oour,Ung at low speed unW well mixed. Add corn oil, beahng
untll blended.
Stir together remaining 111 cups
Dour, baking powder, ~ teaspoon

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~own

.J ohr1 ·" !Jsten srr\'f·d

MANDEL BRODT
I egg

cinnamon and almonds. Gradually
add to egg mixture, beating at low
speed untll thoroughly mixed.
Turn dough onto floured surface .
Knead about 3 minutes or until no
longer sticky . Divide dough in balf.
Shape each half Into 2loaves, each
2 lllChes wide by 10 inches long by I
inch thick. Place on greased cookie
sheet.
Bake in 351k!egree oven 30
minutes. Cool on cookie sheet. Slice
loaves into ~-inclrthick slices.
Stir together remaining v, cup
sugar and ~ teaspoon cinnamon.
Sprinkle cut side of cookies with
sugar mixture.
Return to oven and conl!nue bak·
ing 10 minutes or until crisp. Cool on
wire rack. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 40 cookies.

I

ttppcd tn blue .
REGULAR MEETING SET
POMEROY - The OH KAN C&lt;&gt;m
Club will hold a regular meehng
Monday evening at the Ri ve rboat
Room of the Metgs Branch. Athens
County Savings and Loan . W. Mam
Sl., Pomeroy. Out of town com
dealers will be present for trading
starting at 7 p.m .
A coin auction wlll follow the
meetmg . Refreshments will be ser . ved .
Club Pres1dent Edward
: Burkett invites all persons 10 •
terested in coins or paper money to
attending the evening ·s arttvi lies .

JACKS UP
TORONTO &lt;APJ - The province
of Ontario ill considering following
Alberta's lead in attemphng to
prohibit cars wtth jacked-up rear ends .
The raised ends, a style popular
among some owners of sporty model
cars, is said by Alberta Transport
Minister Henry Kroeger to expose
the fue I tank. making the car
dangerous in a collision.

honor . Shr wore a li ght blue Onor
fr:.-llur in~

com oll .

• ,

tra ditional headp1rcr conred w1th
b&lt;'aded \ ' CnH_'c l i:H'P . Tht&gt; lJndl·'s
bouquet wa s blue a nd whtt(' carnati ons a nd rose buds w1t h ba by 's
hrra.th a cce ntin ~ the lace and blur
etnd whi te str r ;mwrs.
Rrcnda 1\ hsll'Tl se rved 3S m~nd of
length

Remember

gown of po lyester cre pe.

de l!ca te ly trimmed w1th hand
bead~d venice lace. co n~red w1 th

TRIBUTE TO BACH
PIITSBURGH, Pa. ! API- ·'The
Joy of Bach," an intemalional
salute to the mfluence of Johann
Sebastian Bach on the serious and
popular music of two centuries, ts
scheduled to be telecast as a Christ·
ma' holiday speCial on the Public
Broadcastmg Service net work Dec.

By Aileen Claire
NEAFood Editor
Hanukkah, the Jewl3h Feast of
Llghta, Is a time of quiet and joy and
obl!ervance.
Although Hanukkah Is not a major
miglous holiday, Jews throughout
the world share the joys of lighting
candles on the menorah each evening after sundown and exchanging
cards or gifts to mark the victory of
the Maccabees over the Syrians cen·
turlesago.
Just as fitting Is the sharing of the
foods, slle or elegant, of the season.
Mandel brodt, or almond bread Is
a blacuit-llke bread baked in a 1~
llhape' cooled and sliced. It has long
been popular 8ll a Jewish delicacy of
German origin.
Mandel brodt Is usually made with
lour eggs , But this low-cholterol version calla for only one whole egg, two
egg wbltea and polyunaatur~led

ourselves, 'Would I lil&lt;e to trade
places with the Cambodians' Would
I rather be on their end needing to
receive, or would I rather be on this .
end of American abudnance, able to
give• · When we do this, we wiU not
resent these appeals tht come to us."

agencies in the all-()ut relief effort.
"s to the need in Cambodia,"
Wilson says, "I do not need to add
more to what you ahve already seen
and heard in the news media . As we
view it, let us remind ourselves of
the words of Chrillt, 'Inasmuch as
you have done it unto one of the least
of these my brothers, yoo have done
it unto me.'" .
Pastor Albert Dittes of the
Pomeroy Adventist Church Will urge
each family to discuss what it will do
in response to the great need. Pastor
Dittes says, " Thia comes at the time
of our annual Ingathering appeal, a
time when in addition to making an
appeal to the community, members
give edra for our world work.
Now we are chaUenged to give
about that. U we will only ask

responding to the challenge from
President Carter for churches and
religtoll'3 organizations in the United
States to match the amount of $70
million for food and hwnanitarian
relief.
Neal C. Wilson, president of the
General Conference of Seventh~y
Adventists, ill making a special appeal to church members in the
November 8 issue of the Advenhst
Review, the denomination's weekly
paper. Wilson, in the front page appeal has called on Adventists to give
a spettal offering for Cambodia
relief by Thanksgiving.
Plans were laid October 26, for
Seventy~y Adventillt World Service (SAWS ) to cooperate with the
United Nations, Inernational Red
Cross, USAID and other voluntary

More holiday food treats in the offing! II

Sid Manuel , Long Bottom; Mr . and
Mrs . Bob Arms and Jeannie,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and bfrs· Terry
McGuire, Terry, Jr . and Patrick ,
Dexter ; Mr. and Mrs . Steve Elder,
Huntln8ton. W. Va . ; Mr . and Mrs .
Howard Searles, Flatwoods. Pic tures were taken during the after·
noon and a door priZe was awarded
to Tim Manuel.
Visihng Mrs . Ouistena Grimm
over Thanksgiving were her three
sons, Robert of Colwnbus ; Mr . and
Mrs. Reese Grinun and daughter,
Sheila,
and
granddaughter ,
Christena, Grove aty, and Mr . and
Mrs . F1oyd Grinun, Whitehall. In
the afternoon they visited their
sister, Mr . and Mrs . Raymond
Teaford and family, Minersville.
These are only a few of the many
families who shared the Thanksgiv ·
ing holiday . We invite you to tell us
about your holiday .

with Mr . and Mrs . Dick Karr . &amp;- .
were Mr . and Mrs . Edward T.
Bauer, New Philadelphia ; Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Mahotra and daughter .
Michelle , Flatwooda Road ; Jeffrey
Karr , Middleport ; Mrs . Rodney
Karr and son, Rory, Pomeroy, and
Miss Marcia Karr. S)Tacuse .
The James Lochary family of New
Jersey are the holiday guests of his
parents , Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
Lochary. They were joined here by
their daughters, Patty and Susie,
both students at Ohio University .
Ruth Lochary was unable to come to
Pomeroy due to the illness of her
parents and is in Tennessee
assisting in their care.
Families gathering at the home of
Mr . and Mrs . Marvin McGuire ,
Route 3, Pomeroy for Thanksgiving
were Mr . and Mrs . Joe Manuel and
son, Tim, Racine; Mr . and Mrs .
Harry E . Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Hudson , Minersville ; Mr . and Mrs .

Gathering at the home of Mr . and
Mrs. Burdell McKinney in Mid·
dleport were their daughter , Peggy .
whose birthday was also observed
her husband, Earie Wood, and thei~
children , Stevie and Stephanie, Jo
McKinney. a freslunan at Rio
Grande . Dan Edwards , who attends
Ohio University, and Ernest McKin ney of Gallipolis . The Thanksgiving
cake was the gilt of Mrs . MargarEt
Edwards.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Carl Roach, Tom and
Darin were Gertrude Miller , Marie
Prances , Mr . and Mrs . Raymond
Roach , Mr. and Mrs . Mark
Wtlliams , Courtney Knapp , Mr . and
Mrs . Randy Roach, Ashley and
Cbarla, Pomeroy, Marion Prances,
Middleport and Mr . and Mrs
Wil la rd Miller and Loraine ,
Wooster .
Enjoying Thanksgiving dinner

li a lh e r

Together ...
Thanksgtnng- that day of lllfkey
wtth all the trummngs -a tune for
togetherness . a time to share, a time
to reflet1 . a tmw to be thankful .
On the local scene many fami!Jes

noor

.'

.. '

8-7- The Sunday Times-lientinel, Sunday, Nov . 25, 1979

8-41- Dte Sunday tlmes-lientinel, Sunday. Nov . 25, 1979

RebeC('(:I Ann Farlr~ and r\ndrrw
Greely Miller exchanged weddm12:
vows in a ca ndlelight ('eremo ny on

~

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7_.0UPACI
C.ISTIIAS WUI

'2."
REG .

222

Men's and Ladies '

888

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Lafa)·ette :\I all
Gallipolis. 0.
-~

�B~-TheSunday

Times-Sentinei,Sunday, Nov . 25,1979

Imboden, Honaker wed in October ceremony
POMEORY-Pamela June Imboden, daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Ernest Imboden, Syracuse, and
Gary Keith Honaker, son of Mr . and
M.-s. Pa ul Honaker , Ma son . were
married on Oct. 12 at the Salem
Church in West Cu!umb1a .
The 7 p.m . ceremony was perfunned by the Rev . George ' !&gt;Schar
fullowmg a program of music int'! Jdmg " [f ", " Brian's Song", and
Evergreen . " The a ltar was

decorated With arrangements of
white , purple and blue mwns .
Given in marriage by her parents ,
the bride was attired in a floor
length gown of white silk with a low
square neckline and long lace
sleeves. Her veil of illusion leU from
a headband whic h matched her
dress and she carried a bouquet of
fall flowers . The bride wore a cr oss
necklace .
The bride's attendants were Debi

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PANTSUITS
IN HALF SIZES

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Gift Ideas

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WHITE SW&gt;.N
UNIFORMS

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NUME ROUS STYLES "'!if"""~"\
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~IN SIZE 4 20
FORMERLY

The Umform Center
Secon d &amp; State 51 - GallipOli S, 0

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Honaker, Middleport, ma1d uf
honor; Veronica Imboden, Alllens:
Usa Duvis. New H&lt;~ven . W. V1::1
br1de.smauts. Thetr gown.'i werr tn
yellow and gn"'. e n and they ci:lrrtl~
bouquets of fa ll flower s. Vena
Hona ker , Mason, W. Va . was the
flower girl and she was rn a cr eam
colored floor length dress and wure a
corsage of faU flowers .
Paul Honaker of Middleport was
best man . and the ushers were
Kelvin Honaker , Mason , H Va .
Roger Imboden, Athens, usher.; .
For her dau~hter's weddinM . Mrs .
Imboden wore a fl oor length dress of

POMEROY - We're now planning
the new bookmobile schedule for
January through May, 1980. U you
and your neighbors have suggestioru on when and where the
bookmobile should visit, plese call
992-3745, or your Pomeroy Library,
992-51113 .
Mooday, Nov. 26
Uiura's store (near Carpenter),
2:30-3: 15; Dexter - Church ,
3:45-4 :15 ; LangsviUe - SmaU 's
Grocery, 4:3(h'i ; Rutland - Pomeroy
National Bank (Short film at 5:30 )
5: 15~, Depot Street Ishort film at
6:30 1 6 :15-7; Middleport - Ash St .
Freewill Baptist O!urch (short film
at 7:.5) 7:30-8:15.
Tuesday, Nov. 27
Success Road - near 39060,
3: 3(}-4:15; Reedsville- Reed's Store
(short film at 51 4:30-5 :30; Tuppers
Plains - Arbaugh Housing (short
film at 6:151 ~ : 45; Sali sbury .
Housing , 7·15-7 :45.
Wednesday, Nov . 26
Torch - Post Office !short film at
41 3:45-4 :30; Hockingport - Communi!~ Bldg !short film at 5 15 1
:N :45; Coolville -School Lot (short
film at 6 :30 1 6:15-7 :15: Rigg 's
Adiiton 7 : .5-l! : 15.
Thursday, Nov. 29
Sr. Citizens Center 12 :45-1: 15;
Mulberry Hts . Infinnary 1:30-2;
Racine - llh Street 2:31h'l; Letart
Falls - Effie's Reslaw-ant (short
film at 3: 45 1 3: 15-4; Racine - Home
National Bank (short film at 4 30 1
4:1:N, Wagner's llardware (short
film al5 :15) :N :45 ; Syracuse- Pool
(short film al6 :3016-i :311.

Wedding plans named
111

111e bnde's t&lt;~ble featured a three
twred ca ke decorated with cupids
and fall n owers and lopped With the
tralhlwnal miniaturt&gt; bride and
groom.
[)rcama Honaker registered the
gues:_&lt;; Deb1 Honaker and Sue Imboden pres ided at the refres hinent
t&lt;~blc. The couple now res1de at Mid dleport.
The new Mrs. Hona ker IS a senior
at Meigs High School and is
employed at the Bw-ger Chef in
Pomeroy. Mr . Honaker graduated
from Wahama High School in auto
uwcharucs a nd is employed at
Kais ~ r Alwninumat Ravenswood .
Out-&lt;&gt;f-town guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Imboden, brother
a11d s1.ster·ln-Iaw 0f the bride, Biloxi ,
ML«.; Mr . and Mrs. Roger lmbo&lt;len, Athens, also a brother to the
bride ; Steve Chancey, Ravenswood;
Mr. and Mrs . Paul Kaptiena, Columbus; Jeremy Keith Allen Honaker,
son of the groom. Mr . and Mrs. Bill
.J ones, Neva Grimm, Minnie
.Johnson , Mr. and Mrs. Ke1meth Imboden, Mr . and Mrs. Frank Imboden, Missy Hubbard, Mrs. Jack
Lunsford. Gladys and Cathy
('haney , Mrs. Eddy Sellers, Margo
Martin, Steve Chancey, and Phil
Hobbs .

Elizabeth johnson marries

John Douglas, brother or the groomelect. The gracious custom or open
wedding will be observed . A reception wiU be held immediately follow ing the wedding in the lower level of
the church.

HEEDSV!LLE--()n Saturday,
Dec. 1, !Wbin Humphrey , daughter
or Mr . and Mrs . C. Ed. Humphrey.
ReedsviUe, wiU become the bride rl
Michael Douglas , son of Mr . and
Mrs . Glenn Douglas , Parkersburg,
w. Va . The ceremony will be perfanned at the United Methodsit
O!urch , Reedsville . by the Rev .

a bla('k
velvet .su1t and both mothers won•
cnrsagt'S of fall f](,wers.
A rt'n·ptwn honori ng the coupiP
was ht!ld a t the Mason F1rc Station.
blue . Mrs. 1-lunaker was

B.Q- TheSunday Times&amp;ntinel,Sunday , Nov . ~.1979

COLUMBUS - Elizabeth Mary
Johrulon and steven lMyton Morgan
were married Salw-day , Sept I, in
St . Matthew Lutheran O!urch with
the church pastor, the Rev . BiU
Luoma, and the Rev . Albert McKenzie of the St . Peter's Episcopal O!ur .
ch of Gallipolis officiating .
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl T. Johnson of Logan,
and the groom is the son of Dr . and
Mrs. Thomas W. Morgan of
Gallipolis .
Arrangements of tangerine and
whit.. carnations graced the altar,
with an arrangement of three unity
candles with matching flowers
placed at a vantage point.
White satin bows marked reserved
pews . A half-hour of wedding music
prior to the ceremony was offered by
Mary Jo Turner, organist, and John
Ooyd, pianist and brother-in~aw of
the bride. Daphney Sigman sang
"The Weddlnj.: Song" during a cancllelighting ceremony .
Given in marMage by her father,
the bride wore a white jersey gown
trlmmed with silk Venise lace . The
Queen Anne neckline and cap
sleeves were edged with lace and a
semi-cathedral~ength train fell
from A.fute skirt, bordered with
lace . The elbow and fingertlp~ength

TO APPEAR TONrGHT
POMEROY - Dan Bayman and
the Country Hymntimers will appear at 7: 30 pm . Sunday at the
Graham United Methodist Olw-ch,
two miles east of New liaven on
!Wute 33.

MEETS WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy-Midd -

leport Uoru Oub will hold a regular
meeting at the Meigs Inn at noon on
Wednesday . All members are asked
to be present.

CHRISTMAS CARPET CLEANING SPECIALS
1

Any Living Room With Connecting Hall ........ _... .. 19.9'"
Limit 250 SQ. ft . All wh i le and light pastel c arpet , 2.SC 5Q tt .

Any Living and Dining Room with Hall... .... _...... 37.95
1

Limit 350 sq . ft .

Any Other Room When Cleaned Wrth
living and Dining Room ... _........... _... _..... ...... .'15.00
L imit 180SQ . ft.
Ml NIMUM CHARGE Sl9. 95 FOR ANY CLEANING

For

the

best

in

worry -free

cleaning,

call

the

Experienced

Professionals. We have cleaned over 20 million square feet of carpet .

PAUL'S STEAMWAY

MIDDLEPORT-The Athens Men tal Health Center parties held lor
many years by the Homebuilders
L1ass of the Middleport Olurch of
Orris! will be continued for another
year .
Meeting Tuesday rught at the
church, the class voted to contmue
holding the monthly parties and
made a donation of $25 from the
class treasw-y . Mrs. Nora Rice and
Mrs . CoUeen Van Meter will remam
mcharge .
The class also voted to sponsor a
projector fund for the church and
gave $50 toward that. At the meeting
Ouistmas gilts for the Athens
hospital 's December part y were
wrapped .
Terry Yankee , youth minister ,
will continue In be supported by the
class, and will also be remembered
with a monetary Christmas gift as
will the minister and the janitor.
Peggy Brickles, vice president,
conducted the meeting which opened
with prayer by Ed Evans . Evans
also reported on the Men's
Fellowship held at the church . Mrs .
Dorothy Roach and Mrs . Clarice Erwin gave reports.
Named In the funeral dinner committee for the year were Mrs .
Margaret Kincaid, Mrs . Nora Rice ,
Mrs . Edna Evans, and Mrs . Dorothy
Baker. Mrs . F1o Grueser and Mrs .
Mary HyseU were named to the card

Safistaction Guaranteed
Paul Smeltzer, Owner

AIr
orFtmlly~

MdH811

"No One Knows More About
Your Carpet!"

HaffeH Brothers
Custom Carpet
446-2107
ASK ABOUT

••

,

,JJ

ttce
Not all m1crowave ovens are alike I Get the complete fac ts on mic rowave cooktng

If you own a microwave oven, or you're
thinking about buying a microwave oven

you're invited ...
to see a liw demonstratial
of microtiOW
cooking with
the

~~
Gila

Look your best in these textunzed

~otcjlg~~·

tiers of silk UJusJOn or her veil were
edged with lace and held in place
with a lace bridal bonnet.
The bride wore a pearl necklace, a
gift from the groom , and Cl.med a
handkerchief belonging In her
mother.
Her flowers were a cascade
arrangement of Sonia roses ,
stephanotis, miniature white carnations and baby's breath , completed with strands of English ivy
and bridal bows and streamers.
Leslie Coppennan was maid of
honor and Susan Streilenberger,
Nanette WaUace, and Rene Ape!
were bridesmaids .
Junior bridesmaids were Jennifer
Ooyd and Gina Johrulon, nieces of
the bride .
The attendants ' gowns were ivory
and apricot print voile with blouson
bodices and split cape sleeves with
ties at the waistline and full, lonna! ·
length skirts.
They carried crescent bouquets of
tangerine
carnations,
while
miniature carnations, pomporu1 and
baby 's breath , accented with
tangerine star flowers . Matching
bows and streamers completed their

SALE
BROTHERS UPHOLSTERY
PRICES
REG. LABOR
'110.00
STANDARD SOFA
195.00
STANDARD LOVESEAT
'75.00
STANDARD RECLINER
STANDARD CHAIR
'60.00
25% DISCOUNT ON All FABRIC
FREE: ESTIMATES, PICKUP, DELIVERY
FREE: ARM CAPS AND HEADFLAPS

SALE LASTS FOR TWO WEEKS ONLY
so Call Now to Insure Delivery For The Holidays

CALL NOW AND SAVE
EUREKA STAR RT.
256 -1562- GALLI POLlS, OH 10

~~~~il!.

®

polyester 3-piece suits. Two button

OA.TE

No~

29th

7:00 p.m.
: r&lt;t ,n lkl "'"il " ll
~ . ,.

2119 Jatkson Ave.

•

')O"o 10 : ~'

..,. ,, 011plaon the m any
on &lt;; tu(lmQ llt.tw you Cll"'
o t tne energy n o rmally uS I!(] 1n coo11 1ng

oourmet

•

• ~ .. . ,. ... 11 t&gt;,. a Q~t ·on llr&gt; O a"swe• peroO&lt;l o;o vou ca"
....... ., ~1·11· (,11'&gt; ' t ac t' il i&gt;Ou l "'•C' Ow llve (OO~ • no

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.., II rece +v(l

A SHOP -A-RAMA STORE

~oo~

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hto:&gt;rl lu •t e• p iO!I o&lt;••r&gt;Q h o w m ott OWI VM
·~ c'lm pl ete t~ d •fl e-• e " t '• o m c orwen

Point Pleasant

Ou T r:lo &lt;t

"'l""

We Jre l ,m , t~ It": ! hi'

S£ND fHt S COUPON TQOAY FOfl YOUH RESERVATION

C OQ ~ ong

· ,.,li' ) .. 1 "• o•a·" r.o w yOu c11n coo" "'0 51 to o cls
. .. . ,t!ll ., ,u , t one lourlrl 1t1 11 U'lua l t ome

· .t ,

6'75-2318

Oern o n&amp;toator~

• '"'"" r.o ..., t OJ ca n t)rown Ml ' 9"11 '') Dak!IIMO saute
.,. •t · .1 -·oe•o "'a~e o ven r. ro.,m n y ~lt •li ll!l

OPEN MONDAY EVENING TIL 8 P.M .

charge of the program and decorations Wllh Mrs . Brickles, Mrs . Rice,
and Mrs. Van Meter in charge . The
closing prayer was given by Mrs .
H.i('e .

SINGER
U@[[

©[}u[[O@UITlJUCID~

•699.95

.... . PUT YOUR NAME
AND ADDRESS HERE

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I t woutd toh to .tt.nd rour rnocro-.••• o;n ..,
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DAI.E'S

KITCHEN CENTER

TOUCH ·TRONIC 2000
MEMORY MACHINE.
( ) nl' () r t ht'

RABKIN NAMED
ANN ARBOR, Mich . (API- Eric
S. Rabkin, a professor of English ,
has been named associate dean for
long;ange planning in the Umver sily or Michigan College of
Literature, Science and the Arts.
The two-rear appointme~l was approved by the university's regents
recently .
Prof. Bernard A. Galler, who served in the position from 1975, has
returned to ruU -time teaching in the
department of computer and com munication sciences.

RIO GRANDE
COLlEGE
COMMUNITY COllEGE
Offers

Manufacturing
Technology
Rio Grande, Ohio

\~ 0 I' Id' .., Ill! l \[
J

ad\ "fllt' d 'ol' \ \ I- 11 -~

Ill J

dllllL'" I\ al\ll- 'LIIIL' Lilllh'L'thl -.'' [ [tl l J ~ l' \tl ~ llll

l- ~lll \f'tt..'ll d k \ \ llllll' O i l I ~ l l' lllL' 1.' ha111~·..., Ol I ht·
Ill~\( hI IlL' , tl\ d lllOfL' [illl l 1 I ll l!"l 'tl I Ill~ '&gt;\ Hlll' [hIll,!!

ht.:aut 1lul . Ju ,tt n uch,t htlll• l ll lnr\t'\\lllg;u l\ td
tlJ fiL'I l ' lll \(II chl'\ . \\ II h ; 1 f l1p...'\: \)rH • rant:l,
, JilL'-" t L'r tou 1!(ln twk r ;tnLinli 1r l'. \ L H.k 1n L·. ~ . ·\
~~

Lay-A-Way Yours Today

OTHER MODELS FROM

~

•SEWING GIFTS
•SCISSORS •HEMS •BUTIONHOlERS
•SEWING BASKETS •CUTIING BOARDS
•SLEEVE BOARDS •PINKING SHEARS
AND MANY MORE

Fabric Specials, Tool

French City Fabric Shoppt
· •II I P l

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GLASS SCULPTURES
LOS ANGELES (AP I -A showing

of some 15 glass sculptures by the
contemporary U&gt;s Angeles artist De
Wain Valentine 1s on view at the Los
Angeles County MuseWJ of Art
tbrolll(h Dec . 30.

LAY
AWAY

Dale's Kitchen Center, Inc.

HERE'S WHAT YOU'll SEE:
•

bouquets.
Each attendant also wore a cluster
of matching flowers in her hair .
Hillary Johrulon, niece of the
bride, was a flower girl, carrying a
basket filled with rose petals and
decorated with a flower
arrangement. Scott Nyland, nephew
of the groom and ringbearer,
carried a white satin pillow with
flowers and attached rings, and was
attired in a brown lux, aa were the
groomsmen.
Best man was Tern Pebler and
llshers were Richard Johnson ,
brother of the bride; Tom Morgan,
brother of the groom, IUld Bruce
Rodgers, Steve Patterson and Mike
Mautz . Assisting the ushers were
Mark Nyland, nephew of the groom,
Scott Johnson and Olartie Cloyd ,
nephew of the bride.
Mrs . Johnson, the bride 's mother,
wore a formal length , forest green,
sleeveless polyester knit dreSB,
gathered at a scoop neckline, with a
blouson overlay.
Mrs. Morgan, the groom's mother,
wore a medium blue qiana knit lormal~engtb gown with a long...teeved
jacket. The mothers' shoulder corsages were made of Sonia roses .
In charge of the guest book was
Julie Smeltzer .
Hostesses at the reception held in
the Hocking Hills Country Oub were
Mindy Thomas . Kim Woodrum ,
Susan Smith , sister of the groom,
and Jeanette Johnson, sister-in-lljw
of the bride .
Tile room was decorated with cen ·
terpieces of tangerines and white
flowers and bud vases fllied with
tangerine carnations .
Tile wedding cake was circled
with leather~eaf foliage .
The couple took a wedding trip to
Hilton Head , S. C.
The bride is a teacher at Onent
Stab! Institute, Onenl, nnd her
husband is a customer service
representative for Thorp Financial
Service
,
The newlyweds reside in Coltnnbus.
Qul'()f.t()wn guests attended from
Gallipolis, Columbis , S. C.,
Wilmington, Del., Ottumwa, Iowa,
Carlisle, Pa . , Ft . Uiuderdale, F1a .,
and Pl . Pleasant, W. Va .

"Home Of R .. autiful Kitl'llen"'

I.Jtlne l ll'&gt; o ' m c •o wll vli'

Sizes 38 to 46

Banging of the greens was annoll{lced for Sunday at 5 pm. at the

PLACE :

&lt;ifiM E

jacket w1th center vent and button

SALE
PRICES
1
80.00
'60.00
1
50.00
'40.00

All Work Completely Guaranteed
Finest Quality At The Lowest Possible Prices

~ ....~0

'"Dl ONLy BY

grey

AIrs. Sieve Morgan

GRAND OPENING

CHRISTMAS GIFT
GIVING

colors including navy, brown, and

ii!UI

UYtnti Aoom 6 H.. l

MIDDLEPORT - A
s pe c i al
meetmg of Middleport Lodge 363 ,
F x AM, wiU be held at 7 p.m .
Tuesday at the temple with work rn
the fcllowcralt degree .

front vest. Available in assorted sol1d

church . It was noted that the
December m ee t1ng has been
cancelled for the combined chw-ch
party to be held on Dec. 13 at 6 :30
p1n . The Homebuilders wiU have

committee .

REGULAR MEETING

MEN'S
VESTED

Homebuilders continue
Athens MHC parties

DALE'S KITCHEN CENTER~ INC.
2119 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant

PLAN NOW FOR A

675-2318

~rrp (brigtmas

H

~~ KitchenAicl ®·
BECAUSE IT'S WORTH IT!

DISHWASHERS - DISPOSERS
HOT WATER DISPENSERS

$1,000
INSTANT

CREDIT
If YO\! Ho~ve
VISA . AMEitiCAN

EXPRESS or MASTER

CHARGE Credtt

Card ~

NOW
FOR
FOR DELIVERY DECEMBER 24th

�B-11- The SWlday 'I'Imes-&amp;ntmel, Sunday, Nov . 25, 1979

B-10- The Sunday Tu nes-lientmel, Sunday . Nov. 25 . 1979

· S'urprise party held
40th
annzversary for 35th anniversary
observed

Couple wed in evening cere·mony
Miss Jean /\nn Pl•r r y. d;;~ugh t er of

\1r . a nd Mrs L'harlc.s F Prrr:o.

~:n,

r\HJi t Ph.· &lt;-t~ant. dOd
!L:tndy Dran He\'Jn~. son uf \1r ;.u u.l

Jefff&gt;rson

t\ Vt'.

\~ r s

1Jonn1e K Be\'1n s. 2tll 8 1 :.:
F aste m Ave. t : rd lqwl1s. wl'rt•

united in
· · tTPmon~

marr ia ~e 1n u l'&lt;Jmlll'l i ~ht
Saturrla~ . Jub l 8. 7

CHESHIRE - Mr . and Mrs . Fred
Thompson celebrated their 4()lh an &lt;ll versary Sunday, November 18 at
Uw1r home on little Kyger Ro~d ,
( 'hcsh&lt;re.
'11ley were married November 18,
1~39, m Gallipolis, Ohio and have
always resided in the Cheshire area .
Mr . Thompson is employed at the
Kyger Oeek Power Plant, and Mrs .
Th ompson is a wonderful
homemaker .
TI1e cuuple enjoyed a turkev dinner foUowed by an open house ~ecep­
llon in the afternoon. A three-tiered
ca ke was decorated with wlute icing
and red roses . They received cards
and gifts from friends and relatives .
The celebration was hosted by
their children .

:m

p m at lht• Fn·st Church t•f ( :od

Ht•v l.ynn Karm.·:o pe riur , .t•d thr
duuble rmg s t• rvlct'
Mr ~

Phy ll1s I ks st•n ~t.T\' I'd as
a11d soiotst Sht• pla~·rd a
11\f'd!t•:&gt; of ...U!!g ... bdnr~-. tht•

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: :ttht•r , ,f tht· nr .. •rn 11 o~rt a ni_ir v blue
-.;uJt Y.lt h v.htlt· !'11\t'hlld hnt i{H!I! llt'rt'
'1r' f\.tr [;JI. Jtd1flc'ld frtt•rrdo f the
brtdc· '&gt;C' I' \ 't ·il il '- ll(t1f'i ol l ur h11nur
')hl'

\\ (l J'I' ;11\1':11

h

II IU!'l! rt f\q{)[' ]('n~J:th

t!tt WT1 H l t tl ;1 \\hill'

ma t t hm g nbb11 n

arrtl'd a t'l lit Jill&lt;tl

p!durL· hat and

\ 1r..,
st~ k

I.Jt('hflt' ld
bouquet of

pl'ach ru:-.e:-. . pr·;H ·h .lruw rosP.
h&lt;J b) ':-, bn;ath and pe ~tch rtbbon s.
Bridesmaids wne \1tss .Joy('e
S(' hoo lnaft ;tu n! uf th t· bndt&gt; . cmd
.\ 1rs . .\l;tr_l St.:-~ffu rd , s tskr of thE'
bndr ThP\ "' Oft' bel~ t · fll llSlJn noor
!t•rJgt/J t.:u v..rt '- wtth &lt;J fW&lt;.II'h n btxm
~nd

be1~ t·

[; we Jnscr:. :.; nnd wh 1t e
OIC'tU rf' hrth I~ tlh [](' ~W h "t rt'l:i !l!(' J':-o
Buth CCHTJlld lJntH.jUi 'l ' ~ tr trlldl' tn
ttm t of tht' lll&lt;ilrrrll ,,f hPrJ ,,r
Ch uck 1-:llts. fnr·r1d ui thi · ~l'rHJ!ll,
. .; (•rv(:d &lt;.I '&gt; ht·"t lllftrr llt- \\,t :-. .ttltn·rt

a brt~WJ 1 q •:-.t t&gt;rl tuxt:do \.I.Jttl a
fJt.'&lt;H' h rufni•tl ~ h 1 rt &lt;nHI pcor·h
rosr hud bnu:,,nntl' l't' l '-;twrs lv'l'f'P
\1&lt;i rk Canarl;.ti. frwnd nf tht · g ftH\ITI,

ill

,\r. Ci I i:ze n

c·a/c ndar

1\· :T~ .

br11!t1t'r of t l w
iittlrt'd o.., untl&lt;Jr to

IIIC I!l

Thl' flf l"' t' r l!lrls. \1 &lt;.mt· Pt...--r-ry.
,t...,IL'r uf th• · hndt• . and I ) o nt ~t'
Ht·\·m:-.. Sl, t••r of tht L! I'O!llll. won ·
m;dr htn c bi.'lt:!l' /lJU S[ lll ~o:rmns r_tnd
, d r rt •·d -; m:1 ll 1\)\ltl' 1'u-kt:r IJ.askf'l.s
"' !th pt·&lt;H"h f l l~t · t){'tah

\ 1a ... tn

~!lil llll rm

Bl'\'1 11 ~.

lJrothn

.. r

th t· l( r"on l. '~a~ nnL!bt·art•r a11d
\\ o t·e &lt;1 fh ' ;l l tJ \T 'i tl'd SUit \\ t{h \\!Jltl'
r O.'-i·bud btllt l un n!L'rt · Tht · r·andl t'
l!g lt! L' I'~ ·~~ · rt· P~r \'Jcl

Pt&gt;rry. hroth rr
nf tlli ' hndt· . and J);l!Jtt•l Ston t'
r· oustn of tht• lJrtdr . k 1)th Hon• UlcwK
't•sted •;u 1 t ~ \\ tth pe ach rufned s hu1 ..,
and pt'dt h r uw bud buutunn lr n·s
·'' wlu k t/q)l'red Ci:i!H iif cntwtntrl
w1th t1&lt;JIJ~ 's lJrt&gt;ctth an d holdlllg &lt;l
:-. uu.:ll' pt'&lt;td l r11St' 1n tht· center.
adornPd L'aL·h " tndow m thP t ·h urch
T"o n tn t·-bra nch c:tn del&lt;i bra .'-.
tlt·cnratrrl th r c-d tar cJ \ on~=: wtth o
wt&gt;d thn ~ ;tr rh dL•t'l lrnt cd
w itlt
l! n·e nrr~· , pt·ach roses. and o lar ~c
v.- ht tt' bulv' ~d !ht.· t op and tw11 -"lllill!n
!)(1\\'.'-. on tht ' ~i tl!'S Two whit~· don•s
&lt;-td tl rnPd lht · top of th r arch wttM
p~ '; Jdl r1b hon ~ t·unun~ frn111 tht&gt; 1r
JllC !Uth.'-. ( )n L'Cit' h Sld t• oflht · it rCh Wi] S
&lt;t "t.1nd hnldmg ~ v.·hi tC' V.I CkL"r
f'Jia!l ! r&gt;r {'U IItpo St.• d With r e;;H,_'fl f!)Sl'~
and 11 ;d l~ ·-., ~J I't'i-J ih Th e frmu l ~· pt'\b
\\ l'ft '

r!f•t 'll l'.ttl'd ·.qth wh tt l' ~~ ll'ki ' f'

lar ,._ 1\ \tlr pt·.rt ·h r oses. i t pr nch .Junt·
r i N ' :11 td li,tl)\ · . . hfl'a lh

f.oCill cluh rneets

\

\

JAPANESE ART

,
'

.

NEW YORK lAP 1 - "Joum ey of
the Three Jewels: Japanese Bud dhist Paintings from Western
Collections " is on view at Asia
House Gallery through Dec. 9.
The exltibit contains over 60 pain tings chosen from 20 collection; in
the Umted States and Europe.

Stole w rnner g o es to Lo'
Vega) rn Apr rl !or O'o'er one
week a ll expen~tn po1d

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::~ ·. · .·.·.·. l .'. l .l _ti_ i ,'.' . ' . " . ".· :: :.·.·.·.·.·.·i.i ·&gt;:

Mrs Am9rt co •s sponso•eo
bv H1lto n Ho te ls Pers onat rty

i

botl"lmg SUII and gown No
!olen! I A and 0 11er M ust DE"

{

mo wed

·.·.
·.·.
;:::

Send lor hee b roc hure
Nollonwrde Modeltng

·.·.

:;::

Agency

living in the Indian Ocean in 1939.

CleYeland Ptora Towe rs
Cleveland . OH 4411 5

II
.•.·

.·.·

t1

Thl' hostess read Psa~n 100 along
w1th a p£wm , "(;od Knows Best "
Hv" din gs lll eiuded ·].Jot&gt;s God Seem
Ncar ' .. by Anna L&gt;g&lt;lln : " A !Jttie
r ;~rl tn Ireland" by Cathenne Culwell : "Tha.ok You. Dear Pilgrim "
by Ruby Lambert . Thanksgi v in~
Day" by :-lm" Macomber: " Over the
H.JVer to ( ·randma 's House·· by
b .:.! ;i!nc e Htnt&gt;hart . " We Are
Gralefui ·· by Dorothy Bolen :
' 'Thanksgivm~ Prayer" by Grace
Co lweU : " l F'eas t Mme Eyes" by
Calhenne Shenef1 r lrt : and two or
original rx&gt;ems un Thanksgivmg and

FRIES

Wr1t~

~oth

booklets
showing
m emorial s tn full color with sizeS'
and

for

pn ces

Locations

McCLURE'S

~fated

LOGAN

daliy1Sie

~

I
~~,

MONUMENT CO.
Pomeroy, Ohio

JS4 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
992-6292

Leo L . v~ughan, Mgr .
1n \1 in ton, Ohio

James 0 . Bush, Mgr .

Locust St.
Middleport, o.

~
~
.,

992-5248

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

below the water lme m your fmal
arrangement . Hold the ends under
water and cut about an inch of£ each
stem. lnunedialely put the roses in a
water-fUled vase, Without lettmg the
cut ends dry out.
Keep adding water daily and keep
your roses out of direct S Wl or drafts .

~All
£"L

I want for
•

'-..dtnstmas •••.•

nually ' 1o "" outstandmg young
t'ditor . 1n itltt&gt;mate yea rs from
F.nglan d a1•d the United Slates. and
Inc ludes a st1pcnd for travel and
II ving expense:-; enabling the ~A'inner
to lcam t.he ways or a publishmg
house on ihl' other side uf the Atlan ti c for a pt&gt; n od of SIX wel'kS. ··
fall by Mary Nelson.
Cards were Signed for shutms and
those hospitalized . The C'hristmas
party and gift exchange w111 be held
at the home of .\ 1er rwn Hoffman .

Cloud ~

Bright

Qiana"

Tlo e to ud1 o f ~o ftnen fo r the
holtdoy! I l 00 "/g nylon kn i t~ . mo
&lt;h,ne wo\h d r y , 60 " w1de

$

Re{l . $4 99 yd .

3

88
YAAD

Printed Knits
Choo~ e

YOU'LL NEVER KNOW HOW INCREDIBLY DELICIOUS
AND NATURAL FOOD CAN TASTE UNTIL YOU COOK ·

loch o r

t 00 •;.,

~o ft

Tht~

tru l ; untOU(&gt; . nr~t ur..lt r oo k
tn Q metho d"~s also orw 0 1 th,. most
one~

Qo me rropt

,.,

a

Romerto pt o fler "&gt; you d
m a rvelo us fr'tSI• " &gt;::0• r Pr- f .' N o
w o noe r O\.er 11 •11111 on c0n " " tJ\fl
11 and lov e I lhe niltu r ) ! tu•C&lt;' 'l

pPnetra l e

n •c

fooa

q . -· · 11

mouth ,...,·aff'r 111Q ll rt ·,or
1~ hea\ fh tt' ~

A,l\ f hfl

'-1

f1 1t" ler~

9

99

yd .

dry

A5" wldf'

Easy to use ,

YARD

Acetate / " ylon

,

Reg . $1 t9ro $1 .99 yd .

All

Fiskars~

-. 9 $7 .4S &amp; $9 .9! pr .

Polyester or ocetote/nylon satins, nylon
printed sheers ; polyester crepe de ch ine
so lt ds , prints . M ac hine' wash , dry ,
4 5" wide .

Reg . Price

Pt1nh &amp; doh or s pec ,ol pnnt~ &amp; g1nghoms . all polyester
ft ll Muc h me wash, dry , 45" w1de

$248

YARD

Our Individual
Retirement Accounts are now paying the
highest, tax-sheltered interest ever.

Sale! Shimmering Elegance

Christmas Quilts
rrtnfl I Oot 1
Itt U 49 (d

•2!!

Scissors

5" emb r o ,dei y l,gh f ·
werght ~ and sharpes t 8'' ~ 10 1 11

'pe tiol ,r inH &amp; Gu•vhom1
l•t · 'l U •• U n yd

too Just out r1 ,n the oyen and
toret 11 ltt! th e l on d is don e

'299

lotlnt I lhoert
log . $3 .99 to $4 .99 yd.

Cre'" de Chlr~e1
lot. $5.99

·3~!

•3!!

YIID

y-.

PABRICS

design for ove n 10 table serving .
M~ltf" you r nex l mea l un f orgel
table

Now AI An
lncr ed•ble Oil e r

Hou n. ·

ONLY

10 til' Mondav thru Saturda-y
sunday 1 tit ~

S}400

218 Grand Central Mat!

t.hi' 1 iCoth e, Ohio

Parkersburg , W . \Ia

Headquarters fa,. Dnpenes ,
Slip Covers and Upholstering Materials

111 6fh Ave .

Huntington ,

w. va .

J; , ~ \lfdcpt\"lt

If you are "e lf-e mrlo ycd o r a 'lalaricJ em ployee not cove red by&lt;-~ retirement pla n . an
Ind ividua l Retirement Acc ount liRAl h:t'
a lway.; he-en a great idea . No~J... with !he tn crea~cd intere.., t rate of 8'/f ( S.4YJ;: a nnu &lt;tl

"'- lthd rav..tl Yn r1 "or" h.trd l n r ~our nll l llt:\
A 1( )h to \' ai l e~ Hank . we · rc "er nl!! It\ 11 1hat
yoUI monq "'-0 1" " h;rn.l fpr ~nil 1-nr furth n

1..,

Galltpolrs Oh ro

llld .t\ 11!

J et;:nl.., et hntll the l H.'\ . nr a hout am tl f otJ r
., a\ tn~ \ pl an .... IU'-1 qop h~ an~ ,,f~~ur ft,ur
ul!ncnient lu•.: ;tll ll ll ..,

Ohio Valley Bank

Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza-Route 7, Gallipolis, Ohio
Zan p Plaza

pauJ from

;t nt!

yJcldl. it'' even hcll t r \Vha l·'&gt; mo re. ~ollr
int e rc't ''tal\ s heltered . (.;ll mpounJeJ dall y.

®

H"ndsome IO' mbo ssea te r ra colla

PPddl-~r ·.., Pc'u;tr:~
State &amp; Thirtll _ _ _ ___..______ Gallipolis

Trlacotate / nylon
•••. $3.49 yd .

•I!~

161
YARD

Pre zr ~e

ltv• f00 (1

f&lt;'l "" 11&lt;, oV1d

Ho liday warmth for robes, dresses, more!
A cetate/nylon &amp; Arne!~ trio cetote/nylon
solids Ma ch i ne wash , dry, 48 -52 1 ' wide .
Aog . $2 .49 yd .

d

nu t rH:• n:s iHf' rptn .two ~ J n1e r
topt l("r.d cro : es r· ..- l'n nw t ou Qhesl
mea t No tar s o r o· •s a re u sed , so
,, s •dea l l or

$299

Ma

-:i: ~ Sl

Sale! Luxurious Velours

"Plum-Perfect" Prints

.=~

•t-nt &lt;'111

ctenl Roman pot Fooc1 p r epclreo
1n

chollts

Fo r l .tttc to p. s Co tt on ond b ie n. d
ft or(JI) (.O I, co s, modune wa~h ,

No. 1 clay baker In the world

modern deso•n nnn t 01

1pun

&lt;l,,ne wu&gt;h and d ry, 60"

R(Q)MERTOPF®
an c1enf

polyes te r i nfer

'

The golden rule 1s a good guide for
holiday gift giving, according to
many famous personalities.
"[X) unto others as you'd have
them do unto you," simply means
you really should think about the
person you're getting a gift for -not
just send an~thing wrapped in pretty
paper . What would he or she really
like'
For example, give your friends
with a young family a babysitter's
service for six nights over the next
SIX months. Does your friend have a
hobby ' II he's a fishennan, get him
something special for fishing, not expensive, from your sporting goods
store. If he 's a sports fan, a pair of
tickets to hockey or basketball
game. Are they music buffs' Get
their favorite record, or tickets to a
symphony .
Would they love a limousine '
Arrange to have a car and driver at
their disposal lor an entire evening .
Maybe a massage for a hard working housewife, or dinner for two
at the best local restaur ant.
This year, a warming gift, made
especially for a good friend would be
a hand-knit sweater, a soft wool stole
(to snuggle Wider during our 68degree evenings). Another wanning
item is home-made bread to be
toasted ; preserves you've made add your own to...,d-lrom labels.
II your man is handy with tools ,
get him to build a small treasure
chest . You paint it m glowing colors
to match your friend's decor .
Gloria Vanderbilt, artist and
designer, believes that giving must
come from the heart . "Also, if I happen to see something in April and it 's.
exactly right for one of my friends, I
get it. Gifts really are very special like my friends ."
Another famous designer, Olarlotte Ford, says that O!ristmas for her
this year means "starting early and
going through catalogues . Then I
keep lists for years so I don \ give
the same thing twice . I like to give
something that's useful as well as
personal. I also like to give

Now,
your retirement funds
can work harder than
ever

presented an -

IS

::::

Save NOW on solid co mfor1 and
long wea r' Mens while crew-nec k
T-Shlr1S. Athl e ltc-S hlrls. V-neck s and
bnefs Sale ends Dec 16. 1979

GOERNER WINS
NEW YORK 1AP 1- I ee Goerner
has been selected as lhe fourth Winne r of th e Tony &lt;rl.ldiNln \1cmonaJ
Award .
Goern~r IS an as..-;1stant editor at
Alfred A. Knopf Th e aw ard,
1!Ji6,

Hours~~i;~l~s', b

20%0FF
SALE

FISH &amp;

t r ;mr..,ft· JTt'(l tr i WJ! \o\1 f;r nn·.

1n

::::

.·.·
·.·
::::

UNilEIIWEAR

nL"L'~ .

establi.shl'd

Is Sweet On You ...
Stop in and have coffee
&amp; donuts and we ' ll show
you why
Open 24

·~

an entry hall. What a beautiful
holiday welcome for your guests!
Why not scatter smaU bunches of
roses and evergreens throughout the
house on bedside tables, snack trays
and in powder rooms to spread
holiday cheer'
An unusual and colorful holiday
table arrangements can be made by
floating a fully opened rose in a
water ~oblet at each place setting.
Be sure to select blooms from your
florist that are fully mature and at
room temperature . Then cut off the
stem just below the flower head and
very gently bend the outer petals
back.
Tucking single red roses into
napkins at place settings as takehome favors for your guests is
another holiday table setting idea .
But remember, because roses are
always thirsty, be~ each one is in
a water .filled, sealed florist tube .
For a dramatic Clui.'ltmas centerpiece, try lining up a series of
identical water goblets or bud vases,
each containing a rose or two. When
the party's over, place your bud
vase bouquet where you 11 enjoy
them most.
To ensw-e freshness, ask your
Oorist for American grown roses . As
soon as you get them home , remove
any leaves or thorns that will be

Hanes

PERSONALIZED
MONUMENTS

l·ol lm\ trh' tht' C l'rl'tll O n~. a
rt'i't' ptt on v.;r~ lw ld llti' bnde · ~ taLk
v. c1:-. dccrn·atl'd w1th ~~ nt•a r:J lace
t;cbh- do th ',\ tlh whllt' un ckrsk1rt.
&lt;trld :1 fl\'i'-1 1P r \~ l'rhhn t-'. cak i·.
Tht· r· ;-lkt · \\ ;1\ decoralt·d With

sralhrps. heart.\, swan s.
and r upH h. &lt;Hld ti e r:-; \H' rt ' d!\'Hird
I\ 1th :1 fou nt aut flow 111g wtt h peach('Oln n ·tl \\ ;ll t'!' Tilt trHdi !lonal bride
a nd j!ronr n toppL'd thr • l'ak e The
v.cdd 111g r &lt;.tk!' l.t&lt;J~ m ;.nl e and
1 k -' 1~ nl' d t,~ Dunnlt' Ht'\'lrl S. father of
th t• ~.: ruor n
The -'en ·mc to blt- wu s decorated
\\l th &lt;t l'rt '&lt;-tlll ian· t&lt;1blt· r loth w1th
whltl' umkr~k trt Tht.· li:i r ~t' cr ysta l
punch biJWI wa :-, fllltd w1th peach
l'Ulored JlUIIl'h S~n· in ~ p u nch "''8 S
\1Iss P;1tt\ Wounwr . a sststl&gt;d by
\1 n
1.orJt&lt;., t· I &gt;ursl \1r s \1 arg tr
Swt!-Jht•r ... t.·rn·d thr c · &lt;~kl'. e~ss J s ted by
;\ 1rs .'\lor~ Planh In Uw re nter of
!he l\\ tl
lablt·~
V.l'fP
floral
;rr rur H!t•na•n t '- ~11th whitt.· ('CJflrilcs on
t'iH'h :-. Irk The Wt·ddmg houqw·l wa s
('i tUght b\ \ 1JS:-. P::tlt\ \\' ()(\J!](' r
Tht · 1 t• upli
nr1\\
r t' :-o t tk
1n
. I ;H · k ~J t l':tlk . FLt . whL•n· Hand 1
_ t:-.
tn t hi · l ' ~ '\; i r ~ 'l' n t!H! ,r s an .·\lr
'I r;.JffJc ( 11!\lrnlln. Sn·nnd ('las~ urr
tlw l'SS Fort·stal li t• plans to
n_·t·nllst f11r fo111' 't't-t r-.; ;_tnd Wi ll the n

THE DONUT HOUSE

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

Pe nt\

IJEXTF.H - Mrs . Martha Chapman
hosted a recent meelm~ of the
Fnendly !'&lt;eighbor C1ub at her Dex ter hom" . Precedmg a poU111 ·k din rwr. (~ra ce Col well had pr aye r .
IJevotwn,; fro m Psalm 100 read by

IT IN CLAY. ''

1980?

70 million years, was discovered

famt !~

pl';L('h

How Would You
Like To Be
Mrs. America

MON. THRU FRI., NOV. 26-30

uesb w&lt;:t:-. \1 ts:-. 1\o(Jt.'
.Ja go_ fri\'IHI of tlw tmde and l! runm .
Th+ · h r~:-- t t ''-" fut tht.· \\t.·ddtnj.! and
rTi't'ptlun
\~ a _...
\ lr·_. ,
En·lyn
\t•\\~t\rnt·
frt c·nd r1f t h~ · I'L'rr ~

lw

the hostess a nd

GALI.IPOI.IS - Ar t1v1tits at the
Senwr O t11. ens Center for tlus week
are :
Monday, Nov 26- Clwr us, I 15-3
pm .
Tuesday , Nov ?J - Bible Study.
12 :30-1 :30 p.m .: Birthda y Party ,
I : 30 p.m .: STU P Oass , 10 30
a .m . : Physical Fitness , 11 : 15a .m .
Wednesday, ~ov . 28 - Card
Games, 1-3 p.m ., literature Class, I
pm . : Mobile Umt at Thurman. I
pm.
Thursday, Nov . 29 - CoWJCil
Meetmg , I : 3() p.m.: Blood Pressure
Clleck at Vinton Site .
F'riday , Nov . 30 - Art Class , 1-3
pm. ; Social Hour, 7 p.m .
The Senior Nutrition Program will
serve the following menus :
Monday - Fish, baked potato,
coleslaw, bread . butter . peas . milk
Tuesday - Baked ham , sweet
potatoes, peas. bread, butter.
pineapple upside down cake , milk .
Wednesday - Italian spaghetti
with meat sauce. tossed salad , French bread , butter , chocolate dup
cookies , milk.
Thursday - Uver and onions,
boilet potato in jacket, mi&lt;ed
vegetables. bread, butter. peach
with wh1pped topping, milk .
Friday -- Wieners, mashed
potatoes, sauerkraut, cottage
cheese' bread, butter ' nutterscotch
pudding, milk .
Clloice of beverage served with
each meal.
"Services rendered on a nondisctiminatory basis ."

Ht&gt;gi~H·rtn l.!

NEW YORK fNEA) -Want to add
a tooch of chann to yule season par ties and holiday home decorating'
One beautiful way is to use fresh
roses from your florist .
Whether it 's a full dozen or a few
choice blooms or a single rose roses are sure to spread holiday
gaiety .
Remember roses are eye catchers, so place them near where
guests will gather -on a livingroom
cocktail table, dining room table or
buffet, or even tbe kitchen counter.
A bull bouquet of roses is always an
impressive centerpiece and during
the holiday season a red bouquet is
especially striking.
To double the impact of your
holiday l'O'!f arrangements, try
placing them in front of a mirror or
other reRective surface, perhaps in

ToWldaf and their children, Amy,
Billy and David, Yorkville ; Mr. and
Mrs . George Glaze, Rick and Brian,
Rockbridge; Mr . and Mrs . BUl Radford, daughter, Brooke, Marietta,
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Gilmore,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Stewart,
Clui.'l and Jared, Syracuse; Mrs.
Grace Glaze, VIrgil Glaze, Do1Ul8
Glaze, Cindy Glaze, Donald Machlr,
Belva Glaze, Mr. and Mrs . Larry
Romine, Pomeroy.

The roelacanth , a fish which
existed 400 million years ago and
was thought to have been extinct for

About 50,000 Americans each year
W. ke part in marathon races, a
dis1 an ce - when measured by
I llympw standards - of 26 miles, 385
) •r ds. The anginal marathon
runner supposedly ran 22 miles ,
1.470 yards, t.he distance a Greek
«&gt;l dier ran fr om the battlefield at
Marathon to Athens to report the
nrtury over the Persians some 2,000
years ago .

flt'\~!!t h

fu ll -&gt; ktrt

.trtl &lt;t

POMEROY --Mr. and Mrs.
William Radford hosted a surprise
J:ith weddmg anniversary celebration on Thanksgiving Day honoring
Mr . and Mrs . Donald Pullins of Columbus .
Arriving at the Radford home, the
couple were greeted by a large sign
of congratulations on the garage
door . A three tiered weddding cake
decorated in fall colors with cupid
figw-ines was baked by Sharon
Stewart, and the Rtv. Ronald Reed,
son.ffi~aw of the honored couple, led
m a ceremony where the couple
repeated their vows . Gifts were
presented to Mr. and Mrs . Pullins.
Attending were the Rev . and Mrs .
Ronald Reed, Jeff and Alisha, Indianapolis, lnd .: Debra and BUl

Santa's elves readying appliances

Roses, striking decorations

Member FDI C

NORl'H POLE INEA I - Santa 's
elves are busy making appliances
fur food preparation and personal
care to put under this year's Chrbt mas tree, aceording to a national
polling of retailers .
With the increasing trend toward
entertaining at home, consumers
are looking to receive and give food
appliances such as convection
ovens, blenders and drink mi1ers
the retailers say . And the interest
health and personal appearance will
mean brisk sale of personal care
items , they predict .
''The exercise industry continues
to grow, so we expect strong sales of
portable blow dryers, body and
facial massagers and the like," says
a buyer for May Co ., a Los Angeles
department store . " At the same
lime." he adds, "!.here. is tremendous growth in gounnet electric appliances . '·
Another buyer, Grorgta Gooch of
The Great Ace hardwaredepartment chain , says that the
time.,;avmg attributes of food
processing appliances are also a key
to their popularity . ''The modern
family, where often both spouses
work, just doesn' have time ot
prepare food in a slow, deliberate
manner," she says.
One small appliance that should
do particularly well, according to
Jeff Piys, a buyer for Carson Pirie
Scott in Chicago, is the coffee
maker. ''The recent lowering of coffee prices should boost !.heir sales
considerably," he said.
Larger appliances such as
vacuum cleaners, freezers and dishwashers are expected to do well at
holiday time this year, according to
one East Coast buyer . "Rising transportation costs mean that more
people will be buying appliances to
facilitate entertaining at home ," she
says .

one industry source.

SUPER MARKET -OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
VINf ST~ffl, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONf 446-9593

Pnces Effective Sunday Nov_ 25 thru Sat Dec. l, 1979
"We Re5erve lbe Right to timrt Qtwltity"

GOLD KIST
MIXED FRYER
PARTS

SUPERIORS
QUARTER
PORK LOIN
9 to 11 Chops

3~.

19
LB.

GOLD KIST

Loin Pork Chops

Chicken Breast

99fa. $1

GOLD KIST

79&amp;. •1•:
FRESHEST pqoDUCE trJ TOIIIIN

ICEBERG

CRISP, CRUNCHY

HEAD LETTUCE

CARROTS

39~EAD

POUND
PKG.

RED DELICIOUS

TANGELOS

APPLES

$129

5LB.
BAG

79e

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All-Star
2% Milk

Toilet Tissue
4 ROLL PAK

GALLON PLASTIC

$179

RITZ
CRACKERS

12 OZ. BOX

79~

RC or

By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday , Nov. 25 , t.he 329th
day of 1979. There are 36 days left in

ICE MILK

Diet Rite Cola

the ye ar .

Today·s highlight in history :
On Nov . 25, 1783, the British
evacuated New York, !.heir last
pos1lion in the United States after
the Revolutionary War.
On !.his date :
In 15611 , the mquiry into conduct of
Mary Queen of Scots reopened in
Westminster.
In 1758, 1n the French and Indian
War , the British captured Fort
Duquesne 1n what is now Pittsburgh .
In 1863, Union troops captured
Missionary R1dge, eoding the battle
of I nokout Mountain in Tennessee .
In 1920, WfAW of College Station .
Texas . broadcast the first play-by play account of a footbaU game .
Texas played Texas A&amp;.M .
In 1957, it was disclosed that
President Dwight Eisenhower had
suffer ed a slight stroke .
Ten years ago , President H.ichard
Nixon renounc'ed ~erin warfare and
promised to destroy our stockpiles of

HALF GALLON

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BOlTLES

VALLEY BELL

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COTTAGE CHEESE

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oz.

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oz.

WIDE &amp; EXTRA WIDE

59~

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oz.

PKG.

49e

TETLEY·

TEA BAGS

suc h wea pons .

Five years ago, U Thant of
Rurma . thrrd secretary general of
Uni ted Nations , died of can""r . He
was 65 .
One year ago , an !raman army
spokesman said lhe shah's for ces
would "merCJiessly " crush new
street protests .
Today·s Birthdays : John ~'.
Kennedy .Jr . IS 19. Joe DiMaggio is

100 CT.
BOX

$169

EASY OFF

OVEN CLEANER

oz. '139
CAN

16

65 .

.---·COUPON---, r·---·cOUPON - - ,
MAXWELL HOUSE :
FINAL TOUCH

I
I
I

Althull!l h Europe is about the
same size as Canada. its population

19~

FLORIDA

Today in history

Th ought
forToda y .
Coovalescence
is the part that
makes the illness wort.hwhile . (;eorge Bemard Shaw ! 11156-1900)

79LB.

Rib Pork Chops

Chicken Legs

something that I would like myself.''
Eva Gabor, the actress and
business woman (board chairman of
her own Wlg company), said that she
likes to give things she would like to
rece1ve . "You know . Something
that's too expensive to buy for yourself ." What would Eva Gabor like to ·
receive' "Almost anything," she
replied with laughter .
Traditional gifts- ties, shirts and
sox for Daddy are still welcome . But
add a personal, thoughtful touch to
show the gift was chosen just for
him, the celebs urge . For instance, if
he's a car fan or a gardener, wrap
that special necktie with the
magazine published for his mterests
-car, plants, sports, whatever.
II you think a friend would like
perfwne, thin!&lt; it through. Then get
her either a grand or petite selection
of products all in the scent right for
her . Bath lotion , soap, cologne and
perhaps even perfume. Choose her
own preference or for her personality
The tip to remember for gifts that
will mean much more , both for the
giver and the receiver, is to ask
yourself : "What would !like most of
all'" Then use that technique for
everyone important to you on your
g1ft list.

America eombined , according to
!\al10n al t;eorgraphic .

•

clean and be well.groomed in a
limited amount of time - and they
are willing to pay more for appliances that do the job right ," said

u;

ts g rea te r than North and South

PuiMm Village
Shopping Center
Hurricane, W. V• .

The huge upsurge in t wo~come
families has had a marked effect on
appliance purchases, according to
manufacturers . " People want appliances that will let them cook,

INSTANT COFFEE

I
II
! I

I
FABRIC SOFTENER I
I
33 oz.

Ito oz. '469 j I
1 JAR
t 1 BOmE

89e!I

l.Counpn Ex,e;~_!!..~~J.. !-~.!!..!.L~:..l.!..~!,9J

�B-12- The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Sunday , Nov. 20, 1979

C-1 - The Sundav Times,&lt;;entine l, Sunday , Nov. 25, 1979

Marriage announced
GALLIPOlJS -· Salley Bail ey of
Point Pleasant, W. Va . and William
Michael Vanco of Gall ipohs wtre
llllited in marr iage Fritlay, ~ov . 16,
at the Mount Union Methodlst C'hur-

ch in Huntington , W. Va . with the
Rev . Thomas Malcolm presiding
over the pn vate cer emony
They are now residing in Point
Pleasant .

FAMILY DINNER HOSTED
RIO GRANDE - Mr . and Mrs.
Marshall Canada y, Rio Grande,
hosted a Thanksgiving runner for
their family a t noon .
Grace wa s offe r ed by Mr.
Canaday , after wtuch dinner was
served .
Those present we re : Mr::~ . Ma urice

Jones and daughter, Ruth , Rio Gran de : Mr . and Mrs Harry Bailey, Mr .
and Mrs . FerreU Niday , Mrs . Bar bara Steele and daughter , Ginger ,
Gallipolis: Mr . and Mrs . Patrick
Canaday and daughter , Katie
Elizabeth , Miss Joyce Canaday ,
Mark and Scott Canaday, and the
hosts .

.r""'
w

!'&lt;::&lt;-

I

~

GR,~'~'~.''!?USE

I~

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CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE

~

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saturday , Dec. 1, and Sunday, Dec . 2nd

w
~ Fr•~:;::r;:.~;,"""

li

F:,r~~;r;~:'n•

12 til 5 pm

~

W FEATUR lNG - Poins e tt ias , Hanign Baskets. Foliage,
W Christma s Cactus , Artificial Arrangements, African

W Violets and many more .

9'12-5776

W
W
W

·-~----~--~----~---"""-~~-~

HERE
IT
COMES!

'

ally
It 's been one of those weeks . You
know the kind I mean , I'm sure - one
in which you discover that the lovely
blush you had in your cheeks is actually a rash caused by eating too
many cranberries at 'Thanksgiving
dinner : or one in which you find out
that the dozens of food specials you
have piled in your cart are for but

week's coupou.
To illustrate how bad it's really
been , let me tell you about a couple
of incidents which occWTed to me :
I was driving to work Tuesday
when I casually glanced down at my
speedometer . I was shocked . The
needle was leaning dangerously to
the right, so I inunediately braked only to find I'd been looking at the
gasoline gauge. I Which also threw
me into shock when I realized how
much money it cost me! )
Then, yesterday morning, I was
again driving (I have all this trouble
with CARS, you see ), when I absent
mindedly stopped the car on temperature at the intersection by
Fruth's and started moving again on
time! The car with the right-&lt;Jf-way
nearly hit me .... (1 do things like this
all the time, tho. I remember one
Christmas season in Wellston,! stopped the car at a red bell strJung
across an intersection in the middle
of town and waited several rrunutes
before I finally realized it was a red
BELL and not a red UGHT! I.
To reiterate .. .it 's been one of
TIIOSE weeks .
I think it's because I know what's
comJDg: I know that -sooner or later
- I'm going to have to go Cbristmas
(shudder ) shopping .....
I mean, honestly, don1 you just

CENTER

WINTER QUARTER

REGISTRATIO
Rio
Grande

College
and
Community College

NOVEMBER 26

9 a.m.-9 p.m.
DAVIS CAREER CENTER

POMEROY - AI long last we
again have a nursing home in Meigs
County. The staff at the Center were
invited to the opening and were very
impressed with the facility and its
staff. The building was weU laid out,
the colo,.. bright ahd cheerful, and
from talking to Mr. and Mrs. Zidian
one got the feeling that it 'll'ilJ not be
"just an institution." Mr. and Mrs.
Zldian have many ideas and plans as
to how to involve patients in various
activities so they wtU feel "at

home."

We are glad that we could be of
some assistance and have a small
part in the work "behind the
scenes." Before administrative staff
was hired our I and R Office was
used as the employment office when
persons seeking employment at the
nursing home could fill out applicatoons and have questions answered . Oose to 1,000 applications
were given out and hundreds of
phone calls answered .
Senior citizens and staff at the
Center would like to say "welcome

r~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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CHRDSTMAS a~

~

Register for the SlO giH certificate to be given
away each Saturday woth a SSO certificate draw ing on the 24Th .

·

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fl.

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r~memhcring . ~
It i'&gt; for govong .
111 rem~mhranc e .
~
i' .1 n:otural. ll&lt;hlaiglc" lollll' lnr lril·nds. ~
Chrl\llloJ'" lor

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hotrday \ea -;on woth a ·h~Jutoful poo n ,~ltoa

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y our

fro~n ,h

~

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throughout

th~ ~

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You're Invited To Our Christmas

w
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TODAy NOVEMBER 25th
From 11:00 A.M. To S P.M.
I

~

•
~·

~

• Yards and Yards of lllew Garland
Chnstmas Arrang emenh 1life , permanent g, 'j, •lk l
• Door Wreaths
• Poonselloa s
• Swags
• Polled Plilnl s
e Candft~ &amp; Candle R1nq s
e T erranum s

L:

•

.

I·
\.

Plan to be w1th U!t for our " Open.ng " of th e Ch r . , tm.l ~

Season .

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
Mr s Millard VanM r t c r
Ph YY1 · 10JY
YY7

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106 BufiHnut A vi'

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dC c &lt;·pt ,l/1 n1.l1 o r c r p d 1f c a t e1 &lt;&gt; &amp;

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Pom e roy . 0
w1r e

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REFRESHMENTS &amp; DOOR PRIZES

In

LOVE getting out in 20 degree
weather, slopping your way through
slush and snow, driving on slippery
highways, and then fighting the
crowded conditions in stores only to
find that, instead of a doll that
Jaugha, cries , gets diaper rash and
probably smokes cigars, you can
only find one that merely wets aU
over the front seat of the car on the
way home•
I always feel so lost when it comes
to choosing presents for certain
relatives- my father, for instance . I
have to face it : if it doesn 1 have
grease aU over it and it doesn ~ smeU
of gasoline, the man is simply not
Impressed! Have you ever tried to
wrap a carburetor???
And once you've finaUy got the gifts, then comes wrapping the gifts!
Even though my mother can whip
out a bow in about 15 seconds that
looks as if she bought it at Bon wit's,
any time I've tried to whip out a
bow, it looks like I've done just that ·
whlpped It! She can also curl a libbon that looks like it came straight
from Shirley Temple's head; rnim
looks Uke Shirley ran into humic
weather!
My cats always present a problen
when it comes to wrappin1
packages, too. After I've careful!
spread out the paper on the table
smoothing out every wrinkle, I often
turn to find them spread over the
paper - adding a few wrtnllles that
weren 't there before! Someday,
someone Is going to receive a
beaultfully wrapped cat for Cbrllltmas and never Wldenlalld bow It
rould have happened ...

Ironton wins Class AA title

Sundav 10 am-10 pm

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
DEC. 1st,
1979

By GEORGE STRODE
,\PSpons Writer
AKRON, Ohio I AP J - If you win
the toss on a high school football
overtime, do you take th e ball or
play defense'
"It 's like a chess game, .. con ceded
l.arrle Tisdale . The Covington coach
chose to atta ck after winning the flip
in the longest otrio playoff game in
history Frida~· ·
Co a c h Norman
Long le
of
Mogador e listened to his player s and
opted for the defense whe n the
Woldcats won the toss for t he second
overtune possession

In this case, Lingl e pulled the right
mov e. Hi s offe nse matc hed
Covingtor 's I ouch down a nd extra
point on th e fir s t ove rtim e
possession . And the second tim e, 120-0 Mogador e's defense interce pted
a pass and then scored tu win the
U ass A title 23-17.
Tigers comr ba ck
Ironton ·s H decis ion over Akron
St. Vincent-&amp; . Mary was just as
dramatic. TI1e Tigers scored with 31
seco nds left tc grab the Class AA
champion ship.
"Our defense felt we could hold
them. The defense has been our

DAN STAGGS

ROBBIE GOBLE

str ong s uit a ll ye ar ,.. Lingle
explained hi!; strategy afte r winning
the toss for tile serond se ri es of
possessions.
Under Ohio hig h school r ules , each
team gets a serie s to scor e in a ny
mannner from the 20-y ard line . If
both are Stoll tie d, the procedure is
repeated until a winn er is deci ded .
lin the first overtime possesson ,
Covington quart erback Dave Tobias
ran 6 yards for a to uchdowr and
ki cked the extra point. Mogadore
matched it on Kirt Gasawa y's !-yard
pass to Tom Pollock and Pollock 's
r on version for a 17-17 tie .
On the second series, Ken Dunlap

intercepted Tobias' fourth down
pa ss at the 15. On Mogadore's first
offe nso ve pla y, Brian Gilc hris t
bolted 20 yards for th e winning
to uchdown .
" We misgu cssed on the last play .
We blitzed . They ran a draw whi ch
left Gilc hrist in the open ," said
Tisdale, his team winding up with a
10-1-1 re cord .
Ironton Coach Bob Lutz also
praised his defense for the 1~1
Ti ~ ers' first title .
Force five turnovers
"It was super against enormous
soze ," Lutz said of hos defenders that
for ced five turnovers by the Irish , 9-

2.-1.

Joe Hacker 's rec overy of Akron
fuUba ck J erry Gaydash 's fum ble
ignited Ironton on a nine-play, 73yard drive in the final minutes. Lutz
admitted he took a chance of having
Gabriel Lewis go wide for the final
four yards. Joe Fletcher then kicked
the winning point
" It was kind of a gamble at the
end ," said Lutz . "When I saw them
switch into a goal line defense , we
switched the play to go outside
instead of passing over the middle to
I-letcher ."
St . Vincent-St . Mary , the 1972state
champion , went ahead 6-{) midway m

the third quarter. Ron Ross ran 4
yards for the touchdowr , but Darwin
Con well and Lewis swarmed on
Kevin WaUace on his unsuccessful
run foc the vital two ooints.
STATISTICS
Department
F rr st downs
Rus hes -yard s
Passi ng yards

Iron Akr
12

l1
42 177
82
22
33
26
15 2 1·4 3
06 3-40
0-0 2·2
2·20
4·39
~ - 71

R et u rn y ards
Passes
12
Punts
Fumbl es-l ost
Pena l ties y ards
Sc or e by qua,.ters :
I ro nfon
0

0

0

7-- 7

St V incent
0 0 6 o-- 6
Akr · Ross 4 run (run failed)
Iron Lewis4run (Fletcher kick)
A II , Ill.

¥.t PORK
LOIN ..................:~-..
GREGG HARRINGTON

BRIAN BISSELL

SCOTI' RUSSELL

But we11 know, won't we ?

TIM HOWELL

Senior Citizens Scenes.
POMEROY HEALTif CARE

W

Tigers finish year 10-0-1

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

!

ANNUAL

,li

W

Something

="""""'-- ---""""""---""'""'""""""- -l'"'Il
HUBBARD'S

c

POWELL'S

tlowrn

i

to Meigs County, Ron and Helene,
and we hope that you will include us
in your plans for the future .''
RSVP EMERGENCY
ASSISI' ANCE
Just in case the sun doesn 1 shine
all winter, the RSVP office is
preparing and updating the
emergency assistance list which
was started last year. Persons on
this emergency assistance list are
those who have requested a phone
caU during the bad weather months .
U you know of someone who should
be receiving a caU or if you are in·
terested in checking on others, give
the RSVP office a caU at 992-7884.
We never know what winter wiU
bring and we want every senior
citizen in Meigs County to be only a
phone caU awy from help and
assistance . Give us a caU today!
ACTIY11'1D!

The Center could use YOUR talen ts this week in preparing for the annual Olristmas Bazaar which is
scheduled for Thursday and Friday,
December 6 and 7.
Craft making sessions are planned
for Tuesday and Friday, November
25 and 29 with candy making taking
place on Wednesday, November 28.
~member, if you have craft
items you would like to seU at the
Ouistrnas Bazaar, please have
them at the Center by December 3 so
they can be marked.
In conjunction with the Bazaar , a
ham dinner wiU be served from 4 until 7 pm . on Friday, December 7.
The dinner menu will include ham,
sweet potatoes, green beans, cole
slaw , rolls, beverage , and dessert
for $2.!i0; children's plate, $L!i0. Join
us '
This Thursday begiJ!ning at 11: 15
am ., Jan Northup, C'Oordinator of
the Meigs, Gallla Senior Friends
Program will present a program answering the questions - What happens to the older mind and body and
how can the elderly maintain good
mental healthaO
Jan was formerly employed here
at the Center and we know you will
all en joy seeing ber again.
The film to be shown Friday,
November 30, is entitled "Garden of
God . " This brief visual journey
among
the
beautiful
and
remarkably various nowers and
plants mentioned in the Bible was
phorographed on location in the very
settings in which they appear in the
Bible .
Each plant is identified . its unage
accompanied by poetic passages
from the Old and New Testaments .
The narration is inteWgent and in formative, designed to be of interest
to people of aU faiths .

,.

'I
I

U. S. No. 1 WHITE

w
~

POTATOES .~.A~~
COUPON DAYS

~
IS:

10 LB.
11 OL

·~~~~~~~~~~-~- - -=~---~Q-~-~----~

COLUMBUS - Twelve area high
school footbaU players from GaUla
and Meigs Counties received All District Associated Press honors in
Qass A and Oass AAA c ircles
Friday .

$459

NORMAN , Okla . IAP J -

CAN

both Oklahoma touchdowns and the
Sooner
defense choked
off
Nebraska's high-powered offense as
the No . 8 Sooners eased to a 17-14 victory over the third-t"anked Cor nhuskers Ul their Big Eight foothall
championship showdown .
Oklahoma , 10-1 , wiU meet fifth ranked F1orida State in the Orange
Bowl, while Nebraska , s uffering its
ftrst defeat of the year, will play
either Arkansas , Texas or Houston
in the Cotton Bowl.
Sims , who had a 63-ya rd touchdown run nullified by a penalty in
the first half , dashed 71 yards midwa y through the fourth period as the
Sooners zipped 94 yards in only
seven plays to take a 17-7 lead .
Sims, the 1978 Heisman Trophy
winner. was pulled dowr at the 9.
But with 7::;:; left , quarterbac k J .C.
Watts scored from the 3 on fourth
down .
Nebras ka , whi ch entere d the
game woth a 3.'&gt; .2-point scoring
a verage, roared back downfield a nd
closed the ga p to 17- 14 on a trick
play.
After quarterback Jeff Qwnn was
sacked for an 11-ya rd loss to gove th e

$}99

Limit1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

FLA VORITE SUGAR
5 LB.

BAG

$}19

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
fer E
ires Dec. 1. 1

ZESTA CRACKERS
LB.

bf. &lt;'ts tin y as mmu uws ur
a:: la r~e a~ whales . accord ing tv
r-.;i:l .tJOn aJ Crt'O/;! raphic Squid can

.

• ~

--

Billy

Sims rushed for 247 yards and set up

CRISCO
3LB.

In Oass AAA , Gallipoli s' Dan
Staggs was named a member of the
first Team Defense, and was voted
District Uneman of the Year
Two other Blue Devils also made
the AAA All-Distro ct Team - Greg

Oklahoma tops
Nebraska, 17-14

Limit1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

Squid can

t..• as lal l as ;o six -st ory buildi ng
from th £' tops of lhPir head~ to lh t•
lips nf Uw ar arms

TODDSlBLEV

KERRY OURS

TIM BEAVER

JAY BRAY

12 Gallia-Meigs players receive All-District honors

OXYDOL

Have a ruce week .

we lg 11 as mu ch us tw u tons and can

MIKE HAYMAN

JIM BARNES

1

~

~

I

2/$1

TICKETS ON SALE
RIO GRANDE - Tickets are now
on sale at Rio Grande College 's Lyne
Center for the Nov . 29 Rio Gra ndeAustralia l)asketball game . Ducats
are $3 fur adul ts and $2 for stud&lt; nts.
The game begins at 7::W p .m .

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Ex ires Dec . 1, 1979

Huskers a third-and -1 4 cri sis from
the 15, ro g ht guard Randy
Schleusener picked up an intentional
fumble at Quinn 's feet and rambled
into the end zone.
Oklahoma was forced to punt on
its next possession but Mike Babb intercepted a Quinn pass with I : 56
remaining to seal the victory .
Nebraska Jed 7-3 at the half on an
11-yard touchdown pass from Qwnn
to Jarvis Redwine. Oklahoma
regained the lead in the third period .

.College
scores
By tbe Associated Press
EAST

Boston College 41, Massachusetts 3
Holy Cross 28, Connecti c ut 12

SOU Til
E. Carolina 38, WilUams &amp; Mary 14
Georgia 16, Georgia Tech 3
Maryland 17, Virginia 7
Mississippi 14 Mississ ippi St . 9
N Ca rolina 37, Duke 16
S. Carolina 13, Oemson 9
Tulane 24, Louisiana St. 13
MIDWEST
Oklahoma 17, Nebras ka 14

OHio High School Football
By The A ss ociated Press
State Champi onsh•ps
At Akron Rubber Bowl
Cla ss AAA
C1n M o eller 41 , Parma P M1ua7

Harrington , First Team Defense ,
and Robbie Goble , First Team Of fense .
Hannan Trace , Southern Valley
Athletic Conference champion ,
placed four players on the Oass AA

Offense and Jay Bray , ki cker .
North Gallia 's Jim Barnes was
named to the First Team Oass A
All -District . The Pirate s' Tim
Howell was named to Second Team
Defense .

All-District AP squad, led by Kerry
Ours, a First Team Defense honoree
and District Uneman of the Year .
Other Woldcats making the select
list were Tim Beaver, Second Team
Offense ; Todd Sibley. Second Team

Southwestern's Scott RusseU was
named to the Second Team Offense.
Two Eastern Eagles honored were
Brian Bossell, First Team Defense
and Mike Hayman, First Team
Defense .

•

Blacks eliminated m playoffs, 21-0
CHARLESTON - St . Albans' Red
Dragons defeated Pt . Pleasant's Big
Blacks, 21 ~ . in Saturday's Class
AAA semifinal game of the West
Virgirua tugh school playoffs before
7, m fans at Laidley Field .
Coach Steve Safford's Big Blacks,
playing without the services of
Junior quarterback Glenn McCleUan
and senior fullhack Brian Stepp,

both out IVlth injuries, concluded
their 1979 campaign with a sparkling
11-1~ record .
Meanwhile, Coach Homer Crid dle 's crew advanced to the Class
AAA West Virginia finals with a
perfect 12~ mark.
The Red Dragons will face
Bridgeport, a H upset wiMer over
number-one ranked Parkersbur~

Saturday in the other semifinal contest . The championship will begin at
7:30pm. at I..aidley Field.
Pt . Pleasant was gully of six tum oven in the contest - the Big Blacks
lost four fumbles and had two passes
intercepted .
The Saflordmen, however , .were
still in the contest until the final five

Moeller cops fourth state grid crown
AKRON , Otu o IAP I - Quar terback Tom lockwood 's three
touchdown passes carried topranked Cincinnati Moeller to a 41-7
romp over Parma Padua Saturday
for t he Ofti o Oass AAA cham pionship, the Crusaders' fourth prep
football crowr in the last five
seasons. •
The Crusaders , the wiMers of 12
straight games this fall , now hav e
won 57 of thetr last 58 games and
have an 1\-2 r&lt;'Cord in postseason
eurnpetition .
Moeller , an all-boys Catholic
school of 1.0011, r olled up a 27-7 halftime lead a nd ea s ily handed sixth ran kd Padua its second de feat in 12
~ am es in 1979.
l.o&lt;"kwood . a 6-loot -2, 19~und
senoor , comple ted 13 of 19 passes for
16-1 ya rds before lea v1 ng the game
nudway in the fourth quarter .
Lockwood passed 5 yards to Eric
F:llington, tO yards to Da ve Thurkill
and 41 yards to Joe (jma for Moell er
touchdowrs .
The Crusaders were just as overpowerong on the g r ow1d as they wer e
on the air , rollin g up 291 yards in the
fi rst ha U and mor¥ than 400 yards

total offense for the game .
Mark Brooks , a 6-2, 207-pound
junior fullback , ran :; yards for a
Crusader touchdown and swept
through the usually rugged Padua
defense for 130 yards in 17 cames .
Ellington , a l961&gt;ound senior who
was the southwestern district Back
of the Year , contributed 115 yards in
24rushes .
Unebacker Mike Larkon intercepted a Panna pass and returned the ball 32 yards for the other
Moeller touchdown .
Padua 's only score came Ul light-

ning fashion , stunning Moeller for a
7-7 tie afer the first quarter.
The Bruins needed just two plays
to go 63 yards for their lone touch down . Quarterhack Dan Schodowski
passed 20 yards to Tom Hardy fur
the score after Ed Murphy had
bolted 38 yards .
MoeUer succeeds Cincinnai Princeton as the big-&lt;~ehool champion,
Ironically, Prinnceton was the last
team to defeat Moeller 20 games
ago. The Vikings won on a lastminute field goal13-12 in the second
game of the regular I 1178 season .

minutes of play. Pt . Pleasant had
brilliant goal line stands in tbe second and third periods or play .
After a scoreless first period, St.
Albans broke the ice with 2:411left in
the second quarter when QB Scott
Tinsley threw a four-yard
touchdown strike to wingback Jeff
Hodges . Tile extra point was good .
Tinsley tossed another 9-yard
;-trike in the final period with 8:28remaining in the game, and iced the
VJctory with a four-yard run during
the final minutes of play. Both extra
points were good .
Jay Minton paced the Big macks
with 49 yards in eight trips . Dave
Sprouse was limited to 23 yards in 12
trips .
QB Tony Thompoon, filling in for
the injured McOeUan, was IJ.4or-a in
the passing department. The Big
macks were limited to six first
downs , and were forced to punt four
times during the contest.
The Big Blacks were panallzed
three times for 30 yards.
Sc ore by quarters :
Pt. Pleasant
000()-0
St Albans
0 7 0 lol- 21

Wittenberg advances to finals
.

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio IAPI - Af .
ter missing two earlier tries from in side 30 yards, Wittenberg senior
Mike Dowds booted a 41 -yard field
goal with two seconds left in the
game to give the Tigers a 17-14 vic tory over Widener Saturday and a
berth in the NCAA Division Ill
championship game next week .
The Tigers, ! ! 0, nvw r. . ~ . . !: ~ .aca,

N.Y., 1~2. in a rematch of the 1975
Stagg Bowl that Wittenberg won 280. Widener closes its season at 1~1 .
Dowds ' kick climaxed a HI-play
drive that started from Wittenberg's
43-yard line .
Wittenberg had scored first in the
game, with Maso Moon gathering in
a ~ard touchdown pass from
quarterback C'hu:·k Delaney that
was first tipped by Widener defen-

der Tom Deery.
Widener bounced back in the
second period to take a 14-7 halftime
edge on a 20-yard touchdown reception by Tom Kingde and a I~yard
scoring r1m by Gpy Oofine.
Following a scoreless third quarter, Delaney brought the Tigers even
with a 12.,-ard scoring run, setting
up Dowds ' heroics.

,,
•

�•

Taiwanese fight to stay zn games

•

~

;
PIRATE TROPHY WINNERS- Presentation of
trophies highlighted the recent annual football banquet :
at North Gallia High School. Receiving trophies were
Scott Lewis, Most Improved Offensive Back; Jim Barnes , Mo.&gt;-t Valuable Defensive Back; Keith Payne,
Most Improved Defensive Back; Joe Peck, Most Im proved Defensive Lineman; Tim Howell . Most

;;.'

.

.

Valuable Player; Jim Cains, Most Valuable Defensive
Lineman ; Clulrles Lookado, co-Most hnproved Offensive Back ; Jeff Gardner, co-Most Valuable Offensive Lineman; Don Shupe, Most Valuable Offensive
Back, and Bill Hash, co-Most Valuable Offensive
Lineman.

LONDON I API - The Taiwanese
are fighting to sl&lt;iy 10 lhe Olympi c
Games, to gu on calling themselves
llw Republic of China and to k&lt;'&lt;'P
using lhe old Kuominl&lt;ing flag .
A pile of letters lies tn the
headquarte rs of the lntema liona l
Olympic Commi ttee 1 JO C 1 a t
I.aus.atme ~ Switzerland, containing
votes by lOC members on the la test
for mula to bring the athl e tes
ofmamland Otina into t he Games .
The votes will be counted Monday .
The formula calls on Taiwan to
drop its old political name . compelr
as the Cltinese Taipei Olym ptc
Committee and march in t he
opening parade under a b'Jlecia l
Olympic flag . If that is approved and Olympic sources say approval is
virtually certain Taiw an's
lawyers will seek to bloc k it through
the courts in Switzerland , legally lhe
IOC's horne.
The Taiwanese are prepared lo
argue before judges thai the IOC has
no right to tell them to mar ch
without their chosen national flag.
They will quote the Olympic charter ,
hich says each team must be
accompanied in the parade by th e
flag of its country .
The Otlna problem , which has
plagued the Olympics for more than
ro years, could be in a state of
deadlock again .
The IOC executive board drew up
the new plan at Nagoya, Japan , la st

Honor North Gallia athletes
VINTON - Tim Howell, senior
tailback and comer at North GaWa
Willi named Most Valuable Player at
the annual football banquet recenUy
in the high school cafeteria .
Howell totaled 2, 731 yards rushing
in li36 carries in fow- years . He
scored 16 touchdowns totaling 174
points. He had 25 pass receptions for
439 yards and passed low- times for
68 yards . He had 27 kickoff returns
for 406 yards, 12 interceptions, six
fumble recoveries, and 173 tackles .
In 1979, he carried the ball 203
times for 1,049 yards and averaged
5.2 points per game .
Howell was co-eaptam of the
team. He made All SV AC First
Team , and was first in the SVAC in
total game rushing .
Senior offensive tackle and defensive linebacker Jim BArnes
received Most Valuable Defensive
Back Trophy .
Barnes had 32 kickoffs for 1,122
yards . He had 58 assists with 72 individual . He was a placekicker,
ldcking one for one on enra points
and had two fumble recoveries . Barnes was All SV AC First Team and
Co-Most Valuable lineman in SVAC
in 1979.
Jim Cains, senior cneter and
defensive end, was awarded Most
Valuable Defensive Lineman
Trophy . He is co-captain and was
third on the team in tackles with 73.
He had 41 assists, 32 individual , and
All SV AC First Team in 1979.
JWlior offensive back and defensive corner Keith Payne received
Most Improved Defensive Back
Trophy. Payne was the team's best
receiver with 14 receptions for ~
yards. He carried the hall 15 times
for 54 yards .
He was third on the team in
scoring with 22 points and had four

interceptions with 46 return yards .
He had 22 punt returns for 193 yards,
42 tackles, 24 assists, and three
touchdowns .
Most Improved Defensive
Lineman was semor middle guard
Joe Peck. Peck was second on the
team with 99 tackles. He had two
fumble recoveries, 41 assists, 58 individuals, and two sacks.
Junior offensive quarterback Don
Shupe received Most Valuable Of.
fensive Back. Shupe carried the ball
47times for 81 yhards . He had 86 attempted passes with 31 completed
for a 36 percent . He rushed for seven
touchdowns, has fow- interceptions,
with a return yardage of W, and two
fum ble recoveries .
Tying for Most Improved Offensive Back was Scott Lewis and
Cbarlie Lookado .
St'Ott Lewis was a senior slotback,
safety, corner, end, and linebacker.
Clulrlie Lookado, a jWlior, was
second in team rushing . He carried
the ball 75 times for 341 yards . He
had 59 tackles and 39 assists .
Bill Hash and Jeff Gardner Most
Valuable
Offensive
Linemen
trophies.
Bill Hash was Honorable Mention
All SV AC 1979. He played four years
offensive tackle - defensive tackle.
Has had 'l:l individual tackles and 38
assists.
Jeff Gardner was Honorable Mention All SV AC 1979. He played four
years. Gamer played offensive
guard and defensive linbacker .

Total Yards
2261 1359
Scoring
161 71
The banquet was opened by
George Hertake , NGHS principal.
The invocation was given by
Reverend Jerry Lewis.
The dinner was served with a
menu of turkey and dressing,
mashed potatoes and green beans.
lntroductioo of cheerleaders was
by Mrs. Joyce Twyman. Varsity
cheerleaders are: .ijecky !lash, Debbie Mays, Margie Thaxton~ LY11Jl
Marcum and Beclcy Jones. Reserve
cheerleaders are Darlene Higley .
Kim Ewel, T~ FAirchild and
Terri Straughn .

an LI

th e

T ;u wanese

urunedtately turn ed on the pressure
tn g t·l 1t rr jeded Every mernb('r of
Uw ]()(' n •ce ived a \Ptter from
Ttuptl say wg legal a (tHlll ·s 1Juld
follow 1f tile \'O te went
:nnst
Tatwan ·~ wtshes .
Shrn Chia -Min g, prl''id·
·f

pr t&gt;ss

co nference

in

T:11pe i

Friday .desptte this. lhe executive
board is confiden t it will gel an
approval vo te from the IOC's .89
nwrnbers . ('...or respondence between
member s indicates many who have
stood behind Taiwan in the past have
cha n ~ed thelr position .
A dozen or more IOC members in
La tin Amcnca are believed to be
'"till fatthful to Taiwan But many in
oth er parts of the world have come
around to the view !hat unless a bold
new posit ion IS adopted. they will

Athen.~

ATHENS (591 ·· Mike druning 4-614 , Randy Sabo 2· J.5, David Mat

thews J ·0-6, Steve Bruning 5-0-10
Fred Ross 3·1·7, S.cott Burson 7-3-17,
Totals, 24· 11 ·59 .
·
LANCASTER !59) ·· Bob Clark 12-

5 79, Jim Flowers 9-J-21, Alan Went~
J 0 6, Jay Jadwin 1-0-2, Scott Hunter
2 I l . Bob Hyde I 0·2. ToTals, 28-9-65

Score by quarters :

Athens
Lanc aster

J)

II
16

Reserve s

Bruce Shriver, Dan Shupe,
Payne and Richard Payne .

Nunn Bush Shoes

Harvest Brown
8lack Smooth

Barry Marcum , Ken Neal , Paul
Hollingshead , Tim Le-e , Jeff Smith
Brian Fletcher and Don Barnes .
'
Managers
Mike Mayes , Eric Russell , Keith
Edwards and Steve Turnf&gt;r
Girls Volleyball
Tana George , Becky Dotson .
Terry
Do~on .
Vi c k i Cetmpbell ,
Holl i ngshead , Lu cre t ia
Sh erri
Justice, Julie Smi th , Conn ie H olley
and Liz Nibert .

Open
Mon . &amp; Fri. to 8 P .M

Tues ., Wed . , Sat. til S
Thursday til 11 noon

• •

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SOUTHERN OHIO

TENNIS
BOLOGNA, Italy i AP I - John
McEnroe breezed past Sl&lt;inislav
Birner of Czechoslovakia 6-3 , &amp;-2 and
Britain 's Mark Cox edged Italy 's
Corrado Barazzutti 4~. 6-4 , &amp;-2 to
advance to the semifinals of the
$75,000 Italian Indoor Tennis
Otampionship.
BRIGHTON , England (AP) Otris Evert Uoyd came from behind
to defeat defending champion
Virginia Ruzici of Romania, 6-4, &amp;-1
and Martina Navratilova brushed
aside Ilana Kloss of South &amp;-1, 6-2 to
move into tbe semifinals of a
$100,000 tournament.
BOMBAY, India ( AP ) - A pair of
unseeded West Gennans, ·Wolfgang
Popp and Peter Eller , defeated
favored opponents and won
Semifinal berths in the $75,000 Grand
Prix of India Championship .
BOXING
NEW YORK ( AP) - Willie
Classen of Puerto Rico was fighting
for his life today in Bellevue
Hospital after suffering head
injuries following a lOth-round
knockout Friday night at the hands
of unbeaten Wilfred Scypion of
Houston .
Referee Lew Eskin stopped the
fight at 12 seconds of the lOth round
as Classen was flat on the ring with
blood cOOling out of his mouth . He
remained there for about seven
minutes befcre being carried out.

Ne w OrleansslipP"(l back into lhe
fir st i)la ce tie v.hen Seattle's Jim
Zorn burned them for his third and
fourth TO passes of the game in lhe
final six minutes last Sunday and
then LA beat Atlanl&lt;i Monday nigh I.
Saints quarterback Archi e Manning
hadaprettygoodday.too . hittin gon
Wof 27 for 268 ya rds and directing a
42G-yard offense .
'
The Fal co ns have won four
s trai ght against New Orleans,
includmg a 40-J4 seesaw overtune
affair ear tier this season, and a pa1r
of 211-17 fin a l minute victories last
year. Atlanl&lt;! is two games behind
Los Angeles and New Orleans and a
Joss would e liminale the Falcons .
The Rams ha ve enjoyed an

tllr~resStve re cord of s uccess
agau"1 the 49ers, beating the1r
northern neighbors SI X stra ig ht
tllll&lt;'s and 17 of lhe la st 19. Overall ,
l.os Angeles leads lhe serie s 38-19-2.
San Franr isco. despite its 1-11
re1ord , threw a gtant.,;ized scare
uno llenver last week, shoot ing out
l&lt;l a 21 -10 lead as James Owens
returned a kickoff 85 ya rds for a
l&lt;luchdown . Bul the Broncos came
ba"k wtth four straight second-half
TUs to wm the game .
That VICtory kept Denver tied for
lh e AFC West lead with San Diego,
wllt ch stung Pittsburgh last week .
B&lt;rth are 9-3 .
LJenver return s home for Oakland
and Mile High Sl&lt;idium agrees With

!he Broncs , who have won 20 of 24
games there since Red Miller
became coach in 1977 .
Both lhe Broncos and Raiders
staged second half rallies with
different results last Sunday when
Denver overtook San Francisco but
Oakland fell short against the
Kansas City Chiefs.
KC tries to halt San Diego's threegame , winning streak but the
Chargers are s ky-high after belting
Pittsburgh last week . Eight
t urnovers,
including
five
mterceptions, were the difference,
with linebac kers Woodrow Lowe and
Ray Preston picking off two apiece.
Lowe took one of his 77 yards for a
TD .

Larry Bird leads
WOLVERINE
10 WATERPROOF

WELLINGTON

Celts to victory
By The Associated Press
Larry Bird is making the Boston
Celtics winners again and lringing
lhe fans back to Boston Garden lwo things he was expected to do
when he signed a $3.25 million
coo tract with the team last summer.
Bird, the College Player of the
Year last season at Indiana State
University, hit a pro career high 30
points on 14 of 29 field goal attempts
and 2-&lt;lf-2 free throws, grabbed 11
rebounds, had three assists and
.made two steals Friday night,
keying the rampaging Celtics to a
118-103 romp over the Indiana

Pacers.
"The only way to play him is
strong outside and front him inside ,"
Indiana Coach Bob Leonard said of
Bird . " He has a great nose for th e
hall and we didn't play him strongly
enough outside. Once he gets two
steps with the ball, the chances are

he'll score."
The victory was the Celtics ' ninth
without a loss this season at home
and drew a capacity crowd of 15,3W,
Boston's sixth sellout. It raised the
Celtics' record to 14-4, the best in the
NATIONAL Basketball Association,
and put them 10 games over .500 for
the flrst time since March 1976.
Boston missed the playoffs the last
two seasons.
In other NBA games, Philadelphia
downed Houston · 113 -1 02 , San
Antonio walloped Washington 128108, Phoenix beat l.os Angeles 12&amp;112, Seattle edged Portland 94-90,
Chicago topped Atlanta 103-98,
Detroit trounced Milwaukee 119-100,
and Kansas City whipped San Diego
107-91.
Julius Erving scored 41 points,
three below his NBA high, and
Bobby Jones t'Ollected a season-high
25, powering Philadelphia past
Houston . Moses Malone paced the
Rockets
with
17
points .

Sa11 Antonto, playing without
guard George " Iceman " Gervin th e tw~ime NBA scormg champion
- got a season-high 35 JXlints from
James Silas and 21 from Larry
Kenon
in
overwhelming
Washmgton . Gervin was sidelined
with a hack injury .
Bobby Dandridge topped th e
Bullets with 22 JXlints .
Suns 126 , Lakers 112
Paul Westphal's 25 points, Truck
R.obinson's 23 and Walter DaVJs' 20
plus the defense of unheralded Joel
Kramer helped the fast-breaking
Suns outgun Los Angeles .
Kramer, inserted into the game
after starting center Alvan Adams
got into foul trouble , held Los
Angel es' high -scormg Kareem
Ahdul.Jabbar to IS points in three
quarters.
Rookie Earvin Johnson led Los
Angeles with 25 points .
Lonnie Shelton had game-lligh
totals of 23 points and 14 rebounds.
sparking Seattle 's narrow victory
over Portland . Shelton's three-point
play with 6:28 remaining gave the
Somes the lead for good 81-79 before
a crowd of 33,335 at the Seattle
Kingdome .
Maurice Lucas paced Portland
with
17
points .
Chicago blew a 14-point thirdquarter lead, then rallied behind the
scoring of Reggie Theus and David
Greenwood to upend Atlanta. Theus,
who finished with 27 points , and
Greenwood, who tallied 20 ,
combined for 12 points in the final
four minutes.
John Drew had 26 points, including
14 in the fourth quarter, for Atlanta .
John Long's 27 JXlints and Bob
Lanier's 20, plus what Milwaukee
Coach Dm Nelson described as an
illegal wne defense , led Detroit past
the Bucks rn Pistons Coach Richie
Aduhato's 39th birihday .
Adubato called the Pistons'
defense a "wne trap ."
" You are allowed to trap the hall
and that's what we did ," he said.
Brian Winters scored 21 for
Milwaukee.
Otis Birdsong, the game 's leading
scorer with 36 points , triggered a
Kansas City spurt of 14 consecutive
points in the fourth period that
carr1ed the Kings past San Diego.
Uoyd Free . the NBA's top scorer.
led San Diego with 32 poinL•.

LINED

captures awards

N~

light Sets

18 ·· Wreath
Assortment
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Pin tournament, also was first place
winner of the Fisher 's Handicapped
Tournament . The Awards Banquet
was held Nov . 16 at Oscar's
Restaurant in Gallipolis .

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mediocre tHi records.
· ·
·
This week the divtston ts split in
geographical pairin gs, with Los
Angeles playing at San Francisco
and New Orleans at Atlanta .
Sunday 's other games pair Buffa lo
at New England, Cleveland at
Pittsburgh, Kansas City al San
Diego, Miami at Baltimore, Oakland
al Denver' Minnesol&lt;i at Tampa
Bay,PhiladelphiaatGreen Bay and
Washington at the New York Giants .
The New York J ets play at Sea ttle
Monday night.
The season's 13th week got started
Thanksgiving Day with two upsets
as Detroit shut out Oticago 20-&lt;1 and
Houston won its fifth in a row , 311-24
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dner, Tim Howell , Scotf Lewi s.

cond . good ftres .

350 V -8 eng ., 15,000 lb ., 2 speed, like new , 825 tires . 108 .. cab to ax l e

.. Struggling under the burden of
SQJ)'le rather ragged play so far this

season, the National Football
Cooference West Dtvision has been
granted a divorc-e - for a week from its more successful rivals.
The four NFC West teams play
each other Sunday and even though
their records aren 't as impressive,
first place is on the line In this
division , just as it is in the rest of the
National Football League .
New Orleans and Los Angeles
share the NFC West lead, each with

·

varsity Football

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO ............... ~3695

~

ByHALBOCK
AP Sports WrUer

,_,wraP UP

bo-.: score

Easy a ~&lt;;.emb ly noturol look
lr p e
Lu ny. plo st.t.. needle s

rt 1r

NFL season heading down home stretch

Taiwan 's
national
u l :on •p!t
c"Ornn uttee, s aid the sa ml' th an g at a

Honored were :

North Gailla ended the season
with a &amp;-2-1 record .
Overall Team Slats
Dept.
NG Op
First Downs
l:ll 73
Rushing Yards
1682 971
Passing Yards
579 3aJ

Locall owner . 350 V 8 eng ine . auto _, P _S . P B ,
landau mOd el. so lid wn ite co lor

.

gtvlni ,t,AA Cl ub Member"ship1 . It ' s

Christmas .decorations.
At A

month ,

oever see the athletes of mainland
China - the world's most JXlpulollll
co untry with nearly I billlon people
- in the Olympic Games.
Peking refuses to let lts athletes
compete in the Olympics while the
Taiwanese are there calling
themselves the Republic of Olina .

C-3_-The Sunday Times-sentinel, St•nday , Nov . 25, 1979

It D W \'&gt;-~

&lt;(........

NEW

BATTERIES
e36 month guarantee
• Heavy duly service baTtery
• For most auto. and
trucks .

Less S 10 .00
Trade In

546.50
)10.00
s36.50

Ba"eries for heavy duty
trucks and heavy equipment .

WITH PURCHASE OF 52 GALLON
WATER HEATER.

CAROLINA

PHONE 446-4554

HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9 AM TO 8 PM

LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

SUNDAY l-6PM

-

3' 2 Sixth Street

675-1160

l'oint Pleasant

�C-4-The Swlday Times-Sentinel, Swl(lay, Nov . 25, 1979

Pro sumdings

LYnl' Center Schedule

Ea~r

a

.v . am 1
[juffolo
N Y Jets
Baltrmore
o us lon
P rlts
Cleve land
C1ncrnnat 1
1

W . L. T . Pet . PF
4
66 7 371

PA

o

7 ; 0
6 6 0
5 7 0
4 8 0

583
500

211
233

417

:1 46

333

197

Centra 1
;o 3 :l 769
9 3 0
760
6 4 0 6&lt;&gt;7

:J15
30 I
269

1 10

0

221

172
209
286
7/6

No"' 76 8 10 p m Open Re crea T1on
Nov 17 8 10 p m Open Recreat1on
N ov . 28 Ciosed
7 JOp .m R ~ dmen vs Otterbe•n
Nov '19 Closed
7 9p m Redmen vs Aus t ra l 1an
N at to nal Team
Nov 30 l 9p m Family N 19h1
Dec 1 2 4 p m Open Rec r ea t 1on
Dec 11 4 p m Open Rec reat 1on
7 9 o m Open Recrea t1 on

167

250

195
277
3 16

9

3

0

750

230

287

3 0
6 0
6 0

750
500
500

305
266

20 4
249

')ea ttl e

9
6
6

Kan C1 fy

5

7

0

417

270
184

2B1
:?OJ

· ) d~l a nu

Nationa l Conference
Ea~t

Phi! a
8 4 0
667 231 22 1
Wash
8 4 0
667 242 211
Ortll ,:t l)
8 5 0 615 284 255
N Y G1 ant~ 5 7 0
41 7 189 229
Sl L nu •S
3 9 0
25{)
231 152
Central
Tnmpa Ba y Q 3 0 75{) 241 177
Ch· • ,. yc•
7 6 0
536 235 219
Mr nP
41 7 182 258
"
7 0
G rPf'r B.:~y
4
8 0 333 183 129
Oel r t•.r
2 11 0
154 189 275
W est
LU':&gt; A I' ll
6 6 0
S00 127. 226
N ew O r le an~ 6 6 0 500 269 26 J
Atlrlll l it
4 8 0 333 '11'1 270
Sc'ln Fr&lt;'ln
7 11 0 OB J 234 339
Thursd ay's G&lt;~me-.
Dt_. t•o, t 70 . Ch •ca go 0
HotJc:.l on 20, Dal ia"&gt; 24
Su nday 's Ga m es
Bultd iO nt New E ngland
(IP Vl'lr1nd at Plltsburgh
W &lt;J:..'l ,n gt on r1t N ew York G1an ts
S t LOUIS ill C1 n(1 nna!!
Nt" A- Qrle dns at Atlanta
M "1/lf'&lt;;.U iil at Tampa Bay
rr1.1 ndelph •a a t Green Bay
+c. ,, n \d'&gt; C•tY a t san D1 e-go
l _.,-, ~\n qeles at San Frnnc 1S(O
M •&lt;lrl'l• at Bd!t 1m or e
0&lt;~"'- •rnd i'l t Denver
Mondav ·s Game
Nn.., Yo rk Jets at Seattle

Oh10 H1gh School

By

Ba sk etbc1ll
T he A ssoc 1at ed Pre ss
Fnday ·s Resu lt s
El let 6'1 . Tal l madg e 54
Kenm or e 68 , Stow 58
Spr~ngf, e ld 79 Greensovro

Akron
A kron
AKron
Gr een 65
An th ony Way ne 62 . Ot se q o 5)
Ar c anum 67 , Col dw ell er 51
Bellbrook 93 , Y ellow Sprrng s Bl
Belleton!a rn e 71 , Sprmy ShawnPf'

60
Brec k "ovil le 79. Independence 61
Bu c keye Central tJ I , Old Fo r t .!.7
Buckeye VrtiiPY Sl. W Jpff f' r \tm 46
Cel 1na 76, Greenville ]6
Cleve Bened l( l rnP fll Lou ,svrllr
Aqu,nas 61
Co l Academy 72 . N Un ron 'i':l
cor Brookhaven 99 , Col D PS &lt;~Ir &lt;;,
64
Col Northl and 67 . Zan esville J9
Col South 101 . Col Hart lf'y 71
Conneaut 67 , G1rard . Pi'! 58
Cre st view 8'1. Oh10 C1t y 49
Day F airv 1ew 58, Spr1ng N orlh S7
DeGraff Riversrde 56. lnd1an Lake

7 11

368

Dublin 71 , N ew A lbany 4]
E Cli nton 52. Greenf ield M c Cl a in

rn

p

Ill

6
8

I

11

'

4
4

Olms ted

L yn c t1burq Clay 59, Georye'own 48
M cH10n Lout I Stl . Ver s a diP~ 41
Marlrngton 79, Poland 43
New Bremen 59. Srdney Lehm ii'l
Newark 58. Co l West ~0
Northridge 75, Vanda l ia Butler 63
N orwa l k 71. Edison 61
Olenta ng y 46 . Marysville 42
Olm sted Falls 59 , Str ongsville 58,

ot

··~,/

•
2. 19 BONELESS

• 5

CUBE STEAKS.

61
66
66

55
87
64
55
59

Hamline 77 , No rthwes tern , M inn .
Lakel an d 90 NE Ill inois 74
Mo . West ern 108, SW Bapt ist 102
Ohio NOrthern 92 , Adrian .d9
Panhandle St. 90, cent. St . Bible

Coli. 73

SOUTHWEST
Texas A a nd 1105. Paul Quinn 103
Sci . Arts ·Ok la . 75, Texas Wesl e yan

58
Cameron 116, Texas College 80
FAR WEST
Adams Sf . 98, Kansas W.esleyan 77
Regis 100, Colo. Rockmonl 54

f,n· tlw ..o.JrliiL'r:-.

.lull t Slll !th lt·d l.ucas\"llle With 14

STRIP STEAKS •••.

3.89

Out of 19 bouts , Meigs youths
fought in 12, winning nine trophies.
Several family members and fans
of the Meigs youth traveled to
Olillicothe to support the club ,
despite a last minute change in the

93"

24-oz.
Ctn.
PINNYf -'•1 COUI'I()N

p

1

\l"l•rt'

-.. •1 "·

C.~'l..H~ At,C,EL~ f6.8 )

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All hlulters are ,·eu unded tha t
every hunter who kills ::1 dPer in Oh io
mll5t a ttach a tempo rar\ tag t•J Lhe
dead deer at the plan· "i1cre it falls

LIPTON

Faygo
Beverages

WITH
COUPON

LIMIT 2

BELOW

ttf'tNYPAII COUPON

"..;. !Jr,l;_

5-FLAVORS

Cottage
Cheese

_

~~

5

location of the meet , wh1ch w:L'&gt;
believed to huve bt·Pn 1n Ht'lprf' 1111
Saturday evemng
The Belpre meet IS Sl"hPduleJ f&lt;•r
Dec . Bat the Belpr e Higil S&lt; il~&lt;d
Any mtere.sted per sons ~-:Hr ~·1sh
tu lJt. involve d in the p r(Jg;·cHn IJ~
boxing , traimng, workmg nut or jll'-&gt;1
helptn g out are welcv m e. &lt;1ust stop
m the Pomeroy Scmor !Ugh S&lt;h•&gt;1l
Building on Tuesday or Th ur,•lat &lt;&gt;I
6om . and-or Sat urdays at 4 r rn

SEALTEST • Small Curd

SAT., DEC. 1, 1979_
.. _,..RETAILS
........ ..,..._..EFFECTIVE
... ._ .. ""THRU
........................................
.

Hlut· Angt&gt;ls w1ll
1Jp1·n
Si 1utl was tern Ohw Leagut• p!a\ r~l
\I ll· 11&gt; ·n~ur.-.; (tJy 1 venm L:
' n·b ~

Wise , 12, 92 lbs.; James Acree 13
1041bs.; Brill King , U, 105lbs.; Rru,:
dy Stewart . 15, 145lbs .: Randy Mur ray, 15, 172 lbs .; Charles Whit tington, 16, 127lbs . ; Roger Cotte n II.
21, 168lbs .

fourn~il! l\'llt ,

thl' Oak lUll

-\f11-r

ttJ• ·

By Gr•g llaUey
POMF.ROY ~ All pt'rsons are
reminded of the ··no sluning" law
wh1c h became effective August 31 ,
1976. Ohlo Revis&lt;ld Code 1033.161
prohl b1 ts the use of a spotlight or any
arti fic ial light from any vehicle at
any lime In additiOn , it i&gt; Ulegal to
use an artifiCial light wlule having a
hun ting dev1ce ln a velucle.
Wildlife officers have been and
Wlll be patrol ling areas where
poaching Js a contuming problem
and airplanes are being used for sur ·
veil lance .
Anyone seemg hghts beamed from
a vehicle near buildings or into fann
held&gt; or woods should immediately
contact a state game protector . In
many a reas. illegal adivit1 es ha ve
posed a threat to inh~t _,. i dw~llm~ s
1r1 rural ctrea.&lt;5 .
C.onvtrtlon under thl' ·,i:m;ng ILl w
L" tl th1rd dcgrt'e nusde:i:t·anor w1th
i1 !lltl .l (.lfilum fint ~ r1f S.cJi -1 and·(Jf 60
(b~ 'i m jail

2-Liter

Bot.

69e

P1

Tea
Bags

Willi

BILOW

~INNYPAaiCOU'ON

SEAL TEST

10Ckt.
!lox

COUPON

p 14

COOKING SAUCES

,.

79

WITif

PINNYfAII COUPON

RAGU ITALIAN

COTY AGE CHEESE

$184 COIJI'Oh
mow

I

Pti

PURPICkUD

WELCH'S GRAPE

PIGS FEET

JELLY or JAM

qqe

·~·
...

.-

@39a9'c

ARE SHOE STRING
FROZEN POT A TOES
20-oz. log

MEAT WIENERS

·~-.
......

qqe

PUUY COOkiDSMOKID

SEMI-80NILISS

,.,._,.,.51

HAM PORTIONS

$1
BEEF WIENERS , ••• ,..:

IIGUW .. TIW!Ill

J.a

..•.
....... ICI

@24jjc

... qae

PESCHKE

.... $1
, ...

SLICED BACON ...... .

St .DeOff JOYAl NIO W/COUPOIIOII Lin PMI

AT ,_.NTPAII Wtn1 Tltll COUPON.
LIMIT Ottl . VJIIUO THIU Ul .. DIC . I.

Fro..:•n Imported New Zealand

Genuine Sprlnfl

LEG-0-LAMB

WMOQ$

....

BROUGHTON

ICE CREAM

79

SIll SV.-11.

r ' _ '/,-Gollan Cln .

s;;j Sf!!

lb.

A 1 M:NN'fP All WrTH lltlt (0\JI"Qtooo
UlilllnONI II' AIID1H.US,11

1.59
1.79
BEEF FRANKS •• • • • • • • • • • •
SLICED BOLOGNA :~........... .., 99c
51.45
SLICED BOLOGNA:~ •••••
BREAKFAST STRIPS ...........
$1.49
,..... 5
,..... 5

12. .. ..,

•

For those hunters purchasing a deer
tag . a temporary tag is furnished
with the regular deer hunting per·
mit. The temporary tag mUBt not be
detached from the deer hunting per·
mit tmtil a deer is killed.
.
Landowners, their childreit,
tenants, or managers hunting on Wt-·
ds where they reside, and
disabled veterans who are eKellllil
fnm purchasing a deer penult,
must now attach a tag bearing their ·
name and address to the dead de.,;
where it falls . The tag may be made
out of any material, but the in·
fonnation written on it muat be
legible . A tag should be prepared ·
before going into the field and the
hunter should have a strong piece of
string or wire ready for attaching It
to the deer .
All deer must be taken to an of.
f1 cial deer checklng station for in·
Spt'ction and final tagging.
Uluo's 1979 deer gun season in
Zone 4 will open November 26 and
e xtend through December I. For
spec ific information on hunting
times. bag limits, and counties In
each deer wne, htmting wne, hun·
te rs sho uld consult the 1!17!1 Hunting
on d
Trapping
Regulation•
1 Pubhcation 85) and the 1979 Ohio
Deer Hunting Law Digest and
Chec k i ng Station Locations
1 Publication
861 ),
available
where ver hunting license and deer
penrut.s are sold .

certlfl··

EMERGENCY
RADIO SERVICE
A:; a service to the sportsmen of
Ohio during the deer gun season, the
Ohio Department of Natural Resouroes, Division of Wildlife, is providing
rn emergency contact service for
1unters away from home. With ap·
&gt;roxunately 110,000· hWI!ers afield
luring the deer gun season and
1wnerous calls reference emergenoies at home, the Division of Wildlife
' "Presses special interest in the
•portsman afield , as well as the
[amily at home .
The emergency radio service is
being provided with the cooperation
&gt;f the following radio stations and
Jther news media throughout Ohio .
~ould you be htmting in deer Zone ~
!Southeastern Ohio) , the following
=ergency ntnnber will apply : (6H)
i94-2211.
The following radio stations will
li'Oadcast the emergency message
tl the time stated below !run
~ovember 26 through December I,
1979:
Station , Location, AM and Flf
JiaJ Location, and Broadcast Time
U"e indicated :
W.A.T.H., Athens, 970 and IOU, .
!2: 35p.m .
W M 0 A, Marietta . l490and 94.3,
!2 :30p.m .
W.M .P .O., Middleport, 1390 and
12.1.12 :50pm .
W N X T . Portsmouth, 1260 and
19.3, II: 45 am .
W.C.H.I., Oilllicothe, 1490 and
D.3,12 :45pm.
W.I.L.E ., Cambridge , 1270 aDil
l6.1,12 :25pm .
Conta ct Edward A. Dean,
E;ducation Officer, Wildlife District
No 4, &lt;6141594-2211.

I ltJt

.. v• .

SLICED

,.. $149
-

PAII'I

LUNCH MEAn ••• ..,:

S UNLIT!

VEGETABLE SPRAY suNFLOWER OIL
I

DELl
4 PACK ••• .

10-Ib. Bag

b ~ oi .

Aero . Ca n

$1.89

BEEF &amp; ONION PAniES ,.,u....
BREADED VEAL PAniES .... ,.,.
FLASH-0-FREEZE CUBE BEEF 1... ....1

"'""I""'"" •rrwnus~

UMil O NI . ¥-.tiD ! M. \,J 1 &amp;1 .. DtC. I . 1•n

...

- .. . . . . . . . .

,,

Burley found in

SUNMAID SUDUSS

RAISINS

contempt of court

$J54

30'
PINNYFAII COUPON

• JIFFY •

-. 32 -o• . Bott le
SAll E ',

- - - . .

• • •• •• • • • •

Ol (

FROZEN FOODS

OSCAR MAYER

12. .. ....

at

(;alllpol!S pick•'d uff 52 rcoowJds.
::i !Jy l;._1r; th r:..-cms and;~ by Sanc.r
J :v;m'l
\1.Jrt.',,J! t·1 l·\·an:-; h ,td f(lur
.J .'l.~ r~t-... ;·r d L1:11 ' -...; hill'~ fllllf 'i tr '; tl s

Ja r

MEAT WIENERS

46
58

MIOWEST

r

gfare
~-­

lU 111 ~0 d t -

tcmpt.' f(lr JO rx·rc·t·nt

lbe Blue Angel s connPL'tt'd on 2'J d
B:l fi eld goal attempt" for :\4 po.·ro ... llt
The Gallians were ··off f! Jrm" &lt;-~t tlw

70
94

futU hn~-' . ~1nk1 n~ unl~

Pi n t

67

53
79
77

periods of play .
Sa rah Evans led the Winn e rs w1t h
ZOpoinl, . Nancy F.vans addo·J 12 " '" !
.Jane Stoney 10 .

' ' ' " ' W!NI . Hill 0 1 PlA I ~

GA
57
61
R5
66
87

Southern TPch 100, Libert y Baptist

First Round

THANKS TO OUR MANY PARTICIPANTSI

54

•.SJ!!

87

Arkansas 56, Cent . MetiDpdist 43
Evangel 71. Harding 601.

NEXT SPRING I

\9

lb.

4' '

The Blue Angels jumped off to an
IS-2 first period lead, and never
looked back in their season opener .
It was 29-10 during the halftime in termission a nd 4:&gt;-15 after three

Cflli.UCOTHE - Last Friday th e
Jaycees' Amateur BoXJng Club
traveled to Cllillicothe for the
Golden Gloves prel!minary boxing
matches held at the J . A. Smith , Jr.
High School.
Clubs from Cllillicothc, Zanesville.
and Glouster participated .
Boxers from Me1gs COtmty were :
Matt Baker, 8, 62 lbs .; Olri.s
Becker, 8, 00 lbs .: Scott Neigler, 8, 60
lbs .; uonme HeCKer, w, tsJ 10s.;
Slawn Baker, 11, 150 lbs.; lUck

46

s

1

winner of the Jackson.{)ak H111
game Saturda y night.

Den talk.

()I llll'i

FOR THE SEASON ••• OPEN

72 . Wyn to rd SB
L1mr1 Cat ho li c 80, El1 d~ b4
L or&lt;11n K 1nq 106 , Lor a1n Br oo k s1dc

Sou rtl v1e w 6Q . N

Angels humble Lucasville
Valley 68-27 in cage opener
Nine trophies won by local boxing club

L e~t1ngto n

~V r&lt;'11n

&lt;.-:

OAK lflLL Coach J ackie
Knight's Gallipolis Blue Angels advanced to the championship round of
the Oak Hill Holiday Tournament
following Friday 's surprisingly easy
6&amp;-27 victory ove r Luca sv ille Vall ey
in first round play .
The G AHS girls were to battle the

OUR FLEA MARKET WILL CLOSE

Strip Stealrs

I' '

EAST
Bluefield 102, S lippery Rock 72
SOUTH

TOURNAMENTS
Evangel College Tourney

Friends • ••

BONE-IN

5' '

College results

..1

To Our

,y

GB

Ka nsas Ci t y at L os Angeles . 10
P ·n
nhoen1• at Portland . 10 p m
Monda y'\ Go1me
1ndiana a! Philade lph ia. B 05 o m

64

Stryker 79, Hilltop 43

N•ght
Sw 1m
Sw1m
Sw i m

E 1yr1a b-13 . Tal Macombe r 66
Fa,rv,e w 58 . Spr1ng North 57
Fort Lorarn 1e 96 . New Kn O)(Ville 5 1
G rflndv•ew 72, B1g Walnut 67
Gree non 51 . Urbana 42
Yamrlton Garfield 87 . Sp r ing
So u th 77
Ham,l t on Ro ss 64 . New M1dm1 57
Hopewell Lo udon 85 . N orthwood
4)
Jona th&lt;t n Alder 88, Bex ley 84
Ken ton R 1dge ]q , Spr1ng
Nor
tnf'nc:.tern 37
Ke ller ,ng Aller 50 . Fa 1rmon t Ea st

Go lden State at Mrlwa uk ee. 8 JO

National Hockey L eag u('
At A Glance
Bv The Associated Pr ess
Campbell Con t erenc e
Patrick Di vis1 on
W . L. T . Pts. G F
Phita .
15 1 l J? 84
A tlanta
11 7 3 'l S 79
NY Ra ngers
9 10 1 19 BJ
N Y Is land ers
6 9 3 15 65
Wa sh ing ton
4 14 3 11 5q
Smythe Divi siOn
ancouver
9 7 5 23 7]
Chi c ago
6 7 6 18 so
St . Louis
61 1 4 16 59
Winnipeg
6 11 3 15 -46
Colorado
4 12 3 11 53
Edmonton
3 11 5 11 b8
Wal es Conf er ence
Adam s Oi v rs1on
Boston
14 2 J 3 1 76
Buffalo
11 6 ) 25 74
Minneso Ta
10 4 4 24 81
Toronto
8 9 1 18 71
Quebe c
7 10 2 16 60
N orr1s Conference
~ontrea l
12 5 J 27 78
Los Ang
9 A 4 22 68
Pittsburgh
7 7 4 18 60
Hartford
6 7 5 17 58
Detr oi t
6 10 '2 14 52
Friday ' s Games
Atlanta A, Pittsburgn 1
Co lorado 5, De t roit 2
Phil adelphia 5, Van couver 1
Sunday ' s Games
Montreal at Boston
M i nnesota at Buffalo
Atlanta
\IS .
H artford
Springf iel d, Ma ss.
Toronto at New York Ranger s
Wash i ngton .at Quebec
Sf LouisatChi c ago
Monday ' s Games
No games schedu l ed

Teays Valley 63. Co l Hamilton
Twp SR
recumsey B,j , ~pr1ng Catt't . 70

THOROFARE ''7)e/r.ae' 'am • U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Western Con ter enc e
M1dwest Oi'v't S10n
M IW&lt;tU k.ee
15 6
!14
K&lt;m sas Ci t y
11 17
478 5
D••n" er
B l4
364 7' ,
i..l,r( i'l~O
616
27)91?
Utar
2 18
100 12'.'?
Pa cific D1v1S10n
P(,r fland
16 7
696
s.·~ ftle
14 7 .Ul
1
An g
14 8
636 112
r oenix
14 8 6J6 Jl 7
· Iden St
9 11 450 5' 1
•n 01 ego
914
391 7
Friday ' s Gam es
Bo"&gt;ton 118, I nd i ana IOJ
Ph!l adel ptl i a 113, Houst on 107
De troit 119, Mi lwaukee 100
So n An to nio 128, Wa shing t on lOB
Ch1cago 103, Atlant.a98
Phoe n ix 126, Los Angele s I 11
~ iinsas Ci t y 107 , San D iego 91
Sea Hie 94, Portland 90
Sunday 's Games
New Jersey at Cl eveland . 7 35
p

? '1 p m Famdv
7 .tp m Open
'l 4p m Ooen
7 9p m Open

C.{)- The Swlday Times-sentmel , Stmday, Nuv . 25, 1979

N . uf

Cl osed

54

NBA
All Tim es EST
Eas te rn Confer~nce
AflanfJC DIV ISI OO
w_L Pet .
805 10n
14 4 778
Ph da
14 7 M 7
W,l "'~• ng t on
8 9
471
Np,... v ar k
9 11
450
N ('V. Jf&gt;r Sey
l 13
30()
Central 01 v rsron
!] 9
591
57 I
12 9
Hn• ' ~on
IC 9
576
Cit'• ··land
9 13
409
9 13
409

47

Swanton 83, H olland Spri nghe ld

Sharon . Ptl /4 , Brookfi eld 53
Sharpsvil le. Pa 51. Hubbard 37
Spring Northwe"o t ern 68 . Lo ndon

17 4

We- s l
Denver
')a n 01 cgo

W ee k o f November 26 , 1979
NA TATORIUM
810pm Opensw,m
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Closed

DATE - GYMN ASIUM

National Football Leagu{'
At A Glance
By T he As ~ocia ted Pr ess
Amer1can Con ferenc e

Ottoville 90, Mendon Un1on 30
Parmd Padua 64 , Vallf'y roroe6?
R ,verdale 72 . CarPy 63
Ro~!ii 64 , New M 1am1 57
Sa lem 58 . Be loit W_ Brttn ch 41

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CO LUMBUS, Ohio ( AP )
Frank.hn County Domestic Relations
Court has ordered that Cincinnati
Reng~ Is d( tensive lineman Gat)'
Hurlev be arrest ed during the
Bcn~a Is game Sunday against St.
! .ou1~ 1n Cincinnati.
·nit" ,·vurt &gt;tipulated tha t the
tl:·r":-t br m a d e at Rive rfront
Stadiu m after an at torney for
Bur le; 's for mer wife , Tina Kay
Burley of Grove City, said the
football player had been elusive and
would not answer the door at his
(\nun na ti resi dence .
Hurley. 26, has been found in
conw mpt of a co w1 order stemming
frurn ~ divorce settlement . The
r!Jvorce was fmal last November.
Hurl e\· ha d been served court
p:.opers ~rdering him to appear Nov.
r, 1n Fran kl!n County for a hearing on
luo non i&gt;ayment of the financial
~et tl e me n t. He was served in
Cleveland when the Bengals played
Ulc Browns on Oct. 21.
lo urt officials said Burley failed
lo show up m Colwnbus for the
hearing and a warrant was issued
for his arrest.
Attor ney
Thomas
Vivyan
specified that authorities in"arrest
defendant between 1 and ~p.m . Nov.
25
at
Riverfront
Stadium,
Cincinnati. Defendant Is a member
of the Cin cmnati Bengals and can be
found on the field , on the sidelines or·
in the locker room between above
hours." He noted that Burley'lli'
nwnber is 67.
• .•
The court has granted a judgment ~
,,f mure than $3,000 . f&lt;r attorneyt.1
fees to Vivyan and Cleve~
attorney Joon Duda and abJo f .:· "'
that Burley is In arrears $2,757 o;;q
tD his wife according to the termll o ;
the divo,r,ce settlement. ·
,~
t

�•

C-6- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntmel, SWlday , Nov. 25, 1979

.. .. . .

.

·,'",',',

Flames' Bouchard
'one man gang'

.·

Grid standings
(F in a l)
All G AM ES
T E AM
w l T
1 ron ton
10 0
Coal G r ove
9 0
P t Pl easa nt
II
I
Jac kson
7 2

5
5

We- l l s t on

Logan
W aver l y

4
3
3
2
I

Ga ll ipoli s
Rock H i l l
Athens
Mt- igs

•

I
0
0
0
I
0
6 J
0
I 0
a 0
2 0

'

'
•

Jackson
p
258
239
193
142
213
115
132
Ill
70
59

70
69
145
130
199
110
179
213

48

44

OP
92

n

S EOA L ONLY
TEAM
w
p
l
T
OP
1ron ton
6 0 0 189 49

I

5

107

0

51

3 3 0 83 107

Log a n
Ga lli po lis
Well s1 on

0
••• 00
0

92 90
103 106
45 127
40129

0
0

64 1 64 1

l
l
l
I 5
0 0
l l 11

Arnens
Waver ly
M ei gs
T OT A LS

0

0

Fn d ay 's result :
Ir o nt o n 7 Ak r on 6

......-

Sa tur d av ·s r es ul t
St . Alban s 11 Pt Pl ee~s ant 0

Samsonite Regenr Attache
THIS
YEAR
TUNIO H HH ;H 1'AC; F:HS \1 em lwrs uf l ht·l !l79 \\'a harm J unior
High School gir l 's basket ball team finished the1r season last week with
a home contest agamst So uthern of ful cme . Pi ctured above. front
row from left to n ght. : l rt' \'all' rt l' ll lt 'kflli l/1 , .'v1 1StJ ( ;l bhs Kill\ r·~l l iott .

GIVE

l.1s" Wa rth and Faye P r id dv: back row . flre nda Bu ssel l. score kee per .
Va lt•rip Colt•. Anaj.!e Dayo. i ,on Wt' a vrr , La Donna Moxley , Suzy Flann(•r y a nd TondH Ke rwood . scorekeept• r. S tan d in~ beh ind th r ~iri s is
r oa ch Hubert Da rs t

Browns, Steelers square off today
CLEVELAND I AP I - There 's
plenty of mutual respect between
the Cleveland Browns and Pit ·
tsburgh Stee lers as they prepa re to
square off Sunday 1n a crucia l
National Foot ball League game m
Pittsburgh 's Three Rl vers stad.J urn
The ~elers ml.l5t W t.Il to imp~ ove
their record to 10-3 on the season and
to keep pace with the Houst on
Oilers , an Amen can ~·ootball C.m ference Centra l Division n val that
won victory num ber 10 Thursday
with a 30-24 defea t of the Dallas
Cowboys.
1be Bro wns . no w the tlurd place
\earn in the same d.Jviston as
Houston and Pittsburg h , m ust ,.; n to
Improve their record t o !i-4 and keep
hopes alive for a divtswn championship or playoff berth .
Browns defens1ve lineman Lyle

t\lzado may be as quah fred a s
anyone to offer an opinion a bout the
Steelers . He11 face Pitts burgh for
the fourth time m less than 12 mon ths Sunday .
Ah.ado bas ass wned a leadership
role with the Br owns this season . He
played for the Denver Br oncos la st
year .
' 11Jey 're a great team ," he said
this week abo ut the Steelers. " I
thi nk of them as the team of the '7&lt;ls ,
just li ke the !Green Bay ) Packers
were the t eam of the '6(1; , " said the
6-l'oot.J. 250i&gt;oWld veteran who , as a
Bronco . played against the defen ding Super Bowl champions in the
1978 regula r season finale and the
opening playoff game .
He saJd Cleveland mu.sl overcome
the st igma of never ha ving won in

Three Rlvers Stadlwn and do m the
Steelers .
" We can l hope for other teams tu
beat Pittsburgh . We've got to do it
ourselves to gel over the huon p ," he
said .
When Alzado is resting on the
sidelines SWlday , one of the
dominant forces of the Pitts burgh
defense will be out to destroy the
Browns attack . Jack Lambert , the
fero cious,
218-pound
middle
linebacker of the Steelers , says
playing the Browns is always a
· ~ pecial ·· experience for him .

He grew up in Mantua, about a
pWlt ·s distance from Hiram College,
where the Browns used to have their
swruner training camps . While in
high school and later as a coUege
football player at Kent State University, he says he spent many hours
watching the Browns practice .
" I still have a big coUection of piclures and autographs from those
days, " he recalled . "Jirruny Brown,
Frank Ryan , Gary Collins, Jim
Ninowski - all those guys. I guess
that's why playing the Browns is
something special for me."

that center Blar Bush is out , and of ·
fensive tackle Vern Holland is
among the questionable . But the
b1ggest blow to th e Bengals last
week was the Joss of linebacker
Heggie Williams, the team 's leading
tac kler .
" We've got a lot of people banged
up , .. Rlce said . " Rut we need to
regro up and we need to pla y well ,
that 's all tiler e is to it "
fUce sa1d veter an Ken Anderson
woudd retUlrll to start as quarterback
afte r being benched in the second
half in last SWlday 's loss at Houston
simply "because he 's our No 1quar terbat·k ."
Anderson 1s lulling &gt;4 percent of
Ius passes. mcl uding 11louchdowns .
F'or the Car dinals . J im Hart has
completed 50 pe rt'€nl , incl uding fi ve
touchdowns.
Ne1ther coach Wlll admit that his
learn should be able to handle this
wee k ·s opponent , but the y know
eac h other 's stats forwar ds and
back words.
Oncmna ti hru; lost four games by
three pomts or less . howeve r . and St .
Louis has lost five games by a total
of 13 points

" A Shop -A- Ram a Store "

TO ANNOUNCE THE

•

ADDITION OF A QUALITY

Bengals to face
Cardinals today
CINCINNATI I AP J - st . Louis
Coach Bud Wilkinson says rook:ie
rwming bac k Otis Anderson is still
improving despite leading the
National F ootbal l Leag ue in
rushing , and that alone should give
the Cincinnati Bengals de fense
.reason to ponder Sunday's game
with the Cardinals .
"O.J . is playing quite well ,"
Wilkinson said . ·'He always has been
a great ball c arrie r , and he has been
improving as a blocker He 's very
nearly a compl ete ballplayer ."
Anderson , in 12 games . has
~arried 245 times for 1.217 yards and
t. the Cardinals' second l eadin g~"""
receiver behind Pat Tilley .
Neither St .Louis . 3-9, nor Cin .
cinnati , 2-10, has llved up to ex ·
pect.ations this year . however . Both
Jeams have been beset by inj uries
and both t eams have lost a n umber
of close games .
: " We haven\ started the same of.
ferudve line in an y two consecull ve
games this season - and we a r en \
going to this week . either ," Wtlkin son said . " Keith Wortman is out with
8 knee injury , and we won\ know un ·
i:u game time about Bob Young "
: Bengals Coach Homer Klce Knows

Op e n Mon .
- 9 : 30 til8 P . M .

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NOVEMBER 26
9 a.m.-9 p.m.
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GALliPOLIS~_...--:-......_..__

TAWNEY'S JEWELERS
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424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

OXF OHD . Ohio 1AP I Th e
disaster pred icted by some a th leti C
depart m e nts seven years ago when
ongress dec ided colleges co uld no
longer d iscrimina te agamst women
at hletes duin 'l materialize at Miami
Uru versi ty , schcol officials say .he
pr ide factor ," said Pame la Wettig .
The Bowlin g Green Uni versity
gradua t e was h ire d t o coa ch
ex clusively he re five year s ago. She
is a lso a ctin~ wcrne n's athletic
dire ctor , overset&gt;i ng seven sports
s w1mm1n g. te nn iS , vo ll eyball ,
softball , fi eld hoc key. tra ck a nd
fie ld , and bas ketbal l.
The universit y off ers 55 grants-i·1·
a1d to wom en a th letes and next }'biH
will h;we 12 hasketba ll sc holarsh ips.
Th is IS thl' rii axi umllln set by th e
Assoc iat ion of Interco lle gi a te
Athletics for Wom en .
" We an" not at th e max unwn in
other spo rts The tot al is not
adeq uate, merely sufficient ," she
said
She said Miami has made strides
since she was hired . Previously ,
women had to buy their own shoes
and pay thelf own room a nd board
til the road.
" Title IX ha s helped fund it
rwom en 's sports r, but it can 't
change a ltitudes. " she sa1d of a lack
of strong acce pta nce of wom en's
athleli cs by st ud ents . "We h ave a
long way to go to change attitudes .
" Hopefu lly. m the futur e we will
ge t a lot more recog nition. A few
vear s ago w~ w~ re not ve r y good to
~a t ch . But we th tnk we've beeom e
•eputa ble ... she said .
Wettig applauds the coopera tion
and en th us ias m of the male
coachmg staffs of all sports on
c amp us. pa rticul arl y ba sk etba ll
Coa ch Darre ll He dnc .
Women have even ad a pted to
Na util us condition ing progr ams. but
she debun ks a m: ~ lt that this
deve lops musc ular women .
" We wor k on weights foc some
tone, not bulk ," she said . She
conte nds women basket ball player s

PHONE 446-4464
STORE HOURS
MON.-TliURS. 7:30 to 5:00
FRI. 7:30 to 8:00
SAT. 7:30 to $5:00

Ironton this morrung. Llty poll ee ex ·
peeled to escort the team into the
city e arly this morning . And , the
Ironton Chamber of Commerce
planned a pre-dawn reception for
1979's state champions .

knowing we proved Southeast Ohio
coudd pla y football, too ," Burcham
said .
Lutz capped wbat has become for
him a routine year with his first
state championship . Lutz' record at
Ironton Is 71 -9-2for eight seasons .
" Bob Lutz is one helluva coach,"
Burcham said . "There's no one bet·
ter in the state, but I don\ want that
to get aroWld , or someone will want
tli.rn ."
TIGER
NOTES :
Anoth e r
m onwnent to the quality of
So utheast Ohio football was sitting
in the stands at the Rubber Bowl.
Ken Fritz , an All-America lineman
at Ohio State and top contender for
this year 's Outland Trophy, cheered
on Ironton , his alma mater ... The
festivities moved from Akron to

Wil son , the Pengu 1ns · c oa ch .
Color ado broke loose foc four goals
within a 3: 37 span of the first 1-eriod
its
best
s ingle-pe ri od
perfocmance of the season - in
beating Detroit.
Ja ck Valiquette open ed the
Rockies' burst at 14 :38, tying the
score 1·1. Eighteen seconds later,
Roo Delorme deflected in Doug
Berry's slap shot for a 2-1 Colorado
lead. Then Randy Pierce stele a pass
by Reed Larson a nd fired it pas t
DetrOi t goalie Jim Rutherford , a nd
Lucien DeBlois skated tw~hirds of
the length of the ice and scored at
18 : 15.
" We must have had seven open
nets and didn't pu I the puc k in one of
them," said angry Detroit Coa ch
Bobby Kromm . " We' ve got guys
whc can put the puck in t he net, bu t
they just a ren 't doin g it. This 1s our
whole failure this year. "
The victcry in the fight-marred
game extended the F'lyers' un beaten
strea k to 16 games a nd gave the
Patrick Division le aders a n overa ll
record of 10-1-2.
Referee Gregg Madill meted out
120 minutes in penalties - in cluding
fo ur mis conduc ts and t hree
ejectio ns - most ly in the second and
third periods.

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Rio
Grande

game, the Irish r epresented the
bullies on the block - in this case,
three quarters of the Buckeye State .
Yesterday, the Imagined sissy rural Southeast Ohio - prov ed he
coudd fight back .
" We've been kicked around long
enough, " Ironton Coach Bob Lutz
said after his Fighting Tig er s be at
St. Vincent , 7~. " Tile thing that
gripes me is people said we didn \
belong up there with the other
teams. We beat a damn fine team an enonnous team .' '

AUTOMATIC AND
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AKRON - Even without an offensive line that averaged well over
3lO poWJds a man , Akron St. Vincent-St . Mary would have play ed the

AT LANTA HAW KS
T ' a d&lt;d
Terr y Furlow , g uar d, t o t ile U t ah
Ja zz f or a 1981 !.econ d r ound d ra t ~
c hOICe Signed Sa m Pel ion , cen t f'r ,
t o a m u lti ye ar cont ra c t
UT A H J A Z Z Wa ive d And r e
Wakef ie ld , guard
WA SHIN G TON BUL L ET S - Ac
t 1va ted Mit ch Ku pc h ak . f orw a r d

•119

CHAIN &amp; BAR lUBRICANT
'

Ml ke Burcham , Ironton 's athletic
director , said a win for Southeast
Ohio made the school 's first football
l! Ue that much s weeter . " One of the
reasons we're playing here (Akron)
is beca use Southeast Ohio is looked
do wn upon , " Burcham said . "Same
thing with the (wire service ) polls .
They had to give us Hlh place or
they'd be danmed embarrassed if
we won i t."
The facts seem to back up Burcham . In Ironton 's l wo appeara nces
in t he championship game they have
been played within an hour 's drive of
the opponent. Cleveland Benedictine
played Ironton in Massillon in 1973
and the Fighting Tigers had to bus
mo re tha n five hours to play St . Vincent m 1ts hcmetown of Akron .
"Damn nght , it 's a lot s weet er

(Note - The foll owing article
appeared in Saturday's Hun tington Herald-Dispatch and was
written by Jerry Tipton a fter
Ironton's Tigers, a member of the
Southeastern Ohio Athl e ti c
League, captured the 1979 Class
AA Ohio High School football
championship . )

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Hilton , Brian Rodehaver, Mark Dlckea., Kraig Koerper ; third row, Darwin Conwell, Dale Spencer, Gabriel Lewis, Craig Thomas, Tink Williams ,
Tim Hodges, Adam Ainsworth, Jolm Moritz , Brian Carter , Patton Rlffe:
fourth row, Jimmy Morris , Dennis Bacon, Brent Wtlcoxon , Kent Koerper ,
J oe Hacker , Brian Je nkins, David Kelly , Rlck Fritz and Joe F,letcher .

Fighting Tiger victory
earns SEO League respect

Friday ' s Sports Tran sa c tion s
By Th e Ass ociated Pr ess

~~ POULAN M25-10" POULAN M25D-12"

•99

iiTATE CHAMPS - Coach Bob Lutz 's Ironton Fightmg Tigers captured the 1979 Oass AA State High School football championship Frida y
foUowmg a Hi VIctory over Akron St . Vincent-St . Mary . Pictured above ,
first row , left to right , are Bruce Taylor , Jeff Underhill , Steve Sutton ,
Terry .R oyal , Jolm Lewis, Scott Willis . Da vid Clay , Sam Bacon ; second
row, B1lly Allen, Dickie Carter, Aziz Seng ud , E ric Scwr, J eff Jackson . T"n

Assoclated P ress
In these days of two-platoon
goalt endin g in the Nationa l Hockey
League , Dan Bouchard is provmg a
virtual one-man gang foc the Atlanta
Flames .
The ve te ran Bouc h ard ~ who
shares th e job with roo lae Pat
Riggin , posted his loth victory of the
season - and Atla nta 's li th overall
- as the F lames beat the Pittsburgh
Penguins 4-1 Friday night. Boston 's
Gilles Gil bert. whose tea m has won
14 games. is the only othe r NHL
goalie with 10 victor ies this season .
" Dan Bouchard is one of the best
goalt ende rs I' ve ever seen - not just
played witil - seen ," said teammate
Garry Unger , who had one goal and
one assist agau"t Pittsburgh .
In oth er NHL games, the Colorado
Rockies beat the Detroi l Red Wmgs
0-2, and tile Philadel phia F lyers
tr1r0med the Vancouver Ol nucks :;.
2.
Jean Pronovost and Kent 1\ilsson
also had one goal and o ne assist for
the F'lames, while Bouchard stopped
30 P ittsb urgh shots. Bouchard lost
hi s shulDUt with 6 :43 remain ing
when Rod Schutt scored from 40 feet
on a power-play .
'· we had some good opportunities .
but Boucha rd came up with som e
te rrific saves~" ~in led out Johnn y

shoot , pass and bandle tile baU as
we ll as men , but that there are
obvious dilferen('es .
" I have a &amp;-foot~ center who can 't
even touch the rim," she said .
" Darre ll has &amp;-footers giving
dunking per formances . But we think
we have an exciting game . It 's
bec&lt;I!ling fashionable to be a woman
athle te ."

BETZ HONDA SALES
Rt

hrysler Corporation
Is Giving a SJOO .OO Cash Rebate To
the lstlOO , OOO Buyers of 1979 and 1980 Cars
and Trucks at Participating Dealers Only .
I am giving an additional $200 .00 Plus Discount . t
have 40 new cars to choose from . Check us oul .
You will find that
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1979

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Get Ready For Winter. It's Here!

Golllpoll•. 0 .

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�C~-The Swlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday . Nov . 25. 1979

Seminoles win 27-16, finish year unbeaten
GAJNESVJI.LE, Fla . I AP I
Power fullback Mark Lyles burst 20
yards
for
the
tt e- brr a kin g
touchdown early in th e fourt h
quarter and clinched the game w1th
':II 3-yard rwt in the final two mmutt•s
to lead fifth-ranked F lorida State tv
l 27-16 victory over Flonda on
Fnday .
The victory gave the Orange Bowl bound Seminoles, II~ . an unb(•atl' n
regular season .
Lyles' touchdown snapped a l()- 10
1 e with 12: 31 left and capped an 8().
ya rd drive . The Seminoles opem--d et
20.10 lead on Bill Capece's 18-yard
field goal after tackle Walter Cart er
was credited with an intercepti on on
a controversial play det•p in Flurat.1
territory . A television rl'I-Jia~
seemed to show that l.arry llrhab 's
pass hit the ground before Cartrr
grabbed it.
O.:hab tosse'J a 25-yard louc hdown
pass to Juan Collins as the t; :~ tur s
came back with 2:2lleft . 8ui a twopoint conversion pass faUrd. and r~n
onside-luck try didn 't work and sc•t
up FSU's final touchdown .
The winless Gators. trytn~ to

sa h· a~t'

soml' prl'~tlg l' agmst tht•Jr
ar ('h-n vals. stymied the vr:tuntt·d
r·su quartt•rba1 ·k tHndellJ of JL/lllll)'
J ordan an d Wall y Woodham with
four saL·k..s &lt;md two interl'eptton s
Hut each quorte rba ck put to~ether •
a long sconng drive J ordan relieved
\\'oudham 111 thr sel'{md quarte r and

quarter and ended with Lyles' score,
thc'fl led the Seminoles on th•·
clin rhmg !().yard driV e in the last

tut five pa sses in a '11-yard n'art'tl
Wid(• rece i ver Ha r di s John::Wn
grabbed tl 21-y ard tour hdown pa ss
11 second!S befcn • thl• fu· st half
ended, givmg r' SU a 10-0 lead .
Woodham directed an 8().yard
drive that lx•gan la te tn the third

twu minutes

Davy Cappelen hit a 12-yard field
goa l in the first quarter fur FSU, but
nu ssed two other attempts . Capece .

· FS!I

F lorida ti~d 1t al 10-10 in the t hird
quarter on Brian llark 's 3!1-yard
field goal and a 2-ya rd run by C&lt;lrl
Prioleau Corn erback lllll r'iorill o

HOUS'IDN ' AI' 1 S&lt;-cond-st,rmg
quarterback Tt•rr y Elston .s printed
72 vards for a touchdown and Te rald
l'la rk rus hed fur a career high 167
va rds Fndav . rallymg ntnth-rankcd
il iiUSton rru~n a 1()...{) th1rfi-quarter
drfi('lt to a H-10 \1Clory ovt'r Texa s
Tech.
The tnumph hfted the l 'ougars , 9-1
w1th on t&gt; gamt• rema ining , mto a
of tht.• Southwest Conferen(·e
lead wJth Arkansa s and offset a
re&lt;·u r d-sl't linl:! 199-yard rushin~

shi.irt'

eff ort bv .James Hadnot . who set
Tl'X(:I S .Tech s ing le-s eason and

lflnniuE~tSfllt¥1
COME HELP US CELEBRATE
STOP IN AND REGISTER
TO WI~ 4 PRIZES.

caret'r marks .
Houston began Jts com eback m the
third period after Te C"h , c1 1 0 1 ~ iJoint
w1derdog, too k a 10-0 lead on Bill
Adams· 19-yard field goal in the fir st
period and Hadnot's 61-yard dash
down the right sideline on thr third
play after the seeund-half kickoff.
nark ca rried 31 tin1es a nd began
the Cougars' scoring on a 14-yard
S&lt;·amper a round ngh t e nd with 44
St•conds left in the third quarter
Houston scored again after l.on el l
Phea r eturned a punt II yards to the
Cougars· 2().yard lme w1th 12 ::18 to
play . &lt;lark reeled off a pa1r of 4yard rum before Elston faked his
way around linebacker Andrew
·nwmas. cut le ft and outran safety
Larry Flours t o the end wne. wtth
Hobert Jom·s throwmg a key block .
Thl• ste tback closed out Texas
, . Tec h's seaso n at 3~- 2. the Red
Raiders· ftrst losm,g ca moauw s1nce

1971 and the flrst time smce 19£2
th ey fail ed to wm at least four
games.
Hadnot, however , was a bright
spot. The 23(4lounder, who was
converted from tight end to fullback
last season, needed just 21 carries to

homeowners

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at what
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with State Farm

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I •

By The AssoCiated Pr ps&lt;,
Slat e Playoff Champ1ons.h•ps
At Akron Rubber Bowl
Fnday 's Results

LADIES HANDICRAFT

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FREEPORT , Bahamas 1AP 1 - A
chartered a1rliner bnngmg gamblers back to F1onda made an
emergency landing when one of il'
two engmes caught fire and fell off
just after takeoff early today,
aut.horities said _ Four persons were
reported injured .
The twin-engme Mackey Airlines
Convair 44(1 carrying 43 passengers
and a crew of three had just left
Freeport International Airport airport for a llight to Fort Lauderdale,
F1a ., when the fire broke out. an
airlines official said
"An engine fell off befure we la nded and the whole stde of the plane
~ on fire, " said Barbara Btstany
of Hollywood , Fla . . one of the
passengers ... About half the people
had to jwnp off a wing," she .'&gt;aid
"The right engine and a portion of
the wing dropped off," sa1d a
Freeport polt ce constable who wit nessed the in cJde nt .
The constable, who asked not to be
identified, said the plane was about
two miles from the aJrport when he
spotted the fire and saw the engine
fall off .
The constable s aid four
passengers were injured when they
evacuated the airplane on the
ground .
Ms BJS!any said one man suffered
a broken ankle when he lept off the
wing . "There were a lot of older
people who got hurt when they jum ped," she sa1d .

SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1979

Secretary Harold Brown .
White House press secretary Jody
Powell srud the meeting with the
Pentagon leaders was scheduled
some tJme ago to discuss the 1980
budget. But Powell added that he
could not rule out the possibility that
the situation in Iran would bt part of
the agenda.
Powell had issued the warning
about grave cortllequences after Carter met with foreign policy advisers
F'riday morning .
Administration officials, in
private conversations with reporters, have said no final decisions
have been made on the use of force
against Iran if the hostages are put
on trial or harmed.
One problem facing the decision
makers is reading the varying
signals from Iran:
On the one hand are threatening
statements coming from the
Ayatollah Khomeini and the student
mob that is actually holding the
hostages.
On the other hand are more conci ltatory statements delivered
through the media by acting foreign
ministry supervisor Abolhassan
Bani Sadr and the charge d 'affairs
at the Iranian embassy tn
Wasltington, Ali Agah .
While Khomeini spoke in a broadcast Friday of "war between the
Moslems and the pagans," Agah
said of the hostages : "Their wellbeing and that of al l other
Americans presently in Iran concerns me very deeply . I am hoping
that their safe release will be accomplished soon ."

All Tlru Plus F.E. .T. E•ch

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security of their current pursuits
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Agah 's remarks were in a letter to
The Washington Star.
Bani Sadr said in a broadcast in terview Friday night that the
climate would "change for the better" if an international tribunal
agreed to investigate the crimes
Iran says the former shah committed.
But he said Iran still insists that
the United States agree to return the
shah to Iran for trial. The inverview
was on the Public Broadcasting Service 's "MacNeil-Lehrer Report ."
The administration's response to
the conflicting signals has been
cautious.lt has almost stopped reacting to individual statements,
preferring to maintain its focus on
the overriding objective of getting
the hostages released .
Official sources who asked not to
be named said the administration is
hopeful of reaching an arrangement
that would give Iran assurances of a
hearing for its grievances at the
United Nations after the hostages
are released .
Meanwhile, U.S. military analysts
said Friday that Iran 's armed forces
have deteriorated seriously since
the revolution and would be ineffective against a major military opponent .
In another development F'riday,
Defense Secretary Harold Brown ordered an indefinite halt to llight
training of 236 Iranian military
studentlJ in the United States . All
Iranian military personnel now tn
the United States for training
arrived before the shah was deposed
last wint~ .

now having problems

1.62 Each

1

?AGE 1-D

Railroad associates

1

:' U6 I.

year, say it is badly needed to rejuvenate the state 's deterJorating tran sportation system .
It would be part of the transportation 's biennial budget bill , whi ch is pen ding in a Senate-House conference committee .
Already in the bill is a luke from $10 to $20 in the state auto tag fee, and a
llat $15luke for trucks which are charged according to their weight.
The department has been operating on interim budgets smce July , due in
part to the inability to reach accord on the gas tax .
However , Riffe gave assurances that there will no more mterim budget'
" We're going to pass their two-year budget bill next week , Wllh or without
the gas tax," the speaker said .
Senate Finance Chairman Harry Meshel, [).YoWJgstown , said his panel
will begin considermg amendments this week to the House-approved capital
construction plan .
Although he said no definite decisions had been made, it is likely that about
$200 million will be cut from the House versiOn, wtuch the Senate finds ex -

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illLUMBUS , Oluo 1AP 1- A showdown is near in the Legislature on a controverSial proposal to h1ke the state gasoline tax from seven to nine cents a
gallon .
Lawmakers reconvene Tuesday following theJr long Thanksgiving holiday
weekend, with the gas tax and a major $775 million capital improvements
bill the top prioriti es They arc expected to adjourn after tlus week WJtil after New Year 's.
Senate President 01Jver O.:asek. D-Akron, says there ts "a bare majority"
of 17 votes m the 33-m•mber upper chamber for the tax . But he said at
week's end he was not s ure that the needed 50 votes can be mustered in the
House . He had heard that the total there stands at 48, he said .
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., [).New Boston, gave no figures, but
said "some of the members are still polling on various proposals . " Hesaid he
expects further discussions nelrt Tuesday when lawmakers return from
weekend recess.
Supporters of the tax. whJch would bring m an additJOnal $110 million a

WASHJNG1DN
The
nation's top military leaders met
with President Carter Saturda y
following the presJdent ·s warnmg to
Iran that "elrtremely grcvc " consequences would result 1! the
American hostages in Tehran are
harmed.
The Joint Chiefs of ~'taff - the
wtiformed heads of the Anny , Air
Force and Navy - went to the
presidential retreat at Camp David
in Maryland Saturday morning for a
meeting with Carter and Defense

BRING IT IN AND THE NEXT DAY PICK IT UP.

D

I'

Showdown near on controversial tax hike

VOL. 13 NO. 43

THIS YEAR THE SHOP IN POMEROY

.

Football

CRAFTY

' ·t ' "

Mike Swiger

Oh•o H 1gh School

992 -2298

I '

I
I

~
President, leaders confer

ATTENTION
DEER HUNTERS

insurance!'
('

classified

jun~ctlt ~imts

991· 668S
149 S. Ttlird St .
Middleport, 0 .

NOHTH HA NDALI., Oh10 1 AP 1 Bold TaJ . a 3-year-old filly ridden by
M1ke Moran. covered six furlongs in
l 11 on " sloppy track Friday to Wtn
th e
featured
allowance
at
T!ustledown and return $21.20, $7
and $5 .40.
Ohio Sugar was seco nd and paid
$2 .60 a nd $2.80, whde Pt Phi Prez
returned $2 .80 for a th1rd-place
fimsh .
r\ l TOWd of 8,553 bt&gt;t $92/.~7 ~ .

piece on the aU-time SWC rushing
chart , passing Jim Swink of Texas
Chri s tian a nd Alvin Maxon of
Southern Methodist. Th e eight
players ahead of him all played
rwming back for at least three
se asons.
?1

gain his 199 yards . He finished th e
season with 1,371 yards , breakmg hi s
own 1978 mark of 1,369 and ended his
career Wlth 2.794 . That erased Larry
Isaac's mark of 2.6:ti SPt In four
seasons .
Hadnot also moved mto ninth

"Alotol

Hll~'fl .F.OI)WN

NOW THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 8, 1979

lfs"-DRIVE SET

I

mterceptt-d Ju&lt;·dan at the FSU 34
and returned 11 to U1e 4 to set up the
touchdown .
Th e VJctory wa s FSU's 15th
stra ight, while the Gators , who
fimsh next week at the University of
~1iami, are ().9-1

Houston rallies to edge Texas Tech, 14-10

IT'S OUR 3RD

804 W . Main St.

relegated to kickoff duty all season.
did tht• second-half plareki r kmg for

D-1 --'llll' Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWJday, Nov . 25, 1979

CHIMNEY SWEEP - Gordon Spencer of New Haven, W. V~ .. lJI a
n06lalgic sight as he travels around the Big Bend area perfomung hss
duties as a chimney sweep . Pictured on a ladder as he prepares to perform the cleaning processes. f.pencer wears the traditional tophat and
black coat .

1&amp;0 between Valley JWJction , ncar
aeves , Ohio, and Cedar Grove, lnd ,
company Prestdent Butch Weller
works as the brakeman wtule Vice
President John Richter fWJclions as
engineer and Dick Wllkes. another
vice president, serves as conductor .
The trio became friends five years
ago while working the Whitewater
Valley Railroad, a scenic rail line
that runs weekend pleasure excursions between Coitnersville and
Metamoa, Ind.
When they learned Conrail was
about to drop the 1&amp;0 line , they
decided try and keep the line
operating . But they needed the
Public Service Corrunission of In diana to rebuild the tracks . The
agency spent $000,000 in federal
money to do it .
Wilkes, 34, Oxford. was a student
at Miami University . Weller , :13, was
working in marketing for Cincinnati
Bell and Richter, 36, was in the excavating business .
Richter keeps the speed at 10
m .p.h . as the nine&lt;ar freight line
winds through back country farm
land and small towns . " And we'd
have another 8-10 cars on here 1f the
bridge at Cedar Grove were open . "
said Wilkes .
The lxidge would give Utem access to Brookville, Ind . "There are a
Jot of potential customers in Brookville," Wilkes said . Currently, the
1&amp;0 is used to deliver steel, lwnber,
housing panels . But all three believe
their btl.'!iness would double if PSC!
would fix the bridge and give them
access to industrial cw;tomers ineluding Owens-Corning at Brook-

ville .
"'The commission is trying to put
these small lines oul of btl.'!iness
because it means less work for
them, "said Wilkes .

cess1ve.
O.:asek hinted that in the area of hig her education , $21 million for day care
centers for cluldren of students, and projects such as new gyms and multipurpose buildings Wlll get the axe . " I'm in favor of classrooms," the senator
said .
state collegos and universities would get $488 million if the bill were approved as recommended by Gov . James A. Rhodes.
However, O.:asek noted that the board of regents, wtuch oversees higher
education development . had recommended only $!50 million for the 11J79-1981
bJcnni urn . The day care centers are an e&lt;ample, Oeasek said, of projects the
colleges and WJ..iversities never requested .
Riffe indicated he would not s it still Jf the Senate takes a heavy axe to the
construction bill which cleared lus chamber last September in only two days.
If major cuts, are made. the speaker said ,the bill would likely go to a joint
conference committee wtuch ma y or may not be able to work out a compromise tlus week .

1
t

Demand Iran flight

727 commandeered
EL PASO, Texas lAP) - A man
believed armed with a knife and
possibly with dynamite com mandeered an American Airlines jet
Saturday at El Paso International
Airport and demanded to be taken to
Iran. Officials said the hijacker was
holding 20 passengers aboard the
groWJded jet.
The lujacker allowed all women
and children to leave the Boeing 7'!1
jet, but forced the 20 men to stay on
board, said John Raymond, an
airline spokesman tn Dallas .
"I was scared to death ," said
Irene Smallridge, 72, of Huntington,
W.Va ., one of the passengers
allowed to leave the plane .
Raymond said he was told the man
was armed with a knife . Radio transmissions from the cockpit of the jet
indicated the man said he had a
quarter-61ick of dynamite .
The F'BI and Special Weapons and
Tactics teams from the El Paso
Police Department surrounded the
jet at the airport.
The jet was en route from San An .
tonio to Los Angeles when the man
' 'informed the crew he was taking
over," said Dennis Feldman, a
spokesman for the Federal Aviation
Administration in Washington . The
lujacking occurred at 8:25 a .m .
MSf, just before the plane carne to a
stop on the runway .
" All I know is that someone run
through, and they told the
passengers to sit down," said Mrs .
SmallrJdge , " and they told the
women and the children to get off

Police probe
two accidents
GAI~ IJPOIJS Two accidents
were mvestigated Friday by
Gallipolis City Police .
Officers were called to tbe scene of
a two-vehicle mishap on Eastern
t\venue. at 11:31 p.m .
Poll ee report that an auto
operated by Teresa L. Longenette.
20. Reedsville, backed from a
private drtve and struck a parked
ve hicle owned by Ralph S. Wdfong .
Vinton .
There was severe damage to the
Wilfong auto, moderate damage to
the l.ongenette vetuclc. l'io c1tation

and the men to come to the front of
the plane ...
The coc kpit conversations,
monitored Ln lhe American Airlines '
ope ration s room at the airport. said
the man repeatedly plunged a kntfe
mto the aircraft 's bulkhead, apparently acting in frustration or
rage.
'11te radio discussions mentioned
the knife and a quarter-Btick of
dynamite . One conversation said the
tujacker might have indicated he
will let all passengers off the air-

craft except for one, who would
remain hostage.
El Paso Mayor Thomas D. Westfall offered to exchange himself for
those being held on the jet. "If they
let off all the rest of the hostages, I
will take their place," he said.
Raymond said he was told the captain was allowed off the plane to file
a flight plan for Iran.
He SaJd the llight was American's
395, originated in San Antonio and
was making a scheduled stop in El
Paso .

Inflation took
•
•
any Income gams
WASHINGTON iAP!
The
median family income rose by 10
percent m 1978 to 117,640, but people
saw little benefit because inflation
wtped out most of the gain, the
government reported Saturday .
The Census Bureau said that for
the second straight year. the number of persons earning less than the
poverty level dropped s~ghtly . Yet,
24.5 million persons , or 11.4 percent
of the population, still earned incomes below the 1978 poverty poverty level of $6,662 for a non-fann
fanuly of four .
The ftgures refiected a survey last
March and did not address tlus
year's income adjustments and
rising inflatJOn rate . The median mcomc means tha i half of the !ami iles
earned more and half earned less
than the figure.
According to the survey. the
median income of all families rose
by $1 ,630 in 1978, from $16.0:0in 1977.
But, the govenunent said, a 7.6 percent inflation rate in 1978 cut the real
gains to 1410, or 2 percent. l1te rate
of tnflatJOn tlus year has been running at better than 13 percent .
Since 1970, the median family in come after inflation has rtscn by
only 6.5 percent
Government
economists attribute tht! slo~ness of
the rise to saggmg econonuc growth.
mcluding the 1974-75 recess ton. and
an mcrease m the number of
fami lies headed by women or young
persons, both of whom tradi tionally
have earned less .
There contmued in 1978 to be a
"'-1de gap between the median m-

comes in famllies headed by a man
- $19,229, up from $17,m the
previous year - and those headed
by a woman - $11,537, up from 7,765
in 1977, the goverrunent said .
The 1978 figures, however. showed
the first significant rise in three
years in real income - after inflation - for blacl&lt; families, ' " median income increa8ed from
$9,563 in 1977 to •10,879, or 6 percent.
The 1978 median income for all white
families was $18,370, up from $16,7~
the previous year .
The nwnber of black families
livmg below the poverty level
changed ~ttle from 1977 with more
than 1.6 million families, or 'l/.5 percent, having incomes of less than
$6.662. By comparison, the nwnber
of wtute families below the poverty
level was 6.9 percent, or 3.5 million
fami!Jes.
Geographically , the govenunent
said. three out of every five poor persons in 1978lived in a metropolitan
area wtth about 60 percent of those
persons ~vmg in the central cities.
A:; has been the case tn other
years, the median family income
was lowest in the SouUt at $15,940,
followed by the Northeast, $18,190;
the West , $18,410; and the northcentral states, $18,600.
The median income figures reflected earn mgs by non-farm families.
But the Census Bureau said there
was a sizable gain for fanners in
1978. Their median family income
rose 12 percent, after inflation, inc reasmg from $12.637 m 1977 to
$15.2110 last year

was issued

Offi'7ers investigateU a two collision on the 300 block of
Second Avenue at 10 :30 a .m .
Police report a flluth bound auto
operated by Jewell A. Durst . 39.
Gallipolis Ferry , pulled into a
parking space and was struck by a
pickup truck. wluch was reversmg .
driven by Larry Justus . 25 . Bidwell
Both ve hicles incurred mod('rate
damage . o citation was Jssued
velud~

240 people killed
The Associated Press
Traftlc deaths continued to rtse as
the Thanksgiving weekend moved
Into 118 final two days.
The toll bad risen to 24Q at 1 p.m.
Saturday.
Travel """ hampered In many
parts of the eowstry by rain and
snow. Travel advisories were Issued
In parts of the northwestern quarter
o1 the nation and rain fell over stretches of the south-central Midwestern slates.
The Nallooal Safety Council
eotlmaled that between 500 and 600
persons would be tllled In tTaflic accldeols between 6 p.m. Wednesday
and mldnlgbl Sunday.
The traffic death toll last
Thankoglvlng weekend was 508. The
wont toll for the four..tay holiday
was In 1988 wbeo 764 penono died.

·-

llllf
Ill II
Ill II
lll1 II

-;

l
BALMY WEATHER - Spring weather prevailed In Meigs County
Friday . Janet Korn, Pomeroy, was one of many wbo strolled the streets
of Pomeroy in short sleeves . The thermometer on the local bank read 7B
degrees.

'

!·

I

�D-2- The Sunday Times-sentmel. Sunday. Nov . :&gt;.:&gt;. 1979
. D-3-TheSundavTime~nW!el. SWldaY . Nov . :&gt;.:&gt;,1979

Designate Athens store as outlet
COLUMBUS - Director Oifford
Reich of the Ohio Department of
liquor Control Saturday annoWlced
th..qt as of December I, State Store
No . 211, Athens, will serve as a
"customer service outlet," as part
Jf a continuing program to improve
service to the pubtic.
Store No . 211, locate&lt;! at ZL East
State Street, Athens, will stock
every brand and size of tiquor listed
in the state inventory.
nus store has been selected
t: 1eause it has adequate ;1orage and
•isplay space. The new customer
service outlet will service all of
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Me1gs, Morgan,
Muskingum , Noble, Perry, Pike,
Ross, Scioto and Waslungton counties. Store hours will be from 11 a.m.
to 6 pm. Monday through Saturday .
"There are ~90 brands of tiquor. or
a total of 1,072 items m the state in ventory 1each brand rna v come in

several stzes l 1n addttton tu
discount. or dose-out item.s ," Direr -

tor Re1ch stated. "While every sales
outlet attempts to stock adequate
llquors to satisfy nearly every 1tem
aVIulable, (especially slow-moving
brands and decanters not always
foWJd in standard state stores'·
customer service outlets have on
hand all authorize&lt;! SIZes and types ."
There are currently 15 customer
service

outlets

in

Canton,

Springfield , Mansfield, Dayton .
Toledo.
Akron,
Warren.
YoWJgstown . Colwnbus. Oeveland
and Cincinnati .
Director Re1ch reminde&lt;l citizens
that this new customer outlet will
not reduce service m the1r local
stores

The ~esignation of No. 211 as a
customer semce outlet completes a
1979 plan by the department for
designation of the l&amp;h State Store as
a customer service outlet. These 16.

oullet.s

ar~

,--------:._--------~---~

wtthm reasonable corn·

muting distance for over 85 percent
of Ohio's populatiOn .

Juvenile Court ,
POMEROY - Two juveniles were
fined when they recently appeared
before Metgs CoWlty Juvemle Judge
Robert E. Buck on traffic charges.
Appearing were Kevin Hudson .
Minersville, on charges of reckless
operation . Hudson was fined $I~ and
costs . Scott Hartmger, Middleport,
on charges of failure to display a
Ucense plate was fined s:;o and costs,
Wlth $25 suspended. His license was
suspended for the weekend.
Geraldine McGilUlis was arrested
and jailed on a warrant out of the
Juvenile court fUed by school officer
Otis Knopp on charges of faiting to
cause her child to attend school.
Mrs . McGinnis will appear before
Judge Robert E. Buck Monday .

To Our

OUR FLEA MARKET WILL CLOSE

., ..

..

STAGE COMPLETED - Through the efforts of
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce a concrete stage has
been erected on the upper par king lot in Pomeroy. The
matenals were purchase&lt;! by the Cllamber with the

labor being donated Santa distributed treats from the
stage Saturday . The ;tage will be available for use by
groups or orgamzations m Me1gs County. flus IS one of
many projects sponsored by the Pomeroy Cllambe r of

WE'VE MOVED TO OUR
NEW LOCATION II

NEXT SPRING!
THANKS TO OUR MANY PARTICIPANTSI

NOW LOCATED ON UPPER ROUTE 7

FANTASTIC
SAVINGS!

ACROSS FROM THE SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Now Through

BESIDE JIM BALDWIN'S GUN SHOP.

HOOVER~
CARPET
SeN-propelled
SHAMPOOER c;QNc;E:~T QN~"·
Do it yourself Cleaning System
Quadraflex · '·'
an d save . . .
agitator
dee p cleans wrth d oub le
anytime!
the brus hrn g &amp; groom rng

Overlap action leaves no

unbru shed center str ip'

Deep-foam
cleaning action

ac t1 o n of prev1ous mode l s

Edge cleaning
plus...
ed ge brusher deer cleam
c lose to th e wa ll

I

I
I

By Bob Hoefli ch

RF Ga1n Con tr ol

Middleport Village will welcome
in the Ouistmas season at 6:30pm.
Monday with Santa arriving .. a
part of a parade.
Candy Ingels, president -elect of
the Middleport Cllamber or Commerce, is heading the annual parade
and Santa wiD be on hand to
dilltrlbute treats to the yoWJgsters
following the parade .
Middleport merchants will stage a
moonlight sale Monday in conjWlction with the opening of the
holiday season.
Incidentally , I Wlderstand the
Middleport First Baptist Olurch,
wluch had such a dandy float entry
in thia year 's Regatta parade, wiD
have a nice entry 111 the Monday
night event.
No doubt Middleport will be
crowded Monday evening 'ca use
rain , snow . whatever , Santa knows
how to pack 'em in .

Ben Petrel is continuing as a
member of the Racine Village CoWJcil through the flip of a coin .
Petrel received 91 voleo! for COWlcil in the Nov . 6 election and so did
another candidate, Ccessa Mae
~ - E. A. Wtngett , chairman of
the Meigs Board of Elections, supervised the flip of a coin to see who
would serve the term and Petrel
picked the right side .

S'o'n l c hable ANL

John and Gayle Rees, sons of Mr .
and Mrs. James Scott Rees, Sr ,
Racine, are doing weU "in the city."
The brothers opened the Rees
Flower and Gift Shop at Gahanna
with a grand opening Nov . 1~. 16 and
17 and the venture is the second such
shop, tbe first being off Broad St ..
Columbus, near the Town and CoWl try 9lopping Center. The Gahanna
shop is located at 80 N. Hamilton
Road , In a shopping center known as
"Gahanna Square."
Gayle has been growing things.
Oowers particularly, since be was

'
I
I

IJ," John reports. "He worked many

years as head designer for a wellknown Columbus area Oorist before
we went out on our own. He knows
all facets or the business -growing,
cutti ng. or der ing, designing.
anything."
While Gayle takes care of growing
and arranging , John , whose retail
and finance experience in the auto
industry has been inval uable, takes
care of the business side of the
operations.
The new shop features all types of
arrangements and has a special
area set aside for planning weddings . Another service being offered
by the two fonner residents of
Racine is one wluch provides for
coordinating home and offi ce in terior decorations for the Christmas
and other holiday seasons .
"Gayle will make house calls and
coordinate etther interior or exterior
decorations ," John said , "and that 's
something most norists don t doo ."
The shops carry lead crystal .
various porcelain items as weD as
Hurnmella in their gift tines.
Wives of the two men, Grace and
OJnna. assist with the businesses.

J.'dU~

about 20 percent of Boston wit huut
""lectrkity, i:l utility spokesman said

t•xplusJun Ul a rn&lt;:1nflole that se nt
· fle~m!'~ s hoot m).! 40 fert into Ule a1 r
and
dcunaf!:t·d
n1m·
major
underground rablt·s
1\Jlt&gt;n Hn\Hngs, a Rosto n Edison
Co sp okesman , sa1d a reas blacked

About 30.000 households in parts of
about half the city's res id ential
neighborhoods lost power . th e

ou1 uw luded parts nf Soulh Boston .
tht• South
r:nd .
Kuxbury,
Durf'hestc r. Wr st Hoxbur y and

Kl

AP I

1

An t&gt;Xploswn

and fiH' in a manholt&gt; outs1dc

1;1

power plant touchPd off a powf'r

failure early Saturday that lt·ft

~spoke sman

Thl'

said
trouble

16 ql bag capacity

bP~an

w1th

an

mo~t

mechamcal failure at a generating
plant and a tre~ falhng on a power

lllJll Delu &lt;e 30" serl cre anrng oven -range 11m Aulo mattc uvcn d1Q tla 1 coc k
3- •n - 1 Power Saver
sJ rfa ce U' " ' I'IJ Fu ll w r~ lh lluo res cent lamp 1!1
Wlnd o :v 000 '

II

$5000 DISCOUNT

DAUMIERSHOW
WASHINGTON (API - A selection
of 100 prints, drawings, watercolors
and sculptures by Honore Daumier
is on view at the Nat ional Gallery of
Art through Nov. :&gt;.:&gt;.
The show, "Honore Daumier
11808-18'191," marks the centenary or
the death of the 19th-century French
political and social satirist.

rULl COtOit SHP' ·IY SJH'
GU IDE' COOII:BOO II. INCLUOlO

-t-to-tp_o-i.n.

fB 7 Cycle buill In r tl &lt;; hv. J&lt;:;,"' er ~P o t
wa she r ._...,, !f l h• IV l.' I ·Sc rut' 11 ::: ycle t1

[] Oclu)Cr· rn 1crrJw;w e Nllll l,l rQ ' ! 1 3

LEGAL NOTIC[
The Publrc Ulilrtres Commrs
sron ol Oh&gt;o has set lor pub ·
Ire h€anng Case No 79-134 ·

0

17 8

t1

·~, ,

nr1 'r us t retr1 qC1Ji .r

rrf'/e r 0 1-ir- , •··•; il• :~' •l(J() r'; 0 1\(~J'! ' .'
a l ;l p qi;J•,, SflOII.L'~ 0 l !H• ' ;y r : ;•·r
', : 11 !()1 [] S~;~ :r r u 'l lc~li ~ r·r·;
· ,:-n ,c. 'rul
11 1r~ ·:d 'r t • ', 0
IJ I·, pJ" ',

pol&gt;c&gt;es ol the Ohro Powe r
Com pany. the operat&gt;on 01

Q 30'·}" ,',

•so

1ls fuel Cost AdJus tment
Clause. and related matters

·' ~P

' ,'

-:,

··· "r · &gt;
' 1("
1'
,.

~~

•

m I =I

Po·, e r i"!vels El
D '.Jh ~e - n_l'y 1 '·' •)\ t:.&gt; ' rJ SO IT Js tate
· · ~~.· -~ 0 Coc ks lnst O'f!Tme or tem
fl

f:tl

1

El -FAC . to rev1e'N the fue l
procurement pr aclices and

[Ji ro d " sur~ a ce COO king unt!S
M oo e l R8 7 47V

ca;JaCd')"

Revcr s1b 1e
r:olr:·r":rww. Q S for, r' vVJ ::.rr cyc le 91
Cry &lt;, : J 1~, 1 )· · ·.• •,nr r• I).~ I ·CriS81 !B S:::- 1!
t"rJer cv·s a•;er drv cyc e II
1

0 CI.JCJ ~ l, s.u N Nilh automatiC
,•;r [] Cr;r__.. k awJ ho ld featu re

: 1 · 1:u·(·
· 1·

;~ ~~

'';Qd ;

r• • [3

:

mo re cle(lnmg per hag

SUPER E-Z

1

You'll lrke the Ourck &amp;
Clean bag changer

Twin lamp
headlight
Br oad . brrg h t beam ol
lr gh t h e lps seek oul lrtler

Thrs hearing rs scheduled
lrom 1 JO to 2 30 p m on
November 16. 1979 . a1 lhe
Crty Councrl Otlrce 118
Cleveland Ave . S W. Can
ion OhiO 44701 An evenrng
sess1on w1t1 be conducted

f)

!rom 5 00 lo 6 00 p 111
All rnterested persons wrll oe
grven an opponun&gt;ty to oe

perFormance
TELEV I S I O N

heard Further mlormatmn
may be obta&gt; ned by contact·

rng lhe Commrssron
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COM MISSION Of OHIO

By Davrd M Polk .

Secretary
diOQOOOI COLOR f\1' 125YM0a40l

,,-.necr~

Qf10

somuln lf-'d wood

'100 DISCOUNT

A LIGHTWEIGHT

(Ji
perFormance
TELEVISIO N

fJ
per-Formance
TELEV I SION

I

13 dtogonal CO lOR rv 1 J,., COS0 2V
.,. 0 .,, 1.J '1r

Regular ' 234.95

~&gt; CC

.~n

L_

( Automat• :

Vl-H PTe )r&gt;t
F1nP lu nmg

• 70 PQSII IOI

r l1f ~ 1n

UHF h ,ntN1

•

y ,l•G Stn '• '
n l n t• PfL 1 tJ 11 '
Tu DP s , ~ tt:_•m
IQQ'\

~us~

s

•

G~

•

B lnr· ~ Mat n • P.r lu•e 'uDf'

e

AFC ( Au1 0f'T10I IL

1

12" dtogonot BlACK • 'NHITE TV / 12)(89HUV!Y!T
MotdeO--tn corry;ng "anal&amp; 12XBQ1 04\1' tn cornea

~fP Olof&gt;"(', (nntr nl\

r110ry ftn 1sh 12XB91 04Y 1n sun yellOw ftn tsh . Ond

SAVE

• 2)(8Q1 041 n

teno cot!o.11nJst1

ONLY •9995

Super E- Z

SEE ONE TODAY

POMEROYw. LANDMARK

F3119

Jack

APPALACHIAN TIRE PRODUCTS, INC.
Point Pleasant
675-3930
426 Viand Street

COD•net consl•ucted

c&gt;l r. · c• m01noroon n r genu1ne t\Qr QINoOCI SOhd s

Features simple triple option with compres sion release for easy starting. - 16" power tip
buide bar to put the power to the wood. - With
automatic or manua I chain oiling pump for
various cutting conditions.

$51

"';,Jia t .· r•
t. .hdf"l H0A860

•so DISCOUNT

•100 DISCOUNT

DISCOUNT

PERFORMANCE LEADER
U3103

S.l! . ~~~:

M rJd el nfq 45Y

HOM ELITE'S

COBRA 87 GLT

In April, about 30,000 people m
Boston's Back Bay neighlxrhnod
were without electricity for about
four days after a fire in a manhole.
And in May, an explosion in a power
station tOuched off a flvH!our
blackout that left about 120,000
people in darkness in parts of Boston
as weU as neighboring BrooktinP and
Newton.

.lui )'. when power was knocke&lt;l out
tu about 400 ,000 people in
Massa chusetts and Rhode Island for
about two hours. Utility officials
blam ed that blackout on a

With Thanksgiving over , all you
have to do now is figure out how to
spend your hard earned dollars what fe w are left alter you pay the
utilities and buy the groceries - in
buying those Cl!ristmas gifts which
the commercials say "wiD make
your loved ones happy. " Can you do
that and still keep smiling'

•

$10

has been hampered by a

'•

C oto r C o n !r ot)
• DC hlesto,o t,cn

SAVE

13fi~

series of blaC'kOUL&lt;;j this yea r_ The
latest rna }or outage occurred in

lint!

Have yo u noticed the improvement at the entrance way of
the New York Oothing House '
The display windows have been
widened to provide more space for
showing merchandise . Paneling has
been used in the backgr ound and the
noors carpeted. The entrance way,
of course, was reduced in size by the
attractive improvement.

•

Regular '59.95

Platn

'14W&lt;'Hr 'Ct

•.

fAPI~ AMfOi C M~ Sr'Vll~

2 qt. dispenser

ada pt s cleane r to

Of the Bend

15

carpet. Spec ral p lush
&amp; shag sett rn gs '

Complete with
WIDE -FLARE
SHAMPOO
BRUSHES!

OynaM1ke Gam Control
AdJu s tabl e Squelch C on tr ol

Wh irls shampoo deep rn to
pile e nveloping grit
ahsorb ing d ul li ng dr rt
Trigge r controls the release
of s ha mpoo tust the way you
like it.

PA Capab d1ty

Automatic
carpet
adjustment

I

You lmow, it'sa small world .
You mlght have read or heard on
television the past week about an inclclent in Flatwoods, Ky ., in wluch a
man entered a drug store and held
hostsges to get drugs .
.run Oatworthy, who gets aroWld,
tella liS that Fred Kanouae , fonnerl y
of Middleport, is the owner of the
Flatwoods drug store where the incident took place. Fred is a phar maciBt and attended high school
with Wayne Sw!aher and Harold
Lohse both of whom became phar'
macillts also.

CHRISTMAS

Reach out fo r baseboa rds
and get deeper into corners

1

I know you will join me in extending a wish for good luck to
Dorinda Wlhon Nardei who for 20
years has serve&lt;! as secretary to
various Pomeroy mayors .
Friday was OJrinda 's last day on
the job and she was hon&lt;'red with a
dinner attended by present and former village officials and employes
Friday evening.
QJrinda has misgivings a bout
leaving . but she has no family ties
here since the death of her mother.
Mrs . Norma Wilson . So she and her
two children, Michael and Michelle,
will be joining her husband , Anthon y
Nardei . at Bridgeville. Pa .• very
clooe to Pltt..burgh.
" I hate to leave and wiU reall y
mlM my friends ," Dorinda commented.
Dorinda is being replaced by
Helen Hreatoo who has been learning
Ube ropes for the past lew days.

FOR THE SEASON ••• OPEN

Wide-flare
shampoo brushes

Beat. . .

'

Commerce .

Friends• ••

t

Plant explosion causes power failure

master

lANDMARK .

cnarg~

. . ., I···-

·~

I

985-3308

CHESTER, · .'.

r

Carsey, Mgr.
Main St.
Store HOurs : 8 : 30 to 5:30
Mill Clos ed at 5: 00P .M.
Serving Meigs , Gallia and Mason Counties

�[).,)_The Sunday Times-Sentme l, Sunday , Nov . 2:i , 1979
0-+-The Sunday Times-sentinel , Sunday . Nov . 25, 1979

20,000 Christmas trees shipped by farmer
CANAAN, Vt. tAP ) - Thirty
years ago, dairy farmer Lorrainy
M'll'chessault decided there had to
be a way to keep lllose scrubby
balsam trees from getting in tlle way
of his cows.
There was - he got ri&lt;' of tlle
cows.

Thi s year , Marchessault is
shipping nearly 20,000 Christmas
trees and about 8,000 wreaths from
his mountaintop farm near tlle
Canadian border to wholesalers
throughout the Northeast
He and his workers plant 50,000
seedlings by hand every year on the

BETZ HONDA SALES
PH .. 446-2240

RT. 7

GALLIPOLIS

Clearance On All
Used Motor Cycles
'75 CB 750 Honda . ....... ............. $1200
'78 CX 500 Honda ..................... $1700
'79 CB 400 Honda . .. . ... . .............. $950
'79 XR 250 Honda ....... .. ............ $1000
'79 XR 500 Honda ........ .. ........... $1400
'76 XR 350 Honda ... .. ... .. .. ... .. .. ... $450
'76 XL 175 Honda ........ . . . ... .....•.. $450
'76 400 Yamaha .. . . .............. ..... $750
'73 900 Kawasaki .... .... .............. saoo
2-'78 GL 1000 Wrecked . .... .. ......... Offer

500-acre farm The regimen in dudes
~gng treks on snowshoes deep lnto
lhe woods to shear the trees,
ensuring the proper shape at harvest
time .
The 66-year-&lt;&gt;ld Marchessault says
he never regretted llle switch from
cows to trees . Being a tree farmer
b&lt;ought fringe benefits his former
colleagues in the dairy business only
dream about.
" We 're able to take weekends off
and two weeks' vacation every year,
which you can't do if you've got
cows," he says.
As he works, Marchessault
switches easily from English to
French speech, depending oo which
of his employees is nearby . His
family moved to Vermont from
Quebec when he was only 9 monllls
old , but in his isolated c&lt;rner of
Vermont's Northeast Kingdom ,
French remains the language of
everyday life.
This year Marchessault has a
crew of 23, including five .ons and
four daughters, helping out at the
pre-Christmas crunch .
lr a shed near Marchessault's
stark, wealllered fannhouse, the
women wire wreaths together,
chattering in French and keeping an
eye on their children . The smell of
balsam and woodsmoke fills the

room .
Outs ide , the frigid Canaan
winters, where temperatures often
hover at minus 2:i, take their toll on
workers and trees alike.
Marchessault says a major fear is
that temperatures wil: dip below 15
during tlle Christmas cut:' 'e season
- from mid-Oct. her t . - ;d -

ALL NEW '79 MODELS REDUCED.

MODEL

FINAL
CLOSEOUT!
4 dr., midnight blue with contrasting vinyl top. Loaded with
everything; including power and tilt seats, built· in
C. B .. .. Buick factory official car. 4800 miles .

'10,000

BUICK PARK AVENUE
2 dr ., hdtp ., white with white
landau top, burgundy interior,
Buick factory officia) car .
Loaded . 8 ,000 miles .
List
$12,500

Clearance Price

'9500

BUICK ELECTRA
4 dr., Marl in blue, white vinyl

top . Average equip .

LEMANS STA.
Fully equipped with factory
air , AM ·FM and V ·6 eng .
3 to Choose From
Clearance Price

'5995

Clearance Price

List
s 10.373

'8500

PONTIAC CATALINA
STATION WAGON
Seafoam blue, loaded

Clea ranee Price

List
$8431

'6995

White with white landau top, red interior, loaded, front wheel
drive . Motor Trend Car of the Year. Mrs . Smith's personal
car .
CLEARANCE PRICE

'10,000

1979 DEMONSTRATORS
1- Pontiac Catalina, 4 dr.
1- Buick Regal, 2 dr. HT
1- Buick LeSabre Limited, 4 dr.

LIMITED DIESELS
IN STOCK

All Selling Below Dealer's Cost

2 TO CliOOSE FROM

IN STOCK

5

'80 TRANS

AMS

All Ready To Go

WASHINGTON (API - Twentyfive per!lms were arrested Frfday
oo the steps of the U.S . Su~e
Court after they staged a serQlS of
mock executions - complete will!
hooded "executiooer" - t9. protest
the death penalty .
The 25 men and women were led or
dragged to two police paddy wagons
after authocitieS'' warned tllat no
demonstratio!U! were permitted on
..the court grounds .
;· The ant1-death penalty rally was
billed as "Florida Day" by its
sponsors,
People
Against
Executions. Organizer Michael
'Kroll said the protest focused on
'Florida because 141 people are
coodemned to die there, far more
lllan in any other state .
"Fida leads the country in states
lllat are willing to kill people, " Kroll
the approximately 150
told
demonstrators .
Each person wore a Sign bearing
tlle name and number of a
condemned
person
awa1tmg
execution in Florida . They chanted,
"No More Legal Lynching - Death
Row Must Go ."
A fake electric chair - a wooden
chair with belt straps - was set up
across the street from the high
co urt . James
Loehman
of
Tallahassee , pla)ing Florida Gov .
Robert Graham , signed ''death
acted out what it is supposedly like
to be electrocuted.
Some screamed, others cried for
mercy and still other shouted their

SEE:Harland Wood
Gene Johnson
Bob Brickles
Greg Smrth

DISCUSS HOW TO OJRRECT IT. ''
Thirty years ago, he says, llle
trees sold wholesale lor Sl each;
today tlley go loc $1 a foot.
"But in those days, we only paid
our help $31i a week ."

Quee n in Nanuet, N.Y., where he
sets up a Christmas tree stand for
two weeks before llle holiday .
" When customers don 't like a tree
tlley tell us," Marchessault says
"COME BACK HERE AND

'Quake kills 35
said Zsco Ospina said at least six
persons were killed and more than
70 injured in the towns of Cali,
Sevilla Trujillo and Ansermanuevo,
all soutll of Pereira.
Hundreds of residents of Bogota, a
city of 5 million , rushed into the
street.s in panic as buildings swayed,
walls cracked and power failed
briefly . No deaths were immediately
reported in the capital.
The Richter scale is a measure of
ground motion as recorded on
seismographs . Every increase of
one number means a tenfold
increase in magnitude . Thus a
reading of 7.5 reflects an earthquake
10 times stronger than ooe of 6.5.
An earthquake of 3.5 on the
Richter scale can cause slight
damage in the local area, 4
moderate damage , 5 considerable
damage, 6 severe damage . A 7
reading is a "ma j&lt;r " earthquake,
capable of widespread heavy
damage ; 8 is a " great" quake,
capable of tremendous damage .
The San Francisco earthquake of
1906, which occurred before tlle
Richter sca le was devised, has been
estimated at 8.3on lhe Richter scale .

BOGOTA, Colombia ( AP ) - A
powerful earthquake tllat shook tlle
mountain cities and towns of
western Colombia has killed at least
35 persons, injured more than 400
and toppled sc&lt;res of buildings,
authorities reported.
The Rev . Jesus Emilio Ramirez,
director of tlle Geophysical Institute
of the Andes, said the Friday
evening quake "was the strongest
recorded in Colombia in the past 20
years."
He said the quake was centered off
the coast in the Pacific between
Colombia and Panama . If it had
been inland, he said, it would have
destroyed whole cities.
The National Earthquake Center
in Golden , Colo., said the quake
struck at 6:40 p.m . EST and
measured 6.4 on the Richter scale,
putting it in the class of a tremor
capa ble of causing severe damage.
Red Cross officials said the 90second tremor pununeled a 350-mile
belt along the western slope of the
Andes mountains, leaving about 50
cities and towns without power .
Hardest hit was Pereira, a city of
about 250,000 some 100 miles west of
Bogota, the capital. The Red Cross

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CHAPI'ER LOADS TOBACCO BALING BOXES -Members of North
Gallia FF A are pictured above Loading Tobacco Baling Boxes that have
been completed by the Vocational Agriculture classes. The baling of
tobacco is a new system of handling the tobacco in preparing it for
market . It reduces the amount of time spent in the stripping room which
is usually spent tying the tobacco into hands . It also makes it easier to
handle the tobacco in loading and Wlloading for market . The baling
process was introduced last year in the 1978 crop year and has carried
over into this crop year with more support . Most fanners that have tried
this way of handling tobacco say they like It and think it ts the answer to
some of the labor problems with tobaC&lt;.'O. Members of the North Gallia
FF A pictured from left to right : Hollie Marcum, Ralph Taylor (behind
box I, Joe Peck, Matt Queen. Tim Howell, and Colby McClaskey . Jeff
Pope is FF A advisor

.,,. ," 'M"' ....,~ ~~ C HRYSlER
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GAlli POLlS, OH 10

COURT &amp; TliiRD

Dear Editor :
What is happening to Meigs County' Or is that the $64,000 question'
We have lost all perspective of our
goals. Yes, I'm speaking of the
teachers ' strike against the board or
is it the board's strike against llle
teachers?
What do we, as parent.s, know
whose strike it is'
It seems as though nobody is concerned whose strike it is, as long as
there is trouble and a fuss and a
conunotion .
Are we concerned with what the
teachers do , or the board' If the
board wants to put the teachers in
jail and the teachers want to go, all
fine and good . But then what'
The board keeps charging at the
teachers and the teachers not to be
outdone charge right back at them .
But , as concerned parent.s, what are
wetodo'
Education is so very important to
our children. At least, that's what we
keep telling them . But when we have
teachers who won't teach , what does
that teach our children ?
My children are blaming the
teachers for this strike . They don't
even realize there is a hoard of
education. It 's hard for me to explain to them, the teachers are NOT
striking the children, but against the
board. They just know they're not in
school because the teachers aren't.
The board wants to lay the blame
fully on the teachers and the
teachers lay blame 011 the board.
Are there any teachers or board
members who want to put our
children back where they belong , at
a school desk learning ' Or out of
school learning what hard-headed
people operate our school system'
I'm concerned . Not about our
teachers ur board but what the outcome will be for my children and the
lesson they will learn from it .
A concerned parent. - Peggy
Bfickles , Rt. 1, Middleport .

GIY
DR. ROBERT VANKEUREN

turn to us
4 sp . tr~ns .. V ·8. P.S.. r~dio , heovv duty , step
bumper . 2 to choose from .

1975 F-100 PICKUP
I

P.S., P.B ., IIke new paint , re~r

l •

se~t

1977 F-150 PICKUP
V·8. P.S.. P.B.,whitespokewheel s.

1977 CHEV. C-10 STEPSIDE
V·8, ~uto . trans., white spoke wheels .

7-NEW 1979 TRUCKS IN STOCK,
4 - 1979 CARS IN STOCK.
ALL REDUCED PRICES.

PAT HILL
FORO,
INC.
Deal
For a Friendly
See Rocky Hupp, Darrel Doddrll
or Pal Hill, Gen. Mar.
lRD AVE.
992-2196

OfRJSTMAS WORICSfiOP
GALL.IPOUS - Mark December
6 on your calendar so you won'
forget to save time to attend our
O!ristmas workshop here in the Extension Office . Come for the day, if
you can manage , or look over the
schedule and pick the demonstrations in which you are especially
interested and just drop in for that
time slot.
A new and special feature of our
workshop, this year, will be some
displays by local merchants
featuring gifts especially ap propriate lor the men on your list.
Be sure to allow yourself time to look
over their tables .
Here is the tentative schedule;
10-10 :20 a.m. - Twine Wreaths,
Gladys Amsbary.
lO:ID-10:50 - The Art of Making
Bows, Shelia Ferguson.
10 : 50-11 : 10
Christmas
Terrariwns, GiMy Powell.
IU0-11::11- Making Snuggables,
UndaRutan.
II :30-11:50 - Edible Wreaths,
Jackie Graham.
II ;50 a.m .-12 noon - Browsing
Thne, Bud Carter.
12 noon-! p.m . - Lllnch (on your
own) .
1-1:10 -- Decorations from
"Natural" Materials, Carol Thom-

Health and safety a re Importa n t parts of the 4 · H program Th e fou rth H in the 4 -H c lover
ernblem sta nds f or Hea lth . Expen en ces th at sh ou ld en n ch a young person' s growing -up ye.::rs
all too often turn to tragedy 4 -H'e r s learn h ow t o recogn1z e and el1mmate unsafe cond 1t 1on s .
They develop safety h ab1t :) and altttudes t hey c an use all th e1r l1ves.

By Jolul C. Rke
Exleuloo Agent
Agriculture

MefpCoUDiy
POMEROY
DATES TO
REMEMBER ... Tuesday, Nov . 28 orders for free tree seedlings for Ul
and FFA members due in our office .
Call for more infonnation.
Monday, Dec . 3 - Forage Day at
Jackson Area Center from lOam . to
Jp.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 4 - Artificial In semination of Beef Cattle using
prostaglandin drug, 2:30to 4:30p.m.
at the Meigs County Extension Oflice .
A new program in artificial in semination is coming. The use of
prostaglandin, giving two shots, and
breeding of cows has now been
O.K.ed. A meeting discussing the
procedures to use will be held
Tuesday, Dec. 4, in our office.
Do you have your lawn mowers
and other small engines ready for
winter' Follow these procedures :
(1) First, dean outside of engine. U
engine is greasy. use a degreaser
and wash olf with a garden hose. (2)
Run engine and get oil warm . (3)
Disconnect spark plug . (4) Drain oil
and refill . (5) Drain gasoline tank
and gas lines and refill . (6) Put two
tablespoons of oil in cylinder and

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

POMEROY - Hope you will be
able to join us for the "Hints for the
Holidays " program on Wedne.day,
November 28, at the St . Paul
Lutheran Olurch, 231 East :&gt;nd
Street, Pomeroy. Registration is 75
cenis per person. Door prizes will be
awarded at this event sponsored by
the Meigs County Extension
Homemakers Cluba.
The demonstration schedule will
anunonia · to reduce loss . "How
Forage Varieties are Developed",
will be described by Dr. James
Monbtray, Director of Research !(J'
North American Plant Breeders,
Ames, Iowa .
Dr. Glover B. Triplett will discuss
forage weed control while Dr .
Robert W. VanKeuren will bring the
groUp an update on forage varieties .
Both are research agronomists on
the OARDC staff, Wooster. Extension agronomist Don Myers, Columbus, will cover steps to successful
forage establishment and summarize results of the Fertibull program . John Underwood , Jackson
Area Extension Agronomist . will
discuss forage fertilization .

DON MYERS

DR. JAMES MOIIITRA Y

Forage Day slated
Dec. 3, at Jackson
JACKSON - Latest rsearch with
large bale hay and steps in developing improved forages will be
presented hy guest speaker s from
Indiana and Iowa durtng Forage
Day , ()ecember 3, at Jackson Ohio
Research
and
E xt e nsion
ll!(rononu' ts will join them lD d program that should provide valuable
information for local dlury , beef and

sheep producers. The lOa .m ..Jp .m .
Forage Day will be held at the Area
Extension Center, 2 miles south of
Jackson on State Route 93. Registra ·
lion will include lunch at noon .
Purdue agronomist Dr . V L
l.ectenberg will discuss innovative
research in making storing largP
bale hay. tncluding use of plastic
rovers and preservMti vt•s such a"'

.,..

County agent's corner

be as folloW5 :
10 a.m. - "Cl!ristmas Dough Ornaments," Marianna Mitchell ,
Pomeroy Homemakers Unlimited
Uub.
10 ::11 a.m. - ''Getting Ready lor
the Holidays .. Time Wise," Betty
Ree!e , Athens County Extensioo
Agent, Home Economics.
II a.m. - "Holiday Cookie
Decorating," Sharon Stewart ,
Syracuse .
11 ::II a.m. - Potluck Lunch
featuring Your Favorite Holiday
Recipes (Please bring your own
table service. Coffee and tea will be
furnished.)
12 ::11 p.m . -"Microwave Cooking
for the Holidays," Judy Burgess ,
Lawrence County Extension Ai'ent,
Home Economics.
I ::II p.m. - "Jute F1owers and
Wreatha," Iris Baker. Syracuse.
2 p.m. - ''Olrtstrnas Decoration
Ideas," Barbara Hackett , Pomeroy
Homemakers Unlimited Uub.
2::11 p.m. -"Holiday Oeme Mints," Third Wednesday Homemakers
aub.
3p.m . -Safe JoWlley Home.

turn engine over two or three times
and replace spark plug . I71Oil , very
Ughtly , moving parts . (8) Service
the air cleaner. Take the air cleaner
off, if it happens to be a paper
element air cleaner, it's very easy, it
can be either cleaned or replaced
with a new one.In the case of a foam
element, which is relatively com mon today on small engines, it sim·
ply means soaking this in a
detergent water base, getting the
dirt, grime out of it, reoiling it and
putting it back in the engine. Once
we've got the crank case oil drained ,
refilled, the fuel drained, refilled ,
we've oiled our povit points, we've
serviced the air cleaner, we're done .
And it's just a matter then of putting
that engine in a dry location to store
lor the winter.
Store inside a garage, storage
building, or something of this
nature . There is no problem just putting It inside; it's going to keep dry.
keep out of tbe elements . However,
if you are forced to store it outside,
out of shelter, they recommend that
you wrap the engine, in fact, if
possible, the whole lawn mower, in
plastic . Putting a tarp over it will
help or something of this nature to
prevent the elements from getting to
it.
Engine operating temperatures

Decorating," Sharon Stewart,
Syracuse
7:30 p.m . - "Ouislmas Oleese
Ball, " Patty Asbeck, Pomeroy
Homemakers Unlimited Club .
7 : ~ p.m. - "Jute Flowers and
Wreaths,"lris Baker,Syracuse.
8 : 15 p.. - "Ouistmas Candy
Making," Jo Wiles, Pomeroy
Homemakers UnlimJted Club.
8 : 45 p.m.
"Christmas
Decoration Ideas, Barbara Hackett,
Pumeroy Homemakers UnlimJted
aub.
9p.m . -Sale Journey Home.
Displays of each of llle demonstration topics , Christmas
decorations and gifts, and energy
conservat10n infonnation will be
provided lor viewing dunng the en tire daytime and evening programs .
All educational programs and activities conducted by l.he Meigs
County Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice are available to all potential
clientele on a non-discriminatory
basis wtthout regard to race, sex,
color, national origin , or religious affiliation .

are important .. . It may seem
strange to say that engine operating
temperatures have a bearing oo fuel
c'Onsumption but it does. Low engine
operating temperatures are more of
a concern than high engine
operating temperatures. When you
have an overheating problem, it's
very evident and you know it and
you can correct the difficulty . The
temperature can be low and the
engine seema to be operating nearly
normally and you really doo' notice
it, but still some very importart
things can be going on in that engine.
For e:wnple, one thing that happens, wear rate will increase very
rapidly as the engine operating ternperature drops. In one test that they
ran, they found that the wear rate Is
appro:rimately 25 times as fast at 40
degrees F . engine operating tern·
perature as at I~ degrees F. And
the difference, it's very amazing
just between, at 140 degrees F., for
elUIIIIple, the wear rate is three
times as fast u 180 degrees. So that
operating temperature is extremely
important from the standpoint of
wear rate .
The other thing which happeru is
that as the engine operating temperature increases, the fuel consumption will decrease. In other
worn., the efficiency improves as
the operating temperature approaches its nonnal range. The
reaMD for this is that you have less
heat loss out of the engine and the
result is that more of the energy in
the fuel is converted to useful power .

••

,,'...."
.,"
'•

'·

·'
",,

..
,

·•

Fuel efficiency improves by about
00 percent if you compare 40 degrees
F. operation to 180 degrees. And
that's a tremendous increase in fuel
efficiency . And you 'II alao find that
as the operating temperature goe11
up, you 'II get more power out of the
engine. So you have the advantage of
getting better fuel efficiency and
more power output if you maintain
proper operating temperature.
The proper operating temperature
is in l.he range of !Ill to 190 degrees
lor gasoline engines and probably
l!IOto 200 degrees for diesel engines.
The engine should not be idled at
no load to warm it up. The thing on
start up, you should start up and idle
the engine for about :II seconds to
provide 1ubrication . Then you should . •
provide it with a tight load and thia
will warm the engine up quickly .
And , of course, quick warm up to
proper temperature is going to extend engine life and it's going to
reduce fuel consumption.

I. H. TRUCK PARTS &amp; SERVICE

Due to the decline in
agricultural service work during

EVENING PROGRAM

7 p.m .

--

"Holiday

Cookie

G.E. LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

V ·8, std . tr~ns . , P.S., bumper .

v ~ a.

atTJir II AU

SPECIAL
40 lb.

1974 F-250 FORD PICKUP

1975 F-250 SUPER CAB

WHEN DO M O~ I 1\IJ\O
AcCIDENTS OU::UR i

1:10-1:30 - Christmas Centerpieces, Joyce Blankenship.
1:30-1:$0 -Microwave Dough Art,
Jane Yoho.
1:5(}.2:20- Gifts From Your Kitchen. Bettie Uark .
2:20-.'l- Browsing Time, Bud Carter.
We hope you will find time to stop
in to see our displays and demonstrations . Some folks brought sack
lunches and spent the day last year,
and that seemed a good Idea . At any
rate, we're looking forward to a full
day and we'd like to share our ideas
and recipes with you . We will be serving refreslunents and there will be
a door prize.

I Jud!.!t' 1/inulrt.

.......

Cooperatrve Ex ten sron Serv1ce
The Oh1 0 State Un rvers tty

pson.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

I
I

Parent concerned

individuals to explore two year
degree programs geared to
agricultural careers in business, in
industry and on the farm .
Local Galli a County students who
have attended A T 1 include David
Mills, Rob Massie, Jim Rose and
Cl!uck Covert.
Career Day Highlights will include
Oireer Opportunities, Admissions
and Financial Aid, Buildings and
Farm Tours, Faculty - Industry Alwnni Symposiwn, Individual and
Group Interviews . Lunch will be
available at reasonable cost.
There will be a Special Feeder
Calf ·'Qean-Up " Sale at Ohio Valley
Livestock Yards at 8 p.m ., Dec. 4.
Local Feeder Calf Conunittee members and Extension will be assisting
with the sale . Calves must be
deUvered to the yards by I p.m . the
day of the sale and may be brought
in after 3 p.m. the day before .

li·sl drin · lulu/ f~~'':f;wrtllll,., .

I
I
I
I

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I

GALUPOUS - Weevils in your
cupboard ? Your first step toward
control is to find the food source that
the pest has infested . This may be
cake mix, cereal, spices, dried
fruits , nuts, pet food or bird seed .
Place the infested package in the
freezer for a lew days to kill the eggs
and all live stages of the insect and
then loss it in the garbage .
U llle problem is so bad that you
feel an insecticide is needed, use a
malathion spray on the shelves and
in the cracks and crevices . Cover
with shelving paper and replace cup board items. Entomologists s uggest
us10g insecticides only as a last
resort .
There will be a Career Day at the
Agricultural Technical Institute at
Wooster . Ohio, November 28, from
10 a.m . to 3 pm . This is an op portunity for students , parents,
teachers, counselors and interested

dan•s lo t•unlpart•

After
a
bla ck
hooded
" executioner" pulled an imaginary
switch, a each prison er was
pronounc"ed "dead." The 2:i were
then toted across the street by other
. demonstrators and placed on the
sprawling steps leadin g to the
nation's highest court .

,,,,.,,
Ulloa J8ll

By Bryson R. fBudl Carll'r
Gallia County Ex-tension A~t · nt

Do(lge Mirada

F F AT U R £

Homemakers'
Circle
8~

aii-IWW

innocence.

um.-. ••II t. .,., 1"'.-.1 J rill n

BUICK RIVIERA

LfS'T $12,700

booked Friday

1&gt;o

on"''u NEW

BRAND NEW

25 persons

warrants" as each demonstrator

BUICK PARK AVENUE

LIST 513,148

•

November U that happens. he says,
the trees can't be chopped down
because thetr branches will crack
off .
In the s pring the cre ws
pamstakingly fertilize each tree,
and in sununer they fight back the
undergrowth that threatens to choke
out tlle seedlings .
he
s tarted
out ,
When
Marchessault says, the idea of a
farm dev oted exclusively to
O!ristmas trees was practically
unheard of .
And the fickle tastes of city
dwellers added to the problems.
" The first two to three years the
shape was wrong ," he says . "We
weren 't shearing them right. "
Then - as now - he does his
market research outside a Dairy

Agriculture and
•
our communtty

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

WITH BORAX
ALSO 2 FRFI: DEODORANT SOAPS

the off season, we will be able
to handle your truck service needs
this winter. We sell genuine
IH Parts and have factory trained
service men to serve you. Contact
our service manager, ..Chuck",
for your service needs
as they arise.

CENTRAL SOYA
Farm Supply Department

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.

69 SYCAMORE ST.

GAlliPOLIS, OH.

PH. 614-992-2176
'

I

302 THIRD ST.

POMEROY OHIO

-·.

'

•

�D.I\- The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel. Sunday , Nov . 25, 1979

it's the freezin' season but 400 A.me~ican~ arrive. home
after
znczdent
zn
Pakzstan
1 '" NT ADS
\
~ g,~~~.g~~~!~":n~~
HOt VVt\
'
7 .
thaw SaIes Out
WASIHNGTON (AP) - About 400
Americans arnved here from
Pakistan Friday rught ordered
home by the state Department after
the Moslem attack on the us Em bassy at Islamabad two days -.~o
..., ·
Looking pale and ellhausted after
a 2&lt;Hlour flight aboard a Pan
American World Airways jumbo jet,
the group was greeted at Dulles In ternational Airport by
Un dersecretary of State David
Newsom and hundreds of friends
and family members .
In their haste to join the waiting
friends and relaltves
the
passengers rushed past .;,ailing
reporters without pausing to commenton their ordeal .
Left behind in Pakistan were two
U.S servicemen who were killed in
Wednesday 's assault .
Their bodies will be flown to the
United states on Sunday or Monday ,
State Department officials said .
It was an emotional scene at the
airport as the returning Americans
anxiously sought out their loved ones
from the waiting crowd in the
customsarea .
Newsom boarded the plane just af-

ter 1t landed to speak privately with
those who returned .
In his prepared remarks which
were t 0 be dertvered a board the
plane, Newsom avoided any reference to the swelling controversy over
th p kistaru.
• s1
e a
. army s ow response
m evacuahng the scores of
Amencans trapped by the Islamic
mob at the embassy comptmd .
..
"I want to w~lcorne you horne,
Newsom satd . Many of you have
been through a fnghterung and dif.
ficultexperience."
. .
. .
Newsom S81d the administratiOn IS
consctous of the rnatenal and
emotional problems which the group
ts undergomg as a result of the
evacuation.
"We intend to deal with those
problems energetically and syrnpathetically," he said . "We will
make every effort to take care of
your needs here in Washington and
then onward for those going on to
other destinations."
Oilldren carried teddy bears and
parents lugged infants and pets
aboard the chartered jet at
Islamabad .
Meanwhile, anti -American viol en -

PresidentCarterandstonedtheU.S.
The
ed b
EmbassY.
y
were
encourag
· ·
h
used the UnitedY
0 8
polJUctanS w
d'
th
States of rnasGerrntmMmg
.e
takeover of the rea
osque In
.
· last week
Saudi ArabLB
·

EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs Prices paid to country packing
plants for eggs delivered to major
.Ohio citi es. Cases included
consumer grades including U.S.
grades, minimum 50 case lots .
Cartoo Large A 67-71 , Medium A
. 61~6. Small A 48-56.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
:cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white n-86 , mostly n-79, medium 74l.n, mostly 74-76.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, light
type hens 9&gt;,; . Cleveland trucklot
trading 42--44. Cincinnati, too few to
rep&lt;rt .

r

Escapees relive incident
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Eight East
Gennans who recently made a
daring balloon escape across the
East-West border, huddled on a platform beneath a homemade hot-air
balloon, are reliving their experience for Hollywood screenwriters
The balloonists, two electricians
and their wives and sons, were the
ftrst refugees known to have used a
balloon to cross the heavily fortlfied
East German border .
When West German police,
checking reports of a UFO, found the
balloonists in a small Bavarian

Wwn, they were hailed as heroes .

Offers of clothing and money
poured in . And Walt Disney Productions invited the two families to visit
Hollywood this week and talk a bout
their escape with Dimey screenwriters and producers. The two
families plan to return to West Germany on Sunday.
Tom Wilhite , a spokesman for
Disney, said Friday that the company had purchased worldwide
screen rights for the story from the
families and planned to begin
filming the adventure next swruner
in Europe.

The escapees are Gunter and
Petra Wetzel, both 24 ; their sorts
Peter, 5, and Andreas, 2; Pet..Strelzyk, 37; his wife, Doris, J.l; and
their two sons, Frank, 15, and Andreas, II.
"They knew who the Dimey
characters were because they bad
lived close enough to the border to
receive West German television,"
associate Disney producer Mark
Stirdivant said .
"We are happy about the movie,"
Strelzyk said . "It will show the
world what IJCe in a conununlst country is like."

[).7- The Sunday Tlrnes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Nov . 25, 1979

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory

Notices

IN LOVING memory of
Thomas 8 . M i ller , who
passed away 10 years ago
November 24, 1969. Sadly

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, p!8rts , i'lnd
supplies .
Pick up and
delivery, 0a'w'i5 Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Cali
4&lt;46 ·0194

m issed by wife and fam ily
IN MEMORY of " William
Pooler. Sr .", who passed
away one year ago on N ov
14. 1978.
Daddy. vou bade no one a
last farewell You said goodbye to none
Your loyal heart had
ceased to beat
Before we knew that you
were gone
Those faithful hands we
can't hold anymore
Have hands cIa sped on the
other shore
Those kindly eves so lit
with love
Are gazing earthward from
abOve.
Tis hard to think that you
are gone
That your deao face we ' l l
never see
But we w i ll trust in H i m
Who !aid " Ye weary some
toMe "
God ~i!lw the road was get
ting rough
The hills were hard to
climb
And suddenly c losed your
weary eyes
And whispered " Pea ce be
thine."
Sadly missed by · Lena
Pooler
" Mom ", sister
Sally, daughter Marily n
and son ·i n ·law Ray Wiener,
granddauohter Caro l, who
ca l led you " Dad ", her
husband Gene , your thr ee
great -granddaughters , Lis
a. Tammy end Joyce
R.oush,
grandson Mick
Meldtinger.

I

THANK YOU
lor makrng us the

....

Hl DEALER

.,,6ug ••••
ola -oon •• ••
'0 !till

rn the LA Area

Cede~ IS IS
'0 I &amp;4 4 speed

i'(&lt;~rm.an

...

Cn•a

&lt;~• r

oSQ Wg

Suo

01.11 Cel•c a. a•r

*

tun :? 40 1 Auto a or

'"0'"'-&lt; ·"-

We II Beal 1he11 P11a
We DeaH Days AWe
We
Cash for Used B1

Cle an

CARS CARS CARS
CR£DIT NO PllOBtiM
WE RNANC£ OUR OWN
/1 f leo. I•" ;'1;'15

ro Ne'IIW Yo· ~ ~·

7;!f"\11.1sYtlLS

C L!'!

r,

c •.a

ll t~c

74 Ve-g.1 H oi le"&gt;tJ.o CI&lt; 71 Old~ C pe
60 011"~c'" ' 10 C'"'oose r '0"'

Ch-••

')i Camaro

ll8 4so loa1

Monte Carlo. lully eo
rncl facl all &amp;p• r
'76 Malibu clm'c co up•
10aded • ,!act arr &amp; 1
'76 l:noala Clmrc Coup
Rar e' Super laadei
')\ Malrbu Clmrc has

' )6

1.1

I C AR'&gt;
IN RlJI,.t4 •"J t , C(. "'()l TlQ N

1 &amp;OOCI lll._...torJ4 'ru Ullllt l ortblf&lt;h' 1 tr1M. Atn - and I MUST
M~t

II••

l•mt and SJ(RltA " tiW

ca u

~··

VI

·'"' \.-44 '·

11,1 O¥elf Utf !0111( ~0 Jltl
Ul 0~ I P11A IK ltOW IS

t

.~
w•·· • ~ $4 '1' •
71\-' f ,A

14

lftl' ' '

M 1211 tor

'~

Pli&lt;,j l •

'.· • ."&amp;Xl"9A
&lt;; t~ .'~r~·m S •l

·, )lll llf

&lt;; r.:~1,. ~n

s r~

.bOC, TB

ii\I .:I'J''"

Br,,n zr&gt; I',')'}
VOt

1"1 ~. w Ar, [ N
t J.; ~
~ ~~ ! 7C(l6

TB

ev~ r yth1ng 1 p!almurn ~

'74 Cap11ce Cl.ssrc cou 1
La adell me I arr &amp;P'

Pets for
Sale
- ----

Auto Sales

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western Sadd les and
h a rn ess
Horse s
and
pon ies . Ruth Reeves. 614
698 32 90 . Ba rding
and
Ri di ng Lessons and Horse
Ca r e · products . Western
bOots . Chi ldren 's S15 . .SO
Adults S29 .00

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .
7 pm . Har1ford Communi ty
Ce nter, Hartford , wv . 4
m i les above Pomer oy
Mason Br1dge .

Sales
- - - Auto
-------1978 CHEVRO LET Diese l
I B ig George) all ext r a Call
388 8•70

&amp;MQMIII
••11/Vf

Lorain County.
Under discounting, an operator
accepts a bet for less than full value.
For example, a player could place a
$1 bet for M cents . The player collects $1, however . lC the number is a
winner .
The payoff rate for all three
games is the same : 500-1 for
choosing a three-digit number in the
exact order; payoffs for other combinations are also similar in the
three games.
The operators of illegal games say
they don l play any changes to compete with the state's operations.
NOTICE o•
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given
!hal on Dec . 5, 1979 al 10
a .m a public sale will be
held at The ot1 ices of The
Central Trust Co . N .A .,
Mlddlepo.-1 1 OH , to sell to.Ci!lsh
the
following
collateral to -wit :
1 ·• 1974 Chevrolet 2-dOor
Camara,
Ser .
No .
1Q87H4N238812
The Con ·
tral Trust Co., M iddlepon ,
OH. reserves the right tO
bid at the s.ale
(1 II 21, 23, 75, 3tc

RI SING STA R Kennel
Bo arding Call 367 ·0292

MR . MECHANIC

how to play . And many who will bet
the state's game regularly would
have been afraid to bet the illegal
games ... to deal with the runners ...
with people like me ."
A numbers ''runner," who moves
bets from co-workers in a local factory to a game operator, contends
that the state's new game will help
the county 's illegally operated numbers game and bolita .
"It will add respectibWty to bolita
and the numbers ," he said.
Gamblers think the use of a rWl!ler
will continue to make both illegal
games attractive, because of the
familiarity and confidence between
the runner and the better.
Credit is among the reasons why
gamblers don 't upect their
operations to suffer. Regular
players have the advantage of being
able to place a bet by telephone with
the MU1ner collecting later.
Also working the the gamblers'
favor is discounting - a feature
reportedly part of some illegal
games in Cleveland, but not in

71 C HEV IMP ALA. 2 doo r

HT , auto . P S. PB , Phon e
441&gt; 3870.

1979 FORD F 15(), • wheel
d rive , factory
topper .
Au to . P S., P . B . $6800 .
Phone 965 4339.
1973 OLDSMOBILE . 4
b ra nd new t ires in goos
shape ~1 7094 .

1978 AMX Black 11. gold
frim 304 , v 8. Auto . wn i re
leathe r . r&lt;Jd ial mags, AM
FM &lt;j fe-re-o . tach .. bucket
sea ts , lots ot ex tras Call
245 924B
1976 M O NZA $7 ,000
446 0978 or 367 0315

Call

I975 M ONTE CAR LO Lan
dau , many ex tra s. Gd
co nd . ca ll 446 3175.
1969 NOVA
Mint cond .
$1/00 Call 446 3395
1970 C H E VEL LE Sharp ,
for sa le or t ,.ade . Call 446
0119

1975 CAMARO
GOOd
c ond ., 4·spd , cil lt .u6·4740
afTer 5.
1975 DODGE C LUB CAB
pickup . Wi th camper top
and too l boxes . Cal l 440
4953.

1976 FOR 0 F 150 4 wd
Good clean truck . To pper s,
w •de t i r es, white wheels,
new d ual e)C haust . 9'92 S896 .

1974 AMC MATADOR . one
owner . GOOd body , gOOd
tires. and new bat tery
S750. Cal l 367 ·0667 alTer 4: 30
p .m .

1977 CUTLASS SU PREME ,
AM tape deck . cru ise con ·
troi , tilt wtleel . Excellent
condi tion . $4500. 992 ·5786 .

1970 CORVETTE
Both
tops, 3.50 H . P . 4 sp d ., c a!l
.u6 7304.

1977 CHEVY

NOVA , 35()
engine, auTo., $ 1000. After 5
p m . 99'1 3897 .
1975 GRA N TORINO Ford
stat ion wagon . P ower win
do~ . A .C., cruise control.
Asking $2500 . 742 ·2008
1977
THUNDERBI~O .
P .S, P .B ., A .C. , radial
II res . AM F M. SJSOO. 747
3594

Wl f i-1 \(P AP f

1978 JEEP CJ 5
Black ,
10 00)( 15
1ir es.
n l um
wheels , 11 ,500 acTual miles ,
ca ll 446 0859

Auto Sales

1973 PLYMOUTH ROA D
Runner , 340, " speed New
t ires and mags . 9'92 7768 or
992 5671.

Fully
1976 OODG E VAN
equipped , one owner . Call
6" 156·6409 '
19 79 FORD FIESTA · 6,000
miles . a .c .. S5, 475. cos t , sell
S. ,BOO Call 446 04'14.
1978 HONDA XL
Exc.
co nd ., new tires and_. extra
tir es and wheel s ; 35 mpg .
on r eg . gas, a .c ., a m -fm
cilsseffe , al l extras, cal l
4&lt;46 1&lt;131.

Auto Sales
1976 FORO 1/ ' ton pick. ·up,
307 V 8, auto , p .s .• p .b .,
will tra de for any F .W .D .
truck . Call 4.46 ·0515

197• F .W .O . toyota Land
Crui ser , 6-cyl , 4·spd ., wide
t ires,
chrome
spoke
wheels, locko ut hubs. 43 ,000
m iles, e-x c. cond . . SJ ,2SO .
Call .u6 3131

1976 CHEVY 4x4, 6-c y l. 4·
spd , S3500 . and
1977
Camara Rally Sport LT .
loaded . S4100 Call4&lt;46·2240 .
1973 VEGA body wllh
cragers. new paint, ~arp
AI~ other V ·8 Vega parts .
Call145·9213.
1973 VW Super BUll . call
446 7380 .
1971 GMC tri axle dump
truck S6,500 with job . 74
Dodge Dar! , auto .• S1 , 100
65 Dodge red a. while c~ur
c h bus , gooc:l shape S1 ,000.
7_. Chevy 31.. t . auto . p .u . air .
Sl..SOO. Call 156· 1270 or 4&lt;46·
3131.

1977 Plymouth Volare St. Wag....... $2895
Loca l one owner . 6 cvt.

1976 TRAN S AM. bla c k ,
auto , AM FM c assette ,
ti : r wheel , air Cat I 843 2965
after 6 or anyTime on
weel&lt;ends
1975 INTERNATIONA L
hea vy duty 1' 1 ton p1 ckup
35,000 mi les Good cOd iti on .
M eigs EQUipment . 992 2176.
1976 FORD BRONCO , good
cond i t ion , 33,000 miles.
AM ·FM tape , P S . , P . B., 4
wh ee l drive . S4AOO After 5
p m , 997 2400or 99'} 5169
1977 FORD F1.SO pickup ,
12000 actual m i les , a uto ..
ps, S3.800 446 4053

1975 AMC Hornet Sl Wag. ........... $1995
P .S . P B .. A. C.

1978 Ford Fairmont ............. .... ... $3295
Sharp, 4 cy l.

1974 Mazda .. .. .......... .. ...... .. .... $1095
B l ue, 4CY'I .

1976 AMC Pacer. .....................$2195
Auto., P .S.,6cyl.

Prices have been reduced on these cars &amp;
others, for your best deal check with us
first.
··

RIVERSIDE TRADE CENTER
1220 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

CARPET and Up~olslery
cleaning . Davis, phone 446029• . Quality WORK a!
REASONABLE
PRICE S
SINCE 1970.

Card of Thanks
THE FAMILY of Ralph 0 .
Keller would like to ex
press their sincere thanks
and appre-cia1ion to our
friends and relatives for
the many beautifY! flowers ,
the cards, the food and al l
other expressions of sym
pathy . Special thanks t o the
doctors and nurses at
Holzer Hospital and at the
Pine-crest Care Center , the
Ewing Funeral Home and
the Rev . Richrd Thomas
God Bless each of you
Wife Marcia , Children and
Grandchildren

Plumbing 1 Heating
CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and P ine
Phone AA6 ·3888 or 446 ·-«77
DEWITT ' S PLUMBING
AND HEAT ING
Route 160 at Evergr~n
Phone 446 -1735.
GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbing
Heating
Air
condition ing . 300 Fourth
Ave . Ph . 4&lt;46· 1637
STANDARD
Plumbino ·Heating
215 Th ird Ave , U6·3781

Help wanted

NO
HUNTING ,
no
tr espassing on my propert y
in Olive Township . F . M
Myers .

DEER HEADS mounted
Perry Kennedy , 742 ·2927 ·

tgomery .

RIVERSIDE
1

100.00 REWARD

VW - AMC - JEEP
Parts &amp; Service
WIU BE CLOSED

White Charolais Cow,
Tag No. 47. May have
calf. Lost in vicinity of
Rt . SU .

Phone 446-3345

446-8696

SAT., DEC. 1
FOR INVENTORY
GALliA CO.
GUN CLUB
SLUG SHOOT
Open Sights On~

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 00. Factorv choke only
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249 .

GAUIA CO. GUN

CLUB

SLUG SHOOT
Open Sights On~
Starting Tme 10 AM

nL??

Sunday,Nov. 25, 1979 i
PUBLIC IS tNVITED
NO
HUNTING
or
trespassing day or night on
the Charles Yost and Ivan
Well farms

After 4 P.M.
LOST . BLACK and white
male Walker coonhound .
Tanners Run area . 247
3663 .

FOUND : C HERRY R idge ,

a beagle . Ca ll to ident ify ,

m

7363.

LOST OR STOLEN : 16 It
Weaver John boat with 5
h.p . motor Reward . 949
2610 .
LOST
or stolen : from
Forest Acres Park Male
bluef ic k crossed with Red ·
bone . Has one eye . Childs
pet .
Reward
for
in ·
formation Contact Randy
Hysell, Now Lima Rd ., 742 ·
3065. Al!tO, would the man
that called abOut this dog ,
please ca ll back .

For Rent

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

MEDIUM SIZED Collie
type, male, lovabl e, brown
and white . ShO ts and war
med . Human e Soc 1ety, 997
6160.

AAA
EXCAVATORS
Bac khoe .
dozer , dump
truck . Licensed to 1nstall
septic systems . No job too
big or too small For in
formation , call 446 8565 or
156 1911.

PART BLACK Labrador
puppy . S mo . Good with
c hi ldren 992 3618.

Pets for Sale
BRIAIIIPATCH
KEN
NE L S.
Boardi ng and
groomll\&lt;;l .
AKC Gordon
Setters, English Cocker
Spaniels . Cal l-'46 4191 .

for

POODLE GROOMING .
Ca ll Judy Tayl or at 367
7710 .
DRAGONWYNO
CAT
TERY
KENNEL. AKC
Chow Chow dogs
CFA
Siamese, Himalayan and
Persian cats
Available
now , 1 poodle, i!lnd J adult
Him.-J~Iayans. .
Orde,.s for
sPring puppi es and kittens
are belf\9 accepted . Call
446·J844after 6p .m .

STUCCO .
pla stering ,
plaster
repair , texture
ce ilings , fre e esti mlltes .
Call 256 1181

- - ---

KE N MANNON MOBILE
WELDING Service . Cut
Ti ng , brazing , arc weld i ng .
Ca l1156 ·9302 otter 5 30

STOVE, fur nace and ch im
ney insulation Ca l l 446 ·
3407 .

--------

---

CE NT ENARY WOODS Pet
Gr ooming
Faciliti es
Profess1onal servi ces of ·
fered . All breeds. a l l styles.
Call 4&lt;46.o231.

INTERIOR PAINTING
Call 245 5735

FOR RENT
1St . floor
turn . apart .. util. fur ·
nished , ref . req . adults
preferred , at 631 4th . A11e
in person .
AMSBAR Y Eye Clinic near
Holzer Hospital , suitable
for offices or business .
plenty of parking . Call 446
0139

B ILL'S MOBILE HOME S
and Home 1 mprovements .
Free estimates Ca ll 446
2642
RUSS AND M AX
E L L IOTT
Lenno x Heat ing and air
conditioning . Rapco Foam
1nsu la ti on . 446·8515 or 446·
0445 Call after 4. 30 .
PAINTING Res1dential in
ter1or and ex terior barn
and m obi le home roof s.
Free es tim ates . 15 yr ex p.
Call ~67 7784 or 367 71 60

JOHN SO N Water Del 111er y
Call 446 100-4 anytime .
F ill d1 rf , top soil , complete

dozer and backhoe w ork ,
tocHe r and blOCk lay1 ng
MCNEAL
CO NTRACT ING
379 1258

1096 .

JERRY L U CAS ' S w ater
delivery
Cn ll 4.46 7534
anyt ime .

J IM MARCUM roofing ,
spouting and sidi n g
30
year s e)(perien ce
Free
e•:.t 1maTes
Re m odeling .
Call 388 9857 .

CHIMNEY'S cl ea ned and
repaired . Sto11e s insatatled
Ca ll the Chimney Sweep,
373 60 57

REESE TRENCHING
0 1tches , 8 inches w ide to 5
H
deep , septi c tanks ,
drainage l ines , concre te
work Ca It 367 756.0

HILLCREST
KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also
AI&lt;.C
registered
Dober mans . 614 4&lt;46 7795 .

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

BOSTON TERRIER pups,
AKC. Shots. Only 1 left
sl75 .
39(]5

services Offered

anytt'tinQ

QUALITY
MAIN
TENANCE
Electri cal ,
plumbing ,
heating,
speciali1ing in oil and gas
furnaces . Call 388 ·9618.
SA NDY AND BEAVER In ·
surance Co . has offered
services for fire inst.Jrance
cover age in Galtia County
for
almost
a
century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
avai lable to meet in ·
dividual needs . Contl!ct
Harry Pit chford , your
neighbor and agent .

IRemodeling,
Frank Rose Const . C':'· ,...
repa1r,
new construction, all
tyQes. Free estimares,
all
work
fully
guaranteed . Residen ·
fial, · comm~rc;ial, in ·
dustrial &amp; m1nmg,_ elec ·
trical work . MSHA Cert .
446 -~62.7

C &amp; W CONTRACTORS
All types home im ·
provements - Roofing
gutters- spouts- con ·
crete work . Ph. 367-()427 ,
367-il194, 367 -0!41 . Free
estimates.

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, gutter,
build -up roof, home
repair.
F,-ft Esfi mates
388·9759

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Slorm
Windows ,
Slorm
Doors .
Replacement
Windows.
Patio
Covers,
Aluminum
Sid1n,g .
and
Accessories . Call

D&amp; F CONTRACTOR~
All types home im provements and roofll
addition.s .
Also
In surance claim repain. &amp;
electrical wiring.
Free Estimates
446·1407 or 367-0189

for
anyboclv at our Auction
8arn or in your home . For
1 intorm•tion and pickup
Mrvice call H6-U1" ·
Sale Every Saturday
Nlahtat7p.m .
sell

T RASH PICK · UP
Mon ·
thly rates , genera l hauling .
Ca II 388·9765.

WOODS
REMODELING CO .
Complete remodeling or
general repair .
24S·9SSS

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE
Septic tank taef"vice,
residential &amp; commer·
cial. Electric eel se,..
"'ice , chemin I toilets.
367-0527

KOTALIC
LANDSCAPING
Residential &amp;
Com mercial. Tree &amp; shrubs
install&amp;d, designing &amp;
planting ,
shrubbery
trimming , lawn need
control programs.
446·3100
41 Slate St.
Gallipolis, Ohio

BtU.'S

44£..~2

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE

BOGG5
EXTERMINA T IN G
CO .
( Formerly F a ines and
O 'dell) Oak. Hil l. Oh . , call
collect .u6 7569 .

COMPUTERIZED
FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
Compl•tl! Tax Service.
Plenty
of
parking
•vlilaiHe. Av•ll.bility
in Day or Evening
Hours . We ' ve got the
p,-ogum for you 1 Stop
in or call for more

Kenneth Swain , Auct.
Corner Third &amp; Oli~e

• OHI PIICI

•NOu••

SEPTIC TANKS

THEISS INSULATION , In
sulmaster foam insulation .
New homes, old homes,
commercial structures .
For free estimates c all 4.46
1971.

Installed and
Le11ch Beds Installed
Gallia county ce,-tlfied

CEILING &amp; WALL te x
ruring, free estimates . Call
388 98~ .

det~ils .

COHI1NUOUS
GuniiiNG

Reese Trenching
&amp; Backhoe Service

Bob Lane's Complete
Bookkeeping &amp;
TalC Service
Spring Valley Plaza
«6·7600

69U205 ALBANY, OHIO

367 -7560

ex ·

SA NDER CERAMICS
5
miles out St . Rt . 218. Call
256 6265.

P IA N O TUNING
Lane
Dani el s Quality ser v i ce sin
ce 1965 Ca ll 742 295 1 or t:jq'l
1081.

ELMER
MURREL
FOLDEN , Dozer work . 441&gt;
9835 .

POODLE
GROOMING .
Judy Taylor . 614-367 · 7120.

cy
Trained
and
perienced . 992 -7314

ROBERT S BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 hr wre cker
service All types of repair
Upper Rt 7 Call 4&lt;462445
days and 446 4792 nigh ts

E &amp; R lr ee 5ervice . Pain
t i ng and exc avating
Ca l
388 8797 or 388 8860

GORDAN SETTER
11
mo . female . Call 446 ·4191.

WILL CARE tor !he elderly
in our home . Have vacan -

TR I S TATE
U PHO LS TERY SHOP
116 3
Seco nd
Ave .
Ga ll ipolis 446 7833 or 446
18Jl

J IM 'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery Call 256
9368 anyf ime

HI LLC REST KENNEL
Board ing all breeds , c lean
indoor-outdoor facilities
Also AKC Reg . Dob&lt;lr
mans. Call AA6· 7795 .

m

COUNTRY
T RAILER
space just below Porter on
St Rl 160 . Garden spot , two
out -buildings , small lot and
shed to keep horse, if in
terested . also, rural water
available . Call 446 ·7157 at
ler
7 : 00 p m
Re nt
negotiable .

ADVA NCED SEAMLESS
GUTTE R CO
Contin uous no l eak gut
tering
R t 1 Aloany698 8205

FOR
BE S T In
Carpet
Cleaning
Call
Paul 's
Steamway
Call 614 446

WATER
WE LL Dr i lling
and cleaning Pumps sold
and in stalled Call w T .
Grant , 446 8508 .

LI M ESTONE, g ravel and
sand Al l sizes . At Richards
and son , Upper Ri ver Rd .,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 446·
7785

HAMMOND BODY SHOP ,
lO day Christma s special ,
S-Cin d &amp; painT . $U9 .95 . 2&lt;15
93 71 or 379 7306

ROOFING Painting , side
walk , pat io , eve ·s.pouling ,
tree es t ima te s . Da11 id
Boggs &amp; Robert M cGu 1r e
Ca ll
379 1587 .

Services Offered

Offered
--Services
--

GALLt A RESI DENT IAL
IMPROVEMENT
l n~u lated
viny l siding,
aluminum gutters and
spouts, storm door s and
Wi ndow s Free estimates
Pn . J67 0209 day or night

HALLEY ' S
MOB ILE
Weld ing ServiCe , 15 year s
ex per ience . Call U6 2459

We

SLEEPING ROOMS
renl. Galiia Hotel .

Services
Offered
--

·-

M cCORMICK
&amp;
STILL M A N
f or
remodeling , Roofing , con
cr-E"1e , and gen home ma1n
tenance . Ca l l 675 5774 and
evenings , 675 1298

2 BDR

GET TODAY ' S MARKET
VALUE FOR YOUR GOLD
OR SILVER . CONTACT
ED BURKETT BARGER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OH .

HOUSE on Rt . 7,
d•p . req .. call156 W3

FURN , 2 bdr m obi le home
on Bob M cCor m ick Rd . Ret
req , sec . dep. N o p€'ts ,
water paid -4-'6 6561.
TRAILER FOR Rent , at
Centenary . Ref
&amp; Dep
required . Private lot . Call
MJ 26 ...

SLUG MATCH at lzaa~
Wa lton Club Grounds near
Chester every Sunday until
deer
sell~on,
Bacon ,
turkev!. , hllms
Shells
available 1:00 p .m .

FOR RENT 7 bdr . mobd e
home . Ca ll 446· 1052.

GARBAGE PICKUP
Pit riot &amp; Cadmus area ,
Tuesday &amp; Crown City
area Wedneselav .
For more inlo .
Call 379·2322
NEW LOCATIONS for
Gene Harris and Friends at
me Eagles in Galli pal is
every Friday , Saturday
and Sunday .
OPENING NOV EMBER
30, Log Cabin Gilt Shop .
Located 2 miles north of
C~esler
on
Rt .
7.
" HomemBde Items sold in
a
Homemad e
At
mosphere ."

........- .2!1

loday on act 1v111es wh 1ch could
con tnb ule to your 9eeur1ty Your
f!tt6rts w111 pay art fOr you
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. tl )
You haYe -.er 'f' good leader Sh iP
Qu ~I II IBS loday and you may tmd
several occas,ons to put them to
use You ·u know wh91"1 to make
you r moves
PISCES (Feb . 20--Marct't ZO) Play
your hunches t od a y rt!{lar01ng
lh1 ng s whiCh haye an effec t on
your car eer or status Your 1n!U1 ·
11 o n tS very sharp 1n these areas
ARIES (M•rch 21-April ta)
Rather than was te 11me 1n unpro duCtive meThods that haven I
solved pro b lem~ . Try fre sh

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Oso l

HAVE
YOUR
troph y
mounted .
Birchfield ' s
Taxidermy on 124, east of
RuTland . 6U·747 7118

2 bdr . mobile home , furn ,
utilities paid , conve n ient
locat ion . Rt . 7, 24S 5818
4 RM . APART
Upstairs,
fully carpeted , cal l 682 ·601 0
a-fter 4 .

TRAILER SPACE Large
pr i vate space, city schools
dis!. Caii14B259 .
TRAILER FOR Rent on
Kerr Bethel Rd . Call 446 ·
3101.
FURN . APART .
1 bdr ,
near HMC . adults. $190
uti I. paid Call 446·4416 .
CO UNTRY MOBILE Hom e
Park , Route 33 . north of
Pomeroy . Large lots .Call
991 7479

November 25, 1871
Your road to malttriBI !!luccess
thiS com !~ year w111 travel an

approaches

unusual route and may tak e you
!arther than you dreamed
Elpecl thlt unexpectttd

uam.-a (-. n-o.c:

The

NO HUNTING dlly or night
on the following farms :
Charles 5 . Beller , Alma
Peterson , Don Stiles. Jay
Stiles Violators will be
prosecuted .

BOOKKEEPER tor local
distributing co . Write 129· J ,
c -o the Oaify Sent inel ,
Pomero,-, OH 4.5769

WANTED :

advanTage o f any opportumtiH!I"
you hav8 tOOa y where you·u be
able to make new acquain-

LEO (Julr 23--AuQ. 22) vour
1udgment and ad .-1ce COI.Jid be
ver y const ruchve t oday '" help·
•ng a pal son oul a problem
where he doesn t rt"tCogn1ze all of
hl5 !lllt ernall ves
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) You
won ·! be nappy today unless you
are domg sornetrHng v.trH c h ; ou
!eel
IS
produc t ve
ana
wort hwh1le
Busy your r,and s
Wllr, uS('fl;l

tances Someth•ng mteres lt n ~
and 8lCII •ng could occu r

SCORPIO

might find a few short !up!'! far
mOf"e pleasurlltle man a lengthy
one . F1nd out more of what hes
ahead lor you m The year follo w·
mg your birthday by sendmg l or
your copy or Astro-Graph Letter
M811 $1104'" each to Astr a-Graph
Box 499. Rad10 C•ty Statr on. NV
TOOT9 Be sure speCJty b1rth
date
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JW~ . tt)
Spend as much t1me as possible

GEMINI (May

NfWSPA.P£10 ff.lfERPRIS( A. SS ,._. 1

BRIDGE

21 .1vne
4

201

Defense deftly destroyed
Ftna lly . he sa td . ·· Maybe
'\t,HTII

byHenri ArnoldaMBo tJLee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one letter To each square. 10 form
tour ordmary words

II !1

. -;,,

tr:J ("\ d. S long as W es t hadn' t
lt•d f1fth best from &lt;l si x -c ard

t r.

&gt;; UI!

\\EST

t-:.-\ ~ T

• .I 9 l'i ~'
· ·\41111~

• t\ lj ' -l
• H .J ~
t .I K -; 4

t 1\

•

11 ') .'\

• ~..~ =,
Til
• !\ I.J IH

~(I I

• t\ ./ !:1

IOxSS two bedroom mobil e

IN &gt;YRACUSE . 1 bedroom
tra i ler , water and garbage
pi c kup
furnished
2
worklno people or coupte
with 1 child
No pets
Deposit required . 991 l169
HOU SE FOR rent
area Call 992 1288

• :\ v

m

RM1 ne

Giveaway

Home servicel Worker to work wit" dav~lopmenta.,l ·
ly disabled persons th,-ough placement 1n wark~r s
home in G•IH• &amp; Meigs counties . ~o.m• servrcn
workers will be responsiblt for prov1d1ng tra1n1ng,
social services, •ncl home c•n for adults or
children .
.
Room and Board Rate •nd S•••ry wtll be p.~id .
Room •nd 801rd is SS. SO per d•v
Salary ranges from S1,016 to U ,OOG

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt t o
offer anv other thing for
sate may pl~ce an ad in this
col umn . There will be no
charge to the i!ldvertiser .

Contact : MARIE HOBBS
Buckeye Community Services
Patriot Star R t.
GallipolisL.DH 45631

FREE
LUMBER
FOR
demol is hing two story
frame ho u se in Ewinoton
All lumber must be hault' d
away fr om prem 1sPo; . Cdll
J88 8510

ltJ ~

+ .J Ill \J

SOAVE

I 0

yrx)

\ u!nNahk Hnth
()p ;J ll'r :\(1r 1h

(]

" t·&lt;.,t

i 'il~ ~

L-J-:,t"'&lt;:T"J--,

I ENTELGj
tJ r
1

Print answer here.·

1 An5wer

So uth

I ';'''
l'..t "

-~NT

! 'il ~~

ROUSE

MI SERY

Monday )

DI GES T

What the guy who re tused TO pay hiS
elorc1sl s bdt got - RE -POSSESSED'"

Jumbtelootl No. t 3. c:on t~lnlng 110 puu:lea, It •vtllabla rot$ I .75 postpaid
froM Jumble, clo ,hlsnewsp•:r.:· lo• 34, NOf"WOOd, N.J.07644.1ncluda your

Nme, addrnt. dp coct. an mah checka payaiJtt to Newtpaperbookt.

East.

"Maybe

yo u

sho uld nol have cas hed one
(•x tra h('art tnck ."

·J cou ld do nothing ,"
repli ed West "If I shifted
JmmedJatrl y South would wm

the shih and lead another

WA 1-:-'&lt;'E55 W'ERE
PI.AY INI5 FOF!: .

~Answers

Yesterdays

h1st

THE

rixJo:rrxi J

1 Jumote s SHE EP

J.

Sout h put dum my ·s k tng of
dubs a nd led a heart West
sa 1d ·· thank vo u ·· - 1t wa s a
talkat 1ve and rea so nably pol ·
tte ga me - and cas hed four ·
ht'art trtck s . Somew h e r e :
cdonf&lt;: the ltne. So uth di scard - ..
ed a dub from ht s hand and onn· West had fini shed wJth
h1s hea r ts . Sou th clatmed th e
balance of th e tncks
·Did vou have t o lead that
fo urth · round of hea rts''"

asked

'ortb

WHAI THE 5UY5
WHO FLIFITSD WITH

Now arra nge the c•rcled let1ers to
!arm The surp1 1se answet as sug
gested by The abov e canoon

wt~

htd too much ·· Th en he found
J sa ft·tv pla ~ t o 1nsure h1s con -

• :1 ~

+ -ild- -~ 1 \ :

ts . Phone 9'92 S-434 .

home in Racine area
5858

Zl)

manageable

Iii&lt;;~ '&gt;

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

24--Now.

more

You "rt! Vt!ry racepllvll! 10 new •de·
as 100 ay You 11 De able 10 11no
good uses lor what you learn
L1s ten closely when someone
knowledgeable speatl s
CANCER (JuM 21· Juty Z2) Tl"11s
may be a good day to .mpleme nt
a change you ve been Mpmg To
bnng about Thai cculd e11her
tu!lnel ll
vou mon&amp;1l r11y or

m'\1

(Oct.

Entertamu'tg choice lnends m
your surround•ngs today could
lurn out To be a real fun Th•ng
Keep the g•oup small and

at10ns w1th competiTive etemen ts
wtll 5ef"Ve to bflng out thf! besT 1n
you toda y You nee(t some type
ol challenge 10 gel InTo full gear

211

11 r-ou ' re a blt restless t oday and
wanT to go somewhere. you

1f\J\lN}

today

liBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Take

ad vance your work or Cllrtttl•

un•que the beller
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) S1 t u ·

3 AND 4 RM furn ish ed ap

Help Wanted

ext . 2 .

rwo G REY tiger ca ts, 1
white , 1 yellow . 1 m ed i um
si zed k i f1en , grey a nd
Wh ite F em at e b l ac k w ith
whitt&gt;
young
k. i ff en .
Humane Soclety 992 ·6760

CHAROLAI HEIFER last
seen between ROdney and
Rio Grande . Ha s tag no
9flJ, if seen ca ll 245·9376 or
A46 4058 . Donald
Mo n

UP TO S220. weekly , part
time taking short phOne
messages Bf home Ca ll
•11·179·8601 ext . 233.

DIRECT SALES
Salary co mmissions ex
penses
hOspitalization
Mr Mor ris. 614 ·846 870 1,

GUN
SHOOT
EVER Y
SU NDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
GU N CLUB .

m

BOB CLINE TAXIDERMY
Specializing in game
~eads . Call675· 14&gt;18 .

GUN
SHOOT . Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday . 6 :30 p .m
At their buildingin Bashan
Factory choke guns only .

We cannot say and we
will not say
That she is dead . She iS
iust away!
Wi t h a cheery smile ,
and a wave of her hi!lnd ,
She had wondere-d Into
an unknown land,
And t lt"ft us dreaming
how very fair iJ must be,
Since she linoenthere ;
SO think of her faring on,
As dear , in the love of
there .
As the love of here ,
Thlnk Of her still as the
!tame we say
For she is not dead, she
is just away
So sadly missed by Mom
and Oad . Ken . Dlln and
Ti m and all.

BOUNCY
HAND SO ME
shor-t haired terr 1e r . blond
and white , male , shot~ .
wormed Humane Socie ty ,
997 6160 .

Lost and Found

NO
HUNT I NG ,
no
trespass ing w i th no ex
ceptions on my property .
Judy McGraw Self .

In Lo~Jing Memory of
our beaut iful dllughter
and sister, Nancy Ann
Challi!e Walker on her
19th birthday .

MEIGS
COU N TY
HUMANE SOCIETY
6260
Pets avai I able for
adoption and information
service

ANT IQUE S APPRAISED ,
Ph U5 5()5().

STARTING TIME
10 :00 A.M. TIL?
SUNDAY, NOV . 25, 1979
Public 1s 1nvited

State will attract different clientele
EL YRJA, Ohio IAP) - Habit and
convenience will prevent the Ohio
Lottery's legal numbers game from
having much impact on illegal numbers operations, according to gamblers in Lorain County .
·'What is going to happen is simply
that the state will attract a very dif.
ferent clientele, like the middleclass, white housewife, " said one
source .
The illegal numbers game is
basically black-oriented , according
to one operator; bolita is a favorite
among Hispanics .
The state's new game - dubbed
"The Number" - is designed to
renew sagging public interest in the
lottery . Computer problems have
stalled the start of the new game .
But after four false starts, lottery offi cials are cautiously predicting a
"go " for Monday .
"Many of the people who bet the
state's number game will never
have bet the numbers games
before," said the operator of one
rUe gal game "Many won l know

FOR THE BEST buy in
diamonds, go to Tawney
Jewe lers ,
422 Second
Avenue, Gallipolls . Com .
pare prices anywhere .

- ~_e_r:vices ~ffer~d_

_ _G
= iveaway .

heart. Then he would win the
next trick . l ead his ten of
cl ubs and let vou m. You
would not have · a heart left
and he would make the rest of
the tril'ks ··

B\· Oswald Ja'-·oh~
arid Alan Sontag

South loo ked at dun1m y and
made that dr£&gt;ad rf' mark .
·· partner . we probably dtdtt"t

bid enough "
Then South won that first

or

lrKk With hi S nJO C
h eart~
and lrd h1 ~ Jac·k of cl ubs . West
showed o ut ~~· her~ u po n South
\\· ~nt mto a st at e
almost
complete- s hoc: k Thr si le nce
rould hin T herP ('Ut with a

or

1 \~: W S I'A P EH EN H :HPIH SE ASSN I

(Do you have a question for
rh e experts? Writ e ..Ask the
Experts. ·· care of tnis newspaper. fndividual questions will
be answered If accompanied
by stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes. The most interest·.
mg questions Will be used in
rhis column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

kmft'

,,

�..........

~· ·

,,

·

.,

...,

·,

l

...

"

'\

.

'

.

~

.,

..

.•

·-

0-li--The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday , Nov. 25, 1979

0-9-The Sunda y Times-sentinel , SWlday, Nov . 25, 1979

For Best Results Use Sttnday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Wanted to Bu y
JUNK
t..utn and 5UclD
rT1 e trtl (&lt;'111388 8776

Avt'

:::ORNfQ \ll
..v,lll lUO
.)()arcs ~ Jll 100 dt •&lt;;, l&lt;.s cl aw
IOC l !DUll!: l cliJW 'S Or f~n ( "(
un o: t 1Jrn t u1 ,. f.Jh 145 50~0
~ ·~ I..ER •U1!1'S

')

'''k'S I.H

t_'

Pay~

C.l ll 446 '10S3

CJlJ D t.',t-lJ rtp._tr ·&lt; lah•
"11'&lt;&lt;~1'1
11 po•w· ,Iter 'N r1tP
[l,J .. "lO lr'&gt;~ ·II r_ ,lrr o t fh('
: • bunt&gt;
TO B UY Jtd barn
V• l•l r1•r nuvt· Co l li ]Afl '1106
.v;..NT

(l L 0

rl1S ht._·') .

F U R 1'&gt;4 I T U R E
~.Jil D•_ U"&gt;
.-'1 nd el l

(Mil 446 ' II','

JLD COIN S I)Or l&lt;et wat
diE") . c1r'1..,':&gt; r if'I.J&lt;- wedd1nq
b&lt;~llds. ~l ·&lt;l •n o n c! s
Gala or
'.)1!\. t•r ( Mi l J A Wamsley .
7H {331
I rC"asur(' Ch('o,t
C.••t 'l ShOO Atht~ ns . OH S9 2
'•46}

PACKARD 1n runnrng
co ndtt ton Call99'17706

Wa nted to Buy
CHIP WOOD P ole s. max
U1 ameter 10" on largest
t-nd s 12 p er ton Bundled
5ld b $10 per ton Del•vered
Ia Ohto Pallet Ca
R1 "l,
Pomeroy 991 2689
OLD
FURNI T URE .
bOKf'S
brass. b eas
tron
beds desks . e t c . co mol el e
hOUSf'hOIC1S
Wrtte M 0
M1 l ler R I 4. Pomf'rcy or
( all 99} 7760
WAN rED
SA W
logs
Payment upon ael rve r y t o
our vard . 7 30 ro 3 30w€'ek
days Blaney H ar d wood s..
SR 339 8Miow . OH 678
11,180
ANTIQUES .
FU R
N tTU RE . glass . chrna ,
any th ing Sef' or call Ruth
Gosn ey. ant1QUC'S , 26 N
7nd . M 1dUieport . O H Qq'}
J 161
A NT IQ UE POCKET wal
;: hes W lll1ng t o pay top
o ollar
Call
1 5'12 '] Q7 J
e vcnrnqs.

,--------------~

I WANTED TO BUY
I STANDING TIM B£R

BUYING RA W fur htdes
Gl'orgE&gt; Bu c kl ey , CR 3,
Al hf'n')
664 4761
Hours
MOn Frt
5 10 Sa r and
Su n 'l 10 Fu l l l 1ne o l trap
p1nq suppl1es

Contact
Paul Mercer

WAN1ED
HOMEMADE
laken on Consrgnment
for c; 1ft shop Cdll 98 _S 4377 ,
YB) 41~1 3 , or 9!:1) 3951

Rt. 1,
McArthur , Oh1o

j

45651
L - - -- -- - _ J

18 SH EETS
WA L N U T
p an e l rng 130 utiiiiY studs
B" m etal bes t o~ a ll fue l
cn rmney Tw o 5x.8 utility
tralrs 180 amp Lrncoln gas
welder 99'} 6229

BUYI N G US SILV ER COi n S
aa 1e u
19 64 o r
be fo r e
Pov1ng top pr~r€'
Cnll
Brown ·s. 'Y'i'l 5113

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

Wanted To Buy
OUTSIDE STORAGE BUILDING.
APPROXI MATELY 10'x15'.
CA LL 985-4344
A FTER 5:30P .M.

Bu s1 ne ss Servtces
''llOMUHI Lf:
\Uh'A N CF
U• t•n
rOpf'r
t· llt·
d' &lt;,
,lf(lr

l ·"'i
c ~n

I
I&lt;(LO..,
o• n&lt;,e)

. o ur
PitOn('

yQ) /l4j

1

FOR SALE o r rent 14x70
Wrnd sor mob1le home 1
bed r S10 .500 or S200 mon th
plus. u11111tes. 99'1 36 18 Mus!
sell by OE"C I

Bu si n ess Services
W I LL HAUL ltrn(l&lt;S.I one and
gra .... el Al~o . l1me hiWi i ng
anct s.preadrng Leo Mor r1 s
Truc k1n g Ph u m • 74') '1455

Prof essi onal Se r vices
CALL
US
t or
your
photograpnrc needs.
P ar
tr.:uL commercra l anc1 wed
drng pho t og ra phy Tawne ·(
Stud iOS. 42 4 Second Ave

PAI N T I NG
A ND
sa nd
bl as.trng Frt&gt;e es t rm~ f po:,
Cat I 9491686

Mobil e Hom es - Sal e

DOZER
E ND Loader .
brush
h og
W rl l
do
bas e ments , ponds , brush
trmber . l an d
cle ar1ng
Ch arles Butcher 747 2940

WI N N ER SALE
Prrces.
reduced o n used mobtle
homes
TRISTATE
MOBILE HOME S CALL
446 7572

SE WIN G
MA C HINE
Rep a ir s,
servr c e ,
all
makt•s
99 7 2'184
The
Fabr 1c Sh op ,
Pomeroy
Aut hori zed Si n ger &amp;a les
rt nd Ser .... ICf' W e s h~rpPn
Scrssor s

1977 Lynn Haven 14X65 3
bdr
1'1 70 Vmdal e l2x63 w1tfl ex
panda . 1 bdr
1970 New Moon 12x60. 3
bdr
1973 Sky li ne 12x55, 2bdr
1972 Bonan.za 11x52, 7bar
B &amp; s Mobi le H emP Sales
Pt Plca s,a nt W VA
675 4.424

EX CAV ATING .
do z er .
loader and ba c ~h oe w ork
dump tru c k s and lo boys
lor h1re . w i l l haul f ill dtrt,
top soil , limestonP r.n d
gravel Call Bob or Roqcr
Jeffers. day ph on e 997 7089,
n1g ht phone 991 3525 o r 99 2
5232

1974 N EW MOO N mob i le
home, 17)(70. 2 bdr . wal l to
wall ca rpel , exc co nd . cal l
379 7458

qdt&gt;,.

614-596-5770,

GO CAMPIN G A MfoR IC~
With
Coachman
RVS
Quc'll lly burl! . pr 1cd r•ghl
Dol('OS ot models wllh d
w1d e rangf&gt;
of
t amrly
pl easrng tloo rplans
See
Th em loday
Apple Cr t¥
Recreational Ve hrCie ·s. Rl
3' . I mt Wes t o f JMksa n
Oh . 614 286 S700

19~5

SALE o ff ru• space
~ pr1ng Val l ey areu . 1650SQ
tt•pt ca ll 446 0139

OR

0 1.'\MONDS . OIO
('\loft•
gold
bn nd .;,
T ,"',WNE Y
1 ~·wt·l Pr 1 ··1t
4}'}
SPron(J
JE~v\ELER&lt;:,

Ca m pin9 Eq uipment

For Lease

For Lease

HOWERY A N D MAR TI N
Ex c i'lvating ,
s.e pt r c
sySlf'rns. dozer . bnc khoe
Rl 143 Ph one 1 1614 ) 698
7331 o r 741 75 93

1973 MOBILE HOME
12x60, 2 bdr rota I elec , e)(
tr a good co nd $5. 500 or
best oller Ca ll 446 3 192

I N ~T Q(t&lt;' lcJT ltn.'Tll'd 1{1 )('
d(•l Vf•ry var iOUS 51lPS. Of
poo l k.rh D o rt your!&gt;elf or
IPT u•, ~nslatl tor you r&gt;
13umucndner Salt&gt;c.
Inc
rirn 57:J 4
t~&amp;H U phol &lt;, tt&gt;r~tl q . acros!&gt;
!ro m Th(• I f')(&lt;J co Sfilt 1on tn
'iy rau C"&gt; t' 997 H 43 o r 997
)711

S &amp; G Carper Clt•anrng
St t·am
clf'r1nf'd
Frtte
(' Si lmc'l t e
R r- c~ sontlble
raff''&gt;

'11n t L hq ue~rll

QQ')

6)09 or 74'1 7J·I8
· ~ SULATIO N IS

PROPER

.,

" n

1:1

;nr &lt;' oph l'r
Closeu p
Tr t·• ·flC•~~ t· Lkb 10 Bf•'ler Wdy
H K 1d&lt;, ,'..rf• PPOJ-Jit • Too 13
0{)
ThiS I') !hf' ! &lt;If•
Jl'rry
r rJi,...,pll
Urh nn L t·aquP 10
r · "'
,.,. ,IUQrl~t
JO
" ( qp•·l 1 EddlP 'ir~un der o,
-, 'hi IJ,:,I~ :,nsw,..r s 13 J1mmy
~ ·'•·1QGcl"'
Chrts l l or the
'Norta 11
OC1 M or mc•n ( no1r
D&lt;'ly ot
D•'&gt;co vPry 8 Cr oce CathPdral 6
( hr .; t lor 1f,p W or ld I )
Th r f'e
S tooqeo._,~

rr tP nds 17

'lesa m r ) I

JO D

JO Out l l.{obPrto; J RPv LPOnMrd
Repi'l s\ H !o ntrtc' b
J;uneo,
Ro b i'.'&gt;OI'l 10
L OW":'r l•qh thouSf'
IJ Op,·r, B 1l&gt; 't' I~
Y 00 1,0,,pp l 'ltnq,n q JLbil('f') Oral
Ro bt •rt&lt;, ' '1
1-o:o~
f-&lt;urnbard 6
(h r iS. ! trt n C1•n1er 1:1
Rt •v J tm
Frilnld 1n °3 Er"n('&lt;,l Anqley 1)
Lost on Spi\ &lt;.. c 11 M ro; t e .. Roqero;
)0 J)
? 10
Robr·r ~
Sc hullpr 8
It Is
Wr il lf'r 10 ( ,os pt•l Outrt&gt;ac~ 13
')esamr · ) t 10
10 00 Th rs r; t~e NF L J K1ds Mf'
People Too 6 M ov1e N or th to
Alaska
10
J 1mmy Sw aggart
13 , Gos.pe t S1n g1ng Jubilee 15
HaJel 17 StudiO See JJ
10 30 - R e11. Hum bard 3
Ernes t
A n gley 8
Zoo m 20 . M ovre
'Co m e Back , L tttle Sheb a · 17
Big Blue Marble J)
II 00 - Re ._ r&lt; u rnbard 15
Rt&gt;v
Hr·nry Mrll1 rlfl 11 F 1£&gt;1 Co 10
Ff"f'hngs !3
11 3Q- At Issue 3 Anrm rtl s An1mnls.
Anima l 5 6. Face the N aha n B.
Ove r En sy 70 W1ld Wild W or ld
ot An1mal s JJ
17 OQ--M t&gt;et the Press 3, 1). Issues &amp;
Answer c.. 6. 13 . Oh1o J ou rna l 20 .
Movie 'Capt1ve o l Bill y the K 1d '
))
12 30 Bob Zull e lata Bask e tball 3.
Ohio
Un tv ersity
Fo o t ball
Hrqhltght s 6. NF L Todily A The
l o:,sue 10 E .... angelrsl 1c Outre ach
13 Mov ie ' lmdaflon o f l1fe " 17 .
All Cre atur e5 GrPal &amp; Smctll 20
00 - N FL Foo tball 3. 15 . Amcr1cr3 ' s
Bl ack Forum 6 N FL Foo tball
8, 10 ; A dam 12 13 , M ov te " The
Man in lhe Glass Boo th JJ
3()- College Footb a ll 6 . 13 . Sound
&lt;.:i la ge 20
2 00- C ommunique 6. Mc1r lo &amp; I he
Magi c Movie Machine 13
2 ,:10- FBI 6 . B r1tt le of l hP Planf' I S
13. Hock 1ng Vrt l ley B lueg rass 20
3 00·- Tri St al e Toda y &amp; Tom o rrow
13 ; M ovie ' In si d e D c1i sy C lover ''
17 , Poldark I I 20.
D1 o nne
Quin t uplet s. 33
3 JO- Mar y Tvler Moore IJ
~ DO- NFL Foo tball 3. 15
F ~mous
Cla ssic- Tnlr&gt; &lt;; 8 M ov 1rKon il
Cons,t
IG . Mov1e
Al cie's t.d
ve ntures 1n Wonderlc.nd '
13
Con SI ' 'TIE'r Su rvival Kit 20
J 30- ( .=t mf'r,l Thr f'c 13 , Wa ll Sl n ·.--. 1
Wrf'!l&lt;'. 70
'J l)0 J:: : ' ~ t i 11 " ' 1. I [ • ~
1 ' '
I· 'T
"((11 " , p

man tl('.il l ng oil
T akf' advnnl. tqf' ol d qou0
•nvestm••n t Celli 997 3788
for mo r f' 1nfur ~ - "~ t •U'l

HORSE
'1'/ ) ])88

; U N I N C,
PIANO
Lane
Orl l.l ll'l"&gt; Nt ' '\1 p ll OI1t..' num
br·r . J 4.' . 'I~ 1 St'r \ c f' to

o

'

el nsulation
• Storm Doors
• Sto.-m Windows
•R eplacement
dows

7/HD MrmiQllml'r' li'll
I &lt;'nQi wol lo&gt; O h oo
o' J Ut .tH~ f vtononq ~

i M .1•'\

JAMES ~ EESEE
PH. 992-2772

5 l OC I&lt;
1! f' F ll
G OO SE
!QAILfll..,OW C. V C.I1 Afll F

Pom ero y, 0 .
10 1'1 1 mo

1019 1 mo

0 ., '

Roger Hysell
Garage

-- - - - - - .

Hammond Oraan &lt;

7

PIANOS

ROOFING

Grea t Chr i stmo:. s Gift
Both N e w &amp; U sed

PETE SIMPSON
T v .- e-e Bl vd . R aci n e. 0 .
0
h
'
0
P hone 949 -211 8 e"e in g s
atfer s p .m . w ~e k e n cn
a ffer 12noon .
1119 1mo

----- -~====--.:..:::~===:::::::=~======
SUNDAY PUZZLER

1973 14x.l0 V I NDALE 7x14
expando , 7 bedr , 1 1 .. acre
rural water . sept 1c fan~ .
c entral heal and A C Car
pe ted Prrced rea s.o nably
Exc ellent co ndi t ion
614
742 2182

,\(

n l fl l f-'dl
!l Ht · 1!1h;.
lil B. tr ~ c l r 1 h
1 .~ f I JI It
. II

NOilOlOS

1 q ( l( l d i

.&gt;-: \'"J

TV Log

:_;f

~ i:-'1

d&lt;

N ova 33
3D- - In Sea r ch 0 1 6. Be st at
G rou c ho 20
6 00- ABC News 6 : N ews B. IO . Fran
Cucri Football 13 , Wr es tl~ng 17 ,
Sesame St 20
6 J()-ABC N ews 13 . N ews 6 CBS
New s. 8.10
00 01 sney 's Wonderful World
115 Rudolph &amp; Fros t y 6. 13 60
M 1nutf's. 8. 10 . N HL H ocke y 17 .
reeli ng s 70 . Evening at Sy m
phony 33
30 --once Upon a C lassic 20 . 8 DOM ovie " Smokey &amp; the Bandit"
J 15 Connections. 20.33 . Ar chie
Bunkers Pla ce 8. 10
8 30 Mork &amp;. M 1n dy 6.13 , One Day
A! A T rm e 8.10
q 00 Mov1e ' When She Wa s Bad'
6.13 . Mo-...'ie " Oh . Godl " 8.10.
9 10 Porter Wago ner 17
10 00 Prrme T1me Sun day 3. 15
Comeb ack 17 . Mo-...iP " Go1n lo
!own " tO
Frr in g l1ne 33
'0 JO Ru tl H o use 17
II 00 N e w s 3. 6.B, 10. 1l15 . Open Up
11
Br~an Burk e
F ool b.11 1 ?0
Wall St r eel Wee k J J
l t 15-- ABC New&lt;:. 6 . C B S N e wc, 10 .
PMA P ulse 15
11 JQ Mov re ' Dark P ass ag e" 3.
Pol 1 o~ Story 15 . M y Partner !he
Ghost 6 (Pif'brity Concer t s 8
F dce the Nat1on 10 PT L C l ub 13
Wash 1ngton W ee k 1n Revrf'w _
13
17 OO - - M ov1e
' F1ve
Bran d ed
Women · 10 . 12 30- -N FL Game
ot the WeC'k 6. Com eba ck 8
1 00 M ov ie " The Bla c k Ro se " 17
1 30----ABC New s 13. N ews 1)
3 )0 Mov1e " R unaway Daughlers "
17 S 30- Love . Am('rican Style
I 7
~

MONDA Y. NOV E MBER 16. 1979
45 F nrm Rf'porl 13. ) 50 PT L
Club 13
6 00 - P TL Club 15 . 700 Cl ub 8
H ealth F 1e ld 10 L ts.len 17 6 1~
A l h 1e t es 11
6 30 For Our T1mes 10 N f.'w&lt;:. 17
6 ·IS Mor nrng Report 3 6 SO
Good M or ning We st V1rq1n1a l)
6 S5 -- N ews 13
! 00 Today 3, 1S . Good M o rn1ng
Ame r tc r. 6.13 . Bdtm an 10
f~. onday
Morning 8
Three
Stoog es l1tlle Rascals 17
I 5- A M W eathe r 33
7 JO
Famtly Atla1r 10. Sesam e Sl 3J
! ss- Chuc.k Whit e Rep ort &lt;:. 10
8 oo- - Capt Kanga1 ·oo 8.10 . LPitve It
To Beaver 17
':J 00
Bob Brc:lun J, Biq Valley 6
Pork y Ptg &amp;. Fnends 8, One Day
At A T1me 10. P h i l D on ahue
13, 15 . Lucy Show ll
9 30 -- Bob Newhart 8, l ove ol L if e
10 ; Green A cres 17
10 ·00- Car d Shar k s ), 15; B ewi t ched
6. B ea t the Clock 8. 10: M orn ing
Maqa1ine 13
Mov1e
" T he
Marrtage Go Round " 17
10 JO - H o ll ywood Squar e&lt;; 1. 15
Andy G r iftif h 6
Wh1• .v
R 10
Mar v T v iN Mnnri' 13
' A 'l '~
( ~S N+~""" r! H ouse ( , 1 10
1 '•" Hrqh RoliN " , 15 Lcwcrne /"'..
',h tr io If ( :3
r(f· IS Rtch t ·~ 10
le• Co ?0
~

1

)0 Wheel ol Fortun e 3.l ':r.
Fdmrly Frud 6, 13 . Se5ame 51
20.33 11 5~ N ews 1.'
12 00 - New sce nt cr
J
Nf"N&lt;:&gt;
6.8, 10 .13 , Mrndreade r s IS Love
Ame r ican St yle 17
17 30 --- Rya n s. H ope 6. 13 . Search for
Tomorrow 810 . Heal th Freid !S
Mo v 1e ·Ra mpage" 17 Eire Co
3J
00 Oaysol0ur l ives3 . 15 AIIMy
Ch ildren 6, 13
Younq &amp; the
Restless B ' 0
JQ-- - As The
Worl d \urns 8 10
2 00 - Do c t ors J 15 One L1lP •o
Lr ve 6. 13 . 1 2S N ews ll
1 30 - Another Wor ld 3.15 . Gu 1d 1ng
Ltghl 8 10 Gr qglesnor l HotPI 17
3
General Hosp1tal 6. 13 I L ove
Luc y ·17 Pri soner 70 , [o"'':.ufl"'·Pr
Sur vival Kit JJ
)G---One Day At A T 1me 8 Joker":
W il d 10 . F llnt o, lones. 1'
F-oot
slep s 33
.1 00 M ts ler Ca,·toon J.
as'iword
Pl us 15 , M e rv Gritt1n 6 . B~"'&gt;vcrly
H rl lb1 l li es 8. Ses am e St lO 3J
Sl):. M illiOn Doi iM M a n 10 R0n1
McCoys 13 . Spect r cmnn t J
30 B ew1ic h e d 3
Pi •ll• coat
Ju nc f10n 8 Tom &amp; Jro rry 13
Mer-...·G ri lf in 1S . G 1II1Qiln ' :. l s '5
00 - I Dream o f Jpnnnr e J San ford
R. Son R M tsle r Roger s' N erqh
b orhoo d 70 ,3)
M cH y I yiN
Moor €' 10 . M y 1 h r ee Sons 17
30 Ca rol Burnell J
NPws 6
Gurn er Pyl e 8 . E lee Co 20
Mash 10 . Happy Days ~.qant 13 I
Dream ot JC'annie 17
Do c tor
Wh o 33
6 00- -News 3.8. 10,13.15 ABC N e~~&gt;.&lt;
6 loom ?0 . ( arol Burnf"lt 17
Planet ol Miln 33
1'1 10
NR C Nf&gt;w s3 . 1S . ABC N ews 13
Ca r ol IJurne tt 6 CBS N ews 8.10
Rob Newhart 17 Over E,1sy 70
Ja pa n The Chanq 1ng Tr ~d1 l10n
]J
00 3 s A Crowd 3. M uppc t )row
6 T1c Ta c Douqh 8 ~ of,w&lt;.:. 10
N ewlywed Gamf•
Love
Amer1 can St yle 15
'-lrm~ u rd 6.
Son 17 O rc k Ccl v('ll 70 n
10 Thai Nnsh vi l le Mu s.1c
N nsh
vi lle On th e R o ~d 1:. N ('N iyor.- f'd
Game 6 Joker '&gt; W il d B F,1m 1 r
F-eud10 ,l 3. AlllnTht·Fam dy 11
MacNetl Leh r er R e pon 70 JJ
8 00 L1 lll e House on th e Pril 1r1P
3, 15. 240 R ob ert t) fdwa r d 'tlf ·
K rng 6
Whiff!
\hrldow fl 10
Predator &lt;, ')0 33 Frt i(U!l r noltJrlli
I7
Q 00 - Movrf'
· BeggMma n
J 15 N FL Footbal l 6.1 3
8. 10 . So ng bv Song ?0 J J 9 JO
WKRP 1n Crncmnatt H 10
10 DO Lou Gran t fi , 10
N t.· w &lt;.. J0
C1 ty N ot ebook n
10 J O -Cop rn g w1lh K rd s 70 P ol d a r~
I I 33
0 I ( j.
II 00 New s
J R 10 .13 IS
C.rw e tt
70 .
II I ) Lflvt
."1 rn •' r rr ;, n c, T yle 17
II J O- 1unt g hl 3 IS H arryO H :.rv
N ews 13 M ovlf• I rd C.,i r , , . . I;~
,\". ovoe f Jh l,nl •·
I.' ' .(l
t&gt;J. ,.., , t , 1
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J C \/t"' lll cl e
50 f-o flCl pr o

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52

Ma~P S

tr l! O

I(IF\1 'Wr
l rl h•rtf'CliOr'
r,rJ F r)O IW€31

:&lt;3

~7

Scd!P
n ot~'&gt;

S8 S n ooz es.
59 Md9 1c
60 S t ate At ll; '
6;? Dawn g od

d ess
64 MI X

66 Thus
68 Arm y co p
Abb r
69 F01 fear tha t
70 Cheer
7 1 Sca d s
73 Saved

I ,;w
l } ~)

Aq lltl
106 S t ate At)bt
107 La tm Cqf
)UnC!Iorf'
108 C lan
t 10 Thenter
Stg n A bbr
1 1 1 Cui lege deg
1 12 Pronoun
1 13 Men t al
1magr
115 Pan o r " t o
be
1 17 Clock la ce
1 19 Pr1nter 's
m easu re
120 Ocean
Ger .
12 1 Fore tol d
124 B tval ve m ol·
lu sk
126 Care for
127 Fr u1 1
128 Sctssors
130 W ithou t en d
132 Island off
Ir el an d

133 Al e!!
134 SUite Abbr
1J5 In ter twin e
13 7 Turk tsh
strm rlilr d
139 Scoundrel
140 Va st l~n o n g
141 Barracudas
14 3 Fes t1ve
14 5 Harem room
146 Some wh o
w ed
148 Pl1able
150 Moham -

med(l ll

152
153
15 4

15 6
15 7
158

159
160

month
Recompense
R1p
H e bre w
mon th
B eg 1nner
De lea l s
Tran sp o rt ed
R epe t 1tt on
Clans

DOWN

20 A11tU 1 ll lnC
23 L ease
? ~ Belgtan r 1-...r r
27 Alarm bt~ll
28 N o tsPs
3 1 Dec lared
33 Ma riiiL· r

36

P1erc~

wor ship
18 Rel axes

cou ntry
IJ i' Weavrng
m,tChlnP
100 Ra11 w ay
'· ab t) r

52 Sc utll p
53 L amp1PY '•
5 4 Plant pii• 1
56 County 1n
lrf' !an&lt;l
S(j Rent:'wt-d

60 Yll unq -:,, tim
61
63

on
Na u t1 ca 1 c
Ru SSIO:ir l
piG if'1')
Unu&lt;.,li dl
p

,

Il l ' ,('

llH~ d ~ lHl!

70 School b oo k s
72 LCJk S
74 S lat e AtJ!)r
76 Near

77

AVO id

79 Por tu guPSE'
cur renc.y

83

Bus1ne ~s

a bb r

85 Cner
86 God d ess ol
d tscord
87 D a m age
88 R eg1on
89 Pri nter 's
measu re

1

105 L ean -to
109 Story
11 2 S l il t e Ahbt
1 13 A sran land

down

61
69 L'·

part

na mP

q6 E uroper1n

1 1·1

3 Eccentnc

While
T 11a l
M al ure
P la •d s
1 7 P laces lor

93 Revol~e
9 4 Ma ns riiCk -

:) 1 P ou nd '-&gt;

65

13
14
t5
16

9~' S 1mran

102 H e rorc

1 Bl em1 s h

by
5 Reta1ned
6 Pr onou n
7 S tamese
cu rrency
8 P lunde r
9 Be g
10 Gt eek letter
1 1 Ventt l ate s
12 Fo o t11ke

9 1 S ummed up

3 8 Shan~ Orrd
40 M e. idOw '-&gt;
4 1 Cu rse
43 God o t lo vl·
4 5 Pla gued
46 Sma11 w ave
4 7 Ja, gon
49 Sm,1ll r h I
dren

2 S hred
4 T1me gone

90 Retu 11 1

Pa~s&lt;~ye-

WOOD S TOV E S by Bette r
N
B e n s.
G l assview.
Ley den Hea r th , O ld Ti m er ,
F i r e -Vie w
S u b ur ban
M obi le home wood hea t e r s,
UL appr ove d , a nd Subur
b an Fur n ace m as t er s . Out
ooor Eq ui pment Sa tes , Je t
R ts 7 &amp; 35 , Galli p ol is, O H
Ca l l ~ 3670

w rly&lt;:.
1 16 Hepast
1 18 V QlC(IniC
(:111Jl1CJ. IIO'l
12 0 L e as
1/1Saucy
122 lrHe lillk
12 1 t1oul
125 TUllPtul
126 lr rs t1 seaport
127

FlR E WO O D
H; ck or y,
re d, wh i t e &amp; blac k Oak
Sugar Mapl e, SJO. truc k
load , we a l so h ave a pp le
wood . Call L46 7106a fter 6

Free !iCkCI

12:1 Clca t nx
13 1 Ed 11
132 Bttter
133 S peec h part
13d Separate
136 Verve
138 L to ns features
140 Possess1ve
pronoun
'41 S tnk e
14 2 S torage
sl!uct u r e
144 Man ·s name
147 S troke
148 Ed1b le seed
149 Sev er
15 1 Ha1P
153 Edit Or'S
abbr
155 F r en ch art ic le

1971 7 H . P M .F . Tr ac t o r
E lec tr ic start. S..OO. Ca ll
4-46 224() .
K NOBB Y T;res $ 15.00 Cal l
B eU H on da Sales 446 2240
CAMPIN G E QUIP
1978
P ro wle r, 11 11 self con
tai n ed . S-4 200 . New Demo .
Call 4-46 124ll
1974 Z ·28 m otor, b ui lt , -400
rurb o
trans m issio n .
header s. other p art s a l so .
Call1 45 9113
FO R SALE
1«J,OOO BT U
fu el oil fttrn ace. elec tr obe
t y pe, call 4-46 ·3750

FOR SALE
1 Used Homelite

saw S9o .oo
1 good used 16 cu .
11. Frigidaire
Freezer
Only S17S

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack w. Carsey

~
~-

Mgr .
Phone 992 · 2181

...

17

o\' l'

LUM P , stoker &amp; egg coal ,
" " l«J8 .
EC H O
C H AI N
SAWS.
hydrau lic wood splitTer s,
!&gt;aw chain , bars , an d all
wooo
c utt i ng
svppl1es .
Charles M c Kean . Fatrfreld
Cen tenary Road , 440 9442 .
F I REWOOD .
seasonf'd
oa~ . ash and h tc kory , Ph
446 9447
FIREWOOO
Split,
seasoned oak &amp; hicko r y.
cr oss tie ends Ca ll 4.U. 453-4
or 4-4&lt;&gt; 2329 .
W I NPOWER EMERGEN
CY Generators Call 513
788 2 S89
B EAUTY
EQUIPME N T
tor sale Vani t y &amp; bowl , 2
hydra tic chairs.
1 n atr
dr yer . 1 Pi bb s i nf r a r ed
11gt'l t , new 40 ga l etec . h ot
wa t er t ank . 1 b ath room
vani t y &amp; bow l , sa ni t izer.
mi.- r or , 10 ff
wooden
garage door Call 4.46 7476

40 L B Box o l West Virgi n ia
Chunk s, low a sh , l ow s,u lfu r
Foster Coal Co .. 446 2783 .
M F 40 TRACTOR Ford , 5
ft
b usn n og o nd 6 It
sc r aper blade . 750 boom
pole Sub sorler Ca l 256
1443

FOR SALE
37 H ol s te i n
Drtiry cows , ca l l 388 8564
USE D FURNI T U RE
Ch er ry hu t ch , me t al war
dr obe , lull size ma ttr ess
cm d box sp r1 ngs. occ asional
chair . a nd used so f a . Cor
bin an d Sn yde r F urn . 955
Secon d Ave , Ga l lipO l is,
446 1171.
8 T R A CK T A P E PLAYE R
wi tn 5-40 . FM r a&lt;1 10. 40 wa n
powe r boos ter , SJO. f il t er
powe r supply $1 0 . tack
m ount S2 50 wil l sell a l l 4
pc . f or $75 All in ori g .
bOxes . Call 367 7686
BR O WNIN G 0 0 17 Guage
J in . M agnum Nf'w on box
4-46 0494
SE ASONED Hardwood
$25 . tor a 4:11:8 brick Call
388 8139
8 H OLSTEIN SPRI N GER
Heifers . freshen rn Feb
weigh 1100, ca l l 30 4 173
1848

M iddleport
Representati ve
Wilke n son Small
Engin e R epai r
Evening
Ph. 9923092
or
Ca rP4fnte r Otf 14J
698 ·61 21

, It

( lp• r·

HOUR~ ·

10-6Mon .· Sa t.. 1·l Sur

I

F or Sal e

F or Sal e

BOY S'
HUF FY
Tr ail er
Blaz er b rke , likt' new Ca ll
992)21.(

CLEARANCE
SALE
Component systems 1n
ma t ched sets of m i x and
match Speaker s. f or home
e nter t ainment ce nt f'rs ,
radios , automob iles and
patios Combi n at ion AM
FM stereos and t ape dec k ,
cassette or a tr ack , CB
base stat ions and mobile
uni ts
P ort ab le AM F M
radios, wi t h tape p layer an d
re corder . Digi t al A M -FM
clock radios. an d com pac t
AM FM pocke t radio!&gt; . Par
t abl e r ecorder Televisi ons
portab le an d console
models. Regency scann er s .
An t ennas,
an d
m ast in g
Many o pti on al accessor ies
an d gen era l electron ic su p
p lies . France TV and E lec
tron ics. 39260 Br adbur y
Rd .. M ;ddleporl , OH 45760 .
991 1276 .
GOLF
P RESE N TS t; r
Chris tm as . Bags.
ba lls ,
et c Specia l l ad1es' put te r s .
John Tea f ord 614 985 3961.
197 4 1600 Loadster 1 t on
with l6 ft . va n be d. S3800
992 61 73 . After 5, 992 6206
GOOD M l XEO hay
ba le. 992 3709

70C a

BOBCAT STYLE loader, 30
h .p . $3950 . Di tch Witc h
tren ch er , J 20, 4 w d, w
trailer. $.4500. Call 614 457
] 1) 9
197 9
ELECTR O LUX
sweeper, 3 m on ths, ol d R ug
sham pooer and al l at
rac nments $400 Judy , 992
5007
BUCKEYE
WOO l)
and
coa l bu r ner. $75 Ch a nn el
Mas t e r
s t e r eo
150 .
Evenings on I y, 949 2732

Re a l E stat e for Sale

COAL,
LIMESTONE ,
san d , gravt&gt;l, calc i um
chlor•de,
f er t ilizer,
dog
food , and all types of sa lt .
E)(cel sior Sa tt Works, Inc.,
E Main St ., Pomeroy , 991 ·
3891
F I REWOOD
FOR
Now laking orders
deliver, 742 2056.

sale .
W i ll

HOBART DI LL ON ,
BROK E R

EMERGENCY POWER
alternators own the bf' st
buy WINPOWER Cal l 51J
788 2589 .

BO B L AN E
SALES MA N AGE '

QUALITY PLU S B E AUTY
New L shaped .)rick home tess than a year old, of!
St Rt 35 3 soaciOIJ O::. hPrlr oomo:,
$38,00 0
AT A THINKING MAN ' S P R I CE
Her e IS opportun1 t y t o get thE' space you need at the
p r ice ycu want J bedr oom s, ) aues

APPLES
C I DER
HON EY . Fitzpatri ck Or
chard , St ate Route 689
Phone
Wi l kesv i lle , 669
3785
H O U SE COAL, l ump or
stoker, wi l l dettver . 742
21 83

BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF TH E V ALL EY
A n d Bob Evans Far ms 2 6acres

WOOD STOVES b v Be " er
N Bens . Gtass .... iew. Leyden
Hearth , O ld T i mer , Fi r e
view
Sub urban
mobi le
home wood hea ter s., U L a p
p r oved. and Subur b an fu r
nacemas t ers .
Outdoor
E q ui pmen t Sales, Jet R t s
7 an d 35, Gal lipolis, OH
P hone 446 367 0.
RO M E beaul y
A P PLES
app les at S4 per bu . Best for
apple butter Call 649 3785 .
F it zp a t rick Or chard, SR
689.
LUM P COAL. del iver ed
l ocall y . SJ9 per ton . 992
7116
GOIN G OU T of Bu siness : 3
b lack an d ta n coonho un ds
A ll
nunt in g equipm en t ,
p i u s dog ho uses. Reason l or
se l l ing, i ll h eal th . Cont act
J ohn A nde r son , Rt . 3,
Pom er oy 992 7096 or 992
7038.

NEW SECTIONAL
4 m os . ol d, 3 b edr oom s, 2 b at hs, fa m i ly room , liv1 n g
r oom a nd di nin g room . M oder n bui lt in k i t chen
W ~dburn e r Take a took a t th is rea l nice home All
setti ng o n on e and h alf acres i n the ci ty school
di stri c t P rice d i n the 3C's
RESTING

BEAU I IFIJ L
ELE VATE r'l
GROU,JOS
wm·, a p an oram ic. view of Sl Rt 35 and su r rou nd ing
ar ea is th is st at~ l y nnch de~ i gned w o1h a large
f ami ly in mind . 4 : o ob e d rocm~ •. nuge torma l living
room - 30x30, spa Lious dini ng r ')om. modern com
p le t e buil t in '&lt;.i l chen , 2 w to hrepla .;: ~s. 2 bath s, l ull
basemen t , 2 1 1 ca r gara ge Can buy w1ih 7 F! cres. or
mor e land . A must to s,ee 1

SALE
PRICE

'249.00

CORBIN &amp; SNYOER
FURNITURE
•ss sec ond Avenu e
Gallipolis, Ohio
4S6ll
Phon e 614 -446 · I 111

ON

..

••
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CHAMP A GNE TASTE !

You ' ll bubb l e w in e;.:c i t emen l w h en you si p the
fea t ur es t his lu xu r y t&gt; om e offers . Foyer , new l~a k
ftoor ing , f orm a l livi ng room, w b fir ep l ac:e, ceda r
mantle !rac k lrghting, new plush carpettng , formal
drnrng room, new teak floor rng , beautifu l family
room w i th large sliding door leading to beautilul
POO l an d pat1o area . t erra r ed gro und wit h lots of
snr ubbe r ';, gas grdl , ideal f or en t ertainme nt. J
b edrooms, ') b ath s. fargtt k itc hen with un usual
b rea~tas t bar , cher ry , wa l n ut wood , full basemen t,
central air , gar age and openers This home IS
beaut if ull y df'cora ted All new cus tom drrtperies
L ooKs lrke rf jus- t ca me r rghT out ot an ln t e rr or
Deco r at or 's magaztne . One of t he lrne c; t I'm sure it
wi II b e love at fir st siont

.tll tl motwy pi c kine ou 1
1nr d&gt;i l l' h e•mt · t hal rrwet ..,
~·,\ Jr "'J-&gt;t'('ilil· 1U't'd"' . Nou:
J..! t ' l t h e i n.., ll rance Ht

We'l l covrr ll t' W o r u st •d
tw Jbil e h omt&gt;s . Yo u t'&lt;Ul
t'\T n get ~ea.'&lt;o( m al. re n laJ
''r t·omrnt·n.·ial in .., u r&lt;UHT
• 1 1\' t ·ra~r·~ .

WI' r&lt;· ht·n · ~\· h e n \'LII J tlt'!'d
lll !ib i ic hnlllt' ill
'&gt;ll l :tll! 1 '. ( '!lll!«'l t ottw prtt
(1- ..,.., ITH l,l l .., tiH I)H'..,fl!"! Lo ti
Ill rilly 1•1 Iii )"\ tUr "IH'l' l f ic ·
II.., lr H'

Bonnie L. Stutes, Realtor,
Any Hour 446-4206
~mes R. Stutes, Realtor446-2885
Joseph L. leach, Assoc. 245-9484

l lCTrJ~ .

DOWNING -CHILDS
Phon e 9n· 2342
Middleport , 0 .

**JUST
- LI S TED ~ FOR THE BUDGET MINDED ~

Jt Bran d n ew 3 bedroom h ome _ Full y ca rpeted , ther
: m opa ne w indows, 1 car att ached ga r age a nd c on ·
lt c r etedr iv ewa y . ve r y low 40 ' s

••*
•.
•*.
••
•,.
•

lt SELDOM DO YOU SEE an older home ol lh ;s q u aH

*Jt-

ty on th e m a rket. Comp le te l y and ta s tefui~V
r em ode led, th e r e is somet hing h er e for ev eryon e 1n
lt th e f am ily . A lovely b ra nd n ew ki t ch en tor M o m , an
Jt- acre o f lawn t or the kids to pl ay in an d nearb y
t 1shmg . tor Dad All app l 1ances and dra p ertes tn
el uded A home you w ould be proud to own 1

**'

•Jt-

~ BA CK _AWN ADJOINS
GOLF COURSE - AI! bric k constructton and a fu ll
baseml:!nt 1S e)(tr emel y hard to find in town . We
ha ·1 e 1t here plus m any ~C\\ ~ ·,t ras su ch as na t ur al
* gas for ced atr wtl h c. -::ft)~ . , c arpet~d por ch and
pat• o. all dr apt"n es L·•u ap pl r;,n c-es. a love l ~ lan
Jt- dsc aped front and b ack ·; ard and a wor ksnop 1r1 tne
lt- basement Grv e us a c all todu f dnd ta k f" a look~

lt IN -TOWN L OCATION

**
*
:+
•

FOR TH E RII "'G,... '= T MINDED Bran d new J be ~A'Lf. pf."O\"
car pe t ed , !he r
mopane windOY. ~
~ .. o ... ,t&gt;u gar age and con ·
cr e t e drivew ay Ve r y low .40 's .

*
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*Jt*
lt
*Jt-JIJj-

JI:

*lt
,..
:
..

*
..

*

*Jt.

**

*

&gt;tOWNER WILLING TO SACRIFICE ~ Th;s lo v ely 4
• bedroom hom e is situa t ed on ove r 5 be aut 1fu l ~c~es
wi tn a wel l stocked I arm pond . Ex t ra la rge lt v tng
room with stone wOOdburning 11re p 1ace and f ort.:ed
a 1r hea t with ce ntral a ir condition ing ar e some Of
• t he f ea tu res of th is f i n e hom e. Loca t ed on ~, tate
: hi ghway . P rice Redu c ed

*

*
*
•

MAK E US AN OFFE R -

&gt;t

:

**'
' •Jf-*
*'
:

(Mrner wants a ro offer o

Jt daY on th•S lovel ·r aiiiXtC k. home w rth futl basemen t

•

Natural ga s. fur f"'rt ce ~n d ce ntr al a or 5u per loca t ron

IfJt.

•

Jf-

B E A U T I F U L 1 YR . O L D LOG HOME
II \"OU are Jfloo k 1ng l o r an unusual nom e, l hrs IS it 1.850 SQ ft of Jtl uxurrou~llv t ngrtrf"a 10 11m,nutesfrom town
JI-

*
lt

•Jt

.

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LOOKING FO R BUILDI .N G L OT S OR. A CREAGE ?
- w e h ave several 1n drfferent 1ocal1ons CA l l t or
delaits

&gt;t

•
•

Jt•

...

rt WE H AVE MANY OT H ER LI5T I NGS CALL F O R
lt MORE I NFORMATI ON .
EVENINGI

*
ri-

...
•

•

446 1049 rl446·97S l rl-

BOB LA N E

&gt;t 5U E RO U SH
rl- OL ENE BURD ETTE

2S6·93 46 :

\**************************#
R eal E state for Sal e
- - - -- - - - - - -NI CE LOT 100x150 f or sale
Near Eureka Dam Cou n
try stream nearby
No
re strr c tion s
Lana
co n
tra c t Ca l l 614 2')6 6409
HOU SE lor S.dle or rent .
owner w 111 be on prem rses
Mon thr u we u 1117 Sunse t
Dr

SI LVE R DOLLARS and
gol d co ins . For ln ,.('s,t ment
or col lec t ion
M TS Coin
Sh op _ Cl!l ll 446 1841 or 446

35 ACRE S of vacan t land , 6
m iles tram Gat1 1p oi •S $250
per acre ( dll 4..16 77 88

0690

Yard Sal e
&gt;

.'

·,

..

'.

4 46 - 3987 - 24~ · ~ 175

of
wood - coal
A s hleys due in
Nov . 26, '79. Now a
S2S deposit will
hold the stov e for
you .

•
*

sA.LE

*

BU I LDI N GS~•
Sa ve U
Al l
5 tee1
c lea r
bui l dings
by
majo r
manu facturer s 30 ' X 48 ' X
12' t or $)550 411 ' X n · X 14 '
tor t 5 750 48 ' X 96 ' X 14 ' for
$7980 A lso 40' X 66 ' X 14 '
for $5-400 Onl y t w o at th is
pr ice F .0 B f act ory Ca ll
co llec t 61 4 294 4449, 9am t o
7pm

$300

*JtJt-

:NEW LISTING ~ BEAT THIS FOR $l5.000 - V .A .
Jt- APPROVED - Th is 3 b edr i'V"- !rame ':'&lt;&gt;m e Is
* perf ecT tor Tn• &lt; - · pcK{)\KG •!chen •nc l udes
ref rige r ator an t
1,. _, 'cHlQe . N ice leve l tot
: with plen t y of s.. doe trees Gallipolis Ci t y School s.
N o dow n payment, Ve t era n s!

Jt.

5

•*•
•**

•

:JUS T LISTED -

lt

KI N G Healer . st ov e w1t h
blow er an d ven t prpes,
S752 gas bathroom neater ,
$10 . ea . Ca ll 446 1760 a ft er

,.*
•,.,.

lt

Jt

Ex tra N1ce Couch,
Loveseat and
Co ffee Tablr.

•,.,.
,.
•,.
**,.
**,.
,.,.

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Jt

IIL, t ll · h _

BEMCO
SPECIAL BUY
Queen Site
Bedding Sets
HALF PRICE
R eg . Pric e S499 .00

••
••

MODERN Bl LEVEL
For onl y S38,()C() .00. $1 ,400 .00 Down Call for more
deta ils

•,.

Phone 446 -79L ,

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

LOAN ASSUMPTION PO SS IBLE
9% int _ Owner tra nsfe rred a nd very anxi ous to sell
Ci t y schools, ac r e ot g r ound more or less , liv1ng
room , 2 w b . ti r etaces, k itchen &amp; dining area F ul l
baement. priced in S40's . Cal! for more details

WITH A DOWN PAYMENT
own ers wo u ld con si der ca rr ying t he balance on a
LA ND CO N T RA CT Modern r a nc h . 3 bed rooms 1800
s,q . f l L ar ge unattac hed garage . St orag e bar n and
loft ar ea . B eautiful pool 20)( 40 co n cre te and st ee l Ci
t v school s. t mmed iaie possession

For Mobile Home
Insurance.

Lane , S ale~ M anager
H om e : 446 104Q

••
•...

A SSUME THI S L O AN
of on lY 9% In t . and own t hiS lovely Cedar Rach only
1 y r s.ol d ) bedrooms, 2 b ath s, modern built in ~i t
ch en , di n ing ar ea . Thi s ho m e is onl y 11' 1 miles t ram
ci t y Own er h as been t r ans f er red and rs very am:
ious t o sell .

.,.

Spring Val ley Plaz;

RODN EY -CO R A RD .
58 Ac r e, mobi le home runner s for a lix60 trad er .
sep t ic tank , rura l water availabl e ve r y reasona o1e

LANDCONTRACT9 % 1NT .
O w ners are w ill ing to he lp f inan ce th 1S love ty brick
hom e c l~e to H o lzer Hospital 4 bedrooms, forma l
en tr y and livi n g r oom , m odern ktihf'n , full base
m enr . w .b fi r ep lace, 2 car garage a tt ached A lso a
work shop an d a b arn . A ll t his s itua t ed on 5 acres
m or e or less T h is hom e reflects tender loving care
and tr ue v a lue

y, 111\T -.. p nlt a lui o l t inw
TWO
LOTS i n
M e1 gs
Memorial Garden s. Sec 1
on 40 C J 4. Bolh t or ' 300
985 3861

,.~
TE AGENCY :,.
,.,.,.
,.,.
,.,.,.
,.

. DILLO-N

H &amp;N Day old or started
leg horn pullet s, bOth floor
or cage grown av ailable.
Pou ltr y
H ou s in g
and
Aulo m a t i on .
M o dern
Pou ltr y, 399
W. Ma i n,
Pomeroy . Phon e 992 -21 6.4
- -----·--PAR T T (M E m on ey , earn
mo ney
par tti me wh ile
chi ld r en a re i n sc hool, be
al ert, in t e l ligen t, an d re ady
fo assume respon si b ili ty .
Caii67560U

20 FOOT Gib!&gt;On chest
freezer
Early A m erican
f lowered love sea t . 742
2348 .

Real Estate for Sale

/**************************~

JO HN D EERE 70\0 Lrve
power . power st eeri ng , 3
poi n t h it ch , new valve nng
~nd rod bear i ng 10b Gd .
cona , 1&gt;2600 Call 388 8280 .

Ashley Model C-60

'"

.j

KACH AL L
PORTABLE
BLDG . A ll siz es . 6x 10 t o
12x d0 . See at 173 1 • Pine S t ,
446·2783 or 3 house s below
B owli ng Alley on R t 7, 446
1279

Pat ent Down Dra ft system fully guarant eed .

Main Office'"
'~

BA T TERY

LARGE SHIPMENT

3

N !'\'V '&gt;

0...,,1\,i l d

ISt f' i'!\... il y

Wd',\ t'S

'I

CJ• l e r s
llnrm• t0 w n
i ; Dan1s h
tsla n&lt;i
~ 8 P1lot
80 Selt -e'&gt; l eern
8 1 Oep os 1t
8:2 Ol1ve
sh aped
M ed
84 B&lt;=l seb ill!e r
Rees f'
86 S m oot hed
81 M err1er
89 Eon
92 Macaw
Y5 F1s h b J Sio. e t
98 War goa
gg M cr 11 e0
10 1 Cour tPOus
10:~ Group o f
l h !P.P
1:1 4\hiil QS 1n
~~

LA YNE ' S FURNI TUR E
SOf a, ch a ir , rocker . ot
tam an , 3 ta bl es, $500. Sofa.
c ha ir a nd tovesea t , $ 275
S.Ofas a nd cha ir s p rrced
from $275 t o $.550 _ T ab ies .
SJJ S60 S70
an d
S85
5of a bed a n d cha i r , S 150.
Hi de ·a ·bed. $225., queen
si ze , $325 . R ec l ine r s. $ 125,
Sl SO .. $160 .• $ 175., and $225
Lamps f r om S18_ to $50 . 5
P&lt; . di nettes fro m $69. to
SJ2 5 Wood ta ble an d 4
c ha ir s, $135. Ta bl e, two
lea ves , 6 chai r s,
l hig n
b ac ked L S-400. Hu tchf'S,
SJOO. and SJ.SO , m a pl e or
p1 ne
fin is h
B edroo m
su i tes, S175., S275. &lt;wh ite).
SJ2 S. (pecan ). SJ SO. coak ).
B ~ sse t t Oa k, $550 _, Bassett
Cherry , $625
Bu nk bed
co mplete w it h mattr esses,
$175. , $250 .• $275 Ca p! a; n ·s
bed s, S1.SO . com pl et e Baby
beds , S75 . Mattresses or
bOJC spr ings, full or tw 1n ,
$ 5() • f ir m . $60 an d $70
Queen se t s, $17 5
4 dr
c hest , $.4 2 5 dr ch ests, $..49.
B ed f ra m es. S10
En
te r ta i nm enr cen t ers, S-40.
a nd l50 Desk s. SJ8
USE D
Ra ng es.
r e fr id gera t or s,
d r es s~ r s,
T V ' s, st er eo.
t'lea dbOar dS an d beds . Por
t abl e dr ye r s, co ld h ea ter .
3 m i les out Bul avi l le Rd .
Open 9am to 8pm , Mon
t h r u Fr i ., 9a m t o Spm , Sat .
"-'6·0311

A ll t ypes r oof w ork , n ~ w
or re pa 1r gutter s and
d ow n s. pou ts,
gutt er
c lea ning and p a inting .
All work guara nteed .
Free E st ima tes
R easonabl e Pri ces.
Ca ll Howard
949 -1862
11 14 mo

Sal es R ep . For
Sundin s
H a mmond Or g an s

Auto &amp; Truck
Rep a ir
A I so T r a n smi ss ion
Repair
Ph one 992 -5682

R EPOSSESSED
Elec
trol ux Vac u um clea n ers t or
sal e, with n ew gu ar ant ee
C a sn or
l ow
m o nthl y
pay m ents Ca ll 675 6066

H. L WHITESEL

&amp; Fa mo us Name Bra nd

1 . milro o ff Rt 7 by pa ss
on 5 1 R t I'l-l toward
Rufi&lt;J nd

Win ·

Free Estimate

£,. , tot Wolhto\~olll;'

~

olJOtl r

l &lt;i)S~ ,

M OVIN G SAL E Ken more
e lec. range, West ingh ouse
frost free ref r ig ; 2 pc .
l i ving room su ite , 3 p iece
end ta bles, goose n ick
roc ker , 5·p iece di ne tt e, 9
p iece twin bedroom s uit e, 5
shelf woode n , m etal she lf , 2
k i tchen utilit y c a binet s,
c hina c abi n et , hi gh cha ir
a nd p lay p en , str o ll er ,
Fi sh er -Pr ice toys, c l othes,
m ise Frid ay, Sat urday 10
l o 5. Ca l l 388 8 163. FirS!
b rown hou se, on le ft h an d
s ide of r oad i n Vi nton, OH
corp lim i t

INSULATION

TRAILER SALES

'

::, HOEING
Crill
llS. ~
t or Dorrell

J&amp;L BLOWN

1972 LY NN H AVE N 14.:65 J
bf'droom
Jlil70 Vi nd ale llx63 wrtn e 11.
panda . 2 b edr
1970 N ew Moon 12x 60 3 bdr
1973
Skyline
17x5 5 7
bed r oom
1977 Bon a n za 12)(52. 7bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SA LE S. PT PLEA SA NT .
wv )04 675 4424

Monday~s

r.

Ma tn St.

F l RE WOOD. c a ll
388-9670 Leave order tor
Rodge r . W i II deli ver .

V inyl &amp;
Aluminum Sid i ng

Feat ur i n g :
m e n 's &amp;
wo m en 's styl ing, p er ms
Call tor a pp t . or w a lk in .

GOOD

GOOO
U SEO
AP
PLIA N CES
Washers.
dryers,
refrtdgerators ,
ranges .
Skaggs.
Ap
pliances,, 191B Ea st ern Av
ce , 4-46 7396

For Sale

CALL 992 -7544

MONTGOMERY

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

0'130 .

H ou rs9 · 1 M., W ., F .
Other tim es by appoint·
m e nt.
107 Syca more (Rear
Pom eroy, .Q .

9 28 1 mo . Pd .

Mick 's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

c nt'&lt;'~P r? r

,'Q

ll'l('~

RA CINE , 0 .
949· 2748 or
992-73 14
11 I I Pd J

992 -2367

"- .' I P,l ', l

.., , .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

AL L TYPE S of build1ng
mater1als., block , brtc~ .
sewer pipes , w i ndows, l rn
te ts, et c. Claude W rnter&lt;; ,
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone ~ 4 5
512 1 a fter 5pm
PE N DLETON
REBU IL T
$70 pl us ta x
and o ld b atte r y We bu y old
ba tt er ies . Repair batteri es
Ca l l 388 8596

WANT TO DO Babysi tt ing
in my h o m e . For l sma ll
c l"! ild, week d ay s . Call 446

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

•
Real Estate Bu),..'t .4re Found zn
the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Fot Sal e

1 HEAT P U M P
E l ectr ic
h eaf. ref r i geration , elec t r ica l w or k . Cal l 379 7196

Fe d e .- a l
Hou si ng &amp;
ve t era n s Admin . Loans .

Roofing, gutters, and
downspout s.
Free
E s t i mates .
All
work
guaranteed . 20 y ea rs eK ·
perience. Ca ll Athe ns,
c ollect, G e rald Clark
797-485 7 or T om Hosk i ns
797 2741.

~toDo

SEW IN G
f\o atteratton s
Cal l ~ · 7512 alter 5.

REAL ESTATE
F I NANCING

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Gu tr er
w or k , down
spouh, C\O m e c oncre t e
wor k ,
w a lk s
and
drteway s.
!F R E E ES TIMATE I

oLWOOD
BOWERS
R E P;\ t R
) weepNs
IOcl) f("rs tron~ rlll c.,m all
APPI•e~nce s
L&lt;1wn mowe r
NP, t To Sta lt&gt; H•ghw&lt;ly
GM.lgr- on Rou t,, 7. 985
J8) I

. ·~I ~1 . 1 ', \t 'r1"'

5UNOAY,NOVE MBER 15,1 919
tO {l(. lJ\f• 1'
6 00 Ame n c a n
P·G~)!!•rn" .o;.
(hr'l ll cnqes 10 .
,i '0r&gt; N• •.\&lt;S'Ylc)kpr 13
Between

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Wan .

J

Business Services
l===========:;-

ORt,DFORD
,\u1 ft:lnPer.
Complf&gt; l t' Servo((" Phone
949 7487 or 94'1 7000 rac , ne .
Ohro . Crdl Br M!Ior d

, 1 .--, ' H &gt;I 1

Sunday and

I

Be.~t

Your

We 'II Put A New House Like This
On Your Lot
For As little As $33,000
We'll eve n throw in th e kitc hen sin k . .a n d th e kitc hen cao;""'rs Th en we'll
include th ree bedroo ms , 11/2 ba ths. carpetin g . pa tio doors. ins ula tio n .
thermopa ne windows and the cra wl space . We'll even take yo ur mobile
home (single or do uble ) in o n trade . Th is is your opportu ni ty to m ove into
a rea l ho use at a price lo we r than m any compa ra ble and o lder ho mes o n
the m arket. See the "All -America n" models at Kmgsbury Ho me Sales.
1100 E. Ma in S tree t. Po m eroy . Ph o ne 992-703 4 .

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
NOW A NEW HOME YOU CAN AFFORD

MO VI NG SA LE M onday
14 Fost er Or , Mason Ra rn
or sn tne
Di sh e s,
bed
c lo t hing , furni ture . Christ
mas deco rations . m ise

Real Estat e for Sale
REAL ESTA T E LOANS
SPECIALIZING IN F H .A
A N DV .A INSURED M O R
TGAGES
MI LLO N S TO
LEND
FAVORABLE IN
TEREST RATE . ).O W OR
OOWN
PAYMENT
NO
FOR VETERANS. L ON G
TERM FI N ANCI N G A N D
NO
PREPAYME N T
PE N ALT I ES
TH I S I S
THE WAY T O DO IT . I F
YOU CAN QUALI F Y .
REFINANC IN G
ALSO
AVAILABLE.
CALL
TOOAY
FOR
M ORE
DE T AILS . LIN OA LA N E
446 1517
F H A VA -Convential Home
Loan s,
Columbus Fi r s t
Mor t gage
Co .
l_oa n
represen 1at ive ,
V10 1e t
((ookre) Vier s , 463 Sec o nd
Ave _, Gallipoli~i. Oh ., 446

7172
-~--

Bu s~'!_eSS Qllp '!_y_~

BRANCH
REPRESENTATIVE
OPPORTUNIT Y with a
large financial instifu ·
t i on for High School
graduates who a re in ·
ter ested in a future in
the Consume r' financ e
bu si ness.
Sl ar t i n g sa lary
wi l l
m eet th e needs of you
an d your family now .
Exceptional employee
bene f i t s
Relo ca tion
may be necessary now
or in the future
Phon e Mr. B arcu~ at
441S-2765 for
appoint·
ment.
CAPITA L FINANCIAL
SERVlCES
An Equo:.t Oppo r t unity
Employe r .

LARGE tot in coun try, nice
location , near sc hoo ls &amp;
st ore . Pa ve d road, w at e r
availab le, 4,.500. Idea l for
new home or t ra iler . Ca ll
379 26 17.
CO UN TRY Home on paved
road , near v il lage, sc hool s
&amp; stor e . o ver 1 acre , 3
b dr s .. full basem ent, 2
baths, un derg round cellar ,
I g . redwood b atcon v , well
or ru r al water . Immediate
possession . Pr iced to sell ,
$37,000 Call 379·2617 .
LOTS
111" ac r e t o 33;.,.
acr es. BeaUtifu l count ry
se tt in g and level . Al so two
new homes f or sal e or will
bui l d t o su it. Call 379·2196 .
FOR SA LE · 6 room house,
b ath , fireplac e , barn, 3
acr es of land , 700ft. road
fro ntage, v.,. mile from
T ycoon lake, c atl388·9756.

�. ........

·

-~-

-

-

·

-·

·

···

'

'

. ·...

... ..

[).li - The SundB y Times-&amp;ntinel, SWlday, Nov . :&gt;.:&gt;, 1979
().Ill-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Nov . :&gt;.:&gt;, 1979

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
"Real~

NATIONAL HOME RELOCATION

ONEY REALTY to

428 Second Ave.
CAL1~52
ANYTIME

PH. OFFICE_446-7699

WM . D. TONEY · BROKER

446-3087
24 STATE STREEl
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

FINE BRICK RANCH with tour BR ' s . This 10\/ely
home has all the extras including a WBFP, the
finest kit . in 1he area , two complete baths, lots of
closet space . There is much more . Call for more
details . Green Elem . school
NEW LISTING - HOMES ARE LIKE SHOES
better if they fit ! Chec
feature s on tht s one and se- e i f t hey f i t y ou r need s 3 bed rooms , I g . li v in g room
ta stef u lly dest gned wood bu r ning f ir ep lac e , spact ous kitchen a nd d tni ng com
b ina Tto n . d i -.ttwa shpr Pnt to door s . 1 c ar garage and lg lot ver y tow h e al i ng
b i lls W tt h pr iC e lh &lt;'l f w ill l tf vou r bu d qe f Pr tced tn $.40's
11412
MUST SEE THI S ONE
MOder n hou se. six r oom s oa rn .
bedroom s . ut d th · room . t:&gt; n&lt;I 0 5e d ba ck

oo r c h. na tu ral gas. c ily wa te r Jus t o u t
o f c tl y li mi ts Smal l ba r n t or st ab le or

c a tt le . 4 1 1 a cr e&lt;; of g r ound 600 I t r oad
tron t age

St

Rt

141

M us t se!!

m e d ta te posse••r.Sto n !..lR.()(l(l

tm
•2 3~

HERE IT IS
For yo ur farm tng plea su r e 188 acres of
re al farm l and 1700 lb tobacc o b ase
Several acr es of t i ll able lan d Sever al
acres ol woods and pas t ure E)( ce l lent
oar n Shed AdeQuate wa ter su pply I!
rou ·re too k. ng tor a n .ncom e pr oduc1 nq
t ar m , ca ll tOday
11 40J
LAND LAND LAND
F or people w ho lov~" t h e la nd
163
ocres ot highly pr od uct1ve land Shor t
ctista nc e from t own _ Sever al exce ll ent
me ta l bu i ld i ng s Lak e plu s J ponds . All
t enci ng i'5 in tip to p shape T oba cco
base A farm you would be pr ou d to ca ll
yo ur own Owner will consi der la nd co n
t ra c t t o qu a l ifi ed bu yer
II 347
VACANT lAND
66 acres H a r r1son Twp , well f enced .
la r ge por t1on ha s new w ovE'n w tre w im
st ef&gt;l posts Es t •mated 10 acr es til lab le,
so me Ttm be-r . loa rge road fr on t age E ,.ce ll en t buy SH ,OOO
IJ 367
NEW F ARM liSTING
So much t o off er w tth new l y bull t J
bedr oom ran ch on a ver y sc en •c a r ea .
fu ll oasement , heal p ump Wtld l tf e
ab undan t . 61 acres ~ or
15 acres
ti ll abl e, some toba -l o acrt&gt;age , ex
cellent f arm t or par t f 1m e f arm er
Owner s anx ious to s.ell
tJ 398
NEW LISTING l 1 , ACRE S
Sttua ted in bo th M ei g s a nd Vt nton coun
t1 ~S
31') acr es Ol der rwo bear oom
hom e tn n eed of r epa ir . Loo kt nQ tor a
hi de ·a way ,c al l toda $15,000
1

NICE COMFORTABLE
8ROOMHOME
Br •ck . J or 4 BR , with walk in c lose t s.
fu l l basemen t. bu tlf · ~rl b ac k p orc h , ni ce
lar- ge fr ont por ch Ca rpet ing , mode r n
k1 t c hen . c 1ty w a ter . 1 ·• ac re of wood
garden !an d Wood burn ing f .r ep l ace
Ga r age . L ot s ot sh r ub ber v . Be autiful
ho m e at &lt;t tow pr1ce

liKE THE COUNTR Y?
Smal l farm yo u c a n call you r own ,
m oder n s i x rm s., bath , ba sem e nt . w el t
bu i lt bar n , 1200 lbs. t a b . base , 15 ac r es
to t a l , 10t i llable , 5 w oods Pa stur e Good
l1 ne 1en c es . Plenty sp ri ng w a t er for
lives toc k . R esurfa ced stat e r out e . Lots
of c lean r-o ad fr ontag e Sc hool bu s and
matl r ou t e Good buy SJO,OOO
11387
LOY ELY ,
liVABlE · LARGE
Ston e a n d st ucco , 3 be drm s , l l .. bat h
r anch For m al dini ng room . lg . c heer
lui k tt c hen , pa nt ry 2 il r eplaces , l ul l
ba 3eme n t _ 1 acres H om e on ly 3 y r s
old . Older sev en r oo m hOm e inc l uded
w 1l h sa le N ic e home at an a ff ordable
pr ic e
11 363

BRA NO SPANKING
NEW
Large l i v i ng room w tHl
W B l irt&gt; place , lOVe l y k i t
c h en
w i th
b u i ll i n
c a b 1nPi s .
r a n ge ,
dishwasher, fo r m al d i n
1ng room , w i th pati o
door s, J BR , 2 f u ll baths ,
uti lity r oom All lh1 S an d
m or e s •tuate don 1 are of
level land
on State
Highway 160 . Be the one
~o turn this lo\l'ely house
1nto your nomr .

IF YOU THINK OF YOUR FAMilY ...
P ic tur e them tn thi s J bed r oom hom e .
Just l ist ed -fir st offer ing on th e market
Your fam i ly will have enough elbow
room to spare~ Living r oom , din ing
room , family room with fir ep l ac e , cen
tral heat C"Jnd air , huge patio . J c ar
ga rage . A l l w e need IS one c al l one
show in g an d yo u w il l sa y " th is ts i t ' ..

•

~

la st stop f or w or ke r s going t o w ork at
1&lt; yger Creek and G av i n Plants and the
ftr st stoo aft er a io n.-. ' lrd day on tne
•Db r~r-oce r i e s ~
win e , ser v ic e
Slitf10n , -3U t Ort :;) _.. vp. N ice 3 br . apt .
a nd O ~u o R n11:-r .r ontage w1th b o at doc k
ma k e th 1S a gr ea t p l ac e to live a nd be
tour own boss Abov e average in c o m ~

c.()\.\l

..

l

PLEASANT
ATMOSPHERE
l4 2, 900 .00
Love ly hom e, 3 B R . bath
and u tilit y r oom Large
li v ing roo m and d i ning
room
F ul ly equipped
kitc hen w it h sid e by
side r efr iger ator L arge
leve l l andsc aped lot . Be
th e t i r sl to see 1h 1s nice
home
c onven i e ntl y
loca ted 1n tow n Owne r
w dl FH A o r VA Ci t y
&lt;..c llools

'

PRICED FOR QUICK SAlE! Roo m v
modern r anch . J BR . eat i n ki t c hen ,
new r oot , new fu rnace Ch a i n li nk
fence . Att ac hed garage . E xt r a room
now used for w or k shop w ou ld m a ke
nice f am i ly r oom Ky ger Creek sc hools .
Ne arl y an acr e . Country sur r ou ndings
only few mil es fr o m c ity $27 ,500 . Jus t
li st ed!
IN CITY - 1 storv . 1 f\R f rame , h as
•lum . Sidi ng . VI
lki ng di s ta n ce
groc ery Exce11
.. . ... ,) tm en t proper
ty . $1 5,000

SOLD

FIFTY -SE VEN -- Approx 25 t illab le
m eadow, sev eral p tne g r ow•s , woo ded
ar eas, la r ge stocked pond . ru ra l wat er
availabl e 525,700 .

lAND- LAND
47 acres more or less
w i t h lar gE' fr ont age on
Rt 160 . E )( cell cn t to r
re s1dent ial or c omm er
eta I d€'velopm en t

TREES

- PRI V ACY - E x pans1v e
r n nc h . 1700s q 11 l l v ln g Men . ove r stze d
\ •v• nq rm w1 l h ~ t o n e t 1r epla ce ana
&lt;&gt; l •d•n y gld&lt;.o:, rl oor s lead 1ng on t o h1 gh
10' x40' dC'C k J BR . 2 f ull ba t h s. . t ull y
eQu tppPd
"' coun t ry st yle ' k •t chen
Pl ush ca r p et Al l the e)( tr as yo u e xpec t
t o t.n u •n n cust o m home Separa t e
74'x JO" g a ro ge Be au t if ul lawn Ctt y
sc hool'&gt; ~8 . 900

RAMBLIN " BRICK RANCH - W tth
rang e r ef r•g and lots ot cabt n et s tn k •l
c hen . J BR . 1 1 1 bat hs. ful ly CMOet ed
F or ma l d1 n1 ng ar ea , 1 c ar t •n •stH:od
g ar age w 1th ove r head stora ge Con
c u-t e dr• v e c •t y sc hoo ls S56 500

ONLY ONE LIKE IT
RIVER FRONTAGE
Beautfiut 7 rooms un 1
quely designed 1 s tory
home with 4 B .R ., 2
baths , 20' K19 ' living
room
with f i repla ce .
Fv\ 1 basement , garage ,
storm doors and garage,
storm doors &amp; windows .
Pati o doors open up to
the ba c k. pat io &amp; a
beau1ifu l view of t he
Ohio Ri ver
2 acres
more or tess . You ' ll love
the home &amp; view CALL
NOW .

lSACh'E!&gt;
Loh of ro,Hl trc,n f&lt;i&lt;W on
Morq.n1
L,m;o
\ornf'
qood lon1• 1t'fli .nq \o rlH•
Wllt tr • n,l ~ l•tnl•t •r Ap
pr n11 I'J /\ Ttl1,~hiP All
'OtJ ir1 tu• p.l ~, l•1r1•rT Al L
HH&lt;(J N I Y \ )7 ~)(JIJO
00
'J d l r I "• I II l. t/111 piiJ"' / fl R
(t) fi ,JIJf'
I 1d!,1 r"ltfl"'
rolltnq l,wr! rw, hl,\r klop
r o.HJ .1ppro11
1 rntlr•
fr om Hol;r•r Ho&lt;,ptlrtl
~1 1,0 00

J9900.0(
TWO HOU~ES
O ne 5 r ooms
one 2
r oom s , also storage
bldg . Located on Main
St . i n Crown Ci ty . Laroe
leve l lot . Front por ch .

$1 4.000!

f['iA I, CING A\-AILABLE LonH'nlionaJ, II! \.A
WE HAVI; MORE FARMS , HOME &amp; BUSINESS PROPERTY AY/'LA'tLE

RIO GRANDE -

We are offering an older home
with tour BR 's . Thi s home is In excellent condition
and is on a S55 00 gas. budget It is well insulated .
Also has J extra building lots . Good investment .
FINE FRAME RANCH on KC School Dist This
nome i s exceptionally clean Has fu l l basement . At
ta ched garage Situated on a ni ce flat lot . Low ~ · s
NEW HOME - Selec t your own carpet for this fine
raised ranch all bri c k home Th i s f i ne hOme just
l isted , co mplete details ava i lable at our office MidS60 ' s

Tom White

1-

••

""""""
"''~

Ntt&lt;'W' 41!

.

,_
,,.,,c,1;!.

.

" ;,;-

OF STREET FRONTAGE
ON EASTERN AVE.,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.

I

.

.

.

.

608 E

PH. JOHN SWAIN, 446-0175

FARM Beaut ifu l bottom
la nd Old house 30 -40 a cr es t i l lable.
1,400 lb fob base . Lot s of t i m ber

-~,

COMPlETElY SECLUSION - When
w e sa y sec lus ton , th at 's ex ac tl y what
w e m ea n ! Th is b ea ut ifu l br ic k home
nes tl ed i n the tr ees , situated on 3 ac res
plu s of la nd. with a pond Owner will
fin an c::e . Good term s

ADDI SON - Lav el y r a nch ove r looking
t he r•ver . F ul l basemen t. 2 c ar- g ara ge
and 1 a cr e of lovely l awn

STARTER HOME - PRICED RIGHT
J B R . r anc h . l iving r oom . eat -i n Kit·
chen , bafh , ntce yard . Co mpletely
re mode led City sc hools

AFTE R HOUR S PHONE
V I CKIE HAUlDREN . ASSOC . 446-4042
WILLA DA V I S, AS SOC .
446-IJB44
B EC K Y L ANE . A SSOC.
446-0451

BUI L DING LOT - Bea u t iful si te to
build ! hat ho m e you 'r e wa n t ing Hi gh
an d dr y ove r look ing R t 35 A road to be
put tn , also w at er and sewag e t her e
loca t ed on Bul tt\l i ll e Roi! d . not tar f rom
t ow n

Strout

TY

Realty

MAIN
POMERQ.Y , 0 .
NEW
liSTING
Beautiful 2 story home
with r i ver view , full
usable basement . 3
bedrooms, 1 1h
baths,
central air cond ., level
lot, many new features .
$4() ,000. 00.
NEW liSTING - Great
locat ion in M iddleport,
nice 2 bedroom in good
condition , basement.
l evel
lot
JUST

JUST LISTED N ice Y lnedale mobile home.
l2x60 , tip out , 2 bedrooms, central air , n ice loti 1017
PRICE REDUCED - owner Wllnts to ~II now, low-e·
ly bHevel , 2 firepli!lces , fem lly room , 2 acres, only

I OS91

$.19,500.

LAND CONTRACT - Smal l down payment will buy
you a house with 2 apartments and a mobile home In
Rio Grande. Call today .
10250

.

L OT on de ad end
w ith wate r
and
Will ltn a nce lo
c ouple at 9 Pet .
NO realt or !.

COMM E R CIAL BU I L DIN
G on 132 It lot at 1600 Nye
Ave , Pomeroyd , O H W ill
f tnanc e at 9 Pet t o r eli able
c ou p le No rea lt o r ~ . 99'2 ·
57 86

CLOSE TO HOSPITAL - Beautiful bi ·level , 2 full
baths, centra l a ir , 2 acres with woods Extra OOOd
buy tor $.16 ,500
r 1465
BlOWE LL - Attra ctive 3 bedroom home, bath, dinIng room , storage building, Iaroe level lot , owner
wlllconsideroffers .
11572

30 ACRES -

Beautiful building site, nice rolling
land, large barn, located on Rodney -Cora Rd ., pric ed to sell now .
10522
LDvely home overfooking the River, 4
be&lt;:Jrooms, formal din ing room, family room ,
firep l ac es, 2car garage , large beautiful lot . 10175

IN TOWN -

NICE HOME WITH RENTAL - Nice ranch, w .b .
firep l ace in living room , full basemertt, 2 car
garage , also 2 ~room block house , 1.76 acres.
10051

FOR SA LE beh i nd
Jon es Boys $5500. Cal l 304
'"J73 S02 9 Sharon St a rk

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
Call '146 3643

1 LA R G E lots . w i th a new
f ra m e struc tur e . ap pr ox
I. 100 sq . f1 loc at ed in ce n ter of vlllag ~ . Ideal f or a
business o r hom e . SILOOO
Call 379 26 17.

MINI FARM · Owne r s m ovE"d If' Florida r1nd are
selling thi s l ovely 3 BR br •c k nome This 6 yr . o ld
beaut y o lf -:; r s lot s ot good I iv ing f or some lu cK y
f a mil y with a l ar ge ki t che n &amp; d1n i ng rm ., LR , ta mi
ly rm wi t h f ir e pl ac e. ga rage &amp; barn Loc ated on
St al t:&gt; Route 160 appr o x 6 m i. fro m HMC

S37,SOO .OO.

WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF - Matu re l an d
sca p tng &amp; ri ch gr een lawn hig hli gh t t his en ch ant ing
r ive r v tew hom e ow ne r h as been t ran sfer red 8.
mus t sell th is cu st om b u tlt 3 BR hom e LR . d in in y
rm , eq ui p ea ktt c nen , t o yer Wtfh o pen st at r way ,
fa m i l y rm w1 t h FP . base m ent &amp; 1 car g arage are
onl y a f ew of th e spec •al fea tu r es L ocated on Ro u t e
7sout h o f row n w 1th fr ontagE' on the Oh i o R tve r .

NEW LISTING - In the
country lovely !tone Pn
stor-y home . l•h acres ,
eQuipped
kit c hen ,
washer &amp; dryer , bae ·
ment , 3 B .R . $30,000.00
BEWARE OF OYER
PRICED
PROPER ·
TIES, PlEASE AllOW
OUR
FRIENOLY
FUll TIME STAFF TO
HELP
YOU
WHEN
BUYING OR SELliNG .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland , Jr .
992 -6191
Henry E. Cleland , Sr .
'1'12·2259
ASSOCIATES
Ro9er &amp; Donie Turner
742·2474

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABlE - S7.500 down
- 9o 0 - As k ing SJ J. OOO - Remo de led 1 s tart hom e .
3 B R 's , LR , den , f amily rm ., d 1n tng, k it chen, 2 WB
f i r ep laces . 3 ' 1 r~ c re!, Loca t ed on State Ro ut e 133
be tween Ga l ltpO I•S and Oa k H 111
ROONEY BIDWELL ROAD - 76 A cre farm . ap
pro x 50 A . t i ll a ble. ba la nce pa s t ure &amp; wood s. 4 BR
sec l ton a l hom e, 5 yr s. o ld 18x30 concre te b loc k
build m g , c o wat er
po nd . cree k . 135 M as~ey
Fc r qu son l rac t or &amp;. equipmen t 1nc luded 1n pr tce
CHE SHIRE - S26 .000
Remode led 1 12 stor y, 2 B R ,
ba lh , LR , d 1n 1ng rm , kit c he n, p art base m ent . dou
b le carport . s tora ge budd ing and a large corner tot .

Joan Russell 949 -:tuo
OFFICE '1'12·2259

FINANCING A V AILABLE Remodeled
hom e 1n cludes 5 rms &amp; baTh , carporr ." stov e, r efr tg .
dt&lt;&gt; hwd &lt;.her . m ob de h om e oa d. a l m ost 6acres o n 588
1 m • f rom t own SJO .OOO

OWNER

SPRINGFIE L D 'TOWNSHIP
Approx 6 acres
leve l an d gentl y r o lltng lan d, co un 1y wa fer , nt ce
bu il a 1ng st tc&lt;:.. loc{1l ed on I h e Flo yd Cla r k Rd ap
prox • 1 m• off Route 160 ne ar P orte r A skt ng

11 S, 000
OWNER FINAN CING A V AILABLE 10°'o
DOW N
Ol der 1 st or y f ar m home w •th 6 r m s 8.
bath c('l la r house , shed s. lar ge sh ade trees on a p
pr ox ' 4 acre~ L oca ted d rn• sou th of R1 0 Grande on
fhe To m Wood s Rd Sl ?,?OO

BUSINESS - All stock ,
equipment &amp; bui I ding
with J bedroom apart
ment and extra level lot
Only $27.500 .
2'l ACRES Wood s.
brush and wild grapes
A · FRAME spec i al . Only

HOME STEAD HERE or use as a hun t 1nq lodg e ,
vac at •on hOm e. et c Ru s t• c log hom e ' "' butlt f rom
hand hewn bea m s 8. has a slee p.ng toft , m ode r n
bath . l ar ge s tone f i r epl ace &amp;. a ppr ox 17 acre!, of
woods 1n th e Wa yne N,Ht onal Forest Ex t ra land

S'/,SOO.
tW ACRES -

In Chester
Township at F tatwoods.
About 1/ 1 fenced. good
old 9 room home and
lots of good outbuldino s
Asking $80,000.
RIVERFRONT
MOdern brick with 2 car
garage , 3 bedrooms , 2
full bath!, and 4 lots _Ci ·
ty water and carpet_ing .

FINANCING AVAILABLE
A ssu m e q • 'Jo.o loan ,
love l y J B R c ottage 15 s•t va ted on a 100x2 50 lo t on
State Rout e 141 at th e edge a t t own &amp; t ea tur £&gt;s a L R
din 1 ng rm , l rtundrv . f ul l basem en t
gas heat Ask
.nq S31 ,900

a.

RIO GRANDE AREA
Appro x 45 acr es va ca nt
lan d, cou nt y wat er . pon d . so m e t tmber , n •ce
butld tng &lt;;.1tes . c &lt;~v schoo l s. S \8 ,000
PE RR '( TWP .
60 ac res . abou t 11 A td label ,
ba l ance 1n l tmbe r. sl yl•!. h Ol der 7 r m home w1 th lo t
of posstbtlt t n:-s . b arn . ov tb u tl d1ngs . m tner al r tgh ls .
fro nt':&gt; on Sta te Rd Cal l to r m or €' tn for m alton

~, 000 .

RT . 124 - Beaut ifvl 2
acre spot with large
tr~~ and pi cnic area. 7
room family home , nat .
OlU
furnace ,
r~ral
water ,
carpet t nQ .
fireplace , nice kiTchen
and 1 car geraoe .

$43,000

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE 7.0~ down
camp s1tes i n the Wrtyne N a t 1ona l F orest 5 to 8 ac r e
tra c t s wooded land . g"oOd hun tt ng , pr•ces star ! ~ ~
13,500
HARRISON TWP . -- 147 a c r es, appr ox . bOA . wooa
e d (c ommercta l t imber r (&gt; por ted) , 40 A t i ll a b le . SO
A pa sture . 7 rm ho m e, ba r n , pond , s pr tng s, 2 we lts
t ab bas e, to t s ot r d f r on t .:t gf' rt '&gt;klng \6 5.000

«

NI!W LISTING acres
In
Rutland
Township. Located at
the old gun club.
BUILDING LOTS - In
many locations. Call

EASY TERMS on th tS b r ,c K &amp; tr arn e bt level A
smal l down payment wil l let you have QUI Ck po sse o;
sion . 4 BR 's , 2111 oaths , L R wi th hea tal at o r
f irep lace . l arge f am i l y rm 1,1 1 A ., 2 ca r garage .

992 ·3325or 992 ·3876.

Rousmg
Headquarters ,

Vnant land, good Investment prOPer ·
tv 1 some timber , all mineral rights , located In Ad·

FOR SALE
BY OWNER

1 10l2

OaiYin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599
Oscar Baird, Realtor 446 463~
John Fuller, realtof 44&amp;4117

rn
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$18,800.00.
NEW
liSTING
Apartment w i th large
garage below , r-ented
and i n good condition .
S13,500 00. (Idea l for c ar
repair business) .
NEW liSTING - New
ranch style
(brick ),
almost 1 acre, beautiful
living room with br ick
walls, equipped kitchen ,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths ,
storage
building ,
garage ,
close
in

t3 ACRES -

Evenin&amp;S Call

WISEMAN

446-0008

$12,000 .

'un

di~ Twp

AVAilABLE.

7~ ACRE

·x .... ~

COUNTRY HOME - Neat and attra c
five in a country se tting descri be s thi s 4
bedroom home , inc luding liv i ng room ,
dining room , main bath , nic e size ki t
c hen with ni ce c ab inet s and range . L ots
of fru it trees with 1.18 ac re s. Pri c ed to
sell S22 ,500 .

FISH POND Well
stocked on 1 1/ J acres
and 12x.SO mobile home
on St . Rt . Asking just

CHESHIRE - Ni ce ranch with -4 bedrooms, llh
bath, full basement. hardwood floors , carport ,
beautiful large lot .

~ HOU SE

GAS, WATER AND SEWAGE

WARM AND FRIENDLY - Complet e
1y
r e mod eled otder nome w ith 3
bedr oom s, ce l l ar, 2 car g ara ge w ith a t
I ac he d gr een hou se sett i ng on 3.5 ac r es
in Green E lem e nt ar y a nd G AH S H igh
Sc hool distri c t s

CLASSI C BEAUTY Loc ated tn
Cr own Ci t y ) bed r ooms . li v 'room ,
tam r oom , l arg e k it and d ini ng ar ea ,
2111 ba t hs . lull basempnt and 2 car
garage Sttua l ed on a IO\Ie ly lawn w it h
lot s of tru tl trees

116 E. SeCOf'ld Street

OUTSTANDING BUY Extra nice ranch , J
bedrooms , bath witn $hower , den , central air ,
Rodney area , vou can ' t find a better home for
$39,1)()() .
11993

F INANCING VA ·FHA LO
A N S LOW OR tojO DOWN
PA YMENT . PUR CHA SE
OR
R E FINANCE
IR ELA N D MOR TG AGE ,
77 E
ST A TE . ATHEN S
614 592 305 1
lA R GE
str eet
se wage
re l ia bl e
9CJ7 5786

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4-46-tSSl

OFFICE 446-7013

116,500.00

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l0xl6 BLOCK BUILDING - 2 room s ,
large garage door on one si de . Tr ai l er
hookup , c ounty water , e lect r ic hea t a nd
.94 an acr e .

Sit liS Auoc

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

10ACRES
MORE OR lESS
Level , gently rolling
land with rural water
tap paid for
Lovely
building
site s
with
enough
rooms
for
privacy City sc hools .
CALl NOW .

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OHIO RI V ER VI EW
Thto;. J BR br ll k ranc..h tS tn
exc elle n t con d• t ,on .1nd off e r s 1' • ba ths . den Wtl h
FP , dtni ng rrn . f oyer . H W f loor s. g la '&gt; Sec1 tn po r ch .
pa l to, ex t ra n1 ce landsc ap•ng . double g ar ag e plus a
detach ed '11.: 24 bn c k anrl co ncr etp g ar agP Lo t s of
pr tva c y

YA APPROVED
A B roo m non e. ju st
finishe d 4 8 R fr r. m e
home with br i( k. front .
Carporf. nr ce built i n
c ab i ne t s tn k i t c he n
Rura l w a ter sy s t em ,
12' .: 16 ' st orage bu tl di n f:,,
l arg e
ga rden
sp v t .
Wit hi n 1 11 m il es f ~ orn
H ol ze r H osp 1 A 'Jf
land ~ c 1pe d ydt"d
L ot s
of sh ade t rPes .

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Dona M.CI&gt;IIH

Solos Auoc .
«6· 9557

CALL NOW. Oi=FICE 446-7699 HOrJI E 446-9539

--c.nl'O

FOR REAL VALUE you can ' t bea t fh 1!,
c oun tr y h o m e. We ll m ai nt ained lr am e
home on 4 acr es . Se ver a l n 1ce bu i lding
tot s fr ont ing on Rt . 21 8 . Enoug h p ast ur e
t o r aise yo ur own beet or keep a l ew
11o r ses Garage , cel lar hou se , sev eral
o1hPr o utbldqs G al l iil Co un t y ru r al
water Ci t y Schoo ls A gre it t buy at

on a

REAL OPPORTUNITY for a business adventure .
we are offering a going bu siness in Midd leport with
a C-2 c arryout li cense , also has a gOOd grocery
volume . Cal l today

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HAND Y WITH A HAMMER ') B (' ltN br

CHESHIRE VIllAGE
3 BR . l 1 1
st or y nome tn good c ond 1 c a r g arage .
21 '·, c i t y to ts . Wi th tn walk tng dis t ance
groc er y , c h ur ch S1 9 ,900 Just Lite d 1

Situated

Call now .

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
in
downtown
Gallipolis . Presently doing \WII, but owner has
decided to sell You can buy the entire stock. fi&gt;c tures and bu i ld i ng or just the building . G i ve me a
call right now and let ' s take a look .

We'"'e Out To -sell The Earth

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$42 , 900 00

APPROXIMATELY 387 FEET
tOll 11 prt tn l br ush t oo 1 Ttl 1'S hom p ncf'dS
re pa tr bu t tS
11 tr a m(' Wtl h
a lum s1d •ng,
~
""s h(•,; t , t:J arn .
t rad er n oo ~e: up 4 acre~ 1 mtl e tr a m c 1
IY ~19 , 900

ne shape

..vi D i st

LOTS OF COUNTRY atmosphere with 30 acres of
hill land to enjoy plus a very nice J BR home 1n ew.
eel lent condition Call today . 148 . .500

KYGER CREEK
SCHOOl Of ST .
M Od er n 3 8 R r an c h
home approx 3 111 years
old
Ther mopane w in
dows , stor m doors, FA .
fur na ce w 1th central a i r ,
k i tchen
ha s bvtlt in
c ab•n et s , sta i nless stee l
dbl
sin k and d in ing
ar e-a
HJ II basement
W1l h pa t io door s Rural
wat e r system . Garage .
CAL L NOW

Sl i\ NQING iii:OOM ONLY! ThiS IS Th e

$36,000

'O ,

GREAT WORKSHOP for autos or trucks 30X40
metal bu i lding situated on two lots in 1he village of
Crown City .

VINTON - Che&lt;k this one out Fine older hOme
with lots of room . New carpet , 3 !g BR '! , nice deep
lot Lots of room for tha t spring garden . Pri ced 1n
the M i d . teens

BR A ND N E W HOME ,
3 BR . 2 full
f trep\a ce, o v er an ac r e ro 111ng
lawn , c ou ntr.,... '&gt; e1t•ng Bu y tt VA or
FH A S4Q SOO

WHY RENT? You ca n ati or d a home of
-our own at thi s pri r~n_i
l arge n ew l y
carpeted k it che
~\.
· room . new
vinyl siding , g u~ nea t . Lev e l fenced
lawn . In c ity S27,000

CROWN CITY - very nice frame ranch on a 1/ 1
ilcre lot . Paneled and heated garage . Call for com ·
pletedetails .

rn,\l)

bc1 th~ .

AFFORDABlE AND NICE l BR
H ardwood floor s . cab tnets, a tt ac hell
garage , te nc ed bac k yard , c dy sc h ool ~

MOBILE HOME situated on .65 of an acre, good
c ondition . Has 30 x 30 metal garage with concrete
floor . Call now .

a buyer . Tnree BR t- flat lot in the Gall lpc. ~

F\lt&gt;u.• ....-.-G Dt
w f:.
SAL£"'P£NOIN
h s, stone
, ~ u-:~t: , ( tT)' SChOOlS

MOST ADMIRED - Bu ilder ''&gt; ow n t a'&gt;
tie on a full ac r e ro11 1ng l aw n, 4 B R ,
part•nt ' s su1ts has full b~th . dr es1ng r m
(:tfi c ient kitchen with snack. bar . ra nge
Formal d i ning , overs i z ~ d 11 v ing rm . J
Pull bath s, family rm . witn ft r ep ta ce
plus recre at ion r oom . Att ac h ed garage
New tenced pool w i th pa1i o. $79 ,500

$2'1 ,900 .

1F THEY ARE pri c ed right like thi!l one we w ll llind

HOME &amp; INCOME
PRODUCING
PROPERTY
6 r oo ms , 3 B .R . hom e
located on Old Rt 100 in
Porer with 1974 U 'X 71 '
mobile home . J B R
with comple Te k iTc hen ,
elec r ic sto ve &amp; r elr i g .
F .A
f u rna ce, ce ntral
a rr H ome has a stok er
coal stov e Live in one ,
rent the ot her . Gall ia
Rur al W af er Sys t Jl •;o
lot A. · t or onl y $19 ,000
CA L L NOW

Real Estate for Sale

BUILD I NG LOT ll 8' xl50' restr ic ted
buil ding lo t Wtth water a nd gas
av a tl a bl e in n tce su bdi\lision

INVESTMENT PROP . in town. We have two older
homes, both i n good condit ion . Each priced at

HOME ·ZONEO COMMERCIAL
N •ne room house , 2 ba th s, ful l IJ a~e
men ! , gas st eam heat . good con d1tion
Loc at ion 400 bl oc k 2nd Ave .. c enter of
t own Poss ib ili t ies -- 2 n ice m odern
aoar t ment s, offi ce sp ac e , etc Look ing
t or inc om e plus home ' Conta c t us to
d ay Pr iced in the $.30's Qu tc k posses
Stan .
1393

COLONIAL
&lt;now n
ft r epl a(

~ ~

t"IUt d•f'(; "· "d,lr r f, •.
mo1,,1,. ~·o·TH •, 1u&lt;; t r, •.f·
new Muc.t &lt;;f't' to ht:ll\it•
1

Real
---Estate for Sale

-

FINE BRICK RANCH with full basement , family
r oom and fireplace . Low $60 ' s

BUILDING LOT in town . E)I(Cellenf opportunity to
get in a fine loc tion .

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636

$.15,000

'.lor,. 1,

MODERN RANCH
8 ROOM HOME
tn c ounrr y . Over 1700sq
f1 ot li v ing spa ce . L arge
li v in g
roo m ,
l6 'X 18 ' ,
fa m i ly r oom 17'x l 2' w i th
wood ourn ing firepl ace
Rur al w a ter . ce ntra :
at r , appr ox . 111 A . of
cle a n l a ntl . La rge c on
crete pat io, carport , J
mulb e r r y
tr ees .
A
be autiful rPod e rn c oun
tr y hom e . You must Se(
thi s ho m e to apprec iate
itS beauty . PRICE
IN THE $30 's .

ACRES of potential developme nt land . All
minera l rights . SOme timber , most ly pine .

ANY HOUR

COUNTRY HAVEN - 8r1 c k c:. tu cc o &lt;'n c1
ced ar tudor , 3 BR , '"J ba t ns. fa mtl y r m
w !!rep lac e . cen r11 r \51 .900

t1 :o , •

Rea_! Estate for Sale

PL ATTED AND READY T O BUILD
O N - Bui l di ng lots 120' )( 100 ' locat ed in
subd iv ts.on •n K C Scnool D i st rict .

~..

NEW LISTING - IS ac res more or less
of roll ing land with a 12x65 3 bdrm
mobile home , barn, &amp; cellar house .
Close to 3S West .

Real Estate for Sale

BUILDING LOT in a restr ic ted subdivison . All
util i ties ava i I able . 120x 180 .

30

f.

261f1 Locust St.. GallipoliS, Oh10

HOI /t·r

9 ' x 1( 1

COMMERCIAL PROP . l.J acres more or le55 with
frontage on two bla c ktop rollds . Seller is anxous to
sell. Ownr financed, low Interest .

IIH1

446-3636

Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

H~
nlOillll'
lrH·o: 1 IQ&lt;.,P to
A_A,·r' .tl ( t'ti1 1 .r

hOf'l"'•· X.

BUSINESS PROPERTY located inthecity . l2()()sq .
ft . 60&gt;1751ot . All utilities Ott street park ing .

COUNTRY DREAM
30 acr es , half wOOd s and halt ro111ng
oa sture 5 m i les f ro m R to Gra nde
eea ur tf u l 1oca f10n to butld an d r at se a
la m• y S71.500
"401

CANADAY REALTY

IH

I H ACRES AND
MOBILE HOME
1 4~ ·1 ·'

NEW LISTING - Great investment property In
town _ T\'; o units . live in one rent the other or rent
bOth . Plus storage area tha t could be rented or con verted to a gl!rage . Pric ed in the Mid $30' s . owner
f inanced for the right buyer

STATE HIGHWAY 160
REASONABlY PRICED
150 It frontage on R t · 160 _ large living
and eat -in kit chen Two BR with c loset ,
bath with shower . Ni ce stream r uns
through property , some tree s, garage
w ith con crete floor . Thi s prope r t y only
S22. 300 . JU ST LI STED

Real Estate fo rsai e

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SERVING 6,000 COMMUNITIES

Real Estate Age11cy

Real Estate for Sale

r:.-:.

REALTOR -AUCTIONEER

oan Boggs, Realtor As;sot'J
Ph. Home :

*

Real Estate ,-or Sale

M~GHEE

• Tom Holstein, Realtor
Associate
Ph . 188-9030

, Realtor Ph. Home 446 ·9539
(;a/lin ( ,'out~ty'.~ Fast~&gt;!it Growi11g

Real Estate for Sale

·~ud·

Phillis Loveday, Realtor
Associate
Ph. Home 446 -2230

}~or Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Small house under con struction and 8.5 acres
some
building
material
supplied .
county water, electric &amp;
septic tank Installed.
Will con~ider land con tract.
l67 · 7S24

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DO YO U nee d ex tr a
m oney ? A r e yo ur ea r nings
de11 at ed b v tn f lat ion ? Does
your wo r k tac k oppor-t u ni t y
and cha llenge? If yhou ar e
i n te r es ted in fu l l or par-t
t i m e o ppo r t u n i ti es
fo r
husband and w i fe teams or
sing les . send resum es to
PO Box 729-E , C·O the Daily
Sent inel .
Pome rov , OH
4
5
7
6
9

OWN ER W ILL sell 40 acres
or
mo r e
w dh
197 8
Hol l ypark
mobtl e home
14•7 0 with expand o, plus
14)1( 36 f am il y
r oom
at
ta c hed . tullv carpete-d .
r ura l w a t er , so m e pas t ure ,
fence.
st and i ng 't1m ber .
some waln u t , sun dec k
fron t and ba c k Loc at ed on
New Lima R d Call 614 7~ 7.
1182

NEW H OM E 3 bedroom .
21 1 oat hs . r e c room w •th
fi repla ce,
l a r g e rl f" r k
base m ent and g ara ye 1
acre to t Call 991 345 4 If no
answ er , c al1 992 5455 .
N E W HAVEN b r i ck home
304 882 2197 or 61 4 949 268 2
aft er 6 p rn

RE STRICTED BUILD! ·
NG LOTS
Debby
Drive all utilities
available .
STROUT
REALTY , 446 ·0008 .

SPECIAL FAMILY HOME - Y ou ' ll en
i oy th e quali t y &amp; sp ace th is moder n
hom e a ff o rd ~ - 4 nice Slteo bed rooms ,
211 ba th s. love ly st one fi r ep lac e in l i v
i ng room l orm a l d ining, equi pped l&lt; tl
c hen , f ull ba semen t wi tn a huge r ec
room . ba r&amp;. utility rm N ice pat io. 2 c ar
g ar age &amp;. l andscaPe- d v ar d ius t ou t Stde
of t ow n U pper 50 ' s

NATURE IS YOUR NEIGHBOR - Lot
of tall trees sur rou nd the 6 acre se tt ing
ot t hi s attra c t tve new hom e T his
unu sua l 3 bed r oom hom e otter s long
w mdows, cat hed r al cei l i ng, f irepla ce in
l1vtng r oom . f orm al din i ng, equipped
k •l c hen , 1 lu ll ba th s &amp; 2 c ar garage
He at pump &amp; c entr a l a 1r J mi le s f rom
H M ( LO W 50 'S

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!H2- The SWJday Thnes-Sentmel , SWlday . Nov . 25. 1979

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IPPHS-St. Albans I

BEAVER - A top team of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars when they
meed Dec. 2 here will be the VFW's
newly fonned Political Action Committee .
Post 9942, Adams Rd ., will host
delegates from District Twelve,
representing VFW units in Athens,
Ross, Vinton. Pike, Jackson. Meigs.
Scioto Gallia and Lawrence coun-

Playoff Scenes

ties . T~ulbyJohnsoniswnunander .

_...,.

Stanley Komoroski, Athens,
Distnct Twelve conunander. said in
the past the VFW was not permitted
to engage in politics and that most
members felt they could do little to
influence national events . But the
· a1 action
· comfonnation of a pol1·t IC
rruttee, he said, provides a legal
method for the VFW as a group and
for the individual member to par-

-r. ..,.
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· fed
1 1 :t'
hclpate m
era e ec wns . .
"The corruruttee g1ves us a means
of helping our friends seeking electiou to the U. S. 3enate. House and
the Presidency," Komeroski e• ·
plained . " We consider our friends
those who support veterans
programs and a strong nahonal
defense ." . .
Kamoroski srud the VFW may endorseasmanyaslOO-l:iOcandidates
In the 19M elections . But he sa1d an
endorsement would not necessanly
mean giving a candida!~ money .
He said that VFW s contmued
growth for the last 25 years has
enabled it to outmaneuver some of
the attacks against veterans by
Congress and the President. But he
said the VFW foresees more cuts in
veterans benefits, further reduction

Free seedlings are avaiillble

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Veterans' group meeting
planned
v

POMEROY - The ordering and
Ianting of trees by 4-H members can
be a very rewarding learning ex perience and for this reason the Ohio
Division of Forestry will furnish WO
trees of any one species only free to
each 4-li member . Only one species
may be ordered by each member .
Species are white pine, red pine,
green ash, and black locust .
The applicant must be enrolled as
a 4-H or FFA member . He must
plant the trees on land where they
may reasonably expect to grow to
maturity and may be harvested as
timber products . The trees are not to

be used for shade, ornamental.
Christmas trees, or windbreak purposeo. They must agree to protect
the trees from livestock and fire and
must permit a representative of the
Division of Forestry to inspect the
tree planting if they SAJ desire .
An additional two hundred
seedlings of pine only are also
available from the West Virginia
Pulp and Paper Company .
Anyone interested m ordering the
trees should contact the Meigs Coun ty Extension Office before Nov. ?B.
All orde!'ll must be sent to Columbus
prior to Dec. I, 1979.

·
h · 1 beds d
ed
m A ospJta
an fa renew .

a ttac k on. veterans pre erence m
federal hmng .

~ Middleport Christmas parade tonight

A past state corrunander, Art
Tabor, F1at Rock, will represent the
h' VFW th
t
0 10
at e mee mg ·

el 1 ••
C1::' t
-.us a. e :•

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Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

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(USPS 145·960)

VOL XXVIII NO. 157

enttne
POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1979

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BLACK ~

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(.'out'h ."iufforrl, f)ll Tm1 , . Tlwmp.wm

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CONDOMINIUM COOPERATIVE
THE DifFERENCE

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Otd yo u ever wonder about the difference between a condominium
and coo perat 1ve ? In a condominium. you get actua l title to the space
w 1t hin your unit plu-s an undivideo interest a tong with other owners to
Th e stru cTu re , grounds and com mon el ements (pool , parking area.
hallwa• s. recredt ionat area . etc . ) .
·
1n a cooperat 1ve, the "coop " corporation owns everything within
the co mplex includ i ng your unit and you get stock in the corporation
pl us a lease to your untt In effect , coops do not enjoy the same
f avorab le mortgage treatment by banks as you get when you own and
have title to your condomtnium or home .
Another difference between having title to your home or apartment.
a nd own 1n g stock in a coo p, is that your mortgage taxes and
ma1ntcnance charges are comp le te ly independent from other unit
owne r ~ and you have no responsib ility tor your neighbor's mortgage,
t axes or charges if he shou ld default In a co·op, all th e stockholders
are re~ponsible i f one stockholder de t autts on his mortgage , taxes, etc
If ther e 1s anything we ca n clo to he lp you in fhe field of real eslat&lt;
pl ease phone or drop in.a1 L!AOINGHAM REAL ESTATE , 511 Second
llo ve ., Gallipolis . Phone 446 ·7699 . We ' re here to help .

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Annual Pomeroy Otristmas parade Saturday

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ELBERFELD$
STOP IN AND LOOK OVER OUR COMPLETE LINE OF

APPLIANCES.

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HOUSEWARES DEPT.- 1ST FLOOR

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1400 watt Pistol Dryer
from General Electric

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Your Family DeseNes Prorection
--Help Prorecr Wirh A GE HOME

SANTA CLAUS made his first appearance Saturday when he arrived in
the annual Christmas parade held in downtown Pomeroy. Santa is shown
with two year old !Uchle Wamsley and Richie's mother, Olarlotte Wamsley of Racine . Santa passed out treats to the children from the new stage

loca~ontheupperparkin
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Bobby Glen Saunders, 46,
Gallipolis, a special deputy with the
Gallia County Sheriff'• Department

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died in the Hoher Medical Center
sbortly after a head~n colllsion
Saturday night on the Silver
Memorial Bridge.
According to West Virginia State
Pl&gt;lice, SaWiders' car wu struck by
a vehicle traveling east in the westboWtd lanes of the divided, four-Wte

bridge operated by Dencil D.
Jividen, 53, Buffalo, W.Va .
The accident occurred about 10 :45
p.m. Saturday night.
According to WJOfflcial reports,
Saunders was trapped in his vehicle
which calll!ht on fire .
The fire was eningulshed by a

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JIDDA, Saudi Arabia (AP) - A
Pakilltanl airliner Oying Moslem
pilgrims home from Mecca
caught fire, exploded and
cra.shed sborUy alter taking off
early today from Jidda, and all
1&gt;7 persons aboard were believed
killed, Pakistan International
Airlines reported .
PIA officials said they did not
rule out Mbotage, but PIA
engineel'll in Karachi , Pakistan,
the plane 's destination , said they
believed a short circuit caused
the fire and expiO!IIon .

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Eight arrested

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white sits by itself- wa1ting . Watling fo r some nice person to come along
who wants a real smart .lovable pet Won 1 someone come forward so that
this homeless male creature can have a future ? If mterested call your
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Stewart enters
guilty plea, gets
15 year sentence
A Jury trial in the Meigl! County
Conunon Pleas Court wu averted
thls morning when Tom Matthew
Stewart, 31, Middleport, entered a
plea of guilty to aggrava~ murder
charges .
Stewart was charged with
aggravated murder by the Meigs
Grand Jury on Oct. 10 as the result of
the Sept. 16 death of his stepson,
Keith Landers, 17, a 1979 graduate rJ
Meigs High School at the Stewart
residence in Middleport.
Stewart allegedly killed his stespson with a .38 caUbre revolver. Ac ·
cording to reports the shooting occurred at 12:30 a.m. Sept. 16 at the
residence loca~ at 235 S. Fourth
Ave ., Middleport.
Mr .and Mrs . Stewart were
separated and in the process of
being divorced when the shooting OC·
elUTed, according to reports.
A jury wu scheduled to be seated
today in the Meigs CoWlty Common
Pleas Court to hear testimony in the
case . However, Stewart entered a

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JU S T

PHILADELPHIA (API
Eight persons were arrested
early Sunday as authoritieo ended a 12-day protest occupation of
Hanity Elementary School by
parents demanding the principal
be replaced .
Personnel from the sheMff's
department went to the school
about 4:30am., knocked on the
door and asked to be admitted .
When they were not, they broke
the locks on windows and entered
the west Philadelphia facility, of·
ficlals said.

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EASTERN BAND-The Eastern High School marching band was the only
band that participated in the annual Ouistmas parade held in downtown
Pomeroy Saturday afternoon . The parade officially opened the Ouistmas season and was sponsored by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
Jim Frecker was the parade chairman.

Two area residents killed In separate traffic mishaps

SENTRY rr~ SMOKE ALARM

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CARRIE BETH BEARHS second runnerup in the annual Big Bend
Regatta Queen coolest took part in the annual Olristmas parade held
Saturday in downtown Pomeroy. A large crowd attended the annual
parade .

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plea of guilty when he appeared
before Judge Jolm C. Bacon canceling the jury trial.
Stewart wu given a 15 year to life
sentence by Judge Bacon and was
remanded to the custody of Sheriff
James Proffitt .

Meigs strike
in lOth week
Both sides in the 10 week old Meigs
Local Teachers stMke continued
silence today as to the status of the
strike situation.
It was reported that negotiations
between the Meigs Local Teachers
and the Meigs local Board of
Education being held in Colwnbus
last week under the auspices of the
Ohio Department of Education
broke down ThUI'!IIIay morning.
Nf8otiations Wl!re dl.!continued
until yesterday afternoon, according
to reports, when negotiating teams
were swrunoned to Colwnbus by a
representative of the Ohio Depart ment of EducaUon. However, SWl ·
day evening , It ·was reported that
negotiations had again broken down
between the two groups.
Neither the teachers group nor the
board hall issued any statement for
several days in regard to the
progress or Jack of progress being
made In negotiations .
Today marked the 1001 week of the
strike which began on Sept . 24 .
Schools were not officially closed Wl UI Oct. 16.

MaBon County depuny sllenlt .
Jividen wu taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital where he is listed in
satisfactory condition . State pollee
have charged Jividen with DWI pending further investigation .
At 9:1a A.M. today on SR 218 in
Gallla County, one half mile south of
SR 7, William GutheMe, Rt.2, Bidwell, an employee of Gerald Smith, a
private trash collector in the county,
was fatally injured when struck by a
garbage truck opera~ by Willard
Smith.
The accident occurred in the
driveway of a private residence.
Gutherie was pronoWJced dead at
the scene by Gallia County Coroner
Dr . Donald R. Warehime. He repor·
.... . .·.·•... ··.·.·.•. •.•.•.•· ·.·.·.·.·.·.·

PARADE TONIGIIT
A parade at6:30p.m. this evtnln«
wtU officially ..,.. the boUday
season ID Mlddlepor1. Mlddltporl
me...,banta wiD bold 1 mooDllgbl
oale-wlth opeclal prices on rtr1aln
ltellll-iD colljuncdou wilb the
eveulng's activities. Santa, wbo wiD
appear ID lbe parade, wiD dlslribuk
trealll to yoqoten following the
parade.
Mlu Candy lugelo to
parade cbalrmau.
·.·

:- :·:-:-:-~:-:-: -: -:-:- :··

:-:-:-;.:-:-··

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight with a low of
3:i to 40 . Increasing cloudiness
Tuesday with a chance of showers.
High low to middle S«m. Probability
of rain 20 percent Monday night and
30 percent Tuesday .

tedly suffered head and cheot injuries.
Meanwhile, the Thanksgi,1ng
holiday weekend drew to a close
Sunday, with the four-day traffic

death toll climbing.
By 6 p.m. EST, 3116 penons had
died in traffic..-ela~ accidents
across the nation.
Continued on Page 10

Meigs deputies probing fire
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
are investigating a Saturday fire
which destroyed a home owned by

Elbert Mullins,RD., Dener.
The fire occurred at 10 :30 pm . at
a home occuppied by Mr. and Mrs .
Oliver Mullins . Salem Center
firemen responded . The lire is still
under investigation .
Sam Arnold, 69, Syracuse, was
cited to court on charges of failing to
keep his vehicle on the right half of
the roadway following an accident
Saturday at 2:50pm. in the village
of Syracuse, the Meigs CoWJty
Sheriff's Department reported .
According to the report, Arnold
was turning to the right onto
Brigegman Street, near the
Municipal Building, when he went
off the road on the left and struck a
hedge owned by Buster Diddie and
continued on and struck a utility
pole.
Arnold was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Syracuse
ER squad where he was treated for a

SQUAD CAllED
The Pomeroy Emergency 5QWld
answered a call to 127'&gt; Mulberry
Ave ., Saturday afternoon for
Margaret Va dish who was ill . She
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted.

la&lt;:eration to the lip and releaaed .
There was heavy damage to the
vehicle .

Rutland man cited
One driver was cited following a
two.Yehicle accident Saturday on SR
124, three and six-tenths of a mile
westofSR 7.
Called to the scene at 4:20 pm.,
the Galli a -Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol, reports a west bound auto
operated by David C. Davia, 18,
RuUand, ran off the right side of the
roadway and struck the rear of a
parked vehicle owned by Frederick
Wolfe, 34, Rutland .
The Wolfe vehicle was
demolished. There was slight
damage to the Davis auto. Davia
was cited on a charge of excessive
speed .
TICKErS ON SALE
Tickets to the awards dinner to be
held Wednesday, Nov. 28, at the
Meigs Inn at 6 :30pm. may be purchased at Pomeroy Olamber of
Co mmerce office , New York
Oothing House, or from Fred Crow
or Paul Simon. Tickets are ~.50
each.
To be honored at the dinner are
Dr . Ralston Russell , Paul Cuci and
Kenny Wiggins.

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"The most important thing we'll
do today is fill your prescription!"
SENIOR CITIZENS
Remember every Thursday is Double
Discount Day. 10% +another 10% off on
every prescription .
~ The Medical Shoppa .,~
.!~
Phar"'acll
W
519 laCK SON PllC • Srtiflt&amp; Vi\Ll t ~ 11 lAlA • G ~l 1 ro&gt;n ~r. ' '" ~ • ~ f. 11

•

SUCCESSFUL EVENT- Mr. and Mrl. Millard Van Meter, left, and
Mr.and Mrs . Melvin Van Meter are pictW'ed SWlday at another suc ceasful open house held at the business, the Pomeroy F1ower Shop, But·
temut Ave., Sunday afternoon . Door prizes went to Nonna Baker,
Pomeroy; Judy Dixon, Pomeroy, and Sharon MarUn, Sandyville, W. Va .
Refrealvnents were aerved and favors distributed. Organ miiBic wu
provided by Kyle Allen and Mn. Margaret Eskew registered the over 400
guests. Othenl worldng with the open house were Wanda Rizer, Debbie
Grueller , Cllarlotte Wilford, Jane Harris, Jean IGoes, Betty Jo Woodring ,
~berta Van Meter and Me lvin Van Meter. Jr .
1'1

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ORGAN PRESENTED- An Allen Digital Computer Organ wu presented to the Middleport Fil'lll
Baptist Cllurch in ceremonies held Sunday afternoon .
The organ wM presented by the family of Paul S.
Smart in remembrance ol Paul S. and Frances M.
Smart . Paul M. Smart, aeveland, speaking for the
family of the late Mr. Smart emphasized the dedication
of his late father to his chureh, cornmWIIty, family and
profession and presented the organ to the church. Accepting the gift for the church was EdiMn Baker who ,

.,

in his remarks, paid blgii tribute to the late Mr. Smart.
Grandchildren of the late Mr. Smart provided an organ
lamp. An hour~ong concert on the new organ Will
presented by E ugene Wickstr9m, Athens, after which
the family held a reception in the church soc1al rooms.
The Rev . Mark Mcaung, pastor of the churdl, gave
the invocation and the Rev. George T. Siddall, IIOIHnlaw of the late Mr. Smart gave the benediction. Pictured at the presentaUon from the left are Paul M. ·
Smart, Eugene Wickstrom and EdiP1 Baker. The
church was filled to capacity for the event.

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